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·
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PIKI-14-The Daily Sentinel

19,1988 :
____
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dodgers one
victory away
from crown ·

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s9-&lt; i

Wf Reserve The Right To ·

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

· LOTSA POP
Voi.39, No.116

24 PAK, 12 OZ. CANS

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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·

.

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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
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1 limit 1 Coupon Per Customer

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

.-.:...--cOUPON·----,
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I HALLOWEEN I
L CANDY I

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!MORTON'S
SAL
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19

IIb6BOXoz.
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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
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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 •••• !~!~~;-••

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limit I Coupon _Por Customer
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'Gaad Sun., 0&lt;1. 16 thru Sat., Oct.

T---- COUPON ·- - -

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1B.S OZ. BOX

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Limit 1 Coupon Por c.,,..,.
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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•

Limit I PO&lt; Cullom•
Good Only •At Powolr S- Yalu
Oct. 22, 1911

Good Ony AI Powol' !'Sui* Yalu

i

•

16 tlwu Sat., Oct. 22

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PENNINSULAR

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1 BOX

$

FRESH .
12 OZ. CAN

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L~od .u... o'!:..!!.!!"!.!'.::.~':!!l

•
'

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

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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. .

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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

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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

limit 1 Coupon Por Customor
1Good Only At Powoll'o Supor Valu
Good Sun., Oct. 16 lhru Sat., Oct. 22

ARMOUR LUNCH MEAT

l-23·35-37 -38-42

e.

r----COUPON ·--:- 1

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 16 THRU SAT., OCT. 22, 1988

.

Pick 4
0554
Super Lotto

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•••••••[:·••• $119
Fish
Sticks
. SUPERIOR
Me~ts ••••L:.••• S1 19
Lunch
FLAVORITE
. .
W1eners•..•••••..••••.•• 89&lt;

109

I Limit 1 Coupon Por Custom« I
I Good Only At Powoll's S... Yalu I

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM -10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

SEA STAR

Daily Number

Page3

LB.

li mit Quantities

Ohi,o Lottery

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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.
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�The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
·-.,.

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The Daily Sentinel
'.

Ill Court Slreel

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~

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~m~ ~...._--.-.~=·~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

•
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pubjlsher/Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o! The United Press ln!A1rnatlonal, Inland Dally Press
AssoclaUon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION

are welcome. They should be I~s than 300 words

long. Alllettersare subJect toedltlng and musi be signed wUh name, address and
telephone number. No unslgnOO letter:;; will be published. Letters should be In

good taste, addressing issues, not persmalltles.

.. 1. .

Letters to the· editor
wants fizz, pride back in area
What would I like? What I
would like to see Is an tnfus ton of
county community attractions.
Possible names: Meigs County
River Festival, SporVAthletlcs,
Ca bbage, · Potato, Marigold/ Flower, When: Last week of
September would be nlce or old
Regatta ttnie slot.
I'm tired of hearing Meigs beIng referred to as not having apythlng to offer Its citizens especially. to the tourist trade. Not
much to offer In lhe work force
and always, always, being associated with the growing of marijuana. One would think that's
the only thing we had going for
us. Let's put some fizz, pride,
some thrtll back into the area.
I would like to see a community effort of a full blown, county
wide festival with competing of
bands, cheerleaders from all
over with all the trimmings.
Since we are on the river, we
could haves ternwheeler races or
· anything that can float races,
grandstand attractions, a talent
show, fashion shows with hair
styles from local shops featured
and awards for floats. Awards
could run from sportsperson of
'the year, teacher or coach of the
state, present Miss Ohio, to our
youngsters, an antique car category, the . motorcyclist of the

area, the merchant of the area,
best dressed residential area In
the county, Floats of our senior
classes from Eastern, Southern
and, of course, Meigs, the softball tournament winners. The
list Is as long as your Imagination,
I know there are reasons for
not offering the Regatta any
more~ but we are tough and when
things get tough the tough get
tougher. WE are standing slUt
We need to get on with it. If you
ask around most everyone wlll
agree the other counties offer
more In almost every recreation
aspect. Their grandstand fair attendances are bigger and better.
They offer more during the summer for the kids to do. WE should
be able to turn some otherwise
unusable land Into something
like maybe a waterpark.
The bright spot I see for Meigs
Countians Is their continued and
constant support of their football
teams and their garden cl11bs.
They keep their following good or
bad from event to event year af- .
ter year, Maybe we should pay
tribute by naming a festival after
our enthusiasm In the love of
sports or for floweu.
Barbara Sue Varney
Langsvllle, Ohio

Disagrees with opinion
I disagree completely with the
letter written 'by Barbara Stahl
(Sept. 22nd), I talked to many of
the strikers of D.H.S. Maybe
some people opposed to this
strike should get both sides of the
story before making a decision.
The money the director and
Commissioners are spending on
security guards and other peple
working there has been more
than enough to give the raises.
And If the people opposed to the
strike think that the jobs are so
easy then let them go down to the
D.H.S. and do them. D.H.S. Is not
overstaffed. A handful of people
cannot do the work of several.
And the computer error that occurred cannot be blamed on the
strikers. You cannot learn to run
a computer In a month when It
takes a year to really get the bas·
tcs down. And as far as the test
the employees took, you'll also
find that many have four year
college degrees In Social Service
Work on top of that. They didn't
spend ali that money on a colle~e
education to get Into a job that
doesn't pay that inuch.

There are people In Meigs
County suffering, but that is not
the fault of the strikers. They
have not stopped anyone from
entering either the Welfare Dept.
or the Food Stamp Office, The director and commissioners had a
chance to stop the strike but they
didn't do it. So we know where
the blame lies for the strike and it
lsn' t with the strikers.
There was also a substantial
amount of money sent down from
Columbus for the hiring of new
employees. Were the employees
hired? No! The money was spent
on computers and telephones,
and the work was piled on the already overworked employees. If
Columbus felt that there were
not enough employees and sent
down the money to hire mote
than D.H,S. was not oferstatfed.
It was understaffed. Over 50% of
Meigs County Is on either A.D. C.
or G.R. and the computer and
phone system that the director
and commissioners had to have
cut Meigs County out of some
jobs.
DOrothy Owens

Page-'2-'-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy...... Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, October 20, 1988

Prison .s ite caused Dukakis·· pro~lem
WASHINliTUN - tiov. Ml·
chael Dukakls knew It would be
no cakewalk to build a 1)rtson In
the sleepy Massachusetts town or
New Hralntree. A confidential
memo to the governor dated Nov.
21, 191!5, proposed the "site and
Includes Dukakls' hand-written
reaction at the top: "This spells
mucho trouble.· '
"Mucho trouble" is what the
governor got, especially when
townspeople ol New Hralntree
found out that the land Is owned
. by a long-time acquaintance ol
the governor's.
·
No town wants a prtson tn Its
back yard. Hut th·e New !:!raintree site, on Its race, should have
posed few political problems lor
Uukakls . . 'l'her,e;:.were _only 426
voters':'lherlLii1 '191l6:' As -one. of
Dukakls': \(lp o!ftclals put lt,1New
' l:!ralntree was the only place to
build a prl'lon "without having a
nuclear meltdown politically."
The land had been the home for

a Seventh Day Adventist
academy, but the church put the
7!l2 acres on the market In 19!13.
The report to Dukakls In November 191!5 said the "new
owners" were Interested In selling. 'l'echnlcally, the "new
owners'' dldn' town the property
yet. Dr. tiary Jacobsen, a respected psychiatrist, and Daniel
Strlar, a· developer, had only put
an option on the property In
February l\11!5.
In November 1!11!5, a representative of the state quietly ap.
preached Jacobsen and Strtar' s
realtor about the land. Un Dec. 2,
the state secretly. put the New
l:!ralntree property on Its ltst of
possible prison sites. un Dec. 3,
Jacobsen and Strlar exercised
their option and snapped up the
land for slightly more than $3
million.
·
Jacobsen and Strlar originally
piCked tile land lor a psychiatric
facility, When the town refused to

Dukakts maintained at the
time that he dldn' t know who tile
owners were and that he dld!l't
care. Hut, according to notes
taken hy one or his aides In a
meeting with New Hratntree
townspeople on May 6, 1llt!6,
Dukakts was told that Striar was
one or the owners. One or the
participants at that meeting, the
Irrepressible Dorothea Vltrac,
recalled that Dukak!s asked who
owned the land. Vltrac, who lives
tn New Braintree, has dogged.
Dukakts on the Issue and lotlowed him to Iowa during the
primary campaign.
·
. ),;ven alter he knew whO owned
the land, Dukakts clalll)ed he had
never met Stlar. He stuck to that
story until ·octOber l!lt!6 when
Vltrac showed the governor a
picture of hlmsel! shaking handS
with strlar the previous month.
'!'he occasion was the dedication
of the Striar Community &lt;.:enter
In Stoughton, Mass., where Dukakls spoke,
Dukakts' relatiOnship with Ja•••"TR@cobsen ts more clear. 'l'be two
grew up In Hrooklfne, Mass.,
~\SUZU
togethef. Jacobsen contributed
to Dukak!s' 19!l~ gubernatorial
oF
call)palgn. Jacobsen wrote the
governor a chummy "Deal: Ml~ .
cllael" letter In OCtober 19!!6 bemoaning the fact that !belt
relationship had given Dukakls,
trouble In New Hralntree," according to the personal letter,
· ·
which we nave seen.
Jacobsen apparently got over
his reticence tbe following spring
when he and his wtre donated
$l,UUU each to Dukakls' presklen,
ttal campaign.
·
The New Hratn!ree land deal
has become a majoc embarrass-.
ment lor Dukakts and remain~
unresolved, Ironically, becau~
ofapricedlspute,thestatetsnow
•lo--B . threatening Jacobsen and Strtar
~~~l,~rtll to take the land by eminent ,
domain.

Fbt.il'ICS

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uo I"'''A!U~Iftt.O ril'l nflOioiMNTA\. CAMPAIGN t1'A
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·
R

Top court reviews discrimination law
WASHINGTON (NEA) -Are
p~lvate acts of racial discrimination unconstlt11tional? The U.S.
Supreme Court will face that
question In an Important case tt
bas decided to review early In Its
new term, . a case wblch may
provide the first Indication of
how solid the court's conservative majority really Is. ·
Last year the court heard
arguments by Brenda Patterson,
a black employee of the McLean
Credit Union In Winston-Salem,
N.C., that she had been the
victim of racial harassment on
the job and had been laldoffwhen
she complained.
·
Patterson did not bring her sutt
under the Civil Rights Act
because that Jaw, while prohibitIng racial discrimination, does
not allow for a jury trial or the
collection of punitive damages
and damages based on emotional
suffering, Rather she brought the
suit under the broad terms of
Section 1981' of the U.S. Code,
which bars racial discrimination
In private contracts.
A trial court dismissed Patterson's sutl, saying that Section
1981 does nol specify l'actal
harassment as grounds for action. An appeals .court upheld
that cfeclslon.
Last April, lawyers gathered
before the Supreme Court to
argue that an implied contract of
employment - such as Patterson had with the credit union -

was covered by Section 1981, and
that the legislative history or
Section 1981 made It clear that
Congress Intended racial harassment to be covered by the
statute.
But the court stunned the
lawyers, and civil right groups,
when It (iostponed a decision,
saying ·It wanted to hear arguments on the broader question of
whether a landmark 1976 decision barring all forms of private
d Iscrim Ina lion should be
overturned.
Voting 5-4, the court said It
wanted to hear arguments about
whether or not It should reverse
the 1976 rullng In Runyon vs.
McCrary, which declared
"whites only" private schools
and- more broadly, all forms of
private discrimination - to be
Illegal by virtue of a post-Civil
War civil rights law.
Conservatives have argued
that this is too broad an extension
of civil rights, that there ts
nothing constitutionally Improper about a private Individual
discriminating In a private
contract.
The unusual order to broaden
the arguments In Patterson vs.
McLean Credit Union caught
everyone by surprise, partly
because neither side had rals!!d
the Issue, but also because most
scholars considered the question
of whether the Constitution bars
private discrimination to be

Wrong approach to foreign policy could hurt U.S.
By United Press International
DETROIT - Republican George Bush, saying Wednesday In
Michigan that his view of the world and of the Soviets reflects reallt)'.
said the wrong approach to foreign policy coulcl reverse recent gains
and return America to the days of the Cold War.
At the University of Michigan's Dearborn campus outstdeDetrott,
Bush sald, "A great deal Is at stake. The wrong American policy
toward the Soviet Union could turn the most promiSing era In
s uperpower relations Into a replay of the Cold War. And wrong
American policy toward NATO could undermine peace and
freedom ."
Bush also planned to attend rallies today In Royal Oak, Mich.,
where he will appear with former President Gerald Ford, and In
Saginaw.
· .
hi 1
Democrat Michael Dukakts, meanwhile, used Wednesday's first
anniversary of the stock market crash to promise to ·produce a trade
surplus if elected ·president.
·
Bush, calling for the NATO alliance to wor,k together to Improve
· superpower relatlons, said, ''It's not going to happen unless we have
an experienced, realistic and strong president."
Referring to differences In a ttl tude between himself and Dukakts,
Bush said, ''My vlew reflects the world and the Soviets as they are,
no I as we wish them to be.' ' .
The vtce president said he dismisses Dukakis's apparent notion
that the Soviet Union has been left "too weak to make trouble"
because of Soviet economic problems.
" The Jesson Is clear . We must maintain the pressure on Moscow to
change. Only such a pollcy will produce lasting Improvements In
U,S.-Sovlet relations," he said.
Bush and his top aides also Insisted they will act as II the vice
president ts the underdog, despite recent polls showing him holding a
·healthy lead over Dukakls.
Oh lo and Michigan a~e two of the lB states Dukakls aides reportedly
have targeted as necessary for the Massachusetts governor to win
Nov, 8. The vice president Is working to keep them out of the
.
DemQCrat's grasp.
"(He) complains that I call him a progressive ltberai Democrat. He

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
approve their proJect, they exer·
ctsed their purcbase option
.. ,
anyway.
· .
·They may have ~n daring
gamblers 7 hOping r~tat a little
town with no wa:ter or sewer
system, no doctor, no major
roads and no public transportatlon would be a good real estate
Investment. There Is no hard
evidence that the two had Inside
lnlormatlon, but some people In
New Hratntree are critiCal ol the
·speed with which Dukaltls went
arter the land while claiming he
didn't know anl(thing about the
owners.
In spite' or his own premonition
of "mucho trouble," Dukakls, Un
June 6, 1\1!!6, requested a whopping $1U million In state funding
to buy the land. A hastily done
state appralsal put the value at
$!!.7 million. (A later appraisal
would reduce the estimate to
about$5,mlillon.)

doesn't like to hear that," Bush told cheering students at Southwest
Missouri State University In Springfield Tuesday. "Well, let me tell
you something. He will continue to hear It everyday for the nextthree
weeks!''

Dukakis, however, met by remarkably enthusiastic crowds
throughout Michigan Tuesday, fought back by attacking Republtcan
c'Onservatism and reminding his audiences that the Reagan-Bush
administration has changed the United States from the world's
largest creditor to the largest debtor In just eight years.
At Western Michigan University In Kalamazoo, the three-term
governor told about 1,IOO students that he and his running mate,
Texas Sen. Uoyd Bentsen, would reverse that economic trend.
"And In the first four years of the Dukakls-Bentsen administration,
we'll turn that trade deficit back Into a trade surplus and reclaim
those jobs for American workers," he promised: ·

Today .in history
By United Pres• International
Today Is Thursday, Oc\. 20, the 294th day of 1988 with 72 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
English astronomer and architect Sir ChriStopher Wren tn 1632,
French poet Arthur Rlmbaud in 1854, educalor John Dewey In 1859,
composer Charles Ives In IB74, actor Belfl Lugosf In IB82, TV
personality Arlene Francis In 1908 (age 80), psychologist Joyce
Brothers In 1928 (age 60), newspaper columnist Art Buchwald In 1925
(age 63), and former New York Yankees slugger Mickey Mantle In
1931 (age 57).
·
.
·

On this date In history:
In 1818, the United States and Britain agreed to establish the 49th
parallel as the offlcl'al boundary between the United States and
Canada.
I

'

closed.
In dissenting from the order to
review Runyon, Justice Harry
Blackmun wrote, "! am at a loss
to understand the motivation of
five members of Ibis Court to
reconsider an interpretation of a
civil rights statute that so clearly
reflects our society's earnest
commitment to ending racial
discrimination." In a separate
dissent Justtc John Paul Stevens
wrote, •'The court has Inflicted a
serious arid unwise wound upon
ltsel! today."
The keys seem to be Justices
O'Connor and Kennedy. · Last
term O'Conner seemed to grown
progressively more conservative, and Kennedy, the newest
justice, Is assumed to be very
conservative.
If both vote solidly conservative, then the conservatives will
have a working majority. But

Robert Wagman
· many believe the court Is still one
conservative justiCe away from ,
really having a solid majority
that could dominate the court 1
and make the sweeping social
changes conservatives have advocated since Ronald Reagan
took o!tlce.
To some extent, the Patterson .
decision may_only be symbolic• .
Civil Rights groups believe Con- .
gress would move quickly to .
write a new law should the
Runyon lnterpret.itlon be voided.
By overturning': Runyon, the
court's - conservative majority,
would send the message that tt Is :
ready and willing to overturn .
past liberal decisions and that
the court's' long-held doctrln of
"stare decisis" - adherence to
past precedent- will not stand In '
the way,

·something.to tusk- ·
tusk over Vincent Carroll
The movie "Gorillas In the
Mist" should Impress Americans
with the plight of endangered
species, but whether the message translates Into meaningful
behavior remains to . be seen.
Even now, jewelry stores across
the nation are casually conspirIng to snuff out another of the
planet's nobler creatures.
Anyone Interested In an Ivory
bracelet? A necklace, perhaps?
or course some of you are.
Otherwise stores wouldn't carry
those Items.
So Is anyone . In favor of
poaching elephants, too?
No? .Sorry, butyoucan'thavelt
both ways.
Eighty percent ofthe lyoty sold
In Amertca can be traced to
Illegal kills. It's Imported legally, but only because It's first
shipped to places like Hong Kong
or the Middle East and there
carved Into jewelry.
Poached Ivory tusks rarely slip .
through U.S. Customs. They
don't possess the proper papers.
But carved poached Ivory enters
routinely every day.
Since 1979, Africa bas lost
nearly half of Its elephants -and
still the carnage continUe.. Try
as they might, outmanned park
employees In Kenya, Uganda,
Tanzania. and elsewhere cannot
stop the slaughter.
We can stop the slaughter. We
can stop It by refusing to buy
Ivory, drying up the U.S. market,
desllnatton for one-third or the
·world's supply. Let the poachers
find another hustle.
Not long ago, I called a number
or jewelry stores fn search or
Ivory. Happily, most said they
didn't carry any. A few clerks
responded so war Uy they must
have ;thought Ivory sales had

been banned and that i w;.. on an
unsavory hunt for contraband.
But finally, PaY dirt: Several
dealers mentioned beaded Ivory
bracelets, necklaces and pend- .
ants for sale. And only one knew .
the name or· an artist who'd
carved the jewelry In New York
and who presumably could produce proof of legally obtained
tusks,
Specialty catalogs also market
Ivory, One catalog released only
last month actually had the gall
to claim, In small type at the top
of a page, that "Items are made
from African Ivory In accordance with the' Ia ws of the USA
and are not detrimental to the
species."
Africa Is still home to nearly
750,000 elephants, so extinction Is
hardly foreordained. Yet less
than a decade ago, elephants
numbered 1.3 million. Just to
satisfy present world-wide Ivory
demand, poachers mus~ kill
70,000 animals·a year.
That doesn' !.leave m11ch time . .
Don'! look to Congress for a
solution, either. Even the African
Wildlife Fund opposes an outright ban on Ivory Imports, In
part because desperately poor
African governments traffic tn
tusks seized from poachers and
from beasts that die naturally.
Congress can and should retal•
late against countries that flout
rules governing the shipment of
raw Ivory, but that will reduce,
not extinguish, the trade.
I'm a sucker, I'll admit, for the
plight of exotic animals. No
matter where I travel, I often
check out the local zoo. And I've
sought glimpses of rare wildlife
from the jungles of South AmerIca to a primate preserve on the
Island or Bor,neo. ·

r

Dodgers hold on, edge A's for
c hances to co llect thai fourth
OAKLAND , Calli. (UP!) The Los Angeles Dodgers. fleld- victory in the llest·o f-seven
ing possibly the worst lineup in serjes. ·
The J.985 St. Louis Cardinals
World Series history , moved
within one victory of the cham- were the last team to assume a
pionship Wednesday night with a 3-1 lead In the World Ser ies, bu t
they blew the next three games to
4-3 decision over the Oakland
the Kansas City Royals.
Athletics.
Injuries to Kirk Gibson and
With a cleanup hitter who
batted .196 this season and a Mike Marshall forced Los Andesignated hitter who failed to geles to put Mike Davis In right
hom er, the Dodgers backed batting cleanup, Mickey Hatcher
rookie Tim Belcher with two in left and Danny Heep at
first -inning runs and downed designated hitter . That trio acco unted for three homers and 53
Oakland ace Dave Stewart.
Before an Oakland Coliseum RBI this season.
' Davis batted .196 this year with
·crowd or 49,317, Belcher encoun·two
homers and 17 RBL Even
tered trouble in ftve Innings buf
wound up allowing just three George Robe, who batted fourth
runs . Reliever Jay Howell, who for the I906 Hitless Wonders
yielded the winning homer to brought better credentials.
Mark McGwlre the previous Robe , the Chicago White Sox
night. atoned by escaping a third basema n that season, hlt
.258 with no homers and 25 RBI in
bases-loaded jam in the seventh.
" ,
He also had to withstand a 75 games.
Los Angeles suffered still
tense ninth lnnlng. Luis Polonta
L • I worked the count to 3-2, then flied another injury in the fourth when
to left. Afier Dave Henderson catcher Mike Scioscia, running
FINAL OUT - Dodger rellever Jay Howell, Jell, pulls his arm
dellvered
a single for his fourth on a botched hlt -and -run •. twlsted
back lor a high flve from teammate Franklin Stubbs, right, after
erun king J'ose Canseco his right knee sliding into second
hit,
hom
getting the final out In the ninth inning to beat the Oakland A's 4-3 in
to
a full count · before and · had to be helped from the
went
the fourth game of the World. Series Wednesday night in Oakland.
fte!d.
striking
out
on a breaking ball.
(UPI)
Nothing stopped them , how ·
From there, the drama ended
ever,
including a seventh-inning
quickly. Dave Parker lifted a foul
that
knocked out Belc~er ,
rally
pop behind third, and the
.
With
one
out,
Walt Weiss singled
'Dodgers were two games ahead
off
Tracy
Woodson's
glove at
of baseball's winnlngest team
a grounfirst.
He
advanced
on
this season.
dout
and
scored
on
Henderson's
Los Angeles scratched lor Its
runs - one came on a passed double, bringing in Howell.
Howell, crlttctzed by Oaknight when they play at Ironton. bai 1, two on grounders and one on
By GENE CADDES
land's
Don Baylor as unable to
Both are 7:0.
UPI Sports Writer
an error.
handle
pressure, gave up the
CAPE received 11 first place
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The Dodgers can seal their
wiiming
homer in the ninth
Only three points separated No. 1 votes 'ahd 223 points thls week to sixth championship Thursday
In
Game 3. This time he ..
inning.
Akron Buchtel and No.2 Steuben- six firsts and 188 points for the night when they send ace Ore!
ville in this week's United Press Tigers.
Hershlser against Storm Davis. walked Canseco. Then shortstop
Orrville was third in Division .Should the Dodgers lose that one, Alfredo Griffln mis played
International Ohio High School
Ill, followed by AkronHobanand they wlll return home with two Parker's liner, filling the bases
Board of Coaches Divtslon II
Urbana . Akron St. Vincent-St.
football ratings.
Mary, a 24-7 loser to Youngs town
Buchtel, which took over the
Cardinal · Mooney Saturday
top spot from Cleveland St.
night, slipped from third to sixth.
Joseph a week ago, held only a
Another showdown ls on tap In
213-210 margin over Steubenville
Division
IV when No.1 Columbus
this week, although the Griffins
Academy
plays at No. 2 West
had a 14-7 edge in first place
Jefferson,
wlth the No. 1 rating
votes.
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - Quar, shotgun, quarterbacks have to
and
·
an
almost
certain playoff terback · Bernie Kosar will be take their eyes off the defense
One coach voted Buchtel only
berth at stake.
seVenth on his ballot, while the
back at the helm Sunday, and the and concentrate on catching the
Academy held a solid 250-209 Cleveland Browns are taking ball. which could be deadly hi the
lowest Steubenvllle was voted by
lead in this week 's ratings over every precaution to keep him long run.
any of the coaches from around
•
West Jeff, receiving 22 first place there:
the state was 'fourth. Both teams
•'That split second makes a
votes to one for the Rough
have 7-0 records.
Kosar, Injured in the season difference back there," he said.
Riders. Third with 190 points was opener in Kansas City Sept. 4,
Harrison, boasting the state's
- Schottenheimer sald there's no
once-beaten Wheelersburg, fol- wlll start against the Phoenix reason to keep Kosar inactive
only 8-0 record, advanced to third
lowed by Belpre in fourth with 163 Cardinals Sunday at 4 p.m. EDT, any longer.
this week as St. Joseph lost for
and Versailles rounding out the the Browns announced
the second week in a row and
' 'There's nothing to save him
top five .
,
sUpped to seventh.
for at this point," he said. "It lie' s
Wednesday,
Newark Catholic continued the
Minerva moved up two spots to
Cleveland players worked dili- medically ready, there's no reaDivision
·v leader as the top six gently before practice Wednes- son not to play him."
fourth and Uniontown Lake also
teams remained unchanged.
climbed two places In the list into
day on picking up the blitz, a play
Kosar was examined after the
The Green Wave received 22 - that stde)ined their star quarter- Eagles game Sunday by team
the No. 5 position ..
firsts and. 289poll points, followed back for six games.
The only newcomer in the
physician John Bergfeld . He
again by Mogadore with 240,
Division II list was West Geauga,
In the second quarter of the gave the qUarterback the mediDelphos Jefferson with 191, Arch- season opener, someone- no one cal clearance to start against the
which moved from 11th to sixth
bold, Portsmouth Notre Dame is sure who - missed a block1on Cardinals.
after a 28-14 wtri over Chardon,
··
and
Monroeville.
last week's No. 8 team.
Schottenhelmer isn't sure what
bltlzing safety Lloyd Burruss,
TWo newcomers cracked the who slammed into Kosar to force lies ahead for Kosar.
The leaders In the other four
Division
V list this week - Canal an Incomplete pass.
divl,stons remained unchanged,
"I don'l know what to expect,
Winchester
tn ninth and New
but a couple of showdown games
The 6-foot-5, 219-pounder to be honest with you," he said.
Bremen in lOth, both unbeaten,
this week could change things
sprained a ligament in his . "The thing to me that 's impordrastically,
throwing elbow, which precipi- tant is that everybody' should
Cincinnati Princeton, a 20-13
tated a stint on the Injured- worry about doing their job and
overtime winner over Lima
reserve list. Kosar is still on IR, that way we ' ll be . more
Senior Friday night, stayed well
but will be activated later in the efficient."
_ .
AKRON, Ohio (UP I)- Univer- week, said Browns head coach
- out front in Divisio n I, the
Schottenheimer said he wasn't
VIkings holding a 263-229 margin sity of Akron assistant basketball Marty Schottenhelmer.
sure there would be an emotional
over runnerup Sandusky in this Coach Ray Hernan will become
lronjcally, Kosar will ~~ke uplift to Kosar's presence In the
general manager of the Young- Webster Slaughter's place on the lineup.
week's ~cling.
stown Pride of the Wor ld Basket - 47-man roster. Slaughter, the
"I don't see that necessarily
Princeton claime&lt;l 18 first
ball
League, officials said Browns' top receiver, b~oke his happening," he said. "I'm sure
place votes to five for the Blue
left forearm last Sunday against there's a sense of re!ief that
Streaks who advanced from. Wednesday,
Hernan will replace Pride the Eagles.
Bernie Is fine and ready to play.
third to second after Cincinnall
general manager Tom ZawisMoeller's 36-33 loss Friday night
Kosar is convinced opposing To me, from a personal standtowski who will become a broad- teams will blitz .
point, the thing that's gratifying
to Cincinnati Elder.
cast
manager for the ' under
Cleveland St. Ignatius also
"It's only naiural that teams is that he's going to be back under
will test us with some form of it center."
wenfpast Moeller, which fell all 6-foot-5 league.
Zips
head
Coach
Bob
Huggins
Kosar, who complained of a
(blitz) because we screwed tt up
the way to sixth, taking over
sore elbow last wee·k, attributed
third, wlth Warren Western said he ls hoping to have a in the past." he said.
"We're concentrating more on that to the high number ol passes
Reserve going from sixth to replacement !or Huggins by Nov.
1.
the blttz end of it beca!lse we he threw in practice. " ·
fourth and Groveport-Madison
Hernan wlll take over a $1.3 haven.'t been as efncient In it as
"I'm not going to throw as
remaining in fifth. Elder made
million budget with the Pride, we should have been."
much as when I had the good
·
the ltst lor the first time, landing
one of seven teams in the league. _ To help keep BK clean, as the arm," he satd. ''I'm not going to
in seventh.
Other teams are located In offensive linemen like t.o say,
In Division Ill. the Cincinnati
~1~: arm on Wednesdays
Worcester,
Mass .. Chicago, Cal- ·Ko sar may line up in the shotgun,
Academy of Physical Education
and Ironton remained one-two gary, Vancouver, Fresno, Calif. , a formatlon he disdained In the
past.
and will decide the No. 1 spot at and Las Vegas.
Zawistowski said the league
least for the time being Friday
''I'm going to experiment with
hopes to have three more franit
(the shotgun), " he said.
chises by its nex t season which
Kosar said when using the
Clip and Bring
starts In April.
:rhe Daily Sentinel

and bringing. up McGwire . How ·

won this du el, inducing u
pop-out.
Stewart opened the first by
walking Steve Sax on a 3-2 pitch .
After Franklin Stubbs lined to
right - a ball Ca n se~o !ought in
the sun -Sax reached third on
Hatcher's hit -and-run single.
With Davis batting. Terry
Steinbach committed a passed
ball, scoring Sax and advancing
Hatcher. Davis reac hed on an
error by seco nd baseman Glenn
Hubbard , Ha tc her moving to
third. Davis stole seco nd , possibly savi ng a double play when
Stewart deflected John Sh~lb)''s
comebacker for a 1-4-3 putout.
Hat cher scored for a 2-0 lead.
Oakland pulled with in 2·1 in the
bottom Of the inning. I his t imc
with the Dodgers contributing a
passed bal l. Potonia opened with
a single, and advanced when
Sciascia dropped the ball and
couldn'tfind it. Polonla scored on
ground balls by Henderson and
Canseco.

~ 11

th~d

win

Los .Angeles raised the lead to
3-l in the third. Stubbs dotjllled
with one out and. after Ha tcher
!l ied out, Stewart appeared to be
out of, the inning when Davis
ripped a 1iner to short. But Weiss,
who made only one error from

Jutv8 until the e nd of the regu lar
season, nonchalanted the ball. It
landed in left. fleld as Stubbs
scored.
Lansford snapped his 0 for 12
slump in the sixt h, bringing
Oakland within 3-2. Henderson
Jed orr with a single a nd, two outs
later, McCwire wal ked. Lans·
ford then poked a si ngle over
second basema n Sax, scoring
Henderson.

The Dodgers threatened in the
seventh. With one out, Griffin
walked and raced to .third on
Sax's single. Left-bander Greg
Cadare t relieved a nd right·
handed Tracy Woodson bat!A1d
for St ubbs . Sax took off on a 1-2
pitch. !oiling a doubl e play , and
Griffin scored the ins urance r un
on a groundE'r.

BARGAIN MATINEES IAT &amp; IUN
AU. SEATS U.50
ADMISSION fVEM' TUE5DA't
ALL SEATS S2.50

Buchtel holds slim
lead in Division II

Kosar Sunday .starter
for Cleveland Browns

•••

f•••

In ~.

eVe ry afternoon. Monday

Member: Unit ed Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and t he
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�Page-4-1he Daily Sentinel

Hurricanes to start freshman against Bearcats
CORAL GABLES; Fla. !UPI)
A shutrle In the Miami
secondary will .put a true freshman into the starting lineup for
the first time in Jimmy John·
son's five years at Miami.Charles Pharms. 18. will start
at free safety Saturday afternoon
in the Orange Bowl as the
fourth-ranked ' Hurricanes, 4-1,
look ~o start another winning
streak with
victory against
Cinclnnall. Pharms, from James
Madison High in Houston, got the
starting nod when senior Bubba
McDowell was moved from free
safety to cornerback, knocking
Kenny Berry out of the starting
lineup.
Although his collegiate experience consists of five games.
including three contests in which
he got some playing time at free
safety, Pharms talks calmly
about his progress at Miami,
which he attributes to maturity.
"The coaches. always felt I had

a

•

Thursday, October 20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

the talent and everything but
usually when you come from high
school and go Into coUege, there's
a lot of little things you have to
work on," said Pharms. 5-feet-11
and 180 pounds. "Reading the
quarterback, getdrig familiar
with a lot of routes. You make
that adjustment, that's mainly
what 11 is. I've just been doing a
better job of that, which · Is
basicall)l' coming from
maturity."
Other than Pharms' maturity,
the move was dictated by the
upcoming Miami opponents. The
first five teams Miami played
this season were basically running teams that liked to mix in
the pass when possible.
Beginning this week with Cin·
clnnatl, however, the Hurricanes
will be facing teams that m lrror
their own offensive philosophy throw first and use the run to
keep defenses honest. Other

passing teams on the schedule
are Tulsa, Louisiana State and
Brigham Young.
" (Ph arms) has shown signs in
practice that he's going to be a
good free safety for us," Johnson
said. "We fell like now is t~e time
to glvehimachance. We're going
Into a part of our sche.duie now
that a lot of our opponents nave
pass-oriented attacks. So that
was another reason for putting in
Pharms."
As free safety. Pharms will be
responsible for making the coverage calls for the entire defense.
Recognizing the offensive formations and making the correct
coverage call Is the most difficu.It
task facing a free safety, Pharms
said, \!ut learning those responsibilities was easier than he
thought it would be.
''It wasn't hard for me at all,"
Pharms said. "I thought it was
going to be harder than it was. rt
was basically e&amp;sy."

Thursday, October 20. 1988

Weathers says not to
worry over Slaughter injury

at a news conference.
"At the cost of protect tng him,
I believe I sacrificed my marriage," sa id the 23-year-old actress, who filed for divorce from
the 22-year-old Tyson Oct. 7,
citing irreconcilable differences
during their stormy union.
In throwing in the towel on the
marriage. Givens is sacrificing
millions of dollars In what would
have been the divorce settlement, but she said she wanted to
preserve "dignity In our lives. "

The champion is worth about
$50 million, $20 million om from
his last fight June 27 when he
knocked out Michael Spinks.
Weitzman declared victory for
the boxing champion.
"The truth Is, for Mike, this is a
knockou't. I'm just glad to see
they conceded they weren't entitled to anything," he said.
Tyson wlll proceed with his
motion filed In New Jersey for an
annulment of the marriage, said
Weitzman, who reached the
fighter in Venezuela where he Is
attending a World Boxing Association convention.
"He got real excited because of
course he realized It's a win,"
Weitzman said.
In a statement ab&lt;iut Givens
Tuesday, Tyson s.aid, "I still love
her. butshecan' ttakeadvantage
of me.''
Givens lashed out at • the
publicity surrounding her marriage, which the actress described In a recent television
interview as a "llvin_g hell "
because of her husband's depression and violence.
She insisted she married T)lson
for love, not money. '
''Although I did not rise to the
bait, the stories became more
and more outrageous, untrue,
scurrilous and defamatory . We
were n&lt;;&gt;t permitted the dignity of

Scoreboard ...
C.nleld II;

1'7 . Poland 10; Ill. (tk')
Pauldlrll( 1111• PembeniUe Ealilwuod, 9
uch; ZO. (lie) l "ounrstown Ursuline.'
Uclt.lng V.-Jiey and All:roo Manchester, !I

NHL results
NA.TIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wale.; CoDierencl'
Patrie~ IJI~· Wion

GF GA

W L T P ts.
Pltt!thu ~1'1

I
.f

Phllade'lph.IR
I sla nd er~;

Nl'

R~n~r&gt;i
\\'a~iihin~on

Nl'

New J e r !il'y
'

I

0

K

0

R

3

2

I

7

;I

\!

I

1'
4
·I

'!
2

-1
4

0
0

i\du.rn'i Hl vl~lon
~

Ba1110n
Quebt'c

I

2
2

0
0

:l2
21

'!:l
15

""
"' "'
17

19

10
R

:l9
27

lti

26

311

'.!6

HarUonl

,2

4

II

·I

28

:,e;
2i

Ednuuton

a

'2

Vano:;..ltl\f'T

2

I

0
2
:!

GF GA
:u t.a

H

!i

6

1- :t 1
3
\\.-dnesd ~· ·s Re,;lllts
Mon4real ~. llardurd 4

Wtnnpt'JI:

TororMo

.a,

" ,.
:16

:1':

rl
'!4

I!!

:17
29

20
25

BuUu.lu 2

103

6. W11.U~U(1) (7-41)
1. Loulnlllc Aquinas

Bo~lon5, \\' lnRIWII: '!
Cal pry 'l, Mlniii'SOta 1
Edmonton !i, Lor; ,\n~.:les 6
Thun;;(hi,y'K Gumeo
Qutbet a1. Phlladel!ill a. 7: 3ii p.m .
CbicU!III ~tl St . lAIUI!i, 8: 35 p,m .
Friday's Gaml"!''
Montl'l'al at lhalfalo, nl~:hl~
Nl' RMJ;t'NHLt \\ !Vihln~:ton. nll{ht
Torontu at Detroit, nljtht
PH hbu rg !I at J...-tow ·lt•r!OI'y, nl1111l

DI\'ISion V

Mogadore (~) (7-0~

191
141
117
115

8. M~Do.td (7-0)
&amp;. CU.al Mo'lnches1cr iHIJ

75

BaHehllll
\\'arid Srrl~
AnKt'l~

Ill Oakland, !1:39 p.m.

FI. Plme. F11L - S&amp;S,oon

Polnb
263
2~

'213

Wll.l'ren"-' et~lt'rnReoerw ( 7-0)

J.IJ
126

On Motlll'r (&amp;. 1)

108

liO

(6-1)

EuC'IId (i-1)
71
(tie) Toledo Whitmer (6-1)
57
9. Hie) Austintown Fitch tS.l)
:n
Secend te n : II . Dayton Wayne -47; 12.
(lie) Wt!l!'t.enille North ll.fld Urns. Senior,
27 each; If. Trotwooi-Madlson ~0; n.
MlddleOO~ HelcJIIliMidpllrk Iii; Ill . EMI

Berea i: 19 . .0e\'eland Collinwood II: 20.
Clnclnrl'l.tl Withrow 5.
Dl\'llilvn II
Team
PolniM
1. AkronRuclltel (14)(7-0l
'2 13
2. Steubenville (7 ) (7-1)
210
3. Harmon 18-0}
li2
1~

Minerva {7,0)

$. Vlliont-nLaktl (7-0)

IU
lUI

a. Wee I Geauca 111 CH)
'J. Cleve !:11. Joseph ( IJ (&amp;-'!)
!.Fo,.rip(l-1)

&amp;9
86

1. SOlon (I-ll
ID.Cohmbu• Bl'!ee:hcrntt (i-1)

5&amp;
!!I

Seooill

len: II . file) Elida and
Fr•nWIII, 23 eae:h; 13. North Caaltln
Hoo'l'er U; 14. Chardon 11'; 15. Pori•
mouth 10; 11. cambrldre 8: 17. Olmated
Fait. '; 18. (tie) Vounplown South,
Nordo!11a and Kent Kot~~~evell, 5 e~ill.

Division Ill '

Tre~&amp;~~ure

Coast Senior Open
Rocklurd, Ill. -S50,001LPBTHa mmer
Mldwesl Oprn.
Golf
P~~sacoM,

Fh. - ·5-tOO,OOO Pen!IM.t:Oia

[)pro

Hockey
Qucbcr a.t Phlbl.delphla. ·us p.m .
(,'hlc~o at Sl. Louts, II: 35 p.m.
TendM
Tokyo. Japa•- Sii1'7,500Japan Indoor
Men'~!&gt; Chaunplon&amp;hlps
Vlenrw.- $205,ot0men'alnlerrutklnal
tournament

Zurich, Swlturlaftd -

5200,000 Euro-

peWI Indoor Women's GhamploMhlp

Transactions
Basetuill

Cle\'eland Shaw IS; 17. Zi&amp;llt'!'ivllle 9; 18.

.a.

66

Bowun.-

5. Growp011·Madison 0'·01

C1n EIOOr

Mi

Calendar

Ohlu CUPU - Thl!i
weeil's Unltt'd Prt'U lllt ernatlo~ttl Ohio
High School Board ot CoachEI! fooctJWI
mlnRS (WIIh Uri« pla1~ e votes and
wu,..IO!il nH.:o nU In parllntbeseat ;
Dl"lslon 1

6.
i.
it
9.

240

J. Delphos Jelferson ( 1-0)
' · Archhold (ll (1 -0)
~- J'orh l'llolrt&gt; Dame (7-11 )
6. MoiU'OC\'IIIe (2) 17-0)
7. Mlnp ('!) 17-0)

CeRicr 17: 18. 1\rllnrton Ui: lt .Sandu!lk)'

COLUMBUS.

...

Polnt:l
!89

I. Newark Catholic (!~)17 - 0t

St MRTy'11 If; %0 . Beall!!lotlle 12.

Prep Ratings

1. Cln Prlr.:don(li.) (1·0) •
2. Sandusky (SI IH)
J . ae\'l' St ~ lgnllllus (F.) {j-11)

99
11

1$-'ll

II.

l.ui'i

T~IUII

II)

IO .New Rr emMI (7--tl)
U
Set.'O nd len: 11. Middletown Ftnwlck
31: If, Fremod St. Joseph 34; IJ.
Ayen\tlle 31; 14. EIUII Kno• (I) 29 : 15.
Mln!laer 25; 16. VM &amp;ren 111; l'f. Liberty

Ran~rs (i,

WllliNngton 1
Vant.'flllll•f'r -1, NPw ,Jpr*')' 0

1\'Y

l'i . Ver!lllllles (6-1)

t.

26

6

J

009
190
163

21

_o

ft

4

.t

UO

3. Wheelerlibull' (6-1)
4. Belpre Ill {7-0)

Team

~

3

Lo~ An~~:el""

(i-0~

\!. West Jeffel-160n (I) (7-0)

39
29

:1

!-1
31
:!'J

Polnls

I. Cohmbus Academy rnJ

'lli

Buffalo

(:lunpht&gt;ll t :onferenl'••
Nurris Dlvl~kln
WLTPb.
onlo
3 :t 0 10
Detroit
! 2 ~
6
St . Loul~
2 '! I
j
Chlntgo
I 3 I
3
Mlnll'liofll
I 3 I
3
8m)'the Olvi--lun
(' ttl~ry
-1 I 2 10

Division 1'\'

East Palestine (6-1)
55
9. Toronto (i-1)
4lt
IO.Canlon Ce: ntrtll Cai!JOIIC (H )
.U
5eoon:l ten: 11. Bt'lh111e Clear Fork :11;
It Markin EI,Pn %4; 13. (lie ) \hrrn
Kl'n!W!dy and Atwater Wa&amp;erloo, •each:
15. Wellin~ton 17; Iii. Wyomln&amp;: H ; n.
Zant• Trace II; Ill. (tie) Tu!lllarawas
Valley, COIIDlhlana CH:!It1Aew, Colwn btui Hartley , Bucyn&amp;J Wynford IUid
Day ton Jefferson, S each.

20
'! I

1\olontl't'al

II

"""
Tum

Hou,.tun

-

Si~d

lnt'le l~r

Duve

Sll\'csl ri.
Baskethall
O'.t.llw&lt;- Wad"ed ~rd Jerry.lohrn&gt;on.
Golde II Sllllt e - Rele~UWd I(Uilrds Kc&gt;ll h
~mart, Hryan Warrick and To~ White .
Football
'
Atlanta - Sipd dcfen sl\'1' lineman
Ron Mclean.
KIUI!IUI City - SII(Rt!d cornerback
Calvin Low all.
· LA RIUIUI - Announced free ~~afety
Vince New~t~me ill out for du• 1eason with
.a herdated diM .
Miami - Phct&gt; d delen•l"e end John
RoM and kicker Fuadlte"etz o•ln)ul'ld
raerve; llped nOM ptkle Mike Lam-breciM and kh:ker Toll)' Fr . . ldin.
New Enpa.Dd-Actt.atdq..,.lfrback
Tony bon from InJured resene.

a nd co rnerback Terry Williams on
lnjun.•d rftene; ae~~•Tfd jl;'lii.td Adam

3. Orrville (2) P·O)

I~

mingo Bry11n't on wal"er!: slrned line·

4. Akron Hoban flf('T ·O)

116

5. Urbana (7-tl)
8. Akron St . Vlnccnt(l) (IH)

ll3

1. Ct\PE ill) (1-t)

2. lrotton (tl) (H)

"/, Younp&amp;own Mooney (3i-2)
8. BDckere S.ulltiwHti1-0)

91
71

511
t. BeU•Ire f21 (1-tl)
51
tt .• ooln&gt;llle 1I) (1-(1)
43
Second &amp;en: 11- Cam,..eiiMemorla.l :Jt;
12. CoM!I)don .'lt; U. PhUo JS; 14 . St .

Mary•

Memorial 1'7; II. Oraalf 14:

1r.

"I have· never seen a woman
give up this kind of money," said
the divorce lawyer. who said
Givens could have won millions
of dollars In a settlement.
"It is over," he told reporters
who packed his Madison Avenue
office.
He did not say what would

But don't let his confident
camp; his ability to return b&lt;ith
words hide the fact that Pharms
By ROBERTO DIAS
is a hard worker who believes
punts and kickoffs." P.r obably "
U~l Sports Writer
that the only way to make an
CLEVELAND IUPI)- Ouch. -helped. }1/ow , he has -a chance ·to
impression is to work hard every
another injury .for the CleveJosnd show that the Browns' foresight
play of every practice. He said
was clear.
Browns.
Slaughter Is a very· good
that is a phUosophy he picked up
Yet according to Clarence
receiver.
Weathers once was
early on from his fat~er, a
Weathers, losing Webster
thought
to
be. and It is the view
repairman In Houston.
•
Slaughter for eight to 10 weeks
from
here
that
"He wasn't the type of father
he can shake off
beeause of a fractured left
rust
and
contribute,
He has
the
that said 'My son has to play. My
forearm Is nothing to warrant
tp,
since
Bernie
,vill
have
-no
deep
son has to start, ... Pharms said.
concern.
th"reat
save
the
erractlc
Reggie
"He said 'I know if you work hard
When Browns .. Coach Marty
enough and do what you have to
Schotten~elmer named Weath.' Langhorne.
.do, you'll play. If not, you'll have
ers to start In place of Slaugh-ter,
The Browns pass ru.sh: surto work harder.'
the latter's reaction was swift.
prised?
Likewise. Clearly, Ml·
"He's always been like that.
While acknowledging that
chael
Dean
Perry Is making the
He'd come to all my, games. If I
Slaughter Is Cleveland's No. 1
adjustment
to 'the rigors of the
did something right, he'd tell me.
wide receiver. Weathers ays the
has
totaled a teamNFL
as
he
If I did something wrong, he'd let
Browns are not losing much.
leading
-3
¥.,
sacks
and Charles
me know ab&lt;iut that too. He .
He's right. Slaughter did lead
Buchanan
was
nothing
short of
wasn't the type of father who said -the team in receiving yards last
first
sensational
in
playing
hls
'OK you diQ everything great.
year, bl.Jt he is far from being as
NFL
game
In
the
victory
oyer
I'm grateful for that. Ithlnk a lot vital offensive cog as, say,
of my success Is a direct result of quarterback Bernie Kosar . Philadelphia last Sund.ay, notch·
that."
Weathers was supposed to be tng two's.acks and plenty of pass
Cleveland's top wldeout a couple pressure.
Funny thing ab&lt;iut Buchanan:
of years ago, but · a hamstring
Pittsburgh,
which also has gifted
injury and Slaughter's effective
Cleveland
with
the likes of steady
rookie season hampered thO'!€
defensive end-nose tackle Darryl
plans.
"
In time, Weathers found him- Sims, cut the. Tennessee State
become of the couple's $5 mllllon
product during training camp
self in Schottenhelmer's dogmansion In Bernardsville, N.J.
without
giving the 6-foot-3; 255house although neither cares to
Givens was ''unbudgeable"
pounder
much of a look.
and made her decision Tuesday, discuss the point today. Now,
The
Browns
Invited Buchanan
hours before Tyson's attorneys . Weathers wlll be the one poised to
to
play
In
the
replacement
games
were expected to make a settle- contribute as Kosar returns after
(an
offer
Sims
accepted)
but he
missing six games with an elbow
. ment offfer, Felder s.aid.
declined. Instead, he agreed to a
Tyson's lawyers would learn of injury.
1988 contract and spent the
Givens' decision through the
Weathers has been the forgot·
winter maintaining hls readiness
media, he added, saying he did ten man In the offense and barely
until a teg problem cropped up .
not want to give them an held onto a roster spotin training
opport~.nity to claim they "beat .
her down to nothing."
But no offer was in the works,
said Weitzman. ''We did beat her
down to nothing."
He said Givens is trying to
protect her acting career, suggesting that a trial would have .
been damaging.
Givens, an actress on the ABC
sitcom "Head of the Class," was
In Los Angeles, where she has
been since a well publicized bout
with Tyson earlier this month.
Police were called after Tyson
reportedly hurled furniture
through a window of t)leir luxur·
ious home.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Will the real North Gallia
Pirates please stand up!
The Southwestern Highlanders, who will face the Plrates
Friday night in Vinton, aren't
going to know which Pirate team
will show up. Will It be the team
that features a strong rushing
attack led by senior fullback
Felipe Beach, who plck_ed up his
third straight 100-yard game
.against Southern last week? Or
wlll it be a pass-happy Vinton
squad that prefers connections
from quarterback Greg Glassburn to Keith Eleam or Clinton
Kelly?
There's no telling which team
the Highlanders will see. And it
doesn't get any easier when they
get the ball. Will quarterback
Mike Walker see the Pirates that
turned away a tough, passoriented Ross Southeastern
squad at the gates of the end zone
ear lier this season? Or will he see
the Pirates that allowed Symmes
Valley fullbac': Kenny Daniels to"'

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Seventh grade team crushed Oak
Hill 42-0, gridlng out 319 yards In
offense while holding their opponent to a net 15 yards.
The first play from scrimmage
demonstrated the Marauder offensive punch as Kevin Whobrey
galloped 65 yards for the TD and
Joshua Blair added the two point
conversion to give Meigs a quick
8-0 lead with only 14 seco nds gone
in the first quarter.
Oak Hill forced to punt after
three consecutive losses, gave
the Marauders the ball at the Oak
Hill 35.
On their second play from
scrimmage, the Marauder-s
quick strike offense racks up
another 6-polnter on Heath Hudson's 35 yard run with Blair
adding his second extra point of
the night at the 5:16-mark of the
first quarter.
·
Ryan Conde intercepts an Oak
Hill aerial and the Marauders

Bo Smith named
Player of Week
Ohio Wesleyan sophomore Bo
Smith, a 1987 graduate of Gallia
Academy, was named this
week's North Coas t Athletic
Conference's Defensive Player
of the Week.
Smtih, a defensive tackle, led
the Bishop def~nse in a 17-7 win
over Denison last 'Saturday. He
had nine tackles, includ ing seven
solo stops, six tackles for losses,
two quarterback sacks and an
assist on a third sack. He also
forced and recovered a Denison
fumble.
Teammate and fellow sophomore Kirk Jackson, who gradu '
ated with Smith, had 11 tackles
and was second only to defensive
back Chuck -Rose, who had 15.
The Bishops (4·2, 2-1) will host
Wabash Saturday.

Sc h~lher

and

ta lel)' &lt;orne~aclt

r!1te

take over at the opponents 48.
The awesome Marauder offense scored again on their third
play of the game as Eric Wagner
hit Hudson for 48 yards with 4: 08
showing In the first quarter. The
extra point try came up short.
After an Oak Hlll punt. Who.brey's 65 yard touchdown was
wiped out by a penalty. Then 5
plays later, Wagner hlf Hudson
for 55 yards and the TD with 6:14
remaining In the half. The tW\l
pOint conversion was unsuccessful and Meigs led 28-0.
Chad Duncan recovered an.
Oak Hill fumble at the 45 with
time running out In the first half.
Oak Hill starting the second
half, saw Tom Cremeans knock
the ball loose from the QB and
Jake Kennedy recover at the
Marauder 48.
The halftime break recharged
the Marauder offensive and on
their first play Hudson sprinted .
48 yards for the TD ar.d Scott
Gardner addlrig the two pointer
with 5:29 remaining In the third
quarter.
Duncan fell on an Oak Hill
fumble at the 31for his second of3
recoveries on the night.
Tony Davis saved an Oak Hill
TD and one play later Matt Clark
smothered the loose ball at the
Oak Hlll49.
Oak Hill took over on downs at
their own 31. Two plays 't ater
Ronnie Diles recovered for
Meigs at the Oak Hlll16.
Oak Hill again took over on
downs at their own eight yard
line where Jason ·Dellavalle
pounced on the loose ball at the
Oak Hill5.
Scott Gardner punched It In
from 3 yards out to round out the
scoring for the Marauders with
:58 remaining in the game.
The Meigs team, now 4-1 on the
year, travels to North Gallia next
week.

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SVAC standings

SniPper L. .n end Garden product purchased for noncommercial ust that woa recommonded lo Ill your needs by
your prolooolonot Snapper dealer. It you're not 'saltottod

SVAC STANDINGS

with Snapper's perlormonco, return It wlthtn t4 days ol
purchoN lor 1 lull rotund. See your participating Dealer lor
detolto.

(All games)

'VIolt Thttt Dtolere Today lor Snapper Soieo l Sof"flce
NOit: Prtclnt mty 'lfY d~ lo ,,...., tnet dttl., P''P chlrv••·
All DQitft lilted m•r not bl PMtlclpetlnt In 111 ~tomollon•

POMEROY -

•
'

TEAI\f
W L
P
OP
Oak Hill .............. 6 1 197 60
Symmes Valley ... 5 2 188 73
Southwestern ....... 5 2 114 92
Hannan Trace ..... 5 3 132 165
North Gallih .... ... .4 3 128 109
Kyger Creek ........ 2 6 102 .131
Eastern ............... 0 7 32 252
Southern .............. 0 7 31 226
(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L P · OP
Symmes Valley ... 5 0 176 32
Oak Hill .............. 5 0 171 38
Southwestern ... .... 4 1 100 53
Hannan Trace ..... 3 2 95 83
North Gallia ........ 2 3 92 96
ll';yger Creek ........ ] 4 50 118
...lltliuthern .............. O 5 25 145
.l:astern ......... , ..... O 5 13 157
Friday's games
Southwestern at North Gallla
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Southern
Symmes Valley at Oak Hi.ll

l:

the Bobcats' four losses since the'
win over Eastern, they have ]J~n
outscored 121-30.
If that wasn' t bad enough, take
a look at Southern. They are in
the grip of a 16-game losin g
s treak "and don 't seem to s how
any signs of shaking it , In spite of
scoring In double figure~ against 1
Oak Hill lor the first time since
their 56-12 loss to Hannan Tra ce
last year. The Racine squad put
up 12 points in last week's loss to
the Oaks.
This game will be the last home
game for Southern seniors Mike
Amos, Shawn Diddle, Ryan
Evans, Danny Gheen, Kevin
Grueser, Todd Lisle, Matt Lyons,
Mark Porter, Chris Stout , Shannon Slover and Brian Weaver.
Symmes Valley-Oak Hill
Finally the VIkings and the
Oaks, the SVAC's co, leaders, will
bat Ue to see who has the right
stuff to take the league lead. Th e
Oaks will find out if they ca n
contain the league's top rusher in
Daniels, a 5-9. 170-pound sophomore who needs 79 yards to crack
the 1.000-yard mark In con!er-

E'nce games.
The Viking de!ense will have
it s hahds lull with senior fullba c k
Bobby Ward, a 6"0, 182-pound er
-whose 503 ya rds -rushing th is
~eas on have carried him to 11
to uc hdowns. two fewer tha n
Daniel s has. However, the Norseme n in the se.condar y s hould not
b~ s leeping, as OH quarterback ·
To ny Simpson can do more tha n
ha nd off to Ward.
Three teams In top 10
Three of the SVAC's Division V
tea ms - Symmes Va lley ,, Han nan Trace and North Ga llla a re curre ntly In the · top 10 in
Region 19. The Vik ings are
ranked seventh, followed by the
No. 9 Wildcats and No. 10 Pirates.
Other league teams and their
rankin gs Include Southwestern
(13 th ), Kyger Creek (26th!. Eas tern (32nd) and Southern (35th) .
. Oak Hill was ranked seventh In
Division IV. Region 15. behind
Fredericktown , Columbus · Har·
tiey . Tuscarawas Valley ,'Belpre . .
Marion Elgin and top-ranked
Co lumbu s Academ y.

mos t important thing."
Late Wednesday , the Dolphins
placed Bosa and kicker Fuad
Reveiz 1thigh't oh injured re·
ser ve. To replace Bosa. the team
re-signed nose tackle Mike Lambrecht . In additibn, the team also
official iy announced it had
s ig ned placekicker Tony
Franklin.

Mark Malone and sacking him that ," Kumerow said. "I try no I
to worry ab&lt;iu&lt; that. There's
for an 11-yard loss.
Kumerow was a surprise c ho- nothing you can do abOut it..
ice in the first round , and when he . You just have to go ouJ and do
struggled·early there were grum - the best that you can, .make
blings that the Dolphins had yourself happy.
"The first couple weeks were
made another drafting. mistake.
rough,
but right now I'm doing
Recenliy. however. such critics
good,
the
confidence Is up and the
have been hard to find.
team
is
playlr!g
well. That 's the
"I heard a little bit abOut

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'

·Eastern-Han nan Trace
Now that Arch Rose's Eagles
have learned 19 put pplnts on the '
b&lt;iard. they can concentrate on
doing so In double figures.
However, before they do so, th ey
are likely to see themselves on
the short end of ·things · if the
Hannan Trace rushing firm of
Cremeens &amp; Saunders can ret urn
to form after last week's loss .
The Wildcats would be wise not
to look ahead to the season finale
against Symmes Valley , as the
Eagles are geltlng hungri~r by
the week for a win. The Reedsville squad have lost every game .
so far this season and haven't
tasted victory since last year's
season closer against Southern.
This will be the J.asthome game
for Wildcat seniors Scott Caldwell, Mark Chapman, Glen Cline,
Brad Cremeens, Dean Flanery.
Woody Greene, Larry Jarrell,
Terry Martin, Ross McPherson.
Jeff Randolph and Jack Swai n.
Kyger Creek-Soulhern
Mel Coen's Bobcats are In a
slump, They haven ' t seen a win
since the leaves turned colors . In

pass-rushing specialist

he's doing a fine job." Olivadolti
sai d. "He's a good pass rusher.
He' s athletic and he can run
people down . He'sgot that kind of
ability . He knows what it takes
now and he's ivorking hard to get
it done ...
In Sunday's win over San
Diego, Kumerow stopped one
San Diego drive by chasing down

NATIONWISE IS SPONSORING ME,
MOTOR EARL, ON "THE NATIONWISE RADIO WRITE·IN TALK

Urugs
The CBA will test all players
for drugs during training camp
and will institute random· drugtesting during !he season. Any
player testi ng positive will be
removed from the league but
may apply for reinstatement In a
year.

MW.11210M

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 CONDOR STREET
992·2976

Edwards. They held them to 93
yards and collected a gift pass . ln
last week's game, they knew they
had to do the same to Brad
Cremeens and TOdd Saunders.
The Highlander D ~eld that .,air
to 45 yards and picked off two
passes. In short, they knew what
to expect.
North Galli a will have to show
Southwestern as many' looks as
possible on offense and use all the
weapons at Its disposal to keep
the Patriot defense off balance,
in spite of losing center Mike
Lemley to a spinal injury and
wtde receiver Kevin Smith to a
resurrection of an. oi&lt;J knee
injury. Both are out for the
season. In additioq, tackle Walter Loveday suffered a bout with
bronchitis and will not play ·
Friday.
This contest will be the last
home game for Plr~te seniors
Felipe Beach, Keith Eleam .
Steve George, Greg Glassburn.
Mike Lemley, Don Mays. David
Russell, Steve Ratliff, Sam Robinson and Kevln Smith.

• Limit 12

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•.

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"When you come In It's kind of
a rude awakening." Kumerow
said Wednesday. "Practices aren't going as good as you'd hoped
and your confidence level does
drop a lot. It takes a little playing
time and a 1it tie experience to get
your. confidence
back up."
.
The turning point of the young
season came in a meeting with
Shula. Kumerow got a chance to
say he wanted more playing
time, and Shula res ponded by
saying that if Kumerow wanted
to play more •. he w~uld ~ave to
prove he was ready m practice.
"When the practices looked
better, we got him Into the
games, .. Shula said.
With his success rushing the
passer and the Dolphins on a
three-game winning streak head ing into Sunday's game with the
New York Jets, life in the NFL
suddenly is .quite rosy for
•
Kumerow:
" I'm pretty happy with what's
been going on.'' he said. "A
couple weeks ago I g9t a chance
to play in the 46 defense along
with some special teams and

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• 21" aelf.propelled
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merow on passing downs.

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MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

CARRIER NEEDED FOR
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hacker Stevt' Hammond .
Huckt!'.r
Pltt!lflu rth AssiJD~d riKbt winK
Pf!rry Gaal:har to , .,uskel(ln of the
Internatloral Hockey Lupe.
~ wastlinJion Aqu:lred defen!leman
Roh Wlu.Ue from St. Loull for a
co rdlkllltl llxtb-ro•nd dralt pick and
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htrita_gt hou$t~ ..

Toledo race results
TOLEDO, Ohio tUP!)
James Bailey guided Shapes to a
1 % length vjctory over Cabillito
In the featured lOth race Wednesday night at Raceway Park.
Win Willie finished third.
The winner covered the mile in
2:00 4-5 and returned $6.60, $5.20
. and $4.20.
The 2-3 dally double combination of Fancy Oregon and Ace Hy
Straight paid $78.60.
A crowd of 1.547 wagered
$164,297.

I

N.2ND

wound up making a couple plays.
I'm just hoping that things keep
going. I still have a long way to go
and I've got to keep working
hard ."
Defensive coordinator 'Tom
Olivadotti said Kumerow is one
of many reasons for the Dolphins' Improved play this year.
"In our nickel defense I think

MIAMI iUPI) - One month
ago Eric Kumerow stood on the
sidelines in street clothes and
watched his teammates beat the
c:;reen Bay P.ackers.
Kumerow had two dislocated
fingers, a sprained ankle, and
had already experienced a season' s worth of frustrations. To
say the rookie defensive end
from Ohio State was discouraged
would .be like sayipg Mike Tyson
and Robin Givens have had a few
marital misunderstandings.
"He hit bot{om ab&lt;iut "(four)
weeks ago wh~n everything
seemed to be going negative for
him ," Miami coach Don Shula
said of Kumerow, the team's
first-round draft pick.
Since then, however, a re-'
newed enthusiasm for practice
and some hard work have turned
Kumerow i'nto &amp; pass rushing
specialist. Playing mostly in
passing situations, Kumerow has
one sack in each of Miami' s last
three games - all wins - and
will be counted on to keep up the
heat on opposing passers now
that end John Bosa is out for the
year with a knee injury.
The Dolphins wlll replace Bosa
with the combination of Jackie
Cline on base defense and Ku-

CHRISTMAS

I

rush for 191 yards and four
touchdowns?
The solution seems simple give the ball to fullback Josh
Halslop. The 5-9, 157-pound junior tore through Hannan Trace's
defense for 221 yards and scored
three touchdowns to pace his
mates to a 33-0·win over highly
favored Hannan Trace last week.
Halslop's rushing In that game
put him two yards short of this
year's SVAC season-high rushing
mark set by Daniels against
Southern: But In case the Highlanders think they can rack up an
easy win after winning their last--four games, they should remember that one· never- knows
what Gregg Deel's Bucs have up
their sleeves.
. Be certain of this- Southwestern skipper Jack James and his
young guns will have a tougher
fight on their hands than anything they've seen this year. In
their upset win over Kyger Creek
they knew their defense had to
contai n the tough backfield tandem Of John Sipple and Joey

Ex-Buckeye bounces back,

LAYAWAY NOW FOR

Meigs seventh graders post
42-0 win over Oak Hill team

NY Jets- Placed pard Ted B1tnlalor

Pnlnl$
2!3
188

Tum

deallng with our private problems, " she said.
''I never married Michael for
money, " she said. "Therefore,
this represents no loss for me
other than the loss of my husband
and the effec:;t this whole situation
has had on both our lives. I wish
him welL"
Givens' attorney, Raoul
Felder, said there were "no
hidden meanings and no hidden
agendas" be hind her decision.
She will drop her court action
and not contest Tyson's divorce
request. he said, adding that
court papers could be filed for a
no-fault divorce in California
next week.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Highlanders to -face tricky North· Gallia squad Friday

Givens says she doosn't want Tyson's
money
·.
.

NEW YORK iUPI)- Lawyers
for bOxing champ Mike Tyson
claimed "a knockout" In the
legal fight with Robin Givens as
the actress announced she will
walk away from the celebrated
marriage without seeking a
penny of Tyson's millions. ·
''Hopefully; she'll live up to her
word," Tyson's lawyer, Howard
Weitzman, said in Los Angeles
Wednesday. "We beat her down
to nothing."
Givens announced Wednesday
she will grant her husband of
eight months a divorce and not
seek any money from him.
"I will not seek nor accept any
money for myself. J never
wanted anything but what was
best for Michael, to protect
Michael and to preserve my
marriage," Givens said in a
statement Issued by her lawyer

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'

Thupday. October 20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 1988

·'~ Ednionton ·Oilers trip Los Angeles Kings
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Edm9nton fans gave
Wayne Gretzky a warm receplion in his return as a member of
the Los Angeles Kings . The
Oilers weren.'t as generous on the
Ice.
Mark Messier scored two goals
andthe0ilersconvertedon8of21
shots Wednesday night, spoiling
the return of Gretzky as the
Oilers took an 8-6 victory.
Gretzky. who was traded from
Edmonton to Los 1Angeles In
August, received a . five-minute
standing ovation during the pregame skate-around 1at the Northlands Coliseum. Tne crowd of
17,503, an Oiler~ record with the
addition of one seat for the
occasion, stopped cheering only
after the prblic-address announcer persisted In announcing
the start or the national anthems.
"I wanted to cheer too," said
~llers' co-coach John Muckier.
Wayne meant a great deal to
this organizaliOIJ. It was great.
The crowd cheered for Wayne

....
GRETZKY CHASED - Wayne Gretzky olthe Los Angeles Kings
Is chased by Edmonton Oiler Esa Tlkkanen (10) during the first
,period of their game in Edmonton Wedmisd~&amp;y night. This WaS
_Gretzky 's first game in Edmonton with his new team. (REUTER)

This week's grid picks
By CHARLffi McCARTHY
. ina 13
UPI Sports Writer.
Clemson I minus 7) over North
. Indiana 1plus 7) over Michigan
Carolina State - Wolfpack, who
--: Who would have imagined
lead nation In tot11l defense and
Indiana and Illinois leading the
are second with 75.7 rushing
Big Ten midway through the
yards allowed per game, will
season? Hoosiers, 5-0·1, are sevsuccumb to the Tigers' aerial
enth iii nation with 293.3 rushing
attaack.
·
yards per game, thanks mainly
Clemson 28, North Carolina
to Anthony Thompson. The naState 17
tiDn's -second-leading rusher has
Midwest
run for 964 yards (5.2 per carry)
Illinois (plus 1) over Michigan
and 17 touchpowns.
State- Illlni, stilllongshots for a
..Wolverines, 3-2-1, are 6 points
trip to the Rose Bowl, will slip
from possible No. 1 ranking.
past Spartans.
(They lost to Notre Dame by 2
Illinois 24, Michigan State 20
points, to Miami by 1 and tied
Northwestern (minus 1) over
Iowa).
Wisconsin - A game only the
, Indiana beat Michigan last
players' parents will care about;
year 14-:0 at Bloommington,
teams are a combined 0-11 -1.
Ind., but Wolverines hold 35-9
Northwestern 21, Wisconsin 16
overall edge.
Southwest
Houston (even) over Arkansas
Wolverines always tough
against the run so quarterback
-The Razorbacks lead nation in
Dave Schnell must provide the
rushing defense (allowing just 75
Hoosiers with needed air sup- . yards a game) but Cougars, with
pert. But how much? Probably
home-field edge, have run-and·
not enough.
shoot passing attack that averMichigan 19. Indiana 17
ages 388.8 passing yards a game.
•.
East
Houston 31, Arkansas 24
: Penn (minus81-2) over YaleOklahoma State (minus 21)
Quakers averagfng 27. 6 ppg
over Missouri - The Cowboys
~hould be too powerful for Elis,
(48.6 ppg) lost to Nebraska by 21
averaging 14.6 ppg.
points but still managed to score
Penn 30, Yale 14
42; Tigers' D will be declawed.
Dartmouth (plus 7) over CorOklahoma State 51, Missouri 21
nell- Big Green coming off 38-7
West
des !ruction of Harvard; Big Red,
Arizona (plus91-2) over UCLA
coming off 35-0 romp over
- Wildcats, lOth In nation with
Winless Brown, scored no more
274.5 rushing yards a game,
¢an 19 points in each of first four
should hold ball long enough to
games.
scare top-ranked Bruins.
UCLA 27 ,'Arizona 24
Dartmouth 24. Cornell 21
1
Washington State lmlnus 12
South
: Georgia Te.ch !minus 5 1'·2) 1-21 over Arizona · State - Cou:
over North Carolina - Yellow gars defense was exploited last
:Jackets stingy D second in nation week by Arizona - this week the
;tgalnst the pass 1105 YPG): 0-6 offense atones.
Washington State 34, Arizona
Tar Heels can take comfort in the
fact basketball pract i_re has State 20
Last week: 74
·started.
Season: 35-36
' Georgia Tech 27. North Carol·

TVC STANDINGS
(All games)
:TEA,M
W L
P
'Belpre .. ,............ .. ? 0 167
.,Meigs
. ................. .5 2 158
'r!'rtrnble ... ..... ... .. .. 5 3 107
:Nelsonville ......... .4 3 92
:Vinton Co. ··-r-- .. ..4 3 66
Wellston .. ... .. .. ..... 2 5 123
:Alexander .. ... .... ..l 6 · 39
'Fed. Hocking . ...... 1 i
87
:Mi Here ... ........... .. .l 7 53
(TVC Only)
:J'EAM
W L
P
flelpre .... .... ....... .7 0 167
Meigs .. .. ..... .. ..... ..5 1 148
!'lelsonvitle ....... .. .4 2 92
Vinton Co . .......... .4 2 66
Trimble ... .. .. ., .. .... 4 3 101
Wellston ... ..... ..... . 2 4 114
Alexander .. .. ..... .. ) 5 33
)"ed. Hocking ...... .1 6 75

~ulls

OP
20
100
82
112
65
133
188
171
145
OP
20
50
67
43

82
120
174
158

post first win

• COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPII Michael Jordan scored live of his
29 points in the final two minutes
Wednesday night lo help the
Chicago Bulls register their first
J'IBA exhibition win oft he season.
s 105-100 decision over the New
.)ersey Nets.
·
· Jordan also had five rebounds
and seven assists in· the Bulls'
ihlrd exhibition game of the year.
Horace Grant added 16 points,
.l'ohn Paxson had 12 and Brad
Sellers contributed l1 points and
six rebounds for Chicago.
: Chris Morris led the Nets, also
J-2, with 21 points, while rookie
Tim McCormick and Buck Willi·
ams had 16 each for the Nets, who
I,ed 54-53 at halftime. Williams
also had a game-high nine
rebounds. Roy Hinson added 15
points and John Bagley had 10
assists for New Jersey.
A crowd of 10,815 attended the
game at St. John Arena on the
Ohio State University campus.

Sheets Jaycee
player of week
Meigs Marauder Jared Sheets
w'as honored by the Meigs County
J~ycees as its Player of the
Week.
Sheets, a 6-1, 196-pound senior
guard/ linebacker, was recognized for his play in last wee~'s
50-10 loss to Waverly.

Reynolds ·hopes to play for Cleveland .
CLEVELAND IUPI) -Butch'
Reynolds, the world record
holder In the 400 meters, plans to
play football for the Cleveland
Browns, saying he can help them
win the Super Bowl, buttheteam
has ruled out. Reynolds playing
this year.
"Competing In two sports,
that's the challenge for me,"
Reynolds told The Cleveland
Plain Dealer in a story published
Wednesday. "I believe I can be
the one to help them get that
Super Bowl ring."
The newspaper said the
Browns wUl offer the Akron
native a contract that wm allow
him the option of time off to
compete In the 1992 Olympics in

Spain.
"He has an interest and we
have an Interest," ErnleAccorsl,
executive vice president of the
Browns, said In response to the
story. "(But) this year Is out of
the question."
Reynolds, 24, ran the anchor
leg tor the u.s. 4 x 400-meter
relay team that won the gold
medal in Seoul and tied a
' 20-year-old world record. He also
won a s1lver medal In the 400
meters but has said he wants to
chance to win an Olympic gold
medal in the individual event.
"Our attitude Is that we ·will
cooperate with his ambitions In
track," Accorsi said.
Reynolds said before playing

Harper says this is his second season

I

TVC standings

but a!so for the guys in the home . turned out the way they wanted It
shirts."
to, which Is nice.,
Gretzky was not on the Ice for
the start of the game, and the
Seven Edmonton players
crowd chanted ' 'Gretzky,
scored goals, with Messler scor-'
Gretzky, Gretzky," until he aclng twice In the second period. He
knowledged them from the bench
scored a shorthanded goal at 3:40
with a wave.
of the period and added one at
"I was nervous and r ·m happy
14:01 to put Edmonton up 6-3.
it's over and I'm sure they (the
"Messler's a great player ,"
Oilers) are. too," Gretzky said.
Gretzky said. "I wish he was for
· The Oilers kept Gretzky In
sale."
check for most of the game,
In other games, Vancouver
holding their former teammate
blanked New Jersey 4-0, Mont- •
to two assists as they hounded
real nipped Hartford 5-4, Toronto
him each time he took lire Ice.
defeated Buffalo 4-2, the New
"After the game I'll be friendly
York Rangers upended Washingwith him, but inside the rink
ton 5-1. Boston thumped Winwe're tigers," said Esa Tlknlpeg 5-2 and Calgary edged
kanen, who drew the main
Minnesota 2·1.
as!llgnment against Gretzky.
- Canucks 4, Devils 0
At East Rutherford, N.J., Kirk
The Oilers also swarmed oftenslvely. scoring on two of their
McLean stopped 28 shots for his
first four shots and turning the
second career shutout as Vanfans' allegiance back to the home
couver ended a three-game losteam.
·
lng streak. Rich Sutter, David
"Obviously, we're not going to
Bruce, Tony Tantl and Petri
win anything If we glveupelght
Skrlko scored for Vancouver ,
or . nine goals," Gretzl\y said.
which handed New Jersey Its
"But for the Edmonton people It
third straight loss.

Miller ..................0 6 40 136
October 21 games:
Bel pre at Meigs
Miller at Wellston
Alexander at Federal-Hocking
Nels-York at Vinton County
Trimble - Open

RICHFIELD, Ohio IUP I)- In
the Cleveland Cavaliers' media
guide, Ron Harper Is listed as a
third-year guard. But Harper
says that's wrong.
"Second year," Harper said.
"Last year doesn't count. It was
a lost season."
After averaging 22.9 points a
game as a rookie, the 6-foot-6
guard was being called a future
superstar.
Indiana's Chuck Person was
voted the NBA Rookie of the
Year, but It was Harper who
many people believed had the
most potential. Person would be
good for a long time; Harper •
could one day be great.
The natural progression, of
course, would l;&gt;e ·a sophomore
season that bettered his first
campaign. It might have been,
were it not for Tyrone Corbin's
foot. In the second game of the
season, Harper went up for a
loose ball, came down on Corbin
and severely sprained his left
ankle.
·
"It was very frustrating,"
Harper said. "I played four years
of college and four yeats of high

school and never got hurt. Being
out half the season didn't help me
at all. It played a mind game on

me."
In the record books, itwlllshow
that Harper missed 24 games. In
reality, he missed much more.
"I only played one and a half
games healthy," said Harper,
who finished his second season
with a 15.4 scoring average.
"After that I was hurt even when
I played. .
"When I came back, (Larry)
Nance and Mike Sanders were
here, and Brad' (Daugherty) and
(Mark) Price were playing

goOO."

football he wants to add about 15
pounds to his 6-foot-3 frame.
"I'm not saying I can take the
contact right now," said Reynolds, who has not played football since high school. "! know
my body can't withstand It at 175
pounds. I nee() to do my weight
work and build up. Then, I'll pray
to hold on through the first three
or four games. I get those under
my belt, I ought to be OK."
Reynolds said he led Akron city
schools In catches and yards per
catch at Hoban High School, and
the Browns were Impressed with
the size of his hands.
"We don't know whether
they're soft or not," Accorsl said.
"But they're a basketball player's hands. Youhaveltlikethat."
His world record In the 400
meters Is 43.29 S&lt;;"conds, and he
believes he can run40yardsln4.3
or 4.2.
''The Browns already have two
of the best running backs, 1,000·
yard men (Kevin Mack and
Earnest Byner) In the league,"
Reynolds said. " They have a
great medium threat In Webster
Slaughter. I could give them the
deep threat. With me out there,
they can't double cover
everybody.
"I really like Bernie Kosar. I
liked the way, the first game he
played (In 1985) when (Gary)
Danielson got hurt years ago, he
came In and started gojng for tt.
That's my style of ball."

Canadiens 5, Whalers 4
At Montreal, · Mike Lalor
scored with 100 seconds left to
give the CanadJens the vlctQfy ,
Lalor took a pass from the far
side of the net by Claude Lemieux
and banged In the game-winner.
Hartford's Ray Ferraro had tied
the game 4-4 at 6:15 of the third
when he scored on a rebound.
Maple Leafs 4, Sabres 2
At Toronto, Ed Olczyk scored
twice and Ken Wregget made 37
saves to lead the Maple ·Leafs.
Olczyk scored the go-ahead goal
on a power play with 28 seconds
left In the second period, and
added an empty-net goal with
eight seconds left In the game.
Rangers 5, Capitals 1
At New · York, Brian Mullen
broke a season-long scoring
drought with his first three goals
of the · season. Brian . Lawton
produced his first goal as a
Ranger and added two assists.
Washington lost for the first time
totheRangersinNewYorkafter
Iive straight triumphs , dating
back to Feb. 4, 1987.
·
Bruins 5, Jets 2
At Winnipeg, Manitoba, Glen
Wesley and Steve Kasper broke
open a close game with third·
period goals 10 seconds apart.
Wesley scored a power-play goal
on a low shot from the point at
1:36 of the third. Ten seconds
later, Kasper was along In front
of the net and beat goaltender
Alain Chevrier,
Flames 2, North Stars 1
At Calgary, Alberta, Doug
Gilmour ·and Joe Nleuwendyk
scored less than two minutes
apart midway through the openIng period as the Flames won
their fourth straight. All the
goals were scored in the opening
period, as BasU McRae gave
Minnesota a 1-0 lead before
Gilmour and Nieuwendyk
scored.

PUBLIC NOTICE
~NOTICE is hereby given that'.
on Saturday, October 22, 1988,
at 10:00 a.m .. a public sala will
be hold at 105 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy. Ohio, to sell for cash
the following collateral:
1986 Ford PU 4X4, SS #1 FTEF26H3FNA34734
19n
Ford Pickup, SS
jlf10HNX95307
The Farmers Bank and Savings

Compony, Pomeroy, Ohio, reoerv.. tha right to bid at thil aale.
and to withdraw the above colla~
tarat prior to •ale. Further, The
Farmers Bank and Savings Com·

pany reaerves the right to reject
any or 111 bids submitted.

Funher, tho obove coltateral
will be sold in the condition it i1
in with no expre1sed or implied
warr1ntia1 given.

·~"MILLER

ANNUAL

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I '

I

By LINDA WARREN

JUDGE SHOT- Photos (L-R) of Grand Ra'plds
poHce officer Clarence RaiHII, 51, the suspect in
.

1220 Wa1hlngton -Blvd .• Belpre. Ohio
FREE SET·W
DEUVERY WITJDN 100

the kUling of hb wife, 61st District Court Judge
Carol Iro118 41 In her court chambers Wednesday. UPI ' '
.
·

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (UPI)
- A judge shot to death In her
chambers, allegedly by her es!ranged husband, ·a 21-year police veteran, apparently had no
warning of trouble until faced
with the ·drawn gun that killed
her.
District Judge Carol. Irons
pushed a paniC button Wednesday In her chambers in the Hall of
Justice and toldpolicewhocalled
that her husband had drawn his
gun and was holding It to her
head. Moments later, three effieers found Irons, 40, stumbling out
of the office clutching her throat
and crying, "Please help me."
Irons died in her courtroom.

where she was taken by officers
who had rushed to help her, said
Police Chief William Hegarty.
An arraignment on an open
murder charge was expected
today for Clarence Ratliff, 51, a
former · detective recently assigned to night patrol.
Hegarty said Ratliff followed
his wife of four year~ out of the
chambers and fired two or three
more. shots from a 9mm pistol.
After Ratliff ducked back Into the
chambers, Hegarty. said Irons
was moved Into a courtroom
where emergency efforts to save
her failed.
As police prepared to negotiate
with Ratliff, he yelled through
the door: "I'm coming out."
·"Put your hands up," the
. officers yelled back.

Third
officer
shot
in
battle
again
_
st
drugs
af~~ i;~~ ~i~th:~a~icr:',~~~~
--.

Ratliff walked out wltll hands
·
taiS&lt;;"d and surrendered quietly.
left the suspect dead and one three Dominicans as he sat with
Buczek, 24 . On Wednesday, au."When she told me she was
agent with a bullet crease to his
thoritles charged two men with filing for divorce, she mentioned
them In a car parked In the
head and gunshot wound in the
Bu'!lhwlck section or Brooklyn,
murder, one in e~ch of the she thought the worst of It was
leg, authorities said.
said Special Agent Robert slaylngs.
.
over ·and thought It would be
After the second officer was
Strang, a DEA spokesman.
Hoban, fatally wounded during much easier from then on," said
kllled, Mayor Edward Koch and
When the three men showed
the und~~cover cocaine "buy- . Chief 6lst Distrlot Judge Donald
New York Police Commissioner
the undercover agent the co·
and-bust operation, and Hue- Johnston who married the two
Benjamin Ward belittled Reacaine, he signaled his back-up zek, who was shot In a crack· outside the Hall of Justice. "But
gan's so-called war on drugs,
unit of about 10 agents and pollee I n r e s t e d M a n h a t t a n there were no Indications that
charging the president failed to
officers. As au-thorities moved in,
neighborhood , were the sixth and there was any violence In their
back police despite a barrage or
one of the suspects leaped from
seventh city policemen to die on marriage or that she was fearful .
rhetoric.
the car and ran toward a nearby duty this year.
of him "
"I wouldn't call this a 'war on
building, Strang said.
Authorities charged Elbln RoThe · couple had no children
drugs,"' Ward said Wednesday.
The suspect shot the under- berto Pena Peralta, 27, New together though Ratliff has
"That's a misnomer. I don't
cover agent' and then pointed his York, wlth first-degree murder children ' from a: previous marthink we ought to call it that until
gun at the other agents, who shot and second-degree attempted
riage. It was the second mar·
we really declare a war.
· and killed him, Strang said.
murder In Buczek's killing, and
riage for both.
·
"I hope whoever wins this
The wounded agent was listed were seeking . another unldentl"
Kent County Circuit Judge
(presidential) election will dein stable condition at Wyckoff fled man who they believe fired
George Buth who was presiding
clare a war," Ward added.
Hospital In Brooklyn, Strang the fatal shots.
over the dl~orce, said the proWhile Koch applauded the
said. Another agent suffered a
Authorities also c.harged"Flaceedings were complete except
"great courage" shown by pominor Injury to his hand during vloProphete, 49, New York, with • for-a
settlement.
llee, he said that "they are not
the Incident .
second-degree murder In HoPolice, meanwhile, intensified ban's killing and were searching
being supported by the president,
the search for additional sus- · for a Dominican, Blenvenldo
no matter what he"Says."
The unidentified DEA agent pi'cts In the Tuesday night Cast1IIo, 24, New York, as a
shot Wednesday was allegedly
slaylngs of Officer Chrlstoph~r suspected accomplice in the
buying a kilo of cocaine from a
Hoban, 26, and Officer Michael killing.

By WILLIAM K. RASHBAUM
NEW YORK tUPli ~ A
•federal drug agent waas
wounded In a cocaine deal gone
sour, becoming the third law
enforcement officer gunned
down in the city In 24 hours.
The brief, frenzied Brooklyn
gunbattle late Wednesday came
as pollee stepped up the search
for suspects In the upper Manhattan slaylngs of two pollee officers
- one shot to death during a
"buy-an«;t-bust" operation .· and
the other killed hours later in an
·unrelated shooting pollee suspect
was also drug-related.
The killings apparently were
the first time In about 40 years
that two officers died In separate
slaylngs on the same night,
pollee said.
The shootout Wednesday between federafDrug Enforcement
Administration agents, city and
state pollee of the New York
Qrug Enforce_m ent ·Task_. Force
'lind a Dominican cocaine dealer

.

'

=---------------

Bible teaching,
.

l~arning

available In February, will be
able to call up passages from the
Bible In either the King James or
ATLANTA (UP!) - Bible
the New International versions.
students who are also computer
They can call up the ·same
buffs will soon have a new gadget
passage
on a dual screen to
to help them study the scriptures.
compare
.the two translations
Frank Larkins of Georgia
and
even
make notes on an
State University introduced a
electronic
scratch
pad.
p~ototype Wednesday of the
· But Larkins said the computer
Computer Bible, which he patuser
will only be able to make
ented In 1986 as the Electronic
changes
In t]je note pad por!#Pn of
Reference Book.
the vjdeo display, not the scripture portion. He said the RevelaIff_#~
tion or John, the last book of the
..-,.
..
r New Testament, contains an
explicit prohibition against
changing the words of the Bible.
"One of the things I Insisted
upon was that there must be an
. Inability to change the integrity
the word as It was translated,"
tf ·or
Larkins said. "You can cut and
paste or add to the notepad, but
you cannot change the scripture
itself."
Larkins said the Computer
Bible wlll appeal Initially io
clergymen preparing s~rmons
and seminarians studying the
Bible. But he said the concept
will be useful later to scripture
scholars and Interested lay
people.
Larkins, assistant director of
cooperative education at Georgia State, said the Idea of putting
the Bible on microchip came to
him while he was--attending a
If church service In 1977.
"The minister was saying
l
! something about the ab1Uty to
I'
t press a button and change the
direction of a satellite anywhere
)n the world, and I thought , If you
HI-TECH BWLE - Frank Larkins, an official at Georgia Stale
can mass communicate from one
University, demonstrates a new computer Bible Wednesday which
he developed containing two translations of the old and new ~ continent to another by pressing
testaments plus a concordance and an alphabetized list of · a button, then why couldn't you
do something like that with the
Important words used In the Bible. When it becomes available In
February 1989, the portable battery-operated unit will sell for
Bible.
0
"It's the equivalent of the
about $485. UPI

r

.._

Model-T Ford now, but I think 'a
will be a sleek, streamlined and
very usable part of the truly
electronic church of the future,"
Larkins said.
The estimated cost of the
Computer Bible Is $485.
Larkins said the unit eventu·
ally will have all the major
English translations of the Bible.
including the Revised Standard
Version, New American and New ·
Jerusalem.

We're Openl

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

takes computer jump

The Computer Bible Is a
portable, battery-operated unit
that weighs about 4 pounds. It
comes with a 65-character keyboard, liquid crystal display and
a 16K word processor.
The unit also has a computerIzed concordance, an. alphabet·
!zed list of selected words used In
the Bible as well as-notes on how
to find the particular passages.
Users of the system, to be

By STAN DARDEN

-

,. ..

Josef Soper, 61st District Court
administrator, said Irons had
told colleagues that she and
Ratliff "had agreed to &lt;!lsagree
and that they would be friends."
Lt. Vic Gillis said that Ratliff
arrived shortly after noon to keep
his lunch date with Irons. He was
expected by court personnel who
let him In through a locked
security door and ushered 1hlm
down a corridor Into her
chambers at the end of a hall.
"Unfortunately, this kind pf
hostility Is often hid deep Inside
an Individual," Gillis said.
"No security In the world could
have stopped something like
this," Soper said. "Anybody on
· our staff would have let ltlm ln.''
The couple had · flied for divorce In June and RatHff was
living·in a cottage the two owned
north of Grand Rapids.
Stunned court personnel and
other workers In the Hall of
Justice, which also houses pollee
headquarters, met with . a psychologist after the outburst.
''Several of the employees are
just totally broken down," John- ·
ston said. "Just two or three
minutes before she was shot she
was in my office going over
scheduling. It Is just bizarre."
One woman fell to the floor in
the lobby, where she had been
standing with co-workers, weeping. Several women were eseorted from the court offices,
many with dazed looks and
tear-stai ned faces.
Irons, a former prosecutor,
was elected the county's first ·
woman district judge In 1982 and
was running unopposed on the
Nov. 8 ballot.

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)

Judge to interprete Perot agreement
·

•FREE COFFEE •FREE PEPSI® •FREE DONUTS

CHAPMAN
SHOES
NExt 1\ELIEIFELDS I_N POMEROY

Judge shot to death in court
estranged·_husband suspected

.

~- ~~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

By LORI K. WEINRAUB
established when he wpn a ness take Its course," he said.
.
~ $500,000 no-bid contract from the. • ·· Alberthal acknowledged the
U.S. Postal Servicetostudyways company is doing well finan·
FAIRFAX, va. (UP!) - A
lawsuit pitting billionaire bustto cut GOSts through advanced clally and Is expected to have a
data processing.
record year but said he Is
nessman H. Ross Perot against
the successful computer com·
concerned about the "emotional
pany he founded hinges on whose
Under the agreement, written
play" on employees and
Interpretation of a non-compete
when Perot severed ties with the customers. ·
agreement a judge rules is
auto giant In December 1986 for
Perot testified he told EDS
correct.
$700 million, Perot could not offlclalshehadtherlghttostarta
Fairfax County Circuit Court compete with EDS "for a profit" · newcompanyandmentionedltln
Judge William Plummer said he or hire Its employees for such
numerous speeches and news
would decide today, after closing work, although he could hire
conferences.
arguments by each side, whether workers after 18 months for
The outspoken Texas phllanPerot violated an agreement philanthropic work.
throplst, notedforhlscrltlclsmof
prohibiting hllfl from running· a .
EDS executives tes tifled durGM and the daring rescue of two
competitive, profit-making comlng the three day,_trialln.Falrfax
EDS employees held hostage In ·
pany by starting a new computer
County Circuit Court that Perot 1979, said his company Intends to
company In June.
violated the agreement and hurt
start doing work for profit after
Perot, who rounded Electronic efforts to create a separate
the three-year period Is up.
Data Systems Corp. In 1962 and · identity for the company. They
The postal contract was sussold It to General Motors In 1984 said VIenna-based Perot Syspended after EDS and other
lor $2.5 bUllon, said he believed terns is trying to steal business
companies complained that It
he had the right to start a new · away.
violated federal procurement
company so tong as he did not run
Lester Alber thai Jr., president
guidelines.
It for profit until the agreement of EDS, said Perot should be
The contract would have guaexptred In December 1989.
ordered to abide by the agreeranteed Perot Systems would be
Perot testified Wednesday that ment and prohibited from doing
the company that did the work, _a
"nobody ever raised a single business until ,the three-year
deal potentially worth hundreds
question" abouthlsplans to start period Is up.
of millions of dollars II the
Perot Systems Corp., which was
''All we're saylng•ls llve up to
recommend a tlon s were
·
the contract and let competitiveaccepted.

© 1!118 American Electtic.,

'

�Thursday, October 20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page · 8-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

--.

..,.,-

Thursday. October 20, 1988
- -- - -· ~
Pag'!-9_

~

Durst birthday

TRAPPED - Bihy Adams of B!U'row reaches
out Tuesday to touch the snout of one of three
•

Callforpla gray whales trapped by Ice north of
Alaska. UPI

88 CADILUC SEDAN DEVILLE

Rescue barge heads toward
trapped California whales~
By JEFF BERLINER
BARROW, Alaska tUPI)
Experts mounting an unprece·
dented effort to rescue three
California gray whales trapped
near ly two weeks in the pack ice
off northern Alaska said they
were hopeful the giant mammals
could be saved.
The rescue operation was
scheduled to resume at daybreak
today with Alaska's biggest
helicopter flying out to a huge
icebreaking barge that It began
towing out of the giant oll
complex at Prudhoe Bay on
Wednesday on the first and
often-delayed leg of the 200-mile
trip to where the whales are
trapped.
.
The oil company barge designed to hover off the ice and
b,reak it up into slush with 185
tons of downward force gener·
ated by its 8,000 horsepower
diesel engines - made only
about 5 miles on Wednesday .
Ol!icials said it has another

DARK BLUE

MowSl

extremely slow 5 miles to go appeared In good condition, said
before It clears the harbor area Ron Morris, coordinator for the
and makes the Beaufort Sea, National Oceanic and Atmos·
where It can reach speeds that pherlc' Administration fisheries
service. ·
could get It to Barrow In a day.
''They still look quite vigor·
National Guard spokeswoman
Sheryl Deveau said the toughest ous," Morris said. ''There has
part of the trip was that first 10 been a change for the good In
miles, · a shallow area with an their behavior and the way they
uneven sandy bottom and a are resting."
Local reslde.n ts used chain·
covering of "brittle old ice."
saws
and :picks to chop two new
"We feel very positive we're
holes for the whales
breathing
going to get through it," she said.
late
Tuesday
and volunteers
The whales were trapped bewidened
them
and
two original
neath two openings In the shifting
openings
Wednesday.
arctic ice that surrounded them
But the an lmals seemingly
before they could leave the rich
were
reluctant to swlm the 100
northern feeding grounds and
yards
to the new holes, prefer·
begin their annual migration
ring
the
relative safety of the
south to the warm Pacific waters
ones
where
they have been
off Baja California, Mexico.
bloody. snouts up
sticking
their
Despite nearly two weeks of
for
air
every
few
minutes since
frustrating imprisonment, and
they
became
trapped.
the pain of constantly banging
At least one Whale was seen in
their heads against the jagged
.
one
of the new holes Wednesday ,'
pack ice as they search for their
breathing ho]es in the dark of but the holes ! were closing up
long arctic llight, the whales because the whales were not
using them enough ·
..,.. if
. '.

· 50. YEARS - Charles and Daisy Blakeslee,
Pomeroy, and Zlba an Sylvia Midkiff, Pomeroy,
were honored at Tuesday night's annual Meigs
County Fann Bureau dinner-meeting for 50 years

88 CADILUC ELDORADO

1 99 5

WAS $26,900

of Bureau memberllhlp. The Blakeslee&amp; lllld
Midkiff&amp; were amonr; a number of long time
Bureau members who were recognized at
Tuesday's meeting which was held at Eastern
High School. •
·

'...

45 YEARS - Charles and
Gladys Chaffee, of Reedsville,
were among those recogniZed
at Tuesday night's annual
dinner meeting of the Meigs
Counly Farm Bureau lor 45
years membership In Fann
Bureau.

The meat and drInks will be
furnished .
A craft and bake sale was also
planned to be held at Krogers on
Nov. 4 at 9 a.m.
At the next meeting, the
outstanding member of the year
will be selected.

.'

.I

/

i

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992--38~0.

' '

'

__...,._...

:
To the many wonderful people
who called, sent flowers or said
a prayer, to express your sincere
.concern for me, I shall never
forget. I thank you!

1

Cheerleader chosen for London visit.
WAS S10,500

MOW

Tracy Beegle of the Southern St. Paul's Cathedral, Buck·
High School varsity cheer leading Ingham
squad, selected as an Ali-Amer· Palace to see the changing of the
lean Cheerleader at the UCA guard, Windsor Castle, Shakes·
summer camp held in June at peare's birthplace, Anne Hatha·
Ohio State University, will be way's Cottage, along with art
traveling to England In late galleries and museums. They
December to participate in the wlll also attend live theatre and
New Year's Day parade.
have dinner at the Hard Rock
She is one of 400 girls in the Cafe.
.
United States who will be
making . the trip. Besides the
parade In London, the cheerlead·
ers wlll have several other
·Friends and relatives of Todd
per!ormaftces during their ·Dec. ·• anll Diana Bissell are invited to
26-Jan. 3 stay .
. participate In an old-fashioned
There will also be time for
shlvaree at the home of the
touring with visits to the House of
newlyweds on Saturday evening, '
Parliment, the Tower of London,
7 p.m. Those at tending are asked

88 OLDS 98 REGENCY

$8995 WAS $18,900

MOW $1
-t

5I .9'9 5

••

\

WAS S7400

MOW

$5995

87 CHEVROLET BEREnA
WAS $1900

MOW

87

~

To the Voters ol
Meigs County

~·)
r

I

88 CHEVROLET CORSICA

A pie baking and pumpkin
carving contest will be held at
Octoberfest Saturday at the
Meigs Museum.
No prior registration Is re..
qulred to enter the pie contest.
Pies are to be taken to the
museum by 10: 30 a.m. Tl)e
judging will take place at 11 a·. m.
. and prizes wlll be awarded to the
winners.
Carved pumpkins a.re to be
taken to the museum by 11 a.m.
for the judging which will take
place 12 p.m . The pumpkins will·
remain on display. until 6. p.m .
Prizes will be awarded for the
most originaL
Games. music by l! German
band composed of Meigs students, and clogging groups will
be highlights of the afternoon
program.
.
Scupbeans, cornbread, dough·
nuts, German sausages, pumpkin ple, elder, rootbeer and
coffee will be served.
Craft table space Is available
for sale items or demonstrations
and Information on that may be
obtained by calling the museum,

'

MowS12 995

87 CHEVROLET SPECTRUM

CUTTING AWAY - Barrow residents have
been volunteering to work dally at cutting back
newly formed Ice from the trapped gray whales'
breathing holes. Tuesday, biologist Geo~f Carroll,

family, Audrey and Pat Wood ,
David, Katy and Nikki Lewis,
and Mary Kunsevlch.

Plans for the annual Thanks·
giving dinner to be held Nov. 6 at
1 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange hall were made when the
Big Bend C. B. Radio Club met
recently at P)easers.
All members and their families
are Invited to attend. Each
family is to take a covered dish.

Sandra Baer, cheer leading ad·
visor, wlll accdmpany Tracy on
the trip.
Currently the Scuthern High
School senior Is soliciting spon·
sors. Cost of the trip wlll be
$2,000. Anyone interested In
donating toward her trip expense
may contact Tracy at the high
school.
,

Now ..·. I am back healthy and ready to run a
vigorous campaign for ,the office of sheriff! !
On election day, Tuesday, November 8, your vote and
support will be greatly appreciated!!!
Elect Jim Soulsby, Sheriff of Meigs County!1!

.

Paid political ad by candidate, Jim Soulsby, ·u7 Union Avenue,Pomeroy, OH. 45769

Old-fashioned belling planned

,.._

ERIC DURST

CB Club plans for Thanksgiving

1

88 OLDS DELTA 88 COUPE

October/est set

Eric Durst, son of Paul and
Carol Durst, Akron, and grand·
son of Bob and Addalou Lewis.
Pomeroy, was honored recently
with a party in observance of his
second birthday.
Attending besides his parents
and grandparents were his
brother; Robbie, Paul, Shirley,
Lindy, R)londa and Diane
Grubbs, Hinckley; Darlene and
. Amber Bean, Mary Anile and
Kurt Young, Dave and Catherine
Myers, all of Akron.
Others sending cards and gifts
were Hlsae Durst, Ralph. and
Dorothy McKenzie, Mable
McCormick, Ernie and Nancy·
Bowser, Pat and Ken Wallick,
Jeff, Pam and Ben Kerr, Joe,
Susan, Jeremy and Jesse Natt,
Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and

-

to take their own noisemakers. A
wiener roast will follow at the
home of Todd's parents. In the
event of rain the evening's
activities wJII ~ ranee lied.

EUROSPORT
WAS S10,900
MOW $8995

86 CHEVROLET CHEVEnE

$799-5 WAS S4900

MOW

$3995

L, alld Dave Webber hold Ice breaking tools, while
an unidentified man cuts through Ice with a
chainsaw and Eskimo whaling captain Arnold
Brower Jr. stands by with his chalnsaw. UPI

A fabulous spread of over 80 delicious items
.. to keep the whole-4unily busy ... before, dqring and after
your favorite Ponderosa entrees. Hot appetizers, soups, salads,
s~1acks, salad fixin's and desserts. .
All included in the price of your entree.

Past quakes·hold key to predictions
•
By DELTIIIA RICKS
tlons because of the limited size
UPI Science Writer
of the earthquake sample," KnoLOS ANGELES IUPI ) - A poll said. "However, the success
team of American and Soviet ' of the tcalculatlons), which can
scientists says itis closer to being be transferred from California
able to predict major earth- and Nevada to other locations
quakes by studying s ix possible around the world, Is relevant to
warning s igns.
Identifying the approach of a
. The scientists from UCLA , the strong earthquake In many tee·
California Insti tute of Technol- tonic reJdons."
ogy and the Academy of Sciences
The new mathematical model
In Moscow are studying specific examines six key events assopatterns of seismic . events they ciated with major eathquake
believe are mos t likely to occur act1111ty. The events are: Periods
of quake inactivity; levels of
before large quakes strike sueh as movement in dlllerent. actual earthquake activity;
rates of chimge In quake occur·
plates of the Earth's crust and
animal behavior.
renee; earthquake magnitudes;
The sclentis ts developed rna· clustering aftershocks and long·
range Interaction between main
thematlcal models to pr~dlct
quakes, and said there had been shocks occuring long distances
numerous instances of nat ural apart.
Geophysicist Kerry Sleh, of
phenomena preceding strong
ear thquakes that might b ~ used Cal tech, who was not assocla ted
with this project, has been trying
to predict future temblors.
to develop a method of predicting
The mathematical mod el
would be useful in predicting the quakes by "reading" the ring
approximate time of a major patterns of trees growing near
quake, but not Its specific loca· known fault zones In California.
But Knopoff said the new
tion, the scientists said Wednes·
mathematical
formulas he and
day in the current issue of the
hls team developed have greater
journal Nature.
Geophysicist Leon Knopoll, of applications and have been used
to study five other seismic
UCLA's lnotitute of Geophysics
and Planetaty Physics, said the locations in tile world.
Those areas are the Caucasus
new studY looked at q~~akes In
California and western Nevada region in the Soviet Union, the
Pamlr· Tlen Shan of Central Asia,
between 1938 and 1984 and found
the Northern Appalachian moun·
six possible precursors of major
tains
in the United States, the
quakes.
"We can't es tlmate the statis tl· Brabant-Ardennes In Belgium
cal significance of the observa- and th e region around the city of

Vrancea In Romania.
, Without telling It that earth·
quakes had occurred in those
areas, the scientists had a
computer use· their mathemati·
cal model to look back at events
preceding 20 quakes, and said It
was able to Identity the occurrene~ of strong earthquakes 16
times.
Scientists have for several
years been predlcthig a major·
quake of at least ma~nltude 8.0
on the Richter scale will occur In
California within 50 years - the
so-called Big One.
Geologists have believed the
quake would probably occur
along the notorious San Andreas
fault, which was responslJlle for
the Great Quake of San Fran·
cisco In 1906.
But the California Division of
Mines and Geology reported in a
recent disaster scenario that a
major quake could · also occur
along the coastal Newport·
Inglewood Fault Zone near Los
Angeles that would be even more ·
'd evastating than one on the San
Andreas.
A quake on tha,t fault of
magnitude 7.(1 "poses one of the
greatest hazards to life and
property In the nation," the
report said, because It runs
through a much more populated
area that the San Andreas .
Previous federal studies pre·
dieted a 7.5 quake or higher
would kill up to 21.000 people and
injure nearly 250,000 others.

DODGE LANCER
WAS S5300 .

WAS S5600

NOW

$4 59 5
Premium Bedding Now At A New Lower Price!
'

CORRECT
COMFORT 1000

85 BUICK CENTURY
WAS

snoo

NOW

REG .St\LE

84 FORD L.T.D.

$6 2 9 5•WAS S4600

NOW

$3 59 5
"!

...

~, -

..

i&lt;'

'

~~'1:11

FuU. ea. pc . ...... $329 l=t
Queen, set. ....... .$829 1119
King, set ......... $1129 1889
Reg. $259

1 139

1 179

1 199

.'

TWIN , EA . PC .

$8495

WAS S6700

MOW

$5295

Try Our
Terms
01

TWIN , ~A. PC.

CORRECT
COMFORT 5000

REG.S.U.B

FuU, ea. pc....... $29H288
Queen, set.. ....... f689 Slt9
King, set. ......... ' 939 n.e
Reg. '229

84 CHEVROLET CAPRICE
NOW

REG.SALE

CORRECT
COMFORT 3000

Full, ea. pe. ...... $259 •199
~ueen, set ......... $569 SM9
ing, set ........... $759 S5t9
Reg. SlS\1

.

WAS 19500

CORRECT
COMFORT 2000

-

REG. s.u.&amp;

FuU, ea.pc ....... $459 lilt
Queen, set... .. $1129
King, set ....... $1499 llltt
Reg. S37ll

TWIN, EA . PC.

TWIN, EA . PC.

'\OU'VE~ASTEARNS&amp;FOSTElt ~

,.... .,.....,
Fr• Parklna
Open Iaiiy

tUS PA
..... I Fri.
tU I PA
446-3045

863 Upper River Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio (Across from the Airport)
..

...

It

•

~

-

.

.

,,

�,.__-

Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 20, 1988

l,)omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Community calendar

Ohio Eta Phi meets ·
Service projects· were dis- absence. The president thanked
cussed and donations made at tlle~ Susan Clark for planning the rust.
I:l'cent meeting of the Ohio Eta party. A halloween party to be
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi held at theSenior Citizens .Center
Sorority held ·at the Senior on Oct. 29·was announced. Mark
Citizens Center.
Anthony, WKEE will be the
It was noted that $200 had been
emcee. Tickets are $ 2.50 and
given toward the scout camp members of other chapters are
improvements and It was voted · invited. The annual holiday couto contribute $10 to !Ire depart· ples' · par-ty was announced for
ments which service areas In Dec. 17 at 7 p.m. at the Down
which members reside. The Under. Charke will be $11 a
group also voted to sponsor person.
Cathy Johnson in the turkey walk
For the cultural program,
for the American Heart Associa- Becky Triplett Introduced Dar·
tion for $10.
lene Arnott who gave a clotlllng
The chapter also decided to demonstration .
take three or four articles of
Miss Triplett served pizza and
canned goods to the next meeting pop following the meeting.
to be used In baskets lor needy
families.
Theresa Kennedy presided at
tlle meeting which opened In
The Hooven
ritualistic form . Seventeen
members responded to roll call.
Mrs. Herbert Hoover always left a
Communication regarding Inter- $1,000 bill laying on top of ber dreunational 's liability Insurance pta- er, reports tbe 'World Almanac of
gram was read and Judy Willi- Presidential Facts.• This always puzams. an insurance agent, will zled tbe While House staff - tbey
revi!jW the insurance and report thought she might be testlna . tbem.
The Hooven also had a pet dog named
back to, the chapter members.
member was alA letter was read from Marty · Tut, who
.... _no stall
.
'
.· ...

...

THURSDAY
RACINE - 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.

Saturday ; 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Syracuse Elementary School.
Chicken noodle dhiners. games,
haunted house.

Dally Sentlllel, sees unUllual Halloween displays along his lube
route. This acarecrow riding a pig was In the field allhe home of
Mrs. Stacy
Bartlnger Ridge Ro~, Porllapd. ..

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

ELBERFELDS STORE IDE
Now 8-oing Qn!

POMEROY - Round and
square dancing m~y be enjoyed
Saturday night , from 8 to mid·
night, at the Rutland American
Legion. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY- A gospel meeting will be held at tlle Westside
Church of Christ off Route 7,
through Oct. 21, '7_.;.30 each evenIng. Landon Hope of Henderson,
W.Va. wlll be the _speaker.

..,.

Thursday, October 20, 1988

RUTLAND - Rutland Amerl·
can Legion Is sponsoring an
old-fashioned bean dinner on
Saturday, with serving from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. All-you-can-eat lor
$2. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY -Yard sale and
bake sale Thursday and Friday
at 104 Union Ave., Pol'neroy,-IVI!h
proceeds going to the Carleton
Church.

SIGHTS OF THE SEASON - Oils McNutt, ·a carrier for The

-~

SUNDAY
POMEORY - Rally .Day at
Carleton Church, Kingsbury
Road, Pomeroy, will be held,
Sunday starting at 9: 30 a.m.·
Tabitha and Her Friend'S, and the:
New Life Singers, of Point·
Pleasant, W.Va .. will perform ..
Pastor Clyde Henderson Invites·
the publiC.

REEDSVILLE - Revival services will be held at the Eden
United BrethernChurch, Reedsville, through Oct. 23, 7 p.m.
Charles Norris. will be the
evangelist.

Ste•l•~l

~. FLANNEl·

SHIRTS

· · · · ·. ''('pt~ids In regular sites s. M, ·
tnd XL~ plus big and tall slzet L, ,,
r . XL. 2XL, 3XL, 4XL.
., MADE IN U.S.A. .

CHESTER - Chester Church
of God will have special speakers, Tom and Tammy Salone, of
Chicago, Ill.. this. Sunday at 9: 30
a.m . and 7 p.m., and again on
Wednesday, Oct. 26, at 7 p.m.
Everyone Is welcome to come
and hear the Salones.

ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet Thursday, 1:15 p.m., at the
home of Dorothy J~ffers.

.'

'···

·

,

. '· :m.

-

"'('" ~ ·

'_

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;iOut ·f1:0•95''Reg~arwSit••··~,~···· ..·· 7!:
19
'* 79''S···· · 'or
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0':.-'·-~~-;
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'

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MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Child Conservation League will
MONDAY
meet Thursday, 7:30 p.in., at the
MIDDLEPORT - Monday at
home of Unda Broderick. Guest · 7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
speaker will be Bunny Kuhl. All Presbyterian Church, Boy S90ut
members are urged to attend.
Troop 245 will hdld an organiza- .
tiona I and Informational meeting;
SATURDAY
for parents and other Interested
SYRACUSE - Fall Carnival residents.
'

·o . .

---

.

FlippiJJg out over restaurant

.:.,!,:: ' ...'ITie
/I'

''I'was t!U nigfit 6efore Cfiristmas
ana a1{ tfirougfi t!U FWuse,_
not a creature was stirring not even a nwuse ... •

\li
7

1\

stocKings were fiung
6y tlie cfiimney witfi. care
in fwpes tfiat St. 9{tefwfas
Soon wouU 6e t!Ure ~ .. '
Ckment C. Moore .

Open Your 1989 Christmas Club And Receive A Free Gift!

SEATTLE IUPI) _ Mlck
·
hi
McHugh and Tim Flrnsta •
business partners since childhood, announced they will toss a
commemorative coin from the
top of the Seattle Space Needle to
determine how to spUt up their
restaurants.
,.
The two 45-year-old Seattle
restaurateurs - owners of six
eateries, one slated to open New
Year's Eve - said they have
reached a friendly agreement
that It's time to go tllelr separate
ways.
But the two can't decide which

one should get which
restaurants.
"We've worked very hard In
this business, but we've always
tried to have a little run ·along the
way as wet~ so this coin toss Is in
keeping wt(h that philosophy ,".
McHugh said.
So they decided the fairest way
would be to first figure out how to
best spilt up the six restaurants
and then toss a coin to figure who
would get which three.
The coin toss is to take place
Monday morning- with the two
men roped totheroofoftheSpace&gt;
Needle.

TURNPIKE USED CARS!

-~-

,&lt;'~.

'

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~:.

y:·,t¥&lt;.' )i:'
{~-

BOYS' SHIRTS

;S (6-ll, M 110:121, L114-161, XL 111-201

··

....

&gt;&lt;.'

·

Sale
Prices

$715

TO

JEANS SALE

$23 95

Slue Denim · Assorted Styles
Sizes 6 to 20, 32 to 44, 3/ 4 to 15/ 16

OR

REG. 520.00
TO 532.00

'~SANTA''

' CERAMIC
CANDLE
HOLDER

:..-:~''" ~: -l~·- 1;:-, .

$1 $2

OR

SALE ·"'

' '
CLUBS

s-

111983,2doors,""':J~..:~;;'~~:O:t

S749&amp;

S8495

6" SOLID
BRASS BELL

NOW

WAS

$4995

$5 CLUBS

83895

1980 DODGE D-150
S10Ck 1 81l423. V·8, IU10.

~ono

.. 112 1on

pickup,
IIOP bumper.
WAS

NOW

81295

NOW'S THE TIME TO GET READY FOR '89!

:Stocl&lt;l11941,4~:.'~:::::~~~:::::;1
aula. trana., PS, PB, power wlndowt.

·You Make 49 Payments And
The 50th Payuient Is On Us!

OPLES BANK
15th Street 12212 Jackson Avenue '2nd Street
New Haven
Point Pleasant
Mason
773-151514
882-21315
6715·1121
Substantial Penalty

•

•

For Early Withdrawal

Member F.D.I.C.

,.. ..

Stock • 82501, 4 door1, sedan, V-8 eng., air
oond., auto. trans ., PS, PB, dllwhtel, cruise
"'nlrOI. AM!'M rad~. rear window defog.
WAS
NOW '

$2495

SJBOO

.

·:

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.

.

BIKINIS, HIPHUGGERS, BRIEFS . ,
,Si111 4 to .10 -Reg. suo to $4.50

. · .
TO
$359

.,

aaat, power door locka, tilt wheel,
mntrol," AMIFM 'radio, lll1'80 tape, radial
tires, whllewab, rear window delbg ,

$1~:995 .. SJONoW
1987
AEROSTAR

Stock • 40221, atation wagon, 8
a:md., PS, PB, AM'FM radio, atereo
radial tires. bucket aeata, gauges.
WAS
NOW

10,995

5

sgggs

1988 GMC S-15
Stock • 92061, 4 cyl., AMIFM radio, 118r&amp;ol
fiPe, 112 ton pickup, sllort wheel
gauge a.
WAS

NOW

$7995

S7295

CHILDREN'S

KNITWEAR SALE

BERKLINE RECLINERS

WARM GLOVES, MITTENS, HATS ANO EARMUFFS
REG. $2.00 TO Sl 8.00 .

Excellent selection of styles and color!i

SALE $ 134 TO $ 12 00

SAVE 1/4

.Hut! ~vings On CARPET
$ 99
DOWN scut.Ptuam CARPET.."'.u·..-· 3 so. vo.

.,.,,

WOMEN'S

SPECIAl PURCHASE/

SOCKS SALE

VINYL FLOOR COVERING
S ROLLS TO
99 SO. YD.
SELECT FROM

$3

SALE

s119 TO $359

•• ;.

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- - ~.o~,.~~~~,~so='!fl:-::s~au~,.==,c==a::-s.....,

· .0 1 OU IIIWNING STOCI OF TURF

· SPECIAl GROUP OF MILL ENDS ...........

SERTA SPECIAL
EA. PC.
$9900
.
ONI PRICI
ALL SIZES

Stock II 93123 , 4 doors, sedan, 6
cond., auto. trana ., PS, PB, pow&gt;;,w~dow,

Premier Comfort
Mattresses and Box
Springs.
Twin. Fulll, or Queen

power sea ~ tilt wheel , cruise oontrol,

radio, radial tires, rear window defog.
WAS

54895

NOW

S3895
USE OUR

FREE

PARKING
LOT.

'

·CANDY SniPE LEVEl LOOP CAIPET...J399 so. n.

WOMEN'S CREW SOCKS AND IINEE SOCKS

1
CAPRICE

;

CONTINENTAL

,.
Stoc:k • 92101. 4 doors, sedan, station
wagon, 4 wheel drlvt, 6 cyt., air oond., autO.
oane., PS, Pi!, AMIFM radio, radial tires,
while wala, budtet teats. rtar window defog.

'

SALE.
-'~ ., $119

'

drive, 4 cyl.,alrcond ., PS, F
atereo tape, radial tiraa, bucket aeatll ,
window dtbg.
WAS
NOW

. ,, -;

... .

:-'~

...

·PRICED

$3 ·

·''

1f2 PRICE

.,i :WDMEN'S
.PANTY SALE
.
.,.,- .

WITH VOTIVE CANDLE

W~ANGLER

WOMEN'S

I(NIT SHIRTS - SPORT SHIRTS - FLEECES • JEANS SHIRTS
Reg. 18.96 to '29.95
'

"MOUSE"

?'·

ELBERFELDS
992-3671 -POMEROY, OHIO

Ef6ftlefd;
I'OMllOJ 01110

\11 4) IU · l411

CH41Ct C~ltD

2 PRICE

�Page-12-The

Public Notice

More about rthe name game'
then she named me Greta . I got
~.cr,slck of people asking me If I
vanted to be alone" that I
scuttled Greta and went by my
middle name, Marte. - G.M.G.
Penllyn, Pa.: I was Ann .
Landers until a year ago You
asked If It was fun. The answer Is
NO' It got to be such a nuisance
that I went to the trouble and
expense of changing It legally 1
putNancyinfrontoftheAnn My
dad still like to Introduce me as
uMy daughter, Ann Landers/'
and the neighbors enjoy telling
people they - live In the same
bulldlnlt with Ann Landers and
Abigail Van Buren (that's my
dog) So you see I do have a sense
of humor about it.
Bay VIllage, Ohio: My name
Isn't Ann Landers but! have been
married to Johnrty Carson for 26
years. The worst part of having
this name is the 2 a.m. phone
calls from drunks looking for Ed
McMahon
Erie, Pa.: My name Is
Jeannette McDonald. The only

Dear Readers: A while back a
woman from Dallas wrote to say
her name Is Ann and she married
a man named Landers 10 years
ago. The name, she said, has
been a palnln the neck hald that
I would like to hear !rom others
who haw' famous names and
asked if they like It Well, my
friends, read on and you will
knqw what my life has been like
lately,
Sioux City, Iowa: Our family
name was Garbot. M:~&lt; mother
Insisted on dropping the T and

Middleport residents
attend Tall Stacks
Kim Payne and Donna Boyd,
Middleport. were In Cincinnati
over the weekend to attend the
unique gathering of 14 old-time
riverboats on the Ohio River in
commemoration of Cmclnnatl's
bicentennial The two toured all
the boats except the Delta Queen
which was not open for tours and
took the luncheon cruise on the
President"

Property transfers

CIRCUS CWWNS - Pappy Is one of the clowns who will be
appearing with the James Hetzer International Circus at the
Rutland Civic Center at 2: 30 and 7: 30 Saturday. The circus
features a variety of acts Proceeds will go to the Civic Center
organization.

BRINGER OF BACON: Lee Jacocca is tatkmg
about the posslbiJlty of adding US trade
negotiator to his resume The Chrysler Corp
chairman was in Tokyo WednesdaY to announce
plan s to sell Chryslers m Japan and told the
Japanese just how tough a negotiator he would be
"As I have sa id a hundred tunes, this market must
open up a lot wider to Amen can goods," Iacocca
sa1d ·If there were a JOb that would be of some
Intel est to me and where the world may nee d a
tough nosed business attitude, It Is the trade
negotiator I don' t think m a ny countn,es would
like me In that positiOn becau se I'm an unabashe d
patriot. 1 would come home with the bacon for the
United States more often than not "1acocca said
he would consider becoming the trade represen ta
,t1ve "because we have got to nght these things
and we have to balance the trade deficit •·
DURAN DURAN ON TOUR TOUR: Duran
Duran Is back w1th a new album, a free concert, a
mmJ.tour a nd plans for a big tour In January. The
album 1s "Big Thing" and Simon LeBon, lead
smger of th e British dandies, s ays the pU!pose of
one song, ' I Don't Want Your Love,' Is to take
some of the sweetness out of radio "All the
tove·dovey blandness on the charts makes m e
want to puke," he says "That's why we'rewntlng
songs hke th1s We're not grim. just perverse
The charts seem to be bac k to the Bobby Vee era ''
The band Is playing a senes of sm all halls and
clubs with the f1 rst sho" scheduled for Wednesday

Public Notica

night In the old Fillmore In San Francisco and
another set for this week at the 900·seat Coco nut
Grove In Los Angeles In addition, the Durans
planned a free concert Thursday m the parkmglot
of the Capitol Tower, the Los Angeles headq uar·
ters of their record company
HER DINNER WITH LOUIS: Louis Malle ,
creator of the film "Au Revoir Les Enfants. '
recently recreated another of h1s movies, · My
Dinner W1th Andre," for the sake of a contest
winner Stephanie Seacord of Qumcy, Mass. a
spokeswoman for Omnl Hotels, went to Paris at
the expense of the makers of Noilly Prat
vermouth and accompanied Malle to one of h1s
favonte restaurants for a dinner that lasted four
hours Seacord said Malle discussed everythmg
from the Loa\lan mountain people In America to
war and peace He also told her that one of the
screenplays he 1s working on 1s deeply a utobwgra
phlcal , hke "Au Revoir Les E nfants " He sa1d
another, titled "Eye Contact," is being co written
with John Guare and 1s about a large Am erican
family In Sicily. Furthermore, h e Is developmg a
12 part documentary series for Amertcan telev1
slon that he hopes w1ll reflect h1s attachment to
the United States Seacord won the contest by
coming up with a snappy line about vermouth
GLIMPSES: Glasnost mu st be pretty far
reaching if It Includes Cy~di Lauper The madcap
s inger, a long w1th Jimmy Webb, Albert Ham
mond , Mike Stoeller, Barry Mann a nd Gregory
Abbott , will be part of a contingent of American
composers and producers gomg to the Soviet
Un1on Thursday They Will co llaborate with 17
Russians for a n album that Will be released next
year
The formec manager of the Beach Boys
has bad vi.Pral!ons. Stephen Millon Love, 41. the
brother of Beach Boys lead singer Mike Love,
pleaded no conteest In Los Angeles to one count of
grand theft for embezzling near ly $900,000 froi'n
the group The funds were proceeds from the sale
of a parcel of land In Santa Barbara Calif
Involving a partnership between him ~nd th~
Beach Boys Love will be sentence d Nov 16 The
nation' s larges t women's history library now has
a section named for TV chef Julia Child Radel life
College unve iled a $3 4 million renova tiOn to the
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library and It
mcludes a 5,000·cookbook collection In the Julia
Ch1ld Research Area. The library also houses the
paper s of noveliSt Harri et Beecher Stowe.
aviation pwneer Amelia Earhart agd femi n ist
Betty Frledan

Inspection was held at the
Tuesday night m eeting of Ches
ter Council 323, Daughter of
America, h eld at the hall
Inspecting officer was Esther
Harde n of Gu1dmg Star Council
124. Following the Inspecting
Erma Clela nd gave a reading for
Mrs Harden
Thel m a White , cou ncilor,
opened the meeting 10 ritualistic
form with pledges , prayer, and
sing ing of the national anthem
Scripture was read from Psalms
24 Reported Ill were Leta Mae
Krauter and Go ldie Kracken
burger, both hospitalized. Eva
Dessauer ill
The district m eeti ng was an.
nounced for 6 30 p m. at the hall
There w1ll be potluck refresh
ments The good of the order
committee had a cake walk

A halloween party hos ted by
Mary Virginia Reibel and Mary
Elizabeth Chapman highlighted
the October meeting of Friendly
Circle at Trinity Church
Group and Individual pictures
of the masked members were
taken Games and contest were
enjoyed with prizes go mg to
Diane Hawley, Elaine Freeman
and Mary V. Stewart Alice
Globakar won the door prize.
An original s kit, Privileges Are
Important, was presented by
Miss Reibel and Gay Perrin
Diane Hawley presided at the
business meeting with the treas·
urer and secretary's reports

The name of sa•d Andrew
Myers should not have
been Included 1n any part
of Probate Case Number

26954 being the attate of
Glen 0. Deeter
Robe&lt;~ E Buck. Judge
Probate Court
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF GLEN 0
DEETER, DECEASED,
CASE NUMBER 26964.
DOCKET N, PAGE 48
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
TO JOHN ANDERSON
DEETER. ADDRESS UN ·
KNOWN , BEING A PER·
SON HAVING AN INTER·
EST .IN THE ESTATE
OF GLEN 0 DEETER. DE
CEASED, LATE OF STATE
ROUTE 24!!. LONG BOT
TOM, OHIO, MEIGS COUN·
lY PROBATE CASE NUM·
BER 26954. DOCKET N
PAGE 48 You are heriJbv
fiod 111111 on A-ot22, 19BB,
an mstrumMt 1n writing. purporting to be the Lalit Will and
T•111mmt of Glal 0 Deeter.
Oece.ed,
lat:u of M&amp;Jga
County, OhK&gt;, was produced
1n open Coun. and an applu:attOn to admit the same to probate W8l on the same dltf
modo In lho Court. The oppl•
catiOn h• been IJ8t for hBll"ing
before this Court on Thursday, October 27, 1988, at
1' 30 o'clock P.M
W1tness my hand and the
seal of the Court, at Pomeroy, 0 oo,.§~ptamber 12(
1988
....jf"'l'{
~ Robert E Buck, Judge
!9115. 22. 29,
!1016 13, 20. 6tc

...m:

Public Notice
PUB~IC

NOTICE
Not1ce 11 given that a hearmg will be held the 28th day
of October 1988, Hearmg
Am #1, 10th Fl .. 369 S
H1gh St . Columbu1, OH
43216. upon a petition for
seizure of the p~operty

----------------Kirkhart, Sandy White, Ada
whnlch was won by Marcia
Bissell Doris Koenig, Keith
Keller Potluck Iefreshments
Ashley,
V1rglma Lee, SadleTrus·
were seved following the
sell,
Eva
Robson, Betty Young,
meeting
Betty
Roush,
Jo Ann Baum, Iva
Guests attending were Betty
Powell
Spencer, Nathan a nd Betty
B1ggs, Bob and Es ther Harden,
and Margaret Cotterill, Guiding
Star Council 124, Syracuse
Chester Council members at the
m eet ing were Alta Ballard,
Genev ieve Ward, Laura Nice,
Betty Denny, Lillian Demos key,
Bonnie Landers, Helen Wolf,
Beulah Mazey , Everett Grant,
Erma Cleland, Esther Smith,
Etehl Orr, Thelma White, Mare
McPeek, Lora DamewOod, Char
lotte Grant, Doris Grueser, Opal
Hollon, Marcia Keller, Elizabeth
Hayes, Mary Holter, Kathryn
Baum, Jean Frederick, Faye

being given by Evelyn Gilm~re
a nd Norman Jewell
Plans were completed for
serving the canteen at the Red
Cross bloodmobile visit In December . Allee Globokar will be
c hairman .
Projects for the
holiday season were discussed
A salad course was served
from a table decorated In a fall
motif Favors were Halloween
candles a nd jack-o-lantern
cookies
Attending were 15
members a nd a guest, Ire ne
Barnes Miller of Ft Salonga, N.
Y. who Is here visitin g her
mother, Dorotby Woodard

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
;
ESTATE OF
ANDREW MEYERS,
DECEASED, CASE
NUMBER 25955.
DOCKET N, PAGE 4B
PUBLICATION BY NOTICE
en wa1 erroneously added
to the Public Not1ce on the
estate of Olan 0 Deeter

Friendly Circle meets

~

COMPLETE
~TOCK

___ __ ___

~

PH 992 2966

Frl endlv Serv~c:•

.:._

Opell Nrglll• trll 9

Pomoi'OY Oh

.....,

mond E. Bo1ce Tru11 A
Eatata No 23339
E1ghth Account of Elmore E
Boice and Remora C
Young, Trulteaa of the Raymond E BOIC8 Trust 8
Estate No 25715 - Final
and 01strlbutrve Account of
Ronald Hooper. Executor of
tho Estate of Wendell
Hooper, Deceased
.Estate No 26766 - Fmal
and D11tr1butrva Account of
Ernnt1ne Schade, Executrve
of the Estate of Lora Gay
Luellen. Deceased
Public Notice
Estate No 24906 - Th~rd
Annual Account of Jenmfer
PUBLIC NOTICE
L Sheets. Guardian of Oliver
NOTICE 11 hereby gNan E Bailey, an Incompetent
that on Satway, October
Estate No 24791 - f1nal
22, 19BB. at 10 00 a m o and Otstnbutrve Account of
pubhc sale wiU be held at James E Diddle. Adminle
10&amp; Union Avenue. Pom- trator of the Estate of Bobby
eroy, Oh1o, to sell for cash Joe Adams. Sr . Oece.. ed
the followmg collateral
Ellotll No. 25617 - Final
1985 Ford PU 4x4
and D1atr1but1V8 Account of
SS#
Jack M. Hawley. EKecutorof
1FTEF26H3FNA34734 tho Ellote of Mildred W
1977 Ford PU
Hawley, Daceaaed
ss #
· ElUte No. 25740 - Fonol
F108NX95307
and Distributive Account of
The Farmers Bank and Beulah Schuhz. AdmimstraSavtngt .company, Pam trix of the Estate of Everett
aroy, Oh1o, reserves the ' L. Schultz. Decaaad
nght to bid at this sale. and
Unless exceptions are flied
to wrthdraw the above colla- thereto, u1d accounts will
teral prior to 1ale Further be for haanng before sa1d
Tha Farmers Bank and Sav: Court on the 211t day of
ings Company raservas the Novambll'. t 9B8. ot which
nght to reject any or all bids t1me a1d accounts will be
subm1tted
considered and continued
Further, the above colla from day to day until finally
teral w1ll be sold 1n the con- d1sposed of
dition 1t 11 1n w1th no exAny person Interested
pressed or 1mphad warran - may file written ex.capt1ons
ties given
to 181d accounts or to
1101 19, 20, 21, 3tc
manert pertamtng to the
execution of the trutt, not
leas than f1va days pnor to
the date let for hearmg
Public Notice
- - - - - - - - - -1
Robert E Buck, Judge
Common Pleaa Court,
Probate Dlv 11ion
IN THE
Meig1 County. Oh10
COMMON PLEAS COURT 1101 20, 1tG
•••
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
PUblic Notice
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ORDINANCE #673
Accounts and voucher• of
AN ORDINANCE TO
the follnwing named fldu·
REGULAR HISTORIC
Claries have bean filed m the
STRUCTURES
Probate Court, Meigs
Wher-. tha Voltoge of
County. Oh1o, for approval
Pomeroy It dedicated to
and •ettlemant.
both ma.ntaming a h1gh
Estote No 23338
character of community and
E1ghth Accoum of Elmora E
economic development ahd
protectmg real estate from
Bo1ca and Remora C
Young. Trusteas of the Ray
and/or contraband One (1)
electroniC gambhng dev1ce
Property HIZed the 9th day
of Juno. 1988, by Dept of
UquorControlat 196 N. Sa
cond St , Middlepon, Oh.
45760. and prasentty be1ng
held by the department Any
person havmg ownership or
security mtare1t n the above
property may contest the
petitiOn
110113, 20. 2tc

TIMEX
WATCHES

Kenneth Mc Cullough A Ph
Charlft fMfle R Ph
Ronald Haning R Ph
Mo n lhruSII 800AM lo9PM

J --·---

"";-,.y

1

Are you uruggll'ng wuh decuwns ''
about se:r and nt•edmx more
mformahon to help you make
them? Ann Landeri neu1ly revised
booklet, "Sex and the Teenager ,"
can be l1ke 1alhang1o a good frwnd
To re,:ewe o copy. 11end 11 plu~ a
self-addrened, damped buuneuuze envel ope (45 cent! postage) to
Ann Landers. P 0 Box 11562,
Chocago , Ill 6061J 0562

Public N otica
Impairment or da1truct1on of
value, and
Whll'-. tho Vllloge hoo
evulencad the need through
variout econom1c and com
munity development programs to prevent slum and
blight and to create an
environment with a h1gh
standard of INability and
economic growth, and
Whereas. the preservat•on
of build1ngs and places of
h11tOJ1C mterest and the
maintenance of archltectu~al umty of areas of h11tor1C
Interest 1upports and •ncreues property valu•. and
WheJeu, the Commi11ton
for Histone Pr•ervat1on of
the Village of Pomeroy being
mmdful of the proud hl•tory
of th11 community and the
importance of beauty m the
everyday livn of our citt·
zens, hereby dadarn as a
matter of publ1c pohcy that
the pre~arvation, restoratJOn, rehab1htat1on, and
overall authette lmprovemiHlt of our communtty are
matters of public nece111ty
Involving the health, safety,
prosperity. and welfare of
the people.
Now therefore be it propooad that tho VIllage of
Pomeroy pan an ordmance
to regulate historic structures and stgnege
DeclaratiOn of public pur- .,
pose.~ power to regUlate
h•t,torjc 1tructures and IJQ·
n8fit1purpose. of. the Commusion .. fo f "' H11tonc
Preservation
A The praservation of
structuru and situ of histone and architectufll value
tl 1 pubhc purpo~a of the
Commiuion for HistoriC
Pre~arvatlon 1n the Village of
Pomeroy The Commi1slon.
1n conJunction with the
VIllage Council and by authority of this ordinance. w1ll
have the power to regulate
the constructiOn, atterat1on,
repa1r, moving and demolition of auch ltructurn
w1thtn the VIllage of Pomeroy. hereafter called the
H11tor1c Ot1tnct
B. The purpol8 of the
ordtnsnce shall be
1 to ufeguar.d the hern:age of the VIllage of Po me- .
roy by pr..erving the diatnct
therein which reflects element. of Its cultural, soc1al,
econom1c, political, or arch I- ·
Cont1nuad on Page 1J

992-2156

Pharmacy

E Mam

my resume.

YOU CAN'T ESCAPE. THE. GREAT
BUYS IN THE. CLASS/FIEOS

SUJISHER LOHSE

PRESCRIPTIONS

Joan K~nnedy. No, I am not THE
Joan Kennedy, but the name has
helped me just as much as If I
were I'm a third-year law
student at New England School of
Law In Boston I hope some big
wheel In a good !lrm sees thIs
letter and asks to see the rest or

r-----:-----_:_,

30°/o
Su l"ldljV 1000 AM 10 4 OOP M

TlmH SyndiC'III~ ..,d
Crutan SyndlniP

Public Notice

Public Notica

The name of Andrew My-

Chester Council meets

ANN l.ANOfRS•
,.1988, Lu• An11dt!'t

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

w_a_lke_r._l_02-ac-re....s_al-lsb_u_ry_
.....

newspapermen "

problem was when I was hospl
tallzed A lot of people came m to
ask If I has sel'n Nelson Eddy
lately (Wouldn't he be about951f
h~ were allve today??!!! )
West Chesler, Pa.: i was born
ln 1928 and named Katherine
The family name Is Hepburn
The actress, Katharine Hepburn,
was not very well known then but
as time went on 1 began to hear a
lot more about my namesake I
was happy to lose the name when
I married Hugh Iliff In 1951
Justin, Calif.: 1 was christened
VIrginia Dare Kerr. I married a
Ludwig and signed my name
Mrs. VIrginia D K. Ludwig It
wasn't untU later that I learned
that D.K. Ludwig was one of the
world's richest men. Once when I
was playing blackjack In a Las
Vegas casino I signed a marker,
Mrs. D K. Ludwig. A pit man
came over to me and said,
"Lady, with that name you could
sign checks all day a nd clean out
Las Vegas!"
Dover, Mass.: My name Is

Ann
Landers

Classifie

Lois J Hawley, James Hawley
to Robert D Hensley, parcels,
Pomeroy village
Harold Sellers, Ruth Sellers to
Larry Sellers, Agnes, 28 16 acre,
Lebanon
Lester F Thomas, Nora L.
Thomas to Charlene R Doxz1,
parcel, Salem.
Donald It. Miller, Violet Miller
to Michael Walker, Sandra

....--People in the news ___
By WILLIAM C. TRO'M'
United Press International
HA¥ES ON PRESSING MATTERS: He len
Hayes has seen numerous incarnations of "The
Front Page." the story by her late husband ,
newspaperman Charles MacArthur , and the only
one she disliked was a production at the San
FranCISCO Press Club ma ny years ago It seems
MacArthur and his co wnter, Ben Hecht , were
drafted to play the leads and had fornfle.d
themselves w1th strong drink beforehand "It was
abommable," Hayes said " I told them later. 'I
never saw s uc h a great play so ruined by two
rotten actors."' Her favonte version Is the 1932
anginal film starring Adolphe Menjou and Pat
O'Brien and Hayes was m Washington Tuesday
night to introduce a screenmg of It at a fund· raiser
for the Nat ional Press Foundation.' 'I've followed
'The Front Page' all over the world," she said "I
missed It In Japan, t hough It would have been
great to see those Ja pa n ese Chicago

October 20. 1988

October 20, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

.:

THE BERRY-8ASKET
GRAND OPENING
OF OUR NEW EXPANDED SHOP

OFF

OFFER
GOOD .
THRU
MONDAY
OCTOBER 24,

1988 .

OCTOBER 21st,

22nd~

and 23rd

'10:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M.
•GIFTS
•DECOR
•WREATHS
HOURS: TUES.

•FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
•HANDMADE ITEMS
•"CLASSES

thru

SAT. 10:00 A.M.·S:OO

P.M.

"Come ~lsit with Us Tda(
C410L YN McCOY -SHIRLEY HUSTON-BEnY MOHISON

THE BERRY BASKET
2301 SIXTH STREET

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Continued hom Page 12
tectural history;
2 to stabihra and 1mprova
propMty valun in the H11•
toric D1atnct,
3. to fo1t1r CIVIC beauty,
4 to strengthen the local
economy, and
6. to promote the UIB and
preservation of the H11tonc
D11trlct for the educat 1on,
welfare, and pleasu-re of the
r11klent1 of the Village and
the county
Power to establish etc
dlltflct.
The Commi..IOn may es
tablil:h, change. lay out. and
define districts which are
deemed f"o be of htstoric or
t.
are hn.ecturel value. following the procedure in the
VIllage of Pom.-oy applica. . ble tct_ the 81tabUshmen1 or
change of areae and cteutficat10n1 of ronmg The Comm111ton will adhere to the
gu1delinea established by the
Nattonal Ragtstar of H11 tor 1c
Placae
Commission for Histone
Pr11ervat1on generally
The VIllage of Pomeroy
lhall create a Commlsllon
called the CommlslfOn for
Hlltoric PraservatiOn. The
Commi•P:m •hall have a
membership of fivepeuons
all of whom are qualified and
or profa1110nal ahd agree to
terva on thll CommlsSKJn
and a maiority of whom are
property owner~ of the
county The members shall
ba appointed for terms of
three years each ex.capt that
1n mak1ng the mrt 1al appoint-·
mants two appointments
•hall be altabll•hed for four
yeara 1n order that u these
lnitiel terms exptre all 10.
polntmemtl 1hall be for
three years and shall not
&amp;llpll'l at the ume time
Memban of the CommitIIOn shall be eligeble for
reappointment Any vacaney on the Commiulon
may be filled by the Mayor
fortheunexptredtermofthe
particular po1ition and approved by Council The
VIllage Councol of Pomll'oy
may consult private 1oc1•
t1es or agencaes to raquut
tha names of posSible
me mbar1 0 n t h8
comm11s10n
Apphcatton for perm 1111on
to buHd. alter. ate
Before the construct1on,
alterattan. repaar. movtng, or
demolition of any structure
11 made w 1th 1n the hiltorlc
D11trtct, 1f any changes are
1nvolvad which would affect
the axtenor appearance of 8
structunt v••ble or intended
to be visible from an adjacent public way 1n the
d11tnct. the person, lndivld·
ual. firm. or corporation
pr;opoamg to make the conltructlon or change shall file
with the CommisSIOn an
application for permiSSIOn to
build, attar. repiir. move.
demoll1h, or make the additlon Every apphcatton shall
be referred to and conltdared by the Hiltoric Diltrict
Commil1lon and no permit
for any such change may be
granted untd the Commls·
alon has acted thereon a1
hereinafter provkled
Factors for consideration
m reviiiWmg plan• for con·
struction or change·
In revtew1ng the plans for
any such constructiOn or
change the Comminion
shall gNa consaderation to
1. the h11tor1c or architec-1ural value and 1i~~floanc;:e
of the structure ' and lts
re&amp;•t1onsh1p to the h11tor1c
value of the surrounding
area
2 the ralat1onsh1p of the
axtenor architectural features of the structure to the
remamdai of the structure
and to the surrounding area
3 the general compat1btl·
•tv of extanor dat!Qn. arrangement. texture. and matenels proposed to be used;
and

1

Card of Thanks

The family of
CLIFFORD E. SMITH
wishes to thank all
friands, neighbors.
end
relatives for
the lovaly flowars,
food,
cerds, and
prayera and kand ex·
pressions of sympathy at tha death
of our lovad one
To Ewing's Funeral
Home for thair efficient sarvicas and
,thanks to Rev. Tarry
Alvaraz for has com·
forting words . May
God Bless you all .
Clara Smith
and Family
The family of the lata
OPAL E BARR
wJshasto thank every·
one for the kindneos
1hown, cards, flow·
era. to the neighbors
and friends for foodo.

contributions of money, Veterans Memo root
Hospital and Staff.
Veterans
Memorial
Women' •
Auxiliary,
Dr. James Wotheretl.
Meigs County Sherlffl Dept .. Sheriff Ho·
ward Frank, Chester
Fora Dept., Minllters
for the funeral tervlce.
Rev. Amot Tiltit, Rev
Odell
Mantey tor
word• of com ftirt, Ew·
ing
Funeral Homo.
lingera and organ1ata,
Mr. tnd Mrt Herbert
Grato, Singeu Chatter. Ohio, Caryl Pooler
and Gerald Powell,
and everyone who
participated.
The Arthur Barr
Family, daughtoro
and tont-ln·l

Public

Pomeroy M

The

Ohio

Public Notice

._ to any othar factors s1on h~ a r~ght of appeal to
Including anthetiC factors the V1llage of Pom8foy
which the Comm1ssion
S811oroblllty
d~~&amp;ms to be part1nant
The prov11JDns of tt11s
Onty ex.tertor features to ordinenca are S8\lerabla, and 1
ba conSidered
The Commission ohall 1f any of Its provi110n1 are 1
held unconstituttanal by any
consider onty extenor faa court of competent JUnsdiC·
tures of a structure and shall ttOn the decision of such
not consider any lnter1or court shall not affect or
arrangements Also. the 1mpa1r any of the rememtng
Comm11s10n shall not dilap· prOVISIOnS
prove •n appl1cat10n except APPROVED
wn:h respects to the several
Richard 0 Seyler, Mayor
factors specified above
Ani:ST Jane Walton
. Stnctnest and leneency m
Clark/ Treasurer
IUdgment of pla_nl, hmrttng DATE. Oct 3, 198B
arch•tactural.. style to one
I. Jane Walton. u Clark of
tile VIllage of Pomeroy, do
P~~d1
Comm111110n shall fol- hare by certify that the forelow the gu idehnes nUll b- going
I true and correct
llahed by the Secretory of
copy of an ordmance
t"'"- 1
'~ ntanor' a ..Standards for adopted by the legi1latwe
RehabilitatiOn" '" rev1ew1ng authority of the sa1d V1llage
plans tor chang.. or litera on the 3rd day of October,
ttont to hlltor~c structures 1988, that the publication of
and for sh:e1 tn the- H11tor1c such ordmance haa been
District The Commis110n made and cert1fied of record
lhall ba lament '" its judg· accordmg tO law, that no
ment of plans for structures proceed1ngs look1ng to a
which do not contribute to ref•endum upon such ordithe Hiltonc Register guide· nance have been taken. and
1
•n• or for plans 1nyotv1ng that such ord1nance and
new construction, .. unl81s cart1ficate Qf publication
such plans would sertoully thereof are of record 1n
impa•r the historiC or archl
Ordinance Record
tectural value of surround-' No...... , Page
mg structures of the sur
In wrtnHs whereof. I have
rounding era a
The
untq sub1cnbed my
CommiiiiDn 1' not required here
name and affixed my offiCial
to limit new construc11Dn
oeol this 11th dl'/ of Oc·
alteration, or repairs to th~ Iober,
1988
architectural style of any one
Jane Walton,
period
Clerk/Treasurer
VIllage of Pomeroy
ApplicatiOn for repa1r, sl
Me~gs County. Oh1o
teration, etc of structure of
DEFINITIONS tor Pro10r·
unuiU81 Importance
If an applicatiOn 11 submit- vat1on of H11tonc
ted for repain or alterations Structu,..
1 .. Alter" or " alteration"
affeCting the exterior appearance of a 1tructure or fQf means any matar11l changes
the moving or demolition of in the external architectural
a structure, the prasarvat1on features of any property
of wh1ch the Comm1111Dn which lies within the Hisdeem• of unusual lmpor- toric District
2 "Applicant" means any
tance to the Village of
Pomeroy. the County. the owner, owners. person. perState, or the nation, the sons. auociet•on. partnerComm1s110n shall attempt •lup or corporation who
With the owner of the applies: for a building permit
structure to formulate an or a certificate of approprieconomically feutble plan aten•s In order to underchange on property
for the pruervotlon of the
th11 ordinance
structure U"l•• 1n thHe
of Appro..
circumatancM the CommllOff I·
sion II ut:llfied that ~}he
tho
propol8d conltrucUon, alterst10n, or rapatr will not
and
materially impatr the hiltonc
1n any
value of the 1tructure. the
for a permit for
CommlslfOn shall rBJact the
conltNctiOn, erect1on.
application for repair or
atteradon, f11ing a copy of tts alteration, removal, moving
rejection w1th the Mayor of or demoUt10n of property.
the Village of Pomeroy archaeological or hlltortcal
Fa1lure to compty with the 1ita, or 11gn, m the H1storic
deas10n wdl result 1n a f1ne D11tnct.
4 "Change" means any
of •&amp;o 00 per day Any
person who cau-. whether altarat1on, demolit.an, remobyneglecto{willfulact•onor val or conltruction 1nvolvmg
inaction•. any alteratiOn of any property subject to the
or envwonmental change or provl810nl of th11 ordinance
demqJitton affect1ng any hll- includmg 11gns, landlcap
torlc structure or any his- ing, and tree removal.
tone lite or d1str1ct 1n "Change" 1hall Include any
violation of th11 ordmance new construction.
lhall be required to restore "Change" shall not relata to
the structure or property to ordinary ma~ntanance or re1ts appearance as the Com· patr of any property. promission for Hl1toric Pruer- vided 1uch work Involves no
change In mater~al, des~gn ,
vation may approve
Same-Aproval under car- texture. color. or outer
appearanoe
teln clrcum•tance~ ·
6 " Exteraor Architectural
In the CHI of a atructura
deemed to be valuable for Fature" mNnl the archithe par1od of architecture it tectural style and general
repre~ants and 1mportant1o arrangement of the exterior
the neighborhood within of the structure Including
the type and texture of
which rt ex1sts, the Commta
sion
the pro- buHding material•. all winalteration dow" doors, leghts, 11gn1,
other ftxturas apurtelg:,~:;~· lh,intllieath,t&gt;&lt;e&gt;.chl;.i"lrn;o,fiOI;i: and
nance thereto
8 ''H1stor1c S1gmfie~~nce''
meana the attributes of a
1 the structure 1e deter
rant to a maJor improvement district. ohe. or property that
program which wilt be of po•-•• tntegrity of locaaubltantial benefit to the tion, d•~gn, settmg, mateVillage of Pomeroy;
riolo. workmonshlp. feeling
2 retention of the ltruc- and UIOCiafiOn
7 "Hiatonc Site" means
ture would cau• undue
fmanc1al hardship to the the reel PfOperty on which
property hev1ng h1etor~c sig•
owner, or
3 the retention of the nificance 11 located or on
structure would notbetothe which there Is no structure
belt interests of a majority but which 11 it181f of histone
of persons 1n the elgntficance
8 "Landmark" meonuny
cornmunrty
Commiueon meet11101 to property or 11te wh1ch ha
be publiC, r1ght to app811r apeciel character, archaeok
and be heard. records of toglc.t, hlotorieal. outhatoc
or architectural value • part
Comm1n.On·
The CommiSSion shall of the heritage. developmeet at leat four t1mes: a mentor cultural charaC1ensyear All meetings of the tlca of the Vtllage of PomeComm1s110n shall be open to roy. and all property located
the publtc. Any interasted In the Vlltogo of Pomeroy
person or h11 representative hsted on the Nat10nal Reg1s
11 antrtled to appear and ba tar of Hiator1c Plac111.
heard by the Commi111on
9 "landscaping" meani
before it reaches a ded1 ton or mclud81 only such maJOr
or any matter The Commls· landscaping work that 11 to
IIOn shall keep an open be on op., tract• of land.
record of 111 resolution•. porkong lots, llroeto. alley•
procaedmgs, and ect1on1 and other Iorge open arou.
whlch1shall be kept available but not including the plentfor public inspection during ong or arrangement of flow·
era
plants lnctdental to
re11onabla bus~nesa hours
ttl o and
en hancernent of single
A notiCe of the meeting 1hall
be polled ot the City Holt Propertial
10bor"Member" meonuny
and publlahad two weeks
pr10r to the meet mg
Certificate of appropriate- ;::~":;,. 1 .,::: '.!'::..C:.;:o~~•ion
11 "Owner" moon• lha
ness. modlflcat1on or rBJBC·
owner or ow nero of record
t1on of application and plans
12 "Histone Otstrtct"
The Comm11110n shall fila
any area 10 des1gwnh the VIllage of Pomerov m81n1
noted lnoccordancewrththe
1 cartrticate of itl approval,
modlflc.. ton or NJIIC"hon of provoSKono of th11 ordononce.
13 "Property" moonuny
all application• and plans
submitted to 1t for rev1ew
place. building, ltructure,
Work 1hall not be com· work of art. f1xtura or s1mllar
menced on any 1uch proJect object, but shell not mcluda
until such a cart1f1cate of real property unl81s ax
approval hu been filed The pr•sty provided
14 "Sign" moon• any
owner lea~ee, or tenant of
the property and pre~u1e1 ~hl&gt;l,..":f ~.~:.:,~• o~~d~!~
thall not commence the
propoHI'i work or change which 11 u11d to adverttse.
until and unle~a he or n hu identify, d10play, doract or
recaNad the building permit, attract attentiOn to an ob
The Comm11110n shall ra· ject. per1on. lnstnutlon. orIPOnd 1n wrttmg to an gonizotoon, businas, pro·
apphcat1on wnhin ltwen to duct. Hrvieo, evant, or
fourteen (7 to 141 daytfrom loceon by any maens includthe date the application wu Ing wor!oo, aattaro. figuroo,
dea1gn1, symbols, fixtures,
folod
Ordinary ma1ntanance not color~. motion Illumination
affected, completion of or projected imag ..
16 "S1te" means an
work under pflor permit·
Nothing '" th1s sect1on archaeological or h11toric
shall be taken or construed she
Organb:atlon and Rules of
to prevent Work and repairs
on any ltructure com1ng the Commi11t0n for Hl1tonc
under the heading of ordl· Prnervation
AI soon as convenient
nary maintenance. Nothing
m this Nctlon affects the follow1ng their appoimmtnt
right to complete any work to the Coml1)11f10n, the
cov•ad by a permit or members shall meet and
authorlr.atlon lsaued pr10r to organ me elections of a Chairthe creation of the man and a Secretary The
Comm1uion shall adopt 111
Comm11llon
Appeel from dac1110n of own rultl of procedure and
provide fqr regular and speCommlalion
Any penon or pertonl, cial meeting• to accomplish
firm. or corporation ag- the purpose of thla
grieved by a deas10n of the ordinance
Hlatorlc District • Commls- 1101 20, 27. 2tc

13

Daily

4

Business Services

Giveaway

'Part lab .,d pan Dober man. 10
months old fr1endtv 304-- 88 2

pupp1ea,
~::::::::::::::::l:::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::l~::::::::::::::~ -28~8~2____________
__

I.

M•ud Collie

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
IYRACUIE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
DomestiC Vehicles
A / C Serv1co
All MaJor &amp; Mmor
Repa1rs
NIASE Certified Mocham c

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 p.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHiO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
9·19 88 tfn

CALL

992·6756

nDOC""Li c~~\~~~~1
Certlf1ed

M~~~T:P~LtDEI to

lmm

YOUNG'S

Let usoonreraahmoldMo'"'
&amp; ~1dts over to eosr VHS •
Ult AMY CARTER
or BOB'S ELECTRONICS
44b-7390

SERVICE

.ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

9-1-88-tfn

FIREWOOD

949-2168

OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

$3 s
BILL

SER'JICE

Sl~(;l(

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

8-8·88 tin

j '

J&amp;L

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

TRIPLE

Also Trans11luion
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

P

take Reward Call 614-992

6748

Oct mth In Letart Twp

Med1um

111ed

hunting

7

Yard Sale

dog.

·Gallipolis·
&amp; Vicinity
.... .... . "-'·-····--·
Yard Sale-Upp.- River Rd by
Rodgers E Z Ride Motors Fri
Sat &amp;. Sun Open at 9 00 AM
Anttque. and c:mllectable Item•
Sm appliances d1shes cloth
Lots of m11c i19ml Cancel If

'"'"

EXCAVATING
•Dozer &amp;. Backhoe Wor~
•W11i Do Hau l1ng W1th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Ser\IICe
•Junk Yard Busmes s
WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARl OR TRUCKS

6 17 tic

SMALL
REPAIR
Authorized Servile
&amp; Ports
Bnggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homahte
Jacobsen

INSULATION

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

8/15/tfn

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

LINDA'S
PAINTING

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRl

INTERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. let me do
i1 for you.
Very Reasonable.
Have References.

10 8 tic

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

614-985-4180

Complete Drywall

BOGGS

10.19.'88·1 mo

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT . SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

FREE ESTIMATES

Reasonable Rates

56

STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

614-662-3821
Authonzed John
Deere New Holland
Bush Hog Farm
Equ1pment Dealer

446-3487

9/ 15/88/ dn

Fum Equlpmenl
Parts &amp; S

LL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Seo:ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Yard Sale-5 fl!lmlllet Chpper
Mills Thutt Frl &amp;. Sat Oct 20

21

22

&amp;

Pomeroy.......... .
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Ohio

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
H any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us ond we'll
motch it!
AlSO ...
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR

EUM HOME

Roo111 &amp; Board For
Senior Citi10ns and
Good Rates
TL.C
26 Vrs Exp
References

992 ·6873
Joe or Paul•y Bowland
2D9 Soulh 4th St.

M~:~=~ti Oh.
"LOW
HDME"

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Knows Where You
Live.
Call 992-2228
or 992-9922

INCHES ON

AIID

LARGEST END

MODERN GUN
SUPPUES
Muzzleloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplitt
Guns • Ammo . Slugs 22 Ammo
124 Eo•l of Rutland
A&lt;roll Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph • • 14·742·2355

$14 PER TON

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND

-EX-reNSIYE' REMODELING
SIDING &amp; ROORNG

•VINVL

•METAl BUILDINOS
HOUSING • ,.T PROJECfS

SINCE 1969
DUill ST , lriACU!I

992-7611

10-6·88·1 mo

Wantad To Buy

TOP

Ave.

2292

PALLET
COMPANY

We bJv

Fund
George
Sh1sbadc 814-992 3891 For
dehvery lnstruct10n1 call 1 800.

POMEROY, OHIO

Black Walnutt

999-0727

992-6461
Empluymcnl

Servtces
Announcemenls
11

3 Announcements
Flee mwket BVIfY Tuesday and
Thursday Hentl&amp;raonTownHell
~

dealert w.,come

Help Wantad

UP to 815HOUA PROCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GU A·
RANTEEO FREE DETAILS

More than pst crafts. h..,e a
CrMtNe Clrde Craft Pany eall
Cottagav1lle 304-3?2 8t20 ask
for Tam

WRITE SO t057 W Ptulactel'
phla Suit• 239· 60, OntariO

4

Giveaway

Kitt.,•

lht•

ment Fl-'it&gt;le hours Send resume to Box Cia 176 c/ oGell i
poha Dt1ly Tnbune. 825 Th•rd
Ave , Galhpohs Oh1o 45631

train ad Call

bc11t

814-4-18· 9319

Mother c..

6 ktnen• Call

&amp;

Cal1f 91762

Etotper1enced Bartender for
downtown Galhpolts establish-

HOME ASS EMBLY INCOME
produ cts at home

Assembl e

448 491!2

9006

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAV OR EVENINGS
985 -4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
10-4-1 mo

614-446

ralsmg opportun•ty

1431

MARCUM CONTRACTIMG

Call

Junk Cars with or without
motors Call larry LIYely 614-

Craft1

St. Rt.

Galhpohs

Want to buy Uaed furnlturtc and
antlqullttl Will buy ent"e hous•
hold furnlsl'ung Marlin Wedemever 614-245-5152

Free kittans-hall S1amese Litter

(Off

PfMd for 83 model

CAS H

and newM used cars Smith
BUICk Pontiae, 1911 Eastern

To l)tve fiNfft/ to good homeShepherd pup 4 mos old Had

CARPENTER, OHIO

de.,

3158

814-266-1564

ahota Coli 814-4-16-8552

tnlnad Raccoon Rd Call 614Female Slam•• c.r: 8 mo1 old
At.o

fllmlll e kitten

Ca11814-246-8t92

•CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS

9

•

Furniture and apphanCM by the :
piece Of ent1re household Fa1r
pnces bemg IMIId Call 814-446-

OHIO

v.,., gentle

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAl

R1c:k Pearson Auct•oneer II·
cented Ot11o and West Virginia. •
Ettate • .,ttque farm Rqutdt- •

FURNACES
Featurin g· Consolidated, Dutch
West, 8runco, At~hley
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

698-6121
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNER, GRIG I ROU S11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

386-9303

DELIVERED TO

f/20/lflt 1 - pd.

WOOD STOVES

Pleasant

Complete houaeholds of furniture &amp; ant~qun Also wood &amp; •
co .. heaters Swam's Furniture •
&amp; Auct1on Th1rd &amp; Ohve
6t4-448 3159

14

DIAMETER

HILLSIDE MUZILE
LOADING

I

Garage Sale FndiP( flifld Satur
day Oct 21 and 22 8 DO t11l? "
Xmas decorations m1ac tt~:m 1 •
2 5 Warw 1c:k Road Po ini •

J1m Mtnk Chilli' Old1 Inc
B1ll Gene Johnson
8t ... 448 3672

CHIPWOOD
POLES

Fo&lt;tory Choke
12 Gauge Shotgoos Only
Str~~tly Enforced
10 7 dn

1'-----------:-------.!.;.J~~J

......PfPfeasant
&amp; Vicinity

We pay cash for hrtemodel
used cars

an

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Gallipolis, OhiO 45631
I
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy, OhiO

lArge ClotHng. kldl adulh
tome ant1ques, m~y m1sc
Items Sat Oct 22. 9-3 291 :
Walnut St Middleport, Oh10
•

t1on aaf•. 304-773-6785

1012 881 mo

EVERY

-

disl1es 13 In snow tlree exeraseblke Chrlatmeatree OldRt
33, George White ra.. denoe
Phone 614 992-29 39

8

Buildin9

, 6141 99 :,. J:r&lt;&amp;

dpared corner cupbo•d. sofa,

MAIN STREET PIIZA
Our Deli very Staff

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

I: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
3 411 Second Avenue. Box 1213

949 2860
•
Day or Night

S300

UNDER

GUN SHOOT
Basham

October 21 22 Antique round
table drop leaf ta!Me. glaued

Your Hometown P1ace

z LISA M KOCH M S
•
,
• .
a: l
C
W&lt;l:
tcensed linical AUdiologist

8 1

1es.

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

tm

Oct 21 from 9 Oo-3 DO Baby
bed and mtrttress clothe. tov•
ete Roma Cremeans re11~ence
Baeeh Grove Road, Rutland.
Follow signt Inside
H&gt;,sall's ChHdfen's Home Rd ,
naar Laurel Cliff. Pomeroy
Thurs Fn and Sat Toolt
collectors items kntvet cloth•'

y

1 6u1 !~E~~;.:~~~
Rll!DENCE PHONE

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At Reasonable Pr~ces "
PH. 949 • 2801

2 1 ~ " 88 tfn

L1stenmg Devices
Dependable Heanng A1d Sales &amp; Sen1ic•
(!) Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

We Carry
I
p y~IShlng
ay our Phon e
and Cable Boll s Here

CUSTOM BUILT

Betw,.n 9 o.m ·6 p.m
or Leave Messaae

MAXIMUM

Service ,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

614-742-2617

1-28-'88-tfn

992-3410

lr.--------

For any of these sent I[I!!S 'all

VALLEY LUMBER

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport , Ohio
J.ll-lfc

Mastic &amp; Certarnleed
Vmyl S1dmg
Roofmg
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Wmdows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Wmdows
Free Estimates
Call 992· 2772

/!h
'

Pom~~rov Tun Oct 18
Lad1ee Elg.n watch Gold Wtd
t1lver with strtrlch band Keep-

Loat r.

-FREE EIIIMATEI-

PER lOAD
DELIVERED

992-2269'~

or

PH. 949-2801
or Res . 949-2860
NO lUNDAY CAllS
l1Hin

At. 124, Pomeroy Oh1o

10·11.'88·1 mo pd

l OS T l adtet nrl 9'"Auby &amp; dl•
monda R EWAR O Call 6 14446-2828

New Homes Built
"Free Est1mates"

Roger Hysell
Gtlrage

C.ll 614-

Bleck. tlln wh1te Weerln g eollar Looks \'Oung Call 614-247
4134 eftar 6p m

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

We ServiCe All Makes
11

Howard L. Writasel

379 29 32

Found

•VINYL SIDIN G
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

KEN'S APPLIANCE

985·3561

Patrtot Gage ltee

Erisctncal

and

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
113'88 tin

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freazers
•Refngarators
"Must Be Repa1rable"

SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Daalar for
YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway
between At 7 &amp; Bashan
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Strvt&lt;e Center for Ryan
Products .
B 7 F1nancmg on Yardman
Serv1ce on All Makes
Wo Honor MC/ D111/Voso

LO ST
Gray M1 n1at u re
Schnauzer, male Wlttt red ootl•

(FREE ESTIM ATES I

WANTED

SERVICE

6 lost and Found

- Ad dons and r emodelmg
- Roof•n g and guHer work
- Concrete w o r k
- Plumbtn g
w ork

EAGLE RIDGE

3503

CARPEN TER

ll/2/ 881fe

304-895-

Children' a cat Spaved Return
gu~ranteed

Call

614·448 ~

6830
All white

kilt«~

Call 614-446-

8830
Catl to give

149-2908

away. Call 814-

Olve.....,ay Pine naedl s
muldl Croll 814-992 3728
P\oppl10 to

-OV

fer

BoMOtllu\

fluffy, Mlouible. W1nt1ng 1 good
homo Croll 304-878·8833
•Oit cook ltovt. 304-875-8730

P.-t time EtotperlenC8 unnac•·
Details Call 813-327

uwy

0896 Ext 0 . 1149

S600 weekly po..1bte A ~~&amp;em

bllng productl
P0

Huntingt on

SASE to Home
Box 9006-GOT
W \I a 2670 4

PART TIME OR FULLTIME

COUNSELOR Mut• 1 Degree
pref.-r..t Strong backgrourd tn
addiction r&amp;CO\Iery and adoleacent programming. Highly ch ..
htngJng and re'lponslble POSitiOn
evtlleble In an •dole~cent resl
dentlal progflm for sober r•
tponslble mdNktutl Contact 0 r

Joe Gay Ph 0 Beuatt House
P 0 Box 724. Athtwls Ohio

46701 16t .. 594-8101i with

letter of tnt ~tnt ., d 3 ref•enees
br November 1 1988 E 0 E
ProfMslonal office needs • 1t 1tt
person who 11 energetiC

fr iend!\' diPendtbte • market
lng mlttded Send ttlume to 8011:
Cia 176 c•e of the Glll1pohs
Dally TnbuM, 826 Tl"11rd Aw
Galhpohs Oh1o 46831

�------------·--Page-14-The Daily
11

LAFF-A-flAY

44

,.

AVON-Needl 5 Iidia to Sel
Avon. Cell 114-44&amp;-33158.

vr.

61

Apartment
for Rent

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDQET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 538 JookoM
Pike from •113 a mo. W81k to
ohop .,d movloo. 814-4452588. E.O.H.

Government Jobl 118.040 •

•l!i9. 230

Now Nring. Cah

1-8os-117-80oo e... R-9806
for currtnt fed•allltt.
Governm.rt Jobl: l •18,037. 10

*89. 405. lmmecfi•• Hlringl

Your arM. C.U {Refundlblel

for Fed••l UIJt 24 hrt.

2 bect-oom furnllhed or unfurMhed ap.rtmant With G•ao•
Ouiel In town toCIIIion. AwHtlble
Nov. 1st. 1225 plus utlitiM.
AduNo only. No polo. Cal
814-446-7128.

HINI an A \lOft pllrly ar Ml A won
with t5. 00 inve.tment. Mor•
Information C8ll 614--992- 7180.

AVON · All • -· Call Marityn

w• .,.,..304-182-26:46.

.,,.,.heel

2 BR . IPwtment, upsWira. Very
nice. Stave • r8frig.
loc•ed 481'h Fourth A~ .

AN'S &amp; lPN'S -PH, full time &amp;
p.-t time IPPIIc.tion•·are blinD

'11&amp; o mo. t100 dap. Call
448-3170

accepted for P.._•n Vall.,.
Holpitel Nursing C•e center.

CorrtiQ Pertonnel 304-178·
43AO. AAEOE.

238 .First Ave. 1 BA., kitchen
lJr'*hed. c•pated. f\tO chll·
dr.,/ Poto. •176 !&gt;klo u1Mn1• .
Dep. &amp; rof. CoR 814-446-&amp;925.

"Birkess,you're
a man who's
l
I
going P aCeS. Strongly SUggest that you hire a la~er."

long term car• faciltty . Exp•

•lanooprnrod. Comm.,oureta
lllllf'Y Mtd benefits, E.O.E. Mall

~":'.::"o:c:...~:"P~':!:'.~R~•;•

so• 328, Point Ple•ant. w. ve.
25650.
RN. Dlrootor of Nurolng. neodod
1or intermediate health c.-e
fiiCIUty. Exp.-lencedlnlon~;~term

~~.·~-:~~~:!try~:~:

rlenoa. Send ,..ume
loJI p
16. c..-e of Point 10
. Ploao'"'
Reg6attf, 200 Main St., Point
Ple•lnt. W.Va. 25550.
·
Wanted lead _,.i1arlst. drumm•
and k., bo•d pi~•· mila or
female for Ftock Bend now
30•&amp;75-5370 after
'
·

~(,~~f.

Need • companion With room
Md bo•d. phone 304-876-

5709.

12

Situations
Wanted

Homes for Sale

41

Homes for Rent

Mod•n 3 BR . home. VInton.
Faml~ room. eat· In ktu:hen.
ttorege building. large lot.
I 39.000 Call 614-388-9042.

Unfurnished hOUII, 2 BR .
Neighborhood Ad. *228. Referen011 • depoah reqUired. Cal
445-4418 oft or 7 PM.

Own•wll finance. Smell down.
PIIV liker41rt. 3 bedrooms. 2 t.IH
b•hl. b•ement. Just remodeled. Naw c1blnMS. c:e~;pet. 11
n..- wiring·ll'ldplumtMng. •ove.

Nlcelv furnilhed emel h0uae, 1
be«toom. One or two elderly
people. No p.ta. Ref. required.
CeH 814-441-21543.

814-949-2528 or 614-992·
2846-

city ochoolo. AduRo Onl\". No
polo. Dop. lo rof. rO&lt;IUirod. 136()
pot' mo.
114-44.&amp;-0278
aft•8PM. WMkendlanytlm•

House • Farm for aele.
•s.OOO.OOdownallutMbte&amp;Yz
P• cent loin to qualified buyer,
v.-y low doting mrti. 88 ecr•
with 7 .,.. old ced• contemporarv hom .. prleed rDced to

eon

2 BR ~ hou .. dose to Glllipoit.
Double o--11• • tull basement.
a 300 per mo. Dep . &amp;. ref. Can
8 14-44&amp;-3548. ;

•r•

r.:••

n""

"'ok&amp;

double oven and bay window. 2
bedrooms , exc cond ,
118. 000.00. 304-675-6929"'
675-3873

Roush Lwlf Gh•hlre. 2 bedrooms,. nice lot, 304- n3-582B
31

for more Information.

Homes for Sale

1988 8riltany 14•70. all elootVn anrective brick 4bedroom, ric, 1ot 7Bx173 tt. ns.ooo.oo.
2 a-h. family room with fir~ Hartford nw • teenil courts.
place, forrnel dining. l•ge living 304-882-2844 oft• 6:00PM.
room. 30ft. custom oM kitchen
cabin lis. oak woodwork, finish
Farms for Sale
b111ement, 2 c• g•ege. lwei 33
IMdtlcaped lot. 4 mil• from
Holzer HospH:al off Rt. 35Porterbrook Subdivision. CaH 10 6 prhlate acrM with .e .,Y
614-446-4189.
ace••· Gallipolis ~rry, nltW
home elao 2 Iota with walla,
4 BR ., full bMement S. g.-aga HO.OOO.OO. 304-676-4631 .
. 1\lltv c1rpefed {some new} ;
Priced to ..u. Call 814-4460278 after 6 PM. weekends
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
anytlm&amp;
3 bedroom furnished 1 acre or
morel.-.d. 112. 000.00. 1f.1 mil e
from 4 l.,e and CenterviHe on
County Ad . 8. 614-245-9279.
3 bed'oom Rench. 1Vt bst:h1.

2'h acrea bottom 1.-.d Loceta:l
epproJI, 16 mi. s. of Gallipolis,
old Rt. 7 (Vallev Vi., Or.l Cell
814-266-1774.

fll'lliv room. dining room, 1 car
g•age. storage bulclng, pocl/ wooden deck. Spring Vall~
•oa.'~4-446- ~ __.-

Athton. '-oe ~ilding Iota,
obHe hom!!J..peii'nttted, public
water,--aii"O river lots, Clyde
Bowen. Jr. 304-178-2331. ·

For ule or rent. 2 bect-oom

Be.,tit.JI rl'lwlota ew~eecreplus.
public wattr, Ctyde Iowen, Jr.
304-'57&amp;2338.

~• home 1.4 mile out S.UI•
villePikeinG•IIIpolia, Oh . Vi 1cre
fenced-in yarcL ..ortge building.
Clotl to ho•pltal and shopping. 26 •crea Broad Run Road. NeW
City school• 1275 per mo.. Haven. Ownw ftn.,dng w•ll•
Approx.. •1800downwtthFHA ble. 304-882· 3394.
Loan . " Coli 814· 448· 85 77 1- - - - - . : . _ - - - , - evening~ .

Renlals

e rooms ~d blth in Hemlocll:·

Grove. Vinyl siding. naw windows and c•peted. Alking

U1.000. Call614-992·7207"'

814-992-2331.

41

In country with I., d. Good deer
lamting. 16 mliM from Athens,
12 ml• from Pomeroy. Clll

814-992-5848.

Homes for Rent

Nlcatv fur,.Md smal hou ...
Adutt• only. Ftef. rtqur«&lt;. No
polo. Coli 814-448-0338. •
3 IR ., AC, c•plt. pool, v•lll&amp;
2 flropl- fonoo. OOOCI locotion. Otll A·1 Aall ERMe
Brokor. 304-875-1104.

4 .,..oom houl8. 1'12 bill\
G•ll• lot 70&gt;&lt;100. 0•"""' HHI.
Mlddl-. Ohio. Quid&lt; pooaooolon. Call 814-992-5714.

~E~O-H_.

Newt";' f8dilcorllled lp&amp;rtmenta
~alibi• Utillti• paid. 1225.
P•month.depoalt~lred. Cell
114-992-572• lflw 8:00 or
99 2-8119.
...:n.,:ll.,:hod..,::__1_bo_dr
:._oo_m_op_art
_·
mont.tlopookroqu~ai.Nopol~
ut.. IIO pold. 614-992-2937.

~":~O::.·P~c!c.~t~s~-n. =~c!~1;;;:o::·~:~~ ,:,•;. .=F~

888.000.00. Phone 304-676- 1-__:___:_.:._.:._::.__ _ __
ti9H GIIIIJJolia Ferry, W.Va.
· 3 BR : hou• In ctry. 1176 p•
mo ntl1. Ref. • dep. required~
E)llltingDAY CAR Ein trrt home
- .
has openingl for 2 children. Call 2 bedroom hou14J. Extre lot. Coli 814-448-4728.
614-448-6147.
304-875-4384. '4 BR. home. 7 mil• from town.
3 beli'oom home. 11h bett.a. •450 piUI depas•. Cllfl 814c•peted. central IH'· heM, lo- .448-8348. Schools
cated In Point Pleeunt, call
Instruction
304-875-2702 or 30 .. 578- HouM wtth b.th. Ne• R1dne.
Nice y•d. a•den space. Cal
2147.
8 14-992·6868.
WANTED TO BUY. hou• thai
RE-TRAIN NOWI
3 bedroom. 2 b .. t\. ruu b••
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS wll tln.,couwu FHA. Qalllpollo ment.
24J127 faTtltv room. I
Ferry
304-87&amp;-7589.
CO u.EGE, 129 'Jackson Pfke.
rooms.
3 aer• pluL A~Aible
Call448-43&amp;7. Rog. No. 86-11November
111:. C.l 114-992·
10558.
2744.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale ,
3 bedroom hOu•ln Mlnersvile.
.'
18 Wanted to Do
Central air.
$225 P'u•
Land comi'ICI:, llrge l.,lhg room depotit. Re ..,.ce, No pet ...
.
w l eJipando room, 2 BR ., 614-992-3159w / w.ll c•P8t. 1lr oonlltlon.
Dozer 6 Backhoe Work-860 w/ orw.hOutfurnlture. Nit. g• 2 11ory, 4 boctiooml. 2 bot'111.
-·~ •• Case doz8f'. Re .. onable rates.
!Urnece on prNoltelot. M.., rent f.mily room, loCited ParkOrtlle,
•• ,Experience operator. Cremeans lot. Coli 8 to 8 PM, 614-448- t 3&amp;0.00 per month. d•osltend
• Const. CaM 614-266-1718.
ret.-encerequlr;ed. ell I Work dlf'f
14D9.
304-875-4340 ook fo&lt; ' Mr.
, -, Painting &amp;. roofing II c•pentrv 19 88 New Moon 12x&amp;O. 2 BA~ Goach. •
, · .. work bV the hour or job. Call $2300. Call 614'448-0390.
'. 614-379-2418.
Mt, V•non A we, 1miM 2 bed
MobRe Home for u ·.. 1h&amp;o. room. b•errtent. g•age. unfur··
lntertor deaning of home~ and Call 614-448-2003. .
~shed. a• furnace. nice v-rd.
o1flces. 8 ve•• upwience in
one child: ••2150. 00 month,
prof11stonal cleaning. Referen1973 Skyline moble hom• 2 . . . .co .,dtlop..lt. 304-675ce~ . Fret~ 111timetes. C.ll 8142&amp;&amp;1 .
.
t.Goomt, 1b!50, sa- furn.ce.
245-1155.
... go • &lt;elrll&gt; U800. Call
2 b'*oom hoUie. blument.
814-448-7285 "'448-36;18.
Will do babv sitting in your
rtlll dean neighborhood. accept..
home. any age. would perter For Sale or rent· 12x8&amp; mobile In g Hud. apply 2225 Uncoln
days. h111e r8ferencw. call304- home. St. At. 7· 1 mi. a. of Avo. 304-676-1301 .
675-6461 .
Eur.rca dsm. C.ll 11,..:25&amp;8088.
.
.
42 · Mobile Homes
14Jl 70 F1lrmo'nt. AU electric
Financial
for Rent
with hut pump. uteflhe c:Nah.
()loll Ck. Cal 814-245-6284or
246-!1078.
Ne.- W•.-loo--2 If. Cl..-..
Business
21
1918 Flotlwood. 12&gt;&lt;64. bottle *125 • ma. Ref. &amp; dep. AduhL
Furnilhld. CaR 814-441-7764
g11 heet tnd hot water. *300().
Opportunity
Call 814-843-6310 or 814- or 643-2844.
843-6406 anytime. Ask. for
BFt, 2 fun b•hl.
c.-pet
I NOTICE I
Danny.
. 3
Fost.-sMobleHornePark. Cal
THE 0 HIO VALLEY PU8LIS H114-448-1802.
ING CO . recommends that you 1988, 14x70 2 btcttoom VIet~
de bualn•s vvtth p.,ple you rlsn MobHe Home wkh vinyl 3 BR .. 2 bllhl .. Port•. Cell
know. and NOT to sand mon.,., und.-pklnlng. Has g•den tub, 814-388-9604.
throuW1 the mllll until you h.,e b•. bay window, bult in china
investigated the ·o ffering.
cabin .a:, plus morA Shown by
2 BR . Aduho onlv. No
IIPPOintment onty. 30+882· In E
pets. I 225 a mo. Oep. requ lrld.
Own your apparel or shoe store, 3451 aft• 5:30p.m.
Coli 814-248-1883.
choolll from: Jean·Sports!N8tf.
Ledle 1 , Men's, children · 1""70 Mobile Home and 1.9
Nice 3BR. treilerwith•pendo,
maternity, lll"je sizes, pattie. ICI'81. Five Points area. CaU
living room. l•ge ytrd. Se1111 It
dan"""'••· aerobic. bridal, lin- 1:8~1.,:4-.,:9.,:9.,:2.,:
· 7~5_:8_:B.:"':...,:::::In:..:go:·_ _ 314 Third St. KenMiga. Call
gwle or accessories rtore. Add
.
oolonnatvsii. ,B,..dnamll: Ll:t: 2 bedroom 1211:150. $1900. 614-448-7473.
Claiborne. Hottltht... Ch.,,, 304-878-2722.
Svr11111e. 2 bedroom mobile
lee. St Mic'hele. Forenza, Bugle
I 150 momhpluautlltiM.
Boy, LevL C.mp Beverty Hills, 1970 Wlndlor. 12xe&amp;, wood- .home.
814-992-5732.
Organically Grown, Luci&amp;. over burner, Mlher and dryer, air
2000 othtl'l, or $13.99 one cond. murtbemoved.304-8952 bectoom rnobMe home helf
J)rice deligner, mutti tier pricing _3 80=2.--=-------mMe out Jericho Road, nJftll'en7
diacount Of famitv shoe state. :cea f«~Ui'ed. call.tt•IS:OOPM ,
Ret•M priCM unballwablefortop 1979 S.yviM moble home.
304-875-1082.
quaiHy shoea normelty priced 14x70 wtth 7JC21 expendo,
from t19. to $80. over 260 phone 304-875-1141 .
2 be*oom mobile home. quiet
brandl2800.tyles. $17,900to
elghborhood. phone 304-875t:29.900: inventory, tl'llining. .'81 Redman mobRa home. ac n1082.
4ixturn. •irfare. grand opening. . oond. 2 bectooms. good lot
etc. Can open 15 dava. Mr. romlon. OallipoUa, pertialt";' fur·
2 beftoom unfurnished trail.;.,
Loughlin (612/8811-4228.
nil hod. 304875-3779.
w•t•lf1da.werindudtd, 304876-1076.
1988 Allison moble home.
Bealtv Shop equipment for sale, 14JI70, spacious kitchen with
phone 304-675-5709.

Real Eslale

aroc:~ouo

r~=:;;::;:::;::::;;;=~T;:~;:;::::::;::~~~
31

A-mont "" r-. 1225 •
month. Deposit requir.:l. 1!114992-5724 Aft• 6!&gt;m cw 992·
&amp;119. - - : - - - - - - ... "'• 1 .,d 2 bodroom epartrnenh at VNI••
menta
From
Menor in
.,d ,.iddleport.
RIY. .Ido A
-·
118
2. Call 814· 992, 7787.
-------2 be*oom Apt1. for ...,t,
Carpeted. ~ice setting. laundry
f1clkl• wahble. Call 814992- 3711. EOH.

"

44

Apartment
for Rent

New 1 be*oom furrMihed or
unl.lr'*heclln Middleport. Cell

114-892-5304 or 892· 2778.

Syracuse. 1 ' beci-oom apwt·
mMt. 1136 tnonthplus utllltl•.

6 14-99Z.6732.-

"*'furf!ilhe&lt;f ap . .ment et 127

Mulbelory Ava .. Pom•oy. Oh. 4
roo~

end bllt,. second ftoor.
Adutts only. Nq pets. Deposit
end ret•ence rlqllired. Call
81~992· 2275 "'" 5:00 p.n) .

Fwniltwd. inducing 'u tHiti• br
1 p . .on. t1to.,.. month. c.n
114-992,2646.

Furnished : one bedroom · apt,

ad.ltta on~. no pllt. clll aft•
5:00, 304-676-3788.
1 be*oo'm

aPt

in Hen derlon.

304-878-1972 .,.,. 5:00.

FwrUa~upp•hllfofd.lpllt.

1

be.tooom. c•p• end etr con d.
pr.t• single working eclllt, no
PMS, g• 1ft d wet.- furnished
1200.00 month. reference _..d
dopooM. 3114-675-26Sl- '

45

Furnllhed room-919 Second
Ave., Galllpolil. 1136 1 mo.
Utllklao pold. Slnolemolf. Shwe
bat'h. Call446-4416oft•7PM.

Dev•

cr-.

C8th wkh

seme •

opprovod
3 Ml• out
Bul.,lllo Rd. ap., 9om 10 6!&gt;m
• ~..
Mo th S.. Ph 11

0322.

N

' ·

•

--

Vall.,. Furnlrure
New end used .,rnlture. .. d
appllcancn . Cll.l 814-4417&amp;72. Hou,.. 9·5.

J loS FURNITURE
141&amp; Eattern Ave.
4 ctr..,., chen. 148. &amp; driWII•
ch•t. 164.915. 6 pc. wooden
dinnette seta. *198.81.
PICKENS USED FU RMTURE
Complete hou•hold furnlshlngt. 1h 1"1'111• out Jerrlcho.
304-675-148-0.
.
For low prices onOullllv C.rpel
• Fum•ure come to Mollohan
Furn~,.Upper Rtyet Rd., 114446-7444.
.

Kenrmrt waahw t715.00. Speed
au- dryer ns.oo. 2 do..retrigerator •715. 00, 1Pa1ment

•e ''"_
a• •ae.oo. a•nmge30

In avocado ee&amp;. 00, g• space
heater tti.OO. eleclric range
avocado *9 .6 ,00, Hoover

w••'*
178.00. Hoover dryw
t?&amp;.OO, 911 rMge201n .11.00.
Skegga Appll . . cn. Upp• River
Rood. 814-446-7388.

VIR.i•a Furnltuni
Open tt.itv. Mon.·S•t.

SAM -&amp;PM
Sun .. 12 noon- li PM

Complete househ -old
furnishings- AI boating." rurtlc
bunk beds wfth . ruftlc chill.
v•riMy of aof• &amp; chlirl·ll on
safe. EJEtUent ulld appli .. ~.
CHristmas toys naw In 1toclt.
Christmas 18¥8Wavt now"'bllng
tak..-.. Plus fln111clng wvllllabla
with approved credit. Rt. 141 in
Centenary-"A mile .o n Uncoln
Plko. 814-448-3158.
Llr.ge Chine Tub on tega. E.:el.
cond. 1100 or bell off•. can

814-448-470&amp;.

Refrig..-ator, · electriC r_.ge,
King wood burner. alectricwood
oplltt•. CaM 814-379-2248.
Whk'lpocl washer S. dryer·lbo((t
I m91. old. Coli 814-446-8246.

Seven pit&gt;t~aolid maple dinette
.... YI'V good condition. •ble. I
chairs. Solid ·maple be*oom
suite. Twin bed. mltt:r. . &amp; box
sprtnga-Nke new. Cell 814-44&amp;2416 !lftet 5 PM.

53

Antiques

Buy or S.U. Riv•ine Antlquea.

54

Misc . Merchandise

Treillll' Space ·tor Ren1. Call
614-445-4634.

Wheelchairs·,_. or · ulld. ·· 3
. w~ed electric sooot.... C.ll
COUNTRY.. MOBILE Home Park. ..Rogers Mobilty coll.ect, 1·114Aoute 33, North of Pom•ov· 870.9681.
Rental trelt.-a, Call 614-992Queen •Ire floatatlcn bed wtt._
7479.
h811ter, ocat cond., 1160 or
b•t off•. 1 l~t~~Vn mower, j3(),
Sp ,.ciout mobile home lots for
rent. F1mily Pride Mobile Home Call 614-446-2297.
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, W . Ve .
All olk 11nwood. Good plcku p.
30 4-.878-3073.
t30. Split&amp;: loaded Call 614W•e com"*cill high traffic 256-1711.
ultall location,. pl•ty parking,
foot of Shadle Bridge corner For Sale Dog Hou.... 11Jl mil• "
Second and Vi.. d Str881s. 304- OUI Rt. 141 . Call 614-4480593-WIY'ne Shoemlklll'.
622·4126 .. 304-&amp;23-7277.
Truck top fils 8 ft. bid. He..th-

49

For-lease

Comm•elal Bulding for leaae.
A . Pie• .,!. Call 304-875- '
5104-

way_o 380 rowing machine.
Huffy exersystem 5000 l'tltklf~
wy blk~ Allin goocloltapo. CaH
114-448-3113.
1979 Joop CJ-7. outo. 1971
sevme· Fl1. car. 711'\1 MerOJry &amp;
boet, tr1ller. 4-235-71·1fi"
.tlrao-•so. s a. w Modol 63. 22
ell . Mustm.. er•aonebleprice.
Coll814-445-7019.
We~tern

61

Household Goods

Boots, Rad Wing work
Sho81, Huah Puppy dreu tho•.
Quality, 11laedon, greet pric:ea.
Wades wort~; • wlllem, Stlte
R 1. 141. south of Wstrloo.
614-643-21&amp;8.
Dlk.ote farm Home. B~lt on
your lot. •12.995 • up. S.eour

Model. Call1 -614-118-7311.

Mixed h•dwoochllbl. t12per
bundle. Ccntllning ap_prox:. 1Y..
ton. Ohio Pellet Co .. Pom•cy,
Ohio. 814-992· 8481 .
Nice roiiiWIIV bed with iriner
spring mattJ.... 126. Uphols·
tery m•ertll. Antique proJector.

room. 1240 • up. UtRttl• pthi
Coli 448-4418 oft.- 7 PM .
F..-nllhod offld.,oloo· 1145 a.
up. UtMIIi• pah:t Sh•e bit h.
Coli 445-4416 oft• 7 PM .
Apartments for tht Eld•tv.
0.1111 Minor A~m1nt1. 866

'(00.,.

ffi
01:.1':51L ~

•

''WE'LL BE SACKWITI-l Ti-lE
11-EST OF OUft C~EAP SI-IOT5
_i/11 P.. MOME/IIT ..''

54 Mile.

Merchandise

M~ alto wee._., Kenmori
dryw. lloth Mc:ollont ohopo.'
0uoron1ood. t226. 814-387.
0322.

63

Livestock

~"' br. . . · of plaeons &amp;
duclut. Call oft• 6 PM. 114448-0169.

'"dl!y

SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SALE·
WEOfiiESDAY, OCTOBER 26 •
8 PM. All br- ln...dlng
Holetelns.- Cattle will be ecc:op1od Ill dov Tu•dov. Octob.28 a. up to 2 PM Wodnoodoy.
Octob.- 28. Houllng ov.olfoblo.
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE. 1
mHe..-, of AI.,.,.,. Cll'llt. At. SO.
Col Stocltyord 814-1192·2322
or 1111-3131 .,.,lngo.

•nnv comouflougo. donlm. - · Carhart 'c:lothln1&gt;

4- - ·
""'·~ Cal~614Due tp
Doc-.
246-H8,.

Antlou-. C"booo. Much"'""·
R1. 881. of Itt. 33. now
'Mtal8¥''1, S.. •d Sun. 10:30.
4:00. Call ~1--992·!1013.
Bpo Sal• bo.,tlful.-,. built.
buy from W.Vo. m.,.loctu..and IIV'tl. For lnfor.,..k&gt;n Md
coli 1·30"'1Z:t-8288.
1ltnt
2:00 PM tiN
8
.
.
.
Surpluo

1r..-.,

~ Ou1dOOr Sportsman (A)
(ll 0 (J) ABC N• ws

1!J Body Elec1ric

Calf
.
Lite 614-742-2451
modll2.2 Chrysl•
engine.

79

Fri.

Hunters Spedal-21 ft. camp•.
Self contain 101. t1 500. Call

814-387-0140.
1982 Hollclor Rombl• 31 ft.
Cllmf*' trll• far Ml&amp; • 92&amp;0.
1979 Horl.. Low .R -. 9000
actUIII ml•. t3000. C1ll" aft•
&amp;:DO p.m.. 814-742-2304

Sat, Sun, noon 111 8:00 PM.
!NO¥. Doc _ . 7 dl!yo). · Som

14 lndt Hom ... e cftialn MW,
.,d •~~'~~ chllinl •121.00.
Lodl• 28 ln. 3 o - blcyole ll&lt;o
new •eo.oo. 3 wom~n'a white
unlformo •10.00-.UkonM
Ka•O-Sun hut• 1. 700 btu
1150.00. 304-176-2820.

c••

55

BuHding Supplies

GOVERNMENT SEIZEO Voh•
d• from •100. Fordl. Mer·
cedal. Coiwrt• Chivy a. Surp.lus . B~yar'i Guide . (11
808-187-11000 ht. S-10 188.

a.......... au•-•

for Sale

1986 Doclgo · OmnL 4 dr..
21.-000ml•.•uto. t31500. Clll
814-37!1-2721-

Groom ond Supply." 9hop-Pst
Grooming. All brHds : . . All
lama PM Food Deal•.
Julie W.bb ""· 114-441-0231.

llty...

CFA ,_11111 •d •am•• ·klt·
''"'· AKC Chow puDDfel, Ntw
Hlmolovon kltt.... -tall &amp;14446-3144 oft• 7 PM.
·
AKC Rog. OldEnglllhShoopdog
puppl•. Call 814-266-8675.
AKC reglll•ed llbwi.. Hulkllf
puppl-. blk .,d '!'lhitO. blue
eyes. 2 mat• 4 females,
U1S.OO Nch. 304-578-2483
Ilk for,Jennlf•.
Cute cuddly Poocle puppiaa, not
•oglot•od but lull blooclocl. 8
wooko old, 160.00 ood&gt;. -304675-6311.
.
P.R. Ngilt.-.d mile end r.m.le.
7 montho old. T. Wolk... S~o
Hau• Gambl• (Utter m•eto
Upport. Dom NRoCh.lhornoo'o
Anno. 304-875-1070.

1977 M.-cury M•quil, •1000.
1171 ford pldtup · teOO.
1973 Dodge Vlfl·f'llaed top.
taoo 1979 Unaoln Molrk v.
t2800. 1878 Chtllly Von.
11-200. 18 ft. c:omp•. 12000.
C'!fl 814-448-4897 oft• B PM.
1984 Mercury Topoo OS. PS.
PB. olr. AM·FM, 54,000 mRoo.
12100. Call 814-448-0212 or
445-1278.
1982 Pontiac J 2000, auto. eir,
good condtion. 814-992·1110

dlll'tlmo, 814-992·6086 ., ....
lniJIInd weekends.
'T71hu nderbird, rMce de.n cer,
one owntr, auto In toor, ·buclc•
.... tl75.00. 304-676-2457.

1181 Monte Carle. 88,000
actual mll11, good oond, phone
304-898-9480.
1170 Muat.ng Fait back. exc
oond. no motor. t1,100.00, clll
304-112-2892.

Bleck t.mlla Olow, 4 monthl
old, AKC registered, good with

1991 Ch.,, Cttltion. 4 door,
IUto transminlon. Y-8 .. Cline.
elr cond. 70 , 000 mnea,
01.80D.OO. 304-878-1138.

57

'80 Pol'rtitc OrMd Prbc, good·
cond. u.eoo.oo. 304-117582114.

lddo. 304-178-1887.

Musical
Instruments

lndtltkllal .. liar l•eona, bl·
ginn. ..
gultlrtst. Bruic•cllo Muol~ 814-446-0187.
Jeff Wemal~tt lMtnJCtor, 114•46-8077. Llm•od op.,lngo.

•riou•

1984 Buldc Rogal 85,900.00.
304-875-4480.
1988 Chevrolet Nov•
t7.soo.oo. 304-87&amp;-4480.

Olboon Son)o M8260. c..l 304178-7438.

1177FordLTO.,tomltlc. air 2
door. 1982Dodge0rnni. 4do0r,
..to. 304-878-7168.

68

72

FNit

8t Vegetables
Red l'(llllowdelickJUs. MetrO,.,
Jonathan, Idared, Winesap
Orlnw, Aome•p'•· Sorghum:
han., • mllolllanaoua food

Southoaot
oiAIItony.
J:Lo:r:go:m:lrr:o:r.:8:1:4-:99:2:·30~18~.~ Closed
h..,.,
D1.11rovln
FruitHoursll-8.
Ferm-111
Mond•Y · 114·198·
1298.

'

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

I .!1111

Sllpplli'c

/:-, II Vi'SiillJ

TNdcs for

Sale

8t '4 W.O .

1983F-1104a4. -l~onglne
Pl. PB. tool box, bod flnor'
running
14300. Cali
114-448-0212.

Vans

bo••·

I::-:=~:..:.:.:.:::...

____

1187 F.d Aero &amp;tar v ...
Elrtondod " ' ' " -· loalod. Coli
114-448-8779.
19715- oqulppod ""llohlnQ.

tlo,.mor bO pld&lt;odupotllp&lt;lng
V811~ PI••· 829 Jeclceon Pike
... .••1 614-448-4839.

0Holf•. "'"'ahlng ....
1"00· 780 lbo. ·. U!IO. Call
114-448-4083.

Llveatodc

Republican wins in

presidential elections . E;l
®I Ill Qll 48 Houra
• till MOVIE: The
CJuriflghtere (NA/ (1 :40)
I!]) PrlmeNews
iBl MOVIE: Du1/ny of a Spy
(1 :39)
1!11 Mulder, She Wrote E;l
Nalhville Now
8:05 CD MOVIE: Empire of the
Ants (NR) (1 :30)
8:30 11 (]) 1111 World Series
Baseball E;l
9:00 (!) NHRA Dreg Racing

l

a

Pelntlng: Interior • EldWior.
Froo ootimotoo. Call 814-4488344.

•

A ON'S Television Service.
HouM cilia on RCA. Quezar.
OE. Spoc:iollng 1n
h. Call

Supernationats from

z...

Houston. TX (T)
(I) (!) Mys1ory/ E;l
[)) Lorry King Live!
Ill Ql) MOVIE: 'Some1hing in
Common' CBS Special
Movie E;l
(!) Thuraday Night Flgh1s

304-578-2398 or 814-448·
2454

F.rtt Tr11

Trlmmln~J, llump
remove!. Call 304-87&amp;-·1 331.

Rotllfy or cable tool drUiing.
Molt wells compl•edsemed..,.
Pump ul• end aervkle. 304895-3802
.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WEL-L, tON THE Tcre

RON'S APPUANCE S ERYICE
' - • call oorv/dng OE, Hot
Point, w• hera, dry en and
· - · · 304-678-2398.
Ak•• Tr" Trimrrin:,:.d Stump
Removal. Free 11t

82

OFF MY

INNs&lt;.

9:30 ® New Coun1,Y
10:00 (}) 700 Club
(I) IBJ NeWS•
(!) Arthurdale
m I!J) Barney Miller
[)) Evening News
12!1 Crook and Chase
10:05(l) MOVIE: Frogs (PG) (1 :31)
10:30 (!) BaHie ol1hO Monster
Trucka and Mud Racing
From Saginaw, Ml (T)
(!) Ea1tEnders A continuing
chronicle ol the lives of

AND [BLEW

I 6NEEZE:DA

MY COVER.

~IG:ANTIC

6NE:EZE. ...

SANCT/..lM .

... Call

304-875-7121 .

Plumbing
llo Hea'ting

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANDHEATINQ
Cor. Fourth and Phle
&lt;;alllpoHo. Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or 814446-4477
84

&amp;

...

.... .,..u....

residents in London 's East.
End . (0:30)
(!) Ugh1 Houses of New
Englond
till Odd Couple
1211 VideoCo.un1ry
11:00
Remington Steele S1eele
Spawning

BARNEY
MY MAN SNUFFY.
IS WORKIN' ON

Electrical
Refrigeration

A N!W SUNTIIN
LOTION

DOES IT
WORK?

m

ALL IT DOES 50 FAR
15 MAKE YORE. FACE
REO AS A BEET

rn

11 (}) m
1111 News

Dtll•d Wat• Service: Pools.
tlmo. C.ll 814-448-7404-No

"

Sunday ealta.

Bernice Bede Osol

'lOur
'Birthday

d"'hrory. Coll814-992-5275.

success.

W1tterson'a Wetir H1uling,

immedllllte

:'J:'4'frg:'

tri county~ru23re•s. Thebeet

'-lpholstery

Mowr..-• • Upholatarlng ..vlng

In "'rnlture ufholllertn
Call
30 • - 8 76-4 54 forg. fret

estlmat•.

-r~~.;. .

Oct. 21, 11188

More opportunities than usual should
• be in the offing to streng1hen your llnan• clal posl11on In the year ahead . Your
prospects look beiW than 1hey have in

years.

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0c1. 231 A !rend Is beginning 1o develop that will have a lavorable influence on your .earning J?O·
ten11al. 11 will no1 be a cycle of sh0r1
dura11on. Ge1 a jump on llle by under·
standing the Influences thai are governIng you In 1he year ahead . Send for your
As1ro-Graph predlclions today by mailing $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this newspa·
par, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101-3428. Be sure to slate your zodi·
ac sign.
SCORPIO (0c1. 24-Nov. 22) Take a
chance on your own Ideas 1oday belore
;you look to o1hers. Wha1 you 9oncelve Is

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21 ) Let
your natural sense of timing come into
play 1oday If you're trying 10 llnallze an

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) In lnvolvemenls wl1h lrlends where Important Is-

sues are'concerned, things should work

out In . ways 1hat will make everyone
happy. Do your part
important matter. Press tor· the close GEMINI (Moy 21·Juno 20) Even though
a goal you'll be S1rivlng towards today
when your intuition directs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Don '1 will be personal, you might be surpriSf!d
be reluctant to ask probing quesllons how much support you ge1 !rom 01hEil"s.
today regarding something new you are · CANCER (June 21-Jul' 22)/n partnll'•
undertaking but don't fully compre- ship arrangemen1s 1oday. It should be
you rather than your associate, who r
hend . The informa11on Is available.
plays
1he major role. Aoaert yourself,
AQUARIUS (.len. 20-Feb. 1t) There are
wal1
upon 1hls parson ro make 1he
aon'1
two promising areas a1 presan1 · that
could be meaningful !inane/ally. One Is 1/rst move.
your regular work, the other is a confi- LEO (Jul' 23-Aug. 22) You may not be
In a position to lnlluence changes 1odential channel.
PISCES (Fob.' 20-Molrch 20) This is the · day, but you will be able 10 meke 1ha
kind of day you'll /Ike, because you most of any shills tha1 occur. The beneshould be able lo do 1hlngs your own fits could be con8iderabla.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-,llepl. 22) Conditions ·
way. If you don't run lhe show. you'll
. are qu/18 favorable today for striking
• have only yoursell to blame.
ARIES (March 21-Apr/1 Ill) Don'l be bargains or making deals. Try 10 do so
lmpatien1. even If you feel blocked. Sur- now, bec8usa /a1er InflUences may be ,

r.

prising things could develop behind 1he
~

scenes.

·

less conducive.

-.

_

_

T

6

.

•

_

.

.

.

&amp;

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN TH ESE SQU ARES

Complete the chuckle quoted
by fill ing in the missing word5

L..._I-...L-L_I-....L.......J you develop from step No. 3 below.

tft UN SCRAMBLE LETTERS
1;1' FOR ANS WER

I I
•

I'

•

3

'I TT

lrol

.

I

Nuhville Now
12:05 CD MOVIE: Willlrd (PO) (1:35)
12:30 a(]) 1m Lite Night w/1h
Dovid L1Her11111n
ctJJe-nl
GIJJ UIA TodiY
• 11]1 TwiliGht zone
.
e Ol MOVTE: •Quarteltlock
Prine-· CBS Late Movie
(NR) (i :36)

I

Bunei- 'SUITCASE:

BRIDGE
By James

NORTH

IO·lO·II

+to s 2

• 8 642

Jacoby

.AH

+toss

If you're going to bid your hand to

the hilt, you'd better be able to play it WEST
EAST
t974
as well. South had a good hand, but it +J 8'
.753
wouldn't play very well opposite zero .KQJ 109
K J 10
high cards. When Snuth reopened with U3
+J732
a double, the two-diamond bid by +KB4
North showed nothing other than mod·
SOUTH
erate diamond length . Then, when
+AKQ3
East competed vilth two hearts, Snuth
bid three hearts to express that his
•Q9642
+AQ~
hand suddenly looked much better. Be·
cause North had an ace which his part·
Vulnerable: North-South
ner did not know about, he wisely de'Dealer: South
cided to show it by jumping to five
Sootb
diamonds. That was doubled by East
Nortb East
West
It
on general principles.
Db! .
Pass Pass
Snuth had plenty of work to do. For
3.
Pass
starters, he needed two club tricks. He
2•
Pasa
5.
Db!.
Pass
also needed to lead up to the diamond
Pass
Pass
queen. And of course there was no
guarantee that he would not have an
Opening lead: • K
eventual spade loser. Since he did not
think that East would have passed his
partner's one-heart o_vercall with two
I
kings, he decided to play West for the
South. That finesse worked, and declub king. Sn he won the ace of hearts
clarer was still In dummy. He led a dl·
and immediately led the club queen
amond, and the king was onside. Lat·
out of his hand. West took the king and
er, when the spade suit .split, declarer
played a second heart, ruffed. Declarbad made five diamonds doubled. But
er now led to dummy's ace of dia- just try to do it without the queen of
monds and played dummy's 10 of
clubs play at the second trick!
clubs. Wben ~;;ast play~ low, so did

+

.A

1.

z•

CROSSWORD
, by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
· 1 Morsel
6 Dead10 Clan
11 Blunder
13 Exterior
14 Witless
15 Hatchet
16Gioomy
18Cowboy's
nickname
19 Actress
Loren
21 Newborn
one
24Tyson vs.
Spinks,
e .g .
28 Australia's
bear
29 Philip
or Gene
30 Raison

4Burrows
or Vlgoda
5Assumed
character
6 Shirley
Temple

film
7 Sea eagle
81 smell

9 Franchot
12 Actor
Harrison
17 Rearward
19 Oregon

~~en

26 English

river
27 So'! of
·
Odtn
Htukse
29 Mass of
n c name
shrubb
22 "But-;;
31 For.
f~r Me
33 Primeval
23 Dtstant
34 Once
25 Table
around
20
White
21

e:j(

d'31

scr~tp

u.s.

35 Turkish
standard
36 Spirit
lamp
38 Bjorn
_
39 Sharpness
40 Fawn
42 Swiss
river
44 Snake

Justice
-. Stewart
32 Ex U.S.
attorn·e y
general
34New
Guinea
town
37 Curve
38Twin 41 Basilica
site
43 Residence
45 Of prison
46 Overfill
47 Astor or
McGrory
· 48 Keen

DOWN
1 Portico
2 Gist
3 Cere!llony

. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

..

~·

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In

L's, X for the

this

IMIO

'

sample

A is used

O's,

etc. Single letters,

apostrophes, the length and fonnation

of the words are all

for the three

two

hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQU()'J'E
. 10-20

mtill Twilight zone
a

I

A seasoned traveler lamented loa lei/ow passenger, "No
matler what/ want. i1 is. always in the other -SUITCASE."

011 Mignum, P.l.
l!2l New1Night
11J Dregne1

I

SCRAM:._ETS ANSWERS
Frosty- l-atch - Quasi -

Spring. Part 1
1211 American Magazine
12:00 (l) Peper Chaea Pilot
Episode
(!) VIntage Baoeball Film
The Old Ball Game (R)
!I) Nlghtllne E;l

a (JI Enttfllinment Tonight

.

I ~~ Rl OIO Rl7 I IO

and his band • alive.
ll1) Hill Street Blues Ailes of

(J) Sign Off

...:.r.His,....-11 . o_No!

Irate wile to husband: "Whal a
coincidence! You lotgot my birthday
r~------:::--......,1 and I lorgot .:: 10 --!"
.

m

likely to have far greater potential for

Mobil horne mov.. lund
with Morgan Drtve' Away ,
Own• Op••o.- Jtm McQuire.
.,d lnourocl. 6143

m l!2l

m

WM• deiNery . 1000 gallons.

Petriclc's Water Hauling. 2.000
u• doiiYety. 304-57&amp;-2311 or
814-448-4088.

3

-riN...:..;AI....::.C

.

·o

I

Re•onlble prlc:w. lmm . .••

r ...onable retes,

®I

m

General Hauling

Cllt.ns, Wells. DeUvery A!!Y-

o IJJ

(I) (!) Bill Moyers' World of
Ideas Moyers 1alks with a
wide variety of people about
America's choices. (NR)
till Love Connac1ion
ll!2l Money/Jnt
1BJ Tales lrom the Darks/de
(!JJ Miami Vice E;l
l2ll You Can Be a S1ar
11:30 8 (]) 1!11 Tonight Show
(!) SportaCen1er (L)
!IJ ·Cheara
(I) One on Dne
1JJ Nightllne E;l
(!)Sign Off
®I USA Today
till Newlywed Game
[)) Spllrtl Tonight
Ql) 'Night Heal' CBS Late
Night A jazz musician
struggles to keep his music -

A•identi .. or comm•d .. wirln g. New service or repein.
Ucenaed electrid.,, Eltlmlte
free. Ridenour Etectrieal, 304678-·1786.

1979 FFJ&lt;d 4x4 F-180 R.,gor
XLT 410. C1 onsjlno. ou1o
'

as a reversal ot a trend of

RON EVANS E!ITERPRISESSoptle t.,k pumplnll' 190 p•
lood. Call 1- 8110-637·9528.

1700. 114-992·8681.

71. 000 mn ..

~ Off Road Racing Mickey

837·9528.

87

trenemlaslon,

..

Thompsoh's Championship
Off Road Grand Prix lrom
Las Vegas. NV (T)
IIJ 0 (J) 'North and South,
Book I' ABC Novel for
Television C
l!l Fueling the Future Look
a1 the world energy si1uation
and viability or luel
alternatives.
(!) Democrats' Dilemma: A
Quarter Century of Change
Trace the 1ae1ors tha1 have
led to what Democrats see

EVANS ENTER-

hunting. complng. N"' brolt-.
point job. 318 m -. ho-o.

'2.100.00. 304-878-1139.

R~FL~cr:

ES, Jeckson. Ohk». 1·800.

2, 000 gallon deltv~~~y, clat..-ns,
poo+a, wei, etc. call 304-57&amp;2918.

JahnD. . o2010clloool-or,
Nfco. with pl-o. clloko. griln
drill, t3860. John D-• 2020.
1000hro.-So . , . ,, must-to
•pNalltt, *4110. Ow.., wl
nn ..... Call 814-28&amp;-8622.

63

'*'"·RON

R • R Water Service. Pools
ciltarns, wells . lmmedlat.:
1. 000 or 2,000gallons dlllllvery
Coli 304-675-6370.
. ·

61 _Farm Equipment

8uht Morton Ra.ct. Desired for
the Sonlor C-lnn (82 Olcloot ·
andHMdCippecfpWIOM. Equal
housing opportunity. A,Jplaa-

=
o

1910 Ford F21!10. Automatic
tronomloolon. 814- 948·2008.

1871 Ford F-100 holf ton.
engine rebuilt In 1888
.1.300.00. 304-675-1610. .

PAu;-e ANP

&lt;

Conerata Septic T•kl . 1000
gol.. 180Dgol. ond Jot A..-lllon
FaatotV u.lned rep1tr

J • J Weter Service. Swimml!1ti
pools, cisterna, wetla. Ph. 614246-9285.

73

WANTEDTDIUY. 331Minpolis Mol5ne trflelor for pert:s,
304-871-4821.

MIRRORS

BASEMENT.

1884 Ford F1BO. PS. PB'
AM-FM Iter_, tllpe,. ntw -dr•'
brohoo 300. 4 opeod. i&amp;OOO. o;
trade fore•. 814-7•2·2417.

1971 one ton Crew Cab Dool.,
454 VB .,,o, ooll 304-8822632"' 882·2219.

&gt;TEP

LET~
.IN HE'~E ANP

~ATERPROOANG

85

1988 Chooly 5·10 King Cob.
Au1o-lc Ov•driYo. AC. AMFM red'o, pmp sllta, aport·
wh... 3 tone grrv paint.
114-892-3960.

---- HEY 1 E~NI E: r

Improvements

SWEEPER and aewklg mechin8
repair, pwts. 1nd suppli•. Pick
up .,d deUvery, Devls Vaooum
Cleaner, one hetf mile up
Qoorgoo c - Rd. Coli 814446-0284

*•·

7:05CD91o5
7:30 G (]) Family Feud •
(!) sp8edWeek
(ll Entertainmen1 Tonigh1
lj) I]) USA Today
®I Ill Ql) 1111 Jeopardy! E;J
Ill [lJ M'A'S'H
I!]) Crouflre
IBl N/gh1 Court
l2ll VldeoCountry
7:35 CD Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) MOVIE: Family Reunion,
Part 1 (NR) (1 :40)
D (l) 1111 The Cosby Show

Home

81

Concrete blo'*-· lila-.. Ytrd· 1179 Trans AM. EJilal. =~
or doiiYotv. Mao on -d. Clollloo- Complelely -no. n~
111 Blodc Co.. 1231\ Pine !11., lltJ m. w,_., nM
uper
Oolllpollo, Ohio. Call 114-4
_ 45- -oh.-p. Cafi814-246-94BD.
2783.
.
1881 Dolto8a4do... AM-FM·
WESTERN RED CEDAR
Cau; doool. 27- 30 mpg. Now
• Ch•.nal Rustle
Mlchaln ,.dills. Goodfamlty,.
ond llov"'od Lop Siding
WOJk c•. EJCel. cond. Cell
'Deok MM•Iala·
ovorilnoo ollor 7 PM. 814-4482974CETIDE. INC.. . Alhono-814594-3171
1188 Doclgo OmnL 4 dr ..
31.000 mn-. 5 opd. u. 000.
Colt 814-371-2721.

Building Milia-lola
.
Blodl. bride. MW• pipea, win1911f Pontlf!c lonn011Hio LE.
dows. lntell. etc. Claull Wn- - ~. PDL. cruilo. tilt. AM·FM .
ters. RID Oranete. 0. Call 81 .. Ecif. Cond. Prlood rialtO. Coli
245-1121.
t..
•
114-448-815? "'" S l&gt;M.

;,

·-

Un oondit5onef Mf•ime guarantee. Locll rQencet furrjahed.
Free Dlllmlll81. Clll oolleat
1-614-237· 0488. dOl' "'night.
RogersBaaement
Wat•pi"OOflnl&gt;

Pets

HALL OF

For Sale

1982 Flr...d. E&gt;tCol. cond. Call
114-379-.2282.

56

a

Serv1ces

71 Auto's

I. I I II I I 1
I
1--Ti:-1
..;..1
:.:..,:1
:....:.:,1-1
l
I

a

Motors Home•
8t Campers

197121' St•crlft camp• tilly
self e»ntllntd. 1lr oon&lt;ltlon,.
new tlr11, gr•t condition.
64 Hay &amp;.Grsin
· n ,ooo: 1978 Coprlc:o Estota
&amp;omervt~e•s, Eat~RWtneW004,
Junction lnclopondonoo Roal. 300 bolao of hOlt fof •lo. 11.80 atetkln w.gon camp• towing
old Rt. ·2,, !Now EN( lnoulotod each, Sen ..... modal stereo. pedcage, • concltlon. em-fm
com
_ oofl111_a oovlll'llts *27.10, ·-·d· pl.,... 8 tntdc. '100. rocllo. gr_. condition. t1.!100.
Both *f-000. Cllll 304-675304-273-86&amp;8.
Coll814-949-2179.
, 2086 FJ&lt; 678-4818.
19 cu II s... uptight fr_..
1973 Sh•te 21 tt. good oond,
good oond. t280.oo. 30 ..676- Shell«t Corn. pr~m--m Alfalf1.
304· 773· 1828 for more\
•• 31.
.
ot- .,d hov- Mor11111o WOod- lnfornatkm.
- · Form. At. 36. Piny. 8:00
Sfem . . kltt.,, I 315.00 'each. til
12:00 Mondov thtu Sotur- Ford An&lt;M motor home. 18 ft
Plc:lt up lood flro wood t35.00. dor. 304-937-2018.
long. good cond, t2.991.00304-678-1319.
304-875-1188.
P.tr of loaa 901 •DNII•t. call
11 dllSiilli ldllllll
oft• 6:00PM. 30~112·2427.

ermv acn•a,...

lmal

E;J

(!) Nlghtiy Buolneas Report
®I ti)Q}) CBS News
•til [lJ WKRP In Cinclnnoll
[))/noide Poli11CI '86
1BJ WKRP in Cincinnati
(!) Cartoon EXpress
You Can Be a Star
6:35@ Andy Grlffi1h
7:00 (]) Our House Sounds !rom a
Silen1 Clock. Part 2
G (}) PM Magazine . '
(!) Sport8Cen1er (L)
(ll 0 (J) Current Affair
(I) (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewsHour (1 :00)
®I til Qll 1111 Wheel of
Fottvne E;l
Ill [lJ Tllree's Company
l!2l Monoyline
IBl Choero
1!11 Miami Vice C
Crook and Chase

Fou• 15 ln. tlr•." Spoke OM
w -&gt; 1100. 1974 01• ond
1978MontoCorlotor-o.Cal
114-992-3490.
-·

I

KLAREW

2

a

Auto Parte

the

ROWSN

®I

(!) SportsLook
(!) Dr. Who Claws of Axes .
Par12
Ill [lJ Hoppy Days .
[))ShowBiz Today
IBl Fac11 of Life ·
1!11 Fa1 Alben
Fandango
6:05 (I) Lavema and Shirley
&amp;:30 G (}) 1111 NBC Nightly Newa

8t Accesaorles

~~iC&gt;~t~MI~~NfA~·~""~-~~;;;;;:;:~;;;:~==~==;~

(J)

tlll!2l 1111 Newa

Hondo so c11r1 blko. 1125.00.
304-875-&amp;311 .

•

l!l 0

GAM I

be·
low to form lovr simple words

6:00 (]) Bononza: The Loll
Epieodel The Big Jackpot

1981 Hondo 6So. 4 CVL motOI'evcla. 3100 mil•. ti. . nM.
•1.200.00 ~rm. 304-876·
-1 88-4.
-

'''"'

l1111tters of
0 fo~eorronge
ur scromb le'd words

THURS., OCT. 20 •

. , (}) I])

WOlD

Edited by CLAY R. POLLA~

EVENING

\

'·

rr

1888 Honda 4 wheel• MocW
30D. EIICol. cond. Caii814-386171L

Apertm~nta

Furnished epll'tmenta· 1 bed-

AT

T~~~:~:~T '0©\\&lt;1\1~-~r..;rs~

Television
Viewing

1--:r;=;::::;t

1988 Handll200 SX4 whMf.-.
bc:ol. con d. Call a 14-4482&amp;411. Ilk .... Poul.

mo. Call814-367-7860.

and hou .... Call
304-876-5104
.

Wf1Pol Ki~Gf A
!JAM~ IS I.AJi.N
WAWA ref. A

~

74

hwasher, dflpoul, prNate en·
tranoa. prlv1te endosed patio.
pool pl.,ground. Utllhi• not
included. St.-tlng 11 t299 P•

Fwnlahed apt. New . Ne•HPtiC
1 BR · 1276. Utilkl• pold. Coli
448-4416 oft• 7 PM.

~ lHAT MATI~,

•w•

76

The

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

8t 4 W . O.

1987For"dRMg•4wheel
19.800.00. 304-675-4480.

Ota;onwtnd Cattary tc.nnll.

46 Spaca for Rent

~=oo:lt:t~oo=/=.

tu•

............
bo . . t30
. . d . up to t815.

Roome for rant~week or month. . 1124 E. M•ln Street, Pom•ov.
9t_..ing et e120 • mo. Gall it . Houl'1: M,T,W 10•.m. to 8p.m.,
Hotel-814-448-9580.
&amp;ondtll' 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-992·
2628.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
New completely furnlehed Olive St., Glllipolit.
ap.-tment &amp; mobile home In NEW~ 8 pc. wood group- *39 9.
clty. Aduhs onty. Pwldng. Cell Llulng •oom ouH• '19!1-11 99 .
Bunk bedl with beddin~ e249.
814-448-0331.
FIAI aln man,.. • toundatton
Upeteirl unfurnished apt. C.r· atertlng· egg , Recliners
peted. utilttl• paid. No ehll.toen. ...rtlng- •as.
No pett. Call114-44~1837.
USED· Beds. dreeserw. bedroom
•lit•. O..kl. wrina-washer, 1
Furnlt~ 3 roomt &amp; bath. complete line of used furnfture.
CleM. No pets. Ref. &amp; depOIIt NEW· W•tam boot• 1 36
required. Utilities furnished. Workboota •18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
1519. only , C. II 814-448Adult•
:Ca::ll:8:1:4:
· 446-:::3:1:5:9:
.

LuJ~urious T•n Townhouse
eplrtmenta. Etegent 2 floors. 2
BR ..
bath u.,..-alrt. PDWd•
room downttaira, CA., dis-

•so.

Goodaelactlon of bedroom
sutt... mttel cabinet~,. held-

Vans

11770MCuudl. 4whollcklvo.
AT , PS. P8. PW2L 400 C.I. D.
engine, n•ede t,...amlsskln,
t1.00000. 304-875-1258.

•ea.

Furnished Rooms

Mmhandrse
2 BR . apts. 8 clo1et1. kttchenappl. furnished. W•her-Oryer
hook-up, ww c.-pet n-.vt;paln1ed. deok. From 117&amp;. Now
accepting HUD. Regenqt. Inc.
Apto. Call 304-875-5104. "'
876-6386 FJ&lt; 176-7138.

•395 ta t9911i. Tabl• •so and
up to 112&amp;. Hldo-o-bo• •380
to Uti. Redln• t22&amp; to ·
1376. Lompo 128 to t125.
Din- t108 ond.up to t485.
WGod tlble w -8 chlirs 1285 to
179&amp;. Dook 1100 up to U75.
Hutchao t400 •d up Bunk
breda 'com~• w·m.ltr. .•
12tl.,duptoU85.11obv*11D. Mm,....orbox. SDrinos
full · or twin
Rrm •78. and
taa. au- - 1260. up.
ICJng ueo. 4 dr.,., ct.•t •••·
Gun cabin•• I gun. Bltr,
_,...... 136 • • 4tl. Bod
from• 120. t30 a. King •om•

llo. 814-448-8221 .

c•peted•. IIP.Pil81~. Miter and
trah pldrupa provided. Malnt•
~ence ••l~lng doaelo shopping. blnkl Md schooll. For
more informetlon ceil 304--882-3718. E.D .H.

Wrigh1

Sof• and chM priced from

.

Now acCepting eppll~lons fa;
2 bedroom ep.-tments. fult;'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

APARTMENTS. mobile ho.,_,
houa•. Pt. PI. .Mtll'tdG.IIipo-

looch S1r•.; Middlopon. Ohio,
2 .beci-oom furnished IPif!!'enl
utlhl• peid. ref•encea. Phon~
304-882-2586.

Household Goods

73

OOOD ~SEO APPUANCES
w.h-. ..,.,.., r•ia.-•ora.
un D"· Skaggs Appliances,
Uppor RIYor lid. 111cmo
c_, Mo!ol. 114-448- ~a.

10

-

Thursday, October 20, 1988

County ADOII•• Inc. Good
uNd 1ppllaln011 .. d lV •••·
()p!lfi lAM to ePM. Mon dwu
Sot. 614-44&amp;-1199. 627 3rd
'Aw, Golllpollo, OH.

1-518-4119-3111 EXT. F1822

AYONoll•-11 Shirltii'SP-~
304-675-1429.
Llc..oal SOdol ...,• • I n -

---

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

Help Wanted

~ - -

I. S M

IHFISTZH

ULDD 'YTYZSQ

. QZTKSVXVAM
ALYUKIEXZ

YU

YSHYUQ\'S

D W VJ

J I A Y T

I W Q K L- W
T
T X I W P Z
Yeeterday'a Cryptoqaote: EVERY MAN IS VALUED

j IN THIS WO~LD AS HE SHOWS BY HIS CONDUCT THA,T
1

HE WISHES TO BE VAWED. -

BRUYERE

()18811 King Ftllllrn SyeiCI'C~, Inc.

•

�Page-1.6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

ThiJrsday, October 20, 1988

Local news briefs--Enrollment figures revealed

The following Individuals were
fined this week In Meigs County
Court by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Charles F . Bailey, Akron, $300
and costs, 10 days In jail, 120 day
license suspension, OWl; Danny
R. Morgan, Albany , $75 and
costs,10 days In jail suspended to
one, no Ohio license; Roland E.
Landaker, Pomeroy, $75 and
costs, five days in jail suspended
to one, six months probation, no
Ohio license; Crystal L. Pridemore, Pomeroy, $75 and costs, 30
days in jail suspended to five
days, no Ohio license; $5 an(!
costs for an ll!egal exhaust
system; John L. Bilvelle, Athens,
f.:msNOW
$100
and costs, 30 days In jail, six
-RAIN . ~SHOWERS
months
probation, driving under
FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
. . Stalic "
Occluded suspension; costs and 30 days in
jail to be served concurrently
WEATHER MAP - During early Friday morning, rain and
with
the other 30 day sentence,
showers are forecast for parts ol the upper Great Lakes. Showers
leaving
the scene of an accident;
are PO!Islble In the lower Great Lakes and most ol the Ohio Vatley.
$30
and
costs, assured clear
Showers and tbunderslllnns are possible In parts of the southern
distance; Lester Wise Jr., Mid·
Plains, the eastern GuH Coast and parts of the south Atlantic Coast
dleport, 30 days In jail susstates. ( UPI)
pended, six months probation,

Fall enrollment figures were presented by Supt. John Riebel
at Monday night's meeting of the Meigs County Board of
·
Education.
Riebel reported total enroilme~t for the fall was 4,369, which ·
ls_67!ess than last year. Enrollmentln the Eastern. Local School
Dlstrlct was 883. In the Meigs Local School Distrlct,lt was 2,495,
and m the Southern Local School District, totals were 991.
School bus dr_lver certificates were approved for John E .
Evans, Danny Grueser, and Edward Sellers. The teacher
development budget was amended. Courses of study were
approved for vocatl011al agriculture, Industrial arts, and
Southern business and office education.
, ·
The Nov. 8 meeting of the board was changed to Nov. 7. Bills
were approved for payment and the treasurer's report
reviewed.

EMS has one call Wednesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports one
call Wednesday; Middleport at5: 21 p.m. to Rutland St. for
Robert Rinehart to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Midget Football tourney slated
Big Bend Midget Football League's annual tournament will
begin Saturday at the Meigs Junior High football field. Games
will be PlaY,ed at 12 p.m ., 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. Thecompetlngteams
wiU include Gallipolis, Point Pleasant. Glouster, Trimble and
the three Big Bend teams. Cheer leading competition wiU be at
1:30 p.m. Refreshments wiii be available.

Meigs County Co~rt

.Thunderstorms reported in Midwest

By United Press International
Oklahoma was bit with intense
thunderstorms early today as
rain drizzled over the Midwest
and chilly temperatures laid a
glittery frost across the Great
·
Lakes states.
Mason;
four
sisters,
Zana
While the southern reaches of
Embleton, Mary D. Dunn and Oma
the
country enJoyed autumn
Mae Batchelor, ail of Richmond, temperatures
In the 60s and 70s,
Ind., Neva E. Cross, Kansas City,
the
National
· Service
Kan.; two brothers, Alton F. Roush, is.sued a frost Weather
advisory
acros..s
Letart, Oscar W. Roush, Jn·vemess,
much
of
Indiana
and
Fla.; six grandchildren and eight Michigan. The Northeastlower
was
great-grandchildren.
clj1lled by freezing temperatures
Graveside service will be con·
dawn approached. Waterducted Friday at I p.m. at Kirkland as
town,
N.Y. , registered 22 degrees
Memorial Garden, Point Pleasant, at 3 a.m.
with the Rev. James Seddon
officiating.
Friends may call Thursday, from
7 to 9 p.m. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home.
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Becoming cloudy,
with a chance of rain toward
· morning. Lows w11! be in th·e
while the prize payout was lower 40s. Winds wlll be south$615,163.
erly at five to 1S mph. Chance of
In the accompanying Kicker rain 40 percent.
game, there was one winner of
Friday: Rain likely, with highs
the $100,000 top prjze. The win- near 55. Chance of rain 60
ning Kicker number was 717829. percent.
In addition to the one player
Extended Forecast
who had the six Kicker numbers
Saturday through Monday
In order, six peo'pie had the first
Fair Saturday, with a chance
five numbers, which pays $5,000; of showers Sunday and Monday.
59 had the first four, which pays Highs will be in the 50s Saturday
$1,000; 552 had the (irst three, and Mondayy and in the 60s
which pays $100; and 5,759 had Sunday, Lows will be between 35
the first two, which pavs SlO.
and 45.

Area deaths
Elva Davis
Elva F. Davis, 82; Mason, was
pronounced dead on arrival Wed·
nesday, Oct. I9, 1988, at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
She was born April 9, 1906 in
New ·Haven, to the late Winfield H.
and Rosetta Weaver Roush.
She was also preceded in death
by her husband, Frank A. Davis, iii
1960.
She was involved with the
Mason Nutrition Program.
Surviving are one daughter,
Nanna Jean Gruescr, Pomeroy,
Ohio; one son, Clarence A. Davis,

•

Weather

No one claims Super Lotto prize
CLEVELAND (UP!) - There
was no winner of the top prize in
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed·
nesday night, raising the jackpot
to $9 million for Saturday's
game.
The winning numbers were 1,
23, 35, 37, 38 and 42. Wednesday's
jackpot was worth $6 million.
Some 122 players picked five of
the numbers to win $1,000 each,
and 4,609 players chose four of
the numbers to win $107 apiece.
. Ticket sales totaled $4.279,590.

,.

Thund.e rstorms raged over the
Soone\' state early today, having
Intensified since late Wednes·
day. The harshest storms were
centered over Oklahoma City at 2
a.m . . and were expected to
continue across the state Into the
afternoon.
Light rain drizzled through the
night !rom the Great Plains to
parts of the Great Lakes region
as well as in southern Arizona
where low pressure over Baja
California brought moisture to
the area, said weather service
forecaster Lyle Alexander.
Alexander predicted rain lor
the south-central region of the
nation and snow ending by
daybreak over northern Maine.

Supper tonight
A pancake, sausage and egg
supper will be held tonight
(Thursday), from 4 to 7 p.m., at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. Proceeds will go to the
church building fund . Everyo11e '
welcome.

Plan bean dinner
Rutland American Legion Is
sponsoring an oif-fashloned
bean dinner on Saturday from 10
to 5 p.m. All you can eat for $2.
everyone welcome.

1988
PONTIAC
LE

1988

BUICK

OLDSMOBILE
DElTA 88

Gary Rood has been ordered by
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to undergo examination by
Shawnee Forensic Institute per·
sonnel. Rood Is currently Incarcerated In the Meigs County Jail
on two charges of'rape.
In other court matters, an
action by Diamond Savings and
Lana Company against Nancy
Jaspers, et al. has been
dismissed.

Middleport Child Conservation
League will meet this evening
(Thursday), 7:30 p.m., at the
home of Linda Broderick. Guest
spea,ker will be Bunny Kuhl. All
members are urged to attend.

Marriage licences

Meets tonight

Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Charles Franklin John·
son, 37, Pomeroy, and Diana
Linda Conde, 27, Pomeroy;
Brian Michael Manning, 22,
North Olmstead, and Tina Dawn
Davis, 21, Racine; Richard Alan
Shuler Jr., 24, , Racine, and
Angela Yvonne Spaun, 23,
Pomeroy,

Lodge to meet

Child league to meet

...

LIMITED SELECTION

20 to ctiDtJM from

ani,

$6,488*

• An~: H RfJI..\n: (lF API'UF.Si.
T.\IU:.'i, TAGS. T1TLE F'fo:f'.S EXTRA.

3RD ANNIVERSARY SALE-A-BRAT/ON
PRE·OWNED TRADE IN.SPECIALS!
CREAM PUFFS
1t81 PONTlAC QAi\No At,t- Qnl, ),500 11111111'l ~»or CO&lt;.r.JS, qiii!S 41ngine ,

IIIIOfllil11t, ar~. w.er.wwa•SI I,900. ______ NOW $10,968

1it7 PONT1.te FIREBIRD • only IID.OOO flllts' Aulon'atic, lir cordtionog. ~
lletrtlg, cnar.tc:onhl, tm11m ~~ . • mtw'I-' Wai $10,9:W ____ NOW

$9,988

1M Ol0Si1108Jlf: 08 REGENCY . Joacl! P0t1re1 IMir,!hrlql W•l!l)' 1 , 1

_ , _ •...., ..............., _______ NOW 110,988
18~ BUIO: LESA8f\E UMITEO- ~door CI).Jpe. • rnU$1 'MI u., ...,.., 0011'!
lf,lltid S IO.IXXI.OOd)'Oo'J~Ihi~!OUI'. WU W.~- NQW

r---------..
1986
CHRYSLER
LEB.ARON
CONVERTffiLE

1g11 i:l!JICK JIIVIERA -liilll'lf'lll FW!rt~' tnll'}'tlltsl!nelt' t'*'tdl
Wat "·91Kl~~-~·-"·-·-···'-"' "- ---- .................. ~-·NOW

$5,936

QUALITY &amp; AfFORPAHLE
1817 BIJICK C!!lmJR1 · ~ . -. po!OII•'Millbwl, ~dour loct1, Jlt ttelf'l~.
CIUIC4i cnlll, ilila)l'(lltorW'9-I'JOI Clf1 Was S10,W...;,. ____ .;, ___ NOW $9,788

1illfl OLDSMOBILE' at ftECEHCY -• 4001', ICidtiJ! Po!w11 ~'lu•l.l'1
l:lr Jl2 1tle lllice! wa1 i tl/.981-··-···· - - - - - ' - · : - NOW $9,988
1f95 BUICK LESASRE LIYITEO · 4 doG!, /ll)lltl ~ . jiC'Jiel' docw' IGdol,
power ..•ts. ~lf'(olt' Wu SUY

-----~-NO W $7,988

108~ FORD LTD· 4 doai, V.fi pc~W~r' ~lit. u
condilion....,, ~1., pib, .... nm llt!to 1111:1 mart• W,il

iUI8----~-·---------~NOW $5,988
1983 CHEVROLET C•PRICE CLASSIC- ,

illol, \1 a MIO!t ll'!ltiiOt. 1111)' •IIIJPPid. nu uri Wu

SUU--- _________ NOW S5,988
198l BV1CK LESABR.E CLASSIC. • lbi!'
a. moneyl Wn l6.!1e!!

lOidiO! A"wttoi! lol al r:x' !()I

----..·--·---···--·-..NOW $5,986
1Qt7 DQDGEOf,lfll. ldo:o', """ c.I Clinl~

OII HsCIIII! Wa&amp;I5.911J ____ NOW

wu v,uo __________ NOW

...

J

19~ CHEVItOl.ET CHEV£TTE · olfy 27,000 milell 4 a-.l!f «md•lio~'~&lt;ngl

·------ ,..--- ..,--.... NOW ~2'.988

i

1886 BUICK SKYKAW)( - 1 lillor, au!aNk , at'"'"-·.~~'"""

miles

wu SJ.995

111!!1'110, rQ o:.rl Wn sa.•--.:._-~-·-· NOW

,!187 PLVMQIJTH SU~D AHCE: - l 1100r c.c~. """"" · '' "~"'..'' ·
~~ or ioiii1N! prieel Wes$7,8&amp;0- - - - - - - NOW
1914 PONTI•C PARISIENNE- 1 dOotllrxii'J, v~ ~ "" ,... •••

pt., "'!' O&gt;W1Ir1

only

$8,988

1916 BUICK SIIIYURK ·4 door, I IIICtiii iiC, 1i' ~- ~t!Mfi~.
pOWer brW1, 1nrtn

~~ NiCe "rl wu S7.HS........... ---------------.NOW
i986 CHEVROLET CElEBRITY. , 11001, ~alic. w ..,,...,.

1f8f OlDSMOBILE DELTA 8B ·oBJ •a.ooo '"lln1 4 il:loi, Ju:orna!H:, 111
12,000
wrotior'tr'G, ...,aeq..pped' w.a 56.a.l .-~---------·-, NOW $5,988 .__ _ _ _ _..,;.;_ _

$4,988

!184 AMC EAGLE STAT!OHYIAGON - ~ 1 , ,
AlJIOm~bc., l •l eoo~illo ring , Y-8 power! Clnn! Was

15.11111-------------NOW SC,98B

I
I

TRUCK SPECIALS
1988 FORO F-150 LARI.T 4X4 · lrlt J,OOO rrilnl ~•• -;~:; I
llttlrV. "'-"" CllQfd, ..tn cua., lilll new! was 11~ .1!10-. NOW

8 PIECES
OF CHICKEN

19M CHEVROLET C-1500 2WD- I:II'Jrt.(O)IMHI - ·.. .~... '&lt;!
• sl.h, tliclm.M"ino t~oa~ dl. rru:nll'(lq i W.$11 ,MS- ___ NOW

1988 CHEV~OLET S.IO PICKUP- aniy u,(Q) mleti!WJ -

110.11118 1

·"""'"'

u1. qn., s~ tnm~ aian. w..s ss.wo._____ NOW

1986 CHEVROLET C·iO 'MD· ~ moo m~ni i.G4!J*, l~llie; v.t
~. IXM* SiMri!Q. poww -...• .., 111011 1w. S9,11M- - NOW $1,988
IUS HISS AN liZ TON PICK UP. kPf111 hmillion. 4&lt;"11
tcOIIDIII,,

"'*

111e1 Jl.dot

Only

$5.99

Original or Extra
Eal*• 10/J0/11

Wat SUIO.-~----- ..- - ----·---NOW

1
12 PC.

2 PC. DINNER
ONLY

$2.49

ONLY

Y MfAL

$10.99

.12 Piac• 'of Chfckon,
large Mashool Potot ...
large Grny, Large
Cole Slaw, 4 Hot

2 plocn of Cltickll\ Small
Mathod Potot* wfbr.,y,
Small Colt Slow,
1 lutllrmlk lliCUit

liKuitL
bl*• 11/10/11

b;..-. -loiiaiu·

197~ CHEVROLET C·10 PICKUP . Grill hick! Alllfllll.lllc.

~. iiiii*!W.uSJ.&amp;!t&gt;~----- NOW

TO

.

Chevrolet • Oldsmobile • Pontiac ·Buick. Inc.

Phone: 372·2844 • 422·0756 •
Open Mon.·Fn. 344·5947
8:3() a.m. to 8p.m.
Sat, 8:30 . 6 p.m.

CLOSED SUNDAY

Ohio Department of Devf(IOpment' reorgllJliZeS.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stateholllle Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The Ohio Department of Devel·
opment Is combining Its divisions
of technological innovation . and
business development to try to
get more bang for the buck out of
state grants and loans to emerging Industries.
.
At the same time, director
David Baker has reorganized his
· chain of command to better
administer the huge department,
and he Is placing more emphasis
on areas of Ohio with distressed

Rt 2t South· Ripley
475 South Church St.

economic conditions.
Christopher Coburn, the orgi·
nal administrator of the Thomas
Edison program, will become
assistant director for business
and technology about Nov. 1.
Terry Thomas, . former president of the state Controlling
Board, joins the department as
an assistant director, and the
third assistant director, ·Colum·
bus attorney Jacqueline Souel,
will be focusing attention on
areas of Ohio that have escaped
the national economic recovery .
Baker, 44, who has been on the

job for 15 months, said he is
installing the three assistant
directors for a more efficient
management style. He said the
old management table had 14
separate deputies reporting di·
rectly to him.
Baker said he can accomplish
the management change without
adding expense, because of attri·
lion in employees.
The Edison program involves
high technology research at
major universities, and sharing
the . results with busines s for
practical application.

..• ...

~

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

..

228 WEST MAIN .

~

"
•

POMEROY, OHIO

PHONE 992-5432
1

'

But Bilker said in a recent
intervj~~ that the department
has not been linking that program effectively with emerging
businesses that apply for state
loans and grants.
"We haven't tried to match up
the Edison program and business
development ," he said.
Because of a lack of communi·
cation between the two pro·
grams, the director said, "it's
entirely possible that two of our
people can get In two different
cars and drive to the same place
and stay in a motel and tell their

stories to the same company."
When both programs are under
the same management, he said,
small developing companies re·
ceiving loans will au tomatlcally
be Informed of possible benefits
through the Edison program.
Conversely, those in research
concerning. for example, poly ·
mers, will be made aware that
state loans are available for
companies with emerging
technology .
"You have to finance new
technology to make business
grow ," said Baker .

Thomas, who as head of the
Controlling Board has pres ided
over hundreds of state loans to
business, will field all the appli·
cations and screen the ones with
the best chance of positiVI'
results, Baker said .
The Edison experts will be abl e
to tell Thomas whether a com·
pany has technology that is going
to produce jobs for the 21st
,c,entury, said Baker.
That way, the department
won't be wa sting loan or grant
money on companies U1at will not
contribu te to the economy.

Dan Quayle campaigns in
• • •
Southel'n Ohio communities

I
RECEIVES SURPRISE .:.. Sen. Dan Quayle
(R-Ind.) received a surprl8e Thursday mornillgin
McConnelsville, Ohio. The Malta· McConnelsville
High School football team presented the •ice

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- A

$9,999.

2 Se ctions, 14 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Friday. October
21, 1988
.
'
.

•

.
. By CHARLES A. MASON

S·10 PICKUP

'Well Equipped"
Only

.

Vo1.39, No.117
Copyrighted 1988

presidential candidate with his own Raider
jny, complete with his name and the number 88

on lhe back. McConnelsville was the secpnd of his
four slops In Ohio Thursday. (UP!)

Clinical psychologist testifies
in Norma Perry murder trial

BEREITA

Chance or rain 60 percent
tonight. Saturday , mos tly
cloudy, ' highs In mid 50s.
Chance or rain 20 percent.

•

Harrisonville Holiness Chapel
will have a revival from Friday
to Sunday, Oct. 30, wfth Rev .
Steven Manley. Ali services will
begin at 7: 30 p.m.

1988

OVER
100 NEW
TRUCKS
IN
STOCK!

Page 3

Revival planned

Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM
will observe past master night on
Saturday at 7 p.m. There will be
work in the master mason
degree. Dinner will be served at
6:30 !or all who attend.

•

6273

Danville Holiness Church will
be In revival with Rev . Coy
McGuln,ess from Monday
through Sunday, Oct. 30, at 7:30
each evening.

$8,988.

4~·

070

Plan revival

"AUTO· AIR CONDmOHING"
OHLV

.(Lil

Daily Number
Pick 4

OVPStaft

"""
$12,988.

Ohio Lottery

Racine American Legion wlll
meet at 7 p.m. tonight (Thurs·
day). A good turnout by
members is ·needed. A steak
supper wlll be served.

1988
CHEVROLET

LOADED"

'

'

Round and square dancing will
be featured Saturday night, 8 to
12 midnight, af Rutland American Legion.

Keritucky Fried Chicken.

CORSICA

PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

LeSABRE

Dance Saturday

CorneHom.elO

HERE'S OUR THANKS FOR
MAKING OUR 3rd
ANNIVERSARY SALE
A HUGE SUCCESS!
(FACTORY REBATES UP TO ll ,000
·~1:ca~;w;._,r-O,;;,;N..;..;;;;SE;;lE;:CT:::ED::-19:.:1:.:.9. :.::M:::OD::E,lSI

Onlered to undergo
examination by court.

restraining order issued, costs,
assault.
Bruce Fisher, Racine, $10 and
costs. failure to yield: Elsie L.
Roberts , Portland , $10 and costs;
failure to yield .
Fined for speeding were John
V. Shields, Athens, $24 and costs;
Clifford M. Sharp, Racine, $24
and costs; Ricky Osborn, Gar·
land. Texas, $23 and costs:
Pamela S. Davis, Racine, $24 and
costs; Eric Priddy, Pomeroy,$23
and costs; Tony B. Hawk, Pome. roy, $22 and costs; Michael L.
Shaw, Columbus, $23 aJid costs;
Linda L. Brunty, Racine, $24and
costs; Steven W. Carnes, Vienna,
W.Va. , $20 and costs; Victoria A.
Cole, Marietta, $25 and costs;
Charles Matthews, Huntington,
W.Va., $20 and costs.
Bonds for speeding were forfeited by Robert R. Payne, Columbus, $55; James E. ' Watson,
Nitro, w. Va., $55; Richal'd Bennett, Pittsburg, Pa., $22.

Los Angeles
Dodgers cop
World Series

testified
clinical
psychologist
Thursday that Norma Jean Perry
had no o(her option, based on the
fact that she perteived her life was
at stake, than to shoot Fred
Facemire on March 8, 1987, and
. that Perry was acting under the .in·
ftuence of an unconditioned reflex
and was not capable of rational
thought
"On the night of Fred Facemire's
death, Norma viewed Fred more
out· of control than she had ever
seen him before," Dr. Lois J.
Veronen testified in Mason County
Circuit Court.
"Nothing had stoP.pcd Fred in the
past," she testified. 'She (Perry) did
not perceive and know Fred had
been shot," she testified, adding
that Perry would not be capable of
processing such information w.hile
she was reacting under a gut-level,
primitive instinct for survival.
She testified that the instinct for
survival overrides all else in a life·
threalcning situation.
Vemncn, a clinical psychologist
for the Crime Victims Center at the
Medical University of South
Carolina, testified that it was her
expert opinion, based on a 7-hour
evaluation of Perry on Jun~ 7 of
this year, that Perry suffered from
what is known as "ballercd woman
syndrome."

.

The syndrome is a cluster of
characterislics associated with
women who have been victims of
violent assaults by an intimate, the
psychologist testified.
Perry, 30, of 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant, is charged with the
first-degree murder of Facemire
and the trial is being heard before a
I 0-woman, two-man jury in Mason
County Circuit Coun before Judge
Clarence L. Watt. Police say Perry
shot Facemire twice with a .38·
caliber Travis revolver. Facemire
was shot in the chest and the head
in the living room at 2411 Lincoln
Ave.
Perry's
defense
auomeys
Raymond Musgmve and Stephen
Liitlepage assert that she killed
Facemire in self-defense and also
contend that Perry was a victim of
"battered woman syndrome."
Vcronen admitted under cross
examination by Prosecutor Damon
B. Morgan Jr. that her clinical
opinion was based on the Clr·
cuffistances of the case as she un·
derstood them from Percy ...and
police reports and that if those cir·
cumstances .were different, her
opinion could change.
·
The psychologist, who has c~n­
ducted research in the area of VlC·
tims of violence since 1976, also
told Morgan that. the science is. not
finit.e and told LtUlepage that 11 1s
not .possible 10 reduce the opinion
loa percentage of certainty.
"As we're getting to know more

about battered women, there is an
attempt to quantify things as much
as possible," she testified. Asked by
. Littlepage if her opinion could be
regarded as correct more than 50
percent of the time, she replied, "I
have never been asked to quantify
my opinion before." Asked by Lit·
tlepage if she could do that, she
replied, "At this stage of !he game,
we ar.e not quite thete yet"
Vemnen testified that crime victims study involves cases ·or rape,
sexual abuse, aggravated assault,
burglary, robbery and survivors of a
homicide. Prcvwusly having tes·
tified as an expert wimess on the
aspects of "battered woman
syndrome" in 13 stales, Veronen
explained that it is an aspect of life
misunderstood by law enforcement
officials and agencies that deal with
domestic violence.
She testified that less than four
percent of assaults on women by
their intimales - a boyfriend or
spouse - go unreported, and if
they come to light, officials tend to
ueat the battering as a symptom of
problem rather than the problem it·
self. She lestified that a person who
becomes abusive towards another is
. usually the product of a home that
displayed such violence. She also
testified that use of alcoholic
beverages are present in 60 percent
to 90 percent of the cases.
Vemncn explained that women
who arc battered develop long· term
Continued on paage 10

Eastern places high in contests
The Eastern High School
Marching Band has competed in
three OMEA sanctioned competitions in the last three weeks and
placed in the finaJs in each one.
On Oct. 8, they placed second In
Class C (schools with 300 or less
In the upper three grades) at the.
Athens Invitational Band Competition. This wa~ a large Class C
with six or more bands in each
class.
On Oct. 15, the band traveled to

NEWARK, Ohio tUPI) Republican vice presidential no·
mlnee Dan Quayle say she's been
shopping for Haiioween cards ,
and he's found the perfect one.
"This is the scariest card
ever," Quayle told an enthusias·
tic Republican audience 'It Ne·
wark High School Thutdsay .
"You .open it up and it says
President Mike Dukakis."
Quayle said he and Vice
Presldent George Bush will open
educational and job opportuni·
ties for young people, while the
Democrats would "take us back
to the days of malaise and gas
lines in this country."
In a daylong bus caravan ,
Quayle rolled through the colorful fall foliage of southeastern
and central Ohio, urging Republicans to .come out and support the
ticket .
"The road of opportunity is
going to be open to you if we make
the right choice," Quayle told the
Newark audience. " Your genera·
lion will have more of an
opportunity than any other gen·
eration has ever had."
The rally more than filled the
high school gymnasium .

Beverly to participate in the Fort
Frye Invitational Band Classic
and swept their class by taking
first place In every caption
available.
Eastern took first in music,
ftrst in percussion, first 'In
general effect, first In marching
and maneuvering, first in field
commander and first place Class
C band. They outscored their
. nearest opponent by 30polntsand
came within 45 hundredths of a

point (244.55) 'of reaching their
goal of qualifying for the Nov. 5
OMEA State Finals In Columbus.
Eastern will travel to two
contests this Saturday. The first
is at Meadowbrook High School
In Byesville. The band's per!or:
mance time at Meadowbrook Is
appproxlmately 1:30 p.m. and
lmtnedlately after the Meadowbrook performance, the band will
proceed to Tri-Valley High
Continued on page 10

Hundreds of others were ushered
into an adjacent hall where they
watched the performance on
television.
Quayle, speaking beneath a
huge American flag, appeared so
confident he offered to hire the
Newark High School band for the
inaugural parade. "This is Lick·
ing .County , isn't it?" he asked.
"Well, on Nov. 8, George Bush is
going to give a good , old·
fashioned licking to Mike
Dukakis. "
Quayle blasted Dukakis as an
eastern liberal who would raise
taxes. pollute the environment
and be weak on national defense.
"Do you want to go back to the
days of malaise and gas lines tn
this country?" he asked the
partisan crowd. "jllo! "came the
answer.
It was the same throughout
much of the day, Quayle traveled
through such Republican bas- ·
lions as Marietta, McConnels·
ville, Zimesvilie and Newark.
Later , he visited a GOP phone
bank in Columbus and attended a
fund -raiser In Chillicothe.
Quayle, who numbers among
his relatives Sue Moore, the wife
of Newark Mayor Bill Moore,
said ' 'I consider this as being
part of my family right here. ' ' He
said he learned his "midwestern
values " of family , faith , neigh·

borhood and community in Hun·
tlngton, Ind.
."Have you ever noticed how
Mike Dukakis looks down on
America?" Quayle as ked. "I can
see you nodding your heads 'yes ..
Have you ever noticed how he
looks down on us with that
conceited liberal orthodoxy that
he has?
"You're going to help us
change America and make it
even better. With George Bush,
you get experience and with me,
you get th·e future ."
"He made quite an impression
with me, " said Nancy Smith of
nearby Heath, Ohio. " I like Dan
Quayle because of his youth. His
enthusiasm as a young American
can do nothing ·but help this
country. I think he's brilliant,
aggressive and very outgoing."
But Debbie Marr iott, an opti·
cian from nearby Granville who
picketed outside the rally with
union members. senior citizens
and county Democrats, did not
care for Quayle.
"I think Busb picked Dan
Quayle because he thought he'd
appeal to women in their 30s,"
said Marriott , who carried a sign
reading : "Say No to Drugs and
Dan Quayle ."
''I 'm a woman in my 30s, and I
don't like him." she said.

Boster, Long issue
statements on strike
Rep. Jolynn Boster and State
'Senator Jan Michael Long today
issued the following joint state·
ment in regard to a strike by
workers of the Meigs County
Departmenl of Human Services
which began Aug. 1:
We urge alfparties involved in
the Meigs County Human Servi·
:;._..;;;..~ ,.:Jces strike to return to the
bargaining table. ' Negotiations
reached a stalemate shortly
A. E. WILSON
.after the strike began, and as the
strike enters its 13th week, we
. feel that it's time for the people

A. E. Wilson
named plant
••
supemsor

ALBANY - A. ElwQOd Wilson .
has been named general plant
supen1sor at Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs No. 1 preparation plant.
.
In this position he Is responsl·
ble for correlating the mainte·
nance and production at the
plant.
Wilson started his career with
Southern Ohio Coal as a general
inside· laborer at the Meigs ~o. 1
mine in September, 1973. He
moved to the prep plant as the
control room operator the following year.
Wilson has also held the tities
of general maintenance supervi·
sor, production supervisor and
general shift supervisor at the
Meigs l)lo.1 plant before transferring to the Raccoon No. 3 prep
plant In 1985 as general plant
supervisor in charge of production and maintenance.
Originally from Moundsville,
W. Va ., Wilson now lives In
Rutland with his wife Shirley,
and two daughters, Sherry Lynn
and Sabrina Dawn. ·

involved in this situation to
resume bargaining. Resolution
of the differences between the
parties will not occur without
good faith bargaining, with the
parties talking to each other, not
at each other In the local media .
We Issue this statement because we have been contacted by
constltutents in Meigs County
whO are concerned that the
current strike may impact services to thf' area, and we share

their concerns.

MAKES DONATION -David Bl1ike, maintenance superintendent lor tbe Southern Ohio Coal Company's Raccoon Mine 3,
presents a check lor SlOO lo Rhoda Prlc.e, left, and Betty Dobbins,
center, of the Vinton County Council on Aging. Price Is execudve
director ol the·afleocy. Dobbins Is the president.

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