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                  <text>~~--~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

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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\

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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

�---- -- -----

-------

------------- - - - - . . - - - - - - - -

Commenta
.
.•...
•.

·· ~ .

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

:·

•:DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

...
••

....

..·-'

..

~j:b

Bm~ ~...._-,-, M""'E':S!:! =·~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

I&gt;AT WHITEHEAD

....

.

!sslstanl Publisher/ Controller

-.

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

... . , LETTERS OF dPJNJON are welcome. They shou ld be less than 300 words
Jong. All letters are subject to editing and mu st be s tgned with name , address and
telephone number. No unsigned li:&gt; !t&lt;'rS wm be published. Letters should ~in
good tastt&gt;. addressing Issues. no( personatlties.

Taxing
people
twice
.
-:: As millions of members of the "baby boom" generation proceed
tl\rough the process of family formation, public school systems throughout
thi! country are preparing for a massive new surge In enrollment
:; Even in more normal times. education claims the largest single share
(a,'bout 35 percent) of state and local government budgets -and coping
wjih the " baby boomlet" will be even more expensive. In California alone,
IW,&lt;XXI new teachers must he hired by the end of thls decade.
:· President Reagan's pian for drastically revising the federal tax code
make that task even more difficult becauseofhls proposal to eliminate
individuals' ~tate and local tax payments as a deduction on their federal
11-(o~e tax forms.
:That loss of deductibility almost certainly wili increase popular
r'\'istance to. state and local taxes, thus constraining the abUity of the
governments .that rely upon those levies to maintain an adequate level of
public services.
:In recent weeks, the president has traveled to Independence, Mo.;
Rjileigh, N.C.; and Tampa, Fla., to denigrate as "balderdash" the
a$Jments of critics who insist that his proposal will precipitation a fiscal
c~sis of extraordinary proportions among many state and local.
JW;ernments.
·: But various analyses of Reagan's pian have projected revenue losses
to';bthose governments of $10 billion to $12 billion annually - severely
lliniting their capability to finances not only education but scores of other
flli,ctlons as well.
·: Moreover, the president's Initiative comes in the wake of his
a~nistration 's drastic reductions of the federal transfer payments that
lailg have been an important revenue source for state and local
~ernments. During Reagan's first term. those payments were slashed
bY, $59 btllion.
;. Every federal tax statute enacted since the Civil War has preserve~
tllP principle that Individual Income devoted to involuntary payments
s!Jite and . local taxes -should not properly be regarded as incomt
s~~SCeptible to federal taxation.
• Ai the same time tha\ Reagan is calling for a radical departure from
more than a century of accepted policy affecting individuals' taxes, he is
proposing the perpetuation of the credit corporations can claim on their
federal tax returns for the levies they pay to foreign governments.
In addition, he has sought to generate popular support for his plan
througn the cynical tactic of pitting residents of low· tax areas against those
who live in high-tax jurisdiction.
It's true that people who live in many of the nation's mosi populous
states and cities pay higher state and local taxes- and thus are eligible for
larger federal income tax deductions under the current system.
But that's because those areas have a high concentration of
disadva ntaged people- the elderly, the impoverished, the unemployed,
recent immigrants and those in faDing health - most in need of
governmental services.
When the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations
conducted a 1981 survey of the nation's &amp;'i largest metropolitan areas, it
found that per capita spending on essential services (excluding education l
was 69 percent higher and taxes were 37 percent higher in the central cities
than In the surrounding suburbs.
Thus, Reagan's plan could inspire a new round of middle-class flight
from cities to suburbs just when some cities are experiencing a stabilized
population for the first time in decades.
Finally. sta te and local governments everywhere face new
responsibilities - improving the qua lity of public education. cleaning up
toxlc waste dumps, replacing overcrowded prisons and caring for a
growing elderly population.
Eliminating the deductibility of state and local taxes would increase
voter reluctance to finance those programs at the time when they are
needed most

Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlapOrt. Ohio
Wednaaday. September 215, 1986

Today in history
Today is Wednesday, Sept 25, the 268th day of 1985 with '!1 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its fuU phase.
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.

The l"\\enlng stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign d. Libra . They include author
William Fa~ Ikner in 1897, actor-director Michael Douglas In 1944 (age 411 ,
and actor Mark Hamlli in 1952 (age 33).
On this date in history:
In 1513, Spanish explorer Vasco Balboa crossed the Isthmus of Panama
and became the first known European to see the Pacific Ocean.
In 1690, the first newspaper to be published In America appeared in
Boston. It was called Publlck Occurrences, Both Foreign -and Domestic.
In t'is9, the first U.S. Congress adopted 12 amendments to the original
Constitu lion, 10 of which were ratified and became known as "The BUI of
Rights."
In 19'18, a Pacific Southwest alrUner crashed Into a residential
neighborhood of San Diego after colliding in flight with a light plane, and
144 people died.
In 1981, Jordan announced it would restore relations with Egypt,
something no Arab country had done slna! 17 Arab nations broke relations
with Cairo over theEgyptian-Israeli peace treaty of 19'19.
A thought for the day; American author WilHam Faulkner said, "The
, !leld (of hattie) rl"'leals to man his own folly and despair, and victory is an
' illusion of philosopherlr'-'Bnd fools ."
•

Daily

WASJUNGTON -Three months
ago the Uberal Propaganda Machine was complaining that the
public was not paying enough
attention to AIDS. Now It's complaining about "AIDS hysteria."
They have managed to Cllll atten·
Uon to the disease, all rtght, but not
the kind of attention they wanted .
New York City parents have been
keeping their children home from
school in protest and lear because
the school hoard has decreed that a
second-grader with AIDS may
attend classes. Newsweek has bull!
a cover story around this boycott,
v.1th a heavy-handed moral: "Ig·
norance and uncertainty fuel an
epidemic of fear that COI!Id be

almost as destructive as the disease
itself."
What baloney. About 13,&lt;XXIAIDS
cases have been identified in the
United States so far, and probably
many more than that have been
undetected. Nearly all these people .
will die. How can measures like
school boycotts be "almost as
destructive" as that?
Newsweek's cover spread It liseil
a study in hysterla. It warns of the
looming peril of "homophobia" an ugly neologism that means too
many things to mean anything. For ·
example, the magazine reports, as .
an Instance of "homophobia," that
some Insurance companies are
refUsing policies _to homosexuals

1

AIDS-test patent_
WASJUNGTON - Whlle thou·
sands are dying in agony from
AIDS, the French and U.S. governments are engaged in an obscene
battle over the patent and royalties
on an AIDS blood-testing kit. This
not only isolates the virus that
causes the deadly disease, but could
lead to a cure.
As we reported last month, the
French claim the U.S. National
Cancer Institute pirated research
done by the Pasteur Institute In
Parts and illegally ·secured a patent
on the AIDS test kit. The French
want their share of credit and their
share of the royalties, which
already have reached about $2
million. So far, the U.S. government
has brushed off the French claims .
In the last month, however, the
French have delivered documents
outlining their case to Health and
Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler. Among other things.
the French claim that they were the
first to file for a patent in the United

States. Their application was put on
hold, they said, while patent
applications filed later by National
Cancer Institute doctors were
granted.
French officials have warned
that a long court batUe is lnl"'litable
if the United States continues to
refuse France the 'credit to which It
is entitled. Already, the patent feud
has hurt Franco-Amertcan cooper·
ation In seeking a cure for AIDS.
"There is a situation which can
create a very difficult climate and
wlli certainly not contribute to the
conditions of an effective cooperation," said Pasteur Institute Dlrec·
tor Raymond Declonder in a private
statement to HHs officials. A
transcript has been seen by our
associate Corky Johnson.
"The granting of the patent to the
NCI, while our earlier application is
stili under consideration, may
imply consequences which can be
deleterious for the Pasteur Institute
and its licensees, and that we

"on the sctentlllcaUy groundless The df*.ase has a long Incubation
theory that AIDS is simply a gay period a),ld has been spreading
exponentially. Given the promls·
disease."
WeD? Isn't that what the homo· cuity, of male homosexuals, it
sexual activists, have been telling seems rational and prudent to
us? That It's "their" disease? That · regard the,n as poor health i1sks.
In fact, they have been clescrtling
the rest of us are indifferent to the
themselves
- among themselves.
disease because It is prevalent
AIDS
panic,
like AIDS, began In the
an)Ong them? They want to be
capitals
of
homosexualism
- New
regarded as "victims" of AIDS, but
York
and
San
Francisco.
But for
not as carriers of It who can be held
some
reason
the
homosexual
cam·
responsible.
paign
to
avoid
AIDS
and
Its
Insurance companies deal in
consequences
is
permissible,
wheprobability. They would go broke If
they acted on superstition. Here are reas the larger community's self.
some facts: Male homosexuals, defensive measures are signs of
who make up about two percent of bigotry and assaults on homosexuthe pcpulatlon (if that), constitute als ' "civil rtghts."
The Newsweek article reeks with
75 percent of known AIDS caniers.
its own kind of bigotry: a hatred of · ·
the moral C\)reofAmertcan society,
and utter contempt lor ordinary
Amertcans who, when it comes
right down to it, don't trust Uberal
"experts" to look after the welfare
of their children. The parents sense
that they are not being honestly
dealt with - and Newsweek's
disingenuous cover story is itself
good evidence in their favor.
Newsweek exhibits a double
standard: It tells us not to moraliZe
about homosexuality while It mor·
alizes about "homophobia." But
why? The obvious reply is that If
homosexuals can't control their
incUnations, neither can "homo· ·
phobes." Some people feel an
attraction to homosexuality; others ·feel an averse to it. If you don't
condemn the one, how can you
condemn the other? By the librals' :
own logic, both soould be seen as
uncontrollable fo~s ol bihavior,
beyond moral censure.
There is an old joke about a man
convicted of armed robbery. The
judge asks him If he has anything to
say before sentencing. The .man
says, "Your Honor, I'm only the ,·
creature of my environment I can't
help wbat I do." "Neither can I ,"
says the judge. "Twenty years."

lack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta
cannot accept," Dedonder said.
procedures to obtain complete
Declonder said his doctors are recogn)H6n of its rights," Declonder
committed to cooperation with the
warned.
Americans for public health rea·
Dedonder added that an unsons, but vowed that the Frencllwlll · seemly public brawl over the AIDS
fight for their rtghlful credit
test patent will tarnish the "good
"It is a well-established fact that image of science and sclentlsf!l."
the virus responsible for AIDS has
But Dr. Robert Gallo, the leading
been discovered by the group
Al\'lertcan AIDS rl!searcher, inworking at the Pasteur Institute,"
sisted th~ feud Is wholly on tbe
Dedonder said. "We think that we
French side.
are entitled to a full recognition of
Gallo. whom the press has given
thls fact and consequently to a full
equal credit to, along with Mon- .
recognition of our r1ght to a patent."
tagnler, for the discovery of the
Among the evidence submitted to AIDS virus, said his staff has been
support the French claim were " cooperating with researchers
copies of newspaper articles, in- around the world. He indicated the
cluding one in which the head of the
French are not as far along in their
Centers for Disease Control in
research as U.S. scientists, Saying,
Atlanta was quoted as saying that
"The French don't have anything I . the AIDS virus was disCOVfred by
need.''
French researcher Luc
Some experts predict· that If a
Montagnier.
French AIDS test kit is allowed on
"If a satisfactory agreement is the market, it will be more accurate
not attained, the Pasteur Institute is
!han the U.S. Kit, and will capture a
"p repared, determined and even
bigger share of the market
compelled to utilize all available

Sane voices on trade _______Jo_se__:_p_h_So_b_ra_n
WASHINGTON (NEAl - Res·
tortng a measure of parity to this
country's relations with its trading
partners in an extraordinarily
complex problem !bat deserves
more serious treatment than It has
been receiving on Capitol Hill.
Congressional debate has been
almost totally devoid of rational
consideration. Instead, the publl&lt;; is
being regaled with a protectionist
clamor on behalf of various states'
and regions' parochial Interests.
At the same time, the Democrats
are engaged in a disgraceful
attempt to manipulate the issue to
gain political advantage over the
Republicans In next year's
elections.
The existence of a serious
problem is documented by the
lopsided balance-of-payments statistics: The value of this country's
Imports exceeded the value of its
exports by $123.3 b!Uion last year.
If the current trend continues.
that record-setting Hgure will he
exceeded this year. In the first half
of 1985, the trade deficit totaled $62.1
billion.
Marketers of products ranging
from costume jewelry to tuna fish
are demanding import tariffs,
quotas, surchargesandotherqulck·
flx protectionist legislalion- aU of
which fall to deal with the lundamental causes of the trade
imbalance.
Emotional complaints are heard
about imports ol autos, consumer
electronics and semiconductors
from Japan; shoes from Taiwan,
South Korea and Brazil; timber and
hogs from Canada; wine from
France and Italy; blouses from
Indonesia; 1\Dd shirts from the
PEOple's Republic of China.
Among the pitifully few pclltl· ·

clans resisting the hysteria of the
moment are a Republican, Pres!·
dent Reagan, and a Democrat,
Arizona Gov. Bruce E. Babbitt.
At his mid-September news
conference, Reagan uses excep·
tlonally strong language to warn
that "a mindless stampede toward
protectionism will beaone-waytrip
to economic disaster."
The president noted that "for.
almost two years now, I have been
begging our allies .and trading
partners" In the General Agree·
ment on Tartffs and Trade "to join
with us in another round of trade
talks" designed to produce a
long·term solution to import-export
problems. · ·
One of the few Democrats who
views the current crisis as more
than an opportunity to take a cheap
shot at the RepubUcans, Babbitt
also proposes working within the
GATI framework - but he believed radical reform is necessary.
"It is time to admit the obsoles·
cence of GAIT and make a
comprehensive new beginning,"
says the governor. "Before it is too
late, thepresldentshouidlightallre
undertheworldtradlngcommunlty
by requesting Congress to set a
statutory deadline" for a drastic
overhaul of GATI.
As part of that process, Babbitt
adds, this country should serve
notice that it "will withdraw from
GAIT unless there is by that time a
comprehensive new agreement
refiectlng the economic realities of
the 198Js."
Japan, he notes, is a special case
because of its industrial t.rgeting,
internal subsidies, cultural anti·
pathy toward imports and other
subtle yet powerful proteclionlst
&gt;barriers.

Indeed. Japan's closed markets
have led . to a situation where it
routinely produces expert surpluses with every worldwide trad·
ing partner except Canada, Austra·
lla and Swit2erland.
This country's trade deficit with
Japan amounted to $36.8 billion last
year (almost :ll percent of the 1984
total) and could grow to $45 blliion
or more this year.
Reagan, suggests Babbitt, ought

to press for bilateral trade negotia·
lions with Japan, then seek adoption of a formula simUar to that
proposed by the semiconductor and · ·
telecommunications industrtes.
It would limit Japanese access to
U.S. markets tothiscountry'sshare
of Japanese markets, thus giving
Japan an Incentive to promote
mutually beneficial reciprocal
trade and economic cooperation.

Berry's World

~.

d

Winter Is On Its Way!
Electric or Gas

CHICKEN &amp; RIB B.B.Q.
WHERE: Tuppers Plains Fire House
WHEN: Sip~. 29 S.vi• Time Starts at 11:00
P1ice: 53.75- Which Includes 1f2 chicken or Ribs
laked leaps, Cole Slaw, Roll, Beverage
PIE OR CAKE soc

Pickens Hardware
MASOII, W. VA.

INGELS FURNITURE -

Sponsored by Orange Twp. V.F.D.

looking Fot
A Rul 811gsln?

BIG DAY FOR ANDRE -Me t rl'a "--re o.w- 11118 . .
second &amp;Jiree.nm homer In lbe llftb 1111i1q of pme Tt
B wu
DawBOD's lhlrd home .,. ot lbe pme, *llnlwu IDibe llnlllaiDC.
DaW!IOD had a total ol etpt RBI'e, alx of &amp;liem Ill - ltitala&amp;, lo lie a
maJor Jeacue leape record. The Expaa bealllle Cuba n·ll. (UP:I).

«•r,

NOW IS THE
TIME TO BUY •••
Prices Have Gone -Down,
Down, Down!

Mets continue-ch8se
in games at Wrigley
By MIKE TULLY
Ul'J Natklnal Ba8eball Writer
The New York Mets are pursuing
a pennant In a ballpark where
pitchers are raising the white flag.
'fltree games removed from the
National Leagoe East lead with 11
games to play, New York today
visits Wrigley Field. where the most
recent ballgame produced 32 runs.
"li was unbelievable, simply
unbelievable," Cubs' manager Jim
Frey Said Tuesday after Montreal's
17-15 victory fNer ChiCIIIO.
Andre Dawson led Montreal wtth
three homers and eight RBI.

IOYS &amp; •N'S
lEATIIII. UIEIKAN MADE

ss

DIESS CASUALS AND
JOGGEIS FOI THE
WHOLE FIIIILY

WORK SHOES &amp;
(IIAIIID
&amp; UP
IELOW (OSTI
WESTEIN BOOTS
LADIES BLOUSES, SLACKS &amp; SWEATERS

to help the Dodgers surge closer to
the NL West title. The DocJ&amp;en can
take tl2 !lvtslon with any comblna"
lion of their own vlctortes or
Cincinnati losses totallngseven. Bob
Knepper fell to 15-11.

S2to S10

$4

.

YOU DON'T NEED A SIDEWALK SALE FOR
'
THESE PRICESI

......... GI&amp;D&amp;a3
At San Diego, KW1 Bevacqua

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capped a tour-run fourth with a
two-run homer to lead tbe Padres to
a 4-3 victory aver the San Francllco
Giants. Dave Dravecley, 13-10,
pitched five Innings filr t12 victory. ·
De.ve I.al'blnt, 7-15, took the Joss.

SIMONS
PICK·A·PAIR
lfl THE HIAIT Of POMIIOY

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry Inc.
MIDDLEPORT

992·2635

~ ~run r----~::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::========================~----

Daw.m 1nhit
a pa1rfifth tol&gt;euliill!
homers
a 12-run
the first major-leaguer to hit two
oomerstn thesamelnn!nitwke. He
did it against Atlanta In 19'18.
New York' sRon Darllng,IS-5, will
pitch against Chicago's Reggie
Patterson. Right now, the the last
thing the Mets need is the uncertainty of Wrigley Fleid. They are
chasing a St. Louis Cardinal team
that !leemingly can't lose.
On Tuesday, NewYorkremalned
three games behind the Cards with a
7-1 victory over the Philadelphia
Phlllies.
First baseman Keith Hernande-z
got the game-winnlng RBI for his
first -inning sacrifice Oy that gave
the Mets a 1-IJiead. Itwashis23rdol
the season, a new major-league
record, breaking the mark d. 22 set
by Harold Baines of the Chicago
White Sox In 1983.
Hernandez, however, said he was
rot that impressed with thestatlStic.
The sacrifice fly was also h1s lOth
of the season. a Mets' record.
Elsewhere. St. Louis shaded
Pittsburgh 54, Los Angeles beat
Houston 7-2, Cincinnati topped
Atlanta · 7-5 and San Diego nipped
San Francisco 4-3.

Cardinals 5, Mellt
At St. Louis, Terry Pendleton
collected his third game-wlnnfug hit
in his last five games with a two-nm
single to help the Cardinals notch
their filth straight victory and 12th In
their last l3 games. Rick Horton, 3-2,
waslhewtnner.KenDayleynotched
his nth save. LeeTuMellfell to~10.
Dodsers 7, Allr•s2
At Houston, Bob Welch, 12-4,
tossed a six-hitter and drove In two
runs and Mike Marshall went4:ror·5

Linebacker Dinkel
signed by Bengals

"For hfiven's sake/ This Isn't a GAME we're
playing here - this Is FOOTBALL."

..

CJNCno!NATI (UPI) - Tom 195CwhenBobGrbnweat:»&gt;ifilrlhe doubledoowntherlghtfleldllneand llneandscoredonRose'alnfleklwt. ;::
Browning, winnlngeat rookie New' York Yankees.
Eddie Milner hit a t...o-run homer,
Dave Parker walked and scored on :,·
pltchl!r 1n the maJors, wW try
Ted Puweqlltched the last two his third ot the year, to rt(lht. Max Buddy Bell's double to lett-center.
Saturday to beconll! the first rooJcle . innlnga b' his 24th save as the Venable tr1plf!d OOWI1 the right field
slzzllniRedswonfortheelghthtlme , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ln31)'1!1U'Stowtn:llpmes.
The 25-year·old lettbander In n1ne 11ames. But, Clnc!nilatllost
notcbed his 19th victory in Clnclnna· growd to Los Angeles In the dlase
tl'a 7-5 win CNer Atlant. Tuelday fortheNatlonaJLeagueWesttitleas
Jtlibt. That tied him with Harry the Dodien beat Houston 7-2 and
. Ga.tpar (19-llln 1900) for till! most reduced their rna,gtc nwnber for
willa by a Clnclnnati rookie this cllncblngthetltletoseven.
centur.Y. .
·
Atlanta starter Pascual Perez.
Browning, 19-9, with 10 willa in a 1·12, lasted only 1 2-3 Innings.
.row, ls scheduled to pitch again SIUTelldering six hits and five runs.
Saturday
The last
The Reds batted around In a
:II pmes was in four-run second
'
time a

Epidemic of unreason _____R_o_be_rt_~_ai_te_rs

w!l•

..

Reds' rookie Browning notches 19th victory

'

Paga-2~The

The

Ohio

CINCINNATI (UP!) The
Cincinnati Bengals Tuesday plaCed
larry Kinnebrew, their leading
rusher, on four·week InJured reserved and signed linebacker Tom
Dinkel.
Kinnebrew suffered a broken
bone In his left hand in last Sunday's
game against San Diego, a game the
Jl(ongals, ().3, lost 44-41. He has
rushed for 195 yards on 38carrtestlr
a 5.1 average and two twchdowns.
KinnebreW has also caught nine
passes for 91 yards and a touch·
down. His24polntsleadtlte8engala.
Dinkel played for the Benpls
froni1978-1983 before Jumpqtolhe
USFL for two9eiiSOIIII. Here-sltpted
with the BengaJs th1s seasoo but was
waived late in the preseason.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled local
hearings in its Case No. 84-1435-TP-AIR, In the Matter of
the Application of The Ohio Bell Telephone Company for
Authority to Amend Certain of its Intrastate 'Thriffs to In·
crease and Adjust its Rates and Charges and to Change its
Regulations and Practices affecting the Same, at the following
locations within The Ohio Bell Telephone Company's service
territory.
Wednesday, October 2, 1985:
Akron:
Ocasek Government Office Building
1:30 p.m.
161 South High Street
6:30 p.m.
1st Floor Auditorium Hearing Room
Akron, Ohio 44308
Cleveland;
1:30 p.m.
6:30p.m .

Frank J. Lausche State Office Building
. 614 West Superior Avenue
2nd Floor Auditorium
Cleveland, Ohio 44113

· Thursday, October 3, 1985:
Youngstown: City Hall
6:30 p.m.
26 South Phelps Street
Council Chambers- 6tlr Floor
Youngstown. Ohio

Monda~, October 7,' 1985:
Colum us:
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
1:30 p.m.
Borden Building
6:30 p.m.
180 East Broad Street
11th Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43266· 0573
Springfield:
6:30p.m.

City Hall
76 East High Street
Forum .:._ 1st Floor
Spriggfield, Ohio 45502

Wednesda , Octo r 9, 1985:
ity unicipal Building
123 South Third Street
Council Chambers -1st Floor .
Steubenville, Ohio 43954
Thursday, October 10, 1985:
. Middletown: City Building
6:30 p.m.
1 City Center Plaza
City Commission Chambers- Lower Level
Middletown, Ohio 45042
Canton:
6:30p.m.

City Council Office
Council Chambers
218 Cleveland Avenue, S.W.
Canton, Ohio 44702

Wednesday. October 16, 1985:
Marietta:
Washington County Courthouse
6:30 p.m .
203 Putnam
Assembly Room
Marietta, Ohio 45750
Thursday, October 17, 1985:
Dayton:
Dayton Municipal Building
1:30 p.m.
101 West Third Street
6:30p.m.
City Commission Chambers - 2nd Floor
Dayton, Ohio 45401
Thledo:
1:30 p.m.
6:30p.m.

Thledo Government Center
1 Government Center
Lucas County Hearing Room - 1st Floor
1bledo, Ohio 43624

By its application, The Ohio BeU Telephone Company seeks
a rate increase which would generate approximately $135
million in additional gross annual revenues based on a test
year consisting of the twelve months ending August 3 I, 1985.
· As a result of its investigation, the Commission's staff has
recommended an increase in the range of $31 million to $52
million.
The major issues in the case raised by objections to the
Staff Report are:
(al The appropriate allowance for working capital;
(bl the appropriate rate of return to be allowed:
(cl the appropriate allowance for depreciation expense;
(dl the appropriate expense adjustments to reflect
applicant's relationship with its affiliates;
(el the appropriate rate design and revenue distribution :
(fl whether a lifeline rate should be established: and
(gl whether two-party residential service should continue
to lie offered.
The purpose of the local hearings is to permit customers of
the company to offer testimony relative to the proposed increase.
It is, therefore,
ORDERED. That the above findings be observed. It is,
further,
ORDERED, That a copy of this Entry be served upon all
persons and parties previously served copies of the Staff
Report of Investigation and upon, all parties of record .

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION_OF OHIO

By: Barth E. Royer
Attorney Examiner

THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY

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Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

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Wadneedey, September 25, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

ahama, Southwestern remain ·unbe.a ten

Meet the Tornadoes.

By DALE RO'DIGEB, Jr.

~lic key

T ucker
5-10, 150 pound
Junior lineman

to their fourth straight win.
OVP News Editor
The Tornadoes, meanwhlle, were
Believe It or not - Friday night
whitewashed by Green's Bobcats
marks the halfway point of the 1985
lJ.(). The Bollcats scored almost
football season. Thus far, there have
Immediately following the opening
been a lew su~prlses for fans
kickoff. Sou them played wlthou !the
throughout the area, especially
services of three veterans, Kelley
those In the SVAC. Two area teams
Grueser, Jimmy Wolfe and Bt1an
which wage war against loop
Freeman. Pete Roush, a sophoopponents, Southwestern and Wa·
more, led the Tornadoes oftenslve
hama remain undefeated.
attack with 73 yards rushing In 11
Going Into the final week of
carries. CharUe Boso added 67
non-conference competition, two
yards.
teams, Kyger Creek and Sou the m
Al!llleiy does II
are stW searching for that elusive
Eastern, a 10-8loser to Butfalo r1
first victory. Friday's schedule
Putnam County takes Its 1-3 record
finds Hannan, W.Va. visiting
on the road against the Improving
Southwestern; Oak Hlll at Hannan
Symmes VaHey Vikings. Last
Trace; Portsmouth Notre Dame
Friday night, a third period safety
plays the Bobcats In Kyger Creek's
proved to be the difference as a
home opener of the 1985 football
bigger Bison squad edged the
season; Hamlin, W.Va., Is at North
Eagles, 10-8. Held scoreless the first
Gallla and Eastern at Symmes
period, Buffalo went to the alr In the
Valley .
· second stanza only to see a stubborn
Last Friday night , Coach Jack
Eagle secondary respond with
Janies' Southwestern Highlander s
several great plays. Eastern took a
came through with their fourth
lead when senior John Rice scooped
straight victory, a stunning 20-15
up a loose ballandrambled75yards.
thrUier over Oak HUt.
Royce Bissell hit Kevin Morris for
Andy Halslop got Into the scoring
the extra points and an 8-0 lead.
act for SWHS with a six yard pass
Shortly afterwards, Buffalo got Into
from Justy Burleson. Oak Hill came
the scoring act oo a two yard run by
back In the second period on a live
quarterback Lee Halkel. Riehle
yard pass from Kim Strickland to
Wyant ran the two point conversion,
Brenton Brown. Later that period,
tying the game at 8-8. The safety
Southwestern struck agaln on a
ca me in the third quarter when
60-yard bomb from Burleson to
Eastern mishandled a 'squlbb-Hke'
Halslop. The Oaks cut the margin in
ldckofl.
the fourth period . when Larcy
Symmes Valley, meanwhlle, had
Adkins scored from one ,yard out.
little trouble In recording Its third
Jim Burnett Iced the Highlanders'
victory In four outings, »0 over a
victory on a two yard run with 1: 35
punchless Kyger Creek team. The
tell In the contest.
Vikings' Sylvester Bloomfield led
Wahama . heads Into Friday's
the onslaught with 201 yards rushing
game at Southern fresh off a 3-7
In 34 carries. In thf.' second period,
victory over Parkersburg Catholic.
Meadows broke loose on a 61 yard
J eff Barnltz connected for two
TD jaunt and Patterson scored on a
touchdown passes and ran for
one yard run. Bloomfield's one yard
another In pacing the White Falcons
run in the fourth quar!Pr ended the

Scott Grueser
&amp;-I, 180 pound
Junior end

Tony Cmmolly
:;.5, 150 pound
Sophomore back

Chris Stout
5-9, 120 pound
Freslunan back

.

game's scoring. Defensively, linebackers Bert Aid~ .and Scott
WOilams were joined by Greg Webb
and Davkl Rowe in slopping any
potentlal scoring drives tor the
Bollcats. A win Friday night against
Easlern would ties Symmes Val·
. ley's most vlctQry mark In the
school's hls!Dry In football.
At Cheshire, Coach Mel Coen's
young Kyger Creek· Bobcats wW
attempt ID get an offense moving
after being shutout In three of four
games. The Inexperienced BObcats
have also been hurt by Injuries to
lcey veterans.
Coach Dave Owens: Improving
Hannan Trace Wildcats face
another tough assignment against
the Oak HUJ Oaks. Last Friday
night, Hannan Trace blitzed Ironton
St. Joe, :D-7 behind the efforts of
freshman quarterback Jay Jarreu,.
Jarrell rushed for one touchdown
and hlt Grady Johnson and Jason
Jones on two other scorlng strikes.
North GaiU, snapped ·Its . two
game losing streak last Friday
night, 28-24 against Portsmouth
East. David Roush scored two
touchdowns, quarterback Mike
Kemper threw for one and scored
another as Coach Dave Angles'
Pirates moved their season record
to 2·2. Roush led the Pirates' ground
attack with l:Jlyards In 21 attempts.

EAST MEIGS -Eastern's Ea ·
glettes pounded out a ha rd-fought
win in the opening set, but tha t .
triumph wasn' t e nough as visiting
For t Frye came back to ha ndily
defeat Eastern 15·12, 3-15, and 1·15
in three 13) sets here Mnday In
non-Joague volleyball action. East·
e rn is 4·6 and 3·4 in the SVAC.
Dean na Hughes led the Ca dettes
wit h 11 serving poin ts. We ndy
Sa mpso n had eight, Tina Skinner
seven and Cathy Cla rk five.
The trJo of Ta nya Savoy, Kris t!
Hawk a nd Marga re t Horner each
tall ied four poin ts, while Melissa
Nutte r added three, Beverly Wigal
two, Lcsa Rucker one a nd Arlene
Ritchie a nt'.
Coach Pam Douthitt sta ted, " We
played rea l wPII our first game bot h
ollensively a nd defensively. We did
·a lot or standing and not moving ou r
second and third game and it beat
us. We have bf&gt;en playing well our
fi rst game then making mf.'ntal
mistakes from then on. Our serving

Tanya Savoy eight , Ma rgaret
Horner fi ve and l.esa Rucker and
Melissa Nutter fou r each.
F or Southwestern Sandy P a trick
was the top point get ter wi th 11. L.
Edwa rd s added nine, K Rose
seven, J . Donta six , C. Comstock
sLx , Vicki Hammond six , and Diana
Nida one. Eastern hosts Meigs
tonight and Oa k Hill Thursday.
.

.
RACINE - The Racine Volun·
tl'Cr Fi r&lt;' Departmen t · will be
sponsoring a Volleyball tourna·
ment , called the fi rst annua l
" Racine Fa ll Classic, " on Satur·
day. Oct. 12.
Any. a nd a ll teams will be
welco me. The entry fee Is only $10
per tea m . Mixed tea m s a re
welcome.
The tourname nt will begin a t 1
p.m. a nd end when a ll brackets

hurt
In its
us last
aga outing
in ."
Eastern claimed
a hard-fought win over Southwest·
ern. winning 16·14,111-1.1 and l6-l4in
t hre&lt;&gt; sets.
Kristi Haw k led EHS wit h 11
)X)ints, Beverly Wiga l hnd nine,

teams
have been
should
completed
contact
. AllLl'C
interested
Floyd,
Fout1h Street. Racine, Ohio 45771 ,
or call nl4·949&lt;J()73 or 949-2520.
Teams need not be established
teams a lready participa ting at a
given level. " All " team s may ent er.

r.:====~~===::; i
The Daily Sentinel

backed by ~rtCarved 's Full Lifetime Warranty
This offer expires November 30 , 1985 and IS to

C&amp;llf.

Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017 .

Sill
Min•

7

We Reserve The Right To ·
Limit Quantities

15%

.523 16~
.1/n ~
...0~
.l\1 42'h

STORt HOUR';,
· Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M

8500~­

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IW ll6
'78 12 .53!
7-t 77 .fM 11
71 IKI .470 14
$ 82 .457 16
· ST ro BJ :l7~

""'""

T,.u

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY . .OH.

~··ReM&amp;b

POSTMASfER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,

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SVIISCRJPTION RATES
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PRICES EFFE'CHVf THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 28, 1985

Sloan~ ~.

1&lt;0a1 City 2
Oakland 10, 0f!"ttelancl8
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Bllton IHW'S( 10-121 at Toronto IKey 14~ 1.
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rillekro 0-11. 8 p.m . .
Baltln'lorr (Flanagan 4-4 ! at Milwaukee
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MlMf'IOUI iBb'~ 14-161 11 Texas

!R\aiPIJ 2-~). &amp;11 p.m. ·
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13 Wet"kS ............ .......... ............ $14.56

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MIIVIPtCJia al Texa1, nlghl
Ollcii{O at Ca!Uomlll, nilhi
Kansas Clly at Sta!tlt. niP!
NATIONAL U!'AGUE

26 Weeks ..... ............ .. ............... $29.12
52 Weeks .................................. $58.24
Outside Ohio
13 W~ks ............. _. ............ ........ $15.60

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M.D.

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

m-

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79 12 .52.1 16
n 18 .m 2.1
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51 98 JoJl 43

S. Fran.

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Chuck Roast ..l~

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76 "a .500 13
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MonU\'al 17, Chlca«&lt; 15

Ntw York 7, Phlladelphia 1
llnt:'IIU'IIIU 7, ATlanta 5
St . Louis 5, PlltiW11th 4
Ia Anae~es 7, HOQSton 2
San Dk'f!o 4, San Francisco 3

$189
$16 9

BONELESS

62 !AI9 82 67 b!iO 6

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Round Steak

L Pet. GB
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W.....,.a G.,. ~AI 'J'kn. EDT)
New Y9C'II tDaruna 16-51 a1 Olt~aeo

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Montreal (Las~ !&gt;-141 at Plltsbufl':h

tRcu!k'bt'l 13-71. 7 ~ 35 p.m.
AUiiltla 1Pl:'l'l"l l-11 1 at Clnclnna.Tl (11bb9
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Philadelphia !Hudson 7-121 at Sr. Loul!i
1Cox 16-9), lt3.'\ p.m .
1...c:J5 An.,-let (Valt&gt;mUPia 17-10) at HoUston
1Ryan t-121, 8:35p.m.
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GRADE A WHOLE

Chicken

! Hoyt 15-81. JO :lS p.m .

,..,....,., Games
AU&amp;nta at Cincinnati
New Yoric at Ollcago
Montrt'll at PltTJbul'Jlh, nilrtlt

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be used only for the purchase oi14K gold
AriCarved high school class rings .

V4 Pork Loin ••••
lB.

ChlcaRO cNU - AniDirred pltt'her Rk!ll
!t.ltcllffto wUI bP IK11Yaftod from thP dllabitd
liSt and wUlstart Friday.
Hooston - ACQuired lrtk&gt;lder Nf!'deor
• ' HorTa from NI'W York IAI.. I tl c-ompk!tt&gt; the
deal tl\81 ..nt pitcher JOE' Nlekro to the

FREE cu•tam fe•tures an fOK and 14K

golcf ArtCarved high school class rings.

Yanklft .
Oakland - Acqu~ pitcher Robert
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HAM &amp; CHEESE LOAF ••••••• ;,. Sl. 99
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SUPIIJDI IIEAKFAST

212 E. rt\ain, Pomeroy

HOIIEIIADE

BAING THIS AD

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HAM SALAD ..............·.......». ....... 99&lt;
SHREDDED S2 .19 lt. SiiCED lB. $ 1 89
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FRESH PORK BUTT

California t p

compiE'4e thr Sept. 10 tradr for pitcher Don
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Steak/Roast

Boston - Slgrwd p:uard OenntsJohnJQn to
a 4-)'('ar cuntnct.

Dallas - Aaft't'd to Twmo; with! w In g m a
II [)('flt'4 Sdum'lpl
11

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$
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New York - Siltfll'dauanJTwnt '1\Jcl«&gt;rto
mu ltl·)'t'eT mntracl.

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Cololllal Ath!Ptl(' Conft"l"t.'I'ICt• - NamNI
'Thomas Ye•r commls!lloncr .
flor!WI lnt.-rnatlonill - Naml"d Em ilY
Harsh, LaM)' Baldwin and !7ob Str!lz

SUHitOI

as~tslant athktk' dln'c1or.'i.

SUHIIOI 12 OZ. ,ACKAGED

WIENERS .........................!Ali.. S1.29

Volleyball Ratings
NEW KNOXVll.LE. Olio tUP JI - Thls
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ratlnp. mmplled by Chuck Bioldm.
pr£'!\kk'lll of thr otllo Hl¢1 ~1100\
Volk'yball Coarhes AWJCiallon.
and
dl!.lrlbutC'd try UPI HirSt piP ~·OWS and

v.:'«'k 's

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FISHER'S BULK HOT

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PEPPER CHEESE .......t.t 52.69
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GO NORTH ON RT. 7 FROM THE MODEL TO NEWPORT
13.2 MILES. CONTINUE THROUGH NEWPORT ON Rt. 7
APPROX. 2.3 MILES TO JOB SITE. PATWIL SIGN ON
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Point Pleasant

19 '10
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75 'li
661!4
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CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS GROUP

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L Pet. oa
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Member: Unlred Press International,

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Published every afternoon, Monday
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21~. Second clast postage paid at Pomeroy,
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The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Wadne11iey,

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CANTALOUPE .......M~JI .. 79&lt;

In pat't'nll'lf'!t'St:

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to.Brlpll' 111110-01
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INSTANT COFFEE ............. JM •• S2. 99
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IVORY SOUP ••••••••••••••••••••••• mr.•• 9 9 &lt;

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Wadnutlay, September 26, 1986

Page-6 The Daily Sentinel

Players, union bo~s resisf.v olunteer drug testing proposal
NEW YORK (UP!) - Commlssloner Peter Ueberroth, hoping to
rebuild his sport'ssuU!edtmage,has
asked all major league playet:S to
approve a voluntary drug testing
plan and help clear !be "cloud
hanging over~-"
· But the plan, announced at a
TUesday news conlerence, met
resistance from players and the
headofthelrunlon. ll9thquestloned
whether Ueber roth was oversttyping his authority .
The commissioner, who withheld
comment throughout !be recentiy
concluded cocaine trafficking trial
of Curtis Strong In Pittsburgh,
finally responded to the current
spate of drug stories In baseb&lt;ill by .

sending personal letters to all
players, asking that they agree to
undergothreedrugtestsperseason.
The only alternative to this
voluntary testing, he said, would be
Inestimable harm to everyone
associated with the game and
Inevitable ~~Ctlon by Congress.
Some clubs voted on the plan
before TUesday's games. Others
postponed !be vote until later this
week. The commissioner has asked
that herecelveeachclub'sresponse
no later than Friday morning.
'"'ben!'s a cloud hanging over
baseball, and It's a cloud called
drugs," Ueberrothsald. "Whatlam
asking each major league player to
do Is voluntarily participate In our

Parker favors .
•
testmg program ·
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cincinnati Reds' star Dave Parker, who
recently testified he used drugs
earlier In his career. says he favors
Baseball Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth'srequest that all players
agree to be tested for drugs - as
long as the players' union Is Involved
In the program.
"I wouldn't mind being tested for
drugs and Tdon'tthlnkthere'sagoy
in this clubhouse who would mind,"
Parker said late TUesday night after
the Reds had beaten Atlanta 7·5.
"But! would favorthattbeprogram
be administered under the guidance
of the players' association."
Ueberrothsent letters TUesday to
all major league players asking
each to agree to be tested for drugs
three times a season.
The Reds, )ike most teams, held a
meeting to discuss Ueberroth's

will walt till the end of the season.
We'll just have to walt and see what
happens."
After tbe Atlanta players met to
hear details of Ueberroth's proposal, Dale Murphy, the Braves'
representative to the players' union,
said drugs In baseball posed "a
question that needs an answer."
"It's an unfortunate problem In
society and we've got problems In
baseball, too," said Murphy. "It's a
question we need an answer ilr. It
needs to be addressed, but I think It
needs ID be addressed through the
players' association.
"Personally," said Murphy, "I'm
kind of on the middle of the fence
about the commissioner's recom·
mendatlon. Weprobablycould help
people this way, but I'm not sure of
the best approach yet."'·

testing program. !tis the only way to sense, but don't go directly to the
players."
show the public - oor fans - that
Most players contacted TUesday
baseball Is clean."
Reaction to the proposal was split responded slmllarly.
"I agree with his (Ueberroth's)
along management ·player lines,
with baseball executives suppo~ premise, but basically I've asked
the commissioner and players him, as far asoorclublsconcerned.
disputing his strategy, If not hts to pot it Into a proposaHype format
and take It to the Players'
Intentions.
"We are all In agreement that Association or the Joint Drug
something has to be done,'' said New Cooncll," said Kent TekUive or the
York Met. outfielder George Foster. Phlllles, lbe NatlonalLeagueplayer
"But do It through the Players representative.
Dave Parker of the Reds, who
Association." ·
admitted
· In testimony against
Donald Fehr, acting executive
Strong
that
he has used drugs, said
director of the Major League
he
favors
Ueberroth's
plan, but only
Players Association, said he viewed
Ueberroth's proposal with "distress If the Players Association Is
and sadness." He said the action Involved,
was "very possibly, If not probably, · "I wouldn't mind being tested for
a violation of law" because It drugs and Jdon'tthlnktbere'sagoy
In this clubhouse who would mind, ••
bypassed tbe union.
"If they have a proposal to make, Parker said. "But I would favor that
make tbe proposal," Fehr said. "If tbe program be administered under
tbere are speCifics Involved, tell us !be goldance rl. the Players'
·
what they are. We are not refusing Association."
Mike
Sclosc!a,
player
representaanything In a collective bargaining

tlyf for the Dodgers, said any drug
testing plan should go through the
union because, "It would be eesler
for us to have conl!dence . tn the
program."
Bill Giles, president of the
Phlllles, typified management's
stance when he said: "We have a
problem and It's oot going to go
away, so we have to attack it.
"This Is one way to do It," Giles .
said. "If you can't have mandatory
testing, then do It voluntarily
becaUse testing does Work."
Ueberroth, who previously had
s8.id hewantsto"getrldofdrugs, not
players, •' stressed that his proposed
testing program would not carry
any penalties and that It would be
carried out with strict

conlldentlaUty.
Players who tested posili'•ewould
be allowed to continue playing while
tbe!r cases receive personaiW!d
attention, he.added.

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

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

Mtll£N INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CAll 992-3381
992-2342

For Appointment Call 7 42-205 7

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Starting Se/iemlx!r3(), Central Trust is
havingaSale on somethingJVU mJily UK1I1i. .
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Member HJ/C

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pro~sa!.
"We have no gripe about testing," II"r:::~:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

said Parker. "The players' union
should be Involved, but as for
Individual players, I don't know of
who would mind some sort of
drug testing."
Parker also agreed with Ueberroth's "walt and see" approach to
players like himself who testified
they had used drugs.
Ueberroth said be had decided 1\()t
to take any action at this time
. against Parker and the otbers who
admitted to drug use In testimony
during a trial at Pittsburgh that
resulted last week In the conviction
of caterer CurtlsStrongon 11 counts
of cocaine trafficking charges.
"I'm gathering facts and transcripts and will talk to those players,"
Ueberroth said. "I may hold
meetings. Although tberehasbeena
great demand for me to do
something dramatic, I'm not going
to do that today."
Said Parker. "The man said he

any

By.The Bend

.

-

'.Philathea group holds meeting

Rutland Garden. Club meets

Plans were made to prepare and · meeting with members commentmembers ahd friends ctthe church
Ing on tbelr vacations for roll call.
, serve the annual HomebuUders
were put on the prayer Us!. A food
Dorothy Roach and Farle Cole gave auction was held at the dose d. the
banquet on Oct. 15 when the
the secretary and treasurer reports,
Phllatbea Women d. the Middleport
meeting. Mrs. Rice and Mrs. Cooper
Thelma
Boyer reported on Dowers served refreshments to those
Church or Christ met recently.
and cards, and there were acknowl· named and Joann Conant, Rose
: Committees appointed . Include
edgments
from Ron Moyer and the, Reynolds, Clara Conroy,- Louise
' Clyde Allensworth, Regina SWift,
Edward
families.
Ella Mae Daugherty, and Mildred
M~Elhlnney, Francis Roush, ~
Devotions were given by Cathy rothy Baker, Delcle Forth, Phy!Us
Riley, kitchen; Martha Childs, Bea
Cooper, "Sensible Sllena,," ·and GUkey, Mtldred Hawley, Grace
Stewart, Cathy Cooper, Betty
scripture from Psalm 34, and Nora HawJer, Bea Stewart, ClydaAllensMcKinley, Phyllis -Baker, and
Rice, "Harvest Blesslnlis." Several WOrth, Martha Childs, Regina SWift,
Sharon Stewart, dining room; and
• Mildred
Hawley, Grace Hawley,
and Ella Mae Daugherty.
. and Reva Beach; cleanup.
Mildred Riley presided at the

The fall regional meeting to be
held Oct. 16 at Rhodes Hall, Rio
Grande, was announced at the
recent meeting of the ~uttand
Garden Club held at tbe home of
Miss Ruby Diehl and Mrs. Eugene

n tel!iii.J. REYI!Ietosrou.ccoco.

YOU SHOULD KNOW THE FACTS

Arrangements carrying out the
theme, "Black Magic", using black

vines were displayed by Melanie
Stetbem and PatHolterattherecent
meeting oft~ Shade Valley Counc!I
of Floral Arts held at AliCe
Thompson's log' cabin.
Debbie Weber presided at the'
meeting with members responding
to roll call by naming someone
famous who wore black, the study
color !or the month. Mrs. Weber
gave out educational papers on how
not to kill trees, and.Jane'I'honlpson,

WUM holds
•

meetmg
"Let There Be Light'' was the
program topic at the recent meeting
, of the Forest Run United Methodist
Wo)llen held at the church.
Mary Nease was the leader using
' scrlptute from Genesis 1. Readers
, · taking part were Evelyn Holan,
:: Betty Blackwood, Kathleen Scott,·
· , and Mary K. Roush. There was a
:: song, "I SUrrender All" to conclude
·· 'the program. Other readings and
poems Included "Live by Faith, not
by Feelings" by Faye Wiggins;
• . ''Simple Caring'' by Mary Nease; '
' · "Anywhere's a Place rl. Prayer If
..God Is There" by LUI!an Napper;
· _·"Talk to Jesus" by Ada Nease; "To
~ · the Peak or Love" by May Holter;
''Give" by Naomi Wyatt; . "Life's
__Little Blessings" by Hilda Yeauger.
· Hilda Yeauger presided at the
meeting opening with reading of i~
23rd Psalm and groop singing of
,"Send the Light." A love offering
was taken and It was noted that four
members attended the annual
meeting held recently In Logan. ·'
Twenty-two sick and shutln calls
were reported.
A bake sale was planned for the
next meeting. Mrs. Wiggins gave
devotions reading "I Met God In the
Morning."
Refreshments were served by
hostesses, Mrs. BlackwOod and Ada
Nease, after tbe g'roupsang"Let the
Lower Lights Be Burning" "and a
closing prayer by Mrs. Wiggins.

REVIVAL - Bev. Don Bock,
Nazarene evangelillt, camp
meelln« llpj!8ker and radio
of the "Revival 'l'olbQI"
pn&gt;JII'IIIIl, wm hold revival set'\11cealor the Middleport Nuanne
Church beglmlng Tuellday and
continuing lhrough Sunday. Services will begin al 1 p.m. elldl
night and al9: 30 11.m. on Sunday
morning. Charles and N1111cy
Coyle, co-pastors, and the church
members, Invite lhe pabllc to

River Club, Sharon Jewell, Star
Club, Juanita Lambert, Margie
Davis, Marie Blrehtleld, JoAnn
Stewart, and Charlotte . Willford,
Rutland Friendly Gardeners, and
Kate Jarrell.
Atldns.
Beskles the arrangements and
The meeting was held In conjunc- specimens of the show, dried
tion with a home flower show with
materials for use In arranging and
guests Including !be judge, Sheila
an educational book display were
Curtis, Shade Valley Cooncll of featured . The appointment of Lu·
Floral Arts, Mrs. Bernice Carpeter
clUe Macomber as regional director
and Mrs. t;:lleen Buck, Bend d. t!_le
wasnoted,andaboardmeettngtobe
beld Oct. 12 at Chester United
Methodist Church was noted.
Mrs. James Nicholson, president,
thanked those who placed arrange·
program chairman, handed out the . nients In the · Rutland Friendly
new yearbooks. Theme for tile year Gardeners recent flower show. Miss
~ "Cats." Favors for the district
Diehl, Mrs. Chris Diehl, Pearle
meeting of th!' Garden Club of Ohio,
Canaday, and Mrs. Nicholson were
Inc . . were prepared. The Oct. 16
ribbon wlnnei:s. The Club presented
regional meeting was noted as was a
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners
Christmas flower' show to be held
with a check In observance of their
Nov. 23 and 24 at the Senior Citizens
25th anniversary for a planting and
Center.
•
gave each member an Afrlc an
Shelta Taylor, Melanie Stethem
violet.
and Sheila Curtis attended the Bob
Evans tour spotnsored by the

..

PH. (614) 992-7270

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE
- Computerized Acountlng
-Interne! Control
•
- Tax Planning

-Sales .Anelyail

attend.

Margaret Ella Lewis thanked the
members for taking part In the
Meigs County Fair flower show.
Pictures of the Brookside Gardens
onSUgarLoafMountalnwereshown
by Mrs. Atkins and Miss Diehl. Mrs.
Lewis passed out gardening tips for
November taken from an Extension
Departmet calendar. Members
gave suggetlnns for control of lawn
and garden pests.
Cards were signed for several
members who are Ill including Mrs.
Ernest Ward and Mrs. Ralph
TUrner. The traveling prtze, provided hy Miss Diehl, was won by
Mrs. VIrgil Atklns. Mrs. Lambert
won the hostess gift.
Dorothy Woodard dlstrtbuted
October program material. The
meeting wlll be held on Oct. 28 at the
home ·of Mrs. Canaday. The
schedule for the Meigs County
Christmas flower show to be held at
the Senior Citizens Center on Nov.
23-24 wlll be discussed at the October
meeting.

~+T

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
618 EAsf MAIN STREET
POMEROY,OHI045769

-Payroll Proc.essing
-Federal &amp; State Reports
- ~rofit llo Laos Statements
-Financial Statements

THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
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FISH SQUARE

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PH.992-2556

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Starting Se/iemlx!r3(), CentralTmst is
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1985 PLYMOUTH HORIZON

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Member FJJ/C

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1985 CHRYSLER FIFTH AVENUE
1985 DODGE D-15

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HOUIS 7:30 AM·6:00 PM

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For over 30 years,
Winston has sold more cigarettes
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Warning: Tha Surgeon General Has Delarmined
That Cigaretle Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

The facts
speak for themselves.
that's why Winston is America's Best.
UlTRA liGHTS, 6 mg. "taf', 0.4 mg. n~otine av. par crgarane. FTC Repon JAN. '65: UlTRA liGHTS 100's: 5 mg. "tar", 0.4 mg. nicotine, liGHTs;
10 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine, liGHTS 100's, 11 mg. "ter", 0.8 mg. nicotine, KING, 16 mg. "ter", 1.2 mg. nicotine, .BOX.17 mg. "tar", 1.1 mg. nicotina.
100's, 18 mg. "taf', 1.2 mg. nicotina. av. par cigeratte by FTC method,
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Film al Rutland
Rlll'LAND - The fllm, "God'S
Prison Gang" will be shown at the 1----------------------~--------------....!...----------------------------------­
Rutland Church at God at 7 p.m.
Wednesday. In the film, four former
prisoners, George Meyer, AI Ca·
pone's getaway drlvem; Floyd
HamUton, last of the Bonnie and
Clyde Gang; Jerry Graham,
robbery king of California, and Ted
Je!ferson, convicted on drng,
rtlbbery apd mu_rder charges, share
their ellperlences with religion
lJI:hlnd bars. The public Is welcome.

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KElLER BUSINESS. SERVICES

P""''"

Amsbary Chapter
plans annual day
at Royal Oak Park
The Ken Amsbary Chapter of
lzaak Walton will sponsor Its
annual National Hunting and
Fishing Day Saturday, Sept. 28,
at Royal Oak Park. Day's
activities will begin with registration at 9 a.m. Information will
include presentations on Hunter
Safety and Ethics, Turkey Ca lling, Filleting, Ice Fishing,
Trapping and Reloading.
Those attendi ng will pantclpate In canoeing, archery, black·
~wder, and trap shooting, The
day will be topped of! with a
meal provided by lzaak Walton
and a prize drawing at 3 p.m.

Wedneldey, 841ptember 26. 1985

Pege-7
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The Daily Sentinel

Shade Valley G&gt;:uncil meets·

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SALES HOURS
. Mon.-Thurs. 1:00 o.m.-1:00 p.m.
Friday. , ·, ••• 1:00 a.m.-6:00p.m.
Saturday • 8:00 a.m.-4:00p.m •
Cloaed Sundoy

(ooper Qrysler-·Piymouth-Dodge

�•

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.'

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Free .,....... da,y
· LONG.BO'ITOM- LougBottom
Community Association will meet
' 7: ::vJ p.m . Wednesday at the comWEDNESDAY
munity buUdlng. Ladles of the
MIDDLEPORT FeeneyAssociation will meet at6: ::vlp.m. to
Bennett Post 128, American Legk&gt;n,
finalize plans for the fall
andtheAuxillarywUlmeetWednes·
smorgasbord.
day night at the hall. A 6:::vl dinner
wlll ptecede the meetings at 7: ::vJ
POMEROY- Wildwood Garden
p .m. Dues are payable. The Legion
. Club will moo Wednesday, 7:00
District 8 conference will be held at
p.m. at the home of Ada Holter,
Wellston, Sunday, while the AuxilMembers are to bring materials tor
Iary district conference will be at
a dried picture.
Middleport on Oct. 3.

Calendar

TIIURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter r1
Make Today Count will meet at 7
p.m. Thursday attheSenlorattzens
Center In Pomeroy. All persons with
life thn!atenlng illnesses, their

friends and relatives are Invited.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Bela · Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty, will have a card party and
style show at 7: ::vlThursday night at
the Pomeroy village hall.

BIG BEND

Wednudey, Sllftlinber 26. 1881

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-8 The Deily Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Presbyterlall Church Women's Atr
soclatlon will have a potluck dlnller
Thursday, 6: ::vJ p.m., at the chUrch.
Group I wJJI present the prOgram.
POMEROY -Mld-weekseivlces
at Morse Chapel Church will begin
Thursday at 7: ::vJ p.m. A youth
program wUI be heldMondayat6:30
p.m. Everyone Is Invited.

POMEROY Free clothing day
will be held Thursday at the
SalvatlonAm:&gt;y, ButternutAvenue.
Pomeroy, from 10 a .m. untO noon.
All area residents In need of clothing
arewelcometocome.
'
GI'IIIW! a..IYenary
RACINE -The 50th annlversiii'Y
of Racine Grange will be celebrated

Oct.13, 2: ;II p.m., at the grange hall.
The celebration Is open lothepubllc
. and past masters are Invited to
come. Three 50 year pins and

cer11flcates and one 2!1 year.pin will
he awarded.

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Gardea lnldorpd
HARRISONVIlLE - A garden
tractor poD, sponsoredbytheSclplo
Township VoluniA!er Fire Depart·
rnent, will be held Sunday, ~
temher 29, at the fire statlolt In

HarrlsonVIlle. ThepuDwlllbellnatl
p.m. and will feature tm, 900.1000, . •

1100 and 13XI lb. weight c~ .
Entry fee ls $3. Gate admlsslon Is
$.50. Refreshments will be
available.

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..,;~ to• our 1011 1 wtrt!tc tiol'l regard len ol menula&lt;;tu rer It 'fOU Itt not

E'v.,l)'ltllflg you buv ,at Kroger '' 9ua•.• nt •ith lh~ ~me brll'ld or 1 CO"'P"•Ible br1nd o• refund .,.our puu: hllt

M hlfifld K•oQitf w ~l retuc. your ~ em

'

TENDERBEST

Meat
. ,.

orote

Go Krogering

COPYRIGHT 1985 . THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY ,
SEPT. 22. THROUGH SATURDAY . SEPT . 28, 1985, IN GAlliPOl iS &amp; ""'EROY
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

funk&amp; Wagnall~
New t:nc yclopcd1a

#:

VOLUME 4

.•

Now Available

•

40¢ OFF LABEL

•REGULAR •UNSCENTED

Tide

92 SHEETS PER ROLL
DESIGNER

Bounty
Paper Towels
Single Roll

Detergent

• •

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79

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FRESH WHOLE QUARTER

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BOX

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COUNTRY STYLE

Sliced
Slab Bacon

~

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

•

Tail-Less
T-Bone Steak

LB$139
.

Pound

1

Kroger Gladly
Welcomes Your
Federal Food
Stamps

\

·,·•
.

Pork
Loins

aoz~a--

.~139

JAA

·-

LUNCHEON MEAT
CALIFORNIA

·

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Bartlett
Pears...............

.

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Armour
Treet

.

lb.

BOSC, COMICE OR REO BARTLETTS LB .. . 99¢

QUARTERS

Tokay

KRAFT

Macaroni· &amp;
Cheese Dinner

Grapes
Pound

KROGER REGULAR WHEAT
OR CRACKED

Wheat
Bread .............. .

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•SALISBURY STEAK •SLICED TURKEY
·•BEEF I NOODLES •MOSTACCIOLLI/MEAT

KING SIZE

Sunbeam
Bread

Banquet
Entrees

*1'00

~.~169

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LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
Cllll'llll 1111111 M . lfn. JI.IAT. IEPT. II.
IUIJICT 111
STAn • LOCM rws

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•PINTO •GREAT NORTHERN •NAVY
•WHITE &amp; GOLDEN HOMINY

Sandy .Mac
German Bologna

Springdale

chili•·•·••;•..,
3;:~z·$1 00

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12

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PLEASE

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Payday, Milksliake,
Zero, Butternut
Candy Bars

••

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE ,
SPRITE, TAB,

2-Liter

HOLLYWOOD BRAND

16-oz.

Grade A
Large Eggs ... Doz.

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

oz.

CAN

$

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

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For

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Parkay
Margarine .... r-Ib.

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10-The

Sentinel

Racine fall festival plans continue
RACINE - The Racine Volunteer Fire Department, Racine
Village Council, and local busi nesses have joined together in a
united community effort to make·
plans for the second annual "Fall
Festival" to be held within the
small Ohio River community from
noon to midnight on Saturday, Oct . .
12. AU proceeds from the event wlll
go to the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department.
Many yea.,; ago the "Fall
Festival'' In Racine was quite an
attraction, but as local businesses
(•Josed, planning and promoting the
event became quite a burden as
only a few businessmen were left to
carry on the event. Last year,
businesses and concerned citizens
joined together with the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department to
rejuvenate the event. AltiJJugh It
was a small altair, the results were
quite successful. Thus plans for 19&amp;';
tmmedlately went into effect.
the "Fall Festival" has
This

expanded from a Friday evenlng to
A traveling trophy and team
a 12-hour long, entertainment-filled trophy wUl be presented to the
festival. It Is hoped that this year's winning team. Sponsors are being
event has "a llttle something for sought for the tournament In an
everybody" according to Racine effort to make It more attracUve to
Fire Chief Hank Johnson.
the participants.
Many local clubs and organizaThroughout the afternoon and
tions throughout Meigs County and evening hours various forms of
its surrounding areas wlll be setting entertainment wUI be featured,
up a variety of booths, featuring ·Including Bluegrass, Country and
crafts, games, activities, refresh- Western Music, Rock and Roll, and
ments, and information centers.
marching ba!Jds. A talent siJJw Is
AJ though the final schedule has also in the planning stage.
not been released, plans for the first
Beginning at 6 p.m., a parade wUI
annual "Racine Fall ClaSsic" vol- kick off a full slate of evening
leyball tournament have been set activities. The paradewlllllne.upat
for 1 p.m. at the first station the Southern Junior High School
grounds. The tournament is open to grounds at 5: 15 p.m. Entries are
any and all teams. Mixed teams are currently being sought.
welcome.
Following the parade will be a
The Racine firefighters antici - mini-band festival, featuring many
pate entries from local softball of the area's top high schol
teams, indicating that "several marching bands. The mini-band
softball teams wUl be tossing In festival is open to aU high school
their gloves just to have some fun marching bands, many of which
and to help the fire department." wUI also participate in the parade.
The entry fee Is only $10 per team .

The Daily Sentinel

26,1986

Wednesday,

Ohio

7• 7

0/
/0

FINANCING
AVAILABLE THRU OCT. ·2

C!Il!imnty
FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES

• MWolloporl, Ohio 45760

BOTH ARE 2 DOORS,
EQUIPPED WITH SMALL V-I's

We Also Carry
- • Fi1hlng Supplies.
IUSINISS PHON!.
16141 992·6510
RI$IDENCE PHON!
f6141 992-77!4

tJ

SA~E

BIOI!
Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.
.

Public Notice

of each company do contain a
completa copy of the egree-

STATE OF OHIO
DIVISION OF
BANKS
CERTIFICATE
. OF APPROVAL
THIS IS TO CERTIFY:

ment beft•een the llid banka
with reference to such merger;

end
WHEREAS. the Mid pro-

coedingo of tho otoc:kholdon
do ohow that hold... of o t IWO·thinll of the outotandlng
ltod&lt; of eoch company in the affirmative on lhe

WHEREAS. Tho Fenne!'l
Bank and 5ovinga Company of
Pomeroy, Ohio; Pomeroy,
Ohto# and Farmers Interim
Bank; PoiiWIOf, Ohio, have

-oat forth In
- tho PIpmpooool
..
ocoodiugo;

and

filedO&lt;CIIUIOdtobo-with
tho Suporint- of Bonka
of the s- of Ohio .., tilied
~ of tho proceodingo of
tho dir.:ton end otod&lt;holdon
of ooc:h Mid company with

WHEREAS, the Superin·
_ , of Bonkl hoo - mined thst tho reoulting bonk
-the~of

stetalaw for the formlltion of •
state bonk; -tho 11(1-ent
i• fair to tha ltOCicholcleN,
depos;tota, and C:ntdiltH I of
eoch bonk; and that ouch

rejipect 1o the proposed

merger of said The FarmBf'l
Bank and Savings Company of

Pomemy, Ohio with and in1o
_
said Farmers Interim Bank pu _
under tt.e,corporate charter of , "'""'"' io ""'!!e "" logltimste
the letter end ttde of The
NOW. THEREFORE. the
F.,_.. Bank and Saving. Superintendent of of
Company; and
tho State of Ohio, .,..._,. ta
WHEREAS. the said pro- lhe authority vested in hor by
ceoollngs of tho otod&lt;holdo .. lew, ~ CON«rto ta ouch
nwger, tame to ba trffective

as of tho dooe of buoln-

Public Notice

August31, 19B6. upon filing a
certified ~ of tho Agraement 1&lt;1 Meigo In the office of
tho - r y ol State, to·
gother with • -Iliad ~ of

the approval of the Superintendent of Bankl to such

m_.-. Notlco thenlof thai! be
publiahacl once each week for
four COIIIOCUIIw- beginning not I.._ than Septemt.r
9, 1986, in

1

n8Wipllper of

ge-.1 circullllion · in Meigs

County, Ohio, and • certified
copy of laid pubtication shall
bo with the Superintendent of Banko.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, t

tt.ve lwamto l8't my hana

ond affixed tho Seal of tho
Superintltndent of Bankl this
30th day of August. 19B6.

o/ Unda K. Page

STATE OF OHIO
DIVISION
OF BANKS
CERTIFICATE OF
AUTHORITY NO. 1060X

To - Fermn Interim Bank
I, Undo K. Pogo, Suporintandoo\t of Bonka, do hereby
COt1lly that Flll'm.. Interim

Bank.---lotabe
conducted ot l'mleroy In
Meigo Couroy, Ohio, hOI

complied with .. the .,..,..
lion• pruvidod by low ond il

entitled ta commence tho

-

of Bllnlclng effective

August 3t, 1985. eo oat forth
in h1 ArticiH of ln001po;alion.
Givan under my hand end
official Seol at Cotumbuo;
Ohio, 11111 30th day of Auguot.

A.D., 1986

Unda K. Page
Superintendant
of Benka

SEAL
1914. 11, 1B, 26, 4tc
B

a/ Uncia K. Page
Undo K. Page

Suporintondont
ofBanka
1914, 11, 1B, 26, 4tc

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WH0-0-0~0

can help
you?
CLASSIFIED
. ADS

•,

ESTATE AUCTION

ESTATE OF THE LATE BETIY JANE WALLACE
420 West Franklin, Nelsonville, Ohio
420 West Franklin St.. in NelsonYille is located
abou! 3-blocks South of Doctors Hospital. Watch
lor stgns on U.S. 33. Nol hard to find!

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1985

AT 10:00 A.M.
"THOUSANDS

992-2156

I

(-....-----------~--------..

l

lI Curb Inflation II
l: Pay Cash for
I
I
I
II Classifieds and II

:I

Savelll
.

1
I
. · wr1te your own o1d .and order by mail with this 1
I
c oupon. Cancel your ad by phone wnen you get 1
1 .results . Money notretun&lt;lallle.
1

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1 .. a m e - - - - - - - - - - - 1·

II Address

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J Print one word "' each
j ipuu btlow._ loch initial
1 or group of frgurn count'
I os a word. Count nom~

Ad

I
and addren or phon~
I number if uted. You' ll gtl Words doy
I Hiler ruuh1 . if you dr·

I tcriht fully, give puce. The
1 tribune ruerwu the right
1 lc chus1fy, edit or rej«l

I any ad. Your od will ••
~ut in lh proper (lanifiur·
I ·lion it you'll chttk lhr
I proper bu: below.

Jl
I'
I I · IWanled
1 1 !For Sale
I c JAnnouncemcnl
C JFor Rent

Wanted
3

6

10

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days

days

lG 15 SJ.Ou Sl .OO 58 .00 SllDO
To 1i 54 .00 u .oo 513.00 S!LOO

To lS sr.oo SIO.OO IJS .OO $!1.00 I1

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indude discount

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MaiiThisCoupaawithRemiHance
The Daily Selltlnel
111 Court 51.
Pomeroy, 011. 45749

I

I
I

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I

j

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

OF ITEMS TO SELL"
The late Betty Jane Wtllace passed away earlier this year
at the aga of 63 years. She and Iter lite husband operated a
Dairy Freeze In Nelsonville lor a number of years. The
large two story house with lull basement is packed lull! A
more detailed description of items to sell is impossible to
obtain at this time. Some oft he rooms have only a path to
walk through with items stacked on top the othet II somelhint is removed from a drawer the d~awer cannot be
closed again. only items in flont of cupboards can be seen
wtlh no room to remove items for inspection. No doubt
will be some surprises. Thousands ol items to sell at this
estate auction! Something lor everyone!
ANTtQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS: Nice oak drop Iron! writtng desk w/ bevel mt~ror; 2-iron butchering kettles; slone
butler ch urn; 1930 bedroom suite; 2-cedar chests; assorted
sta nds; 4 occ. Japan lO W' hu man ltgures; aboul30·pieces
Foslona "Americana" glassware; Hull Art Pottery; McCoy
w!Shtng well planter w/dog; when doors of cupboards are
opened can only see 1tems in front they are packed so tight!
Smokmg stand w/copper lining; 6-old game plates· pr crystal horse bookends; service for 8 Rogers Bros. flatware in
box ; drum top tnpod table; pattern glass; box of Cracker Jack
toys; also box of toys we could not view in back of closet·
Cheryl Six could remember toys from her chtldhood but noi
exacl content Uncle Sam coin bank; Flashed ruby; quilts;
plus much more. Cannot guess what may be found when
items removed from auction!
NEW ITEMS: Most still in booes. never opened -Schauer
battery _charger; new Hamilton Beach blender; Presto deep
fryer; Rtval eiec. grmder chopper; new 20-pc. set ol Corelle
dinne1 servic,e, new 7-pc Foley Silverstone cookware; new
hat &amp; coat rack; Dazey B·B gun; new Dazey deluxe food
server; new crock plate cooker; new Rival crock oven · new
Titan elec. heater; motor oil; "Comet"; many other new items
not listed!
MODERN FURNISHINGS: Lenoir dimng room suite; 6-pc.
maple bedroom suite w/trim beds; Pullman sofa; 5-pc. bedroom sutte; end &amp;coffee tables ; nice floor &amp;decorator lamps;
cabmet stereo; sharp &amp; Adm11al black &amp; white TVs; brass table lamp; several good fans, some on frames; radios; sewing
machme tn cabmet; chests; bookcaes; upholstered furnitu re·
desk &amp; chair and other modern furniture'
'
LOT OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS, COOKING ITEMS. TOOLS:
Electnc SCM typewnter; good Argus M3 moiie camera
w/ltght bar &amp; projector ; luggage; clocks; lot of record albums; hook rugs &amp; others ; Nesco roaster; lot of items in origi ·
nat bo&lt;es; lot of cookware; blankets, bedspreads, sheets. pil low covers, towels, comforts and other soft goods; Royal vac.
sweeper; old cookbooks ; lot of sma ll appliances; kiichen and
house full of items'
MAJOR APPLIANCES: Maytag wringer washer ; G.E. dryer; G.
E. electric range ; G.E. No Frost refrigerator; 2-chest free zers!
TOOLS: 3-boxes fu ll of tools; hand truck; driveway sweeper·
alum. &amp; wood ••tension ladde rs; elec. &amp; gas lawn mowers:
large Mod. 87 Ski! saw; hand &amp; garden loots; blacksmith vise
&amp; other lools! Assortment of lawn &amp; Patio Furntture, plus
DAIRY FREEZE EQUIPMENT: 2-ICe cream mach ines; stain ·
less slush machine; ice machine; stainless water dispenser;
cone dispenser; hot dog machine; commercial deep fryer;
cases of Sweetheart cold cups, paper lowels. china Therm
plastic cups; rest. dishes; Bunn coffee maker; other items'
Equifment w!s in working order when stored in basement'
NOT : Many 1tems must bt sold in lot &amp;roupinas In order
to selleverythln&amp; in one day. ThouSinds of items to sell.
Mony hundreds of unlisted items. Sale will lost into the
evenin&amp; hours. Truly a very larae sale!
Terms: Cash Day of Sale or Check with Positive ID. Buraer
Barn Lunch!

CD-ADM INISTRATRIXES:
CHERYL SIX and JUDISH RICKETIS

Athm Co. Probtto Court Case ~34410

ATTORNEY: ROBERT L. LILLEY
AUCTIONEER: OTTIE OPPERMAN
385-7195 or 394-2296

CLASSIFIED ADS
asupermarket
for everything.
. Public Notice
IN THE UNITED 'STATES
DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF
OHIO EASTERN DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plelntilf, vs. JOHN C.
BACON, JR .. et el .. JUDGE
HOLSCHUH . Defendants.
CIVIL NO. C2-85·134B
UP9n motion of
plaintiff, end it appearing to the
Court, tha1 the defendants
ORDER

John C. Bacon, Jr. and JUdith
A. Bacon, and tha Unknown
Spouae, Hairs. Devisees, Lega·
18es, Executors, Administrators and Assigns of Jchn C.
Bacon, Jr. and Judrth A.
Bacon. if any, cannot be
served with summons within
the State of Ohio, and that this
is an action 1o enforce 8 lien,
that it. foreclose 8 mortgage
deed. on real property within

NOTICE OF SALE
Offera will be received un·

Fll All y.., Plforlh!t N"''
Ptus, Olliu Supplios &amp;
Furniturt, Wedding
and GraduaHon

Meigs County Deeda Re-

the 21st day of October,
1986, •t ~he Mayor' a office,
237 Race Street, for the sale

Sale of said reel eatele
was authorized by Ordinance adopted .· Jan. 12,
of tho following dotcribod 1981 . The village reserves
real ettate, to-wit:
1he righ1 to reject anr and
Real estate aitua1ed at the bids. The sale i• pun~uant to
corner of Garfield and South Soc:tlon 721 .03 of the Ohio
Third Avenue in the Village Revited Code.
~~Middleport, Ohio. The VilMinimum bid •7&amp;00.
lage acquired title to uld Sept.
4, 11, 18. 26: Oct. 2, 9
reele11ete by deed recorded

tembe• 25, 1985. LEGAL
NOTICE: John C. Bacon. Jr.
and Judith A. Bacon. whose
lest known address is 3691
Paris Boulevard. Weatmvitte,

Ohio 43081 end the Unknown
Spouse. Heirs, Devisees, Lega188$, becutors, Adminiltr8tors and Assigns of John C.
Bacon, Jr. and Judith A.
Bacon, If any, have been
ordered to appear or plead by

December 31, 1985 to a

complaint filed in Civil Action
No. C2-85·1348 in the United
States District Court for the
Southam District of Ohio,
Eastern Division, United
States of America. Ptaintiff. v.
John C. B!lcon, Jr., at al.,
Defendams, praving for foreclosure of a mortgage deed
recorded in Votume 124, Page
147 of the mortgage records
of Meigs County. Ohio, v.tlich
mortgage deed is a lien on the
following described real prop·
erty situated in the State of
Ohio, and County of Meigs
and described as follows. to
wit: Being Lot No. 16 of
Riverview Acres Subdivision
of the Village of Middleport,
Metgs County, Ohio, assllown
on Plat recorded in Volume 13,
Page 31 , Meigs County Record of Plats. PROPERTY
ADDRESS : 70 Riverview
Place. Middleport, Ohio
45780. Failure to respond to
the complaint will result in an

Entry of Default Judgment
and Decree in Foreclosure,
sale of the mortgaged property
and extinguishment of all
interests In said propeny.

JOHN D. HOLSCHUH. United
S18tes District Judge . Ap-

proved: CHRISTOPHER K.
81\RNES, United Stotea Attorney, ALBERT R. RITCHER,
Assilltent United States Attorney, Room 200. U. S . Court·
house , Columbus, Ohio

43215 Telephone: 16141469-

highly motivated, up for a challenge
-and sales oriented this may be your opportunity. We currently have a position open in our
Circulation Dept. lor someone with good 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
•anoiino resume to Box B,
% The
lll Court St.,

Real Estate General

54 Misc. Merchandise

742•2027

j

I

A. A.A.

"Free Esti11101es"

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BOGGS

·we can repair and re-

We'd like to introduce you to
ERPit-A·CII, the IIICidorn WIY
to drive the vehicle of your
cboiu.
·
No Down Payment
lower llonthli Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
For Faster Service

TEAFORD

Call 614-$92-6737

NEW LISTING - Rutland
Street - 10•47 older mobile home on a 60•751ot in
Mtddleport. Wants to sell at
$5.500.00.
NEW LISTING - Double
corner lol in Middleport wtlh
a mobtle home with view of
the river. $13 ,500.00.
NEW LISTING- Two trail·
ers and two lots- bolh ren t
for $160 per month. live 1n
one, letthe other make your
payments. $li,DOO.OO.
NEW LISTING - Nye Ave.
- Pomeroy - Large lot &amp; a
block home. Nicely remo·
deled and priced to sell at
$13.500.00.
PORTLAND - Vacant acre·
age. Approx. 40 acres of
land with a beautiful bottom.
Many uses. $16,000.
OWNER TRANSFERRED!Needs lo sell and move his
family! Eastern District - A
lovely 3 bedroom ranch with
full basement. 2 baths on
I ~ acre lot. Ass ume his 10%
loan on $38.000 .00 for 25
years wtlh a monthly payment of $407 .06 (includes
taKes &amp; insurance) and ne·
goll ale the down paymenl
wilh the owner on asking
price of $43,000.00. Owner
will renl until sold!

REALTORS
· Henry E. Cleland. Jr.

992-6191

&amp;rn
.

REAL lC..R

NEW LISTING- NICe 5 rm,
1 floor home with furnace,
ca rpeling, full basement, carP&lt;Jrt, and farge lot. $27,500.
NEW LISIING - 2 ~ 3 BF
home. Carpebn&amp; automabc
coal stoker heater. 8 rms a~
garden. Only $18,500.
NEW USIING - Nice 4 BR,
1\l story home. Moderr
knchen, full basement carpetin&amp; porches, ga rage and I&amp; ict
in Racine.
I YR. OLD - 1.327 aerO!'
almost level near Rve Points. 7
rms., I&amp; kitchen w~h range,
refri&amp;, dishwasher, dinin&amp; lui
basement and dbl. attached
garaga
$15,0011 - Five rooms one
floor frama Bath, lull basement
and small yard. TP water.
SYRACUSE - 3 BR one 1100"
plan. Slepsaver kilchen,
washer·dl)'er hooku~ and I~
level lot

40 ACRES -

Free gas,
furnace, good 3 BR home, good
outbuildings, all mtnerals, good
fences, c~an pastures and nice
bottom land. As~ng $85,000. ,
NfAR HOSPITAL - Nice one
floor, 2 BR home, hot water
heat lull basement d~ . garage
on corner lot
80 YRS. OLD - 2 ~ory home,
city water, gas and sewage on 1
am. Trees and shrubbel)'. A
little fixing and a nice holM.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm Doon
•Storm Wi!"dOWI
•Riplacemerrt Windows
•New Roofing

"FRU ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Po-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

APPLIANCE

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
~lso acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Authorized John Deere,
New Hofland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equlp111ant

- Middlepon. Ohio
·
1-13· tfc

Ptrta

&amp; Servlae

1-3·11&lt;

RENT A CAR

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

CALL

446-4522

Sizes Sta1t From 12'xl6'

"W• R.lwt F, lm"

UTILITY BUILDINGS

U·SA~E

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

AUTO
St.RENTtL
Rt. f60 orth

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614-843 -5191
10-6-lfc

0•111••111, 7111/lln
hi•

BUY NOW

FIX IN TillE
FREE PARKING
Sua Murpl!v, Mitton Roush•
Htlen, Yillil &amp; Bruce. .
Housing

•Complete Remodelina
*Room Additions
•Roofine
•Siding
•Garaees &amp; Pole
Buildin&amp;s

MAICUM
CONTRACTING

long leHotit, Ohio

Ph. 985·4141

Free Ea11matq
9-11· 1 mo.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complele Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Es1imales"

Headquarters

CAll COILUT:
Ph.

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE FOR S"LE
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bedrooms, 2 complete baths. dining
room, living room and large recreation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm _pond. Racine
area.

HOME NAnONAL BANK
949-221

for

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(6141 843-5425

SERVICE

- Roofing and gu"e' work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing •nd electritll
work
(Free Estimatesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill .
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomtrop, Ohio
12·8-llc

985-3561

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·11c

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Help Wanted .

Scipio Energy, locotod 114
miles nit of Pagetown on

1

year ego today, September

26,

1984. Nothing but

memories 11 we journey on.
longing for 1 emile from a
loved one gone. Noneknowa

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tlc

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

ROOFING

349 N. 2nd

349 N. 2nd

Middleport, OH.

NEW-REPAIR
Guneis - Downsp&lt;&gt;ut:sl
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

SWEEPER and -lng mochine repair, .,_rtl, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery. Davi1 Vacuum
c-.ner, one half mile up

Gaoru•• Creok Rd.
814-44&amp;-0294.

Coli

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

•Sewego Syotem1
•Water 8t Gat Linea
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742-2407

Hl-tfc

.,

Help Wanted

Beeline offere ffM clotha,
good money, no oalhlnvelt·
ment. Work your own houre.
Coli elttr .&amp;PM, 814-218-

1237.

•

Freo llnvorlo, vood limo.
undercoverw11r, partyplen.

coll:ect if nac.... ry.

Coltlna

Fat Burner! GobeM Grap•
frujt EJttra Strength Capsulae. Fruth Pharmacy.

clol. An - · · No eaperlonco
•--ry. WIH bo lntorviow-

Racine Gun Shoot apon·
IOI'ed by Rac:ine Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beginning at

Noedod lmmodlotely: 100

949-2263
Or 949- 'HIIA.O

people seriously lntareated
in losing weight. 1 ·BOO·
992·9991 . Robort &amp; Judy
Hartsoe. Rt. 1, Box 310.

Creoton, NC 2B815,1 -91938&amp;-8801
MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
insured, reasonable rates.

Cell 304-576-2338.

4

73-79 Ford Tr.
Ftndtn ..................... ,...S41

73 -80 (hny lr.

73-79 Ford T•.

73-;;ih::y··T";:"''"'"'""'' 70

(&gt;iveaway

Four regionel TV commer·

ing in Southeeat Ohio .,...
Weok of Oct. 1. For -"'ntmont coli b o t - 1O:AM-

7:PM. Mon.·Fri. 814-8800222.

6 kittens to good home. 4

yellow. 1 black. Coli 814·
367· 7116.
Electric stove to give away

Grille~ ...... r.............. SJIJ .SO

114&amp;.
2 kitten• . Cell &amp;14·446·
3732 or &amp;14-448-6832 .

Doon ......................... 1 13S

Doors ......................... $ 145 ·
71-79 Ford Tr.

IO~·~·F~~d"i~:""'""' $i!.SO

••s

Hoods ......................... s
83-85 ford Ranger
Ra1ktr J'anels ...............s2 S
Hoocls ......................... ll30
73-19 Chny. Tr.
U-U Ford Ra"ger
Colt Corntrs ...... ............ l20
Grillt~ ..................... ,,.,.,175
New and Ustd Auto Glan-late Model Parts

Call:

992·5875 Or
742-3195

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

8-8-tfc

3 adorable long haired kit·
tent, ell female, litter

trained. Call 614·4461797.
Tortoiu shell caUco mother
cat and kitten•. 1114· 742·

232B.

Hay. 2nd cunlng . You rake,

bole end lt'o yourt. 814742 -218B.

9-1
3

1 year old small Shetl•nd

pony. Coli &amp;14·985·4119.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Cl

z

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New

ii2

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Eval1!3tions For All Ages

3 people kittens. Utter
trained. 3 monthl old. Need
someone lo love. 304-1171·

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

3 beautiful ltripped ldttent,

5885.

phone 304-675·8714.

~ · Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Homes Built

Fluffy kitten, litter trained,

%

z

"Free Estimates"

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

304-87&amp;· 5122.

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

Choolnutl. pick up Woe!
9:00 to 3:00. 1.2 mlloo out
Jericho Rd. Watch for sign .

8-13 tin

l/11 /1fn

Full blooded mala Dachlhund, houH broken. 304-

87&amp;-4235.

A-fiN

Tl ..

lht , ...... 1..
11 Dtlf
RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPliANCE
CHESRR-915-3307

4/!ltln

raLU£ STREAK CAB CO.
A

'

a
'

C.tl and kittens various
lint and agee. •bout any

color, 304·&amp;75-2707.

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

N1Jw Setrlnl All 01
.Mslg1 Countg
•nd Su,,u,dlng
._. Atee 9/20~1

____

month. 14 dmo otudenla
e101.00
month, ond
holt tlmo lluclonto 170.00
per month, up to MIJtlmum
of 11.040.00, Wto h... tho
boot port-tlmo jobo oroundl
Colt 304-875-3950 or 1•
800-142-3&amp;19.

'*

Hiring Nowlll Tour guide•
needed. GuarantMd excellent Mmings, training, have
fun ahowlng people around
.Ur rwoort. Coli Fricloy, Sot·

IWdey, Sundoy, Monday 10
am· lpm. AlkforFrenk. We
lrl I IOCIII company with

toll-frtl No. Ohio 1·900·

338-8317 w.v• . 1·BOO·
338-831B.

Dependable. mature woman
care tor elderly woman in
home. Send Nauma end
refereuce1 to Box C21, C·O
Point Pluunt Reglaer,

1o

Llldy to help oldorly coupla
few houre each day. Mutt
have tntnaponetion. Write
Bo• P·24 care Point Plealint Regitttr, etating Ulery
and r.terancea.
Needle cr1ften. leading
atitchlng company now IC·
cepttng application• for nee·
dlecraft inatructore in your
oroo. c 0n Bavorly 1-304-

118-1884.

12

.

6

Lott and Found

FOUND- 9· 22-81 omoll
IM'PPY _, Chorolllo Hllo
Lllkt on 0-n D-y lid.
Coli 814-441·2311.
LOST: mile -~~~ -~~~
a whit• 'NWIIrd'.
Coll814-448 -9483.
brown

HugoGorgeS... Contl.,...._

..,.,. drum .... 4 1p0rt hub
c:epo, houHhold ltlmt, ell .

wlntor jockltl &amp;
cooto• ..,..,, bootl, toolo, -···---·-··--·· ----·---·----· - ond toto mOt'o. 4 mtlo1 fn&gt;m
HMC on old 110 It
YordHioSopt.23-27 .1 837 urwn. &amp;14·441-1339.
0 5 00
cheotnu1 St .• 10:0 • : S
Yord Solo Frldoy oncl otur·
Yord Solo 4y, mlleo out Rt. dey Sopt. 27 &amp; 28th. 9:30 to
1 1154V. Bocond Ave .
141 . Thun . 26. Fri. 27, s ot. Galllpollt.

It Vicinity

11101 jHnt,

E--

Have vacancy for men or
women. Elderly only. Care.
room. board and laundry.

V.cency for the eld•lr in
aur home. Trained •nd fifteen y•n· experience. Cllll

15

resume to box 300, in care
of tho Golllpolit Doily Trib-

une, 825 Third Avo.. Golll·
polio, Oh 45&amp;31.
Countw help: IOCIII convenient ltore now ..:ceptlng
appHcation• for full Ia pert
time counter help. Willing to
worlc flexible houra preferred. Apply In porooq ottho
Gonerol 510rt. 240 N. Col·

able 10 worll weekends •
nlghta. Have own cer (with
inaurance) . Apply in person
attha General Store, 2"C) N.
College, Rio Orende. Oh.

1

Finane. Position. Our comp·
nay h11 a poaition for a
manager tFa~ln•. we have an
opening for • qualified person. Who w•ntt to foin our
nationwide tMm. Our comprehensive tl'llinlng program
•llowa peraona 1Nfth or without IKperilnce to progre11
according to their own abilities. For additional information cont.ct Dave Adama,

614-448-4113. EOE-MF.

Easy Auembly Work!
tiOO.OO per 100. Guaranteed payment. No
experience- No Ale a. Details
tend self~addreseed

School•
I nlltruction

Army National Guard needs
individual• who are looking

for o part·tlmo job with o

good future . Are you wond·
arlng where you will get the
money for college? The new

Gl 8111 will poy full tlmo
student• •140. per month,

up 10 o m.. l.,.,m of 111,040.
The lludent loon NPIYJnOnt
program repave 1 rnejor

Ooyton tor POll 18 .,.....
Root pl,...mont MrVk:o ...,_
phaalzed. For complete writ-

ten detollo coli: Friandly
Trovlo ot 15131424-4693
today.

18 Wanted to Do

Ut. ln.,,.noe. Md you can
utiiiN tho dollpd 1nlnln9
option ond tho op11t tnlnlng
option 10 ottond boolc end

octve- trtlnlnv- n o oohoor. Wo hove
Whit It tlltoe to your
futuro! Col 304-171-3910
"'1·100-142-3111.

One of • kind log cabinRaccoon Creelc. 7 miles
from Rio Grande, 11 inlles

from Golilpolllt. Air conditioned, electric furnance.
waahef, dryer, county water, priced under •30,000.

fumlohod.
2141.

Cali 814-379-

Price reduced. 7 room
houn. wilh beth. utility
room, gas fumance.largelot
with garage. Call 814-448-

2&amp;97.
For 11le by ownN . Modern 3
bdr. home frame. large
kitchen, plelnty of cabinets,
refrigerator 8. eiKtric range,
dl1poul. dlningroom, 2 full
blithe. carpeted, full betement finished. central air,
new
fumence. fenced in
back yard, • large carport.
ready to move in to. good
location on Sunaet Drive on
Upper Second Ave. ·c an help
finance. Cell 814-448-26 73

a••

3 bedroom full baHment,
eat -In kitchen, carport .
• 2. 500 &amp; take over payments, Plant• Subdivision .

Coli 814-446-7360.

12 year old single family
bi·leval home. Brick and
fr•me on 2.9 acres. 3
bedroom. 2'/z baths . Fireplace in living and family
room1. Two-car garage. City
echool district in Clay Twp.
8Hutiful view of Ohio AlvN.
&amp;"A mil•• aouth from Galllpollo City II mitt off St. Rt. 7.

&amp;14·448·2000 oftor

3 bedrooms and beth. larkin
St .. Rutland. Can be sold on
land contract with tmall
down ,_yment. Call 814-

992-5B68.

21

poopla you know. ond NOT

Own your own Je•n ·
Spontw.ar, ladle• Apparel.
Childrene. tar~ Site, Com·
binltion Store, Patlties, Maternity, ACCIIIOfill. Jord·

porch, new roof. '27,500.

814-992-7463.

Three bedroom hou~eon4. 4
acr11, central air. wood
burner, aluminum siding,
storm windows. double car
garage. 1h mile from Che1ter
on Rou1e 248. Call 614·

986-4294 otter 5:00.

Street, lzod, Eapri1:, Tomboy. Calvin Klein. Sergio
Valenta. Evan Picone. Liz
Claiborne. Members only.
G..oline, H.. hhtax. Over

cent e11umeble loan, garden
1pot. Reduced down to

lng, flxturea. grand opening.
ar:c . Can open 1 &amp; dayt. Mr.

60'1. 1-609-463·2692.

Koonon f3051&amp;78-3839.

- - - - - - - - L·
1972 Flamingo 3 bdr .. 1VJ
bath, total electric. CA.
refrigerator. aome fumftu,.,

8x10 dock, 18,BOO. o r offor. Cell 814-245-9847.
1989 Aoycraft 2 bdr. trailer,
$1,700 or beat oHer. C•ll

614·3BB-9341 Tom Glenn
Rd.
19B2 14x70, 3 bedroom,
112.500. Call 614-446·
6231 .
14x70 mobile home 3 bed·
rooms, 2 bath1, 10•20
awning 8. underpinning,
woodburner. t9.500. Call

614-379-2798 or814-2&amp;89392.
------:--:----:--lc1975 12x66 2 bodroom
mobile home on 6 ecru of .
land. Double garege1tor11g-:
building. Kingsbury Rd ...
Pomeroy. Phone 614-99~·

2564

Of

814-992·2774.

On rented lot. Excellent
condition. Clean. With or
without AC. tumiahlnga.
washer-dry•r. awning. Call

614-992-2459 -

p.m .

1:00

Moving-need to sell.1984 '
Shultz. 3 bedroom . Call'

614·949·2863.
- - - - - - - - - - lw09
1973 Vandolo 14x70. 3
bedrooms, stove, refrigerator. step• and blocks.

e7960 . Call 614-9927479.
197B Holly Pork. 14x70, 2
bedrooms, expendo. g•• appliancn, awning and deck.

$13,600 . Call 614-74221B2.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED .
Insured. reasonable racea.

304-176-38&amp;0.

1971 'F lamingo 12,.;85, 3
bedrooms. air condition, excellent condition, refrigeretor end stove. Must sell

614-446·0684.

1976 Governor 14x70 mo·
bile home with 3 bedrooms

and 1V. beth&amp;. 304-B823126.
1970 Kirkwood , 12x50,
partially furnished, BJlC

cond. 304-773-6244.
1969 2 br trailer for •le
10K60, turn., oil tank 8. .
underpenning, $1200 . Do
no1 Cllll unleas really interested. Cell between 10 am ·

6 pm, 304-875-1269.
33

Farms for Sele

32 acre farm •• drilled well.
31ft miles from town. •

$17,600. Phone 304-8B2- •
2407 or 304-8B2·2297.

e49,000. 304-876 -6047.

Call after 6 p.m .

By owner, 2 bedroom ranch ,
704 Marietta Road, Point
Pleaaant. nice locltion. low

34

Old Kaylor S1ore •• Broad
Run, 7 room1. 11h baths .
Le1ky roof, city wa1er.

115,500." Call 304 -8B22407 or 882-2297. Call

22 Money to Loan

t4.600. Coli 814·211&amp;1660.

1980 14•70 Uborty mobil a

echo, Chic, loe, Lovi, E Z 3 bedroom home, 8'/z per·

1000 othon. 113,300 to
•2•.900 Inventory. train·

2 bdr. 12,.;80 mobile home.

home, 3 br, 1 bath, g•rden
tub, tot.J alec. central air,
fireplace. atove·raf.. mu ..
be moved. $9900. For appt.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- 8 rooms and beth. 1'lh acre.
LISHING CO. Neommondo C•llar. carport, cistern~ big
to aend money through the
mail until you have lnvesti·
gated the offering.

~68·6434 .

5 rooms. bath, utility room.
Movir.g. Reduced price.
Good canditon . 814-992-

614·992· 6763.

that you do bu11ne11 with

Call614·258-14fi5 or 814-

814-992·70B2.

In Pomeroy. &amp; room home
with bath, carpeting, storm
windows, new g.. furnace,
panial basement, atorege
building . Ree1onably priced.
Must aee to appreciate . Cell

Bu1inesa
0pponuni1y

concrete steps, •13.800.

Call 305·676·2336.

tlond. 614-742·3008.

hlliillCidl

197B 14•70 Norrl1 2 bdr.
with large awning • 2 Mt1

Six room houH on 49 acral.
Full baeement, free heat,
private. cloae to town•. Cell

outbuildings. mineral rights.
Contact R.T. Stewart. Ru·

Business
Buildings

Commerciel building for •le
or rent on M1ln S1. New

Havan, W.Vo. Coli304·BB2- •
2056.

after 15 p .m.
HOME OWNERS-Refinann
lo low tl..d rat•. Uae equity· By owner, 6 room houl8,
for •ny purpoae. Loder bath. all elec, alumn siding,
Mortgoge Co., 1114-592- storm doors and windows,
city wa1er, furnished or
30111 .
unfurnished . 304· 468·

1792.
23

Profenional
Services

Water well• drilled and ..,.
vicad . PricHon request. Call

114·742·3147 or814-992•
1001. .
PIANO TUNING AND RE PAIR, bock to IChoOI dlt·
counu.

free

McDaniel Custom ButcherIng, open e d.ya a weak.

304-182·3224.

31

Homaa for Sale

2 bdr ., fully carpeted, vinyl

"''lng, ll'tll lot, ltONIIO
bid,., gordon. Notrictld,
U ,100. Coli 814-25&amp;8200.
Oov.mntont home from e1
(U·Npairl. Aloo deliquont
... property. Coli 801·8871000 ext. GH·10118 for
Information .

'
'

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Lots for sale on land contract
with smell down payment .

Cell 614-388·8711 oftor 6.

By owner, 206 Midway
Drive. New Haven . Comfor·
table living; 3 bedrooms,
living room. 2 bl~hl, large

One acre with septic tank.
elac1ric pole, well· houae
with deep well . Blue lake
Dr . off B'!lar Run Rd. Greet
buy for t3,600 cash. Calf

All electric, brick home,
car garage. basement, large

2 level lots for a81e. Greer t
Road, 7 miles from town .

oot in kitchen. utility '""""· ·I _3_0_4_·5_2_2_. 2
_0_7_6_·--:---lot. By oppolntmont only.
304· 882-2833.

tatimatas,

Word't Koyboord, 304·875·
5&amp;00 "' &amp;75·3824.

portion of outiiOndlng Fed-

thin t20,000. on octuc:etionol boneflll. PLUS. you
roc- • monlhty paye-.

114-44&amp;-8038.

5204.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Will p11int trailer roofs &amp; cut
tobocco. Coli 814-2&amp;8- 9 rooms, 17 acr11. garage
with shop overhead. cellar.
1528.

eral atudent Joana. up to
t10,000. You may alaa be
eleglble far 1 t1,&amp;00. or
t2,000. enN1tment bonu1 .

A comblnotion of Guerd

niCIIIOt, llr98 rHr deck. wtth
voHoy view. priced to Hll.
•39.100. Will coftsidlir mobile hom. trade-in. Cell

Coli

Tri·Stlte Semi Driver Train·
lng . Enjoy two - · of
Tractor-Trailer Training conducted 20 mil11 south of

32 Mobile Homea
for Sale

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr,
ju.t flnlahed, full ba11ment.

6PM or WHkends.

otompod envelope: E'-" Vi·
tel -715 3418 Entorprloo
Rd ., Ft. Plen:o. Fl. 33482.
WANTED : HIGH SCHOOL
SENIORS AND GRADU·
ATESI The Well Virglnio

Homes for Sale

31

or 814-448-1171.

Situ1tions
Wanted

One cortiflod Modlc:ol Tochnolofllot, -doyo. Sond

program un provide more

PHONE 992-7075

_______G
___ _. .,P__ __ , __________
8 111 0 11 1

QIIIH. It peyo full1tme ~:2:8:.::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::
NtironMntbe~.udtho

Sell AVON moke 45'11. Cell
814-448-33118.

loge, Rio Gronde, Oh Tueo.
Sept. 24. Fri. Sapt. 27
5 femahts 1h Auttri.. lan 10AM-4PM.
Shepherd, "h Collie. Calf 1-Pa_rt___
tl_m_a_d_ol-iv_o_ry_pe-rto-n
614-3BB-9614.
nooded. Mullbo 11 yro. old,

IO·IS Ford lr.

7l ·1t Chewy. Tr.

Residential &amp; Commercial

WaiiiiJ

•Baeement•

11

Coli oftor &amp;PM, 814-28811237.

guege thorguna.

Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559

Doors ................. ... ..... 'IOO
73 -10 Chny. k
Hoods ......................... ' I SO
73 -14 Chny Tr.

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAIEWT£ SALES &amp; SERVICE

Excaveting
•landacaping

lll'!lid'illll'lll
Sl!l VII 1!,

AA Crllis Pregnacy Center.
Confidential. Free preg·
nancy test and-or informa·

FREE ESTIMATES

73-80 Chevy Tr.
ftndtrs .........................S41

....,_,I

Collll14-192-&amp;022.

for partt. Coli 814-448- _3_·_5_P_M_d_oi_IY_·_ _ _ __

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

•All Typeo of

43948.

regrltl, bu1 we remember
white othen forget. Badley
mined by wHe, child,.., and
grandchildran .

1: DO p.m. Focwry Choko 12

Under New Management (Formtrly Giovanni's)
9-20-1 mo.

9-20·1 mo.

floor only. Write giving
directions. Witten Planoa,
lox 181, S•rdll, Ohio

tho depth of our deep

Middlaport.

*SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA •SPAGHETTI

GIFTS

Wontod:old pionoo. Poylng
120 end f40 ooch. Firat

3 Announcementll

"12 Varieties of Pizza"

AND

coins, large cur-

Aluminum acrep. Sell your
aluminum acrap direct: to the
amah•. Buying •II gradea of
aluminum . Premium peidtor
l1rg1 loads. C•ll for quote.

In Memoriam

VETEIIANI: Do you wilh
you hoct ,..pel In tho
rnllltlry7 Rognot laolng !hot
1 - 1 IOO'ry
youdldn'ttoboctv.ntogeof
tho Glllll to vet your coltooo
...._ 7 M by It'
-..oe
•
o not too
lito. Join tho Army Notlonol
Ouordondr-ornonthly
~·-· •~ 1no
~.-~. ·~
uronCH,

814-982·7314.

ANGIE'S PIZZA

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY

~d

were.

rancy. TOp prlc.._ Ed. Burlcott Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, Oh. 114-9123478.

R. Smith, who pa- 1woy

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigera1ors
•Dryers •Freezers

PH. 11112·7201

coal hettara.

Buying dally gold, lllvor
colnt, rlngo,jewelry, oterling

In loving memory of Norman

All Mak..

JIM CLIFFORD

BUY . -

Townlhlp Rood 141. Molgo
County, 814-992-3418.

9/1212 .... pd.

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

cleenUHdaan.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oide Inc.

Miller, Rt.2, Pornot'O'(, Ohio
45789 .,.. c:en e 14-992neo.

Announ ce II II! 11 Io
2

Howard L. Writesel

DOZER. -BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION. PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMEIIIT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

- Addon• •nd remodeling

3-24-tfc

$20s.
$20.0011 - Union Awe. 5 rms.,
bath, gas furnace, carpettn&amp;
basement and small garage.

PH. 992-3982
'

ICUT OUI fDA fUrURE U5EI

KEN'S

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Phone

1-(6141-992-3326

Wanted To Buy

wood, cupbolldl, chalre,
cheeta, bllketa, dl•h••·
•tone jar1, antlqu•. Jald
•nd 1ilver. Writ•· • D.

tlon . Phono &amp;14-742-2&amp;29.

216 E. 2nd St.

9

COMPI.ETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. - · · Iron,

NOW THRU OCT. 12TH

Real Estate ~~

E. Maio&gt;...,;;;
POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING -Salisbury
School District- Cute one
story five room house with
lwo bedrooms. dining room,
kitchen &amp; balh. Storage
building, large lol on deadend street. $19,000.00 .

...

'

PAY FOR 11 SESSIONS S32.50
·RECEIVE 1 SESSION FlEE!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Installation hailable
4

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

. ('116, tfc

l/2/lln

992·2196.

Real Estate General

11

atude"u *140. 00 par

Wo poy c:olh for lotw modal

TANNING SPECIAL

992-3345

PAT HILL FORD

Bol, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

5715 Counsel for Plaintiff

191 25 11 Oi 2. 9, 16, 23. 30,
6tc

After S Call

LOOKING FOR A CAREER

December 31, 1985. IT IS
FURTHER ORDERED that

notice of this order be publtshed in The Dailr Sentinel,
·1 1 1 Court Street. Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769 once a week for
si;~~; consecuttve weeks commencing not later then Sep-

FENCE &amp; SU,LY
PH. 992-6931

If you are

thio District, IT IS ORDERED

that the defendants John C.
Bacon, Jr. and Judith A.
Bacon, and the Unknown
Spouse, Heirs, Devisees, Legatees, Executors, Adminillra·
tort and Assigns of John C.
Bacon, Jr. and Judith A.
Brown, if any. appear of plood
to plaintiff's complaint by

ACCENT

1

SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd.
• Olivo St. Golllpollo. Coli
e 14·441-3158.

STYLING &amp;
TANNING SALON

255 Mill St., MiddliJiorl
104 Mulbtny Av., Pomlf'Oy

.Olympic Pool

Ill 11 :00 O'Clock A.M. on cords.

\ ,j,.,/

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

\

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU

Stationery, Magnetic
Signs, RubbN Stamps,
Business Forms,
Copy Strvlces, (tc.

· Pomeroy-lloson Bridge

In Volume 270. P,oge 703,

" TOTAL FIREPLACE
AIVO CHIMNEY WORK "

Will Vlrglnlo. 304· n3·
8785 or 304·773-1430.

wood •

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PlUSANT, W. VA.
8 milts from

Business
Services

,.-_.-..
,. \,

farm, entique. lkluid•tion
llloo. UcenMCI Ohio end

WANTED TO

MOTEL

Public Notice

• FLUE CAPS INSTALLED

112?1tlc

•free HBO •Restaurant
Public Notice

1!!!!!1

8111 a... Jolonoon
814-448-3&amp;72

•Live entertainment

Public Notice

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE. E!Nte,

~

INSURANCE WORK

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

POMEROY, OH.

•

I

·:SALES &amp; SERVICE

1-BEAUTIFUL SOLID MAROON .
1-DARK CHESTNUT BROWN WITH LIGHT 1f2 CHESTNUT TOP

CLEANING IN~PECTION

r-;;;;pJ

I2II •CMIMNEY REBUILDING

. 317Norlh St&lt;OIIIII

PH. 992-2174

8

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

HEATING

·

lollt •nd Found

on-

;:HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

500 E. MAIN

8

f'emote
OO·d"-·
Muot
bo23 yn,oklond
DOT pllytlc:ol. lotory
depondt upon .............
-n~ 1o teoch.
114-lt2·e715 •

SINGLE '24.115

Public Notice

Ohio

Business Services

2 IN STOCK
TO CHOOSE FROM

Cllnilitd
Ill Court St., Pe~mttoy, Ohio 4!1151

'

1986

1985 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrilt Dailly Sentinel
De,t.

. .,.

... ...

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Coli 304-6 75-56B9

Renlols

NEW AND USED MOBILE _4_1__
H_o_u_se_s_f_o_r-:R_e_n-:::t:-HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL- -:
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 3 bdr . ranch , locotad on lit.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS. 180. noor NGHS. UOOmo,, •
RT 3&amp; PHONE 614 44, 1150 dop., no pett. Coli
7274. ·
•
· 814-38B-8711 after &amp;PM,
1973 Schult mobile homo
14x70 3 bdr .. 1 both, now
c:orpet. 22,000 BTU olr
condltlonar, 18,600: Call
614·367·0677.
1B71 Brookwood 12•115.

v.

1 bath I , 3 bdr. gas hut.
new car,.-t. like new cond.

Coli 114-448-0175.
1983 F-ood 14x70, 3

belt ., 2 tun botho. like now.

con 814-3B8·B833.

Modern 3 bedroom, doubte
garage, 2nd. , Syracu11 . .
8300 month plus depo1il ,
nice location. Call614· 99~·

7032 or 814-448-2340.

Near Waterloo· farm houM,
I room•, bath, 1 child,
1121, reforenc11 &amp; dopoelt.

Coli 814-843-2&amp;44.

_, •• ,•• ell ytllaiM.paid,
limitt. Cill 614-441·
0.

�41

44

Ho usaa for Rant

3 bdr. home loc::atK on Rt.
1588. 3'!J miles from town.
G'"n School dltt.. t325
mo .. f150 dep. Ctll 814·
258 -8789 or et 4 -258 ·
820 5 .
2 bedroom hou•, t125 plua
de potit Ia ref. Ca11614-448·

4 729.
Houte and beth, large yard in
Racine area . Call 614 -992-

6 858.
~ bedroom houn fully car·
~MJ-t .tn. : Pomeroy . 8180 a

mon.t h.·-.stt· de~D.IIit. , Ca!l

61 4-992 -3054 .

'

Apartment
for Rent

Mt'll:h.iiliiiS!

port for rent or ~ale . Call
. 8 14 -992 -2598 .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Nice, •mall 4-room and bath

house in Middleport with
attached garage. ldHI for
si ngle or couple. Sorry no
children or pet• - Available at
end of month. Stove, refrl gerat er provided. Hoeflich.

6 14-992-5292.
3 br house. carpltted. axe.
cond. and neighborhood,

Nleelv loc::eted . Cont.c:t VII·
lage Menor ~ n Mlddlepon.

Ona or twa badroom apart•
manta i n Pomeroy. FurniJhed or unfurni shed . Rent
6723.

bedroom hquae. good locat ion. basement, Iota of storage, wall to wall carpeting,
all appliances included.
8300.00 month, deposit
and reference required. 304-

.

2

bedroom cottage. for
additional i nformation call

6 14-448-4802 .
Small houae tor rent Crab
Creek Road~ references re·
quired; 3041~~5~ 6609 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. furnished . all utilites
pd .. e.~&lt;cept elect., conveniant location . aecurity deposit rauqired. Call 614-446-

8558.

814-992· 7314.

I'

Furnished, AC, cable, no city
taxes, bealltitul ri\larview, in
Kanauga . Foster' s Mobile
Home Park, 614· 446· 1602.
In Tuppers Plains. t176 .
plus utilities end deposit . 2
bedrooms. Phone 814-887·

3487.
Apartment
for Rent

Unfurnished 1p11rtment for
rent in SyracliM. 814-9927889 after 5 p.m . •
Furnished Apertment for
rent, no children. Available

tftor Oct.3. Coli 614·992 ·
2749 . .

APARTMENTS. mobile
homet, housea. Pt. Pleaunt
end Gallipolis. 814-446-

ent lque .l ofa, good cond. ,

1- - - - - - - - - - 54 Misc. Merchandise

Ho u sing Opportunity)
monthly rent starts at 8169
for 1 bedroom and •204 for
2 bedroom. deposit •200.
located near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV ·available.
·office hours •• possible 10
am to4pmand7pmto9pm
Mondav-Friday. Call 614446-2 745 or leave
me11age.

Coli 814 -446 -0338 .
Furnished efficiency $180,
utiltie1 paid, share bath, 807
2nd. Ave. Gallipolis, adults.
Ca11446 -4418 after BPM .

2 bdr. apt., good location,
re dec::orated, utilities partly
paid. Call304 - 87&amp;~ &amp;104 or

304-675-5386.
Furnished apt ., 2 bdr., 13111J
4th. Gallipolis, S196 water
paid . Call 446·4416 .e fter
Spm .
740 V:a 2nd . Ava .. 3 bdr ..
S190 mo .. t bdr .. f135 .
Oeposit required . Call 614446-4222 between 9 &amp; 5 .

Laureland Apartments, New
Haven. Equal Housing Op·
portunity. Has vacancy. For
more information cell 304-

MCS programmebkt turnat·
ebfe 24 fUnction remote
control, f176 firm . Call

G11 heater 60,000 btu for
shop or barn, good cond,
8100.00. Wood nove Cllt
Iron, exc cond, $90.00.
Myers shallow well water
pump with tank and ·eccea-

882-3718 .
2 br 1partmtnt1 in Hender-

son. 304· 875 · 1972.
1 br apt. carpeted. washer·
dryer hook up. Ea:c. cond.
and neighborhood n .. r

PVH . 304-876-4680 or
875-1982.
Very nice. one bedroom
furnished apt. ideal for one
adult, phone Mrs. ludon

304-875-2861.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rant SIHping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call &amp;14-448·0766.

1----------Fllrnlshed room 812&amp; utili·
ties paid, 919 2nd. Ave .•
Gallipolis, single male . Call

448-4418 tftor 7PM.

46 Space for Rant

&amp; Neil, Glllipolia. Call 448·

Wood

Ia

coal

furnance,

forced air $250 , Coli 614379-2138 before 9PM .
New 1985 ATC 110 Hondo
3 wheeler, never ridden.

5ova. Coli 814·448-0808 .
Fuel oil stove &amp; tank. •76 for
both, good cond. Call 814Heatilator . fireptace insert .
Good condition, f226 . C1ll

1- - -- - - - - - - Large

trail&amp;~

space on
Bulaville- Addit~n Rd . Call

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

Trailer space 1 mile from
Hospital water-trash peid,
165 mo. plus deposit. Cell
614-446· 1364.

l- - - - - - - - - --

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

614-992-7479 .

- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Upstairs office or busine11
space for rent . 2 rooms.
218% E. Mai" St. Inquire at
2 18 E. Main St. or call

614 - 992-5484 . 8 : 00
a.m .to 10:00 a.m .. 2 :00
p.m .to 4 :30p .m .

MASON COUNTY FAIR
AENTAL, storage space
available for can, ~oats.
trailers at Feir Grounds.
PM for ratets
information .

Fllrnl shed apt .. 1 bdr .. e226
mo., 920 4th A\le .. Gallipo·
lit. Utiliti es paid. Cell 4484416 after 8pm .

and

Merchandi se
51 Household Goods

1- - -- - - - -- -

SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE
82 Olive St.. Gallipolis. New
3 bdr. duplex. new carpet, &amp; used wood·coel stoves. 6

new bath. qew appliances,
644 Second Ave,, 1275 mo.

Ctll 814-448 -0890.
Upstairs unfurnished apt ..
carpeted , all utilities paid , no
children, no pets. Call 614-

448-1837.
Apt. for rent, 238 Rnr Firat
Ave., 2 bdr .. •226 mo .. ref.

6 dep . Coli 614-448-4928 .

4607 or 814-448-2802 .
Furnished efficiency 8186,
utilties peid, 920 4th AVe.
Gallipolis. adults. Cell 446-

4418 after 7PM .

pc wood LA suite 1399,
blink beds e199 , antron
recliners 199, n•w &amp; used
bedroom suites , ranges.
wringer washers. &amp; shoes.
New livlngroom suites

•199-$599.

lomp1. olto

buving coal S. wood stoves .

Call 814-446 -3159.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sola• and chairs priced from

$285 . to $895 . Ttblo•. t&amp;O
and up to 8 126. Hide· • ·
bed• . •390 . end up to
8560 .. sofa beds 814&amp; ,
Recliners, t225 . to 8375 ..
lamps from *28. to 81215 .
pc. dinettes from 8109. , to

435 . 7 pc . 1189 tnd .up.
Wood llble with six chain

8285 to f745 . Duk $110
up to S226 . Hutehes. t660.
Bunk bed complete with
mattre1111, 1275. and up to
8396. Baby beds, 8110.
Mettfellet or boK springs,
full or twin, •63., firm. •73.
and 183. Queen 1et1, 8226.
4 dr. chesta,
5 dr.
chests, t69. Bed frames,

••a.

UO.ond t25 .• 10 gun . Gun
cobi-•. t350. Got or

Furnished apt . 1260 utilites
peid, 1 bdr .. remodeled. 920
4th Ave .• G1lllpolls. edutt1.

electric ranges 8376. Baby
mattre11es. *26 &amp; 836, bed

Call446-4416 after 7PM .

fromtt no. t25. 6 uo.

Riverside Aptt. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Cit izens. &amp;130. Equal HOus·
ing Opportunitl .. . 814 ·

•&amp;o.

king frame
Good 11lec·
tion of bedroom suites,
rockera. metal cabinets ,
heedboerdt • 31 a. up 10

2 bedroom' apertments.
New HeWin , WVa. Newly
remodeled . In town. 114-

992-7411 .

1978 Gravely traclor with
mower, very good cond .,

614· 332-9745 colloc:t.

$1 , 250. Cell 614-245 9503 eftor 7 .

BUILDERS

- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Price Wart Flashing arrow
sign f269. complete. Save
t2841 Lighted non·arrow,
8247. Unlighted t199. Free
letters! See locally :

2155 .

Wood and coal heating stove
for sale . · 2. places of triple
wall stove pipe. 614-992·

6295.
Own your own jean ·
sportswear , ladies apparel ,
childrena. large size, c::ombi·
nation nora. petites, maternity, acce11ories. Jordache ,
Chic. lee, levi , E Z Street,
lr:od, Esprit, Tombov. Calvin
Klein, Sergio Valente, Evan
Picone, Liz Claiborne ,
Members Only. Gasoline,
Healthtex. over 1.000 oth·
ers . 113.300 to &amp;24,900
inventory. lraining, fixtures ,
grand opening etc . Can open

15 doyo. Mr. Blng(4041252·
4489 .
3 ornamented wrought iron
porch posts. 825 . 48 inch
· shower enclosure. $26. Akal
8 track player recorder. SSO .
pair decorator shutters.
26x9 . t6 per pair. 2 pair
shutters. 29x11 Y4, 87 per.
pair . Kitchen Aid di sh
washer . t60. 1 set studded
snow tires. P196-76R14 .

a

1 '12 ye1r old Male Poodle,

$50.00. 304·876-2110.

57

Closeout's - Surplus Selvage.
Roof truss (up to 20 '.

bock $39.95 sq .
Marble vanitv's top1 . Seconds all size s c::hoice

$30 .00 ...
Prehung 8 or 8 panel steel
Insulated ea:terlor doors

$89 .95 oc .

Prehung 9 ft. tt'!ermal glatt
steel door' a crossbuck - or

l;lundy alto saxaphone ,
8326, Artley clarinet e160.
Both In excellent c::ondltlon.
Call 814-448-4881 after
Hammond organ auitablefor
small church or new stu ·
dent. Can be seen at Cante·
narv UM Churcch. Call

814-448-2B456 .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Saxophone for sale . Excel·
lent c::ondition . 8360. Call

61 4· 742-2843.
Premier snare drums. Excel·
lent cOndition. Hardly usad.
Cue included. 614-992-

7574.
Buescher allo n xaphone.
exc cond, see at 2019
Maxwell Roed .

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Ounrovin Fruit Farm St. Rt.
681 South of Albany. 614·

69B·829B. Rod 6 Yellow
Delicious. Melrose, Jona·
than, Mcintosh, Super Gold,
Wine Sap, Grimes applas.
Apple butter, sorghum, ho·
ney, &amp; fresh cider. Open 7
davs .

1 pc . fiberglau tub and
shower white and color

bushel. Coll61 4 -949-2579 .
Chuck Yost .

st 99 .00 to 8229 .96 .

••·I 1100

pc-$3 .00

ea .)
4xB wood an m11onlta
paneling woodgrain end
prints, $5 .99 to $12 .99.
Valvea to $24.95 .

PENN ' S WAREHOUSE.
Wellston. Ohio. hours 8- 5 .

Canning peaches now avail·
able, open 7 days week. call
for prices as supply It

limited . 304- 773 -5721 .
Bob's Merket. Mason, W .

Vo .

Farm Suppl1r.:;
&amp; LIVC Siock
61

Farm Equipment

REPAIRS.

56

Pets for Sale

304-675-4831 .
10 ft . truek camper, ba ·
throom, ttove with oven.
refrigerator. sleeps 4. t900.
Copy maehine f40 . Old time
cash register. e10. 304-

675-7980.
Burial Iota. Concord Ceme·

IJ&lt;V. 304· 875· 1128.
Wood 1nd coel stove. w ..h.
ing machine, cook 1tove.
Corning lop, two TV's.

304-773-5758.

lo----------Anti qlle br111 bad , f ull

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding ell breeds . Heated
indoor- outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call81 4 · 448-

7795.
Bri arpetch Kennels All breed grooming . Indooroutdoor boerding faeilitiaa.
Engliah Cocker Spaniel .

388-9790.
Oragonwynd Cattery Ken ·
net. CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppa.s. Call 448-

8300. 304· 876· 8868.

3844 titer 7PM .

EKtra nic8 new 10x18 storage type b•rn building, light
gray with white thlriglet.

Eng. Springer Spaniel AKC .
Reg . thots . tail clip,
wormed, liver • white, 9-w .

Price $900.00 . 304-8756874.
Price W1rl Fllshing arrow
tign 8259 .00 complete .
Save f214 .001 Light.t nonarrow, •247.00. UnHghled

t199.00. FrH lotterol See
locolly : 1 (8001423·0183.

UHd Furniture ·· Metal
office desks. 3 mlle1 oul
Bua.ville Rd. Open 9am to

Electric huterl, fans , motora, carp ..ing, tires, antique furniture, lools, mlac .

Roar 2019 Muwoll. Point
Pleaunt.

1.::::::.. .:_________ '

9/25/85

~ ..1""".:::

Four 14xl 1ix lug wheolt• •; . ::;:gold and chrome with center • .. ,~._.,
capt . 304·178-2387 or
578-2282 .
•, ~"·

8 :00 •

IBIIll lllotlldltiiMn

.. ~~...

-

Wtnttobuytranamit~lonfor '7 . ~~
~"
-· _

304-1711-3898.

79

f175 eo. Call 814 -38B8282 evenings.
Purebred rat terrier pupptes
wormed, Call 8\lt'a or wae -

kondt. Call814· 268· 1487.
registered Miniature
Schneuzer pupp181. 3 fe ·
males. 3 mallt. Champion

bloodllnot. t 1 50 Hch. Coli
814-992-2607.
2 m111 reglstared Doberman. 1 red. 1 bllek end ten.

Coil 814-949-2792.

1981 Pontile Qrande Pfix

• Dlff'r.m 8tnllt8l
(HIOI MOVIE: 'Tho Meglc
of LMtle'
!MAXI MOVIE: ' " - For
the Y - Zephyr'
8 :30
(I) (YJ NIC NNOitlfoh;thody
Newa
(I) Coral ilunwtt Frtendo
I]) Mutlo Sponalook

U .S. 36 West, Jackson,

Ohio . 614-288-6451.
M11sey Ferguson. New
Holland. Bush Hog Sales II
Serviee. Over 40 used
tractors to choose from &amp;
complete line of new &amp;
used equipment . Lergett
selection in S.E. Ohio .
John Deer 360 C track
loader . forks . bucket .
wench , canopy, low hours.

Co11614 -256-6245 or 614-

1981 red T· bird Town Lan dau ea:c:ellent condition. naw
tires, Call after 6 :30 614-

245-9480 .
77 Mustang new parts, new
tires, new paint, ea:eallent

Coll614-388-9780 ottO&lt; 6.

Ill Coral a...-t
Ill
()J ABC elll Ill cn -

S1:1 VICI!~

e

New Holland has no-interest
financing for 24 months on
new or used hay end forage
products, grinders. mixers
and manure spreaders. New
Holland Specials For September . 1-New Model 329
manure spreader . 140bu.
Cash only 12900.; 1 · New
Model 36&amp; grinder mixer,
100 bu larger that . Cash

only S5900.; 1-Und Model
707 3 point New Holland
chopper with both heads

$1900.; 1-u..d Model 519
New Holland manure
Jpreader 217 bu; with hyd ·
end gate t21 00.; 1 -Uted
Modal 847 round baler

85900 .; 1-Uud Model
1090 9 ft . Gehl haybine
81900.; 1 · U•ed Super 717:
chopper with 1 row head

$1600.; 1-Now Hollond31 1
baler demonstrator
16,000.; 1-New Holland
488 9' havbine damonttra·
tor 11200.; 1-Uted New
Holland blower used 1 sea·

son No. 25 $1300.; 1·UMd
No, 8 New Holl1nd forage
wagen •1900; 1-Usltd Gehl
forage wagon •1600 .; 1 Used L· 42&amp; N,w 'Holland
skid steer loader *5900.:
1-Used 718 chopper and 1
row head $3300. Keefeu
Servic::e Center. Rt . 2 leon

St. Rt . 87 , Ph . 304-8953874.
Preconditioning, Receiving
Chow. Now teklng orders
weekly. Thla w ..kl price

'193.00 . Truck

load

of

Super Blocks in stock .
Yauger Farm Supply. At. 35,
Southside, W. Va . Phon•

304-675 -2078.

1----------&amp;2 Inch oak tobacco sticks
10 ooch . 304-875 ·2727.

.vw

Robblt. Noodt

rep1irs. Call Holar Clinic,
M()f'. thru Fri. 91m to 4 pm.

1982 EXP · 4 tp. oir.
sunroof. $4000. 304-676-

8B5B.
1978 Datsun 200 SX. excellent condition. low mileege,
price reduced. 304· 676·

5889.
1967 Chevy. 4 door. excel·
lent condition, t2600.00.
19&amp;7 Chevy, 4 door. fair

thorpe. t700 .00 . 304-895·
3638 after 5.

1979 Rabbit. 1978 Ford
LTD. Call attar 8PM , 614·

1974 Chevy lmpolo. 4 door
tedtn . Ctll 304·876-3430

388-8823.

or see at 222 Park Drive.

VW

53.000 miloa. ·uso.•

Rabbit

need•

repair. Call Holzer Clinic
Mon .- fri . 9AM to 4PM . Call

Home

614-448-5179.

875-7375 .

1981 Dodge Colt 4 1pd.
with economy shifter,
42 ,000 miles. AC. $2,200.
1980 Chrysler LeBaron 4
dr., 6 cyl. , auto, 43 ,000
miles, •2.600. 19B6 Dodge
Charger 5 apd ., 98 miles

t5.BOO. 1984 Dodge Daytona 3,000 miles. 15 •rd ., air
c::rllise, 86,950. Cal

614·

cond . Coli 814-446 -4745
between 6PM &amp; 9PM.
1976 Ford Pinto good transportation, 1300. Call 614·

446-0782.

256-1652 after 3PM.
1981 Buick LaSabre lTD,
air , PS. PB. AM - FM
cassette, V-6 , verv clean ,

$5, 996.
1965

Call 614 -448 -

1975 4 dr. Chevv Impale,
PS, PB, euto, r1d io, air &amp;
C B. very good cond . Call

675-5751.

8 -5 weekdays .
1973 Hondl Civic great gar
car, new · radials. e~~;hault ,
Sanyo stereo, speakers, de·

pondoble. 84 .000. Coll814448-1749.
1978 Chrysler Cordoba beat
offer, Sears dune kart 6 HP
like new. Cell 814-446-

4255 ofter 5 :00PM .
1979 Chevv v, ton PU , 6
cvl. . 3 apd. 1985 112 ton

GMC At. PS . 305 cu .in.
engine. 1984 Ya ton GMC 2
tone paint. PS, PB. nice. Call

speed, 1.6L-HO.

1983 Buick LaSabre, low
mileage, 2 door, air, tilt
cruise, 306 V·B. like new.

Phone 304-882-2778.

1980

Dodge Colt

RTS.

1600 cc. 4 sp elumn whHit,
E.,gle STs, sun roof. not

72 Trucks for Sale
1- - - - - - - - - - '1982 GMC van 'lends Design ' captain chairs, dual
heat &amp; air conditioning.
powar windows •locks. tilt.
cruise. AM -FM ca&amp;lltte.
306 cu .in . with direct drivtir
tranami11ion 44,500 miles,
new tires. Can be teen a1
Pic - Pac Supermarket .

$10.300 . Coli 614 -4468096 leave me11age.
1982 GMC S- 16. Sierra.
low miles , auto. air, stereo.
cassette , cruise. long bed.
like new . Call 614- 388·

614-949-2650.

1981 ChevY pickup, air
condition, AM·FM atereo.
automatic, 304·676".. 5431 ,

73

Vans

W.O.

7B Dodge 4-WD. good
cond . Call 614-446-0120 .
198&amp; 5 · 10 Blazer-Tahoe
V-6, loaded, auto with over
drive. Must Jell . 113,800.

Coli 614-949-23B7 614949-2958 .

74

Motorcycles

Clo1e-out All uaed Honda's
at reduced offer. Can be
teen at Honda Shop.

1984

Hondo

2005 3

wheeler. axe. c:ond. Also
riding boots. gloves. pentt,
kidney belt, helmet • g~ ·

1973

Harley

81 4-448 ·

•

whoel drive. 2 dr .. PS. PB.
71 .000 mllot, t1 ,950. Coli
614-448-8683 .
.J..;..:...t...-

HOtCJ Hf,+f

(YJJ-dy
Nightly
Report

FOfl~
' Pl~E!

ill

-

involved with thit lives of

throe boys while working at
a camp for YOW\9 cancer vtc·
tims. 160 mln.l
I]) Flipper
I]) Sotln'• Slit

&lt;

•

~

e

TH E N IT'S TIME 1

-·

USED A LITTLE
B~ACK MAGIC OF

..
~.:-..

MY OWN I

aoatl and
Motors for Sale

1980 Torry bttt boot. 25
HP, alec. trolling motor. till
trailer. canve1 aover. excel-

lent cond. Coli 114-2419153 .

1--------

-r

AWAKE, MY G IAo.JT
PROTECTORS! YOUR
MISTRESS CA~LSI'

(I)

.::_A

'Symphony No. 5.· (60 min.l
MOVIE; 'lrm;i ~
Douce'
(HIO] MOVIE: ' Untlor Fin'
ICCI
.
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Moecow
On the
8 :30 I]) Outdooro TV Flthlng

e

Carpentry and remodeling.'
...; .•
room addition•. painting, - ~ -·
plumbing and repairs. Phone : · ·::~

headin' ther·now!
Folia' us' We'll lead

....

(I) (lJ Hoi Town An old·
claims to be
the r&amp;al father of Fether

erly con man

you'

Hardstop .' 160 mln .l
Ill 700 Club
I]) Top Rank Bordng from
LuV-. NV
I])
()J Dv1101ty (CCI
!SEASON PREMIEREI

'Rostropovlch
Conducts
Shostakovich. ·
Mstislav
Aostropovich conducts the
tra in Dmitri Shoatakovich's

'Symphony N9. 6. ' 180 min.I
lllJ Under MI. Wood ICC!
Based on Dyltn Thomas· ·A
Play for Voices." this film
features impreasions of

a-ve

~,

Co. ,

-·

Rutland . Oh . 814-7422903. Batementt, Footers,
Concrete work, Beck hoe' a,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher, Dump
trucka, • water·OII·HWer·
electrlcelllnea.

..

()I)

MAY6E WE SHOULD
OPEN A FEW WINDOWS

PROMISE NOT TO
ESCAPE ...

.

...·r

two

37""

1-

'""'""'1

-~­

boolo
5 Miftutet of

42Yaltl

-...
-- - ·-- ·- - ··-i-"""

lrilruUoy

t 2010. Roman

43 Priet libel
t48ellwted

12W...

41 Ariklra

1Hoongdoor
143, Rornln
16Sandlroo

41 o-.trtum

50 Wind !corr\b.

lorml

531010. ......

t$fOOiball

$4WIIndiln

~
t1 1051, Romln

-~-

H Old Englioh
coin
H-lribe
51 Net dDIIi
10 DiE;' II

11-lalo
IOUnolotilod
22 fortnlt'

lllovitt ....

coiM

1112. Romen

82 llrib out
llDi-

,__,

12""-1

1flintorHorno

45WII'Wiull
41 Spooky

21 Monay 1~ -1

24 City

OOWN
1Molofilll ..

Z4 Soul
•
1Fr.l
......
17
ZIR-

.,car port

tO-

,, Maktl

1 --1
z3-..ono

31 City In

4Sihllldlloa

.....
_,.

. In

lowo

,~

21Midlm

1 --1.
2Giouyf-

33-

tcontl

Hoolloy

"'"""" ...

4 Atlb CIOUntr'f

5F....

ll-

Itt OINt

.

21Leedlntm~n
)0 Skirt fatllft

52 Acorn end

31-.rln
lZS.tocrockt&lt;

531004. 11oman
II ColfoltiO
17 laftclint bolt

1•1.1
!M Soyl

1 Plunk

profHOiQntll

I

,_wawatch

INN.N-

~ (YJ•

..... T....... -.:N...-c.

torlot 11 cl'oonlclod on the
""'"--Y of hit

-

-180 --~ .

l1 :30·~,.onlglit-

Tonight'• ~· . . Ollnn

CloM and Michtlol LAndon.

(60 min.l
())It t n ••

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~a.-w;;tcpw . . ~trro.•
1 Obr~
...... ....... _...... . . . ...... !ft . . . . . . . .

CIJ lite

IC-

' .. WE
NO, MAAM
TO

'• "

meet his new

I ] ) - . Fran U.N.C.LE.
(I) Eufap •• loltiNII
liiJ . . _ lranowlltl: Ufe
IIICI " - Tho lifo ol the
r-clw who
crHted 'Tho Aaconl of Mon'

~·.

_ ......

.........
40-.
... .

ACROSS

IY-

w

11 :00

'!

+

(M~M='Tho Night

..

7. Crown
814-2&amp;8· ·· •
114-441··.
6 now ~·
·

••

:II eo..ton

' of the . _ , . Stan'
ISubtitlod)
10:151]) MOVIE: 'Rocky-..
min'
IHIO] MOVIE: 'All the
P,..ldant'a Men'
10:30
Tmol•r'• Woild

...

A 6 M Furniture Manufac-

turing. St . Rt .·
City. Oh. Coli
1470, coli Evo.
3438 . Old
Uphonorod.

s•Pta

, Wben lhe spade king hil the table · Pass
DbI.
' declarer evaluated bis chances. Cari · Pa,.
Pau
. you do the same? Surely if West held Pau
.either red king, be would have kept the
lbiddi"' open. So there wu no future In
Opening lead: K
[tryiDII flneue lor either red kl"'- In·
slea~, South won the spade ace and
I played a club to the king. East won the
ace, cubed the q-n of spades and
got out with a club. Declarer had to be
careful now. First be played the beart won lhe king and had the unpleasant
ace. Then he tried the third round of choice of either leading into the A-Q of
clubs, East discarding. Only now did diamonds or giving declarer a sluff
declarer play a second heart. East and a ruff and his contract.

spring day in the Wollh vilof Lleraggub . 190 mln.l

Upholstery

'. '
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc. Ave .. Gelllpollo.
614·446 -7833 or814·4481833.

S..tlo

Nortll

·

lir.

~ill do water hauling, fill
c1atern and fill swimming

poolo. Coli 814-992-5858.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East

features impretatons of 1

.... '

'

.Jt532
ttO 7
• J 10 7 3

Cabot holpo out the hotol'o
oldell Ol!lployoe. 160 mlno.l
0 Ill Ill liquellzer McCall
comoo to the aid of a housekHper otter her aon is kid·
napped. (60 min .l
I]) Under Milk Wood !CCI
Based on Dylen Thomat' 'A
Play for Voices." thit film

;.,:

Pomeroy. 814-992-3891 .

,_

·inspaueo.

SOUTH

.A9

share a romance and Mrs.

: ::;~:

Haul limetlona, iand gra·
val ,dirt, blllk or bag fertilizer
and lime. Ea:calsior Salt
Works Inc. 838 E. Main St .•

bid, when your takeout
clearly tell your partner
1that you could bave opened the biddiDI
·younelf. Beca- of that uncertainty
rel•Un1 to Nortlt'o double, South wu
not sure he· oboujd rlllt a three-heart
bid. He felt OK whell be was raised to
!four, llince be did have a five-card ouit.
Ia
second suit In clubs and a quick trick
'

banite netQhbora.

ality.

..•..

1130. Reasonable flies.

tK6
.A2

displays a psychotic person-

.··

Wallgh 'a Water Service .
Wells, cisterna. pools. Fest.
reliable service. Call 614- ,

.KI

e

•. AND WHEN m;
ot...D, IT~ Q.U.ED
A HACI&lt; I

Ken ' s Water Service. Wells. • ":'..,.·
cisterns. pools filled. Phon• • ••"'

814 -367-0823or614-367-

.QJ 1076&amp;3

. It's different Immediately of- +taes

8-r

daughtor·in·law ·and Weot·
phaR roto.ma from Ethiopia
with comroversill changes
in mind. (60 min.l
· I])
(jJ Arthur HoH.y't
Hotel (CCI !SEASON PRE·
MIERE) Chriatine'a new lo\le

··
.. .....' .

7741 night or dly.

EAST

.76

31 Alllllivt

Craig Psnt to

I

General Hauling .

WEST

A takeout double in the pass-out po- .K2
aiUWI con be made ., very moderate
1
value~, u litUe u Dine or 10 bleb-Cud tJ9542

ers a secret about his subur·

10:00 DCIJffi&amp;t. EI-eDr.

James Boys Water Service.

87

a

spring day in the Woloh vil1'!11• of Llaroggub. (90 min.l
9:30 • Ill 111
8umo
· Comody W- A man
moves his family from New
York to Florida ond diacov·

....
~- ...
.. .'
::::_,

motu. Call 814-446·8038
or 614-992-7119 onytimo.

Also poolo filled . Call 814256 - 1141 or 814-448 ·
1175 or 814-446·1911 .

Ill On Suoge ot Wolf TriP

..

Dozer Work land clearing,
lendacaping, etc::. Free eati·

85

~·

National Symphony Orches·

4637, Jame1L. Devlson. Jr .
owner.

Construction

•
I]) ill Ctwtie •
Compony !CCI Tho Richmond's annual eamping trip
is cancelled when Charlie is
called in to work .

&amp;I

..• .

J .A .R.

e

.

C•ll anytime 814-448·

• AQ to a
tAQ8 3

e

... ...

·'.

.KQI

.__

Ml!i-

9:00

CARTER 'S PLUMBiNG
AND HEATING

Good -1 Exc::avatlng , basementa, footers, driveways,
aeptic tanks, landiCiping .

ByJaiDitJac:My

NORTH

H-.·

304-875-4322.

..

c.._

MacNolt/Lellrer

'Rostropovtch
Conduct&amp;
Shostakovich .'
Mstislev
Roatropovich conductl the
National Symphony Orchet·
tra in Dmitri Shoat8kovich's

..
·-5:::
,co,...

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT'ING. Rt. 1. Box 355, Golllpollt. Ctll814-367-0578 .

lneltlorl

liiJ On Stago ot Wolf TriP

:--~-

~

Ill

IPREMIEREI'
Dill ill Stir

~=~
........

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

w-

Joumtl
Ill

·•.

.II

.

(jJ DhaUA c - t
WKRP Iii Clnclnnlitl
8:00
Cll (YJ Hlghwev 111
H-n (CCI Part 2 of 2.
Jonathan and Mar1t become

Fetty Trn Trimming, stump
r'-moval . Call 304-871·- ......;

Excavating

..,_

e
e
e

Davidson

Sportotor . 304-175· 1658.

75

COME ItER&amp; (t+IM£1711/TEl Y
Ofl J GHIItt K (}(I(TE
ClrOSS WITH YOU!

.. .'

268 · 1240 or 814-268 -

1979 Suzuki 1000. 13.500
mllot. nice. Coli . 614-448B507.

.Call ott•r 3PM. J . Berrldgo.
814·448-2410.
1980 Old. Omo no f'r ont

GE . Specltllng in Zenith.
Call 304-578-2398 or 8144!18-2454.

83

e.t

(() M.jor ........ , ........:
Atltontl ot ·C I 1])' • I]) FM~lf!r F-

.. '

Phone 81 4-446-3888 o•
814-446-4477

Don't

I]) Flthln' Halo

i )

Cor. Founh and Pine
Gellipolis, Ohio

.._

Ill WltHI of Ftli'tUM

RON'S Televlelon Service.
Hou .. calls on RCA. Quazar,

82

-

I

Deitlloll

ON, PEIIR!

Careful play
saves the day

(jJ Prlc:o I• Right

Jerr.inona
(]) New Newt,wed

I ])

guorentood . CtM 304·273· .
2811 . Ravenswood, W. Va.

1975 Mercury Bobcat sta·
tion wagon, •400 .00 . 304·

1981 Toyota Celica GT. 6
tpdl. AC. Coli 814·317·
0853.

1979 Pontiac Bonneville
blue, loaded, AC. exc. cond.

Pump ulea. aervice. Regit·
lered in Ohio. All work •

. ~·-·
•""r

gloa. Call 614-446·7521 .

U .OOO . Coil
4477.

':.

,·'

3_o_4_-8_s_s_-3_8_o_2_
. - - - -.
.

614-446-2533 .

78 Chevv Impala PS , PB, air,
AM · FM , good cond .,

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

'84 Ford Escort L. blue, 2
6

7:30

00 YO/./ HQ/R t'IE,

:,...;

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

tlon . Coli 614-446-8209

mateo. Ctiii14-B92-2772.

Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Molt weUs completed ~~~
day. PumpMieaandMnric:e.

1970 Chevelle C on . good
top, run s good, needs body

197B Chevrolet Camara
AC , PS, PB, AM -FM radio,
100.000 mile1, good condi ·

..·..
. ..

cond. $250.00. 304-7735873.

1985 Chevy Deluxe 10
pickup truck. P.S .. P.B..
V-8, Auto. $8900. Call

Call 614-379-2138 before
9PM .

•

576-2010.

1974 Nova. 360 engine. f1ir

MKNoii/Lehrer

Newohour

J .and L. lnstallltlon. Roof.. ... ..: ~
ing. vinyl aiding. atormdoors• • - ·
and windows. Free Hti·
?
•

Starks TrH and lawn Service, stump removal, 304·

1979 VW Dasher, auto, 4
cyl., 4 dr, hatch back, no
rust. Call 614-446 ·B507.

International Scout 4 WD:
for parts, good angina ,
trans, and transfere case .

liiJ

crete. Coll304-773-6131 .

'76 Monte Carlo. $200.00

8885 .

6 point job. $1.260 . 1964

111Nowt

D.and M . Contnctors. Vinyl
aiding, replacement win ·
dows. intuletfna. roofing.
new and remodeling, con-

or 675-7318.

plain! 304· 875 - 5306.

1979 Z-28 Camaro. AC . PS,
PB, tilt wheel. 1977 Olds
Cutlass Supreme. Call 814-

(J) so-ld City TV

1976 Ford Maverick, ma·
roon. 4 door; 6 cylinder. 200
eninge. good running cond, · oppllootlonl 304-875-2088

675-7436 .

1967 Fleetwood Cadillac
limosene, 3 seats. fair con ·
dition. $1,600 or best offer.

CIJ Eutatt.eitwnent Tonight
Fortune
.Ill WltHI of F-..

Coli collect 1·114-2370488. day or night. Rogor•

$400.00 . 304-676-2669.

e(I) (I) PMCourtlhlp{Edtlle'o
ali"'lv"'"
(YJ WltHI of

carpenter, electri· .
clan. muon. painter. roof.' .
ing linc:luding hot tar

need• transmillion. 304·

(Mswera lon\OITOW1

Y - y·o l Jum- NUIXIE ~OUSE H_EARTH ~UGHT
- . How you hOYt lo pay lot tor110 klndt ol
.
pltltiC lurgory- THROUGH THE NOSE .

F-

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. locel ~ancea
furniahed. Free ut:lmatn.

1331 . .

YOU

1]) 8pd;tocento;I]J Moly Tyler Moqre

RINGLES'S SERVICE. ox·

After 5 PM 304-8711-3772.

1977 Grand Prbl: . 1978
Chevy 4 .~&lt; 4 , lit ton, good

•.

... .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~rienc:ed

door,

379-2726.

7:00

.,.. .•

gottod

AniWer ,.,., JUST

(CCI

by,.---cr xI I l rn

..._lho ciiOiodiOitorl to .
fcrm,. ......... - - · .. tug-

. I tl

eTIIId

lmp~vements

.'

' 69 Chevelle, 400 engine,
auto. AM -FM cuMtte. rally
whool1, t 1.700.00. 304-

I I ( )

fl1 ~wrllc:Uic

Baument Weterprooflng.

lhapo. 82,000. Call 614·
256-6417.

614·446-0330 .

8500. Call 614-448· 2196 .

1 981

ICAINAM±

e

t5.800. 814-992-5883.

1962 Type 10 Chevy Ctvt·

I

T'-tN

..: .

miles. Excellent condition .

lier. Good cond. 304- 876-

In

I ll Andy Ortftlth
Ill Audubon Wildlife

1978 Amerlc:en Ptlgrlm ,
tilde - in truck camper.
S'"pa 4 , stove. icebox •
tumence . Very clean. e710.

1975 4 dr. lmpolo. pt, pb.

·~ --

llll Eloctrlc c:oon,.ny

Motors Home•
&amp; Campara

81

Aoroblcs·llodiN

I])

:;!;"_:

1982 Flrabird, 4 cyl auto. :

01

Ill 111 •

(I) I]) (YJ •

h

lxrYS

MNING

&lt;......:

1978 Nova for ule. Good
work ctr wi1h new tiret. C1ll

614-448-2282 .

Call 614-446· 1 197.

CROSS 6 SONS

Block.

GUN

door, hardtop. Suutiful.
Looks and drives like new.
Original owner 80 years old.
Florida cer. LowmiiHge . No
rent. Fully equJpped. Cell

614-448-5179.
TOP CASH paid for '80
model and newer uaed cars .
Slnith Buick -Pontiac. 1911
Eettern Ave .• Gallipolis. Call

446-7404.

Firewood for 11le. You cut
and ttack. Seasoned , mostly
ash and hickory. &amp;10. for
pick · up load . Call 614-742-

2222 .

Autos for Sale

1978 Chrysler New Yorker,
$1 ,900 . 2 door. bla ck-silv.er
interior, high mileage, good
cond., loaded . Call 614-

614 -448-2783 .
brick , mortar and
m~onry supplies . Mountain
State Block , At. 33. New
Haven, W. Va . 304-B82·

71

256-1905.

no.oo. 61 4-992-7B34 .

hat dip rablueing, aU fVpel of
gunsmith work, fait service,

WEDNESDAY

' .. .._Jo-.·

-

au1o. trana .• ac, good condi·

1978 Ford Fairmont 4 cyl .• 4
spd., standard . Horticulture
beans 810 bu . Call 614·

Oldearcornforaale . S2.00a

$3 .49

Cell814-245-5193.

1981

penel 0139 .95 .

17'~t19' whits gold vanity
with top f29 .96, marble top
&amp; vanity $39 .96.
3 or 5 pc. tub wall kits, white
or color 839 .95 to S89 .95 .
Emboned 2'x4' ceiling tne
some fire rated 81 .89 ea.
Suipended ceiling grids (12'
main tee $2.601 4' tn 80
cent• I (2' tee 40 cents) (1 0 '
wall angle 11 .99) .
Colonial clear white pine
casing. Window and door
trim 32 cent ft .
Veneered interior white pine
door Jamb's 88.99 pr .
3 '" 16 ' foil face fiberglass
insulation 88 . 12 sq . ft .,
816 .95 roiL
·
lnColor longeted comodes 's
siphon jet 889 .95.
4 'x10 ' P.U.C. sewer and
drain pipe with bell (1 pc.

Seed wheat, cover crop
wheat, feed wheat, rye,
barley, Altizer Farm Supply.

Avo .. Call814·448-0840.

% length green winter coat
with imitation fur collar.
Reel good condit i on .

TONY'S

onolnot.fouroldttyloCht.., , :.;,.•

rallywheela. 304-IIIJ-3131 ,.,.. ; .. :,.

378-8311 .

8782 .

Building material, concrete
b,locks all sizes, lentils. flu
blocks, clay tile . Delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co., Pine
St ., Gallipolis. Ohio Call

2182.

Television
Viewing

310 Chevv trensmlulon. .... ~ .. • .J~
Oldsmobile treOfdnamll-lionu
-:::
auto. Two 310
1
-'"".., ·

after&amp; .

DeilY

The

...· ._.''

~

W . Fully lotdod. 3B.OOO

T r an :; po r l ~ lion

Bend Instruments. 'Frank ' s
Pawn Shop, 430 Second

$15 .001120' to 30'-$20.001
130' to 40'-825 .001 .
Aliminum tiding 8 ' wood grain an twin 4' with foam

65 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Musical
Instruments

Silage wagon , work cond.,

Fire wood 820 .00 a pic::kup
truck load . 614-742 -2230 .

1 &amp;79 v.w. Rabbit. Excellent

condition. t2200. C1U &amp;14·

tion. 304-875· 31 54.

867-4402 evenings.

anytime.

5pm. Mon. thru Stt .
114-44t-0322

,·

Fish Tank and Pal Shop,
2413 Jack1on Ava~ue ,
Point Pleasant. 304-675·
2063 . Fiah, birdJ end more.

Coll814·384-3645.

t65.

992· 7721 .

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes.
windows, lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
Utility bldg . spec::lal :
30'x40'x9 ' with track door
&amp; sarv . door, S6255
erected. Iron Horse Builders,

015. 814-992-8149 .

l- - - - - - - - - - -

55 Building Supplies

&amp;0 gil. aquarium w ith accessories 1nd ttend $100.

Call614·4.:46·8563.

re c lining 1eau. *1 . 111 .
814-992· 5819.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

1985 ·

814-949-2558.

273-3447.

month• old . 304· 875 - _8_:o_o_._ __ _ _ _ __
1
2032.

o . Call814-245· 5121 .

We have a new COPVing
machine'. Our old ona, Xerox
680 I, doesn't work but it
would ifaomeone had know·
how. We ' d like to sell the old
one for $200 .• 11 is. The
Daily Sentinel. 614·992 ·

•zoo

GE Bide by tide ref- fr~~tzer.
Double oven alec renge.
White female AKC regiatared mineture Poodle, 10

448-0373 .

3 offices with small kitchen.
1218EaatarnAve
mo.
&amp; room unfurnished
apt.,8200 mo. Call 614448 - 7572 or 614- 448 1980.

446-7025 .
2 bdr. apt., 11 Court St ...
S326 mo ., ref. &amp; dep . Call
814-446· 4926 .

Firewood 1 00% Haaonad
oak , $30.00 load , split,
delivered, stack ad . Call 614-

118001423-01 83. anytime .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

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

•oriet. f1 00.00. 304-875·
7241 .

258-8417 .

4418 after 8PM.

304-875-6483. 9 AM to 5
Newly radeeorated 2 bdr
apt, with AC. large spacious
rooms. immediate occupancv. S250 mo. Call 614·

livingroom couch and chair
8160.00 . 2 recliners

$60. 00 eoch . 304· 875·
7438.

61 4· 387· 8232 or 814-446Nicely furnished mobile 4285 .
home, eff. apt .. central air
and heat in city, adults only.

Compound Bow Bear White
Tail with acceuorias, 304-

HEAP accepted . Coli 814245-5B04.

614· 446-21 66.

.. ...
..•..

evening•. 614-949·2849.
578-2387 or 578-2282 . .

Firewood-cutup slabs, 1
truck load f100. 2 · t180 .
Pickup load. you haul 815 .

Hay &amp; Grain

Mulch straw. Phone 304·

Pats for Sale

1979 Ford LTD. 4door. P.S.
P. B.. tlr, cnoiN, tilt whNI.

1 973 Ford Galaxy 500. 4

Cell614-949-2424 .

56

Cutloot

Benny Hickel.

Mixed gra11 hey for sale .

54 Misc. Merchandise

Oldt

3fQ4· 458-1B98.

Couch. lovetNt. 2 chairs.
c:om~ete outfit. 1450. good
cond. Call 814- 388-818&amp;.

Coll814· 949-2424.

197'7

Brougham 360 auto ,
loaded. 4 new tirtl Seers
r8dial, looh-runs goods.

2 year-old Holstein steer, 2
veer old Black Angua heifer.

84

Mixed grass hay for ule.

197 9 Plym outh Hori1on
good cond . Call 114~ 388 ·
9712.

1978 Chevrolet Monza
Spider. C1n be Htln at Dan's
Exxon In Pomeroy: Sn

etOO. Coll614-448· 2168 .

8221 .

JACK SON ESTATES Mobile home lot, 12'x&amp;O' or
AP ARTMENTS (Equel smaller. S75 water paid, 4th

Furn, efficiency apt private
&amp; quiet. single working
penon only. Call 614-446·

WANTING TO BUY BABY
HOLSTEIN BULL CALVES.
FROM AREA DAIRIES .
CALL VEAL BARN. 814·
245-9102 OR 614· 4488108.
- - - - - - - -- - lw08
Semmen.. l Cattle. Heifers,
Club Celvu. Call814-9492822. John J . Rote.

llJoo

Autos for Sale

Coll614-448-4482 .

8 ft. wood 6 upholl tory

814· 448 ·2048 oftor 8PM.

814-446-3474.

9595 .

- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Furniture. new &amp;
2 bedroom second floor apt.
Large section of qual ·
Total electric. Aero•• from Jty furniture . 1216 Eastern
Pomeroy fire St ation . C1U 1 _
A_v•_·_·_G_•_II..:ip_o_li_•_·- - - -

large recently redecorated 2

1 bdr . apt., laundry room, no
petl, water &amp; trash paid,
1226 mo . plus deposil . Call

Angus c::rois. Cell 814· 2•&amp; ·

Count y Applian ce, Inc.
Good used appliances and
TVsatt. Open8AMtoiPM .
Mon thru Set. 614-446·
1899. 627 3rd. Ave. Gall i·
~lpo
ls_._
o _H_._ _ _ _ __

One and t wo badroom turnished apts. for rent in
M iddleport araa . All utiHties

Co11814-992-3667 or 814992-5170.

614-245 -9595.

2 yr old bull Hereford-red

6 14 -446-7398 .
negotioblt . Co li 614-992 · 1- - - - - - - - - -

3 rooms and bath apt . in
Middlaport. Furnished or
unfurnished. Nice location,

down town. stove &amp;. ref.
furnlthed , 8260 mo. Cell

conll lb. Call 614· 388·
9181 til 5, or 814· 44801&amp;1after 15.

W11hers, dryers. refrige ra·
tors, rlnQtt . Skaggs Ap·
pliances, Upper River Rd.
betide Stone Crett Mr.~tel .

Houaing Oppor1untty.

71

Live&amp;1ock

Butcher goeta for Ale 50

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

814 · 992 · 7787 . Equol

SchoOl. 304615-4lnl0'11r -87.5, 1982:••

2 bdr . apt. convenient to

83

61 Household Goode

1 bedroom apt. for rent.

.a,~ prdnance

44

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ Larry Wright

. paid . 814-992-5084 ott., 5 1
p.m.
1~

3 bedroom home in Middle-

6 75-6588 .

Wednesday. Septemll8f' o~.o,

r-omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

by CONNIE WIENER

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~ants

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

41

Hopes diminishing for quake victims

Reconnection
procedures
established

31

68
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82

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COLUMBUS (UPI) -The Public
UtUltles Commission of Ohio has
established special reconnectlon
procedures tor gas ~nd electric
customers who ~e without service
due to nonpayment of bills.
The agency Tuesday also decided
that once again this ye~ there wUI
be no generai moratorlum on the
disconnection of gas and electric
service beca\lse of nonpayment.
A PUCO spokesman said the
Percentage of Income Payment
plan for low income customers
ensures that every customer wUI be
able to maintain gas and electrtc
utUity service this coming winter.
The plan allows customers at or
below 150 percent of lhe federal
poverty level to maintain utUity
service by paying 15 percen I oft heir
monthly household Income toward
their energy bills.
Customers currenty without utility service may be reconnected for
the winter heating season by
meeting the following
requirements:
-Any customer who has defaulted on the PIP or anotber
standard payment plan must pay
the amount of default, pay the
arrearage, or pay S250, whichever Is
less. The $250 includes any security
deposit a utility may require.

Marriages to erid

2

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FRIDAY SERVICE! - Je88e
Brinker, 64, Racine buslnes&amp;
man, died Monday at Kober
Medical Center. He WM a
jeweler and wa&amp;clunaker for
many years. Services will be
held at I p.m. Friday at the
,Ewing Funeral Home.

\ School foundation
funds received
Meigs County's three local school
districts received$51i0,598.42as their
share of theSeptemberStateSchool
Foundation subsidy payments .
Amounts received by each district
following deductions for retirement
are Eastern Local, $116,282.31;
Meigs Local, $316,717.97; Southern,
$117,594.14. In addition tbe Meigs
County Board of Education . re·
celved a direct allotment of
$28,477.17. Totai subsidy funds for
the entire state amounted to
$158,364,965.47.

Filing ford isso lu tio ns of marriage
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court are Menifee Ed Blevins,
Pomeroy, and Tina L. Blevins,
Chester; Media B. Schoonover,
Rutland-, and Charles A. Schoonover, Dexter; Cletls Dalton, Albany,
and Iva Dalton, Albany.
G ladys Marie Molden, Dexter,
has tiled for a divorce from Robert
B. Molden, Dexter, charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
A restraining order has been Issued
against the defendant pending final
action.
A divorce filed by Ellen Mae
Stewart against Carl E . Stewart has
been final~ed In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court on grounds ct.
gross neglect of duty ..

~

.
'

Revival continuing
A revival at the Middleport
Inde!ll'ndent Holiness Church with
Ivan Myers, New Haven, speaking
wlll continue through Sunday with
services at 7: 30each evening.

Two emergency runs·
Meigs eounty Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports two c ails
Tuesday: Middleport atl: 40p.m. to
Meigs Junior High for Tina Hill to
Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Tuppers Plains Fire Department at
7: 51 p.m. to a tree fire behind the
elementary school.

Veterans Memorial

Weather forecast .

Admissions--Mona Brown, Syracuse; Dayton McElroy, Racine;
Lena Hooper . .AJbany; Thomas
Stinson, Columbus.
Dlsch~ges-· Brooke Lyons, Mona
Brown.

Tonlght..showers or thunderstorms llkely. Low 50 to 55. Light
southeast winds .
Thursday... mostly cloudy and
cooler with scattered showers.
Highs In the upper 60s.
Chance of rain Is near zero
percent today .. 60 percent tonight
and 40 percent Thursday.
Extended forecast
Friday through Sunday
Fair and cool through the period.
Inglis upper 50s to mid 60s Friday
and Saturday .. and mid 6&amp;!1to low 'lOs
Sunday. Lows in the low to mid 40s
Friday and Saturday momlngs and
In the mid to upper40searly Sunday.

Homecoming planned

r

•

Homecoming will be held at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church
Sunday with morning services at 10
followed by a carry-In dinner at 12
noon. Afternoon services at 1:45
p.m. will feature music by the
Bissell Brothers. Pastor Carl Hicks
invites the public.

MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Woric
crews fumigated and demolished
buUdlngs In the earthquake-crushed
he~t of Mexico City; a sign that
authorities had little hope of finding
more suJVivorstrapped In !be ruins.
Theotflclaldeath toO lromthetwo
quakes that rocked central Mexico
· ·Thursday and Friday climbed to
more than 4,200 people - Including
five Americans - and a govern·
ment spokesman said Tuesday It
would reach at least 5,!XXl.
Rescue workers continued to
search for thousands believed
trapped In the rubble of buildings
that collapsed during the powerful
quakes.
Ricardo Ampudla, a presidential

- 3 spen automatic
blower

Soil Jud@ing teams

t't l;lw-•P~W~lt

•

A leader of the French team·,
Delawnoy Pareln, said poQr organ!·
zat ton • by Mexican . authorities
delayed rescue efforts at a critical
period when time was sUpping awaY:
for anyone still aUve.
Late Monday and early TueSday,
rescuers at qU.ake-shattered Juarer
Hospital rescued two Infants born
days before the earthquake.

Vol .35. No.11 S

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff writer
Danny Melton, 31, Canton, died of gunshot wounds
on Oct. 5, 19Kl according to testimony of Dr. Patrick
Fardal, forensic pathology specialist with the
Franklin County Coroner's office. The pathologist
testified during Wednesday's trial of Lindsay Taylor,
37, charged with aggravated murder In Melton's
death. •
Called by the prosecution, Dr. Fardal outUned his
qualifications as an expert, he described how
Melton's body was received for an autopsy on Oct.ll,
the day after it was found at the Taylor trailer on the
·Forest Rim Road in Meigs County.
Dr. Fardal said the body was checked for ethanol
level to help determine if alcohol was involved. There
was a problem In determining this, Dr. F~dal said,
because of the badly decomposed state of tbe body

~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.

Pic'k4: 7278

JACKSON, Ohio (UP!) -Jackson County Commissioner Marvin
Keller says he is opposed to a plan
designed to help solve tbe county's
financial problem.
"It's too late to negotiate," Keller
said Wednesday . "Let's kiss this
thing off an\! forget about lt."
Keller was presented with the
plan Sunday offering county cutbacks in exchange for his favorable
vote on a 1 percent temporary
emergency tax, which requires the
unanimous approval of the county's
three commissioners.
Keller has repeatedly voted
against tbe tax while the county's
other two commissioners have
voted in favor of II.
"We'll just have to statve for a
while,'' said fellow commissioner
Ed Michael. "It's a shame he's
(Keller's) doing this."
Keller said he Is opposed to any
proposal that would cancel the two
sales tax Issues on the Nov. 5 ballot
or that would require him to vote for
an emergency tax.

FREE

MUFFLER
INSPECTION

MUFFLER INSTALLATION
SPECIALISTS

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Richard M. Lewis. a lawyer
representing Jackson County audi·
tor, recorder. clerk of courts, sheriff
and board of elections, said be had
spent hours negotiating with Keller
over .the past few days. The lawyer
said Keller never said he was
completely opposed to an emer·
gencytax.
"That (Keller's vote for the tax)
was the basic quid pro quo" In
exchange for tbe cuthacksandother
concessions offered by county
ofHceholders, Lewis said. He said

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1320 WATT

80/1500 WATT

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Radiant Heater

Convection Heater

$2188

$26 99

C&amp;A
AUTO REPAIR
PH. 949-2777
320 5th St., Racine, Oh.

110 WEST MAIN

EBER·
S
BACH
HARDWARE COMPANY

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The reslg·
nation of Minnie Fells Jolmson. the
embattled dlrecior of the state
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental Disabilities,
will be effective Friday, the
governor's office announced
Wednesday.
In a letter to Gov. Richard F.

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
"-'~ld• in th!IIChterl""'*'l •• tvlollblt ltOitl p.II10C•Pttont s.nuy.....,. only The • .100 So.nt'Y !;tNiat1 O'IW" ,...,, llorR

,...,CIIeiiCIIII 111&lt;1 M1 IP*f OWf' priOR T ' - IMY a.. •.n.tiontl '" P,OduCta, -dlblil Q&gt;,olnlol . . •l'ld proc.. in onclofidwollllorn

r,_., Mieo.:l lhotor

-Heavy steel and cast
construction

-3 sizes

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

Head Quarters Beauty Salon
LOCATED ON FOREST RUN ROAD

NOW HAS S OPERATORS TO SERVE YOU
We offer manic:ures, waxing, artific:ial
nails, tanning, styling, perming with all
the latest produc:ts.

Keller indicated approval ofmostof
!be pro);JQS'!I, although some ques·
tlons remained.
"The officeholders have made a
good faith effort. .I can't believe
Kelle\ Is acting In the !Jel;l Interests
of the county," he said ..
Earlier this month, thecountylald
off 35 emplayees because of the
budget crunch. However, some of
lhe employees are continuing to
work on a volunteer .basis or are
being paid through private
donations.
"The county Is already broke ....
We'll just have tO' suffer and do the
best we can," Keller said. "It's tbe
12th hour and now t~'re wllltng to
negotiate. Where were (the otber
county officials) 10 months ago?"
The proposal presented to Keller
called for a 6-month emergency tax,
and the placement of a 0.5 percent,
two-year tax before voters lriMay. lt
also called for the withdrawal of the
two tax issues scheduled to appear
on tbe November ballot.
Keller said tbe proposal would
provide only a temporary solution to
the problem.
"l'mnot looklngforaBand-aldfor
six months. I'm looking for a
long-range plan," he said.
County judges and other office·
holders have filed petl1lons in the
Ohio Supreme Court to force th~
commissioners to approve a tax to
keep county rtflces open. Keller said
be would file his response today to
those petitions.
"It's up to tbe Supreme Court
now," Municipal Judge Roy GUll·
land said Wednesday.

Resignation effective Friday

POMEROY, OHIO

PH. 614·992-2111

which woukl cause th~ production of ethanol due to
bacteria.
According to Fardal's opinion Melton died of a
gunshot wound Into the left ·eye at the range of eight
feet or less.
.
He determined the date of death as Oct. 5 based on
the size of the maggots found In the body.
Dr. Fardal explained slides made of Melton's brain
and body which were shown on the courtroom wall for
the benefit of jurors. The witness said a microscopic
test was completed which determined Melton has no
diseases which would have caused his death.
Upon cross examination, Dr. Fardal reported that
no' check was made for the drug content of Melton
because that Is normally not done unless It Is
speclllcally indicated that a person might have been
using drugs.
Jay Cremeens, embalmer at the Ewing Funeral

Celeste, Jolmson said It Is time for a
"new face" to take her post "sotbat
what I haveworkedsohardforwill
not be diminished."
Jolmson, 42, was unavailable for
comment.
Raymond T. Sawyer, Celeste's
chief of staff, refused to say that
Johnson had been forced to resign.

Wesam Construction of P 0meroy
was the apparent low bidder
Wednesday for expansion and
renovation of Addaville and
Cheshlre -Kyger Elementary
Schools in the Kyger Creek attendance area of the Gallia County Local
School District.
The project is among thedistrict's
building improvements and construction program approved by
district voters two years ago. New
elementary buildings have been
completed in the Southwestern and

Bidwell area while renovation is
underway on buildings for Vinton
and Hannan Trace students.
The board will renovate the two

AT THE BENCH- A&amp;meys lorboththestate and
the defm8e approached the bench of Meigs Coumy
Judge Charles Knight !Ill\' era! tbnes during the nr..t

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff wrller
The "dangerous" condition of the
railroad crossing on County Road 21
at Hobson was discussed In length at
Wednesday's meeting ot tbe Meigs
County Commissioners.
The board expressed its concern
over the "hazardous" Conrail
crossing to Phil Roberts, county
engineer.
Commissioner Rich Jones said
the board bas received numerous
complaints about the "obstacle
course" at Hobson "and with good

reason.''
Although the crossing Is not the
responsibility of the county highway
department, the board requested
Roberts to look Into the slt\lation.
Highway Superlnlendent Ted
Warner noted that a25mlleperhour
speed limit lspostedforthecrosslng,
however, the group agreed that the
25 mph limit was stU! too fast for the
crossing. Warner suggested posting
caution signs In addition to the

t'Ultiml.l.:f"ned lkef. liloloi11 :ilyk llctf. Sm01lo~d Turk) lla-l't.

Smolltd Ctlcktn l!ll'~1. t:racked hlack l't:mn !lam.
I~W'I

!14)'11· Ham

GIVE US A CALL TODAY 01 WALK IN
AND SEE HOW WE CAN SERVE YOU
PHONE 992-631'1
OUR OPERATORS AlE:

Cindy Cross
Shirley Ours!
Jeonna Pauley
Tina Pierce
Connie Aldridge

graduated Valley ltauty School
graduated Valley ltauty School
graduated Parktnburg Jtauty Academy
graduated Meigs High School
graduatei Valley ltauty School

COMI'UI:J'EI) PROdECI"- Membenlottbear..tp
Cou&amp;y Elderly Howmr Board, 1e11o rtrbl. M•IM'hr
Wellaler, Paul Barneu, Frank Cleland, IUclwd
.Jone8, Bill YOWl(, and Eleanor Thomas, Wllolleellred

SG01b08b00

25C

railroad crossing signals.
Roberts explained that It would be
expensive for the county to properly
repair the crossing with hot miX.
Roberts said a. gradual slope,
starting about 150feet back from the
crossing, was needed. He said he
would check to see If any federal
funds were available for such
projects.
The Conrail system began last
ye~ raising crosslllgs In Meigs
County, apparently to accomodate
high speed trains.
Warner reported about 20milesof
county roads have been sealed this
year in !be county, Including Cl, 6,
CIA, 'Zl and 65.
Roberts said the county Is trying
to repair as many roads as possible
but he was still unsure if all roads
scheduled for sealing this year
would be finished by fall . The
highway department still plans lo
seal Painter Ridge and County Road
18hesald.
Warner reported that grader
patching Is completed on County
Road 56 and in now underway on

County Road 1.

In other busini:&gt;ss comrnL~isioners:
-Discussed. repairing low spots
near the County Infirmary where
rain water coUects;
- Requested Roberts to check a
potential problem area on County
Road 75;
-Requested Roberts to arrange
a meeting with Fisher's Big Wheel
representatives to determine the
best roadside location for a large
store sign;

-Approved a request from the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service to advertise for a 1985 or 1986
ambulance;
- Granted permission for EMS
personnel to attend three out-of·
county seminars; ·
- Decided to transfer an old
sheriff's cruiser to the county
highway department, If allowed by
law, since no bids for the auto were
received;
and accepted the low bids of
Asphalt Materials, of Marietta, and
Koppers, of Heath, for bituminous
products for the month of October.

elementary atnrlu.TeS \n Ute Ky~r

Creek area which were construc1ed
In the late 50s. Low bid for the two
projects was $339,004. Other bids
were awarded to Architectural
Eight Inc.. of Barberton. Ohio.
$117,825 for window replacement:
General Heating and Air Conditioning Inc., Flatwoods, Ky ., $00,b70 for
mechanical repairs: Jarrell's
Electric and Installation of Ports·
mouth, $117,589 for electrtcal work
and Farnham Equipment Com . pany of Westerville $32,850 for
library and miscellaneous equip·
ment.
According to district architect
Paul Jaros, work wUI begin on the
two buildings as soon as all official
documents havbe been signed.
· Meanwhile, the Assistant Super·
lntendent of Public Instruction, Dr.
Irene G. Bandy, will betheprtncipal
speaker for the 2 p.m. Sunday
afternoon dedication of llle new
Southwestern Elementary School
located on SR 325.
Ground was broken for the $2.5
million Southwestern building and
the Bidwell-Porter school located on
SR 160 near Parler on July 29. 1984 .
The Bidwell-Porter building will be
dedicated on Oct. 6. Funds lor
construction of the buildings, Included in an $11 million building
program drawn up by thr county
hoard of education, were obtained
from a 4-mill construction levy
passed by Gallia Count y voters in
November, 19Kl.

_Silver Ridge area residents
continue waterline efforts

Oscar Mayer"' introduces nine tasty,
tempting lean meat~- new Select Slices:M
You'll find zesty Pastrami, spicy Corned
Beef, irresistible Honey
Ham, savory Smoked .
Turkey Breast and lots
more . . . all smoked or
spiced for the beginning
of a whole new taste.
H¥1'!,

of t...tlmony In the Lin.Jsay Tu.Jilori11Uiidoir
Jack Sclll'llroogh, on
questioning.

Meigs commission discusses
dangers of Hobson crossing

· ·, -. More taste than you thought
~~~
Cold Cuts could have.

!llll'lt' ~

near Parkersburg and accompanied them to the
location. On the following day, he said tbe sheriffs of
Meigs and Jackson Counties and the West Virginia
State Patrol visited his home Inquiring about Lindsay.
He said he told that at first that be had not seen
Lindsay because he thought it was a minor matter .
However, when he found out that Lindsay might be
Involved In the death of Melton, he told them whereto
find Lindsay .
Taylor said he feels his bro1her has some
abnormalities In Intelligence and that he cannot read
or write. He did go to elementary school but Daniel did
not know If Lindsay completed . that schooling.
Lindsay has a lways lived with his mother, Daniel
testified. Daniel testified that he moved' out of his
mother's residence at the age of 12 and was reared by
a relative of his father.
(Continued on page 10)

Pomeroy firrn
given contract

SAVE 25¢ on New Oscar Mayer®Select Sllces:

Snulked 0111ktd lt&lt;vn,

Home, described how he picked up Melton's body ·
from the trailer on Oct. 10 and took It to the Franklin
County coroner for the autopsy oil !be following day.
He said the body had not been moved when he picked
It up at lhe trailer.
Dr. Jolm Ridgway, deputy coroner at tbetlrneofthe
19ll3 death, said he vlsltro the scene and arranged for
the autopsy. He settbedate of Oct. 5 as lhe death date
based on decomposition of tbe body and the autopsy
report.
Hall brother testllles
Daniel Taylor, a half brother of tbe defendant, told
about a visit by his mother, Lindsay Taylor, Alvin
Taylor and Jack Scarbrough In October. He said the
group asked to stay at his home In Belleville, W.Va.,
that night- on a Thursday- butthat he did not allow
them too. They came back the next momlng and
located a trailer home tor his mother and Lindsay

Jackson commissioner
opposes bailout plan

r;::::::::::::===;;;:=:;-1

tough, durable Walk~r8 Tru-Fit®
muffler at a very competitive price.

2 Sactk&gt;f"!l, 14 Pages 26 Centt
A Mullimedla Inc. Newspaper

_Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 26, 1985

Copyrightod 1985

· Flvedefendantswere fined and 17
$46; Jerrena
Robson,
GalllpoUs,
Joseph Llsh,
Mason,
$44;
others forfeited bonds In the court ot $47;
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler Cynthia Ord, Pomeray, $48~ Danny
Davis, Rutland, $44; Allectia Ater,
Tuesday night.
Fined were Jolm warner, Pome- McConnellsvllle, $45; Mark Kimes,
roy, $48 and costs, and Jacquelyn ' Racine, $43; Steve Lambert, Rutland, $49, Rose Yocum, Glouster,
SPECIALIZATION
Yonker, Logan, $45 and costs, both
$46,
all
posted
on
speeding
charges;
charged with speeding; Danny
LOW BACK PAIN • PINCHED NERVES (SPINE)
Haggy, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, Mark McCloud, Middleport, $63,
NECK &amp; SHOULDER SYNDROME o EXTREMITIES • HEADACHE
failure
to
register
motor
vehicle;
disorder!~ manner; John Guinther,
SCIATICA • FAILED DISC SURGERY • ATHLETIC INJURIES
SYSTEMIC DISORDERS • NUTRITIONAL WORK-UPS
Pomeray, $375 and costs, driving Christopher Taylor, Pomeroy, $113,
SCOliOSIS SCREENING (SPINAL CURVATURE)
Intoxication.
while Intoxicated; $63 and costs,
INJURY: PERSONAL , Al/TO. INDUSTRIAL
!allure to control vehicle and $63 and
BLOOD ANALYSIS •LABOR,O.TORY • PHYSICAL THERAPY
cosis, dlsturblngtbepeace; Richard
Medicare &amp; Ohio &amp; W. Va . Workman's Compensation
Hogle, Lansing, Mlch., $43 and
costs. failure to yield the right of
TuesCLEVELAND (UPI)
way.
day's winning Ohio Lottery
WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CliNIC, INC.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles R. numbers: Dally Number
2415 Jackson Ave. 304-675-6433 Point Pleasant
Adams, Broken Arrow, Okla., $45
885. PICK-4 7Zl8.
and costs; Walter Macare, Colum· ~-------------L--==========---------------­
bus, $43; Douglas Jenkins, Pomeray, $43; Robert Roesch, Baltimore,
$43; Timothy Hardeman, Gallipolis,
$45; Scott Law renee, Point Plea·
sant, $44; Barbara Lanier, V\nton,

If your muffler's making way too
much noise, drive into The M!Jfller
Bay and get a free, professional in·
spection for muffler leaks, holes,
damage. broken hangers or clamps
and for weak or corroded pipes. If it
needs replacing, we'll install a

•

at y
e
enttne
Pathologist testifies in murder trial

tJ'lem! n

Mayor ends 22 cases . ·

'I'Ite Buc:k Stow: Whole-house
heating that saves you~ ·
AVAILABLE AS FREE
STANDING STOVE
or FIRELACE INSERT

people hoping to tlnd relatives stUl
alive.
,
Desperate people tried to force
French rescue workers to dig for..
their relatives In a coUapaeq
apartment building but governmellt
troops escorted the foreign rescue
workers away from the scene.
.
"Don't Jet them go!" cried one
hysterical woman as the French
team was placed on a bus. "Stop

spokesman, said work crews tuml· · to feel.
gated devastatro butldlngs In the
Work crews clawed through tons
he~t of !be capital, wbere rescue
of steel and reinforced concrete
teams te~ at least 2,!XXl trapped Tuesday, but Ampudia said trained
victims were dead beneath the rutns dogs used to find survivors pinned In
of some 450 buUdtngs.
the wreckage found no signs rt Ufe In
Ampudla said the fUmigation was the buUdtngs to be demoUsbed.
aimed at protecting !be city's 18
"It Is calculated that tbere can no
mUUon people trom disease. ·
longer be suJVIvor$," ·Ampudla
The first quake, which struck said.
Thursday, measured 7:8 on tbe
Ampudla predicted tbe de~th toll
Richter scale. A. major aftershock Wo\lld reach at least 5,!XX). He said
Friday measured 7.3 m the Richter thousands of · !)E!()Ple Usted as
missing would eventually be found
scale.
A spokesman for the Selsmologl· In shelters around tbe dty.
cal Institute said tbere have been 51
In a second slgo that the
aftershocks since Thursday government was losing hope of
including several Tuesday - but findlngaddltlonalsurvlvors,authormost have been too weak for people ltles kept volunteer workers from
scouring !be ruins of several
collapsed buUdlngs.
The order was expected to spark
resistance from volunteers and

lj

I

the IU ri1lon dolar HUD lvN'k!llor the howlinl
iliNiiplex COIIIInlctlon, wll beon'hMdS.sndaylo ~
vldon ....,.., the open hllue, 1 to 4 p.m. at 'l'he
MapiM. Another member of the board not llhown Is
Velma Rue.

Residents of Meigs County's
Silver Ridge area continue to hope
for piped water from the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District. At
this point, the possibility of a water
line extension looks promising.
At Wednesday's meeting of lhe
Meigs County Commissioners, Rich
Jones requested an update from
Phil Roberts, county engineer, on
the status of the Sliver Ridge
project. Jones had received an
inquiry on the rna tter from Kemp
Beaumont, of SUver Ridge.
f\Oberls reported he has reprodu·
cable copies rt aerial surveys of tbe
location and that !be copies will be
enlarged so that elevations and
distances may be determined.
From this Information, project costs
may then be estimated. The water
district, If the boardoftrustees gives
approval, may then apply for a
. construction loan from Farmer's

Home Administration.
Roberts told the commissioners
he "will have everything ready for
Tuppers Plains-Chester In two

weeks."
Don Poole, a Tuppers Plains·
Chester representative, reported to
The Dally Sentinel that Roberts was
hired In May to begin preliminary
engineering on !be project. Poole
was pleased toheartheconcluslonof
the preliminary engineering Is close
at hand and he hopes' to have the
Information in time for the next
board meeting on Oct. 14.
Poole pointed out that the neces·
sary "eight taps per mile" have
already been secured by !be
residents in the SUver Ridge area.
The water district bad been skepti·
cal that !be tap requirement would
bernet.
A sum cl. $150 per tap was paid by
32 residents to Insure their desire for

the water line extension. This
money, Poolt&gt; explained, has been
deposited In a no-Interest checking
account pending a final decision by
the tx;.ard of trustees and FHA.
Although Poole says the water
district "can foresee no problems,"
the board of tmsl&lt;'&lt;'s or FHA could
stU! reject the extension . If this
would happen , the tap fee s would be
refunded .
Although construction costs have
yet to be determined, till' water
district already anticipat es the
project will necessitate the con·
structlon of a· booster. A booster
usually costs in the IX'Ighbot'hood of
$50,(XX),

Silver Rldge residents began their
quest lor Tupper Plains-Chester
water back in 1968 when a few
customers signed up with the
district, But at that 11rne Poole says,
"lhe population just wasn't there. "

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