<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13278" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13278?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T08:50:04+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44250">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/75ce927eecf35157087403dc5eb158dc.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c6dc21426301920a67ebbe8bdb28e16a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41609">
                  <text>'

'

•

Paga 10-The

--'--GQifel'8 in regionals

Sentinal

JackfM't increases

HOMECOMING QUEEN - Corinna Bui, left,
was crowned 19811 homeoomlng queen Friday night a1
Wahama !Ugh School durlnghceremonles during
halftime of the While Falcons game against

Gary Gene Putman
Gary Gene Putman. 22, of Rt. 2•
Coolville, died Salllrday afternoon
at Grant Hospital, Columbus, from
inJurtes sustained In an auto
ace !dent ·
Born In Parkersburg, W.Va., he
was a son of Jimmie L. and Ruth

A chance of showers Wednesday
and over the north Thursday and
Friday. Highs In the mid 70s to mid
80s Wednesday and in the 70s
Huallngton VInson. Miss Bass, will was crowned by . Thursday and Friday. Lows In lhe
1984 queen Amanda Smith, Is lhe daulhler ol Jean
upper 40s to lower 50s early
and Kennelh Bass of auton. She was escorted by
Wednesday and Thursdayandlnthe
Paul Briles, right.
loivto mid 50s early Friday.

Sebastian and Mary Kessler VoU.
Survivors Include two brothers,
Raymond Voll, Rutland; Paul Voll,
Syracuse; and a sister, Harrtett
Keppler, Akron.
·
Services wUI be 1p.m.Tuesday at
Ewing Funeral Home with Rev.
'
Paul Taylor officiating. Burial wUI
he 1n Chester Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from

Anne
Griffith Putman, Sr.. also of ,. 7 9
Rt.
2, CoolvUle.
A 1981 graduate of Eastern High
School, he was a laborer !or the Paul
Peterson Co., Columbus. He at·
tended White's Chapel Church ..
In addition to his parents, he Is
survived by his wife, Deborah
Pooler Putman; a daughter, Elaine
Elizabeth Putman; lour brothers,
Jimmie Putman, Jr., David Put·
man, Glen Putman, and Michael
Putman, all of Rt. 2, Coolville: a
paternal grandmother, Mary Putman, Rt. 2, Coolv!lle: a maternal
grandmother, Elizabeth DuUn,
Chester, Md.; and a great maternal
grandmother,Ethel Reynolds, Murphytown. W.Va.
Servlces wUI bel p.m. Wednesday
at Whlte'sChapel Church, Coolville,
with Rev. Roy Deeter and ReV. John
Douglass both officiating. Burial
wUl be in Stewar1 · Cemetery,
Hockingport. Friends may call at
the Whlte F uneral Home from 2-4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Tuesday.

DINING ROOM ONLY.
Served with 'Nhipped potatoes, · chicken
gravy, cole slaw, hot roll, butter &amp; coffee.
- Sorry, no substitutes except beverage·with
additional prite..
,

· Slory ~

PH.

Trial called off
A Jury trial slated to begin
Tuesday in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Ms been cancelled.

Meets ton~t ·
Racine Village Council will meet
tonight (Monday), 7 p.m.,. at the
Shriner's Park buDding.

'

'

1

"

KC HOMECOMING 'qUEEN - Julie RIUer, daughter of IUchard
and Carole Ritter~ Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was crowned lhe 1B81111lmeoomlng
queeo a1 Kypr Creek JDgb school Friday night by Dan Bnilll!r, lhe
schOOl's principal. Senior altmdanls wemi LeiiDJia Nibert and Usa

Vol.35. No.123
Copyrighted 198&amp;

VDiaoueva.

f;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

II

HOLlAND'S SPRING
FLOWERING ·auLBS
BRING... YOU ,
NATURE'S MAGIC!

3 25
.

•Easy-to-plant
•Sura-to-bloom
•Wide assortment
available
•We'll help you
select.

'

Polfleroy-Middlaport, Ohio.

Tuesd~tv.

'

Hijacked cruise ship
PhGto, story on Page 8

•

·-

.
·

•

•

enttne
2 Section, 12 Pagel

October 8 ; 1985

25 Cents

· A Multimedia Inc. Nowopspor

Racine's 35-y~ar old water system upgraded
By NANCY YOACIIAM
Senllnel ,slaff wrUer
It was 35 years ago that the publlc water system
was placed in operation in Racine VIllage- at a ccst
.of $115,000. Over the years, the system has grown to a
$42,000 a year business.
Recently, when parts of the system began showing
signs of age, Racine VIllage CouncU started looklDg
Into measures to correct the problemS. To date,
several steps have been taken to upgrade the'system
and additional Improvements are scheduled In lhe ·
future.
The origin~ operation Included a cast Iron
distribution system with two water weUs, an aerator
and supply storage tank.
·
The$115,000project was madeupof $!ll,!XKlderlved
from seUing mortgage revenue bonds and paid off

Plant imported Holland bulbs NOW and delight in
the du,zling array of nature's magic neKt Spring ...
Crocus, Tulip, Daffodil. Hyacinth and many other
fine quality bulbs.

CRQW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY OH.

.

at y
from revenue produced by tbe system. The other
$35,1XXlwas derived !rom the Issue and selling of street
assessment bonds.
The latter was a front footage tax on real estate
which was collected through the county auditor and
distributed back to the village to pay on tbe street
assessment bond retirement.
Frank Cleland, president dRaclneVIllageCouncil,
says the system was badly needed when It was
Installed. He feels the accompUshment Is proof that a
community can have Improvements without outside
help lf a true need,ex!sts and Is recognized ~a united
effort.
Two wells continue to supply village water. Earlier
th1s year, a first time cleaning with acid was given to
well No. 1 and at !hat Ume, a new pump, of proper
capacity, was installed at a cost of $7,:nl. In 1986,

council hopes to have well No. 2 acid cleaned and a
new pump installed.
,
Several well pumps have been used over the years
to maintain. public service.
. Water Is now made sale and treated with chlorine
and aquadene on a regular basis. These chemicals
are lntrodjlced at the aerator building, located on a
public alley between Sixth St. and South Broadway.
In the same building, centrifugal pumps pushwater
through the distribution system , and to the water ·
storage tank on Spencer's Hill.
The aerator also houses the coke trays which
remove the Iron content from lhe water by the
aeration process.
It was lhe rundown conditions of the aerator and
building !hat was publlclzed recenlly. However, to
safeguard the health of mnsumers using the water

system, lhe aeralor has since been rebutlt wit)\ .new
redwOOd coke trays at a cost of about $6,ti00. The
build in~;: which houses the aerator ha s also been
repaired and painted. In addition, 1o further
safeguard the public water supply, a chain link fence
Is to he construcled around the structure as soon as
possible.
When built, lhe 100,000 gailon water storage tank
cost about $7,(00. Just recently, the tank was coated
Inside and the exterior painted. A tornado, lhe high
school emblem, was added to the outside for
enhancement. ·
As explained by Cleland, a service contract Is
maintained on the tank with a 10-year continuing
guaranlee. The tank was serviced last week. Prior to
lhe servicing, it was drained and viewed Inside and
(Continued on page 8)

ELBER.FELDS

~~.~p~.m~-~to~nlg!h~t~(M~o~nd~ay~).:.,_ _ _L:::::::::::::::::~~:::::~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

YOU SHOULD KNOW

0 "'IIU. MVNOLOilOMCCO CO.

FACT. #11

'

'

.
'

BEFORE - Delerloralloll ollhe aerator and thB
buldlng which houses It brouJhl much aHentlon lo

William Vo U, 82, of 128 New Lima
Rd., Rutland, died Sunday afternoon at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
A retired woolen mUI worker, Mr.
Voll was born Jan. 3, 1903 In
Cleveland, a son of the late

Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports 10 calls over the
weekend.
Saturday at 5:31a.m .. Rutland to
Meigs Mine No. 2 for Kenneth
Ferguson to O'Bienness Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:03 a.m. to
134'h Mulberry Ave. !orDonB9wen
to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Middleport at 8:06p.m. to the corner
d Cole St. for Betty Crlte who was
treated but nollransported.
Sunday at 12:26 a.m., Pomeroy to
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge for
John Ord to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 1:13
a.m. transported Dane Huffman to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 1:48 a. m. to VUlage
Manor Apartments lor Evelyn
woiford to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Fire Deparlment
at 9: 16 a.m. was called lo the
Raymond Lambert residence on
Dye Rd.. smoke in house, no
working fire; Middleport at 12: 21
p.m. to the · Middleport Pollee
Department for Howard Ferguson
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutlandat1:15p.m. to BeechGrove
Rd. for Dennis McKinney to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at 7:48 p.m. to 873 South Third.
for Jane Ratcliff to Veterans
Memortal Hospital.

I

•

William Voll

Emergency squads
answers 10 calls

raae s

Fann festivalAlutual Bob E\'IIIIS event on Page 7 ·

:.£..------·--··---·------ --· -.. . . --....-...1---~ ·-.

$

•

r

..
.. ,, ,.·.-,:
·:.Managerial changes · ,

Weatherforecast

Wednesdliy tllroup Friday

I .

,

- .,. . ~

&amp;ee)fdp~~Paae4

CLEVELAND (UP!) - There
have been no top-prize winners In
the last three Ohio Lottery Lotto
drawings which brings lhe Jackpot
· to a multl-mUIIon dollar figure.
In the next drawing on Wednesday, $4.6 mUIIon will be up for grabs.
Not every ticket was a · loser
saturday, however. Four-hunW'edfitty-two of them are worth $712
because tbelr holders cOrrectly
guessed five of the numbers, which
were 2, 17, ~. 25, :Jl and 40.
There were 19,002 tickets sold
correctly naming four of lhe
winnings Ill; and eachofthose tickets
can be redeemedfor$45.

Tonlght...clear. Low 45 to 50.
South winds around 10 mph.
Tuesday ...sunny and warmer.
High in lhe'upper 70s.
Chance of rain near ..ero percent
today .. tonlght .. lind Tuesday,
Extended forecasl

!l

...

RadDe's waler syllem In pasl months.

AFTER - Repairs lo the Racine waler sysem
buDding and the equipment Inside were ~ncluded

rc'Cently at minimal costs.

Public meeting will focus. on locks and dam construction

The pro"jected tlmetab.le for lhe construction of a
new 1,200-foot locklngchamberattbeGalllpoUsLocks
and Dam wUl be the focus of a public meeting to he
conducted by the o!flce of Rep. Clarenoe Mlller,
ROhlo, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The meeting has been scheduled for 7 p.m. on Oct.
17 at GalUa Academy High School.
A compromise between tile House and Senate In
August automatically author:izN. tile S370 million

'

.

.; FACT: These 26 blends give Winston a distinctively smooth
tobacco flavor.

'•

• FACT: Winston's tobacco is aged for up ~o 3 years for greater
tobacco taste . .

•

•

• FACT: To ensure tobacco freshness, ecich Winston pack is
individually plastic wrapped.

'··

The facts
:speak for themseives. ·
.;That~s why Winston is America;s Best.
J

·Ult'M LIGHTS, 6 mg."Ill", 0.4 mg. nicotine w. 1111 cigntte, FTC Report JAN. '85: ULTRA LIGHTS 100'~ 6 1111· "Ia"", 0.4 mg. nicoOOe, LIGHTS.
10 ~~ "tal", 0.8 mg. nicotine, UGHTS 100's. 11 mg. "Ill", 0,9 mg. nicotiw. KING, 18 mg. "tel". 1~ 1111· nkoline. BOX.17 mg. "llr", 1.1 t11g. nicotiw,
1QO's,_18 1111· "tlr", l2 mg. nicotine. w•.per ciGnt• ~FTC mltllocl.
.

'I

.,

.·

from a House blll.
The approprlallons measure, according to an aide
for Rep. Mlller, approves the first two phases of t~
Galllpolls projecl - engineering sludles and land
acqulslt Ion. Engineers are expec ting thaI phase of Ihe
projected to take at least through next May to
complete. The Corps of Engineers will nol be
prepared 10 begin construction until 1987.
Comprehensive water bll!s, Including the Ga lllpolis
and hundreds of other projects are scheduled to be

considered by both the House and Senate.
Tlie bills majl run Into tough salllng, however,
because of sllff cost-sharing provisions that wUl
require local governments to pick up a larger share of
the cosl of a project.
Under lhe House bill, barge fuel taxes would pay
one-third of Ihe cost of Ihe Galllpolls projecl, while Ihe
Senate bill requires the taxes on barge fuel to cover
halt the projecl's cost.

Plans und~tway
-----------·
to fight'tflx~: repeal
in Pomeroy village
· Pomeroy VIllage Council wlll -~
gearing up to defeat an inltlatl~e
petition repealing the village ,Incom~ tax.
·.
Registered Pomeroy village residents will vote on repealing the Issue
at the Nov. 5 election. Pomeroy
officials, who placed lhe tax In effect
the first of this year wlll be seeking
support of their action. Following
the regular meeting Monday n!ghl ,
muncH and Mayor Richard Seyler
njet to plan strategy to defeat the
Initiative at lhe Nov. Selection.
During , the regular business
session, councilman John Anderson
reported on lheprogressoftbestreet
paving. which got underway Monday morning in Pomeroy. Andl!rson
reported that Coort St., the upper
parking lot, and Sycarrore St. were
mmpleted Monday by workers for
lhe Shelly Company. Anderllln 'said
Second St.-and the lower parking lot
would be finished today (Thesday),
before workers move to the SUgar
Run area. Naylor's Run and
Pleasant Ridge are scheduled for
Wednesday.
Anderson explained that Pleasant
Ridge will ha'vetobe closed to tratnc
for most of that day, necessitating
residents to park cars ai tbe llOtlom
of lhe hUI whUepaverswork. Paving
on Pleasant Rklgewillstartearly In

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

Warning, The Surgeon-General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

_·IJI'

project, which calls lor the construction of the locking
chamber and renovations to thP 48-year-old facility.
The compromise action, which includes Galllpolls
and~ othet unauthorized water proJects throughmit
the country, says that If Congress faUs to pass a water
blll that authorizes these proJects by next May 15, the
projects will automatically receive authorization.
The rider was attached to the Supplemental
Appropriations Bill a day after an amendment thai
would have authorized the 21 proJects was stricken

lhe day on Wednesday and hopefully, Anderson sald,tbe t~d will be
~ by afternoon. Street paving ln
the village should be completed
within two or three rri:Jre days he
added.
Mayor Seyler reported he has~
been In touch with Mitch Farley, of
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resource's Bw-eau of MJne Recla·
matlon, in regard to a waterseepage
problem on F1sher St. Seyler
reported that lhe problerp, which
stems !rom an abanooned mine
area, will be reclaimed as !llOn as
Farley can schedule the work.Some
reclamation has already taken
place on Wolfe Dr. the mayor said.
CouncUman BUI Young reported
county engineer Phil Roberts was to
have completed a description for
vUlage property near Middleport
Hill, so tbe property could be
transfered to Middleport. Young
had ~peeled to havet!E)!Escrlption
at last night's meeting, but.as yet,
the document has not been dell·
vered. Mayor Seyler said he would
speak to Roberts this week.
In other business, oouncU discussed minor street repairs needed
on Union and Mulberry AVes., and
accepted tbe mayor's report d. .
$l)ll.50 for September.

A BRAND NEW LOOK - Woltlers~ the Shelly Co.

were IJuly IJrllhl 111d earl)' Mon&amp;ay morning as
t"eTTUdiiCins ol the Pomeroy burllne1111 dlsirlct got
underway. It IIU1'e d!GI'I take loft~ lor thfl men 1111d
their rnachiaftl to pve Court Sl. a brand new look. All

1of Second St. wu to he resurfaCed today (Tuesday)
and lhe street was clnsed lo tralllc. However, a sign
prohlbltln, left turns from Butlernut Ave., onto Main
Sl., was covered so thai moloriol8 oould legaDy make
those left lums miD the reswiaclngprojectmSecond
Sl. was oompleled.

High court
ruling sought
JACKSON, Ohio (UP!) - A
lawyer for the Jackson County
Board of Elections says he wlll ask
the Ohlo SupremeCoul't to order the
county's commissioners to provide
add lllonal funds for lhe Nov. 5
rleclion.
The commissioners Monday allot.
led $10,910 to lhe board for the
elecllon, which was $8,1XXl less Ihan
elections o!ftclals had requested.
The allotment provided no money
for lemporary pollworkers, and
commissioners sa id lhe board
should rely Instead on volunteer
help.
However, L&lt;lwrence Gi ll, chairman of the board of elections, said It
would be Impossible lo get
volunleers.
' "There's no way we can get
anybody to volunteer," Gill said.
Lawyer Richard M. 4'"-'ls said he
would ask for · an Immediate
judgment from the Ohio Supreme
Court on an election board request
which was Included Ina petition filed
last month by monty officeholders
seeking additional operating fund s:
On the Nov. 5 ballot will be two
!13les tax Issues lo raise money for
the financially strapped county,
which was torero to lay off about 35
workers last monlh due to a lack d
funds to pay them.
Meanwhile. Comml§sloner Ed
Michael on Monday presented a
proposal to the Jackson City Board
of E;ducation to sell 23 acres of
(CoritlHUed on page .6)

'
•

�•

1.

/Commenta

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

1985

Tuesday, October 8,

Pomerc;~y-Middleport,

~ ----------~------------------~~------~------------------------------~~~-~T~==~Y~·~O~cm~~~8~·~1- ~98~5~
:: r - - - - - - - - - , - - , . - - - - - , .
)'11.~
. ----·Jame..,---s_._J
: K_u_pa_tric_k
1

Japanese d ·ary·

The Daily Sentinel

·::
'

.111 Court Street .
Pomeroy, Ohio

.. .

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

.....

~Cb

Bm1ii:l
~v

.

~~--.-·~='·=

.

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher /Controller

.··

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

'

LE'M'E RS OF' OP INION are welcome. They shou ld be le-ss than 300 words
long, All lcuers are subjr ct to edltln)! and must be signed wllh name. address and
telephone numbe-r .. No unsigned lette rs w\11 be published . Leiter s should be In
good taste, addressing Issues. not personaliti es.

Beyond credentials
:.' In theory, President Reagan should have lltlle difficulty In security
::· Senate mnflrmation cl his nomination of Alex Kozinski to fill an important
.- federal judicial position.
.::.. Kozinski's supporters In the Senate Include Republicans and Democrats,
: . liberals and conservatives. His judicial, academic and !lllitical credentials
· . are impeccable.
: : If confirmed to a seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit,
·. which (elliews the decisions of all federal trial couns in the nation's nlne
: westernmost states, the 35-year-old Kozinski would be the youngest federal
: appellate court judge in the country.
·. Moreover, there is recurrent speculation in legal circles that Kozinski Is
being groomed by the Reagan administration for a seat on the Supreme

Coun.

TOKYO -1 arrived in Japan a
week ago with a view toward he- ·
coming an exJl'rt on the nation's
economy, polillcs, culture and
publlc education. My thought
was that the enterprise would require perhaps five and a hall
days, and so it hruic turned out. In
today's dispatch, I propose to
deal with Japan's language and
one or two of its customs.
Of its language, the less said
the better. The only way lor an
American to learn Japaneseis to
have been born In Japan f) years
ago. lt is now too lateforthat. We
inust do as best we can.
The best way to read a passage
In a Japanese magazine or new·
spaper ts to have a Japa~~ese
read it to you. Their written Jan·
guage Is composed of two alpha·
bets, one of 46 characters and the
other o!23 characters, ~Jus an es·
timated 3,000 Chinese ideo·
grams. Againt these difficulties,
the mastery of Arabic is kinder·
garten stuff.
It is possible that with great

means, "I am sorry I cannot eat
to speak passable Japanese, though your raw fish; I ml!lht throw up if I
the prospect seems to me d:mbt1ul. tried." The "dozo" (outraged)
The Japanese have at least 94 ways means "You are standing on 11\Y
of saying "!," and we have yet to foot! " The word for thank you,
approach verbs. The verbs are "domo," must always be acmm· ~
beyond our reach anyhow.
panled by a look of gratitude. If you
Let us not he discouraged. Three want · to say "Thank you very
0!' tour ~stc words, plus 5,000 yen
much," say "Dorm alligator." You
for cab fare, will take ~u almost will have !!Onfused your ells .and
anywhere. The first word Is lilTS, and the .Japanese are accus"Ohayo," as !n Cleveland, 'lbledo tomed to this.
arid Dayton. It means "Good
So much for the Japanese
morning," The second essential language. Let us tum to customs.
word is uhaJ," as in "Hi, howr One notable custori) is the bow. That
yew?" It means "yes," but Jt,Js also Is bow as In how, now and row.
a mnversational )Xlsher in; a league Exoeptforthe auto wrestler, whom
with "yeah" and "uh·huh." You I watched In Kyotoooeevening, ~u
should also 111a5ter "d:&gt;mo" (thank rarely will see a fat Japanese. This
you) and "dozo" (please), andyoor is because they bow Incessantly to
ooe another. These are not little
vocabulary Is mmplete.
The important thing Is to speak chicken-bobs rt the head. These are
these words with expression. You full-fiedged bows from the waist,
cannot accomplish this by accent· feet tngether, hands clasped, eyes
!ng syllables, for the Japanese do dow!lwardly cast. In the major
not accent syllables. You must · hotels you will f!nd pretty girls who
achieve results by the look rn your will bow you Into an elevator and
face. Thus "dozo" (regretful) bow youaga!n getting cut. Walters

•

But Reagan's selection of Kozinski for the appeals coun seat has
languished in the Senate for more than four months -and it is becoming
Increasingly controversial because d the nominee's record over the past
four years.
Kozinski graduated first in his class at UCLA law school, worked lor the
prestigious Washington law fi!Tn of Covington &amp; Burling and served as a
clerk for Chief Justice Warren Burger.
He .ll'as a volunteer worker !n Reagan's l!m presidential campaign and
served In the White House legal counsel's office !nearly 1981. The president
'. then selected him to be special munsel to the Merit Systems Protection

·:. Board.

The SpeCial counsel Is supposed to protect the constitutional rights of

::·

: :federal employees, especially "whistleblowers" who frequently are
; ;!hreater!l!d with reprlsals alter they ex!XJse illegality, fraud or abuse of
· ·authority.
• During Kozinski's 14-month-Jong tenure !n 1981-82, approximately 1,500 .
; mmplalnts were filed by whistleblowers and other government workers
~ that they ha&lt;!, been victims of illegal personnel practices.
~
But, Kozinski's record In protecting those employees was abysmal. He
' called for corrective action In only one case d alleged Illegal reprisal and
~ oever recommended disciplinary action against managers accused of
I
: mistreating subordinates.
"Do you know if the lady of the house is in?"
• His lack of sympathy lor the workersmntrasted with his afftnlty for their
. bosses. He prepared a manual and mnducted seminars Instructing
:. managers and personnel o!l'icers how to suppress dissent within their
~ departments and agencies while evading the law protecting employees'
·· rights.
WASIDNGTON -In the face of a BrazU.
:: KozinSki's relations with his own employees were so 100r that more than
Mengele hunters. ·Besides, thliy
Yet
some
of
our
Intelligence
U.S.
pronouncement
that
Josef
::: tw()-thfrds quit or were fired. A former deputy, Jesse James Jr., says
say, he was an accomplished
Mengele is dead, we had the sources still are not mnvinred. The swirruner.
· Kozinski fired one woman only a month before she was scheduled to retire
temerity last June to suggest that medical evidence, they say, is
Now here are the latest reports:
: because of abselices she required to have cancer treatments.
the notorious Nazi war criminal cumulative but not specific. The
- The Israelis have refused to
· In defending his record, Kozinski told the Senate Judiciary Committee
might possibly be alive and thumb· documents and testimony don't close their file oo Mengele and have
:. that the special counsel's office was "!n disarray" when he took over and
lng
his nose at the world. Our always jibe with other, rmre
sent an expert back tn Brazll to
~:·we did the best we could with the tools at our disposaL"
suspicions
have now been height· authoritative evidence.
::: Since 1982, Kozinski has been chief judge rt the U.S. Claims Court, a
review the evidence.
They can't shake off the tantalizened by Intriguing new reports.
:. special tribunal for citizens with monetary claims against federal
- A source close to the Israeli
First, let us concede that the Ing suspicion that the evidence r1 !nvestlj!'atlon confided to us that the
:·departments and agencies. Kozinksi, however, has been a consistent
evidence of the death-caJ11) doc· Mengele's drowning bl 1979 muld Israeli' have obtained a 1982 letter
· ile!ender of the government, repeatedly rejecting Individual mmplaints.
tor's demise is Impressive. Fore' have been manufactured as part d
!n Mengele's handwrtt!ng. If the
: . In one notable case, he turned down an elderly woman's request for
nsic experts have examined some an elaborate hoax to throw off ·his letter can be authentlcatal, he
. federal reimbursement of the $11,500 !n legal lees she Incurred in proving
bones from a BrazUian grave an pursuers.
could rot hav~ drowned in 1979.
: ihat the Internal Revenue SeJVlce had wrongly demanded $4,700 !n taxes.
Just as several governments
concluded that they are Mengeie's
- Both Israeli and American
·: The Senate Judiciary Committee approved Kozinski's nomination In
remains. Their findings are sup· · were closing In on Mengele, with Intelligence agencies have picked
: mid-September but It Is not likely to be considered soon by the full Senateported by letters and other docu· mllltons of dollars In reward money up reports of Mengele slghtlngs In
: and there is growing opposition to confinnation among the legislators.
ments provided by Mengele's on his head, the 1979 grave suddenly Paraguay In the ll@s. ·The latest
family, plus the testimony of those gave up its bones. The tim!ng was was an August 1984 QA dispatch
who purportedly knew him In too mnvenient to satisfy some that "unconfirmed slghtlngs of

how. Bank presidents bow. School
teachers bow. The whole country Is
mnstantly engaged in the bends.
One other custom should be
remarked; Tipping is a no·no. On
our llrst evening in Tokyo, Wtaware
of this Wlbeilevable practice,'[ lelia
tip of 3,000 yen for the waiter. I
pledge you my word, the fellow
came ruM!ng alter us, caught up
with me at the elevator and tried to
give It ~ck. It Is the most
unheard-of thing I ever heard of.
The Japanese are a tidy people.
They also are a rmst obedient
people. I have been taking long
walks through oowntown Tokyo at 6
!n the rmrn!ng. The streets are
deserted - not a car !n sight- but
the few Japanese pedestrians
abroad at that hour rigorously
observe the j'Walk" and uDon 't
Walk" signs. Americans will 'find
this rmst peculiar.
I have Inquired Into the status of
women In -contemporary Japanese
society, and I am told it Is changing
but not cbarigtng much. ·In the
House of Representatives, only
eight of the 511 members are
women. The number of women
doctors and lawyers gradually
Increases, but the tendency Is for
women to enter the labor force alter
graduation from high school or
college, to work for a few years, and
then to retire for marriage and.the
rearing of chUdren. The average
married couple, I read In the
papers, has 1.3 children and would
like to have three. The kids are
adorable. They all look like Japanese dolls.
One more observation and weare
done. The other evening I went to a
baseball game between the Nippen
Fighters and the Nanshu Braves.
Baseball is a national obsession In
these parts, but the Japanese
version differs from ours !n one
remarkable respect: When a foul
~11 Is hit into the stands, the fan
who picks it up is expected to give it
to an usher who then tosses it ~ck
to the baUboy. My host said that had
been the practice for generations.
"Ah, so," I said. That's another
phrase I have mastered.Some folks
have a knack lor foreign language,
and some folks don't.

.- .

.·· .

MIDDLEPORT STORE ONLY

·'

Fee proposal too high

~Today ip history

.

,

The Soviets believe, rightly or
wrongly, that If the United States
proceeds with the defensive shield
which "Star Wars" promises, this
would place them in grave danger.
They fear that it Would destroy the
mutual deljrrence that now rests
on the assuthptlon that neither side
could aitack the other without
Inviting its own destruction.If "Star
Wars" were !n ~ace. say the
Soviets, the United States could hit
them with a first strike, knowing
that we were sate against a Soviet
reprisal. Thus the prospect rl. "Star
Wars" offers the Soviets only two
acceptable alternatives: bulld a
similar system or Increase their
offensive rntsslle power. In either
case, the economic mst would be
enormous:
Since research cannot be reliably
verified, It Is Impractical to propose
to the cold warriOrs !n the Reagan
adm!nlsiration that they abandon
"Star Wars" research. But 'It the
Reagan people can be persuaded
that the last thing the United States
needs is a· bigger arms race and a
bigger deficit with all Its dire
mnsequenoes, . perhaps the proposed compromise will have some
appeal .
In his recent oodress at the
United Nations, Soviet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze
emphasized that the Soviels have
ma&lt;~e a number of. substantive
proposals relative to the Geneva
negotiations. There was doublless a
heavy political rmUve behind the
Soviet tnltlatives, but some ofthem
are well worth testing by the
Amet;lcan negotiators.
~agan has said: "At Geneva,
we're In the best position In rmre
than a generation to ac))ieve real
• reductions-of nuclear weapons. All

6-16

. r~
;, · a- ~

I

PEPSI
DIET PEPSI
DIET PEPSI FREE

CAPRI
SUN DRINK

7-UP

10-pk. Choice of 5flavors.

-

239

2.00 Mail·in Rebate Available.

TRUMP PLAYING CARDS

FOLD-UP
UMBRELLAS

ULTRA
WIPES
.

Men's or Ladies' styles.

Strong, absorbent,
reuseable all-purpose
cloths. 8 pack.
'
59¢ Value

4.95 Value

LIMITED
TIME

·3 99

Fun for all ages!
Easy to play.

No Coupon Needed · ·
. 49e Value

6 PAIRS ,
TUBE SOCKS '

3

ISOPROPYL

RUBBING
ALCOHOL

Men's or Boys' sizes.

16

·1 00

For
No Coupon Needed

oz.

No Coupon Needed
62-B

GOODNEWS
RAZORS

PLANTERS
PEANUTS

5 plus 1free!

24 oz. dry roasted or
cocktail peanuts.

1.00 Mlil~n Reblll Avllllble

4.95Value

2
FOR
396 . $100

1.29

74-A

279·:
'

Sidewalk Sale

T~URSDAY

&amp; FRIDAY

LUNCHEON
PLATES

NG

DOVE
SOAP

Package of 20 Chinet
brand plates.

MR. BIG PAPER TOWELS

74(

Bath Size
4.7Soz.
Reg: SJ06 .

$169

3 Roll Pack

1.69 Value

~:

MARCAL BATH .TISSUE

$199

8 Roll Pack

139

No Coupon Needed

I,

GE crings good things to life.

Stereo sound you
can t-ake along!

-.

BliCK and Silver color

'

G.E.
List

9911

1

Twin Pack
26 oz•

•

DRAWING EACH WEEK IN OCTOBER

$79''
WIREBOUND ·
NOTEBOOK .
70 sheet theme book.
Wide or narrow rule.
5!Jt:Value

"Doctor, does knowing the atomic ·structure

ol the common cold virus help us to better un-

.,' '

J

3.39Value

100

A1dlo/Casselle Recorder
H21t

!

1quart All Season 10W40
motor oil. Great savings!
sse Value

No matter where you go, this GE componenl music system
can go along to provide super stereo sound I Oetachat&gt;le
sp&lt;~akers have 5" woofers and Plezo tweeters. Latch them to
the center music system and take it along with the_conven·
ient carry handle. Six-pushbu.tton caSHUt tlp&lt;~rat1on; LEOs .
for battery condition and FM sloreo. Bu1lt·in condenser mt·
c:rophone . cusnlon eject. Direct " on-air" recor~ing . automa·
tic stop at end of lap&lt;~ . Full One-Year Warranly.

derstand CHICKEN SOUP?"

CITGO
MOTOR OIL

3.29 Value

OE Portable Component
Music: Syttem
AM/FMIFM Stereo

Berry's 'World

Sl :~

2BAGS

;·~~
.,

oz.

Mengele were reported In Paraguayan border cities.?
- The CIA also learned from
members of Paraguayan dictator
Alfred Stroessner's staff that "Mengele sent correspondenoe, Including
Christmas cards, to them from
Portugal untU late 19~." He
reportedly traveled back and forth
between Portugal and Brazil.
- Some Israeli authorities, ac·
cording to a source who has talked
to !hem. believe Mengele is alive
today, hld!ng In Paraguay.
-Secret CIA cables, meanwhile,
report that Mengeie has been
trafficking In drugs under the alias
"Enrique Waldman"_or "Henrique
Wollman.''
·

we need Is a seri6us approach by deployment of U.S. medium-range
the Soviets."
. nuclear systems."
Consider, then, tbeserecentst~s
3. "Our moratortum m any
highlighted by Shevardnadze:
nuclear explosions."
1. "The decision not to place
These and other Soviet !nitiatlves
anti·satellite, weapons In outer Indicate that the Soviets are trying
space so long as the Wilted States tp _set forth a "serious approach" to
does not take such a step."
the Geneva talks.! beltevethatthey
2. "The suspension of further have opened the door to reaspona.
implementation of our countermea. ble compromise.
sures !n Europe caused by the

Pure and white. Regular
size (300 pulls) . Triple
size (100 puffs) .

786 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPOU

Soviet-U.s. stalemate_____Ge_o....=:_rge_M~cG..:...:ov:..:..:e:.:..:.:.rn

Looking at the recent statements
of Soviet and American leaders me .
could easily mnclude that the
· . · I am writing about the raising canvass the county and fine the forthcoming summit meeting of
: til dog ,license fees. It seems to viola tors there was quite a rush President Reagan and Soviet Pres!·
: me In the present state of the to the courthouse to beat the dent Mikhail Gorbacbev is headed
· economy !n Meigs County a dou· deadline.
We have a fulJ.tlme dog war· for a hopeless stalemate.
&gt;))ling of the dog llcense fees Is a
The Sovie~ mntend that there
::mue far out. The only thing den nol\'. Why· can't he be on pa· can be no meaningful arms negotia ·
· gained will be more taxes for the troi every working day looking tlons unless Reagan abandons his
!or unlicensed dogs?
: )aw abid'ing citizen .
If we must have a raise, why "Star Wars" proposal. Reagan
' ;. A reeent article in The Sentinel
counters that this is something he is
) ;tated our fees were lower than double it?
Whatever happened to 50 WtwiU!ng to bargain away. The
c)lther counties. Who cares' I llve
Soviets add that if the United States
-:'in Meigs County!
Jim Lucas, would give up "Star Wars," they
· : As I recall, this summer when
Ru !land, Ohio would be willing to sign a verifiable
:It was announced they would
agreement calling for deep cuts In
ctfensive missiles.
• I
...'.
I personally think It would be !n
the interests of the United States to
seize the Soviet &lt;i'fer. But I wrtte as
one who regards the "Star Wars"
project as an enonnously· costly
· :: Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 8, the 28lst day of 1985 with 84 to fullow.
boondoggle that would escalate the
' · The moon is In Its last quarter.
federal deficit, heat up the arms
; The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
race and reduce national security.
: The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn,
Reagan apparently believes that
Those born on this date are under the sign r1 Libra. They Include Worl!l Ills proposal is worth the added tax
:war I Dying ace Eddie Ricken~cker bl 1800, Argentine dictator Juan and debt burden. The Soviets
'Peron !n 1895, pioneering South African heart-transplant surgeon Dr. regard lt as a mUitary threat. So If
thristiaan Barnard In 19:12 (age 63), ctvU rights leader Jesse Jackson !n the concept is taken seriously by
~941 (age 44), and comic actor Chevy Chase in 1943 (age 42):
both Reagan and Gorbachev, the
·• On this date In history:
rest of us must take It seriously, no
.: ' In 1871, the Great Chicago Fire started. lt destroyed more than 17 ,OOJ matter how foolish It appears.
:.buUdings; kUled more than 250 people and left !fi,OOJ homeless.
• On that assumptiOn, I believe
- In 1918, Sgt. Alvin York of Tennessee became a World War I hero by there is still a possible basis for
~capturing a hill In the Argonne Forest of France, killing~ memy !llldlers
mmpromlse at Geneva: a willing·
"and captur!ng132-others- singie-handedly.
ness on the part of the Soviets to
·:: In 1919, the House and Senate passed the VolStead Actrprohlbltlng the enter Into a deep mutual reduction
Sale or consumption of almholic beverages !n the United States.
of offensive rnlssil!!s In return for an
:· In 1942, the firSt mnt!ngent of World W~r n WAVES - Women absolute commitment by Reagan
: ~ppolnted - for Vountary Emergency Service- began naval tralni1tg at
that the United States will not go
·Smith College In Massachusetts.
· ·
beyond the research stage on "Star
·· In 1984, candy bars were found laced with cyanide In an extortion plot in Wars." Each side would agree mt '
~ :lapan.
·
to develop, test or deploy anU·
·. A thought for the day: Spanish philosopher George Santayana said, "The . satellite weapons of any kind. The
)ioung man who has not wept IS a savage, and the old.man who will not
mllltarlzation of spaee would be
laugh
Is
a
fool."
halted except. for research.
. '
.~·.

COSMmc PUFFS

•Cheese Balls
•Cheese Puffs
•Cheese Popcorn
•Butter Popcorn

. PHARMACY

Mengele reports._____;______:·J~ac:...:...k_And..:. ;.:_;_;_ers::.:.:on-=-

:I.etter to editor

The Daily Serrtinei-Page~3

Ohio

CABANA.
·FOOD
SNACKS

-

diligence an American muld learn

'' .

39c

. A SONY
Walkman Stera~

'

DURING THE MONTH OF ·ocTOBER
STOP AT ANY Of OUR REGISTRARS
AND PICK UP A KEY TO OUR
TREASURE CHEST: IF THE KEY OPENS
THE DOOR YOU WIN PRIZES INSIDEII
i WIN GIFT CERTIFICATES
FROM PLEASERS
•

$49.95
Retail
Vat~e

Walkman stereo cas,sene player
Compact size/lightweight
Tape selector (normal/metal)
Automatic shut-off
• OperadOnlbattery indicatot' LEO
• St8l9o mini headphone jack (X 1)
•
•
•
•

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 8, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Blue
Jays
seek
first
•
wm over fonner Red

Meigs golfers qualify
for regional playoffs

•

t

TORONTO (UP!)- The Toronto
• Blue Jays tonight wUI tey lor a
season first: a victory over a Kansas
City Royals left·hander.
Installed as 8-5 favorites to defeat···
the Royals In the best-cf-seven
American League Championship
Series, the Blue Jays wUI be trying
fo~the 11t.h time this yeartoconquor
a Kansas City left-handed starter.
Charlie Lelbrand~ 17-9, a journeyman cuJVe-baller obtained by the
Royals from the Cincinnati Reds,
will go for Kansas City In the opener
against the Blue Jays' ace right·
bander, Dave Stleb,l4-13.
Leibrandt Is the flrst of the three
southpaws Manager Dick Howser
Intends to throw at Toronto. Bud
Black IS penciled In for Wednesday
afterooon, and after right-hander
Bret Saberhagen starls Friday In
Game Three 3, lefty Danny Jackson
Is slated for Saturday In Game 4.
Leibrandt, Black and Jackson
combined lorflvevlctorieswithout a
loss against the Blue Jays, and
figured In live other games against
Toronto this season, complilnga 1.97
ERA over 77 2-3"1nnlngs.
• BlueJaysmanagerBobCoxcan't
understand why his 99-game
winners have been having so much
trouble with Royals southpaws,
especiallY since they hold a• ~23
advantage against other lefthanded starters In the league.
Weather, which couki become a
factor If Toronto succeeds In Its bid
to take part In Its first World Series,
has been little less than perfect. So
far, temperatures have been more
suitable for baseball than football.

nine-year history the BlueJayshave
been In the playctfs, whereas the
Royals have been In five d the last
10. Only once has Kansas.City made
lt·to the World Series, and fell to the
Philadelphia Pltlllks In 198J.
The only lime Cox has been In the
playctfs was In 1977 as a ~Dach with
the New York Yarikees,'Who beat
the Royals. Howser has been In
three playolfs as manager of the
Yankees and Royals without win·
nlnga penrumtInall nlneplayolfgameshe'sbeen
Involved, Howser has ended up on
the losing side.
"I guess you'd have to say I'm
about due," Howser said.
More than Kansas Oty's left·
handed pitching, Toronto ls concerned about George Breit's recent
hot streak. Brett hit at a .400 pace .
down the stretch to help the Royals
take three wt of four games !rom
the California Angels and two of
three from the Oakland A's last
week.
"We're ootgolngto let him beat us
If we can help It," CQK said. "lf the
situation-cans for us to ptch around
him, weU,tliat'swhatwe'lldo."
Brett finished with a .335average,
second In the.Americlm League to
Ba;tiJn's Wade Boggs, and his
performance ·against the Angels
and A's the ,past week Included 11
RBI and five home !111lS, two
Inside-the-park.
" U they're going to pitch around
me," Brett said, "that'D give
George Orta and Frank White some
better baUs to hit."
Orta will substitute at designated
hitter A:lr Hal McRae, who Is
sidelined with a muscle pull In his
side.
,
"It's not that bad," McRae said
about his Injury. "I can still hit with

PORTSMOUTH - The Meigs
golf team qualified lor regional
play by finishing In a fourth place
tie with host Portsmouth In the
Class AA district meeting held
here last Friday.
· Washington Court House was
the district winner with asizzling
. 316 while HUisboro followed with ,
a 320. Galllplls came In with a 336
while Portsmouth and Meigs
each had :fiG's. All of these teams
will advance Into regional competition as a flth place or better
was needed to continue.
Also competing In tbe districts
were Minford (359), Belpre (363)·,
Jackson (364). Chesapeake (364),
and Trimble (37U J.
The reglonals will be held at
the Lancaster Country Club this
Friday. Meigs will warm up lor

'

~..Deal

Jim's Gulf ........... ................................ l5
Middleport Lunch Room ............. .........13
Smith-Nelson Motors .... ...................... . 13
Htab Team Series - Team No. ~ aJtiO:
H!ih Team Game- Team No.~ mi.
Htah Individual Series- Debt Hensley,
5117: Pat Carson, 523; Ray Roach :141, Bob
Hensley 5'13.
IIJ&amp;h Individual Game -Ray Roach 220
Ruaa canon -217: O.bl Henaley al5 Pat

PREPARES FOR AL "PlAYOFFS- Royals lltlrd baseman,.._
v-• ••
Brett lakes baiting practice durlnc aUght workout Monday aftemoon.
'The Royils ~ the Blue J•"" bt the 11rst game of the American
Leacue cbamplonllhlp aeries tonlpt.
UPI.
.....,._

Carson 190.

•

No.8, headlnglntoSaturday'sgame-l
at Penn State.
No. 9 Nebraska jumped one spot,
and Brigham Young Improved two .
places toroum out the top 10.
No. 11 Aubum bounced ba~k from
a loss to Tennessee to win Saturday
and cOmb from 13th, while 12thranked Air Force leaped from No.
15. Tennessee moved uponeposltlon
toNo.l3andl4th·rankedTexasshot
up from No. 16.
After Ohio State, No.l6 UCLA, No.
17 Georgia and No. l8 Baylor all rose

~163pound

Junior tailback

I

The Daily Sentinel

3. Mlch~an !101 t4.01 ~ ~

4. FlorldaSrartlHt-()1 f11 II
~. C.Jahm Stt{1H4-01

413 6

6. Pe-nn Slal£1!4-{l)
7. Arkansas rt-Or
8. Alabama r4-{l r
9. Netnslca IJ.ll

~

POSTMASTER: Send address hanges

to The DaUy Sentinel, lll
Pomeroy, Ohio ml!l.

Mill Subscrlp&amp;lons
Imide Ohio

13 Weeks ..... .. ......... .. ................ $14.56
26 Weeko ..... .. ................. ...... .. .. $29.12
52 Weeks ........... .... ...... ... .......... $S8.24

$181

15.0hbSiarl' ll-ll . 83 3
16. UCLA rJ.t -lr
e 17
17.Georglar3-11
l&gt;l8
18. BayU lf-11
~ 1'1
19. I.OublarlaSII1!2•11 Zl 9
JJ. lndlana 111-01
10 :Jl
Ottw&gt;n 1'1'('tMf1a 1101n: ArizOna, Army,
Cot.nro. llllnok. Kanw., Miami rF1a.1.
Mlnrnula , SaurhPrn Cal, Tf'WI.Y:M. Ulab
and Wa.,hlng~on.
,.

Out11lde Ohio

13 Weeks ........... . .......... ......... . $1s.60
26 Weeks ... .. ........... ............. ..... $31.20
52 Weeks .................................. $.19.80

"Servke Wllh A Smile"

Located I• laclne, OH.

1.

C'mon America, Drive Over To·

Ttre$tone
Lowest Price This Year!

JIUIIor center

..
-

OUR RnREADS CAllY A
NEW nRE WARRANTY.
. ,,~ .
THEY NOW.)IA~E
·:9~
ROAD HAZAID WARRANTY

·
General
Tire
Sales
"WHtt TIN R16Ht Mllfl TH RHi."

-N. tncf AYE.

tf2-7161 MiDDLEPOII, OH. ·

~

CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH
DODGE INC.

339 S. 31D MIDDIIPOIT

••4-Cyl.
6-Cyl.
B·Cyl.

D78x14
E78x14
F78x14
G78x14
H78x14
G78x11i
H78x16

COIPOIAnOII

29.95
,34.95
39.95

GIJIIIIMPAm

L78d&amp;

Black wall

,Whitewall·

t27.00
$28.00
$32.00
$33.00
$34.00
13&amp;.00

. $29.00
$30.00
$33.80
836.00
$36.00
$37.00
$37.00
$37.00
837.00
$39.00

$3&amp;.00
U8 .00
U7.00

Includes; for enaints with elttlrcnic ltniti:ln:

Offer good tor Mopar/Champion spark·
plug,: $1 per tlfug tor tour, $1.25 per plug
. o.ldjud idle speod
•Set li'o~i
tor "'· or $1.50 per ~ug for eigflt spark
;Inspect em~s control system st&amp;ndud igni- llfug,. Muimum ol $12 per household.
&lt;4·
tia_n or vehicles equiJI!Ied with crulertl'lln two
bmel c~rburelor, silchtry)ilher.
•lnst1B MOPAR!Chlmpion IPI~ Pklts

.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Washingtoq Redsklns hope their
season has just begun.
The defending NFC East champions stumbled through their first
four games, racklngupa1-3record,
but recovered their balance Mon·
day night to thrash the St. Lou Is
Cardinals 27-10.
Washington averaged just 11.5
points per game entering Monday's
contest, and quarterback Joe Theis·
mann had just two touchdown
passes and nlne'lnterceptlons.
Thelsmann bounced back with
two touch~wn passes and ran lor
anotlier score against St. Louis. He
linlshed 11-of·ID for 83 yards and no
Interceptions.
Washington's ground game, rated
No. I In the NFC entering the
weekend, produced a Redsklns'
first: two backs chalking up

100-yard rushing performances In their own ~ in their first nJne
the same game.
possessions. By the time they got
George Rogers ran lbr 104 yards good field position with a Rogers
on 25 carries, and John Riggins tumble In the fourth quarter, they
added 103 yards ll117 attempts. The already traDed ID-3.
performances were the first tOOWashington starled three olthelr
yard outings for Washington this · llrst four possessions In St. ~Is
season.
territory.
RFK Stadium Is becoming someQuarterback Nell Lomax had hsl
thing or a morgue for the Cardinals. worst performance of the season.
Their 1984 season came to an end He was Intercepted four times,
here In a heart-breaking 29-27 loss threw oo. touchdowns, and com·
that denied ihe.m the NFC East title pleted 18-0t-33 passes lbr 216 yards.
and locked them ~t d tbe playoffs.
J..cmax suffered a pinched nerve
In that game, kicker Nell O'DoIn his left Shoulder late In the fourth
noghue missed a hurry-up 50-yard quarter. Scott Brunner, his replace·
lleld goal attempt as lime ~plred. ment, promptly threw an IntercepMonday, the loss robbed tli&gt;m of a' tion. Wide receiver Roy Green
shared the NFC East lead wlth4-l contributed to the turnover count
Dallas.
wllh a fumble.
The Cardinals were holed up their
A14-yard Thelsmann bootleg and
own end of the field most ilf the a 33-yard Mark Moseley Oeld goal in
evening, starting at no better than
the first quarter bunt a 10-0 lead.

MUD &amp; SNOW IE11EADS NOW IN STOCK

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

606 EAST MAIII

992-2094

POMEROY

SanguUlen and$100 &lt;XX! as successor
&lt;o the late Danny Murtaugh
·
Though Tanner made It ·clear It
was the new ownership that wanted .
him ru 1, It was lameduck president
Dan Galbreath who announced with· ·
obvious reluctance that Tanner •
would not fuHill the two years
remaining on his oft-rene;ved PI·
rates' contract.
Galbreath couldn't quite bring ·
himself to use the words "fired," .
"ousted" or "dismissed."
"We've.concluded that in the best
interest of the franchise and of.
basebaU 1n Pittsburgh that a ·
complete change is needed," be
sa id. "We've decided a change In
fleld manager Is in the !Fst Interest
of the Pirates In 1986, though
Chuck's contract with the team wlll
be honored. 1 tell you this with a
great deal of emotion and sadness.".
Galbreath and outgoing general
manager Joe L. Brown who has
signed on with the new o;..,ers as a
consultant. will head the search for
both a new GM and field manager.
They sald they would pursue both
during the National and American
teague playoffs and the World
Series.

riiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiii

yards on only 14 canles (19
yards per carry), whUe scam-

pering for four WICOntested
touchdown rum. On the season
Bls8ellls now averaging 9 yanls
per cany. The younger Bissell Is
also a lavorite tar8"1 ol his older
brother Royce, a combination
llsat helped Ea!item cl8im a
tri-SVAC championship last season.. BlsseU Is the son ol Doug
and CarolYn BlsseU of Tuppers
Plains.

631 JACMSON PIKE · At36 WEST

.......4-16·4524

If you have a safe driving record, you merit
something special when it comes to your Aulo
Insurance ... top-flight
·coverage, low preferred
rates and service you
can depend on. That's
exactiy the combination
of benefits you'll receive
as a policyholder of our
agency and the State
Auto Companies.

FROZEN

MEAT .PRODUCTS
NOW AVAILABLE
At

Sun Fun Pennzoil
In Racine, Oh.
Priced very reasonable:
Fish squares &amp; fantails.
pizzaburgers, steak burg·
ers 8t nuggets, hamburgers, com dogs. hot dogs,
chicken fillets and nuggets, veal pizza, onion
rings .&amp; mushrooms . .

While Supply
Lasts!
Size
A78x13
B78x13

CIIIYSUI

Redskins pound· Cardinals

Reduced prices on Deluxe
Champion® blackwalls arid
whitewalls! Buy now!

614·992·6421

Get A Retrea
:for Econohly!

Trade Hubbanl, Tammy 'lbelss,Rachel Reiber ,JW
Nease.Lorl Adams, and Tammy Adkins. Back
row-Juanita Frederlck,Joyce Foreman,Mandy HW,
Alana Lyons,Becky Adklns,and Wendy Wolle.'lbe
T~madoelies are coached by Suzanne Wolfe.

.

\

Junior end

•

SOUlliERN VOlLEYBALL - The Southern
Tomadoeite Varsity Volleyball team will he
completing Its regular season lids week in
. · p.,Parallon lor the upcoming Sectional Tournament.
Members ol this year's varsity team are, front,

DELUXE CHAMPION
SALE

$25.95

COOPER

No subscriptions by mall pel'mltted In
towns where home carrier servic(&gt; Is
available.

8 PACK- 16 OZ.

11. Air FOf'('fi!~OI
176 l'\
ll.T'-"'ml"ut'•!! 2-311 14Ui
14 Tf'Us t3-0)
97 16

-4.00 Rebate

J118011 Bu8h

urt St. ,

Subscribers not desiring to ~i' the carrter may remit In ad \lance' direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
basts. Credit will be given carrier each
month.

s,u'•' PEPSI

10. 8rlghamYng(4·11 ZJJ~
II . AubJrn (J.li
70) 13

•

·

Member: United Press Intern tional,
Inland Dally Press Association, d the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nat nal
Advertising Representative, Bran am
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Ave ue,
New York, New York 10017.

PENNZOIL

7
342 11
3«1 8
~ 10

TV•·•

s-to.mpound

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

SUN FUN

l . atlaMma (14)12-l}) 51l 2

2995

Donnie Becker
6-0,1CS~

Ushtng Company/Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156 . Se-

and I'K'Ofds In !llll't'ftlthts. 1&gt;1&amp;1 pctn!l
lbalfd on 1S points fer lin! ~. 'W for

UP TO sn lElA 'lEI
MOPAI/CHAMPIOIII

I·

Publlshed Jevery afternoon, Monday '

through FMday, 111 Court St ., Po-.
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·

NE'N VORK IUPU - Thl&gt; United Pftss
Board of Cor.C'h~ Top II
rolk'Xt' toot baD ratr.KS. wtrh nnr-place vOlts

.

,,

A Dlvlsloa of MuUlmedla, lne.

Ohio.

dismissal Monday. "WewalteduQtli
the season Is over, and It's a custom
In baseball that you must ask other
general manager Dick Wagner, clubs permission to talk &lt;o em·
who has offered former manager ployees. We'~ begin that process
Bob LIIUs a front office job.
very quickly.
Lillis, 55, was named .manager In
"Probably some time In October
we'Uhaveanewmanagerlnplace," mid 1982, and had been with the
said Wagner,who announced LilUs' team since Its inception In 1962.
Wagner abo said Dents Menke,
Les Moss and Matt Galante all
agreed to new contracts, and would
continue as coaches during the
coming season. ·
Meanwhile In Pittsburgh, Chuck
Tanner, who guided the Pittsburgh
Pirates to the 1979 World Series
championship, parted company
with his hometown team Mon,day
night under sad circumstances.
Tanner, 56, of New Castle, Pa. ,
said he expected to take anotJv;r
major-league managerial job, even
thoughhehadalwayshopedtoflnlsh
his 16-season managerial career In
his "backyard."
Several teams, including the
Atlanta Braves, San Dlegn Padres
and New York Yankees, have been
reported to be Interested In hiring
Tanner, who has a career record of
1,19':1-1,113, Including six seasons
BREAKS RECORD - Aewith the Chicago White Sox and one
oordlng to reports from Eastern
with the Oakland A's. Hewas71H85
IDgh School, Sophomore runwith the Pirates, who obtalned him
rilng back Brent lllsseU set a new
Oakland for catcher Manny
schOol reeonl tn last Friday's
53-0 foolb&amp;ll triumph over Kyger
Creek. Achieving qulle an lndl\'ldual leal, Bissell gained 266
managertsexpectedtobenam~by
the end of the month, said Houston

1I-~====::====~

lntern~~tklnal

.

I

HOUSTON (UP!) -AnewAstros

For Further Information
CALL 992-6839
or 992-5896 ,

College ~atings

lt ---------·----------------------·I

I

s
n yraCUSt

SUBSCRIPTION R~TES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ... ......... .. ..................... $1.10
One Month .. .......... .. .. ........ ......... $4,80
Oneo Year ................................. $57.20
SINGLII COPY
PRICE
Dally .................................. 25 Cents

r------------------------------,
COUPON COUPON COUPON COUPON
1

HueyEasm

I

,Dawn Johnson,and Becky Evans. Back row.Crystal · ·
HIU,LesUe Duddlng,Becky Winebrenner, Wendy · ·
Frye;JennUer Amold,and Tanun~ Holtw.

Lillis, Tanner lose managerial posts_·.

At Tht Carleton· School

r------------1

I
Kevin Meadows
6-0, 245pound
Senior laclde

'

Grueser,Tracy Beegle,Karla Smlth,Patrece Circle-

TUES., OCT• S
7: 00 PMo

one place. Louisiana State, a loser
Saturday to Florida, crumbled from
ntnt.h to 19th. Indiana held at No. Ill.
There were three Big Eight teams
In thetllp10, whlletlve Southeastern
Conference and four Big Ten clubs
made the ratings.
The top four team; appeared on
an 42 ballots.

S«''r\4 t'fc. l. and In! Wf'lfil:'1 rankfn~r.
I. !OWl (161 tHh
584 l

·.

SOU'IHERN RESERVE'! ~Making up.liM year's
SoUthern Junior Varsity squad are,froni,Angle

(USPS IU·HI)

There were no new teams In the
Top Ill from last week, but Ohio State
tumbled from third to No. 15 with Its
loss to Illinois.
Michigan jumped two spots to No.
3, getting tO llrst-place votesand524
points. No. 4 Florida State and No. 5
Oklahoma State received ooe first·
place vote apiece.
Sixth-ranked Penn State rose one
spot, and No. 7 Arkansas rroved up
four places. Alabama remained at
I

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Wlille series switches to St. Lou Is. The NL pitching.
McGee has outrun even post-season East champion CardinalS won two
"!hate to use excu!jes, but we lost
pressure.
of six games at Dodger Stadium this three straight to them after the
"The toughest part Is over. The year.
All-Star break, andthat'snotagood
playoffs and World Series are fun,"
The Cardinals, picked by many to test. You never know how a team
the St. Louis center fielder· said finish In the lower half of the East, will play right after the break."
·Monday as the Cardinals continued won their division after a tight
Pitching and Los Angeles catcher
preparation for the Los Angeles stretch run with the New York Mets . Mike Scloscla 's abti.tty Ill slow the&gt;
Dodgers In Wednesday night' s flr ~t The Dodgers, equally maligned, Cardinals' toadrunners wUI be the
game of the National League . used a blistering pace after the All keys to the series.
Champl1llrShlp Series.
Star break to win the West.
"Speed puts pressure on. the
"It's great to be on top of your
"The Cardinals, they'rethe best In defense, but It also runs you Into
dlv!slon.lt'sfunny, but itseetnsllke the league In hitting and In defense, some outs," said Scloscla, hoping St.
it's only beginning. Spring "tralll/llg and they have two 21-game winners Louis' speed works In the Dodgers'
(Tudor and Andujar)," said Los favor.
seems years ago."
Angeles
manager Tom Lasorda. "It
' Both teams scheduled . late·
I..IIS Angeles right fielder Mike
afternoon workouts In Dodger will be a very, very exciting Marshall, who set career highs In
· Stadium, where the best-of-seven playoff."
average, .293), homers, 28), and
The- praise was returned by St. RBi. 95, despite missing 28 games
series opens Wednesday night at
8: ro EIYr with the Cardinals' John Louts manager Whitey Herzog.
mostly because of a mid-season
"They're
tough,
let's
face
It,"
Tudor, 21-8, opposing the Dodgers'
·appendectomy, Is counting on the
Herzog said. "They're used to the Dodgers scoring runs In bunches.
Fernando Valenzuela, 17-10.
Game 2 wUI be played Thursday pressure. They do have a lot of
"They have the speed, but WP.
night when Joaquin Andujar will veterans. We played them tough all have the power," he said. "We'llsee
face Orel HerShiser, before the year. They've got awfully good what happens."

Starting

-

~

The Daily Sentinel Page-5 ;

Dodgers; Cards square-off.
Wednesday in NL playoffs

KARATE CLASSES

still top college team

IOW8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BEGINNING

Tony'tCarry Out. .. .. .. ."...... ... .......... ...... l8
~ ..•.. •.•. ..... ..•• ..... .......•. .... .................... 17
1

week.

,.

bowling

-:;.,~., Club.................... .... ....... ....... r.Jo

I
(Meet the Meigs Marauders

'•

Earlier In the week, Harrison
and Long each claimed all·TVC
honors. Harrison became a member ol the all-league team lor the
third straight year while Long was
honored for the second year In a
row.

M~ :ft.~UII

The Haw keyes, who Improved to
4-0, received 16&lt;t42lirst-ptacevotes
• and564 points Monday from the UP!
Board ol Coaches to edge Oklahoma. The· Sooners received 14
llrst-place votes and 571 points Ill
rearnln No. 2 l:&gt;rlhe fourth straight

1

Parker Long led the Marauders In the district meet with an 1'6
while Shawn Baker came In with
an Ill. Marty Hart had a 90, Rodd
Harrison a 93, and Lee Powell a
111. All are seniors except Ha·r t
who Is a junior. _

11.\RLY WIIDNIISMY

YORK (UP!) - Iowa
Cox was concerned neither with
needed
24
years to regain college
weather nor the ability .of his
lootbaU'sNo.l
ranking. Chuck Long
left-handed hitters to bandleKansas
madesuretheHawkeyes'stayatthe
City's pitching.
top was longer this time.
"WU!Ie Upshaw can hit left· lt."
Long, the Hawkeyes' ctynamic
This marks the first year or
banders good," Cox said. "Lloyd
senior
quarterback, threw lor 390
MosebY Isn't bad agatnst left· best&lt;l-seven format tor League
yards
and lour touchdownS, and
banders, and Ernie Whitt can hit the Championship Series, replacing
rambled 2 yards for a score with 27
'
long-baD elf a left-bander ooce In a bi!st&lt;i-flve sets.
seconds
left Saturday to propel Iowa
Last year, the Royals finished
whlle.
to
a
3531
victory over Michigan
"Our bench Isn't bad, either," he first In the AL West, oot_ were
State.
said. "CecU Fielder Is swinging real ellmlntaed In three stralght by the
The triumph kept the Hawkeyes
good, and Jeff Burroughs has been Detroit Tigers, who beat the San
Diego Padres In ftve games In the No. 1 tor the second straight week.
OK latelY."
Prior to this·year, the last time Iowa
This Is the first time In their World Series.
was the top-rated team was the first
J
week dthe 1961 season.
I.

the reglonals with a meet at Gal·
llpolls with the Blue Devils and
Ironton this Wednesday. A top
three finish will be needed In regional play to advance to the
state meet, which will be held the
week following.

Tuesday, October 8, 1985

214 EAST MAIN .
POMEROY
992 -.6687

St•teAuto
Insurance

Companies

SHOULD I TOUCH THE BODY?
ClAIMS POINTS CHAMPIONSHIP - Kenny Memorial Day and Labor Day Champkmslps.
Brewer of Columbus recently edged out Mike Lacey· Brewer drives a well-malntabted 1975 Chevelle,
to claim the 19811 Columbus Motor Speedway pobtts number 1.2 lhn1ted &amp;P9rtsman, and has been driving
champoinshlp doling the season championship races live years. Brewer Is the grandson rl Lildlle Clay ol
September 15. Kenn,y, Jr. Is the son ol Kenny and Pomeroy and Audrey Brewer ol Portland. Kenn,y
Gertrude Smith Brewer, fonnerly of Meigs County. Brewer, Sr. Is lhe owner and crew chlel of his !!On's
During the 1985 racing· season, Kesiny drove his carlimited sportsman to live f~ature wins, Including the

Schlichter waived
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) - In a
su~rise move and with lltte
comment. the lndlanapoUs Colts
Monday released former Ohio State ·
quarterback Art Schlichter.
Schlichter, attempting a comeback after almost one year d being
Idled by a suspension for galnbllng,
was cut by coach Rod Oowhower
who said three quarterbacks are a
luxury In professional rootbaU.
•

.,

Such superstition. have long since faded away, but
the question of touching the body of a deceased
lowd one remains . Though the practice is still common at some ethnic memorial services, some people
are yet uneasy about it.
· The decision $hould be based on how you feel at the
time - lor eumple, when paying last res~ects during a funeral service. listen to your own instincts
and do what you feel comfortable doing. We each
honor the dead in our own way.

~l~rtN~Pou lJ!PsA~~y~ES

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS .AND
LIGHT TRUCK ·nRES
.
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON.·SAT.; 8-B FRI . .

Your comments and questions are welcomed, and
will be answered in public , through this column or
privately.

$mice P/111• ••AH1ntion to Dtt,l/1
James N. Blower

PH. 742-3088

-

In the 17th century England, it was thought that
merely touching a dead body would cure a variety of
diseases. In Scotland, it was.believed necessary to
touch the body so ~s not to become haunted.

Muter Cord end .;,V.Ioo-.;W;•;;;tc;om;;;;,•-----~
'

Bill Blower

..•..
•

•

,,•

·.

•.'
"•
&gt;I

"•

.
•.

••
•
~

h
~

•

�Peg a 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Jacob Mattrew "Jake" Bush, 50,
Route 3. Racine, died Monday at the
Unlvet"slty of Kentucky, Albert
Chandler Medical Center, Lextng;ton, Ky.
A rural mall carrier and farmer,
he was born on Feb. 28, l93:i at
Racine, son of Roy H. Bush and
Constance Lewis Bush. He was an
elder, teacher and song leader at the
Mt. Olive Church, a veteran ct U.S.
Army, and a member of tre
Disabled American Veterans.
He. Is survived by his wife,
Suzanne Proffitt Bush, a daughter,
Carole Jean Bush, at home, three
sons and daughters-In-law, Don E .
and Mary Bush, Cheshire, Mart.tn
and Nadia Bush, Augsburg, Germany; and James Bush, Mtlllngton,
Tenn.; and two granchlldren,
Teresa Bush and Donald Bush, Jr.
Also surviving are stx brothers,
RobertofPomeroy; RoyctChester,
W. Va.; Charles, Ernest and
Lawrence of Racine; and George of
Dowagiac, Mich.; two sisters,
Bettie Plgott, Long Bottom; and
Clara Mae Mcintyre, Okeechobee,
Fla.; hls mother-In-law, Dorothy
Prollttt, Racine; an uncle, Edward
Bush, Racine; an aunt, Susan
Lewis, Coolville, and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services wO be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Mt. OUve ·
Community Church with Lawrence
Bush, pastor, oftlclatlng; Buiial wUI
be In the Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 9 p.m. Wednesday. ·
The body wUI be taken to tile church

for vlewtn~ one hour prered!ng the
service.

Cliffonl H. Rotkhold

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Rep.
Michael Fox, R-Hamllton, Monday
caJled upon Gov. Richard F. Celeste
to make the program that'lllstrll&gt;utes the federal handouts of butter
and cheese a more business-like
one.
Fox told a news conference he Is
trying to unravel "bureaucratic
chaos"lnOhlo'sTemporaryEmergency Food Assistance Program.
He said he wants the Celeste
administration to raise the status of
the program and deal. with food
outlets that distribute the food In a
more business-like way.
TEFAPdlstrlbuteschesse, butter
and other products from the federal
government to abou t 1.3 million
Ohioans.

Clifford H. Rockhold, 65, ofRt.l24,
ReedsvOie, died Monday afternoon
at Veterans Memortal Hospital.
· BornMay7,19aJ,tnReedsvllle,he
was a son of the late Marcellus and
Marteena Barber Rockhold. He
attended Eden United Brethren
Church and was a member of the
American CB Radio Associa tlon.
Survivors Include his wife, Hattle
Baker Rockhold; a son, Steve
Rockhold, at home; two daughters,
Mrs. Robert (Connie) Haynes,
Parkersburg, and Mrs Jerry (Bon·
nte) Richards, Long Bottom; and
seven grandchUdren.
1n addition tO his parents, Mr.
Rockhold was preceded In death by
(Continued from page 1)
three sons, a grandson, three sisters
county land for a new school site.
and two brothers.
Michael sald he ·hoped the school
Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday district can decide on the proposal
at Eden United Brethren Church by its Oct. 15 meeting.
with Rev. Roy Deeter officiating. · If the school district and county
Burial wUl be In Eden Cemetery. reach a quick agreement on theland
Friends may call at the White purchase, the sale proceeds could
Funeral Home, CoolvUie, Wednes· help end the county's financial
day from 24 and 7·9 p.m., and at the crisis.
church on Thursday for or!e hour
Michael sald the county land Is
prtor to the ttme ol services.
worth about $1BO,&lt;m.

"A history o! contusion and waste
has hampered the state's efforts to
meet the needs d the hungry," satd

Fox, a member o! the program's
advisory board.
The federally funded program,
which channels !ood trpm warehouses to 13 regional agents across
the state, has had at least a dozen
admlnlstratlva changes, Including
five directors and In three different
departments, since Its jnceptlon In
1982, Fox said.
The changes have angered regional agents, who havecornplalned
about the
. admin;:tlve shuffle,
use of federal rno
for unneceslt!!msandan tdated!ormula

lor detennlnlng Ire amount of food
needed, he sald.
Fox saldhedidn'tknowhowmany
people ,)lave gone hungrybecauseof
the bureaucratic problems, but said
agents at Ohio food banks have told
htnn they receive one-tturd to
one-fourth of what trey could be
distributing.
Fox addlid that the department
has refused 44 rnllllon tons of food
because there was no way of
processing It and has refused other
lederal funding.
One suggestk&gt;n Fox made In hts
letter toCelestecallsfor he governor
to name a staff member to work the
13 regional agents on a workable
dlstributlonprogramthatcutsdown

on papeiWOrk.
Another suggestk&gt;n Is . to use
National G~ard trucks !or dlstriblltion. as Is done In other states, to cut
down on problemsexperlencedwlttl;
private trucking firms.
Fox ctted cost Insurance and fuel ·
overruns and lne!tlclent service In:
an unbid $770,00l contract between

theDepartnnentctHumanServlce~:

and Ryder Trucks rl Cleveland.
Fox saki the contract, which
expired last week, waS :JJ percent
higher than bids regional !lg'ents:
said they received from otherflnns.~
He suggested a review of the Ryder
contract to determine whether·
TEFAP 'is entitled to a refund from .'
•·

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
HAS EXTENDED ITS '
HOURS FOR THE BIG

High court

NATIONAL FURNITURE SALE

LOW BACK PAIN • PINCHED NERVES (SPINE)
NECK &amp; SHOULOER SYNDROME • EXTREMITIES • HEADACHE
SCIATICA • FAILED DISC SURGERY • ATHLETIC INJURIES
SY~!EMIC DISORDERS • NUTRITIONAL WORK-UPS
S(;OLIOSIS!CREENING (SPINAl CURVATURE)
INJURY: PERSONAl , AUTO, INDUSTRIAL
BlOOD ANAL"'SIS • LABORATORY • PHYSICAl THERAPY

MAYTAG, IROYHILl, LA-I-BOY

Medl&lt;are &amp; Ohio&amp; W.Va. Workman's Compensation

MAYTAG, LA-Z-IOY, BROYHILL

RUTLAND FURNITU·RE CO.

Parts of Pomeroy vtllage were

742·2211
. IUTLAND
·
H- of Waldo, Whert We Are Better Than We Have To .a..

without electricity for over an hour
Monday afternoon after a Columbus
and Southern Ohto electric pole was
struck by a vDlage truck.
Pomeroy otrlctats reported that
the truck driven by Jack Krautter,
fMiand, a vUiageemptoyee, struck
the utUity pole causing the top to
break ct1 pulling down the lines. One
of the wires from the pole hit a car
owned by Donald Offenberger,
Parkersburg, which was parked on
Second Street causing minor
damage.
The electricity went ofl at 12:44
p.m. and was restored after workers
cl tre Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Installed a new pole.
Sections cl the vtllage were again
without electrtctty Tuesday rromtng but power was restored within a
halt-hour. Cause cl the outage was
not determined.

I

..

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

I

GROUND BEEF

79(

LB.

YELLOW ONIONS
3 LB.
BAG

29&lt;

59(
~=:~~~. . . . .~:. . . . 39(
ORANGE CRUSH Sl 09
A&amp;W ROOT BEER

SERVE

CHICKEN . .11
DRUMSTICKS ....:........

DIET or REG. 7-UP
Limit I Please - 16 Oz. Bottles

BACON
LB.

'l1lll'lday tluoup Saturday

A chance of rain each day. Highs
In the mid 61\oi to mid 70s Thursday
and Friday and In the61\oiSaturday.
Lows In the mid 40s to mid 50s
Thursday and Friday and In the 40s
Saturday.
·

The Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department members who are
turning Into great cooks will hold a
public spaghetti dinner Saturday at
the flrestatlon from3to7. The price
Is $3 for adults and 1: 50 for
children--and I guarantee you the
firemen won't let you leave hungry.

Friends CNer the weekend estal&gt;llsred a fund drtve to help the
famtly ol Jacob M. Bush who has
been seriously lll and the long
hospitalization and treatment has
created a financial hardship for the
family.
Jacob, a long ttnne rural mail
carrier 1n the Racine area, under·
went a bone maiTOW transplant at
the Albert B. Chandler Medical
Center 1n Lexington, Ky. However.
his body rejected tre transplant and
h1s sister. Clara Mae, came to be
the donor for the second transplant.
Unfortunately, Mr. Bush died
according to word received here
Monday morning. However,
friends are continuing the fund
drive to help the family and
accepting the contributions wUI be
Darlene Newell at the Racine
Home-National BanK.
If you're rot going to be avatlable

to vote at the Nov. 5 election, you
can row vote the absentee 1:a llot by
contacting the Meigs Coonty Board
of Elections ofllce. You ought to
exercise your right- andyoo know
a ltttle exercise "ain't gonna" hun
you. Do keep smlllng.

Plans lor Inspection to be reid Oct.
15 at 7:30p.m. at the lodge hall were
made when Chester Counctl 3:?3,
Daughters of America, met Tuesday night at the hall.
Members were reminded to wear
white. Refreshments wlll be potluck. Also anrounced was friendship night to be observed on Nov.l4
•• at the Chester hall and the dlstr'ict
meeting to be held Oct. 23 at the
~ntor Citizens Center In New
Le~gion. lnttlatton wll be held at
the district meeting. 'Members are
to wear white.
Fern Morris, councUor, presided
at tre meeting which opened In
ritualistic form. Devotbns were
given using scripture from Psalms.
It was noted that Zelda Weber Is

hospltllzed. An Inspection practice
was held and the good of the order
comtntttee conducted games and
served refreshments following the
meeting. The Past Councilors Club
will meet at the hall Wednesday
night.
Attending were Fern Morris,
Betty Roush, Enna Cleland, Ada
Bissell, Lora Damewood, Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant. Mary
Showalter, Everett Grant, VIrginia
Lee, Betty Denny, Nelle Werner,
Llll1an Demosky, Ethel Orr, Esther
Smith, Mary Hayes, Alta Ballard,
Ellzabeth Hayes, Goldie Frederick,
Jo Ann Baum, Dorothy Rttchte,
Sadie Trussell, Kathy Pullins, Iva
Powell, Sandy White, and Thelma
White.

Evelyn Knight, final plans were
made !or the dance, along with a
costume party to be held later In the
month. Kathy Johnson presided at
the meeting with Kay Atkins giving
the cultural report and SheUa Harris
serving refreshments.

"'

..

LARGE EGGS
(

DOZ.

3 PAK

GOURMET DINNERS
10

oz.

(

3°/o OF GROSS SALES

We Rese(,Ve The Ri&amp;ht To
Lilwit Quantities

STO.RE· HOURS
Mon.-Sat.. 8 AM-10· PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMERO.Y, .OH.

Martha Elmer lost the most weight
In the kid's division. At the
Wednesday night Five-Points class
the most weight was lost by VIrginia
Pooler with Paula Pickens as
runner-up.

Open house observed for renovated home
An open house was held recently
at the parsonage of Heath United

Methodist Church so thlt members
and trlends could view the recent
repairs and renovations of tre home
of t!J!! Rev. S. Zuniga, pastor.
Punch and cookies were served
throughout the afternoon by

members of the parsoMge commtt· .
tee, Betty Fultz, Beulah McComas,
Katie Swanson, and Clara Criswell,
who also conducted tours of the
parsoMge. An arrangement of fall
nowers prepared by Jeanne Bradbuljl n~ed by brown tapers
decorated the refreshment table.

ROYAL COURT - 1985 Wahama Homecoming Queen eortonii·
Bass, daughter ol Jean and Kenneth Bass of Cllftoo, Is pictured above
wltl\ the other aeDlor contestants and lbelr escorts. Fro01lefllo rlgbt are
Tony Hawldus, 1011 li Carol Sue Hawkins of Clifton, Pamela Gibbs,

'

daughter of Mr. and Mn. Harley Gibbs of Mas011, 198t Queen Amallda
Smith, Miss Bass, Paul Briles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Brtleo o! New
Haven, Nancy RoiiiDs, daughter of Mr. aDd Mrs. Kenneth Rollins of
Letart, and Todd Groves, son of June Vance Groves of New Haven.

Farm Festival this weekend at Rio Grande

Our way of Ufe has made some
btg changes since Early America
wren almost everything was done
by hand. Early American !ann
life Is re-enacted each October at
the Bob Evans Farm near Rio
Grande during the Bob Evans
Farm Festival. This year's festival is Friday, Saturay and Sunday
and Is the 15th anniversary of this
event.
Nearly 100,000 visitors are expected to step back 1n t ime durtng
this tan celebration, one of the region's largest and rmst authentic
harvst festivals, a spokesperson
for Bob Evans Farm sald.
With more than 125 artls ans
performing old-fashioned skills
and crafts once essential for survival, the Bob Evans Farm Festival offers people the unique opportunity to learn through a ltve
history lesson. Festival hours
are 9 a.m. to 5 p.. m. dally.
For the three-day weekend,
craftspersons set up shop, dressed
tn clothing typical of Early
Amerlca. Explanations accompanying such demonstrations as candlemaking and shingle splttttng
give Insight on how life was for
people In the 19th century. ·
VIsitors can watch how farm
chores were done the had way.
Just .a simple bar of soap for example, would take two weeks to
cure out. explains the soapmaker. From dissolving Ihe lye,
cleaning out the grease to form
the bars, the soap maker at the

festival demonstrates this time- who have never seen farm ani- of clogging- a traditional mount·
mals the opportunity to ex peri· atn dance, Is also part of Ire festiconsuming chore .
ence
them. Visitors can also join val's entertainment.
Some oft he more extensive de·
In
old-fashioned
country contests
An admission lee of $3 per car
monstratlons are the steam-IDWof
tobacco
spitting,
greased plle Is charged, and primitive campered sawmtll, horse-drawn sorghum mill and corn meal grind· climbing, cow chip tossing and . ing ts available for the entire
weekend for $15, with only a $10
lng mtll which is housed In a n en- hog calling.
Nearly a dozen country, blue- charge after 3 p.m. Saturday.
tire barn aU by Itself. More than
Friday, Oct. llls designated as
four tons of corn meal will he grass and gospel entertainers
ground In just the three-day pe- from throughout the region, enter- Bus Day at the festival, and all
riod for festival goers to take tain during the festival, providing buses may enter the grounds
visitors with a variety of mustc to free . For more Information call
home.
enjoy.
Surrounded by colorful fall the Bob Evans Farm, 614-245Domonstrf!tlons such as cow
foliage,
the performers entertain 5305.
.
mtlktng, sheep shearing and
on
ootdoor
stages.
The
old-time
art
horse shoeing also give penple

Drenner
birthdays noted

MlcheUe Lynn and Marla Louise Dreoner

Darst birthday celebrated

Gloeckner birth

Corey Daniel Darst was honored
recently wtth a party on his seventh
birthday. Games were played and
gifts were presented to the youngster. Cake, ice cream, chips and
punch werP served.
.
Attending were tits parents,
Danny and Sherie Darst, hts
brother, Christopher, his granctparenst. Bud and Wanda Vining, hts
grandmother. Bonnie Darst, great·
grandmothers, Goldie Graham and
Gertrude Stivers. Terrte Smith and
Shannon, Rita Smith, Bob and
Karen Grtnnm, Jeremy, Israel and
Timmy Grtnnm, Wend! Collins,
Krlsty Warner, David Park, Shelly
Sinclair, and Kyle Sinclair.

Mr. and Mrs. David Gloeckner,
Route2. Racine, are announcing the
birth of a son, Davld Erwln,ll, Aug.
19, Theinfantwelghed etghtPJunds,
threeouncesandwas ~Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Gloeckner have a
daughter, Carrie, eleven. Maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Lockhirrt of VIenna, W. Va.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Erwin Gloeckner of Racine,
Maternal great-grandfather Is E;d
Rosencrance of MounclsvWe.

To observe birthday
Gladys Houdashelt' Taylor wUl
observe her ~h birthday Friday.
Cards may be St'llt to her at the
Pomeroy Heath Care Center where
she resides.

WILL BE DONAT-.P
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9
EASTERN
EAGLES
.. '
.

'
U PORT.

. .

TUESDAY
HARTFORD - Special revival
services, Tuesday and Wednesday
at Hartford Community Center,
7:30eacheventngwlthB.T. Weston,
Columbus, speaking; publtclnvtted.
POMEORY - Annual past Mas·
ter' s Night wUl be observed when
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, meets Tuesday at 7 p.m.
Work to be conducted 1n Master
Mason degree; aU Master Masons
Invited; refreshments will . be
' se!Ved.
POMEROY - Eastern Alumni
)3and wOl practice Tuesday, 6::JJ.
7:30p.m., lor Friday's performance
at the homecoming game. Anyooe
wishing to play bui unable to attend
practice should call 985-J979 or

985.:J900.

--

POMEROY - Ohio Eta· Phi
Chapt,er ct Beta Si(lllla Phi Sorority
will hokltts rush party'I'uesday6: :JJ
p.m., In the upstairS banquet room
of the LaSalle Restaurant.
APPLE GROVE -Apple Grove
United Methodist Women meet
Tuesday, 7 p.m. wtth Madhu
Malhotra speaking on lndla and Its
customs. Publtc Invited.

WEDNJ!SDAY
,
MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
Middleport Church cl Christ 1n
Christian Unlon. Pearl St., starting
Wednesday running through Oct.16,
7:~ each evening with Rev. Keith
Eblin speaking; special singing
each evening; public Invited.
POMEROY - P,t. Pleasant Bible
School Choir wUI sing Wednesday,
7::11 o.m. at Pomeroy Wesleyan

Holiness Church. PubUc Invited.

dinner.

MIDDLEPORT - Mtddlepon
Literary Club meets Wednesday, 2
p.m. at the home of Mrs. George
Hackett, Long Bottom. Members
meet at the home of Mrs. Dwtght
Wallace for transplrta tlon,l p.m. or
cal1992-381ll lor tnfonnatton.

GALLIPOLIS - 8 and &lt;10 meets
Thursday, 7:.ll p.m. at the home of
Inez Marchi.

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of th Eastern
Star, and the Middleport Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wilt have
get-together at the Middleport
Masonic Temple Wednesdayat 6: 30
p.m. Eastern Star members are to
take a covered dish.

a

TIIUIISD~Y

POMEROY - The 50th annlver·
saryoftheLaurelCllffBetterHealth
Club wlll be observed at 6: :JJ
Thursday evening wtth a IDIIuck ·

(

••

. The first birthdays of Michelle
Lynn and Marla Louise, twin
daughters .of Max and Eloise
Drenner, Union Terrace, Pomeroy, .
was observed recently with a party.
lndtvtdual Care Beat cakes were
served with other sandwiches.
A!lending wee their grandparents,
Avery and Francis Drenner and
Norbert and Evelyn Fischer, and
Norbert and Pat Fischer, Norb and
Deanna. Elaine Holstein, Dale,
Nicole and Drew, Ellen and Chuck
Fleshman, Beth and Leah, all of St.
Albans. W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Reuter, Angle and Joshua
Harris. and David McClure,
Pomeroy.
Sending gilts werP Shetla, Kenny
and Kenda Carsey. John, andy and
Mepssa Clark, Garnet Drenner,
EUsabeth Akins, Robin and Helen
OUts.

CorcyDarst

Community C4lendar / area happenings

DOUGHNUTS

Weather forecast

HANGING ROCK
. FARM GRADE A

(

~$149 DOZ.

Tonlght and Wednesday ... partly
cloudy. Low In the mld 50s. High 75to .
~.South winds 10tol5mphton1ght.
· Chance of rain .. near zero percent
today .. and 10 percent tonight and
WednesdaYEd81ded forecast
.

'

Mrs. Malinda Casto received rer
20-pound weight Joss ribbon and
certificate at the recent meeting of
the Mason Sllnderella class. Sallie
Elmer lost the most weekly weight
and runner-up was JoAnne Clonch.

Are In Effect

Artlcles of Incorporation have

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dalzy Nwnber
364.
Ticket sales totaled . $1,121,819,
· with a payoll dueof$31'9,289. PICK-4
1QY7.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$165.001. with a payoffdueof$74,432.

The New Haven Fire Department AuxUiary is planning a
Christmas bazaar on Dec. 7 and is
Inviting participants. To reserve a
table call 882-2231; 882-2814 or.

Perhaps you might want to help,
There's a family needing a bit d a ·
helping hand. There have two small
chlldren, one and two years of age
and another baby Is on the way.
The famlly Is In need of a baby
bed, play pen, a regular bed for the
two children and baby clothing and
accessories. If you can help along
these lines call 002-3694. However,
no ooe w111 be at home to answer the
phone oo Thursday so don't try to
help on that day.
·

Slinderel/4 c/4ss has meeting

been filed wltli the Secretary of

Pick 4:1697

Tlmes&amp;nllnel Sial!

Homecoming weekend Is coming
up with a variety
of special activities planned
the local high
schools.
At Eastern the
alumni band wW
be playing and
practice wlll be at the high school
from 6: 30 to 7: 30 this evening for
fonner band members who wUl
return to the band lor homecoming
acttvtttes Friday. Those who would
like ·to play Friday night but can't
make tonight's practice are to call
985-391'9 or 985-3900.

A ftftles and stxt~ dance wUl be
held Saturday night from 8 to
midnight at the Meigs Junior High
School audltortum by the Xt
Gamma Mu Chapter ct Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
Meeting last week at the home of

Becomes corporation
State's otflce In Columbus by Blue
'streak Cab Company, Inc., of
Pomeroy. Gary E. Snouffer and
Wtlllam E. Snouffer are the Incorporators. Jane A. Snouffer Is the
agent.

By BOB HOEFLICH

XiGammaMu holds meeting

Red Brush Church of Christ on
Bashan Rd. wUI hold special
services this Saturday and Sunday
with Denver HUI, Foster, W.Va., as
the speaker. Saturday services wUI
begin at 7 p.m. Sunday worship and
Sunday evening services wW begin
atlO a.m. and 6 p.m. respectively.
The publtc Is Invited to attend.

Page-7

Eastern events set

I

Special sen-ices set

Tuesday, d~ber B. 1986

Beat of the bend

D of A meeting held

OCT. 9, 1985 :IS

Veteran8 Memorial
Admissions-Jerry Black, Ru·
~; MatndaRowley, Pomeroy.
Discharges--David Putnam, Wll·
11am Lerew, Audrey Gaffney,
Lorena Laudermllt, Robert
Snowden. Howard Ferguson.

·

Eastern High School wW be the
scene of a "meet the candidate"
night on Oct. 15, providing a forurn
open to the public at which IInne
people will have an opportunity to
learn more about the candidates
running for the ~aJtem Local
Board of Education In November.
Starting IInne Is 7.

SPECIALIZATION

The Daily .Sentinel

,.. .

By The Bend

882-3234.

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.

Truck hits pole;
electric goes off

' .
~

Changes_ sought in-Iederal food .program~

Area deaths
Jaoob (Jake) Bush

'

•
Tuesday, October 8, 1985:

POMEROY - Preceptor Bet a
Chaper, Beta Sigma Pht Sorority,
wlll meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
Riverboat Room of Diamond SavIngs and Loan.
ROCKSPRINGS-RockSprings
Grange meets Thursday, 7:30p.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, wUl hold, a public spagh·
ettl dinner. Frtday,from 4 to 7 p.m.
at the church. Spaghetti, tossed
salad, dessert. roll and beverage for
$3.25 for adults and S2.W chtldren
under 12.

Jason Alan Parker

Parker birthday

INFANT RANDOLPH -Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Randolph of
RadDe are aniiOIUICing the birth
of their seooud son, Denik
Joseph, Aug. 7 at the Holzer
Medical Center. 'The Infant
weighed seven pounds, nine
ounces and was 11 Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
!Uid Mrs. Roy F. Rl!fie, ChL'Sier,
anrl paternal grandparents are

Mr. and Mrs: Corden Randolph,
Racine. Maternal great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Blsoe!J of Bashan. Mr.
and Mrs. Randolph have another
son, Trenlon Nalhaolel, q;e 15
months.

Jason Alan Parker, son of Carl
and Arlene Paf kt•r. observed his
"'venth blrtMay Wronesday with a
party given by his mother.
A Ca reB&lt;'ar lheme was canied
out for the pariy and ~a ke , lcecream
and punch were Sl'rved. Attending
the party were Jason's grandpar·
ents. Ted and Marge Connolly, hts
grandmother. Mary Gilkey, Debbie, Misty lfnd Travis Lyons, Sheila ..
and Jeremyu Connolly, Carolyn,
Diana, Cindy, Krlli and BtuyWhtte,
Sandy and Chrislle Mllls, Jana,
Debbie and Melissa Pyles, Loretta
Brinn, Shaun and Max L.ong.
Others presrnling gifts to the
youngster s were great ~andparents. Everett and Beulah
SChultz, Btll and Erma Connolly,
Erma Jeaq Connolly and Jason's
great-great-grandmother. Lola
Baker.

•

�8.1985

Racine's 35-year old
out by Racine Mayor Charles Pyles, village council
and the board of public aHalrs. Cleland says the
expected COS\ of servicing aher three years ls·$3,100,
an4 the condition &lt;:1. the tank Is Usted as "good."
Because r11ts underground locatiOn, the dlstrlbuUon system feels tlie·rlgors of use and time more than
other lntregal parts of the system, Its many lines of
various ~ are subject to both exterlor
deterioration and Interior accumulations. Observation at troubled areas on the system discloses a
·buUdup which Increases with use and time and
reduces the Inside diameter ot the water-!low. Those
· restrtctlons wUl Increase "as time elapses, therebY ·
creating problenl$ .,of . replacement, rep61r and
rnalntalnance, accordlng to Cleland.
Two Community Development Block Grants ·$4001 In 1!1112 and S49oo In 19&amp;'1 - have provided the

(Continued !rop1 page 1)

MILLER
ELEctRIC
SERVICE

Alumni band to play

Two emergeney runs

The Eastern Alumni Band wtll be
playing at the homewmtng game
Friday evening. A practice basbeen
set for Tuesday, 6::11 to 7::11, at the
high school. Tho9e who want to play
but cannot attend the pFactlce
session are asked to call !85-3979 or
99:i-39ffi.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports two calls
Monday; Racine at 7:52 a.m. to
Broadway St. for Doris Sayre to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 2:18p.m. to ReedsvUle for
CUfford Rockhold to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Pomeroy, Ohio
12-8-llc

Plaintiff

-va.-

CRUISE SHIP HLIACKED - 'lbe crull!e liner
Achille Lauro Is shown somewhere Ia lbe Mediterranean Sea. A Palestinian oommMtdo hijacked the

vessel off the coast of Egypt Monday laking
pa&amp;~~engers and crew members hostage, UPJ.

· _Italian luxury liner hijacked
·

•,

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - PalestlOne report, however, said theshlp board," he said.
nlan pirates seized an Italian luxury was saUing slowly eastward, paralThe hllacklngcameslx days aher
Uner with about 420 people aboard, lei to the Egyptian coast, shadowed ~lght Israeli fighter jets attacked
threatening to kUI the hostages at a distance by Egyptian naval Pto headquarters near Tunis,
Including as many as 28 Americans vessels. Another report said the _Tunisia, kUling at least73peopleand
-andblOW\IPtheshlpunlesslsrael Egyptians sent two gunboats to wounding about 100 others.
frees 50 prisoners.
determine the ship's position.
The l'l:chUle Lauro left the Italian
The hijacking In the Medlterra- -Neither repc)rt could be confirmed.
port of Genoa Oct 3 on an 11-day
neanMondaywastheMlddleEast's
In Washington, White Hoose Mediterranean cruise that was
ttrst Involving clvtllans since June, spokesman Edward Djerejlan said · scheduled to Include Naples and
when Lebanese ShUte Moslems · the captors were demanding the Syracuse In Italy, Alexandrla and
demanding that Israel release Arab release of 50 Palestinians from Port Said In Egypt, Llmassol In
prlsoners seized a 1WA jet, killed Israeli prlsons as ransom for the Cyprus and the Greek Island of
one American and held J9 others cruise ship and Its passengers and Rhodes.
hostagefor17days.
crew. The Israeli government was
The Italian Foreign Ministry said
An Egyptian securlty ctflclal who expected to discuss the Issue at Its 70 to !ll passengers and 340 crew
asked not to be ldentllled said the regularly scheduled Cabinet meet- were aboard the ship when the
pirates took control. An additional
hijackers of the cruise 9hlp Achille lngtoday.
Lauro threatened to kiD the hosAuthorltlessaldtheplratesappar- 664 passengers,lncludlng72 Amerltages. Italian Embassy officials In ently were members of a Palesti- cans, were dropped off at AlexanCalrosald the guerrtllas threatened nlan splinter group opposed to . drla, Egypt, ror a overland lrlp to
to blow up the luxury liner I! Israel Palestine Uberatlon Organization Cairo and Port Said and were safe,
faDed to meet their demands .
leader Yasser Arafat
the ministry said.
None ofthe hostages was reported
An undetermined nwnber It U.S.,
Two r1the72Amerlcans, reached
Injured In the takeover.
Brltlsh, Greek, German, French, by ABC News today In Cairo, said
Egyptian securlty sources sald Mexican and ltaUan hostages were they were sure some fellow Amerithe Palestinians boarded the ship aboard the vessel, a spokesman for cans remained on board.
..;. posing as passengers and took the Italian Embassy In Cairo said.
Matthew PolltoofNew Jersey told
control In International waters . Some television and newspaper ABC he, too, was certain there were
-;· : abollt50mUesotfEgypt'sPortSald, reports said 28 Americans were Americans aboard but could not
at tbe northern entrance to the Suez aboard but those reports could not guess how many,
Canal.
be ccn!lrmed.
The Italian Embassy In Cairo said
Sources at the Suez Canal
A State Deparlment spokesman most or the crew members were
, authority said early 'today the ship In Washington said he doubted tbat Italian. Maurlzlo Maddaloril, a
was far from Port Said and they many U.S. citizens remained maritime agent in Naples, Italy,
coukl not determine Its exact aboard.
said most of the passengers were
' · location or lhe direction In which It
"I would think we're talking about West German.
was heading.
fewer than a dOzen that ·remaln oo

Senators fail to extend credit line
.

WASHINGTON
(UPI) - The
'
Senate, In falllng to extend the U.S.
credit Une to $2 trUUon because of
squabbling over balancing the
bUdget, could djsrupt government
finances today and leave recipients
offederalcheckslnUmbo.
The chamb€r was stalled for a
flhb day over a pro)lOsal to tack
balanced bUdget legislatiOn onto the
btU needed to raise the..federal debt
celllngfrom$l8trlltlonto$2trUllon.
The Treasury warned Monday
that without the Increased borrowautborlty by midnight, governm~t checks might not be honored
by later today or Wednesday.
pesplte prodding by President
Jbiagan, who fave&gt;rs the balanced
I measure, the Senate was
., ,
mated over the attempt to take,
·
ederal defiCit down to zero ,In six
yeus. .
Backers· said the arilendment spOIISOred by Sens. Warren Rudm&amp;ll, R-N:H., Phil Gramm. RTel(IIS, and Ernest Hollings, 0-S.C.
_ woukl mean equal budget cuts In
au ~msexceptSoclal SecurityOpponents Charged many areas~
tncl~dlng ~percent ortbe mWtary ,
llu!lj!et. would also he exempt.
Qem~atic leader Rober! Byrd

In'

=

•

proposed taking the pressure off by
waiting to vote on tbe balanced
budget measure for a few days and
passing a temporary extension of
the debt celtlng. He suggested a vote
Thursday on the balanced budget
Issue and, several other
amendments.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole, deciding to take Bynl'sofferto
his fellow Republicans and letting
them think about It overnight,
postponed a vote on the bUl late
Monday.
But, Dole cautioned, "We're not
going to back away from trying to
couple the debt ceDing with a
meaningful amendment to help us
i-educe the deficit In the tuture."
Dole, stepping up the Iressure In
~game or seeing wbo would blink
first, produced a letter from the
Treasury _saying that wltblut the
debt ceiling Increase, government
checks would not be honored by
Wednesday at the latest.
"Accordingly, all tl_lose with
federal payment claims- whether
Social Security reclplentsordefense
contractors ... - would then be
.unable to have those claims .
honored," the letter said.
But Sen. William Armstrong,

R-Colo., In w-gtng slow work on the
measure, said the "doomsday"
predictiOns were wrong,
"ltwould be a very sertousbut not
unmanageable problem," Arm- •
strong said, because the government could operate for a few days
with cash It has on hand.
Dole said ·the government would
not shut down I! the debt ceiling was
not llhed bUt without an extensiOn,
government financing would "get
kind of crunchy."
The cash shortage poses no
Immediate threat to federal
workers or recipients of Social
Securlty and welfare checks, Dole
said, since gov~ent employees
were paid Monday and other checks
were maOed last week and are
covered.
,
The House has alreadY passed the
Increase In the debt ceiling but
without amendment ll the budget
amendment were attached, the
measure would have to go back to .
the House fora vote,causlngturther
delay.

CLASSIAED ADS

asupermarket
for everything.

CARL SCHULTZ. JR. fdec.)
Etal
Delondanu
CASE NO. B5-CV-234
Judge Kni11ht
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE,
Carl Schultz, Jr. end Jeffrey Scott Schultz, whooe
last known

reaiden~

is Carl

unknown htlra, devisHI, It·
01teea. executor•. adminia~
tretore, spouses and 111igna
1nd the unknown guerdllnl
of minor and / or incomoe·

Ohio, ;n COle No. 85-CV234 on the docket of u;d
Court, and the object end

ject any Of all bids end or any
pen thereof.
Meigs County
Commi11ioners
Mary Hobllatter, Cterk

-to--bid·
Eoot... Local SdiOot Diltrfct

on the following;

Flaetl.........
TilwonciT..._
FUll Oil, Guolne.- OM

SpecHicatlon ShMto ore
prayer of which nid Com- ..-1o
ot tho
plaint ia to' forecloM said
piJintiH't mortgage
rt·
corded in Mongaoe Book

136, Pogo 851, Molgo
County. Ohio Recordo, upon

the following deacribed r•l
tl1att, record title to which
lo olloged to be hold by Car1

T,...,..,..

()!fa,

No. 3 of

---be•-=-ln
tho
Offlco ..., 12
O'Ciodt Noon on:
Decocolbot 19. 1985

Slid Boord ot Educo~

T,_.,.

fandantl are required to an- . . ..tt "- at 10&amp; Union
twer on or before the 20th A\WKie. Pornortl'l. Otoio to loti
dar of NovemMr. 1985, or tor caah the following
they might be denied a hear1980 fcJrd Plclwp - 133
ing In this case .
LERNER, SAMPSON Strtooide - Mfr.'o IOIIoi no.
&amp; ROTHFUSS CO., L.P.A. F15ECHJ31!41. Modol F161
1979 M...-y-2 dr. ht AHomeya 1or Pleintiff
Cinc;nnotl. Ohio 45202 Mfr . '• aarial no .
91193F620478 - Cou111r
f9) 17, 24:

........,

Public Notice

'-1 leHe111, Ohio
Ph. 985-4141

The F""'*' Bonk ..d SIIVInga Compony. Pomeroy,
Ohio, _,,. the right to bid
01 IIIIo . .. ond ID ·wtthdiiW

NOTICE TO
- one~ SMoo• c-mr
AMBULANCE DEALERS - - the right to roject1111y
In occorden'!'! whh Sac- or II bldl ..- .
tlon-307·.80 of the Ohio Re- Further, too outomobile wll
vlllad Coda, -led bids will
be received by the Me;go ~~'"~xt~~':.:
County Boord of Cornmlo.;v.,.
olonoro In their office
locetad ot the Courthouae, (1018,_8,11, Jtc _ _ _
Pomeroy. Ohio 467611; un~l
noon on Octo"-• 23. 1985,
The bfdo will be openid In 2
hhso l ~l~ly thr
o'cloak P.M. On October
23. 1981ond r•d oloudfor
Brst filrqnmrnt
the following vehicle. Eech
Mon 111 llor hrrn.
bid to "'"' the condhlono
.,d opacification• 11 lollowa.
( on;fJ!Pti' Cor
Spoclflcotlono mor be ob\1'1 ""''· lubr Joh1,
011 CliUIHj•·.
11 Help Wanted
Tunr- ~ Up 1, Brnkr
Jnh1, Muf flf'll .
SEMI DRIVER
Troialn&amp; ltn/Wollttn 18 Up
Try tJ\, ..-.~· &lt;Ufl dn
itatloolll/loul job '"-"'1 ...
olollllt I porontotd Sl,.ot
11 h••lti' l

wa•••tlw

LOlli.

hetllftlllllttllt Poi:Mtlll

Eli(IMt 1Mtillll011 for f..riii.GII

URtTED TIUCK IIASTER
Rt. 14 lhtorol Wells, W.V•·
Phon• :104/419-2027
Homs Oflltt, CINrWIItr, Fl

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

VINYl I AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing o1 all Types
Worked., in home area
20 years
"Free Estimates"

"FlEE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

CAll COLIECI:
Ph. (6141 843-5425
9/1212 mo. pd.

7

DENNY CONGO

GUN SHOOT

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

MGM
FARM CITY
)ERVICF )T 1\ liON
•1n 'i'IJI

I

r

,_.

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND

6:30P.M.

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Factory Choke
12 Gauco Shotcuns Only

i

107

'

Sycamore St., .Pomeroy,

t

PHONE 992-7075

Now Se,ing
AI/ Of
,
.C
8/df ounfg

t

M cl

t ·
~

.._

..,._ .._

snd Su,oundin,jcl

A,e a 9/20/' 1

-- "

HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW
· WHERE tO BUV?

•

'lt. 124, Syracuse, Oh.
f~EE

Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll ·
"Register To Win"

Our Christmas Toys Are In
Cars. Dolls. Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For \'r1om. Dad &amp; Everyone
I0% Down Will Hold For Christmos Gifts

Shop Early ond San

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

MEIGS

EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

F11 All

y,, P1llllltg N11l1

PLUS: Of[;co Supplies &amp;

•All Typeo of
Excavating
•Land1caping

Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation

Stationerr, Magnetk
s;gns, Rublotr StomP',

•Basements

•Sewage Systems
•Woter &amp; Gao Lirles
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

~

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

t
PH. 992-6030
9·30-1 mo.
ik-** ***il·**-*~**~~.,.....~1
73-10 Ch11y lr.

F1nders ................ ......... '48

73-" Ford lr.

Fendtn .........................548

73-10 Chny 1r.
73-" Ford Tr.
Doors ......................... II 00
Doors ......................... 113 S
73 -10 Ch11y. lr.
80-IS ford lr.
Hoods ......................... I ISO
Oooro .........................$141
73-14 Ch11y rr.
71-"
ford lr.
lumptro ..................... $70
Gdlls ...................... $52.SO
73-79 Chny lr.
80-IS ford Tr.
Grmos ..................... '31.SO
Hoods ......................... '14S
73-79 Chliy. lr.
83-IS ford iangtr
Racktr P'"tls .............. .I2S
Hoods ......................... •t 30
73-79 &lt;h"Y· 1r.
83-IS Ford Rangtr
Cob Cornors .................. l20
Grillos ...........................•rs
N;w a'nd U11a Auto Glo11 - Lat1 Model Poros

WHALEY'S

992-3345

9-if-!fe

J/2/ lln

~I
PH.992-3982

FENU &amp;

(CUT OUT FOR FUTUIF US!)

!~ LISA M• KOCH • M-s- ·
Ill
Xz

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8-13 tin

SUPPLY

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PH. 992·6931

*SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA *SPAGHETTI.
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559

Aft,.; 5 Call
7~~-2027

1114-4411-7213

\I

915-3561

lUI Mtbe

.'

!

· ·"Fret Estimatn" ..
· lmtallation Available

II

I I

-.I

•DIIhwashert
I. .•Wuhera
t.Rang11
..,..
•Refrigerators
'

•DryMs •Freezer1

PARTS and SERVICE·
4·1·11c

'

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS
INSURANCE WORK

!9ll6. tic

No Hunting or Treapaalng
on Mynas Farm located on

Giveaway

•

614·992-9022 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

clse. call 304-676-2001 .

fin ancial
21

wood

Business
Opportunity

8a coal heaters .

SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
1 NOTICE 1
&amp; Olivo St. GalllpoHo. Call THE OHIO VALLEY PUB614-446-3169.
LISHING CO: recommends
Want to buy manuel tire that you do bua;nou with
changer. Call 614-266 - people you know. and NOT
to aend money through the
6251 .

==~=

Dod motor home, eKe . ,

cond . 28,000 miles .
$.9,600. 304-676-5513 or
,6_7_5_-4_1_9_3._ _ _ __

•8 rooma and bath on lot
mail until you have investi- BOx 150, 3rd and Hortbn,
Mason. price reduced, 304·
gated the o1fering .

kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

erty. for

A Brownie uni1orm-size 6 o

in Middleport. Priced in the
low forties. 2) Two unit
duplex house on a size lot in

sale:1)

6 unit

Middloport, Oh. 814-992- combination residential · Bank liquidation Sales of
commercial rental property reclaimed doublewides .
3476.
7. Coil 614-992-7180.

a nice arao

Fmp lnym Rnl
Se rvi ce~

11

of

Help Wanted

22 Money to Loan

One certHied Med;cal Tach-

At. 776. on Patriot Cadmua
Rd., 614-379-2603 .

of the Golllpolia Doily Tribune, B26 Th;rd Ave:, GolllpoUo, 0~ 45631 .

for

any

pu rp~se .

sale. 12•40. $3,000. 614949-2996.

82,000 extra cash in

Oc ~

tree

614· 446·8237 to arrange a
paraonal inteNMlw.

Room-boerd with family
willing to provide lllpport
services for gentktman age

Cell now lor 304-676-

month it qualified &amp; ac cepted for our managers
program. For personal inter·
vHtw apply Beat Wettern
Motel on Tues. from 1 to 6 , 6
to 7.

Wanted 10 meone to stay
with eldery lodloo, room, &amp;
board &amp; omilll oolary. Full
lima. Call 614..446-2639 .
The DownUnder Rest . it
taking application for kit·

Caretaker to live-In, Re gency Inc .• Pt. Ple11ant . Call

304-675-6104.

Enterprise Rd .. Ft. Pierce. Fl

members could earn more
than 120,000 in educational

Real Eslale
31

Homes lor Sale

3 bedroom full batement,
eet·ln kitchen , carport,

12,600

&amp;

taka ovor poy-

menta. Pienta Subdivi1ion.

Cal1614-446-7360. ·

3 bedrm ., large kitchen, 1
b8th, utility room &amp; garage.

or 614 ~ 446- 634)!.
1------=---BeautHulview o!Oh;o River.

Cell614-446-0037.
rooms, new gas furnace,
metal utility .!ltorage build·
lng. porch with awning.

2 bedrooms. 12x60 all elect·
ric mobile home. Good
condition . All new carpet.
new hot. water 'tank. Patio .
70K178 level lot. 3 car
garage with work bench. A
bargBin at $16 ,900. See at
Linley Hart 's, East Vlne,

Recine. Oh;o. Call 614-9493071 .
On ranted lot. EJC.cellent
condition . Clean . With or
without AC , furnishings .
washer-dryer, awn ing . Call

614-992-2459 alter 6:00
p. m.

~

12 year old single family

bl-level homo . Br;ck snd

MOBILE HOMES MOVED .

frame on 2.9 ecru . 3
bedroom, 2V~ bath1. Fireplacs in livlng and family
room1. Two-car garage. City

Coli 305-576-2336.

6 3.4 miles 10uth 1rom Galli·

be used aa a hunting camp,
portable office, storage bldg
or 1. Need interior repairs,

school dillrict in Clay Twp.

· contract with amall
down payment . Call 614·

A ~era o11and in Minersville,
Ohto. Reuonably priced.

Call 614-992-3171 for
more information.

paycheck, xtucatlonol op- By owner. Ra modeled 3
portunltltt. retirement in·

1981 14•70 with 7x24
expander . Fireplace, dish
washer. like new . $12 ,900.

Excellent . Coil 614 -9923410 .

bonoflto. ENLIST NOWI Call 992-'6B58.
304-675-3950' or 1-800642-3619. .
2 bedroom house on opprox.
The Army National Guard
need1 your prkJr military
service experience. Enlin
now for part-time montly

1968 Royal mobile home for

10x55 Uborty. AC , 2 bed -

1

..... ············'···-······--

1970 New Moon 12x60,
good cond, new hot water
heater , unturni1hed, in ·
eludes underpinning,

Iober? Call 9AM to 8PM, 1- - - -- - -- Mon.-Frl, 814-368-8476 or Fall Spacl81 furniture reu -

an oxtrl t500, t1.000. or

lost:male. med. Collie-like Euy Aooembly Worklf800.
dog . Gray with black per
100. Guaranteed paysptotches. White neck, ltga m1nt. No uperlence-no
&amp; !leo. No to;l, 614-742- ulet. Details send tali·
2386.
eddreAed atal'l1)ed enve·
lopo: Eton Vltol-715 3418
3

&amp;Vicinity

Service 1614)772-1220 or
773-3926 .

$4,800 . Call 6.1 4-256 6647.

counu ,

Ward'• Keyboerd , 304-676 6600 or 675-3824.

66 . Contact Joann, 6143 yaor old Oochohund. Vory 446-8146.
friendly w;th chUdren. 304- 1-- - - - - - - 675-6924.
$2,000 guorontood per

--- ---Giiiii"iioir&amp;---------

credit his tory nopJ)ing you
from buying a home? Consider a reclaimed single or
doublewide . Low money
down , take over payments.
We're Mid Ohio Financial

ettimatu,

Extra Cash . Could you use

4164 . 'Free Estimate . Mow·
rey' a Upholstery .
•

veer old

Bx10 deck, $6,195. Cell
614-245-9647.

leader

To sell Avon . Call Marilyn
~eaver , 304-882·2646 .

2 9· weeks old black kittens.

1972 Flamingo 3 bdr .. t Va
bath, total electric. CA.
refrigerator, some furniture,

Mortgage Co., 614-592- Big down payment, short
time employment , or paat
3051 .

give away. 614-992-3577. 1- - - - - - - - -

po4-676-6122 .

1- - - - - - - - -

1 YJ baths. 3 bdr .. gas heat.

pholstering. This ia our 21st
year aerving tri ·c::ountv with
the but in reupholstering .

Fluffy kittens. litter trained .

614~ 773 ·

HOME OWNERS -Refinance new carpet. like new cond.
to low fixed rate. Use equity Call 614-446-0175.

2 b;g garage bags of ci- own toolo. Call 614-3BB - 23 Professional
geretto packages. Call 614 - 8547.
Services
246-6481 .
AVON . Sell Avon make 1- - - -- - - - 11emalopup, 'I.! Labrador, '12 46% . Call614-446-3358.
Water walls drilled and serGerman Shephard. 4'12 mos.
Mature. reliable babyslne• viced . Price a on requeat Call
old. Call 614-367-7576 .
my home . Own trenaporta· 614-742-3147 "'614-992Sa-veri boxes clothing . Must tion 1nd reference a required . 5006.
take all , Call 814-367- Call beyween 6:00 10:00PM, 614-446-7693. PIANO TUNING AND RE466 ·
PAIR, beck to achool dioMixed breed puppies, male•.
amell breed. First trailer off

cial Service at
1220 tor details.

1971 Brookwood 12x66,

nologitt. weekdays. Send
resume to boJC. 300, tn care

°

Small ceah deposit. taka
over paymental Delivered
and set up at no eJC.tra

Middleport. charge. Call Mid Ohio Finsn-

Priced in the mid twenties.
Both properties generate
positive cash flow and are
fully occupied. For eddi··
tlon11 Information call after
6 p.m . at 614-992· 7177.

Mechanic needed, eJtpe ·
rience nece11ary. Must have

1

~~~ Jl ?11!~ f!ll~
"Jobb«s We

111 .

WANTED TO BUY UIOd

Notice, no hunting or tres-

Yard Sale

Uttthone Hordl'lers. (Sold Und1r Whol"al• To All)
Dundeco New Roplocomenl Poroo For Trvcko And Cora
(Sorlafoction guara~teed) •
~-

-~&lt;:r

2 bedroom house with bath, '
full basement, central air,
1uel oil furnace. Close to
Vacancy 1or ladies and new store and schools.
gents. Best o1 care . Good 614·742-2417.
food . Reasonable prices . Try 1- - - - - - - - -

814-446-3672

son County.

8ocfy Fill.,.., SondpofMH. Poli1kinQ Compourwb . Pa ln11

..

tients. 8600 . a month . Call

red end whHI Hereford cow. 33482
poUo City llmlto off St. At. 7.
614-742-2877. GoryAopln , 1 ---·~~---- Aooumable fixed 9% loan.
MONEY, MON_EY, MONEY I
614 -446-·2000 alter
or weehnds.
FOUND. omall Beagle fa - The army National Guard
mile pup. Let1rt area. 304· can
providemonthly
you with
part-tlma
paya- !;~~~~~~~~
bath. Lorkln
676-2096.
~
check, PLUS qualified
Can be sold on

CENTER
Complttl Avto Boctv ,bpolr Ctnter

8

Cheatnut Ridga Road. Ma-

Call 614-446-1422.

AUTO

Your

storage

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
773-5661 or 773-5636.
Needed Immediately: 100 FURNITURE. Bods. ;ron. To earn 50.000--- 100,000 . 1- - - - - - - - people serioutly intereated wood. cupboards. chairs. Be your own Boss. All you
;n losing weight. 1-800-992 cheatt, baskets. dishes, need is intelligence. ambi- 32 Mobile Homes
atone jars, antiquea. gold
9991 .
for Sale
and tilver. Write · M . D. tion, a willingness to follow
a
successful
oriented
pltn,
MOBILE HOMES MOVED, Miller, Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio plus be in a position to maka
in1ured, reasonable rates. 457B9 or call 614 -992- a minimal product inveat· NEW AND USED MOBILE
7780.
Call 304-576-2336.
ment for a a little aa $8,000 . HOMES KESSEL'S QUALFor
further details call col· ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
Pregnant? Pleeu give your• Buying daily gold, lilver loct 304-622-2845 .
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
coint,
rings,
jewelry,
sterling
self. your child. and us 1
RT 36 . PHONE 614-446ware,
old
coins,
large
curchance. Chlldlen couple rency. Top prlcas. Ed. Bur- Investment -Rental Prop - 7274 .
seekt to adopt healthy white

Lost: from Dexter.

• CHIMNEY RE6UILOING

i ...
, \
\
I
, ., _ _..,~

43119 Pomeroy p;ko,
Pomeroy, OH. 45769.

old. white face &amp;. PIWI.
Vicinity of Klnaon Dr. Tues.

24

W•ot Meln .Street, Pomeroy
Ph- 614-992-6771

2

814-992-3595.

Call614-446-1358.
chon help, ;ntervlow 1- - - - -- - - LOST black kitten 6 mot. ,_re_qu_;r_a_
d .- - - - - 4 bdr. houJe on 326 In Rio
Grande. Call6t4-246-5823
1-

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds
•Wheel Chairs
&gt;
WE llll MEDICARE All! OTHER INSURANCE
CAIIRIIRS WHEN EltGIIIE

~

"TOTAL FIREPL14CE'
A/110 CHIMNEY WORK"

Order from M•rgaret P•rker.

.---------l--------""1

-Qt~imnt!J C!tarr

/".' - ·

Agnes Hill's History of
Tuppera Plains, Ohio. Cop;eo avoUablo for UO.OO
each. Add f2.00 for mailing.

Under New Management (Formerly GiovaMi'll
304-676-3794,
9-20-1 mo.
L..------------....;;.;.;..;.;;;.;.;...&amp; Yellow and white,. fuzzy,
good mouoe killen . Will
deliver. 304-995-3590.
Hospital Supplies For Home Use
6 Lost and Found
SAlES &amp; RENTAlS

63 Pltle St., Galtlpollo

• CLEANING iNSPECTION
• FLUE CAPS INSTAUED

pool,

18 Wanted to Do

clean used cara .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson ·

4 month old male, mixed
breed. medium sized ckJgto

ANGIE'S PIZZA

FIREPLACES &amp;WOOD STOVES

ground

Nursing care in private 434-762B .
home. Room for two pa - 1- - - - - - -- -

eve ~

guage 1h otguna.

m~::·~;:~~~~~~~~~~OF.

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFI~D .

ACCENT

aero lot. $45,000. Call
Conn;e collest 1-513-434762B.

pr;vacy. Ask;ng $150,000.

614 -992-7314 .

Wanted To 8uy
sorad by Roc' Gun Club.
Every Sund beginning at - - - - - - - -1:00 p .m actory Choke12 We pay cash lor late model

Aboolutly no hununu or

·

We Deliver

nice . 3 bedrooms, 2 bath1.
Redman sectional. On an

Wallpapering, clean and pe-

paulng on Dena C. Durst

BOWMAN'S HOME CAIE MEDICAL SUPPLY

Copy Strwi,ts, ltc.

Coli: 742-2407

'L,.-~

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

349 N. 2nd

Hemlock Grove area . Ulira '

Hemlock Grove area . Large.

Vacan cy for the elderly in

Yard Sale, Wad, Bill Stewart
residence, Cllho.n, W. Va .

9

4

PARTS

lu1lntts forms,

llS 111;11 !t., M;ddloport
104 Mulbtrrr Av., Pom•oy

f~

"12 Varieties of Pizza"

JEWELL'S

mont , garage. $27,000.
Collect 614 -423 -6289 .-

Call Connie collect 1 -613-

S oot aponRacine G~n

1

mo. d.

F.A. heat, 2 baths, base-

AA Crisis Pregnacy Center.
Confidential. Free preg·
nancy test and-or t.forma·

L.....;.,._ _ _ _ _:'"""'_ _ _.....!;!;l.:!:W _L_•w_;s_: _ _ _ __

Cl

Family room, dini~g room,

614-446-0294.

Call Kathy and John collect,
I -201-347-0676 .

~,\

RE~~!ET~:~s~~~N ,~~~E!

t

NEW-MOBILE HOME FURNACES AVAILABLE

JO'S GIFT SHOP

Pick up and

12th. DMC flo11 4-61.00 ,

· PAY FOR J1 SESSIONS 132.50

·········~Kl···············
~
PREPARE FOR WINTER
jt:

and

Situations
Wanted

room house at 10 E. St.,
Pomeroy. 6 wooded acres.

our home. Trained and fif- sheds. barn. ttable, fire·
tMn years experience . Call place, lovely view. Lots of

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one haH mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call

· .TANNING SPECIAL

~~~~~~~~*

.

9-30-tf

10-8-tlc

co.
'
Oh.
t

BLUE STREAKCAB

supplies.

parts,

..

GOOd bar with 2 stools,
formica kitchen top, 40"
vented range hood. 4 storm
windows.

SWEEPER and aewing merepair,

614-992-70B2.

updated, 6 bedroom home
on approx . 196 acre1. In-

Mason. so_mething for
rybody. Thurs and Fri.
chine

private. Close to towns. Call

Garage sale. 7 Burdette
Addn, 9:00 till?. Oct 7 &amp; 8.

Yard Sale beh;nd VFW ;n

infant. legal and confidential. Medical eJC.penses paid .

STYLING &amp;
lANNlNG SALON

-----·p-fpifiiiiiaiit" ----

Valley Home Medical Equip·
ment. Send r11uma to Box
C-3 care of Point P~a11nt
Register, 200 Main St.' Point
Pleasant, W. Va .

Savel

· PHONE 16141 992·6100

1114·667·11235- or 1167·3074
~

3 An.nouncements

cine, Ohio. Ends Saturday

Anything That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home.
No Job Too Small or Too Big.
We Do. Setups and Underpinning
"Special Rates For Senior Citizens"

FOR THE
BOTH ·OF YOU

10th and

12. Semi auto cer top boat
carrier. Antiques, misc .

Closeout Sale at Teeaie't

SHADE, OHIO

We Havt Many Otlter Dishtt To Choose From
ASystem Can It Designed For You
GIVE US A UU

RACINE
FilE DEPT.
Bashan Building

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. QQ7.77n1

REPAIR SERVICE

..

October

11th.

Six room house on 49 acres.
Full basemerlt. free heat,

t;on, Phone 614-742-2629,

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

5AZER-J

ends.

Garage Sole, Oct, 10. 11.

Craft Shop, Third St.. Ra-

•

investment.

collect if necessary.

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

41'1/ttn

demonstrators . No

1006 s;mpoon Place.

For Faster Service

CHESTER-985-3307

3-24-tfc

-· -------~

An noun ceme nIs

CONTRACTING

Shop Ttohlolto
oo Duty ·
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ............................ I1265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... I1350
lO' ALUMINUM MESH-.. ....................... 11395
11' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... 11595

SUPERIOR
.SIDING CO.

tlnlulation
•Storm Door1
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

J&amp;F

Also Transmission

-··

fi 13 li e •

No Oown Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

EUGENE LONG

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

5'T'M
TELLITE SYSTEMS

9·20·1 mo.

J&amp;l BLOWN
lNSULATION

Call 614-992-6737

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElliTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wt HtvJ AFull TIMe

REPAIR

•
.

304·675-6276

•ZENilH

'AUTO &amp; TRUCK

1-3-tlc

Miclclleport, OH.

Free Estimatea
9-11- I mo.

... - Further,
- tho
· h..,.,.
prior .,
...

0.0.1. CMi1kaliDII
Fl••lll ..Ustalt AwiiMit
• • St.,rl...._. lnlniiiC

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

349 N. 2nd

T_..,.,

TYREE'S
SUBDIVISION
38900 - SR 7 .
within Recine Village; thence
Raedovile, Otoio 41in2
north 333.2 fwt to the center of Stata·Route No. 124:
thence east 114 feet with 1101 8. 115, 22, 29, 4tc
Stele Routa No. 124: thence
Public Notice
south 21' 30' oell 3681eet:
thence west 246.2 IHt to
PUBUC NOTICE
tho piece of beginning, con-·-ygMrllhlt
taining 1.4 acrn, more or
on Seturdey, October 12th,
lell.
All of the above name de· 19815, at10:00 o.m, • pubic

ItO 1, 8, 16, 22, 8tc

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

GIFTS

COJITIACTING

In otder to "- oonoidoncl II

Schultz, Jr . br deed ••- - t h e rlght.ID.occepl rtr
corded In Ooed Book 26 7. ......
- lnd .. porta "' lilY
Pogo 1, Mo;go Count'(. Oh;o ondotlbldo.
of Educotion
Daed Recordo. 1 owlt:
Eutern Locol School
Beginning at an iron pipe
tocatad ot the IIOUiheast Oillrict
Eioioo Booton
comer o1 lot

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

to drive the vehicle of your
choice.

•SYLVANIA

Roger Hysell
Garage

SALES &amp; SERVICE

POnERY

tenthelrsotCar1Schultz. Jr . 110)8, 16, 1tc
ond Jeffrey Scott Schulto. 1--------oll of whou reoidonceo ere
· Public Notice
unknown, witt toke notice
thet on tho 22nd day of AuNOTICE TO BIDDERS
IIUit, 1985, Fodorol NoThe ol Educrion ot
tional Mortgage Corpora~
tion filed ita certain Complaint in the Common Pleas
Court of Meigs County,

BOGGS

RT. 62 SOUTH ·
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
Bmiles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
SINGLE S24.'1S
•live entertainment
ofree HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool
A!A.A. .

School on Rt. 7. 9 e.m.-6

Homes for Sale

Call 304-875-575B lor de- By owner. Stately 3 bed-

tails. Openings available for

&amp; Vicinity
--- -------- ------------ -"- ---- 12

Ap~c~o in t m en t

Ohio
7/ 11 /tfn

dance . Above Eastern High

bv having a Marri Mac home
or (:atalog party. 100 par
cent guaranteed line of giftl,
toya and home decor ltema .

Minersville . Winter Medical secretary part time
· coa~.• dre11ea. jeans, odds &amp; for new busineaa. Pleaaant

CALL
742 -2057

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to introduce you to
En1are·A-Car. the modern way

I· O·lfn

992-2.1 96
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

4/29/lln

Gallipolis,

31

Near

MAIN ST.
IN RUTLAND

RENTAL

Help Wanted

1126 E. Mo;n , Pomeroy. 1- - ---_:____

lOCh lEO ON

For

Oct.7-12. Gene Riggs resi·
p.m. Rain cancels.

Complete Ftonl End
P~tls and Service

St. Rt. 160 'North

~

PAT HILL FORD

949-2263
or 949-2969

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

U-SAVE
AUTO

3/11 / lfn

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

NEW-REPAIR

DUGAN'S

446·4522

No Sunday Calls

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Writesel

Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

LINDA'S
MEXICAN

Schultz. Jr., Route 3, Box Comminionert m11y eccept
355. Roclna, Ohio 45771 the lowest bid cirthe "-•tbld
end Jeffrey Scott Schultz, for the intended purpooe,
Addreu Unknown. and the and •eoerve the right tD ,..

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
BUSINESS PHON!
(614) 992-6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE
1614) 992-17S4

ROOFING

-Business
Senrices

"W1 Rlnt Fot l•u"

HEATING

1122/tlc

te;nad from tho Maigl
County EnNirgencr Medlcol
Service Office, located 11
Mulborr( Ho;ghto, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769 . .
19861 r~---~------r--------­
orVehicle
now.,to"Typoonel1)
lit cto•
Emergency Ambulonce. Price
will be with no Indo in vehi•Complete Remodelinc
cle. Ch111ia end conversion
*Room Additions
wiU "- ..,nolder.t oeporetel'f.
•Roof inc
The front of the- .,vetope
·
•Sidlnc
oncloolng the bid muot "molflad "SEALED BIO,
•Garaces &amp; Pole
EMERGENCY AMBULANCE
Buildincs
VEHICLE."' Bidder MUST
AND
USE COUNTY BID FORM.
MARCUM
The Boerd of County

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-llc

PHONE 992-2156

RENT A'CAR
CALL

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

311 North Second
Middlsport.' Ohio 4571&gt;0

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

L.

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

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

WATER WELL DRILUNG
guarantee water or
no charge. 30 years exn••;••n•i Call 614-742at

11

Eem FREE Christmas glltJ

-- ........ ······ ............. .

I :! Y r !~ F :.. pPr u•rr1 · ·

'92-6215 or "2·7314

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

811212 mos

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Ill Coull St.. Pcllllllft, Ollio 4576!1

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
CORPORATION,

Heat Pump1 . Fuiiiaces

)IYOrk'

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Howard

Quality lntertherm
Air Condition.J(s '

446-9416-446-2812

(free Estimates)

FREE ESTIMATES

Public Notice

..

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

992-5875 Or
742-319

01 Wr11e D1illy Stntiul CbssilMd Dtpl

Public Notice

Sal•• &amp; Sonic•

HEinNG &amp; !OOUNG SYSTEM!

- Roofing and gutter work

Painting

The Daily Sentinel

CARPfNTER
SERVICE
'-Addons and remodeling

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial
Call:

feated by voice vote.
The second grain production
control measure considered by the
House was somewhat lessstrlngent,
had been approved by the House
Agriculture Committee and thus
had a better chance of passage. ·

ersofmajorcropsachancetovoteln
a referendum for strict production
controls.
The first attempt to create a
referendum for wheat and feed
ll{alns was presented by Rep.
Harold Volkmer, D-Mo., and de-

YOUNG'S

lEHNEn'S MOBILE &amp;
MANUFACTUIED HOUSING

The Daily

-----·-p·a-iiiiirov ---------

·Business Services

'

water system with ljne extensions and fire hydrants
on Yellow Bush Rd. and John's Rd., both newly
incorporated areas of the village. P.rlvately owned ·
. lines, with deterioration and accumulations, serviced
those areas for some time. COuilcU ropes that In time,
If other -private lines outside vUlage Umlts pcise
problems with leaks and restrlcted water-llow, that
slmUar expansions may be arranged.
Originally, monthly residential water bills In
Racine were $3 per month as compared to$10 a month
now' Of the water systems' $42,000 annual business,
VUlage Ordinance 279 requires 10 percent of the
yearly Income to be placed In a contingency tund to
care for llnex((I!Cied repairs, etc. No accumulation
has built up In this tund as yet Cleland says, but he
adds, It Is hoped that alter 19fl6, this situation will be
ch3J1ged.

.Fann referendum up for third vote
, WASHINGTON (UPI) -For the
third time durlng lengthy House
debate on a tlve-year farm biD,
lawmakers wUl attempt to give
farmers a Chance to vote for higher
prtces and acreage cutbacks.
The House, before completing
' actiOn on the blll, aiso faces a tough
battleoveraproposaltoeltmlnatepr
reform the program that raises
tobacco prlces bY limiting which
farmers can grow how much
tobacco.
•
Rep. Bill Alexander, D-Ark ..
today will offer a measure !mown as
the Harkin ametldment alter Its
Senate sponsor, Sen. Tom Harkin,
D-lowa, which wouk! offer produc-·

•

~droom houte on Rt.33 .

3 FomUr Garage Sole 3'12 coma, 1nd much more. Call New F.A. 1urnace. L•rgelot.
mlleo on 160 from H.M.C. 304-976-3960 "' t -800- •23,000. Coliact 614-423Oct. 10-11, Thuro. &amp; Fri.
642-3619 .
'
6289.

Insured , reasonable rates.

1962, 10x56 Glbroltor con
$1,100 . 00 . 304 - 675 5421, 7:30AMto9 :00PM .
1976 Nashua14x70 mobile
home . Total electric, 1wo
be1trooms, 1% bath1, 1 6 ft
porch. underpenning . 304-

676· 722B or 614-446 40B6.
1969 two bedroom house
trailer 10x50. unde rpenning

and fuel tank. $1 .200.00.
Do not call unless really
inte rested from 10 :00 AM

to 6:00 PM . 304-675•
1269.
19BO. 14•70, 3 bedroom,
1'lo batho. 9x1 0 bldg. muot
aall, S12,000 .00 or boot
offer. 304-675-7829 .

�,)

10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomero_y. Middleport, Ohio
51 Household Gooda

LAFF-A-DAY
acrea Plttu,., SO acr11
dmbtr. 3 ail • 011 wollt. 2
pondt. older home, b!lrn,
othtr bulldlngo, 100x200 ft.
lighted riding ring, oxc.
hunting. mlnilrol righll. Coli
814-387-7143.
34

52
For nle or leooo, 18,000
aquara foot warehouae lo-

CB,lV; Radio
Equipment

StrHt. GoHipollo, Ohio. Foo·
tures include: commercial
goroge. throeloodlng docko.
and 1 Viking dry pipe
1prinkler 1y1tem. For more

Commorclol buildingfornlo

() '" '

or rent on Main St. New

"Let me put it this way,
Hawkins.. ; if we were going
to replace you with a
machine, it WOuld have tO be
an Edsel."

HOYon, W.Vo. Coll304-882·
3233.
35 Lots &amp; Acreege

2 lovol loto for ulo. Greer

Rd. 7 miles from town.
104-875-6889.
•

Ren ldls
41

Houses for Rent

No~ Wotorloo- form houoo.
I roomt, both, 1 child,
•125, roferoncot • dopot~ .
CoM 81 4·843· 2844.

3 bdr. homo 101'1tod on Rt.
188. 3\1 mlleolfrom town.
GrMn School dill.. 1325
mo .. t160 dop. Coli 814268-6789· or 814-218·
8206.

2 bdr. unfum. houooln city.

Ref. lo dip. lltll~let not pold.
Coll814·448-3949.
'3 -bedroom, double

Cllt

pr·

a,.o, flnlthod heH bootment,
•dllllwoohor, gorbogo dltpo·
AI, built-in oven-rang'e, new
p~~int,

lli acral, Ponsmouth

Rd. Rt. 141, depot~ ro·
quirod. UOO. Coll814·448·
1134.
Farm hou• oH Rt. 7. from

Euroko . Coli 8 14-266·
1482.

" 3 bedroom house for rent.
No polo. Coli 61 4-949·
2424 .
BooutHul hill-top, mountoin
lodge ttyle, country home
on 30 rur•l acr11. Stone
hoorth, c.othodrol, coiling.
plush corpetlng, 3 bod·
roomo. 1 1'1 both. full bote·
ment. t31i0. por month. Coli
814-742· 21 111.
Unfurnlthod. 2 bodroom,
nic:o ond cleon. Dopolh
required.

no

lnaide pets.

614-992-3090.

Houot. loc.otod, Rt. 1, Ohio
River Rood, Potter Crook
Rood. Evorono Schwartz.
Rt. 1, Locust Rood. Point
Plolnnt. W. Vo.
·
Houot. 2710 Lincoln Avo.
phonl 304· 875·4489.
One

bedroom

42 Mobile Home a
for Rent
2 bod roo mo. No pots. 61 4·
949· 2424 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

house,

2327'h Lincoln Avo. 304·
6711·3&amp;89.
Efficiency cottogo. 166.00
- k . u111111eo paid, phone
304-8711· 3100 or 876·
5609.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnillfld. AC, coblo. no city
tax ... beautiful river view, in
~nougo .

Footer' • Mobile
Homo Pork, 614-446·1602 .
2bdr. fully furnlthod. oir.
u111~1eo paid, oduito only.
Coil814·448-4110.
Furnithed mobile home on

privoto lot. neor Centenary.
1duh1 onty. no in11de pata,

luol oil, Coll814·448·3918.
2 bdr fum. or unfurn., good

locotJOn. Security dopoo~
rocjuirtd . Coli 814: 448·
B51i8.

1 2•ell 2 bdr. on Clark
Chepoi Rd with Iorge yord.
Colll14·448-3897 or 814·
2411-1223 .
Mobite home for ront, 2
bodroomo on Buloville Rd.
t210 pluo dopoo~ . Cell
814-448-9204.
In Tupporo Plolnt. 1175.
plus u1Hililt ond do-it. 2
btdroomo. Phone 814-687·
34B7.
2 bedroom furnlthed mobile

home. 1711 dopoa~ roquirod.
UtH~Iet pertloiy pold. Phono
304·f75-.8 512 lifter 8 PM .

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Slooplng Roomo
.nd 1,_ht ho.uot k_,_,g
•
..,....
roomo. Pirie Control Hotel.
CoH 114·448·0711.
Fumlohod room

•us u1HI·

tiel pold, 819 2nd. Ave..

Gollpolio, elnglo mole. Coli
•• 11•44 tallftll&lt; 7PM .
=-=====:;===

I

J A C K S 0 N ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol ·
Houoing Opportunity) 46 Space for Rent
monthly Nnt otortoot •1&amp;9
for 1 bodroomond U041or
2 bod
"'-ftolt UOO
1e ho 1o 12' Rft•
Mobi 17&amp;wotorpold.4th
mo t,
xvv or
locotodroom,
nur _,.,..
Spring VoHoy• omoUor,
Plno ond Foodlond, pool • Noll. Golllpollt. Coli 448·
ond Coble TV ovolloble, 4411 lifter 8PM.
office houn •• poulble 10 1..:~:..::::.:=.:.:..:.:..____
omto4pmond7pmto8pm largoprivotolot,pttio,rurol
Mondoy·Frldoy, Coli 1114· , -tor, odulto only, - •
4 411· 2 7 4 8 or I• ov o Contonory. CoM 814·4411·
meooogo.
3918.

Firewood-cutup oleba, 1
trUck lood 1100, 2·1180.
Pickup lood, you houl .,II,
HEAP occoptod. Coil 814·
_2_4_11_-ee_o_4_. - - - - -

0

etc .

Nicely furnlthod mobile
home, off. opt., control olr
ond hoot In city. odulto only.
Collll14·448·0338.
2 bdr. opt., good iocotlon,
rodocorotod, util~lol portly
pold. Coli 304-875-51 04 or
304·176· 1388.

1----------

Furnithodopt.,2bdr., 131\1
4th. Golllpollt. t198 wotlll'
pold. Coli 448·4418 oftor
Bpm.
7401'1 2nd. Avo., 3 bdr..
1190 mo., 1 bdr .. t131.
Dopoolt ~~qulrod. CoH 61 4·
448-4222 bot .. _ 9 . I.

Upotoln unlurnithod opt ..
corpetod, oil utll~lol pold, no
children, no pots. CoR 1114·
441-1837.
Furnithod opt. utlltleo pold.
1235, 1 bdr., odulta, 243
Jockton Pike, Gelllpolit.
Coli 448·4418- 7PM.
Furnlthod opt. 11311'1 2nd.
Golllpollt. 2 bdr. woter poid,
1181. Coli 441-4411 llft11&lt;
7PM.
Fumltlltd apt.lor nonomok·
ing, nondrlnklng. gentle·

mon. lovely nolghborhood.
oil privoto, u1R~Iol Included.
Coll814·448·3818.
Nico cloon, omoll opt. for
one. Coli 814-441-311 11 .
Garogo fumlthod opt. 3
&amp; Nth, w ..her,
dryor. tlr . Rof. • depotit.
Adulu. no polo. Coli 1}14·
448-1619.
Small offlclency opt. Ono
odult. 118 Stott St. Coli
814·448·3388.
3 rooms lo both like·-· oil
now corplt. u1llltiea portly
pold . Ref . • dip. req. Coli
814-448·7&amp;76.
Rlvoroido Apto. Middleport.
Sp.cill r1t11 for Senior
Citizeno. '130. Equol Houolng Opportunltleo. 814-992
7721.
2 bedroom ap•rtmenta.

Now Hoven, WVo. Newly
remodeled. In town. 814·
992-7411.
One or two bedroom •P•rt·

ment1 In Pomeroy. Fur·

nlthod or unfurnlthed. Ront
ftiiiOIIebl.e. Coli 814·882·
6723.

oxcollent cond., '128. Coli
814·441·1328.
Atorl with 1111111 cortridgoo
no, dlnlngroom light uo.
Collll 14 • 441 .2~ 97 .

Houu cool. Lump lo otokor.
Zlnn Cool Co. Coii814-448 140B.

60 percent offll Floohing
orrow tlgno t2119111 .Liohtod,
non-orrow U47 . Unlig~od
---· t199. IFrM lettor~l) Sot
locolly. Limited quMtlty.
Hurry I 1(8001423-01 83,
onytlme.
Mixed herdwood tlebo, tt 2.
por bundle, c&lt;intllning approx. 1\ol ton, fob. Ohio
Pollet Co., Pomorcy, Ohio.
SWAIN
-Phono
814·992-8481.
AUCTION
RJRNITURE
12 Olivo St.. GollpoHa. Now King Wood Bumor with
• ulld wood•cooiii0¥11, e blowor, thormootat. tide
pc wood LR tulto U911, food, 12110; Fronklin Wood
bunk bodt 1199, ontron Burnor; oloctrlc. tree ·
roclirloro ' " · now lo uood otondlng flroploco hooter.
bodroom tultoa, rongeo, Might conolder trodo for
wrlngor wothora, l thooa. Ivory Johnson guno. Coli
lvlngroom oultoo llU 814·892-2172.
1818, lempa, oleo buying
cool l wood llovH. Coli Hunting bow. •100. Elec1114-448·3159.
trollx thtmpooor with
bruthor. tt 00 . Both in
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
excollont condition. Coli
Sofotond cllolror.lcodfrom 814·892· 5283 oftor 4:30
1211. to •Bill. oblol, 180 l.:_p._m_._ _ _ _ _· _ _
ond up to •121. Hldt·l· Hord wood firewood for
bodo,l390 . ond up to tole. 814-742-264&amp;.
U80 .. oofo bodt tt48.1-------Roclinen, 1225. Ill 1378.. Shotgun 12 go. Remington
Lampo from 1.28. Ill 11215. 1100·3 borrolla- 1 olug. 30·
pc. dinottH from '109., to 30M rii It
llo klil2
43&amp;. 7 pc. •189 and up.
o n· voroct nWood ttblo with olx cholro deor·good COli. Clun CO ·
1211 to 17411. Dllk 1110 l-b-ine-'-t._e_1_4-_7_42_-_2z_8_2_.up to 1228 . H11tcll11,1860. Toklng ordoro for flro wood.
Bunk bod complota with Specify which length. •3o o
mottro-t,l278. ond ujlto wucklood. Delivered within
U95. Boby bods, 1110. 8mlloll~. DonleiHentler.
MottrwoiH or boK oprlngo. 514·949: 2722.
full or twirl, •e3., firm, 173.
ond 183. a,_, otto, 1228. TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.
4 dr. ch11t1, •49. II dr. hotdlprililuoing.olltypooof
chollo, til. Bod frornoo. gun-~h work, flllllrvico.
UO.ond 128 .. 10 gun· Gun 304·8711·4631.
c.oblnoto. 13110. Ott or 1- - - - - - - - oloctrlc rongoo 1371. Boby Shredded bork 120.00
monr•-•· 125 • 135, bod pickup IOid. Hordy ovor·
fnmeo 120, 128, • •30. grunohrubt.10.00ooch. 6
klngfromo 180. Goodooioc- lt.Scotcll Pinel24.00 oooh.
lion of bodroom tuhoa, 2 mllot north of Silver
rockero. motol coblnott, Bridgo on upper Rt. 7. Ohio.
hoodboordt 138 • up to 1114-448-4630.
185.
51 Household Goode

t.

1- - - - - - - - -

1---------

Furnished Aportrnont for
ront, no children. Avolloblo
llftor Oct.3. Coli 814-992·
2749.

UMd F~;~~;--::· Motol Worm Morning propene
hootor wKh blo-r 40,000
=~~~/.' ~po':'~:m"':.: 11373.
BTU flrm 1300. 304-8711·
5pm, Mon. thru 811.
1114-448-0322
50 por cent off II Flethlng
GOOD USED APPUAN CES orr ow tlgno 12&amp;91i I Ughtod.
Woohon, dryoro, rofrigoro· non·orrow t247. Unlighted
toro. nngoo. Slcatlaa Ap- 1199. IFrM lottoroll Soo
plloncoo, U - RlVor .Rd. locolly. Limited quonlty .
botldl Ito,. Crwtt Motel. Hurryl 11800)423·01 83,
1,1 4-448· 7398.
onytlme.

2 br. opt. In Middleport
obovo Dontlil't Pizzo . Ro·
oontly - romodoiod. Portlolly
furnlohod. Low ulllitloo. Doy
814-992-2381 . Night 814·
992: 2509.

County Appllonco, Inc .
Good ulld opPHinCII ond
TV Oltl. Open lAM to &amp;PM.
Mon .thru 8ot. 114•441 .
1 881, 827 3rd. Avo. Golll·
polio, OH.

2 bodroom -ond floor opt .
Totol oloctrlc. Acrooo from
Pomaroy Flro Stotion. Coli
814·992·7314.

APARTMENTS, mobile
hornet, houHt. Pt. Pleonnt
ond Golllpollt. 814-448·
8221.

Volloy Fumlturo, now lo
ulld. Lorge oocllon Ill quol·
ltv lurnhurw. 121 8 Eo11om
Avo .. GoUipoHa.

2 br oport!Mftll in Hendor·
oon. 304·178·1872.

Mollohln Fumhuro, Rt. 7,
Konllugo. 1 yr. , _ flnonco.
Coli 814-448-7444. I pc.
wood IMngroom oulta
.400.

Middleport. 2 bodroom, fur·
nllllod opt, c.oll1 · 304-8822588.
Furnillfld 1 br ope, oil
lltllitlooincl. Adu~o only. No
poll. Coli oftof 4 :00 304876· 3788.
2 br 4 ground floor opt.
Downtown Pt. Ploollnt .
304·8911· 348(1.

Convenient locotlon 1 bdr.,
2 bodroom troller. Hud •P· lumilhod opt. Coil 304-1711
proved, rent nogotloble. 304 2441 .
875-4088.
~-------

Bunk bodo, ..W.1tv .._ •
stool. Coli 814-448·3018.

66 9

.

63

.Uveatock

71

vw.• 1000. 304·871·

'72
2189 .

Surpltu, Oonlm·Armylhntoi·Comouflogo clo In
8
th II·
om 8omorvMie't,
Eut Rovonowood. oltornoono, wllkondt, unNnod
donlmjockoto, 119.00 ...

Upr~ht lrotur. 304 ' 8715 ·
30 0
1·_ _·- - - - -Sorlouo tbout lotlng
weight'/ Contoct. Glorlo
Groto, Rt. 2
Sox 282.
·Litort. W. Vo. 21253, 304812·3152 .
Remington M2, 30 .08,
•140.00. Sprln!llloid 12
gauge pump 1100.00 . Win·
dow olr COnd no.oo. 304·
871-2973.

Whirlpool.,...,_ wllhor l
dry• fulltizo copoclly, •••·
cond. Coll814-381-87315.

42" onow biode. UOid once,
IIO.OO. Gorogodooropener
.40.00. Rotory for TV
..0.00. Highchair 112.00.
Strippod couch, brown, 304-878·2301.
otongo ond block. 1110.00. 1 -~------304-1171-8221.
2 yr. old hent good loyoro
.a.oo ...h . . loby btd wtth
a-.. alzo hldo-o' bod, 304- mottrtll •2o.oo. 304-4118·
881· 3027.
1121.

•-- - -- -

Sm~h

Buick-Pontile, 1 91 1
Eutom Avo.. Golllpolt. Coli
814-448-2282.

77 Muotong now porto, new
tlroo, now point;_ uoollent
ohopo. •2.000. Coli 814268·8417.

71 CJ-11. 119.000 orglnol
mlleo. ••· cond .. 14, 300.
eon 814·241-6874.

rod

1981 Ford F·260 4x4.
37.000 mi .. now rlmt, moko
of'-•· Coli 814·379·2808.
1980 Chevy 4-WD Scott·
dolo llop oldo. loldod. now
tlrea, •lum. whetla. exc.
con~ .

Coli 814·378-2708.

t••·

2010 John D-• troctor
lowhouro, goodrubbtr, 8ft.
John · Dotro buth hog,
U,896. Coli 114-288•
8822.
40 ft. com olovo!Or • aillogo
IHdor wogon, ooch •4&amp;0.
Coli 814·448·21t8.
lntemation1l Hervnter corn
plck•r. Coli 114-379-2424.
Ulld 460 John Dooro Dozer
ond R-18 Ditch Witoh
Trencllor. Con· 1·814·884·
7142 or 1-814-884-6008
Ulld 380 John Doorofoodor
~h hoo ond ulld R·IS
D~cll W~cll Tronchor. 1·
It 4 · 89 4- 7842 or 694·

aocle.

135 Ft~:auoon form ~octor,
2300 houro, good cond,
roody lor uot, U,IOO.OO.
Phone 304-578-2752.
t: = = == = = =;::::
I·
62 Wanted to Buy
1-~-------Wonted to buy: Wood or
wood lo cool burnero. Coli
114· 883-8836 . •

1971 Super Cllldo Horloy
onglno robult, thorp. Coil
8.1 4-448-0278.

1977 Comoro, VB ,
AT,PS ,P8, good cond ..
11950 . Coli 814 - 448 4488·
1 978 Oldomobilo Storflro,
V·8, good point. good tlroo.
Coll814-448·0543 .
'--

1883 Chtvotto, ••· ~d.
Coli 814-248· 524311ftor 8.

1- - - - - - - -

1982 Horloy Davldoon
Droll or. Coli 614· 742·
2808.
Horloy-Dovldoon Super·
glldo. A· 1 ohopo. With ol·
decor. •1 ,500. Con- otT
• · G Allto lllet under
Pomeroy-Muon bridge.

I========~M~
76

TE:U. '{OU

Beaement Waterproofing.

~nu~,

D.and M. Contrlctora. Vinyl
tiding, repl1cement win·

~C~ ®

~LL.A ...

- Giii\LL WE SEE I'IHAl'G ON
THE TUBE WHitE
171ClEbliN6 Q(JR
t71NNEFi, ANNIE'?

WELL, WELL! AN QO
JEAN H~RLOI'I

,.. AMITY'5 MOM 1'1\5 I'IE!\RIN'
AOHE% i/'UST Ul(c
THAT ONE!

MOVIE!

Porto lor 1970 351C
onglno. 4 borroll f1 71. C-4
automatic tranamlulon

=

1

'81 tour oyl Eogle, 304-87&amp;- ,77_...,.-A_u_to_R_•_PII
__
Ir _ _
288t.
,.

'77. lonnevlll, ,one owner• 1811 . , _ 14ft. c.ompor.
toll oorrtolnod, liMP• I,
.421.00. 304-878-3534.

An end play

Science Test II.' Art Flam-

with a twist

HouH'

IJ (])

(!J Motor Looguo
Baooboll: American Loogue
Che'!!JIIOnohlp Game 1
8:30 (I) Ill 1D Growing Paino
(CC) Joson becomes jeal8:16

ous when Maggi&amp; works
late with .a handsome co·

worker.
9:00 ill700 Club

..

® Ill 1D

Moonlighting
Madd ie seeks re-

(CC)

venge on her former financi al adviser and winds up
in a high-stakes card game.

HOLY M ACKEREL ! THAT'S A WHIRLPOOL!
A,Nl WE' RE HEA PtN' ~ ! GHT FOR IT!

160 min.)
0 Cll ® MOVIE: 'Love,
Mary' ICC)

including defending champion Edwin Newman . 180
min .)

Jt h:&gt;o::o1+
been on s inee

lastsprinql

Probqbly
someW;nq
· simple'

not paying somequy
fifty buckst.qcomeout
here and push
a little red

button!

Phone 304-876·4322 .
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Clollipollo, Ohio
Phone 814 -448-38B8 or
614-446-4477

WINNIE

JIM'S PlUMBING lo HEAT·
INCl. Rt. 1, Box 3&amp;6. Golll·
polio. Coll814-387-0676.

UM ... BILL$4VFP
LITTLE DARREN'6
J.IF'~ ED .. .

Excavating

Good-1 Excav11ing , b11e·
menta. footen, driveway•.
Mptic tanka, landacaplng.

Coli anytime 814 · 446'537, Jame1L . Davlaon, Jr.
owner.

W INN News
11 ;00 IJ (]) CIJ (!J Iii Cll ® Ill
ID Nowe
ill Man From U.N.C.LE.
(!) Powerboat Racing
Busch World Champion-

motoo. Coli 614·448 ·8038
or814-992-7119 anytime.

THESE DADBURN
FISHIN'WORMS
ARE SO SMALL ..

J .A.R . Conotruction Co.,.
Rutland , Oh . 814· 742·
2903. 8ooamonu. Footero,
Concrete work, Backhoe' 1,

·-TH' FISH KEEP
THROWIN' 'EM

BACK

Ditcher. .Dump

truckl, &amp; Wltlr· QII· HWir·
electrical II net.

85

General Hauling

814-387-0823 orl14 ·387.
7741 night or dey .

HES REAL.L.Y CU1"E!!

EYESIGHT?

PAA1'1CULAF'.L.Y L.IKE

W•ugh'l W1t1r Service .
Weill, ciaterna, poolt. F..t.

AeOU'T' EP:NIE?

rolloblo tervico. Coil 614258 · 1240 or 814- 256 ·

10-8-11

'9 52
• Q6

+J8642

By James Jacoby
•

EAST

WEST

Aller South's strong arlificial tw6-, +...
• QJ 9 7
club opening; We.t interjected a pre- \' J 8 1 3
\'Q 10 7
tH2
emptive three diamonds. When South • . A K 10 9 8 5 3
tiO 7 5
now bid three spades, North was obli· +9 3
gated by their methods to bid on to
SOUTH
game. The conlract was very good, but
·:
tAK10 8 3 2
the bad trump split posed some
'AK 6
problems.
t7
' Declarer trumped the second dia·
+AKQ
mood and played lhe spade ace. Next
Vulnerable: Both
came the ace,lcing and queen of ~lubs,
Dealer: South
witH East following. South lhen played
the A·K of hearts and another heart , WeSI
Nortb Eut
Soutb
. won by East's queen. Now came East's
2+
queen of spades and declarer's test. 3 t
Pass
Pass
u
Pass
Pass
The contract would fail if South took Pass
this trick. (South would have to play Pass
. from his hand with no way to stop the I
J-9 of spades from taking lwo tricks.)
Opening lead: t K
Declarer wisely ducked but still had to
be careful. When East exits with his
last diamond, declarer must be able to L-~------~--~..
play his three of spades and overruff
with dummy 's five. That way , the lead
will be in the North harid with South be brilliant enough to play a suit oth~r
holding the K-10 of spades over East's than diamonds at trick two. Then
clarer will never be able to lead from
J.9.
Have you seen the way for the de· dummy at trick -12.
··
to teU,NEWSPo\PER ENTERPRISE ASSN
'fenders to be victorious? Just Jet West

.

••

ae·

~IJ'Md'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

42 Mary Baker

I Bundle
5 Ticket (sl.)

10 Choose
12 Sultan's

..

DOWN
I Manly

feature

d£&gt;cree

2 German

13 Winged

river

14 Cu(l,.in
fahri&lt;'
151!ace the

3 Not pcst&lt;'r
4 Outer
Yesterday'• answer

(comb .

endin r

form )

"
16 "ReUs

5 Railroad
car

29

17 Tunncric

23 Doubled
over

Assume

r

20 Lin~P rl f"

a,.o;; ar·t.

- Ringing" 7 Must
item
18 - Ia-Ia
be done ' 23 Tolerate
19 Furnllure
8 Loving
24 Astral
piece
g Inhabit · 25 Tool
21 Hopper • 11 Silver
26 l'inn
22 0 1lve genus
.
27 M· ·

30 Cooked,

as eJ!Iis
31 Elfin
36 Dislaff

G.l.
38 11- • lunch

ax•m~~~-""
~..,.,.....,

servtce

241n a -

21i Wampum
26 Tread

27 Eastern
Europ1•an
28 Earl
Grey, e.g.

29 MarrJI
33 Re In deht
34 Irish rebe l

lfiJ Uncommon Plllcoo The

group

life and work of arch itect

35 '1'har she

man hires the Simons to
find hi.,m issing wife. who
disappears in a supposedly haunted motel

•

NORTH
• 6 54

ship Grand PriK from St.
Louis, MO.
(f) MOVIE: ' Experiment In
Terror'
•
(I) Tony Brown's Journal

Frank lloyd Wright are ••·
plored. 180 min .l
fJ) Benny Hill Show
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Thay Call
Me Brucer
11 :30 IJ (]) (!] Boot of C~raon
Tonight'! guests are Bill
Cosby and Arnold Schwarzenogger. (R)(60 min.)
(!) Sportocenter
® Now Newlywed Clemo
0 Cll Simon &amp; Simon A

HIS

00 YOU KNOW WHA'f I

·-

IIJ) War: A Commonto"i
with Gwynno Dyor (CCT
·Anybody's Son Will Do.'
Marine recruits are seen
going through the ritua ls of
basic tra ining in Parris IS·
lend. South Carolina. (60
min .}
9:30 C!l Chempionshlp Roller
Darby
10:00 ill Newt
® Ill (HI Our Fomlly Honor
(CCI Frank hunts for a killer
who t urns out to be a protected informant, and an
official probe is launched
into the dealings of the
Danzigs. 160 min.)
I]) Wor: A Commentary
with Gwynne Dyer ICC)
·Anybody's Son Wil l Do.'
Marine rec ruits , are seen
going through th e rituals of
basic tra ining in Parris Island. South Carolina. 160
min.)
IIll Newewotch .
fJ) Odd Couple
IHBO) lot &amp; Ton The coach
vows that nothing can
keep him down ... or can it?
IMAXI MOVIE: ' Fireatorter'
ICC)
10:30 ill Celebrity Chela
C!l NFL Arm Wreatllng
IIll Innovation ·Meat and
Potatoes.' Health column·
ist Jane Brody discusses
new scientific techniques
being used in American
~riculture .

Dozer Worll lend clearing,

Dozer •

.

I]) Novo (CCI ' Nationa l
Science Test II. ' Art Flem·
ing hosts this science quiz
show with a celebrity panel

room additions, painting,
plumbing, and repalrt .

Ken'e Water Service. Wella.
ciJternJ, paoli filled. Phone

Wrecked left front 71 Che·
volt, 2 dr., htrdtop, Coli
814·2111·8831.11ftor IPM . .

Newshour

pion Edwin Newman . (60
min.)
.
fJ) MOVIE: 'Halter Skolte~
IHeol MOVIE: '10' .
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Mr. Blond·
lnge Builda His Droom

Rotlry or coblo tool drilling .
Moll wollt completed ume
day. Pump 11le1 and Jervice.
304-896·3802

83

.

James Jacoby
'.

ing hosts this science quiz
show with a celebrity panel
including defending cham·

ANNIE

tomorrow!

glDGf

lfiJ Nove (CC) ' National

RON 'S Televiaion Service.
Hou11 call• on RCA. Ou•nr,

82

I

Hometown Mary

Whitley. 160 min.l
I])
MecNeii/Lehrer

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump ulos. otrvlce. Regit·
torod In Ohio. All work
guorentood. Cell 304-273·
281 .1 . Ravenswood. W. Vo.

Now arrange the circled lettefs to
form the surprise answer, as aug.
casted by tho above cartoon.

~An swers

Yesterday's

,

Jumbles: KEYED WINCE INVITE BICEPS
Answer. What kind ola game Is croquet?A " WICKET " ONE

home and Ch ristopher decides to buy· a house in

~
·•-e

P'LAYE~ HA~TO

LI:A~N HOW TO DO.

KXXX1~N I I XJ

Answer here:

looks for a job outside the

· J.ond L. lnotollotlon. Roof·
lng, vlnyloldlng,ttorm door.•
and wlndowo. FrH ellt·
motoo. Coli 814 -992-2772 .

John boot for 1111. Coli
1114-258·8417.

197&amp; Cutlloo.
good l-•;eo;;:.:30::;::4·:•7:&amp;;·38=34;::.=
,
..,nd, 304-871·3111.

oxc oond, •2.000.00. 304175·2337.

WELL 1l.6T Me.

Alto pooio filled . Cell 814·
258 -1141 or 614 · 448 ·
1175 or 614·448-7911 .

1- -------

vorv

IS 1\IATA FAGT!

Coli collect 1-614-2370488. day or night . Rogero

James Boya Water Service.

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

••m.

BORN LOSER

Unconditional lifetime gu•·
rentee. Local reference•
furniahad. Free Bltimatea.

Boata and
Motors for Sale

1978 Cutluo Supremo 1 _:------~Broughom U,OOO. Coli of- 1977 Hydro Sport Btu
t• 8, 814· 378· 21188.
loot. 1110 hp Mercury mo-'
1- - - - - - - - - !Dr, trolw, U,SOO.OO, good
1978 Chivy Comoro AC, ..,nd, 304-458·15&amp;7.
PS, PB, AM-FM rodio, tilt,
good cond. Call 114· 448· I·
8209 .
78
Auto Pert•
&amp; Acce110rlea '
1979 Ford LTD. P .SL' P.B.,
Auto, A.C. I !tOg. Coli
814· 742-273B.
Chlvn&gt;lot 305 engine •
1987 ~moro. Orfglnol ond tronomiulon. Coll814-448·
8828.
notorld. 814·992· 8822.
1878 Corv-. Looo then
20.001) mll11- Fully loodld.
L-82 Maino. T·topabloakon
block. Coli 814·182·2831.
9·8. 304·•2·340711ft.. 8.
1o.ooo

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF NG

l•ndiCIIping, etc. Free etti·

1873 Chevoilo Super Sport,
now point, •-II bucktt
-to. ou1o. 411 rwar oxle.
•h. Cell 814·387·0532.

1977 Cutlla Suprwmo PS,
P8, AC, crulot. tilt, oxc.
cond. Coli 1114-448-11298
IVH. or 1114·448•41172.

Home
Improvements

WHAi. A !!J~IC'ISE

URIADS

Newlywed

m

' 80 Ford F100 Loriot
Rongor. IIB.OOO mlleo, AC. Building and remodeling,
crulte, C B, AM·FM, tope,
roofing, m81onery, electri·
new point. 304-8711-2130. col,
fromlng, flooring, dry
w•ll.
bathrooms, kitchen•.
19BII Ford Etcort. 4 opood,
peinting ond plumbing. 304oppro• 18,000 mileo. AM· 876-2440.
FM c o - •4.eoo.oo or
will tokoln trode older model Got 1 room of corpet clooned
In good oond, 304·937· for 122.95. Captain Stea2028.
mer. 304·876·229&amp;. Sovo
Ad . Explroe 86' .
73
Vans&amp; 4 W . O.
Ctrpontry and remodeling.

1970 OldomobHe Doito 88.
4 door, outomotlc, PS, PB.
run• good,
work car.
Clol 814-24 -91194 or 814446·9747 . .

New

t)

I I I Kj (J

Divorce Court

IJ (])

...

) KJ

Game
ill· Pleoae Don't Eat
Dalaies
(!)Baseball's Greatest Hits
CID Sanford and Son
(I) 0 Cll Family Feud
Jeopardy
(I)
Nightly
Business
Report
®I·Wheel of Fortuna.
GilD Price Is Rlgh!
fJ) WKRP in Cincinnati
8:00 . IJ (]) (!) lnoida Look
ill Doktari
·
(!) Championship Wro..
I ling
CID MOVIE: 'Tho Spiral
Rood'
® IIIID Who' s the Boss?

cond.

crete. Cell 304· 773-6131.

Conning puchu now ovoll- 1978 VW Robbltt, outq, AC,
oblo, opon 7 doyo wook, coli rock • pinion' ttuling, low 1975 Ford von good cond ..
lor pricet 11 oupply io g11 mlnr. 11.11110. Coli . 11.200. Coil 814 · 4484313 .
limited, 304·773 · 6721 . _&amp;_1_4_
· 38_1·_8_14_4_._ __
Bob'o Morllot. Moton. W. 1
1977 Ford T-bird prlvoto. 1
Vo.
OWMr , 88,000 mhl. IXC .
1884 Rom Chorgor 318. 4
cond. Coli 814·441·259S.
opood . 14,000 mllu .
Smoked glou, AM· FM
59 For Sale or Trade
19117 Fleetwood Codilloc clock rodlo . 814-949-3093.
Umo11no. 3 11111. fllr condition, 11,500 or boot offer.
G11 furnoco. 121,000 btu. Coli 814·448-1197.
77 8·160 Ford Rongor,
forcod air, complete, 1- - - - , - - - - - - AM·FM. PS, tllding bock
•100.00. Six drowtr 1976 Ford Grtnodo Ghlo
good cond. Coli 304drtll8r, with mirrow, rtfln - now oil--thor tiroe, now
76·7271 .
.
lthod, U5 .00. 304-87&amp;- muffler ond new point Job.
3982.
Coli 814·4411-1e18 BTW.
10· 8; 814·448·8880 BTW. 74 Motorcycles
8 -9.
.
l.;r111 S 1 tppl11~ ·

CROSS lo SONS
U.S. 38 Wott, Jockoon,
Ohio. 814·288· 84111 .
Mo101y FO&lt;guoon, Now
Hollond, Buoh Hog Solos •
Sirvlce. Ovor 40 uood
trootoro to choooo from •
complete llno of now •
utod oqulpmont. Llrgoll
oolectlon In S.E . Ohio.

exc

•860.00 . 304-875 -3761 or
814-448-2072.

•u9&amp;. 304-87&amp;-50B4.

'78 lntomotloniol 52200.
360 co mingo, 13 opood.
good ..,nd, 304·468· 1881.

yoilow 20 conto 1 lb. 11 0 1979 Buick Skyhowk, outo,
buthol . Kennlboo pototooo oir, PS, PB, prico roducod.
•8 buthel. Coli 8114·268· mull 1111. Coli 814-448·
4491 or 814-441·3888.
8208 or 814-2118-1117.

Farm Equipment

7:30

110 three

dowo. lnaulotlng, roofing.

Trucks for Sale

---

Maga!lne
Courtohlp/ Eddle's

fJl JefferS&lt;~ns

'83 Celebrity, po, pb. oc. tilt

1988 Hondo CRX. tlr. AM·
FM c:eoottte toke over pay'87R 3121
monto. 30 4· • ·
·
1883 Dodge Shelby
Chorgor, &amp; opood, blue end
oliver, AC, 28,000 rrillet,
•&amp;.200.00. Phone 304-8B2
2285 .

...

,,

IJ (]) PM

IIIID

whool, crulot, 83,000milea. new and remodeling. con· "

Sweet Potatoes whit• or

61

wheeler,

t
I ___
I I _) l

I YURMK

'Newshour

LA5T TIME.

Ford one ton dump truck. GE. Spoclollng In Zenith.
Good condhlon runt good Coli 304·576·2398 or 814·
liking •1. 500 . Coli after 5, 448-2454.
888· 4014.
Fetty TrH Trimming, ttump
1980 Dotoun 200SX llopd .• romovol. Cell 304-87640,000 mi., 12,500. Cell 1331.
514·448-2897.
RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex·
78 Chevy pickup-now point, poriencld
corpontor. oloctri·
I cyl .. 3 ~d. Sot 11 Hunt'o cian, mason, painter. roofGoooory, Rt. 180, •1 .700 Ing (including hqt t~r
nogotloble.
opplicetion) 304·675-2088
or 8711· 7388.
1988 Chevy pickup truck.
P .S., P.B .. V-8, Auto. Starlit Troo ond Lown Ser·
18900 . Coli 81 4-949· vice, atump removal. 30428eo.
578·2010 .

1- - - - - - - - -

(i liVI~ :. Iiii.h

1983 Hondo

Autos for Sale

72

1- - - - - - - - -

Fruit

_

good. exc. clean, muat IH
12,896.00. 304-875·
7123.

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

81 Mercury Lyna wogon,
Story 1o Clorll plono, llko cloon, 4 cyl .. tir, t2.000.
now. Coli btl_. 8 • 8PM, Coli 114-288-8822.
614·448-4914.
1-----_:____
1 - - - - - - - - - - 1988 CodMioc convortlblo
Bond lnttrumonto good good top, good point,
cond. Col1814·448·0840.
•1.000. Coli 814-2811·
1- - - - - - - - - 6122.
Wurlltzer Spinet piano, good
cond. Coll814-448-81110.
1988 Cougor • 1979 Fiat
both exc . cond . Coli 814·
·
Splnot·Conoole Pion a Bor- 446-4109.
go ln. Wonted: RHponolbil
porty to toko ovor low 1884 Corvlrtto convortiblo,
monthly poymontoon oplnlt 327·300 HP, 4opud, good
piano. Con bo - n locally. oondlllon. Coli 114·448Wrilo Crod~ Monogor; P. 0 . 4180 lifter 5:00PM.
Boa 33, Friedens, Pe. 16641,
1983 Buick LISobre Lmtd.,
Peavoy HorHogo gultor omp, oKctlilnt condhlon, 4 dr., oil
e•c. cond.. mony oxtroo optlont, 33,000 mllet. Coli
••oo. 304-875-1311 or 814·446 · 41 eo oft or
875-7138 after 6 p.m .
5:00PM.

&amp; Vegetablea

.

Craiol:r mag•. new battery,
muffler •nd 1nttnn1. Runs

model1nd newar uud ar1.

58

'

'.78 Dotoun 2SOZ. 4 opood.

12 wook old Boogie pupo.
125 . 00 uch. 304-898·
TOP CASH Pilei for '80
3911 .

Musical
Instruments

.
;.:,-.--·--/

81

Floh Tonk ond Pot Shop,
] r.IIISII11 il .t lll 111
2~13 Jockoon Avonuo,
Point Ple11ont. 304·8111· 1 ----~'---:-2083. Flth, birds ond more. 71
Aut_O I for Sale

57

IF WE'RE LUC.~'Y;
THI5 MIGHT BE f HE

Scrv 1ces

AKC rog lotorod Buaott -Robbllo: Frwnch Lop ond
hound pupploo. 2 moleo. Collfornion,ollvoordroiOid,
Show quollty. Shott .Md
wormed. 814 •887.11 4 1. ,.3_0_4_-411_8_·1_8_2_8_._ __
1
RotdtvHie.O.

Riot Torrilr pupplot, bob
tolled, wormed, ovonlngo or
wook ondo 814-258-1487.

PAPTAIN EAS¥_ ___

\!!1 ~~·

Unacnunbie thole lour Jumbloo.
one letter to each equare, to form
lour ordlnory -

ill
- Father
C!l Sportscenter
CID Mery Tyler Moore
()) Entertainment Tonight
(!J Wheel of Fortune
0 Cll Wheel of Fortune
CIJ Second City TV
®News
lfiJ
MecNeii/ Lehror

,_

K
All Slmmentol X Club CoiVII.
Brlorpotch
onnelo
• Red. block. oloo 3 yr. old
brood grooming. Indoor·
outdoor boarding flcilhleo. Slmmontolbull,hoylorulo.
Englioh Cocker Spaniel. 38 B ,eo
_u_8_1_4_·38_s_-8_1_7_B._ _

rtiiNOwhhbul~lnoquollzer.

Gorogo to rent In Point HouR cool. Lump lootoker.
Ploonnt for vehiclo otorogo, Zlnn Cool Co. Coll814-448·
304-871-2001 .
1401.

2 bdr. opt .. fully co,P..od.
11 Court St., •325 mo . • rof.
1o dtp. Coli 814-448·4121.

Pets for Sale

7:00

~ Tl1AT SCRAMBLED WORD DAME
by Henri Arnold end Bob Leo

'i}jf!lf.\.a fii}'ft

~

EVENING

For oole 1988 Troutwood 18
ft. cornper, •1 ,600. Coli
814-448-4113.

1---------

Ulld 4110 John Dooro dozer
• uood J ·20 Ditch Witch
trenCher. 1·814-884· 7842
COUNTRY MOBILE Homa or 6008.
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomoroy. Lorge loto. Coli Commodore 11 oomputer
_:8.:.1.:.4·.::9.:.9:.2·.:.7.:.47:_9:_·- - - - l •130, llko now. Coli 1114·
441·4238.
Troller opocot, amall child·
ron occoplod, Rt. 1, out
on tho roH-corpet .
Loculi Rood bock of K • K. Now·otlll
12'X38', btlao, 1200. Cell
304-178·10711.
814-448·4625.
47 Wanted to Rent

·

•·"--'--"' .:!

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

10/8/85

I

Trovel troller. 1979. 5th
wheel, 1979 Bononza, 31 ·
ft., w~h w·1978 Ford truck
'-' T Rionger, •11,100. Cell
814-245-5052.

0
a

Ohio

Television
Viewing

Camping
Equipment

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Wllot.E SETUp.

Firewood for ule. Coli 814 . _97_e_o_.- - - - - - •·Rag. Morgon horota, 1
3•7- 0121 or 814-387- 1
111 lllo 1-· Wouldt-•·
v
Drogonwynd Conory Kenn, "-"'·
~
0181 or 814·3&amp;7·0401.
nel. CFA HimoleyM, Portion for good compor. Con 814·
,_
k~
AKC 378·2181.
King wood. • cool itovo ond s.. moot "'""'·
4411
'225 . Mogle Chofgoutovo Chow puppies. Coli
' Billy Royolllddlo, 11'11 Inch
•100. TruoVoluo40~•Lr.• 3844 ofter 7 PM.
~- 1o
F II 11v
ho
nk •
II
oqu.wt n -1. u o I! •
t wotor to
. I
Pigo for oolo, '26 ooch . Coli loclng Md oliver conchot. 2
814 · 882 •2770 ·
814-379-2411.
vr•·· old. Looks now. 814·
742·2388 . .
Solid Boochwood drop ioof
T p
1e Cell 1 -~------dining toblo, with 2 clloiro, :~f.:::: °j , ood • ·
66·50 lb. Shootl. *31.
like, 178. Flochor home
814-948-2017.

1---------- .tope
co-n• dock, Dolby. motol
cotpoolty, opookon,

room•

For rent trti,ler lot• 1nd
houot otGoilipollo FortY-8 •
D Troller Porll. 304·678:
2844 call ev•nings.

56

L:~~~~::~~~::-r::::;:=~:=;;~=~

I

8LDCoU

23 chonnol bon CB rodio,
BuDding mttoriol, concrwte
146.00. 304-773-6811 .
blocko oil lizoo, lontilo, flu
blocko. cloy tile. Doltlory.
Golllpolio Block Co.. Pine
53
Antiques
St., Clolllpollo. Ohio Coli
814-448-27B3.
Lorgo ttlmp COIIICtion ,
1300. Soli 01 trodo for coint. Block, brick, mortor ond
Coli 114-949-2801 or 814- mooonry ouppllot. Mountoln
Stott Block, Rt. 33, Now
949-2180.
Hovon, W. Ve. 304-882·
2222.
64 Miec. Merchandise

ID •I!l

lnlormotion coli (814)448·
8641 or 814·448-7880 or
814-246-5146 .

80x300 lot with 28x44
t.nment. floor ,aeptic ttnk,
water tnd electric hook-up.
•10,000. Racine. Ctll814·
247-3881 .

~

Cloudo Winton. Rio Gronde.
0 . Coll814-24&amp;-11121 .

Cited at 47 Sycamore

One acre with septic tank,
eltctrlc pole, well-house
with deep well. Bluo Like
Or. off Boor Run Rd. Ro·
ducod U ,OOO cooh. Coli
1· 304· 522· 2078 .

~~IN.It /M,lT'U..

Pomerpy-JI!Iid~rt.

HunteroSpoclol 14ft. 1977
Amorlcon Pilgrim trovel
troller. Coli Stove 304-876·
6046 or 8711· 7868.

I 1'1'\0W IT'S Ycoll

BuHdlng Motorlolt
Block. brick. towor pipoo,
windowe, lintels,

78

'l't!Rtl 'fo BE "IT.'
~ IF $11€ SEe&gt;~

se33.
::;:;~:==::::::::=
Solo. lovoooot, choir , 56 -Bullding ' Supplles
•150.00. 304·1175-50811.

Business
Buil!lings

Lotofornloonlendcontroct
with omoll down poymont.
Coll814· 388· 8711 oftor 5.
3 acrea, guege, trailer hoo·
kup for 1111. Coli 814-4482688.
.

64 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

K.nmoro hot wetor tonk. I Porto Crib , boby bod,
montht old. Glboon rofrlgor· ploypon , trolnlng choir.
oter. I montht old. Corpot phono 304-878-309B.
with podding. 614-992:Jan.
Electric boot motor guldo
loot control. Coptoin - t
Dining room tobla · wood for ou1o or von. 304-171·
2-cholro for oole. 304-876 - ·8479.

· Moigt Co. 143 ocrot, 90

Tuesday; October 8. 1985

Tuesday. October 8, 1985

32 Barring
no o ne

•

37 Forearm

bones

39 Hawaiian
veranda
40 Bullock

41 Raise

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

Haul llm••tone, aand, gravel.dirt, bulk or bag tenilizer
and lime. Excelaior Salt

ilJ Tul

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the lwo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hint.'! Each day the code letters are differenl.
..
CRYPTOQUOTE

Workolnc . 63B E. Main St ..
Pomo;oy. 814-992-3B91 .

fj) One Step Beyond

10-R

...

1130. Reaaon1ble rataa.

8:7

room . (60 min .)
I]) Letonlght ~merice

IIJID ABC News Nlghtline

12:00 ill Bott ol Groucho
(!) Mazda Sportolook
()) Entertainment Tonight
® MOVIE: ' Fuzz'
't.a ® Stlr Hustler/Sign Off
·'GilD Eye on Hollywood
fJ) Gunsmoke
IMAXI MOVIE: 'The Blues

PEANUTS

Upholstery

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Avo .. Oollipolio.
814· 448-7833 or 814 -4481833.

'IOU KNOW
WHAT '(OV

YOU COULD BE A RAilROAD
(g()551N6 6VARO!YOU COULD

COU LD

STAND 6V TilE TKACKS,
At-ID WARN PEOPLE THAT

BE ?

W~AT

DO YOU
THINK

Brothers'
12:30 IJ (]) (!] Loto Night with

A TRAIN WAS COMING ...

' '6

R • M Furniture Menufoc.

. ..

turing. St. Rt. 7, Crown

City, Oh . Coli 814-258·
1470, coli Eve. 814·4483438 . Old &amp; now
Uphootored.
·

David Lettermen Ton ight's
guests ora Art Buchwald ,
Nils Lofgren and Don Herbert. 160 min.l
ill Bill Coaby ShC!W
0 Cll MOVIE: 'Sold of
lnn~ence'

N IJ~: A

I)

•

ZC WIII. VA X

znz wn ON ,
FCA

nov

I

GAAN

!! V A
I' C A

ED I.A VX
N n

· M V A-

ltXI.

GWV L N

NFO LK

N C THl ll I,

~'C AE .

- Z C A NI'AV
II. F:RVYN
Yesterday'• Crytoquote: t.EtUUR UIIIEli'BE, OUR
COUNTRY, OUR COUNTY, AND,. NOTHING IIU~ OUR
COIJNTHY - J)ANIEL WEBSTER
.
(11 91 ~

Klho Feature"
~l

Svl'\di C OI~ . Jrl&lt;

-r·

•.

•

t

-

•I
.l'. f

·~·:t

v

.'

�Paga-12-The ·Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. October 8, 1985

Pomeroy-Midclleport, Ohio

MGM Scouts choose officers

Food Pantry to benefit from Scouts

'!be .MGM Scout District · has
chosen officers and conunlttemen,
according to Frank DIClemente of
the group,
Nominees for the Executive
ConunitteeareDr. BernardNietun,
district chairman; Everett Kin,
district commissioner; commissioner staffers Bob SchoontJver,
Fred Scarberry, Walt..,. Walker,

October Is Scout Service Month, .
according to Frank DIClemente of
the MGM scout district. In light of
that, tbe dlstri«;t executive ccmmlttee has enrouraged the Individual
units to canvass neighborhoods to
gather foodstuffs for tbe GalllaMelgs Communlty_Actlon Commit-

Frank DIClemente, Jim Oller, Bob
Brown, BUI Floberts, Roy Dowell,
Bob Smltliand WUIIam Wise.
In olher oommlttees, Advancement: Robert Matthews Jr., William Knight, William Wise, Pat
Woods, Steve Theiss; Scout Round table: rommlssloner AI Harris.
assistant Walter Walker, Cub rom·

missioner Sarah Johnson. assistant
Kathy Workman; Scout Training:
cha!rman Charles Henson Sr.,
training officers Frank DIClemente, Robert Matthews Jr., Cub
training co-chairs Kathy Workman
and Becky Tyree;- Activity Chairman: scout, Fred Scarberry; Merit
Badge coordinator: Frank DIClemente; MGM district ranger: Bob

tee's
Food Program.
"TheEmergency
CAC food pantry
Is hoping to
gather enough suppnes to atd 10&gt;

Arms.

Girl Scout diary:

•

Scouts hold training
Training sessions for brownie and
junior level troops was conducted by
Dee Lawrence, Black Diamond Girl
Scout field director, and Debbl
Buck, junior scout trainer, at the
Thursday night service unit meetIng of Meigs County troop leaders.
During the meeting arrange·
ments were completed for a
magazine sale to be carried out by
all levels d scouting. The day camp
patch contest was also discussed
along with Interest In participating
In the food pantry for the CommunIty Action Agency.
The daisy program for kindergarten age children was discussed
with Information available from
Kathy Price, 992-71.5, or Ann
Scarberry, 949-:JJI5.
Leaders and volunteers at the
meeting were Susan Jett, Tammy
· Capehart, Dawnette Welch, and
Rhea Norris, Cadette Troop w.J
and Senior Troop l.nl; Gladys
Thomas. Riverview 1015; April
Harmon, Syracuse Junior Troop
m-1; Linda Wells, Mary Dempsey,
and Texanna Well, consultant,
Chester Brownies 1067; uta Van
Meter, Chester Junor Troop 1049;
Usa Grosnlckle, Tuppers Plains
Daisies and Brownies Troop ll35;
Kay Robets, Racine Junior Trop
1042; and Ann Scarberry, secretary
tor the service unit

co-leadef, had charge or the meeung
during which time a coinmunity
service project with Brownie Troop
1067 was discussed. A registered
nurse attended last week's meeting
to talk on health. Meetings are held
at the community buDding, every
other Friday, 3: Jl to4::.lp.m.
Syracuse .Junior Troop ~
First Aid classes wW be held Oct.

16 and Nov. 6 for members of the
Syracuse Junior Troop 1204, April
Harmon, leader, announced at last
week's meeting. On Nov. ~ the
group wUI be visited by Merrl
Amshary, beautician wl\o wUl talk
about skin and hair care, and wUl
also give haircuts to some of the
girls: .

~.

A day camp patch was designed
and the Investiture for new scouts
was held. Rose Ann Jenkins and
Faith Hayman are co-leaders d. the
troop which meets on the first and
third Wednesday at the Syracuse
Methodist Church, 3:30 to 5 p.m.

families during the coming year,
DIClemente said. The program has
been successful in· tbe past bY
assisting needy families who, for
varoos reasons, were without food,
clothing and shelier, he added.
Items needed Include canned

A111ahw~g

good of all kinds, clothing, blankets
and cash donatklns. Because of
limited storage tacllltes, no perlsha·
bles can be ac~pted. Scouts and
Cubs throughout tbe area will be •
seeking donations of canned goods,
DIClemente said.

'

'

I
r-;;::=============:;:;;:;,;;;,;;;;;:;;;;:;:;::::;=.,
Look 0 ut . BUStl.
Introducing one-step rust
.
protection from RUS1-0LEUM.

VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING
Quaity

•

Vol.36. No.t24

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sq. Yd.

Sentilel sta1t writer
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce unanimously
approved a motion Thesday endorsing Pomeroy's one
percent Income tax and to vote against an Initiative
petition to repeal the measure.
Pomeroy businessman Paul Simon made the
motion at Tuesday' sregularchamber meetlngsaylng·;.
''It's the best thing that ever happened to the town."
Simon said that among other Improvements, the
village's streets are the cleanest he's ever seen them.
· Bruce Reed, chamber member and ccuncllman,
spoke hrlefiy to the group about the Income tax
measun! which was enacted by emergency ordinance
on JjU!uary 1 of this year.
Reed explained that' revenue from the first slx
months of the tax was used to bring village accounts
Into the black. But, he noted, In theserondslx months,
Improvements within the village became evident.
.lie specified that the Income tax has 'enabled the
vlllage to pave several villagestreets; hire a total ofslx
new fulltlme employees In the street and pollee
departments; bring salaries of several vUiage
workers to minimum wageandglve an 8peroent raise
to all village workers; free tbe meters oo the parking
lot on an experimental basis; and Install new street
lights and guardrails In some areas d. the village.
Reed said future plans for Income tax money, If the
Initiative petition to 'repeal the measure Is defeated
November 5,1ncludes new sidewalks for the downtown
blocks of the vUiage. He also pointed out that the money
generated from the Income tax puts the vUiage In "an
excellent position to apply for 50-~ matching
government grants". In addition, the local tax can be
deducted from state and federal taxes.
'"We (village councll) want to continue making

INSTALLATI.ON AVAILABLE

King ·Builders Supply
405 N. 2nd

LBERFELDS

Middleport, OK.
Convenient Off Strut P.nllll

A tour of the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. In Pomeroy was
planned at the recent meting of the
Chester JuniorTroop1049 held at the
community buDding. Ula Van
Met..., leader, and Sue Metzger,

Golf scramble
successful event

I
I

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newapaper

Submits appUcatlon

Pomeroy Chamber has submitted an application for
a $19,995 grant from the Ohio Department of
Development's Office of Travel and Tourtsm. U the
grant Is accepted, the money wUl be used to develop a
brocure and slide presentation to promote tourism In
Pomeroy and t'hroughout Meigs County.
Ron Ash, chamber president, prepared the
application on behalf of the chamber. Application Is
being made through a joint elfortamongthe chamber,
tbe Meigs County Hlstortcal Society, and the Meigs
County Park Commission.
A~ percent local match through In-kind services,
donations and other measures will be required over the
78 weeks of the granting perlnd Ash reported. The
application was submitted on October 2.
Ash also rominended Pomeroy Village for the river
bank cleanup on East Main St. from the parking lot.
Ash said he hopes the river bank along West Main St.
will also be Improved.
Tom Reed. vice-president of chamber, reported on
the upcoming Hailoween Party for the village. The
party, scheduled for7 p.m.Tuesday, October29, will be
held on the upper parking lot. Trick or treat night In
Pomeroy wlll be held Thursday, October 31.

QUEEN CANDIDA'IE!- One d these five Meigs
IDghSchoolsenlorswWbenamedhomecomlngqueen
Friday night In pre-game ooremonles at the
Melp-VInton game. Caudldatei are, I to r, Jodi
Harrison, daughter of Marlene and Dale Harrison,
Klnpbury Road, Pomeroy; Mlssle Howard, daughter

By Charlene Hoeflich
Sentinel staff wrller
"Forty years Is a long time to

walt, but, I gues~ou~arisay It's
better late than never," commented Harry Stover ai he
'

.

'

•

of Deborah and Elwood Howard, .Jr., Rutland; Anita
Edwards, daughter ol Joan and Ralph Edwards,
Route l, Mlddlepori; Debbie Wy..tt, daughterd Unda
and Doug Wy..tt, Pomeroy, and Cindy Soulsby,
daughter of Susie and James Soulsby, Pomeroy.

Community getting involved,
says workshop .supervisor .
A shift toward "community
Involvement" for workers at Meigs
Industries was outlined Tuesday for
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
bY David Mllllken, the facility's
workshop supervisor.
Mllllken said ccmmunlty Involvement Is being Increased and noted
that several work contracts outside
the sheltered workshop are now
being fllled by Meigs Industries'
employees. Sonne of those rontracts
were obtained through the competelive bidding process he noted.
Meigs Industries began a Janitorlal service this spring and contracts
are held with the Ohio Historical
Society to clean Buffington Island
· Park at Portland, and with the Ohio
Department of Transportation to
clean the roadside rests on Route 33
and Route 7 at Galllpolis. In
addition. Meigs Indusbies has a
contract to maintain the Carleton
School grouoos.

Pers'-sience pays off for veteran;
p"urple heart, other medals arrive

ItS awhole new world.

Several out-()f-town relatiVes and .
friends were here for the funeral
••
services d Wilma Terrell at Ewing
Funeral Home. Sept 21. The Rev.
WUbur Perrtn officiated and Interment was at Beech Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Atendlng from out-()f-town were
Mrs. Charles Spencer, Anna Marla,
F1a.; Mrs. Michael Wayland, Homestead, F1a.; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Mitch, StevensvUle, Mich.; Mr. and
Mrs. BUI Daw!lln and famUy,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
George Bishop, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Lucien Casto, Columbus; Mrs.
Sue Cramer, Markln; Ray Hines,
. Belpre, and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Hines, Newark.

displayed 10 medals he earned
during World War tL but didn't
receive untO just recently.
The Middleport native wbo
served three years, four months
and 16 days In the South Pacific,
began efforts to get his medals
many years ago, but It wasn't
untO a couple of years ago when
his daughter, Shena Hubbard,
Lancaster school teacher, decided he had "earned the medals
and had waited long enough" did
he actually receive them.
She sent letters to not only the
Veterans Administration, but
other agencies dealing with the
records of veterans, and got one
put-()!! after another before
tlriaUy "going right to the top"
with an envel~ of responses
from the varoos agencies and a
strong request for some action.
'The Veterans Administration
at ooe point lnfoimed Mrs.
Hubbard that all the records had
been destroyed In a depository
tire and without the records
mthlng could be done. However,
with copies d her father's
discharge, letters she had written and responses she had gotten,
she wrote President !3onald
(C&lt;lntlnued on page 14)

Other types of jobs done by Meigs
Industries workers Include lawn
care, furniture rertnlshlng, and all
types or woodworking at their fully
operating workshop located in the
Carleton School building in
Syracuse.
Some of the Items made at the
workshop Include picnic tables.
wooden signs, name plaques and
gun racks.
Milliken noted tha I Meigs Indus·
tries cOntributes $24,000 to Meigs
County's yearly eronomy through
these types of activities. "If you
want It done," he said, "we' ll figure
oulhowtodolt."
Milliken explained briefly to
chamber the background of the
sheltered workshop situation. He
also highlighted many programs
which would provide Incentives for
local buslnesses tohireworkers with
mental retardation. "Think of us as

"

another employment service In the
county," he commented.
He also touched on what he
described "themisunderslandlngof
mental retardallon.'' Hepolntedout
that at Meigs Industries, the term
"people with mental retardallon" ls
always used - never the term
"mentally retarded people" because It is unfair to consider
retardation the mos t Important or
outstanding qullty about a person.
"We jre not talking about people
who cant learn and Improve," he
added, "we are talking about people
who need extra experience to learn
and Improve. "
Meigs Industries Is prtmarUy a
manufactUJi ng pla nt and service
organlzallon, Milliken said, with the
same types of business problems js
any other working place, "except
that our workforce Is made up of
tFOple with mental reta rdation."
•

Temporary measure to avert crisis
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate agreed early today to break
the logjam over the politically
charged balanced budget Issue and
allow a vote on a temporarY
Increase In the federal credit line to
avert a fiscal crisis.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole forged the agreemenIat 3a.m.
EIYr with weary senators, worn out
from an entire day of jockeying by
Democrats and Republicans for top
billing on the balanCed budget Issue.

Under the agreement. the Senate Congress time to take Its four-d ay
planned votes later today on both Columbus -Day vacation this wceDemocratic and Republican plans kend and still have time left over to
to balance the budget by early nexl do more work on balancing budgets.
The short-term bill also must be
decade, which' were attached to an
approved
by the House.
Increase In the federal debt ceiling
The Treasury Tuesday scheduled
from $1.8 trtlllon to $2 trillion an auction today of $5 billion In
enough to last for another year.
Treasury bills - Instruments tbe
The Senate also planned lo vote government sells to finance Its
later today on a small hike In the activities - in the hop&lt;' that· ·
debt ceiling - enough to cover Congress would stop Its debating
checks through Oct. 17 - glviqg and acllo raise the debt limit.

$500,000 allocated .for
laid-off plant workers

Chatter Clubs plans
come-as-you-are party

Todays
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

16 mg. ''tar",1.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC method.
I

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. ·

PIKETON, Ohio (UP!) -Rep.
Bob McEwen, R-Ohlo, says the
federal government wUl provide up
to $500,0011n assistance for laid-()!f
workers at the Plkelon gas centrifuge uranium enrichment plant.
The U.S. Department of Labor
said It expected about 1m former
workers at the plant to take .
advantage of the funds for job,
training, job search and relocation.

At leastl,:lffi jobs were affected by
the decision.
McEwen said he was "delighted
thatLaborSecretaryWilllamBrock
has agreed to help the (gas
centrifuge enrichment plant)
workers. The grant will enhance our
efforts 1D assure each employee Is
given every opportunity to klcate a
new job."
The federal fuming wUl be
available through state Bureau or
The. federal Department of Employment Services dflces In
Eneoo announced last June that It eight counties, Including Adams,
would close the plant as a result d. a Bro"((l, Jackson, Highland, Lawmassive restructuring of Its ura- rence, Pike, Ross · and Scioto,
nium enrichment program. The McEwen said.
governmeill cited low demand jU!d
The fuoos are being made
aggressive foreign ccmpetltkln for available through the Jobs Training
hurting U.S. sales'c/ the product.
Partnership Act.

..

••
•

•

•

..

'•.

... .
'

"-

I
I

"

&lt;\
'
0

'.

'·'

.. ,,

1.

...

r --·~

'

••
'

~

II

I
Friday. Theagency'sclothlngbank .

CAA sets free clothing day

The Gallla-Melgs Community
Action Agency will observe free
clolhlng day form 9 a.m. to 12 noon

'

:"1.

I

eilttne

Improvements within the village, " Reed said. "We
want to keep trying."
.
• FtveofthemembersatTuesd3y'schambermeetlng
actually llve In Pomeroy and will be eligible to cast
their votes against the Initiative measure on
November 5. The majortty of other members at the
meeting work In Pomeroy and therefore pay the tax.
Although they have no vote bi the matter, they
expressed their satisfaction with the tax.
This year'~ projected revenue from the Income tax Is
$160,001 to $165,001, Reed said.

Out of town visitors
attend Terrell funeral

A come-as-you-are party was
planned for October at the homed
Linda Hubbard when the Chatter
Club nnet recently at the bonne d.
Doris Wilt. Dottle Jones was hostess
for the meeting and members
presmted hostess gifts to her. Ruth
Young received a birthday gift.
Gannes were played with prizes
going to Oorothy Roach, Linda
Hubbard, Delores Whitlock, and
Ruth Young. A door prlze was
. awarded to Lola Harrison. For next
month's party Mrs. Hubbard and
Doris Wilt wUI be hostesses. A bake
sale will also be held.
Others attending were Brenda
Bolin, Janice Fetty, Elaine QuUien,
Ma!Y Starcher, Francis Carleton,
and Linda Gheen.

•

Chamber endorses.
Pomeroy's income tax

ani

Cbelller .Junior Troop lOll

Jaymar Golf Club professional,
BUI Childs reports that a ''very
successful and enjoyable" scramble w'aS held Sunday at the club for
the benellt of junior golf In the area.
First place team was Okey
Connolly, Craig Mathews, Charlie
Ritchie, and BrianConnolly; second
team winners were Don WilSon, Bob
MOler, Bob Bowen and Fred Crow
and third place went to Blll Childs,
BOb Ashley, Mlck Childs and Rod
Harrlsoo. Jim Anderson won the
longeSt drive and Don 'JUlia, Jim
Prollltt, and Roger Morgan were
closest to the pin. Prices were
donated bY lllocal business houses.
Childs extends a thanks to all d
the participants who played In the
scramble and to businesses which
· rontrtbuted prizes for the support of
junior golf In the area.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 9, 1985

Copyrighted 1986

... •IKtian of patttmS;

$4 95

at y

e

CqaiMn Innis. Stacks
in 9 ft.and 12 ft. wiiH!s.

Only

•

Is located at the former high school _
In Cheshire.

.

'

~
- ~~~~~

TIIJIEE IN.JUKED -'lbree Melp ew.-y youths were treated aud
d lltVtiEt-Memerlal Hoapllal followtnrasdloolbusaccldent
~ ~ Heepllal o'Dclalt saki Glaa A~, 12, o1 Rt. f,
Pona.., acdkrell 1 brullle 011 her head; Randy Grover, 8, o1 Rt. 4,
PometOJ, iidlered llllue dmlace to his Jell wrW; 111111 Tony Six, 11, o1
Melp Cow&amp;y 18, Pomerov. t!QfleJ'\ld alwulted hand. The GaDla·Melp
rei

.{
,

po8t of the Stale Highway Patrol said the. bus' driver, Charles E.
Williamson, 42, of Ill. I, Rutland, told them his bus was ea:tlbound m
Klnpbury Road, about fouHelltllo! of a mlle east of Ohio 143, when he
said he mei 11 weslbound bus, and tried t~ move over when a culvert
gave way. The bus sustained light damage In the 4 p.m. accident,
troopers said.

•

'I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="199">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2789">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41611">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41610">
              <text>October 8, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="13">
      <name>bush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1573">
      <name>rockhold</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
