<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13293" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13293?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:26:18+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44265">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/6dbee6b4529dfddd76bcd1726688c419.pdf</src>
      <authentication>bb6942a3b4c713c9beccb073fe618bfd</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41654">
                  <text>·'

•

•·
~ Page-D-8,-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~U.S.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

w. Va.

October 27. 1985

1

to search Vietnam,crash·site for MIAs·

: WASHINGTON (UP!) -For the
:,. first time, Vietnam has agreed to
: permit the United States to excavate
: the site of a crashed warplane to
.: search for. the remains of Ameli·
' cansmlsslnginaction, the Pentagon
says.
Commodore James Cossey, an
• acting deputy assistant defense
·. secretary, identified the site Friday
- as the locatlon o~ a B-52 bomber
: crash In the Hanoi-Haiphong area.
' The precise identity of the plane was
not known, he said.
Coupled with the announcement
of the agreement. which was
- reached during talks 'in Hanoi l ~s t
: month, was the identification of the
: remalnsoflOmoreAmericanMIAs.
The remains were handed overt a

U.S. olficlals in Hanoi Aug. 14. Nine
were Identified Oct. 8. The rem~lns
of seven more will be identified In !he
next two weeks. ·
The newly identified remains wUl
be flown from Hawaii to Travis Air
Force Base, Calif., Tuesdav.
Those Identified incl~de a dual
U.S.·French citizen Identified as
Jean Claud LecOrnecofCiearOaks
Calif., who died of dysentery in ~
Vietnamese prisoner cainp in 1976.
He left Vietnam but returned for his
Vietnamese family when he was
ca pt~red and died a month later
Cossey said.
'
Cossey said U.S. officials knew
Lecornec had been in thecampafter
the war ended in 1975. Lecornec was
the second U.S. civilian to be found.

____.. --- _____...

i Pap4

....,

The remains of the first were where the remains of about500ofthe
Cos~ cited the agreement and
still may be alive In Indochina as
repatr1ated in 1977.
2,446 Amer1cans still unaccounted VIetnamese Involvement in investl- evidence Or increasing cooperation
gating slghtings of Amertcans who between Hanoi and Washington
Vietnam'sagreement in principle for In VIetnam may be fouitd.
to permit the first joint· U.S.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ , , . . __ _ __:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Vietnamese excavation of the &amp;52 r
site came dur11lj;( the ninth session of
technical talks in Hanoi on the MIA
issue since December 1982. They
were described as "the most open
and cordial talks to date."
The only other crash site ever
excavated in Indochina after the
Vietnam War was in Pakse, Laos,
where a joint U.S.-Laotian team In
February dug up the remains of l3
Americans who were abo;lrd an
AC·130 gunship.Theexcavationcost
$150,0Xl.
Cossey estimated there are
hundreds rt crash sites in Indochina

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

.Safety award
Pace~

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

~1
By the Bend ............. Page 5

·--

'

Page2

i

'

'"

....

__ -

Bengals top Steeler8
I'
. . --,,..,_I_. ________.____ L.._r•s
. - - - _.__,.......
~-

•

•

ent1ne
1 Section, 10 P•ges

Pomarqy-Middlaport, Ohio, Monday, October 28. 1985

No.136
1986

....... --·--

;

Letters to editor

ClaBsllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
Comics-TV .............. Page9
Deaths ................... Page 10
EdHorlals ................ Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

__..___. __ ....,

at y

e

..

26 Cen1a

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

NOYi ON SMITH'S LOT....

198S BUICK LeSABRE LIMITEDS
4 BRAND NEW
2 WITH LOW MLES

,•,'

LOWPRICEI

1900

198S RIVIERAS "Brand New" ·

--·
---

8.8°/o Financin on These Two

PLUS OVER

MORE

SPECIAL

$49900

FUU FEATURED
TABLE MODEL

'86 Buicks &amp; Pontiacs

SAVE SJO.OO

o 19" diagonal XL-100Color TV
• 17-button digital remote control

RCA 20'diagonar
ColorTrak TV
• 01g1tal Command Center remote

INi\DEQUATE CLASSROOM SPACE Is a problem at all of the schools In Southem Dll&amp;rlct. The
school board feels the answer Is a ooii!IOBdaled school
for grades kindergarten through eight. Chapter I
reading classes at Racine Elementary meet In a
hallwa;v leading to the furnace room. Pictured here

AT ELBERFELD$ YOU GET
FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

...

• New square p1 cture tube

• On -screen
channel dlspla~

• O n·sr. r~ A n t,hannc l

EB
OPEN
SUNDAYS
•

12 noon· 5 p.m.

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA, GALLIP.OLIS, OHIO

~mington.

''

Deer Gu n

MODEL 870 PUMP ACTION

446-2335
··C&gt;
FOXFIRE· ~PJ(

I,,

c ' . t,

FOXFtRE

$23995
HERCUlES
SMOKELESS
POWDERS

95

~

RANGER'"
• Deer barrel with Deer Combination
, rifle sights.
Slide Action Shotgun
12 or 20
with Ex1ra Barrel

ARROWS

39.95dl
22.0

GAUGE

WINCH£.i1£1le
I
. .

halt
d•

TRU·FLITE ALUMlNU)( ARROW!

•·
•

.........

c;..;'lo:..-;

III':Ak \\lliiTt:T.\11, 11
With Uyt&gt;9 Cl,t '. N. t'lom
l)oullle tnpcretl tintb tlulgn BurM" kin

Drown

m~.:M• I~m 1\uMtt . D~rk
bmw~ diAible La~er ~ LI II nil)$. l' ~ l en le d
replllerable draw \ t n~th modulu. i!lrl:1l
nddtllunnl mooluln for ndlu5l mrnt nrc

ln~lu d etl
:~•le .

111lth the boll/ 4 t · ~ ltJill ulu to
Str ing lti"IJ!Ih J8 In

Eucon Gamtrttctr Share

WITH
6-FIELD POINTS
6-BROAD HEADS
I

THOMPSON/CENTER BlACK POWDER GUNS
lli\WK[I'i

I

• 12 or 20,gauge. Ranger slide action with vent rib

~ ~

$99_9 ~A~·
lt t!~TtSO IU~"L[.J

DOZEN PACK

$2495

RANGER,.
Slide Action
Shotguns

870/1100 MOUN1'

$5.97

SUPER-x- ShotsheiLs.
UUO':'Qh. September 15. 1985.

SUPER-X·

- 1.00 REBATE

'\o

16

~~~T

'

25-round box GAUGE

~~~

S29 95DOZ.
REG. FINISH

S1995 DOZ.

$4 97 1 - - - - - - - - - - - l
S1295

Located next to l\lluon County Fair Grounds
Point Pleuant, W. Va. 26660
. Store Hours: Mon. thru Fri . 9:30-8:00
Sat. 9:30-6:00
Sun. 12:00-6:00

MDIII 1100

$1099$

St:ASON

$795

Srt:CIAU
REMINGTON "SUJGGER:'

$199

WINOl

304-676-2988

$9995

·DEER BAII!ll

I • ._ 1'-111"

614·446-2336 .
Rt. 36, Spring Valley Shopping Plaza
Galllpolla. Ohio 46631
Store Hours: Mon. thru Fri. 9:30-7:00
Sat. 9:30-6:00
Sun. 12:00-6:00

I

.0Dill70

DEER BARREl

CAMMO FINISH
Get $1 rebate per 25--round
box, up 10 low bOxes ol

.,

COMBO

LURE

BULK
PKG.

REMINGTON
EXIRA BARRELS

tasco®
. lkOTOUPf

-

S16995

TINM'll •It DOJI:·I!'f· RI JT RVt'K

RENE

S19995

BOX
FIVE

second row, Luke Holman, Charlie McKinney and
~clnda GUklnson, and their Chapter I teacher,
Joyce Ritchie.

buDding a new school julll lor Racine. The schoO!
board oontends that to do this would mean to Ignore
problems at Portland, Syracuse and Letart Falll.

Southern Local voters debate school tax levy
By NANCY YOACHAM

•ARCHERY
•RELOADING
eGUNS •AMMO
•FISHING TACKLE

RACINE ELEMENTARY Is the oldest buDding In
Southem Dlstrlcl, bunt In 1911. Opponents or a
proposed 6.19 mW levy to build a ronsoUdated
elementary school In Southem Dlslrlcl, suggest

1

ELBERFE.LDS

t -J n tr ol

are second graders. left to rlgltl,lront row, Lisa Wiles,
Alysia JeDldns, J011eph Layne and DanleDe Smith,

•

Sentinel staff
A doUar doesn't go as far as It used to.
"With. thtl&lt; thought in mind, it's easy to understand
why voters In the Southern Local School District are
voicing opiniOns, both pro and con, concerning a
proposed 6.19 mill tax levy to build a new consolidated
elementary school.
Proponents of the measure are looking at the levy
from the educational standpoint. Contends Bobby
Ord, superintendent of Southern Local Schools,
"Yesterday's facilities won't deliver today's
education." Ord cites this example,
"If you're going to haul coal nowadays, you use a
coal truck, not a wheelbarrow."
He also points out that students these days compete
not only on a national level but on a world level.
Therefore Southern Local's students need the best
educations money can provide.
Ord, the school board, and many others within the
school dlstrtct, feel thai Soutbern Local can provide a
better education--but only through passage of the tax
levy.
Opponents of the levy, although nol against

BALTIMORE (UPI)- Invesll~~:atorssay the espionageoperallons
of accused spy ringleader John Walker went around the world, but a
chapter of that drama cduld end today In U.S. District Cwrt.
Alter what invesllgalors say was a ~year career or slipping u.s.
mUIIory secrets to the Soviets_,Walker, 48, will appearhelore federal
Judge Alexander Harvey lltoenteran ettpected guUtypleaa&lt;~partof
a sweeping agreement.
Justice Department officials have said nothing more lhan that
loday'shearlngwiU be "very Important."
'
But sources quoted in several weekend newspaper rq10rls said
WalkerwW plead guilty to espionage In ettchange lora lesser sentence
lor his son Michael, 22, a sailor last attached to the 1111clear-powered
aircraft cariter Nimitz, who Is charged with providing cl1188lfled
illonnatlon to his lather.
Another element il the agreement wiU he acomrnltmentfromJohn
Walker to testify against his Navy buddy Jerry Whllwolih, who also I!!

·

,whltworth, 46, has pleaded not guDty and Is scheduled to 1!0 m trlal
In January In San Frandsoo.

GAHS qualifies for post-season playoffs
IRONTON - Gallla Academy's 83.35 points, In this week's ratings
Blue Devils have qualified for tlle according to Walker, while Shert1985 post-season playoffs in Ohio dan and Philo are tied for second and
high school, according to a story in Ironton Is fourth. • .
today's edition ol the Ironton
Walker goes on to say that
whoever wins the GallipoUs-Ironton
Tribune.
Written by Ironton sports editor game Frida~ wiD finish first In the
Jimmy Walker, an "expert" on the final ratings that will come out
playoff system, thestorysaysGallla Sunday, Jllov. 3.
If GalllpoUs loses to Ironton
Academy, Sheridan and Philo are
"definitely" in the playoffs despite Friday, there Is a strong possibility
Gallipolis would go r1ght back to
what the Blue Devils do this week.
The last playoff spot wiU go to Ironton the following week to begin
·
Ironton if the Tigers beat Gallla tlle playoffs.
If Gallla Academy wins at
Academy this week. u Gallla
Academy wins, Ironton will be Ironton, Nov. 1, the Blue DevOs
etlmlnated and presden Tri-Vailey would finish lln!t In their region and .
'j,host a playoff game the following ·
would be the Fourth team.
Gallla Academy will be fln!t, with . week, Nov. 8or9.

-

•''

Most voters In the district agree that it's time to
replaCE' Racine Elementary. Some have gone so far
as to suggest building a new school just for Rllcine.
However it is llie position of the school board that
the problem cannot be considered on a school to
school basis. but must be considered as a distr1ct
problefl1. The board contends that if a new school
could bt! built for Rllclne - Portland, Syracuse and
Letart Falls would also want ,their fair share- and
rl,ghtfuUv so.
·
In regard 10 Rllclne Elementary, Dale button,ofthe
state fire marshall's olflce, has recorded on olflclal
reports, "this building, because of age and
constructiOn, Is hazardous and needs to be replaced."
An open stair well linking the first and second levels
of the school, and oil-soaked wood floors, have been
noted by Dutton as major factors in the building's
pot.entla l for rapid fire spread.
Admits Ord, ''There Is always the posslbllty !he state
fire marsha II will close down Racine Elementary." He
adds that in the past few years, the slate marshall has
passed the building for fire safety only because each
room in thebuUding,even thoseon thesecondOoor,has
an outside fire exit .

Steelworkers ratify 'survival' contract

Expect guilty plea today

charged In the case.

In an effort to meet minimum standards, Ord said.
If the 6.19 mill levy passes, that millage would be
added to the present 24 mlils.
For voters to compute their "approximate tax
Increase" which 6.19 mills would crea te, Audit or
William Wickline says to take the assessed property
value on the Itemized tax bill from fhc county
treasurer, and multiply that figure by 6.19.
Another· factor being considered by voters is that a
new school, if buUt, would be located In Rllcine, the
center of the distrtct. Many residents are concerned
about the posslbllty of eliminating the small
communlly schools of Letart Falls, Portland,
Syracuse and e'Ven Rllclne.
The age of the six buildings which would be lost If a
new school Is constructed, played a part in the
decision of the school board to apply for state funding
f~r construction. Of all the buildings Involved,
Portland Elementary Is the newest, even though It Is
nearly 35 years old. Portland was built in 1951; Letart
Falls In 1935; Syracuse, the junior high school and the
kindergarten in 1929; and Racine, whlth Is the oldest
In the district, in 1911.

education, say that taxes are high enough and they
question how present mUlage Is being used in the
dlstrtct.
As explained by Ord, to be ellgtble for state
foundation money which provides general operating
monies, a district must have levied "at il'ast" 20 mills.
Southern District now has 23 mills providing general
fund monies.
Another 1 mlll, bringing the total to 24 mills,
provides funds for debt service to pay off a vocational
agriculture roan\, a media center and a music room
which have been added to the high school in recent
years as required by state minimum standards.
Three of the 23 mills were added three years ago.
This mlllage provides the dlstrtct with about $150,(XXJ
yearly and has been used over the years for such
major items
as building repairs, purchasing
textbooks, library books, educational equipment,
educational furniture, educational supplies and
upgrading or the bus fleet Ord says.
This millage also allowed the dlstr1ct to hire a
secretary-aldefor each elementary school, a dlstrtct
art teacher and an elementary music teacher, again

paring the nine plants for the
resumption of production.
In SteubenvUie. Ohio, the president of USW Local 12.18 said his
members were eager to get back on
the job, even though they weren 't
totally sold on the contract.
"But, it was something that had to
be done to survive," Ron Glldow
said. "It wasasurvlvalcontract."
"We're having a party. Not a
victory party. Just a golng·back·towork party. Everybody Is ready to
go back to work."
The USW settled for an ,hourly
wage that Is $4.38 below the industry
average. Gildow acknowledged that
the reduction in wages from $21.40
an hour to $18 will cause some
problems, but "everyone can rearrange their flnanres."
Glldow said his loca l ratl!led the
offer because the Ohio Valley has

By United Press International
Wheeling·Pittsburgh Steel Corp.,
struggling to recover in bankruptcy
court, has cleared a big hurdle by
coaxing union ·approval of a
"survival" contract that ended a
98-day strtke by workers in three
states.
The bulk of.. the 8,200 members of
the United Steelworkers union are
expected to back on the job Tuesday
In West Vlrgtnla, Ohio and
Pennsylvania.
By a near?-1 ratio, the USW voted
Saturday to ratify the new work
agreement which Includes $18 per
hour In wages and benefits. Worl&lt;
schedules were prepared Sunday by
plant managers and superintendents at the firm's plants In the three
states.
A spokesman for the firm said
skeleton crews spent Sunday pre-

"nothing else to offer but Wheeling-

(George Ferns) can make this
company one of the more viable
Arepresentatlveo!Local11!Kialso companil's In the nation."
used the term "surviva l" contrac t
Approval of the contract came one
and Secretary Ted VanHorn sug- day after U.S. Bankruptcy Judge
gested the .agreement with Warren Bentz said he had no
Wheeling-Pittsburgh was the "best jurtsdlctlon to block the tentative
agreement. The judge planned to
the union could get.''
"Under the circumstanCEs, I sign !he agreement today.
Faced with a $514 mUllan debt, the
think It was fantastic," he said. "We
could never recoup our losses but nation 's seventh largest steel·
(the str1ke ) was worth it because makrer flied for protecllon against
(former chairman Dennis) Carney its creditors last April under
Chapter 1I of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Is gone.
"I think the new chalrmai!i. Code.
Pitt."

Glenn asked to
back.Kindness' bill
legislation.
'1
Kindness acknowledgeMtlat the
mUitary medical malpractiCe legis·
latlon could increase the costs
incurred by. the Department of
Defense.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep.
Thomas Klndlness, R.Ohio, has
asked Sen. John Glenn, D.Ohio, to
support on a House-passed bill that
would allow service men and
women to sue the government lor
lnjurtes caused by Improper medical care.
Klndlness, a six-term Congres·
slonal representative from Hamllton who Is seeking the Republican
nomination to run against Glenn In
1986, wUl be watching Glenn when
the bUlls considered by the Senate.
Klndess has asked GleM to work
toward Senate approval ol the

Public meeting set
A publiC meeting to discuss the
proposed additional 1 mill levy In
Orange Township wUI be held
Tuesday nlght, 7:llp.m., at the fire
department in Tuppers Plains.
Comments and questions on the
Issue will be welcomed•
'I

ABRUPT STOP-This bus from the Second Baptist Church I~
. Ravenswood came to IUl abrupt stop Sunday morning when It
apparently was unable to slop for a slowi ng car driven by Harold
. Circle of Racine. Circle had slowed for another vehicle oocordlngto
; reports. The Ioree of the Impact caused extensive dama~~:e to
Circle's car, rupturing the gas tank and allowing fuel to.pour onto
the highway. The R""lne Voluunteer lire Department and
Emergency aquad were dispatched to the scene about four miles
northeast ol Racine on state route 124. Luckily ooly minor Injuries
were Incurred. OSP Investigated the accident.

,,

�lll Court Street

•

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

11~

~ffil!\1

,.....,__.._..,.., r-r-e:!c::lo o=&gt;

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

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

LETTERS OF OPINION art' welcome. They should be IE'Ss than 300 words
long . All letters are subject to editing and must 'tJEo signed wi th name, address and
- telephon~ number. No unsigned letters will tx&gt; published. Letters should be In

You are the jurors. Now hear
this:
One night back bt November 1982,
a middle-aged black )Xllieeman,
Officer X, was visiting with rela tives durbtg the early evening. At
about eight, he said good night and
headed home. He had just entered
the gates to his little house when,
from behbtd, there was the rat-a-tat
of an automatic rifle. Twmtyslugs
Into the policeman, killing him
instantly. A waiting car whisked
the murderer away.
But after the murderer got home,
he became Intimate with his
roommate and in due course told
her that he had "shot the dog,"

Officer X. She listened, and after a he hadn't killed Officer X.f But "
while decided she(d better take rer was much too late. Not on ly was the
information CNer to the )Xllice. The evidence circumstantially over)Xlllce arrested the murderer, whelming, there were Independent
questioned him, and got from him a wltnessses who corroboratoo every
confession. Moreover, the mur- detail of that confession. When his
derer took ihem to the scene of tiE lawyer pleaded that the o:mfesston
crime, re-enacted everything that was not valid, a court heard the
had happened, esven lndlcatbtg compl&amp;lnt, and mled that the
where he had hidden, and where tiE confession had complied with the
victim had fallen. He said that he . Criminal Procedure Act of 1977.
had acted agabtst Officer X be- The murderer was accordingly
cause he was under orders !rom a sentenced to death, and &lt;Fnied
terrorist organization to which he appea l, on the grounds that there
belonged to shoot him.
were no extenuating circumstanWhen the following sprbtg the ces: the precondition for appeal in
trial was held, the murderer that country. A date was set for IIE
suddenly recanted. He said In tact ·· execution t..u years later.

good taste. addressing lssues. not ptrsonalttles.

lOth!

Letters to editor
Support those who care

1

-.

-

qlmmunlty, a ~ mill levy was
stXruld enrage Nery human heing- passed for the maintenance c1 all
... cemeterles In Cbester 'lbwnship Chester Township cemeteries.
wjll only he mowed twice a year If Surely everyone will readily agree
certain individuals become elected how Pine Grove Cemetery has been
Improved! .]'m very proud of our
a£ Piester Township trust II'S.
J\llyone who rents or owns current tru~tees wm have dedipty"perty knows that grass needs to cated much effori and time with
be ! mowed once a week lor this as well as all otrer cemeteries
Co.lld you In Chester Township. I, for one,
appearance sake.
Imagine trying to wade through a thank you all for your seiVlce.
Furthermore, I encourage eve'~hayfield" of grass just to place
ryone to remember how beneficial
flowers on a loved-ooe's grave?
Actually, I am appalled that any this ~ mill cemetery maintenance
human being should ever remark tax has been In the past. Your "X''
that we leave the restbtg places of means more than merely a vote ...It
our forefathers, loved-ones, and, means tiE future care c1 our
yes, men Who bravely fought in the Cemeteries. Let's always strive for
wars to become an ~ltome of superior cemetery maintenance
and continue to show others that we
human laziness and apathy.
IndeEd, I feel" sorry for the still care about loved-ooes who tllve
individual wm says to lorget· perished.
Moreover, carefu lly select the
cemetery care and btstead !ransfer
right · candidates for Chester trusthat rmney for a salary increase.
What type of role rrodels do we tees. Make sure your votesarecast
for the men wm truly care about
become behaving in this manner?
I can remember many times their community; · not simply their
helping my beloved Grandmother, own wallets.
Suzanne Weaver
the late Chrlstena Grimm. cuut
48401 Eagle Rldge Rd.
briars, weeds, and multi-floral rose
Long Bottom, Ohio 45743
from her burial lpts bt Pine Grove
Cemetery. But thanks to our caring
-1 have heard something that

Use the power wisely
Two years ago I voiced my
opbtlon on events as a concerned
citizen. I asked why the majority ci
the people had been Ignored. 1
asked why my signature, along
with eleven hu!Kired others on a
petition, bad been ignored. I asked
why children were brought down to
the pobtt of dlspalr. · I asked why a
group ol citizens with 1,100 signatures tailed to get a recall vote.
Now as a concerned citizen and
mother I will answer these questions. The majority was Ignored
because It made a mistake when
wtbtg. They electedoertaln JEOple
who refused to represent them. The
(Fillion was ignored because certabt people refused to acknowledge
the Importance of voters signatures. The children were In dlspalr
because certain people dldn 'I take
them Into consideration, The chUdrens best Interests were Ignored.
The group c1 citizens failed to get a
·recall because it Isn't )Xlsslble.
There Is no law fo~ recallbtg certabt
people.
You may ~der why a con-

~

cerned citizen and mother Is telling
you this. Because on N'ov. 5 we
can 't afford another mistake. On
Nov. 5 we need to elect someone
who will listen to the majority, wm
will acknowledge registered voters
and the Importance ol: elevEn
hu!Kired signatures.
We need someone who will be for
the good of the students, who will
look out for their interests. We need
someone we won't want to recall
two years from now
I urge you to look at all the
candk)ates carefully. Remember
who helped and listened two years
ago and who didn't. Talk with the
candidates, If trey won't listen
you'll know your vote hasn't been
wasted.
Please vote lor the
candidate wm will best do the job.
I've reminded you of the things
we can never erase. The things we
were )Xlwerless to control. Now tiE
)Xlwer Is bt our hands. please use
tiE )Xlwer wisely.
Robbt R Haning
Rt. 1, lloK 254
Rutland, Ohio 45715

Who is responsible??

The front· page article &lt;kt. 22
regarding wha ts happening with the
Racbte VIllage Courril created
more conversation a rmng the
townspeople than anything Jrinted
bt sometime.
Nov. 19-84 I appraoched the
citizens of Racine VIllage and
acquired JOOsignatureson a petition
in order to try to do something about
thesesewerodors. Ocjorssobadthat
people couldn't sit on their )Xlrches
the previous summer oor rould they
open their wbtdows. Children
played dally in these areas brea thing the atrocious odors.
1 took this petition refore the
council, 2 of the six. councilmen
recognized trefactthatl was there.
Then the few seconds I was
permitted to speak resulted bt the
council lnfonnbtg me, they (the
council ) "coukl do nothing" about
the matter. I would havetotakethls
rna tter to the sewer board.
I have enclosed acopydthe letter

I received from the Ohio&lt;E!P.A. in
answer to the letter I sent to the
E.P.A. along with a copy of the
petition so they would know just how
drastic this problem Is especially to
the citizens and busbtesses in that
area.
Is It not the responsibility of the
council and the Mayor to see to It no
matter wm Is contracted to supply
any publlc utlllty, that It Is Installed
properly and meets health
standards?
Isn 't that what we pay i&gt;r and tiE
reason we need a council and a
Mayor In the first place?
Now that Its just a matter c1 days
until election, council seerm to have
an btterest In thbtgsthatsmuldhave
been done a long time ago. Maybe
we could solve our problems If we
had an election rrore often.
Lois Moore
P.O. S...71
Racbte, Ohio
'.

Today i11 history
TodaY Is Monday, Oct. 28, the lJist day of 19lj!l with 64 to foDow.
The inoon Is full.
The mornbtg stars are Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and(Saturn.
Those hom on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
British novelist Evelyn Waugh bt 1903; Dr. Jonas Salk, developer of the
poliO vaccbte, In 1914; actress Elsa Lanchester In 1902 (age83), and former
ba¥i&gt;all commissioner: Bowie Kuhn bt I~ (age 59.)
.
'
In 312 A.D.. In a battle that marked the begbtnlng of the Christian era In
Europe. Constantbte's army defeated the forces of ~ius at MuMan
Bridge In Rome.

The Daily Sentinei--Page-3 .

•

NFL standings

Forgive me ______~___W_t_'ll_ia_m_F_._B_u~_k_le;_y_Jr.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

;::::::S:co=·re=bo=ar=d~====-==-=======T~h:.::.:e7is:::...m_a_n_n....-,-=R=-I:-.g-gi-:-.n-s--=-le-a~d~u:;;.:.p...:;.;s....-e-=r___:.._,&gt;

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 28, 1985 ,

Commenta
Pomeroy, Oblo

Monday, October 28, 1985

JI)S\
~ 1 L\'lE
io ~EE.
~ysoth

...

-

NATilNAL FOO'IBAI.L LEAGl.J'E
.
Antl'rl:a.~ Conlerft.ce
W L T Pc_t, PF PA
6 2 n :rso m ns
5 J 0 .625W7177

NY Jt•1s
Miami
N, En~~:
Ind.

Shortly before ~e scheduled
execution, the murderer's lawyers
came In with an entirely different
appeal. Yes, they said, It was true
that the murderer had killed Officer'
X. But they ;van ted to have a tresh
trial at which they cou ld establish
that the mental condition of the
murderer at the time of the kllltng
was Indeed an extenuating circumstance. The court [XII off the
execution, which had been scheduled for the following day. heard
out the fresh appeal, ruled in &lt;)ue
course that It was not substantial,
and rescheduled the execution.
Which execution took place oh
Oct. 18 of this year.
Now listen to wha t you can do to
that story - if you are Antmny
Lewis of The New York Times and
you are determined to [llt a hideous
construction on literally anything
the South African government
does. Here Is Mr. Lewis:
"President Botha and his c1f!cials
have sent the message (that there
will be no changes bt South Africa )
with uncommon clarity. Their
recent actions have bad the character of not ony rejection but
provocation.

5 3 0 625 156 143

1 1 0 .125104193
Central

CMnd

Houstn
Cncnnl

.....

' Dt'll\'('!"

Hijackin.g fallout
The Reagan administration's
handling of the Achille Lauro
hljac~btg Is emerging as a mUltary
triumph and a d!p!oma~c disaster.
Most Americans felt a surge d.
pride and relief at our successfuUnterceptlon of the Egyptian plane
and seizure of the lour hiJackers
aboard. But the treatment d. Egypt
and Italy by the Reagan administration In all of this was clumsy,
Insensitive and unwise:
These two cooperative, proAmerican governments, which
made possible the safe return of tiE
Achllle Lauro with Its 400 passengers - not-withstanding the
tragic murder of !:eon Kllnghoffer
-have been treated as though trey
were the enemy along With the
hijackers.
The Egyptian government has
been publicly blasted lor attemptIng to send the hijackers back to the
Palestinian organization. And the
Italian government was equally
denounced for permitting Mohammed Abbas -the leader of the
Palestine faction to which the
hljackes belong- to leave Italy for
sate re'tuge.
Lost In all ci this diplomatic heat
Is the fact that 4JO passengers, and
the ship carrying them, were safely
returned through tiE efforts d.
Egypt'and Italy. Both governments
now feel that they have been
assailed rather than appreciated
for their efforts.
The Italian government led by
Prime Minister Bettbto Craxl- the
most stable Italian government of
the past 40 years' and one very
\ friendly 10 the United States _ fell
·\ ~ause d. these evmts. Egyptlan
President Hosnl Mubarak Is under
serious pressure _ 11 not outright
physical danger - !rom the rrore
radical )Xlllt!cal . groups In his

country for having appeared to
cooperate too closely with the
United States. Had he turned the
hijackers directly over to the
United States or Italy, one can only
jmaglne what storms IE would
have raised In his own country and
throughout the Arab world.
It seems clear that the hijackers
would not have peacefully returned
the ship, the passengers and
themselves to Egypt had they not
been promised sate passage to treir
home base. It Is also probable that
the Italians permitted Abbas to
leave because of prior assurances
and understandings with the P)...O
leadership with whom they had
been working on the release~ the
ship and the passengers.
President , Reagan deserves
praise for the successful move that
now has the hijackers facing trial in
Italy. ·But he unnecessarily damaged our relations with two governments that are crucial to United
States' interests In the Middle East
and Europe.
The second painful casualty of
this incident Is the Middle East
peace process. Egypt Is crucial as
the leader of the rmderate Arab
forces In any hopes we may have
for progress toward an eventual
settlement of the Middle East
conflict. If clumsy handlbtg by the
United States d. this btcldent makes
It polltlcally more difficult for
Egypt to cooperate with us, that Is a
serious blow to what seemed to be
recent pro gress toward
negotiations.
It Is Ironic that Syr1a, which has
been uncooperative in Middle East
peace negotiations, has been commended for Its role bt the Ach!ile
Lauro btcident, while cooperative
Egypt and Italy have been con&lt;Fmned. When Syria refused to

.71415913.1

4 ~ () ,[100 l88 1!19
S. Dgu
J 4 0 .429 lti9 187
J 5 0 .375 1!11 181
Nlltlori&amp;IJ Conferenct' 1!:1161 ,
1111\as •
6 2 0 .750 197 125
N\' r:nb
5 3 o .625181 J31

•r

PhiL~

4 4 0 .500 123 ~1

W&lt;~!i h

4 4 0 .:;oo 114

St. Lo u.

Chi.
Dirt

Minn .

4 4 0 ..".00167 167

Cr. Bay

J !; 0
0 8 0

Tmp By

;t75~200

LA Rms

7 I 0
4 4 0
3 5 0
I 7 0
Sul'.ta,v'li fte8llll:!i

N. Orln&amp;
Atlanw

164 8)

.(Ill

w...

s. Fran.

.8"f.ilti.H17
.f«&lt; JlollJ4
.375 16.1 207
lZ&gt; l 612tj()

TIIEJSMANN SACKED- .washington quarterback Joe Thelsmann

Da llas ~4. i\ll!mta 10

Is al)out to be sacked byCieveland'sReggle Camp and Chip Banks In lbe
third quarter of Sunday's 14-7 Redskin wbt over tbe Browns bt

P hllad&lt;.'lphla 21. Buffalo 17
Denvpr :11, Kansas Cit)' 10
lndiWlapolls 37, Gtl'(!flllay 10
Houston 4{1, Sr. Louis 10
Delrolr Jt, Miam l21
Cl\lc~o 27, Mlni'II.'SOt.a 9
NY Jl&gt;ls 17, SeaHif' 14
W.ashl.nRton N , Ck&gt;wland 7

Cleveland.

Bengals defense keys
upset of Pittsburgh

NNI England 32, Tampa Ba y U
NY Cta111s 21 , NN' Orluns 13
San F'rancl.sro 28, LA Rams 14
Clnclnnatl:!$, P1ttsW'l{h 21
Monday'• Game (.\II nJIMi EST)
[)J~

Sari

at LA fb!ldPI'S 9 p.m.
StiiKIH.Y, NO\I. 3

Tampa &amp;!y at NY Giants. 1 p.m
Wa.~hln!iWn at Atlanta , l p.m
Chicogo at Orren Bay, l p.m.

Clnd!Ul&lt;lll at Buffalo. 1 p.m .
CI('VI:'hmd at PIUsl:urgh. 1 p.m.
lNotrolt at Mlnl'll"sola, 1 p.m .

Knn'ills City at Houston, 1 p m
Miami at Nrw England, I p.m.
O.:•nvf'r at Sun DI('RQ, 4 p.m.
LA Halcll&gt;n at Sra tt iP. 4 p.m
Nl'Yo' Or k•aas at LA Rams. 4 p.m.
r-,ry .ll't s at lndlanapotis. 4 p.m
Phlludfolphla at San Fra nrl&lt;;('(). 4 p.m.
MOI'HlAy, Nov. 4

Doii1.1S at St. Louis. 9 p.m.

NHL results
NATIONAL 110()(£1' lEAGUE
"''a&amp;le~~ COf\JI'nftct'

P!Mrkk Dhobiioo
~. GF

" ' I. T

fi201:.!li21

NY Hn~&lt;:
r-.'Y hln

~

~~OJOJJ~"T
21

9

~~~.,

440 II~~
:I J 2 8 3 1 :t!
.l 4211l13.l
AdiUU~t

lions? Also. what will ·be tiE
Egypt ian response if, in the futuffi,
we find It necessary to again
request their help In negotiating
wi th the Pa lestinians - or some _.
other group - for the release of
American hostages•
It Is vitally Important now that
U.S. officials continue their diplomatic efforts designed to heal the
wounds In our relations with Cairo
and Rome.

DMslon
7 I I 15
'l I II

Bo~tnn

Buffalo

~J

HrHrd

~~0
~~0

Mntrl
Minn
St.

:17 21
:.) Ill
,1615

,'j

I.IJU .

Chi.

ill

~ ].J .'IIi
8.1 139

ClunplleD Cotdt'rencc'
Norftl DM!Wn
J 4 2 R
~ :J :1 1 'I
.1 ~ 1 7
1 'j' 0

Trnto
l)l&gt;t roll
~ythe

2

0 R1 1
Dh'hion
G1012 :fl'll
~ J 1 10
&lt;fl 41
44 210:1136
4411 II fJ J:!

Edmntn
Wnnpfot
Vr~C:'· r

C'lfll:l)'

1 11 n
SM&amp;urda,\-''!1 Recul.'l
Qucbrc 4, Plll s tllr~:h 'l i tk&gt; t

LA

2

1JI 51

Nrw , Jcr.;('~· 5, l.os AnJ..'('INi 2
Monlll'al !i, Hurrfut'd .l

(UII!:iii'Y 7, Dt'trolt 4
1\'Y lslandc&gt;rs ~.Sr. Lou I~ ~
Mln~a 7, Toront o ~
Sunday'• Reiub

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati defense, rated the worst
in the NFL through the first seven
g~mes, finally )Xlpped to life Sunday
and sparked the Bengals to a 26-21
win over the mistake-prone Pittsburgh Steelers.
"Cincinnati's defense was outstandlng,just outstanding," praised
Pittsburgh coach Chuck Noll, whose
Steelers turned the ball over six
times to the hard -chargbt~·Bengal
defenders.
"We dominated their offense,"
said Cincinnati coach Sam Wyche.
''The pat on the back for this wbt
goes to the defensive coaches and
the defensive ballplayers who kept
usln this game."
Safety Robert Jackson made the
biggest Cincinnati defensive playreturning a pass Interception 57
yards for a touchdown.
The victory also took some
pressllre off Wyche. After the
Bengals were humiliated 44-27 by
Houston last Su!Kiay, the Cincinnati
media ripped Wyche- and Wyche

Remember the man that gat
the voting places back to Tupp·
ers Plains &amp; long Bottom.

FRANCIS ANDREW
FOR TRUSTEE FOR
OLIVE TOWNSHIP
ELECTION
NOVEMBER 5, .1985

Mo...S~· '11 Ganw (1\11 'ftlllf'fl Fa~'T)

nrnn on at

C&lt;~ IJ:1U)'. !t.:fi p.m .

'1\M-...lltl' '" Gllllll~
Nf"&gt;&gt;' .I f' ~. nl¢11

ll unfUitl at Plll.diJfl!:h. nl,e:ht
Montmtl at Qul'lr&lt;' . ni~Zhl

Pard for by

Andrew

.

(USPS

Ohio.

Member: United J&gt;re!is Int rrna ti onal,
Inl and Dally Press Associa tion a nd the
· Ohio N('wsPaper Association . National

•

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to Th e Dally Setl!i nr l, 111 Court St.,

Pomeroy. Ohio 45700.
SUBSC RIPTION RATES

By t;arrler or Motor Route
Ont' Week ................................... $1.10
On~ M onth ................................ $4.80
One Y€'ar ....
. .............. $~7.20

Mall Suhscrlpllon H

m onth .

Inside Ohio
13 Wcck s ........ ,......................... $14.56
26 Week s ..................... ............. SZ9.12
~ 2 Week s .................................. $58.24
Oul!ilde 01\lo
1.1 Week'\.,·
.................. $15.60
26 Week s .
.. ............... S31.20
~2 Week s .. ..... ...... .................. S59.BO

GOLDEN RIPE

~

.~·'..........· ~;

., sugar ,

PURE CANE

Bananas

;

Colonial Sugar
SLB.
BAG

4. ,$1

$139.
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

VIVA

2°/o MILK

FRESH LEAN

Ground
Chuck
II.

~~~4 .

PLASTIC
lOWFII-' GALLON

Sl 49

$)49

wi 'tmrve the Riahl to Limit Quonititn-

Annual Yield

Quarterly.

Insured by the Federal Deposit lm;urance Coq:&gt;oration.
If you're like many people, your IRA is about to mature. Bul interest
rates have tumbled.
So if you want to keep your retirement ftmds growing at a healthy .
rate in a totally safe environment, there's only one thing to do.
Use Central Trust's new high-yielding, FDIC-insured. special one-year
IRA. This Special Aa:ount is available now through November l.

IF

IRA'S AT CENTRAL TRUST, CHANGING
OUR SPECIAL ACCOUNT IS EASY.

Taking advantage of our Special Aa:ount is ·partirularly easy if your
maturing IRA is at Central Trust already_ _ ·
just let us know. We11move your IRA for you to our spetialone-year
aecount, and your IRA will be 411 set for another prosperous year.

IF YOUR IRA'S NOT AT CENTRAL
TRUST, WE'LL MOVE IT FOR YOU.
It's almost as easy to take advantage of our Special Account if your
IRA's not at Central Trust
·
All you have to do is stop into one of our convenient brandll'~- We'll
take Grre of everything.

IF YOU DON'T HAVE AN IU, NOW'S A
TIME TO START ONE•
You.Qon't need a maturing IRA to take advantage of our Sp(1i;il
Aa:ount.
So if you're thinking of starting an IRA, our Special Account is il gmd
reason to start it now.
·
What's more, Central Trust has a wide range of investment opt_ions that
are perfect for IRAs, including our Double Your Money fRA, our Oextble
Money Market IRA or one of our fixed rate IRAs with tem1s 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 hi~h yields,
Central Trust can make things happen for you. just stop into &lt;my Central
Trust office .
·

Not Rtsponlible for lypoarophicat Erms- Ptlces EffectivethiU Sat.. Nov. 2, 1985

DOUBLE COUPONS .ALL WEEK
SEE STORES FOR DETAILS

•

•

9.04%
8.75%
Effective
Rate Cmn/Xl14nded

Nrw York , Nt&gt;w Yurk 1001i.

CANDIDATE FOR

•
.,y'

...

ASPECIAL ONE·DAIIATE FOR liAs OILY.

Adverlllilog Represcnta li ve, Branham
Newspapt&gt;r Sales, 733 Third Avenue,

No subsc rlp11ons by mal l permitted In
1owns wh&lt;'re holT){' carrier ser vice Is
availab le.

-

,,'

i.

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy.

BILL POOLER, JR.

. .,••

"Try thinking of them as planes with no thin '
but a bunch of hijackers aboard."

S~~e!

Publishrd ev('ry aflernoon, Monda y

;

...

Hurry In and

through Friday. Ill Court St ., Po·

·•
'

.,

'

SAVE 20% ON OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF PLA YTEX BRAS,
GIRDLES AND PANTIES

14 ~960)

VOTE FOR

•

...~
'
•'

20°/o OFF

A Division ol Multimedia, Inc.

dt'Sirln~~r to pay the car·
rler may rl'mll In advonc&lt;' direct to
The Dall y St&gt;ntinel on a 3. 6or 12 month
basis. Credit wll l lX' given ratTI£&gt;r each

'!'itto

'

Playte~

The Daily Sentinel

\

,r

ALL

•

Subscribers not

,Paid For By Bill Pooler, Jr.

.

TUESDAY ONLY

PRICE
Dally ................................... 2~ Cents

"Your Vote Appreciated"

•.'

into sole possession of second place ·
In the al l-time NFL ranklngs.
Former Cleveland great Jim
Brown leads the overall career list
with 126 TD's.

TRUST

SINGI.E CO I'Y

I'

I

Franc1~

TRUSTEE

Berry's World

Riggins' one-yard touchdown run
In the first qua1·t ~r was his sL~th of
the season and the !14th of his
career, moving the 14-year veteran
past Baltimore's Lenny Moor£' and

m eray, Ohio , by lhe Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlng Company / Mulllmedia. Inc.,
Pomt&gt;roy, Ohi o 45769. P h. 992·2156. S&lt;&gt;·

Buffalo .1, Mlnrlf'M!ta 2
Phllactc&gt;tphlu i. V&lt;ilK'!Jli''P I' 4
!'o'\' Ran~n 2. lbiton 1
Washlnl(lon 4. Ollr;q_&gt;O 2
Wlnnl ~ !'!. ()ptrolt :1

Edmonton at

ripped the media In return.
"I'm awfully pmud of our club
because we've had an extremely
hard week, one which Sam Wyche
dldn 't handle very well personally,"
said Wyche. "But I had reached the
)Xlinl where I was looking up at the
boll om."
Pittsburgh, suffering It s fourth
loss In the last five games and
second defeat to Cincinnati In four
weeks, had seven fumbles and lost
three of them. Three Steeler passes
were Intercepted.
"We made an awful lot of
mistakes today, but you have to
credit the Cincinnati defense," said
Noll. "The Bengals came hard and
they came with a great deal of effort
and desire."

VOTE FOR

,~
"'" :---

'

Gr4.

Ph lla.

"

The cable explains that" a charge
by Ennacora of genocide would be
a major development In the (Un!too
Nations ) and could hl\veslgnlficant
repercussions elsewhere.
It already has. Even before tiE
draft report Is out, the Soviet
propaganda machine is already •
denouncing it as "cooked in tiE
sauce of the CIA." In fact, however,
neither the u.s. government mr
any other Western nation with an
embassy In Kabul would provide
Ermacora with information, precisely to belle charges that his
report was biased.
The significance of tiE situation is
that for the first time the U.N.
General Assembly, usually so
susceptible to Soviet manipulation.
will be forced to consider an
authoritative report that charges
the Soviet Union with genocide. If
there Is any credibility left in the
General Assembly, It 11111 not shunt ~
aside this emoo rrassment to the
Kremlin.

...... : ..·...._ . ___

I

1~

3 50 .375165:;(16
C...lltnt.l
8 0 OUOOl.'I91H
!; 3 0 .&amp;!i 1)7 Ill)

George McGovern ·
permit the hijacked ship to dock In
Syrian )Xlrts and tren participatEd
in the ldent!licallon and retum of
Kllnghoffer's body to the Unltoo
States, American
officials were
.,
lavish In their praise of the Syrian
government.
Are the Egyptians asking themselves If it Is diplomatically and
JXllll!cally rewarding to take a
chance and coopera te with the
United States In peace negotia -

0 .750 JJ9 151

u

52

Qudx'l'

At Its meeting this year. however.
the spunky human rights commission voted to com mend Ermacora,
and ordered him to write a second
report and present It to tiE General
Assembly early next month .
According to a secret State
Department cable from Geneva,
Ermacora's second report will be
even tougher than his first. He
"Intends to accuse the Soviets of
genocide In afghanistan," theca ble
states.
It explains that Ermacora "was
clearly moved by what he saw
recently in hospitals on tiE Pak/Afghan border." It adds that
Ermacora "believes thaI Soviet use
of new and more terrible wea)Xlns
In attacks on civilians, the destruction of tribal social structures, the
forced depariure of a quarter of the
)Xlpulatlon to Pakistan, tiE abandonment of traditional villages and
ways of llfe and the movement of
large numbers of displaced persons
Into the cities are the elements of
genocide."

~

6

l.A Rdrs
~at tit&gt;

)\f~Jta11 lV(Ur _________________la_c_k_A_n_d_e_~_on__&amp;
__D_al_e_~_a_n_A_t__
ta
man was Eleanor Roosevelt) took
up a resolution to appoint a special
"rapporteur" to btvest!gate human
rights In Afghanistan under Ire
soviets' brutal occupation.
"The Soviet Union bitterly op)Xlseds this appointment," a U.N.
source told us. But the 43-member
body, over Soviet-bloc nays, passed
the resolution and named Felix
ermacora to fraft the report.
Ermacora Is a dlstbtgutsred
Austrian professor whose previous
human rights investigations - In
South Africa and Chile - were
lavishly praised by the Soviets. But
wren he began btvestlgating the
Afghan tragedy, the Soviets routinely referred to him as a Nazi.
Ermacora was undeterred.
Refused ent ry by the Soviet
puppet government In Kabul, Ermacora toured refugee camps in
Pakistan . His first report was a
tough btdlctment of the Soviets,
which received Utile attentio n in
eltrer the United Nations or the
media.

n .soo 141 122

4 4

J 5 0 .:m 17:1144
3 !i 0 .J75 13!1165
;J 5 0 ~T75 2.'!7 261

Pl~brR

So U1ose are Mr. Lewis' rules.
The murderer who fired into the
back of an Innocent black polleeman, on the orders of a terrorist
organization, is the character we
are propped up to sympathize with.
Not the )Xllice, judges and government officials who brought him to
justice. Mr. Lewis, like so many
critics of South Ab"lca, has got tot IE
)Xlint where he can't even bring
himself to call tIE act of a murderer
cruel.
Weep, If you can still figure rut
whom to weep for. and whom to
weep over .

WASHINGTON - After six
years of diligently sk!rtbtg the
Issue, the U.N. General Assembly .
may fbtally be forced to condenm
the Soviet Union's slaughter c1 the
btnocents in Afhganlstan.
Worse for the Kremlbt, the
process of U.N. condenmatlon wUI
probably begin shortly before the
Geneva summit between Ronald
Geagan and Mikhail Goroochev
next month. How this all ca~
about Is almost enough to restore
American critics' faith in the
btternatlonal body.
Up to oow, the United Nations has
referred to the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan with exqulsltedellcacy
as "foreign troops in Afghanistan."
This euphemism allowed U.N .
diplomats to avoid offerlrig the
Security Council's perennial bully.
But - wonder of wonders - a
small U.N. unit known as tiE
Commission on Human Rights last
year decided to come to grips with
the reality of Afghanistan. The
commission (whose first chair..u-

o . m 155169

:1 5

BuHalo

By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Sporis Writer
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
thought of possibly losing his
startblg status does not bother
Bernie Kosar.
Just the thought of losing does,
period . .
"I'm disappointed that I didn't
play well, but the fact we lost Is
really the Important thing," said the
Clev e land Browns' rookie
quarterback.
"I have to look at the long term.
My name's not etched in or
scratched out as the starter.
Career-wise, it's a learning experience for me.''
The 21-year-old Kosar and his
Browns' teammates received a
Jesson In longevity from a pair of
36-year-old Washington Redskins.
The Redskbts converted two
first-quarter turnovers by Kosar
Into John Riggins' one-yard touchdown run and Joe Thelsmann's
19'yardscorbtgpass, and held on for
a 14-7 victory over the Browns
Sunday.
Washington, 44, snapped a threegame road losing streak and Is two
games behind Dallas In the NFC
East.
Cleveland, 4-4, has a one-game
lead over Cincinnati, Houston and
Pittsburgh in the AFC Central.
Riggins, who rushed 30 times for
112 yards, became the first opposing
back to gain 100yards at Cleveland
Stadium since Cincinnati's Pete
Johnson accomplished that feat four
years ago (Nov. 29,1981).

.,

~~lie
~=~

TRUST
The BankThat Makes Things Happen.
GALLIPOLIS 446-0902

MIDDLEPORT 992-6661

Me111ber
FDIC

�•
Page-4- The Daily

...

'

Royals win 7th game, II

...
.

1985•

Monday, October

Ohio

Sentinel

By MJKE TULLY
UPI Natlonallla8eball Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - For
once, tlle Kansas City Royals left Ill
doubts, took no chances.
You wouldn't have recognized
tllem. Why, tlley even neglected to
fall behind.
They won tlle World Series dtle
out of character Sumay night,
taking an early lead then riding Bret
Saberhagen's five-hitter to an 11-0
thrashing of the St. LoulsCsrdlnals.
TheRoyalsthrtvedlntlleun!amll. tar territory of fro,n,t-~nner. 'I1)ey
offered promise to 'the underdog.
TI!ey created a world where the
inept cartoon character Zlggy could
run for president. And win.
"l can't tell you the times we've
been counted out in the regular
season, the playoffs and the World
Series," said Kansas City manager
Dick Howser.
Darryl Motley hit a two-run
homer 1n the secom inning and the
Royalsaddeilthreerunsintllethlrd.
By the time Lonnie Smith doubled
home two runs In a six-run fifth, the
team from the heartland had
captured the heart of the land.
As President Reagan said to
Saberhagen In a teiepb:&gt;ne call, "It

.-

II

,
'. ,

.
..--·.-

must be pretry sweet tasting rlght
now."

-

ROYALS CElEBRATE -George Brett (left), who
went 4 for 5 In the seventh game, celebrates with a
happy Lynn Jones after the Royals' 11~ victory over

the Cardinals lhal gave the Royals their first world

charnploMhlp.

--.:.~' _··. saberh!ID'eit: two days to remember

•~

~

_

'•. ·._

By·"'"'~
. y
..,......,. TULL

But I couldn't have done It without
.~ .
UPJ National Baseball Writer
my teammates. They make the
••
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) plays. I wouldn't be the MVP
:; Brei Saherhagen became a lather without them."
;; and came of age In a wonderful
"I've seen It all year," said
' • Octobertllathewtllrememberfora KansasCitymanagerDickllowser.
~ : long time.
"They felt good having John Tudor
: • Sliherhagen, a 21-year-old rlght - going, but they didn't feel any better
". • bander with a baby face and a tllan I did having Saberhagen
-; mature pitching repertoire, Sumay pitching."
·,_.. night pitched the Kansas City
A native of Chicago Heights, m.,
:~. Royals to tlle World Series Saberhagen made two starts In the
· - championship.
World Series. With tlle Cardinals
Saberhagen hurled a five-hitter, leadlngtwogamestonone, "Sabes"
giving tlle Royals an 11-0 victory became the second-youngest
~- over the St. Louis Cardinals. It
j:itcher since 1966 to start a World
:: marked Saherhagen's second cru- Series game.
;:: cial victory of the Series and made
He reacted cooly to the World
.- him the Series MVP.
Series pressure. In fact, his biggest
. --; "What more could a person ask?" concern U(Xln entering Busch Sta·
- · Saberhagen said rhetorically. "A dlum for the first tlme was to locate
• _; baby and now the World Series win. the St. Louis arch.

He experienred much 1ess trouble
In finding his stuff than he did with
thearch.HepitchedtheRoyalsback
Into the Series with a &amp;.1 victory.
He did it despite tlle Impending
eventlnhlslamily.Threedayslater,
wife Janeane gave blith to Drew
Wllltarn.
"I'm klnda standing on Cloud 9,"
he said. "I'm mentally exhausted."
His second game was a masterpiece. He allowed no walks and
struck oo t two, but all night long he
had the Cardinals sending the ball
harmlessly Into the air.
Meanwhile, his teammates
backed him with an early lead. He
suJVIved a flfth·lnnlngdelaycaused
when Cardinal frustration led to the
ejection ct St. L6uis manager
Whitey Herzog and Cardinal rlght ·
bander Joaquin Andujar.

·· .· ~-------------=---__:_

The victory came against a team
judged In pre-Series analysis to be
far stronger.
In the end, though, the Cardinals
exited witllllttle offense and even
less class. Their .188 average was
.Their
the lowest
In a seven-game
conduct
came closeSeries.
to a
~rd 1 t
r"'-u ow, 00•
Both St. Louis manager Whitey
Herzog and right-hander Joaquin
Andujar were ejected In tlle fifth

READINGS
BY

TAMMY
Tells your past, pres1r1t,
Jives iclvico on love•Harrs, iiusines~
and marriaco. If you are unhappy
don't know which way to tum, co ..
in for advico. Onevisrt will convince
you there is a better way.
St. Rt. 7. 196 Upper River Road
Gallipolit. OH. - 446-1665

Inning. Both seemi!d c(\lmer after
the game.
"Kansas City has bad baseball for
soorie ll years and It Is tlleir first
championship and l congratulate
tllem," said a conciliatory Herzog.
John Tudor, 21-8 during the
regular season and 2-0 In two
previous SerieS starts, lasted only 2
1-3 Innings. His demise broke few
hearts among those following the
Series. His personality had become
harder to handle than his pitches.
He, too, spoke calmly after the
game.
"They beat us, outpitehed us, they
did everythlng tlley had to," said
Tudor. "They deserve to be World
Champions."
By now, baseball fans know all
about the Royals comebacks, their
fight from a 3-1 playctf deficit, their
battle In a slmllar position against
tlle Cardinals.
Far more difficult tD define Is the
delightful team personality tllat
emerged In the course of this
struggle.
How do you root against this
bunch:
-Saberhagen, only thrre years
out of high school, became a fatller
an~ a World Series MVPinthesame .

The Daily Sentinel

-Buddy Blancalana, a .188hitter
anrl thesubjectd jokl!sbya network'
talk show host, rutplayed Ozzle
Smith at shortstop.
-Jim Sundberg, burled with
losing teams over the first llseasons
ol his career, responded to his first
taste of trlumph with t lmely hits and
hair-raising baserunntng.
-Steve Balboni, a big, balding
first baseman, patiently escaped
slump and delivered key hits as the
Series progressed.
.
-Hal McRae, a regular-season
designated hitter Idled by the Serle~
format, accepted a bench role and
inSisted the Royals would win
without him.

·-·

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION
1

.

WHkly Special
hr. labor 011 all1111chanical
work.
113 hr. labor 011 body work.

110

PH. 949-2044

Paid for by candidate, Bobby Arnold

_ _ ___L__ _ _ _ __j__ _ _____;c___ _ _ _ ___,_

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

3.

This amendment allows tax dollars to be used to repay this debt .

4.

The amendment allows laws to be passed to permit the State to
share in any royalt ies. profi.s, or other financial gain resulting
from this research and development .

To adopt Section 15 of Article VIII of the Constitution of the State of Ohio.
TO ENCOURAGE GREATER USE OF OHIO
COAL AND TO ALLOW THE STATE TO ISSUE
BONDS TO FINANCE COAL RESEARCH, THIS
PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:

Ohioans should VOfE YES ON ISSU E ONE to encourage the
grc~rcr usc of Ohio coal. Ohio's most abundant natural resou rce.

1.

VOTE YES ON ISSUE I to help:

PERMIT THE ENACTMENT OF
LEGISLATION TO PROVIDE FOR
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT EF·
TO
DISCOVER · MORE
FORTS
ECONOMICAL, EFFICIENT, AND ENVIRONMENTALLY ACCEPTABLE USES
OF COAL; .

2.

AUTHORIZE THE STATE TO BORROW
MONEY AND TO ISSUE BONDS AND
OTHER OBLIGATIONS FOR THE PUR·
POSE OF ENABLING OHIO IN·
DIVIDUALS, BUSINESSES IN OHIO, AND
OHIO EDUCATIONAL AND SCIENTIFIC
INSTITUTIONS TO ENGAGE IN SUCH
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT; AND
TO PERMJT THE STATE TO SHARE IN
ANY ROYALTIES OR PROFITS THAT
MAY RESULT FROM THE STATE'S
FINANCIAL PARTICIPATION IN SUCH
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT;

3.

LIMIT THE TOTAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT
OF BON_DS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED BY THE STATE ACCORDING TO
LAWS PASSED UNDER THIS SECTION
TO ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS
OUTSTANDING AT ANY TIME; AND PER·
MIT THE FULL FAITH AND CREDIT OF
THE STATE TO BE PLEDGED FOR THE
REPAYMENT OF SUCH BONDS OR
OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED OR
GUARANTEES MADE ACCORDING . TO
LAWS PASSED UNDER THIS SECTION.

-

(Proposed by Resolulion of the General A-ssembly of Ohio)

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

• Reduce the Cost of Electricity to Residential and
Bustness Consumers. Coal rs the basic fuel which
generates the electricity every Ohioan uses in rheir home
or business. Issue I can lead to the discovery of cheaper,
more efficient woys to burn Ohio coal, and help reduce
the cost of electricity.
• Create Jobs For Ohioans. Issue I can help improve the
job market for all Ohioans. Issue i means employers can
keep thei r energy costs down. making Ohio firms more
competilive againsr busi nes&gt;es from other states or na·
tions. In southeastern Ohio. Issue I can spark literally
thou sand• of new mining jobs for this economically
troubled region .
• Improve Our Environment . making our air cleaner and
healthier. Research sponsored by Issue i cA n help
discover new technology 10 remove the pollutants from
high"sulphur Ohio coal .
• Boost Ohio's Hi h Tech lndusrr . By sponsoring
sop rsucate researc an deve opment projects. Issue 1
will encourage growth in Ohio's high .tech industry. This
wrll help open the door to the next generation of Ohio's
economic. developiJlent .
• Tri er Half a Billion Dollars in Federal Matchin
unds. ongress recent y aut onze more t an a a
Billion dollars in Federal grants for coal research and
development projects. If Issue I passes, Ohio can apply
for some ?f these. Federal fund s and multiry the impact
of Issue Is SJOO mrllton bond rssue lor 0 io.

A ms,jorlty yes vole is necessary for passage.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
--+---~ AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

...

NO

Safety director two-time recipient
POMEROY - The "Safety
Director of the Year" of the
Association ol General Contractors
In West VIrginia has beel1 awarded .
to Michael Zirkle, Union Boiler Co.,
formerly of Meigs County, for the
second time.
Zirkle, an employee of the Union
Boller Co., was responsible for over
2% mUllon manhours of salety in
1984, covering virtually all areas of
construction. WhUe many phases of
work performed by Union Boiler

JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing to amend Article VIII of the Constitution of tlle State
of Ohio by adding tlierero Section 15 to permit the/ state
to give financial assistance for research a~d development
of coal technology to individuals, associations, or corpora·
tions doing business in this state and educational and scientific institutions located in this state.
8~ it resolved by the General Assembly of tlte State of Ohio.
thrcc·ftfths oi the members of each house concurring therein
that there shall be submitted to the electors of the state in the
manner prescribed by law at the general election to be held on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1985 a
pro~sa l to amend Article VIII of the Constitution of Ohio by
addrng rmmedrately following Section 14 a new section as
fo llows:

ARTICLE VIII
Section 15. LAWS MAY BE PASSED AUTilORIZING
THE STATE 10 BORROW MONEY AND lO ISSUE BONDS
AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS FOR THE PURPOSE OF
MAKING GRANTS AND MAKING OR GUARANTEEING
LOANS FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF COAL
TECHNOLOGY THAT WILL ENCOURAGE THE USE OF
OHIO COAL. 10 AN_Y INDIVIDUAL , ASSOCIATION, OR
CORPORATION DOING BUSINESS IN THIS STATE OR TO
ANY EDUCATIONAL OR SCIENTIFIC 'tNSTtTUTlON
LOCATED IN THIS STATE, NOfWITHSTANDlNG THERE·
QUIREMENTS, LIMITATIONS, OR PROHIBITIONS OF
ANY OTHER SECTION OF ARTICLE VIII OR OF SECTIONS 6 AND II OF ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION THE AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE
MONEY BORROWED AND BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED BY THE STATE PURSUANT 10 LAWS
PASSED UNDER THIS SECTION SHALL NOT EXCEED
ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOLL.}RS OUTSTANDING AT
ANY TIME. THE FULL FAITH AND CREDIT OF THE
STATE MAY BE PLEDGED FOR THE PAYMENT OF
BONDS OR OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED OR
GUARANTEES MADE PURSUANT 10· LAWS PASSED
UNDER THIS SECTION.

Representative Jack Cera
Representative Thomas W. Johnson
Senator Robert W. Ney
ARGUMENT AGAIN~ THE PROPOSFJl AMENDMENT

REEDSVILLE ~ A household
products party will be held Monday
at 7p.m. at the Reedsville fire house.
The fund raising project is being
sponsored by the Olive Township

Wolfe Pen notes
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of
Hatfield, Ind. were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank and
Sarah Beth of Te,...as Road spent
Wednesday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald and
Mr.Gladys
and Mrs.
Charles Smith and
Tuckerman.
Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
Langsville spent St'Veral days with
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy
and Daniel ol Daniels, W.Va .

Attending funeral
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brannan of
Mlddlepon have returned from
Eaton Rapids. Mich. where t~ey
attended a funeral of their nephew,
Wllllam Nicholas, who was killed in
an lndustrlal accident In California.

The one member of the General Assembly who voted against
Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution 28 did not choose
to prepare or submit argwnents against the proposed amendment .

I. Sherrod BroNn, Secretary of Stale. do hereby certify lhat the foregoi ng i!i
1;11rue copy of Amended Subslitute Senate Joinl Resolution No. 28, filed in the
office of the Sec~tary of State, propo5ing lo amend the Constilution or Ohio
together with the ballot language and explanation ce.rtified 10 me t1j the. Oh i~
Ball01 .Board and arguments for the amend men! as submincd by the appropr'at

• e

SHBRROD BRC1NN,
Secretary of S1a1a

•

\

......_...

),'l

•

A report on the new histortcal
marker which has been erected on
the Belleville-Reedsville Locks and
Dam Park was given by Warren
Pickens at Saturday evening's
meeting of the Reedsville Commun ity Builders Club held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hannum. Pickens
was elected vice president . Refresh ments were served during a social
hour. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Osborne, Ml'. and Mrs.
Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens, and Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson.

~31

Walk -in Garden
New officers were Installed at the
recent meeting of the Walk·ln
Garden Club held at the home of

RELIABLE &amp; CAPABLE

GREG
EBLIN
CANDIDATE FOR
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
•

Paid For by the Candidate

Greg Eblin, laurel Cliff Rd., Pomero , Oh.

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club meets Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.,
POMEROY -Senior girls inter· home or Pearle Ca naday, Hysell
ested In trying out for the Meigs Run Road.
County Junior Miss are invited to a
meeting to be held at 7p.m. Monday,
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport·
social room of Trinity Church.
Pomeroy Area Branch American
Association of University Women
MIDDLEPORT- Int ernational meets Tuesday, Middleport Fire
Order of Job's Daughters meet 7 Department social room.
p.m. Monday, Middleport Masonic
Temple. Cou ncil meeting 7 p.m.,
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Investiga ting committee meets 7 Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
p.m.
meets 7:30p.m. Tuesday, home ol
Mrs. Evelyn Knight,costumeparty.
..
POMEROY -OHKANCoinCiub·
meets Monday. Riverboat Room of
WEDNESDAY
Dia mond Savings and Loan Co.
POMEROY - Wildwood Garden
Social hour, tra&lt;lingsession beforeB Club m('('tS Wednesday 7:30p. m.,
p.m. meeting; coin auction follows. home of Mar·cia Arnold .

Plump shrimp. Filled with
crabmeat stufftng and a
delicate blend of herbs and
sprees .
Served with:
• Ri ce or potaroes or corn
on the cob
• Shoney's All· You-CareTo-Eat Soup, Salad and
Fruit Bar.
• Grecian bread
• Tangy cocktail sauce and
fresh lemon wedge.

.

r-;====================:;;1
JOHN A. WADE, M.Do Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

ALL FOR ONLY

$5.49
IT'S
•'

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 67 5-1244

lfii=t
'

The front runner in communications. And proud of it.

JACKSON PIKE · RT Je WEST
Phone 446-4524

ELECT

Volunteer Fire Department Ladies
Auxlllar)'.

I

___..

'

. To a wor-ld striving to communicate, we provide
qualitY, communications products qnd services. In
an era of technological advances, we are a leader
in innovation. Yet our pride is being part of the
communities we serve-the cities and towns which
look to GTE for answers to communications needs.
We're proud of those communities and we're proud
to be part of them. ·

UN ITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF. I have hereunto subscribed my name and atfixe~ my offiCial "Seat at Columbus rhis 22nd day of AuguSI, t98l.

m the construction industry , Is a
member of the American Society ri
Safety Engineers, the West Virginia
Safety Council and is chairman of
the Construction Association of
West Virginia Safety and Crime
Prevent ion Committee.
Zirkle, the first individual to be
selected toreceivethisawardtwlce,
r·ecelved a plaqueandanallexpense
trip to The Greenbrier at White
Su'l'hur Springs to accept his
award.

The annual fa:ll festival of the
Rutland PTO has been'scheduled for
Nov. 15 With the kitchen to open for
dinner at 6 p.m. and serving to
continue to 7 p.m. Games wlli be
held from 7 to 8:30p.m. The second
grade presented a program on
Christopher Columbus. Refreshments were served and an open
house was held.
Officers of · the PTO are Lady
Davis, president; Danny Tillis, vice
president; Kay Frederick, treasurer; Kathy Rice, secretary; and
Margaret Johnson and Judy Eblin,
ways and means chairman.

••

LAWS PASSED PURSUANT 10 THIS SECTION ALSO
MAY PROVIDE FOR THE STATE TO SHARE IN ANY
ROYALTIES, PROFITS, OR OfHER FINANCIAL GAIN
RESULTING FROM THE RESEARCH
AND
DEVELOPMENT.

commmee.

were classified as extJ'!'mely high
hazard, the National Association of
Gen~r 0 ) Contractors commended
the firm for operat ing with . a loss
work day case incident rate of over
Q5 percent below their division
average.
As Corporate Safety Coordinator
and Legal Investigator. Zirkle's
duties took him natiom•ode in an
effort to make the construction
Industry safer and more healthful.
Zirkle ha s over 10 years ex perience

Community calendar/ area happenings

Coal_is Ohio's most abundant natural resource. lt;s up to us to develop
efficrent. ec~nomically·stimulating and envi_ronmentally acceptable
ways to use u.
VOfE YES ON ISSUE i

YES

(Amended SubSiitute Senale Joint Resolution No. 28)

the Union Boller Co., also accepted an award on behalf.
of tlle mechanical and industrial contracting linn.
Zirkle, fonnerly of Meigs County, Is the first Individual
to he selected to winner the safety director of the year
award twice.

'IWO TIME RECIPIENT - Two tbne "Safety
Director of the Year" winner, Michael Zirkle, rlght, Is
presented a· plaque by the A!O!Oelation of General
COnlracctors Vice President Dana Jluestts at White
Sulphur Springs, Zhide, corporate safety director lor

MONDAY
•
••
RACINE - Mayor and Council
• will meet wltll town merchants to
.;
• discussed formation of a merchants
association, 7 p.m. M6lnday at the
Twin City Shrine Club building.

ISSUE I
TEXT OF TRE PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

This amendment ~ld aii(M' passage oflaws permitting the State
to borrow money for research and development of coal
technology that would encourage the use of Ohio coal . The State
could give or loan this money to individuals, groups, and corporations doing business in Ohio. and to educational or scientific institutions located in Ohio.
It would amend the Constitutional limitation on the State debt
to allow the State to borrow money for coal research and develop·
ment. It limits this increase in State debt to $100 million fur principal. nor including interest.

Rutland PTO

ATTENTION:

Please cast your ballot for me on Nov. 5 for the
Meigs local School District Board of Education.
I am a fourth generation Meigs Countian who
pledges to serve on the board with strong student support and support of the wishes of the majority of our
school patrons over small special interest groups.
I am familiar with the problems and pledge to
work fairly in helping make decisions for the well being of our school district.
·
Thank you,
Bobby Arnold

Mrs. Belva Willard.
Installed by N.aoml Reed, past
president, were Belva WUiard,
president; Leota Smith. vice presj·
dent; Ola St. Clair, secretary·
treasurer. Preparation of garden
club program books was discussed
with Naomi Reed and Mrs. Willard
to handle the pru)ect. for roll call
members named flowers or plants
suitable for dried arrangements.
Devotions were by Ola St. Clair with
an opening thought by Mrs. Wtllard.
Discussed were metllods used for
storing bulbs duting the winter
months. A variet y of leaves was
displayed at the meeting for
identification purposes. Next meeting wUI be Nov. 12 at the home of
Mrs. Reed. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Willard.

CBC

flw~ee~k~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;P;ira~Gr~o~re~R~d~,;;;;~Rac~ino~,~O~h~io;

(as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

2.

,

MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
VOTERS

Group 2

A harvest dinner to be ·held at the
Reports on tlle successful school
carnival were given and ways to use church on Nov. 17 under sponsorship
the profits for general school
of the deacons was announced when
Improvements were discussed at
Group 2 met recently at thechurch.
Mrs. Jack Sorden and Mrs.
the recent meeting of the Riverview
PTO held at the school.
W11llam Morris repor1ed on the fall
Presbyterial at Gallipolis. Mrs.
Sue Reed presided at the meeting.
From the proceeds each classroom David Cumings, Mrs. Harley
teacher will be given an allotment of Brown, and Mrs. paul Haptonstall
money for needed classroom mate- · were hostesses for the meeting
rials. Gary Reed's fifth grade won conducted by Mrs. Cumings. Mrs.
the banner and monetary award for WOllam Morris had the opening
having the highest percentage of prayer, and Mrs . Brown gave
devotions. The least coin was
parents In attendance.
New parents, as wellasanewstaff cOnducted by Mrs. Haptonstall with
member, Becky Edwards. were Mrs. Lewis Sauer giving the book
Introduced by Grace Weber, head study on Jonah and Joel. the two
teacher.It was notE'!! that Oct. 23isa prophets, using material from the
teacher In-serVice day, and that on Concern magazine. For roll call
Nov. 8, parent teacher conference members res(Xlndl'&lt;l wlih a concern. Homemade ice cream and r - - - - - - - - - - day will be held.
The annual book fair will highlight coffee were served.
the November PTO meeting .

We wiil spray paint your·
car for a low price of $70.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I

I.

Riverview PTO

r;:=========:;
MR. AUTO REPAIR
"The Crazy Speelal"

Page-5

Groups gdiher for meetings

a

..-•.
BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS, ARGUMENTS
AND RESOLUTIONS FOR AN AMENDMENT TO THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITIED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 5, 1985.

By The Bend

Monday, October 28, 1985

Introducing Italian Nights at Shone y's.
MondaY. and TuesdaY. from 4:00 fl .m. to 10:00 1~
· Your choice of five pasta feasts:
• New Fmucc ine with White Clam Sau&lt;t'
• New Fenuccine Alfredo
• New Spaghett i with Marinara Sauce
• Spaghetti with -Our Own Original Ret 'Ill' Sau&lt;e
and Mushroom Topping
• New Italian Sampler · Fcttucn nc w11 h ,, ge nerous
sampling of Clam , Alfredo and Mannara Sauce
Served with
• Garlic Bread
• Shoner."s better-than-ever all-xnu care-to-cat Soup Salad and Fru1t
Bar. -Featuring Italian Tolmatn
Sou)' and lors of other fresh new
suq~

$3.99
S)JONEY~
America's •
Diruier Table .

�-·
-:Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

Monday, October 28, 1985

_:~~~~~~------------~~~~~~------------------~--~--

:Pomeroy
UMW hears special speaker
..
·;, 'O!arlotte Lewis of the United
,.;. r-tethodlst Center of Tampa, F la.
""' was guest speaker at the Thesday
nlgltt meeting of the Pomeroy
~ United Methodist Womenheld atthe
•. dlurch.
• Ms Lewis, director of day care at
tre CentE;r. opened her program by
•;· 9UOtlngscr1pture from St. J ohn 2lln
1. which Jesus tells his people to "feed
~ li!s sheep." She said that mothers
_ can leave their children at the day
• care center WJthout paying for 45
• days while they go out and find a job
-:: 'and attempt to become self
~ supporting. After 45 days the
•• rrother, usually working, pays a
•.:: small arrount set according to her
' wages, to keep he r chldren at the
center,
Another service of the United
Metoodlst Center Is called Wolfe
Center, where poor faffillies who are
· tn need of food pay $2 per week and 1n
·return receive a basket of food a nd
clothing. If the famlly Is unable to
Jl"Y the r equired $2 • they may
• contribute an oour or so oftheirttme
•. Jn eKchange.
• - She also talked about the Cascadlan Program which works with the
• p)lysically a nd menta lly handt·

'.

capped children, and the Reslden·
tlal Center which provides help tor
the homeless and emotional dls·
turbed teenagers. as well as a Cuban
Refu gee and Hiatian Center
The speaker explained that the
enrtre Center receives all funding
!t om church groups, with the
exception of the Day Care Center
which Is 75 percent funded through
the Title :!1 program. The board o!
directors Is made up of representa·
lives from Methodist churches
The meeting opened with a duet
by Dorothy Dwnle and Polly
Eichinger who sang about the
United Methodist Women to the tune
of a familiar hylllil, Mrs Downie
had scripture and used tbe tbeme
"Hands" In her devotions.
World Community Day of Church
Women United of Meigs County was
announced or Nov. 1 at the
Middleport First Baptist Church
Polly Elchlngergavea report for the
rumin ating committee New o!flc
ers ate Martha Hoover, president,
Evely n Lucke, vtce president:
Thelma Dill, socretal)' . Myrtis
Parker. treasurer. G€rtrude Mit ·
dleU, secretary of program resour
ces. Dorothy Dowrue, Christian

The Daily. Sentinel

~.

personhood; Kathy Corbitt, supportive community; VIrginia Hoyt,
Christian social Involvement. Ada
Warner, Crlstlan Global concerns;
Maxine Goegleln, c hairman.
Evelyn Clark and Marie Chapman,
committee on nominations; Martha
Hoover, chairman of music; Faye
Wildermuth, Bernice Carpetner.
Ruth Barnltz, Allee Struble. Pauline
Roush, Ruth Moore and Grace
Whaley. membership committee.
It was noted that Ruth Moore will
present the program 1n November
and Marge Reuter and Betty
Baronlck wtll serve as hostesses.
Mrs Hoover reported on tbe recent
meeting held at the Immanuel
Church in Logan. The Day d
Enrichment at Coolville was an·
nounced for Oct. 17 The annual
conference will he held Nov 9 In
Columbus.
Mrs Faye Wildermuth was
congratuated by the group on the
occasion of ' ber 50th wedding
annlveral)', Oct 9 The 45th
anniversary r:1 the WSCS was noted.
Mrs John Chase was elected
president oft hat organlza tlon which
later grew Into tbe United Methodist
Women

PHONE 992-2156

5.:L_:Jj::~~~~~::j;:::::l:::a::8:88::S:::j:f:::i:e:::•:fi::::A:Il:::d:d::8::==---''r_~·-~·~_·.~_~:-~!~_s._.:_~·._%_~"'_,:_:!_·~d_~ _: _'_J
If' •

r-

Public Notice

Public Notice

··~----------

OF ELECTION ON
',1i.OTICE
r~ LEVY IN EXCESS OF

~·· .

THE TEN MILL
,', :
LIMITATION
,, f!OTICE to hereby gwon

th•t

m pursuance of 1 Re-

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTr, OHIO
Co10 No 85 -CV-6
THE PEOPLES BANK OF
POINT PLEASANT,
Plaintiff.

•&gt;!'!Ju.tion of the Boord of VI
,l'IIUIIIOI of the Town1h1p of
STONE. JR
, ,!;lJivo, Ohio, l"'lled on tho THURSTON
tt 11,
doy of Augutt, 1985.
Defendants
.)ft1'Jare will be submitted to 1
Pursuant
OR OER OF
,o.lfqlt of tho people ~~IBid 01· SALE JUUodtobyontho
Court of
iv•- Township at a General Common pteaa in the
above
ltCt10n to be held. '" the I!Yiod case being No 85-CV·
" T.ownolup of Olivo. Ohto, of 6. ooo _., JUdg men! ren·
~t., regul8r places of vot1ng
reln, on Tuoldoy, the dered theretn. i w1ilexpo18 for
llle It public IUCtiOn on the
h cloy of November. front
nape of tho Court Houoe
• ~·6. tho que1110n of tovy· m Mev•
Pomeroy,
i'W• en eace11 of the ten m1U Ohio at 10County,
30
a
m
on
Friday,
~ltmitotlon, for tho benefit of
Olive Town1h1p for the pur· tho 22nd doy of N011omber,
1986. the followmg IIndo .,d
..po• of provichng and m111nt ~ tenements.
to~wtt
.... g ftre apparatus. apph·
Situated 1n the Village of
,_,ce.. bu1ldmgs, or srtes Middleport,
County of
1...,refor, Of sources of water Me1g1 and State of Oh1o
~pply 1nd matenala there·
Bemg Lot No F1ve (5) 1n
•Jt&gt;r, or the tllablilhmoniS1d Hoadley
and Ru11ell Add•·
maintenance of linea of fire
bon to the aforeaaid Village
alarm talegroph, or the I"'Y·
REFERENCE DEED · Vo"' \'AIC"t of permanent. pert
lume
287,' Page 41 , Me1g1
,.,ti!JII. or volunteer f~remen or County
Deed Recorda
~ rp flght1ng comp~m111 to

.am

i

: pperate the same or .to
..pt.frchlll ambulance equtp·
l ~t or to provide ambu....!Jtnt:• or ,.,..rgency medical
,-.\llfVicll operating by a t~re

Property

appra1Hd

lhat 1n pursuance of 1 Re •
solutton of the Board of
Trunaea of the Townah•P of
Ohve. Oh1o, pa11ed on the

will open 11 6 30 o'clock A

fihh day of Augult, 1986,

M and rema1n open until

there wtll be submitted to 1

o'clocl&lt; PM of urd

votoolthepeoploofnJdOI ·

By order of the Board of
Elections. of Me1g1
County, Oh1o
s•1 Evelyn Cllrk . Chairman

... .

r"
J~

Ootod October 1. 1986
· Jono M Frymyor. Director
lfO) 7. 14. 21. 28, 4tc

rve Townsh1p at a General
Election to be held 111 the
Townsh1p of Olive. Ohio at
the regular place of voting
therein, on Tueaday. the

flhh day of "l'ilovombor,
1985. tho queltton of levy
1ng. In exca11 of the ten m11i
llmitot•on. for the benefit of
Ohvo Townohlp lor tho pcJJ·

---------1ances.
a1n1ng fire apparatus. applt·
..'-NOTICE
bu1ldmgs, or 11111
OF ELECTION ON
~th1t in purauance of a Re

'1oknlon of the Boord of
:i'I"IIOOI of the Town1h1p of

, .. t:olumbill, Meigs County,

Ohto, l"'lled on the 6th day
pf. Auguot. 19B6. thoro w•ll
!lo,tubmlned to 1 vote oltho
people of 111d Columb11

"TiiWnthip oto General Elec
lion to be held'" the Town·
iiup of Columb11, Ohio. at

tM

regular place• of vot1ng

therein. on Tu01doy. tho
lilfh doy of November,
li&amp;&amp;, tho qutltlon of levy·
.apg. '" exceas of the ten m1ll
l!i!&gt;ltotlon, for tho benefit of
~lumbil Townthip for tho
4

wrpoae of providing and
11'flntalning fire IPPirltua,
eppilances, bU1Id1nga, or
therefor, or 10urce1 of
wpt,r supply tnd mat1r1111

ttt••

l!t/Jrefor. or tho eotablioh·
cheltt end melntMtnce of

un•• of fire IIIJm telegrtph,

JIL tho l"'vment of perma-

JN~n~time, or voluntMr
~uton or f1ro flglltlng com~"nlaa to operate the 11m1

•nt.

to purchase ambulance
iquipment or to provideam)IWance or emergency med1
~ a.rvicea operating by •

.Of'l

therefor . or sources of watar
supply and matenals there
for. or the e11ablishment .-.d
maintenance of linea of fire
alarm telegraph. or the payment of permanent. parttime , or voluntMr f1r1men or
fire f1ght1ng compantea to
operate the aame or 10
purchase ambulance equipment or to provide ambulance or emergency medteal
18rvicea operated by 1 fire
department or ftre fightmg
company
Sa1d tax bemg 1 renewal
of an e•1st1ng tax of Yt m1llto
run for f1ve yearatt 1 rtte not
exceedtng Vt mila for each
one dollar of valuat1on
wh1ch amounts to tO 05
!five cenll) for each one
hundred dollars ofvalu1t1on.
for five years
The Polll ior satd ElectiOn
w1ll open at 6 30 o 'clock A
M and remetn open until
7 30 o 'clock P M of 11t1d

dey

By order of the Board of
Electiont, oi Meigs

County. Oh10
Evelyn Clark . Cha1rman

Oatod October 1. 1986

Jane M Frymyer, D1rector

(101 7 . 14 21 28 . 4tc

·s•kl tax

•t•

M. 1nd remeln open until

7:30 o'clock P.M. of oaid

4'Y
I
• By order of tho Boord of
,. :
, .,

Election•. of Me1g1
County, Ohio

~ - Evelyn Clerk,
'(llod October 1.

Chalr1111n
1986
Jono M Frymyor, Olroctor
110)7, 14, 21 . 28, 4tc

Public Notice

--------NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 horoby given
that in punuance of a Rt·
oolution of tho Vpiago Council of the Village of Racmo.
Ohio. l"'llod on the 5th day
of Augull, 1986, thoro will
be oubmlttod to a voto of tho
IHIOPI&lt;I of IBid Racine Village
at 1 General Election to be

held In tho V1llago of Racine,
Ohio. atthtJ •f9Uiarplocooof

voting therei~. _on Tueadey,
tho fifth doY Of Novomltor,

1986, the quollion ofltvy·
In g. '" exoo11 of the ton mill

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

WITH A

WATER WELL DRILLING
We auarantte water or
no charge. 30 years ex·
pertence. Call 614-742·
2146. Also dozer work at
pd

Public Notice

-

on tho w.t by IIndo of Buni,
....-lng 63 ocreo, more or

TholtllpubllcationiMN

commence on that date

In cue of your folluro to
l*mittod bythoOh.,Aulot
of CMI Proood... with ...
time lilted, judgment by

11

default will be rendered
ogoinlt you for the roliof
tlantlnd&lt;td "' tho Comploltt
l..orry E. Sponotr

Clortc of Courts,
M0191 County. Ohio
BY Morlono Homoon.
Deputy

(91 30 1101 7, 14, 21. 28 (11 I
4. 6tc

which amountt to $0.30
(thirty cents) for each one
hundred dollars of valu1t1on
for five years

nomeo and odd,.... of of their unknown heirs, devi·

Tho Polio for Aid Election
w•ll open ot 6·30 o'clocl&lt; A

-

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

of an oxilltng tax of 3 0 milia
to run for five yeere at 1 rate

not ••ceedlng 3.0 milia for
uch one dollu of valuetton,

M end rema1n open until

7 30 o'clock P M of 111d
doy
By order of the Board of

Eloctlono, of Moigo
County, Oh1o
Evelyn Clark, Cha~rman
Dated October 1. 1986
Jane M Frymyer, Director
t10!7. 14, 21 , 28 . 4tc
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON Pl£AS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FREOERICK J STOBART,
Plolntiff,
VI-

FRANKUN McKAY ond DO·
ROTHY McKAY. h11 wife, et
ol
Defendant•

CASE NO 85-CV •147
- NOTICE BY
· PUBLICATIONTo F1011klin McKoy and
Dorothy McKoy, hil wife,
whole lilt known Mid,_ wao
M11n11, Florida, 33100, Ml·
drn1 now unknown, Ml'l
Oniille J IMcK.oyt BelliS end
ONille J Bell11, hor hutbond,
whole lut known oddr011 wao

46 Eut 9th Stroot, Now York
City, N Y, 10003, Mldr011
now ooknown, Hot,_ CiltJr101 McKoy whole 1.. lcnown
llddr- Portlond, Conn.
06480. oddro11 now unknown. John Clore McKoy and
Muriel Aohford McKoy, hitt
wife, whooo loll known od·
drea- Watl1ortfleld, CCIIn.
08109, addre11 now un -

known. l.alio McKoy whole
lut known eddreu was fair·

Wall Vilgnio. 21154.
W~lcnown,

Mable

44302. address now un-Ellen
. .P.c
- s S.VJW 111d
Slyft. hulband ond
wife. whooe lall known Ml·

d- Route 2. R-o.
Ohio 46771. odd,_ now
unlutown. Mre. Flovd W
Herklno Belllnd Floyd W. Bell,
her huab•nd, whose lilt
known e d - -

1988
Edgoniont Rood, Columbut.
Ohio 43212, odd- now
unknown. Mldollno 8oii1Hor
kinlj lao! known od·
dlWII wu 1988 Edgomont
Rood , Columbuo, Ohio
43212. eddre11 now un·
known; Mrs Glonit H. iHir•
kino) Hthr lnd Glenn H
H-. htr hulbend. whole
lalllatown llddr111 wu 4490
l.Mim Orive, Turby Foot

living, and if 6&amp;1: un cl 1he

· oxocutoro. Mlminillnl·
ton .,d -...gns are unknown.

forfweyearaata ratenotexceechng 1 0 mills for each
one dollar of vaiUitiOn,
whiCh amounts to 10 10

lton centol ior ooch one

ond of Mart C McKey. Kitty hundred dollars of valuation,
McKey. C - o Alexondor. for ftve years.
Tho Polls lor oald Elect1on
Mary K McKoy, Agn• Haymon, Una J Bu~lngomo, J will open ot 8.30 o'clock A.
M and remain open until
Angolino Burl~ng~mo. A J
IAngollno) Bul1inglmo, Ango· 7 30 o'clock P.M. of oald
llno Bulfingalmo, Goorvo Bur· day
By order of tho Boord of
llngame. John C McKey. llna
Elections. of Me1g1
Pod.,, U1111 J. Patlen, Vktorla
County. Ohio
E. Mcfadden. E PMI.,, Elson
Evelyn Ciorlc, Choirlllln
Paden, Mortlto Pad... Eph
roim J Savro. Minerva Soyro. ~otod October 1, 1986
Thomu T Hopklnt, Harriott E ,Jane M Frymyer. D1rector
Hopltlnt, E~ Hopllino, (1017. t4. 21 , 28. 4tc
C- Hopltlna. Adelia Hop·
kMII Amttndio Hopklno, Wi·
Public Notice
liam Hopltlno, David Hopldno.
Levi Hopklns, A1frod Hopllino,
Roy Hopkinl, floyd Hopldno.
OF ELECTION ON
Jornot H Porr. Slnlh Po1r, NOTICE
IN EXCESS OF
Sponoor Haymon, Mary C TAX LEVY
THE TEN MILL
Hoymon, Vicca Mcfad-. J
LIMITATION
0 Mcfod-. Olive Hoym.,,
NOTICE It hereby given
Ezra C Hoymon, E
in pursuance of 1 Re
Soyro, Jemoo Aohwortlt, Nol- th1t
solution of the Board of
"'" Podlll, Jomoo 8 Ash
Trulloot of the Townohip of
worth, Warrick Haym.,, Mar·
Chottor, Ohio, peued on
rick Havmon. Rebocca Sh- tho 13th day of Auguat.
Malr&gt;tla Holt. I - Haymon, 1986 there W111 be IUbmit·
ISMC p_,, Ina PerT, Ira P1rr, ted to o vote of the people of
Lolli P11r, Ctlhomo fnlnk. said Chester Township at a
Hemiltt&gt;n Porr, Anthony P..,, General Election to bo held
Wm H Porr. and J - " Parr, In tho Townohlp of Cheater,
H living. llddrt1- lllltnown. Ohio. at the regular places of
and Wdocollld tho nomoo end voting therein, on Tuesday,
addr- of of their tho fifth doy of November,
unltnown heirs.-· OICOC· 198~. tho quolllon of levyutors. odmlnillrlll&gt;ro ond •• mg. In IXCIII of the ten mill
ligna. 11 dolontlonll, willlko llmltat•on, for tho benefit of
notic&lt;l that '"' tho 3rd cloy of Chatter Townohlp lor th
J..,., 1986, Frecerick J purpose of malnt•imng and
S!Dbert. oa plointiff. filed a operating cemeteries
Corr4&gt;Joint agolnll you 11 tho
Sold fox being. o renewal
Moigo County Common Plooo of an oxllllng fix of 0 40
Court, Potr•oy. OhO&gt;, c to run lor llvo Y•rt It 1
No. 811-CV-147, do"*"'lng mil
rate not exceeding 0 40
!hot ~. Frodonck J
milia for ooch ono dollar of
Stobort. be ed)udlcatod tho valuat•on, which amount1 to
owner In 1M simple, including
oil and gil and .. other four centa for •ch one
mlnnll oxoctpt coat In tho hundred dollars of valuation,
heroin'- dtocrlbod ....... for flvo yoaro
oto: that 'IOU. 01 tlofondonto.
Tho Polio lor told Election
be required to Itt up any will opon ot 1:30 o'clocl&lt; A
I n - or ootate you moy M and remain open until
cillm In tho
tJoo. 7.30 o'clock P.M. of oald
cribod root Illata 01 b e - day
berrod frOm - g oame,
By order of the Boord of
!hot title "' tho ......,_
Eloctlona, of Molgo
described real 11tete be
County. Ohio.
quletMI in plalntiH. Frodorli:ltJ.
Evelyn Clark, Cholrmon
S-rt; ond for aJch other Dated October 1, 1986
_ , 11 moy be _.In low
Jane M Frymyor, Diroctor
or equity. Including
110) 7 , 14. 21, 2B ."4tc

-oft•

pt-··

C&lt;llll.to-wlt:
Tho following ,., -~~~~ In Lotort Townthlp,

Locotod In 180 ocrol.ot No

1 1931n tho N - . . com•.
end bou.- on the north by
tho lOUth l)no of 180 ocro Lot
No 1192, on tho- by the
w.tlnoof 1.870crel.otNo.
1190. on tho lOuth by tho
of Wlddln &amp; Burri. ond

Public Natlce

1---------

A. A.A.

304-675-6276
1

Public Notice

will be subm1Hedtoavoteof
the people of 111d Village of

Middleport at o Genoral
Election to be held In tho VII·
lago of Middleport, Ohio. at

ing, in

B.llltell

Sa1d '"" being on addl·
t10nal ta..: of 1 0 m1ll1 to run
for ftve years at 1 rate not ex·
ceeding 1 0 mills for aech
one dollar af valuation.
wh1ch amounts to $0.10
(ten cental for eech one
hundred dollars ofv•luat1on.
for fiVe veers

Tho Polio for Aid Elect•on

w1ll open at 8 30 o'clock A
M. and renun open unt1l

7·30 o'clock PM of 111d
dar
By ardor of tho Boord of
Electtona, of Metga

County. Oh1o
Evelyn

C~rk.

Cha1rman

Jene M Frymyer, D1rector

110)7, 14. 21 . 2B. 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY AND BOND
ISSUE FOR SOUTI£R N
LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT
Noto:olo horeby given thot
pursu.nt to 1 reeolution of
the Boord of Educotlon of tho

fifth doy of Auguot. 1985
thoro will be oub.,.ttod to a
voto of the people of 11id
Orange Townah1p at a General Election to be hold in
tho Townhlp of Orange,
Ohio. ottho regular placet of

electors of said School D11·

tho fifth doy of Novombor,
1986, tho quoot10n of levy·
tng, 1n excen of the ten mtll
limttat1on, for the be.1efit of

Orange Township for the
purpose of providmg and
mal~t•lning fire apparatus.
appliances, buildings, or
11tes therefor, or eourcea of
water supply and matenals
therefor, or the establishment and maintenance of
hnea of fire elerm telegraph,
or the payment of perma·nent, part· ttme, or volunteer
f1remen or f1re f1ghtmg com·
panuts to operete the same
or to purchase ambulance
equtpment or to provide ambulance for ftre f1ght1ng
company
Sa1d ta• ba1ng an addt·
tiOnal tax of 1 0 mtlls to run
for fiveyaarsat a rate not ex·
ceechng 1 0 mtlla for each
one dollar of valuation,
whteh amounts to $0 10
(len cents) for each one
hundred dollars of valuation
for five v•rs
.

Tho Polio for aa1d Election
w1ll opon at 8 30 o'clock A
M and remain open untrl

7 30 o'clock PM of •••d
dar
Br order of the Board of
Electeons, of Meigs

County Oh1o
Evelyn Clark, Ct'!atrman

Ootod October 1, 1985
Jane M Frymyer, Dnector

(10)7, 14, 21. 28. 4tc

trict ot tho gonoralelection to
be hold therein on Tueodoy,
N011omber &amp;. 1986. ottho re·
gular places ot vot1ng ther·
em, the followtng queat10n1
11 a s~r~gle propoaal·
1 The queRion of issutng

bondo of told Board of Edu·
cation for the purpoH of
con1truct1ng a new elemen·
tlfY school, IKim1n1Rrative
center. and bus garage and
enlargmg, renovating, reha ~
b1lltating, remodeling, Improving, adding to, furnishIng and equ1pp1ng exiat:1ng
school fac1htiea, and acquir~
ing and improv1ng school
slttsln an amount sutficNtnt

to raise tho net bonded lndobtodnoll of the Southorn
Loco! School DlltrJCt to
with1n fiva thouoand dollars
of •ven percent ot the total
value of oil property In said
School District •• ltltod and
as•seed for tax1t10n on the
tax dupNcate tor the y•r
1986, which amount It ••·

tlmated to be $3,698 000

The m11ximum number of

.,...,. · during whiCh ooid
bonds are to run 11 twentyth1110 v•ro Tho ,ttlmoted

average additional tax r11te

..,,_ the ton-mill ~mrtl·
11011 to I"'Y tho pnncJI)tl end
tnterwst of

a~ch

banda, as

oortlflod by the Countv Audl·
tor. It 8 19 milia lor to ell ono
doUar of valuation, which
emounts 1u 81 9 cents for

tech ono hund,.d dolloro of
vek.lation, and

2 The quolflon of the levy
of en addttonal tax outside
of the ten-mill hm1t1tion for

tho purpooo of paying tho
colla of purchulng clusroom facilities from the

Stott of Ohio ot the rote of
mill lor Nell ono

Racme. Oh
Ph 614-843 5191
10 6tfc

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VmRINAIIAN
CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

n. PLEASANT OFFKE

be submitted to 1 vote of the

people of oaid Townohip of
Rutland, Ohio, at 1 Gonorol
Election to be held in tho regular places of voting ther·

oin, on Tueodoy, tho fifth
day of November, 19B6.
the question of levywtg, 1n

o•ce11 of tho ton mlllllmilo·
uon. for tho benefit of Rutland lo"f'n•h•p for the pur·
poH of prtvention, control.
and abatement of elr pollution
Sa1d tax bemg an addi tional tax of 1 16 mills to run
tor f1ve yeen at a rate not ex·
eeeding 1 16 m1ll1 tor each
one dolllr of valuation ,
wh1ch emounts to $0 .11 Yt
(eleven and YJ cents) for
each one hundred dollars of
valuatiOn, tor f1ve veers

SUIGEIT IT APPT.

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CAU
Ripley Office

For Hours

304-372-5709

io 14 1 mo

All Mike•

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refngerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4 5tlc

73 10 Chny lr
73-79 Fo1d !1
hndtn .. ... .... ...... ,141
Fendtrs ....................141
73-80 Ch"Y Tr
73 -79 Fo1d I•
Doors • ••• ~ .. 1100
Doors ...... ....... .. S13.5
7!-10 Ch"y Tr.
ID-BS Ford Tr
Hootls ...... .. .... _, .. tJSO
Doors ......... , $145
73·84 Ch"Y Tr
78-79 Ford Tr
lumptn
.. .. $70
Gnlb ... ... ... .. .. $52 SO
73-79 Ch"y lr.
10 BS Ford Tr
Gni~J ........... 131.50
Hoodo ...... ............ '145
73-79 Ch.,y lr
83-BS Ford Rongor
Rod! or POlitis ., .. . 12 S
Hoods ..... , . . '130
13-85 Ford ,Ranger
7!-79 Che•y. lr.
Cob Corners .... .........120
Gnlleo ............... ... .175
Now and USid Auto Glan- lalt Model Parts
9-ll·tfn

4

LINDA'S

JO'S GIFT SHOP

MEXICAN

Rt. 124, Syracuse, Oh.

z

Cars, Dolls, Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone

349 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
9-20·1

100fo Down Will Hold For Christmas Gifts
Shop Eorly and Save ' 1 mo

mo.

Pubhc Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE Ia hereby gtven

pie of 111d Rutland Village at
1 Gene rei Elect1on to be held

'" the V1lloge of Rutland,
Ohto. etthe regular places at
vot1ng therein , on Tuesday,
the fifth dar of November.
19B6, tho quo1110n of levying . 1n exce11 ofthe ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of

Rutilnd V1llago for the purpose of general construe·
tion. reconstruction. reaur~
tac1ng. and repa1r of streets,
roadt, and bndgealn munic
1pel corporat•ons. count111,
or townah1p1
S11d tax be1ng an lddl·
tiona I tax of ,1 5 mills to run
for five ye1r1at a rate not e."ll·
ceeding 1.5 m1ll'- for each
one dollar of valuation,
which amount• to 10 15
(f1fteen cents) for each one
hundred dollara of valuation.
for f1ve years~

The Polio tor .. id Etocuon
will open at 6:30 o'clock A
M and remem open until

7.30 o'clock PM. of 111d
day
By order of the Board of
County, Oh1o
Dated October 1. 1986
Jane M Frymyer, Director

(10) 7. 14. 21, 2B. 4tc

Wt Hnt II Fill Tl••
nop Ttehlelu

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
(HESTER-915-3307

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 9, 1985. In
the M01g1 County Probete
Court. Caoe No. 24,916.
Worley A. Rita, R D. t, Mid·
dloport, Oh•o 46780, wao
appointed Adm1n111rator of
the estate of Hazel E R1fe,

docoaoed. Ia to of R D 1.
Middleport, Ohto 46780.
Roben E 8uck.
Probeto Judge
S•gn.id by
Carolyn G Thom11
{10!14, 21. 28, 3tc

11

the tax rate for debt Mrvice
don Is less than three and

ono·helf milia, tho rote tho II
be lncreaud to that rate
which 11 tho diHtronco bet·
ween four mills and the tu
rate for debt Mrvice outside

the ton-mill llmltadon, until
tho purcho10 prico Ia l"'id.
but In no c11e longer lhan
twenty-three veers

The polio for uld alectlon
w111 be opan I I 6 30 I m ,
and remain open until 7:30

pm,ofoaiddoy
By order of the Boord of
Eloctiono of
Moigo County. Ohio
Evelyn Clark
Chairmen
Jane M. Frymyor, Director
Doted: October 1. 1885
(10) 7, 14, 21, 3tc
Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
LIMITATION
NOTICE It herll!y glvoq
NOTICE It hereby glvon that In purouanco of 1 Rethlt In purouonco of 1 Ao· oolutlon of tho Boord of
oolution of tho Village Coon- Trullooo of tho Townohip of

1

AUTOMOTIVE
SALES
ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
-DEALERSHIPS IS NOW
INTERVIEWING FOR THE·
POSITION OF SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.
Call Mr. Gilmore For
Appointment
Between 10 a.m •• 6 p.m.

614-446-9800

Yerd Sale

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

F~t.

HOSPITAL

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME
REPAIR SERVICE

All rut M1111t1 Ntllt

SHADE, OHIO

PIUS: Off1&lt;t Suppl•os &amp; •
Furnlturt, Wsdd1ng
and Graduation

Anything That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home.
No Job Too Small or Too Big.
We Do Setups and Underpinning

Stat10n•y, Magnet1c

l1gns, lubber Stamps,
lusinen Forms,
Copy Strvlnt, Etc.
255 Mill It, Mltltlltport
104 Mulberry A¥., Pomoray

PHONE (614) 992·6100

3/2/lln

992-3410 .

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

We Dehver

t
t

Oh.

PHONE 992·7075
Don 'I Wslk, Wslf ·''

f

Chsnee Belna Lsfe f~l Ut, We Won'f

t~

HSIIfSfB;

t

1().21-1 mod

pd.J

YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodel•ng
- Aoofmg •n.d ;utter work

- Conl!hte work
- Piumb1nd and electrical

wor•
(free E1t1mates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12 8 tic

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

"4·992-6778

9

Faclory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

9-30-lf

446-4522

"W1 Rm F11 lm"

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt.160'North

FRONT-END

f- '\l''f 'l'llr

I C1C:A TFD ON
¥1\lr&gt;. •,]
1.1'1..1

Hllfl

Ar&gt;.t ~l

~ •.H Appomtrlll ' llf

C: ,\LI

142

Calllpoll•, J)hlo

7111 / tf n

/0~11
111 , ·J !l r

SWEEPER and sew1ng ma·
chme repatr, parts, end
supplies
P•ck up and
delivery , Oav11 Vacuum
Cteaner, one haM mile up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

614 446 0294
Rae~ne

Gun Shoot spon
sored by Racme Gun Club
Every Sunday. beginning at

1 00 p m Factory Clloko 12

Howard

L.

Writesel

ROOFING

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING. NEEDS

Restdentral &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or

742·3195

B8 tfc

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO •

NEW-REPAIR

VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

Gutters - Downspouts

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofm g of all Ty pes
Worked en home area
20 years
" Free Est1metes'

Guttar Cleanmg
Pemtmg
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969
4/29/lln

CAll COllECT:
Ph. (6141 843-5425
9/ 12/2 mo pd

We

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992· 2196
Mtddleport. Ohio
1· 13· tfc

Why pay oomoono who heo
my crocheted f'lat
pattern 20 percent more1

cop~ed

Call614-992-6738 collect
Reduce safe and fut w1th
GoBett capsules and E ~ Vap
" water p11/1" Fruth Phar~
macy. Middleport

MOBILE HOMES 'MOVED.
rnaured. reuonable rates

Call 304-576-2336

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992·5682
:,, 992-7121
3-24-tfe

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING
317 Norlh Stcond
M1ddltport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Also Carry
F1shmg Supphes
IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141 992-7754

! 122/Uc

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
Long Bottom. !Uuo

Ph. 915·4141
Free Estimates
1G-1711n

Nov

Roush 304-882 -3346
Reduce aafe and fast w1th
GoBese Tablets and E-Vap
"water pills " , Fruth
Pharmacy
No trespasting or dellroymg. Ed Shamblin pr_m&gt;erty

on Oohol Road. WitT Bo

INTERESTED IN A

ACCENT

NEW VEHICLE

Wt'd !1k1 to Introduce you to
lnpco-A Cor, the 01odorn woy
Ia drl¥1 the vthleio of your
CbOICt

No Down P1yment
Lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
6
80
Pomori,V:x.oV. 45 769
StrvtCI

•

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931
Afltr 5 Calf

7U-2027

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authomed Joho Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equ;pmenl
Dealer

Far.111 Eq1lptn11t

Partt &amp; Ser•loe

1·3·11&lt;

? PREGNANT?
FaE CONFIDENnAL
NEGNANCY lEST
IRtsults in 30 M1nut11l

ROOM 103
RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER
Mon. &amp; Fn. 1- 4 pm •
lues &amp; Thurs. 7.9 pm

PH. 742·2629

Call 614 -256 ·

Prosecuted

lergo lot former McBrlda
restdence College Rd, Syr·

acuoe Call 614-892·11324

•

•

3 bedroom home on 4 aCres
of land Full basement. ·~w

vinyl tiding end now i'i&gt;Df.

located on Rockapr1ng1 hd .
appro•1metelv 6 mrnUfes
form Pomeroy Call &amp;14-

p.yq
Sell or lease. option t o ].
'2
bedroom riverfront P ;• .

:tc.

place, gn furnace, ,
range d11hwaaher,
. Ill··
deep Irene. washer, d.Y.,.
water softener, fruit JM)fs.

gordon

Call 814· 9U·

6343

• '"'"'

MlddlopO.t.

itt "be

2 story home. full banrrt41nt.
dotochod garage clo~ ''\o
achQols, hospital, grocery': 3
bedrooms upstairs. •lr'flhg
room. kitchen, dining ro~
Good neighborhood ffllw
roof. many other ImprOVe·
menu Ser1ous inqulthts
~

f1nance 304 882-2291 -.,,
B82 -2407
••

150K 100

7

rooms; '

• •1.

32 Mobile Homes · •
for Sale

· '

1- - - - ----..;::..
1979 14x70

Call

Y,,n

.•.

JObt-have reference•

246 -9472-Conme. Ctoaa to
hoopltel

•

7 1/a acr...

located St Rt 325 noor No

Fma nm I

1

m1n11

Reduced

Call

614 742 2269or814-3BB
.. ~

8472

wood. cupboards, cha1r1,
chests , bukets. d•shea .
none jars. antiques gold
and silver Wnte · M D

21

Business
Opportunity

Millar. Rt 2, Pomaroy. Oh1o
45769 or call 614-992·
7760

12X60

2 bdr larg• tR,

refng. dishwasher. countlr
top range with built In ov«tn,
new carpet &amp; wallpsper in
bath , new underplnn-fng,

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8·
Buy1ng da1ly gold, 11lver LISHING CO reconwnondo

after 6pm

co1ns, rings J8Wtlry , sterflng
ware, old co1n1, large cur~
rency Top prteel Ed Bur·

that you do buslne11 with

1969 two bedroom Schuhz

pooplo you know, and NOT

Mobtlo Homo,12•80 Completely furniohad. lnclljdR\11

to send money through the

$4900 Call614

448 ·3~17

..,

kott Barber Shop. 2nd . Avo mall until you have lnvelti- mtcro· wave AC, new car...,.
Middleport, Oh 814-992· gated the offer~ng
throughout Elcellent ~O"b·
3476
d1t10n 15700 Coil 614·1182
Steel bu1ldlng dulerah1p 28BI
..... 1

Wanted used wuhera, dry ers, rtirlgerators ranges,

with major manufacturer·
olea&amp; engmeer~ng support
Starter ads furnished Some

sweepers, worlung or not

Call 304-676-2921

orooo teken Call f303)769
3200 ext 2401

US we buy thobeot. pay top
dollars Sell what you don 't
1nga.

dolls,

J&amp;welry

22 Money to Loan

pottery 1 304· 343· 1867
collect Wrlto B PriCe. 1566
KanowhtJ Blvd Eott. Cha·

J

rteston W Va 26t311

HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rote Uoa oqulty
for any

purpo1e

Leeder

Mortgage Co, 814-692
3061

Emplo ymr.nl

Services
11

Mii

1 Ox44 mobile homo In

son. W Va New under.!UrJ.
109 steps and doors N~
aome rep11r Partially ;f"~·

nlohed $1360 orbett~r
Mull loll Cell 304·37,13765 or 304 372 62815', ,,:

and

23

Profesatonal
Services

/M·

nlng 304 B82 28B6 '

1J a

.. '

1971 Soloway. 2 bedroiil!l.
12 ~e66

ce ntral

304 675 6252
Water wells drilled end ser
viced Prices on request Call

One oenif1ed Med1cal Tech·
nolog1at. weekday• Send
resume to box 300 in care

of tho Gollipol11 Oollr Trlb·
uno. 826 Th1rd Ave Galli·
polio. Oh 45631

arr.

PIANO TUNING AND RE

for $11 000 00

Fall Spec1al furniture reu·

knock on doon Colt tor Info
Ill 4-446-21 56

1

•

814 742 3147or614-992
5006

Word 's Keyboard 304 675
6500 or 675 -3624

Need Chrlatmn money?
Sell Avon Not neceaaery to

lt. ( !Ni

1980 T•dwell 14x7~ /~ 3
bedrooms. 1v~ bath. tOM
elec
Book prl c! ..

PAIR. back to 1chool d1a
counts. free estimates

AVON Soli Avon make
46% Call 814 446 3368

1

1972. 12•65 Schutll

b1le home w1th 7x1f "ix·
panda , wood bumer •?_\Itt
cond washer dryer. alr; ~­
pltantes llvmg room airfte,
d1nrng room sune, bfldt'otSitt
sutte 2 porches, underPiil~

$4 000 00 or boll oflhl,

Help Wanted

2nd with prluo

awarded on Sundar Reg••·
trat1on ends Nov ht Inter~
eated contact Sha ron

$23.000 Collect 614·423·
6289
.

work only $6 00/ hour or by
tob Call814-446-1967

Babysitting •n my home
-hours at Rodney Have refer·
ences, expenence Call 614·

anytime day or n1ght

-=---

~

Kaylor Store 8idg an lot

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Bodo ~ton.

Coil DATETIME TOLL ·
FREE. 1 -800-972 -7878 ,
Mason County F1eld Arehart
will hold 1 one-day hunt

61 4 -446-0388

approclatod Call 814-99'23389
• .,

81 4-446 0175

Lonely. need a dete1 Meet
that special someone todayl

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Addtt1ons
•Roofmg
•Stdtng
•Garages &amp; Pole
Butldtngs

'
By owner 6 rooms, 2 ~thl,
garage . f~replace . axe
neighborhood. walkhfg ,.,,_
tance to c1ty schools' Cell

Call between 5PM -IOPM ,
614-446 -9480

want. Got CASH for paJnt·

Absolutly no hunting or
treapaumg -on Old Town
Farm V1oleton will be
prosecuted Charles C
Lew1s

Coil 814 448 7380.

Experienced pamter, tnterlor

I Odd

coal he•ters

Want to buy manuel tire

,.

eat · m kitchen , ca•~ort .
It 600 &amp; taka ovor ROY·
ments Plants Subdivlsron

only 304 675 1214 ·

SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd
8o Olivo St Gallrpolio Call
614-446 -3169

Used mobtle f'lomes

3 bedroom full boao..-nt,

Palmer St

18 Wanted to Do

WANTED TO BUY u1td

ALIGNMENT

bl level home Brick end
on 2 9 acres:' 3
bedroom 2112 baths Fire
place 1n l1v1ng and f1mUy
rooms Two car garage City
school d11tr1ct 1n Clay Twp
511'. m1lt1 south ff'om GaUlpolio City II mill off St. At 7
Anumable fixed 9'% loan
Call 614 448-2000
I

frame

Oh1o Muat be aeen

$20,000 yearly po11ibla

6144463672

3 Announcements

Complete Front End
Paris and Serv tce

Schools
Instruction

Wanted To Buy

changer
6251

8ooutlful view of Ohio Al9or
12 year old tingle l•tnlly

Because of tllneu I'm dtfirlng my home for ule 247

Prepare at home for Post

Bill Gene Johnaon

Announ ce ments

DUGAN'S

15

Jim Mink Chov Oido Inc

guage shotgun•

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

wood &amp;

1) Yr•.

Nursmg ca "'"' m pnvate
home Room tor two pe
tients $600 a month Call

We pey cash for late model
clean used cars

73-80 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNLITE BODY FILLER ...............!i'JL...., 56.50
3/4 INCH MASKING TAPE ........... K~!........... 99•
DUST MASIC
17.25

I

814 992 7314

Wo$t Vl•gln•a 304· 773· Office job teoto Write Fod
67B5 or 304-773-15430
!36136-JI. P 0 Box 3006.
H.niuburg, MS 39403

FALL SALE

RENT A CAR
CAU

· ~- ·-

farm, antique, liquidation
sales L1censed Ohio and

llOt/t Woot Main Street, Pomeray, Ohio

Ph-

Sttuations
Wanted

RICK PEARSON AUCTIOO ·
NEER SERVICE Ettate.

AUTO
CENTER

806 -887-6000 "'' ~H -

4662 for Information.

2 large bedrooms. new
k•tchen and laundry, corftplete with appliances. ~~ly
remodeled, an condttio'ried,

614 992 3596.

3-D

Government Homes f~om
$1 (u-repair) Al1o delinquent tax property. 'Call

To sell Avon Call Mar1tyn

Vacancy for the elderly 1n
our home framed and fif.
teen yeera exper1ance Call

24 Hr ServiCe

8

bath. ut1llty room &amp; garage

Coil 814-448· 1 358

992-297B after 8 00

Holloway St . Henderson

10·2· I mo

3 bedrm . large kltch&amp;n1• 1

Collect 814-423 8289 ·

-=========

Mov1ng sale, Mon. Tuea,

63 Pint Sr., Golllpo11t

In Call614· 446-8038 .

642-3619

Will babysit 1n my homa any
days, any houra, 304·675-

Wed, 10 00 1111 7, -:11 O'h

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

fii.ut
STREAK CAB CO~
107 Sytall)ore
Pomeroy,
t
St.,

·-· ··:· ... .... .....

Priced to •II $39,600. ,W•II
consider mobile home t,_de

By owner Stately 3' bed·
room house at 10 E: St,
Pomeroy 5 woodad acres
Fam1ly room, dmmg hJom, ·
F A heat. 2 baths, 'basement , garage $27,000 .

To ooll Avon Call Sh~rlay
Spoara 304-675-1429

·Pt ·Pieasant
&amp; Vicinity

WE BIU M£DICAR£ ANI OTHIR INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN EliGIIIE

"Special Rates For Semor Citi11ns"

992-3345

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs

In Rio Grande, new 3 bdr
full baament, n~celot Largl
rear decks whh valley view

The Army N1t1onal Guard
needs your pr10r mlhterv
seNICt expenence
Enlist
now for part tJ me montly
paycheck, educttlonat op·
portun1t1es. retirement In
come. and much more Call
304 876 3960 or I 800

m11cand9Fifth
00· _
3thru
.00. adult),
Collage Rd
St . Syrocuoe Oct 30 thru 12
Nov 2

SALES &amp; RENTALS.
614-446-7283

Homes for Sale

By owner Remodeled 3
bedroom houae on Rt 33 .
New F A furnace large lot

nlture. winter clothes lbeby 7991

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

31

bonoflfl ENLIST NOWI Coli
304·675-3950 or 1-800
642 3619

Weaver. 304 882· 2646

Anttquet. collectables, fur-

Help Wanted

outtido tho ton·m•lt llmlta- 1

7

PH. 992-6030
9 301 mo
**~*~t**~~~**•'***~~M

ono·ho~

tho! In thoaa yurt in which

41562 Reward $100

.......P.oiri&amp;rov ........ .

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Pubhc Notice

Dexter. Oh1o 45728 waaap: '
po1nted Admmiltrator of the

The army National Guard
can provide you wtth a
•••• code (6061 437-5067 part t1me monthly PlY
or 437-8481 Tho dog has check, PLUS qualified
th1saddress oh h11 collsr Rt members could earn more
1, box 206, Shelb1ana Ky than 820 000 1n edtJcauonal

&amp; Vicinity

JEWELL'S

!

Assembly Work!

lost Male Bnttany, McClintiC Wtldltfe area Call collect,

WHERE TO BUY?

!

u Dllf

Easy

$600 00 par 100 Guaran

...... 'Giiiii'P'oiiii.

NEW MOBILE HOME FURNACES AVAILABLE

Public Notice

estate of Floyd 0 Cleland.
day
doceaood, late of 33616
By Older of tho Board of Dexter Road, Box 68, Rut Electtons. of Mttgl land, Oh1o 45775
County. Ohio
Robert E Buck.
Evelyn Clark, Ch11rm•n
Probate Judge
Dated October 1. 19B6
S1gned by
Jane M frymyer, D1rector
Carolyn G Thomes
(10) 7. 14. 21 . 28. 4tc
110)14, 21 28, 3tc

dollar ot valuat•on except

0
t

'
HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

3661

flea collar Coli 614-992· ploaso
6B64
------~MONEY. MONEY MONEY!

•~---·~···~*~···~-~-·~·····~
PREPARE FOR WINTER

WE ARE YOUR
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
*ZENITH
*SYLVANIA

that 1n pursuance of 1 Re·

solution of the CCKincll of
tho Village of Rutland. Ohio.
palled on the 8th doy of Au
guot, 1985 there will bo aub·
mined to 1 vote of tho peo

GAZER -,
j

9' SPUN

Our Christmas Toys ArB In

Toy and Gift Party and get all

teed Payment No bpefience, No Sales Oet1111
6 Lost and Found
se nd self · addreued
stamped envelope Elan V1·
tal ·716 3418 Enterprise
Reward large yellow S. 1 Ad, Ft P1erce, FL 33482
wh1te male cat, wtthered I
nght ear. m1111ng 600 block Pomeroy Health Care Center
2nd Ave Pleaae call 614- 11 now ~~ecept1ng apphca
446 21 89
t1ons for 1 full tune book·
keeper pos1t10n . Apphca
Found . 2 football picture t1ons will be taken from
badgea tor young ch1ld, 1n 8 00 4:00. Monday through
envelope at lootbell field Fridey a~ the Center Must
Coil 814-446-3613
have knowledge of Med1care
and Med.c1ud billing. ac
Found MaleCollletypedbg counts payable, receivable
In Skinner Bd aree. Wearing Md payroll No phone calls.

LITE SYSTEMS

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
ALUMINUM ....................... ..... '1265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... '1350
10' ALUMINUM MESH ....... .. ... ............ 11395
11' ALUMINUM MESH ...................... . 11595
We Hove Many Other Dimes Jo Choose from
A System Can Be Destgned For You
GIVE US A (AU
1114-11117-6235 or 667-3074

Soil, you-haul
Kanauga
Ava.
446-2310

old Call 814-992·6824

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

~~~. 13

Worned about Chrittmas?'
How era you going to get the
413 814
4th th.nga
Call
the kidl want? Why
not heve 1 Fnendly Home

Part German Shepherd pup·
p1e1 to g1ve away 7 weeks

::t

-

Help Wanted

the thiJlga free 7 Have 1 party
614-446-3640 after 5PM
of 8150 andracatvet40 1n
free merchandtaa « have 1
Cat to give away to good book party and rece1va the
home 4 years old Been same Sp qutte worry1ng and
spayed and had shott Call book a party nowl Coli
814 992-3119 .
Magnolia Nitz at 614 992-

~ Ucensed Clinical Audiologist
z

11

Giveaway •

Red male Doberman Call

LISA M. KOCHI M.S.

ii!

FREE Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll
"Register To Win"

GIFTS

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

0

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 7, 1985, In
the Meigs County Probete
Court. Caoo No 24903.
Tha Polio for 101d Election Aundeno Wheeler. R D 1

will open et 6.30 o'clock A
M and rem1in open until
7 30 o 'clock P M ot 111d

985-3561

AND

Evelyn Clark, Chairmen

Ruttond. Molgo County.
Oh•o. l"'lled on the 26th
day of July. I 986. thoro will

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SIUU AIMAl HOlliS
Mon.·Wtd.·Thun. 3·5 pnt
!Huts. 6130·1; Fri. 1·2 pm
Saturday 10-11:30 ...
LAIGE A-AL &amp;

Public Notice

that 1n purtuance of a Rt ·
eolution of the Board of
Trustees of the TownthiP of

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

POnERY

Eltrct1ons, of Me1g1

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE 11 hereby g1von

Business Services

305 Jacksen AYI.

voting therein, on Tuesday,

Southam Local School D11·

triet, odoptod on the 8th day
of Augull, 1986, there wHI
be oubmlnod to a vote of tho

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Orange, Ohto, paued on the

limitation, for tho benefit of
current expense

lin

Public Notre&amp;

of the ten mill

Dated October 1. 1985
Public Notice

RT 62 SOUTH
POINT PlEASANT, W VA
8 mtlos from
Pomeroy-Mason Bndge
SINGLE 124.95
•ltve entertamment
'Free HBO •Restaurant
oOiymptc Pool

PH. 304-295-7145
Mineral Wells, W. Va.

-

be modo on flo 4th cloy of
Nov...-. 1986. .,d tho
twonty·oight dayo lor ano-

r~
MOTELP.o

"F'" Pe/1~"9 "

ell of tho Villoge of Middleport, Ohio, peaood on tho
8th doy of July, 1986. there

Stzes Start From 12'!16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Stzes from 6'K6' Up
to 24'K36'
Insulated Doc Houses

No Sunday Calls
3/11/tlo

lhe Daily Sentinei- Page_,:7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---------r.---------,---------""1'---------"T'--------.....f

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

or 949·2860

1" 160# Waltr ...... 19&lt;
1" Gas Ptpe ............. 18&lt;

fifth dar of November.
1985, tho quootO&gt;n of l&lt;lvy·

--for-~lvo

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

limitation. for the benefit of
R1c1ne Village for the pur·
pou of current expense.
Said tax being 1 renewal

'I
$SAVE$
PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS
4" Sewer ............. $3.70
4" Ell ...................suo

the reguler places of voting
therein, on Tuesday, the

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE lo hereby given
that 1n pursuance of 1 Rt·
aotut10n of tho V•tloga CounCil of the Vlllogo of Middleport, Ohio, I"'Aod on tho
Bth doy of July, 1986,thero
will be tubmlned to 1 vote of
tho _ . . of Middleport
Villago It I Clonorll Election
to be hold In the Vtllogo of
Public Notice
M•ddleport. Oh•o. at there
-I
gular
placet of voting ther·
••n. on Tuoodey, thofihh day
lllend Club. R D No 4, of November. 1985. the
Akron. Ohio 44319, oddrMS quest1on of levying, 111
now unknown , Kathryne eKC811 of the ten mdl hmita·
tton, for the benefit of RaHoller whoM laot known od
d,... Wll 4490 lahm Dnvt. cme V1ll1ge tor the purpose
Turkey Foot lllond Club. R.D of recreational purpons
Soid tox being on edd•·
No 4, Aleron. Ohio 44319.
odd,_ now .......,wn, W t10nal tu of 1 0 mill to run

I

re&gt;

Homes Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

A part oftho•-,.loototo
baing witlod to Challot Soyro
frOm Agn- Haymon ond port
baing ,..,veyoc~ to Chari•
Sayre end E.., Soyro by dood
- I n Dood Book 144,
Page 8~ Moigo County
Dood R
o.
Rolerenot Dood. Volume
220. page 863. Dood flo.
cordi, Moigo Countv. Ohio.
y.., are notlfiod thotyou oro
NqUired to ..,._ tho Complaint within twonty-oight
tlayoalter tho loll publication.
which wilt be publlltoJI onco

CLASSIFIED AD

AO

New

"FREI ESTIMATES"

9·2l-tfc

WIU

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•lnaulatlo,.
•Storm Doore
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Window•
•New Rooting

Call: 742-2407

614-742·3018.9!17/llltC

"VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULATION

J&amp;lllOWN
INSULATION

•All Types of
Excavattng
•Landscaprng
•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas lines
•Water Woll Drilling
•Trucking

'

!McKey) Hark"" whole 1_.
known addrMI wu 1n Oakdole Avonuo, Akron, Ohio.

being. 1 renewal

1Jl mill to conlfHutolfoxof
1.0 mHI to run lor flvo yoaro
fltt not exceeding 1 0
,...111 for ooch one dollar of
~1\1-llon, whloh amounfl to
*0.10 lton contoi lor ooch
Pll' hundred dolliro of
'(flillltlon. for flvo r•"·
, 1'ho Polio for oald Election
lorllt P,.,.. 11 8 30 o'clock A.

"SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
~-- ~ATH~RING DUSt
,,.:~,;; ,_,;.~ ~DD DOLLARS
.
-~. ·• ~_=~. :~ ~. TO YOUR POCKET

addreu now

Jng compony

MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

MIWII' or othel •J1181 riiiP(N'Id

. mon~

Ill• deportment 01 tiro f1ght

oh pert oft 2 0 mllloxilfr&gt;g
lt,vy, being • reduction of

HOWARD E FRANK,

Public Notice

·. ,...--------!
- Public Notice
pose of provfdmg end malnt

TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
.
THE TEN MILL
' '
LIMITATION
'") I'OTICE lo hereby govon

hand

for 18.. than two-thirds of

c«1t1, for Mch one hundred
dolllra of valu1bon . for five
yMrs.
TN Polls tor uld Electton

SHERIFF
Meigo County, Ohio
110121 . 28: 111)4. 3tc

Terms of Sale Cosh on

at

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN Mill
LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby g•von

8

the appra11ed price

$26.000 and con not be told

deportment or flro fighting
- CDIJlPiny
f
SaKi tu: bemg an lddi,,,lionol tax of y, mill to 1un tor
;;.fivo yooro of 1 rote not ox·
..ed1ng 'h m1ll1 for Mcllono
.dollar of voluotlon, whtch
omounu to eo 05 (five

~: 3YO

Public Notice

·Business Services

Monday, October 28, 1985

pholsterlng Th1111 our 2111
yur MNI"Ig tri-county with
the bett 1n reupholttermg
Ctll now for Frte Est1mate
304-676· 4154 Mowrey't

S13 000 00 will IOc\'Jfii!t
J~~

Fleetwood tr11ler, 515xlrtt_
wtth pul l out room 8Jr1 ~

pho ne 304 875-8980 oji'lt
5 PM
,
MOBILE HOM

MOVfllf

m sured . reasonable , • ._,_

Call 30 4-576 2336

• •Y

1--------..,.JA
Free 6 mon1h1lot

3 yellow ·~~:'''~~ yi~~:1:1~1 Auombllng o band, nood _u,:.p_
ho_t~
ll-ery
.:.______ 1 4'x70 ' ell electric. co.n1futl
to good home
Country ....,oic11n1 Call 814
,•_c_3_0_4_6_7_5_3_9_B_1_...:..!:l
3320
387-0213
,.
1- - - - - - - -1974 Crlton houoe '"'iltl!
81 .200
1 2x70. ell eloc good
5 kittens end black mother
cat to give away to good DELIVERY , DRIVER .
$5 , 000 00 304 -899;1
home Coli 614-992·5059 SALES
3896
• "''
· '
between 9 00 and 6 00 .
Local COJ'111&amp;ny hae: openmg 31 Homes for Sa le
19 57 landcreft hoO ..,
for several people full time
By owner Must tell moved troller, 8x36 , comploto.,.,lt~
1 pup 4 month old mail. only Paid training pro -

clmi

half. Norweg1an and collie

304-46B-1678

grime, peid vecatlon flrft
yetr, major medical benet~
Ht Coli Mon . or Tuoo.

Uted underpenning for mo· 10AM -6PM , 814 -448 ·

bilo homo. 304· 876-41 64

•

\
I

7441

3 bdr ranch, one ca r garage
walking distance from North

Gollla High School Reduced
to *29,900 Call 614-388·
B7t 1

furnllhtngs and wood
burner Ideal for hunting
camp needs some

pr1ced IB&amp;O 00 u It
458-161B

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
63

LAFF·A·DAY

4 piece s of wicker. Rocker,
plencer. magazine table and
lomp, table . 1920• 9• 12
Oriental rug, All in excellent
oondltio n. Coli 614-99 2·
3966 .

.~.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·- rrY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GAUIPOLIS ,
· AT 3&amp; . PHONE 61 4-448·
. 7274.

I ;:::;;:::; '
I

1977 14x70 mobile home, 3
bedroom, 2 botho, 10x20
awning, King woodburne;,
all underpinning ea. 700.
Coli 614-379-2798 .

1983 .FIHtwood, 14x70, 3
bdr., 2 full botho. partlolly
furnished. like new. Cell
otter 4PM. 814-388-8833.

33

Farms for Sale

34
•

Cl"" "'"t'••"""' h,..,,••, . t...

~--=::.::::..:==~~:,:.::..;~::::,
44

Anartmertt
,...
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunityl
monthly rent 1t1rt1 at U69
for 1 bod room ond U04 for
2 bedroom, dopooit 1200,
locoted ntor Spring Volley
Plora ond Foodland, pool
end Cable TV avollabla,
office houro •• ponlblt 10
amto4 pmond7pmto9pm
Monday-Frldoy, Ctll 614·
446-2745 or loovo
me11ege.

Nicely furnished mobile
home. eH. apt .. central air
ond hell in city, odulto only .
Coil 614-446-0338 .

Business
Buildings

2 br 1panment1 in Hender·
,IOn. 304-67&amp;-1972.

Apt.: building for Nlo In
Middleport. Contact John or

46

42

Lots

&amp;

2 loti in Vinton wat•
avail.blt. Fronts on ttreet.

46

Space for Rent

Coll814-388-8343.

Ferm for ule: Ao houee, 8 ' Mobile homo lot, 12'x50 ' or

acres. 2 blrna. county weter omoller. H5 water pold, 4th
•ooptic ionk. Coll814-379225~-

2 lo.;.. loll for ulo. Greer

Ad. '7 mil11 from town .
304-1175 -51189.

44

• Noll, Gollipolio. Coli 4484416 olter 8PM .
llrge trailer splice for rent
Buloville-Addioon Rd .
Ctll614-387-0232 or 614 448-426&amp; .

on

20 ocros farm lond for cooh
rent. Coli 513-323-4747
evenings.

Apartment
for Rent

COUNTRY MOBIL~ Home
2 bdr. ept., good loc1tion, Pori&lt;, Route 33, North of
ntdoConted, utilltleo portly Pomeroy. Lorge loll. Ctll
pold. ·Cell 304-17&amp;-&amp;1 04 or 51 4-992-7479 .
304-117&amp;-5386.
Second floor qfflce . Court
Loroo 2 bdr. apt., 2 both, St. , Pomeroy, acrou from
fully carpeted. refrig . • Coun HouH. Carper and air.
llovt, 1 1 Court St., *325 •200. per month . Coli dayo
mo .. ref. • dop. Coli 5i4- 814-992-2054 or 11op at
446· 4928 .
Clarl&lt;' o Jow•lry, Pomeroy.

Upltairt unfurnished apt.,
carpeted. aH utllltleo poid, no
children, no poll. Colll1 4 ·
446-1637 .

Renlal s

6

•uo.

- -- - Eflicltncy college, t66 .00

2 bedroom aPertmenu .
Now Hoven, WVt . Newly weok. utilitlto paid, phone
remodeled. In town . 814- 304 -876- 3100 or 676 992-7481 .
5609 .
One or two bedroom apart· In Point Pltuont , 3 bod menu In Pomeroy . .Fur· room houte, 304 · 675 ·
nithed or unfurnlehed . Rent 4024.
nogotloblo. Coli 614-9926723 .
For rent with option to buy .
4 bedroom, 2 car garage,
F,.nlshod Aportmont for built lri kitchen, large tot,
rent, no children . Availab'e rent 8215 .00 , •100 . 00
oftor Oct.3. Coli 814-992· depoalt. S•le price
2749 .
82&amp;.000.00 oo- on lend
contract with down pey·
1 1nd 2 bedroom furniehed mont. Now Hoven, coll304opto. for rant In Middleport. 882-2688.
All utllltlto pold. Coli 614- haven ....- - - -- 992-5084.
2 bedroom, full ba~ement ,
AC. 2317 MI. Vomon Ava,
APARTMENTS , mobllt 12;!6.00. month dopooit.
homea. houeee. Pt. Pleasant Call Mrs. Buxton. 304-67 6and Galllpollo . 614-4411- 2661 .
8221 .
FOR RENT WITH OPTION
For rent omoll furniohed TO BU'(, nlca 3 bedroom
apanment. Pt. Pleaunt. houoo, 9 mHu from ShoRofwrencoo. No Poto. 304- ney' t Point Pleeeant, Mtting
on level piece of ground,
876-1365 .
129, 000 .00 . 304-782 Nice 1 ond 2 br oportmenll 2228 or 304-676-2441.
downtown. 304-6?&amp;· 2218 2 bedroom port furnlohed,
~·B_·_8_ __ _ _ _ _ _ nice locotlon, reaoonable
1
2 bedroom ground floor opt, ront. Coll304-882-3722 or
downtown Point Pleaoont, 88 2 • 2798 ·
304-896-3450 .

Furniohod 3 rooms, both, ·
upper duplex, Mwly docorotod, prlvtto, odults, 304875-28&amp;1 .

54

Building marerlat, concrete
blocks all tizes, lentils, flu

Misc. Merchandise

2 bedroom , furnished ,
washer, dryer. •wning . No
polo. 8180. plus depolitond
utilitin. Coli 614- 992 7479 .
Ouplox trtilor, 1 bedroom
each . Both furnished , Rant
one for 1140. and other
t125 . Water, tewage In ·
cludld. $60. dltpo1it re·
quirod . Coll614· 992· 2394 .

12~t60 Schult corner lot
Crown City . 81 Monte Carlo
air. pow•. ~h. Coli 614-256
1444 or 304· 6~6 - 1328 .

Gym-Poe 16000, Kl mboll
plano . Cali614·387-0&amp;39 .

King wood burne r S250 ,
Sears chest free zer dalu•
15, 1300. Coli 614-4460094 after 6pm .

2 bedroom mobile homo, 1 ----~---­
Burdette Addn. t176 .00 2 Shallow wall pumps with
plus utilities and deposit . 40 Qflll. tanka, dinn,r table
304 -575- 246'4 or 675 - wlth4c:holro. Call614-2562048 .
1287 before 9pm.

Mr. rcil anrli se
51

Household Goods

Gun Collection for 11le. Call
814-446-9407.
Mlxod hardwoodolobo, 112.
per bundle. contolnlng opprox. 1'h ton. fob. Ohio
Ptollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 614·992-8481 .

'

Block, brick, mortar and
masonry 1upplies. Mountain
Stato Block, At. 33, New
Haven, W. Vo. 304-882·
2222.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Trolltr for rent Golllpollo
Forry, dope·oit ond reflrericoo roqulnrd. no polo, phone ·
304-675-1867.

'

Television
Viewing
10/28/85

'
Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
onelelterto ea&lt;:h square, to lorm
lour ordinary words.

I BOYTN

1..

® News

.;Ill

5100.000 Name Thot
Tune
(J) Mudo Sportslook
Cil Down to Earth
CIJ 3 -2 -1. Contact ICC I
(jj) Electric Company
~ Diff' rent Strokes
IHBOI MOVIE: 'They Call
,
Me Bruco7'
6 :30 II CD (!} NBC Nightly
News
/ Cll Carol Burnell .and
Friends
(J) Aerobics -Eiodios in
Motion
(I) Safe at Home
(lJ 11!1 ClZ ABC News ICC)
O(l)(JDCBSNews
(I) Dr. Who
lllJ Body Electric

THE- POOR ~CRE:ATVRC

CAN HARDL'i S WIM ...

E!U T HE WON' T
GIVe UP i

Services
Home
Improvements

62

Wanted to Buy

like new, 2 bottom 14 inch,
3 point turning plow; one 1
bottom 1 4 lhch 3 point
plow: John Doore Model H
manure spreader, good ,
56
Pets for Sale
8260 .00 ; new 6 ft. 3 point
bnah hog, t400 .00: now 8
ft. grodor blodo 3 point
Briarpatch Kennel• All·
81 60.00; now 4 ft. blade 3
breed grooming. Indoor·
point, 8100.00: new pig
outdoor boarding facilities . polo, 116&amp;.00: 3 point
Englloh Cocker Sponiel. 388· potato plow: .,0.00: Owon
9790.
.
generator end motor out of a
•
motor homo, 1150.00; UnlDragonwynd Cattery Kenverlll
propane conttNction
nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
heater Iorge b.t.u .. 1150.00;
and Siameu kitten1. AKC 2-commercialfans for grHn·
Chow puppies. Call 446- houoa or bulldingo, 175.00
3B44 oftor ?PM .
each. Robert Hill, 6th ond
Elm St., Roclno, Ohio. 614AKC Registered min~ture 949 -2013 .
Dach1hu"nd puppies 9
wook s. $100 block &amp; ton .
Pole buildingo, mony' colora
Call 614-379-2273.
end olroo availoblo. 304-6763981 .
'
Pure bred rat -terrier pup·
~los . Bob-tolled 160. Call
Cue 930 diooel ,
614-256 · 1467, ova' s or 12,996.00. Now Ideo 310
weakendo.
corn picker, t2.500 .00.
Regiatad Pit Bull Terrier Sidero E&lt;JIIpmont, Hendorpupploo. Champion blood· oon, phone 304-876-7421 .
line, $100 each . Coli 614Two John Deere A tract or.
446 -2496 .
- - - - - - - - - 1973 Bronco 8800.00 .
Phono 304-895-3471.
Dobermen 3 mo1 . ears
clipped, shots, 1150. Coil New Holland 354 grinder
.814 -266-1991 .
mixer. Used very Nttlt. Exc
Reg istered . purebred Bea- oond. 304-273-4215 .
gles, grown and pups. 304·
896 · 393B .

1-------- -

50 per cant offl Floohing '
SWAIN
•rrow signs t259111 Lighted,
AUCTION • FURNITURE non-arrow $247, Unlighted
62 Olivo St., Gallipolio. Now 8199 . (Fr,. latterol) Soo
It used wood-coalatovas, 6 locolly. Limited quantity.
pc wood LR ouho 1399, Hurry I 1(800) 423-1063.
bunk bodo •199, ontron
reclinera $99, new • used Fire wood for ule . $66 cord
bedroom sultea, ranges. delivered. t60 pickup. Coli
wringer wethers, &amp; 1ho81. 61 4· 742-2473 .
New lvingmom .. ~.. 11991 - - -- - - - - - Regil tered Bluetick female
t&amp;99, iompo, aloo buying H and R 22 caliber 9 ohot 2'1• yoors old, wllltnre own 62 Wanted to Buy
1- - - -- - - ' - -- coal &amp; wood ltoves. Call revolver. $76 . 22 caliber 6 Coon . 304-675-1070.
61 4-446-3159 .
shot revolver, made In 11aly ...
$60. lncludoo holsters. Call 57
~glttor4d polled Hereford
Musical
614-742-2187 .
'
bull . Aloo round boled hay.
Instruments
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Coli 614-992-379B otter
Sofu and cholro priced from 1976 Ford School Bus with
6:00 weakdoyo .
1286. to t896 . Toblto, t60 no frame for oolo. Good
snd up to t 126. Hldo·a · condition . t250. Must bo Ac Brunicardi's ..... Norapos·
beda, $390, end up to moved immediately . Call s assed piano gimmK:ka. Just 64 · Hay &amp; Grain
8660 .. oofo bodo 1146, 614· 992-2989 :
honest piano values. We are
Roclinoro, t22&amp; . to 1375 .. 1 ------~-­ never under sold I Bruninrdl
Lomps from 828 . to 1126. Cougar Magnum Com - Music Inc , Corner 3rd . &amp;
Cattleman's Spoclal260 lb.
pc . .dinettes from *109 .. to pound Bow. Like new. Court St. , Clolllpollo, Ohio.
protein
block• 831 .26 oo.
436 . 7 pc . 1189 ond up. •180 . Coll814-742-2182 .
Wood toblo with olx chtiro
1 Tama snare, 4 micro- found Mly II Bidwell Cllh
1286 to 8745. Dolk 1110 TONY'S GUN REPAIRS , phone•. 1 fender precision Feed Store. 614·388-9688.
up to 822&amp;. Hutch eo, t560. hot dip rebluolng, all typoo of bolt guhar, Call Log Cobin
Bunk bed comp'-ta with gunsmith work, fast service, Recordera, 614-446-4313 . Hay for oole. Coli 514-3792424 .
mattreuoo. t276 . and up to 304-1176-4631 .
.J395 . 8oby bodo, t110. 1- - - - - - - - - Kimb•ll Whitney piano for
Marireaus or box springs, Serlou1 about losing sola . 11200. Coll614 -742- Mixed baled hoy, 81 .00 . Coli
614-949- 2179 .
full or twin,
firm, •73 . weight1 1 Contact Gloria 2862 .
ond •B3 . Quoon oeto, t225 . Grote . At. 2, Bo• 282,
4 dr. chosto, •49 . 5 dr. Letart, WV . 26253. 304- . Alto sax for sale . 2 years old .
chilli , 859 . Bod frames, B82-31 62 .
Tra ns porlal1on
$6QO. Coll614-742-2862 .
120.ond t25 .. 10 gun - Gun 1..:____.._____
coblntll, •360 . Clu or Sofl. love~eat, carpet and KIMBALL SWINGER ORelectric rongu 1375. Boby drapes, off white green and GAN , repo11e11ed, low
mattro110o, •25 &amp; t35, bod gold, 1118699.00 . 304-882- monthly payments. free les- 71
Autos for Sale
fromn $20 , 126. • t30, 2232 or 882-3764.
oono included. Coli 304-463- - - - - - - - - kingfromol60 . Goodoolec· 1
- - -- - - - - - 1163. Dan Ferguson Music ,
tion of bedroom &amp;~itea, Pickeno Uood Furniture. Ook At. 60 , Ceredo, W.Va .
TOP CASH pold for ' 80
rockers, metal cabinttl , china closet with claw feet .
model .. d newer used cara.
hoadboardo 138 &amp; up to Oak rocker. 9 pc . Duncen
Smhh Bulck -Pontloc, 1911
$66 .
•
FWo 'dinning room suit. Tre- 58
Fruit
Eostem Ava .. Galllpollo. CoM
614 -446-2282 .
dlo Singer oowlng machine.&lt;&amp; Vegetables
Und Furniture ·- Bedroom Old oak bod. Call 304-675- ' - - - - - - - - auite. 1 set of tables. 6348 or 875-1450.
77 Mustang new perta, new
droner. • bod. motel office 1- - - - - - - - tiru. new paint. excellent
Potatoes
red
Pontiecs.
ken
·
dooks. 3 miles out 'Bulovlllo Heevy duty 4x8 utility
nlbec 's , t6 .00 buohol. ahope, t2 ,000. Coli 614Rd . Open9omto 6pm, Mon. trailer. 304-882-3238 .
17.00 hundred. Coli 614 - 256 -6417.
thru Sat.
268-1684.
814-448 -0322
Bon'o Livestock trollers ,
Fiero 12,000 mi., mint
Hurricane, WV. 304· 767· Apple . All varieties . 86 .00 cond .. 4 opd . Coli 614-446·
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 8644 or 767-6399 .
bu shel. Now Open doily. All 8273 or 814-448 -4094 .
Wothoro, dryers, rofrigon ·
tors, rangea. Skagg1 Ap· Used ttorm door, good fruits , vegetable~ . Jacks 19B1 Buick LoSab&lt;o', AC, all
Morl&lt;ot, At. 35 , Hondaroon .
plloncoo, Upper River Rd . cond . 826. 304-676-8176 .
power. AM-FMcaoo . Cruloo,
boolde Stano Crest Motel.
V-8, 87,000 mlloo 15596.
Honey,
$1.00
box
.
Coli
814-446-7398 .
Queen size hide·a -bed, Eerty
Coli 614 -441-19&amp;6.
304-89 5-3404 .
American with matching
County Applionce, Inc . choir. Full olre traditional
19B1 Cougor XR -7, auto,
Good uud tppllanceo ond hide-a-bod. Phone. 304-676air. tilt, V·8~ &lt;:Nite, power
59
For
Sale
or
Trade
TVoeii . Opon8AMto6PM . 6829 .
wlndowl, 1Ubo wheel1. Call
Mon · lhru Sot. 614-446- l..:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
614-387·0&amp;32 .
1899, 827 3rd: Avo . Golli - SURPLUS. nrgulor or my co polio, OH .
For u le o r trade 1977 ~A ton 1978 Old a Cuotomor
mo\Jfllge, denim clothing,
boots. pec:ks. acce11ories. CheV'{PU, 360 engine . auto. Crul11r, good traneporta·
trono, Coll614-446-3243 .
Valley Furniture, new &amp; Camouflage Insulated oove·
~on . Coli 814-441-7339 or
uled . large secrion of qual· ralls $30 .00. kld o comou 814 -448-48B9 .
lty furniture . 1216 Eastern ftage all li1n. Sam Some·
16 ' tandem 1111le, Low Boy
Ave .. Galllpolio .
rville , E11t· Raven1wood . trailer. Call after SPM , 814- 19n Caprice Clonic white
266-6740.
iunctlon Independence
on blue. body eKe . cond ..
Mollohan Furniture, Rt. 7 , Rood-Old Rt . 21, Fri, Sot,
runt Uke new. All power.
200 f ord 82 ,3&amp;0, No. 7 Clll614 -446-1766.
Kenauge . 1 yr. fr" finance . Sun, 1:00-7:00 PM . Freo
Coli 814-446-7444 . 6 pc. delivery Point Pleuant area .
Corn Picker 8425. 40 ft.
wood livlngroom suite 304-676-3334 .
elevator 1476 . Coli 614 - 1986 Corvolr 2 dr. coupe
446 -9526 .
1400.
••c. oond.. 11 .000 . Coli
King size waterbed, book·
tftor 3PM , 814-246 -6873.
8 month old black Reg.
Electric range *66, gat case headboard with mir·
ronge US, electric dryer row. t76 .00. 304-676 - Quarter horse colt . He hal 19BO Hondo Accord hatch good tize &amp; di sposition and bock 6 opood, AM -FM
•66 . auto wooher 196, 7991 .
Maytog wringer wuhar 1
- - ' - - - - - - - - - io out of Super Chix. t400. cauane 11ereo, 4 epeakars, .
Coli 614-245-581 1.
•1 25, nolr. •96, froorer Applo II E, Includes mouoo,
exterku silver, interior red,
t160, smell dry. t96, GE 8Q column cord, disc drive,
29,987 ectu11 milee. · one
electric rongo •1 26 . Skoggo le~tlhan 1 yoor old, boo uti·
owner, lika now cond . Coli
Applloncoo, UpperRivorRd, ful cond. u ,200.00 . Apple
Noloon R. Bootie, 614-446Far111 Supp li r.s
Logo II, 160.00 . Apple
Clollipollo,
3666 .
&amp; l l VP.Siill:k
Electric ronge t65 , gil Pucol1 .2 t80.00 . Apple II
range $96, electric dryer C, dloc drive *200 .00 . ,
1979 Monte Co~o. VB ,
166, auto woohor 195, · Scribe Printer •200 .00 . Coli
automatic, air, good tir11,
Maytog wringer wuhor 304-876 -8700.
ahorp car. Coil 814-99261 Farm Equipment 2849
•126. refr. 195, froezerl - - -- - - - - .
.
•1&amp;0, omoll dry . *96 , GE 50 Porcont Offl Floohing
electric r1nge e126 . Skaou• anew aigns 12631 Ligh1ed,
CROSS &amp; SONS
1976 MGB . 2 topo. Runo
Applioncoo, Uppor River Ad, non-arrow U47. Unlighted
U.S . 36 Well , Jackton,
good. •1395 or boot offer.
Golllpollo, OH . Coli 61 4·446 '199 . (Freo lottoro} Soo
Ohio . 614-286-6451 .
Clll614-949-2288 .
n98.
Maney Ferguson, New
locoily. 1 (8001 423-0183.
Holland, B,.h Hog Soloo .
(AI10 GIANT BLIMP oololl)
197B Novo. In good condl·
Country style ..k furniture,
ServK:e. Over 40 used
tion, with new 11ret. No
hand croftod ond flnlohed, Brown loother couch , 304·
tractors to chooae from &amp;
r•sonable offer refuted.
onllque roproducliono. Poul 876-1175 .
oomplotoline of now &amp;
Coli 814-949-2849 .
Conkol, Rt . 7, Tupporol ---_..:__ _ _ __
u1ed equjpment. Largelt
Plolns.
Wood for oola, t26 .00 pick
oolection In S.E. Ohio.
1979 AMC Spirit . 4 cyl ., 4
Special 10% dlocount on sll 1 peod, good oondltlon .
up lood . Houled .. not
Whirlpool Slde-by-Sido Ro- otackod. 304-67&amp;-4373.
part1 for cith sale• only,
$1200 . Coli 614- 992 · ·
'trigontor, t126. Coli 614until Nov. 16.
6610.
992·2782 oftor 6:00 p.m.
Hou11 coal. Lump &amp; stok er.
Grinder-mixer with t haller, 1966 Pontiec convenible.
Zlnn Cool Co. Call614-446- electronic scale HD PTO, Good condhlon . Coli 614Antiques
1408.
63
good cond . Coli 614 -24&amp;- 247-4292.
6193.
Cottle man's Spoclol 2&amp;0 lb.
19&amp;6 De10to, Homl onglno,
Spartan ridlo wlthochomot- protein block• 131 .25 01. Now Ideo model 323, one po, pb, outomatic trono ..
lco, good cond .. boot offer. found only 11 BldwoM Caoh · row oorn picker. Call 814· "'n• good. wm toke
Feed Store. 614-388· 98B8._ 446-268-,44.
Clll814-446·2184 .
304-89&amp;· 3685 .

1---------

1- - - - - - - -

•eso.

71

Autos for Sale

1984 Oldo Cut lou Supremo
Broughem. low miles. axe
cond wijh all OM optiono
poulblt. Must ..U 304-676
2&amp;83 otter 6 PM .
19n Monte Co~o. 1983
Oldo Cut lou Brougham. Ex·
•• good .Ond. Phone 304·
1176·6376.
1981 Dotoun 200 SX,
tporte package, auto, axe
cond, mull ooll . 15. 100.00.
Phone 304-882·3632.
1974 Chevy Novo SS307, 4
barreH. good tire1, rally rim•
whh cops, 8300 .00. 304·
8B2-2890 .
83 Chevrolet S-10, .extended cab, po, pb, 6 op ..
V-6, otoreo . 304 -8753638.7

- -- - ' 79 Corvette, axe con d. low

mlloo, coli 304 ·675 -6456
after 5:00 PM .
1976 Chevy Impala, 400
engine, automatic, *300 .
After 5, phone 304-B9&amp;383B.

72

Trucks for Sale

1969 Stud. for porto, *100.
Clll614-387-71 18 .

Kenworth tractor, Fruehaf
aluminumdumptraUer, naw
tireo. V.G.C . Together or
Mpa•ote . Call 614 -286 ·
8832 .

...
ANNIE
Clllf'T. (;/rr f&gt;MT Tlfe
lfll/l fii T0!/!11 . Mt16T.
7l!RN 81/C/1 "'

wood.

RINGLES'S SERVICE , ox·
perlenced carpen1er, alectri·
clan, m•aon, painter, roof·
lng {Including hot tor
application) 304-675 -2088
or 675-736B .

e

ALLEYOOP

1- - - -- -- - -

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well a completed eame
day. Pump salea and nrvice.
304-B96-3802

1974 Chevy Suburbon 9

pauenager wagon, runs
good, mony extroo, * 850 or
boot offer. Coil 814-2469167 .
197B Bierer. '4WD, 4 Sp ..
VB , air, AM-FM tope, CB.
Good running condition .
12800. 1980 Ford F160
Aonger. XLT . 4WO, outo,
loaded. t4800. Coli 814949-22B8.
197B Ford, 8 cyl .. Econo·
Hne. one owner. Phone
304-675-1312.

74

Motorcycles

1980 Hondo CR 1211. Voly
cond . Call 614-448-3564.
82c' Kowoakl 750 LTD, oxc.
cond., new parta and ac -.
cooo .. moving mullooll. Call
614-448-2611 or 614-446·
8229 . .
1967 • TR4A Triumph. Boot
Offer. Aher 5:00, 304-876 1839 .
' 81 Horley Dovldoon, oxc
cond , low mllao, low price,
coli 304-676·5465 otter
5:00PM .

75

79 Motor• Homes
&amp; Campera
11S3 Hondo CB 1,000: uc
cond, book prlco 12,600.
mull ooll t2,260 . Phone
304-676-7285 ofter 6 PM.

''

IMAXI MOVIE: 'Evil Under
the Sun'
8:30 CD ESPN 't Mondlry Night
' Metch
9 :00 8 (}) (!} MOVIE: 'A Time
to Live' ICC)
IIJ700 Club
CD ESPN'S Inside Baoeboll
Wo~d Series Special. _
(I) Ill (I! NFL Monday
Night Football : Son Diogo
at Los Angeles (CCJ
0 (I) ® kate &amp; Alllo Allie
di scovers tha t her father is
having an affair with his receptionist.
(I) Tonka
((j) Statuo of Liberty (CCI
David McCullough narrates
thi s historical look at the
creation, cons truction and
!iignific:ance of the Statue of
Liberty. [60 min.)
9:30 CD Gymnastlca: McDonald' s
World ' Chom pionohip Woman:o Turn
Tn.lo from St. Paul, MN.
Ill Cll ® Newhart ICCI
Joanna is tempted to vacetion in Morocco.
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Give My
Regardo To Brood Stroot'

It was left
on our door-

step, Doc'

.,

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
INCl. Rt. 1, 8ox 365, Gollipollo . Coli 814-367-0676.

Good -1 Excavating, bue·
ments. f0ocers, driveways,
eeptic tanka. landsCIIplng.
Coli onytlmo 814 -446 4637, Jameal. Davison, J r.
owner.
1- - - - - - - - Dorer Work land clearing,
lendiCiping. ate. Fru esti·
motu Call 814-446 -B038
or 614-992 -7119onytlmo.
Will do backhoe work on
wookondo. Coil 614 -JBB·
_
8248

WINNIE
.. .)OU SPOKE TO
!'liLLY, WENDY? HOW

DID IT GO?

.;•

NOT ·fOO
WELL, MOM.
HE /?£$/STEP
EVE I!YTHING I
SAID TO ~IM.'

•

. •'

(CCI .
'10:00

J.A.A . Conotruetlon Co..
Rutland, Oh. 614-742 2903. Battments, Footera,
Conc"te work. Backhoe't,
Dozer &amp;. Ditcher, Dump'
trucks.
weter-gas-aewar·
electrical lines.
BALLS

86

0' FIRE!!

General Hauling

James Bo~a Water Service .
Aloo poole filled . Coli 614.266 -1141 or 614- 4481176 or 614-446-7911 .

WE'RE
HAVIN' A
BLA CKOUT,

..

County'
10:30 (I) To Ba Announced
(I) MOVIE: 'Thunder In
the Sun'
.INN Nows
.
11 :00 B Cil (!l iJ(I) (D N.,_
IIl Mon From U.N .C.LE .
IJ) Mcloughlin Group
((j) Viotr)8m: A Television
Hiatory
• Bonny Hill Show
11 :30 D
(!} Tonight Show Guest host Joan Rivers welcomes liv Ullman, George
Hamihon and John Larroq_uette. (80 min .)
CD Sportscenter
Ill (I) Remington Sloe"
While Remington investi-

MAW

Ken ' 1 Water Service . Wells,
cisterna, pools filled. Phone
814-367-0623 or 614-3677741 night or day.
'waugh'a Water Ser'll ice .
Walla. cilttrns, pools. Fa11.
reliable oorvlco. Coli 614256 · 1240 or 614.' 256 1 130. Rauonabla rot11 .

gates a murder connecled
with a $200.000 coin theft ,
Laura is rom anced by the
lawyer of the murder sus·
pact. (Ril60 min.}
C1J letonlght America

Dump truck tervica, 304·
676 -3190.

(D Toi

Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sac . Avo., Clolllpollo.
614-448-7B33 or 61 4 -446·
1833.

I MISSED SC!lOOL
I'ESTERDAV BECAUSE
[ !lAD A COLD,..

~----------

, R a. M Furnituri Manufac turing, St. At. 7, Crown
City, Oh . Coli 814 -2661470. coli tva . 614 -446343B . Old
now
Uphoaterad.

e.

THERE MUST Be

MINE

SOME'IHIN6 601N6 AROUND..
LOTS OF KIDS !lAVE
BEEN GET'TING CO!.DS.. .

g) One Step Beyond
IHBOI Hany Balofonte :
Don't Stop Tho c-11
12:00 (]) Beet of Groucho
CD NFL Filma Prnentt
CD Fort Hayes Cluseo
(I) Gl llJ News
(jD
MOVIE:
'Forced
Vengoonco'
((j) Sttr Hu.tior/Sign Off
• Gunomoko
12: t 51J) Entertainment Tonight
12:3o
Night with
David letterman

WAS A

LOT WORSE,
TllOUG!l ...

e m rn t.ata

I D- ZI

·'

..

.

'-

'r,

. "

...

lorm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve canoon.

I I Xj-( XI Xr

mer: AN ·r I
Saturday 's

I

..

.

Now anange the circled let ters to

...

(Answers t o morro w~
Jumbles: PHOTO FAMED DEFACE HALLOW

Answer: The best th ing to have In a heated
dlscun lon-A COOL HEAD

.lOin u. Jutrlble LO'I'III Fin C:lub lnd r~te~tte 11- •lllh•·•ord Super Jumble&amp;__,
monll\. For h• ,.....,..., MOd a poalcard !o: Jumble. L~ Ftn Cl11b, e10 trill
MWtPtPfl', P.O. 8ox 101 , Ptlmyra, N.J. otol!i.

·.

'

.

.

..

-

James Jacoby

'•

-..

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

I

'

' l

BIIIJGI

Guarding against
the improbable

...

...

•

.

NORTH

11-!1-11

4AQ9 1 64
.AQ7 652

...

By James Jacoby

4 6

... .

WEST
EAST
' I I'"
The incidence of freakish hands at
4KJI08 5 3 2
bridge is so slight that even seasoned .H
•K 10
players fall prey to carelessness when .AQJ8 5l2
• 10 7 6 4
confronted by these distributional +9 7&gt; 2
4 --"monsten." Against the small slam,
SOUTH
West led the diamond eight, a card t
meant to suggest 10 partner the return ·
• 983
of a spade, which West could ruff. Un· •
• Kg
fortunately East did not have the dia- I
+A K QJ 10 8 I 3
mond king, but even if he_did, dummy •
Vulnerable: Neither
was void of diamonds.
Dealer : South
l'jaturally declarer ruffed the opening lead in dummy. He really had no Wett
Nortb Eut
-.~• '
Soutb
way of teiUng that West was desper2+
ately trying to get partner on lead for
Pass
Pass
34
the desired spade return. Who had
3•
5•
Pass
ever heard of a suit splitting 6-7 any·
Pass
Pass
64
Pass
way' In his eagerness lo score up his . Pass
slam, our short-sighted declarer beOpening lead: t 8
came careless. He cashed the ace of
spades, pitching the diamond king, but
West ruffed. Later the king of hearts 1
was the setting trick.
Actually declarer has enough high
,
. .
. . ..
clubs to play with complete safety. Af. dummy s ace of spades, potchmg the _: .
ter ruffing the opening lead, declarer diamond king , and ruffs another spade-...~ .
should play a low spade and ruff wilh m h~s hand. He then leads a heart to · ..
the club 10. Now trumps can be drawn the Jack, queen and king, and the slam- •
in lour leads. Next a heart is led lo is made.
'· .
dummy 's ace. (Note that this is a safeA tromp lead would actually set the: :~
ty play to guard against the singlelon ~lam ,_ bul I don't blame West for his ....
king with East.} Now declarer plays 1magmat1ve lead.
. - ..r

....

.. ..

....

I

.

··.....

'

. "·

~.ur'Dt~

. "·

' 'c

lly THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
I Aida

... .. ,,

I He broke a

showcase

Ruth record
2 Watchful
3Quench
4 Coal

5 Window
glass
9 Apportion

,,

...

5 United

island
13 English
novelist
U Embank-

Cerebral
Yesterday's

8 Philippine
sweetsOp 22 From /

ment
15 Annoy

,,

'

scuttle

11 Coral .

AnSw•er

31 Sophistiof mind
cated
23 Bivouacked 32 Eagle's
24 Sumced
nest
25 Beyond help 33 Envious
28 Deliberate
color
28 New
35 Great

7 Beginnenl

18 Ponderouo 8 Ennoble
18 In a
I 0 Disposldeep way
Uon
20 Squad I Z Gave
21 Ac1zeso
nasty
looks
Sandra
22 Boundary 17 Beverage
18 Paradise
23 - IAl
( Indulge)
26 Did
modeling

Guinea

,,
• • "I

.,
.'

Barrier

port

Island
39 Negative

30 Harsh

I •'

.ftr '

. '•,.

27 English
river
28 Card game
29 Chainnwo

..,.

h--1--1-

,.

..,,

30 Ballast
Item
34 Navigated
38 Celtic
sea
god
37 Give joy
38 Finnish

. '' ll '

' ' ' •H

lake

,'

40Dissuade
41 Riveter
of WWII
42 "Giant"

. ,..
. - J

Him star

. t,

43 Adoleacent
DAILY CRYPI'OQU~ - Here's bow to work II :
t' .

-m

Haul lime1tone, lind, graval,dirt, bulk or bag fanlli1er
and lime. hcalsior Sale
Worko Inc. 638 E. Mo ln St .,
Pomeroy. 614 -992·3891 .

,

Cll News
Ill (I) ® Cagney and

Lacey Cagney and lacey are
ass igned f"l prevent a possible lottery fraud when two
people both present winning
tickets. 150 min.}
(I) ((j) B""n (CCJ 'Rhythms
and Drives .' Similarities between the subconscious
rhythms and drives in animal
and human brains are examined. (80 min.)
{MAXI MOVIE: ' Ralntree ·

GO CLOSE THAT
DADBURN WINDOW

a.

Boat&amp; and
Motors for Sale

John boat for oole. Coli
614 _261 •84 17,
--------

(CCI

GASOLINE ALLEY

Pl_umbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Faunh and Pine ·
Clollipolio, Ohio
Phone 614 -446-3BBB or
614 -448-4477
'

fugitives when Hardcastle is
wronglv jailed and McCormick pl!lns a s pectacular es·
cape. (60 min.)
Ill (I) ® Scarecrow and
Mro. King
(I)
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
((j) Wonderworks (CCJ
'Fire in the Stone.· A teenaged boy hopes to use the
opal mine he discovers to
help reunite his s-eparated
parents. {60 min .I
· • MOVIE: ' Planet of the
Apes' .
[f:BOI MOVIE: 'Fiashpolnt'

...WE'll BE INSIDE
Tl-i' CIW E BY THE
TIME HE SPITS All
THOSE SPliNTERS
OUT!

1 9BO Chevy van. E• c.
Cond .• a / c, cruise. tih, 8
pu11nger. U, 79&amp; . Coli 83
Excavating
814- 379-2341 . NoSundoy I - - - - - - - - Collo.

1971 GMC 1 ton llop von,
good cond . Coli 614-4468034 .

CD MOVIE: 'King Creole'
(I)
llJ Herdcottlo and
McCormick (CCI Hardcastle and McCormick become

Starks Tree end lawn Ser·
vtce, stump removal. 304·
576 -2010 .

82

1986 Ford Ranger 4•4 PS .
PB. stand. with overdrive,
11 ,000 mlleo, V-6, 60,000
worronty . Coil 614 -446 ·
0061 .

SHORT ~Am}.JTI~
SPAIJ!'

Fetty Tre8 Trimming, stump
removal·. Call 304-876 1331 .

1986 Chevy Pickup truck .
P.S .. P.8 ., V6 , Auto. f8900 .
Clll614-949-2650.

W .O.

HE: o;;l.lFFE&gt;K":i FRCM A

RON'S Telovlolon Service.
Houte call• on RCA. Quazar.
GE. Speclollng In ZonMh.
Coli 304·676 -2398 or 814·
446-2464 .

Tree trln1mlng and remo\lal.
Insured , free es.tlmat11.
reuonoble ntao. 304-875 7121 .

4

61LL10f.J COOPW-( [05ITICWD

10 Cf'FER 1\le c.t&gt;STCM~ 'TH~
fr:;~.,._\ MJC€15T.. '

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump sale•. aervJce . Regia·
tared in Ohio. All work
guorentood. Call 304-2732811 . Ravenowaod. W. Vo.

1 974 Ford Truck. 67,000
mllte. Run• good. New
wooden bod. t876 . Cell
614-992-2881 .

Vans&amp;

~'?

J .and L. Installation. RoofIng, vinyloidlng.llorm dooro
and windows. Free esti·
motos. Coli 614 -992-2772. --~

Gat a room of carpet cle1ned
for $22 .96. Coptoln Stoa·
mer. 304-675-2295. Sovo
Ad . hplrao 85 '. ·

73

..1.3

... ~ OF ..........

,,.,..

I TREMIC±
I KX ]

rn

... a=~. Wf- ~ WW A

' ·~

I KJ 1

IJ (}) PM Magazine

(])
Courtship/Eddie 's
1
Father
Sportscenter
CD Rociky Road
(lJ Entertainment Tonight
(Il Wheel of Fortune
0 (lJ Wheel ol Fortune
(I) Second City TV
00 News
lllJ
MacNeil/lehrer
Nowahour
ID ® Divorce Court
1!11 Jeflarsons
7:30 D (}) Now Newtywad
Game
Cll Please Don't Eat
Daisies
ffi NFL Films Preoents
(I) Sanford and Son
(I) OJ (I! Price lo Right
Cil Ill (I) Jeopar\fy
(I)
Nightly
Business
Report
00 Wheel of Fortune
&amp;I WKRP in Cincinnati
(H80l Frllllgle Rock (CCI
8:00 0 Cil (!} TV's Blocporo
and Proctlcal Jokes Karl
Michaelson, lara Jill Miller
and Marie Os mond are this
week ' s practical joke vic·
tims . (60 min.)
IIJ Born Free
CD NFL's Greatest Mo·
menu: NFL Follies go Holly·

BORN LOSER

Ba11men~ Weterpr~ofing.

1979 GMC 427 dump, olr
lift, chootlir. 1977 386
dump , chuter axle. Call
614- 266-1270 or 614-2661970.

1 982 Sllvorodo Chovrolot
pickup, PB. PS, Y·8 engine,
now tlreo, 151 ,000 pluo
miloo, 16,125.00, L .L.
Smith. 906' Mouman Cir·
cle . Point Pleasant,· 304·
676- 3222.

7:00

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua rantee. Local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Call colloct1-614-2370488, day or night. Rogers
D.and M. Contractoro. 'Vinyl
siding. replacement win·
do·w s, lneulatlng, ro~flng.
new and remodeling, con·
erato. Coll304-n3 -5131 .

.,

~Taxi

---~~---

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

,.., · --~""'
~-

Cll

.'

II

I.... . I

6:oo o m rn rn o mrm m

Door Huntoro Special. All
flborglooo body motorhomo,
furnace. shower, ge•· alec .
water heater, front and rear
clning. aleepa 6 cornforta·
~ly , fully oelf-contolnod,
frig .·freezer. plenty of stor·
age space. $9700. 304-89&amp;36B6.

Delivory. l~========:;:========~~ 81

Firewood 136 PU lood,
lhredded borl&lt; t26 PU load,
hardy avergean shrubs &amp;10, ·
landecaping &amp; ~imming. 2
mi. N . of Silver Bridge,
Upper At. 7. Ohio. Coli
614-446-4530 . •

•l1&lt;'

1971 Hannaline Travel
Trailer . 2:6 feat, aeff . ·
contained, Mw carpet and
upholllary. C•ll 614-7422188 after 8:00 p.m.

Gallipolisclay
Block
blocks.
tile . Co.. Pine
St.. Gollipolla, Ohio Coil
614-446 -2783 .

Couch &amp; chair, good con d. &amp;
one .comploto tot of bunk
bods. Coli 814-388-96'29 .

.1. U

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 :· ~

Ohio

EVENING

•ea ..

F..nilhod attic opt. utlltleo 41 Houses for Rent ,
poid. •176, 919 2nd.. Shorel - -- --'' - - - - both, men preferred . Coli 8300 t month, pluo utilltieo.
446 -4416 otter ?PM.
Cloon, wall . kopt, 3 8R
homo . City ochool dillrict.
Furnlohed opt. 2 bdr .. 1311-1 Dopooit• Rof. neodod. Coli
4th. Gollipob. t195 wstor 614-246-9636.
pold . Coli 445-4416 ofter - - - - -- -·
Nice 3 bdr. houat, gerdon
7PM .
•36 budget g11,1. 1300 rent.
Furnished 3 rooms • bolh, Ref. &amp; dop. Coli 614-446·
ciHn , no poll, edulto , ~! &amp; 37 80 .
'dopoolt . Coli 6 1 4 - ~ •
1519.
Small hou.;.forront3 bdr, 2
bath , mostly furnilhed.
1 bdr. apt. for 'rent, laundry 8300 por month plus aloctroom. 822&amp; mo. pluo dop. ric . Acrou from Blue Foun·
Cloooto HMC, trath• wotor toin Motel. Call 614-446poid. Coli 614· 446-3474 .
1822, cal botwaen 6 •
10PM.
Duplex, 2 ' BR . rrfrlgerotor, ~-------­
stove. 663 Third Avenue . 6 room unfum . house. util,
1260 / mont~. Dop. Req' od .
not furn. rent •130 1 month.
Call 814-245-91195.
9 Clorfleld Avo. Call 614446-7544 .
.
Modern 1 bdr apt. conve· - - - - - - - - nient locetion, lingle peraon 2 bedroom•. unfurniaheCI,
preferred, Soc . Dop . . Coli now point , fully corpotod.
614-446-2066 after 2pm.
No lnoldo pots. Dopoo~
riquired . Coil 614- 992 Riveroldo Apto. Middleport. 3090.
Spoclol rotol for. Senior
Equal Houo- 3 bodroomo, both on Lorl&lt;in
Chizono.
ing Opp~rtunitito. 61 4-992- St., Rutland . Call 814-9927721 .
586B .

In Middleport. Ohio, 2 bodroom furnished apar1ment,
1-304-882-2188.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
ond light houoo keeping
roomo. Pori&lt; Central Hotel.
Coli 614-446-075&amp; .

Acreage

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes,
windows. linteh . ate .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
0 . Call 814-24&amp; -6121.

DICK

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Building Supplies

Beautiful antique birds eye
maple bedroom suite. sleigh
bod, highboy chest with
mirror; dre l ser with mirror.
dook-mirror, t760 . 8953686 .

__-i ::-:::-::-~--;:-:-:--:-:~=-=-

Mobile homes IVIIIIblt
Nov. 1, Foster~ Mobile
Homo Pori&lt; . Coli 614-4461602.

Vicky II 814-797-4880.

36

.65

.

Monday, October 28, 1985

1979 Honey 5th whool
travel trailer 36'. Serious
Inqu ire• only , 814 -388 ·
8647.

Tri·county Sport Shop now
Open , Spring Valley Ploro.
Mon.- Fri., 9:30-7:00 . Sot.
9 :30- 5 :00 . · Sun. 12 :00 5:00 . Coli 614-446-2336.

w• ., ••~~ ~~ -·"

"L00k s like a goo d year. ,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®byLirry Wright

Hou1e coal. Lump 8t stoker.
Zinn Cool Co. Coll614-446'
1408.

Antique nine piece .dining
·room auite, h11 a ·lot of nice
carving, mu11 11e to appre·
cia to. Ono of a kind . t875.
304-B96-36B8 .

2 bdr. New Moon 12,500.
Coll814-388-8711 .

Misc . Merchandi~

Fi rew oo d- cutup s lab s, 1
truck load 1100, 2-11a0.
Pickup load, you houl 116 .
HEAP occeptod . Call 814245·5804 .

29·4 S inger leather Sewing
Mochlno . bndlo Modal E
Sewing Machine and a fin ishing machine . Coil 614 949-2537 .

1983 Joy Skyline 2 bdr ..
total electric, underpinned,
anchored down. private
rented lot, Centenary. Cen
lloy .If 10ld. Interested coli
814 - 448 · 7200 ollir
6:00PM.

1973 Now Moon 1 2x66, 2
bdr .. portioily furnished, AC,
woodburner, ceiling fon, undorplnning, porch, 86,800,
Call 814-446-9290 alter
4:00 .
1979 Windoor 14•70 3bdr..
2 baths, CA. extra insula·
tion, Garpeted. microwave,
claon . Call 814-379-2417
or 814-379-2641.

54

Antiques

-

Monday, October 28, 1986 ·

AXYDLBAAXR

Ia LONGFELLOW

.....
. ,··
.

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, ele. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
.hints. Each day the code let!ft's are different.

;

..

CRYPTOQUOTES

.' "'. .,,..

10-28

K P Z

K GUF J E

V F 8
O QE
GSF P

S E .

EF
P FE

RI'FII.I

U K P

U F I' I Z

I KY P
FPI

R P FBJ

VI P Y Z

K

Sl'

VF B

. '"I,...

'

EF

1J

s r, .

.IHI PX

r:VFYIKQ

Yeetenlar'o Cryptoqaote: IF THE COST OF COl,
LEGE TiJmON CONTINUES TO RISE, EDUCATION
W1U. BECOME AS CO!m.Y AS IGNORANCE . - A
DISCOURAGED PARENT

•

.

. '

., .~~

.. ·-

.

. ""

.,

,........

--• -

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

••
Pom8roy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. Octo_ber 28, 1986
'

Area deaths

Inside:

He was born In Calhoun &lt;;oonty, superintendent of Mason County
W.Va., to the late lJJn and May schools. He was also a former
•
. superintendent of Southern Local
, Rose Thomas, 88, of Gahanna, Downs Powell.
He
served
In
the
Untied
States
Schools In Racine. Ohio.
died Friday at Manor Care Nursing
War
World
II,
was
a
Army
during
Survivors Include his wife, LaHome In WestervU!e.
She was born Jan. I, 1893 In member of the Sycamore Baptist · Verne Powell; one daughter, Jane
Columbus and resided In Reedsvllle Church at Millstone, presidentol lhe M . Powell of Dayton; one.son, Rick
for a number of years. She was a Sycamore Baptl.st Church Ceme· Paul Powell of Berkley Springs,
tery Association, a charter member W.Va.; six sl.sters, Shirley McKown
member of the Peace Lutheran
ol
tbe GrantsvUie Lions Club, of Lookout, W.Va., Blrlae Poling of ,
Church.
chairman
ol the Calhoun County Belpre, Lucllle Wllmoth of Mill·
. sun·ivors Included a sister,
Republican Party and former stone, Amy Hathaway of GrantsGlaeys Baughman, an,d two broth·
member
of the Calhoun General vllle, Emma Neal Montgomery of
crs, Tom and Jack Gale, all of
Hospital
Board
of Trustees.
Columbia, S.C. and Eva Burton of
Gahanna.
He
was
a
member
oltbeNational
Parkersburg, W.Va.; two brothers,
She was preceded In death by her
husband Ray, who died In 1900. . · Education AsSociation. A graduate Rue Powell of Arnoldsburg, W.Va.
of GlenvUie Slate College he and William Gall Powell of St.
Graveside services wUl be 2 p.m.
obtained
a master's degree !rom Albans, W.Va .; and two
Tuesday at the Reedsville CemeUniversity and attended grandchildren.
Marshall
tery. Margarwn and Son Funeral
the
Ohio
State
University Graduate
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Home of Gahanna Is In charge ol
School.
Wednesday at the Stump Funeral
arrangements.
He was a former principal at Home In GrantsvU!e with Rev. Ray
iGrantsvllle
Elementary School, Harris offlclatlng. Burtal wUI be at
Ralph R. Kerwood
New Haven Elementary, Mason the Sycamore Baptist Church
Elementary and Point Pleasant Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Ralph R. Kerwood, 78, of 33
Junior High School, ·a former funeral home from 6 to 9 p.m.
Smithers St., Galllpolls, died Satursuperintendent and an assistant Tuesday at the funeral home.
day afternoon at Pleasant Valley
Hospital In Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Born april 4, 1907 at West
Columbia, W.Va. to late Richard
VOTE FOB\
and Laura Taylor Kerwood, he was
a coal miner at Plymoulh. W.Va. ,
for 37 years.
SUrvivors Include his wife,- Anna
.r
Irene Devault Kerwood, whom he ·
Candidate for
married Nov. 5, 1927; three daughters, Mrs. Freddie (Della) Moore of
Cheshire, Mrs. Richard (Anna
MEIGS LOCAL
Belle) McCartney of Waverly, and
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Mrs. Jerry Teeple of Galllpolls
Ferry. W.Va.; two sons, Charles
k"ald For By Candidate • 26 Riverview Dr. - Middleport, Ohio
Kerwood and Tom Kerwood, both of
Phone 912-6051
Gallipolis; three sl.sters, Mrs. Mary
Thayer, Mrs. Virginia Roberts and
Mrs. Delores Day, all o1 Galllpo!Js;
three brothers, Everett Kerwood of
Mason, W.Va., Ernest Kerwood of
Tennessee and James Kerwood of
Chicago, lll.; 11 grandchlldren and
four great-grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by two
sons, one brother and one sister.
Funeral services will he 2 p.m.
Tuesday at Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Horne with Rev. Alfred
Holley, Rev. Bob Madison and Rev.
Ralph Workman oll!clatlng. Burial
wlll he In Mound HlU Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral'
home from 2to4 p.m. and7 to9p.m.
today (Monday). Grandsons wlll
serve as pallbearers.

Rose Thomas

George A.. Hoffman

By the Bend ............. Page 5

ABOUT POMEROY'S
INCOME TAX •••
,.

Clas!deds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8

Comics-TV .............. Page 9
Dealbs ................... Page 10

Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports .... ~ .......... ...... Page4

I consider myself to be a progressive cit·
izen and I want to see my community
continue the improvements made during
·this past year. What should I do?
Don't be confused by the wording on the
ballot. Vote NO on the initiative petition
issue. ANO vote will be in favor of keep·
ing the income tax.

•

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newapeper

•

•

Do something good for yourself and neighbors •••
Vote NO Qn the initiative petition November 5.

Let's keep the progress going!
Paid for by the Committee for a Better Pomeroy
Charles E. Blakeslee, Treasurer

...

'.

.

,

..

....
'

~

"'""'~

."

-

...

. . ' .' ...·;' ..
,: ....

•rc''·

~ .~·

··~·.'_

.

. , :\ .. ·, ·r..,.~' ..

.
••

'

~ .

.

J

. '.
'

• "'f

... .: 4.

.• ..

••

'

'

..

-~

·;·

' ·.·.

'

... . .

DOUBLE GRADES are a problem al Letart Falls
and Portland Bcltools. Pictured here are Pauline Hm,
and her combined class of first and second IIJ'IIders al

..

-.

• :

'PHYSJCAL EDUCATION classes and playtime ai

Letart Falls. Double grad"" mean double le!!son
planning lor teachers.

..
."

recesses aren't ll problem at Racine and Letart Falls
during nice weather betlause sludents can go wllllde.

•

..

class outside on Ute basketball court lor P.E. In bad
weather, It's a dlllerent situation, since mllher of the
two schools have a gymnulum.

Here, Donna Sayre, a teacher at Racine, takes her

Many Southem -voters still und~ided on
Tu~day's proposed 6.19 mill tax issue

Mrs. DorothY I. Tolliver Long,~.
Ashton, died Saturday evening at
her home after a long illness. ·
Born Jan. 10, 19~. at CUlton, she
was the daughter of the late Alva
Bun Tolliver who preceded her In
death Aug. 11, 1983, and Mary
Maeoma Blake Tolliver, Glenwood.
She spent her entire life In Mason
Gounty and was a member ol the
Women of the Moose, Point
Pleasant.
SUrviving In adWtlon to her
mother art' her husband, Mathew
Long, Ashton; three daughters,
Mrs. Luther (Delores) Young,
Ashton, Mrs. Richard (Frances)
Turner. Hunt~on, and Mrs. John
(Janet Sue) Reynolds, Galllpo!Js
Ferry; one son. Ronald Long,
Ashton; two sisters, Mrs. Edith M.
Villars, Glenwood, and Mrs. Ruth
Thomas, Point Pleasant; four
brothers, Dolas B. Tolliver, Colwn·
bus, Ohio, Donald E. Tolliver,
Glenwood, Dana L. Tolliver, Mllton,
and Lewis E. Tolliver, Ashton; and
nine grandchildren.
She was preceded in death bY ooe
brother.
Funeral services wlll he at 1: ll
p.m. Tuesday In the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev. BobbY
L. Woods olflclatlng. Burial wUI
follow In Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home !rom 6-9 p.m. Monday.

Many voters In Southern Local
School District are stlll undecided
aboutvotlngforaproposed6.19mlll
tax levy to bulld a consolidated
kindergarten-elementary-junior
hlgh school In Racine.
Some are undecided because
taxes will go up II the levy passes
whlleothersareconcernedthatwlth
today's shaky economy, their jobs
are not as secure as In times past.
Members of the Southern Local
Board of Education, BobbY Ord,
superintendent, and Robert Beegle,
supervising elementary principal,
say they understand and even share
these concerns, however they stlll
believe a new school is needed "just
to meet state required minimum
standards" for a :'minimum
education."
As noted bY Ord, many state
requirements can not be provided In
Southern's present elementary
buUdlngs and junior high wbere all

ItS awhole new world.

available space fs being utilized to art, science, computer, and !lmndthe maximum and beyond.
proof music !ails. Thel't' would also
The proposed new facility, de· be extra space for talented and
signed by Don Glenn, of MKC g1fted programs.
Associates, New Phlladelphla and
At the present time, becauseofthe
Mansfield, would provide 70,1XXJ structures ci: each oft he elementary
square feet of space to accomodate buildings, special education classes
an enrollment ol700 students.
for elementary students In tbe
Currently, Soutehrn has an enrol- district can be beld only In Portland
lment ol6891nklndergarten through and Letart Falls.
eighth grades.
• There would also be space In the
In addition to providing South· newfacllltytoaltow"altstudentsat
ern's students with a clean, safe the junior high level" to he taught
environment In which to learn, Ord dally llvlngsldllsln homeeconomlcs
says the new building would and Industrial arts classes.
eliminate such problems as double
Another benefit to students, says
grades a! Letart Falls and Portland Ord, would he better staffutlllzatlon
Elementarles by equalizing the of Southern's three traveling
pupil-teacher ratio to about~ to 22 teach~rs--art, vocal music and
students per teacher.
Instrumental music- because time
As pointed out bY Ord and Beegle, wasted and mileage spent going
besides regular and special educa- from school to school would he
tlon classrooms and storage space, ' eliminated.
the ni'W facility would Include a
The same would hold true for the
media center and library; as well as dlsrlct's school nurse Ord says.

"It fs 42mlles !rom the highschool

to every other school in thedfstrtct,"
notes Beegle. "The art teacher alone
could pick up five additional classes
a week If she were In a amtraltzed
I&lt;X;atlon," he adds.
Another benetlt provided by the
new facility would be the addition of
a gymnasium comparable to tbe
size of the gym at Southern High
School with aseallngcapacltyci:!Ol.
The present junior high Ls
equlppedwlthagym, but oolytwoof
Southern's elementarles have gymnasiums - Portland and Syracuse.
Racine and Letart Falls do not have
gyms.
Thl.s Is a disadvantage IJJ those
students, Otd says, not only because
of a lack of adequate space for
physical education classes, but aLso
because when the weather Is had,
the only places to play during recess
are the hallways and classrooms.
(Continued on page 10)

Hoffman says village will lose $15,000
annually after cut off of revenue funds

Paul B. Powell
Paul B. Powell, 77, of MUI.stone,
formerly ol New Haven. W.Va. ,died
Sunday afternoon at the Calhoun
General Hospital In Grantsville,
W.Va., following a brief Ulness.

Weather forecast

·ART SUPPLIES at Racine Elementary are stored In the restroom.

Mostly cloudy. Low near 50.
Norlheast winds around 10mph.
High 65 to 70. Tonight, part·ly
cloudY. Low 40 to 45. East winds
around 10 mph.
Tuesday, considerable doudi·
ness. High 65 to 70.
Chance of precipitation near zero
percent tonight. and 10 percent
Thesday.

Board recommends
options be tertninated

No lottery winners

J

1 Section, 10 PagBJ

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 29. 1985

Dorothy Tolliver Long

,.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio
Lottery Commission offlclals said
Sunday they wert' unable to find a
ticket from Saturday night's Ohio
Lotto drawing that had the six
nwnbers.
Since no one claimed the$1,481,950
jackpot, Lottery officials raised the
jiiCkpot to an estimated S2.9 mllllon
for Wednesday night's drawing.
Lottery offlclal.s said $3,534,560
worth of tickets had been soldtorthe
,dqjwing which prtxlliced the
nambers 1.2,16, !9, 25, 26 arid 35.

enttne

at y

e
Vol.36. No.136
Copyrighted 1986

•

Today\
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

16 mg. )r".1.2 mg. nicotine av.,per cigarette by FTC method.
•

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

J

- I
•JJ

(

The Racine VIllage Board of
Public Affairs has recommend that
Racine VIllage Councll allow current land options on land ior a new
aereator to run out.
Allowing these options to run out
terminates all proposals within the
agreement and blll to t~ land
owners wlll resume In January,
l!l&amp;i. The need for the land ceased
when council recently remodeled
and updated Its exiSting water
works plant without expansion, Ills
reported. Council President Frank
Cleland Indicates that there Is
enough room for access to the
buUdlng, as Is.
. The board aLso has recommended
thatcouncll amend ordlnance292to
add a $3 per quarter late charge on

bills not paid on the 15th of the
month by the collecting agency's
clos'lng time.
.
Problems with collectlngl long
overdue bills have prompted this
action, board members report.
Maintenance and repair work on
the tank have been completed and a
10 year guarantee secured on the
tank. Tree removal at Shrine Park
has been completed by . Frank
Houser, Rutland. Residents InquirIng about the posslblllttes ol
securing some of the wood art'
advl.sed that pennlts to saw up this
wood, wlll soon he available but no
wood can be cut up without first
9bta,lnlng a pennlt. Councll wlll
advise 'residents when the permits
are avallable.

By BOB HOFLICH
Senllael News Stall
Middleport Vlllage will lose
$15,00J annually after October of
next year when federal revenue
sharing funds art' discontinued,
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
Monday night at the regular session
ofvUiagecouncll.
"Everybody wlll be hurt", Mayor
Hoffman commented, as he dfs·
cussed the plan to discontinue the
program next year. He said that
there Is a chance that Middleport
wlll have federal revenue sharing
fundscutbY12\!,percentfor1~.

The money has been put Into vital
operating funds of !he town 0\ler the
years, Mayor Hollman pointed out,
going Into the general fund and the
street department. Loss rl. the
money makes It even l'l')Ore neces-

sary for Middleport residents to
suppott a one rnlll operating levy
and a one mill recreational levy at
the Nov. 5 election, the mayor
stated.
JaeJarrell, representing ConsoUdated Communications which provJdes televl.son cable service for the
town, met to discuss any problems
In the community. The two problema which are primary, Mayor
Hoffman told .Jarrell, are the phone
service the company maintains for
use of residents In lodging compllants and the Inablllty of residents
topayforthelrservlceonemonthat
a time rather than two months.
Robert Hoover of the Boardway
St. area met wlthcounclland Jarrell
and lodged complaints about paying
for Improved service before he

received It , the Inability to get
through on the phone ltnetothe firm
and the problem In trying to pay for
service one month at a time. Jarrell
w!ll look Into the problems with
company officials today.
Council approved a new contract
with the U. S. Corps of Engineers on
themarlnalnlowerMiddleport.The
contract Is for five years and begins
on Jan. 31.19!1!.
Council also agreed to send a
letter thanking the Jay Mar Coal Co.
for tearing down a property owned
bY the vlllage at the corner of Mlll
and North SSecond Streets. The
company did the work free of charge
and the property was razed In ooly a
few hours. Chief of Pollee Sid Lltlle
was thanked for securing the
services of the eompany on II&gt;'
tearing down process.

Councilman JameS Clatwonhy
told of the effectiveness of the litter
control program along the banks ol·
the Ohio River under the direct kJn or
Bernard Gilkey, but he criticized.
residents who are throwing trash
over the cleaned up banks. Mayor
Hoffman warned that anyone
ca ught doing this wlll beprosecuted .
At the request of Councilman Bob
Gilmore It was agreed to place a
dust retardanl on Cottage Drive and ·
to proceed with theestahlishment of
a crime watch pmgram In the town
lhrough Juvenile Olflcer Carl
Hysell.
·
Attendlng Mayor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer John Buck, and Councllmen Dewey Horton, William Walters, Jack Satterfield, Gilmore, and
Clatworthy.

Unemployment climbs to 10.8 in Meigs County
A mixed bag of unemployment
rate Increases and decreases was
repOrted throughout southeastern
Ohio d\lring September, according
to the Ohio Bureau ol Employment
Services. .
Whlle mixed ligures released
Monday relfect a more stable
employment picture 1n September
than during the prevloos two
months. Rates for July and August
showed vigorous movement, with
anoveralltrendtowardlncreasesjp .

the jobless rate.
In Meigs County, the jobless rate
Increased bY three-tenths of one
percent- from 10.5 to 10.8 percent
- during the one month period.
Gallla's unemployment rate fell
bY 011e-half of one percent- from
10.5tolOpercent-betweenAugust
and September.
Vinton County posted the largest
decllne -1.2 percent- as the rate
fell from 13.4 to 12.2 percent.
Lawrence County registered the

largest Increase In unemployment.
as the rate there rose bY l.4 percent
-from 9.7to 11.1 percent.
TheunemploymentratelnAthens
County - which held steady at 8.8
percent-remalnedthebnlycounty
lnsoutheasternOhlotopostajobless
ratebelowdoubledlglts.
In Meigs. U:JO of that county's
estimated clvlllan work force of
11,700 were reported as jobless
during the month.
The bureau reports 1,500 of

Gal' la's esllmated work force of
14: lXl without work In September.
i{ith the exception of Athens, the
jobless rate In all southeastern Ohio
counties continued to remain above
both state and national averages
during September.
Nationally. the jobless rate held'
even at 6.9 percenl .
Statewide, the unemployment
rate rose bY two-tenths of one
percent -from 8.8 to 9.0 percent.
I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="199">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2789">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41656">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41655">
              <text>October 28, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4294">
      <name>gale</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1021">
      <name>kerwood</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="660">
      <name>long</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="32">
      <name>powell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5">
      <name>thomas</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="334">
      <name>tolliver</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
