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Page-16-The

Wednesday. September 11, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Weather----------,r
Sporadic
rioting
to
continues in Britain
SE"TT._L_E__.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST

7 AM EST 9-12-86

30.1f1

By ARTHUR HERMAN

YORK

50

"'""-~50
60

10~

UPI WEATMER FOTOCA&amp;T ~

NEW

OftLUNS

•·AI&lt;
lmJ•NOWIItl'

LEGEND----,

l·::;.;j.-

~;.

WEATHER MAP- Showers and afew lhundersho.w erswlll he
over the southem Pacific Coast, lhe Plateau region and the
Rocldes. Scattered showers and lhunderstonns will continue over
the central and sou them Plains, the Sootheast and Florida. A few
showers wW also he over nol1hem New England. Partly cloudy
skies wW prevail across the Greal Lakes, the upper Mississippi
Valley, the northern Plains and the Pacific Northwesl. Afternoon
temperatures wUI only rise Into the 50s 1111d 60s over the northern
Plateau, the northern Rockies, the nol1hem Plains, the upper
Mississippi valley, the Great Lakes and New England. Readings
1n the 00. wm extend from Texas ll!!t'OSS the soolheastent stales.
'The remainder oUhe nnllon wW havetemperalnresinthe'70sand
80s.

Extended forecast ·
Extended Forecast - Friday through Monday: Fair through the
period, with highs ranging from the middle to upper 00s each day.
Overnight lows will be in the 40s.
Soothwesl Ohio
South Cenlral Ohio
Decreasing cloudiness today, · with highs In the low 70s. Clear
tonlghi , with low in the upper 40s. Sunny Thursday, with highs In
the upj)('r OOs.
.
.
.
The probability of precipitation Is near zero through Thursday.

a

BIRMINGHAM, England (UPl l
- Hundreds of pollee clashed with
gangs d. rioting youths early today,
but authorities said the worst urban
violence In Britain in four years
appeared to be dying down.
At least twopeoplewerekllledand
two were reported missing In rioting '
that erupted Monday In the p.;domlnantly black Handsworth section of
Birmingham, Britain's second:
largest city. Pollee arrested at least
32 people . .
Nearly'4() people- mostly pollee
and firefighters - were Injured in
looting, burning a nd lighting that
ripped through the neighborhood,
police said.
More lhan 50 shops and homes,
mostly ow ed by Asians, were
burned In rioting that began after a
gang a ttacked a white policeman
attempting to issue a ticke t to a
black motorist.
On Tuesday, hundreds of pollee
poured into Handsworth, and the
government said security was
stepped up in other areas prone to
rioting.
A crowd of black youths showered
Home Secretary Douglas Hurd with
stones a nd bottles when he tied to
Inspect the iot3torn areas, forcing.
him to retreat to a police van. Hurd
was not injured.
After Hurd fled. mobs battled riot
pollee, overturned cars a nd set at
least four new fires .
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher said she was shocked by
the violence, the worst in Britain

smce riots spread through a dozen
cities dutingthesummer d.l981.
One person died in thel981 rioting,
but 518 pollee officers were Injured
and nearly 1,8JO people were
arrested in 10 days of unrest.
The two people kUied - believed
to be Asian brothers- were burned
alive when a gang robbed and set
!Ire to a·shOp Monday.

RIOT AFTERMATH - An aerial view shows the deveslatlon at
between pollee and sfllne-lhrowlng youths Jn· the ear
today. (UPI)

.

,,4

Vot.3S. No. 105
Copyrighted 1886

ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS OF YOUR "BIG YEAR" WILL BE
YOUR SENIOR PORTRAIT
We're In our lOth year of doing senior portraiture and we invite you.'o visit our
orudio where you will he ~lven highly individualized attention, Your oen1or preview oet
will eonolot of a variety of pooeo before traditional oil backdropl!i and in picture~~que
outd.oor •ettlngo. In other wordo, you get a great oelection from which to choooe.
All of our full color portrailo carry a .l ifetime quarantee.
They come in a deluxe mane finloh and are delivered In
attractive folders. AND ... our prices are reasonable.
Again thiS' year, .we look forward to working with you.
Just give us a call to sat up your appointment or for
mOre information .

The Photo Place
Bob and Charlene H oeflich

109 High Street, Pomeroy

Sheriff
seeks
guidance
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CoLUMBUS tUP!) - The StaiP
Medical Board 1'1'\'0ked the licenses
of two doctors Wednesday after
adopting a tough new set of
disciplinary guidelines for physi cians-to follow .
The board rwoked the license of
Dr. Vincent Dovlco, a Seven Hllls
surgeon. who pleaded guilty '"
federal court last year to ma ll fraud .
in connection with a fraudulent
billing scheme.
The board also revoked the
license of Cincinnati osteopath Dr.
William Houser, whose office and
home were raided last month by
drug agents In what was called the
largest seizure of pharmaceutic a 1
drugs in state history.
Houser was accused llY·the board
for allowing unlicensed personnel to
dispense addictive drugs to patients
without them first being seen by
Houser.
The num berof licenses revoked so
far this year Is 11, more than the
board has ever revoked in a single
year. From 1975 to 1984, there were
only 12 revocations.
The new gu klelinesadopted by the

Security latchbolt with key outside ; knob inside. When locked,
guard bolt deadlocks latchbolt automatically.

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...

•

King Builders Supply
405 North Second Avenue
I

r

2 Sections, 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

commissioners may need to approve further matters
regarding th&lt;' project in next week's meeting .
Roberts and the board also .d iscussedstriping about
14 miles of twu county roads. Roberts w0t1ld like to
hl!Ve doublecenter lines painted on County Road 1 and
County Road o, at Bradbury Hill. The striping could be
done alter the roads are sea led. Cost forstripingls to be
$275 per mile.
Roberts also reported that the driving of piling at a
road slip on Eagle Ridge has been completed .
The board approved a request from Lee
Wedemeyer, administrator of thC' Carleton School and
Meigs Industries, to transfer int erdepartment al funds
in excess of $38,000. Wedemeyer reported to the
· commissioners that the budget changes met with the
appmval of Bo;lrdof Mental Retardation.
1Continued on page 10)

Ohio firrn c ies foul
.
over const lion pact
'

COLUMBUS (UPil - A Tipp
Cl!y, Ohio, firm lodged a protes
today with the Ohio Department f
Administrative Services, say·
it
lost out on a $5 million rison
construcliotrmA · c t to
Indiana
company which beat its bid by a
scant $1,715.

COLUMBUS (UP! I - A political
spat over the state's travel and
tourism promotion has ended. for
the present. with a pprova l of a
modified. reduced $2.3 million
contract for Hamerofl Milenthal,
In c., Columbu s.
The state'Cont mlllng Board-voted
6-1 Wednesday for the alternative
drafted by the Ohio Depao1ment of
Development In response to Repub·
lican complaints that HameroffMII·
enthal, which produced Gov. Ri·
chard F. Celeste's 198:! campaign
advertisement s. received a $6.2
million two-year contract with little
if any competition.
The GOP. charging " favoritism
a nd cronyism." blocked approval of
the full contract two weeks ago.
The revised contrac t:
-Runs for only 16 months,
reducing it to $fi million.
-Calls for $2.7 million worth of
media advertising to be placed by
Hamcrof!MIIenthal but bllled directly to the state, cutting that

a mount from the ad agency.
- Requires HameroffMilentha l
to subcontract the HIJO-BUCKEYE
travel information hotline for

program continue," added Clarence D. PaY(licki, director of
development.
"This wa s a compromise to give
continuity to the tourism program ,
and to send a signal to advertising
and public relations firms and the
tourism industry that henceforth, it
will be a more open proCI.'ss and that
agC'ncies other than Hamero!f
Milenthal will have a real chanec to
get a rontract," said Aronoff.
The senator predicted tha t in the
tuturt', "there will be a lot more
participation by a lot m ort'
agPncies."
Also approved were two other
marketing contracts rejected by the
Republicans two weeks ago:
-$920,000 to Eaton and Associa tes, Cincinnati, for m arketing of
tra vel and tourism to mtnmit y
audiences.
-$110,000 ' to Clarl&lt; Jones, Inc.,
Columbus. for business development m a rket resea rch services.

$8Xl,tlXJ.

In addition, Sen. Stanley J .
Aronoff, R- Cinclnnati, who had led
the Republican blockade of the
contract, the administration has

assured him that a $:flO,txXJ marketIng contract yet to be awarded will
not go to the Colutl)bus ad agency.
"The Development Department
is pleased that this is resolved so we
can get about the business of
marketing this state," sa id Marjory
Plzzu ti, deputy director in charge of
marketing and r&lt;'Search.
"It is clear thaI I here Is now
bipartisan recognition that the
Celeste administration· s nat lonally·
recognized travel and tourism
program has been ex tremely successful in creating jobs and general·
ing revenue for Ohio and it was
obviously in the best interest of ~e
citizens of Ohio to assure that this

board setout stiff )X'naltles that can
be ordered for violations of the
Medical P ractice Act .
Among the newguldlines:
· - A minimum penalty of revoking the license of any doctor
convicted of any drug-related
crime.
- A minimum penalty of revoking the license of any doctor who
sells. prescribes or Jldminlsters
drugs fo1 · other than legitimate
medical purposes. '
- A minimum penalty of revoking the licenses of a ny doctor who
prescribes drugs in exchange for
sexual favors.
-A minimum penalty of revoking the license of any doctor
convicted· of a felony, whether
drug-related or not.
- A minimum of a t least five
years of probation lor drug and
alcohol abuse.
Those guldllnes, If followed by the
board, willmakeOhio's boardoneof
the toughest In the country, since a
doctor whose license Is revoked can ·
never practice in the state again.

In correctional facilities, while
Geupel De Mars is a general
mntracting firm with little expe·
rlence in the field .
Hetzler was not avilable for

comment .

E quipment has molY' than OOyears'
C'X(X'rience in the manufacluff' and

King said Fries bid $4 ,8.'i7 mllllon
for the project, minus a one·ha lf
percent discount of $211,285. The
Ge~pe i De Mars bld was $4.832
million with no discount , he said .
The contract was awarded a week
ago.
King said Fries cmploys07 )X'Ople
whowouldhavf'paidapproximately
$88,000 in state taxes and W,txXJ in
local taxes to Tlpp City had they
received I he worl&lt;.
He said ~ loopht;lle in the "Buy
Otiio" law permits an exception for
bidders in adjacent sta tes without
res trictions on Ohio products a nd
servlcrs.
King 1old rc&gt;portc•rs he f('{')s lhl'
contract awar1_was '' pre-pl anned''
though he added. " I'm not here to
allege contract favoritism ."
The Colum bu s Citizen.Journal
ha s been publishing a S£&gt;rles of
articles alleging.irreguta r contrdct ·
ing practices by th~ Celeste

installation of dl'tmt ion ('(jUipmrnt

administrat ion.

"We want some answers." sa id

State medical board
revokes two licenses

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Commission members hav&lt;:)Jeen
served with·a copy of the filing and
must answer the sheriff through the
court, said Hall.
"The money's running out fast, "
Hall said. " Housing will have to be
found for the prisoners."
Hayburn and four other county
officials arl'expected Ia ter this wee!&lt;
to ask the 4th Ohio District Cou11 of
Appeals to order funds to keep their
offices open until the endoftheyear.
Michael, meanwhile, said legal
attempts to forcC' commlssloners to
find funds to l&lt;eep county offices
open are futile.
"Why go to this bother when yofi
know we have no money," he said.
"If we had money, thPy would be
funded ."
Commissioners Monda y were
ordered by three county judges to
come up with $57,500 for several
of!ICI.'s the judges said are necessary
for the courts' functions.
County officials said the judges
have threa tened to take the case to
the Ohio Supreme Court If commissioners fail to comply.
Michael said the court orders
have angered commissioners and
will make it more diffic ult to reach a
solution.

SPECIAL
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25'x1"

close .to Route 7 as pdsslble. Commissioners asked Phil
Roberts, county engineer, to' review the request and
report back.
Commissioner David Koblenlz' repm1ed that
Associated Fabricators will pou r an additionall3 feet
of concrete around the present heliport pad , which is
located near Veterans Memorial Hospita l. This is
being done to facil itate driving around the pad
Koblentz said. •
Roberts updated the commissioners on the Carper's
Nursery road project. Roberts said necessary forms
identifying the project have been submitted to the
Marietta office of the Ohio Department of
Transpor tation and the revi&lt;W process is underway.
He added. that attempts are being made to target
constmction for next summer. According to Roberts,

guidance from thP commissioners.

U.L. Listed 16 gauge, 3 conductor outdoor exten·
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Lufkin"

revised plans and the negotiated figure Byer reported .
Construction may begin within the nexlfhreeweeks
and shouid be completed eight to 10 weeks later he
added.
Commissioners have appointed Elmer Bailey, of
Darwin, to the final position on the county's housing
rehabilitation board. Bailey will serve on the board
with lrls P ay ne, Middleport; Carl Qualls, Pomeroy;
Roy Christy, Chester; and Earl Shuler, of Racine.
Meigs County's $642,txXJ housing reha bilitat ion
project will be umlt-rway soon. Community Development Block Grant funds are finan cing the rehab
venturr· and Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency
wlll administer tne prog-ram.
Commissioners discussed a request from Fisher's .
Big Wheel to erect a store sign on county property as

JACKSON, Ohio rUPI) - .Jackson County Sheriff Edgar Haybum
Wednesday filed legal papers seekIng guidance as to what to do when
his departmen1 runs out of money.
County Commission President Ed
Michael Tuesday said the &gt;county
government Is broke. A financia l
crisis could shut down severa 1
county offices by Sept. 20.
Chief Deputy Urias Ha ll said
Haybum, through Jackson County
' Comtnort Pleas Coun, flied for

,.

Doorset II

••

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 12, 1985

Roush Construction Co., Syracuse, has been given a
contract to construct an addition to the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service building and to renovate
the existing structure.
At the request of EMS Director Robert Byer, the
Meigs County Commissioners Wednesday accepted a
negotiated contract flgure of$94 ,782 from the Syracuse
firm , subject only to sat lsfaction of a construction bond
or letter of credit to guarantee the project.
The construction company's original ,bid was
$123,009. This bid was $45,000over the estima ted cost of
$77,760.
Because Roush Construction was the only firm to
enter a bid, efforts were made to e liminale som e
aspects of the project - m ainly in upgTading of the
existing building- In order to lower costs .
The EMS Board of Trustees has approved the

Convicted
murderer
executed
By MARY SCHLANGENSTEIN
. HUNTSVILLE, Texas i UP II Convicted murderer Charles Rum·
baugh forgave society. laughed.
then wascxecutedbylnjectionearly
today after lOY, years on death row.
Rumbaugh. 28, who committed
his first crime when he was 6 and
was sentenced to die at the age of 17
for killing a jeweler during a $54
robbery, did not try to evade his
execu tion, saying, "I don't care
anymore. l'm bored ."
At his request.Rumbaugh'sdeath
was witnessed by D.J. Stubben, an
Amarillo author who helped him
'write a book about his life; Laurie
Vestal, a Waupaca, Wis., houSewife
who began corJ'('Spondlng with him
21 months ago, and George Wheat, a
prison psychologist.
" D .J., Laurie, Dr . Wheat -a bout
all I can say is goodbye," Rum ·
baugh said in his final statement
whilestrapJX-&gt;d loa gurney. "And for
the r&lt;'Sf of you , although you don 't
forgive me for m y transgressions, I
forgive you for yours against me.
I'm ready to begin my journey, and
that' s alii wish to say."
As the poison began to Oow,
Rumbaugh tocked eyes with
Stubben and Vestal, then gave what
sound&lt;?d like a snort of laughter,
rolled his head back and looked at
the ceiling. HC' coughed violenlly
once. and Stubben said, "It's OKit' s OK, honey ."
.
Rumbaugh's head lolled, his eyes
partly open. and hls mouth gaped as
doctors moved in to examine him.
"He's not dead," Stubben whispered fiercely as she and Vestal
gripped hands .
Rumbaugh was declared dead at
12:27 a.m. COT. He wa ~ the lOth
man put to death in Texas since the
state resumed executions In 1982
and the 48th person executed since
the Supreme Court relpstated
caplt al punishment in 1976.
As the witnesses, who included
ptisOn officials, filed out cl.lhe death
chamber, Vestal turned on them ,
saying, "May God have mercy on
you."
A spokeswoman for Rumbaugh 's
family in San Angelo, Texas, said no
one had notified them the execution
had been carried out.
" We'd just heard on the news they
were n't going to do It until dawn,' ' an
older sister, Cindy Rumbaugh, said
at 2 a.m. COT. "But hedldn 'twant a
delay. A delay would have just been,
you know, nothing but another
delay."
· Rumbaugh was 17 when he
gunned down Michael Fiorillo
during a jeWelry store robbery In
Amarillo. Rumbaugh admitted
shooting Fiorillo but said he had no
choiCe because the jeWeler plckl-'d
up a gun to defend himself.
Rumbaugh, whose fin al meal
consisted of water and a fiour
tortilla, visited with friends ·and
relatives Tuesday afternoon but
spent two hours Tuesday night
typing a statement he said he
wanted lo remain sealed untu 13
years after his death.
Stubben said the leller was
dl~ted to her 14·month-old daugh·
ter Patricia, whom Rumbaugh met
when he was In Amarillo for a court :
appearance. " He told me he was ·
going to teU her how he expects her
to grow up," she said.

•

•

at y enttne
Syracuse fin11 given EMS project

e

SENIORS OF
MEIB$, $01JTHERN, EASTERN
WAHAMA HIGH $CHOOl$

We
use

•

England illterflerce riots hrokeout
Handsworth dlstrlct 1n Birmingham,
1y morning hours

Kevin .). King, asslstam vlc~
president of Fries Correctional
Equipment, In c., which was aced
out by Geupcl De Mars, Inc.,
Indianapolis, for security l'Quipment a t Orient Reception Center ,
Lima Correct ional lnstltut ion and
London Comectlonallnstllute.
In a protest fUed with Nappy M.
Hetzler, administrator of state
purchasing, King sa id the contract
for thP installation of hollow menta l
doors and frames, control panels
and locks, was not awarded to the
lowest and best bidder, nor was it
consistent with the "Buy Ohio"
policy of the administration of Gov.
Richard F. Celeste or t hC' "Buy Ohio
Act" of 1983.
King said Fries Correct ional

$1,600,000 sought in lawsuit
Suit for $1,600,000 has been filed In
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Mary J a nP Talholt ,
Tuppers Plains , against tht' Woodmc·n Accident and Life Co., Columbus. and Cha rles E . Hughes, Sr ..
Mariet ta.
Plaintiff chargps that on about
July 20,1981, Terry D.Talbott and-or
his company, Talbott Drilling Co.
purl'ha ~ cd a pPnsion plan and wholf'
life in sura nce pol icy from lhc
defendant, Woodmm, through it s
agl'nl, Hughes, and that Ter!y D .
Talbott was named the insu1nl wit h
Mary Jane Talbott , the desiglta ted
benPfiriary .
The suit states tha t T~rry D.

Talbott died about Sept . 13, 1981 at
which time the policy was allegedly
in full fore!'. ThP plaintiff charges
that the company has rPpeatedly
r~fu sed dE-mands by the plaintiff for
payment of thf' p roceeds due undC'r
th~ policy. Sh&lt;' fu t1h&lt;'l' charges that
she 1s unable to annex a copy oft hc
policy saying thai lh ~ policy was
destroyed while In the possession of
the defendant , Woodmen, a nd-or ot s
agent, Hughes. Thrpla inlllfciaims
that two premium paym£'nts for
August and September had ~n
made. Thr plaintiff asks $ti"JO,txXJ in
compensalory damagtes and
$l ,tlXl,OOO in punit ive damages.

Reagan congratulates
new hit leader, Rose

ROSE BREAKS DOWN - Cincinnati's Pece &amp;se leans on the
shoulder o1 Reds' firM-bale COIICh Tommy Helms as more than .fl,lnl
fans K~ve Pete a lllalldlng ovallon after he broke Ty Cohbls all·tinte hit
record last m,hl. The ovation continued for ellhl minutes foDowtng
Rose's 11r11t
olnsJe In'left-center oil San Diego's Eric Show . .

lnnms

'

CINCINNATI (UPI l - Presi·
denl Reagan called Pete Rose
Wednesday night to congra tu·
late him on breaking Ty Cobb's
career hit record a nd Rose told
the pl'!'sident , "You missed a
good ballgame tonight."
The president told Rose.
"You've given a lift to the who!~
country.''
RoS£&gt;. who broke Cobb's re·
cord of 4,191 hit s with a single
and a triple to up the mark to
4,193, talked to the president
from home plate of Riverfront
Stadium just a few minutes after
the Cincinnati Reds had bealen
the San Diego Padres, 2·0.
The phone conversation was
piped Into the stadium 's public
address system and the sellout
crowd of 47,237 stayed around to
listen In,
The president began: "Pete
Rose, alias Charlie Hustle, this Is
Ronald Reagan ."
"Nice talking to you," replied
Rose.
ThC' crowd chuckled at his

casual mannC'r.
" I just want to SJI' congratula·
lions for breaking one of thl'
most rnduring r0Cords in hislory," said thr· pr!'sidrnt , " I've
been ~otmg fo l' you."
Reagan ' a lso complimented
Rose for his '.' hustle and keen
batting eye."
" Your ri'C!ird may be
broken .'' added lho' pn:sident,
" but your o·eputalion and legacy
is secuf'P ...

Rose, obviously also happy
that his Reds had beaten the
Padres In an C'xciting gamC', told
the president', " If you had been
here tonight , you would know
w hy we conSider Clnrinnat l thp
baseball capital of the world."
The fan s in lhe stadium
erupted in applause.
"We ought to do this more
often," added RE-agan . "Those of
us In the middle of our careers."
The preslden t concluded the
m nversatlon by telling Rose,
"You've given a lift to the whole

country."

\

�The

Ohio

Commentary

Shoe imports. trouble U.S. and Canada

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
f'omeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MI\SON I\ REI\

~lb

~m~ -~L--rt~dJ~

~" .

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
f'ubllsher
f'AT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
L t.TT ERS or OP INION are welcome. They should be l ess th an 300 word s
lonJii: . All le!Ti2rs are subjl'Ct to ro tting an-d mu s11x&gt; signed with name. addrl'Ss and
Tf'IE'phan£' num bN . No unsl,e: nrd lell e-r s. will bl' publ'ished . Lellt&gt;r s should be In

good tas te. addrl'!!Sing

l s~;;u('s ,

. 1

not p('I'S On all tles.

Telecasting disorder
in the House
Live television cmwage of the House undoubtedly helps viewers become
better infmmro about how their government functions . But to the dismay
ol some prople in Congress and out it also reveals the disorder that often
prevails on Capitol Hill.
C-SPAN, a non-profit ca ble cooperative. broadcasts all sessions of the
full House as well as many committee hearings. C-SPAN reports the
. broadcast s are generally welt received by cable viewers across the
country, but one viewer recently wrote to express her concern about the
· behavior she observed during those broadcasts.
"I am disapp&lt;iinted that during committee bearings and House sessions,
people are so rude tha t it looks like a free-for-aiL They do whatever they
please. laugh and talk to each other. walk around whilespeakcrsare trying
to be heard and listened to," the viewer wrote.
, ...
She is right, of course. Congressional m('('lings often do SE'&lt;'m more like
scenes from Bedlam than great moments in the history of dC"mocracy. but
it perhaps is not as bad as it set~ms.

The worst situation in the House• ocx·urs when everyone is therC'. With435
peopk• in one room, even a room as big as the House chamber. it is difficult
to get any businPSs done. At those tim('!', thP presiding officer invariably
must bang the gavel insistently to quell dol ensof conversations that popup
throughout the chamber and make it all but impossible to hear debate on a
bill.
Fol"tunately. lull attendance in the House is rare. usually happening only
when all members are called to the chamber to vote. But having voted and
vl,ited briefly with their colleagues, most members drift back to their
offices or committee meetings , lea,·ing debate to just a few dozen people
who arc members of the committee that reported the bill out or who have a
specific interest in the bill.
TV viewers may also get a bad impression of committee hea rings , wh&lt;&gt;re
members often seem to show litT le interest in what witnesses havC'tosay.
si&gt;me members ar rive late or leave whJic til&lt;' hearing is under ~ay or joke
afid carrv on convPrsaTions wilh each other while witnesses givP their
l(!stimony.
·The committee m 0mbers usually have adva.n«;£' copies of the witnPsscs'
testimony, so i1 is not necessary to hang on every word, but th~ · lack of
attent ion is pr obably irritating if not unnerving to less ~x~rienccd
witnesses. And it probably seems ill·manncred to prople who watch the
proceedings on tciC\'ision.
·
: Some committee members show up a fter the formal testimony.
p]"E"fering to be on hand just for the question period. That enables the
member to be l'iscwher£•. doing other business. but sometimes leads them
rO ask questions that havf' already lX'en askPd or miss useful information
brought out dUJing their absence.
Raucus situations somE"times deYelop when a House and &amp;&gt;nate
conferenc£' mmmittee gets together to try to work out differences in their
respective version s of a major bill. such as the budget resolution or the
sfup-gap fundin g measu"' usually passed at the rod of the government' s
ftscal year.
· On thoSf' occasions as many as 30 houSC' members and s0nators along
with attendant sta ll aides and reporters squeeze into·an undersized room to
op&lt;·n negotia tions. When deadlocks occur, as thev often do, civi lity
becom&lt;'S stra ined and the disorder index rises shao·ply .
·
Most conference comm ittees ar~ not televised, h01,vever. which may be
for the good . &amp;lmr or the antics and horse-trading that go oo might shake
whatPvrr confidencr the viewers still hav(' in thCir Congress.

'

Eagles face White Falcons;
Tornadoes hit road Friday

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 12, 1985

I

Berry s World

A mammoth baltle shaping up In
has suffered severe .Injury in
the United States over shQ(' Imports
productivity and employment."
has Canadian government and s hoe
In 1984. 350 million more•palrs of
indu stry officials keeping cla!ie .. forelgnshoeswereimportrointothe
watch .
· · country than in 1981. By compariU.S, shoe manufactuiT'rs, led by siln, there ·were 75 million fewer
pairs of U.S.-made shoes on th~
Footwear 'Industries of America.
want President Ronald Reagan to
market in 1984 compared with 1981,
roll ~a ck his Aug . 28decision again st
according to the U.S. International
imposingquotas or tariffson foreign
Trade Commission.
shoe imports.
Maheu said the demise of the
They say the decision will lead to
smaiiCanadianshoeindustrywould
further closings. of U.S. shoe be even quicker than in the ·Unitro
factories and more layoffs as cheap States should the Canadian governimports flood the market .
ment refuse to renew quotas.
Canadian shoe manufacturers
Despite quotas, shoe imports to
are fighting a similar battle to Canada have soared by 10 million
convince the Canadian government pairs or 23 percent since 19Sl to a
to renew import quotas that will end total of 53 million out of the over-all
Nov. 30. A recent Canadian govern- Canadian market of 86 milhon in
ment report recommended drop- 1983.
ping the Import quotas.
If the quotas are not renewed, the
Canadianshareofthemarketwould
The outcome of the U.S. shoe
battle is expected to Influence the
dwindle to 15 percent, with mljsslve
Canadian government's decision.
factory closings and the lossof20,oo:J
Jean-Guy Maheu, president of the
Canadian jobs, Maheu predicted.
Shoe Manufacturers Association of
In tbe United States, tbe battle
Canada , in a recent intcnriew said,
over shoe quotas Is sef:'n as the first
"There is no ·question but that the
major fight between a free-trade
shoe industry is dying in the U.S. It
president and a protectionist Con-

In Washington

Interagency
In the compendium of real and
imagined failings of government
bureaucrats, few criticisms appear
more frequently than the claim that
intereclne feuds invariably take
precedence over interagency
cooperation.
There indeed is ample evidence
that petty squabbles about " turt" or
jurisdiction are so disruptive and
demoralizing that they rou~inely
keep federal employees from work. ing together for the benefit of the
public.
But there are exceptions - and
nonr is more striking than the joint
effort sustained throughout the past
two decades by six federal organizalions at the Boise Interagency Fire
Cen ter here.

Operating from a half-dozen
nondescript buildings on a :i3~acrC'
site at theedgeoftheairport, BIFC
coordinates a nationwidE' program
that annually savesmiliionsofacres
or range and forest land from being
decimated by wildfires.
The participating agencies include four Interior Department
units the Bureau of Land
Management, Fish a nd Wildlife
Service, National Park Service and
Bureau of Indian Affairs. The otix'r
two agencies are the Agricultu re
Department's Forest Service and
the Commerce Department's National Weather Service.
The impetus for the unique
combined campaign came doting
the early 1900s, when Two of thoSC'
agencies lx'came ent anglC'd in an
inll'r·agcnc~ feud concrrning thC'
allocation of resources to fight
simu lta nruu s fin's.
Sin('(' 1965. howrvcl', the agC'ncirs

cooperation_-'--_---:-By_R~o_be_rt_W~a-lte_rs

fight a fire," says Arnold F.
Hartigan, the BIFC public affairs
officer. "We do not have any
authority to command resou1"Cfls
anywhere - except in emergency
situations, when W&lt;' can set priorities and allocate rPSOUrcC'S."
One of 1hese emergencies occurred this summer, when s1ales

throughout the West were ravaged
by the most drvf'stating serier. of

wildfires in.moo'(' than a quarter of a
century.
•
"We mobilized more prople to
cover

gress. More than :nJ import- 105 U.S. shoe-manufacturing plants
restriction bills have been Intro- , closed in 1984 .and the same kind of
decline is expected in 1985. Since
duced in Congress this year.
Footwear Indu.strles says It wlll quotas were removed In 1981, the
lobby hard 'to muster the necessary· ·industty has lost 30,00) jobs: he said.
. Shoe manufacturers and supplitwo-thirds supp&lt;irt In Congress to
ers
employ 200,00), compared with
veto any presidential decision thai
400,000
In 1968, he satd. U.S. shoes
allows shoe Imports unlimited
comprise
23 percent of the U.S.
access to til(' U.S. market.
market, compared with 50 percent
• Ken Crerar, FIA spokesman, in a
in 1981.
recent telephone Interview from
The huge increa'il' in import$
Washington, said, "We'rt&gt; going to
since 1981 reflects demand in the
sit down with key Congressional
U.S. market for athletic wear and
leaders and discuss options with
for lower-priced foreign shoeswltha
them. The President Is going to find
retail price o! tinder $15, Mangloni
that when It comes to trade issues,
sald.
he has opened a Pandora's Box." ·
The U.S. shoe industry sold $4
Peter Mangioni. president of the
billion worth of shoes at wholesale·
Footwear Retailers of America,
value ln. 1984 ~ he said. Most were
however, In a Wa~hJngton telephone
interview. said his group is "deligh- brand names. rna ny of them
speclallty items, such as cowboy
ted" with the President's decision
boots, boat shoes and hand-sewn
against imposing quotas or tariffs.
footwear, in the upper price range.
The FRA represents 20,000 retail
"The American shoe industry has
stores which sell half the 1.2 billion
continued
to produtx&gt; at significant
pairs of shoes sold annually in the
levels with excellent profits during
u.s.
The FlA. which represents 180 four years of unreStrained competition," Mangioni said. "It is hardly an
coJ1X)rate members who manufac·
inconsequential industry or one that
ture 70 j:&gt;ercent of U.S. shoes, says
Is likely to die."

mof('

fires

in

a

wlde&gt;r

geographic area than at any time In
our history," says Hartigan. At the
peak of the outbreak. in erly July,
approximately 22,00) lll(C'R and
women were struggling to control
those blazes.
From New Hampshire. New

.J€'rsey. Michigan, Minnesota and
otber states In the East and
Midwest. 3,600 firefighters were
dispatched to the West. FrQm
Georgia, Tennesseeandotherstates
in the South, another 2,!IXJ were
summoned to provide aid.
When the resources in the
contiguous 48 stares were-depleted.
BIFC officials fi&lt;w in ],00) fireligh ters from Alaska.
During the hectic summer. the
BIFC contracted for four commercial jets and three propeller-driven
pas,..nger planes. Also mobilized
for the massive effort was a fleet of
air tankers and helicoptco·s.
From a sprawling supply depot
here and from others scat Ierro
throughout the West came equipment ranging !rom bulky portable
power generators and chain saws to

sma ller map cases and medicaJ

kits.
With the summer at an end, the
outbreak of fires now has a baledbut the statistics for the year are
ilnposing: Almost 2.8 million acres
01 land have been blackened by the
mot1&gt; than ro,ooo wildfires reported
to the BIFC thus far in 1985.
Eliminating wildfires is impossible because appruximately twOthirds are caused by uncontrollable lightning - and there are 6,00) to
8,000 lightning strikes throughout
Ihe West duting a single houron 'an
typical mid-summer day.
But theBIFC remains committed
to detecting and suppressing those
blazes in the - most coord inaied
fashion possible. "We're not perfect ... Hartigan says with a smile.
"It 's like any good marriage. We
still have our fights."

I'VE GOT A SOLUTION TO
OUR lRAPE OEFICJT. I'l.L
SHOW IT TOVOU A$ SOON
A'$1 FIND J'T IN THlS
MESS ON MV DESK.
..

I

have worked in concert to dispatch

.

ret Horner, MeUssa Nutter and Coach Pam
Douthitt. ·

Princeton tops AAA poll;
Ironton rated second in AA

By GENE CADDES
' UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Cincinnati
Princeton has seized the top spot
away from neighboring Cinclnna tl
Moeller in the first United Press
International Ohlo High School
Class AAA footl)all ratings of 1985.
The Vikings of Coach Pat Mancuso, with a pair of lop-sided
vlctprtes already under their belts,
were the solid No.1choiceofthebig
school coaches and held a 214-176
margin over the Crusaders In the
first of nine weeks of balloting.
Moeller. which just slipped past
Akron St. Vincent -St. Mary 10-71ast
Saturday night at the Akron Rubber
Bowl, got only four first place votes,
compared with 12 lor Princeton,
which rolled over Cincinnati Colerain 35-0.
In the other two classH!cations,
Orrville was the llrst-week leader in
Class Mover Ironton, Akron St. V
and LouisvllleAquinas. while perennial power Newark Catholic once
·again was the No, 1 team in Class A,
although the Green Wave were
being pressed by Mogadore.
t'ollowing Princeton, which hosts
Upper Arlington Friday night, and
Moeller, which visits Lancaster,
was Can tori GlenOak, but a long way
behind at 83 poll points.
Lakewood St. Edward was fourth
with 80. fo llowed by Austintown
Fitch In fifth and Zanesville In sixth,
all with 2-0 records.
Akron Garfie ld, 1-1, and 2-0
Centerville tied for seventh, followed by Cleveland St. lgnatiusln
ninth and Middletown In tent h.
Orrville, led by Its one-two
ru!Ullng punch o! Keith Denson and
Jack Leed~r.ls 2-0and beld a147-123

margin over ruMerup Ironton in the
AI\ balloting. St. Vlncent.despltelts
nanuw loss to Moeller, actually had
moll' first place votes (5) than
Orrville (3), but finished with 115
points. Aquinas had 112.
Rounding out the·M top ten was
Lima Bath In fifth, followed In order '
by Urbana, SteubenvUie, Elyria
Catholic, Castalia Margaretta and
Bellevue. SteubenvUJe and EC both
are 1-1, the others 2-0.
Newark Catholic received 10 first
place votes in Class A and held a
150-136 point margin over Mogadore, which had four firsts. NC beat
Johnstown Northridge 51-0 Saturday night, while Mogadore rolled
over Atwater Waterloo 33-0 on
Friday.

pal"f'(ll~ l:

.
,.

Prlnt-t~~

:lH
i ll t121 !:l-111
176
~' On Mt)I'IIC'I"' !II 141 t:l-lll
:1. Cuntm ClctlO;Jk 111 1:11 12-01
4 Lakt..,.,·nod S l. HlWIIftl 41 I 12·!11
!1. Aus11nt(Wn Fltrh f( I 12·1h
li. Z;lnf•s\"llllr !It 12-0 1
7. ttlr) Akron\,al"ftrld l lltl -11
7. l l k&gt;t C'cnl('l"\'lllr 11 1 12-IH
!1. ("I( 'W' Sr . Ignatius Ill ~2.01
tu.MiddiC'IO'&gt;I'n 111 1201
~nd
tm : Jl . Wilrrrn Wr slel"n
RN.rtw• ! H .11; 12. nlt•t F'll'mont RosJ
and Thlnlo Whllnl(•r. Zl ml"lt 14. l .m -aln
Si:'tllor 17: Ja, d k' l Day ton Clrwnlna tlt ~
.lul\rnrr &lt;tnd ("hlltlmlhl•. 14 l'ilCh; l i .
t1k•1
C.n)\"t1XJri -MadL-.:Jn
and
Uppr'r
ArlinWCn, 1.1 r;u ·h: 1!1. 1111'1 1\PIT!'rin~
F'ulrmont . ll!l ~ · ton Wu yr. · and ("ol umtlU ~
Watlo;&gt;p;on •I I , 12 Pilch.

1. C'ln

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"

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'fl'lun

1 nn,11k- 11111•:1• ~~ n,
2. lmnllll\ 1111 1 1l1 1H)1

.'

.:.:
,.

~Today

in history

:: : Today Is Thursday, Sept. 12, the 255th day of 1985 with 110 to follow.
- : The moon Is moving toward Its new phase.
·; • The morning stars are l'!lercury, Venus and. Mars.
. The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn.
.
-:: Those born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They Include Rlcltard
..'c;atllng, inventor of the Gatling gun, In 1818; French entertainer Maurice
~'Ch('llalier In 18!18; Russian composer Dmitri Shostakovlch In 1906; U.S.
Olympic champion Jesse Owens in 1913, and televlslon actress Linda Gray

·lit 1941

(age 44) .

: :· On this date in history:
: · In 1609, Henry HUdson discovered what Is now known as the Hudson
ruver.
In 1958. the Supreme Court ordered Arkansas' Little RockHlgh School to
C71Cmlt black students.

C'APF. 18; 18. ctk:&gt;l St. Mary!! Mrmm1al
Zl . Hamilton

and Philo (1 1. 17 ~·;K"h ;
Badin 14.

T•wn

PobU

1. Nl'wark Ca! h ! VI 1101 12·01

1:,0

2. Mop:adorf' Nl 14 1 (2·01
3. McComb tVI 121 12·01
~ - [)('lptvs Jt'ffcrson lV I 111 12·411
5. Smllh\•llk:o !VI 12.()1
6. Ml(klk•I!M'n fo'Ct'lwiCk lVI 12·01
7. McDonald lVI 12·Ul
8. Wf'llWUit&gt; / lVI Ill 12-01

l:lti
86

~ . 1\kron~t .

\"IIK.'f"nt

1 1111 1 ~htl

11
4. Loi\IL'i\"\11&lt;' !\quina~ 1l\' 1 olltHli
~ . l . lma Btllhilll i lll 1l -H1
H. U!'bMD illn Ill 1201 '
i . !'truJxon\•llllt• rl h ~)) 11·11
~ - E l~· na r attJ.JIIc 11111 tilt

9. C'a ~ talla M&lt;ll'l!:ii i'I'Tia ol\' 1 ~~ rl!

the personnel. aircraft, cquipment
and supplies to suppress fires

also been prtme targets.
dropped a 29-13 decision to 2-0 Fort
Last week, Eastern scored early Frye, while Huntington defeated
on a three yard Rice run and Bls- Portsmouth East 18-14 lor lts first
sell-to-Morrls PAT pass. After
victory since 1981.
Mike Sehmldt pulled P.C. within
Huntington had lost 33 consecutwo points rtght before halftime, tive games before Friday's big
Bissell threaded a 46 yard pass to E
victory that boOsted Its record to 1pllng to give EHS a 14-6 advantage. 1. Jerrod Herald, Steve Knapp;
. Eastern has not reached Its full and Dave Howard are Huntingpotential either offensively or de- ton's offenslvce mainstays as each
fensively. Four lost fumbles and scored touchdowns one week ago.
two costly penalties dulled a potenFirst year coach Bill Hensler and
tially razor sharp attack last Fri- staff have developed their single
day.
wing offense, improving to a point
Meanwhile, Wahama Is coming where they could be really tough
lopsided going down the stretch ln 1985.
off two sparkling
Costly mistakes (7 turnovers)
triumphs. Senior Todd Gress blistered the turf wltll five touchdown robbed the Tornadoes of a victory
runs and galned 87 yards In 13 car- last week.
ries against Kyger Creek last Fri- · Southern scored first on a 33
day. J. T. Lloyd, Terry Hawkins,
yard touchdown run . by Charlie
Boso,
who rushed 48 yards. Pete
and Chris Jewell also added ID
scores.
Roush complied 98 yards to lead
tbe team and Jeff Connolly added
Wlth 14 returning lettermen from
last year's 8-2 team, Coach Bill Je- 16. Roush plunged through for
well's White Falcons are rocketing Southern's second score of the
towards what could be another ban- game.
ner season.
Like Eastern, Southern, too. has
Quarterback Jeff Barnltz, last become a first half team. only to
run out of steam at the flnish.
year's No .. 1 passer. joins tight
Southern's defense has again
end Matt Thompson, the team 's
second l~adlng recelver, as other been respectable as Its offense has
produced more yardage than Its
offensive threats.
Thompson and three other previous two opponents. ·
members of the offensive line
Defensively, Jim Wolfe. Scott
(Matt Jewell. Rodney Dawn and Wickline, and Kelley Grueser
Troy Tucker) weigh In at a solid have had great outings.
200-plus pounds to anchor the line.
The Huntsmen dropped their
Friday's non-league affair could opener to Minford
20-0, but
be quite an offensive battle as the bounced back last week to defeat
young potentially tough Eagles
Portsmouth Clay.
The Huntsmen are coached by
could make aJegitimate assault on
former Nor1h Gallla assistant and
tbe already proven White Falcons.
former Meigs High graduate, Ted
TORNADOES ON ROAD
The il-2 Southern Tornadoes take Lehew. now in hJs second year.
Game time at Eastern Is 7: 30
tbelr act on the road to Huntingtonand 8 p.m. for the Southern game.
Ross. Last week the Tornadoes

.
•

..

Opening loss doesn't worry Wyche

n.

"That attitude is not in our locker
room."
The Ben gals, who play the St.
Louis Cardinals Sunday, were
beaten 28-24 by the Seattle Seahawks last Sunday.
"We didn't play a bad game," said
Wyche. "But when you feelyou'rea

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Although
the Cincinnati Bengals lost their
opening game, head coach Sam
Wyche Insists the club Isn't. worried
about a repeat o!last year's dismal
0-5start.
"No one is sitting around saying,
'Here we go again,"' said Wyche.

'&lt;1
~

51
50
9. Tu~a ra11•1a!tC'illh (VIi1 ·11
fi'
JO.CoiUmbltwl i iV I 111 12·01
:14
Si'f"Ond trn: 11. Blutflon 28: 12. nk'q
M;~rkm Local and !1-flf'Ca Ea11t. 2-1 NJch :
H . Cadl7. 111 11; 1~. Cruok.wlll(' 22: ) G.
Mlnrral Rl$!f' 19: 17. Cald'rl·rll 111: 1jt.
Back Rivf'r 111 1~: 19. Hll' l Bucilr~·~·
North, C011l n~on and Hol~!i·, 19 Nll.'h.

good team- and we feel that wayand you lose, you can never say, 'We
played pretty well.' We didn't play
well enough to win, sowedon't count
that as a good day .

JEWELRY IN GAWPOLIS and POMEROY
PIESENTS

BULOVA

•

SEIKO

PULSAR

•

•

LAYAWAY
FOR
CHRISTMAS

1st BATTERY

IS FREE

""'...
'"m
12'\

.,"

111

74

'"""

throughout thP country .

"We do not tell anybody how to

WASHINGTON- As the Sena te
For example, the South African
debates economic sanctions against government has paid former Rea South Africa this week, a few gan campaign manager John Sears
high-powered lobbyists will be doing $1.3 million in quarterly instal all they can to soften an.v action lmenTs since Aprll1983. Among the
against what has become a symbol issues Sears has been working on
of apartheid: t h~ Krugerrand. The this year is the proposed ban on
coin is minted by the white-minority Krugerrand sales. He provided fact
government from gold mined by sbects to at least 63 members of
Congress. arguing that a ban would
politically powerless black miners.
The lobbyists, hired by both the throw thousands of black miners out
South African government a nd the of work.
nation's gold mining Industry,
From January 1984 through
Include a former campaign man- March 1985, the Pretoria governager for Ronald Reagan, George r'ment paid the law firm headed by
Bush's former press secretary, a ex -Se. George Smathers. D-Fia.,
former Senate sergeant-at -arms $406,034. The flrm has kept track of
and a numberofforrnermembersof the progress of at least 18 congresCongress.
·
sional actions, Including the propFormer Rep. Garry Brown . . osal to ban the Krugerrand.
R-Mich., who Is coordinating the
lobbying effort to prevent a barl on
The South African gold Industry's
trading in Krugerrands, concedes
lobbying funds In this country are
that It all may be an excuse In
dlpenscc:l by Its New York market futility. as \10ience continues in
ing arm, International Gold Corp.
South Africa. It 's tbe Pretoria
Ltd. A spokesman for the firm
. government's choice of response ..:.
confirmed It had an operating
reform or repression- that counts,
budget of $ll.3 million for the first
he Indicated.
five months of 1985.
Among International Gold's ex"What we do in Washington Is of
penditures this year Is $165,00) in
little consequence," he told our
retainer fees paid the the Washingassociate Tony Capaeclo, "but what
ton law firm of Kirkpatrick' &amp;
the government dOes in South Africa
Lockhar1. Since 19&amp;3, the firm has
Is what's Important."
been paid a total of $247,857 by
This recognition of reality hasn't
International Gold, to lobby against
stopped the lobbyists from doing the Krugerrand ban.
their best, nor has It discouraged the
At Brown's urging, Kirkpatrick&amp;
South Africans from laylng out
LOckhart in July hired Peter
substantial sums to promote Its
Teeley, Bush'sformerpresssecreaInterests on Capitol Hill.
try. An unspecified part &lt;A Teeley's

,.

functions. the commission, noting
$S,O!Xl monthly reta iner is for adviet•
he Is to provide to Int ernationa l thaI members of Congrr-ss before
.Jan . 9, 1980, ca n spend thei r
Gold. which also hire lobbyist
Howard LiebE'ngood. the formct' campai~n funds for anything they
choose. gave Clay its approval for
Senatesergeant -at-arms. for$10.000
puttin' on the ritz.
a month.
. CONFIDE NTIAL FILE: ReTee ley. point in!( out that his client
gimes may com(' and go in Iran, but
was a law firm, not lite South
the secret polie!' livrs on. In the
African gold indus:ry, declined to
shah's cla y, the dreaded internal
say what kind of advice he is
seculit y force wa ,~o; called Savak.
providing to Int ernational Gold.
When Ayatollah Khomcini took ·
Licbengood called the proposed
over, the&gt; underground enforcers
Krugerrand ban "unfortunate nnd
I:Jecame known as Savamah. Now
unfair," ·and said, "We're doing
our lntL'IligPnCC' !":iOI,Jrces say another
what we can for those proplc" bunch of sf'crct pollee goons has
meaning, apparent ly. hi s client.
appeared as part of the RevolutionShonty' after the firm hired
ary Guards. They repor1 any
Lleix'ngood. but before It was
"devlationism" to-the mullahs, and
~tting any advice from Teeley,
reportedly make up in ntthlcssncss
International Gold on .June · 21
donated $:!.1,000 to th&lt;' Conservative ;Jnd fanatici sm what they Jack in
competence.
Caucus Foundation, a leading New
Right group.
MINI -EDITORIAL: Not so long
Brown himself has carried on a ago Labor Day meant back-toquiet lobbying campaign on behalf . school sa les and end-of-summer
of the KrugPrrand . It has included
vacations. But nowadays Labor
lobbying · his onetime political
Day also means strike deadlines ·
and contract negotiations. No one
opponent, Rep. Howard Wolpe,
begrudges teachers a decent stand - ·
D-Mich., in February,andeseortlng
an International Gold representa - ard ol living. but Increasingly
schoolchildren ai·c paying t hr price
tive to a meeting with a State
in class disruption and make-up
Department official In June.
days. In Chicago, teachers went on
strike for the third st raight year.
UNDER THE DOME: Rep.
Nationwide, more than half a
William Clay, D-Mo., cun-ently In
students have been affected
million
his eighth tennon the Hill, has either
this
year
by teacber strikes. H
grown In office or Is tired of renting
teachers
don't
get any respect, as
formal wear. He asked the Federal
they
so
often
lament,
maybe ll's
Election Commission if he could
they
act
less
like
Mr. Chips
because
properly spend campaign contribu more
like
John
L.
J,.ewis.
~
and
tions to buy a tuxedo for political

342 2nd AVE.
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691

1 13 COURT ST.
POMEROY
992-2054

The.Krugerrand: symbol of apartheid
-·.

Srrond 1m : ll . Bt-llrfontalrr 51: 12.
FrAiorla .1 t 13. 1,\.'hrelt•rsbur~t , l I 2.1: U .
ColUmbUS Hartk&gt;y 21; 15. Ctlfl too Central
C'atllllk." 21: 16. St ." aalrsvtlr 111 ~ : 17.

.......

Tum

~"'

10.Rcii{'\'\J(' (!Ill (11 (2-lh

mi.UMnus cUI'! 1 - Thr nnt Jlft)
Unit('&gt;(] Pn&gt;s~ lotr·rllilllollCll Clllo Hl1&lt; h
~:hOOI Board &lt;1f Coo ch~ ftiOitl&lt;lll t'Dtlnw;
h~· lth
OIISAA phJ ~·on dl,· l~K)n s. fll -,;t
JlliiC"l' \'llfl:'&lt; and ~o~·Qn - lo-;1 ll'('Ords In .

Jack Anderson

• •'

.

era Arlene Ritchie, Kim Dent, Toaya Savoy, Lesa
Rucker. Back- Bey Wigal, Krlstl Hawk, Marga·

EASTERN EAGLETTES - The defending
Sectional Champion Eaotern Eaglette varsity
voUey hall team has currently posted a S-3 season
record In 1985, having set Its sights on winning the
SVAC championship. Pictured are team memb·

By Seott WoHe
Hoping to turn things around
Friday evening, tbe Eastern Eagles stay at home to host the always tough Wahama White Falcons, while Southern's.Tornadoes
will take their act on tbe road In
search of their first victory at Huntington-Ross.
,
Eastern is 1-lon the season, havIng defeated Waterforil4l-14 In the
season opener, tben dropplng a
stunning 1!&gt;-14loss to Parkersburg
Catholic last week.
Eastern has been a flrst half
team so far this season, scoring 36
o! Its 55 polnls In the opening
stanzas.
Ironically, statistics
reveal that the opposition has done
most of Its scoring ln tbe second
half.
The Eagles have enjoyed equal
success from both Its passing and
_rushing game. Two game passlng
totals have hlt the 260 yard mark,
whlle rushing yardage totals ~1
yards.
Offensively, John Rice has been
the Eagle workhorse (18 for 97),
while sophomore Brent Bissell
added a fine effort last week (9 for
43). Doug Beaver, Ryan Bearhs,
and Royce Bissell have collectively added tothe attach.
Quarterback Royce Bissell, hitling 15 of 31 passes for two touchdowns already this season, has
malntalned hls fine aerial attach
of one year ago.
A wide range of receivers, IncludIng Bob Epling, Kevin Manis, Kevin Barger. Ryan Bearhs, Brent
Bissell and Kyle Davis have had
good games. Epling and Morris ·
have hauled In touchdown receptions. Brent Bissell and Davis have

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�Thl,ll'lday. September 12. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily .Sentinel

Meigs stats..

I

~arauders'

INDJVJDVAL BV8BING
Plarer

20 l.S 4.8
13 68 5.2

Jeff McElroy

Huey Eason
Paul DaUey
Scott WIUiamo

Mike Bartrum

38 12.6
IB 3.5 .

4

15 3.8

I

3 3.0
3.0

I
2
S ·13
65 3116
70 223

Mike Chancey
TOTALS
OppOnents

Majors '

3
8

Toqy Shoemaker

•

W

·2.6
U
3.2

P.USING
~-~~ cmp. M&amp;.-IIIt , Y..

, Mike Chancey
Brad RobinSon ·

21

TOTMJI

32

NY

!fl ~1 .li16

lllmt

Tl &amp;I ~"129 14'h
11 fil ~~H l6'h

270 3

....

2
2 0
ill :M I

29 0
Ill S

KC
Chl.

""'"'

Mnnsta

RECEIVING
No, Yell. TD

I Kitchen

Huey eaaon
Mike Bart rum
Brad Robinson
Phll King
BUI Brotbers

9

6f

6

3

61 T1 .44 2 26 ~
~~ !WJ .:fi7 :JBIJ,
~

79

.'i7'J fl.! ,$1 2Y.!
om ~ !iT7 ll
ll9 71 .49:J 11
til) 7~ .461! 14'!.1
fi2 ,
44 ~ 17
~1 fl7 .l?O 3-l

n

Callt
Stll

Player

2t,oi

.496 19

ffi 7{1

w.-ec~il)' 'll~

2

Tl'Xas 6. Oallland J

11

0

13

0

3

22

0

1
I

15
14

0
1

Toronto .1, Dl11ol1 2
Boston&gt;&amp;, Bah atoll' I
Cltic11 ~ !'i. MlnnrlMlfa 0
Mllv.·aukno 4. l'OI:'W Yor k :1
~allle 9.

Scott PU111ns

1

~7

10
2

.....

18-~J.

0
0

fSmlthion

1 ~· 111

ill

Balllrml'l' lDtxon 6-J 1 a 1 Boston

C1l lr a~

I ~ IP IX-'r

' ' '
'
. ENTIRE TEAM RECOGNIZED - The Meigs County Jaycees have recoc·
nlzed the entire Marauder team lor the way it played In last week's 34·7 victory

~eigs

TRIMBLE
(Offen"• e)

(Vr.-Wt. I

over Belpre. The club's "player of -the week" award wOI be shared by all learn
members.

Jeff McElroy
Bill Brothers
Huey Eason ·

I
I
0

0 0
0 0
0 2

6
6
2

Boston 111 Ml_lwaukct•. rd~hl
l&lt;aJlsa~ Cit)' at Oakland, nitfll
Chk·~ at flcank'. nl!&lt;'hl
Texa.'l at C'1ollfor nla, nl!¢11

.....

Pos.

Jim Holber t (12-160) ...
. ............... FL
Jeff Koon s 110-2301 ... ..................... ... , LT
Shannan Rushing~ (12·185) ................ LG
Mark Deal {11-203) ........................... ... C
La rry Brant on { Jl -1851

or Doug Boudlnot (12-165\ ............... ... RG
BlllyShust f11 ·225 ! ......... .. ....... ... ... .... RT
Charley JE'nnlce '12-165 } .................... SE
Denny Davis (11·165\. .... .................... QB
Kt&gt;nny Paul McClelland ( 12 -19~ ) ........ TB
J ohn Lo ng~ 11 -189) ............................. FB
Ma rk Campbell 11 2- 180 !. ................... SB
(Defene)
ENDS - Long and Scott Shamhart {11175! : TACKLES- Cod y Lewis (10-250) a nd
Shust; MIDDLE GUARD - Ron Huiss 112'Xl5l; LINEBACKERS - Mct:IE'lland and
Rushlngs; CORNERBAC KS - Davis and
Campbell; SAFETIES - Ruddy Lent (12tYI J and Holbert.

anywhere , either In the backfield
or split wide , This will be our first
real tes t In defensing against the
pass," said Coach Chancey.
Trimble, losers to Coal Grove 2120 and 32-13 wlnners over Wellston
last week, will outweig)lt the Ma·
rauders considerably. The Tomcats average 206 pounds per man
from tackle to tackle on their offensive line including 230 and 225lbs. at
the tackles. Add a 250 lb. Cody
Lewis and their defensive line
swells another few pounds per
man.
Meigs' offensive line, which has
been the biggest and mos t pleasant surprise of the season, goes at
188 pounds per man from tackle to
tackle..
First year coach Barry Litteral
was an assistant for Trimble last
year before inheriting th&lt;' head job
this year. Prior to Trimble, Litteral assisted at Portsmouth Notre
Dam for three years. Litteral halls
from Portsmouth West high school
and
graduated from Ashl and
(Ohio) College.
The Trimble coach knows the
importance of Friday's game. "I

MEIGS
(OflenR)
Player (Yr. -Wt.)
J . R. Kitchen t11·162J ........ .

t•oa.

.. .. LE

Danny Welsh (11 -191t .......... . ··~-- ...... LT
DavE' Sh u le r (12 ·164 ) ....... ...... ............ LG
John Epple (12-1151 ............................ C
Jason Bus h 111 -202 ) .......................... HG
Scot Powell (11 -2071 ........................... RT

Bill Brothers (10-15(H
or Mike Bartum ~ 10-1800) ................... RE
Mike Chancey ( 12 ·200) ..................... . QB
Brad Robinson ( U-173 ) ...................... TB
Hu('y Easun (11-1621 ......................... WB

look for a playoff-type atmosphere
because all eyes are going to be on
this game. We'll be ready and I
think it will be a real good bail
game." commPnted LitteraL
The Trimble coach added ,
"Meigs Is a very good and wellbalanced ball club. It runs and
throws with equal strength.
Chancey (Mike) Is a smart quarterback and Robinson (Brad) is
a very good running back."
Robinson needs 129 yards rushing to become the Meigs all-time
rushing leader. The 173 lb. senior
ta!lback has 1424 career yards
while the present leader, 1982
grade Roger Kovalchick, mounted
1553 yards during his stint as a Marauder. Robinson gained 1258
yards last year and another 21 as a
sophomore to go with his 145 thru
far this year.
'
Meigs has met Trimble twlce in
the past, losing last year 14-8 in the
final seconds, but defeated the
'Cats' 23-7 in 1983. Trimble last
claimed the TVC championship in
1980 when they earned a berth in
the state playoffs. Trimble won its
TVC tri-championshlp In 1978 and
again was co-champion in 1979.
Trimble was runner-up to Belpre
last season, going 8-2 overall and 81 in the league.
The Marauders, on the other
hand, are off to their best start
•!nee 1972 when they won the first
four games before having Its bubble burst 37-0 at Ironton. Meigs
went on to post a 6-4 record that

H.l 54 .tilli -

K1~9'Ni-

Mntrl
Phlla.

year.
· line, however. Having protected
Paul Dalley, Meigs' junior full- Chancey well and knocking huge
back-linebacker, is listed as ques· holes in beefier defensive lines, It
tionabie for Friday's game. Oatley lneludes Scott Powell and Denny
suffered a sprained ankle in the Welsh, tackles; Dave Shuler and
Belpre game and also came down Jason Bush, guards, and the cenwlththe nu this week. If he can't go, ter Epple.
freshman Jeff
McElroy, who
rushed for 66 yards in 12 carries at
Leaders
Belpre, wlll get the call at fullback
Wtlnl(
while senior center John Epple will
t &amp;~ on :1.1 platC' appC'amn«'!&gt; x no. rl
gaiTII"!! f"8C'h lf'an'l ha~ pWyf'dl
double up on defense at linebacker.
N.tlunalk~
The Marauder defense, which
~~:abrhpet.
J\o'lr(; . St
]~filS !H 182 ,JII)
has allowed but _one score this year
r :m . LA
124 4.'N 92 141 ..'t !l
and that came when Belpre was
Hrr. Sri .
1:1."! !'D8 711 I:"1!1 •.'l ll
!'ndbr~.
10!9 ~~ ~ lli3 .lll
backed up on their one yard line,
l.'ll ~111 98 l!'i7 ..110
Hn~ . Mil
only to score on a 99-yard pass
121 4ll ~~ t\"t .n
~T I'. C'n
Uti ~ll 1U 104 .:m
l'rltl'. Crt
play, has been a big surprise conlJ'l ~I 7.1166 .:117
f:"') Tln,
sidering Its inexperience. Meigs
Crw.. Ho
124 4IU ~7 147 .:J\4
Sdr.c:•. I.A
111 ,\"ll .\1106 .:fla
returned but two starters, middle
AIIM.'I'II.·IUII..f'ar;ut'
•
guard j'tobinson and linebacker
l(llbrhpa.1.
Huey Eason 1cornerback last
1.11' !;58 !*I :m .J67
J3£1! S, &amp;
Ar11 , KC '
L124bi !\1Hill : w.1
year!.
1.16 5.'16 ~ JR1 .l2fi
Mtln~o~:J:.
End Raymond Rider leads the Ma·
Hndrsn. ·
J:!l¥0 12.115] .325
Brh·. c.,,.
1:11 ~17 !fl 157 ..110
rauders in tackles with 12 while EaHan!', C'h
uti ~s 74 t611 ~n
son and tackle Kevin Meadows folI .at '\ ', Bit
102 4~ !&gt;"'lll ..l'lfi
( 'opr. Ml
U1 !N.l • 7H ll&gt;li ..116
low closely with 11 each.
O.. v ~. Sol •
ll1 4~ 72 150 ..1).1
The Chancey to end J . R.
Mill ', Ml
1111 479 11:2 tf-1 .:rn
llomi• Kur.
Kitchen passing ~omblnation
, Natlollill l c a,Qll(' M urphy. All :f.:
has been clicking In both previ (;IJI'I"Tl'ro, l .f\ :tl ; &amp;midi. Phil :1!1; Pur k1•r,
C'ln '!7: n u1('r , NY. 'Ji.
ous games . Chancey, who has yet
hmf'rir:'an I A'll~· - ~s k .£h l :1:1; 1-: \"ans.
to throw an interception ln 32
Df.t. llalbon l. KC. G. Thoma!'. So:•a .11; &amp;•I I.
Tor and Mall lrlll'l.\ ', NY :lS.
passes, has hit his favorite target
IWI'WIIIil.lk'CIIn
Kitchen nine times for a whopNaliunal l..t · a~l ' - l~i!rlu·r. ('] n 1111 ;
ping 164 yards and two touchMuqlh~ , A11 !IIi; !h'I"T, Stl. 92 ; Wilson, Phil
1fT: Clark. Sll . ~ downs. Chancey has completed
Arrx&gt;• lc:;ln I.NII{Ut&gt; - Mu!t l n~~-. NY 1'2'1;
21 of his 32 attempts for 66 per
Murmy, Bait l lfl: Ri pkA'! , BaltandWtnfk&gt;ld.
NY !18: Rk'l'. Bo~ !n.
cent, good for 270 yards.
The impressive Marauder offensive slats can be credited to the
play of the Marauder offensive

7.1 &amp;I .\11 10
Ql til ~m H ~

"''-

The Daily Sentinel

fiG 11

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(USPS IU·... )
A Dlvltloa of Multimedia, lie.

l.ools ::11 Chlcaa"O
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cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
Marauderette volleyball team
scored a pair of wins this week to
raise Its record to 5-2 overall and
3-2 in the TVC.
Coach Kim Ailkins' netters
whipped Vinton County 15-3, 15·
11 as Jenni Couch Jed the way
with eight points.
Other top scorer_s included
Jodi Harrison with six points
(three aces), Julie MU!er five
points (three aces), and Jenny
MU!er four points (two aces) .
Top spikers · were Julie Miller
with six and Jenny Miller, four .
In the rese~ve game, Vinton
County won 15-2, 15-6. Shelly Stobart led Meigs with three points

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1 POMEROY - Meigs' twOtime def"'lddng TVC and sectional
champion golf team posted two
more victories this week to go 13-1
on the year and 7-0 In the TVC.
At Oxbow, the Marauders'
Marty Hart shot a 41 for medaHst
honors as Coach Bob Ashley's
Hnksters shot a 169 to best Belpre
(175) and Warren Local (177).

golf team posts two more .victories
.42.0, ,Lee Powell is averaging 42.4,
and Matt Baker has a44.1 average.
Coach Bob Ashley credits the tremendous improvement of Meigs
golf to long-Ume Marauder rooter,
Bill Childs. Tonight, Meigs goes
agat,nst Gallipolis at the JayMar
golf course. 'The Blue Devils

Earlier at ATI¥'ns. Meigs edged
Chllllcothe 176-177, whUe Nelsonvllie-York was third wlth 193 and host
Athens was fourth with a 215.
Meigs' Parker Long qas been the
team leader to date as he averages
a smooth 37.0 strokes per outing.
Hart follows with a 40.0 average
with Rodd Harrison close behind at
40.1. Shawn Baker comes in with a

.------....---Countdown
'Ole f1nal ...

4,l&amp;'J' - A llhl' single lo r1Rht-a'l"lll'r ln
· lhP 11th lnntng oil St. ·WuliJ rJatU·handcr

lt'lf Ll.lhtl on Aue. :121.

1

A hil-and-run, grwrd sl~lt· to
rl~hl In the ttird Inning oil Plnm,un:::h
rij[ht-hander Jll!i(&gt; Ocl.con on Aug. 29.
4.1~ - A groord J!lngko up thf. m lddk•
In 'tk&gt; sbtth innl'l!: orr PtllsburRh f'Rhl
4111W -

hander Rick Rbo(kon on Scpr. 1
' i ,l86 - A bour.clng slnRie 0\lt'r lhl'
head d third baiiE'ITlllll Jim Mon1son In
lh.&gt; el~th Inn~ ott Plllsbu~h , r1,.:hthandlri' Rkil Rholrn M Sf-pt . 1.
4.181 - A Sin!!~ lo rfl;!hl In IN' f!ij!htll
lnnlllJI; off St. WJls ~ft ·handc-r Krn
O.~· P)· on Sfpl. f .

-... ...

Transactions
S."n F' rand~- Jw.:·all('•d pilchf'·s ROI{t!r
Mi1son and Bobbl.• Mool'f''anrllnfk'l&lt;h Mlk(l
Woodard fi'M'I r;hr.rn!); or thC' Pacific Cow.;t

......

from Rrggir Patt!'rson on SPpl . 6.
4 . ~ - A !info slngi(' In till' (IrS! ,lnnlna
10 icljo('l'lll('r oo thE' first pitch from

stJmf'(t forward Vol~

Wintt•rs.
t.:t ah - Cut cmlf't' llllly Pnol1 1:
asslslant roa{'h Srolt l.a)'tk'll 10 a

.'IIJm«&lt;

PaiiC'l'SOn on St-pi. 8.
4.l'fl - A lint' slnJk' IO riRhl in thP
nflh lnninK otr Jbojl:gif' Patlf.'rson Cll Srp l,

8.
-1.1!12 - A 111'1(' slnglr 10 ll&gt;fl -('('!lk•r In
thl- flrsl lnnln. ~&lt;: rlf Erit' ShiM· on1 5rpl . ·
11.
.

ss

ARMAND IS BACK!

~ ~'l'U r

wmrac1.

""""'

Arlzo l\il !\tulf' - N;mwd Kt'i!h Hu!lhl-s and
ROO (llavw. as sistanT ba 5krlball &lt;'Dtl&lt;'hC's.
MII I'Shall- NamnJ Da-.·ld Hralnl' alhli'IM·
dhl'Chr.

WEEKENDS 7 P.M. Til ?

OSCAR'S OF COURSE

PHONE
446-9010

•

SEE WHAT YOU CAN
BUY FOR

R.ca~

AT THE PINAO AND ORGAN
KEYBOARD FOR YOUR DINING
,PLEASURE

handed Meigs its only loss this
year. Next week, the Marauders go
to Nelsonville-York on Monday
while hosting AThens and Wahama
on Tuesday, at home again on Wednesday wlth Wellston , and another
home match Thursday wlth Logan.
All matches start at 4::ll p.m,

Friday 13th SALE!

4,188 - A N.'O-run ~~erond- lnnlnl! nome
rUn Into rlght· f~d bk&gt;ac~ In Wrtaley
F1cld on a 3-2 pltdl trom Chlr:~~;o' s Dl;&gt;rclt
&amp;llr lh 011 Si'pl. G.
4.189 - A lilY' slnglf' In lhr sixth
lnnlnl! to righl-ct'lliE.'r on . t~ firsl pllch

Son Franclo;co at Adanla. l\lght
San Dk&gt;go at Houston. nlghl

Meigs volleyball team
records ·2 more wins

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
llshlna Company!Multiniedta, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-21S6. Se·

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including a pair of aces. Vinton
County's Ann Pierce had a whop·
ping 22 points and four aces.
Against Southern, Meigs won
in three sets, 15-0, 12-15, 15-10.
Harrison led Meigs with 11 points
(five aces) while Shannon Hindy
had 10 points (four aces) and
Rhonda Neece four points (three
aces), For Southern, Becky Ad·
klns led ,the way with nine points
(two aces) followed by R Reiber
and W. Wolfe with five points
each. Reiber also had two aces.
Julie Miller led Meigs with five
spikes. Southern won the reserve
match , 15-8, 15·3,
Meigs' next home game is
Sept. 17th at 6 p.m.

Friday's high school games

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NATIONAL LEAGUE

seeks revenge against TVC rival Trimble

•
By Keith Wisecup
•For the third consecutive week,
Meigs will attempt to avenge a defeat frorri last year as the Maraud ers (2-0) host TVC rival Trimble
(1-l) at Pomeroy Friday.
In the season's first two weeks ,
Coach Charley Chancey's Meigs
eleven has looked sharp In nearly
every category In beating both
Fairland (17-0) and Belpre (34-7).
Both of those schools defeated
Meigs In 1984, as did Trimble (148), for Meigs' only losses.
The Tomcats bring to town the
most diversified offensive attach
the Marauders have faced this
year. Unlike both run-oriented
F;drland and Belpre, the Tomcats
have a fine passing arm In quarterback Denny Davis. The Cats', a
long-time football power, also feature a strong running attack with
195 pound Kenny Paul McClelland
at taUback and bruising 189lb. fullback John Long.
"Trimble . has some good,
skilled athletes. I-t has a btg,
quick backfield and its quarterback, Denny Davis, throws very
welL McClelland will play a bout

Player

18
12
7

tHav.'ldn.~

B-61 at .Calltumla 1Wit1

Mlnr.:&gt;Wa al (1{'\I('Jand, 2. rwl-nl)l:hl
Thronlo u l NN' YOI'k. night
Balllrtlot(&gt; at DMroll , nl1&lt; hl

TO FG PA Pia

0 0
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1lttl~Jdlon 8-13 1. 7:35 p.m

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J . R . KltcbE"n
Mike Chancey

1Rawk'y ll-61. '1:35 p.m.

S..n FrandScO iUIPolnt1-J21 at Houston

Frlda;f 11 G~ne~~

Brad Robinson

n .ynchlD-7\, l :ilp.m.
Montreal 1Ywrr.n12-2! 111 P hlladfolphiM

San Dk:w:J

12·71 . 10::rl p.m.

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Kansas City 2. Ca lifOrnia I

INTERCEPTION BETVIINS

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'l'hur•ho·'" G.m~ CAl nme F.DT)

IHuey Eason
J . R . Kitchen

11 67 .m4 U%
II 70 .493 14~
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The Daily

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Russell at Rock Hili
Wehrle at Coal Grove
P-ortsmouth at Ironton
Ripley at Sissonville (14th)
Fairland at Athens
Jackson at Portsmouth West
Miami race at Logan
Marietta at Parkersburg
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Southern at Huntington Ross

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Eastern at Wahama
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Trbnbie at Meigs
Warren Local at Alexander
Belpre at Wellston
Federal-Hocking-at Vinton County
Miller at Neisonvme-York

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Just a few minutes before Rose
came to bat, a ,frantic fan spotted a
m:an with a ball -p:lint in his pocket.
"Can I buy that pen?," the fan
asked. "I gqtta kN&gt;p a scorecard of
thjs game cause it's gonna be
history, bul rain 't got a p&lt;'n. "
An ' usher working the ou1!1eld
seats was gelling more tips than he
had Set&gt;n in several seasons.
" Ain 't this great." he said. "We
need a Rose record ('VE'IY game."
When RoS(' came to bat at 8:01
p.m .. the fans stood in unison and
began to chant, "PNc,Pete, Pete."
Show's first pitch was outside.
Many fans groanoo. Rost' swung on
the second pitch and hundfeds ~r
camera flashbulbs p:lpped. A lot of
peOple wanted their own picture of
ba~eball history lp the making. But
Rose fouled off the pitch.
The next pitch was a ball for a 2·1

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CINCINNATI (UP!)- Call him
"Hesays.'ishouldhavecauflhtthe
Eric "No" Show.
ball,'" said Martln!"Z. "He told
The San Diego right-hander, after (pitching coach Galen) Cisco. If he
allowing Pete Rose's historic !mew I was there, he wanted me to
4,192nd hlt and losing a well-pitched hear it."
2·0 decision to the Cincinnati Reds
The conversation grew fnore
Wednesday night, left himself heated. Martinez said, "Jfyou'vegot
unavailable to discuss the game.
· something to say, tell me."
Maybe it was the Rose base hit
According to Martinez, Show
Maybe it was a fifth-Inning dugout demanded: "What are you talking
skirmish with left fielder Carmela about?"
. Martinez. Maybe it was simply the
Within seconds, the two went at
frustration of a season In which the each other and teammates quickly
Padres have played well below the intervened. It was over in S&lt;'Conds.
standard they set in winning the Nevertheless, it was a strange
National League pennant last year. sidelight to history.
Show has suffered In the sp:Jtllght
Whatever the reason, Show did little
IO help himself by hiding when he over tl¥' last year, He had a
could have been dlSC\issing baseball disastrous post·season, eventually
history.
.
'
declining comment on his poor
"He should have stayed and ·- performance.
talked to you people," Martinez
lncontrasttoShow,Martinezwas
said.
willingtodlscussthebasehltandthe
1
' Show allowed the Rose hit on a 2-1 incident In the dUgOut but appeared
pitch in the first inning. It was a to hold oo malice toward Show.
"It happened tonight," he said. "I
looping liner that fell betwe&lt;&gt;n
Martinez and center fielder Kevin hope It rever happens again. To win,
McReynolds. With no chance to you have to stick together. I don't
catch the ball on a fly, Martinez think nobody's against nobody. We
actu:"IIY mad" a ~lid play by both reacted the same way."
Padre manager Dick Williams
holdmg Rose to ""single off the
difficult bounces at Riverfront . said the Incident merely reflected
Stadium
feelings that can develop among
But it was a third-Inning sequence competitive individuals.
"This happens all the time,"
'! !hat apparently Irritated Show. ~10
this
season.
With
one
out,
Rose
Williams
said. "You get 25 men
I
walkedandwenttothirdwhenDave living together for seven months,
Parker lqoped a single to left. Rose you're going to have flare.ups. You
,eventually scored the game- getthem in football when they bump
winning run and Show eevidently il?ads,.Sometimestheybumpalittle
believed Parker's hit should have too hard."
been caueht.

count. Then came history ,
RoS(', deep in his classic batting
crouch, uncoiled and st mked a clean .
single to left-center.
He rounded first, retreated lo the
bag and clapped his hands. But
50,00l fans were way ahead of him,
For SC'Ven saUd minutes- while
fireworks popped, while lhe Goo·
dycar blimp fla shed "4192" and
while Reds' owner Marge Schott's
gift of a rro "Corvette" automobile
was driven onto the field- the fans
saluted Rose with tons of applause.
All of Rose's teammates rushed
from the dugout and surrounded
him at first base.
Show graciously walked ovPr
from llle mound to offer hfs
congratulations. .
For several minutes, Rose fought
back the tears. But finally, he
hugged his old friend, first base
coach Tommy Helms. and the Iears
flowed down his face.
The fans' applause went on and on
and on- a Iitt le too longforoneman,
so he sat down. On the pitcher's
mound. It was Show, who had just
become the answer to baseball's
latest trivia question.

Reds' Parker admits
cocaineinvolvennent
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - Dave
Parker testlsfled he bought cocaine
from accused cocaine pusher Curtis
Strong, but denied causing the
Pittsburgh Pirates' downfall by'
Introducing his teammates to
anal her accused dealer. ·
Parker, currently a Cincinnati
Rl&gt;ds slar, Wednesday admitted
using cocaine as a member of the
Pirates fmm 1976 until he decided It
was hurting his play and quit In 1982.
But he rebuffed defense attempts
to portray him as the man
responsible for hooking younger
teammates on the drug and causing
the collapse of the Pirates, who won
lhe world championship in 1979, but
are now a l~t·place team.
"I don't carry that burden
becau,;e 1 don't take resronsitiility
for what adults ·do," said Parker.
"Those relationships are ones that
adults conduct with one another."
ParkC~r was scheduled to ..€tum
for more rross-examlnation today,

the elghlh day of the federal trial of
Strong, a 38-year-old Philadelphia
caterer charged with 16 counts of

Weyer makes history too
CI)'IC INNATT !UPIJ Lee · off then call another ball bE'foreRose
Weyer knew he would he part of connected for the record-beaker.
• "U !Md to call him out on strikes
baseball history - for the second
time.
four times I would have. I had to
'" II old Pcteacoupleorthreetimes make the call. A strike's a strike,"
a few yea rs ago I would bE' behind the Weyer said.
plate when he breaks the record,"
Weyer said Rose did oot say
Weyer said. "I just had a feeling II · anything when he came up to bat,
wasgoi ngtoworkout lhatway."
but Weyer said he pid look "all
Thai's prec isely where Weyer business-like."
was Wednesday night when Pete
''I'm glad It happened. 1 knew It
RoSf' s troked hit No. 4192to left field was a hit right away," Weyer said.
off San Diego's Eric Show In the
The first to congratulate Rose at
bolt om of Ihe first inning, moving first base was Garvey. "I t9ld him,
himself ahPad of 1'y Cobb on the 'Thanks for the memories,' "
all-time hit list.
Garvey said. "l don't think he said
Weyer also became theanswerlo loo much to anybody. I saw a few
a future baseba ll trivia question tears (from Rose) and I kind of like
Wednesday. Weyer was umplriJlg that. There's a time for tears and
third base in the 1974 game when thatwasoneofthem"
HankAaronhilhis715thhomerunto
eclipse BabE' Ruth's record.
Weyer Is oneofthreeparticlpants
In bolh games. The other IWo are
SI('Ve Garvey, who was playlngflrst
bas&lt;' for Ihe Dodgers on Aaron's hit
arid for Rose's, and Jerry Royster,
who was a reserve with the Dodgers
in 1974 and played second base for
1he Padres Wednesday.
"Remember those two guys thai
ran around the bases with Aaron? I
was the one who chased th!im
away," Weyer said .
Weyer did not play a similar mle
on Rose's hit, buthewastheoncwho
called a ball, watched Rose foul one

selling cocaine to major-league
players in Pittsburgh between 198!
and 1984.
1"1\e two-time Na!tonal League
hatting champion - the sixth
major-leilguer to appear against
Strung- testified under Immunity
that he made four or five buys from
the defendant In Pittsburgh and
another In Philadelphia.
Other ballplayers who have ,
testified against Strong Included
Kansas City Royal LonniE: Smith,
New Yotk Met Keith Hemancte?,
Los Angeles Dodger Enos Cabell
and San, Francisco Giant Jeff
Leonard.
Parker spent most of his ttme on
the witness stand Wedneoday explaining his relationship with Shelby
Greer, a former Pittsburgh resident
who oow works as a sales represen· ,
tatlve for a telecommunications
company in Philadelphia.
Gnoer was Indicted with Strong
and five other men earlier this
summer on drug tra!flcklng
charges. Strong is the first to stand
triaL Three others have pleaded
guilty, and three more, including
Grt?er, are awaiting lrlal.
Under cmss-examination by de·
fense attorney Adam Renfr()(j,
Parker said he helped two Houston
A.'tros, Cabell and J.R. Richard,
buy cocaine from Greer.
Parker said he lntrodui"ed Greer
tohisPirateteammatesasagasand
oil Investor and occasionally "ar·
ranged through oo~ travellngsecretary for Shelby Greer to be on our
flights."
But he repudiated Renfroe's '
repeated attempts to portray
Parker as a middleman oo alleged
drug deals between Pirate team·
mates and Greer.
Renfroe's questions Included
marks about Parker's character
and his "$Zl,&lt;XXJ Rotex watch" and
"$2),00ldlamondrlngs,"promptlng
presiding Judge Gustave Diamond
to excuse the jury and admonish
Rl&gt;nfroeforimpmperconducl.

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..
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·•

W ·

Give-Away!

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. . . . .WILL SEND 20 PEOPLE TO EACH
. WVU HOME GAME THIS SEASON .
COME, IN AND REGISTER FOR A PAIR OF

FREE TICKETS !

Be Sure To 'Utke It All! .
Your ~tor ~ribet a opoclfk: number of pUla when he
writ• a preKriprlon. By ualnlt the endre quandty at the
,....ulnd frequency. you make oure that the medlcari()ft
~ovlcla Ia full benefia, juot ao your doetM preoerlbed.

Village Pharmacy
'

PH. 992-6669
271 N. 2ND AVE.

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CJNCJNNATJ (UP!) - It didn't
lake long for a sellou t crowdof47 2.17
Pete Rose fans to get what they
ca me for Wednesday night.
A similar sellout throng had
turned out Tuesday nig ht , bul hud
gone home unrcwarded as Rose
went 0-for-4 and failed to sci ·
baseball' s all-time hit record.
flu I Wednesday night, il only took
four pitches.
With all the fans in Riverfront
Stadium on Iheir feel, Rose came to
bat in the first inning and lined Eric
Show's fourth pilch to left-center
field for car"!"r hit No. 4,192,
s~at tering the mark of 4.1911hat 1'y
Cobb had held for 57 years.
For sevrn solid minutes after the
hit, the hometown fans paid tribute
to baseball's most pmductlve hitter
with a thunderous~tandingovatlon.
Rose stood at flrsl base and cried. ·
"l..oo·d, llovo him, " said a fan .
Rose, a native of Cincinnati, is a
blu,e -colla r 'type of hero In the city.
He doesn't have thegrealesl natu ral
ability, bul gives every play an
ali-{JUI effort.
After Rose failed lo produce Ihe
record-breaking hit Tuesday night,
fans immediately lined up to buy
tickets 10 Wednesday night's game.
It was the first back·lo-back
baseball sellout in Cincinnati in
more than seven years- and It was
all because of one man.
The start of both games had to be
delayed 15 minutes " to allow fans
still outside to enter the stadium lo
view the anticipa:fcrl historicevC'nt , ··
as a message on the gianl
center-field scoreboard lold impatient ROSt'-watchers.
"Kind of reminds you of the World
Series, don 't it," said a fan in the
ri~ht - lield nosebleed seats.
"Yeah," replied a fellow fan , "a
one-game World Series where lhe

score don't matter.''

Tissue Ca•e
AEROSOL

Cincy fans give Pete
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ROSE PASSES COBB- Pete
oonnec~ for hit number 4 I921o
break Ty Cobb's all-time hit mark Wednesday night In the first ln~ing at
Riverfront Stadium against Eric Show and the San Diego Padres: UPI.

ANIMAL MUGS

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The Deily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

MIDDLEPORTI OH.

DRAWING Will BE HElD EACH THURSDAY
PRIOR TO EVERY HOME GAME
1 oN() PURCHASE NECESSARY •YOU 00 NOT HAVE TO BE PRESENT TO WIN •ONE
PER HOUSEHOLD.

'•

·..

�Family medicine

Deafness and electronic device

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
..•Mislaoi Profeosor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic MedlcfDe
QUESTION: My brother has
severe nerve damage in his ears
and has been deaf since a childhood
accident I r~ad that there
product that can
help people like
him to hear. Can
you tell me about
it
ANSWER: A

new electronic

•

device- approved by the Food and
Drug Administration In November
1984 - is helping some deaf people
to hear a little bit better. Electrodes
from the device penetrate a
snail-shaped organ In the Inner ear
called the cochlea (pronounced
coke-lee-ah). In a person with
normal hearing, it is the coc!llea
that translates sound energy into
the electrical nerve lnnpulses that
the brain Interprets as sound.

Mayo C11nlc Hea!tn a..etter, over

The device, called a "cochlear
Implant," supplies electrical
·energy from an external microphone directly to the cochlea. These
electrical lnnpulses then stimulate
the firing of the nerves leading to
the brain's hearing centers.
The device, which Is coin-shaped
and has a short wine that lies
against a hearing nerve, consists of
several parts. A microphone in the
outer ear collects sou nil waves and
transmits signals Into a prooessor,
which is worn outside the body on a
belt or in a pocket. The processor
sends signals to a transmitter.
These are then "broadcast" to a
receiver that Is lnnplanted In the
bone just behind the ear. Electrodes
connect the receiver to the Cochlea.
Cochlear implants are uselul for
people whose' deafness Is due to
disease .:... such as tumors, vtruses
and infections such as meningitis , or injury that has destroyed the
special "sound sensitive" hairs that
line the cochlea. According to the

OO,CXXl people have this problem.
The cochlear implant Is especially
helpful to those who can remember
normal hearing before they became deaf.
QUESTION: Does .the cochlear
Implant completely restore
hearing?
ANSWER: The advice does not
allow · someone to hear again
normally. However,ltcanallowthe
wearer to perCeive fiuctuatlons In
the intensity and pattern of sounds,
Words sound muffled, and a person
cannot understand speech through
the lnnplant alone. But most users
can distinguish between male and
female vOices, and may learn to
Identify the voices· of friends and
family.
The key advantage is that
wearers can hear environmental
sounds like car horns and sirens,
adding to their safety. Most users
C;in distinguish sounds like foot·
steps, crying infants and running ·

in the abseoce of Noreen Ondrusko,
who recently resigned to accept
other employment.
Mrs. Thomas noted that the
families Involved in tbe project have
. requested in addition to another
session with Mrs. Palmer. a repeat
of a demonstration program by
Veterans Memorial Hospital on
personal care and skUls and another
session on "Death and Dying."

Pam Garretson of tbe Area
Council on Aging was added to the
advisory board. Plans were dis·
c ussed for securing a person to
replace Ms. Ondrusko as coordinator since the project Is uncompleted .
David Sutherland of Ohio· University, involved In rural gerentology
work, proposed using a graduate
student tocompletetheprojectwork
which includes besides the three

•• .•.

CL~:SSII=lED ~D:S

water.Theycanalsobeartbelrown 't. ~;:;::;:;:;:;:;:;;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;~~~~~;:~

PHOTO .sP·ECIAL

voices.

brother
get a cochlear
QuEsTioN:
Howimplant?
can my
ANSWER: Cochl~ar Implants
can only be done by specially
trained ear surgeons. They require
a fi!W days· of hosp11allzation, and
about a month of healing before
results are known. It takes up to a
yeat to lear how to Interpret the
unusual sounds that the device
transmits. '!'he cost of the device
and the implantation can run over
$10,CXXl•and may not be covered by .,
Insurance.
.
While its cost may be prohibitive
to some, the cochlear implant can
be a major improvement for some
people with total loss ot hearing.

8x10 ·
IN LIVING

·"FREE"

"Family Medicine'' Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic 1
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens, ·
'
Ohio, 45701.

I

•No Age Limit
*Limit 1 Per Person
•One Special Per Family
•Single or Grups Taken

•

DATE:
FRIDAY

additional training sessions, the
formulation of a training package,
written and video, suitable to be
replicated by other agencies, a
requirement of the funding agency.
Advisory board members attending the meeting were Cindy Oliveri,
Florence Richards, Teresa Collins,
R.N., Dr. James Witherell, Mike
Swisher, Ms . Garretson, CharleneHoeflich, and Mrs. Thomas.

&amp;SATURDAY, SEPT. 13 &amp; 14
PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS

FRIDAY 11 A.M. TIL 7 P.M.
SATURDAY 10 A.M. TIL 4:30 P.M.

ELBERFELDS DEPARTMENT STORE
POMEROY

Photos hy Honey Portraits

P~emium

I
I
I
1

motor oil

LAdies golf noted

e

I

Twenty women attended the
ladies golfing day at the Jaymar
Golf Course Tuesday.
A party for members of the ladies
association was set for Tuesday,
Oct. I with a scrambiP lobe held and
dinner served. Tuesday winners
after 18 holes of play were Margaret
Follrod. low gmss; Pearl Welker.
low net. and Elizabeth Lohse, low
putt s.

I

· Gulf

'

10W/40

.

0

Gulfpride
Super:
Premium

10WI40
.

I
APTER IIPO. UBATE
I
OM A I QUART PURCIIASR I
BALE PRICE..................... I
.I
I

Dinner set
POMEORY - Public dinner wUI
be held at theSeniorCltizensCenter
Friday evening with serving from 5
to 6:30 p.m . The dinner at $3 will
include either lasagna or chicken
and noodles, a vegetable, salad and
roll. A squaredancefrom7 tol0p.m.
will follow the dinner.

exp. 9/18/85

·. ~

..

~

DISC PAD SETS
SAVE

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff Writer
Joe and Jack Kennedy, sons
Wllillam and Car·
Kennedy of
Athens Road.
probably hav·
tbe time of
lives this

TI{URSDAV

POMEROY - Rock Springs
center for only a .few hours. Well,
GrangewlllmeetatSp.m.Thursday
the storm didn't perform the way It
night at the hall.
·
should have so they were at the
center for three days and three
LAUREL CLIFF - Laurel Cliff
nights. Batps were unheard of and
Better
Health Club, 7:30 p.m.
food wasn't all that plentiful.
Thursday
at home of Iva Powell.
However. L!la says officials In·
volv&lt;id handled the situation
CHESTER -Shade River Valley
beaut lfu lly.
will meet at 8 p .m . Thursday
Lodge
After - the storm. lhe Mllches
at the hall in Chester.
returned to Anna Marie Island and
........
coqtlnued their vacation. "Don't
FRIDAY
surprise me · none," to quote
CHESHIRE
- Revival through
Dorothy Oliver. After all. I know ·
Friday at Old Bethel Church, Route
Meigs CountJans can roll with the
7 and Storys Run Road. with Calvin
punches.
Minnis the evangelist at 7 p.m.
nightly.
An earlier article on t.he naming

__

of Greg Dale Justis to The Society
for Distinguished American High
School students listed only one
grandmother, Mrs. Audrey of
Pomeroy. There is .a second
grandmother. She Is Mrs, Irene
Justis of Mason , W.Va.
~---- '

r know . You gn)w weary of my
telling you, bul I can't resist. The
Ohio Department of Highways ha s
announced new contracts awarded
totaling $9,4~;594. You guessed It.
Meigs County is not included in the
counties to benefit .

----r--

The musical groups appearing at
the Middleport Block Party Satur·
day kept the . action going and
offered a great variety for the
audience. Amplification was pro. vided for all of the groups by Sweet
Mountain Sound and seasoned
perlormers know how important
good sound is to a show .
Members of. the gmup own all of
the equipment which you saw being
And leave it to Mark and Lila used Saturday. And- you do know
. Mitch, Mulberry Heigpts residents, who the me.mbers are - Jenny
who managed to vacation In Sheets. TlmGlaze,RogerandMary
Florida just at the right time- the Gilmore with Ron Ash pitching In
arrival of the hurricane, Elena.
now a nd again on some of tbe vocal
They were visiting with Mr. and work .
Mrs. Charles Spencer, former
----Pomeroy residents. on Anna Marie
The History of Tuppers Plains
Island where the Spencers livP book by Agoes Hill has arrived and
when Elena jolne&lt;l the party . Tlw is being distributed . If you live In
Mltches along with everyone else Tuppers Plains a nd ordered a copy
were ordered to evacuate and they of lltl' book please pick it up at Mrs.
spent two hours in bumper-to- Hill's home.
bumper traffic on the causeway In .
----an attempt to reach an evacuation
Ma11ha Howell who Is employed
center. ·
in the officP of Mayor Fred
While they wereenroute,the car Hoffman. Middleport . has IJ&lt;oen
was being jarred by the wind and taken oul of intensive care at
the waves leaping over the vehicle.
Veterans Memorial Hospital and Is
They reached the evaculation showing Improvement .following a
center
It was full so they were heart attack . You can send cards to
assigned l"''!n alternate center- a
room 122.
.church.
~
' ----.
: 1!'-Hope the little cool wave Is
They were ~xpectlng to be at the · helping you to keep. smiling.
·

HARTFORD - Revival continues through Sunday at Church of
Christ in Christian Union at Hartford, W.Va., with Rev. Dennis
. Weaver d Point Pleasant speaking.
Singers will be Dennis and Brenda
Weaver. Services 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Trinity ChUrch In
Pomeroy will serve lunch and
evening meals Friday between 11
a.m., and 7 p.m . Sandwiches,
chicken and noodles. rolls, coleslaw,
potato salad, baked beans. desserts
and bevel'ages will be available.
POMEROY - School of Instruc tion will be conduct.ed when Mary
Shrine, White Shrine of Jerusalem
meets at 8 p.m. Friday at lhe
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
POME;ROY - Mary Shrine.
Order of the White Shrb1e of
Jel'usalem, will meet Friday at 8
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All officers are urged to
attend as ritualistic work will be
pe11or.med. There will be potluck
l'efreshments.

SATURDAY
CHESTER - Dorothy Ritchie,
statecouncilorofOhio, Daughtusof
America, will be honored with a
reception ~~ the Chester firehouse
Saturday evening. Reservations are
to be made with Erma C-leland.
985-3955.
POMEROY - Evangelist Herb
Inscoe will speak at the Pomeroy .
Senior Citizen's Center, 7:30p.m.,
Saturday evening. Special singing

by the Pleasant Valley Trio will be
featured. The public Is Invited.

Baptist Church at
Sunday.

Tbe Walter
POMEROY (Squibb) Gilmore annual reunion
will be held Saturday at the roadside
park on Route 33. Gilmore's 88th
birthday. will be celebrated . A
potluckdinnerwlll be served at 12:·30
p.m. Family andfrlendsareinvlted.

POMEROY- Rev. Bud Hatfield
will be speaker for homecoming
services Sunday at the Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church In Christ

10:30 a .m .

Church , Texas Community. Afternoon services begin at 1:00 p.m.
There will be special singing .
Sdnday school begins at 9:30 and
morning wor\;hip at 10:30 a.m.
follow('(! by a carry In dinner at noon ·
in fellowship hall.

POMEROY - A gospel sing will
be held Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at the
United Faith Church on the Route 7
bypass. Featured singers will be the
Gabriel Quartet and the Oldtimers
Quartet. Everyone is invited.
GALLIPOLIS- Grande Squares
Square Dance Club will hold a
western style square dance, Saturday. 8-11 p.m., at St. Peter's
Episcopal-Church, 541 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Sonny Bess will be the
caller .
POMEROY - Meigs Fish and
Game Association work s~slon
Saturday at the club house begin·
ning al7 a.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - 18th annual
reunion of the Samuel Allen Eblin
Family will be held Saturday at 6
p.m. at the grange hall on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds. Those attend·
ing are to take a covered dish and
table s~tting .
. POMEROY- ~ries of meetings
at the Red BrushChurcho!Chrisl.on
Bashan Road, Saturday through
Sept. 1Jl beginning at 7 p.m . each
evening with Guy Mallory of Winter
Gardens, Fla., as speaker. Public
invited.
PAGEV ll..LE - Bean dinner
Saturday beginning at 11 a.m. at
Pagevllle Town Hall on State Route
692. Procees to to the Scipio
Volunteer Fire Department's La·
dies Auxiliary.

SUNDAY

1/4 CARAT OF DIAMONDS

~~~rs $14
~·9 •'

'.

Only

2 DAYS ONLY
SEPTEMBER 1Sth &amp; 14th

MIDDLEPORT- Revival begin·
nlng Sunday and running through
Sept. 29, 7:30 each evening at
Middleport Independent Holiness
Church with Rev. Ivan Myers as
evangelist; public Invited .
POMEROY- Rev. Liston Halley
will be speaker at the Pomeroy

..,I.

jeffers, · Wyers to wed Saturday
Business College in Park~rsburg.
Wyers a graduateofEastern High
School. is a student at the Hocking
Technical College, Nelsonville.

•

Quote of the Day
By United Press International
South African Bishop Desmond
Tutu. warning he will call for a
weeklong national strike unless the
government lifts a s tate of emergency a nd makes other changes:
" I want to tell you I have had
enough of our people being killed as
if you are swat1ing flies .."

\

.\
\

$8fc!NGE

Reg ................ $7.19 I1

10 00

Community calendar/ area happenings

n the same boat

Plans for the open-church wroding of Tammy Elizabeth Jeffers.
daughter of Don Edward Jeffers
and Janet Newlan Jeffers. Coolville,
and Jeffrey Allen Wyers, son of
Florence Pu Uins Wyers and Ihe Ia Ie
Audra Edward Wyers. have been
completed.
The wedding will take place on
Satunlay, Sept. H,at6: 30p.m.al the
White's ChapeJ Church in Coolville
with a reception to follow at the
church. Music will begin at6: 15p.m .
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Freedom Sentln~ls, Belpre, and is
p~ently attending Mountain State

The all-time champion literary
pedestrian probably was Wllllm
Wordsworth, who had walked
180,CXXl miles by the time he was m.

·:.:.

of the bend

The two are on
windjammer cruise aboard the
H. _Evans and didn't know
untlllbe last minute Ihat the boat is
the same vessel as the one told
about In the August edition of
Guideposts.
1t seems that the Evans with 23
vacationers aboard It was hit by an
unpected violent blast of wind
which suok the boat. The story of
the struggle of the 23 passengers to
get to safety is told in tho;&gt;
Guideposts story which also relates
the reactions and feelings o.f the
boat's skipper, Ed Glaser. lncidcn·
tally, the Incident marked the first
IInne in 50 years of passenger
service that such a boat had sunk .
However, even though the help of
a lifeboat which overtumed before
anyone muld get into it. The
accident fortunately. was · seen
from shme and everyone was
rescued. The boat was raised and
has been returned to use.
Joe and Jack are formerly of
Pomeroy, of course. Joe Is now
living ·in Colll~rvllle. Tenn., and
Jack Is living In Hudson, Mass. , a
suburb of Boston.
Undoubtedly, with the Kennedy·
sense of humor, which we all know
about, they're having a blasl.

COLOR

Support Network _will hear author Friday
Marian Palnner. author of "Some·
one I Love is Aging and So Am I,"
will be speaking all p.m. Friday at
the Senior Ci117.ms Center In one of
the concluding sessions for participants of the Family Support
Network project, a federal demon·
statiort program funded through
Health and Human Seivlces.
Plarts fdr Mrs. Palmer'sreturnto
Meigs County for a second session In
the project were announced at a
recent meeting of the Advisory
Board. Mrs. Palmer. a music
therapist and consultant on home
care of the aged. is on~ of three
individuals and organizat ions being
asked to present a second program
for participants in the project.
Mrs. EleanorThomas,directorof
Council on Aging activities, prl"slded at the advisory board meeting

I

•

Sentinei-Page-9

The

Ohio

1985

~ ~~~nw~~~~~~-~------------~----~~~~~~~o~h~~--------r---_:------~~~~~~~1!!
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�Page-1 0-The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

Train wreckage yields more bodies
NELAS, Portugal (UPI) Rescue teams today worked to pry
more . bodies from the tangled
wreckage of two passenger trains
that coUided andexplodl!d in flames
m a remote vineyard region ol
11t&gt;rthern Portugal, killing at least 37
peopk&gt;.
Manuel Joad. an official o1 Social
Security, brk&gt;fed President Antonio
Ramalho Eanes today and said 37
prople were confirmed dead but
that n'SCue · teams were st ~I
· r'.emovlng bodies.
The trains- .a n express bound lor
Parts and a local train - collided
Wednesday near the town of Vlseu,
between Mangualde and Netas,
about 200m lies northeast of Lisbon,
authorit ies said. It was Portugal's
\llorst train disaster.
"We heard a great crash," saip
Maria Rosa Nunl.'Z, who farms near

the crash site. "We heard screams beyond recognition.
Md more screams - so strong, so
Authorities on the scene said
strong."
earller today that 50 people were
The seven·car express train confirmed dead and that more
derailed and the passenger cars bodies were trapped in the
pil('(] up on top of the engines. Three wreckage.
cars exploded In flames, trapping
Eanes and Prime Minister Marlo
pas,.,ngers Inside. The flre also Soares rushed to the scene from
engulfed two cars ol the local train Lisbon. The government decreed
and spread to the surrounding pine thre&lt;;' days of olficlal mourning.
forest.
·
· Hospitals In VlseuandManguald\'
Rescuers were able to rem1&gt;ve at . were flooded with injured and
least four oi the cars from the pileup
authorlt les said some victims were
by morning. Crews today cut into
taken. to the towns of Colmbi'la and
the express train's €11glne and
Qporto - 60. miles from the crash
removed 1hi.' body of Ihe engineer.
site- tor treatment.
Eugenio Silva Sousa, deputy
The local train was on .a run from
c&lt;immander of the fire brigade in
Mangualde, said three cars of the Guarda to Coimbra. It was not
express train were burned, twisted known ll any foreigners were on ·
and " lull of corpses," manycharred board eltber train.

Area deaths

.Emergency squads
'fmswer eight calls . Dr. R. Jeffrey Lytle
· Eight calls were answered by
: loca l units Wednesday. the Meigs
: County Emergency Medical Servi·
· ces reports.
• At 12:34 a.m., Middleport went to
j:.agoon Road for Harold Blevins,
~cad upon thl' unit's arrival; Racine
at 7:55a.m., took Betty Van Meter
. !rom Bashan Road to Veterans
: Memorial Hospita l; Tuppers Plains
: at 1:48 p.m .. took Lida &amp;nnett to
· O'Bleness Hospital in Athens;
pomer0iy a l 1:58 p.m. took Frank
Marone from the sheriff's officl' to
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at
2:34p.m. answered a truck fire call
to Corn Hollow Road: Pomeroy a!
4: &gt;9 p.m. took Eileen Hawley from
Silver Run Road to the office of Dr.
James Conde; Rutlandat6:&gt;1p.m.,
was called to Harrisonville for Noah
Workman , ·dead upon the unit's
arrival. and at 7:38p.m., Pomeroy
:took Cynthia Faulk from Rock
:springs to Veterans Memorial.

Weather forecast
. ' Thursday, considerable sunshine.
•High 65 to 70. Northeast 10 mph or
· less. ·
: Thursday night, clear with a low
. near 45. Friday, mostly sunny. High
65 to 70.

: Chance of rain is near zero
Thursday and Thursday night.
Extended forecast
Saturday through Monday
. Fair throughout the period with
~ highs in the 60s Salumay and the
' lower 70s Sunday Md Monday. The
: lOw will IHi in the 40s Saturday and
: ~nday and the lower 50s Monday.

:Lottery winn~r: 932
:· CLEVELAND i UP!) - Wednes·
· dav's winning Ohio Lottery
: numbers: Dally Number

; 932.
· Ticket sales total('(] $1,129,970.
:with a payoff due of$.'i96,480. Lotta
: 32. 20. 19, 35. 6. 3.
Lotto ticket sa les totaled
: $2.43.'i.871.

Dr. R. Jeffrey Lytle. 44, of 1056
Laguna St., Livermore, Calif., died
Sept. 4 following a lengthy illness.
Dr. Lytle was born Feb.10, 1941 in
Chillicothe, a son of Robert Powers
and Barbara Elberfeld Lytle. He
was a grandson ofthp late Jacob B.
and Katie Mees Elberfeld and
Charles and Frances Pond Lytle .
Among his local survivors are two
aunts. Thelma Lytle, Syracuse, and
Rachael E. Downie, Racine, and an
uncle, Robert Elberfeld of
Pomeroy.
Other survivors include his wife,
Glenda: a daughter, Janette; sons,
Ivan and Robert Powers, at home:
his parents: a sister, Janice L.
Mahoney, Allison Park, Pa. and
several nieces and nephews.
Dr. Lytle graduated !rom Chilli·
cot he High School in 1959 and from
Purdue University in 19!&gt;! where he
also earned his Ph.D In eiectrtcal
engineering. He was employed by
Lawrence Livermore Labs as a
research electrical -· engineer.
Further, as a geophysicist, he was
vice president and director of
Research ofGeotomographlcs, Ltd.
This year he was honored as a fellow
by The Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, Worldwide.
A memorial service was held at
the First Baptist Church In Livermore wlth Rev. RogPr Lewis
officiating.

Manguadde, Portugal ldllbtg about 150 people. UP( ·:

wreckage of two trains which coWded Wednesday in

Noah Workman
Noah Workman, 86, died Wednes·
day at his Route 1, Rutjand home.
He was born in Logan, W. Va., a
son ol the late PPter and Rebecca
Workman. He was a farmer and
belonged to the United Baptist
Church at Pageville.
Surviving. are four daughters,
Ma rgie Hall, Route 1, Rutland;
Dolly Workman, Pecks Mill, W.
Va.; Nina Hall, Verdunville. W.Va.,
and Colleen Payne, Cleveland: 20
grandchildren, 33 great grandchildren; two stepdaughters, Lillian
Castllllan and Callie Sullivan, both
of Charlotte, N. C., and a stepson,
Cecil Elswick, also of Charlotte.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his first wife,
Louise Ann Workman; his second
wife, Rose Elswick Workman: a
son, Boyd; two brothers and three
sisters.
Services will he held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the James Funeral
Home in Logan, W.Va. , with Rev.
Mickey Maynard official lng. Burial
will be In the Jim Baisden Cemetery
at Logan . Friends may call from 7 to
9 this evening at the Btgony-Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany and from 7
to 9 p.m. 'Friday at the James
Funeral Home In Logan.

Syracuse finn
Included in the transfer is $21,500
to administrative salaries; $3,800 to
health insurance; $2000 to employees salaries; $2j()() to supplies:
$19ootucontract repair; $400ltothe.
public employees retirement system; and $Z377 to building and
vehicle insurance.
Wed~meyer asked permission to
combine the three top adminsitra ·
tive salaries into one account- the
BBl. Commissione rs recom ·
mended to Wedemeyer that in
preparing his budget for !he coming
year. the three top adminsitrative
salaries he designated in til&lt;&gt; budget

.

TRAIN FATALfi'IES- Rescuers sift through the

(continued trom page 11

as the BBI, BBlA and BBlB.
In other matters, the board
appointed Jennifer Sheets to the
Private Industry Council replacing
Jim Htll; agreed to begin making
arrangements for reseeding at the
old landfill; approved an interdec
parmental t ranslerol$2700from the
DepartmPnt of Human Services;
and agreed to pay to Howard Ervin,
Racine, the hlgh market prlcP of 24
cents per pound for the loss of eight
ewes to a pack of wild dogs. This is
the county's second animal claim
this year.

Racine residents plan .fall festival
A community effort is underway
' in Racine to prepare for a gigantic
fall fesllval of activities on October
12.
Proceeds from this year's event
will go to the Racine Volunteer Fire

Revival plaruied
Revival services at the Vander·
hoof Baptist Church, Rt. 2, Coolville,
will begin Monday and continue
through Sept. 21.
Rev. Wallace Smith, Pinceton,
W.Va .. will be the evangelist.
Special singers featured throughout the week will he the Sunrise
Singers, from Chester, on Monday;
the Gospel Friends Choir, Marietta,
Tuesday; the Bissell Brothers,
Tuppers Plains, Wednesday:
King's Fellowsbtp, Marietta, Thurs·
day; the Men's Quartet, Coolville,
Friday; and Pralsemen's, flom
Vl€11na, W.Va. , on Saturday.
Services will begin at 7:30 p.m .
each eoJenlng.
Vanderhoof Baptist Church's
Homecoming will follow on Sunday,
Sept. 22.

Department and those Involved in
the planning say this festival will be

bigger and better than last year's. rr:=::;:========~
Plans call for booths and exhibits
by local crafts people and organlza·
~
lions , musical entertainment,
~
games and more. It ls also hoped .
that local artists will step forward
and volunteer to paint village store
fronts in keeping with a !all theme.
352 East Main St.
Further plans lor the festival are
Pomeroy, OH.
:
to be discussed by Racine Village
•
Meigs County's Oldest Florist
Council.
Those interested in participating

FLORIST

ALL

PENHOUS
SEPT.14-15-16
OPEN 9 TO 7 WEEKDAYS
SUN. 1 TO 6
•

NEW EVERGREENS
AND SHRUBS
FALL HAR.DY MUMS

Admitted .. Louise Burbridge, AI·
bany; Wilbur Rowley , Pomeroy:
Betty Van Meter, Rajdne; Everett
Rousb, Pomeroy; Scott Okey,
Canton; Beulah Rousb, Pomeroy;
Landon McDaniel, Middleport.
DischargE!&lt;!--Ellen Couch.

The Chester Bowhunters and
Archery Club will have a camou flageday, Sunday, withflrst, second .
and third place prizes to be awarded
for the besHiressedcamo. For more
information call Terry Brown at
985-3364. The public is invited.

•

SAT.-SUN.-MON.

Veterans Memorial

Camouflage day set

in the festival in any way should .
contact Beverly Moore at 949-2140.

SMELTZER

GCJrden Center &amp; Flower Shop
1:.
· 45 3 JACKSON PIKE
l.~.t'~
GAUIPOLIS, OHIO
"o'\\
? "'e ~~
.,,u ,~~~~"':
..,

~Q-

Annual

Percentage
Rate
On
_ALLIANCE,
ENCORE

AND RENAULT SPORT WAGON
7.5%APR
FINANCING. IS
FACTORY FUNDED
48 MONTH l'E RMS
AVAILABLE TO
QUALIFIED
APPLICANTS!

SMALL cAR PRJTECTION.
~

151N STOCK

5 YEARS OR 50.000 MILES

• PWS REQUIRED
MAINTENANCE PROTECTION

TO CHOOSE FROM!

Classy Renault Alliance. Sporty Renault
Encore. European Technology That's AH~rdable.

'

\

'

'

•'

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(' b
·
. h ld
Jan orn soctety meettng e

Durst birthday
The first birthday of Robbie
Durst, Akron, was celebrated
recenUy with a party a t the home of
his great -grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph McKenzie, Racine.
Attending were his parents, Paul
a nd Carol Durst , grandparents, Bob
a nd Addalou Lewis, Pomeroy, and
Lewis Durst and Hisae Durst, Point
Pleasant . J()(&gt;, Susan, Jeremy and ·
Jesse Non, and David Lewis.
Sending cards and gifts were
Audrey and I;'a t Wood and Dan , Mr.
and Mrs . Fred Parson and Marty ,
Mr. and Mrs . John Miller, Kim,
Tamela, John and Rusty , Helen and
Theresa Baker, Patti, Shaunna and
Shan nan Baker. Mary Anne Young ,
Nedra and Harold Johnson, C.J.
Estep, Ernie and Nancy Bowser.
and Shtrley Mathews.

Project reports were given at the
recent meeting of the B.H. Sanborn
Missionary Society of Jhe Mlddl~&gt;o
port First Baptist Church.
, Rhoda Ha II of 1he Elect a Circle
noted that 18 adult bibs had been
made and sent to Judson Village, a
Bapttst senior citizens home at
Cincinnati. Both circles are working
oo cuttingout quilt blockswhichwill
he taken to the Ohto Women 's
Conference next ear.
The blocks will be used to tnake
table cloths. skirts, quills and other
things and eachclrclehas'a quota of
5.(00 blocks Janice Gibbs of the
Dorcas Cu·cie r(•ported for that
group.
Dorothy Anthony presented a
rcpcrt of the budget which was

IWbbie Dursl

Harrisonville community happenings
.Julie Stevms and Barbara Sled·
mar1 , Fa irfax , Va , h 'a .Johnosn ,
Wolfe Pen Road. visited Mrs. Stella
Adkins and Ruby Diehl recenll)'.
Linda Riggs has returned after
visiting n Colum bus with her
brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and
Mrs. Davtd Ray Riggs.

Dale Ba iley, Marengo , was the
t'ccent guest of Mrs Stella Atkins
a nd Miss Ruo.1' Dlehi.Mr and Mrs .
Dwight Sieplc of Wilmmg)on spent
th wf'ek&lt;'nd he re vis iting Mrs .
Frances Young
Mr and Mrs. Waller Burke a nd
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A lktre wprc

Sunday guests of Mr and Mrs. Bob
Alkire .
Dr. a nd Mrs Don Gibson of
Ma ty· tand are moving to their home
In Meigs Count)' following his rCC&lt;'nt
reiJrcment.
Mrs. Margaret Dougla s ha s
moved from the communi ty into an
apartment in Pom&lt;&gt;roy.

Auxiliary meets

Auxiliary at the firehouse. Meeung
opened with prayer and the pledge
to he nag.
.
1
The secretary's report was read
by Frances Hunt and the tfe11urer's ·
report by Cleo Smith. Commit~
reports were given and Christmas
cards were ordered. Several cards
were signed for the sick of the!
community.
.
.,
Dues and money tor cards wet)i'
collected. After the business meei'!
log, games were enjoyed and
refreshments were ~rved by Lora
Damewood and Ethel Orr to those
named and Marsha Keller, Bonnie
Landers, Erma Cleland, Mal'garet.
Christy, Inzy Newell, Dixie Bealr,
Betty hawk, Paula Wood, Opal
Eichinger, Clara Conroy, Clarice
AUen and Opal Wickham.

IIIINITl'S •oiiU &amp;
.AIIIIfACTIIIII NOISIItG
OUIIIty lnttnherm
Heat Pumps, Furnace•

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
ACCENT

Public Notice

Public Notice

ORDINANCE
NO. 662

After 12 months .. .. .... 3.61

-t . . . . . . . .

dated Fobruory 6, 1969

Wider and Sewer:

Ordinance No. 401, dated

June 1. 1970

Water Superin-

Section I
Police;
Chief: 1 Month thru

5.40

Aut. Supor1. .. .. .. .... 4.35
8 mon1hl ...... ,, 3.000.00 l.aborars- 1 month thru
3.montho ................. 3.36
Abr 8 , _ _ .. .. 14,000.00
P•trolman: (Must have After 3 montho ............ 3.84
Weur Office / Clerk
-"Ill
Regular

Per Hour

Bookk-

1 month thru 6
, """""
"'"' 8
monlhllwllhout
montho """ " " "'" '"" 3.36
AftM 6 months . .. ...... 3.46
"""""""""'
"""""""
'
4.60
Cieri&lt; Board of
Abr6 montho
AffaiR .... ..... ...... Per Mon.
end/ or 1028
145.00
houn thru 12
Secretary to
"""""'
""" "" ""' ""' 4.86
Moyor .................. 4.00
After
1 yoorlhru
6 yoor. .nd/ or 1026
CllfTllltllfV:
houn." " .. " . " .......... . 5.06 1 montho thnr 3
montho ......... ..... ,. 3.35
After~ yeorw ...... .... ..... 5.33
Alter 3 months .. .. ....... 3.61
Extra Po1rolmen:

OrdinanC4t No. 407. dated

November 1, 1970
Ordinance No 431, dated

May 12. 1972

Ordinance No. 440, dated

Village of
Pomeroy and ohal be nitrO·
ac:tiYo to August 1, 1985 and
ohall toke elloct ond be in fon:e
from and after that date.

POlled: Augull 19, 1985

Aneot:

Ordinance No. 451, dated

John Andonon
Pnroident 01

Ordinance No. 454, dated

Novo..- 18, 1 974
Ordinance No. 473, &lt;tated

June 8, 1978

Approved:

Ordin.,ce No . 486, dated
July 1, 1978

Jane Walton
Clerk-Treasurer

Ordinance No. 601. dated
Fobruoory 19, 1979

l9i 5, 12. 2tc

Council

PROBA r'E COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EARLY M.
ROUSH, DECEASED
C... No. 24876 Dodcet 12
Pogo 513
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Auguat 29, 1986, in the
Moigo County Probote Coull,
Cue No. 24876, M. Eileen

Soct10n 3

,---------------------- ·-,-

I
J

· Wr ite your own ad and order by mail wiftl fflis
coupon . Cant:el rouw- ad by phone when ';'Ou get 1

I
1 , results Money notrelundable
I
I
i Name
I

I

I

I

I

l

1

I

I Address

I

I

I

1 Phone
I
J Prmt

j spau below Euth rn1l1al
I or group of figuus (Ounll

I
I

IH 0 word. (oun1 nCimt

I
and addren or phont
numbtr 1f used . Tou ' ll gt! Wcnh day
bttfiPf ruulh if you dt-

J
J tCribt fully, giwe pm1. Tht
1 tribune reserves the nght
I

to ,hm1ly, edt I or re J«I
dn~ od. Your ad w~ll. 1M
I pur in lh proper dautftlll·
Ilion 1f you'll 'h"k the
I proper box below.

II9 .

I "·
I t3.
I t4.

I ts.

I

~~

I

J.
I

I
I
I
1

Thtit (aJh rates
indude dinounf

)Announcement

17.
11 .

)For lien I

II,
20

.

11

13.

u
25.

u.
11
21 .
28.
JO.

HOME NATIONAL BANK
CALL 949-2210-Ask for Tim

31 .
J2.

KltiDLEWOOD
NOT JUST A STOVE
IT'S A WHOLE HOUSE
HEAliNG SYSTEM

I

I

:n

1

1

J!

I

111
51.
Pomeroy, Ofl. 457.,

OPEN 8 TO 6
Countv Appliance, Inc.
627 Tnrid Ave .. Gall1pohs
446· 1699

FOR SALE
14x70 1979
FAIRMONT
TRAILER
24x7 TIPOUT
2 Bedrooms, 2

54 Misc. Merchandise

I

I
I

Absolutely the

Alignment

Best

Mon

In the Area.

Complete Cor
SerVICe, lube Jobs,
Oil Chanqe,
Tune-Ups, Brake
Jobs, Mufflers .

j

---' -----------------'!'.

better.

MGM
FARM CITY
SERVICE

STATION

992 -9932

S. HobstetteJ, B&lt;oker

NICE RANCH HOME IN
COUNTRY - Three bedroom,
all electric home, 2 m1ies oot
Rutland. In-ground SWimming
pod Askrng $45,(00.00.

6 milts INlow
OPEN DAilY 12 TO 7

P.M.;

on II. 7
SUN. 12 TO 6 P.M.

Ph. 985-4141

Free E8tlmates
9·11 · I mo

TAKE A lOOK - 0~ ftoor
· plan, two bedroom home. Lot
45'xl46'. Good in'estment
property. Only $10,000.00
PRIVATE AND QUIET - descnbes th~ beautiful 153 acre
larm, with a three bedroom
brick-veneer home nestled
high up on a hrl, wilh lree gat
Two barn~ equip. shed. Asking

$73,000.00
V•lma Nicinsky, ASIOcilte
·
Phon• 742-3092

Inc.

&amp;

coal

haatera .

Gallip~lis.

Call

All or part of retail, wholeIlia, or urvice buaineu in
Gillie or Maiga Co. Cell

Uted mobile homes. Call

61 4·446·0 175 .
1623 GHL) Want to buy

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12·8·1fc
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

Announce 111 r. nts
1 Card of Thanks

•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp;SEII'IICE

We would like to expreaa our
appreciation at this time to
everyone who came to see
ua and all the gih1 and cards
that were •nt to ua on our
40th Wedding Annjv~rlary.
We thank you all very rnuch .

We H111 f,. Foil Tl••
S..~ Techlctu

o- P•lf

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

Authorrzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Pomeroy·Mason Brrdge
SINGlE S24.9S
entertainment
'Free HBO •Restaurant
•Oiymprc Pool
A.A.A.

TRASH SERVICE

304·675-6276.

MIDDLEPORT-

RIDENOUR
&amp; APPLIANCE

TV
CHESTER-985- 3307
4/ 1/tln

trvlllt .!do~. Eblin •. r

Middleport, Oh. 614·9923476.
Aluminum scrap. Sell your
aluminum scrap direct to the
smelter. Buying all grades of
aluminum. Premium patdfor
large loads. Call for quote .
Scipio Energy. located 1 3A
miles eaat of Pagetown on
Township Road 141 Meigs

614·448-0294 .

ALL STEEL ,&amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Stzes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

P'&amp;S BUILDINGS

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Racrne, Oh.

Ph . 614-843-5191
IO·G· tlc

No Sunday Calls
3/ 11 / tfn

ICUT OUI FOR FUIURE USE)

Howard L.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

POMEROY

'

Writlisel

"O~t

ROOFING

8•"'"' It S.llt
Ow g,,l, "

For

Gutters - Oown•pouts

Trash

Gutter Cleaning

All Mlkts

Painting

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Qryers •Freezers

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3194

949-2263
or 949-2969

ROGER lllNIIY, JR.
ROGEl MANlEY, II.
OWNERS

collect if nec:naary.
The Meiga Fith and Game
Club will hav• a work
1111ion Saturday. Sept.
14th at the club houae
beginning at 7 a.m. All
memberl urged to attend.

8·7-1 mo.

Needed lmmodi'lltoly: 100

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
OYer
Chok••

•Residential &amp;

Commercial
•DeYIIopmints &amp;
Commercial Sites

•oo

•Single and multi Unit

491 Gtn. Harti11gH Pkwy.

Housing

Middleport, Ohio
HR5. I 0 a.m. to S p.m.
Day
Night
1·614
1-304
773-S634
992·2S49

•Wood Modo (obinetry
Design and Plonning
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7611
5·7-llc

6·11-tfn

RENT A CAR .
CALL

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Addilions
•Roofing
•Siding
•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

446-4522

"W• R.lwt F~t t"'"

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt.
N11th

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
Loona lottom,

160

Oellltolls,

Ohio

Ph. 985-4141

Ohio
1/ 11 / lln

Free

INTERESTED IN
NEW VEHICLE

A

Hartsoe. At. 1, Box 310,

Croaton . NC28815 , 1· 919385-6808

Ph. 614-992-U78
Now i~ Fully

Stocked With All Tour

M081LE HOMES MOVED,
inaured ,

BODY REPAII SUPPUES

For Truck~ 1nd Cer1
Pein11 1 Body Flllen, FiiMrgl••• R"in .•n~

4

Ki'll, Fltlliblt Part Rel)llr Productt, Pohthmg
Compound .nd Sand P•J*•IS.IIing Whole.. Ia)
73 10 GM P1J DOjlll SIIIIL.'99 IOCIII PlNILl ................'19
73:7'1 FQU PU FIIIIIIIS .... su CAl CORNitL................. 120

614-992-6737

NIW CHROME sm IUWIII... ....... It25

CONTRACTING

For All Vw Plillll•t N~tit
PLUS. Olli&lt;t SUflplios &amp;

"z

Furnitu,.., Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Mapetk

!

Signs, Rubbet Stamps,

6 kittens, 3 calicos. 1 gr'ay, 1
tiger triped. and 1 black-

1· 12·1 mo.

white. Call 814-448-8268.

-

2SS M•lllt., Mirhllopart .,
104 Mulberry lv., Pomlfoy '

992-3345

614-448 ·4825.

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Eval111tions For All Ages

Kittens 3 mala, 1 femalo,
litter trained . Call 614-446 -

2611 ofter 5 .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

BNutlful male gray tiger
kitten, ebout 3 moa. old. to

licensed Clinical Audiologist

good homo . Cell 614·448·
2686.

:s:
z (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601

lusineu Forms,
Copy StntliS, Eft.

'

3 month old male puppy to
give away. 8 year old spayed
female, Yz Norwegien Elk
Hound and V. Irish Setter.
Call 614-986·3808.

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

312/llo'

DOZEA , 8ACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS • SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT

Rt. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

B· ll tin

73 -10 Ch"Y Tr.

6 wk. old puppies to give
away . Part Irish Setter and
part Golden Retriever. Call

.l

co.-i

F1nehn ......................... 148
73-79 Ford Tr.
Deon ......................... 1135

73 "~h.~~!:..~'.: ........... 11 so
73·14 (h,.y Tr.
$70
lumrpors
73.79 Chny"r;:.... ..........
GrI'll,.,,,, .. ,,....... 131,50
73.79 Ch"Y· Tr.
RD&lt;kor Ponolr ......... , ....I2S
73·79 Chny. Tr.
(~ CDrntrs
JJO

VINYl &amp; AlUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Rpofing of all Tvpes
Worked in home area
20 years
"Free Estimates"

Ph.

73·79 ford Tr.

Fendtrt ......................... '41
73 .10 Chowy Tr.
Doors ......................... 11 DO

N•w

CAll COLLECT:

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

3·24-tfc

SUPERIOR
SIDING

7/ 12/2 mo. pd.

Three 8 wk . old kitten• .
Heahhy end playful. 1 black
and white. 1 black and 1
long-he ired bleck and white .

~~~:.~..~:.: ..............$ t 45
11·79 Ford Tr.
Grills ...................... $52.50
10-IS Ford Tr.
Hoodl .... -................... 1145
13-ll Ford Ranger
Hoods .... -................... 1130
13-ll Ford Rangor
Gr1llts ..." ......................17S
10

~;;4"U;i"A'uto Glan -

Coll614·992·6624 .
Puppiee . Friendly and pen
Chow. 7 wb. old . Wormt~d .

Cute. Cat! 61 4·992 · 7809 .

Late Model 'arh

WHALEY'S AUTO PAnS

16141 843-5425

814·992 -3614.

9· 13-tfn

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-~772

found

' ·

t.
t

TANNING SALON
Fall ltickalf - Stpt. 9 thru 20

HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE•••$7 .50

"Fill ESTIMATES"

Sign up ond win 1 frM PMt to the locol Home·
coming Game of your choice.

.

I

Tanning Special.t••• ..••ili• ...1.!.~~............ $35~ ·
~

"""'

LOST: light1on male Chi on
F1irviow Rd . Mar.,.rvillo. II

BHIIne offers free clothes.
good money, no cuh invest·
ment. Work your own hours.

Cell ofter 5PM, 614-286 5237.

80RED,

BROKE.

BLUE?

Have I got a fun and
profitable job for you. Demo
toys for me now through

Dec. Call today 614·3888794 .
Hourty Clinic Aide needed
part-tfme in family planning
offices. Must have high
achool dtploma or equivalency; good communication
Mi111, accuracy with figures ,
be dependabla, organized ,
and responaible. Training
available for mature individual who is aensitive 1o
reproductive health neada of
client1. Must have reliable
trenlportetion , be willing to
travel locally . Weekday, av·
aning and Saturday hours
are to be expected. Send
resume. including two em- ·
ployment references to
Planned Parenthood of Sou·

thooat Ohio. 8 N. Court St ..
Atbeno, Oh, 46701. by
Soptombor 19 , 1986 .

Gollipollo, Oh 46631

...., ....
•

t

Pomeroy,

PHONE 992 •707 5

All 01
NfJW.M~~~111~
~ fJIJflfg
It

6

1

..._. __ ...._A,••

$1 ,500 or a $2,000 enlist-

1_:.:_:..::.,:__..:____.:...__

ment Bonus. AU ot th11 adds
up to. more than S20,000for
education. PLUS, we sche~
dule your basis and tdvanced training around your
school ' obligations. Don 't
commit yeer1 of your life to
the military until you call ue.

3 bedroom home, 15 acres.
1 acre lake . Naw kitchan and
bath . Full basement. Call
614·949-2503.

6 family 26 Vm1on St.
Furniture, clo1hing 8a lots of
m1sc items. Fri . &amp;. Sat . 9-6.

304-676 -3960 or 1 ·800642·3619.

~ ===~==.====
12

Situations
Wanted

Will care tor elderly people in
my home . 24 hour care.

614· 367-7148.
15

Schools
Instruction

~1:; .~:: 3c;~~ :::::::: :=~~6 *34~;pe~n~~~;r~~

~t.: 1 _,:. :.84~9-a=ft:..:.•_r_4 :3_0_.____

tnd $tmoulldlnJ
'

8/ 19/l,mo. pd.'

Loat In Stivertville. Portland
ar... 3 dogs, 1 allv.r male

I

o ell · add ro 11 o d

Rd , Ft. Pierce, Fl. 33482.
Secret•ry with previous
medical billing experience.

H:.:-::ci ,a~~ ;~~::..~ ~:~~v ':'"ao:i:.,.":~:':i

..
flmalo A..rlovor. All w•r- Point Ptoo..nt Roglatar, 200
ing collon. Colt 114·843- . Mlin St .. Point Ptoo.. nt. W.
5127.
Va. 255110

::

r

6 rooms ~md bath . 1Vr acres.
Ca11614 -992-7453.
Verv nice house for sale. 3
bedrooms, bath , ltving
room , woodbuming stove,
dining room , kitchen, celler.
6 acres. fenced in. Barn.
chicken coop. pony 1hed,
work shop. McCumber Rd.,
Rutland. Priced to sell . 614·

992·2143 day and 614·
742·2289 alter 4 :30 .

By owner , 2 bedroom ranch,
704 Marie1ta Road , Point
Pleasant. nice location, low

Will paint trailer roots &amp; cut
tobacco . Call 614·2661 &amp;21.

60 's, 1 -609-453 ·2692.

1.::._::__:__:_:..:_.:..:._____
5 % acres, 2 houaes, 2 car
garage, pond. several out·
buildings , ponds,

$25,000 .00 Aohlon . 304576-2320.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Yard Sale East of Porler Rt.

Thurs. &amp; Friday 2 Family
Garage Sale First Time This
Year . Nice adult. children.
clothing On O.J . White Rd .

off Rt. 160, 8 to 4
Trailer space for rent $85 •
month includes water 8t
garbage Call 614- 367·

7267.
Garage Sale First time this
year, orange brick behtnd old
Bidwell School. Thursday,
Friday, Saturday 1 0 · 5.
Childrens sizes. jeans, coats,
tools. b1ke, toys.
Shoestring Ridg e Commun ·
ity Yard Sales! 19 Families.
Sept. 13 &amp; 14, Fri. &amp; Sat.
9:00-5 :30 Come down Rt.
7 to Clipper Mills turn right
&amp; follow signs all the way to
the end o f Shoestring. Clo·
thing . jewerly, glassware,
handmade wood &amp; other
items playpen , 2 go carts.

Call614 -446· 2847.

·

Krmer Road Community
Sate 2 miles out Rt . 218, Fri .
&amp; Sat. Jeans. tools. pool
pump-filter.
Garage Sale 5 Famil y. Sept.
12 . 13.14. 9 · 4 . Ca mera,
saxophone. baby items,
jeams, toys, wom ens and
childrens clothes, drapes.
Rodney Village ll ·follow
signs.

... -..P.omerov ....... __
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Porch Sale . Sept. 12th and
13th at Maxine Michael.
Laurel Cliff Rd
Rain or shine . Antique
cream can. bar stools. cream
can floor lamp. Some an ·
tique dishes and other '
dishes. dresses 20"h· 2•Yz.
shoes size 10. bed spraad,
drapes, what 'nots. men's
shirts Sept 12th and 13th, _
Behind grade school in Ru tland, Ohio. Phone 614-

742-2823
Yard sale: Frtday. Sept. 13th
at Harry Spencer 's resi ·
dance . Located on Co .
Rd. 32 at 8ashan. Girls and
boys clothmg . 8:30 - 5:00.
Yard sale Sept. 14th. From
Middleport hill turn first road
left past radio station .
Yard sale . Sept 131h till ?
From 9 till 4 at the Moore
res1denee on township 207
and Rt.7 bypass . Glen.
clothes .
Sept. 13th noon-7 . Sept.
14th 10 ·3 918 So. Third .
Middleport Middleport
Youth League. Baby Items,
used ball pants .lots of good,
clean misc.
Across trom Powells Super
Value. Everything must go.
cheap, Sept . 12-1 4th. 9 til? . ·

.. _....Pi ·Pieiisiri't-·.. _
&amp; Vicinity
...... -~

..... -···

~·-

... ·- ---· -

Yard Sale. Tues. Wed. Thurs .
K &amp;: K Mob1\e Home . little bit
of ever-,:thing

4 femity Vilrd Sale, te::on
Mov1ng Sale dining tables, · Baden Road, Fri and Sat.
office desk, 20 in . b1ke, Clothing, dresser, 2 love
Fostoria glass, plus more. seatl, 2 complete tw1n beds,
Sat. &amp; Sun . Oakwood Dr . off corn pic:ker, 304 ~ 468 · 1823.
State St. 614-446·2439 .
Yard Sale. Sept 13, 14, 16;
3 Family Numerous items Rain or Shine, Beech 'Hill,
including infant · toddler clo· Route 36 . Sam Welch .
thing. Turn onto Bidwell ·
Rodney Rd off Rt 36~ first Yard Sale, 2631 lincoln
lane-right Fri. &amp; Sat. 13th &amp; Ave. Thurs and Fri. too many
14th. 9.00·5 00
items lo mention.

Phone 304-675-4322.

Business
Opportunity

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALtTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GAUIPOLIS,
RT 35 PHONE 614-4467274.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUS·

Rodney Home &amp; Supply
Center. Rodney, Ohio located between US 35 &amp; St.

Ftn~nctal

21

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people yoU know, and NOT
to send money 1hrough the
&gt;!nail until you have inveati·
gated the offering.
(307·CHXI Need extras
cash? $36,000 year paten·
tial, need cash investment of
$35.000. We will tram vou.
Send 1nquire1 to P.O., Galli-

polis, Oh 45631

Rt. 588 . Call 614 · 246·
6308.
Owner in rest home Great
buy on 1981 14x70 mobile
home, 3 bdr.. 2 baths.
equipped kitchen, 2 built in
AC. storage but! ding, in axe .
cond., on rented Jot. Only
&amp;12.000 Call Wiseman
Real Estate, 614-446 -

3643.
1970 mobtle home 12x60.

Open your fashion store
with profeJpionlal help from
Uberty Fashion . One time
tee, different programs to
match your investment
plans . 900 plua nat'l brands,
infant to size 52, accessories, cosmetics, inventory.
fixtures , instore training,
buying trip, grand opening.
more . Also be f~rst in your
arera with color-coded store
and certified color analyzing. Randy Erwin 501 -882·

3026.

1---------HOME OWNERS ·Refinance
to low fi~~ted rate. Use equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgage Co ., 614·592-

23

Professional
Services

614·742 ·3 1 47 or614-9926006.
PAIR, back to sch!lol dis·
counu, free eat1matea,

Word'o Keyboard , 304 -875·
6500 or 876·3824.

446-2156.

11 n d

614-992-5714 .

18 Wanted to Do

Real

C•II· Reward 114- 1- - - - - - - - - ·lc -

block &amp; whllo. Vicinity Milt

7 room house, 1 1h bath,
garage on Gravel Hill 4
bedrooma. Middleport . Call

$49,000. 304-675 -5047.

PIANO TUNING AND RE·

eaperlance-No sales . Dalaila

Call 614·992·5084.

today

Wanted someone with traclor with blade to puth dirt
onto a garden ~ Call 614-

LOST: mala Siberian Huaky

20 acres, 3 bedroom coun try home with 1% baths.
fully carpeted, kitchen liP·
pliances included, full basemen1 with fireplace , family
room , 2 car garage attached.

For sale by owner, real log
home and 15 acres, 3 br, fr.
Tri ·State Semi Driver Train* lr, 2V2 bath. full basement,
ing. Enjoy two weeks of inground pool, satalite anTractor-trailer traming con- tenna, barn, other extras .
ducted 20 m1lea south of For more mto ca ll 895·
Deytom for· paat 16 years ' 3666 .$ 121 ,000 .
Real placement service em· .::_::.:.._:__..:_ _..:,._______
phaaized . For complete writ- 3 bedroom home. 8% per·
ten details call: Friendly cent as1umable loan , garden
Travis •• 1513)424-4593 spo1. Reduced down to

Water wells drilled and aer·
viced . Price• on requett. Call

Start telling Avon now whil•
starting tee is onlv e6.00,
oxpira 9·20·86 . Call 614-

3 Families Yard Sale Toys.
clothing, &amp;. misc . items.
17th V.inton St. Sept . 12,13

Yard Sale Saturday, Sep·
tember 14, 8-6 Drapes,
rods. toys, clothes, many
other items . 6 Edgemont
Or .• Gallipolis, Oh.

3051 .

··.

4 bdr ., bath, utility rOon;" .
living room , kitchen , and
dinlngroom. Big 2 car gar·
ege with · attached greenhouse, on 3 acres, frurt

Make offer 2 bedrooms, 1 .2
acres, 2 car garage, all
reaaonabla offers consi ·
dared. In Pomeroy. 614·
678-25 13.

e2 .000 guartlnteed par mo.
if qualified, and accepted for
our managers program. For
panonal interview apply
E'ectrolux Corporation any
morning from 8 .30 to 10:30
alk for manager. 417 2nd.
Ava., Glllipolis, Oh.
~

446-4152.

448-2026 or 614·245 9160. •
~~-----------n

large Yard Sale Lower Garfield atu . Thurs. &amp; Fri . Home
Interior, drapes, spreads.
dishes. lot gla11ware, nick
nacks, 1raining wheel bike.
too much to mention, gold
trailer.

Loan Repayment Program
repays 1 major portion of
outstanding Federal student
loan1, up to $10,000. You
may also be eligible for a

22 Money to loan

Working Supervisor familiar
with janitorial work, Rio
Grande- Gallipolis area .
Sand rnume to: Box 400 in
care of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 3rd Ave.,

House for sala: Be11 offer,
garage, garden area, Green
School District . Call 61• ~

of $6,040. Tho Student I -_:_ _ _ _ _ _ __

PPSEO i1 an Equal Oppor·

tunity Er:nployer.

Call 6 t 4-4'46· 7380.

Fri. Sept. 1 3 only. 9-5. 1 Y,
mile on Rt. 141 on right .
Girls size 6 It 6. boys 2 -4,
lots of mi1c.
1- - - - - - - - - Huge Garaga Sale con·
linuea. Lou of new itema,
snare drw 1et. 4 matching
hub caps. 77 customi1ed
Ford ven, knivas, flowers,
dishes, cooking utensil•. all
size clothing : new It uted ,
jeans, shoe1, boots, dolls.
many more. 4 milea from •
HMC at Evergreen on old
160. 9 ·6. everyday except
Sunday til cold weather ,
Pricet reduced. Call 614-

Familv- 15 in. tirea &amp; rima,
loti of miac items. houte·
hold items. Childrens, ladies
size &amp;k. large , shoes 9-10.
telephone stand. girls 14 in .
bicycle, electnc sew:r
· g ma chine , 1977 For
l TO
wagon car

Free lingerie, good time.
undercover wear. party plan .

Colt after 5PM, 614-286 ·
6237 .

&amp;Vicinity

GREAT VIEW
GREAT VALUE
3 bdr . ranch , walk to
school, priced for quick
Hie, bv owner. Call
614·446·2439 Sat &amp; Sun .
only.

Work Wanted. Carpenter
work, remodeling, room ad dition , plumbing. repairs

Help Wanted

r;
I( CAB (Q
44 6
7
2
~~~~y~a!~~~.,
'oh•. • tl-~-:_:__'._!. _ ~_or_~_rho
-~~_!_~-~--:-· ::~~o~P~!!~.~ ~':a~~~1

nYUNG &amp;

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wlndowt
•Raplacernent Windows
•New Roofing

·
'

.....~

•-.

·FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU

INSULATION

6 Lost and Found

992 7013
Oh.1~0~;.J;~·~.:.;:.---.L __..JR!!t;_.~61!.!,1,!W~o:=,si~D!!•i!:r"~i~n~!!
I

J&amp;L BLOWN

Giveaway

4 black-whitefemele Cocker
Spaniels, 7 weeks old . Call

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

EUGENE LONG

J&amp;F

Roger Hysell
Garage

re111onable ratea.

Colt 304-576·2338.

Including
New DundiHI Late Model Repllcement Pertl

For Faster Service

Eatimates
8·8 lmo. d

992-9991 . Robert &amp; Judy

810'1• Wort llaln Stroot
Po....,oy, Oh.

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

people aerioualy intereated
In loaing weight. 1·'800-

3-D AUTO CENTER

We'd like to mtroduce you to
£npr:t-A·Car, the modern way
to drtve the vehicle of your
choice.

11

·-·-·-Giiiiiiioiis .... ·---

554, Fd s,pt . 13, Sot. 446 . 133 9 .
Sept . 14, 9:00-5:00 . 31 ------~--­

Cakes by Carol. Birthday,
wedding, etc. Call614· 446-

tion. Phone 61 4· 742-2829.

Service Call

4/29/lln

• 4-511c

Servt~:es

3 bdr, l~rgelivlng room, tUn
ba .. ment. ez9,000 or
14,000 take over payments .

3 bdr ., familv room, 1109
Adrian Ave., *39,000 Call
614 - 446~ 3718 .

065t .
AA Cri1i1 Pregnacy Center.
Confidential. Free preg·
nancy tett and -or informa-

Pickup

985-3561

Emplnyn11:nl

loons&amp; Co . 614-446·431 3 .

BUSINESS-RESIOENnAl

NEW-REPAIR

PARTS and SERVICE

Balloon• for Get Well. Anni vartarya, Birthdays, partiea.
Singing Q.orrillt . CaN Bal-

Prked to oall '39. 600 . Call
614·440·8038.

COMPAREIIf you're think~
lng about joining the mil·
itary, check with the Army
National Guard first .
Monthly paycheck, traini!'g,
life insurance. and retue ment benefita avatlable .
Planning on college? We
have the new Gl Bill that
peysfulltimestuetents.e1•o
per month, uptoaml!lxtmun;t

AND

must be willing to care for
newborn later. Prefer some·
one living Greer Road area.
Point Plea1ant on Rt. 2.
304·67&amp; -2921

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

Rio Grande. new 3 bdr ., full
bat•ment, nice lot, large
rear deck with vallay view .

9 til 4.

AROUND

wonted to sit 3 yr old boy,

45769 or cart 614 -9927760
'

Homes for Sale

eollor . Call614-446-8181 .

SHOP

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

•

•VINYl SIDING
0 AlUMINUM SIDING
0 8lOWN IN
INSULATION

Call 304·675-3960 or 1800·642 · 3619.

FURNITURE. Bedl, iron,
wood, cupboards, ctiairs,
chana, baskets. dishes,
atone jars. antiques. gold
and
Write-MOhio
.D.
Miller,silver.
Rt .2 , Pomeroy,

' Wanted:old pianos . Paying
820 and S40 each. First
floor only . Wnte giving
SWEEPER and sewing madirections. Witten Pianos ,
chine repair, parts. and
Box 188, Sardis, Ohio
suppliea .
Pick up and
43946.
delivery , Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. on• half mile up
Old ln.dien motorcycle. 304Qeorgea Creek Rd.
Call
675· 4681.

AND

student• $140.00 per
month. % time 1tudenta
$106.00 per month, and
half time 1tudanta $70.00
per month, up to maximum
of $6,040.00. We have the
bell part·tirne job• eroundl

Dependable, loving mother

County . 61 4·992-3466.

MANLEY'S

·H

military? Regret toling that

garage or large ttorage
building in Gallipolis area .
Call 614-256·6261

3 Announcements

•li"

1.3.tfc

C~ov. - Oido

814-448-2639 .

SENIOR Packages in Town

Far11 Eqalp111e•t
Parts &amp; Ser-lee

We pay cash for lela model
clean uaed cara .

&amp;. Olive St.

Real Estate General

. WANT A PlACE TO BUilDlSt. Rt. 143 - 50 acres ot Pfl·
vacy and tree l!i!S lor newhme.
REDUCED to 22,500.00

OLD TIME HEATING
CO.
Gallipoli1

Long lottom, Ohio

Wanted To Buy

614-448 -3169.

. ~~

Coil or Wolk In for An
Appaintment and Prius
. 308 3rd St., Rocint, OH.
Home: 992 ·6712
Or Bus. 949.3031
Aller AIHJ. 21
8·191 mo pd.

HYOIOTECH CHEMICALS

Geo.

1/3

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

9

WANTED TO BUY uoed

- Plumbing and electrictl
wO&lt;k
(Frea Estimates)

8 miles tram

6785 or 304-773-6430.

SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3td.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We do Weddings, fomilies
&amp; Children

antique, liquidation
ulea. Ucenaed Ohio end
w..t Virginia. 304-773 -

614·446·3672

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

~-~

BOGGS

farm,

Bill Gene Johneon

- Addons •nd remod1llng

Middleport. Ohio
1·13-tfc

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE. Eatato,

J im Mink

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-2196

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

wood

, PHOTOS

Many Packages To Choou
From - lowest Pr1 oed

"SPAS"

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

•Heats to 3,000 Sq. Feet PRE-SEASON
•Use Fr" Slanding or ' SALE
As Fireplace Insert
"Glass Door
OFF
• Air Tight Ash Pan
NO MONEY DOWN

PICTURE "PERFECT..

GIVE US A CALLI

YOUNG'S

sets.

Tty us, we &lt;&lt;111 rio

I
I
I
I
I
II

34

caurt

Merchandiee

·
I1

~~~~~~~~ II

The Daily Sentinel

~ ...

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bedrooms. 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large recreati~;&gt;n room. located on 8
acres . Large farm pond. Racine
area .

I

1t,

Refncmtors. washen. dryers.
gas and electric ranges and TV

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

I
I

I"·
i
M~iiThisCCIIIpatwilhReminlnce
I
I

10
dcy1

I
To lS $1.00 SIO.OO , , 5.00 $1l.OO I

1.

II ro:

days

6
dars

J

1
lo 75 suo $1.00 It J .OO $11.00 1

I'
I·
I J.
I 4.
I s
I 6.
I :1.
I a, .
I

]

GOOD USED

tt

To IS II Ou $1 .00 $8.00 $13.00 ~

I:
I
I 1 !Wanted
1 ( IFo• Sale

I (
I ·1
I

Real

64 Misc.

Circle
Ad Wanted

Announcements

$15,000
Call 992-3859
or 992-3647

1

on~ word m e11dr

Clllri&lt;

baths, fireplace,
central air.

II

I

19)6, 12. 19, 3tc

Public Notice

Thst:: Ordinance No. 379,

·II
I

Lana K. Neaelroad,'

Ordin1nc8 No. 606, dated

Auguat 6, 1979
Ordinance No. 511 . dated

dec.._.

1I Curb Inflation
II
Pay Cash for
i Classifieds and
II
Savel I I

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

OPENING AUG. 21

•Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
*Roofing
•Siding
•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildinas

$899

8·8 tfc

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

Business
Services
'·----------,---_;'------T----------

pointed of
Administn~trix
of the ~
oatato
Eorty M. Roush.
- • e d. late of 23360 Hill
Road, Racine, Meigs County,
Ohio .

3

992-5175 Or
742-3195

PAT HILL FORD

lluc:k, 23360 Hrll Road, Ra·
cine, Ohio 45771 wu ap·

Mayor

July 1, 1974

PH. 992-6931
After 5 Call
742-2027

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Public Notice

said

Riehard Seyler

Exporioueo ............... 4 .60
Full ~mo Slreet. Cemetery,
With E-ierrco .. ......... 4.86 Water and Sewer empk)yees April 14, 1980
01 ;atchwa: Regular
~co No. 1&gt;19, dated
and the Mayor'• Secnn.ry.
FebrullfV
2, 1981, and
'Nho
have
wottced
•
minimum
1 month
8 .. ........ 3.35
monlhl"'"'
.... . ....
Ordin1nce No. 661 , dated
of five 161 yooro, wiN roceive"'"
Abr 8 montho ........... 3.81 conto t10c) por hour longevity April 1. 1986 wage and salary
Extra Diopotc'-: .......... 3.35 pay kJr Oleh five J6) y&amp;IIIO of sections lhell be Mld are
heraby ...,..ted.
-Ponron·
employmont
That this Ordln.wu:l8 Is herSection 4
, month "'"' 3
montho ............ ........ 3.35
to ba an emerThat this ordinance 11 retro. eby
After 8 , _ _ ............ 3.61 active to April 5 , 1986to raise gency ordinance tor the imme~
After 12montho ........ 3.75 emplov- wogoo of thole diate pras.vation of the public
Strlll't:
making lou lhon 83.36 por
StrwtS~ .. ........ 4.95 hour and relae wag• u being
AaiotontSU1&gt;01' . ......... .. 4.32 mandated by Federal L.w

l.aboren-1 month thru
3 mon1hl .. .. ........... 3.36

in

August20, 1973

January 2, 1980
Ordinance No. 514, dated

C. llonellts

Wi1hout

Public Notice
safety

Call:

lnslallalion Available
4 4/ lfn

Or Write Dailiy Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Public Notice

FENCE &amp;.SUPfLY

II

PHON.E992-2156

SYSTEMS FROM

FOI ALL YOUR
WiliNG NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

"Free Estimates"

The Daily Sentinel

..

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

10-8-lfc

St. Clair, Belva Willard. Lutchie
Riggs. and Audra Well, members,
and guests, George Zeigler, Fred
Riggs, Sa m Curtis, Vern WeD,
Albert Curtis, and son, Travis.
Next meeting will be held on
Monday night wilh Mrs. Curtis as
the hos tess

8

1/?2/tlc

992-34~0

VETERANS; Do you with
you had .caved In the

Now Gl Bill . It pays full time

We Al•o Carry
Fishing ,Suppliea ,
IUSINISS PHONE
16141 992-6550
RISIIENCI PHOift
1614) 99%-7754

•

31

Help Wantad

rwlirament Income? Sorry
you didn't tHo advantege of
LOST. tinted gta . . ., brown the Gl Bill to get your collage
fr•me•. around court hou• degree? Maby it's not too
Point Pteaunt. if found leta. Join the Army Netiorial
laeve at Shop-A-Mini , Point Guerd and receive a monthly
Ple11ant.
.. pevcheck , life in1urancea,
retlremMt benefitli, and the

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

--·-

'

11

lrtl! . Call 814·949·2009 .

•

317 North SKond
Mitldloparl, Ohio 45 760

4U·941.-4U-2112
811212 mos

Lost and Found

t21. reward fOJ return of 3
month old IHgl• pup. Elige

HEATING

Air Conditionert

W~lk-in Garden Club has meeting
The annual picnic of Ibe Walk· In
Garden Club was held recently at
the home of Lutchie Riggs. Prayer
was by Mildred Zeigler.
Cards were signed for Helen
Carper and JessieSaunderswhoare
hospitalized. Attendingwere Naomi
Reed, Mildred Zeigler, Ruth Fran·
cis Leota Smith , .Jessie Curtis, Ola

6

.•____.____"'* I HNI·McKtnzit Ridve A011do

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;

HEU111G I , COOUIIG ITITIMS
Solts &amp; S..wkt

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

at~:s=~t~!u~:~~~~~=

approved by the group. Texanna Hand" and had prayer. Devotlqns
Well gave the secretary's report,
byMaryHughesoftheEiec1aCircle
and Mrs. Anthony, the treasurer's were from Psalm 73 and the Daily
report,
Guideposts. She also had a poem by
The love gift offermgs were Helen Steiner Rice and prayer.
dedicated by Mrs. Gibbs wlio made
Sam Owen of the Dorcas Circle
a cross using the love gift boxes.The gave a report on the America Indian
offerings were presented by Eliza·
taken from a book owned by Charles
bethSiaven.MissHallrotedthatthe and Freda Edwards. This year the
Rio Grande Association has In·
Baptist Women 's Conference Is
creased its offering. A prayer of · concentrating Its help to AIM
dedication was given by Mrs. Gibbs.
IArizona Indiana Missions I· Prayer
Mrs. Anthony had a program of by Mrs. Kloes closed the meeting
music to open the meeting con·
with refreshments being serve by
ducted by June Kloes, president.
the Elecla Circle.
She read "1lleTouchoftheMasler's
Attending besides those named
were Jean Eden, Edna Wilson,
Beulah White, Gwlnnle White, Ethel
Hughes, Sara Fowler, A!wilda
Werner, Freda Hood, Helen Bod!Body perm
mer, Ft·eda Edwards, and Mary
Short, Duffy hairdos may need the
support of a body permanent.
StyUsts say hair must be in good
condition, the perm must be
mateched to hair type a nd process·
ing instTUctions must be carefully
followed.
The test curl. for example.
unwound a few minu tes before
processing time is to end, is vital to
avoid a disastrous perm.

Thursday, September 12. 1985

31

f~lale

Homes for Sale

Government homes from e1
(U repair), Also deliquen't tax

property . Call 806 · 887·
6000 ext. GH-4662 for
Information.
2 bdr .. fully carpeted. vinyl
aiding, l•rge lot , storage
blda .. garden. rettricted ,

.t2?,500. C11t 814· 258UOO.

83,000 . Call 614· 367·
0413.
1972 Flamingo 3 bdr , 1 'h
ba1h, total electric, . CA.
refrigerator. tome furmture,

8x10 deck , $1 ,400. take
over payments . Call 614-

245 ·9647 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Clayton homas on Sale!
1985 Lakefront, 1476 sq .ft .
reduced to $27.996. We're
Elsea Home Canter· Chlllt 1974 H1ll.crest 1 2x65. 2
bedrooms Good conditon
Partially furnished with un ·
derpinning and 2 porches

$4,800 . Call
2478

614 · 992 ·

12~~:65 Elcona Trailer . Good
cond1tion. 1 mile east of
Chester on St . Rt. 248 .
Make offer. Call eventngs

614~ 446 - 3446 .

1972 Atlantic 12x60, for
sala . Call 614-388-9602

8s Acreage

Bunal lo1s, Concord Came-

tory. Phone 304-675-11 26.

Renlals

cothe . Call 61 4· 772· 1 220.

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch, located on Rt .
1eo. near NGH s, $300 mo .•
$150 dep ., no pets. Call

61 4 ·388·871 1 after 5PM .
4 bdr house on Bulaville Rd.
stove turn, 8325 plus dep .

61 4-985 ·4466 016,4-9853841 .

Call614·446-0276.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED .

Modular with garage, Syracuse, Available 9 · 1 . Oep ..
ref' 1. lease required. no pets.

Insured, reasonable ra1es .

Call 306· 578 -2336 .
1970 Shullz 12x60 mobile
home. e~tc cond , 304 ·576·

2962 01 576 -2069
1981 Holly Park mobile
home, 14•70, must sell,

304·576·2947

1974 Celebrity, 12x60,exc
cond. Call614-246 ·9146 or

35 Lots

1- - - - - - - - - 1959 2 bedroom trailer for
sale, furn1shed, oil tank and
underpenning $1,200 .00
Do not call unless really
interested, between 10 .00

AM and 6 :00 PM 304·675·
1979 Libolly 14•65 2 bod · _1_26_9_._ _ _ _ _ __

room , furnished mobele 1
home, excellent condttion, 1971 Flamingo 12•65, 3
gas furnence Mus1 1811, bedroom, AC, eke cond,

U , 500. call 61 4 -446 · I .:.
Po_•_c_
h._6_1_4_·4_4_6_-_
o _6 8_ 4_.__

8300 mo . Call 614 -9927032 or 6 t 4· 446 ·2 340.
3 bdr. full basement, central
air, fireplace . Green school
dtstr~ct, available immediately S325 plus dep. Call

614 -852-1357. .
3 bdr . air co nd .. within city
lim1ts Call 614-446-4110
References requ1red . 2 bedroom at $250 mo or 4
bedroom $300 mo . Near
Porter o n Rt. 554. $200
dep no pets 10 house, accept
1 or 2 small chtldren Call

614 -446-4755 before SAM
ir aher 4PM .

1·- - - - - - - - -

3681 ,

Like new. convenient loca 1969 Skyline. 12x60 with tion. 2 bdr., S260 per
1982 14x70 trailer, 3 bdr, tip out, $4 ,000.00. 304- · month . $160 deposit . Cell
1 % bath , stove &amp; refrig , , _6_
7 _5_
· 1_9_2_5_. _ _ _ _ _ _ evenings614·446~ 9328for
washer It dryer hookup. I ·
appo1ntmen1 .
8x10 wood storage build- 1- - - -F-a_r_
m_s_f_o_r_S,...a"'l'e,..ing, 8 •1 0 wood porch deck, 33
2 bdr house. Pt. Pleesan1
812,500. Call 614-446 · 1- - - - - - - - - - area for a dditional tnforma·
6231 .
Leon , West Virginia 58 tton call 614 446· 4602.
acres, gentleman farmer-2
WHY PAY MOREl Mobile story ho!'le 4 bedroom~ ,
3 bdr , do uble garage.
home additions and mob1le barns, sheds, ponds, fruit breezewa v. College Rd .,
offices by ROOM ADDI - 1rees. you cAn work this 95 Svracuse . $300 plus depTIONS. INC . 1819 Wa - per cen1 tractor lend , city osit Call 614· 446 - 1478.
shington Blvd .. Belpre, Ohio utilitin, water , close to
45714 . Call 614 · 423 - schools and shops on herd House for rent 8 south of
6825 .
road , surrounded w1th white Jackson or 3 m1les above
split rail fencing makas thi• a Thurman in Jackson, 2 bdr ,.
1970 PMC 3 bedroom . Tip 1 tory book ntting, manic- 8200 mo . $200 dep. Call
out, furnished , air, washer ured grounds right up to the 1175 CHV) 614-256·6261.
and dryer. awning. 1$6900. renee, beautiful permanent
Call 814~9 92 ·7479 .
home or retreat. Owner Houae and ba1h , large yard In
financing low inters1 cell Racine area. Call 614-992 ·
Nashua 14K70. completelv Judy 304-925 · 1806 or 5858
furn is hed . Washer and 925- 7624 collect . MLS
dryer. Cell614 -949·2 263 . Broker , Frances Ferguston 2 bedroom home . Fut·
Realty. 304-925· 7520.
nithed . Real nice Rt. 124
1976 1 2x66 2 bedroom
Mtnersville . Overlooks Ohlo
mobile home on 6 acres of 1- - - - - - - - - - River Call 614-992 ·3324.
land. Double garage storage 34
Business

building . Kingobury Rd .,

Buildings

· Pomeroy. Phone 614 -992 - l- - - - - - - - - -

2564 or 614 ·992 •2274.

14x70. 3 bedroom• with
'central air. new carpet. new
roof. Prica reduced. Cell

614· 992 ·3119 •ftor 4 :30.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Commercial building for sale 1- - - - - - - - - - or rent on Main St. New
Haven , W Va. Call304·882·
Mobile home. Cell eve·a.

2058 .

814-446-0608 ,

�42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

64

LAFF-A-DAY

pd., except elect.. conve·
nient loc,tion , security dep osit reuqired. Call 8 14-448 "
8668.

Furnished. AC. cable, no city
taKea, beautiful rivervtew, in
Kana ugl. Foater 'a Mobile
Home Park , 814*446 -1&amp;02.

2 bdr . 1ir co nd ., new carpet,
heat,

private

lot

in

Gallipolis . Call 814-446 1409.

Queen aiza book caae headboard watt~r bad, exc cond,
304-468-·1917,
'

Furnished 2 bdr. on East8rn
Ave. ·1175 mo ., S100 dip.
Ca ll 614-256- 1187.

Full tize hidlt·l-bed. 1 off
·white and beige stripe, IJ&amp;ry
good cond, $76.00. 304675·6622 .

1 2x60 2 bdr .. 2 mi. from

Holzer at Evergreen. Children accepted . Call614-446-

-

3697 or 614- 245-5223 .

1 2x85 2 bedroom . furnished, gu and water paid ,
S250 mo ., 8126 deposit .
Call 614-446-6583.

'

2 bdr. trailer, adults or 1
tmall child, below Eureka .
Call 614-256 -115 7 .

C) I'll . ... , .. _··-·"'-

~- _

Living room suite $100.00.
W11her. works $25.00. Ta·
ble 4 chairs
6 ft .
coffee table $20.00. 304676. 6943.

•so.oo.

..
,.,,... .. , _ _

"I wish we could have one
vacation where he would
just sit down and relax!"

Snow blade for 128 Cub
Cadet H5.00. 304-6763638.

---------L==========-F:;";~:=:=:7:;:;~:=:::;:1
3
1·44 Apartment
61 Household Goods
bdr. privata lot. water paid,
8200 mo., d•P.· &amp; ref.
re.q uired . Call '-614- 446 0362.

14;-c65 mobile home on 1
acre lot S250 mo . plus
utilities 2 children accepted,
Bvailable Ot:t. Vinlon area .
Call 614- 388-9881.
2 bdr . AC , fully furnished ,
utilities paid . Call 614 - 446 ~
4110 .
2 b'd r. trailer in Pomerov.
5170 mo .. S100 dep . includes water. 1 child accepted . Call 614 - 992 3587.

2 bedroom mobile home in
Racine . Phone 614- 3677148 .
Mobil home unfurnished.
Camp Conley arara, 304676· 1371 or 675-3812 .

44

Misc. Merchandise

Fall Hunt Clinic, Sunday,
Sept . 16th, 12:00 tHI 7:00.
reprelentetives from Bear~
Jenninga Archery, PSE
Archery, US Rapeet Arma.
Taaco Thomp10n Center..
Black Powder Gun1. Win cheater, Pennawood, Kal·
pin. Charles B•ilay, Fred
Bear bow hunt films ,
Archer; novelty ahoot. door
pri:res every 16 minutes. Tri
County Sports Shop. Pt.Pit.
304-676-2988.

2 bdr. h.lrnlshed, ell utilitea

gu

Apartment
for Rent

for Rent

6 pc . Formica dinetle sei

860. good cond. Call 614,
2 apu . In Point Plaeaant. 379·2612 oftor &amp;PM.
304-675 -7112 .
1----~---Furnished 1 br apt. Mt.
Vernon Ava. a-c. carpet, 2
utilities furnished . Aduhs.
$1 85. 304-675-2661 .

2 br apartments in Henderaon. 304 -676-1972.
One bedroom apartment,
con11enient location , call
304-675-2441 .
Apt for rent, 1420 Lewis St,
304-676·3420.

45

Thursday. September 12. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14-The Dail Sentinel

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houH keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614· 446-0756 .
Furnished room. range, rafrig . $126. there bath, single male. 919 2nd. AVe..
Galllpolio. Coli 446· 4416
after BPM .

!==========

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS {Equal 46 Space for Rent
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent starts at $169
for 1 bedroom anlj S204 tor
2 bedroom. ~epoait $200 . . Mobile home lot, 1 2 ' "60' or
loCated near SPring Valley smaller, 87 5 water paid. 4th
Plaza and Foodland, pool &amp; Neil, Gellipo,is . Call 44 6·
end Coble TV ovallabla. 4 4 16 after 8PM .
office hours as possible 10
artlto4pmand7pmto9pm Mo~ila home lot 1 mihJ o·ut
Neighborhood Rd . 160 mo.
Mo n d ay- Fn'd ay, c a 11 614 • C
1 61 4 4 4 6 13 40
4 4 6 .• 2 7 4 6 or I e a 11 e l -~a-l__
_·_ _ _-__ _ _·___
me1saga . .
Large trailer lot for rant on
Bulallilla-Addison Rd . Call
Nicely furnished mobile 614 _367 _0232 or 614 _446 _
home, eff . apt .• central air
_
4265
and heat in citv. adults only . I - - - -- - - - - Call 614-446-0338 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North ot
Furnished efficiency S160,
. Large lots. Call
utiltias paid, share bath. 607 Pomeroy
614-992· 7479 .
2nd . Ave . Gallipolis. adults.
Call446· 4416 after 8PM.
Trailer spaces, small child·
2 bd r . apt., good location, ran accepte d• out Locult
"K
R
Rt
1
K
d
b
k
f
•149mo.,uto'loa
.
.
,
ac
o
ca.
red8Corated. •
304 675 1076
itieo p•nly peid . Call 304· __-_ _•__.____
1
675 - 5104 or 304· 675 5386 .

Merchandi se

2 bdr . AC apt .. large rooms.
near Pizza Hut, water paid.
&amp;26.0 mo .. immediate occupacny. Call614· 446 -7025.
2 bdr . apt ., 11 Coun St.,
&amp;325 mo .. ref . 8e dep . Call
614-446-4926 .

1---------

Good melal office delka
$100.00 each . Uaed oolld
wood 3ft. doors. 1omewith
windows 8nd some without
$60.00. 304· 676· 2406.
Singer, Golden Touch and
Sew , sewir1g machine
$100.00. good con d. 304675-6393.
Table saw, good cond,
.:_P_ho_n_•_a_o_4_
· 6_7_s_-_
18
_ 4_ 5_.__

Electric clothes dryer. good 1
d $80 IN 94 KN)
11
firewood $20.00 pickup
·
· •.
load,_$30.00
Call•
con ·
614-266-6251
after &amp;PM
_ delivered.
or
304 675 6762
875
Gibson deep freeze . 15 cu. 2991.
ft . Philco 18 cu . ft . side bv
tide refrigerator. Call 61456 Building Supplies
992·775.1.

c

1- - - - - -- - - -

Elactric range with 2 ovens
for sale. $126 . Call 6149B5-3589 .
1--------Dining table, 6 chairs (old);
small breakfut Ht; ranch
style loveseat and rocker
(excellent condition). Call
614-992-6896 .
Full si1a sofa bed, floral
velvet. like new, S200 .00,
304-675-4144.

1:=========
·

Building Materials
Block, bric~. sewer plp&amp;s.
windows, . lintels, elp .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
0. Coll614-245·5121.
Utility bldg . apecial :
30'"40'"9·' with track door
&amp; serv . door. $62155
erected . Iron Horse Builders.
614·332-9746 collect.

1- - - - - - -- - -

BUILDERS
C I o sao u t • s- Sur plus -

53- - Antiques
1------

Salvagelruas
.
Roof
jup to 20' S16.00){20'to30'-$20.00)
1930 Vintage diningroom 130' to 40'- 826.00) .
set, aolid oak table lw-leaf). Aliminum siding
woOd·
4 chaires, china cabinet, grain an twin 4' with foam
excellenl cond. Cell 614· back $39.95 sq.
446-8263.
Marble vanity's tops . Saconds all sizes choice
$30.00 ea.
54 Misc . Merchandise Prahung 6 or 8 panel steel
1- - - - - - - - - - insulated exterior doors
$89 .96 ea.
Fi(eWood· c:utup slabs. 1 Prehung 9 ft. thermal glass
truck load 8100, 2-S180. steel door'• crostbuck or
pa 1 $139 95
Pickup load, you haul 816 .
ne
· .
HEAP accepted . Call 814- 1 pc . fiberglass tub and
246 ~ 6804 .
thower white and color
1 ---~------ G199.00 to 8229 .96.
.COmpact &amp; opreoding Yewo 17'x19' white gold vsnity
· h
$29 95
$9 .99 / aach . Shreadad bark Wit top
. • marble top
mulch $20/ PU lo•d . 1 mi. &amp; vanity $39.96 .
3
5
b
11 k'
h'
Nor1h of Silver Bridge . Cell
or pc. tu wa •ts,w 1te
614-446-4530 .
or color $39.95 to $89 .95 .
Embossed 2'x4' ceiling tile
16 HP Lawn Tractor w-42' some fire rated $1.89 ea.
cut mower 1980 modal, SUspended ceiling gridsl12'
excellent condition , 8960 . main tee 82 .60) 4 ' tee 80
Ce11614-256-1959.
cents) (2' tee 40 cents) (10'
1- - - - - - -- - - wallangla $1.99) .
Colonial clear white pine
casing. Window and door
trim 32 cent ft .
Veneered Interior white pine
door Jamb's $8 .99 pr .
3'x15' foil face fiberglass
insulation 88 . 12 sq.ft ..
815 .96 roll.
lnColor longeted comodes's
siphon jet $89.95.
4'x10' P.U.C; sewer and
drain pipe with bell (1pc.
Heavy duty Caae front end . 83.49 ee .) {100 pc-$3.00
loader, excellent condition. ea .)
Gallipolis Block Co.. Pine 4KB wood an maaonite
St ., Gallipolis, Ohio Call paneling woodgrain and
prints, $6 .99 to S1 2 .99 .
614-446-2783.
Valves to 824.95 . ·
17.500 BTU air cond .. 30 PENN ' S WAREHOUSE ,
pc . of underpinning, UHF &amp; Wellston, Ohio, hours 8-5 .
channel 23 antenna . Call Call614-384-3645 .
614-446· 8594.
1- - - - -- -- Building malarial, concrete
Regulation size pool table. blocks all sizes. lentil•. flu
exercise bicyle . Call 614· block&amp;, clay tile. Delivery.
Gallipoli&amp; Block Co., Pine
446-3005 .
Sl ., Gallipolis, Ohio Call
Firewood 100% clean hard - 1 6_ 1_4_-_4_4_6_
- 2_7_8_3_._ _ __
wood . $35 - Deli11ered r
pickup. S25 · you haul. Call Block, brick. mor1ar and
masonry supplies . Mountain
after 6, 614-446 -7524.
State Block. Rl . 33, New
Gold colored carpet; 13x20 Haven. W. Va. 304-882feet, excellent condition . 2222 .
Also cabinet Singer sewing
machine and maple .corner 1·
56
Pots for Sale
deok . Call 614-448 -2685 .

a·

!:=========::

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Just Available. Unfurn 'ed. 1
BR . utilities paid , S250/ mo . Sofas and chairs priced from
S286 . to $895 . Tables. 860
Call 614-446-9244 9 -5.
and up to $126. Hide-aUpstairs 3 ro o ms &amp; bath . bed&amp; .S 390 . and up to
Clean, no pets. adults. ref . S560.. sofa· beds $145.
required . Call 614 - 446 - Recliner•. S225 . to 8375 .,
Lamps from 828 . to 8125 .
1519 .
pc . dinenastrom $109., to
Furnished, $175 mo . pay 436 . 7 pc . $189 and up .
own utilities . Call 614-446- Wood table with six cheirt
8285 to 8745 . Dook 0110
9244.
up to $226. Hutches, $560 .
Furnished apt., 1 bdr., 920 Bunk bed compl.te with
4th Ave ., Gallipolis . Utilities mattrenet. $276 . and up to
paid . Call 446 -4416 after 8395 . Baby bode, $110.
Mattresses or box tpringl,
8pm.
full or twin, $83., firm, 873 . Baby bed, Winnie the Pooh
curtains &amp; bumper ped . Call HILLCREST KENNELS
2 bdr, partly furnished . and $83. Queen ~ets , $225 . after 6 . 614-446-4127 .
Boarding all breeds. Heated
4
dr
.
chesta,
S49
.
6
dr.
downtown Gallipolis. water
indoOr-outdoor facilities .
paid, $175 mo. Call 614- chests. 859 . Bad framea,
S20.and 826 ., 10 gun · Gun Myers submergible pump. 2 AKC Doberman puppies:
446 -3919 .
cabinets. $360. Gas or HP, 2000 gal . utility tank . Stud Service. Call 614-446Call614-266 -1208.
7795 .
3 rooms &amp; beth for rent electric ranges $375. Baby
mattresees,
•26
&amp;
$35,
bed
furnished . utilities furnished
Firewood. se..oned slabt, Briarpatch Kennels All $200 mo. Call 614-446- frames S20, S26. &amp; $30,
860 . a cord, delivered . 7 in . breed grooming . Indoorking
frame
860,
Good
salec
~
3793.
tion of bedroom suitea, by 9 in . blocks, 885. a cord, outdoor boarding facilitiea.
delivered . Slabs pit: ked up at English Cocker Spaniel .
Riverside Aptt. Middleport . rockers , metal cabinets. the mill, $16 . a bundle. 388- 9790.
headboards
S38
&amp;
up
to
Special rates for Senior
Approx . 1 Y2 ton per bundle . 1---------~
Citizens. $130. Equal t-lous- $65 .
Coli 614·742-2473.
Oragonwynd Cattery Ken ing Opportunities . 614 ·
nel . CFA Himalayan, Persian
Used
Furniture
-Metal
992-7721 .
office deeks. 3 miles out Kerosene heater for uta . end Siamese kiltene. AKC
11,000 BTU. Call614-992 - Chow puppiea . Call 4462 bedroom apartments . Bulaville Rd . Open 9am,. to 5989 .
3844 after 7PM.
New Haven. WVa. Newly 5pm , Mon . thru Sat.
remodeled . In town. 614- l '-6-1_
4-_4_4_8_-0_3_2
_ 2_ _ _ _ _
Hard firewood for sale. Call . Male blonde. Cocker Spaniel. one yr. old, shots. AKC
992 -7481 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES J-6-1 4
_-_
7_4_2-_2_6_4_
&amp;._ _ __
Reg .- H76 .- Call 614-·245-'
1 bedro:Om · apt . for rent, Washers. dryers, tefrig&amp;ri New l.P.N . Medical bookt 9647.
Nit:aly located . Contact VII- tora • . ranges. Skagga Ap for Buckeye Hills. S240 .
lage Manor in Middleport . pli41nces. Upper River Ad . cosh . Call614-992- 5207 .
AKC registered Brittany
614 · 992 · 7787 . Equal beaide Stone Crest Motel.
Spaniel
pups . Excellent
Housing Opportunity.
614-448· 7398 .
76 Dodge Charger. 8 cv- hunting stock . 8160. each .
Iinder. Stick. 76,000 mHos. 614-992 -2827.
One or two bedroom apa~t­ County Applia'nce , Inc .
Clean . Runogood. 8750. 82
Good
u1ed
appliencea
and
mentl in Pomeroy . FurHonda CXI500 8,000 miles. AKC Sibefian Husky pupnilhtd or unfurnished. Rant TV 1011. Open BAM to &amp;PM . Cleon . t1 ,200 . 76 Mldu
plea, 2 malea. 1 female, Call
negotiable. Call 614-992- Mon thru Sat. 814-446· 26' ielf contained camper.
304-882-3288.
1699. 827 3rd . Avo . Galli·
6723 .
Sleopo 4 . t2,900. 614·949poli1. OH .
F'
h T
2969 .
11
ank and Pet Shop,
One bedroom. total electric,
_.
·
2413 Jackoon Avenue ,
carpeted. CioN to shopping. V aII ey Fur"'ture,
new
•
Cafl814-992· 2094.
used . large section of qual- 30 inch Norge gaa range. Point PlaaNnt, 304·676·
1_8_1_4 _·9_9_2_·5:._7:._8:._3:._._ _
ity furniture . 1218 Eastern IC
- •1.,.
2083. Fish. birdaand more.
Avo .. Golllpollo.
AP ARTMENTS . mobllo J_
_: _ _ : _ _ _ _ _ _ 2 yr. old WIII·Burt Coel 3 female Beagle pups. 8
homes, hou ses . Pt. Plea•ant
Stoker with timer and lher· weeks old , *26 .00 each or
.nd Gallipolis. 614-446- Refrigerator &amp; stove . Call mostat. 1 piece· co•l fur-ce $60.00 takes all 3 . 3QA.
614 - 367 -0409 .
~
7
8221 .
adapted to otol&lt;or. Colt 814- 468-1683.
.
949-2856 oftor 5 :00 p.m.
L.aureland Apertments, New Uaed Meyteg wringer
AKC reglatorad Boogloo. 6
Haven . Equal Housing Op- wesher, aofa bttd. gee renge. TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, gonoratlono podigreo , 2
Corbin
8o
Snydor,
965
Soportunity. Ha• vacancy. For
hotdlprebluting.allty.-sof mel••· 3 femalee. 4 mo old,
more informetlon cell 304. cond Avo .. Golllpollo, 614- gunsmith work. flit HrYice, t75.00 •ch, Jemes Davie,
446
-1171.
882-3716 .
304· 176-4831 .
304·178·2394.

!-==========

67

Musical
Instruments

1----------

F--------.,--

1- - - --__:____

197 3 Dodge mini mo1or
home. 20 ft .• 8 new tlrn • .
new air cond., aleeps 6.
l7,000. Aloo 1981 Buick
Skylork, ell power. 83,000.
Call 614· 448-4230.

Cl•rinet for aaJe .. Call 614446·3823 after 4;30.

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

Bundy clarinet. Good cpndilion . &amp;95. 61 4 - 992· 8271 .

1980 28ft . Aljocomporoxc.
cond .• air cond .. new 16 ft.
care fre~ awning, 614 - 742 ~
2738 .

Bundy Clarinet, uaed 1
school lerm. call after 3:00
or weekenda. 304-676·
6326.

1974 Hennacraft camping
trailer. 24 ft.. awning and
complete hitch. 82600. Call
614 -667·3826.

1-fJ.

1978 Kimbel Kabler plano,
304-882-3872.

&amp;

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Hoy for sole. Call 614 -4460373.
Red raapberries Taylor'•
Berry Potch. 614-448·8692
or 614-246- 6084. No Sunday Calli.

Yz runner green beans pick
your own 30 cents a ppound
or 87 .00 bu•hal. Call 614446-4599 .
Kennlbac potatoes 810-100
lb. will deliver if not too far.
Call614-367-7230.
1000 lbs. po1:a1oes for sale.
$7.00 a buahel. Riding lawn
mower and garden tractor.
GMC 66 pickup truck. Call
614-687-66,6 alter 4,00
p .m.
Winter potatoes:. We have a
good aupply of good Ken·
nebec's on hand . $8 .00 per
hundred. Your container•.
Humphrey Farms. Reedsville, Ohio. 614·378-6295.
Closed Sundays.
Canning peaches now available, open 7 days week, call
for prices as supply it
limited, 304 - 773 -5721 .
Bob's Market, Mason. W.
Vo.
Half runners . Logan Giants,
pumpkins. Laniera at Beach
Hill, 304·675 - 1 247.

59

For Sale or Trade

Luxman labc;~ratory reference series, component Ste·
reo $12,000 value 84,600
cesh or wjll trade tor car or
118n of equal value. c.n
614-446· 7781 .
Luxman laboratory refer ence series. component stereo 812,000 value $4,600
cash or will trade for car or
van of equal value. Call
614· 446·7781.

Farm Supp l ies
&amp; Liveslock
61

Form Equipment

CROSS &amp; SO~S
U.S . 35 West. Jackaon,
Ohio. 614 - 286-6451 .
Massey Ferguson, New
Hollend, Buah Hog Sales &amp;
Service. Over 40 used
tractors to choose from &amp;
complete I i ne of new &amp;
uaed equipment. Largest
'selection in S .E . Ohio.
1 row New Idea corn picker
like newcond . ·3 Ohio hybrid
herd boars.
1 0 LP gas
brooder hea18rs with flex
hose &amp; steel pipe still in
boxaa never used. Call 61 4 266-1286 .

Hay mulch for aalei 76 cents
a bela . Coll614-448 . 1411.
Shelled corn, $2 .65 a bushel. Call '14-378-6311. ,
Hay. appro•. 800 balaa. 76
cents pw bale if you bUy all.
Poll 61 4·949·2666 oftor
5,00 p .m .
Shelled
2586.

corn.

304-876-

TransportatiOn
71

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale -

1083 Chrysler E-claas, AC,
AT. PS, PB, cruiae, lilt
wheel, AM-FM. st8rao, front
Wt,ael driva, 39,000 miles.
$8.800.00 . 304 · 6755479.
1970 Renault, $250.00 .
GE. 2 speed. dishwasher
8100.00. 304·675-7224.
1978 Datsun 200SX, 5
speed. e"c cond, low mileoge, $2,700.00 . 304·
675·5689.
1979 Ford LTD station
wagon. air and cruiae. good
cond, call 304-675-1988.
1977 Olds 98. 2 door. one
owner, axe cond,
$2,496.00. 304-876-2496
after 6 :00PM.

TOP CASH paid for '80
model and newer used can.
Smith Buick· Pontiac, 1911
Eaatern A11e .• GallipOlis. Call
614-446-2282 .

1975 Caprice Ctauic, PB,
PS. PW. tilt steering wheel.
AC, runs good, 304·676·
3124 after 5 :00PM .

1970 Ford 4 dr., 302
engine . Ca11614·669· 7722.

1980 Bonneville Brougham,
diesel, ex cond. $4,000.00 .
Call 304-676 · 1754.

1981 Plymouth Reliant AT,
PS, AC. 4 dr. sedan, high
mileage, 81,896 . Call {14446-0150.

'74 Dodge Dart. good cond.
$300.00. Phone 304-6755996 .

1981 red T -bird Town lan dau excellent condition, new
tires. CaiJ after 5 :30 614245-9460.
1967 Olds for sale or trade.
S250. See James Koontf"it
Vinton .
1979 Ford LTD Landau 4
door, low mileage. Call
614·446·3553 .
77 Chevy 'A ton pickup,
$2.200. Colt 1-614-6823956 .
1980 Olds Cullass LS, V -8,
auto, 4 dr .• new tires. good
cond. Call 614 -446-4171
after 6PM .

1967 Mercury Villager sta·
tion wagon, runa but needs
to be restored. 289 engine,
auto ,t'rans, PS
B. aaking
$195.00 . Call 304·882·
2694 between 4-6 PM. Mon
through Sat.

a.

'73 Chevy Caprice. 4 doors.
auto, PW. PS, PB, 400 small
block engine, good work car,
304-882-2821.
1983 Buick La Sabre, low
mileage, air, tilt, cruise. 306
V-B. like new. $8,295 .00
firm. 304-882- 2778 .

72

Tru~ks for Sale

1977 Che11y Blazer. 1980
1977 Toyota Celica GT VW Rabbit sunroof, Call
coupe, AC, AM ·FM S-trock. , _6_14_-_4_4_6_-2_5_6_6_._ _ __
bucket seats, 92,000 good •·
cond ., asl4ing S2,100. Call 1985 Chevy pickup truck .
PS. PB. V6, Auto. Only 900
614-446-0026 after 5PM .
miles. $9000. Call 614·
1976 vw Rabbitt, sunroof • ., _94_9_-_2_6_5_0_.- - - - -looks &amp; runs like new, •·
$1,600. Inquire at 936 1976 Che11y. 1 ton dump
Second Ava .• Gallipolis, Oh . truck . S2.200. 1978 C60 2
ton Chevy truclc with 14ft.
1970 Old1mobile 98, ellery- van body. $3.200. 614·
thing power, good running , _9_92_·_3_1_9_4_.- - - -- cond .. sell 8450 . Call 614· •·
388 - 9856 dr 614- 388 - 1974 Ford picl4up 7 ft . bad,
302 engine, auto . 8495 .
9303 .
Call 614-992-2063 .
1978 Qodge Colt , 4 dr . l - - - - - - - - - sedan , AT. good cond., ' 82 Chevrofet pickup, 4
$1 ,900. Cell 814- 446- wheel drive . 304 · 576 7137 after 5PM .
2164.
74 Monte Carlo despenda·
ble . $250 . Call 614-4464972 or 614 -446-4117.
1984 Dodge Daytona Turbo
15,000 miles. 6 spd., AC,
AM·FM cass. , axe . cond .,
89 ,600. Call 614 - 4488149 or 614 · 256.-1115.

1981 Chevy pickup, air
condition. AM-FM stereo.
automatic, 304·676·6431 .

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

1- - -- - - - - -1981 Che11rolat van, custom . Call 614-446-2518
after 3 :30PM.

340 HI tractor, 3 point hitch,
PS, live pvwer. 2 bottom
plow1. J. D . corn planter.
$2,296. Call 814- 286 6622 .

1979 Chevette 4 spd .. AC,
AM -FM. &amp; 2 studded snow
tires on rima, $1 ,950. Call
614·446-3977 or 614-4462845 .

1- -----'--- - - -

165 M.F. diesel tractor,
Killbrot 276 grain wagon
with grain elevator. Cell
614 · 288-6522.

1980 Fiesta air cond ., over
40 MPG, 81,000 firm . Call
614-446 -9513 .

1- - - - -- - - --

220 Case garden tractor . 42
in . cut. hydralic drive. $976 .
Call 614·992-2063.
New Holland 718 one row
corn chopper . Twelve
blade&amp;. used very little. Call
614-742-2331.
New Holland 707 3 pt hitch
corn chopper; NeW Holland
363 grinder mixer. Gehl hi
throw blower. All equipment
excellent condition. 304273 -4215 .
One 276 bu " Moridge"
grain dryer$ 2.000.00 . 304675 -4308 .

63

Livestock

large 2 horse trailer ready to
use. Csll614- 288-6522.
Reg . 6 yr. old Tannes1ae
Walker gelding . Call 614 ·
446-9219 .
Butchering •ize hog1. Larry
Soyra, 304-895-3319.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Earcorn$2 . 36 bushel . Also
straw avallabla . Butler Heraford Ferm. Rl. 7. 8 miles
below Golllpolo. Coli 614266-8518.
Alfalfa h•v. pure and mixed
U .25 to .2.75 bolo . Colt
614· 288· 19159.

1984 Dodge Charger 2. 2
liter engine. PS. PB, 6 spd.,
19,000 miles, exc. cond .•
aoking 85 ,500. Call 614388-8896.
76 Pontiac Lemans. 2 dr ..
PS , PB, AC, AM · FM radio,
8750 . Call614-446-2261 .
1977 (627- CHZ) Ford Maverick $250orbestoffer. Call
614· 256-6251ofter6PM .

1977 Dodge van auto, AC.
crusla. Viking van top,
53.000 mi .. esking $2,500.
Call 614-446-3977 or 614446-2845.

1978 Jeep Cherokee four
wheel dri11e. Want to sell or
trade for Plymouth Horizon.
Call 614-986-4227.
l- - - - - - - - - 1983 Toyota SR- 5 4X4. red.
exc. cond., low mile1. fiberglast cab, running boards &amp;
brush guards, 614-986·
4400.

1 - - - - - - - - --

1951 Willy Jeep, runs good,
extra parts and new battery,
304-675-1417.

I==========

1975 Coup de VIlle . Good 74 Motorcycles
transponation . Sell or t r a d • J - - - - - - - - - for riding mower trector.
Call 614 ' 992 ' 3733 ·
1981 Hondo Xl600S very
1982 Choveno . 46 ,000
miles. Good conditionl
1980 or newer truck bed .
Gall efter 8 :00 p .m ., 614·
992-6667.
1981 Plymouth Horizon. TC
3 low mileage. 4 speed.
some extras *2.600. 304·
675- 3137 or 895- 3885 .

good cond . Call 614·256·

12
1__ _6 _o _a_ft_e_r_5_P_M_.._ _ __

Cl~;ute - out All used Honda's
at reduced offer. Can be
seen at HOnda Shop.

500 CC Suouki. $695 . Good
condition. 660 CC Yamaha
DOHC. $496. Call 614986-3839 .

1980 Dodge Colt RS. 1600 1982 Harley Davidson
cc, 4 sp, alum. wheals, Eagle Dresser. $6,000. Call 814·
STs, sun roof. not pllinl
$2996.00 304-- 675 -5306. . _7_4_2:._·_280.:_:_6:._._ _ _ _ __
1983 Oodge 800 ES . 4 dr.
2 .2L, 6 1pd, silver avery
a11ailabla option . $7996 .
304-876. 6306.

1985 Harley Da11id1on
FX68, · 380 mllao.
17.600.00. Phone 304676·7979.

19 76 Dod go Coronet, 2
Boata and
door. 318 engine. runs 75
Motors for
good, axe , gas mileage,
•860 .00. Phone 304-675- 1------~---4203 .
111 ft. Gl11tron with I I
1982 Pontile J3000. Mere. and trailer. vary good
*3,600.00. llko now. 304- cond. t1,iiOO. CoM 814675-3693.
4411· 7346.

Sale

.•

THURSDAY

..

9/12/85
EVENING

e:oo •m
(]) m • (]) ® •
(jJN.,...
(]) Blockbulrt.,.
(!) Flahln' Hole
ffiAnclyGritfith
(])
Audubon .Wildlife
Theatre
Gil Voyoge of the Mimi
fll Difl'rent Stroke$
IMAXl MOVIE: 'The lleac:h
Boys: A~ Ameri-. Band'
1J I]) (!) NBC Nightly

1OY2ft. salf~contained truck
camper. very good condition . Willing to negotiate.
Call814-986 ·3839.

1- - - - - - - ' - - - -

Fruit
Vegetables

Television
·Viewing

loage. Call 614-448 -1299.

Piano for sale . A11ume srftell
monthly payment on modern •tvlt piano. like new
condition. Can bt Men
locally . Wrl1e , including
phone numer to: Menager.
200 Athlon• .. Clteyvilla, Ill
82232 or cell {618)3466927.

58

~~~~~~~~~1!9!a;s_________________________!~~~~~~~~O~h~w~--------~~--------~----~The~!D~a~il!y~Se~n~t~in~m~P~~~~1~5~ ..

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1 979 Champion motor~
home. ex . cond., low ml-

Bundy Alto esxaphona
U50. Artlov clarinet t160.
Both " · oond. Call 614441· 4881 after 8PM .

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

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

79

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Lllrry Wright

6:30

HOWIHE HOTEL.
ROOM Ci.Efl:K

N.,...
(]) Carol

Burnett end
Friendl
(!) 'Down The Stretch'

J I

)
Msw. "t I I I I XXI XI Xr

CIJ Carol Burnett

Camper Insert unit for 8 ft
bed, complete with queen
tize bed and table, e"c
ohope, $250.00. 304-8822002.

(]) a

I]Z ABC News ICC)

1J (]) ® CBS News
(])Dr. Who
l)j) Body Electric
IJTul

IJI]) PM

7:00

Sr.rv1ces

(])

Now arrange lhe circled I8J18f'S to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)

~

Courbhlp/Eddle'o

Father

.

'

·
' Yeser
I d ays

I Jumbles: JOINT

81

Home
Improvements

(]) !ntertelnment Tonight

Join tbl ..klrMIIe Lofll'l flfl Ch* lrld ~ 1b .._,t-wonl Sup..- Jumb4n •-v
fnOIIIh. Far ........... Hnd 1 ...,_tQfd to: JLMTible Lo¥tr1 hn Club, C10 lltll

IJ (]) Wheel of Fortune

IM'MF F , P.O. loll

-.n, Palmyra, hi.J. 01015.

-MocNeil/t..hror
Nows'-r
•
(jJ New Name That
Tune

.

.

fJIIJ,.,.__

IHBO]Inolde The NFL
IJI]) Tic Toe Dough
(]) Don't Eat
D•iell ·

7:30

(!) ESPN'o Spaatho(e'*
CIJ Major l..oolgue Baebell:
loo Angeles at Atlenta

lHf Mi6111't T!WfftWJ 1/JI~L IJoW
flltSEtlt A~lloN of H~

J .and L lnsta.l latlon. RoofIng. vinyl siding. stormdoorl
end windows. Free eatimotes. Call614-992-2772.

(]) 1J ()) F11111lly Feud
CD Jeopardy

ffEEL!
I

A~ ~1FAllJ. IIJ6 ~Itt'S,
,AI~ &amp;Y Ill$ ~eL'I A-!61$TNJ1'!

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump sales. service. Registered in Ohio. All work
guarent.Htd . Call 304-2732811 . Ravenswood, W.Va.

~

'-

~

. . .·_.)

Nlghdy

(I)

Buolnou

® Wheel of Fortune

•

.

A
.

(jJ

w. v.u.

~Foonnttlbllooll

Show
IJ. WKRP In Cincinnati
IJI]) (!)Colby Show Clair
and the kids enlist 1he help
of singer lena Horne in 1n
attempt to surprise Cliff on
his binhday. (R)
(]) Wackialrt Ship in the

8:00

•• ••

Army
(!) Major l..oolgue lineboll'• Greatest Hlta

(])a (jJ NFL Football: loo

ALLEYOOP

Fauy Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 304-675 ·
1331 .

Angel" Raiders at Kanu~
City
0 (I) ® Magnum, P.l.
Pan 2 of 2. Magnum's war
buddV lands Magnum, Hig. gins and himself in a Viet·
namese outpost while on a
Cambodian rescue mission .
IRI (50 min.)
(])
MacNeil/lehrer
Nawohour
l)j)Gallery
IJ _ 'Children
of
tho

RINGLES ' S SERVICE, e•·
perienced carpenter, electrician, mason, painter. roof·
ing (including hot tar
application) 304-876 -2088
or 676-7368 .
Starks Tree and lawn Ser·
vice, stump removal. 304·
576-2010.

Broltenheartad
IHBO] MOVIE: 'Body Rock'
!MAXI MOVIE: 'IIIICheiot'

Wallpapering, neat and precise. References available .
Cell 304-675-2001 or 304675-4683.

Party' ICC)

~~~~.
l planned to wdl~
hOme but with this
leq

Maybe I can
make it as
far as Joels'

I've never spent Well... at least
a niqht on the I'm dressed for
dump!

ouch!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446 -3888 or
614-446-4477
JIM'S PlUMBING lo HEATING .' Rt. 1, Box 355 , Galli·
polls. Coll614-367-0576.
Excavating

Good-1 hcaVating, basements, footers., driveways.
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 61 4 -446 ·
4637. James L. Dav·ison, Jr .
owner.
Dozer Work land clearing.
landscaping, etc. Free lltimates. Call 614- 446·8038
or 614· 992 -7119 anytime .
J .A .R. Construction Co ..
Rutland. Oh . 614-7422903. Basements, Footers,
Concrete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher. Dump
trucks. &amp; water-ga&amp;·aewer·
electriCal lines .

BARNEY

MAW!!

General Hauling

HONGRV 1!
WHAT'S FER
SUPPER?

I'Ll TELL'iE

OUTSIDE,PAW

I'M

James Boys Water Service .
Also pools filled . Call 61 4·
256 · 1141 or 614- 446 · 1175 or 614-446-7911 .

0

Ken's Water Ser11ice. Wells.
cistern1, pools filled . Phone ·
614· 367·0623 or 614 -3677741 night or day.
Waugh's Water Service .
Wells, cisterns, pools . Fast
reliable service . Call 614:
256-1240 or 614-266. 1130, R'aasonabla rates.
Waugh's Water Service .
Wells, cisterna. pools. Feat. ·.
reliable service . Call 81 4256 - 1240 or 614- 256 1130. Reasonable rates.

HIDE::

11 :oo Ill]) rn m o (]) ®
ClZ

Upholstery

PEANUTS
LOOKS PRETTI' GOOD,
DOESN'T IT? -

ACTUALLY, IT
LOOKED BETTER

A DISTANCE!

•

D

Benny Hill Show

I]) (!)Tonight Show
Guest host Joan Rivers wal ~
comes Marla Gibbs. Barbara
Wolters, Johnny Cash end
Vincent Price. (60 min.)
(!) Sportxenter
(]) WKIIP in Cincinnati
D (]) Columbo 'Suilable
for.• framinq.' An art critic
ltlUs h1s uticte in order to inherit an en coHection . (R) (90
min.)
(]) Latanlght America
lliTul

a

(jJ
ABC
Nowo
Nlghtllne
1J One St.p a..,ooKI
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Tlglob-'

R &amp; M Furniture Manufac·
turing, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City. Oh. Call 614-2511470. colt Evo. 614-4483438 . Old &amp; now
Uphoaterad .

I 1:411

~l MOVIE: ·u.- tho

VolcMoo'

--- I

-~

NORTH
t-11·11
.AK832

-.-

.K914

ByJam.. J.....,y
For South, Ibis deal bad to be the
luckiest occurrence duriJic the 188~
Caveadllh Pairs. In tbe metbotll utec1
by North-South the bid of a oew suit at
tbe two-level after partaer's opening
· bid was pm.,.forciDg. North and
South were committed to getting to
game at the very least. At bis second
opportunity to bid, South could content.
himself with a mere two no-trump,
leaving bls partner room to show a
~ suit. North, of coune, bad two
remaining suits, but his opetling bid ·
was so sparse. a mere lZ hlghi!ard
points, that he just raised two no- ·
trump to three. Naturally South bid ,
six no-trump.
.
What waa so lucky about the hand?
Well, for starters, you can see that
North-South did bave a 4-4 suit fit in
clubs, but slam in tbat strain would be
doomed by the adverse distribution of
the defenders' clubs. So it was good
luck to slay out of clubs. The next
piece of goad fortune relates to West's
choice of opening lead. The bidding
held no clues. Any lead could
but the actual choice of the
I•••••" diamond seems wrong. Leading
1a club might c;ost a trick, but it could
.hardly cost an entire suit, and that is

.Q 8 4 3

.J5

WEST

EAST

•1n2

.J8H3
.J3

• 109 7 8 4

tQ7U

·~

.KJH

SOUTH

.Q

.AKQ6~

• A 10 2
• A 10 7 2

' Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

w...

North

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

~
3~T
Pa..

Eut

Seatb

z•

I?ass
Pass

2NT
6NT

Pass
Pa..

Opening lead : ·~

1-,-------------'

~uat what the diamond lead did. De- • .,.
!darer needed four diamond trick.! to
make six no-trump, and that is just
what the opening lead provided.

~tUa•
"'t#
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Cooking

DOWN
I Vegetable

herb

·" '

dish '
GBock t8lk 2 Out of
9 Hebrew lyre the way
10 Click
3 Healthy state
beetle
4 Sea eagle
13 Simba
5 DueMa's
14"- Jive"
tltie
15 Calculate 6 Peerless
I
16 My (Fr.)
7 Angelo or
Yesterday's Aruower
17 Oolong
Antonio
18 Announce 8 What's
22 Record
29 Peewee
· 20 Shrewnew
23 Hi-fi
or Delia
mouse
ln a field
acljustment 30 Banish
21 Greek
11 Come o n 24 Ex Frenc h 31 Biblica l
mountains
sta.ge
president
juniper
22 Venetian 12 Anthology
( 1884--1966)
tree
ruler
16 Indian
26 Kent's
36 Allegiance
23 Old World
servant
co-worker 37 Spanish
herb
19 27 Excluded
article
25 Permanent
prisoner
26 Boorish
- 27 Fiber for
fabrics

28 Verdi's
"- Tu"

..

'•

•.

29 Cattleman
32 Somewhat
. 331lefore
34 English
river
- 35 Hang
around
37 Milk (Fr.)
38Kay
Thomp.
son's brat
39 Heraldic
wreath

40Lack
41 Dam up
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Hen:'sbowloworltit: 9 1

•

(]) Capitol Joumlll
(J.D Tomouow'a Harvest
.t1:30

SUPPEii:TIMEj)

.

Luck
upon luck

AXYDLBAAXJ\

News ·
(]) Men From U.N.C.L.E. ·

come back.

·Haul_ limestone, land , gra.
val,d1rt, bulk or bag fertilizer
and lime. Excelsior Salt
Works Inc . 638 E. Main St .,
Pomeroy. 614-992-3891 .

(]) ® Hometown A

producer shows interest in a
play written by Peter 15
years earlier. {60 min .)
(I) Nenny
l)j) Newowa1ch
[HBO] MOVI~: 'The Blue
Lagoon'
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Fiaahpoint'
(CCI
10: 1 5 (I)
MOVIE:
'Rivkin;
BOunty Hunter'
10;30 (])To Be An.-ncad
Gil Tony Brown's Journal

They might

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ava., Gallipolis .
614· 446-7833 or 614-4461833.

II

I]) Back to No&gt;d
Saturday
(!) Bock to Next Saturday
Keshia Knight Pulliam falls
asleep and must return
home in time for the pre·
miere of NBC's Saturday
morning programs.
(]!) lntamational Edition
. 9 :00 IJ I]) (!) Family Tleo Mal·
lory's boyfriend wants 10
advance their relationship .
{R)
(]) 700 Club
(!)Auto Racing '85: World
Endurance~SPA from Spa,
Belgium .
0 (I) Ill Simon &amp; Simon
(CCI Part 1 Of 2. A.J. and
Riclc decide to split up their
partnership after they gain
celebritv for cracking a big
case . (R) 160 min .)
(I) Wild America (CCI
(jj) MysteryiiCC) 'Rumpole
of the Bailey: Rumpole and
the Golden Thread .· Rumpole is invited to Africa to
defend an official charged
with murder. (R) (60 min .)
1!11
MOVIE:
'Doctor
Oetroit'
9:30 U I])(!) Cheers Sam hires
a mature Englishwoman as
his new waitress. (R)
(]) Profile• of Nature
10:00 U I]) CD Hill Street Blues
Drug-testing on the Hill has
certain officers worried,
Renko and Hill try to help a
poverty·stricken familv and
Hunter and Calletano pre~
pare for the captain· s exam.
IR) (60 min.)
(!)Auto Racing ' 85: CART
Molson Indy from St. Pie.
Quebec:. CAN
8:30

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

James Jacoby

Raport

RON ' S Television Service.
House calls on RCA, Quuar.
GE . ~ Specieling in· Zenith.
Call 304-576-2398 or 614446-2454.

87

--

I)j)

"

85

'

®N-

D .and M . Contractors. Vinyl
siding, replacement windows. insulating, roofing.
new and remodeling. con·
crete. Call304-773·5131.

83

CYMBAL

be- " MAO POLICY"

m Wheel of Fortune

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua rantee . Locel reference•
furniahed . Free estimates.
Call collect 1-614-2370488. day or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.
&gt;..

PAGODA

M~Mwe

(]Js.-.dCilyTV

82

ROACH

Answer: What "diplomacy" sometimes turns oul to

(!) Sportscenter

CIJ Mary Tyler

-

Al"f"EAFI!:.eD.

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lt!lters are different.

_lor the three

CRYPTOQUOTE

9-12
0

QRBOPD .

OH

OJ
RS

10 J

Z DB D M

sw

QZG

S Z D H D N W. -

SHPQM

YSSR

JUD

JS

JUOZY
:0 H

sz

LQ H H

QNIQGH

u

SZNG

0 J .

0 .1

FH D

J S

I 0 NRD

y.,.terdaJ'•

er,pcoqaote: THERE ARE MOMENTS
WHEN EVERY'IlllNG GOES WELL; OONT BE FRIGHTENED, IT WONT LAST. - JULES RENARD

,-

�Thursday.

Ohio

September 12. 1985

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY
"Under ·New Management"

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Prest·
dent Reagan, oplimislic about
suppot1 from his Republican allies
In Congress on 1he legislallvP ba Illes
ahead, was returning to th&lt;&gt; South
today to rP-ignite interest in tax
reform.
Reagan was to speak to senior
cilizms in Tampa, Fla., on how his
tax packagP would llf'n&lt;&gt;lit all
classes oft axpayers by reducing tax
brackets from 14.. to three and
.. reducing the maximum rate to 35 .
percent .
Last wwk, Reagan spoke In
Missouri and North Carolina and
plans to travel lo Concord, N.H.,
next week wit h the same message.
Passing tax reform this year has
been his main goal, even in the face
of congressional activism for trade
and farm legislation as higher

SALE

SEPT. 6. THR" OCT. 6

20°/o DISCOUNT

Square dimce set

_lumber - Plywoetd - Paint - Hardwre

e

10°/o DISCOUNT
All OTHER MERCHANDISE IN STOCK
Cash·n·Carry - 30 Day Same As Cash

-

DELI~ERY

Vot.36. No.108
cop"''Hhttd 1986

EXTRA -

•

•

at y
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Fri

enttne
d

•
ID

FRIDAY, SEPT. 13th &amp;
SATURDAY, SEPT. 14th
LlnLE BOYS'

SHIRT

MISSY
SPORTSWEAR

SALE
2 Dav Sale prices of knit
shirts. polo shirts. oxford
shirts, sweatshirts. tops.
flannel shirts .
Reg . '7.00 ...... Sale '5.59
Reg. •9.00 ...... Sale '7.19
Reg. '12.00 .... Sale ' 9.59
Reg. '19.00 .... Sale '15.19

ers. knit tops, je•ns and slacli.e.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20 and S, M , l., XL

Reg. '16 to '40

Sale p,;esd

S31'9

~::::!

LADIES'

CORDUROY PAJAMA
JEANS
SALE

SAL -

FURNITURE

A wide selectiOn of colors and prints in machine washable reyon/polyeeter.

CHAIR SIZES 60"x7t;l" and 90"x70"
SOFA SIZES 120"x70" and 140''x70"
Reg . '8.49 Throw ....................... ...... .................... .. . : ............. Sale '6.79
Reg. 1 8.99 Throw .................................................................. Sale '7. 19
Reg. 1 12.49 Throw .............. ......................................... , ........ Sale '9.99
Reg. 1 15 .99 Throw .......................................... .... ...... .......... Sale '12, 7~
Reg. '18 .99 Throw .................. , ... : ................... ... ;, ........ , ...... Sale '15.19

.GIRLS' FALL

MEN'S QUILT LINED

DRESS
SALE

FLANNEL SHIRTS

Pretty fall colors in vel-

vets, corduroy and poly/ cotton blends.

Sizes NB to 24 mos., 2 to 4,
4 to 6x, 7 to 14.

Reg. '9.00 to '41.00

Sale Prle ..

·,

$7 36 TO $33 66
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN!

lAYAWAYS WELCOME

MEN'S

LADIES' WRANGLER

SPORT

JOGGING
WEAR

SHIRTS

SLACKS

Twills, poly I gabs. acrvllc
knits and cords.
Miuy 1izas 8 to 20
32 to 38.
Reg. •10

Slacks ........... •7.
Reg. 115

Slacks ...... ... •11,
Reg. •23

•1s.

Slacks .........
Reg. •32

'

Slacks ... ...... •25.6

L1g1w1g1
•

.,

Wsl~ome

WASHINGTON iUPii - Pr&lt;&gt;SI·
dent Reagan's tax reform gospel
has not aroused much enthusiasm
among congressional leaders but he
Is preaching It to voters as economic
sal vat ion forallgroups- theold, the
young, thP entreprPnror.
On the third road trip of his fall
campaign for enactment of tax
reform this year, Reagan told 2,500
elderly citizens of Tampa , Fla .,
"Every group in America will be
better off - and anybody who tells
you othf'rwise doesn't understand."
He was referring to Democratic
New York Gov. Mario Cuo(l1o, who
. ha~. charged that R&lt;&gt;agan's reform
proposal would hut1 the middle
class most. among other things by

!
!

$40.00

CAPE
COD
CURTAIN SALE

EUREKA
YAC

All are machine waahable. permanent preao and
rayon/ polyeater blenda.
Solid colors are stocked in 24, 30. 36, 46, 64, and 63
Inch aizea. Print• are stocked In 24, 30, 36, and 45 inch

Features top fill
bag
to resist
clogs and 4 way
Diai·A·Nap,

Reg.
Reg .
Reg.
Rag,

'6 .99
'8 .99
'8.49
•9.99

CURTAINS ........... ........ ... .... Sale
CURTAINS .......................... Sale
CURTAINS ........................ ,. Sale
CURTAINS ..... ....... ... ........... Sale

4.79
'5.69
'6 .39
'7.99

1

$7995
E,!!~~~
4•1t) 111··71

CMMUCAta

POMIRO
''

•,,

"John Glenn and I havesPrved in
the Congress the same period of
time, and I know how hevotes," said
Kindness. "I think. it istlmeforOhlo
to have some balance in ils U.S .
Senate representation - someone
who does't -'just vote to increa se
spendin): and then claim we have to
lncreas&lt;&gt; taxes. "
Kindness S&lt;&gt;rved three terms as a
city councUman and two terms as
mayor of Hamilton. HP was a state
representative for two terms before
.llf'lng elected to U.S . HouS&lt;&gt; In 1975.
Glenn, 64, served two terms In the
Senate alter defea ting his old
nemesis, Sen. Howard MetzPn·

baum, In t hi' Democratic primary of
1974.
Gl~nn has been . regarded as
unheatab\e,.. having llf'aten rormer
state. Rep . James E. Betts of
suburban Cleveland by ·an Ohio
record of 1.6 million votes in 1900the yea r Ronald Reagan woo the
presldPncy.
Republicans are hoping Glenn's
disastrous venture Into the Democratic presidential sweepstakes last
year took some of the lu stre from his
Image. They will also he questioning ·
his record in theSenate,asklngwhat
he has accompUshed for Ohio and
pointing out a surprisingly liberal

voting record.
Glenn already ha s begun th&lt;'
defense of his Senate scat. He is
making more frequent a ppearanCC's
in Ohio and has switched !rom the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit·
leE' to the Armed Services Comm it·
tee, where ~sayshellf'lie\'eshecan
help Ohio withdefenseprocu t'!'ment
contracts.
· Glenn has whittled his presidential campaign debt to $2.7 million
and is continuing to work on that
while trying to raiS&lt;&gt; money for his
re-election campaign.

removing the deduction for state
a nd local taxes.
"Balderdash," Reagan replied,
usi ng a term he said "people our age
will rem&lt;'mber ... . There are som e
eart hier words, but that wUI have to
do."
Cuomo, In Washington, said :
"The president has a perl..ct r!J;tht to
US&lt;' any words he wants . 1 have a
different lexicon."
Reagan told the senior citizens,
whose response to his speech was
friendly, that his reform plan would
not aff..ct Social Security benefits
and would remedy the current tax
code he said "has in efl&lt;&gt;et made It
more and more expensive to care lor
older parents."
The administration's ..conomlc

blueprint, he boasted, has lifted
more than 400,000 elderly ou t of
poverty since 1983.
Last week, Reagan told chf'ering
st udents at North Carolina State
University that under his plan they
could keep more of their first
paycheck and pay less in tax&lt;&gt;S .
He repeated Thursday that the
Cllrrent system results In something
" Ilk&lt;' one of those horror movies
from the 1950s - The Incredible
Shrinking Paych&lt;&gt;ek."
He said one of his daughters who
had bt't'n Involved In "campu s
llllf'ra lism" brought home her first
paycheck "pale and hoiTOr-strlcken
and I tried to explain that's what her
old inan had been making speeches
about all those years."

the el&lt;&gt;etric a nd gas compan is to
maintain service.
~ Other programs available to low
income customers ar(' thE' Horne
Energy Assistance Program
(HEAP\ and the Ohio Energy
Credits Program. To qualify for the
P!Pprogram,thl'houscholdlncome
must llf' at or llf'low 150 percent
federal poverty leveL The chart
distributed to those attending Indi cated that a household wilh four
p€'rsons could have a yearly
household income of up' to 515,975
and still quality lor the PIP
program.
Also meeting with the senior
citizens was a repreSf'fltatiw oft he
Public Interest Center r:t the PUCO
who encouraged consumers to use
the PUCO hot!lne 1·800-282-0198 to
discuss issu~~ and problems. She
assurl,'d the senior citizens that each
complaint Is investigated to Insure
that the utility company Is abiding
by Ohio law, and that the consumer
is Informed of the results of the
Investigation.

Eastern coach retires

Eastern High School football
coach Ray Watson announced his
ret h'l'ment from coaching ycsterday morning. &lt;'ff&lt;'c l 1\' &lt;'
Immediately.
The announct•mcnt came as a
surprls&lt;' and Watson. 62. said h&lt;'
p\an s t os ta vatEasternasatcach~r.
Tlwsc-cond -.vear Eag\~coachsaid

h&lt;' •x•tlred upon the ad,·icc of his
doctor as "pt'l'\·ent ivemedicinc" for
a developing h&lt;•alth pro bl~m .
Assista nt coaches Don F:ichlnger
and Ron Hill will share III' omchi ng
dulies tonight whf'n the Eagles, 1-1,

take on Wahama .
Li!SI SC'CJSOn. Watsonandhis stalf
lnhc'ritf.'d a !Pam that wa s winles s

~.;.._....;..

i0·9·11 inl0sta rtsin198.1andputlh&lt;'
Eastern program back on its feet
with a &amp;-4 season a nd the SVAC'
tri-champlonsh ip.
Watson started his coaching
career in 1947.and &lt;'njoyed sUCC&lt;'SS·
lui stints at West Virginia Tech
ithrre years\, West Virginia Unl·
vcrslty !four years\, the U.S. Naval
Acadt'my (two years), whit~ winnlng high school championships at
Wirt Cou nty .
This marked Watson·s 22nd year
as a footba II coach . From 19ii:l-1919.
he• sf'f"\1f&gt;d in udministrativf: duti&lt;:'s
lrfornctuming to the sidrllnC'&lt;. ·
WiJison .said hP has no plans to

____

l'fll umto thr sidelinPS.
~

...
. '.I:..... '..."
."' . . . ../..

REAGAN.STUMPS- !;'resident Reagan signs his
naine to a can, that "'' a senior citizen, he Is asking
Congress lor support of his lax refonn plan. Reagan

GOP walks away with sanctions bill

ONLY

sizea.

Valances and swags are also in stock and 18le priced.

Kindness says he will ch~llenge Glenn

By IRA R. ALLEN

SAVE

MISSES
OPEN STOCK

B.Y Charlene HoeOich
ht&gt;arlngs are now being "scatt&lt;&gt;red
their limited incomes.
Sentinel Staff Writer
around over the state so that there
Brooks said that C\lrrently a
"Overall, the PUCO has aided can he a greater lnvoivPment oo the
"lifeline telephone concept for
older Ohioans by moderating rates part of the puolic."
senior citizens Is being worked on"
In the past two yPars," William H.
The PUCO Is taking a much more which will make the cost of
Brooks, deputy chairman of the crlti~al analysis of the information
telephone service affordable to all
PublicUtUitiesCommlsslono!Ohlo, which companies submit In tht&gt;lr Ohioans.
told a gathering · at the Senior raiP cases, he said. Speaking on
He also talked about the 911
Cltizen·s CentPr Thursday lt&gt;lephone chargP increases, ohe emPrgency service system which
afternoon.
senlorcitlzennotedthat In thepast90 has been approved by thl' state
HP compared increa ses of 46 . days his monthly telephone olll has
legisla ture and noted tha t the
percent In ratps allowed by the gone up $2.65Jncludlng the $1 equal' service will llf' required of all
PUCO In 1981 and 1982 to th~ "just access charge put on by the federal
telephone companies within five
over thrf'e percent per year for 1983 go\•errunent. The latest Increase years. A nominal CIJStomer charge
and 198!1." ·
granted by the PUCO to General along with tax dollars will finance
He partially credited the increase Telephone has not yt&gt;t been billed to the new service, Brooks said. All
reduction to a "managemPnt con- consumers. ·
calls will go to a Cl'ntral answering
fonnance audit" program which
Another complained tha t it had setvlce which will print out the
was put into eff&lt;&gt;et last y&lt;&gt;ar.
cost her nearly $100 to move her
loca lion and dispatch personnel or
Brooks said that four audits of t&lt;&gt;lephone to "The Maples" , the
whicles as required.
utUitles have been ordered, two of S&lt;&gt;nlor citizens housing complex in
The PUCO commissioner also
which art&gt; General Telephone and Pomeroy, and she qu&lt;&gt;Siloned the discussed ways to "keep the heat
Columbia Gas, nottr;tg that because 'htgh fOSI for changing the phone on" through using the percentage of
Of ti'ii! a~dlt flndings:' lhe'increlloe~ 1Irani oltelOcJ!iilltro another.
Income plan. call«! Pf?, whereby
allowed by General Telephone was ' There was concern expressed by low Income eustomers can make
llf'low what the company had several of the nearly 50 senior reduced payment ~nd avoid disconrequested.
citizens at the meeting astowhethcr nections. Customers, h('sald, pay 15
The deputy chairman talked they will llf' able to handle the
percent of their monthly income to
about public hearings which are UJX'Oming increases in monthly
held on rate increases, and said the charg&lt;&gt;s allowed by the PUCO on

Reagan preaching tax gospel

fall in fleece jogging
wear. 'Assorted styles
of sweatshirts, panta.
shorts,
vests and
jackets.
SIZES S, M. Land KL
'

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - U.S.
Rep. Thomas Kindnt&gt;ss, R-Ohlo,
announced Thursday he will formally announce his candidacy for
the U.S. Senateseat now held by Sen.
John Glenn, f}()hio, du ling a series
of news conferences later his month.
Kindness, 56, will begin his S&lt;'rles
of news conferences In Cleveland on
September 23, .also speaking that
sa me day in · Columbus and
Cincinnati.
On Sept. 24, Kindness will
continue his announcpment Itinerary with stops in Dayton, Lima and
Toledo. The following day, Sept . 25,
he will visit Youngstown, Cambrldg&lt;&gt; and Marietta.

Neat new colors for

Long sleeved sport shirts in
solids, plaids, stripes and
westerns. Extra nice selec·
lion including tails and big
man sizes.
SIZES: Small thru 3X
Reg . ' 12. 95 ... Sale '10.39
Reg . $15.95 ... Sale '12.79
Reg . ' 19.95 ... Sale '15 .99
Reg . ' 24.95 ... Sale '19.99

MODERATING - Utllty coats have II10CIOrated In the jllllit IWD years,
acconllnK to WIUJam H. Brooks, deputy chalnnan of the Puhllc UtUitles
Commission ol Ohio, who went on to assure the group of senior citizens
that the Commission Is looking out for low Income ronswners through a
variety of "help'' programs.

'

Take advan'lage of the early sale
prices on these cold weather
shirts. Regular button fronts or
snap front western styles. Po·
Ivester blend shell, 100% nylon
lining with polyester fibe~ill.
Sizes: Small thru 3X
Rag. '21.95 ... Sale •1'7.56
Reg . '24.95 ... Sale '19.96
Rag. •26. 95 ... Sale '21.56

ers have been deadlocked all year on
the emergency sales tax proposal,
which would ralseS!DI,OOOannually.
C&lt;mmissloner Marvin K&lt;&gt;llersteadfastly has opposed th&lt;&gt; tax, saying
voters should be allowed to decldl'
the Issue. Unanimous approval is
required to pass an emergency
proposal.
Commissioners say the county's
financial crisis is the result of county
officials refusing to cut spending.
The general fund budgt&gt;t fell from $2
mtlllon In 1984 to $1.8 million In 1985,
but officials admit they continued to
spend at ·Jast year's pace.

PUCO aiding senior citizens, chief says

Beautiful fall blouses. vests, sweat -

S1279
_ _ _ _.......

Nylon, poly I cotton blend
Regular fit, straight leg
bruahed tricot.
cords. EKtre comfort. Sizu: Smatt thru Large
lasting Quality.
3Z to 48.
NEW FALL COLORS
Waist Sizes: 29 to 42 •"ea . '1 z.oo
IP'A.l'A'"A .. .... Sale '9.&amp;9
Big Sizes: 44 to 48
Reg. $15.00
PAJAMA .... Sale '11 .99
Rag. '19.95
·
Reg. '19.00
COROS ...... Sale '15·. 99 PAJAMA .... Sale'14.39
Reg. '22.95
·
•Keg. '22.00
CORDS ...... Sale '18.49
.... Sete•17.59

Jackson County
procedure," Knlppenburg said. But
If county commissioners do not
enact an emprgency 1 percent sales
tax, and countyvol~?rs rej&lt;&gt;etslmllar
tax proposals on the Nov. 5 ballot,
"the county will have to act to reduce
expenditures'' to repay the loan.
There was no lmmedlatp Indication whether the ControUing Board
would approve the loan request.
However, some state officials have
expressed !Pars that such action
would set a precedent for other
counties to seek "bailout" money
from the starP.
The county's three commission-

2

MEN'S

Z SectiOns, ~,2 Peges 26 Centa
A Muliimedil Inc. Newspaper

ay. S eptem be r 13 • 1·985

.

B.Y E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON (UPII - Frus·
Irated S..nate Democrats fought a
running battle all Wf'ek to pass Iough
economic sanctions against South
Africa, losing three times - and
then the Republicans Uterallyselzed
the bUI and walked away .
Three times, on Monday, Wronesday and Thursday, the Senate
refused to bring the sanctions
legislation to the noorfor a vote. The
votes came atter President Reagan,
turning away !rain hls 4)4-year-old
policy of quiet pressure, ordered

limited penalties against Pretoria
make the result meaningless, but
Monday.
when they finished they di scovered
Thursday, shortly after the third
Lugar liad quietly taken the bill
vote on the measure, Senate from the clerk's desk and out of the
Republican leader Dole and Sen . chamber.
Richard Lugar, R-Ind., the chair·
Senate rules grant the chairman
man of the Senate foreign Rei a !ions
of a panel with jurisdiction over a bill
Committee engineered a parUa·
-In this case, Lugar- authority to
mentary pilfering to keep the bill
r&lt;&gt;move It physically from
from coming up again.
consideration.
Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
That left the Democrats with no
asked Dole to delay the third vote as
biU to vote on.
Democrats worked on new strait&gt;: .
"This tactic Is beneath the dignity
gtes. Dole refUsed. Democrats then
r:l the Senate," a st unned Kennedy
voted against their own measure to
told Dole.

Glf'eful, Dol&lt;' said the blll Is
"llf'tteroff In the hands of a member
of the character of Senator Lugar.
thP distinguished chairman of the
committee, tocareluUywatch these
papers."
Kennedy was only briefly
amused.
"We can make light at this
moment about this particular
procedure but It aff&lt;&gt;ets the substance of one the most extrordlnary
Important public policy Issues," he
saki .

tnld senior cltbens in Tampa, Fla., Thursdlly his plan
would correct· 11 system thut makt'S It difftcult for
children to ·care for their parents.

Meigs County man enters plea
Larry Jay Cooper, 32. Racine,
entered a plea of guilty to one count
of cultivation of marijuana when he
appcard before .Judge Charles H.
Knight In thr Meigs Cou nty Com mon Pleas Court.
'
Thechargewascontained In a bill
of Information pl'('sented by the
office o} Meigs County Prosecu ling
Attorney Fred W. Crow Ill charging
Cooper with grownlng marijuana
near his Apple Gt'OV&lt;' residence.
Cultivation or marijuana Is a
felony oft hi' lou rth degree carrying
a possible penalty of up to IS months
In prison a nd a fine of up to $2500,
according to Paul Gerard, lnvesti·

.,

gator fort he prosecutor's office who ·
worked with the office of Meigs
Sheriff Howard Prank in the
Invest lgatlon.
Approximutely 5.1 to 60 mature
marijuana plants were confiscated
by Meigs County Deputy Kenny
Klein.
.ludge Knight accepted Cooper's
plea of guilty a nd ordl'red sentepclng continued until 9 a.m. on
Wednesday, Ocdt. 23, to permit
completion of a pre-sentence Investigation a nd report . Cooper was
rcleased upon a personal recognlz.
a nee bond until final sentencing .

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>September 12, 1985</text>
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        </element>
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      <name>lytle</name>
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    <tag tagId="281">
      <name>workman</name>
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</item>
