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                  <text>Page-1 0-llle Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND

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Daily Number

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*

Vol. 38, No. 124

By LEE LEONARD
. being vacated by Rep. Delbert
UPI Statehouse Reporter
Latta, who lias held ilfor30years
(Editor's note - Second In a and Is Ohio's senior
series of six Ohio pre-election congressman.
articles. )·
In the other 20 districts, incumbents are running and all are
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) heavily favored to retain their
Mention congressional contests posts in Washington. Democrats
in Ohio this year and all eyes turn have an 11-10 edge In the Buckeye
toward the northwestern.corner delegation.
of the state. That's where the
Murray, 51, is a former
most vigorous race is being member o(the St. Marys school
waged.
board who has a college degree in
Sandusky attorney Thomas economics and was a C&lt;Jmmand·
Murray, Democrat, and Ohio ing officer of a military police
Senate President Paul Glllmor, a unit in the Army.
Port Clinton Republican, are
He has campaigned for
battUng for the 5th District seat stronger environmental laws,

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stronger enforcement of those
Jaws and stiffer penalties for
violations. He also favors higher
pay for officers fighting drug
abuse.
Gillmor, 49, is an attorney who
has served for 22 years in the
Ohio Senate, where he has 'been
Republican leader since 1979.
He has beeri in the forefront of
efforts In the· Ohio General
Assembly to reduce taxes and
increase aid to education.
Murray, who operated a small
business selling educational videotapes to attorneys, has attacked Gillmor's record on the
environment, saying the senator

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Republican. "
Murray has Sen. John Glenn,
D-Ohio, making appearances
and commercials for him, while
GU!mor has · President Reagan
describing him as "my kind of
congressman."
The only incumbent viewed as
even remotely challenged Is Rep.
Thomas Luken, a Cincinnati
Democrat who has served for 12
yj&gt;ars .
Luken, 63, is being pressed by
Republican Steve Chabot, 35, a
Cincinnati councilman since
1985, who has portrayed Luken as
a pijppet of the special interest
groups.

FLU SHOTS ADMINISTERED - There were
linea Monday at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center Monday as the first round of lnDuenza
lnununlzalions were administered by stall
members of the Meigs County Department of
Health. At 4 p.m. when operations were shutdown

for the day, 718 shots bact been given, a sizeable
Increase over the approximate 600 given on the
flnt day last year. Today the Immunizations were
being given to the general public at the health
department quarters.

EPA denies 18ndfill permit
for site near burial ground
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio
(UPI) - Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency Director Rl·
chard Shank Monday denreq a
permit for a solid-waste landfill
near an Indian burial ground in a
national recreation area south of
Cleveland.
The EPA six years ago approved a plan by Boyas ExcavatIng Inc. to locate the landfill on a
114-acre site it owns in the
Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area.
Shank, however, reversed' that
approval, citing geological and
engineering problems, including
the contamination of ground

water and nearby river waters
and an inadequate system for
monitoring methane gas.
Shank said the proposed landfill down an abandoned 200-foot·
deep shale quarry would have
been thf largest such waste
faclllty In Ohio.
"Quarries of this nature are
not proper places for building
landfills," Shank said. "Ground
water is always an Issue, particularly. when It is this deep.
'"l'he bottom of this landfill
would have extended well below
the bottom of the Cuyahoga
River, and therefore with the
ground water connection with the

Local News briefs-....,
$19,000 grant awarded
COLUMBUS - State Rep. Jolynn Boster (D-Gallipolis) and
State Sen. Jan Michael Long (D-Circievllle) announced the
award of a $19.934 grant to the Rural Offender program In
Athens, Hocking and Meigs Counties.
The Rural Offender .program is a court-refl!tred day
treatment program for drug ·and alcohol abusers. In its second
year of operation, it has adolescent and adult programs, and
Includes Intensive educational sessions combined with. drug
testing.
.
Each program lasts six weeks, and clients meet twice a week
for three-hour sessions. This year Meigs County has had one
adult program . .
The staff found In its progress report that repeat offenses by
clients in the program were lower than the national average for
such programs.

V~iTWVich, Miller to visit here
George Collins, Met'gs County chairman of the George
Voinovich for Senate Committee, wishes to remind all Meigs
Countians that Candidate Volnovich and Congressman
Clarence Miller will be in Pomeroy on Wednesday morning,
9:45a.m., on the upper'P8rklng Jot.
Both will speak from the parking lot stage and will then hold a
news conference at the Republican Headquarters located on
East Main Street.
All Meigs Countians are urged to attend.
Conunued on page 10
\.

river, contamlnaton of the Cuyahoga would have been quite
feasible, which was certainly a
concern of ours in denying the
permit," he said.
Shank said Boyas Excavating
can appeal his decision to the
state Environmental Board of
·
Review.
Company off!clals were not
available Monday for comment.
Shank said the fact that the
proposed landfill would have ·
been located near indian burial
grounds had no bearing on the
EPA decision, but "this decision
is based in part on my continued
belief that a landflll has no
business being placed in or near a
park or recognized recreation

area.''

ning for the highest office in the
land by waging the lowest level
campaign in modern history."
"They are engaged in a
scorched-earth policy against
the truth - on concerns ranging
from crime to the environment to
national defense ," Dukakis said,
adding that if he and running
mate Lloyd Bentsen win, "AmerIca will be a better country."
For his part, Bush said in a
newspaper interview published
today he has no regrets about the
tone of the campaign he has
waged.
·
"Suddenly, I'm the guy that 's
the attack dog. I mean, I don't
accept that at an. Same old guy I
used to · be," Bush told The
Washington Post.
"I don't consider the way I am
campaigning as personal;" Bush
told the newspaper. And, asked if
voters In general approve of his
approach, Bush said, "My supporters sure do."
Continued on page 10

Farmers under less financial stress
according to reports issued Moriday
.

$1.50 OFF LABEL

90

Pre-election campaign financIng reports show that Murray has
contributed $472,000 .of his own
money to the campaign, while
Gillmor, also a wealthy man, has
donated $55,000 of his own
money.
Glllmor survived a )Jitter Republican primary battle with ,
Latta's son, Robert, winning by
27 votes.
Mark Wellman, his campaign
manager, .said there is little
resentment left, and that the
Latta supporters are working for
Gillmcr, "They 're Republicans
first," he said, "and they want to
make sure the seat stays

meanwhile, showed Bush ahead
By ANNE SAKER
51 percent to 44 percent. CallforUnited Press International
A week before the nation elects . Ilia's 47 electoral votes are
its 41st president, front-runner critical to any hopes Dukakis has
George Bush is ridiculing Mi· of pulling off an upset a week
chael Dukakis for embracing from today. ·
Today, Bush planned to speak
"the L word" whlie the Democrat Is taunting the well-born at the University of Notre Dame
Bush by telling him he cannot before traveling to Wisconsin for
campaign stops.
.
inherit the White House.
A
new
poll
released
Monday
"Fired up" by reports that
day-to-day tracking polls indi- showed Bush leading Dukakis in
cate he may be closing the gap Wisconsin 44.6 percent to 39.5
with the Republican vice presi- percent. The statewide poll of
dent, Dukakis - a newly self· 1,019 likely voters was conducted
christened "liberal" ~ ham- Oct. 24-27 and had a margin of
mered Monday on his populist error of 3 percentage points.
Dukakls was to appear at a
theme with appeals to women
town meeting tn Youngstown,
voters.
But surveys taken over several Ohio, then visit Milwaukee, Dedays lind Bush's lead may be troll and Kansas City .
The Dukalds campaign rehardening,_One national Gallup
poD, taken last week for the leased the text of a 5-mlnute
Times-Mirror media group, gave television commercial to run
Bush an 11-point lead, 52 percent today in which the Massachuto 41 percent, among -likely setts governor continued his
attack on Bush's TV ads, convoters.
An ABC poll in Call!ornia, tending Republicans are "run-

BIRITE LIGHT

Hudson Cream
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failed tq_ support strong antidumping'1eglslat ion.
Murray said Gillmor also
voted against a provision in
waste-hauling legislation which
would have given the public prior
notification of shipments of hazardous chemicals in their areas.
Gillmor has been stressing a
strong national defense, protect·
ing Social Security benefits,
keeping taxes low and strong
constituent service. He also
points out his experience In
representing much of the conservative 5th District during his
years in the Senate.

Presidential battle heats up

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, November 1: 1988

. Copyrighted 1988

White Potatoes

Partly cloudy. Low In mid
30s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High in lower 50s •

By CHARLES J. ABBOTT
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON - •F armers
started 1988 under less financial
stress than in past years, aided in
part by large federal spending,
two reports said Monday - but
one warned the drought may
prolong hardships for some
farmers.
"!'~early 80 percent of farms
were profitable In 1987, up 10
percentage points from that of
19!!6," the Agriculture Department said in a 171-page report.
"The largest share of profitable
farms in 1987 was found in
poultry, nurSery or greenhouse
and tobacco operations and in the
Corn Belt, Appalachia and the
Delta states."
Farmers' financial condition
Improved because of record- high

.

lncQme, a 45 percent rise In 1987 was 39 percent.
government payments to
In 1987, 15 percent of the
fiumers and ranchers and a farmers had debt-asset ratios
"modest" rise In sales .
higher than 40 percent, comIn addition, land values, which . pared to 22 percent the year
represent 70 percent of farm
before.
assets. went up while farmers
The report said the number of
reduced their debt. Owner equity "vulnerable farms," based on
went up during 1987 to$571 billion
Income and the a bliity to pay
from $537 billion, "reversing a
debts, was halved last year,
six-year decline and helping to dropping to 101,000, compared to
Improve income and cash flow,"
204,000 In the preceding year.
the report said.
"The adjusted data continue to
Debt dropped 8 percent last show that 40 perc~nt of the
year, the fourth straight year,
vulnerable farms were in the
declining to $143 bl)lion.
Corn Belt and (Great) Lake
Nearly 44 percent of aiJ farms
States and that cash grain and
started 1988 debt-free and 41
livestock operatiOns' accounted
percent had debt-asset ratios of
for most of the stressed operaless than 40 percent, indicating a
tions," the department said.
fairly strong position. By comThe General Accounting Ofparison, the fignre for both of
flee, a congressional agency,
those categories at the start of
Continued on page 10

·

The city of Indepel\dence and
neighbors to the area had been
fighting the proposal since it was
put forward In February 1982.
Independence Mayor Gregory
Kurtz said the city has spent
more than $800,000 In legal fees.
Shank said there are 180
solid-waste landfllls In Ohio,
many of which have become
environmental hazards.
He said the landfills are
''major contamination sources
around the state, due primarily
to the degradation of trash and
other wastes and introduc~lon of
household hazardous waste."
He said each of the 10 million
people In Ohio generates. about
one ton of solid waste a year .
"While landfills will be a part
of Ohio's solution to the problem
we are facllli, we will be
encouraging recycling, reusing
and reducing the waste we
create," Shank said. "Landfills
by them~lves are not the answer
and we will not approve them
unless they are absolutely necessary and meet the strictest
standards to.t .d esign and
operation.
"~

HALLOWEEN DISPLAY - Darth Vader,
by a number ol"creacben" visited

accom~led

Pomeroy bullla-• aad offices Monday. The

costume display was In observance of llaltoween
of course.

•

�----

__

......

___._____.._ -

Tuesday, November 1, 1988

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Obio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
..

~~ ...:......._-.-,,.,.,...du;:"
~v
.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

volleyball team

KGB may h·ave ·squelched talks

The Daily Sentinel
~ -

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
' T!Jesday, _NOVtn.JI?er 1! 1_988

' BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The Unlt~d Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'l'TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 wQl'ds
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
• telephone nu!'Ylber. No unsigned letters wUI be pubUsh,ed. Letters should be In
gOQd taste, addressing' issues, not persmalitles.

Election-letter deadline ·we.dnesday
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 election.
However, in the interest of fairness, no election letters, as stated
earlier this fall, wlll be accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov. 2.
Individuals should address Issues and not personalities. Letters
purely endorsing candidates will not be used. Letters should contain
no more than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed with Individual's name, address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published.

The campaign that.
went bump in the night
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Edilor
wASHINGTON - The calendar says today is Halloween and the
kids wlii be outln monster masks and ghost outfits expecting to freak
out the neighbors.
SorrY to disappoint them. but this year the presidential candidates
get the prize for fright wigs, scare tactics and things that go bump in
the night. ·
-George Bush would have us believe that Michael Dukakls would
give vicious murderers and ravening rapists the keys to their jail
cells.
- Michael Dukakis wants lt understood that George Bush is .
planning to give hls mlllionaire buddies the keys to the U.S. Treasury.
-According to Bush, Dukakis belongs to an organization that
favors kiddie pornography and wants to tax the churches.
-According to Dukakls, Bush is pals with dictators who peddle
drugs that go to American kids.
-Bush says Dukakis wants to junk the natiOf\al defense.
-Dukakls says Bush wants junk for the national defense.
-Bush blames Dukakis for the goo and gunk In Boston Harbor.
- Dukak is blames Bush for the goo and gunk everywhere else In the
country.
-Bush wants it known\that Dukakls wlii raise taxes.
-Dukakls wants it known that Bush already has.
On and on It goes, enough to boggle the mind of a Stephen King. The
great quadrennial ritual that Is supposed to be the finest
mani!estatlon of a free people weighing men and ideas in a solemn
and nearly unique process of selecting their leaders has become little
more than a horror show performed in an anxiety closet.
Not that this Is something new in American politics. Smear and
scare goes back to George Washington's second term, and 1986
certainly doesn' t compare to the Cleveland-Blaine sleaze-athon of
1884.
But dirty politics is no tradition to be proud of. Thlsisa country that
used to brag about Its industrial might and Its democratic practic'~s .
The Japanese, among others, were happy to give us a contest in the
former category, but not many countries, watching our presidential
contest from afar, are likely to want to import that shoddy piece of
work.
Who is to blame for this?
We, the news people, are for some of it. Most of us rise to the lure of
the campaign sound bites and slogans like starved trout and we nod
off when the candidates actually offer some substantial thoughts
·
about real problems.
But some of the blame goes also to we, the voters. The record shows
that negative "attack" campaigning wins a lot of elections.
Obviously, the managers of the 1988 campaigns think it is go.tngto win
this one.

WASHINGTON -The sealed strong suspicions that there Is a
records of the Iran-contra lnves- KGB agent, perhaps even one o(
tlgatlon suggest that a Soviet the people who met with the
KGB agent may have played a McFarlane delegation In
role In sabotaging President Tehran."
Hashemi wanted to establish a
Reagan's secret overtures to
Iran In 198!&gt;-86. The president "joint committee" as the first
sought to establish a relationship link between the United States
with Iran's Spelil&lt;er of the · · and revolutionary Iran. Lt. Col.
Parliament Hashemi Ratsanjanl Oliver North, speaking tor the
who responded by sending his White House, agreed that such a
nephew on a hush-liush 11\.lsslon committee was ''not a bad Idea.''
But he raised concerns about
to Washington In September l986.
"KGB efforts to penetrate any
The report states that the
relationshjps we might establish
trusted nephew, All Hashemi,
told White House aides "on a with the government of Iran ....
very secret hasls" that lhe KGB The problem Is we have to set up
may have compromised the U.S.
(the committee) some place so
approach to Tehran in May 1986.
that it won't be penetrated by the
A U.S. delegation headed by KGB. We are very concerned
ex-National Security Adviser Ro·
about communications links and
bert McFarlane, established conthe Soviets' ability to Intercept
tact with Mousen Kangarlu in the
them.''
North brought up the KGB
Iranian prime minister's office,
threat again later in the discus·
then flew to Tehran for explora·
tory talks. A "memorandum of slons. The memo says this about
conversation" detailing Hashe- the meeting: "We are concerned,
mi' s secret discussions with the North pointed out, about Soviet
White House reveals, ''He penetration of the Iranian milwanted to inform us that within itary and their Intelligence appaKangarlu' s network they have ratus. We don't know who they

lack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
are, but we know there are some Force general who previously
.had engaged in James Bond-type
agents working there."
Whether an undercover KGB operations around the world. He
operative blocked President · flew Belgian commandos Into the
Reagan's efforts to re-establish Congn, helped the Central Intellities with Iran cannot be proved. gence Agency run Its convert war
But it is assumed that the KGB in Laos and advised the Shah of
was doing all in its power to Iran on how to build an air force.
prevent any reconciliation be· Secord had contacts at · the
tween the United States and Iran. subterranean ievel of diplomacy,
Iran dominates the Persian Gulf, including. people with access to
which has been described at the the Khomelnl regime.
He secretly opened a new back
Western world's jugular vein.
Half of the West's oil travels channel to Tehran and arranged
through this strategic waterway, for the Iranian delegation, led by
That is the reason Reagan tried Rafsanjanl's nephew, to visit the
to open a dialogue with Rafsan· White House, This led North to
jan!, who was reported at the write, "Why Dick (Secord) can
time to be the leader of the do something In five minutes that
pragmatists. The hope was that the CIA cannot do In two days is
Rafsanjanl would replace Aya- beyond me ... "
We reported In September that
tollah Khomelni, end Iran's di·
has again opened
Rafsanjani
plomatlc isolation and seek a
indirect
communications
with
peaceful settlement of the Per·
the
White
House.
No
direct
sian Gulf war.
When the McFarlan mission negotiations have occurred, but
failed, the White House turned to messages have been exchanged
Richard · Secord, a retired Air through back channels.

Today in history
.
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 1, the 306th day of 1988 with 60 to follow.
Today Is All Saints' Dljy.
The moon is waning. moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They "include
author Stephen Crane in 1871, sportswriter-poet Grantland Rice and
Polish au thor Sh9lem Asch, both in 1880, actress Betsy Palmer in 1929
(age 59), and golfer Gary Player in 1935 (age 53) .
A thought for the day: Grantland Rice wrote, "For when the One
Great Scorer comes to write against your name, He marks not that
' you won or lost- but how you played the game."

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The M.S.I. AUTOMATIC Ill hearing aid is desiened to help those who suffer from sensori-neural hearing loss or NERVE
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, .NOYEMI-1 2th and THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3th

HOLLY .HILL INN
_,... 114.Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

•

.•

Ridenour, Anita Thomas, Carrie Morl18sey, and •
Jaime Wilson. Back row-Lisa Hoffman, Wendy •
Rach, Stephanie Otto, Shelly Metzger, Staphllllie
Myers, and Kenda Chaffee. Absent were manager
Brian Hoffman and Coach Don Jackson.

EASTERN JtJNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL
TEAM - The Eastern Junior High School
volleyball team of Coach Don Jackson posted a
line l!-6 record this season, finishing among the
leaders in the SVAC.
Pictured are team
members, 1-r, Amber Well, Kathy !"'r~ard. Kelll
Veteran linebacker Clay Matthews, who had two sacks of
Bengal quarterback BoomerEsl·
ason to take over the team lead
with five, believes the Browns
can play even better de(ense than
they have the past three games in
hol~ing opponents to a combined
40 points.
"I don't think we've reached
way back to play better," said
Matthews. whose younger
brother Br11ce plays on Houston' s
offensive line ... I think you save
that for the Super Bowl.

1-800-223-33.41

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)
probably better, than Hartlieb, "
Indi;;ma's defense, which Mallory said. "He's capable of
thwarted a record-setting pass- running when he wants. I don't
ing performance to defeat Iowa, sell him short on that. George has
will be called upon to prevent a a little quicker release. I would
similar aerial assault nextSatur- say they're both very accurate
day at Illinois.
passers. George has come along
• Indiana improved to 6·1-1 over- where he' s making good choices
ail and 4·1 in the Big Ten with a now and throwing with some
45-34 victory over Iowa last soundness. He's very accurate.
Saturday in a game that lasted He's an outstanding talent."
more -than four hours, The
Michigan remains in the Big
Haw keyes rallied from a 3!&gt;-3 Ten lead, one-half game ahead of
deficit on the strength of Chuck the Hoosiers and a full game on
Hartlieb, who completed 44 of 60 top of Illinois and Michigan
passes for 558 yards- an school State, Indiana's next two opporecords. · He produced three nents. The Michigan State game
touchdowns without suffering an on Oct. 12 will be on ABC
interception.
television a nd the kickoff has
Indiana coach Bill Mallory been changed to 3: 30 p.m.
The Hoosiers are off to their
said Hartlieb and llllnols quarterback Jeff George are equally best start since the 1967 Rose
dangerous.
Bowl team won its first eight
"There are a lot of similarities games. This year's mark Is the
between him and Hartlieb," .A,!.bird-best start in the school's101
Mallory said during a teleconfer- years of competition.
But the Hoosiers aren't think·
ence Monday . "George has good
vision, he knows where his people ing Rose Bowl. In part because
are on the field and he's· able to they know Michigan must falter
gei the bail to them."
against Minnesota, Illinois or
George, who set national prep Ohio State in the next three
passing records at Warren Cen- weeks for Indiana to have a
tral High School in Indianapolis, chance.
went to Purdue tor a year and
"They've got (the Rose Bowl)
then said he was transferlng to in the back of their minds but the
Miami (Fla.) before deciding to most important thing is the job
switch to Illinois. His mobility on ahead," Mallory said. "If it
the field isn't bad, either.
works out, it works out. I haven't
"His mobility is as good, thought about it. I'm worried

Oak Hill dominates SVAC
Dream Team with 3 honorees

* * * START .HELPING YOURSELF TO BETTER HEARING TODAY***

CALL AHEAD FOR APPOINTMENT

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - The
Cleveland Browns have climbed
to within one game of first place
in the AFC Central Division, bu t
they have company .
Cleveland's 23-16 decision Sunday over division-leading Cincinnati improved the Brow·ns to 6·3
after nine games: for the third
straight season, but Houston also
kept pace in second place with a
victory over Washington.
The results provided an appropriate prelude to next Mon~
day night's meeting between
Cleveland and Houston at the
Astrodome, where the Browns
have won four consecu live
games. The Oilers have won just
one of the last eight meetings '
between the two teams, that
coming during th'i' replacement
games last season.
"The Oilers are a very aggressive team. They'll be a handful,''
Cleveland coach Marty Schotten·
helmer said Monday. "But the
players on our team recognize
the Importance of preparation ."
The Browns held the Bengal
offense -top- rated in the AFCto just three field goals after the
latter had averaged 2'.l.5 points in
winning seven of Its first eight
games. Cincinnati's other score
came on David Fulcher's 16-yard
Interception return.
"We stopped them when we
had to." said Schottenhelmer.
''And FrankMinnifield' s block of
a punt that Herman Fontenot ran
in for a touchdown just underlines how much better our special
teams Is playing.
"On special teams, basically,
some young guys grew up. It
started back before the Pittsburgh game (Oct. 2) and has
progressed In a positive way."

..

"We have been really charged .
up. That has helped the
consistency."
Although the winner of the
NFL's weekly showcase contest
will have an edge ip the playoff
chase·, it should be noted Houston
visits Cleveland in the regular·
season finale Dec. 18.
"Still, we can only take it one
game at a time,"' said wide
receiver Clarence· Weathers,
who caught a career-high seven
passes for 140 yards Sunday .
"And I'm not putting a whole lot
of emphasis on what I did

because it's statistics now."
Quarterback Bernie Kosar ,
(s prained lower back) and running back Fontenot (sprained
knee) are considered probable
for the Houston visit.
Running back Kevin Mack,
who missed the Cincinnati game •
with a pinched nerve causing •
neck and shoulder problems, is
listed as questionable for Houston, Schottenhelmer said that
linebacker Mike Junkin, who is
eilgible to come off injured
reserve, probably will continue
to rest his sprained left knee.

'
' &gt;*
'

about who we've got next. That adjusiments for Illinois. But ·
has been pretty well tatooed into don't expect a dramatic change
in the team's straight ahead style
us."
of
play.
Anthony Thompson ran a
"We'll
always throw someschool-record 47 times for 168
thing
in
as
a changeup, but we· re
yards and three . touchdowns
not
a
fancy
dan bunch," Mallory
againstAiowa. His efforts earned
"Our
team is pretty
said.
him a slightly less rigorous
businesslike.''
practice this week.
Tom Bolyard, the team's '
"We'll have to take it a little
quarterback and punter,
backup
easier on Anthony," Mallory
has
heen
reinstated to the team, ·
said. "When you r11n a guy 47
Mallory
·
s
aid. Bolyard was s ustimes, you can' t knock the
pended
from
the squad for the
P·Wiille out of him in practice."
game
for
what school
Iowa
The Hoosiers successfully ran
officials
will
only
describe as
a fake punt against Iowa, and
"breaking
team
rules."
·
Mallory may make some more

·~

JANELLE ,JENKINS

Oak Hill had three players North Gallia claimed one win out
senior Janelle Jenkins, junior of 12 matches.
Memra Ingram and sophomore
Melynda Galllamore - .from its
The Daily Sentinel
12·0 SVAC volleyball champion
team named to the 1988 Ail-SVAC
I USPS IU·9110)
First Team, according to results
A Dlvblion of Multlmedla, Inc.
released by league coaches
Published every afternoon, Monday
today.
through Friday, 111 Court St., PoIngram, a hitter for the Oaks,
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multtmedta, Inc. ,
received MVP honors.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. SeOther first-team members incond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
cluded Southern's Tracy Beegle
a nd Becky Winebrenner, Kyger
Member: United Press [nternattonal.
Creek's Tracy Eggleton and
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assoclatlop. National
Vlkki Noble, Southwestern's
Advertising Represf!ntatlve, Branham
Christa Bailey, Eastern's Lisa
Newspaper Said, 733 Third Avenue,,
MEMRA INGRAM
New York, New York 10017.
Driggs and Tr isba Spencer,
Hannan Trace's Autumn Adkins
POSTMASTER: send addr£&gt;Ss changes
, and North Gailla's Denise
to The Dally Sentinel. lll O&gt;urt St..
Pomeroy, Ohio 457~.
Pickens.
Receiving "hOnorable mention
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
were Oak Hill's VIolet Adkins,
By Carrier or Mol or Route
One Week .. ...... .. ............... .......... $1.40
Cindy Carney and Cindy Stiltner;
One Month ............... .............. .... $6.10
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Eastern's Edna Driggs, Lee
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Amy
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and
Toby
The Daily Sentinel on a 3 6 or 12 month
placed lOth on a list of 20
Hill, Han nan Trace's Tracy
basis. Credit wUI be given carrier each
winningest coaches, based on
week.
Jenkins
and
Carrie
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Suzanne
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Mall Subticrlpllona
Leading the list is John Kresse second place In the league, was
Inside Melli County
named
Coach
of
the
Year.
of Charleston (S.C .), whose re·
. 13 Weeks ... ..... .... ...............• ...... $19.24
Kyger Creek and Southwestern
26 Weeks ... .... ..... ... .................. . $37.96
cord over the past nine years has
52 Weeks ..... ...... ...... ................. $74.36
as
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tled
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Outside Melp Couaty
while Eastern took !ltth with a 5·7
13 Weeks ., ......... ........ ..... .. ........ $20.80
defeated District 22 champion
record. Hannan Trace won three
26 Weeks ...•........••... ,., ...... .. ..... $40.30
Defiance 78·62 in the NAIA
52 Weeks .......•.......... :.... ........... $75.40
of
Its
12
league
co
ntests,
and
Nationals last March.

Redmen, Lawhorn
make winningest list
Once again, th e Rio Gran~e
men's basketball team a nd Its
head coaGh have been named to
the NAIA 's an nual listing of
wlnningest teams and coaches.
The Red men jumped from 20th
Of 20 teams in 1987 to 14th this
year with a 136-39 (.777) win· loss
i·ecord for the past five seasons.
The team also made the
NAIA"s jjst of winning teams of
the last 10 seasons, ranking 25th
on a 231-99 (. 700) • slate. Rio
Grande was not ranked in this
category in 1987.
St. Thomas Aquinas (N.Y.) Is
ranked first In both categories,

1

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BECKY WINEBRENNER

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Browns
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offensive-minded team
Indiana facing · another
,

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With ..lt.loo Wowor, 10,001 lfU.

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1988 All-SVAC

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'

-

�Tuesday, November 1. 1988

4-The l::)aily Sentinel

RCII

Eric Dickerson paces Colts
in 55-23 victory over Broncos
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -One
year after hls blockbuster trade
to Indianapolis, Eric Dickerson
rushed for 159 yards and a
career·higb four touchdowns,
leading the Colts ·to a 55-23
Halloween rout of Denver.
Dickerson ran for 112 yards
a"d scored on carries of 41, 12, 12
and 1 yards In the first 18:13 as
the Colts pulled to a 31·0 lead.
After that, It was just a matter of
how badly Indianapolis would
defeat the two-time defending
AFC champions ..
"I felt like I had a chance to get
200 yards, but I don't like to run 11
· up," Dickerson said. "It might
come some other day. "
The 55 points were the most
ever scored on .a Monday night,
the most scored this season, the
third-most by a Colt team and the
third-most allowed In Denver
history. The verdict left both
teams 4-5 on the season, but
Denver ' s dismal showing
weighed heavily on coach Dan
Reeves.
' "This Is the lowest we've been
In Denver since I've been here,,.
the eighth-year coach said. "I
don't think we're that bad."
The two-time defending AFC
champions see themselves as
their own worst enemies.
"We've got to stop thinking of
ourselves and start. playing as a ·
team, " receiver Vance Johnson
said. "We need to work bard and
make sacrifices."
"Everybody played poorly,"

defensive tackle Greg Kragen
said. " We were humble. We were
embarrassed."
Dickerson was confident but
uncharacteristically nervous be·
fore the game.
"I felt confident but I was a
little bit nervous before the
game,'' Dickerson said. "I 'm not
usually nervous. I went to the
store, sat around, took a nap. I
took a nap at 4, got up at 6 and
said, 'I'm ready to play ." '
Dickerson's rushing performance made him the · first
running back In NFL history to
gain 1,000 yards In his first six
seasons. He matched the NFL
record for consecutive 1,000-yard
seasons shared by Walter Payton
and Franco Harris. Dickerson,
who was traded to the Colts from
the Los Angeles Rams exactly
one year ago, leads NFL rushers
this year with 1,038 yards on 225
carries.
"What can you say about one
as great as that," ' Colts Coach
Ron Meyer said of Dickerson.
"You talk about setting records,
but we purposely didn't run It up.
Eric Is very special and I don't
know' If people appreciate his
talent."
.
Chris Chandler also threw a
40-yard touchdown pass to Clarence Verdin and Bill Brooks
pulled down a 53-yard touchdown
toss from Gary Hogeboom as
Indianapolis pulled to a 45-10
halftime lead. The only larger
flr~t-half total In NFL history

was 49 by Green Bay against
Tampa Bay In 1983.
Denver's defense, the worst In
NFL against the run, allowed 297
total yards In the first half, 124 to
Dickerson and 166 on 5 Colt
completions. The Colts also
forced four fumbles, all of which
·
they recovered.
'"We feltgood aboutourpreperatlon but you just don' t forsee
three fumbles and 31 points just
like that ," Meyer said.
Dean Blasuccl kicked field
goals of 31 and 27 yards but
missed a 39-yard attempt In the
first half. The miss snapped. a
string of 28 straight field goals
Inside 45 yards and prevented the
Colts from matching their record
point total for one game, set
against Buffalo In 1976. The
previous Monday night scoring
mark was 50 by San Diego In 1982.
Cos turned cheerleaders and a
record crowd of 60,544 cavorted
In celebration of the first Monday
night football game In Indianapolis, the only city that had never
hosted such a contest. The Colts
had not appeared on Monday
night In a decade untlllast month
and had not hosted a game since
the lOth week of the 1978 season.
Denver scored on a 48-yard
catch by Steve Sewell of a Gary
Kubiak pass, a 2-yard ca"tcb by
Sewell of a John Elway pass , a
7-yard pass from Kubiak to Van
Johnson and a 27-yard field goal
by Rich Karlls, who missed an
extra point.

Buckeye players get day off to heal
ELWAY SACKED- Denver quarterback John
; Elway (7) grbnaces as he It; sacked by
lndlaDapolls linebacker O'Brien Alston (97) and
defensive end John Hand In the first half of

Big 10 players
are honored

bta Jill Classic

Boxln&amp;
NABF UgttweliM L"'ampktni!Np
Monterey, calli. - Primo Ramos v1.
VI ctorlo Bel cher
Mlddlewelstis

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

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MondiQ', Nov. 7
Clnelud .at Hout~on, 9 p.m .

Calendar
lloWHIIJ

Geo rKt aSo utlu~r n (f..i)

7. NOI'Ih TCUII {&amp;-II
II. MJ.ddleTeanea.ee ~al:e (8-%)
t. Delaware (f..IJ
10. Fui'ITWI (S.C.) (6-2)
11. NorthwMter n State l La.) {7-1)
12. Eaatern Kent.-:lt)' ( 11·2)

13. Jacklloa 8'-&amp;te (5-0.21
14. t::.nlll'!dielll (6-2)

u. vm.-o.,. cPa.) (5-!- t )
16. App&amp;l ~~telliiUI State { N.C.) (5-3)

17. Hie) Bolte St11.te (Idaho ) (1-t)
17. Lafayette (Pa.) (6. 1-1)
It. otade! (S.C.) ( lot)
10. Mo.ana ( 7-!)

College

NA.TIONt\L FO&lt;n'BALL LEAGUE
American Conference

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at New dereey, 1:41 ·p.m .
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5

Monterey , CalU.- Herrn1111 Cave1uela
n. KIU'Kmll Leota

••
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••

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ratings
NEW VORKC UP I ) -TheUnltedPret8
lnteraulollll Board of Coath~ T_o p_20
cotk!ae lootball ratlnp, wltll-fd'.'lln d
lira-place "~ In parenthlst!ll, iotal
point• ( b•P.d QD l :S polnlllor llrtl ..ace,
14 for !ICCO nd, et.c .}, IUid 11181 week '"'
ranklnr.

.. .. ..
...'"' .'
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T•un

Point s

t. Southern Cal (li )('l· O)
!1. Miami (f. I )
.a. W. Vlrdnl a {~) (K-0)
5. Nel:niiD (8-1)

678 '

1. Notre Dam e t30 } (8- 0)

II. UCLA (7· 1)
7. Oklahoma 11· 1 )
It Florida St. 41 ) ('7·1)
I . Auburn ('J-11
11. Wymntnr (9-0)

11. Arbllus {8-0)
1%. Oklahoma. State (i-1)
13. Mlchlpn (5-t-1)
U . 8)' racue HJ.I)
115. So utll Carollna (7-1)
18. Hie) Lou I&amp;. Sl. ($-I)
li. ( lie) A.Jabamll (8-1 )
18.1adl~~na {&amp;.1-1)

lt. Brl(ham Younc (1-1)

... 20. CerTillon IW)
I·Unr&amp;rllil!d
Othera recelvlnl \loin:

m•

... 8
SolS 'J
St! 10

306 I I
11&amp; 12

.. ,
.. .
87 If

1'%13
60 15

60 16
17 •

10 18

Colorado,

Geo r,la. Texas El-Puo.

Division DI
CoUege poll
MISSION, Kan . (UPI ) - The top au
le._lromeach re(loniii'Gie II88NCA..t
Division Ill oonduded by li e NCAA
Dtvlllllon Ill Fuo4ball Committee with
record!~ tllroa«h &amp;t. 30.
'
EutReJfon
I . Ith.ca (NY) t8-I)Z. M'a per (N\' )
(7·J)S. Conta.nd St (NV) (l-0}4. tiolltra
(NY) ( ~· 1)$ . Fordham. (NY ) (1·1)1.
Plymoulh 8t ~NH) {8-0)
~hen recelvlllr voces {lilted aJplaabelllc-'l.rl: Cou&amp; Guard (Caan) , Mont.
clllr Slate {N.I), Treaton 81 (N d) aad
TrlaM1 (C. nnl .
Norlb ReJion
I. Wab... (llul) f'J.OIZ. ~ton (Oitlu)
('J· I)S. Aai\IIIMa {Ill) (1-1)4. BaldwlaWallaee (OIIIo) (1'· 1)5. WIUenbera(Ohlo)
('7·1)1. John C.rroi.I (OIIIo) ('J·I)
•
OIMu receh'lllll utn flllltll alphabtlt klall;r) : A4r'- (Mieh. ), DIIIIOMBea e-

dldlne, Mllllldn (Ill. ) and ~IMIOuU.
( Ill, ) '

8o•dl ReJioa
J. Ftrrwn (Va) (~1)%, (lie)DJc•l....,
(Pa) 18-0):2. (Ue) Rbod" (TeaD) ('J.f)4.
WMhlnston a.nd .l'elftn01 (Pa) (1-..1)1.

Hie) Centre (Ky ) {I-I) 5. (Ue) llonvlu
(Pa) (7·1)5. (tie) Wldeller(Pa) (7-1)
I
Olhera l'l!cetvlaJ Volel (ll... d alphabdk:ally): A ll e&amp;belly(PL),Oeorptown
(DC) and Muhleabfli'J(Pa),
Wftl.t &amp;ePon

I. CoDOi ni•Meort.eal (!lllu) (8-f)t.

CelltJaJ (Iowa ) (7-0) ll. st. Narbel'&amp; (WII)

(7·1) 4. lunll.e IMina) (1".1)1. 81mpeoa
( Mlnn) (1·1,1. Wleco ....WbKewaier (l1) .

COLuMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio State Coach John Cooper
gave his banged up Buckeye
football team the day off Monday
following Saturday's 20-10 loss to
Michigan State.
Cooper rattled off the names or
13 players who came out of the
game against the Spartans with
an assortment or Injuries.
They Included a pulle&lt;l bamst·
ring to free safety David Brown
and a thumb Injury to starting
nose guard Mike Sullivan, suffered In a halftime altercation as

the two teams left the field.
Brown Is expected to be out from
10 to 21 days and Sullivan six to
seven days.
Among the others who will
miss at least some practice this
week In preparation for Saturday's Wisconsin game are tall·
back Marc Hicks, also hurt In the
halftime Incident In a Spartan
Stadium tunnel, cornerbacks
Lance Price and Vince Clark,
outside linebacker Srecko Zlzakovlc, center Jeff Uhlenhake,

tailback Carlos Snow and guard
Greg Zackeroff.
Co-captain Michael McCray,
who missed two games with an
abdominal muscle pull and tried
to play at Michigan State, also Is
on the shelf again.
''The way he's going rlght.now,
I'm not sure we'll get him back
this season," Cooper said ot
McCray. "He tried to play a little
bit, but he just can't run. If you
CHICAGO (UP!) -Iowa quarterback Chuck Hartlieb and
can't run, you can't play on
Purdue linebacker Darrin Trleb
defense. l"m not optimistic abcut
getting him back."
have been selected United Press
International Offensive and Def·
Strong safety Zack Dumat,
enslve Players of" the Week, It
who had 19 tackles, Including 10
was announced Monday.
solos, was named the defensive
Hartlieb, a senior from Wood·
player of the game. Mark Pelinl,
stock, Ill., completed 44 of 60
who played most of the game at
passes for 558 yards and three I
fret: safety, bad 15.
touchdowns In the Hawkeyes
"I think that pretty much sums
By LISA HARRIS
45-34 loss at Indiana.
State and earned 515 points. .up the game on defense," said
UPI Sports Writer
Trleb, a sophomore from Chi·
Nebraska, 8-1, stayed In fifth,
Cooper, "when your strong
NEW YORK - Notre Dame, with 484 points.
cago, made 15 tackles In the
·Safety and free safety have to
Boilermakers' 9·6 win at Wiscon- emerging the narrow choice of
make that many tackles, you 're
The rest of the top 10 Included In trouble. "
sin. He also had two quarterback the United Press International
Board of Coaches as the No. 1 No. 7 Oklahoma, flopping spots
sacks.
·
Cooper boOed the Ohio State
team In the ratings Monday, with the Seminoles, while No. 9 loss down to "two key plays," an
have come full circle since the Auburn and No. 10 Wyoming Intercepted option pitch by Michlast time the Fighting Irish stayed put, along with No. 11 Igan State linebacker Inside the
occupied the top spot.
Arkansas and No. 12 Oklahoma Spartan . 10. and a defensive
Realizing the goal of recon· State.
holding penalty called against
struction under Coach Lou Holtz,
No. 13 Michigan switched McCray which nuUified an Ohio
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -West· the Irish return to No. 1 for the berths with No. 14 Syracuse,
State pass Interception by John
ern ~lchlgan quarterback Tony first time since they lost their which was followed by No. 15 Sullivan, who returned the ball to
Kimbrough and Toledo running second game of 1981 and second South Carolina, co-No. JljsLoulsl· the MSU seven.
back Nell Trotter, along with under Gerry Faust - who was ana State and Alabama, No. 18
Cooper said review ofthegame
Ohio University linebacker held responsible for the demise Indiana," No. 19 Brigham Young film Indicated no holding against
David Terry have been selected · that by this team's standards and No. 20 Clemson.
McCray.
the Mld·Arner-lcian Conference equated hitting bcttom.
or the five undefeated ran ked
"The other key play In the
offensive and defensive pla_yers
With 30 of the 49 first-place ·teams, only Wyoming has played game was the option play," said
of the week.
votes, the Irish, totalled 699 nine games, and only Arkansas Cooper. "If Greg (Frey) pitches
points to 678 for Southern Cal, hasn't ctacked the top 10.
which received 16 first-place
West Virginia, following much :~~c~~~~~~.e ~~·~ho:~:a~e, ~~:e~
votes. No. 4 West Virginia the same route Syracuse took They didn 't have anybody ascaptured two first-place votes, last year In challenging for a signed to the pitch.
and No. 8 Florida State the other. final No. 1 ranking, bas an even
"Believe It or not, the guy who
While Notre Dame followers better chance than the Orange- Intercepted the pitch· was the
The Rio Grande Redmen bas·
must be hearkening back to their men last year, In that Notre defensive enit from the other side
ketball team was one of three
last 8·0 team - the 1973 national Dame and Southern Cal have to of the field. Next time Ilectureon
District 22. schools to receive
champion -,_Holtz Is reminded of play each other,
defense, that's another way to
votes In tlie · annual preseason
the 1987 Irish wllen they were 8-1
While Miami Is stiiiiJi front of stop the option. Bring the end all
poll conducted by the NAIA.
and about to lose all three ofthelr the Mountaineers, It bas a loss- the way across and let him take
The Redmen, 27-8 In 1987-88,
remaining games.
albeit by one point to Notre Dame the pitch man. "
won six votes, ahead of Walsh
"We were at this stage last - and with USC also having to
Cooper joined the "ranks of
(21-11), which netted four. Rio year when wewere8-1 andwedld play UCLA, It ls entirely possible
those
Impressed with the play of
Grande currently shares the
not finish up very well at the end West Virginia could leave the Michigan State offensive tackle
Mid-Ohio Conference champion·
of the year. This Is something regular season as the only Tony Mandarich.
ship with Walsh after both
that we have to address," Holtz unbeaten, untied team currently
" He's for real," Cooper said of
complied 11-3 conference stand·
said. "We're not a very good In the top nine.
the
6·foot-6, 315·pound Ma.nda·
lngs last season.
football team right now, I want to
"No West VIrginia team has rich. "I lion' I know whether I've
Out of 20 teams that made the
tell you."
ever won eight In a row," West ever seen
' a better offensive
poll, current district champion
The Irish, 8-0 for the 16th time VIrginia Coach Don Neblen said. lineman: He wiped out that one ·
Defiance (24·7 last season) was In school hls(Ory, were In second "As a head coach, I never won
ranked 18th. Marv Hohen- last week. They made the jump eight. There's a lot more behind side or the line every lime. even
berger's Yellow Jackets were despite a lackluster victory over us than In (rant of us. We'll just when they weren't coming his
credited with 118 points In the Navy because previous first- keep taking them one at a time. '· way. He"s a great football
player."
poll.
place UCLA lost to Washington
The NAIA chose David Lips· State. The Bruins toppled to sixth
comb (Tenn. ), winner of the 1986 and received no vole higher than
national crown, first In the poll fourth.
with 23 votes and 615 points, The
USC , 7-0, Improved one spot, as
Blsons, who appeared In the did No. 3 Miami, with 605 points.
nationals this year, ended their West VIrginia remained undeseason wtt~ a 33-3 slate.
feated (8-0) by trouncing Penn

Monday night's game In lndlallapolls. The Colts
sacked Elway several tlrnea In lhe half lo hall the
Broncos 55-23. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...
NHL results

The

Tuesday, November 1, 1988

·Notre Dame jumps to
top spot in·UPI .poll

Mid-American grid
playel'S honored

Red.men win votes
in preseason poll

. FALL SPECIALS
BRAKES

AS LOW AS

Congratulations,
Joe Wisecup!

-----

Joe is this week's
winner In The Daily
Sentinel co-sponsored
football contest. ·

.

S3995 FRONT ' S3J75
OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

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1988
FOOTBALL CONTEST

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MEMBER FDIC

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Pomeroy, Ohio
108 W. Main St.

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fi75-1121

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NOTHING TO BUY- ANYONE MAY ENTEI!
S20.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNEI

~--~

CONTEST RULES

Co1t1

Tho conteat is open to anyone e•csptomployoea of Tho Dally Sentinel end their immediltelomliies.
An award of •20. 00 will be given to the parson piclcing the molt winnara. In cue of • tie one winner will
be drawn from all correct entries.

Blowe~

All entrants must use the entry blank below.

Funettl

Games lor this week will bolound In tho advertllementa on this page. Liot the name of the team' you
think will win opposite the name of the advertilier .
Decision of the judges will be linai end entries become tho property of Tho Dally Sentinel.

/lome

This contest will continue for ten weeks from· the date of first insertion.
If mailed. blanks must be postmarked not liter than Friday .
Clip the coupon balow ... .. ..fill it out and •end to ... .

Middleport, Ohio

Point Pleu.. t ••· South C.. rleato•

Buffalo wc. So•ttle

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1 1 1 Court Street

FOOD SHOP
AND
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Pomeroy. Ohio 46769

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W1h1111• ••· Wliii•Mifow•

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MEIGS AUTO SALES

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992-2136 - 992-2137

EWING FUNERAL-HOME

SH Us For That New or UsiCI Vehkle Today!

446-3995
State Rt. 7
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We've Gro-wn Ber.au&amp;e We Have He lped Oth en To Grow

Member FDIC

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COOPER

"FINE LINE OF LATE MODEL
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605 Gen. Hartinger Parkway
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Phone 614 -949 -2210

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113 Court St.
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992-2054

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday, November 1, 1988

Page- 6

FmHA loan
help ready

Beat of the bend

Census workers. out
Nov. 29.
By BOB HOEFLICH
Be not alarmed II someone
Anniversary days wtll be obcomes to your door In regard to
served
at Treasuer Chest Crafts
the census.
Friday,
Saturday and Sunday
It Is an aufrom
10:30
a .m. to 6:30p.m. each
thentic vtslt as
day.
census workers
New craft Items, Christmas
wlll be StOIPPlllg
gifts and decorations will be
at hom
shown and door prizes awarded.
throughOut
The shop Is located one mile
county to ask
just a few general questions In north of the Meigs County Fairpreparation for the regular cen- grounds on former Route 33,
35082 Rock Springs Road.
sus which wlll be In 1990.
HoweVer, do make sure that
Easter bonnets are arriving
such census workers properly
every
day at The Dally Sentinel
tdent!ly themselves. Cathy MeaOffice
In Pomeroy for the Big
dows, crew leader, reports that
Bend
Minstrel Association's
each worker will be wearing an
Create
an Easter Bonnet
ldenttflcatton badge. Also If you
Contest.
h,ave any questions In regard to
No entry blank Is needed to
the visit, the worker Is to be
participate
and your .creation Is
prepared to give you a card with
I
o
be
delivered
to The Sentinel by
a name and number that you can
4
p.m.
on
Nov
.
7.
call.
The hats will be worn In the
Apparently residents are not association's annual Fall Follies
enthused about serving on the to be staged at the Meigs High
School on Nov . 26.
Meigs County Fair Board.
Again let me tell you about the
are
five
openings
on
the
There
prizes:
a $100 savings bond for
board this year but not one
newcomer came forth . to file a first place; twoS50savlngs bonds
petition of candidacy . However, for second and third places, and
all five Incumbents did file for $25 gift certificates for groceries
for fourth and fifth places.
reelectiOn to three year terms .
You get your hat back after the
The five Incumbents are Addaand winners of the five
show
lou Lewis, Dan Smith. Eddie
prizes
will be announced on show
Holter, Benny Slawter and Jennight.
nings Beegle.
I look forward to recetvlng
The annual election for board
your
entry between now and Nov .
members will be held from 5 to 9
7.
By
the way, judging will be by
p.m. on Monday , Nov. 7, at the
number
only - no names wtll of
secretary's office on the Rock
of hats will be known
the
creators
Springs Fairgrounds.
by
the
judges.
Since the role of the board Is to
Sponsoring this fall's musical
stage the annual Meigs County
Fair each summer. we should be are the Pomeroy Chamber of
thankful for Incumbents who are Commerce and the Melgs Local
willing to work for a whole year Athletic Boosters. Sponsorship,
In order to present the five day of course, means that the two
fair annually. Looks !Ike a big job groups will share equally In the
proceeds of the show.
to me.
Jane Beegle turns out these
The 1988-89 Marauder Yearhandpalnted
handkerehlefs. She
book staff will be taking orders
did
one
for
me
so that It would
for yearbooks the week of Nov.
always
remind
me
of a special
' 7-llth.
Now,
I
don't
want to
moment.
Cost of the yearbook will be $20 .
talk
about
that
moment.
Maybe
It you want your name engraved
Jane
will
tell
you.
At
any
rate,
on _your copy, then It will be an
I'm
smlllng.
additional $2. Plastic covers are
Halloween Is out of the way.
an addttonal $1 .
Now
If we can only taketlmetodo
Senior pictures will be taken '
a
little
thanksgiving, before
Nov. 28, 29 and 30 with retakes of
underclassmen to be taken on Christmas . Do keep smlllng.

BIG SMILE -Mary Bacon of Middleport had a
big smUe for The Sentbtel news camera as she
received her Jnftuenza Immunization at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center Monday afternoon. Mrs.

Community calendar

Jason-Alan Parker, son of Carl
and Arlene Parker, Tuppers
Plains, celebrated h1s lOth birthday recently with a party hosted
by his mother at the home of hts
maternal grandparents, Ted and
Marge Connolly.
A monster truck cake was
served with Ice cream and punch

to Misty and Travis Lyons,
Sheila, Jeremy and Christopher
Connolly, Sandy and Christie
Mills, Angela, Justin, and Tina
DeLaCruz, Shaun Long, Erma
Jean and Darlene Connolly, and
his great-grandmothers, Erma
Connolly and Beulah Schultz.

Reedsville UMW plans bazaar
The Reedsville United Methodist Church Women will hold a
Christmas bazaar at the fire
house In Reedsville Saturday.

Public Notice
Not1ee of Election
Tax Levy In

On

EKC811 of the
Ten Milllimitatton

NOTICE io hereby given
th8t in pursuance of 1 Re·
10lution of the Board of

Table space charge Is $5. Anyone
wishing to reqt a table may call
Marlene Putman, 378-6371. or
Pat Martin , 378-6233.

POMEROY -Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star,
wtll hold open installation of 1989
officers at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
Shade River Lodge Hall In
Chester.

7:30 o'clock PM.
By order of the
Board of Elect1ona.

of Meigs County. Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M . Frvmver. Director

~- -

for

.

A support group for family
members and caregivers of
victims of Alzheimer's Disease
and Related Disorders will be
held Friday from noon to 2 p.m at
the Senor Citizens Center.
The related disorders Include
such things as strokes, Parkinson's Disease and Huntington 's
bisease. The meeting will be held
In the new conference room and
lunch will be served to those who
are registered by 9 a.m. Friday.
For more information, residents
may call Linda Friend or Beth
Theiss at the Center, 992-2161.

one

Townlhip Truat"' of the
Townlhip of Scipio, Meigl

The Polls for aaid ElecttOn

there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said

Scipio Townohip at • GE NERAL ELECTION to be
hold in the Townohlp of Sci·
plo, Ohio. ot the regular
plec• of voting therein, on

T-dtl'f. the eight day of
Nov-bor, 1988. the question of levying, in excess of

the,., mill limitation. for

Public Notice
Notice of Election On
Tax Levy In
Exce11 of the
Ten Milllimttatlon

NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance ot a Resolution of the Board of
1Township Trusten of the
Township of Chaster. Ohio,
passed on the 9th day ot Au-

the benefit of Scipio Town-

gust, 1988. there will be

vkling M1d malnt1ining fire

submitted to a vote of the
people of said Chester
Townotip ot • Gonorol Eleollon

ohlp for the purpoM of pro_ ...u.. ..,........ buidlngo, or -efor. or

eourc. of w81er supply and

meterilfo th..tor, or the OIUblilhment .nd meintenence of llnee of fire al•m
tolegroph. or the peymont of
pormonent, port- dmo. or v~
f i r - oo fire flght11111 ....._ ... to operote the.
...,., lnducli"'l the poymlnt
of n. .,..., ~'ploy«' 1 con-

trllutlan roqulred under oectlon 742.34 of thl reviHd

co•. or to pun:h•e 1mbu~
oqulprnont. oo to pr~
vide embullnce or emer-

mldicol ..vioeo
b'( 1 fire depart·

-llold
mont or

......,..,,

fire

fighting

Slid ... being: • renewal
of., •lltlng 1.11-lovy to

to be held In the Townohlp of
Cheotor of Meigs County.
Ohio. at tha regular places of
voting therein, on Tuesday,
the 8th day of November,

19B8, the question of l1111y·

ing 1 tax. In excess of the ten
mllllimitltion, for the benefit of Chester township tor
•the purpo• of Providing and
Maintllining fira apparatus,
appliance..
buildings, or
sh:as thllrefor, or 10urces of
wetar supply and materials
therefor. or lhe estabtlsh~
ment and maintenance of
llnas of fire elarm telegraph,
or the peyment of parma·
nent. per.t-tlme, or volunteer

firemen or fire fighting com·
penies to operate the ume,

Including the poyment of fi-

run forffvellll yeouou rote

remen employer's contribu·
tion required under, ucdon

MCh one dolor of vlluatlon.
wllldl _ , . , to ft-

742.34 of the revioold code.

not •--"ng 1.11 mNlo for

-•1•0.1111 tor-" one
llundrold - · of VIIUI·
lion. fotr . . Ill yeoro.
Tile No far Mid la.ctlon .
willie -11111:30 o'clock
A.M. ond remlln"""' untl

or to purchase ambulance
equlpm.,t. or to provide
embulence or em.,gency
medical urvices operated

by 1 flro deportment or flro
fighting compony.
Seid tax being: an adi·

will be open at 8.30 o'clock
A.M . and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M .

By order of the
Board of Election•.
of Meige County, Ohio

Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M frymyer, Director

Dated Sept. 1. 19B8
1101 11 , 18. 26; 11111. 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
HANDICAPPED BUS FOR
BOA:;~FS .)-gtf6'kTtON
Sealed propoaols wll bo
received by the Boord of
Education of tho MeigsLocat School District of Middleport, Ohio, •• tho Troo·
surer' o Office until 12:00
noon on Wedneodoy, Novembor 18, 1888, end It
thot time 0 PM1ed bl' tho
Tr-uror of Mid Boord. tabuleted end 1 report thereof
m. -•- to oeid Board 11 ito
next ocholduled mooting u
provided b'( low for one 111
hendicopped school buo, ••cording to ..,..;flcotlons of
u1d boord of oducotlon.
Sep111t01nd lndepMtdent
bids wMl be rocolved whh
,..poet to tho ch••ll end
bodytypeendwlllotot.,hlt
tfoebuowhenoooembted..,d
priorto~otiverycomplywhh

ell ochool dillrict opeclfl..
tlono. ell utetv ,.gulltlono
end cunent Ohio Minimum
Stondlrdo lor School Bus
Conllructlon of tho DeportmMtt of Educllllon purauent
to &amp;action 4111 .711 of thl
Ohio Revioold c. . end 111
•
I

THURSDAY
POMEROY- Salisbury Township Trustess will meet Thursday, 7 p.m. , at the township
building. The public Is invited.

Struble to
speak locally
Mike Struble, Syracuse, wtll be
presenting a paper entileld Ty
Capel, Residual Patterns of
Welsh Settlement upon the
Landscape of Southeastern Ohio
at the annual conference of the
Southern Society of Archttectu·
ral Historians and the Pioneer
American Society, Nov. 11 in
Mobtle, Ala.
The research focuses on Welsh
settlement patterns and rural
church ar chitecture In Meigs,
Gallla, and Jackson Counties . He
will be accompan led by Profesor
Hubert Wilhelm of Ohio Unlver·
slty who wlll present. Double
Overhang Bar ns in the Pennsylvania Settlement Region of Sou·
theastern Ohio.
National publication of St ruble's research will take place
next $prlng in the Journal of the
Pwneer America Societ y ..

Hymn sing set
A hymn sing, featurin g the
Harvest Trto, will be held ·at 7
p.m. Saturday at the Appl~
Grove United Methodist Church,
located 10 miles above Racine on
Route 338

Meigs County honor rolls _ __

Public Notice

Dated Sept. 1. 1988
hundred dollars of valuation.
110111. 18. 25; 11111. 4tc for five {6) yean.

County. Ohio. pooood on the
5th cloy of Auguot. 19BB.

Rev . Sam

Support group
forms in area

each

will be 7:30 p.m., Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday, and 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday . Rev. and
Mrs. Lewis Dunnells will be the
evangelists. Pastor Clark Baker
Invites the public to at tend.

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Ea swrn
HARRISONVILLE- Sand ar· Star, Middleport, will meet
list Rev. Bob Everly will be at a " Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Officers to
special missionary service on wear chapter dresses.
Wednesday , 7: 30 p.m. , at the
, Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on Christmas auction
Route 684. Everyone welcome.
SYRACUSE - A Christmas
auction will be held Saturday,
CHESTER - Chester Town· Nov . 5, 7 p.m., at the Syracuse
ship Trustees will meet Wednes- Fire Station, with auctioneer
day, Nov . 9, 7:30p.m.,at tile town Dap Smith . Everyone welcome .
hall.
Christmas bazaar
RACINE Morse Chapel
MASON - The annual ChristChurch, County Road 35, Racine· mas Bazaar of the Mason Volun-Portland Road will be In ter Fire Department Ladies'
revival through Friday night at 7 Auxiliary will be held Saturday,
p.m. each evening. Rev . Ralph Nov. 12, from 9 a .m . to 6 p.m.
Workman, of Gallipolis. will Anyone WIShing to rent a table at
preach. Everyone welcome.
$5 per table may do so by phoning
304-773-5437 or 773-5414. Also
POMEROY -United Pentec- on that. day, the Auxiliary will be
ostal Church in Middleport will selling vegetable soup, chill, hot
be In revival Wednesday through dogs, pop and coffee. Everyone Is
Sunday, Nov. 6. Service limes welcome to attend.

POMEROY -Beginning Tuesday the Ladles Auxiliary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie
2171 meetings will start at 7 p.m.

t1onal tax of 1 0 mills to run
tor five 15) yean at a rate not
exceeding 1.0 mills for each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten cenu

ItO. 101

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants Association will
meet Wednesday, 8 a.m., at Bank
One . The regular meeting date
has been changed toaccomodate
more members. Please attend.

LONG BO'ITOM - The Long
Bottom Flame Fellowship Chapter· will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Mt . ·olive Com·
munlty Church In Long Bottom
with Mary Bush of Racine as
special speaker.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Anderson will be speaking at the
Old Bethel F.W .B. Church, lo·
cated behind Gilbert's Service
Statton on Story's Run Road on
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Pastor Bob
Grubb Grubb Invites the public.

TUESDAY
PORTLAND- Lebanon Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday,
6 p.m., at the township building.

MIDDLEPORT -

Parker birthday observed

Bacon was one of 718 senior citizens receiving
shots Monday. Admlnlslering the Immunization
on the left Is Norma Torres, R.N., director of
nurses at the health department.

Farmers who plan to put In
winter crops with Farmers
Home Administration emergency loans based on this year's
drought should take steps immediately to see If they need crop
Insurance for 1989 crops, accordIng to Bernard T. Chupka, FmHA
State Director for Ohio.
The Disaster Assistance Act of
1988 requires any farmer with a
productiOn Joss exceeding 65
percent of normal to agree to
purchase Insurance for 1989
crops, with some exceptions, as a
condition for obtaining an FmHA
emergency loan to help cover
1988loses, Bernard Chupka said.
The open season for obtaining
mulf)-perU crop Insurance lor
wlnter crops expires October 31.
excepl In certain northwestern
states where It Is November 30,
leaving farmers little time to
obtain Insurance. Although some
extensions to the deadline may
be granted on an Individual
basts, Bernard Chupka said
farmers should be In touch with
their local Insurance representative without delay. Proof of
Insurance will be required before
disaster Joan applications can be
processed.
Exceptions to the Insurance
requirement Include cases where
Insurance Is not available and
where premium costs would
Impose an undue financial hardship as determined by the FmHA
county committee.

other pertinent provisions of
law.
Spocifl..tiona and 1n·
structions to bidders may be

obtained at tho office of
the Trauuror, Middleport.
Ohio.
A certified checlc payable
totheTreuurerofthoobove
board of education or • satisf11ctory bid bond executad
by tho bidder end the surety
company. in an amount
oquot to five percent !6%1 of
tho bid ohall be oubmittod
with ooch bid.
Sold board of education
reoorvos the right to wolve
informolhieo to accept or ro·
]act any and oil or ports of
MIY ond all bidl
No btdl ..., be withdnrwn
for at 1-t thirty 1301 days
lftor the ochoduled closing
time for receipt of bldl.
Meigs Loco~:~:~:~~~
Jane Fry, Trouurer
621 South Third Avenue
Middleport. Ohio 46760
1 18141 992·66~0
110126 , 11111 . B. 16 . 4 ,c
Public Notice
---,==-=-====--;
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Motgo County Boord of
Aontll Retordotlon/Dovolopm.,llt Dloobilllloo wit
h0 ld 1 btl h . 1 t ,._
c eanng
Mllgo puCounty
Boord ,,.
of
MR/DD' office on John
Strwll tn SyrocuM. Ohio an
Wodnlldey, No....,bor 30,
1888 11 2,00 p.m. The purpoM of tho hurlng ;1 to
public comment on
tho 4 yeor "8tr1t111lc Pions"
ond the 1981 "Annuol Actlon Pion" for th41 Meigs
County B08rd of MMttll
Aetardllllon /Dovetopmen·
Ill Dillbllhloo. Acopy oftho
prOfiOMCI Plene will be well·
olrloforrovllwb'(interlltod
peroonutthoMeigsCounty
Boord of Mentel Retard•tlon!Dovotopm.,tll Dloobilhloo office.
11111 , ftc

11-

.i

The first six weeks grading Robby Wyatt.
Rupe, Joseph Roush, Darlene
period honor roll at the Meigs
Sophomores: Larry Barrett ,
See, Debbie Six , Cheryl Stevens,
Junior High School has been Randy Corsi, Barbara Donohue,
Chris Stewart , Natalie Tromm
announced. Making a grade of B John Evans, Kim Ewing, Troy
Jerry White, Ann e Williams'
or above In all their subjects to be Gibeau!, Pam Haggy, Eric Heck,
Tara Wolfe, Mony Wood .
'
named to the roll were:
Susan Houchins, Steve Martin,
Seventh .Grade: Brad Ander- Amy Might, Mary Morton, Missy
Seniors: Lisa Blsseit, Lau r ie
son, Heather Burch, Lorrl Bur- Nelson, Aaron Sheets, Kristen
Black. Kim Braden, Henery
nem, Matt Clark, Ryan Conde, Slawter, Joseph Smith, Kelly
Dan Jelle Crow' Amity Dixon, Smith, Doug Stewart, Jennifer Buchanan, Nikki Bunch, Lisa
Butcher, Mary Butcher, Char·
Tracy Fife, Jennifer Fink, Jason Taylor, Ken VanMatre, Amy
lene Cadle, Metod! Carl, Leslle
George, Dawn Hockman, Mit· Wagner, Stephanie Walker, Amy
Carr,
Chad Carson, Shannon
chell Jacks, Melissa Jeffers, Warth, Jenny Werry, Darcl
Coats,
Marc
Corsi. Decker CulBilly Jones, Andrea McDonald, Wolfe, Daymond Wolfe.
lins, Stacy Dalton, Leah Doidge,
Joy O'Brien, Ann Riffle, SteJuniors: Nancy Baker, Steve Lisa Driggs,__ Scott Edmonds ,
phanle See, Mike Sloan, Tim Bass, Melanie Beegle, May Con- Beth Ewing. Terry Fields, Dena
Vance, Erin Warner, Marlo key, Ed Crooks , Roxan Cundiff,
!!all, Tammy Haw ley, Sheila
White, Sarlna Winner, Jason Lisa Darst,' Brandt Dillion, An· Henderlcks, Cathy Hobstetter ,
gela Donohue, Kelly Douglas,
Wttherall.
Eighth Grade: Debbie Alkire, Brian Durham , Amy Epple, Wes Howard, Janelle Hysell,
Nell Barrett, John Bentley, Abby Angle Fields, Lisa Gray, Lara Stacy Hysell , Penni Jeffers, Ada
King, Tosha Landaker, Vince nt
Blake, Linda Chapman, Jay Hall, Kelly Hamilton, Ryan Laudermilt, Cindy Mayna rd
Cremeans, Kelly Doidge, Me- Harper, Heather Harless, Daniel Elise Meter, Martha Nelson:
Iissa Durham, Rusty Edmonds; Kennedy, Kristin King, Kenda
Jody Fowler, Heather Francko- Kloes , Theresa Lambert, Kandy Parso ns, Todd Powell,
Trina Rhodes, Tina Romin e,
w1ak, AI I!son Gannaway, Tr acy Jeremy Lawrence, Kimberley Lynn Ro sllnski, Jared Sh eets.
Grueser, Trevor Harrison, Jason Masters, Trlcla Michael, Re- Angle Sharp, Joanle Simpson
Huffman, Jodi imboden, Randall becca Napper, Roberta Napper,
Johnston, Lori Kelley, Ch·arles Michael Parker, Mary Perdas, Sonja Ste~ re, .Jody Taylor, Susa~
King, Chris Knight, Kevin Lam- Wendy Phillips, James Rey - Trader, Monica Turner, Debbie
West, Angela White, Susan
bert, Lorena Oiler, Kelly Ph elps, nolds. Tracie Ri chmond , Aimee Young, Wesley Young.
Ricky Price, Tammy Queen,
Vincent Reiber, Beth Roush,
Sherry Seddon, Kyla Sellers,
Tara Shepherd, Jessica Stivers,
Be k s
d
R
T 11
C Y now en, usty r p ett,
Katrina Turner, Michelle Young.
The first six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Meigs
High School has been announced.
Ma king a grad e of B or a bo ve In
TO THESE AREAS
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,
Freshmen: Barbara AnderRUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W. VA.
son, Tricla Baer, Frank Blake,
Misty Butcher, Dodte Cleland,
ORDERS MUST IE PHO.D IN IEFOIE 3 P.M.
Sharla Cooper, Stacey Duncan,
PUICHASI 011 PIISCRIPTIONS PLUS
Stacy Fry, Tara Gerlach,
HIALII ANI IEAUTY AIDS.
Heather Gtbeaut, Angle Goody,
Kim Hanning, Bill Harless,
Jeremy Heck, Amy Herald, April
Hudson, Darin Logan, Joseph
IFOIMIIlf VILLAGE PIIIIMACY)
McElroy, Tammy Miller, Jason
Reynoldsr Melissa RoJJtns, ConSTORf HOURS: Mon.·frl. 9' A.M.·6 P.M~ Saturday ' A.M.-I .M.
nte Sauters, Marjoretta Tromm,
271 NOUN SKONO
992-6669
-DliPORY, OHIO
Bobby Vance, Chrissy Weaver,

*NEW EXPANDED SERVICE*

"FREE DELIVERY"

ss.oo .....

PRESCRIPnON SHOI

r

Tuesday. November 1, 1988
Public Notice

Public Notice

Notice of Election On
Tax levy In
Excess of the
Ten Mill limitation
NOTICE is hereby g 1van
that in pursuance of a Resolution of the Village Council of the Village of Middleport. Ohio, pasl8d on the

with no trade in vehicle com·
plete a"d delivered to the

8th day of Augutt. 1988

thare will be submitted to a'
vote of the people of oaid Mid-

dleport Vijlago ot a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held in tho
Village of Middleport. Ohio.
at the regular places of voting therein, on Tuesday, the

8th dey of November, 19B8,

~he question of levying a tax,
1n excess of th(!l ten mill limi-

tation, for the benefit of
Middleport V1llage for the
purpoae of Providing and
Mai~taining fire apparatua,
a~phances.
buildings, or
sttes therefor, or sources of
water supply and materials
therefor, or the establish·
ment and maintenance of
hnn of fire alarm telegraph,
or the payment of p~rma­
nent, pan-ttme, or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting companies to operate the same.
•ncludmg the payment of firemen employer's contribution required under sectton
742.34 of the revised code,
or to purchase ambulance ,
equipment. or to provtde
ambulance or emergency
medical serv1ces operated
by a fire department or fire
fighting company.
Said tax being: a renewal
of an ex11ting 1.0 mill levy to
run for five (61 years at a rata
not exceeding 1 .0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten cents
($0.10) for each one hun·
drad dollars of valuation, for

five l61 yeero

The Polls for said Electton
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open Until

7.30 o'clock P.M.

By order of the
Board of Elections,
of Meigs County, Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. frymyer, Director

Doted Sept 1, 19B8
l10)11, 1B. 25; 11111. 4tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 18. 198B, '"
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Coso No. 26030 David Wooton. 30040 · Old
Dexter Church Road, Dex-

ter, OH . 45726, was appomtad Executor of the estate of Minnie Wooten, de·

ceosod. lote of 30040 Old
Dexter Church Road. Dex-

ter. OH 45728.
Robert E. Buck.

Probate Judge
lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk

lt0)26; tt1J1. B. 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
AMBULANCE DEALERS
In accordance with the

Ohio Revised Code, sealed
bidJ will be received by the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in their of·
fica located in the courthouse, Second St., Pome-

roy. Ohio 45769,

unt~

12

o'clock noon on November

9. 1988. The bids will bo
opened at 2 p.m. on Novem·

ber 9, 1988 and read aloud
for the folldwing veicle.
Each bid must meet the conditions and specifications as
follows.
Specifications may be ob·
tained from the Me1gs
County Emergency Med•cal
Services Office, located on

Mulberry Heoghtl. P.0. Box
748. Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
16141 992-6617.
Vohiclotoboonoj1)1989
Type Ill Clan I Emergency
Ambulance. Price will be

2

In Memoriam

In Loving Memory Of
EARL H. DEAN
who passed away 9
years ago today,
Nov. 1. 1979
Softly the loaves of
mamory fall:
Gently we gather and
treasura them all.
Unseen, unheard, he is

always here;
Still loved, still missed,
Still oo very dear.
Bet Dean &amp;. Famil
11

Help Wanted
HELP WANTED

LOCAL CONOACTOR
BELL
CONSTRUCTION

RACINE, OHIO

Working In Richmond;
Va. NHds Skilled or linskilled Help. Par Nogotiobit. Start Immediately.

Call 949-2748
.. 06 Tartusso Drive
RKhmond, Vo. 23233

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
SECRETARY
proficient in
medical
terminology,
shorthand and
typing. Excellent
working
conditions nad
fringe benefits.

Send Resume to:
Personnel Department

PO Box 344
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

The Daily Sentinel- Page·

YOUNG'S

Thefrontofthoonwlopoonthe bid mull be
m•klld "SEALED BID EMERGENCY AMBUlANCE
VEHICLE." lllddor MUST
FDUOW INSTRUCTIONS

dos10g

- Ad dons and

KETS

- Ro ofm g and gutter work
- C onaete w ork

The Board
of County
Commisstonera may accept
the lowest bid or the bast bid

- Piu mbtng and

bids will be received w~h
respect to the chouis and
body type and willatotothat

the buswhenasHmbledand
prior to delivery comptywith
all school district Jpecifications. all safety regulations
and current Ohio Minimum
Standards for School Bus
Conatruction of the Department of Education pursuant
to Section 4611.76 of the
Ohio Revised Code and $11
other pen1nent provis1ons of
law .
$pecifications and instructions to bidders may be
obtained at the office of
the Treasurer, Middleport,

A certified check payable
to the Treasurer of the above
board of education or a aat·
isfactory bid bond executed
by the bidder and the surety
company, in an amount
equal to five percent (5%) of
the bid shall be submitted
with each bid.
Said board of education
reserves the right to waive
informalities to accept or reject any and all or parts of
any and all bids.
No bids can be withdrawn

for at lout thirty 1301 days
attar the schadu lad closing
time for receipt of bids.
Meigs local Board of
Education
\
Jane Fry. Treasurer
621 South Third Avenue

Middleport. Ohio 45760
1 1614) 992-5660 .
110126; 11111.8,16, 4tc

r----------'h;========:::;~

Business
Servt" ces

~

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
,..
GENERAL
u
• ·,&lt; • CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
•CUSTOM KITCH ENS &amp; BATHS
•£XTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING &amp; ROOFING
•METAL BUILOINOS
HOUSING &amp; APT PROJECTS
SI NCE 1909

ousn ST.,

ITUCUK

992.7611

10-6-88·1 mo.

SMALL ENGiif1
REPAIR
-

I

Authori1ed

Serwiu

&amp; Paris
Brtggs &amp;t Stratton

NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of a Re solution of the Board of Edu·
cation of the Meigs local
School District. Middlepon.

Ohio. pused on tho 16th

day of August, 1988, there
will be submitted toe vote of
the people of said Meigalo·
cal School District at aGE·

NERAL ELECTION to be

held m the Meigs Local Dis·
trict of Meigs County. Ohio.
at the regular places of vot·
ing therein, on Tuesday, the

8th day of November, t98B.

the queation of levying a tax,
in excess of the ten millliml·
tation, for the benefit of
Meigs Local School District
for the purpoae of current
expenses.
Said tax being: an additional tax of 6. 0 mills to run
for a continuing period of
time at a rate not exceeding
6 0 mills for each one dollar
of valuation. whtch amounts

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio
.92·661'1

3-'30..'87 tfn

LYNCH'S

GENERAl~ 11'

REPAIR~

Specializing In Chain ·
Link and Wood Fencing
•CEILING FANS INSTALLEO
•REMODELING •PAINTING
•ROORNG
•PLUMBING
•DRYWALL
•TILE WORk
•DECKS
•PORCHE&amp;

FREE ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Welcome

992·3723
i0-31·'811-1 mo.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

10-tt-'88·1 mo pd.

HUDNALL
&amp;

PLbMBING HEAliNG
168 Norlh Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishmg Suppli e

Pay Your Phone
_ and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE

16141 992-6550

to fifty cents 180.501 for

each one hundred dollars of
valuation. for a continuing
period of time .
Ttla Polls for sa1d Election
will be open at 8 :30 o'clock
A.M . and remain-open until
7·30 o'clock P M.
By order of the
Board of Elections,
of Meigs County. Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer. Director

RISIOENCE PHONE

16141 992-7714

1178 /tl!l

GUN SHOOT

mmees are Janet Bolin,
Rodney Chevalier, Alan Hoilet and Leroy Welsh
Nominations will be accepted from the floor at the
time of elect1on Two supervisors are to be elec1ed You
may cast your ballot at the
annual meeting or on the day
of election at tho Meiga

SWCD Office. 221 West Second Street, Pomeroy, second floor of the Farmers
Bank building between 8 a.
m . and 2 p.m . Abaentee ballots may be secured at the
local diStrict office.

1101 18; 11111. 2tc

10/ 28 / 1 mo

0

992·6720

ONLY

Racine, Ohio

GET ACQIJAINTE~·
SPECIAL
3

PC. liVING
ROOM SUITE

$449 95

- ..

10·25-1 mo. pd.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
haler for
YARDMAJt &amp; ECHO
Loceted Halfwoy
between At. 7 • Bas han.
NEW &amp; USfD MOWERS
Servico C111tor for Ryan
Products
8. 7 Flnencing on Yardman

Service on All Mokes
Wt H- MC/Oisc/Visa

9·1-811-ttn

or Leave MeuOQf
2 1&amp;:'"'88-ctn

The Staff Is
Back ! ! !

Our Delivery Staff
Knows Where You
Live,

992-2725

Coli 992-2228.
or 992-9922

MIDDLPEPORT, OHIO

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

hWalk.. Jn8 Welcome''

10-31-88-1 mo.

STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

PER LOAD

Fe aturing : Con s olidatrrl , Dulrh
W es t, Brum·o , As hley ·

DEliVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

.VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Now Homes Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
l·ll·tfn

Gar eve sale. 1at. 2nd. 3rd ,
Clot hes-AIIIizes. Bon PtOts sfle
3-7 slim. toys, books. jer.¥~ry;­
misc 32280 Minersville Hill

&amp; Vicinity
.,

Vard Sale. Thuraand Fri. Nov 3
and 4 2829 Mt Vernon Ave.'
Truck topper long bed. Meytlg
wringer wash&amp;r, Fiesta diwhea,
lots (nile. 1D·OOAM to 6·00PM

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Peanon Auctioneer. If.
censed Ohio and Wett Virg1n11
Eatete, antique, f•m liquid.:
tton sales. 304- nJ..&amp;785.

WILL HAUL
JUST CAW

FILL DIRT

10-8-tlc

Announcemenls
3 Announcements

We pay cash for late mod•

dean

used can .
Jim Mink Chev -Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

814-448-3e72

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and niM'er used cera Srntth
8Uick·Pontiac, 1911 E111t•n
Ave .. Gallipolit C1ll 614·448·

2282.

Complete household:! of tJrni-'
tur8 &amp;. antiques. Alto wood &amp;.
coal halters. Swain' • Furnttut'
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; OINe.

814-446·3159.

Want to buy · Used t.lrnfture .,.d
antiques. Will buy entire hous•
hold furnishing Marlin Wed~t­

mever. 614-245-6162

Lose weight fast with Mmumum
Strenth GoBeae and E-Vap
"Water Pills '· •a1 Fruth
Ph•macv.
We wiH haul coal for uml!fgeney
HEAP , Meigs County Dept of
Humin Services. and HEAP
voucl'lers We eao 9itwe you

prompt deliverie~ . E ~olsior Salt
Works. Inc Pomerov. Ohio

814-992-389t
JEWELAV
"SELL our •

60-75% off Just •n t1me for
Christmas . Come see at license
bureau In Pomeroy on November
1st through November 4th.
10 ;00 am-4:00pm

No hunting or trespassing. all
permltt canoalled. Ed Matto•

4

Giveaway

,

Junk Car• whh 01' whhout
motol'l Cell lury Uvely-814-

388·9303

Furniture and appllancet I;Jy the
piece or enttre household. P1lr

pricea being paid. Cell 6t4-44&amp;-

3158

Wsnted to Buy-Used Mobile
Home~ . Call 614-446-0176
Wen ted to buy: Stan dktg pine Of'·

log timber Call 614·384-&amp;182
after 7p.m.

Brownie and Junior Girl Soout
uniforms, and ol,_ Girl Scout

memorabilia Call 614-9492093 Evenings only.
Used furniture by the piece 01
entin tlou sehold 8 t 4· ?42-

2455

Emplovmcnl

Kitteot to give fi!Nay, Ut1er
trained Call 614-446-9319

Serv1~es

Beby kittens to good home Call

614-379-243S.

Small black house do ~ free to
good home. Part Ch•huahua.

1 1 Help Wanted

Co11814-379-2435
4

kl~ant-

2 males, 2 femalet

Coil 814-448·4487.

3 part Lhasa Apso puppies
2- plrt Rat Terriers. Call 614-

245-9523

2 unfurnlthed 111 127 M ulberry
Ave., Pomeroy. 4 rooms sn d
bath. Aduhs only, no pets
Depotit. reference 814 -9922275 1fter 6 p m.

7 week old gold khtens to
good home Call 641 -843·

~utfv

5445.

Tiger kitten 8 YJtcs. old, to

HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME

AaM'Ible prod.Jetl It home.
Part· time. E.~tperlanOII unnet•·
ury Details. Call 813·327-

0898. Ext. 0 -1149.

t 600 weeki'( poSsible. A aernbling prodJct• SASE to · Home
Cmts, P.O. Box 9006-GDT,
Huntington. W.Va . 28704·

9008
EARN ExCELLENT MONEY .,·
home A•ernbty work. Jew~ry,
tovs. oth«s Call 1·819-8851867. BJCt. T 8410H , 24 hrs.

Up to lt5 HOUAPAOCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUA.
AANTEEO. FAEE DETAILS
W1Ho. SO. 1057 W. Phllodel·
Calif. 91762.

Collie and one part Pug Call

Someone to bab;str: rt my home
nights Mutt be reliable. Referenca required Call 614-388-

10/ 13/ 88/ 2 mo.

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohio

8-13 tin

. I

MARCUM CONTRACTING.
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
· •ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
' 10-~-1 mo.

glveewey to good home lltt•

814-378·8360.
Usod ....p ... 304-676-2406.

Puppies part Chihuahua and
Seagle, small dogs, Camp Con-

lov. 304-875-6204.

Lost: Female German Shepherd
Mason County dump. Any inlor·
matlon cell collect: 614-992·

7B63

LOST, bl&amp;ck mare cat vielnfty of
Crab Creek erea,

&amp;702

304-875-

992·9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45P.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 per cuatOfll&amp;r per
·
bl ngo 1111100.
WE PAY '50 .00 ~ER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
Lic. #005-32
10-24·1 mo.

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

Sal•penon 10 call on Miningo
lnc:l.lstrial accountt in Sou- '
the•tern Ohio and nfMghborlng'

riencd , aggressive , self-•

mot~eted

indiv ili.lal. Company·

Chettnut Brown end
whtte English SprlngM Spaniel,

tumes will be oonsid•ed Send
to: 81'1x Cia 177, c/ oGelllpolls
Ollilv Tribme. 826 Third Ave ,
Galhpolil, Ohto 48831 .
Coin Laundry / Dry Clean1ra
needs pertofll, Apply : Duke
Cia.., Ill'S , Gall ipohs ·1ft• 1 PM , ,
Mondey thru Wednesd8'(.

ATTENTION TRUCKERS

LOST.

REWAAD. coli 304-675-2225.

7

Yard Sale

··---·uallip-olis-..... ·· ··
&amp; Vicinity
' ················-·· ·--· ·-·····.c:· ··
Y•d Sale-29 Mediton A\18.

Nov. 1. 2. 3
clothes, mise.

9-6. Stereo,

Townhoute Thura , Frl Nov.
9 AM·e PM Clothing.
albums. e•nttM. home ln1•

rtor, depr ... lon v'••were, most

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAl N ST,

9342.

1urntahM trantportation. AI re-

.......
-------113·4.
BINGO

r-------~'":"'~

phl!l- Suite 239-GD . Ontario.

West Virginia ••a. Pref• •• pe. •

6 Lost and Found

I Femlt; Y•d Sai•Centenlf'V

1 ~

mi aow~n~e

3 dogs. One part Poodle, one

2!

9120/!fn I mt. pi.

Nice ch1ldrans clothing. almost
new tov• c heap , Hotpoint

698-6121

::1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

HILLSIDE MUIZLE
LOADING
AND
MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES
Munleloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supr.lies
Guns • Ammo - S ugs
22 Ammo
12 4 Easl of Rutland
A&lt;ron Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614·742·2355

Formerly Jo' t Gift Shop Harold
an d Jo Sm;t h. Syraw u. Ol'lio

trained 300 Cherry and corner
of Condor Sl 814-992· 3776

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

PH. 992-5682
or 9t2-7121

Basement •le. Mon. Tun. 9-1

LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE
CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

. Television Listening Dev1ces
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servic
(!) Heanng Evaluations Foi All Ages

6-17-lit

lrd St.

Between 9 o.m.-o p.m.

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD

Also Transmlsslon

MEIGS
FURNITURE

614-742-2617.

WOOD. STOVES

REPAIR

9-19-88 tin

For any of thtse servictl call

10-12- 88 1 mo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CAll OR TRUCKS
-fREIESTlMAlii-

Mory, Naomi, Jane,
Groce, Donno, Angie
a11d Gwen Folmer
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

FIREWOOD

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling W1th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Servtce
•Junk Yard Bustness

MAIN SOEET PIZZA

We Service All Makos
1/ 22/ 88/lfn

$3 s

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

S3°

985-3561

DENNY CONGO

10·7-tln

MAIN STREET
PIZZA
Your Hometown Place
Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
If any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match it!
ALSO ...
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
0
UNDER

-···· ···-·· ···-··· -·-·····-·-·· ···

R 1ck

6:30P.M.
Foclory C~oke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
S1rictly Enforced

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

9/ 15/ 88/ tln

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

DESIGNER B~UTIQUE
111 West Soc~ Pomeroy

·.. ---'Poma·rav·· -----·-·-

446-3487

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL

AND

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

RACINE
fiRE DEPT.
Basham Building

TOP OF THE STAIRS

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•R a nges •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Mus! Be Repairable "

56

· •HAIR
~
•TANS

WANTED

Reasonable Rates

992-3410

r. ~~-~~~
: ..--·~·•CLOTHES

d

FREE ESTIMATES

GUN SHOOT

I

m•sc

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

BEAUTIFUL

I , '.,. (~

Wed . Th u fi , Fri &amp;SlltJustotf
1 41 et Centenary on Unooln.
Pike. 4th trailer on left Hull
Brown st oneware, Jawalr y,
pans. d ish&amp;~ , baht through adl lt
c haap wimer clothing. lot s m o-ra

Complete Drywall
Service

1-28·'88-tln

1-3 86-1fc

&amp;Up

RACINE

ELECTION
LEGAL NOTICE

15, 19B8 at 7:18p.m No·

130.00

Salem Street
Rutlond. Ohio
742-2466

EVERY .SUNDAY
1:00 p.M.
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

Code of Ohio at Eastern
H1gh School on November

Parts &amp; Service

ror. ehilct8ns elot hing

......'PfPTeasanc ...

Middleport, Ohio

10-21-'88-1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage

GUN CLUB

1515.0t-14 of tho Revised

Farm Equlp111eni

St. Furniture. s ter eo. j ~M~elry .
ant•qun-gl•swar&amp;- trunk&amp; mlr- •

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Equipment Dealer

Thurs.. &amp; Fri 83 lo tJJ st

Wed

Hysell Rea•danoa

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Bush Hog Farm

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
Ker Heaters
Wicks
•
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace 1 110.00
Blem Batteries

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16·86-tl n

5·15-ttn

Authonzed John
Deere. New Holland.

8115/Hn

CUSTOM BUll T
HOMES &amp; GAR AGES
" At Reasonabl e Prices"

Certift e d L1 ce nsed Shop

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. RT. -50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

\

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CALL 992-6 756
"DOC " VAUGIIN

BOGGS

INSULATION
Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Rooltng
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

lJ/2 18 Itt

Most Fore•gn a nd
O o m estt &lt;:: Veh•cles
A / C S erv1 ce
All MaJor &amp; Mmor
Repatrs
NIAS E Ce rtifted Mechamc

lll-27-1 mo. d

We con repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We olso
repair Gos Tonks.
PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-lfc

446-7390

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN
MONOAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P .M .
992-7204
324 East Main.
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Behind City Hall)

8-8-88-ttn

Dated Sept . 1. 19BB
1101 t1. t8, 26; (11)1. 4tc
Public Notice

The Ohio Soil and Water
Conservation Commission
will cau:e an election of supervisors of the Meigs So1l
and Water Conservation
District to ba held in accordance
with Chapter

Toys, Collectables.

J&amp;L

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

IPTif LYNCH

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.
V
R
bl
ery eosona e.
Have References.

SER~ICE

CAll AMY CARTER
or BOB 'S lliCTRONICI

J()- 24 -1 lnO

~::::;::::;~~~
HAINES
GIFT
SHOP OPEN

10·19-'88-1 mo.

Let uuonvert tnose oldMovies
&amp; Shdes over to emy VHS.

For lnformolton

LINDA'S
PAINTING

614-985·4180

OWNfR: GREG I. ROUSH

Public Notice
Notice of Election On
Tax levy In
Excess of the
Ten Mill Limilattan

tFR EE ~S TIMATE S l
C YOUNG Ill
'
992-6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohoo
7-13-'88- tlrl

V'

and reserve the right to re·

provided by iaw for six {I) 71
passenger SC h 00 I b U18S, according to specifications of
said board of education.
Separate and independent

electncal

work

for tho intended purpooo,

NOTICE To BtooERs
OF
SIXPURCHASE
SCHOOL BUSES
FOR MEIGS LOCAL
BOARO OF EDUCATION
Sealed propoaals will be
received by the Board of
Education of tho Moigslocal School District of Moddleport. Ohio. at the Troasuror'a Office until 12:00
noon on Wednesday. Novembor 16. 198B. and at
thai time opened by tho
Treasurer of sold Board. tabulated and a report thereof
modo to oaid Boord at its
next scheduled meeting as

r em o d ehn iJ

&amp; Vicinity

.·-..... .......... , ....... ....... .

Smm MOVIES &amp; SUD(! lo
VHS TAP E

NEW MINI MART
SPACES FOR RENT
fridays &amp; Saturdays
Only
ARTS &amp; CRAFTS
and 0 !her II ems
FOR SALE
ALLIE SIMON
11 4 West Main
CALL 992-2571

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ENCLOSED IN 810 PAC·

ject any or all bids and or any
part thereof.
Mary Hobotettor, Clerk
110125; tt111 2tc
Public Notice

.. · ·Gallipolis..........

Business Services

above address.

Ohio.

Public Notice

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1

Wented own•l op•ltor Tandem or trailer to h-.. I atone from '
Wet•looCoal Co. to Crown City

Mine property. Call office 814-

256-6512 bfl'tween 8 AM -4·30

PM

Btt~ sitter needed In Rio Granda
area. Call 614-246-6970.
'

OcvernmMt Jobt 818,040 . •
$59, 230 yr. Now hiring. Call

1·805-8e7-8000 Ext R-9806

for current federal lise

,

Easy wa.-lc1 EICCfllhtnt PIVI A•
1emble procllets It home. Csn "
for information 50 ... 641· 8003. '

Ext

A-5010.

.
,

AVON · All ara.. Celt Marilyn

W01Nf11304-882·21146

AN'S &amp; LPN'S·PH. full t1me.
p., time l$)phCIItlont tre being
accepted for PleMant Vall.,
Hosptrll Nursing Ctre Center
Contact Personnel 304-175:

•

prl- ""der s
Sale-51 5 Oak Dr .
Iloring vonor;. Golllpotll. 9-6
Novombor 1.2.3.
4340 AAEOE.
VIRoFurnkuroondAppliancos AVON ell wen II Shlrlev Spe•s •
304-675-1429
.'
WPerkingLotSole
Stlrtt ed. EndiSet OvMstocli
'
of used furniture. Must sell
Licensed Social 'Nor'* ln nww ·
trucldold of now fu~n~uro. l9ng t•m cere fecHtty, l!xp•
ChrlltmestoyshwaJu•tarrllled. rl-.ce prUred . Commeneuma
Priotd VftfY low to mow. Sole ••hry ond bonotlto, !.0.! Moll
beds, ch•ta. too much to r•ume to AdmlnlltrM• Care
montion. At. 141·Conton""f. •;. Haven of Point l'tHIInt, At 1
.mlo on llnooln Pika 614-446- Boll 326. Point "'••ant, w 'v 1
25550.
~t68
Otr~ge

•

•

�-44

LAFF-A-DAY

'MDn_.

mentt in "-41dcleport. f!rom
f18Z. Coli 814· 992·7787.
EOH.

Wlnted 80miOAI to join bCII
Golpll group. prtltr someone
wlh wn•liltthtglnglbiltly and

2 btdroom Apta. tor rent.
Cor~otod. Nlco ullin• Laundrv
ftclltl• tvllllbla Clll 814892-3711 . EO H.

.-hto promoteGototf Mutlc.
S..d ,_,.,... P. 0 . Box 791.
w .v • • 28210.

NI'Wtr Nd~CXKittd ap.tmftt
tval.tJI&amp; Utllll• . p1id. 12215.
P• month. dtpotlt required. CaR
., .. 99Z.8724 .... 8,00 ..
91Z.8119.

lertendlr fDr Fir•. . Inn. IPPiv
In oft• 3~0 PM.

s ...

.-.... II.
o .,d Clvl SoN leo
Jobl. Now ,.lng. _y_our ••·

011110.00 to 0119. 480.00.
tmmMIIIIe operdngL Cllll 1·
311H3:1·1012 ht. F 2138 A.
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST
MEDICAL 1.A11 TECHNICIAN
B.-ton County Merftorilll HoepMIIII-Ingoppllcoliono lor
MT or MLT. --lJII tlmo. Coli
30_.:18,.&amp;111. Equol ()pp....
tunly AfllrmltHe Action Em·
p...,_MPH.
SAI.I!B·MClMTCAAEER

~,:.- !:'d-.:..::.~
•l*'clnt opntlon• In the
Pblnl 1'1-ont • •· No •P"ri•ce nece..ary . Excelllflt
tr•lna•dfrlngebMIIItl. wtH
be lnterv..,lng on WHn•dlrt'
11·2 ·11trom1o~oomto7,00

pmMI..,MIIIonCountylibrtrv.
lth lt. ~nd Vllrld St.. Point
fiiNHnt.

Pomwo,o . 2 btlt'oom apt. Pertly
t.r•hed In Neylor11 Run. Sea~r­
Jty dtpotlt Cell lfttr Bp.m.
.
1 ,,.99Z.8Bea.

Il-l

·

"A clean spoon?

t here.f"
0U

12

Situations
Wanted

31

Homes for Sale

4 Bedroom home. Auume lo.n.
Coli 81_.44.. 0141.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1918 N41W Moon 12d0, 2 BR .
02300. Col 81_.44.. 0390.

s•• 12x150.

Moblt Home tDr
Coli 81_.44.. 2001

2 BR . moble home. Tot .. elec.
. Prl&lt;*f re•onable. Call 814-

44.. 0722.
1973 NMo Moon. 2 IIR .,
front parch •

•ue

und~lnnlng.

13100. C.ll114--37.. 2275.

Eid.... -lom111 noodolooplng
room. Someone to do la~ndrv &amp; 14«70, 3 BA ., 2 boihs o900D.
oooldn• Coli 114--44.. 0101
co11 1 1,.44.. 11815.
Wll c.-e tor et•tv m1r1 or
wo,.., In our hom .. Call
51 .. 89Z.IItl15.

1968 Concord moble home,
12x1515, 2BR .• AC,Iw'*'ILC.I
51 .. 2411-9222.

·1 5

1971 Eloono, 211R .. newwirWig.
12x88, 4•8tlo&gt;-· 13000. Col
11 .. 387. 7111 oft•8PM.

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
CO UEOE. 529 Jocbon Plk&amp;
Coll44..1357 Aog No. 8 .. 1 1·
10BII.

18

Wanted to

Do

1988 Fl. .woad. 1Zxl4. battlo
get he• end hot water. t3000.
Coli 814--843-~310 .... , ..
843-15408 ~time. Atk far
O.ny.
On . t•oe lot, 2. bedroom, In
Mldctepart. Alto 1179 Ch.,_
rollt. EMCellent ooncltlon. C.l
11 .. 89Z.8515.
2 becl-oom 12x10. o1800.
30 .. 178-2722.

Do• • Bedthot Work-8150
C11e dDI•, Rt•olllble m•.
opntor. Crem'*'•
lloftot. Col 11 .. 25 .. 1718.

bp•l.,•

1979 BlyvleN mobile home.
14x70 wfth 7x.21 ·~ndo,
phone 304-87~8141 .

Tree work w1nted-topping.
pr~:,'!J.' remov111. buthll
tr1
F'" •Um8'tt. · Call
&amp;1_.44 .. 1071 or 30,.87&amp;4851

1911 Brlltony 14«70. oil lloct·
~" lot'78x173 ft. f15.000.oo.
count.
Hlrtford
30 .. 882·2844 oft• 8~0 PM.

Cere tDr the .. derl¥' In thttr
hame. O.YI anty. Cell 81~446-

1 Y, blrhl. port lolly
•tl'lt. good cond. •9.000.00.

2427.

t IIIOIICidi
21

fur,._

AI oloclrlc 141&lt;70. 2 bodroorl\
Coll30.. 176-1988-ro2~0
PM OJ ..nvtlme Seturct.va.

.. Mobile home 14Jc70. m.y .WV
on rented lot one yeer ,
112.100.00. 30 .. 773-1913.

Own y. . . .,.,.. or lhotltorl.
cho~ from: Je•SportiWIIr.
Ledin. Men ' t. childrenmlternlly. • • tizM. petite.
..,obic. brlct.l, lln..,lt .. .a~arl- .-... Add
oator~n., • . lfll'ld nem•: liz

dln_.._..

Claiborne. Hltltht•· Chait.
lM. It Miclhtl&amp; For.,.. Bugle
. . . Hill'

Oroenlcllr' Grawn. lucia over

2000 01...._ 011 113.99 ~n•
prloo ........ ...., tlor pricing
dlloou• or f~mlr llhot store.

Rotii.,.._ _ _IOofoftop
queffty thoet nomulfv prioed
from t19. to tiO. over 2150
brondoZIOO~ - o17,toOto
o29.-g.
fllturet. atrf•t. . . . d opeNng.
Cln open 115 d., • . Mr.
......... 11121881-4228.

,....,ort.

•o.

Homes for Sale

v..., ettrec:tlwt brick 4 be~oom.

2 blth. t~mltf

room

with flrt-

pt-. forme! dtnlng. •ve Nving
room. 30 ft. cullom ollk ldtc:htn
otblncs. Mil woociNork flnilh
.,..,..... 2 c• e-'111&amp; lwil
•., • ..,.-:~ tot. 4 ml• from
....... HOOflltll off Rt. 311l'brt-ook Subchllion. COl
11 .. 4411-4111.

4 IR ., full b•emW • lii•IR&amp;
fullY a•peted (lome new).
Prtctd to • • Cal 814-446-.
0271 .tt• 8 PM. 'Nitek .. dl

-·-

33

Farms for Sale

105 prlll1te itta'• wtth e-v
.:c•t. Gelllpall Ferry. New
home
1 lolt with wefll.
070.000. 30 .. 178-41131 .

•o

·•-In

ho~

Vinton.

,....,.., room.
kttchen.
1t-o bulldlnl '"'" lot.
f31.000. Col 11 . . .9042.
OOYIIINMENT HOMES from
11
IU.Ropllrl Allo
T• Delinquent l Faredo1uP11
Pro~. A"'llll&gt;le NOW. Far
....... CALL 1· 315- 733-8014
I!Jd. Q Z7N.
3 Ill .. LR. DA. kllcll.,_ lui

a....-nt. 2 c• unllttectled

· · - ....... Ad. 049,800.
Clll1 .. 4411-41138.
Home In aoumry wtth lmd. Wll
..,....., tend oontiHI with
- • ,... ..... CoN 11.. 182·

.....

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnlt:htd smel hou•·
Ackltta ont, . Ref. requlr.a. No
{:ell 81 4-441-0338.

P••·

3 lA ., AC. a•pwt.. pool. v•eu&amp;
2 firepl-. fenot. Good tocttlon. CeU A-1 Rettl Eetett
8 ""'"· 304--17.. &amp;104.
Untur,.lt._d hou•. 2 Bit
Neighborhood Rd . t221. Referen Dll &amp;. depoett Nqulr.a. Cal
44 .. 4411 oft• 7 PM .

3 SA. home n. . llv• Bridge
Shopping Coni If. f275 por mo.
Soc:. clop. &amp; ref. Coli 11_.44..
1189 or .......e.
Log Cobin. 0250. 2 BR . Col

3 bt•oom hou•Rutllnd • •·
U28 lnctudoo - •- gwboto.
h. .. 1200 tea~rllyendref••
coo. Col 11 .. 317·1217.

3 BR .. 2 borho, lomlly room.
N.O .·81-1 SchooiOilt. A\o811·
oblo - · 1ot. con 114--38..
Ill&amp;.
Hou•.

n~

bllht, 111 elec. tt
E_gr .... s.c. clop. eo1 11•
4411-2&amp;15 oft• 4 PM.

4 lA . home. 7 ml• tronuown.
t 410 Plf' mo. plu• dtPotlf. Ctl
I 1.. 448- 1348.
Hob• wtch b8th. Nt• Aldne.
NICI yard. g•dln ipiCt. Cltl
11 .. 892·1818.

,._OV·

Hou• fDr ..nt. 104 Eelt Mil.-..
Ohio. Coli 114-HZ.
1144.
3 b o · - 2 "" bllhl. ....
living room, dlnl:riroom lnd

11_.44.. 0808.

_.......... _.. __
Ho•••
- F~tm tor lilt.
e&amp;OOO.OOdowne.-urMbtt8'AI

PC- -to"""'"'"" ""yor.
_.,. 1 ...., a~a cec~~r .......
,....,_l!o_ priood r ...ood to
- - 0 0. ,....... 30 .. 17&amp;-

w.v•.

Room~ for rtn1 •¥'11Mk or month.
St.-tlng It •120 e mo. Galli•
Hotel-11 .. 448-9580.

Nice bright Moblt Hopne In the

Courmy. Vlcinllv o1 Five Pt&gt;lnto 48 Space for Rent
.,d So1h1n. AlluM• ..,~y , $188 , - - - - -- - - - month. 814-849-2989.
,.
2 btctoom moblt home on 1 COUNTRY MOBILE Home Per k.
left. Fuel lunace. 814-742- Aoute 33, Nonh of Pomwoy.
·Aent•l trell•a. Call 814-992·
2753.
7479.
Moblehorn•. 'A mlleoutS~nd 1----- - -- - H• Ad. 304-&amp;7!r383'.
Office or tm1ll butln•• apace
for ,.,t. Located at N. Second
3 bioctoom ..1 electric;. 12x&amp;5, Ave. In Mlddlepon Bu.. n . .
0200.00 month plus utllllol, dlltrlct. Coli 81,.992·5645 or
•'-• 30•175-4088.
h·-~-·~94
_9_·2_2_1_7._ _ _ __

2 be*oom12x81mobHehome. Speclou• mobile home lot• fOJ
loCited Aouth Un• Ch•hlre. rtnt. Femlty Pride Mobile Home
Ohio. 30•773-5829.
Pork. Golllpollo Forry, W. Yo .
30 .. 176-3073.
2 btctoom mobile home furnl•hed, o10o.oo dopo1lt
noo.oo month Pll• g• 1nd
electric. Phone 304-875-61512
oltor 2'00 PM.

44

Vall .,. F ~nitu r e
Naw end u1ed furnltur. and
app llc1n cet . Cell 814-44&amp;·
7 572. Hourt 9-15. ,

'

73

Ntw completety turnlehed
11p.,ment • mobile home. In
cttv. Aduttt ont1. P~rklng. Cal
11.. 44&amp;-0338.

u-

Lux.urioua T1r1 Townhoultl
liP wtmente. Eleg.,t 2 -.,aon, 2
811 .• lui bllh
powdw
room dawNUire, CA., dishw11h.-, dlepoeel, private ~
tr•c.. print~~ 1ndoled p•lo.
pool, pt.,pound. UtMitl• not
lnclJ- st.. lng. 0289 pir
mo. C.M 114-387-71150.
Furnilhod opt. No• ~MC. 1 8R .
12315. UtKMI• poi&lt;L Coli 44..
44111fl:er7PM.

Aillr'lmtntl 1nd ~ . .. c.l
304-8715-15104.

Ap..,mem, for the Eld«tv.
Gillie Ma'lor Aptrtmtnttl. 1151!1
BLIII Monon Aold. DMifed tor
tht Santor Cftktn lt2 oldlrt
tndHif'lciCIPP.aP . .ont. Equll
houtfng opportunhy. Appllcettonem.,btplc:k .. up8t8plno
VIII_, Plat, 528 Jackeon Pike
or call 814-448-4t39.
Mod•n 1 BA. downtown. comP•t ldtch• air. c•ptt. Depoolt. no por~ CON 114--44..
... •!'• 1.
238 Fint Aw. 1 lA .. kllch.,
t.tr•hld. c•peted. No chltcl-ln/Pot~ f175 .... utlltla
Oop. &amp;rll. Col 11_.44.. 49:zt.

a138 ..-

821'h

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE "'2
Olive St.• Gtllipollt.
NEW- &amp; pc. wood groupo 8399.
Living room au !tee- 1199- 8699.
Bunk bedl wtlh bedding. t249.
FIAI eize mmr. . • foundrtlon
ltlr11ng· 199 . Recliners
stertlne- na.
.
USED· Btdl. dr•tlrt. be*oom
tultM. Detkt. wrlngerwethtr, ,.
oomplete lin• of ulld fumtture.
NEW- Weetem boott- $35.
W..kbaoto 118 &amp; up. (Stool &amp;
.... tool . Coil 814--44..3159.
County Appliance, Inc. Good
uttd appll.,~ .,d TV slll:a.
Open BAM ta &amp;PM . Man tlwu
Sot. I 14-44.. 1198. 127 3rd.
A.,_, 0111ipolll, OH.
GOOD USED APPUANCES
W•hert. dry~r~. refrlgeraton.
""II" · Skegga Appll•ncet,
Up,_ RWer Rd. be.lde Slone
C,_. Motel. 114-441-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNJTUAE
Sof• .. d ch ..rt priced from
t398 to t9915. T•bl• t60 and
up to •1211. Hkl•t-btdl 1390
to eiS85. Atdln.,. •226 to
0375. Laml!l 129 •• o125.
Dlnentt 1101 end up to e495.
Wood table w-8 eh1h t285 to
1795. D01k f100 up to o.375.
Hutcll• 1400 1nd up. Bunl!
btc:ll compl•e w-m.nr. . .
1291anduptot39e. Bib¥' btdt
t110. Mmrtllllorbo•IPrinliJI
full or twin •ea. firm t78. ll'ld
. . .. QutM tMI 12&amp;0 • up.
King •310. 4 drawtr chltlt ttll.
Gun Clblnlllt I gun. •br

mtttr.... 131 • eu. Bed

frem• no, t30 • King fr~me
t50. Ooodtllection of '-*oom
tult-. metll ceblnet.. heldbo•dt 130 ~nd up to 185.
·•··•· ··· ···
90 DIY• ''"'' 11 c•h with
epprovtd crldtt:. 3 MH• out
lulwllle Rd. Open 9•m to Spm
Mon. thhl Sit. Ph. 814-~
0322.

81 .. 192-7328.

(f"'
•

Chinon Sup« 8 movie cern ....
projector. Bell and Howell aUde
cube prolector. loth new condition. Col 814--446-7928.

s. w Model 63 22 Cll., t2215.
19n Cadillac, Fla. car, 13&amp;00.
trlde. 9&amp;0x18.!1, 175. Cell
814-44&amp;- 7019.
I

Bullclng Motorlllo
Block. brlcl&lt;. - · pip•. wlndowt, Mntell. •c. ClaJdl Wlntere.. Rkl Gr.,de. 0 . .Cell 814245-5121 .

38 Cal. Coli Officer piltol.
•100. Also 1978 VW D.. her.
good for ...... onty. 1100, WltW
ooollng. goodoond .• trani.·IJOOd
cond. Cell 1514-388-9992.

Conc:r•e blodc• ttl . . . . Ylfd
or delivery. Mtson lind. Oellipons Btock Co., 12:J1h ·Pint St..
Oolllpollo, Ohio. Coli 11_.44..
2783.

Mite Copy Star 900 COP¥ .
mechine. $360. Call 814-4464042 or 446-7827.

WESTERN RED CEOAR
• Channel Ruettc
.,d IIVIIod Lop Siding
• Dtclc M8t«llfl

Shop Craft 10" b.,dtaw. t&amp;&amp;.
Cell 814-44.. 3485.

Mixed h•d wood tlebl. 112 per
bu ntle. Containing lpprox. 1 Vii
ton. Ohio Pellet Co .. Pom•oy.

Ohio. 81,.992·1451.

3 yr. old MIVttg portlbte
dlshwnhw. 12 ft . John bolt
wtth Mlnn Kot1 35 motor.
Evonlneo 614--892-5810. .
l.ovHHt. couch and chair for
•le. Priced right to tell. CAl
11 .. 992-2974.

Kenmore w•th• 1nd dlyer Pllr.
Rtal nice. GUinnteed. •2&amp;0.
81 .. 387-0322.

Outrwrteed Quitllty

CETIDE. INC.. Athono-814·
51 .. 3578
Steel Bullclnp. Mun ..U 2 from
Clnoellllion, br1nd n...,, nlilf•
tr'ected. WII • • for bill lnCII

.....rd. Coli Don
4044.

58

Groom ..d Suppty- Shap-Pat
Grooming. All breeda ... AII
atyt.. lam• Pet Food O.el•.
.NIIoWebb Ph. 814-44 ..0231 .
Dragonwynd Cettery Kerin...

198&amp; luldc Som. .«

2 dr.
cou,.. Many extree. V«y nice.
t5800. See • &amp;41 FourthAw.
1978 Chrv•l• LeBiron. 1987
o..,., oorwertlbla. Clll a 1 4o
448-9219.
1974CorvtneStrlnWI'f. E.:et .
con d. AC .• t-top. ltWto. •7150.
Coli 81,.44.. 9421 or 44..
7441 .
1974For4 V·8.LT0.4clr.. AT.
PS. AC. cndat. Good oonlltlon.
1100. CIIIB1_.44.. 1328.

1984 Covell•. PS. PB, tlh,
tt..,,euto.. AC . 1 188Meroury
Top•. lllncWd. AC, lt•to, 4
dr. Coli orlt• 8 PM, 114-388-

len P•••on compound bow. 311
to 515 II. pult 1 dozlf'l arrow•
equipped tor hunting. e1215.
114'992· 1349.

Reg. O.chlhund. Hit PIP ...
071. Colil14--441-0924.

8448.

AKC rogiotlfod Slborlon H..koy
......... 4 - k l old. both
l*'entt Cln be tlln, .200.00.
30.. 878-5800.

bbl.,

n.

~=::::::::::::::::.l.:========::.J

AKC regJttered liberi.n Hus ....
puppl•, 2 m.. &amp; 3 femll•.
t200.00 lleh. Phone 304-578241311k forJinnlf•.

57

.

Musical

Instruments

&amp;.tdwln 2 k.., bo•d .a.ctronlc
orven. llklnM. 304-773-1007.

I Mill Suppl11~~.
i'i liVI!!,II!d

Furnll hod e111 a~.. .,. •1 eo. utll"'• plld. 7 Olllpollo. Col
44.. 4411 oft• 71'M .

81

Farm Equipment

For . . . ReaondUo1111111 ..n ft.
fold- '4'bulhhog. Coll81..28..
4e21.

Howenl Aot~atore, IIIMI•.
- R i n f . auylngoldbolt•
1•. Morril ..._,,..,., Rutl.,d.
Ohio 11..742· 2488.

2 M .• elr
aortelontd. e20o • mo. t200
d. . . . 8 mos. 1-a Cell
., .. 387· 04311.
~menl

"I mlaed. We might get another shot lf'we
•

•

drive last enoughl"

,.

1973 lui'* Loolllra 350, Y·B. 4
MW . . . .Of. F1ir cond.
eeoo. Coli 81,.51!1-1331 or
44.. 7218 orltor 5 PM .
&amp;.Jattlll whfte C1dii1C. Low
mH 111111• beet. cond C1ll &amp; 14.
288-1431 .
19851Wol-28. 305Mito. 1881
Nleun Sllnl1. 4 cvl.. f\1111
ln]oelod, 8 opood. Both ..collont
oondMiorL C.li814--742·287B.

lnalda lha POA Tour
(J]
(I) ABC Nowo t;1
(IJ Body Ehtclrlc
'
I!) NlghUy Buolneos Report
iiDl • 1121 CBS Newo
ID &lt;Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
i1211nalde Polljlco '88
lUI WKAP In ClnclnnoU
1111 Cartoon Expreao
Qll You Con Be a Slor
8'35 (l) Andy Orlfflth
7:00(1) Our Houoe Dancln' in the
Dark
D (11 PM Magazine
(!) llportoCenter (l)
(l) II (I) Curren! Altair
(IJ I!) MacNall/lahror
NewaHour (1 :00)
.
iiDl • 1121 iUJ Wheel ol
Forlllne t;1
Gl (!]) T - · · Cc!mpeny
il2l Monoyllne

Compllte 111 of louvert for
or LyM. 2 dr. ttvlt- $715.
Set h• tide a. rw )owen. C.ll
814-446-8332 .-avtlm•

I DIDtJ'T IJOT!Ct; ...

..

••

-••·•·.

..
....••

Uted tr.,.mlulona. AI internallY' lnJpec:ted. 30 diiY'• guaraTtee. W• bJy trentmlttlont. C•ll

6 Buick Aelt,-tvpewheelt for tJII
lize elf'. 15 1nch. Cell 814-9492780.

...

'lUI Cheert

•

FRANK AND ERNEST

Four P205715R1 6 Uniroyal Tlgw

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

'·.

RON'S Television Service.
Houllt clill on RCA , Quezar,
OE. Sptdallng in Zenith. Call
304-676-2398 or 814-4482454.

~
'

'
..

'"\

\

orglnl .. mil•. Excel. cond.
tiJ600. Firm. Cell 614·4469421 or 448-7441 .
Ford ArrrtN motor home, 18 ft
long, good oond. 82,996.00.
30 ..875-8886.

.

(

·'•'

1978 Dodge Motor Home. 22
ft .• sleeps 8. roof air, elec.
hook-up, bettery, 911:1· 34, 000

''

-·.•.

ALLEY OOP

••
..

'
~·'

Rotltfy or c1ble tool drlllr:tg.
M01tweH1 complltedumediY.
pump 111• and HNice. 304895-3802

•·.
...

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
hou•e call 1.-viclng GE , Hot
Point, w•h••· dryers and
. .OV'. .. 304-&amp;76·2398.

7:30 D (11 Family Feud
(!) All Amtrlcan Pulling
Serlaa From Bowling Green,
OH (TI
(l) Entertalnmenl Tonight
Ill (I) USA Today
iiDl • 1121 OJ Jeopordyl t:;1
Gl &lt;Ill M'A'S'H
il2l Cro11t1re
lUI Night Court
Qll YldaoCountry
7:35 (I) Sanford end San
8:00 (1) MOVIE: Mr. Belvidere
Goes to College (NRI
D (11 iUJ Super Blooper•
and Practical Jok01
(!)Bodybuilding-USA Men's
Championship from Las
Vegas. NV (T)
(l) D (I) Who's the Bo11?
Angela's antics at Tony's
college fr81 pa11y land them .
both In jail. t:;1
CD Ca111palgn: A Cry lor Help
Look at the American
polttical syst~m through llle

••

removal . Call 304-875-133 1.

Flfl',t Tr" Trlmrrlng. ttump

WHO ~ELIEVE.S"
iH~ wo(?I..P IS' FLAT
HA.$' NSV!f~ RIDPEN
IN A COMPACT CA~.
,,

,·
.

Qll Crook and Chaoe
7:06 (I) 1 to s·

))_;.F AN'{ONE

••

PIWt. 885.00. goodcond. 304675-1714.
.

79

1111 Miami VIce C

~.

eyes of one community, the
people ol Jamaica, Queens,

IJ

an area torn apart by drugs

and violence. 1;1
I!) Novo A look at 1he
observatJon llchnlquos used
to lorecas1 tornadoes. 1;1
iiDl .. 1121 High Rlok
18 Q]) MOVIE' Flaoh Gordon
IPGI (1 ,501
il2l PrimeNew1
lUI MOVIE: Houoe ol Wax
iNA) (1 '28)
1111 Murder, She Wrote t:;1
Qll Nuhvllle Now
8:05 (I) NBA BeNetbal Hall of
Fame Game IT)
8:30 (J] D (I) Roseanna

'

,•

EEK &amp; MEEK

Ak•iTree Trimnin' .,dStump
RemOVII. Free 81t1mat11. C11l
304-87 .. 7121 .

-.

.~DY

l&lt;f.AUY ~
(IJH£0 IT ALL ~R'!ED.. .

;.

'
s~rvices

81

Home
Improvements

- Dismayed by friend's divorce.
Roseanne and Dan examine
their marriage. E;1

BASEMENT
WATER PROOANG
Unooncltlon~l lifetime guarantee. Loctl referenc• furnished.
Fret ettlmll•· Call collect
1·814-237-0488, dl't' or night.
RogtrtBetemenl
Wll«prootlng.

9,00 1J (11 iUJ 'Favorite Son, Pan
3' NBC Movie of tho Week

li\ II

SWEEPER .,d tewlngmac:hlne
repli'. ptr11. end tuppll•. Pick
up 111d deltvery. Davis Vecuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
~rge1 Creek Rd. Cell 81444.. 0294.

HE &amp;\Yo THE:. ONLY f'R06l..EM

M'Y UNCLE HARLeY i'HE:
MA~ICIAN MN;te: A Bier
a-iAN~ IN HI5ACT.

15 HE: KEEPS

Will do l .. d bllltln~ IPriY
pllnt In g. interior &amp; IKterior
decarttlng. 25 yu. IKperienca.
Cell814-24&amp;-9097.

,.

FO~TTINEl'

1D G:O 13ACK AND PICK UP
HIS PAYOiECI&lt;..

I

'-lntlng: lnt•ior Bt Exterior.
Free ... II'Nit... Call 814-4488344.

/

f/&gt; r---~

of women in America's
defense plants during WWII.

·'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

-..
.
·..
(

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND ijEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
GoHipolls. Ohio
Phont 814-446-3888 or 614446-4477
,.

&amp;

Electrica I
Refrigeration

•

i

•

'

•

STILL,

•''

a

I SWITCHED TO
FLATLANDER
KINDLIN' WOOD

e

?

".,

'

Away
(IJ EutEndero A continuing
chronicle of tho lives of

..,'

residents in London's East
End. (0:30)

ID&lt;Ill Odd Couple

R•ldtlntiel or commercii! wir·
irt g. New service or repatr1.
Ucen~ed electriciM. Eatlmete
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304878-1188.

85

BARNEY

SNUFFY

a

•••

.

ASTRO•BRAPH·

General Hauling

Bernice

1980 Mtzde RX7. 814-99270411.

rod

clsttrnt, Willi . lmmedlat&amp;1.000 or 2. 000 glllon• dellverv.
Coli 304-876-8370.

1981 Iuick Le Sabra one
ow,..,
cortd. 13.1500. 00.
30 .. 17&amp;-3030"' 17.. 4232.

WM• dellverv. 1000 gaHont.
AeMonlbfe prlc.. lmmedh. .
dollvooy. C.IIB14--192-8275.

1810 Ch., .... looM IMP,
runs greet, 811 IIVtr' ,
01 ,100.00. 30.. 1711-1184.

Pltrldc't w.. ., Htulln(l 2. 000
gil dallwtfy. 304-17&amp;-231 1 or
81 .. 44&amp;-4088.

1875 Oollun truolo ...,dord 4
,.,..._1110FordQ...,Idll.,to.
air. 1982 Dodgt Om"l euto.
30_.17.. 7111.

Wtttlrton' • Water Haulin g.
r. .onlble rlltea, vokJme dit·
coum" 2.000 to 4. 000 ce~e&gt;
lty, cllt•no. poall. woll1. ole.
3b4-57 .. 2918.

•c

1177 M-01..,• oo.rni:Hnt. 4
rCM' oorn httd. 13ft grllln tll:lf&amp;
ac oond, koop In cloy. 115().C
dozer, winch, good cond.
30. 000. 30 .. 837-2018.

72

Tnu:ks

for

Bede 0so1

••aoo.

for•lpm.

1182 Ford ton tNdc. Auna.

1310. Coli 11 .. 387-0149.

87

.~

prelers to keep secret. No need 10 GEMINI (Mar 21.,une :Ill) Later In lha'
probe, beCause you' II be told what Is day IC!Imathlng mlghl d8Y81op thai
pertinent.
could cauoe you to radically alter your
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18) Areas plant. Don't be concerned, btl«aUM
where you and your mate previously · lhluhllt will ulllmately be lor llle biller.
1- •uo.. 22) ll'a 10 our
disagreed are reconcilable lodey ltoech CANCER IJune 2 - - •
y
Is prepared to make """"' com pro- edvantlge to bargain II you get I. wolved
mlsea and concnelona. Be the one who 111 1 commercial oltull11on today. You

..

Upholstery

Mow,..-·. Upholstering

lllttving

trl wuntyeree 23ye.-.. The bfr1t
In t.trnlture ufholstering. Cali
304- 875 - 4 14 fo r tree

...,,...,

VldaoCountry
11:00 (1) Remington SIHII
• (J) (J] • (I) iiDl Gl 1121
OJ Now•
W Lighter 8lda of Sporto
(IJ I!) 1111 .MOJirl' World of
ldeaa Mayors talks wllh a
wide variety ol people about
· America's chol":c\\'AI
18 Q]) Love Con
on
i1JJ Monayllna

1111 Miami VIce t:;1
rlll You Can Be 1 Sllr

Sale

71 F..-d7000dlolll. Cot motor.
24 ft. box. Strlight trucll. ·
Colll1 .. 448-2107bo-

..
.,

Don't be timid abou1oetllng lolly goals
for youroellln the yeor ahead . Theycan
be allalned H you are delermlned. Aim
d p1
high and don't settle lor oecon
ace.
SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Nov. 22) ObloctiVN
ld
can be ach- loday. provided you . sets the example.
won't lose anyllllng and you cou uve
Ell1 b PISCES (Fob. 20-118rah 20) This can a ~ dollars.
·
are enterprising and tenacious.
a - be an extremely productive day, ao be LIO (.IIIIJ :13-A. .. 22) You haveleedarllsh your larga11 and don't lose algh1 of aura to get an Olrly start. Channels lhlp qualities loday thll will carne to the
lhe bull'&amp; eyeo. Scorpio, lreat yourNII
0
10 a birthday gilt. Send tor your Aolro- ohould open In areas where you recenlly lorain Challenging d8Y81opmenta. nee
Oraph predlctlonalor the year aheld by experienced obataclas.
you are aroueed , your compllltor~ may
h
10 this ARIES (M8reh 21-Aprll 11) II you're regrll1 lt.
0
mailing $1 to Aatro- rap ' c
planning something social with lrlenda VIRGO (A•M. :D-IepL 22) Your llrat
newspaper. P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland ,
S
-.
bell t
Be
-34
sure
stale
your
·
today, avoid lhe run-ol-lhl-,!l'ln. elect · lhoughll are likely to be your
o10
28
0 H 44101
....
·
companions to go etong who appreclale day. aopeclally In maHI!'I that are
zodiac ..,n.
Dec Z1) As ·o l varle1y and change.
meaningful financially. Have the courl.!tQITI;AAIUI &lt;::::;,~~· prevail TAURUS (Apr1120-May 20) Condllfona .' age o1 your convlctlona and prOCOid.
1 ay, armony
lurbulenl The : · lhll1 are conducive to your mallrlal o LUA (lopl. :D-Oot II) Frlenda will
In an tree th~t haao=•
·
well-being continue to IDol&lt; favorable. : play Important rolll In your affaire loche~hou d
_,..;.
11
Soma!
Be
sure you are dolng eve,Y,hing poul·
day. yet thetr Input might not be Ill lllat
1
22
~~ wllh~or!, you have dealings mey ble to 1aka advsnlage of this fortunate .. obvluu.. Later, you'll be able to evalusome peraonallnlormatlon hel•he , ,lrend:
.
atalhelr efforts on your behaH.

11:308()) iUJBeatofCaraon
W llportiCamer (ll
(I) Cheero
(IJ TBA
eill Nlgh111ne •
I!) Sign 011
iiDl USA Today
•liD Newlywed Oame
iiJJ llportl Tonight
a21 'Nigltl Heat' CBS Late
Night Colby llnds clues to
five murders lhat point to his
brother. (AI
•
!1J H i l l - - · Fruits ol
llle Poisonous TrH

e

a

.

CD Sign 011

eiiJ Entlrlllnmtnt Tonlghl
iiDl Magnum, P.l.

10

ellll TwUighl Zona
aJ NawaNighl

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While doing my mor•ing exer·
cisas, I had my arms outstretched
. ·
and head bowed 10 lhe'lloor. My son
. - -- - - - - - --,came in and s aid , " A simple 'Good
J
Morning ' - -."
•

IO

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~-_;,.:._:;,..,.5:::_,:1_.:;..1..::...,1&amp;
,....-I

tl-.e chuck le, quoted
.
.
.
•
by Idli ng in the mining words
L.......L-.1...-l you de~el9p from step No. 3 below.

.
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L.J-...L.-

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Campier~

...

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SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
.
Sneeze - Owarf - G/am;l - Uneasy - UNDER WAY
Granny, who wanted us 10 be Involved with mBI'Iy facets
or me, was fond or saying, ' 'II you don't make waves you're
not UNDER WAY."

'

BRIDGE

NORTH

... : .
.. .
...

U·l·ll

+Js 2

By Jame• Tacoby
•a1
..... ,.
+KJ 74
Loa Angeles expert Billy Eisenberg
" . •·.
+10 5.
•has been a worthy adjunct to recent international competitions of the World WEST
EAST
+K105U
Bridge Federation, serving as com- · +7
mentator lor the public presentations _"A K Q 10_8 6 4
+10852
of the world-class events. He is cer- ·• 9 6
+97
talnly no shrinking violet when it +J 8 3
comes to bidding or play, as attested
"·
SOUTH
by today's deal.
.AQ98
· Billy sat South and opened with one
club. When West bid lour hearts and
tAQ3
.. ·"
+AKQ62
the auction returned to South, he bid
.
l.our spades - a reasonable choice.
Vulnerable: North-South
But now when North bid live clubs,
Dealer: North
Billy went on to six, gambling that his
partner held the rlgbt lour or live W..t
Soalll
Nortll Eut
high-card points to make slam a good
Pass
1+
Pass
Paaa
Pus
4+
risk.
••
s+ Pa11 8+
' He ruffed the second heart and drew Pa11
PaiS
Pass
trumps, noting that West followed to Pus
' '•·
three rounds of trumps. With 10 cards
Opening lead: • K
in hearts and clubs, West had three remaining cards. That made it llk~ly
that East held five spades to the K-10.
Knowlfll that and taking advantage of play - be eashOd his last trump, letit were two different things, since Ung a )ow spade go from dummy. Bethere were not enough entries to dum- cause East had to keep all bis diamy to lead through East as many moods, he was forced to let another
times as declarer wished. Still, Billy spade go. Billy now played ace and a .
led the queen of diamonds and over- diamond to dummy and took a spade took with the king in dummy. He then finesse agflnst the 10 in the East band. ·
led the jack of spades, covered by the ' When his queen then dropped East's .. ,,
klfll and ace. Now came the crucial 10, he had 12 tricks.

•u

.

"'

.

'

.~

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

CROSSWORD

;

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 "I cannot
ACROSS
1 Eton boy's
tell

•

parent
8 Dry
3 Color
river bed
4 Medieval
10 Ralph's mate
shield
11 Onward
II Delay
13 "Peanuts"
8 Squander
character
7 Foamy
14 Tennis tenn
drink
15 Track lap
8 Inert .
18 Place
9 Opposite
18 Brando's
side
"The - "
12 Amiable
19 Ritzy
17 Actress
21 Biblical
Hagen
lion
20 Endure
22 One time 23 Highest
23 Vase
rating
handle
24 Moorish
24 Ascended
drum
27 Hostelry
211 Party
28 Pup or
animal

.. '
·r'

26 Fonner
27 Region
near
India
29 Nonsen~l
31 Perfume
32 Dog's skin
ailment

.....

36 Along
in
years
37 Aust.
39

parrot
Max

- •I

..

- Sydow
41 United

oxygen
29 Declare
forbidden
30Roman
greeting
31 "City of
Witches"
33 Wager
34 Tea variety
. 3111ndian
mulberry
38 ExtAnt
40Type
of drum
42 "TheDrop Kid"
43Bum up

,. .....-

.'
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..,

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"
'

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.'

44 Property
income
411 Slender

,·

DOWN

..

1 Shopping
center

DAD.YCRYProQUO'ti!S- Here's bow to worillt:

II/I

-·

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for tbe three L's, X for tbe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, tbe lengtb and formaUon of the words are all
blnts. Each day tbe code letters are different.

HTKHWT

~,

.

P

0 D J T P

RK

W Z J T

ZIG K

EH

GUNZIR

LZGA

G K

HTKHWT

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..

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IKGAZIR

·~

·~ ·

..' -'"..,

CRYPTOQUOTE

American Megazlne

12:00 (I) Papof ChiM
I)) llllldl 1M PGA Tour
(I) Nlghlllne

'•ve

•

I
~,3;.....:;....;
1
:...;......;
'
..:,......;
'
~
I

191 Cheoro

A &amp;. A W•er Service. Poolt,

1977 Ford Oren_.a. very
oond. elmolt ,naN, 311 W
lnoino. 1700.00. 304--88222l1.

MOVIE: 'Go
Toward tho Light' CBS
Tualday Movie t:;1
~ Lany King Uvel
1111 Prime Time Wreofllng
9:30 New Country
10:00 (1) 700 Club
(IJ I]J NeWI
I!) lrllh A.M. C
•liD Bamay Miller
1121 Evening New•
Croolt ond Chase
10:20 I)) MOVIE: The French
Connection II !AI (1 :59)
1G-.30 (J]
!1J ABC Newa Special
The '88 Vote: One Week

a

IH

WHO'S KEEPIN' TH' FIRE
GOIN' DOWN .AT YORE

g Ill~

I

'

82

Top Rank Boxing
(J]
(I) Mra. America
Pogaant From Kaual
·Lagoons in Hawaii (L)
(IJ I!) The American
Exparianca Follow the lives

MORTY MEEKLE ANQ WINTHROP

WO FLEL

CLUP K

li\ II

EICOft

814-446- 0966. Rebuilding
evellable.

rn Bonanza: The loll

La•-

•

BUOOET TRANSMISSIONUud &amp;. rabuilt all types.
W•arty-30 d&amp;V•· PriCII ,99 &amp;
up. Uted A rabuilt - torgue
converters. Stanct.d clutchel.
pr••ure pill&amp;~. • throw out
be•inl} Wwrenty-12 mot. C:VC
Jolnit-ell tv~· Call 814-379~220 01 304-875-6758.

I

8'06 Cil
and Shirley
8:30 IJ (11 iUJ NBC Nlghlly News

Auto Parts ·

84

Fll'mEqulpnwll:. z.torTreoton,

ilpt. .

..

lndNidull guller l•ton~. be- · 1981 Nltun Mulm1 GL. Many
ginnWI. flrioue gultllrltt. Brul- ~til inducing ellldrlcaun roof
cordll Muol~ 114-441-0817. ..d ..lllecurlty ..vstem. IO,OOQ · J • J Wtlllt' Service. Swlmtriing
Jeff Yftmllev lnetruetor. 8 14- mil•. t8000. Cell l14-992- pool•. cl1terne. welit. Ph. a 14248-9285.
448-ton. LlmMod oponlngo.
3710oft• 8'00p.m.

In

b rent IZ21 I
.....,... OopooM - - 11•
IIZ.II'724. Aft• lpm ,.. 112:
5111.

1979 Mtro.~ry Bobc • . Auto.,
PS, AC. AM -FM tt•eo-C.u.
Runt siood. Good oond. t750.
Coli 11.. 28.. 8281 .

Beegle pupe. Alao t5 VW old
femlle Betgle. Cell 814-4462724.
.

2 lA ., Ill utiNtl• '*d M Rio
Clrlndt. Allo 1 8R ., toml .. eo. II
Rio Orondo. Coli 114--24..
1221

Unln•hld

1884 Mercury Tap• GS . PS,
PB, eh'. AM-FM. 11.000 mH•.
$2700. Col 11_.44.. 0212 or
44.. 1278.

1980 HOmiiAccordUC . 15 tpd.,
AC. Good oond. C•ll 514-3"792788.

., .. 44.. 0103 ... 44 .. 21&amp;8.

For rent 01 ............ ~
dllod 2 ................ groll
loCIIIIon n • Nlldtntlll oom""'nlly, lfl• 1'00 PM 011
304--IJ78-23e9.

Pats for Sale

1980 Dodge tiOO. IUto .. elr,
AM-FM. niW' tiret. Clth price.
t41t9. John's Auto Sel•below Hotld.-·lnn. Kln.,ga.

CFA PM'IIIrl and Slem•e kitten•. AKC Chow puppl•. New
Hlmll.,en ldtt.,.. c.n &amp;14448-3844 orlt• 7 PM.

equlpp«&lt; k•ch• llr. Awhblt
- · 111. n2a Pll• clop. Col

Furnllhod .,..__ 1 ...
o221. Utlllol plld. I:IDFaurtlo.
Ollllpolo. Cll44&amp;-4411efl• 7
PM.

1-100.827·

1810 VW Robblt. F,.llnloclod.
2 cl-: WriCkod. Con 814-44..
0278 lit• I PM.

WOOF!

DOGS AREN T ALLOWED
ON TI-lE SCHOOL BUS ..

a . Acce·-ries
m
....,

1979 Toyota Corone. 715,000
mH•. Good work c•. t1000
010. Col 81_.44.. 8348.

For Hie. You dltconnMJt and
h&amp;ll. Good kltdlen sink wtth
filltu,.., f25, Ln•orv with
fixtures. 126. commode. 125,
bathtub,
*'wer ... t25.
H.U fuel oil furnace with we"
thermostat t1110. C.ll eft•
Bp.m. 81,.992-5981 .

a. c. EICel. oond.. 2 lA .,

hmllhod IPirl"*" b tow!\ Ca11114-44.. 1421

•r··· ..."'"u ..

1

'

=

78

•

Eploodaa
., (11 (l) Ill (I) iiDl Ill 1121
iUJ Newa
(!) Sportalook
(l) Ramona Ramona learns
the best way to deal with a
bad day is to forg et lt.
(!) Dr. Who Colony in Space .
Part 6
ID &lt;Ill Happy Daya
[J) ShowBiz Today
lUI Facto of lila
Q Fat Albert
Qll Fandango

·-'

1981 1Cawallki 440Ltd. 17,000
d C II
mil•. 1300. RUnt goo · •
&amp;14-446-11487 Ilk for John.

23 cu fl choot..,.,. deop "-•e. 71 Auto'a For Sale
Uted 42 Inch wood b.rthroom ' - - - - - - - - - ""nlly. 304·875· 5289 11tor ,.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Yoh&gt;
4'00PM.
cl• from •100. Fordl. MlrBuy direct frOm m~nufacturer oedel. Corvett-. Cht¥¥•· Surplus. Buyers ~ Ouidt. (11
1nd ..,. . . ..
11 ,11550.00. C.l Aqua Tech. 80 .. 887-1000. Ext. 8-10189.
30 .. 823-8288.
1984Pontiac 8000, AT . PB. PS ,
Remington eutometlc Model AC. v-8, cruil:e. tltt, AM -FM 7400. "30.01 with .-.12 seopt. Cea. 15400. C.ll 814-21&amp;Phone 304-875-8431 •fter 1780.·
I'OOPM.
11117 Mwa.~ry Lyra: OS . lledc,
PS, PB, 1~. AM -FM , 4 1pd.
Sh•p. CoH 30_.57.. 1331 .
55 BuHding Supplies

8:00

..

~~~-~-~~.,~..,.~·.._~~~~;;;:~~~~~~~~~~ :1;1~·=9=1~2·:1:34::9::.;:::;:===
850

Se., ceblnat model tt•eo end
B treck tape, AM -FM •••eo end
r8COrd plaver. Good condition.
Coli 304·458-1997.

.

TUES., NOV. 1

O Reorronge letters of oho
fo vr scrambled · words below 10 form four simple words

E VENJNG

Motorcycles

1988 Yemthl YZ 80. 8

•

-,.'

''
'

74

g•'•

..,

•

1981 CkwyV.n. 32.000tctuel
mil•. f5, BOQ.OD. 30_.1751280.

ON"•

SNAFU~. by Bnace Beattie

'/

Bench ...... tltver-blue. lett
thlf'l 7800 milee. like n81N.

54 Misc. Merchandise 81 Farm Equipment
Solid Maplo 3 pc. bocl-oom
tult•twin bed. mettr- &amp; box
315 MF trletor, good point, good
~. nice with ICt'fiP• bl 1de,
sprlnQI-IIke new. Cell 814-._.8- .
2415,
Uttd R-86 Ditch Witch *29915 . MF . Dyna -bounce
Trencher. 814-894--7842 or mowet', 18911. MF rake. t895.
Ntw Holend 218 INlier. t9915.
Girl• bet*'oom tult•lncludtt 19~&amp;008.
heedbo•d, frama box.tprln•&amp;
win ftnence. Cell 814ml'ltrftl, oorner d•k le ch-'r, w.,m Morning wood bur.W.ft 2
1122
ae- ·
tmell chill. F(enth cr•m with ttove, good oond. •210.00. Cl
blue &amp; yeiiDW~t flowen . Cell aft• 4:00PM, 304--171-H?O.
11,.317-0102 orltor 5,30 PM .
83
Livestock
hnnWI:
Vktto~rtdOIWldOpen,
------Oaod uaed mlorT.V.'tfor Pia. lng '47.80. F...-hlng chengu- t·
Coli 614--448-1149.
ble lottor win- llgn ott.OO.
Sidwltallc curbtr Mth lettaft 8 Ctii·A1911 Ck.lb ctN11. '450..
'149.00. F,.. thlpplng. WVa 1100 Coli 81,.387- 7481.
53
Antiques
1·800.142·2434, Ohio 1·800.
533-3463 onydmo.
84 Hay &amp; Grain
Slgne. portable hlghted
Buy or Sell. Atverlne Antlqu...
t299.00.
F,..
letters-d
..
htery.
1124 E. Main Strtet. Pomeroy.
P111t1c letten (helt price)
Houra ~ M.T,W 10t.m. to 8p.m.,
Llrgtround bit• ofh&amp;¥fQr . ,..
SundiY 1 to Op.m. 814-992- t47.110. Ott• IXpir• New. II, 120eoch. Colll1,.44&amp;-1082.
WY l · aD0-842·2434. Ohio 1·
2528.
800.633-3483.
700 ••• ot Hov. 1 Holotoln
Antique beer Clf'lt, make en
Toy ch11t, chest of do.wer.. Htif. .· wll t'•hen in Feb. Cell
an• . 304-676-&amp;&amp;22.
mile plecee af h.,d made 11_.38.. 8483"' 388-8810.f\lrniture. fofr.ca~ otordert call
773-58 8 otter 7 '00 PM For s•eup to 100 l•ge bel• of
54 Misc. Merchandise 30_.
gOod ordt•d gr. . mked wtth
each .venlng.
dov• h&amp;f(. Cut • oondltlaned
WhHicheirt· ntW or uted. 3
Couch ., d chllr, beige with June 1188. 121 • blla C.IIC .E.
whetled eleccrlc •cooter~. Call golct.. ftawer b•lurr d,.lgn. Goodwin. 30_.372-2151, Rl·
plov. 9 AM·5 PM .
Roger• Mobltty collect, 1·&amp;14- 0126.00. 304-885-3482.
870.9651 .
'-can dlnnat table. 3 l..,eund Ground thttl corn 18.00 p«
100, Pr.-nk.lm Altllta e3.00.
w.. ttrn Boote. Red Wing work e chelrl, 1100.00. Long thr11 Str.w
11.10. Round ballet
tho-. Huth Puppy dr., 1hoa
cuahion couch eeo. oo. 3041211.00. Morg~n'a Woodlti'td
Quality. Mlection, grMt price~.
882-3201.
Ferm. At. 315, PNny. W.Ve. 8:00
Wldee work • western. Stlte
At. 141. 1outtl of Wlt•loo, SALE Qrldy firm Box 118-I.Jim .. 12:00 Mon-Set. 304-93781 .. 843-2158 .
Hill RoMI, Htnderlon. W. Ve. 2018.
Mondly Oct. 31 lhru N~ 4.
Dl!kote Farm Home. Blift on
10:00 em to 4:00 pm. 12 ki 24 w• corn for llllaga MorWoociMn Farm, Rt 31,
your lot. t12.915 Bt up. See our cema'lt blocks. hdlpfull bed.
Model. Call 1·114-888· 7311 .
uaed tlr•. loa.tt Pott. c~nntng l'llny. WYo. 30,.937-2018 .
J.,., 111'\flng mechln.. lawn
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS· mowers. g• " -... hollt. old Wll hall oarn. inc*l'i!EFAP
1nd
Check tor spechlls an ALL en. VW and Hondl pwts. corn. Alto, will a1
Models. Big diloount-t.t yeer'a medii wardrobe, picnic tebte. deltver .. wduet. 3 4-773ttockMI modelt. Ron Alllton. roM I Wly bed. dehumidifier. 8332. 8~0 till 9~0 AM .
1 210 Seoond Ave.. O.lllpolls, rototill«. c• carrier. tnll•
Ohio. 814--441· 4338.
tremet. fertlllztr epreeder.
I r dll:&gt;porldllon
clolt• lne pollt. tcrap 1luml·
Wood &amp; coal burn.-. Call num, houtehold ltemt. aome
304-875-6331 .
clothtt 1nd tholtl, junk.

Surplus ermy c~moufla~ge. denlm. rental, Carh . . clothiqg.
Smlll lf'l'l"Y •ccet•orfll, Fri.
Stl, Sun. noon dll 8:00PM.
!Nov. Dec 05*' 7 dlrf,, SIWYI
SomiNIIIe' t , Ellt·RIVentwood
junction lndep.,denoe Road.
old Rt. 21 . (New Era{ intul.lt_.
camouflege covertlt U7.110.
30,.273-5185.

4 W .O .

1987 Bronco . Auto., 0 .0 .

•of•

•ao.

&amp;

Edit•d by ClAY R. POLlAN

'

VIRI't Furniture
0p., deftv, Mon.-S1t.
9AM · I PM
Sun .• 12 noon- 5 PM

wkh 1pproved credit. Rt. u.11n
takM. Plu• financing evtllable
Cltllt.,IFY- 'h milt on Uncaln
Pike..514--44&amp;-3188.

.

84 Ford F-250 ht.,y duty . 4&amp;0
4 spd. Needl work. I 4300. 85
Ford R.,p 4 x4, 8 cyl. 5 tpd .
9Verdrivt. Sh•P· call 814-4.481812 ... 81 .. 441-0613.

Fot low prlcel on Quellty Carp«
&amp;. Furntture come to Molloh.,
Furnttu ... Upp• Rlv« Rd .. II1444B-7444.

Complete household
t.nnlshlnga- AH Mddlng. rultlc
bur* bedl 'A'h:h ruttlc che1t.
veri~ of
&amp;. ch.,..all on
..... hcellent ulld IPPiilftCII.
Chrlltm.s tovt "ow In ltock.
Chrlstmee a.y1 wey 1 nOIN btlnQ

V•ns

--·---

--

T~~NovambM::,:·:1:9:s~s::::::::::::::=:::~:::::::::::P:omero::::Y;~Mri~dd;l~epo:·irt~,~O~h~io~~~---r--~~~~~~~~~
;-~o:a~Uy~S~em~in;~;·~·P;,~~;-9BORN Lo
Televt"st·on
,,( ~ ~
'::~:t:~v S©\\&amp;U ~ .. - 'b "Ee:r·S®~:::
Viewing

•

, .,..,. 12800. 814-992·2859
or 814-992-1881.

Cast Iron wood burnll'. t 100.
Coil 814-44.. 41180.

51

-----

TNckl for Sale

1978Je~PCJI!Ii . NI'N t OP. othw
extrtl' l. Low mil ~~~~g.. VtiV goo d

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Coml)l.. t hou•hold furnlthlngt. 1.-2 milt out Jtrrlcho.
30_.57 .. 1480.

Mi••·

Comm•clll a ulldlng for
Pl. pt. . . . ~. Ctll 304-8766104.

72

J &amp; S FURNITURE
u .15 E•••nAw.
4 dr..wr chlilt, 1... a drliW•
ch•t. 154.95. 15 pc. wooden
dlnntne •eu. • 199.915.

Kendellwood fireplace lnt«C.
t600, Firm . Call 814· 44601411.

For LAase
-

KIT N' C~YLE~ by Larry Wrlaht

HOLISahold Goods

'-·49;;;:=:;::=;::====
1
Mr.rchaml1se

2 BA . apta. 8 clotetl, ldtc:tienIPPI. lurnll- W•hlr-Dryor
hook-l4), wW C•P«. n.,..tv
pointed. dock.
From o178.
ltnk)r Cttil.,. W.. ooma. At._,.,, Inc. Apto. Coli 30,.17..
8104. Of 875-8388 or 17&amp;7738.

-----~-

•

FireWood-Hard wood. large
pickup load, t36 dtUvertd. Cell
81_.44.. 1437.
.

A.-tment
for Rent

kttchtn. Alta ._,
100m. 2
o. 1•11•
IIIIIM
U,.al Dlltrlol.
quk'od. Col 81,.247-1211.

Oint...Rot•. ,._

• • • Qolllp... ,._.,,

2 IR . tnt•. W•er&amp;.tr•h~d
A.,, &amp;. clap. requlr... Cell

IEM!TIFUL APAATMENTS AT
8UOOET PRICES AT · JACK·
SON ESTATES. 831 Jocklon
Athton, l•ge buMdlng lot .. Ptke from 1183 • mo. Wlllk to
moble hom. permttted. public lllop end ..-llo. f14--4411..wtM', el•o rill• latt. Ct1dt .28a.E .O.H .
Bo~. Jr. 304-17.. 2331.
IJpttlh unl.lrn61htd apt. Clr·
Bea~ttful rhtwlot• onela'eplut.
ptttd. utlttlet Plld. No chilct-tl'l.
public w•t•. Clyde Bawtrt. Jr. No pit~ Coli 11 .. 44&amp;-1137.
304-87.. 2338.
Furnilhtd- 3 room1 • bllth.
Cl-. No por1. Rot. &amp; clopod
requred. UtUitl• •unlehed.
Renl,ds
Adultt only. Cell &amp;14-44•
1118.

oft• 5 PM, 814--248-9097.

3 bedroom ,.., dl. 1"h bit hi.
tamlr lOOn:\ din lng room, 1 c•
g•og.. otorogo buH ... g. pool/ w - doole. Spring VIII ..
..... Col 81_.44.. 7803.
Modlrn 3 lA .

Unllrnllhod 2 Br.. 2 botho. j:45;;:::;F;u:m::;:I_S;h:e:d;:;;R:oo=m=s
lmmtdl•toccuperu:y. Cell 8144411-2784.
Fwnilhed room-919 Stcond
2-2 BR. moblehomet. 1180 .,_ Ave.. Gllllpollt. *136 a mo.
mo. 1100 clop. Ref, r-~od. Utilltl• .-tct. SlnQtemli• Stl•e
C1ll 81,.357·0132.
bo!h. CoU411-44'18oft•7PM.

mu..

1974 mobile home. 14x.7D,
unfur,.hed,
be moved,
located ln Buff•lo. W .Va.
•e.ooo.oo , """ o11or. 30,.
773-1028 tft• 1:00PM.

41
31

Now oc_,lng oppllcotions for
1 ~oom ep.-tment. Only
lid.... moblllly lmpolood or
- - - - - - - - - - - l h l l ' l d C I P need IPPiy. Fin~r~otd
1:1¥' Farm. . Home Adminiltr•
tlon. Equll houlfngoppottunky.
42 Mobile Homes
Appllootionsoroovollll&gt;loMonf R nt
-, ttwou~ Fridltf. 91.m. ·
or 8
3·p.m. ont,. It the offtce 11
Ston..,oodl IPtl. 205-1100
-oil St .. Mldcloport Ohio.
In Et.Wikl. 2 IR . Acklht ant,. No 11.. 98Z.30511.
p«a. 12211 mo. D11p. requ ...._
Coli 11 .. 24.. 5883.
APAATMENTS. mobile hom11.
hou ... Pt. Plt•tnt .,dGIIIIpo2 Br. mobile homo, ,...doled. llo. 81,.44&amp;-8221.
tiNI'I. 1200 • mo. Flequlr•
.
t1&amp;o tee. dep. &amp;. ral. Cll ' BMch S"trllt. MlddltpOrt. Ohio,
2 btdroom tJrnlthed 1Pa1ment,
814-24&amp;-9547.
uUttl• Plld. rtf«tnCM. Phone
2 bocl-oom unlurnllhod. 12xl0, 30•882· 2688.
w/ d hooloJp. V, mi. Pllt:HM .C.
on At. 31. Adulu ontt. Cll Now ICCtptlng epplicMioAI for
30,.17.. 9710 or 81,.44.. 2 bedroom ap.-tmtntl. fully
c•peted. eppll.,cet, wtt• end
4319.
v .. h pickups prOYided. Meint•
2 btdroom unfurnlthtd. 12x80 RIRCI trMINing dote to lhopIn Ch•'*• Coli 30_.876-9780 plng. bankl and tchooll. For
morelnformltlon call 304-882or 814-448-4389.
3718. E.O.H .
. ... ~lnO room wfth •pen ct.
room. 2 BR ., nM c•pet. CA. Furnilhed one bedroom apt.
A'.,lttlot. Clll 814-448-1409. 1cl.lttt -onlv. no peU. ell! lift•
•a PM.
5,oo. 30,.87 ..3788.

nllhod. 12x10, 30,.57.. 3019.

I NOnCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommtndt thlt you
dD butn- wtth p.aple you
know. end NOT to ..,.d monev
through tht m.M until you h ... I
lnv•igllt.a tlw offering.

Comp -

n.. ,..,..

Community, 2 bedroom. fur-

Business
Opportunity

lor. LwL

.

2 unt.n•htd It 127 Mulbtny
Aw., Pom•or-4 roon • bt!th.
Aduttt mtv. No pelt. Dtp, •ref.
Coli 814-llz.22751ftor 5 PM.

1----------.. .

lin..

Wom., towcndllr .. dnlght to
c••IDr eldlrtr lied¥. 2 d.-, a •nd
one nklht off P• w..... Phone
304-.,...3711 ..,., b.t:wetn
a,oo .,d 1o~o AM .,d 7,oo
•dB~ PM.

Hey, Lennie

1 btct'oorn lf)t. In Mlddtport.
*1150. pw month pk,• ~llltl-.
Coli 11,.192·8548 or 11•
149-2217.

·We got a Culture vulture

-

Oldlr w...._.ege151end OYer.

...._
"' lllrglnl&amp; ....
time. 20 twa week t13a hour.
MUll meM Otiplf1:nwrt of Llbor
inCDMe gukll
304-$752770.

51

Apartment
for Rent

Oredout lvlng. 1 en d 2 bedroom ep.-tmentt t t Vlllege
MMor Md RW.,.Idt APII1·

llolp W..tod
Till..,.....ing posttioM op.n.
Aft.-noon • .,_., houra. Cal
.,.d Tu_. .,d Wedn•dlr· &amp;14-.,.a.7441

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Paga

10-The Daily Sentinel

r . - -.

· Tu.day, Novanber 1, 1988 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•

Local news ·briefs...

--Y

Continued from page 1

New contract gets tentative OK
The negotiating committees of the Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company's Point Pleasant Polyster Plant and the United
Rubber Workers Local 644 reached a tentative agreement late
Monday night on a new contract.
No detallk were released on the tentative new a~ment
which will replac.e the current agreement, due to expire Nov, 6.
The tentative agreement will be presented to the Union's
Executive Board on Wednesday Nov. 2. The general
membership will conduct a ratification vote on Thursday Nov. 3
at the Point Pleasant Moose Club In meetings at 9, a.m. and 7
p.m.
. ,
All Goodyear-URW bargaining unit members are urged to
attend the ratification meetings.
Additional Information will be released pending the
ratification vote.

.~.

Patrol reports two-car colll&amp;ion
The Gallia·Melgs Post, State Highway' Patrol Investigated a
{wo car collision at 10:25 a.m. Ill Meigs County on SR. 7, at
Tuppers Plains. One driver complained of an Injury but was not
treated.
..•Troopers said Danny L. Cremeans, 34, Coolville, Ohio stopped
his pickup truck to make a left turn. James F. Crouse, 39, PSR,
Gallipolis, driving a truck, was unable to stop and his vehicle
struck the back of the pickup. There was moderate damage to
.
'
both vehicles.
Cremeans complained of a minor Injury but was not treated.
The patrol cited Crouse for !allure to stop within the assured
clear distance.

Meigs jobless figUre 7.5 percent
The unemployment rate from Augost to September 1988 fell In
four southeastern Ohio counties, and remained the same for
Meigs and Gallla Counties, according to the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
OBES said the September jobless rate In Ohio ranged from a
low 4.0 percent In Delaware and Shelby counties to a high of 12.1
percent In Guernsey County.
.
The comparable unemployment rate for Ohio was 5. 7 percent,
up from 5.6ln Augost. The comparable U.S. rate·ln September
was 5.2 percent (after seasonal adjustment, Ohio's September
rate was 5.8 percent and the U.S. rate was 5.4 percent.)
Gallla and Meigs counties' unemployment rate for September
remained at 7.5 percent, same as August.
Jackson County's jobless rate had the largest decline In the
six counties, from 10.6 to 8.2 percent In September, a drop of 2.4
percent.
Lawrence County's unemployment rate fell from 7.3 to 6.7
percent, a drop of 0.6 percent.
Vinton County had a drop o!0.5 percent as the jobless rate fell
from 9.5 to 9.0 percent In September.
Athens County's une,lllployment rate fell from 6.5 to 6.1
· percent In September, a drop of 0.4 percent.
The workforce In the six Southeastern Ohio counties for
September totaled 79,000 with 73,400 of them at Jobs, leaving
5,600, or 7.08 percent, unemployed.

Chris SabO
named rookie
of the year

.,•

Upper Michigan gets four inches of snow

By United Preu Jnteraatl!lnal
roads were reported slushy and were cloudy west of the Rockies temperatures would rise to ,
A storm centered along the slippery.
and partly cloudy In the northern above 70from California through .
Carolina coast got the month of
the high Plains to the wes)ern :
The storm system off the Plains.
November ott to a rainy start Carolinas was expected to bring
Temperatures dipped below Gulf Coast and across much of •
today In much of the eastern · a few Inches of snow to the freezing · early tooay In the F1orlda, with south Florida, :
United States:
Pennsylvania mountains later In northern Atlantic Coast region,
western Texas, southwestern ;
Showers reached from coastal the day. Flood watches were In the'Rocky Mountains and from New Mexico, southern Nevada ·
New England through central posted for tonight In the Catskill Nebraska and the Dakotas to the and southern California reaching •
and eastern Virginia to coastal Mountains of eastern· New York · upper Mississippi Valley.
. the 80s.
•
South Carolina, forecasters at state.
Temperatures stayed In the 60s
Highs were expected to stay .
the National Weather Service
Rocky Mount, N.C .. received and 70s overnight across Florida
below 50 degrees from the upper :
said.
1. 74 Inches of rain by 7 a:m. EST and the southwestern deserts,
Mississippi Valley to New Eng·,·
Forecasters said 4 Inches of today, while Richmond, Va., got the 50s In south·central Texas,
land and across Washlnirton :
snow fell during the night at 1.26 Inches and Raleigh, N.C., the central Gulf Coast region, state. Highs In the 30s were.;
Marquette, Mich., and a snow had 1.22 Inches.
much of California and southern predicted across upper Michl·.·
advisory was In effect for northpry weather prevailed across Arizona.
gan. Temperatures elsewller,e ·:
central upper Michigan: where the rest of the nation, but skies
Forecasters said afternoon will be In the 50s and 60s.

FarTJl prices level off
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Farm Price Index, which surged
upward through the summer and
early fall due to the drought,
leveled off this month but Is 13
percent higher than one year
ago, the Agriculture Department
• said Monday.
The Index measures the price
paid to farmers and ranchers for
the livestock, vegeta!Jles, fruits,
crops and eggs. In July, the Index
reached Its highest level since
August 1984 - and It went up In
Augost and September.
The OctOber reading or 144 was
unchanged from September.
"Higher prices for oranges,
milk, lettuce and corn were offset
by lower prices for tomatoes,
apples, eggs and soybeans," t.he

department said.
crop portion of the. Index
stood was up 27 percent from
OctOber 1987. Corn was up 11
cents a bushel to an average
price or $2. 71. Bar ley was down 24
cents to $2.64 a bushel ·and oats
dropped 12-cents to $2.44 a bushel.
Wheat was up 14 cents a bushel
to $3.89.
· However, soybeans were down
23 cents to average $7.71 a bushel.
The poultry and egg part of the
Index was down 5 percent from
September but still was 35
percent above last October. Egg
prices are down 5.4 cents a dozen
from September to 51 cents a
dozen. Prices for broiler
chickens and turkeys were down
slightly.

Rain continues to hamper
hanrest in Northem Ohio

Metze nbaum has been In the
Senate for the last 12 years,
enjoys enormous name recognl·
lion across the state and casts
himself as the ''working man's" .
representative In Congress .
Voinovlch for the last nine
years has been mayor of Cleveland, a city where there are six
Democrats for ·every Republican. For Volnovlch's party, he
seemed like the perfect choice, a
And then one candidate says Republican who le'ans toward the
the public has heard enough and center In a year when It looks like
Republl~an George Bush will
he refuses to debate.
It sounds like 't he presidential · carry Ohio.
However, Voinovlch struggled
elecllon, but It Is also the race In
to
obtain name recognition out·
Ohlb between Democratic Sen.
side
northeast. Ohio. Even the
Howard Metzenbaum and Reparty's
No. 1 man, Ronald
publican challenger George
Reagan,
stumbled when proVolnovlch.

Sialic
Occluded ~ .,
Map shews mitimum temp~ratures. At least 50'Yo of arry shaded area Is forecast •
to receive precipitation Indicated
- UPI :

Squads

lwve four calls Monday

Stocks

RECEIVJ!l RECOGNmON - Motorcyclists of the area
Tuesday presented plaques to 10 persons In recognition of
continued aupport for the motorcyclists' annual, toys for tot run
staged each year to provide Christmas .toys for underprivileged
children. Pictured during presentation ceremonies Tuesday are
from the left, Arnold Priddy, Kathy Mitchell, Mel Swisher and
Kathy Meadows, representing the presenting motorcycllsts, and

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By JOSEPH MIANOWAN\'
UPJ Political Writer
George Bush and Michael
Dukakls pushed Tuesday Into the
final week of the presidential
campaign with a blitz of America's Industrial heartland where
the Republican, talking like a
winner, promised an aggressive
agenda for his term In office
while the Democrat appealed to
common workers to salvage his
hopes.
.
The vice president. In a speech
at the University of Notre Dame
In South Bend, Ind., continued to
swipe at Dukakls and, striking a
serious tone, started to paint a
picture of an "activist" Bush
presidency he promised would
not raise .taxes, would keep
defense strong and would toward
progress with the Soviet Union,
Including an early meeting with
Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev.
In another shot at the Massa·

PEOPLES

BANK
"The BeHer Baa'"

J~ebon Av~t~uel

,.
• • . ·-~

•

... •

~-- ,j .....

,_;; _ _

other orders dropped 0.5 percent
after rlslng0.9percentlnAugust,
the bureau said.
Orders for defense capital
goods took an especially hard hit
In September, down 12.5 percent,
the bureau said.
Excluding the volatile defense
sector, orders were down 1.5
percent, the largest drop In that
series since a 2.9 percent plunge
In January 1987.
The reP.ort coincides with other
government Indicators showing
the economy may be slowing
from Its earlier hectic growth
pace. Last week the Commerce
Department reported that total'
economic growth had slowed to
an annual 2.2 percent rate In the
third quarter, down from 3
percent In the second quarter and
3.4 percent In the first.
Shipments ·of manufactured
goods dipped 0.1 percent In
September to $221.4 billion after

Post endorses
Voinovich for
state Senate

slstance to local needy people,
the Association has seen an
Increase In requests for assist·
ance since the strike began on
Aug. 1. Pangle feels the Increase
In requests for assistance may be
because working DHSemployees
are unable to handle all cases as
quickly as might be deemed
necessary by the Individuals who
have made the requests.
Approximately half of DHS
employees have remained on the
job since the strike began,
working many hours of overtime
to continue to provide normal
services to clients.
Few negotiating session:; have
taken place during the thirteen·
week long strike. And on Oct.l3,
Ohio Council 8, American Feder·
at !On of State, County and Munlc·
Ipal Employees (AFSCME) ,
which represents the striking
DHS employees, filed an unfair
Ia bor practice charge with the
State Employment Relations
Board . (SERB), Columbus,
agalnst'the Meigs County Commissioners and the Department
of Human Services, charging
that management has not been
bargaining In good faith . Management Is represented In negotiations by Ken Edsall, of the labor
consulting firm of Clemans,
Nelson and Associates, Inc.,
Columbus.
.,
Whether or not the fetter from
the ministerial assolcatlon was
responsible or not, a negotiating
session has been scheduled for 10
a.m. Friday at the Holiday Inn,
Ga!Upolis. The session was
called by SERB Mediator Ron
Auteri.

I

Bush, Dukakis head into final
days of presid~ntial campaign

•

(

.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Orders for factory goods fell1.9
. percentlnSeptember,asseesa.w·
log orders for aircraft ·and ,
defense goods ,contlnued to unset·
tie , heavy Industry, the Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
Orders for all manufactured
goods fell to $222.6 billion In
September, down 1.9 percent•
from Augost, the department's
Census Bureau reported. Orders
were up a revised 3.2 percent
from July to Augost after dropping 3.6 percent from June to
July, the bureau said.
Most of the decline In new
orders for big-ticket factory
Items was In transportation
equipment, especially aircraft,
down 11.5 percent, and ships and
tanks, down 104.2 percent, the
bureau said.
When orders for transportation
equipment were taken out, all

122 'DAY-S CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

I

NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Although the Meigs County
Ministerial Association Is not
taking sides In the dispute
between striking Meigs County
Department of Human Services
employees and the Meigs County
Commissioners, the Association
has sent a letter urging the
commiSsioners to resume talks
with the union In hopes that once
talking resumes, a settlement
will follow.
Rev. Michael Panglo, secrefront, I tor, Hlzllee Riebel, PizZa Hui; Pomeroy PoUce Chief Jerry
tary for the Ministerial Assocla·
Rought; Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Uttle; back, I to r, Bill
lion, reports that the letter was
Bariey, Mlzway Tavern; Charlie Lilly, band leader; Lennie
mailed to the commissioners two
Tennant, Riverboat Inn, and Bllb HoeOich of.The Dally Sentinel.
weeks ago today." The letter Receiving plaques but not present were Frank Musser, The
states that the AssocJatlon Is not
Watering Hole; John Kerr, WMPO, and James Hill, l'leasers
taking a position In the strike
Restaurant.
situation, but encourages negotl·
allons to resume and, If neces·
sary, the Association would provide a neutral meeting place for
negotlat Ions.
adjustment for seasonal
Copies of the letter were sent to
variatiOns.
Gov. Richard Celeste, · State
Shipments of long-lasting ex·
Senator Jan Michael Long and
pensive goods, such as appllan·
State Representative Jolynn
ces and aircraft, were about the
Boster.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
same as In Augusl but shipments
Boster and Long had earlier
of more quickly consumed goods, Cincinnati P.ost Tuesday e n· Issued a joint statement urging
, such as food and clothing, dorsed George Voinovlch for negotiations to resume.
dropped 0.3 percent, the bureau Senate and said 71-year-old In·
Approximately 12 churches In
cumbent Howard Metzenbaum · Meigs County be)ong to the
said.
•'should make way for a younger Ministerial Association and Pan·
Unfilled orders Increased 0.3
but wiser man. "
percent to $453 billion in Sep·
glo says It Is the belief of
Volnovich's "conservative ministers In the Association that
tember, with nearly all that
principles, his long and remarka- needy people In Meigs County
Increase coming In heavy equip·
bly successful experience In local will be the ones Jo suffer most If
ment such as aircraft still being
and state governmenl, and his the strike Is allowed to continue.
built, the bureau said.
constructive Instincts will make
Stockpiles also 'Increased In
Panglo says the Ministerial
him an outstanding representa· ' Asssoclatlon became Involved
September, up 0.6 percent to
live of Ohio In the post-Reagan because, as a helping agency ·
$347.9 billion. The bureau said
that while Inventories have
Continued on page 5
which provides emergency as·
edged up since April 1987, the
ratio between Inventories and
shipments has dropped from 1.67
months' supply In AprU 1987 to
1.57 months In September.

Facto_ry orders down 1.9%

'SUPER C.D.

........----·
.......

Metzenbaum Is consldred the
king of filibustering In Congress,
using the tactic most often when
he wants to kill bills he believes
are geared toward special Inter·
est groups such as big business.
He gained national at~ntlon
during tax reform debate when
he publicized several elements of
the bill that were Included solely
for special projects or groups.
Many of them were ·eventually
dropped.
Metzenbaum, 71, who began
his political career as a state
representative In 1942, has said
that.lf elected to a third term In
Senate this year, he will not seek
re-election In 1994.
Volnovlch has received endorsements from 'fhe Columbus
Dispatch · and The Cincinnati
Enquirer, and Metzenbaum has
received endorsements from The
Cleveland Plain Dealer, the
Akron Beacon Journal and the
Dayton Dally News.

Group urges county
• •
to resume negotzattons

,/J

,or

Voinovlch, 52, says Metzenjobs since he became mayor In
baum has failed to get a fair
1979.
Both campaigns claim their return of federal tax dollars for
coirimerlcials are accurate and · Ohio and lacks new Ideas In
Volnovlch proposed establish- dealing with the trade deficit. He
ment of a "truth" panel fo Is also critical of Metzenbaum on
examine commercials to be trade Issues.
.
aired by both campaigns, but
"He (Metzenbaum) Is the only
Metzen baum refused.
senator I know who Is always
Then Metzenbaum, sitting on a there when they close a plant.
15-polnt lead In statewide polls, He' s the past. George Voinovlch
refused to debate. Metzenbaum Is the future;" Volnovlch said
claimed the reason was because during the campaign. ''He
Voinovlch has run a "negative doesn't recognize that the world
and mean-spirited campaign of has changed.
smears," but most political ob·
Volnovlch has not campaigned
servers agree that the real for statewide office since sucreason Is that Metzenbaum could cessfully running for lieutenant
only lose ground by debating governor with Gov. James
·
Volnovlch.
Rhodes In 1978.
The two candidates from
Metzenbaum brags about tak·
Cleveland have their differences. tng the lead on the plant-closing
bill that requires businesses to
Issue notices ahead of when they
plan to close large plants. He has
also been a leader on child .care
Issues.

Weather------.

Actor John Houseman
succumbs at age 86

Hospit&amp;t news

nounclng Voinovlch' s name durIng an October rally In Bowling
Green.
Votnovlch has pounded away •
at Metzenbaum's "100 percent
liberal" votlng record, sayl11g
Metzenbaum does not accurately
represent the political views of
Ohioans.
Metzenbaum claims that Volnovlch's commercials, depicting
the senator as "weak" on child
pornography · Issues, were
misleading.
Voinovlch countered by saying
Metzenbaum' s commercials
. stating that Cleveland has lost
70,000 jobs while he has been
mayor are false, saying Internal
Revenue ' Service returns show
Cleveland actually gained 80,000

•

Darmers

• l ... _
PresidentUl

2 Sections, It Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

'

Ohio, Wednesday. November 2. 1988

WEATHER MAP- During early Wednesday·mornlng, rain and :
showers are forecast for parts of the Pacific Northwest and the :
norlh Atlantic Coast states, with thunderstonns along the coastal ;
area&amp;. Showers and tbunclentorms are pOIISible In parts of the ·
central intermoutaln region aad the central Plains. Saow :
showers are polllllble In parts of the Great Lakes, wUh showers :
JIOIIIIIble In parts of the Ohio Valley. Showers and thunderstonna •
are possible In parts of the extreme liOUih Atlantic Coast (UPI) '

There were 4.4 days suitable
for fieldwork. Soil moisture rated
22 percent short, 70 percent
adequate and 8 percent surplus,
with most of the surplus areas In
the northern third of Ohio.
'·
Most shortages were In south·
ern parts of Ohio, notably South
Central and Southeast.
Fair Thursday and a chance o~
Soulh·Central Ohio
The corn harvest pace quick·
rain Friday and Saturday. Highs:
Ton_
l
ght,
partly
cloudy
with
a
ened as farmers switched from
low 30 to 35. Northwest winds 10 will range from the low 50s to low.
harvesting soybeans; progress
to 15 mph. Wednesday, partly 60s and lows will be In the 30s or.
stood at 42 percent complete,
cloudy with a high In the lower low40s.
•
compared with 90 percent In 1987
50s.
and a 58 percent average for the
Extended Forecast
years 1983-87.
Thursday
through Saturday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
The moisture of harvested corn
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 10: 33 a.m. treated Danny Cremeans
averaged 23 percent. Lodging
at the sc_ene of an auto accident on Route 7; Middleport at 2:33
was a probl!!m In some areas-and ·
a.m. to Mill St. for Paula Mayes to Holzer Medical Center;
could bec&amp;me more prevalent as
Scipio Fire Department at 12: 15 p.m. to a brush fire on the
harvest continues.
Dally stock prices
Howard property on Howard Road; Racine at 4:15p.m. to Pine
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
continued
from page 1 _ _ __
Grove Road for Goldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
r 1
••• _
_--=.:....:::.::....::..:::.:....:...
Bryce and MBI'k Smith
of Bluat, Ellis &amp; Loewi
reported· similar !!gores to the during 1988 has had a serious ,
chairmen of the House and effect on certain segments of Am Electric Power ............. 28'4
Senate Agriculture committees. agriculture and It may prolong AT&amp;T ................................. 28%
GAO aUditors also looked at financial stress for many Ashland 011 ............ ............35%
Make certain au your
trends for this year.
farmers," the GAO said.
Bob Evans .......................... 16~ _
Homeowners
insurance needs
''The overall Improvement In
The GAO report said 1987 Charming Shoppes ............. . 15~
are
properly
covered.
Calf us
1987 must be tempered some- recorded the first Increase - 2.5 Cl ty Holding Co ................... 33
for a no-obligation audit
what because the severe drought percent - In farm assets since Federal Mogol. ................... 54%
MALIBU, Calif. (UP!) - John
those of us In the theater
Houseman, who nurtured young
Houseman was a great, great
1981.
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 52
actors for decades before becom·
teacher who kicked ass and made
Heck's ............................... .. %
Contlnu~
from page 1
____:.:.__::......:.__
lng an Oscar·winner himself in
you feel you were committed to
Key Centurion .................... 16%
his 70s for his .portrayal of a
acllng because of him," said
Lands' End ......................... 24%
Countering Dukakls's blitz of
"I had no role that you are Limited Inc ....................... .26% condescending law school profes·
Gerald Gutierrez, an original
national
television Interviews, aware of or not aware of," Bush Multimedia Inc ..... .............. 71'%'
sor In "The Paper Chase," was
member of The Acting Company,
214 EAST MAIN
Bush appeared on the "NBC said. "So I don't know what that Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
remembered as a gentleman and
and now Its artistic director.
POMEROY
a professional.
"I'm too upset to say anything Nightly News" Monday and refers to."
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 13
Anderson, chief Middle East Shoney's Inc ........................ 7\-2
992-8687
Houseman, whose career In except he was the man who gave dented he had a role In hostage
negotiations
with
terrorists
as
correspondent
for
The
Asso·
radio, theater, film and televl·
me my career on a silver
Wendy's Inti ..................... '... 6%
slon spanned six decades, died
platter," said Patti LuPone, an claimed Monday by American elated Press, said he was "not Worthlngion Ind ................. 21~
Monday at his home after a long
Acting Company product and _ captive Terry Anderson !n a asking President Reagan to deal
State £uto
battle against_ spinal cancer. He
lnaur...oe
protege of Houseman, now star· videotape released by . his with terrorists, although both h~
To
perfonn
Nov.
5
and Mr. Bush did so In the
was 86.
ring In "Anything Goes" In New captors.
Compenlea
Dan Hayman and the Faith
Iran·contra affair and the TWA
Lindsay Wagner, who played
York.
Trio
will perform Saturday, Nov.
hijacking" .In June 1985. ,
Houseman's daughter In "The
Houseman's death came a day
5,
7:
30
p.m., at the town hall.
Bush also said he Is" a little bit
Paper Chase," called him "a
after the 50th anniversary of the Plan homecoming
optimistic" that the Western
total professional and a joy to legendary radio broadcast of
Homecoming
at
the
SutiDn
hostages may be freed because
work with. But what I enjoyed
H.G. Wells's "The War of the
United
Methodist
Church
will
be
Iran may want to make a positive
most was his tremendous wit."
Worlds," which he co-produced
held
this
Sunday.
The
day's
gesture
to a hew president.
Houseman spent decades bewilh Orson Welles.
schedule
Includes
Sun(jay
School
·~r think with Iran, Iraq having
hind the cameras, producing,
James Bridges, who wrote and
directing and teaching at The directed "The Paper Chase" In at 9:30 a.m .. worship at 10:45, a ceaseflre, I think It's In Iran's
Acting Company, which he 1973, said It was an uphill battle and a basket dinner at 12: 30. The · Interest,' though they don't hold
founded.
persuading execu 11ves at 20th Harvest Trio will be appearing In the hostages, ID do what they can
Although he once decried Century Fox to cast Houseman the afternoon beginning around to encourage their release.
American business, politics and as the haughty but respected 1: 30 p.m. Everyone Is welcome to
entertainment as being In "an
Professor Klnpfleld over the attend. The church Is located on Plan bake sale
unbelievable slump of medloc·
more famous James Mason, County Road 28, five miles north
Parents of Eastern High Varrlty, timidity and greed," his Paul Scofield and James Cagney. of Racine and two miles south of
Bas
han.
sity
and Junior Varsity basket·
greatest fame and widest expo"I said to the producers, 'Lei
ball teams are having a bake sale
sure came from a series of me show you what the real
.on Saturday at Gaul's Market In
television commercials for the Klngsfleld Is like,'" Bridges said. Plan Friday meet
Chester. The sale will start at 9
Investment firm of Smith
"We went back to JuUilard,
Meigs County R.E .A.C.T. will a.m .
Barney .
where (Houseman) was teaching
Appearing and sounding the classes. We had It In mind to cast hold a monthly meeting on
Grange to meet
very essence of a solid, trust- some of his students as law Friday, at 7:30p.m., at Pleaser's
worthy uncle, Houseman ended students In the film, but as we Restaurant. AIJ. members are
urged to attend.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
each commercial with the line:
went In a11d talked to John, I
will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Friday at the
"They make money the old
thought, 'Oh my God, yes, here
Rock Springs Grange Hall. State
Service meet slated
fashioned way. They EAAARNN he Is.'
Deputy Arthur Crabtree ..ylll
it."
Most moviegoers who saw him
A ~rvlce unit meeting for Big Install officers. Star Grange will
Actor Kirk Douglas, who In "The Paper Chase" probably
Bend East Girl Scout leaders wtll serve refreshments.
worked with Housemap In "The were unaware of his enormous
be
held Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Bad and the Beautiful," "Two success as . a producer and
$10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Syracuse
United Methodist
Weeks In Another Town," "Lust director of plays, movies and
Church.
for Life," said his friend was an radio and television programs.
original.
··
The role of the Harvard law
I
professor won him an Oscar for
''They don't make his kind
best supporting actor and rein·
anymore," Douglas said. "John carnation In a long-running TV
531
PIKE • RT.3! WEST
Veterans Memorial
Houseman was an Old World
series that has been aired In 52
, Monday Admissions - None.
gentleman, a patrician In a bow
foreign countries. "I 'II be 'the
MI. .........
Monday Discharges - Wood·
tie. John was a wonderful man, .professor• Into eternity," he once
row Zwtlllng, Derrick Bolin,
AJI.IIDII·I~~~~ail!:a~.~
an extraordinary man. He·wlll be
said.
Shauna Tackett.
mjssed."
Saturday Admissions - Edna
Houseman's cancer was dlag·
Meet on Nov. 9
Leach, ·Middleport.
nosed several months ago, and he
Saturday Discharges had been bedridden'
several
Chester Township Trustees Thelma Collins, Minnie
week5. Ills wife, Joaa1 _ . at his will meet Wednesday, Nov. 9,
SICond StrHt
ifll'lock.
.
2212
5th Street
side, t•lly spok-CifiiiM Judi 7: 30 P·"!-, at the town hall.
......
W.Va.
·Point Pluunt, W. V1:
Nt01
HIYIII, W. Ya.
·'
.
lldnday
Admk&amp;IJ•.-••mona
David* £Bid.
m-sst4
675-1121
812·2135
Smith, Middleport; .•
Smith,
No fulll!ral will be held, but a
Shade; Derrick Bolin, R!!tland.
memorial service was being Rummage 1ale !let
Sunday Discharges - Ellen
planned.
Simple Interest • Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal
Gibbs,
Harvey Erlewine, Ml·
A
rummage
sale
will
be
ileld
"Maybe most Americans will ·
chaeta Kuczma, Clara Gilmore,
remember him because of Jhat Friday and Saturday at Grace
MEMBER FDIC
Wllllam Williams:
Episcopal
Chun:h
lo
Pomeroy.
stupid Smith Barney ad, but to
By UnUed Presslnterna&amp;klnal
Last week's rains didn't
amount to much, but they came
often enough to further delay
harvesting, the Ohio Agricultu·
rat Statistics Service reported
Monday.
In Northern Ohio, soils remained too wet to support
machinery and the agency said
some farmers were expecting to
wall for a hardfreezetocomplete
the harvest.
In the week ended at 8 a.m.
Monday, rainfall ranged from
about a quarter-Inch over the
Northeast and North Central
regions, to one-tenth of an Inch In
the Northwest to barely a trace In
the South.
·

Pomeroy~Middleport,

(Editor's note - Third In a
series of six Ohlu'1 pre-election
8l'tlcles. )
·
By RICH EXNER
United Press International
.First one candidate paints the
other as a "liberal," saying he Is
of the mainstream.
Then botl\ candidates start
¢llklntg about so-called negative
nd false campaign

:

ft

Low In 30s tonight. Thursday, partly cloudy, warmer.
High In mid 60s.

Senate race mil'rors top of natioital ticket

.
..'

w'

399

Vol.39. No. 126
Copyrighted 1988

•

~SHOWERS

Daily Number

•

•
•

C.!,··JsNOW
-RAIN
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold

Ohio Lottery
Pick 4
2941

NATIONAL
WEATHER
SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST f1·HI
.
'

The

----~-·--

.

..

·r

chusetts governor, Bush con·
tended his opponent was golded
more by abstract theories than
''old-fashioned cominon sense.''
Dukakls, meanwhile, stressed
his "on your side'' theme In Ohio,
Wisconsin and Detroit, promls·
lng his administration would not
forget average workers and
arguing that Bush would be more
concerned with helping the rich.
But even as Dukakls Insisted
his populist strategy was cutting
Into Bush's lead - "you can feel
It, you can taste It, you can sense
It," he said at one rally - there
was fresh evidence Bush Is
holding a strong edge.
A CBS News survey showed
that from Friday to Monday,
while the Democrat has been
claiming he Is catching Bush, the
vice president held a 12-point
lead of 53 percent to 41 percent.
The poll of more than 1,000
voters had an error margin of 3
percentage points and the lead

for Bush was virtually un·
changed from a CBS-New York
Times poll last week, which
showed Bush with a bulge of 51
percent to 38 percent.
If there was good news for
Dukakls, It was that the survey
showed 22 percent of voters said
they had not yet firmly decided
on either candidate.
An ABC News-Washington
Post poll, however, found Bush
with a similar 13-point lead of 55
percent to 42 percent ainongl,099
voters surveyed Wednesday
through Monday. The error mar·
gin, like the CBS poll, was 3
points.
Meanwhile, an ABC poll
showed Bush holding a 52
perce_pt-45 percent lead In Texas
- a s'tate crucial to Dukakls's
chances. The survey, whJch had
a margin of error of 5 points, also
found that the Republican's lead
would be 5 percent greater If
Continued on page 5

TOURS INDIANA- Republican vice presidential candldlde Dan Quayle spelks at a minority·
owned steel plant In JeffenonvUle Tuesday. He
told the partisan crowd that be bas the chance to

become the first Hoosier VIce l'relldent In 75
years, aa John Mutz, Indiana'• lieutenant
governor, standi behind htm. Mutz ~ rrmnin1 for
the Indiana roverrronhlp. (UPI)

'

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