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Pa

~ants

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

41

Hopes diminishing for quake victims

Reconnection
procedures
established

31

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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

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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.

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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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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

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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
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Turkey Breast and lots
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H¥1'!,

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

Meigs commission discusses
dangers of Hobson crossing

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~~~
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!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

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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

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_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,

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and for weak or corroded pipes. If it
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Pathologist testifies in murder trial

tJ'lem! n

Mayor ends 22 cases . ·

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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. "

�-The

ThLII'Idly, September 28, 1986

Ohio

Southern back home;
Eagles play on -road
•"·· By SCO'IT WOLFE
Friday evening Southern's Tornadoes w!ll defend their home turf
from ttu;o invading Wahama White
Falcons. while Eastern's Eagles
wind down the twisting trail to
Symmes Valley. !3oth ~rc non·

league contests.

Meigs-Wellston
tangle this Friday .

more intensity according to reports
from the Southern camp.
Last week Southern's leading
tacklers were SeanGrueserwlth 10,
Scott Wickline and Ch~rlle Boso
nine each, and seven each by Scott
Grueser. Tim Smith and Dan
Wol fe . Pete Roush had an

By XEl'11l WISECUP

~·

I

•,l,o~r

,._

week. Southern made
interception.
aijGtttcr good showing, but fell to
Eagles Prepare For VIkings
detl&gt;al at the hoods of r.recn 13~1.
Meanwhile, at Eastern last Frt;yahama roilrd over Parkersburg day IhP Eagles dropped a grueling
Oiltholic :10-6.
10-8 contest to a premier West
:·statisticallv Southf'rn rambled Virginia team , Buffalo-PUtnam.
1~ yat·ds on ·the ground, but failed
it was truly a heartbreaker as
to produce much of an effort in the . Easll'rn had a chance to win late in
air. The Tornadoes' ground gamP the game as the ball rested on the
WaS quite a threat as Charlie Boso, thr~¥&gt;-yard line. The result was an
J}.rr Connolly. and Pete Roush Int erception a nd a 10-8 defeat, but
c?ntributed with equally tough
nevertheless the strong showing
g;.mes. Sophomore Pete Roush gave Ea stern a moral victory and
t:ilved the way wilh "3 yards on 11 some momentum going Into this
c~n:lcs, Boso was J:l for 67, and
week's game.
Gl&gt;nilolly was 10 for 50. ·
John Rice had the lone EHS
:·connally caught the lone South· score. a 75-yard return on a fumble
e~n completion for 17 yards.
recovery. A Royce Bissell to Kevin
·:Southern will have its \1·ork cut Morris PAT completed the scor ing.
o'w as it faceo the White Falcon
Rice rushed 12 times for 29 yards.
~~-tr;on curtain" tlefcnsP that has
Brent Bissell carried eight for 24
iflipwed only four touchdowns a ll yrncb;. Morris ~ nagged three passes
s£"aSon long.
for 29 yards a nd Bissell one for 24.
•.. Offensivply, Wahilma is averagEastern's ha r d -hitting defense told
-j~:\)"\ore thfm 40 pOints per game. thl' true story as it forced seven
1_iS&lt;established offense is led by Bison fumbles. four of which
qijtv'tetback Jeff Barnitz, flr-et·
Eastern recovered. Senior Ryan
ttiiloo halfback Todd Gress. Fred Bcarhs led all tacklers with 20
;;i~n . J.T. Lloyd, Mike Wolfe,
tackles. Royce Bissell had 18, Tim
B~{y Marshall, tmd Eddie Starcher.
Dorst 11 and Ron Maxson eight.
'~-~~irh Barnitz at quarterback.
Sly Bloomfie ld Is the VIkings ' top
WHS ha s an equally tough grou nd ya rdage man and workhouse.
a nd passing a1tack. Scniortighl end
Lan)' Pernesti and quarterback
Matt Thompson has been the Gabe Patterson are also serious
Falcons' primP targC't.
threats. The Vikings own a 3-1
Southern's defense will havp to record. Game time Friday is 8 p.m.
concentrate on controlling the line

(

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OCTOBER 2, 1985·
PLUS •••• "SUPER STICKER SALE" PRICES ON ALL NEW AND USED VEHICLES IN
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',

1985 FORD E-150
CONVERSION VAN
Was $23,601 110
• NOW 5

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21,895°0

1985 Ll NCOLN
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Was '25,938.110

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Marauder golfers
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;BJCtPRI•: ~Meigs' Parker Long
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in leading the Marauders to their
third straight class AA sectional
dUe at Oxbow Wednesday, edgi ng
Gallipolis by one stroke.
Meigs, now29-2 on th e year, came
home with a 337, one betil'r than
second place Galllpoll• a t 338.
Trimble was third with a 347 while
Bel~re a nd Chesapeake tit'&lt;l for
fourth at 351. AU five of the above
!cams advance to distriel play at
Portsmouth nex t Thursday. Oct. 3.
Other warn score's includC'd South

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1974 FORD ELITE 2 Dr. •
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY WAGON
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and Title
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Extra
1970 FORD MAVERICK
1972 CHEVROLET CAPRICE

TVC.

(DefenH)

In the Miller win, Jodi Hamson
paced the way with 19 points
Including 10 aces. Shannon Hindy
followed In scoring with six polilts
while Jenny Couch and Julie Miller
had four each. Miller won the
reserve game, 15-13, 15-3.
Against Nelsonville-York, Hlndy
led Meigs In scoring with 13 points
whlle adding six kills. Other Meigs
scorers Included Harrison with nine
points, Jenny Miller seven, Julie
Mlller six, Couch 'five, and Rhonda
Neece two. Harrison had 13 assists
and Couch 1t Jenny MU!er led In
kills with nine.
The Uttle Buckeyes won the
reserve game 15-4, 15-1, as Meigs
fell to 1-10 overall and 0-9 In the
TVC. Meigs plays Belpre at home
tonight starting at 5: 55 p.m.

Jesse Howard 111·170) and
Rider (11·161); TACKLmi -

Welsh and either Paul Wolfe (1J-2fl9) or Don
Bul'l('(' (ll·l89) or Kevin Meadows (12·245);
MIDDLE GUARD - Robinson; LJNE.
BACKERS - Eason and Dailey; OORNER-

BACU - Phil King (11·156) and Donnte
Becker (11-149'; SAFETIES- Bart:rum and

Kitchen.

Transactions
_.,.,..
Chtca~ - rorward Olarlr5 Oakk.o;,· c1.
Viralnla Union agrt'Ed 10 II 3-~ar ro nlract .
~roll - Si gned forward !;pA!Cf'r Haywood and j!Uard Fl;ft'mMil WIWIUTI5. bQth

ond "'"" """"' Ga"'"' "'"""' "'"""''

· LA Lalct'I'S - Sllli'E'd lorward A..C. Grt'E'n

o(

Ort&gt;jJln Slate and guard Ronrlle LHter

Phomlx ~StJ"('dfotwardEdPI~rkneyof
VlllanDYB1o" multl·war contract Foulb.U
Houston- Watvrd wide receiVers Mlkl"
Hols!(l'l and tterkle Walls.
New Orleans - Placed C't'nter StE'W' J&lt;c.-tf' .
ilaned tackk&gt; Jim Rourk(' and ct'll1f'lr-guard
Cbuck Pllnrk.
Philadelphia - PliiCt'd tk&gt;fenst.-(' end
B)'TOn Darby 011 lnJurrd I'P.!IIPI'\T: IK'II\'atc&gt;ct
,dt't'msl\'l".md ReQtte White..
S.oll• - · Wid&lt;' - · " 'PoOl -""''

I

rM=h!n~on

""" '"""" ~• Muk t.aF..... .,..,..,...

· NEW YORK (UP!) -On The .
Road Again, the richest horse In
harness racing history and a winner
of 38 of his 53 lifetime starts, heads a
powerful nerd of seven stan·
d ardbr ed s f or F r ld ay n lght' s
$:1)9,554BreedersCrownAgedPace

Hut'SinJI:.

at Freestate Raceway m

""'""'

Boston- Annou~ po.~n:halit' ore tub ilPd
B:Jston Gllrck&gt;t'l 10 local bJstnHsmen James

Brmnm 1111d Godfn•y Wood.

o..&gt;trol1 -Assigned to AdlronMl'k· of thr
An'rrtclll Hoek~· . I.RaJUe: ROalt"ndton
mm Da\'ld Korol. RICk Zambo and Tl'd
,,.'llll"l'li

•

Basil McRat&gt;. Gk'n Mi"''·

""'"'· ""'"~ "'"'''""a Trcl """" ""'

La

J
ure ,

Md .. It was announced Wednesday
bY Hugh Gf30 t , pre~ lden t 0 f the

Gary Yamnctalk. right winll'l' BriM Shaw
and Don ~!IW and k&gt;H \l.injl: Plf'l"n' Aubr)'.

!-.----------------------.
Your Health Comes First

There's no room for error when fill·

(All Gllftl}

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Vinton Counry .. ............ .......... 4 0 62 19

Warrm Local .............. ...... .. .. 3 1 97 29
2 !r1

2 53 76
3 90 99

3 :Ill 66
4 t:l 74
4 13 102

:Px

MUter .... ....... ...... ....... ........... 0 4 8 Ill
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M•lioi ................. ..................3 0 ltli 26
warrm Local ........................ 3 0 8.1 8
VInton County ........................ 3 0 .1)4 13
2 I 40
I 'l 70
1 :l rn
o 4 13
Wellston ................................ 0 4 13

cmutts

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- Plared linebacker Monte

bock" Ch"• Ke"~•

'1'\'C Grid !1-.p

rr.

since he broke hlsUttlettngerSept. 6,
pitched eight strong tnnlngs, sur·
rendering just flvehltsandtwoi'UIUI .
Garber, &amp;6, w(lfked the ninth and
lOth Innings to get the win and Camp
pitched the 11th for hiS third save.

H e8d 8 f8CIDg
. fjleJd .

c"""''".., '"'"""' """"'' """""""·

TVC standings ..

last 17 games and their pitching has
been horrlble. But they finally got
some sparkling performances Wed·
nesday night from Rick Mahler,
Gene Garber and Rick C;imp.
Mahler, making his first start

·

the Marauders' qulck-hlttlng Une ':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~_:H_:a::_m:::b:::le:_:to:::n:::ia:::n:_:Soc=l::.ety~
. ---~
corps, was voted the Meigs County r

STATION WAGON

Front wheel drive, .. cyl., air

STATION WAGON

I

Huey Eason 111-162) .. ....................... ... WB

straight years (1974, 75, 76) for their

Jaycee Player of the Week. Powell

,------T----I

Mlke Cllancoy (12-Dlt ........................ QB
Brad Robinson (12-173) ........................ TB

taU back Brad Robinson ran for 180

5695

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BUI Brothers (10.150) or
Michael Bartrum (10.19J) ............... , ..... RE

yarlis·~·nd quarterback M.lke Chan·
.
cey hit On eight Of·15 passes fOr J53
yards 8S Meigs WOn J3..8.
f

5

0

Ja.on BliSh tll-2112) ...................... ..... .. RG
soott Poweu m-:am ............................ RT

k,. - "·

Melgs'245poundsenlorde!enslve
tackle Kevin Meadows is Usted as
questionable with a sprained foot.
Meadows, who has been among the
Mara~r leading tacklers all
~
season, would a.A::'
repI aced by e!ther
249 pound junior Paul Wolfe or 189
pou nd ·Juni or Do n B unce.
Srott Powell, a 64, '8.'fl pound
lunlOr otteDS IVe taCkle and anC hoTS

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauderette volleyball team
raised Its record to 9-2 with a pair o!
'IVC wins over Nelsonville-York
and Miller here recently.
·Coach Kim Adkins' Marau,
derettes scored · a come-frombehind 9-15, 15-12, 15-5 win over
Miller. and also scored a three-set
with Nelsonville· York later, 15-10,
12·15, 15-·10. Meigs is now 7-2 In the

John Epple (12·17~) ................................C

Raymond

CINClNNATI (UPI) -A rookie
playing In only his seventh major
league game threw away some of
the Cincinnati Reds' pennant hopes
Wednesday night.
Third baseman Wade Rowdon
committed back· to- back two-base
throwing errors In the Uth Inning to
open the door for Atlanta's 4-2 win
over the Reds.
Had the Reds won, tliey would
have cut Los Angeles' lead b) the
. National League West from six to
. five games hecausetheDodgerslost
&amp;4 to Houston Wednesday night.
The Reds' loss not only kept the Los
Angeles lead at six games, It also
reduced the Dodgers' magi~
number for cllilchlng the title from
seven to six.
The Braves' decisive 11th began
with Rowdon fielding Claudeil
Washington's ground ball and
throwing high over first baseman
Pete Rose's bead Into the Reds'
dugout to allow Washington to take
second.
Glenn Hubbard's sacrifice bunt
was fielded by Rowdon, who threw
far wide of Rose at first. The ball
hounced Iiiio rtght field, permitting
Washington to score the go-ahead
run and advancing Hubbard to
second. Hubbard later scored an
Insurance run ,on Ken Oberklell's
single off loser Ted Power, 7-5.
Rowdon also blew a chance to win
the game for the Reds In the lOth. He
·came up w}th the bases loaded, but
bounced into a force out to end the
Inning.
The Braves have lost 13 of their

Marauderettes ·
post _loop wins

Denny Welsh (U-191 }............................ LT
Dave Shuler t12-164) ............................ LG

Meigs has defeated Wellston 12
Urnes in the 16 meetings with ODe
tie, that a 'n·Tl stunner two years
Roc. kets
ago at. Wellston', """e
.LU
defeated the Marauders three

Cl'lly wins against Meigs. Last year

MOler.

!'layer (Y&lt;.·WI.)IIII'oo.
J. R . Kitchen (11-162) .................. : ... ..... LE

coach Charley Chancey.

Faiqand (377), Nelsonville-York
(397)1, Wellston (424), and Rock Hill
(433).
Besides Long's 79, Rodd Harrtson, Shawn Baker. and Marty Hart
all had 86's. Lee Powell had a99, but
his score did notcountsinceonlythe
top four scores are tabulated .
Meigs, who has los t to Athens and
Gallipolis for Its only two defeats,
warms up for the TVC tournament
~his F:riday wlth a match against
Wahama a nd St. Mary's tod ay at
Mason. The TVC tournament will
also be played at Mason's Rivers ide
Golf Course.

In 1881 week's 3().2 victory over

Uneup
(OIIe,..)

against Warren Local, •• said Meigs

··~ "

PLAYElt OF WEEK- Scott
Powell, fl..f, 2l'l pound junior
offenalve tackle, has been
named the Melp Jay""""'
Pblyer of lbe Week lorblselforts

Metp Pl'obabte SIJUUnr

ENDS -

Pege-3

Rookie's errors throttle Reds, 4-2

Is a two-year starter at tackle,
teaming with Robinson and Chan,
cey as the only returning offensive
starters from last season.
The Marauder offensive charges
are the top scoring team In the 'IVC
with a 35.0 iJer gameaveragewhlle
alloWing only 8.7 points a game.
Meanwhile, Wellston Is eighth In the
loop In scortng (4.2) and ninth In
defense (22.7). In other league
games Friday, Belpre (2-2, 2-1)
travels to Nelsonville-York (2-2,
2·1) In a "big one" for both teams,
Trtmble (1-3, 1-2) tries to get back
on track at Alexander (1·3, 1-2),and
MU!er (0-4, 0.3) goes to Federal·
Hocking (0-4, 0-3). Saturday night,
two 'IVC teams undefeated In
league play go at It as VInton
County (4-0, 3-Q) puts Its unblemIshed record on the line at Warren
Local (J.l, 3-0).

Undefeated Meigs can get art to
Ita best start of a season tn 19 years
plus remain deadlocked tor first
place ·tn the 'IVC with a win at
Wellston Friday,
Not since 1967 has Meigs won Its
flnt five games of the year. That
year, which was the first team
Meigs fielded after consolidation,
the Marauders went !Hl before
Sufferinff an S{l loss to Ironton, the
only Joss o! the season for the 9-1
SEOAL champions.
Meigs, 4-0 overall and 3-0 In the
TVC. Is currently ranked fourth in
_the division m, region u computer
rankl.ngs behind Trt·Valley, Coshocton and Wavelcy. A fourth or
better Is needed to quality for the
state playoffs, Instead of a second
place needed Iii prEvious years . The
state playoff system doubled the
amount of entrtes beginning this
year. At the conclusion of the
regular season, the first place team
will play the fourth while second
plays the third place team.
Wellston, IH overall and 0-31n the
league, has scored but 13 points this
year and has been shutout three
times Iii losses to Jackson (34-0),
Trimble (32·13), Belpre (9·0), and
Warren Local Cli-O). The Rockets
have been hampered by a coaching
change after the season's start as
Bob Straight, who won a court
battle to continue as coach prior to
the season's start, resigned after
two weeks and was rEPlaced by Bill
Fytfe. Wellston has played much
hetter the past two weeks, accordIng to scouting reports.
"'They're vastly improved from
earner In the year. They seem to be
settled Into their new coach as they
looked Uke a much better team

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

_
992 2174

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Member
FDIC

POMEROY, OH.
I

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Pega 4 The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
llnnday, September 26. 1986

Commentary
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
)'I~ ·

~m~. I"'T"\-\'-....,...'~=~~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
·publisher
BOB HOEFUCit
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslanl Publlsher;Conlroller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should bE' less than 300 words
long. Ail ieuers are subject to editing and mu st be signed wl1h name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be pubUshed. LettNS should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities .

It was rather refreshing, I
thought, to have the old Kremlin
lash out In retaliation agulnst the
British expulsion of Soviet KGB
agents posing as diplomats, by
expelling Brttlsh diplomats and
journalists posing as nothing other
than what they In fact are. It came
at just the rtght moment, after Mr.
Gorbachev had spent 12 days more
or less non-stop spooning wtth
Western journalists and diplomats
In Operation Ingratiation.
The effect was quite wonderful,
recalling that glortous moment In
the '30s when the children's radio
idol Don Carney would read for an
hour or co children's stories, and
one day at the end of the hour
commented, "There! I guess that'D

hold the little bastards for another
night," the trouble being that the
little bastards aU heard that
because thP radio operatnr had
neglected to switc~ carney orr the
air. He paid for that by expulsion
from the ahwaves for a probation-·
ary pertod of one forgets how long. ·
Gorbachev won't have to pay so
prolonged a price, because Operatlon Ingratiation has a natural
audience, and soon he wUI be back
smiling his petulant smile and
telling children's stories about his
love lor peace, and there are !bose
who will drtnk It all ln.
It has, to be sure, been quite a
season Ior spies. A cursory look at
the headlines in West Germany
durtng the past month raises the

C1'rA @~iS' I"Oli!T WORI'\I ~ •TEI.EGIU ....
HIJ t.ME
.,. "
.
.
WE~
~~~/

Laws won't help
With an Increasing number of farmers locked in a hopeless struggle
against bankruptcy, politicians here are haggling over agricultural
Jeglsiatlon that doesn't even pretend to solve the growers' fundamental
problems.
In one of Its few attempts to deal with an Issue on a multi-year basis,
Congress traditionally has fashioned omnibus agricultural legislation
covertng four- and five-year periods. In theory, such long-range planning ts
commendable. In practice It doesn't always work.
For example, the 1981 bill (which expires this year) was wrttten when
the country had expertenced almost a decade of spectacular growth In
Inflation, farm Income and agricultural exports. The legislation wrongly
assumed that all three would continue to grow at a phenomenal pace.
This year's bill, govering dozens of federal farm programs for the next
five years, attempts to neither forecast future trends nor deal with a
situation that has led to financial calamity form any of the nation's
farmers.
Instead the Democrats who control the House and the Republicans
who dominate the Senate have sought to Impose upon each other the
responsibility lor the reductions In price and Income support programs
required by federal budget constraints.
At the same time, the White House and Congress are feuding over a
provision in the House bill that would allow wheat and feed-grain farmers
to vote for higher government price supports if they agreed to reduce
production.
The unseemly haggling Is occurring at a time when as many as 43,000
family farms (approximately one of every 16 Ill the country~ are
technically Insolvent because their debts exceed their assets. the owners
or another 93,000 farms owe $7 or more lor·every $10 worth of assets.
Compounding these problems are a sertes of related adverse trends Including plummeting exports, excess production capacity, higher
debt-to-Income ratios, shorter Joan terms, declining asset values and
decreased liquldlty of those assets.
·
·
The Farmers Home Administration, the lender of the last resort for
growers, reports a five-fold Increase Ill delinquent payments durtng the
past four years. Its 267,000 borrowers currently owe$5.4 billion- but many
ot those loans may never be repaid.
Total farm debt now stands at a staggertng $210 billion, while netfarm
income (adjusted for Inflation) has declined by almost 00 percent durtng
the last six years.
'In 1930, the natiOn bad M million nu-al residents, 30.~ mUIIon &lt;JI whom

Jived on farms. In 19!ll, the rural population had Increased to 59.5 millionbut the farm population .had plummeted by Ill percent to 6.1 million.
Of the 00.3 million people now employed in the country's rural
economy, only eight percent hold farm joh&lt;l. Even among farm families,
each of 10 earn the majortty of their Income In non-farm jobs.
Federal initiatives rangi~g from the Payment In Kind Program of the
early 1m to the more recent Bonus Incentive Commodity Export
Program have failed to produce any substantive relief for the beleaguered
farmers who remain ,
Crafting a new farm bill has been especially agonizing this year
because federal policy makers recognize that there ·Is no legislation they
can wrtte that will provide a certain solution to a chronic and severe
problem.
Instead, the process of drafting a new Jaw has become Increasingly
politicized, with both Republicans and Democrats concerned about the
impact of an agricultural recession on next year's elections In the MJdwest.
The nation's farm economy could well Improve significantly in the coming
years - but virtually nobody In this city believes that anxiously awaited
development will be brought about by the new farm legislation.

questlon whether there are more suggestion.
Back up for a moment. It has
communists In East or West
Germany. If Joe McCarthy had recently been highlighted In the
ever said about the United Stall's press that the new Soviet Embassy
that communist penetration was at In Washington presides over the
a level It In fact reached In West city in approximately the same way
Germany, why, even Mrs . that the Elffel Tower presides over
McCarthy and Roy Cohn would Parts. If the KGB· had ·approached
have laughed htm out of town. And the city of Parts and asked please
the West German scandal came might It lease the Eiffel Tower to
only one.month after we discovered -lacllltate the Interception of radio
that San Diego, Calif., is one part a and telephone traffic emanating
retirement community, one part a from PariS, and Franch had
mUitary-lndustrtal complex, one acceded to the request, the differpart a ganglion of Soviet spy ence In the advantages enjoyed by
activity aimed at penetrating naval the Soviet Union In Washington
would not be noticeable.
intelligence.
Along comes Caspar Weln·
berger, our devoted secretary of
Super -modern equipment
defense, and he makes a concrete sprouts from the embassy llke the
bristles of a porcupine, and no
conversation not conducted In
super-scramblese Is safe from
detection. A casual telephone call
from the secretary of defense to the
secretary of state, if there Is such a
thing, can be picked up by the
Soviet Embassy and studied In the
Kremlin and at the United States of
Amertca and Canada Instltute
hours later. Meanwhile- of course
-our request for a new embassy III
Moscow, now over 20yearsold, was
grudgingly granted, and we were
assigned some acreage roughly 100
feet below sea level. Not content
with that, the Soviet Union has
diddled and dawdled, and the
structure Is not yet complete. Why? .
Well , a Soviet spokesman would no
doubt sign and say that the Soviet
Union Is always running into labor
union problems.

"I've averaged three hits per game this season and I can recall at least
one occasion when it involved the baseball."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

By MAJ. AMOS B. HOOPLE
OFFENSIVE EXPERT
Egad, friends! It's finally tlme the heralded Oklahoma juggernaut
is ready to make its 1985debut. They
will play the Minnesota Gophers on
Saturday under the lights at Hubert
H. Humphrey Stadium In
Minneapolis.
Coach Barry Switzer of Oklahoma, the wlnnlngest active coach
(115-23.4, .824) may have his finest
team ever.
On the Sooner offense; markdown
the names of SE ~rrtck Sheppard,
liB Spencer Tillman and QB Troy
Aikman for all-star recognition. But
it's on defense where Oklahoma Is
loaded. This year' steam wlileoutto
better Its '84 record of No. 1 against
the rush and No. 2 Ill total defense.

Leading-the charge Is All-America
nose guard Tony Caslllas (6-loot-3,
2&amp;1 pounds) .
U:lu Holtz wlll field a solid football
team at Minnesota, one good enough
to give the Sooners a tussle. Rickey
Foggte, a soph QB, has polished his
passing technique to go along.wlth
his acknowledged running abUity,
and that means a lotolpolntsforthe
Gophers.
·
The Hoople System calls It
Oklahoma 35, Minnesota 20 ·
Har- rum ph!
Also vying lor national attention
are Auburn at Tennessee (WI'BS·
TV), Texas at Stanford (CBS-TV)
and UCLA at Washington (also
CBS).
The Auburn-Tennessee clash wut
be a real shootout between the

rambling, scrambling of the Tigers'
BoJacksonandtherlfleannofVols
QB Tony Robinson, In an oldfashioned barn burner, make It
Auburn 35, Tennessee 28.
JackElway'sStanfordCardinats,
who pounded San Jose State Ill their
opener, appear to have too many
guns tor Fred Akers' Texas Longhorns. Give it to Stanford, 31-13. And
it's been a year r:t mistakes for the
'84 Orange Bowl victors, ' the
Washlngion's Huskies, but Saturday wUI be their day of atonement.
Watch lor the Huskies to surprise
UCLA, ZT-25.
In two backyard brawls that are
always crowd-pleasers, the Hoople
systemseesPurdue~hocklngNotre

bame

Alabama~

Va.ncBbllt 11

Arkan!WI :fi New M('ICtoStatc 13
An'n)r 42 Penns)"lvanla 24
Auburn~ Ten~

28

&amp;w-UngGn&gt;enlT Akron2l
CoJa:alc 30ConTII aJ
Colorado 21 Ariz()na 17
Coloiado St 36 Sui Dll'l{tl St 19
Florlcla 31 M1Ssl.ssippl Slate 21
Florida State l"iKans.uiM

. .....
~

Geot·g~~_17 South Carotll1il ~
Grambltna2BOretion Sra1t&gt; u
Harvard 18M IW&gt;IIt"t1U~Is 14

HolyCn:.s2J Dela~~o•al'f'lD
Hw1tU1 Z1 l..oulivl!IP ~

•

i

UCLA Zl

Indiana :M Missouri 21
iowa ;flfCM'I Slktf' 22

West \'lrglllla 31 Pit! 21

l&lt;efltucky l'JC1nctn0111i \B

WiJrons!n ol2 Wyoming lO

U.fayt11e 22 Columbia :II
l.cht~J2 PtllK'f&gt;ton 'll

Yale 26 Connecticut il
Aiel&amp; lll&amp;bStllooiGIUniW

Ml ami tFI 211 EIO!iton Collf'gl'22
2-1 Maryland 21
MIChigan State ;J! W Mll'hlgan :M
Mlsslsslp!I:m 1\ilanP 1.2:
N-:brasbliOr"'''\on 12

•

i

VIrginia 25-Navy U
Was!Un~rton 'l1

,'

-i

•
r

Warrw&gt;n Locan 7 \'Inion Counl y b

Mk:h l~o:an

Ml"igs 4&gt;1 Weils10h 0
Trlmblf' 33 AlexanOOr 12
Ht&gt;lpn.· HAk'xan&lt;k'r 12
Mllk•r $ F'edPral - ll oc k!n ~ 'l.!

NewHamP!iblre 14 Dartmwth 7
Nor1h Olrollllll :Ji VMI 16
North Texas Stat~ I~ i&lt;an!i;ls Slaw 7

North Carolina Slalc .11 F"unnan 2~
Nonhwestl.' rn28 Northern'IUIMis 21
Otllo Slalf' 31 Wasl:tngton Stale 7
~lahlma l5 Min!I'WI.l :ll
OklahomaS13tf'26Miaml 10117
Pui"()U(&gt; 32 Noll'l" Dame 24
RtndP Island 22 Brov.-n 7
Rulgl•n 21! Pmn State-21
Southt&gt;rn Cail5ArtzooaStalf' 14

!o=.oothW('SWrn:, HannaJI 7
Wah am a 21 Sou thC'rn 6
Oak Hill GHan n.¥1 Tr~:~ r:eO
E&lt;lsl l'rJ) 19 SYJllm('§ Vall!~ Ji
f'l:lnsmoulh NOire

OaJp_~,, 24 K, l':t1·('r('('k ~

North Gb llla 28HamJ1n6

lrontoo +a Ashland 6

•

• •

Rlplry 7 Huntlng1on 6.
Crt'ellup21 PonsmouthO
!lock Hill :li Ch C!lllpf&gt;al;e6
!~an

.,''

31 Wehr~~

Jacksoo Zl Mark&gt;tl;t 20
Athf&gt;ns '!/ GalUpolis 13

Scuthern Mf'llnll.~ l JJTCU 21
So Mlssisslpp120 NW LDulslana 17

I ,, ..

SALE.
Doug Beaver
1&gt;-8, 145 pound
Junior halfback

Sometimes one has In pause and
wonder, wonder - ln the hauntlllg
refrain of the Negro spiritual - at
the sheer stupidity of the American
government, or so fundamental a
level. Well, along comes Mr.
Weinberger with a proposal to do
somethlnjl about what Is going on.

Steve Homer
i&gt;-11, 140 pound
Sophomore end

..

.' '

.

'

{""

. ...
• ''1

. ··.'·
(ULUMBUS

!UPl l

This werit"s

-

l.,fnltPd Pre!ls lnterns!lonal OhiO HI~
School Boilrd of Coach~ football rating!!
lw11h OHSAA playotr dMslons, flnil

place

wrote for Science magazine was
edited and endorsed by Dr. Robert
Gallo. chief AIDS researcher at the
National Cancer Institute.
Montagnier met with Gallo and
his team to discuss the virus, and
subsequent correspondence was on .
a first-name basis.
-Letters from Gallo to Montagn·
ler asked for virus samples and
permission to clone them. A receipt
for two samples of the French AIDS
virus was signed by a Gallo
researcher on Sept. 23, 1983.
- Tn&lt;' French stipulated that the
samples not be used for commercial pulll05es. Other samples and
Information were given to U.S.
scientists, All this was long helore
Gallo filed for a patent. The French
claim Gallo used their Information
to find the AIDS virus and develop a
test kit, which was then patented.
In an interview, Gallo disputed
the French claim, asserting that the
two viruses were not the same. lie
said the French have had adequately Isolated the AIDS virus.
- The French filed patent
applications in Europe and the

for the second

tll&amp;urd.q,Sept.111
Air Frtte:tl N~· Mt'xk:o21

•..1":

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5tanl0t'd 31 Tekll~ IJ
TI'XU A.llrM :111\1151117
Texa!i Te&lt;.:h l7 Bay lor u
Utah ~Tt"lla~ · EI Pa!oOZT
VIrginia Tech J.')Sytii('Ust&gt; H

!Aorg\.11 Tech ')I ClelpDI1.1

.-

AIDS research ___"--___Ja_c_k_A_n_d_e_rs_o_n_&amp;_Jo_s_:ep:_h_Sp:_e_a_r
WASIDNGTON - Scientists at
the prestigious Pasteur Institute in
Parts claim that U.S. researchers
have stolen credit for the French
discovery of tbe AIDS virus and
Illegally patented a blood-testing kit
that Identifies the presence of the
deadly virus.
At st.l!ke may be a Nobel Prize,
· not In mention millions of dollars in
royalties from the sale of the
patented test kits. The French want
their share of both glory and
money.
The French, threatening court
action, have sent documents buttressing their claims to the Health
and Human Services Department,
demanding recognition of U.S.
researchers' reliance on the Pas·
tellr Institute. The documents, seen
by our associate Corky Johnson,
present a powerful case. Here are
the highlights:
- In the spring of 1983, Dr. Luc
Montagnler of the Pasteur Institute
reported his suspicion that a virus
was the cause of the dread disease.
American sci&lt;'ntlsts were eager to
learn more. An article Montagnier

(~TV)

year In a row, 32-24; and Iowa's
Hawlteyes stutllng Iowa State, 35-22.
In other top games: SMU ll-21
over TCU; West VIrginia 31-21 over
Pitt; Southern Clllifornla 36-14 over
Arizona State; Georgia Tech 24-20
over Clemson; and Georgia 17-15
over South Carolina.
Oh, yes, watch for the surprising
Scarlet Knights of Rutgers to
surprise the Penn State Nittany
Lions, 28-21. Har-rumph!

.-...,

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5 "• .;

Sooners make debut against Gophers; Bucks, are favored

• berger m an·~
StO
William F. Buckley Jr.
W. em
IJ.e - - - - - - - - -

The Daily Sentinel

-

Thursday, September 26, 1985

vat~

and won--tost rf'COrds In

parrnthPse5\;

United States several months be· States is to avoid court acflon:
lore Gallo's group. The U.S. Patent
1. Public recognition of the
Office granted Gallo's patent, but Montagnier team's "lnvaluabl&lt;'
has yet to act on the French contribution in first llnding and
ldentlfylng" the AIDS virus.
application.
2. Freedom lor the French to
- In a letter to a colleague after
Montagnler had Identified the AIDS market their own blood-test kit
Virus, Gallo acknowledged that he "without any legal problems."
3. A share of the royalties from
had not yet succeeded In Isolating
an AIDS virus himself.
· sale of the U.S. kit, In return for
-The French charged that U.S. which the French, If their claims
doctors allegedly broke American are accurate, haven't marketed
and international patent Jaws by their own test kit in Europe.
SPOOKiNG THE SPOOKS: Confalling to disclose the French
contribution to their AIDS cern about terrorism has reached
research.
almost panic proportions at CIA
Th&lt;' French say their documents headquarters in suburban Langley,
present a "prima facie case that the Va. Our sources there tell us that
Montagnler team was first" to even the day' s-end pickup of olllce
discover the AIDS virus, that the workers by their spouses has
Gallo patent Is based on lnlorma- become an occasion for tension.
tion "dertved from the Montagnler The employees walt outside various
buildings for the family car to show
team" and therefore Is not valid.
The French charge further that
up, and every now and then
Gallo breached a contract with the someone will forget a briefcase,
Pasteur Institute by using the vtrus leaving It on the sidewalk. This sets
samples the French sent him In off an all-out security response,
developing a commercial product
wtth officers sealing off the area
The French made three demands and handling the briefcase like a
that must be met If the United
terrorist-planted bomb.

Team.. Polnll
1. ClnPrlnceton tit (24)!4-01

27'2

2. CammG1t&gt;nOall dl 13t i4-0t

1!19

J. Lalc~·ood Sl. Edward ill ti.OI

16."1

4.CinMOE"Ilerd l0 ti:J.Il

1-tl

5. Mlddlel:a.o&lt;n HHI-01

124

6. li1Pl Cf'nlervUik' Ill 14-01
fi . ltkolZa1"8v11Ue!llt4-0t
8.Cil"Vt'SI . IgnatUstltt4-0)
9.CantooMcKlnil'yll)t3-1l

11 7
117
~

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lO.OnLa5allr tll t+Ol
33
Second ten : 11. Lorain Admiral Klnli:
25: 12. f'rnnont ~ 22: 1.1. Ga.Uo n :al:
14.

Jeremy Barber
;;.s, 100 pound
Sophomore guard

Ryan Bearhs
5-8, 155 pound
Senior halfback

Rangers lose pre-season game

0£&gt;\.·etand

Belwdlctlnt:&gt;

19 ;

Team....Polm
l.louls\illeAquns tiV I t22113-0l

278

2. Urbana dlh (2114-fll
3. UmaBDitt.IIJiltlJ IHI •

ll.l

Wieseltier amok ________W_i_llia_m_A_._R_us_h_er

assists on all three scores.
Both teams exchanged goals In
the second period with Andre Dare
putting New York on the-board at
2: 12 with Craig Wolanin, New
Jersey's 19!fi top draft pick, scoring
at 3:58.
Paul Gagne put New Jersey
ahead 5-1 at 3:04of the third period.
James Patrick tallied lor New York
at 13: 19 before Tim Higgins made it
6-2 for New Jersey at 14:52.

'

178
121

~. Strulx&gt; n\1JIIf&gt;( ll ll3· 1 1
~ - Elyria CatOOI K' tTII I 13-1 I
6. 1ronton tlll l tlltJ.l)

911
95
Ill
64

8.0ak Hartord lh (1114·01
9. M:rmSI. VIOC'E'III (! Ill t2·21
IO.Orrvlllf&gt; till! 1.1-11
~
St&gt;rond (('11 : lt. Cantoo Ct&gt;11tral Cathollt'

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12. castalia MaiJ:an.1ta t2t 5.1 ; 13.
('olu mtlas DPSales 48: 14. CAPE 11 1 :tl:
1!1. &amp;-llt•rontalll&lt;' .'Jt". 16. St. (1alr5vilk&gt; 26:

St.

Marys

M{&gt;JJIQI"Ial

23;

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111.

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You~~ta.r.· n

Cardinal Moonry 19; 19.
Youl1(sP·n Rayro 18: :11. West ,Jdff'rs6n
Ia.

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Turn...Polllt8
1 .~ ('\\.·arkCath t VI t 121(4.01

2. M~adorP IVll~\14-01
3. Mct:omb tV• 121 t4 ·01

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7 . Col~llart~· t1V I Ill t4-01

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UP!)- Mark Johnson set up three
goals, including Kirk Muller's
short-handed game winner, Wednesday night to lead the New Jersey
Devils to a 6-.2 pre-season victory
over the New York Rangers .
New Jersey led 3-0 after one
period on power-play goals by Peter
McNab at 7: 25and DougSulllmanat
16:27 and the short-handed goal by
Muller at 17:48. Johnson recorded

1~

Massillon washlngron JB;
li. ttil'l
Ci('VI.'land SL Jfll!I'Ph and Whl!etw..ll. l7
each: 18, Austintowfl Filch 13: 19.
F1ndlav 12: :II. Daylon Chamlnadl'Julll.'fl;.,. 9.

219
196

19'l

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l.'il

fl . l"adt&gt;. tiV I til lt ·Ot

1-1.1

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d

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Sept. 26, the 269th day of 1985 with 96 to follow .
The moon Is moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter an d Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They lllclude poet
T.S.Eiiot In 188!, German philosopher Martin Heldegger In lB89, Pope Paul
VI in 1897, composer George Gershwin In 1!Ql, and singer-actress Julie
London, In 1926 (age 59).
On this date In history:
In 1771, durtng tile American Revolution, British troops occupied
Philadelphia.
In 1900, United Nations troops took Seoul, capital ot South Korea, from
North Korean forces .
In 1959, the worst typhoon In Japanese history left 4,464 people dead,
1n 1983, the racing yacht Australia II won the America's Cup tram the
United Stall's, ending the longest winning streak In sport - 132 years.
1n 1984, Olina and Britain lllltlaled an accord to put Hong Kong Under
ChineSe control In 1997, when Britain's lease expires, and preserve Its
capltallst system for 50 years.
A tiiOUght for the day: T,S. Eliot said, "The only wisdom we can hope to
acquire Is the wisdom ol humlllty."

America's liberals are whipping
themselves into an absolute frenzy
over South Afrtca -a pertormance
all the more remarkable because
conditions there today differ from
prior conditions only in being
visibly and substantially better.
Just within the past two years. the
almost one mllllon.lndlans and the
2.5 million Cape "coloreds" have
been enfranchised, and last Janu ary the Botha government followed
this up by calling lor a "traditional
forum" In which black spokesmen
would be Invited to discuss with the
other groups ways and means of
bringing the nation's black majorIty into the political process as well .
And yet, lncongrously, the chief
result of these hopeful of these
hopeful of developments has been
an escalation of terrorist acts.
Internally · (as Airtcan National
Congress revo 1' :tionarles rushed to
kill or Intimidate all black "collaborators") and furious dnunciatlons abroad.
In the United States, to be sure,
the "South Airica issue" was, quite
apart from Its mertts, an emotional
godsend to liberals smarting from
their their trouncing at the polls last
November. The nuclear Issue had
been sklllfully knocked out of their
hands by Mr. Reagan wtth his Star
Shield proposal, which left liberals
in the dismaying position of having
tn argue for deterrence through
Mutual Assured Destruction. Suddenly the award of the Nobel Prize
to Bishop Tutu, and his adroit use of
the ensuing publicity, suggested a
new means of achieving a moral
11
hlgh." American Uberals have
been mainlining South Airtca ever
since.

Few, however, can have expe- '
rienced the moral raptures
achieved by Leon Wieseltier In the
Sept. 00 Issue of The New Republic.
Wieseltier Is reputed to be the house
leftist, even by TNR's generous
standards, and perhaps hiS back- •
page fulminations are to be understood as his personal opinion only.
But there are plenty of people on the
staff who know better, and I can't
help thinking th~y must have been
prtvately ashamed of Wleseltl&lt;~r's
per1ormance.
"Anybody," he shrieked, "who
cannot bear Sakharov's Internment
ln Gorky should not bear easily
Mandela's Internment In Pollsmoor." Why not? Sakkharov hasn't
committed crimes of violence specific and odious acts of terrorIsm, of which he was duly convicted
and for which he Is serving a prison
term. Nor has Sakharov spumed an
offer of parole if he wtll simply
promise not to resume a career of
terrorism, explaining grtmly that
violence Is now the only solution.
Here Is Wieseltier again: "l doubt
there are 22 million Russians in the
Soviet Union whOse llves are dally
as debased and disfigured as the 22
mllllon blacks In South Africa:• A
valid compartson Is difficult to
draw because the social contexts
are so dissimilar, but It Is surely
suggestive that the Kremlin must
patrol the Soviet Union's borders to
keep the residents Inside, whereas
scores of thousands of blacks enter
South Afrtca Ulegaliy every year to
be "debased and disfigured."
Wleseltier concludes with an
ominous references to the Amertcan Civil War: "There came a ttme
when the only way to better this

country was to bloody this country. " Is there any doubt what, In his
hysterta, he Is suggesting? The silly
little man has flogged himself into a
genuine war dilllce.
Fortunately cooler heads wlll
prevail - In South Airlca, In the
Reagan administration and even (I
venture to hope) at The New
Republic. There Is not going to be a

..,,•.

mass black upnsmg In South · ·
Africa, lor the good and sufficient
reason that the great majority or
•
South African blacks don't want
one. As for Amerlca'sliberals, their
•
attention span is notoriously short.
They wlll soon lind a new rag baby
- the Philippines, perhaps - and
the n rational progress can, and will,
resume in South Africa ..

..-,....,.
... ...·'·
-.;· ..
...
~' &amp; o ., ,

• •t •.,

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•

Berry's World

•

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You meet the nicest people when you play the Lottery._
.:•
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LOTTERY TlCKETS ARE AVAILBLE AT TH ESE LOCATIONS:
LITTLE DAN'S EXXON
7-33 CARRYOUT
GLOECKNERS CAFE
402 E. ~oin S1.
1000 Nyf" An.
t 10 E. Main St.
BIG BEND FOOD LAND
VANCE'S SOHIO SERVIC~ STATION SHAMMYS DRIVE INN
700 \\.Main S1.
RouiP 4
605 W. Main S1.1
KROGER
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Rt. #3, S1. Rl. #7

•

you just tnay be introduced to a
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And aren't these the kind :
of folks you'd love to take - -•:'
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··

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"To begin with, TAX REFORM Is certainly
uppermost In everyone's mind - ISN'T IT?"

Comanche n The New-Size Truck FromJe£P~~·

You can never be sure just who it
might be, of course. But when you
play the Lottery- The Number daily
game, PICK 4, OhioLotto
and the Instant Game - .

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'

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700 F.. Main !"o1.

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-IS

COLUMBUS (U P I ~ - 1lle- top l'lgtll
teams In eadt rep:lun In tbe llrSl OhJo

ot.-JV

H[kh SCI'Kn Alhil'41r A.ssociatlor1 romp~! ·
erlzed foD!ball rat ir~J!; of l!lft!o. TIK' top
tour qualify for tiw&gt; rep;\orlal playoffs:

1. L.onin C1Parvkow , 25.00; 2. LoulsvWe
Aqul nas. ZJ.MI: 3. SuUI\Ian 8111(11 R.Ntr,
1~-~: 4. Pf'lf'r!lbl.lrg Sprtniflfid. 14.00; !1.

-··

Ca t ~

1. Mlddk&gt;t..i!'R Hd~ ts Midpark. 32.50:
Uk'l Willoo.JI(hby South. CK&gt;vfland
G lenVllll' ·and Lorain Ad mln~ l Kl nj~, :l&amp;.!i:l
f' ach; ~. oeveland Sl. J&lt;leroptl. 24 . ~ 6.
M11yfl eld. 21.~; 7, Ot'Vt'land St . lgna!IU 5.
2.1.00: 8. Lyrdbu not Brush. 2!.00.

1:.

·

Rtpont

t

Ulel

&amp; unswlck

.Jactson. 29.50

lind

M as!lllon

l. Nonh Canton
GICfiQak. 29.!X,; 4. SteM' Wa lih .It-suit.
l'a('h;

~.lG:

5. Mansnt'ld Madison. 26.00: 6.
Bct!Wton. IM.OO: 7_ ?.MW"!!-..1111' , ZI .oo: 8.
flk' t Y\'Q()!;tf'r and Masslllun Pl•rro. , 22.50

.......

f'&amp;eh .

1. Tok..OO Cmtral Car nol le. 34 Ol: 2
Tiff!n Columbian, :U.OO; J . Wt"StervUie

North. 22.!10: 4. Xen ia . 20.50: 5. Lima
Serllor. l1 00; 6_ llk'l Troy.
and HIWard, 19.50 ('ach.

Cincinnat i

1.

.......

Bl'.ll~

Z

34.50:.

PrlnN"Ion.

U. Salko. lH(I; 3.' F alr&amp;ld.
~ .00: 4. Onctnnatl Alkm , :lli.50: 5
CentervtUI'. 26.00: 6. West Cheste r
Lllkotil. l!t..'iO; 1. Ham ilton, 24 .~: II

CirK'Inroat l

(.Jnclnna ]i S1. Xavier. :U.OO.
DM.!Oionll

IWPD•D

. · l. j tk' J Clt'l.·nland BmNict ine and
·- W estlak(o , ~ .IX) t&gt;ach; l
You• slown
Ea~ t . 24 .111: 4. Bn&gt;t-ksvlJ](', 21 .00: 1l. !Tie l
Ga rl:k&gt;ld HelghiS an d BP!oll WH1 Bran ch.
]1.~ t&gt;ac h;
7. II~ \ &amp; y Vill&amp;gl' and
COIW'll\11 , 17.00 ('actl.
Heaton I
I. Pen ysbu rg. 29 00: 2. CoJ*&gt;y. 2firu:
3. Avon Lalte, 31.00: .a. Shelby, 21.00: 'i
Toledo Df'YDbi.U :Jl.83: 6. Aktor1 B~ ll.t l'l.
18.91; 7. Uif' l S)'lv&amp;nla NOrthY !f'\1' and

-·'

GaliOn. UUD l'IK.'h.

1. S1. Clalrsv!llll&gt;. 21.00: Z. Canton
Cmnal Catholic. 23.00. :l. Wll.l!f&gt;l\all.
ai.OO: 4. ttlf' l Logan and ColumtM St.
Charft. I!HII f'!K'h: 6. 1tlrl Steubenvll ~
an d Columbu s lndtopt&gt;ndmCf'. 11.00 each:
B. Wlntt'f'Sville. 17.00.

.......

I. t:;:'olumbl.ls Waller!IOI'I .
Deyton Ou1mlnatk~.Jullenm .

26.00:

2.

Zl.m:

:l.

tTankliD. 2:!:.50: t Bt&gt;IIPI'ontalrw, '2l ~"C!1 5.
('IJ1c!nnat i. Taft . 11 .~
6. Clnclnna1 1
Crft.nhllls. 19 .~. 1. Ktot terln ~ Alll'r.
19.00: fl.. ctnclrlna t! Fon.'!it
, ur.oo.

Mill! Hawkerl, 13.00; &amp;. Oberln.
12.:10: 7. Mllll'l"lll R~ . U .50; 8. !11P I
Ando\.'l:'r Pymal uliJi i Vall(')' and &amp;erh.....ood. I UJI eadt

Rqio•14
1. Cr('SIOO Norwayne, 18.M 2. Ql.stalla
Mar~tta .
1~ .00:
3. 11.1t1 Collins
Wof'St£&gt;r n ~1' and Appko Ctt&gt;fok
~-

Waynedalt&gt;, 15,(1) paQJ;

Swantm, 14..00;

6. Tonr()fl:any Otseco. 12.00;: 7. MariOn
Plrcwmr . ll.66: K Pl'mlll&gt;rvllk&gt; Eastwood,

-·"

10.50.

1. Wh«'lt'r!tllli'R: . 19.00: 2. Mi nford ,
12."i), 3. Amanda Clt&gt;arcree-k, m .m : &lt;1 .
n k&gt;t Ca l dY-'t~ ~ Buckt&gt;yt' North a nd Cadiz.
9.~

t'ach; 7. Ok'l Llcklnll: HPI¢\t5 and
Moun! Gilead. !1.00 f'ath.

lteplnll
L Ciocln non l Aca~ of PhysiCal
Educatio n. 18.00: 2. UICI SprtngtiE'Id
Cffit ral Ca1trJiic- and Columbus Harlif')',
15. :10 Pach: t . Dl'lawiH't' OktllaJII':,Y , 13.50:
5. Cloc!Jinall Mark,&gt;mont, 13.00;
6.
Cplum hus .H.f'ady . l Ull : 7. l fi{&gt;J \'r-r·
~ ll k.'S· and W I U iam.~ porl W~ llall . lUll

'""'·

Dtv161oeV

By JOE IU.UZD
UPI Sports WrKer
The St. Louis Cardinals picked up
anothergameontheNewYorkMets
Wednesday. But as the race winds
down, Vince Coleman says the
cards must keep running.
"We have to keep aggressive, "
said Coleman after St. Louts
defeated Philadelphia 6-3 to In·
crease the Cardinals' lead In the NL
East to lour games over New Y~rk.
"No one can think about relaxing
yet"
Coleman, who has been a burst of
energy since being recalled from
Louisville In AprU, refuses to stop
ru!Ullng. A top candidate for Rookie
of ihe Year, Coleman stole three
baseS against the Phlllles, giving
him 105 for the season. That Is the
second highest total In history for a
National Leaguer. He suJllaSsed
Muary Wills' 1961 total of 104 and Is
13 shy of Lou Brock's NL mark

Rf:p:ml7
1
Svu rn011'
Mohawk.
16.50;
2.
Mo gacloi't', 12.00. 3. Smllh\•ll _. , I().S:l : 4..
·n..~an:l was catholic. 10.00: 5. Dalt Qfl,
7 . ~; ii. BuC'kt&gt;;&gt;'(" Ct'flt ral, 7.W: 1 Indian
va u ~· SOUth, 6 . ~: 8. South Amhfn;t,

which he set 1n 1974. Rickey
Henderson holds the major-league
mark Ot •""
....,,
"When I'm on you can e!epect me
to go, " Colem~ said. "There's
neveramlnutewhenl'monthatl'm
not thinking of stealing I go out and
try to put myseiJ In sco'ring position
for the Cardinals."
The 24-year-old speedster has
certainly done that enough times .
why year
the Cardinals
In firstreason
place.
this
and he tsare
a major

remalnlng, Including three against
each other next week In St. Louis.
Dan~ Cox
17·9 struggled
·v
•
'
through seven Innings, but earned
the victory. Jeff Lahti pitched the
tlnal two Innings to earn his 18th
save.
Tommy Herr ripped a three-run
homerfortheCards.
At Chicago, pinch-hitter Chris
Speier singled . off reliever Jesse

lUX); 8. Hannan TraCl', 7.50.
Repon!ll

Medicare &amp; Ohio &amp;

Ciocin natl Summit

Coo nt ry

Da ~· .

ANSWER: The main system of
the body that the flu virus a ttacks Is
the respiratory tract , where It
causes swelling and congestion of
the cells In the respiratory lining.
This Infection leads to the famlllar
syt11ptoms of fever, chills, wea·
kness. headache and joint pain.
QUESTION: The flu Isn 't really a
serious Hlness, Is It?
ANSWER: Each year about
10,00) people In this country die
because of the flu or Its compllca·
tlons. Perhaps the biggest danger of
flu Is the way It weakens the liody's
defenses against other types of
Infections. One of the most common
Infectious complications of the flu Is
bacterial pneumonia.
Because flu weakens the resptra·
tory system people with chronic
lung diseases such. as emphysema.
cystic fibrosis, tuberculosis, heart
disease,diabetesorchronlckldney
diseases are at high risk of flu

Ch1tiM Attfle, A.Ph.

Mon thru S•t . 8 :00 • . m. to 9 p.m.

·
Sund1y 10: 30 to, 2:30 11\d 6 to 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 9 92 · 2908
Fri.ndlv S1rvlce
Pomeroy, Oh :
f . Mlin
Open Nighta til 9

Jll .~ : 3. COVIngton, J6.ro: 4. Mlddltfown
Fl'n wlck. 16.00: ~. 11\l&gt;) Way iV'!i~ld
Gwhtorl and W11y ~vUit&gt;, 1 5. ~ ciw.:h: 7.
Sl . Henry , 13.00; 8. MarlO n Local, 12..00.

'

Majoftl

Parts Plus CREEPER

AMERIG\N LEAGUE

....

rr- ll*rnMIDa&amp;l
W L PIS. Gil
~ :'i6 .629

Trmo

111 112 . ~ fj
79 Tl .S27 15~

NY

••

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"'""'
om
&amp;i n

79 73 .5;JJ
7&amp;7fi .m

Mlwkw
C'tvlnd

67 1W .444 78
:\'I 99 .1';7 4n~

Calif.

Afi

Hardwood body,
padded headrest,
nylon wheels.

16 ~
19 ~

S~LE fRJCES ,

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KC

8.') 66

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74 'lR .4H7 12
71 Bl ..a67 15

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70 B2 .til 16
57 !H .:m 2fl ~

M!fiJW'S()Ia :;,

TPXa.~

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L Pd. Gl
':16~

Sl . Lou
NY

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19 73 .!Ill , 17
7'1 79
2&gt;1
T1 Rl .470
fl2 9f! ..147 4.1

Mnt r1

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Phil a .

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Chi.
Pl stlrgh

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R9 6.'l .\'11 K2 ~ ..'i4'i li
78 74 . ~J:l ll

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Ca liforni a 7. Chic• 4
Kansa.~ Cl~· 5. Sr&gt;al!lfo 4
NATIONAL t.EA.GUE

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Milwau)lco(• l. &amp;IUmow 0

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C'k&gt;Y&lt;&gt;Iand 7, Oakland 2
Boston 4. Toronto 2. 13 lnnlnliS
Nrw Ycrk 10, D"!TUI 2

.

I
I

CJIP. 10/Z/15

N-------------1

. . VOLUNTEER RECOGNIZED - Nettle Hayes of Middleport was
; : )ecopJized lor 1G,IOO hours of volunteer service with lhe Auxiliary of
;: '\leleransMemorlal Hospllal. Tuesday she was wesenled her IO,OOllmur
· · pin by Louise Bearhs. volunteer cbalmwl, Jell. Pictured wllh Mrs.

IRA@•cl·

1

\6¥ LANTER~.~
- . ~·
~

· New officers were elected and
.money for the "food, land and
justice" district project was col·
lected at tlle recent meeting of the
Alfred United Methodist Women
held at the church.
Plans were also made for a
memorial for Helen Woode and a
'report was glven on the Arcadia
'Nursing Home service held In
·~pteinber. Another visit will take
'place next month. Nellie Parker
'announced the officers' enrichment
day at Coolville to be held on Oct. 17
:followed by a tour of Middleton
't)o11s. Mrs. Parker read a letter
' from Vicki Smith, Cedartown. Ga.
:regarding her work there In Ule
' united Methodist Children and
:Family Services. A report was
:mad&lt;&gt; on Ihe ArmdlaNurslngHome
·visit on Sept. 10 and plans were
·fnade for ancther visit In October.
: . Gertrude Robinson had tllc
·prayer calendar and chose B&lt;&gt;rton
Starkey, church and community
:Sei,VIce, Kansas City. Kansas. The
:group signed a birthday card for
hjm and also one for Pl'arl
Randolph.
·' 'Thelma Henderson ~(ave the

San Dk'1!0 1. San Fntn('bro 4

n.a~·ll G~ ~AD 'ftnwt~ EIJf)

Allanta I"Ek'dmilan 7·13 1 a t Clndnna 11
tMcGart[Jan 2.:1 1. 12:1') p.m .
Nf-A· Y ork tGoodl'rl 'l2 41 111 C'hlc&lt;.~~
!AbJ"l"'(IHh . 2:20p.m .
·
MonU't'al tGullldrson 1J.ll l at Plt1~bu r$1h
,·RMdm !J-14 1, 7:J!ip.m .
.
Phlladl'lphla IK, Gross 14·111 ul St. LOU I ~
11\ldOr 19-1'1 . R: :\.'i p.m .

)

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A.FT ER MFG . REBATE

1

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SALE PRICE · ·

&lt;'

14"

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1012/U fl

------6amp

4amp ·

S3374

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Dexter PI usN has been scientifically designed for comfort
from its contoured sole, to 1ts
spongy interior. So treat your
feet to the shoe tha t's maktng
comfort history.

18018

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FOR IMPORTS

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~9~A~T=6=:H
M
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1\10 . 74 50

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FOR MOST APPLICATIONS

All PATTERNS
VALLET 1 PRICE

•Se1t1nQS of 10· 150 h./lb.
•Precis1on accuracy to ± 4%
•Also for metric settings
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POMEROY

MASO!, WV

240 THIID AVI. 1104 EASTIRN AYE.
446-1813
446-4204

119 W. 2nd AYI.
92·2139
I AM 'nL 5:30 PM

IOUll 33
JJ.JS11
I AM 'flL 5:30 PM

. . . . . . . . . . .AM 'fll 5:30PM I AM 'TIL 7 PM

Carhartt
Hooded Sweatshirt
Built better than it has to be.
o Co tton/ Polyest er out er sh ell
o Fl oc ked n y lon inner linin g

• Att ac hed hood with d ra wstring
• Ri b· k nit cuff and bo tt om
• Heavy duty zi pper front
o Fro nt h and wa rm e r poc kets

• AVAI LABLE I N
FLAM E ORANG E
G REY

tC885-107! :

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POINI PlEASANT, WV
515 MAIN IT.
615-1520

2611 JACKSON AVI.

IAM'IIl5PM

lAM 'TIL J PM

....
•

675-2131

:

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LAYAWA'i NOW
FOR CHRISTMAS

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tul l 1an.:L' "t
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ll.)I]L Ill U " &gt;\

Rugge d as the men who w ear them .
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IN MI D DI. ( f'QR T

Serving Meigs &amp; Gallia
Counties As Your Singer

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• Hand held

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Available at this fine

~., '='~
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About
Echo's
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1 or 2 + 5 + LIFE

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CS· 51DEVL

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Member FIJIC

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~Ts~~2nf ABRIC S~~~~ m
DIGitr

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S2J99

Starting Se/i£mlx!r3Q Centra/Toot is
·havingaSale on somdhing;oo really uxmt.
G) :

20°/o OFF
No 2450
No 24F ·50
No 70 50

and has a book which begins Ulen
and shows her volunteer hours
through the years. When she first
started she Worked several days a
weeks and her hours accumulated
rapidly. In fact she showed a total of
5,(XX) hours In her first flve yearsand
In January, 1976 received her 5.00l
hour pin.
She talks about tlle friends she's
made, and the good times and the
good feelings which have come from
her volunteer work. She recalls the
"big snow of "'l!l" and how she and
another mlunteercouldn't get their
cars out, so they just stayed at the
oospital and took over the duties of
other auxiliary members who
couldn't make it on the hill.
Health problems have kept Mrs.
Hayes from her duties at times, bul
she always returns. In lite fail of
1978. sht&gt;suffered a heart a ttack, but
was able to return to her volunteer
station In tlle spring of 1979. Then
just over a month ago she underwent
major surgery ,bul this week was
back filling her time slot with the
Auxiliary. She works mostly on
Saturdays, usually about six hours.
but says she's just a call away if a
volunteer Is needed to fill In
someplace.
"I love coming here, it 's justlhat
simple." concluded the smiling lady
In the bright pink coat.

NAVY

misson report on women in Sou·
theast Asia where women are
expected to do the family work and .
fumtshfood fort he family . Author of
the article glven by Mrs. Henderson
emphasized that anyone wanting to
help the people there must under·
stand the social structure of the
country.
Florence AM Specer led the
pledge program which opened with
groupstnglngof··civeOfYourBest
to the · Master, " and a responsive
reading on missions, Mrs. Caldwell
read "Little 'Things," and ~era!
others had meditations from Helen
Steiner Rice. Group slnglng of
"Take Time to Be .Holy" and the
Lord's Prayer in unison closed the
program. Martha Elliot served
refreshments during the social
hour. Othrs a ttending were Gene·
vteve Guthrie, Osle Ma e Follrod,
Clara Follrod. Martha Poole, Nina
Robinson and Anna Thompson.
Next meeting will be0ct. 15 atthe
home oflsola Taylor. Nellie Parker •:t3*'·'
will lead the program on "Native
American Women In the United ~
States."

6 GOOD USED
SEWING MACHINES
AT LOW PRICES

$811NGE

•57640

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Senltnel Staff Wrler
Nettie Hayes smiles a lot these
days - her health Is better. she's
back doing what she likes best,
volunteer Work at Veterans M~mor­
lal Hospital, and Tuesday she
became the first Aux:Uiar.y member
to receive 10,00) hour pin.
Sevenly·three In June, Mrs.
Hayes has been doing volunteer
work at the hospital for the past 15
years. During that time she has
accumulated a total of 10,00! hours.
"I feel like I'm really doing
something to help others. I love to
come here and work, and as long as
I'm able, I'm going to come,"
commented the genial Mrs. Hayes
who is back at her IDS! after surgery
just a month ago.
Tuesday she was honored by the
Auxiliary and p~nted her 10,00)
hour pin for volunteer work at the
hospital.
Talking about her work there,
Mrs. Hayes says she's "done It all"
during her 1S.year stint as an
auxiliary volun.teer.
"I've assisted In x-ray, took
money In the cafeteria. delivered
mail and flowers, workedatthedesk
and in the gift shop, even passed
trays. and helped on most of the
money raising projects."
She joined the Auxiliary In 1970

~~~~~m
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W.dlendQ''" ~
Cllk'llltO ~ . NC'¥o' i'or11 4
PtttsauRII.II, MontJ'l'al 2
Atl anta 4. Onc\nflllli 2. U innln ~
St . Loul' 6. P'tllla&lt;rlphia 3
HOIJ slon 6. LM; Anlll'l("!; 4, 10 lnnlnjV&gt;

~

center . Call

: • Hayes and Mrs. Bearhs Is Juanita Nonnan, Aux:Uiary president.

fi

.,._FORCKY

In early October at the Ohlo
University Osteopathic Medical

VMH volunteer notes
10,000 hours service

a

Scoreboard
lly Ullld

Page-7

complications. The added stress of protecton against the type A
the flu may overload the body and .lnOuenza virus, the type whic h
lead to respiratory, heart, or kidney causes the most serious compllca·
!allure.
tlons. This drug Is not a substitute
QUESTION: Can the flu be for the fill vaccine, but Is sometimes
prevented?
given to high-risk people as soon as
ANSWER: The flu vaccine Is,the flu cases . are · reported In a
most Important measure In pre- communltr. It Is given every day
venting Influenza. Even IJ you had a
until the tllreat of flu has passed.
shot last year, you soould be The drug helps reduce the fever and
revaccinated for full protection. other flu symptoms in people just
Ideally, the vaccine should be given developing the illness.
to high risk and elderly people some
If you have questions about flu
time In late September or early shots or amantadine, contact your
October to allow them enough tlme physician or the American Lung
to develop sufficient antibodies In Association. If you are a Southeasttheir btQOd streams before a flu em Ohio resident over ffi you may
outbreak In the winter.
want to participate In the geriatric
The drug
amantadine
Is
good
for
.
flu vaccination program sponsored
.
.

ByCHARLENEHOE~H

RonMd H..-aing, A . Ph .

Charll-5tc.~ ~tht· allt('r" n ,

Thursday. September 26, 198~

What is influenza,
·
how
do
you
get
lt,
how
serious?
•

'

-.

Pharmacy

Sentine~

•

&gt;

SWISHER LOHSE
Kenneth McCultoufh, R. PII. .

By The Bend

-·

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Aoe'slanl Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University Collel"
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: Now that flu season
Is here, can you tell what causes the
flu?
ANSWER: The flu , or Influenza
as It is called, Is a contagious
respiratory disease caused by a
virus. The flu virus Is spread by
water droplets whenever a person
. with the disease sneezes or coughs.
' When those virus particles are
. Inhaled by someone else. they can
' start the flu symptoms In that
Individual. Actually, many differ·
· ent viruses cause symptoms we
) abel "flu" - the virus that makes ·
: •you sick this year may not be the
:s ame one that caused last year's ,
nu.
•
:: QUESTION: What part of the ·
: bo~y does tlle flu affect?

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spray and cold air . Ideal tor do-ityourselfers and persons with allergy .
respiratory or heart problems. Hundreds of uses around the home and
farm all year long .
MICRO·FOAM$129
Of MFF-2
PKG

w. va . Workman's Compensation

-

Family medicine

FAM - 1

SPECIALIZATION
LOW BACK PAIN • PINCHED NERVES (SPINE)
NECK 8 SHOULDER SYNDROME • EXTREMITIES • HEADACHE
SCIATICA • FAILED DISC SURGERY • ATHLETIC INJURIES
SYSTEMIC DISORDERS • NUTRITIONAL WORK-UPS
SCOLIOSIS SCREENING (SPINAL CURVATURE)
INJURY ' PERSON .. L, AUTO , INDUSTRIAL
BlOOD ANAlYSIS • lABORATORY • PHYSICAL THERAPY

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ern and Paint V al l~ . 10.50 !!ach; ~.
F'r.1n ldon Adi'Jia . 10.00: G. HCM·ard East
Knw; . 9 .~: 7. Ha mr00ndsv111e Stanton.

I.

The Daily

Orosco. bringing home Davey
Lopes with two out In thetedbo4-ttom
1e ofd
the ninth. The Mets was
a 1 a
by G
Carter's and
provided
ary
gr
slam. Lee Smith, 7-4, worked ~
lnnlngs&lt;iscoreiessrellefloearnthe
triumph.
Wlth two out. Lopes walked and
stole second and third before Bob
Dernterwalked. Spelerthenstroked
a 2-2 pitch to left fte)d .

"He really helped us to tum It
around," St. Louts manager Whitey
Herzog said. '·'He's got a bright
future . He'll have a game sometime
when he~ll get six (stolen bases).
That's cause he can steal third."
The Cardinals, who have won six
In a row and 13ofthelrlast14games,
lowered their magic nwnber for
clinching the division to seven. The
Mets fell to Chicago ~- Both St.
Louts and New York have 10 games

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.

~ . lli

21.00; 2. South

26, 1985

Cards, Dodgers inagie number shrinks

Southwestern third
in computer ratings
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Thursday,

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~~

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�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

In the spotiight

Thursday. September 26, 1986

Thun~day.

Bringing in those plants for the winter months

When digging plants, be sure not
to
disturb the roots. Remove
County Extension Agent
enough
soli with t he plant to protect
Home Economlcs/4-H
the
root
system and allow for
This is the time o f year when we
think about saving some of our repotting.
This is also a good time to do a
pretty plants from summer by
bringing them inside to winter. check up of your houseplants. If
There are severa l types of plants t h~y are growing well. occasional
that will do well indoors, and can be reporting wiii help them to do even
better. Here's how the U.S. Depart·
sent back outside n ext spring.
ment
o( Agricult ure suggests you
At our house we always set aside
do
the
checking.
one night before the first frost to
First
step is to water the plant.
bring in all of our summer
The
next
d·ay, gently tap the plant
!a vorttes. That way, we get to enjoy
of
its
pot
and examine the roots.
out
the m all win.ter, a nd have ple nty of
A
pl
ant
needs
repotting for several .
cuttings for next year. Pla n ts that
do well include begonias, caladi- reasons: ll the t'oots circle the pot
several times; If roots are tightly
\UTlS, coleus, and geranium s; you
might a lso try a fe w marigolds and intermeshed a nd a re pus hing
impatiens .
· against the side of tbe pot : if roots
B y Cynthia S. OUverl

Meeting set
· Adeline Fast, Free Me thodist
q,urch missionary to Haiti, Zaire
and Rwanda, will speak a t the
Laurel ClitfFree Methodist C hurch,
Rl&gt;ute 7 Bypass. Sunday at 10:30
a .:m. The public is invited to attend.
·Miss Fast has served as a Bible
sehool teacher in both Zaire and
tf,aiti, the rapidly growing mission
conferences where the common

etiucational language of both countites is French.
·
; For the past two years s he has
taught in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
where she noted there exists a need
; for adequa tely prepared pas tors for
the many new churches being built.
In Zaire and Rwanda, the missionary directed prtrna ry and second_ary schools under tile jurisdiction
of the church. In 1973 she was
appointed to teach in the Bible
!;thool In Baraka , Zaire whic h she
also directed the Christian educa·
tion program for the confer ence.
Miss Fast began her missionary
career in 1947 in Zaire under an
independent mis s ion. In 1965 she
started work with Free Me thodist
missions In Rwanda . She ho lds B.A.

Adeline Fast
a nd B.S. degrees in education from
Goshen College in Indiana, and a
B.S. in French from Nakato State
College in Minnes&lt;;&gt;ta. She has d&lt;:&gt;ne
fut1her French studies in Switzerland and Belgium .

Racine PTO meets,
plans fall carnival
A fall carnival was planned f'or
Oct. 12 a t the rece nt meeting of the
Racine P'ro held at tile school.
Pam Diddle presided a t the
meeting with te a chers for the
current year being Introduced. They
are Mary Hill, first grade, with 32
students; Karen Davk:lson, second
grade with 26 students; Jan Norris,
third grade with 26students; Donna Norrts, fourth , wlth 29 student s;
Donna Say re, fifth, wllh 25students,
and Larry Wolfe. sixth, with 25
students. Also introduced were
Joyce R itchie, remedial r eading
teacher, Debbie HUI, a r t , June
Buchanan , musi c, and Pat ty Circle,

secretary.
Besides the carnival another fu nd
raising activity di~ssed was a
dinner in November. ltwas voted to
prov ide VCR tapes for each room
and $25 was given to the kinder·
ga rten for supplie s. It was no ted lhat
Sharon Card will take care oflinger
prtntlng the new first grade rs.
Mrs. Norris n oted that pictu res
wUI be taken at t h eshcoolo n Oct.l6,
that there will be parent-teacher
conferences on Oct.!S and no school
for t he children, and tha!Oct. 23isan
inservice day with school to be

d ismissed.
Room mothers were announced
as follows: Cheryl McCune, She rry
Hensler, Peggy Kir by, Roberta
Smith, Debbie Bradford , Me l Hoim an, and Mrs. Wr ltsei, firs t; April
H ud sop , Cha r lot te Wams ley,
Rhonda Dalley , Sally Ervin, Lou
Martin, Lynn McKinney, Megan
Ma nuel, Peggy Holman, Rit a Ma·
thews, and Pau la Gilbride, second
grade; Peach Mugrage, Sue Grace,
J oy Mora rity , Maxine Rose , Vicki
AbtxJi l, a nd Becky Smith, fourth;
Rose Yocum , Rit a Mathews, Pam
Diddle, Becky Hensler, Ka ren
Tu rley , Becky Mallory, Carol
J ustis , Linda Holter. fourth grade.
Diane !hie, Bev Cummins. J anet
Ann Hill, Carol Rose, Pa m Diii .
Sa lly Hill , Resa Sawyer s, Joy
Morarity, Sue Grace, and Peach
Mugrage, fifth; a nd Donna !hie,
Helen Holter, Fa ith Varney, and
Mona Ervin, sixth.
The room count was won by Mrs.
Davidson's second grade.
Regu lar meetings of the PrO are
h~id on the third Monday of each
month a t 7: ilOat the grade school. All
pa rents are invited to attend.

are growing through ·the drlnage
hole to the extent t hey impede
d rainage.
If the plant does not need
repotting, but the soU at the surface
is so hard water can't get through or
e ncrusted with salt de posits, re·
m ove the surface soU. Replace it
with a !rash mix.
If you need to repot, use a PQt only
one size larger than the old one .
P repare the new pot by soaking It at
least 24 houi'S prior to reporting.
Cover the drainage hole with
several pieces of broken crockery,
a nd place an Inch of west sphagnum
peat over the crockery and add a

layer of soil mix. Have plenty of soil
mix ready. Before you repot the
plant, pick out any old bits of potting
and any dead roots.
With chopstick or fingers. loosen
or .r oughen sides of the root mass so
it does not resemble a perfect mold
of the old pot. This wUI help the roots
to grow easily Into the new soU. If
the roots a re so tightly coUed and
interwoven that lOosening is difficull, make vertical Incisions on the
outer rootbali a quarter oi ail inch
deep in four or five places,
Thoroughly water the plant immediately after repottlng.
For one to two weeks, place the
. plant in filtered light, but awa y

Veteran OVP
.employee will
:retire Monday
,with 29 years

from any breeze a nd excessively
high temperature . Resume fe rtlliz·
ing ln two to three. weeks. P lants
transplanted to a larger container
will not require water as frequently .
as before repotting.
A little extra w TLC for your
houseplants will make your winter
months more colorful.
'
Did you know that: The time to
harvest gourds is when the stem
begins to dry a nd tum brown, or
when the leaves start to dry, For
additional information on harvesl- ·1·_1. .
lng and curing gourds, contact the
Meigs County Cooperative E xtension Service at Box 32, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, or call 992-6696 .

"Jesus is Mine" by the Methodist
men accompanied by Rose Ann
Jenkins. The pastor sang "In the
Garden."
Fonner pastorsoftbechurchand
their farnilis welcomed were the
Rev . and Mrs. Richard Jarvis,
Lancaster, and the Rev . and Mrs.
Carl Hicks, Pomeroy. A trtbutewas
given in memory ' of deceased
members; ClHford PhUUps, Otto
Hartenbach, Charles Russell and
Grace Fisher.
Glenna Rummel recited, "The
Touch of the Master's Hand," Mrs .
Mildred Phillips read " United
Methodist Women Speaks Out at
Minersville" and "When Ma Upped
Her Hair," the Rev. and Mrs. Hicks
sand "All Is Well with My Soul,"
Myrna Lowe and Paula Welker
sang "This They Do" and "What
They Sow."
Wiggins thanked thewomen oft he
church who took on the project of

Catholic Women's Club meets
Plans for a retreat on Oct. 27 at the
Hackett cottage, Long Bottom, was
planned when theCathoilcWomen's
Club of Sacred Heart Church met
recently in the activities building.
The Rev. Fr. Antohony Gianna·
more will he speaker at the retreat.
Duling the meeting Rae Swiazdowsky was sworn in as treasurer to

fill the vacancy created by the
resignatin of Noreen Ondrusko who
has moved from the area. The
traveling madonna was won by
Kate Wells. Hostesses for the
October meeting will be Rose
Sisoon , Mary Kunzelman, Elsie
Sutherland, Ann Colburn , and
Debbie Cleland.

A donation was made to the
Grundy Mountain Mission School at
Grundy, Va. and several fall
activities were planned attherecent
m eeting of the Homebuilders Class
of the Middleport Church of Christ.
The annual banquet to be held In
October was planned With the
Phiiatllea Women of the church to
prepare and serve a turkey dinner.
Committees named were Dorothy
Roach and Colleen Van Meter.
tickets; Nora Rice, Nettie Boyer,

Rurherford B. Hayes
Rutherford B. Hayes was governor of Ohio from 1868 to ll!7'1 and
from 1876 to 1877. He served as
president
or the United States from
1877
to 1881.

*

TO REGISTER TO VOTE, YOU MUST BE:

:

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

decorations; and Maryln ·wucox ,
Clarice Erwin, and Kathryn Evans,
program. New officers will he
elected
theMeter
meeting.
Mrs. at
Van
presided at the
meeting with-Raymond Cole giving

:

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Mondoy, Wednesday, Fridoy 9:00 to 4:00
Tuesday 10:00 to 8:00
Thursday and Saturday 9:00 to 1:00
COMMISSIONERS OFFICE, Moigs County Courthouse, Pomeroy
Monday thru Fridoy 8:30 to 4:30
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ElE&lt;TIONS, Mosoni&lt; lemple Bldg., Pomeroy
P. 0. Bo• 488, Pomeroy, OH. 457&amp;9-0488 - PHONE 992-2697
REGULAR HO
· URS-8:30-4:30 Monday thru Friday
ADDITIONAL HOURS FOR REGISTRATI.DN
Thundoy Eventn9s: Sent. 19, 26; O&lt;t. l - 6:00 •.m. to 9:00 p.m.
r
r
Soturdays: Sept. 21, 28; O&lt;t . S - 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 7: All OAY 9,oo A.M. to 9:00P.M.
AND PlEASE REMEMBER
OCTOBER 7 IS THE lAS! OAY TO FILE A CHANGE OF NAME AND ADDRESS
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN IHE FAll EIE&lt;ItON!II

:

POMEROY - Meigs Chapter of
Make Today Count will meet at 7
p.m. Thursday at theSeniorCitizens
Center in Pomeroy. Ali peroonswith
!He threatening illnesses, their
friends and relatives are Invited.

:

~ or PHONE THE BOARD OF EltCTIONS, OR MAIL THE BOARD ACARD.
t1 TOU MAT REGISTER AT THE FOLlOWING LOCATIONS:
~
MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR &lt;tniENS, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy
tl
Monday thru Friday 8:30 to 4:00
DEPUTY
REG
tl
ISIRAR OF MOTOR VEHICLES, 186'Tuiberry Ave., Pomeroy

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THURSDAY

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Pu blls hed e\'oery afternoon , Monday
through F r iday, 111 Court Sl ., Po meroy, Ohlfl, by the Ohio V•lley Pub·
llshing Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pom eroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 9t2-2156: Se·
cond class postage paid at PomHO)I ,
Ohi o.
Me mber: Unit ed Prest International ,
Inland Dally Press Assoclatlon and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoctatton. National
Adver tising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue ,
New York , New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: send address changes
to The Dally Sentlnel, 111 Court Si.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45700.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
8)' Carrier or Motor Route

Mrs. Lyons served as a tape
puncher on the old oflset system
from 1967 through 1911l.

--- - -

He weighted eight pounds, seven
ounces and was 21 inches long. Hls
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Bryan. Reynoldsburg.
Joshua Tyler, born on Sept. 19, Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Cadle,

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Presbyterian Church Women's AS·
sociation wUi have a PQtluck dinner
Thursday, 6: ll p.m., at the church .
Group I wlli present the program.

SUNDAY

QUAliTY FEATURES IN THIS SUITE INCLUDE:

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THE MOTOR PARTS CO.
922·2131
446·2962

/11. Storege Water Heatin g P10v rsion
' Is added to lhts -li!lrrlt w i th a ra te ot
' SO b t456'
KWH to r o il -p eak ener g~
used to elora hot water tor use du rmQ
on-peak PIUtods.
With regard to the Load M anage·
ment Time -oi· Da~ provision . the
cuetomer cnarge an d mr nimum bi ll a•e
lncreasea from $5.50 to $8.SO The
overatll ncre11e pro posed l or th oS p r o~ • ·
elan is 12.1'"- (6 .8'"- i nc l ud i ng tuet
charges).
The rete chant~@&amp; per 1\WH proposeo
as follows,
For an en11 r g ~ used du ri ng on peak
bill i ng pllrloas. tr om 6 l 71 cents
per I'(WHI08 021 cenl 5 pe r I&lt;WH.
or an lncreaee of abo ut JO• o
Fo r an en11r gr, used duo rog o ft.peak
bill mg per Ods. fr om i 553 ~ents
per I&lt;WH to 1.456 cent !! per ~WH
01 a decrlll!lll of about 6 %
Th11 conHNalion and toan manage
me nt credit Is rnc rea sea from
1 108 caniS to L38o4 ce nts per
Olf-plak IC.WM
/4. separa1e m et errn g pro~ •s•on os
added to this tariff l or genvrat house use
/4.n "additional service char ge ol S3 00
PI' m onth rs Included in !hi&amp; provuuon
The c harge&amp; in the Opt rona l Sero•ce
tor Re sidence• Prl m ar ll ~ H l!atl&lt;l tly
Elaelrlclty pro~ll loM are al l Inc reased
b~ about 11 •1o .
Ttle rate cl\a noe s prop osed are n
!OliO WI:
Month!~ S..Vrce Ctlllge lrom S1 4 98

Per

10 118.7~

4.-..rd.l.

Middleport, OH

The monthly customer c narge ana
minimum bill are lncreaseo tra m 53 00
to S!i.!IO. Ttle overa ll Inc rease is abou t
12..3 1/o (8 .8 % inc luding tue t c hlilrges)
The intreaae pe r I&lt;WH p roposed
are aa follow•
For the lrr sl BOO KWH u sec1 per
month fr o m~ 816 ce nt s per KWH
to 5.145 cents per KWH. or about
1'1• .
F or all over 800 KWH u sed per
'month fn;-rrt3 405·cent !l peo't&lt;WH
to 3,100 ce.nt s per I&lt;WH . or at~our
.

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In SectiOn 4, Pa~mf!nts . a c ustoml!! r
w ill be el'laroed lft_91J tor any drshCnor ed
crteck recalYed In pa~ment o t a tllll
rendered by the Company. unless the
cuatomer shows that me Dan k. wa s in
error. An 18.25 Chllge Is fl) ade under
exlaUng tariHs.
In Section t3. E•tensio o ol Rural
Lin . .. t,... C ompany 's Opti onal Pla n os
aliminated.
In Seclion 14 . Tem porary Se r ~ rce
!he fixed charge tor react ing-in and
readlng-oul an exlsllng metllf is tncreaseo
!rom StJ.75to 116.00 . and the charge tor
tingle phase 1201240 YOII se rvice from
permanent source uo to roo amp e••
capactt~ Is tncreaeed from $ 1 14.00 to
IHI3.2S.
In Section 21 , De ni al or Discont in·
uance o t Serv•CI . the re c o nnectron
cha rge dur ing normal working hOurs tor
singfa phase service rs mcreaser:l from
117.30 to 122.00. af'd thO!! cha rge o uts•de
of no rmal worlo. lng hours is In c reas ed
from $31.40 10 S6S.75 Rec on nec tron
charges oll51 .50 durlno normal work1 ng
hOUri and 195.00 outatde'ol normal wor~ ­
tng hours are added lor reconnec ho n of
elt!Yica oth11 thJn sing le p hase The
charge, when 1 Company empto~e l!! •s
dispatched 10 a ~ us t omer ' s prem• ses to
perfOt"m a dltconroecll un but tn lieu of
disco nnection IUYftS a wr i tten noti ce
of such dlscon necllon a l tne prem rses
or receives paymen t. rs incre ased I rom
19.20 to 11 0 00

OIL FILTERS

•After $1.110 rHatt

TheFamly

OF SERVICE

(aps; 7. Hand applied floating buttons to prevent pop
out; 8. Built in center leg; 9. Eight slatted spring sup·
ports in bottcim of sofa; 10. Tempered coil spring con·
struction; 11. Extra fabric swatch for color decorating.

1515

Saclclleupandrellve lheoldwesl wllh Roy Rogers,
Wagon Train,TheMonroes,Wyatt Earp, and other
greatwesferns. Ropelne.xcltealaentforthewhole
family every weekend on CBN.

26 W~ks ... .. ............................. $31.20
52 Wepks .................................. $59.80

SAVE 5100

For !hose KWH used du rin g the
month tne•ce:n ol400 tim es the
monlhl~ bitting aemand !rom t65
cents par KWH to 1.8 5 c ents per
KWH
Fot 11'1011 KWH used du rrng the
.
·
p#lak load perJod:
For the li ra! 500 I&lt;WH trom 5 19
cen11 per KWH to 5.81 c enls per
I&lt;WH .
FOf all over 500 I&lt;WH from ~ 15
cents per KWH 10 4 6 5 c enl s per

TARIFF G.S.
(GENERAL SERVICE!
Ch·erget lor demand me1ared
are Mparated by dlllvery
'-"11. The c:uatomat chsrga i e
inc:rMMCI from St5 .70 t o 111UIO lor
dell¥arY .ollaget of bttow 2.3 KV and
rrom tt5.70 to $75.00 lor dlll~r,
YOIIagea of 2.3 IC.V and lbO'&lt;It. Tt111

vott•ue

,,
(

I

Delivery Voltage
2 li&lt;V a
Below 2 3KV A bo~e

Dema nd M1:1h tred
Cu ~t omer charge
$ 1900 $1500
per month
Oemi!l nd charge
53 45
SJ4!l
pe1 KW
Energ y cha•Qe
S 02664 'l 02 44 3
per KWH
Nontieman d Metered
Customer charge
per month
SIJBO
Energy ch a• ge
$ OJ383
peri&lt;WH
Charges tor Recrea t•on llgh t ong
Customers are •ncreased an ewer age ot
2.er'- (2.1% tnctudlng luel) The cusl omilr
c harge and monrmum bill are •ncreaser:l
from $1 5 70 to Stt:i 15 The current ana
proposec:l rates under tnrs OIOYIStOn are
as follows
Currenl ProposeQ
Cuslome•
charge per month St510 St6 15
En e1gv cnarge
per ~WH
$ 04263 $ 0d35J
A Load Maniillgem enl Ttme o t-Oay
P r o~ision is added to this tarll l The
rate l or !h1s provosoon oncluc:les an add1
l oon aI cus tomer charge of SJ 00_ an on
peak energy charge o t SO 06039 per
KWH and an o i HJeak energy charg e of
SO 01379 pel ~W H
The mrnrmum charge tor welders,
x-ray macnmes etc os changed trom
S2 43 per I&lt;VA ot lnslatted lransforme•
ca pacit~ to the amount de l e•m•ned pu•
suamto the G S M onomum Cha1ge plus
$ 40 peo I(IJ A ot •nstalll!!d translorme1
c ~:~ p acity Monlmum charges l o• CuS·
tome1s hav ong o l l'1er sou1ces of energy
su ppl y are ch anged from $32 50 per
month lor 1he tlrst 5 ~W or tractron
l hl'lrl!!of ol cont•act demand plus 14 64
p11r montn fOI eacn KW o! con t ract de·
mand over 5 KW. to the a pp • Opr~ale
G S cust omer ctrarge plus $3 45 per
KW of monlhly b1lhng O~tmand ·

TARIFF E.H .G. (ELECTRIC
HEATING SERVICE)
Ttus tanH remams in process o f
e11mrnaltOn ano 11m1tea 10 e~•st•ng c us
tamers The m o nlhl~ c ust omer charge
ana m rnrmum b•ll are mcreaS!Id 11om
St900 to S2150 Overall cha.rges to o
tnos tarolf i:l lll onc reased appro oimately
t2 !:I'ID (8!:1 % oncludong luel charge!i.)
The cunenl and proposed rates rn
tnos ta&lt;~tl are as follows
Current
Customer c harge oer montn
St 9 00
Energf charge per KWH
S OJJ75
DemaM charge lOr KW In e~ c ess
ot 30 . ocr Kw
S2 92
Pr oposed
Customer charge per month
$21 50
Energy cn-arge peri&lt;WH
S 03844
DemanoJ charge for I&lt;W on e• cess
of lO. oer I&lt;W
S3 30

TARIFF L.P.
(LARGE POWER)
The proposea ra te has oeen
separated by del1very voltage levels
The monlnly cus tomtu charge haS been
reduced !or dl!!lover~ voltages bi!!IOw 2 3
I&lt; V and oncreued lor dfolllvery ~ollages
ot 2 31&lt;V 11 nd a.bo~e The d emand charge
has been rncreasl!d and the energv
~h a rge decref!seo a1 au ~oltage levels
Overall charges are rncreased from 9 4 °ro
10 t0 11D 15 8°, 10 6 3 '·~ lnC!Udtng fuel
charges)
The cuorent and propOSI:lrl ra1es on
thos tao II are as to Ilows
Cu11en l
Customer chatgll per month S:83 00
Demand Charge PCI KVA
$8 1fi
Energ~ cnarge oer KWH
$00838
P10poseo

Delivery Voltage
Under 2 J"t&lt;v 23 KV 10
2.3 KV tot21&lt;1J 1381&lt;V
Custome1 charge
p11r month
55000 SIOO .OO $28500
Demand chi!llge
SI 0.2S
5972
$9 45
per I&lt; VA
Energ~ cnaroe
per t&lt;WH
$ 00662 S 006 ~6 I 00640

KWH

Fot all addlllonat KWH used durtng
the montn fr om 2.0 7 cenr a oe•
KWH to 2.J2 cents per KWM

C~IIO,_,I

Gallipolis, OH

minimum bill will ~o nt rnue to De eaual
to the c u9tomer cnarge pl us t he de·
m11nd c harg e per KW times mlnrmum
bi lling demand 1 ~ I&lt;W). The o ~erall i n·
crease for demand meterer:l customer s
below 2.3 I&lt;V rs 3.2•!, 12 3~. includmg
fu el) and 5,9 '1• 14.2'1• lncludrno lue l) fOI"
delivery vo ltage a 2.3 I&lt;V and above
Charges lor no ndem&amp;f1d meter ed
c u9tomers are Increased a11 ave rag e o t
ap pro• lmat ely 2 9% t2.3% Includ ing
fue l charge!). Th e montnty customer
cl'large and m rn imum bi ll are Increased
tro m $ 12.00 10 $1 3.80.
The curre nt and proposed r01tes •n
1hls tarill are as l qllo ws
Curren t
De mand' M el ered CUs tomer
Cus l omer ch arge per month $1 5 10
Demand charg e per KW
l3 36
EnerQY charge per KWI1
$ 0258
Nondemand Metered Cu15tom 11r
Cu stome1 c harglj p11 m on1h S1 2.00
En ergy ch a•ge pe r KWH
$ 03639

TEAMS AND CONDITIONS

3. Spring edge front; 4. Polyester wrapped S" poly·
foam cushions; 5. (ontoured seat cushions; 6. Arm

SALE PRICED

Outslde Ohio
13 Weeks ................... .. .......... ... $15.60

Proposed

r. legs built into frame; 2. limited lifetime warranty;

NAPA

ln1~e Ob.lo

Weeks ........... .. .................. .. . 114.';6
26 Weeks .................................. 129.12
52 W eek s .............. .. ....... .... ....... $58.24

13

Pursuant 10 tne requlremen1a of
secuon 4109.19 of the Ohio AeYised
Code. Ohio Power Com~~Y _ hereby
gtVft nollce that on Ju ly 15, 1985, It tiled
with tM Public utiiiUn Comm laalcm o t
Ohio an •Ucatlon lor author ltat lon to
lf'lllld and to lncrtaae Its llled tarllts
and tarmt ..,d eond!Uont of serY ice II ~·
lng rat" and chiiQh lor -.ctttcl ty.
"copy olthiiCI(IIIca.Uon Ill aYallaDII
for lna_peetlon at -,he oltlce ol Oh io
Power comp.ny IOCaUid " 301 Cleveland
Ave ., S.W .. Clnton , Ohio, and at the
oll lctt ot !hi Public Utllltlea Commialion . 180 East Broad Slreel, Co lumbu s,
Ohio .
rt.a 1!18 no rate changes Pfoposed.
othlf • ttltn In the tarltls speclllca ll~
raltnild to in the following pa ragraph s
The subataroce of the revlalons pro·
I)Otad In the Company's appllcallon as
Iliad on JulY 15. 191!1, tS aa lollowa:

HARRISONVILlE - Garden
tractor puB at Harrisonville Sunday
1 p .m. Weight classes are !llO, 900,
1000, 1100, laJO. Entry fee, $3;
adntlssion 50 cents; refreslunents
av~iiBble. Sponsored by Scipio
Township Volunteer Fire
Department.

Columbia won its only ~ost! Bowl
game when it defeated Stanford 7-0
in 1934.

Mall Sut.crlpUo•

TOWHOMtTMAYCONCERN:

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - Bowhunters .will
hold a famUy cookout al the
clubhouse, Saturday, 5::.1 p.m. for
all members and famllles;
members to take a covered dish.

No subscriptions by mall permUte(! In
towns where home carrier service is
avallable.
'

NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF OHIO FOR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES

POMEROY -RlvervleWGarden
Club Thursday, 7: 30p.m.athomeof
Mrs. Frank Bise.
·

NOW YOU CAN BUY A QUALITY SUITE
AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORDI

69~E:.r

Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basls. Credlf ·wtll be gtven carrier each
month.

Reynoldsburg, and the gran~n of
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Bryan,
Romulus, Mich. and Mrs. Crystal
Helm, Miami, Fla. He weighed six
poums and was aJ inches long.
Great great grandmother ot both
Infants Is Mrs. Thelma Bryan,
F~on,NUch. ,

programwillhebeldMondayat6:30
p.m. Everyone is Invited.

In World War I,124 Congressional
medals of honor were awarded to
military persoMel.

NAPI10W30
or10W40
MOTOR OIL

One Month ........ ......................... $4.80
One Year ..... ........................... $57.2Q
t SINGLE COPY
PBICI!
Daily ......... .......................... 25 Ce~;~ts

Mrs. Lyons plans to "take It easy
for awhile, and maybe do some
traveling."

QUA~ITY

tt

r:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::*:*:*:;*:*:*:*:*:;*:*:*:*:*::*:*:*:*:::*:*:*:*::*:*:*:*:*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*:*~*~

WEEK
AT THE WESTERNS

One W e ek .......... .............. .. .... .. ... $1.10

RETOUNG -Mrs. Enna ~loft, 18 OtJIIIIeii•I·•M by OVP
.executive editor Hobart WilBon lr., dunl1 a re11rement puty
· Wednesday In the olflces d the G•lllpolle o.Qy Tribune.

•

:

The Daily Sentinel
[USPS tU··)

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will have a .card P&lt;lr:IY and
style shOw at 7:30Thursdaynlghtat
the Pomeroy village hail.

POMEROY 7 Mid-week services
at Morse Chapel Church wlll begin
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . A youth

Myrtis Parker had the pledge
program with Evelyn Clarkreadinll
the scrtptures. Pledge ·card!i were
turned in by the members. Sixty sick
and shu tin cards were made by the
group and Allee Stroble and Ruth
Moore served a salad oourse.

A DlvlaitD of Multlmedla, be.

Calendar I happenings .

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

tl IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED~ VISIT THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON:

the opening prayer. Officers' reports were given. Several were
reported ill and Geneva Tuttle gave
devotions on praying for others.
Clay Tuttle had the closing prayer.
· RefrehmentswereservedbyMr.
and Mrs. Tuttle and Mrs. VanMeter
to Mr. and Mrs. Bill Grueser,
The1m a Boyer, Dorothy Roach,
Edna Evans, Clark:e Erwin, Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Boyer, Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Baker, Delete Forth, and
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cole.

Mr. and Mrs . John Bryan of
MiddlePQrt announce the births of
two gr~at grandsons.
Zachary Edward, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Marshall, Fort Hua·
checa , Ariz ., was born on Sept. 11.

$
$

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 7, 1985

*

mans 8for her scripture meditation.
The meeting at the Immanuel
United Methodist Church at Logan
on Sept. ·2ti was announced. 'Theme
will be "Our Church in Missions."
Distrtct Enrichmen t Day was
announced for Oct. 17 a t Coolville.
Also announced was thP distrtct
Methodist conference to be held in
Columbus on Oct. 9 and tbe United
Methodist Women Assembly to be
he ld Apr U 17-20 In Anaheim. Ca ll!.

Recent births announced by local family

i MEIGS COUN~TY VOTERS i
i IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
$
: NOVEMBER Sth ELECTION i

:

Homebuilders class meets

· Mrs. Lyons has operated a
:computer• typesetter the past five
_years after she became an editortal
:clerk In June, 19!ll. The Ohio Valley
. {"ubllshing Company moved Into its
~new offset plant in November,1967,
"when Richard Owen was publisher.
Robert L. Wingett is the current
publisher.

**************************************

:

A dinner to honbr the Rev. Ben
Edwards, dlstrtct supertntendent r1
the United Methodist Church, on his ·
retirement will be held at the ·
Pomeroy United Methods! Church
on Oct. a!.
Plans for the retirement carry-In
dinner were m ade a t last week's
meeting of tbe Pomeroy United
Methodist Women held · at the
church . Dorotby Downie opened the
meeting with ·devotions using Ro-

Erma Lyons , editorial clerk, wUI
complete her duties with the
company on that date.
Mrs. Lyons began as a perforator
(keyboard punch operaton with the
Gallipolis Tribune on June 19, 1956,
when the paper was OO'Ited by Dear
PubliCations of New Jersey . Robert
L. Meyers was publisher. Mrs.
Lyons joined the Tribune's compos·
iqg room staff when It was located at
425 Second Ave. It was the period
:when automatic linotype machines
were new in the newspaper
Jndustry.

remodeling the basement and Bill
and Ted RusseU for-their help with
the work. Senior citizen were
recognized, Dwight Spencer gave a
testimony and sang " Got My Hand
in the Hand of the Lord," and the
benediction was by the pastor.
Greeierswere FayeWiggins and
Carol Roush. Flowers used were
give~ in memory of Brad Maag by
Helen Maag and Mrs. Lowe, in
memory of Clifford Phillips by
Mildred Phiilips and Barbara
Nease, in memory ot Stella Grueser
by the Grueser fantliy , Other
flowers were provided by Mrs .
Gladys Hood , Mrs. Maag and Mrs.
Wiggins.

$

Pomeroy UMW holds recent meeting

'

A veteran «;:alllpoUs Dally Tribune, Ohio Valley PUblishing Company typesetter with almost ll
years' service will !'!!lire Monday,
Sept.ll.

Homecoming held at Minersville ch
Annual homecoming of the Ml·
nersviiie United Methodist Church
was held Sunday at the church with
.an ail-day service.
Former members and friends
from Michigan, Columbus, Pickerington, South Charleston,Ohio,
Lancaster, Mason, W.Va., McCon·
neisvUle, Pomeroy, Middleport,
Waterford , and Tuppers Plains
attended the service which featured
" Sunrise" at the afternoon
program.
Kenny Wiggins, superintendent,
had charge of the S)Jnday school
with the Rev . Steve Nelson, pastor,
giving the sermon at the monlng
worship service. The choir sang
"When We AU Get to Heaven."
Abasketdinnerwasheidatnoon. Wiggins was leader for tile afternoon program which include group
singing of "America ," the Invocalion by ihe pastor. the Introduction of
the pastor and his wife, and a son,

The Daily Sentinei-Pege-9

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

September 26, 1985

TARIFF t.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER)
Ttle customer charget5 have been
eltnet Increased or reduced de pend ing
on aenvery vo ltag e Dem and chargu
n avf oean Incre ased and eroe1gy ch11gea
dec rened )n each case Th e bi ll ing
dema nd para metara a re cha nged ! rom
KV/11. to tt.W end I&lt;VAR In excess o f 50%
of the I&lt;W The KVARdl!l ml r'HI cnargell
a ll 1ev111 s It S 50 Ovruatltne mc reases
rlinge !rom 11.2% to 2&lt;l.5•t. {8 5% to
tO.IS'Io .nc lud tng tua l Chlr ges)

rt~e cu~ren1 ana proposed r01tes rn
this tariH are as follows
Curre nI
Voltao e Custoruer Dem11nd Eni!IQ~
level
Charge
Charge Charge
23· 12 $1J300pl!!r
$.00743
manl h
per k.va
per k&gt;~jh
kv
23·69 kv $41 0 00
$6.66
5.00679
per mon th pe r ~va per IIWh
tJB~vor
$60200
$5.68
5.00660
.nrgher per month per ~va per kwn
Proposed
Voltage Customer Demanrl Eroergy
Le~et
Charge
Charge Ch arge
23·12 $14000per S10 30
$00575
kv
mon th
per k w
per kwh
2J.69 ~v SJ75 00
S!l 06
1. 0056~
per monlh per kw
per kYoh
1J8kVOf
S46000
$824
$00561
higner oer month pe1 kw
per lo:oo.h

m.oo

TARIFF I.R.P.
{INTERRUPTIBlE POWER)

c a11y1ng a secondar~ clrcur l. the Com·
paoy will •nslall one pole and/or one
span o f secondi!lr ~ circuit o t no t over
150 teet fOI" an additional cha1ge of 13.80
per mon th. an rncre ase fr om IJ.56.
L11mp
Currel'lt Proo oaad
7 OCHJ lumen
• me r cur~ on 12 toot
post top
S9 40
$ Ul 75
When a customer rectu.res aro under·
ground ~rrc urt Ionge' than 30 fee t for
post -top hg htmo servoce. he woll
li Pa ~ to lhe Compa n~ In ac:lva nce
i!l ctlargeot St 98pertoot tor ltle
length ot underg round ~IICU !ll n
~~~I'! SS o r 30 fee t decre ased
h om Sf! 22 and
21 Pay a month ly tacrlr ties ch arge
o f S 50 101 eac n 25 leet tor fr ac ·
tton tnereoll of underground cH ·
c u it In excess ot 30 teet .
dec reased tram ·S1.82
Cus tomers re~;~u1r i o g service w here
1011:1t o• oth••
soli condiliona
are encountered w ill till turntshed Sl!!l ·
vrce provroed the e•cess coSt ot trench·
rng 01 baCkfilling tcost rn exce ss o t
St 12/toot o f tne wtaltr ench length) IS
paid 10 the Com pany b~ the customer
aecreased fr om S2 561toot

•d•••..

' Th•s tar~ II nas oeen maae availaole
lh!Ollgflou1 Oflro Power Company 's ser
vtCe territ ory The cus1omer uhar~e os
reouced and I he demand charge &lt;5 •n
creased The overa ll level at charges •s
1ocreased appro .. malely 22 5"1, t9 8%
1 n~ludong luel chargi!!S)
lhe currPnl and proposed rates rn
1hos fa&lt;ttl are as tal lows
Culfenl
Customer cnarge pel morliM S602 00
emand charge per KW
$4 2'1
emana cnarge per KVAR on e• cess
o tso ~·~ o f KW btlhnlj !.lemand
S 50
Energ~ c harge pe• KWH
S 0066
·
' Pro posed
C usiomer cna1ge per monrh $460 00
Demana cha 1ge pe• KW
S6 84
Demand Charge per KVAR on e• c e s ~
ot 50•,o f"'.Wbollongdema ncl
SSO
Energ~ charge pe• I&lt;WH
:100561

g

'TARIFF COGEN/SPP
(COGENERATION AND/OR
SMALL POWER
PRODUCTION SERVICE)
Th.e capaCtty credits are redu ced
33''• ano Jne energy cred •ts are '"
creased tiV an average ot 15''• The
customer charge pr ovo soo n 's rl!!placed
f)y an admm1Strai10il charge o t 0 '1 cent!;

TARIFF E.H.S. (ELECTRIC
HEATING SCHOOLSI
This lan rt re mams In the process
of ehmrna 110n and lr mlled to e•rslrng
cuslal'l'lf:!1s Thl!! mon1hl ~ m111rmum charge
~~ oncreasea !rom $1 2 50 to S12 80
The 1ncrease per I&lt;WH •s as lollqws
For tne first 500 KWH Pill month
m ulllpl/ed by th e nu mber al
classrooms rn entire school !rom
2 47 cents per KWH to 2 53 cen ts
per I&lt;WH
For r11m~ on l ng I&lt;WH used per mon th
0 97 cents per KWH 100 99 cen 1s
per I&lt; WH
For total etec tuc scnoots, tne charg e
tor all energy used durrog th e
mon!li r5 •ncrused I rom 0 87
cen1 s oer KWH to 0 89 cenls per
KWH

TARIFF P.A.
(POLE ATTACHMENTI

t&gt;~

~r KWH

The c •ed•t ch anges fliOpased are
a!&gt; fallo ws
Where sla ncla rn P. nergy m elers art
used the ener gy c1edot oncrea ses
!rom I 38 cen ts oer KWH to 1 63
cent s per I'.WH and tn e c apac rly
cred tl aec reases trom S3 00 per
KW' IO $ ( 00 PI!' KW
Where Trme-o t Day e ne·g~ meters
&lt;ne used I he on pet~~ energy
cred•T oncrea se.s tn_.m 1/Xl r.P.nt s
per KWH to I 66 cen l!ii per KWH
and the on p P;~k eapact lv crerltl
d ecret~s es tr a m St 50 pe1 1\W to
it 00 per KW The Oil PCJk &lt;:rCOtiS
ar e th e !o amc as Nh ere 51anaar o
energy meter s are used

TARIFF S.S.
(SCHOOL SE~VlCE!
lhos tanll rem atns tn process ol
~ l • m rnat oO'l
ana llmrt ed ro u rs tmo
cu sromers l t•e custo mer c ha rt:~ !:! ·~ 1n
c reaserl an d t h ~ enerQy •ales a•e
tn ~ r ease d rne o ~e•dll t e~ • ·l os oncreased
approxm•a1u •y 12 5''• 18 ~ ·, oncluding
fuel r
·
The curren1 end pro poser! IIIII' S on
lho s ta11ll arP a5 touo .... s
Currenl
Cusl ome r c harge per mo n t~ S2 1 12
F11st 300 l'iWH per tOOO SO ft
o l enc tosea a tea per I&lt;.WH
S 042 28
S 03727
Balan ce of KWH per KW~
PtOPOSitrl
Cus l omer c harge oer monlh S2• 00
Fust 300 KWH per 1000 SQ It
ot en~los&lt;ed a~ea per KWH
104612
Bali!ln Ce oiKWf.l pei ~WH
I 04 243

Mor•lhlt lamp cha•ges aie increased
a.nd tacoltl~ charge 5 !or seca noar~ en
cu115 aondlnr pales are rncreasecl The
ower.;oll lewet ol cnarges rs 1ncreaserl
9 5"'• j8 '1o .nc ludrng tucl cha1gcs)
.
Tne current af'ld pro pose(.! rate s m
thrs I Bitlt 11re as fOllows
Lamp
Curren l Proposed

mer~ury

9.000 lumen hogh

$8

d~

$11 20

""'

PII!!Ssure s0d1um
58 35
22 .000 turnen hl'ifh
preuuresod•um
$1035
Stt25
THE FOLLOV'J ING LAMPS ARE IN
PROCESS OF ELIM INATION
4.N D ARE NOT AVAIL AB LE
FOR NEW INST ALLATIONS
Li!tmp
Cu11ent Proposed
2.!t00 lumen
Incandescent
5605
5700
4,000 lumen
incandescent
55
S7 GO
For each lamp wllh Hoodloghllng
lumona11e ~ on t rolled h~ ph otoefecltr~
relay . whl!!re se1vlce rs supplied from an
ex •sllng pole and Mcond ~tr~ taclirhes
ot the COmpan~
Lam p
Curren t Piopos.&amp;d
20.000 lumen
metcurylloodi!QMI
SIJ 30
514 25
SO,OOO lumen
mefCurt flOOdhght
St9 80
S22 ) 5
22.000 lumen ntgh
p reSSUIII SOdiUm
St325
St405
tt oodllght
50,000 lum en high
p ruaure !IOdrum
lt oodl rgh t
$1 4 4~
11560
When service cannot be 5UPPIIad
! rom an e•r&amp;llflQ PO le ol tne Com pan~

.se

The P. nnuat Anachmenl Ch;Hge to•
Rura l Goopera l ove Elec tric Compa nres
o r Etc~lrtc L•ghl Compan•es op erat l!!d
b~ 'a M unrcopali l y os 1ncreased tra m
$lJ 80 10 S22 33 Pi!' pale per year The
An nual Altac~ment Cha.rge tor all others
IS rn creased !rom Sl 90 to SJ 31 per
pule per yea•

PRAYER
1he Praver ot tne Applica ti on re
auests tne Public UliiiUes Commtssron
Ot Ohr o tO 00 th e fOllOWing
ta l Fmd thai the a.pphca hoo aod
e•h•br ts are hied tn accordance with Sectoon 4909.18.
Oh• O Revosed Code. and -t he
rules of I he CommiSSiOn
(b) AccP.pl the application and
exh1bt!S tor l rhngs .
tcl A ppro~e Ihe farm at tnrs notoce
101 FrM ltlal I he present ra t es a re
msu fl rctent 10 yield reason able
co mpensation lor thl!! serv •Ctl
1endered and a~e untust .:. nd
unreasonable
(Ill F1nd 111a1 lhe rncreased rales
and cnarges and a.mended tf!rms ·
and condrtrons of servtce pro
posed rn. Onto Power' s Appl1ca
horo are 1ust and reasoroatlle
ana aporo~e tne same
Il l App r o~e the l rllno ol the new
s~heO u les In the fotm proposed
herein, and
IQl Mske such new sc hedules
e tt ecl• ~e as soon u ot rs prac
hCII i!lnd ta wl ulto do so
The proposed .;oml!! nded schedu le&amp;
shall appl~ 1n all temtories served b~
Ohoo Power Compa ny
11 rs estim ated !Qa t 11'18 representa
tr~e res•denll et customer·s brll will IMl
•nc reased annuall ~ . tlased on the lwelvc
month penod ending March 31. 1986 by
e
tha represenlal •ve commer c 1al
cusiOmer ' s bil l by 4 4% and the rep resentatl~e lncluslrra l customer's bill by
78 %
All perr.l!!nlsges presented 1n lh•s
notrce are approxrmate and tlased an
average custofl'lefs. lfldt~•doat customers
mav exoerrence rate adjustments dr l
le1ent !rom trle aYerageS presentetl in
lll•s no lice
Recommend a lions which drller
tr am lhe a.ppllcatron m"'/, be m&amp;de by
the s11111 o f the Pubtrc Uli llies Comm•s
soon or by intervenmg parties i!lnd m11~
be adoptl!!d b~ the Comm rss.on lhe
Com p a n~ rs una ble to· preOICI wnat d
aoy. cnanges. Includi ng chan ges on
amo u n1 or form, m ay be mad e tly rhe
Putllrc Ull l1!1es Commtuion of Oh•o " '
the proposed tari ffs, a.od the Compa.ny
rs unatlla lo predoC\ ""hal . 11 any rmpacl
suc h mod•f •ca.t•ons · may have upon
custome r '&amp; billings
AN V PERSON, f:'"IRM , CORPORA TION
O R ASSOCIATIO N MAY FI LE.
PURSUANl TO SECTION 41109 19 OF
THE OHI O REV ISED CODE AN
OBJECTION TO THE INCREASES
PROPO SED BY OHIO POWER
COMPANY , WH ICH M/ll.Y AL.LEG E
TMAT TME CO MPANY'S APPLIC ATION
CO NTAINS PRO POS/4.L$ THAT AR E
UNJUST AN D DISCRIM INATORY
OR UNRE.SON4.BLE
The 101m of ttlls not ice h as bean
approved by t he Public Utl lllles Com
mlulon o f Ohio

a•r,

TARIFF O.L
(OUTDOOR LIGHTING)

7.000 lumen
mer c ur~
20 000 tu ml!:n

.. -·

0 1110 POWER COMPANY
By C.A Heller
President

,,

�Thursday, September 26, 1986

Thundly. September 28, 198&amp;

ClAlllflfD ADl
FlU THE Bfll
.
\~

.

.

NOTICE OF
PROBATE COURT OF
MERQEII
MEIGS COUNTY; OHIO
Notice II '**! s;v.. thol
. ESTATE OF MARGARET E.
11: the cioN of bl•'natt on
HOUDASHELT, OECEASED
Auguot 31 , 1188 , Tho
c - No. 24897 0oae112 Fo,_ Bo,. lo Savinp
Pogo 518
Compony of P o - . Ohio
NOTICE OF
WM merged wfth and into
APPOINTMENT
Farmers Interim Bank, the
OF FIDUCIARY
-.ltorybonlctobo_.ted
On September 18, 1986, in under the ch.-tltf' of Farmera
tho Meigs County Probote Interim Bo,. ond with tho title
Court, Cooe No. 24897. "Tho F - Ionic lo Bovlngo
Amber Lohn. Pomeroy Cliffs Compony." Tho wu
Apartmenta, Apt. 2B, p...,.. - - ....... 'II 10 0 pion
roy, Ohio 48789 wu op- of.-gonizotklnondmorgor
plad for the
pointed Executrix of the estMe
of Morg~~nrt E. Hoodo-. -offorr!WngooneDetee•ed. late of Smith bonlc holding compony ...
,"Fe"""'" lloncohoiWI,
Str.... Rocine, Molgo County, lftted
Inc.''
Ohio .
St.oto of Ohio, DMiion
Robert E. Buck. of Tho
Bonica ond tho BOO&lt;d of

..,..nwd ·•

f

SOUTHERN'S TEAM - Soulhem Urban soU
judging learn m embers (left to right), Andy Rose,

•

Herbert Rose, Brian Freeman, Harold IIA&gt;ush and
Aaron Sayre, Instructor.

Probote Judge

G....,.,..

of tho

Foderol

R - Syotem how op........ lhe~n. On
J~ 9, 19B5, tho hotdoto of Tho Fo,_. Bonk
1o s.v!ngo Cornpony limitorly

l.onaK. N - .
Clerk
19119, 28 t1013. 3tc .

...,."'"" -··
liNn'S IIOMI &amp;

HllnNG I COOIIIG IT5TIMS
Soles &amp; S..•ke

Qu .. lty lnttrth•rm
Air Conditioners

He1t Pumpt. Fum•ces

•••••416--446·2112

We'd like to introduce you to
Enp1o·A·Car. tho modern woy
to drive tht vehiclt of your
choice.
No DoWII Payment
lower llonthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
lox, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For faster Service .
Call 614-992·6737

Roger Hysell
Garage

mooting.

(9126 1101 3, 10, 17, 4tc
ADMINISTRATOR'S
SALE
1 om otletbog for aalo ot 64 Misc. Merchandise
224·228 Union Avenuo. 1 - - -- - - - - - Pomeroy. Ohio, 46769 .... ,following root - .. ownod by
tho r... Orpho M. Jomoo:
GOOD USED
· T- hou.. ond Iota oJtu.
Reltiproton, washon, diyers,
ps and electric ,..... and 1'1
oted In lhe Vt!logo ol Pomeroy.
Meigo County, Slota o1 Ohio:
sets.
OPEN 8 TO 6
Smol locoted ot 226
Union Av•ue. Pomeroy, Ohto
Countv Appliance , Inc .
end ow.- in tho - • of
627 illrid Ave .. Gallipolis
17,600.00.
446-1199
Larger -locoted .. 224
U!'ion A_,.., Pomeroy, Ohio

Rl . 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;' TRUCK .
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682

or 9U-7121
3·24·tfc

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

and ..,.,ailed in the Mtete of

MEJ£;S JUDG~G TEAM - ~lelgs Agriculture
Judging learn members, left to right, Betty Jo Hunt,

Southern

wins

Southern Future Farmers of
America 1FFA) won the County
Urba n Land Judgi ng Contest held
recently at the Rex She nefield farm
in Salem Center. Members of the
winning team were Herbert Rose.
Andy Rose, Harold Roush and
Brian Freeman.
Meigs FFA wo n the County
Agriculture Land J udging Contest.
Members of that team were Betty
Jo Hunt. John Carl. George Parker
and Ken ny Chapman. Top teams
w!U receive trophies a t the Meigs
Soli a nd Water Conservation Dis·
trict 1SWCD 1 Annual Meeting on

Kenny Chapman, George Parker, John Carl and
Kevin Sheppard, instructor.

land judging

Nov. 19.
High scori ng individuals were
first, second and third respectively
In the Urban Contest - He rbert
Rose, Andy Rose, of Southern FFA
and Ray Riley of Meigs FFA . Top in
I he Agriculture Contest were Betty
J o Hunt, John Carl a nd George
Parker, a ll of Meigs FFA. These
individuals will receive $15 for first
place, $10 for second place and $5
for third place at our annual
meetings.
In the contest, lour 48 Inch pits
were dug in different locations
wit hin wal king dista nce. Site a nd

contest

disarranged and said, in his opinion,
it had been intentiona lly disar·
ranged. Acoff('(' table with Items on
it had been completely undisrurbed.
be said.

Thursday's testimony
Angry loud male voices. the sound
of a gunshot and a woman's
scrram·· thesc things were heard
coming from 1he Taylor residence
on Forest Run on Wednesday, Oct. 5
according to testimo ny given
Thursday by Ronald Reynolds whPn
he appeared as a witness for the
pro5C&lt;'ution at the Lind.,ay Taylor
mutder tlial.
Reynolds. of Minersvil le, owns a
farm across the road from where the
Taylor 1railer was located. Reynolds had gone to the farm in the
early afternoon and was in the barn
when a cornrnot ion across the road
began. He carne out of the barn as
soon as he heard the s houting male
voices . He then heard "a loud boom"
-what he thOught was a gunshotfollowed by a woman screaming
something to the effect of "Oh, my

residence on various occasions
throughout the nex t few days.
On Tuesday, Oct. 4, Ruth Taylor
said Melton came to her residence
about 5 a.m. in the morning and he
was accompanied by T om McKay .
Jr. She testified that Melton had
been drinking and continued to
drink throughout that morning until
tie went to bed about 1 p.m ..
About 5 p.m . that day, Jack
Scarbrough came to her residence
bringing Lindsay and his mother.
Melton got out of bed a t that time.
Lindsay then asked him to com e
back to the trailer on Forest Run
Rnad to put a tube in his (Lindsay's)
tt&gt;levision.

Three cases ended
Ronald L. Dugan, Rutland, forfc·
Ited a $450 bond posted on a charge of
driving while Intoxicated In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman WE&lt;Inesday night.
Fined in the court were John D .
r'ollrOcl. Middleport, $425 and costs
and three days In jail, driving while
Intoxicated, andGregoryW. Knapp,
Middleport, $10, assured clear
distance.

Jack Scarbrough testified Wednesday that he had taken Lindsay
and his mother to run e rrands one
day during the first week In October
and that Lindsay had borrowed $12
from him to get a T .V. tube.
Scarbrough also testified WE&lt;Ines·
day that he took Lindsay and his
mother to Alvin Taylor's wbere they
picked up Melton and took him back
with them thatdaytotheForestRun
t ra iler to put the tube In the T .V.
Scarbrough was unsure oft he exact
day these events oocurred when he
testified .
Ruth Taylor told the court that
Melton agreed to pu t the tube In the
T.V . and left her home wit h Lindsay.
his mother and Jack Scarbrough.
That, she said, "was the last time
she ever saw Melton alive."
About two hours later. Lindsay
and his mother rerumed to the Alvin
Tay lor residence. According to
Ruth Taylor's testimony, " they
wer e nervous acting." She said that
repeatedly during the course of the
evening they would look out the
window to see If someone was
corning.

qn

HEATING

317 Norltt SO&lt;ond

Middltport, Ohio 45760

•

"'"~R

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

ll?i /111

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Brid&amp;e
SINGLE 124.95
·~ive entertainment
' Free HIO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

i

Curb Inflation

We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUStNE!S PHONE
(6141 992-6150
IIS!OINC! PHONE
16141 992·7754

~

I

U.A.
304·675.6276

· lO·Ifn

I
I

I
I

Pay Cash for

Classifieds and
Savell I

'I
I
I

I
I

I
I
ttl is 1

· Write yDur own ad and ordtr by mail with
t:oupon. Cancel ~aut"" ad by phone when wou get

, re5ults . Money norretundablo.

1

1

!
l Name ________._··..:.
·' _::
~ __, l

RENT A CAR
CALL

446·4522

"Wa ~"' F, lm"

U-SA~E

I

I

Phone
Circle

Ad
t
WOJds day

10
days

lt li suo SI.OO 113.00 $!1.00
To lS 11.00 $10.00

( I For Sale
( )Announcement

I I For Rent

I

6

doyl

1t IS Sl.O• ss .oo $1.00 $13.00

( )Wanted

Funds distributed

Wnnted

...3,.

t.

I(

AUTO
RENTAL
Sl.
f60
Rl.

Ntrlh

O•lllptlle. Ohio

7/ 11 /iln

LINDA'S
MEXICAN .
POnERY
AND

GIFTS
34t N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
9-20·1

mo .

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
0
ILOWN IN
INSULATION

IISS~Ll

SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

5. _ _ _ _ __
6 . _ _ _ _ __

PH. 949-2101
or 949·2160
No Sunday Calls

1 . _ _ _ _ __

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

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

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

"FilE ESTIMATES"

Racine, Oh,
Ph . 614·843· 5191
10-6-tfc

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

BOGGS

•Complete Remodelln&amp;
•Room Additions
*Roofing
•Sid in&amp;
•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
Langlattom,Ohle
Free Eetimoteo
9·11· I mo.

SHOULD
HAVE
READ

10.
tt. ____
_
_-

BOYS &amp; MEN'S
LEATHER, AMERICAN MADE

WORK SHOES &amp;
WESTERN BOOTS

$5 OFF

tl.
13.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FDR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEEO QUliN lAUNDRY

•GilSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATlWTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Wt

.lfJ, ....AFillltlllTl••

.~.,

"D•tr

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTEI-91$.3307

4/1/tfn

614·446 -0294 .

•Refriger~tors

B•lloons for Get Well, Anni·
verserys. Birthd•ys, parties .
Singing Gorrilla. C•ll Bal -

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS end SERVICE

4·5·1fc

loons loCo . 614-448·4313 .

1 jAA Crisis Pntgnacy Canter .
Confidential. Free preg·
nancy test and-or informa tion . Phone 614-742 · 2629 ,
collect if necessary.

ANGIE'S PIZZA
"12 Varieties

•All Typos of
Excavating
•landscaping
•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

of

Pizza"

Racine Gun Shoot spon sored by Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday, beginning at
1:00 p.m . Factory Choke 12
guage shotguns .

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

Call: 742-2407

Needed lmmedi•tely : 1 00
people seriously Interested
in lOsing weight. 1 -800-

Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559

992 ·9991. Robert lo Judy
Hartsoe, Rt. 1, Bo~ 310,
Croston. NC 28615, 1·919·
385·6806

Under Now MaNigemenl (Formtrly Giowanni'sl
9-20·1 mo.

9·23·tfC

,

.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

F11 All

13·10 Chewy lr.
Fenclers .........................'tl
13-10 Chewy Tr.
•Doors ............... .......... 'IOO
73·10 Chevy. Tr.
Hoolh ......................... lt50
13.14 Chewy Tr.
;.• • -w'y"'r"r".""""''" "$70
7T 79' (ho
Gritlet ..................... •31 .50
71-79 Chewy. Tr.
lo.:k• Panlls ...............'25
73-79 ChiWy. Tr.

y,, 1'11111•1 N"h

PIUS: Ofli&lt;e Supplios &amp;
Furniture, Wtddi"!
and Graduation
Stalionrrr. Magnetic
Signs, Rubber Stamps,
lu1inns ·forms,
Copy Stnictt, Ef&lt;.
255 Mill Sr .. Middleport
104 MuiNrry Av., Pomffoy

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

13-79 Fotd Tr .
Fenden ............ ,............ S41

insured, reasonable rates .

Colt 304·576·2336 .

73-79 Ford Tr.
Doon ...... ................... S13S
IO·Il Ford Jr.
Doon ......................... $145
11·79 ford Jr .
Grills ...................... $52.50
IO·Il ford Tr.
Hoods ...... ,.................. •t45
13-IS ford Ranger
Hoods ......................... S130
13·15 Ford Ranger
Cab Cornt""""""""'"""l20
GriiiH .. .......... ...............175
Ntw and Ustcf Auto Glau-lott Modtf Parts
WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
9-JJ .Ifn
lt. 611
t Darwin Ohio
992·7013

.&lt;
•

'

992-3345

4

312/iln

1149.
2 kittens. Call 61 4 -448 ·

3732 or 614 ·446· 6632.
3 adorable long haired kit·
tens. all female , litter
treined . Call 614 -446 -

. I

•
''
•'

RADIATOR
SER~ItE

'J

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

,

";:z

\

~
::c:

1

~

z

ll

PAT HILL FORD

'

992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1· I 3-tfc

1797.

742 -2168 .
7 year old small Shetland

pony. C•tt 614-986-4119 .

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

or (614) 992·6601
Second Avenue, BoK 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing •nd gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing •nd electric•!
work

raLUE STREAK CAB CO.'

t

10 7 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

PHONE 992-7075

t

Notr Setrinl1 AI/ Of
~

·t

Msigl Counfg -..1•. .
~
end SQ,DQRfiiRI

!Free Estim1tesl

.V. C. YOUNG Ill

~

992·6215 or 992.7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
· .
11·8'·tfc

•.

-.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

~ -··~

A

•

-'

~®
~ .~
~,,
..

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
JANNIIIG SALON

..n~.

·

PH. 992-3982

TANNING SPECIAL

PAY FOR 11 SESSIOIIS 132.50
RECEIVE 1 SESSION FlEE!

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

NOWTHRU OCT . 12TH

QII!imnty
LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

•

'

·:
•

•
I

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES
CLEANING INSPECTION
• FLU£ CAPS INSTALLED
• CHIMNEY RI!IUILDING

•i \I

;*".' -..

f
\•,

·-.. V

Heve va011ncy f01 men or
women . Elderly Dnly. Care,
room. boerd and t.undry.

Good condlton. 114·992·
1204.

Coli 614·992· 8022.

In Pomeroy. I room home
with beth, arpedng, atorm
wlnqGws. new a•• furnace,
,.rtial baeement, ttorege

Voconcy.' for lhe etdeJ'Iy tn
our home. TraiMd end fitteen yeare lkperte:nce. Call

614·992·7314.
Nuning cera In private
home. Room ·f or two patients . t&amp;OO. 1 month. Call

Bt 4-992·3695.

15

Schools
Instruction

11

.t!S

Help Wanted

Tri· State Semi Driver Train·
ing , Enjoy two WHkl of
Trector-Trtiler Training conducted 20 mlle1 aauth of
Deyton for put 1 6 yeare.
Real placement service em·
ph111lzed. For complete written details all: Frtendty

Trovla et (61 31424·4593
todoy.

18 Wanted to Do

bllilding. R-onobty priced.
Must 111 to epprecillte. Call
614·982· 6763.

Business

Fin•nce Poaition . Ourcompney has a position for a
manager trainee, we have an
opening for 1 qu11ified person. Who wanta to join our
nationwide teem. Our comprehensive training progr•m
allows person• with or with ·
out experience to progre11
acc;:ording to their own abili ties. For additional inlonna tion cont•ct Dave Adamt,

22 Monav to Loan
HOME OWNERS·Rofinonco
to tow fixed rate. Ute equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co.. 814-5923061.

23

Profe11ional
Services

614·446·4113 . EOE'MF.
-------·tcEaay AssemblY Workl Wotor wollo drilled ond oer·
$600.00 par 100. Guoronteed payment. No viced. Prices on request. Cell
experience-No sales. Details 614·742· 3147or614·992·
send aelf-addreaaed 5008.
stamped envelope: Elan Vi- Geary'a Auto end Body
tel -716 3418 Enterprise Shop. &amp;10 P•ge St., MiddleRd .. Ft. Pierce. Ft . 334B2 .
port, Ohio. Open 8·4 woek·
Female c;:o-drlver wanted. deya, 10·4 Saturd•v•.
Must be over 23 yrs. old •nd cloMd Sundays. Phone814pesa DOT phyalcel. Salary 992· 7037 or 814·992depends upon experience. 7169.
Driver willing to teach.
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
614·982 -6758.
PAIR. back to school dlscountt. free ettimetel,
Pomeroy Heafth Cere Center
is presently eccepting appll· Word'• Koyboord, 304· 678 cations tor aida1 and order- 6800 or 676 ·3B24.
lies . Experienced only need
apply. Applications ac - McOeniel Custom Butcher·
cepted through 10:00 a.m .• ing, open 6 day1 a week,
304·B82·32Z4.
Octobor 1, 19B5. E.O .E.
VETERANS : Oo you wiah
you had stayed in the
military7 Regret losing that
retiriKilent income7 Sorry
you didn't t•ke advantage of
the Gl Bill to'get your college
degree? Maby it's not too
late. Join the Army Netionel
Guard and receive a monthly
paycheck. life insurances,
retirement benefits. and the

Real Es lale

31

Homes lor Sale

2 bdr ., fully carpeted, vinyl
tiding. l•rge · lot. stor•ge
bldg.. garden, resrricted.
t27,&amp;00 . l:all 614- 2&amp;6-

&amp; Vicinity

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
Yord aoto Sept . 23·27. 1837
choatnut St., 10:00·6:00 .

Thurld•y •nd Friday. 10:003 :00. Ladies large clothing,
141 . Th•ro . 26. Fri . 27. Sot. shoes. coats. TV . Beiley Run
Roed.
29.

Three bedroom houee on 4 .4
ICIM, centr•l air, wood
burner, aluminum siding,
ltorm windowt, double car
garage. YJ mile from Chester
on Route 248. Call 814·
888·4294 oftor 5:00.

Huge Garge Sal• Continues·
1nar1 drum Jet, 4 1pon hub
caps, household items, all
lizet jean1. winter jacket• &amp;
coats, shoes, boot1. tool1.
and loti more. 4 milea from
HMC on old 160 at Ever-

6 family yord aale. Frid•y
only . All tiles mens .
women• and children• clothing. coats. miac. Items,
table of craft items, includ ing cabbage petch doll
clothes. 208 Mulberry Ave .•
Pomeroy. Ohio .

3 bedroom home. Blh per-

Gorago Solo Oct. 2. 8-12.
Draperie1 , furniture.
clothes, etc. Green Acret
Sub. Neighborhood Rd,

2 yard aalea. 4 miles on

32 Mobile Homes

41

cent 111umableloen, g•rden
..,at.· Reduced down tQ

148,000. 304·675-5047.

By owner, Z bedroom ranch,
704 Meriettl Road, Point
Pleasant, nice locetion. low

so· • • 1· 609-453· 21192 .

Yerd Sale 4'A mllll

OUI

At .

green. 614-448 -1339 .

Eogto Ridge Rd. Co. Rd. 32.
Frid•y and Saturday .

Big Void Solo! Jr., locln. 1o
Yard Sale Friday and Setur- men' • clothes. be. cond.
doy Sopt . 27 &amp; 28th. 9:30to Diohos. Tupporworo, kitchon
7 1154 112 Second Ave. knife .,.., olbums, now lifver.
Gallipolis.
ware • nWkture. Hard Hat
Sunbeam hair dryer, curtains,
Yard Sele Centenary Town- shoes &amp; winter C'Nttl. 773
house 9.-6. banjo, fiddle Ia Gram St. , Middloport, S.turday 9 to 4 .. Rain cancels.
mlac. Thurs . &amp; Fri.

Houses for Rant

for Sale
t 9BO 14x70 Ubony moblto

2 bedroom cotlllge, for
eddltlon•l informetion call

home, 3 br. 1 bath, garden
tub. totel elec . central 1ir.
firepl•ca. atova· ref., muat
be moved. e9900. For appt.

814-446 -4602.

t.oblo living; 3 bedrooms,
living room. 2 botho, IOfge
• t in kitchen. utility r~m .
All electric, brick home. 2
car garage, b•tement, laige
lot. By appointment orily,
price. 304-882· 2833.

304·676·3B60.

quired. 304·675 ·6609 .

0wner will finance. IY2
IICret, 2 housn, one older
and one 8 yr old, 2 bedroom .
2 car g•rege, barn. cellar,
buildings. fenced pasture,

1976 Governor 14x70 mo·
bile home with 3 bedrooms
and 1% b•ths . 304·882-

1792.

By owner, 20&amp; Midwey
Drive. New Haven. Comfor·

t NOTICE t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommend•
that you do buainest with
people you know, and NOT
Excellent Income for pan to aend money through the
time home auembly work. mall until you heve lnvnti·
For info . coli 312-741 · goted tho offering.
B400, •••. 313.

...... 'Pcime;o;; .........

8 roome and beth. 1112 acre.
Cellar. cerport, cistern. big
porch, new roof. *27.600.
• 1.4-992· 7463.

Old KiiYtor Store ·· Broad
Run, 7 roomt, 1 11:1 baths.
Casting
Four regional TV commer- Will paint tl'lliler. roofs &amp; cut ·Leaky root , city water,
cial. All1ges. No llllptlrience tobocco . Coli 814·268 · 115,500. Colt 304· B82·
2407 or B82·2297. Call
neceuary. Will be interview- 1528..
olt11 6 p.m .
ing in Southeast Ohio area.
Week of Ocl . 1. For appointBy owner. 5 room house.
ment c•ll between 1 O:AM·.
flnonml
bath. all e'-c, alumn tiding,
7 :PM . Mon .. Fri. 614·890·
11orm doors end windows.
0222 .
city w•ter, furniehed or
unfurnished. 304 - 4&amp;8 Salt AVON moke 46%. Coli 21

0 pportunity

.. ....'Giiiiii&gt;oilis·· ......

1 - - - - - - - - --

pond. 126,000.00, Aohton,
304·578-2320.

32 Mobile Homes
for ·Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALtTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALUPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 814·446·
7274.
l---------1973 Schutt mobito home
14x70 3 bdr, 1 both, now
carpet, 22.000 BTU air
conditioner. •6.&amp;00. Call
814 ' 367' 0677 ·
1971 Brookwood 12x66,
1Yz batha, 3 bdr. gas heet,
new Cllrpet. Hke new cond .
Coli 814·446· 0176 .
'--------------~·· c
,1983 fleetwood 14x70, 3
bdr .. 2 full batha, like new.
Coli 61 4- 3 BB·B633 ·
1978 14x70 Norris 2 bdr.
with large awning S. 2 set•
concrete steps, I 13,600.
Colt 614-288-1466 or 614286-6434.
1972 Flamingo 3 bdr., 1'h
bath, tOt•l electric, CA,
refrigerator, tome furniture,
8~~t10 deck , •e.aoo. or belt

oflor. Call 614·246·9847 .

1969 Raycraft 2 bdr. treiler ,
11,700 or bett offer. Call

814·388·9341 Tom Glenn
Rd.

1971 Ftomlngo 12.&amp;6. 3
bedroom•. •ir condition. excellent c;:ondition. refriger•·
tor and stove. Must ·•ell

614-446· 0684.

3126.

For rent trailer lots and
house et Gallipolis Ferry. B &amp;
D Treller Park, 304-576·
2644 cell eveninga.
Houae in Middleport, Ohio,
partialy furnished, near
shopping and schoolt. If
interested c•ll 304·882 -

3722.

1970 Kirkwood, 1 2x60,
partlelly furnished , axe

cond. 304-773-6244.
1959 2 br tr1iler for sale
10x50. furn., oil tank &amp;
underpenning. 11200. Do
not cell unless really interested. Call between 1 0 am ·

6 pm. 304-876· 1289 .

33

Sm•ll house tor rent Crab
Creek Road, referenc;:es re-

FafmS for Sale

32 acre farm -- drilled well ,
3 VJ miles frOm town .

42 Mabile Hornas
lor Rant
2 bdr. furnithed , all utiUtes
pd .. e111cept elect ., convenient location, securh:~ dep·
osit reuqired. Call614-446-

8658.

Furnished, AC, Cable, "o city
taxes, beautiful river view, in
Kanauga. Foster's Mobile

Homo Pork. 814·446- I 602 .

117.500. Phone 304·8B2· !n Tuppers Plains . 1175.
2407 or 304· B82· 2297 . plus utilities •nd deposit. 2
Call eher 6 p .m .
bedrooms . Phone 614-66734B7.
34
Business
2 bedroom furn ished ·mobile
Buildings
home, $76 deposit required.
Utilities partiely p•id. Phone
For nle or lease country 304-675 .6512 efter 5 PM.
store with apartment . Call
614·241-831&amp;.
Commercial building for 111e
or rent on Main St. New

Hovon, W.Va. Cotl304·882·
2066.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Lots for ala on land contract
with small down J)ayment .
Coii614-38B-87f1 •Iter 6.
One •c;:re with septic tank ,
electric pole, well -house
with deep well. Blue Lake
Dr. off Ba1r Run Rd . Great

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunityl
monthly rent starts •1 $169
lor 1 bedroom and $204 lor
2 bedroom, deposit 8200 ,
loca1ed near Spring Valley.
Plaza and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV aveilable,
office houra as po11ible 10
am to 4pmand 7pm to9 pm ·
Mondav-Frlday, C•ll 614~
448 - 2746 or leeve
message .

1

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

1----------

B·B·tfc

-...'
..·...
...

Ser JI
1

'{ard SaleS

t88 912011 ~ ~~~~~2 ~~··

snuNG &amp;

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

[ it &lt;plllyllll!l ll

Homes for Sale

1- - - - - - - - -

I

.·
t
t

Middleport. Oh. 614 ·992 ·
·3476.

31

6 roome. balh. utility room.
Moving. Reduced price .

Buying dolly gold. oilvor
coint. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency. Top pricet. Ed. Bur~
kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave.

The Deily Sentinei..:Page-11

buy for $3.600 coeh. Call
Now Gt Bill. tt peyo futt time _6_2_o_o_
. - - - - - - - 19S2 14x70, 3 bedroom, 304· 522-2076.
• 1 40.00 per 1
t12.600 . Coli 814· 446·
614 -949-232B oftor 5 :00 students
month.
l14 time students In Rio Gr•nde. new 3 bdr,
2 level lots for sale. Grear N icely furnished mobile
8231 .
p .m.
jutt
finished,
full
basement.
Road, . 7 miles from town. home, eff. apt., centr•l eir
$106.00 per month. and
nice lot, large rear deck, with
and heat in city. adults only~
Puppies to give away .· half time students 870 .00 valley view. priced to sell, 1 4~~t70 mobile home 3 bed· Coli 304-876-66B9
Coii614· 448-033B.
. .
Miud, part Chow end part per mollth. up to maximum t39,&amp;00. Will consider mo- rooms. 2 blths, 1 011120
German Shepherd. · of $6,040.00. We hovo tho bile home trade·in. Cell awning &amp; underpinning.
Rrnlals
beat p•rt· lime jobl! around!
woodburner, t9,500. Call
Furnished efficiency 8160,
Wormed. 8 weeks old. C•ll
81 4-446-BOlB.
Coli
304·875·3950
or
1·
814-379·279B
or814
·256·
utiltiea p•id, 1hare b1th. 807
614 -992· 7609 .
800·842·36,19.
9392.
2nd. Ave. Gallipolis. adulis.
One of a kind log cabin 3 people k ittent, litter
41 Houses for Rent Coll446-4418 otter BPM . .
Raccoon Creek. 7 mile•
trained. 3 months old. Need WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL from Rio Grande, 11 miles 1976 Festivsl mobile home,
2 bdr. apt .. good location,
someone to love . 304-676- SENIORS AND GRADU· from Gallipolis; Air conditi· 14x70, 3 bdr., 2 full botho,
ATESI The West Virginia
AC, calling fan. metal stor· 3 bdr. ranch, loc•ted on Rt. redecor•ted. utilities p•rtly
5695.
Army National Guerd needs oned. electric furnence , 1198 building. underpinning 160, noorNGHS, $300mo ., poid . Call 304· 675 -6104 or
individual• who ere looking washer, dryer, cQunty wea &amp; deck. completely lit -up in 8160 dep .. no pets . Cell 304-675·5386.
ter, priced under 830,000 , Pork Lane, 19,000. Coli 614-3B8-B711 oftor 6PM .
~h~~~u~6~~';iGp:~ ~~t•n•. for a p•rt-time job with 1 furniahod.
Colt 614·379- 614·446-9763. Aftor 5 coli
good future . Are you wondFurnishedapt ., 2bdr ., 131 YJ
1.:...
2141 .
Near Waterloo· farm house, 4th. Gallipolis, 8196 w•ter
ering
where
you
will
get
the
614·446· 7710.
Ftu-fty-kitt-•n.- litt-ar ,-,.in-ad.
5 rooms, bath, 1 c;:hild, poid . Coli 446 ·4416 oftor
money tor college1 The new
304·675·5122.
Gl Bill will pey full time Price reduced. 7 room 1973 1 2xl0 connentry $125, referenc;:es • deposit . 8pm.
e140 . per month, houae. with bath. utitity trailer 2 bdr ., 1 bal.,. with Celt 614·643·2644 .
Chostnuto , pick up Wad students
up
to
•
maximum
86.040. room, gal furnance.largelot central air unit. e4,500 . Call
740 Y2 2nd . Ave., 3 bdr.
9 :00 to 3 :00. 1.2 miles oUt The student loan of
3 bdr ., air, all utilities paid, St90 mo .. 1 bdr ., S136.1
rep•yment with gorogo. Cell 8 14·446· 614·446·B111 altor 4PM.
Jericho Rd. Watch lor oign . program repays a major 2697.
city limits. Colt 614-446- Deposit required. Call 614- - - - - - --- lcportion of oulltending Fed- 1- - - - - - - - - - 1976 12xl8 2 bedroom 4110.
446 -4222 botwoon 9 &amp; S.
Full blooded m•le D•ch - er•l student loans. up to For Hie by owner . Modern 3 mobile home on 8 acres of
$10.000. You m•y •lso be bdr. home frame, lerge land. Double garege storage 3 bdr. home loc•ted on Rt. Newly redecorated 2 bdr
brokon. 304· elegible
for a e 1 ,600 . or kitchen, piHnty of cabinets. building . Kingabury Rd ., 588. 3YJ miles from town . apt, with AC , large spacious
·12.000. enlistment bonul. retriger•tor • electric renge,
Pomeroy . Phone 814·992- Green School dist., 1326 rooms, immedi•t• occuCats and kittens v•rlous
A combination of Guard disposal. diningroom. 2 full 2664 or 614-992-2774.
mo .. 1180 dep. Coli 614- pancy, ezso mo . Call &amp;14sizes and ages, about any
program can provide more beths. c•rpeled . full bate268-8789 or 614-258- 448 -7026 .
color, 304·675·2707,
than $20,000. on eduu- ment finished. central air. Moving-need to sell . 1984 6206.
tion•l benefits, PLUS. you new g11 furnance. fenced in Shultz. 3 bedroom. C•ll
2 bdr . apt .. 11 Court St.,
Dog, German Shepherd and
receive' a monthly paycehck, b•ck v•rd. l•rge carport. 814-949·2863.
2 bedroom house, 81 26 plua $326 mo .• rei. &amp; dep. Call
Cottle , phone 304· B96 · life
insurance, and you c•n ready to move in .to, good
- - - - - - - - - - twOS dopoolt lo rof. Coll614·446· 614 -446 ·4926 .
3489.
utilize the dalayed trelning location on Sunaet Drive on 1973 Vondote 14x70, 3 4729.
option and the split training Upper Second Ave . Can help bedroomt. 1tove. refrigeraFurnished apt ., 1 bdr .. 122.5
Puppies part Cocker Speoption to attend basic and finance. C•II814 -448-:Z&amp;73 tor, steps and bloch . 2 bdr. duplex 126 Slate St . mo .. 920 4th Ave .. Gallipo.
niel, 3 miles out At. 2 North . advanced lr•lning without or e14-446-1,71 '
S795D , Coli 814· 992· Deposit • ref . required. C•ll lis. Utilities paid . Call 446 mining school . We have
814·448·0254.
7479 .
4416 •tter 8pm .
·
whal il 11ke1 to mike your 3 bedroom lull basement.
6 Lost and Found
future! c.n 304-675-3960 ••t· in kitchen. carport. 197B flolly Pork. 14x70, 2 238 R11r Firat Ave ., 2 bdr ., 3 bdr. duplex, new c;:•rpet.
or 1-800 ·842·3619.
12,800 lo toko ovor poy- bedroomt. expando. gas ap· •226 mo ., ref. &amp; dep . C•ll new bath. new •ppli•nces,
menlt, Pl•nts Subdivision. pllence1, awning and deck . ., 4·446 -4928.
844 Second Ave ., $275 mo.
FOUND - 9 -22 · 85 smott Hiring Nowlll Tour guides Col1614-441-7380.
113,500. Call 614-742Coll614-446-0690 .
puppy near Cherolais Hills needed. Ou•rantMd excel ·
2182 .
House1nd bath: lerge yard in 1- - - - - - - - - Lake on Green Dooley Rd. lent earnings, training, have 12 year old lingle femily
Racine erea. C•ll 61 4-992 · Upstairs unfurnished apt .•
fun showing people around 'bi-level home. Brick and 1979 Foirmont.14•70.Wth 15858 .
Colt 614· 446· 2359.
carpeted. all utilities peid. no
our reson. 0•11 Friday, Sal- fr•me on 2.9 acres. 3 I 2 1 k 7 npout. 3 bedrooms,
children. no pets . C•ll 614·
LOST: male Beagle reddi1h urday, Sund•y. Monday 10 bedroom, 2'h bath1. Flra- 2 full botho. On ren,.d lot . 3 bedroom home in Middle- 448 -1 637 .
·
brown &amp; white 'rewa~rd'. •m - &amp;pm . AikforFrank.We pleca In living and family Excellent condition. Cleen, pon for rent or sele. Calll - - - - - - - - - •re 1 locel compeny with rooms. Two-car.garlfiJII. City with or without AC. Coli 114-982-2698.
Colt 614-448-9463.
2 bdr. apt . convenient to
tott·froe No . Ohio 1· BOO· ochool dlllrict in Clow Twp. 814-992·2211 or 114·992·
- - - - - - - ..... - - lwOB down town, ltove &amp; ret. ·
Loat :Beegle . In Rt. 7 · Union 336·8317 W.Vo. 1·BOO· BooutlfulviewofOhloRivor. 3B59 .
Nice. small4·room and bath furnished , •250 mo . Call
6'.0 mlloo aouth r.om Gottl·
Ave. bypaas area . Rew•rd. 338 -831B .
house in Middleport with 614-245 -9595 .
llmlu
oH
St.
Rt
.
7.
poll
a
City
2 bedroomt, 12x50 oil ofoct· onoc.,.d gorogo. td..t for 1- - - - - - - - - 614· 992·3 976 or 614·992·
Dependable, m•ture woman Call 114-441- 2000 after
6060 .
ric mobile ' home. Good "ngle or couple. Sorry no 1 ·bdr. •pt ., laundry room, no
to care for etderty women in &amp;PM or weekends.
condition . All n•w carpet, childr1n or P'lts. Av•ilable at pets. water &amp; trash paid.
Lost ; Long·h•ired, whlti, home. Send rnume 1nd
new hot water .. nk . Patio . end of month. Stove. retrig- $226 mo . plua deposit. Call
smell male dog in Rutland referencel to Box C21. e·o 3 bedroom11nd beth . larkin 70x171 t•vet lot. 3 cor ereter provided. Hoeflich. 614 -448-3474.
St .. Rudend. Cen be 1old on tlllfO!IO with work bench , A 114·992·8292.
•rea. Family pet. Call 614 · Point ,P ieaunt Aegi1ter.
..nd contract · with •mall borgoln ol "5,900. Soo 11
742· 3077.
Furn. efficienc'f! •pt. priv1te
Lldy to help elderly couple down payment . Call 814·
Untow Hart'o, Eoll Vlnt, 3 br houae, c•rpeted, axe. &amp; quiet. lingle working
low houro ooch doy. Muot 992·8868 .
Roclno, Ohio. co• 114·949· cond. •nd neighborhood, person only . Call 614·441·
have transportation. Write 1--------:--- 3071
noor Ordnence School. 304· 4807 or 614·44&amp;· 260Z .
8
Public Sale
Box P-24 cen Point Plee- Sla room houH on 48 ecrtl.
171-4880 or 675· 1162.
&amp; Auction
oont Roglot•r. llollng oolory Full bo10ment. lroe hoot. 1974 Httlcroot 12xll8. PorFurnished efficiency
an(l reference•.
private, cion to towns . Call tl•lly furnished . Ha1 2 Latrgo rKently "'docoroted 2 utlttlea
poid , 920 4th •ve.
., 4·192· 70B2.
porche1 end underpinning. bedroom hou••· good loco· Gollipolia, odulto. Coli 4411·
RICK PEARSON AUCTIO· Needle crefter1, leedlng
Good conclllon . 14500. lion. bo10mont. toto of llor· 4418 oftor ?PM .
NEER SERVICE. Eoloto, etitching company now ac· 9 room1. 17 ecrH, v•rage Coli 814·982·12113.
ogo. well to wolt cerpollng,l---- - - - - - firm. antique, liquidation copllng oppttcotionl lor - · with '8hop OVIIrhNd, CeiM r
oll opplloncoo lnclud•d. Furnlo.,.d opt. 1280~11•o
ooloo. Llcenaod Ohio ond dlecr1ft in1tructors In your outbulldlnp. mlnorot rttJhlo. MOBILE HOMEI MOVED. $300.00 month, dopoolt pold 1 bd
•
r.. remodel , 120
Wool Vlrginlo. 304· 773· oroo. Coli BonJ'Iy 1· 304- Contect R.T. Bt-ort, Ru· lnourecl. -oonoblo retoo. ond 10I.,.ncerequi -"
·~ · 3 04· 4th Ave., Gollipolte. lllulto.
67B6 or 304· 773·5430.
881·8814.
.Colt 308-178·2338.
ttand. 114·742·3001.
178·1816.
Colt 446·4411 oftor 7PM .
1 gray and 3 calico kittens to
give away . 6 weekt old . Call

Licensed Clinical l\lldiologist

8·13 ttn

-;

.

Hay. 2nd cutting , You rake ,
bale and it"s yours. 614 ·

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Seleclion
Hearing Evalualions For All Ages

446-7619
-. (614)
417

.,

Giveaway

Electric stove to give •way
for parts. Call 614-446-

w..

9. _ _ _ _ __

CORRECTION

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

r----------.:...______. ;,.__

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Situationl
Wanted

One cenified Medical TechSWEEPER and sewing ma nologist, weekdays . Send
chine repair, parts. and
resume to bo~ 300, in care
supplies.
Pic;:k up and
or the GallipoHs Daily Trib·
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hB!If mile up . uno, 826 Third Ava .. Gatti·
polia, Oh 46631 . '
Georges Creek Rd. . Call

All Meke•

1·l·tfc

12

614·446 ·3368.

985-3561

FerM E.ui~MIIIt
P1rt1 &amp; SeNiee

Ph. 985-4141

3 Announcements

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

J/11/lfn

s, .....:,______

Soptombor 28, 1984. On·
this d•y it's been • yHr, Yet
to ,!JS you're alw•y• near.
You left to us forever after,
Sweat mamoriet of love and
laughter. Your loving tmlle
and gentle ways. Help us
through the lonely days . For
one thing death can not
lever, It's our love, it willie It
fo(ever. Sadly ml ..ed by
Wile, Children , Grandchild.
ran, Family and Friends.

ICUT OUT lOR fUTURE USII

SALES &amp; SERVICE

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FJ.IIINITURE. Bodo, iron.
wood, cupburds, chain,
cheats. b11keta. dishes ,
atone jars, antique•. gold
and ailver . Writt· M.D.
Miller, Rt.2 , 'Pomeroy, Ohio
48789 or call 614·992·
7760.

In loving memory of Ed
Foreman, who p•ssed away

10·8·tfC

11

111 Memoriam·

Spll!cia'l thanks to .my
friends, neighbors snd rel•tives tor their pr1~era. 011rd1
and flowers during my stay
in Vlter•ns Memorial Hospi·
tal end •t home. AIIO to Or .
Lentz 1nd Dr. M•nsfield,
nu,.... and •taft. God Bias•
each and everyone . Florence
Circle.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL ·
FILL DIRT

UTILITY BUILDINGS

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Window•
•Replac•ment ·Windows
•New Roofing

2

4/29/tln

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Announc~&lt;nt en 1s

949-2263
or 949-2969

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDI"GS

YOUNG'S

2.

34.. -----_ _ _ _ __

"frN Estimates" ·
Installation Available
4/
n

WANTEO TO BUY u10d
wood &amp; coal heaten .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
lo Olivo 81. BolllRollo. Colt
614·446·3159,

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning .
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

JIM CUFFORD
PH. 992-7201

r - - - - - - - .' •'-'
..f.

S.Otl $!5.00

Then cash rott~
includt discount

741-2027

•.

Address_..;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ II

Print ont word in each
lpact below. lorh initial
"' group of figurtl roun11
01 o word. Count name
and addnn or phan1
numbtr if Uwd. You'll gtf
bttttr results if wou • ·
sui be tully, give prire. The
lribunt r•stnn the right
to donif~. edit or reiec:l
any ad. Your ad will bt
put in th proper danifi(D•
lion if you'll check th•
propef bo111 btlow.

c..

W1nted. To Buv

Wo poy c..h for lote model
cl.. n uMCI Cllfl .
Jim Mink Chev.· Otdalnc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·441·3172

ROOFING

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS lo SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS , .
DUMP TRUCK STONE
lo OIRT

SALES &amp; SERVICE

9?32

Immediate open10g oru ime ·certified
Operating Room Surgery Technician. Excellent working conditions and benefits. Interested applicant may send resume to:
Ginaer Pratt, R.N .
O .R . Supervisor
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. OH . 45769
or phone 614·992·2104. ext. 232
Equal Employment Opportunity ·

.

t/1212 mo . pd.

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; ·

Help Wanted

HEll

16141 843-5425

do

SERVICE \T ATION

~

Admitted--Clifford Icenhower,
Shade;
Lorena Bissell, Long
Bottom.
Dlscharged·-Rose Curry, James
Alley, Gertrude Pellegrino.

State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson 's office reported the August,
1985 dis tribution ol state motor
vehicle registration funds totaling
$17,396,000.96. Meigs County received $16,163.25.

Ph.

MGM
FARM CITY

II Til

Veterans Memorial

God."
Reynolds was unsure of what was
act ually going on and left for his
Mlnersv UIP home.
Ruth Taylor, wife of Alvin Taylor
and an aunt by ma r riage to Lindsay,
detailed the entire first week of
October 1983 when she was called to
the stand .
It was Ruth a nd Alvin Taylor, who
first met Ute murder victim, Danny
Melton when lltey lived in Canton .
Melton lived across the street from
them and became good friends with
Alvin.

Jobs, Mufflrrs
Try us, wr con
it hrttrt

!JiB\

,co_
nun_ued_rr_om....:....pa~ge_l)_ _

After living in Canton fou r
months, the Taylor's decided to
move back to Meigs County.
The Alvin Taylor family moved
into a house on Amburger Road,
near Nease Settlement .
On Sunday, Oct. 2. Ruth Taylor
test ified. her husband Alvin a nd
Melton went to Forest Run, abou t
two miles away, and brought
Lindsay Taylor, his mother, Mary
Ed ith a nd his sister, Freda , back to
the Amburger Road reside nce.
Ruth Taylor said that Lindsay
brought a gun with him and
Identified a sawed off s hotgun.
Rut h Taylor tesmted that Jack
Scarbrough, Torn McKay, Jr. a nd
Gary Diehl were also a t he r

CAll COLLIU:

Tune-Ups. Brrt~e

DanMMCt.

11

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 ve•rs
"Free Estimates"'

Service. lubP Jobs,
Otl Chonqc,

(9!26, 27, 29, 30 (1011. 6tc

sqll are examined by contestants to
determine slopes, erosion and
needed conservation practices for
each pit.
The contest was judged by
Gordon Gllmore, Soli Scientist with
the Meigs Soil Survey and Robert
First , District Conservationist, Soil
Conservation Service. They were
assisted In the contest by Kevin
Sheppard, Brian Windon and Aaron
Sayre of Meigs, Eastern and
South e rn respectively . Met gs
SWCD sponsors the contest annu·
ally as part of their educational
P"'1gram .

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

Contllll'it' ( Ut

Orpho M. Jomoo,

P a t h o l o g i s t t e s t i f i e S e e ,_ _
· i\ltcrmon testimony
The aftPrnoon session got undC'rway with the continuing testimony
of Jack Scarbmugh, w ho told of his
assOciation with Lindsay Taylor and
his mother, Mary Edith Taylor. He
said that he found interior of the tbe
Tay lor trailer disarranged on abou t
· Oct. 6 and told the Tay lor'S about it.
They said they knew it and had told
the law that someone had broken in .
He told of taking the Lindsays to
Chester and Pomeroy in the firs t
part of October and later of taking
them to West Virginia to the home of
Daniel Taylor.
Deputy Sheriff Car l Hysell related
details of being called to the Taylor
trailer on Oct. 10. He told of arriving
and finding the trailer storm door
open, of l'ntering the trailer with his
gun drawn and finding the body of
Melton undPr a blanket. Hysell said
that thP intc&gt;rior of lhP lrai lrr was

Absolutt'ly thP
Best fdtqnmrnt
Man In thr hr ro.

AdminiltrltOr with
wll enneKed of
tho Elteto of

Allor 5

9

Howa.rd L. Writesel

CONTRACTING

fEliCE I SIPPLY
PH. 992-6931

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

the aptclal shareholdar•

$21,900.00.
The ale wil commence et
10:30 A.M. on Wed-y.
October 2nd. 19B6.
Porcoio con bo ootd HP•·
otoly or together. Bidding w11
begin ot 15.000.00 for tho
"""" ..d 116,000.00
for tho torgor hou10.
Richord E. Jon•.

J&amp;F

ACCENT

811212 mos

opproved tho .-gonlution ot

Public Notice

Business
Services

Senices-

Public Notice

Public Notice

\

Business

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

" TOTAL FIREPUoCE
AND CHIMNEY WORK "

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

1----------

*'''·

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

I

l

�Page-12- The Daily Sentinel
44

LAFF-A-DAY

Apartment
for Rent

Riveraide Apt1. Middleport.
Special rataa for Senior
Crtlzens. $130, Equal HoUI·
inv Opportunitiea . 814992-7721 .

2 bedroom apartmenu .

1 bedroom apt. for rent .
Nicely louted. Contact Vii·
lage Manor in Middleport.
614 - 992 - 7787. Equal
Hou1ing Opportunity.

II)

l'III K•~'I

F e•lvru

()Ol!_~ll.J7

Sondi&lt;~""- Inc W&amp;r 1

5fl~

"Oh, he came with me all right, but he just took
your secretary to lunch!"

---------- t-----------T"---.. .

------~

Furnished Apartment for
rent. no children . Avlll!il.ble
after Oct.3 . Call 614-9922749.

54 Misc. Merchandise
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathert. dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614-446-7398.

APARTMENTS, mobil a County Appliance, lrwc .
homes, housat. Pt . Pleasant Good uted appliances and
and Gallipolis. 614-446- TV sets. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sat. 614-4468221 .
- - - -- - - - - - •11699, 627 3rd. Ave . GolliLaureland Apartments, New polis, OH.
Haven . Equal Housing Opportunity. Hat vacancy. For Valley Furn~ture. new &amp;
more information call 304- used . Large section of qual·
882-3716 .
.
ity furniture. 1216 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis.
2 br apartments in Handarton. 304-676-1972.
Couch, lo\#eseat. 2 chairt,
complete outfit, t460. good
1 br apt. carpeted, washer- cond. Call 614-388-8185.
dryer hook up. Ex.G. cond . ~ ~~-:--------­
and neighborhood near Mixed ·grass hav for sale.
PVH . 304-675 -458.0 or Call 814-949-2424 .
675-1962.
1- - -- - - - - Gas range with aye le\lel
Very nice. one bedroom oven . 8100. Call 614-986furnished apt, ideal for one 4454.
adult. phone Mrs. Bu,;ton 1-::----:------304-675-2661 .
Gas cookatove . $26 .
Wooden dinette aet with 5
chairs. 850. Call 614-949 46 Furnished Rooms 2594.

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

1------

Furnished room $125 utilities paid. 919 2nd. Ave:.
Gallipolis. aingle mala. Call
446-4416 alter 7PM .

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, 12'Jt50' or
11maller, 876 water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil. Gallipolis. Call 4464416 after 8PM .
3 offices with amall kitchen,
1218 Eastern Ave •200mo,
6 room unfurnished
apt ., IS200 mo . Call &amp;14446 -7572 or 614-448 1980.
Trailer space 1 mile from
Hoapital water·trash paid,
t66 mo. plus deposit . Call
614-446-1354.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Perk, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
614-992-7479 .
- - - -- - - - - - lwOB
Upstairs office or busine..
space for rent . .2 rooma.
218 % E. Main St. Inquire at
218 E. Main St . or cell
614 - 992-5484 . 8 : 00
a.m. to 10;00 a .m .• 2:00
p.m . to 4 :30 p.m .
MASON COUNTY FAIR
RENTAL, storage 1pace
available for ears, boata.
trailers at Fair Grounda.
304 -675 -5463. 9 AM to 5
PM for retell end
information .
Trailer spaces, small childron accepted. Rt. 1, out
locust Road back of K &amp; K.
304-875-1076.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION II FURNITURE
62 Olive St. , Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood -coal atovea. 6
pc wood LR tuite f399 ,
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners $99. new 6 uted
bedroom 1uites, ranges,
wringer washers, &amp; shoes.
New livingroom suites
$,199 - 8599. lamps, alto
buying coal &amp; wood atoves.
Call 614-446-3159 .

\

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairt priced from
S285. to 8895. Tablao. 850
and up to $126. Hide·l·
beds. S390 . and up to
t660.. aofa bedl t 145,
Recliners. S225 . to S375 ..
Lamps hom $28 . to t125 .
pc . dinettes from t109 .. to
435 . 7 pc . $189 and up.
Wood table with six chtin
8285 to S745 . Oea~ s11 o
up to 8225 . Hutches, Ui60.
Bunk bed complete with
mattreates, $275. and up to
8395 . Baby bods, 4110.
Mattresses or box. tpringt,
full or twin. $83 .• firm, t73.
and 883 . Quean Mtt, 8226.
4 dr. chests, t49. 6 dr.
chettt, $59. Bed frames,
t20.and f26 ., 10 gun· Gun
cabinett. f360. Gat or
electric ranges f37t5. Baby
mattrenes. t26 &amp; t35. bed
framea f20. $25. • f30.
king frame t50. Good ••c.tion of bedroom sllftita,
rockers , metal ctbineu.
headboards t 38 &amp; up to
865.
Used Furniture ·· Matti
oHice deskt. 3 miles out
Sulavitle Rd. Open 91m to
6pm, Mon. thru Sat.
814-446-0322

Utility bldg . apecial :
30'x.40'x9' with trac:k door
•
serv . door. t6266
erected. lron Hone Builders,
614-332-9745 colloct.

Ma11ey Harrit P_9,ny Tractor
with plowt. diecit and cuftlvalort . •1600. Call 114985-4454.

56

Unfurnished apartment for
rent in Syracuse. 6\4-9927889 after 6 p.m .

For rant Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-446-0756 .

61

Block, bricj(, m~rtar end
masonry supplies . Mountain
State Block, At. 33. New
Haven, W. Va. 304-882·
2222.

One or two bedroom .apar1ments in Pomeroy . Furnished or unfurnished. Rant

3 rooms and bath apt. in
Middleport. Furniahed or
unfurnished. Nice location.
Call 614-992-3667 or 614992-5170.

56 Building Supplies

Building material. qoncrete
block• all size•. lentils, flu
blocks, clay tile. Delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co., Pine
St.. Gallipolis. Ohio Call
614-448·27B3.

New Haven, WVa . Newly
remodeled . In town. 814992- 74B1 .

negotiable. Call 614--9926723 .
- - - -- - - - - - lw08
2 bedroom second floor apt.
Total electric. Across from
Pomeroy Fire Station . Call
614-992-7314 .

26,1985 '

Ohio

Oblong formica table with 4
chairs. 304-676-4174 .

54 Misc. Merchandise
Firewood-cutup slabs. 1
true~ load 5100. 2-$180.
Pickup IO•d. you haul 815.
HEAP accepted. Call 614246-6B04.
Seasoned firewood . Call
814-446-0871 .
Wood &amp; coal furnance.
forCed air $250 . Cell 614379-2138 befor. 9PM .

New 1985 ATC 110 Honda
3 wheeler. never ridden.
Sove . Coli 614-446·0608,
Fuel oil stove-&amp; tank. 876 for
both, good cond. Cell 614256-6417.
Heatilator fireplace insert.
Good condition, $225. Call
614-446-2048 alter 6PM .
Used King wood &amp; coal
stove with blower. used 2
years. 8325 . Call 614-246·
5601 .
Firewood 100% seasoned
oak. 830.00 load. split.
delivered. stacked . Call 614446·0373.
1978 Gra\lely tractor with
mower, very good cond .,
$1,260 . Call 614 " 245 9603 after 7 .
Gravity wagon. 22 ft .
camper special. Sleep• 6
fully equipped, 2 row New
Idea corn picker 30 in . rows.
Cue 600 self propelled
combine-both heads. Call
614·246-6822.
1986 Encyclopedia Brittenlea, 30 volume 1et. Broyhill
sofa table. new. Cell 614446-4746 or 4347, 5-7.
Seuoned oak firewood,
split, pickup S26 or delivered e30a pickup load. Call
614-446-1627 after dark .
- - - - - - - - - - lwOB
Price Warl Flashing arrow
-.ign •269. complete . Save
t2841 lighted non-arrow.
1247. Unlighted t199 . Freo
letters! See locally:
11800)423-0163. anytime.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
We have a new copying
machine. Our old one. Xerox
660 I. doesn't work but it
would if aomaone had knowhow. We'd like to nil the old
one for 8200 .. as is. The
Daily Sentlnllf. 614-9922155 .
Wood and coal heating stove
for sale . 2 piecea of triple
wall IIOVe pipe. 614·9925295 .
3 orn•mented wrought iron
porch post1. 125. 48 inch
shower enclosure. •26 . Ahi
Strack plaver recorder. t&amp;O.
8 pair decorator shunera,
26•9 . 85 per pair . 2 pair
ahuner~, 29x111f•. t7 per
pair. Kitchen Aid dllh
w11her. a60. 1 aet studded
snow tires, P196· 75R14.
t15. 814-992-8149.
Fire wood •20.00 • pickup
lruck lood . 614-742-2230.
1.4

length grMn winter coat
with ImitatiOn fur collar.
Real good condition .
t10.00. 814-992-7834.
Firewood for sale. You cut
and steck . Seasoned, motlly
ath end hickory. *10. for
pic~ - up lood. Call 814-7422182.
Uaed roller maasege in ex.cellent condition. t 100.
Phone: 814-992-6703.

Pets for Sale ·

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppiet:
Stud Service. Call614-4467796 .
Briarpatch Kennels All ·
breed grooming . Indoor.·
outdoor boarding facilities .
English Cocker Spanial .
388-9790 .

Farm Equipment

KIT 'N' CARLYLI

L.rry Wright

76

Auto Parte
&amp; Acce11oriea

•ftar 6.

-

c.n

~.:::~~~=======~======~=::.~ ~p._m_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Scr v 1c r. s

------

'69 Chovello, 400 engine, 81
Home
1973 Honda Civic great gaa auto, AM -FM CIIII!IHe. rally
3 handmade quilts. Regular, .,--- - - , - - - Improvements
Dragonwynd
Cattery
Ken
car, new radiall, exhaust, whaala. $1,700.00. 304queen and king size . Cell
Sanyo stereo. speakera, de· 676-7375.
614 -992-7666 or 614 -992- . nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Slemete kittens . AKC
pendable. 8400. Call 6142318 .
BASEMENT
Chow puppies. Call 446·
446-1749.
1976 Ford Meverick. ma·
WATERPROOFING
3844
altar
7PM.
roon, 4 cioor, I cylinder. 200
Starcraft boat and 60 H P
Unconditional lifetime gu•1976 Chrysler Cordoba best eninge, good running cond,
motor. Amana airrantee. Local reference•
Springer
Spaniel
AKC
.
Eng
.
$400.00.
304-875-2659.
conditioner . Pinball ma offer, Sears dune kart 6 HP
furnished
. Free aatlmate1.
Reg
.
shot.
.
tail
clip.
like new. Call 614-446·
chine . Cell·814-843-5244.
Coli colloct 1-614-237wormed. liver&amp;. white. 9 -w, 1 - - - - - - - - - - - 4255 otter 5:00PM .
'78 Monte Carlo. 8200.00
needs transmlulon. 304- 0488, day or night. Rogera
TONY"S GUN RfPAIRS, $175 ea. Call 614-388- Preconditioning, Receiving
Basement Waterproofing.
B282
evenings
.
Chow. Now taking orders
1979 Chevy % ton PU, 6 675-5751 .
hot dip reblueing, ell types of
weekly. This weeks price c:yl., 3 tP~ - 1985 ' % ton
gunsmith work, fast service.
Purebred rat terrier puppies 8193,00. Truck load of
GMC At, PS. 306 c:u.in. 1974 Nova, 350 engine. felr D .and M. Contractora. Vinyl
304-676-4631.
wormed. Call eve's or wee- Super Blocks in stock . engine. 1984 1fz ton GMC 2 cond, .t250.00. 304-773- siding, replacement Win·
dow.. inaulating, roofing.
10 ft . truck camper. 1;1-a- ~endo . Call 614-256-1467. Yauger Farm Supply, At, 36,
tone paint. PS. PB. nice . Call 5873.
new and remodeling. con·
Southtide,
W.
Va
.
Phone
throom, tto.ve with oven,
614-446-2533.
'84 Ford E1cort L. blue. 2 crsto. Coll304-773·6131.
refrigerator. sleeps 4, 8900. AKC registered Miniature 304-676-2078.
Schnauzer
puppies.
3
fa
·
1
---~~-----­
1981
Toyota
Celica
GT.
6
door, 6 speed, 1.1L-HO.
Copy machina.840. Old time
spd .. AC. Call 614 -367- After 5 PM 304-676-3772. J.and L. lnatallatlon. Roof·
cash register, $10. 304- malaa, 3 males. Champion 62 inc:h oak tobacco sticks
bloodlines. $150 each. Call 10 each. 304-675-2727.
675 -7980.
0853.
1- - - - - , - - - - : - - ing, vinyl tiding, storm doors
614-992-2607.
1983 Sulek LeSabre, low and windows. Free eatl1977 Pontiac Ventura new mileage, 2 door, air, tilt malaa. Coli 614-992-2772,
Antique brats bed. full
2 male regislered Dobertires, new exhaust, PB, PS. crulae, 306 V-8, like new.
11300. 304-875-6B5B.
Livestock
COLEMAN WATER WELL
man . 1 red, 1 black and tan . 63
auto trans . Call 614-245- Phone 304-882-2776.
DRILLING
Extra nice new 12x16 stor- Call 614-949-2792 .
9555,614-245-5131 , 614- 1 - - - - - - - : : - : - - -256-9480.
1976 Mercury Bobcet lta- Pump_ _sale•. Hrvic•~ Aegil·
age type barn building, light
tion wagon. t4oo:oo. 304- tared .h~ Ohio. """' work~
gray with white shingles. Fish Tank and Pet Shop, 2 yr old bull Hereford-red
guaranteed. eon 304-273Price S900.00. 304 -675- 2413 Jackson Avenue. Angus cross . Ca11614 -246- 1976 Aspen wagon. S.E .. 675-7436.
Point
Pleasant.
304-6759595.
low
miles.
Call
614-2466874.
1980 Dodge Coil RTS. 2811 . Ravenswood. W.Va.
2063 . Fish. birds and more.
9555.614-245-5131 . 614· 1800cc\ 4apalumnwh8elt.
WANTING TO BUY BABY 256 -9480.
Priqe Wad Flashing arrow
Eagle STs. aun roof. not RON'S Television Service.
V;r
veer
old
Male
Poodle,
1
BULL
CALVES
.
HOLSTEIN
sign t269 .00 complete .
plain! U.B96. 304-676- House call• on RCA. Quazar,
GE. Specl•ling in Zenith.
FROM AREA DAIRIES . 1979 TC3 4 spd. Call 5306.
Save $264.001lighted non- $50.00. 304-675-2110 .
Call 304-676-2398 or 614CALL VEAL BARN. 614- 614-245-9565, 614-245arrow, $247.00. Unlighted
24~ · 9102 OR 514-446- 5131 , 614-256-9480 .
$199.00. Free letters! See
1976 Caprice Classic, PS, 446-2464.
Musical
8 ~~:_ _______ IW08 I-1-9_8_1_H_o-ri-ro_n_4_d-r.-.-a-u-to-., PB, PW. tilt steering wheel.
locally: 11800)423-0163, 57
Instruments
anytime.
AC. runs good. 304-675- Fetty Tree Trimming, •tump
remov•l. ' Call 304-1!175Semmental Cattle. Heifers. cloth interior. Call614-245 · 3124 - r 6:00 PM.
1331 .
Club Calves. Call614- 949· 9556,614-245-5131 . 614·
Electric: heater!, fans. mo·
2822.
John
J.
Rose.
256·9480.
ton, carpeting, tires. an- Band instruments. Frank's
'17 Chevy Caprh;: Cl11aic:.
tique furniture, tools. misc. Pawn Shop, 430 Second
69.000 actual miles. nice RINGLES'S SERVICE. e•periencad carpenter. electriRegistered polled Hereford 1979 Cadillac Sedan De· car. 304 -175-4181 .
Rear 2019 Maxwell. Point Avo., Call614-446 -0840.
cian. mason. painter, root· :.
bull. 14 months old. 8600 . Ville, ·loaded. Call614-245Pleasant.
9556, 814-245-5131 , 614- 1976 Cutlall, very good ing (Including hot tar -.
Bundy alto saxaphone, Call 814-985-4454.
application) 304-876-20B8
Compound Bow Bear Whi~e $325. Artley clarinet $150.
256-9480.
cond. 304-678-3119.
or 6 75-7368.
Tail with acce11ories, 304- Bolh in excellent condition. 2 veer -old Holstein steer. 2
578-2367 or 576-22B2.
Call 614-446·4881 after year old Black Angus heifer. 78 Chevy Impala PS. PB, air, '73 Datsun 240Z, runt,
3104-458-1 896.
AM - FM, good cond .. needs, few repairt, good Starke Tree and Lawn Ser·
6:00.
Uvingroom couch and chair
$2,000 . Call 614-446 · body, reaaonably priced. vice, atump removal, 304576-2010.
8150 . 00 . 2 recliners Hammond organ suitable for
4477.
304-676-2673.
850 .00 each . 304-675- small church or new stu ~ 64 Hay &amp; Grain
Roterv or ·cat.a. tool clrlllina.
7436 .
.
1979 Pontiac: Bonneville
dent. Can be seen at CenteMoat walls comp18teb Mme
loaded.
AC,
exc:.
cond.
blue,
nary UM Chun:::h . Call 61 4 72 Truck• for Sale
dav. Pump Illes end aen,ice.
Gas heater 50,000 btu for 446-2856 .
MiJted Qraas hay for sale. Call after 3PM, J , Berridge,
shop or barn. good cond,
614·445-2410.
Call614-949-2424 .
19B2 GMC von 'Londa Do- _30
_ 4_·_B_9_6_·3_8_0_2_·_ _ __
---- - -- - -~ · lw08
1
S-1 00.00. Wood sto'it'e c:ast Sax~;&gt;phone for sale. E.~~.cel­
sign' captain chairs, dual
iron, ex.c cond, $90.00. lent condition. 6350, Call Mixed tlay, aquare bale . 197·9 Plymouth Horizon' heat &amp; air conditioning. Carp•ntry and remodeling,
M,ers shallow well water 614-742-2643 .
$1 .25 . Call614-949-217&amp;. good cond . Call 614- 388- powerwindowa &amp; looka. tilt, room additions, painting,
plumbing and riPflirs. Phone
pump with tank and acces9762 .
cruise. AM-FM ca•aette. 304-876-4322.
aories, &amp; 100.00 . 304 -675- Bue1cher alto suaphone, Mulch straw . Phone 304306 cu.in . with direct driver
7241 .
1977 OldS: Cutlass transmittion 44,500 miles,
exc: c:ond, see at 2019 273-3447 .
Brougham 350 auto,
Maxwell Roatl.
new tiros . Can be seen at
Plumbing
Riverside Gun Shop. At. 7.
loaded, 4 new tires Sears Plc-Pac -Supermarket, 82
Athalia, Ohio. Quality gun Bundy trumpet , phone 304&amp; Heating
radial, looks-runs goods. 810,300 . Coli 614-44~ 66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer
repair, service. buy. sell, 675-1988.
Call 614-446-4462.
8096 Jeave message.
trado. 1-614-886-5194.
Seed wheat, cover crop 1969 Plymouth Satellite
GE side by side ref -freezer. 58
Fruit
wheat, feed wheat, rye, 34.000 actual miles. good
Double oven alec range.
barley, Altizer Farm Supply. running cond .. new carbure&amp; Vegetables
White female AKC registor, new tires, $600 or be1t
Call 614-245-5193.
tered minature Poodle, 10
offer . Call 614-388-9043.
months old . 304 - 675Dunrovin Fruit Farm St. At .
2032 .
1976 Ford Granada very
Transportal ion
681 South of Albany . 614good tires. good work car.
698-6298
,
Red
&amp;
Yellow
Metal office desk, key nice
Call614-446-8024 .
swivel chair, and rough 4 Delicious. Melrose, Jonadrawer file cabinet. than, Mcintosh, Super Gold,
LT $950. Call 614·
Autos for Sale Camero
Wine Sap, Grimes apple!. 71
$130.00 . 304-372-2801.
388-8641 .
Apple buner, sorghum. ho83 Excavating
Sears Ginny lind baby bed, ney, II fresfl elder . Open 7
1976 Mazda PU. 1977 1 9 86 Chevy Deluxe 1 0
TOP CASH paid for '80 Chevy Impala. Call 814- pickup truck . P.S., P.B ..
mattress and bumper peds. days.
model and newer used cars .
like new. paid 8200.00
446-1000.
V-6, Auto. $8900. Cell Qood+ 1 bcavating, baseasking S75 .00. 304-676- Oldeercornforsale. $2.00a Smith Buick-Porltiac. 1911
menta. footers, driveways•. ::
buohol. Call614 -949-2579. Eastern Ave., Gallipolis. Call 1977 Mustang II needs body 614-949-2650.
2183.
septic: tank1, l•ndacaplng.
Chuck Voat.
614-446-2282.
&amp; engine work, good tires, 1981 Chevy pickup, air
Call anytime 81 4-446auto. PS, PB, V-6 engine,
Canning peaches now avail· 1981 red T-bird Town Lan- blue, $500 . Call 614-446- condition, AM·FM stereo, 4537, James L Davison, Jr.
56 Building Supplies
automatic:. 304-676-6431,
owner.
able, open 7 days week, call dau excellent condition. new 7141 .
for prices as supply is tires. Call ahar 6 :30 614- - - - - - - - - - lw08 '78 International S-2200 Dozer Work land clearing,
limited, 304 +773 -5721 . 245-9460.
1979V.W. Rabbit. Excellent Road Tractor. 360 ComBuilding Materials
landsc:aping, etc. Free eatlBob's Market. Meson, W.
condition. $2200 , Call 814- mins. 13 •peed. good Cond.
Block, brick, sewer pipes. Va .
motoo.
Coli 614 -446-8038
77
Mustang
new
parts.
new
378 -6311.
windows , lintel!, etc,
304-468-1BB5.
or
614-992-7119
anytime. ..'"
tires, new paint. excellent
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
·~ $2,000.
Cell
614shape,
1978 Chevrolet Monza
D . Call614-245-5121.
J .A .R. Conttruction Co.• .-."'
258 -6417 .
Farm Supplies
Spkter. Can be seen atOan's 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O .
Rutland, Oh . 614·742Ex.xon in Pomeroy . See
BUILDERS
2903. 8asemen11. Footera, ~.
&amp; Liveslock
1979 Rabbit . 1976 Ford Benny Hickel.
Closeout ' s · Surplua78
Dodgo
4-WD.
good
Concrete
work, Ba'ckhoe'a, :LTD . Call after 6PM, 614·
Salvage.
cond . Call 614·448-0120.
Dorer &amp; Oitcher. Dump_
388-8823 :
1973
Ford
Galo•y
500.
4
Root truu (up to 20 ' ·
trucka,
weter·U•s-sawarhardtop , Beautiful.
• 15. 001 C20' to 30'- 820.00)
1977 International Scout II electricalli~et .
61 .Farm Equipment 1977 Grand PriJt. 1978 door,
Looks .-nd drives lilee new.
130' to 40' -826 .001 .
Chevy 4x.4, 3.4 ton, good Original owner 80 yean old. 4x4 auto. PS. PB. new pa~int ,
Aliminum sidin9 8' woodcon d. Call 614-446-4 745 Florida car. low milaage. No $1.750 . Call 814- 379CROSS &amp; SONS
grain an twin 4 with loam
2682.
85 General Hauling
between &amp;PM &amp; 9PM .
U.S . 35 Wast, Jackson ,
rust. Fully equipped. Call
back •39.96 sq.
Ohio. 614-286- 6451 .
614-949-2558
'
Marble vanity's tops. Se1976 For.....o good transMeuev Ferguson, New
cond• all tlzes choice
1985 S- 1 0 Blazer· Tahoe
Holland, Bush Hog Sales &amp;
ponation-.
Call 614·
1978 Nove for sale. Good V-6, IMded, auto with over James Boy• Water Service.
830.00 ea .
Service. Over 40 used
446 -07• .
Also pools filled . Call 614work car with new tires. Call
Prahung 6 or 8 panel steel
drive. Mutt 1811. $13,800 . 256- 1141 or 614-446·
tractors to choose from &amp;.
evening1 . 614·949-2849 .
insulated exterior doors
Call
614-949·2387
614197B Chrvai.. New Yorker.
complete line of new &amp;
1175 or 614-446-7911 .
889.95 ea.
S 1 ,900. 2 door, black·tilver 1981 Pontiac Grande Prix 949-2958.
uted equipillent. Largest
Prahung 9 ft . thermal glass
interior, high mileage, good
selection in S.E. Ohio .
U. Fully loeded . 38.000
steel door's cro11buck or
cond .. loaded. Call 614- miles. EJ~cellant condition.
panal $139.95 .
74 Motorcycles
John Deer 360 C track 446-7404.
f5.SOO. 614-992 -5B83 .
1 pc. fibarglall tub and loader, forks, bucket ,
1hower white and color wench, canopy, low hours. 1967 Fleetwood Cadillac
1982 Z-28 . AM -FM otereo.
$199.00 to f229.95.
Ca11814-256-6245 or 814 - Limosene , 3 seats, fair con· elr conditioner. Ex.cellent Clo~e- out All uNd Honda' a
17'x19' white gold vanity 867-4402 evenings.
dition, 8 1. 600 or batt offer.
ehape, Must sell. Call 614- at reduced offer. Can be
with top t29 .95. marble top
Call 614-446-1197.
seen at Honda Shop.
949-3077 after 5:00p.m.
&amp; vanity $39 .95.
Silage wagon, work cond.,
3 or 5 pc. tub wall ki1t. white
5500. Call 6 14-446•2196. 1979 Z-28 Camero. AC, PS,
1984 Chevrolet Cavalier. 1984 Honda 200S 3
or color 839.95 to $89.95 .
PB, tilt wheel. 1977 Olds
Dark blue . A nice small whnler, exc. cond. Alto
Embo1aed 2'x.4' ceiling tile 4000 Ford diesel tractor, Cutlast Supreme . Call814 family car with many ex.tras. riding boota. glovta. pants,
tome fire rated S1. 8 9 ea . clean, new rUbber. Kill bros 256-1652 after 3PM .
$6000. Phone 814-949- kidnay bolt. helmet &amp; gogSutpended ceiling gridsl12 ' 275 grain body . Aluminum
gloo. Coll614·441-7521.
2890 after 9 :00 p.m.
main tM t2 .50) 4' tee 80 grain elevator, Feed-o-matic 1981 Buick La Sabre LTD,
cents) 12' tn 40 cents) ( 1
gn1in box. , corn picker, New air . PS . PB , AM - FM
1975 4 dr. Impala, po, pb, 1979 Suzut.i 1000, 13.600
wall angte 11 .99} .
Idea manure tpreader. Call cassette, V -6, very c;lean,
auto . trans ., ac. good condi · mile1, nice . Call 614-•4&amp;Colonial clear white pine 814-288-6522.
$6,996 . Call 614 -446 · tion. 304-e75-3154.
8507.
casing. Window and door
1965.
trim 32 cent ft.
New Idea 3 24 2 row c:orn
1982 EXP • 4 ap. air. 1973 Harley Davidaon
VenHred Interior white pine picker. New Idea 1 0 corn 1979 VW Doohtr. auto, 4
~~':-~~~ - 84000. 304-676· Sportator, 304-675-1566.
door Jamb'a t l .99 pr .
pickers, gravity bed wagons. cyl ., 4 dr, hatch bac:k. no
3'x11' foil face fiberglall 30 ft . hay • grain elevator rust. Coli 614-446· 8607.
-.;;8;:;7;--;U-;:p-;h-o71a-te_r_y_ _ ,Insulation 88 . 12 sq. ft .• PTO driven. 20 ft . harvest
1978
Dataun
200SX,
excel76
Boat•
and
*15.95 roll.
handler elevator. 40ft . grain 1970 Chevllfle Con. good
lent condition, low mileage.
Motors for Sale
lnColor longatad comodaa's auger PTO driven, manure top, runs good, needs body
pric•
reduced . ao• -676oiphon jot *89.95.
sprudare, fartillze spread- &amp; paint job, t1.250. 1984
TRISTATE
.
6889.
4'x10' P.U.C. sewer and ••· culti -packera, all fleld lntarnadonll Scout 4 WO,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
drain pipe with bell ( 1 pc . ready. Howe's Farm Ma · for p1rtt, good engine,
1980 Tarry b••• boat, 25
1103 Soc. A.... Qalllpalla . •
1967 Chevy, 4 door. excel· HP, elee. •oiling motor. tilt
t3.49 oa.l 1100 pc-f3 .00 chinery, At. 124 Mayhew trana, tnd tranafere cue.
lent condition, 82500.00. trailer-, canva1 cover. excel- 614-448-7833 or 614-448- .
1833 . .
Rd., Jackson, Ohio 814· Call 014-379-2138 before
1967 Chevy, 4 door, fair lent cond. Call 614-245·
4x.8 wood an masonite 286-5944.
9PM.
ohopo, $700.00. 304·895- ' 9153.
paneling woodgrain and
A It M Furniture Manufac·
3638 oltor 6 .
prlnto, t6.99 to $12.99. 3 point hitch cultlvatora. 1978 Chevrolet Camero
turing, St. Rt. 7. Crown
Valves to •24.96.
1!ln. 17 ft. Stor.c ralt Coprl
•160. 1 row riding horu AC, PS. PB. AM · FM radio,
1974 Chevy l"'l'ola, 4 door Trlhull. V-8 1.0. Open bow. City, Oh. Call 114·211PENN'S WAREHOUSE. drawn Cultivators. t2&amp; . Me· 100,000 miles. good condi 1470, call Eve. 114•441...ton. Coli 304-675-3430 Call 114-192-5147 aftor
Wllla1on. Ohio. houro B-5. 111 chicken neata . $10 each . tiOfl . C~ll 614-441-8209
343B. Old •
now
or
ooo
II
222
Porte
On
...
Coll814-384-3145 .
5:00p.m .
Ophotter•d.
814-949-2179.
8·0 waekdayo.
53,000 mllao. U50,

GOIIC.EITeD ~

fOWE:VE'R,M'/ DE'AR.
FHLDW, MD I OOT
Bef;I.J 13Cl&lt;t-.L"

ME-; CONCEI~~
q;F':.TAif.lLV
OOT~

... I M'. FIRML'/ C.O~VIOC£D
1\\AT PEOPLe WOULD
DEOMAI.JD lD KOOW
WHY~

ANNIE
flff NAPIJE'5 AHNIE.

OH, HOW lOVElY.'
YOU MUST COME
10 PLA't_ ANNIE!
PLEI!Gt? PLBISE?

I'M. EH. 5oRI!Y IF
VIANPE'As&gt;

AWAKE, MY GIANTSI I SUMMON THE FORC ES
FROM THE DA~K DEPTHS OF THE EART&gt;-&lt; , AND
1't-\£ Bl-ACKNESS OF NIGHT TO ENERGIZE YOU!
"\LA KAH AH KA NOM!

NOW GO AND STOP THE IN TRUDERS, MY POWERFUL ONES!

Adv

0 CD ®

GASOLINE ALLEY

Why did
you stop,

Joel?

WINNIE
•.. LOVE 15 ~EVE~l, THE
64;HE, WENDY! THE
LOll!: 1 FELT FOR Y0VR
I'"ArNQI 15 VERY

t&gt;/I'F~

FRO.\&lt;
WHAT 1 FEEL FOf&lt;

IS )OUR

lOVE FOR
PIERRE
A5

NO AHSWER? &amp;UT
C4R 15 DOW 11'1
G~RAGEI. ••

STIIOI'I(;?

PIER~E •••

BARNEY
WOULD 'IOU
LIKE TO STAY

FER SUPPER.

JAMEV?

OH,
THANKY.

MA'AM

CANMV DAWG
STAV FER
SCRAPS?

**·

SNAKE!!

Magnum, P.l .
CSEASON
PREMIERE)
Magnum encounters politi·
cal intrigue while investigating a friend 's death in
London. 12 hrs I
(])
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
(jj) Gallery
fJI MOVIE: 'It Started In
Naplas'
!HBO! MOVIE: 'Tightrope'
!CCI
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Cal'
8:30 OOOCDFamilyTiosiSEASON PREMIERE) Part 1 of 2 .
Alelli·s plan to meet the girl
of his dreams hits a snag
when he becomes attracted
to the girl's roommate .
CID International Edition
9:00 I) 00 (I) Cheers CSEASON
PREMIERE) Frasier tells Sam
that Diane left him at the al+
tar and is now working in a
convent.
100 Club
(])Auto Racing '85 : IHRA
Drag Racing+Summer Nationals from Cincinnati , OH.
Cll Ill (j}) lady Blue
!PREMIERE)
(I) Wild America !CCI
(iJ) Mystery I ICC) "Rumpole
of the Bailey : Rumpole and
the Female of the Species .'
Rumpole defends small-time
crooks charged w ith armed
robbery and helps a voung
female barrister make a stan
in law. IRI (60 min.)
9 :30 0
(II (I) Night Court
(SEASON PREMIERE) Harry
clashes with a new defense
attornev and Bull mourns
Selma's death.
CII Profiles of Nature
10:00 0 (II (I) Hill Street Blues
!SEASON PREMIERE) Fur1110 tnes to talk the Chief out
of bombing a tenement, an
undercover Belker hides
himself in a trash bin and LaRue and Renko compete in a
car race. (60 min.)
(]) Cheyenne Rodeo 89th
Anniversary.
(IJ MOVIE: 'California
Gold Rush'
CD 8 G) 20!20 !SEASON
PREMIERE)

·m

PEANUTS

was a story
had to be told.

a.

' f - 10

Well, maybe not .

I

-- - ...

II I

I
I
I I ()

IREECCO

tSNUFUG

)

I

ON

FENGe IN O~PE~
AVO II:' 5-IYINGTH/5.
Now arranoe the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the atxwe cartoon.

·rn-t r I I r r

Prlnranawerhere;
•
Yes·1erdays

OFTEN

(Answers lomorrowl

Jumbles: SIXTY ENVOY MANIAC ALKALI
Answer. A man who takes you Into hiS "confidence"
often does this afterwards- ·
JUST TAKES YOU IN

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

•

Before you guess,
count the rest

NORTH
,_,..,,
.AK1094
., 8 2

.7

t . AJ875

By James Jacoby

EAST

It was not surprising that the bid- WEST
ding got as high as it did on today's • J 3
deal. That usually happens when bo~ "Q J 9 5 4 3
sides h.ave a good lit and 1he high-card'' • Q 10 9
strength is evenly divided. That liv4 • A Q

spades was not doubled was unusual~

·~

9A K76

t6
• K J 10 9143

SOUTH

but logical. East's jump to lour hearu;
.Q8762
., 10
described a hand with great playing
tK43 2
strength tn hearts, but not necessarily
great defensive values. So when North 1
and South were forced to play live
Vulnerable: Both
spades, the opponents were happy
Dealer: East
enough to have them that high. Fine if'
Nortll
Soodl
South went down, but if he was going w..t
Pass
to make it, it would not be in a doubled !
Obi.
contract.
1•
Pass
South can make the contract if he 1 ~ •
applies bridge logic. West led the club Pass
ace and switched to a heart. East won
Opening lead:
A
the king and tried the ace, but declarer
ruffed. South could now draw trumps
and make a diamond play, bul that
line is both simplistic and lazy. When-

••sz

••

s•

+

ever there is a key play to be made in a
side suit, you should search for more
information to lead you to tb.e ri&amp;bt de·
cision. Here it was best for South to
trump a second club in dummy, play jump over North's takeout double. And

the spade ace and a spade to the queen, of course East had followed to one
and then trump the last club. West spade play . What's left in diamonds?
would reveal that he had started with Only one.
the A-Q alone of clubs . Thus East had
. Declarer can now play his diamond
started with seven clubs. Surely East kmg and lake the marked finesse

had four hearts for his four-heart against the queen to land his contract.

~~ .. ~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
4 llefore
1 Arriwd
5 lmpriscm

5 SoviN Se a
9 &lt;'au(' asian

6 Della
of son~
7 ltal. wi1w

lan gmtJW

10 A(ljw.;t. a1ww

t '!'n1n

12 N Lu.l,lW
8 Find out
13 Oday
II F'ot 11 h•vpr 1
15 Distaff
14 Silk
Merino
lirwnf'ss
16 Hrando film
unil
17 Origu1at.P
16 Ca."ii nn
19 Variant
gamP
24 AhjE'c·t 32 A&lt;trrs..,
Ill' AIIIU'
J 8 Rt&gt;mainrler 26 ShrNI
Barhara
20 Fault
20 A Aoon(' 11• 28 f~amous 33 An
22 Muslim
Anwr ic·a
Spani sh
movement
judg~ ·
21 C:orn•('INi
shlp
35 "- Stoo~ts
23 ( 'au~t· fun
a text
30 Shcwk
l.fJ
24 Bflyd or
22 f:a«•l
or Hair
Conquer "
Starr
25 llnltH~ rl
26 l.ufl it•r
27 - anti outo.;
28 ( lnon·hi .

hr+-1-+-

(' .g.

29

l h·~&lt;· r•ndanl

of Esau
31 - o f ros!f's
:14 Mt•41il .
rf'l{ion
35 B4'V('ragc

36 ('ook• cl
al 37 Colorc4J

38 Construct
39 Volcano

DOWN
1 Garm£•nt

2 Justify
a t.o-do

CBS Adv

-·

MYYH

IIY no

3 Caust':'

181 'KNOTS LANDING'
• Will Twins Be Torn
From Thou7 Premieref

o·

.,

(I) Blockbustero
(]) Flohin' Hole
CD Andy Griffith
Cll Audubon Wildlife
Theatre
'
® Electric Company
• Dlffrent Strokes
(MAXI MOVIE:
'Stella
Dallas'
6 :30 I) (I) (I) NBC Nightly
Newa
([) Carol Burnett and
Frlando
(]) ~SPN'o Horoe Racing
Weekly 'Down the Stretch' .
CD Carol Burnett
Cll Gl ~ ABC News ICC)
0 C]) ® CBS Newa
(I) Dr. Who
(jj) Body Electric
1!11 Ta•l
7 :00 0 (I) PM Magazine
(I)
Courtship/Eddie's
Father
(]) Spartscenter
([l Mary Tyler Moore
()) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Wheal of Fortune
0 C]) Wheel of Fortuna
(I) Second City TV
®News
(fi)
MacNeil/lehrer
NewahOur
Ill G) Price Is Right
fit Jefferson&amp;
[HBOIInside The NFL
7 :30 IJ &lt;Il ·111- Newlywed
Game
(I) Please Don't Eat
Daisies
CII ESPN'a Speedweek
CD 'Sanford and Son
(I) 0 til Fomily Feud
(I) Jeopardy
(I)
Nightly
Business
Repart·
® Wheel of Fortune
Gl G) Divorce Court
fJI WK RP in Cincinnati
8:00 I) (II (I) Cosby Show
(SEASON PREMIERE) The
first dav of school leaves
Cliff and Clair delighted and
the kids depressed .
(I) Wackioat Ship in the
Army
(]) Auto Racing "85: 1985
World Championship Demolit•on Derby &amp; · Figure Eight
Competition from Linden+
hurst, N.Y.
(IJ MOVIE: 'Coward of the
County'
CD Ill (j}) Fall Guy
!SEASON
PREMIERE!
While 1rying to catch a forgerm Las Vegas, Coh winds
up protecting the life of a reclusive millionaire . f60 m in l

CBS

·&lt;

...,

SLARN
I,,.... t)
...... .....
I CRAFS

•

181 MAGNUM, PI/Danger
• In london! Special
2 Hour Premiere!

--

a.

I

e;oo urn
Cll mo Cll ®
GJ News

1962 GMC 68 panongor
bua camper with n~frlgera­
lor, 1tov1. hot and cold
water, queen eire bed.
614-992·6947 otter 6:00 •

71

four ordinary words.

EVENING

79 Motors Hamel
&amp; Campers

Autos for Sele

Un~CtM~ble rhese four Jwnbles,

one IIIIer to each ~uare. to form

9/26/85

Wanttobuytranlmislionfor ,,...
1982 Flroblrd. 4 cvt outo.
304·676-3898.

71

i}jJjlNJ fiilit ~THAT fiCIWIILEO WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~- by Henri Arnold and llob Lao

THURSDAY

Four 14x.8 sht lug whHia. · gold and chromewlthcenter : capo. 304-678·2.317 or
578-2282.

Autos for Sale

13

Televisio·n
Viewing

350 Ch•vv trtnamlulon,
Oldsmobll• trenamilllon.
outo. Two 3150 Dido dloMl
onglnoo. fouroldotvtoChovv
roily w - •· 304-891-383B

New HoUand hat no-intera1t
financing for 24 montha on
new or uaed hay and forage
productl, grinders, mixera
and rru~nure spreaders. New
Hollend Speclala For Sep~amber. 1 -New Mod~l 329
manure apreeder 140blJ.
Caah only t2900.; 1 -New
Model 366 grinder mhter,
100 bu larger tires . Cash
only $5900 .; 1-Uoed Model
707 3 point New Holland
chopper with both head•
$1900.; 1-uood Model 619
New Holland manura
spreader 217 bu; wilh hydend gate $21 00.; 1-Und
Model 847 round baler
$5900 .; 1 -Uaed Modal
1090 9 ft. Gohl hayblno
41900.; 1-Uood Super 717;
chopper with 1 row head
baler
demonstrator
41600.; 1-Now
Holland 311
88,000.; 1-Now Hollond
488 9' haybine demonstrator $6200. ; 1-Uaad New
Holland blower uaed 1 •••·
son No. 26 &amp;1300.; 1-Used
No. 8 New Holland forage
wagen $1900; 1-U•ed Gahl
forage wagon 81600. ; 1Used L-426 New Holland
skid 1teer loader $6900 .;
1-Uaed 718 chopper and 1
row head 83300. Kaefars
Service Center, Rt. 2 Leon
St. Rt. 87. Ph. 304-895·
3874.

Ohio

0 ()) ® Knots landing
!CCI
ISEASON
PRE·
MIERE) After finally finding
her babies , Val must fight
the adoptive parents to
prove that the twins are indeed hers. 160 min .l
(]) Nonny
(Jf) Newawatch
• O!ld Couple
IHBOJ America Undercover; UFO' a Whets GoiAJI
On?
IMAXI
MOVIE:
'The .
Competition'
10:30 (I) To Be Announfod
(]) Super Stare Bull Riding
from San Antonia. TX.
(jj) Tony Brown's Journal
I!IIINN Nows
11 :00 0 &lt;Il CD (I) 0 Cll ® Ill
G) Now8
(I) Man From U.N.C.L.E.
Cll Capitol Joumal
(j]) Edge of Survival

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
. apostrophes, the length and fotmation of the words are ali
hints . Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

9-26
IY SU YFTLF

VYY

llHVK

FKYQWPE ' V

S Q I K

HV

VKTHL

KYBMLP

VKHER

HEVTLCTLTF

U WMAIIMLHFS . -

PHT VX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : " The rich may nol II'"' longer,
but II certainly seems so to their poor relations." _
Anonymoua Author.

•

�Thursdav. September 26, 1985 :

Ohio

Sentinel

Ponleroy businesswomanJTPA honoree
IRONTON - Nona Nelson
owner ofSm!th·Nelson Motors Inc.:
Pomeroy was honored recently by
the Are~ 24 Private Industry
Councll for providing jobs for
disadvantaged residents.
Nelson was among seven South·
ern Ohio business persons nom!nated for the Panners Award,
which recognizes employers who
are strong supJDrters of Job
Training Partnership Act (JTPA)
programs.
The Private Industry Counc!l

IArea death
John D. Turnbull

.
'

Funeral services were held Monday at the Foglesong Funeral Home
for John D. Turnbull, 66, of Clifton,
W.Va. whodledFrldayat tlleHolzer
Medical Center. Burial was In the
Kirkland "Memorial Gardens.
Born AprU 9. 1919, at Hartford. he
was tlle son of Richard James and
Carrie Frances Ri!Oe Turnbull. He
was a coal miner lor Central Coal
Co.; a World War II veteran of the U.
S. Army, a member of the United
Mine Workers, American Legion,
Smitll-Capehart Post 140, and the
VFW Post 9926 of Mason.
Surviving are his wife, Opal V.
Van Meter Turnbull; two daughters, Mrs. James (Keith Ann)
Sisson, Middleport, and Mrs. Charles (Sharon M.) Knight, Chester;
three brothers, George Turnbull,
Hartford; Howard Turnbull, Cleveland; and Harry Turnbull, Albuquerque, N. M. and six
grandchildren.

$71,945 sought in
Meigs damage suit
(1. court action asking $71,!145.65
has been filed in tile Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Jennifer J ..
Lleving, Middleport, against Donald A. Ellinger of Logan and tile
Logan Monument Co., resulting
from an accident in Pomeroy on
April 4, 1985.
The plaintiff charges tllat Ellinger, driving a I ruck owned by the
company, struck her vehicle from
the rear and charges negligent and
careless opera lion. She asks $799.95
for medical expenses lncu rred in the
treatment of injuries; $40,1JX) for
extreme pain and suffering al·
Jegedly caused by the injuries;
Sl,l45.71llor loss of wages from her
employment and $ll,OOllor alleged
permanent injuries.

oversees JTPA activities in Athens, which featured guest speaker
Gall!a, Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs,
WUJiam Marchetti, president of
Perry and Vinton counties.
Caroorumdum Grinding Wheel Co.
Dw-!ng tile past year, Nelson of Logan.
hired several employees through
Marchetti explained how employJTPAon-the-job tra!nlngcontracts.
ment and training programs
According to county employment
funded by JTPA helped him open
and training staff who nominated Caroorundum after !t had been
her for tlle award, she "has taken • closed more than a year.
individuals with litue experience
"During the crucial first months
Into her busness and taken a of o!Ji!ratlon, JTPA allowed me to
persona! interest in ·their work."
bring employees back sooner and
Nelson received a plaque at the retrain them to he ready for sales
Cou"nc!l's Sept. 19 annual meeting, later on," he said. He~!dded thatl7
of the plant's 52 employees were
hired through JTPA programs.
Court.cases dismi!!Sed
Also speaking at the meeting,
JTPA administrator Douglas Ph!Two cases, Charles F. Sargent
Iabaun said that 928 adults and 641
against Orange Township Trustees
youth were served by JTPA
and Racine Home National Bank . activities in the seven counties
against Michael Lance, et a!, have
during the past year. Of tllese, 71
been dismissed !n Meigs County
percent of the adults and 54 percent
Common Pleas Court.

Five emergency runs
Five calls were answered by local
units Wednesday, tlle Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 6:53 a.m .. Rutland went to
Route 124 for Hollis Grate. taken to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 2: 22 p.m. took Howard
Parker from Route 7 to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutland at 3: 19
p.m. extinguished a brushflreonthe
Priddy property in Sa !em Township; Tuppers Plains at 8:50p.m.
took Lore~ "Bissell to Veterans
Memorial l'lospital and at 10: 01
Syracuse took Denver Parsons from
Route 124 toCamden-Clark Hospital
In Parkersburg.

One lotto winner
CLEVELAND !UP!)- Another
Ohio Lotto players has become a
mU!Iona!re after picking all six
numbers !n Wednesday night's
drawing to win the top prize.
The winning numbers were 6, 10,
14, 28, 33and34.
The player, whose name will be
announced lifter the winning ticket
Is redeemed at a regional lottery
office, will receive the $1 million
prize In 20 annual installments of
$50,139.60, minus taxes.
In addition to the top prize winner,
242 players picked five of the
numbers to win$719each. Also,9,050
players had four numbers, winning
$51 apiece.
DtiUy Number 590.

of london Fog

•

at y

COATSAND JACKETS
FOR BOTH
MEN &amp; WOMEN

BAHR CLOTHIERS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27TH AND SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 TH

AUTUMN SALE

CAIHAITT

MEN'S

BROWN DUCK
WORK CLOTHES

DRESS BELTS

An excellent selection of quality
leather belts by Buxton and Lee'gin.
Sizes 30 to 46. Western belts included.

Complete selection of styles- bib
overalls, dungarees, jackets, coats,
msulated coveralls. Regular and
extra la rge sizes- shorts, regular
and tails. ·

18.50 Dress Belts ................... 16.79
111,00-112.00 Dress Belts ..... 19.19
112.50-114.00 Dress Belts ..... 19.99
114.50-115.50 Dress Belts ... Sl1.99
s16.00-$17.00 Dress Belts ... s13.19

Sale Prices

AUTUMN SALE.

AUTUMN SALE

CHILDREN'S

SWEATPANTS &amp;
SWEATSHIRTS

LADIES'

NITE SHIRTS &amp;
FANNY WARMERS

Crew neck sweatshirts, sweatpant s.
hooded swealshtrt 1ackets and sweatshirt
vests. Beauttlul colors and sharp prmts.

Brushed tricot, flannel, sweatshirt
knits, challis and thermal kn1ts.
Sizes S-M·L.

Girls" SIZes 6 to 24 mos. 2to 4. 4to 6&gt;. 7to 14.
Boys· SIZes 6 to 24 mos.. 2 to 7

Reg. s 6.00 ..... Sale 14.79
Reg. sa.oo ....... Sale 16.39
Reg. 111.00•.... Sale sa.79
Reg. 514.00 ... Sale 511.19

Reg. $15 Nite Shirts .... SI1,99
leg. S 17 Nite Shirts .... I 13.59

Reg. 120 Nile Shirts .... S15.99
Reg. 124 Nite'5hirts~~ ,S 19.19

This sale includes our entire stock
on No Nonsense brand oantvhose
and knee-hi hose. Comlort stride,
Control Top, Ultra Sense.

Reg. 11.69 No Noosense ••.. 11.33
Reg. 11.89 No Nonsense .... ll.S3
Reg. 12.49 No Nonsense .... 11,93
Reg.l3.19 No N01Ke11S8 •••• 12.53
Reg. 13,59 No Nonsense .... '2.83

AUTUMN SALE
BOYS

WINTER JACKETS
Get ready now lor colder weather on
its way . Sizes 8 to 18. Plenty of good
styles and colors in our selection .

S22.95
524.95
S29.9S
S39.9S

Jackets ..... S17 .85
Jackets ..... S19.45
Jackets ..... s23.35
Jackets ..... S31.15

SHOP FRIDAY

NIGHT Till 8:00

SALE

JUNIOR
DRESSES

JUNIOR

NO NONSENSE

PANTYHOSE
SALE

~UTUMN

~UTUMN S~LE

AUTUMN SALE

SWEATERS
V-neck sweaters, crew neck
sweaters, cardigans, vests, swea ter 1ackets and cocoon vests. Assorted colors and stripes. Sizes S,

Reg. '31,00

M, L.

Dresses .......... Sole 524.79

Reg. $12.00 •.••• Sale 59.59
Reg. 515.00 ... Sale $11.99'
Reg. 521.00 ..• Sale SJ6.79
Reg. S43.00 •.. Sale $34.39

Reg. $33.00

Sharp new looks for Fall. Solids
and plaids in Junior sizes 3 to

Dresses ......... Sole 126.39
· Reg. $39.00

Dresses ......... Sale 531.19
Reg. '45.00

Dresses .......... Sale 535.99

AUTUMN SALE

WOMEN'S

BOYS

BLOUSES

SWEATERS

Missy and extra size open stock
blouses. Casual and dressy styles
in an array of colors and prints.

Sizes 8 to 20. Slipover in V or crew
neck styles and vests . Solid color, argyle and stripes.

Reg. sa.oo Blouses .•••..• s6.39
Reg. S14.00 Blouses .•. S11.19
Reg. $18.00 Blouses ••• s14.39
Reg. S21.00 Blouses ... S16.79

-$14.95 Sweaters ..... S11.89
S15.95 Sweaters ..... s17.69
S16.95 Sweaters ..... s13.49
S17.95 Sweaters ..... S14.29

AUTUMN SALE

QUILTED
. BEDSPREADS
Our entire selection reduced for this sale.
Full, twin and queen size floral prints and
solid colors. Cannon Royal Family Heirloom
spreads included.

Spreads .... 520.75
Spreads .... 530.25
Spreads .... 533.50
Spreads .... 539.7-S

Matching Drapes - Priscilla Cur·
tains and Shams also soli priced.

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

~-

enttne
2 Sacttona, 14 Pages
25 Cents
A Muh:lmadla Inc. Newtpaper

Am burger Road, near Nease Settlement, nearly all day on Wednesday,
Oct. 5, 19&amp;'1, according to testimony
Thursday by Ruth Taylor, Alvin
Taylor's wife.
Mrs. TaylortoldthecouriL!ndsay
and his mother spent the night at her
home on Tuesday, Oct. 4. The next
day, she said, about 10 a.m., Jack
Scarbrough came to her house and
Jack, Lindsay and her husband,
Alvin, went to .Pomeroy to get "a
piece of copper tubing" to fix her
stove. The three men wereonly gone
about an hour when they returned.
On Thursday morning, Oct. 6,
according to Ruth Taylor, Lindsay
and his mother decided to walk the
two . ,11Jes to check on their Forest ·
Run trailer. They came hack later
and Lindsay talked for awh!le to
Alvin Taylor.
About 10 a.m.. the late David
Ohlinger, then a Meigs County
Sheriffs Deputy, came to the Alvin
Taylor horne. Lindsay had appar- .
ently notified authorities at some
point that Ills trailer had been
broken into and furniture turned
upside down. Lindsay asked Ohlin·
ger, according to Ruth Taylor, if he
· (Ohlinger) went In the trailer.
Ohlinger said m, he just looked In,
according to Mrs. Taylor's testlm·
ony: LindsaydldnotmentlonMelton
she testified.
Upon redtreetexaminat!on by the
prosecution, Mrs. Taylor testified
that Lindsay told her on Tuesday
evening that Melton had gone back
to Canton. However, Melton had not
said anything to Mrs. Taylor about
leaving and had left his suitcase at
her home.
On Thursday, Oct. 6, Mrs. Taylor
said that about 5 p.m.. Roger
Hayman took Lindsay, his mother,
and Alvin Taylor to BellevUie,

W.Va. to visit Lindsay's brother,
Danny Taylor. The group returned
about9p.m.
On Friday, Oct. 7, she said that
Jack Scarbrough came to her home
about 8 a.m. and Lindsay asked
Scarbrough if he had the money for
the trailer. (Lindsay was selling the
trailer to Scarbrough.) Scarbrough
replied that he did have the money.
Lindsay and his rmther left the
Alvin Taylor residence with Scarbrough, but did not take anything
with them. However, they did not
return. That was the last time she
saw Lindsay.
On Oct. 10, Ruth Taylor testified
· that Scarbrough came again to her
horne, withhiswife.Scarbrough and
his wife, accompanied by Alvin.
went to the .t raUer on Forest Run to
get clothes for Freda and according
to earlier testimony, Scarbrough
found Melton's body at that time.
Gary Wolfe, special investigator
under Sheriff James J. Proffitt at
the tlmeolthe Melton death, was the
next witness Thursday.
Wolfe told of being called to the
Taylor tra!ler on Oct. 10 and finding
Melton's decomposed body. Furniture in the trallerwasoverturned, he
satd. Wolfe told of g'atherlng .
evidence from the trailer Including a
.410 shotgun shell from a coffee
table, a window screen which had
hurnan hair on it. Wolfe said he was
on the scene (or some six hours.
Continuing, Wolfe said he, Sheriff
Proffitt and Paul Gerard went to the
home of Taylor's brother near
Ravenswood the next day and
secured Lindsay Taylor's address
from Daniel Taylor, the half brother
of the defendant.
Wolfe related going to the trailer
home of Lindsay Taylor and his
mother, accompanied by West
V!rgtnia State Pollee. Wolfe said
Taylor ran when they tried to arrest

13.

AUTUMN SALE

S25.99
537.99
541.99
S49.99

f""'•'"'
'Oitlun.

•

(-"

Teachers'
contract
ratified

Prosecution
•
contmues case
in Taylor trial

MIDDLEPORT

The defendant, Lindsay Taylor

AUTUMN SALE

•

Vot .35. No. 118
Copvrlghted 1985

was at the Alvin Taylor residence on

Weather forecast
Today ... occasional showers and
thunderstorms w!tll a high 7ll to 75.
Southeast winds 10 to 20 mph ..
Becoming west late in the afternoon.
Tonight ... mostly cloudy a chance
of showers early tonight. Low
arourid 50. West winds 5 to 15 mph.
Friday ... partly sunny with a high
65to 70.
Exltended forecast
Saturday throogh Monday
Fair Saturday and Sunday, tlhen a
chance of rain Monday . lllghs In the
80s over the weekend and upper 60s
1o lower 'Ills Monday. Lows 40 to 45
Saturday and 45 to 00 Sunday and
Monday.

We Carry A Full Line

ELBERFELDS

Divorce sought
A divorce action has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Tina Marie Rose, Vinton, against
WilHam Earl Rose, Marysville,
Calif.

orthe youth were placed In Jobs.
"JTPA is ~~g business to our
communities, Ph!labaun said.
"The economic Impact Is evident in
reduced welfare assistance, an
Increased tax base and tbe benefits
realized by employers,
..
!nstltutlons and the participants.
This "year, the Partners Award
was presented to two nominees,
Andrew Verba, plant superintend·
ent of Ludowtcl-Celadon Co., New
Lexington, and Philip Flesher,
executive director of t,he Ohio
Center, Ironton. Other nominees
included Ralph Robinson, owner of
Ohio Pump and Supply Co., Logan;
Dennis France, manager of
Frisch's Big Boy B,estaurant,
Athens; John Sipple, manager of
Captain D's Seafood Restaurant,
GaU!poUs; ' and Larry Murdock,
manager ol' McArthw- Lumber and
Post Co., McArihur.

OMte

lll41»l ·M,I

c....., eua

MAJOR EVIDENCE- This sawed oHshotgun was
recovered from the Undsey Taylor kailer on Forest
Run Road followln'gthe discovery of the bodyctDanny

Wayne Mellon. Several of the stale's wllnesses have
ldentHied this gun as one owned by the defendant,
Undsey Taylor.

READS STATEMENT - Paul Gerard, under
lelltlmony, reads statements made by Undsey Taylor
to fanner Deputy Gary Wolfe oo Oct. 11 at the State

Pollee Barracks In Parkersburg, W.Va. Also shown
are defense counsel Sieve Story and Judge Charles
Knight.

him, but was caught. Taylor was
gtven his rights twice, Wolfe
reported. He said Taylor's physical
appearance seemed to be good and
that he noted no unusual behavloron
Taylor's part. Wolfe said that he
quesUoned Taylor about the alleged
breaking and entering at the tra!ler
to which Taylor
admitted an
argument had taken place between
him and Mel1on.
Jury removed
At one point, the jury and Wolfe
were removed from the courtroom

as anorneys approached the bench
after reference had been made to a
"second shot".
Judge Charles Knight ruled that
reference to a second shot be
stricken frorn the records. The jury
was Instructed to disregard any
statement made to a '"second shot"
and Wolfe was instructed not to
make any further reference to !t.
Returning to tllc witness stand,
Wolfe told of his search of the Inside
andoutsideol the trailer. He said the
barrel part of a .410guagesawed off

shotgun was found under the trailer.
but there were no other weapon
pieces there. He questioned Taylor
on the location of the rest of the gun
and was told that it was inside a
pillow case in the bedroom of the
trailer. Wolfe said Taylor told him
that tllere had been a light between
he and Melton, that he had been
struck by a table lamp and that he
got tlle shotgun and used !t. He said
he had placed the trigger part rJ. the
weaPD\1 in the pillowcase and tlle
(Continued on page 10)

A new two-year contract with
teachers oft he Eastern Local School
District was rat!f!ed when the
district's board d. education met in
regular session Thursday night.
The new contract !s retroactive to
Aug. 1, this year, and provides an
increase ol$&lt;100 above the state base
of$13, 700for a first year teacher with
no experience and provides for a top
salary of $21.,500 for a teacher with a
master's degree and 12 years of
service. The second year in~rease
will also be$400over the stale base .
There were also numerous wording
changes In tlle two year coni ract.
The resignation of Ray Watoon as
football coach due to physical
reasons was accepted. Don Eichinger and Ron H!II, who have been
assistant coaches were named
co-coaches lor tlle rest of the season.
Carol Brewer was hired as a special
ed~cat ion .teacher at the high school
and Vicky Layne was employed as
reading teacher at the Chester
Elementary School. The board
approved the attendance of princ!·
pals of the dls.trict to their respective
conventions and forf!ve ind!viduals,
to be named , to attend a federal
grant writing program to he "held
next fl10nth at Rio Grande College.
Approval wasgtven lor one elementary teacher to attend an elementary art workshop in A lhens.
Class advisors were hired includIng RJta Lincicome, junlor class;
Scott Wolfe, eighth grade, and
Kimbery Con!d!, seventh grade .
Carl Barringe.r was named a
substitute bus driver and ROger
Spencer and Patricia Parker were
named to the substitute teacher list.
RJ'qulrements lor participation in
the marching hand were approved.
These include what will be expected
from band members In tlle way of
participation !n parades, contests
and band camp. A field trip to COS!
In Columbus on Sept. 3IJ was
approved lor specia l education
classes.
The next meet lng wilt he at 7 p.m.
on Oct. 17.

Jackson officials take case to Supreme Court
COLUMBUS (UP! l - Commissioners of financially
strapped Jackson County have filed documents in the
Ohio Supreme Court saying the courts lack tile power
to order them to approve an emergency tax.
The three commissioners have been sued by county
judges and other &lt;il!ceholders in an attempt to force
them to provide funds to keep county &lt;ificesoperating,
and to vote lor the controversial tax.
The suits wound up !n the Supreme Court after the
commissioners claimed there was no money in the
county's general fund.
In a response to the suits, commissioners Ed
Michael and Ed Davis said Thursday they could not be
ordered to appropriate more money than the county

has, despite the closing of offices due to the county's
financial crisis. They also stated that an order to vote
for a tax "violates well-established constitutional
doctrines &lt;i separation of powers."
Commissioner Marvin Keller filed a separate
n:'sponS£'.

"I cannot understand how (Jackson County
Common Pleas Judge Thomas W.) Mitchell or any of
the other &lt;ificehplders can force me to wte lor a lax
when !t !s against my desire !o do so."
Keller has repeatedly voted against a proposed 1
percent emergency sales tax, which requires
unanimous vote by commissioners. He also has
rejected a proposal calling for him to vote for the tax in

Hunicane Gloria hits coast
with 'atomic bomb' like force
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI)releases," added meteorologist
Wallace Demaurice.
Hunicane Gloria raked North
CaroUna's Outer Banks and raced
Forecasters said the center of the
fierce storm, which was generating
norihward toward a midday blast at
the populous New York-New Jersey
4Hoot waves In the open ocean, was
coast with 1~mph winds packing
staying about 30 miles off the coast
"an awesome power equal to an
as it treked northward with gather~
!ngspeed.
atomic bomb."
Officials said 25 million people in
One National HUrricane Center
Gloria's path were ••Jook!ngdown a
forecaster was overheard tell!ng an
gun barrel" as the awesome stonn Atlantic City, N.J., c!vU defense
howled along the track of a 1938 official: "You're In a critical
hurricane that k!Ued 600 people on situation!"
Long Island and New England.
"The forward speed may he up to
So far, there were no reports of 30-35 mph by them!ddleoltheday,"
storm deaths or serious injuries.
Frank said. "It looks like !t Is going
Gloria slashed across the narrow Into the south coast of New England
Outer Banks at 1: 15 a.m., E[Yf, and as early as early afternoon."
roared nortllward off the coast in
Frank ·said Gloria had the
what forecasters called "the worst
potential to push a devastating
possible scenario" because its brief ' storm surge Into the New Jersey·
landfall did not diminish Its fury.
NewYork·NewEnglandcoast "and
"Wearedeal!ngw!thanawesome people· had better take It very
seriously."
power equal to an atomic bomb~'
warned chief hurricane forecaster
"U the eye moved over Manhat·
tan, It could p.~sh up a lot cl. water,"
Nell Frank.
"A hurricane Is equivalent to an
Frank said, "and some of those
glass buDd!ngs could blow out."
atomic blast every few minutes,
really, in the awesome energy It
The posh gambling casinos at

Atlantic City were closed, sandbagged and boarded against Glo·
ria's oncoming wrath and by dawn,
tllere was a last-minute rush off the
Island as winds increased and
streets began flooding.
Atlantic City Pollee cruisers
arrested several looters and picked
up stragglers and took them to
storm she!t'i'rs to await transporlat!on to the mainland.
Atlantic City Mayor James Usry
said lie felt the resort was prepared
for Gloria, but added: "No man Is
confident he can handle what God
has wrought on this Island. We're
doing the best we can."
At 8 a.m., Gloria was about 80
miles soutll of Atlantic City, N.J.,
near latitude 38.3 north and longitude 74.7 west and was dumping up
to 10 inches ci rain along Its path.
"Gloria Is row moving northward
about 3IJ mph and Is expected to
Increase lmward speed as !t moves
near the New Jersey coast,"
forecaster Bob Case said. "This
track will take the eye of Gloria to
the Long Island area by noon."

exchange lor pledges to hold down county spending.
Most county officials have sa !d the emergency tax is
tlle only way out of the crisis, which has forced the
layoff of 35 employees - nearly all of the county
workforce paid from the now-depleted general fund.
1\vo issues on the Nov . 5 ballot lnJ ackson County ask
lor a 1 percent sales tax -onefortheremalnderoll985
and the other for a permanent tax beginning in
January.
The· Supreme Court earlier this month issued an
order barring the countY from paying non•mandatory
expenses. But any decision on t h~ officeholders·
request for additional funds and approval of an
emergency tax is unlikely to come before t.he

' I

November election. COunty officials must l!le another
round of replies before the case will be ready lor the
high court's review .

Both of the resJDnses filed Thursday blamed other
county officials , Including the judges. lor overspend ing that contributed to the county 's problem.
""The present financial situation of the county is in
part the (judges') own fault , !n that the courts ordered
increases In their office appropriations, forcing the
appropriations for employees' salaries in other
noncourt offices to be dr.ast!cally reduced," said
Michael and Davis !n their rt:'sponse.
Othe!" officeholders also "refused to attempt to cut
operating expenses," tlley said.

\

OPENHOUSE-''TheMaples",MelgsCounty's1.9
mDUon doDar apartment complex for the elderly and
handicapped, will he open lor public lours Sunday
from I to 4 p.m. The complex which Incorporates the
old chiJdrm' • borne buBdbig ha8 12 efllclency
apartments anc1 33 .._bedroom un1ts. Tenants ~rust
meet low-lnoome criteria established by lhe federal

ll"Yemment slnoo rents are subsidized bused on ability
to pay. A short program will begin Ill 1 p.m. wtth
Richard Jones, president of the Meigs County Elderly
Housing Board,lo glye a welcome and Introduce other
members of the board which secured funding for the
housing project.

i

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