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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.

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12 Piec11 of Chick10,
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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

•

�The Daily

Ohio

Commentary
•

.Union leader asks for trusteeship

The Daily Sentinel
.

111 Courl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA'
,~

~mst

~~

rT"'--' ~...,.., r"'T"'E:2 c::~,~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/Conlroller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar~ welcome. They should b e less than 300 wOrds
long. All letters are s ubject toedlllng and must be signed with name. address and

telept"lone number. No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing lssues, not persooalttles.

Can Boston-Austin II win?
ByARNOLDSA~SLAK

...to Fight Arson.

Set 1ools are a great pia&lt;:&lt; wstart!
Arson ard suspected arsoo constitute the largest single cause of
property damage due w fire in the
U.S. In 1981-85, these incl'rdiary
and suspicirus fires accoonted .for
an estimated 56% of ail fires in
rducational properties and 73% of
associated property damaR&lt;, for a
national estimate of rrughiy $70
millkKI in losses per year. Of tiK&gt;Se
arrested lOr ail arson offenses in
1986, 40% were under age 18!
(;lcariy juvenile vandalism is thr
leading motivating facwr inJ'I'""'
- and it can be stopped .

... to Use Wood
Stoves Safely.
Sir.·e 1982, tiK'rt' have IK'CII an
avf•rng..• uf nore t.hm1 f){),(){)() hOrne
fin-s ~ach yf:lar lnvolving v.•ood
~love~

and fhcS(&gt; fires have rrsu\tcd
in nw.&gt;rc t.han 100 death~ per year.
Ik&gt;IIK' ( ~eating is by far the leading
&lt;"ause of hoiTie fires, and wood heat~
in~

,'..
r
r

'~ •.. to have home
:•, smoke detectors.

' The chmiC!'S of dying il1 a ho111e fire
: are cu t. in half lf n Octrctor is
• present.. That's wl1y it's Rood news
r that ill 1986, three fourths (77%) of
• all U.S. l&gt;omes had at least one
' detector. Unrortunatcly, statistics
• shoW that only one third of the
~ hornc~having fire• hll'{e detectors,
~ which Is evidence that. the families ·
• 11Cf'dil1g pro!l&gt;Ction rmst are least.
t l.ikely to have it.. Also. in one-third
• of those l.1ome• with them , the
d&lt;'tectors are not opera! ion a! dirr.d proof of the need for regular ·
C tcst.ing and maintcnrincc. Detectors
: are the leading life-safety device in
• home firesafety - and they must
be used even more widely.

"

'

aeromts lOr nearly threefour! hs of that total. Proper
irtstilllation, proper Utaintenar'ICe,

are

md saf(' operation
rssential m&gt;l more homes wit.h wood stoves
must. ~jkJw these practices.

Home Smoke
Detectors Cut
Your Risk of Dying
In a Fire In HaHI
10

Deaths
per t,OOO

FBI has been Investigating possible Mafia control of LIUNA. In
the meantime, the same LIUNA
leadersblp continues Its reign.
An FBI spakesman refused to
comment io us about the
Investigation.
A President's Commission on
Organized Crime In 1986 outlined
some of LWNA's past problems·.
LIUNA General President, Agnelo Fosco, was Indicted In 1981
In a case Involving alleged
pension plan swindles. He was
later acquitted. LWNA General
Secretary Treasurer, Arthur E.
Cola. has been Indicted twice and•
then acquitted of racketeering
charges Involving union benefit
fu11ds .
·
The Presidential Commission
also noted that Fosco has the
power to spend union funds and
award patronage jobs in the
union and that some of those jobs
have gone to people with known

5

Home Fires

0
Without
Wll~
08.. CIQf DetiCtOr
Soutce· 198o-.e5 NFIRS. NFPA Survey

,,

John F. Kennedy, he said: "You
had this young man from Massachusetts whO many thought was
not experienced enough, dldn' t
have enough experience In foreign policy, didn't have the
strength to be president. There
was a lot of this kind o!thlng: He
talked too fast, wasn't emotional
enough. This was one of the raps
on Jack Kennedy: thathewastoo
cerebral, too cool. And It was
only In the closing days of that
campaign that you began to see a
charged up and emotional John
Kennedy.''
Again, true enough. The press
Is always In the pejorative

caricature

gam~.

"Cool;'' 'jcere·

bral," "technocrat,"

'jclerk"

(for Dukakls), or "clumsy"
(Ford), "bumbling" (Reagan).
"wimpiSh" (Bush) and "dull"
(Monda! e). Don't take too mu~h

stock In all that. Many hundreds
of very smart politicians want to
be president. Every four years
only two of them get to the finals.
Then they are trashed, not only
by the press but also by · the .
politicos who weren ~shrewd
enough, or knowledgeable
enough, or tough enough to
become a nominee. ·
And, as many people who have
worked In a winning campaign
know, there can Indeed be
magical moments when the
candidate suddenly gets the beat
and the ·rhythm right, and starts
knocking them out of the park,
almost effortlessly. Dukakls Is
right; Kennedy didn't get
charged up unit! very late In the
1960 campaign. The magic was
late In coming, but It came.
Dukakls hasn't touched the
magic yet. But he might still.

.

Premium-boondoggle in gas·___Ro_be_rt_~_a_lte_rs
VERMILLION, S.D. (NEA)"I lhlnk it's a rip-of!," bluntly
explains Steve Stewart, the
owner of a Texaco service station
here, when asked why he doesn't
offer his customers unleaded
gasoline in premium as well as
regular.
Most motoriSts who buy premium unleaded elsewhere are
only wasting their money, adds
Stewart, "becauo;e 99 percent of
all cars are manufactured to run
on plain unleaded."
At an Amoco station one block
away, manager Bob Vacek sells
premium and makes a tidy profit
on It because the high -priced fuel
constitutes "about a fourth of (all
the gasoline) w~ sell ~ach day."
But can motorists justify the
additional costs? "Some of them
think they rieed It but they don't,"
adds Vacek. "They just like to

have premium.''
;The men who pump the gasoline In this bucolic South Dakota
community aren't alone in their
beliefs. "There's far more premium gasoline sold In the United
States today than Is theoretically
required," admits George H.
Bablklan, president of the domestic relining and marketing
unit of the Atlantic Richfield Co.,
one of the nation's largest gasoline retailers and an aggressive
promoter Of premium fuel.
"I really don't think higher
octanes are needed. I think
on-board computers can handle
any kind or a knocking problem,"
adds Bablklan- but he candidly
acknowledges that "I'm pretty
happy about (the unru;,euary
sales) because prem urn gasoline contributes handsomely to
the bottom line .."
Automotive lpdustry experts
~

say that 90 percent of all cars
produced since 1982 operate
efficiently on regular-grade gasoline. The premium fuel, they
say. Is necessary only to cure
engine knocking In older cars and
for a few new models with hlglt
compression engines.
Moreover, substantially more
crude oills required to manufacture premium fuel than regular
gasoline. "Making a higher octane product can entail a crude
run twice that for a suboctane
product. This shrinks the available pool ·of gasoline," explains
the authoritative 011 &amp; Gas
Journal.
Thus. the premium grade not
only produces higher oil company profits but also contributes
to a tl~hter supply of all types or
gasoline, thereby placing upward pressure on prices.
That practice Is worth noting
because It Is one of several
elements that account for the
steadily rising price of gasoline
during the past six months when the price of crude oil has
declined markedly.
"Instead of passing on lower
prices to consumers, major oU
companies are Increasing their
profits," says Edwin S. Rothschild, assistant director of the
Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition,
a Washington, D.C., pubtlc Interest group.
The Industry has a variety of
explanations and excuses for the
seemingly paradoxical rise In
prices. Among them:
- An explosion at a Shell
refinery in Louisiana took that
facUlty out of commiSsion at a
time when refinery ~apaclty was
limited and demand was
Increasing.

Rotnschlld places special em- The summer drought drastl·
cally lowered water levels on the .phasts on the Industry's campaign to promote premium grade
Mississippi River, which Is used
extensively for gasoline deliver- . gasoline "without the least conles, and thus Impeded barge cern about the economic, environment and nealtJ;l effects of
traffic.
But CLEC, In a study titled stimulating consumption and the
"The 1988 Gasoline Squeeze," political consequences of growsuggests ihere are other reasons Ing dependence on foreign sour- Including the Industry's fail- ces of oil.''
As a result, motorists are
ure to build adequate gasoline
Inventories prior to the summer payll!g more for Exxon Supreme,
driving season and Its refusal to Amoco Ultimate, Texaco Super,
Increase gasoline production Chevron Supreme 93 and other
during the early portion of that premium fuels - but getting
little value for their money.
peak consumption period.

Berry's World
WHY DID 1 TELL HIM
THAT HER FATHER AND

I WERE REAGAN
DEMOCRATS?
0

_,...o

FINAL OUT - Dodger cenrerfielder John
Shelby makes a diving catch for the final out In
Game 5 of the National League playoffs Monday

Eagles stop Giants,

24~13

receivers.'' ·

Atlanta player's death drug related
gested the cocaine, " Burton said.
ATLANTA (UP!) - The wl!~ could cause an overdose."
~
"There are many ways you can
of Atlanta Falcons defensive
Burton said Croudip's wife.
back David Croudlp said her Holly, told the emergency crew take the drug. The only thing we
husband took a mixture of that rushed to their apartment are sure Is that it wasn't Injected.
"Taking cocaine is like playing
cocaine and another unspecified that the five-year NFL veteran
drug hours before he collapsed had taken a mixture of cocaine Russian roulette with a pls.tol.
You never know when it's going
and died of an apparent narcotics and anolher drug, known as a
overdose.
"cocaine cocktail," alter return- off. Each time you use cocaine,
Dr. Joseph Burton, the medical
ing from Sunday's game, which you are taking a chance of
examiner for the five-county . the Falcons lost 33-0 to th e Los somethi ng going bad," the medl·
region surrounding Atlanta, said
cal exa miner said.
Angeles Rams. Burton sa id .
Croudlp's body will be flown
preliminary tests Indicate the
The medical examiner said he
Wednesday
to San Diego, where
29-year-oid National Football
could not be specific because
League veteran ingested more
police were unable to Interview he liVed In the off-season. He is to
than a gram of cocaine.
Croudlp's wife. who "was so be buried Saturday after a
ser0 ce at the Greenwood Mem" We still need more lab reports
upset she couldn't talk."
orial Park and Mortuary.
to be definite. but early tests do
"We're not sure how he In·
include Cocaine and probably'
some other dr ug, " Burton said
Monday. "But It appears he may
have ingested more than a gram
of cocaine."
Burton said a gram of cocaine
could provide "20 to 50 lines,"
and If taken In a short period of
• ASLOW AS
FRONT
REAR
time. "that much cocaine. espeOTHERS SllGHTY HIGHER
cia lly If it were of high quality,

BRAKES
$3995
$3775

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

1986 Reported Home
Fire
Statl8tlc:s
565,500 Home Fires
4,655 Deaths"

18,5751njuries •

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
$1500
TUNE-UPS
8 CYL.

$3895 6 CY. $3495 .ten. $2795

$3,464 Billion dlrecl

property damage

Aguret baud on 1987 Fire 1.0811
In U.S., 9187 Fire Journal, by
Michael J. Karter.

•

'

NIASE C!:RTIFIED

AUTO &amp;

.aiM.

s,.....

• 1247 O.dt St. .
''Daclar" V. gllczi. PtGIIIielor

POMEROY -Scoring on their
first series of plays following
Burt Kennedy's reco~ery of a
Vinton County fumble at the
Viking 16. the Marauder Reserves went on to post a 14-0
shutout.
On that series, alter moving to ·
the six In four plays, a loss offour
and an encroachment · call
agalnsl the Marauders p!llced
the ball on th 14. Jeremy Phalln
then tosSed an aerial to Shawn
Lambert who made a great catch
for the score. Frank Blake's two
point conversion run made It 8-0
at lhe 5: 27 mark of quarter one.
Exchanging possession
through the remainder of period
one and well into the second
quar ler without ellher · team
mounting a serious threat, the
Meigs eleven gained control at
the Viking 14 on a Frank Blake
interception . Four plays later,
from the four, BrakeputMelgsup
14·0 as the conversion try failed.
In the second half, marked
w1th a total of thirteen lnfrac-

OH.

lions called on both teams,
neither could score although the
Marauders mounted drlves lhat
reached the VIking five and eight .
on separate occasions. The visItor's deepest penetration duong .
the contest was to the Meigs 39.
Terry McGuire led the Ma·
rauder ground attack with 57
yards in 11 carries. Jeremy Rupe
added 20 in 7 attempts and Frank;,
Blake picked up a net of 28 In 13:;
tries. Jeremy Phalln threw 12
times completlng 2 for a total of
23 yards. McGuire, on the option,
attempted 13, competed one for
nine yards and had one picked
off. Shawn Lambert had one ,
reception for 14 yards and Blake
2 for 18. Blake, Lambert and Eric '
Heck each had an Interception .,
for the Marauders.
·
McGuire punted twice for a ';
33.5 average and had one blocked .•
by the Vlkes. Meigs bobbled the
ball once and Vinton twice, losing •.
one. The Marauders were penal;
ized 6 times for 30 yards and .
VInton was zapped for 109 yard~.,
on 15 Infractions .
The entire Meigs defensive .
unit turned In an excellent ,
performance led by . Rupe and
James Howerton.

The Daily Sentinel
t VSPS lU·IW) .
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---

Larry Is This Week's
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Ashland..

•

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Marauder . reserves triumph

NEW YORK (UP!) ·The Los tar to improve his grip on the
Angeles Dodgers won three victo- cold, rainy day and not to doctor
ries In a span o!14 hours Monday . the basebalL
Glamattl explained his action
Two Involved games against the
at
a Shea Sladium news conferNew York Mets and the third
'
ence
before Game 5.
came in a meeting with National
"While
I think he dld somE&gt;League President BartGiamatti.
thing
wrong,
I don't think he sel
Glamattl an·nounced he has
out
with
the
Intention
to cheat,"
shortened by one day the 72-hour
Giamatti
said.
"As
he
says, he
suspension he levied against
believes
he
used
the
substance
In
Dodger reliever Jay Howell. The
the
spirit
of
the
rule.
And
I
don't
announcement came hours after
the Dodgers beat New York 5-4 In think because one Imposes a
-12 Innings, and just before they penalty, it Is engraved in stone. "
. "I appreciate the opportunity
scored a 7-4 victory.
Now the Dodgers head home to meet with Mr~. Glamattl."
with a '3-2 lead in the NL playoffs Howell said ~ " !know rule8.02 (b )
and the man who led them wlth21 prohibits any foreign substance
In gloves and I am sorry that I put
saves.
"It wlll certainly give us a little It there, but I believe In this case
more confidence," Los Angeles the substance was in the spirit of
the rule.
catcher Rick Dempsey said.
"Although I am not wholly
"I would have preferred he
wasn 't (eligible) but there's satisfied with the result of
nothing I can do about It," New today's decision, I do understand
YO"rk Manager Dave Johnson the basis from Mr. Glamatti's
decision. Mr. Glamattl also unsaid.
_ Howell was suspended for derstands that I am not a
possessing pine tar on the cheater, and with that conclumound , Umpires found It in the sion, I am wholly satisfied."
Glamat 11 said Monday he felt a
eighth inning of Saturday's
Game 3. Howell said he used pine three-day suspension was too
harsh of a penalty In postseason.
Thistledown results
"What went Into the original
decision, and what went Into this
NORTH .. RANDALL, Ohio one (to alter ill. is a balancing of
1UP!) - Michael Mackey has elements," Glamatti said. "It's a
been named general manager of very serious infraction. On the
Thistledown, his second stint as other hand, these are unusual
manager of the Cleveland area circumstances.
thoroughbred racing facliity.
' Mackey replaces George Jones
who announced his resignation
last week. Jones has served as
general manager of Thistledown
·
since 1977.
Mackey has managed several
of America's top rated racing
!acitlties, Including Hialeah
Park near Miami, Tampa Bay
Downs and Is currently completing his duties as vice presidentgeneral manager of Ladbroke
DRC in Livonia, Mich.
Mackey, 48, was appointed
racing secretary at Thistledown
in 1969. He was promoted to
director of racing and then was
named general manager In 1974.
During his tenure. the Ohio
Derby was re-established as a
major event for 3-year-old
thoroughbreds.

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•

f

•

••

Mickey Hatcher sl~;~gled before ·Len Dykstra hit a two-out homer
·
Gibson's homer.
to right that gave hope to lhe
Gibson had homered less than Shea crowd.
13 hours earlier.· to give Los
0
.
Angeles a 5-4 victory In 121nnlngs
But Belcher settled down and
In Game 4, tying the series 2-2.
· gave Dodgers Manager Tom
The Mets closed to 6-3 In the
Lasorda what he needed bottom of the fifth Monday .. innings. The' Dodgers used six
relievers over seven innings
Howard johnson, 0-for-22 In his
postseason career to' the point,
Sunday and Los Angeles was still
singled and Wally Backman
without its ace reliever. .lay
reached on a bunt single before
Howell.

Los Angeles wins 3 battles in ·
period of ·14 hours Monday

beat me. I tried to make a play . If
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) . tinued to excell -against the
he had caught it and I had tackled
Randall Cunningham used the Eagles' pass defense : catching
him. we. still would have lost. It's
spotlight of Monday Night Fool- nine passes !or148yards. In fa c t ,
ball to Illuminate the best game If he had caught a tenth. the a gambling defense. J went for ·
us, !lost It and they got it."
of his young career.
Giants might have won.
Cunningham's first two touchIn Philadelphia's first appearTrailing 17 -13. New York was
down
passes were tes s dramatic
ance In lhe NFL'.' weekly show- moving toward a go-ahead touchbut
his
4-yard throw to Jimmie
case since 1981, Cunningham down late In the game. On a
Giles
and
his 5-yard toss to Keith
threw fora career-high 369yards !ourth-and-10 play from the Phi·
Byars
in
the
second quarter gave
and three touchdowns to lead the !adelphia 18, quarterback Phil
the Eagles a 14-3 halftime lead.
Eagles to a 24-13 victory over the Simms found Bavaro wide open
Giles' touchdown capped a
New York Giants. their !lrst at the 5, but the usually suretriumph .over their NFC East handed receiver dropped the ball 12-play, 80-yard drive and came
rival in almost four years.
with 2:22 to play , giving the alter Cunningham was hit , and
apparently dropped, by line"On Mohday Night Football Eagles possession.
backer Carl Banks a.~ he rolled
too! ·' exclaimed Cunningham.
"It was the right play, the right
.who completed a career-high throw, the right coverage," New · out. But Cunningham bounced up
and found Giles in the end zone.
31-of-41 passes with no Intercep- York Coach Bill Parcells said.
"My knee was probably a half
tions. "Now we know what we ·'We threw It right through thP
foot from the ground." Cun-i
can . do. It will boost our coverage. it just didn 't work out.
ningham sa id. " I've done crazlf
confidence."
Then we justgave'up the big play
things in the past ·But that wa~
It also boosted the Eagles into at the end of the game."
one I didn't even believe myself.
the thick of the NFC East race.
Three · plays after Bavaro's
Philadelphia, Washington and . drop. Cunningham found Cris . When a big linebacker hits you,
you should go down ."
the Giants are all 3-3 and trail Carter ahead of defender Mark
Cunningham's pass to Byars
first-place Phoenix by one game. Collins and hit him for an 80-yard
capped
an even more impressive
"For us , It's just big," Phila- touchdown to clinch the viclory.
93-yard,
11-play drive as he
delphia safety Wes Hopkins said. which halted Philadelphia's sixcompleted
7-o!-8 passes on the
" We felt we were good enough to gal)'le losing streak against the
march,
staying
in the pocket to
beat them. Last week we beat a Giants.
.
find his receivers instead of
plaYoff team. This week. we beat
"I don't think I was shocked."
the Giants in front of national said Carter, who had five catches · scrambling for his life as he has
been forced to do againsl the
exposure."
,
for a game-high 162 yards. " We
Giants In the past.
Besides Cunningham's hero- were running a lot of those
"Ra ndal) is more experienced,
Ics. the Eagles did It by control- routes. I knew if I got open.
more at ease and he 's not running
ling linebacker Lawrence Tay - Randall would hit me."
as much," New York linebacker •
lor, who has hurt Philadelphia in
Trailing Carter by several feet,
Harry Carso n said.' 'Last year he ·
the past but managed only one all Collins could do was watch
was more inclined to pull the ball
sack in his second game since him run Into the end zone.
down
and run. Now he waits
returning from a drug
"You never stop a guy like
longer
fn the pocket and he's
that , you've just got to s low him
suspension .
getting
to see his seco ndary
Tight . end Mark Bavaro con- flown," Collins said. " He just

Facls and Figures•••

l

•

ties to La Cosa Nostra organized
crime syndicate. Fosco gave the
job of union "special International representative" to AI
Pllotto and Matthew Trul&gt;iano.
Pllotto, according to the commls·
slon report. ·was a Chicago boss of
La Cosa Nostra and was con·
victed on racketeering charges.
Involving health and welfare
funds of a LW!i!A local. Trupiano
was a St. Louis boss of La Cosa
Nostra, the commission
reported.
"Although LIUNA has not
achieved the notoriety of the
Teamsters' Union," the commls- ·
slon report said, "It Is nevertheless a union with clear ties to
organized crime." And, the com- ·
mission noted, "the government
has done little to end organized
crime's hold over LIUNA." .
In the case of the Malt
Handlers, failure of the federal
government to oversee LWNA
may have jeopardized $1 billion
In the Mall Handlers' benefit
plan. That plan covers 500,000
federal workers including the
mall handlers and thousands of
other federal workers who have
opted to join the plan.
For two years, LWNA put the
Mall Handlers In a trusteeship.
Officials of the Mall Handlers
contend that LIUNA just warits
control of the benefit plan. A
LIUNA spokesman told us the
union has a "fiduciary duty" to
ensure that the Mall Handlers do
not mismanage the fund.
In June, four months after the
Mall Handlers were released
from that trusteeship, Fosco
decided to Impose another emergency trusteeship. One hundred
mall handlers responded on ~ne
24 by marching on LWNA's
headquarters In Washington
chanting, "Fosco and the .mob
have got to go."
In July, a U.S. district judge
ruled that there was no "credible" reason for LWNA's control
of the Mall Handlers' finances.

Waiting ·for Duke's magic_.___Be_n_~_at_te_nb_er_:::_g
I am working on a one-hour for It, except doing lt. Ronald
television special about the reReagan, not a bad country
cent history of the Democratic
politician, ran In the 1976 prlmar="'
Party (PBS, Monday, Oct. 17 ies - a somewhat less Intense
consult local schedules). In that
political experience than a
connection I recently Inter- general-election presidential
viewed Gov. Michael Dukakls.
campaign. It was his first time
We talked about Democratic • out, and he blew 11. He won In
Party political philosophy and 1980. Sen. Ted Kennedy, who had
about tactics for 1988. Here Is
been In politics all hls life, blew It
what he had to say about tactics:
In 1980, his first time · out. My
I asked· him If he was having hero, Sen. Scoop Jackson, had
fun. His response: "Yes, albeen in Congress for more than
though there's no question that a
three decades. He campaigned
presidential campaign, after for the presidency In 1972. He won
you've won the nomination, Is no primaries, nor did he come
unlike just about anything one close. By 1976, when he tried
has ever gone through, even If again, he racked up several big
you've been In politics as I have primary wins before losing out to
for 25 years, It takes a llttlewhll_e Jimmy Carter.
to adjust to It, But I'm adjusllng,
Dukakls also talked about the
and enjoying it.:·
dynamic between the press and
Indeed, full-scale presidential
the politician. Recalling the 1960
campaigning Is like no other act
presidential campaign of Sen.
lit. politics. There Is no training

NEW YORK iUPI) - Kirk
.Gibson crushed a three-run homer and rookie Tim Belcher won
his second game of the playoffs
Monday, putting the Los Angeles
Dodgers on the verge of the
. World Series w1th a 7-4 triumph
over the New York Mets.
The Dodgers, who beat New
York just once in 11 regularseason games, lead 'the best-ofseven series 3-2 and can capture
the National League pennant
when the series switc hes to Los
Angeles for Game 6 Tuesday
night.
The Dodgers are sc heduled' to
send Tim Leary against 20-game
winner David Cone, the Game 2
·
loser for the Mets.
Game 7, If necessary, is
scheduled for Wednesday nig ht.
· The NL champion wiii be home
for Game 1 ¢ the World Series
'Salurday against the American
League champion Oakland
Athletics.
The Dodgers might be without
Gibson when they return to Los
Angeles. Gibson left the game in
the ninth Inning when he came up
limping after stealing second
base with two out. Gibson entered the series with a sore left
hamstring.
A crowd of 52,069 saw Game 5
follow the pattern of the entire
series , with the Dodgers taking
an early lead and then trying to
co pe with a New York rally.
Gibs~n·s blast into the first
deck in right field made it 6-0 In
the. fifth Inning. He knocked out
Mets starter Sid Fernandez, who
al Shea Stadium, as right fielder Mike Marshall
had won his last six regularcelebrates. The Dodgers beat· the Mets 7-4 and
season decisions. Steve Sax and
need only one win to become National League
champions. ('UPI)

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

WASHINGTON- Even some ' cates certain LIUNA officials
federal workers who load mall · have long been lnfiuenced by
trucks for a living think their organized crime. And the New
union Is In t~e grip of organized
York local of the· Mall Handlers
crime. A recent letter to FBI wants out from under that
Director William Sessions lnfiuence.
charges the • mob may, have
Our associate, Jim Lynch,
already Infiltrated a Postal Ser-. obtained a copy of Baker's letter
vice union.
to Sessions. In It, Baker says that
George Baker, president of the FBI has been shown docu·
Mall Handlers Union Local300 In ments "that with proper InvestiNew York City, wrote the, letter gation and concentrated review
asking Sessions to place the local may expose one of the largest
in a federal trusteeship and scandals ever to hit the U.S.labor
shield It from organized crime.
movemenl .... " Baker adds, "I
The Mall · Handlers Union am requesting lhat your agency
serves 42,000 Postal Service look Into the possibility of having
watchmen, messengers and mall the . federal government place
handlers. It Is a division of · Local 300 into trusteeship ImmeLaborers International Union of diately before LWNA or Its
North America that oversees friends take control of the Local
several different types of labor and destroy all the Information
unions, most of them represent- that we have painfully gathered
Ing construction workers and over- the years."
other heavy laborers.
This cry for help should come
Federal investigations over as no suprlse to-Sessions. At a
the past several years have congressional hearing In April,
turned up Information that indl· he testified that for 11 years the
I

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Here Is a presidential election scenario:
The Democrat carries every stale on the Atlantic seaboard but
loses the New England trio of Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire
plus VIrginia and Florida.
He carries the western bank of the Mississippi River from
Minnesota to Louisiana, w1th the exception of Iowa. He wins Illinois
on the eastern side of the river and neighboring Miehtgan, but the
Republican w1ns all the rest of the states bordering the river on the ·
east plus Indiana and Ohio.
In the West, the RepubliCan wins everything bui Texas, New
Mexico, Nevada and Hawaii.
,Who wins the election? In 1960, when that happened, John F.
Kennedy carried 22 states to win the presidency with 303 of the 537
. electoral votes, 56 percent of the total.
Richard Nixon won 26 states w1th 219 votes and Sen. Harry Byrd of
VIrginia got all eight electoral votes of Mississippi, six of 11 from
Alabama and one from Oklahoma for a total of 15.
That was, by the way, one of the closest popular vote elections In
history . Kennedy had a 114,603 plurality with more than 68 million
votes cast, a difference of less than 0.2 of 1 percent and a shjrp
contrast to the electoral vote near landslide.
;The 1960 Democratic ticket of Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson was
flleorlglnai Boston-Austin axl_s, and the Inclusion or the Texas senalor
was regarded as lhe key to carrying vital Texas as well as several
olher Cotton South states.
When Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls tapped Texas ,Sen .
Lloyd Bentsen as his running mate this year, political romantics
talked about Boston-Austin II, and the early polls seemed to give
c~edence to the idea that there was still some magic in that
!ormulat ion.
So 'what would happen if the 1988 election ended with the same
stlltes In the Democratic and Republican columns? There have been
three reapportionments since 1960, and for the most part It has been
the states that Nixon carried that have gained electoral votes.
With some adjustments, such as awarding the District of Columbia
to' Dukakls and all of Byrd's 1960 votes to Republican George Bush,
the winner still would be the Democrat w1th 280 electoral votes, 10
mpre than needed.
But there Is a catch. Kennedy carried both Carolinas, Georgia,
LOuisiana, Arkansas and part of Alabama, getting 52.of the total of 58
electoral votes those state&gt; had then and now.
Even If Bentsen pulls Texas's 29 votes into the Democratic column,
there are very few observers who believe Dukakls can come out of the
South with more than one of the other Southern states Kennedy
carried. That difference alone would give the election to Bush.
Democratic strategists are well aware of the situation and know the
quickest way to make up for the Southern states Kennedy won In the
1960 scenario would be to win California. Its 47 electoral votes would
permit DukaklS to lose the entire South except for Texas and with all
oi the other Kennedy states still win the election by one vote.

You Need •••

Dodgers
h~g
on
to
defeat
. .
Mets; playof(s return to -LA .

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio'
Tuesday. et:tol!er 11 ·• 1988

"

~

,

�---

;......_.,..

'
The

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page. 4-The Daily Sentinel

ROll

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

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COLOR TElEVISION
HEADQUARTERS

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I

The Marauder Fitness Center,
a long-time need, is finally a
reality at Meigs High School.
The center is located on the
bottom floor in a well-lighted
room and has been decorated in
the school colors of maroon and

I

gold.
The center is oulfitted with
weight equipment and free
weights which will enable lifters
to develop all body parts.
The new facUlty has ' the
following equipment and sta-

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CoUege ralin@s
NEW YORK(UPI)-TIU!Unlll&gt;dPMJA
lnlertMtlo.al BoW or Coaches Top 211
co Dele loath all ndlnp, with rrcord and
flrli-paa.ce voteR In parenth""., tolal
pohtt!i rh.cd on II po.lntAfor tr• place,
14 ler M"OOnd, llllt•.), lmd Ialii week's
rankln~r.

T&lt;om
I. Mlwnl I-I-OJ (HJ

Point~

'

't.l!CLA. (~0) ($)"
l. Soud'lern Cal (~0)
4. Not"' Dame t5-flJ
5. W~t VlrPnla (1-0 )
6. Florida state ( ~I)
7. Snultl Car nil• (fl-O)
R. Nettr.ka iS·I)
t. Ok lahonua (.f-It
10. Ok .. homa .Stale (4-0)
• II. Cleffl!IOn ( -1-11
12. Aubu .. H·IJ

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15. 1\rkanM.I (~I)
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N!UioiMI Lt&gt;~ Kf'~t·d tAli
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from lhree da_vt~ to lwo.
&amp;!ikelh~l

· Golden Stale - ReMChtd 11. ll·yrar
:I.JIM!emenl wlth . ~rd MJtch Klchmord;
~le~U~ed frlll.,.ll.&amp;:rnl ~rd Mury de
Sftu'la.
lA Olppera- Cui Cif'nler GeurteBall,
forward Ste\"e Ll~ 18m a, lnrinp-~an For·
ret~t McKt&gt;ndt&gt; lind guard Juden SmIth.

NEW YORK (UP!) - Miami
remained No. 1 and Notre Dame
inched one spot to No.4 in the UP!
Board of Coaches' Ratings Tues·
day, adding spice to Saturday's
battle between the . Hurricanes.
and Fighting Irish.
Miami received 730 of a possible 735 points and 44 or 49
first-place votes. The Hurricanes, who were !die Saturday,
have been top-ranked throughout
the regular season.
UCLA and Southern California
stayed second and third, respectively. The Bruins, Who beat
Oregon State 38-21, garnered 678
points and the remaining firstplace votes. The Trojans, who
defeated Oregon 42-14, earned
626 points.
No. 4 Notre Dame. No. 5 West
Virginia, No. 6Florlda State, No.
7 'South Carolina. No.8 Nebraska
and No. 9 Oklahoma each moved
up one notch. No. 10 Oklahoma
State leaped three· positions.
Rounding out the ratings were
No. 11 Clemson. No. 12 Auburn
(last week's No. 4), No. 13
Georgia, No. l4 Wyoming, No. 15
Arkansas,' No. 16 Washington,
No. 17 Michigan, No. 18 Indiana,
No. 19 Louisiana State, and
Syracuse and Washington State,
who tied at. No. 20. ·
Miami. the defending champion, has won the last four
meetings with Notre Dame.
including the memorable 58-7
whipping at the Orange Bowl in
1985, Gerry Faust's last game as
coach of the Fighting Irish. The
Hurricanes won 24-0 last season
at Miarpi. Saturday's game is at
South Bend, Ind.
"Without question, that'si.n the
past," said Miami Coach Jimmy ·
Johnson when reminded of
Faust's last game. "We've
played a game since and we're
just looking forward to the ga·me
this year.
Although teams contending for
the national title are making
their stretch run, Johnson Insists
it's stili premature to stress his

7
10

\6

n

"1

16

MONDAY NITE .M IXED
High Series Team - Pat Hill
Ford-1811 ; Team •2-1646; Party
Anlmals-1565 . ·
High Series Men- Ron Smlth-489: Rod
Walker-460; Larry Tucker-4Ml.

High Serle!! Women -Ann Splres-432;

Joan Banks-430 ; Melod y
Ramsbury-404.
High Game Team- Pat Hill Ford-611;
-604; -!196.
High Game Men- Ron Smith-193; Rod
Walker-185; Larry Tucker-178 .
High Game Women- Joan Banks-168;
Melody Ramsbury-160; Ann Splres-148 . .

Cross Lanes' Mike Dolg broke
a 2·2 tie with a. goal late in
Friday's soccer game against
Ohio Valley Christian School to
edge the host Defenders 3-2.
'T he Defenders scored first
when Dax Hill kicked in a goal22
minutes Into the contest. Though
it took the West Virginians seven
minutes totiethegameat1-1. the
Defenders came, back wlth a

,

Six Independents - including
five among the top seven teams,
four teams from the Pac-10,
three each !rom the Big Eight
and Southeastern Conference,
two from the Big Ten, and one
each from the Atlantic .Coast
Conference. Southwest Conference and Western Athletic Cohference make up the ratings.
Indiana, Louisiana State, Syra·
cuse and Was.htngton State i'il
jvined the ran kings, while Florida (last week's · No. 11), Ala·
bama (No. 14 ) and Oregon (No;
18) dropped out.
Lat Saturday, the Fighting
Irish beat Pittsburgh 30-20; the
Mountaineers beat East Carolina
30·10; the Seminoles beat Georgia Southern 28-10; the Gamecocks best Virginia Tech 26-M;
the Cornhuskers beat Kansas
63-10; the Sooners beat Texas
28-13; and Okblhoma State's
Cowboys beat Colorado 41-21.
Clemson's Tigers' beat Virginia
10-7; the War Eagles lost to
Louisiana State 7-6; the Bulldogs
beat Vanderbilt 41-22; Wyoming's CowbOys beat San Diego
State 55·27; the Razorbacks beat
Texas Tech 31-10; the Huskies
beat Arizona State · 10-0; the
Wolverines beat Michigan State
17-3; the Hoosiers beat Ohio State
41-7; the Orangemen beat
Rutgers 34-20; and the Cougars
beat California 44-13.
The 1988 national champion

..._ r

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dnpw! . Supn!ltndllll rl llllllllnfl al hSIIII Gl Dfllo. liMO!' Clt&amp;llotilnlll
LOYM. .wE~~~CAN LR •coo~ ¥oWt. • o1 ~ - ,. CCJnPoed"""
MM~ lhit Slltt appbblt 111 iltnd i1 ll.llllo!iltd llvungll"otcut"nl I'll'
IIIII_, In th"--~1 ~- ill.llillllt Gfi"'in110;11. lw.llnt.-;i,IICOI&gt;CI~
toen it l.hDwtl bt I!IIIWHIII -~~~ Mw.btln 11 . . , . 011 Dlc:tmlltf 31.
1M1: Allmillld M11111. 1111..1'11.1MIO: UMII~Iflo 11~M1M.W: Sutpj111.
J!UilOIOM: lncomt. Sl!l,sli.II.OO: £&lt;Pift/IU.,IIol.424.2111»: PM! ..

614-992-5141

lll!lir*. ~ d

,.,.,...,.c'll'lillll

l!llift'ICI al [Ills. aiQ\oQ,
mil
.._ 10111. LR • eo &lt;JA ,... ~. s. or
'lllrt. ,.,.. COI'IICMII "Mih
~~ 1
... (ll ltlll 911111 llfiPI:~ 'J ~ 11"111 I autholond duMfiO ... Cut!l&lt;ll. )UI
IUQICI;, 1~1 tllll itt .PP,OCIIilll ~lltlln d l!t\o!lll!;l ~n 11\t moNt! pl111
lllofiii"ICIII CC!Itlollon i l l ' - tJw 1•'""""' tWtmtn~lv " - btlon •1alloorl

""*

Miller v..

on ~ 31. tt&amp;l'· Aarlwnll:t ..u, lltJW.~J:I.IIXI. U.bMitt.
ll!ll1.491.lll!i00, Su!fl!UI. III4D.'li7:.:JIIII WOmi. $&amp;JI17.r.iT454.CIO IN WI~
NESS WH~REOf. I ,...,., hert~ ...tl$ciiJIIG "'J' noma alii:! eauMO !TOf Mil
10 bt lffilllll., ~u"'Oool•. Oh10.1h;, diJ' arid dJit. ~ Fabl. S•pt: ollriiiJr.
wt ol 011111 t.S~

Ca ntoo-420.

High Game Team - Big .Bend c B
Club-589; 'Pat Hill Ford-586; -57!). ' ·
High Game Men - Roil Smlth-212;
Rick Halfleld-173; Don Hysell-173.
High Ga me Women - Melody Ramsbury-200; Debby Tlllls-156; Betty
McKinley-151.

John Keenan goal to take a 2-1
lead at halftime.
In the second half, no scoring
took place until Doig tied the
game at 2·2, setting the stage for
his game-winner.
The Mountaineers kicked 20
shots t.o the Defenders' 17.
OVCS will take on Frt&gt;edom
Christian at Belpre today at 4:30
p.m.

BAUM LUMBER

GREAT CATCH - Nineyear-old angler'Adam McDa·
niel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Luke
McDaniel, Long Bottom, recently landed Ibis five pound,
2l·lnch long catfish. The "cat
catch" was at Maplewood
Lake near Racine. Adam is a
student at Riverview Elementary at Reedsville.

W1h11111 ••· 8aflalo-Put111111

~t?\

or Used Yehkle To!layl
446-3995
State Rt. 7

214 EAST MAIN

Auto

•
•

Starting o,tober 18th
TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELDING
992·3768
I, .

I.

992-3011
605 Gen. Hartinger Parkway

Middleport, Ohio

S•• Fr11elm va. L.A. R11111
'\

Syracuse. Ohio 45779
Phone 614·992· 6333

BANKaONE.
Eighteen Tllousand People Who C.7ro.
'

BANK ONE. ATHENS, OHIO, NA I ONE PART of THl CAAINQ TEAM

. , MEMBER FDIC

BANK ONE
P~T

R1tgers ••· Bott.. Coll•t•

HILL FORD .

NAME •••••.•• ·.••.••••••••
ADDRESS •••.•• ' ' ••

PHONE •.

'

Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone 614 -949· 2210

Clnelaalll v1. Nelf Englld

CLARK'S JEWELERS

992·9907

'·

•
•

"FINE LINE OF LATE MODEL
USED CARS AND TRUCKS"

RACINE MOTORS
HOME NATIONAL BANK

Self Serve Gas • Ohio Lootery Tickets
VCR Rentals • Milk • Bread
Hunting Licenses

.'

Member Federal Reserve

MEIGS
AUTO SALES, INC.

CROW'S RESTAURANT

Pomeroy

\

We HaYt Helped 01hrn To Grow

Nelf Orle111 fl. SuHie

UTILE DAN'S EXXON

Footh.all '88
Catch -All The
EweiteMeatlll

For Registration Call

•

COOPER CHRY .-PLY .·DODGE

Galllpalls, Ohio
446-2691

OWNER: DAN SIDWEU

Bt&lt;!aUIM'

VALLEY LUMBER
VARIETY STORE

342 Second lvt.

East Main St.

FOOD SHOP
JIM COBB

ELBERFELD$
DAIRY QUEEN

LlnLE DAN'S
~
~
EXXON
AND FOOD STORE

POMEROY
992-6687

ARC, AGnYLENEA MIG WELDING

.'

TUPPERS PLAINS
985-3315
667-3161

Member FDIC

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
K&amp;C JEWELERS

Strause v.. Pe111. Sl.

BervJcee

FARMERS BANK

RAWUNGS-COATS-BLOWER
PEOPLES BANK

c6tofo~

·113 Court St.
Potntroy, Ohio
992·2054

..... -

Wr!\•fl Grown

EMPIRE FURNITURE

•

WELDING CLASSES

'

Bank

POMEROY
992-2136
992-2137

EWING FUNERAL HOME

.COOPER

RNER~

•~o~rance

•

'

~armers

MEIGS AUTO SALES

_______....

.......

.

If you qualify for our preferred rate Medalist Auto Policy.
you won't be charged for
your first accident. There's
no waiting period for this impo'lant.exemption Call us
today.

OOAN

Houaton n. PIHaiJargh

VAUGHAN'S

PH. 992-5432 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
228 W. Main St.

Bat~l'hidl

Hnt'ltey

308 East Main, Pomeroy, 'Ohio
992-6614

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

CROW'S
FAMILY REST AURA NT

~- ~olln5i.mc4rJ1PII9111taiOIIrl..l*fDI'Cit!lrl!tiiMI

PAIIQN&amp;.WT\. Lft . . COol Dill to11Wt. Slllt DIN. ~~~~~ ...,
~ 1•-.oltJ!fi S"'- ~Ill ~ t!ld it ""hOtoltd ibong 1111 CUIT«lt )'UI
10 bt!IIICI !'\lhit 111•1 otJiopVOpll.. bllll!IIIICI fl! UIIIO 011111111 m•IUI plan
hllii'IIIICittl ~11011 ~ llvo'n lly Ill ..,ulimll_., 111 n... Min 11 folkroq

Calendar

Waahl~on at Plh!lburwh. 7: 3~ p.m.

•

CHEVROLET-OLDS-CADILLAC

ADVERTISER

Middleport, Ohio Gallipolis, Ohio
~lnton Co. ~·· Ttl111•l•

welterwellftl8

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Jim Cobb

Bel~re

992-'6421
399 S. Third

Boldftl
A.llandc City, N.•l . - JoM \\'I'M.ii'J
M1wkln!i VIi, Saoul Mamby, 10 , iualor
welterwel«hi~;; Joey Fu~ll ,...._ Chilrlle
"Whtte Udttnlnl( ' Brown, 101 Julior

Dallas n. Chleago

The Community Owned Bank

giOtril I.SJ21

5CI!t 01 two. Dtfllnmt~t CIIIMitii'ICf, Cfn,llc.. or Corloill--tllt wn·

Ste Us For That New

1\' at lo rMI Le llfUt'
Charnplo!Mip Series
New \'oril al Los An pleA, M: '!'! p.m .

.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769

Pomeroy, Ohio
GROCERIES : GAS • SNACKS
BEER AND WIN.ECARRYOUT

oll"'"''rc' on

IQ

Middleport, Ohio

120 East Main

s.

•
•

.

This contest will continue for ten weeks from the date .of first insertion.
11 moiled, blanks must be postmarked not later than Friday.
Clip the coupon below ....... fill it out and send to....

992-5552

011 lltctfl'ett" 31 ltll' ACI!'IIIW IIHII .. ~IJ43MDf2ll)'l, (Jdilt,
129-.544.201110; Sir!W. SIISI,!Ol115~ lf'COI'Y.IUIOJetiiUO. rN
WM'NESS WH£REOF, I liMo llnur*l ~"'I' ,_,lid~"" tH1
10 Mt!f1Jid 11 Calumbul, Onlo. I~ dly .-.! t!Mt. Glorgt F.,_, Sl.lji.(lj I ~~Sur·
anctoiOhio ('512)
·
Sl• ol 01!10. O.PIMIIII,. oiii!WIIIa, CI!Tikllt oj Ccrrliiii"--Thl l!f1·
dn9*1. S~o;~MIIIIIr'dtrtl 01 ~n~~tMCI or 1111
or CIHo, ~ r:l!lliiiiiiM
PIIO!IIJ IIVT\IlL Llfl . . CO Ill Hlrlorll. Still Dl COiW'rltliM IllS COlli•
plot(l., 111!1 1. . o1 ""'Stall ~ l!l l llld l!;lirllwllld 611111g 11'11 curfill! ~r 111 111~ in l~illllllll-t IWQII!IIil 11'111the
IIIIAI.III,.,Itlhnii'ICIIIcordon•-b'l'-a&gt;WIIIII..._.tlfiMbtlon
• fObolon ~ 31. •Ml' M'lliCili ..... $$,2110J2U9tOO: WbilttiK,
Wil2.89 11000. Siwph•."W"I,W.III 00, i!'COnll. • •,(tU24.QlllllliH WI"
1-(SS WHEREOF. r h"" ~..,1110 ~- m1 ....,. and ~Nd my .,IIJ
l:l til t!fi-.:1 II Colurnb"'- (),lo, 111it d1y l!ld Gilt. ilforvl Fllbl, Su~ ol 1...,1.

o...., n. All1nta

think will win opPoaite the name of the advertiser.
Decision of the judge• w~l be final ond entries become the property of The Dolly Sentinel .

FOOD
AND
CAR WASH·

C.,.._ S3m0,01Xr0G, IN WIT1ESS WtEAEOF. 1111¥&lt;1
"""IIIII ~ribtcl '"' "''" tnd CIUMd JIY Mllllltt alb-Ill! Ill ~mbul .
Onio. 1114 GIV lnd OMI 1 Giorgi Flot, 5~111 . ol; lnii/IIIICI Ql Ohoa. ]H231
~ rJOhll. ~ ol;11$11rWt, CtriiNcMI ol ~ ~~ ­

Pomeroy, Ohio

Games for this week Will be found in the advertisements on this page . List the name of the teBm you

'

11l3flt~OO .

108 W. Main St.

All entrants must use the entry blank below.

Home

,...,.,

of"''"'"

1111.

· be drawn from all correct entriea.

Fun111l

~lilt, ~ ol ~

992-.3307

CONTEST' RULES
The contest ill open t'o anyone except employaff The DBily Sentinel and their immediate familia~ .
An award of •20. 00 wiH be given to the per1on p
ng the most winnera. In case of a tie one winner will

Cost1
Blow11

on 0tcw11ot1 31. 1te1· ~inlet u~t~t S3.4n.31lr.!3.orJ ; Lilbilitih,
l:!.1'15.011GIIlll00. &amp;wPIUI. Rll1,C1113,i41.00. 11C01'11.. U.mN1CIO: E~

.

TO BUY - ANYONE MAY ENTER!
$20.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNER

~ . ~rJIII'alltiU~IIIS.to!Oiroo.~ctfllt.llllll
tMD~CA~~ .,.IW.un.a~ee•co rAN_..., 51111 o1 Tsnnmet.

llltcvrM! ..... ·~ Ollh•lllll• illlppl/)fll'llt ~ gl-·~
llllirllfiCIII ~-ion IIIIIW~ 1'i iiiiM'JII Mtrltrltl ~ bMtl u !olloon

"C?MPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS"

NOTH~NG

••· Jeekm

Marc Munlord on ln)llrt' d reserw
HorkM•
Minrl.' sow - !o\enr Cenrf'r Kellin Ka·
mlns:kl to Saskatoon of Th e&gt; W~&gt;.~U'rn
Hock~ Lf'l!gtJl'; t'allrd up C(•ntt'r Davr
Gallnt·r fr om Kalamazoo of thl' lnt1•rna ·
tio na ! Hoc kPr Leagul'.

MONDAY NITE MIXED
High Series Team - Pat Hill
Ford-1724; Big Bend C.B. Club-1719;
Rod's Wrecker Servlce-1603.
High Series Men- Ron Smllh-518; Rod
Wallcer-472; Don Hysell-4.35.
High Series Wome n - Melody Rams·
bury- 480; Betty McKtnley-436; Peggy

-

Jac:bon Amut
Point PloiSiWil W. YJ.

M110n, W. l'o
773-5514

EMPIRE FURNITURE
OF POMEROY .

FOOTBALL CONTEST
$200 IN CASH PRIZES

"The Better Bank"

Calvin Thomas &lt;~nd placed ll neback~&gt;r

Cross Lanes beats OVCS

'

season."

19 8·8

BANK

!fool: or rrn $1111 ~ •~ ~ tnd it ~ d\&gt;'1119 1M cunni .,., 10
tllnl&amp;1 in !M . . . ill~fl-~olltowr..-a lllliM!UI(:OIIdililln
II tnc!Wrltri~JIIIIIUII Mt1N111 tl ' - i!IIIIU!ob1 011 ~ :11. IM7"
,tcjii'WMil ..... &amp;5,J12,217.27l00: UIIHIH, $5MU31,4-t5.1)), Surpl~.

Ohio Unlveultt ~•· MiaMI (Ohio)

Ohio St. ••· Pur•••

Teeh v1. South C1ttlln1

~~---+~~~~~~--~~----------~------~----~

will receive a $32,000 non-athletic
scholarship from the Gerrits
Foundation and UPI.
Stll 01 OhiO. De~J~ntntm ~L il!turroet, CtrdiRte ot Compt. . . .TN •..:.
dlrlogMt, Supfriflllndt!'ll aiiMIIInt't 01 ti'Q !lllltfll Cflla, lltrwr erotilft lhM
.w.rrm! Ill 1t1 CO oj ~1d. 51th C11 tlf~ 1111 Clliii!IOI!l """' the

992-2196

POMEROY, OHIO

•n••l•

CRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
DODGE

Local bowling

.

team's piacement In the ratings.
"As far as the ranking Is
concerned, 1 still think it's too
early to put a lotofstockintolt,"
he said. "!really don't want to be
that concerned about the rank·
tngs until much later in the

~~~

IRnwr - Ar!lvatcd runnin~ ba&lt;"k

I I!
I I
I 0
1 I
3
2

J2

Miami remains No. I in poll

Collt&gt;gt'
Notft' Dam f!- Named .lohn Heisler
· e por1 11 lnfonnallon •tt.:oLtor.Football

0

Ad Mfflll

S

14
1

~Mehall

0

't

It

3
2

Transactions

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wah" Conference
Patrlck.DI\'IflklD
Team
W L T · Pl!i. OF GA

t

4

I

1\la.hamll,
Duke, Florllla. H11wat1, Houfllon, Penn
Sl.te.

Atlaata • O!n~r. 4 p.m.
New Orlr.llllll at Se-aU.Ie, 4 p.m .
.
Morlla,_v, &lt;kt . l1
Butlalo at N.Y. Jets, 8 p.m.

N~ Jer ..)'
Nl' IIIIJindfJ'II
NY R .. ~n

0

I

Ochen~

· Phoenb: at WuNn~tOil, I p.m.
san Dler;o Ill Miami, 1 p.m.
Tampa &amp;y at lndl.,..pollll,l p.m .
San FranL-bco at LA Rams.,4 p.m .

~

0

I

z-unranlrd

Cladn-'lat New Encla&amp;nd, I p.m .
Dallali at Chlcacu. I p.m.
Green lay al Mlnnesolll , I p.m.
Huulllonat PUIJibuJ'Ih, I p.m.
1A RaiderttiJ.&amp;aaMiaCity,l p. m .
PhUadelpbla at Ch!weland, I p.m .

2

2

20. ( lle)SynlL'\I!Il' (-t-1)
20. (lit') Wasil . St. (f. I)

S.IMJQ, Od. Ul
Dei rok at N. V. Gi ant.11. I p.m .

nu.dephla

EdmoMon

17. Ml &lt;l hllan 4!1-2)
lll. ladllU\8 (of+/)
U . Louisiana Stll.te ti-l)

Green Bay 45, NN En lfand 3
Clncla•IM. N~ York Jd1l8
. Seattle li. (l~ellldd It
Mlnne•oU 14, Tam~&amp;,)' 13
W**lftllanSi, Dalla•l1
PhOI'nix 31 , Pltu.bllrch u
New Orteaa11 U, San Dl e10 17
Miami U, LA Ral4er114
Denwr 16, san . Fraanci!K'V 13 (ot)
Mallllay's Ret;~l
PlllladelpWa 2-4, NY Glanh 13

U

2t

Calpl')'
Vancouwr
" 'lnnlpel

NI\TION..U. FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Bullalo
NY Jeh
Miami

Smylie Dlvleloa
.-\llpiH
S 0 6
I

lions: ieg press machine; two
dead lift areas; two bench
presses; one Incline bench; one
neck machine; one multiple
station machine; one knee
extension-leg curl bench; three
squad racks; one dumbbell rack
with 10 sets for dumbbells
ranging from five to 50 pounds;
one barbell rack with a set of
barbells ranging from 35 to 65
pounds; one pee deck; one
universal set·up board; three
Olympic barbell · sets of 310
pounds each; one back and
stomach bench; one ·preacher
curl bench; sixty square feet of
mirror on the wall. and one curl
bar.
The fitness center wlll be put
Into use after school by students
who have a current physical card
on file. As time permits and
supervision can be worked •out,
the facility is expected to become
one of the most used rooms in the
building.
For those who will be working
out,.. an Anticatabollc Training
Program has been writ ten by
Kevin Sheppard. head wres !ling
· coach, and can be adopted to the
desired results that the lifter
wishes to accomplish.
Lifters w111 be weighed, measured, and placed on a workout
with all results being recorded
daily as the lifter develops
strength and endurance. Each
lifter w111 have a file folder
containing information and workout charts that are tailored to
their lndivtduai needs and goals.
· The center is the result of many
hours of work and cooperation
among the coaching staff. athletic director, administration
and board of education.

Middleport, .Ohio

1 S. 3rd

AT THE END OF THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

992-2556

OH.
992-3322

PAT HILL FORD

"WHklg $pt~ltll"

~WIIIIIIIorBQ
Eaatern n. North 8allle

JIMMY DlEM

NORTH SECOND
AVENUE

SOFT DRINKS • FRIES • SANittiCHES

LEG- Working on leg curls Is Jerry Jacks.

•

985-3308

Kutuekr v1. L.S.U.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

C~ESTER,

CHESTER; OHtO

LOCAnON
949-2551
Racine, Ohio

Clt111on ••· Duke

·BAUM LUMBER

'

RIDENOUR SOPPY

RACINE
MOTORS

111 East Second
Pomeroy, OH•.
992-2342

Marauders have new fitness center

· Mlehlga n v1: lolfa

VALLEY LUMBER

INSURANCE

CURL- Jerry Jacks works out on th~ preacher curl bench.

Qiddliport, Ohio

992-3481

Alah•• u. t .......,

.DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

•

CRAFT SUPPLIES • BULK CANOY • TOYS
MUCH MORE

'

Melga ~·· We•erlt

'
'

JOHNSONS ·
VARIETY STORE

OH.

992-3471

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

Sentinel-

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"Oood Luck"
SUPPORT THESE
FINE AREA
BUSINESSES!

'

•'

''

�•

By T.h e Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
Page-6

_Eight_and Forty Salon meeting conducted
Plans tor at tending the pouvlor
on Oct. 21-22 were made when the
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, met Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Lula
Hampton.
A bulletin regarding the pouv·
lor was read from Patricia
Oldaker, departemental cha·
peau. A school of Instruction will
be held at 10·15 on Oct. 22 with a
luncheon to follow and a banquet

that night. Representing the
local salon will be Iva Powell,
Catherine Welsh, Pearl Knapp,
Julia Hysell and Mary Martin. A
gift from the salon for the new
chapeau will be taken.
It was noted that more date
books are being ordered, and that
the salon members will have
pecans !rom this !all's crop for
sale soon.
Mrs. Knapp reported on the

nurses's scholarship program of Loutsvlle. Ky. in September.
the Eight and Forty noting that Dorothy Brady of Ohio was
any nurse Interested In specializ- installed Ia aumonier nationale.
Ing In the treatment of tubercu tar VInton and Wyandotte County
or asthmatic chlldren .ls eligible reported being goal salons .
It was noted tlial dues are now
to apply.
The annual holiday dinner payable and may be sent to Mrs.
party was set for Dec. l ,at 1 p.m Richards. Mrs Hampton and
'Mrs. Welsh served refresh·
at Dales
It was noted that 15 delegates ments. Next meeting will be
and partners from Ohio attended hosted by Veda Davis and
the national Ia marche held in Loretta Tiemeyer, Nov 3

Alfred community happenings _ _ _-:--_
The Alfred Church will have a
wiener roast Saturday. 6:30p.m.
at the church.
The death of Gertrude Robin·
son's brother, James Stalnaker,
bas been noted In the community
James KeJ,ly was returned
home from the hospital Thursday
and Is recuperating
satisfactorily.

Belle Findling Is convalesing
at home.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henderson returned recently from a
6,500 mile trip through the West.
They accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Wood of Zanesville Points of
interest they visited Included
Corn Palace at Mitchell, S. D. ;

SAR meeting conducted
BUNKY SUE HUDDLESTON

BOBBY LEE BOGGESS

Huddleston- Boggess
Dale Tribble of Teaysvllley,
W.Va. and Mrs. Jan Jeffers,
Racine. are announcing the engagement and forthcommg wedding of their daughter, Bunky
Sue Huddleston, to Bobby Lee
Boggess, son of Mr. and Mrs

Willard Boggess of Goldtown,
W.Va
The open church wedding will
take place on Saturday, Oct. 15,
at 6. 30 p m at the Fisher
Memonal Church, Goldtown,

wva.

Young birthday is observed
Billy Young celebrated his
ninth birthday recently with an
overnight party In a cabin at
Royal Oak Resort.
Guests came to the Young
home on Spring Ave. early
evening where gifts were opened
and then ·went o'n to the Chester
Skate-A-Way rink for a skatmg
party. They then went to the
cabin at Royal Oak for a
Callflornia Raisin themed party
and a pizza birthday cake Also
served were Ice cream and soft
drinks. The next mornlng'donuts
and orange juice were served fo r
breakfast after which the group
enjoyed boat races w1th pnzes
going to the winners There wa &lt;a

Tel~service

w1ener roast with ch1ps and pop,
and the remainder of the day was
spent sw1mmlng In the Royal
Oak heated mslde pool.
The guest list Included Jason
and Jenmfer Lawrence. Pete and
Sammi Sisson. Shawn Harns,
Evan Struble, Mlck Barr, Ronnie
Casto, Sean O' Brian, VIncent
Broderick, Matthew Dill. Billy's
parents. Ramora and Bill Young.
and h1s s1ster. Rayan.
Sending gifts were Mryus and
Norma Parker, Mrs. Elmora
Boice, Carolyn Richardson. Kettering, Linda and Bill t.Jimbert,
and Evelyn and Hobe Young,
Sidney.

offered by SocSec

. More people are discovering
the convenience of Social Secun·
ty's TELESERVICE - short for
telephone service, Ed Peterson,
Social Security Branch Manager
In Athens, said recently
Everything from reporting a
change of address to applying for
benefits can be taken care of by
callmg the nearest Social Security office. TELESERVICE Wl,ll
save a trip to the Social Security
office, and will also save time
that might have been spent in an
office waiting to be Interviewed.
In addition, the caller Is more
likely to have access to any
nee!led information at home.
People who need to apply for
retirement, survivors, or dlsabll·
tty ben~flts especially like the
convenience of the telephone.
"People applying for disability,
particularly those who don' tieel
well or have difficulty getting

around, enjoy filing their claim
from the comfor of their homes,"
Peterson said
People should call Social Security after the middle of the
month . That's the best time since
the first part of the month Is
usually a very bu'j,Y time, Peter·
son added. Of course, those who
have urgent business should call
at any time. People can expedite
their business by having their
Social Security number readily
available when they call.
The telephone number of the
Athens Social Security office Is
992-6622 . Office hours are 8·45
a .m. to 4· 30 p.m. Monday
through Friday .
People who want to be better
Informed about Soclat' Security
can get th eir free copy of the
pamphlet " Social Security How It Work For You" by calling
toll-free 1·(300-937-2000

Safety Patrol p~ovides service
·'Members of the School Safety
Patrol have been providing public service for mpre than (]()
years," noted Clarence Pack,
Safety Director for The Automobile Club of Southeastern Ohio
"They do their job quietly and
efficiently , protecting classmates from potential traffic
dangers.''

Pack pointed out that when
public attention focuses on traffic safety, the Issues are often
hlgb-proflle or controversial,
such as mandatory safety belt
Jaws or new road construction
"Patrols, however, combine education and dally effort to make
our streets and highways safe r
simply by their presence," he
said. "Members of the Patrol
learn how to handle other students' behaviors In the course of
the dally school journey, how to
deal with a polential emergency, ·
and how their own actions can
help to ensure ever yone' s
safety."
The AAA official also stressed
the motorist's role. "The begin·

ning of the school year Is a time
not only for youngsters to acquire
traffic safety knowledge, but for
drivers to renew their commitment to motoring responslbil·
lty ," said Pack. "That means
obeying the speed limit In all
school zone areas and being
extra careful wherever young
children are crossing streets and
board lng or exiting school
buses."
To increase awareness of the
need for student/ patrol cooperation, AAA is distributing a
national award winner from its
annual Traffic Safety Poster
P rogram. The poster was
created by Shantae Bell when she
was a second grade student at
1-{annaman Elementary School
In Detroll, Michigan.

•

annual Regional Science Olympiad for talented and gifted high
school students He was cochairman of the Appalachian
Black Diamond Festival, president of the Athens County HistorIcal Society and Museum, cofounder of the Athens County
Civil War Round Table.' presl·
dent of the Ohio University
Emeriti Assn., and In addition Is
a six gallon donor to the Red
Cross blood program, director of
Elderhostel program at Ohio
University, and an activist In
Athens area preservation.
Skinner Is a teacher of over 40
year currently at Ohio University In history He Is now helping
to form the Gov. William Dennison Camp No. 125 of the Sons of
Union Veterans.
Keith Ashley. president of
Ewings Chapter presented the
medal and certificate to Skinner
after which Skinner discussed his
community work with the
chapter.

Community calendar
TUESDAY
.
CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will meet Tuesday.
7:30p.m., at the town hall.
REEDSVILLE
Orange
Township Trustees "111 meet In
special session Tuesday, 7:30
p.m, . to discuss the dust control
levy and other matters. The
meeting will 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' Assoclalion
will meet Tuesday, 8 a.m .• at
Bank One.
RACINE - Regular meeting
of Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will
be held Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Five
members will receive 50 year
pins.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association will
meet at 7: 30 Tuesday night at
Trinity Church.
EASTERN - The Eastern
Band Boosters will met at
Eastern High School bank room,
at 7: 30 p.m., Tuesday .
HARRISONVILLE -The Harrlosnvllle Senior Citizens Club
will stage a free blood pressure
clinic from 10 a.m. to noon
Tuesday at the town hall In
Harrisonville. The club will hold
a business meeting all p.m.
WEQNESDAY
POMEROY - Open board
meeting of the Meigs Unit,

American Cancer Society, at 8
p.m. Wednesday, Trinity Church
meeting room In Pomeroy .
HARRISONVILLE - Missionary .services will be held at the
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel,
Oct. 12 at 7:30p.m. with Lee and
Sharon Rickenbach from Guatemalla ~peaking. The Rev. David
Ferrell, pastor, Invites the
public
THURSDAY
CHESTESR - Shade Rlyer
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will observe
the annual past m11sters' night
Thursday . There will be a soup
supper at 7 followed by the lodge
meeting at B p.m. _All Master
Masons and especially past masters are Invited. Past masters of
the Shade River Lodge who plan
to take part in the observance
should contact Rodney
Chevalier.
CHESTER -Chester Elementary school will have an open
house and PTO meeting Thursday. The open house will be held
from !r. 30 to 7 p.m . followed by
the PTO meeting. Parents are
Invited to come meet their
children's teachers.
'
POMEROY - Rock
Springs
Grange will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Fifty and 55 year
members will be honored

CRJSTEN L. DE.l'AGER

GOOD CITIZENSHIP MEDAL - Here Keith Ashley, president
of Ewings Chapter, Sons of the American Revolution, right,
presents Ray Skinner, Jr. of Athens with the silver good citizenship
medal In recognition of outstanding community contributions.

Mrs. Charles Gaskill hosted a
meeting of the Middleport 'Liter·
ary Club with Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, president, welcoming
members and a guest, Mrs.
O'Quln Kelly.
The club collect was given In
unison and Mrs. GeQrge Hackett,
Jr., program chairman, dlstrlb
uted the new program books.
Mrs. Hackett Introduced Mrs.
Carpenter who reviewed the
book, "Cold Sassy Tree" by Ohve
Ann Burns. She described the
novel as being filled with emotion, humor and tenderness as
the story of an old man growing
young again and a young boy
growing up unfolds, and the
shock to the sleepy little town
w)len the young boy's grandfather marries a young lady.
Candy and snacks were served
by the hostess

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hysell . the
former Tammy Gilkey, now
reside at 251 Clemen tis St.,
Pensacola, Fla .. 32503. Monday
they observed their hrst wedding
anniversary.

"LEARN TO DANCE!"
New Ballroom Classes
October - All Men Free!
TUESDAY-7:00p.m.
Pt. Pleasant Youth Center
THURSDAY-7:00 p.m.
Middleport American Legion

----

CLOGGING CLASSES
MONDAY 5:00 f..m. CHILDREN
Pt. Ploasant

outh C~t~ter

THURSDAY, 11:00 p.m. ADULTS
Middloporl American legion
Information or Erwollmenl Cal:
Gerald fr•man
614·367 ·0662
Bolo Gilmore
614-992-6128
Joan laord
304-67S-3306
Mikki Casto
304-67S-3888
f\JN! EASY! GREAT EXERCISE!
MEET NEW PEOPLE!

•

EDDIE ALBERT FOR BELTON£

"Be/tone had the
answer to
my hearing
problem...jind out
if they can
help you too!''

DR. JAMES P. CONDE

DR. CONDE WISHES TO EXPRESS HIS APPRECIATION TO
HIS PATIENTS AND TO ALL THE CITIZENS OF MEIGS
COUNTY FOR THE SUPPORT GIVEN HIM WHILE PRACTICING AND PERFORMING THE DUTIES OF MEIGS COUNTY
CORONER.
·.

Personal note

Literary Club
meeting held

FRIDAY
POMEROY -c- Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution. will
meet Friday at the home of Mrs.
Michael Elberfeld, Pomeroy
Pike. Frank Porter Ill will speak
on the American Indian.

Is Announcing That Due To Entering
A Reiidency Program, He Is Closing
His Medical Practice at 15 5 North
Second Ave. in Middleport, Ohio
Effective October 14, 1988.

DeJager birth
Mr and Mrs. Craig DeJager,
Carrollton, Ga . announce th '
birth of their first c hild , Crts· r~
Leigh, born Aprll21. She weigh&lt;d
10 pounds. six ounces and v• 21·
Inches lopg;. Mrs. DeJager '&lt; the
former Tracy McGraw,
me.

Ewmg Chapter of the Sons of
the American Revolution recently presented a sliver good
citizenship medal to Ray
Skinner, Jr., Athens. The medal
Is presented lo an Individual
showing outstanding contributions to the community.
Skinner's accomplishments In·
elude the directing of the first
Upward Bo~nd Program at Ohio
University for needy collegebound students. the offering of
workshops In environmental edu cation with testimony to the
legislature on strip mining
abuses. He served as chairman
of the Youth Services Committee
for !heAthens Kiwanis Club, was
chairman of the first two Athens
Marching Band festivals to raise
money for new band uniforms.
and lectured In local schools on
Athens County history and scientific research.
• He also directed the Governor's Summer Scholars Program
at Ohio University and the

Nina and Gertrude Robmson
Black Hills, Badland of South
Dakota, Buffalo Bill Museum at and Sara Caldwell enjoyed a tour ·
Cody, Wyoming, Morman Taber· of the Ozarks last week They
nacle at Salt Lake City, Utah, attended the Passion Play at
Golden Gate Bridge, Fisher- Eureka Sprmgs, Arkansas, and
man's Wharf, and A!Qartaz at Pine Mountain Jamboree. They
San Franclso, Calif., Yosemite toured St. Louis Umon Stallon
Valley, Bakersfield, Calif; and Gateway Arch In St. Luis,
Grand Canyon, Petrified Forest, M1ssourt. On the return trip they
London Bridge, and Painted stayed at the plush Gal t Hotel,
Desert In Arizona. They visited Louisville, Ky
John and Helen Gilmore In
Sunday visitors at the PooleOklahoma where they attended 'Parker home were Mrs Roger
church and went fishing In Lake . Leifheit and Dorothy . Rock
of the Cherokees
Springs.

"

Bellone Is offering a FREE ELECfRONIC HEARING TEST.
IELTONE'S NEW LOCATION NOW OPEN
Dl. JOHN H. IIDGEWAY'S OFFICE
224 EAS1 MAIN, POIIEIOY, OHIO
THURSDAY r OCTOIII 13
9:00-12:00 (NOONI
So take Eddie Albert's advice- v1sit the Beltonc Hcanng A1d
Speciahst today for a FREE HEARING TEST Corne m with
coupon for test.
Call Thll Free Number I-800-634--S26S For 1mmed1a1c appo uurnem
COUPON

UMWA AND UAW PROVIDER

October 11 , , 988
Notice

Pomeroy · Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

Not tee of Election On
Tax Levy In
Excess of the
Ten Mtlllimitatton
NOTICE 11 hereby given
that in pursuance of a Re solution of the V1ll~e CounCil of the V1llag-. of Middleport, Ohio, passed on the
8th day of August, 1988,
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of ""'d Mlddl..,.,. Village 81 a GENERAL
ELECTION \o be hold on tho
Village of Middleport, Ohio,
at the regular places of vOting therein, on Tuesday, the
8th c;fayofNovember, 1988,
the questiOn of levy1ng a tax,
m excess of the ten mill limitation , for the benafit of
· Middleport Village for the
purpose of Prov1dmg and
Mamtamtng f1re apparatus,
appliances.
buildmgs, or
s1tes therefor, or sources of
water supply and mater~als
therefor, or the attablish·
ment and mamtenance of
hnes of fire alarm telegraph,
or the payment of permanent, part-time, or volunteer
firemen or f1re fighting com panies to operate the same,
including the payment of firemen empla.,..,r' s contrtbu·
tion requtred under section
742 .34 of the revised code,
or to purchase ambulanca
equipment, or to prov1de
ambulance or emergency
med1cal services operated
by a fire department or ftra
ftghting company
Said tax being . a renewal
of an extstmg 1.0 mill levy to
run for f1ve (5} years at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuat1on,
wh1ch amounts to ten cents
($0. 10} for each one hun~red dollars of valuation. for
f1ve (5} years.
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6 30 o'clock
A.M. and rema1n open unttl
7 :30 o'~Jock P.M .
By order of the
Board of Elections,
of Meigs County, Oh1o
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman

M F-rymyer. Otrector
Sept. 1 , 1988
(10)11, 18. 26. 111) 1, 4tc

Public Notice

hundred dollars of value·

f1ght1ng company
Satd ·tax. being. an adl·
~iOr\11 tax of 1 0 mtlls to run
for frve(6) years at a rate not
exceeding 1 0 {l'lills for each
one dollar of velu1t1on,
whtch amounts to ten cents
J$0 .1 01 for oach
one
hundred dollars of valuation,
fot five(6) yean
Tha Polls for saad ElectiOn
w•ll be open at 6:30 o 'clock
A M and remain open until
7 .30 o'clock PM
By order of the
Soard ot Elections,
of Meigs County. Ohto
Evalyn Clark. Chairman
Jane M . Frymyer, Director
Dated Sept 1. 1988
(10) 11. 18. 26, (111 1 . 4tc

tion, for frve t5) yeara.
Th.!Jolla for .aid Election
~ill pe open at 6 :30 o 'clock
A""M . and remam open until
7 .30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the

Public; Not ice
Notice of Election On
Ta.~e Levy In
Excess of the
Tan Mtll Ltmitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursUance of a Re &amp;olution of the Board of
Township Trustees of the
Township of ' Sc1pio, Meigs
County. 0 h1o. pas 18d on the
5th day of August. 1988.
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of Hid
Scipio Township at a GE ·
NERAL ELECTION tg bo
held in the Township of Sci ·
p1o, Ohio, at the regular
places -of voting therem. on
Tuesqay, the etght day of
November. 1.988, the ques·
tion of levymg, in exceas of
the ten mill limitation. for
the benefit of Scip1o TownJhtp for the purpose of providing and maintaining fire
apparatus. appliance~, buildIngs, or sites thwefor, or
soun::• of water supply and
mater&amp;als therefor, or the establishmant and mainten·
ance of hnes of ftre alarm
telegraph, or the payment of
penn anent. part- time, or volunteer firem~~m or fire fighting companies to operate the
same. including the payment
of f1reman emptoyer' s con tribution raquired under sec·
tion 742.34 of the rev1md
code. or to purchase ambu·
lance equipment, or to provide ambulance or emer·
gency
med1cal servk:es
operated by a fire depart·
ment or
ftre
f1ght1ng
company.
Satd tea bemg. a renewal
of an ext111ng 1 5 mills~ to
run for five (6) years at a rate
not exceeding 1 6 mtlls for
each one dollar of valuation,
wh1ch amounts to fifteen
cents ($0 15) for each one

Public Notice

Board of Elections.
of Meigs County. Oh•o
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer. D~rector
Dated Sept. 1. 1988
(10) 11 . 18. 25. (11! 1 . 4tc

Public Notice
Notice of Elect1on On
Tax Lavy In
Excess of the
Ten Mill L1m1tat10n
NOTICE IS hereby given
that in purauance of a Re·
solution of the Board of

;~~==~1~~ ofTrU'Steas
the
Chester,ofOh1o.
9th day of Au -

I

gust,
there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of
said Chetter
Towrwhip 81 a Genal Election
to bo hold In the Towrwhip of
Ch811ter of Meigs County,
Ohio. at the regular places of
vot1ng lharam, on Tuesda\f,
the 8th day of November.
198B, the quastion of levying a tax, In excess of the ten
millllm;tation, for the bene·
f1t of Cheater Township for
the purpose of Providing and
Maintainmg fire apparatus,
appliances,
buildings, or
aitll therefor. or sources of
water supply and matarials
therefor, or the estabhsh ·
mant and maintenance of
line~ of fira alarm telegraph,
or the payment of permanent, part·ttme. or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting com·
pani81 to operate the uma.
mcludmg the payment of fi·
reman employer's contribution requiTed under section
742.34 of tho revlud code,
or to purchasa ambulance
equipment. or to provide
ambulance or emergency
med1cal serv1CH operated
by a ftre departm11mt or fire

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO. INC
APPLICATION TO ESTABLISH A UNIFORM RATE
FOR NATURAL GAS SEVICE WITHIN THE
SOUTHEASTERN REGION OF ITS SERVICE AREA
ENCOMPASSING THE COUNTIES OF
ATHENS. GALLIA, HOCKING. JACKSON.
LAWRENCE. MEIGS. MORGAN. PERRY. ROSS. •
SCIOTO. VINTON AND WASHINGTON
PUCO Case NO. 88-720-GA-AIR
NOTICE
Not1ce 1s hereby giVen that Columbia Gas of Ohio, lnc.(Columbia), 200 C•v•c Canter Drive, P 0 Box 117, Columbus. Ohio 43215, has filed an ApplicatiOn with the
Public Utillttes Comm1s110n of Oh10 (CommisSIOn of PUCO) in which it requests that
the Commiuion establish a uniform rate to be charged and collected for all gastervice
wrthm the Southeaaterr't Regton. except for saN ice wheretht existing rates have bean
established by cenain municipal ordinance contracts or by spectal rate contracts The
Southeastern Region w1ll be composed of the counties of Athans. Gellia. Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Morgttn , Parry, Ross, Sctoto, Vinton and Washington,
Oh10
The existing rates in thpe areas are unjust. unfair and are insufficient to Vllld rea·
sonable compansatton for servtee rendered by Columbia The rates presently bemg
collec::ted from approximately 62,000 cu$!omars that will be affected by this Applica·
tion are those prascrtbed in 47 different PUCO Rate Schedules. pursuant to variout
orders11sued by the Commi11lon, various municipal ordinance contrtcts that have ax ptrud or will ex.pira by September 30. 19B8, and existing municipal or~inance contracts will not expire by September 30, 198B. but that are currently be1ng bill ad the
Southeastern Reg1on rata pursuant to the Joint Stipulation and Recommendation
filed in Case No. 87-681-GA-CSS
Cofumb1a further requnts that the Commilslon fix and determine uniform. JUst
and reasonable rates to be charged and collected by Columbia fortheservk:erenderad
to the general service' customers 1n the Southeastern Region and substitute such rates
for those rates currently being charged
The munictpalitles affected by this Application are ·
Rio Grande
Adelphi
Chillicothe
Ironton
Middleport
Roseville
Alba"l
Coal Grove
Jacksonville
Murray C~
Shawnee
AmesVIlle
Coalton
Junction City
Neltonvilla
Somerset
Athens
Coolville
Kingston
New Boston
Beverly
Cornmg
Laurelville
New Strtitsvdle South Point
South Webster
Buchtel
Glouster
Lowell
Oak Hill
Stockport
Chauncey
Hamden
Lower Salem
Port~mouth
Trimble
Chesapeake
Hanging Rock McArthur
Proctorville
Wellston
Cheshire
Hemlock
McConnelsville Rendville
Chesterhill
The Application will also affect the rates of Columbia's customers in the umn'?orporated areas of the counties of Athen1. Gellia, Hock1ng. Jackson, Lawrance. Me1gs.
Morgan. Perry, Ross, SciotO, Vinton and Waahington. Ohio. Bec~u'!. the pro~sed
Southeastern Reg1on rate will ba uniform. 1t essentially represents an . average rate
for the region Thus, some of the ex.isting rates within the naw reg•on may be In·
creased. while other e.~eilting rates within the region may be dacraued:
Columbia preaentty has 8 existing munic1pal ordinance contract&amp; wrthin the pro·
posed Southeastern Rag1on that are excluded from thla filing These contracts are
wtth the muniCipalities of:
Crooksville
Jackson
Malta
Pomeroy
Gallipolis
Logan
New Lexington
Thornville
Because the Commission does not exerc11e JUrisdiction over such ratea. the costs of
providing serv1ce to these mun1cipahties Will not be included 1n the Applicat!on ~o II·
tablish the uniform rates for the Southeaatern Region. However, at the eaptrat~on of
any such ordinance, 1f the municipality prefers to be sublequentty md':'ded tn the
Southeastern Region for ratamaking purposes, 1t ':IllY do so by not renewtng .it• o~•­
nance contract with Columbia. If a new contract 11 not established. the munletpalttv
wtll thereafter be 1ncluded In tha Southeastern Reg1on for ratemaking purposn.
PRESENT RATE
The present rates vary by rate schedule. depending on location within the area affected by the Appllcatton
PROPOSED RATES
.
In this case Columbia •• proposing a rate det'an under wh•ch Columbia Will blllrts
customers a ''Customer Charge'' of $8 03 per meter per month during the months of
November through March, and $9 19 per matar per month dunngtha months of April
through October. regardleu oj.-Qas gonsumed. The r~tes for all gil CO!"tumed In each
billing month are 64.61 1 per' 100 cubic feat for the first 600,000 cub1 c feet delivered
and 52.363C per 100 cubic feat for all dehver~ e~cead~ng600,000cublcfeat. These
rates will generate an increue of $1.766.944 1n operating revenues. However. to the
extent that operattng conditions or ex.pansas change durtng the pending of the case.
Columbia may revise 1ts proposed rates accordingly.
COST OF PURCHASED GAS ESCALATION
.
.
.
Both the present end the propoted rates are aubject to decrease or InCrease'" ac·
cordance with the "Gas Cost Recovery" prov1aions of Columbia'aRulea and Regula·
ttons on fila with the Commission as requtred by Commisa~on Orders dated October
11 , 1978 ond October 18. 1979, In Ceao No. 76 -155-GA-ORD.
OHIO EXCjSE TAX
The proposed rates are also subject to an "Oh1o Excise Ta.~e'' clauae. purauant to
wh•ch all bills rendered shall be adJUttad to include the effects of Ohio Excise Tax on
gross receipts 1mposed by Ohio Rev. Code Section 6727 38. excepting tho.a accounts exempted for auch tax.
BILLING ADJUSTMENTS
"
All b1lls rendered shall be adJusted to tnclude the Interim. Emargancy and Temporary PIP Plan Tanff
Rtdar set forth 1n the Columbia's RuiBI and Regulations
on ftle w1th the

c

schedule is discontinued at the request of any customer.
not be under obligation to resume service to that customer on the 11me
premtsfls until that customer has made payment of an amount equal to the ''Customer
Charge' ' for each month of the tntervening period but not to exceed aeven {7) months
ANY PERSON. FIRM. CORPORATION, OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE PUR·
SUA NT TO SECTION 4909 19 OF THE REVISED CODE, AN OBJECTION TO SUCH
PROPOSED INCREASED RATES BY ALLEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSALS ARE
UNJUST AND DISCRIMINATORY OR UNREASONABL£
Racommendat1ons which differ from the Application may be made by the StaH of
the Commission, by Columbia, or by intervening parties end may be adopted by the
Comm1asion
.
.
Further Information ragttrdmg the Apphcltlon may be obtained from Columbia
Gas of Ohio Inc 200 CIVIC Center Drive. P.O. Box117. Columbuo. Ohio 432160117, 16141,460:4603, or from the Public Utllit18S Commission of Ohio, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus. Oh10 43215
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM PRESENT RATE
Because this Application proposes to 81tablish a umform rata for gas service ·
which 11 currently provided under 47 different rate Khedules, the changn from present ratu w111 vary depending on the retescheduleunder'whlch a,customer ill currently
recetving gas service The rate changes propoHd by this filing renge from (0.8)% to
7 .8% for consumphon of 17 Mcf per month ~ring the winter months and 10 6% to
20 4% for consumption of 5 Mcf par month durtngtha summer montha. These percen·
tage charges are detailed below.

AREA

- WINTER (NOVEMBER -MARCHI- - SUMMER tAPRIL-OCTOBER)BJLL
BILL
AMT
%
BILL
BILL
AMT
%
AT OLD AT NEW INC
INC . AT OLD AT NEW INC
INC
RATE
RATE- '(DEC I !DEC I RATE
RATE !DEC .J(DEC.)

$$.%.
MIDOLEPORT CORP 98 26
MEIGS COUNTY 99 .70
UNICORP
(10)11 , 18. 25. 3tc

98 88
0.62
0.6 - 31 54
98 88 - 0.82 - 0 B 33.03

$$%
3G.50
36.50

4 98
3 47

15.7
10 6

(

\

.

'

Business Services
J&amp;L

HUDNALL

DENNY CONGO

INSULATION

WILL

HAUL
JUST CALLI.

Masl1c &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
• Storm DOOIS &amp;

992-3410
ll MESTO N E
GRAVEL

Wi ndows

T
. OP SOIL

Free Estimates
Call

fiLL DIRT

992~27l~ 1"'

168 North Second
M'ddl
t Oh 45760
I epor '
lo

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

Notice of Elect1on On
Tax Levy In
Ex.cns of the
Ten Mill L1mrtation
NOTICE is hereby g1ven
that in purauanc::e of a Re·
solut1on of the Board of Education of the Me•u• Local
School Otstrtct. Middleport,
Oh1o, pused on the 16th
day of August, 1988, there
wtll be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Meigs Local School D11trtct at a GE NERAL ELECTION to be
held in the Me1gs Local District of Metga County, Ohio,
at the regular places of vottng therein, on Tuesday, the
8th day of November. 1988,
the question of levying atax,
1n e•cess of the ten millllml·
tauon, for the benefit of
Me191 Local School D11tnct
for the purpose of current
expenses.
Said tax baing: an additional tax of 6 0 mills to run
for a continuing period of
time at a rate not exceedtng
5 0 mille for each one dollar
of valuation. whtch amounts
to fifty cents i$0 50) for
each one hundred dollars of
valuauon. for a continuing
period of time
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6 .30 o'clock
AM artd remain open unttl
7 30 o'clock P.M.
Bv order of the
Board of Elact1ons,
of Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chatrillan
Jane M Frymyer, Director
Ootod Sept. 1, 1988
(10) 11. 18.25: !11) 1. 4tc

Public Notice

WANTED

' DEAD OR ALIVE
•D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
•Washers

"Must Be Repo1roble"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Pay Your Phone
and Cable B11ls Hero
• • u si NE!S PHONE
(614) 992-6550
RESIDENCE P"ONE

TRIPLE P
•Dozer
•W1II Do Hauling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Servtce
•Junk Yard Busmess
WANT TO IUY WRE(IEO 1!R
IUNK &lt;ARS OR IRU&lt;KS
~FREE

p.m.

446-3487
9/ 15/88/ dn

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 21. 1988,
m the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No 25993,
L1nd8 K Swan, 36266 Htll·
top Road. Dexter, Ohio
46726, was appotnted Ad·
mimstratnx of the estate of
Clair E. Swan, deceased,
late of 35285 Hilltop Road,
Dexter, Ohio 46726.
Robert E Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K : Neuelroad. Clerk
!9) 27.(10) 4,11, 3tc

Business
Services
Bmm MOV lEI &amp; SLIDES to
VHS TAPE
let us ton vert those ol dMovtes
&amp; Slides onr to easy YHS.

&lt;AU AMY CARTER

or BOB'S UEURONJ(S
446-7390

l l/2/ SI ·tf(

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNIII· GREG I. ROUSH
4
GENERAl
'"•'
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

COMMERCIAL
•CUSTOM KITCHENS llo. BATHS
tEX'ffNSIVE REMODELING

•VINYL SIOING &amp; ROOFING
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING &amp; A.PT PROJECTS
SIN CE 1969

DISICY ST., IYUCUII

992-7611

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashatri Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT "
6:30P.M.
12 Gauge s~::~:~Only
Strictly I

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

AND

MODERN GUN.
SUPPLIES

Muuleloacling

Sup.Uos

Madern Gun Supr.lies

Guns - Ammo - 5 ugs •
22 Ammo
12 4 East of Rutland
Atroll Happy Hollow Rd.

Ph. 614·742·2355

•

• , . • •• •

•• •

¥

Va rd Saht-mlcrOWB\1 8 &amp; c.-t

electric s killet. slaepmg bags.
cloth61 . med1umen dlarge aldl .
blankets. P•llowt·quilts. mil~;

3 2 Ct'lllhcothe Ad .fhurs . Fr1 .
Sat ()Jilts 0"1f1ttmes erlftt.
b aby clothas, d is hes. gas furnace tools

··Pomerov--··--·· ·

................... : ..

8 30, Sandy Heights,
lan e, Fo llow Signs

Lewis

R1ck PeiWion Aucttonaar, 11censad Ohio and Wesl V1rgin1a
Ettate, anttque, f•m.. llquidatton sales, 304-773· 5786

CHEESE PIZZA

•

$1».50

: SUPER

+ 4 FlEE

LAIGE

'

:

DIINIS :

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

! Pi&lt;k

992-2221 or 992-9922
Sorry. no dthury or other
coupons combinecl with this

•"•·

6-17-tlc

9

Wanted

To Buy

Wt pay cash for late modal clean
C.uted can
..
J1m Mink Chev -Oids Inc
B1ll Gene Johnson

ante

$14 PER TON
DELIVERED T8

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

992-6461

Junk Cars with ol Without
mo~ Call larry Uvely-61 4388-9303

PER LOAD
DEliVERED

BILL SLACK

992-6215 or992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2269

7i3 88 11n

EUM HOME

Deo.. r for

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

JL.C.
25 Yrs. Exp.
References

Located Halfway
between Rt 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
ServiCe Center for Ryan
Products
8 7 Ftnancmg on Yardman
Service on All Makes
We Honor MC/D1S&lt;/V11o
9 1-88-lfn

992-6873
Joe or Pauley Bowland
209 South 4th St.
Middloporl, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-6112-3821

CUSTOM BUILT
HOME~ &amp; GARAGES

Authonzed John
Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

"AI Reasonable Pri,es"

. PH. 949-2801

or Res. 949-2860
Doy or Night

Ftrm Equipment
Ptrlt &amp; Solltleo

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16·86-Hn

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homos Built
"Free Est1mates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 9.49-2860
NO SUNDAY

Announcements
3 Announcements
No hunting or tres~ssrng on
'')orm ProffJtt farms

4

Giveaway

Small w1red hair9d Dachshund
female 4 mos. old to gcod
home Call 614· 448 7904

Free to good homo -4 puppias
small mixed breed. Call 814245-6836.

CJ

, Television L1stening Devices
I Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sentic4
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

-a:

i3::1:

!

Free to good home·2 female
PUPP18S Part North Am Spitl

Call 8t4-446-8297

(614) 446-7619

2 pur: 4 mot old-1 male' &amp; 1
fema e Mlr:ad breed Call 614-

MARCUM CONTRACTINGCHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

References

Small brown Poodle to give

tftNay to good home Call before
3 PM, 6t4-446-f916

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Of (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis , Oh10 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

10-4-1 mo.

Furniture and appliances by !he
piece or entwe household. Fair
pr1ees being paid Clll 814-4463158
large round balee ot hay
delivered or peeked up Call
614-245-5500 8-4
Used Mobile Homes Call 614446·0175

We buy Black W.JI[nuts Fund
raismg opportun1tv Georga
Shltbadc 614-992-3891 For
delivery lnnruet10ns call1-800999 0727

Employment
Servtces

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 94-9-2969

Good Rates

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

614-446-3159

8-8-88-tfn

Room &amp; Board For
Senior Citizens and

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

992-6611

$3 s

BOGGS

CHIPWOOD
POLES

Want to buv Used furmtullt end
anttques W1ll buy entire household furn11h1ng Marhn Wed•
meyer. 614-245-5152

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

V. C. YOUNG Ill,,

used cars. Smrth

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

FIREWOOD

work

n~M"er

Buick-Pontiac 1911 Eastern
Ava , Gallipolis Celt 614-4462282

Complate hou•holds of furniture &amp; antiques Also wood &amp;
ccal heaters Swiun's Furniture
&amp; Auct1on, Thtrd &amp; Olive,

3 30 '87 tfn

(FREE ESTIMATES)

CALL 992-6756
"DOC""ic~~~~!~~~~~op
Certifted
Li

Ports

TOP CASH pe1d for '83 model

and

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homehte
Jacobsen

Middleport, Ohio

CARPENTER
SERVICE

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Fore1gn and
Domest1c Veh1cles
A / C Service
All Masor &amp; Mmor
Repa1rs
NIASE Certified Mechamc

&amp;

YOUNG'S
- Roofing and gutler work
- C&lt;mcrete w o rk
- Plumbing and e!ectriCB1

Also Transmission •
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Authorltod S•mce

1-28·'88-tfn

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

SMALL ENGtNEf
REPAIR - -I

So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

- Addona and remodehng

10-11-'18-1 mo. pd

LOADING

•

'

319

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

949·2168 .

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

•

8

992-6282

Roger Hysell
Garage

Howard L. Writestl

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

•

Hack To School Sp ec tal
MON.-TUES .- WED.
(Good throuoh Seotember;

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

GUN SHOOT

10-6-88-1 mo.

. ROOFING

•

6t4-446·3672

~IDUCIARV

On Sep. ombor 19. 1988.
in the Me1gkl County Probate
Court, Cese No 25990.
John T Wolfe, R. D. 2. Ra cine, Ohio 46771, was ap·
pointed Executor of the estate of Gertrude Hell, de·
ceased, late of R D , Ra cine, Ohio 46771
Roart E. Buc:k,
Probate Judge
Lena K Neuelroad, Clerk
(9!27, (10) 4, 11 , 3tc

MAIN STREET PIZZA

Uf. or Eat In Onlr !
~ ~~~.r!l ••o.P~~ ?~: •~'!'~.. :

614-742-2617

f act·orv Choko
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

ONLY

Reosonable Rates

56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

•

The Blg Onel Stereo, ~OO(Mork­
mg Items floVol8r 111rangemtnts,
.wreatks, grill, add-a-elotet
paint drapenes boys completa
wardrobe 8 lo 8 new jeans,
household m1.C, Thurs. Fri. Sat.

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

~· •·; s··=·;i{titR'oNl't · · ·:

for ony of theseser'flces

• •

.. ...•...

RACINE, OHIO

Complete Drywall
Service
FREE ESTIMATES

E!IIMATES-

Between 9
or Leave

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Ohio
1-13-tfc

•

Carport •le Oct. 10 ar.(: 11th
25 7 li ncoln St , Midcleport
Althea M1llar ,..

1:00 P.M.

992-2196

•

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

EVERl SUNDAY

PAT HILL FORD

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

••

GUN SHOOT

SER~ICE

Middleport,

••

16141 992;W,!

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

We Service 'All Makes
1/ 22/ 88/ tln

· . Gallipolis · ·

On Bulavl!le Rd R&amp;R Trai1w
CO u r1 October 10, 1 1, &amp; 12th.

We Carry Els h1ng Su pph

10_8_ttc

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

SAND

-

7

7

lr======;ii:::::::::~=::::::=:==irr=:;::;~~~~;-1 _

Public Notice

9/10/tfn 1 mo. pd.

.

The Daily

446-3398
4 ldttuns Jl8" S1emese..to give
away to good home CBII 614245 6t92

Free ldttens half Siamflll&amp;, litter
trained. Raccoon Road , 814-,
448·4982
Free for removsl. Smelt hou!MI
Call 304-676-1337 or 8752466 for more inforJMtlon.

6 Lost and Found
LOST Missing Walk.Br Hound
Centen•rv· 141 area. No collar
Ext,.metv shy Reward If sMn
call 814·446-2729 or 3877102
lOST·Miniature gray
SchniUrtr Vicinity of First St ..
Pt Plusant . Answers to
"Pumpkin" Reward· 160 Call
~14-446-2021

11

Help

Wanted

Farm hand needed in axchange
for rent end utlllti• Reterencas
requWed Call 614-446-1052
after 5 PM
Now acceptmg epphcattons for
part-time position at Network
V1deo, Spring VallS¥ Pleza

Wendv' t ri'Ow h1r1ng Apply 11\
pluton Mondav-Sunday between 2-4 390 Stiver Bndge
Plaza. Gall1pohs, Ohto E 0 E.
8 200 a dli'V 18king phone orders
Poople call you Call 304-937·
2476, e~~:t l -466 Hours 9-2, &amp;
6-8.
•

AVON-Needs 5 ladu1111 lo Sell
Awn Catl 614-446 3368

UPto 815HOURPROCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUARANTEED. FREE DETAILS.
WRITE SO. 1057 W Pt111adelphie.. Suite 239 60, Ontario,

Calif 91762
Pllrt time babysitter in my home
neaded tor Z-3 months, for 3&amp; 6
-,.ar oldl Call 614-448-2042

ActR11ttes director needed, pre.
vlous e.~eperntt'loe and 38 hour
course recommended, e.-.cellent
talsry and benefits, if interested
apply to Senlp Hills Nursing
Center. 536 Buckmlge Road,
Gallipolis Oh1o
McClURE ' S RESTAURANT
HIRING Cooks and waitresses
hBBdad Resumea bf,ing taken
1 00-4 00 p m Tuesdays and '
Tttursdavs at 479Jackson P1ke
Gslllpohs, white hou!llt behmd
McCiunts restt~urant
Government Jobs 816.040 .
S 59,230 yr Now hnmg Call
1-906·697-6000 Eo!t. R 9805
far current federal list.

Resident man.ager couple part
tim e For smell apartment com
plex •n Manetta No

ekp&amp;r~en c e

raqulro(t Will train Job duties
include handl1ng mamtenance
mntais mport1 end rent colle~­
ltons lovely apartment uttht•es
andsalary Sendl&amp;tterort~~sume
of uPenenee to Oaity Sentinel
Bo~~: 729R . fJomerov Oh1o
AVON · All areas Call Mar1lyn
Weaver 304-882· 2645.
AN 'S &amp; LPN' S-PH, full t1me &amp;
pert bme appltcatiOnt are bemg
accepted for Pleasant Valley
Hospttel Nursing Care Center,
Contact Personnel 304-675·
4340 AAEOE

AVON ell areas !! Sh1rley Sp._ 1
304-675-1429
licBnsed Soe~JI Worker '" new
long term care faetlity E~tpe ·
riariCeprsfMntd Cammensunrte
ulary and banafht, E 0 E M11l
rnume to Admltdltl'ller C.re
Heven of fJomt Ple8111nt, Rt t
Box 326, Po mt Ple-..nt W Va
26560

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS . Now Hlr~ng
Your Area $13 ,550 to
e59.480 lmmedtltle Opentng•
Call t-(3t5) 733· 6082 Ext F
2938-A

�Page-S- The Daily Sentinel
Help Wanted

11

LAFF-A-'DAY

Apartment
for Rent

44

Wou kt like 1o tlttW'e Uve In
compenion, tem~le 191 45-80,

51 Household Goods

Modern, 1 Bft . downt own,
comphrte kitch llrl. 1ir, C«ptt .
Deposit. No pats. Call614--4460139 eve ninguftar 5 PM.

Ple....,t Vall..,- Hospital Is Cu rrenlty • c ~ing appfie~~tlon s for
lull t ime and part timeR N's! Call
304-87&amp;-4340 tor more iltfor-

Brookside Apertrnenu located
o ff Bulwille Rd.- 1 Br. ll)(lcious
apts. with modern kitchen,
was her/ dryer hook-ups. Clblat\1
av1ilable. C.ll 814-448-4608.

mation . AA· EO.E.

Situations
Wanted

odern 2 BR . apartment for runt.
Dep. &amp; Ret. raq uired. Call
614-44&amp;:1 079.

HINit room in private home for
• lck elderty or hllldi~. C.ll
Mrs. Gwinn. 814-256-8509.

1 BR . efficiency, pat11ally fur·
niahed. Gas 81 wat er provided.
Call 304-67&amp;591 1 o r 814--

'Mil C.l for elderly m.n or
·In our hpme. C•ll

wo..,...,

245-5559.

EKperieneed deiry hend IMking

821 '4 Second. 2 BR. Nice.
unfurnished. Calt 614 · 446·
2 168.

814-992-8518.

employment . Can IL!Pply ref erenQe. In Meigs.. M11onaree; Cell
81 4-949-23&amp;0.

15

COLLEGE. 529 J1cbon Pike.
C.ll446-4387. Reg. No. 88-11-

10558.

"I could never leave him. He

never taught me how to
drive."
:;;;;=;;;::;=;;:::;:;:====~-;;:::::;;;:::==;::=.~~~
t32
M bil H
41
Homes for Rent
0

18 Wanted to

Do

Dozer a. ·a.ckhoe Work-860
Cue do1er. Ae•onable rates.
Experience operator. Cremeens
Con~ . C.ll 014-256-1718.:
Painting • roofing a. c«pentrv
work by the hour or job. Clll

614-379-2418.

Would like to do babvshting in
my home. Day or !tight. 81 .00
per hour. C.ll 614-388-8885.
Care for the ehtlrtv In their
home. Call 814-441-2427.

Wilt do hou11 cleaning. Galiipolis
area. C1ll 614-446-8483.
V•d c•e. brulh eutt'lng. light
hauling, IOfnltr•trimmingartd
ramrrAI. Bill Sleek 814·9922 289 •enings.

McDaniel Custom Bothering,
open 5 days • vwek. nell

304-B82·3224.

Finanwl
21

Buainass
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
- lNG co. recornmendl thlt 'fOU
do busineu wtth people you
know. and NOT to llthd morHPf
through the mail uml you hll\la
investigated the offering.

Frick Sawmill-01 Detroit diesel
power unit. Frick glllg edger.
trim aw A dril, blower, log
turner. Call 814-25$-8218.

Re~l

31

Eslale

HoiJieS for Sale

VettV attr.ctlve twidl: 4bedroorn.
2 b«h. ftmltv room wtl:h firttpl.ce. formll dining, l•ge lhdng
room, 30 11:. ctut&lt;Jm oak kitch1n
cabinets, ·oak woodwork. finish
b•ement. 2 c• g•ege. levef
landscaped lot. 4 mill!ll from
Hol1er Hosphal uff Rt. 38~rterbrook SubdNillon. Call
614-44f.41B9.
Lose your job7 Having problema
making y-our Ptr;'rmtnta7 Don't
be foreclosed onl I would be
lntM•'@d In buvlng your home
fori
price. lflnterllted, tend
n.ne. phone no. &amp; addr•• of
property to: .Box Cia 174,
c/ oG111ipolla Daily Tribune. 825
Third Aw.. Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .

f*

Nice 2 atorvhomewfth g•ege&amp;
work lhop. $28,600. C1ll 614-

367-0138.
4 BR ., full b•ement Ia g.-aga.
fully cerpetad (some niiW) .

e onnes
for Sale

19 87 Flirrnont 1 4K70, Ill elect·
ricwHh heat punip, teteiUte dilh
in QU811 Creek. &amp;U-245-11294.

19e8 Fl•wood. 12x84. bottle
a• heM end hot Wllter. uooo.
Coli 814-843-5310 0&lt; 81484~5406 anY'ttme. Ask for
Danny.

3 bedroom hou.e. Ulrga .bas•
mw, aluminum siding. fulty
e•peted. in Pomeroy. Clll814-

992·7887.

Hou• for stla. 2 bedrooms.
CorneJ lOt, 2361 Fourth St ..
Syraw• . Ohio. t20, 000. 814-

992-5105.

for •le or rent. 2 bedroom
newer hoi'J\6 1A mile out Beufa.
villePikeinGIIIipolk. Oh.l!) lcre
·fenced- in )'lrd, stor1gabuHding.
Clo .. to hospital ., d shopping.
City .:hooli t40,000. Approx.
$1800 down with FHA Loan.
Call 61"-441)-8677 evenings.

44f.9882.

1970 Windsor. 12x&amp;6 with
10K12 add on. woodburner.
washerlnd dryer. air cond, must

Newly doco•ned. 2 BR .. fuly
c•peted. ell utfltties peid eKcept

19 79 BlyviM mobile home.
14x70 with 7x21 expendo,
phone 304-875-6141 .

electric. Sec. dep. .uqulred. can
814-448-8568.

Furnished or unfl.i rnisMd, 2
BRa, c1ble available. water a..
HWllge p1id. fo11t&amp;r'a Mobile
Home Ptrk. Call 81"-446-

4437.

1602.

14x70 two bedroom 111 electric
partially furNhed m obUe hon1e,
304-875-1985.

14x70, 2 BR .. · 2 blths. citywater. cabea hookup. No pets.
Clost to town . Call 814-446•
8890.

33

Nice 3 B~ t111iler whh ex pan do,
INing room. large yard. See at

Farms for Sale

40 aaea-12 mil• from town.
'Vtctori.. hou•. b•n. fond,
pool . Call 114-258- 515'
evening&amp;.

Business
Buildings

Store building for 11111le or rent,
34a35, 2 bt¥ g•-ue 30•40.
ho'st. 8 room houae, 2 baths. 1
acre land. 304-~76-11558 .

Bowen. Jr. 304-57f.2l38.

26 801'81 BfOid Run Road. New
H1ven. Owrter flnmdn~ lVIII•
bla. 30 4-882· 3394.
Lots, one aa"e, 1811'81, wooded.
city ..,.tar, Jerieho Road, owner
financing. good terms, 304

372· B405 or 372· 2578.

17f.3030 or 875· 3431 .

Renl als
41

3 bedroom home, 1"¥.! baths.
e•l)t'led. Central air-heat. Lo·
cited in Pt.Pienant. 304-1175-

NiOify furrHMd sm1ll houte.
Adutta onfv. Ref. required , No
pets. Callll1 4-4411-0338.

32 Mobila Homes
for Sale

HoU'• for rwnt in Eurelr;e, 8200
plu1 dtp. &amp; raf.-ence. Hou•s
av~illblttoon In Rodnf/liViiiiQt
II. Blackburn Retllty. 814-44~

Homes for Rent

0008.
3 BA .• A C. c•pet. pool, g . .ge.

1978 1.Z.II mobile home II 1'4
Kr• of l~d •u.ooo or belt
off•. e..... ~ . c.ue14-44&amp;-

9823 0&lt; 38f.8192.

REPOSSESSED 14,1(10's. We
t 500 down, tak e over
lo8n. FrM defNery. MID OHIO
~e ' tm .

FINANCIAL SERVICE . 'Coli
r,~ .~:MgQ.82f.075~. "'

1988- Moon 121110. 2 BR .
t2100. COII814· 44f.0390.

Apartments lor rent, Wedge
Apartment Rental, 304-875-

2072.

Furnished 3 room apt. uf)steirs.
pntfar .!ngte working aduh.
S 200. month plut electric. Rlllf·
erence e. deposit . No Pets.

304-875-2851 .

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Horne Park.
Rouw 33, Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rentel tl'lilers. Call 614-992·

7479.

Spacious mobile home lots for
rant. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipoll1 Ferry, W. Va.

304-875-1082.

304-675-3073.
For rent : business building next
to old Marietta Plant. Inquire
1700 Jefferson Ava. after 7 :00
p.m.

2 bedroom furnished t•ihr, 14
Burdette Addn, •200.00 month

pluo 0100.00dopoolt, 304-5751080 or 875-7765.

Merchandise

2 bedroom' unfurnished t ntil er.
weter and sewer induded. 304-

878-1078.

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FUANrTURE 82
Oliva St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group. $399.
Living roqm suit.~•- 8199-$599.
Bunk b1K11 with bedding- • 249.
F\.111 aile mattress a.. foundation
starting - 199." Racllnart
Sllrting- t99.
USED- Beds, dr•aers, bedroom
suttas. Deab, wringer Maher. a
complete line of ueld furniture .
NEW· Weltern boot•- &amp;36.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe) , C.ll614-448-3159.

2 BR . apts. 6 elo18ts . .kltehei'IIPpl. furnished. Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww cll"pet. n81Niy
peinhld. deck. From t176. Now
accepting HUD . Regency, Inc.
Aptt. Call 304-875-1!!1104, or

875-5388"' 875-7738.

New completely furnlthed
ap1rtment &amp; mobUa home in
city. Aduhs only'. P•king. Call

814-44f.0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTME,NTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jeckson
Pika from t183 • mo. Walk to
shop and movi ... 614-41i8- 1

2 fireplac•. fenct. Good lot•
tion. Call A-1 Real Estate
Brok~. 304-157~15104 .

Un.tUrniltted house. 2 BR .
Neighborhood Rd . t225. Aaf•en«88 &amp; deposh '*IUir... Cell
44~4418aft• 7 PM . ·
3 bedroom hou• Rutland are1.
U25 pluo OZOO ._rity In·
etudes water. g.-bege, hnt. Clll

114-317-7257.
3 8R, CA. unfurNehed. Nice.
1 24 Kinton. Cell 814·440·

2168.

3 Br horne. UPJ*' route 7 na.
shopping center. *281 mo.
Sto.~rtty depo.ft • ,..,....,.,...

Coli 814-44f.8189 or 81444f.IIU

3 bedroom hou• Rio G...,. de,
114-24f.5223.

Furnis'-d- 3 room 1 &amp; bath.
Cl..., , No pet1. Ref. &amp; depa.lt

oqulred. lh llltl" furnlohod.
Adultt only . C1t1 814-448·
1 519.

1

For low prices on Quality Car pill:
&amp; Furniture co,a to Mollohln
Furniture-Upper River Rd ., 814-

MoVIng- Desk • chtir. queen oalc
complete bad. gold swivel
rocker, color portable tv/ stand.

Coli B14-44f.4881 .

Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, Po"*OV·
Hours: M.T.W 10a.m. to llp.m.,
Sundav 1 to 6p.m. 814-992·

2626.

Two 1940, 14 Inch Madam
AleJCan der doll• whh original
clothes. One 19 40 large colonial
doll hou~~e . 814-992-15427.

County 4Ppllll"'ce, Inc. Good
uMd appll1n011 1nd TV •eta.
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sit. 614-448-1899. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gellipollt, OH.

----------~

0000 USED APPLIANCES
W•hers, dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Sk1gga Appll•ncu,
Upper River Rd . betide Stone

Creel Mot~l. 814-44~7398.

a family outing, Ramona gets
bored and fru strated. (NR)

J.II,C~UCK . I KNEW '&lt;OU WERE 6ETTIN6
A i-IAIRCUT WilEN I SAW '(OU SITTIN6'
TllERE WEARING THE DROPCLOT!-1 ..

Motorcycles

"'r'j-"~EI-=-E_-lr.~ ,N,.:-~1 ;
I

l&lt;s-T,L'-'-'l)'llr/i..;.,l,j-I--:,BI---jl

mI!] Happy Dayl

ll2l ShowBiz Today

NS I

IBl Fac11 of Lifo
!HI Fat Albert

r-'T,':;7-'~,.i"-'TI:.....:,..I.:...T,·--t

1.

.

' - - '-

8

.

10 hp riding Qrowly with 50
Inch mower diCk. t1.700.00.
Cell lftlir 5:00 PM, 304-87544315.
Good uaed 17 cu . h . ffoat f,..
Kelvlnator ref. '150. or belt

2511.

fi1 ()) ABC Nowo 1;1

S.••

offer.
Kenmore sewing
Clblnet: In Cl..net. UO. 304B95-3813.

76
Hay

&amp;

&amp;

Grain

For •'• King wood burner ttow

wfth fan. like MW. •1715.
304-875-4818.

5PM.

1ransporlal1on

· -..., Couch . • 120. 30457f.2105.

71 Auto's For Sale

56 Building Supplies.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehl·
d• from •100. Forde:. Mllrcedea. Corvett•. Ch..,v-. Surplus . l~yert Guide . 111
805-887·1000 Ext. S-101B9.

Concrete blodcl· all liMe- ..,.rd
ordellwrv. Muon tMd.GIIIIDolia Blodc Co., 123'/t Pine St ..
Qfllllpolit. Ohio. Call 814-448-

·27B3.

Fpr sale: Firewood.

t35 large

AM-FM s•eo-C.s. t3995.
1980 Dodge~ ton truc11. 4 opd ..
one owner. 11,000 miles,

1981 Ch..,y, Covill«. 4 dr ..
&amp; elr. 29.000 mile~.
03800. Coli 814-37f.2721.

alto.

cond. for intor. Call
e14-448-9312 or 4!46-93117.

1985 Suldo Skyl•k. 4 dr.. 8 cyt..
AC , PS, cruile, cloth • • •·

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop..Pet
Grooming . All breed• ... All
l1m1 PM Food Delli•.

•tvl"·
Julio Webb Ph. 814-448·0231.

HAPPY JACK TAIYERMICDE:
reoognlzed a1fa a affeotlve b¥
u.s. au,... of Vet.tniiV Med'cine •gelnst hook. round, •
tlp.worme In dog~ &amp; c.n:al

BIDWELL CASH FEED. J . 0 .
NORTH PAOOUCE .
Drogonwynd Cott"'V _

....
CFA Pertlan •d Sltm. . ldt·
tent. AKC Chow pu~M. New
Hlmel-ven ktnena .. -eeu 814-

448·38«- 7 PM.

.

UKC ReglsterMI Toy Fox Terriart. Call 814317-7770.

For stle:. Firewood. 836 ltrgt
pickup load. Also truck partsfrom 87 to 72 models . Call
614-448-14'37.

oponlol puppy. 20 wko. old. oil
ollo1o. t126. COli 1·2Bf.1 318

1614.
Fi1her 1 00 Wilt ster110. equelizer, CD player. '700. Call
614-256-8628 after 5pm.

m•

IBM PC Computer. 5121&lt;
mory, printer, color monitor.
$800. Call614-268-8821•ft•

AKC

reglrtel'ed

buff

cocrt•

efter 6 :30p.m.

Blue Cro'M} Conure and Cock•

304-175-2193.

C&lt;JIIIe pupa. tun blooded. e

waeka old. Wormed.

30~578-

au'nctv Clarinet. Nice condition.
812&amp;. Clll 814-912·5082.
lndlvkl.lll guttar l•toM. b•
glnnen,
guMrllt. Bntl-

••rlou•

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

te.oo buehtl.
PiCk OWWI. C, W . Proffitt F•m.
next to Hlrrie BrMnhoulll,
Portlond. 814-B43-1112.

I :;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::.l==========~ End of
t"
baskets,

•-on
aala. tt.nglng
hou .. planlt, b•llet•.

u .. n .. M . 1.or111 Flll'o Au-

Tf-.. Phltoden*on.lcheffl. .
et tow priCM. Muttmekeroomln
Greenhou• for n.w ltock.

PIMto 0.10 ond ... .,,.,

GriiiM\hou•. County Roed 30,

Aooln.. Ohio 814-149-2111.

I ,IIIII Sllpplli'.\
&amp; I !\r:,ltli.k
61 Fann Equipment
1251 OIIYer 4 WD dl_, tNctor
w/l)lows, dlec , auttlvatort ..
t488S. Lalemodel444tm.netional . . . . traatDr, Pa wtde
front 3 pt., $3891. Ow- wl
Coli 814-2Bf.8122.

ft..,.,.,

t-

0390.

•••

room furni1Md -"· with
"He's nervous. My vacallon's in a coLmii'Y
thai doesn 't have an extradition treaty
the U.S.'!"
•

l•

w..,_

e..,.

' pons. Jlm-t814-Bif.4484.

1an

Chevy Caprice Cl•aic.
aato.ps. pb. air. tilt. c• driven
del" but n.-cll same work.

•no. 304-87&amp;-1758.

19141uldl whke «terlor-blldt
lin•tor. euto, arnall V-8, Pl.
lm•fm c....ne. A811 good work
c•. t410. 304-8715-8758.
1984FDrd E100rtOL eKC. cond.
tow miMg.. motor &amp; tr~~n•mle­

'""'· PS. PB. olr. U.BOO.
Nogotlobla 304-87f.123e.
19"n Z28 Camero 3150 engine.
n_, llr•. tt.lt · n..- paint.
Metllllc blue. •eoo. 30"'9782881.

1978 01111 eon.. S..PfOmo. low
mil-. 1 owner, muet sell,
304-17f.2113 ott• 1 '00 PM.
1971 Ch.,y Nowt~ Hnchbedt,
low ml•. runs good. clll
304-17f.B088 ott.e ,oo PM.

72

Trucks

for Sale

l!!xtrl Sharp. 1171

Chevy

pickup. 88.000 .at .. l mil•.

euto. •21100. Call 114-387-

1978 Oodgo h-. du1y holl.
c• enydme 114-317-0188.

F•m h1nd lil11111 --.on. NH
3112. Orinder mll:llft~ NH 7'
hartblna All ODOd ooncltlon.

1814 Ch..y 810 ..... ...,. 4
wheel drlw .
Eaetetdll(,
R-.. 114-949-2711 .

. 1150 OIW... 0.,1111 tractor, •c
cond, 304-175-3190. .

Championships from
Chicago, IL (T)
(I) II (I) Who's the Boaa?

7891 .

Concrete Septic Tanks · 1000
glf .• 1500gll. .,dJet Aerauo.,
IVNm. Factory tnlin.:l replir

.,

ohop. RON EVAN.S ENTER·
PRISES, Jackson. Ohio. 1-800537·952B.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES ·
Septic tonk pumping- 090 pelood. C.II1-800.537-9S28.

a

Painting: Interior &amp; Exterior.
Fret ntimat... Call 614-448-

RON'S Talevl•ion Service.
HOUII c•l 0" RCA, Quazar.
OE. Speci811ng in Zenith. Call

CF

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Aotlry or cable tool drilling.
Most Milt completed umedll'f.
Pump •I• end service. 304895-3802

' 74 Ford

O.rri•. n...,

*• 1nd

·
-· good '""'. . . 700.00.
304-17f.Z457.

r-~------------~~-, J

HOW DO '10LJ 51.lPf05E
THEY &lt;SET1l410' O&gt;.FFE.INE

MY Do'ID5 OO::TORTOLDHIM
Tq DRiNK DECAFFEINATED

OUT~

COFFEE .

AON'S APPUANCE SEAV1CE ,
hou• c.ll servfclng GE, Hoi
Point, waaher1, dryers and
........ 304-57f.239B.

I TH INK

T HEY

PICK IT OUT
Wl114 TWEEZERS .

g IIl

304-875-7121.

A• B Remodeling. Aneworkfor
fine people. C.n't beat thtle
prices. Don't let the fall se•on
lllop you. 304-875-2878.

g

Primo Time Wreolllng
9:30
New Country
10:00 (Il 700 Club
(I) fil (I) lhlrtyoomelhlng
Michael 's old girlfriend from
college v;s;ts. (R) (May be
preempted) 1;1
(l) IBl Now1
Ill The Irish R.M. Flurry

10- 11

B2

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

81~448-3B88

84

a

BARNEY
1 WAS JEST
READIN' YORE
TEA LEAFS,
PAW'

CARTER'S PWMBINQ
ANDHEATINO
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Qolllpollo. Ohio
44f.4477

ALL YORE OL' CRONIES
ARE PUYIN' CARDS
OVER IN LUKEY'S 9A RN

HAW HAW !t
AN' TH' COW
LEPT OVER
TH' MOON !!

DEAl. ME INT
FELLERS I

or 614-

Knox. challenges a visiting
Indian polo team to a match .
Ql I!] Bamey Miller
ll2l Evening New1
Crook and Chloe
1flo.30 (]) EaatEndore A continuing
chronicle of the ljves of
residents In London's East
End. (0:30)
ID I!] Odd Couple
11!1 VldooCounlry
10:35 Cil MOVIE: Tho Horae
Boldlera (NAJ (1 ,59)
11:00 (]) Remington Steele Steele
Searching, Part 2

Electrical

a

&amp; Refrigeration
Reaidenlial or commercial wir·
ing. New Mrvice or repah.
licensed electrid... E1timate
free. Ridenour Elnctrieal, 304676-1788.

ASTRO•SRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Dllerd Water Service: Pools
Cltterns. Well•. Oellverv Any:
time . Call &amp;14-448-7404-No
Sundev clll1 .
·

24f.92B5.

R &amp; R Water Safvice. Pools.
claMrna. wellt , tmmediale 1 . 000 or 2,000gallont delivery .

Coli 304-875-8370.

~ Witer delivery. 1000 gallont .
Ae•onable prices. Immediate
delivery . Call 814-992-5276.
Wauenon ' s Water Heullng,
reuonlble retea , Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, cisNrns,
pools. 11¥811, ate. call 304-5762919.

.....,'
.

.•
.
'

..

Patrick's Water Hauling, 2.000
gal delivery. 304-576-23H or

.

·'

Upholstery .

Mowrey' s Upholtle,lng tervlng
trl oountylrea 23
Th ebest
In furniture upholttering. Call
304 ~ 175 - 4164 for lree

ve••·

Ht:imat~ .
~-----

'

...
'

.,

...

.

lde8a Moyers talks with a
America's choices. (NR)
II) I!] Love Connection
ll2l Monoyllno
IBl Ttlol from 1111 Dartrllde 0
!HI Miami VIet 1;1
Ill You Con Be • S11r
11:30 II (2) iiJI Beat of Corson
00 SportiContar (L)
(l)Cheera .
(l) The Movie Palaeo• This .
tribute 10 the movie palace of
the 1920s and 1930s, nosted
by Gene Kelly, portrays the
hoydey, decline, and rebirth
.9f grond old movie llloalros.
NlghUine 1;1
Ill Sian Off
011 UU. Today
II) I!] Newl)wed Game
iiJ Sporls Tonight
ell:ll 'Night Hut' CBS Late
Night Kevin end Frank
lnvasllgele a murder that
Tommy witnessed. (A)
IBl Hill Street Bluet Choice
Cut

e ())

+6
WEST

.A

EAST

+AZ

+Q 10

Q10

..

.KJ8U

+Kt081i4

.

.'

+u

t!O 5

tJ932

.

SOUTH

+Ks

.

..

•uu

tA9i7e

+AQ

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

W..t

z+

s+
Pass

Nortll

Eut

2•

••·

s•

. ....,
..
.

P101

• obstructive bid
Opening leSd: • 7

In that event, declarer mlllt pla;r
spades from dummy aller lakin&amp; Olll;r
one high diamond, lntendln&amp; to CMII'rulf when East rulfl aDd !ben
to
dummy, drawtna trump. Of coune
South would be uapiiiUIIItly 1111rpr1.r
when West ruffed In with the floe of
diamooda u the lll!ttiDg trick.

ao

-

br THOMAS JOSEPH

bill
15 Expected
16 Iron (Fr.)
17 Joiner
19 Started
(poet.)
20 Dray
21 Skin
opening
22 Center
23 Tolstoy
and others
24 Renown
25Germ
26Snake
27 Like some
linens
30 Elec. unit
• 31 Weight
unit
32 Ch'a nce
33 Moon
sight
35 D e borah

"

uHow's

city
13 Off
the gig
14 Hamilton

•.

DOWN
I List of
candidates
2 Ponti's
mate
3 Answer
to

ACROSS
1 Undo, as
a knot
5 Polish
cake
9 Haywire
10 Forsake
12 Rumanian

business?"
4 Herd
of seals
G Assail
6 Residue
7 Stay
happy!
8 Behind
In
pay'ment
10 Intimidate

ll'l'ype
of metal

15 Challenge
18 lnrrequent
21 Equal
22 Military
barracks
23 Sprat's
fare
24Comedy
25 Stockpile

27 Stone
marker
28Bret-

2PWWJ
battle
34 Interjection
35Sumatran

ape

.

.,

..

••. 1

36 Isolate
37 Anatom-

Ic~!
network
38 Grafted
(her.)
· 39 Greek
war god

DAILY CRYFI'OQUOTES- Here'a bow to work It:

.,.

IIIII

•

AXYDLBAAXR

00 Lighter Side of Sporto
wide variety of people about

.

tKQJ4

CROSSWORD

laLONGFELLOW

(l) Ill Bill Mo,ore' World of

IAOmARIUll (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be TAUIIUI (April ZO.Mer 20) If you feel
hopeful rogordlng the outcome ol you are onlllled lo bolter compenutlon
oven111odoy, rogard!Ha of wh81her you for something In which you ora pl'888ntOct.11,1oro working on -tiling new and un- ly Involved. lhllla a good day 10 call It to
or BOIM!hlng roullno.
tested
lhe attention of people who can do
ln I he year aheild you arellk&amp;ly lo spend
conoldorai!IO lime In puraull ot new CAPRICORN ( - . 22-.len. 11) Thlngo oornethlng abou11t.
knowf1dge. furthering your hopeo and lhould have a way of working out to GEMINI (IIQ 21-.IUne 20) You ohould
ambltlont. Proftttbte u - will be lound your edvantoge 1odoy, provided you bt torlunoteloday In two arrangementa
don'1 pul oboloclealn your path. Don'1 you hove with clol8 lrtenda. One Ia 1
lor whot you !olin.
rock the boal.
loyal, old standby. while the other Ia a
LIIIIA (lept. 2J-OcL 23) Today, quick·
AQUARIUI
(.!an.
20-Feb;
11)
Somemore recent acqualntarice.
ly dlllpOII of mlltora thet require your
lhlng lhtt you are hoping tor may sound
personal touch or form of dlrec1
cammunlolllon. You'll fHI biller once like 1 plpl dream to someone lloe.
th&amp;y're out ollhe way. Know - . to - · there are f8C1orathat play on CANCIII (June 21-.luly 22) You're calook lor rom.- and you'll flnd it. Tho your behalf 1hol ~ld provelhlo per10n pable ol.-vlng &lt;:rltlcal maneraloday
wrong.
l you aet your mind lo lt. Gjy! priority IO
Attro-Graph Motch- lnttantly re_., which llgnlore romontlcally per- PIICIS Cllob. 20-Mt!Ch 20) Be alert lo- alluotlono tltlt ohould be flniiiZed .
fect lor you. Mlll$2 to Motchmlker. c/o day lor a oltuallon thtl could provide LIO (Julr 11-Autl. 22) Tltll II I good
•rnlngllrom 1 Hldom·lapped source. dey to orchettrato -hlng ooc:tal ·
lhlt~, P.O. eox 91428, C...._
Ill ~blllllea for genara11ng funds arl&gt; thll wtn give old lrlondt a chance to
land, OH 44101-3428.
· moot your- ones.
ICOIIPIO (Oct. II Now. 22) Ad)Uit· looking batter and batter.
Alllll
I.....,
21·o\pftl11)
Stand
laot
VIIIQO (Alii- 23 ltpL 23) You llloulfl
rnen11 con be medo today 1hat will provilli you Willi gretltr financial -age. on a doclolon you've r-.,IJy made. The bt pretty good today 11 ~ng mlleege
11 you 1ludy mattoro carefully. you'M- poejllon you have 1Men oppeare to be lrom ~ dollat you tplnd, eapeolally
thll you ore In 1 11ronger poeltlon than lhl rlghl one. Time ohould later at1Hito II you . . &amp;hopping lor h.,._old or
IIIII t8C1 .
Jomlly -~. Chock your aourcu.
you moy hove rullred.
•

•·JI.U

.7

meant as an obstructive bid, taking
away much of the opponents' bidding
room. West still liked his band, so he
bid five clubs.' The spotlight was now
on North. He had · already bid two
spades but so far liad not supported his
partner's opening one-diamond bid.
Taking hts life in bis hands, he bid five
diamonds. All passed. Now let's be
fair. Wouldn't you lead a club on this
bidding, just as West did?
South won the queen of clubs and
quickly cashed the ace, discarding
dummy's singleton heart. Without any
further ado, South led a spade f r om his
hand. He did not mind losing two sp.ade
tricks if be could draw trumps ending
In dummy and then run the remaining
spade tricks. West played low and
East won the 10. East now played a
heart. Declarer ruffed in dummy and
led another spade. West won the ace
and continued witb the heart ace. De·
clarer ruffed and then played two
rounds of diamonds. When the diamonds split, declarer took the rest of
dummy's spades to make his contract.
West might have defeated the contract if be had false-carded on the first
diamood with his 10. Declarer might
well have decided that West had start·
ed with the singleton 10 of diamon~s.

II C2l (I) II ()) 1m 1111121
IHl New1
•

'Your
'Birthday

J &amp; J Weter S•vice. Swimming
pools, cistMns, wells. Ph. 614-

87

The American

Experience Trace Operation
Crossroads, lhe Navy's tests
of lhe atom bomb In 1946. 1;1
1m MOYIE: Sixteen Candlet
(PG) (1:33)
ll2l Larry King Llval
ID 1!21 MOVIE: 'Outback
Bound' CBS Tuolday Movie

Ak•• Tree Trimming end Stump
Removal. Fraa estlmltes. Call

514-«f-4081.

,...,ion

Angela's Tony's trainer for
charily boxing malch.(RXMay
be praemptod) E;1
(l) IIl Nova Review tho
status of the American space
program and candidates'
views. C
1m ID ll2l High· Rlok Dangers,
lhritls, risks and rewards of
unique occupations and
hobbles .
181!]) MOVIE: WHhoul a
fiace (PGJ (2:00)
l!1l PnmeNew1
IBl MOVIE: Romantic
C"omedy (PG) (1 :43)
II) ,lunfor, She Wrote t;1
Nnhvlllo Now
8:05 (l) MOVIE: The Sono of
Katie Elder (NAJ (1 :52)
8:30 (I) Q (I) Wbo'o lhe Bosa?
Ray Charles records Sam's
beau's love song. (R) (May
be preemp1ed) 1;1
9:00 II (2) IHl MOYIE: 'Twice In a
. Lifetime• NBC Movie of the
Week (AJ (1 :54) E;1
00 Top Ronll l!oxlng
(I) Ill (I) Moonlighting
Maddie must Identify dead
artist who painted
her .(R)(May be preempted)

Qoorgoo Creek Rd. Coli 81444f.02Bot

A-lone

luy MWchllln IM'oh.,endgec
old one stw-pen_. FREE, Oe·
only. I I - Equlot_,,
- -.... ,304-875-7421 .

304-273-4215.

Junk)r National

l.o

SMEPER .,d 11twlng mechine
•
repair. p.-ts, end tuppli•. Pldl
up end delivery, D1vla Vecuum
Cleaner.. one hllf mile up .... :

... . 1495. 304-17f.

1980 Pontiac Orand Prbt, euto,
pt. pb. 1k'. whtte exterior. red
lnMrkM'. V-1, 84,000 mll!ll.
Good buy. .1891. 304-1751718.

1:00 C2l MOYIE: Tha lntpector
G"eneral (NAJ(1 :42)
- II C2l IHl Matlock Dirty
Harry type cop turns 10

Matlock to clear him of

Uncon&lt;ltionel llflltme gutren·

a-.. V-7tutometic. Pl. pb, 11r.
brown Dterlor &amp; Interior. Nice
1911 Chllll'tht, 1911 Chatlo.,,
Motor Home. 304-175-2711.

•
10-jl

murder. (R)
00 Bodybuilding Women's

2245.

d- _
1718.

T~A\If"J

tee. Local rtf.enc. furnished.
Frea est:lmllln. C1ll collact
1-814-237.,0488. d., or night.
Rogert8a1ement
Wllerproofing.

1 978 Cutl•• Cnd•• •tion-M-

Beans tor •Ia.

Modern 1 Br. ept. Call 814-44~

Compt«e riCI cw. liM model
din. Alum. boctv. p•fornwnoe
body. 414 C.l. engine, alum.
headl,
rlltblor. Trailer,
111 wHh win eft .. d brak-. tire
nick.
PllriS. Ouidc change
,..., ftoeter ,... end. Mtny extn

57

Musical
Instruments

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Fetty Traa Trimming. stldp
rwmowl . Call304-875-1331 .

.4000 114-742·2878.

ABour

" .• ,. ''

11~992-1091

or 304-773-

M•gazlne
(I) Enterlslnment Tonight
II (I) USA Today
1m 1D 1!21 IHl Jeopardy! t;1
181!]) M'A'S'H
ll2l Crouflre
IBl Night Court
11!1 VldeoCountry
7:35 (l) santord and Son

ALLEY OOP

304-57f.2398 or 814-44112454.

;'82 Ftrtbird Pontiac; IUto.
cruite, nM df'N. IKC . cond.
$3.100. 304-175-2741.

1988 Honda Four Trek 4.4. 360
engine, very good candltion.
t1&amp;DO. Graat for f•mlng or
hunting. 614-992-5893.

FurrMhtd efftdlnei•- •1415 6
up. Utlltll• peld. Sh ... bMh.
Call 441-4411 after 7 PM.

Home
lmprov 81!'1&amp;nts

1978 Mercury Zephvr station

1979 Ford Pinto. gaod .cond.
tiOO. or belt offer. 304-875-

58

Furnlsh•d apartments·1 badroom. t 240 • up. Utllltl• .-ld
Cell 4.._4411 1ftet 7 PM.

Clt..... MI ... . .

B1

7:30 II (2) Family Feud
@ Malor League Beoeball

..

+JP8?64S

East's jump raise to four clubs was

7:05 (l) 91o 5

CHoLE"SrE~oL?

1

9344.

wagon. 1980 Oldl 88. 4 door.
eir. curltl, tttt. AM-FM c•Htte.

CAR~

..

Sr.rv ccs

1984 DodaoiOO. Fully loedod,
28.100 mll•. 88 engine and
trartL '27150. 080. Call 814192-17!it tnytima

For •I• 5 mele Btaal• aM
running; 1110 Norwtlgan Elkhound pu,.._, tree br.t. (relf:tt
the 15th]. 1-304-488-1818.

Wanted. Girl Scout uniforms.
Brownie and junior level. Call
614-992-2166, 11k for Nancy,
Or 614-949-2093 lftllt' 5.

P.iliirl
ll'!d[

1980 Ol"'y lmpolo. 01500.
COli 814-99:Z.3e22.

1979 Chrval• Llleron Town
.,d Coul'lh'y Stetlon Wegon.
••oo. tall304-81~-2112.

c•dla Muolc. 114-445-0IB7.
Jeff Warnelttt lnttNCtor. 11~
Wheel horae riding rnower. 14 44&amp;-&amp;on;·Umiled openings.
hp . 814-992·3015.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

llue1988 C.mero. 350 nttrous,
12 bolt ..., .,d. CIII304-8B2289&amp;.

AKC regi~Mr.. puppl• Min•
ture Sch,..Jir, Cock• Sp•
nlela, Cho-w Chow. eh.pt1,
wormed 1nd h ....h guarant•,

1- ,.,--,..------

Gerrn1n 1hort haired pointer t;trd
dog. 0100. 304-175-2119.

SaMoned oak and hh:kof'l h.-dwoGd. 135. big truck load. Call
814-742-2545.

114-«f-4807 .. «f-2102.

1983 Pontt.c Flret;rd. T-Tops,
n.w tlr•, bMttwV, muffler.

7 tt coin operated pool 18ble.
1986 Honde Shldow 600. 2
Suz'-*i Quad runn•• 185 and
125. Rail type dune buggy. Call
after 5:00. 114-2415-9f85.

Mhced hard wood silbs. •12 per
bundle. Containi"UIIPPJOX. 1h
ton. Ohio P•lltt Co .. Pomeroy.
Ohio. 614-992·8481 .

Ollu• flmlly car 1971 Buldt
Electr11 4 door, 152.7150 .ci:UII
mHa. good tlr•, A -1 mech~ni­
aal, all power equipment ,
'3. 550.00. See Third Md OlhHJ,

tiel In .. rge;gga. Also bird cage.
t126. Clll 814-448-8320.

2985 . .

$40.00. 814·248·5271.

1979 Buick El.::tra, air, fu II
poww, runs good . t1200. C1ll
814-25f.~B28 5pm.

9541.

6pm.

Fuel oil tank 276 gtl, like new,
fuel filter •nd copper line
$75.00. Furnaceblo'N8r squirNI
cage fan one third hp motor

Qood oond. A...,cod- 03950.
Coiii14-89:Z.3221.

pof:&gt;N r
1

fr'IY

1984 C.moro, PS. PB. AC.

OB.OOO. Coiii14-Uf.4393.

pickup load. Also truclr: part•·
from 87 to 72 I'I'IOdela. Cell
814-448-1437.

Glau tub enclosure with all
hardware lor •I e . C.ll614-256-

27 ft. Sunatream Motor Home.
2870mll•. AC.gan . .tOf, road
....... Coli 814-992-7329.

1911 01111. Calolo, PS, PB. tit,
crul.e, 1ir, auwoof, AM -FM.

56

--

Po you liAVE ANY
MAGAz.rNS THAi

NORTH

James Jacoby

NewaHour ( 1:00)
011 Ql 1!21 IHl Wheal of
Fortune 1;1
Q) I!] Three's Company
ll2l Monoyllne
IBl Cheers
.
!HI Miami VIce C
11!1 Crook and Chase

FRANK AND ERNEST

79 Motors Homes
· , &amp; Campers

01891. Colll14-28f.B522.

870.9681 .

Tree &amp; stump rtmOVII. shrubs.
top son. stone. firewood-dump
load 1110. Heap Vouchers ac·

Otevy Rlllwt Rlmt, 14 Inches
eo........ •tvto. 304-87s.BB37.

II

Jenny Und bed. elmost n....,,
Complete. t100. 304-8711·
1349.

24f.5121.

,

BRIDGE

@ Sport•Conter (L)
(I) II (I) Current AHair
(l) IIl MtcNall/ Lehrer

Uted t,.nsrNIIIo,.. Each inter·
nllly intpected. 30 days gutran·
tN. C.fl 114-446-0981. R&amp;bulldlng avail able. Call today I

Lar91t round balM qf hav . .•20
a1ch. Cell 814-44~1052 after

For Sala P•l:*-ue Deal: Frost
Free Aefrlgnt:or; 11.,.a, 2

Builclng Me11ritls
Block. brick. IIWW pip•. windows. lintels, etc. Claut. Wlntllfl, Rio o ..... c~e. o. Call tl14-

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

II &lt;2l PM Magazine

Auto Parts
Accessories

..

..

Barany ·- Tryst - Plush - Adroit- THIS BODY
Exercise coach: " Why are you doing leg exercises when
you have such a spare tire?" Overweight man : "I'm
strengthening my legs In order to hold up THIS BODY."

a

Rexataela couch, excellent con·

dhlon. 304-875-123e.

'

Ql ll2l CBS Newt

Impressions
64

.

'

.the chuckle q uoted .
.
.
.
.
.
by fdlmg •n t he m1ssi ng words
..l.- .L_J._..J._J you develop !rom step No. 3 be low.

UNSCRAMBLE fOR
ANSWER

IOllnllde Politico '88
IBl WKRP In Clnclnna11
!HI Cartoon Exproo1
You Can Be a Star
6:35 (l) Andy GriHIIh
7:00 Cil OUr Houae First

1984 Varneha Vantul'8 1200
CC• .full dreas. e•ceUent condi·
tlon. $3896. 304-67~8187.

lull 15 montlw old Guersn.-y
Jersey. weight epprox
1,000 1... UIO.OO. 304-4681183.

1n~

Com~l~.fe

PRINT NUMBERED
LETHRS IN SQUAQES

Body Electric

011

0

mI!] WKRP In Cincinnati

85 230 Sutuld. 4 wheeler. quad
runner. ,1 ,096. 304- 876·
2569.

Young Peacodca. S85 1 couple
or 035 lOCh. COli 614-4&lt;lf.

~

" WoiJ/dn It be nice Ia give the ·
new/yw9ds catering service for a ·
year?" th e woman asked. Her comr---:--~.,--.., pan/on said, "That would only prr&gt;p y
p
I long the-..... )"

1

•

•

.~

l

IIl Dr. Who Mind of EvU, Part

~ lnolde the PGA Tour

Wheelchll'irs·niiW or UHd. 3
wh..tad ehtctrlc scoot. .. C1ll
Rogers Mobllty collect. 1 -814-

hou••· C.ll

tcrHnMI porch, total 81 .c.
Adulte onfy . e200i mo. Ref. &amp;
clop. 4S8'h S.o!ond Avo. Coli
814-44f.223e .. 448·25B1 .

1r -

Fandango
6:05 (l) Laverne and Shirley
6:30 II (2) IHl NBC NighUy Newo

19a5 01..,. Ctl.lty. Very

1 SA . 0275. lhilhlto pold. Coli
44f.441Boft• 7 PM.

3

1m Ill ll2l

a

Furnish41d IIIJt. N.w . NewHMC.

304-875-5104.

Q (I)

@ SporlsLook
(!) Ramona When rain spoils

\

gOod

Lu•urious Tar• Townhou•
apartments. Eleg.,t 2 fioors, 2
8R ., full bath upetalrs, powder
room downateira. CA., dlt·
hweshtr, dispoul, Pfivate entrln ce. prtvlte enclotld patio,
pool, pl-vgtound. Utllftiel not
incfuded. Starting It •219 per
mo. Call814-387-78150.

A~Jwtmenta and

Johnnies

II C2l (I)
IHl News

1978 'Ford van needll t ome
repairs. good motor. 8 cycle.
304-773-6923.

54 Misc. Merchandise

ceplld. Colll14-44f.9848.

bedroom mobile home half
mile out Jericho Road, ft'ftren·
c• requlf&amp;d. cell after 5:00PM.

251B. E.O.H.

304-675-1460.

Accepting epplications for unfurnished 2 bedroom total electFirewood for •le. 835 1 load.
ric garage apt. 3 mil111 from . Call 614-256-9301 .
town. 304-876-3000.
40 channel Realhnic Base Station wjth pmMir mik•t1 26. 40
45 Furnished Rooms chawtnal Car C B-t75. Coppertone g11 ran.ge, 30'' ·• 160. Celt
Furnished room-919 Second
614-992·3225.
Ava., Gallipolis. •135 a mo.
Utiliti111 ,-id. Single mala. Sh.-e Ruger. Redhawk Aevoh,.., 44
bath. Call 448-44 18after 7 PM.
megnum, stalnl•• steel.· Re' mlngton Magnum Wingmatter
Rooms for ll!lnt-week o.- month . !hOigun. 1-wnt 881, 1-Siug
Sl1rting at t120 a mo. G111ia
BBI· both 3 ". Cell 614-446. HoUII-61 ~448-96BO.
9969 .

2

Upatalrt unfurnished ll)t. Carpeted, utilities peid. No children.
No pets. C.ll614-44~1837 .

3 bedroom hou• Jim Hill Rd.
Ch•n Ink, l(trd. 12 ve•s old
Call aft• I p.m. 30~875-2678 .

·1 9 88 Concord mo'&amp;ile home.
12x515, 2 Br.. AC, awning. Call
114-245-9222.

2 bedroom apartments, fully
e•plrted, applhwu:es. water and
trath pickupa provided. Malnta·
nanca frN living clo18 to sho~
ping, banks 1nd tehools. For
more inform1tion call 304-8823716. E.O.H.

304-57f.2338.

lot on Kln.Whe River. camper,
a heft• tnd teptic syttem. 304-

1409.

Now 1ccepting applications for

3 bedroom mobile home. Appro-.: . 6 mil• from Pomeroy and
Middleport Call 814-992·
5B58.

Be&amp;ltiful rtver Iota one acre plus,
public Wiler, Ctyd• Bo11111t0, Jr.

Tho

6:00 (]) Bonanza:
Loot
Eplllodol Stage Door

1974 Dodge Vtn. t!iOO. Clll
1ftw 3 :30p.m .• 814-992-8570.

.•mNightly Bualnoao Repqrt

44f.7444.

304-88:!-2566.

WOlD

&amp;AMI

EVENING

0700. 814-992·88B1 .

PICKENS USED FURNITURE

2 bedroom Apu. for rent.

Beech Street, Middleport. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished apartment,
utllti• paid, references. Phone

Two bedroom unfurnished all
electric with wood burner, Rt
588 private lot, aduhs onty,

44

1975.., equlpped ,for fis hing,
hunting. camping. New brak•.
-paint job, 318 rno1or. hhd••·

'

1082.

· Ashton, large buHdlng lots.
mobile home~ permitted. public
water, alio rtv• lots, Clyde

1984 4K4 Olevy Silverado.
EKcll. co nd. C.ll 814-0038.

2989.

2 bedroom mobile home, qul4rt
neighborhood, phortt 304-675Approx. I acrat 1ill.tlla. GaHia
Co.-3 mil• from VInton on
Jackson Co.' Ad. •e.ooo negotiable. C1ll &amp;14- 491 -4325·
Columbus. after 6 PM
weekdays.

B778.

74

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing ·

(l)

Complete houeahold furnishingt. 1h mile out Jerricho.

614-44f.4607 .. 446-2602.

34

Sofas and ch ai rs priced froQ'I
S396 to 199&amp;. Tabl• UO and
up to 1125. Hide--a -beds e390
to 8595, Recliners $225 to
8375. lamps $28 to $126.
Dinettel fo109 end up to 8495.
Wood tl ble w -6 ch lirs t285 to
1 8796. Desk t100 up tr;J l375.
Hutch• S400 .,d ull'· Bunk
beds complete w-m1ttres'"
8295 end up to S39&amp;. Bllb¥ beds
$ 1 10. Matt reaMs Of bo• pings
full or twin 868, firm 878. and
888. Queen aets U&amp;O 6 up,
King t350. 4 drawer ch81t tl9.
Gun cabinets 8 gun. Baby'
mattreqer 838 6 845. Bed
framea $20, tJO &amp; Kir:.g frame
.860. Good selection of bedroom
s uites. metlll cabinets. held-bo ard s $30 and up to •a~ .

Kanmorewastw t75.00,Speed
~een dryer •75.00, 2 door
refriger~tor $76.00. lptlrtrnent
aid range 895.00. gu 111nge 30
in avocado t8&amp;.00. 1J• aJIIc•
Furnished. 1 bedroom apartheater t85.00, electric r.nge
ment, deposit required. No pets,
avocado t95 .00 , Hoover
utHhl• paid 814-992-2937.
washer 876.00, Hoover dryer
New one bedroom apartment in • 8 75.00, g.. range 20in 886.00,
Sktggs Appliances. Upptr River
Middlll)ort. Furnish~ or unfur·
Ro'ad, 81"-448-7398.
nla:hed. Call 814-992-6304.
Luuire electric 220\1 82.000
BTU updraft furnace. Excellent
working order. •125. 814-949·

31 4 Third St. Kln•ugt . Call
B14-44f. 7473.

R

1917 Ford Arrowwtar Xl T Van,
E•cel. cond., custom running
boordl. Loaded. Coli 614-44 6-

~

Gracious living. 1 and 2 badroom apartments at Villtga
Men or and Riverside Apart·
menta In Middleport. From
t182 . Call 814-992-7787.
EOH.

Newly redaoo111ted aplrtmants
Wllilable. Utillti• paid. $226.
per month, deposit required. Call
814-992-5724 after 8:00 or
992·5119.

Ne• Weter1~2 Br. Cle~n .
1976 Wlndllor 14x70, 3 bed- $125 1 mo, Ref. &amp; d&amp;p. Adutts.
room 3 · ton air cond. [)is.."· Furnithed. Clll 614-448-7764
hwesher, wood burner. Under- or 143-2844.
penning, 304876-5067.
2 BA·. MOI:iila Home tor mnt at
1979 Skyllne 1 4x60. Asking Everg,Nn . No Sunday Calls
AMI&amp;. 814-379-2878.
f &amp;, BOO. 304-87&amp;-8719.
1983 HollY Park. 14.70, 3
' bedroo~ on one acre lot. rural
wtter, 2 mlea out Sand Hill
Ro ld, 30._875- 7808 or 675-

BORN LO

4 W . O.

$225 •

992-3711 . EOH.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

be rnawd.~4-895-3102 .

&amp;

Vans

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

(I)
Ap1rtmtnt for rent.

month. OepoOt requi•od. 614992-5724. Afl" 8pm or 992·
5119.

Carpeted. Nice senlng. leu ndry
heilitiel av1ilabl1. ~II 61 4-

•ec.

5,30

Land contrllct, large lYing room
w / axpen.do room , 2 BR ..
w / WIII c•pet. llir condtlon.
w / orwithoulfurnhure. Net. g•
furnace on priYita k». MIY ,.,t.
lot. Call 5 to 8 PM. 814-~4&amp;-

A\le ., Pomeroy. 8176. per
month plul depolit. C.ll 814992-7450.

Att•ettwe one floor· home on
Mulberry A... .. Pomeroy. Two
bedrooms. kitchen with uow
and refrigfttor. living room,
1974 Moble llorM'. 12x.60. 2 dining room, lowly aun porch.
bedroom. 1 owner. Very nice . . Carpeted, drtperies, full b•ernent, centnll ha.t. wastw-dryer
Coli 814-992-8277.
hookup. Sorry. no pets or
1971 Wntch•ter, 1b.70, 3 children. 8225. plusdepotitend
bedr'oom, utllty room. ltiP- utHitl•. Phone 614-992-5292
down INjng room. 10•10 build- after 5 :00.
ing. 814-742-2173.
In Pomeroy, 2 bedrooms, all
2 bedroom 121150. · $1900. appliancl!ll, g . .ge. Nice neighborhood. 8260. per month.
304-17f.Z722.
814-992-2152 days or 6141984 Sohultt 14xl5. 2 bod- 742· 2972 8\llnings and weekroom~. 1Va bMhl, all
n..v ondl
AC unh. range. '::'Jerator.
Mt« bed 111d cov
porch Two bedroom hou• in Point
inclwded. t12.&amp;00.00 S.ious P I - t. V•y clean and nice.
inquir• onty, 304-175-3117 No Peu. 304-175-1386.
-"• 7:00PM.
Three bedroom hou• t175.
1984 Scou E.,•gy HouJI, month. within walking dlsllnee
24K50, 3 bedrooms. 2 b«hl. to North Point grade 1nd High
centrtl elr. King wood burner. School. h1quire 1700 Jeff~n~on
new drapes , front porch. Ave . after 7 :00p.m.
•17, 500.00. Kan.,ga Moble
Hom•. KlnaJge, Ohio, 814-

42acr• with standing timber in
Galli• Co. 304-17~5087 after

27020&lt; 304-57f..2147.

3 bedroom hou• on Mulbtfry

1979*venor, at 390
Aeh St., Mlddl
rt, on 50•11·2
ft. lot. 304-BB ·3284.

0 276 after 8 PM, wt'ekends
anytime.

9479.

One bedfoom hou• IOCited
1701 Ch•tnut. stow and refrigerator furnished,. t1&amp;0.00 with
875 .00 d•poslt , 814 -448·
3870.

1~70.

"';cod 10 1111. Coli 814-445-

3 bedroom furnished. 1 acre or
more IMd. 815,000.00. 11/t
mil• from 41~neandCenuwvlle
on County Rd. 8, 614-24&amp;

73

Tuesday, October 11, 1988

90 Days same u cash with
approved ao:edit. 3 Mllea out
Furnished apt in town, 614·44.6· Bulavllle Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
1423.
Mon . · thru Set. Ph. 614-4460322.
2 apartment in Rio Grande,
8J_4-245-5223.
Vallav Furniture
NBW and UIJitd ' lurnlturu and
Furni•had efficencyapartrnent ·3
applicancet . Call 814-448 rooms bath carpat thr~h out.
7572. Hours 9 -5 .
private and quhe, slnglawprtdng
pereon or11y, 614-446-4807 or
44f.2802.

I'O •fl

Schools
Instruction

RE -TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

KJT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrlabt

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Phone 304-875-7879.

12

Tuesday, OCtober 11. 1988

·Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~.

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

..

1()..11
Q

YA C I

UY~O

K R U

QO
NW

XNORUAW
TQGFI

N W

KC~I&gt;AC

01

xqo

ICFNO~CS
KCQDAC

•
GIOLAC.

•

'·

Z N D A
CQOVY

AXACWIO

Yestenlay's Cryptoqaote: A PANIC IS A
DESERTION OF ' US, AND A GOING OVER
ENEMY OF OUR IMAGINATION. - 80VEE

....-

SUDDEN

TO 111E

I

•'
(

I
·~-+-

.•

�PBge-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

, Pomeroy

Local news briefs__,•
Priddy released on bond
Fred Priddy. -charged with possession of drugs alter the
Internal Revenu~ Service executed a · search warrant last
Wednesday at his residence on Happy Hollow Road, near
Rutland, was released on a $200,000 bond when he appeared
Frhjay before U.S. Magistrate Terence Kemp in Columbus,·
Magistrate Kemp reported that the bond was secured by a' lien
on property in Meigs County and lille to several vehicles.
According to the complaint, Priddy had in his possession at
I he time of the arrest. approximately !660grams (gross weight)
of cocaine, and ap proximately 60 pounds of marijuana,
repqrted Kemp's deputy clerk, Wanda Harrison.
The next step In the federal court process, said Kemp, Is a
preliminary examination. which is similar to a premllmlnary
hearing in a lower court. The preliminary examtnation is
tentatively scheduled for Friday. However, should a Federal
-Gra nd Jury, which meets Thursday , return an indictment
against Priddy. the preliminary exa mination will be
eliminated.

Patrol probes Meigs accident
The driver was slightly injured in a one car accident at 10:20
p.m. Monday In Meigs County, at the Intersection of Lasher and
Titus Roads, In Rutland Township, according to the State
Highway Pat rpl.
Troopers said a car driven by Becky Phillips, 27, Rutiand, was
headed south on Lasher R,oad and failed to stop at the
intersection. The vehicle went across Titus Road, and struck a
fence. There was minor damage to the car.
Phillips suffered mtnor visible Injuries and was taken to
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital. She was chargd with driving
under the Influence and failure to maintain control.

Eastern...

has been ellmlnated.
5. Three two-hOur custodial
positions have been eliminated.
6. One teacher aide's position
has been eliminated.
7. Board supportfor all athletic
and extracurricular· activities
·
has been elimtnated.
. 8.. Half day, every day kindergarten has been ellmlnated.
Question: What will the levy
· money he used for?
Answer:
1. Cover the projected deficit of
approximately ·$38,000.
2. Reinstitute boardsupportlor
junior and senior high school
extracurrclular activities and
athletics.
3. Purchase badly needed
replacement school buses.
• 4. Purchase library books
5. J:&gt;rovtde monies to deal with
unanticipated emergencies.
6. Purchase classroom textbooks and Instructional supplies.
7. Reinstitute half day, every
day kindergarten.
8. Provide lor an Increase in
staff salaries (currrently our
employees are the lowest paid In
the county and ln .ISoutheastern
Ohio).
Ques Uon: What happens If the

Hospital news

Melgs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Monday; Ru Uand at 9:42 a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Richard Holdcraft who was treated but not transported;
Middleport at 2:58 p.m. to Dr. Conde's office for James
Brewington to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4: 11 p.m. to
the Americare-Pomeroy Nurslng Center for Iva Guess to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:33p.m. to Wippel
Road for Adam Davis who was treated but not transported;
Rutland at 8:58 p.m . to Happy Hollow Road for Sheila Jones to.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 9:39p.m . to Valley Bell
Road for Maxine Sellers to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 10:21 p.m . transported Rebecca Phillips from an
au to accident on Titus Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Veterus Memorial
Monday Admissions - Robert
Jeffers, Syracuse; Evelyn Rife,
Rutland.
Monday Discharges - Iva
Cremeans, Harley Nutt; Faye
Knapp.

A representative from the office of Congressman Clarence
Miller will co nduct an open door session from 11 a .m. to I p.m.
Wednesday at the courthouse In Pomer oy . Anyone with
q uestio ns concerning the federal government Is invited to stop
by.

Dole ... __c_o_n_ll_nu_e_d_f_ro_m_pa_g_e_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Continued from page 1

Squads .make 7 runs Monday

Representative to visit here

Tuesday, October 11,1988

M.iddlepott, Ohio

levy doesn't pass?
1.. There will continue to be no
board support for junior and
senior high school extracurricular activities and athletics.
2. No replacementschoolbuses
would be purchased.
3. No library books would be
purchased.
4. There would he no monies for
any unanticipated emergencies .
5. There would he no money to
purchase classroom textbooks
and virtually no money to purchase Instructional supplies.
6. . No additional salary Increases would be able to be
gran ted to any employee.
7. Continue with full day
every-other-day kindergarten.
8. Reduce the amount of money
spent on custodial, maintenance
and mechanic supplies even
more.
9. Require the board to borrow
as much as ~.000 from · the
Emergency Loan Fund. (This
would have to be paid back just
as if you as an Individual were to
borrow money from a bank.
Obviously we can't afford to do
this as It would only make
matters worse).

Contlnued from page 1
center on Page St., was announced for 3 p.m. Thursday at
the site.
-Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman. Clerk·
Treasurer Jon Buck and CouncUmen Jack Satterfield, WUllam
Walters, Bob Gilmore, Paul
Gerard and James Clatworthy.

-----Area deaths---ters, Ida Perrine and Mary ·nutte, and a son, Gary Saunders,
Gregory, of Buckhannon, W.Va . , all of Gallipolis; four grandchild·
Aria E. Oldaker, 64; Letart, died . and Dora Belle Putman, of ren; one brother, Gerald Halley
Sunday, Oct. 9, 1988, in the · Coolville.
of Norfolk, Va.; and three
University Presbytuian Hospital,
In add!tlon to his parents, he sisters, VIolet Moriarity and
Pennsylvania.
was preceded in death by one Nellie Roarh of Middleport and
Born Feb. 21, 1924, in the Broad brother and one sisters.
Patricia Tucker of Owensboro,
Run Community, she was a
Services will be 1 p.m. Thurs- Ky .
daughter of the late Edwin and day at White Funeral Home In
One brother. Lawrence, preJanet Susan King Edwards.
Coolville with Pastor Rober t' W. ceded her In death.
Her husband, Perry 0 . Oldaker
Services will be conducted 1 '
Sr., preceded her in death in 1984, · Markley officiating. Burial will
be
In
the
family
cemetery
on
the
p.m
. . Friday at Waugh-Halleyand one son, Ronald Wayne OlPutman farm. Friends may cail Wood Funeral Horne. Rev. Ste·
daker in 1958.
at the funeral home after 2 p.m.
wart Ja171lson officiating. Burial
She was a member of the Broad on Wednesday .
follows
In Ohio Valley Memory
Run Zion Lutheran Church.
Gardens. Friends may call at the
Survivors are four sons, Perry 0 .
funeral
home 6 to 9 p.m. on
Jr. , Edwin Joseph, Michael S. and Dencil Fenell
Thursday.
·
Timothy Lee, all of Letart; one
pallbearers
will he Dorsa!
Dencil Ray Ferrell, 60, of
daughter, Susana Marie Roush,
McCoy,
John
Riffe,
David RaNew Haven; two sisters, Mrs. Route 1; Box 26B, Shannon, N.C.,
Steve
Blackwell,
Larry
tliff.
Thomas (Julia) Willoughby, New died Monday morning at the V.A .
North
and
Rick
Blazer.
Haven, Mrs. Conley (Bernice) Dud- Hosplta) In FayettevUie, N.C. ·
Born Sept. 4, )928 In West
ley, Mason; one brother, Edwin T.
Edwards, New Haven; five VIrginia, he was a son of the late '
James and Effie Ferrell.
grandchildren; ode great-grandson.
He is survived by his wife, at
Graveside services will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the home in North Carolina, and Dally stock prices.
Broad Run Cemetery, with the Rev. many brothers, sisters and rela - (As of 10:30 a.m.)
· Bryce and Mark Smith
_llves In Meigs County .
George Weirick officiating.
of Blunt, Ellis A Loewi
In lieu of flowers, !he family reMarjorie
Saunders
quests contributions be made to the
Am Electric Power ............. 27% ·
Broad Run Cemetcty Association.
·
Marjorie
Ann
Saunders,
56,
of
AT&amp;T ................................. 26J18
(Contact Edwin T. Edwards, New
Route
1
Gallipolis.
(George's
Ashland 011 ........................ 34~
Haven)
Creek
community),
died
Monday
Bob Evans .......................... l6%
There wi II be no visitation.
in
Columat
University
Hospital
Charming Shoppes ............... 14
Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason
City Holding Co ................... 34
is in charge of arrangements.
' bus fonowing a brief Illness. She
was an administrative secretary
Federal Mogul ............ :....... 49\ii
for
Guiding
Hand
School
and
Goodyear
T&amp;R .. ........ ......... 54%
James Meadows Sr.
secretary of the 169 Board.
Heck's .............. .. .......... ....... %
Born Sept. 20, 1932 In Gall!a
Key Centurion .............. ..... .. 17
James R . Meadows Sr., 70, of
County,
she
was
the
daughter
of
l.ands'
End ..... ....... .. .. .... .... . 29%
Buckhannon, W.Va. , died Mon the
late
Clennle
Ted
Halley
and
Umlted
Inc ........... ...... ....... 23%
day at St. Joseph's Hospital In
Sarah
Walter
Halley.
Multimedia
Inc ..... ... ... .. .. .. .. 73¥&gt;
Buckhannon.
She
married
Arthur
!Bob)
Rax
Restaurants
......... .. ....... 3'4
Mr. Meadows was born at
Saunders,
on
Oct.
15,
195Q
In
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
............. ... 11 ¥&gt;
Gassaway, W.Va. tothelateGlen
Columbus.
and
he
survives
along
Shoney
's
Inc
..............
.... ...... 7%
and Bessie Meadows. He was
with
two
daughters
,
Mrs.
Barbra
Wendy
's
Inti
..........................
?
employed as a machinist for
Coleman
and
Mrs.
Susie
CurWorthington Ind .......... , .. .. .. 22%
PescO" Products Company in
Cleveland.
· Survivors Include three sons,
James Russell Meadows Jr., of
Ravenna, Ernest Wllllam Meadows, of Parkersburg, W.Va .,
and James R. Meadows; four
daughters, Mary Day, of Cool·
ville, Cindy Cam pbell, of Balli·
more, Md., Helen Lucy Riggle··•&lt;···
man, of St. Marys, W.Va. , and
. :.::~·
-, &gt;:· ::r··,:;:,,.'::::;.··:'' ' ·,,,'l'\;)-t:.:~}\:::_:·~,:::di(;\~:'(,/ii,f:~t?:·
Ellen Hova t ter, of Morgantown.
W.Va.: 20 grandch ildren; one
••.
\
. :-:&lt;·' ...
1..
.
"'
+
grea t-grandchild; and three sis·

Aria Oldaker

------Weather·-----highs In the upper 40s or In the 50s
Thursday, ranging · from the
upper 50s to theupper60~Frlday,
and from the mid .60s to the lower
70s Saturday. Early morntng
lows will range from the upper.
20s to the mid 30s Thursday and
from the mid 30s to the mid 40s
Friday and Saturday.

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a
low between 30 and 35. Light
northwest winds.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
with highs near 50.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair during the period, with

Marsha Spencer and fourchlld·
'l'en, wife and c hUdren or Ted
Spencer, of Somerset, were Involved In an automob!le accident Jamboree tickets
Tickets for the Coal Miner's
near Somerset on Friday. Two
Jambore-..:are
on sale through
children,. 14-month-old Brett and
Friday
at
Buttons
and Bows In
seven-year-old Regina, .were
Pomeroy.
The
Jamboree
will be
killed at the scene.
held Saturday at Meigs High
Mrs. Spencer and two _other School.
chUdren were taken to ·the
hospital where four-year-old SaCorrection
Weekend service
brina and Mrs. Spencer remain
Special weekend services will
1n stable condiUon. Ten-year-old
Syracuse PTO wUI meet to·
be
held Saturday at 7 p.m.,
Amber Wi'S released.
night (Tuesday) at 7 p .m., not
at 10 a.m. and s·p.m .. at
Sunday
The victims are the daughter7:30 p.m. The meeting will he
the Red Brush Church of Christ
In-law and grandchUdren of held at the school. The Ways and
on Bashan Road, near Racine.
Virgil and Barb Kirkhart
Means Committee wiU meet at
Denver Hill of Foster, W.Va. wiU
Spencer, of Somerset, and the
6:30p .m.
· speak. Everyone Invited.
granddaughter and great grand·
chUdren of Faye Kirkhart, of
Bashan Road, Long ~ttom .
Thank You Francis Florist For The Flowers,
Several uncles, aunts and cou·
Thank You John Teaford For The Trophies
stits a) so live In the Meigs County
vicinity, including great uncles
During The Racine Fall Festival
and aunts; Richard and Florence
Queen Contest.
Spencer, Guy and Evelyn
Spencer, Art and · Margaret
Spencer, Mrs. VIolet Parker and
OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE
Mrs. Eunice Midkiff, all of
Tuppers Plains; and Mrs. Jean
Trussell, of Long Bottom.
Address for the Spencer family
3RD STREET
949-2800
RACINE, OHIO
is 10922 Township Road 24W,
MASTERCARD
VISA
GOLDEN
BUCKEYE •
Somerset, Ohio, 43783.

*****

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

PIKE • RT.JS WEST

PhOnl 448-4SM
BARGAIN IIA~ IAT I 1UN
AU. IUfl 11.10

.,..
__
...._1100 .,_
, au MArt 12.so

,

~~~71hru~

Page 3 ·

.,

Vol.39, No.1 10
Copyrighted 1988

Official
says
small
.
.
bustness senr1ces are
available for finns

Steve and Debbie Fin law, Route 1, Long Bottom.
Members of the court, I tor, across the back, are
Penny Aeiker, seventh IJI'IUier, daughter of Cindy
and Pal Aelker, 34428 Stale Route 7, Pomeroy;
Tracy Murphy, eighth-~r~~der, daughter of Robert'
and Sina Murphy, 51MMfo. Pine Tree Drive,
Reedsville; Nichola Pickens, freshman, daughter
of Ray and PIUty Pickens, 38215 Texas Road,
· Pomeroy; Angle Murphy, sophomore, daugbter
of Gary andRoberla Murphy(Route 1, Reeclsvllle,
and Amy Murphy, Jllnlor,llaupter of Robert and
Sina Murphy, Route 1. Reedolvtlle.

EASTERN HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATES - The annual homecoming of Eastern
. High School will be held Friday night with the
· homecoming queen to be crowned Ia halftime
: ceremonies. PlciiJI'I!d are the three senior
: cudldates and members of the court represent·
lng each grade of the junior and senior high
school. The three candldales, sealed front, I tor,
are Jayne Ritchie, daughter of joyce and Ellon
· Ritchie, Route Z, Coolville; Ana Buckley,
. d&amp;~~~bter of Nancy and Chester Buckley, Route
· 1114, Reeclsvtlle; Healher Flnlaw, daughter of

-Operated correctly
Extinguishers should be Inspected monthly by owners and
owners should have extlnqulshers maintained by a quailfled technician. In the home,
family members should know the
location of home fire extin·
gulsliers and 1\ow to operate
them, and Its the same In the
workplace with employees.
Hand in hand with tire extinguishers go smoke detectors .
Ideally, according to' the Na·
tiona! Fire Prevention Association (NFPA). battery operated
smoke detectors whould be
tested weekly and AC powered
detectors should be tested
monthly to make sure they are In
good working order.
Snouffer and Blaetlnar w111
also provide Instructions on
proper Installation and testing of
smoke detectors.
There are also many other life
saving precautions which should
be taken to sa:teguard the home
and workplace and Snouffer and
Blaettnar w111 be happy to
provide information and sugges·
!Ions to anyone who asks.
The telephone number . for
Brown and Snouffer Fire and
Safety Equipment Is 992-7075.
The number for 'Blaettnar Fire
and Safety Equipment is 9925139.

JUDGE ALICE RESNICK

Name keynote
,speaker for
Saturday event

IIY NANCY YOACHAM
Sendnet Staff Writer
Scott Wright, a consultant with
the Small Business Development
Center on the campus of Ohio
University, Athens, informed
members of Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce or the
services available through the
Development Center when he
spoke at Tuesday's regular meetIng of Chamber.
"We may not have all the
answers," Wright said. "but
we'llllnd them."
Meigs County businesses are
second only to Athens County for
utilizing the Development Center, which has been es.tablished
under state and federal guidelines to provide consultation
services to small businesses In

lfs official. Our VISA and
MASTERCARD offer all the benefits
af other credit cards, but at lower
Interest rates. Take time out to apply
for a credit card that costs less and .
saves you more. Call or come in for
an application today.

By United Press International
RepubliCan vice presidential
~andldate Dan Quayle. in a
campaign swing through western Ohio Tuesday, affirmed a
student's right to display a
Democratic campaign poster,
saying political disagreements
are " what this election is all
about."
In a question-and-answer ses·
slon at Ottawa-Glandorf High
School, ninth -grader Sean
HertzSch asked Quayle if he
supports his school's policy prohibiting him from displaying a
"Duke" poster - supporting the
Democratic presidential candl·
dacy of Michael Dukakis- while
a member of the GOP ticket was
visiting the school.
·
"If you want to hold that sign
up, or any other sign, go ahead,''
· Quayle told the student. "You're
· not golng to bother me. We have
freedom of speech in this country. and there are disagreements. That's what this election.
Is all about."
Earller Tuesday, In Napoleon,
Ohio, Quayle attacked Dukakts
by stressing a freguently used
charge that the Massachusetts
governor Is soft on crime.
The Indiana senator harped on
two major themes brought up
many times by the ~publican
ticket: the Massachusetts prison

5th

str..t

New Haven
882-2135

Member F.D.l.C.
2212 Jackson Avanua
Polrlt Pleasant
675-1121
••

•

2nd Street
Mason ,
n3-5514

....

. .

I
-·~ -

''If we don't know how to do It in
our office," Wright co ncluded,
"we'll find someone who does ."
Anyone who wishes to contact
the Small Business Development
Center for assistance may call or
stop by the Center which Is
located In the Innovation Center
on the Athens campus.
In other chamber business,
President Paul Gerard announced that this year's Pomeroy Community Halloween Party
will be held Thursday. Oct. 27,
from 6 to 7:30p.m. on the parking
lot. The party will be held In
conjunction with the Merchants'
Association's Halloween Moonlight Madness Sale. Donations of
money and candy for the party
are needed.
Continued on page 5

furlough program and Dukakis's
opposition to the death penalty.
Quayle spoke about 20 minutes
to a crowd of more than 3,000 on
the courthouse steps In the first
stop of a daylong swing through
western Ohio. Qunle also
stopped In Van Wert, Cellna and
Greenville.
He spoke only briefly a bout
George Bush, spending most of
the Napoleon speech on Dukakls.
The controversial furlough
program -which was Instituted
by Dukakis's Republican prede-

cessor - led to a weekend
release of Willie Horton, a
convicted murderer who terrorized a couple In Maryland.
"Tl\e governor defended the
furlough program ·instead of
acting to improve It," Quayle
said. ''He called the program
very successful. "
Quayle also said II took 57,000
signatures by citizens In Massachusetts to change the program.
Dukakis signed into law a change
In the program a year after the
Horton Incident.

Eastern Local
Questions and answe~
The Eastern Local School
District Board of Education has
Issued a question and aiiswer
Informational packet to encour·
age passage of 12.4 mill continuIng tax levy at theNov.8electlon.
Following Is part II and the
final information provided In the
packet:
Question: Why a continuing
levy ard not an emergency levy?
Answer: The current expense
needs of the school district are
not temporary needs. They are
ongoing continuing needs. They

will not evaporate in five years.
Please remember, that as valuation increases . tax reduction
comes Into play. In other words,
as valuation Increases, the
amount of millage decreases.
This is true of a continuing levy
just as much as it is an
emergency levy.
Question: Why not let the state
do It?
Answer: Granted, for 1987·88
and 1988-89, the state granted the
smallest Increases for public
Continued on page 5

Firm withdraws Kroger. bid

Judge Alice Resnick w111 be
keynote speaker for a. fund
raising dinner to be held Saturday at the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy under the sponsorship of the Meigs County Democratic Party.
Judge Resnick Is a candidate
for the Supreme Corut of Ohio in
the _ upcoming November
election.
·
Judge Resnick has 12 years of
judicia! experience. In 1982, she
became the first woman to he
elected to the Ohio Sixth District
Court of Appeals and was re~
lected without opposition In 1986.
She Is now the court's presiding
judge. Judge Resnick previously
Carol H. Cantrell, administrator, has Issued a report on the
served
seven years on the Toledo
progress being ·made In co Uectlons of the new Middleport
Municipal
Court first elected in
VIllage income tax .
1975
and
reelected
without oppo- ·
. Receipts for September totaled $5,555,13 maklng the total
. sltlon In 1982. She served as
receipts to date since the tax went Into effect at $8,535.55.
pres!dlng-adrrilnistratlve judge
Expenses tor the month of September amounted to $1,772.5!\
of
that court. In addition to her
with total expenses since the tax plan was formulated
judicial
experience she has 11
amounting to $15,990.38. The deficit In the opera!Ionas oft he end
years
experience
as a trial
of September amounted to $7,454.84.
lawyer In Toledo.
Also on hand for the Saturday.
night event will he Sen. Jan
Michael Long and State Repre·
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department received a call at ·
sentatlve
Jolynn Boster who Is
2:34p.m. Monday from David Horner, of Syracuse, reporting
seeking
her
fourth term In the
that his trailer home had been broken Into. Deputies were
94th
house
district.
John Bu·
dispatched to the residence where an official report of the
chanon,
candidate
for
the lOth
break-In was made. ·
Dis
trlct
Congressional
seat, Is
At 3:45 p.m ., Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Little radioed the
expected
to
at
tend
along
with
sheriff's department that he had found a car In 'Middleport
Meigs Sheriff candidate, James
which matched the descrlp.tlon of the car given In the report of
Souisby,
and D . Michael Mullen,
the break-In at Horner's.
.
candidate
lor judge of the Meigs
Deputies went to Middleport, retrieved items from the car
County
Court.
that had been taken from the Horner home, aad had the car
Dinner will be served at 6 p.m.
towtid to the sheriff's office.
with
the program lb begin at 7
Lee R. Sattler III, 33, of Galloway, was arrested for , the
p.m.
Tickets
are·$7 and may he
break-In and charged with burglary. Sattler waived prelimipurchased
at
the Democratic
nary court proceedings·and was to have appeared on the charge
Headquarters,
200
West Main,
today (Wednesday) In Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Pomeroy, or at lhe door. '·

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Kohl·
berg, Kravis, Roberts &amp; Co.
Tuesday withdrew Its $5 billion
offer for the Kroger Co., criticizIng the nation's second-largest
supermarket chain for refusing
to even consider its offer.
Kohll;lerg, Krav!s of(ered
$58.50 a share In cash and
securities for Kroger Sept. 27.•
apd boosted ltsoflerto$64on0ct.

4.

It considered."

"While we are perplexed that
the board found our proposal to
acquire the company lor $64 a
share, or 28 Urnes earnings, to be
Inadequate, we were not even
' asked if we were In a position to
lmproveouroffer,"theKohlberg
letter said.
Several financial analysts, In·

"
'

eluding Morgan Stanley &amp; Co. ,
Kohlberg, Krav!s' adviser , have
valued the Kroger restruc turing
plan at $53 to $56 a share.
Kroger also !Ired 300 em·
ployees at Its corpora te headquarters las t week and, late last
month , announced it was selling
s~veral divisions to raise money
for the special dividend.

State's growing season over

On Sept. 23, Kroger announced
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) - A
a corporate restructuring, under
cold
Canadian high-pressure syswhich It would pay $40 In cash
tem
brought
the first widespread
and $8 In deferred Interest notes
frost
and
freezing
temperatures
for each of Its 76.1 mllUon shares
to
the
state
last
week,
ending
of common stock. In jhe restruc·
Ohio's
growing
season
for
the
turlng, .whlch has a total value of
most
part,
the
Ohio
Agricultural
about $4.3 billion, shareholders
StatlsUcs Service said Tuesday.
would also retain an equity
Frost delivered a killing blow
Interest.
to crops and weeds In mally areas
Last week, Kroger rejected the
of Ohio, giving farmers a chance
Kohlberg. Kravls offer, saying It
to harvest soybe'ans quicker, said
would proceed with Its restructhe service.
turing and Indicating a takeover
Field activities In Ohio last
would raise antitrust questions .
week Included the planting of
But Kohlberg, Kravls, In a
winter grains and harvesting of
letter to Kroger's board of
row crops, late vegetables, hay,
directors Tue&amp;day, said It was
sUage. fruit and other speciality
surprised and dlsapjxllnted at the croPS.
rejection.
There were 6.2 days suitable
"We lind It difficult to under- for fieldwork. SoU moisture was
stand that the board acted on rated 33 percent short, 65 percent
matters of such lmporlance to Its adequate and 2 percent surplus.
stockholders without the benefit
Harves tlng of .c orn advanced
ot meeting with us ... " the letter at a slower pace than In recent
said. •• As you are aware, we were years (8 percent vs. 48 percentln
not given the opportunity to 1987 and a five-year averageof24
discuss the terms of our propos- percent) . Allatollln col)tlnued to
als or to satisfy the board with be a concern, although none has
respect to certain 'uncertainties' yet been found In Ohio, the

-5heriff probes incident

Peoples Bank

Southeastern Ohio.
Basically, the Development
Center is a guiding agency and
will provide direction and assistance in all aspects or small
business needs. And although
money to finance businesses Is
not available through the Development Center, suggestions for
possible funding so)lrces are
available.
"We try to open the eyes of
people who think they would like
to get Into bu s!ness," Wright
said.
As part of the eye-opentng
process, the Development Center
uses Ohio University students to
concjuct marketing surveys and
collect other types technical data
for prospective or expanding
businesses.

Poster doesn't bother Quayle

Issues report on income tax

l.efs set the record straight. Interest
rates and annual fees on credit
cards can vary from bank to bank.
~you don1 shop and compare. you
might end up carrying a card that
carries a higher Interest rate.

2 Sections, H Pages
A Multimedia lnc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October ·12, 1988

,.._Local briefs----..

\

Clear tonight, low In the
upper 20s. Thursday,lncreas·
lng cloudiness, highs near 60.

•

Iri addition to providing free
Inspections, both. Snouffer and
Blaetlnar are encouraging
owners of. fire extinguishers to
reacquaint themselves with their
extinguishers, rather than wall ·
lng until an emergency and
perhaps losing valuable time
because they aren't sure how to
use them.
Although Brown and Snouffer
stress that fire extinguishers do
not take the place of the fire
department with Its equipment
and trained personnel, fire extln·
gulshers can help, and In many
cases,' can put out a tire before It
gets out of hand . But In order for
lire extinguishers to be helpful,
·
they must be:
-In proper working order
-Easily accessible

is pfeasea to announa' fu. Ma6t' foditinjj ' .
nis nt'W office in tfie !Me({kqt,.Qffit. 'l}#f(4if{g ; ..

JAC~ OII

Pick 49914-

•

National Fire Prevention
Week Is Oct. 9-15 and locally. In
keeping with the national week,
two local fire and safety equipment companies will Inspect
your personal fire extinguishers
-FREE.
· Gary Sno11ffer, of Brown and
Snouffer Company, 172 North
Secnd Ave., Middleport, and
Rick Blaettnar, of Blaettnar's
Fire and Safety Equipment, 148
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, are
offering the free fire extinguisher Inspections .

w

531

996

Firms offer free
inspections this week .

·Benjamin . J:~:§l,tY1.t2:'".,. .
Obstetrics and c9J1~biodt

Daily Number

line tonight

Boosters to meet
Southern Band Boosters will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m., In the
high school band room. All
parents of band students in the
district are urged to attend.
Dance slated
Pomeroy senior Citizens are
sponsoring a round and square
dance on Friday, from 8 to 11
p.m., at the center on Mulberry
Heights. Music will be by Larry
Hubbard and True Country
•
Band. Bring snacks.

Stocks

I

Ohio Lottery

'
NL flagon

-----Announcements---~Yearbooks In
Meigs Marauder 1988 Yearbooks are In and may be picked
up Monday through Friday
mornings at Meigs High School,
from 8 to 8: 45.

Killed in accident

Village ...

really. on the people of Ohlp."
In answer to reporters' questions, the mayor declined to
bla me any backlash against his
much - maligned anti- .
pornography commercials for
his standll!g ln the polls .
The Columbus Dispatch's latest poll showed Metzenbaum
leading Volnovich, 55 percent to
38, with 7 percent of the voters
undecided, an Increase in the
spread of seven points since last
month when Votnovich accused
Metzepbaum of being "soft" on
child pornography.
_
"We won't know that for some
time. " said Volnovich when
asked what effect the ads had on
the campaign.

share."
Volnovlch said Ohio send s
more money to Was hington that
all but 20 Mates, yet Is 37th In
receipts from t he federal
government.
·
''Our television commercials
will be ma king ll.clear to Ohioans
that . they're going to have a
hustler for Ohio," he said.
Votnov!ch said the latest bu y in
12 major markets will allow the
average viewer to se.i him six
times In one week. He acknowledged his TV ads have been on for
months. " Wemay ha ve hadsome
commercials on," he said, " but
we haven't had enough or''em on
out there .to make any lmpatt,
'

•
wm•

1'.

service said.
Ohio's soybean harvest gained
momentum last week. The ser·
vice said frost should Improve
harvesting co nditions but also
end the growth of late-ma turing
stands.
The stale' s soybea n crop is
rated fair .
Planting of winter wheat was
almost half completed last week
(46 per,cent. compared with 59
percent In 1987 and a flvi&gt;.year
average of 43 percent). Wheat
emerged on 15 perce nt of ex.
peeled acreage. compared with
16 percent In 1987 and a five-year
average of 12 percent.
High 'tempert'tures averaged
from the upper 50s In the
northern portion of the state last
week to about 60 In central and
southern Ohio, or approximately
7-12 degrees below normal statewide, said the service.
Lows averaged mosUy in the
mid or upper 30s In Qhto last
week, or about 6-11 ·degrees
below normal, the service said.

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