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•

Page

D-B-Sunday Timits-Selrtinel

Pomeroy-Middleport

Drought's effects
may last another year
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) - .
The summer of 1988 will be
remembered for the extensive
drought , but It took a combina·
tlon ot factors to really hurt t~e
plants.
•
Less water was bad eno11gh,
says Barbara WLlllams of the
home horticulture center at Ohio
State Qnlverslty, but plants
suffered because there were also
, lots or sunny days, dry wind and
• high temperatures.
Plants were damaged even
: , worse If they were attacked. by
Insects or disease or grew in soil
, that was compacted or didn't
. hold moisture.
Anything that grows outdoors
:: will probably be affected fpr
another year or more, Williams
says. And a dry winter will
compound the problems.
Burned leaves are one symp·
tom of too little water. But
there's also a lot of unseen
damage, Wlllia,rns says. Roots
die, and when moisture does
• enter the soiL. It's hard tor the
• plant to &lt;lraw It In: Less water In
' tbe plant means reduced photo·
synthesis and that means less
•. food the plant has to live on.
Reduced food means slower
growth and less hardiness for the
winter. A stressed plant will
produce more fruit and fewer
leaves In ali ellort to reproduce
Itself before It may die, Williams

Hecks agrees
to reorganize
NITRO, W.Va. (UP!) - An
agreement has been reached
among the Heck's Inc. commit·
tees on a reorganziatlon plan for
the Nltro·based retail discount
chain In Chapter 11 bankruptcy .
Heck's operates retall discount
stores In West VIrginia. Ohio and
Kentucky, many of which have
been closed.
Maarten Hemsley, Heel s
chief financial officer, also~~
nounced an agreement in princi·
pie between the company and
The Hallwood Group Incorpo·
rated, a New York Stock
Exchange-quoted International
merchant bank, wherein Hal~
!wood would become a financial
adviser and gain 10 percent of the
reorganized company.
The tentative regorganlzation
agreement, reached after two
days of negotiations between the
company and representatives of
Its creditors and shareholders. Is
subject to completion of a de!lnl·
tlve agreement between all par·
ties, and the approval of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court, said John R.
Isaac Jr., chairman and chief
executive officer of Heck's.
· As a result of the agreement,
Isaac said, the Official Commit·
tee of Equity Security Holders,
representing Heck's share·
holders, would support the com.
pany's plan of reorganization, as
amended. The Equity Commit·
tee previously opposed the plan.
The agreement removes most
of the major opposition to the
reorganization plan, Isaac said.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Salmonella rare in eggs, but still a possibility
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) You're chances of getting salmo·
nella poisoning from eggs Is only
slightly hl~her than winning the
lottery, but people still should
take precautlons.
Fred Stephens, poultry scient·
1st at Ohio State University, says
foods containing raw eggs are
being .blamed for 2,000 cases of
salmonellosis In the northeastern
United States between January
1985 and May 1987.
·
Eleven people died.
The Infection has been re·
ported In eggs In other parts of
the countr,y, although none has
been Ln Ohio, Stephens says. The
cases prompted the Department
of Agriculture to issue guidelines
for cooking and eating eggs.
Preliminary tests Indicated
that salmonella got into the eggs
from Infected chickens before
the egg was formed, Stephens
says. Although he admits this Is
possible and probably caused a
lew of the outbreaks, he says It's
so .unlikely to occur that It
shouldn't scare most IS;ople from
" ea ling their usual breakfast.
"Even In experiments where
hens are purposely Infected with
Salmonella enteritidis, It's very
rare for an Infected hen to
contaminate Its own eggs," Ste·
phens says. "Only one of every
250 eggs are Infected, and this Is
from hens that are known to be
. Infected."
Outside the laboratory, the
likelihood of an egg be com In g.
Infected from a hen Is estimated
at less than one In 14,000,

says.
.
But that means more stress for
the plant as It struggles. to
support the fruit under adverse
conditions. ~
•
Even If rainfall levels return to
normal, the effects of stress
remain. since a stressed plant Is
more susceptible to disease and
Insects.
Late summer's heavy rains
increased the threat of diSease
and Insect problems, Including
problems for next year, she says.
Expect more Insect. and disease
problems on weakened trees and
shrubs for at least the next two
years.
Trees and shrubs planted this
year were probably the hardest
hit, Williams says. Some have
already died . Others may be
dead by next spring and summer.
u · possible, you should give
newly planted trees and shrubs
at least an Inch of water each
week It doesn't rain, until the
ground freezes. Supplem~l)tal
water helps roots grow, allowing
the plants to become permanc
ently established. '
Evergreens were also hit hard,
Williams says. They lose mols·
ture through their leaves year·
round and should also be watered
weekly. Needles may scorch this
winter If the plants are blasted
with dry, cold winds. The needles
turn brown . because they've ·
dried.
Look for evergreens to con~
tlnue turning brown and drop·
ping needles or leaves for the
next couple of years. lncreased
attacks by mites may combine
Continued from D·1
with lack of moisture to injure
and kill even more trees and wile, Thelma, and daughter,
Kara. He also has a son and a
shrubs.
Soml' trees and shrubs that granddaughter living In
·
have been unhealthy for years Lancaster.
Heighton
replaces
Raines at
may be dead by next spring,
the
Meigs
No.
1
mine
with the
Williams says. Since nursery
title
of
stores
coordInator
for the
plants also suffered this year, It
Meigs
No.
1
and
Raccoon
No. 3
may be more expensive to buy
mines.
He
began
working
for
the
replacements In 1989.
·1n
1981
and
held
the
company
Because most vegetables are
annuals, the effects of drought position of stores coordinator at
are over lor most or them. Be · the Meigs No. 2 mines prior to his
sure to remove all dead plant latest move.
Originally from Ironton,
material !rom the garden to
reduce insect and disease prob· Heighton now llves Ln Middleport
with his wife, Ollta, and two
!ems next year.
Drought may have affected children1 Emily and David.
Grant moved from stores coor·
rhubarb and asparagus, two
perennial vegetables, Williams dinator at the Raccoon No. 3
says. Plants that were watered mine to the same position at the
regularly this year shouldn't Meigs No. 2 mine - a larger
suffer long-term damage, but facility. He began working for
plants that weren't watered may the company In November 1972.
A native of the area, Grant
p"oduce a poor crop next year.
lives
In Albany with his wife,
Shorten the harvest season
Rose.
They have three children
next spring If the plants produce
and
two
grandchildren,
a weak crop, she says. Providing
the plants with a spring appllca·
lion of 12 ~12 · 12 or 15·15·15 tertii~
izer will also help. Side dress the
rhubarb as growth begins and the
Continued from D-1
asparagus after harvest. Apply
packet
or Information and easy to
the fertilizer at a rate of 2 pounds
use
Ups
on how to conserve soli
per 100 feet of row.
.
and
water.
The . packet also
Expect frult·bearing trees and
Includes
Information
about the
shrubs to suffer the same effects
conservation
of
the
1985
Farm
as other woody ornamentals.
Bill,
becoming
an
"Earth
Team''
Fruit size may be reduced
because the plants have shor· volunteer and the "Take Pride In
tage of carbohydrates. Maturity America" program.
The campaign effort Is spon·
will be delayed and It will take
by the SCS In cooperation
sored
more time lor young pia nts to
produce a good crop. Winter with local soU and water conser·
vation districts.
hardiness may also be reduced.

Stephens says. And since Amerl·
cans eat only a fraction of their
eggs raw, chances are slim that
an Infected egg would cause
Illness in humans, he says.
Salmonella bacteria are killed
during cooking.
It's also unlikely that salmo·
nella could enter the egg after it's
formed, although that, too, is
possible, .Stephens says: If the
eggs aren't washed,properlyand
salmonella cells are on the
outside of the shell, the cells
could enter through a tiny crack.
Or,lf the eggls Iefton a counter
and condensation forms, the cells
could use the moisture to work
their way through the shell.
Otherwise, the salmonella would
have to work Its way through an
Inside membrane and the egg
white, .whose viscosity and pH
level work ag.~lnst the Infection.·

B~t if the cells do get to the risk should follow federal
yolk; ·they can multiply rapidly.
guldellnf&gt;S.
"The yolk Is so nuttient·dense
People "at risk" Include
that at room temperature or aeyorm whose Immune systems
above, salmonella cells cari dou· are weakened by age, Illness or
ble within a half· hour. Before chronic condition. Stephens
long, you've got a mllllon of stresses that of the 11 people who
them ;" he says.
died in the northeastern out·
Although the probability · of breaks, 10 were nursing home
getting salmonellosis from eggs residents and the other was past
Is small, Stephens says anyone at age 70.
, - - - - - - - - . : __ _ _.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,

For Life Insurance,
check with state Farm.

Daily Number
564
Pick 4

9094

'

Super Lotto
7-15-22-29-35-38

Page3
•
.t

•

..

.

Vot.38, No.118
Copyrighted 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, ·ohio, Monday, October 24, 1988

Gollipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290·
Home 4U-4511
L1lce a good ne1ghtxx.

Srate Farm 1s !here

AnORNEY-AT-LAW

ltATI fAIIII

336 S. High St., Columbus, OH.
lOCAl CONSULTADON
in P-oy 992 ·64 I 7,
in Gallia County 245-9591
County 245·9591

A

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•

. In Pom•oy With ATTORNEY D.
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Reagan, said he didn't know why Americans
seemed uninterested In the forthcoming presklen·
tlal election. (UPI)

By United Press International •·
George Bush denied today
allegations that his campaign ·
has sm('ared opponent Michael
Dukakis with direct deceits and
Indirect racism. calling the
charges·a DemQ!:ratlc campaign
tactic.
Speaking In Waterbury "Conn.,
Bush called the Democratic
charges "absolutely ridiculous."
"I stand 100 percent behind
those ads," Bush said. "These
aads have been on the air lor a
long, long time .... People see this
for what It Is, a campaign
tactic."
Bush told an airport rally at
Waterbury, "We are not going to
let up. We are not going to be
deterred by the negative attack
coming out of the other side.''
Bush adviser Charles Black,
reacting to a weekend wave of
Democratic complaints about
the Republican vice president's
tactics, said Sunday, "We've
presented assertions and facts

Meigs County Sheriff Howard
product he was selling.
the restitution.
E. Frank reports that Richard
In other matters, the sheriff .
Bennett, 32, of Ripley, appeared
Judge O'Brien accepted Ben· reported a hlt~sklp accident at
COLUMBUS - In 1989, motor
111 IYfelgs County Court Friday
nett's no contest pleas , round him 10:49 p. m. Saturday on Route vehicle owners will renew their
m0rt!1nt! 1711-':llldiWPaltlelt'H.
gUITW'ol eacb"chaFge iihll sent: "'124; ea~tof SJtai::tise:'The vehiCle registrations by last name one·
enced him to six months In the passed a car driven by Allen more time during their current
O'Brien and entered pleas of no
county jaiL Five months of the Crisp, Apple Grove-Dorcas renewal month, Ol:lo Bureau of
contest to charges of theft by
sentence was suspended so Ben· Road, Racine. The Crisp vehicle Motor Vehicles Registrar Mi·
deception, falsification and crlm~
lnal trespass, !Lied by the shenett will be held In the county jail received moderate damage.
chael J. McCulllon said today.
for 30 days, according to Gerard.
The other vehicle Involved was
riff's department In conncectlon
McCullion stated that 1989 Is a
with the door·to~door sale of a
Once he Is released, Bennett will reported stolen at 12:26 a.m. transition year to get people to
purported cleaning product.
be on probation for an additional Sunday . morning and at 12:48 their birthday lor renewal. Motor
Falsification and theft by desix months, with It being a
a.m. SIJPday morning, the vehl· vehicle owners will renew In the
cle
believed to have been In the same month as in the past;
condition of the probation that he
ceptlon are both first degree
hlt·sklp was found burned off however, fees in 1989 will be
misdemeanors; trespass Is a
not engage In any door-to-door
third degree misdemeanor, re·
sales In Meigs County and that he Route 33 at Burlingham. The pro-rated to the motor vehicle
· portedPaulGerard,lnvestlgator
make restitution to any persons Pomeroy Fire Department re· owners' blrth(lays In 1989, 1990,
for the Meigs County Prosecutor who wish to get a refund on the sponded to the lire.
or 1991. No one pays for less than
Fred Crow III. The prosecutor's cleaning product.
6 months or for more than 17
Anyone who wants their money
office assisted · the sheriffs
The Incident Is still under
months.
department.
back should bring the cleaning Investigation.
Said McCulllon, "After vehicle
On Friday evening, the
The sheriff's department re· ' product to the sheriff's depart·
owners register In 1989 by last
ceived numerous complaints . ment, no later than this Friday. A shelrll's department assisted the
name and their registrations
from citizens about the Ripley list of those who want a refund Reedsv!lle Fire Department on
expire In 1989, 1990, or 1991, the 12
man using high pressure sales
will be presented to the court and aa vacant house fire north of
month charge schedule resumes
tactics and misrepresenting the
Bennett will be ordered to make Reedsville on Route 124.
and their date~of·blrth becomes
their deadline for annual
renewal."

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Bush has 12 point lead in Ohio poll
I

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Repub·
lican George Bush Increased his
lead In Ohio over Democrat
Mlchael Dukakls from 4 points to
12 points In a 10-day period, a poll
published Sunday shows.
The Cleveland PI aln Dealer
survey of 600 registered voters
from Tuesday through Thursday
showed 49 percent planning to
vote for Bush, 37 percent for
Dukakls and 13 percent favoring
other candidates or unlleclded.
Results of a poll published by
the newspaper Oct.l3, wltlchwas
prior to the last debate, showed
Bush holding a 4·polnt lead.
Ohio reportedly Is being tar·
geted by the Dukakls campaign
as a state It needs to carry to win
the election. Twenty-three elec·
toral votes are on the line In Ohio
and Dukakls has made numerous
campaign stops In the state. The

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that all are documented and
they 're all true."
"Dukakis Is running from the
Issues," Black maintained . "He
refuses to talk about his positions
on the Issues so we' have to
present those to demonstrate
how far out of the mainstream of
American public opinion he Is."
At a speech before community
leaders today, Bush asked the
same question Ronald Reagan
asked during Ills presidential
campaign: "Are you better off
today than you were eight years
ago?"
Bush also said Dukakls
"claims that families are better
off only because women have
been forced to go to work. I'll
Ignore the sexism In that state·
ment-a statement that Implies
that women wouldn't choose to
work unless they had to. But, I
wl)l tell you this, women entered
the workforce at a faster rate In
the seventies than they have In
the el ghtles."

Bush said Dukakls Is trying to
"clog up the " irculatory system
of America's economy with ex·
actly the kind of big government
schemes the Europeans are
discarding.
"Economists call the resulting
economic paralysis Euralsclero·
sis," Bush said. "I call It
Dukakonomics. It rhymes with.
Carternomlcs. It didn't work
then and it won 't work now."
The latest campaign bitterness
boiled over as Dukakls's Demo·
cratlc allies, Inc luding running
mate Lloyd Bentsen and former
rival Jesse Jackson, spoke pub·
llcly about the clear and subt.le
messages they see· in the GOP
strategy.
"There have been a number of
rather ugly race-conscious sig·
nals sent from that campaign,"
Jackson told a brief Sunday news
conference In Boston, where he
joined Dukakls at a breakfast
with national black leaders.
Continued on page 10

Bennett pleads no contest on
Ohio motor vehicle owners
charges of lheft by deception
reminded '89 a transition year

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PRE'liDENT RETURNS TO WHITE HOUSE
-President Reagan gestures to reporters Sunday
as he returned to the While House from Camp
David. The president, accompanied by Mrs.

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Bush denies charges
made by his opponent

A... &amp; !tate !t.

L. W. CENNAMO

Cloudy to11ight. Low In
upper SOs. Chance of preclplta·
lion 40 percent. Tuesday,
mostly cloudy , high near 50.

•

•

• Permanent Life.
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CAROLI SNOWDEN
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Ohio.Lottery ·

Kosar returns;
Browns rally
to ~n, 29-21

October 23, 1988

'

Republicans countered late last
week with campaign swings by
both Bush and President
Reagan.
Among- the 319 Democrats
surveyed In the latest poll,
Dukakls held a 57 percent to 32
percent lead. But Bush held a 53
percent to 20 percent lead among
the 122 Independent voters, and
Bush held an 81 percent to 12
percent lead among the 150
Republicans polled .
Dukakls's strongest groups
were black people and union
members. The Massachusetts
.governor held a 52 percent to 32
percent. lead among union
members, and a 75 percent to 5
percent lead among black voters.
The Plain Dealer survey also
asked voters: "Regardless ·or
which candidate you support for .
president, who do you think

would do the better job dealing
with economic problems facing
Ohio and other manufacturing
states?"
Fourty~fo ur percent said Bush;
36 percent said Dukakls, 11
percent said they did not know
and 9 percent said neither .
Dukakls had a 22·polnt lead
over Bush on the question among
Democrats, but Bush held a
15·polnt lead amcmg lndepend~
ents and a 61-polnt leal! among
Republicans questioned.
Meanwhile, Sen. Howard Met·
zenbaum still leads his opponent,
Cleveland Mayor George Voino·
vice, but by a smaller margin,
the Plain Dealer reported
Monday.
The newspaper said Its latest
Senatorial race poll shows Met·
zeilbaum favored by 50 percent of ·
those polled.

In addition, for the llrst time, mail·ln option to do so imme·
motor vehicle owners will be dlately after receiving t)le appll·
given the optldn to 'l'mtew by clition so that they receive their
mall. In 1989, 45 days before an sticker before their registrations
applicant's current registration expire. Titles are not needed to
month, motor vehicle owners will renew a vehicle; therefore, titles
.receive an application in the should not be sen I.
mall. People with last names
Said McCullion , " We think
ending with "A" and "B" (cur·
people will find vehicle registra·
rent January renewals) will lion to be easier and more
begin receiving applications on convenient than ever before by
November 15, 1988. If they have choosing the mall·in renewal
no changes in name, address, or option. In addition, changing to a
vehicle Information. they can date·Of·birth system will also
sign the application and send a ·reduce the end of the month rush
check for the amount Indicated at deputy registra r. locations by
on the application to the Bureau spreading out renewal dates .
of Motor Vehicles In the envelope Instead of 12 months, there will
provided. If there ar.e changes,
be 365 days that will be deadlines
they must visit a deputy regis·
for renewals."
trar agency.
These vehicle registration
Motor vehicle owners can changes were mandated by Gov·
renew anytime after they receive . ernor Richard F. Celeste in an
their application; however, Re·
Execu live Order on Feb. 11, 1988,
gls trar McCulllon encourages
to Improve delivery of vehicle
people who choose to use the
registration services to the
public.
·

Cablevision representative explains
problems to Racine Village ~Council
Lester Errett representing Ca·
blevlslon was on hand when
Racine VIllage Council met In
recessed session.
Errett reported on two major
problems with the tel vision cable
service since last July. He
reported one problem was
caused by atmospheric condl·
!Ions. The other, he said, was a
number of intermittent problems
that jusi took time for technl·
clans to locate. He requested all
Racine residents to call the cable
service Immediately when they
enCOUllter problems.
Toni DeBruin, urban forester,
t'

Ohio Departmenmt or Natural The bill was $3,0lt and members
Resources Division of Forestry, of council feel that this figure Is
met with council concenilng a too high lor the work done. It was
program for replacing trees In noted that charges for the audit
the village.
were deducted from the various
· Council announced that trick funds rather than all of the cost
or treat night In Racine, will be _ coming from the general lund.
held from 6 to 7 p.m. on Monday,
The next meeting was set for 7
Oct . 31 and residents wishing to
p.m . on Nov. 7.
participate are to turn on their
Attending the recessed session
were Mayor Frank Cleland ,
porch lights. Council urges par·
ents to costume their children In
Clerk Jane Beegle , Street Com·
bright colored materials.
missioner Glenn Rizer and coun·
Council authorized Mayor
cllmen Robert Beegle, Henry
Frank Cleland to write a letter to
Bentz, Carrol Teaford, Richard
the Stated Auditor In regard to
Wamsley and Scott Wolfe.
the bill for the recent state audl!·

At least 50 killed by Hurricane Joan; 300,000 flee homes
•

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UPI)
-Hurricane Joan killed at least
50 people and forced an est!·
mated 300,000 Nicaraguans to
flee their homes before crossing
. Into the Pacific, where It became ·
Tropical Storm .·Miriam and
hovered today oll El Salvador
and Guatemala.
"This hurricane Ls the greatest
catastrophe produced by a natural phenomenon In a long time In
Nicaragua," President Daniel
Ortega said Sunday as he toured
damaged areas of Managua.
Ortega said his assessment
was based not on the number of
dead but on the "Incalculable
material damage In the entire
republic."
He said Joan killed at least 50
Nicaraguans and forced an est!·
mated 300,000 from their homes,

most of them In eastern coastal
areas where the hurricane first
blew In of! the Caribbean.
Ortega said the death toll of 50
was based on "very preliminary
flgilres ."
. "There are a lot of · people
missing who could be dead," he
said.
Joan, which left at least 112
people dead on Its weeklong
rampage across the southwest
Caribbean, crossed the Central
American Jsthmus Sunday and
moved over the Pacl!lc Ocean,
where It was renamed Miriam .
and· downgraded to a tropical
storm. It was the third storm to
cross the Isthmus and be re·
named ln the Pacific since 1971.
In El. Salvador, authorities
deClared a state of emergency
and evacuated at least 700

families as Miriam, packing miles south of Guatemala City.
55-mph winds and torrential
Gil Clark, a forecaster at the
rains, hit the western region late National Hurricane Center · In
Sunday.
Mlaml, said heavy rains are
Tomas Pacheco of San Salva· likely through today, producing
dar's National Metereologlcal llle threatening flash floods and
Center said the storm was ·mud sUdes. Heavy rains con·
expected to gain strength tlnued over western Honduras
· and Belize.
throughout the .night.
Maximum sustained winds
EI Salvador's army and all were estimated near 55 mph, but
health services were placed on a: Miriam's proximity to the coast
state of alert and two national and Inland mountains Is expected,
airports were closed.
to limit strengthening during the
Tropical storm warnings re- day, Clark said.
main In effect for the Pacific
Clark said Miriam should
coast of Guatemala and El coniine drifting west northwest,
Salvador. Both nations also slamming Into the southern
issued flash ftood and mud sllde Sierra Madre mountains of
warnings.
Mexico.
'•
At 8 a.m. EDT, Miriam was
"Anywhere It goes now It wlll
estimated to be near latitude 13.5 run Into a wall or mountains,"
north, longitude 90.5 west or 75 Clark said. "The big problem Is If

It does move more north, It will
cause mudslides."
The government of Guatemala
Issued a tropical storm warning
for the Pacific coast. Tropical
storm warnings remained In
effect for El Salvador, along with
flash flood and mud slide
warnings.
.
The damage by a downgraded
Joan In Managua was relatively
m !nor, but the capital was stU!
without electricity Sunday even·
lng. At least three people died Ln
the capital and some 7,000 were
evacuated there because of
floods.
Hundreds or downed trees
littered streets and In poor
neighborhoods, homes of card·
board and sheets of plastic
disintegrated In the heavy winds.
Residents left homeless wan·

dered the streets with mat tresses
strapped to their backs.
State worker s struggled~·
throughout the nlgh't to put up
electricity lines pulled down by
the storm.
Nicaragua 's easte1:n coas tal
city of Bluellelds was the worst
hit ,by Hl!,rrlcane Joan as it
slammed ashore Saturday morn·
lng with winds of up to 135 mph.
A statement from Ortega's
office said Joan caused massive
damage on the east coast of
Nicaragua, flooding crops, kll·
ling livestock, ruining rlce and
other grain stored Ln silos, and
destroying docks, buildings and
boats.
Three people were reported
dead Ln Corn Island, 45 miles off
the eastern coastUne, the state·
meht said.

�Monday, October 24, 1988

'

.

Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
II~

r-T&gt;--J ....
-.-•

~v

.....,.=·=-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publi$her
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers
LE'n'ERS OF OPINION

are welcome. They should

As~latton.

be less than 300 words

tona. All letters are su~j ect toediting and must be slgne:i with name, address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters sllOuld be in

mark~t

market left In !he Soviet Union
for American products.
Trade with the United States
could play a big role In Gorbachev' s reform program. He
needs to Improve the Soviet
standard of living quickly and
one way would be to Increase
trade. Gorbachev Is being pulled
from two directions - the Soviet
bureaucracy, which Is resistant
to reforms, and the Soviet people
who, at the moment, support
Gorbachev's et!orts at economic
reform.
But most Soviet citizens who
now back their leader wUI judge

KCal taste, addressing issues, not persooallttes.

.

Letters to the editor

1'HE RIL-LOWIN6 1$

A "AI~

Feels it is time to do something!
Dear Editor:
Whats wrong with these commissioners? Why do they resent
every penny that Is spent on the
DRS employees whether It be In
wages or benefits?
They better wake up and
realize that all things change
with time - even our wages,
(and they should, as we deserve a
raise). They now give the court·
house employees a raise every
year. Why aren't the citizens of
Meigs Co. griping about that?
Their wages aren't reimbursed
from the state but the DHS
employees' wages are! So why
not us?
As far as comparing apples to
oranges, the employee~ the
DHS should get paid more
because we are civil service
employees and the courthouse
employees aren't. So why do they
complain so much about our
wages?
Don't condemn us because of
where we work. If they don't like
what they're getting paid then
why don't !hey apply for a job at
the DHS when there's an openIng. But let them not forget that
they must pass a civil service
exam In Columbus to be able to
work there. Did they have to pass
a test any kind to work at the
courthouse?
The commissioners probably
get tired of hearing them com·
plain about the differences In
pay. Thats also probably oqe of
the reasons we don't get a raise
because of the hassel the commissioners get from the courthouse employees. The commissioners don' I need to tell us that
the money lsn' t !her~ for a raise
and our Insurance fienellts because that has already been
proven that It Is. They also do not
need to tell us that the money
may not be there for the next
year or the year after If they
would give us a raise and pay our
benefits this year, because Its
there for the asking.
The dlrectbr requests yearly
from the state the amount of
money needed to run the DHS tor
a year. Then ltdependsonhowhe
spends this money when he gets It
as to whether we get a raise or
our benefits. This Is all done with
the approval from the commissioners. Do I need to say more?
So you see the money Is there.
They just have to know how to
manag£ It! Mr. Swisher's employees should be his number one
priority as we are the ones who do
all the work there.
Some of the Meigs Co. citizens
gripe about giving us a raise but
most of the ones that do are ones
that have been to the DHS for
help or assistance of some kind
and they have been denied the
services according to the state
rules at that time. (These state
rules are constantly changing.)
So they , In turn, get mad at the
DHS and the employees who

work there. If they were ever
denied any services then It was
because they weren't eligible
according to the state rules.
• Some people form opinions
from second handed Information •
from friends or relatives who
were denied services and they
don't even know or understand
how the system works or the
rules. Therefore they do not know
what they're talking about but
are quick to condem us. We just
enforce those state rules . - we
don't make them. If someone has
a complaint on eligibility then
they should calltbe State Welfare
or the state governor and com·
plain. Don't blame us for doing
our jobs.
The Meigs Co. citizens say the
commissioners are doing a good
job and are saving their tax
dollars by not giving us a raise alot they really know -:-because
this money Is reimbursed from
the state - so now what's their
gripe? They better get themselves Informed on all the money
spent on things that Isn't reimbursed by the state. That's where
their tax dollars are really going!
The commissioners should and
better realize that they are voted
Into their offices and they can be
voted out also. This strike has
went on long enough and you
don't just let 17 employees with
their children and families sit out
on the street starving and doing
without for 13. weeks without
suffering any consequences to
their of!lces. If the commissioners think or have been told that
the work at the DHS Is getting
done and In a timely manner then
they better talk to some people
other than the director or the
ones who are working Inside now,
because that's exactly what they
want everyone to believe.
The commissioners have had
numerous complaints by phone
and In person about the work not
being done and the quality of
what little work that Js getting
done. Why won't they admit It?
Most .Meigs Co. citizens don't
even realize or know the real
reason behind this strike or why
we voted the Union Into the DHS.
If they are so concerned about
this county then why don't they
ask us, the ones who really know ,
and the ones who are out on the
street fighting tor what Is right
and for what we as public
employees deserve.
Come on commissioners, we
want to go back to our jobs so we
can continue to help the Meigs
Co. citizens the way they deserve
to be helped. This strike Is getting
ridiculous!!
Why don't the citizens of Meigs
Co. really care and wake up and
learn the truth also. I hope they
open their eyes and see what Is
really going on In their county!
· Crestlyn Hill
MCDHS Striking Employee

Today in history
By United Pre!l8 International
Today Is ~onday, Oct. 24, the 29llth day of 1988 with 68 to follow .
The moon Is full.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter . .
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are Ul)der the sign of Scorpio. They Include
pioneering Dutch microscope maker Anton Van Leeuwenhoek in
1632, journalist Sarah Josepha Hale, author of "Mary Had a Little
Lamb, "In 1788, attorney Belva Lockwood, the first woman candidate
tor U.S. president, nominated by the National Equal Rights Party ,In
1830, film producer-director Merlan Cooper ("King Kong") In 1893,
Roiling Stone rock band member Bill Wyman In 1936 (age 52), and
actor Key in Kline In 1947 (age 41).
On this date in history:
In 1648, the Treaty of Westphalia ended the brutal Thirty Years'
War In Europe.
In 1861, the first telegram was transmitted across the United States
!rom California Chief Justice Stephen Field to President Abraham
Lincoln In Washington.
In 1945, following Soviet ratification, U.S. Secretary of State James
Byrnes announced the United Nations charter was In effect.
In 1984, the F.B.I. arrested 11 alleged chiefs of the Colombo crime
family on charges of racketeering In New York City.

•

A thought tor the day: Humorist Mark Twain wrote that' 'life would .
be Infinitely happier If we could only be born at the age of 80 and
gradually approach 18."

IN~ULT.

/O·C

E

HEI'&lt;

~~~----_::.=-_®,~·89 ~ ~ 9fA~·"laE6·~•••,....J\u[:E

Dear voters: Keep calm
The last three weeks of the
presldenttal campaign now lie
directly ahead of us, and the best
advice that can be given to
anyone Interested In politics Is:
Stay calm.
This Is the time when the side
that suspects It's losing will
grasp at any straw, and throw
any dead cats It may happen to
have lying around. If that side Is
the Democrats (and It Is), they
can count on our liberal media to
'multiply by many orders of
magnitude the Impact of anything they manage to come up
with.
So be prepared for breathless
last-minute declarations that
this or that eveiit (e.g. the final
debate), or some unexpected
disclosure, has "turned the race
around" or at least "made It a
horse race again." The polls will

follow suit, asserting that the
race Is now "too close to call."
The objective will be to envelop
the campaign's closing days In a
cloud of hysteria, In which voters
may be panicked Into changing
their minds.
'All that, let me stress, Is what
very probably lies ahead; but, as
of this writing, the Democrats'
mood, and even the media's, Is
more accurately describable as
one of quiet despair. The polls all
show Bush ahead by s•bstantlal
margins. Such liberal stalwarts
as James Reston and Hedding
Carter have publicly just about
thrown In the sponge.
The basic trouble Is Michael
Dukakls' personality. The voters
have had a good look at him by
now, and what they see Is a cold
fish. George Bush may be a little

him by the food he puts on their
tables and the consumer goods he
puis on their shelves. Now, the
shelves In state stores are bare
and the bureaucrats are confidently waiting for the economic
discontent to cause a backlash
against Gorbachev.
He Is literally leading a revolution against his own party
apparatus. He can't alford an
open civil war, so he Is taking
steps to reassure the bureaucrats
that there will be a place lor them
In a reformed Soviet Union.
· The bloated Soviet · bureaucracy; Is known around the world
as a model of Inefficiency.
Gorbachev would like to cut It by
half.
Gorbachev has enlisted the
Soviet press to help him with his
war against the bureaucracy. He
lifted the corner of the Soviet
censorship blanket and unleashed the media, which bas had
a field day exposing bureacratlc
excesses.
Gorbachev has another for~
mldable toe in the KGB, the
Soviet secret pollee, which Is
threatened by the new openness
In the Soviet Union. Gorbachev' s
reform advocates are finding
themselves tailed by the KGB,
according to our Intelligence . f
sources. KGB agents have done
nothing openly to harass the
reformers, but their presence In
the shadows has an Intimidating
effect. It Is clear that the agents
are keeping watch on the re·
formers and gathering
Information.

~\TICAL.

The Soviet Union has produced
such a tangle of laws and
regulations that anyone could
trip over some restriction. That
gives the KGB an excuse, If It
needs one, to crack down.

William Rusher

excitable, and may even misspeak now and then, but he Is
plalnlyawarmandlivelyhuman
being with a sense a humor that
enables him to laugh at himself.
If all else falls, John Sasso,
Dukakls' longtime guru, can be
counted on to turn up at the last
minute with a couple of servlceable anti-Bush smears. I heard of
one about 10.. days ago, but It
hasn't surfaced yet, so presumably John Is saving It for some still
ralnlet day a week or two down
the road.
The polls, too, probably have
one last wild gyration In them.
Having told us Dukakls was
leading Bush by 1B percentage
points during the early summer,
they have recently sobered up
and acknowledged that he Is In
tact trailing Bush just about

Congress concludes work

'

everywhere. But most of them
will get behind any wheeze Sasso
manages to come up with and
declare that It has suddenly ,
made the race "too close to call." ..
Finally, at the last moment (In
the case of Lou Harris, It Is
usually the morning of Election
Day), the polls will head tor the
tall timber, each covering Its
rear with Its "final prediction'' the only one worth the powder to ·
blow It to Hades. If even that · ·
tupts out to be wrong (like
Gallup's spectacular blooper In
the New Hampshire Republican
primary), they can always claim
afterward that they "stopped :
polling too soon."
The point Is: Be readyk for
ugly surprises, heart-shaking
turnarounds, sudden swoops In
the polls .. And stay calm.

KOSAR RETURNS -' Cleveland quarterback
Bernie Kosar (19) looks downfleld after throwing
pass In the first quarter :against host Phoenix
while lineman Dan Flke (69) works on keeping

Cardinal delensi•e lineman Freddie ,Joe Nunn
(78) off his quarterback. The Browns rallied from
a 21-20 fourth period deficit to win, 29-21. (UPll .

Win Q
still leaves Cooper frustrated
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) -Ohio
State's late goal-line stand and
13-6 victory over Minnesota Sat·
urday night gave the Buckeyes
their first Big Ten win of the
season, but OSU Coach John
Cooper was frustrated with his
team's offense.
''I've been criticized through·
out the whole state for being too
critical of our football team ,"
Cooper said. "But we are far
enough along where we shouldn't
be making mental mistakes."
The Buckeyes' defense rallied
in the last couple minutes,
stopped the Gophers at the1-yard
line, drove· them back and
quarterback Scott Schaffner's
fourth-down pass Into the end
zone -was Incomplete to end the
threat.
The key play came on third
down when free safety David
Brown broke through the Gopher
line to snag quarterback Scott
Schaffner and throw him for a
10-yard loss.
Cooper was proud of the OSU
defense, but for the most part,
the Buckeye offense stopped
threatening after the third quar·
ter after Pat O'Morrow kicked
the second of his two field goals.
"It's frustrating ," said
Cooper. "We must be able to
execute our o!tense. If we execute and it's wrong. then we need
to get a new offense."
Buckeye quarterback Greg

Frey, who completed 15 of 20 said. "! was going into the game
passes for 199 yards, wasn't thinking they were one of the
totally pleased with his hardest hitting teams we've ever
performance.
played."
"I'm "glad we won, but It was
The Gophers were led by
kind of ugly be"cause we dldn"t Schaffner, who rushed for 69
put a lot of points on the board," yards on 15 carries, including a
he said. "As far as the defense is 45-yard scramble down the right
concerned, we played a great ·side line that set up a 39-yard
game. They were the key to our field goal by Brent Berglund
victory."
·
early In the second quarter.
. Although the Gophers had 189
But it was the Buckeyes who
yards rushing, the Buckeye de- got on the scoreboard first ,
fense, led by Derek MacCready marching 59 yards In nine plays
and John Kacherskl, who had two in their opening drive to set up a
sacks apiece, held the Gophers 25-yard field goal by Pat O'Morscoreless In the second half.
row that made It 3-0.
"! wish we could play defense
The Gophers, behind ,the rushlike that every game," Cooper Ing of Darrell Thompson who
said. "! 've never seen a team carried 22 times for 98 yards,
fight like our defense did."
drove 54 yards on their next
But Frey kept the Buckeyes possession an,d scored on a
moving with crucial third down 44-yard field goal by Berglund
conversions like a 22-yard pass to thai lied the score 3-3.
Jeff Ellis early In the second
Ohio State struck back early In
quarter. The play put the ball at the second period when Snow
the Gopher 27 and set up a broke loose on a draw play and
27-yard touchdown run by Carlos ran 27 yards for a touchdown that
Snow.
put the Buckeyes on lop 10-3.
:'Frey had some excellent
Minnesota mo;&gt;ved the ball 59
games coming In," said Gopher yards In 8 plays on their next
Coach John Guten kust. "They possession and scored on Ber·
have a balanced attack and It glund's · 39-yard fi eld goal to
helps his passing. He's a good,
make It 10-6.
strong accurate thrower."
Ohio State missed two chances
One thing that Impressed
when 56-yard and 51-yard field
Snow, who rushed for 7.6 yards In goal attempts by O'Morrow fell
20 carries, was Minnesota's short. The first half ended at 10-6
hitting power. "One thing they when a 56-yard attempt by
showed me was a lot of class," he Minnesota's Berglund also
dropped short.

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13 Weeks., ...... ... ........ .. .. ...... ... . $20.80"

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!

UCLA records 7th straight win, 24-3 .
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP I) -Troy
Aikman threw three touchdown
passes Saturday, guiding No. l
UCLA to a 24-3 victory over
A:rlzona In a Paclflc-10 game.
UCLA, which gained the top
ranking this week for the first
time since 1967, scored In each
quarter to Improve to 7·0 overall
and 4-0 In the Pac-10.

Aikman, considered the leadIng candidate for the Reisman
Trophy, delivered scoring
throws of 55 yards to Corwin
Anthony, 5 yards to David
Keating and 2 yards to Danny
Thompson. It was the sixth time
this year Aikman passed for at
least three touchdowns in a
game.

80 ROD ROLL

..

TANKS

•

BIIID PUSHES OFF - Boston CeltiC8 star I.arry Bird pushes
away Real Madrid's Antonio MarUn during action In Sunday
nllht's final of McDonald's Open Basketball Tournament In
Madrid. The Celtlcs won, 119-981n the first pro championship game
held outside the United States. (Reuter).

..•

13 Weeks .... .......... ........ ...... $19.24
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52 Weeks . ... .. ... ... . . ... ....... . $74.36

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HOT WATER

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~~

SINGLE COPY
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DINNER FOR FOUR

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~~

Berry's World

'

I Sports Briefs I

Cong. Clarence Miller

For too long, Americans have Ients hold down a job, the Act also era! government paying lor 90% workforce. By combining work
been upset about the current requires states to guarantee of the lab tests needed to do so. requirements with child care,
state of our public assistance child care for recipients If . The act requires judges to use and edu.catlon and Job training
programs. Rather than encou· · necessary. It requires the states state guidelines In determining programs, the Act addresses the
raging people to work to support - to continue this child care for 12 chl)d support payments every major obstacles that keep curthemselves, our welfare pro- months after an AFDC mother three years for AFDC recipients. rent welfare recipients out of the
grams such as Aid to Families has lett the .program. It also Finally, It permits states to workforce. Though there are still
with Dependent Children requires states to extend Medi- require minors who are parents a number of provisions of this
(AFDC) have Instead created an cald coverage for one year. to live with their parents In order legislation that I take exception
to, overall! feel the act should go
underclass of American citizens However, states could also re- to qualify for AFDC.
a
long way toward attaining Its
In conclusion, the new welfare
dependent upon the federal go- quire the recipients to pay a
primary
obJective, that of turnvernment for their dally support. portion of these latter two servl· reform act Is a reasoned apRecently, Congress acted to ces, depending upon their In- proach to moving people ot! of Ing welfare recipients Into pro- '
change this state of affairs by come. To help pay for the JOBS the welfare roles and Into the duct!ve members of society.
adopting sweeping new legisla- programs, the Act provides fed·
tion to reform our nation's era! matching payments of 90%
welfare programs and this past of the states FY 1987 allotment
Thursday the President signed under the Work Incentive Prothis legislation Into law.
gram and matching grants of 60
Under the new welfare reform to 60 percent for amounts oyer
act, the states are required to that allotment.
The welfare reform act also
establish Job Opportunities and
Basic Skills programs (JOBS). beets up the AFDC program for
The JOBS program Is Intended to unemployed parents ( AFDC·
permit AFDC recipients to per· UP) which provides for welfare
· manently move off of the public benefits for two-parent families
dole and Into the work force by In which the principal wage
combining mandatory work re- earner Is unemployed. It re·
quirements with education and quires a parent In the program to
Job training. To satisfy the work work at least 16 hours per week,
requirements, the states can although thoseundertheageof25
provide community work expe- can substitute enrollment In an
rlence or other unpaid work,
educational program for this
subsidized employment or on the requirement. Furthermore,
Job training to encourage private while the AFDC-UP program Is
employers to hire welfare reclpcurrently voluntary for states,
Ients, or Job search programs.
the welfare reform act requires
The states are required to enroll states to offer It beginning In
!•
most AFDC reclpents In the jobs
October of 1990.
program. The only exceptions to
One of the most Important
this will be for those parents with
aspects of the welfare reform act
. children under the age of three,
Is Its emphasis on making
recipients whoarelllorlncapacl·
parents support their offspring.
tated, those who are already
In particular, the Act beefs up
child-support enforcement. It
employed at least 30 hours per
week, those needed In the home
requires states to begin automat~
because of the Illness of a
tcally wtthholdlnd court-ordered
•
Cl ttea by NEA,II'IC
lt) -C.
household member, children
child support payments from
under the age of 16 attending
absent parent's wages beginning
"I've got a crazy Idea. Let's forget that we're
school full time, and women In
In 1994. It also requires states to
attorneys and try to speak In PLAIN
the latter slages of pregnancy.
meet federal standards In deterENGLISH/"
mining paternity, with the fed·
In order to help AFDC reclp-

'

Kosar said he was •atisfled of the things we did."
TEMPE, Ariz. (UPIJ - -Cleve·
Kosar got th e Browns off to a
land Coach Marty Schottenhei· with his performance.
" Overall, I was pretty pleased 14-0 lead with 3-yard pass on a
mer doesn't hesitate when he
tackle eligible play to 280-pound
talks about how much qWirler- with the way I played, minus the
Rickey Bolden in the first quar·
back Ber nie Kosar means to th e inteo ceptlons," Kosar said. "'Our
offense dld a good job. We were ter and " a 29-- yard pass to
Browns
real aggressive out there."
Langhorne midway In the second
It i&amp; KosaJt, the youngest
Phoenix Coach Gene Stallings quarter. Langhorne beat Cardl·
quarterback starter In the NFL,
who gives the Browns "all the joined Schottenhelmer In prais- nal back Car I Carter wit h a
spec(aculal diving catch at the
weapons," Sc hottenheimer said Ing Kosar.
"He
threw
it
underhanded
and
back of the end zone.
after his star paced Cleveland to
Phoenix stormed back in the
a 29-21 victory over Phoenix everything else," Stallings said.
"That's
the
reason
that
U1ey
are
!ina!
minute 'of the half with two
Sunday. The game was Kosar's
contending
for
the
championship
touchdowns
17 seconds apart.
first since suffering an elbow
every
week.''
.
First,
theCardinal~scoredona
injury Sept . 4.
While Kosar's return was a 58-yard drive after Lonnie Young
"He' s the guy who gets those
plus
lor the Browns, Stallings recovered Earnest Byner's fum·
things taken care of." SchOlten·
had
to
face the loss of his starting ble. Fullback Earl Ferrell got the ·
helmer said, "He's start(&gt;d two
quarterback,
Nell Lomax, who touchdown on a 2- yard drive with
games for us and he's 2-0."
;;uttered
a
bruised
hlp In the third 52-seconds left to play In the half.
An example of Kosar's ability, ,
quarter
and
gave
way to Cliff
On the first play altPr the
Schottenhelmer said, Is the way
Stoudt.
kickoff, Kosar made a rare bad ·
.he picks •up opposing defenses,
The extent of the injury was not throw and Clasby grabbed the
~specially the blitz.
known,
but It was the same hlp ball at the Cleveland 16 a nd
"Listen, they were coming oft
that
has
bothered Lomax all returned It to the 8. Lomax 1hen
the bus with that blitz," Scholtenseason
due
to an arthritic hit J .T. Smith In the end zone for
heimer said of the Cardinals. ''In
the touchdown on th~ ne~ t play,
the first half, out of 32 snaps, I condition.
Phoenix linebacker E .J. Jun- tying the score 14-14 .
think they blitzed 11 times."
Ior said the Cardinals had wanted
Taking advantage of good field
·But. SchOttenhelmer ex·
plained: Kosar was able to call to blitz Kosar, although he was position set up hy a 15-yard
audibles at the line of scrim- sacked only twice. both times by penalty against P hoenix on the
kickoff, the Browns were able to
mage, setting the stage lor a l Junior.
"Anytime
you
can
get
to
him.
move
Into field goRI range with
number of first downs.
it's
just
not
the
easiest
thing
to
Matt
Bahr
hittin g a 46-yarder
For the record, Kosar hit 10 of
do,"
Junior
said.
"It's
a
plus
,
we
with
five
seconds
left to play .
his first 11 passes and ended the
wanted
to
hit
him
at
least
15
day with 25 completions In 43
a ttempts for 314 yards and all times. We wanted to shake hlm
around - make him wonder
three Cleveland touchdowns.
Those Im pressive numbers were where we were going to co me
The Daily Sentinel
compiled althOugh he also suf·. from next, If we were going to hit
fered a dry spell starting when him, or if we were backing off.
(USPS 14ii-96t)
"Give him credit, he read a lot
Phoenix tackle Bob Clasby inter·
A Division of Multimedia,. Inc.
cepted one of his passes to set up
Published every afternoon, Monday
a Cardinal TD just before halfthrough Friday, 111 Court Sf ., Pomeroy. Ohio, by lhe Ohio Valley Pul::l·
time and then was 0-5in the third
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc.,
qual"ter.
•
Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
In typical Kosar fashion, he
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy ,
Auto Racing
Ohio.
bounced back In the fourth
A mce car plowed into a crowd
quarter after Phoenix had taken of spectators Sunday at the end of
Member: United Press International ,
Inland Dally Press Assoclat ton and th e
a 21-20 lead and marched the a hlllcllmb In Bilbao, Spain,
Ohio
Newspaper Association. National
Bt·owns 90 yards, accounting lor killing a 35-year-old man and his
Advertising Representative, Branham
every yard as he completed five two children, ages 1 and 11. The
Newspaper Sales, 73.1 Third Avenue,
NPw York, New York 10017.
of eight passes. What turned out car began to swerve as ·a
to be the winning touchdown approached the finish line and
POS'IMASTER: Send address changes
came on a 25-yard pass from the driver lost control, killing the
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ,
Pomero:;. Ohio 4576\1.
'
•
Kosar to wide receiver Reggie man, whose wife was among the
.
Langhorne, his second scoring several persons injured in the
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
catch of the day.
crash.
One Week ..... .... ... ...... .. .~ .. . ...... .SlAO

a

Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

WASHI):':!GTON - Both presi- already made their judgements.
dential candidates have ex· They have begun to treat tbe
pressed wary optimism over Soviet Union as It the Cold War Is
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba· over. This has led to a sudden
chev's reforms. But the next Increase In . trade between the
president will have to do more Soviet Union and Western Euthan be optimistic. He will have rope. The Kremlin also has sent
to decide If the Cold War Is really signals that It wants to end Its
over and, If It Is, what the United · economic Isolation and take Its
States' new relationship with the rightful place In the world
Soviets will be.
market. Western European
The next American president banks are extending credit to the
w!ll likely accept the Soviet Soviet Union. The next step'wlll
Union Into the world economic be !or the Soviets to add their
community, but neither candl· currency to the International
date will commit to that before monetary system.
the election.
'
If the United States doesn't act
Many European leaders have soon, there may be a limited

The Daily Sentinei- ·Page - 3

_. Kosar returns as Browns
rally to defeat Cards, 29-21

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday. October 24, 1988

·

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

fllm~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Soviets poised to end ·world

The _Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

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PRE-HUNG
INSULATED

METAL DOORS
6 PANEL
2'8" ic 6'8"
3/0" X 6'8"

$9599
.

-

�•

..

Monday. October 24, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ Bengals bomb Oilers; prepare
~ for trip to Cleveland Sunday
CINCINNATI (UP1) - Hallway through the season, no NFL
team has a better record than the
7-1 Ctnc.lnnatl Bengals. Yet ,
there are doubters.
After all, the Bengals are justa
half-season down the road from ·
last year's miserable4-ll record.
And, only a week ago, they
committed slx costly turnovers
in losing their first game of the
year to a relatively weak New
England team.
"There are still a lot of
skeptics," says Bengals' quarterback Boomer Eslason. "Ev·
ery week, It seems we stU! have
to prove something.''
· Cincinnati wasted no , lime
Sunday ln proving It could
'bounce back !rom Its embarrassIng defeat at New England. The
Bengals scored a club-record 28
first quarter points enroute to a
44-21 romp ovw the -Houston
Oilers ln a key AFC Central
division matchup.
A Houston victory would have
given the Oilers a share of the
division lead, but Cincinnati's
wln boosted the Bengals to a
two-game lead over 5-3 Oilers.
Cincinnati's 28 points ln the
opening period were the most the
club has ever scored in a first
quarter ln Its 21-yearhistory.
"That first quarter changed
the whole ga111e," said Houston ·
defensive end .Sean- Jones. "Chicinnatl played one excellent
quarter and didn't have to do that
much the rest of the way."
"We came out of the blocks
early," said Cincinnati coach

•

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~-

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Sam Wyche. "Every thing happened our way.
"Afte r we were upset last
week, everyone wanted to know
ll we were going to fold. " noted
Wyche. "Well, we had one of the
most dedicated, methodical and
business-like weeks bl practice
ever. We wanted to play a perfect
game today . This was one game
we were not going to let slip
away." ~
Instead, itwas Houston that let
the game sUp away early wlth
costly mistakes on a rain-slick
turf.
Three of Cincinnati's first
period TDs were set up by Oller
turnovers - a kickoff return
fumble by Leonard Harris and an
Interception and fumble by
Warren Moon.
Linebacker Leo Barker forced
Moon's fumble by hitting Moon's
arm just as he was about to pass,
grabbing the ball and racing 34
yards for a TD that staked the
. Bengals to a 28-0lead at the end of
the first quarter.
"I was blitzing and no one
picked me up," said Barker. "!
hit Moon's arm, tipped the ball,
saw It in the air and caught it. I
saw the end zone and took off as
fast as I could. It was my first
touchdown since Little League
Football."
' 'I never saw him,'' said Moon.
" He came from my back side."
Cincinnati scatback Jame.,
Brooks rushed 102 yards ln 16
carries and scored on runs oll8, 9
and 7 yards, while rookie lckey

•

Fans believe The King is alive

Woods had a pair of 1-yard TD
runs. Cincinnati got a safety at
the end of the game when a Moon
tumble squirted out of the Oilers'
end zone.
Houston rallied to pull towlthln
35-21 at the end of the third
quarter and could have cut the
lead to 35-28 at the start of the
fourth period had not Drew Hlll
dropped what should have been a
touchdown pass ln the end zone.
·"It was there," said Hill. "I got
my hands on lt. Ijustdropped it."
"If we had scored on that
play," said Moon, "we would
have been down by scve11 with a
whole quarter to pla·y and I think
tht&gt; momentum would have
changed in our direction-.
"But," added 'Moon, "all we
could do was try to peck our way
back all day. The roof caved ln on
us when they got those 28 points
the first qua rter. They even had
14 points before our offense took ,
the field ."
The Oilers scored on Mike
Rozier's 5-yard run and on
Moon's passes of l 5 yards to Hill
and 10 yards to Wlllie Drewrey.
Neither quarterback could do
much with the wet ball. Eslason
completed 11 of 20 passes for 154
. yards, but no touchdowns and .
two Interceptions. Moon was 13 of
32 for 158 yards and two
Interceptions.
,
II was Moon's second game
back after suffering a broken
shoulder blade. "I don 't have the
velocity I want on my passes," he
said. "Some of them are hanging
up in the alr."

MANAGER - Tammy Hupp, Letart Township resident, has
been named new manager of Keebaugh's Restaurant In Chester.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ervin of Racine, Hupp Is a
1982 graduate of Southern IUgh School and received an associate
degree In hotel and restaurant management at Hocking Technical
College ln Nelsonville. She' served as manager of Dailey's Country
Restaurant In Racine before becoming hostess - cashier at
McCoy's Best Western In Ripley, W,Va. ShelsmarriedtoJamesR.
Hupp and the couple has a son, James Richard Hupp, Jr. The
Chesler restaurant will be open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday
through Sunday.

Community calendar
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Monday at
7: 30 p.m.
at the Middleport
Presbyterian Church, Boy Scout
Troop 245 will hold an organlza·
Ilona I and informational meeting
lor parents and other In teres led
residents.

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pace the Bengals to a
over the Oilers. (UPJ),

BROOKS SCOREs - Glnclnnatl's · James
Brooks BCOres the oecond of his three touchdowns
against vloltln~ Houston from nine yards out to
'

Scoreboard ...
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s

W•ldapon

' '.

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(

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t. f

0

7
-4

""

J31"1t811

&lt;Jalcap

1113%41'7
liiiS!ifl

..
,.

1

13

z.s.s

41

Hardord I, PbUallelpllla I
MoatreaU, •rr.r.o J
CaJ..,J, Toro•a (I~)
Boltoe I, 8&amp;.
2
Los Aa(!lm 8. Mla~ncM 2
Sund"' •• Re811ltl
WinNpeJ J. WuMaaton II:

New .18'1!)' a, Def;rlll I (Ue)
C&amp;lpey I, Plllladelpflla4 (OT)
NV Rl,nl*'rt 8, Quebec!
Vancouwr .. Edmoalon6
Mondq ' aGune~
IMIM Eheda~ll

Montreal at Boet-.1:1:1 p.m.
O'IICA(O 1.1 q11e~ 1: II p.m.

'he.diiJ'I Games

• Calprya1Pki. . ..P,1:15p.m.
hftaloat N-tleri('J , 7:41p.m.
Tor...co• N1' lslanden, l:tsp.m .
WMidn... • 1.1 Vuoouwr, HI : 31 p.m.

Edm•lll•a•t Lea Aaplea, II:Up.m.

NFI. results
NATION.U FOO'I'B.UL LEAGUE

Sunl•' • Knuth
NV Glant123, ,\tl.nta II
l'lllllad8pNa !4, DaJIM 0
PlllitiMirp • • Dl!ll\ltll' :u

In) niJhiJame

Transactions
SMIIIIII,)''a Sports TranladkiM

Bueb.U
Olh:ap(.U.) -SIPI!liWIIItHriii&amp;Mto
a m•H~,ear cOntraet utile Club'• IW&amp;Ibrrf
l'O~h.

Mom:re .. -

Mlluec&amp;a ••. Tam.- Bay •
Buffalo !S, N_. En &amp;land 21

NY .leta«. Ml ami "

In dlanap .. ll II, San Dlfp I
W•t~~nponlt, Green B.ly 17

tlevflhUid!l,

Phoe~~b;

%1

Prep scores

.._........ H. lbltllat.• Harbor a
Beadnrood 1, K.lrn••• 1.. 1
Bedlonl 1, Norttrvlew l
Bellaire 8t John 4t, Shtera..tlle (WVal

'

Belh!loalalneto, Keatoe Rldp t
Bertin Wettera 11M 11, Prieratlvra:
Sprlnr1
Canal Wlnche~tter II, F11her CatiL1
Can MciUnh!y tl, Erie (Pa) Prep I
Cle St JpMiusJ.t, Lakewaall&amp;l. 111.1
Cle Unlv IS, IUIIW Prfp, Pa. I
Cle W Tech 8. ae HQ 0
COl Wlltera011UI, Cln hneii-Marlln I
Conotton Val •· Ganny I
DuabM- U
Hu•on W•len Rn A.cad 4%. Ga&amp;ea
Milia Haw-.. 13
Uma Cat CUll J:t, Llbbey 21, ! OT
MMallaa U, Qe 8t olin 8
Mentor lAke cat h. Jl, G.,.tleld HP.
TrlnMy t

Oaf ·while 11, DQ

MJner\la it, 'l'IIM:art.W&amp;I V.. J 0

Newark Ca&amp;k tl, He•h J
Nile IS, YOUIIIJ. Wll... i
Milk Gilmour U
Porta Notre Dame 11, lro ..OII8t Joe 8
Steuben ..tile tl, 8all•lllMI•rn cDel.) 11
1'61 St Franda Sl, Tol Bow.._,l
TYJ.County N 8, N.t Trail 0
, W•'" Watern Rea %1, .\UibttiM'a
FMch • (ot )

Vou Moo~~Q

LA Rami II, Se lit~ II
Mond.,.'a Gunfl

San Franct.ee at Chlcqo, I p.m.
8u adtt.J, Oet. 30
AU•ta at PhlladelpNa, I p.m .
Chleq•at New Enalancl.l p.m.
Clndnnlllld Clevel.t, 1
GremBf,y at Bldfah), I p.m.

,.m.

LA Rlml at New Orleans, I p.m .

MJ11ml at Tam .. ..,., I p.m.
NV Olanlut Detroit I p.m.
PhorU at Dal_lu, I p.m.
Pltl-.rJh .11. 'NY .leta, I p.m .

Kaa- CIIJ .t LA Rahll!n, 'p.m.
MlanetoiA lit Su Fruclk9, ~p. m.
S.. DleJO .a Se••~. 4 p.m.
W•W•~~G•AI Houa&amp;on. 8 p.m.

Denwr at

Slped o..rlel*r nm

Ralnea to a ttne-)tlar conlrad _.h a
•~~e-year opuon.

Pllullul'lh (Pa) Sh..,.r.de SS. Gillet

New Orluns • , LA Rlider~~fl

MoadlliJ', Od . Sl
ladl~olla, t p.m .

This week's games
SM.rdlf , Ocl!l

Ohio Stille at Mlelllpn Stale
MIMnl at Bowln1 oreee
Eu&amp;ern MJc:hlpll at Ohla llnl\1
Kenl S&amp;ale M '1'•1• tnl
Cal state-Fallert• at ,n ron

convlncln~

44-21 victory

Ohio Outdoors

Plan
hunting
•

trips_
•

By JERRY PICKRELL

:n, Cln 81. XavMr I

College scores.
Otllo Cellea:e Feo&amp;bllll Results

Ollilo sa t~t Ml• ... •
llewlarGrec~~•.

•

Yo•.Pvwa8t 11

Ollto llot¥- n, &amp;HIIIM 14
Toledo a, Miami "I
Altr• 4t, Lo•r•ach 8t (Calli) I

M..ml (F1al 1'7, Oad••U J
... ....._Wallace ~I. OllloNortllwn!l
WIUenberrl1, Cl&amp;pllal 17
Held!lberflt, Ol~rbelal
WVa Wt~~._ II, Martetta 11
~ llaiCial1, Ma•lllapm 17 (I~)
Allelhl!ll.)' ~ Pa) .C, le111011 18
Cue RcHr..-e n. Dealloa 11
Wooater .._ Oberh I
Web•• {lad) U, Olrrla Wnleyllll I
A•hl•d41, Vai,.Nllo (Iaiii It

a. .41ikiHMt &lt;1••&gt; I
Ctnt ... st 21, ~ Vallf!J (Ga} 7
Blulfto. .

Dqt• M, F"errW 8t (Micll) II
tJrb ... 14, Defl- u
, . • ., 14. Tlllb •
.lolul CArroll a, IDram 1
·
WllmtniiOIIIfr, Newport New a (Val tt

0Dtdoor Writer&amp; Association
of America
Distributed by UPI
Hunters who have only a
limited amount of lime to spend
In the field need to plan their
bunting trips.
Sometimes, the seaso~ Itself
ltmlts the flexlbtuty that can be
applied to thb. Deer bunting's
gun season lasts only a short
time, for example, and you either
hunt then or not at all.
Fortunately, some of the other
game seasons are longer and
such planning can be an integral
part of ihe overall approach to
\he sport. Turkey hunters have ·
. probably the next-shortest season, but even at three weeks,
there's time to accomodate some
flexibility.
One of the main considerations
lor any bunt should be the
weather. Most species of animals
are more active- and thus more
exposed to the hunter's eye when the weather Is good.
Turkeys call more often, deer
move about more, rabbits spend
more time above ground.
One notable exception to this
might be waterfowl. Ducks and
geese seem unaffected by cold
rains of the klnd to freeze
everthlng else Into a huddled
shivver.
. Fortunately, the new Sunday
hunting laws allow for more time
in the field for these species
anyway, so waiting for the
perfect day isn't so critical.
· For other game, try to schedule your time away from work
to coincide with days that are
forecast to be clear and bright.
Even lf they're not as warm as
you'd like, at least there'll be the
sunshine to warm you when ·tt
comes up.
Most newspapers list the
weather forecast for the coming
days. Some go so far as to llstthe
entire week and even the long
range forecasts extending a
month or more into the. future.
Make a note of what they have
to say and use ltln the plans you
make to take off for a chance to
replenish your freezer's stock of
wild pheasant.

_ _ _,.;_._ _ _ _ Sports briefs---------Bueball
Last-place Lotte split a doubleheader wtth fourth-place Hankyu
. to clOBe the season ln Japan's
Pacific League, won by SlebU
percentage points ahead of Klntetsu. Two of the league's six
teams wili play under new
owners · next season ... . Central
League champion Cbunlchl
scored four runs In the eighth
Inning to beat Selbu 7-3 in the

second game of the Japan
championship, tying the best-ofseven series. Taiwanese hurler
Kuo Yuan-tzu, who set \he Japan
record of 37 saves- this season,
pitched the last three lnnlnga to
earn the victory In the series.
Cycling
Holland's Fred Rompelberg
was )!ospltaltzed Sunday with a
broken collarbone suffered while
trying to set a world land speed

record for bicycles at the Bonne- '
vUle Salt Flats In Utah. It was the
second time In less than two
weeks Rompelberg's quest for
the record . has put him In the
hospital, suffering a broken left
hand In an ear ller mishap.
GoU
Greg Norman shot a 2-over-par
73 to win the $160,000 New South
Wales Open by one shot over
Craig Parry

SYRACUSE SUNS SOFrBALL TEAM Players on this year'sedlllon oftheSyracuse Suns
softball team were (front row, L-R) Billie Halley,
Shannon Morarlty 1 Amber Ohlinger, Joy O'Brien·
and Andrea Moore. Behind them are Coach Pat

O'Brien, Amy Weaver, Tamara Hayman, Amy
Moore, Christina Eynon and Coach Dennis Moore.
Absent from photo are Serena Davis, Debra
Halley, Danlelle Hensley, Aimee Mllls, Angle
Mllb and Corissa MuUord.

College athletic directors like
12-ganie football schedules
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics fa vors expanding the college football season from 11 to 12 games
and plans to submit a proposal to
the NCAA in January , olflclals
said Thursday.
Arkansas Athletic Director
Frank Broyles, chairman of the
Division 1-A NACDA, said revenue from the additional game
would help support non-revenue
sports such as Olympic sports
being operated at a deficit on the
college level.
"We already have 14 playing
weeks during the football season, " Broyles said. "So we don 't
need to extend the season. Every
school has open dates which
could accomodate one more
game.''
Broyles also said haying an
even number of games each
season would make schedUling
easier and more flexlble. With
the ll·game seasons, most major
schools lnsis t on having at least

January NCAA meeting In San
Francisco. the 12-game schedule
could be in place as early as the
1989 season , the s pokesman said.
The NACDA also approved a
number of other resolutions
during its fall meeting , which
ende9 Wednesday in Kansas
Cit y.

Calendar
80\lt'IIRit

H01ahn -

$JI),oot LPRT L.dy

Fair

Litn t'fl Op e n

football
S an FrWid!iCO at Chl l!llgo, 9 p.m.
Hockey
No games !1Che1111ed
Tflnri..~

lndlanapollll - 1110,000 VIrgin Ill Slims

olin dh&amp;napoiiN

'·
531 JACKSON PIKE- RT.35 WEST

The group endorsed a plan to
limit full a thletic scholarships to
footb a ll, men' s and women's
basketball and two addition~!
women's supports yet to be
deter mined.
Th e plan, S)lbmitted by Peter
Likins of Lehigh University,
would res trict scholarships ln the
other sports to only tuition, lees
and books, •but not room and
board.
Another proposal rt-ce lving
support from th e athletic directors was a plan to allow schools to
provide finan cial aid to former
a thletes who did not graduate .

PhOne 446· 4524

MRGAIH MATINIU urr&amp;auN
AU. IUTI 12.10

AoDDMMIIIIIl-MOO l¥UIY .........
ALL MATS 12.50

I OCTOBER 21 thru 2 Q
L....: FRI DAY thru THURSOA'f ~

'

HALLOWEEN4
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~~!~mew7~hmj~s:e~~~~g ~~t:n"Y

["!(i"""... . . . . .......;. . .......................... TU.ES.DAY... . ..,~~·]'-j'·

ga::~nsas

'i!

arid LSU plan to
co-sponsore the proposal wtth
four other school yet to be
determined, a spokesman lor the
NACDA said. If the schedule
expansion is passed during the

SALES • SERVICE - TESnNG

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I

MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's
Daughters, wlll meet at 7:30
Monday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Craft show
JACKSON - The Jackson
Craft Gulld will hold their 12th
annual Winter Craft Show and
Sale at . Llck School, located on
Route 35 West In Jackson. ·
Hours will be from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. each day, Nov. 5 and Nov. 6.
Admission and parking are free.
The craft show wlll feature many
original hand crafter Items, gifts
and seasonal decorations.

-People in the news-

--

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HARRISONVILLE - Revival
services are being held each
eveing 7: 30 p.m. at the Harrisonvllle Holiness Chapel, 38428 State
Route 684. There wlll be special
singing each evening. Evangelist
wlll be the Rev. Steven Manley,
general superintendent of the
Holiness Association of
Churches. The Rev. David Fer·
rell, pas tor' invites the public.

.,

. '.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Pres• International
DMNG INTO A PART:
There's talk about Olympic divIng star Greg LoDganls getting a
role In an upcoming Marlon
Brando movie. Lougants has long
been Interested In an entertainment career and has danced
professionally and made his
stand·UP debut at Los Angeles's
Improv comedy club right alter
picking up his two gold medals in
Seoul. Now People magazine
says there's talk about him
appearing in "Jericho," the
story of a CIA agent written by
and starring Branda. Producer
Elliot Kastner dentes Louganis ls
scheduled lor part but the
swimmer's agent, Rick Hersh,
conllrms there have been discussions about the part. Production
starts in Mexico In early
January .
PLAYING WITH PLAYBOY:
Former Playmate of the Year
Carrie Leigh takes a dig at
ex-boyfriend Hugh Hefner in the
December issue of National
Lamjl(lbn. The magazine features an expose titled' 'The Great
Playboy Wars," a look at Leigh's
ugly breakup with Hefner, and
has a picture of her reading
Penthouse, Playboy's No.1 rival.
PLAY SIMONIZED: Nell Simon's latest play, . "Rumors," 'Is
Broadway-bound next month and
the director Is pleased with the
warm-up performances ln San
Diego. "! don't think they will
need to do much more rewrit·
lng," said Gene Saks. "We are
doing some work with the actors
and some sharpen lng of the
scenes. The audiences are very
warm and very encouraging. I
· hope that's not deceiving."
"Rumors" is a farce about four
well-to-do couples in a New York
suburb who arrive at an anniversary party to lind the hostess
missing and the host sprawled
upstairs with a gunshot wound.
"He (Simon) has probably rewritten this more than he has any
other play," Saks says. "You
have to come up with laugh after
laugh. "
BLANDER THAN THOU: California Gov. George DeukmeJian ls laking credit for being ln
front of this year' s hottest
political trend blandness.
Speaking before the League of
California Cities Tuesday, "The
Deuk" said that, judging by
Geor~e Bush, Michael Dukakls
and Uoyd Bentsen, "blandness Is
really ln this year. " In a deadpan
aside, Deukmejlan, • who last
summer asked Bush not to
consider him for the vice presidential slot, told the audience, "I
want everybody to remember
that I was bland before 11 was

coot''

LOVE IN NASIIVILI:.E: Nashville songwriter Men tor Wllllams
says country singer Lynn Ander·
son j llted him ~ lew days ago but

Dear Readers: I previously
published a leiter from a reader
who was convinced that Elvis
Presley ls still alive. He said,
"Elvis got so led up with people
!qllowlng him around, pestering
him and writing all those awful
stories because he l!ad put. on a
lew pounds, that he laked his own
death so he could have some
p~ace and"quiet. It all adds up."
I told the reader that there was
some pretty convincing evidence
that Elvis Presley died on Aug.
17, 1977, and his funeral was one
of the most Incredible displays of
hero worship ,that lhls country
has ever seen.
·
Since that column appeared I
have been' swamped with letters
from readers who who say I am
mistaken. Pull up a chair and
look at my mail.
Dear Ann Landen: There
seems to be some disagreement
as to whether or not ElVis· Presley Is alive. Let me settle It once
and for all."The King" lives! 1
attended his funeral and lingered
at the casket for quite a while before the guards made me move
on. Elvis was not ln that casket.
It was a wax dummy. I stood
very close and had the opportun·
ity to look at him for a longtime.!
would bet my life ·_on It, - Stamford, Conn.
From Albany, N.Y.: The man
they burled was an Elvis look-alike. 'I recall that a young guy In
California was so obsessed with
Elvis that he paid a plastic surgeon $20,000 to make his face look
like Presley's. The results were
fantastic. That's the fellow they

Auxil~ry

burled.
From Bay City, Mich.: I have
seen Elvis In the supermarket.
Once be gave me a wlnk as !Ito .
say "Don't tell anybody." Several people In Kalama&lt;oo· know
where Elvis lives, but they respect his privacy and are protect·
tng hlm from the media.
From NuhvUie: My cousin
was president of the Elvis fan
club aboutlOO mlles from here.
When they announced that "The
King" had died, Ills father, Vernon Presley, called all the fan
club presidents and told them not
to come to the funeral. My cousin
suspected something was fishy.
She went to Memphis anyway
but couldn't get near Graceland.
· Finally she gave up in disgust
and went home, convinced that
the funeral was staged and that
Elvis hadn't died at ali.
From Heodel'80n, Ky.: My uncle works in a place that manufactures coffins. The elaborate
coffin that Elvis was burled ln
can be obtained only by special
order because It takes a long
tlme to construct. Elvis' coffin
was ordered several weeks in advance, which proves that his
"death" was planned long before
the publllc was told lhal he dled.
· From Bismark, N.D.: My sister's niece wor,ks in the courtbouse where Elvis' death certifi·
cate was processed. The orl&amp;lnal
certificate stated that the body
weighed 170 pounds. The paramedics who picked hlm up said he
weighed at least 250 pounds.
Looks like there were two

Ann
Landers

Plans for hosting a community
halloween party following the
trick or treat In the vlllage were
made when the Racine Volunteer
Firemen's Auxiliary met at the
lire house.
Council has announced trick or
treat from 6 to 7 p.m. on Oct, 31
with the lire department and
auxiliary to stage the party from
7 to 9 p.m. lor Racine area
children at the firehouse.
'
An Election Day dinner w111 be·
held on Nov. 8 at the firehouse
annex with soup beans and
cornbread, ch111, and peanut
butter, chicken salad and cheese

.....
corpses, doesn't it? To add to the
mystery, the first death certificate disappeared and was never
found .
Dear Readers: What you have
just read Is a small sampling of
the mail that continues to pour
ln. Meanwhile, amid all the
"Elvis Is still alive! " hysteria, I
saw a glimpse of sanity In the
words of R.ahbl Ben Kamin of
Cleveland, who wrote the followlnglng In The New York Times:
Elvis Presley, brllllant, stunning, original, became as sick In
spirit as he was sublime ln song.
His music may have been good
but his lifestyle was ·bad. Elvis
died from an addiction to drugs
and alcohol. The end of .his life
was a cacophony of indulgence
and Irresponsibility. He was not
martyred, he was stoned.
Take charge of your life and turn it
around! Write for Ann UmMrt' new
booklet, ..H01JJ Eo Moke Fril&gt;nd. and
Stop Being Lonely... Send a che(!k or
money order for 13.50 and a •eJf-addreued, •romped, bu•inetHite envelope (45 cent.t pall.age) to Ann Lander&amp;, P.O. Box 11562, Chi"''jj. Ill.
66611-0562;

Fitch celebrates
73rd birthday

· sandwiches, coffee tea, and pop,
tee cream, pte and cake to be
served, beginning atll a.m .
Also scheduled was a special
meeting to be held Saturday lor
the election of officers for 1989.
Ann Layne presided at the
meeting with the pledge to the
flag and the Lord's prayer being
given In unison. Attending the
meeting were Sandy Patterson,
Wanda Patterson, Rhonda
Lyons. Jo Ann Grady, Alana
Butler, Emma Lyons, Marilyn
Burleson, Barb Lane, and Jean
Johnson.

Joseph Oscar Fitch celebrated
his 73rd birthday with a surprise
party at his home recently ,
A Halloween cake and ice
cream were served along with
tea and koolaid. Attending were
Mrs. Carole Dailey, Bonnie,
Mikel, AprU and Mikel, Jr.,
MilhOan, B. J. Murpliy, Candy.
Amanda and Susie Milhoan.

he stlll loves her, despite an
incident ln which Anderson allegedly went a alter a woman she
found at Williams's house. This
week, a waitress filed a. pollee
complaint against Anderson, accusing her of malicious mischief.
But Williams s~id the charges
are "stupid" and said the entire
matter has "been blown out of
proportion." He says he doesn't
even know the waitress and
By LEE LEONARD
Projections call for a 53,000·
cannot explain why her car was
UPI sta,tehouoe Reporter
case reduction by the time the
parked outside hls house. Anderprogram Is operating In ali 88
son turned herself ln to police
REYNOLDSBURG, Ohio counties in 1992.
Wednesday night and they re(UPI) - Gov , Richard Celeste
The number of AFDC cases has
leased her on her signature. "!
love her," Williams said. "You said today that Ohio Is In the been about 225,000, and the
ever seen a man fall apart over a forefront of welfare reform and · number of general relief cases
woman? I never thought I'd be has saved-taxpayers more than about 140,000.
Paul Offner, deputy director
that way . I never knew what love $27 mlllton in the last year,
reducing
the
caseload
by
for
benefits administration In the ·
7,000.
was .''
"Compared
to
other
states,
Department
of Human Services,
GLIMPSES: Gregory Peck,
Ohio
will
experience
very
little
reported a 30 percent reduction
72, was named Friday as the 1989
In caseloads In Madison and
recipient of the American Film change as a result of the new
(federal welfare reform) law," Wood counties, where the proInstitute Life Achievement
Celeste told the Ohio Welfare gram has been In operation for
Award lor his contributions to
five years.
movies In a span of some 40 Reform Training Conference.
"We didn't watt for Congress to . In Hamilton County, the first
years. Peck will be given the
act," he said. "As a result, we industrial county where the proaward at a banquet March 9 and
become the 17th film celebrity so already have one of the most gram !las been operating for .one
honored Among his predeces- comprehensive welfare reform year, caseloads have been replans of any state In the nation. duced by 9.5 percent.
sors are John Wayne, Bette
Ohio is ahead of the pack because
The progr;1m begins In 1989 In
Davis, Orson Welles, Lillian
Brown, Champaign, Clermont,
we started early."
Glsh, Frank Capra, Fred Astalre
The Celeste administration Lake, Lawrence, Perry. Plckaand James Cagney ... The country
Issued
an annual report for fiscal way, Seneca, Summit, Trumbull
band Sawyer Brown is heading
1988
on
the program popularly and Wyandot counties.
for China. The group will peras
"workfare," ln which
known
Celeste said under the new
form three shows ln Xiamen on
r.eciplents
work
in
exchange
lor
federal
law, when a welfare
Oct. 27-28 - one of them lor
their beneflts, and are prepared recipient finds a job, the dollar
dignitaries of the province at the
savings wlll not be returned to
opening of a Nabisco plant· . for steady jobs.
Washington, "but wlll stay right
It showed that In the 18 counties
... Charlton Heston , Frank
that have had the program for at here ln Ohio where we'll be able
Zappa, Morgan Fairchild and
least one year, caseloads are to use them to help other people
Michael J. Fox have done a
down by 12 percent.
get off welfare."
series of print and television ads
Celeste also said that starting
titled "Reflections -Gn Voting."
Aid to Famutes with Depend· In January in Hamllton, Montgo- .
The ads, which wlll be in
Time-Life publications and - on ent Children has been reduced by mery, Scioto and Stark counties,
PBS ...Suzanne Somers will serve 7.8 percent and general relief to mothers with young chlldren who
individuals ls down by 20.3 find a job and leave the welfare
as national honorary chalrper·
son of the the National Associa- percent, tpe department rolls will receive a year of health
reported.
care and day care coverage.
tion of Children of Alcoholics.

W~!fare reforms

In the service
JEFFERY A. BISSELL
Spec. Jeffery A. Bissell has
participated In the NATO·
sponsored exercise, Return of
Forces to Germany '88
(REFORGER) .
The exercise was designed to
evaluate plans and support
agreements between NATO
member nations, to exercise
West Germany's ability to support deploying forces and to test
the ability of European-based
units to quickly link reinforcing
units with their pre-ppsttloned
equipment.
Bissell Is the son of Dwight R.
and Carolyn 1'&gt;. Bissell of State
Route 681, Reedsvllle. '
He ts a combat engineer with
the 1st Engineer Battalion at
Fort Riley ; Kan.
The specialist is a 1985 gradu·
ate of Eastern High School,
ReedsvUle.

save·~ money

MCCONNELSVILLE - A reception honoring Martha Porter ,
deputy grand matron of District
25, will be held Sunday, Oc t. 30
from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. a t the
Vall ey Chapt e r
ln
McConnelsville .

Weight Loss Pill
Approved for
U.S. Gov1. Patent
'Lazy Way' 10 Loll WWghl

At1'811dy s-plnf u.s.
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)Anamazingnewweialltleupillcalled
"fat-magnet" hiS recently lleen developed and perfeclcd by two prominent
d"ctors at a wotld fal!lous hospital in
Los Angeles the! repo&lt;1Niy "auarantees" you steady fat lou and calorie
reduction by sintpl_Y. takilltl their tested
an~n new ptll.
~u.s. goyernment has just ll[l!KUV·
ed the doctors claims b a hard-to-get
patent that confirms "there has never
been anything like their til-handing pill
process before." II is a k*lly wew major
scientific breakthrouatund is revolutionizing the
r- industry.
You Can w
NM 1 lly"
Best of all, ")IOU' can -tinue to
eat your favorile fooda lftll you don't
have to chanre your •nl'llll eating
habits. You can stan Iaine fat and
reduce calories from the~ first day,
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire wilhout exercisill"·
Flushes Flit Oal fll aody
The new pill is
*IY called
the "fat-magnet" ptll becl- it breaks
into thousands of panielll, each acting
Iike a tiny macnet, "atll'acdng" and
trapping many times its aia in undigested fat panicles. Then, all tlletrii&gt;IX&gt;d
fat and calorieure natu,.ny "flushed"
right out of your body because they
cannot be •b!iomed.
Within 2 days you should notice a
change inthecolorofyouriiOOl,caused
by the fat particles bei,. eliminated.
"Automatluly" .-.. Fat
According tooneofthe itMntors, Dr.
William Shell, hca.n specialist and
associate professor of medicine at
UCLA medical school, "the new fatbonding process is a "luy way" to
lose weigltt beca...., the •frills alone
"automatically" reduce calories-by
eliminating dietary fat. It is 100% sal'e
and noc a drug."
The fat-magnet pills are already
sweeping the country with glpwing
reports of weiJht loss fmm formerly
011erweight peo,!e in all walks of life
who are rKMI slimmer, trimmer and
mOre anraclivt apiR.
Now Avafllllle to die Public
If Y"" are trying to 1- 2&lt;l. SO, 100
pounds or more, yooo can erder your
supply of these "no-rillk" lli&amp;hly successful fat-rnagMpills&lt;lt8ctly from the
doctors' exclusioe 1111111ulllcwrer only
(includes optiOMI Cllorie-l'eduction
plan for even better re•l~'l. Send $20
for a 90pill sui!Piy (+$3lwldling), or
$35 for a 180pilfoupply (+Slllandling),
to: Fat-MBAnet, f&lt;ll6 Wihllire Blvd.,
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.
( UncoruliiWINII111011q Md ,....,.,..
tee if not J(}OfJI, llltilfiH.) Visa,
MasterCard and Alllencan Express
OK. (Send card numl!er, Clipire date,
andsignature.) For futesl~ervice for
credit card orders ONLY c.tlanytime
24 hours, toll free l~ S2?-9'l00,
exr. W705.
(£}F. M 1'.11111

wei.::

•r.r.• ·

-· When you talk .
about breast cancer,
it's certainly not the
end of your life ...

----!tOne in 10 women in thi~ countr¥ w!Il dnt!lop
· . breast cancer durmg her lifetime.
But with early detection and prompt
treatment, the disease
need not be life threatening.
In fact, breast cancer can be found
at the earliest possible stage when
chances for cure are nearly 100 percent.•

DELINQUENT TAXPAYERS NOTICE
In compliance with provisions of Section 5712.03 of the
Ohio Revised Code, there will be publshed a list of those
persons who are delinquent in payment of real estate tax••
1n Meigs County.
If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements made
with the County Treasurer to
not later than 48 hours
before said publicaton, the parce will be removed from th•
delinquent list before advertising.
All delinqu•nt lands will be certified for foreclosure by the
County Auditor unless the taxes, assessments, interest, and
penalties due are paid.
.
Th• said list will be ready for publication on November 10,
and November 18, 1988.
Willam I. Wickline
Meigs County Au.tor

Reception set

New Docto11 Dlaco..'!

ANN LANDERS•
.. 1988, LcM Anpln
Tim a Syndlme and
Cre.. un S,.-ndlnle

hosts Halloween party

Monday, October 24, 1988
Pllge- 5

See your physician or surgeon for regular ln·eaat n11ms.
And for hilormation about how you can establish -a
personal plan of action for breast health, ~~11

pa7

Tack M. Levip.e, D.O.
Ceneral and Gynecologic Surgery
Suite 211 + PVH Medical Office Building
(304) 675·1460

PLEASANT VALLEY HO§f I I~L
The ~of prolessionols

.

• The American Caa&lt;er Society
'·

---

�'

Page-6-Th8 Daily Sentinel

• Monday, October 24. 1968

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~~B~u--s7
in~e-ss~S~e--rv~I~.c-e-s--~~9~w~ant~~~~~s~~

Whales rescue effort grows.
volunteers battled sub -zero
temperatures to free the
stranded whales.
The world 's biggest plane, the
state's largest helicopter, the two
Soviet icebreakers, a giant Iceeating tractor, a huge Icecrushing barge and a 5-ton
concrete " bullet" were all being
used or brought to the scene of an
ever more bizarre and costly
effort.
But the most successful strategy so far was being used by tbe
, Eskimos, who hacked away at
the tee with donated logging
chain saws and their own whale
· huntfug tools to create a path of
more than 60 air holes toward the
open sea about 3 mlles from the
original hole where the whales
were trapped Oct. 7 before they
could begin their migration to
Mexico.
"It's hard work. If we had
more tools we could go faster ...
said Lawrence Ahmaogak, who
led a recent successful hunt for
bowhead whales. "H makes us
feel good inside to save those
whales.''
At orie time the whales were 7
mUes from the nearest open
channel, but the air holes and
winds shifting the ice has put the
giant mammals just 3 miles from
open water.
Eskimos connected several of
the holes Sunday to create a
. 250-foot trench In the ice, long
enough for the whales to surface
ollnd breathe more normally.
As reporters from around the
world kept pouring Into Barrow,
an Esk1mo vlllageof 3,100 and the
northernmost town In the United
States, to chronicle the effort to
free the whales, military planes
delivered a Navy admiral, ail ice
expert and more Eskimo ice
cutters from a nearby village.

By JEFF BERLINER

.. .
'

.;f

-·

•

•

FINDING WEAK POINTS , Eskimo elder ·
Wbl&amp;lam Adams of Barrow stands on a thick Ice
rldJe separating trapped gray whales from a
channel of open water. The hellcopler, carrying
various Ice specialists, dropped off Adwns to use

his native ex pertlse, gained from decades of
experience on the Ice, lo lell the ofllclals where
weak points In ice might be IUid to suggest where
and how to best get through this thick Ice ridge.
UP I.

BARROW, Alaska (T,JPI) -An
international rescue mis$1on
tried to move giant lcebr(laklng
machines Into the battle to save
two trapped California gray
whales, while Eskimos had more
success with a simpler method,
chopping a path of air holes the
animals were using · to Inch
toward freedom.
Ron Morris, rescue coordinator with tbe National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration,
said the two surviving whales
could reach open water by
Wednesday If the weather holds.
No storms were In the forecast.
A third whale stopped coming
up for air last week and is
presumed drowned. Whale experts said Sunday the survivors
were In good shape.
A growing International effort,
Including a pair of Soviet teebreakers steaming toward Barrow. was under way as scores of
military, scientific and ctvUian·

241 U.S. Marines killed in Beirut remembered
By KAREN GORDON .
ARLINGTON, Va. (UP!) -In
tbe five years since a suicide
terrorist destroyed the Marine
barracks In Beirut and )&lt;Uied 241
U.S. servicemen, thoughts of the
"devastation and agonies" have
diminished, but the father of one
of the de.a d pleaded that they not
be forgotten.
About 50 friends and relatives

of those killed gathered Sunday, most o! them Marines, who were
the filth anniversary of . the sent to Beirut by President
bombing, for a wreath-laying Reagan on a peace-keeping
ceremony In Arlington National mission.
Cemtery.
The men were killed on Oct. 23,
The chalk-white gravestones 1983, as they Iaysleeplngearlyon
stood out among the brilliant fall a Sunday morning bY a driver on
foliage and unblemished blue sky a suicide mission who crashed
as flags of the Marine co lor guard Into their barracks with a flatbed
flapped in the wind during the ·truck laden with explosives.
memorial for the servicemen,
"It is difficult to recall the
horror, the devastation and the
agonies that preceeded this day ·
live years ago,'" said John
Knipple, whose son, James, was
killed in the attack. ·'The (servicemen) need to be honored,
they need to be remembered ....
Please remember them."
Kevin Jiggetts, a survivor of
the attack, addressed the crowd,
which included military officials
and diplomats from France and
Lebanon, assembled at the No
Greater Love tree, a cedar of
Lebanon planted on the first
anniversary of the bombing.
"On this day in 1983, 241 of my
best friends, your sons, your
fathers ... were taken from us by
this act of terrorism," Jiggets
said.
The service also honored 56
French servicemen killed in a
separate terrorist attack In Bel·
rut the same dav.

"--"

IN REMEMBERANCE - A member of the Sun Valley High
: School Junior Marine ROTC, Aston, Pa., places a rose &amp;lop the
grave of one of the 241 Americans killed In the 1983 bombing of the
U.S. Marine barracks in Berlut. The ceremony at Arlington
Naltonal Cemetery marked the fifth anniversary of the terrorist
attack thai also kllled 56 Frenchmen and was sponsored Sunday by
No Grealer Love. UPI

'

Six killed as pace of ·
gang slayings ·continue
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Six
people died and four others were
wounded in separate weekend
gang activity, Including a knife
light that broke out when a gang
crashed a "Sweet 16" birthday
party.
· The slayings late Friday
through Sunday Increased therecord gang- related death toil for
the Los Angeles area.
For tbe first nine months of the
year, 245 people were killed by
gang violence In areas patrolled
by the Los Angeles pollee and
sheriff's departments, up from
215 slain during the same period
in 1987, according to the most
recent statistics.
In the latest Incident of gang
violence, a man was shot and ·
wounded in the leg about 9:50
p .m. Sunday when gang
members drove up to a crowd of
about 20 rival gang member s
ouislde a pizza restaurant, Lt.
Roger Fox said.
Fox said friends took the
wounded man to Los Angeles
County-USC Medical Center. His
condition was not Immediately
known.
Mtgel Cruz, 21, was fatally
stabbed about 10:35 p.m . Saturday in a fight !bat broke out when
several local gang members
crashed the birthday par ty !or
two girls in Vaiinda, about 20
miles east of downtown Los
Angeles, Deputy Gabe Ramirez
said.
Two other partygoers were
wounded in the brawl outside the

party. Azael Martinez, 18, and his
19-year-old brother, Obed, were
treated for stab wounds at a local
hospital and released . Cruz died
at Terrace Plaza Medical
Center.

"Many, mapy Marines gave
their lives to the cause . and
principles of their country as
they saw them," said Marine
Maj. Gen. Robert Wing! ass .
"The sons of France were also
consumed by the holocaust.of the
day."
"These were good men. These
were honorable men," Winglass
said. "And these were men who
were serving their country and
trying to bring peace to a small
country on tthe Mediterranean. ''
"The act of terrorism was
wrong ... it was conducted
against good men, and It was
definitely wrong," said Winglass. "I think that's the great
lesson !bat was learned from the
Beirut experience- (terrorism)
Is no longer recognized by any
person of any ~tature and dignity
as having any foundation in
principle. It's rejected universally across this country and
across the world, literally."
Two children recited a peace
pledge, one In English, one In
Arable. Some of the relatives
wept quietly throughout the
service. Uniformed Junior Mar·lne Corps ROTC members lay
red roses on the gravestones of
some of the slain.
On Saturday, about 500 people
attended a memorial service at
Camp Lejeune N.C., the home
base of many of the Marines. The

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc..
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ,.·

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT .
GENERAL ALLERGIST
IIWE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

·*NEW EXPANDED SERVICE*

"FREE DELIVERY"
TO THESE AREAS
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVIlLE,
RUTlAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W. VA.
OIDERS MUST IE P~liiED IN IIFOIE 3 P.M.
ss.OO .NIMUM PIIICIASI 011 PIESCIIPTIONS PLUS
HEALII ANIIIAm •s.

PRISCRIPTION
SHOP
(FORMIItY VILUGI PIIAIIIIACY)
STOlE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.; Satur•y 9 A.M.: l p.M,

. 271 NOITH SKOIIID

992·6669

IUDIUPOIT, 01110

statue of a lone Marine, his gun
raised, was unveiled, bearing the
inscription "They came in
peace.''
The Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that clues IdentifYing the forces behind the
bombhig have been assembled
by tbe combined resources of the
departments of State, Justice,
Defense and the CIA.
\ Among the tons of steel and the
concrete debris was a bit of an
axle, the only trace left of the
nine-ton truck driven into the
barracks. After three years of
Intensive forensiC work, the FBI
traced the truck to a MercedesBenz assembly plant In Iran , the
Los Angeles Times reported.
Investigators also deter.mlned
that tbe explosives originated in
Bulgaria and reached Beirut by
way of Syria, the Times said,
quoting unidentified sources.
The sources said Individuals
within Syrian President Hafez
Assad's Intelligence network
were Involved.
U.S. Intelligence also has determined the identity of the
suicide driver, the Times said,
with one counterterrorism expert calllitg him a devote Lebanese Shla MusUm "seduced by
the policies of the Hezbollah,"
the extremist Party of God.
The sources declined to provide the man's name.
Public Notice

Public N alice

Notice of Election on Tox
Levy in Exce1a of the Ten

MHI Umltotion
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that in purtu~nce of a Re-

solution of the l011rd of Education of the Eutern Local

School District, Roedovlte,
Ohio, paMd on the 27th
day of June. 1988. there wit
be submitted to a vote of the

people of old Eootern Loco!

School Oiatrict at

1

An Ice-breaking barge got
bogged down In Ice and 'traveled
only 8 miles from Prudhoe Bay in
a week, and a National Guard
Skycrane helicopter bouncing a
5-ton cement-and-steel bullet off
the Ice was not having much
success because the holes froze
over as fast as they were
punched .
The heavy "bullet" was being
used to try to smash through a
30·foot deep ridge o!lce that lurks
between the path of hOles and the
open sea ~ considered the last
major barrier to the whales'
escape.
The latest high-tech approach
- the Archlmedlan Screw Tractor supplied by Prudhoe Bay oil
companies - was delivered by a

GEN·

ERAL ELECTION to be hold

in the Eutwn Local District
of Maiga County, Ohio, at

tho roguler plocoo of voting
therein,

By Order of the

Director of the Ohio Deport-

Board of Elections of

ment of Transponation, Col-

,

Meigo County. Ohio
Evelyn Cl•rk. Chairman

Doted September 1. t988

JIWte M. Frymy•r. Director

110) 10. t7, 24, 31, 4tc
Public Notice

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy in Exce11 of the Ten
Mill Umttation

NOTICE Ia hereby given

that in purauance of a Resolution of B01rd of Township Trustea of the Town-

on Tuea'*-v. the
eighth day of November,
1988, the quntion of lavylng 1 tax. in IXC81&amp;oftheten

lhlp of Rutland, Meigo
County, Ohio, puood on the
7th day of July, 1988. thoro

fit of EMtern Local School
Dlotrict for the purpooo of
current expen....

the people of Mid Rutland
Townohlp ot o General Election to be hold in tho T-n·
ohlp of Rutland of Molgo

mHI llmltlltlon, for the bon•

Sold to• being: on

odd~

will be eubmitted to a vote of

tloMI tu of 12.4mille to run County, Ohio, at the regular
plac• of voting therein, on
for a continuing period of
time It a rate not exceeding T&lt;*doy. the 8th &lt;fov of No12.4 milia for each one dol- ..,.ber,1988. the-lonof
lar of vlluetion. which levying 1 tax, in uceuotthe
amounts to one dollar and ten mill limitation. for the
twenty-four centa for each benofit of RutlondTownohlp
one hundred dollar• of for the purpo• of providing
valuation,
for continuing ·end maintaining fire eppera-

porlod of tlmo.

The Palla for llid Election

will bo opon ot 6:30 o'clock
A.M . and remain open until

7:30 o'ctock P.M.
By Order of the
Boord of Election• of
Moigo County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman

Oolfd J11ty e. 1988
Jone M. Frymyer, Director
(10) 10, 17, 24. ·31. 4tc
Public Notice
Notice of Election on Tox
Levy in E•ce. . of the Ten
Mill Umhation

NOTICE Ia horeby given

that in puriUince of a lte80iut'on of- the Board of
Townlhip TrulteM of the

Township of Sollobury,
Mel go County, Ohio, paMd
on the 1st of day of July,
1988, there wHI be submit·
tod to 1 vote of the pooplo of
uid S.llaburyTownohlp ot o
GENERAL ELECTION to be
held In the Townohlp of SalIsbury of Molgo County,
Ohio, 01 the regular plocoo of
voting th•eln, on Tueedty,

the 8th day of November,
1988, the q,_tlon of tavy.
ing I tax. in exc•eoftheten

mlllllmltlltion, for the bonoItt of Salisbury T-nohlp tor
tho purpo• of maintaining
and operating cemet••·
Seld Jox being: on addl·
tlonol to• of 1.0 miH to Nn
for five 151 yooro .. ot • rete
not a - n g 1.0 ""'11 for

tuo,oppllon-. buKdingo,or

litea therefor, or aourcea of
water auppty end material•
therefor, or the ntllbUshment end maintenance of
linea of ftre alarm telegreph,
or the p~~ymM'It of permanent, part-time. or votuntHf
firm~~n or fire fighting com•
penkll. to operete the aeme,
Including the payment of the
fl,..,.,. employer's con-

tribution required under AC·
don 742.34 of tho revlood
code. or to purchase ambulance equipment, or to pro·vide ambu,.nce or emar·
gency mediCIII nrvk:n operated by 1 fire department
or fire fighting company.

Said tax being: a renewal

of en oxlotlng . 3 mill levy to

run for five (lit years at a rate

not exceeding .3 mille for

umbus, Ohio, untN 10:00A.

M .• Ohio Stand•d Time,

...,._,ent.

TuMdov. Nowmber 1. 1888.
for
in: Melgo
County, Ohio. on MEG-1181(8.58-17.56) . . Stole Routll
5111. Melgo County, by ......,..
toeing with oopNit concnte.
Praject end work 1"'1!"':
81,6112 f• or 11.86 mil• ·
Pevemn..width: V.-ioua.
"The date Ht for completion of thi1 work ,ahell be u
let fon.h in the bidding propoMI."
'

Eoch bidder· shall be re·
qul&lt;ed to fHe w~h hio bid •

certified check or cashier' 1

check for an amount equal
to five per cent of hi a bid. but
In no event more than fifty
thou•nd doll••· or a bond
for ten percent of hia bid,
payable to the Director.

Bidders muotopply, on tho
proper forma. for qualifiCIItione at l. .t ten deya prior
to the date 111 for opening
bids in accordance with

Chapter 5625 Ohio llevioed
Code.

th81 in pursuance of e Re-

oolution of Vlllogo Council
of the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohio, pu Mel on tho 1 1th
dey of July, t988. therewll
be aubmltted to 1 vote of the

which amount&amp; to three
hundred doll•• of veluatton,

meroy, Ohio, at the regu'-r
plac• of vot..,g th•ein. on

corlto (10.03) for

ooc~

ono

for fivo 151 yeoro.
Tho Potts for oold Election
will be open ot 8:30 o'clock
A.M. and remeln open until

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

Board of Elections of

Mel go County. Ohio
Evelyn Clork, Cholrmon
Ootad September 1, 1988
Jane M. Frymyer, Director

110) 10, 17, 24, 31, 4tc
Public Notice

Tueodoy, tha 8th dey of November, 1988. the quootion

of levying a tax, in IXCf&amp;l of
the ten mill llmitatiof. for

the benefit of. Pomeroy VIl-

lage for the purpo11 of
providing end maintaining

fire apparatus. eppliiWicea,

buMdlngo, or oltoo therefor,

or aourc11 of water auppty
and materials therefor, or
the
eatabllahment and
~alntenlflct of lin• of fire

alerm tolag,.ph, or tho poy·
ment of .,.rm..,ent. part-

NOTICE TO
tlme, or volu ntMr firemen or
CONTRACTORS
fire. fighting componlee to
STATE OF OHIO
operate the umo. Including
MChone dollar of valuation.
DEPARTMENT OF·
tho poymont of the firemen
which •mountt to ten centa
TRANSl'ORT.t.TION
ompki'Yer'o contribution ro·
1•0.101 for eoch one hunColumbuo, Ohio
qulnd under Nction 742.34
dred dollero of valuation, for
Octobe&lt; 7, 1988
of tho rwlood code. or to
flvo 151 yMro.
Contract Sal•
purch•e ambulance equip·
The Potts for Aid Election
ment, or to provide ombuwill be open ot 8:30 o'clock , Logo! Copy No . 88· 785
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT lance or emergoncy medlcol
A.M. and r~~mein open until
Sooled propo•lo will be · nrvlc• operated by a fire
7:30 o'clock P.M. •
.
received et the office of tho depertmont or flro fighting

992- Middleport
Pomeroy.
985- Chester

246- Rio Grande
256- Guyan Dis t.
643- Arabia Oitt.
379 - Walnut

843-Portland

388- Vinton

876- Pt . Pleasant

458 - Laon
676- Apple Grove
771J - Mason

247- Letert Falls
949- Racine
742- Rutland

882 - New Haven

ELIM HOME

Room &amp; Board for
Seniar Citi%1111 ollll
Good Rates

. T.L.C.
25 Yrs. Exp.
References

Misc . Merchand tae
Bu ilding Supplies
Peu tor Sale
Musicellnstrument s
58- Fruitt &amp; Vegetablea
59- For Sele or Trade

Supplies
&amp; Livestock

13- lnsurance · ·
14- Busin•s Training

1618171 B-

Schoolt S. InstruCtion
Radlo, TV 6 CB Repair
MisceUaneol.is
'
Wentad To Oo

22- Money to loan
23-Prot•sional S•vices

Real Eslate
31 -Hom• tor Sale

32-MobileHomBII for Sale

33-Farme for Sale
34-Butin•s Building~
36-Lots It Acreage
36- Rnl Estate Wanted

71 - Autol for Sale
72 - Trucks tor Sale
WO ' s

747! 78 77-

Motoreyct•
Boatt 6 Motors tor Salt~
Auto Plfls &amp; Acc•aori•
Auto Repair
78 - Camplng Equ""ipment
79 - Campen &amp; Motor Homes

EVERY SUNDAY

RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

ONLY

9·19-88 ltn

Public Notice
ORDINANCE 574
8E IT ORDAINED by tho
meroy, all members thereto
concurring:
Sec. 1: That the salary of
the
Mayor
shall be

$3800.00 per year. and in
addition thereto the Mayor
shall be entitled to all other
benefits provided any other
employees of the Village of
Pomeroy under tts insurance
programs.

Soc. 2 : That 1hio Ordinance is hereby declared to
be an emergency ordinance
ne~essary for the Immediate
preservation of th public sa·
fety in said Village of Pomeroy and shall go into im·
mediate effect .

ATTEST:

.

Jane Walton, Clerk- Treaa.
Larry Wehrung,
Pres. of Council
( t 0) 17, 24. 2tc

LOWEST PRICES

Service
FREE ESTIMAtES

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
Rea1onable Ratn

56 STATE ST.
•u1.1:~, OH.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

..o.. Addons and remodeling
- Raoling •nd gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7-13·'88-lfn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO _
" Moat Foreign and
DomBStic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp;: Minor
Rapaira

NIASE Certified Mech.,ic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

CUSTOM ·BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtasonable Prices"

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

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Bo Ropoirobll"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service

GUN SHOOT

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

Basham

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

949-2168

5·25·tfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNIW: GIEG I. ROUSH

l:h

~

RESIDENTIAL

~COMMERCIAL
•CUSTOM kiTCHENS. BATH&amp; I
efXl!.NSrYE AEMODELINO
•VINVL IIOINIJ 6 AOOFINO
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING. APT. PAOJECTS
SINCE J9o9

DIIIT ST. SYUQI.

.

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

,

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

2

7 :30 o'clock P.M.

By Order of the
Board of Elections of
Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman

Ooted September 1, 1888

Jane M. Frymyer. Director

110110. 17. 24, 3t, 4tc

Munltloading Supplies
Moclom Gun Supr.lies
Guns • Ammo • S ugs •
22 Ammo
124 Eost of Rutland
A&lt;roll Happy HoHow Rd.
Ph •• 14·742-2355

AHANDFUL

p&amp;

SER~ICE

We can repair and re-

319 So. 2nd Ave.

P-AT HILL FORD

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Foctory Choko
12 G1111gt Shotguns Only
Stri•llr Enfontd
10·7-Hn

FREE ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Welcome

•CEIUNO FANS INSTALLED
•REMODELING •PAINTING
•PWMBINO
•AOOFING

•DRYWALL
•DECKS

OF CASH

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY
In Iovin&amp; memory

de• father,
FRANK {Jack)
KRAUTTER, JR.
who pas sed away J)

years BIO, Ott. 24.
Sadly missed by wife and

$3S til~tv~O:fo
BILL SLACK
992-2269

•TILE WORK
•PO.. CH El

IBTH LYNCH 992-3723
10·31-'11-1 ••.

HUDNALL
Pl0MBING &amp; HEAnNG

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

992~3410

SALES &amp; SERVICE

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL " SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRl

We Carrv Fishing

Su;ppli~

Pay Your Phone

and Cable Bills Hero
-IUSIN!SS PIIONE
(614) 992·6550
IISIDEN(E PHONI
16141 992!- 7754

EAGU RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INtERIOR • EXTERIOR

Dea.., for

YARDMAit &amp; ECHO

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the Pain out of
painting. let me da
·
it far you.
Very Reasonable.
Have References.

Located Halfway

between Rt. 7 81 Bat hen.

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-Hc

8.7 F6nanchjig on Yardman

Service on All Makea

614-915-4110

We Honor MC/Di1&lt;/Yisa

REPAIR
Authorited Sonice
&amp; Porto
Briggs • Str•tton

614-441-11488.

Gov•nment Jo._ 111!1.040 •
t59.230 yr. Now tMring. Call

1-808-887·8000 Errt. R-9806
._.,., ttn.

for curr..t

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

•Dozer It Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding

Roofing

•Junk Yard Buainest

Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation

WANT TO IUY WIE(KED 01
JUNK UIS 01 TIUUS
-FilE E!IIMA1ES-

For .,y ol lhllesorvktl &lt;all

Windows

614-742-2617

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

lt1w•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or loovo MK•-

1115/Hn

2·, lr-''88·ttn

Qt536, 181 S. Llnoolnwoy, N.

Aurora, IL f50542.

AVON· An ar.... CaH M1rilyn .
WetN• 304-882-2145.

Fruth

Ph•INCV ·

AN'S

&amp; LPN'S .PH.

p.-t time

Ml timo&amp;

..,ptlct~tlons

are being
accepted far Pla••t Valltrf
Hospital Nurslng C.e C•'llar.
Contut Panonn .. 304-876-

Gift Shop open. Tovs. gifts.
ooHectabl•. downs. thlmblee.
porcelain. 324East Main, Porn•

ray, Ohio. 114-992-7204.

4340. AAEOE.

Giveaway

AVON all • - I I Shirl., Spews.

304-871-1428.

.

..Lic::ented Soci• Worll• .. nw.1
long twm ewe facility. Exp•
rience prel•red. Commen1ume
aal.-y end benllftt•. E.O.E . M ..
r•uma to Adminletm• Care
H8Yen of Point Pl . ..,l, At. 1
BoJII 328. Point Pla..ant. W.Va.

B•b\t ldtttnl·llwks. otd. 2-bleck.
1 gr..,. • white also 1 yellow
mal•&amp; mos. old. Call 614-379-

2435.

Kilt.,, to give r/N8y. 8 wkt. old.

Utter t01ined. Clll 814-4411707&amp;.

28660.

RN, Oiract'"" af Nwsing. nMdad
for lntermadiete hlllhh c•e

Zenith color IV console. Workt ,
Call 614-44~8063 .
Mixed breed puppl• to gtve
IWflt. Clll 814-441·3845.
•
~
·•
I
81 atk ...
w .... e m.. a cat; ong
haired. hM been decl.wad, 14
mo 1. old. C.ll 814-446·24 15.

fiCillty. Exp•iencedln longt.-m

we required. Sal.-, and benef..

~:.,:.ms::,~.:me~: ..-::-P
Ple~t

16, Cll'e of Point

Re""'-ter. 200 Mllin lt., Point
'
""'

PleMant. W.V1 . 25580.

1 gr1y &amp; white stripe tom cat,
very lmell. t tllghttv bigg•
famlla. all white. 2 tMnage
tom~- 1 orange,. 1 grav. C.ll

Wanted lead sr.titlrJit drumm•
and key bo•d pll"flr, mal• or
fem•e for Roc:k Btnd now
forrnln~ 304-875-15370 after
5 :00 p ·

Big Wood to give IIWay. Call

Anention: ew:celent hoome for
home 11aambty work. Info call

Puppi• to gtveaway. Beaulfful.
fluffy, ador8bla Wanting a good

E
ARN MONEY AT HOME! A•
•emble j..-alry, tovl, electronic.
01 ,.,.,.., FT • ~work available.
Call (Refu nd•blll 1· 407- 7443000 ext. 8 2289. 24 hra.

814-4ol&amp;-t822.aveningsonly .

e14-448-4!35.

Sm.H pup to give,..,
home. llkeechlldren . Part
g...

604-1141-1700 dept . p 2301

304-888-3546

Church benchee, phona 304-

• 70 t 3• 8
v

6

·

o;r

•

Lost and Found

JOBS AVAILABLE
Scrap pap•·metal proceS8or

sNking:

•tv-.. tow-motor op-

erator1, l•bors. semi-skilled
grading ~onn• for our recycling facdttv WI Columbus. Ohio.
Call or writ•: Gary Grouman;
Grossman lndanlri", 1980
South Fourth St., Columbus,

LOST : Gr-ay Miniature
SchnMJzer. mile_with red coli•.

Ohio 43207.

(WV)

800-387-

8477. (0hiol800-445-8181 .

PMriot·Gege 1rea. Reward. Call

e14-379-2932.
B

12

Situations
Want~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Aldl Pe•aon Auction•, If.
cen•ed Ohio and Weet Virginia.
Ellata, .ntiQue. f•m. liquid•
lion ..,... 304- n3-5786.

9

Wanted To Buy

hold furnilhlng. Marlin Wed•

moyer. 114-248·6152.

Junk Cart with or withOut
Cell Larry Uvtlv-114-

motor~ .

388-9303.

Furniture llld appllan.- by the
plec:. or entire houHhcild. Fair

Jacobsen

.

Read the

.

CLRSSIFIED RDS
I

Elderty gantlem.. need steeping
room. Someonato do IMJndrv •

cooking. C.ll 1!114--44&amp;-0803.

15

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COllEGE, 529 Jack1on Pike.
Coll441-4367. Rog. No, 81-1 f .
10558 .

18

Want~

to Do

1----------

Camoro bodv. Clll 814-388·
8147.

Dozer • Backhoe Work- 8150
Cue dour. Aa•Of'llblt rltea.
E11.p•iance op••or.

We buy BliCk WeinUta. Fund
r•l•lng opportunltv. George

Tree work wanted-topping,
pruning. ramoOJ•It, buaha•

Wanted to buy Tran .. •m or

'Homallto

014-446-8147.

" to buy: U1ed furnftl.lre and
Want
antiquM. Will buy entIre hou•

prlc:Oabolngplld.C.II014·44131&amp;8.

Tecumseh

VALLEY LUMBER
5UPIPLY

.,-d

foi reading boobl
1100.00 pw tit Ia Write: PAS E-

Get

EJIIlstlngDAY CARE In my hom•
ha• openl"gs for 2 chll«en. C. II

Weed Eater

Mi~!tpo;rt,_ Ohio

Local company h• opening to~
Sllll'enl fuN time peo._ M1}or
Medical ben aRts. Caft Mondl\'.

46701 .

4

w•

DELNERY, ORNER , SALES

a... ch. BoJII 5848. Athens. OH

10-19- '81-1 mo.

9-1-18-lfn

Storm DooiS &amp;

FIREWOOD

p....

Speclaflzlnglu Chain

NEW &amp; USED I!'C)WERS
Sorvi&lt;t Coni« for lyan
Products

992-6282
1·28-'88-tln

from the service or lf'IY ott.rMIOnl teeking ttmpOrary or
car..,. work. contkler thil a
unique opportunity In •'•· The
young man tnd wom.,
are
looking for m.,be tired of
tYping. folding
Wllrehousajobl• working for lmited
inoome, Workwtthyoungpeopla
in oor vouth oriented n .afoi\11
comp.,., with Rock-N.Aoll at·
mosphere. Rtpld MIIIMoement.
If your era tl 01 alder Md1blato
!tart work lmmadiMatv ... Mrs.
Hathway , Wednatday only
1Q ::.10 AM-4 PM M the Econo
Lodge. Paremt wetcome.

-h;;;omo;;H.;;;Ca;;;I;-;130;;4-;,0;-;7;;;0·;;;8;0;33;-;.;;;.;--J

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair lias Tanks.

Middleport, Ohio

Building

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

t/10/tfn 1 -

Said tax baing: an additional tax of 1. 5 mill to run
for five (6) yean at a rate not
exceeding 1.6 mills far each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to fifteen
centl ($0.1 &amp;) for eaoh one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for five (5) vnra.

REPAIR~

Unk and Wood Fencing

992-6720

Howard L. Writn•l

temporary dlloontlnulng your

Did MD¥ ill

"Weter Pill•" at

GENERAL~

you ere n.- to the •r• or

edu c::ttion. recent tv dftch•ged

a_.ch beglrttl Select slngl•

LYNCH'S

W.V• .

ROCK-N·ROU '88

If

want to meat you. Wrh Heart·

.

Ch•l•ton,

26303.

lDnlin111 ends when yourH ..rt·

1-3-'16-llc

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

AND

111 Wilt S.C. P-ay

84!6 S .

3 Announcements

Equipment Dealer

F.,.
E••'P••••
Parte &amp; Serf lu

Ul (ORWiff I han

u.p.,•• • bo""'·
Box

Pla•a•.,dr..,m.to~P.O .

loll weight fattwlth Maximum
Strtnth GoBate and E-Vap

. •TANS
TOP OF THE STAIRS

,

are.. 911..,.

A1111 uu11ceme nIs

Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm

10-24-1 ..o.

10·11-'88-1 mo. pd.

Certified Licensed Shop

Real Estate General

""'

/

position oov.-ing thll Tri-Rate

TO

J l/2fBI ·Ift

' 614-662-3821

For Information

10-21-'81·1 mo.

WANTED

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

Fridays &amp; Saturdays
Only
ARTS &amp; CRAm
and Othtr lhms

,.r '•~
'. ,•HAIR
.,
.....
.r~

-.uipl'l'*lt. lmmedl•• full-time

&amp; Slidat .,., to oMy VIIS.
CAll AMY CARTER
or 108'5 ElECTRONICS
446-nqo

BOGGS

NEW MINI MART
SPACES FOR RENT

BEAUTIFUL

'

Neaded •oert.,ced ..l• rep. in
Medical r~•ed field. CompiMe
!Ina of medlclll 1uppll• &amp;

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
YHS TAPE
let

114 West Main
CAll 992-2571

· ~~~~:~·•CLOTHES

P.O. Bo&gt;c 724, Arhono, Ohio
46701 (814-89+81081 wkh
II!Kter of intent •d 3 refwancea
by November t, 1988. E.O.E.

992-6461

698·6121

FOR SALE
ALLIE 511!10N

1

COUNSELOR, Milt•'• Oegr~
pref•red. Strong t.dlground In
addiction .-.oovery and adol•
cent progr~mming. Hlghtv c::hallenJling and rMponslble poaiUon
tva•lable In an edol"'*'t rMI·
d•tiet program for Iober. r•
IPon&amp;lbl.f. lndtvicliat. Contact 0 r.
Joe G,.Y, Ph.D ., Blu.n Houee,

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

6· 17·tfC

BISSELL
BUILDIRS

9008.
PART·TIME OR FULLTIME

POMEROY, OHIO

West. Bruneo, A8hley
WE TRADE

possible. AtNm-

bling prod.lct1. SASE to: Home
Cmtt. P.O . Box 9008-GDT.
Huntington . W.Va . 2!704-

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

Featuring: Consolidaled, Dutch

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

YOUNG'S

DEliVERED

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
~ FURNACES

83- ExCINiting
84- Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration
85-General Hauling
86-Mobile Home Repair
87-Upholttery

Complete Drywall

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

teoo weakly

$'14 PER TON

i

WOOD STOVES .

81 ..,· Homelmprowtments
82 - Piumbing &amp; Healing

Rt. 12 4, Pomeroy Ohio

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

GUN SHOOT

'10-4-1 mo.

ScrvicP.s

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Al10 Trttlltnlulon

HOME -'SSEMBlY INcOME

A...,bte proO.tct• M home.
Pan:. nme. E ~i•ce unneeae•-v. Oetai11. Cell 813-327089e. Ext. D-1149 .

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

985-4141

•

"Free Estimates..

polls Oalfy Tribune. 826 Third

Ave., Galllpolil, Ohto 415131 .

POLES

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
Reference~

REPAIR

E 11.perienced Barten dtr for
downtown Gallipolis e.tlbliahment FleKible hour~ . Send r•
tumeto BoK.Cie 175. c/ oOalli·

CHIPWOOD

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Help Want~

11

10-12- 88-1 mo.

MARCUM C

Transport ali on

l;lijdfild

Serv1~1:~

ante

63- Uveslock
64- H.y &amp; Grain
66 - Seed &amp; Fertilinr

73- Vans &amp; 4

f IIIII III v!Ill: Ill

Call 992-2228
.or 992-9922

61 - Farm Equipment
62 - Wanted to Buy

Bill OenoJohnoon
814-441-3172
TOP CASH pold to• '83 modol
M'ld n.r;ver uted c••· Smith
Buick·PontiiC, 1911 Ealt«n
Ave.. Qllllpolil. Call 814-4412282
Swoln' oFUfnku••
Third &amp; l)(lva,
114-44&amp;-3189,

Our Delivery Staff
Knows Where You
Live.

DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchase of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon par cuatomar per
bingo ••••ion.
WE PAY '60.00 PER
110
PEOPLE

F~rm

. 11 - Help Wanted
12-Situation Wanted

pollution.

THANA
GARAGE-FUL
OF STUFF

224 E.. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45P.M. ·
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

545,5 5667-

Services

992-6873

Orange Townahip for the
purpose of prevention. control. and abatement of air ·

IS BEllER

51 - Household Good•
!52- Sporting Goods
53 - Antiques

l.t:e model cle.,

Jim Mtnk Chw.·Oidllm:.

roai hoata.a.
&amp; AOC'tion,

AlSO"..
HOME COOKED
lUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
-UNDER S300
MAIN StREET PIZZA

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

Roger Hysell
Garage

NO SUNDAY

any local
competitor offerr
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match it!

BINGO

Merchandise

p.,-

used
We 1*'1.
c•h for

:;::~"'!,':~~:o ~.!'~"i

If

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy, Ohio

Emplnymenl

Joe or Pouloy lowland
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.

Council of the Village of Po-

The Palla for said Election
will be open at 8:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until

$7.00
$10 .00
$15 .00
$25 .00
$60 .00

•VINYL SIDINCl
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

New Hoinos Built

"LOW INCOME HOME"

Mel go County. Ohio
Evelyn Clerk. Chairman
Oated September 1. 1988
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
(10) tO, 17, 24, 31. 4tc

q1:eation of levying a tax, In
exceaa of the ten mill limitation for the benefit of

9- Want.t to Buy

46- Spece for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for RBflt
49-For la•e

Board of Elections of

of November. 1988, the

GiveJPNay
tiappy Ads
Loal and Found
Vard Sale(paid in advance)
Public Sale &amp; Auction

41-Hou••• for Rent
42- Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farm• for Rent ·
44-Apartment for Rent

667- Coolville

26-36 WORDS

Business Services

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

ein. on Tueadly, the lth dey

4567I-

•

will ba open at 8:30 o'clock
A.M. and rem.-n open until

vote of the people of said
Orange Townlhip at e Ge-

3 - Annoucementll

896- Letart
937 - Bufflllo

Get Results fut

The Polio for uid Election

NOTICE Ia boreby given

1- Card of Thanks
· 2 - ln Memory

45-Furnished Rooma

which amounta to ten cents
($0.1 0) for each one hundred doHara of velultion. 1or
five (6) years.

ragular place of voting ther-

Mitt Umitotlon
NOTICE io hereby given

446- Gall ipotis
367- Cheshire

RACINE
GUN CLUB

BERNARD 8. HURST
DIRECTOR
110) 17, 26, 2tc

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy in Ea:c11s of the Tan

Maton Co., WV
Area Code 304

Mitlg• County
AruCode614

not exceeding 1.0 milia for

neral Election to be hold in
the Townehip of Orenge of
Meigs County. Ohio, at the

Public Notice

Gallia County
Area Code 614

{614) 446-7619 (K {614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

ada .

21 - Busin•s Opportunity

following telephone exchanges...

uch one dollar of valuation.

The Director reserve• the
right to reject eny and all

bids.

Classified pages cover the

1:00 P.M.

that In pursuance of 1 Re·
lolutk)n of Board of Township Trusteea of the Town·
ship of Oron ge. Melgo

dlW 8J

lih6h1Mfill

Sold tax belnlJ: o ronewal

County, Ohio. pu•d on the
Bth day of Auguot. 1988.
thert will be submitted to a

Director.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE - 11 :00A.M. SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. WEDNESDAY
"0-IURSDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M. THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2 :00P.M: FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

ea~h

Announcements

' A classifi ed advertisement placed in The Daily Sentinel (81t·
cept - classified displty, BusiniiiSS Card and legll n~ticu)
will also appear In the Pt . Pleuant Register and the Galli'polis Daily Tr ibune, reaching over 18,000 homes.

of an existing 1 .0 mill levy to
run for five (51 ve•aat a rate

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy In Exceu of the Ten
Mill Umitetion

far

peid .

"Receive $.50 ditcount for ada paid in advan ce.
•Ftr ice of ad lo r aH capitalle4ters is double price of ad cost.
• 7 point line type only used.
'S entinel is not responsible for erreraefter fint d.,.. (Check
fo r e rrou firtt dav ad run1 in paperl . Call before 2 :00p.m.
d~Pt~ 9f1er publication to meke correclion,
"Ads that must be paid in advance are
Card of Th.,ks
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Sel111 •

$4 .00
$6 .00
$8 .00
$13.00
$33.00

THE BEST PIZZA
At Tht BEST PRICES.

icensed Clinical Audiologist

Rateaere for contecuHve runs, broken updrvswill be ch•ged

"Ads outs ide Meigs. Gallia or Mason countiet must b e pr&amp;-

company.

Plane and specification•
are on file in the Department
of Tranaportation end the office of the District Deputy

people of said Pomoroy VII·
logo at o Gonorol Election to
be held in the Vltlogo of Po-

'hch one dollar of voluotion.

POLICIES

•free ads - Giveaway and Found ads under 16 words will be
run 3 diiVS at no c hs~e.

t6·26 WORDS
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
$21 .00
$51 .00

0 -16 WORDS

1 OAY
3 OAYS
6 OAYS
10 OAYS
1 MONTH

PIZZA

Your Hometown Place
HaS a IWays 0ff tr eel.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

RATES

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

Public Notice

Public Notice

- - Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearillg Aid Sales &amp; Servic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

•· The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Acting Mayor Warren Matu·
meak said local government has .
spent $300,000 solar on the rescue
attempt, but military and oil
Industry officials would not dis·
close their costs.
NOAA Ice specialist Gary ·
Hufford, with 24 years' expe·
rlence, was seeking advice from
two Eskimos elders on how to get
through the 30-foot-deep ice
ridge.
As the whales were coaxed
from hole to hole with lights and
the humming of Jacuzzl·llke
machines that were keeping the
holes free of Ice, the older holes
froze over, preventing the whales
from backtracking.
In Moscow, the Soviet Union
said It would send an icebreaker
300 miles to aid In the rescue, but
it was unclear If It could help. The
o!!lclal news agency Tass said
shallow water will prevent the
icebreaker Admiral Makarov
from get tlng closer than 5 miles
to the beasts.

Public Notice

r;:========:t:========::;r.;::;;;;::;;:;::;::;:::::=il
MAIN STREET

Classified

giant C-5A Air Force cargo pla ne
and was expected to join the
effort today .
" I didn' t even ask .for this, "
said Morris . " But I'm not going
to turn anything down. We want
to end this thing."
The $650,000, 23,000-pound tractor, the only one in the world, can
break ice 2 feet thick, churning
through It and riding on pontoons
when It breaks through. The
C-5A, the worki 's biggest plane,
was the only Jllrcraft big enough
to carry up tbe tractor .
"Everybody loves whales . Did
you ever meet anybody who
didn't like whales?" said Lloyd
R. Brestau, an executve of
Arctec Offshore In Columbia,
Md. , who flew to Alaska to make
sure the thing worked.

U.S. officials said a second
Soviet ship, the Ice-breaking
cargo ship Vladimir Arsenlev,
would head for Barrow and It
might be able to get through If the
Admiral Makarav could not.
The assistance was requested
under an lnternailonal environmental agreement.
David Withrow, a marine
mammal fl!Search blologlstfrom
Seattle, said the trapped whales
are Inexperienced juveniles, per·
haps drawn to the arctic as much
out of curiosity as for food.
Withrow said one whale is 2 to3
years old and 35 feet long. The
other two, Including the one that
vanished under the Ice, were
described as 28 -foot -long
.yearlings.

The Oaily Sentinei-Page-7

Sll~beck 81"-992·3891 . For
d-lnltructlonacoli 1·800.
999-0727.

Cr..,..,.

COnot, C.H 814-281-1718,

trimmed. Frw eetlm«a. Call

814-441-8078 or 304-0714883.

�--

---

---

---

____....

'

-

"'"7"-

~-----..---~·

,
•

Page- 8- lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

•'

18 Wanted to Do

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Apartment
for_Rent

Will cut fWe w ood. Call aft • 5

61 Household Goods

KIT 'N' CARLYLEIIl by Larry Wrlaht ,

74

.. dlor

refin ltMd. Frea td imlt•. Ctll
114-"4&amp;-3814 "'"411-2898.

Financial
21

h••

Own your appl!IINI: or sh9e store,
ch.oot8 from: J&amp;II'I·Sportaweer,
l a d le• . Men 's, 1 c h i ldren ·
matwnttv. l•ge t izn. petite.
d.-.cewwe•·eeroblc. bridal, lingerie or ecc••or• ttore. Add
lee, St Michete. Foreru:•. Bwle
Boy, Lov t. C.mp Bovot'ly Hlho.
Org.-.lcallv Grown, Lucia. over
2000 Olhon. "' $13. 99 one

""'"'"'tv

35 lots &amp; Acreege

44

Reol Eslale
Homes for Sale

Vfll'l .itractlve brick 4bect'Oom.
2 bath. f...,IV ~m with flr•
pi .:e. formal dining. l•ge living
room, 30ft. custom&lt;&gt;* kitchen
cabinllts, o.tr: woodwork. finish

.... ttful river lois oneecreptue,
public water, Clyde Bowen, Jr.
304-5711-2336.

2 c• o•lll&amp; lwei

IMdscaped lot. 4 ml• from
Holzer HOipkal off At. 315~rterbroolc Subdlvition. Call

25 acrea Broad Run Ro~. New
Hsven. Owner financing av•l•
bla 304-882-3394.

614-"411-4189.

4 IR ., full b•emtrrt. g•ega.
fultv carpeted (tome newt.
P•tced lo ull. Coli 814-"411-

Renlals

D 278 aft8r 6 PM, w.ekends

anvtime.
3 ~ct-oom furNihed. 1 eera or
morellltd. e12,000.00. '12 mile
from 4 r.,e and CanterviKe on
County Rd. B. 814-246-9279.
3 :bedroom R.,ch, HI bstO..
family room. dining room, 1 c•
g lJ'ag&amp; stOf'lge buldfng. poal/ 'tlfooden deck. Spring V•llev
•ea. Caii814-448-790J.

41

Nicely furnished lm~~l

Unfurnished hou•. 2 SR .
Neighborhood Rd . t 226. Ref..-.
ences • deposit requlr.t. Catl
441-4418 after 7 PM.

b••

GnV£RNMENT HOMES !&lt;om
.. •
$1
.
(0-Aepair) Alto
TP ..aetlnquent • Foredo.ure
Pro,pertiM. A... ilete NOW. For
t;Oiing. CALL 1-316· 733-~084
Exl• G 2758.

Pfantz Sub.· 4 BR ., full
m ent. c•pllt fa orne niiW), ~Mgt.
city schools. Adults onty. No
..... Dop. &amp; .... ..,..trod. $360
•• mo. Coli 814-"411-0271
after 8 PM, w..._.-.dl any-time.

3 bedroom houM, be11ment.
c•pon Pius 2 c• t•eoe.
Betw... ilelllpolis end Hob.,. • ·
Cantril air, natur81
ctty
'Mt•. No pels. Reference~ end

3 BR .. LR, DR . kitchen. full

basement, 2 c• unanaehed
g•ege. Bul.,ile Rd . $49.900.
CaR 614-448-4536.

a•.

depo!Ut . Call

00 N'T LOSE YOUR PROPERTY IN FORCLOSURI:II Send
name .,d phone no. 10: Cia 174
c/ oGalipolitDalty Tribune. 825
Third A\141., Galllpollt, Ohio
46831 ..

t•SPM.
3 BR .

log Cabin. t260 . 2 BA . Call

aftw 6 PM. 814-2411-9097.
Hou• with bath. Ne• Recine.
Nice yard. g•den SpiCe. Call
e14- 992· &amp;8 !!iB.
•

3 bedroom, 2 bl!ll:h. ful l b••
mant 2~27 famlty room. 8
rooms. J ecr• plus. Awilable
Nov.nbo&lt; 111. C.l\(814-992·
27"4.
./

4 nice , modern one floor plan

2 bet+oom house . Exrra lot.

304-876-4384.

n.- Sltver Bridge

House in city . Wettr peid Cell
814-2511-6338.

15 mil• from Athena,
12 mil• from Pom.-oy. Call
614-992-5848.

· Farm for sale .
56.000.00 down atsumable B'h
per cent to., to qualified tuyar,
Yf1f'Y low closing costa. 88 acres
With 7 yeer old ced• contemporary home. priced rGJced to
568..000.00. Phone 304-6756955 Gallipolis Farry, W.Va.

.

8189"' 4468886.

~nting.

H o use

hom~~

81~U6-128Baf·

Shopping Center. 8276 per mo.
Sec. dep . &amp; ref. Cell 8 14-44&amp;.

in courwrv wfth 1M d. Good deer

h ou ses . Owne r re locatiog .
Needs quick sele. Will co nsidw
land contraC'I. Also take IMe
mo del vehide as partial trade.
As king 154.000. for . all 4.
814-742-2728.

hou 18•

Adu~o only. Rei. - " l d. No
Pill. Coli 814-4411-0338.
3 BR .• AC. c•pet pool, g.--s~e.
2 fireplaces, fence. Good Joce·
tion. Cell A-1 R..l Estate
Broker, 304-675-5104.

Mod•n 3 BA . home. Vinton.
Farnllv room. eat-in kitchen.
ttorage btl ildlng. large lot .
$39.000. Cell 114-388-9042.

Government hom• from t1 .00.
(u- rep8ir) . A~o tax delinquent
and for&amp;Ciosure properties.
Available now. For listing. call
1 -315-733-6064 ext. 02766.

Homes for Rent

-:::-:--::--.,-.,-,---,--

House for ..-.t. 6Q4 Eest Mein
St. Pom•ov- 614-992-8144. ·
g

Sa••

1968 Ne'N Moon 12xOO. 2 DR .
s 2300. Celt 614--446- b390.
Mobile Home for Sal e. 12x50.
Call 814-4411-2003.
14x70 Fairmont. All electric
w it h heat pump, llt"lfte dish.
Ck.lail Ck . Call614-245-6294 or
2465076.
1972 mobile home. 2 BR ..
p.-ti•tv furnisMd. 85, 000. Call
814-"411-8844.

2 BR . moble home. Total elec.
Priced r••onllble. C.ll 614-

4411-0722.

81900.

1970 Wlnduw. 12x85. woodburn«, .,..,.._. and dryer, air
]e'l,~_ mustbemoved, 304-8961979 S.yvtew mobUe home.
14x70 wfth 7x21 •,.ndo.
....... 304-8711-8141 .
1988 Allis on mobil e homi,
14x70, specfou• kit chen wtth
double oven end bay window, 2
b•ad r oomt, exc c o n d ,
f 16.000.00. 30 4- 875-6929 o•
6 75- 3873.
19 8 1 8 - 14x70. Ill IIOCI·
ric. lot 78x1?3 ft. $ 15.000.00.
Hirtford near teen is courts,
3 04- 882~ 2844 aftlft' 6:00PM .

Commercial SOOding for ktas u.
Pl. PleMent. Calf 304-6756104.

unfurnit;hed apt. CtrP•ed. utlltiea peld. No chl"'en.
No··~ Call814-"411-1837.
~steira

Merchandise

Furnilhed- 3 rooms 6 bath.
Cle.,. No pets. Ref. &amp; deposit
required. Utllitl• furnished.
Adutts only. Cell 814-4461519.
lu•urlous Tara Townhou•
ap.-tments. Eleg.,t 2 floors. J
BR .. full bM:h upetalrs, powdtr
room downstlllrs. CA,. dis·
hwastt., dlapaul, prfwllte entrlltca. prl'late endosed p .. lo.
pool. pt.,ground. Uoll~l• ·noo
Included. S,_,lng ot U99 P•
mo. c.n 114--387-7880.

FurnllhediPt. New. Ne•HMC.

1 IR . t 275. UtilltiM paid. Cal
4411-"4 181ft• 7 PM.
Apertment1 and hou .... C.ll
304-8711-5104.
Furnlthld apwt.....,.t•-1 bedroom. 1240 &amp; up. UtHitiea paid

C.. 4411-"418 11101' 7 PM,

1973 F•onklln 132 AXL SkidIf.... Good condition. Priced for
quick aale. C. II 1ft: er 6 PM.
814-268-1698.

61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
Olive St. , O.llipolit .
NEW- I pc. wood group- U99.
Llwing room suft•- t199· 8599.
Bunk bedl: with bedding- t249.
Full •in mattrMI &amp; foundelion
starting - t99 . Recliners
ltlrting- 199.
USED- 81tds, dressers. bact-oom
suit•. Oetks, wringer wee her. a
complele line of used turnrture.
NEW· Western boots- $35.
Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft too) . Colt 514-446-3159.
County Appliance, lne. Good

used

appll.-.ce~

c•

Al&gt;_,monll lor lho Elct.tv.

Gallla Minor Ap.rtments. 655
auhl Mo"on Road. Desired''"
the ·Senior Chinn (82
older)

andHanclc:tiPPed penons.. Equal
housing opportunity. Applcetions m~ be pidted upet Spring
Vall., Plaza. 129 Jeck•on P•e
or call 1!114-446--•639.
Mod•n 1 BA , downtown, compill• kitchen. air. c:•pet. Deposit, no pets. Call 814-4480 139 evenings. aft• 6.
238 Ftm A110. 1 BR .. k~chon
furnished. c.per.t. No chll·
dr1n / t:'ets. t176 plus utllti•.
Dop. 6 •of. CIH 814-4411-4928.

aA ..

turnt.hed k,ttmen.
Deklxe 2
low utilltl•- E.:ellent location.
No piJfs. 8ec. dep. Cell 814448-1817. .
Furnilhed ·2 room ap.-trtlent
with prlvete b•h. Utillti• peid.
Seoond Aw. •150 per mo. Call
814-"411-2390.
2 BA . dutillk. e225amo. Stove,
refrigwetor,; Ca . 1'h mil• from

Ollllpollo.,., 160. Coli 814-"4113753 from 8-5.

and TV sets.

Sot. 814-"411-1899. 827 3•d.
Aw. Gallipolla, OH.
GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
Wash.-s. dryers. refrigerllltors,
renges . Skagg• AppUances.
Upper River Rd . baeide Stone
C•eot Motol. 814-4411-7398.

nished. gea furnace, nioe yard.
one child. U&amp;O.OO month.
ref•ence end deposit. 304-6762851 .

2 BR .. Ill utilh:l81 paid at Rio
Gr., de. Also 1 BR .• totelehtc. at
Rio Gran de. Call 614- 245-5223.
Apaotment for rent. 1226 a
month. Olpoeit required. 814992-67N. After 6pm or 992·
6119.

Gracious lving. 1 11td 2 bed. room ep . . ments et VIllage
Manor and Rivertide ApenNe• · Wet•lo~2 Sr. CCean.
ments In Middleport. From
t 126 a mo. Ref. S. dep. Adults.
1182. Coli 814-992-7787.
Furnished. ¢aH 814-448--7764
EOH.
or 643- '2 144.
3 BR ., 2 full baths, n...-v c•pet.
Fosta-'a MobHe Home Parle. Call

In Eureka. 2 BR . Aduhs on.,.. No
pats. t22fi a mo. Oep. required,

Call 614-2465883.
Nice 3 BR. trail.- with Ml*ldo.
living room. large yard. See 11
314 Third St. Kanauga. Call
614-"46-7473.
2 BR ..

fully hnnished. new

c•pet:. AC.. All utilh:i• paid
except elec. end g•. Cable tv
SY~il able. Own• PIVI water,
SI!MI&amp;Qe S. tn1h pickup. SeCl.lrlty
depo.lt Md ref. Four-tent hi of
f'llle from chy lmltt. Call
814-"411-n93.

2 bedroom Apts, for rent.
Carpeted. Nice ietting. Laundry

flciii/M IYeilllbte. Call 814992-3711 . EOH.

New.,.

rldeoorllted apertmenta
available. UtllitiM paid. •226.
pw mom h. depoalt ta:~u ired. C. II
814-992·5724 ..... 8 :00 "'
992-1119.
New 1 bedroom furnished or
unfurnllhed. In Middleport. Call
814-992·5304"' 992-2778.

Private. 2 room. furnished
bachelor apt . .in Syraaute. Call

814-992·78eo.
Pomerov. 2 be*oomapt. Penly
t. rn 11~
.,_
,_. 1n Nay 1ors R un. ..-o.n-

~Y

2 B r.

dopooh, Coli lfl"' 8p.m.
814-992-asee.

• 200 mo. 8150 dop. Pov ott
uti! It iM Ia h~ W\llt•. Call
Debbia 814-4411-8180.

APARTMENTS, mobile homoo,
hou . .. Pt. Pl. .ant end Gallipolis. 814- ...... 8221.

unfurnished. Stove •
refrigarMor llrn. Fully cwplled.

1.b 80 furnished. 2 bedroam.ln
Syrteu se etN. Wet• peid. C.U
Nilce bright Mobile Home in the

COuntry. Viclnltv of Ftvt Points
and Baehan. Adults onty, •186

month. 114-941-2119.

On 1 acr a 2 bedroom. fuel oH
furnac•. In Autlend Cell 114742· 2753.
2 bectGOm mob61e home h ..f
mle out Jericho Road, refwen1 ce11 required. cell aft• 6:00PM.
; 304-8711-1082.

WH1TE 'S METAL OETECTORS·
Check for
apec:fefa on All
Models. Big discount- lest yt•'s
stocked models. Ron ADiaon,
1210 Second Ave ., Oelllpolle,

Ohio. 814-"48-4338.

Mixed h•d wood sllbl . S12 per
bundla. Containing epprox. 11h
ton; Ohio Pellet Co., Pomll"oy,
OhiO. 814-992-6481 .

Antiques. CB base. Much more.
Rt. 681 . west of At. 33. ne•
WhM8¥''•· Sat. and Sun. 10:JO.
4 :00. COli 814-992"6013.
For tala. One Natural Oa1 Heat.80.000 BTU, One Natural G11
Heot"' 20.000 BTli. 33031
New- Lima Ad .• Rutl..d. Ohio.
Roy W. Carter, 614-742·2895
anvtim&amp; u.cept Sund'!Y.

Wood Chief 'Noodburnw. Paid
S286., liking 81150. Call 814'sofas ltf'ld chairs priced from 992-72ea.
1395 to •99&amp;. Tabl• 850 and
up .t o 1125. Hide-a-beds 8390 Warm" Morning GIII!S Stove.
to 859&amp;. Recliners •225 to 86.000 STU, SZ76. 'Call 814137&amp;. lamps t28 to 8125. 992· 5228.
Dinettes t109endup to t495.
Wood table w -6 chein 8285 to Surplus army cemoufl.. ge, d•
87915. Dnk 8100 up to $375.
nlm. rental, C.rh.-t clothing
Hutehes 8400 and up. Bunk Small army ecc•elorfes:. Fti:
beds compl•e w -mattressft Sat. Sun, noon till 8:00 PM.
t29&amp;endupto8395. Baby bech (Nov, Otc 01*1 7 d.,-s}. S1m
t11 0. Mettrltlln ar ba• springs Somerville's, Eallt·Riwenlwood
full or twin 888, firm S78, and Junction lndep.-.dahce Road,
•as. Quean seu 12&amp;0 &amp; up, , old Rt . 21 . !New Eric lnsulat~
King SJI50. 4 dr~ ch•t tel. camouflage coverall• 8 27.60,
Gun cabin8ts 8 gun. Bab¥
304-273-6866.
mattr ...n t 35 8t $45. Bed
frem• 820. $30 &amp; King frame Siamese kittens $35.00 each.
'SI50. Good sehtctlon of bedroom Piclt up load frre wood 835.00.
suites, metal cebin9ts. head·
304-876-1319.
'
.
boards t30 .,d up to 865.
Pair of Bose 901 speaker•. call
90 Days same • • eash with aft"' 5:00PM, 304-882-2427.
approved erdt. J Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Antique timber bldg and85,000
Mon. thru Sat. Ph . 614-446· btu Warm Morning 1911 heater,
0322.
304-5711-2438.
'

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete hou ..hold furnishIngs. Y2 mle out Jarrieho,
304-875-1460.
For low prices onOualttv Carpet
• Furniture come to Mollohan
Furniture-Upper River Rd., 6144411-7444.
ViRa's Furn~ure
Open deity , Mon.-Sat.
9AM - 6PM
Sun.. .12 noon · 5 PM
Complete household
furnlthinga- AH bedding. rustle
, bunk beds with ru1tic cheat.
\l'eriMy of sofas &amp; chairs-all on
Hie. E :cellent uaed appll .. ces.
Christmn toys now in stock.
Chrlstme1 1-vawav• now being
taken. Plus fil).,oing available
whh approved Cl'edh. At. 141 in
Centenerv·'A mile on Unooln
Pike. 814-"411-3158.
Furnfture. woodatotete, 1978
Mere. Bobcel: SW. 1979 Olds.
Sta~ra. Call 614-448-2568.
Girls bedroom sult&amp;lnctudes
head bo•d. fr~me. boJt sprin9•
&amp; matt,..., corner desk&amp; ch11r,
amell ch .... Frwui'l Cl'eam with
blue • ytlllow flowers. Cell
11 ._ 387• 0502 after !5: 30 PM.

Siegler oil heatar. 80,000 btu,
phone 304-875-6412.
Used R · 86 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 61•·694-7842 or

894-6008.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materiels

Blo(:l[, i:trlck, 18W&amp;r pip•. windows. Nntels. ftc. Claude Winten. Alo Grande. 0 . Call 814245-6121 .
Con.rzete blocks- all sizes- yard
or delivery. Mason Hnd. Gelllp~
lis Block Co., 123Yz Pine St.,
Gatnpolls. Ohio. Call 614-44112783.
WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Channel Rustic
and Beveled Lep Siding
• Deck Mlteriels
G uarantaed Quallly
CETIDE , INC., A.thenl-114·
694-3678
Steel Buildings. Must sell2from
cancellation. brand new. never
erected. Will sell for balance
owed. Call Dan 1· 800..627·
4044.

56

Pets for Sale

Female WM 8 Reg. Engllth But·
ldog. Call 814-251-1135.
AKC Aeglst..-ed Mlni•ure Col11 e. Houta br oke. 10 month:s old.

Roush Uht Ch•'*• 2 bedrooma, nice lot, 304-173-1828
for morelnformltfon.

ldtt-.

AKC Reg. 01dEnglllh8hoopdog
'"'""'"'· Coli 814-2411-917S.
AKC reglst•ad Slbaritrl Huekrt
ouPPI-. 4 oltl bolh
perenu can be seen. 1200.00.
304-1711-!800.

67

Musical
Instruments

lndtvicklal Eller l••ctn~. beginners. •r us gulterilt. Brulc•dla Mua c. 114-UI-0187.
Jeff _,.,"" ..........,. 114441-BOn. Um~od

-'"Ill·

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Now jlllcceptlng •ppllcetions b
2 bedroom apartments. fultv

Gri,_, Romeapplel. Sorghum,
hon~ • mflcell . .eous food
Items. Ounrovln Fruit Farm-181
Southeat of Albeny. Haurt 9-1.
Closed Monday . 814· 898·
8298.

Fdrlll SUJJIJI II'S
~&lt;; LtvesluLk
61 Farm Equipment
John O..e 2010 di•II1J'8Dtor,
Nioe. With plows, dtskl. .grain
drHI. •3910. John o... 2020.
1000 hrs.·So Sh wp, rnult ... to
IIPPrecl••· t4850. Own• wll
fln.,ce. Cell814-286-8622.
10 Inch plow, 42 Inch dtoc. 48
lncf'l bl.tewlththr•pointhltch.
Fits s..-11 Ger.,_ Tractor, Good
condition. Al•300. Lando Ct.,.,

ChKtw. 814-9811-"411
19n M·Giesn• oomblne. •
rowcornheed. 13ftg,.mtlble.
Me CGnd, keep i'l *'I· 11&amp;0-C
dozer. winch. good cond.
30. 000. 304-937-201e.

63

Livestock

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veh•
cl• from •100. Fordl, Mer·
cedea, Corvett:H. Chwyt. Sur·
plus. B~yers Guide. (1)
ao&amp;-887· 8000. EXI. s-10189.
1985 Fcwd Tempo. 1984 Buldc
LM*o. 1984 Ponlloc GP.
1988 Cltwy CovoM•. 1986
Pontiac Sunbll-d, 1818 Dodge
Omn~ 1980 T-BI•tl 1978 Cu·
tiiiL 1178 Buick SW. 1986
Cltwy Cijellon. 1981 Subwu
•wo.1980Unooln. 198•Pontlec Bonnev•• 1971 Oldt.
Cutlue. B 1: 0 Motprs, Hwy.
110, 4 m51. n . of Holzert.
814-...... 8886.

1979 Monte C.rto for •le or
trade fur 4 WD pickup. Cell
814-"411-8741 "'4411-1847.
1971 Monte C.rlo, V-8. 2 dr .
1978 Delta Royolo. V-B. 2 dr.
Calllflor 3PM. 814-"411-2157.
onytlmo Frid"''.
·

Fancy breeds of , plaeons •
ducks. Cal eft• e PM. 8144411-0119.
•
SPECIAL FEEDER CALF SALE·
WEONESDAY. OCTOBER 28.
8 PM. '" Including
HofstllinL Ce'ftle will bt ec-coplod ol
Octobo&lt;
25 &amp; Up .. 2 PM Wednlldoy.
October 28. H.,llng_t~teilable.
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALE. 1
mHeeest dAIMny on8t. Rt. l50.
Colt Slcdyo•d 114-592-2322
or 898-31531 wenlnga.

&lt;f"'' :r••&lt;f"''.

Registered Polled Hereford cat·
tie. 6 cow a, 1 bull, 5 Springers.
Clll 814-2511-1431.
Young heavy breed fryer
chh:ken• t2.150 •ch- Oreen
heeded M••d draft• • 3. 00.
114-992· 1851ou•tngo.

diP{IIm&amp; 814-99.2-&amp;086
Jngtlnd WMk.,ck.

MI'M-

1988 Ford Eacort L. 4 door
hatchback. Very good condition.
AliteR $432! .. ••king $3900.
Coii814-74Z·3114.

· 1914 Olclo 88. 4

door, Brough_, package. Sable
with brown vlnvl top, small VB.
rNI wire wheelt, etwavt g~~rage
kept .. non-1m0k•. A fun 11M
...,.o in show room condkion.

taooo. 114-892-27&amp;1 .

1982 ~rlee Wagon. 4 -peed.
Wen . maintained. good b•lc
trentportetlon. 81000. 080 .
Clll 114-912·8818.
1tBibkloZ·28. 305outo. 1988
Mtan St1n11. 4

cyl.,

fuel

lnJ••· 15 spaed. loth ~~~:cel•t

condition. Cllll14-742·2876.

1970 Muateng F111tt.ck, exc
cond,. no motor, 81 _.800.00,1c;all
304-882·2192.

71 Ford mation wagen. a-c. pt.
pb. ac. work c•. •aoo. 304175-5141 .
1984 Cryll• lal« XE with
Turbo, e11c cund, all options. for

1983

o ..... d

Prix, good cond.

Cougar. 2 door, Ike niW must
••. 304;)1711-5~81 .

72

TNcks for Sale

1986 FO&lt;d F·150 PU. ohot-p.
1982 GMC PU, nice. 1986Ford
windoW &gt;An. nice. 19B4 Dodge
0 -50 4 wo. 1984 Fo•d - ·
nice. B. D Moton. Hwy 110.4
mia. n. of Holl:ers, 114-448-

8818.

youg glGGfS'T fAULT?

FOrd A"ow motor home, 18 ft
long. good co nd. ez.995. 00.
304-875-8866.

LYING

IN

INTE~VIf:=WS.

11

Services

19'71 Chevy . 1h ton, llhort wide
bed. 8 eyl.• Milo., PS. Good

up end delivery. Davit Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 6144411-0294,
Concrete Septic TMk!l . 1000
· g • .• 1500gal. andJetAerat,ig n
system. Factory trelnfld r~air

Ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
Pfi.IS ES. Jackson, Ohio. 1-80(}
537· 9528.
RON EVANS ENTERPRISESSeptic tank pumpinl)- S90 pet
toed. Call 1- 8()().537· 9528 . .

· UF' IS .FUJJi. IS~T tr?
THAIJKS 10 1Hf: SI"-GLES

Painting: lnt.-Jor &amp; Exterior.
Free estimates. Call 614-4488344.

~

...

1980 Ford F2150. Automatic
3 point hitch wood . transmilllon. 814-9.9-200&amp;
oplllt•. Colt 814-379-2340.
1971 Datsun King Cab. Runs
Lllrsleround . . . h.,- for •••. aooct. e49e. oao. eon 814no 11eh. Coli 1114-,.....1052. 892·1111 .

AIJD lf-IAtvi::S 10 ~~
SWl\la, U'RE S\RAIJG£15

().!.'((£ ~ 0/JE:

MlUJTt AIJD FRl£J.J:lS
11-\£ ,UE)(T

A~l~

Will do llll"'d biMt ing. s pray
painting, interior &amp; scterior
deoorllting. 25 yn. experience.
Call 81 4· 246- 9097.
RON•s Television Service.

removal. Call 304.67 5-13 3 1.

I

ar

Ground shell corn •8.00 P•
100. Prem'-'m Alf•f• •3. 00.

Straw

•1 .50.

Raund bal•
ns.oo. Mor-·o Woad1.. d
Ftrm, Rt. 3S.. PUny, W.V1. 8:00
un 12o00 Man-Sol. 304-937·
2018.

Tl'illlSIJ!illiillllll

1981 llue ChiWV Vt ton truck.
W. AC. AM·FM ot«oo. Poy off,
Colt 114-742-3080.
·
1971 ane tonCNWCab Doolev
484 VB ..to. colt 304-8822832 or 882· 2219.

THERE-~1:6 MY UNCLE'

ARTHUR ... HE'6 A
BLACKSMITH .

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
house cell servicing G E, Hot
Point. washers, dryers end
stavtll, 304-676239e.

ALL HE .COE516WALK

HE. SAYS'Sl.l6\NES5
15 PRETTY SLOW IN
HIS TRADE .

AR()JND ALL O&lt;'.Y l.DOKING-

FOR eAREFOOTEDHORSes.

Akers Tree Trimrringand Stump
Removal. Free estimates. Call

304-675-7121 .

82

,.................. •'

Plumbing
&amp; Hea.ting

.BARNEY
...
" ...........

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth lnd Pine

84

,.

SAIRY ·GAVE ME

Phone 614-448--3888 or 814446-4477

TH' t..OWDOWN
ON IDA BELLE

LET ME GIT
MY NOTES
IN ORDER

Let ME GIT
MY ROCKY
CHAIR

SQUIRES!!

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

w--

een

1979 JOio
llm~od.
AM·FM. tB. AC. tilt. ,._,..._
tlr-. Extra lh•P· c.tl
114-2411-1040.

niW

1981 Dotlgo Omn~ 4 d&lt; ..
211.000 ml•: outo. 13500. Coli
114-379-27211.
1984 Mercurv Top• GS . PS.
Pl. o". AM·FM. 114,000 ml•.
12700. Col 1114-"411-0212 ..
4411-8278.

'"I Q.- I looked dep! ened about returning
from my vacation- they tool&lt; my belt and
shoelaces away.'"

l

o.....

1874 l'lrmauth
mill!'
nM plrta, nMCII engtne. 3-mfnl
Wk-. 1100-mu .. tslce ell. Cell
814-357· 0314.

1975- oqulppld for llohlna
lu..lng. Clft'lplng. N.w brlk•.
point Job, 318 malar, he.,...
noo. 814-912·1881 .
88 AMIII•d Rv wlh screen
room. low mfteege. Ellttl'a conv•t.,oo. 304-879-4811 .

77 Chwy lurblrbon; 4 wholj
d•lvo. f1.400.00. 304-871111191ft•I:OOPM anytime on
wetken•.

'Your

'Birthday

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) II you Involved wl1h someone 1oday who has
look lor the flaws In friends today. you'll dhtpleasad you tn the past A failure 1o
find 1ham, but you must also be awa•e let bygones be bygones won'1 help mal·
!hal 1hey will start pu111ng you under tars and mlgh1 reopen an old wound.
·· ·closer scru11ny.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) In order 10
OCI. 25, 19M
; .AQUARI,US (Jan. 211-Feb. 111) In com· appease your ma1e 1od8y you mlgh1
Your chan Indicates that you may make pe1111ve developments today where your · have to socialize wl1h a ~son you'd
soma major adjus1ments In the year career Is coocerned , don't gB11n a sl1u- ra1har Ignore. For 1he Illite of harmony,
ahead 1ha1 will favo•ably anect your ma- a11on where you are overma1ched. Be- bile 1he bulle! and a1rlve 1o be friendly
larial clrcums1ances. These altera11ons lore 811ecklng, be certain you have ads- LEO (July :13-Aug. 22) tt'a bel1 no1 10
quate back-up.
broedcu1 your career goala 81 thla
will no1 be dona In has1e.
SCORPIO (Oct. U-Nov. Zll Do no1 take PISCES (Fab. 20-March 20) Making a lime, because someone who Ia )ealoua
II personally 1oday II others are no1 In poln1 10d8y Is no1 as lmpor1an1 8s joop- of you mlgh1 1ry 10 hamper your
.
complale harmony wllh , your Ideas. srdlzlng a valued ralallonshlp. Don'1 progreoa.
They could have valid reasons lor their CO!"promlse your s1andards, just be VIRGO (Aug. 23 8opt. Zl) Your precon·
. ealved no11ona u 10 how 1hlnga will
obJecllons. Know where 10 look lor ro· aura 1hey are valid.
monee and you'll find 11. The As1ro- ARIEl (Mil...., 21-Aprtt 18) If you're work 1oclay could be a 1rlfle too negaGraph Ma1chmalcer lns1en11y reveals shopplng 10day, consider qu8111y above 11ve- Think positive and don'1 1e1 your
you.
.
which signs !ll'e roman11cally pertact for i price. The beau1y and aestha11cs of your , ·lmeglnatlon
• 23) Keep your
you. Mall $2 10 Matchmaker. c/o 1hls selacllon ehoutd lake precedanca over LIBRA (Sept.
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland, Its coal.
·
ma1erlaldealruln Check 1oday. lna1ead
·TAURUS (Aprti20-May 20) Do no1 ex- or focusing on personal ln1-ta look
OH 44101-3428.
SAOinARIUS (Nov. 23-l)ac. 21) The ',I)BCt 100 much !rom your r8\a11onshtps l lor waya 10 genera1e good will ancs reneeds of aomeonll you like may tug at wlth o1hars 1oday. If you dealre behavior apect !rom your aaaoclat-.
your hearto1~ngs 1oday. Sacrillcell nec- 1hey are not capable ol showing, you'll
-ry. bu1 don'1 ex1end you•self be- be &amp;adly dluppoln1ed.
OI!MINI (MSJ_21-.IIIne 20) Y~u cou~ ~.,Y.On~ your means or ablllly.. .

Water dellvetY . 1000 gallons.
Re•onable prices. Imm edi at e
dolhto,.. Call 814-992-5275.

Plltridc.' 1 Wet.- Hauling, 2, 000
gel d•lvery. 304-678-23 11 or
814-4411-4086.
Mobile home movtrt, leaud
with Morge'n Drive Awey,
Ow...- Op•etor Jim McGuire.
•perlenced and in•ured, 8144411-2138.

87

Upholstery ...,

(!) Campt~lgn: The ,
Cholet Presidential
candldatas George Bush and
Michael Dukakls are profiled;
key moments thanestad the
character or each man are
leaturad. C
llDJ •1121 MOVIE:
'lndlacreet' CBS Special
Movie 1;1
IIJl Llt"Y King Uvat
II! MOVIE: H1111mett (PG)
(1 :38)

""':a!l.'t!nat

'

'

Mowr1Jf' &amp; Upholtterfng aervlng
trl countverea 23ye••· The beat
in '"nllure ufholltering. Cell
304- 876 4 54 for fr oa
ettimllltes.

fI

.AB
c

tAQ74
+J107~4

... .

WEST
+AK863

+to 7

.KJ74

.Q95

+K963

.K9865
+Q82

EAST

SOUTH
+J912

•to 6 3 2

eJl032
+A

,.2.

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

Weol

North
Pass

2NT

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

.

Easl

I NT
Pass

Obi.

Ooenin~ lead: • K
.
Fred threw away his last heart u
South ruffed still anotber dub. Fred ·
was left with 9-8-6 of trumps and dum--my with IF, but declarer could not'
score a trick with the diamond seven.
Had Fred played a low diamond back
rather than the king, South would have
won in hand and would bave been able.
to ruff hearts in dummy be~ Eut.
could discard a beart, event y mat- ·
tbe doubled contract.

IDl Newt

a fill a.mey ,..,

v

Sensl11ve S1!lale
D t2J ®l
il2l IIi Newa
CD Surfor M...... (R)
(I) (!) BIU Moyera' WOIId a!
Idea• Moyers 11\ks with a
wlda variely of people abou1
Ame•lca's cholcee. INRJ
Dflll Love Comecllori
llll Mcnyltne

I!§ Ta~ from the O.l1c11de
II! M'-ml VIce 1;1
8 You C.n Ia 1 tltar

11:30Dt2J 1111 NBC ...wa:
Campaign Countdown

8por11Canter (L)
IZJ Europeon Joumot (0:30)
(J)

sawbuck
29lnfo
30Masked
31 Mr.
Motu
portrayer
33 Exclamation
36 Ascertain
37 Get-up·
and-go
40 Nation
without
freedom
43 Brazilian

9)UUTaday

eo ,..1_, Game

.

~~nt!:1'8:s~
Night Dee Dee QOIII

undercovtr u a rock linger
10 801va puzzling murder. (A)

1111111._ ......

• Amerlcen Megutne
12:00 I]) Piper Cha• A Day In 1he ,

Defe-:::at:~
rFJrOiwirrE8~~;;
DAILY
t 1
-Here's how to work It: ·

4&amp;

10/24

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

-"

CllYPTOQUOTES
10-24

(I) • (J) .....
(I) Sign_~

S L 0

SLO

LOZKB '

YWF

VRR

DRWBV

LH

LTZYWEGR
BL

JKYB
BKR

Y W· Y X S G
B K R

ll

R X· R .

.,OVEWRVV

·

® leat of C.raan
'
CD NI'L'ell...- M San FrandiOO 49eia 4llih

'

bird
44 Gyrations
45 Tier

IRHLtR

Annlvaraary: Gellani Men and
Golden Momen1s (R)

.

..
.

(!)81gn0ff

Ule 01...

.,

a

9:30 1211 New Country
10:00 Cll 700 Club
CD Blverty Hilla Klfllnet Clull
lntema11onat Dog Show
From Los Angeles, CA (R)

a (2)

'•

2811alf

a

Bernice Bade Osol

1.000 or 2,000gallons deliVary.
Coli 304-875-8370.

1988 P!ymouoh Vovltl• SE.
l»w miiM, AT, AC, crullo,
AM·FM st•eo. CUitom atrlp•
1188 Dodge Omn~ 4 d• .• . end running
•9991.
31, 000 ""'·· 11 opd. 13.000. obo. Colt 814-"411-1300.
Clll 814-379-2728.

Nlgll1

IZJ

(I)

10-1&lt;.11

by THOMAS JOSEPH
l&gt;OWN
ACROSS
1 Shout the
1 Earl llPrr
breeze
lliggers'
2
"Roads"
sleuth
scholar
6 Colorado
3 Egyptian
resort.
go!l
10 Winslow
4 Neiglibor
of Calif.
12 FissiiP
6 Pallid
rock
6 That lady!
13 Steven
7 Boundary
Seagal
Yeeterday'a Anewer
8 Verve ·
movie
9 Man bites
1~ Weight
dog, e.g. 25 Thrice
34 Kibbutz
unit
11 You don't
(Lat.)
dance
18-you
'
say!
26
Buchwald
35
Palm leaf
sure?
14
Shoe
28
Woodland
37
Trim
17 Naval
18 Trite
30 Manitoba 38 Spirit
officer
19 Impulse
Indian
lamp
(abbr.)
20
Among
32
One·
of
39
Nuisance
18Amalga21 " ...mouse
"The Odd 41 Eng.'s
mate
man?"
Couple"
neighbor
20 Mental
22 Decay
33 Iridescent 42 Laundry
outiOQk
24
St.
crossing
gem
23Pro27 Satire

tDflll Odd Coupla
8 VldooCountry
1t:OO CD Remington lteela

R &amp; A Water Service. Po ols,
cistern•. wells . Imm edi at e·

Watterson ' s Wate r Hauling,
reasonable ratet, immediat e
2, 000 gallon deUvary , cis tern•.
pools, well, etc. call 304-6762919.

*•·

I

Dillwd Water Service: Pools.

73

CROSSWORD

Footbell

10:05 (II M..,.,. !rom MalnllrMI
Americans Advise 11te Next
Preslden1
10:30 (l) EeetEncle,. A conflnutng
chronicle of 1he lives of
reeldente In London's East
End. (0:30)
(!) 8111ewkll

General Hauling

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimmin g
pools, eist ern a, welts. Ph . 61 4246-9285.

bo.-..

One be*oom apt In Point

85

1987 Chevy Astro v., bv Mark
Ill . laodod ond only 14.000
ml•. E,ceuent: contltlon. Ask·
lng I 12.900. .4. 000 off 1(11.
Colt 814- ...... 2049 .. .,tngs.

wheel•.

r~nt.

Residential or commwcial wirNew 1arviee or repairs.
Ucensed electrici~ . Ettimme
free. Ridenour Ela(trical. 304876-1788.

· Match-Up San Francisco
49ars a1 Chicago.Bears
CIJ
(J) Macayver
MacGyver's Infatuation with
a woman of mystery may
prove fatal. (R) I;!
IZJ Celebration of Amer\~t'l
Wlldlfe .
(!) Sml1hoonlan World
Celebra18 crea1ors of
museums refteC11ng
accompllshmen1s of
Americans. E;1
GIJ 1111121 N - n tltck's
how-1o books are banned
a~d become the obJBC1 01
bOOk burning. C
tD fill MOVIE: Unau111ortnd
Biography ol Jane Fonda
t!3l PrtmeNewa
IBl MOVIE: Lucky Luke
II! Munier, 8be Wroll E;1
12!1 ... llltvltle Now
8:05 (II MOVIE: The Llt11
. Olnouur (NA) (1 :40)
1:30 CD NFL Mondey Nlghl
Mapzlne
llDJ DIUI Coming ol Age
Dick Is upset Ia lind 1hat he
can't finance a new car on
his lncoma. E;1
1:00 8 (2) 1111 MOVIE: 'A SIGning
111 Fulham County' NBC
Monday Night 1111te Movlea
(J)

NORTH

+Q ~

Fred Hamilton is tbat rare expert
when an unusual play is
Sitting East and defending·
three diamonds doubled, he made a
highly dramatic but effective play
when he eventually got on lead.
The auction was normal. North
sensed that the opponents were about
to stop at a heart partial. so he stuck in
a two-no-trump bid to ask his partner
to bid a minor suit at lhe three-level.
This works fine if partner has four
cards in one of !be minors and a few
high cards. Otherwise it may be tights
out for North-South. When South set·
tied in three diamonds, Hamilton, sit·
ling Easl, was happy to double.
West led tbe spade king and received a discouraging seven from
East. So West led a low club, covered
by the jack and queen. Declarer won
bis ace and played back a spade. West
took the ace and now led a heart. Declarer won dummy's ace, ruffed a club
and shed dummy's small heart on the
jack of spades. Fred Hamilton rulled
and found the one card in his band tbat
could set !be contract. He played the
king of diamonds right into !be A·Q in
dummy. Declarer. ruffed another club
and ruffed a heart In dummy . But now

llll Ev.,tng Newt
12!1 Crook and Cheta

Ing.

Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Anytime. C.ll 614-446-740 4-No
Sunday calls.

Exteru:ted werrenty, loaded.
., ........ 8778.
.

BRIDGE

tDI ero..n..
fBI Nlllh1 Coun
12!1 Vld..COUntry

(IJ

896-3802

1971 Ford F-100 half ton.
eng_i_n_e rebuilt In 1988 .
•uoo.oo. 304-1711-1110.

Vans&amp; 4 W.O.

beneath It: " Please Use SIDE DOOR."

liJ Sponawomen
of 11te Yur
a Monday

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Gallpolill, Ohio

w.,._,

Women Walk · Through These Doors." Someone penned

a

SWEEPER _,d se&gt;Ning machine
repair, .,.,,, end suppll•. Pick

stump

UNSCRAMBL E ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Tidbit - Visor - Mound - Vendor - SIDE DOOR
Sign over door to beauly salon: "The Mos1 Beautilu l

ffi NFL Mondlly Night

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnoonditkJnal . llfltlme guaran·
tee. Local refllf'ences lJrnis hed.
Free estimatea. Call coll ect
1· 614-237-0488, d.,- or night.
Ro ger s Bas e ment
Waterproofing.

Complete the chuckle (lu0ted
by f111ing in the m1sS1ng wo rds
you develop from S!ep No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

hosts The Tonlgh1 Show In a
~oof s1arrlng Ed McMahon.

cond. •950. Call 614-2681332.

1988 ChiOIV S-10 King Cab.
Aulometic Ov•dr~e. AC, AM·
FM radio. ;..mp ••s. sport·
3 tone grey paint.
814-912· 3850.

ClilclnnaU
t!3l tnolde Politico '81
II! Canoon Expro11
12!1 You Can lila Sblr
8:35 (I) Andy Orilfttll
7:00 CD Our Hou• Friends
(2) PM Mllgozlne
(!) SporlfC.nter (L)
lll Dlll Currant Affair
(I) (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewiiHour (1 :00)
·
llDJ 1111121 1111 Wheel of
Fonune 1;1
tD fill Three'a Company
t!3l Monoyllne
1H1 Cheers
II! Miami VIce C
12!1 Crook and Chao
7:05 (I) 9 to 5
7:30 D (2) Fanlly Feud
(!)NFL Triva
(IJ En1erbllnmant Tonlgh1
D CIJ USA Today
GIJ 1111121 dJI Jeopafllrll;l
tD fill M' A'S'H

;R~ 1111 ALF ALF guest

Home
Improvements

0

PRI NT NUMBERE D LETTERS IN
THESE SQU ARE S

0

7:35 (II Sanlor!l and Sc)n
8;00 (II MOVIE: Father Murphy

.

Fit hens for ul• 304-87&amp;-

Hay &amp; Grain

WHAT Po YD_u ' CON$lDE'R

PERS 0NNEl
:..:::..-----.--

tnfor,...tion.

Rotary t;~r ceble tool drilling.
Most wells comphrtedsamaday.
Pump ~ties end service. 304-

Mercury

1878 Ford ph:kup truck wtlh
I&lt;&gt;PI&gt;"'· Cllll14-387·7831.

64

1973 ShMta 21 rt, good con d.
304-773-5828 for mo re

1911 Oldo Cull . . Cll;lio, 2
1980

8

a

5 :00p.m .. 814-742· 2304

House calls ' on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Spedeling in Zenith. Call
304-5711-2398 o• 814-448·
2454.

I I Is I I

.. fill IBl WKAP In

1982 Holiday Rambler 31 ft.
camper trailer for sale. $9250.
1978 Harler;- Low Rider. 9000
actual miles. $3000. Call aft er

Fetty Tree Trimmin g.

nlc.,

~

~

L._.J.-...1..._l.._.J.- ...1..
. .....J.

llDl Ill il2l CBS New•

•

:

While helping a den1ilt wi1h pa·
11en1s' Char1B, Hwu apparent that he
.
.
.
.
was dislracted. and I had 10 repeal
..--------~ myseff many times. Now I know what
-r-T....:R,....:I:_,:;c:-=.
E ...:D:..,.~~ pulling - is like.

CIJ Dlll ABC NowtQ
.IZJ Body Electrtc

g•.

I I' I 1

I HIU IM TI

IiiandS..Adam
~ho1 Jack Reynolds
Wes1 (R)
.

WfRE GOIIJG ro ~ LAlli.

g:

·14 . p

(!) Nlgh11y 8ualn... Report

runs good, hllh mileage.
'2.450.00. 304- 75-3213.
DAHt',

II

8:05 CIJ Lltvemt and 811\~ey
8:30 D (2) ' 1!11 NBC Nlgh11y Newo

-

be-

..

TUHOY

(2) CIJ • CIJ GIJ 1111121
® Newo
C!l SpontLook
IZJ Coloraoundo

•

11!1 Fondango

1978 Dodge Motor Home, ~.2
ft .. sleeps 6. roof air. alec.
hook-up, battery,
34.000 .•.
orginiel miles.. EJCeal. cond. ·
181100. Fl•m. Coli 814·4469421 or 441-7441 .

81

.

I[! F11 Alben

·79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

17160. CIH 814-"411-9421 or
4411-7441.

1982 Pontiac J 2000, auto, air.
good co~d~ton. 114-992·6860

.

IIJI ShowBiz Today
IDJ Foot. of Ufe

Set of 4 Ctliforn'a wire chrome
·14" rimt. $200 sm. louver for
1986 Cem•o. $126. Call 814245-9294.

cond., AC., t-top, stereo .

1 .400 lb Perc:hon a.e.,m work
m•e. 304-5711-2438.
2197.

&amp; Accessories
- -- - - , - --

th e

RHECLO

Pan4

Boats and
Motors for Sale

::::

,o fo rm four simple words .

Fl WOI1f\, !11

Ill fill Hoppy Doyo

;7;,6;;==A;::ut;o::::;P;a~rt;;:
s ==
- -

}ow

(!) Dr. Who Claws ol Axos.

1977 Monte Clrlo. Alit. $226.
CIIII14-...... H11 lfl• 8 PM .

lnformetion Clll 814-317· n57.

1979 TrMI AM. EIClsl. ?.:!
Complltolv - - .
Ilium.
n.w
upw
•h•p. Clll 814-2411-8480.

Furnillhld one bedroom apt
. eliltt• ontv. no pets. clfl .,..;.
5:00. 304-8711-3788.

' I

1985 Chevy Suburb.,. Good
cortd. Cell 114-2151-1531.

I bou,.. -

1988 Pontiac Bonnwllle LE.
PW. POL. arut.o. 1111. AM· FM .
E -. Cond. Priced riohl. Cell
114-"411-8117 lift• 8 l&gt;M.

e.-psted. epplllr'IOII. wlltw .,d
tr.. h pldlupa pravkled. Malnt•
Mnct t• ltvWtg dose to ~hop­
ping. blnlts and tchoola. For
mort information c:llll 304-1123718. E.O.H.

Pl. .n . very ot.-t 1n d good
con d. no p«s, phone :J94-87fS.
1388.

1882 Hondo Acoo•d hllchbodc.
Exeet cond.Ceii814-446-.,2B
•11•10 PM .

1974 Corvette Strlngr.,. E.::el.
Red &amp; vellowdellciou1. Melrose,
Jonathan, ldered. Wlne••P·

1979 Buldt Eledro. Full po_,
Runo_vooct. e1200: C.ll 11.:
2511-H21 Ill• II PM.

I

1--- - - - -- - -

0111gonwynd Cett.-y tt.nMI.
CFA ~,,., .,d 81~•• kll·
tens. AKC Chow puppiM. New
Himeleyen
Clll 11 4441-31.,.Bfl•7PM.

71 Auto's For Sale

-ch 81&lt;- Mldd1•ort. Ohio.
2 becl'oom t.Jrnilhed tpwtment,
utlltl• p1kl. Nf•ance~. Phone
30 4- H:Z. 28 811.

3 room apart,.,.,. for
p Ilona 304-8711- M 1 2.

71 Auto'• For Sale

1917 Ford A8ro Sr. Van.

neighborhood, phone 304-1711082.

1988 2 bedroom moblt homo.
304-8711-7988.

Groom end Supptv Shop-Pet
Grooming. All brHds ... AII
styles. lams PM Faod Deal•.
Julie Webb Ph. 11.4-441-0231 .

Hoy. 304-9111-3888.

~ bedroam mobile ho,_ qui&lt;O

2 be"'oom unfurniehed tretl•.
water end SIIWIIH' included. 30~
676-1071.

· ··~

Cle~m ttraw.

1==~=:=:~:::=::=;.L:':15:0:· :C:•':'=·~14-:":99::2·:8:3:20:.:::.J
SNAFUIIl by llruce Beat1ie

r

Pets for Sale

~

•so.

614-"48·0288

'

·

56

1 27&amp; getlon fuel tank with
mmd. Goodconcftion.
Call

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

J&amp; SAJRNffURE
1415 Ealtern Aw.
4 drswer cheet, 848. 5 -drawer
chMt, 854.95. 5 pc. wooden
dinnette sett. $199. 95.

equipped kitchen. air. t210 plus
dep. Cell &amp;14-44&amp;.0603 or
446-21158.

Fir.,..ood for ~tie, 136 1 load.
CoH 614-258-9301 0 , 21116574.
Bunk bedl·complele, e.tttra long
lingle mattrea. Cell fl 1~4484922.

Open SAM to 6FIM. Mon thru

Furnished effidend•· •145 &amp;
up. UtiUtiM paid. Sh•e bath.
4411-"418 aile&lt; 7 PM.

Dakota Farm Home. Built on
yourtot. t12. 99S.up.Seeaur
Modo'. c.n 1·814-8811-7311.
Sot of bookcloebunkbedo: 886,
Colt 814-2511-1332.

821Second.EJCCel. oond. 2BA ..

114-992-7880.

1908 Fleetwood. 1b54. bottle
gu ha• and hot water. $3000.
Cali 114-843-5310 CK 8148 43-5408 anytime. Aak for
Donny .

House In Eettern Local Schoo l
Oistrict. Cell 814-992-6161.

Mt. Vernon Ave. small 2 bed
room . b•ern.~t. g•age. unfur-

814-"46-1802.

'f;·o;•"

47 Wanted to Rent

Wntern Boots, Red Wing work
sho•. Huah Puppy dr., shoe~,
Quality , -'ectfon, greet prices.
Wad• work &amp; wutem, S1ste
At. 141, touth of Waterloo,
814-843-2158.

7672. Hou" 9· 5.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

w / e,; pando ro om , 2 BR . ,
w / well e.-pet. air condition.
w / orwithout fur niture. Nat. gas
furnace on private lo t. May rent
e to e PM. e 1 4-~e-

'

49

'

uo.
011 ~;.~:::;;;;~:;~::=r~~~~~~~~~~

All..,. fi&lt;IIWood. GaoJ ptd&lt;up,
030. Spl~ lo loodod. Col 8142611-1788.

514-,.....o&amp;o3 a. 4411-2158.

Main. free tl'teriOr, 3 beli'oom
u tnch, family room wood burn-

Land contract, large living room

best off.,. 1 IIINn mO'Ner,
heat.-, axcel. cond .. 1150
Call 814-4411-2297.

8211h Sec. heel. oond.• 2 BA .,
Vallav Furniture
equipped kttchen, air. A...llable · NeW and used furniture and
Nov. 1st. •22&amp; plus dep. Cell i epplic:anc... Call 814-448·

Modern 3 bedroom country
home. kJCIIted on Ashton Mlhon
Road. call 304-876-1113.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Sl&gt;lldout mal&gt;le homo lolt fo•

Very nice ~wa bedroom.
mant $22!5. momhfy or tell on
lllf'ld contract. Ref•enoe lr'ld
dopooll. 614-742-2728. -

3 bectoom home. 1% baths.
c.-peted. central air-heat. lr&gt;
c •Mt In Point Pleasant. 304.
675-2702"' 304-5711-2147.

Ing firepalce. new central air,
lerge dectc.. wooden ~orega
bldg. priced mid 60' S, owner
must tell make offer, 304-6757 438 after 6 :00PM.

Ouoon tlzo

Garage sPace. downtown Point
Pfe•ant. 20x20. E•IY ace••·
seana. 304-895-3450.

2'h eeree bonom land loc•ad ·· - -- - - - - -- approJC. 16 mi. •· of Gellipoll.
old Rl. 7 IVolllll' VleN D•.) Col
New completely furnished
81 4-2511-1774.
ip.-tment • moi;Jile home in
city. Aduhs only. Parking. Call
3 lot•· Venice, Fie., 3 mil• from 814- ...... 0338.
.
beach. Saleortrlde foranytNng
o.f . . . "'81ue. Cal 814-44&amp;-BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
8898.
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES. 538 Jockton
A lin on, l•ge bulclng lott.
Pike from t183 • mo. Walk to
mobile home. permltt.t, public
ohop ond movloo. 114-"46water. elso river loti. Ctvde
25ea. E.O,.H .
Bowen. J•. 304-1711-2338.

'·I

8

Epltodel A Matter ol Faith

motor. 4bassseats. •1800. Call
814-387·0251 .

~oototton bed whh

7479.

rent. Famltv
PrideF.-ry,
MobileW.
Home
Parle.
O.llipolls
Ve .
_3:-0_4-_8_7_&amp;-..,.30_7_3_
. - ----

Apartment
fOr Rent

75

0 four
Reor ronga lone rs of
sc ram bled words

· 8:00 (I) Bononu: Thtl Loa1

18ft. out bo•d. new trail er. 30
HP Merrurv m ot or &amp; tr olly

IBM PC co mputer, 5 12-K m•
mory, SBOO; Call 814-2588826 aft" 6 PM.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeF'ark.
Route 33, Nonh of Pomwoy:
Rental trail••· Cal 814-992·

t;.;::;:~:;;::::====r---------"""1

J)!'ice deiligner.
muttishoe
tlar pricing
discount:
or famltv
store.
Retail prka unbeliiiNeblefortop
qual~y oho•
,..teed
from t 19. to $80. over 250
brandt 2800 rtvl•. S17,900 to
$29,900: inventory, training.
fixtures, eirf•e. grand op.,lng.
ate. Can open 15 dllfs. Mr.
LoughUn 1812)8811-4228.

"""

n. '1'V lilting il&lt;OOJp, Inc:

S@~c!UlA-~£~ss

TIIAT DAllY
PUULII
_ _ __ _.:._.:; Edlto4 bv CLAY I . POlLAN _.;:__ _ _ __

EVENING

1990 Honda CR 260 A: phone
304-8711-4681 ohw 5:00PM.

0

-

MON., OCT. 24
01iY

Motor cycle trail er for sale tor 2
or 3 -bikM. Call 614-448- 80 93.

()

Wheelc:h•r• new or used. 3
whutad elactric s cooters. Call
Rog.-. Mobitty collect. 1-114870-9881 .

Trailer Space for Rent . 0!111

"I always come in here to kill
t'lffie While ffiY Wife is at the
laundromat."

0

Television
-Viewing
8

Collector's ltem· 1917 Honda
300 Dream .• 100% orgin ill.
Show room co ndit io n. Cell
814-387-0680.

64 Misc. Merchandise

814-"411-4634.

Cl~~:::••"':''1H.'!t.~~~..,~~~~

, Antiques

0

46 Space for Rent

w_."'_,_ _J

oro~~~

1987 Honda 4 track. Excel.
cond. 81000. Ca ll' 6 14- 2661725 efter fi PM .

Buy or Sell. Riverh. e Antiques,
1124 E. Main Str88'1, Pomeroy.
Hl?urs: M,T,W 10e.m . to 8p.m..
SUnday 1 to 6p.m . 614-9922528.

Hotef-814-446-9680.

knO'N, 1111d NOT to emd monev

2 bedroom 1 2x60.
304-675-2722.

53

Rooma for rent· week or month.
Stertlng at S120 a mo. Gill la

do bu ilin. . with people you

ba~ement,

m uct. m ore. Pidtens U s edFurn~

Furnilhed room-919 Seco nd
Ave.• Gallipolis. 8135 ' mo.
Utilitiee ,:.id. Sin glem•e. Sh.-e
bath. Call441-44 18afler7PM .

I NOTICE I
THE 0 HIO VALLEY PUBLIS HING CO . r.commendl that you

31

IF ~&amp; oiDII'T WA~T.A Wo.lt"(;Oe&gt;,

1988 Honda 4 w.haeh.- M odel
300. E ~el. con d. Call81 4-388-9718.

t ure, 304-176- 1450 .

45 Furnished Rooms

Business
Opportunity

through the mlil untl you
lnvestlg.ted1he oHerlng.

Motorcycles.

Ex eel. cond. Call 6 14- 44 8·
244&amp;. esk for Pau l

4 piece Ban ette bedroom suite
living room t uhet, new rectinar:
dlnerte l ets, dr.... chest
t win cenopy bed, elec. 'he11:11rS:

2 BR . apt t . 8 closets kit cheneppl. furnis hed. w M Mr· DIVer
hoolt- up, ww c wpet. newly
paint ed. dedc.. From t176. Now
accepting HUO. Regency , Inc.
""''· Coli 304-875-6104. 0&lt;
675-- 5 388 or &amp;76- n 38.

The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1981 Honda 200 SX 4 wheeler

PM. 114-742-2381.
Wood fu r niture ''~'*

Monday, October 24, 1988

Monday, October 24. 1988

YTR .
ZRTYTF
VJLCR
· Y~terday'a Cryptoqacite: WORK IS SOMETHING
CAN COUNT ON, A TRUSTED, LIFELONG FRIEND
WHO NEVER DESERTS YOU.- MARGARET BOURKE-1
'WHITE

jvou

�Page

Parts of Ohio may get some snow today

Squads have 9 weekend calls

Weather
Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight: Cloudy, with a chance
of showers or snow flurries. Lows
will be In the upper 30s. Winds
west 15 to 25 mph. Chance of
precipitation 40 percent.
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 50.

Setting out to stump for the get the jobs . That's the substance
Massachusetts governor in of it."
Bentsen, the senior senator
nearby New York, the black
Chicago preacher and civil rights from Texas, spoke sternly on the
leader accused the Bush cam· Issue of racism In a . Sunday
palgn of trying to spread "horrl· morning television Interview,
ble" fears - and In a union rally suggesting a subtle fear tactic In
at Kll~Jllesha Lake, N.Y., he · Bush campaign advertisements
denounceed the vice president that focus on a black murderer's
for contriving star-spangled escape from the Massachusetts
themes In repeated attempts to prison system while on furlough
question Dukakis's patriotism.
under Dukakis's administration.
"We love the flag. We pledge
''When you add it up," Bentsen
allegiance. We love our country. said, "I think there Is (racist
That's not the Issue," Jackson .appeal) and that's unfortunate. I
said. "More and more American think that's one ofthereasons the
nags are made In Taiwan and American people will turn
South Korea. We get the joy; they against them, with that kind of
campaign."

By Unlled Press lnl.e rnatlonal
Eight people were killed In
seven traffic accidents across
the Buckeye State during the
weekend, Ohio Highway Patrol
officials said today.
·
The only multiple-fatality accident occurred Saturday on a
Columbiana County road. Killed
In the .one-car crash were Ed·
ward J . Delrio, 18, and Daniel S.
Connley, 15, both of Alliance.
Also killed this weekend were:
Frlda.v
Batavia: Jesse R. Combs, 14,
Milford, when his bicycle was
struck by a car on Ohio 131 In
Clermont County.
Saturday
Akron: Donald E. Miller, 22,

I

Thelma KellenbeJ'8'lr

"';

ThelmaM. Kellenberger, 63, of
Dublin, died Sullday at Riverside
Hospital In Columbus.
A daughter of the late Eber E.
and Ethel Gorell Ours, she was
born Sept. 13, 1925 In Portland.
She was a member ·of the
Worthington United Methodist
Church and a retired office
manager for Carter, Schwartz
and Schmidt Radiologists,
Columbus.
Survivors Include her husband,
Rollin V. Kellenberger; a son and
· daughter-In-law, Gregg and. Kat·
hleen Kellen berger, Worthing.
ton; two grandchildren; and a
sister, Garnet Johnson, Belpre.
. Besides her parents. she. was
preceded In death by a daughter,
Janet.
Services will be 10 a .m. Tuesday at Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home, · 515 High St., Worthington. Burial will be In
Concord Cemetery, Grove City .
Friends may call at the funeral
home !rom 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 today
(Monday) . In lieu ot fiowers, the
famllly askS that .contributions
be made to Worthington United
Methodist Church, the American
Cancer Society, or another favor·
lte charity.
·

Gamet Williamson

243

Pick 4
. 6590

Page 3

•

..

NYQU/L

NIGHmME
COLDS MEDICINE
IIEG. OR CHERRY FLAI.tll!
6 OZ. 8/ZE

TRI·BUFFERED

BUFFERIN
.I'Ktl. OF IIIII

Dukakis ·acknowledges soine
points in campaign hindsight

I

Hemlock Grange 2049 has
scheduled a community potluck
dinner this Saturday, 6 p.m., for
all Meigs County grangers and
guests. The guest speaker will be
Diane E. McVey, audiologist,
Athens, speaking on the topic
"Why Can You Hear but Not
. Understand."

MENNEN

THERASRAN·M
MUU/VITAMINS
I PKS. OF 1IJO.f'I.US 311 FIIEE

SPEED STICK
A~TI-PERSPIIIAIITmEmiOIIANT

SPORT T.UC, IIIUSK, UIISCEIITEII.
FRESH 011 SI'ICE
Z.Z$ OZ. SIZE

!
.
1

WHITE RAIN

CDNAIR

•

Veterans Memorial

SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER
ABIJirlt

SHAMPDOOR
CONDITIONER

Hospital news
I HAIR

EXTRA BOIIY-15 OZ. SIZE OR
SPRAY-REG. UNSCENTED, lll1IIA

OZ. SIZE OR HAJR IIWAY-ll Dl.
tHf NDff-AEIIOIOL-1 Dl. lllf; IIOfllllUTIIA IOIW-1 OZ. lllf;

SCENTED OR ULTIIA UNSCENTED

1 OZ. IIZE

STYUNG SEL
4 OZ. SIZE 011
STYLIIIG
SPIIITZ
B OZ. SIZE

REG. OR MINT
6.4 OZ. TUBE

'"''·'7'1•'"

By United Press International
With two weeks until Election
Day, Democrat Michael Dukakls
acknowledges "a certain amount
of frustration" In his presidential
campaign and thlnRs "maybe ....
1 should have tried to respond
earlier" to at tacks by rival
George Bush.
The Republican vice president,
meanwhile, leading the Massa·
chusetts governor In public opin·
ton polls, calls It a "ridiculous"
sign of desperation that the
·Dukakls camp Is alleglnk-· his
advertisements are filled with
lies and racism.
The two men stumped on
opposite sides of the country
Monday, with Dukak!s In Callfor·
nla and Bush In New England.
Dukakls arranged to move
through the San Francisco area
today befor~. going to Denver,

'

.

...

-~;,1~.'-t•

.,...

~I' ·

where he will appear tonight on governor acknowledged It took
ABC's "Nightllne" program,
his campaign a while to realize
while Bush planned events In that In a national conte~t "you're
Ohio all day.
suddenly In a very different
Dukakis, lighting perceptions world."
thhathehasfallenbehlndtostay,
"I think there's a certain
was asked In an interview amount of frustration," he said.
televised Monday night on CNN's "Who says what for 45 seconds on
"Larry King Live" program how · the 6 o'clock news makes :the'
he lost a 14-polnt lead over Bush difference In the particular day,
In polls following July's Demo- and It took us a while to
cratlc National Convention.
understand that."
"Well, I'm not sure these poll
However, he mainta ined, the
numbers are ever really real," Democratic effort Is coming on
he began, but went on to say, strong down the stretch toward
"You know, the Republicans Nov. 8 - and even though he is
made a deliberate decision to run dissatisfied With the campaign
a kind of negative attacking bitterness, he does not have
· campaign and maybe, with the lasting personal animosity tcr·
benefit of hindsight, I should ward Bush.
have tried to respond e&lt;~rller . "
"I get angry at some of the
Asked If he now has a feeling of things that I see," he explained.
"gee, we should have done It "(But) we've got a shot. We're
(dllferennvl." the three-term
Continued on page 10

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Members of Middleport VII·
!age Council will meet lnfor·
mally Thursday evening to dis·
cuss further possibilities of a vii·
!age-owned cable television ser·
vice for the town.
Meeting In regular session
Monday night, Mayor Fred Hoi·
!man reported that Cable Servi·
ces, Inc. , has completed Its study
on the construction ol a vlllage·owoed system. Cost would ·be
almost $300,000, based on 800
cable service customers In the
community. This would include a
system with at least 29 channels
plus other features and village
officials would select the chan·
nels to be supplied to the system.
Council members and Mayor
Holtman decided to meet Thurs·
day evening and discuss the plan
further and to discuss which
channels would be offered In a
village-owned system.
Meeting with cou neil Monday
night was John Koebel, local
area manager·tor Columbia Gas
of Ohlo, who explained that
according to present proposals
. Middleport VIllage will not be
permitted to negotiate as an
Individual community for gas
service contracts In the future. A
hearing
before the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio will
probably throw Middleport lntoa
regional group of communities
all of which' will have the sa me
rate for nat ural gas service.
Koebel was apologetic about
the development placing Middleport In the regional area plan
since the community bas always
negotiated Individually with the
company for gas rates In the
town and had Indicated that It
wish~ to continue that plan.
However, It was pointed out that
Consumers Counsel had for some
time been promoting the uniform
system and a hearing Is now

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will hold Its annual
Halloween party this Thursday
on the upper parking lot, starting
at 6: 30 p.m . with a performance
by the Meigs Ma rauders Band.
Costume judging, on the parkIng lot stage, will begin right
after the band's performance.
First, second and third place

'

of murder by Mason County jury
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStaiT

RITE ACCEPTS
ALL
MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

The \tinning numbers were
seven, 15, 22, 29, 35 and 38.
There were 231 tickets sold,
each worth $1,000, bearing five of
the numl5ers. There were 9,580
four-of-six tickets sold worth $69
apiece.
The top prize lor Wednesday's
drawing will be an estimated $3
million.

l4l•*

Files foreclosure suit

HERR'S

Farmers · Bank and Savings
Company has flied a foreclosure
action against Yvonne Scally,
Middleport, administratrix of
the estate of Thomas Christian
Scally II, deceased, et al ..
An action by Trlna T. Lee
against Lawrence R. Lee Jr. has
beer&lt;'lsmlssed.

No one hurt in accident

11Ja OZ.

1'11/CES EFFECTIYE OCT. 14 THRU OCT. JD. 1188 • WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUAMTITIES • MGT RESPOMSIBIE FOR TYPOBRAPHICAl ERRORS

RITE

Meeting Wednesday .

AID

A special meeting for Wild·
wood Garden Club's 50th ann!·
versary will be held Wednesday
!rom 1 to .3 p.m. at the home ot
Mrs. Michael Elberfeld.

nocent Monday of killing her
common-law
husband
Fred
Facemire last year.
Perry maintained throughout the
10-day trial that she and her
children were beaten and abused by
Facemire and that she reacted in·
stinctively in shooting Facemire after he threatened her life with a .38·
caliber Travis revolver in their

-LOcal news briefs___,

SMALL BAGS

A square dance will be held at
the old courthouse IQ Chester on
Friday from 8 to "11: 30 p.m.
Caller wfil be Jolin Coss. $2
donation at the door. $1 for
children under 12. Refreshments
will be sold. Everyone welcome.

POINT PLEASAN'r, W.Va. - Norma Jean Perry was found in-

living room at 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Point PleasanL
The 30-year-old Point Pleasant
woman . sat motionless apparentl y stunned - between her
defense
attorneys
Raymond
Musgrave and Stefben Littlepage,
when the verdict o the 10-woman,
two-man jury was announced in
Mason County Circuit Court Monday afternoon after one hour and 15
minutes of deliberation.
Afterwards she said, "I didn't
know what 1.o think. I didn't want
to move. It was like I froze."

•

No one was Injured In a car-tractor-trailer collision at 10 a .m.
Monday, In, Meigs County, on SR. 338, 0.2 miles east of mile post
2, according to the Meigs Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Wilma L. Powell, 38, Racine , was attempting to
make a right turn when her car was hit by the tractor-trailer
operated by Arthur J . Parks, 27, Trimble, Ohio, as Parks
attempted to pass. Damage was moderate to the car and minor
to· the tractor· trailer. There was no citation.

Council to meet tonight

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

Racine VIllage Council will meet In special session tonight
(Tuesday}, 6 o'clock, at the Shrine Park building'.

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

Trick or treat set Thursday .
.

I,

Tuppens Plains Trick or 'fl:eat night wUI be Thursday from
6 to 7 p:th.
Continued on page 10

Perry, who was hugged by
several family members and friends
after the trial was concluded and
who cried a few tears in their arms,
said the toughest part about lhe 10·
day trial was what to say to her two
children, Brian, 10, and Hope, 8.
At one point during the trial, the
children were in the counroom, but
Perry said she asked that they
leave, noting she didn't want them
to see the proceedings.
Asked what She would do Mon·
day afternoon now that she was
free, Perry thou$ht a moment, and
said, "I'm gomg to Ordnance
School...no, my kids are at home.
I'm going home," she said, her race
breaking into a wide grin.
'
Perry said she wanted to thank
h!lf attorneys, and people who supported her through the long ordeal.
"People were praying 'for. me. I
never really knew thai there was
. that many people who cared.".
Perry; who took the stand m her
own defense for the better part or
three days. said she hadn' t piepared
herself menially to testify. "It (the
testifying) was a last-minute thing."
The strategy or the defense at· ·
tomeys was to employ psychiatrists , .
to explain to the Jur,&gt;' the "battered
woman syndrome,' and how a
woman would react under il
"Bat~ woman syndrome" is
when a woman is physically,
sexually, emotionally and mentally
abused by her boyfriend a husband
in between intermittent periods or
carirlg and compassion by the
boyfriend or husbarid.
Continued on page 10

\
_,

~- -~

""--'"""'---

_,__ t _....____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ ..._ ___ ' - - - - · - - - - - - - " " " · - · - " - - · _ _ ; . - - - " --- - · - - · · - - " - ·

j ___ -·

I"'

sc heduled for the regional proposa l In November.
Mayor Hoffman and council
members expressed objections
to the new plan, but Koebel
commented that It was beyond
his doing anything about it.
Will Cost VIllage $17,000
Mayor Hoffman said that as a
result Middleport will probably
be paying a higher rate for gas
services and in addition, the town
will lose about $17,000 in free gas
each year used to heat the town
bulldhlgs. As a result of that loss,
the town will now have to pay out
· that $17,000 which will take
money from other services of the
town.

slon in Columbus.
A communication from the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources was read Indicating
that there has been no decision
reached by the department an
the town's appllcat)on for rtver
improvement funds . Mayor Hof·
!man also reported that the
charge for liability ins urance for
·town olflclals which comes due In
November Is up abeut $500 over
last year's charge.
Mayor Holtman was authorized to proceed with an appllca·
tton for Issue II funds amounting
to about $95,000. The funds would
be used for street and drainage
improvements on Pearl Street
between Hartinger Parkway and
Laurel St. An estimate prepared
by Floyd G. Browne and Associates Indicates that the Improve·
ments would cast $67,850 plus 15
percent lor engineering and
other services Involved in the
project.

Mayor Hoffman also said that
according to a notice on the
proposal regional plan, some
eight communities whose con·
tracts with the gas company will
not be expiring In time to fall
under the regional plan will he
permitted to negotiate IndividuIssues Reminder
ally for their future rates. How·
A reminder was Issued by
ever, Koebel commented that he Mayor Hoffman on .a one mill
does not believe this will happen. renewal levy to be voted upon In
He said that h~ expects those the town at the November
communities also to be placed In election. This levy will provide
a regional plan when their money needed to pay on the new
contracts explre.
fire truck, the mayor reported.
Going a bit further, Koebel also Mayor Hoffman also pointed out
commented that he could foresee that Middleport residents will
the possibility of one gas rate for vote on a one mill levy being
every community and city
placed before voters of Salisbury
served by Columbia Gas In the
Township In the November elecentire state. Pomeroy and Galli·
tion for cemetery malntainence.
polls are among the eight com- Middleport will vote on that
munities whose contracts do not measure since It Is .located In
explre at this time and hence,
Salisbury Township. However,
they do not !all into the regional
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that
plan. The entire matter Is In the
no cemetery within the village
hands of the Ohio Public Utilities will receive any benefits if the
Commission, Koebel stated.
levy Is passed. Passage of the
Mayor Hoffman expressed dis·
levy would mean that Middleport
satlfaction with the plan remark· · residents would pay out some
lng that the regional system $12,000 without receiving any
gives Middleport no say In the
benefits to cemeteries within the
future unless officials wish to go
Continued on page 10
to the Public Utilities Commls·

Pomeroy Chamber Halloween party
to be held on par!cing lo~ Thur~day

Nonna Jean Perry found innocent·

One person has winning lotto ticket

Square danoo Friday

........

~

Hynm sing scheduled

freak fruit and will light It with two candles. Her
JP'Bndson, Luke Ferguson, son of Amy and Glenn
Ferguson, New Haven, 'Is fascinated with the
pumpkin and all other Halloween things.

SIAM&amp;&lt;IE PUMPKIN - When Carol Sisson
selected her pumpkin for a j ack-o-lantern, ·s he
went for this Siamese one. While It Is attached at
the center and hal only one lop the Interiors are
completely separate. She carved two faces In the

;:::::::::::::::::: TABLETS OR
CAPLETS

Plan pot lu~k

Garnet' L. Williamson, 97,
Salem St., Rutland, a Rutland
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
businesswoman for a number of
ticket was sold bearing all six
years, died Saturday. Her birth·
numbers In this weekend's Super
day anniversary , at the Amerl·
care Nursing Center near Pome- . Lotto drawing lor a $9 million
jackpot, Ohio Lottery officials
roy following an extended Illness.
said Sunday.
Mrs. Williamson was born In
·Meigs County on Oct. 22, 1891, a
daughter of the late John William
and Retta Lyle Lutz. She oper·
ated the Williams Farm Supply
Gloria Sue Musser, Pomeroy,
IIi Rutland for,a number of years.
has
filed In Meigs County Com·
She Is survived by two nieces,
mon
Pleas Court lor a divorce
Helen Saxton, Logan, and Ka·
from
Michael Todd Musser,
thryn Sheets, Gaqtpolis; two
Racine.
nephews, Dr. John Lutz, Charles·
Connie Chevall!er, Racine, has
ton. W. Va. , and Hetzel Folden,
flied
for a divorce from Allen K.
· My.rtte' Beach, S. C, and several
grand nieces, nephews,and cou- Chevalier, Reedsville.
Restraining orders were
sins .
issued
against the defendants In
Besides her parents, she was
both
the
Musser and Chevalier
preceded In death by her bus·
acllons.
.band, Loren Williamson In 1953;
Dissolutions of marriage have
three brothers, Ray , Howard and
been
filed by Kimberly Ann
· Wayne Lutz, and a sister, Flor·
Hudson,
Pomeroy, and Kevin
ence Folden. ·
Hugh
Hudson,
Rutland; Charles
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
R.
Simms,
Langsville,
and Em·
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
mogene
J.
Simms,
Albany.
Home with tile Rev . Lloyd
blssolu ttons have been
Grimm officiating. Burial wUI be
granted
to Orva Jean Holter and
In the Danville Cemetery .
Harold
H.
Holter; Gary L. Griggs
F r iends may call at the funeral
and
Connie
L. Griggs.
)lome !rom 4 to 8 p.m . Tu esday.
A divorce was granted Edwina
Scott from Charles F. Scott, and
. . Qufzt •• 7 I
Edwlae Scott was restored to her
lormfr name, Bell.
Erla" (!Ietty) Christopherson,
A divorce was granted both
78, 1100 Powell St., Middleport,
parties in the case of Ronald Lee
died Sunday at Riverside Hospl·
Wag11er against Betty Louise
tal In Columbus following an
Wagner.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newap~~per

Middleport to discuss
own TV cable senrice

There will be a missionary
service at the Harrisonville Holl·
ness Chu reb on Wednesday, Nov.
2, at 7:30p.m. Sand artist, Rev.
Bob Everly, will be the guest.
Rev. Everly will be at the
Coolville A. W. M. Church on
State Roule 7, north of Tuppers
Plains, on Saturday, Nov. 5.

Saturday Admissions - Cecil
Karmen, 'Pomeroy; Dayton
McElroy, Racine.
Saturday Discharges- Bryan
Hoffman, Edna Leach, Lovercia
Evans, Cecil Smith.
Sunday Admissions -Charles
Bissell, Long Bottom; Wilda
Brinker, New Haven; Darlene
Johnson, Mason; Thelma Col·
llns, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges - Hazel
Oliver.

-.

1 Section. 10 Pageo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, October 25, 1988 •

Vol.39, No.1 19
Ccipyrlghtod 1988

·.

.

.

.

Am Electrlc 'Power ...... .. ... .. 27*
AT&amp;T ........ .. .......... ...... .... ...27~
Ashland 011 .. ... ... ... ... ........... 35
Bob Evans .......... ....... ..... .... 16*
Charming Shoppes ... .. ......... 15~
City Holding Co .. ......... ........ 34
Federal Mogul. ..... ..... .........49~
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .. ...... ,..... 50%
Heck's ..... .. ..... .............. ....... ~
Key .Centurion ............ ........16%
Lands' End ........... ...... .... .... 26%
Limited Inc .. ..... ................ .25*
Multlmedla Inc ................ .... 71
Rax Restaurants ............. ,. ... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ...... ... 13
Shoney's Inc .. .... ..... .......... .. .. .8
Wendy's Inti ...... ........... ... ... . 6%
Worthington Ind ........... ~ ..... 21~

A hymn sing will be held at
Morse Chapel Church, County
Road 35,
Racine-Portland
Road, on Saturday at 7 p.m. The
Gabriel Quartet wfil sing. Everyone welcome. A revival wUI be
held at Morse Chapel Church
Oct. 31 through Nov. 5 with Rev.
Ralph Workman of Gallipolis.
Revival services will be at 7 p.m.
nightly.

Mos tly clear lonlght. Low lo
mid· 30s. Wednesday, mostly
sunny, highs near 50.

'

Missionary servioo

extended Illness.
Mrs. Christopherson was born
Nov. 5, 1909, at Harrisville, Pa., a
daughter of the late DeLoren and
Lulu Clair McCue Martin. She
was employed as an office
worker at Midwest Steel and at
OhiO University In Athens before
her retirement.
Mrs. Christopherson was a
member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, the Women's
AuxUiary at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Organization.
Surviving are five grandchildren
Harry Pickens, Jr. , Janet Peav·
ley, both of Pomeroy, and Nels
Pickens, Marte Phillips and Luke
Pickens, all of Racine. Two
nephews and three great·
grandchildren also survive.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband Nils Christopheson In 1969;
a daughter, Chris Pickens In
1971, and a brother, Bob.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
•Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James
Seddon officiating. Bur tal will be
In Greenwood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 9 a.m. until the time
of services on Wednesday.
Friends may make contributions
In her memory to the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center.

Divorces sought

Daily Number

Dally stock prices
(AI of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt. Ellis .. Loewl

Akron, In .a one-car accident on
an Akron city street.
Ravenna: Steven M. Francis,
20, Rootstown, In a two-vehicle
accident on Ohio 14 In Portage
County.
Hamilton: Kevin Scenters, 20,
Hamilton, In ·a two-vehicle accl·
dent on U.S. 127 In Butler
County .Sunday
Upper Sandusky: Wlllls J .
Henline, 50, Gibsonburg, when
the car In which he was riding
striiCk a tree along U.S, 23 In
Wyandot County.
Bellefontaine: Mildred B.
Orss, 76, West Liberty, In a
two-vehicle accident on U.S. 681n
Logan County.

•

Ohio Lottery

Stocks

deaths

Area deaths

and Berryville, in northeast
Arka nsas, registered 1.341nches.
Lesser amounts fell In much of
the res t of Arkansas, Tennessee
and Texas.
High pressure over the Pacific
Nor thwest and the cent ral Rock·
les created a balmy autumn day
fr om the Wes t Coas t eas t to the
Pl ains states.

' Forecast
· Extended
Wednesday thrOIJih Friday
A chance of showers In the
northeast Wednesday, otherwise
mostly cloudy. Fair Thursday,
with a chance of rain Friday.

1

8 weekend

first snowfall of the season
Rain was also forecas t over
moved south and east ear ly today
Pennsylvania, New York state,
and wa s expected to spr in kle
New Jersey and New E ngla nd,
more snow over par ts of Michl· . but sunny skies were expected
gan, lll lno ls, Indiana, Mi nnesota,
today for most of the rest of the
Wisconsin and Oh io.
nation, the National Weather
The weather system also Service said.
spread as far south as Texas a nd
Live Oak, Texas, a suburb
Mississippi, bringing showers
nor theas t of San Antonio, r e·
and thunder storms with lt.
cetved 1. 7 Inches of rain Sunday,

By 1Jalled Press International
A cold front that·dumped snow
over the upper Great Lakes
states and brought Chicago Its

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend; three calls Saturday and six calls Sunday.
saturday a t $: 25 a . m., Racine to Eagle Ridge Road for Dora
Hysell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:09a.m.
to Bailey Run Road for Cecil Karmen to Veterans Memorial
_Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9: 23a .m. to Bigley Ridge Road fo r
Edna Tanner to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Sunday at 12:23 a.m., Middleport to Diamond St. for Terry
Harper who was treated but not transported; Pomeroy at 12: 24
a.m . to an auto accident on Bear Wallow Ridge; no Injuries were
reported; Tuppers Plains at 6: 41 a.m . .trinsported William·
Grueser to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 11:16 a.m. to · •
Stlversvllle Road for VIolet Brewer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 6:56 p.m. to Hartinger Parkway and
Pearl St. for Charles Searles to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 8:44 p.m. to Scout Camp Road for Nellie Perry to
Holzer Medical Center.

·Ohio records

Bears edge
San Francisco
49ers, 10-9

•

-Local news briefs·-

Bush. .. Continued from page

Monday, October 24, 1988 •

Pomaroy_;.Middlaport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

prizes will be awarded to child·
ren In four dllferent age groups.
including, preschool through kin·
dergarten; grades one ·through
three; grades four through six;
and grades 7 and 8.
Candy will also be given out to
the children and eacl. bag will
contain a gift certificate from
Pleaser's Restaurant.

TOYS COUECI'ED FOB CHILDREN- Area
motorcycll&amp;lll collected eDOUJh toys to require six
vehicles 1o transport t}lem Monday to the
Salva&amp;loa Anny Headquarters In Pomeroy. The
collecttoa was the re~ult of the annual toys for loll
ride beld Sa&amp;urdiQ' from the Boad81de Park on
Boote S3 to the River boa&amp; Inn where a party was
held. OJect of the ride was to collect toys lor

'

Local merchants and restau·
rants have all joined to make the
party a success by donating
candy, p r izes and gift
certificates.
.
WMPO Radio will also do a live
remote broadcast during the
party.
The party Is being held In
conjunction with the merchants'
Moonlight Madness Sale.

underprtvUeaed children of Melp Couoty·fot the
upcoming holldiQ' season. Pictured are Erica
Meadows and Mrl. Dora Wining, of the Salvation
Army, seued oa couch, an4l standing al back,
lrorn left, Pete WIIUa11111, Dudley Meadows,
Nancy Woolard, Sherry Swisher, Jo Frye, Jenny
Thabet and Kallay Meadows and son, Matlhew.

.

'

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