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                  <text>Dukakis says
he is gaining
on opponent

NL
of

taken late last week and pubol error.
lished Tuesday, showed Bush
A CBS News-New York Times
poll, meanwhile, of 1,287 regis- leading by 11 points In Callfornla,
a critical state that represents
tered voters Friday through
the largest prize Nov. 8 with lts47
Monday, gave Bush an even
larger lead of 54 percent to 41 electoral votes.
percent. A previous survey,
taken a few days before Bush's
That poll certainly was bad
generally accepted victory IIi the
news
lor Dukakls because It Is
final presidential debate Oct . 13, .
found him with a slimmer edge widely believed even among
over hls rival, 50 percent to 45 supporters that he cannot win
wlthou t . carry.l ng Callfornhi.
percent.
A Los Angeles Times poll,

however, were broad and dis·
quieting to Democrats, as one
poll even got specific enough to
find 75 percent of voters think
both men make unfair charges In
their advertisements yet Bush
benefits more.
A Gallup Organization weekend survey of 1,232 registered
voters found Bush ahead of
Dukakls with 50 percent support
to 40 percent. The poll, wh!ch had
given Bush a 6-polnt lead two
weeks ago, had a 3-polnt margin

By United Press International' peeled In Chicago after starting
Michael Dukakls maintains hls the day In Denver, while the vice
Democratic presidential bld Is -president's agenda had him
gaining strength with more tele- moving from Michigan to
vision' exposure. but Republican Montana.
Bush turned down an opportunGeorge Bush . Is . riding a new
wave of poDs that show his rival Ity to Join Dukakls on a special
weakening down the stretch ABC "Nlgl!tllne" show from
Denver, and the underdog used
toward Election Day.
Perhaps symbolizing the oppo- the 90-mlnute live Interview
site campaign assessments, Du· •Tuesday night to spurn the latest
kakls decided to fly east as Bush round of polls showing Bush's
headed west this morning; the lead solldltylng.
The public opinion gauges.
Massachusetts governor was ex-

•

WednesW!y. October 26. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
612
Pick 4
2039
Super Lotto
2-13-23-26-35-38

Page 5

•

Shop Kroger For

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Val.39, No.121
Copyrighted 1988

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availatUe, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck which · will
entitle you to purc:hase the advertised Item at the advenised price
within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon wilt be accepted per item
purchased .

1988, IN GALL!I"OUS .LIID POII£10¥ SIOIES.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD
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TRICK 'R TREAT - I t was dlfftcult to tell just
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or the kindergarten younpters who got all
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§DO

CO'LUMB'uS, Ohio (UPII Democratic National Chairman
Paul Kirk says Michael bukakls
. . can win the presidential election,
but It will take "a relentless,
continuing, tough-It-out" effort
durlna the next two weeks. ·
Kirk and Democratic State
Chairman James Ruvolo met
with reporters Wednesday to
evaluate the presidential campaign, which the national chairman said has been made negative and distorted by Republican
presidential nominee George
Bush.
"We are going to send a
wakeup call to the American

t "

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class youngsters to the hospital Wednesday to
trick or treat the patients. Some they 8aw In the
activity room, others they visited In their rooms.
Afterwards there was party time with the hospital
staff serving orange koolald Wid chocolate
cookies to the children.

Democrats feel · Dukakis can
-still win ~with-~ relentless effert

Available At Kroger
Oct. 27th. ·

~

2 Secllons, 12 Pages,
A Multbnedla Inc. Newspaper

·Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio, Thursday, October 27, 1988

At Last On Videocassette From MCA ••

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY-Each of these advertised items is required
to be readily aveiJabte for ·sale in each Kroger Store, except as

Fifty percent chance of
showers late tonight. Lqw In
mid 40s. Friday, cloudy, 30
percent chWJce of morning
showers. Sunny In alternon.
High In mid 50s.

I

people about what's been going
on In this campaign," sald Kirk ..
Kirk said Bush has distorted
Dukakls's record as Massachusetts governor, particularly his
commitment to the environment,
efficient government, balanced
budgets and law and order.
"They (Republicans} appeal to
fear and division and the
meaner, baser Instincts In people," he sald.
He also said lt Is hypocritical
for Bush to brand Dukakls as a
"liberal" In terms of
permissiveness.
"You want to talk about
permissiveness," he said, "this

administration permitted more
scandal, more drugs and more
debt than any other."
Kirk said Bush has "established a pattern of not telling the
people th~ truth, and I think
that's whatw111 happen If George
Bush wins the election."
"We're doing everything we
can and more," said Kirk, "and I
think It's going to be enough by

By United Press International
Democrat Michael Dukakls
and Republican George Bush
seem to agree on only one thing at
this point In their blt ter battle for
the White House. They know It's
not over yet and th~lr partisans
must show up to vote Nov. 8.
Despite yet another national
poll showing Bush cl.early ahead
of Dukakls, both men had similar
pleas as they headed out to rally
supporters In crucial states today - California and Illinois,
respectively.
In Evergreen Park, !IL, the
Democratic Massachusetts governor told cheering supporters at
a rally In the Chicago suburb
today, "This election Is up for
grabs, my friends. Twelve days
Is a lot of time. I know all about
these polls, but dozens and
dozens of races In the past have
proven these numbers to be
meaningless."
Recalling Harry Truman's
upset victory over Thomas Dewey In i948, Dukakls said, "I'm
always reminded of the famous
headline: 'Dewey Defeats Truman.' Truman was short of
stature. He wasn't a great
speaker. They had written him
off, but Harry Truman was a
fighter, and so am I."
The Republican vlce pres !dent
told a Wednesday night crowd In
Billings, Mont., "We are taking
~bcolutaly nothln11 fQr l!l'antad.
~ When I say I am running like I'm
running ~hind, I mean it . We are
not going to lighten up."
An ABC News-Washington
Past poll published today dlf·
fered from other national surveys In Indicating Bush has not
built on his recent lead. Still. the

.

poll of 1,241 registered likely
voters found Bush with 52 per·
cent and Dukakls with 44 percent. Taken Wednesday through
Tuesday, It had a 3-polnt error
margin.
A New York Times-CBS News
Poll conducted Oct . 21-24 among
276 reglslered black voters nationwide and published today
showed Dukakis leading Bush 76
percent to 13 percent. This poll
compares with a similar pollln
1984 among black voters that
showed Walter Mondale fav_ored
over Ronald Reagan 81 percent
to 2 percent. The recent poll has a
margin of error of plus or minus 6
percentage points.
A statewide poll in Wisconsin
published today shows Bush with
a clear lea.d over Dukakis, 51
percenl to 39 percent, with 10
percent undecided. The Wisconsin Survey polled 343 people Oct .
18-24 and ls the flrsi statewide
poll to show Bush wlth a lead
among likely voters In Wisconsin. The poll has a margin of
error of 5.3 percent
Also, The New Republic, a
national weekly magazine, endorsed Dukakls in Its Nov. 7
Issue.
"Gecrge Bush's only notable
accomplishment has been the
brilliantly demagogic political
campaign he has waged In the
past three months," Senior Ed I·
tor MQ1·ton Kondracke wrote.
"Dukilk1s exaggerates the r'Massachusetts miracle.' both In
general and In Its policy particulars. Nevertheless, he has been a
successful governor, both lis a
competent administrator and as
a creative policy entrepreneur."
Dukakls, shrugging off the

perception that he trails, con- ,_.
tinued to make hls effort as
high-profile as possible. He arranged a live Interview on the
"CBS Evening N:ews with Dan
Rather'' tonight after his running
mate, Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen,
appeared on the broadcast
Wednesday.
Bentsen again chargec;l that
Bush's persistent use of photographs of convicted killer Willie
Hortop, the black man ..who ..
attacked a white Maryland couple when he escaped on a
weekend furlough from the Massachusetts prison system, appeals to the "lowest of instincts"
in Americans and amounts to
racist campaigning. ·
Bentsen would not accuse Bush
personally of racism but said the
overall tone of tbe campaign has
been "miserable" and Bush
must take responslblllty. At the
same tlme. he agreed Dukakls
had not responded early enough.
"They started (attacking} lm·
mediately after that Democratic
convention, and frankly , I
thought they should have been
answered then," he said. "But
my friend Mike DukaktS ' was
Incredulous. He just didn't believe those sort of charges and
distortions could stick. But they
have and they have hurt."
As Dukakis wound uphlsday In
the predominantly Republican
Chicago suburb of Napervllle, ,
Ill.. he told several thousand
people at a town meeting,
"Maybe I should have responded
sooner than I have, but I'm
basically a positive person and I
. tried to keep this camp(llgn on a
higher level as long as I could."

Nov. 8."

But under questioning, Kirk
sald he could not recall a
Democratic presidential candl·
date winning after being In
Dukakls's position two weeks
before the election.

Instructor faces disciplinary action
POINT PLEASANT - A Point
Pleasant High School teacher,
who resides In Ohio, is facing a
third disciplinary action In a
dispute over his classroom
attire.
Bill Webb, on his flrstdayback
at school alter an 11-day. suspension, wore the same outfit that
has gotten him Into trouble jeans, a work shirt and no tie.
Webb has been suspended
twice for defying a new dress
code for teachers, and received a
reprimand by the administration
Tuesday.
The veteran math teacher said
he expects to be suspended
again, and eventually fired for
not complying with the dress
code.
Webb. who lives across the
Ohio River In Gallipolis, has gone
to school In blue jeans, · an
open-neck work shlrtandcowboy
boots for most of the t !me he has
taught school. He has taught
more than 20 years at Point
Pleasant after starting his career In Meigs County.
"J, am doing exactly the same
thing I have done every day for 15
years," he said. "For 15 years, It
was OK."
But It Is not OK now according
to the terms of the dress code
Imposed by new county school
superintendent Charles
Chambers. The code requires
male teachers to wear ties and
bans both male and female
teachers from wearing · blue
jeans.
Webb said his complaint Is that
the dress code was Imposed
without any advance notice, and
be would have resigned If he had
kDown or It earlier In the
summer.
''We were given no advance
notice that this was In thealr," he
said. ''Had I been notified July 1
that this was In the air, I would be
gone'. Now,,,I won't give them the

satisfaction of resigning. They'll
have to lire me."
Principal Michael Whalen sald
he feels caught ln the middle, but
defends the dress code.
"There's absolutely nothing
wrong with asking a professional
person to look like a professional
before a classroom of students,"
Whalen sal d. "It doesn't change

the man teaching. That's true.
But it has an obvious Impact on
the attitude of the students
toward the teacher."
Webb sald he believes he has
the respect or ,his students
regardless of his dress and said
he has had no disciplinary
prob1ems.

Local news brief----.,
Case still pending in Columbus
A federal possession of drugs charge against Fred Priddy,
Rutland, Is still pending In Columbus.
Priddy's attorney, Tom Beal, Columbus, has flied a motion to
suppress evidence In the case, on the basis that the search
warrant executed Oct. 5 at the Priddy residence by the U.S . .
Internal Revenue Service, was for Income tax purposes only
and that the confiscation of cocaine and marijuana from the
'
home was Improper procedure.
As yet, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Greg Lockhart,
Continued on page 6

PART OF JOB - Part ol the job of Ohio
Deparlment of Transportal loa olftclals Is to
ensure that equipment owned by county ODOT
branches Is In mint condition. From left to right,
Joe Leach, ODOT District 10 director; Meigs

state JUghway Superintendent Jim Proflltt; Don
Johnson, district maintenance engineer; and
Paul HoflmW1, to the right of the truck, district
maintenance engineer, review one of the county's
12 trucks. Also Inspected were two endloaders and
one grader.

officials
· i nspect equipment
()1)()1r

CHESTER - Before the first
snowfall, the Ohio Department of
Transportation (ODOT) wants to
make sure their equipment Is In
mint condition with the lnspec·
tion of snow and Ice equipment.
Inspections are underway the
rest of this week and began
bright and early Tuesday mornIng wlth the Inspection at Meigs
Countv's ODOT site.
Eight other counties, Gallla,
Vinton, Athens, Hocking, Noble,
Monroe, Morgan and Washington, are also Included In District
10.
Several areas are covered In
the Inspections, which assure the
snow trucks and plows are ready
I

lor winter weather operatiOn.
Snowplows are Inspected by
personnel from safety, equipment-mechanics, malnetnance
and communications branches of
ODOT. •

Safety Inspectors check for all
aspects of safety, both In and off
the truck. These Include the
emergency supplies, such as
nares, flags, first aid, etc.
Inspectors from the equipment
olflce check the mechanical
aspects ol the trucks. Maintenance Inspects the calibration on
the trucks and plows and communications checks each radio
and communicator. •

CLOSE INSPECTION - Tim Wald, In front,
from ODO'ra · equipment-mechanics dlvl1lon,

,,

made careful notatlo• of his review ol Meigs
County's state highway trucks and snow.plows.
;

�.,

'

'

.
Thursday, October 27, 1988

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill C(lurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TIJE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~~

~m~

r-M--1'---r• ~c:::l·-==­

q:Jv
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant. Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal, Inland Dally Press
:Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
.
l.E'll'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. T"ey should be less than 300 words
. long. Alllettersaresubject to editing and must be signed with name, address arad
telephone number. No unsigned tetters wDI be published. Letters sh.ould be 1n
good taste, addressing Issues; not personalities. ·

President Reagan
~igns veteraris blll
,

By HELEN THOMAS

.
UPI White House Reporter
·. WASHINGTON -President Reagan Tuesday signed legislation
creating a new cabinet-level Department of Veterans Affairs "to
show our thanks" to those wU!tng to give their llves In service to the
country.
Reagan signed the blll, elevating the 58-year-old Veterans
Administration to cabinet status at a ceremony at the National
·Defense University at Fort McNair In Washington attended by
government officials, members of Congress and veterans
organizations.
''All those who served In America's uniforms deserve our thanks,"
Reagan said. "To show our thanks, I'm going to do something I've
been looking forward to for a long time."
.. The department wllllmmedlately become one of the largest federal
~encles, considering the VA's annual budget now stands at about$30
~tilton with 240,000 employees.
·: It w111 retaln operation of 172 veterans hospitals, 231 outpatteilt
allnlcs, 58 regional offices, 117 nursing homes and 189 "outreach"
centers for VIetnam veterans.
: ''This bill gives cabinet rank to every single veteran," the president
said, adding, "welcome aboard."
"
: "This bill glves those who have bo~ne America's battles, who
defended the borders of freedom, who protected the nation In war and
peace ... It gives them what they deserved for so long -a seat at the
t.a ble In our national affairs."
The new department will go Into business March 15, 1989.
. Reagan prefaced the bill signing with a major foreign policy
address that colnclded wlth the fifth anniversary of the U.S. Invasion
· of Grenada.
: The speech was bllled as non-political.
.. The president declared that "Americans have always stood with
those who stand for freedom."
"We've always been ready to give a hand to those who fight for
fteedom," he said.
· But he charged that after the VIetnam War, some of America's
leaders "tendC~d to shy away" from freedom and decried the lacl\ of
~upport for the U.S. efforts to depose the Marxist Sandlnlsta
government In Nicaragua.
•
: However, Reagan sald that from Afghanistan to Angola his pollcles
~f supporting fr~dom fighters around the world was paying off with a
retreat from the Soviets.
: In the 1980 presidential campaign, Reagan denounced the size ofthe
federal government and pledged lo eliminate the deparlrnents of
Education and Energy from the Cabinet. He never pressed the Issue
seriously once elected, however, and the VA bill would create the
government's 14th fuU-fledged department.
• Reagan's support for a new Department of Veterans Affairs came
i(s a surprise a year ago, even to the strongest supporters of the plan.
\)Ppollents called It an election-year ploy to'wtn the veterans' vote.
The VA also plays a blg role ln the housing and banking Indus tries
wlth Its government-backed loans for veterans. It guaranteed 474,000
home loans worth $35 bllllon last year.
. The VA legislation was approved just before last week' s windup of
\he lOOth Congress. Reagan still faces about 120 bllls passed In the
final days, and Fitzwater predicts some vetoes ahead. To clear the
decks, he said Reagan will sign about 10 measures a day while on a
campaign trip to Callfornla this week.

Letters to the editor
·Attention, voters of Salisbury Twp!
Dear Editor,
cemetery levies.
.. We would llke to call this to the
As you are aware, we lost
!tlentlon of Salisbury Township $27,000 a year when the Federal
voters.
Revenue Sharing program was
•· As you go to the polls on Nov. eliminated. The money for the
8th, you will flnd that the maintaining of Salisbury TownTrustees of-Salisbury Township ship's cemeteries _has alwan
are agaln asking voters for a one come from the general fund, and
mill levy for cemetery expenses. as a result, we have had to cutout
The first request for a levy for some services.
cemetery expenses was
Tothoseofyouwhohaveloved
defeated.
&lt;Jnes burled In our cemeteries
·· Most other townships have youknowthatwecoulddoamo.,;
efflclent If the money was availa.The Daily Sentinel
ble. We have five cemeteries In
"•ll•hoorv Tonwshlp and have
(USPS

11~9110)

A DlvlJion of Mllltbnedta. Inc.

'Published every afternoon, Monday
tn.eroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Company/Mu ltimedia, Inc.,
,Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. SeCC)nd class postage paid at Pomeroy,
~ llshlng

.Ohio.

'Member: United Press Inter nat ional,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Ass celation. National
Advt&gt;rtlslng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POS'IMASTER: Send address changes

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Mall SulloeriJJIIulde Metp County
l3 Weeks .................................. 119.24
26 Weeki .................................. $37.96
52 Weeki ....... .. ......................... $71.3&amp;
O.llllde Melp C.un17

13 Weeki .................................. 120.1111
26 Weeki ................... ............. .. $10.30
52 Weeks ............... .. ........ ......... $7HO

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··&lt;

h~rt-Mah:esi~;~·ojects.
C

made some Improvements In the
Bradford Cemetery, the Howell
Hill Cemetery and the Rock
Springs Cemetery.
· But we would llke to do a lot
more. This levy would enable us
to Improve our maintenance and
to fence our cemeteries to stop
the vandalism and the theft ofthe
flOWf!rs you place on graves.
This one mill levy wtll not
Increase your tax bill that much
but a llttle from each of you wui
help to do a better 'job In
maintaining and Improving your
cemeteries.
.
Respectfully,
Richard Batley, Nathan Biggs,
Harold Brinker, trustees; Sarah
Glbbs, clerl:.

th Me1gs will be looking to break a . are not as bad as their record
ree game losing streak as they
would Indicate, according to
travel! to Federal Hocking Fn- Coach Charles Chancey. He rates
day for the final league game of
them as probably the best
the 1988 campaign. The Maraud·
Federal Hoc)dng team Melgs has
ers !5-3,5-2) can nail down a
faced to date. The Melgs coach..
second place flnlsh with a wln states they key to shutting down .
the Lancer offense Is stopping
over the Lancers (2·7,2-5).
The Lancers, operatlng from
Ray Shuford, their top runner
and former Melgs Local student.
the V.:tnged I for the most part,

Cla

Humane Society of the United
States Is not an umbrella organl·
zatlon for local humane societies, •
he noted.
Dr. George Cave, president of
Trans Species Unlimited of Wtlllamsport, Pa., thlnks too many
animafwelfare groups are more
concerned w1th raising money
than wlth animal suffering.
Trans Species Unlimited cru·
sades for animal rights and
Works to expose what In Cave's
oplnlon ·ts "animal welfare
fraud ." Cave maintains that the
animal rights movement has
been slowed because most ot the
donations are sponged . up by
some large animal groups with
high salaries and expensive

1 ~ ~

.

renee

Belpre jumps ,t o second in Division IV

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
- Ironton and
Steubenvllle joined the list of No.
1 ranked teams this week In the
United Press International Ohlo
Hlgh School Board of Coaches
football ratings.
Ironton took over the top spot In
Dlvlslon Ill following a 6-0 trlple
overtime wln In Its showdown
with the Cincinnati Academy of
Physical Education (CAPE) Friday nlght, while Steubenville
~;eached No. 1 In Dlvlslo·n II
following Akron Buchtel's 35-28
overtime loss to Akron El!et on
Saturday.
The leaders In the other three
dlvlslons remained unchanged
as the season headed Into the
final two weeks of regular·s eason
play.
Clnclnnatl Princeton con·
tlnued to be the leader ln Division
I, Columbus AcademY. ln Dlv·
lslon IV and Newark Catholic ln
Dlvlslon V.
Ironton, now 8·0, received 18 of
23 flrst place votes ln thls week's
balloting by Dlvlslon III coaches
from around the state and held a
222-171 margin over CAPE,
which fell out of first place for the
first time In five weeks.
. The next six teams In III
remained unchanged from a
week ago. That would be Orrville
ln third, followed. -by Akron
Hoban, Urbana, Akron . St.
VIncent-St. Mary , Youngstown
Cardinal Mooney and Tlltons·
vllle Buckeye West.
Campbell Memorial advanced
from 11th to ninth, replacing
Bellaire, and Brookville remained ln lOth.
Steubenvllle, second to Buchtel
1ast
wecl\, grabbed 17 of 22 flrst
1
pl~ce yates following a 25·15 wln
.over Saleslanum (Dela.) on
Saturday. The Blg Red, also 8-0,
polled 210 points, while Harrison,
9-0, advanced Into tthe runnerup
spot with two firsts and 173
points.
The loss dropped Buc hte 1from
flrst to tblrd with one first and 152
points, wlth Uniontown Lake
fourth thls week at 130 and
Minerva sUpping one spot to flfth
wlth lll .
Prlnceion, a 28·15 winner over
CO~UMBUS

9

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Its elegant new roofline,
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ITH
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1981 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

JOHNSON,S VARIETY STORE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

I

ANY CHILD'S

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1

West · Chester Lakota Friday
night,. rolled along virtually
unchallenged. The VIkings, 8-0,
received 24 of 31 !lrst place votes
from Division I coaches and held
a 297·263 point spread over
Sandusky, which had five firsts.
Cleveland St. Ignatius, which
received the other two first place
votes, again was third with 213
points, followed by Groveport·
Madison ln fourth with 155 and
Warren Western Reserve ln fifth.
wlth 152, those two exchanging.
positions from a week ago.
Columbus Academy, the de·
fending Division IV playoff'
champ, solidified lis hold on the
No. 1 spot with a convincing 31-14
win Friday night over West
Jefferson, last week's No. 2
·team.
Academy got 24 of 27 first place
votes and 267 of a possible 270
points in '!his week 's balloting.
Belpre, a 33-27 w1nner over
Pomeroy Melgs on Friday, advanced from fourth to second,
going by both West Jeff, whiCh
fell t6 fourth, and Wheelersburg,
which remained ln third. Ver·

10°/o OFF II 200//0 OFF II
ALREADY MADE-UP

______~AfJt. _____ L_.!~-c.!!~_L!~~'!-J

TVC STANDINGS
(All games)
TEAM
W L . P
' Belpre .................8 0 200
Melgs ...... ... ..... .... 5 3 185
Nelsonville .......... 5 3 108
Trlmble ...... ;... .-.... 5 3 107
VInton Co........... .4 4 66
Wellston ... :.......... 3 5 145
Fed. Hocklng ....... 2 7 99
Alexander .......... ,1 7. 39
Mlller .................. l 8 53
(TVC Only)
TEAM .
WL
P
Belpre .................8 o 200
Melgs .................. 5 2 175
NelsonvUle .......... 5 2 108
Trimble ......... ,..... 4 3 101
VInton Co ............ 4 3 66
Wellston .............. 3 4 136
Fed. Hocklng ....... 2 6 87
Alexander ........... 1 6 33
Mlller ..................o 7 40

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

.I

OP
47
133
112
82
81
133
171
200
167

·" Cheez" McElroy or Wess How ·
ard, the Marauder's premier
running backs . Flanker duti es
will be shared by James Sauvage
and Frank Blake.
'
Defensively for Meigs Geoff
Cogar and Bla~e will startat end,
Stewart and Peterson will be at
tackle, Dave Lester will go at
middle guard as the Marauders
change the!rdefenslve set, McEl·
roy and Young wlll be the Inside
llnebackers, Howard and Terry
McGuire wlll go . at the corners
and English and Vince Vanaman
will be the last line of defense at
'

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP
GOING OUT OF

BUSINESS SALE
ALL FABRIC REDUCED

Open 10-5 Mon., .Tue,,,
Wed. 8t Fri.
Sat. 10-2
Closed Thurs. &amp; Fri.
St. Rt. 7. 5 miles north of
Chester

safety.
·
In league play thus far, the
Melgs offense have racked up an_
average of 22 poin ts per ·game
whlle the defense has ylelcted but
12 The La ricers are just the
oppos ite wirh an average of 12.5 .
on offense and g iving up 22.5 to ·
the opposlt!'on.
'

ZWAY

TAVERN
CROSSOVER
BAND
JRI., OCT. 28TH
SAT., OCT. 29TH
$UO COVER CHARGE
MUST BE 21 AND OYER

.

OP
47
83

67
82
59
120
158
196
158

'Twas tft.t niglit 6efore Cfiristmas
ana a[{ tft.rougli tlie fwuse,
not a creature was stirring .
not even a rrwu.se ... '

'

•...'Ifle stoc/(jngs were liung

6y·t/U cfiimney witfi care
in fwpes tfiat St. 'J.[tcfioCa.s
Soon wouU 6e t/Ure ... •
CCement C. Moore . ;

Open Your 1989 Christmas Club And Receive A Free.. Gift!
"MOUSE';
. OR

Friday's games

"SANTA"
CERAMIC
CANDLE
HOLDER

Meigs at Federal Hocking
Alexander at Mtner
Trimble at Nelsonvllle'York
Wllllamstown at Belpre
VInton County at Wellston

1984 FORD
MUSTANG

WITH VOTIVE CANDLE

$} $2 OR $3

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CLUBS

Stock I 82042, 4 doors, V-8, air cond., Slllek 1 84 t5 t, 2 doors. 6 cyl., air'cond.,
vinyl roof, auto. trans., PS, PB, ~It wheel, auto. trans ., PS, PB, AMIFM radio, stereo
cruise conlrol , AM!FM radio, stereo tape, tape, radial tires, bucket seats ..

'

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radial tires , white walls.

•

WAS

$3995

NOW

WAS

NOW

$2995

1984 MERCURY
LYNX

1986 CHEVY •
CAMARO

Stock I 84533, 4 doors, front wheel drive, Stock# 40t3t, 2 doors, coupe, V-8, air
4 cyl., auto. trans., PS, PB, AMIFM radio, cond., stand . trans ., PS, PB, power windOws, power door locks, tilt wheel , cruise
bucket seats.
control, AMIFM radio , slereo iape, radial
tires,white walls, gauges.
NOW
WAS
WAS
NOW

$8995

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CONTACT PAPER ............................. Buy 2 Yds, Get 1 Yd. FREE
HALLMARK EVERYDAY GREOING CARDS ...............,;,... 10% OFF
DELSEY 4 ROLL BATHROOM TISSUE....................................... aac
ALL 2 UTEI COlE PIODUCTS ·····~········································· 99(
6' TALL LIFELIKE TREES ..........~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 519.95
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MEN'S POCKET T·SHIRTS .......-.............1!9~fA·~!.......... NOW 2 /SS.OO
MEN'S BOXER SHORTS ~.....................1!9~.!t.U.............. Now S5.99
MEN'S AIKLR LENGTH SOCKS ..........1!9;.!!.!11.............. NOW S1.99
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center. Fuller wlll get the nod at
the flanker position.
The Marauders have a number
Of walking wounded who will not
see action Friday and a couple
that are lost lor the !Ina! two
games. Scott Nelgler and Decker
Cullumsaredeflnltelyoutforthe
remainder of the season as lsJlm
Durst. Jared Sheets, Kevin Oiler
and Terry Fields will not see
action Friday but may be able to
return for the finale against
Gallipolis.
. So the offensive set for the
Marauders wtn probably read as
such: Kurtis English; Kelly Og·
din and Jay Humphreys will
share the duties at end with Doug
Stewart and Matt Peterson at the
tackle positions. Peterson, lncld·
entally, was the player who
sallies rounded out the top flve ln' recovered the fumble for a
touchdown ln the Belpre contest,
fifth.
not
McElroy as previously re·
Newark Catholic also was an
Jerry Jacks and Aaron
porlj!'tl.
overwwhelmlng No. 1 choice, the
Sheets
wlll
fill the gurad slots and
Green Wave getting 22 of 28 !lrst
Wes
Young
wlll man the center
place votes and 273 or a possible
posltlon.
Ed
Crooks, who had hls
280 points. One coach voted them
best
game
of
the season against
thlrd.
Belpre,
will
call
signals and feed
Delphos Jefferson was second
the
ball
to
running
backs Jeff
wlth 204 points.
·

.,,.•

TVC standings

TURNPIKE USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

1~--------------COUPON
i ----COUPON-----,------COUPON----,
I $1°0 OFF I $200 OFF I 1 0°/o Off :

Wlth Shuford In the backfield will
be Shane Burchwell and Quarter·
back Craig Jar~ls .
One of Jarvts favorite targets
wlll be left end Sequoia Lemon
and his counterpart on the right
s ide of the line ls Arnold. The
interior line of the Lancers will
consist of Buck and Cremeans at
tackle, Green anct Young at the
guard slots and England at

Ironton, Steubenville new
leaders in UPI grid ratings

nn~TTI::'D A
~V~

October 19th marked the first months after the crash, the
anniversary of the stock market economy grew at a rate of 6.1
tU.el'l
crash. One year ago that day, the percent. Outside or a few Isolated economy. Rather, it interprets
Dow Jones Industrial average brokerage' firms ·on Wall Street, the economy and anticipates
fell 508 points, a drop that was few companies went out of economic change. What the Innearly twice as severe In terms of business because of the crash. vestors on Wall Street who
percentage as the crash of Oct. Moreover, while housing starts 11.anlcked last year saw was not a
28, 1929, that marked the begln· are down for reasons unrelated to fundamental weakness In the ·
ntng of the Great Depression. the crash, Detroit automakers economy rather than a perceived
Understandably, that fall led are enjoying one of their best weakness In the federal govern·
many to wonder If hard times years ever. Even the stock ment's economic policy. That
were just around the corner for . market Itself has recovered weakness Is the federal budget
our nation. However, one year about 400 of the 500 points that lt deficit,. which absorbs capital
later, It Is clear that what lost on the day of the crash.
and helps to exacerbate the trade
happened .o n Wall Street on that
Why then did the dramartc
deficit. In the crash last year.
black Tuesday of October 19th drop In stock prices last October Wall Street sent a warning to
meant very llttle In terms of 19th have little Impact on our Washington that the federal
lasting consequence for Main economy as a whole? To begln government must put Its ecoStreet, U.S.A.
wlth, the stock market Is not very
nomlc house In order. The signal
The stock market Is Important Important to the economic wellwas loud. and lt got the attention
because It Is a store of wealth for being of most Americans. Only
of Congress. In the year since the
many Americans. It Is a deposl· about 20 percent of household
crash, progress has been made In
tory where many Invest their financial assets are tied up ln
reducing the deficit . However,
holdings In hopes of having those stocks, and most of this Is In the . still more needs to be done when
ho ldlngs enhanced through an form of pensions and mutual
the next Congress convenes with
Improving and expanding funds. However, what's really
a new President ln the Whlte
market. So, last, year's crash Important from the standpoint of House.
represented a reduction in economics it· whether or not
In conclusion, one year after
wealth lor many large and small people precelved they were
the stock market crash, It ap·
Investors. After the crash, many poorer because of the crash and
pears that the predictions of ·
were fearful that this loss in cut back their planned spending.
economic doom were unfounded.
wealth would cause consumers to The fact of the matter Is that
Whlle a few people on Wall Street
·cut back on thelr purchases. For people did not. After the crash,
were Injured by the crash, people
example, an editorial ln the Americans behaved pretty much · on Main Street were largely
Washington Post the day after as they had before and did not
unaffected. However, we must
the crash declared that the crash change their planned spending
not forget or Ignore the crash.
''translates Immediately Into on homes, cars or llttle else.
There are lessons to be learned
houses that won't ·be built and
!rom it. The crash pointed out
Business continued to Invest In
cars that won't be bought." Thus
plant and equipment creating •!hat the country wlll continue to
many people predicted that the
need strong economk leadership
jobs and economic growth. In
economy was on Its way Into a
from Washington. It also pointed
short, Americans dld not lose
recession or even a fuU-scale
faith In the strength of the · up the Interdependency and
depression.
economy or their own personal
Interrelationship of the various
These dire predlctlons never
· facets of out economic ln!ras·
economic future.
came to pass. The doomsayers
It's Important to keep ln mlnd
tructure, none of which can be
missed the mark and missed It by
that the stock market does not
Ignored If we are to keep moving
a mlle. In fact, in the first three cause direct changes In the .forward economically.

** Satellite Repairs **

S\JBSCHII'TION HATES
By Curler or Motor U.O.ie

Subscribers nol desiring to pay the carrier may remit ln advance direct to
,The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
j&gt;a.sls. Credit wUl be gtven ~arrler each

w;r.tes;;;;tdid;{'i

Marauders hope tO end losing streak at Federal-Hocking

]ack Anderson and Joseph Spear

WASHINGTON - Top dogs In · two of the wealthiest animal organizations themselves. A 1983
the animal rights business have organizations In the country report published by an Ohio
animal rights group, Moblllzatl·
rallied around the Humane So- wrote letters defending Hoyt,
c!ety of the United States since and complaining that we were ong for Animals, noted that
Davts' Massachusetts Society for
we ljlnted at how much money out of line to question the
there Is to be made In the top financial dealings.
the Prevention of Cruelty to
ranks of animal charities.
Frederick J . Davis, president Animals, was' lhe wealthiest
We reported that national of the Massachusetts Society lor animal welfare group In the
Humane Society President John the Prevention of Cruelty to ·country, with more than $40
Hoyt and Treasurer Paul Irwin Animals, defended Hoy ~'I am
million In assets. Kullberg's
were reaping far more compen- · confident that future dts!llsures American Socletyfo~; the Preven·
satlon lor their work than even of all the facts wlll document his
tlon of Cruelty to Animals was In
their own board members knew. Integrity."
nlnth , place with $6 million In
Last year, In lieu of a portion of
John F . Kullberg, president of assets. Hoyt'sHumaneSocletyof
his compensation, the Humane the American Society for the the United States placed fourth
Society bought Hoyt a $310,00() Prevention of Cruelly to Anlm· with assets of more than $11
home In Maryland. It also als, wrote there was nothing million.
Peter Paul, a San Francisco
allowed Irwin to write himself unusual about Hoyt's salary.
$85,000 In checks for another Kullberg said the average salary
journalist, recently finished a
real-estate venture, which was for the president of a non-profit four-year study of charities In the
later considered by the board to organization Is about $119,000,
United States and abroad. His
be a loan.
although he was careful to add a upcoming book, "Easy Pick·
The Humane Society gets Its "disclaimer," that his own sa- lngs," Includes a chapter on
money with heart-tugging pleas lacy ls less than Hoyt's and "I am animal organizations. Paul told
to donors that "The animals need not given a house to live ln."
our associate Jim Lynch, "I tell
1t now," and contributions will be
We reported that Hoyt's and
people If you want to get rich, get
"pur Into action on the front line Irw1n's compensation dld not . Into AIDS, animal rights or
Immediately."
stop with salaries . In all, their
missing children."
The questionable financial salaries and benefits amounted
Paul thinks Humane Society
transactions tor Hoyt and Irwin tomorethan$139,000and$114,000 literature should Include a disprompted the Humane Society respectively.
claimer that the national society
Maybe our report on the money
Is not connected wlth local
board to hire two Washington law
firms to conduct separate tnves- to be made ln animal charities hlt
humane societies that must raise
too close to home. Davis and
their own funds to run animal
ligations of the dealings.

ALL MAKES AND MODELS

to The Dally Sentlnel. Ul Court St..
·Pomeroy, Ohio 4571!1.

One Week .................... ....... f ....... $1.40
Une Month ................................. $6.10
One Year .................... : ............ $72.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ....................... :.~· ......... 25 Cents

.Animal rights .execs

** VCR Repairs **

through Friday, lll Court St., Po·

,,Page-2-The Daily Senti~el
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. October 27. 1988

The Qaily Sentinel Page 3

POIT!EII'oy Middleport, Ohio

1983 FORD
RANGER XLT

6" SOLID
BRASS BELL

$7995

$5 CLUBS

1980 FORD
F-150 4X4

Siock # 8844 t, 2 doors, 4 cyl .. 4 speed, Stoc., 92t02. 2 doors, 4 wheel drive, 6
AMIFM radio, stereo lape, 112 1on pickup, cyl., 4 speed, PS, PB, AMIFM radio,
radial tires, t/2 ton pickup, short wide
rear slep bumper, sliding rear glass.
bed, sliding rear glass.
NOW
NOW
WAS
WAS

$3499

$3499

BACK ROW SPECIALS!
1973 VW STATION WAGON Slockl88357,2doors,slalonwagon,
4 cyl., AMIFM radio, bucket seals ...................................... W/IS 'IQ5 ........ :........ NOW

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

$350

You Make 49 Payments And
The 50th Payment Is On. Us!

1977 VW SCI ROCCO Slock I !0191 , 2doors,hhaal drive, 4spee&lt;l

lrans., PS, PB ... ................................... . .. .....;... .......... WA~ '1295 .......... NOW

$450

1977 AMC GREMLIN Slockt83454,2doors,6cyL,auiO.Wis.,

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AMIFM rad~, slereo lape, radialliras, bucl&lt;ol seals ................ WAS '995 .........

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1977 CHRYSLER NEWPORT Slock 17837i, 4 doors. se&lt;lan,

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5th Street 12212 Jackson Avenue '2nd Street
New Haven
Point Pleasant
Mason
882·2135
. 6715-1121 '
773-5514
Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

Member F.D.I.C.

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Improved Maple Leafs edge Minnesota

Scoreboard ...

By JEFF SHAIN

Prep ratings
COL\IMIIU&amp;

CoUege

OhlG (UPI) -

Tble

week' I UaiH heu IIKtr-'ao_. Ohka
1U 1111 Se:MII ._,. ol c..cll• loo6aU
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11. Tretwttllf-Ma . . . it; II. Qncla..tl ·

WI ..... ·t: 17. Fairfield 8; 18. (Ue)
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Bowllll Green 18; 1'7. Nontonla It: IS.
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111
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tt.(Ue) warren Keaedr' (5-I)
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Cavallers news: There appears to be· little backlash generated regarding Mark Price's $5
mUIIOn contract. Here's why:
}'rice's · tep.mmates appear to
believe thllt the third-year guard
had very little to do with the new .
pact.,and that Is true.
Price Isn't worth $5 million
over five years. But the Washington Bullets certainly thought so,
since· they were the ones who

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lncap;&lt;Citated and you had to
signed the Georgia Tech grad to
become head coach of the Clevethe offer sheet that Cleveland
land
Browns?"
was forced to match.
Kosar
did not heslt:ate. He
Although I blame both owners,
stared
at
his questioner and
players and their agents for
responded,
"First,
I would say a
driving up the wage. scales of
prayer.''
professional sports, Price can't
be faulted for agreeing to terms
far beyond what he sought. The ·
Sports brief '
Bullets (and therefore the CavaOlympic~
llers) cQuld have had him for$1.5
Sir Arthur Gold ·rt:!placed Chamllllon over five y.ears.
rles Palmer as chairman of the
--British Olympic Association and
Kosar .recently appeared at a · · Princess Anne was re-elected
suburban Cleveland· restaurant· president. Sir Arthur, 71, is
chairman ofEngland'sCommonduring halftime of a Monday
ntght gaine, and coolly fielded
wealth Games council and a
leading figure In the fight against
ques lions from excited patrons.
One was: ·'What would you do
drug use in British ~~ack and
If Marty Schottenhelmer became
field.

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This must cease, for the
Browns aren't. exactly marching
toward the Super Bowl just yet.
Despite Bernie Kosar's excellent
effort In his first contest since
being injured the first week of the
season, the play-calling of Coach
Marty Schottenhelmer remains
passive. Having a defense faller
with silly words and gestures
certainly undermines the te;1m
effort.
•.
·
The Cardinals game certainly
provided some interesting performances. Wide receiver .Reggie Langhorne caught two touchdown passes and Rickey Bol~en
finally was more than a decoy on
a tackle-eligible play and caught
a Kosar pass In the end zone.
A,n unfortunate byproduct of
Kosar's re.turn - not those
ridiculous songs that have Infected many radios, including
my dentist's- was the release of
rookie quarterbai:k Steve
Slayden:
Suffice It to say that Slayden, a
producf of Duke, likely will
return . in 1989 if another team
doesn't sign him. Indeed, already
it Is rumored the Browns have •
Slayden under contract for next
year.

~-.~~.~

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•

By Realistic

VPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - My dentist
was pretty upset, and it's hard to
talk to a guy when he's performing root canal, ~o I just listened.
Not that I hall much choice in
the matter, th~ks to an aching
bicuspid and molar. Anyway, the
Doc ·was annoyed at the way the
Cleveland BroiNns' defense apparently has gone back to Its old
habits of taunting opposing defenses. In Sunday's victory at
PhoeniX, he said, cornerbacks
Hanford Dixon and Frank Minnifield indulged in some wild
finger-pointing, cocky strutting,
davclng .' and excessive
handslapplng.
En route ba~k from visiting
familY In NeW'JY ork, I caught
parts of the third and fourth
quarters at Hopkins Airport. I
saw the "Dawgs" mouth off a bit,
bUt nothing really excessive,
s !nee It was obv lous the Cardinals were mounting a rally.
That was the point, my dentist
exclaimed as I moaned a reply.
The Browns' an tics has so
Inspired the Cardinals, the latter
bolted back Into the game. While
reaching for a syringe the size of
Carl Hairston and murmuring
the ancient falsehood, · "This
won't hurt a bit," my dentist
recalled an ex:Brownle named .
Roberl-Jc.. Jackson, who was said
to spit at opponents.
There Is little excuse for
· provoking players from the other
team. I truly believe taunting
does backfire. that it makes the
targets respond by playing above
and somet lmes beyond their
usual level of play .

,.•

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THE CENTRAL TRUSI' a:MPANY
The BaM That Mtks Things Happen.

•

.

York Rangers edged Philadelphia 4-3, Detroit topped Montreal
4-2 and Hartford thrashed Buf- '
falo 7-1.
Rangers 4, Flyers 3
At New York, Tony Granato
scored a tie-breaking goal with
6: 08 remaining to extend the
Rangers' winning strea k to five
games.-Tomas Sandstrom set up
the winning goal. The game
marked the first time Dave
Brown faced the Rangers since
he delivered a cross-check to the
back of'Sandstrom's neck' on Oct.
26, 1987, resulting In a 15-game
suspension.
Re.d Wings 4, Canadlens 2
At Detroit, Steve Yzerman
scored two goals and Paul
MacLean broke a tic with 6:.50 to
play, sparklrig the Red Wings to
their first victory in three games.

reached 1984 NL MVP Ryne
Sandberg via a ship-to-shore
phone. Last year, he contacted
American League Cy Young
Award winner ltoger Clemens on
the pitcher's car phone.
Lasorda has managed the
Dodgers 12 years, winning siX
division titles, four pennants and
two World Series. The Dodgers
finished in the second division In
1986 and '87, winning 73 games
bOth seasons. Then. Los Angeles
signed free agent Kirk Gibson, a
move that energized the entire
club.
The Dodgers captured the NL
West this year by seven games
over Cincinnati, then topped the
Mets In a seven-ga:me playoff.
They capped their season by
routing the Oakland Athletics in
a five-game World Series.
Leyland pushed the Pirates
Into contention this season. But
his team could not compete with
the Mets and (aded, finishing 15
games 0ut of flrs.t place. .

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wered points early In the third
period to grab a 67-6llead after
the Pistons had scored the first
four points of the second half to
tie the score at 61·61.
blah Thomas paced the PIS·
tons with 16 points while Adrian
Dantley' and Joe Dumars added
14 each.
The Cavaliers, who have three
more exhibition games on their
schedule Including a Friday
night contest at Miami, open the
regular season In Charlotte,
N.C., Nov. 4.

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Cavs cop fifth straight pre season win

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Two plays later Heath Hudson
scored on a 7 yard run and
Whobrey add the two point
conversion.
Ripping off chunks of yardage
In life' second half, Meigs moved
downfleld and faced a fourth and
ten situation. Hudson, on a
counter, scampered 15 yards for
the touchdown and Blair added
the extra points for a 24-0 Meigs
The Meigs express roared to ·lead.
Ufe and on the third play from
Ryan Cqnde intercep\fd a
scrimmage Kevin Whobrey
Pirate aerial at ~ Meigs 47 on
raced 29 yards for the score with
the next series and then, from the
Heath Hudson adding the two
NG 32, Eric Wagner, on a keeper,
pointer to give Meigs the 8-0 lead scampered Into the endzone for
at the 5:10 mark of the first the score.
quarter.
North Gallla posted Its lone
The Pirates were unable to score with 1:44 remaining In the
advance again and turned the game. The success of the Meigs
ball over on downs to the. team was due to outstanding play
Marauders at the Pirate 32.
of their defense who allowed only
Neither team was able to move
22 points In six games.
the ball untll the Marauders took
Meigs ended Its season with a
over at the Pirate nine on downs.
5-1 record.
•

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Minar•

The Meigs seventh grade foot-.
ball team thundered to victory In
their final game of the season,
whipping North Gallla 30-8.
North Gallla starting from Its
own 35 was unable to move the
ball as Joshua Blair sacked the
quarterback to force a Pirate
punt with Meigs taking over at
the Pirate 39.

DAYTON, Ohio (UPI) - Brad
Daugherty stored 27 points and
Mark Price added 21 Wednesday
night to lead the Cleveland
Cavaliers to their fifth atralgbt
NBA exhibition victory, a 120-102
decision over the Detroit Pistons.
John "Hot Rod" Williams
contrlbU ted 20 points and Larry
Nance and Ron Harper chipped
In with 18 apiece to help the Cavs
Improve to 5~. The Pistons fell to
5-2.
The Cavs, who never trailed In
the game, reeled off siX unans-

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Transactions

Continued from page 4
Improved···------

Are Cleveland's DBs falling into old ha:bits?

W L T

Central st

Meigs seventh graders win

•

,,
••''

H•leUa
Ohio Norillf!l'a
, Ot&amp;ertJeln
I U
1 II
NOR'IH COASTCO~ENCE
Conferenoe Overall
TeMn ~
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W LT
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NEW YORK (UPI) -Tom Louis, Hal Lanier of' Houston,
Lasorda, who took the · Los Buck Rogers of Montreal and
Angeles Dodgers from the se- now Lasorda again.
cond division to the World Series
The announcement came
championship, won National hours after Lasorda and the
League Manager of the Year Dodgers attended a White House
honors, the Baseball Writers' welcome. Asked about the possiAssociation of America an- bility he might receive the
nounced Wednesday.
award, Lasorda said: "I can't
Lasorda received 19 firs t-place feel any greater than I do right
votes, one second and three now, because winning manager
thirds for 101 pollits, &lt;/II !distanc- of the .year, any su~cess a
ing Pittsburgh's Jim Leyland. manager gets can only come
Two voters from each NL city through \he contributions of his
participated. Leyland collected · baseball players.
one tlrst-place vote, 13 seconds
·'If' I get any kind of an award;
and six thirds for 50 'points.
It's the team that is really getting
Dave Johnson or the New York the award. And I am very, very ·
Mets finished third with 38 points proud of that. But more lmpprand San Diego's Jack McKeon tant, I want to share It with the
fourth.
players because they are the
Lasorda, 61, has ' now won the ones that do the job, not the
award twice In the six years It manager."
has been given. He won In 1983 for
Lasorda later received the
leading the Dodgers to the NL news In fllgh~ to Los Angeles.
West title. In subsequent years, BBWAA Secretary Jack Lang ·
the award has gone to Jim Frey says he never before 'notified
of Chicago, Whlt~y Herzog of St. . someone In the air·. Lang said he

I 11

u

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Lasorda named top. NL manager

...

au

Feerela)'; releMetl otfeaahe II Deman

JJ

18
!II
32
JS

The Toronto Maple Leafs, who
had the second-worst record in
the NHL last season, needed just
12 games to reach one- third the
point total they had last yeat.
The Maple Leafs Increased
their NHL-Ieadlng point total to
17 Wedne$day night with a 3-2
v!ftory over the Minnesota North
Stars. The Maple Leafs, 8-3-i,
had just 52 points last season,
finishing one point ahead or
Minnesota.
· It was the sixth s tralght road
victory tor the Maple Le!\fs, one
shy ot'the club record set In 1940

The Daily

October 27, 1988

Leafs took advantage with an Ed sota Coach Pierre Page. "I was
Olczyk goal just 25 seconds happy with the effort but not the
results."
before Intermission.
Minnesota also was the victim
"The save on Archibald was
ot
bad luck, as shots by Neal
Important, but us scoring In the
Broten
and Stu Gavin clanked off
last minute of the period. I think,
was the turning point;" Wregget the post.
Following a scoreless first
said.
MoeMantha gave Mlnne- .
period,
Toronto made it 3-1 at 4:54 of
sola
a
1-0
lead on a power-play
the third period, as Dan Marois
goal
at
2:36
of the second period.
beat Minnesota goaltender Jon ·
Toronto's
Dave
Reid tied It ;with a
Casey from close · range. Curt
Fraser brought the North Stars goal!: 23 later.
The North Stars have the worst
within 3-2 when he slapped arecord In the NHL, garnering
3!&gt;-foot shot past Wregget at
three points on a record of 1-7-1. "
10:47.
Elsewhere In the NHL, the New
"It was a good effort by us but
Continued on page 5
not good enough," said Mlnne-

I l l ·141
. . . . . 11
WloeoOHIO CONFERENCE
Collfen.ee ()yerall
Team
W LT W LT
WIUeaberr
I I I
I It

C~rt

Campbell Collfll'f'ence
Nor,. DIYIIIoa

Tor.mo

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I · II
• 80

lR •anap.Ue - 8lped q•rterback Bill
Ran .. ell; watnd Mfenaln baek Terl')'

By Uatled PrenlrlterraUollll
NATIONAL HOfJaEV LE-'GUI:
Walee Coafere•oe
W

48
f U
f U
:S 110

Draw-.

NHL resuhs

NYRah.ra

s

J . ..
I 11
I 18
I U
I U
• 50

F..ulen Mlch

Polnu

I. NewarkCatlullc(!2) (8·0)
f:. Delp..,. Jdlenon (8-0)
s. Ar~hbold (I) {8··~
4. Mopdll~ (7-IJ
5. MonroeVllk ttl (8-tll
e. Portt Notre Dame (8-0)
1. MJn10 {%) (8-0)
-

Ctaferea01 ()ytrall
W LT
W LT
11 . . .
4 ..
• ..
S II
5 !I

•

IWI8&amp;ate
W.atr•MJdll

,..,

and tied in 1961.
Key to the fast st~rt this season
has been .·g_oaltender Ken
Wregget, who made 30 saves
Wednesday night as the Maple
Leafs were outshot 32-19.
Wregget has won six straight
starts and has allowed an average of 2. 62 goals-per-game.
"You can't beat good goaltendlng and thal' s what Ken •s been
.giving us," said Toronto Coach
John Brophy.'
With the score tied 1-1,
Wregget robbed Minnesota's
Dave Archibald on a shot from
point-blank range late In the
second period, and the Maple

UPJ Sports Writer

standings
l*'-«AIIep ,-MtbaliRI!a:trda
aMID-AMDICAN
1 u•••r,..-.. ........
CONnRI:NCB
Tum

-·

Thursday, October 27, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'

GAWPOUS, OHIO

446-0902

MIDDliPOIT, OHIO

992-6661
•

·

Montreal suffered Its first defeat
In three outings.
Whalers 7, Sabres !'·
At Buffalo, N.Y., Peter Sldorkie wlcz made 37' s~ves, .and the
Whalers scored five thlr~-perlod
goals · while pounding Buftalo.
Hartford was leading 2-1 before
its offensive onslaught In the
final 13 mlnu tes.

Sports hr.ief
'fennls
Swedish star Joaklm Nystrom
withdrew from next week's
Stockholm Open because of all
Inflamed knee. He Is received a
cortisone shot Wednesday and
was ordered to res t a week. "I
need · a victory to regain my
sell-confidence," he said. "But'
the main thing Is to become well

again. "

DR. JAMES P. CONDE, D.O.,
announces that. his medical practice
at 155 N. 2nd St. in Middleport,
Ohio will be continued by
DR. EDWARD P. ISAACS, D.O.
Dr. Isaacs plans to begin in December, 1988, and a
definite opening date wll be announced later. Dr.
Isaacs will accept all of Dr. Conde's patients in·
· eluding Workman's Compensation patients. Dr.
Conde urges his patients to continue to receive
their care under the direction of Dr. Edward P.
Isaacs.

WE ARE YOUR CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING HEADQUARTERS

Carhartt • Chippewa • Redwing
Lee • Levi • Chic • Hang Ten
STOP ·BY AND SEE OUR LARGE .
SELECTION OF SCHOOL JACKETS

==
290 North Second

992-3684

�I

'
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

'

I

Ohio

Loca
' l news b. rteJ.f.s...

Thursday,

Thundly, October 27, 1988

0

O

r

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices ~ per
bushel) paid to farmers by grain
elevators in the principal mar·
ketlng areas of Ohio Wednesday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3. 76, No. 2 shelled corn $2.65, No.
2 oats $2.67, No. 1 soybeans $7.49.

Hoffman processes eight cases
· Eight cases were proce~sed Wednesday night In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
Forfeiting bondS were Jeffrey L. Hoscbar, West Columbia,
W., $450, driving while Intoxicated, and $50, weaving course;
James B. Glover, Point. Pleasant, W. Va., $100, disorderly
manner, and Franklin C. Jewell, Pomeroy , $100, disorderly
manner, and $100, open container.
Fined were Edward J. Dreyfuse, Middleport, $425 and costs
and, three days In jail, driving while Intoxicated; $10 and costs,
stop sign violation, and $25 and costs, disorderly manner;
James Quillen, Middleport, $25 and costs, expired plates; Terri
L. Hall. Middleport, $25 and costs, expired registration;
Hershel Pelfrey, Vinton, $100 and costs, driving under
suspension, and $25 and costs, expired plates; Toni Uttle,
Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's license.
·

DAN THOMAS &amp; ,SON SHOES

~-'~ ~8D
IEZJSNOW
-RAIN
FRONTS:
'Warm "Cold ·

fl

Pre~~s Internatloual
Snow swirled across the frozen
Midwest early today with blizzard conditions predicted In
Montana while the Northeast
awoke with a shuddering winter
chill.

By United

Charge dismissed in court
An alleged probation violation by Timothy Davidson has been
dismissed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court. The probation
violation charge was made by the State of Ohio, ex rel, Meigs
County Probation Department.
· A reciprocal action for child support by the State of Florida
and Constance L. Dreyfuse against Edward Jess Dreyfuse has
been final !zed.

Weather .
Soutll Central Ohio
Tonight,. variable cloudiness
with a 50 percent chance of
showers by late tonight. Low 45 to
50. Southwest winds 15 to 25 mph
becoming westerly by morning.
Friday, variable cloudiness with
a 30 percent chance of morning
showers, becoming mostly sunny
In the afternon. High 55 to 60.
Extended Forecast
Sa&amp;urday through Monday
Chance of rain showers Saturday .and Sunday, possible snow
showers In the north, and fair
Monday. Highs mainly in the 40s.
, Lows In the mld·20s to mld·30s
Saturday and mostly In the 30s
Sunday and Monday.

--Area deaths-Scott, Zanesville; Steve and
Marie Scott, Lancaster; a sister·
George E . Scott, 73, Sugar In-law, Kathleen Scott, MinersGrove, former Meigs County ville; a n Ieee, Mrs. Rcscoe Wise,
resident, died Friday at his Middleport, and six
home.
grandchildren.
Mr. Scott was a construction
He was preceded In death by
worker and a striker engineer on his parents, Earl .and Minnie
barges on the Ohio River.
Scott and two brothers, John
He is survived by his wife, Scott and Ted Scott.
Delma; four sons and daughtersServices were held Tuesday
in-law, Ted (Scottie) and Sharon · afternoon In the chapel of the
Scott, Wes t Land, Mich.; James Frank E . Smith Funeral Home
P . and Mary Scott, Kingsport, with the Rev. Donald Cummans
Tenn.; George David and Lois officiating. Burial was In Stukey ·
Cemetery.

Hospital news .
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Lawrence Babbitt, Racine; Martha Conkey, Rutland.
Wednesday Discharges- Dayton McElroy, Kenneth Payne,
Anna Hllldo re, Teena Rcse
Mary ll'ladoen.
- '

Divorces sought

Stocks ·~·
D..U,..!Kock prices
( A.s ol10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewt

__ ....,..

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T .. .................... :.......... 27%
Ashland 011 ........ ... .............35%
Bob Evans ........... ........ ........ 16
Charmlng,Shoppes .............. 14%
City Holding Co ................... 34
Plan slug shoots
Federal Mogu1. ................... 53'h
Goodyear
T&amp;R ..............,. .... 52'h
Ken Amsbary Chapter of the
Heck's
....
...........
.... .............. %
lzaak Walton League will be
Key
Centurion
....................
16\4
sponsoring slug shoots the next
five Sundays beginning at 1 p.m. Lands' End .. .. ..... ............ .. .. 25%
each afternoon. The shoots wUl Limited Inc ........................ 24%
consist of free hand and bench · Multimedia Inc .................... 71
rest events at various distances. Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Rifles and scopes will not be shot Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .... ... 12%
in the same category. Various . Shoney's Inc ........................ 7%
prizes of meat and money will be Wendy's Inti. .... .... ... ........... . 6%
Worthington Ind ........ ......... 21%
awarded.

Sneaker named
f:!.ev . Sam Anderson will be
speaking at the Old Bethel FWB
Church, located behind Gilbert's
Service Station on Story's Run
Road, on TUesday at 7:30 p.m.
Pas tor Bob Grubb Invites the
public.

Two players eligible
for Ohio jackpot

$75999
Heats approx. 1,500 sq.
ft., 286 CFM blower · .
firevitw gl11s door, '

CLEARANCE PRICED
CLEVELAND (U" - TwQ
flayers are eligible telllare a $3
awton jackpot after Nth plckl!lt
six winning -bera In
Olllo' s Super Lotto ~lng w....
HSday night.
The names of the players will
be announced after the winning
tickets are validated by lottery
otr!clals, a lottery spokesman
said today.

*

•AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AT
WHOLESALE PRICES
We Feature F,_ Repair On The

CHIEF E•l-UNER
·
•

'

210 Sttuth Secand

3

CHEVROLET
ASTRO CONVERSION VANS

-- .

-

/,/

RalKd RIJD(

""'"""'

UMn'ED SELECTION!

Stop In and chack cut the 1989 modele.
We have a good aelec:tion of
Cllevrolell, Oldatnoblles, Pontiac &amp; Bulcka.
Rebalaa apply to moat models.

$

6,488"

LUMBER

-"""'o.l

19&amp;e BlJ!CI( $KY~AA~ ' _., •~•tic. 1k ~

1~1~ PONnAC Gf!AHD Alt Uoorccupe, Y-41
. . .......... • . ..mc::aMt.WMI1.tl5.- -

w..••-----·------.. . . Now $s,;ee

- - - - - - NOW 16,9115
ltM Pl. YMOUTH HOII!ZOI+' • &lt;mr, ......-:,

•

NOW $10,988

NOW $1,788

19ili OlDSMOBilE IIAEGENCl" 4 ... Mf1
'

191\J CtfE'VPOLET CAPI'!o(;E (LASS!~ '
... v.. CUfiOIII !ftllflt(, ""' ~ nillt Cit' wu

IO.IU ----·------~ NOW SM88
1111:3 BUICK LESAeRE CLASS!O 4 CloOf,

\9117 BUtCW C£NTUFI'f ' -· .......... ..,.., IDCtll. . ..., .,,

_ _ , _ . . , . . , .. ,,~.

pr...,"""'""

L...ry

1117 Pl.VMOUTH SUNDANCt· Uxn.•JPt,

1DM PONTIAC PARI$1EHHE- 4lloor klllrl. Y4 PDW111 Rt• ~
~NiciCII!WUS7.• --·----·---- ··

NOW

lit&amp; CttEVAOLET CELESRIT¥- • ooat, tUIOIII.dc, u l»&gt;''dilcHWIQ.
jft,OIIIIIdl'1 Wll11.110- - - - - - - - - - - - NOW
IIIII BUICK SKYHAWK ' 4 door, IUICI!IIIC, tlr ~ raiO-Iitt (ar
will

t.IIIIICIII'My!WII••- - - - - - - - NOW

IOtCIWI A._.IIMCIW' IIIINIMtlrfl

.,.. • •

NOW S5,988

.

IGI' OOOGE 0U Nt 4..,,NDI *a....._
onl'ltnt WIIIIMO- - - NOW $4988

Volunteer firemen
set Halloween pa,;rty

1161 FOliO ~-1S&lt;ILAR!AT-4.1:.t ortr1.00C lliiHIIMIQIIIId,• COMIIIDII1ng . WI
..... WIICIOIMI,MJIIIIMc.., ... ""'IW..I!•.IID-

NOW
'
19&amp;1 CHE'¥FI0lt.l C-15011 2;WD criJ'4.ol!MIIII Longbld . au:c.- Jt~~:. v.a

...,.,...._, flnWivbolldi,IIII.Ctl~~~ntW.Itt•-- NOW llO,!Bel
'l'M&amp; Ct1EVROlET "C.10 2WD .,., 11.11110 Mil Llltlf* ~

11\ft, ...,--.;'*""~n~~~~,n ... tw.•._:, NO~rl8,911ft
• AITII

amn

(rP "I'PI.JU).
•· fAIU, TA(II, Tm.l Pill lXTM.\ .

$7,9S8 tU11- - - - - - NOW$4,988

--~~·-.-=~·~·····-·····-·-·---·--

IOf, MO

, .

PIOIII614~2-SSOO

ChiY!oltt • Olllldll•l"onllac • Bulak, Inc.

Phone: 372·2844 • 422-0758 •
Coin Mon.-Fn. 344-5947

HO.SIIIOII ..... 7100 TO 5t301 SAT. I100 TO 5100

8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Sat, 8:30 · 8 p.m.

CLOSED SUNDAY
I
·-- ----~

,_ -.

----

-~-

.. --........

,

'

_

_.. _..

Pomeroy

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE .1868 . .

-

_.,

I

I

I I ' 'I : Jl

I

After Rebate ..

Kendaii10W40 or 5W30
Motor Oil

,_

...

119

WR80PY

•

PUratator
.
p£11·,..
• Limit 2

59

STPOII
Treatment

Bosch

• 15 oz

Platinum
Spark
Plugs

• F1ghls motor O•l breakdown

Rt. 21 South • Ripley
475 South Church St.
-~·

- .. ----- . ···-1---'·-

A halloween party to be held on
Monday at the firehouse from 6 to
7 p.m. for children of the Bald
Knob, Eagle Ridge, Rainbow
Ridge, and Bashan-Keno Road
areas was planned when the
Bashan Volounteer Firemen's
Auxiliary met at the firehouse
l'I!Cen tly.
It was noted that the recent Ice
cream social was a success.
Winners of prizes were Adam
McDaniels, Opal Mather, Win·
ston Varney, Ruth Rose, Cathie
Wood, Kathleen Morris, and
Carol Wriston.
·

,,

~r l015

aac

• Designed lor demands of
modern high compression
lean mix lure engirfes
• Limit 4 packs

STPGas
Treatment

Purolator
Air Filters

• Cle&amp;ns your.carburetor and luel
system while you drive •2050

•Limit 2
From

4

'

Night Blaster ....- ..... ..
Universal Lighl
Bar

Sylvania

2188

• 1]0 Willi qull &lt;l l

1og n1

495

&lt;~ous• ng

• RH-tJOW

888

Sylvania
Halogen
Headlamps

·Night Blaster
High Intensity
Spot Light

copper #BC82

Boost

• Wllh gl!lre-rc-ductng Cleo"'r he

• Stopa knocking, pinging and
overheating caused by lowoctane fuel

• Easy g.. p

Be~m

SWIICI"!

95

G&amp;ONew

Radiators

.. • ·· ·

.-:~~~
...

• Protection from
mud, salt &amp; stone
chips

277

Tonneau
Covers

Rex Radiator

• Protect your

valuablea from
the elements
andtheH

TRW
Timing
Gears

• Price good wtlh eu:htmlile
e 1 ye8r WIH80 iy

Bestop

Running
Boards

595

7588

Kenco

Caps
~

• VInyl coaled polyester

fabric lnsureslonglosting durability

gg¢
TRW Timing
Chains

Alumaseal

e 0UI18'1IM0 10 r• pair &amp; preYeOI
leakaln tadlatcrl. motor IIIOc-t;
cyl lob11 h• ad•
• NASBP· 24

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Slore hours9 ·00 a.m. 10 8:00p.m MondiY lhroug, Fnday.
9:00a .m. to 6:00p.m . Saturday. and 10 :00 am to S 00 p m
Sunday

·

• Burn brighter. last longer
• Dramatically Increase night
vision

hlllndlf wol h puSh·bi.IIIOn

From

From

otep out

From

h~I 0 9&lt;' "

• RectanguiM crvomc-

• 8ft ..

104+ Octane

Headlamps

Night Blaster 9
011 Road Light

Wells
Booster\
Cables

• Eaay atep~ ln,

TRUCK SPECIALS.

v•

----

1

~~.Mille,

••••JIIIjiiii:IIIWal7.110- - - - - NOW

~111llltprlc:IIW.IIO.IM-• NOWSi,&amp;e8 19t4 AMC EAGlE SUTIONWAOOrt 4•41
111.5 BIJICK LESABRE UUJIED 4IIW, Di111* 111'111111'1, ...,_.INN, AI.WIIIIIIC. lltctnctllllftlllf, -~ CIMnl Wll

,_,-.n~~~~~t~w.•. • -·---~----·

INSURANCE
111 Second St.,

... ,

•·ll'l'lot'ft ewttlt. Vfus7.lll'll ___.

\U4 CHEVfiOLET CHtVEiTI: or1r :7/IIJ mllill4 $101', *IIDIII*IIt'*"DI -·----.---··..· - - - - --- HOW S6,9S8
W. &amp;3.185- - - - - - - - - - - - - NCW $2,98~ 1915 FORD LTt) ' '*-· po.trt...,_dr:. llr
ttu eHflV$U:FI LEIAAON C0"4¥kAll81.,-. Olfr ID:III fi'IIIH. IIIOIIIIk. W
OII!ICI~.
Dtt., PID., IIMIII MIN W
lift$5
I WU
,tu _______
NOYI
988
WqiM,rbCifiWIIStiJM- ____ ~---~---

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

. , --

Meeting timeofTOPSOhlo570,
'held each Tuesday at the Coonhunters buUdlng on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will change
to 5 to6 p.m. for welghln on Nov .
1.
.
At lhe past two weeks' m eetIngs, the top losers have been
Bernice Durst , both weeks, tied
with Virginia Smith on one week.
Mary Martin and Phyllis McMI·
!an were runners-up.
The surprise packages were
won by Phyllis Drehel and'Oia St.
Clair, and the fruit baskets by
Mary Roush and Pearl Knapp.
In the team . contests the
wlnne'r s tor the past two weeks
have been the Calorie Counting
Coons and Gertrude's Golden
Girls.
Lennie Belle Aleshire, leader,
presided at the meetings with
Teresa Wood giving reports on
weights.

I

.

I J t'

• Holds up 10 511g n! s rt GM IQ,)S

PDWWiniiii............ CII!WUSII.III~------- NOW

8"x24" 28 ga,'

' :

,I

TOPS meets

1988
S-10 PICKUP

~ $17,900 $16,999

O!IA!.ITY &amp; Aft'ORQAR!,E

Blue atove pipe.
·
Allo IVIII.Ible in 8 ", 28 ge ..
black and 8''111 both

SEREnA

~

v•

Jt~-L.

.

Ralph and Rhonda Zirkle
Snider of Coppers Cove, Texas
announce the 1\lrth of a daughter,
Stephanie Renee, born Sept. 27 .
The Infant weighed eight
pounds and was 20 inches long.
Maternal grandmothers are
Bruce and .Jackie Zirkle, Pomery, and the paternal grand·
parents are James and Connie
Casey, Middleport.

$8,988'

w..•.•·-

lilt Itt - · · ....1.

WRITE; MOTOR EARL
8100 N. HIGH ST.
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43285

Snider birth

3RD ANNIVERSARY SALE-A-BRAT/ON .
PRE..OWNED TRADE IN,. SPECIALS!

OOMIIIIfnll..... ..._,

NATIONW!SE IS SPONSORING ME, .
~~::. ~~~•••
MOTOR EARL, ON "THE NATIONWISE RADIO WRITE-IN TALK
' Kendaii10W30
SHOP SHOW," .. .
Motor Oil
JOIN ME IN RADIOLAND. JUST
• Limit 12
WRITE TO ME WITH ANY QUES97e qt. Sale Price
TION YOU MIGHT HAVE ABOUT
- 25e qt. Mlr's Rebate
CARS. THEN IF I ANSWER. YOUR
LETTER ON THE AIR, I'LL SEND
YOU AN OFFICIAL MOTOR EARL
T-SHIRT PLUS A GENUINE MOTOR
qt.
EARL DIPSTICK WIPER. OKAY?
You r Cost.

STEPHANIE R. SNIDER

1988

•

••nu1o.aoo.oo.,.,.. lfll4 Nlllalyedl
~ow $8,988 " ·" 5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ NOW 55 9; 5
11&amp;2 OLOSMOSIU' OEL TA at ~ 41.(«1 m...t 4 liDO!, Mlmllic, lir
l~.i,.\ErOL&amp;f UOHtE' CAAl~ ~

" - .... ujl fho I

qt

-·

"AUTO • AIR CONDIT10ifil"
ONLY

______

chimMy. Aloe anila- .

pizzas to the Brown Deer Depart·
ment of Public Safety and a
couple of plz2as to the Glendale
Fire Department."
As to his new son, he said he
andhlswlfe namedhlmAndrew,
but are going to call him Homer.
. " We're giving him the nick·
name Homer, because of the
home deliver y( ' he said.

'

•

CORSICA

_..,.wwnllll~eq~'lllflls,,,..,
NOW $10,sae --~--------------·--NOW 14,988
1085 !UIC" LESABRf: liMntD 21100r~. ~,.. •II.Jil.-1 Oon't
11185 OLCS CUfLASS SUPFIUIP J_., .........
•
lop. tu!Oftk, ll. c:NII, .....- . IQ Clr!WII

Sa•• ........ .

.....

CHEVROLET

CREAM PUFFS

home In Brown Deer, a Mllwaukee suburb.
They called emergency perso nne! who arrived 10 minutes
later, but by that time the labor
waswel ( alongandMrs. Caldwell
gave birth to a son In the llvlng
room as her husband coached
her . Their two other- children,
Jennifer, 2, and Alex, 4, lOoked
on.
Paramedics who arrived after
t he birth wrapped the newborn
boy In aluminum foil to retain
body heat and took mother and
son to a hospital.
Caldwell, who owns Marko's
Pizza in Germantown, another
suburb, says he's planning to
thank police and firefighters with
special pizza deliveries.
"The firefighters and pollee
helped me personally deliver my
son,"hesald. "So, thlsFrldayl'll
personally deliver a couple of

• limit 12

SHOP &amp; PARTS
lobloutii,O....,
•••••• wv.

773-5024

BUICK
LeSABRE

;pp

pointing out the mistake, Martin
said, "We were shocked. We've
been doing ads for a long time
without errors."
·
A harried staffer at the Trlbune's Job Guide said the paper
would be r unning a corrected-·ad
Thursday. "Anyone can make
mistakes," he said.
The Tudors, including Henry
VIII and Elizabeth I, ruled
E ngland from 1485 to 1603. With
the death of Eliza beth, the
cr9wn passed to James VI of
Scotland, a Stuart.
Home delivery
MILWAUKEE (UPI) - The
owner of a suburban pizza
business and his wife have found
a new meaning for the words
"home delivery. " .
·
Mark and Diane Caldwell had
been expecting a baby In about
two weeks, but Diane went Into
labor early Tuesday at their

87e qt. Sale Pnce
- 25c qt. Mlr's Rebate

•

llltlnOJ, IIIIAIICIIIMII•.,.,. ca. I IIIMIWIIII~ ...._••.-. NOW $9,988' lllf~ 1111/1111, WM 56.911.- NOW $4,988
1~6 OLOSU081LE t8 RI!:GENC't INdlldl , _ .....,.., WllllfJ• 1
198~ . CAVALIER 2 D06A COUPE • air
CID!dllalq, .,.,.., , . .. . . WillS·----·-·

6" « I"

6S4 L . . . ST,. h

•COMPLETE COLLISION WORK
TO YOUR SATISFACTION

ROUSH'S

1H7 PONTIAC FIREBIRO '"r 10h» "*'I ~ . ,.IXII"dlirilg, lilt

$9995 .

I

•ALL INSURANCE CLAIMS

$12,988

fittings and atove boards.
... allsizes.
.,

O'DELL
.

"

"JUST ARRIVED•
Full supply of stove pipe

$26_9

•

OVER
100 NEW
TRUCKS
IN
STOCK!

MAGIC HEAT

STOVE

•

WaUmount
1,000 to 11,000 ITU, •turol 9D'-

4 ~llUI'ICO .•

•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN

'\0.....

$85999

589595

•FREE ESTIMATES

OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88

HEAITNGLOW
Heats approx. 2,000 eq. ft.
flreview double glau doors,
large aah pan, heavy duty
shlklt' grate.
.
H•rthglow in.rt, deluxe ._,tural, holda 25" loge.

ROUSH'S
BODY.SHOP AND PARTS

(FACTORY REBATES UPTO $1,000
~
ON SELECTED 1989 MODELS)

OoOy

Only royals need apply
CHICAGO (UPI) - Evanston
Township High ·School thOught
they needed people to help teach
foreign languages, but want-ad
typists at the Chicago Tribune
. apparently decided they needed
help with English history.
Under th!l beading "Educa·
tlon" In the Tribune's Job Guide
section this week was an ad that
started;
"TUDORS NEEDED, Evan·
ston Township H.S. needs tudors
Immediately ·for the 1988-89
school year. Tudors are needed
for the following languages:
Chinese, Urdu, Polish."
Chris Martin of the school's
personnel office said Wednesday
she had phoned In the want-ad
and the mistake was made by
Inventive spellers at the paper.
When the Evanston staff
started getting angry phone calls

1

-·-

Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to James Edward Fish, Jr.,
27, Rutland, and Constance Renee Witt, 22, Pomerby; Barry
Alan Yeauger, 18, Pomeroy, and
1988Terri Lynn Grover, 18, Pomeroy;
PONTIAC
Kevin Dale Cowdery, 21, Reeds·
BONNEVILLE LE
vllle, and Melissa Dawn Ed·
wards, 17, ReedsvUle; Joseph
Wllllam Dummitt, 27, Tammy
Diane Johnson, 26, Pomeroy. .;,

SALE

Saturday has been set as a
work day at Camp Klashuta
located on Scout Read near
Chester.
Shirley Smith who is active In
the scouting program says that
volunteers are needed to assist In
some cabin repair work as well
as repair work on th~ swinging
bridge over the Shade River
which leads to other camp sites.
Scout oftlclals will be at the
camp all day from 9 a.m. and
anyone willlng to help even a
couple of hours Is asked to assist.
It is also requested that those
with carpentry tools bring them
along.
She emphasized that workers
do not have to be Involved In the
scouting program but simply
Interested In youth pr9grams . ,

HERE'S .OUR THANKS·FOR
MAKING OUR 3rd
ANNIVERSARY SALE
A HUGE SUCCESS!

Licences issued

.

The 49th a nniversary of the
success. On committees for the
Homebuilders Class was obbanquet were Flo Grueser, Clar·
served at the annual banquet
Ice Erwin, and Thelma Boyer,
held at the Middleport Church of
tickets; Mrs. Evans and Mrs .
Van Meter, program and
Christ Tuesday night.
Colleen· Van Meter read the
decorations.
'
· history of the class, dlscusse&lt;fi he
Attending were Marie Curd,
projects, and presented gifts to
Edna. Evans, Willard and Nettie
Frank Ihle; teacher, and Ka·
Boyer, Thelma Boyer, Elsie
thryn Evans, president.
King, Delcie Forth, Dorothy
For the program Paul FitzgeBaker, Glen and Kathryn Evans,
raid showed slides of the Holy
Coleen Van Meter, Richard and
Land.
Shelly Duboise, AI and Donna
lhle had the opening prayer
Hartson , Virginia Buchanan, Dowith Mrs. Evans serving as
rothy Long, Clarice Erwin,
emcee for the program. The
Mildred Long, Doris Carder,
fellowship class served the steak . Frank and Kathy Ihle, Bud and
dinner In the fellowship hall
Ha2el Wilson, Raymond and
Farle Cole, Clay and Geneva
which was decorated In a
Thanksgiving motif. Ceramic
Tuttle, Harry and Margaret
turkeys were given as favors.
Bailey,BillandFloGrueser,and
Tapers on the table were In
Paul Fitzpatrick.
turkey repUca candleholders.
Mrs. Evans thanked the com·
mlttes for making the class
activities ·for the past year a

-Quirks in the .news--------

&amp;out work
•
sess1on "set

Trick or treat night In Pomeroy
will be observed Monday night,
from 6 to 7 p.m.
1

The hymn sing which was
scheduled for Saturday at Morse
Chapel Church has been canceled. The revival at Morse
Chapel will still be held Monday
· through Nov.
·

SAU lieS IIOV. 5

WOOD/COAL '

15°/o

SAlE I-IOY-1,1UI

Event Monday ,

Hymn sing canceled

'DELLS' HEATING
WINTER .

SPITFIRE:

SAVE

Static . . . Occluded

A cold ·rront tre.Kklng across the
northern Plains brought snow,
strong winds and freezing
temperatures to the upper Midwestern states early today, dumpIng 2 Inches of snow on Billings
and Great Falls, Mont. Four to 8
Inches of wlnd-wlilpped snow was
predicted to settle across the
area by late today, said National
Weather Service forecaster
Harry Gordon.
·
Similar wind and snow warnIngs were issued 't or today over
Wyoming, North Dakota and
northwest Minnesota. Gordon
said winds late Wednesday
gusted to 60 mph winds at
Sherlday, Wyo. ,·arid to 67 mph at
Rapid City, S.D.
Wind chill temperatures In
North Dakota were expected to
· sink to between 5 degrees below
zero and 15_below later today.
Gale force wind warnings were
posted across the Great Lakes
today, and snow was expected to
fall In New York state. Elmira,
N.Y., recorded 23 degrees at 2
a .m. today.
Rain fell overnight in Maine,
eastern South Caroilna and
Texas, whlle the Northeast endured freezing 1 morning
temperatures.
1

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 26: Maggie
Arnold, Mrs. John Bentz and son,
Stella Blanton, Jerry Lewis, Mrs.
Robert Shiflet and son, Mary
Sommer, Mary Sowards, Rcsalee Stewart, Denny Su Uivan,
Gladys Syck , Mrs. William Taylor and daughter,, Reger Vining,
Ca rl Willet, Neoma Wiseman and
Belva Yester.
Births Oct. 26: Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Jarvis, son, Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Mitchell,
daughter, West Columbia, W.Va.
Mr . and Mrs. Rcnald Petty,
daughter, Millersport. Mr. and
Mrs. Rebert Rls t, daughter,
Southside, W.Va. Mr. and Mrs.
!taymond Stephens, son, Bid·
well. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Tolliver, son, Reedsville.

~SHOWERS

Winter chill strikes Midwest

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls Wednesday; Rutland at 3:39a.m. to Main St. for Jennifer
. Shasteen to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 8:03a.m
to New St. for Mary Qualls who was treated but not transported-'
R~tland at 11: 07 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Oron Dungee t~
0 Blenness Memorial Hospital.

A divorce action has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Berness Brumfield
Pomeroy, against Donal Brurrr:
field, Wapakoneta.
A dl"orce has been granted to
Brenda Buckley from Tom
Buckley.
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted VIckie L. Metheney
and Ricky A. Metheney.

1111, Ohio

NEW HUNTING BOOTS

WEATHER MAP - DuriDg early Fl'ldiQ' mom1D1, . IJIIOW Is
forecast lor parta of the upper Grea&amp; Lake~~ wtth showers In the
lower Great Lake~~ and thundentorms Ill the 011111 Valley aad lower
Mlslllsslppl Valley. Showers and thundentonna are peulble In the
western Galt Coast and parts of the soutllera Pia/•· (UPI)

EMS has 3 WednesdaY cails

Geor~ Scott

w'

a••

·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Porna:oy- Middleport, Ohio

27, 19S8

Homebuilders class meets
to note 49th anniver~ary

Ohio grain report

Continued from page ~
the hearing on Beat's motion to suppress evidence has not been
scheduled.
Charges of Income tax evasion will likely be forthcoming
against Priddy whether or not the confiscated drugs are
suppressed as evidence, Lockhart said.
Priddy remai ns free' on bond,

October

• 1 ve•r w•rr11nt~

Gallipolis
209 Upper River Road

Sale Prices in Effect October 27 through November 2, 1988

(614)446 4103

�.'
·Paga 8-The Daily Saatinel
PubUc Notice

Public N otlce

Public Notice

0f ~ 011 llu-' -~~~
ORDINANCE 111173
menta nt
· - ""'" '
AN ORDINANCE TO
-nomic. polltlcll. or orchl·
REGULAR HIITOR IC
.....,..
z. ., ..hlatcloy;
ulko•d lm-o.. '
STRUCTUREI
~
~
Wh.,.., tho VIII- of :.•.;; r:...~- In the Hla-

:::-:.

~=~~~~~
c h . - of community ond

nunday.

Pomaoy-l\lliddlaport. Ohio

3. t o . - olvlc _ . , ,
4 10
•
- . - the locll

.,.._.,d

•-oily

-tor·

IIUIIIIII..- Ill .,.
1iMo ...,-. lndlvld-

-

--

uo1. firm. or -pooollollo
prGpDiu.,.
.... to n-o
-~ tho oonIIIUCIIQnor ........ lllol•o
with ihe C11111Riio... M

economic devlloprnont ond "":~ 1,_ u• ..,d
.;._'"'D .... from · pmvxolloto of~
HIIIOIIc
,..v-~· or doetruction
lmpolnnont
of · Dlltrlcl far thotoduC81Iolo.
vlluo; ond
- - .,d.,...uraoftlw
Wh--. tho Vlllogo h• - - of ?too . _ ovldonced ?too noed through ~
nty
-nomIc M d com· -cou
" - to. illtoblloh. ..c..
munity dovtloprnont pro- dll1rict.
iromo to pr_,t alum ond · Tho Comm;,alan , _ •·
b?lghl ·ond ta creoto on tllbllah. chtngo. loy out. 1nd
.,.lronmont wltlo o high define 'ilatrlctt Whlcih · - - of llvoblllly ond ~EEIIIIIII to be of' hletorlo or
-nomic - " ' · MOd
onohiiiCIUrll - 1• follow·
· Wh--. tho pr•orvollon ~ pr.....,,. 1n the
of bultlniJI ond p i - of
of.._ _ _ lllllflllicl~hlltorlc lnt-..1 ond . t.~ ble to the ·-·-...
OFtllllllo- or
mllntononce of on:hltoctu· chengo of • • .,d -tlfi.
·ral unity of ,,_ of hlltoric C81lona ol rorolng. Tho c...,..
lntoroat Mlworfl Md In· million wll ...,.. ~ lho
~-properly valuc •nd guklllinllettabfilhed b¥the
Wh- tho Commlarlon Netlonel Roailtlrof HIIIOIIo
for Hlotorlc Pr....,otion of " ' - ·
1.
·
tho VIII- of Pomaroyblolng
Conomlulon tor Hlotorlc
mlndflll of llw proud hlllory Prn.,..loro ..,.....,.
of lhlt community ond tlw
Tho 1111ogo of PPoonowor&lt;oy..,
Jm...,........ of -.tv In tho aholt o C11111mlaalan ·
_.,.._, llvoa of our alt~ call_. t• comm-.o far
••a. horob'/ - - • • H - Po r ••111M- Tho .
o·
mlltar of public pollay !hot Commllalan .. tho -11'1-n. Notaro· n..,b 114p of-,.._,.
- tion. rehob?lllllion. and .. of _ _
--.11 -hltlo Imp,.,... or . . . - - •d ..,..,0
mont of our community .,. on lhll C•"toloalan
mottono of public
Mid 1 lllljorlly o f - Involving llw hoolth. rof81y, propartv ow-. of llw
'prooprolly, and
of county. noo ........... lholl
tho...,.....
blo IIIIPDiio?ed for of
N- -.tooe, blo ~ pro- - - - - - ' p- tho Vllogo of, In illlldngtho'lnlllol IIIIPDinl·
l'omaroy pou., ordlnonc.: - • two appolootn-•
to .._lolo lolotorlc atruc· 1hlll blo -lllllhed fa&lt; lour
tu Ond ...__.,
~ -~-- • ' i:.J-'k:;'O'f pub?lc pur· -lnlllol ·.;,;;;;-ooPIN
oil oP-- ; to .._lolo . . . , _ , 'lhlll t.· fa&lt;
•d ahlll 1101
' hlltOric - - .,d alg- thNe : n811e; pur- of lho Com· eJ?piro ot tho tllioo.
inlulon lor Hlatorlc Momboro ol tlw C11111mlop,.oryotloro.
olon oholl bo lllallllo for
_ A. Tho .......,otion of ,...,polntmllit. lrry ••·
- - and ,..., of lola- coney on tho Commlulon
orchltoctu,.l
moy blo flllod by lho Mlll'or
.lorlc
lr. o MOd
public
purpooo ofvlluo
tho farthe_plnd...,.,ofthe
-Commlaolon for Hlolorlc por11cu• pooltion Md..,.
P-ionlnlheVIII8goof . . , - by Counal. Tho
Pamaroy. Tho Commlaalan. Vlllego Counoll of ........,ay
In conjunction whh the . _ -~~ privela ooalaVIII- Councl Md by ou· tiN o r _.... lo raqtharllyofllola-nMao.w• lho of patolblo
·,_. lho power to .._.... m • m b 1 r a o n t h o
-tho aanlllruction. o i l - . aa ••••' .-poir, moving ond -~
Appllaolion for pormllalon
tlon of lllructu- lo buld. - · Ole.: .
within lho VIH8ge of Pom•
.. ?too - i o n .
roy; heruller coil_. 1t. ott-.o. ...,..,, mo.lng. or
Hlolorlc Dlolrlcl.
of lilY ..fUCiura
a. The purpo• of the ;,cllrnolllion
Wllloln lhe loletorlc
ordnonce aholl blo
Dletrlct. If any chMIJII 1. to '"'-""' lho h•lt· Involved which would llflect
ago by
of pr--"ng
liw\1111-the
of dlatrlct
Pomo- . lho
•t-.lor
of I
· ,_
_,
. . vllIPPitrlt101
..o or Intended
·;~•lin which reftecta ol• to ..,. v
-

.,.,lou•

Public N otlce
rounding oru. Tho
Commlaalan ;, nat NCiulred
to llmll aanmuctlon,
-ion. or
to tho
_ _ u,.laty ofonyone
..... loci.

Beat of the bend
BOBfR::J'IC~t

:r."

I l l ' . , . . ... ,.....

lion. Ewry "'"'' llua ~
be
to .ad DD--.r
doradby ... lllr! I Dlatrlat
Conn~ • d no ponnlt

'*"''ad

.,.IIIII'
. _..._._...

..,.?ood untl lho CooownII- ·
lion ha aatM dawn •

,:"".:.::....U..,.

~

In NVIIWing . , - for con_.... clr cih--.
-...-;.,....fa&lt;
In NVJowlng tlw ~-lilY aonotnoctloro Ill'
aloongl lhe Commloalan
lhlllgloe - 11 ~ Ilion to;
1.t~Mh-.qrllllhlt.oIUr7ll
vllul ..,d " " " " ' of tho l1niOtUN lild 111
NIOIIonahlp
tho loiiiOi ic
10

nd

.....

of the turrou no
tho ral-..olp of the

orr.· lrcliltKtural fu.
-lor
ol the - t o the

,_..,cllr of tM ll..,ctun
ondtothoourrou...... - .
3. tho ioo- aompa •
lly of iwliW'Ioll clooiF. -1_...... _ . . , .... ..,...
rtlla prapa•d to be u•:
MOd
.
.. .

4. to orry othlr foetora
lndudlng - - l o foetora
which the Commluion
d....,r to blo penlnlnt.
Only IFI&lt;Iorlor , _ , . IO
b1o conrlcMNd:
Tho Commloalon aholl
conolcllr only
ftu,. olo atructure1nd lhlll
not conaldor orry lntorlor
omn....,arota. Alro. the
Coonmlaalon ohlll not dlupprow an oppllcotlon •COPI
with ,..,..., to tho -orol
foctora apoclflod obow.
8triC1ne01 ond leniency In
judgmlllt of plano; llm~lng
archltactural OIYII to ono
...,lod.
Tho Commit alan -1 fol..
low
?too guldolln• _.,_
llahocfby the...,....., of
lholntorlor'a"810ndlldofar
Rehobllhatlon" In rovlowlng
plona for cihMIJII or altenodono to hlotoric _ , _ 1
Md for iE111e In tho Hlolorlc
Dl.-. Tho Comm;,alan
.lhtll be
In MoJudgmont of piMI for - u which do not contrl.... \o
tho Hlllorlc Reglator gulin• or for plona Involving
new conotruclion. u-o
· ruch pl111o would •loualy
1m110lr the hlotoric or 1rchl·
tectu,.l volue of aurroundlng IINctu- of lloo our·

••lor

,..,lent

27. 1988

.October 27; 1988

I remember when.._
. ·.

M B:e
Cub
Sc etrr;. ';: 2: 5 ar tak~ par !In
ou ac
e
a national
gram ca
UNI. . . lmponance.
Scouting
H on ~~~~~n;, Mlbmlt· Food.
~~~--"'raor
....~--a
--··-·-·
The group will
llflectlng the •torlor op·
-ceofoltrUcturaorfar place containers
tho IIIO)IIno or lllmolltlon of In area
o atruc1Ure, tho prrr-tlon
of which tho comm~~~~· ~:!~e:2 to Nov. 19 so that
dooma' of., Mnurull lmpor- residents can contrlbule canned
tonoe 10 tho VIII- of goods to the program.
tho County, the
Members of the pac will also be
• - · or tlw n01ion, lho
Commlaalan rholl ottompt moving door todooronNov : l2 to
1
with tho - - of tt.
..ruotuoe to formulolo ., collect canned goods, no g ass
-nornlcolly -lble piM please.
for the p,.._tion o I t h •
Food collected will go to the
..noatura. Unl•• In thMe food pantry and will be dlstribatrcumata,_ the Commloalan ;, oatlafled thlt lho uted back Into our area for
prapa11d conltrUCtlon. •I· underprivileged people.
-ion. or repllr will not
--mot•lollylmpolr llw hlatoric · To celebrate
the Parts Plus
- · of the ttnlcton, the
Salule
to
National
Car Care
Commllalan lhlll reloct tho
Month,
G&amp;J
Auto
Parts In
far ""'"'' or
ion. filing o copy of ha Pomeroy will award $100 in car
njeotlon with tho Moyor of
service to someone In our afea.
tho V1118go of Pomaroy.
The $100 voucher will be
Follu,. to complr with lho
doclalon wll ,..ult In o fino redeemable at a partlclpatlng
of eso.oo ..., dll\'. Arry auto repair shop In the area. The
,.,_,who cou•. _ . . . , winner will be selected by lotlery
by neglect orwllfuloctlon or
l1110tiona. 1rry 1tt...ion of and you may enter the conlest at
or MOYiron-1 chMgo or the auto store and at part!clpatlllmollllonoffocllngorryhla- 1ng Installer's shops. No p\ar1or1c Olliiclure or ony hlolorlc 1111 or dlalrict In ch~::s:::;:::K·also be ellglvlolltlon of lhla ordln..,ce ble to win a 1989 IROC-Z
rholl be required to ,..lora
. tho iitrUCtura or property to Camara In the nationwide conIta - - c e • tlw Com· test sponsored by Parts Plus, a
m;,;"b''HI..orlc Preear· national charn of 2,575lndependvodon . _ opprove.
ent auto parts stores. The local
Sonoo-Aprovll under cer- winner wlll be named on Friday,
loin clrcumatonCII:
Nov. 4.
In tho c•e of o ot"'cture
deomed 10 blo veluob?e for
The final appearance of the
the porlod of orchltocture 11 season by the Delta Queen for our
reprMonta and lm....,_. to area Is scheduled for Oct. 30 - .a
tho nllgloborloood whhln
whlclolt•llla.thoCommlo- late visit -I'm told but no hour
oion rnoy opprove tt. pro- hasbeenplacedonthepassblgby
poaed repolr or ~ion
t
doephe tt. foot tho charogoo ye ·
aomowllhlntMibovepravlllano If;
Looking for the good old days?
The late Mayor Hess of Pome1. tlw ..ruciure Ia d...,. roy received a letter on Dec. 26,
....,. too mljOr lmprovoment 1926 from an employee of the
pr. . .m which wN? blo of
........,ntlol bonofll to the Middleport Boller Works. EveVII?- of Pom•!"';
rett Bachner of Middleport, has
·
the letter today.
2. retllition ot lhe otruch
ture would ceu• undue
In the communication . t e
ftnonclll h-hlp to the wrller looked back 48 years from
(Conllnuioci
Poge 91 .
the 1926 date of the Jetler to

w•

=.-.=,~,.;;,;~=
~~~~~:!.=,;. ~·
lllm. .h,

()ctober

f~~

Pom-.

:C:!:"Ioro

Public

"Forty-eight years ago, long
atrald of work and were proud of
before the adventofblgbusbless,
11. A laborer earned $1 per day of
which has benefltled a few . ten hours and never !~ought of
centers of our country at the
striking.
expense 'of all others, Pomeroy
•'I remember when women
Bend was a humming bee hive of
were real women and protected
Industries , with large coal mbles
their health with sane clothing
on both sides of the river,
and shoes. They did not bobb
numerous salt furnaces, rolling
their hair nor bare their kness,
mills, sleel plants, nail factories,
smol«!, play poker, drink nor
boat buDding plants, docks,
exhibit a leg show on the public
sleam boats, saw mUls; planing
streets. Thef had their petting
mills, flour mUls, furniture facto-,
parties and home andnottn autos
rles, machine shops , foundries
on the public highways .
and many others.
· ·
"Tbe nearest hospital was In
''I remember Meigs and Ma·
Cincinnati .and no one was
son County farmers produced
operated on for appendicitis, nor
. great wheat and coal crops, large
was .there a demand for monkey
herds of cattle, sheep, hogs,
glands . Folks were sociable and
turkeys, chickens, fruit, hay and
lived to a good ripe old age,
produce. When dressed, hogs
walked miles In the cold to wiBh a
were delivered at your door for
dear friend a Happy New Year.
$3.50 to $4 per hundred pounds,
They were burled in beautiful
tresh butler, 10 to 12 cents per
black walnutcasketsat$25to$35.
pound, four to five dozen eggs for
The llvtng were rememl)red with
a quarler, six seven pound old
beautiful flowers and · not the
hens, 15 cents; milk, six cents a
dead."
quart; bestgradeofflour$3.50to
Well _ that's a part of the
$4 a barrel and three pounds of
letter. Idon'fbelievel'mpartlcuthe famous Arbuckle coffee for a · larly looking for yeslerday If that
quarter.
lsanaccuratesynopsls,areyou?
"I remember when men were
real men and grew wirey
Jack Carsey will be stagblg a
whiskers, wore boots, loafed In
bowl-a-thon beg!nlng Nov. 41n
the stores, chewed tobacco,
Pomeroy for the benetlt of st:
cracked jokes, cussed, drank
Jude Children's Hospital. Mrs .
good liquor from the same cup
Betty Smith will serve as coordl·
and cared nothing about germs
nator of the bowl for life
and mlcrobs. They were not
can'lpalgn,

(Continued from Page 8)

3. the would
rllontion
ol the
otructuro
not bototho
boot inloroota of a majority
of perrona in tho
community.
Commiaaion moetingo to
be public; right to appear
end b1o hoard; recordo ot
shell
. meet at lout four times I
year. All mootlngo of the
Commiuionshallbeopento
tho public. Any lnterootod
peraon or his ropr•entative
ia ontltlod to appear and be
hoard by !he Commlalion

before it reachat e decision
or any matter. The Commiasion shall keep ·en open
record of its ratolutions.
proceedings, and action•

whlch ahall !&gt;e kopt avolloble

.,

ANNivERsARY - The lllldl aalllveniU')' of the Middleport

- Church of Chris&amp; wlll be ob8erved wllb l!peclal eventa acbeduled for
'Ibis Sunday.

-

.

STOP

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
THE BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

the
PAIN
:
.
·
...
with Pain Management, now availahM at
Westmoreland

Family Care C! a I

I

in coo~ration with

i7l Plee·

.

club class seat because she
checked In early for the trip to ·
visit her husband, a student at
Salford College of Music, 200
miles north of London.
. ''The plane would have flown
anyway," the spokesman said.
He said the airline operated 12
flights a week on the London·
Tokyo-London . roule, and that·
•'tills sort of thtng happens to all
carriers' around the world."

OHIO WELFARE
COMPENSATION
\ GENERAL REUEF
UNITED MINI WORKERS
BOILERMARKERS
PAID
P.C.S.
MEDIMO
ADYACARE

lQl) Home Medlcol fquipmaal
.
If you suft'er from low back pain, ~ ....
~lion lieadacha.,post surgical pain,~ I
'
syndroine, acute muli?;le apums and other
fl.
pain, you may find lelief in ~· new p~ I ~~
through electrical nerve stimulus and back -,, 111
This fonn oftnatment baa been proven IV 11 I J·

A:a-,

For additional hlformatioll-·• Pain M•aa I I 1
and how it 1111lY help you call (104&gt; 87~100:

Westmorelaud.

· II OlDS DELTA II COUPE
WAS 114.900

NowS12,995

...... 1..00 A.M ...

a certificate of Ita approval.

which there 11 no Jtructu,.

modlft.,..tlon or rejection of
all oppllcotlonr and plana
submitted to It for review .
Work aholl not be com-

bUt which lalt•ll of hlatoric
olgnillconce.
s... Landmark" meene any
property or aite which h•

menced on any such project
untll such a certificate of
approval hM been flied. The
owner. lessee, or tenant of
the property and premi...
shall not commence the

speci.. charact•. archaeological. hlatorical. a•thetk:
or archttectu1111 value u part
of the herttage. developa
mentor cuttural characterla:tlca of the VIllage of Pom•

•:011 P.M.

liM. •t·ZIA

•

ray. ond all prc~perty loclled
In tho Vllloge of Pomeroy
1;,1ed on the Notional Regia·
lor of Hlotarlc Plocoa.

londacoplng wark thot lr ••

Commlaalon;

piece. buMdlng. Olructuro,

Any person or per10ns.
firm. or corporation eggrieved by 1 decision of the

work of art, flx'ture or tlmllar
object, but shell not Include
reel property uniMs ax·

tion hM a right of appeal to

14. ..Sign" muna any

attract mention to an ob·
ject.. per~on, instttutlon. or·
ganizltion, bu.U.Ma. product. Mrvice. w.ent. or
loCMtn bv any meanalnclud·
lng workl, lenera. ftgul'll,

provlaiono.
APPROVED:
J!lchwd D. Savior. Mayor
ATTEST: Jane Welton,
Clork/Trouurer
DATE: Oct. 3, 1988.
I, Jone Welton, •• Clerk of
the Vlll8go of Pom•oy. do
hereby certify thot tho fore-

doalgnr, oymbola. fl•tu,.,
colore, motion lllumlnllion
or proJocted lm-.
111. "Site" meena on
archaeologlcol or hlatorlc
site.
Orgonkation and Rul• ol
tho Commlsolon for Hillorlc
Proaorvotlon:
As soon 81 convenient
following their appointment

to the Commirolon, tho
membera ahol? meet end
orgonlzetloctlonaofoCholrmen ond o Secretory. The
Commltolon shell adopt Ita

made and certified of record
according to law; that no
proceeclnga looking to a
referendum upon such ordl~
nance h.-we been taken; and

own rulee of procedure end
provide for regular end spacial mM'tings to accomplish
the purpose of · this
ordinance.

that ouch ordinMce ond
certiflcoto of publicotlon
thlreof ilro of record In

1101 20, 27, 2tc

.

Record

oool thlr 11th dey of October, 1988.

17 CHEYIOLET SPECTRUM

MODERN GUN
SUPPliES
Munl1loading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Gulli • Ammo • Slugs •
22 Ammo
12 4 lost of Rutland
Across Hoppy Hollow Rd.

Ph.

WAS 11900

NOwS7995

vation of Hlatorlc
Structures:
1 . ''Alter" or "elteratlon:·
mean• any materlel changes
in the external archttectural
foatu1'81 of ony property

appointed Executrix of the

eo?oto of Edno P. Schoefer.
doceMod, Iota of 40676
Laurel Cliff Rood, Pomeroy,

toric Dl1trlct.

, .
. ~robete Judge
Lena K. Ne11elroed. Clerk

,.

oppli• for

NOW

1

building permk

or a certificate of appropri·
aten•• in order to undertake any change on property
eubject 10 thla ordinance.

3. "Cortlllcato of Appro-

86 CHEYIOLET CHEYEm
WAS ~4900

priatnMI" means the offi·

clal document laaued by tho
Commloalan for Hlatoric

$3995

Pras:ervation approving and
/or concurring _ in any

oppllcotlon lor • pormit for
the constNctktn. erKtton.
alter8tton. removal, moving

or domolklon of propOrty,
orchoeologlcol or lola?orlcal
alto, or algn. in ?ho Hla?oric
Dlt?nct.

IIOW

Meigs County, Ohio.

Robert E. Buck,

11 0)' 27;

owner. ownert, person, pereons, association. partnerahip or corporation who

6

17 CHEYIOLET lEimA

Ferndora Schaefer Story.

40676 Lourol Cliff Rood,
Pomeroy, Ohio 411789, wu

2. "Appllcont" munaany

., .

4. "Change" means eny
alteration. demolition. remo"v.. or construction involving
any property aubject ?o tho
prova.ions of thla ordinance
Including algn•. landacaplng, end tree rernov...
"Change" shall Include any
new construction .
"Change'' thall not relate to
ordlnery malnten•nce or repelr of env property, provided auch work invofves no

$4595
•.

. ·,

.(

·'

14 FOlD LT.D.
NOW $3595
WAS•-

color,

or

cutrix of the Mtate of Olga
PieroltL diiCIIOiod, lo?o of 218

e.t Socond Street, Pom•

ray, Meigs County, Ohio.
Rcb&amp;rt E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lane K. Naa•lroad. Clerk

(101 27; (11) 3, 10 3tc

FOR RENT OR SALE
1 Houses 011 Mooro I!.
in Pomrroy
Will l•·rr: ,,, '·• II.,,, l,rrHI
Fr~:h rr., rl 1.1
tlr~ rr p.r11
l'rotlr r r•q tv.

C.lllllr.r t

Cdl1 flll·'··'' 'I' p,ll'-

CAll 9'12- 2403
or 792-2780

outer

1ppoera~co.

utrlr•r:!

1,r r 1,".. '

!,

8 LANE fiMF
BOWLING l fiNE

J1Jr.r

lll"·l.t r·.

, · · · • . 1, , , • ·

• 1·

IH

WAS .. 700

Jim Cobb

CHEVROLET

'1

FOR SALE
MA\!lN. W V~

rl

1
·rr r•rrl

I1

ST,

rl

h! Pill

'; ~ 1 v .r

•1 ' d '

MAIN

. , ·,

f

l&lt;i l'llr 'lt

snr.rll
rrr,·•rt

I &lt;!J \11!!(:11,

d"v\
••··A"'If

,

,rv

r l:••.rr\o

l'i ,, ··d

OLDSMOBiLE POMEROY, OHIO
992-6614
CADILLAC

. ·t

(fll(

OPEN

or

If'

'l'lf2,10J

992-2780

BOGGS

Writ...l

.ROOFING

SALES

&amp;

EAGlE RIDGE

SERVICE

SMAll ENGINE
PH, 949-2969
......
~·•r f or

u.s. RT. so fAST

NEW -- REPAIR
Gutters

614-662-3821

G DOwnspouts
Cl
·
utter
eamng
Painting

between l=tt . 7 &amp;

Farm Equipllllll

FREE ESTIMATES

949 2168

'
10·11·'88·1 mo. pd.

Parts

sash~n.

&amp; StiiWIIII

Now Hamor BuHt
"Free Es1imates"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAllS
3·11-lfn

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Transmlulo.

Also
PH.
or

992-5682
992·7121
6-17 ·lie

$35

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY

BISSELL
BUILDERS

1:00. P.M.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prius"

RACINE
GUN CLUB

949-2801
Res. 949-2860

PH.

RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
9-19-88 tin

or

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4- 16- 86-lfn

~!'_kos

'::=;;;;;;;;;;:::~

lYNCH'S

YOUNG'S

6E1 ACQUAINTED
SPECIAl

- Aooling and gutter work

3

CARPENTER
SERVICE
~Addona

and remodeling

~ Concrete

work

- Plumbing and alaetrieal
work

(FREE ESTIMATES!

PC. LIVING

ROOM$UITE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

$449 95

992-621 S or 992-7114
Pomeroy, Ohio
).13-'88· lin

10·25-1 mo. pd.

~

·

GENERAl~

REPAIR~

Specializing In Cbaln
Unk and Wood Fencing
•CEIL! NO FANS INSTAlLED
•,REMODELING •PAINTING
•PLUMBING
•ADORNO
•DRYWALL
•TILE WORK

•DECkS

•PORCHES

FREE &amp;&lt;!TIMATES
Buckeye Card Welcome
18TH IYIICH 992-37~3

10-31·'18-1 m·o.

.•

MEIGS
.FURNITURE

CARTER'S

Complete

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Drywall

Service

FREE ESTIMATES

992-6282

Reasonab,. lata&amp;

56 STATE ST.
GAlLIPOLIS, OH.

446-3487

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

JUNK COS 01 TRUCKl
-IREIISTIMATES~

For 111y af lh.Suer'liCH

614·742-2617
·aetw•n 9

p.m.

or Lean

-BEAUTIFUL

""'"- .

,',,...,_
'. •HAIR
, I •I
• ~ ,, 'i

, ~~
' ~"':~:oClOTHES

Good Rates

\

T.L.C .
26 Yra. EKp.

~

CJ

.

References

992·6·73

Joe or Pauloy Bewland
211'1 South 41h St.
Middloporl, Oh.
"LDIU!l~OME

HOME"

Basham

Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

6:30P.M.
facllorv Choko
12 Gaugo s';:~~~ Only
Slri&lt;lly I

TOP

OF

•TANS

THE STAIRS
AIID

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 Wott Sec~ P-oy

992-6720

l 614-?92 -2403 ur
1 614-??2-2780

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNU: GREG I. ROU!H
,":~\

GENERAl

•CUITOM KJTCHEHS 6 8ATHI
•EXTEHIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL IIDINO 6 ROOFING
•METAliUILDINOS
HOUSING. APT . PROJECTS
SINCE 1969

DUm sr. SJucu•

992·

ante
CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM .
DIAMETER

14

INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PER TON
DELIVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY, OHIO

99~! ~ 6~J6 1

Hom elite
Jacobi en

VAlLEY LUMBER

&amp; SUPPLY
Mid=~lr~~:; ohia

Brownie and Junior Girl Scour
uniforms, and other Girl Scout
memorabilia. Call 114· 949 2093. Evenings only .

No soopoo or rlflod borrulo
11 Help Wanted
••~He~
1 -----------~~~~

I

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

LINDA'S

. PAINTING
INtERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
paln~ing. let me do
11 iar you.
Very Reasanable.
Han Rlfereno1.

We will ti'MJI coal for emer9ency
HEAP. Meigs Countv Oept. of
Humen Services, and HEAP
voochers. We can give you
prompt deliveries. E•eelsior S!lh
Workl, Inc. Pomeroy, OhiO.

9008.

No hunting or trespassing. ell
coL I-.. Ed Mitt 011
permh:a can

au.

'

4

Giveaway

KlttMI to give IINBy. Lht•
trelntd. Call 814-446· 9319.
Llfga female est &amp; 3·8 wll.. otd

loltt..s. Coil814-446-7075.

985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
'Ul-4-1 mo.

BINGO.
POMEROY-EAGlES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST.
"

992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:46P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchase of min .
H.C . Package. Limit 1 coupon par customer par
bingo •••ion.
WE PAY '50.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '85.00 PER GAME

1 Ferret, Z vra. o)d. Slameee
coloreci .female. .......ary gentle. Cell

114-388-e7e1 .

Reg. Dober"*' female. rust
color... ~ yrs. old. gentle but
good watch dog. Call 614-388-

8781 .

Our Delivery Staff

Know&amp; Where You
Live.

Call 992-2221
or 992-9922
10-12-88-1 mo.

P.O. Box 724. Athono, Ohio
45701 (8t4-594-8t081 w•h

letter of intent .,d 3 rtrf•ance.

Contrlct position weillbl8 Clll'k·Typing sklllt, knowledge
of Office Preetlce and Pro~
dur•. ability to meet public
requIred. Appllcltkme wll be

..,.., Octob.- 28. October 31 .
NovemtMI'

1. 1988. 8:00 to

12:00. 1:00 to 4:00PM. AppJv

Reg. Box_. nt.la. 21ft yrs, old.
Groot """Ry dOg. Cell6t4·388·

17St.
4

cot. Fomat•. Lnt .. troinod. Cell
oft• I PM. 614-446·0812.
sec1c ot ciottooo to give ......
Coll614-388·8449.
1 Rod Tide iM'P· 3 hound pups.
conm- 3as-se 12.

14

kittens 71h wks. old to give
IWI'f to good home. 3 m•e, 1

tomato. 300 Cheri'! St .. Pom•
roy, Oh.
:_B:,:tac:_k:__m_rl_e_do:-g.--:-:
'h-:Po:-ocl::o.:-;:-'h
T..t.. Appro•· 2'h yr:. old.
Good wHh iddl. Cell 814-742·
2103.

et the Gallla County He.tth
Oep.-tma"tt. Equel Opportunity
Employer.

Up to t16HOURPAOCESSING

MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUA·
RANTEEO. FREE DETAILS.

Wrtte: SO, 1057 W. PhiiMit+phiL SuJte 23&amp;-GO, Onlllrlo,
Cl\lf. 91712 .

Oovernmtnt Jobl $11.040 •
t 69,230 yr. Now hiring. C.ll

1·B0&amp;-6a7-60DO E.t. R-9805

for CIJrrR fadarat list.

Gat p1id for reeding booklrl
•100.00 pw title Write PASE·
01138, 111 S. llnooll"ftdy, N.
Aurora, IL 10142.

AVON • All " •· Cell M1rlty.n

Wet~~•

304882-2145.

•

AN'S It LPN'S-PH, full time &amp;
plrt time ~~ppllc:.ttoM • • betnp
acCi~f:~ted for Pll • .,t Vlll4ft'
Hotpltal Nurafng Care Cencef.

------:----:-:-;-

Contact Pertonnll 304-&amp;?e-

3&amp;77.

AVON ou .... uShirlov Spoa.
304-676-1429.
.

Fluffy 7 wk. old kttt.,a to

good

home. 814-843-6445.
ON•wiV. 3 kittens. 2 black
CMI. 814-949·2346.
Puppi11 Code• Spenie/ mixed.

304-876· 7829.

Jot h., ff• for the
cutting. 304-ei?S-4131.

22

4340. AAEOE.

~

.. licensed Social VVorker in

Kr•

7pupp6ee, 5maleand2fem. . ..
plrt Beagle. c,.n be teen 2617
JeH.,.on Ava, 304-875-1085.

r\ei

long twm care f1cillty. E"P•
rl8"1cepreferr.t. Commenaur~te

salll'! ond beno?lts. E.O.E. Moll

r•uma to Admlniltrlltar C1re
Haven of Point ,.. ..,t Rt. 1
Box 328, Point Ple•.m. W. Va.

266150.

AN, Director ol Nuraln g. ""did
for intermedlce hMtth e. .
fiiCillty. Exp.-ienoedin long term
c.!' I required. s.. " and bin~
tts comm•«lfe wtth •JME
rl.-.ee. Send riiUme to Box P.
1 IS,
of Point Ple•anc
Aegilter. 200 Main 51., Point

c••

6 Lost and Found

P!e11101t. W.Va. 21580.

AttwttJon: acellent
LOST : Gray Mlnlalufe
Schn-..ztr, m.te with red collar.
Petrlot· Gage 1rea. Reward. Call

114-379-2932.

LOST:M.tt fluffy biiCk pup/ tan
• whit• mwldnp-Poleclt Rd.

c .. k-. Ia ha 01(7. Cell

Lost; In Middlepor1. gr- end
white long·hMred cat. Close to
looiloal? llalol Soturdo1. Oct. 22.

Answers to loott. Call 814-

992·15848.

~oome

·•

tar

home aasembt¥' work. Into eli!
504-848-t700d0jit. p 2303. .;

EARN MONEY AT HOMEl A•

18mblel.vllrv, tovL eledroniQr
others. FT • PT work .v1Uibli:

Colt 1-. ndobtal

t ·407· 74.(:

3000 ext. S 2289, 24 hrs.

114-441!1-8282 evarnlngt.

LOST. femaltBeaglepuPPV, lost
vtck'rlty Sand Hll Road, George

Crump,

304-875·4&amp;96.

JOBS AVAILABLE

..

•

pep•·mltll proeeuor
seeking: drtv . .. too.N-motor ~
eraton, labors, teml · tkille~
grading peraonnll for our raey~
cling f~IHy in Columbus, Ohio,
Call or writ~ G•rv Grossmant
Grouman lnduttri•. 1910
South Fourth St., Columbu.-,
Ohio 43207. (Will BOD- 38~
Scrap

Needed babtfsln:er tor l•lhle
hours, conttct Chuck Mason at

304-875-1334 boforo4,00 PM;,
W~rned someone

7

&amp;

-.,Television Listeninl Devices
Dependable Hea ""l Aid, S&amp;les &amp; Senticf Y.. d sat .. 21.27. a, 2e. Ewrv·
••
t,.ng_ VJ price. Corn• of Third
CJ · Hearing haluations For. All Aces
ond svcomoro St.

a: .L1'censed Cll'ni'cal Audiolnaist
..,..

&lt;I[

~ ~614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
17 Second Avtnut, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

:a

or at
Veterans Memorial HOIIDitat
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

':;......,,_...,__,..,.,..,,...._______,.:;;:.::.,:....-! '

211v1nu room chair•. dr~··

1s

cu. ft. fr-or. clot '-•II :lzes,
on1ao. n ...... Fri .. s. soc. Boh?nd

Bolley CloOjitoi-Rt. 218. 614-

zss-ma.

Mnon. W.Va. 26280.

12

Vicinity

GAI.LIPOUS FLEA MARKET·
Rts. 3&amp; a, teo. Opon Sott . a,
Suns. 8 AM tiH 5 PM.

z_ LISA M, KOCH , M, S,

to join beli}

Gospel group, pref• 1omeon•
with versatile singing ability an~
d•ireto promoteGoeuel Mualll,
Send r•ume 'P. 0 . Box 791&gt;~

Yard Sale

.......G.alliiiofis ........ ..

-

MAIN mEET PillA

PART·TIME OA FULLTIME

COUNSELOR, Mll'tw'e D19,r•
prefll'riKf. Strong badr.ground In
addiction recovery .,d Mol•·
cant progremmins. Hlg~ chlllenging end r•ponsible posh:idn
available In ., adol•cant ,_._
dentlal progrll'n for sober. re•POI'IIIble indlvltilal. Contact 0 r.
Joe Gly, Ph.D., Billett Houte.

8477. !Ohio) B00-446-B181 . •

At The BEST PRICES.
H any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
mulch itl

UNDER

•

by November 1, 1988. E.O .! .

HUD·NALL
Pay Your Phone ·
aoid Cable Bills Hera
- IUSINISS PHON I
(6141 992·6550
RlSIDEHct PHONE
16141

813-327·

0ell.,. Welcome.

w_.,

3-bl.ck • whke kinene, 1-blaek
ktntn, 1·g'riiV &amp;. wtllt11 motf•

We·Carry Fiah&gt;ingSuppli~

sary. DetaHt. C.ll

0898. Ext. 0 ·1149 .

$800 weekly pos1lble. A•embling prod.lctt. SASE to: Home
Crafts, P .O . 8D.II 900trGOT,
Huntington, W.Va. 25704-

white cute kittens. litter
trllned. Call814-446·4836.

PlDMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Sacond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

INCO~E

HOME ASSEMBLY
A81rtmble 'prolilt11 It hol"'"'i8.
Part· time. Expll'ltnca unnec•-

92 389 1 ·
81""9 •
Flea Mll'ht
Tuesday and
Tt,urtday. Hendenon TownHall.

614-985-4180

Has always offered
THE BEST PillA

$3°0

Services

Bench and Off· hand $hoofing.

Your Hometown Place

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR ·•

Em p lovnu~nt

umil Nov. 27th.
prizes will be bacon,
turkey, and monllri. It will. be

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

AlSO ...

deltvery instruction• c•l 1-800.

999-0727.

Winning

CHE$TER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING 8o REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS .

Weed Eater

Shltbock 614-992-3891 . F0&lt;

81: ume time

MARCUM CONTRACTING.

Tecumseh

-COMMERCIAL

We buy Blaek Walnuta. Fund
raiaing opportunity . Qeorge

The lraak Walton Club willstert
.their annual Oeer Slug Gun
Shoot! Sunday, October l1st at
1 :00 p.m. et their farm, 3'/r miles

Strsy tom cllt. 1 or 2 yrs. otd. To
good home. Cell 614· 992·

Briggs &amp; Stratton

3t5B.

Wanted to buy : Stan ding pine or
log timber. ·c all 6,4· 314-6182
efter ?p.m .

10-21-'88-1 mo.

SMAlL
REPAIR
Authorized Sorvice
&amp; Parli

the

south of Chester on Sh&amp;de Rlv•

lll-19·'11-1 mo. ·

-RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Furniture and appll.,CM by

piece or entire household. Fl!ir
prices being paid. Clll 61 4 - U6-

Rd. Shootl will be ••rvSundey

992-2196

GUN SHOOT

.

Qift Shop open. Toys, gifts.
collectables. clowna, thimblas,
porcel1ln. 324Eatt Main, Pomerov. Ohio. 814· 992-7204.

PAT HILL FORD

P

1-28-'88-tfn

EUM HOME

• - I Boord For
Senior Citil- and

Reduce yoUr Weight.Tak"e " New
Shape Diet PltWI" and Water
Pills . Available l!lt Fruth
Phll'rlliiC'Y.

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

TRIPlE
EXCAVATING
•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business
WAN! 10 IUT WIECKID 01

beginal Setect singles

went to meet you. Write Ha•t·
••rch. Box 6846, Athens. OH
4670.1 .

SER~ICE

•

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

seerch

985-3561

10-8-tfc

Complere housetlolds of furn ._,
N re &amp; anUqun. Also wood &amp;
co el heaters. Swain's F11ntlure
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; OINe,

motorl. Cell Urry Livelv-814-

Lonllneu &amp;ndt when y or..r rHaart-

SERVICE

992-2269

2282.

388-9303.

KEN'S APPLIANCE

BILL SLACK

TO~ CASH paid for '83 mo del
and newer used cars. Smith
Buiek·Poritiac. 1911 E•~•n
Ave., Gallipolit. Call 614-446-

Junk Can with or without

3 Announcements

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
eRanges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable" '

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

Bill Geo fl Johnso"
614-446·3872

Wani to buy : Used furniture ar'l 'd •
antiques. Will buy entire hous•
hold turn iahing. Marlin W•d_...
meyer, 61o\.-2.t6·51 52.

Announcement s

WANTED

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
WP SOIL .
r'ILL DIRT

Racine, Ohio

INSULATION

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Buy

614-44&amp;-3159.

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-'2772 ,
_ ·
1/ 15/nn

FIREWOOD

992-3410

3rd St.

J&amp;L

Roger Hysell
Garage

Wanted To

used CM'I .
J im Mink Chf!II',-Oids Inc.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Serviu Center for Ryan
Products
8.7 Financing on Yardman
Servico on All Makos
We Honor MCIDisc / Vioo
9-1-88-Un

Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Rick Pearson Auctioneer. II·

e en 18d Ohio and Wett Virginia.
anUquo.
f .. m. Uouid•
tEotata.
lon ......
304-n:l-5785.

W e pay c11h fot" late model cle.,

Located Hallway

Authorized
· John

Public Sale
&amp; Auctfon

9

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

3, 10 3tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT DF
FIDUCIARY
On Oc?- 21 , 1988, in
tho Mtigo County Probata
Court. Coao No. 28038, Ucla
Ebonbach, 2273
Ayora
Drive, Roy noldaburg. Ohio,
43088, appointed e...

chongo In moterlol, dooign,
Mxture,

(t'1)

Public Notice

FOR RENT

Wli ..SOO

~6037,

Court, Cue No.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

614-7~_2!._2~~15

the Meigs County Probat•

Molga County, Ohio
DEFINITIONS for Proaor·

which Ilea within the Hla-

NOW $5995
'
J

.n

Jane Walton,
Clark/Treuurer
Village of Pomeroy

·

WAS 17400

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oc?ober 21, 1988, In

hera unto aubacribed my
name and affixed my official

II CHEVIOLD CORSICA
IIOW $8995
WAS 111,5tMI

'

Public Notice

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

AND

preoaly provided.

if err/ of ita proviaiona are
held unconattlutional by any
coon of competent jurildic·
tion, the decision of such
coun ahall not affect or
Impair any of the remaining

'(

.._ _ Oio.

•

property hovlng hlatoric alg·
nillconoe Ia locolod or on

I

Clllllll .... l.lllt.

NUCJII"'DNI

f

Tho Commluion aholl fi?o
the VIllage ol Pomeroy

r'

...... ttw IM. 1:01 A.M. te I P.M.

7. "Hiotorlc Sito" m-•

No ............ Page....... ..
In wit-a whereof. I hove

SllJir:;HEP t OHSE

--··
"'·
__
·- _......,..

Ftmi)J Care Center

and uiOCiaUon.

w~h

A.p

. . . . . NIICft"tl' I.....

e. "Historic Slgniflcence"

the r~~t~~l property on which

OrdlnanQe

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Liconsod Shop
5-25-!ln

Ohio
Hall)

IILLSIDE MUIIlE
lOADING

nonce thereto.

tlon of application and plans:

adopted by the laglalotlve
authority of the said VIllage
on the 3rd dey of October,
1988; thatthepublicationof
ruch ordinance hu bloon

TO THOSE 60 AND OVER
ON ALL PRESCRIPTIONS

11'1'

building materi81s. all windows. doon. lights, signs.
and oth• flxtur81 apurte-

the VIllage of Pomeroy.
objoct or device or port
Severability: ·
thereof s~uotod outcloora
The provlalona of thlo which 11 ured 10 advertloo,
orclinence oro aeverabla. end Identity, dlaploy, direct or

10°/o DISCOUNT

~~~l(J/

P~tm•erc&gt;v.

(Behind

992-67 56

CALL

of the structure Including

rillla. workman1hip, feeling

going it a true end correct
copy of an ordinance

Repairs
NIASE CertWied Mechanic

L,

Howard

the type and texture of

prior to the m881ing.
Certificate of appropriate-

Hlatoric District Commio·

C Service
AU AI
Major
11o Minor

99 -7204
324 East Main,

6 , "Exterior Arch~ecturol
Feoture" meant tho 1rchl·
tectu,.l atyla end van•ol
orrongemilnt oltho ...terlor

be on open tracta of lend.
filed.
parking Iota, lf:reeta. alleys
Ordinary maintenance not and other large open ereu,
effected; completion of but not including the planting or arran gem ant of flowwortt under prior permit:
Nothing in this Hctlon ers end planta incident.l to
lhell be taken or construed the enta.ncement of alngle
to pr.vent Work and repairs propertle. .
on any ltnicture coming
10. "Member" means any
under the heading of ordl· member of the Comml11lon
nary maintenance. Nothing for Hlatorlc Preaervetlol\..
in this HctM)n affects the
1 1. "Owner" meana lhe
right to complete any .work owner or owners of record.
covered by a permit or
12. "Historic . Olttrict ..
authorization i11ued prior to meant any area 10 desigthe creetion of the nated In accordancewlththe
Comminion.
provltlonl of this ordinance.
13. "Property" means any
Appeal from decision of

---::::.:.==-----·-

I Valley

Public Notice

muns the attribut" of 1

the date the application waa

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Mos? Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 M 4 p
A. 2 ·•
.M .

dla!rict, olio. or proporty !hot
po•-- ll)legrity of loco·
tion, dNign; Hltlng, matt·

fourteen 17to 141 doyafrom

VAUGHN'S

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN

spond in writing to en 9. ''Landscaping" means
application within seven to or includ• only auch major

early years, the church was
. supporled by the Rutland Church
of Christ and was encouraged by
Thomas Campbell aad the restoration movement.
A new building for the church
was constructed on Walbu t St. In
· 1844. Meigs County was growing
lnpopulatlonandtndustryandby
11188 a larger church was needed
so the present brick building was
built on Main St.
Sill! growing; tbe church con- ·
gregation built on another addl·
tlon In 1914 and bl 1971 a large
educational and fellowship wing
was added to the church and
more recently a lot adjacent to
the church was purchased to
· provide additional parking.
AI Hartson Is the current
. mtnlsler of the church with
Richard DeBose serving as assoelate pastor.

LONDON (UPI) - A British
Airways jumbo jet left Tokyo for
London with only one passenger
aboard, but an embarrassed
airline spokesman still Insisted,
''It's a very busy route."
Flight BA008 began Its 11-hour
Journey Tuesday with only one
passenger because delays resuited In all the others being
reroutea. ·
The passenger, ldentUied as a
Mrs. Yamamoto, was ~ven a,

VH! TAP£
to
t.tu;convortthooeoldMo•irl
&amp; Slidts • .., to tQiy VHS.
CALl MAY CARTER
or lOB'S ElECTRONICS

A no?ico oft he meeting ahall
be pooled at tha. City Hall
and pub?lahod two wooka

propored work or chango
until and unlou ho or it hu
received tho building permit.
Tho Commlaaion ahall ra-

recall:

Woman gets choice of seats

HAINES GifT
SHOP OP-EN

for public inspectio" during
reuonable bueln•t hours.

nou, modlflcodon or rejec-

Church anniversary being observe¢ _ _ _ _ __
Threeformerpastorswlllbeon
hand Sunday when the 150th
anniversary of the · Middleport
Church of Christ Is observed.
The trio will blclude the lmmedlate past minister, Bob Melton,
now In Owensboro, Ky. , Roy
Moyer 'nd Terry Yankee.
Mr. Melton will speak at the
10:30 a.m. morntng service
which will follow Sunday school
· at 9:30. At 12:15 p.m., there will
'be a potluck dinner for members
of the congregation and their
guests at the Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion An·
.n ex. In the evening, the church
will host a , county-wide hymn
sing at 7 p.m. with thecholrofthe
·church presenting a preview
program at 6: 45.
The Middleport Church of
Christ was founded In 1838 by
nble residents and durtng its

lt__________i1F========iT-;:========:;rr:========:rrr=:::::::=:======;-r.:==:::;::;:;:;;:::;l

Comminion:
The Comminlon

,
SU.rh
' Tomorrow:

8

Business Services

owner; or

on

t!-~·~~--~·~·~~~~L:~'""~:•:•:·•::•~:m:·~~~~::':JL:---~~-----:~--L-------;---------..J

Ohio

.
I

Eld•lv gentlem., noec;talerarplnj
room. Someone to do·laandry '

cooidn!&gt; Call 814-448-0803. .

El'llatlng DAY CM E. 7 d.,. I a
wk. . 24 hrt. ldlft. full / ,.ntlme:
fenced yard. E..ctrl. ref•~r~c-.

Re•aneblent•. C.ll114-44&amp;:

0839.

16

t"

2 FM!Iy v ..d Sot• mil• out
141. NM flower lnlf'lgements.
clothing. a, mtoo. 'll•ns., Fri. a.
s ...
Oar- Salo-wlth lo:t of uood
' doti'Mtg. 1e Belmont o •. Frt a,
Sot.-Oct. 28 8o Z9.

Situations
Wanted

•

•

Schools
Instruction

'

RE-TRA!N NOW!
.
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. &amp;28 Jocloaon PH&lt;aCott 448-4367. Rog. No. B?l-1 1'
105158 .

::

�Page 10-The Daily S.ltinel
18 W1nted

to Do

44

o._ • locllhoo w.. ~oiiO
C.M dozw. AIIIORIIbll ret•.
&amp;p.lenoe . . .or. CIWft..,.
COntt, Cal 114-25&amp;·1718.

town. Coli 114-oWII-1423.

Moble hoi"N IIIOVftg, l. .ld
with More*" Drlv•Awev,
owner 1nd opentor Jim
Mc&lt;lulr.. ..,...,ood ond in-

2 bedroom Ap1:1. for rent.
Corp- Nico oottlna. Laundry
f.:::IMI• wlilable. t.ll 614912-3711 . EOH.

....... 814-4411-2139.

••1:1¥
•• "' ..... ..... -a•
lnftm up to on•v... 304-773-

"Bless my teacher Mrs.
Crumby, and if you need her
up there, don't worry about
us kids ..."

8Uiin811

Opportunity

New 1 bedroom furNshed or

J &amp; S FURNITuRE
1415 Ealtern Aw.
• dreww chllt, 148. B drewer
ch..._ ti4.H . I pc. waadM
.d lnnettesltl. 1199.915.

unfur,.had. In Middleport. Call
514-1112· 1304 or 112-2778.
Prlv1te. 2 room, furni1hed
bechltor apt. in Syrla.IH. Cell
814-882-7180.

Pomoroy. 2 bedroomo[ll. Plr11y &amp; Furnltu,. come to Mollo'-'
FI.Wnttu,.upper Rlv• Rd., 1141 NOnCE 1
~~~;;~:;::::::==r:;;::;;:::~;;:::;;:;;::i furnllhtd In Naylol'l Run. S.a~r- 4411-7444
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- 132
H
Homes for Rent
=~:::r:aa?." otter 8p.m.
INO co. , _ _ d o - yoo
Mobile omas
41
VIR1'1 Furntture
Open dilly. Mon.·Set.
do
IOfth pooplo yau
for Sale
1 -oom opt. In Midciopon.
I AM · I PM
know . .,d NOT to -'dmOM¥
Hou11 with b•h. Ne• Racine. e1150. per month piu 1 utllttill.
Sun .. 12 noon· 5 PM
through tM mil und you h•• 2 BR . moble home. Totel •ec. Nlca yerd. e•den spte:• CaN Clll 114..992· 51541 or 114lnvootlgoto&lt;ltt. ofl-"'8.
""'ood - - · Coli 814- 114-992-1888.
9411-2217. .
Co·mplete household
4411-0722.
.
.:..,::.::-:::::=~-:-:--;-furnilhfngo· AI bedding. Nlllic
Own your IPP'NI or thoelt.....
H_.11 tor Ml'tt. 50. Ea~ M•ln APARTMENTS. mobile homee,
bunk beds wfth ruldc ch•t.
cho-fr-: Joon-1-. Klngrldg&amp; 12xl4 w•h tit out. 81. Pom•ov· 114-992·1144.
hou-. Pt. PI . .antlndOaMipov.illty 'of IGf• • ch . . . . . on
hdl•s. M•n· 1, ctlildrtn· AM eliCit~ inc:ludel under,...
Iii. 114-..,.8-8221 .
Nle. Excedem uNCI .,.,.. .. 011.
mooamlty. l•oo - · potMa. nina • blodlo. t30oo. Coil Fa&lt; "' 811&amp; n-ly Chrtot... tovo now In ttock.
bridoL lin- e!.(.317·0274.
doled 2 bedroom houoo, or• Bloch Stroot, Mlddoport. Olllo.
Chritt,..• llveweye now baing
gtrie oracc-ariM ll:cn. Add
laartktn n.,
co~ 2••-.mfurNihedepertn-.nt.
aolorenllr'• lrMdMm•:Llr 1973 N.-w Moon. 2M ., lirge munlly. lftw 1:00 PM call utiMt.
Phone tlken. Plua flnMcing w•Habl•
with app1owld CJedtt. ~t 1141 In
Clll-. .-.. - .
pa.ch IIi u-nlnfl.
304-1711-23&amp;1.
304-182·2111.
c.nt.-&amp;.-y· 'A mile on Unaoln
Lao. It I l l - For-. BHt,• 13500. Call14-37g.2278.
loy, l..oYI Comp hvarlv H o.
42 Mobile H - · s
oocopilng aptl((ootlono leo Plko. 114-4411-3158.
o._,_o._n,Luof&amp;- 14&gt;o70,3SR .,Zb•ho.IIOOO.
~·2-oom opor1- lui~
2000 or t13.99 ono Coif 114-oWI-8818.
for Rent
. .potod, "'pion-. - · ond Montgomery Werd Energy
prloo doolgnw. mull tilr pricing
trooh plofwpopr- Moln... Sner·el•ctronlc control· used
one summer. peldle&amp;owflttllkt
dlaoount or
lien. 1111 Conaord mobile horns,
n•os free living doll to •apU50. Living room .,ko·tiOO.
Rotol,-...--ofortop 1biii,2SR., AC.-nlngo. Coll lnEurok&amp;2SR.AduMoonly.No ping. bonko ond lchooll. F"'
quolty oloo• nomwlv orlood e14-2411-1222.
plio. t225 I mo. Dop. -Ired. moNinfo..-lon coli 304-882· Coli 114-317·0274210
CoM 114-2411-5813.
371" E 0 H
from til. to 010. -do2800 ..,._. t17.900 to 1tl8 Fl•wood. IbM. bottle
..:.__,•_
· _,._ . - ·- - - - Couch, love SHt end chair. A•
tB.IOO; lnwntory, trakting. t• h. . .nd hot wet«. t3000. Z lr. unllrNihld. Stove &amp; Furnilhed one bedroom ept good condiUon. Priced right to
flit-. alrf•o. g..,d -"ng. Coli 114-843-1310 or 814- rotrlr;ot"'"''" Fultt
-~·~ 1y
polo. coli ~,.. 1011. Coli 114-992·3e75.
11 dj¥'·
Mr. 843-8408 onytlme. Aok for 120 mo. t!IO •
- p ~ of( 1-•lll
on , no
•n
.... ~- (112)1811-422
.
.....
:00.
304-171-3788.
Lou ...
2 rust chairs. phone 304-175Don!lll.
.... ,.. • holf - ·· Coli
Dobbla 114-oWS.IIIO.
Ono -oom opt In Point 8119.
Lot fur"' Afa In Rutl ..d with
PIHHnt. very clelf'l 10d good
12JII8 Mobile Hom.. t'h bllh.
For R•l or ..... 2 IR .. mobile cond. no ptts, phone 304-1575- Maple clnlng room ..tt._ 8
chlirl, lght«&lt; hutc:tw, uc con d.
l•ve femlr room. be*oom. home.OO t200 '*Coli ~ntlhPMor 1381.
304-1711-1732.
built on bock. 131 wll buy.
•n•
.
.,....,, 111.500.
114-4411-1345.
• ..,..s....... 814-992·
. 2 8 --~ ho
dol~ 46 Fumishad Rooms
62 Sporting Goods
r. ~• me. Nmo 31 liom81 for Sale
2 boer- 1 biO. 11100. of- t200 o' ·mo. Roqulr•
304-8711-2722.
I 110 dop. • r&lt;l. COli Fw•hld roo~919 Second
Ave.. OlllipoU1. e13e a mo. H.T.K. llenolli SL· 123 V outo
e14-2411-9947.
UtHitl• . .d. Single mlle.lh•e
1170 Wlndla&lt;, lbU, wood1hotgun. 12 a•. 211n. imp. cyl.
buriW.
d dryer, •lr 1 z.eo furnished. 2 be*aom. In both. Col 44&amp;...-11oftor7PM . vent rib. E)C.t. cond. t300. Cell
c:onct multbem~. 304-891- $fr8CIUH trea. Wet• peld. c..
Roonw for rart·Metc or month. ,l14-28fl.8881.
3802.
I 14-112-7810.
St.nlng trt e120 e mo. O.llie
1979 ...,.,._, mobil• home,
Nlce ... lght MobleHomeln the Hotol-814-448·9580.
53
Antiqu"
14&gt;o'lll IOfth 7x21 •pondo. Countty. VIcinity of FlvoPoimo
ond luhon. Adulto only. t111
phono 304-1711-1141 .
46 Space for Rent
mom!\ 814-148-2019.
Buy or Sell. Riverine Antlqu•.
, 881 a-ny , ••70. oil II Oct·
4 IR .. full b•tmtnt • a•ea&amp; "" lot 71•173 fl. t18,000.oo. 2 bedroom unfurnllhld troll•.
1124E. M1ln Street. Pom•oy.
fu ltv ClrpMed (101M nM¥1. tWttord n• tMnll courtt.
Hours: M,T,W 1 01.m. to &amp;p.m.,
w.. w end 1ewerlnok.lded. 304- COUNTRY MOBILE Hom•P•k.
"'lood to olll. Col 514-4411- 304-182·28441111• 1:00PM.
Sundav t to ISp.m. 814-992·
1711-1071 .
Route 3 3, North of Pomeroy.
0271 aft• I PM. W'Hk1ndl
R... ol traN•L Coil 814-992· 2628.
1989 Zimmer deluxe 12xl0,
19812 Nctoom moble home. 7479.
wood ond ~ool .,_, plftlally
304-1711-7111.
64 Misc. Merch!lndise
3 bed'oom R•ch. 111.1 blll:hl. 1\lrnhhed. mutt . . to IPP,.
Office or small bu1lnee1 space
ftm- rGOm. dining room. 1 a. cllle.. 1-304-178-2919.
Moble hom-.~ rnlleoutl.nd for rent Locat.t at N. Second
_ .. ttoroge bulding.Hll Ad. 304-1711-3834.
Ave. In Middleport 8usin11111
dldc. Spring VIII"' 1984 ~ltr 141&lt;88. 2 ......
diotrl ... Coli 114-992·554&amp; or Wh•h:hlir•I'IIW or used. 3
· - Call814-44&amp;.7903.
roorno. 1\'1 bot hi. oli ol..,rlc, 3 bedroom oil oloctrk&gt; 1:Z.I&amp;. 114-!MII-2217.
whHIId electric acootws. Call
'
n• 1lr GDNI uNt,
18frlet 200.00 month . plus utltltl-.
Rag. . Mobihy collect. 1 ~ 814Modlrn 3 lA . home. VInton.
Spldous mobile horne lots for
orotor, - .. bod .. · - p-304-1711-4088.
,.
870.9181.
F8mitt room,
kllcb-. patch included, t1 2.800.00.
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
1torege building. l1rgt lot. S.lout lnqulroo only 304-178PM"k. Glllllpolls Ferry, W . Va.
All oak ftrM"ood. Good pl'dcup,
I 38,000. Coli 114-3811-8042.
44 Apartment
3117aftl&lt; 7:00PM.
304-1711-3073.
UO. Splk IIi looded. Call 8142Bfl.17e8.
for Rent
GOVERNMENT HOMES from AI ol..,rlc 14&gt;o70, 2 bedroom,
Glrage ,,_.. dowmown Point
II
1'h ·b•tw.. ,.rtl.., furr*hed.
A1M«rt. 20x20. EIIY 1cc•1.
W•tern Boots, Red Wing work
(IJ.Aopolrl Allo
•trll. good cond. e9.000.00.
sho•. Hush Puppy drllllho•.
2 Bit ....... . - - ldtchon- IIHl.lr•. 304-891--3410.
T• DelinqUM1t • Foudoaure Coli 304-e7&amp;.1111 .. 2:00 oppL furmhld. Woohor-0....,.
Qualtty. _.ectlon. gr-' prlcwe.
Ptopen,_. Awhble NOW. For PM Dr -.tytiiM StlturdeyL
hooll-...,, ww c•pet. nMiv
WaHl wortr. • wutern, Stl'te
lilting. CALL 1·315·733-8014
Dllinttd. deck.
From 1175. 47 Wanted to Rent
At. 141, south of Weter:too,
Eat. 0 2788.
Comn'llnlry, 2 bedroom,' fur~r Chk- Wlleome. Re·
814-843-2168
nilhld. 12&gt;&lt;80. 304-e7&amp;.3019. -oy. Inc. Apto. Call 304-17113 Bit ., LA, OR , ldtchon, fuH
1104, or 1'75-15318 or 875Dakot:l Farm Home. Bulh on
Hou11 In E•st•n Locat School
b•..,.m. Z
UMtttchMI
7738.
your lot. t 12, 9115 • up. l•e our
[Metrics.
C.ll
814-992·
1181.
g•ooo. 8.,.,.1. Ad. *48.900. 33
Farms for Sale
Model Coli , ·II 4- 888· 73, , .
CoM 814-4411-4531.
N•'tllf completely furnished
mobile horne In
Flravooct tor ..... e36 a load .
DON'T LOSE YOUR PROP·
city . Adu~o onlr. P•ldng. CoN
Coli 814-2111-9301 or 261·
80
N'e
f•m.
Free
t•·
LHt
ERTY IN FOACLOSuREII Send
For
L1111se
114-44
..
0338.
49
8674.
nm~e .,d phone no. to: Cl8 174 pi-=- on H.,. .. Run Rd. Loti of
cloOoMipohDoilyTrilluno. 825 prlvocyo With Of without troll or.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
1973 Fl'lf'lklin 132 AXL Skld- d Aw.. Oollloollo. Ohio C1ll b.tore ID.m. 114-IIZ·
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK· Comm•clel BIJiding far laue. lteer. Good oondftlon. Priced far
3880 or 114-992·1017.
45831.
SON ESTATES, &amp;31 Jockoon
Pt. Plo..,t. Coli 304-87&amp; quick slle. Clll 1ft• 8 PM,
Pike from ·e113 • mo. Wllk to 5104.
e14-218-1511.
By Ownor-508 Ridge Aw .. Rio 36 Lots
ehop
end
81~~6Ac1'81198
Gnn de . Goad ttlfttr ·
21. .. E.O.H .
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS·
RltWenwrt•lnoorne Property . 2
Check for specllls On ALL
Merch~nuise
IIR .• LA. OR . RM' blth. RIIW
Upotolro unlurrishod op!. Car·
Modetl. Big clsoourn·t.t va•'s
kitchen. tun porch, full b•• 3 tot•V.,Ice. Fla.. 3 mil• from potod, utiMioo pold. No chlldr...
stocked models. Ron AHIIon,
ment. rww v• rae., rww pk.ld· 'bt1ch. Slle ortMde torenrthlng No ..... Coiii14-44S.1137.
1210 Second Aw .. Galllpoll.
lng. oloctrlc loMco. Now Vlny I of eqU11 v•e. Cal 814-446Ohio, 114-448·4336.
e8H
.
....... lorgo lot. 2 blodlo from
F..nllhocf. 3 ,.,_ • boll\
61 Household Goods
oollogo. ly IPPofnt""'" only.
C'-&gt;. No Pill. Aof.. • dopoolt
1 275 galion fuol tonk with
Aohton. •oo bul..,, lou, r ..ulrod. Utll~l• furnllt.d.
,. el 4-182· 7.24.
moble home~ permtnld, public AcluMo only. Coli 114-Ufl. County Applience, Inc. Good •nd. Goodconcltian. eao:c111
814-"48·0288
rtt• lata. Clyde 1119.
OovemmMt homel from t1 .00. wetw,
usld epplilllOM end TV •••·
IIDWon,
Jr.
304-1711-2331.
Open 8AM to IPM. Mon 1hru MobMa home trtil« fr.-ne for
tu- NP~~Irl· A..o •x delinquent
end forecloeura pro~rtl...
Lu.:urlous T•n Townhou11 Itt. 114·4411-1199. 827 3rd. ulo. II 50. Coii114-25S. 1189.
Awillbl• now. For Itt
celt Beantlll ritter lots on•8Cr•plua.
IPirtmentt. Eleaent 2 11o0f'l, 2 Ave. Oolllpalil, 0 H.
pubflc w1tw. Ctyde IO\!Wn. Jr. SR .. tun llllh • . . - . powder
1·3111-733-10140111. 02 II.
Wood &amp; cost burner. · Call
304-17S.2331.
room dow..Uh-1, CA., die· GOOD uSEO APPLIANCES 304-1711-6331 .
• nice modern one floor pl1n
Wllherl,
«yen,
refrlg•etort.
hw111tw, dlspc.f, privet• ...
hou•••· Owner reloculot. 215 ecr• 81101d Run Roed. New tr•ce. priwlte endoled p .. lo. nngH . Skagge Appliances. Sen cabin• model ttereo end
N - quk:ll •lo. Wll conoid• HIIYen. Owner
pool. plwground.· Utllll• not Upper R.,.. Rd. booldl Stone 8 triCk tape. AM -FM stereo end
l .. d oontl'lict. Alto Ulke 111:• bla 304-882·3394.
fnduftd. lterting It t211 P• c - Motel. 814-oWS. 7398.
record pleveJ. Good concltlon.
mo~ veNde u plrtllll trlde.
mo. 'CoN 814-31?-7150.
Coli 304-~58-1997 .
A-g 184.000. 'fo&lt; oil 4.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
114-742-2728.
Furnished • '· N.w. Ne• HM C.
3 wheel blo,cle for ••· Call
1 BR . 1275: Util~loo poid. Coli Sof11 end chlirl priced from 814-oi4S.3818.
Home In country wtth lind. Will
t3815
to
t996.
Tabl•
t&amp;O
1nd
44S.ol418 aftll! 7 PM.
corwW.. 1111 d contNct wtt h
/
up 1G t125. Hid•l·bldl e390
W9od. L1rge
to t15115. RecUn . . e2215 to Firewood-Herd
~rtments Md hou•s. Cell
p~m-. Coli 11 " 992• • "4•1--:H"'om--e-•"'fo;..-r"R"'a::-n-:t~ A304-1711-5104.
Dickup lo~. e38 delivered. Call
1371. Lamps t28 to e125. .14-oWI-1437.
Dlnett• t109 •d up to e49&amp;.
For ule or rn. 3 b.*oom Nicely furnilhld smll hou•. F urnM t.d sp ertments-1 bed- Wood ub4e w· 8 cheirl 1286 to
Mbtod '-dwood•l•. t12p•
hou•. intulmed, 1• furnM:&amp;
Aduko only. Rof. -;.od. No room. e240 &amp; up. UtltU• peid. t711. D•k t100 up to e3715, bundle. Contltlning lppro~e . 1Vz
No,..... Ret . . . oe •d dlpoait p .... Coli 814-441-0331.
Hutches
*400
Md
up.
Bunk
CoM 4411-4418 oftor 7 PM .
ton. Ohio P.elet Co .. Pom•oy.
I 14-992·15471. L1.,em..-ge.
beds compllta w-mattr••• Ohio. 814-992·1411 .
3SA .. AC,c•pM. pool, g•ego. Furnllhod offlofon-· 1141 IIi 1298 •ndupto &amp;396. B•bV bedl
2 flropl-. fon•. Good 1. . . up. Utllltl• paid. Sh•e bat h. •110. Mlttr... llorboJI IPflnga Roll top d•k. ~lh new. Solid
House · Farm for tale. tion. Cell A·1
fu• or tvvln &amp;88, firm e78. and
wuod. Wllnut fln•h . e300 or
te.ooo.DO down euum~ble 8"h Brokor. 304-171-1104. E•l't• Coli 448-4411.oftor 7 PM.
118. Qu- *250 • up. ••t cffe&lt;. 814-992-7813.
por oont """ to quollftod ,...,,
King
1310.
4
d
r
ch
...
$J9.
Apon,_,ta for tt. Elderly.
yery low cloalng cottt, II acre~ UnfurrMst.d hou•. 2 IR . Gllll1 M.-or Ap.-tments. 8156 Gun c•bfnatt I gun. Blbv
c~nopy babv bed for •le.
with 7 .,... old ced• eontem- Neighborhood Rd. t225. Aofort315 • • 46. Bed Whtte
Buhf Monon Rood. Doolgnod for
In
good oon~on . CAll 814..,.ry home. llricOd r011lc..t to
tho Senior CHizen 112 • ol&lt;llr) frn• ezo. t30 It King freme 992-7175.
dipoell required. C1H
tii.OOO.OO. l'hono 304-17&amp;. 4411-44 llllllor
eao. Good •election of bedroom
~ndH.. cla.ppm p . . on~ . Equ.t
7 PM .
'
5118 OoMipoh Forrv. W.Vo.
houolng opportunity. Appli . . suhn. matel cebin.t1. heed- Boy'1 1ult, size tOR . Hiking
Plsntz Sub.·4 BR ., fuH bM• tlarw,..,. bepk*ed Uplt Sprfng bo•d• 130 snd up to t86. boatl,
2\-i. Excellent condi2 t.droom hou... Extra lot. mint, C.pM(sorneniiW), ..nge, VIII_. Plue, 1529 J1ck1on Pike
tion. Coil 814-192· 3507.
304-1711-4314.
90 DIVI ume •• c•h wtth
City IChooll. Adutte ont,. No rti colll14-oi4S.4138.
1pproved credit. 3 Mil• out For •le. Building met.-lals. 14
P•L 0.,. IIi r&lt;l. roqulrod. UIO
3 be4t'oom home. 1% batt.. P• mo. C:.ll 114-~•0278 Mod•n 1 IR . downtown. comBlAIVille Rd. Open 9em to 5pm eight .,ch chlmn..,. bloiQk with
a•ptttd. cent,.l alr·helt. lo- aft•l PM , wNk_,._,dme.
ploto kitchen, olr, ....... Dep- Mon. thN Sot. Ph. 114-"48- Nnor. 145. Phono 814-882·
cotod 1n Polm Pl_..t. 304oolt. no p - · Cal &amp;14-4411- 0322.
1001.
878-2702 or 304-1711-2147.
3 blct-oom
Hl"'*"ofu• 2 •• g•og• 0139 waninge.. ettw 15.
"-'"· frM •terior. 3 bedroom Oollipollo ..d.Hollor'o. 231 Fint A... 1 8R .. k~c:hon
rtnc:h. f.,IV room wood bur~
SNAFU~ by Bruce Beanie
nlluNI a•. cfty furnished. c ..__.. No chHlng flr ...oe,. MW C«&lt;tl'll lir, Centrll
wat•. No pMI. R•fw .. DM end •en/Petl. ,,.,B plus utflftil•.
l•iJt' dade. Woodin ltOIIge dopook. CoN e!4-445-1288of· Dop. IIi r&lt;l. Col 114-441·4928.
bldg. prlold mid 50'1, - - ter&amp;PM.
mult ... mllke
304--875DeluH 2 M ., fur,.hed kitch an.
74391111ori:OOPM.
3 BR . home n_. Silver Bridge low utllkiM. Eoclll.,. -ion.
Sho pplng Com or. 0275 por mo. No pML 8oe. dop. Coli 1143 bedroom home with CM" POf't. Soc. dop. • rol. Coil 114-oWS. 448-1e!7.
mtllntenana. tr• ••-.tor, 1 1181 or 4411-IBel.
b•l\ fulv OCIUioood kkchon.
2 BR. duple!:. t2211mo. Stove,
centr11l lir. .tedrlc he-. fine Houoo In ctty . W,.e&lt; polol Coli NfriSJifltor, Cl. 1\'i INI• from
e•pM. flroploeo with Bucl&lt; 814-2511-8338.
Ollllpolll on 110. CoN 114-4411..- . . .NUt .... It, Golllpollo
3783 from S.l.
•
fenV orR tiZ.IOO.OO. 304- Log Cobin. t280. 2 BR . CoN
178-8033.
121\'i S.c. EJCII. aond., 2 SR .,
aft• I PM. 114-2411-8017.
equipped ldtch... llr. Av.tleble
3 bedroom homo. 2 b•hl.
Nov. 1 ot. t221 pfou dop. C. I
f...,'¥ 1D0m. 2 CW _9Wig.. 1 !.A, 3 be..._ ,_... Rutlond • •· 114-4411-0103 or 4411-2118.
n2a
"'
.....
·
g•bogo.
_.. IU. 17 neer County lne, hell. t200 IIDUrlty.,drtfer.,.
1110.000.00. 304-1111-3428.
121 Soi»nd. E -. oond. 2BR .,
.... Col 114-317-7217.
. . ulppod k"""on. air, · - ....
Nicolf 'turnllhod ..... ,_.., dop. Coli 114-4411-0103 or
32 Mobile Homes •·
onebe*oom. On•or twolldlrl¥ 44&amp;.21Be.
1
p .opt.. No pMe. Ref. ,.., .....
for Sale
2 IR ., oM utllillao pold tt Rio
CoM 114-oi4S.2143.
GrMde. Allo 1 IR ., totlltl.c. at
3 SR .. 2 b.. hl. f.,;.,-. Rio Orondo. Coli 114-2411,,. . N- Moon 12x80, 2 BA . N.O.·Bidwol
BollooiDiot. A - 1223.
• 2300. Coli 114-4411-0380.
olifo Nov. lot. COl 114-31112 be*oom furnll:hld Of' unfurMoblo Home iDr Solo. 12•10. 9881.
nll hod • .,....., with O•lflo.
Col 1114-44S.2003.
3 -..oom hon. 1n eent.n.-y. Oulot In town-·· A.oloblo
•331.
No ,... ,., mtlt from Nov. Itt. t221 pluo ut. . lao.
1t72 -bllo homo. 2 IIR ..
"~ go to a heart speclallel whO owns a
~- ·COli 114-4411- .,
p - furnlohod. u .ooo. C.l lllft.
Acluh
· No CoM
4-oW fl.- "20.
lucrative
funeral-home bu8fi'IEII!S on the side."
114-..... 1844.

•••••lei

a,.,., ••m

.,..d.,.,.,..,..,...

.,.r.,

s..

c•

• .,mtnt •

mov•.

,_..,tag

yr. old
DOf'tllbl•
diiiMoohOr. 1 2 ft." John bo •
wlch Mlnn Kote 311 motor.
"-lnfll 114-992·1880.

3

:ra.

A•..

mattr...

*•

••port

off•.

"'If!

*·

~=========.J..;;::========~

·1 977 M-Gioonor oomblno. 4
rt~NoornhNd. 13fto••ble.
uc oond. liMp in dry. t t so-c
dozer, wlnah, good cond.
30.000. 304-93'7·2018.

·Portable b1I:PI arjb wtth met·

·
· -· IOfth
t40.pod
Hooded
...... bolly
olnot.
• 10. Oroco
•win.&amp; II. 814-742·2818. .
Surplut •rmv ctmouft.,ge. d ..
nlrn. - l Corhon olllthlftg.
Sma• lrftlY ecc.lllorlel. Frl,
Sat. Sun, noon dH 8:00 PM.
(NOY, Ooc _ . 7 doyl) . S . .
Somervila's. e.-Rw. .wood
luncdon

lndlpendlnw Rolld,

63

Llvntock

Regilt- Pollod Horoford ....
tie. I oows. 1 bulL 18prlnoers.
Coli 114-21S.1U1.
I Chi-A191o Club colv-. t41101800. eone14-317-745a.

old At. 21. ( - Ero( lnoulotod
cemouflep oow•llll t27.10,
304-273-8855.
Used R-t5 Ditch Witch
Trencher. 114-894-7842 or

as· •Ao•

Llr. . round bll• r:Ah., for•le.
•20 ooch. Colll14-oi4&amp;.10B2.

23 cu It ohOII typo doop • - •·
42 Inch Wood bilttwoom
vanity. 304-e7&amp;-1280 after

ljoy tor ool•rCOJnd blloo. Mottl;
In dry, Coli 114-2411-1117.

=-:..:.~=::.·----~Ultd

4 ,oopm .

Spo'o ond Whlrpool bothtullo.
buy direct from menufllcturw
ond _ . IU. Cal A..,. Toch ..
304-523-8288.
2TD141m_lonol_aro. 1
••c concl with wench. other
c1onr for n .ooo.oo
n-loblo. 304-171-1417.
Buok Stow, m•llum !newt. uc
cond. 1475.00, 304-1711-7411.

w...m

b.trNna
ttove. aoocloond. 1210.00. Cal
llllor 4 :00PM. 304-8711-1870.
Morning wood

Kenmore portebl••,_•h•. 7

cycle. Horv_. GohL I vro old.
ac oonct. eea.oo. 304-875·
2301.

r:B.bll•
of "-"· 7 Holotoln
. will 1n Fob. ean

814-38a.S413 or 3811-1810.

Ground lhlll corn ee.OO p•
100. tt.omlum Alfolfo U .OO.
ltr.w t1.10. Round bal•
e215.00. Morg~t~•a WOodland
Form. ~1. 31. Pliny, W.Vo.I:OO
Ill 12:00 Man-Sat. 304-137·
2011.
COrn tor •I• 304-1711-4228.
24 ...-. oorn far IIIIQe. Morgen•• Wood.-wn Ferrn, Rt. 31i,
Pliny, wv•. 304-137-2018.

WRI h.,l oorn. lncluiEFAP
oorn. Allo. wfl su
and
d1llver NWdust. 3 4-77 3·
5332, 1:00 1111:00 AM.

66 Building Supplietp

!D ~ l!leclric
(!) Nightly llualnoea Report

(I) D (J) AIIC Nowo

Motorcycles

11 dlloiJIIrL IIIII Il

Motor eydurol• for •I• for 2

or 3 blk•· Col e14-448-8093.

1971 Hondo Ooi&lt;MIIng. 1,000
cc. lots of •tr11. t1,200.00,
•• oond. 304-8711-4210.

:;

76

.
••

1 IS ft. out bo•d. nM trill•. 30
HP Mera.uv motor &amp; troflv
mot•, 4b•s..ats. t1tOO. Call
814-317·0251.

::

79

•

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

66

Pats for Sala

Groom ond Supply lhoi&gt;'P,.
Grooming. All breeds . .. All
otylao. lomo Pot Food Ooalor.
Julie Webb Ph. 114-4411-0231 .

AC. cruiae.

_..... a... gao mfl.-oe.
USOO. Coil 114-4411-9330 af·
tor4PM.

1971Jo• CJ-1. V-1. 3 opd .. 2
topo. Alklng 11800. 1979
- · C.lo. •soo. Col e144411-2BIB.
1914Pontllc 5000, AT, PI, PS,
AC. v·l. &lt;n~loo. tilt. AM·FM·
eaoo. t840o. co11 a14-2Bs.
1710·
1187 MoriUry Lymo 08. Block.
PS. PI, air, AM·FM, 4 .,d.
flh•p. Coli 304-8711-8331 .

AKCRog. OldEngllohShoepdog
pupploo. Colll14-2411-1171.

1'179 Toyota Corone, 71.000
mAIIO. Oootl work. ••· 11000
010. Coll14-4411-9341.

1980 vw Robblt. Wrecked Coli
- · old. 1100ooch. Coli llllw 5 814-oi411-027eatt• I PM.
PM. 814-379-2103.
1981 Fotd Eooon L. • do"'
UKC Cll..,plon ·bfod A.-no hotchbeck.
Vorygoodoondltlon.
pupo. 12 wko. olol 0125 · ~otoM t4328.. aoNng 13800.
All moloo. 114-117·1171.
Cal 114-742·31 14.
Full blooded Pom .... lon pupo. I

I ,IIIII SlliJ;lll&gt;",
X LIViSIIli.~
61 Farm Equipment

_...,ty.
-Sill.

1110 FO&lt;d pick up, •on dard. I
cvl Nno flOod. *!.800.00.
304-57S.2841.

John O..e2010dl•eftnlalor,
Nice. with pl-o, dlako. groin
Vans&amp; 4W.D.
drill. t3850. John o - · 2020. 73
1000hro,·Solh•p.muot-to 1 - - - - - - - - - oppndoto. t4110. Ownoo wll 1117 Ford ,_o lw VIr).
fin.,... Coiii14-28S.II22.
Eotondodw"'""'Y. loldocl Coli
For _.•Rooondltlonod 11 ft. e14-44&amp;.877B.
fold-101buohhog. Colll14-28fl. 1171Joop Wago.- Llmlto&lt;l.
4821 .
AM-FM, CB, AC, tit. loodecL
n.w tlra IJdrl st.p. C.ll
35 MFtriOior,goodpolnt,good 114-24fi.S040.
.,.,_, rico with ocrop• blodo. 1.::.-.....:..::..:.:..:.._____
*2991. MF Dynl·bounoa 1917ChwvA•roVon bvMork
m - . tl99 . MF rolla t815. 111. Loodod •d only 14.000
Holond Zll bol•. till. ml• E-ont oontftlon. All&lt;·
Dwnoo will finonco. Coli 814- lng tiUOO. t4.000 off llot.
2811-8122.
Coli 814-441-2041ovoningo.

1--_:._ _:.._____

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE .
hou.. call strVIdng GE. Hot
Point, w•Mrs, dryers •n d
· - · 304-1711-2388.
Akers Tree Trimming ond ltump

SWEEPER 1nd IIINing mechlne
rep..,, .,.-ts. end suppll•. Pldl:
up ~nd dtllv-v. DIIYII Vecuum
cteener. one h1lf mile up

r

·'.,
•.

,.

'.
',.

'

'

SO WHY !:X)ISr 1HE.Y .
JUST RJT 6J9-\ CtJ CU.
CHAIJUL ...tx.lt::AI::JS C1J
· 'THE. 01HfR ...

'

'•

•·

,..

AOO L£r 11-lE. BEST

RAilklGS lUfrJ

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WHAT DID 'YOUR MOO

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES ·
Soptlc tonk pumping t90 por
lood Coli 1·80fi.I37·1B28.

'MAKE Fc:R ~
LJJNQ-1 TODAY~

Plumbing
Heeting

'}

1:00 ()) MOVIE: The L1tt111
lhtlphord at Kingdom Come
(NRI(1 :48)
D CD IIJl The Coaby Show .

Oft Road Racing Mickey
Thompson's Championship
- Off Road Grand Prix from
Las Vegas, N\/ (T)
Cil D Cll The Making of •
Model Super model Cheryl
Tiegs goes beneath lhe
surface of the billion dollar
business of modeling to lind
out what makes the dream a
reality. Q
!D Canada: True North
Explore canada's poli: of
multiculturalism. (NR)
(!) The Rapubllcana:
fore
end After RMgan David
Gergen axamlnos how tha
GOP has become the
predominant party In
presidential politics since
WWII; look 11 presidential
campaigns historically. 1;1

all DIDI 48 H0tn

manager - former ownar
Sam.
(J) NHAA Dl'lltl Racing .

castro! GTX Fall Nationals
from Phoenix, AZ (T)
Cil DCII WorldSaiii'Ch: Look of tile Year
George Hamilton, Kll1) Alexis
and Carol All hosl from
Ataml, Japan, as 62 women
from around tile world
compete for $1 mNIIon In
modeling contracta.l;l
!D (!) Mr~~eryl Q
notorious gunfighter Inherits
his sister's four young

"

CIIUdreo . .

I GOT

ALL A'S
ON MY
REPORT
CARD!!

WHArS SO

TERRIBLE

ABOUT THAT?

I WOKE UP
WHEN IT

TARNEO INTO

A FRO' I!

11J1 Larry King Uvel
11J Thureday Night Flghtl
9:30 D CD 01 Deer John Ralph
believes his bad lucf&lt; Is
c:aulied ~~yptlan curse.

!II New

10:00 ()) 700 Club
D CD 01 L.A. La.-Yan
Owen squares olf with wily
delllnoe attorney (James Earl
Jones).(R)
!D IJI) Newt
(!) Kanawhtl County on the

Una

,,

Ill • 0

Knola Landing
Val's body Is lound tile next
momlnt:butIs sha dead or
alive?
•
•4])
M•r

"

Bernice Bede Osol

•

Wit• deUvery . 1000 gallons.
AtMoneble price~ . lmmedl••
dollvorv. Coli 1.1 4·992-5275.
Patrldc's Wet• H1ullng, 2. 000
delivery. 304-5,.S.2311 or
14-441-4088. .

I•

W1tt•rson·s W•ur H1uling,

r•oneble r~t•. vdume dis·
cioums. 2. 000 to 4.000 c.,ec-

ily: deC•ns. pools. walls. etc.
304-8711-2919.

Upholstery

•

•.'

· •·

lltfm.t...

..

8

'Your

. 'Birthday .·

thing verified.
01.... (Mer 21...._ 10) P.ople with
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22........ 11) Give whOm you come In contact today will , .
mo.r e anentlon than usull 10&lt;11y to Hfl· Hflllt bHt.rly II you attempt to manlpuOat. II, 1. .
llfble health pr-uree. Eat properly, late them to further . your. pui'J)OIM.
gal ample reel and sulllclent exercloe • Don't be 1111-oemng.
In they year aheld you might haYII lo 10 that you'll feel your belt.
CANCIII (..,_ 11-.lulr 22) What
work harder In order lo ach'- your AQUAIIUI (Jan. ....... 11) Thera you're ~lly working _, II going 10
obleel-· It wtl behoove you to eel may buome compllcatloha developing take CCM~ ellorl II 11'1 to be IUC·
your alghtl high ·10 thai you'll haYII now wlltre your IOCial lnltreeta are ceMful. Don't cout.
aomethlng to boaat about at year'a and. concerned. Don't do llnylhlng to allen- LIO (.lulr 11-Ayt.ll) II you're InVOlved
8COIIPIO lOot. 14 No•. 22) Be cau- . ate frlendl.
with a club or 100111 organlullon, there
tloua today In II1Y commerCial dealings PI8CII (l'ab. 10 lltrGII 10) Should you Ia a good chance you may 11111*1 for a
you haYII. wllh people or flrma you do hiYII problema at home IOdey, do your chore that IIIII Oilier mem.,.,_ haYII
not know 100 well. C.... IIUUmp- beet lo reoolw mattere u quickly u
been dodging.
tlona could tum out 10 be expenalve. poealble or eloe IIIII chill might llngw for . VIIIGQ (Aug. 11-lapL II) Your alma
Get a jump on IIIII by underltandlng IIIII • IMr daya.
mlghl be fruatrttad tOday by condlllona
lnft-thatiFI governing you In the · Alii!I (March 11·Aprll 18) Hyour men- ovw which you no control. Be pa,_. . . - . Send for your Allro-Graph tallorce~n-tteradtoothlnlytOdly, · ·!lent, lnataad of trying to Ioree round ·
pradlcllona today by milling 11 to Al- you n not likely lo operate efficiently. peat Into equare holel.
tro-Graph, c/o thll newtpaper, P.O. TakeiOIIMIIrona out of~ flre.
LIIIIA (lepl. II-OoL II) TOday, plana
Box 1"21, CIIYeland, OH +41014428. TAUIIUI (April :10 ...,. :10) There'I a · thai I~ Olhera mlghl not be well , .
Ba .,,. to llala yout zodiac llgn.
• poalblllly you might be overly lnftu· . calvad. Tile llluallon COUld MQITTAJIIUI (Nov. II DaD 11) When encetllodey b y - who Ia lmpul- -~com~ If you try to 1mmaking llnlgl-tloday, be oertaln liVe llld extr!Migant. Don't do aorne- PI* your vtfta.
thtl other party 11 on lhe level. To be on lhlng Imprudent that could end up In the
· tha Hill aide, lnllfat upon having ~- lou column •
·~,,

1,000 or 2, 000gallonsdeUvery.

MOWrl'f'' l Upholltlflng ...-ving
t'l ooumver• 23yen. Th• belt
In furnltu,. ul)holltertng. Call
304· 171 · 4114 fpr. !roo

7:351Il Santoni and Son

11m DIll Pandlae A

A &amp;. R Water Str~jcei, Pools.
clst•rns, wells . Immediate·

87

E=NI5'LJ5H NOVE;~.AI;iAIN.

,.

&amp;

Call 304-87&amp;.e370.

'51-!ES 6EEN I&lt;EADIN6i-

)

_..--....._J

Ptlntlng; lnl•lor • Exterior.
Free •imltM. Call 114-"58344
--------Will do oond bf.,lng; oproy
painting. int•ior • •terior
deeoratme 215 yrL. exp.-lence. · ,
Coil 814-2411-9087.
!
82

LITTLE WA."!'E:RCRE.SS
SANDWICHE5 WITH 11-IE
Cf&lt;UST.S TRIMMED OFF.

ntry

IBl MOYlE: lhlatll Hunt(RJ
(1 :37)
IIJ Murder, lha Wrote !;I
ill N1lllvllle Now
I:OSIIl MOYIE: lnalde tile Thlnl
Reich, Part 1 (NR) (2:05)
1:30 D CD IIJl A Dllferent World
Jaleesa and Walter gingerly
push lhelr relationship
beyond frlandship . 1;1
9:00 D CD 01 Chaerl Rebeeca is
fired and replaced by a new

ConCI'•e Septic T•kl - 1000
g.... 1800gll. andJttAertltton
non... F•ctorv ... ..,_. rep•
thop. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PR•ES,Jackaon, Ohio. 1·800.
537·1128.

1811]1 M'A'I'H
I!)Croaaflre
IRJN=rt

8Prfm1Newa

"

Ooorgoo Creek Rd. Coil 1144411-0284.

(jJ En-lnment Tonight

D (() USA Today
1111 • Gl 01 Jeopardy! 1;1

.. 11]1 MOYII: Stlphtn
Klng'a Sliver Bullet (R) (1 :35)

-~~·

IIJ l!venlng Newt

ill Croolllnd Cha!l8
10:061Il MOYIE: lnt*lhe Third
Rllch, Part 2 (NR) (2:05)
10:30 (I) lwemp Buggy
Spectlcullr From Naplea,
FL !R)
!D iatll!ndan A c:onllnUing
Chronicle of tile IIvas of
realdenta In London's East
End. (0;30)
• 4J) Odd Couple
• VldnCounllr
11:00 I)) Retn~IQIOII Steele Steele
In the Running

DCD Cil DCII Ill

•o

01 Newt
!D (f) 1111 Morerl' World of

BRIDGE

(J)

11e11 of C.reon

-...Cinltr (L)

-· (I)

' !D Ona on One

IIJL,~•Q

e U'IATo&lt;tar

.Q

.KBO
WEST

ACROSS
1lnebrirue
6 Amateur
radio
9 Slur over
I 0 Curious
12 Suit
fabric
13 Cut
15 Fall behind
16 Rested
18 Airport
abbr.
19 Choice
. 21 Giant jet
22 Knightly

SOUTH

•

.AI076
.AKQ
• 91
+Q9 6 2

•

..

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
North
Pus
2•

West

Pass
Pass

Pass

Eut

Sootll
I NT
2 ..

Pus
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

,,

+K

L.__ _ ___;__

_ _ . ..

frotn dummy . Eitner way sbe would ::
make an overtrick, crucial In tbll cue..
since her opponents at the other Lsble ·
made only eight tricks ill their t'!PO-heart contract.

James Jacoby's books ' Jacoby oiJ ~
Bridge • and 'Jacoby oo Card Games'
(written with bis father, the late Oil- ·
wald Jacoby) are now svailllbJe at .:
bookstores. Both are pub/.lsbed by '
Pharos Books.

...
J

-. .'
••

able

'

.

6 Celerity
7 21 plus

8 Departs
11 Begins
Yesterday's Answer
14 One who
estimrues
17 Had supper
27 Weary
36- noire
20 Dilatory
29 That
37 Reared
23 Half
woman 39 Frost
(pref.)
S1 Devotion 41 Baby24 Polish
32 Admit, as
Ionian
25 Imitate
a visitor
deity
26 Craftsman

drink

'

-.
••
...
..
''

29That man

-.

SO Morsel
Sl Danger
33 Tell's
canton
94 Black mood
35 Subside
· 98 Rosalind
' Russell
film
40 Western
movie
42 Savoir
falre
43Cement
44 French
marshal
45-ln

·•

...'
.,
·,

(knowing)

..

DOWN
1 Tocsin

.'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES ~Here's how to work It:

10127
.,

AXYDLBAAXR

'
.'

.,

IILONGFELLOW

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

10-27
AU

CRN

YA SW
·

EAST
.K94
.32
.107532
+AJ7

.JI3
•1o 61
.AKJ86
+10 5

2 Es&amp;'ayist
Lwmb
3 Burn
4 Poem
5 Stretch·

23 Drivel
24 Freshet
27 Gedda, e.g.
28 Relief org.

ZAK

e•

.J9BB

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

Ill TaiM lnllllllle lhlrkalde

I =:-c.nn:.~...,

IJ.Z~I~

NORTH

CROSSWORD

YFNTZ

IIJ Maney1lne

.

.Q 52

Californian Helen Utegaard has had
a good year. She played on the winning
women's team in tbe North American
champio.nships last Marcb: then that
team won the United States Women's
Team champiOilBbip in June. More recenliy her mixed team-of-four was
victorious in the North American
cbampionships held in Salt Lake City
In July. Today's deal from that event
shows Helen playing an innocuous
part-score contract 10 best advantage
for a winning result.
Helen's partner responded two dia·
monds, a Jacoby transfer bid compel·
ling the opening no-trump bidder to
mention hearts. After diamonds were
led and continued, Helen ruffed in
dummy and then played just two
rounds of trumps. She then led a club
toward dummy's king. East took the
ace and returned a low club. Declarer
won the queen and exited with a club
to East's jack. East was on lead again
but this time was helpless. A spade
lead would be away from tbe king into
dummy's queen, and a diamond lead
would allow declarer 10 ruff with the
heart honor she had carefully reL8ined
in ber band while discarding a spade

- . Moyera lalkt wllh a
wide variety of people about
Amerlca'l choiCel. (NR)
• 4J) ~ Cor•leC!Ion

11:30 D

·.

Comple1e 1he ' chuc&lt;le quoled

you in half!" Dad , whhout even a smile, said , "Why would
you want TWICE as MANY? "

By James Jacoby

(J)SpeedWeek

Q!l v

.-.

Wring - Stony - Lackey - TWICE as MANY
My kid brother broke a vase. and mother roared, "I'll brllk

A crucial
overtrick

/i

'

•
'

J

1

up iHE TAg.

Rotery or cable tool drRiing.
Mol'l w.ls aompllllldltmld&amp;';'.
PUmp AI• and etrVIce. 304- · '
1911-3102
•

AKC rogiotorodllborlon Huour
1182 Arill .Wogon. 4 · - ·
pupploo. 4 - · old. both Well inlintaln... goad b•lc
~rlntl Clift bit • ..,, t200.00.
CARTER 'S PWM81NO
nneportMion. •1000. OBO .
304-1711-1800.
AND HEATING
Coli 114-812·181B.
Cor. Founh and Pine
AK C regllterld flmele B•egle.. llllbluoZ·21. 301outo. 1181
O•IIDolil. Ohio
115 months ald. not train.:!, Nil- 8._o. 4 cvl.. hill Phone 114..4.-1-3888 or 814a5().00. 304-1711-8884.
ln]octod, I opood. Both •0111- 4411-4477
oonoltlon. Coiii14-742·217B.
AKC roglotoro&lt;l Cockor Sponiol
for Mud · s.vice (8""". cell 1982 Cutt•• c•• Luury S•
84
Electrical
304-e7&amp;.8111.
don. PS, Pl. olr, AM-FM .
&amp; Refrigeration
*2400. Call 114-992·2208. •
Boagle pupo, 304-1711-2071.
1880 Mlldo AX7. 814-912·
7048.
Re~ldem:ial or commerciel wir·
67
Musical
ing. NI"N ·l lfVice or rep1ir1.
'II Oldl, ane owner. phone
Instruments
Ucenaed electricllr'l. Eftlm•te
3,04-e7&amp;.1178.
free. Ridenour Elec:trlcel. 3041711-1788.
1979Ford0rlft_.&amp; 11T7Ford
Snare drum e20o. Trumpet Tllu-bird.
304-1711-8002af.
tiiO. loth aJicollont oondltion. t• 1.:00.'
85 General Hauling
Uood vory lttlo. 114·192·1998
, •nytlme.
1883 Cllovy Mollbu .,.tlon
*3,500.00. Phone 304lndiY'*"' gullllr l. .ons. be- WOfiOI\
Dlll•d Wat• Servloe: Poo11.
1711-oWIO.
ginntrl, Mt'lous gutterilt. INiClsternt. Wells. OeiNery Any·
c•dll Music. 114-. .e..0887.
timo. Coil 114-448-7404-No
Jolt Womol., Ina-or. e14- 72
SUnd.,. clllt.
Trucks
for
Sale
448-10n. LlmMod oponlngo.
J &amp;. J Water Service. Swimming
1918 Ford XLT \'1 ton. E &gt;eol.
Splntt pl.,o, 304-812-3104.
poolt, clst•ns. weUe. Ph. 81~
oond. Coil e14-4411-2817.
2411-9286.
1117FotdAongor, 4cly.,4 apd,
ovw drln, on• CM..,, bed
covw, ltiP lumper, ,.. slide
W'lhclow, AM..ftM·C.U ...,.,.
e-dod
28 MPO.
Poy off eeooo. eon
114-38.8010.

~UL1...181Lii'Y 1.5 prcir'ING ~

FfttV Tree TrlmnWn9- m.mp
r...-1. Coil 304-8711-1331 .

t'"'·

1187 lkytsrtr.

LAB

RON'S Telwl•lon Service.
Hou• cell on ACA. Querer,
GE. Spoolollna 1n Z..kl&gt;. eon
304-171-2398 or 114-44112•&amp;4.

*•·

brMd nlll¥, newr
•ected. WHI ,_,. for balen01
owod. Call 0.. 1·800.827·
4044.

THAT LITTLE: GENE fOR A
'AP ME'Mo~y .$AY&gt; HI:
foRGOT Hl.5 WAL-l-ET
"'
AGAIN ... gU'r IT'.&gt; o~AY, ~
THE GfNe fo~
~•

l

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

FonuneQ
1811]1 Th-'• Company
IIJI Moneytlne
IRl Chilwa
11J Miami Vlca D
ill Croolc and Chaoe
7:G51I) 810 5
7:30 D CD Family Feud

G~N~TICS

..

Upon raceiving . an award, a
lamous comic commented, " I don 't
deserve lhis , bull have arthritis, and
don 't deserve lhal-1"

Jumble -

NewoHour (1 :OQ) ·

"

·.

UN SC RAMBLE ABOV E LE TT ER S
TO GET ANSW ER

1111 DID 01 WhMI of

1982 Holldar Rambl• 31 ft.
c....,. ..,..... tor''tll.. et2eo.
1171 .Harl., Low Rid•· 9000
actuel ml•. t3000. call aft•
1:00 p.m.. 114-742-2304

.._.&amp;

c~nclll•ion.

..

.•

of:!. PiiNT NUMBERE D LETTER S IN
~
THESE SQUA RE S
.

.

7:00 ()) Our Houn The .Road out
of Brlarpatch
D CD PM Magazine
(J) SportiCanter (L)
Cil D (() Current Altair
!D (!) MacNeil/ t..hrer

,

I

.
.
.
.
.
"
•
b y filling in !he miss.ng word s
L....l.-..l.........J.....J..J.......JL-..J you develop from step No. 3 below.

1:351Il Andy Griffith

1180 Hondo CA ZIO R, ohono
304-175-4581 llllw 5:00PM.

...

I -.

I

Cincinnati
0 lnalde Polltlca '88
11J C.rtoon Expreaa
Q!l You Can Be 1 Star

1181 Suzuki f!JOtorcycle '
'0851501.. new tlr11-1t1rter·
boltarloo, 8000 orolni• mloo,
te80. 1973 BUick. 1'8, PS, AC.
runogood. Col814-oi4S.B789.

I

CJTEEf1
~__,;~:...:,~..-S:...·.;;.IG
....;..I.:.;_,.I--l Q

1;1

1111 DIDI cas Newa
1811]1 IRi WKRP In

I

I" .I ; .I .I

Q!IF-.ngo

74

1

.

1:051Il Laverne e~d Shirley
8:30 D ()) 1!51 NBC Nlghdy Newt

~~ ~ Sporta.,.n (R)

Boats and
Motors for Sale

··,

1----rl:....:.:,....:1:....,:.:.-1::,.,.......jl
'
t

(!)Dr. Who Colony in Space,
Part 3
18 4J) Happy lhlyo
I!) ShQwBiz Today
ill Faota OILtte
IIJ Fit Albert

""eelcencfl.

Remwlf. Fr• eltlmlll•. C.ll
Building M • .
304-e71H121.
Block. !wick. - • pip-. w1r&gt; =;-::;,.-,--,.-;;;:--;--;-_._ 11mo1o. ••· Cloudo-. 71 Auto'• For Sale
ton,
Rio Orondo.
0. Coil 114- 1, .- - - - - - - - - 2411-5121
.
Serv1ct!o
1179Tr•eAM. E~~:~ll.
Concrete blocb- 111 en. ~rd Compllhflt redone. NM pe[nt.
. m. whMII. ntw
Sup•
.. dol......_
W-Y · MOlonlln d.CWII..... .
Ill Block
Co., 123'/a Plno St., IJtorp. CoM 114-2411-1480.
Home
011
Ohio. Collll4-4-le. 1182Hond1Acoordh,.chboclo. 81
Improvements
278 ·
Eocol. oonol Colll14-445-4928
WESltRN RED CEDAR
1111• 10 PM.
• Chonnol Ruttlc
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vah~
· BASEMENT
ond·=":..."":.,':'ng
doo from noo. Fardl, - WATERPRDORNO
Quer.,tlld au.ltty
cedel. Corwtt... Chwys. Sur· . Unconcltional llf•l~ne guer..CETIDE, INe., Athen•81·· plut. luy•rs Ouldt. (1 I tM. Loc.. ref•en011 llrnlahecl
194-3178
BOII-887·8000. E.t. S-10181.
Free eiCim••· C.ll colllld
1·114-237-0481. d.,. or night.
1911 M«c Lynx. EJCII. cond.
Rogerslatement
WMwprooflng.
Stool BWidngo. Mutt_. 2 from Coli 114-4411-2817.

•a

••u,.ng ..,.u.

·e1 Farm Equlpmll'lt

I

I
'
.....,;.L...:E;..,.T:....,.V:......:D,__~~ ~":
~.--------.....,1

(J) SportaLook

I SUPPOSE IT'S THE SORT
· OF TIIIN6 THAT COULD
~APPEN TO AN'I'ONE ... IT
NEVER j.~APPENEO TO 'I'OU ?

II

2

EXORB

IIIIDJ 1!51 News

~~;;,:;:::::;;::::;;:;::::;~[;.;:::;~;~~~;=1----,.-----1

-

Mu•.

'1'E5, SIR, MR.PRINCIPAL .. MY
SISTER FELL ASLEEP SITTING
81( ~E TELEPj.IONE POLE ..I n•n..'TI
WANT TO WAKE J.IER UP SO WE
MISSED T~E SCilOOL 8US ..

drivo, 11,400.00. 304-1718159 •Iter 15:00 PM 111Vtlme on

....

'"'* •

•' I ~,

'"n Ch•v SurbJrbln. 4 whHI

••her ..

&amp;

e

------------------ ------

IS Mall•d RV wtth SCfMrl
room. low mleeg&amp; Ema aonv..lanc» 304-8715-45151 .

Misc. Merchlndill

WOlD
GAM I

.I·

N E wT H I

I

8:00 ()) Bonanu: The Lot!
Eplaoclea The Power ol Ute
·
and Death
D ()) Cil !D
(J) all

·-

1171 ChewY Bl••· ~·. IUto.•
n. . tlroo. • 1350. Colli 14-247·
3881 .

-lc
Coli=

••-In

oqulppod for flahlna

1000 mloo. 814-843-5181

-••od.

w-

~~~:~:~' S©~u~:n~A-~£trs~
_...:..:.::..::.:.::__:::._= lditod by CLAY R. POUAN
1

low to form four Simple words.

1188 Bronoo 2 XL. .tx•. 8tend•d. PS, PB. mP~ mora Mtrll't.

64

Sentinai..;;..Page-11

letters of the
· four scrambled wo rds be·

paint Job. 318 """"'· hood••·
I 700. • , 4- 99 2-188, .

.....

Daily

O Rear rang e

hunting. cempintJ. New brill-.

tent:r; ...,.

rw.·

Telev'ision
·
'
EVENING

1875 -

11u-

don-·--

The

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

27.1988

&amp; 4 W.O.

1111 Joop CJ-7 . Good oond.
ReiNII: •Gin&amp; No rult *2160.
Coli 114-4'45-3040.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complet1 houllhold furnishIngs. 'h mile out Jlrrlcho.
304-171-1450.
F.. low ..._ on Ouolltv Corp•

V1ns

1988

1181 Plymouth VOVIO• IE.
lDw mil-.. AT, AC. cn•llt.
AM ·FM otorao. c ...om lllipoo
end running b:J•dl· tl995.
obo. CoR 11'4-4411-1300. :

VIlla, Furniture
N.w end ueed furniture end

oppllconcoo. Call 114· 441·
71572. Hour1 9· 5.

woMolifo. Utlllloo polol 1225.
pwmonth, diPOslt required. C.ll
814-992-15724 after e:oo Of'
992-8119.

73

SWAIN .
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Olivo St.. Galipollo.
NEW· I pc. wood group- e399,
Living room autt•· *11g.. 1898.
Bunk wMh boddln1t 1248.
FIJI sl:a milt,... • fou,w~Mion
•t•rtlng· ett . R•cfln•rs
Nrtlng. eee.
USED- Bldl, dr_..., - · suit•. Delkl. wringerwuher. •
compiMe Una of UHd *"rnlture.
NEW- boot• *31.
Workbooto • 18 • up. (Stool •
10ft tool. Call e14-445-3119.

1'8d1C1H'It. . IPiflmel'lll

Nwi~

5811.

21

~

Orocloua lvlng. 1 ond 2 bodroom apertments at VHI1111
Minor Md Rtv. .ldl A,.rt·
mtnts In Middleport. From
t182. Call 814· 992-7787.
EOH.

PM, 114-742-2311 .

KIT 'N' CAllLYLE~ loy Lury Wr!Pt

61 Houslhold Good•

Aplf'tmtnt for rent. 1225 a
month. O.,olit ltiCIUirod. 814992·1724. ll.ftor lpm or 992·
1118.

t:.a lftw 15

f lll.illl:ldl

Apartment
for Rent

F ~llhMI • ..,ment for ...U

TrM work wented-topplng.
prunl"g, removals. buehe1
trimmed. ffW •tlmltl. Cell
114-44S.I07tl .. 304-171141113.
Wll out fire wood.

Th~~Ckrtobar27.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

PFD
C R N

EZADS
FDB

FDB

F

PFD
KFSW

JWYAWQW

KFD
KFSW
ZAK

C R N .

-FYUHWB
W .
XKAEZ
. Yeeterday'e Crypt.oquote: ELECTED LEADERS WHO
FORGET HOW 'l'lu:Y GOT TIIERE WON'T TilE NEXT
TIME.- MAl-COLM FORBES
C) 11188 King F..._ Syndiclle. Inc:

..

�Ohio Lottery
.Daylight
Savings Time
ends Sunday

Daily Number .
915
Picj( 4

1421

0

STARTINO OUT, FOR OUR FRIENDS FROM TRANSYL~ANIA,
WHO ONLY CAME OUT BETWEEN MIDNIOHT AND 6:00P.M.

FROM'
OUR

1dah0

ASSORTED FLA~oRs

*DELl*

CORNDOO
&amp;
PEPSI
CIDERoa

Copyrighted 1988

Po

+

State to look
into MRDD
program setup

10 LB.
BAO
LIMIT 1

..

'

A~AILABLE

ONLY FROM 12 MIDNIOHT TO 6 A.M. FRIDAY

AND FOR THOSE OF US WHO FEEL THE DAYLIOHT HOURS
ARE SAFEST BETWEEN 6 A.M. AND 6 P.M.

USDA CHOICE

BEEF
CHUC
BONE-IN

STORCKS
8RAIN STREET

arkev
Drumetlekt

HITE
BREAD

PER L8.

ALL

PER.LB.

DA~

LOM8

· FOR OUR FRIENDS WHO PROWL AT NIGHT
I

PEPSI

frankias

IENERS.

NEW

Coca-Cola

8/16 OZ. RETURNABLES

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

WITH PIRCIASE

PER 12 OUNCE PACKAGE

24 PACK

Middleport

Monday

t

-·--- -·- --~-~----~-

WASHINGTON (UPI) Most people In the United
States will have to set their
Clocks back one hour at 2 a.m.
Sunday, ending the dayUght
savings season and returning
to standard time.
Under a 1986 law, daylight
savings time begins the first
Sunday In AprU and end the
last Sunday In October.
Daylight savings time will
start again AprU 2, 1989.
Some U.S. states and territories .do not observe dayUght
savings time Including Ar~­
ona, Hawaii, the part of
In.dlana located In the eastern
time zone, Puerto KI&lt;'O, the
VIrgin Islands and Amer.lcait
Samoa.
· Clocks do not have to be
adjusted In those areas.

Pomeroy
party big
·success
The Pomeroy Chamber ol
Commerce annual Halloween
party held Thursday night was a
big success with more than 200
children turning out In their
Halloween wear.
The Meigs band performed and
the event was emceed by WMPO
personalltltes Johnny Kerr .and
Brian Collins.
Winners In the costume contest
In the preschool and kindergarten category were Holly Grlf·
flth In first place; Misty Painter
and Klm Johnson tying for
second; and Tony Boring and
Allsla Ord tying for third.
First through third grade
}VInners were Sara Craig, first;
Wesley Talney, second; and
Michele Painter and Mike Kline
in a tie for third.
Fourth through sixth grade
winners were Michele Jenkins,
first; Annie Jessie, second; and
David Hardwick, third.
In the seventh and eighth grade
category, the winners were John
Perez, first; Mells~a Neu tzllng,
second, and Jason McDaniel,
third.
The Chamber extends appreci·
ation to everyone who partlcl·
paled In any way to the success of
the party.

···'

IT'S NOT UNUSUAL during Halloween to find
ghosls and fairy princesses In th41 very same
famUy. This Utile ghost, nlne·year·old Hollie
Thomas, of Middleport, and her three-year-old
fatry princess cousin, Tiffany Patterson, also of

Mlddieport, were among the Halloweeners at
Thursday night's community party In Pomeroy.
The party was sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.

SPOOKS AND SPOO.KS' PARENTS were out In
fuU foree for Thursday niKht's community
Halloween party on the upper parkin&amp; lol In
Pomeroy. The party Is sponsored annually by the

Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. Local mer·
chants remained open during the evening for a
Mlclnl&amp;hl Madness sale.
'

d by str; k ers

Warning issued by sheriff

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26 Cents

statement

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ONLY FROM 6 P.M. TIL MIDNIOHT

2 Sections. 14 Pages

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DSTwill
end Sunday

tiie 1983-" liberation" of Grenada
and the 1986 bombing of Libya.
" George Bush and I did all
these , things, and ·I tell you
proudly right now we'd both do
every single one of them over
again," he declared.
·
The president plans a brief
weekend respite at his Santa
Barbara mountaintop ranch before more campaign appearances In California, Nevada, Wls·
consin and possibly Ohio next
week. He returns to the Whl te
House Wednesday.
Reagan appears to be enjoyl!ig
what has been billed as his "last
hurrah" extended campaign
swing. He attendedralllesThurs· .. !-8• sur~ ·_
day at Little Rock, Ark., and _ .
..::;
Springfield, Mo., urging the GOP
faithful to "win one for the
Gipper."
&amp;At one s top he told the crowd,
Striking members of the Meigs
" You and I and George Bush
County
Department of Human
worked much too hard t1&gt;cutyour
Services
charged today that they
taxes to let our opponents come
are
not
given
the sameconsldera·
into office and r aise them all over
ps
department
WOrkers In
tion
again. So, on Nov _8, go Into that
other
counties.
polling booth and do some
In a s tatement Issued today the
negative ca mpaigning of your
own - the r ight kind or negative workers say:
" Here we are remaining to be
campaigning.
· 'Say no to new taxes and yes to victims of clrcums tances, prim·
ar Uy the county commissioners,
the Republican ticket. "
Reagan plans to send In his while other situations such as
absentee ballot to California this ours are being set tied quickly,
weekend, and Fitzwater said he gracefully and rewarding.
"Lawrence County D.H.S. reIs expected to make a t least' one
newed a contract giving them a
Continued on page 10
signing bonus, continued 100 paid
health Insurance, a 40 cent raise
for the next two years, one extra
holiday.
" We are saying to each other
trick~r-treat
'Why us? ' Don't we deserve the
same consideration as other DHS
Trick-or-Treat Night In Middleport wlll be Monday from 6 to7
employees in counties through·
p.m. for youths 12 years old and younger .
out Ohio? Our state tax dollars
Residents who wish to provide treats for the c hildren are
are helping every counties
requested to l~:ave their porch lights on. The fire siren will be
D .H .S. employees with the excel}'
sounded at the beginning and the end of the trlck-or·treat
tlon of Meigs County.
period. Motorists are urged to use extra cautlon during the
" We feel the primary problem
period, due the large number of small children who will
Is one of the commissioners who
be on the streets .
stated on Oct. 13, 1988. That the
D.H.S. mohey comes from the
stale on a year tG year basis and
we never know from one year to
Rumors have recently circulated In regard to an unknown
the next how much It will be. His
person who has reporil!dly been photpgraphlng school children,
belief Is that the commissioners
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank said today.
cannot commit to s.omethlng
This has reportedly happened near several elementary
which down the road the county
schoolS but no child has been touched or harmed In any manner,
might not be able to afford.
the s):lerllf said. Deputies have checked the schools and are
"The Lawrence County and
continuing to do so, according to Sherl1f Frank. All leads have
other surrounding counties' com·
Continued on page 10
(Contlliued on page 10)

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
LOS ANGELES (UP!)- Pres·
!dent Reagal), repeatedly lnvok·
lng George Bush's name on the
Republican campaign trail, had
another chance today to give his
deputy some credit for the
administration's foreign policy
successes.
In an address to the World
Affairs Councll, a group focused
on such concerns, the president
was expected to focus on the
status of global policy, super·
power relations and arms control
that he will leave hiS successor In
January.
"The president will urge that
VIce President Bush be elected to
carry on his policies," White
House spokesman Marlin Fitz·
water told reporters In advance.·
The Idea, then, was to continue
the theme Reagan expressed In
support of the Republican ticket
as arrived In California Thurs·
day to a rally that drew about
10,000 cheering fan s to the San
Diego Sports Arena.
" None of our triumphs - no,
not one- would have happened If
the liberals had had their way,"
Reagan said. ' 'There would have
been no INF treaty or rollback In
Afghanis tart or democratic revolutions around the globe."
The two-term president ac·
cused the Democratic Party of
opposing stronger U.S. ,defenses,

AVAILABLE ONLY FROM 6 A.M. T0 ·6 P.M. FRIDAY

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REGULAR

lacking to place about 6,000
mentally retarded citizens, that
there Is a long waiting list for
residential housing, and that
state funding has been trimmed.
"I support the efforts of the
people here today to bring their
needs to the attention of their
elected officials ... " said Robert
I!rown, dlrect.or of the Ohio
Department of Mental Retarda·
tlon and Developmental Dlsablll·
ties, and the parent of a mentally
retarded son.
Celeste was In San Francisco,
but Haller and Lukensmeyer met
with the representatives of the
protesting groups.
Haller said that with a "contl·
nuation level"budgetcomlngup,
"we can' t talk about a huge
Increase In new resources. We'll
have io change the way we think
about the way we try to provide
services."
Haller said this means · the
state war have to streamllne Its
operations and use Medlc'aid
money more creatively.
She said the state wUJ try to
provide more services to people
In their own homes rather than
having them In more expensive
group homes.
Haller said the administration
will ·work with the health care
providers and the advocates for
the mentally retarded.
Continued on page 10

Reagan credits Bush
in foreign policy mark

LAROE 20 OUNCE LOA~ES

SUPERIORS or BALLARD

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
The administration of Gov. Rl·
chard Celeste has promised to
look Into )letter ways of housing
mentally retarded people and
providing services for them
following a march on the Statehouse Thursday.
Several hundred members of
the Association of Retarded
Citizens of Ohio visited the
Statehouse to protest the lack of
residential housing and call for
greater state funding of programs for the mentally retarded.
Mary Haller, the governor's
assistant for human resources,
said she and Carolyn Lukensmeyer, the governor's· chief of
staff, met with representatives of
five of the demonstrating groups
lor about 90 minutes.
"We all are of agreement that ·
we have a really serious problem ·
on our hands," said Haller,
adding that the parties to the
discussion agreed to work together on the problem.
The sign-carrying demonstra·
tors, who came In bus· and
van-loads from throughout Ohio,
rallied on the Statehouse steps
before . proceeding peacefully
Into the rotunda and to the
governor's office, where they
presented at least 730 letters.
The group said facilities are

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, October 28, 1988

Vol.39. No. 1 22

Clear and co ld tonight. Low
in mid 20s. Saturd ay, partly
cloudy. Hi gh in m id 50s .

'

,,... ..

'Potential restructuring' discussed
TORONTO (UPI). - Campeau
Corp. said Thursday It delayed
pric ing Its offering of Federated
Depar tment Stores Inc .. junk
bonds, and was not withdrawing
the offering bu t was discussing a
potential restructuring with
First Boston Corp.
·
The Toronto-based developer·
retailer, which In a $6.6 billion
deal earlier this year acquired
Cincinnati-headquartered Fed·
era ted, parent of Bloomingdale' s
and ·other hlgh·fashlon store
chains, made the announcement
after requesting a halt In trading
of Its stock.
That, In turn, followed a Wall
Street Journal report that the
underwriters of the $1.15 bllllon
Federated offering, led by First
Boston, pulled the offering ap.
parently because Investors were
shunning the Issue.
Campeau, denying a wlthdra·
wal, said In a state.m ent It was

discussing a potential restructur· markedly. Observers expect a
lng with First Boston and "prlc· restructuring.
'
lng of the offering will not take
"It will be done somehow,
place this week." A spokeswo· probably with more equity, but
man said the market changed definitely First Boston Is going to
radically within the last 10 days do everything in its power to
because of recent mega takeover res tr ucture it and make It m ore
attractive to buyers," said bond
bids.
"It may be restructured," she trader Cricket Barlow of Deltec
said. "It's not clear what they ' re Securities in New York.
Barlow said she did not ex pect
going to do."
jssue fo r several weeks and
an
Campeau stock was halted on
cited
Inves tor concern over the
the Toronto Stock Exchange,
ability
of Campeau chair man
having last traded a c)ay earlier
Robert
Ca m peau , a developer
at the equivalent of $14.40 ($18
until
his
$3. 5 billion takeover of
Canadian) a share . After trading
Allied
Stores
Corp. In 1986 and
resumed Thursday, It fell $1
($1.25) to $13.40 ($16.75) by . subsequent 1988 acquisition of
mid-afternoon, but gained again Federated, to take over a retail
to close on the Toronto exchange company .
"It's more of a credit problem
at the equivalent of $14.
than
anything else," Bar low
The bonds were scheduled to be
" People are concerned
said.
priced and sold this week, and
about
the retail Industry and
could be restructured In a
they're
also q mcerned that Ca mmanner that could boost Federal·
Continued
on page 10
ed' s costs of borrowing

''

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