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Page-~ 0-Tile Daily $entinel

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Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Girl ·Scout Diary

Tuesday, October 1, 1985

Awards ceremony'· held for Chester Brownie Troop

· An awards ceremony was held
~neer, Heather Well, and Lafren
PrEPai'ed. The girls are· given a ,recently for members of. Chester
Young.
A "Daisy"· troop for kindergarten certiftcate when they entPr the Brownie Troop 1067 at the Chester
All of the Brownies received the
age girls, has been Included in the program . and one when they Fire ijouse.
Brownie Discoverer emblem, mefn·
Girl Scouts of America program complete It and are awarded ' a
~aders, TPxanna Well, Jackie
bershlpstarsand
discs, al)dacoolde
. with four currently active In the special pin.
. Frost, Karla Chevalier, Charlotte patch.
r.telgs County.
Rules of the Council require that Smith, andCarolErwln,hadcharge
Lila Van Meter of Junior noop 1
. There are troops In Harrisonville, there be one adult for every five of ·the ceremony with their daugh·
Middleport, Rutland, and Chester children at tegularrneet)ngs, one ters, Amber Well, Debra Frost, 1049 was there to receive the t hlrd
and· several more in the. process of adultsforevecylhreeatoutlngs,and Jessica Chevalier, Crystal Smith, grade girls Into her troop. All of the ·
organizing. The "Daisy" program Is the adult supervisors mvst be over Amy. Smith, and Jamie Erwin third graders received a Brtdge to
Juniors emblem and their ·wings
an Introduction to girl scouting and 18. The kindergarten kids are leading in the flag ceremony.
emblem
with which to fty-up to the
consists of meetings where crafts allowed to attend day camp but are
The third year blue Brownie B junior troop.
are made and a scraplxlok is not permitted overnights.
·emblems were presented to Penny
Perf~! attendance awards went
Aelker, Andrea ·Dillard, Debra to Jessica Chevalier, Melissa
Frost, Stephanie Hoffman, and Dempsey, Sara Machir, and
Amber Well. Recelvings~ondyear Heather Well. The QSP patches for
red Brownie l:l's were Sarah Pullins, selling magazines Went to Noelle
Jeslca Ctievaller, Danlelle Kibble, Pickens, Lauren Young, Jamie
Mary Nally, and Crystal Smith. Erwin, Jesslca Radford, Jal.rtlee
First year Brownie B' s went toAmy
Krautter,
third grader; Carrle
Plans for frlendslp night to be
The dlstrlct meeting held Thurs·
observed on Nov. 7at 6; lJ p.m. were day night at the hall was noted. The Ingels, Courtney Knapp, Sara
A bridal shoWer honortng Crystal
made when Chester Council 3?.1, . birthday of Leona Hensley was Machir. Jamie Ord, Jessica Rad·
ford,
and
Crystal
Taylor,
~ond
Manley
wUI be held Friday at 7p.m.
Daughters ot America, met re- reported with members presenting
graders;
and
Melissa
Dempsey,
at
the
Middleport
AmeriCan Legion
cently at the hall.
her birthday cards. Potluck refresh·
Jamie
Erwin;
Jessica
Karr,
Jen·
hall. Hostesses are Nancy Manley
Fern Morris, councilor, presided ments were served.
nlfer
Mora,
Noelle
Pickens,
Brandl
and
Dorcas Manley. All· friends of
at the meeting which opened In
The birthdays of Dorothy Ritchie,
Reeves,
Amy
Smith,
Jaimee
the
area
are Invited to attend.
rjtuallstic form. Officers' reports Beulah Maxey, Doris Koenig, Doris
were given and Kathy Pullins was Grueser, Jean Frederick. Elizabeth
reponed hospltallzed and Pauline Hayes, Mary Holter, Laura Nice,
Ridenoor not feeling well. It was Betty Roush, Lora Dame\roOd, and
noted that the good of the order Leona Hensley. A decorated cake
cornrnlttee w111 have charge of was served.
games at the next meeting, and
Others attending were Esther
practice for Inspection will be beld.
Smith, Mary Showalter, Ada Bls·
Served with
A thank you note was read from sell, Opal Hollon, lnzy Newell, Mae
Mashed Potatoes,
Dorothy Ritchie for the recent McPeek, Ruth Smith, Marcia
Choice af Salad, Roll &amp; Drink
reception honorlng her, and also Keller, Sandy White, Ethel Orr,
from Nettle Hayes for cards sent her Margaret Tuttle, Eileen Martin,
durtng her stay In the hospital. Charlotte Grant, Helen Wolf,
'J.bree new members accepted Into Thelma White, Everett Grant, Alta·
membership wUI be initiated at the Ballard, AdaMorrls,SadleTrussell,
second meeting In October.
and Erma Cleland,
By Charlene Hoeflich

.Friendship night plans
outlined by.DAR chapter

Spencer, Andrea Dillard, and Jen·
nifer Mora.
Those third graders' earning
dabblebadgeswereAndreaDillard,
Penny Aelker, Debra Frost, and
Amber WelL
Mothers who registered ~ ith the
troop who were r~ognlzed were
Cindy Aeiker, Mary . .IX'm~e~ .. .
Mary Dllard, Barbara Hoffman,
Susie l&lt;atr, ·Sue Kibble, Pen nee

Knapp, Judy ~auttev, Denise
.Mora, Marjorte Reeves, Linda Well,
f'ftty Pickens, ang Lynn Taylor.
• Sue KJbble and Karla Chevalier
werenamedCQOklesaleschalrmen,
It was noted that the Clli!ster
Brownie Trop Jed the county In
cookie sales with 996 boxes and that
thetroopalsorecelved.i~outstand·
..,irig .girl' seoul' troop· tl1!!1hy at ·the· · ·
Meigs County Fair.
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'----,.M.,..a.,..jo.,..r'""Ho-o-p'""Je-·s ·-

Bridal shower plalrmedl

Vol.35, No.119
Copyrighted 1985

~AY

said he did know 75 percent of the
By Charlene Hoelllch
capltollettersshowntohlm,butthat
Sentinel staff wrl!er
"Mlldly to moderately retarded" the only word he could spell was
was the description of Lindsay "Mom." The psychologist testified
Taylor given by James A. Howder, that when he &lt;ISked Taylor to spell
Marietta psychologist, whodetatled his name, he wrote "Llndzey." As
results of h1s psychological evalua· for hjs math sldlls, Howder said
tlon of Taylor, charged with Taylor could only do single digit and
murdering Danny Wayne Melton on · even then utUlzed h1s fingers.
Asked by defense counsel Steven
Oct.l7, 1983.
In 'testimony Tuesday, Howder Story to describe mUd to moderate
said TaylOr's I. Q. score was ffi, a retardation, Howder llald such
mental agt&gt; of 8 to 10 years. He people learn through hands-on
testified that he scored 63 on the activity, and are nOt able to grasp
verbal portion ol the test, and 72 on theaiBtract. and that their retention
the perlonnance part 'noting that he of ~Ois comes.fm1i"'lfie 'm~t
had more difficulty with the verbal nature of doing smtefbbtg DYer and
part than with understanding and over, where little · reasootng Is
needed and memory takes over. .
carrying oot speclttc Instructions.
Howder testified he had no
Another test which the psychoJo.
Information on the patient prior to gist discussed was the Bellder
conducting the testing, and that If he Visual Motor Gestalt which mea·
had been aware i:Jf the retardation sures ·functions. He said the test
factor, then he would have used a results gave Taylor a developmen·
test which Is more sensitive to highs • tal age of 5'n to 5 years (below the
and lows In measuring. He showed Was-R of 8-10) . He said the
several charts and compared the indication from the test results are
gifted, normal and retarded ranges that the defendant Is emotionallY
to Taylor's results.
dependent and needs support In
The psychologist gave the results carrying out datly living skills.
of thewlde-rangedachlevement test
The witness then turned to a chart ·
(Wass-R) which checks literacy, detailing the results ot the VIneland
spelling, reading and wrttlng, He Social Maturtty Scale In which the
testified the only word Taylor could defendant was asked· to "draw a
recognize In the preschool to 11 year person", one measure 'used tn
looking for developmental age. He
old range was ''Mom."
Howcter said that· the defendant said that the results Indicated an
scored In the fifth month of the first immatu~:e, dependent person with
(Continued on page 16)
grade In the achievement test. He

POMEROY - Dinner meeting
lor Drew Weooler Post 39, Arneri·
can Legion, 7 p.m. Tuesday at post

mrne.

RACINE - Revival at Racine
Church of the Nazarene wW start
Tuesday andconllnuethroughOct. 6
with Lee Hammond as evangt&gt;llst,
7: 30 each evening and on Sunday
morning atlO: ll.

POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Sorority meeting, 7::.1 Tuesday,
ht;&gt;me of Mrs. Evelyn Knight.
SYRACUSE- SUtton Twp Trus·
tees meeting, 8 p.m. Tuesday at
Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.

ItS awhole new world.

POMEROY - Melgts Athletic
Boosters meet 7 p.m. Tuesday at
high school.

'

Tuesday
Open House the open house Is

tonight (tuesday night)
OpenhousewUI be heldat7:30thls
evening when the Bradbury PrO
meets at the school.
Friday
.'
OL!VE TOWNSHIP Trustees
meeting wlll he held at 7:lJ p.m.
Friday at the ReedsvUle Fire
Station.

Medication abuse
~omes problein
in Mason County

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP Trusteeswl)lm.eetat7 p.m. Frldayatthe
home ·of the clerk, Wanda Eblin,
Laurel Cliff Road.

Fall t:4rnival Iet Saturday
Fallcarnlvalo!theSyracusePTO
wlll be held Saturday at the school.
The kitchen w111 open to begin
serving at 6 p.m. and the games will
start at 7p.m. Pizza, hotdogs, sloppy
joes, coffee and pop wlll he sold.
Activities will include a cake walk,
prtze table, country kitchen, games,
balloons, face painting, a spook
rouse, and popcorn and cotton
candy will be sold.

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Officers installed at
·recent WMFI' meet
Jean Wright hosted a recent
meeting of the WMFI of tbe Laurel
CUff Free Methodist Ch\lrch.
O!flcers.were Installed with each
officer receiving a corsage. Adeline
Fast's talk at the church Sunday&lt;Jn
her missionary work was noted.
.J3onnle Friend presented the pi'Qo
gram using "Let the Son Shine
. Though Our Concern for Otbers" as
the topiC. Mrs. Wright gave scrip·
ture from Luke 19, and Kay Clark
and Mary Miller read articles about
Mexico. Shirley Friend had prayer,
andWandaEblinwonthefrlendship
basket.

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Beulah Oehler and Iva Powell
were co-hostesss for the meeting.
Others attending were Belinda and
BUlle Soulsby, Donna Gilmore,
Evelyn You~, and Janice Haggy.

wasamess.
.
At the request of the defense, Hayman Identified a
photograph of the living room portion of the trailer.
Hayman noted a .davenport', couch and T.V., all of
which he recognized as Lindsey Taylor's.
HaYJTlllll could not however, remember actually
looking at the couch on Oct. 7, while he and h1s brother
were In the tratler. He said they were only Inside about
llseconds.
Hayman aliso testified thatooSunday, Oct. 2, he saw
a sawed off shotgun at Lindsey Taylor's trailer.
He also recounted a vlsltto Alvin Taylor's residence
on that same day - Oct. 2 - with Danny Wayne
Melton, Lindsey Taylor and Mary Edith Taylor all
present.
Hayman testUled that while at Alvin's, he saw
Melton swinging a table leg around ootslde and heard
him say he was go\1111 to knock someone'sdamn head

off. Hayman said Lindsey was oo tbe porch of Alvin's
house, about20or30feetaway, at tbetime Melton was
swinging the table leg.
Hayman Identified a table leg, which has been
entered as evidence In the case by ihe prosecution, as
the table leg Melton had on Oct. 2.
On cross examination by the pros~tlon, Hayman
was asked by Attorney Robert Toy If he had ever
mentioned the table leg to Prosecutor Fred Crow
durlng Interviews. Hayman answered no.
As requested by Toy, Hayman r~ounied an sn:)ler
Incident at the Taylor trailer when Lindsey Taylor
threated the life rl. another acquaintance of the too
men. Hayman said a vehicle pulled up at the trailer
while he and Alvin Taylor were there. Hayman said
Lindsey took outhlsgunandsald hettvught II was Red
Malone and he (Lindsey) was going to shoot him. The
person who came to thetrallei'was Tom.McKay, Jr ..

,

Tayl9r's evaluation
described in court
.

Rl!l'LAND - VIllage Council
meeting 7: ll p.m. Tuesday at Civic
Center.

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16 mg. "ler", 1.2 mg. nicotine av. per cigafette by FTC method.

.

: Today's
Ca~el Filters,
surprisJngly
smooth.
,.

Warning : The Surgeon General Has 'Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous 10. Your Health.
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CHARLESTOf', W.Va. (UP!) medical care at the jaU.
Mason County officials have im·
On the postllie side, the panel said
posed new security measures in an overcrowding Is seldom, It ever, a
effort to combat abuse of medjca·
problem; 111ere Is adequate lighting
.lion by Inmates at the MasonC911nty and noise levels; inmates have
Jail, described by the Juvenile proper personal hygiene supplies;
Just Ice Committee as "a real
the jail Is sanitary, dean and free of
problem."
hazardous substances; bedding and
1lle committee, which fhspects linen are clean and adequatee; and
correctional 'faciUtles for the West . there was no evidence d. Improper
Virginia Supreme Court, said In Its restraint or discipline ot Inmates.
. Tuesday t;ePOrt It plans to monjtor
However, the committee .QQted
· medical practices at the jail, located that a fire marshal's Inspection In
In Point Pleasant.
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1983 expo~ a number of deflclen·
Sheriff Robert Fruih couldn ',t be cles that "appeared to be serious
reached for comment.
and should be corrected
An .unannounCed Inspection was
lrnmedllitely."
madebythecommltteeMay24after
It also sal&lt;llninates' complaints
It gt&gt;t a complaint involving mediCa· that fOOd was served cold appeared
. ,tlon abuse.
~ to be legitimate and recommended
"A major effort was made to that situation be corrected, as well.
InveStigate the complaint durtngthe
The panel suggested a county
committee Inspection," the report . dlet!Cian·revtew !lie menu toensur,.
said. "Abuseofmedlcatlonappears . Its adequacy.
to be a real problem at the facility.
The jail also should put more
emphasiS on diagnosis iillllpreven· ·
"There are Indications of over· ·tlonrl.sulcldes, thecommitteesald,
· prescriptiOn of moolcatlon and although It noted there had been no
. ab\lse o1 medlcatlo~ (storing ~I· ,·' suiCides at the jallln recent years.
cation, taking medicatiOn In large.•
JallolflclalsshouldasktheMason
amounts, etc.) by Inmates. During a COUnty Commission · to order an
recent fire drill ·. several Inmates lncrease.ln staff and salaries, the
could not 'participate as they were committee recommended. How·
Impaired by liJedlcatlob."
ever, It noted In Its report the county
Panelists called for random replied that there would be no
shakedowns of cells il klcate and Increase In pay and that · atiy
seize contraband mediCation, 'as llicrease In jail stall must be taken·
well contracting \Yith a private from other areas of the sheriffs
PJYSiclan and nurse lor regular budiet.

I

2 Sectiona, 16 Pages 26 Cent&amp;
. A 'Multimedlt Inc. Nawsp..,er

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. October 2, 1985

The defenSe rested lls'case at 10: 35 a.m. today In the
aggravated murder trial of Lindsey Taylor, 37,
Forrest Run ~- Racine, charged In connection with
thE! October, 198! shooting death of Danny Melton of.
Alabama. '
.
,
Prior to that, five witnesses testUled In tl!e trtal
continued this morning In Meigs County Conunon
PleaS Court.
Roger HaYlDan and Lawrence Hayman, of the Long ·'
Bottom area, said they were Inside the door of the
Lindsey Taylor trailer, Forest Run Road, on Frtday,
Oct. 7, 19!C, but neither saw a body or smelled any
'""1·11· .........unusual odor.
· ~ Hayman,told the coUrt he and h1s brother wenttothe
· traDer because Lawrence knew the trailer was for
sale.
The door of the trailer was ~n. Hayman testUled,
and he aild his brother both went Inside and saw that It

Community
calendar..

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a1y ent1ne
Defense rests case in murder trial
e

$ 35

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM meets· Tuesday,
7:30p.m.

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Hayman testlfted, not Red Malone.
On redirect examination by the defense, Hayman
said he never mentioned the table leg to the pros~utor
because he was never asked aboijl It.
·
Lawrence Hayman, called tothewitnessstandafter
his brother, gave basically the same testimony
concerning to the events surrounding the Oct. 7vlslt to
the trailer. Hayman said he-was In the trailer just a
minute or two and was looking for signs of water leaks
aroond the ceiUng and tops of the walls.
· He. as did his brother, testified It was a warm, sunny
morning, the place looked as If It had been ransacked,
and he could not recall actually looking at the couch.
Also testl!Ylng before rebuttal witnesses were recalled
by the prosecution were Meigs deputy Jlmmer
Soulsby, former deputy Wall Manley and James L.
Ridenour of Chester.

',

NOO'ES-

altomey Doll Cox who Is 8lll'\'lac
as a defeme COWIIellor Lindsey
Taylor · ID Ids agravaled
murder lrlal takes DOte8 during
the tellllmony of a witness at
1\tesday's proceedlnp.

ADMINL'iiTERS OATH - Melp CGunty Contmon
Pleas ,Judge Charles Knight administers the oath to
Of. Charles, Knouse, another expert wltne88 for the

defense who was called Tuesday afternoon lo testify
In the Untl&lt;ley Taylor munler trial.

.

Defendant's uncle ·recalls week's·events
By the Sentinel stall
· Testifying Tuesday afternoon,
Alvin Taylor, uncleofthedefendant,
recounted events of the week
leading up to the time of the alleged
muxder of Danny Melton, ll, of
Alabama, In October, 1983ln Meigs
County.
,
He said on Sunday, Oct. 2, he and
several others were to Lindsey's
trailer on Forest Run Road, and he
saw a gun laying at the trailer and
as-sumed It was Lindsey's but never
saw Lindsey do anything with the
gun. He testified that he has never
seen the gun since that day.
Taylor said he never saw Daney
Melton after }!e went with Lindsey
and his mother to get a tube on
Tuesday, but that Lindsey and his
mother came back after a couple of
murs. Questioned about whether
the ' defendant had a sawed off
shotgun, the witness replied "not at
my place."
.
The witness related that on Oct.10
he went with Jack Scarbrough and
h1s wife to the trailer and that was
when Jack found hlm (Melton) on
the couch. In response to a question,
the witness denied ever having
received a shotgun and shells from
the defendant.

· Boste~

Asked whether he had aeonversa·
tion with Roger Hayman after the
• body was fou~. the witness said he
had "saw and talked with Roger,

Lindsey, his mother, Jack Scar·
brough and Melton went to gel the
tube, and all returned except
Melton.
Questioned about Lindsey and his
mother's behavior when they returned, Taylor,saldtl\atwhenevera
ear or truck would pass by, they
wo'bld took oot the window. He said
that several times Lindsey yeUed
"Mom&lt; Mom are yoo alright."
Asked what Lindsey did that
evening, Taylor said he watthed
television and drank coffee. Toy
asked If he appeared nervous, and
the witness said "a little."
Taylor said he asked the defend·
ant what hap):lened to Melton and
Lindsey said he got Into a black car
with three hippies and was going
back to Canton. In r-eSponse to
further questioning, he said Mel·
ton's suitcase was upstairs with his
clothes In It.
Toy th~n questioned the witness
on the abilities d the &lt;lefendant, the
types of things he Is able to do, and
Taylor said he had seen him (Xll up
hay, clean barns, use a power saw,
flx flat tires, clean spark plugs, and
drtve. He said he stopped at stop
signs· and signal lights. Asked

yes.~~

The witness again reviewed
events of the week noting that on
Tuesday the defendant and his
mother had stayed at the Alvin
Taylor home, that on Wednesday
morning he, Scarbrough and Lind·
sey had gone In the morning to get a
part for a stove, that after that
Lindsey was there all day and
stayed Wednesday night.
Questioned about his relationship
with Arlee Malone, the witness
related howheandLlndseywere Ina
truck which stopped, and Malone
came up behind them In a car, and
· loki Lindsey "I want my money now
and It you don't give to to me, I'm
going to beat the h··· out of you."
Lindsay told Malone that he had len
the money at home with his sister.
Asked whether Melton ll\IIY have
had a large sum of rroney, the
wltness said he did not know.
Defendant's behavior
On cross examination, Toy asked
the wltness to recall what happi!ried
on Tuesday. Taylor. said that

whether he had ever seen him fire
weapons, Taylor sa ld he and the
defendant had gone hunting together, and then Toy asked him If he
knew how to break down and load a
· gun, and the witness responded
"sure, sure.,"

Toy then showed the witness a
dress which Taylor Identified as
"Freda'sdress."
Asked what M. Edith Taylor was
wearing the day she left ivlth
Lindsey and Melton tivo last time he
saw Melton, the witness said she
was wearing a blue blouse and
slacks, and had on thesameclothlng
when she returned. ·
Former deputy la!llfies
The final witness Tuesday after·
noon was Robert Beegle, Southern
school administrator, and deputy
sherlfffor over JJ years. Beegle told
of a contact in the county jail with
Lindsey Taylor In 1978 In which he
jokingly said, "no, Lindsey, lhPy
won't hang you ......... ". "
Beegle also testified that he had
been to the trailer on an unrelated
matter about two week before the
lncicle!!t and saw bottled gas tanks
near the · steps which had been
knocked over.
'

blasts
plan
for-sharing
u~ility ta.x
.
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Aproposal !Ortaxlng(XlblicutWty Dlslnct could lose about$1'l01CXXlper
plants - fl!COmmended Monday by year.
1
The' '7(J.JO'' plan had been used by
a legtslatlvestudjl committee- has
the state tax deparqnen t for several
been criticized as "unfair and
arbitrary" by State Representative years, until the Gall Ia County Local
Jolynn Boster, D-GaiUpolls.
Schools brought a successtu I suit
The "objectlonablel'eCOIT\ITll!llda· · (Condee vs. Lindley) to the Ohio
lion" proposes to re-establish· a Supreme Court. The high court
taxation plan .under which a local found the tax deparlrnent did not
school dlstrtct could tax only 70 have statutory authority to establish
percent of the value of personal the "70-ll" plan; and, ordered
property at an electric generatllig reimbursement to Gallla schools for
tax revenues lost due to the plant In
plant located In the dls!J1ct.
•
1001
through 1983.
The other 30 percent would be
apportioned, In a maener yet to be
Under pressure fnl!ll . school
determined, among outside dis· • dlstrlcts wlthoot power plants IJ1cts In which the utUlty holds which had grown accustomed to the
property.
share of personal property tax of
BOster said the Gallla · Cwnty non-local plants allowed by the
LOcal School District· would lose "7o-ll" plan- the General Assem·
approximatelY $1.4 million annually bly Is now considering establishing
under the plan; TheGa!Ha,Jackson· , slatutory authority lor the plan.
VInton Joint Vocational School , Last . June, Boster objected

·,

strongly when attempts were made oounty should have to loregosomeof
to enact legislation to make "70-ll" Its tax base merely because we have
electric utility property, while other
the law.
Boster says she convinced Hoose counties can keep their entire tax
Speaker Vernal Riffe and Finance base of Its non-utility property.
"Furthermore," Boster added,
Chairman William Hlnig - the
sponsor of the legislation- to allow "the 70 percent figure Is completPiy
time for rnqre carefUl debate on the arbitrary."
Boster 'i3ld she was not lNIPriScd
Issue. A joint committee ot Hoose
and Senate members was estab- . by the committee's decision ·to
lished to conduct heartngs on the · recommel)d tbe "70-30" split, given
Issue and make recommendations that the number of school districts
which do oot contllln powerplants_:
to the General Assembly. ·
"The Gavin plant Is the single andwQuld like to share the tax base
greatest ·base for· tax revenues In - ootnumberby about 16 toooe the
Gallla Cwnty," Boster says In a numberrl. dlstrlctswhere plan~are
statement released tod~y. "In sOOle located.
Boster- who was not a member
counties, there are several large
manutacturtng plants and In other rl. the joint commit tee - said she
counties there are amusement succeeded In convincing panel
members- to consider the hardship
~rks or commerclal·lndus111al
caused to GaiUa County by re·
parks.
(Continued on page 16)
"There Is no fair reason why our

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Wednes~ay, October 2. 1985

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Commenta

Page~2-The

.

lessons of Grenada

The· Daily Sentinel

)

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIOS·MASON AREA

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f"'T""'E!=. ~-=-

ROBERT L, WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher; Controller

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Reps. Newt Gingrich, R-Ga.,
and Ike Skelton, D- Mo., have
come UR with a very bright Idea,
to which end they are fo~a~lng
for support from their co Ilea.
gueS. It Is to ordain ihe week of
Oct. 20-26 "The Lessons of Grenada Week." Already they have
close to 200 signatures, and during I he next few days they hope to
mobilize Congress. The purpose
of It all?
It is disconcerting how ungratefully we deal with the little lodes of
vital Information we com~ upon.
We are a nation whose tr~dllion
called on us to Remember the
Alamo, and, as recently as a gen-

Ill Court Street.··•'

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

I

BOB HOEFUCH 1
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINlON ar(' wl'ICOmP . They should be less than 300 words

"

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, O.ctober 2, 1985

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telephone number. No unslgne(Joletters will bE' publlsht'd . Letters should be In
good taste, addn•ssln~ lssurs. nOt pt"rsonalltles.
r

U.S. households rose
faster than population
"

·'

"Trouble.is·brewing your majesty·~ people are beginning to resent your
living like an ex-president."
·

chemical weapons for years,
.probably since 1973. According
to one secret CIA report, Syria
was "a major reclplen t of Soviet
cbemlcal weapons assistance,"
to the degree that It achieved
"the most advanced . chemicalwarfare capability In th·e Ara b
world, with the possible excepllon of Egypt."
Both Czechoslovakia and the
Soviet Union " provided the
chemical agents, delivery systems and training that flowed to
Syria," according to the CIA. As
a result,- there was "no need for
Syria to develop an Indigenous
capability to produce chemical
warfare agents or material. "
This absence of an'' indigenous
capability" became slgnlflcan t
when Iran , unable to respond In
kind to the Iraqi P:&gt;tson gas,
appeal(id to Syria for help. The
Iranians had been reduced to lobbing' back unexploded chemical
weapons thrown at them by the
lraquis,
·
The Syrians were eager to help

FORGt:T ABOUT THE
ARMS RACE, COMERADf ! .
WHATCANWE 'DOTO
STRENGTHEN THEIR Whe~e War
DOLLAR?

"'T oday In
• h•IStory

- but their suppliers In the gestlon 1hat the West Germans
Kremlin balked. Iraq is a Soviet thought they were merely helparms customer, too, and even the. _lng Iraq develop a pesticides In·
cyr.lcal Soviets could hardiJ(
dustry .
supply chemical weapons that
'In many cases," the CIA rewould be used against their own
port explained, "the acquiring
chemical weap6ns.
military force deals dtrectiy with
· This didn't stymie the Syrians firms In the West, principally
for long, however. They secretly Swiss and West German, often
turned to the West Europeans.
without the knowledge oft he sup-.
The Syrians knew that West pller's government. We see only
Germans had been providing continued growth In this indusmaterial and training to the lr· try."
aqls. The CIA, which had an
As It turned out, the Swiss and
agent In a key position Informing We~ermans were only too wll-.
it of every step in Iraq 's cheml· ling to make a few bucks selling
cal warfare development, knew polson-gas technology to the Sy·
It, too. ·
.
rians. Some , experts from the
One secret CIA report we've Netherlands joined in as well.
seen states fl atly: "West GerThe result is that Syria no;., has
mans have provided technical Its "Indigenous capability," In
assistance (to Iraq) In field trials the form of a large polson-gas
of nerve agents." In fact, accord· factory on the outskirts of Daing to the CIA, West German and mascus. There the Syrians are
Swiss companies have been se- producing World War !-style
cond only to the Soviet govern- mustard gas and, what's worse,
ment In the proliferation of a deadly nerve gas !irs t develchemical weapons- and the CIA oped by Hitler's scientists but
doesn't for amlnute.buy the sug- never used In World War 11 for
fear of retallatlon.

might S(ari _ _ _ _ _Do_nG_ra..::::_iff

The Cuban miss ile crisis of change. This raises a scary ele·
1962 Is the classic example of a ment of pure chance. But the
• superpower confrontation that more it Is studied, the less threat·
!
might have exploded into nu - enjng It seems.
,. clear war.
ei
Slqce then, how it developed
" If you are In otherwise a rela ~ · and how it was managed on both
lively calm peacetime situation ,
1 ·· sides have been Intensely studied " Mosher explains, "the control
o- for clues as to how future explo- systems are such that an acclslve situations might be defused . . dent probably won't provoke a
...
But textbook case that It Is, war by Itself. The danger Is when
",:! there Is general agreement that you're already ln ·a real crisis ."
~ the Cuban crisis Is history that
Bu t neither an accident nor a ·
will not repeat - thus, It might· crisis in Europe, where the sunot be so Instructive.
perpowers would be most able to
For one very Important thing, directly control dev elopments,
Frederic Mosher points out. the scare the nuclear-war students
Soviets have corrected the gap· as mu ch as a third scenario: a
lng disadvantage In lntercontl- crisis In an are'a where l11eforces
.
nental strategic forces (hat com- of the nuclear powers might not
be directly engaged, but w)lere
pelied them to back off then.
~
Mosl\er, on the staff of the Car· their vital Interests are, with the
negle Corp., Is coordinating a . Soviets backliig one side and we
·
• .. Today is Wednesday, Oct. 2, the 275th day of 1!115 with oo to follow.
joint American-Soviet study of the other.
The place best ·rittlng that de- .
:: :·'fhe moon Is moving toward Its last quarter.
·
causes and ways of preventing
nuclear war. It Is joint In that So· scription Is the Middle East,
: The inornlng stars are Venus and' Mars.
viet specialists have been Invited where Arab-Israeli animosities
·: . The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
to participate periodlcaliy In are not the only Irritants . Soviet
· : Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include study sessions with their Ameri- sensitivity Is also a volatiie fac~ngland's King Richard lii in 1452, German 90ldler Ejnd statesman Paul
can counterparts.
tor. The Soviets. aspiring to re:VOn Hlndenburg In 1847, French military commander Ferdinand Foch In
Underway now for two yean; , cognition as a s.uperpower In
1!151, India's Mahatma Gandhi in 18Ql, comedian Groucho Marx In 1895, · the project has produced a book, more than Just weapons, reel
:'fiovellst Graham Greene In 1901 (age 81), and rock star and actor Sting "Hawks, Doves &amp; Owls : An they've been cut out of the area
.~Gordon Surilner) In 1951 (age 34) .
Agenda for Avoiding Nuclear and It rankles.
'::' On this date In history:
War, " (Norton) tha1 analyzes a
"They're !Ike Rodney Danger;: In !'Ill!, ':lritlsh spy MaJ. John Andre was convicted In connection with number of scenarios considered field," Mosher suggests, "They're
llenedlct Arnold's treason and was hanged In Tappan, N.Y. .
most likely to escalate to the nu- looking for ·respect."
~ In~. U.S. SupremeCourtJustl;:,eAbeFortaswlthdrewhlsoomtnatlon
clear level. ·
There·ls no guidance as to what
~chief justice. Six months later, he resigned from the court, admitting he
Sucp1 as a crisis In Europe, might happen If third parties In
flad 111ade a financial deal with the Louis Wolfson Foundation,\.
·
where nuclear-armed forces of the Mideast or elsewhere drew
.:; In 1981, President ~agan proposed upgrading the U.S. arsenal to
the two powers are already eye. the superpowers Into· a nuclear
:Jnclude MX missiles and B-1 bombers "to keep peace well Into the next-- ball t_o eyeball. The 'spark could confronta'tlon . Recent technolog~tury."
'
·,
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be a new Berlin crisis, disarray . leal advances on bOth sides
-~ In 1982, a powerful terrorist bomb demolished a hotel In Tehran, Iran,
In NATO, which the Soviets greatly complicate the uncer·
ltiJIIng at least 60 people and Injuring s:n~e 100 others.
might seek to exploit, or an upris- talnty. There has not been a· ma. In 1984, FBI agent Richard Miller and two Russian emigres were lng In their restive Eastern Eu· jor crisis, Mosher points out,
, .arrested In Los Angeles and charged with spying for the Soviet Union.
rope empire.
since the strategic systems of
~: A thought for the day: Mahatma Gandhi said, "Non-violence and truth
Another much -d(scus~ed pos· both sides reached their present
~are ~able and presuppose ~e another. There.\tl)9,god higher than · slblllty Is accidental war - hu- · stand-off levels.. .
·
truth."
man or technological error trig- . Back to scenarJos, of all the hot
•
gering a full-scale nuclear ex· . spots arouhd the world, {be one

i\!

lowed to happen. .
That much is easy to remember. "But the call for a week
. devoted to a study of "The Les-'
sons of Grenada" acknowledges
that there Is much more to consider than merely the bare historical episode. A.nd the reason
for this Is that when the Marines
landed In Grenada -two years ago
they discovered documents that
give us a most extraordinary, detailed account of how it Is t ha tthe
Soviet Union goes about colonlz·
lng a little country, with the aid
of Indigenous fellow travelers.
Under the sponsorship of the
State Department and the USIA,
two scholars · (Michael Ledeen
and Herbert Romersteln). were
deputized to try to put together In
manageable size a cross section
of those documents, their purpose being to tell us, or to remind
us, of the kind of things the Soviets do when they are engaged
In colonizing. The book that grew
out of that effort is called, "Grenada Documents : An Overview
and Selection," and Is available
from the Department for $19. Do
not be shocked by the price. Be
shocked by the size of the book.
The pagination Is not sequential,
so that one can only guess at the
number of pages, which I would
put at, oh, 1,500, Moreover, the
compliers tell you, in their foreword, that they could have given
us another ..document of equal
size and of equal significance, so
abundant was the documentary
quarry that gave us memorandums, treaties, secret plans for
expansion, the record of foreign
activities: all the paraphernalia
that go with the Implantation of a
communist revolution , and then
Its extension.

.Deadly genie______l&lt;_(lc_·k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_D_al_e_va_n_A_tl_a
WASHINGTON - The deadly
genie of polson gas, once uncorked, Is difficult to put back In
the bottle, as the Iraqis may
learn to their horror.
Iraq used It agalnstlhe human
waves of Iranian troops In early
1984 - but now I,raq's sworn
enemy, Syria, Is providing Iran
with deadly chemicals to use In
retaliation.
This development Is of more
than parochial Interest. An Iranian capability to use polson gas
Is bad news for every target of Iranian-backed terrorists - including the United States.
What makes the situation particularly distasteful Is that the
Syrians were rebuffed when they
tried to get chemical weapons for
Iran from the Soviet Union, but
were able to buy the terrible ma terials from U. S. allies in Western Europe. Here's the story,
pieced together by our associate
Lucette Lagnado from sources in
the Pentagon, CIA and State De·
partment:
The Syrian have possessed

•.

The preliminaries are over- now who led all ft1Shers with 131 yards in Bobcais have taken It on the chin .
third period. The Eagles wrapped It
it's time to get down to business 17 carries.
Eastern, meanwhile, isJresh off a up with a 19 yard run tiy Brent ,
the war Is on. The first week of
Pliateswln
30-20 victory over the Symmes Bls1ell and then a one yard run by·.
head-on competiUon In the SVAC
North Gallla got a clutch defen- Valley Vikings. Trailing, 20-61n the Rice.
·
,
begins Friday night when unde- sive performance in the final third period, Eastern s&lt;;ored two
Hannan Trace, a 2h17loserto0ak ·
feated ~uthwestern meets North seconds of the game to perseiVe'a fourth period touchdowns for · the Hill, travels to Southern In the other
Gallla; Eastern travels to ,Kyger . hard-earned 13-12 victory over win. The Improved VIkings scrired loop opener Friday. The Wildcats of
Creek ancl Hannan Trace visits Hamlin, W.Va. Thedefenslvehero- early on a 27 yard run bY Sy eoach Dave Owens own a -3-2 slate
Southern. Oak Hill and Symmes ,,lcs were set-upwhen Hamilln's Bloomfield and a three yard run by after five games. Hannan Trace
Valley, new league members 1n Jason Tully put Hamlin In conten· ·· Bloomfield to lead 14-0 In the first took an early lead last week against
football next year, face eachother at tlon for a win on a five yard run with quarter. The Eagles hit the score- Oak Hill only to see the Oaks come'
the Lawerence County school.
four seconds remaining. However, · board fort he flrsttimeln the second storming back. The Wildcats
Last Friday night, Coach Jack the wildcats' attempt for the quarter when John Rice went over jumped Into a 3-0 advantage when
James' Southwestern Highlanders winning two-point conversion was from the one yard line. SVstretched Sean CoUey hit a :rr yard field goal.
had somewhat of an emotional stopped by a host of NG defenders.
Its iead to 14 points when Don!lle The lead was extended to 10.0 when
Coach Dave Angles' Pirates Craft zoomed in !rom 24 yards out Deke Barnes ramblecl40 yards.
letdown but held on to defeat a
stubborn Hannan, W.Va., crew, broke Into tlie scoring column first capping a nlne-piay, 65 yard drive.
Oak Hlll began Its comeback .
14-6. Whether the Highlanders were on a one yard run by David Roush Eastern's comeback started when effort with 6: 23 left In the first half on :
looking fqrward to the North Gallia which ended the game's openirtg Rice scored his second TD on a two
Kim Strickland to Jame Logan ·
encounter, took the Wildcats too march, a 55 yard effort In 10 plays. yard run with one second ieft in the pass following a Wildcat fumble. •
lightly or had their minds glued on The lead stood unt9 Chris Weaver·
Hannan Trace took the ldckofl and ·
the school's homecoming dance Is tied the game for Hamlin with a four
scored once again, this time on a 23
SV .\C Slandln"'
not known but according to the yard run with 11:56 left In the ·first
yard pass from Jay Jarreli to '
A.U Games
Southwestern coaching staff all half.
Barnes. However, from that point :
Team
WLPOP
North Gallla jumped hack Into the &amp;luthwestem .. ." .... ........... 5 0 78 50 on, It was all Oak Hill. Hale grabbed :
three contributed to the team's
Hannan Trace ..... ·········-.:.;.:)·3 2 1M 57
worst showing this season. "We lead on a 39 yard pass from Mike North
a five yard pass from Strtckiand :
GaUia ......... .. ... ........... 3 2 6J 69
. ...... ... J 2 R7 TI
stunk" was how Coach James Kemper to David Hammonds. Todd Symmes Valley ...
with 6:52 left In the third, quarter. ·
Eastern .. .. ..
............2 3 99 10~
described the team's performance. Holstein added the EPwhichproved OakHW
Strickland, a 5-11 senior added the
.
. ...... .... .. ...... '1 3 55 79
Southwestern jumped into a 6-0 to be the winning point. Tully ·Kyger Creek ........................ 0 5 lJ 123 winning touchdown on a one yar~
Southern ................ .......... ,. ..o 5 l3 137
lead In the first quarter when Tim grounded out 2'lO yards rushing.
run In the fourt h perlnd.
'
Frtda)''5 gante8:
Burnett ran 11 yards caplllg an
Need a win
Southern
Is
still
seeking
It
s
flrs.t
Eastern at Kyger Creek
myard march. A key play during
At Cheshire, Coach Mel Coen's 1 Southwestern at North Gall!a
\ victory after last week's 27-0 losst'?
Hannan
Trace
at
SoUthern
the drive was a 54 yard pass from Kyger Creek Bobcats, victims of
) powerful Wahama.
·
Oak Hlll at Symmes Valley
Justy Burleson to John WoUum. four shutouts In five outings; hope to
Hannan tied the game.on an 82 yard get some offense going against the
pass from quarterback Genny Eastern Eagles. Last year. EastAdkins to Mike Wilson with 1: 46left ern, North Gallia and Kyger Creek
in the first half. The Highlanders shared the SVAC crown. A year ago,
scored what proved to be the Eastern Inflicted KC's only league
I
winning points In the third quarter Joss, a one point defeat. This season,
UP TO Sl2 REBAlEI
I
on a nine yard run by Jim Burnett however, the young, inexperienced

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long. AlllPitt&gt;rs arE' subj£&gt;Ct to t'dlllng and must be signed with name. address and

The Census · Bureau has reported that the number of American
)louseholds, whether made up of related or unrelated Individuals, grew at a
faster rate than the U.S. population between 198l and 1984.
The bureau said the 7 percent estimated increase In the number of
households during the fo~r-year period renected changes In the nation's
age structure and Jiving arrangements.
During the period. the popula tlon rose 4.2 percent,
. According to the report, thee s tIm~ ted number d. households in the
·united States Is 86 million, compared to !ll.3 mUllon In Aprlll98l.
· The 10 states wlth the highest number of households were California,
New York, Texas, Pennsylvania, Florida, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, New
Jersey and North Carolina.
·•
The estlm&lt;ites ranged from 9,5 million In California, the most populous
.state, to 165,tm In Alaska, the least populous state.
''The more rapid growth In households than In population Is partly due to
'changes In age structure as well as to changes In living arrangements,'' the
.report said.
. It said that In th~ J9!1l to 1984 period, the population 18 years and over,
which Includes virtually all householders, Increased by 6.6 percent, while
the number o! per!lms under age 18 declined bY 1.7 percent and dropped
from 28.1 percent to 26.5 tiercent of the total population.
· The bureau defines a household as "aU thepersons who recupy a housing
'unll," whether a house, ·an ,apartment, or a single room. ·
·: An earlier bureau report showed a statistically sharp drop In the average
number of perrons per household -!rom 2.76 to 2.71-and the new repgrt
noted the drop was "entirely due to the drop among persons under age lB."
'1\vo weeks ago, the bureau, In a report on marital and Jiving
arrangements, reported a large growth In the number of unmarried·
couple households, which II said has been groWing bY an averageofl~.OOJ
a year and now totals nearly 2 mUllon.
. At the same time, the bureau' showed that young people are postponing
·marrtage and subsequently there has also been a a decline In the annual
·number of births, so that In 1984 there were 7 million fewer children under
·18 than there were In 1970.
The report said there were only two.states - Ui~d Wyoming where population growth outstripped the percent In Increase of households
and both those states also had a rise In the estimated proportion of the
population under age 18 in the 198l to 1984 perp!.·
But In terms of the percentage Increases, the repqrt_conflrms a shift In
population to the Sunbelt.
Alaska, wlth a 25.7 percent increase, and Nevada, with a 15.9 percent,
were first and second respectively, In rates of increase in both household
and population, the report said,
They were followed by Florlda,l5percent: Arlzona.14.3 percent; Texas,
14.1 percent; New Mexico, 12.1 percent; Colorado, 12.1 percent; Utah, 12
; percent; Georgia, 10.8 percent and Hawaii, 10.3 percent.

SVAC co~petitlon begins Friday&lt;night

Meet the '85 Eastern Eagles·

Willwm F. Buckley Jr.

eration ago, tG Remember Pe~rl Ism, even as historians point to
Harbor. But although It was only Tier as the westermost point of
two years ago !hat It all happened, the Mongol Invasion, arrested In
we haven't until oow heard a voice the 13th century. A.ll the more
enjolnln!l us to · Remember Gre- ·· significant If we remind ournada.
selves of the Brezhnev Doctrine.
Why?
.
It Is the one that reads, IdiomatiGrenada Is Infinitely ·Interest - cally: What Is ·ours Is permaIng. Begin only with the histori- nently_ours, what Is yours Is up
cal point. It Is the first country for grabs. A more formal version.
ever substantially controlled by of the Brezhnev Doctrine Is that
the Sovlet ..Unlon that has been the ·entire socialist world (as
emanclpl\ted. Indeed, If we are they style themselves) Is commitat all optimistic about the future, ted to the Irreversibility of socialwe may lnd!llge ourselves In the Ism (read coinmunlsm) wherthought that future generations ever It Is established. By the rules
will point to Grenada as the high of the Brezhnev Doctrine, Gre·
watermark of Soviet Imperial- nada should not have been al-

least llkeiy to spark a nuclear us to play the International polltl·
war, as Mosher sees it, is the one cal game like chess, where the
that preoccupies the Reagan ad - loss of a pawn can blow everyministration .
thing.
Central America.
He thinks we would do better
It lacks an essential element: thinking In terms of another
Interests considered vital by one game, one at which we ought to
of the nuclear rivals are not at be especially adept.
stake . But It does, Moshe~thlnks,
"The Amerloan..lerteought to
symboilzetf'e way we respond to be~g It like poker," he sug- ;
crises - thinking that all some- ~s ts, "where you can lose a ;
how are Infected by Soviet lnvoi - hand a win a hand. That probably
vement. That attitude In Itself would be wiser. We'd be a little
creates a problem. It encourages calmer about these things."

Berry's World

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The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

a

David Edwards
11-11, 2lO pound
Senior tackle

Bry1111 Beeler
11-9, 1110 pound
Sophomore fullback

r--~~~;~~-~~~;;;-~~u~·~N-~ouroN---.1

~-------------------------------:-. 1
MOPAI/CHAMPION TUNE-UP

IIIW!&gt;.

Todd Wilson
il-7,130pound
Junior halfback

•

Mets edge Cards; -.
Dodgers clinch tie

,·•

Kevin Moms
11-11,190 pound
Senior end

Todcg's Sports Parade

Pregame message

St. LOUIS (UP!) - Some guys ldss and teD, bu.t ·as a general rule,
ballplayers don't. WeD, no more lhan anyone else.
That doesn't mean they don'tsharesomeof their innermost thoughts now
and then. Not necessarily with their wives, either.
Darryl Strawberry had this very strongfeellnglnside him beforeTuesday
night's Mets-Cardlnals' contest, the one everbody agreed was so pivotal.
Cali It a hunch, premonition or anything else you like, the Mets'
free-swinging right fielder was getting some kind of message, and he had to
tell somebody.
The one he picked to teii was Lenny Dykstra, and he did It around the
batting cage In Busch S~dlum while some of the other Mets were taking
th~.lr pre-ga~ ~\\1ngs.
.
You watch, Strawberry ~a!d to Dykstra, the Metsgung-ho, pel'Jll;'tu_ally
hustling backup.?utflelder. I m gonna hit one so far tonight. fou re not
gonna believe It
-.
.
For 10 Innings, neither the Mets nor Cardinals cou}Jl so much as scratc~
out a single run between them. In quite possibly the best-pitched game this
year ,on both sides, rlght-hanrll'r Ron DarUng, the Mets' 16-garne winner,
blanked the Cardinals on four hits through the first nine Innings beton;
yielding to southpaw Jesse Orosco. Left-hander John Tudor, the Cardinals
20-game winner, held the Mets scoreless on six •hits for 10 Innings before
giving way to fellow left-bander Ken Dayley.
Dayley opened the ~th by striking out both Keith Hernandez and Gacy
Carter, two of the Mets biggest guns.
Strawberry, who had managed to get the ball out of the Infield only ooce,
and had failed to get anything even resembUng a hit four previous times at
the plate, was up next.
The crowd of 46,026, aware they were sitting in on a pitching classic, was
rootlng.for Dayley to strikeout the side bY getting Strawberry thesameway
he did Hernandez and Carter.
Dayley's first pitch to the left ·handed-hitting Strawberry was a fastball~
little outside for ball one. HtS second offering was a breaking ball the Mets
slugger took for strtke one..
. .
Dayley's third pitch was another breaking ball, a bit up.
Strawberry swung, and from the Instant the ball left his bat, all the
partisan Cardinals fans in the park knew the worst Some groaned, others
watched in numbed silence as the ba Udlsappeared Into the right-center field
seats, and Strawberry slowly trotted around the bases with his 28th home
runoftheyear.
All the Mets came out o! their du gout to greet Strawberry and high-five
him. He was looli!ng for Dykstra.
"See, didn't J\-11 you•" he whispered to him, lauglilng. "You know I
wouldn't lie to you."
Of all the home rim.'; St rawberry has ever hit, none was bigger than this
one, and very few traveled a whole lot farther. Hernandez, who played here
for so many years with the Cardinals, estimated the ball went almost 500
feet.
Maybe It didn't go quite that far, but it certainly went well over «10 feet.
After Orosco survived a scare in the bottom rt the 11th to nail down a 1-0
victory for the Mets, It moved the New Yorkers wlthln two games.of the
first -place Cardinals, and gave them new hope, especially with their
23-game winner and strikeout ace, Dwight Gooden, ~lng for ·them In
Wednesday night's second game. against Joaquin Andujar, the Cards'
22-game winner.
Stra wberry's homer did far more than keeptheCardlnals' mv~~c~~~~~
at four and offset a truly remarkable pitching perlormance by
was going for his 11th shutout of the season that would have tied
\
major-league record set bY Sandy Koufax in 1963.
Str'lwberry's blow swung momentum In favor rt the Mets, partlml;orlv
with G00den on deck, and raised their hopes of leaving
all tied with the Cardinals.
In addition to the remaining two games, the Mets havethr,ee-nnon~ le:tt lit
home with the Expos, while the Cardinals finish their season at hon1e •vtill
three games against the Cubs.
Mets manager Dave Johnson naturally was happy over his team's
winning the series opener, but wasn't celebrating, Questioned as to how
liked the Mets' position now, he said "l'dllkeltbetter ~wewereeven. But It'
better thlm It was."

'By COUJNS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer

For 10 innings Tuesday night, the
Cardinals and Mets struggled in
vain to scratch out a run with bunts,
steals, and even a suicide squeeze,
succeeding only In stranding 15
baserunners. In the 11th, Darryl
Strawberry tpok a different approach, and left no doubt about the
outcome.
Strawberry blasted a 1-1 hanging
cuJVe from Ken Dayley in the 11th
inning for his 28th home run to give
New York a 1-Ovlctory over St. Louis
and move the Mets within two
games of the first-place Ca rdlnais 1n
the Na tiona I League East.
_ Each team has five games
rema(n!n~.includingtheremalnder
ofthetl!ree'gameserlesWednesday
and Thursday nights.
"He did what aU g()()(j, hitters
should ·do with It,.. St. Louts
manager Whitey Herzog said of the
pitch DaY. ley made to Strawberry.
Dayley.started thelltheystrlklng
out Keith Hernandez and Gary
Carter. Strawberry followed with a
mammoth home run estimated at
450 feet, to give the M~ts the iead.
Dayley, 44, admitted he made a
mistake to Strawberry.
The magic number remains at
four forSt Louis
' JesseO~sco 8.6 pitched the fin al
two Innings for the ~lctory .
The Mets will send their ace,
· Dwight Gooden 23-4 against Joa.
quln Andujar, 2i-1o, Tuesd~y night

I
I
I

. ·I

II

.I

2995

In the second game of a three-game
·I
.I
set.
I
St. Louts starter John Tudor
I
hurled 10 scoreless Innings to
.I
Increase his scoreless string to 19,
J
before leaving for a pinch-hitter. He
I
walked three and struck out seven
while giving up six hits.
New York starter Ron Darling
pitched nine scoreless lnlngs before
leaving In the lOth fora pinch-hitter .
DarUng allowed four hits and three
walks while striking out five.
In the lOth, pinch hitter Cesar
CHRYSLER
Cedeno worked Orosco for a one-out
PLYMOUTH
walk and stole second . Orosco
caught 02Zie Smith looking at a
DODGE INC.
calied third strike after getting
339 S. 31D MIDDlEPORT
behind 3-0. Tlto Landrum, pinch,
6 U-992-6421
hitting for Tudor, was interitlonaliy
walked. Jack Clark, In his first
29.95 I
••4-Cyl.
appearance since Sept . 22, new out
34.95 'II
6-Cyl.
to Strawberry while pinch-hitting
39.95 I
8-Cyl.
tor VlnceCoieman, to end the threat.
CHIYSLEI
,I
COIPOIA11011
Elsewhere, Houston blankEjd
~
I
GENUINE PAm
Atlanta 2-0, Chicago edgfod Pitts·
I
burgh 4-3, Cincinnati nipped San
.I
Francisco 7-6, LosAngeles pounded
I
San Diego, 10-3 and Philadelphia at
Incl ude~: Fo1 en'ilnes w1th ele&lt;:tromc l&amp;fl~IOn O!!er good lor Mopar /C hampwn soar~ I
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Montreal was rained out.
.1 •Ad1usltdle
speed
'
plugs. Sl per plug lor lour. Sl .25 per plug
• S~I 11m 1ng
lor Sl~, or $1.50 per plug lor erghl spark · I
Iludgers 10, Padres 3
J:lnspect em ru 10ns co ntrol system sta r~dard rHOt· plugs. MaKimum of $12 per hoUsehold.
At Los Angeles, Mariano Duncan
1100 cr vehiCles eQUIPPed wrlh &amp;realer tha n flfj li
1
delivered three hit s and t-..u RBI to I
· lmrel nrburelor. slightly hrgher
help the Dodgers rllnch a tie for the
· National League West. With the II
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decision, the Dodgers malntaiited
Offer good thru 10-20-85
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I:lraveckY.13-11, took the loss.
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Harvard ~wuuam 6 Mary 27
HG~;yCl'ol•
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klwa :liMldllpn Stalf If.

Kansas 22Euternl'llmtt 7
• Loul\!llna Sl~le 36 Florkla ~
Maryland 311NorthCiratna ~iltl'13
MempNI SCale 17Mialllsi~State 14

MlamltFklrldatll EutCaroUrla 1~
MJ amt ton\oll'5 otllO t/nlvtTsJfY 12
Mlch.lgan II WbcoMIII21
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otUo Still' liiUlOOUi :ll
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&lt;ltlalloma State 17 T\llsllt
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Pl!lsbifll.h :n South Car01lni1125
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RJp)cy 218arbounvl.l le 12
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Han nan 'J'raC't 8 Soo tlworn 6
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Warll'fiUlcai33Millt'r0

..

.

By IAN LOVE
night, he used Mike Witt on three
UPISporll~
daysrest. •
California Angels manager Gene
"It was too logletl 80( to do,"
Mauch, burned in previous pennant Mauch said. "U It (tbe Western
races, Is making a. run ll'l the Division race) goesdowlltolheflnal
Amerlcan Legue West on some old . day, and it very w.eU cwld, Witt is
legs.
going to he the guy wbo pitches
The Aogels, In the midst of a . Sunday. U he pitched Wednesday,
four-game serles with Kansas City he'd have to come blc~ on three
that could determine the Western days rest Sunday.
Division champion, evened the
Witt limited Kanl181 City to three •
four-game set 1-1 with a 4-2 victory singles over tile first II!'Vftl Innings.
Tuesday night.
In the eighth, the Royals jumped
Average age of the run:producers him lor two runs on ali RBI trtple by
In the Aogels' triumph, which Wlllle Wllson and an RBI single by
moved California back 111 first place . George Brett.
by one game with five to play, is 36.
Witt, 14-9, had lasttill only three
Bobby Grtch, ,36, opened the Innings In his last start, against the
scorlng with a solo home run in the Cleveland Indians. Maud! decided
second Inning off loser Charue to switch Witt aild llillllllllrnanlck,
Leibrandt, 17-9. The Angels added who will pitch t9nlgh( l!plnst Bud
three more. runs In the fifth on a Black .
run-scorlng double by 34-year-old
Donnie Moore relleYed Witt In the
Brtan Downing, and run-scorlng eighth, and retired flllllr consreutlve
singles by 40-year-old Rod Carew Royals · to end the flllllle for his
and 34--year-old Doug DeCinces.
club-recOrd
manager of
Mauch resigned
Lelbrandt sufferellllllllrst hqme
the Aogets In 1982. He was blamed Joss since May 10, snapping a strlng
for California's !allure to win the of nine consecutive vk:torles. ·
pennant after winning the first two
ElseWhere, ~ dropped
games of the AL championship Seattle9-3, Detroit dtiacted Toronto
series froln Baltimore.
6-1, Boston Flp_ped Baltimore 10-3,
Mauch, In his 23rd season as a New York beat MllwiNkee 6-1,
manager, hokls the record iormosts Texas took Oakland4-2 lilt! Mlnneaseasons as a skipper wlthou t a polls topped Chicago 12-6.
pennant.
·

·low• Slatll'40 Drake 7 r

.

I

C~nnatl Reds won't quite come ·
01!( and say it, but . they seem
resjgned to a second place flnish In
tJ¥!: National League's Western
DlY!sion.
·
..-After Cincinnati fought back· to
tai&lt;e San Francisco 7-6 Tuesday,
pl,ayer-manager Pete Rose_ dlsC$Sed his forthcoming series with
tJW. Dodgers:'
~ :.(\11 we are trying to do ts go Into
Los Angeles with a chance and If we
aNi going to finish second, then we
wliljust begin toconcentrateonnext

y!)ar.

:John Franco, whose relief hurling
p!leServed Tuesday's win, said.
"We're longshots and"! believe In
'nrver say die.' But Jn any case we
~ve SUI'Jlrtsed a lot of people who
picked us filth at the start of the
I.
"
seeson.

,

).'oung Eric Davis, sent down to
~ver In mid-season to cut down
hll,strtkeouts, led the Reds against
the:Giants with three hits and four
lU)lS knocked ln.
•'l 've·beeitswlngtng the bat well, ''
sald Davis. "I don't know why. It is
something tllat happens and I am
ha;llpy witlrit."

Big Dave Parker of Cincinnati, a
MVP candidate who hit his 31st
homer, has been worklngwlthDavts
on shortening his swing.
"He Is working to make good
contact now. He has made that
· adjustment," Parker saido!Davts.
"He Is hard-work111g. The man has a
great future and he has got to play.''
ParliPr continued,, "The major
transition from the minors to the
majors is to learn to play relaxed. He
Is playing more relaxed and the
production Is there.
"When be has two strikes, we
talked about just making contact. It
appears he has learned that."
Davis and Parker homered in the
first to gtve the Reds a 2-0 lead.
The Giants tied the score when
Dan Gladden belted his fifth homer
and then Mike Woodward singled,
stole second, moved to third on an
error by catcher Bo Dlazand scored
on Dlaz' passed IB!l.The Giants took
a 3-2 lead In the second on Dan
Drtessen' s ninth homer.
The Reds tied tl)e score
the
fourth when Tony Perez and Nick
Esasky singled and Perez scored on
Dlaz'sgroundout.
The Giants registered three runs

m

Mauch was criticized In 1982 for
using using pitchers Tommy John
and Bruce Klson on three days rest
In the last two games rJ. the playotf
series with the Orioles.. Tuesday

In the fourth to move ahead 6-3. With
two out, Jooe Urtbe singled, pinchhitter Chrls Brown walked, Gladden
tripled borne two runs and Woodard
then singled in Gladden.
Cinrlnnati closed to6-51n the sixth.
Concepcion singled, Dlaz walked
and Ron Oester' s bunt single loaded
the bases. One run came in on a
double play ljlld Davis singled In
another.
In the eighth, Dave Concepcion
singled, Gary Redus walked and
pinch-hitter Wayne Krenchlcki also
got a base on balls to load I be sacks.
Davis then sl,ngled In two tallles to
make a winner of Tom Hume, 3--4.
Franco came on to earn his 11th
save.
The Reds showed they still mean
business by scorlng !heir winning
tallies dfScott Garrelts, the Giants'
most effective hurler this season. He
took the loss and saw his record fall
to !l-5.· •
BQb Brenly of the Giants was
eloquent and poetic 111 summing up
his team's fruitless season. ' "The oars sank long ago - way
upstream," he said. "The oars just
felfout."

"COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The 64th

Official announcement of the
ari~ual boys state high school ' move was to be made today at the .
basketball tournament played in St. UD convocation center.
JQlut Arena on the Ohio State
"I .will announce the final decislop
University campus since 1956 will be (today) in DaytOn," OHSAA Comh!I'Id at Dayton next year.
missioner Richard Armstrong said
'A conmct between the March Tuesday.
20;22 tournament and OSU's comThere~ for the niovecentered
mencement ceremonies forced around March~ and 21, Armstrong
Ohio High School Athletic Assocla- said. OSU comment-ement practice .
u6n officials to move the tourney to Is Thursday and graduation is
Friday.
t1f University o~Dayton .

Richard Callgu iri says he Is "95
IJIItWnt certain" that a publicprtva te coalition wlll reach an
aF,ment to purchase the Pitts-blligh Pirates by the end of tilts

w'l'!'k.

~.'We

are v~ry. very clooe to have
with the Pirate
o~ers," the mayor said Tuesday.
"1hlngs could break at any tiine.
l'ye always said I would like to do
semethlng before the end of the
all agreement

season.
'
"

~'The regular

.·

season ends Sunday.

Ui\der CaligUiri's· proposal, the
ccil;ts of buying and operating the
ptrates lor the next flveyears would
!x"shared by private Investors, the
cii;,, and possibly the ·county.
l!owever, two of the Allegheny
C~ntycommtssioners, TomFoers•

.. ~ ... .4

CLEVELAND (UP!) -RewardIng a manager who has lost 100
games by signing him to a
"perpetual" contract may seem
unusual.
Cleveland president Peter Bavasl, however, says the Indians'
oiganlzat(on "has strong faith in our
manager Pat Corrales; and we feel
he Is the man to cont lnue the
rebulldlng processofthls team.·:
"We want Pat, our players, .the
media and the fans to understand
that we're ronilnltted to 12!'bulldlng
this team," added Bavasl, noting
that Corrales' original contract
expired after the 1~ season.
"We've considered this for a long
time. The 100 losses are only
reflective of how much work this
new management team has to do on
the field.''
· The Indians announced prior to
Tuesdey night's game with Seattle
that Corrales had signed the new'
pact with unspeclfiWtenns.
"A perpetu;~l contract is standar&lt;l .
In Industry, especiallywlthcompanles that are bulldingor rebundtng,"
said Cleveland vice president of
baseball operations Joe Klein.
"It's an Indefinite, mutual agreement, We wanted Pat ... tobepartof
our management team for the long

.::.

PLAYER OF WEEK -Brad
Robinson who sr::Gred a reoord
five touchdowns 1111d rushed for
98 yards has been named the
Meigs Jaycees Player o1 the
Week for his perfonnance ID last
Friday night's 48-16 victory over ·
Wellston.

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Ciwl'land - Sljtllf'(l Managrr Pat f or·
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and r!1)1itml llim w11 h Hank BulktuRh.
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San b ti:W) -)in'Ct Dfoi'C'f\SI\'r Coordinat or
Tom Ba ~ and rrp la&lt;,'d hlm ..-:1111 l)n'C'
Adolph : ~ltMI f!W-IlRrrtl qu:H11'rbiidt
Babr l.aulmb.'r)l.
Washlnll:lon - Wal\'l'd l111t'bac•t'r ~tr
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We'd lib you to stop in and see
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OkiM

'

MUFFLER INSTALLATION
SPECIALISTS

.

'

)
6

IJrl roll 6. Toronlo 1
' .
('lt&gt;vC'land g_ ~;~ ulr .1
Boslon 10, Baltlmon&gt; l
N~· York 6. Mll~~o'a u leff' I
C'alllomla ~. K&lt;1R1'1a~ City 2
(lllr~~Rt~12, Mlnri-!;11111 fl
Tf"Xas 4, O akland 2
W~'"Game~ {All nmBiEIJT)
Toronto jKt"Y 13·61 ur [)(&gt;troll !Morris
1 ~ 11 1, 7:?1 p.m.
!iran)(' IMOOR' 17-1\ 1 at Clf'\"&lt;'liUld ll'll"''i
1 ·~1. 7: ,'fi p.m.
&amp;~ ton INlpP"'f 1:1.121 at Bil11irroow 40ixon
R4 1, 7:3.'i p.m
Ml lwB ukf't&gt; r HJ~('ra 14 -81 at Nrw York
rShlrlfoy 541 . R p.m.
Oakland ~~ S. !Ot at T~as 1Mar.on
S.14t. 8:~ p.m.
California 1W1tr 13.'91 at Kansas City
!Block 9-l!tl , 8 : ~ p.m.
Ollc'~ rDav ls J.2t at MlnnMIOia tVlOia

· ,. Patwil Is .
BeHer ;Than Ever!

..... b&amp;tlwrln
And be sure to Ct1eck out the an-new
198610y0stove models.

!i61 -

'l'uftllday'!i Gamftl

POSTMASTER: Send - . . . changes

Lldlt

w

8!1

.&lt;129 :11

100 .lii 41

!f1 ill S54
R2 7!i !121

Tnas

. '

otat

.....

~

C'hl.

New York, New Yort - 7-

and

m 89

MJ~·Jcrr

KC

Ohio Newspaper Astoe1atteR . National
Advertising Represewtatlvt, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 13a Tt*d Avenue,

.'•

oo
_5 -

II} 71i .~U IR
ff) 77 . ~10 181-$

ClvtRI

To Visit Our
Model -Home
/&gt;J'IO$

4
ID Th .M9 17

""""
""

99
Steak ••• ~.. S1

Round

9-1 1)2 .6113

Drn

Jne.

LPlt . GB '
98~.6~-

NY

C:Jilt

Member: United PrHI [Mtrnatlonal,

1\vo other baseball managers Toronto's Bobbby Cox and Boston's
John McNamara- are understood
to have the same type of contracts . •
Fonner Detroit manager Ralph
Houk also was repoted to have had
an Indefinite contract, saki Klein.

l(eRO-SUN MOOB-

W

1'rnro

INSPECTION ·

Inland Dally Press A..edlitton and the

~

· USDA CHOICE

AMDtiCAN I.EAGut:
B)' United PrfNs lnkr.tlonal

Sttl
I

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 5,' 1985

' Majors:

1----------...L.___...:...______

DUGAN'S
FRONT·END ALIGNMENT

•

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·

FREE

Pomeroy , O~lo 451e9. Pll. lft-2156. Se·
oond class postage. paM~ at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·

•

Dav

DO YOU HAVE ANY PROBLEMS SUCH
••
PULLING, SHAKING, SHIMMERING, OR .
••
DARTING? THEN BRING IT TO THE FRONT
END SP.ECIALIST.

..

Scoreboard

Published every afte~. Monday
through Friday, 111 COurt St ., Pomeroy, Ohio, by th~ Ol'llo Valley Publishing Company /~ta, Inc.,

Pat Corrales

During previous years when there
was a conDlct between the touma·
ment and OSU graduation activities, graduation was moved from
Frlday io Thursday, said OHSAA
Assistant Commissioner Fred
1
Daffier.
"In the early 1970s we had
conflicts with Easter and (OSU)
graduation but (OSUotflciats) were
wUUng to move graduation up 24
hours," Daffier said.
·

ter and Barbara Hafer, are opposed
at Investing public funds to purchase
a~llteam. ·
Matter, Callguirt's execu·
tlve secretary. said the city is
working on a series of alternate
financing plans in hopes of winning
the support r1 the commissioners.
Matter refused to disclose detalls
· of the alternate plans, saying they
are In the "exploratory" stage.
Earlier, an officlalofPittsbuigh's
financial adviser had contlrrried the
city was considering a proposal to
sell Three Rivers Stadium and then
lease the facUlty from the buyer !JJ
the clt}i' will have enough cash to
swing the deal.
Callguiri didn't rule the sale out,
saying, "We are looking at all kinds
of alternatives In tenns of flnancing
tilts arrangement.''
·

'

tUSPS 11.-1
A Dlvlllon of . . . .

l?irate sale may be completed soon
(UP!) - Mayor

· STORt t!OURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM·lO PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 P.M..

The Daily Sentinel

•

'~PJ'TTIBURGH

We Reserve The Right To
• Limit Quantities

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

Indians rehire

64th.
annual
boys.
state
tournament
..
switched to Dayton due to conflict

Jnd!Mw 9, Marbters 3·
· At Cleveland, Andre Thornton
crashed a two-runiDmerlil the sixth
111nlng; arid Brook Jacoby drove In ,
four runs 10 pa~ the Indians. Don
Schulze, 4-9, allowed· two runs on
three hits. Jerry Reed got the final
six outs for his eighth save. 'l1gers6,
· BlueJays1
At Detroit, Darrell Evans
slammed t\\0 homers to retake the ·
ALhomerunlea(l wlth39andpower ·
the Tigers. Frank Tanana won his
fourth straight and raised his record .
to 11·14. Doyle Alexandet,16-10, was
the loser.
Red Sox 10, Orioles 8
At Baltimore, Bill Buckner drove
In five runs with his l4thbomerand a
pair rJ. doubles to pace Boston.
Bruce Hurst, 11-12, dealt the Ol'loles
their flfth ~tralght Joss. Dennis
Martinez fell to l3·10.

m -.: ·'

as

~eds delay elimination with 7-6 win
~ FRANCISCO (UP!) -The

October

Califomia evens KC t'eries;
·
Indians dump Mariners, 9~3

(

: By MAJOR AMO$ H. HOOPLE
Michigan State's Spattaas, 36-14 (on
•
Fearless Forecaster
CIJS.TV). '
'Egad, friends! Now the big
J'he Oklahoma-Kansas State Big
conference battles 111 college foot- Eight tray will go to the Sooners,
ball are klc~lng .off - with the
42-11. Powerful Nebr~ska will roll
spotlight on lf!e SEC and the Big over New Mexico, . 48-W, and
1'en. ·
Oklahoma State will take aclooeone
: Led by speedster Dalton Hilliard,
from Tulsa, 17-14.
f.outsiana State Unlv~rJiity will play
In olher key games, the SMU
host to the tough University of · Mustangs of t)le SEC will trtp host
tlorlda ··Gators In a key SEC Arizo~by lf!e Pac-10 by a score of
coritrontatlon. ,.
32·22 and talented Arkansas will
· The LSU-Florlda contest Is· ;ll· tum back TCU, 24-22, In an SWC
most a,toss-up.
.
'
· meeting. And BYU will continue Its
• However,Okey Beyou, ourLoutsi · drive for another WAC crown with a
ana correspondent, confidently re- 3$-17 win overleaguerlva!ColoradO'
polis the Hilliard-Gary James · State.
Infantry attack will put more Points
In the South, the Georgia Tech
on the board than the aerlal Yellow Jackets and North Carollna
bombardment of Florlda's gifted will slug it out In M ACC meeting.
passer, Kerwin Bell.
Tedt gets the nod, 28-22.
• In a real squeaker, we see it LSU
Here area palrci close ones In the :
by two, 26-24.
East: Pitt will edge visiting Sou til
• Bo Jackson and his Auburn Carollna, 27-25; Rutgers and Boston
cohorts will entertain Mississippi in College wlll stage an old-fashioned
anotherbigSECgarne.Jackson,the donnybrook - with the Scarlet
early
lront-runner In .the Hetsman Knights trturnphant 28-24. Har,
. derby, will l~!ad the Tigers to a
rumph!
:convilicing.J!&gt;-17 win over Ole Miss. · Now go on with my forecast:
• On the Big Ten front, rugged Ohio
Slhardq, Od. $
State's Buckeyes will C(lnllnue their
o\riW'Is.u ~ Tf'XaSChrlsllan 22
yromlng ways over disappointing
Ann)' 31 Vale H
A.ubtm!iMls~p617
llllnois, 3!&gt;-28- on the IJI111i's home
Baylor:N Houston 14
' turf.
BowUn.a Crten ODWeslel'n Mlrhl,qan ~
Brool.·n u Prirlrt.'1on 8
: The Iowa Hawkeyes' aerial
BYU 3:.1CoJondoStatt&gt;l7
·: circus, with pass-master Chuck
C1rm.tm ~ Ktonhrky 21
Colaate 21 !..eliJah ll
: Long cracking the whip, will down
Con•IIWL.af ~tt&gt;1

W.adne~ay,

w'li·o CARS

' %MILE NORTH OF 1·77 ON ·
NEWP'PRT PIKE, MARIETIA, OH.

(614) 374-4344
OPEN WEEKDAYS 1-9; SATURDAYS 10·5
. SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMEN'J:

"f''"········............4

HOUSE

ht High Ind. Game Anne Spires, 191;
2nd Hlih Ind. Game, Chrll Wheatle~ . 196:
3rd Htgh Ind. Game, Ltnda Arthur aM
AMe Spires, 194 .
111 !flgh Ind . 3 Gaines,

!71; 2nd High Ind . 3 Game•. AM e Spires.
551; lrd High 100. 3 Games, Donna Grate,
197.
. lit High Team Game, Hlnf'i' Wine
(WMPOil085; 2nd Htgh Team Game, No.
8 (Splm) 1017i 3rd High Team Game,
Pool1 Plut, 1110.1.
111 Htah Team 3 Games, Hiney Wine
(WMPOI, 2996
2nd Htgh Team, 3Games. Pool• Plus, 2934 .
3rd Hlah Team 3 Games, No. 8 ;Spires)•
2917 .

"

COFFEE

June Lamberl,

3 LB.

CAN

$649

Uml11 ' Per Cultomer
Good Qnly At !'owet!'t
Offer ExplrM Oct. 6, 19811

•
~

1

CRISCO

CHARMIN

SHORTENING

TOILEr' TISSUE

3 Ll
CAN

$2·29

, Umlt 1 Per Cuttomer
Good Only
Powell'•
O'tfer Explrot

6, 198&amp;

410Ll
PKG.

. 99(

Umlt 1 Pe• Cuatomolr
Good On.ly At Powell'•
Offer

Oct. 6, 198&amp;

ARMOU~

TREET

LUN(HEON MEAT ·:
12 ~z.
09
CAN

$1

Limit 1 Per Cuetomer
Good Only At 'Powell's
Offer E&gt;iplrn Oct. 5, 1 985

�{

'

,.

. Page- 6-.The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 2, 198~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~~~~======~--~~==~------~~~~~~~
Outdoor lif e

.'

Tuming mpoachers
CHAR!--ESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
-For all of you outdoorfolkswho
hunt It, shoot it and bag It, or bait
It, hook It, reel it and net It, this
Bud's for you.
Bud Grant, that is.
For years, the stern man on the
. Minnesota sidelines has fielded
some rock-ribbed defenses that
were the e~vy of the NFL.
You remember the Purple
People Eaters?
What few realize Is he's a
veteran of the outdoors, a man
who takes an equally · nononsense approach to those
avocations. as well as football.
And Grant has done much to
counter a nasty breed known as
poachers. ?oachers? That term
sounds too charitable, almost
polite. I prefer what West
Virginia game wardens call
them: "Slobs."
Grant orgarilzed a Turn in a
Poacher program In Minnesota.
Today, many other states are
lett lng outdoor buffs play delee·
ttve, calling In tips to game
wardens. Most do it fort he loveof
the outdoors. A few are motivated bY rewal_'ds, much of It put
up by private groups.
"Persons who violate game
and fish laws are stealing from
all West Virginians and future
generations," says Natural Resources Director Ronald Potesta ·
of West Virginia. which launched
, • Its program late this summer.
Hunters are asked to get as
many details as IXJSSible, such as
Ucense number and a descripUon. Many states have 24-hour
hotllnes, with such catchy
numbers as J.tiXJ.POACHER in
Ohio, and 1-!IDNET-GAME in
West Virginia.
II you can't arguewithsuccess,
there's no debate.
In Utah, where the Idea has
been going five years, enforcement agent Bruce Johnson
concedes tha t rrost rt the annual
3,fffi callers want an exj:ianatton
of gaming rules. But there are
also about 400 tips. From that
number have come 160 arrests a
year.

Foolhall ·notes from around the Buckeye State

12 OZ. COI.IIMIIA VACWM PACKED

olltces o1111e Pub lic Utilities Comm is·
slon. 180 East Bro ad Streel. Columbus
01'110
•
Then! ani no ra te ct1anges prooosed
other tt'1an in tht tarrllt tpecllically
referred to In the tollowlng paragrapht
Tt'1t subtlanct ol the re'lltront pro
poted rn the Company"sapplica!ion at
tired on Jul'f Hi. I IUI5, Is 11 follows
·

'TERMS AND CONDITIONS
OF SERVICE
In Section -4 . Payments a customer
wrll Ot charged S9. ~ tor 1ny Orshollored
ooeck recel~ed in pa~men t ol a bill
rendered by the Company , unless the
customer shows lh1l I he ban~ wa s 1n
err or An 18.25 c harge rs made under
e•rstrngt1rllls
In Section ll. E•tan!lion ol Aural
Lrnes , the Comoany ·s Opt ronal Plan rs
eliminated
tn Se1tron 14, Temporary Servrce
the lloed c harge lor fe ad lng ·rn and
re~&gt;dlng -out an existing meter rs rncreaseO
from $13.75 to $16 00. and the charge l or
srng te pt.ne t20i240 YOII ser-lce !rom
perm1nant source up to tOO ampere
capac ity '' inc relied trom $114 00 to
$15325
tn Stcli0f1 21 , Denrat or Drscon11n uan~ ot SeNice . the reconnect ron
c harge durr no ~rmat working hour s l or
single phne aer~ l ce Js lncre11sed fr om
$11 .30 to $22.00, and the c~a rgt outside
of normal working hours is Increased
!r om SJI 40 10 16575. Reconnec t ion
charges of S5t .50dur ing I"IOI'mal work ing
hours and Si5.00 out1k:le olllOrmat work
ln"g hours are added tor reconnectron ot
aer~ l ce other than singlt p1"1tsil ,The
chaige when a Coml)any ~tmployee rs
dispatc hed to • customer's prtmlsl! to
perlorm a disconnection tx.rt •n l ieu of
draconnectlon lea~ea 1 Wfillen no t•ce
or such dlsconnecllo"''' tne premrses
or recewes p~ymant , is inc reased h om
$9 20 to StO~

.

. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••
. ' ·--·- PI&lt;g~ ........ 79C
Sl .ICId BQ(On
1·11. KAHN'S PACKAGED

•

1eners.................................. $1 .69

W.

Pkg.

ECIIIICH JUMIO

Bologna •••..•. ~ ..................~~ ••.•• S1 ~59
SHREDDED .....Ib.

SUPERIOl

l2.14J

Boiled Ham .................... .s!~c!~.~- S1.89
HOMEMADE

Salad.~ ••••••••:••• .; .••••• :!-.......... 99c

DAIRY

PRODU CE

I DOl. PACK llllANDAII

'

LARGE
£GGS ............... !.~!~ ........ 89 c
IRAn 12 OZ. 16 SLICI HOC.

PIMENTO CHEESE -~•· '1.19

l ·ll CIUA 'lCI

CARROTS .........~.~t ........29 1

..

LODI
A'PLES ..............~.~ .........99 c

TARIFF R.S. (RESIDENTIAL
ELECTRIC SERVICE)
The monthly customer charge aM
m•n1mum bill ill rncreased !rom Sl 00
to ~ ~50. The overall Increase 11 about
12 3''• (B.8 1t, Including luel chargest
The tnctetse oer KWH oroposed
are n foll ows
For the hrtlt 800 KWH used per
month hom 4 Bt6 c~t~~ls per KWH
10 5 U5 cents per KWH, or aOOut

3 Ll. lAG

YELLOW
ONIONS .......... ~~ ......... 89~

,.,
,.,.

I

FRDlE N
10 OZ.

I

3 Ll. lAG COOliN

CHEESE ............ ~: ••••••s1.79

IIIID~i· EYE

For all over 800 I(WI't used per
month !rom 3 40S cents per KWH
10 3 700 cen ts per KWH. or abou t

Broccoli Spears ......._........~:......... 89(

A Storage Wiler HBIHng Pr o ~ lai o n
rs added to thi s tarifl wrth a rate o f
$001456 per KWH tor oil -peak energy
used to store hot water l or use during
on - pea~ perrocts.
With r11gard to the Load Management Ti me -of -Day proylslon . the
customer charge 1nd minimum brtl a1e
ll'lCrused from $5 .50 to
The
trverall lncrease oroposad tor ll'lls pr owl·
sion is t 2 t "lo (6,6'1t tncludrng tuel
ch aroe ll
•
lhe rate chaoges per ~WH PfOpoHO
u follows
For a l l ene10~ U!td dunn'il on -poalt
blllrng perfod s, lrom 6 t7t cent s
per KWH 10 8.021 cen ts per ~WH
or an rncrene of about 30'4
For all enerw used durrng o il -peak
blllin1,1 ~r i ods , lrom I 553 cent s
per KWH to 1 456 cen ts per KWH
or a decrease of abOut 6'4
The conservallooand loan manage ·
ment c redit 111 lncreasea rrom
1 toe cents to 1 384 cent s per
Oil -peak KWH
A separate metering provltiOn rs
aOClEI&lt;t to this tanlf tor- general r10use use
An addltiooal Slll'l"rce charge of $3 00
per month rs rn cr uaed rn thit pr o ~r s r on
The charges In the or,ttonal Servrce
lor Residences Prrmarl y Heated b~
Ete ctr tcrty p ro~IS!ona are all incre ased
by about 11 1/o
The rate chanoes proposed are as
follows
Monthly SeNice Chtrge !rom Sl4 96
IO SI675
For " those KWH used during lhe
month m exceuof 4r '} trmea the
monthly billing dema nd from 1 65
cent s oer KWH to 1.65 cents per

16 OZ. T-SEA

Perch Fillets ....................~!;.... Sl.97

sa.so.

46 OZ. DOlE

. ap pIe Ju1c• e......................
Can
Sl •39
P.1ne
101/• OZ. CAMPBELl'S
Tomato Soup ........................ 2/69&lt;
17 OZ. OXYDOl DETERGENT
I

I

I

1

Powder ..................~:..... S1.19

3 OZ.

CANNED

·Cat. Food ..••.....••..•••••••••••.... 2/S1.39.
IS OZ. BREAKFAST CEIIAl
Wheafies ..••••.•..•..•••••AJ.e···~:..... s1. 99
3p0• OZ.Ml~BY'S PUMPJUN.
_
Can
$l
1e IX ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. • 19

'I

15 OZ.CHEF lOY -AR-Dff COSMK KID

KWH

Mac. &amp; Tomato Sauce ....c.-::... 2/99C

'15 1/z ·oz. HUNT'S

pea~

For those KWH us~ dunng t he
load peri od;
For lhe 11rs1 !SOO KWH trom 5 19
cenh!J per KWH to 5 81 c:ent s per

KWH

Manwich •••••••••••••~ ••••••••• -.~~:••••••.•-;.99&lt;
2.5 OZ. ARMOUR

Driecl Beef ·......................~:;..... Sl.l 5
JUMBO
.
1
Bounty Towels ...............a:!....,. •••• 99(
II OZ. IEm ClOCKER STIR &amp; FROST

Cake Mix •••••••••••••••.'.·........~:.•••• S1.4 9

r

For all o ver 500 KWH hom -' 15
cents PI'' KWH to 4 65 ce nts per
KWH ·
•
For all aDditiOnal KWH usect during
the monlh from ~ . 07 cents per
KW H to 2 3~ cen11 per KWH

TARIFF O.S.
(GENERAL SERVICE)

•

Chargu
lor d8mind metered
tuttomtrt ere IIPtrllec:l by delivery
~olt ag e le'le la. The customer charge t•
incrtaat d !rom 115.70 10 S1i.OO lor
dellvtrl ~oll ag" of btlow 2.3 KV and
from 15.70 to S75.00 tor Cltll'l"ery •
'fOII1ges of 2.3 KV and above. The

charge and minimum bill are incr'entd
from $ 12.00 to $ 1~ . 80.
The current and I)I'OPOSed rates rn
I hi I rardl are as follows··
Curren t

Demand Metered Customer
Custom&amp;rchargapermon th $1 ~. 70
Demana Charge per KW
· $3.36
Energy charge per KWH
S .0258
Nondemand Metered Customer
Customer charge permontn St2.00
Energy cherge per KWH
S 03639

~roe_~seG

Oeli~e~. v~tt age
2.J KV &amp;
Demand Metered &amp;!low ~ 3 ~V Abo-e
Customer charge
pe• mon th
$19 00
$1~ ()()
Demand c harge
per KW
SJ45
SJ 4~
Ene~y cnargo
per WH
02664 $0210
Nondem ancl Metered
Customer cha1ge
pe r montrr
$1 3 BO
Ene~y ct1arge
PfH WH
s 03363
Charges tor Recrut•o11 L•gh hnl,l
Customers are rncreattd an aYerage ol
2.8 "1. t2 t ''• Including tutl) The customer
ct\arge and minimum bill are Increased
rrom $15.70 to St6.15. The cunant and
proposed rates undetlhls provrsion are
as l ollo~s
.
Cu!rent Propo_!.ld
Cusromer
$18 IS
charge per month ~15 70
Ene1gy char ge
oer KWH
S0426J $04353
A LOild Mar.agement Tlme-oi ·Day
Pr o ~rsr o n rs added to tl'us tarlll . The
•ate. lo1 th rs QrO¥isron rncludes an acldl
I ronal custon'ler charge ol 13.00. an on peak energy cha11,1e ol SO 06039 per
KWH . and an o tt·PO•k4&amp;nergy ch11ge ot
$0.01319 per KWH
The minimum charge tor wtldett.
• • ray machines, etc ·is changed hom
$2 43 per KVA ot tnstalled trenstorme•
• Clpi!dly 10 the amount datermined pursuant to I he G S Minimum Chafge plus
S 40 per KVA of Inti ailed translormer
cepacity Mrnlmum chari,ICS tor customert ha~rng othe• aourc11 of energy
supply are c"hanged lrom 132 . ~ per
month l or the first 5 KW or lract•on
thereof ot contnrct demand otus $4.64
per month 101 eacn KW ol contra ct de·
mand o ve1 !i KW: to the appropnate
G S c ust omer Ch11ge plus $3.45 per
I'(W of monthly bill ing demand

s

TARIFF E.H.G. (ELECTRIC
HEATING SERVICE)
Thrs tanll remam1 •n proceu of
etlmrnelton and llfntted to e• ratmg eus
tamers The monthly customer charl)ti
and min1mum bill are •ncreaaed IJom
$1900 to $21 !)() Overall charQel tor
this tarrll are rnc reased app ro•rmtttty
t2 ~'lo 18 51ilo rnctudlng luel chargest
The current and l)roposed rates rn
thrt tarrll are as follows
Current
Customer charQe per month $19 00
Energy charge per KWH
$.0337~
Demand c harge l or KW in exceu
0130, Pet KW
' 2 92
Proposed
Cust omercnarQepermontn $2150
Energy ch111ge per KWH
S 0384~
Demaria charge tor KW rn exuas
o l 3Q per KW
S3 3D

TARIFF L.P.
(LAROE tOWER)
The pro posed rate hU been
se parated br del••ery voltage l~wels
Tne moruhty cus tomer charge t'1U been
reduced lor dellverl•ollages below 2 3
IW •and rnC(ease&lt;J 01 Clett~ery ~OiliQts
ot 2 3 K\4 and .atJo'tt The de_mand ch1rge
has been Inc reased and the anergy
c harge decreued at all o;oltage levi!IS
Q..oerall charges are Increased Irom 114'/t
to tO "k t5lf% to 6 J''• Includ ing fuel
ch arges).
The curren t and proposed riles In
thrs l arrll are iS follows
Cu11en1
Custome r cha rgf! oir month S830tl
Deman d c harge per KVA. •
$8 t6
Enerov charge oer KWH
S00838
Proposed

D_!II~Ye_~'!'_~~_!!..P_t
Under 2 J KV 23 KV to
2 3 KV tot2 KV 138 KV
Customer charge
- - $50.00 SIOO.OO S28~00
per month
Demano e na~ ge
per KVA
S10 25 S9. 72 $9..(5
Energy chargf!
$.00682 UXl646 S 00640
per K:WH

TARIFF J.P.
(INDUSTRIAL POWER)
Tt1e cuttomer charges have been
either tnereuto or re&lt;luc ed dtl)ancling
on delivery •oltlige. Otmand chargea
have been lnereamtnd entfQY Chari"
decretltd In each cese Th e bill ng
demand paremtttra are chat~ gtd tro,n
KIJA to KW and I&lt; 'JAR In lliCIIt al 5011.
ot thti&lt;W, The KVA~ damanc:l chargett
al l lt'lfll a Ia S.SO. D'IMIII the lncrea111
rang• from 11 .2'1• to 20 . ~% (6 51/o to
10 5 1/o Including fuel c h arg•s~.

11o11aga
Level
···23-t 2
k.v
23-69 kv

138 kv 01"
hrgt'1er

Propo5td
Cus toffi8"i "Demand
Charge
Cha rge
St 4o
s1d.J5
monrn
per kw
$375.00
19.00
per mon th per kw
$460 rXI
$6.24
per mop th per kw

OOPer

·~

•l -

Energ~

Charge

1.00sr~

""' '""
""''"".,
$,00565

....

$.00561

. TARIFF I.R.P.
(INTERRUPTIBLE POWER)
This tart!I hts been made available
throughout Ot11o Power Company' s !lef••
-ice terrlloty The customer char9e 11,
reduced. and the cf'emand charge 1s rncreaaed The overall ltYel ol charoes rt
tncreaud aprroxlmatety ~2 . 5•1. (9.8''•
rncludlng l ue charges!
The current and p10posed rates 1n
thrs tart!! are El l I OIIOW!
Current
Customer Cha rQeper montn S602 00
Demand charge per KW
$4 22
Demand charge per KVAR rn eJICBIS
ol50% o t KW brtlii'IQ tlemand
S.SO
Energy Ch81ge per KWH
S 0066
'
Proposed
Customer Charge per mon th $460 00
Demand charge per KW
$6.84
Demand cnarge per KVAA in e•cess
of !50'11o ol KIN bitlln1,1 damand
S SO
Energvcnarge pert&lt;WH
UXI561

TARIFF COOEN/SPP
(COGENERATION AND/OR
SMALL POWER
PRODUCTION SERVICE)
The cal)aclly credits are reduced

oy :13% and the energ) credits are In
created DY an avera!e of !5'4 Tne

cuslomer c harge pro~ sron i s repl aced
by an adminl st rat rOrf charge ot 0.2 cents
•
per KWH
The Credrt changes orooosed are
as l ottows
Whare standard energy meters are
used. the energy crerli t onc reases
.., trom t J8 cents Dtr KW H to 1 63
cen ts per KWH and the capacity
cre(!ll decreases lrom $3.00 per
KW to S2 00 per t&lt;W
Where l ime-of Dar anergy meters
are used !he Orl-peak energy
cred it Inc reases trom 1 68 cents
per t&lt;WH to 1 86 cents per KWH
and tne on -pea• capaciTy credr1
d!trea ses !rom $150 per KW to
$1 OO'I)e r KW The Q lt-pea~ Cl'edlts
are the s ame illS where standard
ent~ov mete•s are used

TARIFFS.S.
(SCHOOL SERVICE)
This 11:11111 remains 1n proc ess of
ellmJnetlon ano llmrted to e-ishng
cu st omers The customer c haroe is 1n
creased . · •na the energy rates are
lncreued The overall level Is increned
appro• rmatety 12 5''• tS ~ % •nctuaing
luel)
The current and proposed rates 1n
lhre tarifl are as follows
Current
Cus tomer chargeoer monlh
$21 12
Frrst J00 KWH pe1 t000 IQ. ft
of ftnclosed area. per KWH
S 04228
Bal ance o l KWH . per KWH
S 03727
Proposed
Cuat cmer chtigf per month
$24 00
F!(SI 300 KW H per 1000 SQ . tt
ol enclOse d" ere1. par KWH
S 04 8 1 ~
Be lance Ol KWH, DerKWH
$ 042-(J

11

Pa~

to the &lt;;:oml)any in advanca
a charge· of St 98 per foot lor the
t e n ~t r. ot underground circuit rn
eJICtss ot 30 leef. decreased
!rom $6.22. and
2) Pa~ e monthl y facilities charge
o f $.50 tor each 25 teet torlrac
lion 111tfaOI) olunderground cir
·'
cult 1n excess o l 30 teet .
dec reaserl from 1 1 82
Customers requiring serv1ce wflere
roc k or other adverse sort condillons
are encO\J nlered will be t urnlshed ser
vrce provided the e..c:eaa cost o ltrenc:hrng or backfilling (cost rM e•ceu or
$1.12Jiool of the total trei\Ch length) is
paid to the Co mpan~ by the customer.
-decreased !rem S2.561toot

Thla week your rNnufllcturered'' producb "cents off" cou-

ALL THIS WEEK

~1-ara wonh double their value etFoodland.li mited to men u!a~tu red producll coupona worth up to ond including 50 C OFF.

Coupon• wor1h more thin 60¢ I re redeemed at face value only.

oo·uaLE

limited one coupon for eect1 product purcha11d. ljmit one
coffee coupon. No beer, wine, or cigarette coupon'f"will be
doubled. Not valid on Free coupon s, Foodland coupon-a or reteil
food 1tore coupon a. The amount refunded e»nnot exceed the
pt'ict oi the i1tm. You mu tt purchase 'product in sizetspecified
on the coupon . This offer eppliea only to manufactured products .. Cents off" coupons tor it ems we cerry: To allure pro·
duct's avellabllitv 10 all ~ r custo mer~ only one coupon per
shopping family will be dOuble on any brand item dur ing eeeh
store viait.
..

COUPONS

--

MT. DEW, DIET PEPSI, PEPSI· FREE
'

"

Pepsi Cola

9

oz..

18
BOTTLES

'

TENDERBEST US'DA CHOICE

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

Top
Sirloin Steak
LB.

Bite 'Size
Beef Stew
'

~279_
.

"LB.$199

'

•PLAINeSELF RISE

Gold Medal

Flour

Th is tarlll remains m the process
ot elimination and limited to e.dsttng
cust ~l . The monthly minrmum charge
11 increased !rom S1 2 50 to 112 80.
The increase per KWH rs as lollows
For the lint MJO KWH l)er mon tl'l
mult1phed by the number o l
clanrooms In entrte schOOitrom
2 • 7 cents per KW H to 2 53 cents
per KWH .
"tor remarnln1,1 KWH used per month
0.97 cents per KWH to0.99cenls
per KWH
For lOIII etectnc SCfiOOI!I , tf'le Charge
l or an energy used during t he
month 11 increased'" tram 0.87
cents per KWH to 0 .89 c:ents per
tr;WH .

\

AU PURPOSE
' · -ENRICHED
FlOUR

'.

~D

...

SifTI ~

5 LB.

PKG •

-.

TARIFF E.H.S. (ELECTRIC
HEATING SCHOOLS)

TENDERBEST•11l-16 LB. AVG.
•POP·UP TIMER

Groun'd
'
Chuck

Self· Bastin

Turkey
_,,

Sprite, Tab·
Diet Coke .. ..''
Coca-Cola .

FRESH LEAN ·

L8.99•

••
•'

$ 99

-$139

ECKRICH
BOLOGNA
16 Oz .. $
89

•

•

•

•

12

LB.

' 'I

TARIFF P.A.
(POLE AITACHMENT]

.' .

.

•WHITE•ASSORTED COLORS

Tt1e Annuel A!lachment Charge lor
RlJtlll Cooperallve Elec tric Companres
or Etectrlc LrQnl Companies ope1ated
by a Municipality is Increased !rom
S13 80 tO S22.J3 pel pete per year . The
AnnlJal .(u,. chmenl Charge for all others
Is rncreased !rom St 90 ro $331 per
po l e per year

Northern
Bath Tissue

PRAY ER
The Prayer ol thl! ApptJcet ion requests the Public UtllrUes Commi SS IOn
ot OhtO to tlo 111ft toltowln~
lat Frnd that the applicat ion and
B~hlblts are flied in accordance wtth SectiOn 4909 t8,
Ohio Revised Code . and the
1u1es ol the CommrS!Ion ,
lbl Accept the applicat ion a nd
utllbits tor filings .
(C~ .Approve lhfllorm of thil norrce.
!dl Fmd tna t tne present rate&amp; are
lnsult ic rent to yield reasonable
cc mpensatlon tor lhe SI!NiCft
rendeltd and are unlust and

1.0 LB.
OR

· ...,&gt; MORE

unrea~~ooneble:

(e) FlnJI thlt t he Increased ra tes
and"charQft1 and emended terms
and conditi ons ot service propoaed In Ohi o Power "s Applrca llon are JUS! and reasonable
and app rove the same ,
111 Appro~e the filing c t the new
• !ICI!edutes ln the rorm propoaed
herein, al'ld
IQ) Ma~e such new sc hedule s
etrecuve as soon as rt Is prac
tical and lawfu l to do so
The progosad amended sc hedules
shall appl~ In all territ ories ser~ed by
On to Power Com pan~
Ills est•ml tftd that 111ft repreaenta ·uve re!lldtntltl customer a bill writ be
increateclannuall)o, based on the twelvemont h period el'ldlr.g Mll!rCI'I 31, 1986, by
8.&amp;•;.: lht representative commftr ciel
TARIFF O.L.
customtr"a bill by 4.4% , ana the repre
(OUTDOOR LIGHTING)
senta l lve Industrial cuatomer' s bill by
78 1/o .
Monthly tamp chlroes are Increased
"All DtrCef"ltegea preeentftd rn lhr~
ano tacllity charges lor seconda ry crr·
" o ti c• ~~~ approdmatt and based on
culls and/o r poles are rnc reased . The
avereg&amp; cuai0111Bf3. Individual customers
overall ltvtl o f cnargea It tncre•nd
may ••perlence ra te adjul!mente dll9 5'1. (8'1• lnctudii'IQ luel charge a)
terent !rom the l'leragea oreaented rn
The current 1nd proposed 1ates rn
thra notlca.
this tarill are as lotlcw5
Recommtnclatlons whic h di ller
Lamp
Cu11ent \:&gt;ro pqsed
hom t he application may be maae by
1.000 tunien
• .....
the sttll 01the Public Uttlllltt Co mmr ~ ­
slon or by Intervening parlin and may
mercury
S760
S8 _.S
be adOpted by the Commtsskln The
20,000 lumen
Company It unable to pred rc t w,rrat , rl
mercu r ~
S11 20
St245
any, Cl'llnge s. Including cha nges rn
9.000 lumen nrgh
amount or l orm, may be made b~ the
preuu re sodu..rm
ST SO
S8 35
Puollc Ut ilities Comml'lslon o f Ohio rn
22.000 lumen h i gh
the proposed tar lfls , and the Com pany
pressure aodlum
StO. ~ .
$11 25
Is unable to prt drct wn11 . II any, rmpa cl
THE ,OLLOWI NG l AMPS ARE IN
such modlflca!lons may have upon
PROCESS OF ELIMINATION
custornt!"s billings
,
AND ARE: NOT AVAI LA BLE
ANY PERSON, FIRM, COAPOAA TION
FOR NEW INSTALLATIONS.
OA ASSOCIATION M A't FILE .
Current Proposed
Lamp
PURSU I!NT TO SECTION 4909 19 OF
2.500 tumtn
Tl-tE 0 1-itO REVISED CODE, AN
Incandescent
16 .~
$7.00 t
...,OB.IECTION TO THE INCREASES
PROPO SED B't OH IO POWEA
4.000 tumtn
COMPANY WH ICH M A't ALLEGE:
lncandetcent
SIJ .55
$7 60
THAT "fHE COMPANY'S APPLICATI ON
For each tamp with ttooc:lttCII"I tlng
CONTA INS PROPOSALS THAT ARE
tumlnalre , colltrolled by photoerectric
UNJUST AND DtSCAIM INATOAY
relay. whir.a ser~let Is aupplltcJ trom 111
OA UNREASONABLE .
e•istlng pole t nd aecond1ry tacllltles
Tha lorm ol this notice hn Deen
ot the Company·
e p groveo bV tne P\ID!IC Ulllllle• Com
~
Ctl/nmt. Prof)Oifl
mii!Jtlon of Ohio
20.000 lumen
I
m'lltcury floodlight
$1:1 :W 1 $14.2~
SQ.OOO lu men
OHIO flOWER COMPANY
St0.80
122.15
mercury floodlight
By C.A. Heller
22,000 lumen h igh
Flraatdent
preuurt aoolum
floodlight
$13 . ~5
$14 05
50,000 Iuman high
prenurt sodi um
114 . ~5
$1!1.60
floodlight
Wllen ttr'f!Ct CIM Ot be I UPPiiiiCI
from -.n e.tatlnq pole ot the Company

•
'l

•We Reserve Thti Right To Limit Quantities
•Prices Effective Wednesday, October 2 thru Saturday,
Octpber 5, 4985•U.S.D:A. Food Stamps Accepted
•Not Responsible For Typogr.aphical Errors .

,.....,

PRICES EFFECTIVE IHRU SAT.. OCT J !~8~1

LONGHORN

...................

r.

Phone 742-2100

OHIO COLlY,

BIG BEND
.. .

-.

· PomeroyL Mid=rt, Ohio

'

DEPARTMENT STORE

I·LI. RUIIONNn QUAIIIIS

----

.............

Esiason shows progress in win over Steelers

RUTLAND

MARGARINE .... !~:.......... 79 c

.

'

Wednesday, October---2, 1985
..

COLUMBUS (UPI) - 'Ohio high touchdowns. In the 17 prevtous Sprague sdlred two St. Paul
A Z7-yard field goal by Chrli
school football no!es fr0111 around g;lmes between tlie two, South touchdowns and rushed for 122 Bor!J!rdlng withllsecondsrematn·
"We believe rmsl of those
the state:
'Central, had been outscored by the yards rn17 carries.
tng tn the game provided St. Henry
arrestswoukln'thavebeenmade
Columbus South's Tony Cupe, a Chargers 497-50 and 28 of the
Likeexclt!ngflnlshes? l{owahout with a 9·8 victory over Minster
without the hot Une," he says.
6-2, liD-pound wingback-safety, re- Trojans' point total came In one the end of"·:the Cambridge-East
Fiiday nlght. Earlier In the final
"They werevlolattonsthatwould
turned klckQ!f~ 90 and 92 yards for year, a 29-28 1oss.
Liverpool game Friday night? With quarter, Borgerding had missed an .have gone undetected ."
touchdowns and also ran 26 yards on
seven seconds left In the game, attempt from the same distance.
You cannot accuse Utahans of
a COIII),ter play for another score to
Perry Snow's 43-yard touchdoWn Kelth Gunn ofCambrldge llnedupto
·Quarterback Glenn Farkas ralbelng mercemary, either. The
lead tlie Bulldogs to.a 26-7 wtn over run wiih 1:44 to play provided attempt a potential gaine-wtnnlng Ued Klrtland from a :al-0 fourth·
state offers a $!&gt;X) reward. So lar,
Columbus Walnut Ridge. Cupe also CAnton McKinley wit h a 20-16 _field goal from the EL ~. The · q~arter deflclt toa21-~vlctoryover ·•
there have been ro takers.
had the game's only pass lntercep- victory over 5th-ranked_,Zanesville Potters' Larry Long blocked the Perry fliday night. Farkas comLast year, a ootltne Up helped
tlon, returning it 23 yards to the Friday night. The Blue Dev Us had kick, however. Teammate Pat . pleted four of five passes for 108
smash a commercial big-game
Scots' 14.
come from behind to take a 16-14 Burson picked up !1\i loose ball on yards In the final period, Including a
slaughter operationthat actually
South Central appeared on the lead earlier In the final quarter on a the Bobcat17 and raced 87 yards for 61-yard scoring strike to tight end
worked out of a van serving as a
way to Its18th consecutlvelossat the 60-yard pass play from Andy a wlnnlngTD after time had run out. Jay Wolfe with 4:09 to play, which ·
mobUe butcher shop.
-- - - ___ ...hands of Mtlan Edison Friday night Graham to Larry Dickinson and a Final score: East Liverpool, :i:l, proved to be the game-wtnner.
Jerry Scott, the TIP coordlnawhen It trailed 12-6 at ha lftime. B~.t, 26-yard field goal by Graham. .Cambridge 15.
Terrance Davis, subbing for the
tor in Ohio, says many tipsters
the Trojans, behind the ruMing of
Norwalk St. Paul, blanked the
Greg Hoso ran lor 196 yards and Injured David Key, ran for 148
are contented with nabbing the
Craig White, rallied In the second first four games of the season, three touchdowns Friday night to yards, including touchdown runs rt ,
slobs and eschewrewards, which
half for a 32--12victory.
" exploded for 35 points Friday night spark Warren Kennedy to a 26-18 60 and fiY yards, to lead Columbus
run from $'25 to$1W- depelld!ng
White finished the game with 172 aJJd a 35-12 win over Ashland victory over Canlleld. Hosohad TD Hartley to a 27-16 win over Fostoria
on the severity, number of
yards on 26 carries and four Mapleton. Junior Fullback Gary runs of 23, 40 and 49 yards.
Friday night. Hartley now Is 5-0.
an imals Involved, the circum·
stances, ant;! the public's loss.
In three years, Ohlo'sprogram
has paid out $1Xl,o:xlln rewards to
.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ctnc!n- either get lielter oc look bad. And he of Eslason's -audibles, according to quarterbacks signal to each other to
164 callers, while 2ro people have
natl Bengals Coach Sam Wyche didn't look bad."
been convicted for $150,1lXl in
Wyche. The Bengals had recovered get the play ln. Eddie figured It oot,
didn't get home untll after 4 a.m.
fines.
Eslason completed 19 of 27 a fumble on the Steelers' hotched ran the right route and It was a good
TUesday, but he stU! watched the attempts for 184 yards and two flea-lUcker, but faced third and five throw and a good catch."
Pennsylvania calls Its apEsalson lofted a 25-yard pass to-- .
video tape of his team's 37-24 touchdowns, and just as Impor- on the Steelers' 29 yard line.
proach "SportsmenPoUclng Our
Brown,
setting up the Bengals'
thumping
of
the
Pittsburgh
Steelers
Ranks Together. " Hunters are
tantly, no interceptions.
"It was a beautltul audible on the
touchdown
which pu t them ahead,
a few hours earUer. ·
urged to gently remind the minor
"Boomer operated at the line of step-and-go to Eddie Brown,"
"! watched most of lt,"' Wyche scrimmage much rt the night. We Wyche said. "Eddie couldn't hear 28-24, two plays later. The Bengals
offenders about such Indiscresaid at hls TUesday news confer- told him whatto look for and we told the call, so Boomer reached over addoid a field goal and another
tions as leaving gates open.
ence. "ltwas agnodgameto watch. the team what to listen for," Wyche . and used hand signals and told touchdown (Jim Breech missed the
Jim FUkoslcy, chief of the
I
had to work the first time I saw the said. "I'd say' he audlbled between Eddie what the play was. The extra point) for the final 13-potnt
hunter education div ision, says
thing
so I didn't get to enjoy It as two and three ttmes every five signals he used are the signals margin.
90 to 95 percent of the more
much."
snaps:"
severe abuses are reported by
It ls llttle wonder he enjoyed
Pennsylvania hunters.
Wyche said Eslason showed his
watching the game. It was the poise when the Steelers,came back
Nonnally, states trea t tips
Bengals' first wln of the season, and from a 21-10 deficit to take a 24-21
confidentially
unless, of
II also cemented Boomer Eslason's lead.
course, the offender goes to court
role as the Bengals' startlng
protesting his Innocence.
"Right then you've got .to regain
quarterback.. .
Law·abldlng hunters have
your perspective," Wyche said. "As
snitched on a number rt people in
"Boomer progressed a long way II turned ou t, wewere abletomovelt
Kentucky, even though Its.proIn this game," Wyche said. "It was right on tn. That takes poise."
gram Is somewhat hamstrung bY
The key playrt thatdrtve was ooe
the kind of game where he could
the fact callers reach an answer·
tng machine on wee kends.
An undercover sting In the
NOTICE OF APPLICATION TO THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION
Black Hills d. South Dakota some
OF OHIO ~OR AN INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES
years back broke up some
big-game poaching and gave rise
to Its TIP rcogram. Today, the
carrying a secondary crrcult. the comThe current and ptopoaed ra tes In
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: minimum bill will cont ln1.111 to be equal
ptny wil l 1011111 one pole and/or one
to tt'1e cullomer charge plus the dt·
thiS tarlllare •• to tlowt:
project has spread through the
Pursuant to the reQuirements of
span of secondary circuli of not o~e r
Current
mand charge per I&lt;W timet minimum
Section 4909.19 of ltlt Ot1io Re'llsed
150 fee t l or an additional chal ge ol $3.80
Dilling demand t5 KW). ft1t o~•rall inVol1age Custoin$i[)!mand Energy
entire state.
Code. onto Power ComDany hereb~
r mon th , an rncrease !rom 13.56
crease tor demand metered customers
_Le~et
Ct1arj!_ Chi!~ Cherge
grvtt
noUct that oo July t~ . t e. It !iled
mp
C~o~rrent Prooosed
I)(I!Ow 2.3 KV is 3.2¥• 1~ . 3 Vo lncll..(dlng
In South Carolina, It's known
$.007.:3
with t he Public UUIItles Commission ot
2 3· 12 1133.00 per 16.00
luel) and~ 9'11 ( ~ - ~·~~ Including lu!ll) l or
r,ooo
tu men
perkwh
Ohio
tn
tppllutlon
1
01"
autl1orlntton
to
k~
month
p11
kva
as Operation GameThlef. "Very
deli~eF'J 'i"Oitagea 2.3 KV and 8bo'l"t.
merc ury on 12 l oot
amend t nd to lncreau Its fli ed tarllls
2l-69 k.v $410 00
$6.66
l00019
Charges tor nondt m&amp;nd metered
.. post top
$9.40
St075
...'
tnc:l termt ancl condUiona ot MrYice !bpe r m on t n per kva
successful" with major arrests Is
customera are rncre11ed an l'ltrage ol
When a custome1 ti'IQulres an under
Ing retes and cht rges 101' electricity
Ill kv OJ S60:2.00
$6.111
$.00600
approxlmatefy 2.9 % !2 3'1. Inc luding
~r
ounct
circuli
longer
than
JO
teet
to•
how one report haUs II.
A copy oltha f9PIIeall0rl ts avalta~e
nrgher per month per kwa ""''wh
fuel charget) . Ttl a monthly cuslomer
po!~t - top l iiJhllng service . he will.
tor lnsptellon 11 the olllce ot Ohio
Pcwtr C&lt;lmpany IOCaltd at XII C'-"llnd
A'llt., S W, Canton. Ohio. and t1 tr.e

Ham

'

0

··
U. S. NO. 1

·potatoes

LB.

limit 2
Please

\

lED or GOLDEN DEUCIOUS
lOME or WINSAP

App~es

KING SIZE
\
(

50 II. BAG
1/1

..

lulhel .

Food land
Bread

S291
•'. .

y

..•"
'

MAXWELL HOUSE

.,•

Coffee
•Regular •Drip
eEiec .

. :

-·

.. .

·-

l '

Perk •ADC

VIVA

6+1'1l'4

49

IJII$

••

I tllllflf

'

•..

$100·:

oz.

20
.,LOAV,ES
• • •.

'

'

Plastic
Gallon

49

•

�•

'.

-,.

-'

·,

•

..........

'

Wed~y.

Ohio

October 2; 1986

.

Helena K. Lietwiler

\

'

more 9(flclatlng. Burlal will Ill? bt
Sacred Heart Cemetery. Friends .
maycallattheEwlngFuneralhome
frorn2to4 and7to9p.m. Thursday.
Rosary services wnt be at7: .ll p.m.
Thursday at the funeral home.

Helena K. Uetwiler, Ph.D. of
Bethesda, Md. wife or tj!e late Capt.
John M. Uetwiler, l,JSN, Ret.,
formerlY of Pomeroy. died Sept. 21.
She was the daughter of the late
Charles H. and Blanche Enzenauer
Keehne, and taught in the Pomeroy
Schools from 1928 to 1932.
She is survived by sonS, CharlesJ.
Lietwiler, Rockville, Md., and
Chris,tin W. Uetwiler, Springfield,
Va.; grandmother of Kathryn, I-ori
and Bevin Lietwiler; sisters, Mar·
garet Davis, Athens, Ruth :Ebersbach, Roseland; N. ·J., and Emmy
Lou Sweeney, Amsterdam.
ServiCes were held Sept. 25 at the
Memorial Chapel at Fort Myet with
interment in the Arllngton National
Cemetery. Memorial contributions
may be made to the American
Cancer Society.ll3'l3ArnherstAve.
SilverSprlng, Md. rooo2.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lietwiler,
Columbus, attended the funeral
services d. his slSter·in-law.

Otho B. Murray

~-- :_-~ ~·

Otho B. (Oat) Murray, 92, 28!1 ·
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died
Tuesday at Veterans Memorlai
Hospital.
Mr. MurraywasbornAug.l9,1B93
at Bunker HUI, Bedford Township, a
son of the late Hiram and Jane
Gilcrest Murray. He was a member
of the Christian Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Char·
lone Young, Columoos; a son,
Charles H. Murray, Pomeroy; four
grandchildren, Anna Russell, Dallas, Tex.; Charlotte Rowley, Ironton; Mlnada Simms, Galllpoils, and
Charles 0. Murray, Albany. Four·
teen great-grandchildren and eight
great-great-grandchildren also
survive. .
Besides his parents, he was
pn:ceded in death by his wife, Ada
Helen M_urray; a brother, Frank
Murray, and a sister, Lucy
Franklin.
Services \Yill be held' at 3 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with Mr. Mark See\&gt;ers ofl!ciating,
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Frlends may call at the
funeral horne anytime after 1 p.m.
Thursday. In lieu or Dowers friends
maY contribute to . the Meigs
Chapter of the Atilerkan Cancer
!«lety.

Virgie L. Hysell
V~ L.

Hysell, lW, of Rt. 5,
Athens, died Tuesday morning at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital after
an extended illness.
Born In Milton, W.Va., she was a
daughter of the late Arthur M. and
Ona Butcroer Nelson.
Mrs. Hysell spent most d. her Ule
In the Beech Grove area In Meigs
County and has Hved In the Pleasant
Hill area of Athens for the past 22
years.
end miUTi- ·
She attended school In Milton,
-eW.Va. and Beech Grove In Meigs
A dissolution of matrtage has
.. county and was a member or the been granted In Meigs County
True Church nf the Lord Jesus CmunonPleasCourttoGlendonE.
Christ in Athens.
Faulk and Eleanor J ; Faulk, both of
Surviving are three d8ughters, Pomeroy.
·
Mrs.
(Agnes) Jordan,
Athens; Miss Lelia Hysell, canton; t
Mrs. Harry (Audrey) McFarland,
'
JacksOJivUle; lour sons, Harold
Hyseli,WilkesvUle; Cllilr Hysell, ·
Senecaville; Orville Hysell, Nestor.
Ca; Victor Hysell, Reynoldsburg; a
. I
sister. Mrs. Russell (Alice) Priddy,
Rutland; 14 grandchildren; 12
great-grandchUdren; and a greatgreat-granddaughter.
She is preceded •in death by her
husband, Harry Hysell; adaughter,
Leona Hysell; two siSters, Gll!dys
and Dovey Nelson; a brother. Roy

.... ,/'
,k,

·-r

--4524

031 IACMSON PillE · RT. 30 WEST

to review circumstances suiTOund·
OSHA accu5ell utilon Carbide o1
ingthe Aug.ll accident.
three "willful" violations or safety
The Environmental Protection procedures punishable with maxiAgency and other federal offices are mum penalties of $10,tnl each. The
looking Into earller gas leaks at the agency also alleged three other
InstltutefaciUty,
. "serious" violations and proposed
Union Carbide also owns the penalties ranging from ~ to $1m
pesticide
plantleaked
In Bhopal,
India,
that
in
Decembef
deadly
methyl
Jsocyanate - another substance
used In pesticide prodUction. A!least
1,700peopledled In that disaster.
Under OSHA rules, Carbide
ofncials have 15 days tollle a formal
challenge or the 9gency' s aUega·
tlons. The Aug.Uleak invowed the
chemical aldicarboxime, the active
Ingredient in the pesticide Temlk. ·
Six plant employees and 135 area
residents were sickened from the
leak and were hospitalized In the
Incident.

To

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r:=========;;i
DOWNING-CHILDS
- AND

"f

•

Servtces wUI be 1 p.m. Friday at
the Jagers Funeral Home in Athens
with the l&gt;,astor Leonard Swoyer
officiating. Burial will be In the
Miles Cemetery In Rutland. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Thursday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9p.m.

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

YOU SHOULD KNOW THE FACTS

I

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'

NATIONAL
FURNITURE
SALE

Magazine sale planned
The Big Bend Girl Scout service
unit will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
night at Grace Episcopal Church.
Magazine sale program will be
di~ssed and a workshop
be
held from Bto 10 p.m. Bro~mie and
junior scouts will be seiling magazines to famUy and triends during
October. Forty percent of the
subscription rate will go theCouncn,
with $!from eachsuiJscripliongolng
into the troop treasury.

will

Rummage sale planned
A rummage sale will he held
Thursday and Friday at the Heath
United Methodist Church, Middle·
port, .9 a.m.
. to 4 p.m.

~+~+c&gt;o
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SPECIAL OF TilE WEEK · •

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HAMBURGER

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WITH FliES .................... S1.14

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"At the End of the Pomtroy-Mason lridge
POMEROY, OH.
PH.992-2556

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Every pack is individually
plastic wrapped to seal in
and ensure freshness.

•
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siOf"es seem lo be cutting back the conveni·

ence you value , it's
reassuring to know you
can alwavs count on us!

SUNDAY•SPI'iAKER - Scolt

Danld, of Mount Vernon Naza·

I

Each Winston contains 26 blends ·
of select tobaccos for
a rich, flavorful taste.

I

•

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I.
I.

RIVERVIEW SCHOOL will hold
a carnival beginning at5 p.m. with a
. choijceofchlckenorbakedsteakfull
course dinner. Other activities
include tractor rides and hidoor

,,

Edward P. Duffy

.

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'
THE SCIPIO Township Trustees
wUi meet Friday at 7:00p.m. in the
PagevUle township building.
Saturday
FALL'CARNIVALSaturday5to9
p.m. at Portland Elementary
School; several activitiesalongwlth
a soup supper. Circle D Wrangles
wUi entertai'n with blue grass and
country muslt~ -

''

The-facts
·-·.·_ . .· ( ·
speak for themselves.
that's why Winston is America's Best
ULTRA ~IG~IS: 5_mg. ~ta(. 0.4 mg.•n~oti~ sv. pe~.cig~atte, FTC ~epon JAN. '85: ULT~ ~!GHTS 100's, 5 mg. "tar", 0.4 mg. nicotine, LIGHTS:
. 10 '!'!!· tar , ~-B ~ lliCOtln~, li_GHTS 100 S: .11 mg. far. 0.9 mg. mcot~e. KING.16 mg., ler ,1.2 mg. nicotine, BOX, 17 mg. "Ia( 11 mg nicot'
100 s: 18 mg. tar •1.2 mg. Ntonne, r1. per tt!lllrette by FTC mQthcd.
• ·· ·
Ina.

Sunday
Homecoming at St. Paul United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.
A carryout dinner wUl be served-at
12: 30 p.m. Afternoon program
starts at 2 p.m.
. THE HAZEL COMMUNITY •
Church in the Portland area will
hold a hymn sing Sunday at 2:00
p.m. "V)ctory ~ingers" will be
featured. Everyone welcorne.

...

- - -- -·· -·--·--' •..

I

SPECIAL HOURS: THURSDAY. FRIDAY 9 A.M.-5 P.M .
SATURDAY 9 A.M.- 2 P.M . COME ON 'tTl
• FREE SALE CATALOGS • SPECIALTY CATALOGS
• PLUS DOOR PRIZES I

.
2 speed, acycle waSher

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Delay 111111, pouoe.

3860..t

E"ri ·CIPICIIy.

2591 1

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Extra-capacity dryer

3 water levels.

E~~ane

Automatk: shut-oft.

255-U,.

Wrinlde Guard' 1.

19.6 cu. ft. refri&amp;erator
rrostleu. MocMI wl:l.

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11

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rc: " 101.. UMI:Oft

S66395.
·
Nhile

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP Trus·
tees will meet at 7p.m. Friday at the '
home of the clerk, Wanda Eblin,
Laurel Cliff Road.

Winston makes
their own filters ·
for a smooth,
cqnsistent taste.

•

Warning, The Surgeon General Has Oete.rmined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

sears \s here to serve Y .

Thursday
Southern Local Board of Educa·
tion, speclaj,meeting at 7: 30 p.m. in
school cafeteria.
Friday

For ov~r 30 years,
Winston has sold more cigarettes
than any other brand.

ou'

calend4r...

OLIVE TOWNSHIP Trustees
meeting will be held at 7:30p.m.
Friday at the Reedsville Fire
Station.

I

· · ·

Community .

I·

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"'

rene Q,Uege, will he speaking
SundaY morning at the P~meroy
Church of'the Nazarene. Service
' hegins at 9:30 a.m. Dante! was
chosen by Youth in Mission to
work with children's ministries
and Vacation Bible schools
during I he summer.

games. ·-· ·:..

\

Kansas, are announcing the
biJ1h of Travis Mlcllael Keshav,
born Seplember 2. 'Ole Infant
weighed 8 lbs. '2 "'· Malemal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
George White, Pomeroy. Pjdernal grandmother Is Mrs. Parvathl Vasanllla, Ontario, Canada.

I
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may

EdWard Patrick (Pat\ Du((y, 56,
107 Wehe Terrace. Pomeroy, died
'Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. Duffywasborn0ct.l9, 1928111
Pomeroy. a son of theloateEdward
.'- J.' and Edna Burns Duffy. He wu a
memberd.theSacredHeartChurch
. • 'and was an' employe of the Philip
· Sporn Power Plant. He served in the
U.S. Navy.
. SUI"'!v!ng are his wife, Janet
· Epperly .Duffy; two d8llgillers, .
Patty Duffy, Pomeroy, and nna
Nelgler, Racine; a son-in-law,
· David Nelgler; ·a sister, Rita
Hamm. Middleport, and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Friday at the Sacred Heart Church ·
. with Monsignor Anthony Glanna·

KESHAV BIR'nl - Mr. and
Mrs. R.V. Keshav, of SIDwell,

•..

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· Andrew Crittenden (Crlltl Brad·

.

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~-. -~

Meetings are held at the church on
Tuesdays with weigh-in time from 6
to7.
"" '
·- . .....,.

Andrew C. Bradford
lord, 88, Racine, died Tuesday at St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg.
He was born March 16, 1897 at
Roiandas In Meigs County. a son 11
the late John Andrew and Aurellia
Crary Bradlord. He was a retired
rural ·mall carrier and was a
member ol the Retired Letter
Carriers Assn. He was a past
president of Veterans Memorial
Hospital's Board of Trustees and a
life member of Racine Post 600
American Legion. He served with
the armed forces in World War I.
Mr. Bradford was a member of the
Racine United Methodist Olurch.
Surviving are his wife, Beulah
Mitchell Bradford, Coolville; two
daughters, Mrs. Howard E. (Ruth)
Frank, Racine. and Mrs. Herman
(Mary) Carson, . Jr., Racine; a
daughterl·in·iaw, Jeannie Brad·
lord, Worthington; four granddaughters; t!)ree grandsons; six
great-grand&amp;lughters. and two
great-grandsons.
'
PI eceding him in death were his
first wife, Lois Apger Bradford; a
son, Cloyce Crittenden Bradford,
· ,three ·brothers, Otto, Howard and
Wilbur, and a sister, Bertha.
Serv.lces will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with Rev. Roger Grace officiating.
Burlai will be in the J..etart Falls ·
Cemtery. Friends
call at the
funeral home from 7to9tbJsevening
.and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
'lbursday.

''.(i'

Best loser, runnerup
recognized recently ·

MULLEN INSURANCE

~~==~--~------~---------·~·--------------------~--------~:::::::=:=:=::::::j_~----==~::____:_

~~

Nelson.

The West Virginia State Farm
Museum, Inc. will hold its 7th
annual Country Festival and
-Antique Steam and Gas Engine ·
Show Satur~ay and Sunda·y, Oct.
5·6.
.
&gt; .t '
f
f
. It l- ' ~-- .. -. ~. '
The two·day festival is being ""'
"71
co-sponsored by the West Vir'
ginia Antique Steam and Gas En- (
~
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/
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v1
'~
. gine Association. Several An·
tique Steam Engines and a large
)I;
number of old gas engines will be
T.
·
''·
J
i I
V! , ...
,-.,_
on display and operated. Various
pieces of old farm equipment will
HANNING Bffi'l11- Mr. and
be displayed and will be operated
Mrs. James Keith Haning, Jr. of
peflodically.
Rutland are annoWICing the· The two-day festival will feabirth of their first child, James
ture a number of activities and
Keith Haning m, born Sepcrafts that were quite common
tember 5 at Holzer Medical
during the late 1800's but seldom
Center. The Infant weighed Sibs.
observed today.
6 oz. and 21 inches long.
On Saturday, visitors can see
His matemal grandparenls
wheat threshing using an antique
are. Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
steam engine which wili furnish
Barrett, Jr. of Rutland. Paternal
power lor one of the early threshgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
in!! machines. There will also be
James K. Haniilg, Sr. of Albaay
corn meal grinding, apple butter
and Margie Haning or MDfteld•
. fhaklng, m,oiasses making and
Maternal great-grandparents
cider making.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
are
Saturday evening Floyd RayBarrett,
Sr. of Rutland, Donald
burn.wm call for a square dance.
Weaver ol JlarrlsonvUJt and
The music will be furnished by
Katherine Weavet of HarrisonEverett Wedge, John Smith,
ville.
Paternal great·
Burl Tennant and Frank
•
grandpalents
are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas.
Clarence
Hanbtg
or Albany and
On Sunday, October 6, the Rev.
Louis A. Husseil wlii hold church . C.W. Lynch of Pomeroy.
services In the Old Log Church at
9:00A.M.
Sunday afternoon beginning at
1 P.M. several gospel groups wili
present a program of old time
gospel songs.
Nancy Gillespie was the best loser
The. Country Kitchen will be
and
Dreama Pickens the runner-up
open both days of the festival. in
·
atTuesdaynlght'smeetingofTOPS
ad.dltion to its specialty of cornbread and beans, the kitchen will OH 570 held at the World of Faith
,serve corn meal pie, hotdogs, ice Church in Middleport.
cream and pop.
' •
Everyone fs invited to visit the
The best teen loser was Brenda
West Virginia State Farm Mu· Roheits,and VIrginia Dean won the
seum on October 5th and 6th and .fruit basket in a drawing from the
experience h'ow life was "down group of members losing the most
on the farm" one hundred years . weight durlng the week. Kathy
ago. Admission is. free. The McDaniel presided at the ~peeting
Farm Museum Is located four with 24 weighing in, It was noted that
miles north . of Point Pleasant . Mrs. McDaniel wlll attend a TOPS
just off State Route 62.
retreat in North Carolina this
month, and that Mary Snyder is
nearlng her goal weight.

The executive committee of _District Ranger, Bob Ari!"s.
w~· discussed and ail units were
The upcoming Tri-State Area encouraged to canvass neighborthe M·G·M District,_Boy Scouts
of America · met ac·woodland · council "Camporal" to be held hoods throughout the area to
Center September 26.
Oct. 4-6 at Krodel Park, Pt. Plea- gather foodstuffs for the Galiia·
The agenda Included final ap· sant was discussed arid !ndi· Meigs Community Action .Comproval of all nominees who wiil vidual assignments of partie- mittee Emergency ,Food Pro·
serve on the District .Executive !pants train the District were gram .
Committee for the coming.year. made by the district ch.airman.
Members present were enDr. Bernard Niehm remains as
It was emphasized by all that couraged to recruit other interDistrict Chairman with Everett
the Pubilc Is Invited to attend the . ested adults In the District in
King as DIStrict Commissioner,
Camporal and see the displays as order to strengthen and broaden
heading up the following memb·
well as observe many scout cere- scouting's membership growth
ers of the District Commissioner monles, which have ~n sche- throughout the are~. Anyone instaff: Bob Schoonover, Fred duied during the weekend.
1erested in becoming a leader or
Scarher·ry, Walter Walker,
In other business, Oct. 19 was assisting with the Scouting ProFrank DIClemente, Jim Oiler, .., approved as the next scheduled gram can call the District Com·
·B-ob Brown, BUI Roberts, Roy
workday at Camp Kiashuta's . mittee Chairman or Commis. Dowell, Bob Smith and William
Sutherland Lodge, Chester.
stoner for information or the
Wise.
The annl!al districtfood pantry Council Office at l ·3j)4-523-340B.
Also, approved were the follow- r________....:.,______________
li\g offlcers and committeemen:
Advancement: Robert Matthews
· Jr .. WUllam K!Ught, William Wise,
Pat Woods, and Steve Theiss;
Scout Roundtable Commissioner,
AI Harris; Assistant Roundtable
Commissioner, Walter Walker;
Cub Roundtable Commissioner,
Sarah JQ}mson; Assistant Cub
THIRD ANNUAL
Roundtable Commissioner, Kathy
Workmaq; Scout Training ChairJllan, Charles Henson Sr.; Train·
ing Officers, Frank DiClemente ,
and Robert Manhews, Jr.; Cub
Training Co:Chalrmen, Kathy
Workman and Becky Tyree; Activity Chairman (scout). Fred
Scarberry; Merit Badge COQI'dinator, Frank DiClemente; M-G-M
OCTOBER 4-13,1985

•

.

Kenmore _u pright frH1er
Cholll-. I~. I

35411

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cu. H. cap. 444.11

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•• dly, • program.

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oicture:

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Good October 3. 4, 5

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ober 3• 4. 5

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•••··••••···•········•••·••······ ---·-----------------------------·---·--------------------·-··-··----·
those
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llile-a...,dvenisod.·
CII'*CINIOittUppllldtJUr.tittiMD

A ope''" p..ocha&gt;o,·-..,; · - · 1un , _ . . ; """·

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advertised

IS teadil'j' ovoilobl!&gt;tor

Kenrnc:ndlyerl '""""• CICJMICIOill 1'101 i'dudld In prioes .nown.Many KtMIOfe modell come In cokn at eddl1klnAI CXIII.~linoua.dii.'*'Q ovens helplcteanspal1&amp;f'll8t baking temperatures Simulated
TV rceptlon on Nlllhown , Prk:waN ~ pricts now avallabtt In OYf "E", anci '' SR'' Nit Shipplng, lnstallllion axtta. ~about Snrl credit Qtant.

'

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT

Slllllocllon _ . . . -

LOCAU. Y OWIP

"'""f-.....
'
"•rt
S&gt;'' A '~ Rnr /:1;1' •

&amp; OPIU11D

Ct ' r!i~ !.

•

''

n: BILL &amp; JENEW HAPTONSTAU

North Second An. ·
·
Mldllltport, Ohio
Phone: (Ohio) f92·2178 CW. Ya. 1·100·SIAIS·99
1·100·732-7799

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�r ·

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'-a•

•

10-Tha. Daily'$entinel

..'

Pomeroy-:-Middlepon, Ohio

Wl!dl'!esday, October 2,

Wednesday, October 2, 1

198~

I

·An This .Wee~ ·
w

I

.

Prostate cancer Is second In the
number of new cases each year
(57,000), and third In deaths
(20;QJ0). It occurs mainly In men
over 60, according to S. Michael,
Public Information Chairman of '
the Meigs County American Cancer
Society.
.
The signs and symptoms of
prostatic cancer Include a variety
of urinary difficulties and It must he
emphasized that these signs and
symptoms are more likely to
Indicate prostatic enlargement, or
other cnditlons, .rather than cancer
- but such signs and symptoms
should never be Ignored.
The signs and symptoms are:
Weak or Interrupted flow of urine;
Inability to urinate or difficulty In
starting urination; need to urinate
frequently, especially at night;
blood In the urine; urine flow that Is
not easily stopped; painful or
burning urination: continuing pain

....

See Store For.Oetai\s
CbPYRIGHT t985 . THE I(IIOGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUND,.Y, SEPT. 29, THROUGH ~"TUADAY , OCT. 5.

Gold Medal
Flour

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OU,.NTITIES . NONE SOLD
TO DE,.LEAS.

Fall Potato·Sale
Round White
·Potatoes

5-lb. Bag

'""'·•

79C
9
4
•20-lb. Bag .••..•..•.. $1
49
•50-lb. Bag ..•....•.. $3

Cauliflow~r
Head

'•

"

Mr. and Mrs. Brent A. Bolin are
announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Lindsay Kae
Bolin. She was born July JJ §t
. O'Bieness Hospital. The Infant
weighed 91bs. 7ozand was221nches
long. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. E. Ned Swindell,
Shade. Paternal grandparenls are
Mr. and Mrs. Joe M. Bolin, Rutland.
Maternal geat-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Howard. M. Swindell,
Shade and Mrs. Harold Douglas,
Albany . Paternal great ·
grandfather Is Henry Turner,
Middleport.

•10-lb. Bag ..........

Fresh

'•.

Bolin family announces birth of first child

. . U.S.. NO'. 1

12 SIZE ·

.

aAI.UP(liS &amp; I'OM(RDY

·.

· James Brown, Meigs County, has
·been · named to the Tri-County
·VocatiOnal Center's Adult Educa·
tlon Department honor roll !or the
summer quarter. He earned all A's
and B's to be named totherolloJ the
school located at Nelsonvllle. .

·. Charmin
Bath Tissue

..
"SILVER PLATTER"

Whole ·Fresh
Pork Loin

fRoll Pack

Pound

Rebecca Ann Dempsey, formerly
of Syracuse, has been selected as an
entrant In the J!lffi Miss .West
Vlrglnla·USA Pageant to be held
Oct. 1-6 at the grand ballroom of the
Marriott Hotel in Charleston, W.Va.
She Is the daughter of Ronda
Dempsey, Huntlngtmt, W. Va., and
Doug Dempsey, CVhapmanvUie,
W. Va .
Winner of the Charleston pageant
wUI represent West Virginia In the
Miss USA Pageant next May.
.
'

A graduate of Logan High School,
Miss Dempsey Is ~employed
with Dempsey'"!!d"Assoclates, Inc.,
coun reporting, and Is a student at
Huntington Junior College. She
formerly resided In Syracuse and
attended Southern High School In
Racine In 1917 and 19'18.AtSouthern,
she was a member d the cheerlead·
lng squad. She Is a recent winner d
Robby's Miss Hawaiian Tropic
Contest and she does fashion
modeling and video work.

ture dlstrtbution project to he
condu~ted on Q!;t. ~- An effort wUI
be made to distribute !,(XXI New
Testaments locally and to locate
people In thecommunltywhoarenot
members of a local congregation.
Attending the workshop were
Sonny and Rltojean McClure, Keith
Ashley, Rachael Lefebre and Sandy
Needs.

Undsay Kae Bolin

•

School Friday with
serving to begin at :;t&gt;.m. with a
cholceofchickenorbakedsteak!uU
course dinner.
Outside actlvltles Including tractorrldeswlllbeglnat6p.m.!ollowed
by Indoor games at 7 p.m. There will
be door prizes and cake walks .
during the evening.

OCTOBER 3, 4, 5
JO'S CERAMICS
LO&lt;oltd 13 milu
So.of Athens on
State Route 33.
12 milts Mrth ot'.
Pomoroyon Salt .
Routt 33. Look for
!Ito signs.

STOP IN
AND REGISTER ·
FOR DRAWINGS
FREE COFFEE &amp; PUN
~

•

20°/o ·oFF

(

Graenware, Paints &amp; Ceramic Supplies
Discounts on othtr itlms dliring Opt'n House.
ltceive 5,_ Di~rount with this ad.
large 11lecti• of GrHnwa,., bi ..ue, spacial year-round
disc-ts tp oranhations. Now tculpturod piocos and now
oloctronlc music boxos.

•
;
:
.

DEAlERS WELCOME

.

fo: JO'S CERAMICS

.

13 mUos.
of
.
~ _ ' • 12 milos North of ~
AIHm on St. lt. 33
992-280 7
Pomeroy, on St. II. 33 ·
OPEN THURSDAY T0·4 &amp; 6·9, FRIDAY -3, SATUIAY 10·2
:

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.

A carnival will be held at the

Finalize wedding olans ruvervlew
Planshavebeencompiele&lt;lforthe
open church wedding of Tammy
Darlene 'wells to Jeffrey James
Cowdery. The double ring cerem·
ony wUI be performed by the Rev.
Richard Thomas. The wedding will
be Sunday, October 6 at 2:30p.m.
Pre-nuptial music with Maxine
Whlteliead, pianist, Sue Redd and
Sue Douglas, vocalists, will begin at
2:OOp.m. Reception will follow In the
church social room.

Former .Syraruse resident
enters Miss W.Va.-USA pageant

Several members of tile. First
Southern Baptist Church of Meigs
CoUnty attended the recent Scioto
alley Association "Good News
America" tralningworkshopheld at
the Hamden Baptlst Church.
''GoodNewsAmerlca..GodLoves
You!" Is the theme fora nationwide
evangelistic effort of Southern
Baptists. Included will be an
evru\gellsllc people search, scr.lp·

C.amivaJ planned

3 BIG DA1S

Miss Rebecca Ann Dempsey

Church members attend ·training workshop

Makes honor roll

400 SHEErs PER R

0LL

In lower back, peil1s or upper
thighs.
The Initial step In diagnosing this
condition Is palpation, or digital
examlriatlon of the bland through
the rectum. By palpation, the
physician can !eel an Irregular or
unusually firm area that may
Indicate a tumor. Fortunately,
. almost all prostatic cancers begin ·
In the part of the prostate that can
be felt by rectal examination. If the
physician finds a suspicious area,
he will perform other tests as he
sees necessary.
Treatment will depend on the
stage of the cancer and on the
patient's age. A regular rectal
exam of the prostate by your doctor
ls the best protection against
prostatic cancer.
For more Information call 992·
7531 or stop at the office in the Old
Masonic Temple.

•

The M·G -M District Boy Scouts of Johnson, T·32; Eric Wyatt, T·32; ~
Amerlcawasliosttomemberso!the
John Pierotti, T-205; Bob Schoon·•
Order of the Arrow, Thai-Coo-Zyo over, T·W5; Mark Stockman, T-205; ;
Lodge457, TrjStateAreaCounoU!or
Dennis Watson, T-790; -JeffZembry, '
the annual fall fellowship over the T·259; Brent Lilly, T·32; BUI Hager, :
weekend.
·
T-W5; Jim Thomas, T-7; Jack:
· The group which Included scouts Thomas, T·7: Everett King, T·250:
and leaders from Mygyoh, Kn., and . · AI Harris, T-200; PhUUp Savage..'
the M-G·M District set up camp at
T-200; Jason Savage, T-200; Frank
Sutherland Lodge at Camp Kla· DIClemente, T·205; Dewey Ball,
shuta In Chester.
T-88; Bill Ball and Danny Ba II, T·88:
Ttie· grouP' was organized into--..·Bobby Workman, T-249; Scott
work parties to complete a list of Starcher, Roger Starcher, BUI Slm.
renova lion and repairs .to the log all of Troop 235.
.
,
cabin and surrounding grounds. •
Sunday homecommg
The Order of the Arrow is an
Homecoming at St. Paul United
Important part of scouting which Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains.
provides strong support to the will be held Sunday. A carry-In
camping program and facilities. dinner will be served at 12:30 p.m.
Scouts are elected to the Order by with the afternoon program to be8Jp
members of their respective troops at 2 p.m. The Royalalres :or
and are Initiated through cerem(} Columbus will have special musjc.
nles based upon customs of the &lt;i'he Rev. Don Archer, pastor,
American Indian and especially the Invites the public to attend.
Lene Lanape Tribe.
.
Adults leaders and scouts attend· Special session set
lng were Chuck Henson, T·32;
Charles Henson, T-259; Fred Scar·
Southern Local School District
berry, T ·~5; Kerry Theiss, T·200: Board of Education will meet In
Bob Matthews, T·259; Bill Guy, ~Ia! session at 7:30 Thursday
T·101; Steven Smith, T42; Danny evening In the school cafeteria . .

Prostate cancer on rise

'

Manufacture~ s

1986, IN

M-·G-M District .hosts
.
Order of Arrow session

Richard William Vaughan, 671 S. Pomeroy ·Lodge of Masons In 1.006;
Third Ave., Middleport, has been High Priest of Pomeroy Chapter,
awarded the designation of Knight Royal Arch Masons In 19'70; Master
of the York Cross of Honour.
of . Bosworth Council, Royal and
This honorary degree, highest In Select Masters In 1971, and Com·
. the York R)te of Freemasonry, Is · mander of Ohio Valley Command·
confen:e&lt;f only on those who 'have ery, Knights Te111p1ar, In 198l. He
held the hlghest,'qfflce in each of the was elected to membership In Ohio
four bOdies of the rite. Vaughan Priory and his election confirmed by
becomes one of the comparative Convent General o1 the Order on
handful of about 400 of ihe vver four Sept. 24. A certificate of member·
and a quarter mil~on RreemasohS ship has been mailed to him .
In North America, the Philippines
There are 71 Priories of the Order
and Australia to qualify this year. with a present membership of
Membership Is by Invitation o~ly .
12,000.
Vaughan Served as Master .of

•

•

. "'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 1 1

Ohio

Vaughan .accorded
honor
.

· Sarah 'Allee Meredith, Parrel,
Benjamin . Boggess, deceased, to Burt Christian, Sharon Christian, Sutton.
Curtis L. Jenkinson, Dortha
•
Jenkinson to Curtis L. Jenkinson, Zelpha Boggess, afftdavlt, Letart.
Parcel, Meigs.
Austin Phllllps to Virgil P. Chester.
Ruth Gloeckner to James E. ·
Dortha JenkinSon, Parcels, Meigs.
Harold T. Hubbard, deceased,
Martha Stewart, Carl R. Stewart . PhlllJ~s. Gina R. Phllllps, Pt. Lot,
Diddle,;
Rjght. of Way,
Bedford
. .
. .
•
.
Chesapeake aild Ohio Railway .LUlie Hubbard, a.fftdavlt, Middle· to James Cox, Margaret Cox, Pt. . SaUsbUry.
I
. .
.
Gary
Griffith,
Juanita
Grlt!lth
to
Co.,. Manufacturers Hnov~r Tnjst' port VIllage. •
Lot :m, Salisbury.
PhliUp W. Kelly to .Hany L.
Co., Trustee, to Village of MiddleDartell Brewer, et al, to Bank
Ediili Stooort to u .S.ftt;. Farmers Eblin, Barbara I. Eblin, Parcel, James E. Diddle, Rjght of Way,
Chester.
port, Pt. Lot 115, Middleport One, Athens N.A., Sheriff's deed, HomeAdm., Sheriff's deed, Middle- Chester.
Keith G. Riilenour, Lila L.
Pomeroy VIllage.
Village.
.
. port VIllage.
Lois' G. Kelly tn Hany L. Eblin,
Ridenour
to James E. Diddle, Rjght
Joan G. Burson, Vern (... Meeks,
Richard A. Warner, Sharm K
James E. Carpenter, decellljed, Barbara L. Eblin, Parcel, Chester.
\
Harriet Meeks to Gregory Meeks, Warner, George H. Warner, Grace Betty A. Carpenter.,. a!!ldavll,
,
Ellsworth•P. Crispin to Jack R. of Way, Chester.
·
Albert E. Parker, Dorothy
M. Warner to Herald 011 and Gas Sutton.
Rebecca Meeks, Lot 640, Bedford.
Carroll, Parcels, Olive.
David Lawrence Grate to Karen Co., Right of Way, Salisbury.
Betty A. Carpenter to Charles C.
Sherwood L. Meredith, MIIQml Parker to James E. Diddle, Rlghtd
Sue Grate, Lots Wand 22, Chester.
Denver Queen, .Josephine Queen ·Beegle, Mattie F. Beegle, Parcel, L. Meredith to John B. Meredith, Way, Chester.

:Property
transfers..

'

..

SPECIALIZATION

·•

LOW BACK PAIN • PINCHED NERVES (SPINE)
NECK &amp; SHOULDER SYNDROME • EXTREMITIES • HEADACHE
S&lt;;IA TIC" • FAILED DISC SURGERY • ATHLETIC INJURIES
SYSTEMIC DISORDERS • NUTRITION"! WORK·UPS
SCOliOSIS SCREENING (SPINAl CURVATURE )
INJURY: PERSONAl. "UTO. INDUSTR!Al
BlOOD ANAlYSIS. •LABORATORY • PHYSICAl THERAPY

Medicare &amp; Ohio &amp; W. Va. Workman's Cbmpensatlon

PRESTON E-ll;
ANTI-FREEZE:

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

'

·Springdale
1
I

$ 47

.2%

: Milk ......................... Gal.
.Kroger'
:Grade ·A
:Large E

..
...........

Cheerios
Toasted Oat .
Cereal ..... ..... ..... ... ..

SLICED FREE INTO ONE CONVENIENT
·' TAKE HOME PACKAGE

$ :09
lO~o.z.

Doz.

•
U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF
PORTERHOUSE OR

Pillsbury
Microwave
$
p·IZZaS ........
. ~.'.. .........1.1 -oz

c

r

39

Tail-Less
J;.B.one
Steak ......................

•,

•-_
-

..
.....
- ---=-..
....._.
::::·~

'

$ 99:

.

lb .

2 :.~'· 8.99 Sale Price
·3.90 Mfr . Rebate

5• 99
2 Oat.
For

Xour Nat Cost

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

,..,U tl4raat

-

..

'

AH&amp;f Rebate

PRICE AmR REBATE
AVAIL.-,IL( ONLY IN S TORE S
W ITH OW 8AkERifS
HOT '000S AVAil ABlE
11em Til 7pm QAILv

WHOLE OR HALF STICK

Sandy Mac .

German Bologna
Pound

I ~~~~
~rj} .
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·.fl\.\~-;

MTN . DEW, PEPSI FREE,

·.Oiet Pepsi ,
or Pepsi Cola·
6-12-oz. Cans

GENERAL MILLS

Betty Crocker
ca~e

Mix
18.5-oz.

I

I
I
I
I

•

Prestone ·Ariti·Freeze ·

LIMIT ONE COUPON

FAMILY

COUI'OII GOOD SUII. HPJ. IUAT. OCT. ~

t•

SUBJECT TO API'l!CAILE STAll a LOCAL TAXES

BETTY '-n\JI.."
FROSTING 16.5-0Z.

SPREAD
' $1 .19

i

~

The Winter Anti -Freez3 and Summer Coolant tor~
year around protection .
!
,R•bate Llmltod to Mlr .'s Stipulations

I

I
I

Gal.
,fo.r

''

~

I

!

'

�..

'

•
'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Heckl~r . accepts
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres!·

dent Reagan Is scouting around fora
replacement for Health SecretaiY
Margaret Heckler, whoheeasedout
of his Cabinet and appointed U.S.
ambassador to Ireland.
Heekler, 54, appeared by Rea·
gan' s side In the White House press
center Tuesday wben he announced
that she had accepted the Dublin
post.
The president also assailed the
"malicious gossip" that. sl¥! was
·. be!J\g ousted·for Incompetence or a
lack of Ideological polity - stories
recently Instigated by top White
· House aides.
The former Massachusetts con·
gresswoman became teaiY but kept
her composure as. Reagan heaped
praise on the "fine job" she bad done
In running tbe massive department,
which. spends one-third of the
federal budget.
White House chief of staff Donald
Regan, reported. to llave been the
prime mover In Heckler's ouster,
was expected to have a big say In
· choosing her succesoor.

NEW ASSIGNMENT - President Ronald Reqan has a word for
HealthandHwnanServlcesSecretaryMargaretHeclderduriDgapre8!1
conference Tuesday in which be announced her reslpatlon and
appolnlrnent M ambassador 10 Ireland. UPI.

.

Wedne~y. October 2, 1986

October 2,

Bus ness
Services

Ireland ambassadorship
.

Pomeroy
11

ALL STEEL &amp;
'·POLE BUiLDINGS

It was "quite a sales pitch, because

'this was my Idea and I wanted rer

very much to do that."

Mechanic needed , expe·
rienco poceuary . Must hove
~~7-toolo. Co~ 614' 388·

Announcemenls

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Htwt AFull Tl11t

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

3

Sho~ Teeh•lal..
DR Out~

. P&amp;S BUILDINGS

been granted In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to John
Michael Roush and Brenda S.
Roush, both of Ewtogton; Donald
Lee Dalley, MiddlepOrt, and Belinda Ray DaUey, Albany; and Tina
Louise King and Keith King, both of
Syracuse. Tina King has been
restored by the court to her malden
name Pierce.
Filing for a dissolution are
Lawrence J. Seymour andMindyS.
Seymour, both of Mlddle{lort.
Filing for a divorce In Meigs
CountY Common Plea,s Court Is
Geneva Agnes Conrad, Pomeroy,
from James Joseph Conrad, AI·
toona, Pa.,charglnggrossneglectof
duty.

bas

*SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Dissolution~' of marriage bave

446·7390.

•ZENITH

Sizes Start From IZ'x16'

Marriages ended

instillation . Must have experience. For info . cell61 4 ·

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADqUARTERS FOR

Of.llce meeting and he said Tuesday

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Racine. Oh .
Ph . 614·843·5191

Announcements

·

SWEEPER and oewlng ma·

chine

repair,

supplioo.

CHESTER-915-3307

lQ.fi.tfc

pans. and

· Pli:k

up

and

deliwery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call

411/lfn

614-446 -0294 .

BOGGS

Howard L. Writesel

SALES &amp;SERVICE

ROOFING

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
Authorized

AA Crisis Pregnar:y Center.

NEW-REPAIR

GUYSVILlE, OHIO
John Deere.
Bush Hoc

Farm Equipment
Dealet

Farm Equiptnent
Parts &amp; Servlee

949'-2263
or 949-2969

The Daily Sentinel

Fendtrs ........ ................. '48

PHONE 992-2156

Chtvy Tr.
..
. .. •100
73-10 (htvy . Jr.
Hoocls ......................... 'lSO
73-14 Ch"y Jr .
73-~~mlh~:;..
$ 70
Grilles ..................... 'II .SO
73-79 Ch"Y· lr.
Ro&lt;kor Ponoh ...............&lt;2S
73-79 ChiYy. Tr.

Or Write Dtilly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Colrt St.. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

each. Add S2 .00formailing.
Order from Margaret Parker.

T'*&gt;gO . . -·tnlho

WANT ADS

Public Notice
LEGAL
NOliCE: John C. 8""""' Jr.
and Judith A. Bocon, - ·
1o1t known addreu it 3691

Porio ao..toVard, Wootorvillo,
OhiO 43081 and tho UMnown
spou... Hoin. Devioen. Logo·
tell, EKecutOfl, Administra·
ton and Auigno of John C.
Bocon, Jr. and Judith A.
Socon, ~ any. hove boon
o r - to OPIJOir or plood by
Declotnblr 31 , 1986 to 1
oo•tnt·filed in Civil Action
No.·C2·85·1348 in tho Unitad
StatM Dil1rict ·Couri for tho
Southem Diotrict of Ohio.

Eutarn Divi1lon, United
StatH of America, ~tiff. v.
John C. Socon, Jr.. ot II.,
Delandanu. praying for font-

cloounl of • - - - dood
recordod in Volume 1 24. Pogo
147 of the mortgage rooordl
of Moigl County, Ohio, which
mortgage dee.$t is a lien on tM
following deCribod r•l prvporty lituatod in tho State of
Ohio, and County of Moigo
and dtocribod e1 lofloWI. to
wit: 8eing lot No. 16 of
Riverview Acr01 Subdivilion
of tho Village of Mlddlepon.
M.;go County, Ohio. H llhown
on Plat recorded in Volume 13,
Pogo 31, Moig1 County Record of Plats. PROPERTY
ADDRESS : 70 Riverview
Place. Middleport. Ohio
4&amp;760. FaHuro to mpond to
the complaint wiD resuh in an
Enuy of Dalault, Judgment

and Decree ln Forec6osure,
sole of tho mortgaged property
end extinguishment of 11
intereltl in aaid property.
JOHN D. HOLSCHUH. United
Sutn District Judge. Approvocl : CHRISTOPHER K.
BARNES, Unitod Stllllll Attor·
nev. ALBERT R. RITCHER.
Asliltant United Stotoo Attor·
nev. Room 200. U. S. Court·

hou!ia, Columbut. Ohio

Public Notice
STATE OF ONO
DEPARTMENT OF
NAnJRAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF
REQ.AMAliON
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
COLUMBUS. OttO
43224
LEGAL NOliCE
INFORMAL CONFERENCE
COAL MIMNG &amp;
REClAMAliDN PERMIT
. APP.UCAliON NO.
R-0111
(permit .,.lion!
APPUCANT - Dork Diamond Cool Corporation
32878 R- Hi1 Rood.
Fbm-ov•.J)Iio 45769
lho Dillilion &lt;1 Roclamotion
horebv gi- nodct that on
inform~~

B&amp;D

"
Public Notice

' ELECTION.
LEGAL NOTICE
Tho Ohio Soil ond Wotor

tho Roviood Code of Ohio ot
Entem High School on No·
vombor 19, 1985 1t 7:05 p.
Permna who era or rr.y be m. Nomin... are: Marviene
Rodney Chovollor.
adverooly
or any 8oogto,
Alin Holter ond Lorry Mont·
dlictr or '-d d onv -... go
. .ry:
.
'
•te, or local government ·
Nominatlono
will
bO OC ·
~gency or authority may •t·
coptod frllm tho floor at tho
und to pre~~m theit' ~ews .
limo of oloction. Two Mtporlliton .... to bo oloctod. v..U
110) 2, 1tc
moy coot your ballot ot tho
annual meeting or on the dly
of elactlono ot Malgo Sollond
Water Conoorvltlon District
Public Notice
OHico bat-. 8 o.m. ond 3
p.m. Aboontoo blllotl moy
be oocuntd It tha local dl•·
NOTICE OF SALE
trlct offlco.
Offen will be receiwed un- (10)2.1&amp;,2tc
til 11 :00 O' Clock A.M. on
the 21st day of October.
1986. attho r.'loyor'o oftico.
R1111l Estate General
237 Roco Straat. fortho olio
of tho following d01cribed
County Courtroom
Second StrBBt
p...,.roy. Olio 46789

-tiKI

to-wit:

cords.
, Stla of 11ld real estate
Wll authorized by Ordi·
nance ldoptod . Jan . 12.

1981 . The village reserves

43215 Telaphono: (614!489·
6715 Coumel for Plaintiff
(9) 25 (101 2, 9, 16. 23. 30.
6tc

ReviHd Code.
'
Minimum bid $7600.
Sept. 4. 11. 18. 25: Oct. 2. 9

Happy Ads

E. M•inlorl,lll
POMEROY,O .

992·2259
NEW USnNG - PomoroyNo strain on yarr budge( to
heat lhis winler' This mobile
home wdh expando has a

woodbumer to warm all 3
bedrooms. Garage with MJI'k·
shop. large fenced lot Frul
trees, garden space. $.18,000.
Rlcine - 5

room rouse wdh 2 bedrooms
oo lot in I«Mn. Needs repairs
but cou~ re good rental
irrvestn]etlt $6,500.00.

SPUT li.VEL HOUSE wHh 3
bectOOIIIS, 2 complete baths,
dinitl&amp; roam. livin( room and
lqt ~~mlllon roam. ~
~ on 8 teres. 1¥11111111
pond, Rlcine • •·

3 BEDR'OOIIIIIOBILE HOllE
~oil In Sy11cuse.
OLDER HOUSE with

3 bed·

rooms on. cornIf lot io Syr·

cu•.

Signed By.
Carolyn G. Thom11
(101 2, 9, 18, 3tc

HOME

SlltADE, OHIO .

"Special Ratts

TEAFORD

NEW USTING - llklor,2BR

home near stores in
Middleport.

ST. - 5 rm. one 100.
home with lg ~e( let 2 BRs,
bath, autQ heal &amp; carpetilg.

GRANT

Jusl $16,500.

5ACRES- Sou. Schoo~. Elec.
&amp; water avai~ble.

POIIE_,Y - ~ water heat
(new boiler), carpetir&amp; 3 IJ 4
llRs, formal dinir&amp; .equipped
k«chen &amp; lull balement. Just

NEW USTING - Rt. 33 Cozy 2 bed1oom house m

2 STORIES - 5 Ac1es, swirl
pool, garage, balemen~ 3 or 4
BRs. Real~ nice lor on~

*VINYL SIDING ·
*ALUMINUM SIDING
0 BlOWN IN
INSUlAnON

BISSELL SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Pit. 949-280 I
ar 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

304-675-62

CONTRACTING

349 N. 2nd

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

le can repair and re'
radiators and
llelter cores. We can
alto acid boi I and rod
·. t radiators. We also

JIM CliFFORD
PH. 992-7201

992-2196

*'

5

rPA¥~1 L'Ln;oRo

Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY
AND

GIFTS
349 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
20·1 mo.

Remodeling
•Room Additions
doofinc
•Sid inc
•Garaps &amp; Pole
· Buildlncs

MAICUM
CONTIACnNG

lowileHeM,Ohio
Ph.
141

FOR ALL YOUR

Residential &amp; Commerci~l

992:5875 Or
742-3195

I.

SUPERIOR
SIDING' CO.
VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area .
20 years
"Free Estimates"

INTERESTED IN A ,
NEW VEHIClE

·We'd like to ·in1rodu~• .you to
Enplt-A·Car, tho modern way
to drive the vehiclo of your

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Alto Carry
Fjalti'r1g Supplies.

Payment

Lowerr~~~c~~~·~:rmtlnl

BUY IIOW

FIX IN nME
FREE PARKING
Sit

llurplty, Mlftoa Roollt,

Htltn, Villi &amp; llnlll.
HOIISIIlCJ

Headqualle1s

I

-Roofing

'WEE ESTIMATES,"

JAMES KEESEE
PM. 992·

(6141 992 -USO

IISIIINCI
16141

000.77•..

YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Rf. 33- Nice 3 BR renovallll
lllme. New lurnac~ cabil!!fs,
new ~rpeling &amp; panelirg
Askirs $25,000.

·No Down

..__..cement Windows

IMINIS! I'IIONI

9U-6215 ar 992-7314

choice.

VINYL &amp;
SIDING

3 i 7 North So&lt;ond
Midtlloporl, Oloio 45760

V. C. YOUNG Ill

elec. br 2 trailers.

J&amp;L BLOWN
. INSULATION

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

PH. 161 !!.~:!~-:~4

carpeting " block bldg with
dbl. garage. Shade lot. ()]~

42 ACRES - In lhnge
Ta;onship. Hil~. trees, OO!Iom &amp;

C.U: 742-nln

EUGENE lONG

NEW USTING- P.-oy -

nll'W bath, nice

•landscaping
. . .tements
•Sewage Systems
•Water Ill Gas lines
•Water Well Drilling
•tr.ocking

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

- Addons and ramoct.llng
- Roofing and gutter work

lashan luilding

-

- Concrete wort
- Piumblnt _, fOCtrlcll

EVERY I •
SAl. NIGHT
6:30-P.M.
factoiY Choke

• (Fraa Eotlmotooi

..

11·8·11c

ICUT OUT FOI FUTUH USE)

:iX:

RENT A CAR
· CA~l
446·4522
1

Otlllpollt.

North.
0~1•

7111/ lln

124,Pomeroy

KEN'S .
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Mek"

•W••here •Dlahwaahera
•AinOI'I
oRolrlgorttora

.•Dryers •FrHzert
PARTS and SERVIICE

Ftt All

y,, M""t!Hm

PWS: Office SowJios &amp;
Furnituro, WWding
ond Graduation
Station•y, Mo.,ofi&lt;

Signs, luWoor Stamps,
lusln01o Form~

(opy S••i&lt;ll, ll&lt;.
!SS Mill St., llli&amp;t.apart
104 M&lt;olioorry

992·

a•• hm•oy

.,

•

GE dryer. worko, 304· 675·
2568 .

....

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

i

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121.

HAVE YOUR FURNACE .

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTON.E
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
IIIANUFACIUIID ·MOUSING
HElliNG I (OOUNG !l!rEIIt!

Sales I Swrice
Ouality lntertherm
Air Conditioners
Heal Pump!l,. Furnaces
~···9416-446· 2111
·
811212 rruls

l.

~

8.

..-

··

n

'

Duplex houu in nHd of
repair located in Vln:ton,
Ohio. t10.000 . Coil 614·
245·6818.

3 bdr. ex. neighborhood.

.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

:

3·

9-30 1 mo. .

·f

J' tJ
1
~UnOUnllln~

A,ea 9/20/ 1 mo. d.
If

'

-

·

814·448· 1368 alter

or cotolog party. tOO per - - - - - - - - -

cent guaranteed line of gift1.
toya and ho~rpe decor itama.

3 bedrooms and beth. larkin
St .. Rutland. Can be •old on
controct with omall

.ararr ·

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFI,ED

FIREPLACES &amp;-WOOD SlOVES
• CLEANING INSPECTION
~
• FLUE CAPS II&amp;TALLED

"o

614· 992· 7082.

Very nice houae tor ule, 3

Nursing care in private bdr. both, LR. woodbumlng
home. Room for two pa· stove, DR. kitchen. cellar. 6
tienta. 1600. 1 month. Call acrealfenced In]. bern ,
614·992-3&amp;95 .
chicken coop, pony shed.
work ohop. McCumber Rd.
Rutland. 128,600 Coll614·
992- 2143 day, 614· 742·
~289 alter 4:30pm.

cent assumable loan, gerden
spot. Reduced down to
By owner, 2 bedroom ranc:h,

your children In hor home. by

dly or weak . Hot meals,
superviaed play, references.
Colt 6t 4·446-4208 .

Fin onw l

Pleasant, nice locatton. low
Old Kaylor Store ·• Brood

Run, 7 rc)Omt, ,11f.t batht.
leaky roof. city weter,
815,600. Call 304·882·
2407 or 882-2297. Colt

after 5 p.m.
By

owner. 206

Midway

Drive. New Haven. Comfor-

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. rocdmmando

Be your .own Boaa. All you
naaq it intelligence. ambition. a willlngnen to follow
a •ucceatful oriented plan,

ltct 304·522·284&amp;.

Open your r11hion atore
with professional help from
Uberty Fnhiono. Ono-tlmo

• CHIMNEY REBUILDING
,..-:· -..,

·~ '

•

I -, \
\., I
~- .. /

• " TOT~L FIREP~CE
'
AliD CHIMNEY WORK "

INDUSTRIAL '
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

11

Wanted

Ono c»rt~led ModicaI Toch·
nologlat, walltdayo. Send
rooumo to box 300, In care
of the GoiHpollo Dolly T;lb·
uno, 826 Third Ave .. Golll·
polio. Oh 4&amp;631 ,

6 family yardaale. Thursday,
October 3rd. 8:30-4:00 .
Ubby Fisher's, Yellowbuah
Rd .. Recine.

1----- - - --

Moving Sale. Starts Satur-

home interior, tupperwere.
clothes, diahaa. etc .

1- - -- - - - - - -

Yord Sala Lot 32 ot John·

aoff'a Mobile Home Park .
Thuro Fri .. &amp; Sat. Acro11
from Blue Fountain Motel.

1 - - - -- - - - --

G~rage Sale 38 Vinton Ave.
Thurs. &amp; Fri . Oct. 3rd. &amp;4th .

9 til 7'

Yard Sale Vanco-Fairtield
Rd. Tues..
9AM-6PM.

Wod .

Thuro.

day and Sunday, October
6th and 6th. 10:00 a.m.
1958 " FOfd Truck 361-C .
300 H .P.. Honda XR&amp;OO.
Honda CR80. Dune Buggy.

tel. Thurs. Oct. 3, Fri. Oct. 4.

9-6 . Clothes, toyl, coata,
bedapreeds. twin bed and
lots of miac .

mechanic. carpenter. and
farm tools, boom pole, auto
partl, household items, and

Gange Sale Clothing.
drapea, office chair, toys, PU toto moro. Miko Hill, Co. Rd .
tool box. gospel albu!"M, 36, Racine-Portland , Rd .
bicycle• and other items. Sharon Rd. Phone614 -843·
Good mdse., ht .sale of 6350 .
.
aeuon . Bill Wooldridge. 4
mi. N. of Holz:ar on SR 160. 2 family. Oct. 3rd. 4th. ond
Thuro. &amp; Fri. 9-5PM . Free

5th. 9 :00 till 6 :00 . HouM

coffee.

beaide Highway Garage on
Rt . 7 . White unifroms,
shoes, bedding, numaroua
items.

odult·groot ochool· clotheo,
now dealer tupperware ,

32 . Mobile Homes

knick ~necks, appliances.
1oy1, booka, furniture, fresh
---~-----1 baked goods. Something for
everyone. B miles south ·of

1971 Brookwood 12•8i6.1 Golllpollo on St. Rt. 7 . Form
1 'lz baths, 3 bdr., gas heat. on left before Raccoon

new carpet, like new cond.
Coll 614·446·0176.

Bridge.

Don't mi11

this

one.ll

1971 12x60

Excellent condition . Clean,
with or without AC . Cell
·614-992-2251 or614-992·
3869.

Solo 1069 Second
Fri. &amp; Sot. 9 :00
Good
·clothing 'oil sizes Prom

of miac.

prooent lot. Call 614-742 ·
3033.
.

condition . Cleen .
or girla •. mens S. women1,
-without AC, furnishing•. ·household items, beds·
w11her·dryer, awning. C.all pceada. sheets. Friday Oct.
614-992-2459 alter. 6:00

4, 9 :00AM. 350 Dobby Or.

p.m.
2 Family Yard Sale. Satur1968 floyalmobllohomofor
1110. 12x40. 83,000. 614 ·
949-2996.

day Oct . 6th . 8 :30AM ·
6 :30PM . Centenary Town·
house. Baby, children &amp;

MOBILE HOMES MOVED :

tura, toyo, bikes, bothroom

Insured. reaaon1ble rate1 .

vanity.

Coli 305-676·2336.

1 --~------

Yard $ale Fri. Oct. 4, 8 :30 til
1981 Holly Pork. 14•70,
'11.800 .00 . 304 · 576 ·
2947.

7 410 Hedgowood . Baby
dresa. table, winter clothes
sm. Jr &amp; children , boots,
mi1c .

Uaad mobile homet for aala,
1973 Nolidity . 12.60.

range, refrigerator. Home
needs some repa i r .
•1.996 .00. D. I!oW . Homes,

Phone 304-676-4424.

Carport Sale Thurs ., Fri.

S1i.900 . 00 . D . &amp; W .
Homoo. phone 304 -676 ·
4424.
1973

Lee Circle. Rustic Hilla,
Syracuse, Ohio . Oc1ober 4.
Friday . 9 :00-4:00 . Winter
clothes , drapes. knick ·
knacks. Cheep .
2 family . 444 Beech St ..

Middleport, Ohio . October .

GorageSole0ct.3rd . &amp;4th .
10AM-4. 327 LeGrande
Blvd.

Valiant

&amp; Vicinity
'

Yard Sale , Five family first
time awer. 2 din&amp;tta seta,
Anchor kit for trailer, kitchen
i1ams, baby clothes end
other. Electric oven, toys. 8
miles out Rt. 2 &amp; 62 , Route
2

Eckard

Chopol

Road.

Thurs. Fri. and Sat.
1982. 10•56 Gibroltor con
be used 11 a hunting camp,

Yard Sale Childrena, women
clothing, other ttem1 . Oct.

portable office. storage bldg
or 7. Need interior repalra,

1976. 12.&amp;5 trailer. elect·

nary . Junior clothing ,
wicker. toys. misc. Rain data

ric, 2 Mdroom1. underpen-

Oct. 4.

lighted riding ring. e.~tc .
hunting, mineral righta. Call
614-367· 7)43.
3~

acre ferm · · drilled well.
3"11 ' miles from towA .
817,500. Phone 304· 882·
2407 or 304-882-2297.
Coil otter 5 p:m.

1- - - - - - - - - -

Moving Sale Thurs. 590 Jay

Centenary Townhou. . Oc1.
3 &amp; 4. Lampo, dloh01. 1111oll

appliances. curtains, coati,
horne interior. more aech
dey .

'1-- - - - - - - - Gorago Solo Sat. Oct . 5,
9 -67 3 rd . houso on Ro

Rodney-Cora Rd.
34

1982 14x70. 3 bedroom,
e12 .&amp;00 . Coil 614· 448·
8231 .

1983 F!Utwoocl 14•70, 3
Own ·your own Joan· bdr .. 2 lull bothJ~ III&lt;t now .
Sport•-·· LodiOI, Child· Celll14·388·8133 .
ron• or Lorge Size Store. 1 --------~100'• of Nat'l brando. 1972 Flamingo 3 bdr.. 1\'o
t15,900 lnctudla t1 0.1100 both, total lloctrio. CA.
lnvllntory. ll•tuntl, oupplleo rolrlgorator, oome lumltunt,
ond moro ... call today! b10 dock, ~1,196 . Call
Mr.Tata 704 -274-19111.
814-24&amp;·914t.

ren's clothing, misc .

· ··········· •·····••· •••··•••·

gorego. bulldlngl, barn. truck. 304·675-3968 .
Dr.
pond. Aohtoh, t25.000.00. 1-:==::::= = = = =
owriorfinonc~d. 304-576 · I·
3 Family Yard Sale Thurs. &amp;
2320.
33
Farms for Sale
Fri. 9-5 . BulaviiiB ·Addiaon
r - - - - -- - -Rd .
h
6 room• and bat on one •• - -- - -- - - - aero. borlutlful yord, South · Moigo Co. 143 acroo, 90 r
00
acres pasture, 60 acres 7 Fomily Kerr, Oh, Wed ..
lida, t20,000. ·
timber. 3 oil l!o go• wlllo. 2 Thurs. S. Fri. Window1,
studded tiraa'on wheels 15',
3488 .
pondo. older · homo. born,
other bulldingo, 100x200 ft . clothing. oddo &amp; ends.

Sat up ond dol ivory at no
oKtra chorgo. Wa'ro Mid
Ohio Flnlnclal Sorvlco 474·
6710. 773-3921, 837 ·
1232 .

Midway D{ive, New Haven. ·
W.Va . Oct. 2 ond 3. Chid·

······PfPiaasaiit .....

ning and blocko. 14,000.00

Hoalthtox, over 1000 oth·
en. t13,300 to 124.900
Inventory. training. flxturoo.
grond oponlngotc . Con open
15 dayo. Mr . Loughlin (112!
888 4228 .

1 .2. 3 . From 9· 31n Syrocuoo

at Yellow Block houae
acrou from Hubbard's
greanhouae on 3rd Street.
Rain or shine .

167 Woodland

6112 acres, 2 houus. 2 car or will conaidar trade on

We hive 7 . Vour good credit
r~ting and very "little cash
leta you t1ke over peymenta~

Yard solo. Oct. 4th . Stollings :.

residence, New Hop8 Rd .. ,
Chester. Aero•• from Hart - .
man ' s. Rain cancels.

1979 Norris 14x70, 2 bed· Drive. 2 Families. loti of
room. furni1hed. luxury Jer· goodies.
ies , IXC cond . TE. I ~----------~-----

Oct. 3.4 .

3,4,5 . ~ mi . out Rt . 218 .
Time 9AM to &amp;PM .
.1 . ~00 . 00 . 304 · 676 · 1- - - - - - - - &amp;421 . 7:30AM to 9 :00PM . Y1rd Sale Oct. 3 in Cente-

Klein, Sergio Valente. Evan
Picone , ll1 Clelborne,
Members Only, Gasoline,

October 4 and 6. 10 to 4 :
Harrisonwille , St . Rt. 684 .
Bedding. clothing , di1he1,
appliances, jewelry, Avon
bottles and lots more.

1-- - - - - - - - -

price. 304-882·2833.

Ropoouuod doublowldtll

2 families. Friday, Oct. 4th.
Tyree Blvd .. Racine . Furni ·
ture, blankets, quilti, iron
bed. clothing, misc .

Yard Sole 49 Garfield Ava . 4 Winter clothing,, baby iteme,
Families . Something for · misc .
everyone . Oct. 3 &amp; 4 .

Comer Rt. 141 and lincoln
Pike.

lzod, Eoprit, Tomboy, Colvin

Something for everyone.

3rd through 5th . 9 :00 ·6:00 .

ture. 83.796.00. D . &amp; W.
Homeo.304·675-4424.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
AT 35. PHONE 6 t 4· 448·
7274 .

October 2nd, 3rd, end 4th .
9 :00 ti171~ mile nonh on
Now Limo Rd . Rein ouhlno .

adult clothes. Baby furni ·

living room, 2 baths, large
eat In kitchen, utility room.
All electric, brk:k home. 2
car garage, basement, large
lot. By appointment only.

1- - -- - - - --

School.

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

);~:;;,;dlo;-E.;;ii;;;. l2 Family Garage Sale lot a of Garage sale Tuesday. Wed ·
On rented lot.
toys, clothll toddler thur 14 neada.., and Thursday. Oct.

Garage Sale One Day Only.

32 Mobile Homes
for S•la

obovo E01tom Local · High

clothe• ell aizes. furniture , '
etc. Will be-.held rain or
ahina, take 1 41 to Centenary turn onto Lincoln Pike
go to Northup Bridge . Fol low sig}'ls after thai. Approx imately 3 miles out from .
bridge . Wed., Thura. &amp; Fri.

Thuro. Oct . 3, 9:00- 4 :00.

fully corpotod. new modfllh
kltclion. aloctrlc hoot pump,
304·882·2267.

seat. 2 chaira, bunk beda.
natural gas furnace IHeill,
clothing,lotaOfml•c . items.
At Star1ing Maanr, on Rt. 7.

1-- -- - - - -Gigontic 2 Family Carpon

12x60.' 2

Owner, Wast Columbia. 5
rooml. bath, utility room,

Oct. 3rd, 4th, and 6th . 9 :30

to 5:00 . Furniture, oofa.love

for Sale

bedrooms. ga1. 1ome furni-

toblo living: 3 bodroomo.

Buying d1ily gotd, allver Own yout own jean 12x80 connanr:ry
coina, rlnga~\iewelry, alerting apor1swetr, lediea apparel,
ware. old coins. large cur- childrena, large 1111, combl · h"'""' 2 bdr .. 1 beth with
rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur· nation ltore. petlte1. mater·~-~~~~"~"!"~
. ~C~oll.
11· •~4~.5~0~0~
alter 4Pr.'l
kott Berber S~op, 2nd. Avo. nlty, acco11orllo. Jordocho,
Middleport. Oh . 614· 992· Chic. Leo . Levi. E Z Stroot,

Sr:rv ll:t:s

Yard Sale Evergreen Rt.
160. lV2 milea from Hoaiii·

FUll. basement, free heat.
private, cloae to towna. Call

614-992 -7314 .

8 6

~ 'II[! I IIYIIII:III

Yard Solo 166 Garfield Ext.
Oct. 3 -4 . Dreperloo. bod.

1974 Holly Pork, 14X70, 2

Vacancy for the aklerly In
our home. Trained and fifteen years e•perience. Cell Sundaya.

and oi (vor . Wrlto· M . D .
Miller. Ri'.2, Pomorcy. Ohio coded store ond clt11fl.._d
4&amp;769 or call 814 -992- color analyt.ing . Dan KOitocky 601 · 327 ·8031 .
7760 .

•

Saleo. At. 36 W .

bdr, family roo rt1f"''11ice appliances . n4"w carpet
throughout . A. steal at
S10,600 . May remain on

pon. 2 kitchen• and 2 botho.
825 .900. nogotlobto. Call
614·742 ·.2480 except

fee . different programs to
match your inve1tment
plana. 900 plus national
coMPLETE HousEHOLDs brenda, Intent to size 52.
FURNITURE. Bodo. Iron , accessories, co1metlca, In ·
wood. cupboord•. chairo, '" entory, fixtures. instore
cheata, b1tklta, dlthu, training, buying trip, ~rend
stone Jars. 1ntique1, •gold opening, more.Aiao be firlt
In your area with colo;.

3478.

ltem1. 624 Oeenie Dr.,
across from Don Mink Auto

misc .

992· 68&amp;8 .

1--------Six room hou11 on 49 acru.

l----- - - - -

Qt~imnry

TV, tovo. &amp;

6P~ .

1.11 . 614-992- 6022.

&amp; Vicinity

1. Oct. 2, Oct. 3, 9 til dark.

Colt

We pay caah for late model pluo bo in 1 polition to make
1 minimal product inveatment tor aalitt'- 11 18,000.
For further datallo coil col·
Bill Gene John1on

1

·

Eom FREE Chrlotmao giltl

Woot Virginia .. 304-773· 1.:.-- - - - = - -- 5785 or 304· 773·5430 .
To aarn 50 ,000··· 100.000.

SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd.
: ~-~~: ~;; ~olllpoli• Call

Sat. 333 3rd. Ave.

by having a MerriMac home

Vacancy tor ladles ·and
gents. Be1t of care. Good
food . Rtaaonabla prices. Try

Middleport

very cheap. 4th trailer. past
Yard Sale Men. women . Addaville School. sign on
chil~ren clot~es . Thurs .. Fri., Bulewille-Addison· Rd . Oct.

1979 Fairmont. 14x70 whh
s 2 h7 Tlpout . 3 bedroomo.
2 full betho. On ranted lot.

Situations
Wanted

......P.iimiiri:iv·········

Yard Sale C hildran, women
and mens clothing, nice,

ryono . Weight machine,

farm . antique, Uqukfation mail until you have invettisales. licensed Ohio and gated the offering .

&amp;14· 446-3672

women. Tues.- Sat .

Sale. Something tor eve ·

12

Hammond, Mary Steiner.

ren clothes, ladiet clothes.

Garage Sale 6 mi. below
Oolllpolio (oig~oJ. Now Var·
tetv I&amp; ellsizesclothea men &amp;

,

household goods 6 more .

614-261-1661 .

that you do buainell with

_s__
w_a_nt_ed_To~B-uy_

Womana large aizea, boy
clothing, glanwlfe .

Rouoh. 304· 882-204,9 after &amp;386 .
6:30PM orweok· endo. ·
---------

. RICK PEARSON AUCTIO· people you know. and NOT
NEER 'i SERVICE . . Estate, to Mnd money through. the

•

Oct. 2,3,4. Centenary. 9 ·5.

Two Family Yard Sale Frid_a y

October 4tH. Cheatwood
Yard Solo Oct. 2,3.4. 457 Wagner Rd.. near G811ia .
Jerry Or., Pleasant Valley Watch tor 1igns . Baby
Eotatos . 26' girl• blko. child· · thing I, Iota of miac . lawana

bdr .. 11!:. bath, S6,

Lowing G.M. will care for

•.

·.

I 07 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oli.

,•

Coll 6 14·446·7360.

Rood , 860 . Rowordl 304·
458-1968.

304·675·3t 10.

$

i
,) " ~
' ·. · Meigt.Counfg
.~
d ft j,

lEHNEn'S 11101111 &amp;

3 bedroom full booomont.

goopol olnglng trio. Deco· pool. air, 2 firepllc... quellaional week· end traveling Ilea for bond money. A-One
required with tranapon8tlon Rool Eototo 8rollar. Call
provided . Call Evelyn ,304-67&amp;-6104 or 304-17&amp;·

,..

Thurs., Fri. Oct. 3,4.

eat -in kitchen, carport. I,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::.J Enormous Three Family Oct.
$2,600 &amp;: take over pay- f'
4 &amp; 5. Lots of extra nice
menta. Planta Subdlvllkln .
clothing, sized infant to

50'1, 1·609· 453·2692. '

21

ladies Seiko wriat watch
with brown atrap, reward ,

-~

·

ter, priced under UO,OOO.
lurniohod. Coli 814-379·
2141 .

roferenceo. Call 614 · 446·
1362.

Sept .

**********f************
..***
_. . BLU£
li STREAK CAB.CO. t c~~:;i.!~=~;~.-otd•lnc.
i
PHONE 992-7075
t
~!:JE~ !~o~~!a~~~~
'
Now ,.,,..ln'tJ All o·l

992-3410

from Golllpollo. Air conditl·

oned. electric furnanca ,
washer. dryer, county wa-

849,000. 304-675·6047 .

football game. 304· 675·
4823.

:

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
J)H. 992·6030

Homes for Sale

Female, short hair. and ears,
brown and white , Laat teen
wearing collar. leon Tribble

Dog,

Yard Sale Oct . 3. Antiques,

ware. collectibles . Infant·

704 Moriotto ,Rood, Point

·1 8

J.EWELL'S ·

: .l _.,

Chriatian female piano
player for " Reflections "

new items . Dishes. drapes,
winter clothing all sizes. 31h
milo• from HMO on Rt. 160 .
Evorgraan, 614· 446- 1339 .

Gigantic Yard Sale, Rt . 7 windows. furniture, clo Addison, Fri. only Oct. 4, 9 thing, stereo, much inore . 1
milo on Rt. 218. off Rt. 7 .
til? Nice things!

adult clothing,

31

Gigatttic Garage Sale Lota of

Garage Solo Oct. 3, B-3PM .
Vine St. &amp; Belmon~ Dr.
Gallipolis, Oh .

Second &amp; Grepo. Thur., Fri ., ·large Garage Sale Wed . Set.
9:00-4:00. Fenton glan· 9-6 . Lots 8t lots of new

Will do baby1itting in my
home . Reaaonable rat81,

Loot

WHERE TO BUY?

!•

DENNY CONGO

Brookoville. Flo. 304·67&amp; ·
5398.

lost and Found

LOST pendent, gold croat,
Friday night Point Pleasant

.J NEW. MO~~RH~~~-~~~~VAILABI£

3·24-tlc

Wanted truck and driver to
move houaehold furniture to

18 Wanted to Do

6

~*******w.···············
* . PREPARE FOR WINTER :

Also Transmission

Re al E$ ldlc

3 bedroom home, Blh per-

9·1·1 mo.

. .CE &amp; SUPPlY
"'· 9'12·6931
Afttr S Cllll
742·2027

I

8 wooko old , Call 614-992·
2249 .

NOW THRU OCT. 12TH

ACCENT

fliNT SHOP'

puppiea . ~ormed, very cute,

PAY FOI 11 SESSIONS 132.50
RECEIVE I SESSION FREEl

Ohio

countl. frH eatimatea,
Ward't Keyboard, ~-8766600 or 17&amp;-3824. ~

domonotrotoro . No
lnveotmont .

Small. haolthy, Boogie-typo

JANNING SPECIAL

Roger Hysell
Garage

PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR, back to school dia-

toke oil 94 Lower Rlvot Rd.
Coll614·446·0388 or 614·
446 -6213 .

Free to good home . Collie

iJ.
/
PH.992-3982

STYLING &amp;
1ANNING SALON

Gaory' 1 Auto and Body
Shop. 660 Pogo St., Middleport, Ohio. Open 8· 4 waak·
dayo. 1 0·4 Soturdoyo,
cloood Sundayo. Phonol14·
992 · 7037 or 614· 992·

down payment. Cell 814-

puppi01. 6 weeks old . Call
61 4·843·6285 .

,~
•.\~'
.· ·
••
·~ :.

~

1 - - - - - - -- -

land

.gOQll . home. Clll 614· 446·
2329 .
- - - - - - - · l c-

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

FOR THE'
BOTH OF YOU

614· 742· 3147 or614 ·992·
5006 . .

10 raom house, patio, car·

8·13 tin

AUTG
RENTAL
St. Rt. t6D

portunitlea, retirenwnt income. and much more . Call

&amp; Vicinity

Water walla drilled and ..,,.
vic ad. Prtteaon request. Call

tails. Openlnga available tor

Kitten•- good mouters . To

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601

U·SA~E

······ Giiiiiiioii&amp;~ : ·· ···· ·

Call 304-8'16- 6768 for do·
to

Female Walker Coon hound
pup. 6 moo. old . Colt 614·
379 ·21 14.

·-

"lVI Rt•l F, llll"

Services

give eway, must

Clothea

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

9-30-11

-:rHE QUALITY

down. Call 614· 379 -26&amp;4 .

·i: · LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

d lluJ• Shotauns Only

Pam;roy, Ohio

Old building if you tear

..

"

Giveaway .

Part Beagle puppieo. Coil
614-256- 6826 .

Middleport, OH.
PJI. 992·3559

z

614-592·

Houae tor 11le by owner .

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

Call:

Rl.

E~tcavating

4

WIRING NEEDS

~

$44,500.

lirep~ce.

MEIGS
EXCAYAnNG
COMPANY

•All Types of

Free Ett:imooteo

(AU (OllECT:

RH:INE - Lg. 2·story, 3or 4
BRs. stoker &amp; gas lurnaaiS,

•

n col

Under New Management (Formerly Giovanni's)
9-20·1 mo.

8·8-tfc

RADIATOR
SERVICE

J&amp;F

appr()l(imalley 9 acres, roo;(~
wooded ftir hunlin~ House has
been remodeled w~h ni'.e
kitchen and bath. Uollomical
gas heal 5mirutes 11om liMn.

$61.90000. ..

olive entertainment
' free HBO •Restaurant
oOiympic Pool

A. A.A.

$33,IXXI.

•bedroom; FA. electric wih
heat pump, Central air cond&gt;
OOrlilg st&lt;Jage llli~irg On a
.2.36 acre IDI.Make an appool·
ment ID see this one

SINGLE S24.9S

PHONE 1614) 992-6100

NEW USTING - Wlrlirg
man's special, lar' kK. all
utiliies, reason~ble 1ncome.

Give us a call.

In ta;on p~s ellxlw 100!11. A
neal sp~ leV~ ho'!:f"~Vilh 3

8 miles from
·rOOterdy·lllason Bridce

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

304·67&amp;-39&amp;0 or 1·800·
642·3619.

1· 201-347-0675 .

*SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA *SPAGHETTI

Real Estate General

hood. aectric BB. heal

Askirg S~. IXXI.OO.

RT. 62 SOUTH
NMI PIIASANI, W. VA.

For Senior Citiuns"

"12 Varieties of Pin a"

The _Army National Guard
needs your prior military
service experience. Enlist
now tor part-time montty

MOBILE HOMES MOVED.

Pregnant? Please give youreelf. your child, and us a
chance. Childless couple
seeks to adopt healthy white
infant. legal end confider·
. tial. Medical expenses paid .
Call Kathy and John collect, ·

ANGIE'S PIZZA

dozer work at

REPAIR SERVICE

) / lt/tlo

BUS, BLDG. - 5 rms.. one II.
wih outs~e .chmney if,
Rutland On~ $6,!'00.00 cash.

$3l,!l00.00.

REAL ESTATE
fOR SALE

e.

$28,())).

~.

54 Misc. Marchandiae

of tho ..Ute of Ellta
J - Ruaoll, de&lt; ""·liM of
168 M.-ry Avonuo, Po ...
roy. Ohio 45769.
R~
Buck
Probota Judgo/ Ctooi&lt;

NEW USTING - Five Poillt$
Arll - A 3 iJ!!&lt;Iroom rancll

home on ap!l'oxmalely ~ acre
lot lndudes dishwasher, range,

Real Estate General

-trill

Street. Syracu11 , Ohio
4&amp;779, w• appointed Admi·

~OBILE

Anything That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home.
·
No Job Too Small or Too Big.
'!Je Do Setups and Undeipinning

1·(814)-992·3325

NEW USTING -

•

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF ESTA JANE
RUSSELl. DECEASED
c - No. 248M Dockat 12
l'llge 511
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARY
On Septomblr 27. 198&amp;. i1
the Moigo County Proboto
Court. Coot No. 24866. ery..
tol E. Slmpoon, Sovonth

216 E. 2nd S"t.
Phone ··

llga acquired tit1e to aaid
rnloltato by daocl rocordld
in Volume 270. Pogo 703,
Molgo County Doodo Rl·

Public Notice

Real Estate

• Rnl estate oltuotocl at lho
c•tner of Gorfield ond South
Third Avenue in tho Vill~~~to
of Middleport, Ohio. Tho ~II ·

tho right to reject onv ond oil
bidt. The ale it purauant to
Soctlon '721 .03 of tho Ohio

5

Business Services

confwrenct on the
ConHrvation Commi1Mn
• .... cool miririg llld &lt;Niion pormlt opplicadon will · Will COUM In oloction of ...
be hold on Oct-17. 19B5 porvlaoro of tho Molgo Soil
ot 2:00 p.m. ot tho locotion and Weter Con11rvltion Diatrlct to bl hold In occOfdlnco
IIMod below:
with Choptor 1&amp;11.01·14 of
Moigo County Courthou•

r~leetltt,

guarantee water or
no charge. 30 years ex·
·
Call 614-742·

642·3619.

paycheck, oclucotlonol op·

Coli 304-676-2338 .

WATER WELL DRI LUNG

"

Co .•

I -'::2-:::3-"'P"'ro:..f:-e-u
_i_o_n_a~l--

Christian mal11 for lull ~ime
goapel group'. base gurtar,
drummer, piano, must be
willing to travel. call SaVed

43119 Pomeroy Pike.
Pomeroy. OH . 45769 .

Insured . re11onable rates.

WHALEY'S

Mongogo
30&amp;1 .

MONEY . MONEY. MONEY I · Gov8rnment home from t1
·The army National Guard IU-repoirl. Aloo dollquont
tax property. Coi18Q&amp;· 887·
pro~Jida you with 1
pert·time rponthly pay - 6000 ext. GH -10189 lor
chock . PLUS quoliliod information.
members could earn more
than S20,000 in edUcational Ona of o kind log cobln·
benofitl. ENLIST NOWI Colt Raccoon Creek. 7 miles
304-67&amp;-39&amp;0 or 1·800· from Rio Grande, 11' milea

Tuppers Plalno , Ohio. Co·
pies available for' $30 .00

Cab (orners ........... .......t20
Grillet: ...........................i7S
Ntw Etncl Used Auto Glau-lote Model Ports

tor any purpoH . L11der

Experienced parts per10n 7169 . and aalea person . Pickup 1------~--

- - - - - 8o.b2, fclor78

'{atd Sa\eS

'
HOME OWNERS·Roflnonco
to low fixed rat8. Uae equity

1:00 p.m. Factory Choko12

Agnes Hill's History of

. ........

i·;:.......... ..

22 Money to Loan

Goopol Singing Group, 304·
67&amp;-3860.

by the police in Rutland on
Friday morning, September
27th , as the 1c1nner
announced .

•us

Enterprise Rd .. Ft. Piarca, Fl
33482 .

The Daily Sentinel' Page 13

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beginning at

Rood did not gat pulled ovar
73-79 Ford lr.
fender~ ... ......... ....... ...... ~48
73-79 ford Tr.
Doon .........................
10-IS Ford lr.
Doors ........... ............ ..$145
78-79 Ford lr .
512 10
ao~i~1 i·;·;d·r;:
'
Hoods ......................... lt4S
ll·IS ford Ronger
Hoods ......................... 1130
13-85 ford Rongor

lope: Elan Vital-716 3418

application• at Simmon•·

Grover , White, Jr., Baihan
73-10 (h"l Tr.

ment. No experience-no
sales . Detailt aend aelf·
addreaaed ttamped enve-

Olda-Cadillac-Chevrolet in
Pomeroy . Interviews will
take place latter.

guege shotguns .

4/19/lln

1·3·1fc

Eosy Allembly Workl8600 .
per 100. Guarontaad pay·

Confi dantial. Freo prog·

Middlopon .

FREE ESTIMATES

AVON. Soil Avon moke
45% . Coil 614- 446· 3368.

. nancy test and-or· inform&amp;·
tioh. Phone 614 -742-2829.
collect if necesiary.
Fat Burner! Gobe1e Grapefruit Extra Strengt~ Capaulea. Fruth Pharmacy.

Gutters • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

New Holland,

. '

Electronic Tach . for reJJ:air of
two· way radlo'a. ttereo~'end

post Monday durlng a private Oval

Several niunes have cropped up also were suggestio• tllat ftrstlady
as possible successors, Including Nancy Reagan wantl!d tbe change
John Svahn, asslsllint to the attbe department, pe'1'llepl because
president for policy development, ct the publlclty earlier this year
who had run-Ins with Heckler wben surrounding Heckif!l''s recent
be was her deputy at the Health and divorce.
Human Services De!&gt;artment.
In her defense, Rearan said, "If
Also said to be under consldera·~he hadn't done such a .,00 job,- I
.lion Is fprmer Health Undersecre- wouldn't have~ ..eqer to seek
tary David . Swoap, who has just her out to be tbe ambassador to
resigned as California's health and Ireland."
welfare secretary to open a )li!alth
He offered Hecklfr th!'· Dublin
care consulting firm.
In annouJ¥:1ng Heckler's new job, Funds r~J'ved
Reagan said, "I am dellghted ljlld
""""
happlerthan I've been in a longtime
The September dlstrlbu lion of
that Margaret Heckler
agreed
$10,al1,569
collected br !be state
to my request that sbe become tbe
from
tbe
seven
cents per gallon
amlBssador to Ireland.
gaso!tne
tax
has
lll!ill
made, State
. "Andlnsaytngthis,"lieadded, "f
Auditor
Thomas
E.
~son an·
would ~e to say - and I'm sorry
that I didn't start saying II sooner- nounced. Amounts received by
that the maUclous gossip, wltoout Me~ County Vllllln Include
any baSis in fact, thathasbeengolng Middleport, $2,1!M; Pomeroy,
on fort be last several daysaboutthls $1,674; Racine, $1,67~ Racine, $548;
Rutland, $501, and !tyratuse, rTm.
Is wltoout any basis In fact."
HeCkler has been assailed by the 1 Meigs County receMid Jl;,IXXI and
New Right for fautng to press a each township Ill lite county
conservative social agenda. There received $1200,

Help Wanted

Ohio

Business
Buildings

Foil Yard Solo, 2 Fomily,
Thuro .. Fri .. Sot. Eut on Rt.

664 In Porter.

4 family Yard Sale. 31 1 Fire1
St ., Oct. 1,2,3. ,furniture,
tries. ahoes, ·clothing .
Bock Yard Solo, 611 4th

Street, New Haven , W. Va .
October 2nd &amp; 3rd, 9 a.m .· 7
If ra in. cancelled .

Yard Sale, October 1. 2, 3 ,
1st 1railer, Greer Road . Base
CB. books. mlscellaneoua.
Yard Sale, naw and uHd

clothing and Iota of misc. 6
miles out Jerry1 Run Road at
Apple Grove , Oct . 1 to Oct.
3 . 9 :0010 1.

Ga rage Sal e. 204 Joan
Place . Haven Heights, New
Haven. Oct J.
Garage sale 2923 Maple
Awe, Thura: Fri , Sat Applian ces , drapes. beds ·
preads. clothes end miac.
Garege Sate, Thurs and Fri.
ucond house on Plymal
Road, Gallipolis Ferry. W.

Va.

Yard Sale. Oct.

•

~ nd

4,

9 :00 so 3 :00 , 7 N . Third St .,

For nle or Ieese country
etore with aptrtment. Call
114· 24&amp;·931&amp; .
Commercial building for ulo

or rent on Main St, New
Hoven. W .Vo . Coll304· 882,
3233 .
36 lots

8o

Acreage

lbtl~or nit on Jand contract
with small down payment.

Call 814· 388·8711 oltor 6 .

Lot for ule. 1 acre. cOunty
water, apetlc syuem. g11
top.

aloctric nrvlco. Bo·
tw- Pomeroy ond .Middl•
port on At. 7. t4.500. Call
D. Ill W . Homoo, 304·675·
4424 .

Mason, W. Va. CB radio,
Sept. 4 ,6 . Curtains, bed•· Avon .
pre1d1. fnen. women. children clothea. dishes., tape G.!lrege Sale . Th urs 3 rd thru
Sat 6th, 9 W. Honon St, •.
player.
··
Mason. W. Va . 9 :00AM to
October 2 ..3.4 . , Bidwell · 5:00 PM . Bunk bedo. boby
Rodney Road in Bidwell bed . apt size stove, refriger~ .
seventh house on righ1 . etor. television. diat1es, curtain s .. bedspread s. clothing,
Wateh tor signs .
lot &amp;of misc .
Moving Sate. on 160 at 1- - - - - - -- Vinton . Oct. 4th' &amp; 61h. Ya rd Sale. Thursday, 10 :00
Starting 10AM in ca1e of till 7. One and 1 tenth mila up .
rtin be inside. Have furni -· Rt. 36 Henderson. Tupper-:·
ture, tools, 2 fUrnancea coal, were, Avon, Home Int. rom· :'
ence books, western books, ~
&amp;gao.
clothing, Iota of mla ittma. ~
Y1rd Sale Spring Vellay Rain Cancela.
·
'·.
3Fomlly4mlloooutRt. 141 ,

Subdivision. October 3 &amp; 4,
9 :00-4:00. AM-FM otoroo.

televlaiona. coffee table, cu·
rllng irons , g1rdan disc.
tultcue. inside doors. aome
Clothing .

16 family yerd oolo, Oct . · :
3,4,6 &gt; Oollipollo Forry.

w;: ·

Va . at Powell 's Barber Shop .'. 'l'
~undreda and hundreds of · :
1tems, come early.
·

.,

�.
'

.

Page--: 14 .The Daily Sentinel
Renta ls
41

54

LAFF-A-DAY

Houses for Rent

5 rooms. bath, 1 child.
$125, reference• &amp; deposit.
Coil 614 -643-2644 .
3 bdr. home located on Rt.
688, 3Yl miles from town.
Green .School dist., $326
mo., 8150 dep. Call 614256 -6789 or 61 4 -266·
8205 .
,

inalu, .2 car garage . Call
614-367·0162 .
Very nice, spacious, unfurn.
in city, 3 bdr , buill-in icil·
chen, plua dinette, formal
dining room, SU'J porch,
double garage. no pets.
8276 plus dop . &amp; ref. Call
Earl Tope 614 -446-0690
dayo or 614 -446 -0161 ovo.

r(J,..J

~

"You never did find my
luggage .last ye~r."
r

t~=~=~====T~:;::===::::::==1

Recine area . Call 614·992·
6868 .
Clean, new paint. carpet.
etc . Six rooms and batt'!, full

b111ement. S200 a month·
(working or social security) .

814-992-3325 .
2 bdr house in Middlapon,

fenced yard, $190 mo .. plus
deposit &amp; utilities. Call&amp; 1 4-

.992-7177 ahor 6pm .
'3 'bedroom houae for rent.
No polo. Call 6 y· 949 ·
2424.
_:;;&gt;

Beautrtul hill-top, mountain
lodge style, . country home
on 30 rural acres. Stone
hearth, cathedral ceiling,
pluth carpeting. 3 badrooms, 1Y2 bath, full bile·
ment. 1369. per month. Call
614-742-2115 .
Small house for rent Crab
Creek Road , ref8renc11 required . 304-676 -6609 .
For rent trliler lots and
-house at Gallipolis Ferry. B &amp;
·o Trailer Park. 304-678·
2:&amp;44 call evenings.
House. located, At . 1, Ohio
River Road. Potter Creek
Road . Everette ~artz.
Rt. 1, locust Road. Point
Pleasant, W. Va .
5 room house Krodel Park,
;304-675 · 6832.
·3 or 4 bedroom houae. At. 2,
Rollin1town. 1 child ac·
copied, no polO. 304·8953436
House in Middlepon , Ohio,
partialv furniahed, n81r
'thopping and schools. If
JMorooted call 304-8823722 ;
Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished . AC, cable. no city
taxes ; beautiful river view, in
Kanauga. Fost.,.'s Mobile
Homo Park, 614 -446·1602.
Fuin . 2 bdr. mobile home on
Eastern Ave.. $175 mo .,
$100 dep. Coil 614·256·
1187.
2 bdr. North Gallia School
Diotrict . Call 614-38.7 7781 .
Nice 2 bdr , furnished, con·
vanlence location, on Rt. 7,
no inolde pob. Call 814·246
5B1B .
2 bedroom furnished mobile
home, •76 depotit required.
Utllitios pen illy paid. Phone
304-676-6512 ahor 6 PM .
2 br furnished trailer on Crab
Crook Rd . $160. per month.
304-676-1208.
2 bedroom mobile home for
rent, Jerrico Road area, call
304-676-64B3 ahor 5 PM.
Apartment
for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APART!,1ENTS ! Equal
Houting Opportunity)
monlhly rent starts at t1&amp;9·
for 1 bedroom and 6201 for ..
~ bedroom, deposit $200,
located near Spring Valley
Piau and Foodlond. pool
and Cable TV available.
office houn as pottible 10
am to 4 pmand7 pm to 9 pm
Monday· Fridav. Call 614448 · 2746 or leave
meaaage.

Fumlohodapt .. 2bdr .. 131 'h
Gallipolis, 1195 water
paid. Call 448-4416 after
Bpm.
,
740V. 2nd. Avo ., 3 bdr ..
, 190 mo .. 1 bdr., 1135.
Oopooit required . Call 6144411· 4222 botwHn 9 &amp; 5 .

2 bdr. apt .. fully carpeted,
Court St .. S326 mo .. ref.
a.11clop. Cell -614-446 -4926 .
Upablrw unfurnlahad apt ..
..~.... oil utilltlot paid, no
chlki,..., no pota. Call 814•4411-11137.

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special r~tes for Senior
Citizens. S130 . Equal Hout·
ing Oppoti!Jnitioo. 614-992
7721 .

1 bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely located. Contact Vii·
logo Manor In Mlddlapo_
n.
614 - 992-7787 . Equal
Hooting Opportunity.
One or two bedroom apart·
menta in Pomeroy . Fur·
niahed or unfurnished. Rent
negotiable. Call 614-992·
6723.
- -- - - - - - - - lw08
2 bedroom second floor apt.
Total electric . Acro11 from
Pomeroy Fire Station. Call
814-992 -7314 .
Unfurnished apanment for
rent in Syrocuoa. 614-9927689 ahtt 6 p.m.
Furnished Ap~rtment for
rent, no childre'n . Available
ahor Oct.3. Coli 614-992 2749.

APARTMENTS , mobile
hom... houses. Pt. Plealant
and Gom,ciuo. 814-448B221 .
2 br apartmenu In Henderson. 304-875-1972.
Middlepon. 2 bOdroom. fur nished opt, cell 1-304· 882·
2588 .
one and two bedroom unfurnished opto. oil utllltlea paid
in Point Pleaiant, 304·676·
7112 .
Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house · keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-448-0766 .

Sewing Mochlno Clou"Out
Sola. On Nocchl 11wlng
machines Mt color code dial
and wa1ch megfc happen.
Zig, sag, button holM any
slzo. blind hom, lnvlolble
blind hem, monogram, utin
ltltch. embroidery. 1 P·
plique. Hwl on button• and
anaps, 1op llltch. overcast•
lng, ·profeslionolttlch. elutlc ttltch. All, without old
faehion cams. Sews on all
materials, stretch, denim,
even leather. Mull sell by
Doc. 1, 1985. Thaoaaro now
machintl with 26 yur war·
ranty . Suggeated retail
*499.00. Now f19B .OO .
Call collect 614-386-8026
•nv day but Thuroday. von ..
Le~ch Home Furnishings,
Log'an, Ohio. Autl'torlzad
Necchl Dealer 28 yMre in
businou. tocol oarvico.

Furnished room S125 utili·
ties poid, 919 2nd. Avo ..
Gallipolis. single mate. Call
448-4418 aher 7PM .

Gas cookstove . •26 .
Wooden dinane Nt with 6
chairs . 160. Call -614-9492594.

46

One Ill of bunkbeds . EKcel·
lont condition . 11 00. Call
814-992-6441 .

Space for Rent

Mobile home lot, 12' •60' or
amallar. 175 water paid. 4th
6 Nell, Gall)pollt. Coli 4464416 after 8PM .

Kitchen cabinets. Good condition. Call 614· 992·372B
ohor 5:00 p.m.
'

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., Golllpolit. Now
It uMd wood-coal atovee. I
pc wood LA · auHe 1399,
Large trailer space on bunk beds , t199, antron
Bulavillo -Addlton Ad , Call. recliners 199, now 81 uoed
614-367-0232 or614·446- bedroom tuitot, tangos,
4266.
wringer Withers. &amp; 1h011.
Now llvlngroom ouH01 I 199
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo 1599, tampa, oloo buying
Park, Aouta 33, Nonh of cool &amp; wood 1\ovu. Coli

Mobile "home lot 1 mile out
Neighborhood Ad . •so
month plus dep. Coil 4461340.

Trailer spaces. small child·
ren accepted, Rt . 1, out
Locust Road bock of K &amp; K,
304-675-1078.

6 3 16 9
Il -~~·~~:·::;~·=;:::==814 44

54

Misc. Merchandise

Firewood-cutup ,.leba, 1
truck lood 1100, 2-1180 .
Mobile home lot for rent, 1 Pickup lood, you haul 115.
acre, county water, uptlic ""HEAP accopt~d . Cell 614·
syttem • .
tap, garden 245-6804.
apot. etec1rlc service. Between Pomeroy 11 nd Middle· Fuel all stove &amp; tank, 176 for
Port · on At. 7. $70.00 per both, good cond . Coli 614 •· w• Hamos. 1 258·8417.
month. 0 , m
304-676·4424 .
1
Pool hble ond balls 125,
tform door $26 , Call 614 446-3042.
M e r c h ~n d ise

a••

-...,.,=----- -

51 Household Goods

POOD USED APP~IANCES
Waahera, dryers. refrlgertt tors, rangtt. Skoggo Appliencu, Uppar River Ad .
boolde Stono Croll Motel.
814-446-7398 .
County Appliince. Inc.
Good uud appiJancBI and
TV sets. Open SAM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sat. 814· 446·
1899. 627 3rd . Avo. Gallipolls, OH.

,,

Valley Furniture, neW •
used. Large taction 6f qu,.l·
i1y furniture. 1216 Eastern
Ave. , Gallipolis.

nice corpetlng, no pet•.
water paid. Call 814-446. i • 7026.

Dlningroom fum. blonde
finish. Call 814-387-7248.

2nd. floor apt ..

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from 2 year old wood s. coal
*286 . to 1895. Tobloo, *50 fumonca. Uaod one winter,
and up to ., 26 . Hlda·a- will haat largo homo. Coil
be do, $390. and up to 814 367 0314
esso .. 1011 bodo 1146,1----· --·--Recllnars, $225 . to $376.. Porker 12
double barroll
U.mps from UB. to 1125.
pc. dlnottoa from 1109., to ·shotgun, lrm $860 . Call
435. 7 pc. $1B9 ond up. 1-8_1_4_-3_7_9_
-2_8_6_0_
. --Wood table with aix chaire 3 handmade quilts. Regular,
$286 to t746 . Dalk 1110 quoon and king size. Cell
up 10 1225 · Hutches. 1550 · 614-992-7686 or 614-992Bunk bod complete with
mattrotoaa, 12711. 'and up to ..2_3-'-1-B~.- - - - $395. Boby boda, *110. 1·
-lcManrenes or box aprfnns, Price War/ Flashing arrow
full
•
ljgn 60% offll 1259 comor twin, 183.. firm, t73. plotol Lighted non-arrow.
end 183. Quoon 1111, 1225. 1247. Unllghto• ., 99.
4 dr. chtato, *49. 6 dr.
"
chatll, $59. Bed fromes, !Free lottorsiiSeo locally:
UO.and $211 .. 10 QUn . Gun 118001423-0163, anytime.
cabintlt, U50. Gaa· or ·
oloctrlc rongaa 1375. Baby 2 Kin9 ·wood ond coal
mehtOIIOI, $26 6 *36, bod heaters. One with blower.
Both UOO. Call 814-949, lremoo '20, $26, 6 130. 20B3.
_
kingfroma 150. Gqod,toloc·
tlon of bedroom suites.
GUN REPAIRS.
rockers. metal cabln•h. TONY'S
hot
dip
robluoing,
oil typoa of
he~lloorda $38 6 up to
gunamlth
work,
fast
&amp;eNica.
165.
304' 676-4631.
·················
Used Furniture ·· Me1al
office desks. 3 miles out Stool building daalorahip
whh Majo~ Manufacturer·
8ulav~lo Ad. Opan 9am to
Salas and Engineering ~up­
&amp;pm, Mon. thru Sat;
port.
Starter ada furnished.
614-446-0322
Some areal taken . Call
13031769-3200 Ext. 2401 ,
1 Whirtpool electric range·
new, continuoue cleaning. Metal office desk, kay nice
almound, 8200. 1 uud swivel chair, and 'rough 4
hldo-o-bod, good, $100 . drawer file cabinet,
Cellohor 6, 614·446-8193 . I 130,00. 304-372-2801 .

1---------

1 end 2 bedroom furnlohed
apartments for rent. Utilitia
paid. Cell614-992-6084 .

e&lt;~nv~~r~lent to Silver Bridge,

bdr.

Auto Pem
&amp; AccBuories.

' Firewood for ula. Cal\ 814387-0121 or 614-367 01B1 or 614-367-0401.
Air temp oil · fired model
6210 · 2 furnance unit
100,000 BTU excalltnt con ditloil'UQdonly 1Ya'l811ons.
New 1600 otklng *260.
._'C
__
al_l8_1_4_- 2_5,...8_-_19_11_9_._ _
'·
US stove magazine· coal
stove model 17F hot blelt,
neverbeenflred, ntwcondi·
tlon, 21' round diameter 34 '
high, colt now 1350, liking
1160. Con olao bum,wood.
Cell814 ·256-1959.

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

10011 ctNn hllrdwood, delivered and stacked, *70 face
cord. 140 hell, 136 pickup.
Caii614·44B·7524.

Firewood- opllt. llack....
end dallllerod for I 30 a forgo
load. CoD 614-448-7993 or
614·367·0201 ohot e.
ClM Aefrigorotor worka
'good *20. HHon lrucll roor
'end 1110. Coil 614· 446·4851 .
c

196B Cougar &amp; 19'19 Fiat"
both oxc. cond. Call 814446-4109.

2010 John Doore tractor
lo~Vhourw, good rubber, 6 h .
John Deere bush hog,
13,896. Coil 01 4-2B8 ·
6622 .

1- - - - - - - - -

\Farmall M. Tractor, new rear
tlrao. good thopt, Call814992·2221 ·anytime.

1- - - - - - - - -

1981 AMC Spirit DL hatch·
beCk. loaded with' extraa,
exc. cond.. will Hll or
consider trade. for truck of.
equal value. Call 614-2455040.

A 5HOIU
TIM E:

"ATE-R ...

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

WHAT~ TAll

8\. Home
\,! mprovements

AIJWJA'H ~vG~-

I
1I I

~YUIRPT

ANNIE

m

Report

1

•
-fl.
10· 2.

f\LLEY OOP

Gramps, Ljou're I guess we all
spi Iling ashes on naq a I

the chair again!

BARNEY
I SHORE
:ENJOVED TH'
VISIT,

FORGET.
LOWEEZV· ·

'IOU CAN. TAKE
TH' COTTON OUT OF

'lOUR EARS NOW

:3~0=4:-0::7:6:-3:1:9~0:.~=~:

EVER
SINCE

YOU GREW'

L.ES6!

.

~A;:-:6-M:::-:F:-u-rn-:lt,_u_ro_M_o_nuf_a_
c _'
turing, St. At, 7, Crown
City, Oh . . Call 114-25111470, coil Eve. 614· 4483438 . Old &amp; no-w•
:;
Uphooterod.

--------------~ '

ll) Wheal of Fortune
Gl ()J Price Is Right
Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
[MAX] Album Flesh
8 :00 0 (}) (7J High~ay to
Heaven !CCI Jonathan temporarilv sheds his angeli.c
powers to serve as a po~c~
man"" with Marl&lt;. 160 min .l
II) Flipper
II) MOVIE: 'Tobruk'
•
l]).(iJinoldersiCCJNick
and Mackey investigate an
arson·for-profit scheme in
the world of high fashion.
160 min .l
Cl) ® Stir Crazy Skip
· and Harry help an Canadian
Indian chief solve the puzzle
to a long-lost buried treesure . 160 min.) •
())
MacN~I/Lehrer ..
Nowohour
(jj) Sol!lh Africo Aepom A
varied oJCaminadon of the
. South African crisis offers
views from several aspects,
including geography and his·
tory. 12 hrs.l
81 MOVIE: 'Far Pavilllons'
Part 3
.
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Country'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Thil Lonely
Guy'
9 :00 0 ill Cll Aell Town
II) 700 Club
CD Top Aa'* Bo•ing from
Atlantic City
(I) 81 &lt;lJ Dynasty iC.C;I
0 (I) ® Charlie 6
Company !CCI Charlie fears
for Diana's safetY when viol·
ence breaks out at her
school.
()) South Africo Aeporto A
varied ~xamination of the
South African crisis offers
views from several aspects.
including geography and history. 12 hrs.l
9 :30 0 Cl) ® George euma
Comedy Week A man returns from the dead to col·
lect on his life insurance
,
policy .
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Big Hond
lor the Uttla Lady'

a

OH-DON'T '

. \Ill

J I I ) " ( J X)

(AnsW9fs tomorrow}
Ya81erday's l Jum~lea: ~BB6T PROXY INFLUX OAMASK
Answer: What a cl'llp on the shoulder usually IsJUST PLAIN "BARK"

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

Starting the hand
on the wrong foot

NORTH
• KJ 3 Z

By Jamea Jacoby

•u

AND, FORTUNATELY .FO~ ALL OF US, FALSE!!

• A 10 Z

• 6 4 32

••••

a•

di6MA _,.,(
b, THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I llatUe

43

Summon

DOWN
1 Excel

memento

5 - she
blows!

2 F)Jel
3 Seed

9 African

coating

4 Queen

antelope
10 Held a
second

in India

5 Hot platter

seS8iOn

stand

6 Macho males Yeoterday'o Answer
7 Elec. unit
lie
·
8 Effed
. 22 cam e 30 Honey
ll Foot lever
boss
badger
14 Easily
23 Sea eagl e 33 Coarse file
chewed 24 Hawaiian 34 Town near
16 Dlfferen~
tree
Caracas
20 He was
26 · - and
35 Work crew
leather
"lionized"
Tillie"
36 "1'!1• Razor's
20 Abominate21 Corrected 28 Coachman's 24 Infamous
38 Afr.
12 Related
13 Convey
15 Assuage
17 Passing
grade
18 Author
Deighton
19 Make

1 0:00 ()) 81 (j) Arthur Hailey's
Hotel ICCI Peter" s life is
threatened in a car wreck
and relatives of a young girl
contest a will that awards
custody of the child toe gay
·man. 160 min.)
0 (I) (j) Equalizer
(jj) Wore Albert: Oasle and
Ruby Spaclel This satirical
play depicts the se&lt;;ond
coming of the Messiah in Johannesburg, South Africa.
160 min.)
1!11 Odd Couple
·
[H90l MOVIE: 'Sheena'
!CCI
10:30 II) Ta Be Announced
(IJ Major Loogue Baaaball :
,Atlanta at Lot Angeleo
il]) Nawowatch
1!11 INN Newt,
11 :00 0 ill Cl) Cll 0 Cl) (j) Ill
(j) Newo
CD Man From U.N.C.L.E.
()) European Journal
illJ An Uneertoln H,..t
!CCI Tho problems of agriculture in the United States,
as well as new scientific
methods of f.arming, are dis·
cussed . 160 min.l
Ell Benny Hill Show
IMAX) MOVIE: 'Cannon'
11 :30 0 ill Cll Tonight Show
(I) Sportocenter
I]) Now Newlywed Gome
Cl) T,J. Hooker Hooker's tither arrives to assist
his son on a supermarket
robtiery case . (60 min .l
·
()) Letenlght America

pirate

25 l,ove (it.)
26 Pulitzer

Prize

novelist
(1918)
271nert gas
28 Less fatty
29 Printlng
need
30Siower
(mus.)
31 Old Tokyo

32 Mediocre
37llescendant 1 --1--1ofl.evl

39 8omanlan
Elty
. 40

"'

Pootpone

41 Berlin
creation
4ZTrust

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONG.FELLOW

a

One letter stands for anollter. In Ibis sample 'A· is used
lor lhe three L's, X lor lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apotltt opbes, lhe le"'ith and lormalion of the wonls are all
hlnta. Each day lhe code letters are different.
C&amp;YPTOQUO'I'J!_

(j)
ABC
News
Nlghtllne
• One Step Beyond ·
12:00 (I) Beat of Groucho .
CD' Muda sponsloot.
(I) Entorteinment Tonight
1m MOVIE: 'A Fine

...

1..1-11

EAST
It was lucky that North and South . ~ro 6
.Q98754
had failed to find their 4·4 diamond lif, • 9 8 7
.6513
the outstanding diamonds ·split • Q 1og 8
+J
badly. Six clubs had a chance, but de· • s 1 6
• •9 3
clarer had to play with care. But first
SOUTH
a word about !he auction.
Two clubs was strong, forcing and
.KQJ .
perhaps artificial. The two-diamond
tAK 75
response was a bid waiting for South
.AKQJ 10 5
to clarify his type of twQ-Ciub bid.
Vulnerable: East-West
Three clubs·sbowed a long club su1t
Dealer:
South
and a band good enough to play game.
Three spades was natural, and South WHt
Nortb East
bid the' no-trump game. Finally, after
North had invited slam with four no- Pass
Pass
trump, South bid six clubs.
Pass
Pass
u
I don't like the nine of hearts as an Pass
4 NT Pass
ope1ning lead. U declarer needed to dis- . Pass
Pass
Pass
spade ace lor his contract,
chance lor the defense might
Opening lead: • 9
be to set up a quick diamond trick.
Wben tbe heart was led, declarer won
In his hand, drew trumps and ducked a
diamond. East won tbe Jack and returned a spade. South ruffed, played a
high diamond (revealing the bad split)
and thea proceeded to make the con·
.,
tract ·on a squeeze. He .cashed all his amond, declarer would have won that
clubs, discarding a diamond and two trick; drawn trumps, and then probamore spades from dummy, and then, bly ducked a diamond as before. But
played the heart king and a heart to West, not East, would be on lead. West
dummy's ace. West had the choice of could continue lhe suit, knocking out
chucking the spade ace or unguarding South's other high diamond and dethe diamonds.
prlving declarer of the comrilunica11 West's opening lead had been a di· lion needed for the squeeze to work. .

®T..I

RELATIVELV TRUE !
'MARGINALLY FALSE!
APPARENTLY TRUE !

gested by the above canoon.

Printanswerh818: " (

Gl

PEANUTS

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suo-

a

ll@b It; ·
Rl'LATIY~ .. .

BASEMENT
• WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references ·
furnished. Fr" estimates.
Call collect 1·614-2370488. doy or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

0

II K II

0

I]) PM Magazine
(I)
Courtohlp/Eddle's
Father
CD Sportacentor
1]). Mary Tyler Moore
I]) Ento11Binment Tonight
(7J Wheal of Fortune
Cl) INiteel of Fortune
()) Second City TV
!» Newa
illJ •
MacNeil/Lehrer
· Newshour
Ill &lt;iJ Divorce Court
fJ) Jeffarsons
7 :30 0 ill Now Newlywed
Game
• (I) Pleaoe Don't Eet
Daisies
(j) PKA Full Contact
Karate:
Sallford and Son
I]) D Cl) Family Feud
(7J Jeopardy
())
Nightly ~Business
7:00

e

Hl-rldo lntlke and Holley, 4
barroll corburotor for omoll
block Ford no. Proaourw
ploto &amp; fly "!hill lor big
block Ford UO. Call 81 4·
379-2860 • .

0

Ill Taxi

S1~rv 1 ces

1984 Corvette convonlble,
327-300 HP, 4 spood, good
D.ond M. Contncloro. Vinyl
3 point disc. 1296. John condition. Call 814-446- siding,
56
Pets for Sale
replacement win ·
Doore 10 h. Tronaport diac. l ·4-16_o_o_h_e_r_&amp;_:o_o_P_M_._ _ dowa. lnaulating. roofing.
-::-:----,,..,.--,---,-=
plckar . 1260.
Br'·arpatch Kannolo All- $696. Corn
· k or. $696 . c• 11 19B3 Buick LeSobro Lmtd,.I new and remodeling. con·
breed grooming. "door- Corn pc
crata. Call 304-773-6131 .
"
814 843 •155
exC'IIIent condition, 4 dr.• al
'
outdoor .boording fecllltiea.
__
• __
'options, 33,000 miles. Cell
English Cocker Spaniol. 3B8 John Daoro 2030 tr&amp;ctor,
1 4 . 4 4 8. 416 0 oft or J.and l. Installation. RoOt9790
Ing, vinylsidlng,stormdoora
dlooal with front onloador, 6:00PM .
·
and windowa. frH esti·
good
cond,
call
304-468:
1
-Dragonwynd Canary Ken.
mot01. Coil 614-9ln-2772.
19.7B Chevrolet Monzo
nel. CFA Himalayan, Penian 1574 ohor 6:00 .
Spider. Can 'betHn at Dan's
and Sieme11 kinens. AKC
COLEMAN WATER WELL
Chow puppies." Call 446 - 198&amp; International tractor, Exxon In Pomeroy. See
DRILLING
plow• ond dioc. 304-676· _B_•n_n~v_H_Ic_k_e_t._ _ __
3B44 ·ohor 7PM .
Pump 11111, 'llrvice. Regis·
2720 .
1973 Ford Galoxv 600 . 4 tor... in Ohio. All work
AKC Doberman puppy 7
door, hardtop. Beautiful. guerontood. Call 304-273waekl old, black &amp; ten, 63
Looks· and drives like new. 2811 . Ravonswoo,d. W. Vo.
Livestock
Champion Pedigree, $100.
Original owner 80 years old.
Call614-367·7628 .
RON'S Television Service.
F~rida car. Low mileage. No
House calls on RCA, Quazar,
rust.
Fully
oquippod.
Call
AKC Buoatt pups, 2 males. Team- 1 more with filly colt, 614·949-2568 .
GE . Spaclallng In Zenith.
quality hounda, . shot &amp; 1 gelding ride or work, very
Caii304-676·239B or 614·
wormed, heallhy B. buuti ~ gentle. 3 harne11aa. one
.
448-2464.
'77 Chevy Coprlc Clouic.
lui, 1 red&amp; white, 1 tri- ooddle. Ceti814-266-134B. . 89.000 actual milet, nice
colored. Call 1-614-667·
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
Good; growthy, gentle Here- "'"· 304-876-4181.
6941.
romoval. Call 304 -675 ford club calve1. Butter
1331 .
1976
Cutle11,
very
good
AKC Siberian Huoky puppy, Herefofd Farm, lower River &lt;Ond, 304-876-3119.
grily &amp; block, et 26. Call Rd . Call 614-256-8518 .
AINGLES'S SERVICE. ex8 ft. pool table. ]A inch slat&amp;. 304-882-3268.
perienced
carpenter, electfi·
good cond, 304-8B2-333B .
Rag. full blood limoulin 1979 Pinto. 63.000 mllea,' clan, ma1on, painter. roof!food
ahepo
.
304·
676
·
Regiatered Miniature bulls, 747 trodemerk, lending !Including hot lor
XMAS GIFTS. Lowry Genie Schnauzer puppiH. Dark mark Jtock yearlings and 2 3476.
oppllcetionl 304·875·2088
Organ, axe cond, •8oo.oo. tall and peppar. 1160. oach. y•r old. Chottnut Hill Uor 875-7368.
1986 Big Rod 250 barley No checks . Cl'tampion mouoin, At. •2 Box 86. 1977- Dodga Monoco, PS,
rode. 1977 KZ 850. low bloodline. Colt 614-992 - Crown City, Oh, Coil 614- PB. AC. n-tlroo, exc con d. Starks Tree and .lawn Ser·
13,600.00 . Phone 304-896
mileage, runs good. make 2807 .
256·1959 .
vlco. 11ump removal. 3043415 .
offor-mull tall. . 3'04-882576-2010.
2668.
•
Fioh Tank and Pet Shop, Robblll: F,.nch · Lop and
2413 Jackson Avenue,. Californian, alive or dre11ed, '66 Chavolle, good cond, Rotary or cable tool dr"ling.
new paint. with extra 11t of
. PRICE WAR I Fleshing arrow Point Ploasanl, 304-676, . 304ft58-1528 .
mag wheela with tires, Most wells completed same
1i9n 50 percent offl 1259 2083. fish, birds and more.
11,800.00. Phone 304-B95 day. Pump saleeandaervlce.
complotel Lighted non304-895·3602
3415
.
arrow, 1247 . Unlighted
64 Hay &amp; Grain
*199 . !Free loHart) Sea 57
Musical
'77 Chevrolet Monto Corio. Building ·ond, romodaling,
locally : 1-800-423 -0163
Instruments
305 tngino, PS, PB, tilt rooflna. masonery, electri·
anytime.
Mixed hoy $1 ,10 bola. Call whool, AM -FM CIIIOitl, cal. fromlng, flooring, dry
614-378·2171 . .
.
power windows. new ~r11.' wall. bethrooms, kitchens,
Colored TV, 304 - 675· Hammond organ suitable for
small church or new stu·
Rally wheele, ex eond. painting and plumbing. 3046108 .
dent.
Can
be
aeen
at
Cente12.600.00.
304-876-4230 675-2440.
Transpnrl at1nn
--------nary
UM
Church.
Call
614doys,
304
· 876 - 4B6;1
Baby swing, Infant car teat,
evenlngt.
play vard. stroller and 446-2B66 .
92 · Plumbing
. . 71 . Autos for Sale
wa!kor, 304-773-9143.
&amp; Heating
Story &amp; Clark piano, like - - - - - - - -'74 Chevy Nova, one Bluetlck Coonhound, roglatored
Bookahell water bod, queen new. Call between 6 &amp; 8PM,
aquorrll dog, Wolker CoonTOP CASH paid for '80
tize, pads. 34 buffert, 614-446 -4914.
hound . 004-876-7433 after
model and newer ueed cars.
hooter. oxq cond, 304-676CARTER'S PLUMBING
Flute. used onetehool term. Sm~h Buick-Pontiac, 1911
8:00PM.
4203 .
.
AND HEATING
good condition. Worth Eaotom Avo .. Oolllpolla. Call
Co(. Fourth and Pine
' B1 lour cyl Eagle, 304-675Gat furnace. Luxaire. forced $170 . Make en offer, 304- 614-448· 2282.
Gallipolis. Ohio
2B69.
oir, 125,000 btu. etoo .oo . 675-2720·.
Phone 614-446·3B8B or
complete. Six drawer vanity
77 Mustang MW penst new
614-446-4477
'78 Oldo 9B, ol'l"lrlc dooro
with mirrow •36 .00. 304- PeaveyT-1&amp; gutair,1 yrold, tires, new paint, excellent
includu modified bridge. lhope. $2,000. Cell 614and windows, very good JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
875-3962 .
hord· shell case, $276 . Elec- 258-6417.
cond, IBOO.OO firm. 304· lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355, Galll•
676.1892 .
•
Uaed truck tires and tubet, tra X-280 Workingamen
polla. Call 614-367·0676 .
7 - 60 - 18 LT. 304 - 675- Natural. 1 yr old. Includes 1978 Chryllor New Yorker,
10ft ehell c11e, strap two U ,900. 2 door, block-lilver
1976 'Coprlco Cle11ic. PS,
4292 .
cordo, $260. 1967 Red Interior, high mileage, good
PB, PW, tilt IIHring wheel, 83 ' Excavating
Serlou.1 about lOs i ng Qlarlde pearl 6 piece drum cond., lood.... Call 61 4-446· AC, run• good, 304·6763124 aher 6:00PM.
weight1 Contact Gloria set'. includes 'two cymbala. 7404.
Grato. At. 2
Box 2B2. ball pedals, atnads. enare - - - - - - - - Good-1 Ellcavating, baseLotan, ' W. Va . 265263, case and c11es, 12&amp;0. JBL 197B Chevrolet Camara
ments. footera, driveway•.
72
Design
speaker
cablnota
AC,
PS,
PB.
AM-FM
radio,
Trucks
for
Sale
304-8B2-3162 .
11ptic tankt, landscaping.
, with now 16 inch 300 wan• 100.000 mil••· good condl Colt anytimo 614-448One white bedroom suite, • Pevo tpoak•ra. Pair $226. tion. Coil 814-446-8209
1977 Chevy 1to~truckwlth 4537, Jamos L. Davison. Jr.
304-773-9127
ask
for
Rog
B-6
wookdoys.
one aingla bed with boJC
16 ft. aluminum car hauler owner.
sprlnga and mattress. Elect· Paualey.
bad, clean . 197B Dodge
1973 Hondo Civic groat gu
ric fireplace. Two dehumidi ·
motor home cab &amp; chai:els1 Dozer Work land clearing.
car. new radlels. exhaul1, . ton dual wheels. Call 814· landscaping, etc. Free etti·
fiers. Onerockingchalr . Two
Fruit
new 14 In snow tirtl with 58
Sanyo lloroo, Qlaoktrl, dt·
2B6-6622.
motu. CaM 614-446-8038
11uda. Womans golf clubs.
&amp; Vegetables
po~ble, 1400. Call 614or 814-992-7119 anytlma.
304-882-2796 .
448· 1749,
1978 F-100. nrnt good,
good body, H95. Coii614- J.A.R . Conltructlon Co ..
Uaed auto Maytag waaher Canning peachea now avail· 1S89 Plymouth. Sotelllte
266·68B9!'
.
Rutland, Oh . 614-742 ·
end dryer. antique bed and able. open 7 devs WHk. cell 34,000 octual mllu, good
2903. Beaement1, Footer•.,
chalra, treadle typo sowing for prices 11 supply 11 running cond., neW carbure·
Chov. Silvarodo 85, dr. blue, Concrete work, BackhOe'•·
machine and other mise limited , 304-773-6721 . tor. now tires. 1500 or boll
short bod, lo... er. 9,000 Dozer ~ Dltchor, Dump
ltama. 304-676-1080.
milts, u .c . cond. Will take tfuekl, &amp; water·gas· ~ewer·
Bob's . Market, Mason, W. offer. Coll814·388·9043 .
trodl, 614-379 -2766.
Vo.
electrical lines.
2 ton window air cond.
Camero LT *950. Call614almost new, 220 volta. GE, Appl01 all voriotlot, U.OO 388- 8841 .
1977"EI Comlno, fair cond,
1376.00 . AIIO IIIOrtment bushel . Now open dolly. All
cell 304-876-2789.
85 General Hauling
of uMd furniture. D. &amp; W. fruita. vegetables. Jacka 1977 Mustang II nooda body
Hom~s. 304·675-4424 .
'74 Chiw pickup !lot bad,
Matl&lt;ot, t:tl· 36, Honderaon. 8o angina work, good tlraa,
auto, PS, P8, V-6 onglno,
new motor and 1r1n1mis· James Boys Water Service .
· Shroddod bark 120.00
blue, 1500. Call 614·446slon, *460.00 . '76 Honda Alto pools filled. Call 814pickup load . . Hordy ovar7141.
760, axe cond. 304-B95- 266·1141 or 814-446 green ahrubll10 .00eech .1i
3482 .
1175 or 614-446-7911 . ·
h Scotch Pine $24.00 ooch .
84 Chevy Chavetto auto,
2 mil.~• - '.north of Silver Wanted to buy, ull or trade AM·FM lterto, rear window , lntomatlonal dump truck, Ken's Wottt Service. Wells.
:;~~~U&amp;~~g~~~ Rt. 7 • Ohio. guno, knivoa, &amp; coins. Will defog""'· 4 dr. *6 ,1100. Coli
cillornt, pools filled. Phono
pick up. Coll614-446- 34 491 -:&amp;~14~·~24~6=-·-:-66:-:6-5::-.--:-:-:-:-::
614 -357-0623 or 814 -3871
73 Vans &amp; 4 W , D.. _774 1 night or day.
79 VW Robblt 2 dr.. 68.000
a•rt • Peanon '46 lb bow 0' 814 -446 -2799 · ..,..,,
130.00. Ma~ln 22 col rWio '74 Ford Movorlck, body mi.; olr, "M·FM CUHIII,
Waugh's Water Service .
.• 40 .00 . 19711 Ford pickup,
tinted glau, rur defroster,
Wells. claterns, pools. Flit,
rough,
260
engine,
PS,
outo
now
tiattery
ond
Una.
extra
.
1979
Ford
E·250
van,
8
oyl,
wooden bad .. . go.91l bod~....
c
4
auto. new tires, 37,000 rolloblo · Htvico. Coil 6141
runs good, tano.1iO. 304- trena.goodmotorandtrana·
11
81
1
mision, 1226.00. '77 Volko- c ""· .,.. ..ahor
- 7PM
·
- octuol mlloa, 304-•711 - 256- 1240 or 614 - 268 8B2-36444.
wagen nooda fuol diotribu- 446 ' 45 D2
"
·
v
4230 dlyo, 304-875-4863 1130. Reasonable rates .
'
tor, 4 apood, 39 mlloa per 1 982 Olda Cutluo avonlnga.
Haul
limestone.
sand,
-gra·
55 Building Supplies
gal.
fuel injection BroughPS
om 2 door, B cyl .. - ~~:;=;:======
gas. 1450.00,
304-576 -2887.
vel,dirt, bulk or bag fanilizer
IUIO,
, PB, CNioo, tilt,
and
lime. E•celtlor Salt
po-rwlndowa.doorlocka. 74 Motorcycln
-11. all optlona, *6,600. 1- - - - - - - - - Works inc. 838 E. Moin St.,
Building Matoriala
Pomeroy. 814-992· 3891 ,
f mn Supplit!S
Coll 614-446-7380.
Block, brick, oewor pipet.
window•. lintels. etc .
&amp; [IVI!SIIII.k
1982 Honda V-45 Mogna
1878 Cordoba. o·lot of,_ 760CC, 11.000 mllea. Muot
Cloude Wintoro. Rio Grenda,
porto. t:.11 614-446-3393.
Upholstery
0 . Coil 814-245·5121 .
tall, 11 ,476. Coll814· 448- ~7
084* or 814-441-7602.
1977 Corvllte •••· cond ..
fully lo...od, IIJOCial odltlon
TRISTATE
whMit, 4 now tlrea. Call 78
Auto "Parts
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
thor 5, 614·992·232T."
1163 Soc. Ave .. Clolllpolio
&amp; Acceuorles
614-446-7833 or 1114-448 : •
1833.

·u....,_.----

II

I]) (I) Cll 0 (I) ® Ill
~No""
(I) $100,000 Noma That
Tune
I]) Mazda Sportslook
(I) Andy Griffith
()) 3-2-1, Contact !CCI
illJ Electri~ ,Cooripany
~ Diff'rent Strokes ·
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Running
Breve'
"""
6 :30 0 (}) (Il NBC NiiJiltly
News
•
(I) CarOl Bumen and
Frlonde
I]) Aeroblcs-"&amp;odios in
Motion
Cll CarOl Bumatt
I]) G1 &lt;iJ ABC Nowa !CCI
0 (I) (j) CBS News
())Dr. Who
illJIIOdy Electric

6:DO

\

I KANCH

EVI!NING

1973 Mini motorhomo, 20
ft .• ~ new air conditioning &amp;
tlroa, good cond,. "16,760.
Coil 614·44.8·4230. ,
19B1 Pontiac Grond Prix LJ
black, axe. oond. Mull oall,
16,500. Cell 814·4480644 or 814-446· 7802.

.

~ ~ ~~~ by Henri Arnold and Bob Leo
Unocrombki ''-tour Jumbloo,
How much do I owe you
one lellor to each - l o form
hom last time?
tour ordinary lfiOttl&amp;

WEDNESDAY
10/2/S!;i_

Camping
Equipm111nt

1977 Dodge Mini Motor
Homo, 304-675-6613 or
304-B76·4193.

4000 Ford • dleul tra&lt;:tor,
clean, new rubber. Klllbros
275 grain body. Aluminum
grain elevator. fHd· o-matic
grain box. corn picker. New
Idea manure ipraader. Cell
614-286-8622 .
'

15 .

ftftl)~ filft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

Viewi~g

Huntetl Special 14ft, 1977
· American Pilgrim 1 travel
troller. Cill Stove 304-6756046 or 876-7666.

79

The Daily

Television

h:

oxcellont
cond .. 1126. Call
614-446.•B326.

fl"·

2 bedroom apartments.
New Haven, WVe . Newly
remodeled. In town. 614992 · 74B1 .
'

45

Pomeroy-Middlepor:t, Ohio

1977
Huntera Special 14
American Pllgfim travel
trailer. Coil Steve 304-8766046 Or 676-7668 .

Solid Beechwood drop leaf
din(Jlg table. with 2 chairs.
like, . 176. Fischer h...,.
lloroo with builtin oquallzor• .
CIIHIII da&lt;:k, o ·olby, metal
tapti caspacity, apeakers.

.

.

· 4 speed . Sa~lnaw trimamie·
olon, coil ohar 3:00 PM.
304-876-3788. '
.

78

Bluo L11y Boy woll hugger
recliner, like new, $200. Call
614-446-3556 .

Garage door over head,
7x10 ft. with l'terdwere.
1176. Coll614-246-6062.

Furnished eHiciency $185.
utiltieo paid, 920 4th AVe.
Gallipolis, adulll. Call 446·
4418 ahor 7PM.

Mollohon Furnlturo, Rt. 7,
Kanauga. 1 yr. " " llnonce.
Coli 614-4411-7444 . 8 pc.
wood livingroom suite
•400.

2

IF c;ATS UAD TNEI!l
OWN MU5EIJM ...

76

.

October 2, 1985

51 Household Goods

Pomeroy. Large Iota. Coli
614·992-7479,)

" ~th.

•J

ID·Z

House and bath, largayard in

2 bdr. apt., good location,
redecorated. utilities partly
paid. Call304-876 ·6104 or
, 304-676-5386 .

Wright ·

KIJ'"N' CARLYLE

Gold antique eatln .lined
draperies with valance and
ohootl 160'x84'. Coil 814 446-3754 ahor &amp;PM.

Close to hospital 3 bdr., 2

Nicely furniehed mobile
home, eH. apt .. central air
and heat in city. adults only .
Call614-446·0338.•

Building Supplies

King size water bed mat·
trail. liner 6. heater. Call
614·266-6029, prico 160."

baths, brick home. full base-

44

55

Swinger •ewing machine, in
very good condition. gbinet
model . Screens slidet. bo•
for olldeo. Coil 614·4463647. .

• 2 bdr . duplex 126 State St .
Deposit &amp; ref. rtpAuired. Call
814-446-0254 ."'&lt;·

42

Misc. Merchandise

King wood a. coal stove
$225. Mogle Chef 91iutove
$100. True Value 40 gol. 11•1
hot" woter tank $70. Coil
814-992-2770 .

Near Waterloo· farm house.

Newly redo
house,
536 ~orated
budget form
get,1300 per mo .. Cheshire
area, ref. &amp; dopooit. Call
61 4·446 ·3760 or 614 ·3670322 .

Wedn!Jsday. October 2, 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

'

10-J

..
., X NTX, DZ

XC

WF

NXWD

Nl

KD

Modne..'

il]) Star Huatler/Sign Off
• (iJ Eyo on Hollywood
• Gunamol&lt;e
'
IHBO) MOVIE: 'Wild Ufe'
•
.!Cr.i_
12:30-. il'l
t.to Night with
David letttrlnM T onlght's
guest is comedian Jeff Alt."
men. (60 min.)
II) Bill Cosby Show
Ill Tennia MlgiZine

czi

G QUXSIHIQU, DT ; KRN
.I

JCIP

PGH

XC . -

UIP ;

X ZI C' "N

AUDDTYR SC DHH

GSPGFH

KTD G JX C B
,

'

IS X M D T
·D Z P (\ T Z H
YM~enlq'l CI'J'tOq'aote: N~ ~ PF.RFECf ARE 1'HERE N&lt;Yr SPOTS ON TilE ~? - ANON.

�.

,.

'

Page.._16-The Dai

Sentinel

,

.

(Continued from page 1)
mt a "natUral science" but that
the dev.eidpmentai ageo(7-8. flle lias obseiVatlons and tests .determine
a SOCial quotient of 00, the witness the results.
said.
The witness sald it is possible for
Howder then referred to res1ilts of someone being tested to fake a lack
the Ink blot test, a measure of ol understanding. He was asked to
emotional and mental abllltles.. a explain the expression "test-wise"
personality test. He described the since tre defendant had been given
dPfendant as . falling !l'lto · the tests on several occasions before.
"Concrete" thinking pattern.
Asked If he had compared his test
Asked about whether he had results with others, Howtter said be
reviewed resultsofotheqlsycholog· had and that there was "no
leal tests given the defendant to slgnlllcant discrepancies In my
check consistency, the witness sald testing and previous testing."
. thathe had and thattreresultswere
Asked by ' Toy It Ire mUdly
consistent.
retarded would have Ire ability to
Causes of retardation were dis- know right from wrong, Howller
cussed by Howder and he listed • answered "yes.: He also said that
damage to tre central neiVous the mildly retarded would have tile
system by such things as birth ablllty to recall events, but not Ume
Injuries, rheumatic fever, 'down frames. ·
syoorome, and iteuroological dis·
Questioned about tl)eposslbUltyof
oroers, congenital effects, passing the defendant being psychotic,
from one generation to another, Howder said that It was his opinion
either genetically or ol a soclo- that hew~ not suspect psychotic at
economic nature, and ~ettmes.a the time he saw him.
· mixture of causes.
.
·
. Toy then questioned the witness
Asked whether he ha made a · on whether someone ot the mental
determination about Taylor's retar· ageol7 to 9 could coverup their le\lel
dation, the witness answered "no, of lritelllgence witti' Howder redue to a lack of history on Mr. spondlng that It might be possible.
Taylor. ~!&lt;edy Story on the The attorney then referred to a
thlnklng. . · s of the retarded.' report trOm another psychologist
Howder
d It Is difficult for who had examined Taylor quoting a
i;Oillrone retarde\::1 IOfl\akegenerall· portion "suffldently smart to pres·
zatjons, to Infer, thattheycannotget ent a goodtront."Asked whether he
a focus on sameness, and that they agreed with that state, Howder said
i;Oilletlmes have · problems with he 4Jd not.
hearing what is sald, ~aluatlng
Toy then turned to the matter of
pictures and papers.
whether
Taylor Is capable to
· Asked specifically about Taylor
function
on
his own. Howder spoke
and his retardation and abilities,
of his dependence on his motrer and
!lowder responded ''I do rot believe
that he feels the
commented
Mr.Taylor can understand abstract
defendant
Is
ootcompetent
to Uveon
concepts. Mr. Taylor cannot reason
his
own
and
suggested
something
In
lndu·cttvely. "
With that, the Witness was the way of a group home and a
presented a copy of the statement c1 sheltered workslxlp atmosprere.
The attorney again referred to
rights read toanyonecharged with a
reports
of other psycholo~ts,
crime. Howder read tberlghtsaloud
Including
Dr. NanM!cklewlxluSted
and then was asked to make a
judgement based on his training and Taylor as "mildly" retanled, while
exj:erlence as to wrether the . another referred to "motivated
'defendant could unc:IPrstand tre forgetting." Howder testified In
response Ill questilns about learn·
statement of rights. Howder retng,
that the defendant Is capable c1
sponded that since Mr. Taylor taus
(nto the bottom hall of mild learning by oolng and therefor'
could probably shoot a firearm. ·
retardation, he "would have dlffi·
1n redirected examination, the
culty In understanding Ire wording
question
ct. ma)lngerlng again came
on the card."
·
Asked about Taylor's susceptlbll· up, and Howder testified that there
Jty Ill manipulation by others, have been cases In the post when
he's been able to detemnlne If a
Howder gave tbeoplnlon that be felt
person Is mallnge1ng based on
Taylor could be eesUy manipulated,
observations and skills he'SJ been
"that be does not look to long term
taught.
effects."
. Howder said that In his opinion
Asked about Taylor's susceptlbD·
Lindsey was not maul!gerlng with
Ity to pressure, such asbelngheid In
the exception ol the drug and alrolxll
a jaU against his wru, Howder said
assessment
when be !alled to
that he felt the defendant would do
maintain eye contact, used facta!"
"whatever he oeeded to get out of
grimaces
and other actions. The
that situation", that he would react
psychologist apologized to tre court
to pressure, and that hi! !ourKI even
lor falling to IUt that ln!ormailoit In
In the testing that he wanted to know
his report.
what was expected and then give his
answer.
CI"'M "examination
Under cross examination by
Robert Toy, Howderwas queStioned
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Tues·
on whether any medical examlna·
day's winning Ohio· Lottery
lions of Taylor had taken place to
numbers: Dally Nwnber
c:IPtermlne If there Is an organic
349. •
problem and how much time hi: had
Ticket sales totaled $1,110,795,
actually spent with the defendant.
with a payoff due of $313,491.~ .
Howder said that he had two
PICK-t · ·
sessions, with a total of tour to six
0'103.
hours, that he had not talked with
PICK-t tlcket sales totaled
relatives or other associates.
The questioning turned to the $165,291.~. with a payoff due of
matter of malingering and the $74,009.
PICK-t$1stralght bet pays$7,260.
psychologist was asked to dlescrlbe
PICK-t$1
box bet paysm.
the word. Howder said !twas faking,
bad or good, and acknowledged that
there ts nospeclflctesttodetermtne
malingering. The witness said he ·Meets Friday
did not believe Taylor was malin·
The .Meigs County Fox Chasers
gering. Unc:IPr furthering question·
wtll
mret Friday at 7:30p.m. at the
lng by Toy as to psychology being an
"exact" science, Howder said It Is clubhouse on Eagle Ridge.

Pick 4:0703

A'judgiDent of $18,329.01 has been
awarded In Meigs County comlnon •
fleas Court to the Home. National
Bank, Racine. from 'Barbara, R.
Talbott, Portland, et al. The
Judgment has been awarc:IPd In a
foreclosure. actiOn tor property In
Lebanon Township.
Goldome Realty Credit Corp. ,
Philadelphia, has been awardPd a
$37,215.41 judgment from Richard
A. Ryan, St.. Marta, Ca., et 31, In a
foreclosure action for property itt
OUve Township.
1n other court rna tters, a notice to
appear and .. answer under oath .
concerning · property, Income,
assets, etc., has been Issued to Larry
Hunt, president of Abundant Ute
Coal Corp., In an action filed against
Abundant Ute by Eastern MobU~
Power Co., lnc. Hunt Is to appear In·
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
on0ct.'l5.

Emergency squads ·
answer six calls
Six calli were answered Tuesday
by local units, tre Meigs County

Emergency Medical Services
reports.
Rutland at 5: 43a:m. went to Route
143, the Harrtsonvme .area for Roy
Ellis, treated but tran5pQrted;
Rutlandat9:52a.m.IOHarrisonvllle
for Margaret Eilts, to Veterans
Memortal Hospital; Racine at 2:03
p.m. to Yellowbush Road for
Carolyn Russell, treated but not
transported; Pomeroy at 3:02p.m.
10 Wehe Terrace for Patrtck Duffy,
to Veterans Memorial; Middleport
at 4:09p.m. to Beech St., for Carol
Stone to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Pomeroy at 8:24 p.m. lo Callaway
Ridge for Deldra Carleton, to Holzer
Medical Center.
'

Veterans memorial
Admltted..Samuel · McKinney,
Rutland; Anna Roush, Syracuse;
Naomi Wyatt, Racine; Margaret.
Ellis, Pomeroy; Margaret Goett,
Pomeroy; Beulah Kapteina,
Pomeroy.
· Discharged.. Floyd Re!trnlre, WU·
ltamQutvey. •

Boster
(Continued from page 1)
establishing the "71).30" plan.
"I tried to make It clear In my
testlm;my that Gallla County had
not received some windfall by the
Candee decision, because we had
not been subject Ill the · tax
departments "70-:.l" plan prtor to a
corporate merger In 1981.
"lt'sarealshocktorelymthefull
taxable value of j:ersonal proj:erty
In your dtstrtct, and then lose :.&gt;
j:ercent because or an uncontrolla·
ble corporate decision," Boster
said.
The committeerecognizing
Ire
unique
and Wlforeseeable
hardship
which results when a corporate
merger changes the legal status of a
large portion of a dlstrtct' s tax base
- recommended that dtstrtcts
which have been placed In that
situation In the last six years, or who
experience that hardship In tre
future, should have a three-year
phase-In j:erlod to prepare for the
decrease In revenues.
The state would fuoo the phase-In
so ihatdlstrtcts scheduled to share a
ll percewt portion of the plant wlll
not have to walt three years.
The committee did not recom·

Racine reSident
injured in accident

actions riled

Marriage license8

'since there were no powder bums to
tissue $Urroundlng the wound.
Dr. ~mise tok! the court he also
thought a 5e\,'0Dd shot was fired at
some time because« shotgun shell
· wadding · found in the screen and
behind the couch, and because there
was no exit wound In the victim's
bead. However, tre doctor sald he
could not say If hair removed from
the screen actually belonged to the
victim since there was no report In ·
t11e autopsy r:J hair missing from the
victim's scalp.
Concerning the ethanol level, the
doctor described the level at which
ethanQI becomes toxic "would
alway~ depend on the Individual."
Regarding the blanket covering
the body, Toy asked Dr. i(nouselfhe
was aware that an Individual had
puUed the blanket back. and then
replaced it before autlxlrttles were
ootlflei:l? (Toy was referring to
testimony given last week by Jack
Scarbrough, who found the body and
notified authorities.) The doctor
replied that he was·oot1\ware ofthls
fact. That could account tor tre Illes
he said.
G: Michele Yf!l2f), a criminalist
with Bureau ol Crlmlnallndentlflca·
lion·, London, Ohio, was called l1y the
c:IPfense lo IdentifY a torquotse and
white dress taken from Taylor's
traDer, which YeuJJ subsequently
tested for blood stains.
She told the court that she did
identifY human blood stains on the.
dress but that the blood sampiels
could not be matched to a specific
human because the putrtficatton
process had made It Impossible- to
establish Illood tYpe.
When asked by Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred Crow,
Ill I! sre (Yezw l thought tlie j:erson
who shot Melton could ·have been
wearing the dress, the de!imseflred
an objeetion and the que8tion was
strtcken from the record by Judge
Charles Knight.
When asked- by Cr6w It she
( Yezw) was famWar with blood
spattering patterns, she answered
yes.

Tonlght ...partly cloudy. Low 40 to
45. Winds southeast around 10 mph.
Thursday ...parlly cloudy. High In
themldtiOs.
Chance of rain near zero j:ercent
today and tonight and 20 j:ercent
Thurnlay.
Exteuded forecast
Friday tltrougb Sunday
A chaitce of rain Friday •d
Saturday. Fair 81111day. HIgiL'! mthe .
60s Friday then coollnglolbe40sand
low II&amp; Saturday and Sunday. Lows
In the 4&amp; Friday and the 30s
Satunlay and Sunday.

51 MONS
's re ere!

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' HOUIS: 9·8 MON.-FRI. 9-4 SAT.

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aty ""'enttne

e

Vot.36. No.120
Copyrighted 1986

2 SectiOns, f6 Pages

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 3, 1986

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

case

•

Weather forecast

r~;;;;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•---~

I

,,..,.

-on behaJf,ofTaylor

By 'lbe S1!ntlnel Staff
A Racine man was treated and
· With a dozen or so people listening
released Tuesday morn!Jig at Vete;
trom the ·gallery, Dr. Charles
rans Mernortal Hospitartollow!Jig·a
Knouse, o(Athens, ari oSteopathic
two-vehicle accident on u.s. 33.
pbyslclan and a professor of
· DannyD.Brown,'rl,of4:nxlOhio
pathology at Ohio University, told
124, was treated for back strain,
the Meigs County Common Pleas
hospital officials said,
Court he believes the gunshot wound
'lbeGallla·Metgs posto!theState
to the head ofbanny Wayne Melton
Highway Patrol said· Brown was
may have occurred after Melton's
eastbourKI on 33, about 500 feet west
death. He also told the court he
or Ohio 68;1, when a westbourKI van,
thought Melton's body had been
driven y Jack D. Crowder, 38, of
moved after death.
Elkview, W.Va., allegedly went left
Dr. Knouse was called Tuesday
or ceriter and st\IICk Brown head-on. · afternoon l1y the defense to give
Crowder was not Injured In the exj:ert testimony In the Lindsey
9:05 a.m. collision, which trooj:ers Taylor munler trtal. said caused moderate damage to
Dr. Knouse was hired by the
Brown's car and heavy damage to -.4Jefense to review the autopsy report
Crowder' s· van. Crowder was of Danny Wayne Melton.
charged by the patrol with driving
As requested by the defense, Dr.
left or renter,
Knouse revealed findings based on
his review of the report, photoHomecoming planned
graphs or the body an~tcroscoplc
•The homecoming or the South
slides. 1 The doctor
tlfied he
Bethel New Testament . Church on
believes
Melton's
deal
~k place
Silver Ridge wlll be held Sunday.
between Oct. 4-7, 19&amp;3.
FoliOwlngfellUiarmomlngserv~
He also answered questions from
there will ooadlnner at 12noon In the
annex. Special music during an the defense regarding the level of
ethanol (blood alrohol) In the body
afternoon service wiD be ~nt~ and cause of.death.
·
by the Bissell Brothers and Frank
The doctor said he thought the
and Lou Ann Hunnell Gale of
cause of death was more likely to
Columbus. The public is Invited.
have been ethanol toxUlcation
rather than a ·gunshot wound
Co~
A notice of Impending suit has because some "phenomenon is
been flied In Meigs County Common consistent with the wound being
Pleas Court for Brenda Janey, Inflicted after death." Dr. Kl)ouse
Langsvtlle, Ervin Ray ·Janey, listed the fact that there was "no
deceased. against Aqlerican Elect· arterial bleeding" as one of the
determining factors in his
ric Power Co., Lancaster.
conclusion.
An action !Ued by State Farm
He added that a dead body does
Insurance Cos., Newark, et al,
not
bleed - It wm drain some body
against Pontiac Motor Division,
fluids
though and there was evl·
General Moto~Corp., Clnctnnatl,et
aence
or
this type of drainage.
al, has been dismissed.
He ful1her noted that the upj:er
part of the victim's body was darker
In co~r than the'lower part, leading
him to believe the body was moved
Marrtage llcenses have been +after death. Dr. Knouse described
Issued 1n Meigs County •
"'""bate
'u
the decomposition process and said
..Court to Thomas Wilson Parks, 'rl, that 11 the victim died In an upright
Coolville, and Rena Mae Chevalier, posltlonashewasfoundonthecouch
3618, ReedsReglnvWe; RoCrubert Ra30y Crumbothpot, In the trailer, the opposite should
, and
a
mp, ,
.have occurred.
.
Minersville; · Ronald Arlington · He also noted 1n photos a blanket
Haught, 50; .antt Audrey Lynn which covered the body apProredto
G~lndley, 41;-rothofRaclne.
be tucked In tightly, making him
question how flies were able to get
underneath to Jay eggs.
. Regarding a stain on the couch
wrere the body was found, Dr.
mendamethodforapportlonlngthe Knouse said that If tl)e body had
30 j:ercent share among school Initially been on its back, putrHied
dlstrtcts. Boster said that apj:eared fluid would have pooled In the skull,
to be a positive signal that ·the then, when placed uprtght on the
committee n\embers sought a more couch, the fluid would have drained
equitable system than had been In out.
effect umer the tax department 's
Could DDt be positive
plan: and, Boster said, she would
During cross examination by
seek a system based on need.
Robert Toy, Dr. Knouse told the
In testimony before the commit· court that he could not say positively
tee, Boster said she frequently that ethanol toxlflcatlon was the
emphasiZed that tre ·tax c:IPpart· cause of death.
ment's apportionment plan was not
,!fe also said the gun shot to
equitable and "tenc:IPd to makerlch, Melton's head probably occurred
lndustrtaUzed areas rtcher."
from a distance of about four feet

UN II 111&lt;1 10 -lrlc lltoom,
but wlrh mort conrtnltn&lt;»!

·.-

Pa~hologist -testifies .

Meigs'County happenings... :
Court ac~ionsfilea

.

.Wednesday, OQtober 2. 1986

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio
·"
.

·Taylor's evaluation

..

'

"

'

"What It boUs down to Is this Was the defendent' s confession fact
or fiction?"
•
rJ:his was the state's final position
'-'" hi the Lindsey Taylor aggravated
munler trial.
,
"There's enough holes In the
evidence of this case to create a
reasonable doubt. "
This Is the final position 'of the
defense.
·
l'loslng arguments In the Lindsey
Taylor case were heard th!S
morning In Meigs County Common
Pleas CoQrt, as Robert Toy, for the
state, and Steve Story, for the
defense, summarized · infl1rmatlon
from :liwitnesses In over seven days
oftesttmony. ·
The state lf!SISts that enough
corroborating testimony has been
given toto provethatTaylordld, "on
or about Oct . 5, 19~. purposely and
with prtor calculation and design,
take the lite of Danny Wayne
Melton."
Toy told the jury that testimony ct
several witnesses verllled that
Taylor did possess a firearm - a
sawed off shotgun- and that he was
In possession of the gun under a
disability - he was a fugitive from

justice under a prior charge from
1978.
Toy cited testimony of various
prosecution and defense witnesses
In an attempt to j:ersuade the jury
for a guOty verdict.
He admitted to the jury there was
confusion about the dates -but he .
asked, "Is there contusion about the
events that occurred?" He pointed.
out'to the j4ry that many witnesses
corrobOrated events, If ootdates.
Story stressed the point "beyond a
reasonable dloubt. We're looking for
proof- not probablllty," he said.
After recoUnting the evidence as
presented by· his witnesses, Stot'Y
'said he "did not · know what
hapj:ened" to Melton, and neither
could anyone else.
Story told the jury he believed that
after dellbera lion, they would come
back to the courtroom with awrdlct
of not guUty. He also ooted tbe lesser
Included charges In the Indictment
of , murder and voluntary
manslaughter.
Presiding Judge Charles Knight
gave his Instructions to the jury after
11 a.m. thismornlng,afterwhlchthe
case was presented to the jury for
deliberation.

Gallipolis finn buys
Mountain State Steel,
saves 55 hourly jobs

•

I
I

DEMONSTRATION - During cross examination
Wednesday morning, defense witness Lawrmi.'e
Hayman was asked hy Attorney Robert Toy to show
the lury exactly what he did on Friday, Oct. 7, 1~83,
when he entered the Undsey Taylor trnller on Forest
·Run Road. Usmg a stop watch, Toy Hmed Hayman's
demons!ration at 13.43 seconds. Hayman told the

•

court he had thought about buying I he lraller; he was
only looking for signs of water leaks; and that when he
saw the tr.iller In such disarray, atl he wanted 1o do
was leave. Hayman and his brother Roger were hoth
In the trailer but saw no body and smelled no pecullar
odor.

.

President's. soapbox in Cincy

Diversified Chief Executive Of.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UP!)fleer
WOllam Eachus said Mountain
A federal bankrupty judge tnday
State
has had profttable months this
was to sign the final paj:erS
I
but
lost a totalof$:lltJ,{lX)InJuly
year
approving the sale of bankrupt
CINCINNATI
(UP! ) -Not only · numerous visits to ~tr i es to promote and·grill items.
and
August
because
companies
Mountain State Steel of Parkers·
Then cal'(lf&gt; .Reagan's main bust·
·
burg to Diversified Investments of 'were afraid to place orders because the political soapbox, but the soap the plan .
ness-a
trip to a downtown lxltellor
Alter arriving at Grea ter Cln cln·
or the uncertainty ot Mountain Itself, was on President Reagan's
Gallipolis, Ohio, for $1.4 million.
agenda for his visit to Cincinnat i nat! Airport on Air Force One, his tax speech to a bour 1,&lt;XXl people
Marshall Spradling, Ire trustee State's future.
today ..
Reagar planned to fly on Marine at a Clnclnnall Chamber of ComDiversified
moved
In
to
reorgan·
for Mountain State, said all of the
One,
a helicopter, from I he airJ:')rt to merce . fu ncllon - · a luncheon
The
presi:lent
scheduled
a
tour
of
lze
the
steel
company
last
Desteel casting firm's assets wUI be
meeting of the Cincinnati Business
turned over to Diversified aember. Eachtls said It found •a . the Procter &amp; Gamble Co. plant near the P&amp;G plant.
Committee
and the Cincinnati
At lvorydale, P&amp;G's gigantic '
company In dtsarray and suffering where Ivory soap Is made and a
Investments. - ·
.
Institute
for
Small Business
speech to promote his proposed manufacturing complex where
· The sale. initially approved by from ~rcash now.
Ivory soap is made. the pr!'Sident Ent erprise.
Mountain State has had as many 1ederallncome tax ~'!?forms.
Bankruptcy Judge Ronald Pearson
Following the speech, the pres!·
planned
to take a tour and ca t lunch
The
presklent
planned
to
·spend
following a hearlngWednesday ••will as 70 hourly emplOyees. That
dent's
schedule called for an
with
the
workers
In
the'
plant
number had di'DPped t.o 39 at only about three hours In the city save~to55hourly jobs at Mountain
Immed
ia
te (light bac k to
State, which had tlleduooerChapter t;teglnnlng o! this year, before an1vlng on a flight from Washing- cafeteria.
W
ashington.
ton shOrtly before noon and depart.
No fan cy food was plan ned.
11 of the federal Bankruptcy Code climbing back to the 5(). 55 range.
The president' s \1Sit to Cincinnati
"The White House said the
lng
In
the
early
afternoon
on
a
n
tght
.
Mountain
State
workers
had
this year In onler to reorganize.
was
his first In more than a year.
president
wants
to
ea
t
what
the
accepted wage , oonceslons .o1 12 ~ck to Washlngiori.
, .. , ,
('U business picks up fo r the new ·percent In March and alsogaveupa ' 'The maln ,purpose of Reagan's people there normally have," said Reagan was last in Cincinnati In
·"Purchaser, then more workers wUl 6 percent raise tha t was part r:J their visit was to
up support for his plant manager Uoyd Ward. The August of 1984 during the preslden·
~ added at a later date ," Spradling
tax plan. in recent weeks!he'smade menu usually includes soups, salads tlal campaign.
contract.
said . .

'

arum

House. approves $.1.90 million allocation for -AIDS
The money was put In the-1986 the disease die within three years. , \"eakef\S the body's Immune sys· -·-· The administration rev L•ed Its
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
' "It ts the committee's Intention tern , leaving a person w lnera ble to original budget r'equest for AIDS
· House, pledging to leave "no stone approptiatlons btu of.$104.9 billion
research, but critics said the.
' unturned" In the search to find a for the Health and Human Services; . that no avenue be left unexplored for ca ncer and ot her deadly diseases.
amount
wa s not enough and many
La
bound
Education
Departments
tack
of
funding,
that
progress
be
AIDS
has
been
found
to
strike
cure for AIDS; voted to boost
members
of Congress have pressed
and
related
agencies.
made
as
fast
as
tiutnanly
possible,"
mostly
ho
mose~uals,
Intravenou
s
research funds by nearly $190
for
additional
money.
ThebU!wasapproved322·107and ' Contesald. .
. .
.dr ug user s. Hai ti ans and
mllllon'on the day RockHudsoridled
Reagan,
during
his Sept. 17 news
sent to the Senate. ·. , ,
Conte sakltl)e committee t.Iso w.ls hemophotacs. •
of the mysterious disease.
The S1B!p rnllUoit Is $70 million urging the Health' and 1-~uman • The additional money would be conference, defended his bu ~et
Hudson, the suave film star who
tlutn President Reagan re Services Department to appoint a divided among several agencies for reco~endations for AIDS re- 1
more
entertained audiences !or three
quested
and 90percent more than Is coordinator for tre AIDS effort, "In • research, .. .community - aw~reness • search, saying they represent "a top
decades, died ln 'his sleep Wednes·
being
SPent
this ~ar.
other words, an AIDS czar."
prograins, preventtve'care and risk prlortty with us."
day after a yearlong battle with
During debate on the approprla·
Conte, senior RepubliCan on the
"Nlne agencies havf been en· · reduction programs.
AIDS. He was 59.
!Ions
bUl, the House accepted an
The National institutes of Health
The additional money that the t1ouse A11Propt1atlons Commt~. gagedlnthtseffort.... What we need
House approved Wednesday, $189.7 told the House, "There are now at Is a well-coordinated, well-planned would receive $140.6 million, the amendment by Rep. Robert Dor·
mUUon, will ensure that "no stone ,leastl2,troconflrmedcasesofAlOS'· effort, with one person rurutlng the Centers for Disease Control would nan, R·Callf., that would allow the
. receive $45.6 moton and $3.5 mUllan surgeon general tousesomefu ndsto
wUI be left untumed In research Into In this country. The number is show," Conte said.
close bath houses that may be
.doubling every 10 montJts.. Eighty'
~cqulred Immune deficiency syn· would go to the Alcohol , Drug Abu se
the causes anry~atmen
. ts and the tlveperceilt oftltO.!edlagnosedWith drome Is a virus that attacks ~nd and Mental Health Administration. responsible lor transmlttln,g AIDS.
potential !:\Ires AIDS," Rep. Silvio
.
~
C~nte, R·Mass.', said. -·
I

,

'•

'

Group seeks·plant
AKRON,Ohlo(UPI)-Agroupof •
unidentified Investor.; want to buUd
a hydroelectric plant on the Cuyahoga River at the Gorge Dam near
Akron.
Akron Associates has iued a
preliminary. permit application
witli the Federal Energy Regula tory Coffiii'l/sslon'ln Washington.

1

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