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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

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Pom8roy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. Octo_ber 28, 1986
'

Area deaths

Inside:

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

Rose Thomas

George A.. Hoffman

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

ABOUT POMEROY'S
INCOME TAX •••
,.

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

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

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

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

•

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newapeper

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

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

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

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• :

'PHYSJCAL EDUCATION classes and playtime ai

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

ItS awhole new world.

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

"It fs 42mlles !rom the highschool

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

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

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

Weather forecast

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

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

Board recommends
options be tertninated

No lottery winners

J

1 Section, 10 PagBJ

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

Dorothy Tolliver Long

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

enttne

at y

e
Vol.36. No.136
Copyrighted 1986

•

Today\
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

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

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

J

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•JJ

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Gal' la's esllmated work force of
14: lXl without work In September.
i{ith the exception of Athens, the
jobless rate In all southeastern Ohio
counties continued to remain above
both state and national averages
during September.
Nationally. the jobless rate held'
even at 6.9 percenl .
Statewide, the unemployment
rate rose bY two-tenths of one
percent -from 8.8 to 9.0 percent.
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Tuesday, October 29, 1986 .

The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~lb

Bm~ r"'T"'\.-JL--.-. ~d,~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT · ,
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
LETTERS OF OPIN ION are welcome. Thf"y shou ld be Jess than 300 words
long. Alllet1ers ar(&gt; subject to edltlng and must bP signed with name , address and ..
telephone number . No unsigned lellers wm bt&gt; published . Lettf'rs should be In
good tastf', addressing Issues, not personalities.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, October 29, 1985

U.N. triumph
The president's speech to the
United Nations was a joy. It
antagonized both the Soviet Union
and American liberals, a sure sign
that on Oct. :.» God was in hls
heaven, and all was right with the
world.
Here is the p&gt;int to keepone'seyes
on. It is that our strategic posture
vls·a·vls the Soviet Union has !Or a
generation been defensive. We have
always, or almost always, left It to
them to determine the treater of
combat. Obviously, when that
happens, the enemy will choose
favorable terrain. During the past
period, the Soviet Union has posed
as the suitor for an anns agrreiTI!IIt
that will leave the ~rid safer from
war. What never comes up is why
there should be anydang&lt;&gt;rcl.warln
the first place.

Letter advisory
All "Letters to the editor'' pertaining to upcoming Nov. 5 election issues
must be received In our otflces by noon, Thursday. None wm be (:llbllshed
after Friday, Nov. 1.

Letters to the editor
Extends thank you
f,'ln behall of the Racine Volunteer

Flte Department and firemen's
a~lliary. I would Uke to extend a
warm "Thank You!" to everyone
th&amp;t helped make this year's Fall
F¢1tlval In Racine a huge success.
'!'he tire department wishes to
think all Meigs Colnty businesses
th&amp;tcontrtbuted In some way. and to
aliI community organizations that
par11clpated in and rupported thls
yeilr's event.
r&amp;DY communities outside our
ln]medlate area gave us their
support and It too is greatly
awreclated.
'!'e would again like to give

special thanks to the dtizens cl. rur
immediate area for their continued
support.
Proceeds from the Fall Festival
will be used for equipment to equip
the new fire engine to be delivered
by the end of thls year.
In an effort to improve next year's
event, more entertainment and·
additional activities are being
planned in addition to several new
attractions. Thank You again i&gt;r
your time and consideration'
Scott D. Wolfe, Reporter
The Racine Vol. Fire Department
Third and Vine Streets
Racine, Ohio 45771

Meigs board has more than
one opinion, member says

I'

i, Robert F. Snowden, a member
of : the Meigs Local Board cl.
Education, serving a !bur·year
•
that ends Dec. :n, 1987.
j\ school board can be of one
~lon, operating the sdlool dlstft:t In complete hannony. lklw·
eV,er,.the Meigs Local School Board
Is not of cme, but SilVera!, opinions.
Fire members should have five
~Ions, expressed in live votes as
Olllo state law provides.
I have voted with both the
fTiilJorlty and the minority of the
bOard on dlsctptinary, hiring and
~g issues. Mr. Barton and I did
rot vote with the majority when Ms.
GOodnlte's -contract was non·
~ewed as the board minutes on
~t Issue will confirm.
Several present board p&gt;UcJe:;
h+ve been In effect stnce district
ronsolldatlon In 1961. However,
~n a p&gt;llcy has been !bund to be
Ull~rkable, It has been changed
with Input from teachers, students,
~rents, Jrlnclpals, non-certified
elflployees, !llperlntendents, and
bOard members.
j'l'he resoiu lion of some Issues Is
dictated by negotiated contracts
..tween the Meigs Local Board of
~ucatlon and the teachers' associ·
allon (MLTA) andthe·non-certlfled
s4hool employees (OAPSE).
:ariel comments up&gt;n other
statements recently made to Meigs
Lbcal School Distrtct votES'S:
•- Students cou!K!Us have been
trlvlted ' to attend sdlool bOard
n)e!tlngs for observation and Input.
•'!be manner in which students
al-e disciplined Is in lar(IJ! part
dictated by Ohio law.
i - The state of' Ohio (through

I
in

the Past year I have v1sltoo

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In my opinion the cemeteries
8!1f the most neglected item in the
county.
~ are 111me very well
~talned cenrteries In the
~lit)' . Bin the neglected CPmeteriesllUI IIWTiber the well malntainoo.
~of U.. townships have levies
Wf!!d in ID ,rttamtaln cemeteries,ln
tie IDw1lllllp and some of these
sa.rtw:' IOWII:IIblps have General
Refe1 Wonen tbat help to maintain
~

~of the lbinp I Obselved till I

oe8l allsll&lt;lo were as bllows.
1) NofeatuiJ! ~

2f F - a'irJd pus In need d

rep&amp;lr,

~ No

9J.

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·~ ' -whe lp

4. ~!ll .,~ 61\11ll
wilt dirt ar.d &amp;!{~.

Sur!taler-

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!l'.i'/tral

6 Bnullptl'li;""IACIM'~
VeteraDSIIJ'll'l&amp; llff«lri!li dllri;J
8 lndlvtluaJ .lot martrtB
91 Cattle grazing In ceiJEI8)'.

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weap&gt;ns aren't Inherently frighten·
ing, It is the w)1l to use them as
weap&gt;ns that frightens.
The
president pointed to four areascl.the
world in whlcl\ there Is a great deal
of tension - indeed, in whlch people
are killing each other. Because cl.
what Mos&amp;w has done, in Afghanis·
ian. Because d what Moscow has
done, In Nicaragua. Because of
what Moscow has done in Ethiopia.
Because of what Moscow has done,
In Angola. Subtract Soviet support
of these revolutionary govern·
ments, and suddenly a great
stillness would come. That Is the
kind of stillness that accompanies
true rapprochement.
Sure, there was in the speech an
element of national pride. Mr.
Reagan referred to the United
Sta'les as a country that occu~es m

land abroad except - a 'lovely
metaphor - "beneath the graves
where our heroes rest." But that
Isn't bombast, and altoough some of
the editorial writers cringe at any
expression of pride in the record c1.
America, it is fairer to say that the
difference between our record of •.
conduct abroad since World War II ;:&gt;
and that of the Soviet Union is rather
too Infrequently remarl\ed, than so
frequently remarked as to elide into
chauvinism. We have every reason
to call to the attention of the world, as
Mr. Reagan did, that we have glvm
s.m bWion of aid to the world's
needy: a figure 10 times as much as
the request we have outstanding for
research Into a space shield.
And why not recall; as Reagan
did, what Premier Kosygln said, "I
believe that defensive systems,
whlch prevent attack, are not the
cause of the arms rae~. · but
constitute a factor preventing the
death of people.
Maybe an
antl·mlsslle system Is rmre ex(En·
sive than an offensive system, but it
is &lt;leslgned not to kill people but to
preserve human lives." The New
York Times editorial writer sniffed '
at quoting an "18-year·old statement." Well, the BU) of Rights is '~
older than that.
They didn't inte!T\Ipt Mr. Rea·
gao, not once to applaud hlm thls
time around. Last year, he was
applauded every time he mentioned
the need for arms control. It is a key
to how thlngs work In the United
Nations that when you inquire as to
why you need arms control, there is
silence. There is applause only
when you deal with the obvious
threats p&gt;sed by international
tension. By· analogy, they would
applaud a speech about stopping
AIDS, but not a speech about
stopping dirty·needle use or aberrant sexual habits.
Mr. Reagan may SUf1lrlse ·the
skeptics In Geneva.
He has
certainly not approached It In the
spirit of someone who is willing, In
exchange for ephemeral trades In
arms reduction, to give up on the
\ ·
important things.

Cashing in on father _"_J_ac_k_And--'er_so_·n_&amp;_J_os_ep_h_Sp_e_ar

county superintendents' of!ices)
provides courses cl. study; a
local-dlstrtct commlttee meets with
WASHINGTON - While Dr.
the county board of education when
Josef
Mengele was sending preg·
new courses of study are
nant
women
to gas chambers at
considered.
Auschwitz during World War II, he
- Utilizing federal, state, and
conceived
a son of hls own, woo is
local funds, we do have progralll5
alive and well and living in West
for the gtfted, average, special
education, and handicapped stu. Germany. Tilts Is the story of Rolf
Mengele, the only chtld cl. the Nazi
dents In our district.
- The Meigs Coonty Board of
"Angel of Death," woose remains
Education is the
,, autoorlty thai were exhumed In Braztl thls year.
hires all teachlrig employees and
In magazine articles and public
bus drivers for Meigs, Eastern, and
appearances, Rolf Mengele has
Southern Local school districts. In
tried to (:lit dlstanre between
these matters, the Meigs Crunty
hlmse~ and hls notorious fairer. He
Superintendent Is the ruperlntend· says he has mthlngin common with
ent that by law must make
the coldblooded quack woo decreed
recommendations to local school
bOards before employees can be
hired.
- Evaluation procedures for all
employees of Meigs Local schools
are part of the present contracts
Thanks to Bobby Ord, Superin ·
with these employees.
ten dent , for his letter "A slice of
- As mandated by Ire State of the whole pie". whlch states
Ohio, all school board meetings are several sources of money that
open to every person woo desires to wlli pay for the new elementary
attend them.
school' in Southern Local School
- Press coverage of board District, which is 23'.'! from State
meetings and school activities has
•Assistance . Where did the state
been excellent; also, letters to the
get it's money?
7% from
editor sharing students' problems
Who
pays
property
rollback.
have been printed .
property
taxes?
8%
interest
I urge citizens of the Meigs Local
School District to call me whenever ea rned from investments.
you have problems that you cannot Whose money was used for
get resolved ~ the school admlnls· investments? The hydroplant
tratlon; my telepoone number is 37%, built by the government.
742·ni1. As long as I am an elect«l Who is the government? The
board member, I will ·serve you 10 people like you and me. 25 %to be
paid by taxpayers in the district.
the best of :my abUity.
Respectfully yours,
Since taxpayers and property
Robert F. Snowden owners pay into all the above
named sources of money, the
1
figure I come up with Is 100%,
which means we wlli be paying
tor the "WHOLE PIE" and nota
Some people thlnk if a graveyard slice! To me, his explanation Is
is mowed often that is all that has to nothing more than undecided
be done. That is only part cl. diversion, to fool the penple.
cemetery maintenance.
In my opinion there is a cemetery
at Long Bottom thatrouldbeused as
a model. It is known as the Sand HUI
I am writing this letter to ur(IJ! tiE
Cemetery. A few years back It was
people d Pomeroy and the people
In sad shape. Their CJ1ly source 11
woo work there to wte against thls
Income tor this cemetery Is small
"so called" need tax.
donations. It s supervised by a few
I live in Middleport and work at
dedicated people woo care.
Midwest Steel in 'Rlmeroy. One
There is lots of history In these old thlng that Is not fair is that! cannot
cemeteries such as clvtl war vole at all because Jl!ve out &lt;i town.
I think that all the people thatllve
soldiers and Spanish Americans.
outside
of Rlmeroy, but ~rk In
many of these ma!'kers are upset
Pomeroy
should be able to vote and
and covered with dirt and not
voice
their
opinion. But no,.we just
ledglble.
keep
on
paying
thls "so called need
You penple that pay for these
tax"
for
nothing.
cemetery levies, should demand
I like to know when· Rlmeroy i;
that the cemeteries are better taken
going to do something !Or the
care of than whatthey are now.
children that llve there. I llved In
With the amount ctGenerai'ReUef Pomeroy when I was a bOy and we
workers that are available io the had ball parks to go ~. and other
townships In Meigs Crunty we things !br kids to do.
should have the best maintained
But now, wmt does Pomeroy
cemeteries In the state of Ohio. have tor the chlldren, •the lll caned
Mr. Denver Curtts mint park. blink an eye and you
Rt. 1, Bole 11)4 . missed lt. so when are we golilg to
VInton, Ohio 4i6!6 do anything for the d!Ddren, now or
be!bre they get too dd.

Neglected cemeteries
nujnY cemeteries in Meigs County.

-

.,

WUliam F. Buckley Jr . .,.

But the Western specialty, dating
back to the 1948 crisis in Berlin, has
been the countersallent. The Soviets
block Berlin, so wba t do we do?
Block Vladivostok? No, weairllftto
Berlin.
The Soviets threaten
Lebanon, lll we land troops In
Lebanon. The Soviets mastermind
(there Is a historical question here)
the invasion ot South Korea, we land
troops In South Korea. They move
nuclear mlsslles into Cuba, we
chasethemouto!Cuba . they invade
Vietnam, we defend VIetnam. They
attempt to colonize Grenada, we
liberate Grena!la.
The theme cl. Mr. Reagan's talk
can then be defined as: What Is it
that's going on In the world that
gives rise to internatlonaltenslons?
As I say, it Isn't the exlstenre cl. a
huge Inventory of nuclear weap&gt;ns;

death for hundreds of toousands c1.
innocents and a living hell cl.
laboratory experimentation for un·
counted others. He has even said he
wished he had a different father.
Yet the son shielded his father
from justice for rmre than llyears,
knowing his whereabouts in South
American exlle and corresp&gt;nding
with him regularly. Arid he withheld
'tram autoorltles Ire report of his
father's death flf six years whlie an
lntematlonal search was going on.
Our associate Lurette Lagnado
recently discovered another rontra·
diction in Rolf Mengele. Though he

Will not support school levy
Also, have st udents been in·
formed concerning available
scholarships? When children
have problems, why do teachers
close eyes, ears and doors to
them, whlch discourages and
humiliates them to the point of
quitting, running away or possi·
bly suicide! Closed eyes, ears
and doors suggests to me , closed
minds and failed leaders hlp!
Why are studepts being taken
out of Southern Local and placed
In Private Academys, when their
parents and families are some of
the largest tax payers In the
district? '
I am NOT tor the levy nor do I
Intend to support any board
member who sponsored thls
levy.
Put a stop to this by saying NO
to both TAX LEVY and BOARD
MEMBERS, who are running for
re-election!
Maxine Diddle Sellers
Racine, Ohio &lt;15771

told bluntly that there were "practi·
bemoans the worldwide attention
cai rna tiers" that had to be settled
that has been turned on him since
before the interview oould take
the discovery of his fairer's
place.
remains, and claims that he has
suffered for the sins of his father,
The price was Sl,rno, up front. Our
associate said she didn't have it.
Rolf is (Erfectly willing to make a
Strober seemed upset. He took her
buck from the notoriety that
to lunch, called Mengele and
attached to the Mengele name. In
reported
back: no money, no
fact, he Insists on it.
interview.
Our associate learned this the
hard way after she received an
Mengele himself called her later
unexpected trans-Atlantic phone at her ootel. Gone was the warmth
call from Mengele not long ago. She and charm of the earlier conversa·
had requested an interview months lions. He was cold, snappish,
earller and been rejected.
adamant: no free inte!VIew. Alter
But nowMengele had calledoutof 15 minutes of fruitless negotiation,
the blue and asked if she were still · Mengele announced that h1s time
inlerested. She said yes, and they was valuable and hung up.
agreed that she would Dy to
Others have hadslrnllarex(Erlen·
Germany.
ces. Mengelereportedlydemanded
Mengeie called a second ttme to $500,(l)() for the movie rights to his
confirm the arrangement - and to fairer's story, but the deal fell
bring up the delicate subject of through after Jewish groups pro·
"remuneration." Our associate tested to the would·be producer. ,~
Rolf Mengele's drearns c1. getting
said she had no money to pay him.
We do not practice "checkbook rich on his father's shame are mw
journalism." Mengele was mn· more modest: peddllnghls father's
committal. and the subject was left dlartes, notebooks and letters tor
whatever the marketwtll bring. The
upinthe air_
.
When our associate arrived atthe banality of evU, it seems, lasts
door of Mengele's law office at the beyond1he grave. Josef Mengele's
appointed time, she was met, not by legacy is a souvenir stand.
him but by a burly go-between
· Footnote: Our associate is curnamed Peter Strober. After a brief rently wor.klng, with co-autoor
Interrogation Into her background Sheila Dekel, on a biography d Jose!
and Intentions, our associate was Mengele.

1 urge the people who vote to read
the ballot very carefully. For itlsso
turned around that you might end
up voting tor the tax.
I would !Ike to know why at
election time does the town try WJ
railroad people into voting their
way. For instance paving the
parking lois and other streets and
taking out the parking meters.
How long will the people of
Pomeroy and the people wm work
there, let the town run them over?
I lived In Rlmeroy at one ~·
but I got out and moved to a town
that cares for Ire people and not
just their own. I heard about the
town on 1V the other day. They
didn't give a person !hat works a
chance to voice their opinion on TV.
Everyonewasworkingatthattlme.
So vote against the tax or be sorry
In the long run. I wish that I rould.
Steve Burton

Middleport, Ohio

•.

· '

The announcement will apply to
all personnel who have been issued
discharge notices and whose cases
are awaiting . adjudication In the
grievance system.
Ferris said the move Is in
response to the overwhelming
supp&gt;rt exhibited through the
acceptance Satunlay of the new
contract by the United Steelworkers
that ended a 9!klaystrlke. The union
approved the pact, which includes
$18 an oour in wages and benefits, by
about a 7-to-1 ratio.

PITTSBURGH (UPI)- Avow by
Wheeling·Pitlsburgh Steel Corp. to
withdraw all pending discharge
notices against employ~s and
restart operations with 1 "clean
slate" was warmly received by
United Steelworkers officials.
George Ferris, WheelingPittsburgh's vice chairman and
chief executive officer, announced
Monday a corporate-wide retrac·
lion of all active dlscipllnary action
notices.

COLUMBUS (UP!) -The state
of Ohio soon will offer loc;~l
communities assistance in planning
to react toposslbl~ hazardous waste
leaks and spills, much in the way it
offers help in planning for natural
- disasters.
Warren W. Tyler; director of the
Ohio Envlrorunentai Protection
Agency, said the holE is to avoid
recurrences of toxic gas leaks in
Bhopal, India, and Institute, W.Va.
Tyler said the U.S. Envlrorunen·
tal Protection Agency Is expected
early next month tolssueallst ot500 .
to 8:xl hazardous chemicals which
could cause problems.

The list will be forWarded to
mayors, county oommlssloners and
disaster service agencies.
"Local officials wUI be given the
opp&gt;rtunity to decide If their
communities have a risk of an
acutely hazardous accident," said
Tyler.
If th• Is a risk, said the director,
emergency plans may be developed
for notification, evacuation, and
emergency housing and medical
care.
den. Raymond R. Galloway, the
state adjutant general and director
of the Ohio Disaster Servlres
Agency, said local governments

!he

•·

rould qualify for a share of $1.3
million in Federal Emergency
Management Assistance funds, just
as they qualify for planning for
natural disasters.
Galloway said Cuyahoga, Mont·
gomery, Greene and Clermont
counties. are exploring these
pos5lbllltles.
Tyler said many Ohio lndustles
alreay have spW prevention procedures and rontalnment and response plans.
He said It is not only manufactur·
lng plants or gas leaks that pose
dangers. "Any community whlch
has a lawn and garden store, a dry

Today... mostly cloudy. High in
lhe upper OOs. East winds 10 to ll
mph.
Tonlght ... raln likely. Low near 50.
Southeast winds 10 to 15 mph.
Wednesday ... rain, heavy at
times. High 60 to 65.
Chance of rain 10 (Ercent today ..
60 percent tonight .. and 90 percent
Wednesday.

The Supreme Court had thrown
out the Feb. 11 decision and ordered
It reconsidered in llght c:i a Supreme
Court decision in a simila~ case In
Oklahoma City.
Upon reconsideration, the circuit
appellate court found the!actso!the
Kentucky case di!lerent from the
Oklahoma case and reaffirmed its
Feb. 11 decision.
In that decision, thecourl upheld a
1983 jury finding in favor of truck
driver Paul Dale Rymer, .who had ·
been "violently" beaten by Shepherdsville pollee ofllcer Ben Stll·
!well after a 1979 arrest.
The rourt agreed with the jury
that Rymer should receive $82,CXXI
from Stillwell and $25,1m from the
city of Shepherdsville.
Rymer was part ot a truck convoy
stopped by pollee June 13, 1979.
Rymer and three other truck
drivers were arrested.
"Stfllwell beat and kicked Rymer

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number- 642.
Ticket sales totaled $1.114,Z72,
with a payotf due of $928,162.
PICK-I- 0036.
PICK-I ticket sales totaled
$165,316, with a payoff dueof$74,411.
PICK4$1straight bet pays$7,lro.
PICK·4$1 box bet pays$.lXI. - - -

Berry's World

-

r:=========;;-1
I1

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
8 PACK -

..

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES
. "OETTING YOU THERE SAFELY"
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR

•••

.

.._·~

- .,

'

LOCATED: MAIN ST .. RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON.-SAT.; B·B FRI.
PH. 742-3088
Master Card and Visa Welcome

:Tu,_J Yftll4) ....141

MIDDL~Irl, 11!110

'•

'·

Locotetl In Rocint, OH.

RllLIAIILlli lk CAPADLII

for

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

'

Paid li'or B)'

Ca ndtdal~

· Laurt=l Clltr Road - Pomeroy, Ohlo
Phone 99:3·18'98

On the other hand, when your friends send
flowers or food, acknowledgments are In
order, FoJ this purpoae, we end other fu·
neral directors provide tuteful acknowl·
edgment cards ao you can send them
''Thank You" nt:ltea.
·
If thare
other such quetltlona in your
mind. by all mean• come inorphoneu1. We
will be glad to answar you as bed we know
how. '

are

f!l/~6~ '(jj,M IJ·-~

7 ~

SAVE I0%0FF APR.

Candidal~

.

.',,,....'"
,.,..

"Service With A Smile"

'

'

..

$181

But, of course, moat people do like to be re·
membered for their friendly ga.turee, ao it
Ia nice to remind them of your appreciation
-when you see them.

Our big sale starts with
annual percentage rates (APR)
on installment loans that are as
good, if not better, than
anybody's.
But that's not good enough.
So we've knocked 10% off
our APR.
But wait, there's more.

SEE

YOU SAVE.

.,

Assume a IZJo* APR. Herr :s lww our
Mmwy Sale would work.

12•O
\linu• Il l" .. oil -1 2
10.8
-0.5
10.3%

AI IIlll:tll't•n.:t•n t;t)!t' l&lt;;t lt ·

, . \1'1~ =

•

\ lil lli:O (1,:-J"., =

l 1//lrt/ lfl/1 ,

o,\1'10

IIIII\

fr•r ;ntl,,ttl;tllt ' dt ·rlt tt11••11

I 'll /\'

SAVE AN EXTRA0.5%.
Well take another 0.5%off
your APR if your loan payme~ts
are made through an automatic
deduction from a Central Trust
checking account.
Farr enough? Fair enough.

.,,'

...
...
·"·
·...

,

..
,o '

$,,,,, P/11• . .Attewtlo/1 to D1ttll/

Jome1·N. llowu

Billllower
L-------------'-------~ ,&lt;

•'

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,,
,.

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16 OZ.

It Is not socially required for vour friends to
come to funeral villitationaln YOUR behalf .
Thev are there to support vou and they just
want you to know they care.

•

'

"He
Cares"
Paid for by the Candidate Scot! Wolfe

s'"'''' PEPSI .

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

•
'.

.•

SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD

violently during the arrest," the
court noted. "At the time of the
Incident, the city had no rules or
regulations governing Its p&gt;llce
force.
"The city's pollee ofllcers used
their own discretion in the arrest and
treatment of persons suspected &lt;i
criminal activity.

DO I THANK PEOPLE FOR COMING TO THE VISITAnON?

" Not to worry, Misterl-l'm OK. This is just the
latest fashion from London."

FOR

. ··.

Lottery winners

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 29, the :ll2nd day of 1985 with 63 to follow.
The moon is full.

cleaning establishment or an automotive repair business has some
potential !br a hazardous material
spW," he said.
Tyler said that if a community
identifies an Industry as the
p&gt;tentlal source 11 a leak, the Ohio
EPA will assist In reviewing the
industry's emergency plans.
Tyler stressed that the program
will bestrtclly voluntarry, and there
will be no deadlines or penalties.
"Communities that decide to
participate wW do so because they
be)teve the program will be benefi·
clal, not because they face some
kind of enforcement action if they do
not," said Tyler.

..

•

~

SCOTT D. WOLFE

Court upholds finding against - department

Weather forecast

•

VOTE

conspiracy to gain hidden Interest in pertorm either function for the fund. r---------------~---------------------------------William, who fsexpectedtotestlfy
Las Vegas, Nev., casinos owned by
the Argent Cof1J. and to skim more this week In return for a possible
· than $2 million in gambling receipts reduction of his smtence for
from those casinos In the mid·1970s. bribery, took over the presidency of
The trial, whlch began Sept 23, is the union In May 1981, following the
expected to last about three months. death of Frank Fitzsimmons.
Others on trial are John Aluppa,
The government is attempting to
prove that the Argent Corp. was 71; John Cerone, 71, and Angelo
formed on the basis of multimillion- LaPletra, 60, all of Ollcago; Carl
dollar loans from the Central States DeLuna gt Kansas City; Frank
Pension Fund that were obtained by Ballstriert, Iii, and his sons, Joseph,
Allen Glick through mob influence. 45, and John, :J7, all of Milwaukee;
Dorfman, Wlll!ams and Lorn· and Milton Rockman, 73, of
bardo were ronvlcted of attempting Cleveland.
..
Carl Clvella, a reputed Kansas
to bribe a U.S. senator. Dorfman
was slain In Chicago em Jan. :al, 1983 City mobster, also was charged in
the skimming conspiracy In the
after the conviction.
During Monday's proceedings, (lriglnal 1983 indictment but later
William Nellis, an attorney for the pleaded gu Oty and is serving a
Penston Fund, testified that the :~).year prison term on that and
executive director of the fund had . other federal chrges. In the summer
the autoorlty· to hire lawyers and of 1984, DeLuna and Civella were
employees for the fund. However, convicted of skimming profits from
Dorfman never had the authority to the Tropicana.

By RICK VANSANT

.

.
.·..
•......•

'

affects about 2i pending cases marketplace," Ferris said.
scale," Rusen said. "But, I'm ;.'
involving incidents that occurred
Rusen said main tenanC{' crews looking forward to it. I want to see ·
before the strike. He said the cases continued preparing Monday blast Wheeling·Pit t become very competrange from absenteeism to a crane fumances at the various plants In itive and take on the rest of the · ·
operator at a plant in Beech Bottom, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West VIrgi- Industry ."
W.Va., woo allegedly was negligent nia. He said hundreds of union
Wheellng·Pitt was the nation's
with equipment.
employees should he tock on the job seventh larges t steelmaker before it
• Ferris said all union employees Wednesday.
flied tor protection against . Its
"It Is the first step by the company and management otficiais will be
"It will be the end of the week creditors under Chapter 11 of the
to indicate It has been de-Carney· judged In accordance · with their hefore we're anywhere near full U.S. Bankruptcy Code last April.
lzed," said Paul Rusen in reference future performance. "It Is nowtlme
to former Wheellng:Pitt chairman for both parties to become one, and . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - DenniS Carney. "Ithlnklt'sgreat." together bring Wheellng·Pittsburgh
Rusen said the anmuncement Steel Into prominence in the
i

Jurors hear tape of 1980 conve~sation
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) - A
tape reconllng ln.whlch one of nine
defendants in a casino skimming
trial suggested that If Roy Williams
became president of the Teamsters
union he should name Allen Dorf·
man exec\ltlve director of the
Central States Pension Fund has
been played in
trtal.
The reconllng of a January 19!0
conversation in whlch reputed.
Chicago mob lieutenant Joseph
Lombardo made the suggestion to
Dorfman was played Monday to
jurors and U.S. District Judge
Joseph Stevens Jr.
"It would beaconflictoflnterest,"
Dorfman said during IIlii ronversatlon, shrugging otf Lombardo's
suggestion. Dorfman was a Teams·
ters union insurance executive at
the time of the conversation.
The nine defendants - from
Kansas City, Chicago, Milwaukee
and Cleveland - are accused in a

clean slate~

4

"We're trying to wipe the slate
clean and start all over again,' ' said
company spokesman
Ray
Jolmson.
I
.
'"The company feels thls is the best
way to do it."
The director of USW District 23
applauded the.announcement.

State to offer planning for evacuations

CINCINNATI {UP!) -The 6th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals,
ordered by the Supreme Court to
reconsider a controversial police
case, has reatlll'fl'led a decision that
a lack of wHee training in
Shepherdsville, Ky., made police
misconduct almost inevitable.
With Monday's reaffirmation of
its , Feb. 11 decision, the court
reinstated a $107,(l)()verdictagainst
the city of Shepherdsvflle and one of
Its policemen.

Today in history

Against 'so called needed tm

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wheei~Pitt officials vow to reopen with

!

CommentarY

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

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�Tuesday. October 29, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Raiders win 34-21
ByJEFTHASEN
UPISports Writer
LOS ANGELES (VPI) ~Marcus
Allen ran with abandon. Abandon
was theonlythlngthatcamecloseto
him.
,
"It's an attitude," Allen said after
be scored three touchdowns and
gained 111 yards to help the Los
Angeles Raiders maintain their
Monday night mastery with a 34-21
rout rt tbe San Diego Chargers.
"We want to win. You just can't
play with a lackadaisical approach
to the game."
Allen had m runs of 3, 1 and 4
yards as the &amp;-2J;talders moved Into
a tie tor first place In theAFCWest
with Denver. The fourth-year runn1ng back went over the 100-yard
rushing mark for the third time this
season and lOth In his career.
Los Angeles, which prides Itself on
Monday night success, Improved Its
pr!metlmetelevtslonmarkto2J.3-l.
"It's always nice to win on
Monday night," said Los Angeles
coach Tom Flores, whose team has
wonllvestralghtgamesthlsseason.
ALLENnJMBLES- Loll Angeles Ralden' Marcus ADen has the 1110
"I don't really want to know the
lll.._,ped from Ids ann as he goes up the middle during second quarter
reason why because I'm Btrald I'd
action Iaiii nlgllt. San Diego's Mike Green recovered the tumble, setting
do something to mess It up."
up a OJaater louchdown. '111e Ralden won the pme 34-21 and Allen
The Chargers, who received two
scoredthreetbnes. (UPI)
touchdowns from Gary Anderson
and another late in the game on a
Dan Fouts to Jesse Bendross 1-yard
completion, remained In last place'
In the d_lvision with a 3-5 record.
Their top-ranked offense proved
inconsistent against a Raider deATHENS, Ohio (UP!) ~ Ohio being built as part of a stadium tense that prnduced six sacks
University's Peden Stadium wUJ be renovation.
against Fouts.
inspected today to determine the
The fire was discovered at about
"Our field position really hurt us,
extent of damages e,aused by a fire the same time pollee were reopen· It put the defense In a bad position
Sunday morning. but the final two ing streets In a two-block area of early," said San Diego coach Don
horne football games of the season downtown Athens from the second Coryell. "The Raiders have a great
will be played In the stadium, a consecutive night of a Halloween defense, the best we played against.
sc~ool official said Monday.
party that has become an annual . They played betler than we had
The blaze, which took firefighters event. A pollee spokesman said hoped."
about six hours to extinguish, about roo arrests were made,
Los Angeles dominated from the
caused smoke or fire damage to mostly for open containers, resist- start, taking a 10.0 lead In the first
most of the underside of the east ing arrest, and drunk anddisorderly period on Chris Bahr's 20-yard field
stands, said Athletic Director Ha · conduct.
goal and a lJ.yard surprise TD run
rold McElhaney. Investigators are
An early estimate ol $liO,OOJ from scrimmage by rookle wide
still searching for the cause of the damage might rum out to be a bit receiver Jesse Hester.
blaze, which apparently started in low, university spokesman Alan
Anderson's 52-yard . touchdown
or near the RCYrC eqUipment room Geiger said Monday. He said RCY!'C catch from Fouts brought the
located under the bleachers.
was taking an Inventory of what Chargers within 1().7 early in the
McElhaney said a structural equipment was In storageunderthe second period, but Allen added
engineer wtU Inspect the stadium stadium and how much was in use on touchdown runs of 3yardsand lyard
today and determine to what extent other parts of the campus.
before halftime.
The Chargers closed to 2'1-14 when
the stands may be used durlngOU's
Geiger said some university
games with Western Michigan Nov. equipment, such as chairs and Anderson scored from the 4 In the
9 and Bowling Green Nov. 23.
tables, was also stored at the third quarter, but Allen upped the
He also said the fire did not stadium and damaged, as was some
damage any of the new structures d the football team's equipment.

I
Phlla dPI~ a

MalldQ, Ntw. 4
Dallas at St Louls, 9 p.m.

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Montreal at QuE'broc. 7:.15 p.m
Los Al\it'k.&gt;s at N.V. Islander... a ~ p.m.
St . LouiS at Wuhinflton, 7:.15 p.m
W~JGimM

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PhUQiphl a at MODlt('IJ, night
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KallSII! City at flouston. 1 p.m.

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Washington at AlliUl ta, 1 p.m
. Ollc:.,o at Gll'E'!\ Bay. I p.m.
ctnclnnall at Buf1akl, 1 p.m.
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DPirolt at Minnesot a. 1 p.m.

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despite fire damage

f

..•- I

ROYALSCELEBRATE~BretSaberhagen,lheWorldSerlesMVP,

:~

. aclmowledges the cheers of the crowd which lned the streets of
• mwmown tor a llcker-tape parade to celebrate the Royals8e\'enthpme
: .•: victory over st. Louis. (UPI)

r Royals celebrat~ with
I~ ticker-tape parade

-•..

By TONI CARDAREUA
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
. More than a quarter-milllon people
• ~ many missing work or school ~
&gt; poured onto downtown streets
·: !'t1onday for a .two-hour parade
;-. saluting the World Series champion
&lt;· Kansas City Royals.
; ·• The parade. which was marred by
; five minor fires. began downtown
' and ended at Liberty M~mortal,
where an estimated 200.00&gt; people
participated in a pep rally. Tens ~~
thousands of others gathered along
the. parade route. Pollee reported
·• only a handful of arrests.
, . As Royals players, owners and
: • team olllclais rode In antique or
classic cars, marching ba11ds blared
and ticker tape- some 20 tons ct It,
provided by the city ~ new. Many
players signed autographs and
shook hands with fans as the parade
moved onward.
Arches of helium-filled royal blue
and white balloons marked 12
Intersections along the parade
route. with flying. Royals nags at
various other locallons.
The Royals beat the St. Lou Is
Cardinals UO Sunday night to
caprure the World Series four
games to three.
Two of the fires Involved cars
: carrylngmanagerDickHowserand
ouUielder WI!Ue WUson. They and
· their families jumped- from the
vehicles and escaped Injury.
One of the fires Involved a
· motorcycle in the pollee escort and
· the two others were confined to the
groum between parade vehicles.
There were no Injuries reported.
All of the blazes apparently
stemmed from the mass of paper
being thrown onto cars and the
streets, pollee said.
• . Each fire Interrupted the procession at dlllerent points, and t~ final
blaze forced a final turn ol the route
Jo be changed~ excluding a section
d tans who had waited for almost
.•

I

0-2 Cavs to entertain Bullets

RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!)- Fans
"We have to concentrate more
attending tonight's Washingtonmentally," said the coach. "We're
Cleveland game probably will not
boxed out on the boards, and
see as much "basketbol" as they .getting
our free throw shooting is shaky."
would like.
Bullets' 7-foot·7 rookie center
Cleveland spilt the six-game
two hours to see the parade.
Manute Bol, a Dlnka trtbesman
series with Washington last year.
A number of children and from Sudan, only played three
Free averaged 25.5 points while Jeff
teachers were forced to walk hack to minutes, missed one shot and was
Malone scored at a 23.3-polnt pace to
their midtown school because the hit with two personal fouls In his
lead the Bullets.
school buses~ apparently stuck Ina team's opening-game victory over
"Washington's a tough learn.
!raffle jam~ did not return to pick Atlanta last Friday night.
though maybe not as physical since
them up.
"We really don't expect him to
Rick
Mahom .got traded Ito ()e.
The rally included brief speeches play much," says Cavaliers' coach
troll)," said Cleveland forward Roy
from players In which they thanked George Karl, "but It will be fUn to
Hinson. who has been hampered by
fans. Muriel Kauffman, wife of just look at him.lf he does play,well,
an Inner ear Infection.
Royals co-owner Ewing Kaullman, we'll have to see."
"Still, we give them a pretty even
also spoke.
,
OevelandveteranguardWorldB. matchup. We have to get that first
"Last night was a dream come Free says he knows how to play
win, and that will : . the
true," said Mrs. Kauffman. "I'm against Bol, who established a
motivation."
sorry he's (Ewing) not here today. reputation as a shot-blocker at the
Bullets head coach
Shue
but he's suffering with tiE Bu. He University of Bridgeport IConn.)
characterized the Cavaliers as "a
said to tell you that you are not only and with Rhode Island of the U.S.
great pertmeter shooting team."
the best fans In Kansas City, but the Basketball League this past
"With Free. Hinson and (Mel)
best fans In t~ nation."
summer.
Turpin bombing from the outside,
The crowd favorite seemed to be
"We'll just take:J(;.foot jumpers~
that tends to draw an qJponent'sblg
Bret Saberbagen, the Series' Most boom, boom, boom, " he said. "I
men away frorp the baskets," said
Valuable Player. The 21-year-old can't walt to see this Bol guy ~ he
Shue. "The~-soludon Is to play an
pitcher, grinning and wearing a looks like a toothpick on TV.
uptempo game, but George Karl
paper gold crown, threw bags of
"And he's from the Sudan? Ah.
likes a fast pace.
confetti to the crowd.
he's probably from Newark. (N.J.).
"What do I expect? Sweat.
Arter expressing appreciation to But I've never met anybody named
Yelling. An exciting game."
the fans, Breit thanked Howser "for Manute, not even In Brooklyn."
In other nbvs, word has •
. the
his own style d managing" and his
Karl is looking at an even bigger Cavaliers have renewed theu push
mother, "who has been bere for problem than Bol- Cleveland's ().2
to trade guard-forward Ron Anderabout two weeks."
record.
son for another big shoot lng guard.
"We waited a long time." White
told the pep rally. "The city r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
deserved It, the fans deserved It, the I ,
team deserved It, and last night we
go tit. ..
Many students missed classes to
attend.
,.
'
"The professors wer~ weartng
(Royals) hats, jackets, and finally
said just go to the parade." said
'
EllzabethKallas.ll, a student at the
Unlvt!rslty d Missouri-Kansas City.
A78x13
'19.50
The Jackson Coonty courthouses
19.50
878xl3
in Kansas City and Independence
19.50
C78xl3
~losed at noon "In honor d our
Kansas City Royals victory," allow20.50
'E78xl4
Ing city employees to attend the
21.50
F78xl4
parade .
22;50 ..
G78x14
_\ All "non-essential" employees of
)JVerland Park, Kan., were given
22.50
H78x14
the latter half d the day ctf I:Pcause
G78),15
22.50
d the parade.

RETREADS

VOTE FOR

BILL POOLER, JR.
CANDIDATE FOR

CHESTER TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
."Your Vote Appreciated"
Paid for by Bill Pooler, Jr.

....

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

600 EAST MAIN
992-2094
POMEROY
W1 Do lrab Str-Yice - Alignment.on Mott Can

Perhaps, many of you wUJ
remember Raymond Krider, for·
merly of Syracuse and an employe
of the former Parkersburg Rig and
Reel In Pomeroy.·
Mr. Krider who Is now 92 Is
confined to Echo Manor, ECF
10'110, Blacklick Eastern Road,
N. W. Pickerington, Ohio, 43147, and
would love to hear from old friends.
Recently, two of his nieces, Leda
Mae Krauetter, Racine, and Laura
May Hartung Nice, Chester Road,
made a triP to Pickerington to visit
him ~ and he liked that. Krider's
wife, Freda, lives near Echo
Manor.

Published evE'ry afternoon, Monda y
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·

llshlng CompanytMultlmec:Ua, Inc.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Member: United Press lnlernallonal,
Jnland Dall y Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Associallon. National
Advertising Rer,rPsentallve, Branham
Newspaper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTh1:ASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court Sl.,
P,rneroy, Ohio 4571!1.

8VIIS(;RIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Molor Route

One Week ................................... 11.10

One Month ..................... ............ $4.80

No subscrlplions by mall permitted In
available.

Ytm mn do mort• than imure
:mur child~ lift'. You mn in.w rrofi·
rumciall.v .fl't'UrP futurr•. Wilh loU).
m.111, f.hildr(Jfl ·,~~ f..'.11rar( 1 Builder Li/P
lru11rtJnn• from Aut(~Wnfrj,
So i/ ~·mi'rp romidt•rinK imw.rrantl' fur )nur childrm . iri ben ltJ

r!Jh

In your

13 Weeks ....... ................ .. ........ . 114.56

52 Weeks ................... .. ............. 158.24
Oull1kle Ohio
13 Weeks .................................. m .60
26 Weeks ........... ,....... .... ........ ... $.11.20
52 Weeks ....... .... .. ..... ........ ........ $59.80

A halloween skating party was
held at the Chester Skate-a-way
. recently.
Costume prizes went to BUlle
Soulsby, Jenny Friend, Jessica
Wright. Travis Friend, Alicia
Haggy. Missy Friend, Pam ~ggy.
Arnie Friend, Deanna Haggy.
Bennie Wright, Tracy Ellis. and
Bobble Ellis.
The cake walk winners were

Legion Post donates $6,000

Fire safety was the topic~ an a,ssem~ly at
Tuppers Plaalns School recently. Here Smokey the Bear vlslls with
students.
ASS~Y HELD~

Fire safety topic of assembly
An assembly was reid at Tuppers
Plains School with Michael New·
land holding tiE flag and t~
student body singing the Star
Spangled Banner, accompanied by
James WUhelm, band director, on
trumpet.
Lamar Lyons, lieutenant with the
fire department, dlscusssed fire
safety with the students at Tuppers
Plains Elementary durtng Fire
Prevention Week.
Students were shown a fireman
(Joe Buchanan) in full gear.

Meantime, buckle up for safety
and me, will ya? I want you able to
keep smiling.

responslblltles In light of a broadened world consciousness.
First observed In 1943, World
Community Day Is a "peace day"
which has grown out of concern of
Church Women United for ways
women can bring about an enduring
world peace with justice.
The movement brings Protf!stant.
Roman Catholic, and Orthodox
wo(l'leh together Into one Christian
community of prayer, advocacy
and service. These church women
who represent a board spectrum of

Ernie Haggy, Marvin Friend and
Janice Haggy. Others attl!nding
were Bonnie Friend. Brenda and
Klrh Haggy. Parlck GrySlka, Jim
and Donna Gilmore. Rev. Robert
MUier, Linda and Eddie Frtend,
Shirley, !larold, and Troy Meadows, Melissa Hoover. Lloyd and
Jason Wright , Shirley, Richard and
Mark Friend, Steve .Meadows,

Students were also given the
qJportunlty to see howtheflretruck
operates durtn~ an emergency. As
an added feature, the students met
Smokey the Bear (Ron Loscar)
assisted by ·Greg Scarbrough .
Amy Well presented Sandy
Bowen with thank you cards and
letters that the students made In
appreciation for her painting the
outdoor basketball court with
games. Students were presented
fair awards from the summer.

religious traditions, race, age,
economic status, and ethnic background, work through a national
unit, 52 state units and l.llXIIocal
units.
World Community Day offertngs
make possible. In part. the mission
of Church Women United Including
ihe lntercontlnent~l Grants for
Mission program thBt !unds national and international projects In
support of the empowerment of
women, human rights, justice and

~

peace.

vluto-Ownen ltuurance

MIDDLEPORT - MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch American
Association of University Women
meets Tuesday. Middleport Fire
Department social room.
I

9 FT. DISH
UNIDEN RECEIVER
85 DEG. LNA
WITH 3-YEAR WARRANTY

POMEROY ~ Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorortty.
meets 7:30p.m. Tuesday, home d.
Mrs. EvelynKnight,costumeparty.

$9950°
We Still Have Specials
On Motor Drives

DON'T CRANK!
MOTORIZE!!
Criticallnstallatio.l ona Personally
By Dealer, Not By C'ln• ·1ct or Commission
or En&gt;!' ,, "'9
COMPARE &amp; SAVE ...:. t:'

: BEST FOR LESS I

·LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET
HOBSON lOAD"

MIDDLEPOIT, OH.
992·6173

Club meets Wednesdlly 7:30 p.m.,
·home of Marcia Arnold.

car far a low price of $70.
WHkly Special
11 0 hr. labor on all mtcha nical
work.
1!3 hr. labor on body work.
Pint Grove Rd.

Radnt, Ohio

Nancy and Norma Baker. Mary
Byer, Pat and Scott Barton. and

Teresa\Deem.

•

VOTE FOR

biNil~G ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken
gravy. cole slaw. hot roll, butter &amp; coff!e.
Sorry. no substitutes except beverage·w1th

BILL POOLER, JR.
CANDIDATE FOR

TRUSTEE

AMILY

PH .

"Your Vote Appreciated"
'd F B 8'11 P I

$3.25

; ~ditional

J

"VILLAGE OF POMEROY
INITIATIVE PETITION
TO REPEAL ORDINANCE NUMBER 547

-

MIDDLEPORT - · Chamber of
Commerce community Halloween
party, Wednesday, with parade to
form at 6 p.m. at Fruth-Sears
parking Jot area; move .to junior
high football field; prizes for best
costumes and treat bags to tiKJiil;
masked under l2 years of age.

THURSDAY
PORTLAND ~ Trick or treat
night for Portland community, 6:30
to 7:30p.m. Thursdaywlthresldents
wishing to take part to turn on porch
lights.

ket:p ~ CJr'l S Dl SOli &lt;Jr~nkS beer (tVfJ11 ol 1.-! 1"1 '

hOit!r&gt;nf wlnf!C hrllf~ lorhnrrr !l - andrl 'i

REPEALING ORDINANCE NO. 547. ENACTING AN EARNED INCOME TAX. INCLUDING INCOME TAX
REGULATIONS FOR THE VILlAGE OF POMEROY, OHIO
.

Be it ordained by the Council of the Village of Pomeroy, Ohto. .
. .
Section 1. That Ordinaoce No 547 enacting an earned income tax, tncludmg mcome tax regu 1a1tons 1or

the

FREE PORTABLE
CULLIGAN COOLER FOR
6-PACKS OF POP, BEER,
BOTTLE OF WINE
11 s il handy dflr'lily rnsulalcd coote1 ! hoi !

A majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage.

V~~c~ro~f J.~'l:f;~d~~i~:~~Wtat~ee e~~~~ ah~rebb/i~sf~~re~~~~ and after the earliest period allowed by

law. Section 3. This Ordinance is enacted pursuant to the results of an iniative petition and eleclton.

YOURS FREE' Your Cullrgan

~J

..,

'

·. · ·

0~;:~1~:;.1' w1ll

pnona vou to cont1rm thl!. Pxcr tmg tree ollcr
11 vou can 1 wmt call t1rm lirM an&lt;J (J!"t PVCn
mo r ~ n emJ on'

,. .• .1.

L...~;;,.;.::;_

_ _'"":'_ _""'!.-:-...J

FREE HOME WATER ANALYSIS
You r Culhg11n Deillf'r wrll lf!&lt;:l you r watrfr il l
ohhgahon

flO

Cfr&lt;.l m

.,

.

EXTRA! HOW TO GET DOUBLE GIFTS
Call ynur Cu iii~JRr'l Ocalur today before hP. ca n call you
and you II Qe! two valuab le gr fls rnstead nl one uhso ulely
1

SHALL ORDINANCE NO. 547 BE REPEALED?

YES

..

SYRACUSE ~ Elementary
School ~lloween party, 2 p.m.
Thursday; parade to take place
near the school.

POMEROY~ Free clothing day
at the Salvation Army, Butternut

.

Let's Keep the Progress Going!

LONG BCYITOM ~ Community
Assn. meeting, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at Community Building.
---

2nd llt:EK ! 7 :00 I

We will spray paint pur

PH. 949·2044

.

POMEROY~ Wildwood Garden

·I

-t u;

MR. AUTO REPAIR
"The Crazy Spec lei"

Don't be FOOLED •••••
Vote NO On The
Initiative ·Petition.

WEDNESDAY

SPECIAL/

....

!~u~~~y:·:al~la:re~a~r~es~ld~e~nt~sln~need~~~~~~~~~~~:;:;:;~P~at~o~r~y~t~o;o;e;r.::r·~~

Club
meets Tuesday,
7:30Garden
p.m., ofclothingarewelcome.
RtJI'LAND
Rutland
home of Pearle Canaday, Hysell - ·· --- -- · - · - - Run Road.

'EST PICTURE AT .LOWEST PRICE
AND BEST WARRANTY, TOO!

gion
A picnic was announced :for
Sunday , Oct. 27, at the post home.
Those attending are to takE- a
covered dish. A Veterans Day
dinner was announced for noon on
Nov. 9. All Legion members ~ nd
their families are invited. Opening
prayer at Wednesday's meeitng
was by Marvin Kelly.
·

Gifts totaling over $6,00J were
presented to charitable and service
organizations by Feeney-Bennett
Post128, American Legion, Wednes·
day evening.
·
Durtng the session presided over
by Commander · Jim Hudson.
checks for$!00 each were presented
to Mitch Meadows, representing the
Meigs County Jaycees; Eleanor
Thomas, representing the Meigs
County Senior Citizens; Dora Vining
and Glenna Rummel, representing
the Salvation Army; Jeff Darst.
representing the Middleport Fire
Department, and Becky Tyree,
' representing the Women's Auxll·
lary of the local American Legion
Post. Mrs. Thomas was also given a
new wheel chalrforuseby the senior
citizens organization.
Checks of $:ro each went to
Ronald McDonald House. Cancer
Society, Diabetic Foundat lon, Heart
Association. Kidney Foundation,
Boy Scouts of America, and the
Muscular Dystrophy Foundallon.
Walter Bunce was presented a
plaque by the post In appreclallon
for his work as chaplain for many
years. A guest for the meeting was
Bill Trace, first vice commander of
the Eighth District American Le-

~::;;;~;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:::;;;;:;;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-j

Ave Pomeroy. 10 a.m. until noon

Orvnen agPnl find .

Life. Home. Car. lluioineoo.
One name says il all.

Melissa Stewart, Cella and Char·
lotte Hart, Sandy Wright, Belinda
Soulsby, Karen and J.P. Stranley,

Calendar/ happenings

indepf'llch&gt;nt Auto-

Mall Su~rlptloeuJ
IMide Ohio

26 Weeks .... ...... ... .. ........ .. ......... 129.12

buckle up that seat belt.
I was converted to the use of seat
belts last week when my sister,
Betty Hoefilch Hammer, and my
daugl)ter, Jayne, were involved ina
serious auto accident in Columbus.
Jayne who was · buckled In,
received on!y bruises and pulled
muscles. My sister, who hadn't
fastened her seat belt, on the other
hand was seriously Injured receiv·
lng head, neck and chest injuries.
it was nip and tuck for a few days
but she Is now progressing nicely.
In aU fairness, I should point out
that the oocomlng car which hit the
van my sister was driving did strike
the driver's side. However, the
incident sold me on seat beltS.
From now on, yoo'll find me
buckled up.
By the way, I know Betty would
appreciate rearing frolli Meigs
County friends at this point in time.
The address Is Room 325, Mount
Carmel East Hospital, 6001 East
Broad St., Columbos. Thanks!

·: · Halloween skating party, costume contest held

Ohio.

towns where home carrier service is

I can't encourage you enough to

.

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Vallt&gt;y Pub·

Subscribers not desiring to pay the ca r·
rler may remit in advance dire-ct to
The Dally Sentinel o~a 3, fi or 12 month
basis. Credit will be g1ven carrier eac h
month.

sixtieth wedding anniversary with
a famlly gathering held at the home
d. daughter, Patty. It was quite an
occasion and even though the
celebration was out of the county.
the Karrs received almost roo
congratulatory cards.
Well ~ "it don't surprise ·me
none" (lovethatquote,D.O.) -the
Karrs have always been one of
Meigs Coonty's favorite couples.

World Community Day will be year's. service. written by church
observed In Meigs County at 1: 30 women from the fal'!)l belt of
p.m. Frklay at the Middleport First · America, Nebraska, Kansas, Mis·
Baptist Church with women of all souri, Iowa, North and South
churches being Invited to attend. Dakota, Is entitled "Harvest of
Dues of $5 per church per year are Blessings,"
It expresses values born of
payable at the meeting.
I • •
,
World Community Day is a closeness to and reverance for the
, . national ol!servance sponsored by earth that produces food for the
Church Women United that unites hungry of the world. The service
Christian women in an ecumenical also reflects the challenge felt by
these rural women as they recount
experience that focuses on Issues d
their blessings, their feelings about
. . world peace and their individual and
collective part In tli~t process. This family, home, land, and their own

22.50
23.50

PlUS RECAPPABLE TRADE-IN
or s4oo CASING CHARGE

In praise of seat belts
By BOB HOEFLICH
'l'lmet!-Sentlnel Staff
Charles and Ernestine Werry
observed their
45th wedding anniversary
Sunday.
It wasn't your
typical celebra. lion since Ernestine (Tine) is a
patient at Si. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg.
So- they celebrated there In her
hospital room. Charlie took Ernes·
tine a cake which he had baked for
the occasion and son and daughter·
in-Jaw, Jim and Karen Werry,'who
brought along a decorated anniver·
sary cake, joined in the celebration.
Incidentally, CharUe wlll enter
VeteransMemorta!HospltalThursday for knee surgery which
_shouldn't be postpone.

meeting. Helen Blackston gave
devotions. Thank you notes were
read from Clarice Kennedy for
flowers durtng her hospltlzatlon,
and from the Pat Duffy family. Also
read was a thank you note from
Thelma Sine for a surprise wedding
shower.
Plan were made for the annual
Christmas party to be held in
Parkersburg. Susie Abbott won the
traveling prize donated by Ann
Colburn. Mrs. Kennedy won..11!1!
hostess prtze. RefreShments "'ere
served by Mrs. Colburn and Mn.
Sine.
•
·
·

Sally Radford and Judy Mees of
the Meigs High School Teen
Institute, talked on the effects of
drug use and alcohol on the younger
generation at the recent meeting of
the Middleport Child Conservation
League.
.r
Meeting at the Ohio Power Co., the
two teens talked about prevention,
ways to combat the problem of drug
use and alcohol, plan~ fororganizlng
• a~ group and various activities
of the organiza lion.
Nancy Morris presided at the
meeting with' the Mother's Prayer
and pledge being used to open the

World Community Day planned for Friday

(USPS 1411-ltt)
A Division or Multimedia, Inc.

Dally , ...................... ............ 25 Cents

Page- 6

MiddlepOrt CQ meets

Recently Charles and Leona
Karr of Pomeroy observed their

The Daily Sentinel

One Year ................................. $57.20
SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Tuesday, October 29, 1985

Beat of the bend

.----------~

MUD &amp; SNOW

H78x15
L78x15

By The Bend·

Raldersleadwithhls4-yardrun4:2'l
before the end oltbe period.
Bahr's :!(;.yard field gual early In
the fourth quarter ended the
Raiders' sooring.
Los ' Angeles quarterback Marc
WUson was J5.o!-31tor ~yards and
· twolnterceptions.ToddChrtstensen
caught 7 passes for 134 yards for the
Raiders.
Fouts was 23-of·OO for 315 yards
with 2IDs and no ln\eroeptkms.
The Raiders took a 3.() lead
midway through the first period.
Then, following a sl:rJrt punt by San
Diego rookie Rail Mojslejenko two
minutes later, they scored when
WUsonfaked ahando,:rtoAUen, then
gavethetBlltoHester~wl:rJsprinted
around right end and Into the end
mne for a 10.0 Los Angeles lead.
The Chargers moved to]J).7 m the
first play d the secondquarterwhen
Anderson got behind linebacker Jeff
Barnes and caught Fouts' 52-yard
1D toss .
Los Angeles took advantage of
another short punt by Mojslejenko
for a TD five inlnutes later. Allen
dove in from the 3 to restore the
Ralders'10·point lead.
Another Wilson-to-Christensen
· pass play enabled Los Angeles.to go
up 24-7 with 4: 06 left In the second
period. Thetwotearnedlora4Jl.yard
gain totheSanDiego5.Allencarrled
three times, the last a 1-yard plunge
for the score.
Allen fumbled on the Raiders'
opening possession of the second
half and San Diego linebacker Mike
Green recovered on the Los Angeles
34. Anderson srored his SECond 1D
when he rambled left from 4 yards
oot to cut the Ralders' lead to 2'1·14.

163-+

VOTE NO

wrlhOu l co::1 t or obllqat um Ca n the ohOnP. number l:lrlow .1nr1
hurry You must call hrst to coll ecl d ouble~~ ~~ ~

CALL YOUR CULLIGAN DEALER TOOAY FOR VOUR QIFT5

.
CULLIGAN OF ATHENS
:
21'11 PlLWI STIEIT
. ATHENS, OHIO :
CAU. 5'13·6366 or 1·800·624-9883

J,

·Paid for by the Committee for a Better Pomeroy. C. E. Blakeslee, Treas ..

�P.ge-6-The Daily Senti tel

Tuesday, October 29. 1~86

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ --

;Controlling Board approves ·$1~5 million school loan
By LEE LEONARD
tJPI SWebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The state
€:ootroUing Board has approved a
·$1,484,1IXJ loan to a laDing school
illstrtct on the. Ohio River , but has
dipped Into the state Emergency
Fund todoso.
The loan was awarded Monday to
Indian Creek Local School District,
.teflerson County,. which would

otherwise close before the end of the
year lor Jack of money because of .
the financial Instability cilts lafgest
corporate taxpayer, WheelingPittsburgh Steel Co.
.
To grant the loan, the board also
had to transfer $3B5,906 from the
state Emergency Fund to the school
loan lund, which has nowpaldoutlts
$4 million llrn1t forthlsflscalyearto

'

six Oounderlng districts and Is oot cl
cash.
WheeUng-Pttt, whlchjustreached
agreement with slrlklng workers to
restart operations, has fUed · lor
financial fl!OI'ganlzatlonand has not
paid its property taxes In 1985.
"If Wheeling-Pitt had paid their
taxes, we wouldn't be here lor the
loan," said Indian Creek SuperlntendentJoseph.Aguir.

Voters are being asked to approVe
a 12.1-mill one year ~estate tax
levy next Tuesday to raise money to
pay back the state loan.
J)eparttpent r1. Education officials cautioned that another $2.2
mUHon In loanS rnsy be necessary,
depending on the outcome of three
local Ievie$ next week.
"Either ,you're going to have to
find money lnyourbudget,oryou're
going to have tQ come with some ·
enhanced revenue plan,.. warned
Sen. Stanley J . Aronofl, RCinciqnati.

Interpretation of AIDS test
rules reversed by Pentagon
By RICHARD C. GROSS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Defense Department, reversing Its
Interpretation c1 guidelines governIng AIDS tests for milltary personnel, refuses to rule out the discharge
of Individuals who acknowledge
~ use and homosexuality.

In fact, members of the armed ·
forces can Incriminate themselves
by disclosing drug use or homosexu·
ality durlng an Interview with a
physician who is testing them for
exposure to the deadly virus.
Pentagon officials said Monday.
When the guidelines were issued

--Local briefs-!--.-~
.:. School districts receive paymeius
Meigs County's three local school districts received a total of

$531,515.96 as their part of the October State School Foundation
Subsidy Payments. Amounts received by each district after the
deducatlon for retirement Include Eastern Local, $116,296.ro; Meigs
Local, Slll,439.41, and Southern Local, $l13,790.25. In addition, the
1
• Meigs Coonty Board of Education received a direct allotment of
" S28,4TI.16.

-.-'
'

Meigs receives $12,000 in fees
State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguwn's office r~rted the
September dlstrilxltlon of $13,51JJ,625.66 In state motor vehicle
, ;"; registration fees in Ohio. Meigs County's share of the total was •

:- ;Sl2,001.25.

.'.

;'.Trick or treats scheduled

Tuppers Plains Trick or Treat will be held Thursday from 6 to 7
:_ p.m. with t~ siren slgoallng the heglnning and ending of the event.
r , · Residents wishing to provide treats are asked to tum on !Drch lights.
'.
Racine Trick or Treat will be -Thursday from 5:30 to 7 p.m.
:. :Immediately following, the Racine Volunteer Fire Department and
AuxUiary will sponsor a party featuring games, costume judging
and a lunhouse,
Trick or t!l'at night will be observed In the Porlland community
(-:area from 6: ro to 7: ro Thursday evenbtg. Those wishing to treat
children are asked to tum on their porch lights.
Trick or t!l'at will be o!Eerved In Pomeroy Thursday from 6 to 7
- ·p.m. A siren wUI mark both the beginning and the end.

Republicans on the board also
were annoyed that the Ohio Lottery
Commission requested and received approval to take$5 mUllon In
lottery prollts that ordlnarUy would
go to schools and use It lor
maintenance.
But lot\ery o!IIclals said the
money will be used for upgrading
computer facillties and microwave

.Shirley Quickel, doing business as Meigs Inn Pizza, has been flied by
~- Dipaolo Food Distributors, Columbus, In Meigs County Common
. Pleas Coort.
.. ·An action IUed by D.V. Weber, ReedsvUie. against Gene Metz
•' ConstJ;Uctlon, Mineral Wells, W.Va., has been dismissed .
Title has been quieted as to claims by the defendants'ln a case filed
• by Dwight E. Ross, Akron, et al, aga(nst W.N. Hovis, present address
· ·unknown, et at.
_ . In other matters, Bonnie Lightfoot, Janice Young, Sharon Knight,
,.- Klla Young and Carol Cundiff have been appointed by the rouri as
· ofllctal court reporters.

..

: -,Divorce granted
A divorce has been granted In Meigs Coonty Common Pleas Court
to Loretta F. McDaniel, Mlddlepori, from Jerry L. McDaniel,
;: Rutland, on grounds of gross neglect of-duty and extreme crueltY.
, . Patricia G. Dudding and James F. Couch, III, both of Pomeroy,
.. have petitioned the court lor a dissolution of their marriage.

House destroyed by fire
An unoccupied two story tram house In an Isolated area near
Portland owned by Richards Sand and Gravel Co. was destroyed In a
- !Ire early Tuesday morning.
' , .Racine firemen 'w ere on the scene from 2: 55 a.m. to 8 a.m.
Firemen reported that the bouse which burned to the ground was
engulfed In flames when they arrived . On the scene were three Ore
trucks and an emergency vehicle and about 15 firemen.
A lire Saturday morning destroyed the oome of Harley Hoschar,
•· New Lima Rd., ~utland . The house, owned by David Herdman, was
_occupied by Hoschar alone.
Rutland Fill' Chief BUJ WUHamson, reports the fire was caused by
an overheated .woodbumer. The older, one and a hall story, frame
• home was almost a total loss, according to the ctllef.
Rutland Fire Department responded tQ the caU at 9:27 a. m. with
- three trucks and 18 men.
r
No Injuries resulted from the incident. .

Meigs EMS answers five calls
•

0

. Five calls were answered IJy units of the Meigs County Emergency
· Medical Service Monday.
.• At 12:24 a.m. the Racine unit went to County Road 28 and
transported Dory Wolle to the Pleasant Valley Hospital; at 8:12a.m.
: 'j'uppers Plains unit went tg. Reedsville lor Violet Smith who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 8:56a.m. the Pomeroy unit
. went to the Arnold Road resident rt Maggie Arnold who was taken to
the Holzer Meclal Center; at 4: 16 p.m. Marilyn Wiener was' taken
·:rrom the Stonewood Apartments to Veterans, and at 8:57p.m.
Pomeroy unit transported Stephen Chapell from Rock Springs Road
-to Veterans Memorial.

··;;'fair board meeting set
' The annual election ol director for the Meigs County Fair Board
·will be held Monday from 5 to 9 p.m. at the secretary's office on the
:latrgrounds. Running for the five seats are live Incumbents, Blll
~Downie, ~ Slawter, Bob Lee, Dan Smith, and Addalou LeWis. A
.·meeting will be held on conjunction with the election.

,.
'

.

•live entertainment
.. ' Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

I

Howard L. Wri.tesel

ROOFIN(i

A.A.A.
304-675 -62

NEW-REPAIR

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

949-2263
or 949-2969

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

J&amp;F

Racine. Oh.

CONTRACTING

614·843-5191

002ER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWE,R LINES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
OUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; OIRT

10-6-tfc

JIM CLIFFORD

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POTTERY

Building

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

"We R111 For l111"

U-SA~E

AUTO

'St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 ort.

· 81lllpoll1, •lo

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY
VnERINA.IAN

CUNIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUlSlNT OFFICE
305 Jacfc1011 ln.
SIWI. ANIMAL HOlliS
Moo.· Wad.· Thun. 3·5 ,.,

THUIS. 6:30·1; Fri. 1·2 pm
laturllar 10-1 1130 '""
UIGI AUAL &amp;
SUIGIIY If APPT.

(free Eatimatesl

V. 1C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215 or 992-7314
Porntroy, Ohio
12·8·11c

CJ

z

i

PH. 304-675-2441
lEND AIEl CALL
- liplty Office
For Hours
304·372-5709

10.14-1 mo.

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

t

•

Mele. 4 mon. old, mixed

brood. Loveo children. Give
awoy to good home. Colt
614-992-3&amp;77.

BOGGS
SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. AT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorizod JohQ Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoe
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equltlllllll
Parh &amp; Service

1·3·ffc

Ch~n~•

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, BoK 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
. l·ll lfn

f

PREPARE FOR WINTER
HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW .
NEW MOBIL£ HOME FURNACES AVAIIABL£

PHONE 1614)
992·6100 10-2- 1 mo.
.

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

!0·8·tfC

F11 All Ym Ptllfl•t N11il
PIUS: Offico Supplin &amp;
Furniturt, Wadding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic

Signs, Rubber ltompr,
lusin111 fornH,

Copy Stf'Vi(ts, (tc.

255 Mill lr ., Mi4dloport
t 04 Mulberry I•., Pomwor

992-3345

312/ tln

•Complete Remodelin&amp;

•Room Additions
•Roofing
•Sid in&amp;

•Gara,es &amp; Pole

MARCUM
CONTIACnNG
Lone Bottom, Ohio

Ph. 915-4141
F18e Estimates

2nd Ave. Please coli 814446·2189.
Found: 2 footblll picture
b•dgll for young child, in
. envelope et football field .

LOST 2 block &amp; white
Boogie dogo, malo &amp; !emote,

? P EGNANT?

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
PH. 992·6030

9·30-1 mo.

SAifS &amp; RENTALS
614-446-7213

Out of Town Customers C1lt Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital 8eds •Wheel Chairs
WE 1111 MEDICAl£ ~ttl OTH£1 INSUI~NCE

CAIIIIEIS WHEN lliGIIIE

BOWMAN'S HOME CAIE .DICAL SUPPLY
63 Plna St., a.tfltiolt

Wa Oollvor
.

. 24 Hr. SOf'&lt;ico

.

fDE CONfiOENDll
PIEGNANCJ TEST
IR1111its in 30 MinuttJ)

FAtL·SALE

73-80 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DTNLITE IODT FILLER ...............li'!L.... 16.50
If• INCH MASICING TAPE ...........!11~........ ~~· ,,y.
DUST MASI ...................................~.-:::...,.,.

F111a nw l

opportunity

wuhers, dry·

SU we buy tha boot, pay toP.
dollart. Sell what you don t
want. Get CASH ·for paint·

ingo. dolls. towelry and
pottery . 1-304· 343· 1857
collect. Write B. Price. 1556
Kanawha Blvd East. Cha -

rlooton, W. Ve . 2&amp;!311 .
20 gauge tingle shot . Phone

to eend!money through tha

mail until you have lnveatl·
gated the offering .

Stool building dealarahlp .·
with n1ejor manufacturer- ,
.s alesl ·~alneering support.
Starter ada furnished . Some

araoo tokan . Collj303)759·
3200 e•t. 2401 .

========s
22 Money to Loan

~

--------~,.
HOME OWNERS-Rotinonco ~
to tow fixed rote . Use oqulty

for eny

purpoaa . Leeder

r
J

Mortgage Co .. 814-692· •
Mowrey ' t Upholstering . 30&amp;1 .
::
304-675-4154.
.
23

11

Help Wanted

••
••,,
••

Professional
Services

,.

..

-------------

~

J•

Water walla drilled and eer- 1~ ·
viced. Pricet on request. Call ~

614-742 -3147or814-992- ,.
6008.
;

,.

One certified Medical Tech·
nologlat, weekdaya. Sand
reaume to bo~~: 300, in care

of tho Golllpolio Doily Tribune, 825 Third Avo, Golll·
.polla. Oh 46631 .
Need Chriatmaa money?
Sell Avon . Not nece .. ary to
knock on doors. C•ll for Info

814-446-2158 .

PAIR. back to ~•chool dlt· ~
countl. free estimates, ,..

Word'o Kovboord, 304-876- j;
6600 or
_
876-3824.
__ _ _ _ _ p
•'

___

e

Fall Special furnitUN ' reupholltering . Thia it our 21 It &gt;•
year •rvlng tri -countv wit h. ...
the beat in reuphol.terlng. "'
Call now for Free Eatlnwte ~;

304·675-41 54. Mowroy'o ,.
Upholllorv.
r,

Auembllng o band. need
Country rruolclano. Colt 614
387-0213.

·',.J•

,.

Rea l Eslal1:

'..•

Cut firewood in wood1, 1
~
Rood. Reword. Call 614- pooolblo $200-1250 per --------31 Homes for Sale ,.
448·1943.
w.k . Colt 614-266-8689. - - - - - - -- ··
owner. Must aell-moved. ,..
LOST 2 Coon dogo. 1 black AVON Stort up foe $6.00. 3Bybdr.
ranch. one car garage, -.•
&amp; ton fllmolo tho lottoro ST noke 46% for Chrlotmu. walking dlttance from North ~
branded on tide . 1 red tick Coli 81 4·446-336B .
Gallie Hiuh School. Reduc:ed :•
male. lost Tuea. night on
to 129.900. Call 814-38B- ·•
Kemper Hollow &amp; Bulavlllo- Youth Baakatblll referees 8711
.
-~
Rd . 1rea. Reward. Call 614·

446-9780.

and

LOST· Hereford bull calf,

tho G•lllpotlo Porka tlo Rocrootion Dept. 11 614·448·
I 789 lmmodlotoly.

around 400 lb. Evergreen,
Kerr Community . If ••n.

Found: Malo Collie type dog.
In Skinner Rd. area . Wearing

aconkeepera art

noodod for tho 1985-88

Rinky Oink, 1111on. Contact

Worried about Chril1maa1
How are you going to gel the

thing• tho kldo wont) Why
floo collar. Coli 814-992- not have e Friendly Home
8884
Toy and GHt Party and get oil
th,thinga 1r..1 Hove 1 porty
Found: Kinen. Around Nel- of S160. and receive &amp;40 . in
aonvllle, Ohio. Coil 814-992 free merchandiM or have a
2&amp;31 oftar 5:00 p.m.
book party end recelvt the

- - - -- ·
In Rio Grande, new 3 bdr., '!
full boomant. nice lot. Largo •·
rear deck• with velley vie'N . ;

Priced to sell U9.&amp;00. Will •
conaider mobile home tr8de

in , Coil 614-446·8038.

"(&gt;

:!

- - - - - ··
3 bedrm., large kitchen, 1 ~
beth, utility room &amp; gorago . ."
Caii614·446-135B.
;:_

..

Government Hom11 from ,.
$1 (u · repair). Al1o delln- :
quent tax property. Call .,

805·887-8000 •••· GH- :;
1ame. Spquitewonvingand
Loll In Hoppy Hollow. 2 book • party nowl Call 4662 for lnform1tion.
Walker Coon Hounds. Both Mognollo Nitz ot 614-992- BeautifulviewofOhioRiver. ~
woaring collora. If found, 3661 .
12 year old single family \•
plouo con 814-949·2t 71
bl-level home. Brick and _:
or 614-992·69&amp;2.
Ea1y Auembly Work! frame on 2.9 ecrea. 3 "'
$800.00 par 100. Guoron- bedroom, 2 '11 bttha. Fire· ~
Lo1t Male Brittany, McClin- teed Payment . No E~~:pe­ place in living end family ..
tic Wild lifo oreo. Call collect. rienoe. No Sales. Detaila rooma.
Two car garage . Chy "'"
area coda 18081 437·6057 oond ooll · oddronod school district
Clay Twp. ::
or 437-8481. The dog hoo rtemped envelope: El1n VI· 51A miles 10uthin from
Galli· ~o'
thia addre11 on his collar. Rt. tal -716' 3418 Enterprise
polis City limitl off St. Rt. 7. ~
1, bo• 20&amp;. Sholblono.Ky , Rd. fl . Piorco, FL 33482 . , Auumeble fixed 9% loan. I'
41882. Reword 1100 .
Coil 614-446·2000.
~

-----------------··

Pomeroy Health Care Center

loat male walker coon
ho11nd, Ml11ion Ridge and

ia now accepting applice·

found call leland VanMeter.

tiona will bo taken from
8:00-4 :00, Monday through
Frldoy altho Center. Mull

B96·3394.

tiono for • full lime bookkeeper po1itlon . AppliCI·

have knowledge of Medlcere

7

Yard Sale

·.. ·.. 'P'iimeiov-.... ·.. ·
Middleport

count• pavtble, receivable

plene .

MONEY. MONEY, MONEYI
The army National Guard
can provide you with 1
part · ti me monthly pay·

chock , PLUS qualified
AmM~uea.

callecteblel, furniture, winter clothes ~baby

=
~

3 bedroom full b•iement,
eat -in ~itchen , carport, ~
11 ,600 lit toke ovor pay· "
ment1, Plen11 Subdivi1lon. ~

Coll614-448 -7360.

"

-----'---- ,.
Three bedroom hard wood ~:

and Modfcold billing, oc- floora, inau&amp;ated. new gaa ,•
ond p11yroU. No phono cello,

members could earn mora
than *20.000 in educational

furnace , one mile from 01111· ' :

_________ ,.
polio. A-one condition "

116,000 no down payment. ~

Co11&amp;14-367-0262 .

,.

By owner. Remodeled 3 ~
bedroom houd on Rt.33. ...•
New F.A..furntce. Largelbt. -.:

$23,000. Collect 614-423· :•
6289.
.

t:

•
bed· )II'

lOOM ID3

bonofiu. ENLIST NOWI Coli By owner. Stately 3
thru adult), mloc. 9:00- 304-675· 3950 or 1-800- room house et 10 E. St. , ~
Ponwtrov . 6 wooded acr••· r~M
3:00. College Rd . and FHth 642-3619.'
Femlly room, dining room, ~
St.. Syracuoo. Oct. 30 thru
The Army Nettonal Gu1rd F.A. heat. 2 bllhl, bill· .,,
Nov. 2.

RUT~ AND

Tuppers Plain• at Gordon

CIVIC CENTER
Mon. &amp; Fri. I· 4 pm
Tues &amp; Thurs. 7-9 pm

PH. 742·2629

Caldwoll'o. Nov. 111 ond

2nd. Lots of nk:e Chriatm11
det;orationa. what-nots, clo·
thing, much more.

·..... 'P'i .Pi&amp;iisa·n f -.. ·

1011011 mo. pd.

Annou nce ments

&amp; Vicinity

ment . garage . 827,000 ...
Collect 614 -423-1288. " •!

1- - - - - - - - -

j.

2 l~rge bedrooma, n,w 'tl
kitchen and l11 ~ ndry. com. ,.,late with appllanc11, newly

304-175·3950 or 1-800·
642-3619.

remodeled. oir conditioned, :
Iorge lot, Iormor McBrlila l:

To sell Avon . Call Marilyn

ICUI&amp;.

residence. College Rd .. .Syr- .,

Weover, 304·882-2646 .

Call 614 -992-5324 . .,

Sell or lease . option to bu~. 2
bedroom riverfront . Firepiece. gaa furnace. el4c.
range. dishwasher. refr • .,
deep freeu. washer. d'Y.fr,
water softener, fruit tr....

"'~
,_
ti

Moving aele. Mon. Tuu,

Spear•. 304·676· 1429.

Holloway St., Henderson .

Will bobyoit In my homo any
doyo, any hOuro, 304-8787991 .
golden . Coli 814 -992 - ,
8343.
·r -;

Wed, 10:00 till 7, 3101'&gt;
3 Announcements

Racine Gun Shoot apon·

needa your prior . military
11rvice experience. Entiat
now for pin-time mon1ly
paycheck. educational op ·
ponunltill. retlrenwnt Income. and much more. Call

To aell Avon . Call Shirley

8

110112 Wm Main Stnet, PomerDy, Ohio
P"- 614-H2-6778

245-9472-Connlo. Close to
ho~pitol .
·

In vicinity of Centerpoint

IQ-17 tro

AUTO
CENTER '1

'

Reward: large yellow S.
white male cat, withered
rjght ur, milling BOO block

Pottar Rd . orea. Sot. 10-28.
Ranl(y Fo•. Vincent, Ohio. lf

3-D

,I

6 Lost and Found

ptouo colt. 814-448-1627.

THE QUALITY
PIINT SHOP

hours at Rodney. Heve reftii

encet, axperlence. Calll1 4 ·

PIANO TUNING AN 0 RE· ,.

&amp; Vicinity '

JEWELL'S

REPAIR SERVICE
Anything _That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home.
No Job Too Sma~ or Too Big.
We Do Setups and Underpinning
"Special Ratts For Senior Citi11n1"

1 mota Booglo puppy. 304·
87&amp;-6937.

WHERE TO BUV?

B&amp;D MOBILE HQME
SHADE, OHIO

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Buildings

f

American Flyer. Any ahape
or condition. Coll814-992-

Uaed underpennlng for mo·

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Bslng Ltte ~~U1, WsWon,f
l~ Hlllflfl. 10·21 -1 mod. pd;J

•

homo. Call 814·992·6059
between 9:00 ond 6:00.

%

-z

\

Wanted to buy. Topper for
I NOTICE I
.I''
ohort bod Dauun lruci&lt;. Colt THE OHIO VALLEY PUP,:
614-992-7822.
LISHING CO . recommenae ·
that voO do butineae wltfr·
Electric toy trains, lionel , people you know, ond NO:r; ,

26 in. color Zenith TV In 8358.
working cond. Colt 814-246
6243.
Wanted used

Coli 614-448-3813.

I.

•.

Red male Doberman. Call

614-446-3640 after 5PM.

6 ~ittens and black mother
cet to give away to good

7/ 11 /lln

- Plumbing and electricat
work

_
. 614-667-6235 or 667-3074
~
Rocilvera b Pontoonic Unldon Muum Mil / Com -

PHONE 992·7075
D~n 't Wtlk, W11f 0t

Giveaway

GIFTS

- Conci-ete work

fiiut
STREAK CAB .CO~
107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
'

4

Sr: rv; ces

- Rooting and gutter work

g

Middleport, Oh. 614·9923476 .

Cot. Btuloh gray colored.
304-875·398&amp;.

·· r_:~~~}~~ ·l

Wt Have Many Olt!er Dishes To Choost From
l Systom Can lo Designed For You
GIW US A CAU

Prosecuted.

Ernp lnym enl

- Addona and remodeling

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ............................ IJ265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... 11350
10' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... SJ395
11' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... 11595 .

Buying dally gold, ollvor

-AND

349 N. 2nd

1nstructlon

coini, rings, jewelry. tterllng
No treapa11lng or deatroy-· ware. old colna. ··large Cur- 1, - - - - -- - - - - '
ing, Ed Shamblin property rency. Top pr~oo . Ed. 8ur- •21
Business
on Oohol Road. Will 8o koll Sorber Shop, 2nd. Ava.

bile homo, 304-675-41 &amp;4.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

TUPPERS PLAINS. OHIO

45769 or call 614-9927780.

Rouoh . 304-882-3346.

3 yellow kittens to giv,e away
1u fo"d homo. Call 8.1.4-986
33 0.
.

Factory Choke
12 Gauce Shotguns Only
9·30-tl

YOUNG'S

.

Nov. 2nd with prizea
awarded on Sunday. Regia·
tretion enda Nov. ht. Inter·
ut8d contact Sharon

cheats. baskets , diahu,
atone jars, antiques, gold
and silver . Wrlte ~ M . D .
Miller. Rt .2. Pomeroy, Ohio

Coil 304•576-2921.

6:30P.M.

PARTS and SERVICE
4-S·ilc

4

10% Down Will Hold for Christmas Gifts
Shop Early and Save I0-3-l mo .

~

'

"Free Estimates" .
InstallaTion Available

Our Christmas Toys Are In
Cars,' Dolls. Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts -For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone

t

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Faster Service
Call 614·992·6737

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

.. •A•ngea
•Refrigerators
•Oryera •Freezer•

II

"Register To Win"

·[H

ll&gt;·
''

Badlan

•Washers •DiiJ1w•ahen

FREE Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll

.

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

All Maku

Rt. 124, Syr•ust, Oh •

Hospital news

I

FIRE DEPT.

985·3561

JO'S GIFT SHOP

-

' •

742-2027

.Minora! Walls, W. Ya.

-----t"'..

'

Aftor 5 Call

NEW VEH I.CLE

RACINE

-KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992·6931

PH. 304-295-7845

•

,.

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

4" Sewer ............. $3. 70
4" Ell ................... $1.00
I" 160# Water ...... 19&lt;
1" Gas Pipe ............. 18&lt;

"F;u D•llretg

•• D1ty

GUN SHOOT

9-20-1 mo.

ACCENT

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS

""J

Wt
Afiii1'1Mt
.Shop Ttehlol..

16

.
SWAIN'S Fi.IRNITURE, 3rd. *20,000 Y!"rtv poulbla&gt;
&amp; Olivo St. Golllpollo. Coli Prepore ot 1\ome for P!&gt;Q
814·4411-3159.
OHice tob toiu. Wrho: Fill
(3&amp;135.J), P1o . Bo• 30IIil;
Want to buy manuel tire Hottiooburg, MS 39403.., :
chonger. Call 61 4 - 2~6 ·
8251 .
18 Wanted to Do
Uaad mobllo homeo. Colt
Odd jobt· have referenu...
Lonely, nMd 1 dete? Meet 814-448 -0175.
Colt bolwoon 5PM·10PM,
that apeclal1omeone today!
Call DATETIME TOLL- COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS 814-448-9480.
FREE, 1-800-972-7676, FURNITURE. 8ed·o, Iron,
wood, cupboarda, chaira, Bobyolttlng In my ho,. o~
anytime day or night.

ert, refrigentors. ranges,
tWMpers, working or not.

Middleport, OH.

PH. 992-7201

$SAVE$

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATUUTE SALES H~RVICE

Wanted To Buy

wood _It co1l he1ten .

Wo'd lite to introduce you to
Enpco-A-Cor, lho modern way
to drive lho vehicle ol your
choice.
No ·Down Parment
Lower Monthlr Parment

Ph. (614) 843-5425
9,0:li/2 riiD. pd . .

9

WANTED TO BUY uoed

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

CAll COllECT:

CHESIER-985·3307

4129/tln

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
P~.

WE AND,.
ARE ••iivtcC
HEADQUARTERS FOR
*ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

Gutters - Downspouts
Gulter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

-·

,', '$

3 Announcementa

INTERESTED IN A

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

SINGLE 124.95

CLASSIFIED AD

Busi nc•ss
Sc·rvices

The

EUGENE LONG

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

WITH A

~)

_,.___, _____ _

Ohio

tT. U lOUTH
POINT PLIAIINT, W. VA.
8 miles !rom
Pomeroy-Muon Bridge

I·

:~

......- .

will hold a one-doy hunt

"SUBTRACT" THOSE THINGS
GATMERING DUSt
,~~
-·
·~DD" DOLLARS
TO YOUR POCKET

1asuperui
r\.fOfaveryHMg.

---~

~--­

PHONE 992-2156

A

.

Muon C()Unty Fiel41 Arctlera

Friday, Pentagon spokesman Lt.
Col. Pete Wyro said Individuals who
tell doctors voluntarUy they are gay
or use drugs cannot be dismissed
from the service automat,lcaUy.
Wyro also had said' that such
Information given voluntarUy would
remain confidential.
The Pentagon's general counsel,
Chapman Cox, acknowledged Mon01 Writ ~ 01111, Sentl~~el Clmilied Dept
day that there cannot be automatic
Il l Co111t Sl. , POIIIfll~ . Ollio 457U
dismissal. But he said the volunteered lnfonnatlon can be used as
evidence In proceedings leading to l- -,-----'- - I
an honorabledischargeordlsmlssal
Public Notice
Public Notice
for a physical dlsabUity.
In such dismissals, the former
PUBliC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Villoge of Rutlond hu
service members are eligible to
The Boord of ·Dirocto11 of
following item up for
Lsading Creole Conl8ntancy
receive medical care IJy the the
oolo: A )980 Pymouth Gran
District met in regular Mllion
Veterans Administration.
· Fury JL42, Serial No. JL42·
on
October 15, 19811 . and
"The basic concept is that no LAA146763.
p-ad the following ....ru. ·
Sealed bidt can be sent to
adverse action can be taken against
tioo. Thaoo n~gulallono apply
Rutlond Villogo Inc.. Box
to any Individual comp.,y,
an individual who voluntarUy dis- '420, Rutland, Ohio 46776.
corporation, or enyone illltatcloses drug usage or consensual lall dolo bldo will be ocling any type of pipelineo or
cepted
ia
12
noon
Novemsexual activity," Cox said In a
links ocrou or along tho rightber 12, 1986, Thio velllclo
of-WII'(I of tho Oillrict.
telephone Interview. The key word, .,.n be -n by coiling 742·
Before any inllolotion .,. ·
he said, was " adverse."
2121 betw•n 9 o.m.- 12 p.
conotructlon of '"'Y lind lo be"Adverse," he said, refers to m. Mondllythru Fridoy. Rut·
"·'" gun on property owned or con· .
land Village Council rootroNad by the Olllnct, lho folproceedings leading to a had BfVOI
tho right to reject ony
lowing oondiliono rrull be
conduct discharge or any other kind ond. oil bids. This vehicle lo
mol:
of disciplinary or criminal action, offered for Ale 11 it.
t1 I Apenni! mull be iOiu ad
Gregory Yen Meter
by tho O.illrict givilg pernio·
Cox said.
Clerk-Treasurer
!ion for ouch oonlllruction 111&lt;1
Public Notice
Public Notice
Village of Rutland, Inc.
Wyro said Monday that an
instruction• aa to how it ia to
honorable discharge "would re- (101 22, 2~ .2tc
be COII'I'Iotad. If construction
NOTICE OF
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
invotves a natural g11, cil, brin1
move the stigma and avoids the
Public Notice
APPOINTMENT OF
Tho Board of Education of line or any patl'qleum ...,.,., •
posslbUity or people accusing us of
FIDUCIARY
Eaotem Local School Olllrict thoro mull firll be dopoaltod .
NOTICE OF SALE
helngona witch hunt trying to catch
On October 23, 1986, in dotireo 1u reoolvo -lod bids with tho Olllrict • $1 ,000.00
By vWtue of an Order of tho Melgo County Probeto on tho following:
bond whidl wil be retumod
oomosexuals."
Sole looued out of tho Com- Court, Case No. 24929, EfFloot lnouranco
upon oullCelllful completion
Mllltary regulations forbid drug mon Pleoa Court of Molga fie L. Grato. 2t701 Stoll
TlretondTubos
according to tho tormo of tho
Coonty, Ohio, In tho 0111 of l'!outo 124, Langovile, Molgo
use and homosexuality.
Fuel Oil, Gooolno, Motor 0~ Dillrict'o n~gulationo.
Realty Crodh Corp. c..,nty, Ohio. wu apSpecification Shoeto ore
121 If ouch conllruction is a
Gay tights groups were certain to •Goldome
IUCC .. tor in Interest to Buf· pointed E•ecutor of the 81· avllillble at the Tre~aurer'a
protest the new explanation of the IIIIo Sovlnga Bonk. Pillnliff. toto of HoiNo R. Grato, dl- Office.
tank
or iooued
- · aforpornit
""II
aloo be
fllo and
1 ~
ag1in1t Richerd A. Ryan, cuud. tote of 26701 Stoto
guldellnes,~which do not gurantee
In order to be conlidorod ol bond of $2,000.00 for thofirll
confidentiality for voluntary upon 1 judgement thoroln Routo124 , Langovlle, Melgo -lod bidl - be rocaivod In link and $1,000.00 por- : ~
rendered, being Cooe No. County, Ohio.
lho•TroollUOI"a Offieo by 12 tank t11o""'fl• dopolltod with
disclosure.
8&amp;-CV -196 In ooid Court. I
Robert E. Buck. D'Ciocl&lt; Noon on:
1llo Olllria Slid bond will olio
"I admit! waswrongonFriday," will offer for ..... at the front
Probe to J udgo
o-mber 19, 1985
be rotumod upon MICCoaful .
Lena K. Noooolroad, Clerk
Wyro said. "!was wrong based on a door of !!It Court Hou• in
Sold Boord of Educotion COII'I'Iotioo ecoording to tho ·
Pomeroy, Moigo Coonty,
rnerves tha right to accept or terma of the Dlatrim'a regula·
previous examination of the pro- Ohio, on tho 8th day of De- (101 29: (111 5. 12, 3tc
reject any and all parll of .,Y tiona.
·
posed po~cy and a lack of expl"\\a- cember, 198&amp;, at 10:00 A.
111&lt;1 ell bids. ·
(3) Thoro will bo • $160.00
.tlon about how this policy would be M. the ' folk)wing lend• end
Boord of Educatioo
charge for uid permit to cover
tenemonto. to wh: '
Public Notice
E•atern Local School lnopoction -~ penrit io· •
Interpreted."
Sltuoted In Section 35,
Oillrict
a~ance, etc. Thil fee wiH not be •
Cox said the guklellries remained ·Town 4, Rongo 11, Olive
Elolte lk&gt;llon
retumed.
·
'
LEGAL NOTICE
T........... .
unchanged from Friday and that Townohlp, Melgo County,
This ection Wll tllk.. by !
of Ohio, 1nd being
Sooted bido will be re·
311900 - SR 7
authority of Section 8101.19, •
only the interpretation of them had Stoll
more fully described 11 fol·
ceived in the office of the Vii·
Reodavilljt,
Ohio
46772
Porogroph A, B. C, of tho Ohio ;
been wrong.
lowt:
lege Clerk. Pomeroy, Ohio,
Conoorvoncy Olllrict Law. •
Commencing at the exist·
untl 12 o'clock noon on No· 1101 B. 1&amp;. 22. 29. 4tc
The Pentagon announced Oct. 18
'MKJII!IVM' wiolatel •kl regula· '
ing
atone in thl 10uthwnt vembor 18, 1986 on tho foltiono mov be fined $1 ,000.00 :
that all 2.1 million active duty cornor
of ooid Soetion 3&amp;, lowing pmpoul:
P• viotltion according to the •
persoMel, reserves, recruits and 111d atone alao being on the
1. FDf tho purchase by tho
Real Estate General
termo of Section 6101.99, Po- '
applicants to the armed forces well line of Olive Townohlp Village of Pomoroy a (11
n~groph 8, of tho Ohio Con181'- .
Vlni'U Oittrict
would be screened for the antibody ond tho Eoll line of Oronge N-or (1 l Uud Portoble Air
.,r
townohip: thence North 87 Compreuor with minimum
(10)
22,
29;
(1
1)
5
3tc
In acquired immune deficiency
degrH 06 minutll 19 II·
epeciflcationa 11 followa:
syndrome.
condo Ell! olong tho oouth
Engine: Oloul (41 Cyllndor
The Washington Times reported tino of ooid Soctlon 35, - Wiler Cooled 219 Cubic
877 .16 feetto an iran pin in
Inch Oioplocemont with Ory
today that discovery ri. AIDS among the oouth-11 property Typo Air Cloiner - Ether
an unex~tedly large number of cornor of Do~ Enovold - Cold W•thor Starting Aid U.S. troops stationed In West oon •• rocorded In doed book Muffler with Roln Cop.
283, pogo 17 In tho.rocordo
Single Stege
POMEROY.O.
Germany sparked the mUltary's of tho Meiga County R• · OilCompreooor:
Flooded Rotory Screw
992-2259
AIDS testing program.
cordor'o Office ond tho 185 CfM (ii! 2400 RMP with
'
NEW LISTING - Home in .
Thenewspaperreporied that 52 of · 10uthe1st corner of Howard 121 'A Service Volvoa - Auto·
B. Caldwell 11 recorded in
mollc
Shut-down
for
High
Middleport. Partly remo·
1,000 soldiers - 5.2 percent deed book 214, pogo &amp;731n Compreooor Air Olachorge
deled
but ready lor the han ·
stationed around West Berlin and tho recorda of tho Meigs Temperature. Fuel Tonk 1301
dyman.
th~ II? story home
Gallon• - Lockable Side Pa·
randomnly tested last summer County R""order'a Office:
is 11 a good neighbor hood
nelsHourmeter-Fuell.evel
Thonco
North
2
dig""''
&amp;3
were found to have traces of the
and has 3 bedrooms and a
mlnuteo, 41 . .onds Eo11 Gaugo · Engine Wator TamAIDS virus, according to a classified along the welt propeny line perature Switch - Engine Oil
level lot with a garage. Askof ooid Dorwyn Enovold- Preuuro Switch · Sound At·
Defense Department report.
ing $17,000.00.
•
The soldiers' sexual contact with ond tho eoot property llno of tlf11uotion:'78 dba @ 7 Mat•
Howard 8. Coldwoll ond er• from Enclosure • Tires
•
POMEROY - One floor
West German prostituteS, mostly paning on Iron pin at G78 x14- Houro Nat ToE~·
ranch with 3 bedrooms,
those not licensed by the govern- 393.18 loot alotol dlotan.,. ceed 500 II Uood Machine 1p
deck area, I car garage an
ment, lsbelleved behlndthetransfer of 992.76 feat to an Iron pin Bid.
approx. I acre. $48,000.00.
in the grantor's welt Prop·
Offered Ao Trodo·ln: 111
of AIDS to the soldiers, woo In turn erty tlno and rul110int of Ill- Sullolr 100 GP Air Compreo.
pass It on to Wives and girlfriends, ginning for tho land do· oor Sorlol No. 3830B
LONG BOTTOM - Neat 3
Each bid mull contain tho
bedroom ranch, lamily room,
the newspaper said, cltbtg Senate acribed: thonco North 2
dog""'•
53
mlnutoo
41
10•
full
nome
of
ovory
peraon
.,.
apjHox
. I acre with garden
testimony last month.
condo Woll •long tho gron- compony lntertlled In 1llo
area.
$32.000.00.
The AIDS rate Is 40 percent tor' l welt property line and Nn. and the tiid must be
ammg the unlicensed prostitutes, tho ooot property line of accompanied by a chock .,.
ST. RT. 7- Appro• . 2 acres
uid Howard 8. Coldwol, bond In tho 111m of *1 00.00
many rt whom use drugs, whileoniy
with nice big yard, garaden
270.00 fool to on iron pin;
to tho oadolactlon of tho VII••
I percent among t hose licensed and thlf1ce Nortfl 87 dogNOo 06 lege Council 11 a guaranty
area, lruit trees, I ~ story
home with 3 bedrooms, lamgiven routine health exams, the mlnutu 19 aocondo Eoot !hot ~ tho bid lo occoptod,
•
ily room, tireplace, lull base·
Times said.
· olong ollno. 277.44 fHtto o contract will be entered Into
roMroed opiko In tho existing ond ~~ performonce prop·
ment, and equipped kitchen .
The presence of the antibody conto~lne of Townlhlp Rood erty aocured.
•
$26.900 00
Number 157; lhonce South
Thoae chocks.,. bondo will
means exposure to the Incurable
•
50 dog,... 28 minutes 13 be returned 1t once to 111 ex·
disease but does not mean an
RACINE - 3 bedroom, 2
MCond• West 1long the ex·
cept the tucceuful bidder.
story home situated oo 2 rIndividual has contracted the virus. illlng cente~lno of Townohlp Hlo chocka 0&lt; bond will be
lots. Original oak woodwork,
Homosexuals, intravenous drug Road Number 1&amp;7, 47.rn hold until tho contract or bid
J&amp;L BLOWN
nice kitchen with a;ip liusers and hemophUiacs run the fHI to • rallrood oplto; io property oxocuted by him.
Bidder to oubmlt dotollod
anees, vinyl Siding, base·thence IOU\hoaotwordly con·IN'SULATION
highest lisk rt contracting AIDS .
tinuing along nld nne 1nd
opectllcotiono of equipment
ment, storage shed . lovely
'
VINYL &amp;
with thil arc of 1 curve to tho offered.
'•
home. Asking $39,000.00.
loft hovlng o rodluoof713.13
The right ia rtHrved tore·
ALUMINUM SIDING ~
• dill..- of 99 .83 "'" Ill joel any or all bldo.
•lnsul11tion
rolroed oplto, tho tong chord
Jono Wohon, Clerk
•
•Storm Doors
COUNTRY ES!AU and arab·
of ooid . . bearing South 53
Vlllogo of Pomeroy
'
•Storm
Windows
•
bil hunter's parad~e. Nice 3
Veterans Memorial Hospital
dog roM 32 minutes 48 •- 110)29; 11111 , 2tc
•Replacement Windows
'•
bedroom ranch type home
condo Eoot, 99,76 fHt to
•New Roofing
Oct 28
uid polnl: thence South 57 .
w~h a lull basement. Over 26
'•
"FREE ESIIMA!£1 "
Admlsslons- None.
dogNOo 33 mlnutoo 44 • ·
•
acres ot ground P~ S. "FREE"
Discharges - Ruth Campbell, condo Eollcontlnulngalong
gas. $54,900.00.
JAMES KEESEE
:
uid line, 122.87 fool to •
Orland Cremeans.
railroad ~pltta In 111o grinPH. 992-2772
:
NEW LISTING - Eastern
Oct. 2'7
tor'o oouthooll property·
District - A Yery mce 3 ~--------~7~~ :
Admissions - Ross Stewart, cO&lt;nor: thence South 87
'
·bedroom ranch with a large
Middleport·, Margie Fetty, Langs- dogr•• 011 mlnutu 19 • ·
.-~--- :
tamily room on approx. 2
condo Woot along tho gron·
MEIGS .
'
ville; Edna Searles, Bidwell.
,. tor'oaaid property Nno, 286acres ot ground. Priced to
Discharges - Robin Manuel, n fHtto tho point of begin·
sell at $45,000.00.
EXCAVATING
Walter King, Carol Wines.
nlng ond contolning 1, 720
COMPANY
REALTORS
ICrll.
•All Typfts of
Oct. 28
Sub!ocl to oil legol highHenrr E. Cleland. Jr.
Admllled - Eva Barrett, Langs. , ·wava and ooumenu of re 992-6191
Excavating
0
Jean
Trussell
949-2660
•Landscaping
vme; WOllam Rife, Middleport;
"S~id parco! appralood -,t
1 Dottie Turner 992-5692
•Basements
VIolet Smith, Ree&lt;lvUie; David ~t27, tSOO .
I,
' '' , Jo 'Hill 915·4466
•Sewage
Systems
Tle!!teyer, Pomeroy; and Stephen Tormo of Solo: Cnh
' '\ "'
&amp;
Gas Lines ,
•Water
' A
Chapell, Pomeroy.
..~~~.:~,:.~ =~~lr=
•Water
Well
Drilling
Dllcharpd - Gary Fulk, Helen • ·of tho -oiled votuo.
•Truc~ing
•
Ebersbach, 1)1lldred ferrY, Wllit~Q ;J H,~~ E1 Fronk, llloi;lff : ,
__
·
tt
·~w
'ji21,1
l0f:U...Iii••Coumv;'Oiil0'
,
Har ris • Wendell ""'re. ·
' RIAlTO!
" .1 : 11 0)'21i: '11 1)II, 1:z;- 3tc ·

, I .:
.J

-

Business Services

1

L:Suit filed in Common Pleas Court
.- An action requesting a $634.01judgment from Meigs Inn Pizza, and

-~-~

October

circuitry, as well as additional Department of Rehabllltatlon ~d
lottery terminals, enhancing the Correction with license plate matelottery's ability to make a profit for rial for the rest of 1985 pending,
education.
· competitive bidding on a new'
Th~ boanl approved a' $4 m!Won
contract.
·
low-Interest state loan to theGreater
Three-M. held the contract for 11
Cleveland Domed Stadium Corp. to years, but was underbid earlier this :·
assist With the purchaseof26.8acres year by two Japanese firms,
of prime land for a domed stadium. prompting allegations that there ,
Ofllclals said the land acquisition · was collusion In rewriting the ·•
will cost $17 million, ofwl\lch IIi! city specifications to favor one of those ·:
of Cleveland is underwriting $7 firms. The specifications are under .
million.
review.
The state loan, at 7.5 percent
The board also approved:
Interest, Is repayable In 15 years. In
-$16,227 for the Ohio National
addition, the state Is guaranteeing Guard for expenses Incurred In :
another loan of $2 mi!Uon lor the asslstlngtheclt1oiNUes followlnga :
same purpose. The state loan Is tornado last May 31.
backed by profits from the sale d
-$2,752,963 lor school lxllldlng ·
liquor.
,
assistance for East Guernsey Local :
The stadium Is to be used for School District, Guernsey County. :
athletic and cultural· events and
-$1,1JJ1,228 for pfellaratlon lor:
entertainment.
the reconstruction and widening of :
The board approved a $.'1Xl,IIXJ five existing bridges and the·:
non-bid contract extension lor 3-M construction d two new one~ oo 1-76..
Co., Cincinnati, to furnish the Ohio near Akron.

The Daily Sentinel

··-·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE . Elloll,
form, ontlquo, llquidotlon
uloa. Llconoed Ohio ond
Wool Vlrglnlo. 304· 773·
1178&amp; or 304· 773-6430.

oorod by Roclno Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beginning at
1:00 p.m. Factory Choke 12 9 · Wanted To Buy
auoa• ohotguno.
We pay cnh for toto modo!
Roduco ollfo ond loll with CIMn Ulld Clrti.
GoBaN cof)lulea and E-Vap Jim Mink Chov.-Oido Inc ,
"water pillo", Fruth Pl!or·
811 Gono Johnoon
mocy, Mlddloport.
814·446-3672

12

Situation•
Wanted

Vecancy for the elderly in

our homo. Trained ond fif.

~

E
r

.t

3 bedroom home on 4 acre;
of land . Full b11ement, new •

vinyl siding and n- roQf,
located on Rockaprlngo Rd.,

approximately 6 mlnU\ea
forl'f'l Pomeroy. Call tf4-

teen yeart experience. Cell

992-2978 •!tir 8:00 p.m.

Nuraing Cll rl in priva te
home . Room for two pa ~
tienta . •soo. e mon1h. Call

21tory home. full basement,
detached garage, cloae 1to '•
achoola, hotpltel, groc.,Y, 3 ~
bedrooms upatalra, livitag ,..
room, kitchen, dining rocun.

814-992-7314.

814· 992· 369&amp;.

Room ond boord foroldt•ty .
Reo11Dt1tlblo prfcu.
992·8022.

Good neighborhood.

=

roof, meny other lmpr
mentt. Serious lnqulrlaa

only. 304-675-1214.

*

i
•

�-

Page- S- The Daily Sentinel
for Sale

51 Houaehold Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Solound cholror.lcodfrom
UBI. to IB95. obloa, 160
ond up to .112&amp;. Hldo· • '
boda, t390 . and up to .
U60 ., toll ,bod1 1146,
Recllnore, *226. to 1376 ..
Lompt from UB. to •12&amp; .
pc•.dlnonoa fro"' tt09 ., to
436. 7 pc. 11B9 end up.
Wood toblo whh oix cholrt
U8Sto t74&amp; . Doll&lt; 1110
up to 1226. Hutchoa, 1560.
Bunk bod comploto with
mottreOHI, U76 . and up to
1395. Baby bodl, •110 .
MattreiHt or box apringa.
full OJ twin. 163 .. flrm·. t73.
and IB3. Quoon 111t. 1226.
4 d•· chilli, 149. 5 dr.
chooto, 1&amp;9 . Bod !Tomeo,
120.and 125 .. 10 gun · Gun
coblnato, 1360. Goo or
aloctric rongoa U75 . Beby
mottriUII, 125. U&amp;. bod
fromoa 120. U6, 1!o 130,
klngfTomo •eo. Goodoolec·
tlon of bedroom ouheo.
rockert , metal clblneta.
h11dboord1 138 l!o up to
II&amp;.
.

1983 Joy Skyline 2 bdr ..
totel electrk: , underpinned, '
anchored down, privata

rented lot. Centenirv. Cen
ttay if told . Interested cell

614 · 448 · 7200 oltor
5:00PM .
2 bdr. Now Moon 12,500.
Coli 814-388· 871 1.
197714•70 mobllohonio, 3
bedroom, 2 both a. 1OdD
awning. King woodburner.
all underpinning 18,700 .
Coll814·379·2798 .
1973 Now Moon 12x85, 2
bdr .. partially lurnlahod, AC,
woodburner, ceiling fin, undlrpinnlng, porch. *&amp;:800.
Cell 614·448·9290 oHer
4:00.
1979Windoor14•703bdr..

2 bltha. CA. o•tro inaulo·

"We ran some tests, Senator,
and found that your
speeches cause acute bore-

-----------------•

dQffi ffi
• 1a b ffilCe.
• "

'----------,1"""--------....j

lion, corpotod, mlcrowove.
cloon. Coli 114-379-2417 r
orll14 ·379·2841 .

41
1983 Fllllwcod. 14x70, 3
bdr., 2 full bltho. portlally
lurnlahod. like now . Coli
oltor 4PM. 614·38B·B833.
1979 14•70, 7 \o\ acrot,
located St. Rt. 32&amp;, noor No.
I minot. Rlducod. Coli
814·742· 2269 ot 614-3B8·
8472.
12X80, 2 bdr, lorgo LR,
rlfrig., diahwaaher. counter·
top reno• with built in oven.
..,., corpet • wollpopor in
bath, new underpinning,
•c8oo. Coll&amp;14-446-3417
olior 5pm.

44

Houses for Rent

hoven, c e - - -- - 2 bldroom. full blllmont,

R
A
M
lvorlidl pto. lddloport.
Special rates for SerMor
Citizena. 1130. EquoiHoua·
·
0
~
•14 992
rng pportun ....o. v •
·
7721 ·

AC. 2317 MI. Vornon Avo,
1226.00 month dopoait.
Colt Mro. Bunon. 304·67&amp;2861 .

2 bdr. 1346 mo., 3 bdr.
U2&amp; mo. Both furnlllhod.
- · dip.. nc poto. Colt
814·448·1386 oHor &amp;PM .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: 2 bdr. 14•58 toto I oloctrlc
iniUrtd, rHIOnlblt FJtll. trailer, 122&amp; per mo. plus
Colt 304· 576·2338
oloctrlc ond dop. Ref. roq. on
prlvoto lot . 10 min. from
F,.. 6 month• lot rent. 7B town . Coli 814·258-1393.
14'x70' , oil oloctric. central
I ·C. 304-875-3981 .
Duplex troilor. 1 bedroom
Meh. Both furnished . Rent
1974 Crhon hou• troller, one for t t40. end other
12x70, oil oltc, gcod ccnd, •125. Woter, -oge In·
u;,ooo.oo . 304 · B95 · eluded . 1&amp;0. . depoolt rt·
368&amp;.
qulrod. Colll14·992·2384.
19&amp;7 Londcroft houu
troller, Bll36. complete with
furnlah lngo ond wood
b..nor. ldool for hunting
comp, noodl ocmo ropaif,
priced •BISO .OO I I it. 304458-181B.
Farms for Sale

By owner 93 ocroo. 6 yoer
old houM. 2. 200 oq It, 4
bedroom, 2 bltho, 24•38
garege. mlnerll. Southside.
w. v•. 304·871·2034.
Buaineu
Buildings

Apt. building for oolo in
Middleport. ContoctJohnot
Vicky ot 814-797-4860.

35

Lots &amp; Aci'BIIge

Ftrm for 11le: no houM, 8

acre1. 2 btrne. county water
• aoptic tonk. Coll814·379·
22&amp;8 .
2 level loti for ule . Greer
Ad . 7 mll11 from town.
304·67&amp; ·1188.
.

2 bedroom mobile homo,
Burdelto Addn, 1176.00
pluo utiNtloo end dopolit.
304· 176· 2464 or 675 2048 .

1--------- -

One or two bedroom epar1·

nlahod or unfurnlthod. Rent
nogotioblo. Coli 814 -992·
8723 .
Furni1hed Apartment for
rent, no children . Avellable
oltor Oct. 3. Coli 614,992·
2749 .

For ront om Ill lurnlahed

apertmant. Pt. Pleuant.
Rolorenceo. No Poto. 304·
87&amp;-138&amp;.
Nice 1 and 2 br apartment•

down1own. 304-87&amp;-2218
• 8· 8
2 bldroom ground floor opt.
downtown Point Pletatnt,
304-885-3450.

1-- - - In Middleport, Ohio, 2 bod·
room ftimlllhod oportmont,
1·304·882· 2668 .

1---------Furniahod 3 rooma. both.

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS IEquol
Houalng Opportunity!
monthly rent otorta ot 1169
for 1 bod room and 1204 for
2 bedroom. dlpooit 1200.
located noor Spring Volley
Plo.. ond Food..nd, pool
and Coble TV ovoiloblo,
office hours •• possible 10
omto4pmond7pmto9pm
Monday-Friday. Coli 814·
448 · 2746 or loovo ·
mouogo.

upper duplo• . newly dtco·
rotld, prlvoto. odulto, 304·
87&amp;· 28&amp; 1.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent SIHping Room•
ond light houoo kooplng
rooma . Pork Control Hottl .
Coli 614-448-0758 .

46 Space for Rent
Mobile homo lot, 12'x&amp;O' or
omollor. 175 wotor paid, 4th
• Noll. Golllpollt. Coli 448·
4416 oltor 8PM .

20 .:rea farm lend tor c..h
rent. Coli 513 -323-4747
ovonlnga.
--------COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork. Route 33. North of
Nicely lurniahod mobile Pomoroy . Lorge loto. • Coli
homo, off. opt., control olr 814·992·7479.
ond hoot in city, odu~• only.
Coll 614·446·033B.
Second floor office. Court
St., Pomeroy. ecroa1 from
2 bdr. opt., good locotlon, Court Hou11. Corpot ond olr.
rldocorottd. utllitlol portly UOO. per month. Colt doya
poid . Coli 304-876·6104 or 11 4·992·2054 or otop ot
304·&amp;76·5388 .
Clork'• Jewelry, Pomeroy.

1- - - - - - - - -

Lorao 2 bdr. opt., 2 both,
fully corpotld, relrig. &amp;
atovo, 11 Court St., 1326
mo .. ref. l dop. Coli 114·
44B -4928.
.

41

Houaea for Rent

t300 1 month. pluo util~i...
Cloln, wolf' kept, 3 BR
homo. City ochool diotrict.
Dopoalt l Rot. nooded. Coli
014-24&amp;-9635 .
Smoll hou11 torrent 3 bdr. 2
both. monly furn lahod ,
t300 par mdnth pluo elect·
ric. Acrou from Blue Fountoln Motol. Coll'814-446·
1822 col ' bltWHn 5 l
10PM.
&amp; room unfum. hou11. util.
notfurn. rent •130 a month.

I Gorflold Avo. Colt 614446·71544.
Noor 8uckoyo Hilla 2 bdr ..
lomlly room. we. '225 mo ..
dip .. no polo. Coll614-448·
947&amp; or 814· 246-5097 or
614·241·1369. ·
2 bldroomo. unfurnlohod.
now· point, fully carpeted.
No lntldo polo. Dopoalt
required . Coli 61.4·992·
3090.
Efficiency cottogo, 1&amp;6.00
- k. utHhlll pold. phone
304·176· 3100 or 876 ·
1&amp;09.
In Point PlooHnt, 3 bod·
room houu , 304· 878 ·
4024.

'-

'•

Upatelra unfurnithed apt ••

corpttod. oil udlitiet paid. no
children, no polo. Colt 614·
448 -1637 &gt;
Furnlahod ottlc opt. utiHioo
pold, 1176,919 2nd .. Shore
bath, men preferr~d . Cell
446-4.,18 oltor 7PM .
, ____.:._ _ _ _ _ __
Furnlahod opt. 2 bdr. , 13H&gt;
4th, Golllpclla, 1 196 wotor
pold . Colt 448· 4418 otter
7PM
·
Furnlohod 3 room a • both,
clean, no pets, adulte. ref. &amp;
dopoolt. Coil 81 4 · 448 ·
1&amp;19.

County Appllonco , , Inc .
Good uood epplioncoo ond
TV 1111. Open BAM to &amp;PM.
Mon thru Sot. 614-4461699, 827 3rd. Avo. Go IIi·
pella, OH .
Volley Furniture, now &amp;

u11d.

~rv•

a..:tion of qu•l-

lty furniture. 1218 Eaatorn
Avo., Golllpolla.

63

Antiques

menta In Pomeroy. Fur·

1 and 2 bldroom fumiohod
opu. for rent In Mlddlopcn.
All utllitieo paid. Coli 814·
992·6084.
1- - - - - - - - - APARTMENTS , mobile
homoa. houan Pt . Pleount
ond Golllpolla. 814 ·448·
8221.
1- -- -- - - - - 2 br oponmonu In Hondlr·
ocn. 304-875 -1972.

Trailer for rent Golllpcllo
Forry. dopoo~ .and roloren·
cea required, no pe1t, phone
304-676·1B67.

44

2 bedroom tpertmenta .
New Hoven. WVa . Newly
remodlled. In town. 814·
992-7481.

U10d Furniture .: Bedroom
ouite , 1 nt of toblot,
dro111r. • bod. motel office
d11h. 3 mlloo out Bullville
Rd. Opon 9omto&amp;pm, Mon .
thru Sot.
814·441-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W11hero, drylrl, rotrlgero·
tore. rongoa. Skogga Ap·
plloncoa. Uppor River Rd.
blaido Stone Crell Motel.
814·448· 739B.

•-·

19BO ndwoll. 14x70. 3
bed;oomt, 1 'h bath. total Mo b ile hom11 ovaileble
elec . Book price Nov . t, Fottora Mobile
U3.000.00 will oocrlflco Home P'ork. Coli 614·446·
lor U 1,000.00.
1802.
·
Floltwood troller. 51•1 0.
witll pull out room 8x1D,
phone 304·076·8980 oHer
5PM.

Apartment
for Rent

For rant with option to buy.
4 bldroom. 2 cor gorogo.
bum In kitchen, largo lot,
ren t 121&amp; . 00, 1100.00 2 bdr. oil utilitiu pold 1350
d • Po 1 It . Sole p ric • mo. 2 bdr. PlY own oloctrlc.
125 -000.00 or on lond 1350 mo. Both lurnlahld.
controct with down PlY· IIC· dop.. no poll. C1 II
N
H
~2'~2.;$'
coli 30 4 - 814·446· 13B5oltor &amp;PM .

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
1918 two bldroom Schuhz TO BUY. nlco 3 bldroom
Mobile Homo. 12xiD. Com· house, 9 miles from Sho~
plotoly furnlllhod, including ney'1 Point Ple111nt, Mttlng
mli:ro-wovo. AC. now carpet on lovol pllco of ground.
throughout. Excellent con- 129 ,1000.00 . 304·762· .
dillon. '5700. Call 814-982 22211 ... 304·678-2441 .
2H1 .
2 bldrocm port fumiohod,
1o044 mobile homo in Mo· nice location, NIIOnlble
ocn, W. Vo. Now undorrrkirt· rant. Coli 304·BB2· 3722 or
ing. tteps and doors. Needs B82· 279B.
oomo repolr. Portlally fur· = = = = == == =
nlollld. 11360.orblttollor.
Mobi'le Homea
Mull loll . Coli 304-372· 42
3715 or 304· 372·8265.
for Rent

34

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br Larry Wr!ght

S4 Misc . Merchandise

Sperion redlo with ache rna t iel. good conci., beat offer.
Call614· 448· 2184.
4 piocoa of wicker. Rocker.
plon1or, mogozlne toblo ond
lamp toblo. 1920a &amp;.12

54

Misc. Merchandise

firewood-cutup ·slabs, 1
truck load •100, 2·11 BO .
Pickup loid. you houl 115 .
HEAP occoptld. Call 8 t 4 ·
246·6804 .
HouH coal. Lump Sa stoker.
Zlnn Cool Co. Coll81 4·446 ·
1408.

Hau• coal. lump &amp; stoker .
Zlnn Cool Co. Coll81 4-446·
140B.
Tri·county Spcrt Shop now
Open, Spring Volley Pluo .
Mon.-Fri.. 9:30· 7:00. Sot.
9 :30 · 5 :00. Sun. 12 :00 ·
6:00. Coli 814·448-2336 .
Couch • .choir, gcod cond. &amp;
one complete 111 of bunk
boda. Coii614· 38B-9829 ..
Firewood $36 PU load,
llhrlddod bork 126 PU load.
hardy ovorgoon llhruba 11 D.
Jond~e~plng • trimming. 2
mi. N. of Sliver Bridge .
Uppor Rt. 7 , Ohio. Coli
814·441· 4630.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Ollv.e St.. Golllpolla. Now
• uood wood·coolatovoo, 8
pc wood LR ou~o U99 ,
bunk bld1 1189, tntron
recllnero 199, now • utld
bldroom ou~11. rongu.
wrlnaor wollhora. • ohooo.
Now llvlngroom oultol f19 S
•699, lompo, aloe buying
cool • wood ltovoo. Call
814·448· 31 &amp;9 .

hoodbcord with mlr·
King
wotorbod,
book·
row. lizo
176.00
. 304·875·
7991 .
CliO

Apple II E. lncludoo mcuoo,
80 column cord, dlac drive,
lou than 1 yoor old. bloutl·
ful cond, 11 .200.00. Applo
logo II , e&amp;O .OO . Applo
Pucol 1 .2 $80.00 . Applo II
C. dlao drive 1200.00 .
Scrlbl Printer '200.00 . Coli
304·675-8700.

Brown leather ccuch , 304·
87&amp;· 1175.
Wood for 1111. 126.00 pick
up lood. Heulod .. not
necked. 304 -.8~5·4373 .
Junior Girl Scout uniform:
blouoo. jumper olzo 8;, ponto
lizo 10 . Novor wOJn UO.
304-67&amp;·6844 .

Building Materlala

Block, brick, •-•• plpoo.
wlndowo. llntolo, etc .
Claude Wintoro, Rio Grandi.
0 . Coll614·24&amp;·6121 .

Brlorpotch Kennel• All ·
brood g rooming . Indoor·
outdoor bcordlng locllltloo.
Englilh Ccckor sp.,lol. 38B
9790.

f .11111 Suppl11~:;

(; L Vt~slo;;k
1

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 36 Welt, Jockoon,
Ohio. 814·286·8451 .
Mauey Fergu10n, New
Hollond, Buth Hog Soloo •
Service; Over 40 uood
tractore to choo11 from &amp;.
complotollne of now •
~·od oqulpmont. Lorgolt
IOiectlon In S .E. Ohio.
Sptclol 10% dlacount on oil
pertolor coth aoloa only,
until Nov. 15.

Two John DHre A tractor.
1973 8ronccl UOO .OO .
Phone 304· 88&amp; - ~71.

~ ~~=·===·======
87 6 36 34

At Brunlcordl't ..... No ropol·
lilted pi1no glmmickl. Juat
honllt piano voluoo. Wo ore
"B
never un ... r ocldl runlcardl
Muolc Inc. Cornor 3rd. •
Court St .• Golllpolla. Ohio.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlonollltetlmo guo'
rantee. Local reference•
f~.trnithed. FrH eltlmetea.
Coli collect 1·614· 23704BB. dey or night. Rogera
Batement Waterproofing.

BORN LOSER

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

(}JIT'Q1~1!, ""L~T-

AQ-11~ ...\H'

MAIL?

'I li:llE?? 1 PEALL'{'""'

AH6RALL:_)]
'IOU DID

'500UWI.l'T CCMPLAI ~ ,
?HC\.II.D L. ~

_.;-;j.,

- ~'1£:. ~~~ ~

AREI.l'T

M~ LATE?T
CCf&lt;{ Cl=

I

-mAT

64 Hay l!a Grain
I

•lo. Coll614·379-

Mlud bllod hoy, 11.00. Coli
814-949-2179.

1---------Tr.Jn spn rl.il itlll
71

Autos for Sale

1985 Chevy Pickup truck .
P.S .. P.B .. VI . Auto. t8900 .
Coli 814· 849·21&amp;0.
1982 Sllverodo Chevrolet
pickup, PB, PS, V·B onglno,
now tlroo, 61,000 plua
mlloa, U.125 .00 , L.L.
Smhh, 906 Mo11mon Clr·
ole, Point Ploloont, 304·
871· 3222.
1883 Chov S10 truck ••·
ton dod co b. with full roclln·
lng buckot -to. white with
blue lnolde, lump Mill In
wall, po, pb, V-6 onglno, I
opood tr•omlaolon, Cadillac
radio, with stereo 1nd
CIHittl

TOP CASH pold for 'BO
modtlll'td newer uted e~~ra .
Smith Bulck ·Pontloc, 1911
Eootorn Ave .. Golllpolla. Coli
814· 448· 22B2 .
77 Muotong now porta, now
tiroo. now point, exoollont
ohopo, • .000. Colt 614·
268 -841 .

1 9 81

tepee. 4 new Revo

drn~lront atoblllzor biro. 20
grrl. tonk, 1100 poy load
tuepenaion, front 1nd ...,
chromo bumPifl, otolnlooo
11•1 mlrroro, . lock and tilt
wing glo1101. lliding raor
gl111, oloc n - LHr oluml·
num top with ollding reor
gl111. Actuol mlloo 44,000 .
Coot •11,000. Solll5,500 .
304· 87&amp;· 383B.

1~:::===::::::::::::::=

1-

ANNIE

eatlmetea,

NotJSE!

[)

TERIAP

rJ I

HAPPINESS

WAS !Hie,

ALLEYOOP

•.

SO FAA, SO GOOD,
FCU-AS I WAlCH
YOUR STEI' ON
11-iiS LEPGE!

BUT I

'

..

raling. 160 min .)
(]) 700 Club
CIJ ., rD Moonlighting
ICC)
fJ (I) ® MOVIE: ' Into
Thin Air' ICC)
()) Nova (CCI 'Tha Robot
Revolution/' The techniques
of computer automation in
Amerloan indus1ry are Ole·
plored. 160 min.l
(j]) War: A Commontary by
Gwynne Dyer !CCI 'Keeping the Old Game Alive.· NATO's conve"tional war
games in central Europe are
documented. (60 min .)
9:30 I]) Chompionahlp Roller

WINNIE

menta. footers, drlv.waya,

Mptlc tonka. londiiCOplng ..
Coli onytlme 814 · 448 · '
4537. Jomoo L. Dovloon, Jr.

•
•

Will do bock hoe work on • ~
wMkondo. Coli 814· 388· :
8248 .
J.A.R. Conotructlon Co ..
Rutland, Oh&lt;• 114· 742·
2903. 8o11rnlnto. Footoro.

Derby;

10:00 8
(}) (ZJ RemingtOn
Steele A pro wresiler hires

CITY STORES.
SILAS

. Remington and laura after a

OPEN
YORE EVES,
LOWEEZY-THAR'S ONE
OVERVONDER

series of death threats and
g}'m 'accidents .· (60 min.l

CD Now1
CIJ Gl rD Spenser: For Hire
ICC I
(I) War: A Commentary by
Gwynne Dyer [CCI 'Koop·
ing the Old Gama Alive .· NA·
TO's con ventional war
games in central Europe are
documeniod. 160 min.)
(j]) Newswtrteh
IH801 Hitchhiker; Out of
the Night
[MAXI MOVIE: ' Evil Thlt
...,.n De' (CCI
10;15 (I) MOVIE: ' Troll of tho
lonetom1 Pine'
10:30 (J) Celebrity Chefo
(!) Super Stan Bull Riding
frcm Son Antonio, TX.
® Houoe for All Se810no
[H801
MOVIE:
'Tho
Wicked lody'
11 ;00 8 Cil CIJ CZl Ill CIJ CD

-

••
•

rDNews

•

lUJ

••

.

.........

_---

BOOTY FORAY METRIC IMPEND
performance&amp; aound
like someo~ ·s having- AN "OPEAA ·T I O~ "

.

.

...•

'

.

.,.,

.'
'.
...

James Jacoby
__;;_.;;;.;..:.:..:..:::..:..::.!....___

' _

."

r-- - - - - ----. ·.

Too great
a sacrifice

•

tl·ll-11
NORTH
• 10 7
• to1
t A KJ 8 43
+J 9 7

By Jameo Jacoby •

...

..

...

1 DON'T KNOW.

OFFICEK ... IT
WAS EITI4Eil f&gt;,
SIJLLOOZ~f
Z(J.MBONI uo.

A 7+7!

11'1

a 1.0ng

wr, trcm

Tipperary and Anntrgh Tho
history of tho singing group
tho Clancy Brothers and
Tommy Mrrkem is chroni·
cled. i 60 min.)
• Bonny Hill Show
11 :30 • (}) (ZJ Tonight Show
Guest host Joan Rivero wei· ·
comea Sus an Sullivan. 160
min.)
·
(!) Sporuconter
(I) New Newlywed ~
8 (I) Slmorr llo Slrmn

y

~.wd'

•••

.•.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

..

4 Wire

ACROSS

I Stuff
5 Gree k

measure

5 Oregon city
6 On Uptoes ffi'lf*l:'

island
10 Purplish
7 Nat Cole
recordllng
12 Expiate
IS Sprightly
8 Burdened
14 Cambric,
9 African
e.g.
republic
15 Aparll11ent II Remove
(sl.)
from pcwer Y-rday'e Answer '
16 Ready
17 Malarkey!
18 1.1% Taylor 18 Object
22 DlveNIIfy 31 Mai&lt;e of sarcasm 28 Consented
of
19 Fall behlnd 20 MUk
24 Just about
(mock)
20 Etrronlery
products 28 Plump
32 •_ or
22 Dante's
plant
28 Paid att.en·
troubles.. ."
"La Z1 - one's
danceo
33 Conduce
Nuova"
oars (lake SO Mining
36 Electric
23 Mountain
It etiBY)
diAcovery

·,

rum

·.

..•
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-'
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.

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.,
"

.

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6-+-+-++-

DOWN

-·

~~~~~

CreR

24Swl88 clty
25 •- Si Bon" 1,1,-+-l'"""f-21 Elec. unit
27 Jazz fan
28 Merrill
or
Coleman
29 Rival
31 "Healer"
34 BUll S!Atlon
35 Rental
agreeme nt
37 Eat away
38Arablan
republic
39 Foree unlls
40 Guide

'

I Applause

2 LatVIan

.

...
,,
'

city

3 Athlrst

DAILY CRYFI'OQUUI'ES - Here'• bow to wort It:
AXYDLBAAXR

e

(]) Mort Frum U.N.C.LE. 1
(I) Tony Brown'o Joumoi
Tony Brown discusses is·
sue$ of special interest to
tho black communhy

..,

•a.oo

I Jumbles:
4nswer: What some musical

•'

·.

ponise
to
determine
whether or not someone
from ihe pcHce force is har·
asslng a local councilman by

YOU OUGHT TO
HAVE GROCERY
CARTS LIKE THEY
DO INTH'BIG

;

(Answers tomorrow}

Nightly
Buolnass
.
EAST
. At tournamen t bridge, when vulner· :lff~ 6 1
Report
+AQJ8 2
opponents are abcut to ~~Core 620 , K J 7
liJJ Wheal of Fortuna
'Q9 63 2
or
650,
it's good tactics to sacrifice t 6
til WKRP in Cinclnnoti
+7&gt;
even though you may give up 500.
K 10 8 5 3
8 :00 0 (}) CZl A-Team !CCI
+A
Meanwhile your frustrated defenders,
Murdock poses as an evanSOUTH
gelisl in a wild scheme to
angry at not being allowed to play and ·
' • 53
'
stop a seri es of vagrant killmake their vulnerable game, are go· ·
.,
ings. 160 min .l
81
ing to do their utmost to set you four
• Q 10 9 2
(]) Dal&lt;tari
tricks doubled, If lbey can. Watch the
+ Q 61 2
(!) A.W.A. Championship
careful play made by Evelyn Fowler
Wrestling
Vulnerable: East-West
of Lubbock, Texas, to Inflict the maxi·
(I) NBA Baoketbatl: loa
Dealer:
West
mum penalty on sacrificing oppoAngolos Lokera at Delloo
nents.
CIJ • rD Who' e tho Bolt I
Norllr Eost
Soutb
The four-diamond bid by Evelyn, ~=
ICCI Mona intrudes when
Pass I+
Pass
who was sitting West, showed a single· 4 •
Tony mak es an innocent atDb I.
4+
5t
'"
ton diamond, four-card spa~e support Pass
tempt 10 matc h Angela with
Pau Pbl
Pass
a recently divorced buddy.
and a maximum pass. When North Pass
Pass
' "··
fJ CIJ CD Donald Duck's made a lead-directing double, South
u
&amp;01h Blrthdly Dick Van 1 deddr!d to sacrifice against the East· ,
Opening lead : 4
·'
Dyke hosts this Disneyland·
West vulnerable game. Athough fivebased celebration lor the an·
spades would make, East could not be
imeted character. (RI 160
sure, so he doubled the five-diamond
min.I
sacrifice.
CIJ
• MacNeil/lehrer
East won the spade ace and cashed
Newohour
the club ace, Evelyn signaling with the
(j]) Nova !CCI 'The Robot
eight. Wben East ignored the encourRavolutionl' The techniques
aging club and played back a spade, it than enough to compensate for the '
.of computer automation in
was apparent that he had started witlr vulnerable game they could have . :
American industry are explored. 160 min .l
111re lone club ace. Now Evelyn made made. If the club king is played before. .
fill MOVIE: 'Battle for tho ,the key ftefenslve play. Without cash· East Is given the club ruff, declarer .•
Planet of 1he Apea'
'ing the king, she played a low club. can rise with the heart ace, draw ~
IHBOJ
MOVIE:
'Beet
East ruffed and switched to a heart. trumps and discard dummy's losing ;
Street'
That line of play gave the defense six heart on the queen of clubs, holding
IMAXI MOYIE: 'Pwple
·,' .
tricks for a 700-polnl penalty, more Ibe damage to 500 points.
Will Talk'
&lt;'
8 :30 ()) Ill rD Growing Paino
tccr After Carol chooses to
'•
1ell Jason about a school
•
crush instead of Maggie,
Maggie blames Jason for
tha apparent loss of hor
children's affection .
9 ;00 0 (}) (!) Riptide Lt. Quinlan uses Boz' computer elll -

tampering with his credit

Dozer Work land cloorln1;
londocoplng, etc/ Frao ootl·
motll. Cell 614-448·B038
..- 814· 992· 7119 onytlmo.

...
•.

.'

+
.
L - - - - - - - -- - ...J ...

Excavating

.

XXI I X)(IJ

Plint111awerhere: TO (

-·

..

•

'

Good·1 Elcovotlng, ·blot·

gested by the above cart0011.

'A

bad he
why would
ate the r'e$t Hhr~u leave him
oft he note!
with mei'

JIM 'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 355, Golll·
pclio. Cell 814·367·0&amp;76.

Now arrange the circled letters to
IOfm the surprtse lllSWM, u sug-

II

) KJ
Ylllenloy'o

.,

He. FEL-T \HE. ONI..Y
WAY TO MUL.T IPl.Y

+

Plumbing
Heating

9W""·

r

CIJ

CLE!l/1 0\IEA HERE~ THE {)()fJSOH

~~

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpollo. Ohio
Phone 814·448· 3BB8 or
&amp;14·446· 4477

(I) Corol Bumett
CIJ Gl rD ABC News ICC)
0 C1J ® CBS News
CIJ Dr. Who
(j]) Body Electric
1!11 Rosa Petal Place
7 :00 1J (}) PM Magazine
(])
Courtship/Eddie's
Fa1her
(!) Spcr'tscantor
I]) Mary Tyler Moore
(I) Entertainment Tonlght
(ZJ Wheel of Fortuna
0 CIJ Wheel of Fortune
(I) Seccnd City TV
liJJ News
(j])
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
Iii rD Divorce Court
1!11 Joffersons
7 :30 IJ (}) New Newlywad
Game
(]) Please Don't Eat

mo

A HAIL5TOflM7 BUT. IT STIIUC~
IT'S BEEN PEAFECTLY I APPROACHEP

l!a

83 ·

...

II

·

Daisies

re11onoblo rotoo. 304-671' . • ,
7121.
••

Concrete ·work. Backhoe's,
lck LoSobra. AC. 111 73
Vans l!a 4 W.O.
powo , AM-FM colO. CruiM,
Oozer • Dltchor, Oump
V· 8, 87,000 mlloa U596 . 1- - - - - -- - - - truck&amp;, • water-gu- Hwer- _
1980 Chevy von. EKe . electrical linea.
Coli 814·448· 186&amp;. ·
'.
Cond .. ol e. cruiM, tl~. 8 ·
·'.
pouongor,
18,79&amp;.
Coli
1 Tome anoro. 4 micro- 1977 Caprice Clouic wh~o
''
blue, body txc. cond .. 614· 378· 2341 . No Sundoy
85
General Hauling · ·: :
Pho noo · 1 fo ndor proc11lo " on
rune llko new .. All power. Cillo.
blu guitar, Colt Log Clbl~ . ~ 11 ~ 1 4 ••1 17••
Rocordoro, 814·446·4313 . _""
_ _•__·_
- _.__•_•_·_ _ 1871 GMC 1 ton ltop Yon ,
'.'.'
Jemea Boys Water Service.
Toacom pcrto 1 , 4 trock 1868 Corvolr 2 dr. coupe good cond . Cell 814 -448 ·
Aloo poolo filled . Coli 814·
recording machine, brond oxc. oond., •1.000. Coli B034 .
266 ·1141 O( 814·446·
new . Coli 114-446·48 82 ,
liter 3PM, 814-245-&amp;873.
1175 or e14·4f6·7811 .
.
•
Kimball Whitney plano for 1880 Hondo Accord hitch · 187B Ford, 8 cyl .. Eccno·
Kon 'a Water Sorvico.
Wollo, , ,
line. one owner. Phone
ulo . • 1200. Ce11814·742· bock &amp; IPIId , AM· FM 304· 671-1312 .
clllorno, pcola fHiod. Phone •
..
2
CIIIOtll otereo, 4 opMklro,
814·387·0623 or614·367·
B82 .
'exterior oliver, Interior rod.
n41 night or day.
: .... :
29.917 octuol mlloo1 ono
Alto oox tor 10lo. 2 YMre old . owner, Ike new cona.
C1ll 74 Motorcycles
' Weug~ · · Wat~r Service.
''00. Coll814-742·2162 . ·Noloon R. Bottle. 814-448 ·
Wtlla, cisterna. poolt. F11t,
31 1 6
rolloblo aorvlco. Coil 814. , .
KIMBALL SWINGER OR· 1..:.:_:_: _ · - - - - - GAN, roponooood , low 1974 Chevy Suburbon 9 82 Kowolltl 760 LTD . oxc. 2&amp;8 · 1240 or 514• 268 ·
•
monthly poymonll, fr01lo1- poooongorwogonrunogood. cond., neW parte and ac· 1130. Ro11onoble rolla.
.,.. Included. Coli 304-4&amp;3· mony o&gt;droo, IB&amp;O or blat Clll., moving mull Mil. Coli
81 4 ·448· 28 11 or 614·448 · Houl llmlltono, ll~d . gro·
1163, Don Forguoon Muolc, of fir. Coll614·24&amp;·11&amp;7.
B229 .
vol,dlrt, bulk or bog fertilizer l
Rt. 60. Corodo, W. Vo.
.
end
lime . Excolalor Bolt '
B2 Chlvotto outo olr, AM· 1978 Horloy Dovloon Supor·
Worka Inc. 63B E. Moln St.. •
FM.
4
dr.,
now
point,
Ill
now
58
glldo . 1800 mlloo. Colt 304·
_::
Fruit
tln11. 12.760. Call 614-371· 317· 7780 or 304· 367 · Pomeroy. 814 ·992· 3891 .
•
&amp; Vegetable•
21B2 .
7214.
Dump truck 11rvlco. 304· ·•
:
1171 dodge A1por1, olant 6, ' 81 Horloy Dovldocn, oxc 67&amp;· 3190.
opoclol
Edition,
cloln.
now
Apple. All vorietloa.
ccnd. low mlloo, low prlco,
buahol. Now Open dolly. All tlrao. good goo mllolao. Coli ' coli 304·17&amp;·11456 oltor
87 Uphol1tery
!nlltt. vog'otobloa. Jock• 114·448·3010 onytlmo.
&amp;:00 PM .
Morkot, At. 311, Hlndlrocn .
1B7• Monto Corio. VB. 78 Horloy SpOn•r. 1,000
Honl\f, 11 .00 be•. Coli eutOrMtic, air, good tirea, CC. Eloc. · ttort, very low
TRISTATE
ohorp cor. Coli 814·982· mlloogo. •11500. 304·871·
304·B9&amp;·3404.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
284t.
842411tw'l5 p.m . ,
11113 Soc. Avo .. Golllpollt.
614·446 · 7833 or814·448·
1878 AMC Spirit. 4 cyl .. 4
1B33.
opood. good condition . 76
Boata and
69 For Sale or Trade 11200. Coli 614 · 882·
II • M' Furniture Monufoo·
Motor1 for Sale
6110.
turing, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh . Colt 114, 216·
For 1111 ortrlde1177 'K ton 1111 Pontiac convortlblo.
1470, coli Eve. '6 14-446·
John
bcot
for
ulo.
Cell
ChiVy PU, 380 onglno,outo. Good condition. Coli 814·
3438
. Old • now
114·286·6417 ..
247-4282.
trono. CoW 11 4· 441·3243.
_u_p_ho_.,
_ .,.
__d_·--------~
·, :

I

l

(!) Major leogue Baoeball' 1 Grooteat Hita
I]) Sanford and Son
CIJ Ill rD Price Is Right
CIJ JeoporiiV_ _ _

,

mlloo. Runo good. Now
wocdon bod . 1876. Coli
814· 992·2881 .
·

~

(]) Carol Burnett and
Friends
(!) Revco's World Class

Home
Improvements

82

1

News

••c

olr. AM ·FM auto.. now
point, good tirtl, t3,000.
Coli 814-379-2882.
Purobrod Yort&lt;ohlro BOJoo, 8 1- - -- - - - - - WMko old. •21. ooch . 304· 1974 F..-d Truck. 87,000

r-1 .... I I
·
·--

rD News
(]) $100.000 Name That

Worrien

inaured, free

CALLI

IJ (}) CIJ (ZJ 0 CIJ ® •
Tune

D.and P,1 . Contractors . Vinyl
18B4 Oldo Cutloll Supremo tiding. replacement winBrougham. low r!Miea, ••c dowo, lnoulotlng. roofing.
oond whh oil GM optlono new end remodeling, conpoalllblo. Must ooll 304·876 erato. Call 304·773·11131 .
2863 liter 6 PM .
J .end L. lnatollotlon. Roof·
1881 Dotoun 200 SX , lng, vlnylaldlng, otorm doora
lporta package, auto,
and ' windows. Free llti·cond. mull •II. S&amp;.100.00. mateo. Colt 614·992-'2772.
Phone 304-882-3632.
COLEMAN WATER WELL
1974 Chevy Novo SS 307. 4
DRILLING
borrell. good tlroa, roily rima Pump ulea, tervlce. Regia·
With Clpl, 1300.00. 304· terod in Ohio. All work
882-2880.
guorantaod. Colt 304,273·
2811 . Ravenswood. W. Va.
'79 Corvette. exc cond, low
mllot, coli 304-87&amp;·&amp;466 RON'S Telovialon Service.
liter &amp;:00 PM.
Houle Clllll on RCA. Quezar,
GE . Spoclollng in Zenith.
1978 Chevy lmpolo, 400 Coli 304-678·238B or 814·
engine. IUtomotic. 1300. 448 · 24~4 .
Alter 5, phone 304·896·
3838 .
Fetty Tree Trimml'ng, ltump
romovel . Cell 304-676 ·
1987 .VW van, good cond. 1331 .
11200. 18ft. conoo 12&amp;0.
30 4
RINGLES 'S SERVICE, ••·
= :::::== perienced carpenter, electri·
clan, m11on, ,.Inter, roof72 Trucks for Sale
Ing llncludlng hot tor
opplicotionl 304· 875·2088
1-:-:-:-:-:---- - - •
1969 Stud. for porta, 1100. or 876· 7368 .
CIII .61C,il&amp;f·711B .
1---.::......:____ _ Starks Tree and lawn SerKanworth tractor, Fruehaf · vice. atump romovol, 304·
aluminum dump treilar, new 876·2010.
tlreo, V.G.C. Toaothor or
Mporoto. Coli 614- 286 · Rotary or coblo tool drilling.
Moot well a complettd ioomo
B832 .
day. Pump JlleaandMrvice.
1 ---.,..---.,.--~-­
1879 GMC 427 dump, olr 304·896· 3B02
'.
IIH, chootor. 1977 388
•:
Get
1 room of carpet clunad •
dump, ch10tor axle. Colt lor 122.96 . Coptoln Steo· . ...
B14· 2&amp;8· 1270or614·25B ·
moi. 304·87&amp;·229&amp;. Sovo ~ '
1970.
1·-- -- -- - - - Ad . Expire• 86'.
77 Chevy hoovy duty PU.
TrM trimming 1nd removal.
Clll814· 441-3824.

78 Joop Chorok• ·Ps. PB.

'

(!) Mozda Sportslook
C1J Andy Griffith
(I) 3 ·2·1, Contact !CCI
(j]) ·Electric Com pony
fil Diffrent Strokes
[H801 MOVIE: 'The Year of
Uvlng Dangerously'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Warlordo
of Atlantis'
6:30 1J (}) (ZJ NBC Nightly .

304l875·l :;;=·=6~7;&amp;·=7=
&amp; 3=4=.

ond rriZM ovolllblo.
39B1 .
•
•
Coot 93 ·0 dloaol,
*2,986.00 . Now Ideo 310
corn picker, 12, 600.00 .
Sldera Equlpmont, Hondlr·
eon. phone 304·871-7421 .

Hoy for
2424.

Musical
I nstrumenta

Autos for Sale

B month old block Rog.
Quertor horll coh. He hu
good alze .• dltpco~lon ond power door lock•. windows.
lo out of Super Chi•. •40.0. olr condition, LTD edition .
11 1:'000. with trade-ln .
Call 614· 241· 11811 .
112.600. cooh. Coil 814992·11862.

Pure bred rat-terrMir pup·

pl11. Bob·llilod 110. Coli
814-268 ·1487, ovo'a or
w•konda.

71

1986 Foid Station Wagon.
2B,OOO miloa. Roor aooto,

Cottlomon' o Spoclol ~50 lb.
protein blocko U1 .:Z&amp; eo.
found only ot Bidwell Coah
Fled Store, 814· 388· 98B8 .

Gun Collection lor 1111. Coli
814·446-9407.

Ml•ld hordwocd olobo, 112.
par bundle. co~tllnlng op·
prox. 1 'It ton, lob. Ohio
Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 814·892·8481 .

69 For Sale or Trade

Drogonwynd Conery Ken·
nol. CFA Hlmoloyon, Porolon
and Silmon klttono. AKC
Chow pupploo. Coli 44&amp;·
3844 oHor 7PM .

57

1----------

. 6 :00

Serv1ces

~~"~'~"'~"~'"~'~""~::~~~~~;=~=~~~~~ 81

Building moteriol, concreto
bloch oil lizoo, lontllo. flu
bloch. cloy till . Delivery. N- Holland 364 grinder
Gollipclit Block Co .. Pine mixer. Uood very lttla. Exc
St ., Golllpclla, Ohio Coli ccnd. 304-273·421&amp;:
814·448-2783. .
1= = = = = = = = = =
I·
Block. brick, mortor ond 62 Wanted to Buy
maocnry.uppllet. Mountoin , _ _ _ __ _ ___:__
Stoll Block, Rt. 33, Now
Hovan. W. Vo. 304· 882·
2222.
Roglltorod polled Hereford
bull. Aloo round bllod hoy .
Coli 614-992· 379B liter
1 :00 WMkdoyt.
56
Pets for Sale

2 &amp;hollow well pump• with
40 gol. tonka, dinner toble
with' 4 cholra. Coli 114-268·
1287 blforo 8pm.

Firewood 11110nod ook .
126 ycu pick up 130 pickup
Ia od . apllt , delivered ,
llockod . Coli 814 · 441 ·
1&amp;27.·

;~

Ulld Mobile Home windowo
tnd doors, variou1 -'111. 2
ulld 111• furnocoo for mobile
homoa, ono uood electric Now ldlo modll 323. one
lurnoco for houoo. Uood row corn picker. Coli 614·
gelvonlzod undorpennlng . 44B· 2&amp;6· 1144.
Kl!oK Mobile Homoo Inc . 1--~------304·876-3000.
Pole building•. many coiOJI.

0094 oHer 6pm.

Fifewood· oplit, otockod ,
and dlllvorod for 130 olorgo
lood. Coll814-446·7993 or
814·317·0201 .

01

Utfll
.

60 Percent Oltl Flaahing
arrow oigno 12831 Ughtod.
non-orrow 1247. Unlighted
t199. tFroo lottorel SH
locolly. 1 !BOO) 423·0183 .
IAioo GIANT BLIMP oeloll)

King wood burner •260,

••a

I

junction Independence
Rood -Old Rt. 21 . Fri. Sot,
Sun, 1 :00· 7:00 PM. F,_
dlllvory Point PIH11nt "''"·
304-8711·3334.

Roglltere&lt;( Bluetlck lo,.lo
2\o\ y10re old, will t""' own
Coon . 304·876•1070.

ISO par cant olfl Fillhing
orrow olgno 1269111 Ugh tad,
Now quoon 1110 wotorbod, 8 non·orrow U47 . Unlighted
, pc, LR IUito, like now, •199. lfroe lottorall S11
1 bdr. opt. lor rent. laundry ....,vlng mull Mil. Clll814· locally. Limited quentlty .
room, e225 mo. plue dep, 258·8872.
. . ~ .. .. .. Hurry! 118001 423·1013 .
Clooo to HMC. troah • wotor
paid. Coli 814·448-3474.
cord
Country otylo ook futnlturo, Fire wood tor •le.
hand croftod ond flnlahod dollv-d. 180 pickup. Coli
Duplex. 2 BR , refrigerator, antique reproductJon1. Peui 614· 742·2473.
ltovo. 863 Third Avonue. Conkel . Rt. 7, Tuppero
•250 / mcnth. Dop. Roq'od. Plojno.
Couger Magnum Com a
Coll814· 248·9696 .
.
pound Bow. Llkt new.
Whirlpool Sldo·by-Bidl Rt· •160. Coll814·742·2182 . .
Modern 1 bdr apt. conve- rrtvorotor, 11215. Coil 614·
nlont locotlon, lingle poroon 982·2712 alteri:DO p.m.
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
prelorred, Soc. Oop . Coli
hot dip robluling, olltypol ol
814·448·205&amp; olter 2pm.
Whito Fronco Provlnclol with gunomith work. fill Mrvlco ,
mirror. U&amp; . Colt 114·88&amp;- 304-676-4831 .
2 bdr. lurnlohod, pey own 3&amp;10.
olotric. '300 mo. 3
Serlouo obout loalng
bdr. unfurnished, ll8Y own Unlco upright 1rM1er ond wolghtl ' Contoct Glorlo
olo!llc. U80 mo. Both ooc. wood bumlnn .,...,. whh Grato. At. 2, Box 282,
dip., no poto. Colll14·448· blower. Co
614 · 812· Lotort, WV. 21253. 304·
13B5 oHor &amp;PM .
7822.
812·3112.

oo• •

!'Ville, Ealt· RavenawooCI .

Reg. Doberman 3 moa. eara

arrowo . Coli B14 · 448 ·
3&amp;48.
.

EVENING

Camouflogolntulolod cove· '
rolla '30.00. kid• comou·
flogo oil olzoa. Som Some·

clipped, ohotl. 1150. Coli
814·258· 1991.

arrows end one doten target
Merr:IIMHII SI'

10/29/85

19B3 Hondo CB 1,000; ole
cond, bcok price 12,&amp;00.·
mull ooll 12.2&amp;0. Phone
30'1·871· 7285 oltor .6 PM .

~Ckl, ICC8UOriel .

Gym·Poc 16000. Kimbell
plono. Coll ,814 · 317·0638 .

8Mr Whltotoll compound
hvnting bcw, 39" long with
1'11 dozen of hlrtoro hunting

Television
Viewing

'

SURPLUS. rogulor ormy co·
mouflogo. donlm clothing.

Roglltod Pit Bull Terrier
12x80 Sohult corner lot pupploo. Champion bloodCrown City. B1 Monte Corio line. 1100 ooch . Colt 814·
ol&lt;, · dh. Call 614·216· 446-2496 .
1444 or 304· 671· 1328.
1- - - - - - - - -

Surs cfi11t frMitr dlluJt
16. UOO . Colt 614· 441·

:DICK TRACY

·

1971 Honnollno Tnvel ·
Trailer . 26 loot, ulf·
contained . new Clrpet and~
upholotory. Coli 814· 742· •
21BB oltor 8 :00 p.m.

0

--

The

Ohio

1979 Honey 6th w!'otl
trevel d ailer 31'. SerioLII· ~
lnqulref only, 814 · 38B· .
B647.
'

OuMn olze hldo·e ·bld, Early
Amoricen with . motchlng
choir. Full olzo trldltlonol
hld.• •·bid. Phono 304-875
&amp;B28.

Orlontol rug . All in ••collent 1;;::;::;:::::=:::===
ccnditlon. Coil 814· 982·
3966.
65 Building Supplies
29·4 Singer Loother Sowing
Mochino. Londlt Modll E
Sowing t,llechlno end o fin·
ilhing mochlno. Cell 814·
949·2537.

October .

i

Plckono Ulod Furnltura. Ook
chino cloool whh olow flot.
Oak rocker. 9 pc. Duncori
FWo dlnnlo\it room ault. Tr•·
die Singer •wing mochlno.
Old ook bid. Coli 304·871·
8348 or B75-1460.

bootl,

- ~- -

79 MoforaH~
&amp;./ Campara

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814-4487274.

33

Tue~y. Octoder 29, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A·DAY

32 Mobile Horne a·

'

II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the t&gt;vo O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
1~29

E Y BV AV S V C KD
ATVKMD

U Y OY GW

K C AQ GC BBH
AT V K X

y p

EQGEYDWBH . -

JVBB

.

P Q KKH

A TCK

v

U YV KM

G YMW G O
. Y..tenler'o Cry&amp;oqaote: ALMOST ANY MAN KNOWS
WHO TO EARN MONEY BUT N()'f ONE IN A MILLION
KNOWS HOW TO SPEND IT. - HENRY THOREAU
I

.." -c'.

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...

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�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Hurricane Juan retains
strength, drifts eastward
LAKE CHARLES, La. (UP!) Hurricane Juan drifted eastward
today while It lashed the Louisiana
coast with B:).rnph winds and heavy
ralru; that overwhelmed unprepared oU rigs and boats and forced
tl!ousands from flooded homes.
Three people were killed and three
were missing.
.
Floods that washed up to 12 feet
deep through LeevUle, about 45
miles south of New Orleans, forced
the evacuation of some 2,(m coastal
residents, and rnot'l'than 2,(mother
people were stranded by high water,
officials said.
Coast Guard rescuers were expected to reswne searches at
daybreak today atterpluckingrnore
than 150 oU rig workers and sailors
Monday from violent seas churned
by the storm. which caught many
offshore interests by surprise.
Two men - one a board a small
boat and the other an &lt;il rig worker
- drowned Monday, while a third
was electrocuted by a downed
power line.
· Two crewmen were reported
missing !rom a sunken 160-foot
supply boat off Morgan City and
another from a grounded shrimper
off Southwest Pass. But some
autooritil.&gt;s warned it might he 'too

The new gym would be dividable,
to allow the kindergarten and
elementary students access to the
faciUty during r'ecesses at the same
time the junior high students would
be participating in P.E. classes.
Also, notesOrd, the kindergartenelementary area of the I&gt;.JUding
would be separate from the junior
high area, each with its own
entrance and fenced in yards. The
children would only be toget)ler on
the ruses, Ordsays, "justastheyare

school is buUt.
As brought out by Beegle,
elementary sporls cannot legally be
sponsored by the schooUtselt, even
though school facities are mlllzed.
P'fO's and booster orga.nlzatlons
must sponsor elementary sporls
programs and with the new school,
" It could even be a better operation," he adds.
Another point Ord makes is that
time spent by students en buses will
be equalized with a consolidated
facility because the "loop method"
of transportbtg would be used
instead of "backtracking." In most
ca~. Ord says, the first child on the
bus iii the morning would be the first
child o!fthe bos In the evening.
Another district benefit ot the new
school, says Ord, would be a
monetary savings en fuel and
electlcal costs to the tune c1 $22 per
pupU. According to district figures,
Southern Local spent $64,500 in l9Sl
for fuel and electricity. The proje-cted cost to heat and light the new
building is $49,000.
When the district was evaluated
by the state department of education in 1975 and 76, Ord reports, the
suggestion was made that the board
should see If was "economically
feasible" to continue operating the
four elementary schools.
Because oft he longrangp savings
in. utilities, Ord says an operating
levy "after"·completion d the new
school, "should oot be needed."
Also, it the levy passes, additional
typing, special education and art
classrooms, wtth storage, would be
added to the high school.
In regard to choosing a site next to
the high school in Racine for the new
buDding, Ord says that more went
into the decision than just the fact
that Racine is the center of the
district.
Because road' access and sewer,
electrical and water hookups are
already avallable at the proposed
location, he explains, "little sit
preparation would be needed before
construction could begin." '
AI a total estimated cost of
$5,208,000, wtth the State of Ohio
providlng$1,209,500ofthatsum,Ord
says coru;tructlon could begin in
October d 198i. Then, depending on
weather, the avallabllty of materials and otherdetermtningfactors,
the building should take 14 to 16
months to complete. The new school
could be ready for occupancy by the

I Area deaths I

Soviets offer swap

Walker to get life

Thor M. Nelson

Thor M. Nelson, 65, Route 2,
40th birthday." Actually Michael is GuysvUie, died Tuesday morning at
eligible for parole in eight years.
his residence.
Under the agreement, approved
Funeral arrangements are being
by Judge Alexander Harvey II, the lnade by the White FunPraiHorneat
Walkers also wlll reveal complete CoolvUie.
detalls of their spying efforts to help
the government assess how damag- Ray Williams
ing the secrets the Russians
Ray Wllllarns, 82, of GuysvUie,
received were io America's naval died Monday morning at his home.
operations, particularly its submaHe was born in Trimble to tile late
rine network.
James L. and Emma Skivers
Although Harvey approved the Williams. He was a former coal
deal, he will not sentence the miner and farmer and retired
Walkers until they cooperate with employee of the Ohio Department ot
government inquiries into John Highways.
Walker's actlvltil.&gt;s. Bennett said
He is survivro by his wife, Pearl
sentencing could be conducted in Atherton WIUlams; one son, Carl
four to six months.
and one daughter, Opal Castle, both
The fourth member of the spy ofGuysvUie; one sister, Lula Keirns
ring, John Walker's brother, Ar- Rainer of Chesterhill; one sister-inthur, 50, also a retired Navy officer, law, Ethel Williarru; of Shade; eight
was convicted in August of stealing grandchldren , 16 great secrpt documents from his em- grandchildren, one step grandson,
ployer, a Virginia defense contrac- and several nieces and nephews.
tor. He Is awaiting sentencing.
He was preceded in death by four
Investigators say J o h n Walker brothers, Fred, Leonard, John and
and the ring members obtained Charlie; two sisters, Eunice NicholInformation from the world's larg- son and Ada Van Meter; and a
est Naval base in Norfolk, Va., and son-in-law, Vernon Castle.
Navy Installations on the West Coast
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
where Whitworth lives. They also Thursday at the White Funeral
say John Walker went as far as
Home in Coolvllle with Rev. David
Vienna and Hong Kong to meet
Axsom oHiciating. Burial will be in
Soviet contacts.
the Asi&gt;.Jry Cemetery at Guysville.
Officials have characterized the
Friends may call at the fu nerai
ring as the most damaging to U.S.
home after 2 p.m. Wednesday. The
security In ll years.
family wlll be there to greet visitors
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

district - both certified and
non-certified - are still not sure a
consolidated buDding Is the way to
go.
"If It's their jobs they're roncerned about" Ord says, "there
may be some shuffling of assignm~nts oo t no layoffs. Southern
District Is not that overstaffed," he
adds.
The construction process would
Ilkely provide some other jobs in the
community Ord points out "If It's their jobs they're concerned about," Ord says, "there
may be some shuffling of assignments but no layoffs. Southern
District Is not that overstaffed," he
adds.
The coru;truction process would
likely provide some other jobs In the
community Ord points out.
If the levy fails, Ord says, the
board will have to start over to
qualify for state funding and then
walt tiliSouthern'sturn comes up as
funding from the · state becomes
available. "Each year many districts in the state compete for a
limited amount of dollars."
Also lithe levy falls, the board will
be looking at approximately $80,tnl
in furnace repairs at Syracuse and
Racine Elernentaries and the junior
high, in addition tootherrPrnodeling
needed In an attempt to bring the
buildings to state standards.
"And there is no state assistance
for remodeling," Ord notes.
"Anything to do with repair and
rennovation would have to be done
with local money."
Another major need which may
befaCII)&amp;the board If the levy fails is
construction of sewage treatment

plants at the Portland and Letart
Falls schools which are botlt stW on
septic sysiems.
in October 1984, Ord reports, the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency "strongly suggested" sewage treatment plants at these
locations. In both cases, easements
would have to be obtained from
private property owners to accornodate lines to carry treated waste
water from the schools to the river.
Beegle asks voters to note that
also included on their ballots will be
"construction of a bus garage."
As he explains. the garage is
Included only as a possibility. If
estimated costs would exceed
actual construction costs, the district could use the extra money to
construct a garage, but only wtth
prior voter approval.
Ord and Beegle both contend that
even l.f the levy falls, construction of
a new building "is inevitable" at
some point, again, because local
boards rnu strneetthestandardsfor
educat ion that are adopted at the
state levt-L

IDAHO

POTATO~~

PORK LOINS
II.

h

·

1
P Oils back to Tupp·
ers Plains &amp; long Bottom.

VOTE FOR

fRAN (IS ANDREW
FOR TRUSTEE FOR
OLIVE TOWNSHIP

ELECTION
NOVEMBER 5, 1985

tor

lrrors - Pricos EHKiiYt thrv Sit.. Nov. 2, 1915

DOUBLE SEECOUPONS
ALL
WEEK
STORES FOR DETAILS
.
'

EPSI,

Poid tor by Franc11 Andrew

20°/o

$1.4 million suit filed in Meigs
Suit for $1,400,(m has been filed in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Michael Henry against
Aaron Sayre, vocational instructor
at Southern High School; James
Adarru;, principal; Bobby J . Ord,
superintendent of Southern District,
and Joseph Thoren, Don P. Smith,
Gary Dennis Evans, Janet Sue
Grue5er and David Hill, all
members or the Southern Local
Board of Education.
The suit was flied as the result of
an acci!}ent in the fall of 1983. The
plaintitl' charges that Sayre instructed, supervised and assisted
his vocational agriCulture class In
bu~ding a barn in the shop at the
high school and was negligent in oot
having the barn built on supportive
structures so that it could be moved
from the buDding by reasonable

ELBERFELDS

TUESDAY NIGHT
CHAIIUE &amp; LfNNIE
' P.M. 'nL 1 A.M.

POMEROY

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
HAllOWEEN PARTY and
Mill IIVII lAIII
9 P.M. 'nl 1 A.M.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
' P.M. 'nL I A.M.
Mill IIVEII.llll

1------------___JL-----------:----------===----

Save s319s

88Q9
Reg. 119.9!i

2 Sections, 20 Pogo•

26 Conte

A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

mpans. Ahout Oct, 7, 1983, Sayre
allegedly offered an "A" to any
members of the class who would
help him lift the barn onto sleds and
the plaintiff was among the volunteers. The plaintiff charges that
Sayre negligently placed the plaintlff and others in position to lift the
barn rather than using the hydraulic
jack which was directly available
from the ceiling above the ~rn.
Theplalntiffallegedlyfellbeneath
theweightofthebuUdingreceivinga
lifelong injury. Sayre allegedly
allowE'dlwoci!ISSIDernberstocarry
the plaintiff to the administrative
offices rather than seeking and
administering appropriate emergency medical assistant. The plaintiff charges that Sayre's action
constitutes willful, wanton and

malicious misconduct. Once in the
administrative office, Adams approached the plaintiff and asked if
he wanted him to call an emergency
squad whereupon thP plaintiff
requested he be allowed to call his
mother, according to the court
action.
The plaintiff charges that the
administration wronged In not
seeking innm!'diate appropriatE'
medical assistance. The plaintiff
alleges that all defendants were
negligent to adopt and maintain
adequatepollclesandproceduresto
provide first aid to serious Injured
students.
Claiming permanent Injuries
which have dlmished his life's
earning capacity, Henry seeks
$!XXJ,OOJ for injuries received and
$500,001 in punitive damages.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehotllle Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPII - Home
State Savings Bank owner Marvin
L. Warnertriedtolngratiatehlmsell
wtth a new Republican state savings
ano loan superintendent 10 years
ago by posing as an expert on thrifts
and an agent of then-Gov. James A.
Rhodes, . the official testified
Tuesday.
But the superintendent, Roger W.
Tracy, appointed by Rhodes, said
the ploy did not work.
"1 don't give a damn whether you
know Jim Rhodes or not," Tracy
quoted himself as telling Warner to
his face shortly after he had become
superintendent In early 1975. "I'm
going to regulate your savings and
loan just likP everybody else's."
Tracy, now a Franklin County
commi~ioner, was the fifth former
superintendent to testify befQre the
Joint Legislative Committee on
Savings and Loaru;, which · Is
attempting to get a handle oo the
collapse of Horne State last March,
resulting in theshutdownof70other
state-chartered thrifts by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste.
Also testifying was David J .
Schiebel, a Home State oHicer who
said Warner and President Burton
M. Bongard made all the investments in ESM Government Securities, lnc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
which resulted in a $144 million loss
to Home State when ESM was
closed by the u.s~ Securities Md"
EKchangeCommtssion.
Schiebel was to complete his
testimony today.
Tracy said he "hadn't been
superintendent more than three
weeks" whPn hP was introduced to
Warner in the office of then -Senate
Minority Leader Michael J. Maloney, R-Clnclnnatl.
"Mr. Tracy, I'm glad to meet you,
we're going to get along just fine,"
Tracy quoted Warner as saying in a
charming voice with a southern
accent . "I'd like to meet with you
soon. I'd love to give you some
background on savings and loan
law. I'm here to give some petitions
to Jim Rhodes on the bond issues."
At that time, Rhodes was attemptIng to get a package of $4.5 billion In
construct ion bond issues oo the Ohio
ballot .
"l'm not going to hold it against
you that you're a member of the
Democratic National Committee,"
Tracy recalled te1ling Warner, "and
the top contributor to (former

· Democratic Gov.) Jack Gilligan.
And ldon'tgiveadamnwhetheryou
know Jim Rhodes or not. I'm going
to regulate your savings and loan
just like everybody else's."
Tracy told the committee he
learned quickly he would havE! to be

tough in order to avoid being
co-opted bythe S&amp;Lindustry, whicll ·
always looks "forwaystoget a 'y~' ·

answer."
·
He said he discovered j&gt;eople IIi
the industry were.wondering; ;·How
Continued on page 20 .

Racine may fonn
merchants group_
Racine Village Council and Ra,cine merchants met in a joint
session to discuss the formation of a
Racine Merchants Association at
the Shrine Park building Monday.
Mayor Charles Pyles presided
with councilmen Carroll Taford,
Larry Wolfe, Scott Wolle and Frank
Cleland on hand along with merchants, Edwin Cozart, Betty Sayre,
Jeanette Lawrence, Eber Pickens,
June Corbin, Ruth Brooks, Gerald
Simpson, Cathy Carleton, Beverly
Moore and Joan McLain.
The success of the recent fall
festival was discussed and It was
emphasized that more similar
events sbouid be scheduled and neKI
year festival plans should be
expanded to include more program

and activit les.
Council expressed support of the
merchants and encouraged tfle
formation of a merchants association. The village a~ to place a
Christmas tree in the business
section; add street lights in the
business section along with add4:d
decorations; place barrels for Utter
collection in theoosinesssectionali'cl
repair areas for parking.
.
It was announced that two new
businesses may be locating in t11f
town and c council wm make
contacts toencourage them to klcate
In Racine. A meeting was set for 7
p.m. on Nov. 4 to oranlze a
merchants associatiOn after which
time plans wtll be. madP for a
Christmas promot ion.

Prisoners find documents
-'D~"(Uiil ...!"l''\e llfti iiiid 1lie isll!lWY ~y iviit

"

launch separate investtgattom ·today to determine how sensitive
DefenseDepartmenldocumenlsendeds!Pinlhehandsolinmaleiala
West TClliL'! prison Industries unit.
'The documents were brought IAI their altenlion by United Preos
International, which received the items - including lechnlcal
manuals, personnel rues, a memo marked "classified" and maps ol
mUIIary bases - from the Inmates.
"We pian to do a too rough, oompleCe lnvesllgallon," said Matt
Perez, spokesman for the FBrs El Paso, Texas, office. "We've &amp;~~Ito
find out where lheselhings areoomlngfrom and whole gelling them.
'These are obviously documents that should not be in the hands of
Inmates. Somebody's obviousb' being lax In security."
Inmates said I he documents were left klsideofflce fumllureshlpped
from a variety c1 regional mUitary lnstallatlonslothe La Tuna federal
penitentiary near El Paso.
'The FBhald II was reopening the case, w(jch It had dropped, based
on the UPI findings.
"AI first we didn't thinklhere was much there," said Perez. "JWJI
desks tuB oflhings you would find In any desk. But we obviou81ydldn't
see all the papers."
Docwnents sent by Inmates to UPI inclllde a "Category II material
deficiency repon" marked classified and directed toolflcialsaiKelly,
McClellan, Langley and Berptrorn Air Force bases in the Unled
States, and Cologne Air Base In West Gennany. Another wBS a
leclulical order for pans for the F-15, one of the nation's moll&amp;
sophisticated warplanes.

l

Juan wavering over Louisiana
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - Tropl- from Port O'Connor, Texas, to
New Orleans, where some residents
cal storm Juan wavered over · Apalachicola. Fla. Four to 8 inches have lived wtth 4 feet of water since
c,entral Louisiana today as muddy of rain was expected in portions of Sunday.
ftoodwaters several feet deep kept Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama
"We'reexpectingthewaterinthls
more trw 8,tnl people from their and northwestern Florida.
whole area to continue receding,"
homes and rescue teams prepar!'d
More than 8,(m people in sou- said Joe CannateUa, a sheriH's
tosearchforahalldozenmenlostat theastern Louisiana have fled the deputy in St. JoM the Baptist
sea.
rising waters for shelters or homes Parish. "We haven't had any rain
At least four people were kUled in of lrlends and relatives.
now In a couple of hours."
the storm. The six others who
As sandbagging continued, offlBetween New Orleans and the
vanished included three workers ciaissaldtheyexpectrothefloods- Gulf, however, high water swirled
trapped in a capsized oil rig in the called the worst in a quarter of a unhindered through levees
mouth of the Mississippi and three century - to begin receding near breeched by the storm.
men aboard industry supply boats in
theGullC(\&amp;St.
Rescue ·' teams, which have
plucked some 160 people from Gull
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI I nauts are commander Henry HartsCoast waters, were to resume - J record crew of eight crowded field, making his third shuttlefltght,
searching at daybreak. Rough seas aboard thespaceshuttleChaUenger co-pilot Steven Nagel, James
Tuesday night forced divers to for blastoH ' today on a historic BuchU, Guion Bluford and BonniE&gt;
suspend efforts to find the trio weeklong Spacelab flight chatered Dunbar, the seventh American
woman to fly in space.
believed trapped in the A.H. and managed by West Germany.
Joining them for the Spacelab D1
Howard rig.
The countdown went smoothly
mission
- the "D" stands for
"We had to ~op due to the ljeavy andofflcialssaiderratlc instrument
Deutschlandcurrents and the instability of the readings !rom one of the shuttle's
bargf," Coast Guard spokesrnaJ\ three electrlclty-produclng fuel were physicists Ernst MesserschKeitliSpangler said.
cells were not serious enough to stall mld and Reinhard Furrer, both of
· At 2 a.m. EST Juan, demoted the flight, the 22nd In the shuttle .West Germany, and European
Space Agency astronaut Wubbo
I·
from hurricane Tuesday . after program. ·
; !' . ·. making its second assualt on land,
Theonlyconcernwasl hethreatof Ockels, also a physicist, of the
was In central Louisiana between rain . and thundershowers from Netherlands.
The cr~ members, awakened
\~r '· Lake Charles and Lafayette. The tropical storm Juan. The morning
today
in the staggpred shifts they
National Weather Service said the sky was crystal clear, although rain
will
maintain
in orbit, lett their
storm was expected to weaken remained in the forecast and NASA
quarters
at
9:13
a.m. EST, sinillng
slowly oot that its direction was officials wereoptlmisticChaUenger
and
waving
to
photographers,
and
uncertain.
would be able to take off during Its.
went to the launch pad. They hegan
J~l,itldR
three-hour "launch window."
boarding Challenger at 9:38a.m.
mph, and gale war gs
'"'&lt;.-\1llf¥Jh~!l)e's five NASA astro-

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algh&amp;'s Halloween party In Pomeroy, Eight-year-old
brotl!er Travis was also pretty original as a soda pop.

AS NICE - Michelle and Marla Dntnlf:l,
left to rlchl, 13 month old twins of Max and Elel9e
'Dremler, Union Ten:ace, stole the sliuw al Tuesday

Hurry In And Save

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

enttne

Ex-loan chief Tracy says·
Warner tried to 'woo him'

MOST ARE PREPASTED AND WASHABLE -

RIVERBOAT INN

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October 30 1985

I e vot1ng

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QUALITY WALL COVERINGS IN PRINTS,
STRIPES, MINIATURES, PLAIDS, .
SPORTING EVENTS AND MANY OTHER
PATTERNS.

Ord says the old buildings in the
district, and the properties oo which
they sit, wouldlikelybeoffered tothP
cornrnuruties, or else sold. Whatevertbe board's deciSion on the old
oolldings, that decision woulct be
made based on Iocai Input from the
public, Ord adds.
But even wtth benefits to the
district outlined In detail, many
voters, some even employees of the

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Edllorlals ................ Page 2
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WALLPAPER
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$119

By the Bend .. Pages 11, 12, 16
Classlfleds ..... Page&amp;18, 17,18
Com,cs-'l'V ............. Page 19
Deaths ................... Pqe 10

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Inside:

Some Southern. "'-~----..:.:tc::on:::lln=u=ed:..:f::rom:.:.:.!:pa~ge:..:1~J- - -- - - - - - -- - -

early to count the missing.
"The big problem Is, we have no
idea of the number of people out
there," said Coast Guard Lt. PhWip
Fallis, whose crew Monday rescued
arigworkerwho stayed afloat forlB
hours by clinging to a slender
wooden plank.
At2a.m. EST, the massive center
of the hurricane was south- now."
southeast of Lafayette, La., near
Uncertainties have also been
latitude 28.9 oorth and longltude 91.5 voiced by residents of the district
west. Hurricane warnings reached concerning sporls programs at the
from Texas to the mouth of the elementary level if a consolidated
Mississippi, and gale warnings
ex tended from Texas to Florida.
The storm was drl!ting Past ward
at 5 to 10 mph, battering the
Louisiana coast with 85-rnph winds
and t kles up to 8 feet ahove normaL Dennie G. Barker
Juan was oot expected to lose
DenniE' G. Barker, 55, of Youngstrength because It was remaining
stown, died Sunday at his residence
over water, theNWSsaid.
following a long Uiness.
Six inches of rain drenched
He was born Feb. 17, 1930 In
Beaumont, Texas, threatening
Danvllle, W.Va., to Bernice Fox
flooding. NParly 5 inches of rain
Barker, who resides in Parkerssoaked siruthern Louisiana, flooding
burg, W.Va .. and the late Dennie
streets and disrupting electrical
Barker.
services. As much as 10inchescould
He was a maintenance supervisor
fall, theNWSsald.
for
J.C. Penney in Boardman for 15
"It's stUI got good circulation," an
NWS spokesman In Miami said years and was a formerempioyeeof
Monday night ot Juan. ' 'lt'sstUI well the Coca Cola Bottling Co .. for 17
years.
organized."
Survivors include his wife, Violet
Covey Barker, one daughter, Mrs.
Judy Minnich of Barberton; three
sons, Gary L. Barker c1 Columi&gt;.Js,
Dale E. Barker c1 Youngstown and
Paul A. Barker of Gallipolis; one
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The rnent d!lcial said of the oHer.
sister,
Mrs. Verna TlttisofChqrlesSoviet Union wants the United
The offer, described for the Times
States to cease modernizing two by U.S. and Soviet officials, was ton, W.Va.; one brother, Gerald
existing radar installations as the made ahout three weeks ago1at a Barker of Alabama~ and slx
condition lor its halting constuction special meeting In the Geneva arms' grandchildren.
One granddaughter preceded him
of a radar site In central Siberia, It
negotiations by YuU A. Kvltslnsky,
In
death.
was reported today.
who head~ the Soviets' spaceFuneral services wlll be 1 p.m.
One Pentagon official, not identi- weaporu; team.
Thursday
at Arner Funeral Chapel
fied by The New YorkTimes,caUed
The Soviets contend that upgradin
ChPSfl'r,
W.Va., where friends
the oHer "a non-offer, a sucker Ing of the two U.S. radar installacall
Wednesday
from 1-5.p.rn .
may
deal."
tions-at Fyilngdales In Yorkshire,
p.m.
Friends
rnayalsocallat
and
7-9
"We have nPither a positive nor a England, and Thule, Greenland negative attitude overall to the violates the Anti-ballistic Missile the Anstrum -Gustafson-Velker
Funeral Horne in Youngstown from
Soviet proposal," a State Depart. Treaty of19'7'.l.
7-9 p.m. today. Burial wUI be In MUI
Creek Hill Cemetery in Hookstown,
Pa.

ByCARLKORN
BALTIMORE (UP!) - John
Walker, mastermind of one of the
most damaging spy rings since the
Cold War, wlll get life in-prison as
part of a deal with the governmpnt
Monday that gave his son a lighter
sentence for hts role In spylngforthe
Soviets.
The elder Waiker, a retired naval
communications expert, pleaded
guilty to three counts of espionage,
including a new indictment that
accused him ol 20 overt acts of
spying between 1968 and 1985.
Walker's son, Michael, quietly
pleaded gullty tofivesirnllarcounts.
In return fora25-yearsentencefor
Michael Walker, the father and son
agreed to cooperate fully with the
government - Including testifying
against Jerry Whitworth, another
former Navy man, at his spy trial in
California.
John Walker's lawyer, public
defender Fred Bennett, said the
Sovlel spy accept!'d alifeterrnsohis
son can someday be free.
"John Walker loves his son very
much," Bennett said. "He Is more
concerned for his son's future than
for his own."
John Walker wUl be eligible for
parole in 10 years, but Bennett
acknowledged that he probably
would spend the rest of his lifP
behind bars. But, Bennett said,
"Michael will be out of jail before his

Tuesday, October 29, 1985

Pornaoy-Middleport, Ohio

16K Standard BASIC
Color Computer 2
Includes Tutorial Manual on BASIC

id:l.i .•

H41Y:!·Wu;i!i:.:

•

'

ability "' do just lhal, ooor annually IMpede local
MEIGS STATE mGHWAV DEPARTMENT
soow and ice removal equipment. Meigs County's
INSPECI'ION - 'The National Weather Service
State IUpway Deparimenl was inopecled 'l'1leMay
Reports that snow oould fall as Clll'ly as OciDher or as
by an elsht man Inspection team from
1
late as May. Since last Dec:emher and January
dlstriclgarage, headed by Gene Baker, OOOI"urea
ranked founh as lbe snowle8t months reconled in Ibis
superintendent. Nonnan Weber, Melp Count)' l
area, lbe Ohio Depu1meot ol Tranaponation Is
superintendent,
reportl the department has a fleet~
gearing up to the "max" lor tile coming winter.
Keeping all highways clear of snow :111d Ice 18 a top . . 10 lnsckA and lwo graders, and stookpOes of over 880
loll!l of salt and 700 tons of cinders.
priority or the
In an eflon lo Insure their

ooor

ooor.

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