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•

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I

"FALL ClASSIC" TOURNAMENT ACnoN 1be ftrsl annual "Racine. FaD Classic" voUeyball
1oun1arne111 was a laage success and provided
spedBioni wllh a lot~ COI1Ipl!tlloo and excitement as
this ScGit · Wolte adloll photo of Saturday's
cl!amplon*lp game lndlcates.Eieven teams participated In the event which was part ol the annual Fall

Festival sponso!Jd by the Racine Vohtnteer Fire
Department. Pam D1mcan and Beth Bum field ol 'lbe
N.E.T.' retumaserveagalnstEastern-KoumryKlub,
a team sponsored by John Tealord, Chester. 'The
N.E.T' 1111 all-womens team from Parkersburg won
the lnnaugural event.

Parkersburg team, classic winner
The first annual were furnished by the Kountry Club
'Racine Fall Classic' sponsored by 1
the Racine Volunteer Fire Depart·
men! Is now history, but the
excitement of the lnagural event
was still In the air early Saturday
evening, when the 'N.E.'I:.', an
all·women's team based In Parkers·
burg, W.Va., was crowned cham·
pion after defeating the Eastern
Kountry Klub In the exciting
championship match.The N.E.T.
!foam defeatfod four teams to earn
the title, defeating many all men
teams In the process to win the
championship trophy and bragging
rights to the traveling trophy.
The competition throughout the
day was Intense and exciting as well
as much fun for the players and
spectators wlK&gt; llned tiE sldellnes to
watch. The Initial excitement began
during warm·ups w!En eventual
champion, 'The N.E.T.' displayed
their talent and gave an Indication
thattheywereateamtobereckoned
with.Members of the N.E.T. team
were formerly West Virglnta State
Volleyball champions.
Eleven teams participated In the
event Including • J.D. Dr!Uing of
Racine. the Volley Vandals, the
Drones,Rutland,the Cove,the Ra·
cine Loafers, Eastern Student Coun·
cU,Eastern Koontry Club, Nor·
theast Cluster of United Methodist
Churches,tbe Racine Fire Depart·
ment,andtheN.E.T.
All teamsJ ere surprisingly
tough.
Tournament direCtor Lee Floyd
commented, "1be tournament was
a huge success. The traveling
trophy was sponsored by the Racine
Emergency Squad, tbe llrst place
trophy sponsored by the Sun Fun
PennzoD In Racine, and second
place was sponsored by Roses'
Excavating In Racine. Trophies
RACINE -

In Chester.

.. El~e11 calls were answered by .
local unit$ over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
Calls on Saturday lncl~ded: 8:03
a.m., Pomeroy to Village Green
Apartment$ for Lawton Templeton,
Jr., toVeteransMemorialHospltal;
TUppers Plains, 8: 53 a.m. to Route 7
lor Kenneth Grove, to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutl;md at 10:59
a.m. to Depot St. lor Howard
German to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroly at 12: 56 p.m. to Butternut
Ave., for Dawn Thomas to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 6:52p.m. to
Second St., lor Debbie Hawley, to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 7: 10
p.m. 1ll Route 2411 for Lisa Wawn,
taken from the scene of lm auto
accident to Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at 1: 23p.m.,Pomeroy
took Ellen Wilson from State St. to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
4:43p.m. tookShaneEngl~fromthe
Middleport Marina to Veterans
Memorial; Rutland at 8:13 p.m.
took Sandra Boring from Route 684
to Veterans Memorial and ath9: 15
p.m., Rutland took Bruce Davis
from the !Ire station to Holzer
Medical Center.

•

WALLPAPER
SALE
QUALITY WALL COVERINGS IN PRINTS,
STRIPES, MINIATURES, PLAIDS, .
SPORTING EVENTS AND MANY OTHER
. PATTERNS.
MOST ARE PREPASTED AND WASHABlE ·

.

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.Inside:

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Clas8lllecls '"" "'Pages 6, 7, 8
Cotni~Js-TV

............ .. Page 9

Deal;hs ................... Page 10
l!'.dltorlal •
Page 2
By the Bend ............. Page 5
Spona ............ ..... Pages 4, 6·
0 . . . . I • •• • •••• I.

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at .Y . . . . -e nttne
Vot.3tl, No .u7
Copyrlftld 1985

A meet the candidte night will be
held at 7 p.m. ·tomorrow night
(TUesday) at Eastern High School
to give district residents an oppor·
tun!ty to meet candidates running
for the Eastern Local School District
Board. of Education at the Nov. 5
election. A forum will be conducted
and the meeting lsopentothepubllc. ·

POMEROY

WAIT FOR TRANsPoRTATION - Two famllle8 wall to be
il'aalpolie!l to Parkenbur&amp; South HJch Scbool'a ftelclhcge lollow1ng a
chemlcltlleak at the DuPont Chemlcallmclltermlnal at Larlanead on

•

ItS awhole new world.

LARKMEAD,W.Va.(UPI)-Du . skin Irritant, but families llvlng , carrying~ the one cyllnder and
Pont crews early today capped a within a half· mile of the facility, was parked at the time.
"A relief valve Is leak.lng,"
leak;y valve on a cylinder that were urged to evacuate as a
9\'li)Wed a' 'cljjiirot toXJiffunies'1nto precaution.
DINIIXl~sald. "Tbevalvetop-evllllt
the cycllnder lromoverpressurtztng•
tile ali- and lotted the'e'vacuaitolt r1
Pollc.e said the leak was plugged If It becomes warmed up.
abou! 400 to 500 people from their
DINicola said the truck was en
homes.
at about 2:20a.m.
"No one was Injured. ·we have all route from a Du Pont plant In
About 100 of the homeless went to
South Parkersburg High School for ldndli of help here at the site," sald Louisville, Ky., to the llrrn's
the night while the rest apparently Jerry DINicola, an envirOnmental ' Chambers Works disposal faclllty at
Deepwater, N.J. He said he didn't
found shelter with friends or family. ofllcer for Du Pont.
"There Is high hurilldlty aJ)d when know what the chemical was used
The Wood County Sheriffs Department said the ·100 residents who It Is coming out ol the eyllnder It Is lor.
'l1ll; facUlty Is located about one
stayed at the high school went home generating a cloud. It's a little bit
at about 5:15a.m.
llke (Iff acid cloud. II extends about moe frol)l tiE Ohio River and about
A spokesman for the sheriffs 400 to 500 yards and then seems lo '10 m1les northwest of· West Vlrgl·
nla's Kanawha Valley, where
dfPllrtment said today "the wlK&gt;Ie dissipate," DINicola said.
He said' the eyllnder held about several chemical leaks occurred
area was cleared atabout5:15 a.m."
this summer. A leak of aldlcarb
Officials said there were no 2,1ro pounds r1 the material.
The leak was discovered about oxime Aug. 11 at a Union Carbide
reports of Injuries from the leak r1
antimony pentachlor1de, an eye and 9:20p.m.The tractor· trallel'rlgwas pesticide plant sickened 135 people.

Weather forecast
Ton!ght...raln llk\'ly. Low 55 to 00.
Winds beCOming northerly 5 to 10

mph.

DINicola said the antimony
pentachlortde Is "Irritating to the
eyes."

.. "lt'a an ac:kkversus a bale,'•,he
said. "It's a material you shouldn't
get Into your eyes and that Is why we
evacuated."
O!flclals at the Wood County
emergepey operations center.said
people had been evacuatfod tJ:om
three neighborhoods along with
campers oo Blennerhassett Island.
Gall Hartshorn, Wood County
emergency services director, said
the estimate he had of the numlX'r
evacuate&lt;! was 400 to 500.
"It's nothing really bad but
!llmethlng to be concerned about,"
Hartshorn said.
'
The leak was "only about tiE size
of a pencD," he said.

guards released unharmed today

By MICIIAFL BURNS
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
Two guards who were held hostage
for about 15 hours by Inmates at
Ohio's only maximum·security prl·
son were released uriharmed early
today, and their captors surren·
dered without Incident.
The guards at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility were freed
, after tt(lclals agieed to temporarily
transfer four Inmates to another
facility and to allow a list of their
grievances to be read over a local
radio station, said Bob Prosser, a
spokesman for the Ohio Department ol CorrectiOns.
.
Prosser said the guards, Randy
Mehaffey and BUI Dunn, were not
harmed during the ordeal. They .
· were taken hostage shortly at about
12:30 p.m. Monday In the J.l cell
block, which Is reserveil !or unruly •
Inmates.
,
Dunn was released by the Inmates
at 2: 53 a.m. In exchange for a radio.
Mehaffey was released at 3:46a.m.
afterthelnmatesheardthegrlevan·
ces broadcastby theradlostatlon.
The four inmates, JayScot~33, ot
Cuyahoga County; John WOllam

Revival services scheduled to be
held at the Middleport Church of
Christ In Christian UnkmwW be held
Instead at the Middleport Nazarene
Church. The Rev. Keith Eblin Is the
evangelist. Services will continue
through Wednesday evening. The
public Is Invited.

Rl. Bllln Weat Vlrpda Moncla.v night. About MO people were evacuated
from their homes In the PI!Jker!burg area III'OUI1d t p.m. No Injuries
were reported. (UPI).

Leaky,.chemic~} valve capped early today

~son

Revival announced

Byrd Jr., 21, ol Hamilton County;
Wllllam G. Zuern, 26, of Hamilton
County; andErlcM.Swd!ord,24,r1
Clark and MontgOmery counties,
left the prison about 4:30 a.m. en
route to the Franklin County JaU.In
Columbus, Pro5ser said.
Bynl, Scott and Zuem all have
been sentenced to death for aggra·
vated munler. Swrl.ford was serv·
lng a sentence for aggravated
robbery and attempted murder.
Bynl, Scott a~d Zuern eventually
wW be returned to the Lucasv1lle
faclllty, said Prosser. It was not
!mown I! Swofford also will be sent
back to Lucasvllle.
PrlsonsuperlntendentTerryMor·
rls said the only weapons found In
the cell block were the guards' night
sticks and a pair c1 "numbchucks"
made of two magazines rolled
tightly and tied with a cloth.
He said a thorough search ~ the
cell block would IX' conducled today
for any otber possible weapons.
Prosser sa1d the Inmates were
upaet by living conditions In the J.1
cell block. Their complaints In·
eluded Improper medical treat·

ment, Improper diet and lack of

access to newspapers, magazines
and radios.

A few hours before the siege
ended, one of the Inmates had
threatened the IK&gt;stages with death
after five members of a specially
trained disturbance control unit
entered the prison.
"There's going to be some dead ..~
(hostages) going to hell.' ' one
inmate shouted through a window.

Morris said the Inmates' com·
plaints were unfounded.
"We feel we give the best medical
care possible and the food Is checked
dietetically," Morris said. "We
serve balanced meals.''
He said an Investigation would be
Prosser said a team of negotiators
conductfod to determine how the
were In contact with the Inmates
guards were overpowered.
Offlclalsalllrstsaldelghtlnmates throughout the ordeal. They con·
were Involved In the takeover. Two dueled negotiations through a door
Inmates gave up about three hours to the cell block and vla the
after the Incident began. A third, tetl;&gt;hone..•
1be J.l cell block has al cells but
who apparently was not Involved,
ooly
houses eight Inmates at a time
was releasE!! Monday night In
for
Inmate
safety, and Is segregated
excbangt' for food. Another Inmate
was In tiE cell block during the siege from other areas. Therearealways
but did rot participate In taking the two guards In that area. prison
IK&gt;stages.
ofllclals said.
The prison, designed for 1,6~
Morris said tbe Inmates des·
Inmates,'
opened tn 1972. lt now has
troyed several sinks, commodes
and an electric console during the an Inmate population d 2,278.
Another Inmate was found dead
siege. No estimate d damage was
·earlier Monday, apparently of
Immediately available.
The superintendent said It will be natural causes- and ofllclals ct tbe
up to the Scioto County prosecutor to .Prison stressed that his death was
determine what charges wW IX' llled rot related to the hostage-taking
Incident.
against the Inmates.

Some say Rhodes, 76,. too old for another
~enn
.

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1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue1day, October 15, 1986

Forum set Tuesday

Saturday AdmlssJons .. Lawton
Templeton, Jr., Pomeroy.
Sa5urday Dlscharges..Terry Powell, Walter King, Margaret Goet t.
Sunday Admissions- Hugh Lelf·
belt, Pomeroy.
Sunday Dlscbarges .. warren
Black, Donald Bailey, Effie
Edwards.

~LAND (UP!) - Satur·
·day's winning Ohio Lottery
numberS: Dally Number ·
933.
Ticket sales totaled $1,317,0l7,
with a pa,Yolf dueof$779,176. LOT1'0
2, 8, 22, 26, 31 and 33.

i ,; \

New Diles
park plans
are revealed

Veterans Memorial

Tuesday ...cloudy with a chance of
morning rain then partly cloudy In
the afternoon. High 65 to 70.
Chance of rain ts 00 percent
loday..70 percent tonlght .. and 40
percent TUesday.
Extended loreeast
Woo.-1&amp;11hrough Friday
Achanceolraln Wednesday. Fair
ntunday and Frld&amp;1· Highs In the
881 WIDte8daY lllld'l'bul'!lday.. lllld
70 to 75 Fiiday. Lows In the 46§,

t

Monday, October 14, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Emergency squads
answer 11 calls

~

Todays
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

, COLUMBUS (UPIJ -More than ' 1986 election.
Sixty-one percent of the men who
am registered Columbus voters
The mall poll was conductfod by responded and 70 percent ot the
were asked about fonner Gov. the Columbus Dispatch between women wlK&gt; responded sald they felt
James A. ·Rhodes' aae In a recent Sept. 30 and Oct. 3. Of the 844 be was too old.
mall poll, and twOothlrds said, at76, regiltered Columbus voters asked
On a racial tx:eakdown, 63percent
ite Is too old to hold that dftce aaaln. about Rhodes' age, 827 responded,
Rhodes. who bad toor four·Yfl!T with 66 percent saying they felt he ~ the white voters who responded
·and 7!1 percent of the black voters
terms as the state'schlefexecuttve,
was too old.
who answered said they thought
plans to annouf!Cf hls.candldacyfor
In the poll, 78 percent of the Rhodes was too old.
a fifth term Nov, 9 at a luncheon at
Scioto Downs. Monday he got his Democrat$ who responded said . Just prior to his 76th birthday last
llrst formal opposition when State · Rhodes wa5 too old, whlle49percent month, Rhodesdlstrtbutedresultsol
Sen. Paul Pfel!erri.Bucyruasaldhe ot the Republicans felt that way. Of • a medical examination that showed
was running for the Repubican those who listed-no party afflllatlon, , h1m 10 be in excellent health. A
statement by Dr. Waldemar Bergen
gubernatorial nomlnatl!ln lor the 68percent!elt he was too old. '

that accompanied the report read
that Rhodes appears "to be much
younger than the stated age of 75

Plans for the development of the wilt be voted upon. He said that the
new Diles Park- the former C &amp; 0 elect ric bUlls now running $a!,1m a
depot property - were unveiled by year and the one mill levy now In
Council President Dewey Horton effect to pay the bill brings In ooly
Monday night when Middleport $8,000. Through Increased costs and
Village Council met In regular the lnstallationolnewstreetllghtsln
session.
various parts of town, a surplus tn
Horton reported that the Middle- the street llghtlngfundwiU bewlped
portChambero!Commercehashad out by the end of the year. Horton
a plan drawn up for ljle development commented tba t good street llghtlng
of the park area which was inthetownlsadeterenttocrimean~
purchased by the vlllage from the indicated that he believes voters of
railroad company for W.OOO. Re· the town wlll support the new levy.
presentattves from council, the Council also discussed a one mill
chamber and the Middleport Re· recreat!On levy totiedeclded upon at
creation Comffilsslon are working the Nov. 5 election which would
together towards the developmenr provide money for repair of the
of .the new facility on Front St.. swimming pool and Improvement
Horton said.
and development of other recrea·
Plans call for an attractive tiona! facilities. Mayor Hoffman
wooden fence with planting areas pointed out that the recreation fund
built In and for the development of Is now $5,000 "In the red". The
shuffle board areas, construction of dl&amp;cusslon brought out also that
a stage area for performances at swimming pool personnel are paid
events like the block party. a less than the minimum wage during
playground area, a picnic area with the summer months. Again Horton
abarbecueplt,stepsgolngtoarlver said that he also !eels !hal
boat dock and other accornmoda· recreationallacllltiesreducecrlme
lions, Horton satd. Many of the in the vUiage bl'cause through the
Improvements wUI be donated .lzy recreational activities young people
Individuals and businesses, accord· are kept occupied.
lng to the plans, Horton pointed out.
One resident discussed damages
The vUiage will be expected to being Incurred to hts home by motor
provlde certalr! basic features llke vehicles In anarrowal~behlndthe
watf.r.dn~mrtroord taCI11t1eo wtilll!•' ·Sundry SIOI'e. He asked that &gt;101!\e
the group working on the develop-. protective guard be placed near his
ment wlll be stressing more visual home to protect the structure from
Improvement. The group envisions vehicles. Council agreed to look Into
the lnterlorolthe depot as a meeting the maUer. Another resident was on
place and Information center, hand to complain against the Cable
Horton reported. He Indicated that Communications Group - both
within a year many of the planned bllllng and service. He said that
reception on Broadway St. bas not
developments wUI be completed.
Village workers have been work· been good and he objected to the too
lnglntheparkarearemovtngtracks month billing policy of the cable
and a roadway, It was reported. television group. Mayor Hoffman
During the report Mayor Fred and several council memlX'rs
Holtman stated that the vma·ge bas Indicated they had received calls
made appllcatlon for a $10,1m about the company and Mayor
community block development Hoffman Indicated he wlll try to
grant which would be used for have a representative of the
restoration of the depot structure company present for the next
and the purchase of playground council meeting.
equipment.
Council approved the September
Council passed a resolution In report of Mayor Hoffman showing
support of State Issue I which would receipts of $4862.50 In fines and fees.
provide $100,000,1ro for coal re· Mayor Hoffmanreportedtbatanew
search and development to find flagpole has been Installed In
methods of using Ohio's high · Riverview Cemetery by the family
sulphurcoal.
of the late Pollee Chief J. J.
Council discussed tax measures Cremeans and a letterofthankswlll
to be voted upon at the Nov. 5 be sent to the family. Mayor
election. Mayor Hoffman said a new Hoffman announced the approval of
one mill
expense tax levy
Continued on page 10

'·

i
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.l

years."
"The question Is not who's the
youngest or the oldest or wlK&gt;' s the
best looking," Rhodes said. "The
questlonlswhocandothejob. (Gov.
Richard F.) Celeste has shown he
can't handle the job."
His aide James Duerk said
Rhodes wW overcome the ag~lssue.
"The Issue was there In 1974"
when Rhodes deteatfod Gov. John
Gllllan, Duerk said.

GUARD - Prli!On guardl slalld outside the Southem OhiO
Correctional facility walling for progreas In the hostage situation Inside
the prllon where two guards were beln« held hostage by Inmates In a high
security area ol the prllon.
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'C.o mmentary

. .Tuesday, October 15, 1986

•

Nuclear arms

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Slreel .

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUC.H

Assistant Publlllbcr/Controller

General Manarer

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OP.lNlON are welcome. They sho uld be less than 300 words
long. All leiters are subject to editing and must bP signed with name, address and

telephone number . No unstaned letters wan be published . Letters should be tn
good taste, addressing_Issues , not personalities.

WASHINGTON- In tbe midst
of all the tumult over an agreement on nuclear arms, a small
suggestion Is In order: Let us proceed on the assumption (a) that a
nuclear war wUI never be waged,
and (b) that therefore lwe should .
reduce our nuclear stockpUe to
some m)nlmum point regardless
of what the Soviets may do.
Over the past 40 years, wllh not
the slightest help from any pact·
fist or peacenik outfit, I have
come to a serene conviction on
assumption (a) . There Is not go·
ing to be a nuclear war. Ev,er.
The reasons go back to HI·
roshlma and Nagasaki. We re·
cenlly have been reminded of the
fearful destruction wrought by
the atomic bombs that were

--~~--------------------------------Soviets have in! mlssUes known (a plausible assumption) an av·

dropped In 1945. One .hun$red
thousand persons died Instantly
In Hiroshima; other thusands
died later of burns and radiation;
the clUes were essentially destroyed.
Think for a moment about the
bombs of 1945. They were known
as A-bombs, activated by atomic
fission. '!be A-bomb that hit HI·
roshlma had the destructive force
of17,lXXI tons of TNT.It was a Uttle
baby bomb.
Now we have hydrogen bombs,
activated by atomic luslon. These
are great big grown-up bombs.
The Soviet Union has exploded a
test bomb carrying the destruc·
live power of 58 mlUlon tons of
TNT. Our own Titan mlssUes
carry 9 mUllan tons of TNT. The

as the SS18; each mlssUe carries
10 warheads, and each warhead
packs !!OO,IXXI tons of TNT.
Let us do a little multlpUca·
tlon, followed by a little renee·
lion. If the Soviets were to fire all
of their SS18s-- and this Is less
than a third of their arsenal they would hlt the United States
with the equivalent ot 1.5 billion
tonnsofTNT. YouwUlrecallthat
the atomic bomb ot Hiroshima
was 17,000 tons.
In our own combination of mls·
sll~s. bombers and Polaris sub·
marines, we have destructive ca·
paclty that roughly matches the
Soviet arsenal. All told, we have
In our strategic forces a reported
11,291 warbeads. Let us assume

A good way to calculate
Dear Editor :
Numerous inquiries have been
received as to what the Southern
Local School Dis trlctlevy for the
propos£!!! new elementary school
would cost the taxpayer.
A good way lor an Individual to
calculate this Increase In property taxes Is to compare 11 to tbe
Increased amount ol taxes that
would be paid on a residential
property (house and lot) with
with a market value of $50,000.
The market value Is the resell
value a's determined by the tax

assessor, not necessarily the
price that an Individual would
ask lor his/ her property.
Generally, the market value Is
less than an " 3sklng price." The
Increase In taxes tor a house and
lot with a market value of$50,000
would be approximately one
hundred dollars annually or
twenty dollars per $10,000 valua·
tlpn.
Sincerely,
Bobby J . Ord
Superintendent

Today in history

,,

erage destructive force of 300,000
tons of TNT. That figures ouuut
to 3.39 billion tons of TNT. The
Soviets, for their part, have a re·
ported 9,900 warheads. Because
theirs are bigger, let us assume
an average of 400,000 tons. That .
figures out to 3.96 billion tons of
TNT. The data do not Include
4,208 U.S. warheads and 9,549 Soviet warheads In the European
theater.
Hiroshima, to repeat was hit
by 17,000 tons.
The situation Is absurd, grotesque,
obscene, Insane. Pick yoor ad)ec·
tlve.ln an aJl..o()Ut nuclear war, both
the United States and the Soviet
Uniln wwlil be reduced in a matter
of hours to srooklng cinders. '!be fal·
krut woold jloUute the whole of the
planet In an afternoon, both nations
wtWl plunge from clvlllzat»n to
berbarlsm. Nuclear war Is a suicide
•

We know this. The Soviets
know this. Let us suspend the
sport of Red-bashing long en·
ough to assume that Mikhail
Gorbachev and hls advisers love
their country as deeply as Ron·
nald Reagan and his advisers
love our country. Neither nation
Is under the thumb of a madman.
There will be no first nuclear
strike.

.'

On this basis, what need have we
for the working equivalent of 4 bll·
llon tons of TNTT Or the Soviets loi'
their 4 billion tons.? No suoh need
exists. My modest proposal would
call lor our goverllll'lent to pick :xl
t9P targets In the Soviet Union. Let
us suppose that each of them could
·be utterlY destroyed by a single
300,1m-ton warhead: the cities of
Moscow, Leningrad, Kiev, Vladl·
vostok, the key oil fields and refl·
nerles, that sort of thing.

Computer mistake
WASHINGTON·Last June we
charged that a vital Anny compu·

ter project was turning Into another
billion-dollar boondoggle, and re·
ported that the ~·s InspECtor
general was lnvestlgatlngtbe mess.
The investigation Is now com·
plete, but the Army has refused to
release the report. Sen. Charles
Grassley, R-lowa, who Is becom·
ing the nemesis of Pentagon·
Waslrels, has asked for a copy but
has been rebul!ed. Internal Army
documents, which we've reviewed,
explain why.
In a nutshell, the Army plans to
solve tbe problem by repealing Its
mlslake. Generals, historically,
prepare to light the last war they
won. In this case, the Army Is
prepartng to re-light a war It just
lost·and to fight It man evm bigger
scale.
The Army has spent at least $40
mtlllon on just the "brainstorming"
stage of Its CAMIS computer
project·trylng to decide what the

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear · ·

computer system shouuld be de· an August Internal report warns:
signed to oo. While tbe money Is "The Competition-In-Contract·
belngspenttll scbedule, theworkls ingAct has created anmvtronment
months behind. The delay, accord· and an expectation that sole·
lng to our Army sourceS, can be -source conlractlng wiU oolonger
blamed,in)l&amp;rt,mthesote-source take place. It ls possible that the
contractor
,
sole-source contract...may be
So oow the Army plans to have protested."
CAMIS absorbed by the new,
In other words, It's strictly an
all-etcompasstng·Stamet compu· Image problem An4 this, the
ter system.
Why? BecaWie, report suggests, can be handled by
accordlng to a July memo seen by · a good publlc-relatlonscompalgn.
our associate Dtllald Goldberg, ''The Army should attempt to
"tbe Army didn't have a 'China· mitigate these risks through 311
man's chance' of suocesstully effective liaison and lntlrmatlon
defending CAMIS" to Pentagon campaign" ·aimed at Defense Sec·
superiors.
sretary Caspar Weinberger, Cat·
But heres the rub: The &amp;enerals gress and tbe media.
Intend to have the Starnet system
Alleast aJe Army dllclai, Wayne
designed and bunt by yet another Grant, acting ' assistant secretary
sole-source contractor, Electronic for financial management, has
Data Systems Corp. of Texas. In warned that tbe "new approach
effect, theArmylsbusllyrebuUdlng being recommended"·that Is, the
tbe Maglnot Line.
sole-source contracts to Elec·
'lbe Army Is aware that the new Ironic Data Syatems·may not be In
plan Is "still not Without risk." So tbe Army's best Interests.

For one thing; "there appears to
be no rationale on a C06t-ellecttveness basis" for ~nceling other,
competitively won contracts to be
absorbed by Starnet, Grant wrote,
adding: " Largely because of the
pereeptlon that (Electronic Data
Systems) had a lock" t11 :hese
earlier contracts, "we had to take
rather extraordinary measures" to
persuade other companies that It
was worth their while to bid on

The LONGEST
of all.

them.

"To cancel these (contracts)
would at least appear Ill confirm
that viewpoint and could readily

•

lead to protests or legal actions ... " ·
Grant wrote.
He also warned the &amp;enerals that
oot only would a sole-source
contract on Starnet "send a .clear
signal" that"wdald discourage other
cyntractors from future bkls, but It
Would run head-oo Into q&gt;posltlon
from Weinberger and his chief
associates, who are now committed
to the competitive-bid rrocess.

~ 'U'
*
4$ "
' ~·" ' ~ f , , 1

But the news that President
Reagan wants the United States to
oo likewise dismays them, because
tbedevelopmentanddeploymentct
such a defense woold be a rurtlier
heavy slraln m their already
overburdened economy - and
because the competition 'Mluld take
place In a field (space trebnology)
where the United States Is weU
ahead and likely to remain ahead.
In addition, of coorse, the men In
tbe Kremlin feel none ct the
oomestlc pressures ngalnst 111clear
warfare that rain oown lncessanlly
on ;10 Westem jX)lltlcal leaders.
Small wonder, then, that the
Soviet propaganda machine
launcbed a heavy baiTage against
Mr. Reagan's S.D.I. PfllllllSal as.
soon as he made It, In March 1983.
And oow, as the Nov. 19 Geneva
summit approaches, communist
boss Gorbachev has begun tossing
wt hints that, In return for barrtng
all work t11 S.D.I. except research
(the cessation of which would be
unvertfllible anyway), he might
consent to "radical" reductions In
tbe number d. nuclear missiles
retained by the superpowers.
Our hot--eyed llberals didn't
even walt for his actual proposals.
Mondale promptly called on Mr.
Reagan to use S.D.I. simply as a
"bargaining chip" at Geneva.
Smith and Warnke enoorsed the
trade-off hinted at by Gorbachev
as containing "the makings of an
agreement d. hlstonc proporu.
ons."The Times' Kielman, rotlng
that Gorbachev nust soon choose
between expenditures on m!Utary
and on clvlllan needs, urged Mr.
Reagan to "lnfluenre that decision
by convincing Mr. Gortichev that
serious negottations for a trade-d.f
of S.D.I. progr~ for offensive

m1sst1e cuts are possible."
It was Ms. Lewis, however, who
phrased the proposed capltulallon
most cleverly. Obserwlng, cor·
reeDy, that It Is lutUe to speculate
whether Gorbachev Is reaDy ready
to make serious reductions In
nuclear arms In return for a ban ltl
S.D.I., she tben suaested that
"there Is an easy, stralghtt&gt;rward
test . . It Is to take him up on his

hints." In other words, give him
exactly what he Is asking for, to see
1! he'D take II.
Such slavish moorsements ol the
latest Moscow Une are not merely
wrong; they are downright embar·
rasslng. And to think that, If Mr.
Geagan decUnes to follow ruch
people Into the jaws of the Russian
bear, they will proclaim that
Geneva was a "faUure"!

.

VIRGINIA

Prescription for SUJTender__w_i_Uia_m_A_._Rus_h_er

!swear, If I wereoneofPresldenl
Reagan's liberal opponents, I wwld
try a great deal hanler than they
are doing to put · a Utile daylight
between Mikhail Gorbachev's posl·
lion on arms negotiations and my
own.
Yet here they are, from Walter
Mondale and Iarmer U.S. arms
negotiators Gerard Smith (SALT!)
and Paul Warnke (SALT D) to
Robert Kielman ct 'lbe New ;fork
Times'
edltortal board and Flora
(An aaawer Ia Cb11111ben' ea· son to load the minority wage
Lewis
£1
Its OpEd page, aU lined up
donemeal ol Pomeroy's Peno- earners with the problems.
behind
Gorbachev's
rumored propI suggest, If I may, that some·
oal lllcome Tu Levy by a coa·
way - such as property tax In· osal like a bunchoftronrutngs In the
cerned cltllea. )
crease,
higher sales tax, license presence of a jX)werful magnet.
It seems to me the tax Is unjust
Mr. Reagan's space defense
tax,
etc.
Then maybe we all could
to the (working people) being for·
Initiative
Is Without question the
lunate enough to have work and pay a share of the Increase In re·
most
InnoVative
and challenging
able to pay their way without as· venues. I say again - please use
slstance from other tax backed common sense and vote against Idea lor breaking out ctthe "1n1tual
assured destruction" stalerrufte
this personal lnrome violation.
programs.
Leo F. Young, Jr. that anyone has proposed In 25
I know It costs a lot to run the
15 Locust St years. From the Dberals' stand·
town, and I hav no answers to our
point, It was sheer rotten ludc: that
problems, but I also see no rea·
Reagan came up with It before they
did. But he did, tbereby leaving
them to argue - to their great
discomfiture - for the vecy
strategy d deterrence through
Today Is Tuesday, Oct. 15, the 288th day of 19al with Tl to loUow.
"mutual assured destrructlon" that
'!be moon Is new.
they and their lrethren m the
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
further
Jell have been Inveighing
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
against
for
decades.
'!bose born on tills date are under the sign d Libra. They include Roman
The
Soviet
bosses q&gt;p0se S.D.I.
poet VlrgU In 70 B.C., nurse and hospital reformer Florence Nlglltingale In
for
better
reasons.
They have spent
:w&gt;, German phlloeopher Friedrich Nletzche in 1844, boxing champion
huge
sums
oo
Ill
clear
missiles, and
Johp L. Sullivan In 1858, wrtter and humorist P.G. Wodehouse in 1881, and
their country's very status lis a
pop s1n1er Rlchani'Carpenter in 1946 (age 39). •
superpower
de)lEIIda In large part
On tills date In history:
on
tbe
continued
slgnl!lcance ct the
In 1917, the most famoos spy of World War I, Gertrude Zelle, known as
threat
tho6e
mlssUes
pose. (Cer·
Ma_ta Har~ was executed by a firing squad ootslde Paris.
talnly
the
number
ct
cars
Cl' phones
In 1928, the Gennan ~le Graf ZeppeUn arrived in the United States
oc toilets per capita In the Soviet
t~~lts first commercial flight after a four-and-a·half:Oay flight across the
Union woukln't establish lt.J They
Atlantic.
have
also forehandedly conducted a
. In 1!M6, Nazi Relchmarshal Herman Gllerlng, convicted as a war
very
exJenslve program rl. re·
criminal and sentenced to death, committed suicide in hls prl!lon cell. ·
search
into possible sateWte de·
Ill ~. Soviet Premier Ntklta Khrushchev was ousted by Kremlin
fenses against nuclear mlssUes.
leaders and replaced by Alexei Kcsygln and Leonid BreziUlev.

Responds to chamber's endorsement

.

jPact

'

Letter to the Editor

The Daily Sentinel- Page--~
.

]ames ]. Kilpatrick

Liberals lose
liberal town
Not lor tbe first time, polltlcal wrtters have all but ignored the national
significance of a story rlght under their noses.
Consider: '!be Democratic Party Is tbe more liberal of oor two major
parties. SeVeral weeks ago, this more liberal party held a primary election
for mayor In what Is often called the most liberal city In America -New
York.
lJberal party, Uberal city, liberal constituencies. In addition, two ct the
three candidates In tbe prlrnary were clearly Hberals: the activist city
councU presilent, Carol Bellamy, and Herman Farrell, a black
assemblyman. The third candidate In tills oontest In a hberal party In a
liberal city was tbe Incumbent mayor, Ed Koch. May Koch, oddly enough,
Is often described as a neo-conservative.
In New York, Koch has been pummeled by the liberals for eight years
now as being too twgh on crime and too Insensitive and harsh on minority
.and women's IBsues. He has llEen accused ct jX)Iarlzlng the city. He has
even been attacked for being too hard· line on foreign policy Issues: In New
York, everyone- even the mayor- Is allowed to have a foreign jX)Ucy.
So who won the race in liberaUsm's capital city? Why the
new&lt;anservatlve Ed Koch. Not only did he w1n It - he got almost
two-thirds ol the votes. He got more than three times the number d. votes
as his closest competitor.
What's going on here? Well, of course, Koch was the Incumbent. He
raised more money.for his campaign than his &lt;l'lllllents raised for theirs.
He's been a good mayor. He's an Irrepressible personalily. All that helps.
)3ut his main opponent was no unknown. She raised about a miiiJon
dollars. She received plenty of free media publicity in the media capital of
the world. There were five public debates.
Koch could have been sertously challenged 1! only me condition had been
met: 1! tbe voters disagreed with hlhls views, there would have been
electoral profit to be made by attacking aU his alleged neo-conservative
hard1lne sins.
That such a campalgnnever.successfully mater1allzed should give a clue
about the status of the old lmee-jerk liberalism.
Clue: It Is deader than a doornaU. It should be remembered that the new
politics strain ct liberalism began In the overheated political climate or
New York City, and had real strength for a whUe. But today, even liberal
conatltuendes oon't support the sort of liberalism that Is perceived to be
soft on crime, p~. pro-welfan'.glveaways, pro-militant feminism.
Althougllthe politlcallftSS largely Ignored the meaning of the·electlon,
tbe Koch victory should send a message - no longer a new one - to the
national Dermcratlc Party.
Thls: tbe old days are over. Either accommodate to a more
hard-headed, common sense sort ct progressive thinking or kiss It goodbye
as a potent national party. After au, 1! liberals can't even carry liberals
anymore - who can they carry?

.

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

SUMS

I

'

"

LOW T~R'

Berry's World

Slim, light
and extra loflg.

LOW fAR • ''LTER

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SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly. Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

"What Is It, Jerry! Have you met someone
who's EVEN MORE Into hedonism and moral

anar"'y than I am?"

14 mg " Jar;' 1.0 mg nicotine av per ciga1att e by FTC mr.thod

•
l

.,., .,.~

'

.

•

•

•

•

•

'

�Page- 4-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 15, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

AL series to resume in Toronto
TORONTO (UPil - Veteran
Kansas City Royals' catcher Jlm
Sundberg has threejobslnGame6 of
the Amerlciln League Champion·
ship Series against the Toronto Blue
Jays- hit, catch the gameandk~
young Mark Gublcza from turning
Into a wUd man.

r---------...,.---~-------......;;.­

APR
Financing .
Available
ON ALL 1985 V.W.'s IN STOCK!

~hoose

From The

Tri-State Area's Largest
V.W. lnve.ntory.
8.8 ". A P.R ovod oble lo Ouol.ltcd AppliCOn ts on 36 monlh te rms wilh 6.000 mo• imum to
linonce , :10•. down pl1.1s to .w a nd title B s•. A P II Finonrlng olltn good lhrough Octobttr J /.
1983

.

'

R'

195 Upper lvef
'

ld.

·GiiUIIOiiS, Ohid

~=====-----lJ~~;;;;;;~-~-~~~~-..;~:::::;J

.
~ ~lettes end fall season ·

.

;: tastern played one of Its better
·llaffieS In defeating the tough
:f.alrland Lady Dragons 15-7,2-15,
:and 15-91n a non-league match.
Tonya Savoy and Krlstl Hawk
· shared top scoring honors wlthd 9
: points apiece for the victorious
· Eaglettes. Margaret Horner rand
: Lesa Rucker added !our,Bever!y

· Make a note and check
with us before you renew your present Auto
or Homeowners insurance. It will pay you to
compare our broad coverages and competitive
rates. You might save
some money.

THRU OCT. 31st WE'LL GIVE
YOU A FREE STIHL CAP

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto.
606 East Main

992-2094

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ST/H£.

Effedive
Annual Yield.

8.75%
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His latest communication comes
from Gary L. Holland, executive
assistant to Gov. Richard Celeste.
It reads In part:
"The primary reason that Meigs
Coonty was Included In the governor's snow emergency declaration
was to provide the ablllty to the

--t;)uarterly.

Insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance G:&gt;rporatio11.

bucketsll

The Rutland Civic Center group
now has Its community Halloween
plans made.
There will be a community party
on Oct. 29, from 6 to 's p.m. at tile
center with ro;tume judging for
both chUdren and adults, pumPkin
decorating, a pumpkin pie baking
contest and a decorating cake
contest to be among the features.
There will be a sock hop and
admission w1ll be one decorated
sock. There will he refreshments.
The event Is free and will replace
tricll or treat night. Th.e group Is
accepting monetary contributions
only from residents to help stage
the Jll!r!Y and tl¥lSe donations can
be sent to Marcia EUiott, Box 129,
Rutland, or If you have any
questions, you can call her at
742·2233.
And by the way, Rutland Mayor
Richard Fetty does report that
there is a curlew In effect at 10 each
night until after Halloween and the
curlew wUl be strictly enforced. A
word to the wise.....

. If you're like many people, your IRA is about to mature. But interest

teshavetumbled.
·
So if you want to keep your retirement funds growing at a healthy
rate in atotally safe environment, there's only one thing to do.
Use Central Trust's new high-yielding, FDIC-in~ured, special one-year
IRA. This Special Aa:ount is available now through November L

. IF

IU'S IT aNTRAL
OUR SPECIAL ACCOUNT

Taking advantage of our Special Aa:ount is particularly easy if your
maturing IRA is at Central Trust already,. .
Just let us know.We11 move·your IRA for you toour special one-year
account, and your IRA will be all set for another prosperous year.

SALISBURY - Sallsbury PTO,
7:30 p.m. at the school with a
program on nutrition.

'J.lJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Group !I of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
wUI meet at the church at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday.

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
meetbig, 7::JJ p.m. Senior Citizens
Center. .

POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter r:J. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
meetsat7:30Tuesdayatthelnmeof
Libby Sayre.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Halloween party
for young people to age 16
Wednesday, 7 to9p.m. at Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene, comer of
Mulberry and Union Aves. Come
masked or unmasked; fun and food.

POMEROY - Meet the candl·
date night at 7 p.m., Eastern High
School to provide Eastern District
residents an opportunity to meet
board of education candidates In the
Nov. 5 election.

POMEORY- Trappers training
course, Wednesday and Thursday,
at Meigs High School, 6 to 9 p.m.,
conducted by John Hetzer, Ohio
Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Wildlife. Registration
required by phoning 985-4400; spon·
so~ by Meigs Coonty Juvenile

The Daily Sentinel
(UsPS ttl-HI]

·IF YOU DON'T HIVE All IRA, NOW'S I .

What we n11d Is:

Ohio National Guard to use hellcopters to Ry over the power Unes of
Buckeye Rural Electrtc CooperaUve. These over-lllghts were necessary to detei'mlne the locatlnn of
,.POwer outages and to direct crews
to that site. Should 1!11 aircraft have
a problem and be forced to land In
Meigs County, It would be essential
for the county to be Included In the
declaration.
"The county reportedly dld an
outstandlngjobofcaringforltsown
residents. The efforts of all local
emergency service personnel were
mtewortey.
"Regarding the law pertaining to
restriction of assistance to private
property, only the legislature can
. make this change and as of tills
ttme, the Administration does not
have a position on the matter.l am
requesting the Ohio Adjutant Gen·
era! to research the feaslbllty of
such an amendment to existing law
and that they communicate a
recommendation to me. Once an
opinion Is developed, this cl.flce wUl
communicate with you."

nME 10 START OlE.
You don't need a maturing IRA to take advantagt~ of our Special

Account.
So if you:re thinking of st.art:ffig an IRA, our Special Account is a good
reason to start 1t now.
.
What's more,Central Trust has a.wide range of investment options that
are perfect for IRAs, inCluc:lim! our Double Your Money IRA, our flexible .
Money Market IRA or one ofour fixed rate IRAs with tenns from 12 to
·
60 months. All are FDIC-insured and there are no fees.
,
So if you're looking for an IRA with maximum safety and high yields
Central Trust can make things happenfor you.] ust stop intoany Central '
Trust office .
·

A Dlvlllon ol M.:ltlmedla, lne .

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley

Pub·

~AWARD -Modern Woodmen 11 America, Camp 11)900,
received the Patron Status Awnl from tiE Athens County Historical
Society and Museum. Pictured left 10 right are illn. Anthony Sargent!,
Robert Henry, andAnthonySargenti,Amesvllle, represenlklg ACHS&amp;M
and Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris, Athens, representing the Modern
Woodmen d. America.

Modern Woodmen meet
Clara Kearse, United Methodist certificate for his $1,001 gift.
Committee on Relief, New York
The Woodmen pledge service was
City, was guest of the Camp 10900 led by Paul McPherson, Coolville;
Modern Woodmen of Amertca Kody Johnson Athens, and Roger
Indian summer picnic held In Carr Pullins, Alfred. One-month·old DelOak Grove, Alfred.
dre McBrayer, Colville, was pres·
She is part of the Mission en ted asllver spoon as newest camp
Saturation Team cuJTellt!y In the member.
Frances HendersOn, Coolville,
Athens District United Methodist
Churches. She thanked those pres- described and Invited participation
entforthelrcontlnulngasslstanceto In the MWA fund drive for the
victims of fire, earthquakes, Roods , renovation of the Statue of Liberty
and other catastrophic events and Ellls Island, two national
worldwide, the most recent being symbols of freedom. The slogan for
the project Is "Keep the Torch Lit."
the Mexico City earthquake.
Harold Lee and Wilma Henderson Marjorie Malone, Coolvllle, led In
expressed gratitude to all camp singing "America" and "A Church
members and friends who volun· In the Wildwood."
Door prizes were awarded to Ida
leered help In raising a new barn for
· Livingston, Guysville; Doulgas
them after the fire on Oct. 6.
Carr, Shade; Mike McBrayer,
Antlnny Sargentl, Amesville, Coolville; Dale !3oston, Tuppers
presented an Athens CountyHlstort· Plains; Teresa and Mike Courtney,
cal Society and and Mutseum Pomeroy; Hope Decker, Martha
Patron membership certificate to Elliott, and Genevieve ·Guthrie,
Camp 10000, In recognition of Its Alfred' and ~lie and Terry
recent matching fund drive ·Which McBoyer, Charleston, W.Va.
netted $2,635 for the ACHS&amp;M
A Halloween masquerade and
endorsement fund. Charles Byron, weiner roast will be beldatCarrOak
Stewart, also received a patron's Grove Oct. 26, 6:30p.m.

DINING ROOM ONlY

~

$

Served with whipped potatoes. chicken
gravy. cole slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry. no substitutes except beverage·with
• ~ditional price.

3 25
0

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

I '

Baer gathering conducted
The annual gathering d. cousins,
all descendants of the late George
and Catherine Baer, was held
Sunday at the home of Mrs. Purley
Karr near Chester. Mrs. Karr and
Mrs. Uswin Nease, only Uvlng
children of Mr. and Mrs. Baer and
aunts of the cousins, were also at the
gathering.
A basket dinner was held at noon
with Mrs. NJ?ase giving grace. The
afternoon was spent reminesclng,
looking at old photographs and
taking pictures. The group earUer
this year planted a Dowering

OhiO.

•

crabapple tree In the yard of the
Forest Run Unlled Metliodlsi
Church In memory of Mr. and Mrs.
Baer.
Attending besides Mrs. Nease and
Mrs. Karr were Mr. and Mrs.
George Baer, Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Salser, Mr. and Mrs. Pau!Karrand
David, Mr. and Mrs. Horace Karr,
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora , Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Davis, Mr. and
Mrs. David Nease, Mr. and Mrs.
Wllllam Knight, Mrs. Mary Kay
Roush, Miss Helen Baer, and Mrs.
Kathleen Scott.

Inland Dally Preu AssoclatiOI\ and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newapaper Sales, 753 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send add,... chan&amp;E'
t9 Tho Dally Sentinel, lll Coort St.,
Fllmeroy, Ohio 457111.

81Jl18CRtmON RATES
By Corrter 01 Molor Routt
One Week ....... ....... ....... ............. .$1.l0

One Month ............................... .. $1.80

One Year ..... .. ...... ........ .. .. ...... .. $57.20

Co. Teen Institute of Meigs High
School will have the program.

RIO GRANDE - OAGC !all
regional meets at Rhodes Hall, Rio
Grande College, Wednesday, begin·
nlng with registration at 8:30a.m.

POMEROY - The Rock Springs
Better Heal.th Club will meet
Thursday at the home of Betty
Conkle. The program will be given
RACINE - OAPSE meets 7p.m. by Helen Blackston and Louise
Wedz\esdaY at Southern High Bearhs will have the contest.
Members arr to nneet at the Rock
School.
· Springs United Methdolst Church at
12; 30 to travel to the Conkle home.
THURSDAY
POPLAR RIDGE - Poplar
Ridge FreewUI Baptist Church
revival Thursday through Oct. :Ill, 7
each evening with Bud Hatflela
speaking and singing by Heaven
Bound Four, Thursday; Rutland
Baptist Church choir on Friday and
Saturday; Harris Baptist Church
8 PACK - 16 OZ.
choir, Sunday.

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL

Sp1eltl

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meet Thursdliy at the Ohio Power

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OH.

IS PRE-PLANNING WOR11HWHILE?

MlaDU..aRT
MMR.Y I""IJQ; I iQ1
CWUIIA

1

-..

·--- ~~
M. ' · Do,o. .r.. M.D.

~.
Htm: llor! .. lou. &amp; Fri.
10
p.M. tnd l-5 p.M.
Ctostt1111u11: Wttl. 10-11:301.11.
- .ltd 3-7:30
Sot. 10 1.11.- p.ot.
CIDIIit 1111 Sat. in M1J Mon.-

•·•··!

r···

Servlcel OfMrod:
-fltlliiJ Jladlct Gl lttl41clnt

Yes' Pre-planninglor a funeral is well wo rth the hour or so
it takes to talk over your final wishes with our trained fu·
neral directors. Pre -planning is importanl for thr .. ra·

-111101 Strri'IJ (Saturlnaotod Eocislon)

-X-rtr
-llborttOIJ IIIII offlct strop KrHn

..........

-Hut t..op lltd U!trn11nd trHt,.nt

,

sons:

--IQ
-Citlldnrt'sond Atlon vacclnot!Dft
-Attllotlc "trslcal !Frat hi&lt; lolls. Sottt~llll.

First. pre·planning makes your wishes lu1own in advance
so difficult decisions wonn't have to be made at the time
of tltath.
Second, pre-plan nina permits free choice of all those per·
sana! and intimate aspects of a funeral (music, scrip·
tures, euloc;etc.) in a comfortable, relmd atmo sp here. -

111\ern ood lltitltllo Hiall khooh)

- lo!Mnil

Dally ................................... ~ C. nil
Sublcrlben not detlrlng to pay the car·
rler may reml1 In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. credit will be stven carrier each
month.
No •ubtcrlptloruJ by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service II
available.

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

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ATHENS, OHIQ
CALL 593·6-366 or 1-800-624-9883 .

With A Smile"

In

301 North Second Av.,uo
Mlddlopon. Ohio 41780

Member: United Preas Inttrnatlonal,

I..We Oldo

Me111ber
FDJC

Court. Open to public.

Jlshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Moll S.botrlpll... .

STEELWORKERS OR MANAGEMENT

at Children's Hospital In Columbus,
Ohio and Sandra Allen, Choices for
Vic tims of Domestic Violence,
Columbus. Ohio and a panel niade
up of Jackson Clly Pollee Captain
Ted Penix; Mike Flaig, principal of
Grant Middle School, Portsmouth;
and Belh Starcher Evans, Gallla
Cou nty Division of Children's Servl·
ces, Gallipolis.
ReglslraUon fee Is $2. More
details are available and advance
resetvatlons can be made through
the county Coopet·a~ve Extension
office.
Call Cindy Oliveri, cou nty Ext en·
slon agent, Home Economics at
992-£696 for more rlelalls about the
program.

VIolence In lhe home Is thr
physical, psycholog1cal, emotional
or sexual abuse of a fami ly mem~r
of another family member. The
results can be damaging and long
lasting for all members of the
. family.
The Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service Is sponsoring the South
District Health Conference. It is
planned for Thursday, Oct.17, from
10 a.m.·3 p.m. ln Jackson, and wlll
address the problems of abuse in
the home.
The meeting, planned for the
South District Extension Center on
Rt. 93 south of Jackson, Ohio, will
have several gilest speakers. They
Include keynote speakers Dr. Jacey
Showers from the Child Abuse Unit

Community calendar I area happenings

It's almost as easy to take advantage of our Special Account if your
IRA's not at Central Trust.
All you have to dq is stop into one of our oonvenient branches.We11
takecareofeveiything. ·

MORE PEOPLE with

Program on violence set

Somehow, I never seem to be able
to get very worked up over
Colwnbus Day. Nwnber 1, 1 always
have to work; number 2, almost !m
years Is a long tlme to remember,
wbe.n the fact is, I c~ barely
remember yesterday, and number
3, from ttme to tlme doubts are
projected as to whether Chris·
topher was the actually the first. Oh
well - I'm goMB keep smiUng any
way. Aren't you?!

part,

IF YOUR IU'S NOT AT CENTRAL
TRUST, WE'LL MOVE n FOR YOU.

What we nMCI Is: to
drill MORE HOLES to
the water outll

By BOB HOEFLICH
Seiltlnel Stall WrMer
Acouple oflormer Meigs
resldents are do·
lng well In the
1o n g e v l t y
department.
One Is Clyde
Riggs, now of Columbus, who recently enter·
talned with his harmonica and
story telling at the reunion of the
descendants of Alvin Percy Relgs
and Nancy Rollins Stevens held at
the Licking County Home Park.
Riggs Is the oldest Uvlngdescend·
ant. He was born In Meigs County
on Dec. 25, 1Jl8i and will be 99 years
old "come this Christmas". He Is a
son of the late Charles ·and Ella
Barbara Hart Riggs.
·Also enterlalnlng at the reunion
was Carlos Worth Lynch- only 'iff
years old - who Is a Rrst cousin d.
Clyde Riggs. He also was born In
MelgsCounty, asonofthelateFran
and Addle R. Riggs Lynch and
spent much o! his lll'e In rural areas
of Meigs and Athens Counties. He
told stories of Pagetown, Pomeroy
and Scipio Township at the reunion.
Attending the annual get·
together were Clyde and Mary M.
Stockdale, Marti Stockdale, Can·
ton; Daniel J . Stockdale, Clnelnnati; Susan Stockdale, Ruth Love,
Clyde Riggs, Columbus; Walter
and Louise Riggs, Marengo;
Sharon Mobley, Doug Uvlngton,
Lee Mobley, Thornport; Lee and
Mary Lynch, Joshua and Dianna
Miller, Deanna L. MUler and baby,
Copley; Daniel and Betty Downs,
Erin and Jenny Stallsmith; Marlon; Rolland arid Dean Lynch ..
Northfield; Guy W. Lynch, Prospect; Carlos W. Lynch, Athens;
Karl and Eileen Skivlngton and
Kay Sklylngton, Granville; Kimberly Sk!vlngton, Kenton; Paul
Ecleberry, Newark; and Robin
Townsend, WestervUJe.
Francis Andrew, Long Bottom,
continues his efforts to get state
laws ch~ so that 10\VllShlp
equipment can be used to help clear
private drives under such emer·
gency conditions like those we had
last winter during the heavy
snowfalls which brought activities
to a screaming halt, for the most

OIE·YEIR RITE FOR IRis OILY.
YOURSELF
Writ TREAT
TO $TIHL TODAY
~-··
WITH EVERY NEW SAW PURCHASE NOW

Page-5

Inngevity, birthdays

.- Byars ffil:\Y see some action against :t;»urdue

•'

By The Bend

Tuesday, October 15, 1985

Beat of the bend

"He calms me down," Gliblcza
chuckled. "We have a sign. When I
get excited, I start overthrowing,
throwing too hard. "
"So he holds out hls hand,"
Gublcza said, showing hls palm to a
couple of reporters and moving his
hand away from Ills chest In which Is
generally understood as, a "Stop"
sign.
"He's responded better and better
as the season has gone a)ong,"
Sundberg said. "He has a tendency
of getting wild. That's when he
Mica Jones, Junle Beegle, Jennifer Jotuwon, Andrea
SOU'111ERN JR. IDGH - Souiltern's Jr. high was
throws the ball harder.
Theiss.
Back
row,
CIII'Wy
Bnunfield,
Tracy
Norris.
·
one of several SVAC schools to add a junior high
"I have to try to keep hlm under
Amy mn, Trlcla WoUe, Jane Ann Wtruams, and
volleyball program tltls season. Pictured are
control,"
said the catcher. ·
Melanie Adams. Absent was Sarah WOes.
members of tha&amp; team, J..r, front, Coach Kim Grueser,
"Basically, what I try to do Is
encourage him," Sundberg said of
how he ·handles Gublcza. "When
he's throwing good pitches, I give
.
By GENE CADDES
the rest of the season If we want to because of a foot Injury suffered him support."
"He's a rah-rah type of personal·
stay In the win column.
UPI Sports Wrler
Sept. 21n practice.
"We're In one of those struggles
He has been slowly working his- tty," Sundberg said. "He' s a very
: : COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- Ohio
' $\ate was a team with an obvious where we can't afford too many way back Into playing condition and emotional kid. But I believe he's
mtsslon last Saturday · against losses in the Big Ten and we've got to Monday was given the go-ahead to learned to control It better this
year."
shoot the works every Saturday. resume lull contact. ·
~ lndlana and came away with a 48-7
Sundberg enjoys catching Kansas
There's going to be a lot of fireworks
•- win over the previously unbeaten
BruceandByarsmetwlthlhreeof
City's
young pitchers _ Brei
flying around and if you don't, you're
': Hoosiers.
theBuckeyes'teamphyslclans,who
Saberhagen,
Danny Jackson, Gu·
• Can you get a team that going to be in trouble."
examined a recent set of X-rays of bicza, Bud Black and 'oldtlmer'
· "emotlonatiy pitched" two weeks In
For the first time this season,
Charlie Lelbrandt.
Bruce may have at least the part Byars' foot.
a row?
"ObviOusly, we're going to have to time services of Keith Byars In
"It Is progressing nicely," bead
team physician Dr. Robert Murphy ;;:be 'pitched' not just two weeks In a Satunlay 's game against Punlue.
said of the Injury.
Byars, the Buckeyes' All·
row," Bruce said athlsweeklypress
U Byars Is ready to play Saturday
:luncheon Monday. " It looks !Ike America tailback, has yet to play In against Purdue, It would gtve Bruce
any of Ohio State's five games
• we're going to have to be 'pitched'
.
three able-bodied tailbacks for the
Rrst time this season.
Junior John Wooldridge, who
starled the first five games, rushed
··: - EAST MEIGS - Eastern ended Wigal tattled three, and Melissa for 104 yards and scored ·rou r
flrst·half touchdowns against lndl·
:its regular volleyball season re- Nutter three.
'
Curry led Fairland with 15 ana, while lreshnnan VInce work; -a!!!tly
by splitting In Its final two
markers and Lewis added 8.
man, in m!y four carries, ran lor 60
:~.claimlngadramatlcvlctory
In
Its
final
league
affair
Eastern
yards.
•'O'Jer Fairland and losing to SVAC
Wooldridge' s performance
: &lt;»champion Kyger Creek. Defend· bowed to Kyger Creek lh· two sets
4-15 and 12-15. EHS finished league earned hlm player of the game
: l!)g sectional champion ·Eastern
·
honors.
·.ended the season at 9-11 with play with a 6-61eague slate.
~~tlonaltoumamentplayslatedfor 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - f
:.saturday, October 19lnNelsonvllle.

The Daily Sentinel

..

' .

fl~- 'fbM#-~1tllo«1i,.
·ffu,.,.j .fffJme
111'1 1111-51'1
MIDDLII'OtiT, OHIO

•

Finally, any possible disagreement amor.gthe bereaved is
e!lminat1d when your wishes ate eMpressed and recorded
in advance.
As funeral dire&lt;tors, we have all the information you
ml&amp;ht rieed i~ pre·r,tanninclor funeral services. Please
stop by ~you wou d like more informstion on this very
. important decision m•kin&amp;.

$mice Plut. • .Attenfion to Oml/1
James N. Blower

Bill Blower

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 15, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Hawkeyes remain on
top, Sooners second
in weekly UPI poll

Cardinals within one game of NL flag
By RANDY lUINKOFF
UPI Spmis Writer
ST. LOUIS (UPl) -Momentum
sides with the St. Louis Cardinals,
and history favors the Los Angeles
Dodgers entering Game 6 of the
National League playoffs.
Fresh from a three-game sweep
over the Dodgers, climaxed by
Ozzie Smith's dramatic one-out
homer m the bottom of the ninth in
Monday's ~-2v lctory , St. Louis has a
pairof20-game winners readytotry
to clinch their 14th N·l cro..VO.
Under the old hest-of-five format,
champagne would have flowed at

Busch Stadium Monday. Instead,
bags were packed for a retum trip to
the West Coast.
Erratic Joaquin Andujar. 21-12
during the regular season and the
loser In the second game, will pitch
In Wednesday afternoon's game.
John Tudor, 21-8 and the winner in
the fourth game, Is set if a seventh
. game becomes necessary.
The Dodgers can take solace in
some recent history. The home
team has won 13 straight NLCS
playoff ·games, and· their pitcher in
the sixth game, Ore! Hersh!ser, is
unheatenathomein11decls!onsand

has won 11 in a row overall dating
back to-a loss July 7 at St. Louis.
"I'm undefeated at home, and I
don't think !be way our pitching ·
rotation has been sel up is pure
happenstance," Hershiser said. "As
a sinkerball pitcher, I'm much more
effective on natural turf than I
probably would be on the surlace in
St. Louis."
In addition, only seven teams
have ever have come back to win a
seven-game series after tralling 2-0.
Five of tM~' ~rieS Mve involved
the Dodgers.
St. Louis manager Whitey Herzog
'.elected to gQ with Andujar, the loser
in the 8-2 second game loss, in part
becauseDannyCox!snursingasore
elbow.
Andujar doesn't talk much to the
media these days, but teammate
Terry Pendleton isn't worried that
Andujar can match the feat of he!ng
the winning hurler in the Cardinals'
pennant and World Ser!es'clinching
triumohs in 1982.
"Joaquin has his ways about
him," Pendleton said. "But his
attitude and 1 approach toward
pitching and winning never varies.
When he gets out there, it won't
make any difference to him.' '
Should Andujar again find trouble, Herzog enjoys a bullpen that has
proved strong in the playoffs.
"Our bullpen has been outstandlng. It got cut us out of some jams in
today's game," Henog said.
In Monday's contest, soutnpaw
Ken Dayley escaped a two-on,
one-out jam after Eill Madlock
knocked out starterBobForsch with
a two-run homer. He induced
pinch-hitter Enos Cabell to bounce
Into an inning-ending double play.

Irt the seventh, It was rookie Todd
Worrell's turn to bail out Dayley,
who walked leadoff man · Mike
Scioscla on four pitches, and~elded
a single by'Cabell.
Worrell went to 3-0 on Sax before
receiving help from pitching coach
Mike Roarke and sttlkingout Sax.
''I was a little bit nervousalthough
l've been in that situation since I've
come up," Worrell said. "l was
doing some mechanical things
wrong that. Mike Roarke noticed. I
made the correction and gQt It into
the strike zone, made two good
pitches and got the third in the strike
"The 3-2 pitch to Sax was
evidently a bact pitch," conceded
Dodgers skipper _Tommy Lasorda.
"Itchangedthewholecomplex!onof
the game."
Los Angeles starter Fernando
Valenzuela, who survived eight
walks and a shaky first two innings,
was allowed to hit for himself, and
grounded back to Worrell. Rookie
shortstop Mariano Duncan fouled
out, ending the Dodgers' last threat
of the game.
The Dodgers bullpen wasn't as
fortunate.
"We wanted to keep him (Valenzuela ) In the game. Whenyouhavea
guy like that wbo'sa good hitter, you
have to stay with him," Lasorda
explained.
Tom Nledenfuer, Dodgers relief
ace, got Willie McGee to foul out to
start the ninth.
SrnJth, who, like McGee, walked
and scored on Tommy Herr's
first-inning double, delivered· his
first major-league homer batting
left -handed. It came on a 1-2 pitch
and cleared the rlghtfield wall.

HAPPY CARDINAL - Cardinals Ozzle Smtih holds up his
arm as he rounds third base after hitting a solo horne run off
Dodger 'l'on Nledenfuer In the bottom of the ninth Inning to win the
game Monday. St. Louts now leads .the National League Championship Series, three games to two.

Scoreboard ...
SuldQ'allMuiU
ClnclnMTI 35. N'l Giants .II
Phll.adt&gt;lphla ,'J), St . Lool~ 7
Dlillla.\ 'n , Plltsburgh 13

NHLresults
NATIONAL HO£XEY IEAGt.;E:
By Unl&amp;4-d F'I'UI61'*'Mtkml

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7:l'opm

f 'lmtlu r~: h
W lnnl~

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Orn\'f't 1 ~. lndianopoHs 10
Was!Uilton '11. Of-trot ~

LA Ram.' .i J. Tam!E !lay 'll
Grt'('n B;Jy 1), Mlnmola 17

&amp;&gt;attic :11, .\llanta jli
Cl\lcilfi&lt;l 2ti, San rranr lsro 10

San D l~ .l l. Kansas Qty JJ
I.A ftaldl'fs :L1. Nt•rlo Or irans \J

MoltCliQ'II RtP.uti
NY Jl'l s 2..1, M\aml 7
Sunda,y. 0u. IJ (AD 'llrne!l EUr)
Cilll'1n111Jt \ at Hw ston , 1 p m
Da l la.~

at Phii~K~l&gt;lphla , 1 p.m.
lndlanapolls at Buffalo, 1 p.m.
LA Raidf&gt;n a ! C k.'\·~·l aml I p.m.
LA Rams at Kany,as City, 1 p.m.
Nf'W Ort&gt;ans at Atlanta , I p.m.
NY .leis at Nl'\4' E n ~l!uul ~p. m .
!'.~ . LCAJls ar Pl llbli"Jth . 1 p.ni.
~n D~

at MlniW"SSOa . 1 p.m.
San Francisco 111 Drtrolt . 1 p.m.
WashlnJ[ton at NY Giants. 1 p.m.
~a t t ir' 111 DM\\'(1", 4 p.m.
Tampa -Bay al MJaml. 4 p.m
MOftday, Oct. !I
GN'm Bay a! Ch lta~roo !J p.m.

Raalr.r.tball
Boston - Wal\:«:1 fiN• BJ(l'nt RUard Trac~·
Mltrhrll.
PhomlX - Wal'-'rd f1rward ,\Jvtn ~~~ ­

Wed"ll'!ldliQ"'!II Garnt'll
£b~1o n ar \"anrou w r
lluffaJ() ,,, Mon\1-ral
'IY l ~ lrm df&gt;T•U t Edmonton
\f"A' York RIIRilf'I"S111 Las AI\IWif~

F"'hall
Kansas Cit y - PIOC'l'1:! 1!Jrback4'f Looi.s
Cooper on ~Jured rt"Sf''"'o't'; waivf'd rk&lt;fm
stv\• ltnmlan Mlkr Oowm.
NY Jf'!: - AC1I\'81f'd ll~baekf'r' Bob
C'rabK' orr InJured ~1"\·t; pla('{'d safMy
Harry Hamilton on ln]ul\'d f1'fol:'r\.'l'.

.11 Chi cago

w a~l\i n gto n

H~tm

Transactions

nmm Em')

QIM·LK~. 7:35
M 1ru :n ot:1 il l l-'l!t~l'(th.

Harlf(lr'(! fll

Nl'YI' F: n ~land 14, BufJm J

Ck'vf'land Z1 .

at Tor onro

.......

ar Dr:1rcit

"' l:ou l~ ,n C".ltf,l ory

WIMIP£'1!: - AcquiN'd ROaltmtt'r Dan
Bouc hard !rom ~f'brc for a M'Ymlh·rt'Aind

l!llli draf1 ch:J6c.'1.&gt; and r~h-

""~•

NFL results
;-..·ATIONAJ. "'OO'IBAI.L LF.AGUE

Ci('l.·l'land cMISll -fuok!all'd mldlk&gt;tct&gt;r
Mike Fall . wOOs~ wllh l.ctlls\•llk&gt; of llx•
Amrrlcan Indoor Soco&gt;r A!ll&gt;(l."I.Htion.

H3• t ' nll~d PrM8lnlernatt.nal
f\nw&gt;rk'.llll CollffN'fttlf

"""

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.007 14S 108
.!ill 104 IJ6
.113 109 138
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~ 4 0 .JJ.ll291M
'J 4 0 .•n1UW196

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s. ~0
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NY Gnl s
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Wash .
.1 3 0 .!'.00 9'7 134
Sl. Lou .
3 a o !'.OON5 1SJ

1...._--bmvl'r
• LA A drs

PhUa.

2 40.J'l.3~!Kl

Cmlral

. Chi.

6

I)

0 1.1111 189 98

.1 3 0 .SIJ l.'J7l2.'\
3 J 0 !m 1111138
J 3 0 !lll tl7J.&amp;O
0 6 0 .!Ill IJ2 177

Minn
Dirt

Gr. BaY
1'mP By
WOII

I.A Rms
s. .1-'ra.n
N. Orlrw;

6 0 Ol.!»J l3J 1B
.1 .1 0 . ~ 1!)5 ll7
3 :1 0 - ~ i.26J56

A!lnl

0 6 0 .OOJ lJ) 192

College

ratings

NEW YORK 1 UP() - Thl' U11 lll'd Pmis
lnl(•rootlonal Board of Coache!l Thp :1)
oollegl' football l'illtlnp, with fln t-plare
\\111'! and I"f.'COI"'ds In Jl!llrt'!li~. tllal
potd!s 1ba..'W'd on I~ potnts tor rlut pllllC@. 14

,.,....,

.......

1. Iowa 1161 1~01
~ - Ok lahoma 1141(3-{)t
J. Mlchlp 1111 1~1

m

1
S72 2
W. .1

4. P('l'ln Slate (~01

l'i6 6
m 7

tor M.'mnd, {'!r .I . and la~t IM't'k's raniOO~

!1. Arkansas ~ :HII
6. Netnska 14--11
1: Auburn t4·1J

8. BriJ:flam Yona- 1 ~11
9. Air Force 1&amp;-01
10. OhO Slatf' (4-11
U. Florida Slate t4-1)
12. Oklahoma Slt(4·1)124
13. Baylor (~1 )
14. Al.al:lllrna (4-1 1
14. GEOrsta (4-11
16. UCLA (4-1-11
11. Ululslana Statll-lt
18. Tau l.l-1 \
19. TE'Ill'lEU.'f! 12·1·11
1), Anny ([)-()\

400 9

:fillt

29t W
263 1.2
ani 15
IU i
!)

106 18
102 8

102 17

""
""
1911
18 1.1

"" ''
Ott-ers recetvlng VOles: Miami !Fla.l.

:,J, ArizOna (4-11

l-unranktd las! week

Colorado, Texas A&amp;M. USC. Washington.
-Kent~ky. MarylaM, Mlnlll'$(l(A. PurdUe.

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sporli Writer
EAST RUTIIERFORD , N.J.
(UP!) -As much as the New York
Jets tried to downplay their battle
for ffrst place in the AFC East
against the Miami Dolphins in the
wee)( leading up to the game, they
ballyhooed their 23-7 victory Monday night that gave them the
conference's best record.
"First of all, this Is a rivalry,"
explained Jets right tackle Marvin
Powell, who led the way for mosl &lt;i
Freeman McNeil's 171 yards.
"Secondly, they are the cream oft he
confe~ence, no d!oubt about it. They
are the pride of the AFC East. When
'Miami goes to the playoffs, every
guy In this room roots for them .lt is
always a milestone to heat them."
II was a milestone victory. The
Jets, 5-1, tooksolepossesslonoff!rst
place for the first time since 1969,
snapped Ml~l' s seven-game .!I' inning steak over them, and matched
their best start ever, winning five
straight.
The Jets defense became as
famlllar a part of Dolphins qu·arterback Dan Marino's jersey as the
number 13, and the offense kept the
linesmen moving the first-down
chains.
Using multiple fronts. one in
which All-Pro defensive end Mark
Gastineau lined up as a blitzing
middle linebacker, and mixing
coverages, the Jets hru·rassed the
usually-lethal Marino Into his poorest statistical outing as a starter in
his three-year career.
"He got rid of !he ball quick
because we were close to him most
of the night, " linebacker Lance
Mehl said. "He knew we were
coming."
· Marino completed 13-of-23 passes
for 136 yards with a long gain of 25
yards, and no touchdowns. The lone
score for Miami, 4-2, was 3-yard
run by Eddie Davenport in the third
quarter that brought them within
13-7.
The .Jets outga!ned Miam i 476
yards to 200, and held the bail for
37: 14 compared to the Dolphins'
22:46.
"What they did to us was mind
boggling," said Mark Clayton, the .
lone Dolphin wide receiver to catch
a pass. "Nothing like 'this has
happened to our offense since I've
been here. I'm not used to this."
Clayton and the rest of the NFL
may have to get used to the Jets
being - take a deep ·breath - an
elite team. After a season-openelng
31-0 loss to the Raiders and four
victories over sub-.500 teams •. New
York's authenticity was suspoect.
Monday's triumph changed that.
"It was a big win, we heat the
defending Super Bowl representative and the team that has won our
division regularly," Jets coach Joe
Walton said. "It makes you think we
might have a pretty good football

a

Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Dept.
SPONSORING A

SPAGHETTI DINNER

Miami, quarterback Ken O'Brien
was. He hit 18-of-28 passes for 239
yards and one touchdown. Of his 18
completions, 14 went for first downs.
O'Brien has often heard what a
mistake it was for the Jets to select
him two picks before Marino In th~ ·
1983 draft . Now he listens to praise.

AT THE FIRE STAnON ON

Saturday, Oct. 19 from 3:00 to 7:00 P.M.
ADULTS S3.00 -:- CHILDREN S1,50
~ERYONE WELCOME

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FEDERAL NI\TIONAL
MORTGAGE
CORPORATION,
Pla intjff

- vs.-

CARL SCHULTZ, JR . {doc,!
Et ol
Defendants

CASE NO . 85-CV-234
Judge Knight

NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE,
Carl SchUltz, Jr. and Jetfrey Scott Schultz. whose
last known residence is Carl
Sc hultz, Jr .. Route 3, Bo"

355, Racine. Ohio 4577!

and Jeffrey Scott Schuftz,
Address Unknown, and tho

unk nown heirs, devisees, le·
ga tees. executors. administrators, spouses and assigns
an d the unknown guardians
of minot and / or incompe·
tent heirs of Carl Schultz, Jr.
and Jeffrey Sco1t Schults,
all of whose residences ere
unknown. will take notice
that on the 22nd day of Au-

gust. 1985. Federal National Mortgage Corpora·
tion filed its certain Com-

Public Notice

Public Notice

nonh 333.2 feet to the center of State Route No. 124;
thence east 114 1eet with
State Route No. 124;' thence

ject any or all bids and or 81Y
pert thereof.
Meigs County
' Commissioners

south 21" 30' eost 368 ""'''
thence well 245.2 feat to
the place of beginning, con·
taining 1 .4 acres, more or
less.
All of the above name de ·
fendants are required to an ·
swer on or before the 20th
day of November, 1985, or

thoy might be denied a hearing in this c81e.

LERNER, SAMPSON

&amp; ROTHFUSS CO .. L.P.A.
Attorneys tor Plaintiff

Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
{9) 17. 24;
{10 1, 8, 15, 22, 8tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
AMBULANCE DEALERS

In eccordance with Section 307.88 of the Ohio Re -

vised Code. ••led bido will
be receivod by the Meigo

County Board of Commis·
their office
sionare in
located at the Courthouse.

plaint i5 to foreclose said
plaintiff's mortgage
recorded in Mortgage Book
136, Page 851 , Meigs
County, Ohio Records. upon
the following described real
e5tate. record title to which

lows.
Specifications may be ob ~
rained from the Meiga

Schultz. Jr. by deed re·
co rded in Deed Book 267,
Page 1 , Meigs Countv. Ohio
Deed Records, t owit :
Beginning at an iron pipe'
located at the southeast
corner of lot ao. 3 of

and Water Conaervabon District to be held in ccordence
with Chlptar 1515.01-14 of
will be with oo tude In vehi- the RaviiOd Codo of Ohio at
cle. Che11ls and conversion Eostem High School on Nobido will be oonlidered eepo- vember 19, 1985 11 7:06 p.

is allogod to bo held by Carl

SUEfb~VISION
within Racine Village. thence

TYREE 'S

2

In Memotiam

Sarwtca Office, located at

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46789.
.
Velilclo to be one 111 1985
or newer Type Ill Ctoa 1
Emergoncv Ambulance. Prico

ratoty.
The front of the envelope

Rodney Chevalier,
Atan Holter and Larry Mont·
gomery.
Nominations will be accepted from the 11oor at the
ti.me of election . Two supervtsors are to be elected. You
may cast vour ballor at the
annual meeting or on the d!ly
of alections at Meigs Soil and
-Water Conservation District
Offk:e between 8 a.m. and 3
p.m . "'bsentee ballots may
be secured at the local district office.

NOTICE TO BtpOERS
Tho lloird ol Ejlucation of
Ea11.., Local Sc1ioo1 Olllrict

Fuel Oil, Guo~ne, Motor Oil
Specificatlqn Shoots aro
= l o 11 the Treasurers
In order to be coosidared al
-led bid• , .., be received in
tho Troosurers Office by 12
O'Clock
Noon19,
on:1985
Deoember
Said Boord of Education
mtlfVel the right to ecoopt or
reject env and a11 porta of111y
IWld •K bids.
Boord of Education
E••t••n Local School
Oillrict
Etoile Boston
Troosurer
· ~.!t~;.s~~ 46 m

ELECTION
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Ohio Soil and Wotor
Conaervatlon Commi11ion
will ClUte an election of IU·

porviooro of the Molgo Soil

m. NominiMI are: Marvillne

encloaing the bid must be

·m•rl&lt;od "SEALED BID.
EMERGENCY AMBULANCE
VEHICLE."
Bitclor MUST
USE COUNTY BID FORM .
The Boord of Coonty

ROOFING
NEW -REP.AIR

INTERESTED IN A

(CUT OUT fOfl FUTURE USE!

NEW VEHICLE

KEN'S :.
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

We'd like to introduce you lo
En pee-A-Car. the modern way
to drive the "hicle of your
c~oice.

Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment

949-2263
or 949-2969

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

Call oH-~~l-bt.H

PARTS and SERVICE

4129/tln

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
l!IUCK LEASING
For hster Se~ice

985-3561
All Makee

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial
Call:
992-5875 Or

742-3195
8-8-tlc

HUDHALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North !tcond

Middleport, Ohio 4H 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUSINESS PHONE
1614) 992-6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6' 4) 992-7754

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work '

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
Work
(Free Estimates)

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Joho Deere,
New Holland, Bush Ho&amp;
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equl.mant
Parts &amp; Servlea

•An Types of
Excavating
•Landscaping
•Basements
•Sewage 'Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742-2407

9-23-tfc

PH. 99.2-7201

FilE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
Factory Choke
1.2 Gauee Shotguns Only
.
9-30-tf

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

MOTEL

Rl. 62 SOUTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
·8 miles from
Pomeroy,Mason Brid&amp;e

SINGLE S24. 95

VINYL &amp;

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

ALUMINUM SIDING

"FREE ESTIMATES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410

Complete Gutter Work

Complete Remodoting
Roofing of all Types
Worked in homo area
20 years
"' Free Estimates··

RENT A CAR.
· CALL
446-4522
F11

R~DIATOR

ER''ICE
I

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

PAT HILL FO.RD

FREE CONFIDENnAL
PREGNANCY nn
IRtsulls in 30 Minut!Sl

ROOM 103

RUTLAND
,CIVIC CENTER
Mon. &amp; Fri. 1- 4 pm
Tues &amp; Thurs. 7-9 pm

PH. 742-2629

thru Wednesday.

8

to bo With A

10-8-tlc

THE QUALITY

ACCENT -

PRINT SHOP

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

y,, P1lwtl•l N11h

PH. 992·6931
Aftor 5 Call

PIUS: Olfict !uPfllits &amp;
furniturt, Wodding
and Groduotion

7·2-2027 '

992-3345

"Free Estimates" .
lnslallation AYailablo

3/2/ tln

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZlNITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REfiiGERATOR
•SATElLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Nne ~ Fill Tl11e
Sh•• hehiei11
•• Daly ,

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESfER-915-3307

4f lflln

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

An nnu nr, J) men ts

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

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

P&amp;S BUILDINGS,

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

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

PH. 949-2801

or 949-2860
No Sunday

Calls

l/11/ltn

AUTO

CENTER

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

We Have Many Other Dishes To Choose From
A System Can Bt Designed For You
GIVE US A CAlL

Cloener, one hell milo up
Goorgeo Creek Rd. Call
814-446·0294.

for rhe tntendad purpose,
reserve the rfght to re -

ASA E. JORDAN,
who passed away
Oct. 16, 1981.
Do not ask me if I miss you
There's such a vacant place
Oft, l think l hear your
footstep!
And sea your smiling face.
Days of sadness stili comes
o'er me
Tears in silence often now
Memory keeps you em
near me
Thouglt you left this world
4 years ago . .
I

Sadly missed by wife
-Nora.

11

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!
FULL &amp; PAIT nME

REGISTERED NURSES

For 25 W SNF-ICIF FaciHty
CONTACT RHONDA DAILEY, R.N.
.
Or Apply At
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

116'12 East Mtmorlal Drive, Pomeroy

Paul

E.

Shockey,

DVM

PT. PLEASANT OFFKE
305 Jacklon Awe.
SMAlL ANIMAL HOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-Thu". 3-S pm
TH110s. 6:30-1: frl. t-2 pm
Saturday 10-11:30 am
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;
SUIGEn IY APPT.
PH. 304-675-2441

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Offlct
For Noun
304-372- 709

·14-1 mo.

rep•ir,

supptlas.

perta,

end

Pick up end

delivery, Davia Vacuum

z

a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

%

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

Jim Mink Chov.-Oids tnc .
Bill Gene J ohn1on

. 814-446-36 72

WANTED TO BU V used
wood

&amp;

coal heaters .

brother, Clyde Wines, Jr.•
who p11sed IWIY October

Ntw arwl Used Auto Glan-lats Model Parts

nologiat, weekd1y1. Send
rt11ume to box 300. In Clre

tho Galtlpotls Daily Trib16, 1978. Sedly miosed by of
une, 825 Third Ave., G'alli·
alltera. Kathleen Holt1r 1nd polls, Oh 45831.
Eileen Grueter.

PARTS

i - 992-701

M081LE HOMES MOVED.
intured, reason1ble ret11.

Call 304-578-2336.

SAif5 &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7283

Notice, no hunting Of trel·
pa11ing on Dana C. Durst

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Bed a •Wheel Chairs
WE IIU MEDICA II ANI OTHER tNSUIANCI
CAlliER! WHEN EI!G!IIE

Caretaker to live-in, Re ·
gency Inc .• Pr . Ple111nt. Call

304-675-5104.

AVON . Sell Avon make
46% . Coil 814-446-3358.

proporty.

New Credit Card! No ona
refused . Vlu · Mutercltrd .

24

107

Svcamore St., Pomeroy,

Oh.

t

'\

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

\

..,;:

_,

........

j

Ught housakaeping . Have
references . Call 614-379 -

Need money? Old you know
thar there Ia a place In
GalllpoUa where vou can

borrow $1 .00 , $10.00.

9100 .00. etc .. easllv with·
out red tapa of thelergeloan
institutfons? On the spot
loan1 with no waitbg or
credit checks, using your
personal belongings 111 col lateral. Only 6% interest .
Call or visit today. Frank'e

counts,

2scery·looking black cetlto

free · estimates.

Now Set~lng All Of
f
Meilt -County
.6
snd Su,ounding'
_ Ares 912or 1
Woavor, 304·882-2646 .
-~ ...
. 8 month , old good with
JO'S GIFT SHOP
chlld1en. 304-67fi-6072

Appty l"' peraon at General
Fell Special furniture rau Storo, 240 N. Cottago, Rio pholst:ering
is our 21st
Gronde, Oh Oct. t 6-18. veer •rving. This
tri ·counrv with
bury Rd .. Middleport. C1ll 1PM to BPM.
the best in reupholstering.
614-992-6824.
now for Free E1Umate
Eooy Assambty Work I UOO. Call
4 eight week old kitten• to per 100. Guaranteed pay· 304-876-4t54. Mowroy'o
give •way. Coli 614-949- mant . No experience-no Upholetary .
2779.
selu. Deuila aend self·
Puppies to give 1w1y. '1:1
German Shepherd . Bred·

-

.d

To sell Avon . Cell Marilyn

One tong he ired 1 -2 1he·
pherd, 1·2 utter m1le pupe .

Rt. 124, Syracuse, -Oh.
FREE Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll
"Register To Win"
Our Christmas Toys Are In
Cars, Dolls. Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone ,
10% Down Will Hold For Chrislmas Gifts
Shop Early and Save

876-2398.

•

01

eddreued stamped enve·

montha old, full blooded

The Molgo Local School

c:o.chlng

po•ltions mult

Atheno High School on a
dolly beolo. tntorollad po•IOnl mul1 Nve 1 valid
cheuffer'• llcenu. a car
Afety in1pection end ade·
quete lnturance coverage.
lntereeted penon• should

oontoct R. Cho.-too Holtldey.
Director of Sp9ciel Educe ·

tion,l1614 -742-3113.

MOI\IEY. MONEY. MONEY I
Yard Sale

ANGIE'S PIZZA
"12 Varieties of Piuq''

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

Middleport, OH.

PH. 992-3559
Undtr Ntw Monagtllllnt (For1111rly Giovanni's)

The army National Guard
can provide you with e
part -time monthly pay -

chock, PLUS quoltflod

------aiiiiiiioifi--· -----·
. &amp; Vicinity
1\ol mllas- Rt. 180 poll
HMC- old 160. Mltomlty,
lnfonto-boys 3, houiohold ,
honey. Tues. &amp; Wed.

31

Homes for Sale

District i1 currently seeking - - - -- - -- applications from cantfled 3 bedroom full basement,
appllcent1 for 1 Var1ily eat-in kitchen , ca rp ort .
Buebett Cooch ond en As- $2.500 8t taka over payalltaM Veraity Softball ments, Plants Subdivision .

mother. 304-676·6072 or meet certiflcetlon require·
875-23911.
ment1 of Ohio for sports
medlclne end CPR. Persona
Full blooded German She- lntereltMI should contact
pherd. full blooded Pin bull. Dan E. Morris, Superintend 2 Boogtu- 304-675-2797. ent of Melgt locatl Schools,
It 621 South Third Avenuo
Puppies. mother port Doch- In Mlddtopon. Ohio.
lhund. 304-468-1058.
The Molgs LoJ01 School
Dillrictlooeeking aquallllod

8823 .

Real Esla!e

lope: Eton Vh•t-716 3418
Enterprise Rd ., Ft. Plerco, Fl
33482.

Smoll dtrk dog 1 y•r old,
good with children. 304- Cooch for the 1996-86
876-6072 or 875-2398.
ochool y•r. Applications
mutt hold • valid Ohio
5 1-2 Dobermon pupe, 8 t•chlng certificate and for

II ~[~::::~!1~ ln.vk:lllitV
1114-388-

OI~imnLt·!J

f -, \

Call 614-446-4630.

give awty. Colt 614-742· Man-eement traihet for Word 'o Koyboard, 304-8752480 ..
convenience store &amp; de;i. 6600 or 875-3824.

Lab.

" TOTAL FIREPLACE
AND CHIMNEY WORK "

landscaping, painting on
mobile home roofl. 860 .

Anillont Menogors. Oppor- Water wells drilled and ser·
Coli 1-1119-586-1857 for tunity
to •m 1250 to 1300
lnformetlon . 24 hours.
per week. M1jor company, ~cad . Prices on request. Call
614·742-3147 or 614 -992no experience. prefer our 6008
.
own methoda. cer helpful.
4
Apply at 417 2nd. Ave .. PIANO TUNING AND RE_ Glv_e&amp;w
_ av_
Room 18, between 8:30AM PAIR , beck to ochool disto I O:OOAM, Mon .-Sat.

LOST Reword otolon Beagle
10 mo1: 1nawera to Max,
childrens pot. Mike Con•dey. Cell 1114-441-7538.

,..-:·-..\.

18 Wan1ed to Do

BLUE, STiiK CAB CO. -' -

3-24 -tfc

IGill •CHIMNEY REBUILDING

donts. $500. 1 month. Call
614-99 2-3596.

·aggreUive metureindlvidull
who qualify to train IS

Individual to tran1port a hig h
lchool ltudent to and from

• FLUE CAPS tNSIALLEO

Nursing care in private
home. Room for two PI·

Babysitter reierenc11, trans· Pown S~op, 430 Second
portation.
Bidwell School Avo., Gallipolio. OHio 614Abootutly no hunting or Oiotrjct. Cell
814· 448 · 446-0840.
treapaulng on Old Town 7568.
Farm . Violators will be
prosecuted . Charlea C . Auiltan1 Meneger tralnn. 23 Professional
Lewis.
Wa hove 3 openingo for
Services

lOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUI!PLY

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

1!!!!!!!J

1- - - - - - - - -

to send money through the

73 -79 Ford Tr.
Fendt" .........................•41
73-79 Ford Tr.
Doon ......................... ll3S
10-IS Ford Tr.
Doon .........................$145
71 -79 Ford Tr.
IO~;~t·F~;d·t;:--· ....... ss 2.50
Hoods ......................... 1145
13-15 Ford Rongor
_...ltoods ......................... •tlO
13-IS Ford 1'"'9"
Griliii ...........................•7S

Transmission

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED
FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOV~S
1"i!i!P1 • CLEANING INSPECTION ' ~

in

mail until you have investi·
Recine Gun Shoot apon- Buying d•lly gold. silver gated the offering.
coins.
rlnga,
jewelry,
sterling
oored by Racine Gun Club.
Every Sundoy, beginning at ware, old coins, large cur- Sreel building dealerahip
1:00 p.m. Factory Choke 12 rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur· with major manufacturer·
ken B•rbor Shop,- 2nd. Ava. sales &amp; engineering support.
guage 1hotgun1.
Middleport, Oh. 814-992- Starter ad1 furnished . Some
Neodod tmmodlotely: 100 3478.
arou taken . Coli 303-769peoplo 10riouoly interelled
3200 ext. 2401 .
in losing waight. 1-800-992
Elll ploynlllnl
9991.
S t:rv11:e s
22 Money to Loan
Rovivotl Oct.9-18 . 7:30
·p.m. Middleport Church of
Chrill In Chrilllan Union.
HOME OWNE RS-Roflnonce
Poor! Street . Rev. Keith 11 Help Wanted
to low fixed rate. Uu equity
Eblin preaching. Spoci•l - - - - - - - - - for any purpose. Leader
singing nightly.
Mortgago Co., 814-592I
3061
.
Dna
cortHiod
Modicoi
Tech
In loving memory of our deer

8-13 lfn

63 Pino 51., Gallipolis

Wanted

1- - - - - - - - -

SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd. 2393.
Olive St. Gallipolis: Catt
Shooting match Gollla Co. &amp;
Gun Club. Every Sunday 614-446-3169 .
Financial
1PM, Buckrldge.
Want to buy manual tire
changer. Catt 614 -26 8Mine &amp; Yours Boouly Shop 8261
. .•
advanced training. lotoll
21
Business
cutea, perma ... Famlly hair·
COMPLETE
HOUSEHOLOS
atyling . Owner-operator
Opportunity
Beverly Garron. Call 1114- FURNITURE. Bods, lrQn.
wood,
cupboards,
chan•.
446-9228 off Rt. 7 on
chest•. beskets. dishea.
Georges Cnek Rd .
I NOTICE I
lt:one jara, 1nrique1. gold
THE
OHIO
VALLEY PU8Absolutely No hunting or end ailver. Write·M . D . LISHING CO. recommond•
Miller,
Rt.2.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
tre1pa11ing on William Welrt
that you do busine11 with
property behind, Gollla Co. 45788 or Cllll 814-992- people you know. and NOT
7760.
airport.

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

10/10/ 1 mo . pd.

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VETERINARIAN
CliNIC

chine

614-66 7-6235

the toweot bid or the boll bid

apfl

5785 or 304-773-6430 .

We pay cuh for late model
clean Ultd cera .

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also

farm. antique. liquidation
salel. Llcensed Ohio and
Wast Virginia . 304 -n3-

SWEEPER end -ing me-

73 -10 Cheoy Tr.
Fsnd.. s......................... •41
73-10 Chloy Tr.
Ooo........................... 'lOO
73-10 Chtvy. Tr.
Hoolis ......................... •tso
73-14 Chsoy "73 -~9m!..';;y--r;:·--- .......... s70
Grillll ..................... s31.!0
73-79 Chsoy. Tr.
Roehr Pantls ...............•2l
73-79 Cht¥y. Tr.
.
Cob Cornors ..................120

1- - - - - - - - -

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE . Enota. 614·992-7314.

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ............................
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... '1350
10' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... '1395
II' ALUMINUM MESH ........ .... .............. '1595

PHONE 0.02-7075

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Roger Hysell
Garage

I

9 · Wanted To Buy

-

Apply Mister Donut. No
Phone Calls .

our home . Trained and fif.
teen years experience. Call

3 Announcements

z

6

Holp wantod . Part time help.

Bidwatt. Oh 466t4. 614 367-7728.
Vacancy for the elderly

EYE 'IIIE
WANT ADS
FOR GRERT IUYS

Commlulonert mey accept

In loving memory of
my dear husband,

ers Free. Joe Jonas. Rr:. 1,

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

a

territories,

otarting Tuosday. AVON.
Call304-676-t429.

Hospital or out 160 et North

Signs, Rubbtr !ramps,
lusintss Forms,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Gallia . Oealora $3.00, buy-

5'T?'k ·sAZERl
SYSTEMS

We Deliver

Copy Stnicts, Etc.
2SS Mill It, Midcllsporl
104 Mulbtrry Av., Pomeroy

Diet. 304-384-9167. $400St 000 part limo: 16000·
$10,000 full time.

anything. 7 mi. N. of Hotzor l--:1 -=-2--S::-:itu ~ati_
o_n_s_ _

PHONE (6141 992·6100

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Ph. (614) 843-542 5
9f 1ZI~ mo. pd.

Sales Representatives
needed . Hei-bai-Nutritional

Four open

Old Time Traders Day. EVery
Sat. 8t Sun . Sell or trade

Mobile Home.
No Job Too Small or Too Big.
We Do Setups and Underpinning
"Special Rates For Senior Citizens"

GRAVEL- SAND

Stationerv, Magnetic

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

? PREGNANT 7

···-············-··--· -·· ···· ·

SHADE, OHIO

LIMESTONE

(ALL COLLECT:

F11 All

&amp; Vicinity

IL-----.::~!.1

REPAIR SERVICE

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Stqrm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New RoOfing

· ·lfn

nt-'SS

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

-- ----"Pfiiiiiasa·,:.-i----·

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

~'

A.A.A. ·
304-675-6276

1-o-..;,------Busi
1

304-876-32 14 after 6:00 .

11265

RACINE

Help Wanted

1409 Kanawha St. Saturday 1- - -- - - - - -

9-20-1 mo.

GUN SHOOT

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

i10J2.16,2tc

S''... r"• 1•&lt;' ...' .·s

no charge. 30 years ex·
perience. Call 614-7422146. Also dozer work at
614-742-3018.91!7/1 mo. pd.

349 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

• MEIGS

11

Working couple needs part·
time babysitter for 4 year old
...................................·• girl
in our home. Mu1t be
144 Mulberry Ave., Pome - mature, dependable individ·
roy; Thursday. Fridav and ual willing to work flexible
Saturday. Oct". 17 through hours-no evenings, nights,
or weakenda required. Call
Oct. 19 .

WATER WELL DRILli~G
We iuarantee water or

GIFTS

EXCAVATING
COMPANY

V. C. YOUNG Ill

JIM CLIFFORD

AND

' -3-tfc

•live entertainment
"Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

12-Btlc

MEXICAN
POTTERY

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

1/lUIIc

YOUNG'S

LINDA'S

··-----P-omeri:iv----·--··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Anything That Has

MILLER
ELECTRIC
.SERVICE

7

The Daily

Ohio .
64 Misc. Merchandise

4-5-tlc

Beeg~.

Public Notice

Pomeroy, Ohio 46789, until
noon on October 23. 1986.
plaint in the Common Pleas Tho bids witt be opened at 2
Court of Meigs County, o'Clock P.M. On October
Ohio, in Coso No . .86-CV- 23. 1986 and •eod aloud for 11018.16.22.29. 4tc
234 on the docket of said
the following vehicle. Each
Court, and the object and bid to meet the conditions
prayer of which said Com- Wid apecitications •• fol ~
Public Notice

County Emergency Medical

Public Notice

Mary Hobllottor. Clerk
{10J 8, 16, ltc

deoireo 1D receive . . lod bids
on tho following:
Fleet Insurance
Tim and Tuboo

Writesel

DOZER, 8ACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp;DIRT

Or Wnlt D11M., Srntinrl Clmd1td Dept
Ill Co11rt St.. PomtlOJ. Dh10 •S7U

Public Notice

L.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

PHONE 992-2156

team."
The Jets definitely have one
'thing: an awesome t11iming back.
When healthy, McNeil Is one of the
NF1.'s most feared weapons. He
constantly slithered and stutterstepped through Miami's defense.
, McNeil became the first player
ever to rush for more tban 100 yards
against Miami four times.
'When McNeil was not torturing

Howard

-

Jets take over first
place with victory

Pomeroy-

Business Services

·
lBy KEVIN KENNEY
'
on ~ carries and scored one
UPI Sports Writer
touchd!own and Rob Houghtlit1
NEW YORK (UPI) - Iowa, kicked three field goals to pick up the
despite struggling to win for a slack for Iowa.
second straight week, remained the
Oklahoma, 3-0, received 14 first- ·
top callege football team in the place votes and '!!12 points after Its
nation Monday in the UPI Board of defense held Texas to four first
Coaches voting.
downs and 70 yards Saturday. The
Oklahoma, coming off its 14-7 Longhorns did not get a first down,
victory owr Texas, remained No. 2, and registered minus-26 yards in the
and Michigan, a 31-0 winner over second half.
Big Ten rival Michigan State,
After its easy victory over
stayed No. 3.
Michigan State, Michigan received
Army and Arl2ona entered the 11 first-place votes and 5,'j4 points.
Top~ for the first time this season,
The 5-0 Wolverines llmlted the
and Indiana was dropped from the Spartans . to 139 yards in total
list. Theweek'sblggestjumpwasby offense, including just 24 In the
Ohio State, which climbed !rom 15th second half.
to lOth after a 48-7 triumph over
'The Michigan defense, which has
Indiana Saturday. F1ortdaStateand allowed only one touchdown all
Oklahoma State, both losers Satur- year, also is ranked in the top five
day, each dropped seven notches.
nationally, and Is best in the nation in
The Hawkeyes, 5-0 after their points allowed, yielding an average
. 23-13 victory over Wisconsin, col- of 4.2 per game.
lected 16 first-place votes and 575
Each of the top three teams was
points from the 41 coaches who named on all41 ballots cast.
voted t[)ls week.
Rounding out the top 10 are Penn
After nanuwly escaping defeat State at No. 4, Arkansas at No. 5,
two weeks ago to.Michlgan State, Nebraska at No.6, Auburn at No.7,
the Hawkeyes had some dlfflculty Brigham Young at No. B, Air Force
against the Badgers, but managed at No.9 and Ohio State at No. 10.
to wtn' a game In which quarterback
·others in the Top~ are: Florida
Chuck Long took a heating and pass State (No.111, Oklahoma State (12) ,
forunder200yardsfortheflrsttime Baylor (13) , Alabama and Georgia
this season.
(tied at No. 14), UCLA (16),
Long, who completed 18-of-28 Louisiana State (17), Texas (18),
passes for 167 yards, !ncludlng an Tennessee (19) and Army and
8-yard touchdown to Blll Happel, Arizona tied at No.~Almy, 5-il, entered theTop20after
had thewindknockedoutofhlm,anq
suffered dizzy spells after he!ng hll trouncing Boston College 45-14.
in the back with 1: 31left in the !Irs! Arizona was idle Saturday, and
half.
brings a 4-1 record Into this week 's
Ronnie Harmon gained 175 vards action.

zone."

Tuesday, October 15; 1985 ·

members could earn more

than 120.000 in educotion•l
benefits. ENLIST NO WI Colt
304-876-3950 or 1-800642-3819.
The Army Notlonol Gutrd
needs your prior militorv
11rwice experience. Enlist

now for

part ~tl n.

montly

peycheck, ,educational op·

Call 814-446 -7360.
4 bdr. house on 325 in Rio

Grande. Call614-245-5823
o• 614 -446-6345
Bv owner . Must 1ell - m~wed .
3 bdr. ranch, one car garage,
walking distance from North

Gallio High Scho6t. Reduced
IO 929 ,900. Call 614 -388 8711 .
36 acres. houae, 6 rooms,
bath. workshop, garage. At.

160 . Salllng cheap. For in for

call 1-304-273-6046.

1 acre with house, 2 bdr.,
rural water, septic tenk.
mobile home hookup .

St2,500 . Colt 614-388 9856.

By owner. Remodeled 3
bedroom house on Rt.33 .
NeW F .A"':1urflace. Large lot.

123,000. Collect 614 -423 6289.
By owner. Stately 3 bed room house at 10 E. St .,
Pomeroy. 6 wooded acres .
Family room, dining room, ·

FA heat, 2 baths. base ment ,

garage . $27,000 .

Colloct 614-423 -6289 .

,6 room with bath . Oak
floors , hmily room
equipped for wood burner,

12.24 dock porch, 80•100

corner lot . Nelson Rd .• Ru tland. call Bill Williamson at

614-742-2007.
Mlchigon Sate 60 Noll Jew- portunitlel, retirement ln ·
erly, dinette 101, Coroleara, conw, tnd much more. Cell House and approximately 1
coati, toy1, Infant thru X· 304-1175-3960 or 1-800- acre for sale Apple Grove •
042-3819.
304-fi75 -6406.
torv• clothu.

•

�1ueSday, Uctober 1 b,

31

LAFF-A-DAY
"""V' .......

Homes for Sale

In Rio Gr"nde. new·J bdr .•
full bumen t, nice lot. large
rear decks with valley view,
Priced to sell $39.600. Will
consider mobile home trade
in . Call 614-446 -8038 .

51 Household Goods .

Red barn style house. 1.226
sq . f1 . living space, 4 ac res.
total elec . fireplace , 2 car
garage. shed and worlc shop .

304 · 675-5739 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED M OBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 . PHONE 614 ·446 ·
7274 .
Big down payment . short
time employment. or past
credit history stopping you
fro m buying a home ? Consider I reclaimed single or
dou blew ide. Low monev
down. take over payments.
We ' re Mid Ohio Financial
Service ~6141772 - 1 220 or
773-3926 .

10 · 1$

Houses for Rent

1983 Jay Skyline 2 bdr ..

44

Apartment
for Rent

total electric. underpinned. Furnished house 131 Rear
anchore.d down , private 4th Ave .• Gallipolis. 2 bdr. Furnished 3 rooms&amp;. bath,
rented lot, Centenary. Can $200 pluse utilities .. Call clean, no pets, adults, ref. &amp;
_ 6_·_4_4_1 6
_ a_h_a_r_7_P_M_.__
depooit. Call 614 -448 stay if sold . Interested call ,_44
61 4 - 446 · 7200 after, 1519.
6:00PM .
55 ,66'' Garfield 7 rooms• . - - - - - - - , - - - - unfurnished. 4 rooms fur- 2 bedroom apinment. $330
1977 mobile home, 14X70, nished. Inquire at 57 Gar- utilities paid or 8220 no
with 1 2 ft expando, good field Ave.
utilities paid. deposit riJcond . Caii614-367-752B .
quires. Call614-446-2129 .
3 bdr . house gas heat. ,Call
2 bdr. garage, washer -dryer
2 bdr . New Moon 52,500. 614-446-1876 or after 6.
614 ·448-1889 .
hook-up. Reoidontial nalghColl614·388·8711 .
borhood. Furnished197714x70mobilehome, 3 Eureka , nice one story 2 bdr. unfurnished . No pets. 8225
edrooms. 2 baths. total will rent, Ieete or land plus utilities! Call614-446electric 10x20 awning, un· contract. Deposit &amp;. referen- 7720 .
derpinning &amp; woodburner. ces required . Blackburn
Realty. 614-446 -0008.
Riverside Apto. Middleport.
Call 61 4-379·2798 .
Special rates for Senior
12x60 trailer with 12x7 4 bdr. house in country. Hud Citizens. e130. Equal Hous·
u pando. AC , oil heat approved, 8250 pluo dep. ing Opportunhiet. 614-992
rented lot, with garden Call 614-387-0200 or 614- 7721.
! pace, rural water. Call 446 -4684.
614-256· 1713or614-379- 1 ~-------- 2 bedroom apartments.
2707.
2 bedroom , furnished, A. C. New Haven, WVa. Newly
electirc heat. Good clean remodeled . In town. 8141970 Rilzcraft Ventura, condition . 8175 per month. 992-74B1 .
12X60 , 2 bdr. on rented lot. Naw Hovan . 304 -882 One or two bedroom apart$3495 . Call 614 -446 - 2466 .
menta in Pomeroy . Fur·
6 322 .
4 room, Vine St., Racine. niahed or unfurnished. Rent
1974 Bonanza . 12X65. 3 Bath, yard. garden, sewer, negotiabla. Coli 614-992bdr. 2 bath, AC, OW, porcl'l, gas heat. 614 ·992-2766 6723 .
underpinning , clean . Call days . 614 - 985-4231
evenings.
2 bedroom second floor apt.
614-388-8794 .
Total electric. Acro11 from
1968 Royal mobile home lor 2 bedrooms, unfurnished. Pomeroy Fire Station. Call
solo . 12x40. $3,000. 614- new paint. fully carpeted. 814-992-7314 .
No inside pets. Oepoalt
949-299e .
required . Call 614-992- Furnished Apartment for
14x70 mobile home, 3 3090.
rent, no children. Available
bedrooms. 1 '' ' baths. gas
ahor Oct.3. Cell 614-992fllrn ace. Price reduced . Call Efficiency conage. e&amp;&amp;.OO 2749.
614-949·2388 .
week. utilitiol peld, phona 1-------.,.---304· 676- 3100 or 676 - APARTMENTS , mobile
1970 PMC 3 bedroom•. ai"-. 5509 .
homeo. hou10o. Pt. Pl.. sant
wa sher . dryer. awning . - - - - - - - - - - end Galllpolio. 614 -448 Partly furnished . S6, 1 50. Clean 2 llory houlft In 8221 .
614-992-7479.
Middleport. $200. month. II 1 - - - - - - - - -intereated 304-882-3722 .
2 br apartment• in HanderIOn. 304-875·1972. ·
1981 mobile home. 14x70
wi th 7x24 &amp;*pander. Fire- 2 br houoe, gorogo, 177 Pork 1 - - - - - - -- - place, dish-washer, total 0r. 1200. month . Call Mrs. Convenient location 1 bdr .,
lumilhed apt. Coli 304-676
electric. located in Gallipo- Lanham. 304-676-4692.
2441.
lil. Call 814-992-2354 or
614-446·0037 .
42 Mobile Homes
For rent small furnished
for Rent
apartment . · Pt. Plenant .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED.
References, No Pets. 304Insured, reasonable rates.
Call 305-576-2336 .
2 bdr, turn. or unfurn ., good 875-1386 .
location. Security deposit
Kirkwood M obile Home. required . Call 614-448- All new ground floor 3 rm
and bith apt . Corpetod.
12K55 . just refinished real 8658 .
w•sher &amp; dryer hookup,
nice $4 ,000 .00 . Plano call
altar 4 :30 PM , 304-675- 12x60 2 bdr. on Clark stoYe It refrig . furnish•d.
11 OB .
• Chapel Rd with large yord. 304-675 -4680 or 676 ·
Call614-446-3697 or 614- 1962.
1971 Flamingo 1 2'x65 ' 3 245 · 6223.
br. refrig. stoYe, a.c. axe .
co nd . Must Sell . 614-446 - Mobile home 2 bdr. fur· 46 Furnished Rooms
0684 .
niohad. Call614-448-4480.
For rent Sleeping Rooms
1973 Cameron 2 br all 2 bedrooms extended liYin· and light houH keeping
electric S5 ,3400. New un· groom. step up kitchen. rooms. Park Central Hotel.
dorpanning. 304-8B2 ·2688 S230 mo .• 8100 depooit, Gall 614-446 -0758 .
after 3 p.m.
plus utilities, 314 3rd . St.
Kanauga. Call 614-446- Furnished room e125 utili ~
1975 Holly Hills 12x65. 3 7473 .
till paid, 919 2nd . Ave.,
br, wood burner. underpen- 1- - - - - - - - - - Gallipolis. single male. Call
ning and porch . Must sell. 2 bedrooms. No pets. 614 ~ 446-4418 ahar 7PM .
Make olfor. 304 ·882-2249 . 949 -2424.

1-------- -

1974 Peirless mobile home.
good cond. Cell after 2 a.m.
304-675·6284 .
1974 14x70 Schult $3,527 .
below blue book. blocks.
underpennlng, new carpet,
2 porches . 304-895-3089

•m
33

1 2x60, 2 bedroom, fur·
ni,hed, in Syracul8. No
more than 2 children. S225
per month plus deosit and
utilities( water paid). Call
614-992-8867.

1- - -- - - - - - -

3 bedrooma. At Country
Mobile Home Park in Shade.
can 614-992-3858 .

Farms for Sale
44

66 acres, 9 year old. 3
bedroom home, 44x72 barn
and gafage, good fence,
water, plenty of pasture and
woods. will take trade near
Eureka , Ohio . 614 -256 1348 .
34

Business
Buildings

For sale or lease. 16 .000
square foot warehouse lo·
ceted at 47 Sycamore
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio . Features include: commercial
garage, three loading docks.
end a Viking dry pipe
spri nkler system. For more
information call (6 14)4468541 or 514-446 -7BBO or
814 · 246 -5146.
Tayern for sale in Middle ·
port . 0 ·1, 0 -2. D-3. Call
61 4 · 992-9976 .
35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent atarts et e1&amp;9
lor 1 bedroom and t2041or
2 bedroom, deposit $200,
located near Spring Valley
Plaza and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV available,
.office hours a a possible 10
am to 4pmand7pmto9pm
Mondoy· Frlday. Call 614446 - 2746 or leave
message .
Nicely furnished mobile
home , eff. apt .• central air
and heat in city, adults onl'l .
Call614·446-0338.

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, 1 2' •60' or
smaller. f76 watar paid, 4th
&amp; Nail. Gallipolis. Call 4484418 ahar 8PM.
1 mile from hospital, Kyger
Creek School, water &amp; trash
paid, 886 mo. pluo d8p. Coli
614-446-1364.
Mobile home space. 2 mi.
from Gollipolio on Rt. 688 .
One child accepted . Ref.
req. Call 614-446 -3252 or
614·446-3413 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , Nonh of
Pomeroy. large lots . Call
614 ·992 -7479 .
Trailer space available. Aqua
Vista Trailer Coun in Syracuoa. Call 814-992-6867.
Trailer spaces, small child·
ran accepted, Rt. 1, out
Locuat Road back of K &amp; K,
304-876-1076.

Merchandise

Furniture -~ Metal
desks. 3 miles out
Bulavilla Rd . Opan 9am to
5pm, Mon . thru Sat .
614-446-0322

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers. refrigera tors. ranges. Skaggs Applian~as , • Upper River Rd ,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614-446-7398 .
County Appliance , Inc .
Good used appliances and
TV oats. Open BAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat. 614-4461699, 627 3rd . Avo. Gallipolis. OH .
Valley Furniture. new &amp;
used . large section of qual·
ity furniture. 1216 Eastern
AYe .. Gallipolis.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 01iYe St., Gallipolis. New
8a used wood·coalstoves, 6
pc wood LR suite $399.
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners $99, new &amp; used
bedroom ~tJjtes , ranges,
wringer washers, &amp; shoes.
New Wvingroom suites 8199
8699 , lamps, also buying
coal &amp; wood stoYes. Call
614-446· 3159 .
53

Antiques

1---------1930 era dinette oak table
with leaf. 4 chain. matching
china cabinet. Affordable .
Coli 614-446-8263 .
4 pieces of wicker. Rock8r,
planter, mapazine table and
lamp tabla. S325 . 1920s
9x12 Oriantol rug . $250 . All
in excellent condition . 614 ~
992-3955 .
Antique nine piece dining
room suite, has a lot of nice
carving , must see to appre ~
ciate. One of a kind. $675.
304· 895-3686 .
Beautiful antique birds eye
maple bedroom suite. sleigh
bed. highboy chall with
mirror, dre11er with mirror.
desk-mirror. 1760 . 896·
3686 .
54 Misc . Merchandise
Firewood -cutup slabs. 1
truck load 8100 . 2-S180 .
Pickup load, you haul 615 .
HEAP accapted . Call 614. 245-5804 .
House coal. lump &amp; stoker.
Zinn Coal Co. Call614·4461408.
House coal. Lump &amp; 1toker.
Zlnn Coal Co. Call61 4-4461408.

Lorge 2 bdr. apt., 2 bath,
fully carpated. refrlg. &amp;
stove. 11 Court St., 1325
mo., ref. &amp; dep . Call 814446-4926 .

51 Household Goods
Mollohan Furniture, At . 7,
Kanauga . 1 yr. free finance .
Call 614-448 -7444. 8 pc .
wood liYingroom suite
8400.
Kenmore hot water tenk . 6
months old . Gibson refrlgarater. 6 month• old . Carpet
with padding . 814 -992 3877.

Building material, conctete
block• oil olzeo. lentllo. flu
blocka. clay tile. Dalivery .
Gollipolio Block Co.. Pine
St.. Gollipolio. Ohio Coli
614-446·27B3 .
Block, brick, mortar and
masonry Jupplies. Mountain
State Block. Rt . 33, Naw
Hoven, W. Va . 304 ·8822222 .
56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
nel. CFA Himalayan. P•ralan
and Siamese kittens. AK C
Chow puppleo. Call 4463844 •her 7PM .
AKC Reg. 8ugla pupo. 8
week• old. 2 male. 31emole,
$60 aach . Call 614-2469578 .
Prue bred Rat Terrier pup·
pies. bob tailed . Call eve. or
weekends. 814-256 ·1467.
AKC Registered miniature
Oach1hund puppies 8
weeki. Call 614 -379-2273.
Beagles for sale. Call 614·
949-2544 .

Double sta inless steel kit·
chen aink and disposal. (like
new) 150 or best offer. Call
614-446 -2129 .

3 piece French ProYentil!ll
bedroom furniture . 6200 .
Call614-446-4413 .
Gas double oven stove. $75.
Ph. 446 -1312.
glass, $95. Call 614-2661216.

Lots for ule on land contract
with small down payment. Upll•lro unlurnlohed apt ..
Call 614· 388 -8711 alter 5. carpeted. all utilities paid, no
Woodburning stoYe . 73
children, no palo. Coli 8142 tevel lots for sale. Greer 446-1837.
Dodge Polara : 72 Chevy
M ogle Chof gu range . 2 Impale. Tho Variety Shop,
Rd . 7 miles from town.
304-875-6689 .
Furnished apt . utlltiaa paid. years old. Can be seen after Rt. 36 near Rodney.
S235 , 1 bdr .. oduHl, 243 5 p.m. at 168 S. 3rd. , _ _ _ _ _ __:__ __
Jockoon Pike, Galllpollo. _M_I_dd_l_ep_o_rt_.______ Mlxad hardwoodolaba, S12 .
1Country •-le Olk furnltura, per bundle. containing apCall446-4416 otter 7PM .
Rentals
prox . 1V. ton, lob. Ohio
••
Furnishttd apt. 1 136Y2 2nd. hand crafted and finished, Pallet Co., Pomeroy. Ohio .
Gallipolis . 2 bdr. we tar paid. antique reproductions. Paul Phone 614· 992· 6461 .
S185 . Call 446 -4416 aher Conk•l. Rt. 7. Tupporo
.:.n par cant olfl Fluhlng
Plains .
41
Houses for .Rent
.7PM :
.,..,
arrow olgno 8259111 Lightad,
Neer Waterloo- fa rm house, Furnished apt. 919 2nd. Picken• Used Furniture . non·arrow $247. Unlighted
6 rooms. bath . 1 child, AVa . 8175 utllltlao paid . King wood stove, dehumidi- $ 199. iFreo lettarsl) See
$126, references &amp; deposit. Share bath. Men preferred. fier. refrigerator, 81ec. &amp; gas locally. Limited quantity.
rongo. 304-875-84B3 or Hurry! 118001423-1063.
C•ll 614 ·643 -2644 .
Call446-4418 ohar 7PM .
675-1450.

IN ON HIM,

INSPECTOR 1"

79 Motors Homos
&amp; Campers

10/15/85
EVENING

6:00 II CD Ill CD Iii &lt;Il tlt 1!1
lW News
()) S100,000 Name Thai
Tune
(]) Mazda Sportslook
CD Andy Griffith
(I) 3-2-1. Contact (CCI
(jj) Electric Company
fll Diff' rant Strokes
[HBOI MOVIE : 'Swing
Shih' !CCI
!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Thing'
6:30 0 Ill CD NBC Nightly
News
·
CI1 carol Burnett and
Friends
(]) Rei/CO's World Claso
Women
CD Carol Bumatt
) CJJ Gl (JJ ABC News !CCI
Ill CIJ ~ CBS News
(])Dr. Who
(jj) Body Electric
til Roaa Petal Place
7 :00 0 CD PM Magazine
CIJ
Courtship/Eddie's
Father
(]) Sportscentar
CD Mar; Tyler Moore
CIJ Entertainment Tonight
CD Wheal of Fortune
Ill (JJ Wh•el of Fortune
(]) Second City TV
®News
(jj)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Nawshour
Gl &lt;D Divorce Court
~
fl) JeHeraons
7:30 0 CD New Newlywed
Game
CII Please Don't E•t

CAPTAIN EASY

?1ijp!D iil 11&lt;1&lt;!''&gt;.
196B

16 ft. Troutwood
a~mper. $1,000. Call 61'4446 -41 13 .
" I " I 1/

77 ·Dod motor home, axe.
cond. 28.,000 miles .
89,600 . 304-675-5513 or
675. 4193.

63

Livastock

Rag . American saddle bred
horaes for sale. Call 814256 -6481 or 614-4481842 ext. 478.
Simmental ~ Club caiYas .
Red &amp; block, aloo 3 yr. old
Simmental bull, hay for sale .
call 814-388-8178 .
4 yearling steers, 1 yearling
heifer, 2 cows with calves
and 1 bull . All Haroford. Coli
614-742-2421 otter 8 :00
p.m.

Transpo rlat 1on
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH p•ld lor '80
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 191 1
Eallem Ave .. Gollipolio . Call
814-446-2282 .

77 Mustang new parts, new
tirea. new paint. e•cellent
ohapa, S2,000 . Call 61426~-8417 .

1978 Chevy Cornaro AC,
PS. P8. AM -FM radio. tilt.
good cond . Call 614-4468209.

Band instruments good
cond . Call 814-446-0840 .

1979 Ford Granada , navy
blue, ax. cond.. 82200 .
1981 OldaCutluaSuprame
Brougham dieael, loaded
with ace ., ••· cond . 85000 .
can 814-448-3944 ahar
5pm.

Spinet-Console Plano Bar·
gain . Wsntad : Responsible
party to take over tow
monthly payments on spinet
plano. Can be ooen locally.
Write Credit Manager; P. 0 .
Box 33,Friedona,Pa . 16641
58

Fruit

&amp;

Veget~bles

Apples. All varietkls. 15 .00
buohol. Now open daily. All
fruits, vegetables. Jacka
Market, Rt. 35. Henderson .
59 For Sale or Trade
1 976 12x66 trailer, two
bedrooms. all electric. underpinning and block. Will
consider trade on car or
truck . 304-875-398B or
875-6938.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Li vc slor.k
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 Wftll, Jacklon,
Ohio. 614-286-6451 .
Massey Ferguson, New
Holland, Buoh Hog Solo• &amp;
Service . Over 40 U18d
tractors to choo1e from 8t
complete line of new &amp;
used equipment . lergel1
ulactlon In S.E. Ohio.
For sate. New Holland 'super
717 forage horvol!or with
like new 770 R corn hood .
New Holland 362 grlnderr
mixer. he . cond. 304 ~273 ~
4215 .

1977 Old1 Cut1a11
8rougham 360 auto .
loaded, 4 new Searl redial
tires, runs excellent, looks
good . Call 814-448-4462
alter 8PM .
78 Impala V-8. PS , PB, air,
good body &amp; engine. Call
614-446 -4477.
1971 Volkswegon Fallback
needo angina 8100. Coli
614-367-7118 .
1976 Mullang II Futbeck.
V-8. auto. new tlrn &amp;
battery, etc. Good con d. Call
614-44.6-4171 oher 8P'-' .
1977 Chevy truck, 360
engine, auto. trans. Cal
614-446-3243 avaningo.
1981 Chevette 4 door. AC.
4 IPd~. $2,196 . 1977 Ca pric• Claaolc 2 door, AC,
81.B95 . 19n Ford 3 opd ..
heavy duty, y, ton, $1.396.
Mull sail. Call 814-2561251 or 814 -268 -8874.
1976 Nova . &amp; 21 5 ralley
whee]l . Call 614 · 446 8031 .
1980 blue Turbo Tron1 Am
31.000 miles. auto. trans .•
many optiono. prlco f5.800.
can 614-245-6078.
1976 Pontiac station
wegon. 8 h . truck toppero.
614 -986-3839 .
1984 Chevrolet Covolior
with many added features.
$6,000. 6314-949·2890.
1979 Fair~nl. 14x70 whh
a 24x7 Tlpout. 3 bedroom1,
2 lull botho, on l'ftntad lot.
Excellant condition. Clean.
Whh or without AC . Coli
814-992-2261 or 61 4 -9923869 .
'
1979 Ford Folrmontllotlonwagon. Coli 81 4 -ll492388 .
1983 Po~tlac 1000. P.S..
P.B.. Auto . 13500. Call
814-949-2660 .

aga 111 ace. 89700. 304-895·
3888 .
1979 Trona Am. Gold into- 1 - - - - - - - - - rior, 400 engine. Good
condition . Call 614 -742Services
3159.
71

Autos for Sale

1980 Monte Carlo. P.S ..
P.B .. A.C.. Tilt Wheel, AM FM Cassetta. Call614-949 2059 .
1 9 76 Oodge C harga~ 2 door
hard-top. V-8. $200. Cell
614-949-2689 .
1 976 Plymouth otation wagon . 360V8 motor. P.8,
P.S. $2~0 or bell ollar . Call
614-985-4226 .
81 Dollun 200 SX sport
package ~ ei&amp;Cl . controls,
42,000 m'iitl. Aoking
85 , 600 . 304-882-3532.
1986 Ford Eocort 4 ap.
approx . 19,000 milea. amfm c11sette. $4,600. or will
take trade -in older model in
G.C. 304-937-2025 .
1979 VW Rabbit, good
cond. 1988 Camero; 1965
GTO. 304-876-4072 ;

1---------1974 ·Buick Electra 26, 4

door HT, brown body, tsn
top, G.C. $600. 304-6763624 .
72 Volkowogen. runs good.
extra trans. plus 72 Super
Beetle lor parts. All lor
8300. 304-875·7241 .
Codllloco . Mercedes.
Porsche.. etc. direct from
Government. Seized in drug
faids. Availabla your area.
Save thouoonda. 218-453·
3000. Ext. A3044.
1965 Desoto, Hemi engine,

ps. pb, automatic trans.,
Nnl good. Will taka 8B50.
304-B95-3688 .
72

Trucks ,for Sole

81

Beoeball' s Greatest
Hits
CD Sanford and Son
CIJ Gl (jJ Price Is Right
CD Jeopardy
0 (JJ Family Feud
(JJ
Nightly
Business
Report ·
® Wheal of Fortune
fll WKRP In Cinclnna11
[MAXI Maxtrax This show
features hot videos from
rock · s rising stars.
8:00 0 (]) CD Inside Look
CIJ Ooktori
I
(!) Championship Wr•stling
CD MOVIE: 'Ono Eyad
Jacko'
.
C1J Gl (jJ Who's tholloso1
iCC)
0 Cll ill Home-n
(])
MecNeii/Lohror
Nowahour
(jj) Nova (CCI ' Seeds of Tomorrow .· New technological
methods to improve agricul~
tural output are explored .
!60 min .)
til MOVIE: 'Cleopatra'
Port 1
IHBDI MOVIE: 'Mi11ing in

ANNIE
6EE IF YOU C'N PICK UP
TOIIGEff'G SCENT, 5ANI7Y!
SOMf:THIN' MAY HAVE
HIIPPENECl T' HIM ANC7
fl/1\ITY!

HMM. THERE'S THE C1a760ti
PLACE! MAYBE 1 SHOI.Jl/7

OROPIN..

ALLEYOOP

446-~464 .

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-6751331.
RINGLES'S SERVICE, experienced carpenter, electri·
cian. mason., painter. roof·
lng !Including hot tor
application) 304-876-2088
or 676-7388 .

Action'
B:1 5

IO · IS

Starkl Tree and Lawn Ser·
vice. stump removal. 304-.
578-2010 .
.

1959 Stud . lor parts. 8100.
C811614-367-71 18.

Get a room of carpet cleaned
lor $22.96 . Captain Stu."
mar. 304-675-2295. SoiHI
Ad . Expire• 85' .

1979 Chevy Luv. 4 opd ..
radio, wire rims, topper,
$2, 399 . John'• Auto Sales.
Bulovllle Rd .. Galllpolio.

&lt;II

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump ules. service. Regia·
tered In .Ohio . All work
guarentaed. Call 304-2732811 . Rovenowood, W.Va ..
RON'S Television Service .
House calls on RCA. Quaur.
GE . Specialing in Zenith .
Call 304-678-2398 or 814-

B2

GASOLINE ALLEY

8:30
·9 :00

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1977 Chell'( 3.i ton pickup.
11,800. Coli altar 5PM.
814-448-7637 .

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Plna
Galllpolio, Ohio
Phone 614-448 -3888 or
614-446-4477

1985 GMC 'h ton PU, 31
miles. $9,240.66 .. Call 614
446 -2633 8AM -5PM .

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Box 355, Gollipolio. Call 814-367-0676.

9:30

WINNIE

B3

1983 Silverado Chevrolet
pickup. ps, ps, V-8 engine.
new tires, 51 ,000 plus
milas. 18125. L. L. Smhh,
906 Mossman. Pt. Pl., WV.
304-676-3222 .

Good-1 Excavating, bas•
ments, footers, driveweys.
septic tanks, landacaping.
Call anytime 614-448 ·
4537 , James L. Davison, Jr. :
owner .

1960 Int. 2 ton flatbed
truclc, good cond. Call 304B95-3082 oher 4 p.m.
weekdayo. 1800.

Dozer Work land clearing.
landaceping, etc. Free esti·
mates. Coli 814-448-B038
or 614-992-71 19 anytime.

n

J .A.R. Construction co :.
Rutland , Oh . 814-742.2903 . Basements, FooterS. •
Concrete work, Backhoe's, ·
Dozer &amp; Oitcher, Dump
trucks , &amp;. water-gas-aewerelectricallines.

Ford '12 ton pickup Nko
new;
Monte Carlo, sharp;
77 Bonneville. 304-6766281 .8

n

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

1976 Ford v•n good cond .•
11,200. Call 614-446 -

Excavating

'Profession of Arms.' A pro~

85

BARNEY
READ MV
TEA LEAFS .

MAW

WELL··
DO
THEY SAY?
WHAT

THEY SAY-" YOU'RE USIN' .
TOO MUCH
SUGAR"

General Hauling

1980 Jeep Renegada CJ -5,
$2,600 . Coli 814- 367 7672 or 614-367-04B8 .

James Boys Water Service
Also pools !iliad. Call 614:
256 -1141 or 814-4481175 or 614 -448-7911.

Motorc~cles

K_an' s Water Service. Wells.
Cisterns, pools filled. Pl'lone
614-387 -0623 or614-3877741 night or doy.

550 Suzuki lor porto only.
call 614-246-6040.
Moving·mull 1811-1981 Yomoho 126. 3 wheeler. 814742 - 2274 or 614- 9928280.
1 983 Honda 11 0 ,thro•
wheeler , exc cond,
f850.00. 304-67.5-3751 or
814·448- 2072 .
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

John boat lor oola. Call
814-268-8417.
76

&amp;

Auto Parts
Accessories

Sand blu1 cabinet. Recvcllng. lOll-filtering type.
1300. 304-882-2466.

B7

Upholsteryc

SNAKE!!
ARE:
FROGS AN
ENDANGERED
SPECIES?
~I I

R 1!. M Furniture Manufac.
turing. St. Rt. 7, Crown ·
City, Oh. Coli 6'14-256- .
1470, coli Eve. 814-4483438. Old &amp; n •o w
Uphootored.

'

111

'PEANUTS
[ KN0\11 THE ANSWER!
IT WAS HENRY VEE !

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Soc. Avo., Golllpolii.
814· 446 -7833 or 614-448·
1833.

file of career military officers
is feaiUrod. 160 min.)
{jj) NOWI\!IIOtch
fl) Odd Couple
IHBOI Hitchhiker: Night
Shift A cruel nurse and her
boyfriend have !heir comeuppance when a new pa ~
tient checks in. Margot
Kidder, Darren McGavrn .
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Without a
Trace'
10:30 (IJ ColebriiV Chefs
(!)NFL Ann Wreolllng
lj]) ln11011atlon 'The Tastemakers.· A look at the seton. tific preparation of food is
featured.
ti)INN Nows
IHaOI MOVIE: 'Give Mv
Rogftrdl to Broad Str••t'
(CCI
11
1J Ill Ill CD Iii &lt;IJ ill 81
(D Newo
(IJ Man From U.N.C.L.E.
(I) MOVIE: 'Rough Night
in Jericho'
(]) Tony Brown'• Journal
(jj) Dalelino; USSR/USA
Soviet news correspondents in Washington discuss world events with
American correspondents in
Moscow through a sateHite
hook -up. (60 min I
Ill Be""}' HIH Show
11 :30 II (l) CD Tonight Show _
Tonight's guaat Is George
Burns. 160 min .)
(]) SporUC-er
CIJ Now Nowlywtd Game
Ill (JJ Simon &amp; Simon A
rouline lrip to Las Vegas to
deliver a package becomes
a· deadly hunt for the packego·s unusual contents. IAJ
(60 min.!
CIJ Uttonight America
(jJ ful
-

:oo

Waugh '_s Water SerYice ,
Walls, Cflterna, pools. Fast,
reliable service. Call a 14 ~
256 - 1240 or 614 -266 1130. Reasoneble rates.
Haul limiJstone, sand. grF
vel,dirt, bulk or bag fertilizer
and limo. E•celsior Salt
Workllnc. 838 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. 614-992-3891 .

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD ClAME

~~ ~

by lienrl Arnold and Bob

Lee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letlet' to each square, to form
Jour ordinary word•
llf\-~-1 1

I

I AVARL

I........I I . . tJ

ROIVS

~·- "- --

II I

t

IPROTTE

IO · If

SOME. MEN CI'.N 'T

ese. TRu 5TE" -roo
FAR.- OR TH /5.

(] I

[j

Print answer here:
Yesterday's

I

Now arrange the CirCled latters to

form lhe surprise answtH a! sug·
QBSted by the a/xwe cattoon

r ll J r XXI ]

(Answers lomoaoW)
Jumbles: GUMMY SURLY HEALTH 'GOVERN
An swer: The "one ltlat got away" wou ld nave oeen
bigger lithe fisherman had this LONGER ARMS

JumiJ!tlBoot No.. 10 1nd 11 1r. n1I11M klr Sl.t5 Nch plu1 55 cents .. til pot\9
and tllndllnl from Jumble, c/o ttlll neMpeptr, P.O. lo~ Ul , Pllmyra, N.J oeoM.
klcludl ywr n~m1, lddl111, Jlp code 'nd mah c:Mc:k ~M~w•INt Ia NIWIJlllpwbad.J..

MIDGE

James Jacoby

f!ENRY VEE WAS
KING OF ENGLAND
IN 1413'!
.

HENRY Y. SIR ...
HENRY VEE .

AND ANOTHER PUPIL
SINKS SLOWLY BENEATH

HER DESK ...:_
. _ _1

Ill

First place it;
then play for it

iJ2I

ABC

Newt

Nlghtllne
.
• One step Beyond
12;00 Cll Bea1 of Groucho
(!) Mazda Sportolook
'()) Eniirtalnment Tonight
~-

NORTII

+Kn

11-11·11

• A Q9 3

.QJI06 1
+5

- By James Jacoby
WEST

EAST

Here is a deal from H.W. Kelsey's +A Q 2
• 10 9 6 3
"101 Bridge Maxims." Today's maxim • 6 4
.K 7
is a sound principle of defensive play· • 8 7 1
t92
"Work out what partner needs to have +A K J 8 3
+Qt0962
in order to defeat the contract.'' II you ·
SOUTII
wanl to take a test, cover the South ·
+JO&gt;
and East hands and place yoursell in
• J 10 8' 2
West's chair.
.AK3
Your partner's three-club jump was
+71
pre-emptive after North's takeout
Vulnerable: East-West
double, but that didn't slow South
Dealer: Wesl
down. He jumped right to four hearts.
Your opening king of clubs allows you West
Norah Eas1
South
to inspect the dummy while you still 1 +
Obi .
3+
. have the lead. What next? The bidding Pass
PaSs
Pass
tells you It is unrealistic to place more ;
than one defensive Irick in the red .,
Opening lead: • K
suits in partner's hand. (South had to j
have something to jump to game. 11 •'------------...J
partner has jusl one trick in the red '
suits - the diamond ace or heart king ·
- you still need to take some spade
tricks to beal the hand: The jack of
spades in partner's hand would be
enough. bul also the 10-9 of spades will king, back comes the spade 10 and
do, provided you make the right play. down goes declarer. No other play will
You should play th~ spade queen at defeat the contract, although in practice, declarer would be hard put to
trick two.
Dedarer covers with dummy's duck a spade around to his jack ;I West
king. When East later wins the heart plays ace of spades and a small spade.

,.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Potpourri
3 For rear
that

ACROSS

I Slough
5 Abstru se
9 Athena's

4 Soviet
news agency
5 Proxy
6 Finnish
lake

title
10 Guarantee
13 HiS!ling
sound

14 Light color

1 0:00 (IJ Now•
CIJ Gl (jJ Our Family Honor
(CCI
(JJ War: A Commentary
with Gwynne Dyer (CCI

431~ .

74

!MAXI MOVIE: 'Gunga Din'
0 (]) CD Major Laogue
lllaebell:
Am•rican
t.eegue
Chllmplonohip
Game 8 If this game is not
necessary, alternate pro~
grammlng will air. 13 hrs.)
(JJ Ill (D Growing Pains
iCC)
CII 700 Club
(JJ 81 (jJ Moonlighting
(CCI
Ill Ill CD MOV1E:
' Promise• to Ke•p' (CCI
(])Nova (CCI 'Seads ofTomorrow.· New technological
methods to improve agricul~
tural output are explored.
(60 mrn.l
® Wor: A Commentary
with Gwynne Dyer (CCI
'Prolession of Arms.' Aprofile of career military officers
is featured . 160 min.)
(]) Champlonohip Roller
Derby
[MAX) George SloiHino:
Great Moments in Am•riCIIn Film Jack Lemmon
hosts this salute to one of
America 's greatest filmmak ~

ers.

n

F-150 Ford Rangor.
AM-FM, PS, sliding beck
glen, good cond. Call 304676-7279 .

~

Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Daisies

J .and L. lnotollation. Roof:
in g. vinyl siding. storm doo~s
and windows. Free a111~
mates . Call614-992-2772 .

Rotary or cable tool C:tilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump Jalaa and service.
304-895-3802

Ch8\l'f pickup, 6 cyl.,
std ., low mileage, new tires.
$1.996 . Call 614-246 5865 .

HN'f'l'llW lD '/CiH

D .and M. Contractor •. Vinyl
siding, replacement wiridows, inaulating, roofing.
new and remodeling, con.'
crete. Call 304-773-6131. ·

Leer compertop lor long bed
small aile PU . Also camper
top for short bed for full size
PU . Coli 814-266-9387.

n

WHATO~~

Homo
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee. Local referances
turnished . Free estimates.
Call collect 1-814-2370488, dey or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

ftjJ\}1.\.ft IDil

, ~ \!:'}

r------

Deer Huntero Special. All
fiberglass body motorhome,
furnace, shower, gas·eltc.
water heater, front and rear
dining, oleepa 6 comforta-

19 67 Plymouth GTX, 440
mag .. 4 111d .. black, 82,800
or trade for ameli car of equal
value. Call 614-448·8073.

Weight bench with butterfly
8t leg 1;11;eraizer. Never used,
lell than 1· yaar old . Call
814-245-6040 .
Wood 815 .00 PU load llack
or throw till Oec . 1 &amp; 1974
Ford PU . Coli 614-36771 1B.

IKE\1£ You HA~t; rr. Fo~.

Musical
lnatru menta

57

Shredded bark 820. pickup
load . Hardy evergreen
ahrubo 810 eech . 6 lt.
Scotch pine S 24 each . 2
miles nor1h of Silver Bridge
on upper Rt. 7, Ol'lio . Cell
614 ;446· 4530 .

lJye turke fs, Cal1614-446·
9582 .

Television
Viewing

SIQJLDWE

Mr. Auto Repair is having a
before winter apeciaL Wi
will clean inside and out P,1u1
wax lor $26. Also. we will
grease all fitting• lor $0.6Q.
Call614-949-2044 or 814.992-6537 lor an appointment and directions.
·

Briarpatch Kannel• All~
breed grooming. Indoor·
outdoor boarding facilitteJ. Young roosters for sale.
Englloh Cockar Spaniel. 388 _3_0_4_
-8_7_6_-36_3_9_._ _ __
9790.
•

1 Tame snare 'Brum, 1 Peevy
260 ampliliftr. 4 microphonal, 1 fender precision
bast gu !tar. 8 channel stereo
Peavy mixing board, out·
standing buya. Call Log
Cobin Rocordero, 614-4484313 . -

Chest type freezer 22 cu.tn .,
19 in . color TV, both in Yery
good cond . Call 614 -4467025 .

DICK TRACY
fo/0/E

Auto Repair

~e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~=~=~====~=~=~==~~:==1 frig.-fraezer,
bly, tully sell-contained.
plenty of stor·

Old upright piano. completely reliniohed . Coli 814379 -2543 alter 4:30PM .

Firewood split, stacked S.
dolivorod $30 large load .
Call 814-446-9743 or 614446 -7993 .

77

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Sears micro electric range 1
and oven Corning top sell 61 Farm Equipment
cleaning ahar 5 . 304-7735758 .c
24 h . corn elevator. Call
614-4367-7708 alter
14 pair Sean Fle111· EX pants, 5:30PM.
some new, some worn. Size
38x30 . 610 .00 pair. 304- JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIP675-3538.
MENT
614-446-1876.
50 PERCENT OFFI Fluhing 6~(.'.-tnterst on Long tractors,
arrow ligna $2691 Lighted. groin bina &amp; lull line of Agr.
non-anow $247 . Unlighted equipment . Complete line of
$199 . IFroe lettorol) See Vermeer hay equipment,
locally. limited quantity . round bale feeders e78 .•
Hurry I 1 1800) 423 -0183, grinder mixers, 3 pt, hitch
anytime.
rotary tiller. 11 h . feed
bunks 8106. post drivers
White bedroom suite, alec . $780, 8 HP woodoplittor
fireplace. 2-13 " snow tires $950, pickup truck racks,
with studs. womens golf seeders, mineral feeders,
clubs. 304-882-2796 .
Wheel Horse lawn mower.
Woodburning stoYes, free
standing, fireplace insert &amp;
55 Building Supplies·
&amp;dd on fumanca. Check our
pt·,.ices on pipe gates 8t corral
panels. Good salectlon of
Building M•t~rlela
used tnctora &amp; used
Block, brick, sewer pipes, equipment I ·
window•. lintel1 , etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Coli 814-246-6121 .

King wood &amp; coalstoYe with
fan. good cond . Ektctric
furnace with heat pump.
CA . Clal614-446-6266 .

8 ft . sliding door, termal
2 bdr. apt., good location,
redecorated. utllltlol portly
paid . Call304-675 -5104 or
304-876 -5388.

54 Misc . Merchandise

. 2 picture windOW's for aale .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
S,ofas and chairs priced from 4x8 end 7x8. 8oth !rootS285 . to SB96 . Tables, 860 proof and In good condltk&gt;n .
and up to S1 25 . Hide-a- Both lor 8100 firm. C•ll
beds , 8390 . and up to 614-742-2718 anytime.
85~0.. sofa beds $146,
Recliners. $225 . to 8375 .. TONY' S GUN REPAIRS .
lal'!'lps from S28 . to $125 . hot dfp rablu8ing, oil type I of
pc. dinettes from $109 .. to gunsmith work, fa at servk:e,
435 . 7 pc. $189 and up . 304-876-4631.
Wood table with six chairs
5285 to $745 . Desk S11.0 Firewood for sale e2&amp;. dell~
up to S226 . Hutches. S550 . wred not stackad. 304-875
Bunk bed complete with 4373.
mattresses, $275 . and up to
8395 . Baby beds, $110. Surplus, Regular Army Ca ~
mouflage · denim clothing,
Manress~s or bo• springs,
full or twih, $63 ., firm , $73 . boots, packs. accessories,
and $83 . Queen sets. S225 . Sam Somerville's East of
4 dr. chests, S49 . 5 dr . Ravenswood. Junction Inchests, $69 . Bad frames, dependance Road - Old Rt.
S20 .ond $25 .. 10 gun - Gun 21, Fri. Sot, Sun, 1;00 cabinets, S350 . Gas or 7 ;00 P;M. !Delivery 304electric ranges 8375. Baby 676-3334)
mattraues. S25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; $30, Warm Morning gas heater
king frame $60. Good selec- with blower $100. 304-876
tion of bedroom suites, 7771 .
rocker s, metal cabinets .
headboards 838 &amp; up to Couch and chair. 304-6763417 .
$66 .

"See what happens when
you let girls on the team?"
t:::::::::::::::::::-r-:::::::::::::::::::"1 Used
office
41

Tuesday, October 15, 198ij

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

1::~oo

7 Feminine

15 Madcap
17 ·- Maria"

sufftx

Reputed
Yesterday's Answer
II Daydream
12 Krypton or 24 331nd inNI
cobalt
way
and haw
8

18 Colorado
Indian
19 Egyptian
deity
20 Scarcity
24 Employ
25 Watehrul
26 "Deathtrap"
playwright
27 Push pin
28 Convene
anew
·· 2911ove
(Lat.)
30 Marsh
31 Craggy hill
32 Mean
37 Bring
Forward
39 Irish
islands
40 Youngsler
41 LiqueFy
42 Director
Martin

16 GolF lerm 26 Smooth
34 ~le ld
20 Drum roll
con 35 Audacity
21 Menu lerm
sonant
361leing
22 The "R"
28 Change
(Sp.)
·iJI VCR
38 0 ne
22!!_3~~~:_ :;J~:....,,_,..l(prefix )
rr

43 Like

Eastwood's
rWer

DOWN
I Reduce
to pulp

· DAILY CRYPTOQV&lt;YI'ES - Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is u.sed
for lite three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are all
· hints. Each day lhe code letters are dtflerent.
CRYPTOQUOTE

IO-U
XR

CE W

G X K
ZK

GD ·ZBN
OKNRIX

X TN

DPTIID ZTW ilK Z

.IZK GS RMRR

CE W

Z K

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Yeoterda7'o Crytoquote: TilE RICil NEVER FEEL SO
' GOOD AS WHEN THEY ARE SPEAKING OF TIIEIR
· POSSESSIONS AS RESPONSIIliLmES. -

LYND

ROBERT

�)

.

'

Paga 1()-,..Tha Deily Saatit!lll

Tue. .y, October 15, 18815 ·

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-Local briefs:--------------~------w Auto worker$ strike
Three calls answered by EMS

Man reported missing

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports three calls
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 1:09 p.m. to52570CcuntyRd. !Kl!orMacy
Sovel to Veterans Memorll!l Hospital; Syracuse at 1:29 p.m. to the
Carleton School for Detdra Carleton to Holzer Medical Center;
Tuppers Plains at 9: J6p.m. was called to participate Ina search party
on Bridle Trail Rd. In Olive Township; units from Pomeroy, Cbester
and Olive Township were also calted to the search.

AuthcnitleS and rescue workers have been Involved since about8: 30
p.m. Monday night In a search for 23 year-old Jacob Cade, missing
from a !os!P.I' resldel)ce In the Reedsvtlle area.
The Meigs Ccunty Shertlt' sDepartment was 11&gt;tlfled that Cadewas
missing a$ 8:17 p.m. last night. Deputies were lnunedtately
dispatched to Bridle Trail Rd. Ill Ollve Township to commence a
search. Tuppers Plains, Cbester, OUve Township and Pomeroy EMS
units were also dispatched to the scene.
AuthorttleS continued looklngforCade through the nlghtbutwtthno
success. Additional deputies were dispatched this momlngtoasstst In
tbe search tor tbe missing man.

Chester Council DAR to meet
CbesterCouncn 323, Daughters of America, wlllmeetat7: :Jltonlght
at the hall. Inspection will be held along With initiation of new
members. Members. are to wear white. There wDI ,be potluck
refreshments.

Pomeray council session set
"

Plans for Its program to support the continuance of thelncometaxin
Pomeroy wW be made when Pomeroy Vtllage Council meets in
special session at 7 p.m. Wednesday at vWage hall.

Eastern board meeting set
The next regular meeting ot the Eastern Local School Boa1d wW be
held Oct. 231nstead at Oct. 17. The meeting wW start at 7.

appears imminent

Marriage license issued
A marrtage llcense has been Issued In Meigs County Probate Court
to Davkl Lee Swisher, 28, and Cynthia Ann Misner, 19, both of
Reedsville.

Meigs Democrats to meet
The Meigs County Democratic ExecutiVe Committee will meet ~t
7:30 p:m. Thursday at Carpenters' HaD, E. Main St., .Pomeroy. All
Interested Dernocratsarelnvtted, sal!! HenljiHunter, chairman.

Steelworkers' union leader.s ~eet on latest offer
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
'The company' which has $527
Members of the United Steel- mlllton In long· term 1lebts, has been
workers union negotiating commit. operating under protection of the
tee, composed of 19local presidents, U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
· considered the latest contract ctter
The strike started threedaysa!ter
trun Wheellng-Ptttsburgh Steel the company on July 18 received
Corp.
penntsslon from a bankruptcy
Details of the proposal were not judge to void Its contract with the)
rEpOrted Monday, and there has union.
been a virtual news blackout on the
talks.
More than 8,001 steelworkers at ]1/
1\.Tew
1
.. •
• • . .contlnuedtrompage1
__ _ _ _ __
the company's plants In Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia have a $6.240 grant through tbe elderly The'bid of Mrs. George QuJUen for
been oo strikeagainst Wheellng·Pttt . tranSit program. The amount Is to $310_on an old pollee department
help with the operation d. the Blue vehicle no longer used was accepsince July 21.
Streak Cab Co. Mayor Hottman also ted!. There was only one bid
that Inspections of new submitted. Council agreed to refederalregulationsdeallngw!ththe questno hearlngonanappltcatlon to
pay and overtime work of village transfer C·1 and C-2 liquor permits
,employes wlll not begin untU Nov. 1 from the Comer Store on North
rather than on Oct. 15 and there are Second Ave., totheMeredithOIICo.,
Mary E. Sovel
indications that new compromise at the same location.
Attending were Mayor Hoffman,
Mal)' E. Savel, ffl, of 52570 Eden legislation mlgbt be lnet!ectbyNov.
RldgeRd.,Reedsvllle,dledMonday 1.
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck, and
A public m~tlng In regard to the council members, Horton, Jack
afternoon at Veterans Memorial
status
of the Gallla Locks and Dams Satterfield, Wllllam Walters and
Hospital.
.
was
announced
for Oct.17, 7p.m. at BobGUmore.
She was born In Northfield to the
late Archie and Ruby Milhoan tbe Gallia Academy High School.
Camp.
. MrJo Savel was retired trun the
Nashaua Photo Cunpany In Parkiersburg, W.Va. and attended the
Eden United Brethren Church.
SUrvivors Include a daughter,
Janet Chichester d Reedsvtlle; two
stepdaughters, Helen Butcher of
Guysville, and Edythe Woodyard of
Present this coupon and you'll also receiw these other
· Parkersbllrg; three stepsons, Clltvaluable complimenury' semces:
!ord Savel d AkiUI, Harry Savel Jr.
•FrH 10-poin~ hta~" aid chec•up (any mab .or model)
ol Parma, and Garth Savel of
•frH .tltelfORIC h~~tn&amp; tVllluatton conducted by a licensed
Tuppers Plains; two brothers,
.
heanna atd spec11hst
Floyd CampdBaltimore, and Jack
Camp of Lowell; five sisters, Ruth
Shultz and Allee Mays, both of
ReedsvUle, Evelyn Bush and Ellen
BATTERY SALE 'h PRICE
Mays, both of Parkersburg, and
Clatlce Meredith of Morgantown,
Ky.; :!1 grandchildren; 28 great
PLAN NOW TO AnEND
grandchildren.
FACYOIY·TIUIIII .LIOII·l-G 1• SPECilUm
She was preceded'In death by her
husband, Harcy Sovel, In October
WIUII 011 UIID AT
19QI, and a slepllln, Kenneth Savel.
Dl. llNIIN PICIENS
Funeral sernces wW be 1 p.m.
509 SOUTIIlllm 1111., -IIIPOIT, 01110
Thursday at the Eden United
011 YlllmDlY, DC lOIII 17
Brethren Church with Rev. Roy
FIIOII 9:01 l:IL TO 1:30 P
Deeter cttlciatlng. Burial wUI be In
CALL 992·1756 FOI HOME lPPOIITMIIIT
the Eden Cemetery. Friends may
caD at the White Funeral Home In
W.(Ll{-INS WELCOME
Coolville after 2:30 p.m.
NO
APPOINTMENT
NECESSARY
Wednesday.

Among the ls!Ries to be settled
were wages and benefits, Including
pensions, Insurance, vacations and
holidays.

Diles

Velerau Memorial Hoapltal
Walter Harris,
Syracuse.
Dllchaqa - Elizabeth Hayes,
Eunle Brinker, Hugh Leifheit,
Francis Benedum, Dan White. .,.
Admlulons -

...

BULBS
BUY 4•••• GET ONE

FREE!

Buy any 4 bulbs and get the
5th bulb of equal valllt FREE!

ELBERFELOS

FREE HEARING TEST

z

..

0
:I
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THE SUPREME
FIRESTONE'S SUPREME ENGINEERING ACHIEVEMENTS

-THAT'S THE NEW TOP-OF-THE-LINE·- ·
STEEL BELTED'

ALL SEASON RADIAL
NOW AT YOUR AUTHORIZED FIRESTONE DEALER
'
POMERO~ HOME &amp; AUTO

1ncU1es·..._won1•

..........
129900

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Reg. SIDIIW
Hems1~.80

AI

seo Per Month on cttii.In'*

Quantities
Are
Limited
At
These
Prices!

"'*"' -

POMEROY
HONE &amp; AUTO'S
PRI(E

Pleas Judge Thomas Mitchell must approve any
county expenditures, under an order Issued last
month by the county's three judges to provide
essential funds for several county of!iceholde~s.
He said commissioners planned to meet with the
judge today to discuss the allocation of the fUnds. ·
The commissioners are also under court order to
provide an additional $8,txXI to the county board of
elections for the Nov. 5 election.
The commissioners are trying to outllne use of the
money to "see bow far we can go with what we've got
left" after the court orders are met, Michael said. He

JACKSON, Ohio (UP!) - Jackson Coonty's
financial crisis was temporarily ended Tu~y when
- county commissioners were presented With a$140,001
check by the Jackson City School Dlstrtct.
The presentation was made shortly after the
commissioners approved the sale of a 23-acre tract of
land, former site of county home. Anew middle school
or high school wUI he built on the land.
Commissioner Ed Michael said he hOped part d. the
money can be used to bring back to work some of the
approximately 35 workers laid off last month because
Of the county's budget crisis.
'
However, Michael said Jackson County Common

The Meigs County Local Board of
Education Tuesday adopted new
courses of study as approved by the
Meigs County Board of Education
for reading, K thrOugh 12; language
arts, K through 12; mathematics, K
through 12, and science, K through
ll!. A student attendance accounting
po\icy was amended to ~ In
agreement , with state
requirements.
James Carpenter, assistant su·
perlntendent. was named to be ,
responsible for communicating to
and enrolling any eligible school .
groups, !\liCit as P,l'l\ and boosters".
who wish to enroll In Nationwide's
llsbDity Insurance program.
In other niatters, Instructor Kevin
Sheppard and a delegationo!Futute
Farmers of America from Meigs
!figh School will attend the national
FFA COQvent.ton In Kansas City,
Mo., next month.
The IMp by the group was
authorized Tuesday night when the
Meigs Local School District Boanl
o! Education met In regular session
In Middleport.
The trip, Nov. 13-15, was one of a
number of !Jips and professional
leaves authorized last night by the
board.
The board approved a field trip for
Meigs DECA officers and a state
parliamentarian contestant to at·
tend theOhloDECAState Delegates
Conference In Columbus on Nov. 1
and 2.
Professional leaves approved
Include:
Kevin Sheppard to the Ohio High
School Athletic Association Wrestling Coaches Ciinic.
Constance E. West to the OMEA
in !l'rvlce day for band directors at
Kent State University.
Linda Yonker to the taU '85 hair
show In Cincinnati.
Sabra Click and Bonnie Fisher to

the Trt.County Career Center.
Sheila Bevan and Teri York to the
TTl-County Career Center.
Bonnie Fisher, Sa bra Click and ·
Terl York to the taU conference of
the Career Education Assn: In
Columbus.
Earl Young, Jack Slavin and
Benny Slawter to serve on the North
Central Evaluation Committee for
Nelsonville York High School.
Galjl Pippert and three students
to a chorallea&lt;lershlp worksbop at
Alliance.
Rita Slavin to a science expo at
Wooster.
Marjorie Fetty to tl)e Tri-Coonty
Career Development Program In
Nelsonville.
Dale Harrison and Galjl Walker
to an electronics curriculum
program.
Kenneth Eblen and Richard Fetty
to a Ohio vocational welding
seminar in Columrus.
Resignations aceepted
The board accepted the resignations Of Sylvia Neece as a oook and .
Linda Faulk asasubstltutetj!Bcher.
JoniJeffersandLtnda Stanley were
hired as cliapter 1 teachers !&gt;r the
remainder of the current school
year. Rita ·Slavin was given a
supplemental contract to serve as
the Meigs High quiz team advisor.
Jamie L. Blaettnar, a teacher, was
granted a maternity leave. Linda
Morris was employed as a new
school bus driver and Rick Ash was
hired as junior high girls basketball
coach as a non-certified employe
since no certified employe applled
for the position. Jo Ann Newsome,
Tina Stewart and Catherine Wood
were added tO tbe substitute bus
driver llst. Substitute teachers hired
were Macy Wakefield, EMR and
LD; Shirley Sallsruljl and Merrt
AIT$aljl, cosmetology~nd Helen
(Continued on page 14)

·~

FIONl DID

26 Cent1

ersshould try to avoid the problem ~rxtyearby using
planning Instead of crisis management.
"I would hope the commtsstoners and judges meet
and work out thetr differences and work out an agreed
entry to conclude the law~R~its," Ochsenbeln said,
referring to the.onler to pay ths $57,5:!1 to keep county
offices operating through tbe end o( the year.
Two sales tax Issues wlll be on the Nov. 5 ballot thlit
could further aid in' ending tbe county's financial
crisis. One Is a 1 percent tax for the remainder d.l985,
and the other Is a permanent 1 percent tax effective
Jan. 1, 199i.

.

. POMEROY

IOn CAIDS Are ..... SUVICI

By United Press lntematlonal
U.S. officials Identified a body
washed ashore near Tartuy, IR·
banon, as that of Leon Kllnghoffer,
the American kUied aboard the
hljackedcrutseshlpAchUieLauro,
and shipped the body to Rome today
In a flag-draped coffin for an
autopsy, a spokesman at the U.S.
Embassy In Damascus, Syria, said.
· "There are apparently two bullet
holes In Mr. Kllnghof!er's body,"
said acting public affairs officer
John Burgess. A State Department
spokesman said earller tbe wounds
were In the head and the back,
apparently confirming witness reports that Kllnghoffer was murdered by his Palestinian captors.
Burgesssaldthebodywasplaced
on an Alitalla !llght to Rome In a

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

members Mary E=iadq and Earl ero.. l'relentpl'dlfllt Sunday
for the 1111lden 1111alvenary tng the awardl were El~ lllld Jordan Mendal, ol
celebration 6f the Racine Grange. Lei! lD lilht an! · Albany, CIJU5)' depudes. Spencer, Eisterday and
.Ruth~ who accepted the GO yeatcert\flcalelllld
C1'0811 wereallclulrtermembenotthe Ractnechapler.
pin for her late rnolher, BeJtha Spenc:er, and 118 year

·'

(

.,

. .

another semi rtg. Kuhn was taken w lhe ltolzer Me.dlcal Center for
treatment ollnjuries. Details wel'll mt available at lnday's pre!!llllme.

'Body id~ntified as that of u~s. citizen

J3 $9f
175/80113 W/S....... J3995
.: 205/75114 Ilk...........$4495
235/75115 Ilk........... $5800
(EXTRA LOADI

992.-2094

•

said he could not determine how much money would
remain, but "we want to bring back whatever
(employees) we can aflonl to bring back."
"As soon as we satisfy (the judges') orders, we can
disperse the money," Mitchel said. He added that the
commissioners hoped to hold on to some of the money
through 1981l, if possible.
Mark Ochsenbeln, county. prosecuting attorney,
said that the money earned through the sale d. the
land only temporarily ends the financial crisis.
"The fact that the county has tbe money resolves an
Immediate crisis, but doesn't resolve it In the long
term,'' Ochsenbeln said, adding that the mmmfsston-

WRECK BACKS UP TRAFFlC -Traffic was halted this momlng on
the Silver Memorial Bridge where a lanker lrud&lt; driven by Paul Kuhn,
32, South Webster, Ohio, jacklmlted whlle Kuhn was attempting to pass

175/80113 llk.; .......

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

606 E. MAIN

2 Sections, 14 P11gas

A Multimedi• Inc . Newsp1per

d sale relieves ·financial crisis

IECAPPABU TUDE

~1000. 2&amp;-1118,

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. October 16, 1985

MUD &amp; SN.OW lniEADS S1950 TO S235o

• Print Corre~Dondence-llty Orlgllllll
with the DMI»·130 Dot-Metrlx Printer

"''I

Vo1.35. No.126
Copyrighted 1985

FREE MOUNTING
FREE BALANCING

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2&amp;-1280. 26-1401 ll1d 26-3211. IIIMITM ~--- M«hlnt1 COrp. HomoWordiTM Sloira CJn.Uno.

a1 y

Meigs board
adopts new
course study

FLOWER

I Area death I

•

e

Hospital news

DUTCH

r---------...., announced

BELTONE HEARING AID CENTER
IS OFFERING

UAW and its newly Independent :
Canadian llfanch. the pacts wW
rover 70,001 U,S. workerS and 10,400 ·
In Canada. ·
In the u.s. talks. the UAW
rejected Chl)'sler's Initial offer last
Wednesday, and as of early today
the company had not made another
·
of!lcial propoSal.
In Canada, Cbcysler presented a
secOrldmonetary ctfer Monday that
UAW-Canada leader Robert White
said contained "a much better .
Canadian flavor. ''
The last UAW strike against .
Cbcysler In the United States was In
Sept.l973,.when workers walked out :
tor nine days. Tbat year, Cbl)'sler .
was chosen as the strtke target In
simultaneous negotiations
•

By JAN ZVERINA
UPI Auto Wrler
DETROIT (UP!) - The first
United Auto Workers union strtke
against CbcyslerCorp. in the United
States since 1973 appeared more
likely as little progress was reported
among negotiators facing a deadline of midnlgbt today. ·
A 17-hour bargaining session
recessedatabout2a.m. EDT today.
Talks were scheduled to resume at 9
a.m. One source said Cbcysler
delivered "new pieces" of an
economic proposal, but neither side
would confirm the,.r.llP,9tt,.
. ·
UAW spokesnlan Boll, Barbee
said Monday that union subcommittees had met With manageinent, but
ha'cl made llttle helidway. On
MQ!Iday night, UAW shop stewards
prepared for a walkout authorized
by workers last week.
Across · the border In Canada,
contract talks between Chl)'sler·
Canada and the newly-Independent
UAW-Canada took an• optlmlsttc
tum late Monday, as union leaders
reacted favorably to a new financial
package.
Contracts ,are being negotiated
separately for the !lrst time by the

wooden coffin draped with the
The AchUie Lauro's chief bar·
American flag.
tender told other Americans the
The body washed ashore Sunday, hijackers shot Kltnghoffer 69 an
four days after the four Palestinian
Invalid, In the head Oct. '8, then
hijackers of the Achille Lauro dumped him _ stU! In his wheel·
surrendered to Egy ptiap chalr-lntotheMedlterraneano!f
authorities.
the Syrian coast. AhlghPLOofflclal
"There were t.wo bullet wounds," sought by the United Stales for his
In the body. the Slate Depattrnenl . role In the hijacking' had claimed
spokesman said. "One ~as In the Kllnghofferdled of a hean attack.
head. The other one was In the
The body's Identification "sure
back."
does gtve us some peace of mind, "
U.S. experts had been sent to saidFrankHodes,ffi,ofSpringtleld,
Damascus, Syria, to examine the N.J., whose wife, Mildred, 64, was a
body. An ABC News reports from
hostage and next In llne to be killed
Damascus said several Syrian after Kllnghoffer. "At least they
pathologists, a U.S. consular offi. have a bodytobUijl."
clal, an FBI agent and another
Hodes, who with his wife was a
pathologist retained by the Amerl· friend of the Kllnghoffers, said the
can Em bassy made the body's Identification wUI "by al l
tdentltlcatlon.
•
means" gtve Kllnghoffer's widow.

Marilyn, some rellef. "The fact that
there was no body was pretty
traumatic for her."
Italian authorities pressed the
Investigation Into the AchUie Lauro
hijacking and said they. belleved
about 15 terrorists were pmbably
involved, in planning and carrying
oot the attack.
Four Palestinians jaDed 1n
Spoleto, Italy, have been charged
with hijacking the Italian luxuljl
llnerOct. 7o!!thecoastd.PortSa!d,
Egypt, and kllllngKllnghoffer.
In Genoa , where the hijackers
first boarded the ship . warrants
were Issued Tuesday for three
additional suspects Including the
man who bought tickets for the four
hijackers.

Grange celebrates 50th anniversary
Mem~rs and friends of the
Racine Grange gathered this past
Sunday at the grange hall on Oak
Grove Road to celebrate 50 years of
growth and activity for Racine
Chapter2606.
Honored atSunday'sget·together
were Hazel Carnahan, Earl Cross,
Maljl Easterday, Marion Easter·
day and the late Bertha Spencer, all
50 year members of the Racine
chapter. Present to accept their 50
year certltlcat.es and pins were
Cross Mary Easterday and Ruth
Stear;.., who accepted ~n behalf or
her late mother, Bertha Spencer.
Carl Holter and Mattie Circle
were hOnored for 25 years of
membership.
Formed Jan. 29,19liattheRaclne
H!ghSchoolbyHarleyMusser, then
county deputy, the Racine Grangt&gt;
was officially orgganized after
Sydney Fadely, a vocational agrl·
culture Instructor canvassed the
community and s~rrounding area
for prospecti~e members. The first
signature on ·the l1st was that of
Arthur Beegle.
The llst of 53 charter members
lncluded Mr. Beegle and Mr.
Fadely, A.C. Bradford Lois BradfoUJ,SberCarnahan,lfuazelC:arna· .

han, Harold Carnahan, Isabel
Carnahan, Allan Cross George B.
Cross, Earl Cross, Margaret Ca·
rleton, Arthur Circle, Carl J.
Easterday, Lsla Easterday, Mary
V. Easterday, Marton Easterday,
Claire Ona Fadely, Leo Gilmore.
Emerson Holter, Frank Holter,
Floyd HUI, Clark lhle, MaljiJewett.
M_aljl Jividen, Laura JohlJS9n.
LI2Zie Johnson, Kenneth Krider.
Ralph E. Lee, Roberta Lee, Evelyn
Lee, Gomer Lewis Min a Lewts. Vlca
L. Morrison, Cllfford S. Morris.
Lester McKenzie, Tom D. Pick·
ens,hJosephlne Pickens. Mattie
Powell, Roy Spencer, Bertha
Spencer, James L. Spencer, Irene
Spencer, J .E. Stobart. W.T.Stobart,
Maxine Wingett, Robert Yost, Earl
C. Shain and Cecil Shain, aU IO&lt;;al
residents.
Meetings were held the first and
third Wednesday ntghts and dues
were ~ cent s a month, paya ble In
advance, semi-a nnually.
On Sept . ~. 1935, the meeting place
was changed from the high school
ruildlng to the Knights of Pythtas
.Hallin Racine. ,.
.
On Feb. 10, 1938, the meeting
nights were changed to the second
and fourth gwednesday nights.

~----'-----..,...--------~-------.-----

On July 22, 1942. the Trustees of
Dak Grove Methodist Church approved a rrquest allowing the
grange to hold meetings In the Oak
Grove Community Hall.
In 1973, the RacineGrangt&gt;txJUght
both the church building a,d the
community buDding from the Ohto
Methodist Conference.
Past Mastors of the Racine
Chapter were Harold Carnahan,
1936-37_and 1940; J . L. stJ:ncer,
1937-38, C.S. Morris, 19.ll49, Earl
Cross, 1941-48, 1950,1961·n , 19'19-85;
Letha Morris.' 194245; Freelan(l .
Norris, 194647, OrtsSmlth, 1952-53; .
Eber Carnahan, 1954·58; Robert
Beegle, 195!t-OO; Keith Ashley, 1978.
The chapter oow has 38 mem hers
and still meets two times a month .
All members agree that the
highlight of their year is the annual
Thanksgiving turkey and ham
dinner, which Is always followed by
a pig-ln-the·poke auction.
Grange Is a nallona l organization
of farmers for farm~&gt;rs. with
act tttes and program' based on
educ tlon, sociality. ro-qJeratlon
and
dshtp. Thenati~Jl!llorganiza n was fonned on Qec. 8, 1876.
According to Racine members,
(Continued on page 10)

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