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Page-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Com .. , .

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Porileroy-Middlaport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

frequent breaks from your work. going to feed calves out you need
Fatlj(ue Is one of the main causes facUlties, you need to have sotne
RIO GRANDE - The story of
or a~cldents wHh tarm experlencelndoingthls,andthen
Ohio Coal Co .. Meigs
Southern
equipment.
·
you not only need some expeDivision.
was presented to
We rec~ntly had a beef outlook rience in feeding the calves, you
members
of
the Ohio Valley
meeting at the Horace Karr needs to have some experience
Management
Association
at the
Farm and again I would like to and a market for these calves.
association's
first
meeting
of the
thank Horace Karr for being the Also, don't forget that you have
1988-89
program
year.
hoat for this event. 1 would now your money tied up for a longer ·
The presentation was made by
like to. talk about ~orne of the period of time.
Frederick
Zirkle, administration
things that going to influence the
Facilities are very Important
beef cattle outlook lor next year and I am talking in terms of
and also make some predictions water, some protection ffom the Goodyear announces
on prices.
weather, and freedom from mud.
quarterly earnings
Therttare four factors that are Freedom from mud can be a very
going to affect feeder cattle important one because lots need
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
prices more than anything else to be dry and you cannot make
announc~
that third-quarter
and they are feeder cattle supp- money If cattle are in mud up to
earnings
could
be$1.10pershare,
lies, fed cattle prices. the price of their knees and hocks.
compar~
with
$2.98 per share
corn, and the competition for
You also need to rememb.e r
for
last
year.
these Ieeder calves. The predlc- that you are Increasing your
The previous year:s earnings
risks by keeping the cattle for
!Ions for feeder calf prices for
include,d
a gain of $50,600,000, or
another six to eight months.
this fall are medium frame
$.88
per
share,
from the sale of
steers, weighing 400 to 50() ·
You need to know when these
facilities.
pounds-$85·$90 per hundred
~attle are ready for market and
Last year a gain of $8.300,000
(mostly in the high SO's); for
you need to have a place where
from
discontinued operations
medium frame steers weighing you' can market them and get
company's final net
made
the
650 pounds-$75-$80 per hundred;
your money's worth. All of these
$178,700,000,
or $3.13 per
profit
things need to be considered and
choice steers weighing approxi·
sales
of
$2,479,500,000.
share,
on
mately 1100 Jiounds, the . price · It Is not all that easy when you
Goodyear . said the shorlfall
range for here In Ohio 'from
consider to · feed out your own
was caused primarily by sharply
September .ot 1988 thru June of calves.
1989 should be from$66 to $74 per
I also have some tables that increased raw material costs and
hundred and for the second
might help you figure what you a lag In recovf!ring costs through
quarter of 1989 wrilch would be
feel you must· have for your price increases, reduced plant
from AprU through June, proba- calves to get a recent return and I efficiencies during the hot
bly In the high 70's.
would be glad to share that with summer, and significantly
higher employee benefit costs.
As we look at the cons umption
you.
The company said Its tire and
of meat, whether it is white meat
Making Your Own Compost
general
products operations
or red meat, for the coming year,
Plle... A compost pile In a moist,
were
most
severly Impacted by
we are making the following sunny area breaks down faster
these
unfavorable
conditions and
prediction.. that the consumption
than one In a dry, shady place.
suffere&lt;:l
the
most
significant
of white meat, which would be
The first layer of refuse placed
downturn.
In the bin should be 8 to 12 inches
chicken and fish . wlll Increase
"We expect a recovery In the
deep. Scatter over that layer a
about 2% io 3% per person; also
quarter. but It Is unlikely it
fourth
that the consumption of pork will
cupful of commerchil fertilizer
will
be
strong enough to offset the
Increase and that !he C\)nsumpsuch ai 10-10-10 or. 5-10-5 and 1 to 2
disappointing
past thee months,"
tlon of beefwllJdE'crease s tightly. ·inches of garden soli. The soil and
said
Robert
E. Mercer, Goo.
,
Also, with the drought, you fertilizer provide decay mldyear
chairman.
must ask yourself "should I sell crobes with nutrients they need
cattll! or buy feed Jfl do not have to begin the decay process. A
enough hay to feed" . With cattle light layer of ground limestone
numbers being down it looks like added . with the soU keeps the
there is going to be a strong decaying material from becon'ldemand for feeder calves, not ing too acidic and may enhance
only for the fall of 1988 but more the bacterial action. Repeat the
GALLIPOLIS - Southeaster-n
than likely for the fall of 1989. process with every layer of
Business
College will of(er GED
This means that we probably refuse.
classes
starting
Tuesday at its
Lightly water the pile each
should hang on to our cow
Gallipolis
branch.
numbers If pOlis!ble. Now, as you time you've covered a layer of
GED, or high school equivalknow, If you don 't nave enough refuse with soil. fertilizer and
ency
classes, are available to
feed, there are three alterna- llinestone. This helps the bactewithout a high school
individuals
llves. One is to sell ail the cattle ria and fu11gi break down the
diploma.
Classes
will be held on
you down to where you have materials. Water the pile during
and
Thursdays
from 6
Tuesdays
enough teed to feed them.
dry weather and keep its tope
to
8
p.m.
for
1.0
weeks.
Another alternal!ve is to sell bowl-shaped to catch rain. Avoid
A book fee will be charged
some of the cows ano buy some of over-watering because It Inhibits
during
the course. in which
the feed; or last, you can buy all
the decay process.
students
will be enrolied on a
tile feed. But It does look like it
Because air hejps the bacteria
first-come,
first-served basis.
· would pay you to keep your cow
and fungi wotk, use a garden fork
For
more
information, call
number~ and buy feed, if
or rake to turn over the pile about
446-4~37.
once a month .during the
necessary .
From all of the information
summer.
that I am able to obtain, probably
you best bet would be to suppleA Shop T, Meer The Needs of
ment with some grain if possible
instead of buying hay because of
the economics. Now, the olfher
problem comes up of do you have
Ma tern it~· Fa&gt;hions from Linl{erie to Finer
faclllties or a place to feed grain.
Dre.•se.• Fnr Special Occasinns.
Don't replace aU of you1 hay with
Infant Clothi.np; 0-24 Month.,
grain because cattle need some
roughage in their plet. The next
question to come up is "Can you ·
afford to keep your calves and
1
230 Broadway. J•ck&amp;on • 286·2659
feed them out"? The answer to
\ , -·
Open Tues. -Wed.-Thurs.-Sat. 9:30·5:30
that can be yes but the word
,
Mon. 81 Fri. till EI:OO
-IF- comes in there in big
capital letters becau'e If you are

manager of Southern Ohio Coal's
""Meigs Division, and David Zatezalo, general superintendent,
Meigs Mine No. 2.
The title of their presentation
was "Southern Ohio Coal Company ·-We Dig Our Work."
With an ann_ual producttop
capability of6 million clean tons,
Southern Ohio Coal's f!!elgs No.
I, Meigs No. 2 and Raccon No. 3
mines form one of the largest
underground mining complexes
in the nation. Since ,production
began at the Meigs operation in
1972, the three mines have
provided &lt;;oai for the generation
of e lectric power at Ohio Power
Co., Gen . James M. Gavin Plant
at Cheshire:
·
Development of the Gavin
Plant and the Meigs . mining
complex offers another example
of the American Electric Power
Systems philosophy of construct·
ing mine-mouth generating facilities close to available sources of
coal, officials said.
Attending the meeting were
Charles Adkins. Holzer Medical
Center; Phyllis Handley, Jackson Area Chamber of Commerce; Ron 'Burton and Clyde
Hall, Ro.bblns &amp; Myers Inc.; Carl ·

Dahlberg, Wellston ; llboseph
Cain, Gallipolis municipal
judge; Brent Saunders, Gallia
County prosecuting attorney;
William Frazee. The Steak
House; Scott Hinsch Jr. and Bob
Hennesy, Star Bank; Fr.ank La!
and Dennis Jewell, Goodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber Co.;
Ron McDade. Columbus Southern Power Co.; John Lambert
and Orpha Lambert, Jackson
Aluminum Co.; Charles Powell,
Appalachian P&lt;fwer Co.; Harold
Thompson, Central Trust Co. , '
N.A.; Evelyn Scarberry and
. Walter Stowers, Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services; A.J.
Trawick, G.D. Six and T.R.
Chapman, Ohio Power Co.;
Paula Dobbins and Dwight

Leedy, OTTO. Present from Rio
Grande Colleges were Jerry
Gust, Paul Harrison, Sanford
Lane, William Medley . Kingsley
Meyer, Charles Palmer and
Harold Walker.

Firms announce
sales increases
GALLIPOLIS - Two area
firms announced sales increases,
according to the investment firm
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi.
Limited announced a sales
increase of 11 percent for September, while Charming
Shoppes announced a sales increase of 10 percent in the same
month.

Market has...
Continued from D-1
active issue, Jumping 19%· to
57'n. The stock soared 18 on
Tuesday after Grand Metropolitan made a su rprise $60-a-share
tender offer. Pillsbury later said
It would fight the bid. ·Kroger followed. galningl% to
58. Kohlberg Kravls Roberts &amp;
Co. Tuesday proposed an increase in Its bid for the company
to $64 a share from $58.50. On
Friday Kroger rejected an earlier offer and the propos~ higher
bid.

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EARNS

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A Multimedia Inc. Newsoaper

SEN. LONG
{17th District)

Vern Riffe, serving his seventh
ently serves as chairman of the
term as speaker of the Ohio
Legislative Service Commission.
House of Representatives, will be
During his long time public
among the speakers at 3 p.m.
career, Speaker Riffe has reThursday when a dedication
ceived many awards and acclaceremony Is held at Overbrook
mations fo r what one major
Center, a $3.5 million health care
newspaper in Ohio has called,
REP. BOSTER
rehabilitation center on Page St.
"Vern Riffe's untiring efforts for
(94th District)
In Middleport.
the people of his district and
Other speakers will be Sen. Jan
throughout the state."
Michael Long, state senator from
Mr. and Mrs . Riffe reside in
Ohio's 17th Senate District, and
New Boston where Riffe is
Rep. Jolynn Boster. representapresident of the Riffe and Bentive of the 94th House District.
nett Insurance Agency , Inc.
Speaker Riffe, a lifelong resi- They have three daughters.
dent of Scioto County, Is serving
Cathy, Verna Kay, and Mary
his 15th consecutive two-year
Beth and a son, Vernal Riffe IlL
term as a state representative
They have seven grandchildren.
be linked to ttie girl's , family. having been first elected in 1958
Senator Long, a native of
Morgan said he believed the llnk from the Sl!th Ohio House Dis trlct
Middleport, represents Athens,
might prove the girl had erotic which encompasses Scioto and
Ross, Plckaway. Vinton, Jackdreams of Rinehart, but no Pike Counties. He is the presid-· son, Meigs, Gallia and Lawrence
evidence was found to link the !ng officer of the Ohio Ito use of ·counties which make up the 17th
Representatives and the leader
girl to drug use.
·
Senate District in Southern Ohio.
of
that chamber's majority
He was ·elected to the Ohio Senate
The new spa per sa ld It obtained
party. As of Sept. 20, 1983, Riffe
for his first fouir -year term in
a copy of Morgan's report to the
has served as speaker of the Ohio 1986.
FOP and confronted the former
· In the legislature, Senator
House of Representatives longer
pollee officer with it.
Long
has been appointed to serve
Three Columbus news organl- than any other Speaker in Ohio
Senate Highway. Transon
the
his !Dry.
zatlons have sought files on the
portation
and Local Government
As Speaker. Riffe serves as
police department's investiga- ·
Committee,
the Senate Ecotlon of the allegations. Rinehart. , chairman of the powerful Rules
nomic Deelopment and Small
Committee and · as an ex-officio
a two-term mayor , is considered
Business Committee and the
a possible Republican guberna- member of all House standing
commltu.es. The long - time' Senate-JudlcJary Commlttee.-H e
· tortal,..ndldete for 19110. ·•
Rinehart has called the inci- House Speaker, in addition, pres- was recently appointed to serve ·
dent ''a 10-year-old baseless
allegation.' ' 'He called his former
babysitter, Vicki Pardue, now23,
"a disturbed young girl."
A grand jury did not return any . COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) nine Democratic-leaning metroindictments against Rinehart.
politan counties other than.
VIce President George Bush ha s
The newspaper said Pardue
Franklin, Hamilton and Cuyaa slim lead over Massachusetts
appeared stunned and flabber- Gov. Michael Dukakis among
hoga. The candidates were evgasted when its reporter InOhio voters .in a Columbus . en iy matched in suburban Cuyaformed her of Morgan's investiDispatch poll published Sunday. . hoga County.
gation. Pardue said she and her
In the mail poll of 1,571
family were warned by pollee
Among men, Bush received an
registered voters, conducted
officers Investigating the case
11-point lead over Dukakis, while ·
Oct. 1 'to Oct. 6, 47 percent of
that som.One was following
women were almost evenly direspondents supported the
them.
vided between the candidates.
George Bush-Dan Quayle ticket,
''Damn, I can't believe it," she while the Michael Dukakis-Lioyd
More Ohio voters said they had
said.
"a
lot" of familiarity with the
Bentsen ticket received 43 perThe newspaper said Morgan cent. Ten percent of those polled
record, policies and positions of
described himself as a close said they were ~&lt;not ·s ure."
Bush (36 percent) than Dukakls
friend of Rinehart's since 1978.
(25 percent) .
Bush capt\!red strong leads in
The former policeman admitted Republican-leaning Franklin
The Dispatch said the latest
that his motives behind the 1983 and Hamilton counties, and In "a
results are basically similar to
investigation were political.
results in a September poll on the
grouping of the state's 76 most
A week after Rinehart won the rural counties," the newspaper
fall presidential race, when Bush
election, the new mayor pro- said.
led Dukakls by five precentage
moted Morgan from the rank of
points, 48 percent to 43 percent.
Dukakis fared best in heavily
patrolman to assistant safety Democratic Cleveland and In
The poll's margin of error is
director

Officer says he tried to
help .clear Dana Rinehart

Cl,ASSIC FLORAL

.:;;,q'jJLovea,eat

1 Sectiorr,1 0 Pages

~v~oi:;.3~9.~N~o-~t~oa~=====:---;:=========~Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 10, 1988

The 13-year-old girl said Rinehart sex-ually assaulted her while
she was babysitting his children
in 1978. Rinehart was then
Franklin County treasure r campaignlng to be Columbus mayor.
'the Plain Dealer said Morgan
conducted the investigation on
city time and without authorizatlon from his superiors.
Morgan compiled the results or
hls Investigation and presented
them to the Fraternal Order of
Pollee, which was considering an
endorsement during a close
mayoral election in 1983.
Morgan. who is nowColtimbu!l.,_
deputy development director,
said he also tried to determine if
three drug store burglaries could

Fourteen die on Ohio .
roads over weekend
Sola

Cloudy, windy, tonight.
of rain 50 percent.
'fuesday, variable cloudiness,
high In mid 50s.

Chan~e

•

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
friend of Columbus mayor Dana
Rinehart said he investigated the
family of a girl who claimed
Rinehart sexually assaulted her
because he feared a pollee
organization would not endorse
Rinehart in his bid to be mayor of
the capital city, a report published Sunday said.
John Landis Morgan III, a
Iarmer Columbus pollee patrolman, told the Cleveland Plain
.Dealer in a copyright .story he
conducted surveillance on the
~irl's family, obtained personal
&gt;'JiM-king lnformlitlo!t, researched
the family's genealogical hi.s tory
and ran criminal checks on
family members.

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Super Lotio
12-21-30-32-3840 '

(House Speaker)

For Columbus Day

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be dedicated Thursday

MONDAY, OCT. 10, 1988

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Santa Says:

Daily Number

Middleport's $3.5 million facility

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BIICKEYE BUILDING &amp; LOAN
CENTRAL TRUST-COMPANY
CIVIC SAVINGS BANK
STAR BANK

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'

October 9. 1988

Meigs Mines topic at meeting of OVMA

continued from D-1

SBC offers
GED classes

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,.

By United Press International
At least 14 people were killed In
accidents on Ohio roadway s
during. the weekend, the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported today .
The victims died in 13 accidents. There were five deaths
Sunday, live Saturday and one
Friday evening, a patrol spokes- ·
man said.
The patrol's weekend fatality
count began at 6 p.m . Friday and
ended at midnight Sunday.
Killed were:
Friday nlgbt
Lancaster: Leroy F . .Friend,
58, Lancaster. killed In a cartruck accident on a Fairfield
County road.
Saturday
Medina: John E. Hofstrum. 24,

Strongsvllll!, killed when his car
hit a tree along Ohio 252 in
Medina County.
Campbell: Luis Diaz, 30,
Campbell, killed when his car hit
a utility pole on a Campbell
street.
Bowling Green; Paul Roe Jr.,
20, Woodville, killed In a twovehicle accident on U.S. 23 In
Wood County.
Newark: Henry Burke, 57,
Columbus, and Joanne R. Johnson, 53, Crestline, killed In a
two-car accident on Ohio 62 in
Licking County.
·
Sunday
Delta: Steven Faulknor, 27,
Milton, Ont., killed in a one-car
crash on Ohio 109 in Fulton
Continued on page 10

on the Governor's Peace and
Conflict Management Committee and also serves on the Solid
Waste Disposal Committee of the
Na!ional Conference of State
Legislators. Prior to his election
to the Ohio Senate, Sen. Long
servced as assistant prosecuting
attorney in Pickaway County and
as the Village Solicitor for
Commercial Point and South
Bloomfielld.
Rep. Boster represents the 94th
District composed of Athens,
Gallla and Meigs Counties in
Southeastern Ohio. A resident of
Gallipolis where she has a
private law practice, Rep. Boster
served as assistnat city solicitor
in Gallipolis. from 1978 to 1980. In
1982, she ran for public office for
the first time and was elected
State Representative. She is th e
first woman from Southeast Ohio
elected to the General Assembly
and is currently serving her third
term.
'
She chairs the House Standing
Committee on Ethics and Stand-·
ards and serves on the House
Judiciary and Criminal Justice,
Education. Civil and Commercial Law, and Children and Youth
Committees as well as on the
·s ubcommittee on colleges and
Continued on page 10

George Bush ahead in Ohio poll
plus or minus three percentage
points. That means Bush could be
leading Dukakis by as much as 50
percent to 40 percent, or Dukakis
could be leading Bush by as much
as 46 percent to 44 percent.
The latest poll found Bush with
an 18-pointadvantageoverDukakis among Independent voters
and winning 89 percent of Republican votes. Dukakis received six
percent of Republican votes and
the remaining five percent were
undecided.
Dukakls received 78 percent of
the Democrats' votes, Bush got
12 percent and 10 percent were
not sure.
The candidates have been
campaigning frequently in Ohio
in an attempt to win its crucial23
electoral votes.

Life back to nonnal
in Nitro aftar 'scare' ,
NITRO, W.Va. (UPI) - The
orchestrated destruction of a
cylinder containing deadly hydrogen cyanide went off without a
hitch, and officials said the town,
situated In the heart of one of the
nation's leadingJpetrQ-chemical
corridors, "Is back to normal."
· A crew of environmental technicians explod~ the steel drum
Sunday after weighing it . to
determine It the chemical Inside
was the deadly cyanide and how
·much it conta !ned.
Charges placed strategically
on the cylinder shattered the
canister with a loud boom at the
rundown Flke-Artel Chemical
plant, while half the town of 8,000
was evacuated.
Air samples showed only one
part per milllon, and an all-clear
was sound~ 1 'h hours after the
detonation, allowing displaced
residents to return home as the
highly poisonous chemical
burned away Inside a bunker, 6
feet deep and surrounded by a
3-foot layer of sandbags.
"We're all .quite relieved,"
Police Sgt. David Dean said from
a command !x&gt;st at a nearly
deserted city hall. ''The cylinder
has been destroyed. It went just
like clockwork. Everything is
back to rtormal. We're glad It's
over."

Hours later, a scientist studied
a videotape of the explosion and
verified for the Environmental
Protection Agency that the
chemical was hydrogen cyanide.
Capable of causing instantdeajh,
is used in pesticides and In
executing criminals In gas
chambers.
"At the point of ~xplosion,
there was a brll!f, actually one
television frame , in which It was
evident that the upper third of the
flal r was a magenta flash, .. said
EPA spokesman Harold Yates.
"The representative of American Cyanamid, when we played
back the tape and stopped It a.t
that frame, said that the magenta was hydrogen cyanide."
Yates said the EPA weighed
the drum and found that at 30
pounds it was the proper weight
for hydrogen cyanide, but , due to
the reputation for shoddy bookkeeping at the plant, the agency
wanted to make sure.
"Even It hadn't been, It was
considered a safe operation," he
said. "It's better toerron the side
of safety than to risk Injury."
About 120 officials -coaxed
townspeople out of the imme- :
diate area In an elaborate evacuation plan, but many were
reluctant to go, and a few
refused.

NITRO RESIDENTS EVACUATED- Charges were set off,
blowing up ·a 30-pound cylinder of hydrogen cyanide In Nllro,
W.Va., Sunday, where aboul 3,500 people were evacuated In

advance of Superfund operation. The liquid chemical them was set
afire, and lhe evacuees were allowed to return. (UPI)

�•

Monday, October..10, 1988

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio .

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS QF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
. ~~~

~m~ ,...,..,__,~.-.....-.~=·r=a
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
·
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Buckley's revelations under torture filled 400 pages recorded by
his captors, and Included 200 to
300 sensitive names.
Buckley died alone, a gaunt
shell of a man, In the stark, dingy
room that had been his cell for 19
. mci"nths.
The news that Buckley divulged secrets was brought to the
White House by All Hashemi. He
was sent by his uncle, Hashemi
Rafsanjani, who Is second In

.

"Buckley ·gave Hezbollah a
great deal of sensitive Information," Hashemi reported, accord- · ..
lng to the transcript of the White : ·

power to the Ayatollah Khomeinl. The visit was yranged by _
the White H~re-establlsh
Unks with revolutionary Iran.
Hashemi acknowledged that
Buckley was seized by Hezbollah, a terrorist group supported
by Iran. But Hashemi Insisted
that Iran doesn't really control
Hezbollah. He lmpll~ that a
radical faction, operating on Its
own, collaborates with the
terrorists.

::.'t:!te~ee~~f"
lranians.''

Hashemi described briefly
what the terrorists had beaten
out of the CIA official. "Buckley
revealed 200 to 300 sensitive
names of people and over 400
pages of debriefing." He also
passed on some secret Information about "a group of Palestinians working to gain Influence ,
within Iran" - a group headed
by the Palestinian terrorist
George Habash.
Getting down to specifics,
Hashemi reported 1 "George Ha-bash had several. times tried to
get details from the debriefing of
Buckley ... and In return for the
details of this debriefing of
Buckley, Habash promised the
Iranians a supply of weapons,
ammunition, explosives, etc."
Rafsanjanl's nephew also tried
to tell the skeptical Americans
that "Buckley was not killed, but ~­
he died of natural causes. He had
three heart attacks."
Buckley's capture and torture
by terrorists acting under orders
from Inside Iran shook the CIA to
Its foundations. Under accepted
International behavior, civilized ;
nations simply don't kidnap one
another's officials en route to the
office and then torture them until
they divulge their government's
secrets.
On March 16, 1984, Buckley
was seized by three gunmen as he
)leaded tor his office In the U.S.
Embassy In Beirut. The most
reliable Intelligence now places
his death about Oct. 4, 1985.

'

LETTERS OF OPINION are welooml!'. They should be less than JOo words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed With name, address a nd
telephone pumber. No unsigned letters will be published. Le tters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues , not persooalltles.

Hughes tries to fire up
Republicans to court blacks .
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter ·
COLUMBUS - If a political campaign were a fire, Bob Hughes
would be the guy to come along with a gasoline can and dump_the
contents on the flames.
Hughes, the veteran chairman of.the Cuyahoga County Republican
Party. did just that a week ago, accusing the state Republican
organization and the Bush for President campaign of neglecting a
potential harvest of blacll,votes.
Here was the Bush campaign and the state party. nicely nursing a
six-polntlead for Vice President George Bush, carefully calculating
strategy for a _Republican victory next month, and up pops Hughes,
spraying unflattering remarks at a press conference.
The reason? You can take your choice. Either the wily Hughes
knows the black vote is ripe for plucking this season and wanted to
s pur Republican leaders, or he's chafing from his loss of Influence
with the state GOP because or the political demise of his sidekick,
former Gov. James Rhodes .
To understand, you have to know a little bit about Bob Hughes. Over
the years. he's been one of the most successful Republican county
chairmen in the country, winning elections for the GOP In a
Democratic-dominated county.
Hughes ha s little use for Ideology; he's a practical politician who
can work with almost· any group tqjassemble the numbers to win
elections. The only black to win a countywide election In Cuyahoga,
Virgil Brown, is a Republican.
Hughes and Brown have long believed that Democrats take black
voters for granted, that there Is a place In the Republican party for
blacks, and that the GOP should try to attract them .
So It was with par ticular delight a week ago that Hughes assailed
.the Dukakis campaign and the Democrats for relegating Jesse
Jackson to the role of "chopping cotton."
This, said Hughes , was the time for Republicans to go after the
black vote, and he accused the Republicans of going to sleep at the
switch.
II just so happens that the chairman of the Ohio Republican Party is
Robert Bennett, longtime vice chairman of the Cuyahoga County
Republican organization and Hughes's former rlghthand man.
" Bob's just being Bob." shrugged Bennett after outlining some of
the the state GOP's efforts to get black support. "I'm not going to
worry about it."
Keith McNamara , chairman of Bush's campaign in Ohio, was a tad
less understanding. "It's a shame that Mr. Hughes didn't pick up the
phone and find out what we are doing in th e black community," said
McNamara . .
Hughes says he-4ljd pick up the phone, bu tall his suggestions "fell on
deaf ears" and he felt it was time to go public.
McNamara's testiness may be attributed to the fact that the last
time he ran a presidential campaign in Ohio, he received the
"Titanic" award after Pres ident Gerald Ford "snatched defeat from
tile jaws of victory " in 1976.
Bennett and McNamara say they are concentrating their efforts
where they can reasonably expect to attract votes. Those efforts
include black voters who own homes in !lJe suburbs. They say It would
be counter-productive to send Geoi'ge Bush Into the black ghettos of
Cleveland. where the Reagan economic recovery has not reached.

NFPA: Official Sponsor
of .Fire Prevention Week
for over 65 Years

)))

Fire' Prrvrntion Week marks the

Tl1r Gt1"nt
Cliit'(lgn Fire of 187!. On Ocloh&lt;&gt;r 9
of that yc~ r. lire killed 250 persons
an&lt;l ri&lt;ost rayed 17 . 4~0 buildi11gs in
Chicago. m. a coot of$1t;a,OOO,Oal
1!1 cc lllltnr•lnnmt.ion of t.he date , Fire
wclrst c~lflllagratir)IIS.

rrrVf'l1\.it Ml

Wf'Ck is always U'le

SurKlay -lllfoueh·S.,turd'IY period
wl1ic·lt ir~t·lu(lrs OctobPr 9. The
ohscrvanrt• nri~inat cd in 1911 whetl
t.hc: Pin.' Mar5hals Association of
Nor! h AnK&gt;rica estal&gt;lishcd Firr

Prc'\'('111ion Day. Upon rccommcn d:ltit"'· N I~PA members urged Presi{b ll Warrr11 G. II:J.rdin~ iJ1 l!l22 to

pn)d:Jilll ~~ire Pr&lt;'v('ntion Wcrk.
Sine.'(• then, NFPA has been thP
oflic ·ial SJM1t1sor, IC'ading t.l\e nat ion
in brin~inp, thr meSS&lt;'lgc' o[ fire·
saff'ty tn t.IIC puhlic riOt 0111.\' during

fir(' PrcvC'nt.ion week h,ut also the
wh•&gt;r year through.

.

"A Sound You
Can Uve With •••
Test Your
Detector!"
This year's Fire Preventiou Week
I heme, • ASound You Cnn Live
With . . . Test Your Detector!"
emphasizt·s t hl' imrxlrt.ance of
smoke de tech1rs;their proper
installation and testing . Battery
operated smoke detectorn slmld be
tested weekly and AC powered
detectA:&gt;rs should be tested monthly .
to make sure they are in good
working order.

..

One-Third of Home Detectors Are Not Working!
·"
35

30

25

Estimaled .
Percent

20

Not
Operational

15

tO

..

5
0

1980

1981

1962

1983

~~

19&amp;4

Sovr~· NFPA AnalySIB ol1980- 65 NFIRS. NFPA S!Jrvev

,,

"Barbara, why don't you dye ¥our hair?''

Playing the patriot
Eush's assurance and Insist that
he deeply resented the (nonexistent) charge.
What all thl&amp; really Involves Is
a sharp difference between liberal and conservative cultural
atlltudes on the subject ot patriotism. Secretary of Education
William Bennett. put his finger
squarely on the key point a
couple of weeks ago when he
remarked that he himself has
spent several years In the
Harvard-and-Brookline atmos-phere out of which Michael
Dukakis emerged, and that patriotism Is Indeed an unfashionable
emotion in those purlieus. The
regnant attitude Isn't really
"unpatriotic," but It certainly
discourages such open displays
of patriotism as the Pledge of
Allegiance.

When the Pledge oi Allegiance
issue came up in the first
pJ:esldential debate In WinstonSalem, N.C., Vice President
Bush was quick to stress that he
was not questioning Governor
Du.kakJs' . patriotism. But Duk·a ·

kls, Who obviously had his
comments on the subject all
ready, rejected this assurance.
On the contrary, he declared,
Bush was Indeed questioning his
patriotism, and he resented it.
Why should Du)\akis have been
so eager to Insist that his
patriotism was under attack?
One would think he would be
grateful to be spared such an
accusation, and pleased to hear It
rejected outright by his opponent. My guess Is that Dukakls
had been soheavllyprogrammed
to resent aspersions on his
patriotism (because of his position on the Pledge Issue.) that he
was simply unable to change his
attitude when the circumstances
required it. The only response he
could think of was to reject

Anyone who, like Bennett, has
swum In those waters (and I
myself am a gradual~ of Harvard's law school) knows wqat he
was talklngabout. A person whO

game~__Wi_il_Lia_m_Rus_he_r
openly appeals to the emotion of
patriotism Is swlilly labeled a
"super-patriot." And yet (although liberals don't hesitate to
brand their opponents as "racists," "bigots" and "lacking In
compassion") If t~e "superpatriot" were to respond to thar
label by suggesting that perhaps
In that case his critics are
"sub-patriots," he would quickly
be asked In no"uncertaln terms,
"Are you questioning my
patriotism?"
,
Certainly for people whose
patriotism Is so unquestionable
the liberals spend a lot of time
deprecating it. What conserva·
tlve hasn't heard some liberal
llp-smacklngly quote Samuel
Johnson's remark that "patriotIsm Is the last refuge, of a
scoundrel"? Liberals don't mind
Implying thereby that their ad·
versarles are scou_n drels, cynically Invoking patriotism for
Improper purposes; yet their
own patriotism Is beyond all
discussion.

As a matter of fact, )l'hen their
/
guard Is down many liberals will
quote with apparent approval I"
certainly without any criticism
- E.M. Forster's notorious re- .
mark that If he were ever forced i'
to chooSe between his friend and
his country, he hoped he would
have the courage to choose· his
friend.
From timeto time some clever
liberal will Imply that, for him at
any rate, patriotism Is simply too
private and precious a thing to be
proclaimed openly. But surely It
Is only logical to share with our
fellow citizens an emotion that
celebrates o.ur collective
nationally.
.
So the liberals keep handy that · ..'.
clove of gjlrlic before which they . .
know, any conservative vampire .
will recoil: "Are you questioning ·
my patriotism?" 'They themselves may not consider patriot- . .
Ism a particularly noble attrlb·
ute, but they know that
conservatives do.

Debating fantasy vs. confusion
There are those who claim to
have learned more about the
candidates' platforms from the
first presidential debate.
· Alii got was an hour and a half
reaffirming what I already
knew:
- Michael Dukakls has more
of President Reagan's flair for
the anecdote than Reagan's own
vice president, along with his
penchant for not getting the story
quite right. Whereas we couldn't
find Reagan's Welfare Queen, It
wasn't Little League baseball
that Dukakls' little boy couldn't
play because his father didn't
have insurance; It was football .
Dukakls also has more of
Reagan's talent for creating
visions of that shining city on the
hill awaiting us once we punch
our ballots for him: more of the
"It's morning In America" knack
than Bush, whose biggest promIse Is that we'll all have values
when we cometh Into his
kingdom.
- When backed Into a corner,
Bush will put on a show the likes
of which we haven't seen since
Gracie Allen lett the stage:
Defense by rambling Innuendo,
managing to use every bit of his
rebuttal time without ever drawIng a bead on what he was asked.
But I can't say I didn'tenjoy lt.
I always look forward to "shining
city on the hill" time, when one or
both of the candidates promise us
Camelot while preparing to give
us South Succotash. .
Here's what we'll · find In
Michael Dukakls' version, lei- ·
cated just south of Fantasy land,
next to the Magic Kingdom:
We will "help people to live
better ill1!lS, and at the same time
save money by helping hundreds
of thousands of families (this

became "millions of families" a
little later In the speech) on
welfare to get off welfare."
All God's chllluns will have
free health Insurance, as well as
wings: "I think It's time that
when you got a job In this
country, It · came with health

insurance:' '
We'll have such a low unemployment rate we'll enj'oy "a
tremendous opportunity to reach
out of everybody and make them
a part of this woder!ulnatlon of
ours with the opportunity we

create." .
He'll be a president who
" understands that affordable
housing for families of low and
moderate Income, for young
families, first-time home buyers,
Is an essential part of the
American dream."
Bush was at his best. When
questioned about his own role In
~he arms-for-hostages deal, he
shifted attention from himself to
President Reagan and accused
Dukakis of making a "serious
charge" against the president.
When as ked to defend his
choice of Dan Quayle as his
running mate, the best he could
do was a shameless ploy for
yuppie votes: "I see a man who Is
young, and I'm putting my
confidence In a whole generation
of young people In their 30s and
40s .. ..'f.Does that mean we don't
have to worry about Dan
Quayle's qualifications to lead,
because all of us young mlddleagers will be governing by
committee?
Bush must have sensed he was
getting nowhere with that tactic,
so he launched himself even
further Into orbit and urged us on
to mass repentanCe on Quayle's

'

~~~:~::

•• :
.;
was so concerned abou the
sensitive nature of thts Information that they passed It to the

A MEMBER of The Untied Press Internationat, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper PubHshers Association.

m111ivers:uy 11r onr- of Arrt('riCa"s

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - The Los
Angeles Dodgers responded to
the loss of their ace reliever
Sunday night with their be~ I
late-inning effort of the National
League playoffs.
'
The Dodgers hit their first two
homers of the series- a two-run
homer from Mike Scloscla to tie
the score In the ninth inning and a
12th-inning game-winner by Kirk
Gibson- and received a superb
bullpen effort to beat the New
York Mets 5-4 - and tie the
National League playoffs at two
11ames apiece.
.
"If you don't havecharacterby
now, you're not going to get it."
Sciascia sa id. "We're probably
not the most talented team In the
league."
The Dodgers, who won just one
of 11 games against New York
during the regular season, regained the home-field edge they
lost · by splitting the first two
games in Los Angeles. .
"After a tough ballgame we
come back and play well," Mets
Manager Davey Johnson said.
"It's definitely a tough loss."
Game 5is Monday at noon EDT
with the Mets sending · Sid Fernandez probably against Game 2
starter Tim Belcher.
Monday was originally sup-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 10, 1988'

WASHINGTON - William
Buckley, the CIA station chief in
Beirut whO died at the hands of
Iranian terrorists In 1985, was
brutally tortured until he revealed government secrets .
The terrible details of Buckley's death bave been kept under
wraps until now. We have seen
the suppressed transcript of a
· White House meeting with an
Iranian envoy In September 1986.
If the envoy was telling the truth,

'.

'

Sarah Overstreet

behalf: "And I'd like each person of It, and falling that, using It to
to say, (altogether, now), 'did I Imply Dukakls Is unpatriotic.
jump to conclusions running "My opponent says J. Danforth
down rumors that were so · Quayle .... Do you know who J.
outrageous and so brutal ... "'
Danforth was? He was a man
Bu I he surpassed even my' who gave his life In World War II,
wildest hopes when he accuded so ridiculing a person's name Is a
Dukakls of making fun of little beneath this process ... "
Quayle's name. It was vintage
Allin all, It was an entertaining
Bush - pulling nothing out ofthe hour and a half: Mr. Pie-In-Theair, trying to make something out Sky vs. The Wanderer.

Berry's World

DODGERS CELEBRATE VICTORY -Mike Scloscla, left, and
Kirk Gibson, center, Dodger ·home run hitters in Game 4 of the
National League playoffs, celebrate their 5-4 win over the Mets
Sunday n lght with manager Tommy Lasorda. The Dodgers evened
the series at 2-2. (UPI)

posed to be an off-day , but Game
3 was rained out Friday. The
Dodgers' victory Sunday guaranteed the teams will have to' liy
Monday night back to Los An geles. where Game6is scheduled
Tuesday night.
The Mets, who won. a major
league-high 56 games -at home,
had their 12-ganie.Shea Stadium
winning streak snapped.
Earlier Sunday, the Dodgers
learned !hey had lost ace reliever
.Jay Howell for three days . NL
President A. Bartlett Giamatti
suspended Howell beca use he
was found with an Illegal sub=
stance on his glove In Game 3.
Howell said he might appeal
Monday.
Without Howell, Los Angeles
marched six relievers to the
mound after starter John Tudor
left trailing 4-2. The relievers did
not alloW a run over seven
innings.
The winner of the series plays
the Oakland Athletics In the
World Series starting Saturday
at New York or Los Angeles. The
A's completed a sweep of the
Boston Red Sox In the American
League playoffs Sunday with a
4-1 victory.
Brian Holton escaped a runneron-third none out jam In the sixth,
Alejandro Pena pitched three
hitless Innings for the win and

Orel Hershiser, who starred
Games 1 and 3, got thelas toutror .
the sixth •11ave of his career,
Including postseason..
GibSOn, I for 16 entering the .
at-bat tn the 12th, homered off
loser Roger McDowell to put Los
Angeles ahead 5-4. Scloscla
forced extra Innings with his
homer of! Dwight Gooden In the
ninth. The Mets had won Games 1
and 3 in their last at-bais.
Tim Leary, expected to start
either Game ·5 or 6 for the
Dodgers, opened as the Los
Angeles pitcher In the bottom of
the 12th. He left with runners on
first and second and one out.
Jesse Orosco entered and handed
a bases•loaded, two-out situation
to Hershlser, who had closed the
season with a major leaguerecord 59 straight scoreless
Innings.
"If I know Bulldog (Hershlser)
he went and told (Manager)
Tommy (Lasorda) he could do
It," Gibson said.
Hershlser started Games land
3, pitching seven Innings
Saturday.
" It 's a big win, but It 's only
worth one game," Hershiser
said.
Hershlser induced Kevin
McReynolds to hit a short pop to
center that John Shelby stormed
in to catch. In Game 1, Shelby
had a bloop, game-winning two-

a Athletics d00:n Red Sox 4-_1
OAKLAND, Calli. (UPI ) The Oakland Athletics say they
1
will need all five rest day s
resulting from their sweep or the
American League Championship
Series.
·'It's a definite plus,_" Manager
Tony LaRussa said Sunday after
the Athletics rodeJoseCanseco's
A's CELEBRATE - Oakland reliever Dennis Eckersley gets
bat and sterling pitching by Dave
hugged by catcher Ron Hassey, left, alter the final oulln the ninth
Stewart and Dennis Eckersley to
I nnlng Sunclay to complete the foui--game sweep of the American
a 4,1 victory over the Boston Red
League Championship Series against the Boston Red Sox. AI right
Sox .
.are teammates Carney Lansford (4) and Mark McGwire. (UPI)
"When you talk about your
closer &lt;Eckersley 1 pitching four
games in a row, he definitely
needs the time off. II' s a great
time to back off. catch your
breath and get ready for the
(World) Series."
By Gary Clark
12-play drive that consumed some·
The Series appearance will be
seven minutes plus before the Fal- Oakland's first since 1974. It was
SlEWART, Ohio- Although it
con defense stiffened. Wahama ran keyed by Eckersley, the ALCS
was far from one of their beuer out- just three plays and were forced to MVP who set a· playoff record
ings coach Don VanMeter's
pwtt and the Lancers began yet with four saves.
Wahama White Falcons overcame
another time consuming drive, but
"This is the best I've felt in my
three lost fuml)les and a number of once again the WI-IS defense rose life,", Eckersley said. "I didn't
dropPed Jli!SSeS Fri&amp;y evening in to the occasion 10 halt the llireaL ·
think this would happen to me. I
posting a 21-7 come-from-behind
Wahama managed just five of- haven't pitched this much this
triumph over the Federal Hoelting
fensive plays during the first 17 year. I w'as so pumped up, It
l.ancers before a shivering crowd at minutes of the second half but once didn' t matter what stuff I had.
the Southeastern Ohio school.
they did get a drive going it resul- I'm glad we're not playing a day
The White Falcons found lhemted in the final score of the evening. after tomorrow because l need a
~lves forced to play in a catch-up
Starting at its own 32, the Bend rest. "
situation for lhc third consecutive
Area team went 68 yards in nine
Canseco · made sure of · It,
week, but unlike last week when
plays, with a 37-yard pass from banging out a playoff recordtlJC Bend Area team rallied with a Gibbs to Philip Upton and a 16- tying third · homer and two
vengeance to defeat Vinson, that yard run by Kearns being the key singles.
~arne
hunger
never
really
plays in the series.
';Jose Canseco is God, " teammaterialized. Nevertheless, a win is
Gibbs went the final two yards mate Mark McGwire said.
still a win and the local gridders for the tonchdowr. and Sigman
Dave Henderson doubled home
managed to dodge yet another bulbooted tho point after to make it a run in the third before the
let in keeping their unbeaiCn string
21-7 with 3:02 remaining in the Athletics sealed their final triintaCt at SIX straight.
.
contest. Federal Hoelting was for- umph with two runs in the eighth.
Senior running back Rick Keams ced to go to the air following the
No American League team had
ran for· 147 yards on the night and
ensuing kicko!'f, with Kearns pick-. s wept the playoffs since 1984,
scored the Falcons go ahead
ing off a Jruvis aerial on the game's when the Detroit Tigers pretouchdown with an eight yard burs!, final vlay to thwart any Lancer vailed In the final year of the
while senior signal caller Sean comeback hopes.
best-of-five format.
Gibbs added a pair of touchdowns
Wahama held a 14-9 edge in first
Oakland, which so far in this
for the locals. Dave ·Signmn booted
d•lwns while rushing for 187 and decade had finished fourth three
:til three point after touchdowns as p!JS!:!oog f!J,· 5!5 fo, a nc.L 243 Lew! times and filth once, opens the
Wahama Improved its record to 6-0 yards. l'ederal Hocking picked up World Series next Saturday night
on ti11; ~eason ,·,hik: Federal Hock- 121 rushing yards and was limited In the home stadium of either the
ing fell to 1-6.
to just si• yards passing for a total Los Angeles Dodgers or New
The Lancers took an early 7-0 of 127 net yards from scrimmage. York Mets.
advan.tage midway tllrough the
Keams led all runners witll 14 7
''Team-wise , it 's no preferopening stanza by capilalizing on
yards in 22 carries while Randy e nce," Canseco said. "I'd rather
the first of three Wahama fumbles. ShuiTord paced the Lancer ground go to Los Angeles, but only
Federal Hocking recovered the
attaCk with 81 yards in 18 tries.
because It is a shorter trip. Those
loose pigskin on the WHS 20
Gibbs completed just two of I 0 six-hour flights can kill you."
where Craig Jarvis surprised
passes, although several were
everyone by scoring on a quarter- dropped by. the Falccln receivers,
Stewart earned the victory,
back sneak on the Lancers first of- for 56 yards, while Jarvis connec- giving up four hils over sevep
fensive play following the turnover. ted on two of five for six yards. Up- Innings. He walked three and
Sequoia Lemon -nailed _t)le PAT 10 ton caught one pass for Wahama for s truck out five before Ellis
g1ve Federal Hocking the lead with
37 yards wilh Lemon leading Burks' leadoff single In the
ti·O? remaining in the opening Federal Hoelting in tlle receiving eighth knocked him out. Rick
deparuncnt witll one reception for Honeycutt got three outs before
quarter.
Wahama •arAe back to knot the
13 yards.
Eckersley pitched a hitless ninth.
score late in the period by marching
In front of an Oakland Coliseum crowd of 49,406, first-game
54 yards in eight plays. Keams was
Defensively for Wahama,
the workhorse of the series with
loser Bruce Hurst allowed two
number
of standout ·performances runs before leaving after four
five carries for 53 yards with Gibbs
wel'e turned in by the local defen- Innings because of shoulder
sneaking in from a yard out for the
sive
II ·with the play of Bobby stiffness.
to"chdown. Sigman's kick made it
Kin~aid being ~1e most notable.
7-7 with ;16 seconds 10 play in the
The Red Sox, who this year lost
Joining Kincaid in the limelight for all eight games in Oakland,
first canto.
.. '
The White Falcons added Lheir the White Falcons were Qave Sig- closed within 2-1 in the sixth on
man, Wes Bumgarner, Mike Har- Jim Rice's RBI grounder but
second touchdown just before the
bour, Bill Zuspan, Sam Thompson never seemed to do enough to
half ended after gaining possession
Chris Noble. Noble had a pair beat a team that led the majors
and
on the Lancer 24 followin~ a short
fumble recoveries ll!ld with 104 victories .
of
enemy
T'ederal Hocking punt. Chns Jewell
Keams
and
Upton picked off a
''It 's over, but we lost to the
picked up 16 yards to the Lancer
•
Federal
Hoelting
pass each (Or the best club In the league, " Boston
e •ght before Kearns burst free
through the center of the line for Bend Area team.
Manager Joe Morgan said.
the score. Sigman's extra-point
kick made it14-7 wiih 2:36to play
irt the half.
Wahama threatened qnce again
just before the half ended after
ACETY~ENE,
• Chris Noble recovered a Jarvis
fumble at the Federal Hocking 15
but the half ended with Bobby Kincaid just inches short of paydirt after hauling in a Gibbs pa~ for a 19yard gain.
.
.
Federal Hocking dommated th~rd
quarter action by using a ball-contml offense. The Lancers took the
second-half kickoff and sustained a

,, ""~•
. 11_

a. . .•.•.

,,.

,

.

Wahama hard-pressed
in 21-7 win over F-H

"They're solid all around.
. they've got good pitching. It 's
tough getting a lot of runs off
good pitchers."
Oakland went ahead 4-11n the
e ighth. Canseco singted past
reliever Lee Smith, stole second
and scored when McGwire
banged a single up the middle.
Don Baylor drove In the AthletIcs' fourth run with a sacrlllce
fly.
.
"The last four games they did
ever thing right ," said Boston
utilltynian Spike Owen. "They
showed they're not a onedlmenslionalteam. They can hit
the long ball and do everything
else as well."
Canseco slammed a 2-2 pitch
over the fence in right-center to
make II l -0 In the first. The
slugger. who homered off Hurst
in Gamel, equaled the mark of
three homers ln a series set by
George Brett In 1978 and
matched by the Kansas CHy star

The Daily Sentinel
( USPS 14$-168)

A Diviston ol MuUbnedia. Inc.

· to cop Amerrcan League tttle

....

run double falllnfront ofhimand
was criticized for playing too
deep. - --- ~
_
in the sixth inning , he was playing shallow and allowed a
Carter bail togo over his head for
an R:BI triple, which brought In
the· Mets' fourth run .
"As soon as I saw the way he
swung at the ball- I've seen the
replay of the one Carter hit
enough to know those· things fail
In, " Hershlser said.
The Dodgers had taken a 2-0
lead In the first on Shelby's
two-run single.
The Mets went In front ~-21n the
fourth on back-to-back homers , a
two-run shot by Darryl Strawberry and a solo blast by
McReynolds.
Gooden, after allowing two ·
· runs an.d two hits In the first,
permitted no runsaQd just one hit
until the ninth.
He then Issued his fifth walk, to
John Shelby to open the ninth.
and Scloscla followed with a
homer to right. Gooden, who
struck o.ut nine , was relieved
whenAifredoGrl!!inslngledwith
one out. That guaranteed Gooden "
would remain winless In six
postseason starts. ·He has two no
decisions hi this series.

in 1985.
The Athletics scored a run in
the third but blew a chance to
break the game open. Walt Weiss
and Carney Lansford singled and
Henderson doubled down the
left-field line to score Weiss.
After Hurst got Canseco to pop to
short, he loaded the bases by
walking McGwlre Intentionally.
The strategy worked when Dave
Parker struck out and Terry
Steinbach filed to center.
Boston closed to within 2-1 In
the sixth when Stewart was
nearly lifted. Marty Barrett
walked and took second on a
sIngle by Wade Boggs. After
Mike Greenwell's fielder's choIce left runners at first and third,
Rice grounded a ball up the
middle that was slowed by the
pitching rubber. Second baseman Mike Gallego made the play
at first while Barrett scored.

Published every afternoon, Monday
, throogh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Ushlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
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'•

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'

WELDING CLASSES

ARC,

MIG WELDING

Starting October 18th

For Registration Call
TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING

992-3768

'

~

M.Jl 8ulliltcrtplloM

lasWe Metp C..nty
13 Weeks ...... .......... .................. $19.24·
26 Weeks ...... ......................... , .• S37.96
52 Weeks ........... .. ............... ...... $74.36
Out,ade Meip County
13 Weeks ................. .. ............... $20.110
26 Weeks .................................. $40.30
52 Weeks ....... ........................... S7MO

"Up e_your
·heating system. Switch to
aheat pump." 808 VILAlCile~--­
HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT

Thday's electric heat pump is the modern
choice. Because it's three times more energyefficient than an old fashioned
furnace. Also, since it's flameless,
it's cleaner and safer. Plus it gives
you the bonus of central air
conditioning.
Find out more by mailing in
this coupon today.

a

.·

"Whatever happened to ol' whatshlsname you know, the guy from California - the
president?"

The Daily Sentir'lai- Page-3

Dodgers edge Mets 54, in 12th inning .

Brutal tOrtUre revealed Jack Anderson and Dale Van Attt1

The Daily Sentinel

'

P9fll81'oy-Middleport, OhiO

.N.M------------------:
,- .,,·'j..'..'. &lt;hl
·Addlw--~_...:..------~--..
,.)

'' ''CIIY·~-..;;J;;..;;_.,:,_;_,....:::._~- Sta~e: _ _ _ Z i p &gt; - - (\\tlrt)l- - -- -

�J

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bengals pound
By DAVE RAFFO
UP I Sports Writer
The Cincinnati Bengals, with
guys named lckey and Boomer
leading the way, convinced the
New York Jets they are one of the
baddest teams In the NFL.
Rookie Ickey Woods rushed for
139 yards and two touchdowns on
30 carries and Boomer Eslason
passed for thr~ touchdowns
Sunday, lifting the Bengals to a
. 36-19 victory over the Jets at
Cincinnati.
The Bengals remained the
league's only unbeaten tea~ and
are off to the o;econd 6-0 start In
club history.
"I think they're capable of
doing a great job all season
. )ong," Jets running back Free-

KNOCKS BALL AWAY- Cincinnati Bengal tight end Jim Riggs
has the ball knocked away by New York Jet safely Eric McMillan
during the thll'd quarter of Sunday's game at Riverfront Stadium.
The Bengals, still the NFL's only unbeaten team, won 36-19 to
claim their sixth win. (UP I)

:Meigs Marauder golf results
Get tlng near the end of the
season, the Marauders of Coach
John Krawsczyn participated In
' a TVC match hosted by VInton
County at Fairgreens Course on
October 3rd, finishing fifth In that
event.

- The top golfer for the Maraud' ers was Matt Baker with a 43.
Jamey Little finished with a 45,
-Mike VanMeter posted a 47, Phil
' Hovatter 48, Scott Barton 52 and
Tim Peterson 57 to round out the
Meigs scqring.
Belpre maintained their unbeaten string with a team score
' of 166. Second place went to
Nelsonville-York with 174 and
: they were followed by Federal
Hocking at 176, Trimble with 188,
Meigs at 188, VInton County with
191, Miller at 199 and Wellston
with 200.
· Belpre: through seven
: matches, holds top spot with 49
points. Trailing the leader In the
· following order are Federal
Hocklng-33 points, Trlmble-30,
VInton County-26, Melgs-23.5,
Nelsonville- York-21. Mlller-1.5

and Wetlston-6.
The final TVC tournament of
the year will be held on October
lOth at the Oxbow Club and will
be hosted by Federal Hocking.
In a district tournament for
Class AA squads at Portsmouth's
Elks Country Club on October
5th, New Lexington captured the
title and advanced to reglo)lal
competition. TVC representative
Belpre came In fourth and will
also advance to regional play,
Meigs' Matt Baker. an individual sectional qualifier, shot a
round of 88 which missed the
regional cut by just four strokes .
This was Baker's third trip to
district competition.
Finishing out the week with a
trl-match at Riverside, Meigs
emerged victorious over the
Wahama and Point Pleasant
contingents with a team score of
192. Wahama nailed down second
place with a 206 and Point
Pleasant shot a total of 219.
Matt Baker was match medalIst followed closely by Scott
Barton and Jamey Little.

Scoreboard ...
lA RalclenM Kan.u Clly, I p.m.
Pblkdelphla at aE!\IeiMd, I p.m .

NHL results
NATIONAL ROCKEl' LEA.GtJ£
lt'.,et~

...._...Ill W..i.I!IKf-. I p.m.
San DloeJQ at Mhlml, 1 p.m .

Ceakrenct"

ratdck Dl\'l8kln

Tum
W I, T Pl!f. GF GA
Plllllacldpllla
2 t t
-1
H
l
~'l' Rat~~er s
I 0 I 3
PIUabuJih
' I 0 {I
:Z
8
I
WMhlqt•a
I I I
'l
N-.J~r•r
I I I
2
•
l
N\' lsluden
0 t I
I
II U
Ad...- Dlvl~lon
~loa
310
li
II
l

'

" '

til-t
I I t
'l
I % t
2

Que~

Montrnl
Ruffalo

Harlford

" '
'' ""
•

0 ' t
0
Camlflell Conlerence
Nnr.U llt\'IHion

Teun

WLTPt8.GFGA
2 I 0 4
lfl 10
I I 0
:l
10
'7

Tvronto

st. Loui!i

0

"'""'
"

6

1
!

0

Dlt.AII'O

o

Mlnne11 D&amp;a
Smylhe

I

I

.5

II

I

I

10

11
1

3

o· o

Dh· J~Ion

1.- An1elu;

~

0

0

G

20

EdmiHIIIon
\lancouM"r
Calp.-,

'Z

II

0

.a

10

0

0 2

2

5

5

0
0

1
I

I
I

II
6

10

Wlnnlpto~~;

1
I

12
!

~

Sat uni!QI'J IWIIUih

BoHlon &amp;, Hlll'tl•rd 2

Waahhwton 8. Bulfalo 2
N- .Jrrii!J 5, Qu.ehec 3
Molllrul4, Mlnntllota 3
Toronlo '7, ChiCiljllo 4
Dd relt 3, V &amp;lk'Ouwr :J
NV RUI!III"rll .. , lit. Lollla :!

Los An pie~~ I, Cal11111ry 5, (ot)

Sum.,.·, Reii~I!J '
Bo11lOII 3, Hudonl I
PhU.dclphla4, BuUala 3 ( fll J
Quebec -t, Mlnres.ta 1
Edmonton~. Wlnripea;ol
To,....o fl, Clllkap o1
Lo11 Arl~et~l, NV llll.ndeul ( ol )
MoiiiiiQ''~Games

New Jeeeya.lNY Rinpll, 7::J$p.m.
ik'trott Ill Cal pry, t :30p.m.
NV

l~ludft' aat

VutOU¥er,IO: l8p.m.

Tuf'M.,.'" GamE'
WMhh.Conat PltC&amp;bu 11h. niP!

NFL scores

Tam~&amp; Bay atlndlailapo.lls, I p.m.
.San Fl'llnclliC'o al Ll\ Ram11, 4 p.m .
At-..tl aa Drenwr. 4 p:m.
New Orleans at Seattle, .. p.m.
MOndiQI , Oct . 1~
Buflalo at N.Y .•ll!t&amp;, t p.m.

Ohio High St:Mol Foodlall Re!l~lli
By Un!WdPrt.'Bto,lnterrallnnd
8&amp;1 urd IIi, Oc.1 . A

AJir Norell :U. Allr Kf"nmort" 3
Befonl Chanell2, Cloe Httlloly Name7
BeUal~·

42, IE U\'Prp)OI 13
Black River It Colli• Wu RAvD
Buckeye N n, BrldJepori 14
.
Canton. Cent CII.Ut 'l"l, Day Ch llffl.Jul 0
CardlnRtlln 3,, Mar~n Calh 8

Cle Lutheran W 'Z I, BrOOid)'ll I
Cle Mar!llall :U, Cle Rhodes I
Cle Ad ant~~. Oe EaJJt Tech 12
Cle lJatw SchObl S6. Pl(bSh!lllySde li
Cit' l,;~alllls H . PIU'ma Val For,;to 13

Col Hartley 11, Col Cll~

~

Col WIIJk"rsen It, Coll&gt;t-Saii'S i
Conotton \ ' IIIII')' 35, Jewr.tt..Sclo 7
D~ Dunbar 41l, D-.y Plfllk:rson 0
El)'rta w~ :n, IAnln Brookside o
Hubbanl4&amp;, ShiU'on (Pa) Kenllfctf 8
Hudson W~&gt;n Rn 48, Oliver (lnd! 22
Lakewood Sl Ed 5. Nor .. CIUlton 3
Lfod~molll 31 , F•lrp!)ri HArbor 0
Uhfort)' Union i, Lan~•k'r Fl1hec t
Uma Cat• 31, RIMfftun z.a

Lllc•,.UIP Val S8, lr•llllon 81 .laP 28
Mlcl'd Cantinal U, Bt&gt;-.:hwo.cl 'ZH

Portllm:Olllh Damt s.t, Porbmoultl E i

RldSfWeod M , 'I'll lily Ctnl Calh II
• Shlldy .. de If, McMecheft tW\'a)

()o.

nahue I
Sprln~e N'we~~ter n :eo. Kenton Rldlt' 12
Sleuben\oille Calli Jot, Edl1on S 10 •
Tol Scott 2:3, Tol Woodward 14

Tol Bowllhcr 30. To I U~Wl)' IR
Tol John ttl, J11cbon (Mich) Lumen 7
Vleo• Mathew• n. Soulhl-.cton i
War,.,n WH&amp;ern Rtil :M, Howland 3
' "''"~nston If' ( Pa) Zll, Zanet~ Ro ~~oe·
('hh!S

12

Ohio scores

-.TION\\L FOOTBAI.L I.EAGUtJ
Sullllf'!t ~kores
('hitii(O 'N. DetroM 7

o.na1o u, lndlanapoll!! ~~

Hou•on 7, Kan• cttyG
LA Ram~ tS, 1\llanla 1
G'tf't'n llA.T .f5, New Er1 pu.c~ 3
l 'lnd...atl Jfl, New \'o"rk J~h 19
Suttle Ill, 0nfi!U1d HI
MlnN!!IOU 14 , T.unra Bay 13

W.MI ... on 31, Dallls 17
Ph•nbl31, Pltt.lbursh H

~:-:.':.~ !~:;,~.~· 11
Dfon..er II, Suf1'1U1cl~~ro 13 (nH
Mond!Q''8 G~am~
NY Glanlt~ at l'hlladdphla, II p.m .
SUnlh~. Ot.i . t6
DetroltatN.Y. GIIIIIt~,lp.m .

ctnclnrati!U New f.R..Iand. 1 p.m.
IY'

D.. a. at Chlc11o, I p.m.

~~:'o:: ::,:!:.rn,.::·.~!:m.

OhiCJ Collere FootbiiJI Rellall&amp;
By United Prea1 .. ter•tlotal
Sat!ld.,, oct. II
l•diMa " 1• OllltoSiate 7
lbll Stat• Sl, Keal State 20
Bowlin1 Green

u:, Ohio U•lver111ty II

Western Ml~hl~ tl, MiamiS
ToiHo s:t, Norlhern 011 . . . 10

i\r"-•" SUJe tJ.

Akrua 12

Ptmn Staid$, Onclntatlt

·NvrtiUlMier n2S, Vouaptown Still e 1
Raldwtft.\\' an~e 31, Moutf Union 2:1

C•plal :u. Oblo Nord! ern.
HeldelherJ ~A. Mllrlet&amp;M 3
Mullldnpm:J~, Jilndii!N ~2
Wllk•nhl'rK 41, OUtorbeln !2
ibhland 14, lndlaMpolis I!

BM«on,t l"IQ'nesburw (Palo
D .... lonU falbolle(DC)ID
...,
'
llanowr lind ! Jl, ~~~an~ 10 ·
Hlnm 26, Grovr C'lt)' t Pa) 21
GcoPKr.town (Kf l TtHI•D
Urh~UJM

~.

31, Wllmln~ton31

(lie)

~==========·=============~~
BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE AND
. SAFETY EQUIPMENT

SALUTES .FIRE
PREVENTION WEEK

A fire extinguisher in your home or
busintss will reduce insur- and
give you the filling of MCurity.
PROTECT YOUR LOVED ONES.
NO JOI TOO lARGE OR TOO SMALL
CALL GARY SNOUFFER

992-7075

FOR ALL YOUR FIRE AND
SAFETY NEEDS

..

Monday, October 10, 1988

Jet~;

man McNeil said after being held
to 50 yards rushing.
"Cinci nnati Is the best team
w.e've played spfar," added New
York quarterback Ken O'Brien,
who came Into the gamecomplet·
ing 61 percent of his passes but
managed only 1&amp; of 38 .for 151
yards . against the aggressive
Bengals' defense.
The Jets, like- Cincinnati a
surprise team, fell to 3-2-1. The
Bengals lead second place Hous-,.
ton _by two games In the AF:C
Central. The Cleveland Browns,
Winners Of the division the past •
three years, are three games
back.
"Boomer Is a star and Ickey
ran great today, but what we
really have is a good combination

Jackson eighth graders
top Little Marauders, 16-14
MIDDLEPORT - The JackThe Meigs defense denied the
son jronmen defeated Meigs'
lronmen a first doWJI on the next
eighth graders, 16-14, in a gruel- series and Stewart chalked uphls
. lng defensive battle. ·
second blocked punt of the
Jackson, starting the contest evening with Jay Cremeans
from their own 35, used a
taking the airborne ball to the
combination of runs and two · Jackson 22. After Hamon scored
penalties against the Little Ma- on an 8 yard plunge, the try for
rauders to move the ball to the the extra points failed and Meigs
Meigs one yard line. They scored led 14-8 at the 3:54 mark of
on a dlve'wlth 4:59 showing In the quarter two.
first quarter and added the two
That lead melted when the
point conversion to take an early lronmen stormed back wilh a 47
lead.
yard jaunttoknot the score again
'
and then took the lead ali- a
On the next series, Meigs was
successful two point conversion
forced to putn after three plays
tty.
from scrlmmage and Jackson
With all the scoring taking
had possession at the Ironmen
p]ace In the first half, the last two
28.Stopping the Jackson running
quarters were mostly defensive
game on the first two attempts,
struggles
as each squad man-Mike Welsh and Richard Stewart
aged
only
one sustained drive.
joined forces to sack the signal
The
lronmen
did penetrate to the
caller on th:rd down and force an
Meigs
.32
In
the
fourth frame but
Ironmen punt Stewart, penetrat·
the
drive
was
halted
when Billy
lng the enemy defense, blocked
Glaze
recovered
a
Jackson
the kick and the Marauders took
fumble
over at the Jackson 15.
Mike Cremeans and Shawn
Hamon moved the ball to the one
from where John Bentley hit
Scott Whitlatch for the touchdown. Hamon's run for the two
point conversion was successful
and the score was knotted at 8 all
with 6: 13 remaining In the half.

Browns lose Pagel

ol players who are working hard
week after week," said Clnclnnat! Coach Sam Wyche.
The Jets led 9-0 in the first
quarter, scored touchdowns on
O'Brlen's 11-yard pass to AI Toon
and Roger Vlck's 1-yatd run. Pat
Leahy kicked a 30-yard field goal
and Marty Lyons tackled Esiason In the end zone for a safety.
"I'm so proud of this club after
coming back from some early
things that weren 't very pretty,';
Wyche said. "I'm tired, I'm
exhaustedandsoaretheplayers.
! left everything I had out there
on the field , just like our
players ."
,
Tne Phoenix Cardinals,
another surprise first-place
team, won their tourth straight
Sunday to stay atop the' NFC
East. Neil Ioomax threw three
. touchdown passes for a 31-14
victory pver the Pittsburgh Steelers, who have lost five straight.
The Cardinals, 4-2, enlered the
weekend lied with the New York
Giants for first. New York, 3-2,
plays at Philadelphia tonight.
"I'd rather be there than last,"
Cardinals Coach Gene Stallings
said of his team's first-place
standing. "But what's Important
is how we're doing a few weeksfrom now."
The Cardinals' victory was

. their second In three games In
their new home. The Steelers last
lost five straight In Chuck Noll's
first year as coach In 1969.
In other games Sunday, Washlngton blasted Dallas 35-17,
Houston nicked Kansas City 7-6,
Chicago clubbed Detroit 24 -7,
Buffalo slammed Indianapolis
· 34-23, the Los Angeles Rams
blanked Atlanta 33-0, Green Bay
stunned New England 45-3, Seat·
tie trimmed Cleveland 16-10,
Minnesota shaded Tampa Bay
, 14-13, Denver edged San Francisco 16-13 In overtime, - Miami
defeated Los Angeles Raiders
24-14, and New Orleans ripped
San Diego 23-17.

"

Seabawks 16, Browns 10
At Cleveland, Norm J_ohnson

kicked three field goals and Curt
Warner rushed !or96 yards a'nd a
touchdown to lift the Seahawks. '
The Browns lost their third :
quarterback to Injury this season
when Mike Pagel suffered a
~eparated right shoulder.
Oilers 7, Chiefs 6
At Houston. former strike• team q~arterback Brent Pease , ·
scored Houston 's touc~ownon a ·
4-yard run. Pease's s
lng run
came late In the third qu rter of a
game dominated by defense.

OLIVE TOWNSHIP
VOLUNTEER FIRE -DEPT.

WEE

··

October 9th thru l Sth

Would like to thank Commander Ed
Wigal, Quartermaster Tom Burroughs
and the VFW Post #3478-of
Coolville for their S300 donation.

-

(i.J

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Speciai)An amazing new weight loss pill called
"lilt-magnef' has recently been developed and perfected by tv.u prominelll
doctors at a v.urld famous hospital in
~.:"ngeles that n;portedly "guarantees you steady lilt loss and calorie
reduction by simpl).' taking their tested
and proven new pill.
The U.S. gow:nunent has justapp!ll\led the doctors claim~ for a hard-to-get
patent that confinns "there has never
been anything like their lit-bonding pill
process before." lt'isatollllly new major
scientific breakthrough and is revolutionizing the weight loss industry.

\bu Can "Eat NormaUy"

.

Best of all, "you can continue to
eat your fiM&gt;rite foods and )00 'don't
have to change your normal eating
habits. You can start losing lilt and
reduce calories from the very firs1 day,
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire without exercising",
Flushes Fal Oul of BOdy
The new pill is appropriately called
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks
into thousands of panicles, each acting
like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
trapping many times its size in undigested fat particles. Then, all the trapped
fat and calories are naturally "flushed"
right OUt Of your body becaUse they
cannot be abSOrbed.
\l.t' th '
da
· .nJ m 2
ys you should notice a
change inthecolorof\Kll•rstool,caused
by
fat
,-the
panicles bein~minated.
uAutonudlcally"
· Fal
A~
_..
ofthe
,.,;COrulng toone
inventors, Dr.
William Shell . heart specia.lisl and

associate professor of medicine. at
UCLA medical school, uthe new fatbonding proceSS is 8 .. lazy way" tO
1ose welg
' ht because I he PI'II s a1one
••aulomatically" reduce calories
' t 1ng
' d'
fa [ ' 100"'10 S8
eI'lffil08
JClar)'1 t. tIS

:k

a nd not a drug."
.
The fat-n1agnet pills 8re already
·
h

reports of tweight
loss from
sweepmg
e country
with formerly
glowing
overweigh! people in all walks of life
who are now slimmer. trimmer and

more attractive again.
Now Awllable to the Public

If you are trying to lose 20. SO. 100
pounds or more, you can order your
supply of these "no-risk" highly sue·
cessful fat-magnet pills directly from the
doctors' exclusive manufacturer only
(includes oplional calorie·reduction
plan tbr even better results). Send $20
tor a 90 pill supply ( +$3 handling), or
$35 ill'a 180pill supply ( +$3 handling),
10: Fat-Magnet, &lt;j(j(6 Wilshire Blvd ..
Dept. W705., Beverly Hills, CA 90211 .

(U~temtditiotull ~k fiUIIUII•
lte If 11111100'11. llllilfitd.) Visa,
MasterCard and Amertcan Express
OK. (Send card number, expire date,
and signature.) For fastest service for
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ext. ~704.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·-

Diet Pills Sweeping ILS.

u.s. Gov't. ~ Plfent
Claltn8 (01 New Diet Pill

Prep scores

Monday, October 10, 1988

WARNING

National Fire Protection
AaaoclaUon

FIRE KILLS!

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE
•
'.
MANY FINE BUSINESSES:·

FALL

Fruth Pharmacy

AND

•

WINTER
.
HOME
IMPROVEMENT
EDITION
.,

I

IN THE

Daily_Sentinel
October 17, 1988
RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE

NOW!

992-2.156
ASK FOR
BRIAN OR DA YE
'
'

AD DEADLINE .
OCTOBER 11 I . 198'8

.'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6491

Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co.
992-2136.
POMEROY, OHIO

985-3385
TUPPERS PLAIN$, OHIO

Gravely Tractor
Sales
and
Service
992-2975
. POMEROY, OHIO
Valley Lumber
&amp; Supply Company
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

' 992-6611

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy .

992-2955

POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

G&amp;J Auto Parts
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2139

Baum True Value
CHESTER, OHIO

985-3301

Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser Insurance

992-2342

.

POMEROY, OHIO

King Builders Supply Inc.
992-3748

P~

992-2D39

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

oh;,

992-6454

U

BANK=ONE
Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
/11\Ni&lt; I ! N/ 11 I Ul fl '

Sugar Run Flour Mills
992·2115

POMEROY, OHIO

Ewing Funeral Home
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2121

992-2196

MIDDLEPORT OHIO
I

-Middleport Trophies
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

949-2210
RACINE, OHIO

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992-3345 '

State Farm
Insurance
· MIKE SWIGER
992-6685

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-3662

Smi-th-Nelson Motors
. POMEROY, OHIO

992-2174

Ridenour Supply
985-3308

CHESTER. OHIO

Ridenour TV &amp;Appliance
985-3307

hu i 1-aa-t houst

-

SHOE PLACE

CHESTER, OHIO

•
992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home

992-5141

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6333
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Veterans Memorial
Hospital .

992-2104

Crow's Family
Steakhouse

National Bank

Brown &amp; Snouffer
Fire &amp; Safety .
992-7075

992·5432

( &gt;/Ill, Nlo ! QNF: PJIIII (II I I ll f. MtltU, I I AM

ACE- Hardware

Pat Hill Ford

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C ·Jewelers

,.~)

Pomeroy Flower

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

· Rick's Fire &amp; Safety
Equipment

992-5139

.

POMEROY, OHIO .

,

&gt;&lt;IF· M t9KM

'•

••

�.

'

'

T.he Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

-----;:.-------- -------

Monday, October 10, 1988
Page-6 .

Monday, October 10, 1988

•

•

Girl Scout · servtce
untt meets
.

'

,JOSHUA AND JACOR VENOY

Venoy twins birthday observed
.. - Joshua and Jacob Venoy ee l~·
brated their first bir thday re·
cenlly at the home' of their
grandparents, Rober t an,d Lo·
ratne V&lt;!noy, Pomeroy.
A Mickey and Minnie Mouise
theme was carried ou1 with
Barbara Arnold and Mis sy and
Sarah Lavender presenting
cakes to the twins.
At the celebration were. Tony
and Lisa Venoy, their pa rents,
the hosts, Elson and Sa ndra
Long, great,grandparents, My r·
tie Grover and Louise Gibbs,
Mark, Melinda and Br&lt;.&gt;Oke Vi'·
noy, Robyn Venoy, Rodney and
Pam Long. Donna Long and Bill

Leonard , Brandy Grover, Greg,
Li nda and LeDeana Grover,
Nellle and Karer. Grover. Genla.
Rachel and Cody Hysell, Marcia
and Brent Houdashelt, Brian,
Debbie and Nathan Dingey,
Steve, Brenda, Stephanie and
Brad Haggy, Bob and Alice
Russell, Carolyn and Crystal
Summerfield, Ronnie, Nancy
and Michael Russell.
Sending cards and gifts w~ re
Mr. ar.ct Mr s. Bob Ilendr!x. Rex
and Dwain. Mr. and Mrs. K. K.
Scltes, Mrs. Marguerite Boyce,
Butch Grover , Beverly Roush ,
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth Reynolds,
Keith, Kelly and Kendra.

Birthday noted by Stacy Black
·Stacy Marie Black, daughter of
Cheryl. S. and Danny Black,
celebrated her first birthday
with a party at the Portland
Park.
Games were played with prize&amp;
going to Jessica C9oper, Greg
Sel!er, Robert Sellers. Prizes
were also given to Tommy
Cooper and Aaron Sel!ers.
Attending the party wer,~: Bob,
Tris, Billie Jo Sellers, Clarinda
Theiss, David, Sharon and
Steven Smith. James, Ruth Ann,
Krts and Kasle Sel!ers, Carol
Lang, Rick and Coty Sel!ers,
Cl)eryl and Danny Black, Agnes
and Larry , Ann Sel!ers, an,1
Angie Richards.
Sending gifts were Ruth and .
STACY BLA(;K
Harold Sel!ers, Judy Sellers, Sue
and Freddy Engle, Cnar les,
Janie, Patty, Peggy, Tootsie, and Whi te.
Charlie Lawrence, Waiter and
Ca ke. ice cream: and koo!ald
Margaret, Kenny and Debhie we rE served.

Picnic held at Krodel Park
'Former employes of the A and
P Supermarket held a picnic
recently at Krodel Par k, Point
Pleasant.
Attending from Pomeroy were
Carl and Dorothy Hend r icks,
Marie Hauck, Dale and Jen)lie
Little, Louu!se Gilmore, Eva
Dessauer; from Middleport,
Dick and Ruby Vaughan. Fran·
ces Roush, Dayton McElroy;
!rom Langsville, Jack and Joyc e

Girl Scout leaders from Big
Bend East Service Unit proposed
changes In display rules.lor the
Meigs County Fair when they
nwt Thursday evening at the
Chester Fire Station. The meet·
lng was conducted by Shirley
Cogar, service unit director, with
troop leaders from Racine, Syra·
c use and Chester.
Among suggested changes in
!a ir mles was the addition of
another display category for the
fair only - The World of Girl
!lcoutlng- and the selection of a
grand and . reserve champion,
and an honorable mention. for
the best individual displays In the

Community~·calendar
Tt!ESDAY
CHESTER - Cbester Town·
ship Trustees wll! meet Tuesday,
7: 10 p.m., at the town hall.

....-People in'the net:Vs··- --.
By \\olLLIAM C. TRO'I'T

United Press International
DEBI BACK ON ICE: Now that th~ Surnrner .Qiympics al'e
over, one of the stars of the Winter Olympics ls back In the
spotlight. Deb! Thomas, !he bronze Uledal winner lJl th~ figure
skating competition , Is now with the Benson &amp; Hedges on Ice
show that performed In Phlladelph;a Saturday ·and also
Includes 1984 gold medalist Scott HamUton .
She skates on weekends and spemls therestof her time going
to Stanford, where she is taking a rugged 19-hour class load that
lnc)Jldes calculus, biology , organic chemistry and psychology .
"My plan Is to try not to get behind during the week so that I _
don't need to study so much on wPekends," she says. ''I'm really
enjoying it because I 've been away (from skating; while and I
want to take advantage of my enthusiasm. I'd like to do more
skating once I get E'verything organized. "
As if that's not enough, she also has a long-distance marriage
with Brlao Vanden Hogen, who Is finishing up his school work a r
the University of Colorado. Someday, she says, they'll open a
spor!s medicine clini~ .
TYSON WINS ROUND FOR MONEY : The latest In the Mike
Tyson-Robin Givens match is a fight over money . The New York
Dally News says Givens, who brought ira Marvin Mitchelson to
file for divorce Friday, tried to cash a $6.'i1,000check on Tyson's
account last week In California, where she· went to f!hn her
television show, "Head of the Class." ·
But Tyson, wi th the guidance of fight promoter Don King.
blocked the check and moved the fund s lD a new accou.nt to
which Givens does not have access.
STONE ROLLING ON NEW MOVIE: Ollve.r Slone starts
shooting another mQvle next week iu the Dallas-Fort Worth
area and he says the !ilm w!l! be a postscript to his
Oscar-winning !'Platoon." "Born Gn !he Fourth of July " w!l!
star Tom Cruise as Ron Kovic, who can.e fr om VIetnam a
paraplegic and became an anti-war activist. "I was kind of
given license after 'Platoon' to do a seque l." Stone said.

a

EASTERN - The Eastern
Band Boosters will met at
Eastern High Schoo! bank room,
at 7: 30p.m .. Tuesday .
-~-

REEDSVILLE
Orange
Township Trustees w!!l meet in
special session . T~esday, 7:30
p.m ., to discuss the dust control
levy and other .matters. The
meeting w!!l be held at the home
of Clerk Dorothy Calaway .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Commerce
meets Tuesday, noon, at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants' Association
wil! meet Tuesday. 8 a .m., at
Bank One.
RACINE - Regular meeting
of Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, wll!
be held Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Five
members will receive 50 year
plw;.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association wi!l
meet at 7: 30 Tuesday night at
Trinity Church.

Fische., birthday
Susie Fischer was honored
recently at her home in Racine
with a party in observ ance of her
9.'ld bi~thday.
She recleved many gifts from
her family and friends.
Cake and Ice cream were
served

Handley, Tim Peterson, and
Randy Johnson; from Gallipolis.
Raymond and Rosalie DeLille,
RogPr Edwards, Bobby Nibert
and Kary; from Leon, W. Va,. ,
B&lt;&gt;b and Eva Mae Rolilns; St .
Mary's W. Va .; Mildred Robin·
sen and Suzy; Pennsboro, Mar·
garet Rexroad , Mr. and Mrs.
.James Props and Adam; and
Point Pleasant, Jo Lou Sw!ft .

·dlflerent age levels of scouting.
SuggestP.d changes must be dis·
cussed with 'l'epresentat!ves
!rom Big Bend West Service Unit
before they can be presented to
the fail' board and Incorporated
into the rules for the 1989 fair,
It was reported that QSP
magazine sales must be turned ln.
to Black Diamond Girl Scout
Council by Nov. 21. Infonnat!on ·
which must be turned in to Cogar
by the..n~xt service unit meeting
Includes the number of subScriptions sold, total troop sales, total ·
number of girls who participated
In the sale and the top seller In the
troop.

to

famH.Y

members,

Mary, Blll and Mark Porter,
John and Shelagh Porter, Kara
King, Sam and Diana Carpenter,
Charisse and Craig Knight, Glo·
ria Michael, Roger Michael,
Brenda Hickel, Shelly and Tara
. Wolfe, Carol, Stacey and Mat·
thew Theiss, and Gary Michael.

HARfl,ISONVILLE ..,-The Har·
riosnvl!!e Senior Citizens Club
wll! stage a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a.m. to noon
Tuesday ~t the town hal! In
Harrlsonv!i!e. The club w!!l hold
a business meeting at 1 p.m.

If scouts wanHO participate .in
the annual contest to select a day .
camp patch for 1989, the'deadllne
for turning In patch ideas to
Council Is Dec. 15.
II was reported tliat Joyce
Sisson, Syracuse, will serve as
this year's cookie sa!e c hairman
tor the service unit.
II was also announced that the
Area III meeting for leaders will
be held Oct. 2~ in Sistersville,
W.Va., and .age level training
sessions for leaders will be held
this Thursday, 6 p.m., at Vete·
ran s Memoria! Hospital, with
Dee Lawence, Girl Scout field
·
director, Athens.
Cogar Issued a reminder that
troop leaders In the Southern and
Eastern School Districts, and
anyone who may be Interested in
working In scouting should calL
Cogar at 992·2668.
The next service unit meeting
will be held Nov. 3 at the
Syracuse United Methodist
Church.

Public Notice

NOTICE I&amp;

hereby

that in purtuence of· a Re~
.ulution of Village Coundl
of tho Ylllogo of Pomet'oy,
Ohio, puaed on the 11th

doy at July.1988, therowlt

be eubmitted to 1 vote of'the

people of oold Pomeroy Vil-

lage It a Gen•al Election to
bo hold In tho VHitgo of Pomeroy, Ohio, at the regular
plac81 of voting therein, on

Tueodoy, tho 8th doy of No-

DOMINO'S ' .
PIZZA
P-oy, OH.
WHI Mtin St.

DWYERS
FREE.
limitd D41i•ur

992-2124

"''..

DINNER FOR FOUR
URGE 18 ' 5-ITIII PIZZA

:- Wit~

Onio,. 8ftd 0'"" Pepl*t '

PLUS, 4 ·
POIIIUDI

sTOlE o•L' .

..

-

II • ·I. S..-IMt.
n •.a 111 "' s...

tiz Soltdrlnl&lt;•

11 MI-l ,.

SJGI[ GMLY

biNNER fOR TWO

Hlf[llft'

16

$9.99
. ..... --..n.11 W-l

643-Areb•aDiet
379-Walnut

DOOR SWAGS, GARLANDS, WREATHS
. PRICED
050 TO

$1

(

O.l

11 Mol Alii "~·Set.

'

I

992-Middleport

Pom•ov
986 - Ctl•ter
843 - Port~nd

247- Latart Falls
949- Racine
742- Ruti.OO

676- Pt. Pleaunt

458- Leon
576-Apple Gro~o~e
773- Mason
882 - New Haven
896- latart
937- Buffalo

867- CoolvHie

of levying a taK, in exceu of
the ten mill limitation, for
tho benefit of Pomeroy Village for the purpo.. of
providing and maintlining
fire app.ratu 1. appliances,
building~, or ti181 therefor.
or sourc• of water supply
end materials therefor, or
the
ntebUthment and
maintenance of lin• of fire
al•m telegraph, or the pay~
ment of permanent. parttime, or volunteer firemen or
fire fighting companies to

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

$2 5

Public Notice ·

$7.00
$10.00
116.00
1211.00

$6.00
18.00
113.00
$21 .00
161 .00

Real Estate General

which amounts to ten cents
(tO. 1 0) for each one hundred dollars of valuation, for
five (6) years.
,
Tha Palla for aai d Elaction
will be open at 6;30 o' clock
A.M. and rumain open Until

E.eo•
Main

1101 10, 17, 24. 31 , 4tc

Mason, WV

POMEROY - 3 bedroom
trailer ju st' out ot town'
Woodburner, I car garage,
equipped krtchen, A/ C,
fenced yard. Fruit trees.
MAKE OFFER. $15,000.00. ·
TUPERS PlAINS- Very neat
3 bedroom ranch wrth an at·
tached garage I acre levellot
FMHA approved. Call tor w
p~nlment. $39,000.00.

LC... ;;·:- ·"

32" or 36"

30" Dnll',str'· 265

$
White, Ful VIew .......... .. 9995

•all wood
·energy efflcflent
•certified for Federal
Energy Tax Credit
• Ready-to-install .
·Solid Brass mortice
lock Included

ROOFING
5

5.33

26" X 10'........................16.59

CASH&amp;CARRY
'

I.JWI!!;JJ.J

POMEROY. OH.
992-2269
MINERSVIlLE - Want a
home that offers a beautiful
view of the river, is energy
elf1cient, and newly redecorated? 3 bedrooms give
you comfort - front porch
w~h river view gives you en·
joyment. Call for appoint·
ment. $22,900.00.
•
JUST OFF OF SR 7 - 417
acres of vacant ground .
Elec. &amp;telephone available,
close to city water. All mi·
nerals. ONLY $7,500.00.

Board of Election• of
Meigs County. Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Dated September 1, 1988
Jane M. Frymyer, Director

36" Only Style 464
S8995
White cross Buck ........

The Atrium Door
Is actually a whole
system of Ideas
for enhancing the .
beauty of any ".
home. Come In
today - let us help 1
you choose the
Idea that's right
for your home.

t

" PRICE REDUCED - POMEROY - Beautiful view
ofthe Ohio River, this 2 story
home features 3 bedrooms,
full basement, large front
po,ch, I\\ baths, 'attic area.
MAKE OFFER $17,900.00.
RUTlAND-1 \\ storyhome
wrth 3 bedrooms. 2 car gar·
age, equipped kitchen. Can ·
buy home and lot for
$24,000.00 or buy home
and appro!. 17 acres for
$31,900.00. MAKE OffER.
POMEROY - FLATWOODS
RD. - 10.73 acres of va·
cant ground. Would make
nice home site. Call for more
information.·$211500.00.

90LB.

ROLLED
ROOFING
Blo o ~

• Brown • White
· Green &amp; White Mix

' $1~

lAND CONTRACT - Nice
house in Pomeroy. $1,000.00
. down. 12% interest, 12 year
term on
balance of
$15,500.00, $203.59/ mo. in·
eludes P&amp;l. CAll TODAY!
·
ROCK SPRINGS RD. - Ap.'
pm. 80 acres of vacant
ground. Appro!. 20 acres til·
lable. ' All minerals. water
and elec. available. Good
hunting land. $29,000.00.
RACINE - Nice l'n siory
home with wrap around
porch. 3·4 bedrooms, family
room. fireplace, part base. ment. Many unique features. ONlY $29,900.00.

. HENRY E. CLElAND

8 A.M. • J2 NOON

·t

NOTICE it hereby given
that in purauance of 1 Retolution of Board of Township Trusten of the Township of Rutland. Melg1

County, Ohio, pooood on tho
7th dey of July, 1988, thoro

7:30 o'clock P.M.
By Order of the ·

style 16t Mlli .Fintsh......s59 95
32" or 36"
Style 153 White Flntsh ..$79 95

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy in Exc•s of the Ten

992-6191
Jeon Truntll .... 949- 266e
Dottit Turner ... 992-5692
Tracy Riffle ...... 949-2107
Jo Hil ............... 915-4466
Offill _............. 992-22 59 .

'A Ji

will beeubmittedtoevoteof
the people of eaid Rutland
Townahip 'et 1 Generel Election to bo hold In the Town-

ship o' Rutland of Meigo

County, Ohio. et the reguler
piiCM of voting therein, on
TUMdoy, tho 8th doy of Novemb«, 1988. th• qUtltlon of
levying a tu. in excHsof the
ten mill limitation. for the
benefit of Rutland Township
for the purpo11: of providing
end maintaining flre eppara·
tus. 1ppliancea, bu Hding~, or
litet therefor, or saurcn of
water supply 1nd materlalt
therefor. or the Htablleh·
ment and maint.umce of
lines of fire alerm telegraph.
or the payment of permanent, pirt-tlme, or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting com~
pan I" to operata the ume,
Including the p11yment of the
fireman employer's contribution required under HC·

2-ln Mernorv
3- Annoucements
4- 0iverttNay
6- Heppy Ads
8- Lon and Found
.
7- Verd Sale (paid in ettwance)
8 - Public S1le Ill Auction
9-Wtnted to Buy

C!l

~

:z
-

f III[Jioyment
Serv1~~s
1 1- Help W.nted
12-Situation Wanted
1 3-lnsurence
14-Butin•• Training
15- Schooll &amp; Instruction
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Aeptlr
17- Miscelltneous
1 8 - Wented To Do

21 - Bu•in•• Opportunity
22- Mon.,. to loan
23- Prof•sional S•vices

Real Est ate
31 - Homea for Sale
32-· Mobile Homa for S.ale
33- Ferm• for Sale
34 ....... Busin•s Buildings
36- Lots &amp; Acreage
38- Reel Ettate Wanted

I;IQIIIII
41 - HouHs for Rent
42- Mobile Homa for Rent
43- Farms for Rent
44-Apertment for Rent
45- Furniahed Rooms
46- Space for Rent
47- Wented to Rent
48-Equipment for Ren1
49-For le•e

Farm SurJplles
&amp; L1vestnck

Doted Soptombor 1, 1988

Jane M. frymyer, Director

(10) 10, 17, 24. 31, 4te
Public Notice

Notice of Election on Tu
Levy in Exceu of tha Ten
Mill Limitation

NOTICE i&amp; hereby given

that in punuence of 1 Ae·
aolution of the Board of Education of the Eutern Local

School Olatrlct, Raodovlltt,
Ohio, po..ad on tho 27th

day of June. 1988, there will
be submitted to 1 vote of the
people of uid East•rn Local

School Olttrict ac a GEN·
ERAL ELECTION to bo hold

in the Eastern Local Oiatrtct
of Mol~ County, Ohio, ot
the reguler placet of voting
therein, on Tueeday, the
eighth day of November,

1988, tho question oiiiYY·
ing a tu, in 8li:C811 of the ten
mill limilation. for the ban•
fit of Ee1tern Local School
District for the purpote of
current eKpeniH. .

Soid tox being: on oddl·

tional t._ll: ol12.4 milia to run
for a continuing period of
time at 1 rate not ••cHdlng
12.4 mille for each one dol·
lar . of valuation, which
amount• to one dollar end
twenty-four centt for each
one , hundred dollar• of
Vlluetlon.
for continuing
period. of time.
"'

The Poll• far uld Election
wltl bo open tt 6:30 o'clock

A .M . and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.
By Order of the

Board of Election• of
Meigs County. Ohio

Evelyn Clerk. Chtirman
Doted July 6, 1981
Jane M. Frymy•. Director

110110. 17, 24, 31, 4tc

_:':.:.
,4
.:...·4:.:.
46
=-·3:.:.
&amp;7
:.::
2_ _ , ;

Complete hou.aho lds of furnl·

ture &amp; antiQIJ81. Al1o wood &amp;

NtASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756

ooal heaters. Swain's Furnh u 18
Avctlon, Third &amp; Ollv11,
614-448-3159 .

&amp;

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licei}Sed Shop

Employment
Services

Transport ali on
71 -·Au los for Sale
72 - Tnicks for Sale
73 ...... Vans &amp; 4 WD's
74 - Motmcycias
.
76- Boata &amp; Me:tors for Sale
76 ~ Auto Parts &amp; Aceeuorie&amp;
77- Auto Repair
78- Camping Equipmenl
79- Campen &amp; Motor HomM

JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FREE ESTIMATES-

for any of thestserwices &lt;all

614-742-2617

We can repair and re-.
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

Milt Umhetlon

NOTICE ie hereby given
that in pursuance of a Re·
toludon of the Board of
Townlhip Trusteaa of the

Tow.nahip of.Stllsbury,

Melg• County, Ohio, paasad
on \he 1 8l of day of Juty,
1988. there will be submit·
ted to a vote of the people of
nid Salitbury Township at a

GENERAL ELECTION to be
held in th11 Townahip of S.li,lbury of Meigs Coulity. ·

five (6) yean.
·
The Poll• for uid Election
will be open at 8:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.

By Order of the
Boerd of Election• of
Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman

Doted September 1, 1988

Jane M . Frymver. Director

110) 10, 17, 24, 31. 4tc

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSV!f,lf, OHIO
614-662-3821

SI NCE 1969

DUSH ST., SYUQISI

992-7611 or

WANTED

DEAD OR ALIVE

Mtlgo County, Ohio, ot the
regular

p~ace

of voting ther-

ein, on Tueaday, the 8thdoy
of November, 1988, tho
qt:eetion of leYylng a tu, in
excMs of the ten mill limita-

tion lor tho

benefit of

Orange Townehip for the
purpoaa of preventton, con·
trot. and abltement of air
pollution.
Said tax being: an addi·

We Service All Makes
1/ 22/ 88/ tln

J&amp;l
INSUlATION

Mastic &amp;Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates

Call 992-2772
8/ 11/tln

hundrod doll ora of voluotlon,
for flvo til
Tho Potla far ..td Election
witt be open at 6:30 o'clock

ve••·

A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.
By Order ofthe
Board of Election• of

Melgo County, Ohio
Evolyn Clerk. Cholrm•n
Dtlld Sopllmbor 1, 1888
Jene M. Frymyer, Director

110110, 17,

~4.

31. 4tc

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EUM HOME

Handicapped.

Good Rat81

T.L.C.
26 Yrs. Exp.

Basham Building

EVERY

992-11873
Joe or Pauley lawlond
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"lOW IIICOME HOME"

f.18-'88-tfn

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Gaup Shotguns

Only

Strictly Enforced

10·7-dn

-

Addons and remodeling
Rootin g and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing- And electrical
work

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALIS
4-16·86·«•

·I

Authoriud Se"i"
&amp; Parts

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

vALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio

992-661'1
l ·lO.:11 ""

7· 13.'88 1\n

+ 4 FlEE

•

: SUPEI' UIGE Dtli•S. :
: Pick or Eol tn Only :
~ =!~!~..·.P~P. .~~~.:
n2-2221 or 992-9922

't.

'P:

Sorry, no dlliwtry or other
coupons comlintd with ltit
off•.
916/A/1 .,.,

Middleport, Ohio 45760

N•w Homoo Built

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAU.S
l·ll·tln

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

No Hunting or Trespe .. tng of
any kind on Al'f'mond Smith
Farm.

4

Giveaway ·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Sui&gt;Piio~
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hera
IUSINEIS PHONE
16141 992-6550

Sm1ll wired haired Dachshund
female. 4 mo1 . old to g(tod
home. Call 614-448-7904.

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
VHI TAPE

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

or lOB'S E\EC1RONICS
446-7390

Loctted Htlfwoy

1112/'U -tft

between Rt. 7 It EfMhan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvi&lt;t Contw for Ryaa
Producto
Wt Honor MC/Disc/Viso .

CARPORT SALE
OCT. 10 &amp; 1l

. T
1

~

.

McCLURE ' S RES TAU RANT •
HIRING. Cooks and welt NUBs -~
n98dad. Rnumes being taken •
1:00-4:00 p.m. Tueedi!!VB and ··
Thursd-vs at 479Jacks0n Pike." ,..
Gallip!JIIs, white hou!e behin&lt;t, 1-,
McCiu.es f"BBtaurant.

·- ~

Resident manager couple, part- :'
time. For smell al)lrtment co.,... ~l .
pl~~t in Mltt'l•ta . No e~eplfience
required. Will train. Job duties
incfuda handling meintenaoce':'
renUiis, reports end rent collecliOnl. lovetv apartment, utlliti81 ·
and 111.-y. Sand l.rter or rt;t~me
of ex.,.,ience to Deity Sentinel ~
Bo~e 729R . Pom•oy, Ohio.
·,

RN'S &amp;. LPN'S -PH. full time &amp; •
pat time applications are being ,•
accepted for Pleasant VBII"f ·
Hospital Nursing c.,.·e Center.' '
Contact Personnel 304-675, .
4340. AAEOE.

- - - - - --

,

"

AVON all areas II Stllrlev Speers. ·,

304-875-14"9.

--------.
Major Publishing Co. needs 10
!.

people for beal eree. 1 5 to 20
hrs. per wee4c requ ired. Free
training. 304-675-5617 or 304882·2485.

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity
Urge O.ra9e Stle-Oct. 10th Be
11th, 8 AM-1 Fairfield Acre•.·
Centenary Rd. Dinet1e set, bar
ltools. Chlnon movie camera &amp;
protector. Bell &amp; Howell 11ide
prolector. karDHne hf!llt&amp;r, 2

lamps, baby Items, much more
misc.
Yerd Sale-microwave &amp; cart.
electric skillet tleeping bags,
clothes. medklmend lergetizes,
blankett, PiiiDWI·quMts. mise.
On Bul...nlle Rd.
R Treilw
Co..rt. Oc:tober 10, 11.S. 12th.

R.

FEDERAl: STATE AND CIVIl
SERVICE JOBS. Now Hiring.
Your Area. S13 , 6SO to
t69.480. lmmediMa Op ... inga.
Call 1-{316) 733-8012 Ext . F
2938-A.

12

'
'
'
:

••
•
•
•

~

~

I

Situations
Wanted

•

••

- - -- - - ·•
Have room in prillate home for :
sick elderly or hmcficep. Call ~
Mrs. Gwinn. B14-268-8509.
\

Will care for eldllf'ly man or ~
woman In our home. Call •
614-992-6515.
:

•

dairy l'lend seeking •
Can supply .efer· "

.......,o.merov........... I'~~~~~~M;;••;o•;•;•;••;·~;;\1 ''
13

&amp; Vicinity

- -- -- - - ..

lnsur111ce

'

Hou• hold ind misc. items,
women. glrla. mens clothes. One
mile from Lan.villa', 0 . CR 10
Dlx1er Rd. Oct. t0 -11th. 10-6.
614-742·2888.

8

•

Middleport

Call us for your mobil e home .,
insurance : Miller Insuran ce, ~
304-882-21 46. All o: auto,
home, tile. t,ealth.

15

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Schools
lnstru ction
RE-TRAIN NOWI

s crUTHEASTERN
Rick Pe••on Auctlo..._., licenll:d Ohio end Welt Virginia.
&amp;tate, entklue. f•m. liquid•

BUSINESS

COLLEGE. 529 J11ckson Pike.
Call446-4387. Reg. No. 88·1 1: "'
10558 .

lion ...... 304-nJ-5785.

PH. 949-2969
Dealer for

9t762

6 Lost and Found

I!SIDENCI PHONE
16141 992,7!.5~

phia. Suite 239-80. Onterio,

~Ill.

AVON· All ara11. can Marilyn -:
WetN~r 304-882-2645.

1 68 North SKond

ltf us convert thost oldMovtes
&amp; sn•s 'o nr lo ICilY VHS.
• Ull AMY CART lit

9· f.IJ.Ifl1

·11-88-tfn

CHEESE PIZZA
$6.50

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

992-'2 269

:

'HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp; HU TING

FIREWOOD

·BILL SLACK

:

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

8.7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Mall.es

PER lOAD
DEUVEREO

No huntin9 or trespassing on
John Proffitt f.,ms .

Ba('k To School Special

~· · ·;s·,: ·m~·£RoNI"t · •·;

MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUA·
RANTEEO, FREE DETAILS, .. ·
WRITE • SO, 1067 W. Phlledeh .

1·801&gt;887-8000 Ext. R· 9805 "

.......Gii mi)·ons···.. ·· ···
MON.-IUIS.-Wm.
IGood lhro•"" .5_.P.t..ber;

'

for current federal list .

9 -27·1 mo.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

AVON-Needs 6 ladiet to Sell
Avon. Call 814-448-3358.

Government Jobs t1 6. 040 • : '
t59,230 yr. Now hiring. Call .. .

3 Announcements

7

MAIN STIEET PIZZA

$2001 day taking phone ordan.
People cell you. Call 304-937·
2476. eiCI . L-466, Hours 9 -2. &amp;. :.

.

614-446· 2021 .

YOUNG'S

46692.

Part· time bellvsitt• In mv home
needed lor 2·3 months, for 3&amp; 8
ve• oldl. Cafl614-446-2042 .. .

l , OST ~ Miniature
gray
Schnaurer. Vidntty of Firs1 St.,
Pt. Pleasant . An1wers to
"Pumpkin" . Reward-$50. CIU

References

ADMINISTRATOR
' '
Small cheln !eeklng motivated ' •
' and dediCited licensed Nursing .,,
Home AdmlnlstratOf for Ita 150
bed nurting f.Oih:y in Southeast- ~.
Ohio. Good compenaation plu1
bonu1. healthendllfelnsu,..,ce, ~
ret irement and more. ·s.nd ,
r11ume to: Adminiltretor, 405 ...
North Ptrk Aw .• Wa+lston, Ohio

UP to t15HOUA PROCESSING ..

Qood I.IMd clothing for femlll•
with limited Incomes. Tuesdevs
only from 10 a.m. until noon.
PYe•byterlan Church clothes
clotllt. 8th &amp; Main Sts.

Room &amp; Board For
Senior CltiliRI and

Middleport, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

BISSELL
BUILDERS

$3 s

9/15/88/dn

992-6282

!FREE ESTIMATESj

for five (I) yearlata rat'e not
one dollar of velu1tion.
which· emount1 to fifteen
centa (•0.111 for each one

56 STATE ST.
GALUPOLIS, OH.
446-3487

319 So. 2nd Ave.

tlontl tix of 1.6 milt to run

oxcMdlng 1.6 milia lor uch

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

SERVICE
985-3561

REPAIR .

Reason•te Rates

I·J.'86-Ift

KEN'S APPLIANCE

SMALL ENGINE

Complete Drywall
' . Service
.
. FREE ESTIMATES

Perfs &amp; Serrlee

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairob~"

PH. 949·2801 .
or Res. 949-2860

8th doy of Augutt, I 988,

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

Part -tirila delivery men ·.
w/ knowhtdge of Athans, Jack- I'
son, Lawrence. Meigs &amp;: Gallia ·
Co. Call 814-446-4109.
..)

1&gt;8.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
.
.
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Far111 Equlp111eaf

Notlce.of Election on Ta•
Levy in Exceu of the Ten

there will be aubmitted to a
vote of the people of 1aid
Orange Town1hip at a G.e~
neral Election to be held in
the Townthip of Orange of

6-17-tfc

Authorized John
Deere. N8w Holland,
Bush HoQ Farm
Equipment Dealer

"At Reasonable Prins"

Mill Limitotlon

9-23-'88-1· mo.

Announcements

Public Notice

NOTICE i1 hereby given
that in pur~uance oi a Resolution of Board of Town~
ship Trusteet of tha TownshiP of Orange, Meigl
County. Ohio, pelted on the

992-6461

H3·tfc

Guns - Ammo - Slugs .... 22. Ammo .

Notice ot ElecUon on Tax
Levy in E;~~;ceu of the Ten

POMEROY I OHIO

Services

SER~ICE

Wendy'• now hiring. Apply in
persort Monday -Sunday beI'N8en 2-4. 390 Sllvtr Bridge .
Plaza. Gallipolis. Ohio. E.O.E... ~

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tran1mi~tion
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR

Fftrm hand neaded in e•ettang e
for rent end utilities. Ref•ences ,
reql!ired. Call 614-446-1062 ·
after 6 PM.
·~
Now accepting applications for
pe rt-time position at Network
Video, Spring Vallev Plaza .

DELIVERED TO

Pomero~hio

Rt. 124,

2-10-' BB· Ifn

Munloloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies

Public .Notice

Roger Hysell
Garage

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•WUi Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

MODERN GUN
· SUPPUES

124 East of Rutland

, MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

S14 PER TON

Between 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or lean Mtuaqe

81 -· Home·lmprovenients
82-Piumbin,Q&amp; Helling
83- EJI:CIIII'ating
'
84- Efectrical &amp; Refrlgeratton
86- Genlll'ai Hauling
86- Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholltery

11 Help Wanted

CHIPWOOD
POLES

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

&amp;Ill

Across Happy Hallow Rd.
Ph.

a

Television
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senric.
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

63- Livestock

64- Hey &amp; Grain
6 5- Seed &amp; Fertilizer

•

2282.

Oomustic Vehi cles
A / C Serv ice
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wanted to Buy

HILLSIDE MUIILE
LOADING

for tach one hun·
Tho Polio lor ..td Election 1•0.101
dred dollart of valuation, for
By Order of the
Board of Elections of
Meig1 County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman

_

8111 Oene Johnson

TOP CASH paid 1m '83 model·

SYRACUSE, OHIO

iE LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Suppli•
for Sale
67- Mulicallnauumenta
·68- Fruita &amp; Veo•eblea
69- For Stle or Trade

&lt;

Jim Mink Ch .., ..Oi do lne.

5· 25·tfn

Mercltantlls1:

1 - Card of Thtnkl

lance equipment, or to pro· voting therein, on Tuesday,
vide ambu'-nce or emer~ the 8th day of November,
gency medical services op- 1988, the question of levyerated by a fire department Ing a tax,Jn axcees of the ten
mill limitation, for the beneor fire fighting company.
Said tax being: e ren.,.,-el fit of Salisbury Township for
the purpoae of maintaining
of on exlttlng .3 mllllovy to and
oper1ting cemeterlea~
run for five (&amp;I yeartal a rate
Said
tax being: an addi·
not exceeding .3 miii.J for
each one dollar of valuation, tlonal tax of 1 .0 mill to run
which amounts to three for five· (6) year• .. at a rate
not excMcling 1. 0 mills for
eenta tl0.03) for tech one each
one dollar of valuation,
hundred dollar1 of valuation,
which
amount• to ten cents
for five (6) yean. ·

7:30 o'clock P.M.

u•dpay
cars.
We
cash for late moctel cl iNift •

con•cutNa runt. bt'oken updfVIWIII be ch•gld

tlon 742.34 of the riYi&amp;od Ohio, at the rlllJular plac11 of
code, or to purche~e ambu~

will be open at 8 :30 o'clo,c k
A.M . and remain open until

Wanted To Buy

---------·~

an d nBNer uaed c••· Smitt(.
Buidl-Pontiac, 1911 Easter~
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 81.,448-•.

Moit Foreign and

160.00

Business Services
Mill Umhotlon

Public Notice

operate the ume. ·including
the peyment of the firemen
employer's contribution required under NCtion?42.34
of the reviMd code. or to
purehue ambulance equip~
ment, or to provide 1m bu~
lance or emergency medical
servicea op11'8ted by a fire
department or fire fighting
company.
Sa'i d tex being: a renewal
of an exiating 1 .0 mill llvy to
run for five (6) years at a rate
not ••ceedlng 1.0 mill• for
e~~ch one dollar of valuation.

REPLACE YOUR
OLD SLIDING
DOOR
WITH THE
ATRIUM DOOR.

and Herdware

CHESTER , OHIO
•HOM!: BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
9B5-4141 )
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
10-4·1 mo.

By Students or Call 992·2710

3112 x 23 (135.12 sq. ft.) ....s16.22 roll
5 x 15 (48.96 sq. ft.) ......... .$11.51
6 x 23 (75.07 sq. ft.) .........117.65 roll

lnctudoo Screen

Mason Co ., WV
Area Code 304

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Cet Results Fast

KINDERGARTEN

Prices In Effect October 10"' thru 15"', 1988

6.0. 8'8"

2:00P.M. TUESDAY
2:00P.M. WEONESOA¥
2 :00P.M. THURSDAY
2:00P.M. FRIDAY

'

THE ATRIUM DOOR

26" X 12 1. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . ..... . •7.95
26" X 14'.;......................'9.25

-

following telephone exchanges ...

U6- Aio Grande
266- Guvan Dist.

2' X 2' .......... $26.95
3.' X 2t .......... $30.95
3' X 3t .......... $37.95

26" X 8' ..........................

- 11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY

Classified pages cover the

JOHNS MANVILLE
Ja\AFT FACED
3112 X 15 (88.12 sq. ft.) ......110.58 roll

SIZES
AVAILABLE

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

388 - VInton

'$ 4.99

h nJC;It Only-11 AM · 1 PM
fOII(ROi'
IIOUilo
y
1I • ·I • s.....n.,.,
110.

•A clauifi«&lt; adllartilement pl1ced in The Dtlly Sentinel I•·
cept - cl•sified dilplav. Bu1in•• Card and legal notice~)
Will al10 app"r in tha Pt. Ple. .nt Register artltttle Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. re8ching ~ver 18,000 hom•.

.. .
SaIe Pnee
. $379
3' X 5'. Underp1nn1ng.........

SLIDEWDIIII

t.ea discount tor ads peid in 1dv1nce.
•Free ada - Gtvaawtv and Found Mia und• 16 word• will be
run 3 d-v• .t no ch•ge.
•Price of ad for 111 capitlliiattars is double prlc:11 of ad cott.
•7 po.lnt line type onty used.
•Sentinel I• not r•ponslbla fur error• after fint d'f . IChedt
for errors tlrtt dll'f ad runs in paper) . Call before 2;00 p.m.
d~ tft• publication to make correction.
•Ads th .. mult b• P&lt;~ld lr'l 1dvence .,.
Card of Th.,U
Happy Ad1
· In Memoritm
Yard S.l•

448- Gallipolis
367- Ch•hira

wnch ltMciel
t2 ' t IT. . PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Soltdr!oks

AllY 12" 2 ITIII PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Solt&lt;lrinks

$6~17

Pep r-oN. 1•-oa. Mu• ..- . .

OUTSTANDING - Aaron
E . Pool, gran'dson of Mrs.
Marie Turner, Langsville, has
been selected as a new
member of the Outstanding
IUgh School Students olAmer·
ica because of his outstanding
merit and acccompllshmenl
as a high school studen·l.

-,

SV GALVANIZED
NOW OPEN IN

.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO., INC.

ALUMINUM

$4.00
85.00
$8.00
$13.00
133.00

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

MARCUM CONTRACTING

&lt;

1 DAY
3 DAYS
8 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

9

t;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;t;~;:::;;::;;;tr=:=~;;;~;;;;;=11
VAUGHN 'S

JMld.
•Aaalliva

-

(304) 773-5554

Business Services

0 -Hi VJORDS 16· 25 WOROS 25-315 WORDS

Maigt, Gallla or Maaon countiM must b1 pr•

Galli a County
Anu COile 614

vombor, 1988, tho qutotion

given

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY. 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

7 •

The Daily

••••PIIomlllier•olliyiiMiddleport, Ohio

• The Area',s Number· 1 "'arketplace

••

Natural Evergreen
CHRISTMAS WREATHS

Public Notice

Notice of Election on Tax
levy In EKCHI of the Ten
. Milllimitedon

',.•

From 'Minnesota

Past masters night
CHESTESR - Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will observe
the annual past masters' night
Thursday. There will be a soup
supper at 7 followed by the lodge
meeting at 8 p.m. All Master
Masons and especially past mas·
ters are invited. Past masters of
the Shade River Lodge who plan
to take part in the observance
should conta a t Rodney
Chevalier.

·-·-~

Classified

COPY DEADLINE -

DAR meeting
POMEROY - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at the home of Mrs.
Michael Elberfeld, Pomeroy
P ike. Frank Porter Ill will speak
on the AmeriCan Indian.

·----- --

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

18 Wanted to Do
9

Wanted To Buy

Want ta buy: Used furnfturB and
entlqUIIII. Will bur entire houae·
hold furnilhlng, Martin Wede-

4863.

Junk Clf'l With or wtthout
motors. Call Urrv Uvety-014-

Woutd like to do bebflitting in
rrrv home. Dey or night.
oo
per hour. Call614-388-8865.

m-. 614-246-5162.

Furntlure and appfltncet bv the
pleoa or Intire houethold. Fak'

Liro8

Yard c .. a. bruth cunin9- lighthauling. tometrettrimm•ngend
rem~l. Bill Sitek fJ14-992-'
2289evenings.

round bal• of

hey,

We buv Black Wllnuts. Fund
relaing opportunity . Geo~ge
lhl:tback 814-992-3191 . For
dlllvery ln•tructionscllll 1-800..

fi1DDlEPORT

ONLY

9-19·88 tin

Care for the elderly In thel"
home. Cell 614-446-2427.
~
Will do hou"ol.,lng. Gallipolis'
area. Call 614-441S-B483.
•

FACTORY CHOKE

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

'1 .

r,:;,bolngpoid. ~II 114-448-

RACINE
GUN CLUB

257 UNCOLN ST.

•

318-9303.

deUwred or pldced up. Call
et 4-245-1500, 8· 4.

RACINE, OHIO

Tree work wanted ; topping,
pruni ng. removals . bushes
trimmed. Free •timate. Call'
614· 446-8076 or 304-675·

Uaed Mobllt Home•.., Call 81•
448-0175.
'

999-0727.

.

&lt;

Baby sittar available, flexible
hourt, part: or tun thna. lenoed
verd, behind Ordnance School,

304-876-2784.

McDilliel Custom Buthering.
op51 8 diVt a week. call
304882-3224.

�'.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
I

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

18

LAFF-A-DAY

Do

Wanted to

• 44

Ower II Bukhoe Work-850

Antiques

Apartment
for Rent

Ex.-ilnoe operetor. Crem.., 1
Canot. Catt 814-2H-1718.

APARTMENTS. mobile hornet.
hou••· Pt. PleaenttndGallipo111. 61~448-8221 .
'

f lflJIICidi

Betc:h Strtet. Middleport, Ohio,
2bedroom furnished .,artment,
utllti• pel d. teferences. Phone
304-882·2556 .

54

Now,acceptlng appllc.tions for
2 bedroom apertmanh. fulfy
c•peted, appll.en~. water end
1r11h pldcup1 pr011lded 'Maintlnen Cit he living eloia to thopPJf'tg. b.,b •nd ~ehools . For
more lnformetion call 304-882·
3718. E.O.H.

Wheelad electric IICOOterl. Call
Rogers Mobllty collect, 1-814-

21

Business
. OppOrtunity

I NOTICE I
THE 0110 VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. NCDmmendl th• You

cto

bu•-

Apartment• for rent VVedge
Ap.-tnwnl Rtmtal. 304-6752072.

with pmple you

know, lnd NOT to .-d moMy
ttwough the rMH untl you hwe
""-tipled
offlring.

t._

Frick SMinlll-01 Detroit d l -

unit. Frick gMg edger.
trim 1M' • dril, blower. log
tumor. Cell 814-25S.SZU

"I won't have to throw any

mor:e tantrums; Mom. I put
9
_o_n_e_o_n_a_VI_._d_e-ro_c_as_s_e_tt_e_·_."----l :.';:;:"t!':.
ric g.-.ga2 fO:::~:..'f~.':
apt. 3 mil• from

~

32

Homes for Sale

31

Mobile Homes
for Sale

33

Fanns for Sale

1878.
milling your payments? Don't

45831.
Nice 2 rtarvhomewh:hg. .ge&amp;
ohop. *28.500. Cell 614387-0138.
4 Bfl .. full b•ement&amp; g.-ge.

.,ly

c11rpete~-

(lome

new) .

~IGIId to Hll. Call 114-44f.
0278 after I PM, weekends

envttme.

A110.. Golllpollo. lJvfn.
groom. hmityroom, 2 bedThird

roomL one •

hlllf bMhl. lg.
m.et perking.

ldtoh... Off
Clo•to.::hooft. church: Prlced
'" the 120's. C.ll 114-448-

1734.

3 bedroom hDu11. Urge b••
ment. alumh•um tiding, fulty
c•petld. in PomtrC!';'. Call814-

992-7887.

•I•

Store building for
or fltnt,
34A35. 2 b~ g.,ge 30x40.
hoilt. I room hoult, 2 baths. 1
acral•d. 304-871-11558.

Approx. 5 acrea tillable. Glllia
Co.-3 mll111 from VInton on
Jlck1on Co. Rd. ti.OOOnegotJ.
able. C1ll 114-491 -4325·
Columbus, efter 5 PM
weekd.,l .
Alhton, ,.,'" buHclng lbtt,
mobile homee permitted. public
water, elao rlvll' lolt. ctyde
Bowen. Jr. 304-571-2338.
Bea~dful ,.,_

kn• one acre plus.
pubUc water, Ctytte Bowen, Jr.
304-57S.233S.

2&amp; ao• Broad Run Road. Naw
Hwen. Owner fln.nolng evell•
bee. 304-882·3394.
loti, on• acr., IM. wooded.
city w.ter, Jericho Road, ownw
finandng, good tarmt. 304372·840&amp;"' 372.2575.

Hou• for ••• 2 llldroom ..
Corrw lot. 2351 Fourth St.
SV•au•. Ohio. 120.000. 81~
··2-1101.
Farm for ule,
•e.OOO.OO downaaaa.n..,.e BY.z
P• cent toan to ~lifted bJyer,
..-y IDwcloling coltl. 88 ecr•

a

Renl is

House •

41

Homes for Rent

wllh 1 year old c«&lt;ar co""'"'"

Nl c:ety fu rniahed 1m..l hou•.
Aduh only. Aol. '"'!Uirod. Nc

111.000.00. Phone 304-17&amp;59&amp;1 o.llipolis Ferrv. w .va.

-

paMry home. priced reduced to

In New Hwen. 3 br, 2 blllha,
large !Wing room. fireplace.

gerogo. 030,000. 304-273·
2471 .

· Cell 814-448-0338.

Hou• for .ent in Eurekl. t200
plus dep. &amp; rehrence. Hou••
INaileble •oon in Rodnev ViU-ae
II . Blaburn Reetty, 814-4410005.
.

2 bedroom houll. Extra lot. 3 BR . hou• for S1le or Rent.
• Ref. requ6rlld. e30o plus dep.
304-17'"4384.
Cell 614-44S.7106 or 44S.
1916.
3 bedroom hau• Jim Hill Rd.
Ch-'n Ink. yard, 12
old
c.llllfter I p.m. 304-17 5-2678. 3 BR .. AC. cwpat. poot, g•ege.
2 fireplac•. fence. Good loc•
tion. Cell A-1 Real Estate
3 bedroom home, 1 1h bMhl,
Bro .. •. 304-875-5104.
c•peted. cent,.! eir-heM. l.Gcaled in Pt.Pieaeent. 304-876Unfurnished houM. 2 BR .
2702 or 304-57S.2147.
Neighborhood Rd. $228. Referenc. 6 deposit *luired. Clll
44f.4418 •tter 7 PM .
32 . Mobile Homes
3 bedroom hou• Rul'-nd ~rea .
for Sale
1325 plu11 S200 Mtcurity includ• \tWter. g•bege, helll. Cell
....,d cont,.ct. l1rge t;ving room 814-387-7287.
w/expando room. 2 BR .7 3 BA, CA. unfurnilhed. Nice.
w / WIIII c•f*· 1lr condition.
124 Klneon . C.ll 814-448·
w / orwithouttumfture. Nat. gM 2158.
fllrr.ce on privete lot. Mer ..nt
lot. Clll IJ to 8 PM. 814-441J... 3 Br home, upper route 7 ne•
140~.
shopping center. f2R5 mo.
Serurity di!P.ottl: 1ft referencea.
1980 Beyvtew, 14x70. 7x21 Coli
814-44S.6189 or 614t~tpMdo. 3 BR .• 2 bathl. fire44S.6885.
pl.:&amp; 10 ecres. 19x20 2 c:•

ve••

l;'iX~ f25.000. C.II514-44S.

19 81!5 Concord mobile home.
12x55/ 2 Br., AC. awning. Coli
814-2415-1222.
1178 12d5mobilehome&amp; 1'h
of lend. t15,000 or bell
off•. EvergrHn. Call 614-4469123 Dl' 388-$192.

l«ft

REPOSSESSED 14a70'i. We

Nve'em. esoo down. •ke 0\lllt

loen . fi"H deflvttrv. MID OHIO
FINANCIAL SERVICE . Coli
Ohio Wilt• 800-826-0762. or
514-772-1220.
19611 Nilw Moon 12x50. 2 BR .
f2500. Coli 514-44S.0390.
191118 Fl"'wood. 1b.l54, bottle

v- h. . and hot w.ter. t3000.

Cell 514-843-5310 or 614143-5406 •nvtime. Atk for
Dlnny.

1-70. 1979 Govenor. 11 390
Ath St., Mldclepor1. on 50•1 1 2
ft. lol. 304-882-3254.
1974 Mobile home. 12a50. 2
bedroom. 1 owner. Very nica.
Coli 114-992·5277.
2 be•oom 1 21!150.
304-878-2722.

t190C..

" " Schutu 1••85. 2 bedrooms. 1'h b•hl. all el..:. new
AC unit. rongo mrioorotD&lt;.
wet« bed 1nd covered porch
Included. t12.600.00 Serlou1
304-175-3117
oft• 7,00 PM.

lnq... """'·

1884 Scan En•gy Hou•.
24.1dl0, 3 Mdrooms, 2 blll:hl.
cent• lir. King wood burMr,
new dnptl, front porch,
t17.1100.00. Konougo Mobile
Hom-. ~a.ge. Ohio. 114441-9882.
1183 Holly Pork. 1 4&lt;70. 3
be*ooma on on. eer• couhtry
lot. 2 mil• from town, 30.._
8715-7805.
1179 lly\11.- moble home.
14x70 with 7x21 apMdo.
phone 304-87S.I141.

1179 lloylno , ...so. lltldnt
••.100. 304-8715-1719.

..... W.t:•loo-2 Br. Clean.
t126 • mo. Ref. &amp; dep. Adu Ita.
Furnished. Call 11 .... 448- 77154
011' 8·~28-44 .

2 ttory ltlll.,... bflck houte.
Apprw..122yrt. old..t.BAt.-fuH .tO ecr•-12 mil• from town.
blllh updlrt. ptrtor· LA- DR· Vlctori., hou•. b•n· fond
kltchll'l· fun bath-lamdrydown- pool. Call 114-2158- 5&amp;8
stlk'l. 4 room MrWnt quartera avenJngt.
on b•dl af kitchen. 4 flr~IIC•·
NcetbaraomswithiiPPfOK.I.9
acne. lo~lld on At. 7-Eureka 34 · Business
behind Cl.,- El-.,. School. Call
Buildings
for •ppolntment. 814-21515-

be foclciMtd on! I would be
intllf'llttd tn buying vour home
for I f.W Grice. If ln•retted. ttnd
nM'Ie. phone no. • 1d.._ of
prOf*!Y to: lox Cf1 174.
c I aOelllpoOs Dilly T tlbune, 8 26
Third Aua., ~llpoHs, Ohio

Newt( deoomed. 2 BR ., tuttv
c•pettd. all utllltiea paid eccept
electric. Sec. dep. ,.quired. Ctll
114-•• B-8658.

3 bedroom hou• on Mulberry

Ave .. Pomeroy. e175. per
month pl1,1s depoalt. Call 614992-7450.
Attract:Mt one floor home on
Mulberry Aw ., Pom•ov. Two
bedroomt, IOtch1n with lttMI
1nd rt~frlaeretor, living room
eNning room. lovely aun porch:
Carpeted. draperi•. full b••
ment. central hNt, Wllher·dryer
hookup. Sorry, no pets or
.chillten. •226. plusdeposifend
utlllll•. Phone 814-992-5292
aft• &amp;:00.
In Pomeroy, 2 bedrooms. all
eppllwu:es, o•ege. Nice neighbor-hood. t250. per month.
814-992· 2162 dll'f• or 814742-2972 evening~ end w•ekendo

3 br hou• New Hnen. t275.
month plus depolit. 304.8752471 .

=---~~~----n
Two bedroom hou• in Palm
PINNnt. Verv cl..-e 11nd
No,... 30~67&amp;-1386 .

ni~ .

Three bedrOOm hou• •176.
month, wtthin Wilking dt.t.noe
to North Point grade end Hlgh
School. Inquire 1700 Jefferson
Ave. after 7 :00p.m.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Nice 3 BR trail« wllh ex~ndo,
Uvino room. III'DJo vtrd. See 11
314 Third St. ICeniUge. C.fl
814-4.8-7473.
3. be*oom mobHt home. ApprO&gt;&lt; . 5 mM• from POmeroy on d
Middleport. Call 514-~92 58118.
2 be*oom mobile home hlf
mh out J~riDho Road, •f.-.n·
cea ~Wquirad, cllll 1ft• 1 :00PM,
304-17S.I 082.
2 bedroom mobile home. qui«
neighborhood, phone 304-1751012.
1Wo 3 bedroom tntll•t. ell
.. tar/e. O.lllpoUt Ftrry, phone
304-57&amp;-4088.

14K70, 2 BR .. 2 batt.. city
wat.,, cable hookup. No pets.
Clo1t to town. C.ll 814-4468890.

Rent
2 BR . epts. 8 closets. kilcheneppl. f\lrni1hed. WMher-Drver
hook-up, ww c•PI't nfMify
painted. dedi. fromt17&amp;. Now
accepting HUD . Regency, tnc.
Apts. Call 304.176.5104 or
87S.5386 or 8715- nJ&amp;. '
New completely furnithed
apartment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adultt only, P•king. Call
614-44S.0338.

Stv~ge 20 ga. pump shotgUn. 2

County Appli•ce. Inc. Good
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT u~ttd f1Pplian081 .. d TV aets.
BUDGET PRICES AT .JACK- Op. . lAM to IPM. Mon thru
SON ESTATES. 635 Je'*:aon Sit. 814-448-1191. 627 3rd.
Pike from 8183 a mo. Walk to Ave. Galllpoll•. OH.
thop and movia. 814-4462588. E.O.H .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waatw1. drvetl. refrlg.-aton.
unfurnilhed apt. Car- ran •• · . Sk•aa• Appliencel,
peted. utilltiet paid No children. Upper Rtver Rd . betide Stone
No pOtt. Coli 814-448-1837.
Cre1t Motet 614-448-7398.

Up,.,,,

Furniahed- 3 · room• A bill h.
Cle... No pets. Aef. • deposit
required. Ut lilt lei fu rnlsh ed.
Adult• only. Call 614-4•61619.
LuJ~urious Tara Townhou"
aplll'tments. Elegant 2 ftoors, 2
BR .. full beth upetalrs. po-.Nder
room ' dOwflltelrs, CA. , dls hwathar, dl1poul. private entrance, private endo•d patio,
ool, playground. Utllltl., not
nclud~d. StMtlng 11 $299 per
mo. C.ll 814-387·7850.

r.

FurnitMd l!pt. Ntw" . N11rHMC.
1 BA . S276. Utllita paid Call
448-4418 efter.7 PM.
Apartment• and houses. Call
304-1!575-8104.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu and chairs priced from
t395 10 t995. Ttbl• t50 Md
up to *125. HidH·bedl t390
to $695. Recilnn $225 to
8~76 . Lampl 828 ~o 8125.
Dmtttel e109 and LIP to .8495.
Wood table w-8 chalr,e a286 to
8796. Desk •100 up to t375.
Hutch• t400 and 1 up. Bunk
bedl comphite w-mattret. .
t291Jtnd up toe396. Babvbedl
t 1 10. M1ttreae1 or box pings
full Of twin 888. flrrfl !1178. and
888. Queen lfttl 8260 1ft up,
!(lng 8350. 4 drew.r1c:hett $69.
Gun cabinets 6 f'un. Baby'
m.nret•• •35 &amp;: t45. Bed
tram• 820, *30 &amp;: King frame
850. Good sehJctlfln,of bedroom
auitea. m... i cabln111, head·
board• 830 and up to 885.

........ .

Furnlthld apertmentt·1 bedroom. 1240 &amp; up. Utllftiel paid. 90 Dan same •• CMh witl1
Call -446-4416 efter 7 PM.
· apprololld credit. 3 Miles out
Bulevi11e Rd . Open 9am to 5pm
Furnilt,ed efficierid•- $145 Ill Mon. thru Sel. Ph. 814-446.
up. Utlllti111 paid. Sh•e bath. 0322.
Call 448-4418 after 7 PM.
Vallev Fur~iture
Mod•n 1 Br. apt. Call 614-446- New and used furnhure and
0390.
applicances . Cail 614· 446·
7672. Hours9-6.
3 room furni•hed tpt. whh
tereened porch, totlll· elec.
J. 5 FURNITURE
Adultl onty. S200 e mo. Ref. &amp;
1416 Ea1tern Aw.
dep. 41tl'h Second Ava. Call 4 driM'er ch ••· 848. 5 drawer
814-441-22311 or 446-2681 .
chest. 854.95. 5 pc. wGOden
dln.nette lets. $199,96.
Modern. 1 8R.. downtown
compl~e khchen, elr,
PICKENS USED AJ RNITURE
Oeposrt. No pet1. Call 814-44&amp;- Complete hou18hold furnish 0139 evening~ after 5 PM.
ing~ . V:!
mile out Jerricho.
304-875-1460.
Effi~encv ept. Second Ave ..
Gelhpollt:. 2 rooms. private HI: h. For low price• on Quality Cerpet
all utilities paid t1!0 per mo. &amp; Furnhure come to Mollohan
Calll14-446-2390.
Furnlturti-Upper,River Rd. 81444&amp;-7444.
.
Brookllde Apa"menta located
oH Buleyllle Rd. · 1 Br. spacious Mowoing-Deak&amp; chair. queen oak
apt•. with modern kh:chen
complete bed, gold swiwoel
w.sher / dryer hook· up•. cebf et~ roc:kar, color portable ht l ltlnd
av .. able. Call 614-448-4808.
Ctll 814-448-4881 .
.
-~~

e.,.pet:

od•n 2 8R . apartment for rent.
Dep. &amp; Ref. required. Call
814-446-1079 .

Weletbed._ 8 drawer bate unit.
Bookctse headboard with mirror. Baffled mlltreu. E)Ccellent
condition. $250. · 814 ·9926082.

1 SR . efficiency, partially fur·
nl1hed 0.1 &amp; water provided.
Call 304-876.6911 or 814- lu~Caire eiiiiCtrlc 220V 82,000
245-5559. •
. BTU updraft furnaciJ. Ellllcellent
Y.! S.oortd.
A Nice
2'98~.ng order. 8125. 6·14-949821
2 8
u nfu r nit he d. Call 6 14-4 4 s :
2158.
Apartment for rent. 8226 •

month. Deposit: required. 6149&amp;2-6724. After &amp;pm or 9925119.
.
Greciou• living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartment • at Village
Menor and Riven Ide Apartmenta In Middleport. From
$182. Cell 814-992·7787.
EOH.
2 bedroom Apts.· for rent.
C.rpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
fac:lftU• evallllbla. Call a 14992-3711. EOH.

"'

Lllwnbov puth mower•. sl'nlll
John Deere riding 1-n mowor.
Cell81•44"2905
~
~
'

40
Relllatic
Baae Sta·
with po._,
mik•t12&amp;.
40
tlonc:hannel
chennel Car C8-t76. Coppertone
. ga• r~~np. :JO"-t180. C•ll
614-992·322&amp;.
·
Ruger, Redhtwk Revolver 44
~gnum, stalnleM -.... A•
m1ngton Magnum Wingmuter
1hotgun. 1·'Mtl 111. 1-Siug
BBI· both 3" . Call 11o\-4489159.
F~r

sale: Firewood, f38 l•rge
ckup to.d. Also truck ,.., ..
om 17 to 72 modelt. Call
814-44S.1437.

r.

For sale; Flrewooct. 136 large
pic:kuf) load. Al1o truck pert•
from 67 to 72 moclllt. Cell
814-44S.1437.
Glaa lub enclo•un~ wfth all
hardware lor •Ia Call 11~2561814.
Rsh• 100 'Mtt stereo. equatlur, CD pleyer. . e7oo. Call
614-2&amp;8-8626 after &amp;pm.
IBM PC Computer. 512K m•
mory. print•. color monitor.
taOO. Coli 514-25S.6825 oftOf
5pm.

r~~;;;;~;~;,:::::=r.;;:;::;:~~~§§~~
66

Building Supplies

Sullclng Motoriolo
Block. brl~
.-.. ..... pip•. win:.ws.,.:l~ll. etc. Cl-..de Win.J_
; , rende, 0. c.ll 1142
151 1
Con...,. blodoo- oil-· yOrd
ordelhlery. M•onssnd.Oell';t.
llo Block Co .. 12ML Plno
Gollloollo 011
·~
..
~. '
io. Cllll14-448278 '

56

.Peta·for

Sale

-b

Ort~gonwynd c.ttery Kltnnel.
CFA P~r~len end S.1m- kit·
te:n•· AKC Chow puppl• New
Himel..,.. •ft•7
- · ·PM.
. Cell
441-3844
• 814-

UKC, Aog-od TOIY Fox Terriero. COli 514-317· 7770.
AI\C . . . . ~und puiJIII•· 8
wko. old. Wo'""" ond rOIIdy 10
go. 0125. 814-892·2998.

AKC reg ..... ld buff cock~
lpMisl puppy. 20 wb. old. Ill
lhotl. 1121. Cell 1-281-1318
•tt• 8:30 p.m.

AKC raglswr.. PtJPP'• Min•
ture Schn....,., Cock• IP•
nlel1, Chow Chow. shotl,
wormed 1nd h..,.h .,...entte
304-17S.2113.
•

pu...

week• old.

lui bloodod. I

Worm~d.

304-157f.

Hardwood for •Ia $215 pidl-up.
614-742-31 12.

57

1988 Honda Four Trek 4a4. 310
•nglne, very good oondltkln.
$1800. Great for f•mlng or
hunting. 814-992-5893.
Ba..boer,d elec:. huteJI &amp; ther·
mostlltt. 304-875.2722.

350 C1se dozer 8 way blada.
very good shape. 80 -iill Ditch
W~ch. 304-273-31815.
Portable lighted tign t329.00.
Free delivery &amp; Lettert. 8 in
lmera (half price, $42.80 boll.
Offer exP'tll Oct. 1 z. wv
1-800.842-2434. Ohio 1-800.
5 33·34 53 •nvtime.
~

0 hp riding GfiiVety with 60

mch mower deck, t1.700.00.
Call aftiH 5:00 PM 304-875-

4435.

.:

•

t•.Ont.

w.,....,

"48-8077. Umhed

58,
&amp;

30~675·7771.

ReJIIteale couch, excellent condition . 304-875-1238.
Jenny lind bed, almolt naw.
Complete . e1oo. 304·875·
1349.

55

Building Supplies

WESTERN REO CEOAR
• Ch.,.nel Ru1tic:
and 84Neled Up Siding
• Decll Materilll
Guerantlled Ousilty
CETIDE. ~~~ls~~hens-814-

opening~ .

Fruit
Vegetables

Furnished, 1 bedroom apertmont. dopoolt '"'!ulrod. Nc peto
utlhl• polcl 514-992-2937. ·

76

M

Boats and

.

b•• trec:kerboat. 2 "
.,.., old. hkenew. Uled 4tlm•.
, 4ft.

llu~ .

304-882-3463.

1178 Mercury Zephyr ••tion
-on. 1980 Oklo 88. 4 dcor.
air, curill, tilt. AM-FM cMMtte.
814-912·8011 or 304-773-

S llllllill' :-.

/': lliJ I~' liii.K

61 Fann Equipment . .
1 0 70 Cese trlld M, Su par Sh .-p-

$59110. 5000 Fc•d dl•ol whh
bal•. raMie. moWI!fng m~chl.,.
• 3815. Owner wiU ftnence. C. II
614-28S.8522.
.
1258011ver 4W0 dlf181MIIIctDI"
w/plows, dl1c, cultlvetort
'49H. L.tamodal444trlterne:
tiona! dl...t •ctor. Pl. wlcM
front 3 pt. • *31911. Owner will
flnanc:e. Call 814-288-8122.
'surnewchain•wchlin.ndgel
old OM sJwpen.t FREE, ~ Oc­
t - only. Si- Equlp-t
Hlndaraon. 304-175-7421 . '

19• Oldo 18 A..,onc,. 2 door.
fi.OOO.bO. 114-448·
708 blltween 10:00.,d4:00.

hen!''"'·

'88 T-81rd, Turbo Coupe
13,000 mil•. black...,.,. uP:
tlon. 1!1)(1 warranty .
f14.IIOO.OO.fordolollocoll3046715-2818.

••k)r •

Interior. Nlee
brown
.. _ _ ... 01495. 304-5758718.
1881 Chevette, ,981 CltatkJn
Motor Home. 304.875-2711 . '
1110 Pondec Gnlnd Pr'-: auto
PI, pb, air, whhe •••riOt"... d
in11trlor. V-1, 84.000 miiH.
Good buy. $1895. 304-5758718.

1177 Oevy Ceprioa Cla ..ic.
M.tto.ps. pb, air, fit. c.. drtv.n
deify but need• soma work.
f7110. 304-57S.87!18.
18M Buick white 81Cterlor-black
Interior, auto, tmell V-8, pt.
lm•fm c11 ..... Relll good work
• • . f450 . 304-875-67&amp;8.
, 171 C.dRiac Eldorado, pet"fllct
ahepa. Sell riJMontble. 304U2-34&amp;3.
1977 Z28 Camero 350 anglne,
MIN tlrll. H11. n.w .paint.
- l i e blue. UOO. 30~97S.
2585.

72

Trucks for Sale

or U5 Hd1. Clll 11 .....44628115.

1988 M•rda 'B-2000ctb plus,
21.000 mu ... 15 •peed.
Uke- 011800. Coii614-44S.
7710.

rJI'..l7":;1ko110.old. t25.00ooctt.
64

Hay

l!a

Grain

•w•.

1884 C-30 Cllwy pickup lnock.
41.000 aet~l mil•. &amp;eel.
cand. Call 114-448-4083.
19\720.svv'/J ton truck. 8cyl.,
3 speed on column. Good
condition. eeoo. Cell 614-4462105.

L@!ge round bll• of h.,. *20
;~~· 814-446-1082 •ft...

Going back tocollega Mu•t•ll.
1918 Ch8!Y Cheyenn•. PA!st
h ... f10.900. Coli 814-9823884-

FDr Sale:tt.y, Atfetfa • 2.00bala

1984 Ch.. y S10 plck·up. 4
wtiHI drltA. Merion Eenerd.,,
Roclno. 514-949-2781.

a... • Loopo.tlu t1.110 bolo.
304-57S.202e. •
TfilllSiJilll dllllll

1187 badge Ram 150, 4x4
pldru_p. aJtomatlc owrdlrw
10,100 mil•. coli 304-87S:
5740 oftor s ,oo PM.
'77 Fcrd lruek.. V-8. goOd cond.
t8oo. 304-87s. 1121 .
.

N.,w one bedroom tplrtmenl In
Mlddltport. Furni1hed or unfurnished Cell 814·992-6304.

71 Auto'a For Sale

One bedroom apartment Jn
MiddltpOif, Tottl ..ectrie. Weter
includoct khchon lllmlohod. Coli
f14-982-3887 or 514-882·
11170 wenlngt.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcl• from 0100. Fo&lt;do. Mor·
- · earCllovyo. Surpluo.
Buy.,, Guido.
11
BOIS-817·11000 EXI. 8·10188.

SWEEPER •d aewlng machine
,..,,,pert., and tuppliet. Pick· '
up and deiMtry, Devil Vao.nm '
Cleaner, one half mile up ;
Goo- CNol&lt; Rd. Coli 814- •
448-0294.

Vans

., ..

I

I

restore repect to the
Presidency; Morley Safer
going aboa•d lhe U.S.
destroyer Maddox to find oul
what really happened In the
Gulf ol Tonkin; Lelia Khaled,
the first woman hijacker,
explaining herself to Harry
Reasoner; and reports on.
phony I.O.' s phony diplomas
and a phony cancer clinic. Q
ID 1111 MOVIE: Weird Science
' (PG13) (1:34)
I!)) P~meNawo

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
"DEAR

WINTHROP :

.A5

~ KNON, IM NOT MUCH

ON LETTER-WRITIN3 ...

'

ilJ MOVIE: ArMnlc end Old .

"AND YOU'RE PROEYIE!&gt;LY
'SL.JRPRISED TO GET THIS
LETTER Ff&lt;CWI ME ...

'BL.JT MY DAD HAD ANOTHER
Fl.;::jHT Will-I Tl-IE PHONE
COM~NY. "

RoUiry or cable tool drilling. ;
Mott'WIIIIIcompleledsemedey . ,
Pump • I • ., d service. 304- •
895-3802
'
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE. ,
hou• call 18rvicing GE. , Hoi ,
Point, wlllthers. dryers and
ltovet. 30+678-2398.
-;:Ak;:-,..--,-:T::-,-:,e-:T:-rl:-m..:mo-:·n:.:g:_:M:.::.,d-:S-t u_m_p ;
Removal. Free estimates. Call
304-8715-7121 .

L.oco (NRI (1 :58)
9 Murdor, She Wrote Q
11!1 Nuhvllle Now
8:05 (l) MOVIE: Tho War Wagon
INA) (1 :41)
8:30 Dl]l iiJl The Hogan Family
The twins compete agalnsl
David In a battle of practical
jokes. Q
·
Gl NFL Monday Nlgh1
Msgazlno
9:00 .I]) iiJl MOVIE: 'Winnie'
NIIC Monday Nlghl at tho

Mavi••C
(!) Clnalc SUmmer (R)
(l) DID Monday Night
Football
W Ill Campaign: The
Politico of Proaportty Look
at 'he difficult economic
choices the next President
will have to lace upon taking

TAKE TATER
OUT IN TH' YARD
AN' PLAY,

Plumbing
8t Heating

JUGHAIO

office, but are somewhat

avoided In 1ha campaign. Q
•1121 22nd Annual .
Country Mullc Aaooclation
Aw5rdo An all-star roster of
• country music stat's,
(ncluding Johnny Cash, John

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
,
Gallipolis, Ohio
•
Phone 814-448-3888 or 814448-4477
~

®l

~=.=;== ·
84

•c

Family Tlas, lea1uring
Interviews with lha cast and
crew of the show : Q
®J •1121 80 Mlnutlf 20th
Annlvoraary:-The Flrot10
Yoaro Highlights from
original broadcast reports
from 1968 lo 1978 include
Richard Nixon telling Mike
Wallace that he hopes to

EEK &amp; MEEK

Fetty Tree Trimming. · stlmp '
~mowl. Call304-875-1331 . :

82

9C-..nExprau
12!1 You ·con Be a Star
8:35 (l) Andy Grllfflh
7:00 !II Our HouH Choices
D '!II PM Msgazlne
. (!) SpotlaCanlar (L)
ID DID Curren! Affair
W Ill MacNeil/ Lehrer
Naw•Hour (1:00)
illl
iiJl Wheal o1
Fortune Q
1D 1111 Three'• Company
I!)) Monayllne
I!Jl Cho8rt
9 Miami Vlca D
12!1 Crook and Ch•••
7:05 (l) 9 1o 5
.7:30D!II Family Faud
(!) NFL Trlva •
ID EntertalnmenfTonlghl
D 00 USA Today
.
illl
iiJl Jeoperdyl Q
ID 1111 M'A'S•H
I!)) Crounre
I!Jl Night Court
12!1 VldeoCountry
7:35 &lt;11 Sanford and Son
8:00 !II MOVIE: Tho Lll1to
Shepherd of Kingdom Como
(NR) (1 :48) ·
D !II iiJl ALF A guardian
angel grants ALF' s wish for a
different life on earth. Q
(!) NFL Mondor Night ·
Ma1ch-Up New York Giant~
at Philadelphia Eagles
(l)
00 MacGyvor A toxic
wasle disposal company may
be poisoning lhe
environment. (R) Q
(Z) ll)lnoldo Family Tloo:
Behind the Sconao of a Hl1
Take a behind the scanas
look al lha popular ·

commercial television show

RON EVANS ENTeRPRISES - ;
Septic tank pumping- 190 per 1
1
load. Call 1-800-637-9528 .
'

Denver, Chaf'IIB Daniels,
Emmylou Harris, Loretta

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

Lynn. Reba McEntire, Anne
Murray and Randy Trav:s,
will join hosl Dolly Parton as

Rasidantlal or Commercial ~ir:
ing. New service or repairs.
Ucen!led electrician , Eelimate
free. RidenouJ Electrical 304675· 1788.
.

performers and presenters.

85

J &amp; J W~ter Service. Swimming
pool•. cisterns. well!. Ph. 614245·9285.
R. 1ft R Water Service. Po ols,
c111e'rns. wellt . Immed iate·
1, 000 or 2,000 gallons delivery
Call 304·675-8370.
·'
Water deiMtrv. 1000 gAllons.:·
Rem10nable prices. lmmedlete •
deiW.ry. Call 814-992·5275. '
Watterson ' s Water Hauling 1
ree•oneble r11e1. lmmedild~
2.000 gallon deltv.ry , cisterns .
pool•. well. etc. cell 304-67S: ,
2919.
'
Petrick's W81:er Heuling, 2,000 '
gal delivery. 304-57&amp;-2311 or
114-448-4088.
. '
Upholstery

&amp;4W.O.

Mowrey' I Upholstering .,ving '
1971 v.n equipped for flehing ~~ c:ountyarea 23.,..ars. The belt '
hul'lltn_11. c~mplng, New brlk•: m furnitunJ upholstering. Call
=lllllnt
Job. 318 mot«. heedert. 304 - 876 -4154 for f#ee
700. 614-992-8881.
.
' ••tlmatet.

.

.

e

'\bur

'Birthday

SAO InAAIUI (Nov. 2J.Oac. 21) Thla
Ia an axlramaly favorable period to begin naw proleCta or venturn, eapeclally
If 1hey are progr8SIIIve and uoe updated
prlnclpln.
CAPRICOIIN (DC. 22-Jan. 11)1n com·
IMhe year ahead you could experience petlllve lillllllona you should como out
grnlar tuccoos than uaual In projecta altead II you Clflllallza on opportunllln
you direct or originate. ll'o limo to ao- thai hove _ , overlooked by
aume the mantle o1 lledarohlp.
edveroerlea.
L1811A (tlapt. za.oot. 23) ll'almportant AQUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Peb. 11) You may
1o realize that the COUI'M you Ml for maot 110meono who will have an enor·
yourHif now will be the one you'll follow mouolnfluenca on your ou11ook end atlor tome time to come. Hlflplly, you're Illude. Your new undor51andlng5 will
on to a good 11art. Major changaoora mal&lt;a lhlnga . - In ~ol.
aheed lor Ubr5 In the coming year. PIICII (Fall. 20-llllrclllfl) Venturn
Send lor y&lt;&gt;Ur Allro-Graph predlc11ont whara you ahara equallnlarlll with olh·
1oday. Mall $1 to Al1ro-Graph. c/o thla .,. have ·marwtoua chii!CII lor auc- - · P . O . Box 81428. CIIMIIand, ceoe at1hlatlme. Tha u~ta Indicate
OH 44101·3&lt;128 . Be aura to 11a1e your you may becOme Involved In 1WO
Zodiac sign .
•
lfmullanfiO'IIiy.
8COIIPIO ( O c t . - · 22) You're In I T Mill (Marolt 21•Aprll 1t) Thora are
unique cycle, whare you thOUid be able llrong lndlcatlona lha1 you will form an
to gain the upper hll!d through circum-! Important new alienee althl5 lima. The
lloncea you do not directly control. Ro- ~bllftleaiO&lt; achieving mutual grallftlax and havelahh In dntlny.
calion are ex1romely promlolng .

.

'

••

''

TAUIIUI (Apr112D-IIIIJ 211) TOday you
ohould begin to -IInce algnlttc.nl
Improvement• In conditione where your
wort&lt; or career are concerned. New,
ambitious
obleCIIcan
be
ntabllllhed .
OIMINI (Mar 21-.1- 211) Don'1 detpllr II your IOCial Mit hun'l _ , up 10
por letlly. You . . entering a cycle
where t~ ahould be a noticeable up1um In your popularity.
CANCIII 1"- 11..1ufJ 22) Due 10 an
unexpected polltlve lhlfl In critical In·
fluencn, Y"'!.!!.'IY ,., .... your poal1lon
on epmethlng you - e adam111t about
prevloully

LIO I.IUir 21-A... 211 Don't loOk yourMil Into any l d - or plana IIIII tte you

.~ too lor In • - · Fllxlblllly wiN
enhanCe your .,_tbllftlae lor aucc ou.

I.HYa -lor NVII!ona.

VJIIQO (A... II llpl. 221 Continue 10
devote rour 11t..,tlon to lltuatlone 1111t
can 11rengthln your ftnenclal polltlon.
Thll Ia the lt88 whirl you are llklly to
be the i11011for1Unlll•

.

.

•

_

.

chu~kle

·

.the
QlJOied
1n the m1ssing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

by l1i1Jng

PRINT NUMBERED
I
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
"What should I get your husband for his birthday?" asked

my mom. "I can't tell you, he's sitting right here." 1answered.
"That's okay," she winked, ")usl SPELL IT."

Butterfingers
to the rescue
.

WEST
+P43
.Q10852

EAST
+AKQJ87
•Ks
•82

· •a

Jameo Jacoby

By

+KB

••1.713

You won't find a lesson in any textbook on how to bid the South hand. Obviously South hoped North would hold
a little strength In the red suits . If
North bad values in· the black suits and
West bad some tricks in diamonds,
South's bold five-diamond bid might
be doubled and aet an uncomfortable
number of tricks. But bands with 8-H
dlstrlbutloo defy scientific analysis, so
1-coacur with the bid of World Grandmuter Betty Kennedy, who held the
South cards in a Women' s Pairs event
at a reponal tournament last June.
Fortunately for Betty, the defenden were 110mewhat mesmerized they fumbled the defenae, dropping
the baU not once but twice. East won
the jack of spades and continued the
suit. Declarer ruffed and played a low
beart. West ducked, and East won the
klDI and tried another spade. Declarer
wu now able to ruff again, play ace
and ruff a beart, ruff a club and rulf
her lait burt. That was II tricks and

the contract.

SoUTH
+&amp;

....

•uu

.AQ1097H3

Vuloerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Weol

Nord

Pus

Pm

Eul
1+

Pus

Opening lead: • 3

Correct defense sets the contract
two tricks. East sbould realile that the
lead of the spade three is from a threecard boldlag. (South would hardly
jump to five diamonds with three little
spades.) So at trick two a trump return
should be automatic. Upon pinlnl the
lead with the king of hearts, Eut leads
another trump and declarer"s goose Is
well cooked•

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Hamlet's
I Abject
"mWly
5 Slide by
woes"
9 Arabian
4 Purpose
seaport
5 Robin ·
10 Deliver
Williams
a speech
role
12 South
6 Irish
African
islands
assembly
7 Remo,
13 Canal
Italy
· country
8 Agitated
15 - trip
condition
16 Pea or
11 Appear
Guinea
14 Wrath
17 KO count 16 Moss
18 Bear the
or
expense
Lorenz
20 Ice mass 19 TV's old
21 Sundered
" - 66"
22 Theater
20 Sheep
box
sound
. 23 Swagger
21i Allude
26 Binge
27 Actor
Penn
28 Libertine
29 Roberta
or Jean
32 Poorest
neece
33 Israeli
airport
34 Sandpiper
35 Paleness
37 Athirst
38 Dispensed,
as cards
39Nota401nnuence
41 Big Powj!r
(abbr.)

Yesterday's Answer
31 PaSsover
feast
33 "Whatever ·
- Wants"

23 Watch
part
24 What
a shame!
211 Oliver
or Donna
27 Flashy
30 Bridle

36 TV's
"L.A.-"
37 Part' of
Moslem
names

parts

DOWN
1 Uncovered
2 Maxim

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

10110

AXYDLBAKXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letlers
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali

a

hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

UHO
M·

ID ® Odll Coupta

•c

......

.JI
.KJ
4QJW882

James Jacoby

8:30 12!1 New Counlry
10:00 !II 700 Club
(!) Water Siding International
Tour from Shreveport, LA (R)
W I!Jl New•
Ill Statewide
• • 11111111mey Miller
I!)) Ev1111lng Newo
Crook and ChaM
10:05 (l) MOVIE: The Hollllghtero
(Gi (2:01)
10:30 W EaatEndoro A continuing
chronicle of the IIvas of
residents In London's East
End. (0:30)
1111 VldaoCounlly
11 :00 !II Remlnglon Illite Sleele
Searching, Part 1
illl
IIJJNawa
Gl World- lmmortala
(R)
W (J) 811 Moy. .' World of
ldeu Moyers talks with a
wide varl81y of paopla about
America's choices. (NRI
ID 1111 Love Connection

.- ·

NOTml
+1062

(I :46)

•w

.toholdup ----."

Limpid - Quell - Truly - Queasy :... SPELL. IT

Lllny King Llvol
9 MOVIE: Threah!lld (PGI

Bernice Bede Osol

1

AI D0 RT

1--T,,i-_
-=r,..::.,,:::.....:;l"'a~T,--l o"Complete

I!))

.

Exercise coach: " Why are you do-

lng leg exercises when you hawoe
~u.ch a Spare tire?" Overweight man:
·~~-;--;--;:--::-::-:::--, 1 m slrengthening my legs in order

ILl Q

General Haulin~

D!liard W&amp;ter Service : Pools,
Crsterns, Wells. Delivery Anytime. Call 814-448-74'04-No
Sunday c&amp;ll1.

87
73

_... .
----·

SrurF rHe WAY ,,. rs.

Concrete Septic Tankt - 1000
g .. ,. 1600gel. •ndJet Aeration
syttllm. Factory trained rep•ir
thop. RON EVANS ENTER· ;
PRISES , Jecklon, Ohio. 1-800. ,
637-9628.
J

; '12 Arebird Pontl•c; MJIO.
crui11, new tlret. eM . c:ond.
• 3.500. 304-57s.2749.

1118 Cutlas CMter . .tlonwa -

NOVEMBER

Home
Improvements

RON'S T•iewolalon Service .'
Hou• clllls on RCA. Ouemr. ,
G E. Speci.ing in Zenhh. Cell ,
30~67S.2398 or 814·445 ..
2454.
.

A6i'i3ti1J'i:·y:':(JS::
.::;t::
0-ck-;:----

4 Ho111111in Hal,_ o.tve1 4-&amp;

B1

Painting: Interior &amp; EJCterk)r. ,
Free ..tlmate1. Call 614-446- 1
8344.
•

.

'\/OTf-- I GEi
8LAMeP FoR ENOI..Ic:iH

·I:

'811

e

1879 Fot'd Jltnto, liJOod Cord.
teoo. or beet off•. :J04-17S..

22411.

AL.LOWel&gt; 'f't)

Services

n•

••end.

A~ENir

27 fl. Sunstream Motor Home.
2870 mile~ . AC, generetor, f'Oiid
... dy. C.ll514-992·7329.
'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
..
. I.Mconcltlonel llfMime guar.,. '
tet. locel ref•encet furnl1hed. '"
Free Ntlm..... Call collect '
1979 Chrvtl« LeBaron Town 1-114-237-0488, dllf' or night . ..
•net Country SUtlon Wegon. R o g e r • B a • e men t '"
uoo. Cell 304-882·2182.
Waterproofing.

Compl• raee c•. late mod..
dirt. Atum. body, p..tonMnce
body. 484 C.l . engtn., tlum.
h ..... webw n~dl.tar. Trill•
tHt with wlnc:h end ...... ani
rile*. Extn part1. Ouk:k chenge
,_float.Many extra
part,. JlmW•t114-8e..,.484.

::t'M f$ LAl&gt; jc;l P.$

· ·\ VOJf'

,.'

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

1983 Pontile Fh'.ttlrd. T-Topt.
tlntl, bWI'tllry, mufft•.
. f4000.114-742-2878.

Extrl Sharp. 1978 Chevy
pickup, 88.000 ect..-1 miles.
auto. t2&amp;00. Call 114-3877111.

moa. old. Coli 514-448..053.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

9-.

gen. V-7 anonmlc. ps, pb, eir,

Fdlln

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

l

H Uj (
Sl i
• . . .
· £

•c

otors for Sale

Bomber bolt cla•ictrailer 35 hp · ;
Mercury . Like new. 304-875- I
5284.
*

1914 Dodge 1100. f&lt;llly lcodod.
21.100 mlla 88 8nglne end
trana. t27BO. oao. 0.11 814.
992·1718 anytime.

End of . . .on Nl&amp; Hanging
belkets. hou• p4ants, b•k•a.
f2.. f3 .. t4. Lorge Flgo. AuTrMI, Phlloden«on, Schefftn
et low prle~~ . Must mall:eroomln
Gretnhou• for niiW · stock.
Pllntl f.ISO lnd up. Sue's
G,..,hou •. County Ro8d :10
Rlclne, Ohio 814-1$2115. '

N.wty redecorated epert:mantt

.w1Habla Utllltl• Plld. *226.
pw month, depo1h .equlred. Call
614-992·&amp;724 oftor 6'00 or
992·5119.

llue19U Camara, 310nftrou•
12 botl ,.. end Cell 304-882:
2185.
1980 Chwy lmpolo. t1500.
Coll814-912·3822.

' 78 Pontiac Catalina. n~mgood.
uoo. 304-575-3455.

rL,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j,. ____:_.:_.:____J ---------Vourv Peaoodtl, •ea a ooullle
SNAFU® 'by Bruce Be1ttie

1979 Buldt EIIICII,., eir, ful
Nm good. f1200. Cell
11o\-268-8121•ftltt' 15-pm.

pcnwr,

Beant for sale. 88.00 bulhel.
Pick own. c. W. Proffitt F•m.
nMI to Herrle OrHntuu...
Pbrt1and. 814-143-&amp;112.
.

896-3883.

Firewood. t10. pickup IOIId.

Musical
l.netruments

lntiYiduel guitar
beglnntrl, 11riou1 guttarlm:. 8ruJ.
c.-ell Music. 114-4CI-0887,
Jeff
lnstrur:tor. 114-

Good uted 17 c:u . fl . frott fr•
Kelvlnator ref. t160. or belt
offer. Sean Kenmore •ewing
ceblnet In cabinet. 830. 304Large sim Flaxtteel radlnar.
broYm, good cond. t100. 30-a,:.
675·5324.

19811 Chevy. Covoll ... 4 d•..
llllto. • air. 29.000 mila.
f3800. Coli 114-379-2725.

';;::::~~:;::::::::;::==
4-

U1..t tn~nsmluiont . Each lntor- '
nelly r.apactad. 30dtrttH'*'Bn·:
••· Cafl 61~4.6-.-0968. A• ,
building ewliablt.· Call tod.,l '

recognized ate • effectM bV
U.S. a...., of "-'MY ~dJ.
cine agMst hook. round, 6
.. peworms In dogs • CMsl
BIDWELL CASH FEED J 0
NORTH PRODUCE.
' ' .

992·6409.

Wanted, Girl Sc:out unHormt.
Brownie and junior &amp;evet Call
114-992-215$, Ilk for Naney.
or 614-94g.209311fter &amp;.

PS. PB. AC
- ~moro.
.
AM-FM l'tlfeo-CUt. t3986.
11.,Dodgt~tonlr..ck. 41pd.,
one ownlf', 81,000 mlle1,
*1995. Cell 114-288-1122.

I!)) !nolde Polltict

815230SuJ~.4wheeler.quad .

good cond. For lnfor. Call
814-o&amp;48-9312 or 441-9387.
9
1 818uldt$1ry...... o&amp;dr .. lcyl.,
AC. PS, cruM, cloth .....
Oood cond. Ao4oc.... 039110.
Coli 814-992-32211.

PIMunt V.tlll¥' Hotphlll II curren!fv accepting epplcetlon1 for
fultlrne end part ti"'-A N'a. Clll
304-175-4340 for mo,. lnfor·
moil on. ""'' EOE. ·
German short haired pointM bird
dog, $100. 30 ....1715-21159.

large b•htub. like new l)ink

ru!'lner. 81 , 095 . 304-875·
215!9.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICOE:

21811.

Smell upright gea furnace. 81._:

18 WKAP In Clncinna1i

I:

yl

~~

II

ID DID ABC Nawo Q
W Body Elec:lric

19851 TRX 125 ' 4·whtoiM . .
304-176-2559.
;

1173Daltun8WI10forpsrh.
Oood engine • •to. trant. &amp;
other porto. t200. C.ll 114387·7248.

l rs,.T IT

If,andStarShot
Ron Shea•er ·
Bub Taylo• (R)

.....,-=-::-------~ ·

1985 TRX 126. 4-wheelor . .'
f795. 304-6715-2569.
·

I TONBAY

6:00 !II Bil111nze: The Loti
Epllodlf Maestro Hess • ·
D !II (l) Ill 00 ®J IIIIIJ
«3) New•
(!) SportoLook
(Z) Colorooundo
Ill Dr. Who Terror of the
Aulons, Part4
• 1111 Happy Dayo
I!)) ShowBiz Today
I!Jl Facta of Ufa
9 FatAibart
Fondling&lt;&gt;
8:05 (l) L.ovoma and Shirley
6:30 D !II 1!11 NBC Nlghlly Nawo

f450.00
. Phone 304· 175-,
1980CRT250.wrtrygoodcond.:
18~

1185PiymouiiiRoliontLE 4d•.,
4 .,YI.. outo .. AM·FM-C.... AC.
cru'-. 1ft. Clll 114-245-6040.

11~

•

Ill Nlghlly Bualnoao Report
®J 1111121 CBS Nowo
ID 1111 WKRP In Cincinnati

76

a . . ouad oM and hickory h.-d-

Wheet ho,... riding mo'tMH'. 14
hp. 614-992-3015.

71 Auto's For Sale

10

a

-:-:
1988 Hon• 4 tisiJI 280 R. Two:•.,1
Mtsdr•. toamnayeJitrettolltt. ·
Relldv 10 race. 304-882·2895. ~;

1988 Otds. Cellls. PS. PB, tilt.
cru•. air, •unroof, AM-FM.
•t.OOO. Cell 81~448-4393.
18811 a.w. Celobrlty. V&lt;r(

Collie

wood . S36. big truck load. Cell
814-742·2645.

Motorcycles
__:_

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
.Grooming . All brHde.-.. AII
sty.... terns Pet Food Deller.
Julio
I'll. 114-441-0231.

MIJied Mrd Wood llabl. $12 per
bundle. Containing IPprow:. 1V..
1on. Ohio Pallet Co .. Pomeroy
Otlio. 614-992-6481 .
'

OUHJF A HOSE ..

----::-::-------·'

a ..stone.
ump •rnoo...l,
1hrubs,
Tree ,oil,
top
fireoNood-dump
load f110. Heap Vouc:h.., eccepted. Call 814-44&amp;-9848.

46 Space for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., GaUipoill.
1
NE~- 8 pc. wood group- t399.
liv•ngroom suitn· $199-t699
Bunk bedl with bedding- S249:
Full eize mattren a foundalion
11ertlng- $99. Recllnert
1tarting- 899.
~
'
USED· Beds, dreSIMI, b1droom
•ultn. Dnkt, wringer washer, a
cof'l'll)lete line of ulfld furniture.
NEW- W"tern boots· S35.
Wortcboott $18 • up. (Steel •
loft lot}. Calli 614-448-3159.

74

I HATE DRINK1t46

______ ..

19Ji Suz- ....i GS5&amp;0E. 7"00 '
"l
1
mil•. new""'clu1Ch c:eble. Hood
batt~ry
&amp;
tlre1.
f5&amp;0.
Call" ,
304-175-,.33.

64.. u•d houiO wlndoWII· 7·
28" wldo. 2 ...II. lo plctu,.
wtndow. See after 3:15PM et
109 Klneon Or.

Household Goods

PEANU'FS

1987 Nl~ten Sentre, AC, SR,
PS. PB. Elector.
llereo, organ
24.000
mi.
YM11he
Model
E·3. Cell304-675-1471

Call 614-26&amp;-9301
FirMood
for .... .'35
, elo•d.

MON., OCT.
EVENING

Excel. cond., custom running ,
boardt. lollded. Cell 814-448· •
8778.

___

Rooms for 111nt-weK or monttt.
Starting «t t120 • mo. Oellia
Hoto1·814-4411-9580.

51

•

=~=---=---=--'
1987 Ford ArrOWitlr XLT Van.• :

1911 TT 800 YM'Iehe r:lrt bike.
~od oond. t400. Almond SUnray sto..,.-oven on top &amp; bottom,
f250. Call 614-25S.1224.

R e 'fr lg eretor-frost-free·
leemak•. OlnetteHt. COmpl•
bed. large oak d•k. Dryer.
Uving room couch. Cell 8 1 4448-3224.
-·

Merchandise

W.O.

1979 ChfNy Wv whh flt.gla•• •
topper&amp;. bed liner. Call 814- 1
218-8278 oft or 4 PM.
·

&amp;70.1881 .

Furnllhed roorn-919 Second
Ave.. Gallipolis. 8135 • mo.
UtiUti• pild. Single male. Sh•t
batf¥ Cal1446-4416eftar 7 PM.

2 BR. Mq bile Home for rent at '
Evergreen. No Sunclav Calls
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Pfe•e. 814-379·2878.
Rou• 33. No.rth of Pomero~.
Rental ·trailere. Call 814-992Furnilhed or untlrnlthed. 2
BR1, cable evllilllble. weter a. 7479.
HWIIge paid. Folter'a Mobile
Spactoua mobile home loti for
Home Park. Cell 814--446rent. Femity Prido Mobile Home
1802.
P•k. Gallipolis Ferry, W. Ve.
2 ,aR .. fully fu mil heel new
30 4-8753073.
I
C:lf'pet, AC. All udlti• paid
tltCIPt elec. end g•. C.bl• two For ntnt: butine~s building natt
IM/IIIeble. Owner PIYI W8ter, to otd Meriena Plant. lnqurt
MWige&amp; treth ph:*up. Securtty 1700 JtHerton Ave. efter 7:00
depoe,lt .,d ref_ Four·tllnlhl of p.m.
mMe from citr limitt. Call
81 4'44S. 7793.

&amp;4

'-""eelchlir•-new or u•d 3

Furnished Rooms

45

Vans

1988 Chwy . Altro Conyer•ion ,
V.nbyLuxuryRide. hce/.conl:t . ,
can 814-2.a&amp;-9585.
-~

Misc. MerChandise

Sea'S Uve Stvler 2000 Multioxcorite gym-like now. uo.
Coleman electric fumece wh:h
thennod.l!lt
&amp; bto~.Wr,4 t50.
61~25S.5218aftor
PM. C•ll

town. 304-S:76-3000.

1970 Wlnct.or. 12x81!1i with
10x12 lldd ' on, woodburrw.
w11t..nd ..,.,, etrcond. mutt
be moved. 304-895-3802.

LoM your )ob1 Hwlng problema

Furnllhed 3 room apt. uplltllin.
prshr lingle working lldutl.
I 200. month plut electric. A•f·
erence &amp; deposit. No Pet•.
304-578-2661 .

73

TWo 19.0. 1 4 inch Mad.-n
Aleunder dolll with original
clothes. On. a1940 l•ge colonial
doll hou•· 814-9:92-5427.

Pol"'in9 • •ooflng • c•-t'Y
work bV 1he hour or job. C.ll
814-37!1-24 18.

Wrlpt

Buv or Sell. Rlver!ne AntiqUIIS,
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
Houn: M.T.W 10a.m. to lp.m.,
Sundav 1 to 6p.m. 1514-992·
2528 . .

Complecelv furnished. 3 room•
and bath, prfvete entrance, firtt
floor. No pets. Call 814-94g.
22p3..

c... ctoz.. Re•ONbl• ,.t ...

KIT 'N' CARL\'LEII) by IMr)'

Television
Viewing

1988

October

Ohio

'fJ MEHI

H F

y c

PTFTLVHYE
M

A Y HE A

T E T S N

M

Y J T L

y c

.M A H E M V H Y E

FQPPTE
Q F '

MEP

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VKT

y Q L

HS

D Y J T T

PEOPLE . WHO MAKE

1111 M-Jinl

.

Sorry, Wrong NUI!lber
9 Miami VIce D

.MUSIC TOGETHER CANNOT llE ENEMIES, AS LEAST
WHILE TilE MUSIC LASTS.- PAUL HINDEMITH

tm T - fnlm tile lllllk•

Yeaterday'a

Cryptoquote:

�\

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 10, 1988"

.

'

-Local news briefs---. Parts of ~ nation has rain, ,cooler weather i
EMS has 10 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Se~vlces reports 10 calls
. over the weekend; lour Saturday and six Sunday.
Saturday at 8:40a.m., Middleport to South Fourth Ave. for
Mayme Manning to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at
3:41p.m., Racine to Sharon Hollow Road for Elsie Roberts to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:14 p.m. to Star Hall
Road for Harley Nutt to Veterans 'Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 10:12 p.m. io a natural gas leak on Maple St.
Sunday at 1:40 a.m. to Five Points for PanrPierce to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 11:33 a.m. transported Marie Roy to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 12:26 p.m. to North
second Ave. for Tiffany Qualls who .was treated but not
transported; Pomeroy at 3:04 p.m. to West Main St. for Cathy
Willis who was treated but not transporte&lt;); Syracuse at 5:03
p.m. to Bald Knob Road for Lester Richards to Holzer Medical
,. ·center; Pomeroy at 7:11 p.m . to Village Green Apts. for Dale
Call to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

Portland woman hurt in wreck
A Portland woman was injured in a two-car acCident
Saturday at 3:20p.m. In Lebanon Township on T.R. 134, about a
mile and a half north of s.Jt1124, according to the Gallla·Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol:
Elsie L. Roberts, 23, was taken by ambulance to Veterans
Memorial Hospital , where she was treated and released.
Darryl 0. Danner, 43, of Racine. was, traveling north In his
1985 Ford Escort EXP when ltoberts, driving a 1983 Plymouth
Colt, tried to turn left from a private drive and had a head·on
colUslon with Danner's car.
Roberts was cited for failure to yield.

~

Man charged with sexual battery

By United Press International
Thunderstorms rumbled over
• the Gulf Coast today and gusty
winds swept Utah, while Los
Angeles residents faced cooler
temperatures after a day of
record-setting autumn heat that ·
sent thousands to the beaches.
Early morning thunderstorms
dumped nearly an Inch of rain on
La!ayelte, La. , where heavy
rainfall accompanied by marblesize nail and winds gusting to 40 .
mph struck near the city on
Sunday night, lhe National
Weather service reported.
Further west, Houston recorded more than an tncho!eariy
morning rain, and, late Sunday,
Arizona and New Mexico were
hit with thunderstorms.
Strong winds swept the Wa·
satch region of northern Utah,
prompting the weather service to
Issue high wind warnings
through tHe morning hours. Fore·
-caster Hugh Crowther predicted
gusts could reach 60 mph: Late
Sunday, gusts as high as 51 mph
were reported at Centreville.
Clouds shrouded the northern
Atlantic Coast early today. releasing showers over Pennsylva·
nta and New York state. The

Overbrook...

A former Rio Grande College student was arrested Friday
and arraigned Monday on a sexual battery charge.
Richard Link, 20, was arrested Friday evening on a third
degree felony charge In conneCtion with an alleged sexual
assault.
Link was arraigned Monday morning In the GaJUpolis
Municipal Court. Judge ~oseph Cain sel a preliminary hearing
tor Oct.-13. Link's bond was set at $25,000.
The Wi'rranl was executed by the Rio Grande Pollee
Department, Rio Grande College security and the Gailla
Counly Sheriff's Department.

remainder of the nation awoke to
c]ear skies and dry" weather. '
Northern New England and
upstate New York were the cool
spots In the nation early today
with temperatures In the upper
20s and 30s.
In Los Angeles, the mercury
registered 74 degrees at 1 a.m.
and was expected to rise at least
into the low 90s by afternoon.
On Sunday , hot, dry . winds
helped push afternoon temperatures to 102 degrees, setting a
record lor the downtown area
and sending hundreds of thou·
sands of people to the oeach fo r
relief, weather officials said.
The previous record high
temperature for Oct. 9 was 98
degrees, set in 1976.

Page 4

.

Vol.39, No.109
Copyrighted 1988

,South Central Ohio
Tonight : Mostly cloudy and
windy, with a chance of showers.
Lows will be between 40 and 45.
Northwest winds 15 to 25 mph .
Chance.of rain Is 50 perecent. .
Tuesday: Variable cloudiness

"LEAIN TO DANCE!"

JAMBOREE ENTERTAINERS ~ The Third
Annual Coal Miner's Jamboree is scheduled for 7
p.m. onOct. U atMelpHighSchool. Entertainers
Include popular local artists, like the Hart
Brothers - pictured here ~ wbo will provide a

New Ballroom Classu
October - All Men Freel ·
TUESDAY-7:00 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant Youth C111ter
THURSDAY-7:00 p.m.
Middleport A1111rica n Legion

---CLOGGING CLASSES

·

MONDAY 5:00 p.m. CHILDREN

Looking for something to do on
Sweetest Day? "Take your swee·
lie to the Third Annual Coal
Miners' Jamboree," says David
P . Baker, chairman for this
year's Coal Miners' Christmas
Planning Committee of Sou-·
theastern Ohio.
The committee has acquired
the · talents of a number of
popular loc;il performers who
will fill the Meigs High School
Gymnasium with a mix of
bluegrass, country .and gospel
music beginning at 7 p.m. on
Saturday.
The miners are representa:
tlves from Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs Division, lo- ·
cated In Meigs and Vinton
counties, Baker says. The committee was responsible for the
collection of nearly $15,000 the
past tw6 years, the bulk of which

Pt. Ploa..,t1outh C•t•

THURSDAY, 6:00 p.m. ADULTS

Middleport Am•ican Logion
Information or Ennollmont CaH:
G•ald Fr•man
614-367-0662
lab Gilmore
614·992-6121
1.., laird
304-675-3306
Millki Casto
304-675-3111
FUN! EASY! GREAT EXERCISE!
MEET NEW PEOPLE!

KentuckyFried Chicken.
,.

.

CINCINNATI (UP I) ~What's
"By contrast. during periods
the J:dggest problem facing _the
when the U.S. faces a serious
nexl president of the United
foreign threat' or severe eco·
nomic difficulties, voters focus
Stales? Ohioans consider the No.
1 problem to be drug abuse,
on those issues to the exclusion of
according to a new poll.
others," said Tuchfarber.
Bolh George Bush and Michael
The Ohio Poll, conducled by
the University of Cincinnati's . Dukakls have been campaigning
Ins.tltule for Policy Research,
heavily on the drug abuse
problem.
·
recently asked 600 reglsterd Ohio
voters to name "the mostlmj)Or·
"It's no surprise that It ranks
so high (In the poll)," said
tant problem ·facing tbe United
States that the'presldent elected . Dukakis campaign adviser Paul
in November shOuld try to
Bograd. "Drugs are a household

Lottery numbers

jackpot to be
$6 million

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

bplr• 10130111

I
I
I

2 PC. DINNER
ONLY

--1
I
I
I

ONLY

$2.49

I
I
I
I
I

, .JJUI- -- 12 PC.
Y MEAL

$10.99

12 Piec11 of Chick10,
larp Mashed PotoiDIS,
Lar• Grcny, larg~
lolt: ~law, 4 Hot
liHUits.
bflins 10/10111

2 pious of Chickon, Small
Moshod htatDIS w /Gmy,
Small Colo Slaw, '
I lulllrmilk tioaoH
bplt• 10/30/11

CALL (614) 992·2104
(304) 675-1244
•

228 WEST MAIN

concern.

Leading the list of answers was
drug abuse., which was menU·
oned by 13.7 pe~cent of those
polled.
second was unemployment
(13.4 percent), followed by homelessness (11.1 percent), the fed_era! budget deficit (9.6 percent)
and the lrade deficit (8 percent).
Poll director AI Tuchfarber
said the diversity of Issues
reflects a country at peace with a
strong economy.

"It's very much a family
concern, a concern of day lo day
life that permeates every instltu·
tlon of people's lives, In school
and in the workplace."
Said Bush's Ohio campaign
executive director Jim Nathanson, "The public makes a much
broader connection between
drugs and problems with crime
and victims' rights, a whole
phalanx of lssuues the vice
president has been """"kln'l

Eastern Board releases
information on tax levy
The Eastern Local School
District Board of Education has
Issued a question and answer
type information packet to pres·
en I the need !or a "yes" vole on a
12.4 mill continuing tax levy to be
voted upon In thedlstrictonNov.
'

Following is a part of the
information provided by the
lioard:
' Question: Why do we need the
levy?
Answer :
1. To fund .!! projected deficit of
approximately _$38,000 lor the
1988-89 school-year.
2. To allow the board lo:
reinstitute junior and senior high
athletics and extra-curricular
actlvllies (this year they've been
funded by private donatiOns on a
one-time only basis); to pur·
chase badly needed replacement
school buses; p_u rchase libra-r y

CROW'S FAMILY
RESTAURANT
.
.

solve.''

8.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARINO AIDS"

was used to provide special gifts
at Chrlstmastlme to needy
children.
The annual donation Is focused
on a large portion of southeastern
Ohio. The charities Involved are
the Gallla County Children's
Home and the Children's services of Wellston, Vinton, Jackson,
Gallla,. · Meigs and Athens
counties.
The jamboree will consist of
the following artists: the Pecos
Canyon Band, Larry Lightner,
The River Junction Bluegrass
Band, Randy Callahan, Rachael
Pridemore, Danny Brooks, Ivan
Potter, the Hart Brothers,
George Thacker, Kathy Grimm
and the Midnight Cloggers.
"We're happy to announce that
this year's emcee IS Skip Logan
of radio station WATH in
Athens," B~ker says. As last

year-, there will be quilts on sale
for $15 ~ proceeds from which
will go to the children' s services,
he adds.
Ticket prices for the jamboree
are: $5 for adults and $2 lor
students · while children age six
and under are free. Tickets are
on sale now at Southern Ohio
Coal's division office and the
Meigs No. 1, Meigs No. 2 and
Raccoon No. 3 mines. They also
will be available at the door.
This year's jamboree wUI be
precel'!ded by a buffet·style
dinner provided by the Meigs
County Future Farmers of Amer·
lea's Woodcookers In the school
cafeteria starting at 5 p.m. The
prices lor dinrll!r are: $6 for
adults and $3 for children under
13. A donation from these proceeds also will be made to the
committee.

Drugs biggest problem facing next
president a~cording to Ohio Poll

Stocks

$5.99

mix of bluegrau, country and gospel music as
well ao clogging. Proceeds from the event will be
donatedtotheGalllaCountyChDdren'sHomeand
the Children's Services of Wellston, Vinton,
Jackson, Gallla, Meigs and Atheu counties.

·
y
Saturda
Set
Third anitual jamboree

CotneHotnelO

Hospital news

1 Section. 10 Pogea

26 Cent.a

A Multimedia Inc . New .paper

Village .will continue
separate talks with
Columbia for rates

.·- ~-

and windy, with highs between 50 '
and 55. Chance of rain Is 20·
percent.
'
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of showers In ex·•
treme northeastern areas Wed· '
riesday, otherwise fair statewide'

\

Announcements

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 11 ,' 1988

•

Four teen...

Area death S

Tonight, mostly clear. Low
in mid '30s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy, highs near 50.

•

•
------Weather--. ---...;

"There are so many people
universities. She also serves on
who
have contributed their time
the joint committee on Agency
and.
effort
to the completion of the
Rule Review and · the joint
nursing
home.
Pu.bllc officials
committee on Mental Health and
will
be
speaking
at
tlle dedication
Is a member of the National
concerning
aspects
of the cooper·
Conference of State Leglsla·
ative
commitment
to the health
tures ' Task Force on Education.
care
needs
of
our
beloved
.elderly
She serves on
several
admlnlstrtallve boards of organi- citizens."
The Rev. Don Meadows and the
zations and in Southeastern Ohio.
Rev.
Sonny Zuniga, respectively,
Thursday's dedication service,
Continued from page I
lo be held outdoors at the new sill present the Invocation and
facility. 333 Page St., Middleport. bendiction. There will be tours of
son, 31, Stow, killed ina one-truck . we.~ther permitting, Is scheduled the new center and a social hour
County.
Heath: Lorrie L. Laymon, 27, accident on the Ohio Turnpike In
from 3 to 6 p.m. with the Meigs win be held.
Buckeye Lake, killed In a one·car Cuyahoga County.
Meigs County's newest health
High School Band under the
Mt. Gilead: Jo Dee Farmer, 29,
acciden t on Ohio 13 in Licking
direction of Toney Dinguass to be care-rehabilitation center, Over·
Marengo, killed when lhe car she on hand .to present musical brook featur!'s the most modern
County.
Wapakoneta: Christopher J . was driving was struck by
facilities and furnishings and has
selections.
Anderson, 23, Celina, killed ln a another vehicle on Morrow
Dr. Harold Brown, Pomeroy, been designed for exceptional
two· truck accident on U.S. 33 in County road;
sponsor of the new 100 bed patlentcomfortandcare. ThelOO
Brecksville: Frances Laub·
Augiaize County.
facility which will employ some bed facility consists · or four
Cincinnati: Louanna A . ach, 60, Syracuse, N.Y., killed in
90 lull-time and part-time people, private rooms. 12 deluxe semi·
Schneider, 41, Cincinnati, pedes- . a two-car crash In Brecksville.
wUI cut the ribbon to officially private rooms and 36 semiBrook Park: Nathan L. Tweed open the new center. The man- private rooms In Its 36,500 square
trian, killed ina hit-skip accident
II, 20, Brook Park, killed when
on a Hamilton .County road .
agement team will be Introduced feet of space. The facUlty,
Cleveland:
h A. Hoskin· car struck a retal ning wall along
by Ray Brown, Columbus attor- according to presenl plans, will
a city street.
ney, who has played "an aclive also be open for community
role in" the development of the • ,.natrs.
Middleport facUlty and Mark
Murphey, administrator. will
Cemetery. Friends may call at ' present the ~oats of the center.
Opal BatT
the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
Thursday s dedication of the
lo 9 on Monday. .
new n.urslng home wlll be at:
Rev . Amos Tillis will officiate
tended by state and local governal services for Opal Barr, 73, of
ment officials· as well as comPage St., Middleport, who died Aria Oldaker
munity leaders.
Saturday at Veterans Memorial · Aria E. Oldaker, 64, Letart, died
Dr. Brown, D.D.S., !adlilty
Hospital. Services will be held Sunday, Oct. 9, 1988, in the sponsor, states:
12:30 p.m . Tuesday at Ewing University Presbyterian Hospital,
Funeral Home. Burial will be at Pittsburgh, Pa.
Arrangements are under the
Chester Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home this direction of the Foglesong Funeral Mlslonary service
Home.
·
evening from 7 to 9 p.m.
A missionary service with Lee
and Sharon Rickenbach, of Gua·
temala, wlll be held Wednesday,
Mayme Manning
7:30 p.m. , at the Harrlsonvllie
Holiness Chapel. Paster David
Mayme Powell Manning, 77, of Dally stock prices
Ferrell invites the public.
Route 124, Syracuse, died Sunday (As of 10:30 a.m.)
at Veterans Memorial Hospital Bryce and Mark Smith
Plan Fesllval
Th2 third annual Harvest Fesafter a' sudden iilness.
of Blunt,
Ellis
&amp;
Loewl
.
llval , sponsored by the Enter·
A homemaker, she was born
prise, Rock Springs and Flat·
Jan. 29, 1911 In Racine, a Am Electric Power ...... ... .... 27\11
wood Churches, wlll be held
daughter of Lewis and Ida AT&amp;T ........................ .. ........ 27
Sunday evening at the grange
Pondorf! Johnson. She was a Ashland Oil·.. .. .... .... .. ........... 34
member of the Pentecostal As· Bob Evans ............. : ....... ..... l6 Y,
hall on the Rock Springs Fair·
sembiy Church, Racine, and the Charming Shoppes .............. 14 Ill grounds. Potluck wlli begin at 6,
followed by special music at 7.
Meigs County Senior Citizens.
Clly Holding Co ......... .. ....... . 34
Survivors include a son and Federal Mogul. ................... 49';7 Everyone welcome.
daughter-in-law, Jerry and Ma· Goodyear T &amp;R .................. .54% PTO to meet
Syracuse PTO will meet Tues·
rilyn Powell•. Racine; two grand· Heck's ..................... .. .......... %
d·ay, 7:30 p.m., at the grade
daughters, Mrs . Austln (Donna Key Centurion .......... .. . :....... 17
Rae) Wolle and Mrs. Roger Lands' End ... ....................... 30
school. The Ways and Means
(Jane Ann) Hiil, both of Racine;
Limited Inc ........... .......... .. .23% Committee will meet at 6:·30 p.m.
four great grandchildren; a Multimedia Inc ................... 73'h Tuesday.
Pressure clinic
brother·in-taw, OmerDalley, Ra· Rax Restaurants ................ .. 3';.
The Harrisonville senior Citi·
cine; and several nieces and Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11 Y.
zens Club wlli hold a free blood
nephews.
Shoney's Inc ........ ... .... .. ...... . 7'h
pressure clinic frqm 10 a.m. to 12
She was preceded In death by Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 6'!/8
noon Tursday at the Harrison·
her parents, five brothers and Worthington lnd ................. 22%
ville Town Hall. A business
one sister.
services will be Tuesday, 10:30
meeting will be held at 1 p.m.
a.m., at Ewing Funeral Home,
W~nesday's
with Rev. Bill Hoback officiat·
Dally Number
ing. Burial will be in Letarl Falls
422.
Ticket sales totaled
$1,461,949.50, with a payoff due of
$684,256.50,
PICK-4
V,eterans Memorial
CLEVELAND, Ohio (UPI) ~
6109.
Saturday Admissions
The lack of a top prize winner in
PICK·4 ticket sales lolaled Saturday night's SuP.,r Lotto
May me Manning, Middleport;
$248,514.50,
with a payoff due of game means lhe jackpot for
Sara Stamper, Middleport; Ver· $111,945.
mont Markins, Racine; Harley
PICK.'4 $1 straight bet pays Wednesday night's drawing will
Null, Cheshire.
$6 million.
$4,152. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays beThe
Saturday Disc harg es
numbers drawn Saturday
$173.
Decker Collums, VIrgie Burford.
were
12,
21, 30, 32, 38 and 40, but
Super Lotto
Sunday Admissions ~ Marte
none of the 3, 717,969 tickets had
12, 21, ~o. 32, 38 and 40.
Ro y, Racine; Ethel Belle
all of those numbers.
. Super ·Lotto ticket sales totaled
Reeves, Coolville.
Ohio Lottery officials said 101
$3,717,969.
Sunday Discharges ~ Mary
of
the tickets had five of the
8 PIECES
Kicker
numbers,
making them worth
Pickens.
345012.
OF CHICKEN
each. Another 5,23211ckets
Kicker ticket sates totaled $1,000
had four of the numbers. for $82
$591,967.
Only
each.
·
Origioal or Ellra "'~Pf..,(.,;:

I

Daily Number
385
Pick 4
6779

fa~ility

NATIONAL WEAll!ER SERVICE fORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.11-118 :·

The unusual autumn heat wave
~SNOW
-RAIN
~SHOWERS
:
caused problems for some motor·
lsts, said California Highway
FRONTS: . . Wa~m "Cold
. . Static . . Occlude~
Patrol Officer Monty Keifer.
Map
shows
fl'jrimum
re~rarures.
At
least
50%
of any shaded atea Is latec:aSt
CHP dispatchers receiving more
Ia
receive
pteeipitalion
I
ed .
,
UPf
than the usual number Of calls
WEATHER MAP: Ralnshowers are predicted along a cold front
about overheated vehicles, he
from
the Great Lakes and upper Ohio Valley Into the New England. ;
sal d.
Showers
and thunderstnrms will be scattered from Arizona and
Some 220,000 to 225,000 people
southern
Utah to New Mexico IUid southern Texas. Winds gusty •
headed to county beaches to
across
the
upper Mississippi Valley and the upper Great Lakes
escape the heat . county life- .
guards reported.
· region.

continued from page 1

Ohio Lottery

Meigs has
new fitness

POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE 992·5432

.,

,\

books; provide montes lo deal
with unanliclpated emergen·
cies; purchase classroom text·
books and Instructional supplies;
relnstllute half day, every day
kindergarten; provide lor an
Increase In staff salaries (currenlly our employees are the
lowest paid In the county and in
Southeastern Oh lo).
Question: What cuts have been
already made to reduce costs?
Answer:
1. Attendance of ali .staff to ali
non·requlred meetings, conferences and seminars for which
there is a c,ost to the board qf
substitutes, lees, etc,. has been
eliminated.
2, Three teaching positions
have been eliminated.
3. One elementary priJ\clpal's
position has been eliminated.
4. One malntanance position
Continued on page 10

about." Despite Tuch!arber's
contention tllat the poll reflected
a strong economy, some political
experts noted that the four main
areas of concern after drugs
were general economic topics.
"People are concerned about ,
their economic future," said
Ohio Democratic. Party Chair·
man James Ruvulo. "That' s
consistent wllh our polling."
Said Nalhanson, "!Former
Ohio) Gov. James Rhodes used to
say there were three Issues In
Ohio- jobs, jobs and jobs. That
hasn't changed. People are com·
fortable about where we've been
the last eight years, but they're
concerned about where we're
going."

system can be figured and mending officials lor effective
By BOB HOEFLICH
lighting which has been Installed
presented.'
Sentinel News Staff
at
Council
approved.
the
report
of
tlle tennis courts in Hartinger
Meeting ' in regular session
Mayor
Hoffman
showing
re·
Park.
The Hacketts' also sent a
Monday night Middleport Village
contribution
in appreciation of
celpts
of
$7,335.37
In
fines
and
. Council passed a resolu lion lndl·
the
new
lighting.
lees
for
the
month
of
September
eating that it wishes to continue
Council set trick or treat night
separate village ' negotiations and-agreed not to take any fiCtion
in
the t~nfromMonday , Oct.31,
on
the
request
lor
the
transfer
of
with Columbia Gas ofOhioongas
from
6 to 7 p.m . With parttclpa·
a
llqubr
license
from
Carroll
and
rates In the town.
lion
to
include youngsters 12 and
Mildred
Johnson
to
John
Kloes
Mayor.Fred Hoffman said lhat
under.
The dedication of Over·
doing
business
as
the
Mlddleporl
a new notice Is being published
brook
Center, the new $3.5
Lunchroom.
Indicating that communities wlii
million
health
care rehabllltallon
A
letter
from·
Phyllis
·
a
nd
being going into a group struc·
Continued
oti page 10
ture for a regional rate strucure George Hacl\elt was read com·
with the gas company rather
than negotiating for rates as
Individual ~ommunitles with the
company . Mayor Hoffman said
. that rates under the regional
structure might be higher for
Middleport residents and that the
village would lose the free gas
~ which would have been a yes
clause It now has for heating
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ~
vote had Votnovlch been Ohio's
village owned facilities. The senate Minority Leader Robert
senator.
'
latter would mean the loss of Dofe of Kansas declared lhe ·
he
was
"frusVoinovlch
said
some $17,000 a year, Mayor presidential race over Monday
lrated'' by Sen. Howard Metzi.nHoffman reported.
and said "President" George
baum's media advertising,
Council · members Indicated Bush will need George Volnovich
which
he said was " deceptlve"
they would prefer that the village of Ohio In the senate.
regarding
the Voinovlch position
continue to negotiate on gas rates
Dole and Volnovichheld a news
on Issues .
within Mlddleporl on an lndlvld· conference to corivlnce reporters
''He Is buying the election,
ual basis with the company and thai the contest with Sen. Howpassed a resolution to that effect. ard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo, Is not literally , with his TV conimerThe resolution will be sent ·to the over yel despite recent polls, that clals, " said the Republican,
Public Utilities Commission of Volnovlch Is conduclfng a posi- adding that two-thirds of Metzen·
Ohio, Columbia Ga's. of Ohio and tive campaign on his record as baum's campaign money comes
Consumers' Counsel. Council mayor of Cleveland, and that from outside Ohio. He said only
also agreed to ask John Koebel,
Metzenbaum ought to debate 10 to 15 percent of his own money ,
discounting lhat from the Republocal gas company manager of him .
GaJUpolis, to attend the next
The latter fell through later in lican N atlonal Committee,
meeting of council also so that
the day when Metzenbaum re- comes from outside the state.
Voinovtch said he has star led a
the town can clarify with him Its
buffed ail debates , saying Volno·
lelevjslon
campaign of his own
position on prefering Individual vlch's "sleazy" campalgndldn't
aimed
at
projecting
him as "a
negotiations for tlle town.
deserve the dignity of apIa t!orm.
hustler
for
Ohio."
"George Bush Is going to win
Mayor Hoffman also anVoinovich said his talest comnounced that Cable Services has this presidential election, I think
the vlllage·o.wned cable televi· il's · virtually over," said Dole. mercial talks about his record as
slon system laid out but before It "He needs a Republican Senate. mayor of Cleveland, particularly
can show its presentation to He needs a Republican senator· In creating jobs through the
establishment of enterprise
council, the services personnel lorn the great state of Ohio.
zones
with property tax
"If
you
want
to
get
th
lngs
done
need to know which channels the
Incentives
.
for
Ohio,
let's
don
't
elect
a
hostlle
town would wan! ' to provide If
Voinovlch
said he Is nationally
senator,"
said
Dole.
"Let's
elect
such a system can be estalr
~;ecognlzed lor his efforts in
someone
who
will
have
access
to
llshed. Council members were
asked to make up a list of the president, someone who has Cleveland, adding that as senasuggested channels this week so known the president, who has lor he would work with communthat the list can be submitted to supporled George Bush, who will Ity leaders and local developCable servl·ces. Since each chan- know the people In the adminls· ment groups.
"Ohio's in trouble because we
nel has a fee , the services must tratlon and who will get things
have
a senator like Howard
have the Information on which done ."
he said. "Our
Melzenbaum,"
Dole said the balanced budget
ones will be requested In the
state
really
Isn't
getting its fair
planned village-owned system amendment in the Senate was
Continued on page 10
be(ore cost structures, on the lost by one vote~ Metzenbaum' s

Dole says Bush
needs V oinovich

Eleven from
Ohio make
'Forbes
400'
"
By United Press International
Eleven Ohioans are listed on
this year's "Forbes 400" list of
the nation 's richest people.
Forbes, In Its seventh annual
listing of the wealthiest people In
the nation, said New York had
more people on the list ~ 82 ~
than any other state. Ohioans on
the list had a median net worth of
$360 mllllon.
walk will be held Saturday, Oct. 22, beginning 11
ARE YOU A WALKER! - U you are, why not
The wealthiest Ohioan, accord·
a.m.,
at the Meigs IDgh Track Field.
go
a
step
further
and
become
a
Turkeywalker?
lng to Forbes, is Edward John
ThiS
year's
American
Heart
Association
Turkey·
DeBartolo of Youngstown, with .
$1.4 billiOn earned from Invest·
ments in variOus developments,
mainly _shopping centers.
He was !olinwed by Leslie
Anyone wilh $80 will receive a
Traditionally, family, friends,
Herbert Wexner, head of the
"Step right up to a healthy
shirt and a turkey In time for
tee
neighbors and co-workers team
Limited Inc. of Columbus, wlth$1 heart," says MIUle Midkiff.
Thanksgiving
dinner, and $200
billion. Third was Carl Henry
Midkiff ts this year's chairman up to participate fn the will earn a walker a tee shirr, a
Lindner 11 of Cincinnati with $950 for Turkeywalk, an American Turkeywalk.
In addition to the satisfaction turkey and an American Heart
million earned In the Insurance Heart Association (AHA). walkexperienced by participating In Association swealsult.
industry . .
.
for-pledges-event.
Those interested In TurkeyOnly two of the Ohioans quailOn Saturday. Oct. 22, at 11 Turkeywalk, walkers also earn walk may contact Midkttf at
awards
for
their
partlcip:ltion.
fled as. billionaires. Debartolo a.m ., Meigs County residents
ranked 21st on Forbe&amp;' 1988llstof will lace up their tennis shoes to Anyone with $40 In pledges will be 992·2133 or 992·5728, or stop In
tlle nation's billionaires, with walk at the Meigs Hiih School awarded at Turkeywalk tee Bank One In Pomeroy for registration forms .
shirt. ·
Wexner listed as 49.
Track Field.

at

Annual Turkeywalk slated Oct. 22

•

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