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:~~E~-=!·u~-~~~M~~~~~~--~--------------------~~~~~~~~~U~h~2-----~---:==~==============~~~~UCOO~~O.~l4,1Y66
1

Local Briefs:---- ·Park district p~oject
W OUB off a)iluiefiniteiy
.d d I
to aJ eve opment

r---

A majOr transmitter equipment failu re has kno&lt;;ked WOUB-TV,
Athens. off the air and station officials are not a u e whert service will
\xo resweci.
.
A public television station based at Ohio University, WOUB Is
Ga rricd locally by Conselldated Gon;tmunieatlons Group II on
Channel ll.
Rich Lewy, promotions coordinator for the station, said Monday
that an electrica l problem developed in the system last Wednesday
night , causing service interruptions. The system went off the air
entirely on Thursday, he said.
"We had hoped to get up ro part ial power again , but at this point ,
that doesn't appear likely," Lewv sa id.
·
Engineer s are working around the clock to repair the equipment
failure, Lewy said. and service will he restored as ooon·as possible.
Ques tions can \xo directed to Lewy at 591·0091.

E HS Band Boosters meet tonight
The East ern High School Ba nd Boosters will meet at 7:30' this
eYening 1Tuesday) in the high school band room.
.

Democratic headquarters open ·
Henry Hunler. chairman of the Meigs County Democratic Party,
rcpm1s that the Meigs County part:v headquarters located at aJO W.
Main St., Pomero.v. ·are nolv open ,
Hours are 1 to 5 p. m.. Monday through Friday. and 9a .m. to 1 p.m .
Saturda.1·. The public is invited to slop by and pick up literature and
advert isenwnts of Iheir candidates a· just to vis it. The phone number
is

~2~ ;J2fl) ..

Ches ter PTO slates fall carnival
ThP Ches ter fYI'O fall carnival has been set for Saturday from 5:30
9 p.m.
A jitne)· supper wil l begin at5: llan dgamesat 7. There wat \xo&lt;bor
prizes. ga mes, a haunted house, a fifth and sixth grade dance, a
country slun· and an auction among the fea tures. The festival will 1xo
h('!d at the Chester Elementary School.
10

. Probe continues into fatality
•

Ttw.st;ll c highway pat rol's Gallia- Mcigs post continued today its
in\'osligation into a fa ta) pedestrian accident at the intersection of
U.S . .15 and Ohio 160 near' Gallipolis early Monday.
Haro ld L. Mays, 19. Rt. 2. Vinton, was dead on anivalat St. Mary 's
Hosp ital. Huntingto n. W.Va., from head injuries rqJoriedly reeeived
aflri he was s!JlJ Ck by a Heiner's B~kery delive1y truck driven by
Michael R Wills. 28, Rt. 3, Bidwell.
The patml said Wills was westbound at 3:55 a.m. when he
repo11cdi)' heard something hit the front of the truck. He stopped the
truck. and wit h a co-worker who had been driving another Heiner's
, truck behind Wills, thpy discovered thai Mays had been hit. The
1patrol said Mays had been walldng on the roadway.

Patrol cites motorist
The slalt' highway patrol cited Dianna K Cox, H. Rt. 2, Gallipolis,
fo r failun:' to yield in a two-car accident on County Road 25 at the
entrance to Meigs High School Monday.
Troopers sa id Cox reportedly pulled south from the school
d.-ive\vay at 10::.0 a. m. .into th€ pa th of a oorthbound car driven by
Ronald C:. McDade, 50. Ga llipolis, and owned by Columbus &amp;
Southem Ohio Electric Co. The cars collided ,' the patrol said. ,
There was moderate damage reported to the Cox vehicle and
slight to McDade's car. the patrol said.

EMS units answer three calls
Meigs County Emergency Medica I Services reports three calls
Monday.
Rutland a til: 18 a.m. treated but did oot transport Stevie Darnell
from Beech Grove Road; Racine a! 9:19p.m. to Bashan Road for
Leuv ina Hayman to Veteran s Memorial Hospital; MJddleporr at
10:22 p.m. to South Fourth Aven ue for StevE' Haning to Veterans
Memorial Hospiti!l.

Racine to flush hydrants
The Racine Water Department wants ro a len customers tha t they
will he flu shing hydrants on Thu rsday and Friday, starting after 6
p.m. each day.

MA RC schedules hog roast
The Meigs Associat ion for Ret.arded Cit izens Is sponsoring a hog
roast on Satu rday at Ca rleton School in Sy racuse.
Advanced tickets may he purchased at Hartley Shoes In Pomeroy,
and at the Sy racuse Dairy Bar. Serving wUI be from 5 to 7 p.m. at
$4.50 per adu lt and $2.50 for children under 12.

No Southern classes Friday
Southern Local School Superin:
tendent Bobby J. Ord reminds
parents and students in the South·
ern Loc.rf School District that
schoo l will not \xo in session this
Friday , Oct. 17, so that teachers
may attend the county-wide inser·
vice at Meigs High School.

Also att ending lnservice Frldav
will be tbe dist rict's custodians and
rooks.
"'
Hutchison Sani!my Supply Co..
Ripley, W.Va., will oonduct the
inservice !br the custodians, while
Mrs. Joyce Thoren , Southern Dis·
trict lunchroom supervisor, wlll
conduct the inservlce for the cooks.

·

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Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Barbara Talbott,
Racine; Cynthia Sexton, Rutland;
Herbie Lance, Bidwell; Laura
·
McDaniel, Cli fton, W.Va.
Discharges "'"" ""Ethel Hatfield,
Clara .Custer. .

Spencers.
Blood cholesterol level Is a
controllable risk factor In heart
disease. By reducing saturated fats
and cholesterol In the diet, blood
cholesterol levels can be klwered .
Turkeys provide a delicious meal
low In cholesterol and saturated
fats and turkeywalkers raising over
$00 will receive a free turkey.
"Walkers benefit !rom partlc!pat·
ing in turkeywalk in two ways.
First, they get a day of heart.
healthy exercise. Second, If they
roilect :tro or more, they will
receive heart-healthy food, a tree'
turkey," said tile Spencers.
"It's not too late to register," they
said. "Lace up those walldng shoes
and walk for heart on October 18." •
For more lnfonnatk&gt;n, or to
register. call 992-6222. Pledge
sheets may be obtained by contact·
lng M!ll!e Midkiff at Bank One,
Pomeroy.

r----------------....:.._____:__

Jon T. Merrifield, who ha s served
as manager-safety at Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s Martinka Division
for the past 10 years, ha s been
named manager-safety lor South·
ernohiocoarsMetgsDivlsion.
In his new position, he will have
responsibility for the safety tunction covering all three mines. After
joining
AEPand
system
In January
1974
as the
safety
training
coordi·
nator at the Martinka Division nea r
Fairmont, W.Va ., he was promoted
to safety supervisor In 1976. That
title was subsequently changed to
man ager-safety.
Originally !rom the Fairmont
llrea. Merifield has attended Farimont State College and was
employed as a salety supervisor by
Eastern Associated Coal Corp. at
its ~he ! , W.Va., operations from
1970-74. He also was employed by
the &amp;&gt;t hlehem Mines Corp. from
1966-70.
He succeeds John O'Grre n, who
left the company to take a posit ion
In Ut ah.
.

Racine United Methodist Church
will make apple butter on Wednesday at the church. The apple butter
will be on sale at the 'church after 5
p.m. at $4 a quart and $2.50 a pint.

TUESDAY NISHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY ·
DINING ROOM ONLY J
Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw: hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substttutes mept beverage with additional ·

FOR JUST

$3.25

(ROW'S fAMilY RESTAURA-NT

.:._J:j

COUPON

BE THANKFUL YOU CAN

few weeks w111 ook more deeply
into the structure, planning and
intent of the Meigs Countv Park
District Project. and look more
spec!HcaUy at exaQ1ples of the type
and ldnd of activities to be
developed within the Park District,
howthis acttvltywtllallectthelocal
ecooomy and wby the next
necessaryinthedevelopmentotthe
Meigs County Park District Project
Is that the citizens of Meigs County
approye operating funds In the

GIVE BLOOD

WEDNESDAY OCTO BER 15
1

·.

RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

1 p• M• • 5: 30' p• M•

rN~o~v~e~m~he~r~e~lec~tio~n~.-==~_:_=-~========:::::::::::::::::::::::::::!_

To makto apple butter

li,_____

Rutl and Chu r~h of God wUJ he
makllig apple bu tter on Thursday
and Friday at the church on O)lio
124 . For orders, call 742-2000 or stop
by the church.

Charles R.
New Albany, who
survives , along with a son, Marvin
(Doc1 Es!le~Route '2;\JakiWOd, sGi
grandchildren and seven great·
grandchildren.
SerVIces wlll be held at 10 a.m.
Thursday at the Oakmod United
Methodist Church with Rev. Robert
Kenney and Rev. John Ash Off!clat·
ing. Burial wUI te il MapleWOOd
Cemetery ht New Aloony where
there wUJ also be viewing at 4 p.m.
on Thursday, Friends ll)IIY call at
the · Ta:rlor Funeral Home In ·
&lt;'lakwood from 2·4 and 7·9 p.m. on
Wednesday or ~t the church one
hour prior to the service. Order of
Eastern Star services will be at the
fimeral home al8 p.m. Wednesday.
Mrs. Estle's husband was superintendent of the ChUJlcothe public
schools• from 1955 to 1976 and the
couple lived In Chilltcotl:e during
those years .

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10-18-86

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HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY
Free Electronics hea_ring tests will be given by Bellone Heartng Aid Center at

DR. RANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY, OOOIEI 16 · ·
FROM 9:00-12:00 P.M.
THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST.
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding eonversalton IS lnviled to
have a tree hearing lest to IH If thlaprobtem can be helped! Bring this coupon
with you tor your f'BEE HEARING TEST ot $50 valuo. Adult• only. Please.

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

ALIGNMENTS
MOST CARS

S1450

'FREE

nRE ROTATION &amp;
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COUPON EXPIRES 10-18-86

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WELCOME

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO.

600 EAST MAIN
·

SERVING M .

992-2094

CO. 20 YEARS - 1966-1986

in playoffs

POMEROY

PICK-4. .
2719

-Page 3

e
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Vo1.38, No.1 t 4
Copyrighted 1986

precipitation Is near
through Thursday.

zero

2 Sections, 14 Pages

26 Cent•

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enttne

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Pomeroy-1\i!iddleport. Ohio, Wednesday, October 15, 1986

A Multimedia

Inc. NOWIPIPtr

Pomeroy Chamber Jends.support to park levy
By NANCY YOACIIAM
·
Sentinel Stall Writer
The Pomeroy Chamber ol Commerce has passed a
resolution ill support of the Meigs County Park
District's proposal for a half-mill operating levy.
Meigs Countlans will vote on the levy proposal in the
November election.
Pomeroy chamber members, meeting Tuesday at
the Trinity Church in Pomeroy, viewed a slide show
which was prepared by the park district and
presented· by Steve Powell, a · park district
commissioner.
The slide showbrieflydescribedthed!strict'sgoals
and the rt'l&gt;ources available In Meigs County to
achieve those goals.
·
in romments following the presmtation, Powell
said that each village in lh~ ..county has already
passed resolutions allowing the park district to
' operate within their respective village limits. ·
Efforts are already underway by the district,
Powell said, to have the Shade IRJver designated as
one of Ohio's srenlc rivers. Powell reported the

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d!strtct has met with trustees of townships bordering
· Shade River, to obtajn preUmlnacy informatk&gt;n to
submit to ODNR. II tile Information would meet With
slate approval, ODNR whuld then investigate further
tefuremaklng the declslontoplaceSbadeRivermt!s
list of scenic rivers.
·
Powell said that romments !rom the various
governing entitles, regarding the park district's
goals, have been positive.
County resldenls will be able to cruise the Ohio
River on board the P.A. Denny when the Charleston,
W.Va.·based sternwheeler docks In Pomeroy on Oct.
30-31 and Nov. 1.
Debbie Holbrook, P.A. Denny cruise director, was
at Tuesday's meeting; of the Pomeroy Cham her of
Commerce to final~ plans · for the weekend
excursions.
,. ,
.
Late afternoon hour·!ong trips for the Jllbltc wUl be
available on Thu~y and Friday at acost of $3 for.
adults and $1 for chUdren. On Saturday altermon,
two-hour scenic cruises wUI be conducted. Aprlmerlb

WASHINGTON (UPi l - Pres!·
dent Reagan, conducting a massive
·public relations campaign to counter the Impression that he walked
away from a nuclear arms break·
through at the Iceland summit,
says he Is convinced the Soviets wUI
return to the negotiating table.
Since he returned from Iceland
Sunday night, Reagan has \xoen m a
non-stop media blitz to win over
global public opinion in support of
his refusal to make concessions ro
--6ovtet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
on the "Star Wars" missile defense
system, the Strategic Defense
'Initiative.
· Today. the president arranged
more of the summit "big sell" by
·scheduUng a luncheon appearance
:1n Baltimore on behalf of Maryland
:Republican smatorlal candidate
•Unda Chavez, a former White
House special assistan t.
• Reagan gave three separate
briefings Tuesday - to congres·
,sional leaders, television anchors
'and rommC'flta)ors. and gove rnomen! o!Jicil!ls. He told the TV woup .
he was "ronvlnced" thr &amp;1v!ets
·would "rome back to the table and
'talk ."
But things got slighlly testy at the
congressional session , a sourti
said. 'when· House Speaker Thomas
O'Nr lll. D·Mass., told Reagan.
"I've tlf'Ve r known America to walk
away" from arms control'.
Reagan explained that after
Gorbachev responded to his coun·
terproposa l by saying '" nyet' three
times, I got up to leave."
O'Neill then reminded !he pres!·
dent that he used to call SDI a
" bar gainin g ch ip" in ar ms
negotiations.
'
At his session with administ ra·
lion officials. Reagan said the'
"slgnliicance of that meeting at
Re1·kj avik is noll hat we r:ldn 't sign
agrcements in the end. The slgnlfl·
ca nce is that we got as close as we
did ."

.

dinner cruise wiU begin at 5:30p.m. ala oost lt$35 per
COUJ?le, and a dance on Saturday night will wind up the
· P.A.' Denny weekend. ·
Aided by slides, Holbrook presented a trlel history
of the P.A. Denny which was built In Cnarleston In
19ll. After being used for many years by the U.S.
· Army Corps of Engineers, the boat was Jll~chased by
· an Individual In Alabama and rroved to that state
where It was left to decay. It was then that Pete
Denny, of Charleston, located the boat, purchased it .
and brought It back to Charleston to begin rebuDd!ng
it for the 1975 Charleston Sternwheel Regatta. The
boat pari!ctpated in the regatta, although repairs
were not complete. Denny died shortly after, before
repairs were I)Jllshed. The boat, 24 feet wlde.109 feet
long,welghlng300tons, wasthenboughtbyhls!riend,
Law&amp;Jn Ha.milton, who named it the P.A Denny.
Hamilton still owns the P.A. Denny, which Is docked
on the Kanawha River near the West Virginia Capitol
building, but the vessel is operated by the Charleston
Festival Commission. The boat has a capacity of :.00
.
.

.

people, however, during the trip to Pomeroy.
capacity Will be lowered to 100 due to the weather.
Because of this, Pomeroy Chamber members will be'
selling a limited number of tickets to the prtme rib
dinner and dance cruises.
.
Aeyooe seeking more !nformatbn oo the P.A·
Denny may call the chamber office at !112-5000.
:
. A briefupdateofchamher'sco-sponsorshlpwlththe
Rutland Civic Center Organization of a Big Bend
Minstrel Association Musical was rresented by
chamber member Jennifer Sheets. The show will be:
held Nov. 29 at the Rutland Civic Center.
. This year's chamber sponsored Community
Halloween Party wlll be held Oct. 31 on the Pomeroy
parking lot, beginning with a concert by the Meigs
Local Band at 6:30p.m. Chamher members Tbm
Reed and Paul Gerard are coordinating the event.
They ask that anyone wishing to donate rmney or
treats. or wanting to volunteer to help during the
evening, contact them or Sherry Hari, cham!Er
secretary.
'

'

Drug, alcohol abuse groups
discussed by Eastern board

·Reagan
begins
•
summit
'big sell'

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel Stall WrHer
An appUcation with the Ohio
Departme nt of Aging for funding of
a pilot project In respite care and
other supportive services for Meigs
Countlans who have Alzheimer's
di S('as~ and l"l'iated disorders will
\xo tiled this week by the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
Between SOOO,IXXl and
appropriated by the Ohio Legislature. will be awarded by the Ohio
Department of Aging for pilot
projects, with an adv!.sory commit ·
tee from that agency to sel~t ten to
fifteen proposals lor the funding.
Selection of the projects to he
funded Is expected to be announced
ln. early November and spec!flca·
tlons call for the projects to be
. underway by Dec. 1.
Meigs County's application will
specify that the F:amlly Support
Network Advisory Council, which
has been active In a program of
training and assistance to careglv·
ers of the frail and elderly In

$m,ooo,

-

. Daily Number
329

.

Generally clear lonlgN, witt• " ' I
low tielwee.D 3il ana -41~ MiiiitiY'
sunny 'lbursdily, with h!Khs In
the upper 50s. 'lbe prollabOity of

REl'JRING - CarolYn 'lbomas, 1111 employee fl the Mel~ County
Probate and JuvenDe Court for the past tO years, was honored Friday
by her co-worilel'!! with a retirement party. Carolyn, whO has abo
woriled lor WlWPO and till' Pomeroy Area Ouunher ol Commerce, wUl
continue worillng at too probate office m a part-Ibn~ basis lor jug a lew montill.1ben, says Carolyn, "I'll start lTG' jobasaluU-drnegrandma."
WHh llfrs. Thomas, who Is married to Don 'l1Dmas, Pomeroy, Is
Probate and Juvenile Judge Roliert Buck.

Several substitute teachers were tobacco and alcohol. The two will schools and Jllbllcatk&gt;n It those
employed and plan!&gt; dlscus,sed for confer with the athletic council to menus In newspapers.
Conduct at danres following
organizing groups geared toward study the provisions and were
prevention of tobacco and alcohol asked to make recommendations at atlietlc event was discussed at the
meeting with Apllng praising the
use and abuse at a special meeting the next meting of the board.
Also d!scu ssed at the meeting students for their henavtor. A
of tbe Eastern Local Board of
were scholastic eltg!lillty state· progress report was given on the
Education Tuesday night.
ments
for athletes. Apllng mted remedial program In the lOth and
Charles NoJT!s, Michael Ed·
wards, and Christy Nelson were , that gl-ades are being carefully 7th grades by Carolyn '!Tipp and
employed as substitute teachers. watched by the · staff so that Maida Long, who noted that
students with def!clenres are l:elng
Darlene Buckley was hired as a· problems can be detected early.
The board approved pay for a Identified and the corrective work is
substitute library aide.
Discussed at the meeting was the substitute teacher and a mileage being initiated.
Apl!ng reported that a reconditi·
possibility of organizing MAOD allowance for Janice Weher, who
!Mothers Against Drunk Drlvingl has been selected to attend the oned copy moc hine had been given
home ecooomtcs conference, which to the school foilowingapurchaseof
and SADD (Students Against
Drunk Driving! in the district, wlll be held next month in supplies by the Harris ~ M of
Atliens. The possib!l!ty of hiring a
along with making other educa- ColumiJ.t s.
tional 'prevention prowams avalla· .. It was voted to dlsrontinue teacher to travel from school to
ble to students. Ir was suggested "romp" time lor employees and to school to assist with students in the
that a prevention program be pay overtime within the pay period learning disablllly or handicapped
initiated in the primary grades in which il is earned. The first classes who might be main·
using materials appropriate to the reading was given on a policy streamed back to regular
age level.
· regarding ur administration of classrooms.
Following the meeting, the board
Daniel ApUng. EHS prindpal. prescription drugs to students by
moved Into executive session to
and Dennis Eichinger, athletic staff members.
No action was taken oo eitt..r the consider peroonnel and negotla·
coordinator, met with the board to
"hold-harmless"
statement or the t!ons with OAPSE . Attending were
discussed discrepancies in the
energy
conservation
program with board members Jim Smith, Roger
school rules and the athletic
handbooks regarding the posses- roth to IE considered at the next Gaul, Kat~ Manicke and ~sle
sion, use · and consumption of meeting. Grace Stout, lunchroom Heines, and principals Daniel
· supervisOr, was at the meeting to Apllng, !)maid Shue, and Grace
d!SCU'l!l fond preparation and It was Weber; ~perintendent Richard'
decided that emphasis wUI be oo a Roberts and Eloise Boston,
uniform luncheon menu in all treasurer.
Gravelle said Sunday "this story
is of particular Interest and benefit
to our polillcal opponent. I look at It
as a political story."
"I think any suggesllon that the
chief justice was rewa rded or
oometling is ludicrous. In fact. I
Hnd It a little upsetting," Gravelle
The Middleport Chamber of Commerce, meeting In regular
told the Plain Dealer.
session at the Dairy Queen in Ml&lt;kllepcct Tuesday, endorsed a
'l'he newspaper also sa id Cele·
one- half mill levy to be voted upon In the en:tre county at the
brezze twice made judicial rulings
Novembt-r election.
that benefitted Cleveland union
The levy has been placed before vot~ by the Meigs County Park
boss Chester Liberatore, the trea s·
District Board of Commissioners, whiCII.jlas outllned an extensive
urer of Local 310.
program It wilt follow in the county with proceeds from the levy.
Celebrezze cast a tie-breaking
The annual Halloween party, sponsored by the chamber, was
vote .in 1982 against convicting
announ~ed for Oct. ll at the Meigs Junior High School iJotball fteld
Liberatore of arson. In 198J,
following a parade from the Sears-Fruth parking lot. There will \xo
Celebrezze had Liberatore released
treats and costume prizes.
from jail after two tower courts
A discussion was also held on the annual Christmas parade to
orderoo him jailed pending appeal
welrome In the holiday season. The charnll'r may work with the
of the same a rson conviction. State
Pomeroy Chamber in the develo~ent of one parade forbothtowm .
records show that a Celebrezze
The 1~ block party date was set forSept.19. Presldent BtU Blower
carppalgn fund received $5,000
announced. A visit by'the P.A. Dennywasannouncedfor Oct.li-Nov.
from Uberatore's union PAC five
1 In Pomeroy.
days after the 1982 vote.

Celehrezze seeks probe into funds
DAYTON. Ohio !UP!) - An
Investigation Into a report that two
woups linked with organized crime
in Cleveland have made conlribu·
lions to Supreme Court Chief
Justice Frank Celebrezze's cam·
patgn ha s been ordered by the
candidate.
"I've already Instructed my
campaign manager to set that
money aside and determine who It
was from," he said.
But Celebrezze said he didn't
expect his campaign manager,
James Gravelle. to uncover any
wrongdoing In .connection with the
contributions.
A story published Sunday In the
Cleveland Plain Dealer said Cele·
brezze's campaign received at least ·
$10,500 in rontrtbut!ons 6ver the last
four years from Locals 310 and !llO
of the Laborers' International
Trade Union of North America .
Political action committees att·

ached to the locals are mobInfluenced, the newspaper said.
Celebrezze said he doubted If the
report was correct. adding that It iS
"absolutely " unethica l !br Jllblic
ligures to accept tainted PAC
money .
"II they're a!ttllated with organ·
!zed crime. of course'We'll give the
money back, " he said.
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown
said the contributions were legal.
About 3.500 construction workers
represented by the union donated a
dollar a week tqthePACsthrougha
wage check-off system, the justice
said.
"It's my understanding that It
came from a PAC formed under the
law, " he said.
Celebrezze, who is f"\lnDing for
re-election against Appeals Court
Judge Thomas Moyer. a Republl·
can, said the newspaper story b~s
"political overtones."

Levy wins endorsement

from Middleport Chamber

Aging council to apply for Alzheimer's pilot project funds

RADIAL RETREADS

All PRICES GOOD

Ohio Lottery .

at stake tOday .

l,_, JC&gt;;&gt;&lt;,; she married

Residents warm up
for annual Turkeywalk

Fair through the period, wit h
highs in the 50s Thursday and
ranging from the uwer 50s to the
~H. ~92·5432
POMEIOY, OH.
mid OOs F\·iday · and Saturday.
..;=.:::.!:::!:~F~r=ltd:!,!C~hic:k~e:n_ _ _
?vern!ght lows will he In !he 30s I'
early Thursday and In the 40s t-----------~-..,....---------..J
Friday and Saturday mornings.

Church to make butler

1!t

Mrs. Luc!Ue M. Estle, 72,Route2,
(EDlfOR'S NOTE: This Is the
Since approximately May of19&amp;i, Oakwood, Paulding County, Ohio,
first In a series of lourlnlonnatlve the Park District Board of Commis· formerly oLRutla nd , died .Monda¥
iii'tiCies outlliiliig llii! lllefgs County sioners has been involvOO In the morning .a t the Leisure Oak
Park District Project. The Park research, evaluation and planning Convalescent Center In Def!anre.
Dlstljct Board of Commissioners of how the Meigs County Park
Mrs. Estle was born March 14,
consists ol Stephen ·E. PoweU, District can best meet the requlre· 1~14, at Rutland, a daughter of the
Steven L. Story and Charles D. ments set forth under the Park late Harvey E. and Lillie Wilson
Barrett.
District' Law and create an entity Jones. She graduated from Athens
A slide presentation of the Meigs that best serves the present 'and High School In 1933. Besides her
County Park Dlstri&lt;l Project Is future recreational and ecooom!c parents. she was preceded in death
available lor viewing by any group . needs of Meigs County. As a result by four brothers, Clyde, Roy,
or organlzatlon. To schedule ~ of this rf'5oorch, the Meigs County Sidney and Charles Jones. a sister,
P~ntatlon, or if you have any Park District has evolved into an
Mrs. Erhel Evans, and a greatquestions ·or comments regardln'g aggressive ecooomtc development granddaughter.
·the proJec!. contact the Meigs project incorporating various as·
In Athens, Mrs. Estle was
County Park District Boanl of (lects of historical and natural
employed
'at the zenner Depart·
Commissioners through the Meigs resource preservation and conserment
Store
and later with the
County Development Office at vatlon, recreational activity devel·
~1.)
opment, the marketing of the asset s McBee Co. In Chillicothe, she
The Meigs County Park District of Meigs County for development of served as a guide at the Adena State
was foimed and operates under the · a locaitourlsm Industry ,Increasing Historical Park and was employed
authority ofCha!)ter 1545of the Ohio" opportunities !or employment, as a . personal shopper with the
Revised Code as a political subdivl· stimulating the local economy and Kroger Co. She was a member of
slon of the State of Ohio. The Park fostering an environment where the Continental Chapter 1Zl, Order
District Is tasked with the responsl· new and existing IJ.tslnesses may
billty of rescuing remnants of our grow and prosper.
rapidly vanishing natural environ·
Viewed in the light of the
. ment. and through their wise county-wide Park District concept,
management, development and Meigs County Is Hteral~y an undis·
use, preserve and protect these covered jewel of opportunity. The ·
areas for the edlflcation,!nspirat!on . raw materials which exists here for
and enjoyment of present and our use in development of this
future generations of Meigs project Includes: 62 miles of Ohio
Meigs County residents are
Countians.
river front and. waterway; the warming up for turkeywalk.
srentc beauty of Meigs County's
The American Heart Association,
cliffs and hollows, vast tracts of Melgs .County branch. is sponsoring
forest , rolling hills, large open a turkeywalk on Saturday at Meigs
spaces, abundanre of game; the Local High School from:1to 3 p.m.
rich cultural and historical legacy The !ivP.mile event will raise funds
·Jeft to Meigs Countlans by early for the research, education and
Indian inhabitants, European community service programs of
settlers, the salt, ooal and river the American Heart Association.
industries, French and Indian War
"This walk -for-pledges e~ent is
\
and Civil War are only a partial geared to the entire family," said
listing of the raw material available . Mr. and Mrs. Billy J . Spenrer.
to the Meigs County Park District. co-chairs of the event. "All fund s
These
serve as a brief illus tration of raised wU! help in the fight against
t
what Is available to the Park heart disease, and businesses are
District for development into camp- also encouraged to sponsor teams
. ing areas. hiking trails, historical of turkeywalkers."
walldng, driving and sight seeing
"We also want to spread the
tours, local festivals, hunting and message that walking is a heart fishing and other asoociated act tv!· healthy exercise," they said.
ties which can be developed into a Twenty to ll minutes of bris k
comprehensive. co~nty-wtde pack· walking at least three times a week
age for use of Meigs Countians and helps improve !he hea lth of your
which can \xo developed and heart and lungs, added the
marketed in such a manner to
-attract tourists to'our area to enjoy
,Jon T. MeJTifield
what Meigs County has to offer.
Articles to follow over til' next

Firm names
'
safety official

League title

E~:t:.~;~:~tand
the OakWood
Church.

Lucille M. Estle

·

Ohio w.eather
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy lonighr, with a low ·
between 35 and 40. P~ rt ly cloudy
Wednesday, \11th highs in the mid
50s.
The probability of precipitation Is
ll percent today and near zero
tonight and Wednesday.
Winds will be from the west at10
to W mph today, diminishing to
near 10 mph tonight .
Ohio E xtended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday

.•.

I

another project, wUI continue to be
active In the Implementing and
referral areas should the funding be
granted.
Respite Clift planned
Meeting this week at the Senior
Citizens Center. Eleanor Thomas,
executive director, advised
111embers of the Family Support
Network Adv!.sory Council that the
local appllcat!on wUI request fund·
tng up to . $ll.IXXl, anticipating
service to a maximum of 50
lamllies.
•
·
The services would have some
Income guidelines, wi.th fees being
based m a sliding scale according
to family Income.
The statelunds would be used lor
respite care In the home, a half-day
or a day a month, and cou!d Include
two or three days of relief assist·
ance lor the caregiver with the
Meigs . County Council , on Aging
contracting for that service with
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Skilled Nursing Facll!ty.
In addition to actual respite care,
l,

•.

the program would Include training
In addition to the grant program
sessions for caregivers and suppor- lor respite and other supportive
tive services such as transporta - services for the victims. the
tion, chOre and health-relatoo legislature has also provided lor up
programs.
to a million dollars for research ,
Referrals lor tbe pilot project-If diagnosis :llld physician train\llg In
Meigs County Is successful In Its bid Ohio' s medical schools and re·
-would conie from physicians and search centers.
health agencies.
The legtslati~e iritent o! the plio!
Or. James Witherell, a member projects Is to demonstrate the
of the FSN advisory council. noted
effectiveness of respite and suppor·
that there are currently live to nine . tlve serylces for fam!Ues caring for
percent of \hose over 65 in Meigs relatives with Alzheimer's Disease
County suffering from diagnosed In terms of providing relief from
Alzheimer's disease, whlle an even ·constant care giving arid delaying
larger percent of over 65 year olds tnstltutk&gt;nailzatlon of the patient.
have related d!.sorders.
An emphasis of the pilot project
Nationally, Alzbelmer's disease here would be to supptement the
a1fects some twc m!llion Ameri- funding from the Department of
cans. As the population ages, Aging with local resOurces. Many of
lJI!yslclans predict an Increase In those local cOntacts and resources
til' numher of diagnosed cases•
are already In place having \xoen
Alzheimer's disease Is a progres- established under the Department
sive, Irreversible neurological \118· ot liealth and Human servtces
order that affects 100,000 Ohjoans. Project, the Family Support Net·
Its cause Is unknown and there Is oo work, lor the at-risk elderly In rural
cure or treatment.
Amertca, completed early this
Supplement funds
summer. That program has· been

,.

taken as a model lor other agencies
working with the aged.
Malrolm Orebaugh, associate
director of Woodland Centers,
advised that Its crisis program
could provide some service to
lac!Utate the Alzheimer's project.
The Senior Citizens Center's role
would he to provide related servJ.
ces, such as transportation and
chore, as well as continue the
limited respite service which Is row
available, some of the funding ror
which Is provided through the
Meigs County Department of Human Services.
Training 8es8lo118
AI the meeting of the FSN
Advisory Couocll, plans were out·
lined for direct service to careglv·
ers to provide rel!el and mabie
Alzheimer's Disease and related
disorder victbns to remain at home
as long as possible, contingent, of
rourse on the pilot project being
funded.
'
Twelve two-OO,ur training ses· ·
slons for caregivers are being
If

planned, these to include rwo
sessions conductcd by personnel of
the Alzheimer' s Center at Mount
Carmel Hospital, Columbus. wlth
all sessions to lx' rompleted by May
15, 1987. The project ,would also
Include in-home respite care servl·
·ces on a limited basis, Institutional
care lor temporary rellei o! the
primary caregiver. management
services to enhance access and
promote coordination among available supportive services, and to
organize a support group of faml·
lies and other caregivers with the
same problems.
Family Support Network Advi·
sory Council members attending
the session where the preliminary
plans were made for applying !br
the pilot project funding for Alzhei·
mer's Disease and related dis·
orders included Dr. Witherell, Mrs.
Thomas. Pam Garretson, COOFdtnator, Area Agency on Aging, Sandy
White, social worker; Sidney Ed·
wards, executive director of the
(Continued on Page 14)

•

v

�-·

~-·- .,-"--c!''-"- -

'

The

, Comment~

.I

AL baseball •crown at stake this ·evemng

p&amp;g.-2-The Daily Sentin~l
Pomeroy:-Middleport. OhiO
We!Snesdlv. OCtober 15, 1986

By ROBERTO DIAS' .

period he had for Callfomla's 4-3,
11-lnn!ng victory In' Game 4 last
BOSTON (UPI) ,.- Something Saturday.
.
about the final garne of a series
In addition, Boston's bid for Its
· 6ffiigs oot- llie" gambler in a fll'st WOfta Si!ftes appearance In U
manager.
years Is underlined byltsreputatton
Nopnally, Boston Manager John for collapsing In key_games.
McNamara would not be taking
"That should te dispelled by
much of a risk In starting Roger now," McNamara sald. "This team
Clemens ln toniglit's decisive sev- has won in clutch situations all
enth game of the Arneiican League year. We don't expect California to
Championship Sertes (8: 20 p.m. te intimidatEd beeause we·v~ won ·
.. EIYr), created when the Red Sox two straight. .
stavEd oft elln\lnatlon Tuesday
"As far ,as Roger, the man has
'night with a 10-4 victory over been romlng through for us the
· · California.
'
whole swnmer. He's a major
After all, Clemens went :!1-4 reason we're here. and that's why
, · during tbe regular season and Is a, I'm pitching him again. I expect a
shdo-ln for the Cy Young Award,
tough, competitive game."
But the ace right-hander has
California Manager Gene
. thr9wn a wearying 277 pitches in his Mauch, bidding for his first pennant
, two playoff losses and ls pitching on In _a q\UU'Ier-century of managing
three days' rest, the same rest and the A!;lgels' first World Series

UPI Sports Wrtter

The Dttily Se~tinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.

~lb

B m~
'qjv.

r;"T'-1""-""T"' II""T"E!! d

·-=-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
fubllsher

(

-.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant P.ublisher/ Conlroller
•

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

· DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the AmE'rican NE'wspaper Publishers Association.

'

LETTE RS OF OP INION are welcome . They should be Jess than m words
long. All letters are s u bjoc t toed !ling and rrust be signed with name, addres s and
tl'IPphon r numbN . No un signed te11('rs wiil be published . Letters shou ld be In
good l aste. addressing issuC'S. not pe-rson alities.

The Lij!hter Side

Long may it bloom

,.

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON tUPII - When Pres ident Reagan signed into law
legisla tion designating the rose as America's national fi9wer, it may h ave
sta rted the late S&lt;&gt;n. Ewrett Dirksen. R-111.. foliatin g in his grave.
Not that Reagan's pen is ull that fe11ile. but Dirksen, as we lovers of
nowcry spe«hes arc aware. used to champion the marigold in fruitless
effort s to presuade Congress to create a national floral emblem.
I undcrSiand the marigold lobby was active unt Uthe bitter end. trying to
block lhP tosr with a presidential veto, but without thP former Senate
Republican trader's oratory that -roovrment didn't stand a chance.
It may he. as Dirksen once proclaimed, that the marigold "reflect s the
hardihood and character of thr generations who pioneered and build this
land into a grrat nation ."
But . fr anklv . I have alwa.vs valued the flower less for its hardihood and
prPttv blosSQms than for is ability to repel nematodes, which feast on the
root s of other plants.
Show me a row, any of the 2.000 varieties cultivated worldwide. that
r&lt;'Prl anything. except maybe a few human beings.
Upon · receiving a roS£' bush for a birthday gift. a neighbo r once
remarked, "'Nobody likes roses except Japanese t&lt;&gt;etles and mv
husband."
·
Even her hubb.v. who Si'lected the present. might have been surprised to
learn the row already reigned as the nat ion!J.l flower of Iran. But whoever
heard of Iranian beetles?
Po Us conducted by the Florists' Transworld ~liverv Associationclearlv
established the rose as the ··people's ·choice" in this rountry .
'
Although somr memhers might have been swayed .by Dirksen and other
marigold part l= s. the FTD ~&lt;'as officiall.v neutral in the national fiower
controversy. That left the winning lobby to be waged by ruch groups as the
National Rose Society and Roses Inc.
Not even its most ardent admirers disputed charges that the rose may
contribute to the nation's trade deficit.
More than a million roses are imported each year, mostly from
Columbia, and account for about ll percent oft he ~nnual sale of cut nose5.
Legislation signed by Reagan before he left (or Iceland was sponsored by
two Louisiana Democrats, Sen. Bennett Johnston and Rep. Lindy B:&gt;l?l(s. It
remained , however. for Sen. Howell Heflin of Alabama to pick up
Dirksen' s oratorical mantle.
·
Henln and others, perhaps senators carried away with the Sounds of
their own ,voices..pald tribute not only to the marigold but to the camellia
and pven to flowering trees such as the dogwood.
Other blossoms entered in the national floral emblem derby at ooe timr
or another included those sprouted by the com tassel. the mountain laurel
and the columbine.
It also might be pointed out that the wildnlie Is the official state flower or
North Dakota. Surely you have heard thE' expression: "As North Dakota
goes. so goes til&lt;' nation."

Big ban on

campus.--=.____,....;=::..;;:..;;....;;:.~W-ill==
iam=A. . . . . . . . . . .=
u./

Nothing more dramatically lUus- dedication to ':hearing
other gan himself on hand, and settled ' enough to remeinher what lberaltrates the state of affairs on many point of view'' seemed, and I am with evident relief for the Prtnoe m tsm used to stand tor, hal blntEd
Amerlcan ,college campuses today sure was. absolutely · sinoere Wales. Alfonso c..Jero, the Nlcara- that he may reverse this' Nllng,
observing that "There Is no ~h
than !be fate of the ooncept of "free , even though, as Bill' Bucklt;r guan contra leader who was also a
speech."
remarked, they were ottm aston- fmiofSQIDO&lt;'ll, was shouted oownat so horrenoous irl content that It does
,
Dw-lng the 1950s, liherals streilu- 1'shed upon discovering that there Northwestern and dismissed by a not serve our purposes." '
·
Meanwhile,
all
over
the
land
ously supportEd the right of Rrln· really ""'' another point of view:
· faculty~lst as 'llucky to get wt of
. members of college faculties and
cetWI uilctergradu~tes to Invite
Today, however, many AJnerl: here alive."·
Alger Hiss to addres_s them, despite can colleges are In the · grip of a
' At Dartmouth, a wnch of leftist administrations wheel and swoop
the protest of tbe university's lettlst dogmatism so. ~bsolute that students .erected a series of illegal like flocks ot birds or schools·Offlsh,
Catholic chaplain that "In an e\'en Stalin might haveenvletllt. As shanties on the Grren (alle&amp;edly In mindless cibedlenoe to · the
academic community dedicated to Secretary of· Education William representing the lx&gt;mes of SJuth dictates of leftist Ideology. Just
the search for truth, an unrepentant BEnnett r~ntly noted , · many · African blacks) and were In tlle days before til" final House wie on
perjurer simply has nothing to American campuses are virtually course forgiven by school autillri· contra. aid, 100 coUegl? presidents
say."
closed to speakers balding locally ties; 'ro~atlve students who , signEd a statement opposing It. As
And when the New Leftists burst unpopular vtews, including high tore the shanties· down were . the Senate neared a vote 011 the
onto the scene at Berkeley durtng officials of the Reagan brusquely disciplinEd. A Yale so- president's nomination of Daniel
the 1900s, It was under the banner r:J administration.
' phomore will dared to satlr)ze Gay Manion to the 7th U:S. Circuit Court
the "Free Speech Movement,"
Harvard University, for exam- and Lesbian Awareness Days was of Appeals, 1IJ law school deans
joinEd In denouncing him as
however quickly they abanooiled it. pie, celebrating its 350th ·.annlver- put on two years' probation Say what one would about literals sary, managed to finessethe ·awtul though Yale's new president, unqualified. Could tbe Rockettes, or
In· the old days, their Mlllslan problem -of having President Rea- Benno Schmidt Jr., who is old the Marines' p~isioo marmlng
team, have improved oo these
pet1oitnanees?
·
What has happenEd, of oourse, Is
that the studeni leftists of the late
l!lffis have now taken over . the
college faculties, and are stlll
employing - and even improving
on - their disruptive tactics. But
when they were students, there
were always at least a few or their
classmates and contemporaries
ready to speak out against them.
Wbere, today, Is !be Inevitable
handful of professors on college
facull/£'5 who oppose this reign or
terror•
.•
·
They're there, alf'~t. but with pitifully feY/ exceptions - they
have been frightened or browbeaten into sllenoe. The student
conservatives tJf the 19flls, after aU.
knew that in four years allrost they
would be Ieavlngthecampusfor the
. real world, where Vf!f'IJ ditfm'ent
valllf!l prPValled. Ilut !lQnservatl\'e
professm-s must stay and sw-vlve
on campus, if they are to support
their families, and they must not
become unpopular with their leftist
colleagues If they hope for advancemmt (let alone tenure) . They can
only wait, and pray that sanity will
ultimately return to Old' Ivy.

, BIG INNING - ~·s Spike Owen tries tO break.., ooub1e ~In
the filth Inning of Game 6 of the American League pla,vctf !ll!'les.. b
Fenway Park Tuesday night by throwmg a bo&lt;b' bi(Jd( at Ca!Uomla
second baseman Rob wutong. lt was to no avaU as Wade Boggs was rut
at first. The Red Sox scored five times b the filurthlnnlng mroote to a
10-4 vlcto~. The series Is aU eveil .and today's winner will be O'Owned
American League champion. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
NHL results

W L T Pis . GF GA
Nw Jrsy

formal negotiation that could lead
to the establishment of this thing?
There's Interest on both sides."
One White House source wariled
against premature ·optlmlsm. The
talks are "the kind of thing that
needs to be done quietly," tha,
official explalned, adding: "Maybe
an agreement can be reached and
maybe not."
· The Idea of risk reduction centrrs
has been quielly promoted by
various members of the Senate
over the years: primarily the late
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., Sen .
Sam Nunn. D-Ga., and Sen. John
Warner, R-Va. , a former seci'!Yry
or the Navy. The Foreign Relations
Committee held unpubllclzed hearIngs on the subject In 1984.
Following a Strategic Air Command assessment in 1981, the three
senators Introduced legislation ordering the Pentagon to explore
ways to reduce the risk of accidental nuclear war. This led to secret
negotiations with the Soviets and a
1984 agreement to modernize and

Wshngt
NVIst.
NV Rng

Adams Division

Today in history

\

2 0 1 s
2 2 0 I

Quebec

Bostm

I

mental pollution !rom 6JssU Alels.
The experts' accord has sha ken the government, which prefers Io look at the nuclear ques tion In the very long term. That
means that a cutback and possible total withdrawal may be studies, but no date-setting, please.
Actually, the "gradual" scenario could be cqnsidered plenty
long term by hard-line opponents
ol nuclear power. The deadline
could be as late as 2010. AccordIng to Essen , this would mean
that, until 1989; plants curromuy
under construction would be al lowed to come .on line. But after
tliat, no more. And reactors
reaching the end of useful service - 20 years - would not be
replaced.
Meanwhile, power generation
from other sources would steadIly Increase, with proper environmental precautions. The nu clear constrlbution would decline until It was phased Olit completely and economically painlessly.
. ·
Or so the experis say. They don't
appear to have changed any ~ ­
vernment minds, however. ~s ­
pite obviously political disromfort,
the Cabinet says It Intends to hold
to Its very long-term course.
It may be some comfort that
the nuclear Issue has also shaken
up the opposition. A spokesman
for the environmentalist Greens
recently let It be known that the
party might compromise, specifIcally as to the timing of a nu clear withdrawal, In order to
have a joint s(a~d with the Social
Democrats for the coinin'g parlfamentary erections.
.
Other Greens (every party member seems to be a spokesman of

6
18 13

I I 0 2 8 12
l!!onlrel
t 2 0 ! II 16
Dulfalo
0 2 1 t 9 t! .
Cafll)bt!ll Conference
Norris Division

W L T Pis. GFGA
10 . 2 1 t3 to

Toronto
St. Louis

. I I

I

3

6

I 2 0

2

1 tO

8

0 I I

I

8 10

I
4

II II
9 1

1102~9

Detroit

MlnnC!il

Smythe Division

Calgary
Wlnnpg

2 I 0
! t 0

I I 0 I 5 tO
1 2 0 % 9 11
1 2 0 2 II 1!

Vancvr
Edrmtn,
L§rAn.ls

improve the Washington-MOIICOw
"tklt Hne."
Tht SAC report ~o led to
creation In 1982 of. a ·•working group
on nuclear risk red~tlon , " Which
eventually prpduced the secret,
ex[ioratory talks in Geneva. There
are three basic concepts under
study at this time:
- Create a special "alert group"
dlt'I'Cted by the NSC to develop
tetter ldentlflcatlon methods for
nuclear attacki and ways to share
ln!crmatlon Instantaneously . with
the Soviets.
- Set up closely linked nuclear
risk rEduction centers in Washing·
ton and Moscow, mannEd by top
nuclear experts with regular ~ex ·
changes of information.
- Establlsh a joint nuclear crisis
management center In a neutral
country. In addition to Its great
.JYmboUc value, such a center
would involve day-t!Hiay relationships among U.S. and Soviet
nuclear experts that could make
the difference between peace and
war W\l!'n a crisis develops.

some sort) Immediately jumped on along tbe French border, es~ially
the heretic and said no Rich tling the Saarland, over till safety af a
could te consld!red. The (llrty fXl· new reactor going up just across
sltlon remained a nuclear phase- the line In Alsace. The Frmch have
rut within two years- nolfs, and or rejectEd the German rrotests rrore
buts. The resulting squabblln~ has or less out of hand and continue to
pretty well shoved the ~vernmrnt ~full speed ahead on their nuclear
and Its nuclear quandary orr the . program, the world's most "amll front pages, which ~ certainly aJ. tlous.
lrlght wltltlt. So It's going. Nuclear
Apparently Chernobyl's shapolitics are not entirely Internal, ho- dow doesn't reach quite that far .
wever. There Is ooncern In areas

11

Harltrd

Tuesday's Results

Pittsburgh I, lAs Angell'O 3 tOTi
· St. Louis 1,

Toronto 1

Boston ~ \\1nnlpf1 1

Wednesday's Games
Vancouver at New Jersey, 7:35

p.m. '

Montreal at BuUalo, 7:35p.m.

Lo!f Angeles at DetroU, 7:35p.m.
NY Range .. at Chicago, 8:35

p.m.

Quehec at Ed~nton , 9:3G p.m.

Thursday' s Ga'me!i
Winnipeg at Hartford, nlghl

VIUicouver at Phlladelplrlll, nl&amp;:hl
Wushlngtm at NV Islanders,

nlghl
.
Bostoo at Minnesota, night
Quebec at Calgary, night

Baseball
Named Fred

Hawai i (PCL) -

Whitacre general manager.

uted by UPJ. (First place votes and
team records ln parentheses):
Class A
Team

he si:lellned at IM.••t two months.

Football
Chicago -

,

At'qutred rlghls to

IJ!IU'Icrback Dwg Flu tie from Los
Angeles Ral'l'lli ktr a dralt Choice.

Green Bay - Waived delensiVI'
~ lineman

Matt Koart; signed defen ·

!!dv e m d Kurt Ploeger.
Houston .;.... Traded •fulbt\ck
Larry Moriarty to Kan!!lasCUy forll
draft choi ce.

Miami - SlpOO llnehacker
,Johnny Tayklr; waived lineback er
Alex Moyer.
Philadelphia - Placed center
Gerry FeefHry oo lnjun!d rete-vc;
signed ce nter Mike McGraw ,

Hockey
New Jer sey - Assigned right
wing Doug Brown to Maine ol tlte

1
Tmnls
·
U.S. TcrtniJJ "JSoclatlon - An·
nounced Chris Evert Lloyd " 'HI nol
corrc»ete ln the 19116 Wlghtm tUl Cup .

111

86
511
46
39

Oa.~.\

31

AA

Team

Point!
21!3

!.Norwalk IUT (!0-0)
2.Akron Hoban (2 ) ( 11-2)
3.Fall"\'lew· Park t!i 111-11
I,Granvute II i (IS.2i.
! .Sh eridan IIi 111-2)
6.Finneytown t2) (21 ·11
1.0r .. mc (16-li
s.sprtng Nrthwstm tll m -21
&amp;.Eaton til-l) ··

m

110
II!

112

110
104

12
Ill

48

JO.Ro&lt;ky Rl""r !16-Si .
Cla.u AAA

Team

Points

1.Ctn Setoo 122) 121-01
304
2.Canlon McKinley 131 (Il-l) 2511

3.Stow (l i 118·2i

4.Perrysburg (1)' (20-li

183

.

169

Uoledo Devilbiss (I) 120·1i
I .Reynoldoburx (I) (11-3)
7.Bre&lt;ksvUie 120.2)
8.Cin Roger' Bacon (18- 2)

LIH

m

131
55

· t.Salem 111&gt;3) •
IO.Dayton Wayne (16-3 )

19

14

Ohio College
Grid Standings
·

Houston and ~re're gOing to win
WEdnesday, and then we've got
NEW YORK (UPI) ·- Keith · Mike Srott ~lng in tre clincher. I
Hernandez, an artist with a bat, ·still belleve we're going to win this
turned poet-phllosopher Tuespay.
thing."
"You can't look past today.
The Mets, who collected only four
Tomorrow Is the biggest game we hits against Nolan Ryan and
play," Hernandez said.
··
KerfeldTuesday, tellevedtheyhad
. After Gary Carter's 12th- Inning . to win Game 5.
single gave the Mets a 2- 1 victory
"With tre series tiEd at two
over the Houston Astnos In Game 5 games each and with this being our
of the National League Champion- last game at illme, I knew It was
ship Series, Hernandez warned his very Important for us to win," said
teammates not to get too carried New Ycrk starter Dwight Gooden,
away.
.
will pitched a career-high 10
Despite a S-2 lead In the best- lnntngs. '1 figured we'd have a
of-seven sertes, the Mets must play better chanoe U we went back to
today, and possibly tomorrow, In Houston with two gameS to play
Houston, where they have won only needing a split . This was the
three r1 eight games this year.
liggest game of R\Y career."
"It won't be easy," Mets ManGoodenhookedupwlthRyanina
ager Davey Johnson said of his classic, confrontation of (Xlwer
club's chances ol wlnnlngoneoftwo pitchers. Although each pitcher
games at !be Astrodome. "The aUowed ooly one run, Ryan, ll,
Astros are a team that light tooth clearly . outpitched the 21-year-old
and nail. They have two fine Gooden.
·
pitchers going against us. We'll
Ryan, tenalttlng from a fourth
have to play well to beat them."
day's rest, ylelred two hits - one
BobKnepperlsscheduledtopltch being DaJTYI Strawberry's home
for Houston today (3: 05 p.m. EIYr run In the fifth Inning, struck rut l2
start) against New York left- and walked one in nine innings.
hander Bob Ojeda, who won Game
"Ryan showed true professlonal2. Mike Scott, wlxl has garnered lsm,"HoustonManagerHaiLanier
both Astros victories In tbe series, said. "He pitched one of his test
would start Game 7.
games .of the seasoo . He ~~
. "They have to come Into oor stronger and stronger as !be game
building and beat Knepper. and went on."
he' s one of the.toughestleftles in the
The veteran rlght-hanrer ctOml_.
game," Houston third baseman nated New York for five Innings,
Denny Walling said. "He's espe- when he claimed nine of his
clally tough to beat In the Dome. strikeout victims. He struggled a bit
There won't be any letdown an our late, rute11perlenced trouble only In
part - I can promise you that. the seventh Inning. Hernandez
Anyone woo's sren us play this year 'singled and StrawbeJTY walked, but
knows we don't q~It. Then they Moolde Wilson filed ait to end the
have the distinction of facing Mike threat.

Scott
in Game
7.'' lack of clutch
Carter,
whose
hlttfug had hurt the Mets in the
series, broke a 1 for 21 streak with
his game-winning hit off Charlie
Ket1eld In the 12th. wally Backman
IgnitEd the inning with a one-out
single off Walllng's glove. Ketield's
wild pickoff throw enabled Backman to take second and Hernandez
was walked Intentionally.
Carter fouled off three payoff
pitches before smacking a single up
the middle to score Backman.
"! guess there is justice In the
world ," Carter said. "It was ~st a
matter ol time. I'm mt an .!00
hitler. 1 was hoping for the
opportunity to win the game In the
12th,"
The Astros contend they accomplished what they Sff rut to do In New
York, winning me of the tljree
games.
"We can't complain," Astros
center flel&lt;Fr Billy Hatcher said.
"We came In here and played three
great ballgarrles- In New York, in
front of their fans and their media
pressure - and we gave tbell) a
battle.
'
"Now lYe' re. . gotm; b~k to

W L T W' L T
4 00

KentSCate

s 1o

3 00

3 30

Central Mlch

3 · 10
~tO

4 10

Bai!Siale

Bowling Green

3 20
1 30
t 30

1
3
3·
!

() 3 0 .

0 60

Ohio Untv

0 40
OWO CONFERENCE
1'dount Union
3 on
Bald-Wallace
3 00
~luoktngum
3 t0
Marlelta
2 28
Capital
2 20

20
30
30
40

0 60
!'i

on

I t0
3 !0
3 20
3 !0

Heldelbcr!

t 20

3 ~0

Wlllenherg

I 30

2 30

Ohio Northern

0 30

0 f 0

Onerheln

I 30

I 40

NORTH COAST CONFERENCE
Denlsm
CMe Reserve

3 00
3 00

I 0 I
4 01

Woo~ter
~tlegbcny

2 10
3 t0

:J 20
3 20

I 30
0 30
0 40

2 30
.I I 0
0 60

DtG'ffiN
2 00
2 00

s 00
s 00

2 00

4o! O

Oberlin
Kenyoo
· Ohio Wes le)·an

Iowa
Michigan
Ohio Slate
Indian'\ .

2 00
3 20
I 1 0 I 1'0
110 "13"0

Michigan Sl

0 20

.2 3 0

0 20
0 20
0 20
OO'HEIIS

2 30
I 10
I SO

Minnesota

Jttlnots

Northwestern
Purdue

Wisconsin

.6

0 0

Central Siate

5

0 0

Wilmington

4 0 0

AHhland
Hiram

5

I 0

Z

I I

3
3

Cincinnati
Findlay
YoungSiown State

Ohio.

o s· o

John Carroll

Member: United Press Interna t! Ynal ,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nat ional
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspape r Sales. 733 Third Avenu e,New York , New York 10017.

.

Ohlci Valley Tire outlet
Located 5 mUe1

bttow Sliver Memorial

•Idee

on Itt.

"Next Door To 8l Lumber"

rosrMAs'TER: Send address changes

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to

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what they're &lt;lolf1g: I'm not ner·vous. My frusll'atil!g11nu·worrylng days are behind me."
California will be wltillut rookie
Wally Joyner, who was expected to·
accompany the team to :Eklston but
remained In California with a leg
Infection.
The Alt~ls' pitching, . parlicu'
larly starter and loser Kirk McCaskiU, 0-2, · and Its d.e!ense were ,
lnafective In Tuesday night's loss.
Red Sox starter Dennis "Oll can"
Boyd recovered from a shaky start ' .
to pitch sevel! strong Innings. Spike
Owen was the unlikely hitting star,
going 4 llT 4 with two RBI,
"I overthrew a bit In the first, but
I knew what liad tl te mne and .
Continued on page 5
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The Daily Sentinel

3 2 0

Akron
Blunt on

'-

By JOE ULUZZI

&lt;Ainference Overall

Miami

a

UPI Sports Writer

MID-AME,RiCAN CONFERENCE

NV Ran&amp;ers - Recalled goal·
tender Ron Scott lrom Nt'W Haven
~HL .

110

121

l.Falrbanks (I 1 t 15-31
8.Mogadore .(16-6i
9.81. Bernard IIi I 15-1)
JO.Kyger Creek C%2·0)

Dayton

Ptitshurgh - Sent right wtng
Dwight MathiiiSen to Batttmore ot
tOO AIIL; retumed cen~er Rob
Brown to Kamploops ~ WHL. .

%29
189

I .Hopewell-'-'&gt;udon tli (IS.Di
5. Falrla.wn (IS. I)
6.Ada (11-1) . ·

AIIL.
ot the

PolntM

t.SI. Henry (lli 120-0i
! .Buckeye Trail l7i (:!0·0 1
!.Archbold tl) (11&gt;-Z)

EaHtern Mlch

und erwent finger surgery and will

Volleyball

Coaches Auoclatlon, and distrlb·

Toledo
Western Mlch

Vada Martin; placed guard Dale
Blaney on suepended list.
Porttalld -Signed forward Walter Berry and free Kgent center
Caldw ell Jonefl.
Wa~~hlngton - Signed swinl{"mu.n
,John Williams and guard Frank
Johnson ; forward Jay VIncent

'Berry's World

School

pitcher

Released

guKrd Roaer Hard en and forward

'

,High

l\11ckey MaHler.
Ba.kcthall
LA Laker!S - Waived rookie

Toronto · -

•

Ohio

Team

Transactions

Nuclear politics ____--;;;:____D_o_nG_·r~aff
BONN, West Germany (NEA l
-The Soviet nuclear disaster at
Chernobyl continues to cast a
long shadow over -Europe.
The fallout has been political
as well as radioactive. Longl:&gt;uildlng concerns about nuclear
energy have Intensified since
May 's events demonstrated how
high the pr ice can be for this supposedly "cheap" energy ·source.
The West German government
very sensibly decided to address
the Issue scientifically rather than
emotionally. It commissioned two
thoroughgoing studies by separate
research lnstltues which would approach the Issue from different as·
pects. This would ensure, accordToda)' is Wedn&lt;'Sday, Oct . 15, the 2ll8th day of 1986 with 71 to foUow.
ing to the government, that thereThc moon Is moving toward its full phaS('.
suiting conclusions and recom·
There Is no mornin g star.
mendatlons would not be ooeThe evening stars a re Mercury. Venus . Mars. Jupit er and Saturn.
sided.
Those bom on this date are under th&lt;' sign ct Libra. They include Roman
Surprise, Different approaches
poet Virgil in 70 B.C.; German philoscpher Friedrich Nietzche in 1844;
reachEd pretty much the same
boxing champion John L. SuUiva n in 18.'i8; Engll' h writer and humorist conclusions.
The report of ihe Eco-lnstltute
P.G. Wade house in 1881; Mervyn Leroy. producer of the film " 'Ire Wiza rd
of Oz," In 19fll tage 86i; pictu re archivist Otto Bettmann In 1903 t age &amp;ll ;
In Frelburg was pretty much
writ er and historian At1hur Schlesin ge-r Jr. In 1917 tage 001. andpop sln grr
what everyone, Including most
Richard Carpenter in lq\16 (age 4() J.
·
certainly those In the governOn this date In history:
•
ment who commissioned the
In 1917. the most famous sp)· of World War I. Gert111de Zelle, known as study, expected. The organtzaMata Hari. was executed by a firing squad outside Paris.
tlon 's thing ts ecology .
In 19:!8. the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin arrived In the United States
The finding of the Rhine-Weston Its first commercial flight after a four and one-hal! day flight across the
phalla Institute for Economic R.eAtlant lc.
search In Essen was not expected.
• In 1946. Nazi Rcichmarshal Herman Goering, convicted as a war Instead ofwarnlngthattherewould
crlmlrial and sentenced to death. committed suiCide in his prison t-ell.
te grave economic oonsajuenres U
In 1964. Soviet Premier Nlklta Khrushchev . was ousted by Kremlin
nuclear energy was abanooned,
leaders and replaced by Alexei KoS)'gin and Leonid BrezhneV.
Essen essentially agreed with
In 1984. astronomers in Pasadena. Call!., displayed the first Freiburg· that a gradual JUlclea'r
photographic .evidence of another solar system 293 trillion miles from
phase-out was entirely possible
Earth.
\
.
witb:lut undue ecommlc stress. tbe
In 1995. blaming U.S, "Imperia ism," Nicaragua suspen&lt;Fd "individual Essen group found that even a
freedom and personal flberry.'' Including the right to rrove frrely .
short-term witlllrawaf: within two
A thought for the day: German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche wrote. . years, would not create unbearable
"Whoever flgllts monsters should ~ to It that In lhe Jrocess h,e does not · dislocation, altillugh It would probecOme a monster."
. bably cause an increase in environ·

19 13
10 (l

2 0 0 4
. 200 4 8 2
I 2 0 2 12 11
0 2 0068
0 3 0 0 II 18

!'hila.

Acc'ident prevention___Ja_b~k_An_d.....er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~.....:.an.~·A_t_ta
vated U.S. officials occurred In the
summer of 1979. A malfunctioning
Pentagon computer Indicated falsely that 200 Soviet missUes had
been launched against the UnitEd
States.
Fortunately, ll was rot a period of
crisis In U.S.-Soviet relations, sot he
possibility of a mistake immediately occurred to U.S. officials.
Quick checks of the warnlngsystem
soon determined that the computer
was the culprit. Had it been a period
of high tension, the consequences
could have been disastrous.
High-level Reagan administration sources told us there have been
at least two substantive meetings
with the Soviets on risk-reduction
centers. Those twa were held In
Geneva In August and September.
Leading the U.S. negotiators were
Robert' Llnhard of the NSC and
Richard Perle of the Pentagon.
"The prospects are promising,"
one official said. "But these are
ex[ioratory talks. The Issue for
decis ion Is: Should we have a

Chuck Brad en·, president . of the

Patrick Division
4 0 0· 8

(UPI)

- This week'·!l Ohio high school
volleyball ratings, compUed by

By United Press International
Wales Conference
~llsbr

Ohio

NEW KN011VU.LE,

NATIONAL'HOCKEY LEAGUE

Chicago \

WASHINGTON - The Reagan
administration has been conduct·
ing secret, exploratory talks with
the Soviet Union that could soon
lead to the creation of "nuclear rtsk
reduction centers" to . prevent an
accidental nuclear war between the
two superpowers.
Both sides are uneasy at the
possibility of mistaking the source
of a sneak nuclear atiack by
terrorists or a Third World country
and turning it Into a nuclear
holo c au s t through preprogrammed retaliatory strikes.
Concern has grown in !be last few
years as both superpowers realize
they lack the ability to pinpoint the
Identity of a nuclear attacker.
The risk reduction centers would
have as their sole mission the
prevention of an accidental U.S.Soviet nuclear exchange. They
would be either closely llnked
centers in the United States"and the
Soviet Union, or a jointly manned
faclllty in a neut ral location, like
Geneva.
One Incident that highly mot!·

Volleyball ratings

Mets take lead in
·NL playoff _'series

appearance ln the 26-year htstoryo(
the franclllse, also Is bucking uie
odds.
·
He has named John Candelaria to
· ta-ce Clemt'ns. qftilelarlli, woo Hoo
elbow surgery ~lier this year,
can't throw many more than 100
pitches, although he provided a
victory In Game 3 and the
California bullpen has done little to
inspire confidence in the last two
playoff games.
Finally, the "CanciYman" is
lett-bander, and starting a scuth- ·
paw In Fenway Park oould be
disastrous with hitters almlng for
thelnvltlng"GrrenMonster"-the
left-field wall.
"You'll see Candelaria, and
(Mike) Witt, (Don) Sutton and
(Donnie) Moore wlU also be
ready," Mauch said. "Both teams
_know how to play - ~·n ~nd out

I

I

�.,

--·---~·

-

--~

'

·--

. 1

Wednesday, October 15,1986

Captain
predicts...

AL baseball...

,

Big games on '
tap this week
By CAPTMN cROW ·
TheSEo'AVs two finest teams~
Gallipolis and Logan, square off In a
match of unbeatms andtre SVAC
race could be decided with ·Ire
North Gallla.Qak Hill game In this
Friday's beadlining encounters.
The Crow report has tre Blue
· DevOs eoinlngout on tOp, 21-14, over
tre speedy Chieftains, and Dak HW
p.1Us a mUd upset with an 18-14 win ·
over the Pirates.
TVC·leadlng Meigs has a week
away from league play with a bout
against winless Rock Hlll, the ole'
bird seeing the Marauders coming
away with a 'n-7 win.
Last week's. 13-1 (.927) mark
brtngs Ire seasonal mark io an
Improving 97-21 (.822). Last week's
mark coupled with tre previous
week's perfect 15-0 makes ole'
birdbrains 28-1 (.967) ttr past two
· weeks.
This week's forecast calls for ...
TVC
MEIGS 27, ROCK HILL 7 Marauders (7-0) had close call last
week and make sure that doesn't
happen again with easy win over
Redmen (0- 7).
VINTON COUNTY :!1. TRIMBLE 0 - VIkings (4·3) break
three-game losing streak and Tom·
cats 13-4) continue decline.--...
BELPRE JO, Mll.LER 13 Eagles I5-2\ rolling with Joe
Andersoo a r quarterback and snap
Falcons 13-4) three-game winning
streak with sixth straight win.
WElLSTON

:li,

settled down," said l'llyd,l-lln the
jlayqf!s, "As fa·r as (tonight) , l
have to believe my nian &amp;lger can
do it. Big Tex wUI be ~ady . "
--'- Call!Omla seemed pl'eparecl inUiauy; jumping out to a 2·0 lead on
rorneclltlve first -inning RBI doubles by Reggie Jackson and. Doug
DeCinces. as l'llyd threw 44 pitches.
· "Dennis gets in his crwnwor.ldand
daydre~nis," Baston catcher Rich
Gedman_said. ·"I .told him not to

Reserye The Right To '
. Limit Quantities

STORE ~OURS
Mon.:sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

t~

Findlay squad ·

RIO GRANDE - The Redwo·
men dnopped a 9-15, 4-15, 15·7, 15-13
anjl 15-17 decision to the Findlay
. QUers in a live-set match Sarurday.
Laren Wolle had ten kUis to lead
JUo Grande, now ·. Lisa Schmeltzer
added elghf kllls and Sharon
Headings five lor Rio. KrlsCochran
si:ored four kills, two aces and three
tjod&lt;s on tbe evening.
:·we had a good comeback after
klllng the first two games. We
played hard and could have won the
!Ina! game with a couple of
breaks," roach Patsy Flel~s said.
"OUr sen:e-l'f!Cf!Ptlon game was
Clll' weakest point durtng tbe

Continued from page 3
"
Gooden scattered nine hits. !bubled off second base to end tOO:;.
walked two andst,ruck.ciut four. The - inning when h~ took o!f for third off
right-hander had ·problems In the · Walling's llnedrlve.thal wascau~ht~
early !Mings, allowing !ix hit s wer easUy by kft fielder Wilson .
•.
!he ,~rst__ five. }je e5c:aped .a. . .Houston.swred ttsrnnJ!llheflfth. ---4;~,
first-and-third situatbn in. tl't' se- Ashby doubled and Reynolds
cond by strtkingou_t Alan Ashby and singled him to third . Ryan runted '
inducing Craig Reynold~ to ground into a fielder's choice, leavlnA: .
into·a dlspJted double play.
rurmers at first and third. Oonln
. ·
.
m·ounded into a lbrre play at
A baserunnlng blunder by Bill o•
th et
thrOW
Do ran ·aIso pu lied Goode n au t or a. socond. · but . beat e r W'n
•·
jam Jn . tlr eighth. Doran was . enabllng AslliJY !Q 9:'ore. - ...

PRICES EFFECTIVE. THRU SATURD_AY,- OCT. 18, 1986

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

. ..

E1ch of th• •cMirtind iteml 'il riQuired to be re1dily av1itabl&amp; .for uMI in each
Kroger S10re, IKCIIPI 11 speclfk:1tly noted in 1~i1 1r;l. I,~ do Jiln out .ol an •
ad11ertiud item, we will otter you your chok:e ol1 co~,_ra~ ttem, whln 1\'lilll)le,
reflectloil the ~~me uvingt 01 1 reincheck wlllc~ w11 entttll yo~~ to putchn~~ t~
.:l~enlled it.m It tM Mh«tiMd prlte within JOdtv• · Only one wando!' coupon w~l
be accepted lllf Item purchllld.

•'

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FRESH PORK BUTT

.

.

Steaks/Roast•••L:·....

$ , 29

1

.

SAVORY'

"

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H'

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Bacon •.•.•••••••~~ ........ 89&lt;
$ 99
Sausage ...••••.. ~ ••. ~.. 1
.
Turkey Franks ••~·.•• 69&lt;

.

.

ECKRICH SMOKED OR POLI~H . .

LONGACRE

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

.,

·

Chuck Roast .•;!•••• $149
FRESH
.
.. $
29
Ground Chuck ·.L!·•• ~ 1. .

•

ALL WEEK

ouble

Manufacturer's

.

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE "

This week your manufacturered products " cents off:'
coupons ere wor1h double at Kroger with t1Q .OO or mort
purchne. Lifnited to manufactured product1 coupons
worth up to and Including 50C Off. Coupons worth mo!8
than 60e are redeemed etfaee value only . Limit one coUpon
for each product purchased. Limit one coffee coupon . No
bter. wine or cigarette coupons wMI be doubted. Not veld
on free coupons, Kroger coupons or retaH food .store
eoupon1 . The amount refunded canno~ exc~ the p~ce ot
the item. You muar purchase product m alifl apecified on
the coupon. This offer applies onty to manufactured
products "cents off'' coupons for Items we carry. To esaure
.. product availabiity for aU our cuS1omers, only one co~pon
per shopping family, will be doubled on any brand tlem
during each store vish..
.

Oup0nS

BUCKET

Cube Steak ••.•..L!·••• $2 29
SUPERIORS
$
9
4
Lunch Meats ....L:·... 1 .

,

&gt;.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF "UNTRIMME
WHOLESALE CUT 11 -13-LB. AVG.
,

$ s9

U. S. NO. 1 RUSSET ·

Potatoes •••• !~~·~:~G···· 1
I
$
Med. Eggs •••••••••• 2 1
.

GRADE A

.

.

.

-

DOZ.

.

MINUTE MAID

O~nge ·Juice ••••••••
64

AGNER'S,

oz.

99&lt;

oz.

Whole Boneless
Ribeyes ............·...................... ~ .......

$5
49
·Detergent ••••••••••••
JIF

.PEANUT BUTTER
• 2a

o~~;, ~.~o~•9

' Good Only At Powell'• S~ermaricot
bpiros 0(!abed a. 1986
s

10.1·10.8_

:

: PAPER TOWELS •

09
~ ~~~ u~ lu!mJ ~
0

Good Only At Powell's S~ermarlcot
•
- lxpiros Odabor 11, 198li •
S •

.,, ... ........ ,,.... •..!

•

:

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

-

.

MAXWELL HOUSE

INSTANT COFFEE
12

Oz~mit~P~u.!?

Good Only At Powell's Sl.lltrmarictt
bpiros o&lt;tobor 18, 1986 '
. S

•

'

:

TOMATO SOUP

•

88

FRESH CUT PREMIUM

-Red Roses

IN OL OR WATER, CHUNK LIGHT

Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna ......... s.s-oz

"

c
AVAILABLE ONLV IN STORES WITH FLORAL SHOPPES

40¢ OFF LABEL

Surf Laundry

Detergent
42-oz.

12-INCH MEDIUM CRUST CH
&amp; PEPPERONI,
CHEESE &amp; SAUSAGE OR CHEESE
&amp; MUSHROOMS
.

Deli Fresh
Pizzas .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

$
12-ln.

LIMIT 1 PLEASE
. ,•

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....

•

~~-:.s 4f$1 09 ~
Umit 3 Per customer
Good Only ~I Powell ', S""trmaoi&lt;et
bpi11s Octobtr 18 198~ S

LIMIT 4 PLEASE

Sweetheart

........ .

CAMPBELL'S

10. 75-oz

, Die.t Pepsi
or Pepp~! Cola

.
''''
• • • '.• ·courPON·.'
•. •••••
'''.·· ~

•••••

PAGE

SLICED ·
FREE

$

Sweetest Day Specials Oc:t. J8tla,

- ·
oz. ·
Pl.zza •••••••••••••••••••••
89&lt;

•• •
•
•·····couPON·······
•

•

Campbel
Tomato Soup .......................... ..

16-0Z. NON RETURNABLE BOTILES,
PEPSI FREE,

JENO'S

oz.
•

lb.

99

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

TIDE

. 147

$

-~~;....-----. . .

Ofange ·Drink ·:~. 79(
54

match."
'I

Mets take lead...

18, 1986, INNIIEIOY MOOi\UIPOllS STOIIS.

Redmen
'
. seventh in
t\II·Ohio CC meet .

Rio
. women lose

Boston made it 8-2 as Don Bayllr
was. hit by a pitch and evenrually
scored !XI Henderson's fielder's.
chqlce grounder.
Owen had a two-run triple In the
seventh. ·eanrornla's .Ilrlal'l Down.
ing·hit-a solo holnel"'in the seventh.
and tl't' Angels scored their final
run on Owen's throwing error In the
ei~~Mth.
Is kl .. J ks
omenrum 11c e, ilC on
said "As soon as that flrsfpltch is
· 1tonight) momentum Is up .
thrown
• __ - · . .. . _
.for grabs. " .

. CO~VRIGHT t986 - T~E KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY , OC1 . t2, THROUGH SATURDAY, OCT.

me

•. OELA WARE - The Rio Grande
Rromen cross country team placed
K'\'t'llth ill tlw 24-team AU-Ohio
)'deet at DE&gt;Iaware, Ohio Saturday.
: Mark Pierson ran a 25: 50.491n the
lllOO meter race for a tenth-place
dnish. Archie Mundy, a 1977
All-American. took ·25th a 26:23.42.
. , Darren Miller and Brtan Lugen·
heel rompleted the event In 66th and
91st places ou t of a field of 249
runners.
· 10. Mark Pierson, 25: 50.49; 25,
~hie Mundy, 26:23.42: 66, Darren
MU!er, 27: 13.49; 91, Brtan Lugenbeel. T/:45.14: 154, Troy Cochran,
ll:51.87; 183, Cun Herron, 29:20.04;
211. Tony Fatica, 30:!1!.85.

.

. singled home Boggs and Rice hit
into a fielder's choice, with Barrett
give Into the hitters witb crlppl.e being thrown out In a rundo~~m. .
pitches and he settled !bwn*"'ly." · Baylor then singled to center and
McCaskiU walked Ire first two Bobby _Grieb, playing !li'SI base in
batters he faced , Wade Boggs and Joyner's absence, tlrew the relay
MartN- Barreti, and they scored, .t past ·.first' and · Buckner and Rtcerespecttvely, on a passed ball and scored. Dwight Evans tl't'n singled
Jim Rice's groundout , tying the home Baylor from third b ra 1· 2
score.
.
lead.
&amp;lston scored five runs in. !he
"The stuff !Mt's happened to me
'third Inning. OWen and · Baggs In ·this. series is unbelievable,"
singled and Barrett lined an RBI Grieb said. "One day, I love
. double to lat-eenter. -BUI Buckner- baseball, tre next I want out ot:-lt"'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH ..

FEDERAL·

HOCK! NG 6 - Rockets (4-3)
coming off big win and _m*e short
workofrutmanned Lancers 10·7).
NELSONVILLE· YORK 20,
ALEXANDER 0 -Buckeyes (2·5)
might have first NYHS losing
record in nearly !I years. rut defeat
Spartans (1-~1.
SEOAL
GALLIPOUS 21, LOGAN 14 Blue DevUs (7-0) may have
ri
strongl'st GAllS squads it history,
and wUI have to play that way
against Chiefs (7·0). State playdfs
could await winner of thi s ooe.
Loser can iJrg!'l tt.
WARREN :!1, ATHENS . 13·
Warriors t6-1 ) come off devastlng
loss to Gallipolis, lllt break back
into winning form against fading
Bull!bgs (5-2).
MARIETTA 12, JACKSON 6 Tigers (0·71 show improvement
whUe Ironmen (0-7) 'taking worst
Ucks in school's history. Somebody
has-tl win.
SVAC _
OAK fULL 18, NORTH GALUA
14·0aks (6·11 canallwrapupSVAC
Utle with win rut same !Pes for
Pirates (6-1). Playoff berths ·also
depend on this one. Biggest SVAC
)!arne of year thus far.
• KYGER CREEK 14, EASTERN
12 - Bobcals (5-2) carve anotlrr
.notch in impressive seasoo with
edge wer Eagles (2-5), who broke
&lt;five-game losing streak last week.
'• SOUTHWESTERN 31.
&lt;SYMMES VALLEY 12 -Highland·
'ers t!\-2) brought back to earth last
:week with loss to North Gall! a. but
':oounce back against VIkings 13-41.
-~ SOUTHERN 22.
HANNAN
tRACE 13 -:'Tornadoes 11-61claim
~nd win after near· upset over
-Kyger Creek, while Wildcats t2-5)
s tuMed after klss to Eastern.
.,
OI'HERS
Pr. PLEASANT 17. HUNTING·
JfON ffiGH 13 -Big Blocks 12-51
;coming rif biggest win of year
agalnsl Milton and make it two
~ tralght over Pony Express.
' BUFFALO.PUfNAM Zll. WA·
RAMA 14 - Would take rnomumental effort by Fa loons (5-I I. who
hJe five gam(' winning streak.
RJwerful Pulnam puts end to
Fa lcon streak.

.Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
Continued !rom page 3

.

. ''
The Daily Sentinei-Page-6 •

OctQber 15, 1986

Red Delicious
5-lb.
Apples ............. . Bag

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Page-6-The Qaily Sentinel

The Daily

Wednesday, October 11), 1986

Pomeroy-M,ddleport, Ohio

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.Top-ranked Miami mjury list
·growing;. Johnson .concerned

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MIAMI (UPI)The top- ranked the second straight week on turt," r.&gt;' said. "I think I can speal&lt; ~
Miami Hurricanes had an easy win' artificial turf.·
ror-tlie whOle team, we dol!'tllke lt. ~
over West VIrginia last Saturday, . "I don't enjoy)laVIng our team We play most of wr games on
butthe victory added more pl!IYers play on an artificial surface," grass, but ttl!re Is nothlrig yw can :·
to an already croll'ded Injury Jist.
Jomson said. "We do not practice do aboutlt. We've !JlttDgoandplay
Miami suffered some key losses on artificial turf and we play very' It."
;
In Its 58-14 wlr! o~er the Mountal· few games on artificial turf. It
BecausetheHun1caneshavehad :
neers. Defensive tackle . Jerome ·seems Uke every time we get man so many oo~slded games, It has •
Brown, an Outland Trophy' _candl- artlflclal surface, we lose some given Jolilson a cHl!ilre ·ro E:fllpty ~
date, and hallback Melvin Brattpn, players to lnjucy. So that concerns his bencll
the second half of !
the, team's leading rusher and me." ··
·
several games. The experience . ;
scorer, will miss Saturday's game
Quarterback VInny Testaverde players gained there is row ex· ·:, ·
at Cincinnati.
' ·
agreed .
tremely valuable,
\,
Bratton, woo ·spralned·an ankle,
"Personally, I oon'tlikeartlflclal
;i:
Is expected to be ready In time for
,. •
the Nov. I game with Florida State, . r---~-------,---,---------but Brown, wlil has a turf toe, may
rot be back for the Seminoles game. ·
The Hurricanes are off next week. ·
"We are In as bad a shape
pbyslcally as any teain I've ever
been around," Coach Jimmy Jolm·
son saki Thesday. "This is rot the
same football team we had oo the
field a month ago. We are really
concerned about our team \'right'
now.
"We had quite a few starterS out
fOr the Northern Illinois game (a
34.0 win Oct 4), I rl!lnk we held out
·six, and we had four starters out for
the West VIrginia game, and the list
UniW
Prea
lntemallonal
Coaches
PoD.
First
row,
seems
to keep growing." ·
SVAC VOlLEYBAlL CHAMPIONS- 'llle Kyger
left to right, are Christina Carrol, KeiJ.y Roush, Janet
Creek Lady Bobcalll captured llle 11188 Soutlr!m
Also out of the anclnnatl game
SUitner, Cindy Lemley and Mhsy Dar!ot. Rear Valley -'lhletlc Conference volleybaD cluunplo,.Np
are safeties Sel~n Brown and
Melody Graham, Tracy Eggleton, JW Drummond;
wit~ a perfect J2.4l mark tldslal. Ovenll, K~ was
Kevin McCutcheon, tight end Ola·
22-ll ~ring regular season play, 'and ran~ lOth In the Missy Kitchen and 'Renee Ward.
rles Henry, offens[ve tackle John
· O'Neill, and defensive tackle Der·
win Jones who is out for the rest of
'
.
tre regular seasoo. ·, · ,
Doubtful ilr Cincinnati are wide
reclever Brian BI:J:ies and comer·
back Do!Uiie ElUs.
The Hurricanes wUI oo some
sl\!ftlng on tre defensive line,
moving end BUI Hawkins' to tackle
and Inserting freshman Jimmie
01\lbl.lon I
Undefeated Mlegs High Sc~l hosts Division V, Regliln 19,
Jones as the starter at the right
ReKion 3
and GaUia . Academy climb?&lt;! to· · uth·rated North Gallla Friday. The
I. WorthlnJ;ton 91.00; 2. Toltdo Whlfmf'r
defensive end slot.
3. Toledo Cenlral Cat Mile 70.00; t.
second and third In their respective· Pirates !inproved from l5thtollth, (K;.oo;
At Cincinnati's Nlppe~;_t Stadium, .
hUilcothe ~.141; i. Uma S.Oior ~3. 91;
regions ·In the Ohio High School one-third: d a p:l!nt behlnd'Danvllle ti.Sprlnlfleld North5~ .00; 7. Fremont RGt~os the Hurricanes will be playing for
Computer Ratings . this week with and tie with Indian Valley South rl 53.110; ~ Upp..- Artlnrton . ~t.IIO .
·
Dht Wion II
victories last Friday.
Mldvaltl, with tts 13-2 victory over
.
Roglool1
The Mall_raders, 7-ll, jumped two · Southwestern.
1. W~ter 7'UO: 2. Steubi.'R\'IIIe 72.08; J.
notches with Its 12-10 victory ·over
With the loss, Southwestern, 5-2, Galllpoii&amp;IIJ.OO; t. Columhus 1\DIIlln 55.110;
VInton County last Frida~. Me!gs.:... reu :rrom tile tOp 10 In the rEgkln, :5. Columhus ..' ranklln Hel(l:ht" 51.50; 1• .
V.Sat"' 51.00; 1. Vlnt~nl
ranked fourth In Dlviskm . m, tour , spQis · back. to ·13th. Kyger Columhu•
Warl't'll 49.50: 8. Columhus ~' llftcnon
Region 11, last week - is one JXllnt Cre!k, also 5-2, fell back me spot to 16.511.
ahead of third-rated St. Clalrsvme ' 17th. The lbbcats host Eastern for
· and 18 behind tap-rated Ironton.
Its Homecoming whUe SouthwestWith lis 35-?blowout of previously ern travels tn Symmes Valley.
fourth-rated . Warren Local last
Area schools rating 'highly In
Friday, Gall!polis moved from ttl!lr respectiVe regions are ChUII·
sixth to third in Division 11. Region oothe,lourthlnDivlslon 1. Region:!;
7. The Blue DevOs, 7-0, trail Wtl!elersburg, first In Dlvisk&gt;n III,
SteubenvUle by five and one-half Region 12;. ~lpre, fifth In Division
!Dints. Warren slipped to seventh.
IV.. Region 15; and Coal Grove. a ·
: 'Th;! Blue Devils' Friday opp:l· ' 21·9 1\Jser to GAHS earlier In the.
nent. urxlefeated Logan, slipped second week dttl! season. cijmred
from seventh to ninth . The Blue to eighth In Regjon 15 wttha victory
DeyUs and Chieftains clash 7:30 last week.
p.m. at Memorial Fleld. The
Athens, GAHS' 44-0 victim two Comp~ler ratings .
weeks ago, is rated 18th whUe
cou;MBUs cVPIJ - 'i'h•' top •·IKht
Portsmouth West, a · 16-0 GAHS ' '""""' In "'lions. lnwolvinK sEO """
victim thfee weeks ago, received a loams In lhU. wo•ek'• Ohio HIKh School
mting rl' seventh in Division ]][, i\thl•tk """•dation -compul•rt.cd ro••·
hadl ratln~. Tht• top four quadlf}' fur lht•
Region 12.
r~lon~ playofb&amp;:
Tn Division IV, Region 15. Oak
Hill reid steady with t~ No. 9 II
poslt iln. The Oaks. 6-1. defeated
~'ymmes Vallay 40-61a!;t Friday and

1
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Unbe~ten . Meigs

ju;mps ·t~
s·econd in;·computer ran~ings

'

TRICKOR:tREAT ·WlTH THE
IRJlESISTlBLE TAm OF

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

Jl

America II claims
narrow victory
FREMANTLE, Australia- The
New York Yacht Club's America II
earned a slim 33- second victory
over French Kiss. and unbeaten
New Zealand earned its ninth
""'straight triumph with an easy 4:41
decision over California's Eagle
Wednesday In America's Cup
challenger competition ..
In a match filled with mishaps,
Dennis Conner sailed Stars &amp;
Stripes over the starting line roo
·early and compqunded the error by
crossing Canada II on a pon tack,
~orclng t re Canadians to veer away
on the first leg. ·
After the San Diego Yacht Club
skipper finished 2:19 ahead, Canadian helmsman Terry Neilson
protested , leaving the outcome to
Jxo decided by the lntematkinal ju cy
ovcrsrelng tre matches.
In other results in t~ 10-knot
winds on the lOth day of the Hrst
round -robin series, San Francisco's
U.S.A.. ~. trounced Ital!a, ~. by
3:52. Chicago's Heart of America, :J.
7, defeated winless Courageous. 0-9,
bv 4:43 and Challenge Frana', 2-7,
si-lled around tre -course alone
when Italy's Azzurra.l-9, withdrew
for' the second day with steering
problems.

OUR LOW, LOW EVERYDAY
PRICES AT SAVE·A·LOT
SEEING IS BELIEVING
HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES
.
. OF THE SAVINGS YOU'LL ENJOY EVF.RYDAY AT
SAVE·A·LOT
.
. ••• THESE
. ARE NOT WEEKLY SPECIALS IUT ARE EVERYDAY. LOW
PRICES ••• WE .INVITE YOU TO COMPARE THESE EVERYDAY LOW SAYE·A·LOT.
PRICES TO THE PRICES MARKED ON COMPARABLE ITEMS IN YOUR KITCHEN
CABINET AND ·ADD UP THE SAVING'S FOR YOURSELF.

1

'

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'

Everyday Low Price

U.S.D.A.

Ground Chuck

99~1b.

Everyday low Price

Everyday low Price

Coke
2 Uter Btl.

Hanging Rock Grade "A"

Large Eggs

99~

59~~zen

Everyday low Price

Bananas

4

LB.$100
FOR

.

'

Hawks nip Cavs

COBB

UiEVROLtT-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"fO. .IlY $MONS OLDS.·CAD••CHIV."

These Special Apply to GM Owners Only
.r------------COl iPON------------ 1

I

WINTER COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL

I1 Test
GET YOIM GM YEHKlE' READY FOR THE LONG wtNrn. HAVE
pressure check entire system lor leaks, drain and fill
~oolant,

I1 REGULAR PRICE~

Special Price

(RHommtlldtd ot 24 month or 24,000

I

$12 95 • TAX I1

milt inltrvalsl

(With Coupon)

I

GOOD THRU NOV. 1. 1986

~---------:.----c:ouPoN-------::------,

I. '

I

t

I

AUGNMENT SPECIAL

'1 Get started on the right track for winter with genuine GM front end 1

1 alicnment.
·
I HGUlA~+ TAX

Special Price

I

I
I

1

$1995 •

I

·

;c TAX (With Co.. onl

1

$1295 . I

··

~-----------;. ,..-cOUPON------------

1

I1 L'ubricate

·

OUR QUALITY
WITH A

Monday-Saturday
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday
Noon To 8 p.m.

MONEY BACK
E!
WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMPS
I

.

Rt. 62 North

(304) 675-1155

Point Pleasant, W.Va.

We ~eseM= rne
r1gnt lo limit quantities

e 1914 SAVE·A·lOT . jLtd.

'

.

I·
I

I

w• ,

OIL AND FILTER

·

suspe~i , d11in oilard replace fiKer using Mr. Goodwrench

I oil IIIII 1£ filter.

this special we insist on usin&amp; qUIIity Mr. Good1' wret1t:h oil IIIII · filttn. This is an honest to aoodness special on quai.
ity GM Plrtl}o substitue for qua6ty. Limit 5 quS orl

l

I .GULA~~ +TAX

Special Price

I ,,

1995
.

We'll treat you to

• T~X

GOOD THRU NOV. 1. 1988
!With Co..onl
RALEIGH , N.C. (UPI) -The
I
·&gt;-f
Atlanta Hawks built a 14-p:llnt
~
halftime lead Thesday night and
COUPON·------------1
I
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coasted to a 126-98 NBA exhibition
I I
I
victory over the Cleveland
I I
COMPUTU ENGINE ANALYSIS
I
Cavaliers.
·
The Hawks are row 2-0 In
l et us taki JOUr qine,'s: pulse with our smart Engine Analyzer. I
exhibition play. The Cavaliers are
{(This !s not a tune-up and does not include tune-up labo~ or tune-up
02.
II part~)
.
I
Acrowdot8,llOatNonhCarollna ·
95 • TAX
State's REymhE Coliseum saw the
• TAX
Special Price
Hawks take command In the
1
!With Co...n I
second quarter ·over ttl! ooldI
GOODTHRllNOV.1, 1988
1
.stnotlng Cavaliers.
I
I
Atlanta fOrward · MJke McGee
------~-------------~--------­
scored 11 points In tre first two
' MONDAY
'
THRU FRIDAY 8 TO 6
quarters tn take the Hawks to 61-47
'
FRIDAY 8 TO II; 'SATURDAY 9 TO 3
alvantage. Atlanta continued to
30H. MAiN
812-111114
JiOM'EROV, OH
enlarge Its lead to!&amp;69at the end of
"SERVII=E'THAT COUNTS"
tlrre (Jiarters.
.t

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I

I REGULAR~

.

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AUGNMENT CHECK ('• adjuttiMnhl
GOOD THRU NOV. 1/ '1986

TAX

(With '•••nl

I

STORE HOURS:

'

+ lAX

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

· · WE lACK

1

1

1 cooling system if ne~ed with ~~tnuine GM coolant, check hoses, 1
1 c"mps and drive belts. (All Added Labor &amp; Pan• Extra)
, 1

•

WE ACCEPT MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS

I

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$1 9

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50eSAVI
·----------------·---------I
I

WHEN YOU BUY ONE 2-LITER BOTTLE OR
...
ONE MULJI·I'ACK OF CRUsH, ANY FLAVOR
OFFER GOOO ONLY lN AREAS SERVED BY: A""'M BonNnt Company.
IIOTt TGOlAU": for
COIII)Qil wou
uwr
•t."'Will 1111\'0'J h
1)11.1 8" llardffio(mrjj(l
wou 1'011' tl.lsii!I'M,
!¥it Ifill ltlflll \II !his
Df~
JIII IC~Ist

.

p--1

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1011

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~,., eOf!IIJI!ei)
~~ ~~

o! I,IJittil!~ l Olt'tl ta tiW~I

mu$1~v JllV r~ued slle!i tl• tnG l!()nif ~oo~i
Qll!o_45701
•

JUIIIor~

I

•

l..:ev~l.le pii!III(OU~

Q~f' f,tly ~~ 1~ioP Clllllllill!tl ltlud l~w~Jm ~ ,o~Jr

showri UOOilltq\1!'9 Voll'l ~ po'ohlllled lhftlll)( llllritlfl! ~0111 tbll~mtl
Cash ~¥u&lt;! II'~! or 11 ~~detm b'f'
Ill tileM Bo tH~ C1 ,1001 fnt Silt~ S tl~~~

II\IU M

••

~n1

ONLY ONE COUPON PEA IIEOutAED PURCHASE '-nii"'IIIWr.".-.11'11ri..

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�0
r

•

..

· ·The Daily. Sentinel .

By The 'Bend .
•

Beat of the

'

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:

!

....

BIG
BEND
..

Wednesc:tav."Oc:tober 15, 1986

·)

.

'

. .

'

c"

'·

.We Reserve The Ala hi To Limit Quantities.
Prices Efiecuve Sunday, Oct.12 Thru Saturday, Oct. 18 ,1986
' U.S.D.A. Food Stamps Accepted
Not RMponsible ·
. For.TypograP,hiCal Or Pictorial Errors ·

,Page-S

'

Our Meat Master's Pledge To You •••

1. Only ..... ...,.... Who ..._.,. Up.

2. Onty USDA

~

,.ONj......,. U.l . llo. 1 .....

bend~

w.,. ...

lli.
1.
Dll'1 NulrtUon C"**-d.
• . ,..,.,. U..C...tiCiftlltwllorwf·k l ~ -

Oftii .....

4. Otlty USDA Gndli " A" llouftty.

Absentee vote time

DOUBLE COUPONS.
0

25~'

Alfred notes ·

. ,.
'

Now this ls heavy. Be sure to use
what \lllent you have. I mean, what
kind of world would It be II ooly the
best birds 5ang?
Do keep smiling.

~~- Te"'clemesf auatlw usoA Ch,oic' Bonf:frl'

Lean

'

..

.

·"' ·-·

..

.

.. _.,
.... ,._..
~"

:·~--·

~~

.

.

'

~

USDA Choice
Boneless

Chuck Roast

Extra Large Lawn/Leaf Bags

...::::=====71

Pound

Made of superstrong linear low density
PQlyethylene. Box of ten 7-bushel capacity
btigswlthties.II5010SSR .
,

.

'

~

SPECIAL PRICE

First Alert®.

..,..~:.

.

'

Specifically designed to fig hi the most common kitchen
fires-grease, oil and electrical. Disposable. #KFES

~~

154577

Silicone II
Caulk/Sealant

weatherproofs and Insulates
glass, metal, rubber, wood,
ceramics. Won't crack, chip
or IM!III. Clear or while.
t0.3 oz. #5000,5010

L - mfr.lltllll-111
-~~ $2.00

Colllflw
mfr• ....,.,.
15&lt;1576.5

99

' Tenderbest Quality Sliced

C)

'
9-11 Chops

sPound oi M9r•
.. Poun~

·'11''

'

Pound

-.~589

Heavy duty 4·mll plastic 1heet hU hundredo of ullel
around the house. Folded and rolled to handy, carryhome size. IMK728
,..,...

SPECIAL PRICE

~

154583

'I

STANLEY

-PLUIDMASTEA

Toilet Tank 8allcock

,.,,

Slops shut·oflleaks. Non-corrooive atalnless steel
control components. Easy installation . 1200A

Grar
Shelf Bracke

·1o" x 12"

ego .
15&lt;1587

•

ECKRICH ALL MEAT

Turkey Franks

Franks or

:: .

\

I SIW'"CUT I ®

Tree Pruner
Flberglaaa poles easily adjust from 6' to 9'.1ncludes W

5

8ft

Wf;;;!l

154s 12

GOLDEN RIPE
PREMIUM

Electric Staple Gun

'17•

New tool desiGn. Flush staplii)g ability with heavy duty
capacity. fETfl·SO

SPECIAL·PRICE

'

••

__n_"

405 North Second Avenue
MIDDLEPORT
•

(

CORN, PEAS &amp;
GREEN BEANS

Del Monte

Bananas Vegetables
$l ?~N~z·$1
185.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

~~~·~·•_ca ~-~~P-·~--~----~~~--~--~-~
•

ASSORTED
1

...• Chiquita

15&lt;5110

tndMduaf dealers may limit quant~les .. lndiVldl!ll dealers may not stqck •tltems,

he·•

-

1 Pound Package

.

10 Poundl And Up

5 Pound Box

IIINO'S

Pepperoni
Piaa

.-

•

23 01.,...

2 fOil $469

•
'

..

Telescoping
$~

.

'·'

$].89
$_Jf9LB.

.

Flanders
Beef Patties

lurkeys _.

KiellMaa
&amp; Sausage

\
.

20 Quarter Pounders

Grade 'A' Tenderbest

·aologna
'ICICIIQt
SMOK8

Improved stronger tip design prov!det ltrengtll exceed·
ing BHMA atandtrds. ~ped wtth correopondlng
shelf sizes. *197

SPECIAL PRICE .,.

15&lt;1578

®

•

SWIFT
12 Ounce Package ·

Pound

Pound

I

, 10' x 25' Plastic St,eeUng

Jaws are hot-forged of special molybdenum steel.
#M3R
.
$~

Turkey
Breast

¥ ' · .: 4-7 Pound Average

~-TE&lt;HI Film-Gard®

. Straight Cut
Metal Snips

Frozen

.

· 49c~'·

15&lt;1592

wu.··

1M

/ .Turkey
Drumsticks

Pork Loins

Pre-assembled and ready to hang. Grounded cord and
plug. Two 40 Wan. 48" fluorescent lights included.

SPECIAL PRICE

Fresh Frozen

Quarter

with Two 40 Watt Bulbs

steel saw blade. Dual pulley
leverage system. 1333

Pound

•~
llllii - -

SPECIAL
PRICE

Shop-Lite

til

Top Sirloin _
Steaks . ;

-Pound

Pound

~~

SPECIAL PRICE

Rib Eve Steak

GU!IAL.ILECTRfC

Kitchen Fire Extinguisher

U

' ·Tenderbest Quality
· USDA ChQb; Bont!Ua "--._.... ""' _,,. Choice Boneless

Beef Stew

Pound

I
Tendtrbtel Olillf!Y

Lean

· ~-.• ,Butk·
. ·Bacon
•

Pound

Tenderbest Quality

'

~

•.
•

154580,79,81,82 .

I

Sliced .

.
.. .-~
.•

""

$

SPECIAL PRICE

·Top Round
Roast or Steaks

SEIMSJM®

Medium base bulbs with soft white finish .
' 40Watt, 60Watt, 75 Wan or tOO Watt. $1 mfr.
mail-in rebate on the purchase of 3 packs.·
N13257,41028,32,36

fSL·1B

.Pound··

i

•

4-Pack Soft White
Light Bulbs

SPECIAL PRICE

.

Tenderbest USDA
Choice Boneless

~

• '. 1 !

.

$1.69

·~

: - : 't.

SPECIAL PRICE

Paund

-.. ..,.

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

.ELECTRIC

Ground Rou·nd ,

.~~~~$1.39.

.

.

'

Ground Chuck

~

'' .

.GENERAL •

v

: ·Rourid Steak· ··

Gro·und ·Beef

The Freshest Ideas·
in Frozen ~ish.

•

By Nellie Parker
Sunday School tendanre, Sept. 28
was 19; church attmdanCE, 15. On •
Oct. 5 Sunday School was :M;
church 26.
Thelma Henderson, Nina Robin·
son, Oara Follrod and Nellie
Parker attended the UMW District
Annual at Athefts, Sept. 25.
Church visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. StepiEn . St . Qalr and Stephanie ri Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Weber and children ri Eagle
Ridge.
Icy Taylor .and Genevieve Gulh·
rle are·tu. Mrs. Tayi:&gt;r's address Is
Hickory Hills Nursing Home, The
Plains, Ohio 45'18), Mrs. Guthrie's
address is Crestview Manor n,
Room «!i, 92!1 BEck's Knob Rd.,
Lancaster, Ohio 4300.
Garner Grtmn has returned to his
Alfred home after visiting his
daughter, Mrs. Charles O'Brien, in
Columbus.
.
. Lloyd Dillinger underwent 1eg 1
sul'(ll!cy at Riverside Hlspltal, I
Columbus Oct. 8.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost vtsltl!l1 i
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost and
Aaron, OCt. 4.

FRESH
TASTE
PAYS

OFF

The Southern Junior High School
Boosters held a successfu I fall
festival and tiE winners of prizes
awarded in a promoti:&gt;n are Daniel
Stone, Pomeroy, $25 worth or
gasoline; Edgar Brewer. Portland,
$25 wocth ol grooerles, and Bernice
Roush, Racine, a Halloween
wreath. Boosters members extend
a big thanks for the support.

Many of you wUl remember
Caryl A. and Chris Layh who
played such active roles in the
building and operation of the
Carleton School In Syracuse,
They are oow Uving in Hillsbo·
rough, N.C .. and doing well.
Carol was tiE subject of a recent
newspaper article. According to the
account, Caryl gave up her job as
community relatims director for
the ViUage Companies in Chapel
Hill and has fi:lnned her own
company.
Alter leaving Vlllage Companies,
Caryl who was serving as a
member or the Board ri !lroctors
of the ArtSchool In Carrboro.
reslgnro from the ooard to take on
the schOOl as a client.
· Her most bnportant responsibll·
lty Is -to raise $1.11! million for the
renovation of a t&gt;nner food store

•

DETAI~

' '

In the birthday comer is Judy
Cowan, Middleport, woo marks an
anniversary on Oct. 17.

Louise Carsey found a balloon
bouncing along Condor Sreet in
Pomeroy. Investigating, Louise
found that the balloon was sent out
by Nathan Kaufman all the way
from the Claymont School in
Ballwin, Montana.

ALL WEEK •••·

SEE STORE FOR

Special hours wlll be observed by
the Meigs County Board of Elec·
tlons Office lor the next three
saturdays for the convenience of
absentee voters.
The office - ~ted in the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple struc·
ture - wlll be open m Oct. 18, Oct.
25 and Nov. 1 to make absentee
voting more convenient for those
who are going that .route.

e

-

PLUS

sparked the East·
ern Eagles to a
24·19 triumph
over Hannan
Trace - the 11rst
ieague win fnr tN&gt;
Eagles Friday
night.
A tight end converted to tailback,
Davis rushed 29 tJ.rnes lor 149 yards
and a touchdown making quite a
contribution to the Eagles victory.

Be careful with that credit card.
Credit card fraud amounts to
more than $100 mllllon a year.
Now - even if you have your
card in your possession. 11 is still
possible lor your account number to
be used tradulently.
Some tips: Ask lor the carbons
from your transactions. These
carbons have your account
number. your signature. expiration
date and other inlonnation.
Another thing, don't' give your
number to the poone caller woo
says you've won somelhing free if
you wlll identify yourself by giving
your credit card numbers.

.......

-tt . antw l.Ntl Oround ~ (.,... l~)12 ONy \Mil Otound RDwni11 (II~ u .....

.

Dr. John Ridgway and his staff
thank you for your attendance at an
open house and reception Sunday
afternoon at the Meigs senior
Citizens Center.
The occasion turned out beaut!·
tully and was held to honor Louisa
Johnson, one of Dr. Ridgway's
employees who will be retiring this
month. Louise has been with Dr.
Ridgway lor 25 years.

,~

1Q,.Af'41QI_Ldn QtoyM ' - f_(n'MI L..,_),

'"

By BOB HOEFUCH

Sentinel
- 'Excellent play

.......

I . Alwep Ull 'ht OoN.n AIM j1141neh Trim Or~~

.. ....,.n.. ....

IMf.

3

l

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--_...,. ----------~

·3

DIET RITE,
Diet or Regular

RC Cola

8$1 49
Plus Deposit

Potato Chips
Orange Crush
A&amp; W Root Beer

FOOD LAND
GRADE 'A'

Large Eggs

ASST. VARIETIES
HERR'S 10 Oz. Bag

DIET OR REGULAR

KRAFT·
MIRACLE WHIP

2 Liter Btl.

69(

.."

.

8

DOZ.

Sa lad Dressing

•

••
•

'I-

..

99(

32 Oz .
Jar

Limit 1 Jar With $I 0.00 or
More Additional Purchase

.••
.
'•
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�'
-~

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Wednildly, October 1

Ohio

Brown reunion held recently
The rtfth annual reunion of the Barbara WeekS, Mary Beth Weeks.
William BroWTI family .was belil The Plains: .Shirley Harman, Lauri
Sept. 20 at the grange hall on tl)e
Harmon, Belpre: ;\lya and Karen ,
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. FiftY· Ciark, Beth Clark, Tara Clark,
four family members and slx
Matt Clark, LangsvUJe: Sue Atin
visitors attended.
Roilsh, Cindy Roush.... Rutlanl!;
Affending we"'
ancf Jenny . Stephanie Pullins, 'Tara Puillns,
Brown, Avon; Don and Ruth Tate,
Stacy Pullins, RaCine: Kathryn
Cleveland; Bernice Brown. Joseph
Pullins, Point Pleasant, W. Va.:
and &amp;irbara Brown, Kelly Brown. Dorothy Clark, Shelly Clark, Jack
Mt. Vernon: Judy Coogle Brown.
and Martha Greenaway, Linda
Fredericktown: Rayrriond and
Pullins, Rodney Pullins.• Ernie and
Garnet Brown, Nancy Strawser,
Lori Pullins, Paula Hall•. Jason
Julie Strawser, Matthew Strawser,
HaU, Danny Hall. Paul and Ruby
Mark Strawser, Reyooldsburg;
Frick, Tom and Mary Bowm.
Robert Frick, Columbus: Emma
Pomeroy.
· Frick Burkhard. Clarksvlll~. Ind.;
Visitors were Clara Austin, Lloyd
Warren and Margie Reas, Earl and
Ho11gland, Paul Schamore, New
Wilma Brown. Louisville, Ky. .
Albany, Ind.. Shari Nogrady,
Edwin and Alice Livingstron,
Athens: Ruth Bearhup. Langsvllle:
Leslie Livingston, Leanna Living·
and Agnes Dixon, Pomeroy.
stan, New Albany , Ind.; John and

.Calendar I happenings .
MIDDLEPORT - The Midple·

. port Child Conservatiln League
will l!'lE'et at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
the offices of The Ohio Power Co.
The program will be presented by
the staff of the Meigs Health
Department pre-natal clinic rn the
topic. "Teen~e Pregnancy".

Canv/1 and Katherine Su ·aiHOn

Swanson anniversary to lx: noted
The :'ilih wedding anniversary of
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Swanson.
Mlddlep011, will be observed Sunday at the !'4lddleport Heath United
Methodist Omrch with an open
reception from I Ill 4 p.m.
Swanson and tlx&gt; fanner Kathern
Hawkins were married on &lt;XI. 10,
!9:.&gt; at Greenup, Ky. by the Rev.
W.H. Muncy, pastor of the Metlndist EpiscOpal Church there.
Mr. and Mrs. Swanson have four

Children , Olarles " Rusty" of San
Jose, CaUl.: Mary Carol of E ngland: Robert of Phoenix, Arizona,
and Sylvia Fox of Newark, DeJa.
They have six grandchildren, and
four great-grandchildren.
1'he celebration is being hosted
by Frank and Shirley Eastep of
Day ton, and Roy and Mary Evans
of Canal Winchester.
They r(IJuest that gifts be
omitted.

.Woman honored by her church
Susie Fischer. Racine. was ho·
nor·ed Sunday on her 9l st birthday
bl' members of the Syracuse
Prrsbvterian Church .
Fotiowing church services a
i&gt;JIIuek dinner was held in the
an!l('X oft he church with 18 person'
a nendin~. Mrs. Fischpr was pres cnt!'d with a cake. gifts and flowers.

.-\11('1lding the " "cnt were Ger·
trude Nriglcr. Bmt ricr Blake.
Gcnei'IC'Vc Schneider. MaiYin and
Eleanor Kay McKelvey. Michael
and Jay. Pauline Morarit)•. Maxine
Russell. the Rei'. and Mrs. Charles
Talmtt. James and .Jane Teaford .
Margaret Cottrill, Katie Crow.
Jean Hall and Janice Lawson.

Scholarship awarded at Malone
Lor! Adams, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob 'Campbell, Tanners Run
Road, Racine, has been awarded a
·J. Walter Malone Scholarhsip to
anend Malone College in Canton.
Scholarships are awarded to
outstanding high school seniors.

Adams, a 1~ graduate of Southern
High Schoof .anending Malone
College. is majoring in archltec·
ture . · Malone is a four year
Christian liberal arts m llege and is
afflliat!'d with Evangelical Friends
Church·Eastern Region.

YOU NEED..._'ll

RUTLAND- Rutland Olureh &lt;i
God will be inakling apple butter oo
Thursday and Friday at the chu rCh
on Ohio.l24. For orders, call742·:Dro
or stop hy the church.
•

SATURDAY

CHESTER :__ The fa ll carnival &lt;i
the Chester PTO will be held at !be
school Saturday with a jitney
supper to begin at 5:30 p.m. and
ga mes beginning at 7. There will be
door pr17.es, a haunted house, !Uth
and sixth grade dance, country
store, an auction and games.
FRO&gt;T - A eyrnn sing will be
held at the Faith Chapel ChurCh at
Frost beginning at 7 p.m: Saturday
featuring the Gabriel Qt,tart et ft'om
Dex ter. The churCh Is thr!l' miles
nor! h of CooMlle.

lll Co1111S!., POI!Itroy, Oft10 U7i~

NOTICE OF
APPOII'ITMEI'IT OF
FIOUCIARY
. On 'OCIObof 7. 1986, 01 the
Meigo County Probehl .COOn,
Cue No. 26278 , Moe
McPMII, R. D., 1.on11 Bonom.
Ollio 45743 . Wll
EliOCIIIri&gt; of the of
l.oono M. Henltey. ·
toto of R. D.. l.oog Bottom.
Ohio 46743.
Robert E. Buclt.
Ptobeto Judge
Lona K. N-od. Cioll&lt;
ttOi 15, 22, 29, 3tc

4. 360-360 cubic inch V-8
eng'i ne.
5. Gauges for oil , temper -

ature. and alternator.
6. Heavy duty spring w / o-

verloed .
7 . t0.600 GMW.

_.,tid

B. Power steering.
9. Power brakes.
10. · Heavy duty sho cl&lt; s
(front &amp; rear, ,

11 . Spere wheel and l ire .
12 . 30-gal. gas tank or
larger.
13. Dual outside mirrors .
14. Rear step bumper.
15 . Swinging rear do ors .
16. Open between cab

Public Notice

Public Notice

SYRACUSE - The Meigs Asso·
clati&gt;n ilr Retarded Citizens is
sponsoring a ho g roast on Saturday
at Carletoo School in Syracuse.
Advanced tickets may be p.Jr·
chasa:l at Hartley Shoes In Rlme·
roy, an d all he Syracu se Dairy Bar.
Serving will be .from 5 to 7 p.m. at
$4.00 per adult and$2.00 !or children
under 12.

'"""'""'li ..

llllloriolo
1
- lot end
the execution llld
COIIIIruction of:

PICKENSMASON,
HARDWARE
~.
WV

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

O'DElL'S

SPECIALS

We've Got It! ... the All New

.,..bid

RINSEtiVAC
~~

CARPET CLEANING SYSTEM
Rotary brush action combines with
hot water extraction to get out
deep-down dirt and grime.
Leaves carpets clean, fresh,
dry In no time.

:alto

m

PER

DAY

8

•

O'DELL .li«t""V'*LUMBER
PH. 992-SSQO

&amp;lwling
Lanes will be conducting a bowl-atho nduringt he \leek &lt;iOct ..11-Nov .
8 for St. Jude Cblldren 's Hospital
with Mrs. Belly Smith serving as
coordinat!l' of the " bJwl for life"
campaign.

ECI!IICH OLD FISIIOIII

LUNCHEON MEAT ........... w. 52.19
UMOUI 01 SMITHFIELD

BOILED HAM ..............llu.Ru.52.19·

HOMIMADE

from the Oflio l&gt;epll!m.,l of
NotuiOI R-..rceo. Divilion al
Roc...,_,, 1856 Fountoin
8quln Coull. Blilding H-2.
Coturnbuo. Ohio, 43224.
The I(IOCific ptOjecl O.!Sidld
01 this oction i&amp; the Rud.,d I·
Ph.. I Roclamlllion l'lojoct
iocotod -•tho colm'Unity a1
Rutland In Meigo County. Tho
project wB toclaim 151 ,.,..
of -do~ llltfoce
tt.t are a rneior IOUrot of
lodi,..t which leodoto ftoocl.
ing of local ro1d1 1nd
relid.,CH.
(t0j15 , tiC

ity Action Agencv • an Equal
Opponunity E.., Ioyer / Equal
Pro\lider of Services .

110113, 14 , 16. 16 4tc

Public Notice

OFFICIAL NOTICE
ID Title PI of 1M
Surface Mini'lg Control and
Reclamation Act of 19n, 30
U.S.C. 1201 01 aeq .. 1M Ohio
Department of Natural R•
IOUFI»&gt;, Division of Aec'-ne·
lion herllly givooo 1101ica of the
IYiitllliity of 1 FINDING OF
NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
for In onvitonmonlllt ment.whichooncema••..l·dc'ned minad !ondtoo:lo-.,
project in 1ho S - of Ollio .
TheS....,ofOhlo huprop•ld
.,d tho Office of Siotfeco
MO.i'lg Reclomation .,d Enfotcemont, Un~ed Still• Do·
PartrMnt of the lnt.-iar, has
proval bv the Department of approved the 111Yironlnll'1tll

P\1..,.,,

"*'•

12 OZ. KRAFT 16 SLICr

~J1

-4441--

SUND•Y • All

5ATUitD~Y

SE~TS

l

$2.50 '

~OMI SSION m~Y M SDAY 12.50

OCTOIIJI tO tllnl te
F!IDAY thnJ

THU~S DAY !

~OCESS

16 OZ. CEllO

~II: I

PIMENTO
CHEESE ................ lliG. S1.19

CARROTS ................... 31 c

BIOUGHTON'S 24 OZ. CTN .

NEW GIEEN

COn AGE CHEESE ..... SJ.49

CAIIAGE ..........~IA ..... 25'

COOL WHIP .................... -'vt.... 99&lt;
11 OZ. IAIQUET

·

TV DINNERS .........·.........u,u 51.39
151ft OZ. JOAN OF AIC

RED KIDNEY BEANS.......lSNt~. 99&lt;
oz.

·KOOL-AID·......................lu~. 99c

,.,,~- POTATO SOUP .............2.UAS51.69
11 oz.
1Oil• OZ. CHU..Y STEAl I

FRESH MERCKENS
CHOCOlATE
OffictH01n

tp A,oiHIMnf

l'ltone:
(6141 592·2163

e&lt;andy Molds s1.60' '""'
•Slicker Sticks
•Cellophane Sucker lags
ellalaw...

Atlt1111, Oltio 45701

. fer lnfonnatlon On:
1

519Sll

•HEARING •HEARING AIDS
•BAnEIIES &amp; ACCESSORIES

Chocolate,
White Chocalall,
Colors including
HaHoween Orange
Mi.

S.r Lay-ans

.

.

Jf.J

~

\.,
.
~

COFFEEMATE ....................,. 51.69
oz.

'

•

&lt;
I

DIAL BAR SOAP .............lNA\.98&lt;
4

OZ. IIIIST AJIT

.

SANKA COFFEE .................. 53.89

11

oz.

POP TARTS ........................ 51.23
7'H OZ. WN.W.Y

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods

I OZ. UnLE JUG

514 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

30 CT.IUMIO

992-6910
W. Acctpl
Fat41S._,.,

SALES &amp; SERVICE

~~lR~DM"!":":'AN==-'1
We~

Stock ·
Mobile Home Parts

Unimproved
Land For Sale

~~~':T':'eJT"";.rN'lTt~

3 Announcements

If the 2 younc men
the blue pickup
who "borrowed" the

· in

aluminum ladder
from the storap
tanks on property in
MineTsville, return
same before 25th

toe~ ":bidw=:.v~

BOUNTY·TOWELS.........

95&lt;

. HOME

1·551·2211

I
•

•

RACINE, OHIO
PH. 949·2210

Real Estate General

reported to
authorities!!

STEAK DINNER
ENTERTAINMENT.

DOOR PRIZES

ADULTS 13.50
CHILDREN 11.00
EVERYONE WELCOME
992·2111 FOR
TICKETS OR

l!ESERVADONS

m

Estate

muOt

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

1 - 1~141 · 992 · 3325

MINERALS - 66 acres n
Rutland Township wi!h
young timber.
.
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rm.
frame, lg. fam ily rm., garage
and nice lot.
SALEM CENTER AREA - 3
BR ranch , all elec ..
carpeted , carport and 4.76
acres.
FIX IT- Nice!g. 2story Fun
basement 2 baths. Pay bal·
ance.
.
RANCH - Excellent 2 BR
home on Mulberry His. 6
closets,central heal, carpel·
ing, 2 patios, garage and !ol
~•145.

FARM - 9 rm . home, 43
acres, barn and other bldgs
in Eastern. All minerals.
SECLUDED - Loveiy 3 BR
ranch . Full.· basement, lg.
carport, swim pool and lg,
trees in M1ddlepor!.
BUSINESS BLDG. - 3 to 4
incomes plus business. Your
opportunity to · be self employed.
LG. BUILDING LOT - In
restricted area. TP watet
available. In Easern dis!rict.
SlUING .PIIOIUM?
Call H2·3S25.

w....., ...,,...

....,

ne Ler111t, J11t TH
Hotl',tnq

'tie&lt;~dqu,Jtlr ''•

'

I

AI1GS CO. HUMANE
SOCIUY HAS IEAUf1FUL
tamNS and CATS FOR
ADOPTION .
SSOO Atfoption ht
lncludss Wormed and First

10/ 5/ 1 mo.

POMEROY,O.
.992-2259
NEW LISTINGS - Newer
hom e with Gambr~ el type
roof, plush carpet, !remend ·
ou s livtng room wi!h ca!he·
dral ceiling. ston e firep lace ,
equipped kitchen, 3 bed·
rooms, lull ba sement, 2
heating systems, large older
barn . pond and approxima·
tely 30 acres of nice lay1ng
pas!u re. $69 . ~0 . 00 .

· BISSELL
BUILDERS

Tt!PIPFRS PLAINS -A 12x65
w~h a 15x21
room add~iln . Has
ceilings w~h sky lighl, in· ,

system, equipped kit·
and heat with gas at well
price, plus royatties !rom
gas well. Approximate~ 'h acre.
$19,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Tw o"story
frame house 011 approxima·
lely 36'x70' lot, 3 bedrooms,
fireplace, storm doors &amp; win·
dows. Assume 8'A% in!etest
lor 23 years balance. $119.23
P&amp;l on $14,200.00. MAllE Of·
FER $15,500.00.

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2.8 60
Day or

Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS

4-16 .' 86 tfn

NEW LiSTING - Blum
Subdivision - Approx ima·
tely 5 yrs. old, 3·4 bedroom
rom~ with 2 ba!hs, deck,
porch and garage. Split
toyer design all in J!od con·
dition. Natural gas fotced air
heat and cen!ra! air. Nice
lot. $59. ~0 .00 .
Henry E. Clil1nd, Jr.

THE QUAUTY
PIINT SHOP
Ftt AH l'fw ,Htlllf
~WS:

**'

Office Su"i" &amp;

. Furnituro, WNoling
and Gtotluotilln ·
Stationery, Matnotic
Signs, lublsw St•p•.
lusinas for1111,
Copy Sonic11, Etc.
. ISS JIIH St., Miolol!oport
104 lltullllny Aw., '•morov

99,-334
EUGENE LOIIIG

SUPERIOR
SIDING 'cO.

YIIIYl &amp; AUIIIUM
Complete Remodollng
Roofing of all Types
Worked In home weo
20 yeon
"Freo Eotimoteo"

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425

BOGGS

SAliS &amp; SDVICE
U. S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, 01110
Auth•iiM John Doort,
Now H•llll, lush Hog
Form fquipm_
ont
· , Dialer

Fe~:~~

E••l••••t

Putt &amp; Serwl"

1·3-'16 tfc

J11n Tntssell ..... MS·2UO

.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
-

Clinical Audiologist

A W,

GiiiiTpolis..........
&amp; Vicinity

Mlc:h6g1n Sale- 60 Neil. Mon. -1
Chriltmlt toy1, eluth01, home

Five flmity Yard Selt Thun. •
Frid-v. lth houa on alft an
Aoulh Line, Ch•hire off At. 7.
All item• priced kaw,
Ger~~ge

Sale All item• 25 cent

e1eh. Fridey 17. on 101 Mlblene

Drive.

8-13 ""

BLACK WALNUTS
Starling

Price .....

GUN SHOOT

$8 00

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Per Hundred Pounds
After Hulling On
Hammons Huller

Bashan .,ilding

SEPT. 29·NOV. 8

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Just Bring your Black
Walnuts still in the hull
10

NEWELL'S SUNOCO

6:30P.M.

Chttlll', Ohio

'

Mon.·Sal. I •m·5 ptn

Factory Chalu

12 Gouge

9B5·3350

Shotg1111

RADIATOR ·

Roger Hysell
Garage

SER~ICE

We can repair and r"'
core radiators and
heater cores. We can

Rl. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

also acid boil and rod

out radiators. We also
Tanks.

repair Gas

Alao Tr•u•luiOit

Yard S1le Fri. Oct. 17, 10-i HeN
mile out Georgn Creek Ad .. off

.... 7

3 F1mi~ Porch Sale Thurt:. • Fri .
Jet. of old 180 I At. &amp;64 In
Porter.

Yard &amp;ele Thurs. &amp; Fri. 'K1
Port1n10uth Rd. Toy1, bik•.
hlndmlde b11ket1. Woodwork
&amp;. crou stitch , glu1W1re, fumiture • mi1c.

lllursdly- Fridey 16 -17.4 flmlly Ger-ue81le- 3'h mil•on 110
p. . HMC.
B11ement Sale 212 Jecklon

Ontr

10-11-tfn

9·22·86·1 mo.

Pile.•. Thur~ . •

'Vtrd &amp;ale Friday 17th, S.turdlty
11th. Jult off 141 Dn LinoaM
Piklel Ctntenary, 4th trail• on
left _ Tool1, fill clothing
j•elery, nt of C•ri• l IVM
dilhel, blue. mile. itam1.

*•·

.......Pom-erov ........ ..
Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

6·17 -tfe

Fridl'f 10 -&amp;.

Colec::ovllion e•me con~ale .
IUpper edlon controll••• roM«
contrail• 10 pm• cenridg• &amp;
IIMCI. Bumper pooltlble, womMI co• 11111 20 Ike new, bird
ftedert. picture fram• lllutt
clothing &amp; conector~ bottlel,
much more.

PAT HILL FORD

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

New Lima Ad . Autl10d. Thur.
ll'ld Fri. Oct. 11th and 17th, Lalt
thlt ve1r. Little of t¥.-ythlng .

814·742· 2&amp;02 .

(CUT OUT FOI

fUIU~

AUTO MAne
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT I REPAIRED

USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND .

All Maku

190 MUl.DY AVE.
POMEIOY,

q..

•W••hera •Dishwashers

•R•noea
•Aefrigereton
•Drven •Freezer•

PH. 992-9949
Bob Barton, OwMr

PARTS ond SERVICE
4·5·ttc

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR
•ZENI1H
.SYLVANIA
•SPEED OUEIN LAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
.SATilUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

If• HlfJ ll Fill Tl•
S••t Tn .. leill
11

Dllf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPliANCE
CHESTER- 915-3307
4/1/lfn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

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

•VINYl SIDitG

*AlU. .UM SIDING
*IIOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSBL
SIDING CO.

'New Ho1111s luilt

Mftll
WANT ADS
lOA GIMAT IU¥5

Yard Sale

Interior, baby furn ., knick ·
kneck1, )IWelry. mile.

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

Complete Gutter Work

Hl-6191

DoHit Tumer .....H2·5692
Office-.•..,....
. mn•n
.; 112·2251

'

915-3561

1HI-11

NEW USTING - RACINE 1.4 acres and a nire ranch
type ho me with basement and
detached garage. 3 bedrooms,
bath, nice lot with garden
space. $28.lXIO.OO.

-a:

"AI Reasonable Prices"

I

EASTERN DISTRICT Acreage apprDximately 41
acres w1th 5 acres tillable.
New ooe lloor home wi!h ba,
semen I. 3 · bedrooms. modern kitchen , !ree gas, F.A.
heat. 2 car garage, chain
link yard len ce, fruil trees,
grape &amp; berry vines, plus
gas royalt oes. MAKE OFFER.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

C!l ·Col!futerized H•ring ~ir Seioc~ion
z Swim Molds - lntel)lretJng Setv1ces

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

NEW LISTING- RUSTIC
'HILLS - Nice rand! with
colonial por ch, large livmg
room with fireplace, 3 bed·
room, l 'h ca r garage, patio,
central air. and a lar ge lot.
$39.900.00.
.

s·

Real Estate General

8·20-'86 tfn

992-5427 or 992·l026

E . M~in

7:14

!lfASONAILE • IELIAilf

CALL 992-6505

601

ANNUAL MEETING
CHESTER GRADE
SCHOOL

614-143-5248

HALF COST of SPAY/
NEUTER at time of Adoption
Balance Paid monthly to
Humane Society

number will not be

Meigs Co.
Farm Bureau

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

7

I~=====~====~~~I ... .

J.R,'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

NORMAN WEBEI
661-3074

9· 15-'86

::1: Licensed

lnnoculations

Oct. you1 plate

Tues., Oct. 21.
1986 '

OffiCE
1·551-2731

110 acres on
Rainbow Ridge in
Chester Towns hip.
Home National
Bank

CHAlliS WEBER
667·6235 '

z

Real Estate General

: IN CHARGE OF ~LE: STEVEN L. BROWN
: .
. AUCnONEER
MICHAEL A. MAYLE

.

Your Cable &amp;
Ph•one1 ·BIIls Here
IUSINISS "'ONI
1~141 .. 2-6550
II!IIINCE ,HONI
t•141

875-48!1.~ ~

SHEETS RECLAMATION
PRQJECT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO, RECLAMATION PRO·
JECT NUMBER MG-Sb-9 n
eccotdon~ wllh the plonund

Not Responsible tor Accidents or toss .

Ohio 45760

We Cln'Y Fishing Supplies

of:

All Silts Fin1l

FRUIT DRINKS ................l1AA .. 79&lt;

Mitldloporl,

m 119

TERIIS OF SALE: C~th or Good Check with Positive I.D.

·

Now lllcati-.
161 North le&lt;ond

88 M. H. Repair

::!."":
':.'! =:~9 ~
conlllruction

This is just 1 very brief listina. Brin&amp; your IIWn ch1ir 1nd
· pi111 to 1tttnd this 111 d1y Nle of •tlques1nd tollttti·
bits. Lunch will bt provldtd.

PINK SALMON ...............m1.. 51. 19

-

PlUMIING &amp; HEAUNG

Stherllln~ Tllotomefuonlsdh'op.,theod

FURNITURE: lar&amp;e oak hall seat w/ beveled mirror, ~Is of
gingerbread, nice; combina!ion bookcase secretary w/ bev·
eled mirror and griffin's head, nice; nice oak curbed ~ass
china w/ ba ck splash and m1rrored shelf; oak cased Eaison
• stan dard phonograph w1rorn; Table-top wffee mill w/original red paint: one drawer tile stand on Sheraton style legs;
Governor Win!hrop style broken arch drop front secretary
oosk w/claw tee!, super; oak cu111ed glasschina w/ beveted
mirror and claw leet, some vMeerdamage; !II Per session s
.wall clock w/ F.G. Meyer Jeweler Advettising on ~as s; oak·
case sessions calendar regulator wall clock, super: Ctterry
Case self winding clock co. New York Wall Clock w/second
hand, battery ~er~ted; oak Princess dresser; oak dressers;
3-door claw toot oak bookcase; very ornate oak server
·wfcarved dolphins supporting mirror; 4-stack oak !ile: oak
high -boy w/2 hat boxes: tound oak table; oak hole! wash
: stand ; oak refinished mantel w/ glass door boxes oo shelf,
· nice; large oak Mutphy bed w/ornate dressing m1rror;
painted cottage Victorian bedroom suite: Globe 4·stack oak
oookcase w/leaded glass tloor, nice; 7'10" Victorian high·
·pack bed : Country Hep.plewhite cherry solid .md chest of
drawets· large walnut Vtctor~an wardrobe: Cannon Ball. rope
bed in old rill finish ;coun!ry server; country wardrobe mold
red paint country pie safe w/ tins; ornate Pier mirror; press·
back tockers; hooked rug w/lion : Salmon wuntry pine open
top cupboard; Victor ian dressets: Victorian wicker ~ i nting
couch; goo&lt;i handmade quills, many more rtems too num·
erous to mention .

F!)Und· 3 bugl• with coU••·

Frlderlek Ad ., Bidwell 1r•. Cell •
814·388 ·9&amp;44 .

THEIE ARE STILL APPIIOX . 100 UNSCRAMilED CIIANNEIS

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Seated f)IOPQIIIs will be
received ot the: .
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NAllJRAL RESOURCES
1856 Fountain Squ.-e
Second Floor
COWMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Tueodoy, November 18,
19811 at 11:00 a.m. Eastern

RAL RESOURCES THE DIV·
IS!ON OF RECLAMATION
COLUMBUS. OHIO. BioS
WILL BE OPENED IN THE
SECOND FLOOR CONFER·
ENCE ROOM OF 1855
!BUILDING Hi OF THE FOUN
.
TA!N SQUARE OFFICES OF
THE OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES.
THE ESTIMATE FOR THIS
PRQJECT AS DETERMINED
BY THE DIVISION OF REC
•
LAMATION IS 183,1180.60.

814-448-0370 ,

DESCRAMILERS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASE - $365
DESCIAMilER AlONE S315

DOLLS: 25 in . C.M. Bergmann marked b~que head, open
mouth dol! w/ original wedding dress: KStar marked bisque •
head opm mouthed doll.

FRUIT COCKTAIL ............u~~o 51.29

3.5

SAME SYSJEM. AS AIOYE WRHOII'( IUIOIE 11,250

Sale located in Bartlett, Oh., a"roximately 23 miles
west of Marietta. OH. and 2l miles •st of Athens, Oh.
on St. Rt. 550 and awrox. 50 niles southeast of lanes·
'lille, Oh. Due to inconvenient conditions we have
moved this fine collection of antiques ll1d collectibles
'to Barlett, Oh. for a~.:tion. llrae all ~~~~ ule of antique
oak fllllilure in ori&amp;inal condition, pnmitives, stone·
Will c11ssw111, clocks, several pteces of. pottery,
dolls, 1111s, and V!Ctllrian fllltiture. In case of inch1·
ment Welther.• will be held under laflt tent.

30 OZ. DEL MOIIITE

ArrENT/ON )
CANDY MAJ&lt;ER$ .....

10' 2" All ALUMINUM BlACK AISH SU lflEEZE
SATELLITE SYSTEMS. Full Remote. Installed ........ st,6SO

Public Notice

•·-

Lost and Found

t1 00 rewerd for retum ar
inform11ion INding to the whll·
reeboutl at m•l• bl.ck lib . ~~~
in OJ White Rd . •r•· Cell

TUPPERS PLAIIS; 011.

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1986
. · 11:00 A.M.

I OZ. IIIDSEYE

.023

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS

AUCTION

WINESAP APPLEL S1.J9 .

.LtCKSON PIKE -AT. 315 WEST

BAAGAIN MTINIES

8

LARGE ANTIQUE

318. BAG

io .........

1

OR· THE
NESS
SION BY CALUNG t8141
486-67000RTOUFREEON
1·1800I 282 ·I08&amp;.
APPROVED FOR PIJBU.
CATION iN THE DAILY SEN·
TINEL POMEROY, OHIO ON .
OCTOBER 16 end 22, 1986
RECOMMENDED:
La,., W. Mamone, Chief
Division of Reclamation
APPROVED :
Jooeph ,J. Sornnw,
Dlt....,, Depenment of
Natural RIIIOUICOI
110115, 22, 2tc

8o Auction

fin ..a.t ... in , _ , .
ing .nd re110ri1g l•d lnd
Watll' "*""OM odYOIIOiv of.
toctld by Pill minhf. A
C:OfTlllote copy of the ....t

,

SLICED BAC

w• .,bmittld by 1M
S IIIII in opplicotion for Ttdt PI

mont -

s2•39 SHIEDDID

MENT
STATE~c~~~~
r~~
CAWNG

N::"
vomber 4 1988 at 10·30
• .
·
a.m. at the .1111 '
,,
Copoos of the pt.,., opecifl.
~~ llld propooal futm1
w_ill be lornwdod from the
Dtvition of Rildomotlon. Deportnw&gt;t of Nolllral RMOut·
""· upon rocoipt of • c:hocl&lt; 11
the omount of •10.00 mode
- - to the ~t of
R - . . , . . . - the.Vhlto Noual Rooou,_. T"-e m,y
lljoct 111'1 or al bidl, or to t1oo be purchaoed wltll ~ 01
·
.
ttw euct amount. P11n1 and
apetKicotlono become the
~ of tho f)l&lt;lspective
• - . oncl no nlfunclo wl11 be
ftATURAL R OU
•
DIVISION OF RECLAMA:noN, 181111 FOUNTAIN
SQUARE, BUI.DING H, SE·
COND FLOOR, COLUM·
8UJS, OHIO 43225 . No
m,y - - hia bid
~ 11octy i&amp;o1 o1oyo -tho
ectull oi tho opa1ng
thonof
. The . Dir«:tor of No_,lll

'1 ll. CIISP &amp; SIIV E

.....,..,1 for this pnJjoct

bid ,...,

. . . . to: DEPARESTMERNTCEOSF

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••Il.. .... 99&lt;

which

The Gallia-Meis Commun·

=

POMEROY ~ Rlmeroy

Anrual session
CHESTER - The annual lll('('t·
ing of the · Meigs Count y Fann
Bureau wll l be held at the Olester
Elernet1 tary School Tuesday begin·
nlng with a steak diMer ll'rved al
7:14 p.m. The Shade River
Shufflers directed~ Gerald Powell
will rrovide entertainment. All
board members and the office have
tickets for the annual session.

TANNEHILLE REClAMATION PROJECT, . MEIGS
(:OUNTY, OHIO, REClAMATION PROJECT -NUMER
MQ.Sb-10 In llecordt!nce with
tho plona 111d IPICificilliono
- - by the DEPART·
S
MENT OF NATURAL RE- . TOR
SOURCES, THE DIVISION MAY
BUS.
OHIO, BIDS WIU
BE
OF
REClAMATION,
COWM·
OPENED IN THE SECONO .
FLOOR CONFERENCE
ROOM OF 1865 IBULDING
HI OF THE FOUNTAIN
SQUARE OFFICES OF THE ·
OHIO OEPARTMENr OF
' NATURAL RESOURCES .
THE ESTIMATE FOR THIS
PRQJECT AS DETERMINED
BY THE DIVISION OF REC·
LAMATION IS .• 38.305.00.
A
rnootilg wit be
hold on Wodneodoy, · No·
6. t 986 at 1:00 p.m.
· vombet 4. 1986 ot 1:00 p.
m. II tho litO.
·
he
CopOM oft pt.,,, IPecifi·
end PIOPOIII forms
wll be foowwdod from the
Dlvition of Roclomotion, Dei&gt;enmlnt of NatuiOI R_,.,,_
cot, upon reoaipf of a c:hoctc In
:: the omount of *S.OO made
· - - to the ~~epanm.,, of
•Natural R-..rceo. T"-e may
be purch- with t:ash In
1M _ . amount pt.,1 .,d
' opeclllcatlono become tbe
. ~ of tho fli'OIPocliYe
bidilan end nlfundo w~ be
"mode. Additional O.lorrnation
;IN\' be oblllinod from the
· Divi&amp;fon of Roclomotion,. DeR
•portment of Natu rol _,.,,.
: .,.., 181!6 Fou""'" Squore,
• .._... H. Second Floor,
Columbuo, Ohio 43224.
:!Phone: i81412e5·10tiBj,
11 be '"""'"'
· ' Elc:h
1
jonlod by BID GUARANTY,
- . g the 1'811Uiremonta ~
~:0154 of · tho 01110 ·
CONTRACTORS ARE IUJ.
VISED THAT IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH THE PROVI·
liONS OF THE JAMJARY
27 , 1972 EXECUTIVE
ORDER BY THE GOVERNOR
OF OHIO ANO EXEWTIVE
ORDER 84·9, FEBRUARY
15. 1984, EQUAL EMPLOY·
MENT OPPORTUNITY CON·
DITIONS ARE APPUCABlf
TO THI&amp; BID WAGE RATES
ESTAIUSHED IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH SECTION
11113.18 end 1613.37 0 F
l;HE
REVISED CODE ARE
ALBO APPliCABLE.
. ' llldl n llld ad ·

Bo\01-a-tmn

Public Notice

Energy and Ohio Oepart
ment of Development and
should occ ur withh) 2-4
weeks of the opening of the
bids. The Gallia -Meig s Community Action Agen cy reserves the righ_t to accepr or
rejec t any and all bids.

.,dcargo body jno potioionj .
These bids rrust set fonh
NOTICE TO 81DDERS
full. accurate Md OOI'11)1ete
The GaiNa·Meigo Commun- infonnation as required by
ity Action Agency, North Se- this O.vitation of bids. The·
cond ...t Eat Main Slrooto. ponefry (Qr malcO.g false staleChelhi&lt;e, Ohio 46620, o non· menu in bidl is prescribed in
profit orgenlution. is tllkftg 18 USC 1001 . Accossories
Nillod bido 11 of Oc-r 6. aoe di1couraged and llxuoy
1986, on the lolowing vohi· options sre Inappropriate.
c)e: 1 ton eel) «1dcha11is with Seolod bids wiH be ICCIIpted
cube body. specifications as until4:00 p.m., October 17.
lotlowo:
1986, II tho Gallia·Melgs
1. One 111 ""' Cllb ond chO$· Com,..,nity Action ' Ag..,cy,
lisw/ cube boctt. iWhMt beoe North Second and Ea11 Main
Streets.
Cheshire, Ohio
to accommodate 14 ft. bo•l
·,.2 , HtiYV duty atternator.
45620. At that time all bids
~ . Four 141 speed lrllno·
will be opened and revi&amp;wed .
millio n.
Purchase is tubjec t to ap-

looand Floor
COWMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Tuoocley, N01o...- 18,
18811 at 2:00 p.m. Eatan
. Blllndord Time .,d op111.r
lhertoliiW lot fumlohO.g 1M

no, mast

PHONE
992-2156
01 Wnte Oin\ly
Cbmlitd Dt't.

Public Notice

•

•HUNTING JACKOS
•HUNTING VESTS
•SHELLS

llon1reomln'
,
POMEROY- Homecoming will
·IE observed at the Morning Star
United Methodist Cburch Sunday
. with Church services to begin at
9:45 a.m. Sunday school at 10:45
POMEROY - A free diabe!es
screening clinic for all ages will be
a.m. will be b llowed by a crry·in
held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. dinner at 12:30 p..m.
.
Thursday at the .JY!eigs Senilr
An aftwnoon program beginning
Citizens Center in P6meroy.
at 1:30 p.m. wUI featured the gospel
group, Sheklnah, which includes
POMEROY - Pomeroy Cub
Debbie .bhnson PoweU a former '
Scout Pack 249 will meet at 7:30 member·of the church. There wlll
p.m. Thursday at the Church of IE Sl'\leral other special music
Christ for Its regular monthly rumbers. The !lJblic is Invited.
meeting.

Stlllllltl

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
&amp;Niod propoulo will be
I8C8Iyed .. the!
.
.
DIVISION Of
REClAMATION
- DEPARlMENr OF- ·
NATURAL RESOURCES
1851FG1nllllnS-o

WE HA~E WHAT .

ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Health Club wUI meet at
J: 15 p.m. Thursday at the Rock
Springs Church.
· '

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

The Daily Sentinel

SYRA.CUSE - A ~g roast will
IE held at the Carleton SChool from
5 to 7 Saturday.' Dinners are $4.50
for aduh s and $2.00 for Children
under 12. Advance tickets are
avaUable at Hartley Shoes and tre
Syracuse Dairy Bar. The dinner is
sponsored by MARC.

Public Notice

HUNTING.SEASON .OPENS

Joe

THURSDAY

...

"l'ree Eetlmet•"

PH. 949-2101 .
or 94•·2160
No Sunday

Call1
1/ 11 / tfft

9/27116/1 mo.

Announ ct!1111! nl s
3 Announcementl
SWEEPER and tiWkiO machine

repair. p1rt1. end tuppli11 . Pidc
' up end delivery, DIYll Vacuum
Cleaner, one h1lf mil• up
Georg• Creek Ad . Ce~l 114·

-:--~:-:-:--:­

Behind grlde 1choolln Rutl.,d.
Lett~
lf'ld lots

Ohio .

mile.
3:00 .

Thur~..

d,..,.
Oct. 11th. 8:00.

Arnold Grtle r•ld""Rce, 1 milli

north of Rutl..,d un Rc. 124:

lhurt. end Fri.. Oct. 11th end

17th.

Now yard lalo. Thursday, Oct.18111 only . Loot •allot bohlnd

Vet' I Offic. on MuiHny Av..
loakt. ckttfl... mile. aoo-.
4:00 .

.......----Pt.Pieasii.iif .....
&amp; Vicinity

YlfdllltOct . 17 &amp;18 .4hlu. .
betow SW1r1 JIWtlry, Gill.'
ferry_ Lota ol mi1c. • toot..

9

Wanted To ·Buy

We PlY cllh for lett model cleerl

utld Clfl.
Jim Mink Ch.V.·Oidt Inc .
Bill Gene JohniDn

448·0294.

&amp;14·448·3872

Control hunger end lose W"eighl
with N• Shepe .Diet Pl~n end
E· Vep W1t1r Plll1 . Fruth
Pharmety.

Recine Gun Shoot 1POn10r.t bot
Atcine Gun Club. Ewrv Sundey,
beg6nnlflg et ·1:00 p.m. F.atorv
Chokl. 12 QUIQI 1hotgun1.

Abaolulety No Hunting on R•v·
mond Smith .

TOP CASH paid fur '83 model
1nd MIWif uMd c1n . Smith

luidc -Pontlac,

1911 E..terrt_

Ave., G111ipoli1. C1H 614-441-

2282 .

WANTED TO ~UY Ultd wood l
coel hlatar1. SWAIN 'S FURNI -

TURE, lrd . • Olivo So Galllpo·
111. Cell 814 -448 ·31&amp;9 .

Wanted to buy laying hln1 . Cell

814-e419-711 I .

4

Giv1111wey

Kitten

grey

&amp;

beige, muhi

Uled mobile homes. C1ll 114·
448 -0175 .
Buying dalty gold, 111v.,- coln1 ,

cotored, 9 wk otd kittem nn. rinp, jewelry, liMing were, otd
trointd. Coli ea-448-9&amp;3&amp; .

coln1, l•ge CUrNncy, Top prl·
Blrber. Shop,
2nd. AYI. Middlepon, Oh. 114·

c•. Ed . Burkftt

HeH lab. mete. 3 ye1r1 old. Call
&amp;14·• •·9e44.
992·347&amp; :
1 fem1le rlbblt. C1ll 814· 441·
t149 .
Ghteewey

-----~- -

llllj:IIIV Iill 11 1

1 t.mele gotcten

SI' I '• ILl

:

·'e.
·~

• will . ofdpuppite. Wlllbl:lmll

.·.,'

10 outefluffyldttlnl, 6wlll. okl,
Mfl« train• . uM to ahlldrm.

..'

hompllot. Coil 814 ·448· 1314.

I

dog~. e month old Codl•
~:.
H 1p W ted
lponlol, triah Saftor mix. Coil _
11
__
e_ _•_n___ '·'
1
814··1-1)1181 .
1·
•'
\

Make Chrilt.,...l rMnfY,

MM ,.~

lrootlttorl koodwllh-. CoM
814 ·448·1&amp;&amp;8 aftor &amp;PM.

Avon. Mike 41 .,.-oent. Cel ~
114·44&amp;·33&amp;8.
;...

Loog belrldo 1 wtoo. ~ block l

Eaperl1nce IlDdy men needed to '"'

white puppy, mixed brted, cutl,
ID

tllllld
. homo onty, CoN t14·

" ''37111.

F- ' tdlt.,t a wtoo . old . CoH
814·.4 4··· · · .

t wk. old ·bfacto IIIIIIPIH to glvo
10 good Ito. .. Cd oflet
p.m. &amp;U-1141·21182 .

••

buld •tv1111• cert. Too .. ,... : \

Cflifed . Cell 114 · 311 - 1811 , ·~

=

IA=M;;.·;;.
IP..;
M;..'--"":"'-:-'"':" ••
••
Now hlrtn\ driven. Domlno 'l l'
Pine. Clll 14-441·4040 .
:..

Clrotalcor • ttv. In -mont,;
"""""" ' C•ll304-17&amp;·1104 or,. •
304 · ~&amp;· 838t .

�..

...----.-

'

' '

·.

Sentinel ·
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

t.dy ., lloy wllh old.... lody.
Call114· 441-2711 . '

2 bod room aH olactric.. I 180.00
mQA1h plut utlitiM, Gallfpollt
Forry. 304-175-.0011.

Woodcutter mulf hive own uw
11.7 5 to ~200 1 a WMit. Call
814 -218: \1"88 .
.

lihoun.

2 · bedroom furnlthld mobile
honw, wee h.- 1nd · dryer, air
condltton, 304-17&amp;·4874.

f

2 br fumi1h.d _ mDbite home;,
WMher and dryer, air conditian.
• 304·675-4874.

Poeltton now w~llble in auto
ul•
Good benefit•. Appty
w for a rewerding

I'MU"' to.._Jim
vrolel -0 ldamobila

Mlnlt l:
~~ 18 ~ern Avenue, Gallipo:
46~31 '

101, Oh

44

3000 GO)Iarnn..t Jobt Li1t.

A pertment
for Rent

*11,040-M8 ,230 '(r. Now Hit·
lng. CeN'• 806 ·M7-8000 Ext.
A-•o8 . •·
·

Regency Inc. 1p1rtment 2 bdr.,
utilitiM pertlY paid, nice. Cell

l~a-ln : N~ a WV'Omlln 150 yrs. of

-a•

to '"' in. Tl6te care of 2

304·618·5104 o• 304-871·
7921.

.chHdren, do lght houM work,
moderel~

cooklnu . Room bo•d-lllary. c.• after 7:00
p .m. 814·742· 2080

AaMmbtara Wanted, e 1m ~ to
180.00 per dey auambling
display clo,wnt. Meterl•t a~pplied. S•d st1 mped self ltd·
dr•Hd .,..,elope, Htwks land-

lng, P. 0 . .Bo• 13493, Orlondo,
Fl. 32859'. ,

~natraid~.womonormuple
lo llay . M!hta. " Houoe Sot"
worh var~ from 111w ntghtt to
vacation 1time up ID 3 weeks
Send
and .-.~,..,,.,:
Bo~~: C-20 care of Point Pleaant
Regitter, 200 Meln St., Point
Pleeunt, w. v1 •

....,·mo

TELEMARKETING . Home Im-

F'-!rniahed apt.
N4fAih~

CH•._...,._... s,....."' WaNJ.qu ,, _

10

''s

"We.,fe tak.mg Up a COllectiOI)
~

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

... 6·"11 after 7pm.

phone eolichor for Immediate

positkm. Male or iemate. Please
can 304·676-5262 .
·
Baby litter needed in my home.
P.ark Drive .,... Dependable.
.. b&amp;eto'NOrkevenlngl. 304 -675 -

:&amp;834.
:Avo.,
' .

Open territories.
,..veillb!e. 304-676-1429.

Ins.

~CaretPer to live in apt. corf1)1ex

•,for fr• ,.,,_Mutt be honest and
' bon'd lble. Prefer eldorty couple.
:304-875·6806 .

~art-time, eveninijs 6-10 p.m .
·Clerical position . Some typing
''equlr8d . No previous exp. re• quir«~e:t. Send Resume 10 Box
;P14, in cere Pt . PleuMtt Regis1ter. 200 Main St. Pt. Pl. W'tl .
!REPS NEEDED for busin"s
~ar:coun ... Full-Time, &amp;60.000·
\t80.000; Pert· Time. •12 .OOO\t1 8,000-No Selling, rep.. t bus·
t1neas. Set your .:»wn hours.
:Training provided . Cell: 1-612, 938-68'70, M-F, 81m to 5pm
•ICenual Standerd Time).

:..,...
'---=::;;;:::;====
112

l

Situations
Wanted

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

.Room ll'ld baard fo r !Ienior
~citi:Eens . Special loving r;are. Cell
~614 - 992 - G873 .

"

-'J.ia-lt Man. No job too large or
''t(OO

.,.

small.r Jim Branhsm. Call

" 304-773-5538
.
,..,
'

$

Wanted to Do

..... _,

· 'Electrical work. fr~tt~ DStimates.
Industrial, Commercial, Resi·
dftntiel . Call 614 -446-3028 .
Tired of mowing? Clll me.
814 -446 - 3176 . Alto lawn
mower repair &amp; ligl'lt hauling.
.,.-,--~-'---

·le-

FIRE WOOD. Loeust. Maple.
Elm. Walnut. $30. per pickup
load. delivered . Call8i11 Slack at

614-992-2269 .

Fmanm l
21

Countf¥ horne 2 story 9 rooms,
remodeled, new carpet, kitchen
&amp; bath. 137,000 . Cell614-446·

2359.
House 1: 3 .2 acres for. sal8
Neighborhood Rd. Call 614-

446 -.7458 aho• s ,Jo.
Hou~~e for sale, LR. 2 bdr ..
kitchen. bath $18.800. Call

304-675· 7423 .
2 bdr. house full basement. 2
bsths, 1 att1chtd garage 1
unattech8d, outbuildings, 13 A .
m· l. new fence. lou of pine
trees , pond. Call diVS 614·446·
2107 or aves. 614-245 -6600 .
6 room house. 1 .2 acres . Double
car garage. located on Roee Hill.
Bargain priced S20.000. Call
614·678· 2513 .
Government Homes hom 81 . (U
repair). Delinquent tax PfOperty.
Repoue ..ions. Call 806 ·887·
6000 Eu. GH9806 for current
rePo 1/at.
In Middlepon . 3 bedroom. •1 'Ia
storv house. Completely remo·
deled, fully insulated, carpet.
forced air ga&amp; furnace. Low
utilities, fenced-in beck vard.
storage build i ng . Asking
121 .600. or makil offer. Cell

304·875·5422 or 675-7976 .
1984 14a54 Mansion mobll8
home. lived in one veer. excel·
lent condition. 89.100 . 304·
675 -5039 after S p.m.
Sm111 2 br house. 1ppro11. 3
~ern land beeide Letart grade
school. 304-896-3858.

McComb .004-365 ·8675.

OWN YOUR OWN JEAN ·
SPORTSWEAR , Ladies Apparel,
Q.hildren I· M eternity, Large
Shu. Petite, Dsnctwear ·
aerobic or Acceuorles ttore.
Jordaehe. Chic. Lee. levi, lmd.
Gh:ano. Gu•s. Cal\lin Klein,
Serg6o Valente, Evan Plcone..liz
Claiborne, Members Only. Gudine. Htehhtex over 1000 oth·
ers. 114 ,300 to 126 ,900 inventory. training, fiKtures. grand
opening etc.
Open 16 day1.

Mr.

c.,

K"""' (3051678· 3639.,

FREE BROCHURE - Wo open
all typeS of IPPirel stores . Our

mort popular •ores are: 1\C•reer dreasee . 1uhs end I(JOr11·
weer for the working women
21HiQh ...olume off-price lediet'
11ore feiiiUring over 1000 top
brenda at 20 to 60 p.,cent
sevlnfl 3) Young junkn CaiLitl
w ..r tor ttle 1B ID 36 yur old
•!Large lize ltdie~ d1111 and
..,ortswt8J 5)1 nf""t to Preteen
Children "• store 6)113 .99 (and
len) o~:~a- prlc.el.tiell1ore fNt·
urlngvalu• ~to 140.00 . Total
cost 119 ,97fi . You cltl be open
within 2 weeks. Call1 -404-489·
... 38 anytime .

•
23

Profenional
Service•

2142 or a7e· 2010 .
Jim'• Carp.. Outlet. C1rpt1
rtlrh t2 .315 tnd 84.00 ln-

otallod. 8·8 T~... s ... 304-812·
3710 or 773-1111 .

,

Horne•
for Sale
.

·
3 lldr., eir. pool. ueiege. Nice.
commtreitl praperty, corner
lott. I hllfhwey frontage. Lid
with Ul- Yla h...,t buyert. A·On•
Ani E~•· lroker . CaM 30 4 •

174-8104"' 304·674-&amp;386 .
1 idlfJ -$ ' bdr. full b... ment.
VInyl •Jdtng, carlori, ioid
ntllahbor1HKHI· 12 ,1500. Cell

114-241·8371 .
•,

pm.
Furnished 3 rooms 1nd bath.
cleen. ad uhs only, no pets. Call

33

Farms for Sale

Small fUm'iahed 1pt., utilitjl!!tl
paid. would Hke m1ture lady.
Close to town r.t. required. C1ll

57 acre farm county water, 2
bdr. mobile home. barn. out
building, IIVtral piec.. of fll'm·
lng equipment. and mare for

814-446-4063 . .

169,900. Coli 614·286·8074. •

814-448-4336.

Unfurn . 2 bedroom, ret. &amp;
range, 1 or 2 adults. no peta. Cell

1 bedroom apt. for rent. B11ic
rent stan• •21e . e month thet
- - - - -- - - -- ·l includn ell utllltl11. Deposit
required of 1200. Contact VII·
1 acre 2 car garage 30~~:30 heat lage Manor Apt. Middleport.
water. electric. Set up for mobile 614·992-7787. Equal Housing
home. Stata Route 664 . Call . Opportunity .

35

lots

&amp; Acreage

614-388·8746 .

2.09 acrtl State Route 66•·
Wheaton Rd, 15,500. Trlde for
30 ft . or larger c1mper. Cell

Ap1rtments tor rant. in Pomeroy.
One 1nd two bedroome . Call

between 8:30 end 4:30.

41

Houses for R"ent

3220 .

New 3 bdr. 2 bath house in
Rocksprings Pamtt"ov. Newly
redecorated . Call 6U -4'6·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HO'IIE SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 35.
PHONE 61 4-446· 7274.

1 bdr. unturn. U2 4th Ave.,
G1lllpolis. Deposit req. 11 86 per
month . Clll614-441-3867.
2-3 bedroom house in Pomeroy.
Unlurnithed, Suglf Run 1r11,
close to school, \/try nice. Pay
own utilities and deposit tl!l·
quired. Dev 614·992·2381 , or

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light houte keeping rooms. Perk
Central Hotel. Call 614 ·448-

0756.

call814 ·742·2729 .

304·67&amp;-1076 .

Ctll Keneuga Mobile
Homes. 614·446·9662 .

home.

g••

12x60 1973 Arlington
heat.
2 bdr., e•cellent cond. Must aee
thit on e. 14,960 . C1ll61 4-446·

017&amp;.

'

1973 12•66 Utopia g11 hett. 2
bdr .. IJCCIIIent cond , ~UIISHtO
IPP1-tciatt, 85 ,960. Csll 614·
446-0176 .
Mutt tell, moved will not refun
snv re.. osnble offer. Br.nd nl"ttW
1986 24•40 SunwaodAC. OW,
aKtru in1ul1tion . Furnlthed.
nest Green SchooL C1ll 613·

Call 814·943·5309.
Smell furnished . ldesl tor 1

ponon. Call 304·7'73·1183.
3 bedroom houl8 in Henderson,

w. v • . 304·675 -7448.

1 bedroom 1umilhed duplex
400. 2ht StrHt, 8250. manlh.
2 utillti• furnished . Adultl

Only. 304-675 -2851 .

653-6909.
1983 Cl1vton mobile home
12d0 &amp; }.3ofen acreeitheteell
touethor or septrate. Call 814·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

245-5689.
1973 FrHmtn 12a60 very good
condition, total alec. 16,000.
Cell 614-245-5818.

1973 Monarch 12xl&amp;. 2 bdr.
plut util. room, good condition,
86.995 delivered. French Ch:y
Mobile Homn. t14·448-8340.
1971 Fleetwood 14•65. 2 bclr .,
Iaroe kitchen, ready for wood
burner, 86 . 500 delivered .
French City Mobile Homet,

614-446-9340.

1979 Llbarty 12•80. 2 bdr ..
reduced , 13 ,995 delivered .
Frenctt City Mobile Hornet,
514-445-9340 .

1----------1974 HINcr81t 14x70 3 bdr.,

reduced , t5 .500 d1llvered.
Frendl City Mobile Hamn.

61 4-446·934Q .
'81 Windaor 2 . br terge living
room • ~itchen, 2 porch• &amp;
underpinning, great cond. Mull

•II. 304·812-3718.

space~ .

tmell children
Rt . 1, locust Ro1d
bsck of K • K Mobile Hames.
ICC8pl~ ,

5 room house in Pomeroy, 2

2 bedroom. Ful bnement.
newly remodeled. FrM gas.
&amp;300 per month . No .deposit.

Nice 2 bdr. mobile home 2 mil81
from hospital. accapt c:hildren,
clble, n1tur11 QIS, central 1ir &amp;
h..t. Call 614·2•5-5223 or

814 ·441·3887 .
1986 14x80 mobile home. 1
mile below Gallipolis Dam on Rt.
7. C•ll lfter 3 :00, 814 ·251·

8089 .
2 bdr ., 1H utilities paid except
elK., fum . or unfurn ., IICdepoelt required. Canvenient
locetktn. Callt14·448 ·8558 or

114-446-4778 .
Mobile home for rlnl. 2 bdr., KC
school diatrlct. Cell 614-441·

0722 .
2 bdr. mabile home In country
COf11tletetyfum .. 1111. cond. 8250

mo . CaU14·381·9eOII.
2 bdr. 1211115 .:ompletely turnithed, low utHitl•. t•a• lot.

Call 614·448·9204.
2 bdr. fullyfumlehteildulteonlv,
utll. paid. CaH e14·44e-4110.
Nh:e 2 bedroom mobile home tor
rent. Ntlf' 'Jecin1. Call 114·

Mm;hanrl1se
61 Household Goods

1---------SW.AIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gelllpali1. New &amp; utad
wood·coalltovn, e pc woOd lR
.. tte &amp;399 . buftk ~· IJ9&amp;.
ant ron reclin•• &amp;99. new &amp;
used bedroom suit11, . range•.
wringer Wishers. S. shoes. New
livingroom IUh'n 8199 -1699.
ltmps, also b!Jylng coli 8t wood
1tov... Call •614 ·446·3159 .
Caunty APPNitf'lct, Inc. Good
used 1pplitnces and TV sets.
Op1r1 lAM to IPM . Mon thru

Sat. 814-448· 1691. 827 3rd.
Ava. Gall/polio, OH .

Valley Furniture, new Ia used.
L.irge tectlon ol quality furniture . 1218 Eastern Ave .,
Gellipoll•.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof.. 1nd chalra priced from
f39a to t888 . Tabl" t50 and
up to 81215 . Hldt·a·btda U90
to t588. Reellne.-s 822&amp; to

f37B . Lampo f28 to t125.
Dlrlettn f109 end up to t48&amp;.
Wood table w-e duiu •2BI5 to
t781 . Dnk UOO up to t37a.
Hutch• •40o end up. lunk
beds COtf1llttl w· mllttrllte~
t211111d up to 8381. Baby bed1
•110a 8171. MetlrMinorbo~~:
epritlga full or twin 8113. firm
t73. 1nd 883. Qu•enaeta8226,
King 1310. 4 drewerch•t Ill.
Dresser• 888 . Gun cabin et:s 8,
10. &amp; 12 gun. Gee Of' eltctric
range 1375. llby menr•HI
135 &amp; "5 . Bed fram11 120.
130 a King frame 8150, Good
eetect6on of bedroom ., Res,
rne1111 Clbinl1s, heldbo'erde 130
1nd up to 1115.
Ue.t Furniture! Wash., a
dryer, eltctric rtngt, gu range,
wood table 2 bendt•. btd1,
drltlllf, a rtclkttr. 3 mU• out
8ulevllle Rd. Open tAM to
6PM, Mon. thN Set.

a

0000 USEO APPLIANCES

Nlili 21iii1100111trtlltl tontmln

WMh"!! dryera, ,tfrig~~r•Jon.
r~ngea . lkagg1 Appllanou.
Upp• Rlvw Ad. beside' Stone

Chllhlre. On n101 lot, Cal

•/
,_

----

2-

a mo. old Be-sal•. 171

...

Reg. Beegle pupa. 8 wks. ald. 3
malea, 1 fem1lt. Cell 614· 2419178. .
'

C.•t Mota!. 814·441·7318 .

IVestOC

k

614· 251 ·1393.
Heavy duty g11 station, type air
COfT1Jrt110r, tl500 . C1ll 614-

258·1393.

Firtw'ood tpllt II h1ulld 111
hardwood, PU bal 140 deli·
\lered. Cell 6'1•· -.&amp;· 3028 or

614· 245-9677. .

,

Cabinet Zenith ttyle stereo

a.

Firewood lor sale mixed ' 'aplit
115 pickup load . Csll 614·2611·
1718 sfter 5PM .
Double blrrell 20 giUge thot·
· gun, top condition. foa modi! 8 ,
cofl"C)Iete with c••· exceltent
bird end rlbblt gun t22&amp; . WWII
M-1 Clfblnt. with beyCH'Itt and
box of am.,..,.nition. good condi·
tion 1195. Cell 614 ·441G·t681
after 10:00AM .
Mixed hardwood alebs. 112 . per
bundle. Containing approx. 11h
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet: Co.
Pomeroy, Ohto . Cell 11 4·•2·

AKC Regietered Boaton TetTiarl.
Black and white. Wormad and
1hot. 1110. Gutrlf'ltMd h..tthy.
Squirrel

dot. m11e

118001423-0183, anyllmo.
1979 Ford 350. dual· whHI 4
wheel drive wek:ling truck with
weldtng bed tool boxtl and new
200 emp Lincoln Wilder,
17 ,000.00; 60 serite Ditch
Witch . good · condition ,

f1 1.000.00: 7 -D Fiat AHio
Oo1:er MW. Clll $4-273·:,1 85
or 304-273-8830.
Tappan electric range. 304·115·

1915 .

Flrl'llltood. HardWood d,.iwtrtd
etaclttrd 130.00 truck toed .

a.

67

Musical
Instruments

S'n•e ... m Itt, IXC. COnd .,
&amp;160. Trombonewithcesel90.

CoU14-446-4141 .
H1mmond organ apinet modet
M-3. Perftct mechanical aondi·

IK&gt;n, 1110. Call 814-44&amp;·0848.
Plano, upright, good condition.
will deUver, 30'·175· 20881fter
7p.m.
For .. le Lowery l70 debut.
org1n. t11500. G.C. C111 304·
882·2298 after 4 .

58
8t

Fruit
Vegetables

Ctnning tGmartOM delivered to
G1Uipolie . Cell after 7PM, 114 -

256-6550.
Now open, lots large apples, all
vsrieti• . All. fNlta and produce.
Jacks Mertet, Rt. 36. Henderson. W. Va,
Winter potsto, onions for Ala.

304-882-2041 .

For Sale or Trade

CR OS S&amp; SONS
U.S . 35 W•t. Jackson, Ohio.
814-281-8451 '
Mneey F-..eon, New 1-!ollend,
Bush Hog lei• • Service. Over

40 used tr~etors to dloose hom
&amp; co"" '*tt lk\t of new a ultd
equipnwnt. Largest •lection In

S.E. OhK&gt;.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
-CENTER . SR 35 W. Clalllpotla,
Ohla . Cell 1114· 4416·9777, eve.
114-441· 31S92. Up front tractors wtth weffenty over 40 used
"ICfOfl. 1000 toola.
Motor pul,_ 2 ton H· PJ••· 30
ton mNI band IIW 78· 240 Ford
truck tow mileage good cond.,
74 LTD CDv. low mlleegle, 2
tho\fnnd bel" hay 1· 2· 3·
cunmg llfttfe dover. Call 111•-

387·0242.

Sid•• Equlpqnt Co.. 304-

248·5121 .
Concrete blacks •llelr:ea yard o'
delivery. M.,on stnd . GaiMpolia
Blodl Co.. 123'h Pint Bt ..

Gallipolis. Ohio Call 114-4412783 .
Pole Building• by. Ousllty
Build••· Workshops, ClrPOrts,
1nimal ehelte,., pr~g• . Fr"
ettlm1ta1. Phone 114-384-

&amp;712 .
Cammerdll Bldg . 34x40 clasr
tp. . aMmetlllbldg . HHvyieuge

!78·7421 ,

HomeNte dllin IIW All, Iuper
XL· AO -3 .1 cu inch engioe.
manuel end auto o&amp;llng, 16 WI
power tip be\11289 .00. We have
over 30 good usld and rebuift
uws ~ •ock from *76 .00 to
81&amp;0 .00 . We will give • frH
cheln Of' elect ch •In sew lhlf·
P'"• wh:h the purch•• of env
used HW . Keefer Service Center, St. At. 87. leon, W. V1.
Phon• 304-896-3874 .
'71 Ford 2,000 tr1ctor, bruth
· hog, grad If' blade, plows, boom
pote. m~ure spreader. 304-

773·8187.

lnterneUonal 12 50 grinder
mixer. Excellent condition. 304·

273-4215 .
62 Wanted to Buy

Pets for Sale

Dregonwynd

CFA Hl""llll'an,

Now buying shell com or ._
com. CalltorlatlltquotH. Ri..,...
Ctty Farm Supply, 114-441-

44U011or 614-446-3731 .

1110-

*"'"

ttt!lll- ~38Q . . . 2

ll1mwe kitttne.

Ilia.-· 4400 2783.

.. --· ..

· 114·742·

IBI WhHI of Fortune

ID S GOURMET DINER
1

~'{)

&lt;:AU. Tt:II,S" FooD.
'
'
l
FO~ 'it"'IOUGHi ...
i

•
•
I

FllltWing, ttuck campti' I'
fum.ce. tink. water t.nk. port•·
potty.~-· 4. f800 . 304·882·

etm&lt;IIIJeoperdy

(BilleMon

7:311 Cll The Honevmoot~era
1:00 • Cll ()II H~ . to
H - ICCI Jonathan and
Mart&lt; help a dacaased Viet·
nam vet's Orientol refugee
famHy 10 reloca1e in the Un·
itad Stites. 160 min .I
()) Bring "Em llecll Alive
(])~ Arnericl'o Cup Chll•
lentil Downuncler
(I) • (I) Mlljor Ltogue
••• ' ..:
American

1974 Volb W1111on. 1971 Pon-

30•-

1979 Ford Muetang. Auto, P&amp;.
PB. 302 engine. 2 door. aun
roof, AM·FM 8 track , rune good.

f1200. 814 -985·4302 .

.

1$79 Trana Am 400 ent6nt.
IUtOmetic, 12500. Excellent
candhloo. 1987 Chwy !rUCk.
1973 310 anvine. S1Md1rd
Trant. Good shape. 1110. C1ll

a.me

7 The Booton Red
Sox and 1he Cel~omia An·
gels compe1e for the Amtrl-

ALLEY OOP

canloaguoche~n~p.H

f

this game ia no1 necttllry.
'Perf8C1 S1rangers,' "Held.QI

=---..::--:::-::--81
Home

1118 Cleu: 'Dynmy·

Improvements

(I)

lrtXJ CAtJ tiVSP£Ci

IH~M Q\J

MOIJmf .L q:44 AM 10 1·.42 PM
W[)H( - 10: ~S" AM 10 2 :2!. I'M
WE.DN~S.~i'-11 : U.

'•,

i&gt;M 10

'3~07

PM ·

1HUR.WA'f-12:17 PM 10 3:SE. fl\1
AAJD FRIDAY- I :QS PM 10 "1&lt;51 PM

rienced carpenter, electtidln,
muon, ptlnHr, roofing (includIng hot tar application! 304·

17&amp;·7147,

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP r - - r - - r - - - - - - - . : - - - - - ,
IF SHE 15N1TAeL.E'70

SOMEDA.Y !1'.1 ~NG10A5K
MRS. STENEiLE HOW CoME
I 5ETALL THE SL.AME ..

Aoterv or cllble tool drlling.
MOlt we lit completed same dey.
Pump Ill• and teNict. 304·

888-3102

TeACHM~ANYTHINe'i

Aetlby Conltructloft. carpeftt.,.,, rtmodeUng, raom addhion,
c"*'t block work. . rooting,
iftftrior end txtarlor 'pelnting.
sid !f\1 . ,,_ tltlfNitM. 304-

198{ Hondl Civic, Nns good,
lookl good, 11 ,000.00. 5 toat
co mpl•ta 11tellite tyetem
t30o.oo. 304-e7&amp;-7U2 .

BARNEY
JUGHAIP··I'M MOVIN '

'IOU UP TO tH' HEAD
OFTH'CLASS ••

Trucks. for Sale

1982 •~~• wheel drive, 11.2l
diesel 4 .d., lock oUu. Call

114·381·874&amp;.

1174 M pelltnll' lntMnt·
tlonll ~ •• auto. trane. n.w tkes.
runs greet. •1 .000. Call 114-

lU-1313.
Wreckw II Chevy 440 HolmH,
ow~glnl booma. f2.000. Call
114 -21 ·1393.

79 GMC plc:loup hNvy hOK, 3&amp;0

B6

General Hauling

J•mes 8oys Wiler Service. Also
pools fill8d . c.ue14-25&amp;·1 141
or 114·448-117! or G14 -446-

~

O.llerd's Water Deltvery. Cistern•. pool, It well. Anytime but
Su~dlll':

KNOW, DO
YOU -n:-IINK

61 4-448·7404.

1-rLL. RAIN?

Weueuon ' t Wster H1uling.
reatonsble rates, immediate
2.000 gallon detlv~, clstems,
pools. well, etc. csll 304·571-

V-8 enf'rle. 1uto, air. cn.tla•.
running bo•d. tide r~Hs. eKe.
dtlln, U ,IOO will teke ttade.

2919

Call &amp;14-378-2122.

304-87&amp;-31 90.

11-IE~E·s AS MUCH
CHANCE OF RAIN AS
"THERE IS OF REAGAN
6E-r'"nNG ANO"T'HER
· 'rEFtM IN OFFICEII

273-4218.

TRI9T~TE

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 13 Sec. · Aw.,

18-78 ClMC plcllup w·toppor,
380 .., .. pt &amp; at·Mekt Offer.
304-87 ·210? .
V1n1

Uphol1tery

I 4 W . O.

cond. U ,900. Call 814· 446·
4141 .
1811 CJ·8 Joop 38.000 _ ..
mll01. Call aftar 8:00,M, 814·
:141·8487. 14.000 .

Gallipolie.

114· 448-7833 or 1114· 441·
1833.
A. • M c.._ttom Couchea 1nd
Aeupholetery, 8t, Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. 114·2H·1470. Eva.

114-44e-3431. Opon dally e to
5. Sat. UO to 1:30. Old &amp; • -

!DI NIWI

NOT FEMININE
ENOU6~?!!

TH~ 8ALL OR SOMETHING?

C
!

lhll per-.! portrlit . lft),
()Jl hwtowctlan

Mowrtv'e Upholettrlng ...-vlni
trioauntyaree21 yeen. The beet
In fumltur• uDholn1rtng. C•H
304 · 175 · 4114 for free

11:30

.

The HllotOtlllllll,lftm~-.lltnn .

(J) IS Ttlltlght lllow

min.lln S1ereo.

I •

'

.''

'

'

.

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for lhe three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
*JIOIIb w.'les, lhe lefllth and forTlllltioo of lhe words are all
hlnte. Elich clay .the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE
lCJ.II

X

8 MQ LJ
X

QM

MVDTJV

y Q F'

XLG

EA,jYYFG

GFXG ,

R D. U F M Q U F

G· F X G

"NF

n,

ZXL

Y c.! · E F

..

X L LX

C X R K .

0 X U F 8 0 L
.
.
Yeatenla)''a Cryptoquote: IT'S NEVER WHAT YOU
SAY, BUT HOW YOU MAKE IT SOUND SINCERE. -

r-----iMAR~Y~A~~~::~~~~~~~!:~~~-(])

(])

In Cincinnati

•mrox~
• ()) Newt

(J) I ll_.ber Oorgeout

010t110 Newapaper column·•
iot Clihan Jolley explores

the myth1 end trUthl behind

M•AOS•H
Yelalt: A fDr Mr
Iii veack. • t11ln
for 1t1V apan, lt1hll focua in

'

•

1 English
river
DAILY CRYPTOQU&lt;n'ES- H~re's bow to work II:

Cll (J) ill • (JJ (lll
Newt
()) HMiolotle end MoCor·
mlak

WIIAT Do '1'011 wANT TO
DO~TIE ARIBBON AROUND

..

DOWN

1, ;00 •

Uphostered.

MtiMitH.

(1948 nlm)
river
cry of
8a&lt;tok
13 Paint
9 Ttust
approval 35 Sunday
14 Gage best 11 Code
25 Within
punch (sl.)
seller
or system 21 French 36 Jewish
11 Snoop
15 Coup d'city
month
17 Air-defense 17 Shopper 28 Son of
38Degree
8fOIIP
stopper
Cuslt
40 Greek peak
19 African
18ln the
SO Cavalry 42 Mad lake
center
weapon
wet hen
21 Bereft
20 Sour
82 Poe poem, 43 Alejandro
of ethics 2Z Prize with "The" 28 CleVerly
stylish
27 Capacity ,
28 Italian city
29 Churehlll's
auccessor
80Uhruffied
31 Snlkh
33 Guidry or
baseball
84 Snake
87 Mortify
39 Salad green b-l-l-f-413under
44 Maeslro
41Assuage
46 Scottish
lsland
47 Entreat
the deity

mon

.(!)INN,._

PEANUTS

YeaterdeJ'• Anawer
8 European 24 Rrltlsh
34 Composer

'

KAISTOFFEASON 1llnlte

lor any tpOrt, is lite focua in
thlo peraonal portran. IR).
()J NIWI
10:10 (I) MOVIE; 'LMt Cry for
Help' .
1 0;30 ()) Arn111&lt;11t11rlc:lolc:lo1n Snlplltoll

'72 Ford ton tNck. Flet bed. Ctll
1974 Ford F310,toong wheel·
beee ton truck, 11,000 actual
mile~ . Perfec:t condttioft . 304·

blade

10 Indonesian 5 Visited
l9land
hastily
11 Procession 8 Hour (lt.)
12 "I
7 Pack In
Remember
tightly

nlaht wflh KRll

Senan Bill Veack, 'a

LimMtone and Coel Oe!Nery.

B7

5 Helicopter

•m

7911 .

2 Palm leaf
3 I say
old chap!
4 USSR
i·nland sea

ACROSS
1 Caetlllf's
TV mate

Ike Emmy Awordwinning 1e1or E.G. Marlhlll
s1ora 11 Dwight David Eioen·
ho- In this progrlltn
turing Ike relating the -~~
ol his IH8 and hit career. 1110
min.!
(]I• (jJ Magnum. P.1. An
ex-hooket Mlgnum encoun1erad while eervlng 11 a hotel det8C1IVI In Honolulu re1Urno and onllttgloo him in
Iter aa8rch lor Iter mining
sister. 160 min.!
(j]) MOYlE: 'Huey Long'
ICC!
·
1:30 • Cll &lt;Ill You Apln1 ICC!
In Ste~.
10:00 • Cll (ll) St. I:IMwhlte
!CCI A convoleacing Dr.
Crolg and 1 new moid ltua·
1rate Mro. Creig"o patience,
while VietnomtH llllllfOil
Dr. Kiem ilnpreaHo11te hoaprtal IIIII and Axelrod inldverten11y ahinera a · petient"o confidence. (60 min.)
0c1t1 Couple
(I) MOVIE: 'Huey Long'
ICCI
(]I • t1Z EqUIIIHr McColl
protiiCit a blindld mutic critl~ from a nuder thnllt tnd
ltelpl out • special agent
bent on auiclde. (60 mln.l
(j]) VIIICk: A fDr Arry

1974 Buldl Cantury 3110 V-1, _Goocl-1 hciiVatlng. be11mente.
needs batt...,. 107,112 actual foottrt, drivl"llWIVt. septic tanke.
mll11. Thia c::.r is i'lr my w.y. Haul IMHiecaplng. Cell anytime 614·
it or *iva it eway for t71. FIRM. +.t.e-4!37, Jem11 L. Davison,
Jr. owner.
304·982·2334 attor e p.m.
72

ltr THOMAS JOSEPH

I••

Excavating

83

"'M*"*gl

M11CNeii·L8hrlr

())700Ciub

Car. Fourth 1nd Pine
Gallipolis, OhK&gt;
1878 luic* :Miyhewk1 Runs
good. auto. V-8. t500. 304 · . Phona 114·448·3118 or 114·
448-4477
87&amp; -7142.

1t78 luidl Elaetra. all unao,
good Cbnd . t1400. 304 ·112·
2712 .
'

ace.

(I)

CARTER' S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING

+s

ace

NASHVILLE Adv.
1:01 (I) MOVIE: ·~·
1:30 · (])NHI.Hot:kly: NewYCifk
Ra1gara at Chlcego (3 hrl.l
Uvl.
!II
t1Z litter 0.,.
Snake's promiH to Ilk•
·Wandel to Coney ltlond
puts 1 snag in tho geng·o
plana ~ when they get 1
chance to plrj, hoot to three
beautiful Candy Striper~ .
1:00 • Cll (ll) Olmtnl ......
(CCI A letter from Joey
promplt Nell to leave lor
New York when llhl wohiH
lbou! Joey and hil brothlr
Matthlw. who ' Ira living
with their la11ter. In S1er.o.

Plumbing
Heating

.KQJBZ
tAQJ104

1.

an NASHVILLE NOW

8t

11-1....

.7

M8ke It tmuah 1111

871-8112.

NORTH

tJ7

EAST

~uya·

*

MSWEU -.. ·-

Everyone knows that you can.duck =~ 10 6 5
+tz
111 ace a few llmel, thus sevenng com· ••o 6 4
•AeU
munleatlona for the defenders. You t 3 2
U8H
can do the same wllb smaller ~ards, +Q J e
tiO 9 7
even though It goes against the grain
SOLITH
to refuse to win a cheap trick. Look
+QBU
what happena when you play low from
dUII)IIly on today'a openiDg lead and
tK6
Eut pull up the nine. Tbe casual detAKI43 2
••
cluer lrinl with tbe queen and plays a
Vulnerable:
East-West
heart. Quickly the defenden take the
Dealer: West
heart ace and four spade tricks to set
the contract.
Nortb Eaat
The more adroit declarer assumes Weot
Pus
Pau
that West led from A·K-10·6·1 of
Pus
Pass
H
spatlls. ~fore, be allows the spade Pw
3NT Pass
nine to .win trick one. Reprdlm of Pau
bow the deleue conUnues, declarer
will be able to dlllodae the heart ace
Opening lead: • 6
safely and make bla contract.
.
The Jacoby bridge acronym ARCH '----,-------.....:~
caa )lelp on thla deal. "A" stands lor remember tnat West paaed orlgiRal·
"AIIalyze the lead," "R" is lor "Re· ly. He would hardly do that with 1\·K
view the blddlltg," "C" is lor "Count of spades pl111 the ace of Mutl. And
the baad," and "H" is "How do I make that's why it's ri&amp;ht to let Eat win the
the coatract?" For today's deal, you spade nine. Since be does liald the
need only the firSt two letten.
of hearts, be can't set y011f lie 18 out of
When you rev!•• the bidding, you spades when he eventually lakes that

e

Starkt Trn ,nd LIWn Service.
Hedges, shrubbt, buthtt
trimmed, landacaplng 1nd
ltuqt removal. Wirlteriz1tlon of
lawn end leaf removal. 304·

82

- hire."

I'

By James Jacoby

winning ac1or E.G. Mllrlhell
stars as Dwight David Eioan·
hower in this program Ill·
turing Ike rola1ing the .ovanh!
of his life ltld his Cllttr. (60
min.!
· ·
()J MOVIE: .'Sunlhinl

EEK &amp; MEEK

AJNGLES"S SERVICE. ••P•

Of

PRINT NUMBERED

•

Refusing
a cheap trick

• (JJ Together We
Bt8nd
(j]) lkl E111my Awetd·

Fetty Tr._.. Trimmin;, etump
remowl. Call304·175·1331 l

87.1·1445

-

I8

BRIDGE

~

304-1'11-2391 or 814· 441'
2414 .

Of

I

·DR I L A z '

llehlng equipment the man lllkl.
"It would be be a lot euler ll1d

YEmiDAY'S SCIAM-IEts

........,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional ftltlme guaran·

875·2081

and

·Arthur Hailey's Hotel" will
air. (3 hra.l
•
(I)· MOVIE: 'WOIIWI
Celltd MooN' Part 2 of 2.

814 -·2-11624.

taOO. Cal 614 ·992 ·11044.

Clternplontihlp

IAIQIIe

27112 .

tiac Station Wagon. Both in
good condh:ion. Cell
nJ. . 578-2010.

1912 lubaN 4 WD w.gon, VQ

~00

• (I) Judge
(I) Mother IIIII Son

FRANK AND EllNEST

-=--------:--------'-' "

·a

reglnered Polled , Hereford
Jogger htlfer
everege

fort

79 Chovy van. 79 Chwy otep
\lin. 79 Chevette. other old c1r1 Ever9reent • blue tpruce
for Hie or trade. C1ll 614-441·. 112.50. TrH6ttumpremovel,
,..lch, ttone. firewood • Co.!
2668 eve.
deliv8fed. Don'• Landecape~ .
1975 G,.nd Prix. 2 dt ., PS , PB, CaH 614-446-9846.
M:. , looks good. Call 814-441 ·
RON ' S Television Service.
3f61 .
Houltl c1llt on fiCA. Quazar,
1979 ChiiYY Monu good cond. GE . '-lllllng In Zanhh. Cttl

1871 AMC Concord, 1 owner,
ex. cond ., PS , AM·FM. tter.o,
has extr1s. 11 ,1100. Call 114·

(I) Too CloH for Com·

•

w....,.roofln1.

1972 VW good conditlan, 14150.
Call G14·441 ·1G11 .

'

bell'l Glwlwt Hits

tH. Loc11 referencea fumilhecl .
71 Chavy I mpa&amp;e. 310 motor • Free eatlmaMa. Clll cohct
trensmlssion . Fluns good. 8300 . 1·114·237·0411, doy or night.
Rogers Basement
Cell G14 -245-9487 .

4 horu trailer 11 ,000. Ctll
114·211·1383.

puppiM.

.-7PM.

CaN 814·387· ?225 .

73

bl10k l•ldll Htlflfl ever.1 1e121

c.. 81

d&lt;lvt.

114-•2-8421.

oidlng,
panalo.
lnoulatod
ouhllillolnt~r
tor ollie.;
480
piton . "~lt~85~.=::;:;:::=====
hot wa.., hoator 220 3· phuoln 83
livestock
good thape. After I p.m. c1ll
304·871-aan .
66

Chevy Cilltton no rust,'
good work car. front wh•l

197&amp; Cllovy Nova. AC. AM·FM .

SIS Allia Ch1lm~ra tractor, 5'
pull-type bruah · hog; alum.
topper for shortbed . S -10
pickup. 150 gel. fuel oil tank,
2-one acre tots ~ Pal.cet Ad.
Addison TownthiP. Ohio. Rurtl
weter. 304- 882 - ~3&amp; .

Building Materiels
Block. brick, nwer pipes, windowl. litlt~a, etc. Cleudl Win·
ten. Rio Gr•nde. 0 . Cell 114-

19~0

818&amp;.

61 ~arm Equipment

Game

(]) M.jor LAgue liMe·

1831.·

John ' a Auto Seln, ltulaville Ad;
G1llipollt. Oh.

teaoo. Call 614·742·3142.

f dril l Suppl11:s
&amp; L1vesluc~

N-hour

• (JJ &lt;IIIWhlll of Fortune
(j)IIIMnly Miller
7:05 (I) S.nford IIIII San
7:30 • Cll (I) Now New~Jwed

1980 Chevette runs good,
t70D . Csll 1114· 256· 1393.

1984 Ford Escort wagon, 1uto,

-

Quench .., Elope - Utht - Wll!iiY - Tl:ETH
auotetrom woman whO had ra1eec1 eix bo¥1: "Parente .,.
\he bone1 on which children cut their TEETH."

Cll People'• Court

•

(I) Nightly BUiineN Re·
)IOrt
(]I Newt
(j])
MIICNeii·Lehrer

Ca,_.er 1877 20 ft. Nom1d MH ·
contained, .wnings, AC, dua ,
axles. Cell lift.- 8PM, 1114-448- .

Meroed• 450 tel 78n sharp
will trlda. C1ll 814-881· 7311 .

•

.

•mM•A•S•H

c~lle14-2111 · 1383 .

dune buggy, &amp;300.

•

~

.

'11:11' LETTERS IN SQUARE;

Academy Award winner
Anne Bancroft talks abctrt
her iataet film, '"night.
Mo11ter".
'

27 ft. Tro1vvoacl clfnPer ·•811
contn.ld. good shept. 12.000.

Call 814·286·1393.

1~82 Olda CutiUI Calai1, 1
owner. •xcellent condition,
lo .. td. glass T-topa, very ehsrp.

New and uMd partt tor Whi..,l,
Olivert. M·M . Dtutz trtetorl.

66 Building Supplies

Valksw~gon

•

' Alter paying !Mil $200 for

• -·

(I) Entertainment TanJtht

Autos for Sale

Call 614·218·111192 attor 7PM.

59

mlck

(])~

'

1982 Dodge Dipomet 1uto 1ir,
AM wire rima. *2,799. John'•
Auto Still, B.._.evllle Rd, Gtlllpolls, Oh.

1;:

Complete lho chuckle quottd
by filling in the missing words
L.-l-~-J...~-1......1 you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

7:00 • Cll PM M-a-Ine
(]} Httnk:N11a end M.cCor·

front .-.d. 1174 Fard Gr.. ade
lor ,.rta, good motor end ·
trenlmlsaion. 304-882-2812 or

1981 Ch...,rolet Sprint phn. 6
apd. trentmillion. redia, ex.
cond. Very bw milage. E•cel·
lent gat mileege. C1ll 11 4 ·2469688

RA$HH

~...,,,:..7_;;1...:.,;1::..;,;.1~~8-i

Ill • t1Z CBS Newt

p•rt•
8111 ..ev•ll..,le. Cal 114~311·
~--'----Mou.naJn.., Auto Body Pent. '
1311·11th St. Now Ha... W.Va.
Nt thllargeet i1v.,tory of 1ft•

.al•. AM·FM, wira •ima. t2.999 .

Melrote, W~••P· Rome, Red &amp;
Goklen Delicloul, Jonathon ep·
pia. Cider, pufl'4)kins. torghum.
honey. apple bu1t1r. jsm a.
jeli81. Dunrovkl FNit F•m.
12-11. Cloted Mon . 681 1 .1 Eaat
ot Alb~~ny, Oh. 114 -1188-6298 .

•(I) m
~~og~n·, u-.
DoaiDr Who

(jj) llodv Electric
()J Gold Tltn4lt
1:31 (I) ~lily !41HIIIIIIee

79 -Motors 11omes
&amp; Campers
71

I

.---------:-'"! chelper illhey -

. Cll. ()) AIIC N - ·

··pooR.

DodriH's Aut9 Parts. 2V. mi.
North of v-.ton CJ'I St. Rt. 110 II
the jllac1 to buy your uaed auto
p~rta. You'll receive faat,
frl~tlv NNICI 8 lhe beat UNCI

882-32&amp;4.

Tronsp or LJ!I UII

BOSEE

I I 1 I' .r

Jullua llotOtl

1980 AMC Splrh. good motor,

Prlee UOO. 304-876·8132.

.

304· 773 -81 n

&amp; Grain

round baits of h1y 11011.
Sc:tuere bela 11 .21 ... Ctll
1114-44111-10&amp;2 tftlf li.

2 yean old .

614-742-2&amp;05 .

SALE! 50 pet cent OH! Fluhtng
arrow tign 82791 l6ghted, non·
arrOW 82181 Nonltghted 1239!
FrM lett8f11 Few tift, ... tocelly.

liv•tock : 20 tlead crou-bred
ttock cowt, vet cheeked tor
etriy c1lv• II til fall . V1~lnt·
tlono. 304-273·2848 aher I
p.m.

Call304-863-8378 .

Seasoned firerwood tor 11le. Call

4412 .

po1cod to aoll. fiOO .OO . 304·
1175· 1789.

Hay

CijUCK• YOU'L.L
TAKE OUT .THE ·
TI'IO 6UARD5 AT
THe 61RL'S

038. OM &lt;loon f78. 73·79Ford
t.dlrs t31 . Doort $911. •.Wa
now h~ lhort end long P.u;
0 M bed aide. bluer lid• •nd
early and '-'' Ford bed tides In
ltocll.AWo pant far cart and
Vlnl, btdNnll't, &amp;tep bU"1)trl,
ShiiP n1 IP'~Y gun and cup
$81 , while they l11t. Bett•l•
and ect. Alto 1\lallable a 3 year
ruttt"rough wtrrlf'lty on our top .
lflllity body .-ru. OutlideWnt
Vl•gjnia CttH 1·800·823· 2013..
In WMt Virglni1 1 ·800-1154·
•87. Local 'colo 30•·882·
3728 .

l~tge

Sale! SO per cent off! Fl•hing
1rrow sign 12791 Lighted, non·
arrow 82:891 Nonllghtld 12391
Fr" letttrtl Few left, SH
locally . 1· 800 - 423-0113,
1nytim1.

Aouoh cut lUmber, Mltontd
welnut 50 cents board foot.
White oH $125 per thau11nd.
C1n be SMn Walker Wt-ecker,
8:00AM to 5,00 PM . 30'·•75·

ROGER, YOU ANP
! I'IIL L TAKE: OUT
THE FO\JR GUARDS
AT tHE' PALACE .
6ATE • ..

mltllet ,.rtt In the ar11 at tow,
low pricet. 73-10 OM fend.-a

Regilllfed Ou1rter HorN, geld·
lng, e Y'• old, good •••· well
brolll. trlllert well. hi• t.een
thown. pavment plan with ap·
proved cr.tit, trli~ rid• well,

64

Steel culverts&amp; ft. dieml1e.-, 8ft.
di1mete. Up to 28 ft. long . C1ll

61 4· 446-0322 .

892-8888.

304-773-8121 '

hom worlolng dogs. 1128. Cttlt
614-448-2358.
.

46 Spaca for Rent

1984 Shulu mobile home
14x70 with 10x20 t.llptndo on
llvingroom &amp; kitchen trea, 1ot1l
elee .. 3 bdr., 2 baths, GE 1p1ce
saver microwave in kitchan. will
let underpinnng go with tr1iler.
Call614 -379-2725 .
Btg Slvlng 6 big ttlection of
used &amp; bank repoueued mobile

Half Llbredor &amp; hllf Ookl.-.
retril'l•· Calll14·245-9387.

11ao. Good with chlldron . 304875-1143.

CciUNTAY MOBILE Home Perk,

l"

63

a e

Firewood for 11le. S81son_. oak
firewood . 114-742-2292.

Tr1iler

1 btth, l1undrv room ,
1 ' csr gar1ge, built· in kitchen ,
completely carpeted, drtpariea
fumished. Very privatllltting. 5
min. from town . No pett. U75
plut utilitln. Deposit required .
Send ruuiTII!I and reference~ to
The Dallv Sentinel. 8o1 728 S.
Pomerov, Ohia

S I

8461 .

3 bedroom home in Oe~eter .
close to coal minn . If interuted

bedroom~ ,

f

ets or

75 Ford carrier pickup $100.
Body good cond. Good Nnning
cond., 4 epl8d; Himalaytn cat

2587.

81 Oakbrook e•pando. e•c.
cond . Must sell. Call 614-379-

p

56

Roorm tor rent. day. week.
month. Gallis Hotel. Call 614·
..-&amp; -9580. Rent u low as 1120
moitth .

Specious trailer lot• for rent with
plsyground and picnic fiiCIIitles.
at Femllv Pridt Mobile, Home
Ptrk . At. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, W.
Va. 304-875-3073.

814-25a.6502 .

Fither Grandpa Bear wood·
bum• b,.nd n.w retell over
8100 . Lest one 1431 deiN-ared .
Cell 814-446-9210 ewenings.

304-675·7423.

3· 4 bedroom house in Pameroy,
fully turnlthed , W·d. microwsve,
newly remodeled, rec. room. PlY
own utilitiee, depotit .-quired.
C1ll dlys 61•·992 ·2381 or
614-992-2720.

.

'

In Middleport 2 bdr. furnished
apt .. 1 -304·882-2511.

.

614·992·2720 .

All Snapper end MTD mowert in
llock, on Slit nowl Swiaher
Implement. Cell 614-•41·

C1mper trailer for sale. couch, 2
bdr . . cooking equip . blth. Cal

Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Large lots. Cal1614·892-7478.

1976 14•70 Gettysburg. 2 bdr.-:
2 full betha. porch t.. awning. 2
AC '1, all elec., e~ec . cond . Belt
offer. Cllt 614-266-6620 or

0475 . .

lis. e14-445 -8221 .

'

Partl

2220.

r~~=~=~=::;:~~;:::::;:~~§~~1

'

0276 . Call614-367·7218 .

2 bdr. house with g1r1ge csrpeted. curteint. dishwasher a.·
refrig. Near new city pool. 106
Kin eon Or. Rent t300 mo. dep.
&amp; Ieite r_equired. Call 814-448-

I

•tv.,
p.,a, Will doNvar.Call8,4·371·

c-~"=-:J

lrl
~

AU wood burning ttovn In
11ock, reduced to coat. Swiahtr
Implement. Cell e14 · 441 -

APARTMENTS, mobili homes,
houe-.. Pt. Pleusnt snd Gallipo-

R1ndlstyle. 3 bedroo,.., family
room. good. locstion, New
Haven, 304-882 -3620.

Auto

F

~.--~.;..I. ;. :1:.rt-=rl-1 ~

-Trlf'ltmll.ionl, · 1~ ~. 011er,
froftt. IUr, 4 wMII
end

Coli 61 4·441·8308 ah., 5PM.

Pl11tic clttem slate .pproved ,
pfaatic teptie tanks, plllltic
culvert1, mwt1l culvertt. AON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. "Jack·
aon. Oh. 1114-281-6930.

1 ro~m. furnished efficiency apt,
in Langsville. 11 Ob per month .
Csll 614·992-6892 1fter 6:00
p .m.

Apartment In private home.
private entrance. 304-67&amp; ·

4307.

Coli 614-266-11251 .

Buckeye model236 wood • co Ill
stove, good cand, 8150. Call
614 -256-1739 .

&amp;14-949-2801

2 bdr. furnith.d dupllll in
Recine. 8200· per month. Dep·
otit &amp; reference requited . Call

Cal!then't Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000tlr•.liin12,13.14 , 18,
18, 11.5. 8 mil• out At. 218.

9978.

2 bdr: fumithtd duplex in
Aecine. 8200 per month. Deposit &amp; reference requtred . C•ll

76.

''

20

Honda.

.

'

13 -

t I t1 I I

I·

t1eoo·. Low nii!Mv•· 304:178•

larder Collie puppy pureb,..c:l

Appl1 2-E RGB coklr. due dltc
2 bedroom. furnished lptr1mtnt. drtve, VGC. 11 ,&amp;0. Cames whh
for rent. Adults Only. Csll meny gam•. Call 614· 388·

log home, 3·4 br, ell elec. fully
carpeted, finished buem..t ,
Ambrot.l1. 7 mllesfromPt. Pl. on
At. 62 . City water, paved
driveway &amp; "ptic tsnk. situated
on VJ 1cre. O\llrlooking Ksnewhe
Riv;er. $60,000. Csll 304·67&amp;6440 between 8 :30 end 4 :30.

814-949-2801

64 MiiC. Merchandise

0475 .

Meg,.um

.,4,

Uncotn Ave.

1 bedroom ap1rtment. Newty
carpeted . HUD approved. 402%
24th St.. pt, Ple1sant. C1ll

814 -992-2749 .

s4o.ooo. -co11 304·675-5440

MetalutUitycebinet.throWNQI. ·

Stove for nle, copptrtone &amp;
con . 1etf cleenlng oven. Cell

Renta ls

2 br, kitchen, b1throom, wit'h
laundry room. living room &amp;
din ing room. all elec. Approx . 7
mile• from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 62. 2
tr1ctsapprox. 1 acremoreorle11
o\lerlooking Kanawha River.

8,4 1 . 304-17&amp;·
'

114-446-2223 .

814-992-5858.

B2 Y·4S

178· 14ti0.

Houtehold twin lila bed. bo~e
tprings &amp; mattr"'· d1rk pine

.

MNINQ

EK«**ent oondhitln. 1800.- 304·
8711-UOI.

Pic:kene Ueed Furniture. Good
quelity used furniture. OpM 810
8 . or . Clll for ·appointment.

81 4' 992-621 5.

Jerry's Run Rd· 1 acre with
11ptic system. good well, metal
building. Clll 304·876-2351.

Schult 12xl0 with exp.,do, 2
bdr., good condhlan, 15,195
delivered. French City , Mobile
Hornet. 814-448·9340 .

31

ties paid, ah1re beth. 701 4th.
Gallipolil. Cl11 . .6-441 l1ftere

3-4 bedroom h0u1e near school
end ho1pital. Priced to sell,
823,000. Call814-992-6060.

1979 M1nson 12x66 2 bdr.,
total electric. new carpet ,
$1,995 delivered. ·French City
Mobile Hornet, 01 4·44e-9340.

Stertl• Tree and Lawn Service.
Hedgll . shrubs , bushes
1rimmed . l-'dtceplng. stump
~nd l•f removel; 304· 576·

F~rnithed _.ficieney, $160 utili-

814·446·1&amp;19.

16&amp;2 or 114·992 -&amp;304.

Own your own Jeen Sponaweer. ladiea 1pparel.
childrens-matet'nity, lsrge sizes.
peth:e, dencewear -atrobic or
KCtuories llore. Jordache.
Chic. LH. IAvi, llod, Git..-.o,
Gueu. C.tvtn Klein. Setgio
Va..,.te. Ev.-. Picone. Lil Clai1
borne. Members Onlv, G1soline,
t-t.althtex over 1000 othert.
*141 ,:1)0 to 126 . 900 Inventory,
treining. fbctures , grand opening
etc. c.n open 15 dl'l•· Mr.

Furnished aPt. 1 bdr. • 8236
utilities paid. 701 4th Galipolit.
Ce11448-4418 1fter S pm.

614-388·8745 .

675-5598.

1 NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY .PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends th at you
do busin•• with people you
know, and NOT to tend money
through the mail until you he\le
inv•tigated the offering.

Unfum . 4 rooms • btrth. centrelly located. no pet., ref. &amp; sec.
dep. Call 614-446-0444.

614·992-5018 .

For 11le · M11on - 2 -ltory, 3 br, 2
full bathl, corner lo1. patio, g ..
heat. $32.000 . Only serious
inquiri .. . Ph. 304· 773·6148 or

Business
Opportunity

12'a8&amp; trail•. utlllry bldg ..
storage bldg., :1/4 1c:re land.
Route 2 • 4 mil• North from
Point Ple111nt. Anne Schmh:t.

10/15/88

&amp; Acce110rtes

513\\ 3rd. Avo. 1 bdr. prlvato Rotrig.,ator and otovo. 2311

Furnlohod apt. 0236. UtiHtl•
pold. 1 SR. 920 4th. Gallipollt.

..

·H..U ClCIOO• . 1178 Modal.

Rd.. 14' 441· 7388 .

Green "''• bod 128 .00. Brown
10f1 ind chair M5 .00 . K~gsile
hllldboerd t45.00. 8100.00 tor
111. Phone ~- 882·2334.

_bo_t_w_aon_9_e._s_.- - - -

.'

-...

Television
Viewing

....

1811 Keweaekl 300 Fo\.i'r

Rtfr6g•stor 2 clr. 1715, Kerurore
W'!~ heavy duty 875. alectrlc
,.nge 30 k) . harvnt gold' t71.
Wllh" dryer ltlt ponlble 171
ea .• Hoover dryer 171. 1• r~nge
30 ln. 876, dilhwathtr .71.
dryer heevy duty 171, wuher •
dryer Mt OE whh:e ••• ea.
SIIN~a Applitncft Upptr Rrm

heedbo•~d.

BORN LOSER .

Motorcycles

The Daily Sentinei:_Page

Ohio

w-. e14·•2-7103.

lift.. 8;30.

2517,

--·· . wednesday, October 16. 1986

304-178·1380 or 304·•78·
3142
.
"Cia..lflatlatl

3 piec.living room auit1in gc)od
·condition. C1ll 814·311·1419

0&lt;

.... ;

1986 ..

1811 Hond•V-IIMIIItn.um.Cal

Oh . 814·44•·7444 . .

Dupi~J~ far rent 648 Second
Ave., G111ipolia. 3 bdr. li\lin·
groom, diningroam. n.w kit·
chen. bsckvard, mrig . • rsnge.

beth, I 140 per mo. Dtpollt
required . C1ll 1114-446-4222

74

New a uttd rwfrt; .. rtnoes.
wathen • dry.,... I pc. woo.d ·
L.ruam at.lte tiiOO. Mollohan .
· Fum., At. 7 North. OeNipalls,

304·1!8-8483

adults only. Cetl81,·448·0338.

1--------.--'"1"----------1

provement Office needa tele-

ontv. · C11l

Nicely tu•nlohod mobile homo
CA llo hoot. "c:al. location,

11

Homes for Sale

•~fults

61 Household Goods

614·44&amp;·9523 .

1285 plus utllhiM &amp; aec:u•&lt;tv
deposit. Call 614-441-0180.

for Alice Beasley, who
be.li'eveS She'S StuCk here r0f
11
the feSt Q f her }ifie:

31

October 1

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

cer_!ll!-

•

.,

proleaelanlll wraetling.
·
tJI (9 Mllnum, p.I.
(j]) To II ~
• (JJ Addatly 'Adderly ia

f'""'"t

12:00 ()) Bums 6 Allen
(!) Fllhin' Hole (60 mi1.1

IRI-

:!

•

(I) Jtlfei'IOIII
• (!) llowtthll

• ())ABC NIWI Nlellllt•
12:15 (I) MOVIE: "Oitlel Glital
.
011'111"
12:30 • (I) ® late Night with
l
DevJd L l - f onlflht'I
gunts
are
cortooniat
Harvey Pekar and comedlln

160 mln.l In .

aaelgnld to
an ••·
Ambii1Hdor 1 apollod oon.

Drake S.1her.
Stereo.

Who blcometthllllrget ola
kidnapping plot. 170 min ,j

()) S.ot of GIOUCho
Cl) ABC Newt Nlahtlhi

.'

'

\

�-----··

Pllge"'-14-The. Daily S.Otinel

Pomeroy...:. Middleport, Ohio

1/Vedn"sday, October 15, 1.986

~----Localbrie&amp;--~~~----~~-~~
Firemen release monthly report

Local Glenn coordinator named

Foi;ty-four calls were answered ~ tlV! Middleport .AJUce
Department in septetnller, .Fire Chief Jeff Darst r¢lorts . .The calls ,
Included ~3 !Ire cans and 31 emergcpcy runs. All vehicles were
driven 1,424.5 miles In answering the calls.

sen. John Glenn, D.Ohio, announced T~mas Hart of Pomeroy as
hiS senate campaign coordinl!tor In ,Meigs Cou!!tY·
. ·
Hart joined the senator's campaign staff in early June. He wlll'be
responsible lor coordinating all field and wlunteer actlvttles In
Meigs County. Hart Is a trustee at Rio Gran!le College and Is .
Democratic Central Committeeman llf !lie East Beli!OM PreCinCt '
in Meigs County. His wife Is Cecelia Hart' Hart can, be reached
locally !lY calling 992·7078.
•
Glenn, .who hils served 12 years In the qs. Semite, I~ seeking
reelection this year.
,
·

Benefit bowl-a..thon scheduled
j

Pomeroy Bpwling LaPes wUI be cond\lctlng a boWI·a·thon durtng
the week of Oct. 3l•Nov. 8 for St. Jude·ChildreP's Hospital with Mrs.
· Betty slnlth serving as coordinator of the "lXlwl life" campaign.
The program Is dedicated to Terry who in March, 1978 developed
acute lymphocytic leukemia but now her disease Is In rernlsslon
after havmg been a patient at the St. Jude li&gt;spltaJ,

for

EMS responds to six calls
Meigs C&lt;iunty Emergency Medical Services reports six calls .
Tuesday. ·
.
.·
.
·
Syracuse at 8:48 a.nl: to Pomeroy}iealth Care Center for Hqward
Phillips to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Colum~a Fire Department
at 1: 00 p.m. was cililed to a car fire on County Road 55; Tuppers
Plains, at 1:45 p.m. transported Althea Barton to Camden-Clark
Memortal Hospital; Rutland at 3:01p.m. to Meigs Mine No.1 ft:lr
John Chapman to O'Bieness Metnortal Hospital; Pomeroy ·al 5:29
p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Howard Phllllps to
Veter~s Memorial Hosphal; Tuppers Plains at 6:40p.m. to M.lller
Road for Roy Miller to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
,·

Farm bureau slates meeting
The annual meeting of the Meigs County Farm Buteau wUI be held
at the Chester Elementary School Tuesday, Oct. 21, beginning with a
steak dinner served at 7:14 p.m.
The Sl!a~ Rlver Shutflers directed by Gerald Powell wlll provide
entertainment. All boiird members and the office have tickets for the
annual session.

Baseball group elects office~s ..
The Salem Center Baseball Assoclati:&gt;n elected new officers when
It met at the Sa)em Center Firehouse for Its regular September
·
meeting.
·
. Officers for the 1987 season wlll be Carol Ogdin, president; Ken ·
Kirk, vice president; Joyce Ervin, treasurer; and VIckie Metheney,
secretary.
• ...
In otberbuisness.it was voted totransfertheasoociafk&gt;n's banklng
to Wilkesville, for convenience; and a decision was made to maintain
the local !leld exclusively fo r Salem Center baseball. Allrutstandlng
bills have been paid and therewlll be m further assoclatk&gt;n~tings
until 1987.
•

Prank damages truck, .trairl·

Divorces filed

Winners named

Filing for divorCes in Meigs
Winners qf the numerous ctraw.' ·
County · Common Pleas Court lngs held by the Racine Merchants
charging gi'oss neglect of duty' and Association during saturday's
extreme..cruel!y are Robin Annette . Harvest Moon Fair Festtval were •
RJ!!le, Pomeroy, against Handy ·Doris Bailey, Pomeroy, . a · mink
Lee Ri!Qe, Shade, and Dawn Marte blanket; Bill Hayman, ~cine, a ·,
Collins: Portland, against Roger penlJY jar; Eddle M1lllron, Rac.ine,
Dean Col!liis, Portlana.
a ·portable TV; and Margaret ·
Flllng for qJssolutlons of mar· Powell, Racine, a pocket TV.
rlage are .Bryan A. G\bbs, ·Reeds·
Next year's festival ~s · been
ville, and Kenda Gibbs, ~ville; tentatively scheduled for. the J~rst ,
Sabra J. CIJl:k, Pomeroy, and Paul Saturday In October.
.
·R. Click, Pomeroy; Carolyn · J .
The next meeting of the mer·."
Reeve, Albany, and Ronald G. cha!ll's as!;Ociatl&lt;Jn wUl be Oct. ~at
Reeve, Whitehall:
The Club Restaurant.

INSURANCE
111 Sec•d St:• Po!Mroy
· YOUIINDIPENDENT
.AGENTS .SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1861

Super --Li~l~
lo
28-40-21-44-2-35
'

•
.

•

at y

Elghty·six area residents re·
ported to an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday to
contribute 82 pints of blood to the
cdunty b!OC)d program.
Twenty-seven persons gave to
replace blood used by a relative or
friend and first time donors were
Vanessa Sidwell, Marla N. Roush,
David F. Lawson and Pam Hof·
fman. Becoming one-gallon donors ·
during the visit were Larry Fisher,
John S. Foster, David F . Lawson,
Darla N. Thomas, and Robert W.
Couch became a two-gallon donor.
Fred H. George became a four
gallon donor; Kenneth Imlxlden.
six·gallon donor; William H. Ho·
back and Geoffrey A. Wilson, seven
gallons and Ellison E. Myers
became an eight-gallon ~onor
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
WUriia Mansfield were the super·
vising ·physicians and making up
the ·nursing staff were Leona
Leifheit, Beulah Ward, Carol
Adams, Naomi London, Mary Jane
Taloott and Emtna&gt; Adams.
Working with the unit from the
, Retired Senior Volunteer Program
were Thelma DUI, Florence Ri·
chards, Erma Roush, Doroti'IY
U:mg, VIrginia Buchanan, Philo·
mena Follrod, Bernadine Meier,
Marion Ebersbach, Lula Hampton.
Emma Clatworthy, Richard Bar·
ton, William Hoback and Mace!
Bart.on. Other clerical worke rs
were Peggy Harris . Mary Nease,

UILUIBLf r.OUPOII

COUPON GOOD

·

FOR$}5 OFF
ON A PAIR OF
FABULOUS
DRESS SHOES BY

flower 'em with low
on Sweetest Day.

conne·

NATURALIZER

Send rhe FTDII Sweeresr
Day Bouquet. Swee teSt D~y
is Sam rday , October 18. Ca ll
or visit us today.

VISA

enttrte

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 16, 1986

exhibited after the collapse of the summit Sunday
night when he rejected Soviet proposals to restrict
testing and development of the SDI, or "Star Wars,"
an all-out administrative blitz has been going on all
week to turn the results into a political plus.
Speaking Wednesday at Fort McHenry In
Baltimore, Md., to students from Southern Regional
High School in Manahawkin, NJ ., and later at. a
luncheon lor Maryland GOP senate candidate Linda
Chavez, Reagan chided Congiess for "promising to
take a meat ax and chop up America 's Strategic
Defense Initiative, which Is exactly what Mr.
Gorbachev Is hoping Congress wUI do."

A grade feeder calf sale to be held
at Producers Livestock in Lanca s·
ter has been Incorrectly advertised,
Rutland area cattleman Jim Lucas
said today. The sale was errone·
ously announced for Wednesday,
Oct. lfi, but will Instead be held on
Wednesday. Oct. 23, Lucas ·sa id.
Welgh·ln starts at 7 a.m .. and the
sale will begin at 8 p.m.

OR~'!'ITH
HANDBAG OF YOUR
CHOICE

tt:oo•po• Good For Handha~ &amp;
Sho.- Combination On I,.-

~~:;,.,­

i'OMIIOY, OHIO
PHONI 992-2039 ar 992·5721

•

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At theW-' the ,_,., .....n llrldtt
POMEROY, OH.

.

!'tiN'S BlANKET-Ir.ED
COATS

This lined, all-cotton
hip·ltnath coat with a
stylish corduroy collar
will keep you warm in
the coldest weather.
Available in sizes 38 to
50. Blue denim.

PH. 992·2556

·••••o

oo+. .

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - L\'VIna Hayman,
Long Bottom; Steve Haning, Mid·
dleport; Lort Price, Middleport ;
Howard Phillips, Pomeroy; Roy
Miller, Pomeroy: William Whl·
tlbck. Syracuse.
Discharges - Steve Haning,
Barbara Talbott. Floyd Reynolds,
Agnes Brown, Marion Rayburn .

WASHINGTON (UP() - The
defense budget approved by Con·
gress and headed lor President
Reagan's desk .- even at a
whopping $292 billion - represents
far less money lor the Pentagon
than It has received in the last two
years.
That prompted retiring Senate
Armed Services Committee Chair·
man Barry Goldwater. R·Arlz.. to
warn of the beginning of a
dangerous trend - declining de·
fens e budgets.

MEN'S DELUXE
COVERALLS

Conllll, quality and con·
Ylfliencet come lopther
· in the$e ruged COV«&lt;IiS
of IOOllo cotton. The Ac·
lion Back provides free·
dom at movement and
lives you the right fit.
Backed by a one-year war·
ranty. Sizes 36 to 50,
sltor1s, rii\Jlars &amp; tails.

Wanda Imooden, Joyce Hoback.
Jeanette Radford and Arizona
Stewart. The canteen was served
by women of ffi:hllock Grange.
Donors by community Included:
Pomeroy -Debra Mora, James
C. Birchfield, Robert W. Vaughan ,
Fonna K. CUllums, Wallace Hat·
field, Brenda S. Cunningham,
Arlzooa Stewart, Pamela J. Mlller,
Janet L. Persons, Loretta A.
Brown, Lawrence D. Leonard,
Homer E. Baxter. Dan E. FoUrod.
Rlchard E. Swan son, RolErt W.
Couch, Dewey E. Autherson, Mary
K. Spencer, Billy J. Spencer, Pam
Hoffman, Pam Gllland. John S.
Foster, Susanna Heck. Wilma
Mansfi eld, Raymond Jewell, Geof·
frey A. Wilson, Gerald Rought,
Jeanne E. Braun, Janet M. .Am·
trose. Mary A. Sorden, William W.
Radford, David M. King, Patricia
J . Barton , Kelly R. Ginther,
Carolyn A. Charles, Larry G.
Fisher, Michael Smith and Anna M.
BaXter.
Long B:lttom- Vanessa Sidwell.
Harlan A. Ballard.
Langsville - Ellis E. Myers,
Karffi S. Clark. Alva B. Clark,
Patricia Morgan.
Reedsville- John C. RJce, Deryl
E. Well. Rlchard Barton. Roxie
Marcinko and J oseph Marcinko.
Portland - Stephen Nease.
Chester - Herbert Short , Clar·
ence C. Wolfe Jr.
Syracuse - Linda L. Friend,
Darla N. Ttnmas, David Lawson,

By ltli\NCY YO/\CIIAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Efforts are underway by the Ohio
Department of Natu ral Resources
to reclaim !he Coal Power, Dark
Diamond and Abundant Llfr coal
mines in Meigs County.
At the request of the Meigs
County Commissioners. Scott Kes·
ter, of ODNR's Division of Mine
Reclamation, attended Wednes·
da y's regular commissioners'
meeting to discuss Abundant Life,
which lies on county-owned pmp·
erty, adjacent to the land!IU.
The commissioners are con·
cerned with .reclamation of the
Abundant Life because If reclaimed
properly, tbe county landfill 'could
be extended Into the mine area.

ANY SIZE REGULAR RETREAD

JACKET

r

IIIN'S PfRMA-UNED .
PANEL FRONT JA(~TS

$1995

FREE!

This rn,diu mlenath work
jacket of polyest~r/cat·
ton with quilted linil&amp;
will keep you 1111rm. Sizes ,
small throuall tiluble II·
tra·larp. Avalable·in 'II·
riety of colors.

1'0 DAYS ONLY .

Ohio weather
Solidi Central Ohio
Generally clear tonight, with a
low between 35 and 40. Mostly
•liMY Thunday, with highs In the
14liJI!I' 508.
The IJ'OblbOity of JI"Edpltatlon Is
near zro through Thu!'lday.
Winds w01 be from the west at 10
to lll mph tlxiay and Ughr anll

WI!SteriY iJaliJtl,

GOOD THII OCTOm 2Ste.

. ·, .

GENERAL TIRE SALES

N. SE(OND AVE.

l't'IDDLEPORT1 OH.

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PH.

USE OUR FREE
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- they've agreed-to," he said. "SOl is one of the chief
reasons the Soviets went .to the summ it and one of the
primary reasons they'll come back again."
Asked at Fort McHe nry whether the summit would
help Republican candidates, Reagan said, ' 'I don't
know. I'm goingl9 find out between nowand Nciv. 4."
White House aide Haley Barbour said the president
was not attempting to make ti'e summit a campaign
issue beyond his normal rhetoric on behalf of SDI and
increased defense sjlendlng.
But House SP€aker Thomas O'Neill, D·Mass. ,
issued a statement complaining that Reagan had
"abused the bipartisan spirit oft he Iceland s ummit.".

-~""'""" -~· ~

SEVEN GALLON DONOR- WUUam Hoback, Racine, ls a regular
at the Red Cross Bloodmobile when It vlstts Meigs County. As of
yesterday he had donated seven galloRS of blood. Hob~k, retired from
the U.S. Army Corps ol Engineers, Is (IIStor ol the Penk'OOstal

Assembly al Racine.
Kathy J. Cummings.
New Haven. W.Va. -Darla N.
Roush.
Middleport - Kenneth E. lm·
lXlci'!n. Leafy M. Chasteen, Ellis
Clont h, David G. Dodson, Sarah J.
Fowler, Edward W. Durst, John P.
Hood, Gloria J. Peavley, Timothy
E. Smith, Gerald L. An thony,
Brenda Haggy, Maurisha Nelson.
Rutland - Dinah M. Stewart,

Comfort can be yours in
this preshrunk navy de·
nim all·cotlon jacket,
with shrink-resistant
lining plus 1 stylish
corduroy collar. AVIila·
ble in sizes 34·il.

•

ELBERFELDS

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'"'

PO-OY

.___ ,

· The House approved the measure
Wednesday - which reflects ·key
arms control agreements reached
between Congress and the White
House In the hou rs before the
weekend summit - on a 283-128
vote. The senate passed It later that
day on a voice vote.
The blll is SlO billion lower th.an
what Congress initially adopted last
year, although that !lgure later
sUpped to $286 billion with cuts
forced by the. Gramm-Rudman
budget-balancing law. In 1985,

Congress gave the Pentagon $297
billion. This year, Reagan had
asked for SJID billion ...:. $28 billion
more than he got In the bilL .
Goldwater said Wednesday that
once inflation Is taken into aceount,
Pentagon rudgets have fallen 7
percent sin ce 1985. Rep. Jim
Courter. RN.J .. put the loss over
two years at 8 percent.
Goldwater said the slippage has
"set in motion a dangerous !rend
which, If not reversed , may have
profound consequences on our

otl lgation wUl be to develop a lime
table on tnw k&gt;ng it will take to fill
the rest oft be area,lflt is being used
for a landfill, and then totally
reclaim the property.
.
Kester said ODNR "Is dolngw hat
it's supposed to be dllng" In regard
to aband:J nlng the mine sites, It's
"just a matter of time before
everything Is done."
The commissioners asked Kester
to notify them, by formlll letter, of
their plans for Abundant Ll!e. They
·can then go, with the letter. ID the
Ohio Environmental Prots:tlon
Agency for permission to extend
the landfUIInto the mine area.
In a her matters, the commission
heard Iron\ County Engineer Philip.
Roberts that the state has approved
revised plans ft:lr COffitructkm c:i
Kester reported that 10 acres of restroom facUlties at the roadsld!! ·
the mine property was bonded by park in sYracuse, and that quotes
holders of the mining permit at
$2,500 an acre, making a total of from prospectiVe contractors have
been received.
$25,0Xlwhlch will be usedtosealthe already
Clerk Mary Hotstetter reported
two entries at Abundant Ute.
to the commission and Roberts, a -.
Kester said ODNR engineers request from OliVe Township TruS·
have not yet determined the tees to reopen and maintain a part
method~ which the mtrles wlll be
of old Route !ill). Roberts wUI
closed.
e~ta mine the sltuatkm before the
However, once the state seals the . board takes formal action on the
entries, said Kester, the county's request.

!'tiN'S II.AHK£T·llfED

MOUNED &amp; BALANCED

'

.....

Avanell George, Fred H. George,
Mary E. Davidson, Donna M.
Davidson.
Racine - Charles W. Bush,
Marie A. Bush, Ru th E. Shain.
Robert L. Ritchie. Joan L. Tuttle,
Virginia M. Bland, David Aaron
Wolfe, William H. Hooock, Patty A.
Shain, Klm\J'rly J . Follrod, Karen
Werry, Dawna R. Grueser and
Paul F. Marr.

future. I have a terrible sense that
we are returning to the lrresponsl·
ble policies of the late 1970s."
"Anyone who thinks we can go on
cutting the defense budget to the
point where we actually have
declining growt h rates ... wltlXlut
undermining our defense posture,
Is indulging In a happy but entirely
unrealistic delusion," he said.
White House spokesman Larry
~akes said the till contained
ligures that were worked out "to
rur full satisfaction."

•

to reclaim area mines

"PASSENOER CARS OilY"
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Crurt ~Paul Martin Ladd. ·32, and
Gay Lynn Pippert, 29, both of Rock
springs; Robert William Rlifle, 21,
and Wanda Lee Adkins, 18, both of
Racine.

2&amp; Cents

'• · .''·~

ODNR begins efforts

Also availoble
men's blue denim
bib o¥eralh and
work d111garees.

File for marTiage

.
.
campaigning
2 Sections, 12 Pages

A Muhimedia Inc. New,spaper

"Let me state it plainly," he said. "It would be a
terrible tragedy for this country and for our children 's
fUture If those on Capitol Hill are a llov.'ed to hand over
to the Soviet Union free of charge what we refUsed to
hand over across ttl:, regotlatlng table in Reykjav lk'. "
Before the summit, Reagan pleaded with Demo·
crats to support him In a show of unity he said was
important in lacing his Soviet counterpart .
But in his s~h to Chavez supporters. Reagan apparently buoyed by public opinion polls showing
support for his refusal to abandon SDI - seemed to
replace a bipa rtisan slant on the Issue before voters.
"SDI Is America's irisuranoe policy that the Sovle)s
will begin living to the arms control agreements that

Lower defense ·budget vexes lawmaker
•

nlg.IU, \\ilh a low In the low 4(i).
DeCreasing cloudiness Friday, .
with .-g~~s hetween 55 and 80.
· The probability of precipitation
is . near zero today, 20 percent ·
lorilght and nelll' zero again
Friday.

86 donate during
bloodmobile stop

..

--

· Becoming mostly cliludy jo..

' Daily Number
172

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan ,
continuing his· post-summit public relations barrage
and bolstered by the p:ll!s, is injecting support for his
futuristic "Star Wars" defense .program Into the
mld·term election campaign.
On a campaign swing through Maryland Wednes·
day, Reagan urged voters to ask candidates: "Where
do you stand on defending America? Where do yru
stand on SO! (Strategic Defense Initiative)?"
The president had a full schedule today, briefing his
cabinet on the W('fkend summit in £\eykjavlk,
Iceland, and arranging a meeting with young
astronauts who are leaving for the Soviet Union.
Despite ttl!' gloom Reagan and his advl5ers

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

POMEROY
FLOWER
SMOP
10UurTIIIoiUf

Ohio Lottery ·

Reagan ·injects 'Star Wars' into

Sixty-seven arrests were made ~ the Middleport Pollee
Department during the month c:i September, Pollee Chlef~id Little
reports.,.
The department Investigated seven accidents and aU vehicles
were driven 4,459 mlles during the month. Parking meter collections
totaled $877.50 wliiie merchant p&lt;)lice collections amounted to $48.
There were 5~ parking tickets wrttten.

Johnny Cleveland Eblin, 35. of
Pomeroy, was bOund over to grand
jury during a preliminary heartng
Tuesday In Meigs County Court.
Eblin Is charged with aggravated
assault In the shooting of Charles
Napper, 3$, of the Rutland area, In
the left leg, helow the knee, on sept.
19. Eblin remains free on a $5,&lt;00
bond.

It'll be an
East Coast
fall classic
-Page 4

..

Vot:36, J\lo.115
Copyrighted 1986

Middleport police activity listed

Case bound over

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·
k
postercontmtheldlastwee
attheCarletonSchoollaSyracuselostresslhebnportanre .. schoolbus
safety week. Cash pi'Be8 were awarded at an a&amp;~~embly held at the
sdlool on F'J1da.y and durln1lhe week cl111181'00m dlsalllllolli were held
on lhe IAlplc. The pro(!l'lllll was under the direction o1 Keith Black,
lran!I(JOrtatlon director. Winners from lhe left are Ray bwdennllt, flr!i
place; CJuill Lee and Usa Montgomery, holllng the Intermediate dass
BfOUP entry, second place, and Annlntle cade, tili'd (!lace.

,.

WNGTIME VOLUNTEERS - Worldng at the Red CroM
Bloodmobile on its visits to Meigs County ~ "old hat" to Joyce Hoback,
left, and Mlll'Y Nease, of the Racine area. Both have been volunteering
clerical and related assistance for nearly 30 years. Here they are
. preparing the bags which are~ to receive the blood from the cbmrs.

Rhodes supports
domed stadiums
By ~DCHAEL O'MAUEY
CLEVELAND IUPn - The state of Ohio slXluld i'elp Akron,
Columbus and Cleveland build domed sports stadlums, ~ublican
gubernatorial candldate J ames Rhodes said Wednesday.
"Akron needs a dome and help from the state and I think
Columbus needs a dome and help from the state," said Rb)des.
"What we have to do Is bring Ohio Into the 21st century. And this Is all
with capital Improvement (funds!. Thi s is not (from) the general
fund ."
Rhodes, speaking In Cleveland Wednesday, said Cleveland needs a
domed stadium to help develop the city's downtown. He said the state
should contribute at least half the money to b.llld the !I'O!llSed $3)0
million facUlty.
Rhodes could not say whether !he state 'lllney should be In the
form of a loan or a gift to the non·pro!lt Greater Cleveland Domed
Stadium rorp.
"! W .,K the state of Ohio should step In and supply til e rmney,
start' .g out with what you need and start drawing the plans and rulld
the! adlum," Rhodes told a new.; confermce.
"I :hink you're looking at $75 million to $100 million, whether In a
·
loan ur the state giving It to you."
The Greater Cleveland Domed Stadium Cnl]l. Is trying to raise
two-thirds of the money from the prJvatesector. The rest would come
from a pOssible tax on cigarettes and liquor.
·
The former governor said he doesn't believe that the bulk of the
financing can be raised in Great.er Cleveland's private sector and
said the money that the state has contributed so lar to !he project ($2
million) "would not build a walkway." .;'
Rhodes said the state could cont riMe tot he dom e projects wlthou I
Increasing taxes and he reiterated his Tuesday prediction that Gov.
RJchard Celeste Is planning to raise taxes to.offset an anticipated
state deficit.
Though House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr. said Tuesday that Ohio's
corpotate, Income or sales tax will not be raised during the nex t
General Assembly, Rhodes responded by saying Rifle closed the
door on taxes for two years only. "I closed II for four cyears)," he ,
said.
.
The former governor predicted that he will receive about 42
percent of the 450,(00 votes expected to be cast In Cuyahoga Count y ~
Nov. 4. He said that percentage will give him a statewide lead over ·
Celeste.·
Rhodes also said a debate with Celeste will be ll'ld "soon" near the
farm of Cincinnati financier Marvin Warner, a Celeste campaign •
contributor who has been Indicted for his alleged dealings hi the
collapse of Home State Savings Bank.
Meanwhile, a group known as United Students Agajnst Rhodes
held a news conference at Kent State ·Unlverslty at the same time·
Rhodes was talking to reporters In Cleveland.
The group challenged Rhodes to debate Celeste at the Kent
campus, the site of a May 4, 1970 VIetnam War protest that left four
stu~nts dead and nine others Injured bY tlV! Ohio National Guard.
The troops had been· sent to the campus ~ Rhodes to quell tlV!
student protests.
"We want to ask him what be woulr:l til In a future, similar
situation," said group president Alan Canfora. "Would be again send
In armed troops to confroht unarmed demonstrators1 Would he
again provoke another student massacre as he did In 1970?"
Responding to the debate challenJll! at Kent State, Rhodes' only
remark was, "Dick Celeste's behind that." •
But Canfora said, "We have almlutely no ttes with the Ollestr
campaign. We are sbnpl)' attempting to reveal the dismal record of
James Rhodes." .

•

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