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                  <text>Page 10-The· Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuaaday, October 18. 1988

Ohio Lottery

Athletics
edge Dodgers
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1888-1988

Page 3

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Daily Number
719
Pick 4

Mostly clear, lonlght,low In
mid 30s .

6330

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Vol.39, No. 115
Copyrighted 1988

2.Sectlons, 14 Pages . 26 Cents.
A Multimedia
Inc. Newspaper
.
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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. October 19, 1988

Earlier action ·
for new Meigs
superintendent
is rescinded

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MORE mAN 50 YEARS MEMBERSHIP - Lon« time Meigs
County Farm Bureau members were honored at Tuesday night's
annual dinner-meeting of the Farm Bureau Federation. The
meetiD« was held at Eas~rn IUgh School. Individuals and famUies
recelvin« pins and glftl! for their many years In the Farm Bureau
were, from left to right, front row, Bill Nease, and his grandfather,
Vernon Nease, both of Racine, wlth a 70-year membership; Ada
Holter, Pomeroy, 58 years; W.S. Michael, Portland, 53 years;

•

By BOB HOEFLICH
candidate at this time. Ru!JE:
SenUnerNews Staff
responded with a comment that a
The Meigs Local School Dis- "word game" was being played.
Vaughan commented that he
trict Board of EducatiOn meeting
In regular sesslol); Tuesday night does not feel that the board has to
voted 3·2 to rescind an· earlier pay two employes at this Inaction to advertise for a superln· ferring that the district as a
money saving measure might
tendent In the district.
Dan E. Morris who had been functioR with just one admlnis·
serving as superintendent has trator In the central office.
Nellie Parker, Pomeroy, 52 years; Mary Easterday, Racine, 52
been unable to work for several
Barton sugge~ ted that Carpen·
years; Pauline Aikins, Rutland, a 711-year membership; May
months due to Illness and since ter be given an opportunity to run
Holter, and her son, George Holler, both of Racine, with a$3-year
then assistant superintendent the district with the salary to be
James Carpenter has been serv- considered If he Is elevated to the
membership. In back, left to ri«ht. are Jake and Mildred Gaul,
Ing as Interim superintendent. superintendent's post.
Chesler, 51 years; Don and Maida Mora, Chester, 52 years; and
Morris Is not expected to return
Harry and Grace Holler, son and dau«hter·ln-law of May Holter,
Vaughan •. Barton · and Rupe
also.part of the 53-year Holter family membership.
to his post and on Sept. 20, the voted to rescind the advertiboard voted unanimously to semet motion to fill the superinadvertise the pest.
tendent's pest with Snowden and
However, last night the board Jeff Werry voting against the
voted 3-2 to rescind plans for action to rescind that motion.
The board approved a new
ad\tertlslng to fill the position.
had me choked," Perry testified.
ked. "Yes," she rej&gt;lied.
Board member . Richard after school suspension policy
Holdiqg _Perry by the blue
"I didn't want 11 (the gun) tD go Va1,1ghan made the motion to which as described by Carpenter
housecoat w1th one hand and hold· off" she testified. "I dcn't remem· rescind the earlier action with Is an alternative to suspension
ing a gun to her race with the other, bei it going off. I did not heat it go member , Larry Rupe, providing from regular school classes. The
Facemire told her, "Breathe. Make otT. I don't remember."
, . the second. Board President alternative school will operate
·my day." '
Perry told the jury she's not quiie
Robert Snowden questioned why from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. each
"He was serious. I never saw that sure what happened nexL She S&amp;ld after a unanimous vote to adver- Tuesday and Thursday with Carl
tfacial e)(presSion) .'before • tllat -· •sh&amp;. belieYe~she headed_!Oward ~er . tlse the post early why some Hysell and Otis Knopp managing •
nighL"
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bedroom, gOing through - the board members had decided they the night school and Hysell ·
Muspve attempted tO hand the kitchen.
were wrong. Board membver monitoring the program. Stu.38 cal1ber revolver to Perry to ask
''I heard a noise and turned and Robert Barton said he voted for dents Involved wlll also Include
her to demonstrate how close the fired," she testified. Asked by the earlier motion as an act of those suspended from Eastern
gun was to her face, but she quickly Musgrave to describe lhe noise, ~he unity for the board. Rupe said he and Southern- Districts. Under
shied away from the weapon. "I said, "I don't know how to descnbe had since reconsidered, feeling the plan a student suspended lor
can't get that gun close to me," she it I remember when I wmed, I hoi- the vote to advertise the superln· three days would still attend
sobbed.
Jared stop." Perry testilied that she tendent's job was not fair· to the regular classes and would ·make
Musgrave then held the gun tD did not p~ll the trigller on the gun current candidate. Snowden re- up the suspension time by attendhis face and asked Perry to tell !he the first ume and did not mean to marked that there Is no current
Continued on page 5 '
jury how close it was to her face. "I pull the ,tngger on the gun the
could barely see the en.d of it," she second time. .
.
testified.
After shooung the second ume,
Perry told the jury tluit once she Perry recalled sitting on the kitchen
saw the gun, she grabbed the barrel floor in· a daze. She remembered
Three working employees of Hopkins' and Chapmans' tires
of it. She insisted there was not a putting a blanket over Facemrre,- the Meigs County Department of had been, Swisher said.
fight between her and Facemire for who was now slumped on the Human Services had their cars
A car belonging to working
control of the weapon. "Were you couch, his head titled tnward one vandalized early .this week. Ac- employee Jenny Leach, Pome·
in fear of your life?" Musgrave as·
Continued on page 5
cording to the Meigs County roy, was vandalized several
Sheriff's Department, the lncl· weeks ago while It was parked
dents remain under Investigation ""during the day at the Middleport
along with an Incident from home of another working
several weeks ago of vandalism employee.
to another DHS employee's car.
Also this week, employee,
Michael Swisher, Meigs DHS Yvonne Sisson. Chester, found
director, said he received a call sharp metal objects In her
about 10:30 p.m. Sunday night driveway.
from employee Greg Hopkins,
And tacks have been found In
Athens, that Hopkins' car had the drive areas of the two DHS
been spray painted, egged and buildings In Middleport since a
two tires punctured.
strike by approximately hal! of
About7 a.m. Monday, Barbara Meigs DHS employees began on
Chapman, Syracuse, called Aug. 1, Swisher said.
Swisher to report she h!ld three
Who the vandals are remains
punctured tires and her car had unknown.
been egged. A third employee,
However, since the acts of
VIcki Rood, Tuppers Plains, had vandalism are happening only to
a flat tlreonMondaymornlngbut working DHS employees; first
did not know until Monday Impressions are that the Incievening that the tire had been dents are related to the on-going
punctured from the · side, as strike, authorities said.

Perry says
she
didn't
mean
to
shoot
Facemire
. .
.

By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStafr

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Norma Jean Perry testified Thesday
afternoon that she didn't mean to
shoot Fred Facemire last year and
that she doesn't ·even remember
hearing the g)lll go ofT.
"I told Fred, 'Why don't you get
up and tell me what to ljo?'" she
testified she said to Facemire's· in·
en, bleeding body shortly aflzr !he
shooting. "I was scared so bad, I
didn't know what to do."
She said events that happened
during the shooting and just after
the shooting are all a blur now. She
'also feared for her family and herself at the time of the shooting, ac. cording to testimony.
"I felt he was going to kill me
3lld tum on the kids," she testified.
Perry,-30, charged by police with
first-degree murder in !he shooting
of Facemire twice on March 8,
1987, was on-the suind the entire

day, breaking down several times
into tears under questioning by
bol.h defense attorney Raymond
Musgrave and Prosecutor Damon
B. Morgan Jr. She left the witness
st.and and !he courtroom to regain
her composure more than once.
Police say the shooting occurred
in the early morning hours at' the
reside~e Perry and Facemire
shared at 2A II Lincoln Ave., Point
Pleasant. 1\vo children in a bed:
room in ' the house were not
awakened by the shooting, Perry
testified. Facemire was shot once in
the chest and once in the tnp of the
head.
Mason County Circuit Court
Judge Clarence L. Watt told the JQ.
woman, two-man jury Tuesday that
court proceedings today will
probably last until about6 p.m.
Perry told the jury Facemire
scared her with a "serious' look af.
tcr grabbing her housecoat by the
neck and twisting it as he sat on the
living room's blue lovcseat "He

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Our Second
tOO Years
Were celebrating our Centennial Year in 1988.
That's a century of producing fine papers for
quality printing. paperboard and kraft papers
for packaging. For more than 30 years, we've
also been developing specialty chemicals,
including activated carbon, the key ingredient
~ in cleaning automobile emissions and purify:

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HEADQUARTERS OPENS - Republican Party headquarters
In Meigs County opened Tuesday In the East Maln,Sireet building
between Swisher Lohse Drugs and Gallery Hair Arts. Headquar·
ters wlll be open from 11 a.m to 5 P·~· Monday through Saturday
and residents are Invited to stop by for lllerature orlnlormat1o11, or
to telephone there, 1192-2288. Gathering for the official opening
were, left to right, candidates, front, Larry Spencer, clerk of
courts, Incumbent; Emmogene Holstein Congo, recorder,

ing air, vapor and water. Along with the
management of our 1.5 million acres of
timberlands, these products are manulac·
tured, delivered and serviced by a worldwide
team ·of some 15,000 dedicated Westvaco
people who salute you and invite you to join
us in noting the start of our second 100 years.

Bids on the renovation of
Anniversary Hall at Rio Grande
Colleges have been accepted by
the Rio Grande Community
College Board of Trusf!!es.
The bids totaled $&amp;'!5,442, said
Dr. Herman L. Koby, secretary/treasurer of the board. The
project estlmate Is $875,700.
Apparent low bidders Include
Porlco, Portsmouth, general
contract; A.J. Stockmelster,
Jackson, ' plumbing; BB &amp; E,
Portsmouth, heating and air
conditioning; and Roy Heffner,

w.atvico

A PLEDGE OF
EXCELLENCE
Our Second IOO'!tars

f,

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Incumbent; Steve Story, prosecutor; with Henry Well, headquar·
ters coordinator; and Evelyn Clark; chairman of the Republican
Central Committee; and back row, George CoWDS, treasurer,
Incumbent; David Koblentz, Richard Jones, commissioners,
Incumbent, with Jones also execuUve committee chairman;
Howard Frank, sheriff, Incumbent; Phll Roberts, engineer,
Incumbent; Pat O'Brien, County Court judge, Incumbent; and
Fred W. Crow.ID, Common Pleas Court judge.

CommunitY. College board ·accepts· bids

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Copynglltt988

Three cars vandalized

w..-c Ca&lt;porotton

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,Chesapeake, electric .
The renovation means an over·
haul of the building, opened
around 1927 and one of the oldest
exlstlng structures on campus.
New heating and air systems will
be Installed, along with elevators
and other Internal Improvements. On the outside, windows
will be replaced. Stone and brick
will be cleaned and repaired.
Contracts call for the renova·
tlon to be completed In 270
calendar days, Koby said.
In a related matter, the board's

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Building Committee recommended that the Columbus architectural firm of McDonald, Cassell &amp; Basset !Inc. be employed to
design the addition to Davis
Library.
The finn has worked on numerous campus and public structures, Including jobs at Ohio
University, Ohio State Unlver·
slty, Columbus State Community
College, DeVry Institute and an
addition to the Mount Vernon and · ·
Knox County PubliC Library.
Upon the board's approval,
·i

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McDonald, Cassell &amp; Bassett will
draw up alternative designs to
meet specifications defined by
the stall. The design process will
Involve a series of meetings and
reviews to determine the design
that best meets staff-designed
needs and that Is within the
building budget.
The proposed addition, Included ln.. the state's capital
budget for 1989-90, · allows for
expanded storage of resource
materials and Improved library
materials.

DANGER TO TIRES - Th- sharp meW objects, approxl·
mately tw!Hncbea loq, were found early this week tn the
driveway of a workln« employee of the Melp County Deparbnent
of Human Servlcea. Taelul have al10 beea found from time to tbne
In the drive areas of the two DRS bulldlap In Mlddlepon, &amp;iDee a
strike by approximately half of Melia DHS employees be«an Aug.
1.

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.·

· ·m' entary
C.·o m
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON ARE,A
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~~ .-r-'-1'--r'~d·o=
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~V'·

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal,

Inland Dally Press

Assoc iation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 woni.;

long. All letters are subj~t toed!ttng and must be signed with name, address and

teleptlone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters Sl}ould be In

goOO ta!ite, adctressing Issues, not persooallties.

Letters to the editor
Thanks volunteers
On behalf of the Chester Fire
Dept. I would like to thank all the
volunteers who worked at the
Meigs County Fair, and who
helped by giving donations. Because of all these people, the
Chester Fire Dept. was success·

lui In raising moeny that was
needed. Once again I want to
thank all of your who have
helped.
Leonard Koenig, J r,
Chester Fire Dept.

'

· loy to work with
want any more cuts. Help us pro·
Dear Editor,
teet your loved one and get the
I work foranurslnghomeasan
care . they so deserve In their
Aide.
Those old people are a joy to Golden Years.
Your local nursing homes wUI
work with and the families are
always very nice, but I wish they appreciate your support and so
would please spend twenty-five will I. So don't put off tUI tomor· cents and- five minutes of their row what you can write today or
time to write to Governor Cel- · you may forget.
Sincerely,
este. The cuts In funding are
hurting all the nursing homes
Anna M. Leamond
·
P. 0. Box 63, .
much more than people realize.
Racine, Ohio 45771
So please write Governor Cel·
este and let him know you don't

Expresses thanks
On behalf of theChesterP.T.O.
officers I would like to express
our thanks to everyone who
helped make our Fall Carnival a
success. A special thank you

goes to all the businesses who
donated to us.
Many thanks,
Denise Mora
Secretary, Chester P.T.O.

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa contributing to tM reluctance to
(NEA) - Even though the reve- enter the profession among those
lat!on came more than a decade considering career alternatives.
ago, Rosalie Fennell still re- As a result, the nation now laces
members the Incident that a severe shortage 'of nurses.
That lack of nurses "Is real, wi·
forced her to recognize how
abysmally bad the salaries are despread and of significant magfor her and other nurses.
n!tude," concludes a report reltoccurreddurlnga1975tr!ptoa cently Issued by the 25-member
supermarket. "I had been working Commission on Nursing estabas a professional ' nurse for five · l!shed ·by the federal governyears and I discovered that this ment's Department and Health
check-out person was making and Human Service.
more than I was," she says with
Hospitals, which employ 68
more than a trace of bitterness.
percl!nt of all nurses, have been
Dee Christensen, also a hOspl· most seriously affected. The
tal nurse here, has another com· commission notes that •'30 perplaint. "Either you work all your cent of hospitals In urban setting
life on the 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. shift and 15 percent of rural hospitals
or you're constantly rotated bet- report that they were forced to
close ~s temporarUy In 1987
ween shifts," she says.
''I work alternate weekends · · due to the nurse shortage. ·
and seven out of lO.holidays durBut the shortage also adversely
!ng the year," adds the nurse ve· affects nursing homes, which emteran of 23 years. "Nurses don't ploy 8 percent of all nurses; com·
lead normal lives."
munlty public health facilities,
Poor compensation and lnsen- where another 7 percent of all
sltlve scheduling are only two of nurses work; and hospices, clln·
the grievances held by those al· lcs, long-term care centers and
ready engaged In nursing and

other facUlties that account lor the
remaining 17 pe~cent of the nursIng work force.
Even though an Increasing
number of men are entering the
field, 97 percent of all nurses are
women. This Is signlfl~ant because the current crisis Is dl·
rectly related to society's tradl·
Ilona! devluatlon of women's
work and to the struggle against
sex '41scrlmlnatlon.
"When I graduated from high
school, there were few 'options
open to young women - teachIng, nursing, getting married
and, If you were Catholic, being a
nun," notes Norma Miller, a
nurse In the Intensive care unit of
a Council Bluffs hospital. ·
As with most other forms of
"women's work,"' nursing long
has been Ill-compensated, especially In terms of salary Increases for those with expert·
ence and seniority.
The average starlings alary for
nurses, accountants and computer
programmers Is about $21,000 per
year. But the (l.verage maximum

1or nurses Is only sUghtly more
than $29,000, compared with almost $43,000 for comouter orogrammers and $61,500 lor accountants.
That compression of the wage
scale Is .t he most Important issue
.for many current and potential
nurses who reach the peak of
earning power and professional
status within five to 10 years at- '
ter starting In the profession.
Indeed, ·many hospitals and physicians long encouraged that salary progression, viewing nurses
as disposable. When they left - of·
ten the victims of exhaustion,
stress and tension·- they could be
readily replaced by another generation of high school or college graduates.
Today, however, young women can opt Instead for careers
In law, business or other prates·
s!ons where "they can make a lot
more money, have more status
and more autonomy," notes an
official of the American Nurses'
Association.

Coach pulls players from
field in protest; team loses

more · than 6,000 farmers In ten
states for over $330 billion In
coverage. Over 600 policies
WQrth a total ol$27.6 ml,lllon were
sold In Ohio. Chubb contended
that an Independent agent oversold the policies and that It would
pay only $40 rnllUon In coverage
to about 1,000 farmers In the ten
states. Chubb offered to refund
double the premiums paid by the
other farmers. ,
"
Ohio and eight other states
hope to hold Chubb liable lor all
applications received before the

Appreciates article
Gentlemen:
You will . he pleased to know
some of your readers feel you
performed a much· needed and
long-awaited public service Oct.
2, 1988, wltli your article .that I
am now a distributor for NSA wa·
ter treatment units. I've received numerous calls expressing relief that these units are

available here. One caller told
me her, doctor had advised her to
use it. Your paper Is to he commended for helping Its reader·
ship take responsibility for the
Improvement of their water
quality. Thank you.
Sincerely,
Colleen VanMeter
104 Locust St., Pomeroy

June '15 deadline. However, a
provision In the 1987 tort reform
law made the Investigation by
the Ohio Department of Insurance more d!Hicult. The provision requires the department to,
pay an Insurer's legai costs If a
court rules the department Investigated the Insurer without "substantial Justification."
Before It could take action, the
department had to gather enough
evlderce to prove not only that
the law may have been violated,
but also that It would be likely to
win the case. As a result, the
department spent 900 hours gathering evidence to prove the
Investigation of Chubb was "substantially justified." Because the
department's Investigation was
hampered, farmers faced the
difficult choice between accept·
lng Chubb's offer to pay them
double the premium they paid or
walt to see II . the department
could hold Chubb liable.
Alter hearings were held regarding Chubb's actions, enough
rain fell o,n many parts of Ohio to

prevent farmers from collecting
on the policies. This did not stop
the lnvestlgatloh o! the company,
however, as laws still rriay have
been violated. In late August,
live companies, Including an
aff(llate of the Chubb.· Group,
were charged with breaking
Ohio's Unfair and Deceptive
Practices Act and with other
Insurance violations.
The bill that was recently
Introduced would ellmlna'te the
requirement th!it the department
pay the legal expenses of an
Insurer It Investigated If the
department's position Is found
not to have been substantially
justified. Removing this provl·
slon will remove a barrier to
Investigations of consumer
complaints.
If you have any questions or
comments on this or any other
Issue of Interest to you, please
contact me by writing State
Senator Jan Michael Long, Ohio
Senate, Statehouse, Columbus,
Ohio, 43266, or call (614) 466-8156.

"I thought th~ days of record-breaking sales
wer-e_ over. But, was I ever wrong. Thanks to

I

the 3 daily .newspapers and the many fine
customers who supported me, my 2 day sale
was the· best sale I've ever had."
-DAVID RICE

on·Thursday, October 6, Rice~s Furniture's
adverti$ement appeared in the G~llipolis
_Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register,
and Pomeroy Daily Sentinel. ''Reaching
People'' is our Business, and if .you have
doubt as to how effective our products are,
·just ask David Rice.
•

entinel
''We Deliver!"

By (lENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio high school football notes
from around the state:
Massillon Perry rall!ed for a
12-7 win over Youngstown East
Friday r\lght, scoring the winning touchdown with five seconds
remaining and no East pl,ayers
on the field. Trailing 7-6, Perry
missed on a 32-yard field goal
attempt with 12 seconds to play.
East, however , was penalized
five yards for calling too many
times out, moving the ball from
the Golden Bear 15 to the 10.
When 12 seconds were put back
on the clock, East Coach Bob
· Be a! pulled· his players from the
field in protest. Perry then lined
up for a 27-yard l!eld goal
attempt. With no East defenders,
holder Brent Vogt simply walked
into ti1e e nd zone for a touchdown. There was no conversion
attempt and the final five seconds were not played.
Clayton Waite did it all Friday
night in Warren Harding's 25-22
win over Massillon Washington.
The senior quarterback comP.leted 19 of 35 passes for 197
yards and one touchdown, a
10-yarder to Gerald Simpson. He
also ran for a pair of scores.
including the game-winner on a
sneak from inches away with 22 ·
seconds to play. That capped a
93-yard drive. On defense, Waite
intercepted three Massillon
passes ahd had a number of key
tackles. He a lso punts.
Steubenville Catholic snapped
Coshocton 's 19-game regular
season winning streak Friday
!light, 7·0, behind senior Tim
Kuczykowskl. Kuczykowsk!, a
5-foot-9, 155-pounder, got the
game's only touchdown when he
turned a short pass Into a 55· yard
scoring play. On defense, he had
' 17 tackles and 8 assists and broke
up 3 passes.
Upper Arlington's Tom Moreland, a 5-foot-9, 170-pound senior,
rushed lor 150 yards and scored
on a 13-yard run In the Golden
Bears' 32-7 win over Westerville.
South Friday night. Moreland
~arried four of five plays In one
78-yard UA touchdown drive,
accounilng 'tor 76 of the yards.
· Unbeaten Wauseon had its
scoreless streak snapped Friday

I: Sports briefs ·

Basketball
Indiana Pacers center Steve
Stipanovlch, who has missed his
!~am's
first two exhibition
games because of tendinitis In his
lett knee, Is uncertain when he
'!ill return. Doctors say surgery
Is not necessary .... The Miami
Heat signed guard Jamie Waller,
who was ~aived by the Chicago
Bulls last week. .. . Lamar
freshman guard Gary Boyson Is
out at least six weeks with a
broken hand. Forward Anthony
I!ledsoe was suspended !ndefb
n-itely by Coach Tony Branch....
E:SPN begins Its lOth season of
televising NCAA basketball Nov.
18 when North Carolina is home
against Tennessee-Chattanooga.
A total of 211 games, Jnclud!ng
173 live durin~ . the regular
season , will be aired.
Bowi!Og
Jeanne Malden of Solon, Ohio,
held a 62-p!n lead over Leanne
Barrette of Oklahoma City after
four .rounds of the $50,000 LPBT
Hammer Midwest Open at Rock·
ford, IlL
Boxing
Three- time champion Roberto
Duran Is to be arraigned next
month on charges stemming
from a shouting match with
Miami pollee. Duran, 37, Is
c harged with threatening a pollee officer, disorderly conductand obstrUcting justice.

night in a 20-3 win over Ever·
green, the first points surrenderedthls season by the Indians . .·
Wauseon, Archbold and Liberty Center continue to lead the
Northwest Ohio Athletic League
with 5-0 records and all three also
are 7-0 overall. That, however,
will change starti ng this week
when Liberty Center visits Wau seon, followed In successslve
weeks by Archbold at Wauseon
and Liberty Center at Archbold .
Junior Damon Brooks accounted for 353 total yards in
Cadiz's 34-21 victory over Wellsville Friday night. Brooks rushed
35 times for 250. yards and three .
touchdowns on runs of 13, 27 and
37 yards. He also amassed 103
yards on kick returns.
Rich Watts ' 11-yard run with 22
seconds to play lifted Springfield
Northeastern (6-1) to .a 32-28 win
over Bellefontaine Friday night.
Watts' run nullified a go-head
touchdown by Bellefontaine's
Bob Chapman with 1:52 remainIng, his fourth TD of the game, to
cap a 78-yard' drive. Chapman,
who rushed for 191 yards In 29
carries. had scored all five
Bellefontaine touchdowns the
previous week.
' Brilliant Buckeye ·North beat
Belmont Union Lacal 24-21 Friday night on a 23-yard field goal
as time expired by Ron McFarland. McFarland, a 5-foot-9 junIor, was a late transfer from
Mingo, so late he didn't make the
program's team picture and his
name had to be Inserted at the
bottom of the roster page. His
field goal still counted .
Dave Swiger, a 6-foot-1, 210pOU!Id tailback, rushed for 161
yards .pnd a pair of touchdowns
Fr.lday night In unbeaten Buckeye Southwest's 37-13 win over
neighbOring Martins' Ferry. ·

Ferrellgas

total of 10 shots on goal through
the !lrst two periods.
"We worked on It the last
couple days," Bodger said. "The
defense was able to stand up
tonight and we owe it all to our
w!ngers."
Lemieux capped his 14th career hat trick with an empty-net
goal with five seconds remainIng, and added an assist for a
league-high 19 points, four ahead ·
of Los Angeles' Wayne Gretzky.
Until the final five minutes of the
game, however, the Pittsburgh
deferlse was the story.
"I don't think they even e*·
peeled that type of defensive
game," the Flyers' Dave Poulin
said of the Penguins. " I haven't
seen them, but I read the box
scores and they've been In some
really high scoring games. They,
have some talented defensemen
on their team, It's just they're so
capable of going offensive, they
don't get caught up In a defensive

Chicago 4-3 In overdme .
ls ..odenl, Caa.clul ~
The Penguins, 3-0 at home this
At New York, Steve Konroy1:1
season, recorded the 600th victory of their 22 year history scored a g0111 and an assist for his
before a third straight sellout first points of the season, leading
the Islanders to their third
crowd.
"This is a great confidence straight victory. New York has
builder for our hockey club," won 11 of the last 12 meetings
Penguins defenseman Paul Cof- against Vancouver in Nassau ff
fey said. "These are all blg tests. Coliseum. Kelly Hrudey, 7-0-1
Friday iagainst New Jersey) lifetime against Vancouver.
will he another stepping stone, macle 30 saves tor New York.
and then Saturday (Chicago).
Red WhM 4, .8lackhawks I
These a.r e all steps towards the
At Detroit, Steve Yzerman
playoffs."
Steve Guenette recorded his poked In a rebo1111ll of his own
second straight win hi as many ·shot with one second remaining
In overtime, rallying tloe Red
starts.
Wings
from a 3-6 deficit. Lee
"They were trying to make
perfect plays," said Guenette of Norwood and Paul MacLean
the Flyers, "and we didn't Jet each had scored In the final 2:15
of regula lion to 'ull Det rolt In to a
that happen . "
For the Flyers, It was their 3-3 tie . . A total of 72 penalty
minutes were called Ia the
first defeat of the early season.
In other games, the New York second peri(MI, Including' game
Islanders nipped the Vancouver mlscellducts t&amp; Cll!cago's Dave
Canucks 3·2, and Detroit clipped Manson and Detroit's Dave Barr.

game."

••

UCLA takes over top. position in UPI ~II

High sclwol grid notes

Bill would remove barrier ___se_n._Ja~n_M_.L.. ;_C?n..;;..g
A bill has recently been Introduced In the Senate that -would
repeal part of the 1987 tort reform
law, making It easier for the Ohio
Department of Insurance to
Investigate consumer complaints against Insurance
companies.
The bill was prompted by the
problems this summer with the
Chubb Group Insurance Company's drought coverage. In the
final two days that farmers could
apply 'for drought Insurance,
Chubb .took -applications from

By GERRY MONIGAN
· tJPI Sports Wrlte'r
When It came time to establish
the early 'peclj:lng order In the
Patrlek Division , the Pittsburgh
Penguins turned to a new tack.
Alter outgunning the competition In their first three victories,
the Penguins used smothering
defense Tuesday night to subdue
the Philadelphia Flyers, and let
Marlo Lemieux take care of the
scoring chores. With a 4-2 vic·
tory , Pittsbu,rgh pulled even with
Philadelphia atop the division
standings with a 4-1-0 record.
"I think we proved we can play
bOth ends of the Ice," Penguins
defense~J~an Doug Bodger said.
"We won 9-2 the other night, then
won a close one like this. Now all
we have to do It put them both
together."
In their first four games, the
Penguins had outsco!*'d the
competition 28-21. Tuesday, how·
ever, they held the Flyers to a

Rio Gra11de cross country chenman, 206th, 26:18.96. TherP
runner Mary.. Dowler was ranked were 21-2 women runners
first among all coUege-level participating.
participants In ·the 1988 Ohio
In the men's race, Rio Grande
Intercollegiate Cross Country placed · 30th of 38 teams overall
Championships Oct. 14 at Ohio with 849 points and was 19th of 26
Wesleyan University.
coUege teams with 487 . OU also
Dowler, a senior from Jac~son, took first overall with 63 points ,
finished 21st overall In the while Malone won the collegewomen's race and was the first level team judging with 35. OU 's
college, rather than university, Shannon Ritchie finished first at
representative to finish. Her 24:42 .75.
time was 18:45.03. L. Schweitzer
Finishing for Rio Grande were
of · the University of 'Dayton Doug Horne, 128th, 28: 23.36; Jim
finished first overall with a-time Peck. 158th, 28: 52.82; Bob Fritz,
170th, 29: 04.85; Tony Fatica,
of 17:48.50.
Ohio University was the first of 192nd, 24: 49.33; and VInce Fatall teams participating with 51 Ica, 20lst, 30:03.34. The race
points, . while Dayton was the drew 253 male runners.
The cross country teams will
college-level . team winner with
49. Rio Grande's women's team participate In the Marietta Colplaced 26th out of 32 teams with lege Invitational on Saturday .
713 points overall, and was 17th of Other teams slated to run be~ ides
21 teams on the college level "1th · the host school include Otterbein,
Musklngum, Bethany, Glenville
414.
State, Fairmont State, Davis &amp;
Other )=tedwomen finishing Elkins and Baldw!'n-Wallace. Rio
were Libby Best, 154th, 22:06.58; Grande will also run In the
Atsuko · Yamazaki, 165th, Mid-Ohio Conference and Dis22: 29:44; Paula Sydenstrlcker, trict 22 championships, hosted by
193rd, 24: 01.62 ; and Gina Kll- Walsh. on Oct. 29.

Behind the nursing shortage __R_ob_er_tw;_ a_lte_rs
The Daily ~entinel

Penguins gain tie for first after .4-2 w_in

Rio's Dowler wins
top spot lit CC ·meet

Page-2-The Da;ly Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday. October 19, 1988

The Daily SeRtinel Page..:..3

Pomeroy- Middleport, , Ohio

Wednesday, October 19, 1988

in the rank!ngs by four learns ran kings.
NEW YORK !UPI) - The Washington State.
from
the Pac-10, three each from
Dame,
which
has
failed
Notre
Arkaasas, 1AdlaRa and SyraUCLA Bruins found themselves
the
Big
Eight and Southeastern cuse each leaped four positions.
Monday in a rare position- atop to land In last seven final
rankings, played Its biggest Conference, and one each from
the college (ootball ra(lngs.
the Atlantic Coast Conference,
The Bruins earned the No. 1 game since losing the 1981 Sugar
Big Ten, Southwest Conference
ranking for the first time In 21 Bowl - and a possible national
· The Daily Senthtel
and Western Athletic
years, with 722 of 735 total pol"ts title - to Georgia with Herschel
Conference.
{U-_,tHWI
and 37 of 49 first-place votes from Walker. The Irish avenged four
A Dtv.._ ef Md11R•a. loe.
South Carolina took the biggest
straight losses -Including a 58-7
UP I' s Board of Coaches.
fall, dropping from seventh to
On Saturday, UCLA beat Cali- rout in 1985 - to Miami by
P\Wlbhed every taenoon, MOIWIIly
thra.&amp;gh Fr14ay, lll. Cevrt St., Pilfornia 38-21 and Notre Dame stopping a 2-polnt conversion 17th after losing to Georgia Tech
meroy,
Ohio, 'Y IH Olllo Valley l'lllo34-0.
Oklahoma
State·
dropped
attempt
with
45
seconds
left.
defeated Miami 31-30 to upset the
llshtng Compaay/tlu.ltiiRedla, hie.,
"(The Hurricanes) didn't play
from lOth to 15th. Michigan, 'last
former No. I team and end
Pomeroy, Oh!Q ~M. Ph. !92·21511. seweek's
No. 17, fell from the
like
it
but
I
still
believe
they
are
cond class postate paid at Pomeroy,
coUege football's fifth-longest
Qhig,
probably the best football team ·
winning streak at 36 games .
The Bruins gained the top spot in the country," Notre Dame
Member: United Press lnteraational,
laland Dally Press A'(;Saclatlon and the
for the first time since the 1967 Coach Lou Holtz said. "We're a
Oblo Newspaper Aasgelatlon. NatiMal
very
good
team,
though.
I've
season, during which they lost
AdVertising Rer.resentatlve, Bra a ham
Newspaper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
21-20 to Southern Cal with O.J . never been prouder· of my
New York, New York 10017.
players."
Simpson. UCLA's only Qational
Six
Independents
were
joined
championship was in 1954.
~: Softl a.ldress cllanges
10 The Dolly Sentloel, Ill Co•rt St..
"I've never been on a team
Pvmeroy, Olllo«i7• .
that 's been ranked No. 1 -as a
!IUIISC&amp;-N KATES
player, an assistant coach or a
By Carrier er Met• Rnte
coach,'' Bruins Coach Terry
One Week ........ ...........................$1.40
Donahue said. "For me, It's a
One Month ................. ........ ........ 16.10
One Year ................................. $72.8()
new experience. and I'm excited
SINIILE COPY
CHICAGO (UPI) - Purdue
aboutit.
PIII£1!
"There will be a real focus to freshman quarterback Brian
Dally ................................... 2~ Cents
beat UCLA now . l'n all candor, Fox and· Indiana linebacker
Subecrlliers Rat EleslrLag to pay the car· '
though, there's a real focus to Willie Bates were named UPI
rler may remn ln advance direct to
The Dally Seattael Qn a 3, 6or 12 month
beat UCLA anyway. "\'hen you're Big Ten offensive and defensive
basts. Credit will ~given carrier each
No.1, 3, 8, as long as you're in the player of the week Tuesday.
week.
Fox , In only his third coUeg!ate
top iO. the opponent Is going to be
No subscript tons~ mail permKteil Ia
start, passed tor three touchcranked."
areas where . . _ tarrier service IS
And with a tough Pac-10 dowtis and rushed for another In
available.
schedule that Includes No. 3 Purdue's 31-26 win at Ohio State.
Maus.-,riJ'IIono
Southern California Nov. 19, He completed 19 of 27 passes for a
IuWe Melp Conty
Donahue said: "This is not the career high 223 yards In Purdue's
13 Weeks ........... ....................... $19.24
26 Weeks ................................... $37.96
time to pop champagne corks. I first win at Ohio State since 1967.
52 Weeks ..... ...... ....................... S74.36
wish it were:··
Bates made 10 solo tackles In
OYhlft Meip C•••Y
13 Weeks ...... ..... ....................... $20.110
the"'- Hoosiers 33·13 win 'over
The Fighting Irish earned 670
21i Weeks .... .............................. $40.:io
Minnesota. He also recovered a
points and 10 first-place ballots to
52 Weeks .................................. $7'-40
·
IIASOI,
W.VA.
fuinble and made a pass
jump two positions to second.
lntPrcPptlon.
Southern Cal, which held · off
Washington 28-27, picked up 647
points and the other two firstplace votes to remain third.
Miami fell to fourth .
Rounding out the Top 10 were
No. 5 West Virginia, No. 6
Nebraska, No. 7 Florida State,
No. 8 Oklahoma, No. 9 Auburn
and No. 10 Clemson .
VIDEO CASSEnE IECORDEJl
Completing the ratings were
SKATEBOARD
No. 11 Arkansas, No. 12 Wyom ing, -No. 13 Georgia, NQ. 14
SPENDIIG MONEY
Indiana, No. 15 Oklahoma State.
NEW CLOTIIIS
· No. 16 Syracuse, No.' 17 South
Carolina, No. 18 Washington, No.
KINGS ISLAND
19 Louisiana State and No. 20

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THE DAILY SENTINEL

.•

"YOUR HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

•

•

I

�•

'

•

McGwire's homer gives A's· 2-1 VICtory

Scoreboard ...
ae.....

Computer '
Ratings

1. MIMel_.. fe•wlek tl.lt;
Brf'm.. SUI; I.

Dlvtlloal

LyDdhu...,_ Brulh, fUD each.

BeJion2
I.S&amp;allusky1UI; t.UrnaSeaiOr1UI;

J. Toiedo Wldtmer 15.11; &amp;. Oreru D&amp;J
51.st; S. Toletio St. lo_.t SUI; I.
S,rtalfltlld N•r6154.11: 1, f'rema•Ro••
St.llfl; &amp;. To~ St. Franda lUI; I.
AIWand tt.•: 11. 1'roy M.• .

ReJ1oa3

I . Growplll'I-Malllaoati.St: %. Wea\er·
wille North RUt: I . A.Uatowm Flkh

I*••

\'lft U; 14. T•le• Notre Dame !I; IS.
Daytoa Stebbl• {1) 18; Jt, Lowbl'IUe 11;
17. ,l ilt) Sanduiii:J ... Delaware Hayes,
II e~e~ lt .. P.nna Normand)' ll; W.

Re&amp;lon4

Clncl..-il Prlac,et~ 12l.M; t. '
C1~~elnaUI Moeller 'Js.tl; J. Cl•la.UI
Elder 7fo.ll; t. CIDCIUIIIWIIUIIW11.t1;
s. (tie) DaJ ..• Warne and 'lhtwood·
I.

(Ue) Elf ria Wstud A•adRI-a FMc ..,
IJer.eb.

Ma... DoiUiueh; 1. Fairfield lUI; 8.
CindniiMI o\lkeq lUI: t. (lie) Ot~tln.CI

CI... AA

'te1111.

.....

Hu111H and Cincinnati Oak Hllll, f1.18

1Lepon7
1. U111llai0W11 t.ke 11.10; !. St...tMn·

Repon Ill
1. C.l.-nbuAcademy .JUI; 2. Marion
ElKin 40.18; l. Belpre 11.00; 4. TuiiCan·
wu Valley 2UI; !1. Coltmhul Hartle)
!UD; 6. Frederk:kt.,...n ._Ill; 1. (tid Oak
Hill and Collftlbul Ready, 'l5.CIO each;!.
Welt Lal~eue JU d~ood
18.
Htadi!UO.
Rt'&amp;to• IC
I. West dl!ffeHDn tf .:MI; 2:. Wheelertl'
, bll'll' 44.50: 3. Da,•n olefft'niOn 33.10: 4.

:uo:

Marlcmoet 3Z.H; 5. W7omlnr 3!.01: t;,

Vt'f' . . lk!A SUO: 1. Zane Trace ~.50; 8.
Rlehmolli D•lfl Soulhi!!M&amp;ern 27.01: t.
WfiiYIIe&gt;~\'IUe 2UI;

10. Deer Park.!S.IO.
DMIIOnV

Repon11
1. Mopdoft" 41.CIO; !. Minp 39.110; 3.
Loraln0ean1ew31.41; j. DaMonS0-'12: S.
Woodslleld :lti.OI; I . McDonaldiUO; 7.
tndependeace 'l7.50: 8. Be•llniUe !7.01;
9. susarcreek Ganway tJ.OO; II. Buck·
n~ Ntrrth !UO.
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1. Monroeville 3&amp;.00; 2. Saltd ..lly st.
Mary's 3UO: 3. Archbold SUI; 4.

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Cenlf:f :ruo; &amp;. -'Jenvllle '!UO: 1. Vu
8•.-.en ZUO; 8. Arllnaton20.00; 8. 8enec11
EM~~t 17 .83; 10. IDc:U~Ite 11.00.

ReJion It
1. Canal WIDChtlter ss.OO; 2. Newark
Catholic lUG; S. Cohmb111Webrlt'SI.OI:
4. Eut Knox S3.H; S. rortlmoudl NMre
OametUO: 6. Morral Rl dpdllle !11.01; 7.

9fmme11 \'alley 18.10: 8. New .tlhany

11'.H: t. Hanran Trace IIUIII; 10. Nordl
GaiDa JUt.

sn

1. st. Henry (15) (1..1)
II. New IU&amp;ox:.tllt II) t 17-41
S. llerln Hiland (I) (11-8)

24ft

1111
188
177

•r•rd

4. 81.
(I) (lf.1)
5.·PUrbMIII (SJ (11-1)
• . C.ncllt6a \'allf7 (II-!)
1. Rockio,. Parllw.,- (l) (18-!)

Cohmbu1 Mlldla tUO.
Rellolli
L Harriloa 111.14; •• Frutdla lUI: S.

1. ~ulnllle Aq.-... 3@,51; ! . Warren
Kenne. 38.bt; :t. Tonnlo 11.18; 4.
Columbiana Ct"Hhr6ew :t!.N; I. I!:MI
Paleslhte SUD; 1. Canton Ce•t .... Ca·
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ZUO; 8. UllboaAD•eraDaiUI: I. \'let~•
Malhtwl !UI; 10. Steaben~U.e Cdb•lk
!:Uil
Repon II
I. Bellv1Ue47.H; 2. WelllnstonU.OO; !.
wauseon rue: .f. •eyna&amp; W)'111ord
S'UI: :J. O•tario31.1111: I.SmlUwU!eSS.H;
7.1A.tof"1Ue SG.II; 8. To nlorany Olsep
!!1.01: t . Ruroa 25.118; II. A.dllaad
Mapletoa 2:4.00.

Polnls

Team

51.11; 8. CoiWIIbUI lhiWnon 11.11: I,
C.hmbus Fran Wlo Hlllat*s 18.111; 10.

Re&amp;tot~13

II

CIRA.

ville ... ot: S. C.lumbtl1 Jndipnt~tace
lUI; 4. (lie) Colwnbu lk'!eeltcroft aad
Norib Cuto• a.over, 14.11 each; I .
Delaware HQe• M.st; 1. Cambrldp

Wtslf:rn lr~ lt.QII; 10. Gerlflll.fttown
Vlllley VIew ~.00.
Dhls..,n 1V

Ill

II.(Ue) MII...Ualoa (1 ..1).
•
ti.(Ue) HebLUewDOII Ul (17-J)
a
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Sprl•lfl ... Sbawwllft It; ll. Marloa
IUvtrV&amp;IIttM: 17,(ilel Orepacardlal
Strtaeh Ud Cutoa c.e.ttst C•llolk, 11
uch; II. Te.,u\'llleJ 14; lt. (Ue) Eut
Palatine ud D)'Cie, II each.

Wl!'l't 11.11: S. Nonie* 41.M: l.l'osiOI'Ia
11.N; 1. '-ltdo Maoe~r·Whltne:r
41.41: 8. Bowllq Gl'ftll •.II; I . M...,
field 81'.11.11: 10. Tlri•ColtM~bluM.OI.

tUI; 8, QnclaaMI For8t r•II:IIUII; I.

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118

6. Ailroallobu(I)(IIW)
7. Shtlbr (1) (lt-2)
K. U• Bath Ul fU-t)
I. Flaaey•• (I) (18-1)

st.•.

Restoa II

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I, Pelllb Eulwood CI) ( 18-IJ

" 'etllake 4UI: t. •ecbviUe 4S.H; If.
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1. .U.roa Buclrlel TUI; !,' AmherM
Steele 11.11; S. Pert)'lii:IIIJW n.•; 4. Vu

1. CAPE 80.811; I. Urilana 65.00; 3.
S,rtnJfleld Norlhellll!6ero SUO; t . CarD·
~e 4UO; I. (lie) Trea&amp;oa Ed pwoodl ud
Brook¥11le,IUI e.r:lt: 1. HamllenBalla

217

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S.ulll U.OI; 1. KIP.al Rooe.eveU 411.01; II,

Thoravllle Sh«ldlul 441.60; I . Waverly
4&amp;.00: !1. Bellaire 4.J.lll; Cl. Porllatouth
Weat 41.01; 7. Bloem·Carroll U.S&amp;: 8.
(lie) Colwnbu Whetiltone, Fairfield
Unlo• and Uclda1 VaUI'J, Sl.51each.

181

t. Faln4ew Park (7) (IN).
S. Buckqe Trail (4) (II")

iUO; S. (&amp;le) We1tGe.,..., Ol ...o.~d
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. and Mell• 101111..... S$.llt uch; ID.
{ttt) St. Mar)'ll Memorial aad Oak
H&amp;rbcJr, 311 .• each.
•
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1. lro-.on 8Ut; I. PhUo 51.58; S.

Polats

t. Splt•r N'wetetrU14) Clt-1)

Dlvlllloa II
KeJion S
I. Clifl\'~lad St • .loMph R51;!. Solon

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145

12. Ot)'Aiaop Fal1141: .IS. w....w River

nOD S4 .. . It. MMIIIIoa PerrJ St.ll.

Souluv•t 4101; 8. Po ... d 4UI: 1.
Cll qrln Fall! Kenston S8.51; II. Girard
111.10.
Keaton 10
1. Orr\'llle 58.10; 2.
t8.M; 3.
Celbodo• tUO: 4. Orati~Ei 41.•; 5.
Elyria Wnt 4UI; 6. lJma Bath 41.01; 7.
Willard 37.5t; 8. (tie) Sandu.dy Perkins

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1.
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11'.• ; II.
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Hobu lUI; 4. Cam~ell Mern•rtal
lUI: s. Akroar MuclaeMer U.st; I.
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1. Altron 81. Vlaelll-8&amp;. Mary 7Ut: 2.
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1.

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pretlteal •I lhe 011 .. , •Ill Seltotl
\'ollf')'baU CoachN MIIIPCIMioft, ..11
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Md team ,.cords Ia partoile.eeesJ:
Tum
Paints
1. le)raoNibelr&amp; (SI) ( U.ft
SIS
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I.EIJII&amp;(l) (tf.!J
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t. Cu ... Mellin I!')' (II-~)
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lit

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Bepont

4,

S. D!Ifb••olenetM~~n.ll:

NEW KNOXVILLE,OI'ilo(UPIJ-Tbl8
week'• Obiolll1• IChOIII vollf')'baiJ rat•

Gartldll 13..41; II. Oeoweland (loltla_....
SUI; 1'. Norta Olm1Wd SUI; I. L•ke-

Elida SUO; t. · PDrtlmoutb SUO; S.
Cl~ln..al -'adenon ft.St; I. Nonrood
U~ 1. Ml•ll Trace M.SI; 8. Gotlhen
tUI; I. Sprtalflflhl 8baw•e 41.11: II,
Ctacla•U h.eell Marl . . •-"·

MIIU&amp;er M.tt;

WavlaiUI;

Volleyball poll

ReJion I
L Clneland Sl. IJ•Uul IJ.H; 2,
.MJd(llebull lhl~1 Midpark SUI; S,
Berea n.lll; 4. Euclid lUI; J, Akron

,.

:r. New

aral CaiiMikl,
eaek 8. st. Jko•I'J'
U.M: t. M.vloal..ouiM.•: II .Rocklorll
P•kw..,-tUI.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP I) - Thlt
· week'• Ohio HIJIISchool -'1Wetic A..ocl·
a&amp; kill compu~e~laed toiMball rauap Uhe
top four teanu Ill each ft!Jioaqalltyfer
tM play alt.):
,

Wednesday, October 19, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

.,

Ill
112
17
58

8. Hopewell-Louha C17-1)
I. Mt. lllaacbrd IU\'erda&amp;e (18-11
lO.x·MIIIer City (I) (1·11)
53
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Grayntllt 15kywt ft: 11. New •emen
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Gru\'tlle aad AnlhbDIII, It eac:h; Jl.
Wllllarftlllu qll; to. Bilek eye Ceattsl!l.
•·htclud" t forf•bed -.amN

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
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•
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Va1101uwr

.......... w

By WJLUAM D. MURRAY
. UPI Sports Writer
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!) The. Oakland Athletics took a
turn In Game 3 of the World
Series following the crest of
emodon a game-winning home
run provides that the Los Angeles
podgers enjoyed In Game 1.
·The Dodgers rode the emotion
generated by Kirk Gibson's
ninth-Inning homer last Saturday
to a pair of World Series
victories.
Now, Oakland's Dave Stewart
·says It Is the Athletic 's turn .
Oakland's Mark McGwire ripped ·
a Jay Howell fastball Into the
left·center field bleachers In the
ninth Inning Tuesday, sparking
the Athletics to a 2·1 victory over
the Dodgers.
,
"To me, It was just as Important, just as storybook as GIJ&gt;.
son's homer on Saturday night,"
said Stewart, the A's starter for
tonight's Game 4. "I think It will
help our offense get going."
The A's came Into the Se.rtes
with a thunderous lineup- J 0 se
Canseco was the !lrst player In
major league history to hit 40
homers -and steal 40 bases,
McGwlre socked 32 homers and
drove In 99 runs and Dave
Henderson batted .304 with 24
home runs and 94 RBI.
But before McGwlre:s homer.
the trio had only one moment of
glory In the Series · Canseco's
grand slam In the opening game.
"People have been talking that
we're all In slumps because we
didn't get any hits the first two
games," McGwlre said. ''Well,
during the year some of our guys
did go a game or two without a
hit. But we always managed to
come back. We have too many
good hitters to stay In a pro·
longed slump."
Oakland, which came Into
Tuesday's ball game down 2·0 in ·
the best of seven series, h lnged
Its hopes on righthander Bob
Welch, who had never gone more
than 4 1-3 Innings In his previous
seven playoff starts.
•'I spoke to Tony and Dunk (A's
pitching coach Dave Duncan)
before I went out tonight,'' Welch
said. "They told me to take my
best shot. They said 'What we
need you to do Is go out and throw
as hard as you can for as long as
you can."'

Welch did pitch well until the
sixth when the Dodgers loaded
the bases on a Danny Heep
double, John Shelby single and
Mike Davis walk.
Then the A's bullpen -which
set a major league record this
season wlth &amp;I saves- came on
and halted the Dodgers

Tuf'J141.,'• ltftlll•

Foreclosure
action filed
.
'

Loa AD plea aa Edmont•a. 1:35 p.m.
Tba . . lt''•&amp;amea

. 'quebec: .tP•IWelphla. niPf.
Chlcaro M St. LoW.. nlpt

Trans ad ions
Baaltletb all
Miami- Walnd paardJ Con-.rHtllr)'
and Tony Falrl)'; II~ l.,.d .Jamie

Waner.

~ ..-.-.

CoUep
Prau laallhiot -

Named ' bMI!eball

t:oacbltulent Marlh.UatiiiHtc dlrelfor,
Ml diNI Blake 100.-- cG&amp;Clll,. Ml 'ke Greea
Mllieiult b•ltdball ctacb ud Wuda
Baooa ~·• vol..,..,all coach.
PIMibaU
Slp~td •fiiJ

lit-an Cooper:
n!leued coraerbacll. Ll'Mder KIIIJii,
Greea Ia)' - Placd recf!lw!r lhlt.er
Stuleyoalaadlv•J ... ; slpedhH&amp;ftll
retftver .JIQ' Ambt..e.
Kaa- City- w..ved , ......,back
Larl')' Morlarl:p.
1'ampl Bay - 8t pd receiver hey
OIU.C ... , cell&amp;er Kl'\'11 hDmlll ud
Allaata -

receiYer Ge~ T.111,.r; waJwd ..... ,.,
Der Jtck Me\do o; placelllpaard Dail
Turk and receiver S*epllea Starltar on
IDJun!d reaerw.

-·.

_Jb~ek

One defendant forfeited a bond and three others were fined In
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Douglas E. Durham, Bidwell, forfeited a $43 bond posted on
speeding charges and fined Were Carroll Walker, Gallipolis,
$100 and costs, possession of marijuana; $25 and costs. open
container. and $425 imd three days In jail, driving while
Intoxicated; Joseph A. Delgado, Middleport, $10 and costs,
f~llure to control; Levi Caruthers, Cheshire, $25 and ~osts,
speeding, and Barb Boling, Middleport, $150 and costs, and 30
days probation, telephone harassment.

•

McGWJRE MOBBED - Oakland's Mark
McGwlre Is mobbed by his teammates as be
crosses the plate after hilling a solo home run of
momentum.
Greg Caderet got Mike Sctos·
eta to pop out to third baseman
Carney Lansford. Gene Nelson
then came on, getting Jeff
Hamuton to ground ·Into a force
out at the plate and Alfredo
Griffin to roll out to first to end
the Inning, preserving the 1-1 tie.
The A's had scored In theothlrd
on a Ron Hassey single to left,
scoring Glenn Hubbard. Los
Angeles knotted the contest In the
fifth when Franklin Stubbs
doubled to score Hamilton from
second.
The game had two turning
points - the Dodger sixth and
Howell's seve·n consecutive fastballs to McGwire In the ninth.
"It was our opportunity to win
the ball game,'' said Dodger

Dodger reliever Jay Howell In the bottom of the
nlnlh to win the third game of the World·Series
Tuesday ·night. (UP I)

manager Tommy Lasorda of the
sixth. "We couldn't capitalize
with the bases loaded and nobody

out. We couldn't drive in the run,
we couldn't get the bal_l out of the
Infield. It's got to hurt you."

Loca

MO)IIDAY NIGHT MIXED
.
HIGH SERIES TEAM: Pat H111 Ford
1847: Party AnlmaU; 1818: Team 112 1604.
HIGH SERIF.S MEN: Rod Walk.,. 537;
RDn SMith 519: Rick Hatlleld 474.
HIGH SERIES WOMEN: Dibble Nease
418, Betty McKinley 4lt, Ann Sflres 404.
HIGHTEAMGAME: PatHII Ford644;
Pat HUI Ford 615; ·P arty Animals 613.
HIGH GAME MEN: Rod Walk.,. 18~
RDd Walker 183; Ron Smith 176BIGB GAME WOMEN: Betty McKln·
ley 183; OebbteNeue 1S4; Joan Banks and
Debby Tillis 145..

EARLY WEDNESDAY Mlli.ED
SEM. U,1f88
l'TS.
Team No. 5 ....................................... 24

Team No. 3 .. .......... ............-........ .. ..... 20
Middleport Lunch Room ........ ............ 18

Team No. 6 .... .............. ..................... !&amp;

Team No. 1 ....... .. .............................. 1~

W

ing

Team No.2 ... ....... ...................... ......... 6
TEAM IUGH SERlES: Middleport
Lunch Room 1951; TEAM HIGH GAME:
Middleport Lunch Room.
IND. HIGH SERII!8: Ray Roach 553;
Ron Smllh 533: Maxine Dugan 508; O.bl
Hensley 490.
IND. 111GB GAME: Ron Smith :1111;
Maxine Dulan 197; Ron Smith 188: Car·
olyn Baclmer 182
SEI'TEMIIEII 18, 1118
Team No. 5 .. ~ .................................. .. 32
Tony's Carry.Qut ............................... 28

Middleport Lunch Room .................... 22
Team No.6 .......................... .. ........... !&amp;
Team No.1 .................................. ..... 12
Team No. 2 ....................................... 10
TEAM IUOH !IBIIII!ll; Team No. 5,
2017: TEAM 11GB GAME: Team No. 5,
703.
IND. RIG"&amp; 8BRII!8: Ray Roach 579;
Terry Seldenabel 5011; Debl Hensley 494;
Marlene Wlllon 487.
IND. BIGR GAME: Ray Roach 210;
Debt llettltey 206; Marlene Wllsm 192;
Ray Roach 1911.

CARRIER N
FOR
THE MIDDLEPORT AREA.
Contact Mike at

THE . DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
•. '

I

Fifteen cases were proceessed In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
·
Forfeiting bonds were Ronald Dalley, Portland; Mary M,
Miller, Pomeroy, $47; Brenda Richards, Racine. $46; Dwayne
Good. Middleport, $50; Corinne K. Bass. Cli!tol). W.Va .• $47, all
on speeding charges; Robert Bryant, Liverpool, W. Va .. $43,
Illegal left turn; Raymond Michaels, Pomeroy, $63, open
container In a motor vehicle; qperatlng under suspension, $63;
James Warner, Coolville, $10, seat belt violation; Christopher
Hutton, Rutland, $63, passing on a double. yellow line, and $52,
speeding; Barbara Ohlinger, Letart, W.Va., $43, assured clear
distance; Steven Call, Slier City, N.C., $43, defective muffler;
Roy McCarty, Oak Hill, $63, expired plates; Jerry Van Kirk,
Dexter. $63, no motorcycle endorsJ!ment. Fined were Jef!le
Elliott, .Charleston, W. Va., $47 aifd costs, speeding; Charles
Aelker. Pomeroy, $130, failure to pay delinquent parking
violation tickets.

•

NATiONAL WEATt1ER SERVICE FORI;CA$T TO 8 AM EDT 10:~

Special of the Week!
FISH TAIL

S1.29
WRH FRIES-•• $1.84

Lottery numbers

TURKEYWALK PRACTICE - Bank One
employees, lelt to right, MarUyn WoUe, Ten-e
Wood and Dianna Lawson, pause for a picture as
they practice for their participation In Saturday's
American Heart Association Turkeywatk. The
Turkeywalk is a walk-for-pledges event which
will get underway 11 a.m. Saturday at the Meigs
Wgh School Track Field. FamUy,
friends,
,_

neighbors and co-workers usually team up to
participate In Turkeywalk. And It's still not too
late to become a part of Turkeywalk. Just contact
Mlllle Midkiff, Turkeywalk chalnnan, at 992-2133
or 992-5728, or stop In Bimk One, Pomeroy, for
regllltratlon fonns. Prizes will be given for
pledges 540 and over.

Earl ;ar... ' - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - . . . . . , . . - Continued from page 1

~

..

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues·
day's winning Ohio Lot tery
numbers:
Daily Number
719.
Ticker sales. totaled $1,138,425,
with a payoff due of $414,030 .
PICK-4
6330.
PICK-4 ticket sales . totaled
$202,376.50, with a payoff due of
"$91,453.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,736. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$478.

lng the night school. Cost of the board authorize Treasurer Jane
and a discussion was held on the
night makeup suspenslon school Fry to make all appropriate use of tobacco In ihe schools with
wlli be funded by the juvenile payment for accumulated sick Carjlenter being asked by the
court.
leave, vacation pay and personal board to try to come up wlth some
The board named Shirley Salls· leave on Morris's ·last paycheck policy on staff smoking In the
bury and Jeannie Slawter to th'e In October. _
school. possibly providing a
subs dtute teachers list and hired
The parent-student handbooks lounge area for non-smokers.
Harold Graham as classroom and the teacher handbook for the The board also discussed the
Instructor for driver training Harrlsonvlll and Salem Center posslblllty of adding strobe lights
lnstructloll'at $10 and hour for 36 schools were approved and It was to buses not already ~o equipped
hours per group taught. Shirley agreed to enter Into a service as a safety feature but no action
Smith, Sheryl Gibbs and June ·-agreement for the phone system was taken.
Mowery were hired as behind the In the Central Office for service
Following an executive session
wheel Instructors for the present and partsdurlngnonnal working the board agreed to set the next
school year at $6.50 an hour. The hours at $486 for one year.
regular meetinglnNovemberfor
• board granted up to eight weeks
A field trip for the Meigs
Wednesday, Noli.l6,andadopted
of rna ternlty leave to Suzanne Future Faremrs of America to a public participation pollcy In
Bentz, effective Oct. 12. A pur· attend the National Convention regard to board meetings. Under
chased services contract with In Kansas City, Nov. 8-13, was the policy, tlte public can partlciSandra Butcher Increased from approved along with a purchased pate In board meetings. Indlvldu5% ·hours a dally day to 6% hours servlces contract with Orkin to als or representatives of groups
a day .w as approved.
.
remove termlltes from the Brad- are to notify Treasurer Fry at
The boara passed an action · bury Elementary School at a least three days before a board
·declaring the transportation by charge of $472 affecting Infested meeting of their request to
partlclpate.ln a board meeting.,
school conveyance for six stu· areas only.
Speaking on educational Oi&gt;' They must submit the topic they
dents to be Impractical and the
boards agreed to pay the parent tlons, Interim Supt. Carpenter wish to discuss. Each person wlll
or guardian of these students the reported that In Ma,rch ·t he State be given 10 minutes to speak on a
will be Inspecting Meigs Local subject with comment:; to be
amount reimbursed by the State
Department of Education In lieu
and one of the state's require- addressed to the board's presld·
of providing such service.
ments Is that a provision be made _ lng officer. Public participation
A letter from Supt. Morris was
for ways other than classroom will take place before the bustwork to earn credit.
ness of the board Is discussed .
accepted. The letter concerned
The board agreed to hli'e a Treasurer Fry announces that
nodflcatlon of his dlsa blllty retlrsecond girls basketball coach she Is now. taking appllcatlons for
ment contingent upon the State
due to the large number of girls a full time secretarial position In
Teachers Retlreme~t Board's
who have signed up to take part her office .
approval on Oct. 21, and that the

Plan pancake supper
The Men 's Group of the Racine
United Methodist Church Is sponsoring a pancake, sausage and
eggs supper this Thursday evenIng with serving from 4 to 7 p.m.
Everyone is welcome and proceeds from the supper will go to
the church building fund .

OUR EMPLOYEE
PLANS HAVE A PLUS
FOR EMPLOYERS,

TOO.

'
'
'

'

'

Would 24-hour life and health
coverage (on and off the job)
be of interest to you? You

''

.'

'

may qualify-look into it!

''
,'

Derry...·_.__-..,---.:..---....:=::.:::...:.::=.::::::.:..:..._--,--...:._
continued from page 1 .
r'
__

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

side. She also remembered shoving the knife on 1\er "five or six times."
a rug underneath his head. "I 10ld
Perry testified that up umil the
him he'd get a stiff n~k."
shooting, Facemire had been driitkPerry
lestified
that
she ing heavily and had been "playing
tel~honed her mother shortly afler
games" with the police and lite
t!te' shooting.
Her
mother neighbors, asking her to break out
telephoned Mason County Sheriff's the neighbor's back window while
- ~SNOW
- RAIH
SHOWERS
Deparunent Chief Deputy George he broke out the front window and
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded Plants, who was the first law enforalso ·shooting out lite front &lt;~qor
WEATHER MAP - During early Thursday rooming, rain and ~ cement official 10 arrive at the with lite gun. He also held two m. scene. Plants turned the investiga- dividuais up at gunpoint in front of
showers af_e forecast for parts of the extreme north Atlantic Coast
: states. Showers are possible In parts of the extreme northern . tion over 10 lite Point Pleasant City the house.
Police.
Perry said she's couldn't identify
· Plains, the mid-Mississippi Valley and the lower Great Lakes.
1estified
litat
she
didn't
Perry
the
gun, and when asked by Mor: Rain and showers are possible In parts of the southern Plains and
or
·
signing
remember
giving
gan if she had loaded the gun for
: the western Gulf Coast, with shower~ and thuuderstonns P.oulble
statements about the case for the Facemire, as she told police in one
• In prts
of
the
south
Atlanllc
Coast
states.
(
UPI)
.
police. Confronted with copies of of her written state111ents, she said
those stalements - including a emphatically and wide-eyed, 'T
Miranda rights fonn - She IOld have never loaded it."
'. Both drivers were cited In an
Motgan litat the signature might
Perry lestified that Facemire, a
to stop within the ·assured clear
have
been
her.;
on
the
documents,
Vietnam
veleran
undergoing
accident at 5:10p.m ..Tuesday on distance and Hubbard for no
but
she
wasn't
sure.
counseling,
after
having
stopped
CR. 75, In Salisbury Township, operator's license.
.
At
one
time
during
Tuesday's
drinking
alcohol
for
several
years,
Meigs County.. just east of SR. 7.
The patrol also Investigated a
on
the
stand,
lenglity
testimony
showed
up
at
the
house
drunk
Feb.
Troopers said David W. Hub- one car accident at 3 p.m. on SR
Perry
had
a
look
of
pure
fear
in
her
26,
1987
after
having
seen
the
bard, 20, Pomeroy, was making a ·7, near Pomeroy, where Everett
eyes.
combat
movie
"Platoon."
Perry
tesright turn when another vehicle Jarvis, 58, Rt. 1, Guysville, lost
That look came afler Musgrave tified litat Facemire then drink aldriven by Kelly McCarthy. 23, control, and his pickup went oft
produced
a plastic bag that con· . cobol "from daylight to dark" from
The Plains, struck the rear of the the road, striking an embank·
tained a knife inside. It tm- that time until the time of the shootijubbard car.
ment. _Damage was moderate.
mediately brought Perry to tears.
ing. She took photographs ~f
Damage was moderate to both No one was Injured. There was no
Mter
gaining
her
composure
Facemire when be was drunk agam
Vehicles. No one was Injured. The citation.
during
a
shon
recess
for
the
Jury.
that first night and ~so ~~ a
natrol cited McCarthy for failure
Perry told lite coun that Facemire photograph of Facemrre .s!tung,
kept lite brown-handled knife next staring at a turned off lelevtSton, a
IO'thc bed near the baseboard.
can of beer nearby.
Plan
special
meeting
did
he
keep
the
knife
"Why
"He didn't even know the flash
~eel
there?" Musgrave asked.
went off," Perry testified.
"There was a couple of times I
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
Perry 1estified that she took lite
; .Ptu tland Fire Department's
wlll be hold a special pack
would wake up in lite middl~ of the first pictures 10 show Facemire
Womens Auxiliary will meet 7:30
meeting at 6:30p.m. Thursday at night wilit lite knife at my ~~ "how senseless it was" to drink and
this evening (Wednesday).
the United Presbyterian Church and he (Facemire) would ask me if get drunk." Sbe dated lite picture
In Middleport to confer the this was the night I wanted 10 die," on the back.
''Arrow of Light" eeremony, Cub Perry said through tears.
Perry testified that Facemire
1
Scouting's highest honor upon
"Did he ever use this knife to bought the Travis .38 rev~lver at a
To meet Thursday
three scouts. During the ceremoforce you to 'have oral sex?"
nies several others will be
Musgrave asked.
GOOD USEQ
: Rock Springs Better Health graduating Into Boy Scouting. All
"Yes, one time," Perry replied.
Club will meet Thursday, 1: 1~· parents, grandparents and the
WASHERS, DRYERS, I
"But it didn't work because I got
g.m.. at the .home of Dorothy general public are' Invited to
sick all over the bed."
REFIIGERATORS, TVs,
Jeffers.
'
attend as well as all other troops
Perry testified that Facemire used
GAS &amp; ELEC. IANGES
'
and packs In the area.

f?la

ft

.

Meigs accident probed by patrol

·• -------..--------..;..."1
I OO I
·1

·~--------r. -

Seyler processes 15 court cases

'

Friday's games

Mlueaot. - Recalled defaaernan
Gord Dineen tram Kal ....... eltheiHL

'

Three fined in Middleport court

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Four compete. The university plans to
University of Cincinnati basket- appeal.
Banks, Givens, Robinson and
ball players have lost one season
of. ellglblllty for receiving flnan· Starks will be listed as juniors
cia! aid while being withheld , while the appeal is pending.
from competition for ellglblllty
requirements.
Louis Banks, Elnardo Givens,
Layertis Robinson and Keith
Starks enrolled at UC In the fall of
1986 but were not eligible to
compete In the 1986-87 season.
A university rnvestlgation determined that during that Initial
year tho.~ players plus Terrell
Jackson and Kevin Wllllams,
who have since left the basketball program, received
university-administered financial assistance, unbeknownst to
the student-athletes.
Under NCAA regulations,
student-athletes must be assessed one season of eligibility
for receiving lnsdtudonal flnan·
clal aid while being Ineligible to

S.1lon at Wlnnlper. 8:31p.m.
Mlo~~n.U Ill CaiiiU'Y· 1: II p.m.

A foreclosure action has been !Hed In Meigs County Commofi
Pleas Court by Farmers Bank and Savings Company against'
Charles L . and Carolyn Neutzllng, Middleport.
Ohio Valley-Clarksburg, Inc .. Wheeling, W.Va., has flied suit
for a $12,&amp;19.39 judgment from Wolf· Newland Pharmacies, Inc.,
doing buslnes~ as VIllage Pharmacy, Middleport.

•
•

HuCford.llt M•lltreal, 1:Jip.m.
hH•o at Tora&amp;o, 7: II p.m.
Wllbl . .oa Ill NY Ruaers, 1:SS p.m.
Vancouwr II New .J!lr~ey , 1:JI p.m.

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a
low between 35 and 40.. Light
north winds.
.Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of shOwers each day .
High~ will be In the 50s Friday
and Saturday and between 55 and
65 on Sunday . Early morning low
temperatures will be between 35
and 45.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports two calls
Tuesday; Pomeroy at 3:23 a.m . to Spring Ave. for Audrla
Arnold to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9:45a.m.
to Lincoln St. for Edna Leach to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Four Bearcats lose year of eligibility

NY 1•....,~•
I. V ucou~ !
WecMct.,•a Oame1

Weather

Local news briefs-EMS has ttoo ·calls Tuesday

Det,. 4, Cllloqo I

rtlt•usbt, Plllladelllbla2

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

WedneSday, October 19; 1988

Logan at Gallipolis
Athens at Warren Local
Marietta at Jackson
Pt. Pleasant at Ripley
Spencer at Wahama
Charleston at Huntington High
South Point at Coal Grove
·
Southwestern at North Gallla
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Southern
Symmes Valley at Oak Hill
Belpre at Meigs
Miller at Wellston
Alexander at Federal-Hocking
Nels-York at VInton County
Trimble - Open

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shop in Gallipolis. She had so!"e
strong words about that; expresstng
some pent-up frustration on the
stand as a result of lite lenglity
questioning by her own attorney
about the gun.
"Sometimes I feel mad at the
whole world. The man at the
pawnshop . sho~dn't have sold it
(lite gun) to htm. The law saw tt
and didn't take i~ People knew
Fred had trouble."

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/:':iY
JEFF WARNER

302 West Second St., Pomeroy
992·5479

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~I NATIONWIDE
U..t~o~'l~~~~':,~

Nationwide Muluallnsurance Company
Nationwide Mutual F'•e lnsurai'IC9 Ccimpany
Nationwide Lile lnsunmcv Company
Home Office: Columbus, Ohio

••

Chuck Wingett's
CONSTRUCTIJN DISCOUNTS
·~o

Let Chuck Wingett
Show You How To Save Thousands
in January, February and March.

Purchase your new home now. Take detlnry on your new home belween Jan. t
and March 31 , t919 and rocelve your special wlntercanatiUCtlon dlscounl.

Homes Sold Under the FmHA Loan

Do Not Qualify

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tonight

Thai's why we've created a special activity
bOok. to help young people leel more confident when they have to be by themselves.
The book Is called "How To Be A Key
Performer." And with an adult's help, Hguides
a youngster tnrough ks)l salaly lessons and
how-to information, all in a kid-friendly
fashion. The activities In the book are all
designed to make the learning easier and
fun. Columbia wlll gladly send you a free copy.
Simply flllln and mall the coupon. Columbia has
always been intent on making homes feel warm
and cozy. Wdh this program, we also hope to make
them feel safer to youngsters who
must be at home alone.

-~----- '
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'1
_J'
-

OMJCk herB il you'd alao liM a Ires copy of the "Kav Performer'"
taachinQ guide.

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Mall to : Educational Services
ColUmbia Ges
P.O. Bo11111
Columbus. Ohio 43216

.'

Hospital news

Group to meet
•
', Middleport Child Conservat ton

Stocks

l;eague Wlll meet Thursday ,'1: 30
p.m., at the home of Linda
Broderick. Guest speaker wlll be
sunny Kuhl. All members are
urged to attend.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.) .
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................. : ............... 27~
Ashland Oil ......................... 34
Plan bean dinner
Bob Evans .......................... 16~
Charming Shoppes .............. 14'&gt;1.
, Rutland American Legion Is
City Holding Co .. ...... ........... 34
sponsoring an old·fashloned bean
Federal MoguL ................... 48~
dinner on Saturday, with serVIng
Goodyear
T&amp;R ................... 52'&gt;1.
from fo a.m. to 5 p.m. All-youHeck's
.................................
')!!
can-eat for $2. Everyone
-Key Centurion .................... 16~ .
welcome.
Lands' End .... ..................... 27%
Limited
Inc ........................ 24)1
Licenses issued
Multimedia Inc ...... ............. 71~
'
• A marriage license has been Rax Restaurants .................. 31{,
Issued In Meigs County Probate Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .... 11%
Court to Terry Lee Brewer; 42, Shoney's Inc ........................ 7%
Middleport. and Bonnie Lou Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
Worthington lnd .............. .. .22~
Br~er, 27, Mldt:lleport.
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Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions- Audrla
Arnold, Pomeroy; Mary Nichols,
Rutland; Frank Wolford, VInton; Edna Leach, Middleport.
Tuesday Discharges - Rosie
Searles, Robert Canaday. ·

COUNTY
·APPLIANCES

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627 3rd Ave., Galipolis
PH. 446-1699
HOURS: 8 A.M •• 6 P.M.

iiiii!imZ!ii
DINNER FOR POUR

DOMINO'S.'

PIZZA
OH.

w"' Mal• St.
992-2124

DEUVOS
flEE.
Umlto4 DollYOry
Ana

"· wttb '•Pifonl. Sat~tg&amp; Mu•hrooma. ;
01dons •d OrHn hppii'S

PLUS 4 · 16 oz. Sofldrink$

$9.99
.
.....
.

PC*EIO'f
UOIE OJILY

11 .UI.I • S....rt.n.
11 Ml·l

Lunch lpecl•l

ANY 12" 2 ITUI PIZZA
PLUS 2 · t6 oz. Softdrlnks

12" t ITIM PIZZA
PLUS 2 · t6 oz. Softdrlnks

-

11 .... , •

s-.n.r..

11 .... ,. ..........

•I
t

LARGR ·16" li·ITIM PIZZA

DINNER FOR TWO .

$6.17

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$4.99

Lunch 0ntw·11 All·1 PM
POIEI(ft'
MOIIIa
10 .,..,.,,.
SIDlE OilY
::

Hours: Daily 3-6. Sat 1

Office
460 Richland Ave
Athj!_nS - 592-4119
Model Home
Adena Park Subdivision
l:he Plains -797-2098
' - Total Ehlctrlc
Kitchen and Laundry
Avelltlble

Dnlbllt11illlder

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

tttl'"i.
II.IC:TfiiiC:fTY;_:::)

TH£
SYM80L

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Page 6-The Daly Sentinel

Wednesday. October 19; 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'IN CELEBRATION OF OU

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SUMMIT
BATH TISSUE
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GOLDEN
RIPE

Bananas

5

39&lt;

LB.

By BOB HOEFLICH
If the adage that llfe begins at
40 is true, the children of Mrs.
Phil Follrod of
Pomeroy and
the late
' ,FoUrod should
have a great
year.
This year all
• five children
will be ln their 40's. They are, of
course, Jack, who turned 48 in
June; Jo Ellen Roush, 47, in
September; Kay Fulks, whO will
What happened to you and the
be 45 on Dec. 7; Phillip who will
Easter
Bonnet creations?
be 43, also on Dec. 7. and Dan who
don't
hear from you but I
I
was 40 on Ocf. 11.
assume
that
a number of you are
All of them reside in Meigs getting
lt
all
together and are
County except Kay who lives in
getting
into
creallve
moods for
Athens.
making
an
Easter
bonnet
for the
By the way I hope you noted
upcoming
fail
Follles
of
the
Big ·
that Phil had two of her children
on Pearl Harbor Day, Dec. 7. No, Bend Minstrel Association.
Creations and these can be
George, Pearl H.arbor Day is not
from any materials Includmade
Sept. 7.
Ing older hats ,that you want to
Jean Hall of Syracuse is the use as a base must be dellvered to
winner of $1,000 in shopper The Daily 'Sentihtel Office by 4
dollars through the QVC channeL p.m. on Nov. 7.
Better get your feet weal. The
Jean 's lucky number, which
prizes
are a $100 savings bond for
deals with the membership
first
place;
$50 savings bonds for
number, was drawn on Friday.
second
and
third places, and $25' '
That was good for $25 credit to
gift
certificates
for groceries, ,
her . account and made her
fourth
and
fifth
places.
eligible'· for a $1 ,000 credit for
Hats created by residents will
shopping drawing on Saturday
be
modeled in the Easter Parade
night. Sure enougq, they pulled
number
at the show On Nov. 26.
Jean's name out of the drum
Maybe
If you don't want to
Saturday evening.
enter as an individual, your
John Beaver, husband of the organization members could get
foi'T)ler .Pauley Ann Kincaid, has together and come up with a
undergone a quadruple heart snappy bonnet for the compebypass operation. He's been tlton. It might be a fun activity
returned home and ls doing well. for the group and undoubtedly
The Beavers are now living at your treasury could use one of the
prizes.
·
, 6045 Serena Way, Middletown,
Ohio 45044.
Boy! what Tuesday's overnight
rain would have done for us
It's good bean soup and cornIn
July
and August! Oh well-bread weather and the Ladies
better
late
than never. Do keep
Auxiliary of Olive-Orange VFW
smiling.
Post 9053 must be aware of that.

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$100

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Problems buying kids'
rc,othes? Here:s. guide."

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By Cindy s. Oliveri
County Ext. Aient,
Home Economics aad 4-H

NUTRITIOUS ·
SNOW FlOSS

'

59C

Another way to find the correct
size is to measure clothes the
child already owns that fit well.
Lay the clothes flat and measure
the shoulder, chest, waist and hlp
Buying children's clothes can
areas
oflhe garments. For pants,
be a chore. But it's easier lf you
measure
from the crotch to the·
take your child's measurements
bottom
of
the pant leg and from
before heading for the store. This
the
crotch
to the waist. For
week, "In the Spoillght" shares
dresses, measure from the waist
some tips from · Norma Pitts,
to the neck and from the waist to
textUes and clothing specialist at
the bottom of the skirt.. For
Ohio State University .
It's always best, of course, to long-sleeved items, measure
bring the children along and have from the- shoulder to the cu'tf.
them try on new clothes. But Other helpful measurements are
, today, that's not always possible. shoulder to shoulder, chest, waIst, and hips of your chlld.
1 Many working mothers find it's
When you go to the store,
quicker and easter If they do the
measure
garments to flnd ones
shopping alone Instead of carting
that
match
your child's clothes
along the kids. And many out-ofmeasurements.
town grandparents like to buy
The measurements are also
clothing for their grandkids but
handy
to give to relatives who
have to guess at sizes.
like
to
buy
clothes for the kids at
If you want to leave the kids at
' home, you can do a pretty good Christmas and other occasions.
job of choosing the right size Remember to update the size
clothes by bringing a size chart chart as needed.
Always buy clothes that you
and a tape measure.
Make a size chart for each can return just ln case they don't
.child you're buying for. Measure !It well or look good on the child.
their height, chest and waist. Hip You may be able to save trips
measurements also come in back to the store by finding
manufacturers whose clothes
handy when buying pants.
consistently
fit your chlld, and
When at tbe store, fasten the
sticking
to
their
clothing.
garments' buttons, snaps and
You
should
be
able to expect
zippers before you measure the .
that
ail
clothing
in
one size from
clothes . . Make sure blouses,
one
manufacturer
won't
vary top
shirts and dresses are about 3
much
in
fit.
inches bigger In the chest than
But whenever you shop for
your child's chest measurement.
you~
children's. clothes, re Choose a coat or jacket about 6
their preferences. Don't
ml!mber
inches bigger than the child's
chest measurement. The gar- buy anything your child will
ment's waist should generally never wear. Fashion is as Impormeasure an inch more than the tant to consider their wants and
child's for dresses, skirts and needs, too.
For more information on childpants.
ren's
clothing, Bulletin 601,
You can use manufacturers'
"Children's
Clothes," is availasize charts to help you determine
ble
from
the
Ohio Cooperative
' the right size. If you don't see any
Extension
Service.
Contact our
posted, ask a clerk if the store
office
at
992-6696,
for
details.
keeps any behind the counter.

GRADE "A". LARGE

TOMATO
JUICE
46 OUNCE CAN

THOROFARE

EGGS
DOZEN

CAITO~

49C
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lim~ one w~h coupon &amp; $10.00 pun:hae, lltludlnabeer, wi1111d ciplllls
L1mH ont COUJIOn per family. Good .-C.rdinai Saperllllrilll ..ot of Oct,.. 1i
1911. 00-00.00
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.;.-Making the grade for -president
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TUESDAY IS SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'$.
5o/a DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES ( ~=~:':l~:_)
OR DRIVER'S
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Members of the group will be
staging a bean soup and cornbread dinner Saturday at the
VFW Hall in Tuppers Plains, '·
beginning at 1 p.m. In case bean
soup and cornbread Isn't your
bag, there will also be hotdogs,
cole slaw, desserts and beverages on hand.
The good thing ls that you get to
eat ail you can for $2.50 for adults
and $1.50 for children 12 and
under.
Sounds llke a good deal.

SUMMIT
BATH TISSUE

•

Honor roll

·Life begins _at 40...

WE WOULD LIKE TO EXP.RESS OUR APPRECIATION TO
OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS WITH THESE·GREAT SPECIALS!

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Wednesday, October 19, 1988
Page-7

Beat of the bend

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HEAD
LETTUCE

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

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tit

CRISP ICEBERG

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, ·oH.•Corner of Gen. Hartinger Pkwy·. &amp; Pearl St.•992-3471

- ~----.---------~~~~~----~~----1,,~--~~----~--~~----~--------_j

JENKS, Okla. fUPI) - In the
eyes of one little segment of little
Americans, a presidential hopeful doesn 't necessarily have to go
to college but the candidate must
be intelllgent and shouldn't
smoke.
Those are among the conclusions of Kathy Langston's fourthgrade class at Jen~ Elementary
School in the small, eastern
Oklahoma community of Jenks.
The students complied their
own list or quallflcatlons for
president as a part of their
political studies.
"They were very strong on the
no drugs and no smoking, which I
think Is a verycummt atdtude In

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children today," Langston said. The students said a candidate
ought to keep campaign promises if elected. They didn't insist
on the candidate being college
educated but simply settled on
the requirement that a presidential hopeful be "smart."
·"They've heard enough about
Abraham Uncoin and some of
the others who didn't go to
college that they decided that
maybe it wasn't necessary," she
said.
Langston said the students
added an "eitherworilenor men"
line to the qualifications list,
although she had "a large group
of boys who thought women had

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will be on display al the Meip Museum for
Octoberlest and the remainder of the month at the
Meigs Museum. A portion of one display case
IDled with steins and glasses Is shown here.

AUTHENTIC GERMAN COLLECTION Steins, glasses, pewter plates, candies, holders,
even dolls, and some clothing, all from Germany,

Octoberfest set
Octoberfest will be observed at
the Meigs County Museum , Butternut Ave., Pomeroy , Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. under
sponsorship of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society. ·
Soupbeans, cornbread, doughnuts, German sausages, pumpkin pie, cider, rootbeer and
coffee will be for sale.
The museum exhibit will fea ture an authentic German colie~­
Uon of beer steins, beer glasses,
German candles, vases, pewterware, and other German related
Items.
Contests will l).e held during the
day in conjunction with the
e'lhlbits. A pumpkin pie baking
contest will be held with entries
to beat the museum by 10: 30a.m.
with judging at ll a.m. No prior
registration is needed and prizes
will be awarded.
A pumpkin carving contest will
also be held. The completed
carving is to be at the museum by
11 a.m. with the judging to take
place at noon. These will be on
el&lt;hibit until 6 p.m. Prizes will be
awarded for the most originaL
Throughou t the afternoon there
-- will•be games for - the children .
Entertainment will include a
German band composed of students from Meigs High School
and local clogging groups will fill
out the day 's activities.
Craft table space for anyone
wanting to sell or demonstrate is
available by caiiing them'useum,

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The llrst six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Racine
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:.
Second Grade: Steven Boso,
Jennifer Carleton, Joshua E rvin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,
Josie Jarrell, Bobby Johnson,
Jeremiah Johnson, Kara King,
Jesse Little, Regina Manuel,
Jessica Smith, Crissy Snider,
Tommy Smith.
Third Grade: Ryan Grace,
Kristen Hlll , Matt Hlll, Nicole
Hlll, Danny Sayre.
Fourth Grade: Trudy Justis,,
Jesse Maynard, Ryan Norris,·
Jennie Scarberry, Missy Smith,
Bobby Wr itesei.
Fifth Grade: John Card, Paul
Ihle, Craig Knight, Jonna Ma· ,
nuel, Chanda Mulford, Karyn
Thompson.
Sixtl) Grade: Grant Circle;
Kevin Ihle, Shannon Morarity,
Kendra Norris, Courtney Roush.

Mothers-in-Law
are Wonderful!

Flowers Say It Best®
Mother-in-Law's Day is Sunday, :
October 23rd. Remember your
mother-in-law on her special day •
with the Mother-in-Law's
Bouquet. It's a beautiful
arrangement, brimming with all
her favorite nowers, available in

a color to match her favorite
room and a price to tit your

budget.

COLORFUL STEIN- Here, Sherr! Hart, who works partlime at
the Meip Musuem, displays a lar~e colorulf aulbrntic sleln
brought here from Germany.

992 -3810.

This husband needs counseling
Dear Ann Landers: My hus,
band is loaded with stress. He
yells constantly over the smallest things . I am worried about
him.
I have an 11-year-old son from
a _previous marriage. When
Jimmy has a friend sleep over, or
just com,e'ln to play, I must serve
as a buffer between my husband
and the kids.
Yesterday Jimmy was playing
outside with friends. My husband
kept screaming out the window
for the kids to get off the lawn and
"pipe down." He became so
angry he turned beet red and
looked" as . If h!l-, .was ready to
explode.
.;.
It's not just the boy who upsets
hlm. If someone runs through our
yard or cuts him off in traffic, or
If a neighbor has a party that gets
slightly. noisy, or if something Is
not put away tn the proper place,
or lf he wants to wear a pair of
pants and they aren't pressed, he
goes nuts.
Basically , my husband is a
good, kind person, but his volatile
reactions to unimportant things
are distressing to all of us. My
young son is afraid of his
stepfather and tries to stay out of

his way. It's pathetic.
My husband and I have talked
about this many times and he
says, "I'm just high-strung and I
can't help it."
What can be done to alleviate
thts situation? Shouldn't he be in
treatment? Please reply soon.
I'm afraid this man is going to
have a stroke and I am heading
for the outhouse. -Greensboro,

N.C.

.

Dear Greensboro: The man
needs help. And soon. I recommend family counse~Jng. Your
son needs to be part · of . th~ ·
treatment, and so do you . ·
I hope for the sake of the entire
family tfiat your husband agrees
to this. He needs to le.a rn how to
live with himself as well as others
before his life becomes totally
unmanageable. Good luck.
Dear Ann Landers: Will you
please explain "eye language"
between a man and a woman?
What does it mean when a man
looks at a woman with halfclosed eyes? I know it means
something, but I don't know
what. Can you give me a clue? Young and Dumb in Louisville
Dear Y aad D: Half-closed
eyes could mean several things.

OFF LEE &amp; LEVI

JEANS
·BASIC BLUE DENIM ONLY
Thursday, Friday ·&amp; Saturday
TODDLER 0-3; BOYS 4-14; HUSKIES 27-36;
STUDENTS 26-30: MEN'S 29-36:
JR. 81 MISSY 3-18.

290 North Slcond 992-361"

llddllport, Ohio

Here are some possibilities:
(a) He's tired.
(b) He's bored.
(c) He'smyoplc.
(d) He's drunk.
How much do you know about
e&lt;&gt;Mine. LSD, PCP, crock,
speed and downer"? Think you can
handle them ? For up-lo-the minute
information on drus•. write for
Ann Landers' newly revUed boo- ·
k'et, .. The Lowdown on Dope. ••

pol ,

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POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
106 BmUNUT AVE• .
POMEROY I OHIO
992-6454/992-2039

-- Colorectal cancer
is one of the most curable forms of
the disease ...

•

Colorectal cancer is second only to lung
cancer in terms of incidence, and about
60,000 people die from the disease each year.
But when detected early and treated promptly,
over three-quarters of patients with cancer of the
colon or rectum can be cured and are able to
return to normal lives.•

•

Have regular medical check-ups, and discuss
with your famly doctor orsurgeron whether you
might be at risk for colorectal cancer. And for
information about methods for early detection call

•
•

•

Jack M. Levine, D.O.
General Surgeon ·
Suite 211 + PVH Medical Office Building

'

(304) 675-1460

•

• The Amerieon Cancer Society

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�Page-8~The Daily .Sentinel
..

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Pomerpy--MiddlepOri.
' 'This year's conyeh Uon'-', said ·

Doctors
· .attend · . ~au~b}~$~~
;~:af~r.~~~~fr~~
·
• . .
practtc convention In the-naflon
convention
wbere doctors ofchtropraitc and
doctors came togethl!r

Dr. Nick W. Robinson a nd :Dt'.
Nancy P. Klme, Middleport.
were among over 600.doctors of
· chlroprac!lC, th!llr spouses and
ctllfopractlc assistants ~t tending
the 1988 Ohio State Chiropractic
Association .Convention tn Columbus. Oct. 14-16. ·

..

medic~!

for the betterment of both
. profesSions."
·
· Highlightl~g the· .oon·ventlon
was .the license renewal course,
. taught jointly by stx medical
doctors. Including specialists In
neurosurgery, 'ortllo!iedlcs and
physical and occupational medl·

Wednesday. October 19. 198.~

Qhio ·

cine, along · wltll three re··.
Representing the Central Ohlo tor 'of research· at Logan~C~Ilege
. searchers from. !-ogan; -NaHonal · Neurologic Surgeons Organtza- . of .Chlropractlc, and Kenneth
and Palmer ChlrO;praclk .. t!on were Drs. David ' Yashon, Delxler, .Ph.p., professoro.f anat,Colleges. · · · .
: · - .· Edward Sadar Lewis Seeder . amy at Palmer College · of
. "The pa(tlctpatlon . of . both · Th9m~s ·. Hawk.' Edwin Season:. ·Ch.lropractlc: ·. •
· meqlcal ppyslclans and chiro- . James. Parker · ·an de t.:eslie . The ~rlmary purpose of the .
·
· . annual convention Is to educate
.practic physicians makes this · Frledmen: .
year's convention an · unprece- . Addressing i'he Issues of the . chiroprac~lc phys(Cilms ·and of··
dented event," said Association
past, present arid future . of .flc;estaffon·newdevelopmentsln
President Dr. R. A. McMichael of ·chiropractic research were· c·. techniquti', .· health and office
Can\on. "It demonstrates' · the . Robert Humphreys; D. C:, assist- efficiency so the~ can better
new spirit of cooperation ttutt Is,. ' ant professor of rese;nch at the. serve.their patients .
growing between the two health
National College of Clllroprac• . Experts also addressed OSCA
care professions.
tic;
Sanders, Ph.D. dltec· members on
including

'

radiology ; worker's compenlli!- '
lion, ,definition .of disabiUt y, , .
Medicare and public relations. •
In commenting on the conven· •· .
tton. Dr . .'Kime commented. ·'It "
was a fantastic opiiortunJty io:-. ·
.Ie&lt;1rn · from experts tn· · both ~
chlmpractli' · and medicine on ~ ·
subjects that are important to all
heal til care professionals. Ihope.it isjustthestartofanewsplrltof ;:.
co6peration .. between the twe· ,
professions that will continue to·'
" she added.
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Pqneroy-Middleport, Ohio

John R. Hunnell. Antiquity, Is
himself by recreating the great
proudly displaying a compllrnenharbors of America during their
tary maritime print these days.
earlier days ' and historically
And no wonder. The print is
accurate.
fr om an original painting by
Finding that his originals were
Hunnell's cousin. noted marl· being purchased by wealthy
time · artis t, . John Stobart of patrons who hid them away In
Martha's Vineyard.
their hol')'leS, Stobart decided to
Born, reared and .educated In expand Into an· ~ntlrely new
England, Stobart came to the method of marketing his work.
UnltedStalesaln1966arrlvlngln
He formed his own company to
New York with $200 In his pocket
reproduce his originals and
llndfourpalntingsunderhlsarm.
Issued limited edition prints. He
Today, by all accounts he Is the
carefully supervises · the painpreeminent maritime artist of · staking photographic proces5!!S
this age. His original paintings . used to reproduce the original oll
currently bring In $150,000, twice
paintings Into a poster like lithe amount ever paid to another
mlted edition.
While the ortglnalls being sold
living maritime· artist.
When Stobart arrived In New
through Wunderlich's Gallery In
York, some 200 major American
New York, 750 to 950 prints are
artists were concentrating on
being published. Each Is. lndlvldually signed and numbered by
palnting wlldltfe scenes but very
few were concentrating on harStobart and offered for· sale In
bor scenes. Those doing marlover 250 galleries.
· time work were painting ships at
When the prints are first issued
sea so Stobilrt carved a niche for
they generally sell for around

Celebrate Autum Wit
•

VIEWS - John R. Hunnell, Antiquity, views a print sent to him
by his cot~J~In, John Stobart, noted American marlllme artist, free
of charge. The scene Is ollhe steamboat, Hudson, at Cincinnati.
Hunnell is relation to the famed artist through his Mother, Edna
• Stobart Hunnell, who resides near Racine. Hunnell will serve as an
; agent for the Stobart prints and any Interested residents can
· contact him.
·
•

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Each of these advertised items is required t o be rea(jily available for sale in •ach
Kroger Store, except as specifically noted In this ad . If we do run out of an
advenised item, we will offer you your choice of a comparable· item, when
ava ilable , re.flecting .the same savi11gs or a ratncheck which ~ill entitle you to
purchase the advert•sed item at the advertised price within JO days . Only one
vendor coupon w ill be acCepted per item purchased.

-. -

.

Meigs Garden Clubs
meet, plat:l for show

•

COPYR IGHT 1988 · THE KROGER. CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOO D SUNDAY,
OCT. 16, THROUG H SATURDAY, OCT . 22, 1988, IN CO.UliPDIISAIIDPOIEIOJSIOUS.

WE AESEAYE THE RIGHT TO LIM IT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9 '

Hunnell shows complimentary print

.••·•

-

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - A gospel meetIng will be held at the Westside
Church of Christ off Route 7,
through Oct. 21, 7:30 each even·
lng. Landon Hope of Henderson,
W.Va. will be the speaker .
REEDSVILLE - Revival services will be held at the Eden
United Brethern Church, Reedsville, through Oct. 23, 7 p.m.
Charles Norris will be the
evangelist.
POMEROY - Bloodmobile
Wednesday, 1 to 5:30 p.m. at

Meigs Senior Citizens Center,
Mulbery Heights, Pomeroy; XI
Gamma Mu 'Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will serve canteen.m
--- .
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Yard sale and
bake sale Thursday and Friday
atl04 Union Ave., Pomeroy, with
proceeds going to the Car teton
Church.
SATURDAY
SYRACUSE - Fall Carnival
Saturday, 5: 30 to 8: 30 p.m. at
Syracuse Elementary School.
Chicken noodle dinners, games,
haunted house.

The annual Christmas flower of Garden Clubs, discussed Arneshow of the Meigs County Garden rlfiora to take place In 1992 and
Clubs Association was scheduled urged clubs to send thler donafOr the weekend following lions to Rulli Weller.
Thanksgiving when club repreMrs. Dean Installed the new
Mary Shrine and Lafayette ada, all supreme appointed offlcsentatlves met Monday night at county contact chairman, Pau- Shrlne of the White Shrine of ers lind committee members.
Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
line Atkins, vice chairman, AI!Ei- Jerusalem held their annual
Past worthy high priestess and
Mrs. Sheila Curtis, president, gra Will, secretary-treasurer, Inspection Monday night at the
waichmen of shepherds presnoted that the Senior Citizens Dorothy 'Woodard, using a rain- Middleport Masonic Temple.
Center has been reserved for the bow theme.
Presiding officers were,...Eau- ented were Marian Tassey, EliMrs. Atkins announced a meet- llne Atkins, Don Yoho, Sarah zabeth Roberts, Carla Parmlnt,
show, Nov. 26and 27, and that the
theme will be "Sights and Sounds lng for February to make plans Blazer and Melvin Craft with Delaware; Bea and Robert
of Christmas." She distributed for the spring meeting. She then Florence P.' . Ogden, supreme Kuhn, Neine Casto, Phylls Gilthe show schedules and clubs Introduced Judith Hill of the worthy high priestess of Toronto, key , Ann Blake, Jean Yoho, Nora
drew for classes.
Rutland Friendly Gardeners who Canada, as the Inspecting Daubenmere, Janet McDermitt,
Sarah Blazer. Wanda Cassell,
Betty Dean. regional director, gave a program on dried flowers. officer.
dlstrlbu ted 1988-89 rosters to the She exhibited wreathes and pot
Lafayette Shrine conductded Sylvia Lilly, Betty Shaffer, Esta
Meigs County Clubs. She an-. pourrl that she had made from the formal opening and ceremon- Reese, Gail Russell, and Melvin
nounced that there are two new dried materials.
Ial with Ruth and Virgil Cross Craft.
Shrines represented were Ju~deos available from the Ohio
Refreshments were served by receiving the degree. Mary
dea,
Marietta, Miriam, Galilee,
A.Ssocalton of Garden Clubs, both members of the Rutland Garden , Shrine handled Introductions,
Hocking
Vlllley, Delaware, La·
op modern arrangements. New •. Club to members of the Mlddle- escorting and closing of the'
fayette,
and
Mary. Mrs. Ogden
nete paper featuring wildflowers port, Rutland Friendly, Chester, Shrine.
complimented
the shrines on
was shown, dates of upcoming Ru \land, Star. Fernwood,
Introduced and recognized
meetings were announced and It Friends and Flowers, Wildwood, were Mrs. Ogden, Dorothy Plck- their work In her closing rewas noted that Meigs County wJII and Shade Valley Clubs.
ersglll of Parma, the supreme marks. The Rev. Mr. Kuhn had
host the spring regional meeting
Star Cluq will be host and worthy guardian; Irene Smith of the benediction.
Members enjoyed a carry-In
tq April.
Wildwood will have the program Willoughby, Barbara McKibben
dinner following Inspection. The
·Janet Bolin, Immediate past at the April meetlngofthecounty and Emma Polen of Marietta,
tables were decorated with vases
president of the Ohio Association group.
Imogene Caldwell, Beckley. W.
of
red carnations, Ivy and streaVa.; Ed Daubenmere of Logan,
mers
of red, white and blue.
and Jack Ogden, Toronto, Can-

$300, but they quickly Increase in

value as the demand outstrips
the supply. With over 70 prints
now In circulation, a growing
group of avid collectors has
driven up the prices of some to
$5,000 and more. ·
Stobart now sells his works
through his own galleries also .
He owns a total of seven locations
In affluent waterfront communities such as Marth 's Vineyard.
Nantucket, Hilton Head Island

U.S. INSPECTED
HOLLY FARMS

••

.......

..

Mixed
Fryer·Parts

! .
'-

•

Meigs County property transfers _ _ __

Pound

•
"

•
"

Maxwell House
Instant Coffee .
•

...

Fresh

Broccoli ........................

8-oz.

Bunch

sgc

s 99
9

THIN 66-CT. SMALL, 48-CT. MEDIUM, 32-CT . LARGE,
28-CT. X-LARGE OR THICK 66-CT. SMALL,
,.

ii-~uui;~M OR 33' CT. LARGE

Diapers.............. ............. '"'

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

•

$

'

••
•
•

88

A

••
'••
••'•
••
•

(

'1.......

•

)

'

•
•

Dr. Randall A. Taylor

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

.
...•'
••

••
•••

Martha Elizabeth Burns, part
Marion A. Hall, dec. to Charles Power Co., right of way,
lot, Middleport village.
E. Hall, Randall K. Hall, George Pomeroy.
Dovle Cale, dec. to Ernest M.
W. Hall, !reneE. Walker,Cert.of
Margaret A. . Lallance by
Cale,
Jr., affidavit, Chester. .
Trans., Lebanon.
Guardian to Don L. Carter, Ruth
Ernest
M. Cale, Jr. to Ernest
Karl R. Russell, Linda L. L . Carter, parcels, Middleport
M.
Cale,
Jr., Jacqueline A.
Russell to Michael T. Marcinko, VIllage.
Radford,
parcels,
Chester.
Theresa Marcinko, 10.51 acres,
Jenny· Abbott, dec., George
Norman R. Smith, Sr., dec. to
Orange.
Abbot, dec. to Nina Hawk, aka
Mae Smith, cert. of trrans ..
Clyde E. Sayre, Deborah Sayre Nina Cale, affidavit, Chester.
Pomeroy.
to Richard B. Payne, Sherry L.
Ray R. Pickens, Patty Pickens
Charles F . Pyles, dec., aka
Payne, parcel, Sutton.
to Adrian V. Lathey, Emma L.
Charles Frederick Pyles, dec. to
Richard B. Payne, Sherry L. Lathey, 1.0047 acre, Chester.
Payne to Clyde E. Sayre, PeSherman K. Kisner, Melissa D. Shirley L . Pyles, -aka Shirley
Lorene Pyles, affidavit, Racine.
borah Sayre, parcel, Sutton.
· Kisner to Charles E . Young,
Gilbert C. Hart, Audrey E .
B. H. Smith, Ruth N. Smith to Minnie K. Young, parcel,
Hart to Gllberi C. Hart, Audrey
Richard B. Payne, Sherry L. Rutland.
E. Hart, parcels, Racine.
Payne, parcel, Sutton.
Charles E. Young, Minnie K.
Joseph G. Runyon to Burl L.
Richard B. Payne, Sherry L. Young to Rutland Church of the
Putman,
Sr., Bonnie S. Putman,
Payne to B. H. Smith, Ruth N. Nazarene Inc., .33 acre, Rutland
parcel,
Olive.
Smith, parcel, Sutton.
village.
Bert L. Grimm by P.O.A.,
Mary Jean Keller to MonogaCarl Sayre, dec. to Martha T.
Chlorus
C. Grimm by P .O.A. to
bela Power Co., right of way, Sayre, Cert. of Trans., Scipio.
James
Hall,
Rebekah Hall, parOlive,
'
Gerald Sellers, Hattie Sellers,
Mary M. Wolfe to Mary M. to Diamond Savings and Loan cel, Letart.
Ralph Woodrum, Frances
Wolfe, Mll21AnnKlalber, _parcel, Co., Sheriff's Deed, Pomeroy
Woodrum , Freda Bowen to Rex
Racine.
·
VIllage.
Randall L. Tackett, Joyce A.
Bruce P. Davis, dec. to Marlo- Howard Cheadle, Sr., Sara Jo
Tackett to Randall L. Tackett, rle R. Davis, certificate, Rutland Cheadle, parcels. Columbia.
Peggy Wandling Stobart,
Joyce A. Tackett,'% acre, Salem. village.
Bank One, AthensN.A. to Dale Jerry L. Stobart to Penny A.
Sherman Ray Marcum, et al.,
to Randall L. Tackett, Joyce A. E. Taylor, Pt. lot 17, Pomeroy Wandling, John David Wand!lng,
Jr. , pa-rcels , Scipio.
Tackett, sherlfrs deed, Salem.
village.
Manning D. Webster, dec. to
Lllllan Vlctorta Gardner, dec.
Elmer F. Burns, Martha Elizato Robert Fetty, affidavit, beth Burns to Elmer F. Burns, · Richard E. Jones, Trustee, cert.
of trans., Scipio.
Rutland.
Neva Nicholson to Ohio Power
Co., right of way, Rutland. · ·
Cecil Maynard Jr., Debbie
Maynard to Ohio Power Co. ,
right of way, Racine.
William R. Haptonstall to Ohio

w·a'ra Open! .

••'
••

24-Pak 12·oz. Cans
f

•·
CompUed By
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Meigs County Recorder
.Ralph E. CUndiff, · Lots J.
Cundiff to Norma Jean Ratliff,
lots, Salisbury.
Nellie Jarrell Crisp to James
Crisp, Jr., parcel, Salem.
Robert C. Hartenbach, VIola
Hartenbach to Tuppers PlalrtsChester Water District, right of
way, Chester.
Donald Keith McLeod, Sharon
s: McLeod to Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, right of
way , Bedford.
HOllis Walters, Maxie Walters to
Tpppers Plains-Chester Water
J:&gt;lstrlct, right of way, Chester.
Karl R. Russell, Linda L.
Rj!ssell to Tuppers Plains·
Chester Water District, right of
WilY, Orange.
Fred Lee Burson, Helen -Jane
Burson to Tuppers PlainsChester Water District, right of
W,ay, Bedford.
-;\tlanta Financial Federal W.
Va., F .S.A. Magnet Bank, F .S.B.
tq Norman 0 . Weber, Vera A.
Weber, parcel, Orange.
:Michael A. Mitchell, Teresa S.
Mitchell. to Farmers BAnk &amp;
Saving Co., sheriff' s deed,
Rutland. .
Evelyn M. Schuler, dec., by
Executor, to Harley IN. Eblin,
Sr., Jane M. Eblin, parcels,
Rutland.
.Elmer Pierce to Robert Oiler,
.267 acre, Letart.

(Formerly VII... Phar-yl

nder Ne.r Maaagement
"ALL YOUR HEALTH ,CARE NEEDS"

FREE DELIVERY - IN STORE CHARGES
STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M. -6 P.M .
Saturdlly 9 A.M.-1 P.M .

992-6669
71 North .Second

Middl.,rt, Ohio

Is pleased to announc~
he now has staff privileges
for Chiropractic Services

at

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The ~ ol professioools

Taylor Chiropractic Clinic
715 Main St., Point ....,oant, W.Va. 25550
(3Ci4)675·1310 ~
MON·WED.fRI 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m •
TUI 9-4 • THUR 9·12

and on fashionably renovated
wharves in !lo&amp;,ton. Pittsburgh
and Washington~ C.
He owns homes on Martha's
Vineyard and Hilton Head Island, a condominium on Boston 's
Waterfront , and a farm In
Connecticut. Stobart continues to
produce about 10 original oils
each year.
. Three of the Stobart prints are
Included in the deocr at Bank 1In
Pomeroy.

Christmas In October
NATURALIZER • HUSHPUPPY

ALL WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES
20°/o-50°/o OFF
ALL MEN'S DINGO &amp; ACME

COWBOY BOOTS •••• 20°/o OFF
DINGO, NATURALIZER; HUSHPUPPY

ALL WOMEN'S
CASUAL SHOES
.
20°/o OFF
MEN'S 12" LaCROSSE MINER'S BOOT
$3995
.

FLORSHEIM &amp; HUSHPUPPY

GROUP

Shrine inspection held -

"'

'

.

MEN'S SHOES••••• 1/2 PRICE
ALL WOMEN'S PURSES
20°/o OFF

HARTLEY SHOES

z•

MATT. C. VANVRANKEN

·992-s212

OWNER

il

CIISP &amp; SEIYE VACUuM PACIC

SLICED BACON ................... ~~•• S1.19
SUPE.IOI
BIG RED BOLOGNA •••••••••••• :~•••• ;.97&lt;
SMITHFIELD
SHIWDED '2.19 lB.
ruao~$197
COOKED HAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••
•

l

SWIFT ECIIIICH

(

TURKEY HAM LOAF •••••••••••••l~•• S2.29
HOMEMADE MEAT SALAD •••!!•••••• 89&lt;
KIAFT 16 SLICE PROCESS

AMERICAN
CHEESE .............!1.9.t. s1.8 7
HAitiiOND GRADE A

LARGE EGGS .... P!!L...... 9Sc
SHEDOS ~PREAD QUARTERS

MARGARINE .....t!-!t:. s1.19

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE .............. ..L.t•• 2sc
IDAHO

BAKING
POTATOES ....IP.U••~~!i s1. 99
CELLO

-· -..
"'"_... ,,'
•

CARROTS ......... !.\.f!l,r!l¥.. 39&lt;

PAUL

FISH STICKS •••••••••••••••••• u.~~· $2 .89
TIOPICANA
E JUICE ••••••••••••• ~~.~~ $1.69
JUMBO PACK

NORTHERN NAPKINS .... ~!~.'!.... 99c
IIGH POINT

COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.~~·. S4.29
TANG

ORANGE DRINK •••••••••••• ?~.~~- $2.89
GEJIIIAL MILLS

CHEERIOS ••••••••••••••••••••• ~~:.~~- S2. 99
lAI
us ciz. · 99c
CAMAY SOAP ••••••••••••••••••••••••
14 OZ. ICIAFT DELUXE

MAC. &amp; CHEESE DINNER ••• $1.49
"THANIC YOU"
APPLE
PIE
FILLING
........
~:.~~- $1.39
SOL AIMOUI
.
VIENNA SAUSAGE ••••••••• 2f$1.19
15 OZ. AIMOUI
HOT CHILl w/BEANS ••••• 2/$1.99
PIINGLE
POTATO CHIPS ••••••••••••• !.~~-. $1.49
1OIM 01. CAIIPIILL'S
TURKEY. NOODLE SOUP •••• 2/$1.09

. ...
....
·•

-

.-~
..

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel ·

Eagles class
·· of local church
has meeting
Assistance with the purchase
of new exterior doors for the
sanctuary entra nce was dis·
cussed at the recent meeting of
the Eagles class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church.
Meeting at the home of Martha
Moore and RU'th Crouc h, Bill·
Winebrenner opened with
prayer. Harriette Sinclair gave
the treasurer's report. Needs of
the church were discussed.
Beulah Ward invited the class
to her home for the Christmas
party which will be a carry-In
dinner. The time will be announced later.
Next meeting will be at the
church on Nov: 18. Bill Winebrenner took pictures of the
class. Marcia Karr closed with
prayer. Refreshments were
served. New officers are Irene
Parker,. president; Mary Lisle,
secretary, and Mrs. Sinclair,
treasurer. Others attending were
Bill and Dorothy Winebrenner,
• Bob Smith, Dick and Betty Ash,
• Marcia Karr, Mary Cundiff,
Irene Parker, Beulah Ward,
Addie and Carroll Norris. Karl
Kloes, Helen Teaford, and a
guest, Vickie Morrow.

Pomaroy-Middleport. Ohio
"The Fruits of the Spirit" was
the title of the program prese nted by Bernice Carpenter at
ihe Tuesday night meeting of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Women held at the chu rch.

UMW meets
for program

BIG BEND
~

men! In social action In regard to
hunger, homelessness , a nd
health.
Dorothy Downie, devotional
leader, used as her topic, " Gifts
Without Price Tags" such as
kindness, smiles, and wild flow ers. Scripture was from Psalms
8. The Lord's Pr!lyer was repeated In unison and group
singing of "For lheBeautyofthe
Earth ."
·
Martha Hoover presided at uie
business meeting attended by 21
members and two guests. A tota l

Purpose of th&lt;" program was to
·provide the opportunity to .locus
on how one's Inner spiritua l
growth Informs, motivates and
energizes one's outer more public ministry.
Christians, she said, can relate
the fruits of th e spirit to Involve-

Your Independently Owned
Low·Priced Supermarket

Wednesday.

October 19, 1988

of 92 sick and shutln calls were
reported. Officers' reports were
given a nd ttte ladles will serve a
small reception lor the new
membership class to be taken
Into the church, Nov. 6.

Wednesday,

reunion held

•

l

served In memory of deceased
members, Roy Reuler, Dutch
Mescher, Maxine Sayre, and
John Mitch.
Music wa s furnished by
Denver Rice with his country
seat guitar. Cards were signed
for ~~ Schwab, a patient at

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

6 INCH POT

POLICIES
·A~•

outsid e Meigs, Gallia or Mas on counties must be prepaid.

10W30 • 10W40

FOODLAND

Valvoline
Motor Oil

MOUNTAINEER

ound Beef

Pork
Sausage

Tomato
Catsup

•A classified advertisement placed ·in The Daily Sentine4 (ell·
cept - classified display , Business Card and leg" notices)
will also appear in the Pt. Pleasant Register and the Galli·
polis Daily Tribun e. reaching over 18,000 homes.
COPY DEADLINE -

MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAV PAPER
1-HIDAY PAPER

DAY BEFORE .PUBLICATION
- · 1 1:00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P .M . MONDAY
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY

-

SUNDAV PAPER

2 :00 .P.M. WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M. THURSDAY
2 00 P.M. FRIDAY

----

.• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

0 ·15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

16· 25 WORDS

$4.00
$5.00

S8.00
$13.00
$33.00

Announcements

2&amp;-36 WORDS

$7.00
510.00
&amp;15 .00
525 .00
$60.00

56.00
$8.00

$13.00
$21 .00
551 .00

1- Csrd ol Thanks
2 - ln Memory
3 - Annoucemerits

4 - Giv. .w·.,5 - Happy Ads

G•llia County
Area Code 614

'Meigs County
Area Code 614

Mason Co .. WV
AruCode 304

446367388245256-

992- M•ddleport
Pom•ov
985- Ch•t.r
843- Portl8f'ld
247- Littar1 Falls
949- R•cine
742- RutiWid
667 - Cootville

675458576773882895937-

643 - Arabia Oitt.

379- W.. nut

Pt. PleaHnt
Leon
Apple Groll'e
Maton
New Haven
Letart
Bllffalo

White Bread

3.

16

•60•40 WATT
FElT ELECTRIC

MORTON HOUSE
ANGEL SOFT

leef Stew

oz.

106 Union Avenue, Pom·
eroy, Ohio. to sell for cash

Bath Tissue

Flautt, Perry

George W.

County: Hon. James E. Stil·
well, Hocking County; Hon.
Michael A. Br1me. Vinton
County; Hon. Charles H .
Knight, Meigs County; Hon.

tho following collateral:
~:~B Ford PU 4x4
1FTEF28H3FNA34734
1977 Ford PU

lOAVES

6~ - Seed

49 ~ For

Transportation
71 - Autos for Sale
72 - Truck• for Sale
73- Van• &amp; 4 wo ·,
74 -- Motorcvcles
75- Boatl &amp; Motors for Sale
76- Auto Part1 &amp; Ac:ce1sories
77- Au to Repair
78- Camping Equipment
79- Campera 6 Motor Homft

Le•e

Merchandise

Services

51 - Hou•hold Goods
52-Sporting Goodl
53- Antiques
54- Mi sc. Merchandise
55- Building Supplies
56 - Peu for Sale
57- Musical tnsuument s
59- Fruits &amp; Vegmables
59- For Sale ot Trad e

lijhfiUIH@II
21 - Business Opportun1ty
22 - Monev to Loan
23 - Prof•sional Ser.oices

&amp; Fertitiler

81 828384868687-

Home lmprovem.,ts
Piumbing &amp; Helllting
Exc81fating
Eiectrical &amp; RefTig.-ation
Gtmeral Hauling
Mobile Home Repair
Upholsterv

. Public Nat ice

PUBLIC NOTICE
waive any informalitiel.
NOTICE lo hereby given
Approved by-SEPTA Centhat on Seturay. October ter Judicial Center Board.
22. 1988, ot 10:00 a.m. a
Hon. J. Alan Goldlber'V.
· public ulo wit 'be hoi d at Athens County;
Hon.

Light Bulbs

61 - Farm EqUipment
62 - Wanted to Buy
63...;...Livestock
64- Hay &amp; Grain

I;IQUfbl

11 - Helo Wanted
12- Situation Wantl!ld
13- lnsurance
14;- Busin•s Training
15 - Schools &amp; Instruction
16- Radio. TV &amp; C8 Repair ·
17 - MisceUaneous
18 ·· Wanted To Do

following relephone exchanges...

Hom811 for Sal e
Mobile Homn for Sole
Farms for Sale
8usinen Buildings
Lo1 s &amp; Acreage
Re• Estate Wanted

41 - Houset for Rent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43- Farms for Rent
44- Apartm.,t for Rent
45- Futnished Ro oms
46 - Space for Rant
47...JWanted to Rent
48- Equipment for Rent

Employment
Servtces

Cla.~~ijied page.~ cover rhe

Gallipolis
Ch•hire
Vinton
Rio Grande
Guvan Dist.

31 32 33 3 l35 36 -

6 - Lott and Found
,
7 - VtJKd Sale (paid iri advance)
8 - Public Saltt&amp; Auction
9 - Want.t to Buy

Rates 8rt!l tor consecutive runs. brokenupd8Y s Will bech•ged ·
tor each dev as sep•ate ads.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Real Estate

..

Public Notice

Clowns of the James Hetzer
Circus were in Rutland recently
to pass out free tickets to local
children. The circus will be held
at the Rutland Civic Center on
Saturday, Oct. 22 with show times
at 2: 30 and 7: 30 p :m. The clowns
will be visiting local elementary
schools on Thursday to talk to the
children and give free perfor·
mance tickets.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11
and Mary Bowen , Peck Jones,
Ernie Baker , P hilip Joseph,
June Sayre , Marge Reuter. Ceci- Martha Joseph Henders&lt;in, Monlla _Mitch, Joan Mescher, Edie
roe. Mich., Allan and Kathryn
Sisson, all of Pomeroy; Howard
Reeves, Cincinnati; Denverand
and Anna Tucker, Rhode Island,
Nora Rice, Middleport; Jim and
.John and Blanche Grueser, Par- Eva Jean Roush , New Havgn.
kersburg; Bob and -Viola Har·
Reunions are held annually on
tenbach.
Mary and
the
Sunday of October.

RATES

"Receive • .so discount for ads p11d il'! advance.

"Free ads - Giveaway and ~ound ads under·15 words w ill be
run 3 dliVS at no ch•ge.
"Price of ad for ell cepitalle'lters is double pri ce of ad cost.
"7 point line rype only used .
,
"
'SentintH is nor r"ponsible for enorsatter first day . (Ch eck
for errors first dtry ad runs in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.
dll¥' alter public:;ation to make correction.
"Ads that must be paid in alhlan Ce artt
Card of Thanks
Happ'f' Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Sales

· Circus tickets
avaifabJe

Susan E. Boyer. WashingtQn
County .

(10[6,12, 19, 3tc

Public Notice

Court, Caoo No. 24.433, Ao·
bert Buck. 1~9 Mulber'V
Avo .. Pomeroy, Ohio 46769,
appointed Adminillrwtor
with the Will Annexed of the
ntate of Fritz Bu~. ct.

Wll

COMod. late oft 29 Mutbor'V
NOTICE OF
Ave .• Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
APPOINTMENT OF
Ch1rles H. Knight,
FIDUCIARY
Probate Judge
On Soptember 30, 1988. 1101 5, 12, 19,
3tc
in the Meigs County Probate

PUBLIC NOTICE

The following Rnolutton
was passed · by Leading
Creek Conaervancy District

on September 29, 1988.

In order to protect the pot·
able water IY-'&amp;m thai from
this day forward September
29,

the Ohio EPA (prior 10 ap·
proving any septic system or
part thereof in so fir as site
pans concerned) shall con·
tact tha leading Creek Con·
servancy Dlatrlct, 34481
Corn Hollow Road, Rutland,

septic system is planned and
installed in auch a way thlt
the closest part thereof mutt
have a minimum of fifty (60)
feet from any pertofthewatar 1y8tem indudlng service
lines, metert. hydrants, etc.

Ohio 46775. for a•act line (101 6. 12, 19. Jtc

1988. tho Meigs County locltion

at which time uid

Health Department and/or

55#

F1 D8NX96307

Scout meeting
is Thursday

'3

ROLLS

SPRITE • NEW COKE
DIET OR REGULAR

•4 PACK U •2 PACK C's·D's
TOSIIBA

Coca-Cola

right to reject any or ott bidl
oubmittod,
Further, the above collaterot will be oold In the con·
dl1ion it io 1n with no...
prooood or implild worrantioo given.
110119, 20. 2~. ltc

Batteries

Public Notice

PAINTING

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

ceived

by

ROOfiNG·

INTERIOR
EXTERIOR
•
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
. f
l I
d
pa•n .1119• 1 me 0
If for you.
Yery Reasonable.
Have Rlftrtncts.

FREE ESTIMATES

10-19-'88-1 mo.

10-11-'18·1 mo. pd.

614-985-4180

: • 'Sealed bids will be re·

the SEPTA Can·

NEW
REPAII
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

949-2168 ·

W
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also add bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport,

PLUMBIN~

992 • 6282
·

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"'Must le Repoiroblt"
KEN'S APPUANCE

319 So. 2nd Ave.

SERVICE

&amp; HEATING
M'ddl
1

eport,

Oh"

tO

985-3561
We Service All Makes
l/22188/ tm

SALES &amp; SERVICE
RT SO EAST
' ' •
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
•
•
614 662 3821
Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipmen• Deater
Ftrlll E••lplllt•t
Ptrtt &amp; Str¥1..

us

I·J- '86-tft

' ter, (Southeastern Proba·
,.tion Tremment Alternative),

Long Bottom
•
communtty notes

:oos. Ohio, 45701, until4:00
-Gn October 28; 1988 and
Opened immediately ther: Hfter for furnishing the neCes•rv tabor and materials,

·tools, machinery and appli·
•aoces required for the
new SEPTA Center, Factory
Roed. Neltonville. Ohio.
415784, according to the
.. drawings and tpecificationa

of flteln the office of Panlch
and Noel Architects, 607

Richland Avenue. Athena.

Ohio, 45701 .

..

FOODLAND

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 p.M.

Copln of said drawings

and spacificattons may be
obtained by prime bidders
from Panich 1nd Noel Archi·
tects, 607 Richland Avenue.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Athens. Ohio, 45701 upon

the deposit with them of M ·
venty dollars ($70 .00) in
cash or check for each set
of dr1wings and apeciflca·
tionl.
,
Thalull f?O.OO depoo~ on
: one set of drawings and specifications. and one-h1lf of

48 OZ. TUB
LIMIT CINE WlfH $10.00 ADOfTIONAL PUICHASE

(
9
6
SCOTT T~WELS ....~~~...
- CAKE MIXES •••••.~;::.~';.~:. 6 9C
$
DISH LIQUID ••••••• ~:.~~~. 99( Pork &amp; Beans ••..•.. 5/ 2

ASSORTED

IVORY

: will be returned to bidders
, Upon return of dr1wlngs1nd
· apecificatlons in gootl con-

; dltion within tan (101 dayo

SHOWBOAT -15 OZ. CANS

attar bid opening data.
Bids for the above de·
: .::ribed work mu 11 be m1da

•

· l&gt;n bl-nko to be furnlohod by

DIET OR REGULAR

TRAIL BLAZER
$
.up
·
89(
89
SEVEN 8-••••••••••••••••••
2
DOG
FOOD
••••••
!.~';.~:.
3
16 oz. Relurnables ....... s1.69

the Architect/Engineer he;: ainbefore named .
Bidi muit be addreued to
the SEPTA Canter of Southeastern Probation Treat·
. i;nent Alternative on the out·
side of the envelope .the
items of work bid upon.
E1ch bid must contain the
full name of every penon or
company interested in the
uma, shall stale the price
for llbor and matarilll, and
mutt be accompanied by a

2UIIRBTI.

•REG. •ACD •EP

,I Folger's
.
Coffee

·

tho 170.00 dopooit of said

PILLSBURY

FRESH ·

liohad by the Department of

, . 1L .

·~

liMIT ONE WITH
S10.00 ADDITIONAl
PURCHAII

EACH

"'

"

.,

$.149
'

BANANA~£.. ................. \! ... .. 39(

between Rt . 7 &amp; Bashan.

NEW &amp; USED MDWERS
Strvi&lt;a Ctnt• lor Ryan
Products
8.7 Financing on Y•dman
Service on All Maket

Wt Honor MC/Diu/Visa

9-1-81-tfn

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

Industrial Rellllonsaretobe
complied with throughout

STATE ST.
GALUPOLIS, OH.

Bidders 1hell also nola
thll the Rulet and Regula·
tlons on Equ11 Emplpyment
Opportunity shall be m1d1 a
part of this contract.
No bidder may withdraw

446-3487

hie bid wHhin olxty (601 doyo
oftor the octual dote of the
O.,..ing thereof.
If In tho opinion of the
Owner or hla deh•Qat&amp;d
repr•entative, lhe accep-

GOlOIN RIPE

Dealer for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
located Halfway

S1rvice
FREE ESTIMATES
leasonaWo lates

Bidders shill note that the
PnJYailing Wage RatM pub-

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

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

1&amp;3.&amp;4 of the Ohio Aavisld

Coda.

·

toncoofthelowest bldionot

rn the baetlnter•t of all con -·

cerned. the Owner may
cept, with the

of the

concurrence

Director

dllegotod

ac~

or

hie

ropr-tltlvo.

· another proro•l ao opened
or reject al propouls 1nd
ldv. .IU for other bide. The
Ow~

r•ervn the right to

HalrQ.Its ere Just
• 8. 99. 322 Second Aw., ac,oss

FASHIONS,

from the P•k. 814-44&amp;-9112.

Flea m•QI avery Tuetda¥ .,d
Thurtdav. HandarlonTownHell,
dill. . welcome.
"

4

Giveaway

Klt1 .... Lftter box nln... Call

814-44f.9319.

Alto Tr .. tmlttlu

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Basham BuDding
EVRY ·

Now HoSMs BuHt

SAT. NIGHT

"Free Estimates"

6:30P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Ga""' Shotguns Only
Stric~y Enfortotf
10-7-lln

992-2156

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3-11-tfn

FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

$ 3SCPt;v~:fo
BILL SLACK
992-2269

YOUNG'S

HILLSIDE MUZILE

SMALL
REPAIR
Authoriud Senic:e
&amp; Ports

Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite

LOADING
AND

MODERN GUN

Good Rates

T.L.C.
25 Yro. E•p.
Referencn

Jacobian

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-6873
Joe or Pauley lowland
209 S011lh 4th St.
Middltporl, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"

SUPPUES
Munlotoading sueies
Modern Gun Sup ios
Guns • Ammo • Sugs •
22 Ammo
124 East of Rutland
Acro11 Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. •14·742·2355
9/Hitfrl I

S-8-88-tfn

1M.

-

Addons and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and eloctrical
work

!FREE ESTIMATES!
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, .Ohio
7·13-' 88· lin

pd.

e14-25f.1514.

To gtn MIIIIIIV to good ho,....
Shepherd pup. 4 mos. ohl H1d

shots. Call 8t4-44f.8552.

$1.,.,,

frH ldtt., .. halt
Litter
tr.,ned. Rsecoon Rd . Ctll 11~

441-4982.

v••

Mile dog. t
old. Blonde.
Long h*· LO\Iet chi*"'· To

good homo. 114-992·3577.

Wheetbarrow load oflril bulblta
giYoowoy. Colt 814-11112-2395.

Catt to gtve 1/Nay. Call 114949-2908.

Gas cookltove. 304-175·1730.
Plrt Lab 111d p1rt Oobtwman, tO
months ohL friendty, 304-882·

2112.

6

Lost and Found ·

LOST: Ofly Miniature
SchnaRer, mala with r.t coli•.
Prnriot·Gig•
Call 114-

379-2932.

•aa.

LOST: LB'dl• ring-Ruby &amp; dl•

monds. REWARD. Call 114-

44f.2828.

7

Yard Sale

·····--Gallip-olis ..........

Complete Drywall

this project.

99

RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

BID GUARANTY meeting

the requirements of Section

Head
Lettuce

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

GUN SHOOT

Cootj

1. General , Contractor,

Green Beans

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

10-B-tfc

(Contract and estimate of

1940,163.
2. Plumbing. $115,000.
3. Etectrlcat, S108.0DO.
4. HVAA. 8149,000.
6. Sprinkler, $29.000.

Spread
Margarine

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

DENNY CONGO
Will HAUL
JUST CAll!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

"State Street, Suite 4, Ath-

~

eltptnttie. At FIESTA HAIR

Mother Cit &amp; 6' kltttnl. Call

P. 0. Bo• 728. 1006 East

ASST. BUSH VEGETABLES
&amp; DOUBLE LUCK CUT

,, .

lo
withdraw
the above
right
to bid at.thia
Ale,colla·
1nd

PKG.

Paper Towels

Announcements

~;::=:::=====:::;:r.========::;t=:;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;Tt========::;r;=:;;;;;:;=:;r.::~~;::;:;:;::;1 . , - - - ; - - - - - - - : - torll prior 10 11le. Further,
WANTED
BOGGS 3 AnnounCements
ThoFarmoroBankandSav·
LINDA'S
HowardLWrltesel
(ARTER'S
lnga Company reserva the
SER''ICE
Greet h-'r do•n•t hwe to be

4 ROLl

PAGE

Orange
Juice_

Business Services

The Farmtrs Bank 1nd
S•vings Company, Pom·
eroy, Ohio. reserve. the

24 oz.
CAN

The arrow of the light award,
highest in cub scouting, will be
conferred on several scouts of
Cub Scout Pack 245 at a meeting
to be held Thursday at 6: 30p.m.
at the Middleport United Presbyterian Church.
Several other cubs will advance into th~ boy scout troop. 1
All packs and troops ln the area,
along wlth the public are lnvlted
to attend.

By Melody Roberts
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs . .
Ernie Grlffln and Roger have
been Ed Newlun and daughter ,
Beatrice and Buck, Columbus,
Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell, Marie
Swan, all of Long Boittom. Other
visitors of the Griffins recently
were Kenneth Lawrence, Chester. W. Va.; Jim and Pam
Stettler, Tuppers Plains; Debbie
Null, · Belpre, Nell Connolly,
Pomeroy.
Mae McPeek, Mary Andrews,
Eileen Swain, and Ada Bissell
joined other senior citizens on a
sighteeing tour of Michigan.
Kenneth and Tawnya Larkins,
Columbus, were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Larkins.
Whitney Larkins spent the weekend here with her
grandparents.
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman is
recuperating from pneumonia.
Her visitors Included Hazel Higley , Akron; Mrs. Paige Winebrenner, Derek and 'I:Yler,
Alfred; Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Murphy, Santana and Brick,
Torch.
Mr. and Mrs. Burdell Dunn and
Larry, Pittsburgh, Pa. have been
In the area visiting family and
friends .
·
Sammy Ralrd e n, 96, and a
patient at the Arcadia Nursing
Home. Coolville, has been Ill.
Mrs. Elizabeth Bartoe, Mr.
and Mrs. Joey Bartoe and
daughter visited In Columbus
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Luther' Bartoe
hosted a b(rthday party recently
for their granddaughter. Attend·
lng were the children of Larry
Driggs and the grandchildren of
Opal Baslm.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Hauber and Melody Roberts have been Mrs, Nina
Sanders, Reedsville; Mrs. Kath·
erlne Hlll, Mansfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Sinclair, Shade; Mrs.
Loretta Douglas and Leland,
Athens; Clarence and Maxine
Jordan, Bookman Road, Racine;
Mrs. Carolyn Van Meter, Middleport; Norman and Eunice Midkiff, Osborne Road, Reedsville;
Rev . and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp, Portland; Noel. and
Ann Sinclair, Athens; Mrs. Ora
Sinclair, Sumner Road; Mike,
Diane, Nicholas, Jenny Bowles,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowles, all
of Pomeroy; and Pearl Powell,
, Long Bottom .
~

Veterans Memorial Hospital,
and Lera Jones who is Ill.
. Pic tures we re taken and pictures
frompreviousyearswereshown.
Attending Were Mary and Bill
Russell, Mary and Walter
Grueser, Phyllis a nd Ernie
Baker, , Margaret Russell, Tom

-----------Classifie

FALL
··. MUMS

~OODLAND

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The 14th annua l reunion of the
Old Friends Are True Friends
was held at the Racine Village
Park. Oct. 9.
A covered dish dinner was
e njoyed by the group following
grace by Tom Bowen. There'was
also a moment of silence ob-

True friends

••

Ada Warner took the least coin
collection and reported she Is still
taking Campbell soup labels for
the McCurdy School.
Refreshments were ser ved by
hostesses, Betty Baronlck ,
Marge Reuter , and Ne llie
Wright.

October 19, 1988

56

9/15/ 18/ lln

HUDNALL
&amp;

P~UMIING

HEA
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Sut&gt;pli•"'
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hera
,..... - · IUSINISS PIIDNE
(&amp;141 997-65$0

RESIDENCE PIIONI
(.141

YYl:1J.:I4

ROUSH ·
CONSTRUCTION
OWNfl: GlfG I. IOUSH

,.;
'' '•'

GENERAl
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

8mm MOVIES I SliDES to

VHS TAPE
ltt Ul COIIYtft thosl oldMo'41tls
&amp; Sli., over' to

••y VMS.

Ull AMY CAlliER

or

ElECTROIICS
446-7390

IOI'S

ll/21'81-tfc

COIIII£RCIAL

•CUllOM KITCHENS. lATHS
•EXlEN&amp;IY£ REMODELING

.VINYL SIDING. ROOANG
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING. APT, PROJECTS
SINCE 1969

letwttn 9

or leave

10-6-88-1 mo.

CUSTOM BUll T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

.VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYIACUS(, OHIO
Most Foreign and

Domestic Vehicles ,
A / C Service '
All Mllior &amp; Minor
Rap1irs

NIASE Caniliod Mech.,ic
CALL 992-675.6
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified licanold Shop
.

5-25-tln

•Wrecker ServK:e

•.J unk Yard Business
. WANT 10 IUY WIE&lt;KIO OR
AINK CAliS OR TRUCKS
-fRH ESTIMATES-

614-742-2617

992·7611

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

•Dour lr. B1ckhoe
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck

for any of thnuerwicn '.all .

DUSIY Sl. SYUOIII

8
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PEl TON
DRIVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEIOY, OHIO

992-

,.

&amp; Vicinity

MARCUM CONTRACTING.

PillA

Your Hometown Place
Has always aff~rtd
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.

If any local

competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match itl
ALSO •••
HOME COOKED
WNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
0
UNDER
MAIN mEET PIZZA

$3°

Our Delivery Staff
Know• Where You
Live.

Call 992·2221 .

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMObELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY Oil EVENINGS
985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
' 10·4-1 mo.

. -- , Television Listeninc
Dependable Hearillg Aid Sales &amp; Sen1ic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

CJ
~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a: .licensed Clinical Audiologist

~
3
-

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hol;pital
Mulberry Htts. Pomeroy.

WOOD STOVES
•12 Years Experience

45

DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND •
FURNACES
Feoturing: Consolldoted, Dutch
Weel, Brunco, Aahley

LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE
CAIPENTEI, OHIO (Off St. lt. 143)

698.. 121

Y•d SII•Upper Rltfw Ad. b¥'
Rodg ... E-Z Rtdo Motors. Frl..
Sot., . Sun. Op.,ot 9,00 AM .
Antlquat and oolec:tlbleltnt.
Sm. IPPiitncet, dilhN. doth.
Lots ot mite. itemt. CtnCII H

.. ln.

...... "Po·merov......... ..
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Oct. 21 from 9 :00.3:00. B1bv
bed and mllltr. .. clothe~. toVt.
etc. Roma Cremurrs ,..ldenoe.
SMCh GrOYII Ro.t. Autllrtd
Follow Sgns . Inside.
Csrport Sale. Thu,.t-v, October

20th. to,oo •• 4:0o. Ftotwoodo
Road, off Rl. 7. CkJt:Nng. mise,
tt1m1 . Walch for signs.

Jiytell ' s. Chlldun't Home Ad .,
n_, Laurel · Cliff, Pom•of.
Thurs .. Fri., lf'd Sat. Toola.
coiiiiCton ltemt, knt.tes, clot"-.

October 21. 22. Antiq1.11 round
t•bte, drop INf 11ble. gl ..sed
doored corner Glpbo•d. safe.
dlt ..... 13 in. snow ttr .....,.
else ~ke. Chrlstn'IIStrM. Old Rt
33. George Whfte retldenca:
Phooo 814-992-2939.

8

Public Sale
a. Auction

Aide Pe•tGn .Auction•. li·
cented Ohio and W.t Virginia.
Estate. antique, t.m. Hquid•

tlon Nl•.

304-773-571!.

•

�.. . "
Pea•
9

..

41

LAFF-A-DAY

TOP CM H paid !of .. 3 modll
end n..• u..cl c.... Smllh
luidl·Pontt.c, 1911 E•••n
Aw .. Oolllpallo. Coli 81 ... «112282.

-d •

a.

Mt. V•nbn Aw, 1m11n 2 bed
room. beument. g..... unfurnished, o• furMel. nl• ywrd.
one child. e2s0.00 month.
reference --.ddlpoeft. 304-17&amp;2111.

COlli hell... IW81n" a F wnltu,.

• Auction.
114-441-3119• ..

Olvo,

w.nt to buv: U1.d fumlture.nd
-lqun. Will buv ontlre hou•
hald Mnlohlrlg. Morlln Wed•

42 Mobile Homes
fot Rent

· 114-241-5112.
Junll Cort with 01' without
· Call loony llvely-11 ...
318-1:1113.

Newtr dec:or8ted, 2 BR ., fultt
c•petld, all utlitl• ~d •c'Pf
electric. Sec. dep. required . Call
814-448-8158.

Furnllu,.· ~nd

IPPIIInCM by the
piece or Wire houNholcf. Felr
prloeo _ , pold. Coli 814-«11-

3111.

.

Nt•
UMd MobHe Homw. can 114-

"How about a honeymoon in
Bermuda? I'd 'like to get to
know the REAL you!"

'lfllll'/111·1111

SLI VII: Ito
32

Business

Opportunity

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Help Want4[1d
t9.99 one price 1hoe flare or
t 10.· t20. t•hlo" ftorel Open a
non--franchise
whh the
Uberty Fashions advantage.
CN• 1, 300 brand nama On•
time f"' lnv.morv. filtturea.
buying trip, auppll•. lnltore
trainlngandmor._ Cllllrny tirM.
Oon Kostoclcv 101;,3,27-8031 .

AVON-He. . 5 ledl• to Sell

"ore

A-. Coli 814-448-3318.

UPto .15HOURI'ROCESSING
MAll IM:EKLY CHECK OUARANT!!D, FREE DETAILS.
WRITE: SD, 1087 W. Pllllodolphl&amp; SuMo 239-80. Ontorlo.
Celli. 91782.

1918- Moon 12&gt;&lt;10. 2 8R .
f2300. Coli I 14-&lt;WII-0380.

Moble Home for hie. 1 2xi50.
CII614-&lt;WII-2003.
1973 Stytine mobllll home. 2
bedroom~. 1211 so. o• furnace.
'""90 lo rolrl§ 13100. COli
81 4-&lt;WII-7215 or &lt;W&amp;-3831.

For Sale or rent·12xtl mobile
St. Rt. 7·1 mi. 1. of

dom. Coli '114-2511-

1~70

Fatrmont. All el.ctrlc
with he• pump, utlllte dllh.
CiuoiiCk. CoH 114-241-528401'
245-1071.

1988 Fl.,.wood. 12&gt;&lt;54, boltle
1• h. . Md hat ......... t3000.

Croll 114-843-5310 .. 814843:5408 anytime. Alk tor
O..ny.
,
Own your t~ppeNI or tho• fltn,

choo.e from: JeM-S~nswaar,
Ledlet. Men·a, c lldnn·
m••ntty, l•ge lin petite.
Ulc.we.-.... oblco. bridll. lln-a•le or acc.uorl• ~tOre. Add
color an .tv ail. BIWid n.m•: Liz
Cllllborne, H811H:htec, "th.. a,
Lee. St Michele. Forenza . Bugle
Boy. levL Camp Beverly Hlno,
Orpnlc:eltt Grown, Luda. over
2000 othwl. or '13.99 one
~Wice'dlllgn•. multi t'- pricing
dlsaount or f.-nlty shoe ttore.
Ret .. prtcee unblll.,.bletortop

quoillv sho• ....... lly prloed
Oovem..., Jobo •11.040 ·
11111.2:111~ yr. hiring. Coli
1-801-117·8000 Ext. R-teo5
for Cllrrtnf t.cwlf lilt.

1979 Bllyvltw mobHe home,
1 4a70 with 7x21 -~do.
....... 304-175-8141.
' 81 Redm«1 mobile horne. exc
co net 2 bedrDOI'ftl, good lot
locotlol\ Gollpollo. portllllv fur·
nlohed. 304-171-3779.

Bea~ty Shop equ~~NnMt

Aouah lAne Ch•'*• 2 beef.
roomt, nice lol, 304- n:J. 5828
for more lnfDrmlt6on.
-

far 1111.

phone 304-171- ~709. .

Rcnldls
31

AVON · AI • -· Coli Morllvn
w..... 304-882·2145.

33

Farms for Sale

Homes for Sale

v.,., attractive brldl4 bedroom.

RN'S • LPN'S .PH, fill time lo

2 bMh, famity room wfth fir•
piece. formlll dining. l•ge lvlng
room. 30ft. custom oM kftchtn
cabin••· oak wooct.Yorlc, flnilh

p.-t tlmi1PP1k*6oftl are being

ac...,wd for Ple.unt VIII.,-

Hoapttel NuNing Care Center.
Cantaot Periorm.. 304-175·
4340. AAEOE

b11ement, 2 c•

AVON 1111•-11 Shirl8¥ Spw1,

Holzer Hotpital Off At. 31-

landlc~ed

g•~e.

l•tl
krt. 4 ml• from

Ponerbrook Subdlvillon. Cllll

304-171-1429.

814-&lt;WII-4189.

.. Liconled Soc:ill Wor• jn now

4 BR .. full b•em""' &amp; g•ogo.
fully c:•peted (lome n.w-1 .

long twm c.e f.:;ility ,' E. .

rl.t'Oipr... red. Commensu,.le

Prlcad to uU. Cell 814-448-

......, end bMollto. E.D.E . Mol 0278 111or 8 PM. \Neekondo
rwtume to Adminlltreter Care
Hwen of Point: ,.. ..,l At. 1 anytime.
Boa: 321. Point Ple•~t. W. Va.
. 3 bedroom furniehed. 1 aere or
25810.
moreland. $12. 000.00.% mile
R N. Director r:i Nursing. needed from 4 IIW'Ie and CentervHie on
County Rd. B. 814-241-9279.
for lntwt 11wdi1te hHII h c•e
focllty. E-oedlnlongtorm
1 Bedroom home with 1'111ocl.
c•e required. s.e..,. .nd bln.t·
Nicelrtllll home, WllseMwlthor
tta COmmll. . .l wtth IXPI•
riMce. IM'Id riiUme to BoM P without furniture. ean 814-4484109 or 379-2740.
of Point Ple•ant
11.
flegllt•. 200 M-'n St .. Point
21tOfV, 3 BR . haute, bMement,
P l - . w .v • . 28160.

c••

c•port. Loc.ted 1 mNe from
Golllpollo. Colt 814-445-3413.

W..ted leld trJitllriiL drummer
M'd kw bo•d Pll¥«. mille or
femlll for Aodl B.nd now
forrftng. 304-175-5370 eft•

3 bedroom A.n dl, 111\1 bal hs.
f.-nlfy room. dining room. 1 c•
g•ege. 1torage buldlng. pool/ wood«! dedc. Spring Vlllll.rf

G:OOPM.

•ee. C11l

Need a companion whh room
.,d bo ..tl phone '304-575-

81~448-7903 .

For sale or r.m. 2 bed-oom
new• home 1/.r. rNie out S.Ut•
villePikelnOanlpolil:, Oh. 'haae
fen oed-ln v•d. ltorage buldng.
Ctou to hospital and ahop... g.
Ctly 1chool1 1276 P• mo ..
Approx. t 1800 down with FHA
loon . Coli 814-448-8577
.VMingl.

&amp;709.

Schools
Instruction

RE·TRAIN NOW
SOUTHEAITERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 521 Joclooon Pike.
Cell «11-4387. Reg. No. 88-1 1·
10518.

Syrac:u~e .

2 be~oom mobile
homa. '1150mbnthplusutlth:l•.

814-992-1732.

105 private aar• wtth ee1y
acc•a, O.llipolll Ferry, netN
home also 2 fot1 wtth weh,

170.000.00. 304-875-4831.

35

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

acr• boHom I_.. d. Located
approk. 16 mi. 1 . of Gellipolit.
old At. 7 IVollov VI- Dr.) Col
614-261-1774.
2 '12

lerge building loti.
mobile hom• pa'mitted, public
water, also river tots, Ctvd•
Bowen, Jr. 304-157&amp;-2338.

Aahton.

Beantful rlw• tots oneacreplua.
public water, Clyde Bowen, Jr.

304-&amp;711-2338.

25 acr• Broed~Run Road. New

Haven. OwMr ftn.,dng avell•
ble. 304-882-3394.
IPts, one ecre. l•el, woodBd.
cfty v.ter, Jericho Ro~. owner
financing. good terrl'll, 30._
372-8405 .. 372·2578.
Lots .,d ecreage on Rayburn
Ao ad. CIN John D . Oerl.ch•
304-175-5253.

Rcnlals

44

APARTMENTS. mobi18 ho~.
hou .... Pt. Ple-..nr endO..IIIp~
Iii. 11 ... 441-8221 .

Nf••'*·
304-882-2551.

Upltlirl unfurnithed ap1.

ear-

o•ed. utlltloo .. ld. No cltlldr.,,
No pot&amp; Cell 814-&lt;WI-1137.

Fwnlthecl- 3 roome 6 INII:h.
Clean. No pMI. Aef. S. deposit
required. UUihln furnished .
Adutu only. Call 11 ... 4411519.
Luxurlou1 Tara Townhou11

'DolIf 6 Backhoe Work-850
CaM doz•. Re•oMble 1'1181.
bptri.,ce op. . .or. Crtmun1
Const. Col 814-2111-1711.

Now accepting eppiiC811ons for
2 bedtoom .,...,_,,._ fullv
e.plled, appii .. CII, &gt;Mt• and
a-uh pi~upa provided. M•n•
nanc:e free ltvlng cto• to !hopping. bankt and IChoola. For
more [1:1form1tion call 304-882·
3711. E.O.H.
Furnilhecl one bedroom apt,
acl.lhs ontr. no pet1. call aft•

5:00. 304-875-3788.

*'

Wll
bobr olttlng in your
homl. any .... would P•f•
dtlfl, hiN refer.,..._ call304871-1481.

F.. nltt.d room-911 Semnd
Aw., OIIIJpolls. •135 a mo.

WANTED TO BUY, hou• tho!
wll 1!1.,00 ttou FHA. Glllpollo
Forry or-. . 304-171-78H.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

IMid contract, llrge Mvlng room
w / 111pendo r .o om, 2 BA .•
w/~ e•~· air concltlon.
w / cwwlthout fur'*urw. rut, efurniCe on prt.,tlte tot MIIV rent
lot. C.ll 1!1 to I PM, 114-44e.

do Iattin• with p•ple· yau
llnaw. Md NOT to ... d mon.,
lhroulf' tMm .. uMI you hwe

1

_140_9_._ _ _ _ _ __

SUPPER. '(OUR DISH

51

Household Goods
VIR1'1 Fwntture
Op., dolly. Mon.-s ...

IAM - 8PM
Sun., 12 noon- 5 PM
Complete household
furnishings- AI bedding. ruffle
bunk ~ with rusttc ch•t.
VerlllY of •of• • ahlln-all on
•ale. Excell.,t used 1PPII111 on.
ChrlltiNI 1oys now In 1tadt.
ctniltiNI lariWIYI now being
. -... Plus fln•dng IVallablt

whh11Jpro¥ed aedlt. At. 1411n
Centen.,Y· ,A
on Unooln
Plko. 814-«11-3158.

,..u.

66

WOULD ~AVE

SEEN FULL ..

Pets for Sale

C ut8 cuddly Poocle puppiel, not
reglotorod but full blooded. 8

weeks old. t&amp;O.OO each. 304171-6381.

P.R. registeredm"e.,dfemale.
7 monlhe old. T. Wolken, Biro
Hou'" Q.,.,..bl• (Utter mate to
Upper}, Dem Nke Ch . Thomoo•o

67

304-87~1070.

Musical
Instruments

of ...s.

eo

I)

Aetrlgeretor. electriC range,
Kingwood b.lrnw. electric wood

0,.

Glboon Bonio MB250. coli 304Whlrlpool Wllh« &amp; drylf'•lboUt 176-7436.
8 moo. old. Coll114-441-9248.
Sears Kenmore Autom11lc 58
Fruit
Wos .... 1100. 814-992·1088
&amp;
t bl
ovonlngo, 514 - 9S2 - 6150
age a es

;:;;:::==;::::;:====
v

Mer~IJa11111se

51

Buy or Setl. Rlv.-ine Antlqu•
112o\ E. Main Str .... Pomarov: Soutt..t ~Albany . Hours 9·8.
Hours: M.T.W 10e.m. to &amp;p.m., Clo11d Monday . 114·198!klndlly 1 to 8p.m, 114-992- 8298.
2528.

Household Goods

54
SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE ~~
Dllve St .. Golllpallo.
NEW- 8 pc. wood groupo 1319.
Ltvlng room sutt• '11&amp;-eett.
Bunk bede with bedding- e249.
Full aln mlllt,.. 6 found811on
eurtlno· •9s . Recliners
otorlln~ 199.
USED· Beds. dr•un. bedroom
sutt•. O.b, wrlngerWIIaher, a
complel:e line of used l.lrnitur•.

IPirtmente. Elegant 2 floors, 2 . NEW· WMtern boota· t3S.
BR .. full both ......... powd• Wo&lt;kbooto t18 lo up. !Steel &amp;
room downst1k1, CA.. dis· 10ft tool. Coil 814-448-3159.
hwu,_, dllpoMI, prMta ...
Cauntv ADPIIance. Inc. Good
trlnct. prlftte endoHd p:81A
pool, pl.,ground. Utlltloo not uMd appllaflCIII and lV •••·
lndudld. St8rtlng It e299 p• ()p• lAM to 41PM. Man thru
Sot. 814-&lt;WI-1181. 127 3rd.
mo. eon 814-317-78110.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
Furnished apt. N.w. Ne•HMC.
1 BR . I 278. Utllltl• .. Id. Coli GOOD USED APPLIANCES
w..h... dryn, refrl~•ore.
44S-&lt;W18 oft• 7 PM.
ranges . Skeggs Appllences.
Upper River Rd. beelde Stone
~r:artmentl .. d hou.... Cal
Creot Motel. 114-&lt;WI· 7388.
304-871-1104.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Furnlt hed ep 1111ment1-1 bedroom. ez40 6 up. UtRttl• peld.
Sof• Md• chairs priced from
Cell 446-4411 afler 7 PM.
e396 to 1991. T•bl• flO Md
F ll'nlsMd etfidend• 1146 S. up 10 •us. Hid••-- t390
up. Utllltleo plld. Sh ..o both. to •n6. Recllnn e221 to
e37S. L.mpa t28 to t126.
Call o\48-4411 after 7 PM.
Dlnett" 1109 and up to 148&amp;.
t285 to
Aportmento for tho Elderly, Wood ..ble w-8
Gllli1 Manor Ap.,rnenla. 858 •791. Desk t100 up to t371!1.
hhl Mort on Road. Deelgned for Hutch• .f400 ll'ld up. Bunk
beds complete w -m81h'...M
tho Senlo• Cit- 182 &amp; older) 1295
Md up to 13915.
bedl
andH.,dlcapped p. .ons. Equal
t110.
Mattr-•orboxaprlnge
houoln~ opportunity. A!Jpllcafull or twin 188; firm e78, and
tlon~ m.r be pldcedup•t Spring
Valier PI••· 129 J1ck1on Pike eea. Queen aets •250 &amp; up
King t3eo. 4 dnrwer chllllt 119:
or coii814-&lt;WII-4839.
Gun Clblnete 8 gun. Blbr
Modern 2 BR , apertment for menr. .l l t31 &amp; t 46. Bed
rent. Dep . II rllf. C•ll .8 14-441- ffllf'l'l• e20. e30 • King ..arne
t50. Goodallec15on of bedroom
1079.
1u1t•, metal caWnats. heedand up to . tel!l.
Modern 1 BR. downtown, co~ bo•d• *30
............
piMe kllchen, air, c•pet. Dep.
ooil. no pero. Coli 614-&lt;WI- 90 Dlye tame II CMh with
1pproved credh:. 3 Mlee out
0139 evenings, after 5.
Bulwile Rd. Op., hm to Spm
Apartment for rent 1225 1 Mon. lhru SM. Ph. 81 ... 448month. Oepolh: required. 814- 0322.
992-5724. Aftor 8pm "' 992·
Valley Furniture
6119.
New and uaed furniture and
Gl'lcious lving. 1 .. d 2 bed- 1ppllcance1. Call 114-448roOm apartment• at Vlllaga 7&amp;72. Houra 9·5.
Minor and Aivenlde Apwl·
J &amp; S RJRNITURE
menta In Middleport. From
1415 Eestem Ave.
t182. Coli 614-992-7787.
4 dr..,.., cheet, e48. 8 drew•
EOH.
ch11t,. t54.96. 5 pc. wooden
2 bedroom Apta. tor rent. dlnnette 1811, t189.95.
Cerp.tect. Nice setting:. Laundry
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
fdltlee av.Uibla C.ll 814Complete houlilhold lurnieh992-3711 . EOH.
lngs. Yt mite out Jerrlcho. ·
304-871-1450.

ch••

Be..,

Misc. Merchandise

\Nheatch•• new

F&lt;~r111 Silllillli's
(&lt;, Lrvesllltk

ulld. 3
whHIM electric eooot ... Call
Aogere Moblty coU.t, 1 ·81 4Of

870-1111 .

61 Farm Equipment

N11d a break fromthe11meold

routine! Try FIESTA HAIR FAI HIONS for a ttylethllt'ssure to
piHH. 322 Second Ave, acro11
from the p•k. 814-44&amp;-91&amp;2.

WIU.. HAVE- fO

~IP. ~K .

au- size ftoototlon bod wkh
hool•. . .col. oond., t110 "'
belt after. 1 l_,n mower, •30.
Cell 11 ... «1-2217.
All ollk firewood. Oood pldlup.
t30. Bollt lo loodod. Cell 814-

251-1118.

-

For Sale Dog HDUS.e. 1'h mil•
out At. 141. Croll 814-4480893-W.,ne 8ho.,.okor.
Mbced .,..dwoodolobo. 112..,.
buncle. Contlln~g •prox. 1 "h
ton. Ohio Pellet Co .• Pom«oy.
Ohio. 814-992-11-481.

63

Livestock

!---------8 ye• applloOIII m•e. Good

troll horse. UOO. Colll14-3712413.
Ouern~-v

Hell•. welghtng ..,.

pr... 710 it..
814-&lt;WI-4053.
Fan~

1350. CoA

brHdl of plgeone &amp;

dudco. Coli 111• 8 PM. 8144411-0119.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Oullt IWid for llle. t25 firm.
Anlique
for oole. Coli

&lt;tr•..

814-912-3140 oft• 3:30p.m.

Nice rolltiWIIY bed wtth Inner
spring mllttr-. e28. Uphols·
twym8teri ... Antiquepjojector.
lMge mirror. 114-992-3079.
Spa S.le. be.,ttful quellty built,
buy from W.Ve. manufllctu,..
1nd save. FM informttion and
prlooe cell 1-304-823-8288,
Mondov thru Fridov 2 :00PM till
8:00PM.

300bol• of h., for tole. $1 .50
eech.
•bl• model1tereo,
record plrrter, a track. e100.
Cell814-949-2179.

Be••

Motort Homes
&amp; Campers

d ... 304-837-2018.

-

1973 Shlltl 21 ft. good cond.
~04-773· 1828 for more

Surplul army c~moufl.,ge. d•
nim. rental. Cuh.-t clbt.,..g.
Smel ermy ICCIII ..orfel. Fri.
Sat. Sun, noon till 8:00 PM.

oNL'(

THREE

CAJ?).

Si:IVII.IIS

..

Home
lmprovementt

'fH ..Vf5 10· '9
~~ -

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

IAIEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Unconclt5onll M,.lme .,•an·
tee. LOCIII rftMCII furNshed.
Free . , , . . .. Call collacl
1·114-237· 0488. d., or night.
Rog•rs811ement
-·pnoofln~
SWEEPER •d IIIW'Ing m-=hlne
rep*, P«ts. • d euppll• 1 Pick
up 1nd dellvety, Davit Vacuum
one halt mile up
O..rgee C - Rd. Coli 1144411-0294.

.

1-. Dec op., 7 dovo). s..., 71 Auto's For Sale
lol'l't.-vNie's. East·Aavenswood 1--------~­
junctkln lndlp~ndance Road.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh~
old At. 21 . !Now Erlll insuloled d• from 1100. Fords. Mer·
cemoufl-ve aoverlll• e21. 50.
cedel. Corvett111. Chevy1. Sur304-273-5865.
plu• . Buven Oulde . (11
805-887·8000 Ext. S·10189.
Baby bed 1n d mlttre~s. good
cond, t41.00. 304-882·2248.
1985 CutiMI Cl•a. 38.000
mil•. 4 dr, Sh•p-e5395. 1980
19 cu fl Se•• u.,...... freezer,
Buick Alverl•-•2100. 1985
good cond. t210.00. 304-871Morru~ LVIUI Wagon- '3076.
4831.
'
1982
mouth Chomp- t1700.
1981
ltsun 210 W1gon·
Sh~m•• ldttens •35.00 each.
t 1000. 1981 MM-m~rv Lynx·
Pick up load f!re wood e3&amp;. 00.
t1400. 1984 Ford Ringer II,
304-871-131.9.
V-1, auto., 17, 000 mlles$4195. Cell 814-388-8815.
1982 Flroblrd. E&gt;Col. cond. Coli
114-379-2282.

ACROSS
I Gaming

S•rvlee.
Hou• ellis on RCA. Ouaur.
GE. Specllllng In Zonklt. Coli
304-17.. 2398 01' 814-4412454.

R ON:S Television

•

Fetty Tree Trimming. ltump
removel. Call 30..._871-1331 .
cable 1001 drlllng.

Ptlmp •I• end 1ervlce. 304891-3102

. MORTY· MEEKLE AND .WINTHROP

RON•S APPUANCE SERVICE.

15 'lO!.JR
()AD STil-L
AWAY":!

house alii servicing GE, Hot
Point. Wllhert, dryen and

Ak•t TrM Trimming and Slump

\

. YEAIH ... HE

AND MCJ.A SPEND5 TEN

CA l-L..'~ E.VE:RY

MINUTES LISTE:N IN&amp;

AND TI-lE' REST OF 11-le ·
NIG-HT TRYING{ 10 FiGUR$0JT
IF HE: SOWNDeD I.ONE:SOME:

1D HfM •..

N IGH T...

\ ...--....

\

l

A 6 8 R•modlflng. fin• work for
fine people. CM't bla tMie
prlooe. Don•t lot lite loll _.,.
stop you. 304-175-2571.

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
.,

•
CARTER •S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
GoHip..s, Ohio
Pltono 814-441-3181 01' 814445-4477
.

&amp;

41

PW. POL, cruloo. tit, AM -FM.
Excel. Cond. Priced right. Call
114-&lt;WI-1157oft• 5 PM.

Homes for Rent

THAT MfAN
OL' T!ACHfR !I
SHE MADE ME
STAY IN AFTER
SCHOOL

Electrical
Refrigeration

BUilding M•eri•

1979 TrMs AM . E .::el. ahlp a
Compl•elr redone. New ..Int.
llum. wt-e11. new
Super
oh .. p. Coli 114-241-9480.

*•·

1982 Pontile J 2000, auto. elr,
good con&lt;ltlon. 114-992-5810
dlfftlme. 114-992·1086 wt~nlnge .,d week.,.dl:.

·n

Thundlr.,.rd. nice dHn a.,
one owner, auto klloor, buck•
• ... t971i.OO. 304-875-2487.

1981 Monte Corio. 88,000
aclual miles. good oond. phon•
304-811-3480.

2 BR . houM doM to GIIIUpofil.
Doubte pege &amp; fuM bMmlenl.
I 300 ..,. mo. Oep. lo rof. Cell

68

114-&lt;WII-3548.

Groom Md !klpply Shop-Pot
Oroomlng. All breeds ... All
otyloo. lems Pet Food Delli•.
Julo Webb Ph. 114-«1-0231.

4 ~oom hou•. • mil• ftom

hoopltol on 110. t310. Coli
114-&lt;WII-2515

3 BR . hou• in city. 1175 P«
monlh. Root. • clop. required.
Coii114-&lt;WI-4721.

D-nwynd con,.., Konnll.
CFA Penlan 1nd llern•e kilt.,.. AKC Chow ........ Nkin-. 'Cell 814448-3144 ofiOI' 7 PM.

Hh..,.,.,

Hou• with Nih. New Recine.
Nice Y•d. t•dln tJ*e. CaM
814-992-1988.

AKCReg. Old!nallohShupdog
........ Cofii14-251-157S .

b.. h. fill ......
fam~

room. 8

Pom..,l'" pupt. 2 male. 1
'femll&amp; Firat tftottlndwMrned.

roome,
acr• plua. A,.Hibla
Novombor lot. Col 814-992·
2744,

t100. 114-742-3110.

3 Ndroom hou11ln Mln. .vtl e.
81~992- 3159.

AKC roglot- S l - Huoko\1
blk •d white. blue
.., .., 2 .m et• 4 fem•l••·
U71.oo 11ch. :1114-578-2483
Ilk lOr JennHer.

IPUppiM,

Conlrol olr, geroga 1225 pluo
depotll. ftef • .,~. No J)tltL

Pets for Sale

"They haven't restored everything to the
way It was In 1863-t paid 1988 prices."

R•ldent~

Ing.

YOU

ANOTHfR FRO&amp;
IN

NO,

~10

HER

DESK!!

MA'AM
II

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

..

Ucen~_.

87~1788.

85

·"

I

87
Upholstery
1983 F-110 4a4. - I t - n o.
PS. PB, tool tro.. bod liner.
rumlng bo-. 14:1110. Coil
Mowrer'• Uphallt.tng .-vlna
114-446-0212.
lrlcountyMH23,._.. Tttebllt
In t.nnttu.. uDholn811ng C.tl

304·175·4114 for froo
oer-•
I

...

.QJ4
.108&amp;42

SOUTH

'

+AKB
.A7
.AQ
+AQ964S

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
W.st

Norllo

Eul

Pua

2NT
I+
5+

Pus
Paa

Pass

Pau

Pus
Pus
Pass

p.,.

..
-..•••.

,.,.

Sotllb

2+

4NT
.;

Opening lead: • 2

...,•
•

I~

-

..

-·

•

1 . . - - ----'-- - - - . . . . . l '"
;;;.

overruff with the king. But he now had~; ·
to lead away 'from the 10· 8 of clubs·
and give declarer his slam. ·
Notice that had declarer carelessly~~
won trick one with the heart kine to •
lead a club from dummy, the winning ·
end position could not have been ,~
reached.
'

1 Lummox
2 Language
of a
region
3 Placid

.,

(sl.)
4 SPa e3!lll'
6 Cily near
Los
Angeles

6 "The

Yesterday's Answer

Gentle·
man Is - " 24 Jug
30 Peter
7 Sun. talk
handles
Lorre in
8 Monroe
211 Shade
"The Malfllm
or
tese
lJ Literary
blue
Falcon"
work
2 ·8 Ne k - 34 "I've 14 "Hud" Oscar
we;.,
Crush
••
winner
271non You" ·
18 Faction
fertile 36 For sharqe!
19 Easy
29 Garbo 37 Medltavlctory
was
tlon
·
22 Swiss hero
sounds

.

'

..

.,,,.,

....

-'

•

.......'

41 Greek
covered

Bernice Bede Osot

time. Coli 114-«11-7404-No
Sunct.,o clllll.

1970 Mustang flltbeck. •c
con d. no motor. t1,IOO. 00, cell _c:::o:ll::30:=-::4-~1:.:7;11-_:1:.:3~7~0.=--,--.;.
304-882-2592.
• •
War• dalivery . 1000 tlllllone.
'80 Pontlec Grand Prill. good Re•oneble prif:*. lmmec:late
cond, 11 .100.00. 304-871- dolhlery. Coli 814-992·5275.
8284.
Watteno~·· Water 1-taullng,
rMioneble rltM, hnrnedilte
2,000 gltlon deltvwy, cla•.-na,
72
Trucks for Sale
poole, well, etc. call 304-&amp;712919.
1981 Chevy S-10 King Cob.
Aulo-lc Ovordrlvl. AC. AM· Plltrlck'• Wst• H-.,.llng. 2.000
FM redo, jump aeete. sport·
ll dllhlory. 304-57a.2311 or
whMI. J tone •sv p81nt.
14- 4411- 4088.
814-992·3110.
Moblo homo movers. -eel
1971onelonC-~bDoolov with Mor..,. Drtv• Awey
454 VB .,to, ell 304-882· Ow- 0P«OI'"' Jim MCOulr.:
2132 or 882·2211.
........ oed Md - - 814448-2139.
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

+J5tS2

star

Dll•d Water Service; Poola.
Clat•n~. Wells. D•Uv~ Any.

R • A Wotor Senrloo. Pools,
cisterns. w811s. lmmedllte·
1,000 or 2.000gllon•deUvery.

EAST

· WEST
' +t097
; .10852
. • J 8
+ K 10 8 7

or

General Hauling

241-9288.

-·~

TIL\K, etc .

.

J 8t J Water S...,lce. Swimming
pout•. cisterns. wells. Ph. 814-

•'

33 Tyke's
game
35 Shoe style
37 "Buckeye
State"
38 Hackneyed
39 Sahl
comedy
40 "Giant"

rep••·

el.ctrid.,, Eltlmllte
free. Aldanour Elec:triCII 304-

.K 7 6S
+H2

,,•

328&amp;0, AM·

or commercial wir-

New .-vl08 or

•Ks ss

DOWN

items
5 Make
the grade
9 Redolence
10 Grecian
theater
12 Brlt.i~h
symbol
13Joseph
Smith
follower
111 Sanskrit
school
18 Drench
17 Night
before
.18 Of the sea
20 Actre!lll
Thompson
21 Soft drink
22 Cash box
23 Prompt
24 · - , It's
a mouse !"
25 TenR~
27 Bundle
28 Before tee
29Tomato
sauce
Ingredient
31 Statute

Painting: lnt.nor • Elderior,"
Freo eotlmot•. COli 814-448- .
8344.
•

84

lt·lt···

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EEK &amp; MEEK

RON EVANS ENTEI!PRISES·
Septic tonk """""'~~" 111-0 per
loed. c.n 1·800-137·1128.

82

NORTH
+Qs

·CROSSWORD

Coner- Sopllc TMico • 1000
got, 1100 gel. ond Jo1Aerotlon
tyof..,,RON
, .......,
- ·ENT!R·
shop.
EVANS
PRISIS.......... Ohio. 1-10().
537-91128.

llontovot. F... eotlrnot•. Coli
30+871-7121.

J1

.......

North-South were playing key-card
Blackwood, in .which the king of the
agreed-upon trump suit is counted as
an ace. When South learned that his
side was missing the club king, he
gave no thought to a grand slam. AI
first glance, a small slam in oo-trump
looks like a safe bet. with double stoppers or belter in all suits and only the
king of clubs to be forced out. But the
bad split in·clubs precludes a successful no-trump slam. Slz clubs is still a
mahble contract, and today's South
succeeded by not being too greedy.
Declarer won the opening lead In
band with tbe heart ace and immedl·
ately laid down the club ace. When
East showed out, he didn't give up. He
played a heart to dummy•s king and
ruffed a heart. He then led a spade to
the qu""" and ruffed another heart.
Notice that South was now down to the
same length In trumps as West. He
cubed tbe A·K of spades, and West
followed suit. He now played the dla·
mond ace and tbe diamond queen
(overtaking with dummy·s king) and
ruffed a diamond with bis club queen.
· There wu nothin• for West to do but

lnlornwtlon.

........ 304-57a.2318.

Tr~nsport&lt;liiOil

.

........

By James Jacoby .

Molt wda oompl•ed•am•d-r.

SheiiMI corn. Prtmlum Alflllf&amp;
striiW' .,d hlv. Morg1r11 Wood·
IMn Farm, Rt. 35. Piny. 8:00
til 12~0 Mondov thru Sotur·

,
'

.•

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

Long-range
planning

loth .4.000. Coli 304-8712085 or 171-4811.

Of

Complete tbe chudle quoted
by fi lling in the miss1ng words
yov develop from step No . 3 below.

BRIDGE

.

Ao1ery

e

"Would you help me select a pair ollow heeled shoes?"
the beauty cooed 10 1he salesman. " I need some1hing to go
with a short. very RICH MAN.'• . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

'*''· ct.....

WANTED TO BUY. 338Minne•
poll• Moline triCtor for
304-171-4828.

•

SCRA"'-LETS ANSWERS

.''.
1182 Holhllrt Aamlj• 31 ft. &gt;
camp• .,.•• far •I• ••zso. .. '

81

A seasoned 1raveler lame nled 10 a
lellow passenge r. " No ma Her what
1want.~ iS always in lhe olher - . "

Lsrder - Realm - Which - Kilton - RICH MAN

dsrtlme.

Red lla yellowdelldous, Melrote.
Jonethan. ldared. Wlne~ap.
Orirnll, Aome..,plei.Sorghlm,
ho'"'¥' • ml1callan8GUI fabd
)tem1. OunrcMnFruttF•rm-881

.

OOEOFU&amp;

padlage. •lr oon•loft. am-tm
- · II'- oon- t1.100.

....,... Coli 814-379-2248.

.

•

114-812-3410.

79

.

.,. PRINT NUMBERED
· ~ LETTE RS IN SQUARES

514-38 ..

Four 11 ln. tlra Spoke

•

I .I 1..8 •I 1

7

1171 21. Sla'croft ....... lilly
1etf oom.lned, afr ooncltion.
niiW' llr•. 1reat oondltlon.
13.000.: 1171 Coprloo Eototo
1t1tion v..gon cernp• towing

814-&lt;WI-4706.

Antiques

.

1•

1978 Hoftov L- Rider. 11000
actual ml•. e3QOO. Cell 8ft•
5:00p.m .• 814-742·2304

Large c.-a Tub on leg~. Excel.
cond. t100 or belt oflll'. Call

53

.

...,- -R- E_B_T_U-T---.

· noo. 1174 Olcto .,d
1978M-oCorlo far port&amp; CoN

Anne.

lusl A I~ II' I r.!

Partt
Acceseorles

Colllt4- 742-2451. '

.. ld. Slnglomela Sh .. e
b'"lt. Coll448-4411ofter7PM.

I
.

1988 Pontile: Bonnetillle LE.

.

1 NOTICE 1
T,_ OttO VALLEY PUILI8HINO CO. l'llCOmtnendl thai you

IF THIS HAD BEEN A REAL

-~========:;;;;:::;===="=',..::::::"":!·wIU.1emodoi2.2Ciwvoloronglno.
12 01 446-1910. ·
·

1~

ters. R5o OrMde, 0 . Cell 814245-5121.

c.pst.t, cem:nl air-hiM, b-

Bualnns
Opportunity

"'m

Utll~l•

For Lease

A TEST
OF THE EMER6ENC'(
SUPPER S'tSTEM .•

We Ml• UIMI •torrtl far aft •

dopoolt. :1114-871-21&amp;1.

.

Ii

Auto
&amp;

,..,h,

prll'f• lingl• worldng
nO
- . . g• and w1ter fun*t.d.
t 200.00 momh, rwf•anoe and

I

I

'
76

Furnlohed,u ..,..holfofdupl.,,1
bedroom, c•Pif and ek' cond,

Furnished Rooms

10- I

THIS .15

Hondo 80 dirt blko. t121.00. '304-871-8311.

•

1

'

.

1584. .

, ~.,.,

In country wllh l•ul Good dew
huntln_e. 15 milea from Athens.
12 ml• from Pom•DY• Cal
814-992-8848.

elled In Point P....ent, cell
304-171-2702 or 304-5712147.

fIll d 111.1 d I

.

J II

I

. f.--+.1THALC
,-:.:.1..:.:...;...1'..;..1--1

cycf• 38,000 ""'•· Ike n.w, ~
• 1,200.00 firm, 30 ... 078- :

.,''

304-171-1172111• 5:00.

49

.

1 981 Hondo 1&amp;0. 4 oyL motor·

1 bect'oom ..,, In Henderson.

46.

I
.

•.•

SYFORT
'··I
2

EVENING

w,_.•

Block. brlf;lk .-wow pip-. wln-,
dowt, lint•. etc. Claude Win·

3 bl&lt;toom home. 1% bllht,

Motorcycles

Hcmdl 4
Model
cond. Coll814-38a.

t21.000. Colll14-992-7207 ...
8 14-992· 2338.

4 ~oom houN. 11h batt\.
t ..I'IIL lot 70.100. Grovol Hill.
Mlddeport. Ohio. Ouldt pos ....
Pointing 1o roofing • c•p.,try olon. Croll 814-992-5714.
worll br tt. hour 01' job. Cell • --;----.,.-- - -- 114-371-24141.
House • Farm for ule,
ti.OOO.oo clown a .... mlbtefrl.r
Woukt •• to do bab¥siltlng 1n P• cent loan to ..-lfled b.ly•.
rwy home. Dey or nloht. 11.00 VOI'Y k&gt;w clooing ...... 81 ocr•
hou Celll14-311· 884111
wtlh 7 ve• aid c8d• CDntM\P• · r.
•
•
·
porary home. priced r-.oed to
lntorlot d-Ing of homoo end 118.000.00. Phone 304-171offt- 1 - · Mporionoo In 5155 Golllpollo Forry, V/.Vo.
I"'fo!olonol d-Ing. Referon;:i-:.i'e~timotll. Coli 114- ~t":7&amp;."4'!!e':."•· htro lot.

•

19BI Hondl200 IX 4 wheeler.
Excel. cond. Clll 114-441·
2441. ook !of Peul.

foot of Shadle Bridg8 corrwr
Second _..d VIMd StteetL 304522-4125 ... 304-523-7277.

2 BR . t~pts . 8 cloeets, lcltchenoppl, furnlohed. W••·Dryer
hoolt-'4), ww c•p«. n-.vt;'
painted, dedl. From e171. Now
8CC1Ptlnll HUD. Aeg_.cy, Inc.
Ape&amp; COli :1114-179-1104, or
871-5381 or 871-77311.

&amp; 4 W.O .

,...,ment.

41 room~ end blth In Hemlock•
GrOYe. VInyl 1idlng. naw wtndows and c•peted. Alldng

Dp

74

Beech Street, MiddiiPOf'l, Ohio,
2 bedroom l~rnishltd
utlltl• paid.
Phone

Le••
com,..cl.t high trefflc
reteN tocetlon. plenty parking.

Apartment
for Rent

Van1

1988

1975 ..-. -wulp,.:: for ftthing,
hunting. c.,.,.plno. tMw lM'sliw.
point job. 318 rttCJior, heedoro.
1700. 114-18Z·H81. '

2 MSoom mobile home half
mh ~Jericho Road. ref• en~* requ~ed. call aftwi:OOPM.
304-171-1082.
-46 Space for Rent
2: bedroom mobile home, qulllt
neighborhood, phone 304-87&amp;COUN1'RY MOBILE Home Park,.
1082.
Route 33, Nmth of PDm•oy.
2 bedroom unfurnkhed tl'lihr. Aentel trall•a. Clll 114--992·
Wit.' llf'ld sewer k'lcluded. 304- 7479.
875-1078.
Spacious mobile horne Iota fM
fiNo bed room Holly P•lc moble rent. F1mlty Pride Mobile Home
ho,.. wkh holf ocro lot. 304- P•k. Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .
304-171-3073.
875-3030 01' 875-3431 .

44

73

KIT 'N' CARL'¥I.E® by L.any Wright

Apartment
for Rent

Roorm for rent•week or month.
Slatting et •120 a mo. Gallla
Hoto1·114-&lt;W8-9590.

BEAUTIRIL APARTMENTS &lt;IT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES, 838 Jecl&lt;ooo
Pike from t 183 1 mo. Walk 10
shop .. d rnovt.. 814-4412588 E.O .H.

lnfar.,....nc:oll114-912· 7180.

..,• .,..odtt.ofl..tnv. 1

In EUrtka 2BR. Mutt• on!¥. No
PMI. t2215 a mo. Dep. ~ulrlld.

1970 Wlndlor, 12xe5, woodbur,., 'Miher •d dryer, •ir
cond. mult bemOYtd, 304-89&amp;3602.

wllh e1.00 lnveelment. More

21

3 BR ., 2 bahl ot POrter. Coli
814-381-8804.

11900.

2 bodroom 12&gt;&lt;10.
304-875-2722.

from t 19. &lt;to eeo. over 250
brandl 2100 ttylea. U7,900to
t 29,900: lnventCMY. training.
fbnur•. alrfwe. grand opening.

Hne., AWn perty or ... Avon

Wanted to

Fottw's Moble Home Perk. Call

814-448-1802.

New completely furnished
IPartment It moble home In
city. Adutte only, P•klng. Can
114-&lt;WI-0338.

1981 Allllon moble home,
14x70, apldaus kh:c:hen wtth
cb.lble cwen and bav window, 2
bedrooms , eac cond ,
118.000.00. 304-171-5929 or
871-3873.

etc. Can open 15 dsu. Mr.
lougldln 1812)888-4228.

oa ........, Jot.l e18, 037. 10
el9,401. hnmedi•• ,..lrfngl
Your .,., Cell lllefu-111~
1-51a.4111-3111 EXT. F1122
for Fed••l Lllt 24 hra.

18

ct..,,

Coiii14-241-IIH3.

21

15

Br.

3 IR .. 2 ._., b81:1'11. nM c•pet

W. buy Blacll Welnuts. F101d
railing opportunity. George
- - 114-992-3811 . For
detlwery lnttrucdons cMI 1 -800.
-0127.

11

W•~2

e12e a mo. Aef. • dllp. Adult•.
Fu... hed. Col 114-4411-7754
or 143-2844.

441-0175.

I

Homes for Rent

2 stOI'Y. 4 bedtoorno. 2 b'"ho.
family 100m. kJcMitd PerkDI'We,
I 350.00..,. monlh, dlpooltMd
ref...,OI r-.ulr.t . call work d.,
304-4175-4340 aalc for Mr.
Gooch.

c~. houMholdt of ... rn~
tur8
Allo wOOd

a _..._.

October 1

Ohio

Buy

---

..

·.

12- The Daily Sentinel

Wented To

..

..

,

. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTF.S- Here'• how to work It:

'fOur
'Birthday
Oc1. 20. 1888
Several people close to you c ould be In·

splrallonalln Improving your lot In llleln
the year ahead . You·n operate very effectively In lhe new areas thai open up.
UIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Your popular·
lly Is ascending and wherever you go !
you are apt to be noticed. Even persons '
who appear 10 be umlmpressed with ·
you will be. Trying 10 parch up a broken
romance? The Astra-Graph Malchmak·

walk

10118
I

things begin lo unfOld , you'll be glad
you have a roo11ng section.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 111 Condl·
tiona look extremely promising 1oday
where your work or carHr IS con~
eerned. Things that others could not ac-

complish may prove to be easy vlc1orles
for you .

AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 111 Circum·
stances may compel you 10 make major ·
revisions In your plans. New concepts
will be mora eflec11ve and should b•lng
you the daalred results.

PISCES (Feb. 20--h 201 Your lntulllon and percepHon are extremely keen
er can help you to unders1and whal to · today. especially In commercial or II·
do to make lhe rela11onshlp work. Mall · nancllil matters. If you operate as your
S2 1o Matchmake•. P.O. Box 91428. ' lnalgh1• direct, you should como ou11n .
the black. •
Cleveland , OH 44101-3428 .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221 Today you ARIIS 1•rch 21-Aprll111 An arrangecould be lUcky In mailers 1ha1 affect menl you have been anx.loui ta put toyour material lnteroals. Gains are In the - gelher looks like II will coma aboul ao
offing and mlghl develop unexpec1edly. you've been hoping. The' linkage could
begin as or loday.
IAGinARIUI (NoV. 23-0.C. 211 Slarl·
TAURUI
(Aprlt 2!Hiar 20) Today's
lng today frlenda may begin playing
, more 1mponan1 roles in your affairs . As .achievements could have lar- reachlng

•

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
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 fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different. .

•

eHects. The peripheral b-Ills may .
prove as advantageous aa your primary
oqjectlves. Elevate your algh1s and go
gunning.
GEMINI (May 21-.lune 201 This is one of
thoae days 1eam aHott will otter
grea1 rewards. You·n operata mora ad·
vantageoualy with someone . alae 1hll!'
alone.
·
CANCER (~une 21-.luiJ 221 Your great·
est auet today Is 1he ability 1o tranoform something that ls outmoded Into
something more efflctMI and uaelul.
Try 1o uaelhls gilt where your car- 11
conC*ned .
U!O (~uiJ 23-Aug. 221 You lhould do
very ..-111oday In sltuatlonl 1h11 are either opecula11VI or have political o--·
tonal. In IICI, there•a I poaelblllty you
mlgh1 be Involved In both.
VIRGO (Alii· 23-lept. 22111 you plan to ·
enterlaln today. do 111n your eurroundlngo rather 1han oomeplace ou1olde.
' vou·ll be a go6d host and 1he even1 will '.
be memorable.

CRYPTOQUOTE
TN I
FH

MRMOP

F I

WZFH

G Y 0 J E

Q p

HZYGH
WZ N W

ZM

Z F H

GFHZMH

RNJVME

NH

(

~

.

~

'•

•

Z M

AYIEVAW

WY

QM

RNJVME .
QOVPMOM
Yeetenlay'a Cryptoqaote: TifE WORST SORROWS
i IN IJFE ARE NOT ITS LOSSES AND MISFORTUNES BUT

11'8 FEARS. - A, BENSON

.,

•

·•

..'•

•

•'

•

�.

·
•

PIKI-14-The Daily Sentinel

19,1988 :
____
..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dodgers one
victory away
from crown ·

I
I

I

I
I
I
I

s9-&lt; i

Wf Reserve The Right To ·

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

· LOTSA POP
Voi.39, No.116

24 PAK, 12 OZ. CANS

I

.

nesday by the commissioners to
By NANCY YOAHAM
apply
for 1988 Community DevelSenthiel News Staff
opment
Block Grant funds to pay
It would appear that If officials
for
the
much needed elevator.
at the Ohio Department of
must accompany
The
resolution
Development are of the same
CDBG
application to
the
county's
mind as . the Meigs County
0000. The application must be
Commissioners, the commission·
ln to the State by Nov. 1 and the
ers may get something they have
wanted for years - an elevator commissioners already have
verbal approval from ODOD that
at the courthouse to serve the
county's elderly and handl· . the elevator Is an eligible proo·
ject lor funding consideration.
capped residents.
·
The
application must be in to the
A.resolutlon was adopted Wed·

.

-----------------·COUPON ___ _:.

Sl 09

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks/Roast •••• ~..
·
BUCKET
..
k
·
$229
Cube Stea ••••••••••
LB

Sl 79

~.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

l

THANK YOU CHERRY

PIE FILLING

99 (

121 oz.

I CAN
I
I
I .
I
1 limit 1 Coupon Per Customer

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

.-.:...--cOUPON·----,
I

I HALLOWEEN I
L CANDY I

.

L-------------~----COUPON---

!MORTON'S
SAL
I

19

IIb6BOXoz.
I
I

•

Large illegal dump cleaned
up on Olive Township Road

Umit 1 Coupon Per Family

! Good Only At Powoll'o Supor Yalu
Good Sun., Oct. 16 thru Sat., Oct.

..&amp;.---------.!;----·COUPON----,
CASTLEBERRY

BEEF STEW
24 oz.

89&lt;

Seventy-five contribute
blood here Wednesday

limit I Coupon Per Customer
Good Only At Powoll'o SupO&lt; Yalu
IGaad Sun., Oct. 16 thru Sat., Oct. 22

L--------------

Yellow Onions!~.:~·. 69c

I Sl
Margar1ne ••••'!-.'!'!'.;. 3
.
59
Large Eggs •••••••~o!~N..
C
SHEDD'S SPREA~

GRADE A

Tree' •••••••••••••••••••••

49
Baker~ DonutS •::~·. 1

CARNATION-TALL 12 OZ. CAN

BANQUET

Evap. Milk .•••••••• 2

!QUAKER OATS

TV ·Dinners •••• !~!~~;-••

I
I
I

-1·

limit I Coupon _Por Customer
I Good Only At Powoll'o Supw Yalu
'Gaad Sun., 0&lt;1. 16 thru Sat., Oct.

T---- COUPON ·- - -

\EnY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES
1B.S OZ. BOX

3/S2

·I
Limit 1 Coupon Por c.,,..,.
I Gootl Only At Powoll'o Supw Yalu

IGood Sun., Od.

MAXWELL

GRAN. SUGAR
4.25 LB.
BAG

$119

COFFEE
39 oz.

$569

JOAN

ARt

KIDNEY BEANS
1sc!Noz.

3f$1

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL

PKG.

99&lt;

limit 1 Per Cuttom•

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OVPStaff

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Several individuals testified Wednesday that they saw bruises on the
body of Nanna Jean Perry when
she was living with Fred Facemire.
M1lry Ourst, · who lived at the
Regency Apartments at the time
Perry and Facemire did about three
or four years ago, testified that she
saw Facemire kick one of Perry's
two children down a Oight of sfeps.
"I saw him (Facemire) pull a gun
on her," Durst testified, adding, "I
saw him chase her in the bedroom
with a gun at one time," adding she
saw Perry be slall!led by Facemire
and witnessed Jlirry with "black
, -'!:J.~·· ·"""'· a_busted _ffiQIIIh". dwing
""
'od.
There
~not
been any evidence
ILLEGAL DUMP CLEANED UP - 'ftle
pictured as the project neared completion thla
presented that shows !}lat Facemire
cleanup of an Illegal dump In Olive Township Is
month.
owned a gun when he lived at and
managed-the Regency Aparunents.
Perry's first cousin, Cindy Jones,
testified that she saw "pl,ltple
bruises" on Perry's anns, legs and
neck.
Jones also testified that she
'
called a children's services· agencr,
in Charleston to try and "get help'
for Perry.
·
"I asked her countless times,
A large Illegal dump site
cleaned up this month by the a quarter mile along this road .
'Why .don't you leave him?,'"
located on Olive Township Road
The project was a united effort
Meigs County Litter Control
Jones testified.
151 (Rainbow Ridge) near. the
with Supervisor Bernard Gilkey
.
Program.
Perry, 30, of 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Lebanon T~wnshtp line, was
The dump extended for nearly in charge.
Point Pleasant, is charged ·with the
Roses' Excavating was con·
first-degree murder of Fred
tracted to furnish a dozer and
Facemire and the trial is heing
operator. County Engineer Phil
heard before a 10-woman, Iwo-man
Roberts and Highway Superln- jury in Mason County Circuit Court
tendenl Ted Warner provided a
before Judge Clarence L. Watt.
dump truck, gradeall and
Police say Perry shot Facemire
manpower.
twice with a .38-caliher Travis
Olive Township Trustees, Paul
revolver on March 8, 1987.
Life. Joe Lantz and Ernest
Perry's defense attorneys assert
Barringer supplied a dump truck
that she kiUed Facemire in selfS.e venty.flve persons contrlb·
Harold W. Brinker, Brenda S. and operator.
.
. defense and also contend that Perry
uted blood at the Wednesday visit Cunningham, Debra 0. Mora,
Gayle Price provided seed and
was a victim of "battered woman
of the Red Cross blOOdmobile to Walter R . Couch, Pamela Miller, mate~ial and he seeded most of syndrome." Defense attorneys
Meigs Co'unty.
Ray R. Wallace, Sr., Phyllis M. the area .
Raymond Musgrave and Stephen
Of the total number of units
Bearhs, Adelle White, Danny R.
With the closing of the local
Littlepage had called 13 wimesses
given, 17 were contributed In White, Carol Lucas, James Lu· landfill and the many problems
to the stand by the end of court
appreciation for a relative or cas, Lois J . Wyant, Bryan S. lacing the county regarding solid
proceedings Wednesday. Prosecutor
friend. First time donors were Shank, Howard P. Logan, David waste disposal, the county Utter
Damon B. Morgan Jr. rested the
Charles E. Boyles, Janis King,
M. King, Fonna K. Cull urns, control officials are urging all
state's case earlier this week.
James E. Lucas, Carol A. Lucas,
Betty V. Sayre, Marsha L. Meigs Countlans to take pride In
Reba Lanier, Perry's younger sis·
and Paul Gerard.
Barnhart, Gerald E. Rought, their communities and join In the
ter, testified that Facemire was
Multiple gallon donors were Betty J. Lowe, Lawrence D . effort to keep Meigs County
hateful to the two children in the
Peggy L. Lewis, Patricia F. Leonard. Mary L. Voss, Wllllam
clean and beautiful
household and
. ,..would
. . . call them "lit·
Kitchen, John E. Donohue, one W. Radford, Donald R. Smith,
gallon; Penny Brinker. Harold Gary E. Snouffer, Carolyn G.
,.
W. Brinker, Pamela Miller, and Charles, Dan E . Follrod, Paul F.
Dorothy C. McCloud, two gallon;
Marr., Vtrgll K. Windon, Michael
Debra D. Mora, four gallon;
W. King, John F. Snyder, Patrl·
David M. King, five gallon;
eta J. Barton, Barbara A. Riggs .
Judith K. Hunter. six gallon. and
Middleport - Kathryn John·
Walter R. Couch, 15 gallon.
son. David 0 . Dodson. Nancy A.
Dr. James Witherell an&lt;) Dr . Mullen, Peggy L. Lewis, Dorothy
Wilma Manslfled were the doc- C. McCloud, Patricia F. Kitchen,
tors handling the bloodmoblle Sarah J. Fowler, Paul Gerard,
visit, assisted by Lenora Lelf· Leafy M. Chasteen, Charles
belt, Beulah Ward, and Naomi Johnson, John E. Donohue, ChaLondon. nurses . Clerical workers rles E . Boyles, GlorlaJ. Peavley,
were Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
Judith K. Hunter, Esther M.
Marge Reuter, Peggy Harris,
Black, Gerald L. Anthony,
and Ed Cozart.
James R. Dalley, Maurlsh A. ·
RSVP workers who assisted
Nelson, Angela S. Sellers, and
were Marian Ebersbach, Edna
fda M. Martin.
Triplett, Lula Hampton, Norma
Racine - VIrginia M. Bland,
Jewell, Gertrude Robinson, Wll· Bridget 0 . Bing, James King,
llam and Joyce HobacK, Polly Dorothy P . Riffle. Dorothy H.
Hysell, Jessie Curtis, Florence Sayer, Fredric R. Thompson,
Richards , Phllomena Follrod, William H. Hoback, David Aaron
Ezra and Evelyn Gilmore, and Wolfe.
Gerald Wlldermuth.
Rutland- Donnie Laudermllt,
The can te~n was served by XI Marta H. Blackwood, Donna M.
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Davidson, and Mary E .
Sigma Phi Sorority. Donations Davidson.
were received from Quality Print
Long Bottom - Laura L.
Shop. Dally Sentinel and the Hawley, Bruce Hawley~ . Vaness
Senior Cl tlzens .
M. Sidwell, Henry E . Bahr.
SALUTES POMEROY- Not only were MelpCollnll81111 tre~d
Donors by community were as
Syracuse- David F. Lawson,
to another paula&amp; of the Delta Queen TueacliQ' nl&amp;bt but anew boat
follows:
,
Teresa M. Tyson Drummer.
for area retddents, Preoldent, p - d upriver plnl pul Pomeroy
Langsville - Ellis E . Myers.
Pomeroy - Donald A. May,
about 5 p.m. TuesdiQ'. The Prealdent cune to a complete alop on
Janet Peavley, Lenora J . ·
Mason, W. Va. - Teresa L.
the Ohio River at Pomeroy, In front of lbe levee. There waa a
McKnight, Penny L. Brinker,. Covert.
concert from the caltope and tbe caplaln of the excunlon boat

I

I

'

By CHARLES A. MASON

Umit 1 Coupon Por C11tomer
I
Good Only At Powoll's Sup• Valu I
Good Sun., Oct. 16 thru Sat. Oct. 221

1
9
Sausa e ••••••••••••••• $1

To meet this need, and at the
request of County Auditor Wll·
Robinson Is the second em·
llam Wickline, the commissionployee to resign since a strike by
about half of the DHS employees ers ·established this special
account.
began Aug. 1.
. Also at · the reques I of the
A $76,300 payment Is due on the
county highway department's . county auditor. the commission·
ersestabllshed a new account for
road paving program, reported
Phil Roberts, county engineer.
Insurance purposes.
An Interdepartmental transfer
Roberts said he has been told by
of $3921.55 within the highway
state auditors that the payment
deparment budget was approved
must be made from a special
by the commissioners.
highway bond retirement fund .

'

BUY ONE, GET ONE SAM£

BALLARD's 10 0 Z. LINK OR LB. ROLL

hOrne. .

I

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25 Cento

A Multimedia Inc. NawiPI!per

. And Rober ts reported that the
highway department wlll be
helping Salem Township widen a
road and Is also preparing to
widen and change drainage on
Carpenter Hill In Columbia
Township.
Finally. the commissioners
approved a request from the
Emergency Medical Services
Board of Trustees to advertise
for a new ambulance for the
Pomeroy EMS unit. .
·

Defense testimony continues
in Norma Perry murder trial

Chuck Roast ••••• ~.. ·
VALU~
CHICKEN
leg Quarters ....~•.. 49( ! FREE I

LB. PKG.

state by Nov . I. The application ls
being prepared by Kim Shields,
county director of development.
The resignation of Larry D.
Robinson from his position with
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services was accepted
by the commissioners. Robinson,
who lives ln Marletia, had
worked at DHS lor several years.
His resignation stated that one
reason he Is leaving Meigs DHS Is
to take employment closer to his

I Good Only AI Powoll'o Supw Yalu
Good Sun., Oct. 16 thru Sat., Oct. 22

I

2 Sections. 16 Pogn

Meigs County courthouse may· get elevator

1

'I

Cloudy, low In lower 408.
Chance of rain 40 · percent.
Friday, high near 55. Chance
of rain 60 percent.

•
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, -Thursday, October 20, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

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Sun.. Od. 16 thru Sat. Od. 221

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POMEROY, OH.

•••••••[:·••• $119
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Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

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"
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.

tie bitch" and "little bastard."
They said !here was nothing that
She testified that Perry was they could do," Rice testified.
afraid of Facemire, a man slightly
Rice described Perry as being a
smaller in build than the molher of nervous wreck when she would
two, according to testimony. "She star at Greer Road. "She was hyswas reidly scared of him, csp,ecially tencal, she couldn't eat, couldn't
when he would be drinking.'
sleep. She would pace back and
Jones testified that Perry was forth and watch the window. I
depressed about the living situation couldn't get her to go oulside."
Rice· told Liulepage that Perry
and that Perry broke down in tears
when she would be around people would leave the Greer Road
residence to go back to Facemire
she knew.
OUISt testified !hat Facemire - wilh the children - and "in no
threatened Perry in her presence "a time she would be back in my
few dozen times." Durst also tes- house in the same condition."
Rice told lhe jury that she once
tified that Perry used lhe children as
Perry with a burn below
wimessed
a constanL rope to keep Perry from
one
of
the
eyes of her face when
leaving him.
returned
. from another
she
had
Durst told the jury !hat she heard
living
session
with
Facemire.
Facemire say !hat one or btlth of
the children weren't allow to go · Rice testified that she got a telewith Perry when she went some- phone call from Perry, who she calwhere so thai she would come back led "Candy," on the morning of
Man:h 8, 1987, and Rice came to
because she loved her children.
The last defense witneSS of the the residence at 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
day, Annabel Rice of Greer Road, arriving there at the same time as
testified that she knew Perry from Mason CounLy SheriJT's Depart·
the day she was born. "She's like a ment Chief Deputy George Plants.
Plants, the first law officer to arrive
daughter to me," Rice testified.
The two women cleaned houses at lhe scene, turned the case over 1o
together and Perry would stay wilh the Point Pleasant City Police beRice at various times . dwing her cause it was in !heir jwisdiction.
Upon entering lhe house, Rice
twnultuous
relationship
wilh
Facemire. Rice testified that she said Perry told her, "Fred's dead."
observed injwies on Perry's face,
Rice described Perry as being
arm and legs.
hysterical the morning of the shoot"She said he kicked her beLwcen ing and said Perry told her "her
the legs." Rice testified.
mind was blank," adding everythRice said Perry would be "hys- ing was happening like a dream.
terical" after she had lived with
Rice said she didn't believe that
Facemire and then had come to live Perry read the statemeni she gave
at the Greer Road residence. Rice Point Pleasant Police Pattolman
testified that she sought help from R.A. Evick before she signed it.
law enforcement officials, includ''The one (policeman) told her,
ing the Mason Coun.ty Magistrate's 'Sign this, and I'll get out of here
office and lhe state .Department of and leave you alone,'" Rice tesHuman Services to alleviate Perry's tified. Perry has testified that she
does not remember giving two
situation.
''They all said !here was nothing statements to the police· tlie day of
the munler.
that they could do." Rice testified.
Perry alld Rice were never married, but they stayed togelher long Meeting tonight
The Meigs County Democratic
enough to he considered married
Executive Committee wlll meet
under common law principles.
Rice also testified that Facemire tonight (Thursday ) , 7:30p.m ., at
would harrass ·the Greer Road Carpenter's Hallin Pomeroy .
residence by -constantly telephoning, trying to find out where Perry Board to meet
was.
Southern Local Board of Edu "He kept calling day and nighL cation will meet Monday, 7 p.m.,
We went to the phone company. In the high school cafeteria .

uaounced tha&amp; the crew of the President had made the atop Ia
!Jalute lo and In memory of the late Leonard VanMeter, a Pomeroy
rtverboa&amp; man wbo died a IItle OVf!r O!!.l! year ago. Tbe Prealdenl
bad beea In Cincinnati over the weekend to participate In boating
events held In the Queen City.
.. .-.
'

.!
~·

1

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