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Paga

----~-~-~

Receive
Up To
We Reserve The Right To
limit Quant1t1es

$1200

STORE HW:JRS
Monday 'thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

1',4 .por k

LB

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;
lB.

Fryer .Parts •••••.l!·•••• 49&lt;

HOMEMADE PORK

Turkeys •.••.••.•.••·:•••. 99&lt;

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A Multlmodlo Inc. Nawapopor

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 3, 1988 .

•

:.

Chuck Roast •••.l:.••• Sl 79
BONELESS
Stew Meat •••••••~.... $2'19

.

Vol.39. No.128
Copyrightod 1988

Showers likely tonight. Low
In low 508. Chance of rain 60
percent. Friday, high In mid
60s. Chance of rain 80 percent.

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15-16-25-26-30..32

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Pick4

HERE IS HOW
IT WORKS.
BRING THE
ATTACHED
COUPONS AND

Lo1n
• ......... $119

MIXED

Daily Number

Page 3

On The
Purchase of
Your
Thanksgiving
Turkey

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 30, THRU SAT., NOV. 5, 1988

Ohio Lottery

3470

OFF

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH . ·

SWIFT'S BUTTERBALL-6 to 22 LB. AVG.

Walt Weiss
AL Rookie
of the Year

•

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••••••••••••••• •••••••

sealed behind the speaker and cbattln&amp; with Melp County
Treasurer George Collins. Also pictured, seated left to right, are
Melp Couaty Comrntssloner Rlcbard Jon~• . Mrs. George
Volnovlcb, Miller and Collins, steve Story, unopposed candidate
for Melp Couaty Pr011ecut1ng A.tlorney, Melp County Court
Judge Palrlcl&lt; O'Brien and Melp County Sberlff Howard Frank.

POLfflCA.L RALLY - Clevelaud Mayor Georce Volnovich,
Republican candldale for U.S. Senate, was well·recelved
Wedaeaday In Melp County. Area residents, lncludln1 a number
of students from Melp and Eastern Local School Dlslrlcls, braved
cbUiy wlads off the Ohio River and gathered on tbe upper parlda1
lot Ia Pomeroy tO bear remarks from tbe seaatorlal candidate,
showa here at lbe podium, and U.S. Congressman Clarence Miller,

Voinovich
and Miller
•
campargn
in Meigs
Cii.veiand Mayor a~d U.S.
Senatorial candidate George Vol• novich joined U.S. Congressman
Clarence Miller at the Pomeroy
parking lot Wednesday to meet
with fellow Republicans and talk
to Meigs Countlans on the campaign trail for both candidates.
Arriving In Pomeroy around
10:20 a.m., with his wife, Janet,
Volnovich, mayor of Cleveland,
made his promise to southern
Ohio to take note and work for the
area. He told the more than 60
people on the airport landing how
he wants to make Ohio the
number one state In federal
funding, the way he did for
Cleveland.
"I led the nation In bringing
back federal money In Cleveland," Volnovich said. "I want to
do the same for Ohio."
Volnovlch said he wants to
work with local, state and federal
officials so there wUl be a senator
working for southeastern Ohio.
He said he would lobby for coal
miners and do all he could for
farmers.
"I want to be a lobbyist for
miners," Volnovlch . said. "No
senator has paid attention to the
needs of the miners In southeastern Ohio."
Volnovlcb said he would help
farmers and promote a write oft
for health Insurance program.
"Metzenbaum hasn't bad
farmers on his lips In 12 years."
The polls show that Metzen·
baum Is ahead of Volnovlcb, but
Volnovlch said the only polls that
matter are the voting polls.
· "All polls are ridiculous. The
only polls that matter are the
ones voters go to," Volnovlch
said. "I hope that Ohio realizes
Continued on page 12

Petition .asks ·Meigs
Commissioners to OK
contract, end strike
Approximately 75 pages of a effort by strikers to obtain a fair
·---petition containing· about 1,ll00 - contract comparable to Departsignatures of Meigs County resl- ment of Human Services condents who support the Meigs tracts of surrounding counties, Is
County Department of Human a reasonable effort, and urged
Services' strike, were presented the commissioners to accept the
Wednesday to the Meigs County union contract proposal and
Commissioners by Barry Bolin bring an end to the strike.
and Brad Miller, rerpresentlng
In presenting the petitions,
Ohio Council 8, American Feder- Bolin said he felt that citizens, by
at ton of State, County and Munic· signing the petitions, were saylpal Employees .
lng that "It's time "to be adults
The petitions stated that the
Continued on page 12

Two seats are up
for grabs in Ohio
Supre~e Court races
DisPLAYS PETITIONS - Brad Miller, staff
represenlstlve for Oblo Council 8, American
Federallon of State, County and Municipal
Employe~. spreads out a petition ·of about 73
pages and containing approximately 1,1100 signa·

tures of people wbo support the Melp County
Department of Human Services' strike. Miller,
and Barry Bolin, atso of A.FSCME, presented the
petitions Wednesday to lbe Melp County
Commissioners.

. .

Eastern seeks
yes
vote
on
.
12.4 mill tax levy Tuesday
.

.

Without a yes vote on the 12.4
mUl school tax levy at Tuesday's
election, the quality of the
educational program offered to
Eastern Local students will continue to suffer and will deterlorlate even more.
This Is the message from
members of the district's board
of education In a statement ·
Issued today .

r--Local news briefs-Sheriff probes B &amp; E
Sheriff Howard Frank reports his department received a call
Wednesday evening at 7:17p.m. of a breaking and entering at
an unoccupled ·house on Sum11er Road. The house Is owned by
Linda Fitch.
According to the slierlff's report, Fitch observed a red tru~k
leaving the house about 7:15p.m. Upon Investigation, she found
·
some furniture missing from the bouse.
The Incident Is under Investigation by the sheriffs
department and anyone who may have observed a red plck;-uP
truck In the Sumner Road area anytime Wednesday evening, Is
asked to call the sheriff's department with the lnformatlon 11

Police continue investigation
Pomeroy Pollee are continuing tbelr Investigation of a
robbery at the home of Mrs. Marie Robinson, Mulberry Ave.
Mrs. Robinson awoke early Tuesday morning to find a man
standing over her bed. He gagged her and tied her hands and
demanded money. Mrs. Robinson revealed the_l?Catlon of her

.

•

A bid of $13,150 from Pat Hill · tiy the commissioners no later
Fotd to provide a 1989 Ford LTO than Noll. 16. The transfer
Crown VIctoria as a new sheriff's request must be submitted to the
cruiser was accepted Wednesday Ohio Department of Litter Con·
by the Meigs County trol by Nov. 20.
A $900 Interdepartmental
corllrn!~s_ioners .
The bid was accepted subject transfer within the SoU Conser·
to final approval by Meigs vatto'n Service budget was
County Sheriff Howard Frank. approved.
No delivery date on the new
cruiser was given In the bid,
At the request of Meigs County
reported Mary Hobstetter, clerk- Prosecuting·Attorney Fred Crow
treasurer.
III, the commissioners adopted a
A request for a D·l liquor resolution naming Teresa Tyson
license transfer from Karen S. Drummer as administrator of
Werry, doing business as Sum· . the Meigs County Community
merfleld's Restaurant, Chester, Corrections Program.
In other matters, the commls·
to James Raymond Stewart,
doing business under the same stoners discussed briefly the ·
name at the same address, has proposed Ohio River boat launch
been .received by the commls· . faclllty near Forked Run State
stoners. Any objections to the Park at Long Bottom, and
license transfer must be received landfill regulations.

Continued on page 12

-.

"Just as Importantly, the qualment Fund In order to get
Ity of life. In our community will through this school year. No_t
suffer, and our kids will be hurt," only are we going to have to pay
the board states.
this loan back, we'll have to pay It
The statement continues:
back with Interest. Obviously,
"Over the last three years the this Is not an answer.
district, because of the need to
"Clearly, what we have to do Is
try to be as fiscally responsible pass the levy. Locally, we need to
as , possible and because of the do more for ourselves, more for
defeat of the renewal levy In our kids and more for our
November, 1987 followed by the cOmmunity. The 12.4 mills being
defeat of that levy attempt In requested Is what the district
. May, 1988, bas seen the district's needs In order tobeabletooffer a
educational program virtually minimally adequate educational
gutted. Nine teaching, adminiS- program. And, this would still
trative and support staff posl- · put our local effort at approxlm·
lions have been abolished. Addi- nl!ately the average of our
tionally, kindergarten has been neighbors.
changed back to full day. alter·
"The average voted tax rate
nate days and the board has bad for school districts In Gallia,
to eliminate Its support for Athens and Washington Counties
athletics and extra currdclular Is 3U mllls. Eastern's voted
actfvltles. No textbooks, no II· mlllage Is 20.5 mUls, the lowest of
brary books and no replacement any, and the lowest allowed by
school buses have been pur· law. In fact, If It were to go any
chased, repair_of eq ulpment anp lower tbe district would lose Its
facilities bas not been able to be state foundation payment.
done, no replacement eq)llpment
"Currently, the state provides
has been purchased.
77 percent of the total support for
"Needless to say, these defi- our schools. In fact, on the basis
ciencies have had a very nega- of the amount of state support as
tive effect on the overall educa- a percentage of total revenues,
tional •program of tbe district.
Eastern Is receiving a greater
And, If the Nov. 8 levy doesn't precentage than 92 percent of all
pass, things will get much worse. school districts In Ohio. In other
Our kids will be burt even more.
words, we receive a higher
"We are already projected to percentage. of our total revenues
have to borrow $38,000 from the from the state than 566 out of a
Emergency SChool Advancetotal of nl6dlstrlcts In the state."
' \~

EDITOR'S NOTE: This 18 the
fourlb In a series of articles
prepared by United Press International's Ohio bureaus about
the candldales and Issues Involved In next Tuesday's election. To day's arllcle summarizes
the contests for lwo seats on the
Ohio Supreme Court.
~--

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - In one race for

the Ohio Supreme Court this
year, experience on the bench Is
a major campaign issue. In the
other one, both jurists have the
same experience and are trying
hard to raise other Issues.
Justice A. William Sweeney. a ·
Democrat who has served on the
high court since 1977, Is being
challenged by Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court Judge Paul
Malia, a Republican.
Continued on page 16

Wal-Mart to locate
new facility in Gallia
The 68,907 square-foot store Is
BENTONVILLE. ARK. ~peeled
to open In the spring of
David D. Glass. president and
1989.
Landmark
Capital Corp. of
chief executive officer of WalNasvllle,
Tenn
..
Is the developer
Mart Stores, Inc., announced
of
the
project.
plans to open a Wal-Martstore In
Gallipolis expected to hire ap- .
"We are very excited about
proximately 125 people.
opening
the new store In GallipoConstruction of the new store,
lis,"
said
Glass. "Wai-Martplans
which will be located off Eastern
to
be
an
active member of the
Avenue at Airport Road, Is
community,
working with other
scheduled to begin later this
local
merchants
to Increase
year.
retail busineSs In and around the
Gallipolis area. We also .look
forward to contributing to local
charitable causes and projects
through our ongoing community
.Involvement programs," he
added.
The new store, designed as a
one-stop family shopping center,
will carry name-brand mercban'
dlse In 36 departments. In addition, the Gallipolis store will
Include a gatden center, a
pharmacy, a snack bar and a
ttre, battery and auto service
center for customer shopping
convenience.
The new store will be one of the
first Wal-Mart stores to open In
Ohio and one of1,2051n the United
States. The 26-year-old chain,
which operates In 25 states, will
open · approximately 145 stores
DAVID D. GLASS
this year.
••
l

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Tht.riday, ~ovember 3, 1988

Commentary,

Paga 2-The Dally Sentinef
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday. November 3. 1988

·-

The Daily Sentinel
111 Couri Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

1:!

~~
'qlv

.

. . . . . . . . -r·~=·~
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Mauapr

PAT WHITEHEAD
AMisialli Publlllher/ ConiroUer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Asooclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoukl be le11 than D words
tone. All letters are subject toedUtns and must be sJined wttb name, addreuand
telephone number. No unalgned letters wUI be published. Letters sboukl be in

IO(Jd taJie,

addresllnalstue~,

;The lOOth Cong•-ess colnes to an end
. The 1110th Congress adjourned
forgoodat3:16a.m.onSaturday,
October 22nd, leaving Its mark
several significant · legislative
accomplishments.
Among the more Important
achievements of this session was
the passage of the omnibus drug
bill. This bill will help flll!t the
war on drugs by ·combining
prevention and treftment prollfams with tougher penalties for
drug traffickers and users. Congress also adopted a sweeping
overhaul of our nation's welfare
system that combines mandatory work requirements with
education and job training for
recipients. This act also streng-

as

not persoaalitles.

Respf&gt;nds to letter

Letters to the editor
Seeks support for levy
To the Residents of Middleport,
I would like to urge I!Jl
Middleport residents to vote for
and support the one-mill renewal
levy for fire protection which wUI
be on the ballot November 8.
Since this levy Is a renewal and
has been In effect several years,
It will not Increase your taxes.
Funds from this levy, which
amount to approximately $9000
per year. are being used to pay
for the fire truck which was
purchased several years ago at a
. cost of $143,000.
We are certainly fortunate to
: have such a good group of
· vplunteers who are willing to
give so much of their time. In

order that we may have the best
fire protection In the area.
Let's all show our appreciation
by voting yes Nov. 8 to help to
provide our volunteers with the
equipment which they need to
protect our property.
All your support In the past has
certainly been appreciated by
fire department members and
vUlage officials and we ask for
your continued support to help
keep us the best equipped and
most efficient fire department In
the area.
Thanks for your support
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
VIllage of Middleport

Asks for 'Yes' vote on levy
· Dear Sir:
I have been visiting friends and
nelibbors the llist few days
sharing my opinions concerning
the upcoming levy for Eastern
Local School District. I wish to
express my gratitude to all who
have pledged support of the levy,
to answer some of the questions
I've encountered, and to try to
counter some of the excuses that
have been presented opposing
· the levy passage.
· Excuse •1: We can't afford
more tax." Very true, but we
cau' t afford NOT to pass the levy
. because lack of education costs
more than the few dollars of
extra tax. A taxpayer whose
·property Is valued at $50,000 wUI
pay about $16.00/month or about
the price of an extra large pizza
and a pack of pop. Is this too
much to educate our future?
Excuse 112: ''They waste what
they get now." In any burea·
cracy, there Is a certain amount
of waste, but If you will take an
honest look at our school, you will
find very little waste. If you think
our money Is being wasted,
please bring It to the attention of
school officials so the problem
can be corrected, Instead of
voting against the needed levy
and making this problem worse.
Excuse #3: "We have bad
teachers, school officials, school

Cong. Clarence Miller

!hens existing child support
.
enforcement laws. Congress ex·
paDded the medicare program to accomplishment In this regard walling period for the purchase
protect our nation's senior cltl· was Congress's approval of the of handguns was defeated, while
zens from the financially shatter· U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agree- a ban on hard-to-detect plastic
lng costs of catastrophic Illness. ment. If approved by the ·Cana- guns was passed. Congress also
This extension of the Medicare dian Parliament, this agreement extended restrictions on lobby·
program provides unlimited bos· will eliminate virtually all barr!· lng by former federal officials to
pltallzatlon after payment of an erl to trade between our two Include Members of Congress
annual deductible.
countries. In regard to the and certain Congressional staff
On economic matters, the top federal budget, Congress's most members. This past summer,
accomplishment of Congress notable accomplishment was Congress, reactlngtotbedrought
was the enactment of the Omnl· that It passed all of the 13 major crisis , provided substantial
bus Trade Bill. This bill will help appropriations bills on time for emergency relleffor our nation's
the U.S. to more aggressively the first time In over three farmers. Congress also put new ·
combat unfair trade practices decades. However, while Con· curbs on the productlo!l and
and better open foreign markets , ' gress did achieve some reduction distribution of child· porno·
to American goods. However,
In the budget deficit, deep cuts graphy. Finally, Congress eleclosely competing for the top were deferred until the next vated the Veterans Admlnlstra·
lion to cabinet-level status by
Congress.
On envlronmenlallssueis, Con- creating the new Department of
gress approved additional endan- Veterans Affairs. Congress has
gered species protections. It also provided veterans the rlgl)t
banned dumping of sewage to seek Judicial review.
As far as the offices being run
In all, the 100th Congress
sludge In the oceans after 1991
In a tlmelyk and efficient
and
It passed a pestiCide control accomplished a great deal and its
manner, they are, and why
work was marked by a high
sbouldn' t they be, those em· bill and a clean water bill. To
combat the spread of the AIDS degree of consensus and coopera·
ployees took a Civil Service test
epidemic, Congress authorized lion. Hopefully such a !iptrlt will ·
!llso!!
I suppose no one will have to additional funds for research and prevail In the next Congress
treatment of this dreaded dis' when It goes back to work on sucb
remind the commissioners that
ease.
Italsoauthorlzedexpanded pressing national concerns as the
they are elected, but when It
comes election time, they wUI funds to help the homeless . An budget deficit.
more than likely get more votes effort to Impose a · seven day
for holding out, than they would,
If they gave In to petty threats
and accusations.
If the strikers and their faml·
lies are slttlni In the street
starving, that was thetrdeclslon!
The commissioners or Mr.
Swisher have nothing to do with
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A new Ohio PoU showed Wednesday that
that.
George
Bush has doubled his lead over Michael Dukakls In the last
Tl)ere Is a really great consola·
and
enjoys a 14 percentage polntadvantagegolnglntotbeflnal
month
tlon to all of this, as I see It, If
worse comes to worse, and the days of presidential campaigning.
The survey of 600 registered voters throughout Ohio shows that 50
striking employees and tbelr
percent
favor Bush, 36 percent favor Dukakls and 14 percent are
families get bungryenougb, they
undecided.
could apply for State Afd, and
That 14-polnt Bush lead more than doubles the margin be held over
then they would see first hand
In a similar Ohio Poll a month ago. In that poll, Bush was
Dukakts
how the majority of Melp
favored
by
47 percent, Dukakls by 41 percent and 12 percent were
County Jives, know What being
undecided.
·
without, hungry and condemned
It
will
be
"very
difficult
for
Dukakls
to
close
the
gap,"
said AI
Is really like. Then maybe they
Tucbfarber,
who
conducts
the
Ohio
Poll
for
the
University
of
would go back to the jobs that
Cincinnati's
Institute
for
Polley
Research.
they are so lucky to have.
The new poll not only shows Bush Increasing his lead over the last
Barbara Stahl ·
month,
but emphasizes bow much Bush bas rallied In the past five
Pomeroy
months. An Ohio Poll taken last May showed Bush tralllngDukakls49
percent to 36 percent, with 15 percent undecided.
In the five months since that May poU, Dukakls ·bas slipped 13
points, while Bush bas gained 14 points - a total of a 27-polnt ·
current system of funding
turnaround In Bush's favor.
·
schools through propert¥ taxes,
Both Bush and Dukakls consider Ohio a key battleground.
because It Isn't worklni In Meigs
"It's a critical state for our campaign," said Bush's Ohio campaign
County. But, I believe we will not
chief, Keith McNamara. "No Republican has ever won the White
see this system chanp In the House without carrying Ohio."
near future. I believe I have no
Ohio Democratic Party chairman James Ruvolo predicted
more desire to pay additiOnal
Dukakls wUI rally like Harry Truman did In 1948 and said, "I think we
taxes than any other taxpayer
may have a surprise."
.
has. But, I believe It will be a
McNamara said Dukakls has tried to "copy Harry Truman, but I
small sacrifice for what should
don't think be carries It off."
be a "top priority" In our
The new Ohio Poll showed that people who consider themselves
community. I believe as surely
Independents favor Bush over Dukakls 56-16, with 28 percent
as I don't budget my home the
undecided. Of those who consider themselves Democrats, 15 percent
same way today that I did 15
said they would vote for Bush. Of those who consider themselves
years ago, a school distriCt can't
Republicans, 5 percent said they would vote for Dukakts.
either. InOatton or the "cost of
The poU also solicited "favorable" ratings for each candidate and
living'' eats away at our school
found that Bush had Increased his approval percentage from 53 to61
district budget also. I believe
over the past month, while his unfavorable rating declined from 37 to
that I had an opportunity for an
30. While Dukakls' favorable rating Increased 6 pollnts to 49, his
education wben I graduated In '68
unfavorable rating rerl)lllned the same as a month ago at 42.
because my community sacrlficed to provide. I believe It Is
now my responslbllty to give
"our kids" the same opportunity.
I believe Ibis Is not the "states"
or somebody elses problem to
By United Press International
solve. This Is our problem and we
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 3, the 308th day of 1988 with 58 to follow.
have the solution.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
Meigs county raised me. I
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
chose to keep Meigs County my
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
home. I chose to raise my
Texan Stephen Austin, who gave his name to the state capltal,ln1793,
children In Meigs County. I also
poet William Cullen Bryant In 1794, Chicago Bears great Bronislaw
choose to support Eastern Local
"Bronko'' Nagurskl In 1908 (age 80), actor Charles Bronson In 1922
School Dlatrlct by votln&amp; "yes"
(age 66), and conductor-composer John Barry In 1933 (age 55).
on November 8. Furthermore, I
choose to encourage other voters
On this date In hts lory:
to please consider what sacrifice
In 1783, with American Independence established, Congress
you could make to support our
ordered the Continental Army demobilized.
school. I believe there Is no better
In 1948, the Chicago Tribune printed the Incorrect headline,
resource to use wisely or no
"Dewey defeats Truman."
better Investment, than "our
kids".
Joe R. Bailey
Box 195
Racine, Ohio em

boards, .... " Whether a teacher or
school off.lclalls good or bad Is a
personal opiniOn. Even If proven
true, this Is something that needs
to be handled In proper channels
Instead of voting against the
educatiOn of our children.
Excuse #4: "I'll just move to
another school district." Yes. By
all means, move away. Run from
the problem. But what about
those who cannot move? And
have you considered that you will
pay the existing rate In your new
district? It wUI be higher because
Eastern now bas the LOWEST
rate allowed by State Law.
Excuse 115: "I don't have any
kids or grandklds In school."
This ts the best reason yet for
voting no, but stlll you must
remember, when you went to
school and received your FREE
education, tbat alone obligates
you to pay for the next generation. What I have always failed to
understand Is why a cemetery
levy Is virtually guaranteed to
pass and a school levy Is always
an uncertain strugile. Do we
have so much compassion for our
dead past that It pushes out ALL
CONCERN for our LIVING
FUTURE?
Please vote "YES" for the
kids.
C.D. Mcintyre

Has
mixed emotions on strike
'
aboutlt.Manypeoplearehelplng
Dear Editor:
to pay for our Insurance, directly
I have been following the Meigs
or
Indirectly, who cannot afford
County HUman Service problem
to pay for their own. Anyone with
with management, prior to, and
a job should be paying all or
since the strike.
nearly all of their Insurance
I have mixed emotions abolitlt.
premiums.
I am by no means anti-union,
No matter which pocket of
having belonged to four during
Government
the money comes
my working years, and In retirefrom;
It
Is
still
my money. Nuf
ment, stU! belong. But I am
said!
wondering If unions have not
Blaming management for evreached their peak and perhaps
erythlng
that Is wrong and
are In decline. The working
applauding ourselves for all that
man's living and workplace
ts right, Is no way to make friends
conditions have Improved but the
Influence people.
and
pendulum cannot continue mov·
Let us who are on strlkl! Issue a
lag In the same direction. It must
atop at some point and that point manifesto wblcb states, we with·
Is when employees demand ever- draw our demands and agree to:
1·belp psy health Insurance
ything Including a piece of the
premiums
for the elderly, the out
moon.
of work and others unable to do
There Isn't space here to
address the many facets of this so.
2-We agree to Improve producatrlke. I wUI address those which
since that Is what deter·
tivity
I feel stroneJy about. First, the
mines
whether living standards
employeeS or Union Is trying to
Improve.
tell the boss how to run the store
3-We agree to allow those who
withOut the aecompanylng rearelnchargetoremalnlncharge
sponsibility. Generally, the boss
II better qualified to run the store untU we ourselves have been
placed In charge.
than are the emp(Oyees.
4-We hereby witbdraw,slngley
When the boas obJects to being
told bow to do bll Job, we then try and collectively, thelssuethrown
coercion by withholding our belatedly Into the pot, which
aervlcet. That Is IOIDewbat arre- stated that we wauld not be
gant sinCe we all ar.e ~pendable responsible for our own actions.
- witness the fact that the store We realize now that It ahot down
II stU! operating, since we any credltlllty that we may have
bad. We have had nearly three
walked out.
months
to reconsider aad we now
We have been gettln&amp; step and
see
that
we should be at our jobs.
C081 of llvlni Increases wblcb Is
We
appreciate
your patience
more than many others have
durlni
these
trylnf
times.
done. Whether we say It or not,
Case closed - Case dismissed.
we have been earnlni roughly
Floyd Clark
ten percent more than our pay
65fH NE 9th
atut.lhow, simply by having our
Portland,
OH 97211
health Insurance paid. Think

..

v

11 seems that maybe the people
on strike at D.H.S. must be
getting ·tired of blaming their
problems on Mr. SwiSher and Mr.
Jones, so now they have to resort
to blaming the emplnyees at the
courthouse.
Creatlyn Hlll must evidently
think she Is the only person that
bas ever passed a Civil Service
test, and sbe had tried to make
tile employees at the courthouse
look like a bunch of morons, and
that's not fair, because It's not
their fault that D.H.S. Is on
strike, and likewise, they
shouldn't be condemn~ ·because
they work at the courthpuse!!
And why should tbe striking
D.H.S. workers get pal!l more
just because the pasledt a civil
service test, when some of the
employees at the courthous have
been there for a lot of year?
Besides that, the . D.H.S. em·
ployees probably started out
making more money than the
employe,.es at the courthouse
make now, after all their years of
service to the county.
As for Mr. Swisher's number
one priority, I'd think that would
go without saying. ·His clients
should and do come first, the
striking employees have a JOB If
they'd just go to work! !

-

Ohio Poll: Bush ups
lead over Dukakis

Encourages yes vote
Dear Editor:
_ I write as a graduate of the
Eastern Local Dlatrtct. I am
teaching my 17th year In the
Eastern District. More lmportantly, I write as a tupayer and
a parent In tbe Dlatrlct.
On November 8, 1988, the
Eastern Local School Dlatrlct
urgently needs "yes" voles on
the 12.4 continuing tax levy.
Without the seriously needed
levy, the students will suffer far
more greatly than they already
are and have. There Is no "magic
wand" to quickly correct tbe
problem. There Is no "crystal
b~l" to see Just bow far this
"suffering'' will lead. Facts
obviously Indicate that when
students suffer, the quality of life
lnthecommunltysuffers.ltcosts
to educate, but do we always
consider wbat It costs to not
educate? I bear so often of Meigs
County being suppressed. Do we
ronslder thst we can change that
suppression?
.
I spend much tlme·attemptlng
to understand why some areas
have more while others have
less. In my opinion, the areas
that are growing and offering
opporunlty are the areas that,
above all ltlse, have a quality
educational program. The areas
that have the quality schools are
the areas In· which there com·
munltles are behind the schools
r by paying the mUlage necessary
to provide what they do. In
comparison to our own local, to
other areas, or even other states,
we pay pltlfuUy low taxes.
1 have some very strong
beliefs. I believe that I dislike the

Today in history

Berry's World

Great consideration sought
To the Citizens of Sallsbilry
Township:
In regard to the reminder
Issued by Mayor Hoffman per·
talnlng to the cemetery levy for
Salisbury Township voters.
He staled that none of the
cemeteries In Middleport would
benefit from the levy. Perhaps,
this II true but I'm sure there are
a lot of people who may live In
Middleport but have Loved Ones
· In cemeteries located In Salls·
bury Township and would appreciate their loved onl!l res ling
place looking as beautiful as
could be posalble.
If this levy would paaslt would
mean a tax of one mUI wblcb Is
ten cents on every one hundred

®liars for five years.
Mayor Hoffman also stated
that $12,000 would be paid out by
Middleport residents. I'm sure
be meant by all Salisbury
citizens.
Salisbury Township bas never
had a levy for cemetery maln-

tance ••only''.

I hope you as voters will give
great consideration for your
loved ones after all If we don't
who will?
Even thoqb we do not reside In
Middleport and benefit from tax
money we still shop there.
Roger L. Stobart
RD1
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Wants talks to resume
Dear Sir:
We ·taxpayers have watched
a111101t 90 claya while the human
services strllle drap on and on!
Both aides have bad ample time
to compromise and JleiOUate. It
II time for use 'to say .

,,

EJ!DII&amp;'h! ! ! Stop wasting our .
money for Security, Lawyers and
consultanta.
· Negotiate a contract now or
take It to blndln&amp; arbitration.
Concerned Tupayer
C.D.Mcintyre

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

.Weiss named AL
Rookie-of-the-Year
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Short·
stop Walt Weiss. whose s teady
fielding helped Oakland win the
pennant, Wednesday was named
American League Rookie of the
Year to give· the Athletics the
honor for the third straight
season.
Weiss follows slugging team·
mates Jose Canseco (1986) and
Mark McGwlre (1987) in winning
the award given by the Baseball
Writers ' Association of America.
Oakland becomes the first AL
team to claim three straight top
rookies since the league award
began In 1949. The Los Angeles
Dodgers, who beat th e Athletics
In the World Series, are only
team to do better, gaining four
straight from 1979-82.
Weiss called the award " a
tremendous honor," adding that
" after the World Series was
offer, this had been my only
concern."
He said that the fact that
Oakland had produced three
straight Rookies of the Year was
•'a tribute to the organization and
Its mlnor·league farm system ."
The Athletics had been so
confident that Weiss could han·
die the shortstop job that they
traded Alfredo Griffin to Los
Angeles before the season
started.
"I knew I had some big shoes to
flU, but I did my best." Weiss
said. "The thing I am proudes tor
Is that I felt I played better as the
season went on. I really thing I
was a better player at the end of

'Bengals are our heroes,' Noll says

the. season than I was at the

start."
Unlike his Oakland predecessors, Weiss mainly won because
of his glove, going 58 games
without an er ror. He hit .250 with
three home runs and 39 RBI to
help Oakland post the best record
In baseball at 104-58. He com·.
mlted 15 errors In 147 games, but
only one after July 8. His
error less streak ended Sept. 21.
Weiss took. 17 of 28 first-place
votes to easily ouldlstance reliever Bryan Harvey of the
California Angels and Boston
shortstop Jody Reed. Weiss
earned 17 first-place votes and
103 polnts. Harvey received three
first-place votes and 49 points
while Reed got six top votes and
48 points.
The voting was conducted
before the playoffs, In which
Weiss hit .333 to help Oakland
sweep Boston. Like many of his
teammates, Weiss sl.u mped
against Dodgers pitching, gqtng 1
for 16 In the Wor)d Series .
Harvey went 7·5 with a 2.13
ERA and led the Angels with 17
saves. In 761nnlngs, he walked 20
and struck out 67.
..
Reed, a shortstop, hit .293 with
one homer and 28 RBI. He
commlted only 11 errors to help
the Red Sox to the AL East title.
He played In only 109 games with
33ll at-bats.
Don August, who went 13-7 for
Milwaukee, winning his last six
decisions, earned 22 points. Dave

heroes."

"Does somebody have a patent
on It? If we have to pay a royalty
on it, we'll probably not use it.''
Although Cinci nnati still uses
Its r apid-start, no· huddle offense
a lo t, No ll said It's "obvious" that
the Bengals a re n't resorting to as
many "gimm ick" plays as they
did in the past.
"They 're knocking people off
the ball, running the ball well and
thr owing the ball deep, " obse rved NolL
When someo ne rem inded No ll
that sounded like the " old Steelers," Noll replied, " We had a
p~tent on lt . But It expired. So,
there 's no charge.' '
Pittsburgh quar terback Bub by

,Bris ter said he hopes to see more
razzle-dazzle plays like the ones
inserted in recent Steeler game ,
plans.

ow n.

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Nehlen says

FREE!
Flashlight

football image
will take care

wtthcoupon

of itself
MORGANTOWN . W.Va.
(UPI) - Coach Don Neblen Is
telling his No. 4 West VIrginia
squad a lot about winning. but
nothing about where It will take
the unbeaten Mountaineers.
After ·shelling Penn State 51-30
last week, the Mountaineers are
facing 2-6 Cincinnati this week.
Last week, Nehlen coached West
VIrginia to Its first-ever 8-0
record. Every victory now Is a
record and speculatiOn Is high
that the ream wnt meet No. 1
Notre Dame In a national championship game.
Staring out his office window at
the driving rain and chilling cold
In Morgantown, Nehlen admitted
he wouldn't mind going somewhere warm for a week.
"But not this week," he said.
The Penn State triumph was
big, he said, but it wasn·t the
program's biggest win. It only
puts more pressure on the
Mountaineers to keep winning.
That doesn't mean Notre Dame.
said Nehlen. That means the
Cincinnati Bearcats.
"I know the players are smart
enough to realize that If we get
beat by Cincinnati, beat by
Rutgers and beat by Syracuse, a
lot of the nice things we wan ted to
happen are not going to happen,"
he said .
"If I start talking about a bowl,
my team may not shOw up
Saturday."
Nehlen said If his team wins Its
games the next three weeks, the
poll and bowl scenes will handle
· themselves . Meanwhile, No. 3
' Miami Coach Jimmy Johnson
said the same thing - but
criticized the Mountaineers'
schedule.
"When I look around and see
these teams that are playing one
. teamlntbeTop20,1wouldn'tcall
that a very difficult schedule,"
Johnson told United Press Jnternatlonal this week. While the
Hurricanes must face No. 16 •
Louisiana State, No. 11 Arkansas
and No. 19 Brigham Young on top
of the three Top 20 teams they
already have played, WestVIrgl·
nla Is looking at one - No. 13
Syracuse.
·
Although Johnson may have an
argument to participate In any
national championship since his
team lost by a point to No.1 Notre
Dame, he may not get a chance If
the Irish and the Mounta(neers
meet In a battle of unbeatens.
Nehlen said he can't concern
himself with the national scene
for three more weeks.
" (Johnson's criticism) doesn't
matter," he added. "Anybody
· can criticize us all they want.
They have a good scbedu 1e ... Bu I
all these schedules are made 10
years In advance."

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purpose." Asked If he might use
it again, say for Instance Sunday
against Cl ncl nn~t l . Noll res ponded -with a question of his

Gallaglter of the White Sox, who
bit .303 with five homers and 31
RBI In 347 at-bats, came In fifth
and received 18 points and the
other two first-place votes.
Players receive five points for
first-place votes, three for se·
co nd and one for third. Two
writers In each AL city vote. ~
.(l.lso receiving votes were
Chicago pitcher Melldo Perez,
Mike &amp;hooler of Seattle and
Cecil Espy of Texas.

Batteri es, add l!lonal crystela extra

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•

CINC INNATI (UP!) -Things
a re going so bad fo r the 2· 7
Pittsburgh Steelers that coach
Chuck Noll calls the arch-rival
a nd 7·2 Cincinnati Bengals "our
''This has been a d isappoint ing
year for us, but we ju st keep the
Bengals In mind, " Noll told
Cincinnati reporters In a conference call Wednesday. "They've
gone from four victories last year
to playoff time , th is year. So,
they' re our heroes."
A couple of weeks ago. NoU
took a cue from his new-found
" heroes" and borrowed Cincinnati's famous no-huddle offense
In a win over Denver.
"We did It to plck up the
tempo, " explained Noll. "We
were having a tempo problem
and we thought that would help
us and It did. It served a

WEISS AL ROOKIE OF
THE YEAR- Oakland shortslop W,alt.Welsa, shown during
the I988 season, whose steady
lleldlng helped Oakland win
lhls year's Amerlcau League
pennant, was named the
American League Rookie of
the Year by the Basellall
Writers' Association of AmerIca. The award gave the
Athletics the. honor for the
third straight year. (UPI)

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�--------P~y-Middleport,

4-The Deily Sentinel

Page

Thursday, November 3, 1988

Ohio

'

Steelers sign Green Bay's Putzier

Sixteen Meigs seniors to
:e nd prep grid careers··Friday
Sixteen Meigs Marauder senior football players will end
their grid careers when MHS
travels south to battle Gallipolis
of the Southeastern Ohio·League
In a non-oonference outing
'Friday.
, It: Is the season finale lor both
'teams. Gallipolis will be observ·
&lt;ng Parents-Seniors Night prior
:to the game's opening klckoU.
: Meigs has 16 seniors making
1helr final high school appear'llnce on the grkllron - KevIn
Oller, ScottNelgler, James Sauvage, Wes Howard, Jeff McElroy,
,T erry Fields, VIncent Vanaman,
•Dave Hess, Jared Sheets, Wes
;Young, Decker Cullums, Matt
:Peterson, Jerry Jacks,' Mark
,Corsi, Rod Stewart and Kelly
:&lt;Jgdin.
: Meigs, a member of · the
SE;OAL from 1967 through the
l982-83 campaign, leads the ser·
les with eight wins and seven
losses. Last time these two river

t

TVC standings

(All games)
TEAM
WL
POP
Belpre ................. 9 0 223 53
Meigs .................. 6 3 213 139
Nelsonville ......... .6 3 136 126
Trimble ............... 5 4 121 110
VInton Co ......... ..• 5 4 80 88
Wellston ............ .. 3 6 152 147
Fed. Hocking ....... 2 8 105 199
Miller .................. 2 8 68 167
Alexander ......... .. 1 8 39 215
(TVC Only)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Belpre ................. 8 0 200 47
Meigs .................. 6 2 2o3 89
Nelsonvllle ..........6 2 136 81
Trimble ..... ..... ... ..4 4 115 110
VInton Co....... .... .5 3 80 66
Wellston .............. 3 5 143 134
Fed. Hocklng ....... 2 7 93 186
Alexander ........... 1 7 33 211
Miller ..................1 7 55 158
Nov. 4 games
Nelsonville-York at Athens
M~lgs at Gallipolis
Belpre at Warren Local
Nov. 5 game
Jackson at Wellston

rivals met was In 1982 when weeks ago, Coach Chancey said
GAHS posted a 29-0 triumph over "staying healthy" was the key
Charles Chancev's crew.
and his big concern this fall. Like
Meigs, now a member of Galllpolis, the young Marauders
Tri-.Valley Conference, enters have experienced a series of
Friday's contest with a 6·3 season Injuries throughout the
record. GAHSis 3-6. The Maraud· campatgrt:
ers finished second In TVC play
McElroy, Ogdln, Scott Nelgler,
with a 5·2 mark. Gallipolis was Dennis Boothe, Oller, Jared
fifth In SEOAL action at 1-4. In Sheets, Cullums and Jeff Cogar
the Ohio Computer Ratings this are nursing Injuries and are
week, Meigs was ranked 16th in expected to see little or no action
Division lll, Region 11. GAHS against the Blue Devils Friday.
was ranked 24rd in Divlsion ·II,
McElroy Is the Marauders top
Region 8.
scorer and rusher with 14 touch·
Meigs opened its 1988 cam· downs and 1,106 yards In 169
palgn with 13 veterans from last trips. Wes f!oward has 787 yards
year's 9-1 TVC championship in 137 trips to date. Ed Crooks bas
squad with five straight wins ·completed 43 of 114 aelals (four
26-8 over Alexander; 22·6 over Intercepted) for 654 yards and
Trimble; 31· 7 over Miller; 29-9 four touchdowns.
over Wellston and 28·6 over
Gallla Academy's top rusher,
Nelsonvllle· York.
(120-507) Josh Williams, remains
After suffering three straight sidelined with a knee Injury.
losses (Vinton County, 14-12;
Next In llne Is Todd Casey with
Waverly, 50-10 and Belpre, 33-27)
224 yards In 63 attempts. Jamie
the Marauders polished off Chevller has 162 In 22 tries.
Federal-Hocking 28·6 last Senior Bryan King wlll miss the
Friday.
last game, due to an injury.
Gallipolis opened with a 22·6
Casey bas completed 21 of 64
win over Coal Grove, then lost passes (five Intercepted) lor 248
13-7 to Point Pleasant. After yards and two touchdowns while
beating Wellston 13-9, GAHS lost sophomore Donnie Haynes has .
flvestralght- 33-7 to Huntington completed 27 of 56 (slx Inter·
High; 14·13 to Marietta; 13·0 to cepted) for 363 yard~ and three
Athens; 28-6 to Warren Local and touchdowns.
20-6 to league champion Logan
Galllpolis is averaging 10.5
before edging Jackson 23·14 last points a game, Meigs 23.5. The
week.
Devils are giving up_16.5 a game,
When the season began 10 Meigs 15 per outing.

QUESTIONABLE - Meigs
Jeff McElroy, tailback, the
Marauders top scorer and
rusher with 14 touchdowns
and 1,106 yards In 189 trips,
bas been on crutches all week
foUow!ng an Injury against
Federal Hocking, and Is not
ex peeled to see action In
Friday's game at Gallipolis.

- Sports briefsGolf
Hank Majewski, golf director
at the Wakefield Valley Coun(ry
Club .In Westminster, Md .. was
named PGA Golf Professional of
the Year for 1988.

I

I

GAHS-Meigs lineups

Sports briefs-

GAHS-Meigs
·grid history

ALSO IN STOCK:
AVIA 880
AVIA 860
AVIA 850

YEAR
G M
1967 .............................. 6 · 8
1968 .............................. 0
14
1969 .............................. 6
8
1970 ............... ............... 12
6
1971.. ............................ 12
14
1972 ...... ..... ................ ... 10
6
1973 .............................. 7

14

1974 ..... ..... .................... 44 . 8
1975 ..... ..... ...... .............. 19
0
1976 .............................. 8
6
1977 .............................. 6
7
1978 ......... ... .................. 19
27
1979 ............................ No game
1980 ..... ...• . ····· ········· ... ... 0
12
1981.. ........................ : ... 24
13
1982. ········· .. .... ..... .. ....... 29
0
1983-87 .. .... ...... ...... ... . No Games
1988 ............................. ?
?
Gallipolis has won 7, Meigs 8.
No ties.

MIDDLEPORT

992-5627

CONSDLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

HOME NATIONAL BANK
of Baclne In the State of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1988 published In response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12.
United States Code, Section 161.
Charter Number 9815
Comptroller of the Currenty 4th District
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
..
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coln ............ :..... 1,174,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances .............. :......................... .....................700,000.00
Securities ................ ............. ......................................... ... ................ 4, 764,000.00
Federal funds sold ....................... .. ...... ... ...................................... . 4 986 000 00
Loans and lease !lnanclng receJvaotes:
'
' ·
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income .... ............ 17,833,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............. :..... 332,000.00
Loans and lea.ses, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ........... ........................... ... ........................ 17,501,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ·· ··········u· ··· ····170,000.00
Other assets ............... ........ ................... .... ......... ....... ..... .., ................. .424,000.00
Total assets .................................................................................... 29, 719,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) ....... 29,719,000.00

"'

Ill

""_.:

ii
C

:::3

Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ................................................................... 26,234,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng' ................................. ... .... 2,642,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ............................................. 23,592,000.00
Other llabllltles .............................. .................. ................................... 387,000.00
Totatllabllltles ........................... .. ................................................... 26,621,000.00

~~~

'

1

~

1
• •••••••••••••

Common stock ............................ ....... .. ... ...... .................. ......
125,000.00
Surplus ...................................................... ,;,;, .................................... 125,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .............................................. 2,848,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) ............ .... ...................... ....... ............ . 3,098;000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(J) ... , ...................... 29,719,000.00

SAVE UP 10 8850 WITH A\IAILABLE EQUIPMENT PACKAGES ..

1989 CHRYSLER
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1989 CHRYSLER
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1989 PLYMOUTH .,
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AMERICA'S BEST SElliNG CONVERTIBLE

1989 COIJ HATCHBACK,
IMPORTED FOR PLYMOUTH

1989 PLYMOUTH
REUANT AMERICA

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I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Re·
port of Condition Is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Gary P. Norris; Cashier
tBase sticker price excluding destination charges, Iitie and taxea. •Cash back for buyers on now 1989 dealer stock.
• • Savings based on sticker price of options II purcha8ed separately.

We, the undersigned dlr~ctors , attest the correctness of this statement of resources
and ,liabilities. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to,the best of our
knowledge and belief has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions and
Is true and correct.
John T. Wolfe
'
George Nelgler - Directors
Carroll Norris

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\.

·Browns expecting strong pass rush from Oilers. .Sunday

' •.
•.

'

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Jerry
Glanvlllp, the Houston Oilers'
head coach, says his team Is
blitzing with less frequency than
In prevlaus seasons.
The Cleveland Browns put
very Httle credence In that
statement. Noting · that four
Houston players have combined
for 22 sacks, Cleveland coach
Marty Schottenheimer had a
, definite 01-lnlon on what to expect
wl}en hi• team meets the Oilers ·
at the As.irodome Monday night.
"We expect them to blitz ," said
Schottenbelmer. "We expect
them to trY and get to (quarter·
back) Bernie Kosar. Houston's
got some very good pass rushers,
and they will be coming."

Kosar also expects a
challenge.
"Houston's defensive backs
provide steady coverage and
there's a lot of pressure from the
blitz," said the quarterback.
"They blitz you coming off the
·bus, li seems."
The Oiler pass rush Is led by
defensive end· Ray Childress,
who has 6 1·2 sacks. Defensive
end· WI Ilia m Fuller has· 5 1· 2
sacks while linebacker Johnny
Meads and defensive end Sean
Jones have five sacks apiece.
Glanville, however, points out
that Cleveland's offensive line
has played consistently well this
season. Browns quarterbacks
have been sacked lust 13 times.

" I expect a tough game." sa id make It bard to catch them."
Cleveland and Houston are
Glanville. "Especially from
Kosar. I expect both him and both 6-3, one game behind Clncl·
(Oiler quarterback ) Warren · nanll In the AFC Central Dlv·
Moon to get sharper down the lslon. The Browns, however,
have won their last lour games at
stretch.
lhe
Astrodome and have beaten •
" Kosar could throw for 400
the
Oilers in seven of the last
yards against anybody. And If
Oeveland gets ahead. they'll eight meetings.
make very few mistakes and
"It's. a trend we've got to

continue," said Bro~s tackle
Cody Rlsien . "But Houston
wouldn't be tied with us if they
were lucky . They're playing very
well, and they 'll ve at home. That
just makes it harder."

Rozier Is probable with ankle ••
injuries. Cleveland fullback Kevin Mack (neck, shoulder) is
questionable while tour players
are probable: Kosar (nack),
running back Herman Fontenot
(knee). nose tackle Bob Golic
Injury report: Houston line- (hlp) and guard Larry Williams
backer Walter Johnson Is ques- (neck, shoulder):
tionable and running back Mike

UJ:ll grid coaches ratings

Leaders remain unchanged in
COLUMBUS - The five leaders all held their No. 1 spots as the
regular season and the OhiO'Hlgh
School Board of Coaches football
ratings headed Into their final
week.
But at least two of the leaders,

Cincinnati Princeton in Division
I and Newark Catholic In Div-

ision V, lace major obstacles In
their regular season finales.
Princeton, which held a 272-232
lead over Sandusky In this week' s
eighth week of balloting, closes

the season Friday night against place' votes, Sandusky got two
5th-ranked Cincinnati Moeller and Cleveland St. Ignatius. lhlrd
(8·1) at the University of Cincin- with 216 points, the other four.
Warren Western Reserve ad·;
nati's Nippert Stadium, with
Moeller most likely needing a , vanced one spotlo fourth with 145
points, Moeller In II fth hhad 137
win to make the playoffs.
Princeton received 22 of 28 first

Mike Ditka
suffers mild
heart attact

I

GARS BLUE DEVILS
MEIGS MARAUDERS
(Offense)
(Offense)
Pos.-Piayer
WI. Yr.
·Pos.-PLAYER
WI. YR
SE-Kurtls English .. .... .. ..'138 2 SE-Pete Anderson .......... 158 4
LT-Doug Stewart ........... 219 3 Or-Brian Young ............. 145 3
LG-Aaron Sheets ............205 2 LT-Davld Walters .......... 210 4
C-Wes Young ...............174 4 LG-Scott Marchi. ........... 185 4
C-Davld Hoke ............... 210 4
RG-Jerry Jacks ............. 201 4
RT-Matt Peterson .......... 272 4 RG-Nathan Hansen ..... ... 155 2
TE-Jay Humphreys ... .. :.167 3 RT-Chris Dillon ............. 220 4
QB-Ed Crooks .............. ..180 3 TE-Robble Skldmore ...... 220 2
TB-Wes Howard ........... .155 4 QB-Todd Casey .............. 165 4
WB-Frank Blake ............140 1 · TB-Christlan Scott ......... 158 2
FB-Terry Fields ........... .166 4 Or-Gene Garnes ............. 162 1
WB-Jamle Chevalier .. ....175 4
(Defense)
ENDS - Fields qnd Dave FB-Chris Plymale .......... 169 3
Lester (2-181). TACKLES (Defense)
Hockey
Stewart and Peterson. LEFT
ENDS - Chevalier and MarPittsburgh Penguins star cen· LINEBACKER
Young.
te~ Marlo Lemieux and his agent
RIGHT LINEBACKER - A. chi. TACKLES - Hoke and
Dillon. MIDDLE GUARD have sent a letter to General Sheets. MIDDLE GDARD Manager Tony Esposito that is Blake. CORNERBACKS - VIn- Chris Carman (1·165). LINEbelieved to contain a deadline for cent Vanaman (4-161 and Terry BACKERS - Marlin Griffin
(3·141) or Chris Plymale (3-169)
renegotiation of Lemieux's con· McGuire (1·166). FREE
tract. If ait- agreement Is not SAFETY - English. STRONG and Brent Simms (2·145). CORreached before the deadline, SAFETY - Howard. PUNTER NERBACKS - Lee Combs (4·
Lemieux would noi neg'&gt;tlate - McGuire KICKER - Dennis 165) and Casey. STRONG
Fallon. FREE
SAFETY with the tearn until the option Boothe (3-200).
SAFETY- Anderson. PUNTER
year of his contract In ~990-91. ...
- Casey. KICKER - Justin
The NHL Radio Network, which
GAME SITE
Fallon (3·170). PAT- Slagle.
made Its debut Tuesday night,
Memorial Field
wUI provide a 15-mlnute daily
(Pareni...Senlors Night)
(Kickoff, 7:30 p.m.)
program.

-

PmSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers announced
Tuesday they have signed free
agent defensive tackle Rollln
Putzier, . who was the fourth·
round draft choice of the Green
Bay Packers . .
The 6-foot-4, 279-pound Putzier
played his college football at
Oregon, where he was a !lrst
team All-PAC 10 selection as a
senior.
He played In all the preseason
games for the Packers before
being waived on Aug. 30.
To make room on the roster for
Putzier, the Steelers waived
defensive end Ben Thomas.
Irontcally, the player Putzier
replaces also was a Green Bay

cas tot! signed by the Steelers.
Thomas was signed by the
Steelers Aug.ll, and he played In
eight of the team's nine games
and also made five starts.
(\. tblrd·year "player, Thomas
was drafted by the New England
Patriots In 1985, and then went to
the Packers before the start of
the 1987 season. He was waived
by Green Bay on Aug. 9.

Th~.--~~·-N_ov_am
__~~r~3~·~1~9~88~--------------------------~P~om~MU~y~~M~idd==~~port~·~O~h~io~----------------------------~~~D~a:il~y~S:e~m~in~~::!P!~~e:·:5~

LAKE FOREST, Ill. (UPI) Chicago Bears Coach Mike Dltka
suffered a mild heart attack
Wednesday during hls morning
workout at training camp but Is
expected to make a full and swift
recovery, \}&lt;jctors said.
"With his Intestinal fortitude,
he'll recover quickly," said Dr.
Jay Alexander of Lake Forest
Hospital. "We'll be watching him
very closely."
Dltka, 49, Is listed In'serious bu 1
stable condition. Alexander said
the coach Is expected to remain
In the Intensive care unit five to
seven days.
''The pump function of the
heart is excellent, so that's an
excellent sign," he said. "There
were no signs of heart pump
failure."
Asked If a complete recovery Is
anliclpated, Alexander said:
"Barring anything unforeseen, I
expect he will. ..
Dltka was taken to the hospital
by two assistant coaches .after
complaining of chest pain follow·
lng hls dally workout In the
weight room at the Bears'
training camp.
Alexander said Dltka helped
his ' situation by coming to the
emergency room quickly. Doc·
tors Immediately administered a
medication to open clogged ar·
terles. An electrocardiogram
was performed to determine
heart damage.
"If we bad to characterize It,
we would consider It a mlldly
small heart attack," Alexander
said.
Bears owner Mike McCaskey
said he talked with Dltka, who
was conscious bul In pain.
1\lcCaskey said he expects to
name an acting coach within the
next few days. In the meantime,
offensive coordinator Ed Hughes
and defensive coordinator VInce
Tobin likely will handle coaching
duties ..
"Right now, we're prlmarlly
concerned with Mike's health
and his ' care," McCaskey said.
"There's a great sense of hope
and relief this will be a short
episode and Mike will be back
and lead us on to a Super Bowl
championship."
Said Tobin: "The emotional
loss of Mike's leadership will be
the hardest part to deal with.
Right now, we're still In a state of
shock. It's a real blow."
Alexander could not say what
may have caused the heart
attack other than Dltka being a
Type-A personality, meaning he
Is frequenlly under stress and
can become Impatient and
Irritable.
Following hospl~allzati&lt;?n,
Ditka likely will complete his
recovery at home and continue
an exercise program.
Alexander could not project a
date for Dltka's actual return to
work, or even whether the Hall of
Farner would be allowed to
watch the Bears play Sunday
against the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers. '·
"You have to · balance the
anxiety and stress level of not
watching the game against
watching It," Alexander said.
McCaskey Informed the play·
ers of Dltka's condllion during a
te'am meeting Wednesday
morning.
"You know It's lnt~nse to be a
coach but you wouldn't think a
heart ~ttack could happen," tight
end Emery Moorehead said. "I
think everyone was shocked at
first. We bad our game plan (for
Sunday). We want to have a blg
win on Sunday to show our
support."
Dltka, a native of Aliquippa.
Pa., became head coach of the
Bears tn 1982 after nine years as
an assistant to Dallas Coach Tom
Landry. He was Rookl.e ol the
Year and a three-time Ali·Pro
with the Bears during his 12-year
career, which Included stints at
Philadelphia and Daltas. He was
the first light end elected to the
Hall of Fame.
.
Under Dltka, the Bears won
their first Super Bowl title In 1986
following a 15·1 season. The
Bears have won lour straight
NFC Central titles

Valvoline 10W30 Motor
• Llmlt12

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ping Nationwise."

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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store hours 9 00 am to 8 '00 p m Monday through frtdiiiV.

9:00a .m. to 6:00p.m. Saturdav. and tO :OO am to S·OO p.m
!&gt;undo~ .

Sale Pri~es in effect No'vember 3

Gallipolis
209 Upper hlver·Road

. (614)446-4103

�Thursday. November 3. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio .

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

•

•

•

Boston Bruins mcrease wmnmg streak to eight straight
.

.

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Boston Bruins drew on las t
year's experience of playing in

the Stantey Cup finals to take
over the best record In the NHL.
Keith Crowder and Cam Neely
scored two goals each Wednes-

Rio faces Lake Erie
in volleyball playoffs
District 22 playoff action for
the Rio Grande volleyball team
begins Friday at 8 p.m. when the
Redwomen face Lake Erie
College.
The playoffs will feature the
top six teams In the district .
Bluffton College, the playoffs'
host, Is ranked first, followed by
Walsh, Rio Grande•. Cedarville.
Mount Vernon · Nazarene and
Lake Erie.
Walsh entered the playoffs
because It Is first in the Mid-Ohio
Conference, with Rio Grande and
MVNC tied for second. Bluffton
and Cedarville are first and

Toledo rare results
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The
Last Deal came from behind In
the stretch to post a two-length
victory over Hajoca in Wednes·
day night's featured seventh
race pace at Raceway Park.
Driven by John Konesky III,
the winner covered the mile In
1: 58 2-5 and returned $5.40, $2.60
and $2.40. Hajoca paid $2.60 and
$2.20 to place, while Rapid Rudy
came In third and returned $2.60.
The 1-I dally double combination of Hey Hey ·Fttzle and
Designers Fashion was worth
$91.80.
A crowd or 1, 427 wagered
$163,778.

second, respectlvely,ln the West·
ern Buckeye Collegiate Confer·
ence and Lake Erie has an
automatic berth due to Its independent st!ltus.
The Redwomen are 31·9 overall
entering the playoffs, one of Its
best season showings or recent
years. Led by seniors Lisa
Schmeltzer, Krls Cochran and
Sharon Headings, the team
ended Its regular season last
Saturday by defeating Wilmington and· Concord and losing to
Mount St. Joseph In a quadrangular match. ·
1
Should Rio Gra11de defeat Lake
Erie, It will play Walsh at 3 p.m.
Saturday. The championship
game will be played Saturday at
6 'p.m.

-Sports briefsTennis
John McEnroe will replace the
alllng Jimmy Connors In a
!our-man exhibition Monday
nigh! at Verona, Italy, when he
will play Ivan Lend!. Organizers
said Connors is suffering from
bronchitis.
Volleyball
'I'he United States and Soviet
Union, who finished 1-2 at the
Seoul Olympics, rolled over their
opponents to gain the final of.tHe
!our-nation Japan Cup.

day night as the Bruins routed
the Toronto Maple Leafs 7-2,
stretching their unbeaten string
to eight games.
The victory gave the Bru'lns 19
points, two more than Toronto
and the New York Rangers,
which also lost Wednesday ntg~t.
Boston Is coming off a 4-0 defeat
to Edmonton in last yea( s
Stanley Cup finals, and baS been
able to carry over the success of
last year.
"The experience _of going
through four playoff rounds
made us a better team," said
Boston Coach Terry O'Reilly.
"As a group, we've handled
more pressure than they have.
But you should see us In Edmonton - It's. like a bunch of kids
going on the Ice. Those Stanley
Cups count for somethiJig.''
The Maple Leafs, meanwhile,
finished with the second-worst
record In the league last y11ar and
are one of the early surprises of
the NHL season.
"They played stronger to·

BARLOW - The eighth grade
Meigs Marauders defeated the
Warren Warriors in a game that
saw the defense stretch, but snap
back to shut down the opponents
offense.
The final score was 20-0 In
favor of the Marauders.
The Warriors, starting from
their own 35, advanced down
field before being stopped at the
Marauder 35 with Meigs taking
over on downs.
. The Marauders, on their second play from scrimmage, saw
John Bentley hit Mike Cremeans
Oil a 60-yard scoring strike and
Ijentiey hitting Shawn Hamon for
the· two-point conversion with
2:31 showing In the first quarter.
·The teams exchanged possessiOn twice more, once on punts
and once on fumbles, to close out
the first half.
Meigs opened the second half
and after an exchange of posses·

wrist-shot at 19: 31.
"It's nice to just finally score,"
said Crowder, who had gone six
games wlthou't a goal.
Neely increased the Boston
lead to 6-2 at 9: 43 of the third
period with his second goal. Glen
Wesley fired a 45-foot slap shot
past a screened Ken Wregget on
the power play to close out the
scoring at 11: 03.
In other NHL action, Buffalo
toppled the .New York Rangers
6-4, Montreal upended Lo.s An·
geles 5·3 and Edmonton edged St.
Louis 5-4.
Sabres 6, Rangers 4
At Buffalo, N.Y ., Adam
Creighton notched his first NHL
hat trick, Including the winning
goal, as Buffalo ended the
Rangers' seven-game winning
streak. The' Sabres scored four

night ," Toronto Co.reh John
Brophy said of the Bruins. "They
did whatever they wanted tonight . They beat us all over the
Ice. It was just that kind of

game. ' '
The Bruins, who were outshot
badly lp the first period but stlll
led 2·1, took control of the game
In the second, outshootlng the
Maple Leafs 10-4 and scoring
three times to take a 5-2 lead.
Andy Brickley put the Bruins
up 3-1 with a power-play goal a't
6:04, and Crowder scored at 9: 18
when Brickley's waist-high pass
hit him In the chest and bounced
Into the net as he was falling
towards the goal.
Toronto's Daniel Marois collected his second goal of lh!! night
when he converted a Maple Leaf
power play at 11:08 to narrow the
margin to 4·2.
But Crowder scored his second
goal of the period when he faked a
shot and moved around Toronto's
Brad Marsh, scoring on a hard

•

Now they're driving
for 1988-89 bowl bids
By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Sage of the Sideline
,

I

Egad, friends! The drive for
bowl bids gets serious this
weekend In college football. And
there will be some classic
confrontations.
In the Big Eight, the Oklahoma
State Cowboys entertain rival
Oklahoma.
The Cowboys are averaging
better than 40 points per contest,
Including 42 In a losing battle
against Nebraska. TB Barry
slon the Marauders took the ball Sanders leads the potent 0-State
to the Warrior 14 where Bentley offense with an average of 200
hit Hamon for the TO at the 2; 27 yards on the ground per game. t
Oklahoma, as usual, has a
mark of the third quarter. The
extra point try failed and Meigs high-scoring, well-seasoned
club. After 84 games with O·
led 14-0.
State,
the Sooners hold a comOn Warren's next possession,
manding
64-12-8 lead - so a
Mike Still recovered a fumble to ·
tor
Pat Jones' Cowboys
victory
give the Marauders the ball at
will
be
all
the
sweeter.
their own 42.
The Marauders moved to the
Warrior four-yard line and Ben·
In a nail- biter, we give It to
tley hit Hamon again for the TO
Oklahoma State, 35-31.
with 3:17 remaining In the game
Equally Important In the bowl
to round out the scoring for the
chase, Louisiana State will visit
Marauders.
Alabama in the SEC; South
The Marauders end the season
Carolina · will entertain highwith a 4-2 record.
flying Florida State; and Wyom-.
At Tuesday's final meeting for
lng will host UTEP In the WAC.
the team, the game ballfrom the
After a fast start, the Louisiana
Marauder-Warrior game, signed
State Tigers faltered in mid·
by all . the •players, will be season. Now they're back on
presented by Coaches Ashley and
track with QB 'J'ommy Hodson
Judd to teammate Brian Hofpitching scoring strikes. Ala·
fman, who was unable to play In
bama Is strong both ways, but the
the game because of an Injury Crimson Tide won't be able to
sustained In an earlier game.
hold off the Tigers. Make 27-24 for
LSU.
In a wild and woolly fray, the
South Carolina Gamecocks, getting a strong performance from
QB Todd Ellis, will upend the
FSU Seminoles; 38-31.
And It will be a banner day for
lt DelpM• Je.lf!I'IOn (A-ll
,,
f , Mdhnal d (t-0)
8S
Cowboy squads. Paul Roach's
IO.New Bremea (1.0)
S5
Wyoming Cowboys will put a lock
Secord ten: 11. Uberty G!nter 49: 11.
MlMetown Fenwick tl; 13. Fremont St.
on
the WAC title with a stirring
Jo.&amp;ephSI; 14. EMtbea {I) U ; II. Van
44-37 conquest of the tough
Bu~n !I; 11. CohmbUI Wehrle 11; }?,
Mlnller 11; 18. lluu....me I; Jt. S.rtn&amp;UTEP, otherwise known as
tl~d CUIIollc 1; tt. (ile) Wllllam!lbtlra:
Texas-El Paso.
and Balavla, I ucla.
Back In the SEC, Georgia will
outpoint Florida, 24-17; and KenCalendar
tucky will defeat Vanderbilt,
Boxlnr
21-17.

•Arl2ooa

State 21 Oregon State
31 'Baylor 24
• Army 29 Air Force 27
•Auburn 24 SoUthern Mississippi
•san State 30 Western Michigan·
Brigham Young'.34 •san Diego State
•Brown 21 Maine 15
Colotado 28 •Missour124
/
•Central Michigan 35 Ohio Un verslty
•clemson 38 North Carolina 14
Columbia 27 •Dartmouth 24
•eornell 21 Yale 17
•ouke Jl Wake Forest 28
East Carolina 35 •Temple 25
'Eastern Michigan 40 Toledo 14
'Fresno State 35 Pactftc 18
Funnan 17 •Tenn.-Chattanooga 16
Georgia 24 'Florida 17
'Georgia Tech 35 Vtrgtnla Mllllary
'Harvard 10 Bostm University 7
•Hawaii 42 New Mexico 15
Houstoo 28 •Texas 27
Indiana 28 •tutnols 24 .
•row a 40 Northwestern 14
'Kansas 29 ~nsas State 27
'
'Kent State 33 Bowling Green 21
'Kentucky 21 Vanderbilt 17
'Lehigh 24 Buckneii!O
Louisville State 21•Aiabama 24
'LoulsvUle 35 Virglnla Tech 21
'Miami (Fia. )l49Tulsa 7
'Michigan 42 Minnesota 14
Michigan State 28 'Purdue 15
'Misslsslppl17 Tulane 14
Nebraska 49 'Iowa State 21
'Notre Dame 42 Rice 14
•North Texas 'Il NW Louisiana
North Carolina State 24 •vtrgtnla
'Ohio State 28 Wisconsin 7
'Oklahoma Stete 35 Oklahoma 31
Pennsylvania 33 •Lafayette 13
'Penn State 30 Maryland 20
'Princeton 24 Colgate 21
'Pittsburgh 28 Rutgers 20
•san Jose St. 36 Long Beach St.
•South Carolina 38 Florida ·State
•Southern Cal 42 California 21
•stanford 44 Washlngtoo State 24
•Syracuse 42 Navy 13
•Tennesaee 211 Bostoo Colleae 24
•Texas ChriStian 21 Texas Tecll
•Texas A&amp;M 40 Loulslana Tech
UCLA 38 •oregon 28
'Utah 33 Colorado State 14
'Utah State 14 Nevada-Las Vegas
"WashJngtoo 28 Arizona 15
West Virginia 42 •ctndnnat t 6
'William &amp; Mary 32 Wol!on123
•wycmJng 44 UTEP 37

goals In the seeond period to take
a 5-3 lead and hand the Rangers
their first road loss of the year.
Canadlens 5, Kings 3
At Montreal, Bobby Smith
scored Montreal's third goal of·
the thtrd period to break a tie.
Smith scored on -a rebound of
Mats Naslund's shot from out· .
side the crease at 10:53 of the
period tor his seventh goal of the
season, only 29 seconds after
Doug Crossman of the Kings had
tied the score 3-3.
"
Oilers 5; Blues 4
At Edmonton, Alberta. Glenn
Anderson broke out of a scoring
slump with a pair of goals, ,
Including the game-winner with
3:39 left. With the score tied 4-4,
Anderson jammed In a rebound
of a Mark Messier shot for his
third goal of the season.
"'

19

Arka~as

14
28

13
10

14

20
21

, COLVMBliS. Ohio (UP~) - Thl1
• week'• Unl.ed Press lnlerr.llollll Ohio
' 1U11t ScltoGI Board ol Cor.eh• lo.,U,all
ratlnp (w&amp;h flrll plac" \'oleA and
wo•lost JeCDn!li Ill pareatbt!llet~) :
Divlllioal

Team
Po lnt1
I . ctn Prlacdoa {!!) ( .. 0)
m
I. San.t.a•ll;r ( l) (!1· 1)
232
S. 0et"e SC. IJaaUUI ('I) (t-0)
Z16
I, W•ren Wet \ern R~rw (t-0)
lUi
IS7
, :1. On Moelltr (8-1)
. I . Ctn Elder (8-1)
118
7. Toledo WIIMrrw:r (8-1)
78
• 8. 0., ton W..,. • ( &amp;-0)
18
1. Euclid (8-1)
t4
'

North C8-1)

SS

Seooed ten: 11. Growport-Madllon 58; .
IZ.Uma8enior40; IS. AuUiatownFih:h ·
. Ill: It, tJpper .4.rUnpon U; IS. Ml~e­
bul'l Reichl• MidpArk ll; II. Trot,..ood-Matlaon 18; 11. Eaet ClevttiiiRd Sbw K;
18. Oneln.UI Wltiii'O"&lt;Wli Ill. (lie) Ol!rea
aDd 011'!\'eland Colllnwotd, 1 neiL

Dlvlllon II

Telim
I. St!Miben.Ule 11'71 (t-1)
%. H•rilon (I) (IIHI)

1. Akron BucMel &lt;'J (8-J)
t . Unkl....,n Lake {I) tt-0 )

Points
%It
170

un

129
104
114
71

!li. Mlarna (f.-Ill

L Clen St. loaeph (&amp;-S)
1. FOI!Itorfall-1 )

8. Sellon C'UJ

46

I. WatGf'•la(8-l)
II.Fran Win (8-1 1

40
31

SeooiMI ten: II . Oolumhu ABeechcroft
U; Ill. Nortll Canh1n Hoover %4; U .

Clifton 11; 14. CAmbridl" II; U ,
Breckntlle 11; 18. Bowln1Grun {1113:
11'. (tie) Am hl!rlfl Steele and Port.nouth,
I

I

ta

each; 111. Nordoma 6; M. Olmll&amp;ed
Falla 4.

Dlvlliton Ill

Tum

Polnhl

1. Iro•oa (IS) (9·0-

2113
150
1311

Z. ""rvlll~ ( I) (t-1)

I. Vrhna (I) {1·8)
f , CAPE (1·! )
1. AllreD sc. VIncent (N)
I . A.llroa Heblft tA-O
1. •ekj!Je

128
111

81

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bla SOe CIMslc

Tucson,

Hartforclal Bo.IOD, 7:1t p.m.

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L Cohanbg• Academy(~!~ ) (I -G)
t . • I pre (I) (I.e)
S. WheeientNr1 (I) (Il-l)

Pointe
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116

II$

4. We~t .Jeft•ton (8-I I

188

$.......... (1) (8-1)
&amp;. Letdllvllle Af:lu.. • (I) (1-t)
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1341
lot

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Vuw•ver at Ptllladelpllla. 7: IS p.m.
WlnNpe1•• New ler_,., 7:41p.m .
Mlanesota at Cblcqo, 8: Sl p.m.
St. Louil .. C&amp;lprf, I : IS p.m .

Teadl
Worueler, MMI. - IWI,DIO 'VIr&amp;lnla

Ea&amp;l••

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SCockhDlm, SwedMI - M4!,1100 Stock·
holm Open

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wala:'(:onference
Patrick Dlvieton

N.Y Ranlf!rl

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Valley Dnvo, Poinl Ploa.. nt, W.Va. 2SSSO (3041675-4340

(•) Home team

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IQIIebec: It rtlllba rp, 1: U p.m •
Var.oa\el' AI PkiWelplll• "':U p.m.
Wta•pea:•Nn.Ier_,, 1:tlp.m.
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they give a boot about as the Irish
win, 42-14.
Meanwhile, II) Miami, riding
another stellar performance by
QB Sti!Ve Walsh, the Hurricanes
will blow away Tulsa, 49-7.
West Virglnja, clostnglnonone
of Its best seasons ever, will
demolish outmanned Cincinnati,
42-6.
Finally (and fondly), Columbia win make It a big year for
loyal Lion followers with a 27-24
victory over Ivy League foe
Dartmouth. Har-umph!
SATIJIU)A,Y, Nov. 5
•Akrm 31 New Mexico State 27

THEIR KIDNEY
'STONES
REMOVED
WITHOUT A
SCRATCH.
Now there's good·news about kidney stone surgery- you may not need it.
In the past four years, 750,000 people underwent a revolutionary new techniq~e­
extrocorporeal shock wave lithotripsy'· in which a physiCian, using sound waves
in steed of a scalpel, rid them of their poinrul kidney slones.
A group of sclenlists from o company called Dornler put 20 years of research into
perfecting ESWL' technology. And today, Pleosanl Volley Hospital is puling that
technology to work in our communily, offering kidney stone sufferers an ollernative to
surgery.
Dr. Shrikant Voidya, lhe urologist who performs Lithotripsy al Plecsant Valley Hospital, has been using this revolutionory technique to bring relief to kidney slone palienls
for over a year, ond in consultation with your personal physlcldn, he can delermine
whether you moy be a candidate for the procedure.
.
If you suffer from kidney stone disease, coli Pleosanl Valley Hospital ot (304) 6754340, Ext. 311 now. And let us get rid of the pain- without a scratch. ·

The family of professionals
Pleasant Valley Hospital (o locat.d at Vall.,; Drfv•, Point Pleaoant, W.Va. 25550 (304) 675-4340 •
'

,.,
1

Sidney spent Saturday at the
home of Mrs. Mary Roush.
An attendance of 60 was
recorded at the Carmel Church
Sunday.
Elva Dean Barnltz of Pomeroy
was the Sunday afternoon visitor
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and daughter, Sheryl,
and Eunle Brinker.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell. Archer
and Iris Walker of Guysville
visited at the home of Lula Circle
on Satu,rday. They all went to
Springfield to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Harris.
Sheryl Johnson spent Friday
night as the guest of Becky
Lavender, Syracuse.

Middleport Amatuers
conduct meetif!-g
New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of the Middleport Amateur Gardeners held at
the home of Marjorie Fetty.
Elected were Katie Swanson,
president; Bernice Durst, vice
president; Emogene Crooks,
treasurer; and Elizabeth Lohse,
secretary.
Mrs. Fetty presided at the
meeting with Daisy Blakeslee
reading Life's Garden to open
the meeting. A halloween theme
was carried out In the decora·
tions for the social hour with Mrs.
Fetty serving refreshments.

ATTENTIOMI
RED TAG SALE

NOW IN PROGRESS
ALL USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS CLEARLY MARKED .
AND ALL ARE CUT TO THE BONE
I

••
•

TOPS meet

Holiday dinner activities were
planned at the Tuesday night
meeting of the TOPS OH 570 held
at the Coonhunters. building on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
An Invitation was read from
Kay Sage, TOPS coordinator,
regarding a party and workshop
to be held Nov. 12 at the Wayne
· Hayes Towers, Martins Ferry.
There will be a $3 luncheon, a $3
gift exhange at that party.
Reports were given by Ola St.
Clair, secretary, and VIrginia
Dean, treasurer. Peggy Vining
won the prize package. As weight
recorder, she reported Julia
Hysell as the best loser and Ruth
Dugan as the runner-up. Donna
Pauline Atkins was nominated Ann Elizabeth Turner, Mrs.
Aleshure read Dieting Under
Nicholson,
Mrs.
Robson,
Stella
for the Region 11 Outstanding
Stress:
and Mary Martin, The
Atkins,
Ruby
Diehl,
Pearl
Cana·Garden Club Member Award at
Champion
Rule and The Art of
day
and
Pauline
Atkins.
the Monday night meeting of the
Negotiating.
Bernice Durst won
The
traveling
prize
donated
by
Rutland Garden Club held at the .
the
fruit
basket.
Parsons
was
won
by
Margaret
home of Pearl Canaday.
1
Winner of the team contest was
Civic planting were discussed PauUne Atkins. Mrs. Robson w111
the
Calorie Counting Coons
and Margaret Belle Weber re- furnish the prize for hte Noheaded
l)y Shirley Wolfe, with
ported that she had bought and ' vember meeting.
members
being Teresa
olher
Mrs. Diehl displayed a dried
p)anted bulbs In the plants at the
Wood,
Bernice
Durst,
Marcell
park in lower Rutland. A tour of arrangement and Mrs. Canaday,
Casto, Mrs. Hysell, and Kay
the Stahl's Nursery at Hocking- the wreath which she won at the
Morris. A new contest will start
regional
meeting.
port was planned for Nov. 16 with
next week.
For
the
program,
Dorothy
members tomeel at 10a.m at the
Woodard
had
a
paper
on
Gifts
Park and Ride area on Route 7.
' The annual Christmas show of · from the Garden. She talked
the Meigs County Garden Clubs about the use of colored corn for
Association was announced for decorations and displayed a
the weekend folowlng Thanksgiv- straw hat decorated with straw
Ing at the Senior Citizens Center. flowers, dusty miller and ribbon
Eva Robson reported on the suitable for use on a door or
Community Improvement proplanning session at Trinity wall.An article on dried wreaths
jects
were discussed at the
Church which was hosted by the was given by Mrs. Robson -who recent meeting of the ReedsvUle
Rutland Club and attended by used grass, fern fronds , feathers
Community Builders Club held at
Mrs. Robson, Neva Nicholson, and paper ribbon. She also had
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Binda Diehl, and Ann Elizabeth wreaths made with dried grapePickens.
Turner. Classes were drawn at vine with gold reindeer accessoPickens presided at the meetthat time for the show to assure ries and ribbon, and · a straw
Ing.
Thank you notes were read
that all are filled and each club wreath using poinsettias, grefrom
Denver Weber and Warren
was asked to furnish two dozen neery and red ribbon.
Pickens
for flowers sent them
Dorothy Woodard provided
cookies and a dozen sandwiches.
while
they
were patients at
. Mrs. Atkins reported on Gar- handouts on the seven steps to
hospitals.
Also
thanks were exdeners Day Out held at the Bob braiding garllc. Mrs. Weber bad
tended
from
Donald
and PauUne
Evans Farm where the speakers an article on planting bulbs In the
Myers
for
flowers
which they
talked about gourds. There was a fall noting that It Is at a ttme
received
on
their
50th
wedding
tour of the farm by bus. Mrs. when they are dormant and that
anniversary.
Refreshments
Atkins and Janet Bolin attended. a bulb Is always better off In the
were enjoyed following the meet·
Mrs. AtkinS reported on the ground than In a bag.
Ing by. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Mrs. Nicholson gave hints on
Rellon 11 board meeting held at
Osborne,
Mrs. Denver Weber,
Chester which she along with bulb fertilizer, a 9-9-6 which Is
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Myers, Mr.
Mrs. AtkinS and Mrs. Bolin a slow releasing fertulzer high In
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, and
nitrogen which applled once a
attended.
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. The No. A report was also made on the year Insures blossoms for many
vember
meeting will be held at
Regional meeting held at Ma- years. She also said that bitters-the
Weber
home.
rietta attended by Binda Diehl, weet Is best gathered In Ule fall.
•
'

Community Builders
hold meeting

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
.

A Christmas workshop at the
Reedsville Church of Christ was
planned at the recent meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club held
at Sebastlans in Parkersburg.
New year books were given out
by Janice Young, vice president.
Attending were Mary Allee Blse,
Janet Connolly, Mary Grace
Cowdery, Delores Frank, Mar·
garet Grossnickle, Opal Harris,
Gladys Thomas, Grace Weber,
Maxine Whitehead, Janice
Young, and RuthAnn Balderson.
Carmel Personal Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Swepston
of Columbus visited Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee.
The Rev. Richard Young of ·

percent effort In the Third Liberty Loan to help with the wareffert.
The photo was tbe property ol. the late Jacob Swalzel who wa&amp;
among the employees pictured. II now belongs to his grandson, Blll
Swartzel of ncar Pomeroy.

RAILROAD JNn.UENCE - The lnftuence of the railroad
Industry on ME!Igs County's economy some years ago Is reflected In
this aged photo taken at the Hobson Shop below Mldljleport. The
photo 'shows the large nwnber of people who were employed by the
railroad •during World War I gathered In celebration of the 100

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CtHitcB LT 4' dr . Stean

1988 CHEVROLET CORSICAS
GM PROGRAM CARS

'1988 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
GM PROGRAM CARS

S9,29S

Rutland Garden Club
•
holds recent meettng

HAVE HAD

Playing at home In venerable
Michie Stadium, the Army Black
Knights will have their hands full
with the Air Force Falcons In a
military war. The Air Force
attack belles Its heritage. The
Falcons do mos~ of their damage
with infantry tactics, rushing for
more than 400-yards-per. On
balance, the Hoople System has
Army taking a close decision,
29-27.
.
In the tight PAC-10 race, look
for QB Troy Aikman to Improve
his Reisman stats as he leads
UCLA past Oregon, 38-28. KeepIng pace In the league race,
Southern · Cal - behind QB
Rodney Peete, Aikman's closest
rival for the Reisman Trophy will roll over California, 42-21 .
The highly rated Notre Dame
Fighting Irish, Miami Hurrl·
canes and West Virginia Mountaineers will have easy
assignments.
The Rice Owls will get more of
Notre Dame QB Tony Rice than

Riverview Garden Club
conducts recent workshop

TM family of prowslona/s

Lu Ver-.Ne\'.- DarrlnVanHornw.

·owal• Lockman, II ro1111d Junior middlewei pi boul; R.,ael Pineda n. llrlan
SAwn, 10 round llp!:welsf&amp; bout.

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

10

Page-7

.;.~ .

By BOB HOEFLICH
Friday Is happy blrtllday time
An appeal Is being Issued on
tor Ed Stiles, S. Third Ave.,
behalf of the Keith and Tammy
Middleport; Frances Reuter,
Meadows HarMaple St., Middleport; Agnes
ris family of
Dixon, Pomeroy. and Naomi
Reedsville.
London, Syracuse.
The couple
and their two
By the way, Mrs. Eloise Stiles
children reIs doing fine at her home
cently lost everfollowing back surgeery on Aug.': ·
ything In a fire
31 at. Veterans Mernorlal Hospiwhich destroyed their mobile
tal. She Is, however, required to
home. To add to the problem,
wear a back support and does use
they were only In the process of
a walker to get around at the
purchasing the home.
present time.
·-·
So - an appeal is being Issued
for good clothing and linens plus
Norm Rosuey, 14, a resident of
any decent furnishings which you
Alaska, IS getting to be quite
might be.willing to part with.
expert In running. In fact, he
Mrs. Harris's clothing sizes
placed fifth In the 1,500 meter run
are 9-10 In jeans, skirts and
at Ule Jesse Owens Games In Los
slacks; 13-14 In sweaters and
Angeles and during the past
blouses; 7% shoe size 1nd 11-12 summer competed against some
coat.
blgnameAnchorageathletes. He
Mr. Harris sizes are 32W, ~L.
was 14th overall in the Big Lake
jeans and trousers, medium shirt Triathlon. He Is the son of
and sweater, 38-40, medium,
Norman Rousey, former Pomejacket and eight and one-half or roy re~ldent who Is a retired
nine shoe size.
superintendent of schools In
A son, Jessie, age 2, wears a 2T Palmer, Alaska.
and a size seven shoe while a
daughter, Terra, 3, wears 3-4T
WANTED- one navy uniform
and ·an eight shoe size.
for the llpcomlng Fall Follies of
· · Good clothing and linens may
the Big Bend Minstrel Assoclabe left at the Senior Citizens . tlon. Theunlformshouldbeabout
Center In Pomeroy where Mrs.
a size 38- do give mea call if you
Harris Is employed. If you have have such a uniform that you
larger Items contact orphone for could lend for the show.
pickup or delivery address,
The uniform will be worn by a
phone 1-378-6277 or Mr. and Mrs. singer who will be doing We Saw
Keith Harris, 39979 Harris Road., the Sea as a part of the Irving
Reedsville, Ohio 45772. Mr. and Berlin segment of the follies. By
Mrs. Harris and their children the way, this fall's show will
are temporarily making their Include almost 40 numbers which
home with Keith's father.
Is a pretty ambitious project
since usually the annual show
Bank I of Pomeroy and the Includes only 24.
By the way, you'll enjoy the
Rutland Branch have launched
their annual program to collect Melody Men, a quartet which is
warm coats for children of Meigs rehearsing for the Nov. 26
County. You can leave any warm production. Members are AI
children's or youth coats which · Hartson, Denver Rice, Des!
you have on hand at either Jeffers and Ron Ash.
establishment. Becky Anderson
I don't know about you but I'm
of the Fa brlc Shop will be seeing
that coats collected are cleaned hoping for October's bright blue
weather to happen In November.
and In good repair.
Do keep smiling.

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Thursday, November 3. 1988

A. Httle assistance, please

(304) 675-3400.

23
31

·-

The Daily Sentinel

Beat of the bend

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is pleased to
welcome Benjamin J. ,Sol. M.D., to Its Medical
Stalf. A gynecologist and obstetrldan, Dr. Sol
will have offices In Suite 215 of the Pleasant •
Valley Hospital Medical Ofllce Building,
beginning Nov. 1. Dr. Sol comes to Point
Pleasant from Grantsville. where he has been
In private practice and on the medical stalf at
Calhoun General Hospital since 1975. He also
worked with the Gilmer Health Department's
Family Planning Olnlc In Glenville. Dr. Sol
earned his medical degree from Southwestern
University In Cebu Oty, Philippines, In 1961 ,
did a rotating Internship at St. John's ·
Episcopal Hospital In Brooklyn, N.Y., and
completed a four-year residency In obstetrics
and gynecology at St. John's In 1970, during
which time he was chief resident. He was on
the emergency room stalf at St. John's
Episcopal Hospital, 1111d was staff
physldan and E.. R. physldan at
Mather Memorial Hospital In Port
Jelferson, N.Y. Dr. Solis a member of
the West VIrginia Medical
Association, the Parkersburg
Academy of Medldne. the American
Association of Gynecologic Laparoscoplsts and the American Institute of
Ultrasound In Medldne.
Dr. Sol will have office hours from
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.
Appointments may be made by calling

Scoreboard ...
Prep ratings

- -· .

.,.
PVH Welcomes.
..
Dr._Benjamin Sol

Hak-kaff!

Meigs eighth graders win

Je . We~tervllle

By The Bend·

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1988 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
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1988 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERA
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1988 CADILlAC BROUGHAM ........................................................ $19,995
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1987 CHEVROLET SPECTRUM ......................................................... $5,995
1986 CHEVROLET CAMARO I.R.O.C................................................ $9,99 5
1916 CHEVROLET CAVALIER STATION WAGON ..........;.................. s5'9 95
1985 OLDSMOBILE FIRENZA 4 DR ...................................,............. s4' 995
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JIM COBB CHEVROlET•OLDS•CADIL.
LAC
614-992-"66'f4
.
. aoa E. Main

Hours: Mondtty•Frldtty, 8:30 •. m.-8 p.m.
S•tunt•v. 8 •. m.-4 p.m.

Pomeroy, Ohio

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Thunsday, November 3, 1988
Thunsday, Novanber 3, 1988

Ohio

Hubby.or Bingo? How many cards?
Dear Ann Landers: Golfers at
my club are passing around and
howling at your column that
carried the headline, "Golf Ver·
sus Sex." I'd like to make
another comparison. The ques·
tlon I'd like to pose Is this: Which
would a bingo addlctphoose If she
had to make a choice?
My wife belongs to a car pool.
The women travel five evenings
a week to different bingo palaces,
I don't see how they stand the
smoke, the cheap perfume and
the perspiration, but not one of
these women would miss a game
·unless she was hospitalized.
Recently I posed this question
to my wife: "Assume there are
two doors. One leads to a lavish
bedroom with a bar, a stereo, a
water bed and room service; and
I was there waiting for you. The
other door leads to the bingo
emporium. Your seat Is reserved, bingo Is on the house and
_your cards are on the table.
Which door would you choose?"

My wife thought for a few
minutes, carefully evaluating
both options. Finally she asked,
"How many cards?"
Actually she's a great lady and
that line has become a standard
joke In our house. J.ust sign meANN LANDERS•
Herbert K. In Lanham, Md.
.. 1988, Lo. .\nsft,.
Dear Herb: ThankS for my
Tim• Syndldilf' •nd
CreaiGf'l Syndle•e
laugh for the day. You hit the
Jackpot with that one!
Dear i\nn Landers: I just read
one woman's response to the
divorced father who was
I'm trying to deal with feelings
of anger, rejection and hurt, and
troubled by his children's lack of
hiterest. You said children suffer
It's not easy. I am heartsick that
most by divorce. How true.
my father's new wife has sucIn my case the anhnoslty was
ceeded in getting him to cut all
not between our divorced par·
ties with his famtly. She Is
ents. One never spoke Ill of the , depriving him of the joys of
other, either· during or after the
grandfatherhood and robbing us
divorce. The • problem began
of something precious, too._
when Dad remarried. His new
Please comment on this, Ann. wife did not want him to have
Cut·Off In Va.
.
anything to do with us. From the
Dear Cut-Off In Va.: Don't put
day he married her he has
all the blame on your father's
treated me like a stranger.
new wife. He Is at least as
culpable as she.

Ann

RE-ELECT
COSTUME WINNERS - A varldy of costumlng was worn by studet• winning prizes at the fall

carnival held

at

the Middleport Elementary

PAT ~ O'BRIEN

SchooL

Costume winners announced by school
Numerous costume prizes
were awarded at a fall carnival
staged at the Middleport Elementary School by the Middleport P.r.o.
Throughout the afternoon
there were games, prize draw·
ings, cake walkS, a haunted
house, entertainment, refresh·

ments and the costume judging.
Categories for costume judg·
lng Included prettiest, ugliest,
funniest and most original and
winners were: pre-school, Tara
Wyatt, Lucy Haverton, Michelle
Neece, Tyler Barnes; kinder·
garten, Amanda Neece; Ml·
chelle
French, Jordon Hill,
Rachel Taylor; first grade,

Bobbl Roush, Jason and Chuck
Shamblin, Bethany Boyles, Joshua Hill; second grade, Ml·
chelle Watkins, Kyle Werry,
Jennl Haverton, Becky Karr;
third grade, Pamela Neece, J. R.
Eleem, Jennifer VIning, Raenl
Wood; fourth grade, Brook Dal·
ley, Army Klass, Krista Grate,
Brandl Meadows.

Philathea plans for holiday auction
Plans for a something Christ·
mas auction at the Nov. 10
meeting were made when the
Phllathea Women of the Middleport Church of Christ met at the
church.
Octogenarian Sunday to beobserved at the church was
announced for Sunday. On the
prayer list were Dorothy Roach,

Ciyda Allensworth, Jim Soulsby,
James Brewington, Regina
Swift, Vicki Gloeckner, Maryln
Wilcox, Denver Rice, Carl Nelson, and Dennis Hockman.
Ruth Powers ofthe Middleport·
-Pomeroy Libraries presented
a flhn on wtldllfe. Devotions were
given by Donna Hartson who
read In Good Times· and Bad
with scripture from Deut. 6.

Joann Conant read The Beauty
of Autumn.
Hostesses for the Nov . 10
meeting will be Coleen Van
Meter, Dorothy Baker, Grace
Hawley, Louise McElhinney, and
Cathy Cooper. Serving refreshments were Nora Rice, Donna
Hartson, Clyda Allensworth,
Reva Beach, and Joann Conant.

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POMEROY -Salisbury Town·
ship Trustess will meet Thur&amp;day, 7 p.m., at the township
building. The public Is invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangelin-e
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, will meet
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Officers. to
wear chapter dresses .
•
APPLE GROVE - A hymn
sing at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
Apple Grove United Methodist
Church featuring the Harvest
Trio.
SYRACUSE - A service unit
meeting for Big Bend East Girl
Scout leaders will be held Thurs·
day, 7 p.m., at the Syracuse
Un !ted Methodist Church.
RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 6()2 will meet 7 p.m.
Thursday. A chicken dinner will
be served following the meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 011·
ve-Orange VFW Post 9053 La·
dies Auxilia~y will meet Thurs·
day, 7:30 p.m. All officers and
members urged to attend.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
R.E.A.C.T. will hold a monthly
meeting on Friday, at 7:30p.m.,
at Pleaser's Restaurant. All
members are urged to attend.
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
·.nr.'e t 7:30 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall. State
Deputy Arthur Crabtree will
Install officers. Star Grange will
serve refreshments.
PORTLAND - Olive Town·
ship Trustees will meet Friday,

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Btg turnout
expected Tuesday

..

CO LUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Secretary of State Sherrod
Brown has projected that a
record 4.68 million Ohio voters
will visit their polling places at
next Tuesday's presidential
election.
Brown said Wednesday this
figure represents 74.1 percent or
Ohio's 6.33 million registered
voters. In 1984, 73.4 percent of
regl.itered Ohioans vo1ed.
The secretary of state at!J1buted the projectiOn or a rectm1
turnout to heavy ab6entee voting
already taking place, arid the
predictions or county election
officials.
He also cited successful voter
registration drives and Ohio's
Importance In the presidential
race.

'

6:30 p:m., at the Reedsville Fire
Stat jon.
POMEROY - A rummage
sale to benefit Carleton Church
will be held Friday, 9 to 4, at 104
Union Ave. In Pomeroy.
-POMEROY - A rummage
sale will be held Friday and
·Saturday at Grace Episcopal
Church In Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
LAUREL CLIFF - A hymn
sing will be held Saturday, 7
p.m.. at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Dan Hayman
and the Faith Trio will pe~form.
Free Methodist Church. Paster
Bill Williams welcomes

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dauJ)der, loy; Pal:

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.,_·r(loft to rlshl) are
8e1111; 1111d wile, Mary O'Brien.

'

-Experienced: 11 years as attorney in Meigs Count; 8 y~~&amp;rs as your COUJ1ty Court
Judge.
·
-Father: Attorney since 1946, Prosecuting Attorney 1963-1961
-Uncle: Probate Juvenile Judge, 21 years.
-Member of the Meigs Co. Jaycees, Pomeroy Gun Club. National Rifle Association,
Grace Episcopal Church, Fraternal Order of Eagles. Fund Raiser Co·Chairman of
the Amer_
ican Cancer Society, 848 Mentsl Health Bo.rd.
Paid for br Candidate, Pat O'Brien, 100\\ Court St .. .Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

You'll get a great deal with The Club!
B. impressive values on a

What's your idea of a great
deal in checking? A. all
the personalized checks
you need at no per check
charge!

Community calendar
THURSDAY

JUDGE
MEIQS_. COUNTY
COURT
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services! C. no added fees!
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a,ll of this and more with
The Club checking
account
package.

everyone.
EAST MEIGS - Parents of
Eastern High Varsity and Junior
Varsity basketball teams are
having a bakesaleonSaturday at
Gaul's Market In Chester. The
sale will start at 9 a.m.

You can see why our
Club checking account
package is a great deal.
SiQn up todayt

Stock t 83442, 4 doofo. sedan, froot wheel
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _: _ _ _ __ _

County that was literally true."
. complex the state's lobby· law Is The l's have It
Principal Is all wet
In the last year of the war
JASPER. Ga. ~ UPI)
In
at present," La Follette said
CALDWELL, Idaho (UPI)
Confederates
formed home
Wednesday, noting · that he north Georgia's Pickens County,
Principal Dennis Keogh spent a
guard
units
and
searched the
brought the'lnadvertent violation voters Tuesday will find blank area for draft dodgers and
rainy day on the roof of his school
to the attention of the State spaces for the local section of the deserters and gathered supplies
because the students at Washing·
Republican and Democratic
Justice Department himself.
ton Elementary met .his chal·
from farmers lor the Southern
He said last spring, during his tickets.
lenge to get their parents more
The empty spaces are nothing cause, Davis said. The guard
unsuccessful campaign for the
Involved In their education.
new to voters In the state's only units preyed upon pro-Union
U.S. Senate, he mistakenly sent a
Keogh promised his students In
families and Unionists fought
mailing to a lobbyls t. The mall· county where Independents hold
August that he would spend Nov.
all the courthouse offices. The back with their own paramilitary
2 on the roof If they helped boost log would have been legal If a
SYRACUSE - A Christmas the Parent-Teacher Associacampaign representative had blankS have been there for most units.
Before Gen. William Sherman
auction wUI be held Saturday, . tion's membership from 350 to signed It Instead of La Follette of the last 40 years.
captured
Atlanta, he dispatched Nov. 5, 7 p.m., at the !'!yracuse 500 by Nov. 1.
"Every once In a while, somehimself, he said.
troops
to
Pickens · County to
Fire Statton, with aucUoneer
body runs as a Republican or.
The March mailing went to
. Unfortunately for Keogh, Wed·
defeat
the
home guard and
Dan Smith. Everyone welcome.
nesday was the first day the area more than 9,000 Democrats using · Democrat, but they don't ever rescued more than 100 Union
win," said John Sherman Darmailing labels purchased from
received rain In more than a
I
MASON - The annual Christ· month. Keogh took shelter In a
nell, 78, who was an Independent families, Davis said.
the State Democratic Party. He
Bitterness between Republi·
mas Bazaar of the Mason Volun· rooftop tent, but not before he said efforts were made to remove
county commissioner In the
·cans and Democrats wore on,
ter Fire · Department Ladles' was soaked setting It up.
1950s.
known lobbyists from the mall·
with grudges over party affllla·
Auxiliary will be held Saturday, Teachers had warned him It
"If
we
had
strong
Republicans
lng, but at least one letter
Nov. 12, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. might snow Nov. 2.
and Democrats, we'd have rqany tion handed down from generaapparently went to a lobbyist
Anyone wiShing to rent a table at
factions,'' Darnell said. "People tion to generation. In the early
who then called the secretary of
"I thought It was quite humor·
$5 per table may do so by phoning ous," Keogh said of the warning.
don't want to go back to that. 1900s, residents grew weary of
state's office anonymously·.
304-773-5437 or 773-5414. Also "But, wheniwokeupandsaw the
People are united In this county." the upheaval and began electing
"I asked the attorney general's
·
on that day; the Auxiliary wtll be rain, there were a lot of people
On the Nov. 8 ballot are two Independents.
office to look Into the matter as
"By
running
as
Independents,
selling vegetable soup, chill, hot laughing and It wasn' t me."
soon as I learned of a possible . Independent candidates for she- people could vote their con·
. dogs, pop and coffee. Everyone Is
riff and three for county commls·
violation of the law," he said.
Although Keogh climbed a
science without feeling they were
welcome to attend.
"In the future, candidates for . stoner, Including the Incumbents spitting on their grandpas'
ladder to the roof at 8 a.m. for a
of both offices . The other Indepublic office should be extremely
stay that lasted untn 3:30 p.m.,
pendent candldatl!!' are running graves," Davis 'said.
careful to purge their mailing
but it was not a wasted day.
unopposed .
lists to exclude registered lobby·
Besides soine reading and
The Independent roots of
Isis," he said. "If' this Is not
writing, Keogh said school mainPickens
County can be traced to
possible, as In my case, candl·
tenance personnel and the school
before
the Civil War when
district's assistant superintend- dates should have their cam·
pro-Union
sentiment was com·
palgn treasurers or chairpersons
ent climbed atop the roof to take
mon
throughout
the Appalach·
sign fund-raising solicitations
addictive drug. The AMA c ailed care of business.
tans.
For
the
most
part, moun·
rather than sign their own
It "a psychoactive and addictive
taln
people
owned
few
slaves and
·
drug" Implicated In heart dis· Wisconsin official catches blm· name.''
111 Second St., Pomeroy
were subsistence farmers.
ease, high blood pressure, repro- self In the act
La Follette said new adminisRobertS.
Davis
Jr.,
a
historian
•
trative rules to take effect Jan. 1 ·
ductive problems, cancer and
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) YOUR INDEPENDENT
who lives In Jasper, says Pickens
stomach problems.
Secretary of State Douglas La will aid people In complying with
AGENTS SERVING
County probably was the most
The Food and Drug Admlnls· Follette has been lined $50 for the Jaw. He also said he plans to
bitterly polarized In Georgia.
tration Is currently rev,lewing violating the state's lobby law- continue his fight for a better and
• MEIGS COUNn
"You've often heard ·the Civil
another petition from the AMA, the law he Is In charge of tougher lobby law In the next
SINCE 1868
War described as brother vs,
legislative session.
requesting that the agency evalu· . regulating.
brother," he said. "In Pickens
''This Incident shows how
ate the smokeless clgaret tes as
medical products. The agency
does not have jurisdiction over
tobacco products.
"It Is a cigarette and the FDA
does not regulate cigarettes,"
said Maura Payne, a spokeswo·
man for R.J. Reynolds Tobacco
TO THESE AREAS
Co., of W~nston·Salem, N.C.,
that
the
vaccine
actually
proreferring to Premier. Payne said
By ROB STEIN
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,
tects the children, he said.
the company would not comment
UPI Science Writer
"We have a vaccine that's
on the AMA's latest action until it
RUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W. VA.
BOSTON (UPI) - A new
ready
lor
a
field
trial
of
larger
had more information.
·vaccine appears to offer the first
ORDERS MUST IE PHONED IN IEFOII 3 P.M.
scale to actually show protec·
Reynolds began selling Pre- safe and effective vaccine for
tlon," Kasper said.
mier In St. Louis and PhoeniX test protecting babies from a comSJ.OO lllllllliM PUICIIASE ON PIUCIIPIIONS PLIS
In an editorial accompanying
markets on Oct. 1, without mon Infection that kills at least
- IIIAL11 AIIIIIAUTY AIDS.
the studY, Dr. Richard A. Insel of
waiting for the FDA to decide on 2,000 children each year In the
the University of Rochester
the AMA's petition.
United States, researchers reSchool of Medicine and Dentistry
Smokeless clgaret tes Involve ported Wednesday.
noted that the percentage of
no burning tobacco. Instead, air,
The vaccine appeared to proIFOIIIaY YIIUGE PIARMACTI
women who responded to the
warmed by a carbon heat source,
duce antibodies that are protec·
STOllE HOUIS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.; Saturay 9 A.M.· I P.M.
vaccine was relatively low. But
passes through a capsule contlve against bacteria known as
271
110111 SICOIID
"2·6669
MIDII.IPOI1, 0110
he said the findings should
taining tobacco and other cheml·
group B streptococcus In a study
encourage more research.
cals where It picks· up nicotine
Involving 40 pregnant women,
and tobacco flavors. The air then
researchers reported In The New
passes through two filters at the · England Journal of Medicine,
end of the clgarette-,shaped -~. -Group B atieptococcus causes
device.
disease In an esthnated 11,000
children each year In the United
States. Although It can be treated
with antibiotics, at least 2,000
children die from pneumonia
caused by the Infection and many
' of those who survive suffer
neurological damage, researchers said. ·
"It's a major problem in the
healthy cholesterol levels and tor United States and the western
some reason cannot both exer- world," said Dr. Dennis L.
cise and diet to reduce their Kasper, a professor of medicine
weight, the findings Indicate at the Harvard Medical who
doing one or the other can be headed the new study .
effective, he said.
Currently there Is no vaccine
1988
In the study, the researchers for the Infection. But Kasper and
CHEVROLET
asked one group of men to adhere his colleagues developed an
BERETTA
to a moderate exercise regimen experimental vaccine made
consisting prhnarlly of jogging from the sugar capsule of the
an average of about 12 miles a bacteria, which when Injected
week without changing thelrdlet.
appears to produce antibodies
The second group of men were that kill the bacteria. he said.
placed on a diet that consisted
In the study, researchers gave
prhnarlly of reducing their food
the
vaccine to women who were
Intake by about 20 percent
ONLY
In
their
third trimester or pregwithout exercising any more
nancy, and tested their blood and
than they usually did.
the
blood of the fetuses they were
·After a year, the exercisers
carrying
to determine whether
had lost about 9 pounds while the
antibodies
had formed.
dieters had lost about 15 pounds,
.Working
with Dr. Carol J.
the researchers reported. But the
Baker
of
the
Baylor College of
amount of body fat the men lost
In
Houston, Kasper
Medicine
was comparable In both groups.
When the researchers tested found 25 of the women produced
their blood, they found that while antibodies and 80 percent of their
the subjects' overall cholesterol fetuses had antibodies.
When the researchers tested
levels did not change substanthe
antibodies In the laboratory,
tially, men In both groups had a
the
proteins appeared to be
significant Increase In their
effective
at killing the bacteria,
high-density lipoprotein (HDL)
Indicating
they would protect the
levels, which Is known as "good
babies
from
the Infection,
cholesterol."
·
Kasper
said.
In an editorial accompanying
The vaccine had been tested
the findings, Drs. Henry Black·
previously
and been shown to be
burn and David R. Jacobs Jr. of
safe
for
adults.
The new study Is
the University of Minnesota
the
first
to
evaluate
the safety of
School of Public Health In Min·
the
vaccine
for
pregnant
women.
neapolis called the study "excel·
The
next
step
will
be
to
test the
lent" and "an lmporiant step
on
larger
numbers
of
vaccine
toward understanding the role of
physical activity and diet In patients and follow the babies for
longer periods of time to confirm .
weight loss."
Reorganized Church · of Jesus
Ch_rlst o( Latter Day !:)alntsat Old
Town Flats, near Racine. Vegetable soup, chill, bean soup, corn
bread, sandwiches, pie and cake
will be served all day. The public
Is welcome.
··

Auction, bazaar set

By CELIA HOOPER

UPI Science Writer
CHICAGO (UPI) -TheAmer·
lean Medical Association said
Wednesday It will try to block the
first test sales of R.J. Reynolds'
smokeless cigarette, which the
tobacco company began on Oct.1
; In St. Louis and Phoenix.
The AMA, the nation's leading
professlonat organlzat !on for
physicians, will be joining local
medical societies In Arizona and
Missouri In filing legal petitions
requesting state authorities ban
sales untU the product, called
"Premier," can be proven safe.
The medical groups contend
smokeless cigarettes are a new
system for delivering the drug
nicotine, and that state laws
require new drugs be proven safe
before they are sold. '
"The American public has the
right to expect that the products
they consume have been judged
safe for human consumption
before being placed on tbe
shelves for sale. On this Issue, we
are shnply unwilling to accept on
faith the new product of an
Industry that still dentes that
smoking Is unhealthy," said Dr.
James Sammons, exectutive
vice president of the AMA.

DOWNING CHILDS

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AMA trying to block test
of smokeless cigarette

Revival Services will be held at
the Mt. Herman United Brethern
Church, Texas Community, Sunday through Nov. 13, 7: 30 each
evening. The Rev. Clay Sloan of
Belpre will be the evangelist. The
Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor,
Invites the public.

Delllh

'

WAS

RACINE - An election day
dinner will be held at the

Revival set

Stodltt1890,4 doora,oedan, V-8,olr""'d.,

auto. trans ., PS, PB, powor windows, power
while walla.

POMEROY - Election day
111ncheon will be served at Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy.

By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
BOSTON (UPI) -Dieting and
exercise appear to be equally
effective for helping.men reduce
tbelr risk of suffering a heart
attack by losing weight and
improving their blood choles·
terol level~, researchers re·
ported Wednesday.
The Stanford University
School of Medicine researchers
compared 47 slightly overweight
men who..were placed ·on an
exercise program for a year to 43
slightly obese men who were put
on a diet for the same period.
Men in both groups lost essen·
!Ially slm liar amounts of body fat
and the levels or cholesterol In
their blood Improved In both
groups, the researchers reported
In The New England Journal of
Medicine.
"Apparently weight loss by
either diet or exercise will
Improve your cholesterol profile," said Richard B. Terry, a
cardiology researcher who
helped conduct the study.
Terry cautioned, however, that
the findings do not mean that
dieting Is as good as exercise for
overall health. Dieting does
nothing to · Improve aerobic fitness, for example, he said.
Butfor Individuals who want to
reduce- their risk of having a
beart attack because of un-

Nations/
Discount Program

1978 CHEVY CORVETIE

s8995

CHESTER . - Election day
dinner and a bazaar will be held
·at the Chester United Methodist
Church. Serving will start at 11
a.m. On the menu will be ham
loaf dinners, ve11etable soup and
chll, hot dogs, sloppy joes and
pie. The dinner Is sponsred by the
United Methodist Women.

Quirks in the news _ _ _

Dieting or exercise
lowers cholesterol

SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming at
the Sutton United Methodist
·Church will be held this Sunday .
Basket dinner at 12: 30 p.m. The
Harvest Trio will be appearing In
the afternoon beginning around
1: 30 p.m. Everyone Is welcome to
attend. The church Is located on
County Road 28, five_miles north
of Racine and two miles south of
Bas han.

WAS

ROCK . SPRINGS Rock
Springs United Methodist
Women will be serving election
day dinner In the church basement starting a:t 11 a.m.
The menu will include vegeta·
ble soup and chill, ham sandwiches. sloppy joes, hot dogs,
homemade pies and· cake.
Bring your own containers for
takeout.

Surgeon General -C. ·Everette
Koop has declared nicotine an

,.
1984 FORD ESCORT L

Election day dinners

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport., Ohio

PhOne: 372-2844 • 422-0756 ..
344 58t7

NOWII.-

�·-----------------

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

•

·Page 10-The Daily Seu1i11..
\

Thu~day.Novamber3, 1988

Thursday. November 3, 1988

. Pomaoy-Middleport. Ohio

Court overturns part
of bargaining act

Inmate executed for 1975 murder of San Antonio nurse
HUNTSVILLE. Texas (UPI) -Donald Gene
Franklin, convicted of stabbing a nurse and
leaving her to bleed to death atop an ant hill, was
executed by Injection early Thursday morning at
a Texas prison.
Franklin, 37, was declared dead at 12:30 a.m.
(1:30 a.m. EST) Thursday at the Texas
Depar.tment of CorrectionS In Huntsville.
He became the ninth person executed In the
United States this year, compared wlth25ln 1987,
the highest number In any slngl\! year since the
Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty In
1976. It was the second execution of the year In
Texas.
.
"If there was ever a crime that sets out a death
penalty, It's this one," said Texas Attorney
General Jim Mattox.
Franklin appeared calm and never spoke or
glanced at the witnesses In the death chamber as
he was strapped to a gurney and the lethal drugs
administered.
An attorney for ..franklin flied an 11th-hour
request for a stay with Supreme Court Justice
Byron White, but he referred the appeal to the full

court and It was rejected. Justices William
Brennan and Thurgood Marshall dissented from
the majority rullng Wednesday afternoon.
Franklin was convicted three times In the 1975
murder of a San Antonio nurse and was sentenced
to death each time. The first two convictions were
overturtled on appeal.
Franklin, who had wori stays of four previous
death dates, was moved from the Ellis 1 prison
unit of the state Corrections Department to a cell
adjacent to .the execution chamber at about 9
a.m.. Corrections Department spokesman Char tes Brown said.
Franklin, who requested no personal Witnesses
for the execution, had separate visits wtth his
parents and with a Church of Christ minister,
Roosevelt Sands of San Antonio, Brown said,
adding that when told the Supreme Court had
denied his appeal, Franklin sald, "Thank you."
Franklin asked for a hamburger and french
fries for his last meal but ate only two hamburger
patties, the prison spokesman said. He slept from
6:30 unt119:45 p.m.
The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals In New

unfair because It did not clearly state that Jurors
must consider mitigating evidence- factors such
as a defendant's youthfUlness, remorse or mental
state - that might sway the jury to Impose a life
sentence.
Texas executions came to a virtual halt after
September 1987 while the Supreme Court
considered an Issue In an earlier appeal by
Franklin.
'
But a new execution date was set after the court
· In June aftlfmed his conviction, ruling the Texas
capital punishment system complies with S~·
preme Court rulings that require j'!rles to weigh
both mitigating and aggravating factors before
sentencing someone to die.
.
There have been 102 people executed since the
Supreme Court lifted Its ban on capital punish·
ment In 1976. Texas leads the nation with 28
executions since the ban was lifted.
The last Texas Inmate executed prior to
Franklin was Robert Streetman, 27, put to death
bY Injection Jan. 7, 1988, for murdering a wo111an
during a $1 robbery In 1982.
. . --

Orleans refuaed Tuesday to Intervene and
chastised Franklin's attorney, George Scharmen
of San Antonio, for filing the appeal. Hours
earlier, U.S. District Judge H,F. Garcia of San
Antonio rejected a 22-page petition filed by
Scharmen.
. Franklin, a former janitor, was sentenced to
death for tl)e J uty 25, 1975, kidnapping and slaying
of Mary Margaret Moran, 27, who was abducted
from a hospital parking lot.
.
Moran was raped, stabbed seven times and left
for dead In a brushy field. She was fo11nd alive five
days later, lying nude atop an ant bill but too weak
\
to move. She died the next day.
Franklin, who was arrested hours after the
abduction, refUsed to divulge Moran's whereabouts before she was found.
Franklin's Supreme Court appeal claimed the
trial court erred In not allowing tes tlmony during
the punishment phase that might have Implicated
another suspect and that certain evidence about
. Franklin's ellglbllty for a parole under a life
sentence was not allowed.
Defense attorneys claimed Texas law was

;slaying.motive
._probably robbery
.
ROWLAND, N.C. (UPI) · .Authorities say the slaying of two
; Lumbee Indians found In separ. ate rooms at a rundown motel
: appears to have nothing to do
:with Robeson County's notorious
• reputation for drug trafficking.
: The bodies of Timothy Oxen::dine, 23, and Roger Strickland,
• 20, were found Tuesday by a
: passerby who noticed a door ajar
• at the Rowland Motel. Each man
: had been shot once In the head
: with a .25-callber pistol.
• Oxendine's body was found In a
~ room behind the motel ortlce.
: Strickland's body was found In
· Room 25, about 40 yards away.
. His throat had also been slashed.
• Robeson County, located half: way between Miami and New
:York City, has been the subject of
• state and federal Investigations
: of repeated allegations that ortl: clals are Involved In drug
trafficking.
: Interstate 95, which dissects .
: the county, Is known as Cocaine
• Alley. .
: Rowland· Pollee Chief Daniel
:Bradsher said Wednesday
• robbery Is the suspected motive
: In the slaylngs, although he did
• not rule out other factors. He said
• abOut $700 .was believed taken
: from the motel office.

.•

The pollee chief declined to
:Speculate ·on whether robbery
:was the only motivation. "I got a
·theory on that,I got a solid theory
:on that," he said. "But I don't
·want to say because If the person
:round out I knew this, they might
"put distance between us. It
appears to be a robbery and
we're Investigating It from that

stance now."

I

The 25-room motel, a white·
washed structure aiong U.S. 301,
has seen better days. Before
Interstate 95, the highway was
heavUy traveled by people
headed for Myrtle Beach. But
now, Rowland Motel gets scant
business and the pollee chief said
there was no Indication anyone
stayed there this week.
Oxendine and StriCkland man·
aged the motel for Its owners and
shared a room behind the office,
which has a red sign that reads,
"Ring bell for service."
Bradsher said the kllllngs
apparently occurred between 11
p.m. Monday and 12:30 a.m .
Tuesday. ·
LibbY Spaulding, who lives
near the motel, sald neither
Oxendine nor Strickland had a
reputation for dl'ug dealing.
"l'hey were good boys," she
said. "They didn't bother nobody. I never heard any mention
of drugs over there. I've never
heard nor seen any sign of

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

YMUitraUIIAu&amp;ltell•

Koch aide: .Myerson
·dismissed concerns

Model380

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case, then focused on Judge
Gabel's knowledge of the Ca·
passo divorce case.
Rickman said he asked Judge
Gabel, during a luncheon conversation, about Myerson's hiring of
the judge's daughter.
"I have some concern about
Suklu'eet's ability to stay at
cultural affairs I!Jid the appear·
ance of It," Rickman said he told
the jurist. "She told me It was a
merit appointment and It was
none of my concern."
Rickman, contradicting a key
defense contention, Indicated
that Hortense Gabel knew Myerson and Capasso were lovers
before her Sept. 14, 1983, ruling
cutting the ' sewer contractor's
alimony payments.
The mayoral aide testified that
at a May 25, 1983, reception at
Koch's Gracie Mansion residence honoring Myerson on her
Installation as cultural affairs
commissioner, Gabel asked him, ·
"Is what's his name here?"
Asked If she meant Capasso,
Gabel said, "Yes," Rickman
testified.
Rickman also said he had
nothing to do with the hiring of
the younger Gabel, disputing an
Oct. 18, 1983, article In the New
York Post linking the mayoral
aide with her hiring. He testified
he was "IMd" and "furious"
over the story.
Abrams then asked If Rickman
had "a conversation with Mayor
Koch" about the Myerson matter
after the Post article.
"I certainly did," Rickman
replied emphatically before the
court session was adjourned.
Myerson, Capasso and Hor·
tense Gabel are charged wttb
five counts each of conspiracy,
mall fraud and the use of
Interstate facllltles to carry out
th~ bribery. Myerson also IS
charged with obstructing justice
by urging Sukhrl!et Gabel to
miSlead the grand jury that
handed up the Indictments.

$719 95
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:government.''
• He also pointed out that me
:Ohio Constitution only allows the
:state to regulate minimum
:wages and working hours.
• He said that If the court upheld
· : binding arbitration, "we would
: be required to overrule years of
; well-established law In Ohio,
•adopt an argument that has nof

"See You Next S rin "

CHECK OUT.OUR
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FABRIC SHOP

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE
ALL FABIIC REDUCED .
Open 1 0·5 Mon .. Tue.,
Wed. &amp; Fri.
Sat. 10-2
Closed Thurs. &amp; Sun. ·
St . Rt. 7, 5 miles north of
· Chester

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Bring A Commitment of Eq.ual Justice for
••
A II and Exce.&lt;sibility of the Court to the Pubic.

"Will

happy 10 help you. Ask them'

•Lifelong resident of Meigs County
•Graduate of Meigs Local High School. 1969. BS
degree from Ohio University, 19B1. JD degree
from Cepital University, 19B4.
•Currently engaged in the general practice of law in
Meigs County.
.
Serving as Assistant Prosecuting Attorney m
Athena County.
Special Investigator for Meigs County Prosecutor.
1977-1979,
•Member of the Meigs County Bar Associat.ion Ohio Bar Association - Association of Tr~al La·
wyera of America - Am~rican Bar .A~sociation :National District Attorneys Assoctat1on - Oh1o
Academy of Trial Lawyers.
•Became a member of the Ohio Bar College in 19B6
anit js a 13 year member of the Meigs County
Jaycees.

•COSMETICS •SICKROOM SUPPLIES •VITAMINS
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SWISHER LOHSE
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'{-

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D. MICHAEL
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105 E. Seeond St.. Po••oy. Oh_io 45769

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' '(There are) young businessmen and women who are sitting
over a pad and pencil" in
Singapore, Korea . Brazil, "all
around the world, and they are
designing a business plan In ·
which a substantial portion of
their product Is sold In this
marketplace,'' he said.
U.S. manufacturers should develop similar plans to be "truly
competitive," he said .
ness world are outdated and may
Chrysler Corp. has taken the
hobble attempts to revitalize
Initiative In Ohio, Celeste said . •
U.S. manufacturing.
"Lee lacocca has a vision In
Celeste called for better com·
which he's going to produce at
m'unlcalion between academic
researchers and Industry, and least 50,000 Jeep Cherokees in
between management and labor. Toledo, Ohio, and sell them
But hesaidtheblggestobstacie outside of America,'' Celeste
to a manufacfurlngresurgencels said.
The governor praised improvethe "boundary" which "c.on!lnes
men Is in the Ohio Industrial
most U.S. companies to their
sector, saying the state soared
comfortable U.S. markel."
from being dead last In the
Celeste said that during his creation of new jobs in 1982, to
trade missions abroad, he has
observed that the business plans fourth In the nation In new jobs
creation In 1987, behind New
of for~lgn companies usually
York, California and Florida.
involve overseas sales, and IreHe attributed the expansion to
quently the products are In- moves to modernize Ohio' s basic
tended for the American
Industries
· ....marke)place.
. ~-.;.;.,_"!"'________________~--,

had been vaca nt for some time,
Franks said.
"The gover nor's o!flce sent hi s
resume a round to agencies that
might have a need, and as It
happened, we had a need for a
gu y with his background, " he
said. " He Inte rviewed with us,
we wer e impressed and made
him an offer and It a ll worked
out. "
Wingo wili begin work Nov. 21
at a n annual salary of $25,000, a
Celes te aide said.

COUNTY COURT
JUDGE

FOR INFORMATION CALL:
(304) 422-4169 or (614) 742)2882

PLEA TID FRONT

REG. S200

I

DAYTON; Ohio (UPI)- Gov.
Richard Celeste says U.S. manufacturers should think In terms of
distributing their products
woridwJde If they want to have a
competitive edge.
In ~ speech to about 700
Industry leaders at a manufacluring conference Wednesday In
Dayton, the governor said some
traditional practices In the busl:

r.ullng today in Rocky River robs
municipal safety forces of their '
only effective weapon In negotlatlng fair wages, hours and
working conditions," Hodges
said.
"While we are heartened thai
the court ruled In the Twinsburg
case that the law Is not unconstitutional In Its entirety, we are
dismayed by the piecemeal attack Moyer has made on various
provisions of the law.''
Hodges said Moyer "has revealed an agenda to strip the
four-year old law of any meanIngful language.··
He said it "singles out one class
-the safety forces of the state's
charter cities -and leaves them
defenseless to counter unreasonable contract proposals."
''The decision tells municipalities that they are under no
obligation to negotiate In good ~,;...
faith," he said.
.,
Robert Shields, president of
· the Ohio Association of Professional Firefighters, said he was
shocked by the court decision. ·
"We are shocked and outraged
that the Moyer-Wright court
would turn their backs on !Irefighters, emergency services
personnel and ppllce officers
across the state.

DEALERS WANTED - BUVE~S WANTED
Come One-Come All - Reasonable Set-up Rates
Indoor Space - Outdoor Space

SAME AS CASH

Model HK·IOO Hob!IJ Knttt.

Celeste stresses overseas
manufacturers' marketing

pa rticipat e In lhe coverup, ·eliminating his c hances ol prom otio n
to c hief ma s ter se rliean t. the
seco nd-highes t enlisted grad e.
He retire d a ft er 23 years in the
Air Force.
The tape recording was played
at a heailng of Glenn 's Gove rnment Operation ~ Commit tee In
March.
Wingo applied to the EPA a fter
retiring and received suppor t
from Glenn. who wrote a letter to
Celeste recommending Wlngo
for a job based on his ex per lence
In public health and indus tr ial
hygiene, his specialit y during hi s
Air Force career .
EPA spokesman Allen Franks
said Wingo's job will not Involve
contact with Wright -Patter son .
"But of course the knowledge
of the base he' s got could be very
helpful to us," Franks said.
Franks said Wingo will probably work in th e solid and
hazardous waste d·lvls lon In the
agency's Columbus office. Wingo
was hired to !Ill a position that

NOVEMBER 4-5.-.6

90 DAYS

Yl'-"1' ... .
l

erase tape r ecordings of a
meeting at whic h base officers
joked about covering up a 1986
spill of radioactive americium·
241 Inside a base s torage
building.
The spill resu lted In a cleanup
costing more than $1 million and
felony charges against James
Lewis. the former WrightPatterson radiation safet y offleer who is accused. of Illegally
accepting' americium onto the
base and making a false stat ement to federal o!flclals Investigating the matter.
Wingo got the lowest job ra ting
of his career after he re fused to

MBGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, POMEROY, OHIO

ElASnC BACII
Reg. $14.99

Quelltlecl Cuatomera will be
cherged NO lnterftt for 80
d..,a on your total ch•g•
pun:h- of Singer s-Ing or
Knhtlng Machlnea or C•bln-'•
toWing noo or more.
IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO
APPLY FOR UR NI!W SINGER
CHARGE CARD ASK FOR
DETAILS

"By striking down this provlslon, the majority leaves the act,
as 11 pertains to safety forces,
wlthoul a heart, .. Douglas wrote.
•' (w·lt hout) .bl ndl ng cone 111 at 1on,
the· bargaining rights of the
safety forces are so weakened as
to become virtually useless.
"Safety forces are prohibited
from striking. Now they cannot
obtain binding arbitration . What
resource Is left to their
disposal?"
He said the decision of the
majority was Illogical because 11
applied only to safety forces
employed by a municipality and
nol those employed by counties
or by the state such as sheriff's
depulies or highway patrol
troopers.
The Twinsburg case was decided along the same lln\)s .
John Hodges, preslderlt of the
Ohio AFL-CIO, said he was
disappointed with the ruling. ...
"The Ohio Supreme Court's

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII The Air Force sergeant who blew
the whistle on radioactive spills
at Wrlght·Patterson Air Force
Base. at the cost of his career,
has been given a state job at the
urging of Sen. John Glenn.·
A spokeswoman tor Gov , RIchard Celeste said Glenn asked
the governor to hire .wendell
Wingo ' of Chillicothe and the
governor got him a job as
health-safety coordinator lor the
Environmental Protecllon Agency's hazardous and solid waste
division.
Wingo said he took early
retirement after the Air Force
retaliated when he refused to

A Rate Walcher CD is ihe ideal investment because you can get

SEWING UGHT

enap.on

• safety employees and how It
: bargains with those employees
!does not concern residents of
; other cities In Ohio, just as the
• wages paid the safety forces of
: other cities do not concern
; residents of Rocky River," said
: Moyer In the majority decision.
• "Its safety forces' wages and
: salaries aflect only Rocky River
, and have no extraterritorial
; effect.
"Therefore, the subj eel of
; safety forces' wages and salaries
, Is clearly within the power of
: local self-government and Is a
• matter of determination by the
~ municipality." .
Moyer said the Rocky River
' charter stipulates that the coun·
: ell has the power to fix salaries of
Its members and all other offlc·
: ers and employees of the city.
!• He said thl&gt;t '~· slnce setting
:salaries Is a legislative function,
:the state law "unlawfully vests
•the (arbitrator) with absolute
' and uncontrolled discretion to
;determine the wages of city
; safety forces employees ."
• The very limited nature of the
: judicial review of the abrltra~ tor's action for which the law
:provides. Moyer wrote, "cannot
•be deemed to be an effective
•' review of an arblt rat or's decision
:when weighed against a charter
:municipality's power of self-

been made previously with r es pect to the set ling of wages and
related benefits, and adopt an
a rgumen t that, In effect. would
strip every Incorporated municipality In Ohio of one of their most
Important responsibilities and
duties to their citizens - the
determination and establishment of the wages and benefits of
their public employees and the
concomitant duty to adopt a
budget."
Concurring with Moyer were
justices Ralph Locher, Robert
Holmes and Craig Wright, while
dissenting were justices William ·
Sweeney, Andy Douglas and
Herbert Brown.
Douglas said he found nothing
unconstitutional al)out the section"that was stricken and said
detailed guidelines In the law
prevented the arbitrator from
awarding more than the city
could afford.
'

Air Force whistle-blower hired by state

FLEA MARKET

l18ntleld

, ....... llate.

~~g~~~~~t:~a~fe:afety, forces '

•'~ "What Rocky River pays Its

SAVE $230

about Sukhreet hiring
NEW YORK (UPI)- Former
Miss America Bess Myerson
twice dlsmlsaed a mayoral aide's
criticism of her decision to put a
judge's daughter on the city
payroll while the judge considered her boyfriend's divorce
case, according to the aide's
testimony.
Herbert Rickman, special asststant to Mayor Edward Koch,
said Wednesday he spoke with
Myerson, then the commissioner
of the city's Department of
Cultural Affairs, In September
,1.983 about the hiring of Sukhreet
Gabel. He returns to the stand
. today In U.S. District Court In
· Manhattan.
· Myerson Is charged with hiring
: Gabel In order to Influence her
mother, state Supreme Court
Justice Hortense Gabel, to rule
favorably In the divorce case of
, Myerson's boyfriend, millionaire
: sewer contractor Carl "Andy"
: Capasso. All three are on trial on
· conspiracy charges In U.S. Dis: trlet Court In Manhattan.
Rickman testified Myerson
told him of the younger Gabel's
. hiring after he returned from an
· exhausting Eastern European
: trip.
· "At the end of the conversa; tlon, she said, 'By the way, I
: hired Miss Gabel at the depart·
• men I,"' Rickman recalled Myer: son saying.
He then told Myerson that
1 Gabel's hiring was "a mistake,"
: he testified.
But, according to Rickman,
: ''She cut me off, saying, 'You're
: tired, sweetheart. Get a good
r night's rest."'
.
The next day, Rickman testl·
fled he again asked about
'
· Gabel's hiring, and Myerson
. repllecl It was "a low-level
· deciSIOn" that was cleared by
: City HalL
· '1 was concerned about the
appearance of It,'' said Rickman.
Stuart Abrams, the assistant
attorney prosecuting the

;

REG. $949.95

ltselfll

SAVE SSOO

drugs."
Robeson County, one-third
black, one-third white and onethird Indian, has been the scene
of repeated racial violence for
more than 30 years.
In February, two Tuscarora
Indians walked Into The Robesonlan newspaper and took the
staff hostage In an attempt to
publicize what they claimed was
official corruption Involving
drug trafficking by members of
the Robeson County Sheriffs
Department.
A few weeks later, Indian
'Judicial candidate Jullan Pierce
was shot to death In his home.

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docoi 1111.. •1'11111-button
piMIIor lilY llltl:h
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) - A
sharply divided Ohio Supreme
Court has declared unconstitutional the portion of the Public
Employees ' Collective BargainIng Act that deals wllh disputes
with pollee O'fflcers and
firelighters .
•The court, In a 4-3 decision
Wednesday, said that section
violates a municipality's right to
exercise Its power o( self·
government because It Interferes .
with the power to determine
municipal safety e mployee
compensa tlon.
The ruling came In a case
Involving firelighters In the
Cleveland suburb of Rocky
River.
II
In a related case, !r&lt;,&gt;m the city
• of Twinsburg, the court refused
• to hold the entire act unconstltu: tlonal, only the section that was
~ declared unconstitutional In the
~ Rocky River case.
• The section Is unconstitutional,
•' I h'e court said, because It unlaw: fully delegates munlclpalleglsla~ live authority by mandating
' binding arbitration for collective
: bargaining disputes over safety
~ employees' benefits and wages.
: The law, which wentlntoeffecf
; In 1984, was designed to reduce
' labor strife and promote labor
~ peace, but Chief Justice Thomas
~ Moyer says such goals do not
~ justify lnterlerence with munlcl-

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

$975 .
Sl 5

JUNIOR DENIM

MINI SKIRTS

Reg. 522.99 and '25.99

NOW

S1725

&amp; Sl9 50

DAYBED
(COMPLETE)

WRANGLER STONE-WASHED
&amp; HURRICANE WASHED

lndudos' Wllilo darlllol bunlli• mettms. roil1, tt¥tt' •d
· piUow ...._
Su• htoil 'U9.9S

MEN'S JEANS
REDUCED

25°/0

GIRSL 7-14 DENIM

MINI SKIRTS
Reg. SJ6.99

NOW

$13 50

Take Advantage of Our Lay-Away Plan
ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

yoo have the freedom to change yrur investment stmtegy if yru see
mterest rates shift.
0! coorse, the longer you keep a Rate Watcher CD, the rnore it
earns for yoo. Because the rate is compounded monthly and rises
twice during the term .

$19995 s,\~E

0

7.00%
6.79%
RATE
YIELD

·; POSTUREPEDIC
$9995 EA. TWIN
SIZE
PC.
15 Yr.
Sug. •••· 1199.95

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1

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sns
ONLY

_

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TYJtN

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aultu

S9995
... ,.

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ltlo()oly

MAflRESS SALE

LOO%
1'1/iLD,

7.72%
RATE

9.00%
YlliLD

US%

RATE
Thin/ 4 Mmrhs

Seamd 4 MmiiiS

FIIS14 Mmths

.tn%..,.Rl11 8.00%a.ALYBD
So the first four m(X}ths, you'll earn 7.%. 1'1-om five lo eight
ITl(llths, it's 8%. And from nine months to the end ol U10 term, you'U
get a hefty 9%.
.
So if it's a (!!"at investment yoo're craving for, open a new Rate
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by any coovenient Central 'Ihlst office.

THE CENTRAL TRlNf COMPANY
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MaRis Things Happe.~

to.......

GAWPOUS, OHIO
446-0902

.

MIDDUPORT, OHIO
992·6661
'

•

�..
Thursday, November 3, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

P8ga 12-The Daily Seutinel

..-- Local news briefs..•-..
Continued from page 1
money and the robber left after taking the cash.l:letore entering
the Robinson home by breaking out a .glass In a side door of the
residence, the robber apparently cut the phone lines. According
to reports, Mrs. Robinson was tied In a chair and her yells for
help were unheard. She eventually was able to work her way to
the home of neighbors who called pollee. Mrs. Robinson
received a facial bruise and a black ·eye as a result of the
lru:ldent and officials are attempting to determine how those
Injuries occurred. Chief of Pollee Jerry Rought reports that
Mrs. Robinson did not report that she was lilt by the robber and
he believes she might have received the Injuries in her attempts
to get free alter the robber had left the residence.
The Robinson robbery is the second such incident on elderly
Pomeroy women in the past several mont.hs.

50

An undisclosed amount of money and instant lottery tlckets
were taken In an armed robbery Wednesday at the Big Wheel
Carryout, 591 Jackson Pike, according to the Gallla County
Sheriffs Department.
·
Officers said a black male and white female In a light blue
van, with no license plates, pulled Into the carryout and
announced the robbery. Both suspe&lt;!ls, wearing Halloween
masks, entered the carryout. One suspect carried a chrome
plated gun. The clerk at the carryout was physically assaulted
by the male suspect, according to officials.
Officials said Samantha Bradshaw, 28, of Oak Hill, was
physically assaulted, however, she was not immediately
treated.
The sheriff's department received the ~all on the robbery at
8:22p.m. Wednesday.
.
After the robbery , the suspects' vehicle went west on US 35,
and turned left on Mitchell Road, according to deputies. Units 9f
the State Highway Patrol and Gallipolis City Pollee joined the
sheriff's department in the search for the getaway vehicle, but,
at last report, the light blue van had not been located.
A special agent from the Bureau of Criminal I~ntlficatlon
and Investigation Is assisting the sheriff's department in the.
Investigation of robbery .
Sheriff James M. Montgomery is urging anyone who might
have seen a light blue van containing a black male and white
female in the Spring Valley area at or near the time of the crime,
to contact the sheriffs department at 446-1221.

------Weather---"- - Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight, showers likely with a
low In the lower 50s. Southwest
winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of rain
Is 60 percent. Friday, occasional
showers and a chance or thunder,

from page 1
Pet ";tW'n ... -Continued
-------'--

and get down to the nitty gritty
Issues of the situation'' to get the
strike settled.
Bolin also stated that the
overtime wages being paid to
working DHS employees and the
fees or the labor consulting firm
representing the county In nego·
tlatlons, is costing the county
more than the requested union
contract would have amounted to
In three·years.
Bolin said the signatures by
gathered mainly by members of
other unions, by DHS cllensts,
and other concerned citizens. He
said that striking employees did
not gather signatures unless they
did so in the last week of the

Squads get 10 calls Wednesday
Ten calls were answered py local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
; Atl2:07 a.m., theRutlaqd Unit tookNaomiBiackfromHappy
Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
1:06 a.m. took Dorothy Gilmore from High St., to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 7:05a.m. took Eleanor Douglas from
Elk Run Road to O'Bieness Hospital in Athen~; Pomeroy at 8: 45
a.m. took Charles Blake from the Pomeroy Health Care Center
to Veterans Memorlaal; Tuppers Plains at 12:08 p.m. took
Martha Bailey of ReedsvUie to the St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Rutland at 12:59p.m. took Amber Pierce
to the Holzer Medical Center from Beech Grove Road; Pomeroy
at 2:13 p.m., took Pam West from E. Main St., to Veterans
· Memorial; Racine at 4:50p.m. Vicky Floyd from Fourth St., to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 7:21p.m. treated Mary Bentz
at Elm and North Sts.; Middleport at 11:05 p,m. took Betty
Frazier from Beech St., to Veterans Memorial.

I

Roy Harry Griffin, 63, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis, died Wednesday afternoon at Care Haven Nursing
Care Center of Point Pleasant,
W.Va., after a long Illness.
He was born on Nov. 3, 19241n
Lumberton, N.C., son of the late
Harry Griffin and Maggie Allan
Griffin of Gallipolis, who
survives.
A World War II Army veteran,

A car owned by Yvonne Scally of Middleport was broken into
·
Wednesday night.
Middleport Police said a wlridow was broken out of the car
which was parked on Race St., sometime Wednesday evening
and a brief case removed. The brief case contains a number of
business and confidential papers. Mrs. Scally said she is
offering a reward lor the return of the brief case with no
questions asked.

Ohio Lotto jackpot remains unclaimed

•

However, 122 players picked
five of the numbers to win $1,000
each, and 5,876 players chose
four of the numbers for a payoff
of $85 apiece.
Ticket sales totaled $4,345,428
and the total prize payout was
$621,460.
In accompanying Kicker
game, there was no winner of the
$100,000 grand prize.

petition drive. The drive began
about 30 days ago, and a few
pages of the petition are still out,
he added.
Miller said he has negotiated
Department of Human Services'
contracts In several counties,
including a recent Lawrence
County DHS contract. Having.
negotiated DHS contracts, Miller
said he was familiar with DHS
fund lng procedures. "I'm not
saying you have money like
Lawrence County, but I' m saying ·
there are some monies out there
to resolve I he issues," he added.
The commissioners accepted,
but did not discuss the petitions
with Bolin or Miller.

Area deaths

Roy Griffin

' Car broken into Wednesday

CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
jackpot went unclaimed in Ohio's
Super Lotto drawing Wednesday
night, increasing the top prize to
$9 million for Saturday's game.
There were no tickets sold for
the midweek game that listed the
six winning numbers- 15, 16, 25,
26, 30 and 32, a lottl!ry commls·
slon spokesman said today. The
jackpot was worth $6 million.

storms. High 60 to 65. Chance of
rain is 80 percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Chance of rain each day. Highs
mainly in the 50s and lows
generally in the 40s.

Meets Saturday
Star Grange 778 and Star
Ju111or Grange will meet at the
grange hall at 8 p.m. Saturday.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 28~

AT&amp;T ..................... :...........28Y,
Ashland Oil ........................3571
Bob Evans .. :........................ l6
Charming Shoppes ........ ......1571
City Holding Co ........ .... ....... 30
Federal Mogul ..................... 54
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. .. .... 52~
Heck's ...... ... ........................ %3,4
Key Centurion ...... ..............1671
Lands' End .. ....... ........ ......... 25
Limited Inc .................... : .... 27
Multimedia lnc .............. ,....7071.
Rax Restaurants .................. 3'4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12'4
Shoney's Inc ........................ 771
Wendy's !nil .... .................... 6%
Worthington Ind ................. 21%
(Charming Shoppes' October
sales rose 12 percent. Umlted
Inc.'s October sales rose 20
percent. Wendy's Inti reported
thlrd·quarler net earnings at
$8,868,000, or S.OO/ohare, vs.
$11,033,000, or $.05/ollare. Revenue was $273,700,000, 811 opp...ed to S2'l2,200,000 In 1987.)

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Addona •nd remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Conerece work
Plumbing and electrical
work

Tecumseh
Weed Eator
Homelite

Jacobean

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Olio

. '192-6611

3-«J-..'87 tfn

We can repair and recor• radiators and
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair _Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
i
Middleport', Ohio
1·13-tfc '

Toys, Collectables,

Clowns. Porcelain

OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P.M . .
992-7204
324 East Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio
IBohind City Hotl)

"At Roasonoble Pri&lt;es"
or

.

V-8 motor, air, AM·FM·Cauettll, power equip·
ment pluo much mo ... Low milage.

"MUST SEEI"
1915 CHEVROLET BLAZER
4X4 TAHOE. Clean ..................... SALE Sl995

1985 PONnAC 6000 lE 4 DR.

V·6 motor, oir, tilt, cruiH. This car runt and
locka like new.

·

DUSI\' ST, llUCUIE

992-7611

10.6·88-1 mo.

DEAD OR ALIVE

111 Wilt 5ec. P-oy

985-3561

992-6720

We Service All Makes
l/22/88/tfn

10·21·'88·1 mo.

BOGGS ..

Equipment Dealer

far• E4ulp•••t

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by Donna
SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdayo, Holidays
Specializing in

On October 21, 1988, in

742-2235
1

'

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oct- 21. 1988, In
the Meig1 County Prot.le

Court Coao No. 28036. Ueio
Ebw~
2273
A¥WI
Drive, Rll!l noldlbong. Ohio.
43068, wu oppointod e,...
cutrix. of the eatate of Otge

Plarott' d0C8111d, lllto of21 8
roy. Moltll County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Proboto Judga
Lene K. Nn•lroad, Clerk

(10127: 11113. 10 3tc

1979 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO ................................ S1195

1915 CHEVROLET CAVAUER

1977 CADILLAC ELDORADO ............. S895

4 DR. Auto., Air........................ SALE S4395
1911 TOYOTA PICKUP ....................... s1995
1910 OlDSMOBILE
CUTLASS 4 DR. Low Milla91 Cor....... S2495

1977 PLYMOUTH

SALEI

VOLARE WAGON .............................. $895
1972 CHEVROLET
PICKUP TRUCK ...............~.................. S49~

$799

85" AMERICAN TRADITIONAL
LA-Z-BOY• QUEEN SIZE SlEEP SOFA

81" TRANSITIONAL
LA·Z-BOY" QU£EN SIZE SlEEP SOFA

Gracious and gently contoured, a charmer with

A casually lnvltln&amp; style with pillow headrest
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eye·appeaung soft lines anCI ruffled delaUs.

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Stop In and See len, Ed, Mark or J.D.
Or Call 992-2174 Today

"II Wt Don-'f H1r1 /f•.• W• 'II Fl"d If/"

11

•
Uee Our

Fr• Parlting
Fr• hllr•y
0,..
'Til S P.M.
Moa. &amp; Fri.

Termo,

'Till P.M.

YourVIoa

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PACK

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The Staff Is
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Mary, Noomi, Jane,
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and Gwen Falm1r

KAY'S
BEAUTY SAlON
992-2725

W&lt;elcome"
10·31·88-1 mo.

MAIN STREET

Repairs

742·241111

10/ 8/ 1 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage

NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified licensed Shop

·•

5·25-tfn

1857,

VHS TAPE

MAll WEEKLY CHECK QUA·
RANTEEO. FREE DETAILS.
Write: SO. 1067 W. PhiiiiCief.

PhiL Suite 239-GO. Ont•lo.

Calif. 91762.

SoOteone to bet7s1srt in my home
nights. Mult be rellabl• Rllf•· •
enOM rtquired. Call 81 ... 388- •

9342.

ll/lf ll-tle

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAI.R

price~

II

COACHING VACANCY. EUt·
ern local SchoolsilinnMdofln
Alliltent B•lketbltl Cotch for
the boy• teem. If lnt•ened,
pluse contact Mr. Ch•l•
Moore, Principal lrl: 814-98!13329 Immediately.

RN'S &amp; LPN'S .PH, full time &amp; ~
pwt time IPPiiCitlont are being .

accepted 'for Pla•ent Vallev j
Hot pitai Nunlng Care Center. .1
Contact Personnel 304-87&amp;- •

4340. AAEOE.

AVONaUIN'auiiShlrilrfSpe••· ;

304-8715-1429.

.llc.,ud Sodllll Wor• in new
long t•m c•a facility . Exparlancaprat.red. Commentul'lte
IIIII'¥ .nd benefit1, E.O .E. Mall
riiiUml to Adminlltrater Care
H•ven of Point Pleall'lt. Rt . 1
BoK 328. Point Plaa..nt, W . Va .
215660.

!
,

1

t

S.V~

MEDIC/II. TECHNOLOGIST ''
MEDICAL lAB TECHNICIAN '

~

Braxton County Memori.a Ho•
prt.J il accepting applicttlontfor
MT or MlT. Part·fillltime. Call
304-384-15156. Equal Opporttunlry Affirmative Action Em·
ployltl' MPH.
.

ot•ootolnfont&amp;toddl•clotheo
&amp;toyo.
Y11d SII•Junctlon o1'180 11o
564 ot Poner. Clothing of all

:

.
'

·

'

Oldar work.-1 age 55 .nd over.
residtrit of W.t Vifgini&amp; part
time. 20 hrs week 13.36 hour.
Must meet Oep.-tmant of labor
income guide lin•. 304-67~
2770.

li!H. Wed.-Sat.

Y•dSIII•Nov. 411o 6. 10 AM -6
PM. 3 mil• from Port !If toward
Ch•Nreon 564. R1in cancel•.

...... 'Pomerov...........

h.

l

•

Jot.. Now hfrlng. your .... 1
t13, 650.00 to t59,480.00. 1
Immediate openings. Call 1- l
315-733-8062 ht. F 2938 A. ,

V•dSai•Friday-Nov. 4th. 8 :00
to 15:00. loCIII:ed at the Townhou• iu•t off Rt. 7 in Addilon.
V•iou• ltem1 from AM -FM

WI mlgh1 hlv1

,;
,'

..,.--------'
Federal, Stet• and Ctvil
j

Thurs. &amp; Fri.-3rd &amp; 4th.

Nama rt,

'

=.,...-::--~.,....-:::- '

~~::_' wr.::::'fo~.:~:,:,,,~'!i';~

reel~ cad.

.

----------------- '

touth on Rt. ? . New creft1, lilk

06gantlc. 1'1/: mllee up WOif.P.n
Rd. Nov. lrd. 4th. 6th. Price~

~

•
•
•
=

AVON· AI er881. Call Marltvn IIi
WetN• 304-882·2146.

GAI.liPOUS FlEA MARKET·
R... 35&amp;180.0ponoverySot.
&amp;Sun. 9 AM·6 PM.
3 Fomlly·Ciot Twp. Com..,nltv
81.illlng. App&lt;oK. 2'1. mil•

Flo- Shop. 304-SeZ-3737.

:
..

:
"
~

•
•

Wom.,. to work day .-tdnlg~ to :
c•e for elderly, lady, 2 d.,s and
one Nght off p• wllllk. Phone ·
304-87~3715

only

batw"" •

8:00 lnd 10:00 AM and 7:00
and 8:00PM .

Homemaker 56 Of otder need41d
at on01 to go for training. mu@t ·
meet the guide /Ina for s ... ior
Community Servia-. 20 hn per '
week lit rrinimum weg&amp; c.tl ,

304-876-2389.

C1pt. Stttm• now hh-lng helP•· •
tor WI cteening, tt•rt minimum
w-ae. mustben ..... drell.tlle.
clll after 6 :00 304-8715-2296.

2 mil• North paft F•lr Qroundt.

Nov.

4 end a. 814-992· 7867.

.......,t.Pleasiint......
&amp; Vicinity

Situations

12

wanted

•

-------'
WHI c.e for atd•ly man or .,.
In

woman

our home.

Cell •

814-992·8616.

•

Y•d Sllle. Thun and Fri. Nov 3
and 4 . 2829 Mt. Vernon Ave. I will 1111 off and hem pants. Call ;
Truck topper long bed. Meytag 814-992·2483.
~
wrin~
walt.,
Fl
....
dlthes,
-:;;;:::=;;::;;:::~===
lotsmllc. 10:00AMto5:00PM. -;
•

15

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Schools
Instruction

'

- - - - - - ··
RE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS •

Flick Pe••on AUC1ion_., II· COUEOE, 529 Jackson Pika.
c.e nted Ohio 1nd Wnt Vtrglnla. 1Cel144&amp;-4367. Reg. No. 81-11 Eltala, tnt~ue, f•m. Uquid.. 1 10588 .
tlon ..,... 3 .... n:J-5786.
.

____

~
;
.:
...;

18 Wanted to_Do
_;_ ,

W• pay cah 'for late madill detrl

uaed cer1.
~lm Mink Chw.·Oidllnc.
Bill OeneJohnaon

814-«8·3872

'

1

Dozer lit B•ckhoe Work-860 ~ '
Caae
Re•onlble rates. ....

doz•.

EKp•ienoe op•Mor. Cr.-n..,, •

Conot. can 814-26&amp;-1718.

•

---------------1-----------~-TOP CASH paid for '83 model Tree work wanlld·top'Ping. ·~

We wHI Nul cuM for em•geno,"
HEAP. Molgo Coonty Oopt. of

2~~

Hum., S.vlcal,

and HEAP

vouch.._ We c., give you
prompt dlllll'erl•. E.:el16or l•h
Works, Inc. PomM"ay, Ohio.

114-892·3881 .
JEWELRY
"SELL OUT''

10.7PJ" off. Jutt In time for
Onlttmet. Come • • lit Hcen~e
bur.ulnPomeroy on November
1tt throuah November 4th.
pm.

Wtnted: Nttded RUf'MI'V ltem1
for our church. Crlbe, Me. lito

.,d n.-ver u1ed c••· Smllh
8uldc·Pontt.c, 1911 Eall•n
Ave., Qalllpolil. Call 814-441-

Compl•e houtaholdl of furrUture S. antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal han ... Swain' a Furnltuf'l
S. Auction, Third • Oltve,

814-448·3169.

...,fh

Fr• to good hon-.1 yr. old

Free to Fod home-1 yr. old Rat

T•rl•. Good wlltdt dog. Cel

814-379-2435..

Mott. of 2wouldtlketobab¥•ft ,.

in.mv home. Mon. -Frl.. •nv lhift . ·:
Rat. wail .tit a. ·
f*:J Sundl'f ceU1 ple11e. 814- •

.Re•onablerete~.

44&amp;-83n ·

•

8870.

388-9303.

3168.

to Buy-Used Mobill

Hom•. c.e1 114-441-0171.

w...t.t to buy; Sttnding pine or
logtlmt.r. C1ll 614· 384-15182
•fl•7p.m.

Uted llrnllura by thl piece or
entire hou•hold. 614•.742·

24515.

.,

TrtppJna tuppll•. Buytng ginling. Georg~ Buckl., 614·1.84-

4781. Hoors 2:00.9:00. Cloud
onMindllr.

lllililllymenl
SI:IVI~I!S

Help Wanted

.;

Ftnanw I

•••
'

~

~--~~~--------=
21
Business
Opportunity

- - - - - - ··.,
I NOTICE I
. ~
THE OHIO VALlEY P\IBliSH- .~
lNG CO. recommendl lh• you (
do buain•• wtlh people you'
knOtN, end NOT to ... d mon., \
lhrough them .. untl you h•e '....

__ .:

trwettlg•ild the off•lng.

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

3 doga. One plrt Poodla. Dl'll
COIHe Mid one p.-t Pug. ·CIIII

814-371-1380.

;

my home. Oaysl'lift. 304-876- •

Junk Cars wtth or whhout
motors. Call larry llvety-814-

8•11 dog to
only. 000&lt;1
_,..,do~ can 814-37fl.24311.

Free to ~d home-"7 wk old
ldtt.. o. Coli 814-379-24311.

un

=------_:.._ ·

ALSO...

to ofv• -"¥· Lilt•
trolnecl. call814-44e·9319.
3 Pll! Lh .. Apoo pupol•.
2·part A• T«rlera. C•ll e14245-9523.

KHt.,.

pruning, removalt, bu1hea ,
trimmed. Fr" •tlmtte. Cell ;.
~14-446-8078 Of 304-876- :,.

W.nt to buy: Used furniture .nd Will beb¥' lit in my home week :
.,tkluel. Will buy entire hOu• dll"f"t only. C.ll 814-448-8199...
hold 1urMhing. Marlin Wed..
WHI blb¥'111 P'•choolttailmenil\ ,.
mever. 814-246·6162.

w....t..t

Giveaway

:

Own vour apparll or thoe at~e. "'
chooll from: Jean·SPGrtiWII• ~
lediat, Men'• · children: ..._
m••nlty, l•ge lllet, .,.• ., \
d.ncewe•·Hroblc, bridll, In- i
gerle or aec••orfal •ore. Add :-

color ~nalyttl. I rind nem• · Liz ,.
ClelborM, Hlah:hl•. O.~e, ...
Lee, St Michel' For-a. Buale t~
Boy. Lwi. Camp lwerty- Hilla. •..
Org~nlcatty Grown, Lud .. ov• :..
2000 othwl. or •11.11 0 _, .....,

p&lt;loa doolfln•.....It'- pricing -(
dltoount or "-nlv lhoe ttore. •

A..llll prla. unbiiiWIIIIIe~tap ..quallty
nor!ftiiiY P'loecl •..
from 118. to eeo. ovw 280,.t

•ho•

HOME ASS EMILY INCOME

Uve.

6·17-lfc

614-446-2412.

3168.

4

Call 992·2221
or 992·9922
10-12-81-1 mo.

Part-time f•m help w.nled. C1H

ViRa Furniture and Appliencet
Parking lot Sale
StertsWed. Ends Sat. o.,erltoclc
of und furniture. Mu1t s,al
trudcloiKI of new furniture.
Chrlatrres tovshrNajustarrived.
Priced Vfii'Y low to move. Sofa
beds, ch~ts. too much to
O'IJllion, Fit. 141· Cantll'lay.-%
mile on Llnmin Pika. 614-446-

Multi-f..,ify .,.,d sale and bake
tale. Nov. lrd•d4th. 9:00•.m.
to 7 Horton St. In M••on. turn at

I

Baby 1ltterneededlnRioG1W1de :

Wed., Thurs., &amp; Fri. 83 Lo~at
St. Furniture. stenKJ, jaw:elry,
.ntlquee·gl•swar• trunk&amp;' mir·
ror. c:hildren1 c:lottling.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

'"

•ru. C. II 814- 2415-6970.

under t1 .

Knowo Where You

or 992-7121

cSem 01 trtll• toha~lttOflefrom
Wet•looCoeiCo. toCrownCfty
Mine prop..ry. Call office 814-- •
25~6512 between .8 AM .... :30 .,

ReduotyourWelght·Ttlce"New
Shape Diet Pf~n" .nd w.t•
Pills. Av•ll•ble It Fruth
Ph•IT'IICV.

Our Delivery Staff

Alto Trl!ltllllulon
PH. 992·5682

•
•

Wanted owner/OS*Itor Tll'l·

8 Family Yard Sale-Cent.,erv
Townhou&amp;e. Thurs .• Fri.· 'Nov.
3-4• ., 9 AM·&amp; PM . ClothkiGIIIburM, c .. settes, home interim. depreaion glas.sw~~re. moat

Hos alwoys offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
If any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match itl
I

•
..
..

PM.

Annou nr:e 111 en Is
3 Announcements

'

••If· ":

~Vicinity

Lll us convtrllhrn:e aldMiwill
&amp; Sli4H over to easy VIIS.

CAll NAY CARTER
or IOI'S ELECTRONICS
4U-7390

•t-T 1._10H, 24 twa.

Up to t15HOUR PROCESSING

.......Gallipolis ......... .

Qood condition.
PI-•c•r"·
col 304-8715-5728.

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOI
UNDER S300
MAIN S11EIT PIZZA

Rt. 124, Pomaroy Ohio

.

9·1-81-tfn

ICI'IP

Your Hometown PI"""

Rutland, Ohio

All Major &amp; Mino•

home. A•embtv work. J.wMry, •
IO!p'l. ottwt. i!.ll 1· 119-515-

ATTENTION TRUCKERS

Furntture .nd IPPiianoee by the
piece or entire household. Fair
price~ being paid. Call 814-448-

PIZZA

'110.00
992-62.82
Blem Batteries
'30.00 &amp; Up
319 So. 2nd Ave. '
Salem StrHt

Moat .F oreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service

We Honor MC/Oisc/Visa

'

Sll•ptnon to can on Mlnlnglnd.lltrial account• in Sou·
thelltern Ohio and neighboring
wett Virginia ..... Pr• experien cd. •g greuive,
~ biro-.:~:,, F•~=,"'fi'''l:u".!i mo.
t ivated lndividu•1. Co,.,.-.v
pleue le•• Pt. HIKh School furnlthee
trentportltkm. All reofllceo•coii304-4S -1888.
.,IT'IM wll be oon1lct.ed. S.,d
to: Box Cl1 177. c/ oG•IIIpolia
Daily Tribune, 8215 Third Ave ..
7
Yard Sale
. Glllipoh, Ohio 4&amp;8~1 .

8. 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Makes

10:001m-~:OO

Furnace

SYRACUSE. OHIO

between Rt. 7 &amp; Boahan.
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Serrica C111t• for Ryan
Products

lmni MOVIES &amp; SLIDES to

Munlelcia4ing Supplies
Modem Gun Supplies
Guns • Ammo • Slugs •
22 Ammo ·
124 Eall of Rutland
Acrosr Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614·742·2355

Ker Heaters
Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

located Hetfwey

AND

MOIRIS
EQUIPMENT

1-28·'88-tfn

Dealer for

lOADING

MIDDLPEPOIT, OHIO

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

Send Resumt to;
Personnel Department
PO Box 344
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

YAIDMlrt &amp; ECHO

W.Va . 2!5704-

REWARO, coll304-676-2226.
LOST. br.Wn ploid wool Mox•

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3·11·tfn

992-3410

'~Walk·lne

Middleport, Ohio

5702.

Res. 949-2860

or

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

9·19·18tfn

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

LOST. black male cat vicinity of
Crab Creek area. 30 4-875-

PH. 949-2801

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

GET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL

12 GAUGE m·oTGUNS
ONtY

CARTER'S

LDI't: k81f ring c:omafn fng •w•al
k.ys 1nd r.t •nap klly ring with
keys. BetWMn Rea~vllle .,d
Uttle Hodrllng Rt. 124 or Little
Hockin~ end ParkeJtburg At 7
or in 8elpr•Pirkenburg erea .~
Reward. 81 .. 378-6262.
·

"Free Estimataa"

Racine, 0 hi o

FACTORY CH!lJl

IQ. 19.'88·1 mo.

·

New HoiMI Built

10·8-tfc

RACINE, OHIO

614-985-4180

Help Wanted

BISSEL.l ,
SIDING CO,

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRl

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Take the pain out of
painting. let me do
it for you.
Very Reasonable.
Have References.

EXPERIENCED
-MEDICAL
SECRETARY

SMALL
WANT ADS

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

FREE ESTIMATES

you juot came and oat
with uo or offered a
kind word. Porhapa
you oflared o plavar in
our behalf. Please oc·
capt . our heartfelt
thonks with opecial·
thanks to the Moaon
Senior Citizens (Nutrltlonl.
Oaughter,
Jean Gruaaar
and·our fomll

OAK, LOCUST,

9/15/88/Un

GUN SHOOT

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

•• or a card, or maybe

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

446·3487

10-25-1 mo. pd.

LINDA'S
PAINTING

thanks to Rev. Jamoo
Seddon for the boautl·
fulservlce.
Maybe you sont flow·

FIREWOOD

$449 95

Card of Thanks

n81s. We give 1peeiel

•VINVL SIDING

Complete Drywall
Service
'
FREE ESTIMATES

ROOM SUITE

1G241mu

We would liketothonk
all the friends and
i neighbora of Elvo Davis
for your thoughtful·

~::::::::::::::Li:c·=#~Of0~6=·3~2~::':0:·2:4:·':m:o:·::~l

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

MEIGS
FURNITURE

for lnformot1on

11·3.'88-1 mo.

.

8-8-88-tfn

FOR SAL£

cakaa
lt. 1, Bo• 136, Vinton

WE PAY '50.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME

992-2269

ALII£ ~IMON
114 WPst Moin
CAll 992-2511

character and novelty

bingo session.

GA'LUPOUS, OH.

3rd St.

whlte/ bl1ck spots. BUIIYII .Porter Rd. Chll~.n• peu. C•ll
ilfl• 4 :30PM . 814--367-7810.

Huntington.

9006.
EARN EXCELLENT MON£)'_ ot

-.It

DOOR PRIZE
2 H.O. FREE with coupon and purchase of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon per customer per

BILL SLACK

Only
ART\ &amp; CRAFTS
and Other Item&lt;

dor.·

Help Wanted

Crtftt. P .O. Bo)C 9008-GOT.

Ptnl, dlthel, baby through
chMP wtm• ctothlng. Iota more
mllc.

SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

CHERRY

~ofurdoys

LOST:2 male Fox Terrier

Page 13

t&amp;OO weektv po"ibl .. A•embllng products. SASE to: Home

Brown ttoneware. Jewelry,

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:46 p.M .

56 STATE ST.

NEW MINI MART
SPACES FOR RENT

FOUND: Mile c at on Mitchell
Rd. Call 814-448-4007 after 5

Pika. 4th trail .. on left. Hull

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

Reasonalste lates'

$3 s

11

Wed., Thurt., Fri.,&amp; Sat.Jutt oH
141 It Centenii'Y on Unooln

BINGO

RESIDENCE PHONE
lb 141

10·11·'88-1 mo. pd.

1·3· '86-tk

698-6121 .1011318812 mo.

S2ooP - · IUSINUS PHON!
(6141 992-6550

949-2168

&amp; SIIVIu

WE TRADE

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

and Cable Bills Here

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm ·

LOWEST PRICES

Pay Your Phone

NEW- REPAIR

Authorlzsd John

Feal.uring: Con11olida1ed, Dutch
Wee I, Brunco, Ashley

We Corry Fishing SUi~Pii·eti

ROOFING

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Howard L Writ•.t

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Parts

&amp;
168 North St&lt;ond ,
Middleport, Olio 45760

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

•12 Years Experience

HUDNALL
PLUMBING HEATING

WANTED

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

WOOD STOVES

Factory Choka
12 Ga.,. Shotguns Only
Stric~y Enlor&lt;td
·
10·7-tfn

SINCE 1969

IND

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohio
·
8-13 tfn

I·

6:30P.M~

•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING &amp; APT. PROJECTS

TOP OF THE ST AilS

-

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

•VINYL SIDING a FIOOFING

-:::l~~..,~
'-·
,,.'•CLOTHES
c .--, .
.
. •TANS

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
:I: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
2 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

GUN SHOOT

•EXTENSIVE REMODELING

~~

L3

2· 1!1-'88-tfn .

•CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS

Res. 949-2860

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Between 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or lean Mtssaqe .

GENERAL ·
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COIIIIERCIAL

. •'

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

614-742-2617

lO·ll·UI mo.

r.!··

1

tho Molga County Probate
Court, Cooe No. 28037,
Ferndora Schoofar Story,
4067&amp; l.eu•ot Cliff Rood,
Pomoroy, Ohio 46769, woa

bit Second Street. Pom•

"SPECIALS"

\J

WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FR IE II!IMATES.
For any of these stnim ,all .

OWN!ll: GREG I. ROU$11

110127: 1111 3. 10 Jtc

1986 BUICK CENTURY LIMITED 4 DR.

Television Listening DeviceS
lrependable Hearitlg Aid ,Sales &amp; Se,rvic
,,. Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

•Dozer &amp; B1ckhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

•

Lost and Found

~!!!~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~LOST.
Ch•lnut
Brown
and
.,
whtte EJ!u"•h
Springe!'
Sp111iel.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

~,';~~~ , ,•HAIR

eatate of Edna P. Schaefer,

An elegantly appointed style that dispenses
comfort In every shapely contour and custlon.
Exceptionally tailored with matched welting.

$13.00
$21 .00
$61 .00

992-3723

IDTH LYNCH

BEAUTIFUL

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

Lane K. Net•lroed, Clerk

•PORCHES

FREE J!STIMATJ!S
Buckeye Card Welcome

/·~

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
RoofinJ
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Eatimates
Call 992-2772
8/15/Hn

dooe11ed, Iota of 40575
· laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy,
Melga County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

•DECKS

4·16· 86- tfn

appointed Eucutrix of the

LA·Z·BOY® QUEEN SIZE
SLEEP SOFA

SB .OO

ads .

•TILE WORK

D.ay or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Includes lnnersQrlhg mattress.

79" TRADITIONAL

set~arl!lle

•DA"t'WALL

PH. 949-2801

11).27-1110.

The Rutland Township Trus·
tees will meet at 6:30 this evening
at the Rutland Fire Station.

S499

. $5 .00

•CEILING FANS INSTALlm
•REMODELING •PAINTING
•PWMBING
•ROOANG

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Meet tonight

SALEI

CHESTER. OHIO
.
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
.ROOFII\IG
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
' 1 10·4·1 mo.

26·36 WOROS
S7.00
$10.00
$15.00
$25.00
$60 .00

18-26 WO A: OS

Specializing In Chain
Uak and Wood Fencing

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SER~ICE

women."

Air, AM·FM·Storeo·Collette. roor defogger.
power door locka ond more. Reody for your In·
opectlon.
•

$4.00
$6.0.0 .
$8.00
s 13.00
$33.00

REPAIR~

Middleport, Ohio

7-13·'88· tin

Deluxe Sleep Sofas
Auto., oir, AM,FM-Stereo, luggoge rock, wire
whoel covero. Thio cor Is cleon.

0 - 15 WORDS

LYNCH'S
GENERALW

Briggs &amp; Stratton

(FREE ESTIMATES!

Metzelj,baum. ''
Voinovlch said Ohio Is behind
10 year~ In employment, and
needs a senator that will worry
about the economy.
.
"I want to be know as 'Senator
plant opening,' not •Senator plant
closing."'
Negative campaigning has
plagued the 1988 election and is
emphasized with the Senator's
race.
Voinovich said Metzenbaum
has been lying about his record
and that is why Metzenbaum will
not debate Voinovich.
Voinovich said he hopes Ohio
realizes that Metzenbaum Is a 100
percent ultra-liberal, whose
campaign and advertising money comes from Hollywood.
"Uitra·liberal means Metzen·
baum is for gun control; ultra·
liberal means Metzenbaum Is
against prayer in the schools·
... Metzenbaum Is against the
death penalty ... Metzenbaum is
against a strong defense In the
country," Voinovich said. "The
only difference between Dukakis
and Metzenbaum is that Dukakis
. will stand up for his liberalism."
Volnovich said he wants to take
social security out of the unified
budget to protect It for the young
men and women working today. ·
"I'm on the job and getting It
done," Voinovlch said. "I want to ,
work with Clarence Miller to
send help to working men and

1986 FORD MUSTANG 2 DR. XU

-

fnr ear:n diN as

Authoriud Serri&lt;t
&amp; Ports

Public Notice

1987 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY 4 DR.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

RATES

1 DAY
3 DAYS .
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
t MONTH

6

PM.

R.tetare for co,seeurive runs, broken upd~swm bechatged

SMALL ENGI'NE
REPAIR

YOUNG'S

'novte' h... Continued from page 1
------

Stocks

t

Business Se..Vices

1.1
P' Ot

I

he was a member of the Ameri·
can Legion.
He was also preceded In death
by an Infant sister.
Other survivors include two
sisters, Mary Griffin and Mar·
· garet Finnicum of Gallipolis;
two brothers, Marvin Griffin of
Gallipolis and Lewis Griffin of
Chesapeake; and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be Saturday at 2
p.m. at Cremeens Funeral ·
Chapel. The Rev. Sharon Endl·
cott will officiate. Burial will be
at Reynolds Cemetery in Addl·
son. Military graveside honors
will be done by VFW Post 4464.
Frlends may call the chapel
Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.

Get Results Fast

L---------------------.;....-...1
that a Republican senator from
Ohio will work with a Republican
administration. No one has
·fought President Reagan and
George Bush more than

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
· 8 A.M•. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

The Daily Sentinel

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I

Classifie

Big Wheel robbery
under investigation

Gallipolis woman, 37, abducted
A Gallipolis woman was allegedly abducted by an
unidentified man Tuesday )n Jackson and was found unharmed
and tied ~pIn Claremont County, according to Sgt. Jef!Dalton
of the Jackson Pollee Department.
Terry McLean, 37, of Gallipolis, was abducted Tuesday,
around 2 p.m. at the Main Express Convenience Store, 779 Main
St., Jackson, by a man wearing a latex mask of an old man's
face and a mixed black and white wig according to the pollee
report.
The man, described as 6 feet tall, medium built In a blue jean
jacket and blue jeans, Instructed McLean to drive down SR 32.
They drove to Claremont County and parked near the
Cincinnati Natwe Center In Union Township where the man tied
her up, then fled Into nearby woods, Sgt. Dalton said.
McLean was discovered about 20 minutes later in her car by a
man trimming bushes at the center.
•
No weapons were involved. The Athens Pollee and Union
Township Pollc~ are assisting the Jackson Pollee In the
lnves tigation.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 3, 1988

""""'• omoll
..... dotll.
Chi........
..d
Camp Cona.oo~e.

'"'· 304-571$-8204.

A.-mf:lle prock.lcts 81 home.
PM't·tfme. Exp•i.-tC. UMKII•

• .,. Ootlh. can 813·327·
0898. Eot D-1149

br.,c112aoo ""'-· •17.100to~
U9.900: lnv.,..,., -~,..

•c.
loughlln (112189.4228. ·

fix tuNe. •lrf•&amp; QI'Md ~Ina_,

Cen open 11 d.,s M

1-

'· ~

--::----...::..::.:.__ •.

'

.~·:.,

�~-~~-~-

. - - - - - ---

•

..

•

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. November 3. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

46

Space for Rent

64 Misc.

Merchandise

74

KIT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrl1ht

Pomeroy-Middleport, .

Motorcycles

1978Honda0L1000. full

COUNTRY MOBILE Hotne Park.
Aou1e 33, Nonh of ,_,m•oy.
Rental trail••· Call 81"-992·
7479.
•

Office or amell laltln'" IPIIC8
for rint. locM«&lt; M N . Second
Aw. In Midclepo" Butineu
dJ•trld. C.H e14-992-51!546 or
e14-!149-2217.
~It for
rem. Ftmil¥ Prict. Mobile Home

Spadout mobile home

22

P•k. Galllpolit Ferry, W. Va.
304-8715-3073.

to Loan

Money

75

Dakota F8rm Hom&amp; Built on
your ktt. •12.1915 • up. See our
Modll. Coli 1·814-88.7311.

•40o.

«•t.

Television
·Viewing

304-·8715-

Boat• and
Motors for Sale

•

1 9N Evlnrude TrJ..h .. l. l / 0 , 8
wL eng.. QUI drt.l'e. N..dl ,... ·
oolrod. Bolt off•· Coll814-44•
2151.

WHITE' S METAL OETECTOAS·
Chedc far
tpedllt on ALL
Mo-. Big dbcount-laot yoor"o
ttock.t rncxW.. Ron Allison.
1 210 Second Ave.. GIUipoll.
Ohio, 814-448·4338.

&amp;

49

LOAN I UPT0.10,000-RHultl
.,....,tMd rl(l•d. . of crtclt.
Contumlt' Finlf'ldll ServiCII.
513-29.0791 .

folr cond
7981 .

'Wheelch .... lliW or ulld. 3
wheeled electric tcopten. C•ll
Rogn Moblty collect. 1·814- ·
87().9881 .

Auto Partl
Accesaories

For Lease

Merchonc!JSP.

~!:\.::.1~.::::;"~Mv•:.

my mind that if anything
:.::...:
..:.=.-:..1!11:~ happens to me today, itI will
•ement. 2 c.- g•eo• 1.,11
~--"
lot. 4off....
be two weeks before can
HDb:er Hoepbl
At from
38m.-:-~.~~-illon. C.ll worry about it."
b-~~.
••1.

• • ean 114-~ 7101

.,

GOVERNMENT HOMES from
CU.Aep*l Aloo
T• o.llnq._.. &amp; Foredosurw
PrDJ*tl• Awlallle NOW. For
lilting. CALL 1·318-733-8014
Exl. G 2711.

3IR . hou•. 1YJ bahl.a•l9&amp;
W"k ta o.lllpolil
tchoo&amp; Scenlcvt.w. EJIII:tllmt
neighborhood. f325 per mo.
cen llftw 5 PM t. wNk~ndl.
814-44.1410.

., 4 ~oom hoi'IM. Aaurm lo.,.

3 BR . ,., ch. Cia.. to town.

Cll814-44tl-01411.
Home In country wfth lind. WHI
oo,.kllr 1.-.d contntc:t wtth

down p.,mn. C.ll 81..,.99251...

•I•

For
or nMf. I roam on J.ge
lot. Depot Str-. Autlend.
t zo. 000. or t250. month rent.
814-192-8890.

flr.,:~l-.

U78 per mo. COl 814-44•
2881 otter I PM. or 448-420&amp;
1 BR .. unfurnlohod. 142Fourt1L
•185 per mo. Dopooh. 8 moo.
1-• No chll • .,. Prft lingle
....... Colll14-44.3817.
3BR .. clty _..,_G,.,Eiem
I 3001 mo. Ref. • Sec. dip . No
P••· CON 8tuto1 Aoolty, 814-

448-420&amp;
124 •cr•. min... rfghb. 4
Hcnom.. 2 c• Pill&amp; Z Good toc:Mion In Pt. Ple•lnt.
..,.,.. moble home hookups. Recent" romodllod. 2 M.
Hi mle Nit ••"-'· CtH houtl with.,_.,..... • C.port.
114-143-5147.
Corn• kJI. UOOamo. plut .c.
dop.. rof. roqu .. od. Coli 81424.951&amp;

2 Br. houM. Clo11 to tQ'IYn.

• 32

"'Iced U78 pluodep. a rol. Con
814-4411-35411.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

. -----'· 1918 N8w Moon 121150, 2 BR.
· • U300. Coll814-448-0390.
1•

Moble Home tor hie. 12x50.
Cll 814-44.2001

•• 1971 Elmno, 2 BR., nlloVWirlng.

• 12&gt;85. 4a8t!J&gt;aut. •3000. C.H
·· 814-317-711hltw5PM.

..:....-----:-:-:---:-:-::

. • 1974, 12&gt;10moblohome.totol
~ . ol ...rllic. U700. COII814-387·
• 0132.
1.12 1-.70 Llberty-3 Bod·
roonw. 2 bllthl. niW c•p«.
lilt· up. Or.- T..,~ee. $11,000.
Coli 014-298-8010 cr 448-

77411.

1.9 . . 24a52udional. 3BRs.. 2
.,. b•hl. • • raom. heel.
cond.

Frencft Ctty

Broklge.

114-448-9340.
1970SIMIItz. 2 BR .. CA. tlp-ou•
Muet •• to tppreci•e. CaM
114-44. 79921rhor 4 PM.
~968 Fleetwood. 12x64. bottle
ga h• 111d hot weter. t3000.
con 114-143-6310 cr &amp;14143-8408 .,.,..... Ask lor
O..ny.

On l•ge lot 2 beltoom. In
Mldcltport. Allo 1979 ChtW·
rol.a. E)C.Utnt conditioJl. C.l

8._;.14-~99-:-2_·_85_1-:6::
. ~;;--::;;;::;;-

-2 beG'oom 12x 150·
304-87.2722.

11900.

1971 S.yviiM' mobile home.
14o70 wtth 7x21 .. pondo.

phone 304-87~81.,1 .

HouN with b81h. Ne• Racfne.
Nice y1rd. g•dln tpKe. C.M
814-992-8888.

Houte far rent. 504 Ellt Main.
POmeroy, Ohio. C.ll 814-9928144.

2 IR . ••·

e ceo.•.

New compleutv furnlthed
a mobile hom~~ in
ctty. Aduttt antv. P•lllng. C1l
114-448-0338.

ep ..nwrt

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
eUOOET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 Joclo!on
Pike from I 183 • mo. Walk tD
ohop ond ,_loo, 814-44•
2118.E.O .H.
~etalft

unflmUhed ept. Ctr-

P•od. utlltlol pold. No cllllcton.
No poto. Coll814-448-1137.

F..nll:htd- 3 roomt •

~h.

CINn. No plltl. Rot. • dopoo•
'"utred. UtMit... furNihed.
Adulto on., . Coli 814-44•
1111.

Luxuriout T•r• TownMull
ep .,..,_,, Elegont 2 flooro. 2
8R .• full ~h upttllre, PGWd•
room down1talr1. CA., dithwe,t.., d.. poul. priwte ....
tr .. aa.- private 1na6oeld P•kL
pooL pl., • ..,..,. Utllnloo "~''
... .,.,_ 8tortlng .. •299 ••
mo. COl 814-387-78150.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

uMd apphn011 tnd TV •••·

Op• SAM to ePM. Mon thru

Sot. 814-448- 1899. 827 3rd
Avo. Golllpolo. OH.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
W•hert, drywt, Nfrlg•etor.,
reng81. Sk1gga Appllincet,
UpJ* Alvw Rd. bMide Stone
c .... Mot•. 114-44.7398.

c• 814-24.8883.

2 be*oom unfl,r,.hed. 12x 10.
w/d hookup.lhml. putH.M.C.
on At. 35. Adults onty. Clll
304-8711-9780 or 814-«S.
4389.

2 be'*oam unfurnil hlld. 1 b 10
In C h•'*• C. II 304-17&amp;- 9710
or 814-44.43e9.
Large !Nina room with •pendo

room. 2 Blt .• netN c•p•. CA.

A-klatatot. C.II814-44S.1409,
4-8PM.

Unllr. . hed 2 Br.. Z bllttw.
~ medl• • occu Pin ct. Call 11444.2784.

2· 2BR. mabhhon.~ . n&amp;oper
r~ulred.

2BR . traR•. WM•&amp;tt81hpeid
Aol. a dop. roqu .. ocl. COli
814-445-0805.
Ptlrtlv fur•hed. 2 bedroom,
OrNn tchool dfttrict. No intkle
peta. Deposit a rlferenc. required. Coli 814-44.8890.

Two ba*oom trder, Ncefv
furniahed). clean, t210.00
monthly pluj•I!JH~eolnddopook
in Htndwton, 00'4 -875-1121.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

'Farm for -'• b;' OW'*· 66acr•

Apartment
for Rant

'on Caunty Rd. 28-AppleGrOYe,

105 prtlo'ete •cr• wh:h •-v
ICCMS. Q.lllpolia ferry . New
home • a 2 Iota with wtflt.

no.ooo. 304-875-41131 .
Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Alhton. bea~ttful large bu~ding
tots. moble home1 ~mrtted,

public water. also riu'er loti.

Clyde Bowen.

Jr. 304-878-

2338.

41

eppH~ion• for
1 bedo'oom •P .,mn. Onty
eld•lv. mobllty fmp*ed or
hlnciCIP need -..pt,. Fln•oed
b, Farm. . Home Admlnlet,..
tion. Equal houlingoppor1untly.
AppiiCitiont •re •lllltble MoA""" tlwough Frid.,. 9o.m . ·
3-p.m. onev . .. the office •
Stonewoodll ept1. 205-1 100
POwell St.. Mldciii!Port Ohio.
814-992·3055.

Now accepting

2 untunilhed IC 127 Mulberry

Ave.. Pom•ov. 4 rooms lnd
b.t:h. Adultt onlv. no pelt.
Oepoalt. ref•en ... 114-992-.
22715efter 6 p.m.

2 81)11. for"*''· One Broom lnd
b•h. ctoled-ln pOr&lt;;t,, 3rd floor.

Rentals

Hbmn for Rent

Nlcttv 'l.lr,.t.d •rn~~l houll.
Aduh:e only. A.t. required. No
poto. Col 814-44.0339.

3 lA ., AC, c•ptt. Pool. a•111•
2 ftrtPI~~eet, t.nce. Good lac.

tJon. Clll A-1 R. .l E.t:ate
llfokor. 304-8715-5104.
Unfurnished hou ... 2 BA.
Neighborhood Rd. f225. Rotor·
.. ,.. • depoth: requlrtd . Cell
4415-4418 111• 7 PM.

orafnllll

•sa.

Grodouo lYing. 1 •d 2 bodroom IPII'trnentt
II VIIII!Je
M.nor
and Atw-.,.lde
...,..
mentt In Mldc:leport. From
.,12. Call 814-982-7787.
EOH.

Phone 304-e78~ &amp;431 after
8,ooPM.

992-3711. EOH.

Pom•or. 2 beli'oom •pt. Partt;'
furniehldln NIIYioraRun. hantty d1p011t. C.ll aft• lp.m.
114-192-8888.

rlf••c.e.

3 IR . hOme n. . SHv• I ridge
lho.,Pna Cent•. •271 per mo.
.., dop. • rol. Call 814-44.
8188 or 44•11e5.
•

1878 COfWI1o L82.- 4 nu,.....t mMdt. AC. PS, P8,
PW. T .,dT.- tlr•. blldc on
.... 11._247·41181. wonlniJL
114-949-2811d...
Signs .. porttble highted
U99.00. Free lett. .dMivlfV.
Pla•tic latter• (half price)
t47.50. Offer
Nov. 5,
WV 1·800-142-2434, Ohio 180().833-3453.

Tov chelt. ct.•l ot driW.._
mite pieces of hand mllde
furniture, far Dricee ororderl cell
304-nl-5818 aft or 7,00 PM

bOdroomo. 2 liH bllthl. Iorge
Nlllftl room. clnlng room tnd
-on. Aloo IIUndry room. 2
,_ l•ll&amp; ctntr81 lir. ENI•n
laho .. Dtltrlat. Ref•tnCII ,.
qulrod. Col 814-247-4281.

3

bedr oOn. home

b•~

loclt.d

304-812· 3394. .

!'11ft h

~

fu I

.Havtn.

I

_ , opt In Point

,.. .ent. Wt'Y

ctNn

In d

good

1111nd. wfll rMt llrnllhed Of'
untnnlohod. no potL pho,.
304-1711-1388.

w..,
rototnl•. c•

Pa1L

carrl•. trill•
framet. fertilizer spre1der,
clothet line pottt, ICr~ .elumlnum, household heme, tome
clothet and thoe~, junk.

j.

'

I &lt;Hill

SIIIJIJIII~c:

1\ Llvt~'tut:k

J

FEEL 1

HUNG~y:'

.

Ii

DUGE N

I!

A woman on a transcontinental
flight woke up 1o lind the carpet wet
"Has It been raining?" s~e said
sleepily. "Vas," laughed the
--R::-,A_Z_U_Q-::T-'Isteward, "bu1 we pul the - - ."

ier~
1~-.,1;.;....,1"'1-'rl&lt;sll-i 0 · Camp
by fi lli ng

104-882·31 30.

HcmemldeA pplel:utter for Nle.
304-8915-3318 or 895-3372.
For •le:Mqnu• Electrk: chord
orgen~ Stereo, radio ·
phonogriPh con101t¥1(1th tter.,
tepe dedt' Klrb¥ Upright
veruum eweepr. S.nkyoSuper

c•en•

Bmm movie carnen; Mlmlye-

Sekor 31mm SLR cemtrl wtth
21mm. ISOmm &amp;. 200mm
Len•"· l•g• h•d c•e. eleetronlc fiMh &amp; tripod. 304-8751318.
Ski boot•. black. mMt '10'11 .
&amp;45. Good cond. 304-8753781 .

x··

1910 Dlovlltlo. looko ohorp,
runt greet:
liVer,
.,,800.00. 304- 78-1114.·

1978 D81aun tnd 1tlndlrd 4

*·

1882 Dodge Omnl -.Ato.
304-178-7858.

1178 Muotang U150.00. 3041711-2487.

311 MF trldor. good point. good
rubber, nice with .crep• blede.
t2111. MF Dyne- bOunce
m~. till. M F reka t .lll.
Holl.., 281 bol•. Ut5.
Ow'* wll fln~nce. C.ll e1~
28.8522.

bo•.

1
2 liDWI (alr..ty bred). 15
plgo. Coli 814-379-2151.

64

Hey

&amp; Grain

Humane - Quail - River - Vesper - MEASURE
Music majors seem to relate only in musicalterrns. I took
one bowling, and he was telling his friends he had ~otten a
spare in every MEASURE.

BRIDGE

an- itl/U" ~E$

••ot

@ SpaedWeek •
(IJ Entertatnmen1 Tonight
Ill (I) USA Today
®I ~~~~ I!]) Jeopardy! !;I

LMgeround HI• r1f h~ for •le.
t20 llch. Coli 814-44.1012.
For 8tlt upto100 lwge bel• cA
good orch•d ••• mixed wtth
dover
Cut • mndttloned
June 1988. t21 • blla C.IIC .E.
Gooclwln. 304-372·2811. Rl·
PIO\I. 9 AM·5 PM.

h.,.

24 1er• corn for tllega. ~org.,·, Woodlown Finn. At. 35.
Alny, WVo. 304-t37·2018.

72

Trucke for Sale

24 ft. box. ~~~~hll truck.
18100. Coll8142107b•
fore 6pm.

~1:-91::2:-:F:-...
-d-:-:t-on--:tru--:di.;:-;;A:::un=-o.·'
03150. Coli 814-387-0149.
19870odgoD*otopldwp. 3.9
L. V·8 ..... AM ·FM. PS. PB.
arto.. topp•. running bO•dt.
19,000 mi. EIIIIC.. Mt con d.
188150. Coli 814-448-4318 of·

by fHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 G.l.'s fare
II Impudent
. reply
9 Rants ·
11· Salubrious
12 Dodge
'13 New York

1988 IIi&lt;* Somono• 2 dr.
coupe. Meny extr~~•. v.., nice.
•saoo.Seeltl541 FourthAw.

&amp;

10:00 Ill 700 Club
D (2) I!]) L.A. Law

Terrorized family sLJes
private company; Rox makes
bold announcement. r:;1

rn

or cummsclal wlrln g. New service or rap ak-a.

..ASTRo•GRAPH

General Hauling

74

Motorcycles

1---------1181 Kawoui!I440Ltd. 17. ooo
mla. • 300. Runt good, C. II
114- 44&amp;-1487 •• tor John.
1878Hondll710fDur, '*YVOOd
con4 tll00.00. 304-488-1122.

'

'Your

J &amp; J Wat• Service. Swimming
po~t. citt•n•. w.n.. Ph . 814245-9285.

'Birthday

__ ..,,...

A &amp; A Wlll.er Service. Pool1,
cl1terns, wtllt . lmmediete1,000or 2.000g.-on•dellvery.
Coil 304-876-8370.

Wat• deiiYWf, 1000 gallon•.

1,::1::8:-:1-:C::-~--;v::.,-.-:3;;2:-:.ooo;;;;:::,:..::-u..:i
11
*I' 00·00 ' 304-e7S.
m •·

1280·
::.7::1-;E::1::5::0-:E:-co:::-noll-:;-n..-:.::1500;:;:-;
,00::-.
304-178-2218 coli - r o 8:00
PM.

Bernice Bede Osol

Dlt•d W•er S.-vice: Pool•,
C11tarns, Well•. O.IWery Anytime. C.ll 814-448-7404-No
Sundev cal...

Pltrldc"t Wet• Hauling. 2,000
gal deliver,. 304-1178-2311 or
514-448-4088.

Subo1anllal s1rldas will be made In the
ar ahead advancing your Interests.
~ou could be luckier !han uaual wl1h e~!erprl- you orchaetra1e.
•
SCORPIO (Oct• . - . 221 Someone
uMJally rely upon may do oom• I
r:~""' today without being promp1- '
ad just to show he or aha ta atlll In your
Get a jump on 1111 by under1ha lnftuencae that are govern·
In lhtyeor ahead . send for your .
~~~raph predk:tlona 1oday by mall- ·
lng 1 to Aa!ro-Greph, c/o thla ~ :
, P.O. Box 81428, Cleveland,
: ; 0 1·3421. Be sure to atate your zodi-

Watter•on' • Water Hauling.
r-onlbte rltee, volume cl•muntl. 2.000 to 4. 000c.,~
ltv. cletemt, PGOit. wtllt, etc.
30 4-67.291&amp;.

87

=rig
s

Uphola1ery

Mowr~ ·· UIJholllt•lng ..vlng

trlcounty•ru23ye ... The beet
In tJrnllure upholtt.-tng. Oil
30• · 176- 4164 1or tree
•stlmllt:•. ·

111 (I) Cary Grant: A
Celebr8Uon Michael Came
hos1s a nos1alglc look at !he
life and career of one of the
screen's best-loved stars ,
Cary Grant Q
CZJ 191 Newa
The Unquiet Daath of Ell
Creekmore Examine the
Issue of child abuse 1hrough
the case of a three year old
boy who was beaten to
death by his fa1her. C
®I 1111121 Knott Landing Q
ID liD Barney Miller
@ Evening Newo
13 crook and Chell
10:30 CZJ Eas1Endars A con11nuing
Qhronicle of the lives of
residents in london's East
End. (0:30)
•
DJIID Odd Coufllii!..
13 VldeoCounlry
10:35 (]) MOVIE: Endangered
•
ifpectes (A) (1:37)
.11 ,00 (]) Remington Steele
(IJ

Ae~ldential

Ae•onable price~. lmmldl••
doll!lory. COII814-992-627&amp;. ;.

convict and

savage c6mpanlbn. r:;l
!Ill 111 ~ Paradlao
@ Lirry King Uvel
iiJ Thursday Nigh! Fights

doorst~p .

Electrical
Refrigeration

linch ...... ''"'•·bkl.. •...

..,.. 7&amp;00 ml•. like ntw.
814-992-7329.

Watson hunt for a .

13 New Counlr)'

ofl•o. •2800. 114-992·2859
or 814-992·1888.

Vans .&amp; 4 W.O. ;.

\

(!) Myoteryl.flolmes and

one~legged

:'A~AlUUS ( - · 2S-Oec- 21) Vou'!l

I,

be more tnnuenllal !odey If you don I
broadcaol- your tntontlona - • your
work Ia concerned. Do what need• do,_1"11 and 111 dtlldl opeok for t~emMivaa.

'
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. It) In deallngs wl1h others today your grea1et1
benetl1s are likely to come from sltuationa - e you subdue your own Interesta In order 1o do what Is best lor 1he '
group
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Focus
your fllfortl and anantion 1oday on
meaningful objectlvaa. You have 1he
wharewtthal 1o fulfill your Intentions II
ou're da11rmlned enough to do 10.
(Feb. 10 ....... 101 Today
yOu'll bacl&lt; up your words wl1h deeds.
This will no! only pleala your frtendt, 11
will make you proud of yourself.
·
ARJE8 (March 21·Aprfl1t) Take a hard
loolt at sl1ullllons that could provide you .
wl1h additional Income. There Is a
a1rong poulbllhy you m1Qh1 be able 1o :
plug Into a worthwhle aide venture.
TAU- (April _ , :Ill) Do not discount your mate'ald-today un11llltey :
have bien given a chance 1o prove
1hemaalvei. S1rlve to be open-minded;
and supportive ln,a.tead of critical.

~ICII

•

i

GEMINI (IIIey 21-June 20) This Is a
good day 1o ca1ch up on any work
you've neglected recen11y. You re In a
G (2) (IJ Ill (I) ~ II) 1121
I
productive cycle and Iaska that you unI!]) News
dt111ake can be completed 10 your
CZl (J) Bill Moyera' World of
aatlafactlon .
Ideas Moyers talks wt1h a
CANCER (June 21·July 22) A con1acl
wide variety of people abou1
you've made socially may . shortly be
America 's choices. (NAJ
playing an lmportan1 rol~ In, your parID liD Love Connactlon
aonal fllfaJrs. This paraon s 1npu1 win be
@M-yllne
'
constructive.
tBI Chelra
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) Ahhough It will
i1J Miami Viet r:;l
lake some -lous dlscuaalon, a family
13 You Can Be.a Star
problem can be r010lved a1 1hls lime If
11:30 Dl1l I!]) Tonight Show
all of t11e partlae concerned are willing
(IJ Cheera
'
to work on 11.
CZJ
One on One
VIRGO (Aug. 23-llepl. 22) In orderlg~~
~~~~~lneQ
advanoe your p,_,. plana you m
hiiVO 10 be a trifle more ....rtlveloday. ,
Today .
UBRA (llepL 2S-Oot. .13) Favorable
DIIIDN~Otme
Change~ are a1lrrlng where your fl.
@ lporte OIIIQhl
nanc:ea are concerned, bu1 t h - moIll
at 'Niaht Heal' CBS Late
are IJkely to be more subtle !hen ob\11- ·
Night O'Brien 11 Injured and
ous. Something could 1rlnlplretoday.
Glarnbone faces trumped-up
.~
charges.
·

~ UJi

..

_.

-

•

-

3 Egg-shaped
• Espouse
II Famed
songstress
8 Indian
mulberry
7 Woody
Allen

~ity

film

111 Damp
18 Mongrel
18 Wallach
19 Irritate
21 Sword's
conqueror
22 Gypsy
husband ··
23 Utab

@ College Football
(IJ Ill (I) Dynllty AleXIS' life
1hreatenod; Blake anguls~es .
·· ·
over Krystle's

·

• QJ 6
+QJ975

1

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

CROSSWORD

CZl

.A2

SOUTH

Centerfold INRI (1 :40)
l!1l PrimeNewa
® MOVIE: Halloween Ill:
Seaton of lite WltciiCA J

disappearance. C

+Ja6

+7 3
.KQ8
+A9H3
+AK3

career are chronicled. ~NAJ

9:30 D Ill I!]J Dear John A
young man claiming to be
John's son arrives on John's

•

• CARTER'S PWM81NG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ..,d Pine
OonlpoiiL Ohio
Phone 01..,448-3888 or 814448-4477

86

top. other

;
•
!

Plumbing
Heating

1978 Joop CJ5. -

t'ltrl"e. LD¥!1 mll~~t• VflfY good

~=

&amp;

Uc1n1td electriciln. Ettimlle
free. RidM'Iour EledriCII, 30~
87.1786.

1987 Bronco. Auto .. 0 . 0.

1179 MorQJry lobcllt. Auto..
PB. AC, AM-FM ot-COOL
Aunt gDOd. Good oond. • 750.
Col\114-28.1211 .

82

1985 GMC holfton pldwp. An
orlaln&amp; Good oon4 Asking
.,Doo. Coli 814-44.41118 of.
ter4 PM.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlct• fram .,00, fordl. Mtr·

1988 Dodgo 800. outo.. olr,
AM -FM, nM tlrw. Cnh prl01.
*4198. Jahn' 1 Auto s.t...
bof- Holldor-1 nn. Ken a~ go.
1914 MII'Giry Top• OS . PI,
Pll. olr, AM-FM . 18.000 mn._
'2700. con 114-448-0212 or
44.9278.

/

J

BUDeETWHEN
THEY HAD
CHARLTON
HE6TONON
LA6TWEEK .

•

84

1913 Ford v.,, AC. PI, Pe ,
&amp;Ito., e cyL 1914 Ford I ronco.
St. ohllt, V-8. 1979 H001do CR
25().•410. COli 814-24.8022.

I c:;t.JESS THE:.Y
BL!:WTHE

'

It's hard not to have some sympathy
Nortb Eaot
Wesl
for Willy Nilly's play in today's deal.
I NT
When the four of spades was led, Willy
2+
Pass
Pass
2+
thought he peeded to provide for the
Pau
3NT Pass
Pass
possibility that West might h9ld the Q·
Pass
J of spades, the ace of hearts and even
the Q-J of diamonds. So he put in the
Opening lead: • 4
spade 10. East won the jack and, by
counting points, knew that hts partner
could not possibly have any entry card that He rose with the ace and cleared
for bis spades. So East naturally the club suit. He now had to reaain the
lead with a diamond to set the COD·
switched to a low club.
Already Willy was regretting his tract with bis good clubs.
Willy would have won tbe day jail.
play·at trick one. But he won the ace of
clubs and went to dummy's king of di· , by taking the first spade trick m dum·
amonds. Then he played a low heart my. He could now play a heart U ·befrom dummy. U East ca~elessly fore, but the defenders would not l!Jve
played second hand low, declarer time to set up their club suit. AU be
would win the king of hearts and would have to do would be to hold up
switch back to diamonds to guarantee on tbe second spade to break up lbelr
his contract. But East was up to all
communication.

sex.
FLOYD LARRABEE,
J.J. GJE/WIIO,
CLAR.ETTA BU.lM,
IALMACIINE FRE5KO .. .

~RONQ..IR
GUE51'5 WILL BE
RONNIE PLINK,
ALICE INCHL&amp;Y..

•pr.,

Auto's For Sale

pluo. luyoro Guide. 111
1011-8117·1000. Eot. 8·10189.

SWI!EPER ond o-lngmoc!llno

Will do • .,d bl.tlna
pltntlng. int•lor .• •terior
deooretlng 215 1(rt. experllf'lc.,
c• 814-245-9097.

84 Ford F-2150 hoovy duty. 410
4 opel. Neodl work. H300. 85
Ford Ron gor 4o4, I cyl. 5 oJ)d.
0\llr.tve. Sh•p. Cllt 814-4481512 .. 814-44.0813.

ced•. Corwtt•. Chwye. Sur-

MORTY MEEKLE AND

riP*. part1. .nd •uppll•. Pldc.

Plinling: lnt•ior &amp; EJCterior.
Free eetlrNit•. CaM 114.4488344.

Wll hall oorl\ lncklmEFAP 1174Ford,htonpidt-up. •aoo.
oorn. Allo, will tu
end Calll14-992·3801 .
deliver
Nwdu•t.
4-773·1;;;;=~~;~~~~::;
5332. UIO til UIO AM.

71

.tim••·

.J: !oa

By James Jacoby

IDIID M'A'S'H
l!1l Crossfire
tHJ Ntgh1 Coun
13 VldaoCountry
7:35 (5) Sanford and Son

54

EAST

WEST
. +Q9542
76 3

A regrettable
holdup

7:30 D (2) Family Feud

13 Nashville Now
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Sliver S!reak (PG)
(1 :53)
8:30 11 (2) I!]J A Dtfferen1 World
Whitley is upset by the erotic
dreams she's been.having
abou1 Dwayne. Q .
9:00.11 (2) I!]) Cl1eert. Sam Is so
nervous about PQSSibiliry Of.
'
fatherhood, he swears off

gu•.,..

U-J..II

+KI082
+a 2

JAMES
JACOBY

!Ill e ~ 48 Hours
Ill liD MOVIE: Policewoman

Af\ID AI..L !V€ GIJT
IS 'WIRK'

NORTH
+AKIO o

MacArthur's youth and early

eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unooncltlanal Mt•lrne
t•. Local ref•.,.,. furnllhed.
Free
c.ll oolt~
1~114-237·0488. dav or night.
Aoger1B11ement
Wat•prooflng.

For .... 1181 Honda Prelude
1uto. PL pb, air cond. a~n raof.
U200. 304-87.5384.

t•IPM .

TrillloJIOtlctllllll

"It works great! Lookl You can't 888 lhe
black eye from my last sales calli"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

energy requirement of our
food production system .
(!) American Ca~sar

Home
Improvements

up and dllltvery, Dfttl Vacuum
Cl•••· one half mile up
Ooorgoo C - Rd. Coli 114448-0294.

78Fard7000dl•ll. Cetmotor.

Livea1ock

81

1tll Ford F100, good th-.:t&amp;
low !WI-o '3915.; 1978 LTD
loodocl t495. 304-8715-5781 .

73

Of

TTER S IN

Sporta~an

Outdoors
(IJ Ill (I) ABC News Q
CZl Body Elec1ric
(!) Nightly Bullne11 Report .
®I ~~~~CBS News
Ill liD WKRP In Cincinnati
@1 Inside Politico '88
i!J WKRP In Clpclnnall
i1J Cartoon Expre11
® You Can Be a Star
6:35 (I) Andy Griffith
7:00 (]) Our Haute Candles and
Shadows
D (2) PM Magazine
@ SportCenter (L)
(IJ 111 (I) Curren! Affair
CZl (!) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
®I 111 ~ I!]) Wheel of
Fortune Q
'ID liD Three's Company
1!1) Monayllne
®Cheers
·
i1J Miami VIce C
13 Crook and Chase
7:05 (I) 9 to 5

Examine the enormous

Ak... Troo Trim!Wng •d ltump
Remowl. F'" Mtlmetet. Call
304-875-7121.

the chuckle quoted

in the missing words
L._.J.C.......L...-"-·-..L·--'·-~ yoo develop from step No. 3 below .

(1) Fueling the 'Future

w•her•.

~

...

action sequences and guest
appearances. C

RON'I APPUANCE 5 EAVICE.
hou• coli oorvldng GE, Hot
Point.
dryert end
....... 304-578-231&amp;

I

1-.-r.l,.:-~1--;lr-rl--1
I.
.
.
.
. .

8:00 (]) MOVIE: Charles &amp; Diana:
A Royal Love S1ory (NR)
(1 :40)
D (2) I!]) The Cosby Show
Denise hopes to accept the
perfeC1 job lor her • If her
parents agree. C
@ NHRA Drag Aaclng
Showdown of Champions (R)
(IJ 111 (I) Tho Worid'a
Greateat Stunts Watch
breathtaking footage of

FORllJNATELV. TALAXI ... .
. _ ,._ NE18HIIORING
PU&gt;.NET -ERE WE WILL
liE WELCOMED!

wo ~ds.

1---il:.--,1-,-1,..-jll

(1 :36)

1979 Pontloc: Sunblr4 88.000
actu•l mil•. local owner,
11.8915.00. Phone 304-8763830 otter 4,oo.

Ten uted jllou.le wlncbv• and

one door ell with 1creen•. call

roo,.111 S.oond
Ave., Cllltlpollll. t1J8 a mo.
UtiJtl• Dlfd. 81nalemele. • • •
bllth. Col446-44'1eottor7PM.

month. "
8t.nlng .. *120 1 mo. 01~11
HotoU1 ... 44f.9810.

•tiou•

63

....,,ltv

r'Wit-weik

'·

A I.OT Cf DRIVI&gt;...

ap.a.1810Forc10,.,Miea~to.

cemoot block1, holiphal bed.
uted tiret. loa.~ .. post, «*tnh'lg
lera. srwtlng machine.. lawn
mowert, g81 hHt ... hoirt old
CIWI , VW and Hondl
medal w•rdrobt. picnic t1ble,
ron e
bed. dehu midlfler.

Furni•hed Roome

ROOIN for

lndl!lkkllll gu•or loloono, boglnntrl,
SJJitlrWI. 8N~
c.rdll Mu•ic. 814-446-0187.
Jeff Wam•lt¥ lnM:ructor. e14441-8077. Limited openlng~.

SALE Grady farm BoK 81·8, Jim
Hut Road, Htnderton, W. Va.
Mq"doy Oot. 31 1hru Nov 4,
10:00 am to 4 :00 pm. 12 In

,_,.hid

On• _

I

be-

UPRSU

'

i1J Murder, She Wrote 1;1

Pecan clnnet ttl~ e. 3 ,.., .. end
6 chairs, $100.00. i.ong tl'lr•
cushion cauch &amp;60.00. 304-882-3208.
.

Jaakeon Aw rw,
rent *131.00 month
dopOik roqu~od. cfll 304-87•
4410 oxt. 10 or 83.

45

~-DO you

Muaical
lna1ruments

eech evening.

IDg Cobin. '2150. 2 BA . COli

s

57

•plr•

Apt. lor- 807 Moln St. Aont.
• 17&amp; Utlkl• pold 8eanltY
dop. required. CoM 304-87•
4480. E!Ct 80 or 11

ottw I PM. 814-245-9097.

PIE"T! ''

Rotery or cable tool G'llng.
Molt well compl«lldtlmtdrlf.
Pump ..1. 1nd .-vice. 30489.3102

1 boctoom opt. In Mldcllep.,..
e110. p• month • • utilft ....
Con 814-882-11411 or 1149411-2217.

..,t.

MY

Fony Tr• Tl-lrn ... ~ otump
romovot. eon 304-8711-1331.

814-812-5724 oltor 8'00 cr
992-8119.

l.m~ .

ON

11

RON'S Televl•lan ServiCe.
Hou• c.llt on RCA. Ouu•r.
GE. Spoc:i.lng In Zon•IL Coli
304-87&amp;-2398 ... 81 4-448·
'
2414.

l'ldeDOrated epa1ment•~==========l=========:.J

One bed'oom furnltMd or UAfurnilhed IPiftmerrt In Middt•
port. Ailo 2 Md'oom houMin
Adcfloon. Call 814-992-5304 cr
814- n:z. 2771.

2 be*oomfurnllhed~~t . .m.rt.
utlttl• pt~hL
Phone
304-882-2888.

t1,510.00. Cell Aqua Tech,
304-523-1288.

flcHttl• 8\leHeble. Cell 814- 7400, 30. 08 with 4t12 tcope.

e175 plu1 utiNtl•. Oth• II 3
room plut b.th ttSO per month
• • utlftl•. c.ll 814-992·
6029.

a..mStr..._ Mldcltport Ohio,

Merchandise
-----Buy direct from manufacturer
a.d • ..,e tU . Spa'• .tarting at

2 be~oom Apt1. for rent. ~.;..;..:.:........:....:-::::::o:-;;:~
Clrpettd. Nice e.e:tlng. Uundry Remlngton •utori\Mic Model

1111111&gt;1&amp; UtN•I• pold '225.
Newtv
P• month. dapo1tt required. can

APARTMENTS. moble homt1,
hou.... Pt. Pl . . tnt llndO.IIipollo. 814-44.8221 .

54 Misc.

LOST THI~TY pouNP5

Ford A rfOW motor home. 18 ft
long. good qond. •z.eee.oo.
304-875-8888.

23 cu fl chest tvPI deep freue.
Used 42 Inch wood blttvoom
vanity. 304-e7!5-!5289 after
4'00PM .

SHAOV LAWN APTS. -729 Se·
oond Aw., furnlllhed effldenc.
starting It t171e mo. Including Buy or Sell. Rtv•ine Antlquet.
Will• a g•bege. Slngleldults 1124 E. Main Strwt, Pom•ay .
ontt. Cell 814-441-~07 or Houn: M.T.W 101.m. co &amp;p.m ..
44.2802.
Iunde¥ 1 to 8p.m. 814·992·
252tl.
Apartment tar r~nt . 1225 1
month. Depo11t rwqulrtd. 114- Antique be. CMI, make an
992-6'724. After 8pm or 992· offw. 104-875-8822.
5119.

DI£T
CLINIC

_.lobi•

pi••

53

'' :r.

v..-

N-.w 1nd u•td huntture and
•ppllcances . Cell 814-44e-

H1 Third Ave .. Gllllipollt- 2
.... c•p•ed. relrlg. &amp;. ltwe
furnllhed. Vwv cle~rt. C•n 814-

cond.

1985 27 ft. Rodcwood MiniHome. "•• Chwy Dh••"'
•Ror. nvnlng. .., condition an .
motor and raat. 12.000 ml•.
A-1 llhiP&amp; Dt• of atru. prloe
C.lle14-BI2·5320.

90 O.y1 tame • c•h wtth
approved credit. 3 MH• out
Bula.tttle Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru SM. Ph. 814-44&amp;0322.

•""ment.

'!·F~R~AN~K~AN~D~.~~~~-----------------~,~--~ ·

1971 Trovol trolw, 24 ft .. lull
be4 ..... ...... tOII!It. ... pot.
p• lllfng. CUI hkuw. ourt.. nL
tleatrla wat• ....... t2100 or
c:11wr. eon e14-44&amp;-02oa . .

•110. Mmr. . . orboxepring~
lull or twh&gt;
firm •78. ond
••· Queen • • *250 • up,
Klngl310. 4 chw-• ch.et •ea.
Oun cebtn•• e, 8 &amp; 10 gun.
...,. mott-• U8 • f41.
Bed frem• • 20, • 30 • King
fr1me e150. GGOd ttltction of
bedroom lult-. mlllt ca:blnM: ...
h..tboa,. 130 Md up to •el5.

•of•

mil•.

g•.
Exctl.

ur10o. Arm. Coli 514-44&amp;9421 or 44•7«1.

Hutoh• t400 1nd up. Bunk
bedl complete w-mettr-1211Mdupto t311. lib, be*

Aport,_, for tho Eld«...
J a S FURNITURE
O.Hit M.nor A~ente. ess
1415 Eatt•n Ave.
ll.H MortonRoed. bnlgnedfor 4
chalt, *48. 5 drawer
tho Sonloo CHII., 112. oldorl ch•t. •54.91. IS pc. wooden
JndHMciCIPP.. P. .ON. E~ dlnnl'lte .... t19t.95 .
hou•lng opportuMy. AppHcatione nw; bepldced up at lprJng
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
ValtV PI••• 12l ... akton .-.:e Campi«• hou•hold turnl•hor cfll 114-44.41311.
lnp. ,ti mila out Jerrlcho.
304-875-1450.
Modwn 11R, downtown, co~
ldlchen. elr, c•pet. DIP- For low Pl'iCM on Qulllty Carpet
Oitl. no p•e. C.ll 114-448- • Fumlture come to MollohiWI
0 139 evening~. eft• I.
Fwnltu,.Upper River Rd., 61444.7444
23e Flnt Aw. 1 SA .. ldtchon
._.rrilhiiCL c.p«ld. No chi~
VIAe'• Fwntture
cton/Poto. U78 pluo utllltl•.
()pen ~tv. Mon.-Set.
Dop. •rol. Col 814-448-4928.
9AM·IPM
Sun., 12 noon · 5 PM
821'1h S.c. E.:.l. cond., 21R .,
equ_,ped Ieitch... air. Awllable Comple.te _household
Nov. 1tt. e2211 plu• • · C.l furnllihlnp. AI bedding. rustle
014-44•0803 or 448-2151.
bunk bedt with rustle ch•t.
v•l.tv of
&amp; chlin-ell an
Furnloltod ollldon.,. •150. Ufll- lale. EIIICeltent uted IPPiianOII.
hl• polcl 7 NoH. Oolllpollo. COl Chrietnw toyt: now In ltock.
44.4411 ott• 7 PM.
a.n..,... lw.w8ys now being
tMla't. Plus fln~r~dng IVel~e
Furnlehld
1 BR. with epprOYtld Cl'lldil.lU. 141 In
02215. Utl•l• pole!. 920Fourth, Cententry-1J4 mile on Unoolf1
Oolllpollo. Col 44.4418oltw7 Pike, 814·448-3158.
PM.
Glrll be$'oom tult•lncludee
lhlm•hed apt.. 2 IIA ., •lr heac:U10•d, frame. bo• IPringt &amp;
oondltio..t. t200 1 mo. t200 mettr.e, oor,_ d•k &amp; chair,
depoelt. 8 mo•. ,.... Clll •mill ch_.. Fr.tdl creem with
814-387· 0438.
btue &amp; yellow ftowen. CaR
814-317·0802 otter 6' 30 PM .
Nice-2 BR . apt . 4% mil• from
O.UfpoML Btov•. nrfrlg. &amp; wM• Good uted color T.V.'• tor aele.
fur.. . heel. t221 e mo. Na p•&amp; Coli 814·44·, 49.
Cll 114-4415-8038.
Buy, Sell. Trllde. Cell Bargaln1 Br. ept. unfurnllhed
lond, 814-448-1444.
HMC. *1&amp;9 e mo. v.tw I~
eluded. t100dep. No.,_.. C1ll
814-44.3817.

Motors Homn
&amp; Campe111

1978 Oodge Motor Horne. 22
ft.. tleep• e. roof •• elec.
hoi&gt;k-14&gt;. blttory.
34.000

Sof• end chain priced from
t395 to *995. Tobleo teo and
up to t121. Hld••·btldt •t390
to tHIS. Redln11111 t2215 to
U7a Lln)po Ul to • 128.
Dfntttll t109 Md up to t481.
Wood 11ble w-e chlirt t2815 to
1711.. Dull •100 up to *375.

7572. Houn 9·15.

245-98815.

Farms for Sale

44

79

*awer

In Eureka 2 BA . AdUIII onty. No
p«t. 12251 mo. Dep. N&lt;tulrect

mo. noo dep, Ret.
Coli 814-387· 0832. ,

· I !Y.ID,'HEU.·--IT'!&gt;
A1ll'W~ II&gt;J fo\ICHIGMil.

County AwNtnce. Inc. Good

n•

35

i

wou
GAM I

'["-~~~!!'!!:~\

the

PEOSPO

8:30 D (2) I!]J NBC Nlghfly News

V..lav F ...nlture
Ap.-i:mlftte Md hou ... CIH

r

11)1 ShowBiz Today
tHJ Facts of Lne
i1J Fat Albert
13 Fandango
8:06 (I) Lavema and Shirley

kttch . .

appL fur. . Md. W•htr·D..,...
hc)ok-up, ww c•p«. nWtt;'
.-111. dod!. From •11a
Sln5or Cfdrent Wlloome. A•·
gonoy, Inc. Apto. Coli 304-17•
I 104. or 175--5381 or 1717738.

•

low to form four simple

Pan2
.·
Dlllll Happy Days

with you?

SWAIN
AUCTION • FU ANITU RE 82
Olivo 81., Oolllpolo.
NEW· I pc. wood .oup- 1391.
Living room •dt• t199- till.
Bunk bedll with bedding- t241.
F~l tb:e mMt:reu &amp; founct.tion
•t•i'tlng- 199 . Rrcllnen

NEW- W.tern boott- t315.
*18 a up. lltool a
ooltt..). COII814-446-3159.

304-87.5104.

Mobile hor~*, 1.4 rNie out Sand
Hill Rd. 304-175-313'.

•Dorl* Ad. outti~ Racin• Ohio
814- 742·2300.

What is i

Household Goods

"""inv•sa.
,
t;;;=:;:;:~~~;;:~;~r~~::;;~~~~;:::::j
USED· Bide, dr••... bedroom
44 Apartment ·
•ult•.
O..lca. wringer Wllhllf••
for Rent
OOR'!PIIIte Hne of uted furnlluN.

4 lA .. full
a•ag&amp;
cwpllod Coomo now) . 41 HDIT!el for Rent
Priced to
Col 114-44•
0278 oltw I PM, - - 1 - - - - - - : : - - : : - ~time.
3 be*oom hou•Autl~nd • •·
U25 lnc:luiN - · · gwbog&amp;
3 be*oom R.nch. 1YJ b•tw. h. .. *200MCIIrftv•dr.,......
tamtv toOfl\ dining room. 1 c• '*· Cal e14-317-7287.
o•ISt&amp; 1t&lt;nat bulclng. poot..
/ w- Spring V.I..

1

51

Rear range letters of
0 four
scramb led wo rds

Children's Express. Q
(!) Dr. Who The Da~mons ,

'

Homn for Sale

M"

'{ou're supposed to
print them,and make
me rich and famou5.

Dear Editor.
. Why do you keep sending
my stories back?

S©RQ{l}A-~£~S®

- - - - - - -- Edlt•d ,b y CLAY R. POLLAN

draw'S on journalism of

Comm•cill Building for leMa
Pt. Ple•ant. Call 304-875-

v.,._....,,br,,u_...... "I have so many worries on

EVENING

PUULIR

8'00 (]) Bonanza: Tbe Loal
Epilode•
D &lt;2l (IJ D (I) ®I Ill ~
I!]) News
@ SportaLook
CZJ CE News Magazine
PTV's version of 60 Minu1es

8104.

31

NOV. 3

THURS.,

THAT DAILY

·-

.

Sentinel-Page 16

.The

state

flower

•

a. Headliner

8 Sailor's
forte
lO'Zone
Uttle boy
.
(Sp.)
28 Business
17 German city pool
20 Salver
27 Nursery
23 'Identical
charges
2• Wise king 28 Philippine
25 Vocal .
peasant
30 Best part
quaver

t•

.3 1 Push
32 P11880ver
meal
38 Jay of
comedy
38 N.Z. parrot
•o Brooch

..

28 Pullman
and others

27Co~lsen~tiv·~i-i-t-~

28Cap
29 "- Buttermilk Sky"
30 Fondle
33 Actor
Selleck
s• Decay
35 Child
of Loki
37 "- Gets in
Your Eyes"
39 Poem
.
•1 Olive genus
42 Jolly up
•3 Linguist
Chomsky
• • - Wolfe

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1 Seamrn
2 Asyl\lm
.
DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how tp work it:

114.

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

One hitter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the thtee L's X for the two O's, etc. Smgle ·letters,
apostrophes the iength and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differ~nt. .
·

.!.
CRYPI'OQUOTE
11-3

K R

K I J

Q R E U

Q R MU

IUOMRP

0 p

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J R G I

J R G

N C Q Q

· JUOMRP.-

YIUPDA
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:·
.. Yeeterday's Cl')'lltoqaote: IF YOU OFFER TO CARRY ·
· THE PACKAGE, DON'T COMPLAIN OF THE WEIGHT.. RUSSIAN
PROVERB
. ..
l
..
...

....-

�_,

____

~

Page-:16-The Daily Sentinel

- -----· - - - - - ~

November 3, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Southern,
Eastern in
grid rmales

·Meigs S&amp;WCD to
take part in program

l

'Jlhe Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District will be
participating In a program sponsored by Heidelberg College
Water Quality La b.
The Nitrate Screening Program for Rural Private Wells
gives you data regarding nutrient and pesticide runoff from
agricultural land. Thing tested
for Include ammonia nitrogen,
chloride, nitrate nitrogen, sui·
fate, and conductivity.
The cost for having this test
done Is $2.00 per sample. You will
need to stop by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Offlee between Nov. 14 and December 1 and piCk up a sample
bottle. Bottles will also be available at the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District Annual
Meeting and Banquet on Nov. 15.
You must pay when you pick up
the bottle. You will take the
sample and return the bottle to
the SWCD Office on Thursday

Two seats ...

December 1 or Friday December
2 before noon.
··
A representatlvJ! !rom the
College will pick the samples up
at our office on December 2 and ·
test results will be mailed to you
following testing. All results are
con!ldentlal. The only report the
district wlil receive Is a summary printout or nitrate concen·
tratlons broken down by
township.
A brochure put out by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service
(OCES) entitled "Nitrate In
Drinking Water" will be sent to
well owners with nitrate levels
over the safe drinking water
standard, but this Is the extent of
Intervention. Hopefully you wlll
seek advice from the Health
Department on solving tbe
problem.
For more Information on the
program call the o!!lce at 992·
6647 or stop by on tpe second floor
of! the Farmers Bank Building In
Pomeroy.

Continued from page 1
Sweeney, 67, Is the senior change horses In the middle of
justice and says his opponent has
the stream.''
never tried an appeal. Mat !a, 51,
''My opponent Indicates he
of Westlake, says Sweeney Is
would like to be elected to lock In
rated as unqualified and was part his philosophy," said Sweeney.
of the notorious "Celebrezze "If you lock In a phllopsophy, you
court" that made headlines from bring politics back ln. We have a
1982:86 for politicizing the Su- free, open-minded court now ."
pre me Court.
Malia, who ran for lieu tenant
· Running for the seat being governor In 1982 with former
vacated by the retiring Justice state Sen. Thomas Van Meter or
Ralph Locher are Judges Joyce ' Ashland, Is regarded as a conser·
George of Summit County Court vatlve. Sweeney has enjoyed the
of Appeals,' a Republican, and support of organized labor.
Allee Roble Resnick of Lucas
George, who has raised two
County Court of Appeals, a children as a single parent, Is a
Democrat.
graduate of the University of
The winner wlll be the first Akron and Its law school, has a
female elected to the high court master's degree from the Unl·
In 60 years. Justice Blanche verslty of VIrginia and Is working
KrupanskY of Cleveland was on her doctorate at that
appointed In 1981, but was university.
defeated In 1982.
George, 52, has stressed her
She was assistant Akron law
continuing educatllln, which she
director,
Akron Municipal Court
said has prepared her to render
referee
and
Akron Municipal
opinions on complex cases of the
Court
judge
from
1976-82, and has
1990s. Resnick, 49, claims to have
served
six
years
on the court of
tried more cases, Including omi
death penalty case before the appeals bench.
Resnick, married with three
U.S. Supreme Court, as a prosecstepchildren,
Is a graduate of
utor, and has been active In civic
Siena
Heights
College and the
affairs.
University
of
Detroit Law
A George victory would widen
School.
She
was
assistant
Lucas
the Republican advantage on the
County
prosecutor,
Toledo
Muhigh court to 5-2.
nicipal
Court
judge
from
1976-82
·'My opponent has not had one
day of appellate experience," and has been on the court of
said Sweeney. "I've been In- appeals for slx years.
volved In every decision of the
During the campalgri, George
last 12 years."
Sweeney said his legal expe- claimed to have published more
rience Includes the private prac· legal opinions, 178 to 19, than
tice of corporate law In Young- Resnick. Resnick responded that
stown and Cincinnati, Judge her court publishes opinions
Advocate General duties with the collectively except In unique
Department of Defense, legai cases. "''I'm not looking to be
officer at the American embassy published," she said. "I'm look·
In Paris, and practice before the lng to do justice."
The two disagree over the
U.S. Court of Claims.
public
financing of judicial camMatla said the Cleveland Bar
paigns.
Resnick said she favors
Association and the Citizens
using
a
certain
percentage of the
League of Greater Cleveland
costs
In
civil
court
cases to fund
have both given Sweeney a low
the
campaigns,
while
George ls
performance rating compared to
opposed to publlc funding, saying
his own.
He said he has experience In all It will give "name" candidates
three branches or government- an advantage.
George was the Republican
four years as an assistant attornominee
for a Supreme Court
ney general, eight years In the
seat
In
1986
but lost to Democrat
Ohio Senate and four years as a
Herbert
Brown
of Columbus by
judge.
less
than
1
percent
of the vote.
Malia said Sweeney sat quietly
Next
School
Issues
during abuses of court administration. under former Chief Jus·
tlce Frank Celebrezze.
"He never raised his voice
against w.h at was going on,·; said
Matta. "He does not exercise his
Velerans Memorial
own judgment. He goes along
Admitted - Naomi Black,
·with who's In power. We need Pomeroy; Dorothy Gilmore,
judges that exercise their own Middleport; Shannon Hubbard,
Pomeroy; Damon Ferrell, Mid·
Independent th.ought."
"The court Is running so well dleport; Mont Vance, Albany;
now," responded Sweeney. "It's Charles Neece, Middleport; Tlto
hitting on all seven cylinders. Sarsaba, Gallipolis.
You don't try to fix something
Discharged - None:
that Isn't broken. You don't

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Shirts ........
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•FREE ESTIMATES

.

•ALL INSURANCE CLAIMS

•AUTOMOTIVE PARTS AT
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OUR ENTIRE
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MEN'S
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AND
J. J.

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'34.96

Swaatars ..... Now '27.95
•39.9&amp; ..

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•

DRESS

MEN'S

CHIEF E•Z-LINER

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773-5024
210 Soutll S.COIICI

MEN'S
WiNTER JACKETS

Neck siz• 14~ to 17 plus
big 1izes 17'h to 20 neck.
Sleeve lengths 32 to 36 inche•. Solid, stripes, tone on
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KNIT SHIRTS

S, M, L; and XL sizes. Big
selection of styles you'll
like. Buy now for christmas
giving.

•20.00 Shirts ..
'24.00 Shirts ..
'26.00 Shirts ..
'30.00 Shirts ..

SALE PRICES

Bob loush, Owner
Ma10n, WV.

'

•

Plenty of smart styiH and cMors in
regular and big sizH. Select your
vorite now and save.
Regular Prices 129.95 to 179.95

fa. 1\

'16.99
'19. 19
'19.99
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•

Sale Prices

$2245

For Chrlehnlt Olfttf

MEN'S
VAN
HEUSEN
PAJAMAS
Sizes M, L end XL. Lang lego, long oleeva coat otyle tops.

•

$59 95

TO

•

.Solid colora and otripu.

SALE

REGULAR PRICE S18. 95

SALE

$1518

VCR

THERMALS

$4 79

SALE

WOMEN'S

SPECIAL$2 77

EA.

SOCK SALE
Speelal Purehuel

VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING

3 PAIRS FOR $588
LORD ISAACS

5 lOLlS
TO SELECT FROM

SLACKS SALE

$399 SQ. YD.

A!SORTED STYLES ANO FAU COlORS
SREAT LOOK- SIZES 516 t1 17118
$22.00 Slacks .... Sale
$24.00 Slacks.... Sale
$28.00 Slacks.... Sale
'32.00 Slacks .... Sale

·-

OAK FINISH
30" HIGH

~P1'1 Speeltl$

8800

to 20

o.

Steele! '""'
•Boya Sliteaten
•Bayo Druo Shirt•
•Boyo o+nlm Jeeno
•Baya Orne and
Ceoljal Penta
•Boyo Knit Shlrto
•Boya S~art S hlrtl
.Lay·AWfJY Now For
Clari&amp;lmas!

'

SALE

•

I.

DAYBEDS

White steel beds, brass
beds or wicker beds
Starting At Only

Sl4900

SOFA SLEEPERS

BEADS, CHAINS, EARRINGS

20°/o .OFF

DUTCH
FLOWER BULBS
Tulips. "ardssus
and Crocus

innerspring mattress.

SPECIAL

•

·FREE
IL
STOCK UP

RED HEART

AND SAVEU

YARN
SPECIAL

4 Ply Knit and CrechttYarn
REG. 11.99 SKEIN

3 FOR

$4 88

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BEDROOM SUITES
'

11/4 OFF
Oak, cherry, pine and
off-white. Sultaa to fit
every decor

'------_. s!': !trk:;., $441 00

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Unemployment dropped slightly In
October to 5.3 percent, the
government said today, providIng evidence of a continuing
economic expansion that has
been heralded by the presidential
campaign ot Republican George
Bush.
In the last unemployment
report before the presidential
election In four days, the Labor
Department said unemployment
dropped to 5.3 percent In October, compared to 5.4 percent In
September.

Payroll employment grew by
323,000 jobs, a healthy non-farm
payroll figure within the range
forecast by private analysts. The
payroll employment figure came
almost entirely In the private
sector.
The underdog presidential
campaign of Democrat Michael
Dukakls received no Instant
boost from the la.t est jobless
!lgures, that are within the range
of numbers that have held
relatively steady for the past
eight months.
Since last March, the unem-

Goodyear workers OK contract
•

BERKLINE

RECLINER SALE

$58 8

BUY L ..
GET ONE

The financial burden of maln.talnlng these cemeteries began
when federal revenue sharing
was eltmlnated and Salisbury
Township lost $27,000 a year with
the discontinuation of the revenue sharing program.
Trustees are concerned that
Pomeroy and Middleport residents may vote against the
township levy, since Pomeroy
and Middleport VIllages main·
taln their own cemeteries. However, the trustees polo t out thaI
residents of the two villages also
have loved ones burled In the

Metzenbaum, people c,lted his
commitment to the "little guy,"
his experience, his support of the
m lddle class, his policy positions
and his pedormance In
Washington.
As for reasons for supporting
Volnovlch, people cited his policy
positions, his performance as
mayor of Cleveland and the fact
that he Is a Republican.
However, Metzenbaum enjoyed surprising support In the
poll from people who considered
themselves Republicans, with 32
percent saying they would vote
for Metzelibaum. Among Independents, Metzenbaum enjoyed
a 59-23 edge over Voinovlch.

Meigs sports fete
scheduled Monday
Members ol the Meigs High
football, volleyball, cross country and golf teams, and cheerleading squad members. will be
honored at the fall sports banquet
to be held at Meigs High on
Monday evening at 6: 30 p.m.
Those planning to attend are
asked to bring two covered
dishes, vegetable, dessert or
salad.

rural cemeteries. Because of
this, trustees are hopeful that
Pomeroy and Middleport residents will cast yes votes for the
levy when they vote on Tuesday.
The levy, which Is for five
years, would provide the township with $44,440.47 a year for the
five years, reports Meigs County
Auditor William Wickline.
If the levy passes, the trustees
plan to use the revenue to build
fences, repair fallen and broken
stones, for general cleanup, for
tree removal, and to repair roads
In the cemeteries. The priority
Item on the Improvement plan Is
to·bulld the fences, Gibbs says.

ployment 1 rate has remained
within a narrow range or three- ·
tenths of a percentage point
below the previous year. Compared to one year ago, the jobless
rate Is down seven-tenthS of a
percentage point.
Employment among adult
women grew by 320,000 jobs In
October.
.
A separate jobless Index,
counting people In the military,
was 5.2 percent In October, down
from 5.3 percent In September.
Mirroring the civilian rate, the
Index that Includes members of
Continued on page 5

State Rep. Jolynn Boster, James Clalworthy,
Robert Gilmore and Paul Gerard, Middleport
VIllage council member, and back, Bruce Reed
and Betty Baronlck, Pomeroy council members,
arid Richard Jones, Meigs County Commlssoner.
The project was a joint venture or Pomeroy-Mid·
dleport Village Councils About 30-35jobs will be
added from the opening of Domino's and future
opening of the adjacent Subway.

DOMINO'S PIZZA RffiBON CUTTING CEREMONY - Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
jollied Larry Coleman, franchiser, to cut the
ribbon for the openinl of the new Domino's Pizza,
West Mala St., Pomeroy. Others participating ln
the ribbon cutdng ceremonies were from the left,
Pat O'Brien, Meigs County Court judge, Franklin
Rizer, Pomeroy councilman, Bill Haptonstall,
who owns the new business slle, and Rick Arango,
local manager, (Coleman and Mayor Seyler)

.--Local news briefs-__, State's critical school money issueS outlined

Full and QuHn size with

New Fall
ALL LIVING
ROOM SUITES , -JEWELRY SALE

era! funds. says Township Clerk
Sarah Gibbs.

Joe Wagner, "We' re not com·
mentlng on polls anymore."
The poll showed Metzenbaum
leading by 16 points 111 northwest"
ern Ohio, 25 In central and
southeast Ohio and 23 In southwest Ohio.
A half-dozen Ohio Polls over
the pastl8 months have all shown
Metzenbaum with massive leads
over Volnovlch.
Early polls showed that while
virtually everybody In Ohio had
heard of Metzenbaum, many
people In southern Ohio had no
Idea who Volnovlch was.
The campaign has become one
of the most expensive Senate
battles ln the country, with each
candidate spending more than $7
million.
Still, said Tuch!arber, all the
money Volnovlch has spent has
not brought him to a publicity
par with Metzenbaum.
"His money. has brought him
name recognition, but not an
Image," said Tuchfarber.
When people In the latest poll
were asked If they had a
favorable or unfavorable opinion
of Metzenbaum, 64 · percent said
favorable and 28 percent sald
unfavorable. As for Voinovlch, 41
percent said favorable and 38
percent said unfavorable.
lead.'' ·
As for reasons for supporting
Said Volnovlch press secretary
'

CINCINNATI (UPI) -A new
Ohio Poll,.lndlcates Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum Is headed for a
landslide victory over George
Volnovlch In next Tuesday's
Senate election.
The poll shows Metzenbaum,
the Incumbent Democrat, with a
whopping 27 percentage point
lead over Voinovlch, the Republi- ·
~an mayor of Cleveland.
"There's no. good news In the
poll lor Voinovlch," said AI
Tuchfarber, who conducts the
poll for the University of Cincinnati's Institute for Polley
Research.
In a statewide survey of 600
registered voters, 58 percent said
they Intended to vote for Metzenbaum, 31 percent said they would
vote for Volnovlch and 11 percent
were undecided.
Both candidates are from
Cleveland and when the poll Is
broken down geographically, It's
the Cleveland area where Met·
zenbaum enjoys his btgges t lead
- 36 points.
Said Metzenbaum campaign
aide Peter Harris, "We're very
glad to see that In the geographl- ·
cal region that knows the two
candidates best that Metzenbaum has pulled to an enormous

Jobless rate drops in October

•

*Girls Fall Dresses *Buster ·Brown Apparel
*Children's Winter Coats ·*Children's Snowsuits
.*Girls'-leans *Children's Gloves and Toboggans

ji

~r ,BAR. STOOLS

Sizes

SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON:

'

REGULAR S129.00

WEAR

CHILDREN'S CLOTHING SALE

'17.68
1 19.18
•22.38
'26.58
.

0

Salisbury Township Trustees
Richard Bailey, Nathan Biggs
and Harold Brinker are keeping
their fingers crossed that voters
In the township will pass a
proposed one-mlllleyy for cemetery maintenance when they go
to the polls this Tuesday.
This Is the second time that
Salisbury Trustees have tried to
pass a cemetery levy In the
township and they hope the
second time around wlll be the
charm.
.
Salisbury Township has five
cemeteries - Bradford, Howell
Hill, Rock Springs, Bunker Hill,
· and Austin · which are now being
maintained on very ltmlted gen-

•

ON

The trustees have placed a one-mUI, five-year
levy lor cemetery maintenance on· Tuesday's
ballot. A resolution was passed hy the trustees In
July to place the levy reque!il be lore the Salisbury
Township voters.

·Salisbury Trustees seeking
support on c~metery tax leyY
•

Spacial group of white cotton socks.
Sizes 9-11. Reg. •3.00 pair.

Rag.
Rag.
Reg.
Reg.

•Men's Buxton Wallets
•M,n's Neckties
•Mt~n's Quality
,Leather Belts
•Mt~n's Extra Heavy
.\Flannel Shirts
•Flannel Shirts
•Man's Denim Jeans
•Men's

-AUTO PLAY
-WIRELESS
REMOTE
-110 CH. CABLE
COMPATIBLE
-REG. •339.00

WALLETS, ORGANIZERS,
FRENCH PURSES, KEY·TAINERS,
and CHANGE PURSES

Thermal knit tope and
bottoms. Sizes S, M, L.

MAJOR TOWNSHIP EXPENSE - Bradford
Cemetery Is one of live rural cemeteries which
must be maintained by Salisbury Township. Lack '
ol adequate funds to maintain the cemelerle!i
properly ·has ·caused tbe Salisbury Trustees to go
to the re!ildents of the township for financial help.

SAMSUNG

LADIES

25 Ce.n tl

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohio poll predicts big
win for Metzembaum

29.96

Sweaters ..... NOW. •19.9&amp;

Reg. '369.00
Recllnara ......... Sale 1 269.00
Reg. t389.00
Recllnera ......... Sala •291.00
Reg. $419.00
Recllnera ........ Sale $314.00
Reg. '469
Recllnera ......... Sale 1 361.00 .

We Feature Fram1 Repcir On The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 4.' 1988

Sweater ..... Now '16.96

1.---~

•COMPLETE COLLISION WORK
TO YOUR SATISFACTION

2 Sections, 16 Pagn

Vol.39, No. 127
Copyrighted 1988

Stop in, see our big selection of sweaters in
all sizes. · Solids, neat
patterns. new looks.
You'll save nowl

12.75
'16.00
'15.95
•19 .95

0

1

5°/o TO
40°/o OFF

•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN

MEN;S
SWEATERS

'19.96

SALE I

Low In mid 50s tonight.
Chance ol rain 90 percent.
Saturday, chance of rain 60
percent. IDghs In 60s.

•

Speeltl Stief

Long sleeve styles inS. M, L, and
XL sizes, plus big sizes. Solid
color, novelty patterns. Flannels,
broadcloths, westerns, novelty
styles.

Hospital news

ROUSH'S
BODY SHOP AND PARTS

•

Daily Number
193
Pick 4
6015

Page 3

SALE!

•15.99
'18.96
•19.96
•24.96

Ohio Lottery

Members of Local 644 of the United Rubber Workers at
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Company's Point Pleasant polyester
plant In Apple Grove, W.Va., ratified a new three-year contract
Thursday.
The vote was 279-25 In favor of the agreement, which runs
through Nov. 5, 1991. A total of 408 employees are covered by the
local agreement.
,
The agreement provides for wage Increases totaling $l.!i0 per
hour over the three years -50 cents per hour In each year of the
agreement. Increases were also provided for safety shoe
allowance, and some changes -In work rules were adopted.

Railroad crossing being repaired
Meigs Co~nty Engineer Phil Roberts reported at Wednes·
day's meeting of the county commissioners that the hlghw~y
department ls .mpalring a tallroad crossing on County Road 10.
Roberts said that workers are building the road up on both
sides of the tracks to provide a level crossing for motorists.
Once the railroad crossing Is complete, highway department
workers will be moving to Morning Star Road where a widening
project Is planned. .
Roberts sald that stripping or any newly blacktopped roads In
the county will take place as soon as the people who do the
striping are able to schedule a trlp to Meigs County.
Roberts anticipates It will only.take about a half day for all the
stripping to be completPrl. Roberts has been told that the hold \II&gt;
ConU,nued on page 5

EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the perlntendent of public lnstrucflfth In a series of articles ttim. "School Issue proponents
prepared by United Press Inter- are asking for funds to buy books,
national's Ohio bureaus about pay staff salaries, repair roofs,
the candidates !Uid Issues In- and build safe and comfortable
volved In next Tuesday's elec- . · faclltUes.
lion. Today's article outUnes the
"Quite simply." he said,
critical money Issues In Ohio ''school districts are asking
school districts.
communltles to support teaching
and learning."
William Phillis, assistant state
By LEE LEONARD
schools
superintendent, said
UPI Stalebouse Reporter
there
are
more large school
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
levies
this
year
because "for the
Voters In Ohio school districts
two
years,
the
state Increase
past
are laced with 233' money re·
(In
aid
to
local
districts)
has been
quests this year, n:rany of which
less
than
normal.
The
(school·
will determine tl)e solvency of
)
boards
still
have
to
cope
wit~
those schools. . '
Inflation
and
expanded
deThere are 202 opera ling tax
levies on the ballot In various mands," he sald.
Youngstown City School Disdistricts, and 31 bond Issues.
At least 29 distrlcls with levies trict may have the most crucial
will have to resort to the state levy on !he ballot - 14.5 mills of
school loan'fund lithe levies don't property tax. The district, which
pass. Others with levies already hasn't passed a li!Vy since 1978,
have borrowed !rom the state to already has applied lor a $5 million state loan In case the levy
keep sc!lools open.
falls.
"The school districts aren't
"They'll have to lay off tons of
seeking local support for frills,"
people
lf they don't pass It," said
said Franklin Walter, state su·~

.,...,.,,

...

- ......

~-·

Phillis, pointing out that the
district has the responsibility of
educating a large percentage of
pupils whose families are on
welfare because of high unemployment In the Mahonlng
Valley .
Ravenna City School District,
which has not passed a school
levy In nine tries since 1978, Is
offering a 13.8-mlll levy. It
already borrowed from the state
In 1981 and Is preparing to borrow
$958;000 If the levy falls.
Columbiana Exempted VIllage
School District Is attempting to
pass a 14.6-mlll levy, the same
one that failed In August. The
district borrowed $217,000 from
the state last year and will have
to borrow again If the levy falls.
"Thai district has been
plagued by financial woes and
strikes," said Phillis. ''they're on
the rocks financially."
Voters In Eastern·Local School
District, Meigs County, are lookIng at a 12.4-mlll school levy, the
same one that tailed last May.
The district, which has a

'
minimal
tax base and a belowaverage expenditure per pupil,
will have to borrow from the
state for the first time If the levy
falls.
James Garfield School District
In Por.lage County, which has
borrowed from the state three
times since 1985, has an eightmill levy on the ballot. If It falls,
the district will have to borrow
another $157;000 from the state
and go Into receivership.
Fairport Harbor In Lake
County has an 11.3-mlll levy on
the l,)allotln an attempt to avoid a
loan. The district has a good
record or passing levies In the
las110 years.
A five-mill levy on the ballot In
the Ohio Valley Local School
District, Adams County, could
keep the district from borrowing
$2.5 million from the state If It
·passes.
Ohio Valley hasn'i passed a
levy In 10 years, and the same
five-mill proposal failed In August. The district borrowed from
Continued on· page 5 ·

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