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Ohio Lottery

Viola AL
CyYo~ng

honoree

Daily Number
282
Pick 4
1723

Page 4

Super Lotto
3-9-11-16-23-32

We Reserve The Right To

Clearing tonight . Low near
30 . Friday, s unny, highs near
45.

•

limit Quantities

STORE HQIJRS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
NEW SALESMAN - Mark
Sell'les, of Danville, new
1alesman at Pomeroy's
, Smltb-Nel- Motors, says he
would like lo conUnue serving
put customers. Searles
comes to Smith-Nelson with
approximately seven years of
experlellce In selling cars In
Melp County. Searles and bls
wile, Judy, are the parents of
twcr"cblklren, Brian and Joy.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., NOV. 6 THRU SAT., NOV.12

Pomeroy
court news
Eight persons were fined and
six others forfeited bonds In the
rourt of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Todd Calllrotte,
Columbus, $43 and costs, driving
Jell of center; Matthew Dillard,
Rutland, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension; Harry L.
Barton, Pomeroy, $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated; Tim
Smith, Guysvtlle, $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated, and
$47 and costs. speeding.
Also fined were Douglas
Burns, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
open container; Larry Gilmore,
Middleport, $63 aand costs, ex·
plred plates, and $20 line on a
seat belt violation; Joseph
Tucker, - ~ctne, $375 and costs,
driving whlle Intoxicated, and
$63 and costs, no operator' s
liCense: and Darlene Shane,
Portland, $63 and costs, expired
license plates.
Forfeiting bonds were Wlllam
J. Reltmlre, Pomeroy, $63, explfed license; Charlene Work·
mlm, Rockhill, W. Va., $43,
wrong way on a one-way street;
Douglas Rollins, Pomeroy, $375,
driving while Intoxicated, and
$63, driving without a Itcense;
Donald Maye, Pomeroy, $38 lor
letting his dog run loose alter
repeated warnings; Jackie
McDaniel, Pomeroy. $63, open
container: and Edwin Ash, Ra·
cine, $43, assured clear distance.

$ 2.9
Cube Steak •••••!B•··· 2
.

Tu. rkeys ••••••••••••••••• 79·(
'J

&lt;::..

10-22 LB. AVG.

LB.

MIXED

Fryer Parts ••••• !~ .. ~. 49&lt;

GRADE A

$129
Chuck Roast ••••••••
HOMEMADE PORK
$
19
Sa.usage ••••••• ~ ••!'.... 1

Whole Fryers •• !~ .... 59&lt;

LB.

Bacon •••••••••••••• !~ ....
usage ••• !~ •••

$

119

Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 27'!.

AT&amp;T ...... ............ .... ........... 28¥,
..shland OU ...... ... .. .. ...........34',2
Bob Evans .... .. .. ... .... .. ...... .. .16%
Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ 15'4
City Holding Co .. .. .. .. .... ....... 30
Federal Mogui .. .... .... .. .... ... .51:Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... .. ...... .....50%
Heck's .... ..... ....... ... ,. .••.........

Lettuce •••• ~ ••••••• :~A: 2/$1
'FLAVORITE
'
$
149
2°/o Milk
.

QUARTERS

Lottwy numbel'8
'
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number

Shedds Spread.~.
3
/$1
.
.

Ticket sales totaled
$1,220,234.50, with a payoff due of
S508,419.50.
PICK-4

7729.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$:1J8,858, with a payoff due of

,

PJCK-4 $1 straight bet pays .
$5,364. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$447.
'
'

'

DAIRY LANE

Crackers •••••••••• !~ .... 89(

Ice Cream ••••••••••••

BOUNTY

BIRDSEYE

112 GAlLON

Paper.Towels •••••••• 19 &lt; Cool Whip •••••••:::••• 69&lt;
• •

2 LITER •nnt

389.

~.106.

,GAL.

••••••••••••••

Weather
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
between 65 and 70, Becoming
windy tonight, with showers
likely alter midnight and a low
between 50 and 55. Showers
Thursday morning, with highs
between 60 and 65 but tempera·
tures falling to near 50 late In the
day.
The probability of preclpita·
lion Is near.zero today, 70percent
tonight and 90 percent Thursday.
Winds will be from the south at '
10 to 15 mph today and from the
south at 15 to 25 mph tonight.

Pu&amp;IJ has taken a special interest the meeting. Shields said he
By NANCY YOACHAM
In this deal, Shields added , since would release more a bout the
Sentinel News Start
Pugh has been Involved In the workshop as soon as the date Is
Kim Shields, Meigs County's
director of development, and the · project since It began back In confirmed.
Bids were opened by the
Meigs County Commissioners April and was the one who made
are questioning why the Ohio the original .analysts of the comlsstoners for a new EMS
squad for Pomeroy. Bids of
Department of Development Is project.
The total package, which in· $59,614 from the Horton Co.,
taking so long 19 approve the
eludes a low interest loan from a Columbus, and $61,879 from
release $24,000 In Community
local bank and matching money McLain Specialty Vehicles, And·
Development Block Grant fund·
from
the loan applicants, erson, Ind. were received. At the
tng that Is to be part of a . loan
amounts
to approximately request of Bob Byer, the bids
package to a Meigs County
$70,000.
wer e tabled pending r eview by
business.
Shields
anticipates
knowing
the Meigs EMS Board of TrusThe $24,000 had been set aside
something
about
the
release
of
·
tees. The commissioners expect
earlier by the commissioners for
by
the
end
of
the
week.
·
to receive a recommendation
the
funds
a business that ended up locating
In regard to another matter, whether to accept the low bid by
In Mason County, W.Va. Once the
Shields said he hils tentatively their ~ov . 23 meeting. .
other business went to West
A low bid of $9,105 from
scheduled for Dec. 8, an after·
Virginia, the funds were to be
noon economic development Hartley, Inc., on a project to
held until another project quall·
workshop. At this works!lop, widen the garage doors lor
fled lor the money.
representatives f~J!;!m the Ohio Rutland EMS, was accepted by
Shields reported Wednesday to
Department of -nevelopment the commissioners. The bid from
the Meigs Courity Commission~
would present guidelines lor the Hartley was reviewed by Kim
ers that Betsy Gillin. ODOD's
Larry Bank&amp; of Banks Construction. The building
WORK PROGRESSING - This 6,000 square
development
of projects, explain Shields and meets specified
regional
repr!)sentative
for
this
will be leased to Family Dollar which anticipates
fool brick-front building located near the
of
projects that are criteria. A total of$9,6241n CDBG
the
kinds
lind
problems
.
area,
continues
to
opening In early December.
Intersection of Mill and Second St.ln Middleport Is
usually
funded,
and make sug· funds was approved lor the
the
loan
proposal.
with
expected to be completed by Dec. I, according to
Shields said that although he gestlons a bout the kinds of Rutland project.
Information that are needed In
Finally , a $400 tnterdeparthas tried, he has been unsuccesscommls·
mental
transfer was approved
project
proposals.
The
ful In meeting Giffin's requests
stoners
were
enthusiastic
about
for
Meigs
Juvenile Court.
for Information. He has lnstl·
such
a
workshop
and
suggested
Next
week's
meeting of the
gated the help of Professor
that
In
addition
to
local
businesscommissioners
wtll be held 1
Dwight Pugh, of Ohio Untversl·
and
chamber
of
commerce
p.m.
on
Friday,
·Instead of on
men
ty's Innovation Center, to better
members,
prospective
borrowWednesday.
so
the
commissionexplain the loan package. Hope·
ers
and
anyone
else
Interested
In
ers
may
attend
a
meeting
of the
tully, Shields said, Pugh's sum·
mary of the project will suffice the economic development of Southeastern Ohio Association of
and the funds will be released. Meigs County should be Invited to Commissioners and Engineers.
wide underground tunnel. Is rowed to locations In Arizona,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -'-The
expected to be the largest parti· Colorado, llllnols, Michigan,
Ener~ Department today· secle accelerator - or atom- North Carolina, Texas and
lected Te)&lt;as as the preferred site
.Tennessee.
·-for~ tt~· blllton.aupel'e9nd'uet&lt; · sma,~her .._ In the -world. Tile ·
The Texas site Is located In
tunnel will cover an area 17 miles
lng supercollider, ending a lren·
Ellis
County. about 30 miles
long and 15 miles wide and will
zled competition among job·
was the refusal of the Republican
campaigns for Bush and Ohio
COLUMBUS,. Ohio (UPI ) tile Dallas-Fort Worth
south
of
contain 10,000 huge superconhungry states to host what Is
hierarchy to endorse Bush In the
Ohio Republicans, buoyed by Senate and House Republicans
metropolitan area. Waxahachie,
touted as the biggest sclentlltc _ductlng magnets.
primary
season last February
President-elect George Bush's credited togetherness and coopThe device will send beams of Texas, Is currently the major topheavy victory In the Buckeye eration during the campaign for
project In history, Texas officials
when
former
Gov. James Rhodes
protons racing In opposite direc- town tn the area.
said.
and
Cuyahoga
County RepubliCobey Chase, an official with State, talked boldly Wednesday their successes.
Energy Department officials . tions around the underground
can
Chairman
Robert Hughes
Senate and House Republicans
about taking over the Statehouse
track at nearly the speed of light. Texas' Washington office, said
notified Gov. mll Clements In a
were
angling
for an
scored modest gains. Absent
In 1990.
The payoff comes when the the project was expected to
phone call to his Austin office at
endorsement.
"Who are their candidates?" were spokesmen lor the cam·
beams collide, releasing a create 4,500 construction jobs
8:31 a.m. CST, telling him that
"The Bush people had a good
chortled
Democratic State Chair· palgns of Republican Senate
2,000
permanent
jobs
for
the
and
shower of subatomic particles
the department's recommenda·
campaign,"
conceded Ruvolo. "I
man James Ruvolo when M · nominee George Volnovich and
tliat scientists will study to learn Lone Star state. Overall, he said,
tlon was Texas, state officials In
salu
Je
them
for
that. They picked
two GOP Supreme Court candl·
heard about the GOP's plans.
more about the nature of energy the project would pump $20
Washington said.
state to build a
one
mldwes
tern
·'We are serving notice that the dates, all of whom lost.
billion In new economic activity
and matter.
Energy Secretary John Her·
firewall
around
, and th ey
Vice President Bush and his
1990 campaign Is going to begin
The supercoutder will be 20 Into Texas over the next25years.
rlngton called a news conference
In her e. 1
brought
everybody
To win the project. Texas today," Republican State Chai r· running mate, Sen. Dan Quayle
times more powerful than the
today to end more than a year of
wish
we'd
been
able
to do that.
man RotJert Bennett told a of Indiana, scored an Impressive
largest existing particle acceler· lawmakers approved legislation post-election press conference. 10-polnt victory over Massachu· They spent $1.4 million In Ohio
speculation. The site selection
that will provide $1.1 billion In
ator, Fermllab In Illinois.
now goes to President Reagan,
state
funds for the supercollider "We are putting our team setts Gov. Michael Dukakls and and we spent $300,000.
When the competition began
who must make the final decision
Bennett said the Republican
his running mate, Sen. Lloyd
together. "
when Reagan makes the final
on the site lor the $4.4 bllllon last year, 25 states submitted 35
party
will boast good candidates
Bentsen
of
Texas,
carrying
all
"It won't work, " countered
sites to the government for decision on siting.
project.
for
statewide
office In 1990, when
The announcement that Texas Ruvolo, who said his troops will but 11 counties .
The supercollider, an oval- consideration. The list was nar·
crucial
election
lor governor
.the
Bush's 477,000-vote margin ec·
had won the project set off be ready with a "better stable of
shaped, 53-mile-long, 10-foot·
comes
along.
That
list will
celebrations In the state's Wa· candidates." He pointed out that lipsed the one rolled up by
Cleveland
Mayor
George
Include
in statewide contests Tuesday , President Reagan over Jimmy
shlngton office.
Volnovlch,
he
said.
"there was only one with no Carter in 1980.
"We're going nuts over here' "
Voinovlch, who In the mid·
"We had a united Republican
incumbent, and we won."
Cobey said.
1980s
was viewed as the Republl:
Ruvolo said the fact that voters party In this campaign, and
Texas officials scheduled a
cans'
best hope statewide, could
news conference lor 12:30 p.m. in seem to want to stick with that's what made the differ·
collect
only 43 percent of the
Incumbents will benefit Demo- ence," said Keith McNamara,
Washington to detail their site.
popUlar
vote against Incumbent
In recent weeks, governors of crats. In two years. Democrats Ohio ' chairman of Bush's
A minor accident at 5:04p.m. Wednesday on S!t. 124, at the
Democratic
Sen . Howard Met·
campaign.
most of the ttnallst states came to hold every statewide admlnlstra·
intersection of CR 13, near Rutland, was reported to the
zenbaum.
.
He
lost by 602,000
Washington for one more round · tlve office.
Gallla-Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol.
McNamara said a key strategy
Continued on page 8
Bennett and the leaders of the
of lobbying Herrington, underlln·
Troopers said James R. Bowen, 36, Rt. 2, attempted to turn
lng the stakes Involved In snaring
right onto CR. 13, but couldn' t negoUate the turn, so he backed
the estimated $4.4 billion project.
up and his truck-tractor struck the front of a tractor-trailer
State olllclals have salivated
operated by Pearl E . Hutchinson, 59, Wellston.
over the economic bonanza the
Damage was minor to bo th vehicles. No one was Injured.
project would bring, and high·
There was no ct tat ion.
energy physics researchers are
eager for sclentlttc advances it
will make possible once its seven·
to 10-year construction Is
All Mlddle)iort village offices will be closed Friday In
complete.
observance of Veterans Day. Offices will open Monday as usual.
Energy Department officials
had said Herrington was making
his decision on the basis of
numerous factors , Including land
acquisition costs, avallablllty of
The Meigs County Co)lrt House will be closed Friday
skUled.
workers, geological conNovember 11, In observance of Veterans Day .
siderations and transportation,
housing and other "soclallnfras·
tructure'' resources.
Herrington had scheduled his
A bridge one and one--half miles south of Albany on State
news conference for after Elec·
Route 681, which has been closed, Is scheduled to open
lion Day In order to quell
(Thursday), according to a spokesman for the Ohio Department
concerns his decision would be
of Transportation. However, the bridge will be closing again on
polltlcally motivated.
.
Monday so that a culvert can be replaced. ODOT expects the
Rea,gan' s must designate a site
culvert replacement will take three days to complete. During
formally before leaving office
thiS closure, the same detour will be used which Is State Route
Jan. 20. But while Congr'ess
143 to State Route 692 to State Route 32 to U.S. 50, the ODOT
appropriated $100 million this
spokesman said.
year for researeh on the project,
leglslal'ors still must decide
whether the country can afford to
proceed with construction of the
gigantic
project at a time of
The resignation of Janett Call as a speech therapist was
record
federal
budget deficits.
accepted when the Meigs County Board of Education met In
Scientists
contend
the United
regular session.
States
must
go
ahead
with the
MEIGS REACT TEAM RECOGNIZED - The Patrol P011t. It was accepted by Robert Bowles,
The board hired Michele Pratt as a speecl1, therapist for the
risk
being
left
super
colltder
or
Melp
County REACT team was preaented an
pl'ellldent of the REACT team, as several other
remainder of the clirrent school year and Issued bus driver
behind
In
the
technological
race
award
Wednesd~ momlng by lhe Ohio Departmembers looked on, left. to right, front, Mary
certificates to Eric Diddle of Carleton School and Rufus
by other nations now pursuing
meat of IDghway Safety and the Governor's Bowlee, Nathan Btgp, · Carl Nelson, and Ruby
Browni!IS, Meigs Local District. Tile board amended the list of
similar
projects. The Soviet
Safety Cernmltlee. Tbe Melp voup was Hysell; third row, Betty Biggs, Neal White, and
Tratftc
employees
authorized
to
examine
and-or
release
school
1
Unlop Is constructing a particle
one of 15 orgaalzatlons In lhe slate to receive Guy D. Hysell, aad fourth row, Mary Snyder, Earl
records. Bills were approved for payment.
accelerator 1 % times larger
awards of special achievement. Here to pre11ent Snyder, Jim Perkins, and Jed Web8ter.
Continued on page 8
than Fermllab.
the plaque was Lt. Daa Hendenon, Gallla-Melgs

Texas will get $4.4 billion
supercollider scientific project

-Local news briefs-.. . .

~8

Key Centurion . ....... ... ......... 16%
Lands' End ... .. ........ ........ ... . 23 ¥,
Limited Inc .. .. .. .. ...... .. ........ 26%
'Multimedia Inc .................... 70
Rax Restaurants .... ......... .. .. . 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ............ 12',2
Shoney's Inc ........ ..... ......... .. 7'!.
Wendy's Inti .... ..... ...... ......... 6%
Worthington lnd ... .. .... ...... .. 21 Y.
(City Holding Co. raised Its
quarterly dividend lo $.15 from
1.13, payable Dec. 15; lo shareholders of record on Dec. 1. Its
· 50-percent stock dividend Is
payable Dec. 30: to shareholders
of record on Dec. 16.)

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROlL

PKG.

Um~

99&lt;

1 Por (01tom•
Good Only At Pow oil's s..,. Va.,

3/S109
Umit 3 Ptr (..,tom•
Good Daly At Powoll'1 s.,. Valu

"'"''·""

•••
COUPON • ••

PENNINSULAR

LOTSA POP

1911

26 Cents

GOP concentrates on 1990

CRISPY SERVE .

Roll

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce ud Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi

.

GRADE A FLAVORITE

USDA CHOIC

2 SectiQns, 16 Pages

A Multimed i a Inc. New~aper

Officials question late
release of grarit funds
BUCKET PORK

BALLARD'S 10 OZ. LINK OR

Stocks

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November i 0, 1!J88

Vo1.39, No. 131
Copyrighted 1988

GRAN. SUGAR
4.25 LB.
BAG

$119

··:~ . couPON
MAXWELL HOUSE

•MASTER BLEND COFFEE

j34.5 oz.

$4 99

limH 1 Per Customer
Good Daly At Powoll'1 Sup11 Volu
Good lun., Nov. 6 thou lot., Nov. 12, 1911

Patrol investigates minor wreck

Closed on Veterans Day

Court house closed Friday
Bridge to reopen today

Meigs board accepts resignation

'

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�------

Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
11~

.

,...,...._.,_....-,,........,...doo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
, PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Th~. ~~ 10. .~98.8

WASHINGTON - George
Bush didn't have to go to Boston
Harbor to find an environmental
scandal. His own rlght·hand man
appears to have been wading In
the · Rita Lavelle-Superfund
quagmire.
Craig Fuller, now Bush's chief
of staff, was a "worker bee"
running messages between the
White House and Lavelle at the
Environmental Protection
Agency during the Superfund
scandal of 1982 and 1983, accordIng to Lavelle.
In an Interview with our
associate Stewart Harris, La·
velle said that Fuller was well
aware of the scheme to funnel
Superfund cleanup money to the
states where It would help
Republican candidates . But she
said Fuller, then secretary of

111 Court Stree&amp;
· Pomeroy, Oblo

~m~

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER o!T ~e United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and t~e American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Th eY should be Jess than 300 words
long. All letters are .subject toediting and must be signed with name, address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters-1t\ould be ln
good taste, addressing Is sues, not persooalttles.
-~ ·;t

Veterans Day Friday, ·
November II, 1988
By
H.F. "Sparky" Gierke
Na&amp;loaal Commander
The American Legion

.

: Veterans Day, November 11, Is the one day each year America
.,remembers her sons and daughters who served In the Armed Forces
of the United States.
On that day we do not remember war, but rather honor those men
and women who served when the nation called. They altered their
personal lives to maintain America's freedom.
. • When this nation was founded, the concept of a "citizen soldier"
,;.as a bold step forward. Our early leaders believed for this young
nation to be free and Independent required every citizen to share In
the defense of those Ideals.
America Is great because America Is free. Our freedom was bought
by the sacrl!les and dedication of millions of Americans who put n a
military uniform and served this nation with pride and distinction.
: As the first VIetnam veteran to serve as National Commander of
The American Legion, I believe this nation must not forget the
contributions of her veterans. While t do not claim to speak tor all
veterans of America, I do speak for the nearly 3 million members of
The American Legion. Legionnaires feel a deep sense ofprldeln their
service which designates them as "veterans."
In this century alone, mllllons of Americans earned the title of
"veteran." These same veterans continue serving In cities and towns
irom coast to coast and border to border. They are little league
uoaches, PTA volunteers, hospital workers, and business leaders.
: They write laws, serve to protect our homes and property, and
come In all sizes, shapes, and ethnic backgrounds. They are men and
women who toll dally to make the nation's businesses grow, teach our
children, and care for others.
Their military service has preserved our freedom. Their civilian
service has contributed to the betterment of community, state, and
nation.
: Today America enjoys relative peace. Still, thousands or her
)ooungest citizens ate on duty around the world risking their lives to
maintain America's freedom and ·e arning the distinction of being
known as proud American veterans.
When they come home, they too will join In pursuit of all that a free
: America offers her citizens. As veterans before them have done, they
wUI do their part to make this nation better for future generations.
:,America's veterans, from generation to ~eneratlon, stUI serve our
'!latlon with pride after the uniform has long been gone.
It Is right that a grateful nation set aside one day a year to recognize
·these men and women for all they have done, and for all they COI\tinue
to do. America's veterans are proud of the dltference they malle for
the nation. That Is the special message of this Veterans Day.

...

lack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

Cabinet affairs, did not engineer
the scheme. The Superfund was
Fuller has repeatedly ch.arac·
authorized by Congress to clean Former EPA head Anne Gorsuch
up hazardous waste.
Burford said as · much In her terlzed his contacts with Lavelle
Lavelle .says she frequently .book, "Are You Tough Enough?" as "Infrequent and related to
Informed Fulle~ about matters In Burford, who was fired as a EPA or Ca blnet affairs bus I·
the Superfund program, Includ- result of the scandal, writes that ness," according to spokesman
Ing a briefing about apparent she suspected the White House of Steve Hart.
political manipulation of the guiding Lavelle.
But Fuller and Lavelle com·
Numerous congressional In· munlcated more often than
program.
To this day, Lavelle maintains vestlg'ators believe that the Fuller seems willing to admit.
her Innocence In the scheme, and White House claimed "executive Three of Lavelle's secretaries
claims she protested the alleged privilege" over documents so told congressional Investigators
manipulation. Lavelle served a Congress would not find out who that she and Fuller talked as
prison term for lying to Congress was responsible for the mess.
of(fn as every other week. They
It was Fuller's job In the early
about the Issue.
used chauffered messengers to
"Alii can say Is the truth," she 1980s to act as a liaison between trade sensitive packages, sealed
says of Fuller's contacts with the White House and executive with tape and marked "eyes
her. "They were not dltectlonal offices such as the EPA. We only."
calls. They were Informational asked Fuller If he had ever talked .
One weekend when Fuller was
to Lavelle about political manip- moving Into a new apartment, be
calls.''
But many believe someone at ulation of Superfund money. ran Into a Superfund attorney
the White House was giving Fuller's reponse, through a spo- helping the former resident
Lavelle her marching orders. kesman, was ••no."
move out. That attorney told
congressional Investigators that
Fuller said, "Oh, you work for
Rita Lavelle, I know her well."
Fuller added that he spoke to
Lavelle frequently, the attorney
said.
Even former Attorney General
Edwin Meese linked Fuller and
Lavelle. Meese was asked about
Lavelle In his confirmation hear·
lng. "I do not recall ever talking
with her about any particular
· toxic waste site. I suspect she
may be confusing me with Craig
Fuller In that testimony."
Lavelle says she told Fuller
about the apparent politicizing of
Superfund money and asked him
to convey her protest over It to
the White House. It was after she
alerted Fuller that' Lavelle says
the White House launched a
scheme to frame her.
"Me going to jail was a result of
that," she said. "It Is not fair to
P' d
blame Craig Fuller. He was foot
A
soldier," said Lavelle. She
~JHJnc".fil:" AA ~Dr J~AlhbLr'D
blames Meese, former White ·
lfJf ""~
JK.IIII'JIJ'.e:;r;""'" House aide Michael Deaver and
counsel Fred Fielding.

7lJ )'YIJtA tA8JITJI/PJ

· ·•

Thoughtful people have long ·
wonder whether America would
litigate Itself Into paralysis. Now
comes a man with the answer: In
some spheres of commerce, we
already have.
Peter Huber may be uniquely
qualified to assess the ravages of
litigation. As both engineer and
lawyer (MIT and Harvard, respectively), he Is equally at home
In technological and legal sub·
tlety. His new book, "Liability,
The Legal Revolution and Its
Consequences," should convince
all but the sleekest tort attorney
that something Is grossly wrong
with the way our system com pen·
sates people for supposedly preventable accidents and Injuries.
Consider the effect otlltlgatlon
on the manufacture of contraceptives. It's hardly surprising that
a French rather than American
firm Is the first to market an
abortion-Inducing drug. U.S.
companies pulled back drastically from contraceptive re·
search during the past 15 years,
after leading the world In the

1950s and 1960s. A barrage of
lawsuits - some directed at the
admittedly botched Dalkon
Shield, but many targeted at
state-of- the-art products- drove
the companies from the field.
The same crude brake has
been applied to research and
manufacture of vaccines. Never
mind how many lives a vaccine
might save or whether It's safer
than anything on the market.
Modern liability law decrees, In
effect, that virtually any risk Is
unacceptable, tbat any damage
must be compensated - often
even It the viet 1m has been
'expressly warned In advance.
"In matters ot health and
safety," Huber writes, "contract
terms count for nothing at all"
Only In America, Huber Insists, could juries levy punitive
damages "ostensibly grounded
In outrageous (corporate) mls·
conduct for acts that federal
regulators had specifically con·
templated and approved."
The entire medical profession
has been rocked by the legal

)

DANNY GHEEN
(First Team .AII-8VACl

assault. In the bad old days
before judges concocted '"strict"
liability, an obstetrician would
be Immune from lawsuits I! he
took normal, reasonable precautions In delivering a baby. In the
law's brave new world, obstetricians are sued as a matter of
course by the parents of deformed or defective babies- and
appear to win or lose cases as If
by loottery.
"By 1985, one of !our
obstetricians-gynecologists had
been sued," reports Huber. "AI·
most three-quarters won their
cases, but It cost the physician or
Insurer an ~verage of $20,000 per
claim to do so."
Meanwhile, Insurance premiums and patient bills skyrocket,
and some specialists a bandon
practice altogether.
Not only affordable medicine Is

SVAC football champion Oak
Hill led the way in league honors

with six players- seniors Chuck'
M!ller, Tony Simpson, Steve
Snyder, Mike Wails and Bobby
. Ward, and junior Jo~h Ruff being named to the ffrst team.
Symmes Valley was repres·
ented by five players - seniors
Scott Miller
and Joe Smith
.
juniors Paul Hayes and Jason
Pernestl, and sophomore Kenny
Daniels, who led the league In
rushing with 1,382 total yards and
was named the Most Valuable
Back. They witnessed Merrill
Triplett, their head coach, re·
celve Coach of the Year honors
for leading the VIkings to their
second straight 7·3 season.

.

*8191

1984

RESS SHOES

.Today in history

Despite playing what she
terms "a very, very tough
schedule" in 1988·89 , Rio Grande
women's baskeiball Coach
Cheryl Fielltz feels a champion·
ship season "is within our
grasp."
"I anticipate it will be a good
season," she said .
. The Redwomen ope n al West
Virginia Tech on Tuesqay, Nov.
15 at 5:15 p.m.
The Rio women have cause for
optimism because they finished
1987·88 with a 19·9 slate and a 7·3
standing- second place- in the
Mid·Ohio Conference. They
placed fourth In District .22 .
In addition. the team has .ail of
its veterans back and a healthy

_:_~. .:.:. :ince:=.: :.n: .: .:. t~ca::....:..rr=oll
at risk. The "tort tax," as Huber
labels the cost of profilgale
litigation, exacts a toll across the
economy. Cities close recrea·
tiona! facilities or pay obscenely
high Insurance premiums. Manu·
facturers stick with'old, Inferior
technology because juries are
more likely to find fault with new
designs lacking a safety record.
And those same juries, although
bereft to technical comPetence,
are often asked to compare
actual products with hypothetl·
cally safer ones that don't even
exist.
Modern tort law, evolved to
shield people from unsafe products and Irresponsible behav·
lor, conspires Instead to slow or
even halt the pace of Innovation.
And thus It has become, Ironically, one of safety's biggest
enemies of all.

On this date In history:
In 1775, the United States Marine Corps was formed by order of the
Continental Congress.
• In 1871, journalist Henry Stanley found missing Scottish missionary
: David Livingstone In a small African village, and said, "Dr.
· Livingstone, I presume?"
·
In 1917. 41 women from 15 states were arrested ,oulslde the White
House. for suffragette demonstrations. American women won the
right to vote thtee years later.
In 1982, Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev died at age 75 after 18
. years In power.
•
· In 1986, all European Community nations except Greece Imposed
: sanctions against Syria to protest Syria's role In a plot to blow up an
Israeli jetliner In London.
A thought for the day: Martin Luther wrote, "Everythlng'that Is
done In the world Is done by hope."

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Ohio) , Tina Azbell (5·10, Lancas·
ter). Ann Barnltz (6·0, Belpre).
Betsy Bergdoll (5-7, GaiUpolls),
Renee Ward (5·6, Gallipolis) and
Kathy Snyder (6·0, Gahanna), all
of who~:posted Impressive high
sc hoot, records.
With this lineup, fans of the
aggressive style of basketball
practiced by the Redwomen .
won't be disappointed. The team
Is expected to begin speedily and
not let up on Its opponents.
"I like. the fast·paced, lots of
action· type game," commented
Fielltz , whose two· year record at
Rio Grande Is 39·15. "We have
our players conditioned to ptay
full court for 40 minutes, and by
Continued on page 5

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:

infusion of new talent. ·
The six returnees are Lea Ann
Mullins (5·7, McGuffey) , Holly
Hastings (5·9, Clrclevllle), BUlle
Jo .Stephenson (5·8, WestUnlon),
Beth Coil (5-6, Wapakoneta),
Angie Packard (5·8, Baltimore.
Ohio), Mario Kistler (5·5 , Sugar
Grove) and Jenni Couch (5-5,
Pomeroy). Forward Mullins
ended last season as the confer·
ence and district player of the
year. Hastings, also a forward,
continued as one of the conferen·
ce's best rebounders and guard
Coil proved herself In a starting
position she held for the entire
season.
'
The newcomers inc I ude
Heather Bates (5·7, Amlin,

CORISCA
8995°

SERin~iTJIR

1

ESCORTGL

By United Pret~~~lnternallonal .
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 10, the 315th day of 1988 With 51 to follow.
• The moon Is waxing, moving toward It! first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
Martin Luther, founder of Protestantism, In 1483, William Hogarth,
. English artist and engraver,ln 1697, Irish author Oliver Goldsmith In
· t730. actors Richard Burton In 1925 and Roy Scheider In 1935 (age 53) ,
:cou'n try singer Donna Fargo In 1949 (age 39), and actress Mack~nzle
: Phillips In 1959 (age 29).

Schottenhelmer and, to a lesser
extent, quarterback Bernie
Kosar must share the blame for
These are the Individuals se- the confusion that also Included
_Hannan Tr11ce's flrst·teamers
too many players on the field.
were seniors Brad Cremeens and lected for honorable mention:
Instead of trailing by one point
Scott Caldwell and junior Todd
Oak HIU- Ched Adkins, Chris
at
halftime, the Browns allowed
·
Saunders. North Gallla's top Bates and Sean Blevins
Oilers sorne breathing room
the
Symmes Valley - Gary Hoi·
choices were senior trl·captalns
the
hosts quickly converted Into
Keith Eleam, Greg Glassburn schuh, Fred Wilburn and Keith
an·
18·polnt lead. That was
and Don Mays. Mays, who played Wilson
foreboding
- Cleveland had not
tight end,.tackle (both ways) and
Hannan Trace - Larry Jar·
won
a
game
In which It were
linebacker, was named the Mos t' rell, Ross McPherson and Jack
trailing by 18 or more points
Valuable Lineman.
Swain
Southwestern saw seniors An·
North Gallla - Felipe Beach, · since a 49·40 victory over New
York, Dec. 4, 1966.
thony and Glen Arrowood and Steve George and Mike Lemley
The Browns' defense failed to
junior Josh Haislop make the top
Southwestern - Barry Hall,
level, while ·souther.n seniors D.J. Harden and Mike Walker
Danny Gheen and Kevin Grueser
Southern - Mike Amos, Todd
were so · honored. Kyger Creek Lisle and Mark Porter
junior John Sipple and Eastern
Kyger Creek- Joey Edwards ,
senior Chris Lance were also Frank Price and Brian Vinson
named to the first team.
Eastern - Howard Lawrence,
Jay Reynolds and Mike Weber
Honorable mention

•

put any pressure on Oiler qtiar·
terback Warren Moon. The sack
The Daily Sentinel
attack of the previous four games
fizzled comp letely, and the run
I USPS 145-960 )
A Ol vl.!j! On of Multlrhedl si.. lac.
defense was ·standing still. The
cornerbacks corps dldn' t fare too
Pullllshed evf:'ry afternoon, Monday
well either, as Er nest Givins
through Friday, 111 Courl Sr., Pomer'oy, Ohio, b~ th e Oh io Valley Pub·
burned the Dogs sl~ times and
lishing Company / Mull'lmedla, In c.,
once for a touchdown to open the
Pomeroy. Oh!o 45769. Ph , 992-2156. Sethlrd·quarter scoring.
co nd class postag e paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
, Meanwhile, Cleveland's
ground game produced just
Member: United Press Inter national ,
In land Dally Press Association and the
Earnest Byner's number -44, as
Ohio Newspaper f\:ssoclatJon. National
in yards . Pitiful. Kevin Mack,
Adve-rtising Representative, Branham
suddenly alar mingly injury.
Newspa per Sales , 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
prone, had 11 yards on six carries
and 'that certainly will fuel
POSTMASTER: Sertd address changes
whispers the Browns must see k ·
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ..
Pomeroy, Qhlo 45700.
to Improve th e backfield. Part or
the blame must go to the
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
offensive line, which had as ~4 ·•
One Week ................................ ,.. S1.40
much success at opening .holes as
One Month .............................. , .. $6.10
somebody poking the Berlin Wall
One Year .............................. ro. $72.80
with a stick.
SINGLE COPY '
PRICE
Kosar threw 33 passes and was
Daily ......
.. ................ 25 Cents
hIt hard on most of them by a
Subscri bers notd esirlngt o pay the car·
stalwart Oller rush . He was
rler ma y remit In advan ce direct to
sacked just once, but felt much
The Da lly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 mont}].
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
more. Kosar certain ly looked as
week .
If he wished Webster Slaughter ·
No subscriptions by ma il permitted In
was around. Though Ozzie New·
areas where home carr ier service Is
some had a ·good game and
availabl e.
appropriately notched a touch·
Mall Subscription~
dawn with with his 600th career
Inside Meigs County
reception, Clarence Weathers
13 W. eeks .. ,............................. .. $19.24
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52 Weeks .................................. $74.36
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18

CHRIS LANCE
(First.Team AII·SVAC)

I

.1..a !:'

SAFARI·VAN

• ALL
ftJ raJ,~
ANDP , , .

KEVIN GRUESER .
(First Team AIISVAC)

By ROBERTO DlAS
UP! Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - It looked like
that computer virus wiped out .
the Cleveland Browns' memory ·
against Houston.
Very little worked right as the
Browns' worst game ·ot the year
came at the worst possible time.
With six games left, Cleveland is
two games behind Cincinnati and
a game behind Houston In the
AFC Central. The c h ance~ of a
fourth division title have dimmed
considerably.
The 24·171oss at the Astrodome
featured . a number of poqr
performances by Cleveland, bo1h
Individually and as a unit.
Letting the clock run out the last
· 20 seconds of the half without
giving Matt Bahr the chan ce to

Gheen, Grueser' .ance nam ·
SVAC
r~~~edana ~f~;.,o~~e~a~~a~:r~~
.
T
All
'
1
-.eQ.t
earn
1988 F

wJIIJ.,

·Tort 'Jaws impede technology _

e:'fT~ ~19ii T00'~ WA'R:'fEc.Bi~

1\ULME

Very little worked right
for Browns in Houston

Sentinel

Bush aide linked to environmental probe

The Daily Sentinel

'

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�!----:~

----

-- -- -

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

-

-'

Th~day,Novamber10, 1988

ThuBday.N~ber10,1988

;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Coaches' poll picks Redmen to win district championship
CEDARVILLE
The Rio
Grande Redmen basketball team
has been picked to win this year's
NAIA District 22 men's basketball championship, accotdlng to
the preseason poll of district
coaches.
The Redmen tal lied 237 of a
possible 256 points an&lt;l 10 first-

place votes In the polL All of the
16 district coaches responded to
the poll .
A pair of crosstown rivals from
Canton, Walsh and Malone, finis hed two- three In the voting. The
Cavaliers grabbed two firstplace votes and 211 points, while
the Pioneers totalled 192 points
and one vote for first place.
Findlay (186) and Cedarville
(183), which received one first-'
place vole, round out the top five.
Defending champion Defiance is
sixth (170) and Central State
(163) , which picked up the
remaining two first-place votes,
Is seventh.
14th Winnlngest Team
Rio Grande enters this winter
with the 14th wlnnlngest NAIA
men's basketball program over
the past five years. The Redmen
are 136-39 during that span,
Including a 27-8 mark last year
that saw them finish as the
district runner-up.
Senior guard Jimmy Kearns Is
the top returnee for Coach John
Lawhorn, who begins his ninth

season with a 204-69 record at
Rio. The Redmen open Tuesday,
Nov. 15 at 7:30 p.m. at home
against Kentucky Christia n.
.
Walsh has nine lettermen back
plus a new coach as Dan
O'Connor mov&lt;;&gt;s from an assistant pos itio n to the head job,
replacing Dan Peters. Forward
B.D. Buda and guard Jeff Young,
both all-district picks, played key
roles In last year's 21-11 campaign. The Cavaliers expect help
from big newcomers.
Malone may llave had the bes t
16-14 club of anyone last year, but
the Pioneers have the talent to
Improve on that with four slarters back. Coach Hal Smith will
look to smooth guard Keith

Pro results
Euw-rn Conteren ~
AtlanUc Dlvll!»li
N~Jt-rlllt!y

(AL Cy Young Winner)

Minnesota's
'
Vioala AL's
top pitcher
NEW YORK (UPI) - Frank
Viola of the Minnesota Twins,
who Jed the major leagues with 24
victories this season, Wednesday
won the American League Cy
You~Jg Award.
In voting by the Baseball
Writers' Association of America,
the 28-year-old le!t-hander re·
celved 'J:l of 28 first-place votes
and ended the bid by Boston's
Roger .Clemens to win an unprecendented third straight Cy
Young Award.
Viola, 24-7, received a secondplace vote on the remaining
ballot and finished with 138
points. He earned the award a
year after leading th~ Twins to
the World Series title. ··
''The last two-year period has
been more than I ever dreamed
of - winning an All-Star game,
getting the Cy Young Award,
winning the (World Series) MVP
and the World Series, " Viola said
at a sports bar In Orlando, Fla.
"It's just been great."
Oakland reliever Dennis Eckersley, who Jed the majors with
45 saves, finished second. Eckersley received the other firstplace vote, 14 second- and five
thltd-place votes for 52 points.
Minnesota's Jim Perry (1970)
Is the only other Twin to win the
Cy Young Award.
Viola started 35 games with
seven complete games and two
shutouts. He pitched 255 1-3
Innings, surrendering 236 hits
and 54 walks while striking out
193 with a 2.64 ERA. He finished
thltd In the AL In strikeouts and
ERA.
Viola enjoyed the best of his
seven major-league seasons. He
has won 91 games over the past
five years and won two games In
the 1987 World Series.
"When I got the call I was
ecstatic," Viola said. "I feel like
,J'm on cloud nine right now. This
1s the first Individual honor that
has really come to me after seven
years In the major leagues."
Kansas City's Mark Gubicza,
20-8, was third with 26 points,
followed by Oakland's Dave
Stewart, 21-12, with 16 points,
Boston's Bruce Hurst, 18-6, with
12 points and Clemens,l8-12, with
eight.
, Two writers from each AL city
voted. Pitchers receive five
points for a first-place vote, three
points for second and one point
for third.

GB

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17
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Detroit
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Inlklor Cllampiollllhlp11

K.Wes&amp;ervllleNort~(D-1 )

NEW KNOXVILLE, Ohio (UP I) -T he
1988 Cliws AAA all-Ohio woUeyballleam
as selected by member• ol the Ohio Hlrh

Re)o

Mll'ntor.
HONORABLE MENTION
Deb Allison , Uma Senior: :-!lacey
Unps hlek, Delaware Haye~~; .Jeni\Y

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and dtiO!

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Sunday

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After Rebate

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each,orWiper
Refills, pair.

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209 Upper River Road
(614)446 4103

Se:tle Prices in Effect November 10 through November 16, 1988

&gt;~OFV12T S

Clntlnratl Wlthrew, CleveiiUid Colllnl"ood and MusUion Was.. ngton, 4 each.

DIYtilon II
Polnlf!

I Sleubf'nvllle (20) (10·0)

207

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11!1
138

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5. Mlnen-atiD -1)
6. fo"Oi!ltOrlll 19·1)

133
115

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111

13995

Compact Disc Player
CD-2300 By Realistic

HALF
PRICE!

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low As $15 Per Monlh •

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•70
9995

Road Patrol XK" By Micronta

•

'88 Catalog

.

.

. !"'
___,
==-

i

Price 219.95

}

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loW As SIS
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FAST'" circuitry

Digital- the ultimate in stereo at 41o/o off!
Program the memory to play up to 15 selections 1n any sequence. Pushbutton
repeat-play of one cut, programmed
tracks or entire disc #42-5006

cuts false alarms .
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Dual-Cassette Deck

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Schwarber, Clncln•tl Moua Notre
Damf'; Trilla Aaron, Sandusky: Oleryl
Brown, Uma Shav.rnee; Lau,. WaJiuer.
Canal Fulton NortllweM; Slacy DIRo cCG,
LoulsvU ie: Susan G•ldn, WooMer: Rachel Sellers, Hilliard; Deanne Goodell,
Toledo Notre Dame; Hare• Meyer11,

Dayton ChamlnadHule...e;

Hellllter

Auru.-ne, .lack1011; Michelle llut~r.
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F.asl LJverpool.

Coach·o f· the-year-Brlan Strohm,
Reyrulchburw.

HQ VHS Camcorder
MOdel100 Mov1eCorder•• By Realistic

fined Stein, 34, $2,000, and placed
him on probation through the end
of 1989. His suspension runs from
Nov .. 2-Aprll30,1989. Stein denied
any knowledge of how the horse
was administered cocaine.
Soccer ·
English soccer fans must carry
Identity cards to get Into games
next season. The plan, aimed at
stopping stadium vandal Ism, Is
bitterly opposed by the English
Football Association and English
League officials. They claim this
will lead to reduced attendance
and put smaller clubs out of
business.

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
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MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

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releases! 14-day/6-event timer, Qu1ck-l1mer
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Play Through Headphones
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Dig1tat stereo to go! t6-selection mem·
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Prints in draft and letter quality modes. Built-In
tractor #26-2814
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Ch. 9 Priority Mobile CB

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low Aa $15
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Sports briefs
Golf
Doctors have discovered a
serious disc problem In Jack
Nicklaus' back that could end the
golfing great's career. Surgery
has been recommended. Nicklaus, 48, Intends to get other
medical opinions. .. . Perry Arthur of Plano, Texas. held a
three-stroke lead at the midway
point of the $100,000 PGA Club
Professional. Classic at La
Quinta, Ca I!f. Arthur !Ired a
2- under-par 70 for a two-day total
of 6-under 138. He leads Cary
Hungate of Kokomo, Ind., by ,
three shots and Dale Fuller of
Clayton, N.C .. by four .
Horse Racing
Trainer Roger Stein was suspended for six months by California horse racing stewards In
Inglewood, who ruled he was
responsible for a horse he conditioned that tested positive for
cocaine. A hearing was held after
a laboratory report concluded
Emperor's Turn, who finished
second In a race Oct. 23 at Santa
Anita , showed signs oft he drug In
routine post-race urine testing.
'l'he Santa Anita stewards also

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sounds, 12
Catalog Price 199.95 rhythms. N4&lt;1·4&lt;J07

Beth OWens, Senior,

Da)'to• Chamln.dHallenne. JenliJer
Jaelumn, Senior, Manllllleld M~dllon;
Krls~n Voung, SeniOr, Slow.
THIKDTI!:AM
Kim HoWnlller, Se•lor, Norwalk;
Ca r ey lklrW11, Senior, Norell Olm81ed;
J•lle VIdor, Senior, Aullllnlown FICch.
SuE- Bachman, Senktr, Clnd n.. tl Ursuline, Mells!lll. ReeveH, Julior, Canton
MciUakly: MIU'C'!y Hal1111ka, Senior,

Senior (8-'lJ
, J.5
Seoond tea: 11. Dayton W-,yne 30; 12
13 .

noldllbul'l:

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~~m

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Monica T"'lor, Senklr, FJyrta, Darey
Jone1, Senior, Brecknllle, Sue Fish·
1.11.1 ra, Senio r, Onclnlllll S«on: Mickey
Durbin, Se nd, C.yahopFallllt Tammy
Schneider, Senior, DreaorrCJa,y ; Rhon:la
Hardest,., Senklr, War•w RIYer View.
SECONDTBAM
Dan lee WUUam1, Senior, Dllytonstebhlnll; Mlchellf' Horrlr.a. Senior, Toledo
Noh~ 01UJ1e; Tllluy Miller, .Julior,

Light hood . #16-156

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Mount on
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7 9 ! ! a l o g Video Input lor
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Picture won 't wash out, even 1n sunlight!

34Sa9ve~s~~~

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off! Use any Touch -Tone phone to play
back messages, co ntrol major funct ions, or
s1gnal someone at home to answer the
phone. Vo1ce activated recording. #43-394

FIRST TE..\M

tO.U~n~~

CD•2 Oil
Detergent

" Reg.
129.95

, m1ss
. 1mportan1 calls , don .t mass
. 31%

Don t

School Volleyball CoaeherJ A.•oclailoa:

61
~t

Mhldleb.Jr"K" He iJihll Mldpu.rk 29;

.,

AU-Ohio Team

'l34
'!0.5
19!1
I2G
Ill
93

t : Euclld (tH)

Af1er Rebate

'l

Model 70 By Real istic®

AAA Volleyball

Points
!H

'!. Clevr St lsnaliu!l (II) (10.0 )
3. Cln Moell~ (ol t (9-1 )
.a. Cln Princeton {~ I (9· 1)
5. Cln Elder {9-1)
I . Toledo Whllmer (f· l )
1 Warn!n W~~nRc11crw. (9·1)

1 ~~ost

FrWik·

furt Open

Team
I. SMdusiQt {H) (Ul-0)

FramOil
Filten&gt;

Micro~~:enes

Oalcqu - S!SO.OOO V1rJ(IdG Slims ol

COLUMBUS. Ohio CUPI) - ThP llnal
1888 IJnled Prf!MII lnler•llo,.l Ohio
Hlsta &amp;:Mol Board of Coac hftl! footb all
ratlnp (with firM place vofes Wid
won-loHt records ln pal'l'nthefiu):
IHYillon I

Team

Save
•40

Carl \\llllam~&gt; v11 .

Oale"'I
Frllnlr.furt, West Gern.ny -

Football

l

...

,"'
,'"'
"'
"'.
".

Ten lis
Buenos AirH. Arpntihll - Argentine

Cln&lt;eiM d - W~ved offensive la c k~
Da"e Cu lllly off InJured reterve
l'IFL - Su•pended BuJfalo Unebaeller
Hal Garn!r and Hou!ion IIO'IE! tackle
Douc Smtih for :Ill da:,&amp;
Philadelphia - Slpd ruuina: back
Walter Abercrombie: waived run11lng
back Junior T11111ta.l IIIUL
San Di ego - Waived ll•ebacker .Jefl
Jacbon ud defeniJI\' e bacl Jeff' Dalf':
acHvaled ll.ebacker Cedrkl tlgaro llhd
.'lllfely Pat Miller.
Tamp~~ Ba,y- Waived wl4e recel\'er s
Sleplrn Sta rrtnr and GeneTa,ylor

DetroateriDetogger
• Detogs1nd malls snow &amp; ice
lUI tor perlecl ~islblllty In •II
we•ther condition•
• Complelt accenories tor easw

'

.,

78

Soecer

lobe nam ed.
St Louis - Re-slped Ken Daylr 1 to

lnterdynamlc::a

~

No ramt!S scheduled

Prep ratings

49

..

Quebee at Wuhlnaton, 1:35 p.m.
Calgary at Philadelphia. 1. 35 p.m
Terorto at PIUabu rah, 1': !15 p.m.
Mlnmsota at 81. Lou ..s, 8:81p.m.
Hartford a1 Los An rein~, 10. 3:1t p m

Baseball

Castrol Automatic
Transmission Fluid

~

Ho1.1key

PIUtl:lUI"((:h - Tr~tded firM bueman
R•cb' Mtlliraa to Baltimore fora plarer

•

627 Third Avt.
446·1699
Hours: 1-6; Sat. 9-6

~

Sf:atellne, Nev . - Cal\'ln Gr"'ve n .
lrvtns Mitchell
Golf
Pebble Beach, cam. - 12 million
Natuoo Champklnllhlp•

2· )ear co .-racl

OR

Appliances, Inc.

~

Fnlherwelpts

Montreal G, OlicAJ;O 8 (tie)
Detroit 6, Mlnnet~ota 3
Harlford I , Vaneou1oer I (tie)
TbundiQ''I Gam•
Quebec MIWIUihinpon. 7.35p.m.
Cal pr)l atPIIIIadelphia.,1:35p.m.
TorDntoat Pllt!lburJh, 1' 35p.m .
Mlnne!!iula at St. Louilll, 8:35p.m.
HIU"tford at Los AnJdea. 11:11 p.m.
Frld!Q''&amp; Gam8
Chlc~o at Wln ..pel
Boston at NY Ran pn, •lght
NV 181Uidenal Newdeney, ni iJtll
Molltreal at Vancouwr, nlpt

Castro I GTX 1OW30,
10W40, 5W30 or 20W50
Motor Oil L•m•t t2

County

.,

\ISBA. Heav)'Welpt Tit~

t6

Transactions

.' '

MAKE GIEAT GIFTS FOR
CHILDREN OR
SECOND sns.

,Ja n 10-UrbiUUI .. ......... ................
. .. A
Jan . It- OhiO Domlnh::.n
.
H
.tan 11-" ' ltlsh . . . .. . .
........ . ....... H
.tan . 21- Ma lo... . . ......... ... . .. ...... , .. , , ....... ,\
JKn , 2.t- Mt . \ 'f'roon N:u.ar t&gt; ru• .. .. ..
.. .... ,,

41

Utah al Houtlo•, 8: S8 p m .
Portland at Den\er, t.30 p.m.
Bow Ins
Indianapolis - PBA SU5,000 True
Valtw 0pt'll
Las VerM. Ne\ . - 11~11.100 LPBT
Sam's Tow• NaUona1 J..-o-.Am .
Boxln1
Uclewelgtfs
New York- Tu nte Foster \'11. Darren
McGrew
Wi!lterwelpis
New York- Glenwoocl Br -n v•. Juan
Rondon; FeiblSMtlqo \'s. Rodcb'Biake.

Edmonloo3, NP-1" ,Ieney% (01')

• : 1

•

JUST PURCHASED 100
19" ZENITH SOUD
STATE COLOR TV's FROM
'AN AREA HOSPITAL.

It ED\\ OMEN !K' HEDt LE
19M 89
•
NoY. 13-W4'111 Vlfllnla T!'l h .. , . , . . A
Nov. Ul-1!1 - fko, o t'ran•l~ Cl,..,"i' ................ H
Dec 1 -"' e~~t \'lrJ!:Inla Sial(' ......................... fl
JX.c. 3-Cuncord ,, ......... ,, ..... .
. ......... A
. . .. .. ........ H
Df'c. 7- Unlv . ol rharlrlOlon..
n~~- 10-c.-ntral Stal e ............................... A
Dec 13-Lake Ert. ............. ..... ......... .. ...... H
Dt&gt;c. 17-6hwnee Sl~tlt' ......
..,.
.. ...... A.
(}(11· 2!130-0hlo Nnrth t' rn Toun••f ................ A.
dan 7-D) kt'
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110
119

Bu~tball

Buffalo 3, Cal pry 2

(

Robin Hage n Smith.
In the six-member MOC, eac h
team is expected to be even in
ter ms of,playmg. While none will
be a powerhouse, Fielilz sa id ,
Urbana may be the surpri se
team of the season.

14$
104

Calendar

GF GA

I :5 2 14
4 10 3 II
Mlnneso&amp;a
2 10 2
6
Smythe Dlvhkm
Clllpry
t -1 3 21
E4monton
9 $ 2 20
U11 ilngele~
II 6 D Ill
Vancou~r
1 7 3 11
Winnipeg
1 ll 3 13
We~ a,y' s Ke11ulb
NY Ranlllt'f'sli,.Phll. .elplala3

both VIIICOSity and.

"If you can't find the part you
need, Nationwise a~n. They
call it Parts Express. Just tell
'em what you need and they'll
order it for you fast. They've
got more than ~0,000 parts as
dose as their phone. So try
Parts Express. It's one of my
favorite parts about shop·
ping Nationwise."

li:
D9
53

""

Ollca~~ro

Maxlmuin
protection against

48

7t

6~

16

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Norm Dl\'l!lion
WLTPts.

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'~-

9, Middletown Fenwic k 18-2)
10 Ea$1 Kno• (I) (10·0)4'7
Se«Jnd len . 11 FremoriSt . .lo..eph43;
U.DelpiM! sdefferson H : 13. New Bremen
Z-1 ; If. Uherty Cente r 11; 15. Van Buren
lol, 18, Lorllln &lt;.:iell.l'vlew II ; n . Mlnller
10: 18. Beallsville 'l; 18. Wllllamsbur18:
20 t;edarvl lle 5

PIU rtck D\ybJion

t

.••.• , A
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Polnl•

:1. Mont'Of'\'UI"' {2) ( 10.0 )
t . Port!! NOire Dame (3) (10-0 }

Wales Conrerenc:e

7

~!H)

I. Nel"ark Catlmllc (7) (9-1)
z. Archbold (81 00.01

Seattle at LA Lakers, nlcti
NATIONAL HOCKE\' LEAG UE

8
S

, ,

,

l
'"

Dil'ISIOn V

T•,..

New Jeraey at Cblcaro, nl~
Saa An&amp;tllllo at DaiiM, ni&amp;M
Gol*n state at Phoealx, nlrht

19

. ......... H

.••.•••.•

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

.llll

11nd Columbiana Cre!ihlew, 1 u.ch; 19.
(tie) Oak Hill and Columbu11 H~trUey, S

Frl-'1 Gamf'JI
Ddrok &amp;I Botit.on. nllhl
.tUanta aiPhlliwlelpWa, niJhl
•onal Miami, nl(hl
Yorlr.al lnclana , nlpt
•leUI' It W•hl•atou,ni.W

:'i

season, as they will face KAlA
powers Carson Newman and
Wingat e In the Bevo Franci s
Classic. The remainder of the
schedule will be " the toughest
one we've had yet," s he said
"Bu 1 I like to play tougher
schedules because thev mak&lt;'
you better," Fielitz added .
On the district level, Fielil z
said Mount St. Joseph, which
knocked the Redwomen out of the
playoffs last season, is expected
to remi' ln strong. Shawnee Stale
University, entering Di s trict 22
this year, has been a competitive
team on the two-year level,
coached by former Redwoman

tD .Wyomlnc (8·2 )
u
Seoollllen : II. Loudoa\'l.lle%2; 12. (lie)
Wautll'(lnan.d Eat~ll."lllelt\ne , 1'7 e aeh , II .•
Weiii•Kto• ll; IIi. M•ion DJ(n 10; 18.
Dayton J elferson 8; 11. llie l Marlemonl

TIIUI'lldll,f '!1 0am8
Utah at Hoallloa, 8: 30 p.m
Portland at Denwr, t.30 p.m .

9

thai I mean press. Thai 's why we
condition our pla ye rs throug hout
the year "
While heig ht was n't In evidence for Rio Gra nde last season,
talent was. The addition of
Barnilz a nd Snyder as centers
adds to the team 's s 1ze
dim ension
" We've always had the knack
with the rebound, although last
year we didn ' t have mu ch of an
inside game. " Fielitz satd . ''This
year we not only have th e knack.
but we have the height ."
Fielilz said the bulk of the stiff
competition the Redwom en will
confront Is coming early m the

,f:4 n. 31-0hlu lklm lnlo
f''rh. :!- \\ Ji ml•l'IOO ,

..}"11

8. West Jellerson (8·2)
1. Eell\'l.lle Clear Fork (8 2)
K. Louillwllle Aquinu (1-l)
9. "' arn~n Hen...,.zy (1·3)

LA Lakent 123, Denver 1111

WLTPts

·' ~'~" 'l~-l rhiUIII. .... • ••

Polntll

I.Columbull\cademy ( U)(I·I )
2. Wh~l e nhurr~t(S) (1·1)

san ilnl OQio 117, Ml iiTil 83
Utah 10$, Sacraml'lllo81
P.taoenlx HI , 0.1-. 103
Gt!lden Sial~ 113, Se 11Uk- 108

NV Ra~tu
Pltllbu reb

156

Te am

lOt. Atlanta 115 (OT)
Mllwau~~e~ IH, PhljadelpWa 103

Volleyball
The Olympic champion Soviet
UniOn defeated Japan 3-1 and
China edged Peru 3·2 to advance
to the finals of the Japan Cup
women's volleyball competition
at Nagoya, Japan.
Yachting
A record 23 challengers from 10 -t
nations signed up for the next
America's Cup In San Diego in
1991. The challengers Included
NEW SCOREBOARDS - Meigs will have new. basketball
yacht clubs from eight countries,
Including the Soviet Union, sailscoreboards Ibis winter. The new scoreboards were donated to the
Ing In their first America's Cup.
school by the Pepsi Bottling Company.

198

1 Urbana (I) (Il-l )
145
4. Akron St. Vlnce:•c I IJ (8 II
118
I , CAPE (8-%)
IU
i A.kron Hoban (I · I)
66
1. Vounptown Moone)' CHJ
Ill
8. Licking Valley fll-0 1
lit
9. (lk!) RroohUi e (I) ( IN)
!41
9. (tk!) Phllo ( l) {l0-0)
lfl
$eotld ten: II, Cam pbe\1 Me mortal U :
12. Buckey e&amp;! uittwet~tl4; IS: Sprln&amp;fleld
NorCileMter nil, 14. (He) Uma 8al hand
Pemben111e Eastwood (H , 10 each; 18.
{tiel Pauktlnr an dVounp&amp;own Ursuline.
9 eadt; IK. !Ue) Ora n r:e and Hellalh!, '7
ea~J h; 20 . Canlleld 6
DiviSion IV

'rl

11 .500

Denver
Houlton

Point s
(11-.tl)

t . Orrvill e ( Jt).D )

I
I I;,

3 ,010

and Lebanon, I I'IICII
Divhlonlll

Team
~
1. lro'*'n (l.j J

DivisiOn .

CleYeland

.......

I .867 -

DetroM

orlgin.!llequlpment

Basketball
Boston Celtlcs forward Larry
Bird, faced with a nagging foot
Injury ·that could hobble him this
season, Is considering surgery
that could sideline him three
months, The Boston Globe reported .... The Big East coaches
tabbed Syracuse and Georgetown co-favorites to win the
teague crown, the flrsttlme In the
conference's 10-years schools
tied for the top spot. . .. The
Continental Basketball Association will not admit former NBA
player Lewis Lloyd. The league
said he can reapply In the spring.
Lloyd admitted himself Into a
chemical dependency center In
September.
1
College
The field for the ButkusAward,
given to college football's best
linebacker, has been narrowed to
five candidates: Derrick Thomas of Alabama, Broderick
Thomas of Nebraska, Mike
Stonebreaker of Notre Dame,
Keith Delong of Tennessee and
PPrrv Snow of Michig-an StatP.

" ' L Pl't,

New Yurk
Philad elphi a

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

R edwomen ... _______c_o_n_li_n_ue_d_r_r_om....:.p_ag:.:..e_J_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'7 Fr . . kitn (I· I}
7&amp;
II Cleve Iii. du!t~!ph (6-4)
5!
t , Co ts Be eehcron 11·11
41
JO .No rlh Canton Hoew r (~I!)
36
St-coa:ll en 11. Solon~ : I t ChiU'dOQ
U , 13. CamlJrldre II: U. Bowllnr Gree•
Ill : Ill. Wesl Geqa II: 1e. (Ue) Lllk e
(alhnllr ~tnd ft' ee knlll j", 1 u .c ll, 18.
Columbus lnde~•dl!ncl' 3;: It, Pon•
mouth 2; 20. (liel Nonlonla. Delawa~

NA.TIONAL BA.'iKEl'BAL L ASsi)(·

, Sports briefs
FRANKVIOIA

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

better than its eighth-place pick
Is Urbana. Coach Bob Ronal has
a powerhouse lineup, Including
all-district performers Brett
Baker and Anthony Harris.
Shawnee State could · make
some noise In Its fi rst season In
Dis trlct 22. The Bears are
coached by Defiance graduate
Jim Arnzen. a member of the
Yellow Jackets' 1980 dlsirlct
championship team.
Mount Vernon Nazarene has
reason to be optimistic after
making the school's first-ever
district tournament appearance
last year. Plus, all-district forward Tyrone Trbovich could
make Tiffin the comeback team
of 1988-89.
The 1989 N AIA Dis !riel 22
men 's basketball championships
will take place on March 1, 4 and
7. Eight teams wlll qualify for the
playoffs.

shoulders of sophomore point
guard and former Gallla
Ac~demy High School standout
Gary Harrison of Gallipolis.
Defiance Coach Marv Hohenberger welc.omes back four starter s who combined for nearly 50
points a game l&lt;1st year, but he
lost a franchise to graduation In
Second Team NAIA All·
American center Dennis Bostelman. The Yellow Jackets, who
won the 1988 district title at Rio
Grande, always seem to be In the
hunt.
In other notes, Central State
could ' be a force, should the
Marauders make ihe district
tournament, because of their
traditionally rugged schedule.
CSU Is under the direction of
first-year coach and former NBA
standout Kevin Porter.
Shawnee Looks Promising
A team that expects to do much

Troyer to lead the way after-the
junior averaged 16 points a
contest last season.
Losses Hit Cedarville
Findlay Coach Ron Niekamp
has a crafty point guard In senior
Aaron Roth. An all-district selection las t year, Roth hit for nearly
20 points per game for the 15·11
Oilers. Findlay has four starters
returning.
The school that was hit the
hardest with key losses has to be
Cedar"fllle. The Yellow Jackets
lost six players who averaged
nearly 70 points per game for last
year's 23-12 club. Coach Don
Callan begins his 29th year with a
number of question marks and a
lot of responsibility on the

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�- ,
Thursday. November 10. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OHSAA reveals
site, time changes

Cavs capture third straight
victory; drop Clippers _l08-9

PRICE DISHES OFF- The Cavaliers' Mark Price passes the
· ball off to a teammate In the fourth quarter of Wednesday night's
game against the Los Angeles Clippers In Richfield. The Cavswon
. 108-91. (UPI)

some shakiness and played conBy ROBERTO DIAS
trolled basketball," said CleveUPI Sports Writer
RICHFIELD - The.Cleveland land coach Lenny Wilkens. "We
Cavaliers won all eight of their didn' t try to blow out the
exhibition games and !)ave fol- Clippers. If you go out there with
lowed by defeating their first that attitude, you'll be in for an
three regular-season opponents. unpleasant surprise. You just .
Mark Price, Cleveland' s start- have to flow Into your game."
Ing point guard whose $5 million,
Ken Norman and Charles
five-year offer sheet with WaSmith
each had 17 points as the
shington was matched by CleveClippers,
1-3, were held to 37
land Oct. 1, remains cautious
first-half
points. Los Angeles
when discussing his team's
center
Benoit
Benjamin, who
fortunes .
an
18.7-point scorentered
with
" All of us are happy to be
playing well, but the long-term Ing average, had just 7 points
goals are more Important," said because of foul trouble. Danny
Price. "The good performances Manning, the overall top pick In
now will only help us down the the 1988 draft whose contract
road, but it's a long road. Team talks with Los Angeles have
efforts like this one, though, are stalled, watched his first
Clippers game from the stands.
very satisfying."
"We had our moments, but we
Larry Nance scored 27 points
and Price added 21 Wednesday didn't have enough of those,"
night as Cleveland celebrated Its said Clippers coach Gene Shoe.
home opener with a 108-91 v-ictory "We made the mistakes a young
team makes, the ones Cleveland
over the Los Angeles Clippers.
used
to make. Lenny Wilkens has
The Cavaliers, whose 3-0.start
done
a great job."
Is their best In 10 years, downed
Los
Angeles trailed by as many
the Clippers before 16,513 for the
as
25
points
in the third quarter,
lOth straight meeting at the
but
Tom
Garrick's
6 points fueled
Richfield Coliseum. Cleveland,
a
16-7
spurt
that
helped
cut thl'
)Vhlch also got 18 points from Ron
lead
to
81-66
entering
Cleveland
Harper, has won eight of the last
10 meetings between the two the fourth quarter.
"If we had shot better and not
clubs.
'1 like the fact we overcame committed so many fouls , we

best. ' '

Schottenhelmer said the major
difference ·between Cleveland's
team In 1987 and this year's
contingent is an improved pass
rush. In the past two meeting
with Denver, the Browns have
put little pressure on Broncos
quarterback John Elway.
"I would think we're Improved
in that phase. We continute to g11t
very good coverage In the secondary," said Schottenhelmer.
''The addition of (defensive end)
Charles Buchanan and the development of (linebacker) Clay
Mat thews as a pass rusher
enable us to putmore pressure on
the quarterback.
"You have to put teams In a
position to throw. We never did
that with Houston (In losing 24-l 7
last Sunday)."
Elway has a pulled thigh
muscle, and his availability Is
expected to be limited Sunday.
"We're golng In with the idea
he'll play," saldSchottenhelmer.
"If there's any way he can crawl
out there, he will."
Browns running back Kevin
Mack Is listed on the Injury
report as being out with a pulled
calf muscle, and also has been
nampered by a pinched nerve In
his neck and shoulder. Mack
leads Cleveland with 362 yards on
92 carries.
Schottenlieimer said It was
possible that either George
Swarn or Tony Baker would be
activated to provide help at
running back. "If we do an thing,
it probably )VOuld be Saturday ,"
said the coach.

Grain production down
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
government raised slightly Its
estimates of the size ottwo major
U.S. crops Wednesday, but the
severe drought means farmers
are harvesting two bushels of
corn )Vhere three gre&gt;q last year.
This year's droughi}the most
severe to-hit early In the growing
season, spared most of t)le winter
wheat crop but devastated the
corn, soybean and springplanted wheat crops. Overall,
grain production Is_ down 29 .
percent !rom 1987 to 196.5 million
metric tons.
Thanks to lar~:~e reserves from
past bumper crops, the United
States wUJ have enough grain lor
domestic use and overseas customers, Agriculture.. Department
officials say. President Reagan
tapped an emergency reserve
two weeks ago to assure there
will be enough wheat for humanItarian ald.
The drought Is expected to
contribute 1 percentage point to
food price ll)creases this year
and 2 points next year.
Farmers harvested a record
119.4 bushels of corn an acre in
1987. This year, they face a
record 31 percent decline In
yields to 82.3 bushels an acre.
The corn crop, the No. 1 U.S.
cash crop, is forecast at 4.67
billion bushels, up 3 percent from
the October forecast but still 34
percent less than last year. The
soybean crop Is pegged at 1.51
b!Uion, 21 percent less than last
year but a 1 percent Increase
from October. This year's peracre yield of 26.6 busl1els Is far
below last year's 33.7 bushels.
In Its August and September
forecasts, the government said
grain production would fall 31
percent this year. However,
timely rains In September salvaged some of the crops. '
In Its November update, the
department raised ltsestlmateof
the corn crop by 119 mllllon
bushels and the soybean crop by
17.4 mUllan bushels. Most ot the
soybean Increase ~arne In Southern states bordering the MISsissippi River.
This would be the smallest
soybean crop since 1976 and the
smallest corn crop since 1983,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio High School Athletic
Association Wednesday announced a site change and
three tbne changes for this
weekend's regional semifinal
football playoff games.
In Division V, the Region 17
game between Mogadore and
Mingo Junction has been
switched to North Canton
Memorial Stadium. It orlglaally bad been announced for
Massillon Jackson's Robert
Fife Stadium. The 7: 30 p.m.
Friday start remains unchanged.
·
In Division I, the Region t
Cincinnati Elder"Cinclnnatl
Moeller game at Dayton's
Welcome Stadium will start at
1 p.m. Saturday Instead of the
originally announced lime of
1:30 p.m.
·
In Division II, the Region 6 1
Akron Buchtel-Fostoria contest at the Akrori Rubber Bowl
also wUI begin at l p.m.
Saturday, one-hall hour earlier than previously an·
nounced.

VCR
REPAIR

"I just told our kids that
By GENE CAD DES
Moeller
and Princeton piayed the·
UPI Sports Writer
last
game
and that anything can
COLUMBUS Sandusky
happen,"
said
Cook. "All we had
surged into the No. 1 spot In the
to
do
was
to
take
care of our own
final week of the United Press
business.''
International Ohio High School
Sandusky finished · with 14
Board of . Coaches Division I
first-place
votes and 244 poll
football ratings, earning the Blue
10-point final margin
points
and
a
Streaks their first UPI poll
over
runnerup
Cleveland St.
championship since their glory
Ignatius, which also finished 10-0
days of the mid 1960s.
"I'm elated','' said Sandusky and was given eight first-place
Coach Larry Cook, whose team votes !rom the Division !coaches
concluded a 10-0 regular season from around the state.
Mdelier was third with 4 firsts
with a 33-0 win over Vermilion
Saturday night. "It's a tremend- . and 205 points, followed by
Princeton with 2 firsts and 198
ous honor for our program."
Sandqsky, which last captured points and another Cincinnati
the UPI coaches title In 1965, team, Elder, In fifth with 120.
Steubenville, which beat crosopens playoff action Saturday
night by hosting No. 6 Toledo stown rival Steubenville Catholic
Whitmer, the Blue Streaks need- 24-0 Friday night to complete Its
regular season 10-0, took the
log four more victories to prove
Division
II crown, also Its first
they deserve the No. 1 tag.
"Even If we don't win the title.
playoffs," said Cook, "this still
gives us something to hang on to.
It means a lot to us."
Sandusky had been seCond to
Cincinnati Princeton In the ratIngs the last three weeks and no
lower than third since the polling
began after the second week of
the season.
Princeton, however, lost to
Cincinnati Moeller 21-14 this past
weekend, opening the door for
..
Sandusky.

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SVAC preview
slate announced
Dan Brisker, principal at
Kyger Cret.k High School and
secretary of the SVAC Board of
Control, announced that the
league's basketball previews will
be played on Friday, Nov. ll, and
Saturday, Nov. 12.
The girls' hardwood preview
will start Nov. 11 at 6 p.m. at
Kyger Creek's court, while the
boys' hoopfest will begin Nov. 12
at 6 p.m. at Rio Grande College' s
Lyne Center.
The matchups and starting
times for -the · two-quarter contests are: Hannan Trace vs.
Southern, 6 p.m.: Southwestern
vs. Eastern, 6: 45p.m.: Oak Hill
vs. North Galiia, 7:.30 p.m.; and
Symmes Valley vs. Kyger Creek,
8:15p.m.
This schedule wlll be followed
In both previews.

Smith ( '80), Bob Polcyn, Steve
Russell and Bryon Su tphln ( '79),
Mike Casey, Semakl Corflas and
Marcus Geiger ('78), Steve Baird
('77) , Gary Johnson ('72), Dan
Polcyn ( '70) and Bart Stump
('69).

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natural gas, while capital equip- ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)
ment
and consumer food prices
Wholesale prices stayed steady
dipped
sllghtly, the bureau said. ·
from September to OctoQer,
prices fell 0.1 percent
Food
·
another Indication the economy
after
leaping
1.2 percent In
may be slowing and Inflationary •
September
because
of the
pressures cooling off, the Labor
summer drought, the bureau
Department said Thursday.
· The flat performance of sea- said. Prices were lower for fresh
sonally adjusted wholesale pri- produce, beef, fls ,h and pasta, but
ces was the first !line In seven egg and poultry prices turned up.
mont)ls prices for finished wholeExcluding volatile · foixl and
sale goods did not rise and energy prices, wholesale prices
followed jumps of 0.4 percent In after adjustment for seasonal
September and 0.6 percent In variations were unchanged after
August, the department's Bu- rising 0.4 percent In September,
reau of Labor Statistics said,
the bureau said.
Passenger cars cost 1.7 perWholesale prices for lnterme"'dlate goods also were unchanged cent less In October after seafrom September to October and sonal adjustme11ts, offsetting the
prices of raw materials dropped September increase In car pri0.1 percent, the third drop In lour ces, the bureau said.
Before seasonal adjustment,
',- months, the bureau said.
the Producer Price Index for
Prices for energy products fintshi!d goods rose 0.6 percent In
rose 0.3 percent after falling 3.3 October to 109.3, the bureau said.
percent In September, Jed by a
The report may ease pressure
sharp Increase In the cost of on the Federal Reserve to keep
Interest rates at their present
level or raise them to curb
Inflation. Other recent reports
have lndlci!Jed the economy may
be slowing,ll\cludlng slower total
Dally stock prices.
economic growth and a drop In
(At! ol10:30 a.m.)
factory orders.
.
Bryce and Mark Smith
A big jump In total payroll
of Blunt, ;Ellis &amp; Loewl
employment 1'eported Friday,
however, had Increased conAm Electric Power ............. 27% cerns among many analysis that
AT&amp;T ................................. 28% the Fed again would tighten upon
Ashland Oil ..... ...................33% ·
Interest rates to keep the econBob Evans .................. ........ 163.4 omy from over])eating.
Charming Shoppes .............. 16~
City Holding Co ................... 30
Federal Mogul... ................. 51~
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 50
Heck's ....................... .......... 3.4
Key Centurion ................. ... 161)1
Lands' End .. ....................... 23%
Limited Inc ........................ 26% '
~' Veterans Memorial
Multimedia lnc ............. ......70%
Admissions - Madge Bilrr,
Rax Restaurants .. ................ 3%
Long Bottom; Russell Cullums,
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. ........ 12~
Pomeroy; .James Owens,
Shoney's Inc ............. ........... 7%
Pomeroy.
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
Discharges - Frank Wolford,
Worthington Ind ................. 21%
Ketbel Hatfield.

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W111111 , 4·IPIICI ·

Eva M. Roush, 89, New Haven,
died Wednesday, Nov. 9, at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born July 2, 1899 at Graham

wa

~"t!Jitt&lt; I :.~·OL·oi-cunAsiSUPiEME"':'"i~~-;;.·;·:;!~: !.~~
~ Clltllt, r1ct c.IW..

N.*----------........_ . . . _.NOW $5,te5

Station, W.Va., she was the
daugh!er of the ltlle William C. and
Mary Alice Roush Jewell.
She was preceded in death by her
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Marth 13, 1988.

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Slle was employed as a cook at
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Survivors include two sons,
Bobl&amp;y R. Roush of Pomroy, Ohio,
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1887 BUICK CENTURY · • 0001', ,_.-wFO:Jwt,pow~~Bxw knl, llil •IMfinO,

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Hospital news

"CUSTOMS, SL's, INTERNATIONALS"

•DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN

11nother drought year.
The Agriculture Department
raised Its estimate of likely
Soviet grain bnports this marketing year by 2 million metric tons
to 31 million tons. The Increase
was based on recent heavy
purchases by the Kremlin and a
reduction In the Soviet crop.
In Its second estimate on the
new citrus crop, the department
said orange production-will total
217 million boxes, 10 percent
larger than last season. It would
be the largest crop In five years
but stlll 22 percent smaller than
the record set In 1979-1980.
Increases are expected in nearly
every type of commercial citrus
crop except tangelos.
The fall harvest ts nearly over
for corn, soybeans, sorghum and
rice. The corn report Is basl1d on
Nov. 1 conditions and should be
accurate to within a couple of
percentage points.
The cotton harvest, 57 percent
complete, Is forecast at 14.8
million bales, 1 percent larger
than the 1987 crop despite a huge .
Increase In acreage. The drought
cut the size of the crop. Good
October weather In Texas allowed the department to raise the
forecast for the crop by 1 percent.
Tobacco farmers are harvestIng a crop of 1.33 billion pounds,
12 percent larger than last year.
Rice and tobacco are among
the few crops showing Increases
this year. The oat crop Is the
smallest since recordkeeJ)Ing
began In 1866.
Peanut" production is forecast ,
at 4.12 billion pounds, 14 percent
larger than last year but a .
reduction of 3 percent from the
October forecast.
Corn, soybeans and l'(heat are
the three major cash crops in the
United States. About one-quarter
of all U.S. crop land Is planted to
corn each year.
Wheat is used In bread, pasta
and bakery products. Corn has
illdustrlal and food uses but ·
mainly Is fed to livestock to
produce meat.. Soybeans have a
multitude of uses In food, Industry and meat production.
Overall wheat production this
year Is · forecast"'li.t 1.81 billion
bushels.

Wholesale prices unchanged

CHEVROLET, OLDSMOBILE, PON:rtAC and BUICK

Eastem-KC alumni game
slated-Sunday afternoon __
The Annual Rival Classic
alumni football game between
Eastern and Kyger Creek graduates will be played Sunday at 2
p.m. on the Kyger Creek High
School football field.
The teams will compete !or the
travellng trophy as well as
special awards for each team.
The trophy has been at Kyger
Creek si nce last year's 14-0
Bobcat victory over the Eagle
alums on Easter n's !leld. In
addition to allow the grads to
relive their gridiron memories,
the game Is also being played to
help raise funds for the athletic
funds for the athletic boosters of
both schools.
Among those graduates who
may play a re:
Eastern- Brian Beeler, Kyle
Davis. Mark Griffin, Jeff Johnson, Ron Maxon and Alan Tripp
( '88), Doug Beaver, Kirk Fick,
Rex Jus tis and Jeff Roush ( '87) ,
Brian Bailey and Ryan Bearks
('86) , Mike Lance (' 85), Roger
Bissell, Kenny Browning and
Mike Connolly ( '83) , Troy Be arks
( '82), Randy Boston, Randy
Browning, Jack Parker and Dan
Spencer ( '79), Dennis Rucker
('78 ), Phillippe l.aComb ('77),
r· John Sheets ('74) , VInce LaComb
('73 ) and C.D. Mcintyre ( '67) .
Kyger Creek- Mike Bradbury
and Greg Rees ( '88), Tim Gordon
('87) , Kevin Jolley and Carl
Ward ('86) , Robert (Yogi) Myers.
( '84), Troy Edwards, D~vld
Sands and Jeff Ward ( 82),
Kenny Coughenour, Bill Ross
and John Stephens ( '81), John
. • . Amos, Steve Flint and Greg

Cleveland hosts Indiana Saturday night. The Cavaliers beat the
Pacers 105-99 last Saturday.
The addition of premium courtside seats adjacent to the two
benches forced the loss of 12
working locations on press row.
Illuminated courtslde advertising signs located In front of press
row also are new this season, as
Is the Cavaliers' dance team.

UPI crowns grid champions

Coach says Browns
are still in title' chase

BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Marty
:schottenheimer, the coach of the
' Cleveland Browns, disdains tne
thought of making the playoffs on
a wild card berth.
The Browns, winners of the
AFC Central Division the last
three seasons, are 6-4 and In third
.place behind Cincinnati (8-2) and
·Houston (7-3). Schottenhelmer
:acknowledges that Sunday's visit
'to Denver is pivotal for
Cleveland.
''Our Intention is to find a way
to win against Denver Sunday.
We have got to just go about
business like we always do and
·try to get some wins," Schottenheimer said Wednesday. "I'm
not going to concede anything at
this point.
. "The only time you need to be
In first Is at the end. Certainly,
we're In a battle to get up there
and will need some help. We have
six games left and we'll try to win
all six and see where we're at
then. "
Cleveland has a special grudge
against Denver, having lost the
last two AFC Championship
games to the Broncos. The
Browns have won only three of
the 11 games between the two
teams.
" I believe our players want to
win against Denver as we would
want to win any game. It is true
that Denver's caused us a lot of
frustration and disappointmen t," said placekicker Matt
Bahr. "We just have to pull
together as a team and play our

would've had a chance." said
Norman, a second-year forward
out of Illinois. "But the Cavaliers
used to be weak and look at them ,
now. That's what we have to do
with ourselves."
The Clippers got as close as
87-76 on Tom Garrick's layup
with 9:05 left In the game, but
Nance's four points capped a 10-0
Cavalier run that sealed the
decision.
Harper and Price each had 9
points as Cleveland led 26-15
after one quarter and 52-37 at
halftime.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Ohio

Thursday, November 10. 1988

at Foglesong Funernl Home with
Rev. Orland Reynolds officiating.
Burial will follow at Graham
Cemetery at Letart
·
Friends may call between 6 and
9 p.m. Friday at the funernl home.

EASTERN HILL
.FABRIC SHOP

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE
ALL FAIIIC REDUCED
Open 10·6 Mon .. Tue ..
Wed. 11a Fri.

Sat. 10-2
CIOMd Thurs. • Sun.

St. Rt.

1, "

muea north of

Cheater

•

ONE ONLY

ONE ONLY

ONE ONLY

19" ZENITH
COLOR TV

30"

PILOT STEREO

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�--

-- - - - - - - - - -

--~--

.!_

Local news .briefs...
Continued from page 1

EMS makes 2 emergency runs
Two emergency runs were made Wednesday by local units,
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reported.
At 3:36a.m .• Rutland was called toMelgsMlneNo.ltorRufus
Jewell, taken to Holzer Medical Center; at 10:25 a.m. Tuppers
Plains was called tpChester for Madge Barr, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. ·

Ohio farmers are
.
.
.
more optlmJStiC
'

average for the previous nve
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) years.
Ohio's corn production will be
Soybean yield declined 1 budown this year, but not as badly
shel !rom Oct. 1 to 28 bushels an
a1 !eated during the worst days
of the drought, the Ohio Agricul- acre. If this yield Is realized,
soybean production will be
tural Statistics. Servic;e reported
103,600,000
bushels, 30 percent
Wednesday.
The agency released Its final less than 1987 and 35 percent
below the record high output In
forecast of the season Wednes1985.
day, based on surveys conducted
Frost killed weeds In early to
\hrough Nov. 1. The final report
mid-October,
allowing farmers
on the 1988 season will be
to
make
taster
harvest progress
released In January.
during
the
remainder
of the
The latest survey of corn and
month.
Harvest
was
89
percent
soybean producers showed
mixed expectations from Oct. 1 complete by the first week In
November, compared with 99
to Nov. 1.
percentln
1987 and an 87 percent
Corn yield Increased 2 bushels
five
-year
average.
trom Oct. 1 to 76 bushels an acre.
U.S. corn for grain productkm
If this yield holds, corn produc.
Is
forecast at 4.67 billion bushels,
. tlon will be 220,400,000 bushels, 39
up
3 percent from last month, but
percent less than last year and 57
percent ott the record set In 1985. 34 percent below last year's crop.
U.S. soybean production Is
. At the beginning of November
forecast
at 1.51 billion bushels, up
cotn harvest reached 64 percent
1
·percent
from Oct. 1, but 21
complete compared with 96 perpercent
below
1987.
cent In 1987 and 67 percent on the
Continued from page 1

GOP...

votes.
"I don't think anybOdy's been
damaged In the campaign this
year," said Bennett when asked
It Volnovlch had been damaged
for the 1990 campaign.
The GOP chairman said the

Republicans will run against
scandals In the Celeste administration In 1990. "It's a different
climate (than 1982 and 1986 when
the Republicans lost)," he said.
"We're going to have a whole
new set of candidates. There'll be
a whole new team in 1990."

Couple married in jallhouse
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (UP!)A former scholastiC athlete sentenced In the ax murders of his
father and brother has married
his highschool sweetheart In a
jailhouse ceremony.
Jerry Rogan and Debra Boogh·
ler were married Wednesday by
the pastor of a local church, said
Maj. Michael SuUlvan, warden of
the Clark County Jail.
"We've had marriages before
under certain circumstances

Weather

(but) It's not yery usual at all,"
Sullivan said. Rogan will be
transported to an Ohio prison
later this week, he said.
Rogan, 21, of Springfield, was
sentenced Tuesday to 30 years to
life In prison for the June 1987
slayings.
He had pleaded no contest to
charges he killed Perry Rogan,
55, and Terry Rogan, 15. In
exchange, the prosecution ·
agreed to reducethechargetrom
aggravated murder and disregard the signed confession Rogan made after the kllilngs. '

Without the plea bargain, deSoudt Central Ohio
fense lawyers would have had to
. Tonight: Clearing, with a low face the confession In which
near 30. Northwest winds 10 to 15 Rogan said he arrived home
mph.
feeling "fairly happy." As he
Friday: Sunny,wlthhlghsnear entered his house, Rogan said he
45.
saw an ax leaning against a wall.
Extended Forecast
Sal urda$ through Monday
Fair Saturday and Monday, Dance Saturday
with a chance of rain Sunday.
There will be a round and
Highs will be In the 40s Saturday
square
dance at Rutland Ameriand in the 50s Sunday apd
can
Legion
Saturday from 8 p.m.
Monday. Lows will be mostlyln
.
untll
midnight.
the 30s.

-

A line of · tnuncterstorms
whipped up a small tornado near
Pittsburg, Kan., Wednesday
night, and hall the size of half
dollars tell at Independence,
Kan. Severe thunderstorms
snapped telephone poles in Edna,
Kan.
Storms -raged Into Texas late
Wednesday, dropping golf-ball
size hall and bringing winds
gusting to 60 mph in Lamar
County where trees and power
lines were downed.
In the Midwest, a low pressure

system hung over northeast upper Michigan as a counterIllinois as a cold front trekked clockwise flow of air around a
Into the Ohio Valley. Showers and low pressure system promised to
thunderstorms followed a cold bring cold air Into the region. Up
front from northwest Indiana to 10 Inches of snow Is possible
Into southeast Missouri, and with the highest amounts exwinds gusting to 60 mph swept peeled In the snow belt areas,
Indlanapolls early today.
McCarthy said.
Rain was expected to turn Into
The Paclllc Northwest has
snow when cold air whisks Into been hit with overnight raln'that
Michigan today, said forecaster was expected to turn to snow In
Dan McCarthy.
the higher elevations of the
·1 A winter storm watch was
Cascades arid ·the Shasta·
posted for today across much of Siskiyou mountains.
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11·11-118

One player is eligible to win jackpot

PICK-4

1723.
PJCK-4 ticket sales totaled
$240,209, with a payoff due of
$108,106.
.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$3,600. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$150.
Super Lotto
3, 9, 11, 16, 23, 32.
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
$8,421,213.
'
Kicker
443647.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$1,044,240.

$650,000;· the spo~tesman said.
In addition to th.e top prize
winner, 302 players picked five of
the numbers to win $1,000 each,
and' 14,120 players chose four of
the numbers to win $68 apiece.
Super Lotto ticket sales for the
midweek drawing totaled
$8,421.213 and the prize payout
totaled $14,262,160.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, there was one winner of
the $100,000 grand prize. The
winning Kicker number was
443647.
In addition to the one ticket.
that had the six Kicker numbers
In order, 11 players had the first
five, which pays $5,000; 87 had
the first four, which pays $1,000;
915 had the first three, which
pays $100; and -9,428 had the first
two, which pays $10.
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$1,044,240 and the total prize
payout was $427,780.

'

(UPI)

Menus set

·--

By BOB HOEFLICH
Friday Is Veterans Day
remember when
we called It Armlstice Day and DreW Webs·
ter · Post 39,
American Le·
glon, will be con·
ductlng services
In front of the courthouse In
Pomeroy·
Joe Struble, Middleport Postmaster and a past commander of
the post, will be speaker and all
American Legion posts of the
county as well as the Veterans of
. Foreign Wars and the Disabled
American Veterans nave been ·
Invited .to take part In the service.
And- of course, yo11're Invited
to attend the service which will
start at 11 a.m. following the
ringing of church bells at 10:55
a.m .
o' By the way, members of Drew
Webster Post will also be holding
their annual oyster dinner at the
post home next Tuesd~even!ng.

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
~SNOW
Static
Occluded
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold ·
WEATHER MAP -During early Friday morning, shower&amp; are
possible In parts of the Pacific Northwest, wltb showers aud
.thunderstorms possible In parts of the soulb Atlantic Coast states. ,
Rain and snow Is possible In parts of tbe central and nordtern
Plains as well as parts ofthe extreme north Atlantic Coast&amp;tates.

w'

Thursday,Novamber10. 1988

Remembering veterans

30

Meigs County Common ville, and Sherrie Lynn Jones,
·
Pleas Court a divorce action was Racine..
In
other
court
action
divorces
tiled, two dissolutions and two
· were granted to Rose Elaine
judgments.
The Home National Bank, Thornton from WilliamS. Thorn·
Racine, filed a judgment In the ton; Marlene D. Chaffee from
amount or $7,872.28 against Del· Timothy w: Chaffee, and Sheila
bert Teaford, Syracuse.·- The C. Hlndy, from Michael D.
second judgment was !lied Hlndy.
Marriages dlssoived were
against Otto Falls, Reedsville
and Kathylene Falls, Reedsville, Cathy Carleton and Wllllam
Carleton; Jeffrey L. Miller and
by the McArthur Savings and
Belva F. Miller and John C.
Loan Co., McArthur.
Rhonda Burris, Racine, tiled .Maxson and Bonnie L. Maxson.
Michael Rlcahrd Hayman was
for divorce against Charles Burris, Midvale, Ohio. Filing for granted relief to possess and use
dissolutions of marriages were firearms for all lawful types of
Sheila A Randolph, Shade and hunting.
The case Arthur Clark versus
Randy Randolph, Coolville, and
Donald Gean Jones, Jr., Reeds- Dennis I. Boothe was dismissed.

CLEVELAND (UPJ) - Wednesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
282.
Ticket sales totaled $1,355,825,
with a payoff due of $450,137.

The Meigs County Fair Board
election certainly was anything
but earth shaking.
·
It was held Monday evening
and there were only five candl·
dates tor seats on the board. All
are Incumbents and Include
Jennings Beegle, Ed Holter, Dan
Smith, Addalou Lewis and Ben
Slawter. All of them were, of
course, elected to three year
terms on the board.
There were only 32 votes cast
and this Included present fair
board members' ballots.

ft

.

* NEW .EXPANDED SERVICE *
''FREE DELIVERY''
TO THESE AREAS
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINEISVILLE,
RUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W.VA.

Menus for the cafeterias of the
Carleton School and the Eastern
and Meigs Local School Districts
. The Big Bend Minstrel Associ·
for the week of Nov. 14 are
atlon's Create an Easter Bonnet
announced:
contest has concluded as · far as
Carleton
deallnes go and there are 30
Monday: beef stew, blsc~ll.
entries - and some mighty nice
cheese wedge, fruit, mllk.
creations for the association's
., . Tuesday: fish sandwich, baked
Fall Follies to be presented at the
beans. cole slaw, fruit, milk.
Meigs High School Auditorium
'Wednesday: sauerkrau.t, wienon·Saturday, Nov. 26.
ers, mashed potatoes, bread·
A panel ot five judges has been
-btltter, [rult, milk.
selected and winners of prizes
Thursday: barbecued chicken
will be announced on the night of
green beans, potatoes, roll, fruit;
the musical.
milk.
Friday: taco salad, cupcakes.
Incidentally, Joe Struble, longfruit, milk.
time master of ceremonies for
Eastern
the association's shows. will
Monday: hamburger, peas,
again be serving as the Nov. 26
fruit, milk.
emcee. Roger Abbott will be In
Tuesday: grUled cheese sandcharge of floor lighting while Bill
wich. tomato soup, celery sticks,
Nease will be in charge of stage
fruit, milk.
llghtlllg from backstage. Roger
Wednesday: cheeseburger,
and Mary Gilmore ·along with
baked beans, fruit, milk.
Tim-Glaze are donating all of the
Thursday: bqlogna-cheese
WINNERS- Judged as the coslume winners at 1-3; Keith Arlx, Bobble Butcher, Susan CotterUI,
sound equipment for the 1988
sandwich, green beans, fruit,
the recent Scipio Township Volunteer Fire and Jessie Dillon, Grades 4-6; Misty Frum,
production.
milk.
Department were Travis·Butcher, Nikki Bulcher, Anglea Lee, Sandy Vance, and Ruth Will, grades
What with all of these talented
Friday: turkey slice. roll,
William Haning, and Shane Lewis, pre-school and 7-12, and Beth Amoriya, Carolyn Chapman, John
people working with the show's
butter, mashed potatoes, gravy,
kindergarten; Dennlse Cotterlll, Eric Jarvis, Chapman, adult.
staging I feel like a lucky duck.
applesauce, pumpkin pie square
Tom Kopczinsky, and Franco Rom uno, grades
I do want to thank Kathy
with Whipped topping, mlllk.
Pullins and Guido Glrolaml who
Meigs
have come through beautifully In
Monday: cheeseburger, corn,
loaning service uniforms for the II.
fruit, mUk.
upcoming show. The uniforms
Tuesday: chill and crackers,
will be seen In the Irving Berlin
peanut
butter sandwich, cheese
The Alfred Church wll,l ·host ·Su-san Pullins Mar.tha Poole, and
segment which composes hall of
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Keaton
wedge, mllk.
'
Northeast Cluster churches on Nellie Parker.
the follies this fall.
· visited his sister, Glenna BuchaWednesday: chicken and nooNov. 20 at 7:30p.m. Traveiln' On
Linda and Dave Williams, nan, Barlow on-sunday.
I really am Impressed with the
dles, hot rolls and butter, fruit,
Quartetof
Cooivllle
will
be
Belpre,
were Sunday guests . of
cooperative attitude of so many
milk.
featured plus there will be Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Renderpeople - surely makes it all a bit
Thursday: sloppy joes, cole
MOOSE MEMBERS
readings and singing by local son. In the afternoon, Mrs.
easier.
slaw, fruit, cookie, milk.
members. Everyone is invited to Wllllams and Mr. Henderson
Friday: cooks' choice.
&amp; W.O.T.M.
attend.
visited Osle Henderson at the
Maude says that an optimist is
JOIN YOUR FRIENDS
Recent visitors at the church Brenda Darst Home, Pomeroy.
someone who makes the bes t or It
were
Karen
Follrod,
Athens;
Mr.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
Calaway
when they get the worst of it. Do
SWING &amp; SWAY TO
and Mrs. Steve Weber, Shannon, and children, Vanderhoof, were
keep smUing.
THE MELODIES OF
Sasha, and Shalyn, Eagle Ridge. Sunday supper guests of GerWeekend revival services will
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost, trude Robinson.
"GEORGE HALL"
be
held at the Red Brush Church .
Lancaster, visited Mr. and Mrs. 'T'flp•&lt;"
AT
THE
ORGAN.
of
Christ,
Bashan Road, SaturRichard Yost, Aaron and Sarah. 1. V J
day,
7
p.m.,
Sunday 10 a.m and 6
MAlE
YOUR
RESERVATIONS
Mrs. Wilbur Pa-rlier was the
Plans
for
a
holiday
dinner
and
p.m.
with
Denver
Hill of Foster,
Next week's training session recent guest of Mr, and Mrs. party were made when Ohio
NOW I
W.Va.
as
the
speaker.
The public
will be presented by Dr. James Edwin Boettlcher, Smithfield. TOPS 570 met Tuesday night at
CALL 675·1880
is
Invited.
Witherell on the Importance of a She was accompanied by Bonnie the Coonhunters Building on the
medical examination and th.e Landers, Chester, who visited fairgrounds.
effects of medication. This s~s­ her brother and hlswlle. Mr. and
The potluck dinner will be held
slon will be held at theCenter,1 to Mrs. Homer Biggs, Unionport.
on
Dec. 6 at the regular meeting
3 p.m on Nov. 18.
Judy Avis hosted a household
ptace.
member will be
For more Information resi- products party where Pat Marks selectedA TOPS
to reign as Christmas
dents may call Beth Theiss or was the dlsplayer. Those attend- queen. Secret pals will reveal
Linda Friend, 992-2161.
Ing from the Alfred area were
names and draw for new ones,
There will be an exchange of
gifts.
The Women's Auxlllary of
Lennie 1Belle Aleshire, leader,
By Sherwood of Ohio
Mary Shrine, Wnlte :shrine of Veterans Memorial Hospital will
opened
the meeting · with ihe
Jerusalem, will meet Friday at meet Tueday at 1:30 p.m. at'the
the Rock Springs Grange hall for hospital. Plans will be completed prayer and pledge. Ola St Clair
a potluck "thanksgiving dinner at for a craft and bake sale to be and VIrginia Dean had reports,
6: 15 p.m. A meeting will follow held on Nov.181n the iobby,ofthe . arid It was noted that the County
Coons' team was the winner of
the dinner.
hospital, beginning at 9 a.m. and the weight loss contest. On the
continuing throughout the day,
team were Gertrude Cas to,
. Teresa Wood, Shirley Wolfe,
·::
Bernice Durst, Marcella Casto,
have been saved, healed, filled
Julia Hysell, and Kay Norris.
and delivered through the anMrs. Aleshire noted that another
nolnted preaching of the Word of
contest will begin on Nov. 29.
God. Mrs. Manuel's wife Cathy
A surprise gift was won by
ha~ been called Into the ministry
Shirley Wolfe. Games were
of music.
played. Information on the group
Prior to .entering the evangelismay be obtained by calling Mrs.
tic field, Manuel pastor.ed for two
Aleshire, 992-7464, or Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT
145 N. 2ND
years. He Is an ordained minister
Dean, 992-2774.
of the New Life VIctory Center, a
992-2351
Mrs. Wood, weight recorder,
full gospel chu._h In Huntington,
reported the best loser, Gertrude
OPEN 9:30-5:00
W.Va. where Darrel Huffman Is
Casto and a gift was presented to
pastor.
MON.-SAT.
her, with Ms. Durst as runHe Is the founder of Revelation
ner-up. Mary-Martin won the
Power Ministries which spreads
fruit basket.
the gospel via television, crusades, seminars, tapes and the
printed word.

Alfred community happenings

Revival planned

Caregiver training session set

OIDEIS MUST BE PHONID IN BEFOIE 3 P.M.

Tbe ilrst In a series of training
sessions for caregivers and famIly members of those with
Alzheimer's Disease or a related
disorder will be held at the Senior
Citizens Center Friday, 1 to 3
p.m.
.
The session Is entitled A
Caregiver's VIew and will be
presented by Ms. Shirley Cook.
Anyone caring for someone
who has A!zh~lmer~ s Dlaease ar a
related disorder Is invited to
attend. Related disorders Include any disease which cau~s a
form of dementia, such as
strokes, Parkinson's Disease and
Hunting! on's Disease.

FREE DEUVERY 10N ALL PRESCRIPTIONS, IF YOU DON'T
NEED A PRESCIIPTION WE WILL DEUYER ANY!IING 1N .
STORE FREE ON A $5,00 MINIMUM OlDER.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
IFQUIIlY VILAGI PIIUIIACYI
STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9, A.M.-6 P.M.; Sat..-day 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
271 NOITH SECOND
992·6669
MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

meetS

All

· Shrine ·to meet "

LADIES COATS
.AND CAPES .

Bazaar set

REDUCED

Rejoicing Life sets speaker
I

Ucenses issued
A marriage license was Issued
in Meigs County Probate Courtto .Patrick Souls by, 30, Pomeroy,
and Terri Ann Stout, 20, Tuppers
Plains

,,

Evangelist Mike Manuel will
be speaking at the Rejoicing Life
Church, 333 North Second, Ave.,
Middleport, Sunday at 10 a.m and
7 p.m.
Pastor Mike Panglo invites the
public to attend to hear the
evangelist who as a high school
student was Involved In drugs
and alcohol, and became an
agnostic whll.e attending Marshall University. He was converted to Christianity In 1975 and
claims as his mlsson today "to
preach Jesus Christ, the same
yesterday and today, and
forever. (Heb. 12:8)"
Panglo says that many people

lU LADIES

·CHRISTMAS
CARDS

AMITY
BILLFOLDS

SPECIAL VALUE
ASSORTMENT
By CARLETON
32 CARDS

, ME(t AND

WOMEN'S

REG.

OFF

sus

CANDY
BARS

ff\.\~t'ttS

-~09.
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REG. 45&lt;

s~"t
\SO cJ ott1·
,_ stt-'41

3FoR95C
Furniture &amp; Jewelry

106 N. 2ND
MIDDLEPORT
992-2635

tCredit Tenns
VISA • Mastercard
•Free Christmas
. layaways Welcome
•Fr~e Deli vtry Today
or

435 2ND AYE.

GAUl POLIS
446-8084

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Page-9

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__

_.,

Meigs Common Pleas Court

CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
player Is eligible to claim a $13
million jackpot after correctly
picking all six numbers In Ohio's
Super Lotto drawing Wednesday
night.
The name of the player will be
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The winnings will be paid In 20
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- - ...... -·-· -----

The Daily Sentinel

.By The Bend

Cold weather returning to Ohio Valley
By United Preas International
Thunderstorms charged Into
the south-central United States
early today following a day of
ball storms and high winds, while
Michigan braced tor a chilling
day and heavy snowfall. · ·
Storms accompanied by golfball sized hall and strong gusty
winds pelted much of Oklahoma
Wednesday night, and, In Arkansas. thunderstorm winds flipped
over a mobile home In ea~tern
Garland County, leaving one
person Injured, the National
Weather Service
. .reported.
. .

____..

Thursday, November 10, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pllge 8-The Daily Santi 1el

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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thunsdey, November 10. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-=-------

~
~

Thursday, November 10, 1988

CHES'I:ER - Ches(t&gt;r Town·
ship Trustees will meet Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at the town hall.

Is sponsoring a dinner at Dale's
Smorgasbord, Gallipolis, on Sunday from 12 noon to 2 p.m. Cost,
$1.50. Children under 10, free.
Bring a friend.

SYRACUSE The First
Church of God In Syracuse Is
having a holiday bazaar on
Friday at Krogers.

MONDAY
BEDFORD - Bedford Town·
ship Trustees will meet in regular session Monday, 7 p.m.,at the
town hall. Everyone welcome.

CHESTER - A square dance
will be held Friday at the old
Chester Courthouse on Friday
from 7: 30 to 11: 30 p.m. Caller will
be John Coss of Parkersburg,
W.Va. Donations of $2 tor adults,
$1 for children. No alcohol
permitted.

POMEROY -BoyScoutTroop
249 will meet at the Pomeroy
American Legion hall, at 7 p.m
Wednesday. Leader corps
members are asked to come
early, and parents to come at 8
p.m. to discuss future activities
or the troop.

POMEROY - A weekend
revival will be held Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, 7:30 each
evening, at the Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, Route 143, Pomeroy.
Evangelist will be Rev. Toby
Melott, from Pennsylvania. Special singing will be featured.
Pastor Victor Roush welcomes
the public.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The MGM District Cub and Boy Scout leader
roundtable will be held at the
Pomeroy Municipal building on
second floor, Thursday, at 7:30
p.m .

---

SATURDAY
WII,.KESVILLE - The Pyl)lian Sisters are sponsoring a
smorgasbord dinner on Satur·
day, starting at 4 p.m., at ·t he
Pythian Hall In Wilkesville.
Proceeds from the dinner will go
to the buUdlng fund. Everyone
welcome.

RACINE - . Southern Band
Boosters wll meet Thursday
evening at 7:30 p.m. In the high
school band room. All band
parents of the school district are
urged to attena.
REEDSVILLE - Reedsville
United Methodist Church wlll be
In revival through Saturday with
services starting at 7 p.m. each
night. Special singing will also be
featured nightly.

'

and square dance on Friday
evening from 8 to 11 p.m. M.us!c
by True Country. Those attend·
lng, bring snacks. Everyone
welcome.

MASON, W.Va. -Mason Volunteer Flte Department's Ladies Auxiliary annual Christmas
Bazaar will be held Saturday, 9
a.m. to 6 p.m., at the tire station.
Refreshments will be sold. Everyone welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church of Christ will be in revival
through Saturday with different
speakers and singing groups
each night. Services start at 7:30
p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
annual turkey dinner of the
Ladles Auxiliary of Orange
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment will be held Salurday at the
Tuppers Plains Fire Station.
Serving begins at 4:30p.m. Price
$4.50. Everyone welcome.

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 7:30
p.m. Thursday at the hall.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet at 1 p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. Ronald Reynolds.
Mrs. Joseph Colburn, state vice
regent, will be guest speaker on
Broad Blue Ribbon History of
DAR. Members are asked to
take Christmas gifts . for veterans. Mrs. Reynolds, Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
Grueser, Jr., Mrs. W!lson Car. penter, Mrs. Melvin Van Meter
•will be hostesses.

. _
SUNDAY
RACINE - Southern High
School football banquet will be
held Sunday, 1 p.m. at the school:
Anyone Interested is asked to
contact Sue Beegle.

•
Senior
;Citizens are sponsoring a round

GALLIPOLIS Modern
Woodmen of America Camp 7230

MIDDLEPORT- A revival is
being held at the Middleport
Christian Union Church through
thls Saturday wtth services at
7:30 each evening. There will be
different speakers and singers
each evening.

--POMEROY - The

.- -People in the news-By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
BANKRUPTCY BOOGIE
: WOOGIE: Jerry Lee Lewis,
·whose life often seems to be a
:series of wives, Illness and bad ·
:news, has flied for bankruptcy
· protection. According to papers
. Lewis filed Tuesday In U.S.
;bankruptcy court in Memphis,
Tenn., his debts include $950,000
)o George Cunningham and the
;Whiskey River Club In Nashville
-and $2 mUllan to the IRS. Lewis
;was found Innocent In 1984 of tax
evasion charges but still owed
the government a sizeable
amount of money In back taxes.
•The bankruptcy filing comes as
:Lewis is busy tak lng in the
;filming of "Great Balls of Fire,"
·In which Dennis Quaid plays the
:young Jerry Lee.
• IKE TAKES A HIKE: Ike
Turner's musical comeback is
•already In trouble. He failed to
.show up for a Monday night
.performance at the Odd Rock
:Cafe In Milwaukee and now his
:,entire tour has been canceled,
..according to promoter Jack
Koshlck. No reason was given for
the cancellation. Turner, the
former husband of Tina Turner,
:1Jas been arrested on drug
-charges three Urnes since 1985
:ilnd recently underwent treat·
)nent for cocaine addiction at a .
·hospital in California. He started
llls musical comeback earlier
fall at a Los Angeles
and received

slastlc reviews.
PUNISH THE POLLS: Linda
Ellerbee is among those who
think exit j:lolls have .too much
Influence in the electoral process
and she offers a solution - lie.
The CNN commentator says the
exit polls, which allow the
networks to declare a preslden·
tlal winner before the polls have
closed on the West Coast, have
taken all the suspense out of
Election Day . Ellerbee's advice
on how to liven things up: "You
vote, you walk out, you are
approached by somebody who
asks 11 you'll tell them how you
voted. You say yes, smile and
then you lte your head off- from
one end of the ballot to the other,
from sea to shining sea. Imagine
what w!ll happen If television
c ails the wrong winner. Maybe
we can't teach TV manners, but
we can, my fellow Americans,
teach them a little humUity."
CLARK'S CLOCK CLEANED:
A Time magazine cover and the
admlrailon of President Reagan
weren't enough to get Joe Clark,
the get-tough principal of East
Side High In Paterson, N.J.,
elected. Clark, a Republican In a
strong Democratic district, was
trying to become an Essex
County freeholder, the equivalent of a county hoard member,
but he was trounced by a 2-1 ratio
In Tuesday's voting. "Defeat is
not bitter unless you swallow It,
and I'm not about to swallow it,"
said Clark.

Dinner
••
GALLIPOLIS Modern
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
is sponsoring a dlnnerthls Sunday, from 12 noon to 2 p.m., at
Dale's Smorgasbord, Upper
River Road, Gallipolis. Cost w!ll
be $1.50 for ages 10 and over. No
charge for children 'under 10.
Bring a friend.
Meeting
ATHENS - Meeting of the
Buckeye Joint-County Self-Insurance Council will be held
Friday, Nov. 18, 10 a.m., at the
Athens County Extension Office
tn Athens,

Bazaar
. NEW HAVEN - Plans are
underway for the annual New
Haven Fire Department AuxilIary Christmas Bazaar on Dec. 3
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The bazaar
will be held again this year at the
New Haven Fire Station.
As in previous years, the
bazaar Is open to all area crafts
people Including Individuals,
churches, clubs and ctvlc organ!·
zations. Anyone wishing to request a table should send a
self-addressed stamped envelope along with $10 per table to
Shelby Duncan, P.O. Box 137,
New Haven, W.Va., 25265.
For more information, call
(304) 882-2814 or 882-3243.
Turkey dl110er
· RUTLAND The annual
Rutland Fire Department turkey
dinner will be served Thursday,
Nov.17, starting at 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Grade School. Tickets,
at $5, may be purchased from fire
department members.
Open hoUlle
TUPPERS

PLAINS

Fall festivals
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO
will be having a fall festival at the
Rutland Grade School on Saturday, Nov. 19, from 6 to 9 p.m.
There wm be games tor children,
lots of food, door prizes, a variety
show, baked goods, giveaways
and a general store. Everyone
welcome.

Olflces closed
TUPPERS PLAINS- Chester
Water District offices will be
closed F~!day In observance of
Veterans Day. In case of an
emergency on Friday, call
985-3315. Offices will open as
usual on Monday.

•
WESTFIELD'S TOP 10 - .Judllh A. Williams, LUTcF, of
Bropn-Warner lnaurance Ser\'lcea, was honored this week by
WeaUield Ufe lnauranee Co. for lbree consecutive yean as a
member of lhe 'J;op 80 agenla. Here Paul R. Jacobe, Weslfleld'a
Ute Marketing Manager, presented an enJI'aved marble desk Bet
lo Mn. Wllllam8 In recopltloa of her acoompllahment.

Scholarships awarded by
PRESIDENT-ELECT - President-elect George Bush stands
on his car and waves to the crowds Wednesday upon his arrival at
Andrews Air Force Base. (UPI)

1Mpeel
MIDDLEPORT - The International Order of Job's Daugh·
ters Semi-Annual Inspection
will be held Monday, 7 p.m., at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
Dinner will be at 5 p.m. at
Pleasers Restaurant, Pomeroy.

Mr. and Mrs. Mark Harrison,
Pomeroy, are an nounclng the
birth of their second child, a
daughter, JUUan Nocole, born at
the Holzer Medical Center, Sept,
27.
.
The Infant weighed eight
· pounds, seven ounces and was 21
Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Roberts,
Pomeroy, and the paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Harrison, Cheshire.
Dessle Boggess and Dorothy
RDberts are great-grandmoth·
. ers. Mrs. Clara Harrison, GaiUpolls, and Mrs. Faye Robie, of
Mesa, Ariz. _are greatgrandmothers.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison have a
son, Justin.

PAMELA J. FOLMER

TAMMY WRIGHT

Scholarships of $100 each have
been awarded to Pamela Jean
Folmer and Tammy Wright by
the American Legion Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy.
Folmer Is the daughter of Max
and Rhonda Folmer, Greenville,
S. C. and the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. RDbert Hysell,
Syracuse, and Max Folmer, Sr.,
'Long Bottom. She IS a graduate
of Jo'lauldln High School in 1988
and was active in the Fine Arts

Center, chorus, drama club,
C!vlnetts and the Federation of
Christian Athletes. She attends
Winthrop College In Rock Hill, S.
C. where she !e majoring In
music education.
Wright is the daug!lter of Mike
and Sharon Wright and grand·
daughter of Uoyd and Jean
Wright, Pomeroy, and James
and Jenny Whitlatch, Middleport. Sh~ Is a graduate of Meigs
High School where she was
active in sports.

.JILLIAN N. HARRMON

Make-it workshop planned
The Melgs·Gallla County Cooperative Extension Services will
co-sponsor a Make-It-Take-It holIday workshop Wednesday from
1 to 3 p.m. with It to be repeated
from 7 to 9 p.m . .tn Cheshire.
Becky Culbertson, Gallla
County Home Economics agent,
and Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County
agent, wm demonstrate several
Inexpensive creative holiday

Ideas.
Participants wtl make three
Items to take home. Registration
fee for the workshop If $4 and
class size is limited. Residents
may register at the Meigs County
Extension Office, 992-6696, or
the Gallia County Extension
Office, ~6-7007 . .Registration
deadline Is Monday.

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Memorial
set for Celeste
...
CLEVELAND (UP I) - A · the · Democratic prlmary cammemorial service is to be held paign, which he narrowly won.
Saturday for Frank Celeste,
The elder Celeste declared
father of Ohio Gov. Richard bankruptcy several years ago,
Celeste, who died Wednesday of .. apd thoseproceed!ngsarecontlncompllcatlons associated with • ulng in Lucas County.
In addition to the governor, he
liver and colon cancer. He was
81.
'
Is survived by his wife, Peg; a
' The elder Celeste's family, son, Ted, 43, of Columbus; a
, Including the governor, was with daughter Pat, 47, of Cleveland;
him when he passed away at 11 grandchildren and two great:
' Cleveland Clinic, where he had grandchildren. .
The memorial service will be
undergone surgery Oct. 11.
The governor continued with a held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at
~ "Capital for a Day" program
Lakewood United Methodist
· today in suburban Lakewood, Church. The family asked that In
, where his father was mayor from lieu of flowers, donations be
: 1956·63.
made to the church or to the
'
Lakewood-Rocky River Rotary
, Celeste, a native of Cerlsano,
Foundation.
Italy, emigrated to Pennsylvania
:with his mother and father in Chicago grain report
:1909. He later became president
CHICAGO (UP!) - Grain
:or the National Housing Corp. , a futures were mixed at the close
;real estate development firm in following a day of choppy trading
•Cleveland which built low· and Wednesday on the Chicago Board
'moderate-Income housing.
of Trade.
The volume was light and
Celeste was widely believed to
'have saved his son's gubernator·
trading ranges were narrow
'lal candidacy in 1982 when he ahead of the November crop
)oaned him money to contil)ue In report.

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J

;

Former Attorney General John Mitchell
saddened by Mitchell's death.
"John Mitchell committed an
offense and I prosecuted him,"
Neal said. " But he was a very
pleasant human being. He was
not bitter about what happened to
hlm . ... There was no bitterness
between John Mitchell and me."
The White House Issued a
statement Wednesday night say·
lng, '' President and Mrs. Reagan
are deeply saddened by the news
of John Mitchell's death and
extend their sympathy and pray·
ers to his family ."
Among the surviving family Is
his second wife, Mary, an,d . two
daughters.
Mitchell's first wife, Martha,
found herself In the limelight
during her husband's stay' in
office because of her outspoken

v iews about Washington politics
and politicians.
Mrs. Mitchell became famous
for a series of late-night telephone calls to reporters in which
she dropped hints about a muchlarger Water gate scandal than
was known at the time. Nixon
aides tried to discredit her
comments bY saying she was
drunk.
At first her statements seemed
to amuse her husband and Nixon,
but she later publicly accused
her husband of covering up
. Ulegalltes fo.r the president. She
demanded he leave politics and
''all those dirty things that go
on."

In his race against Democratic
Rep. Buddy MacKay to replace
retiring Democrat Lawton
Chiles. All precincts were In but
72,000 uncounted absentee bal·
lots held the final verdict.
Tbe House, which adjourned
this year with three vacancies
and a split of 255 Democrats to
177 Republicans. shaped up as at
least a four-seat and posslb.ly a
five-seat gain for Democrats.
With one race unsettled, the
majority had won 261 seats to 173
for the GOP. Republican Rep.
, Denny Smith of Oregon trailed

challenging state Rep. Mike
Kopetskl by about 1,200 votes .
One unresolved question about
the Senate is who will be
appointed by retiring Republican
Gov. Robert Orr of Indiana to
replace Sen. Dan Quayle, R-Ind.,
now the vice president-elect.
Among the names mentioned
are Quayle' s wife, MarUyn; Lt.
Gov. John Mtitz, whO lost his bid
Tuesday to succeed Orr; and
Rep. Dan Coats, R-Ind., who
replaced Quayle In the House
when Quayle ousted Democratic
Sen. Birch Bayh In 1980.

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..

Norman Ornstein, a political
analyst at the conservative
American Enterprise Institute,
predicted Wednesday that Bush
will have no honeymoon with
Congress of the sort other pres!-

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Democrats maintained their
control of the House and Senate
Tuesday, adding slightly to their
numbers In each of the
chambers. Bush knows that since
regaining the Senate from GOP
hands two years ago, they
largely have pursued their own
agenda and that trend ls llkely to
continue.
There is no love between Bush
and House Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas, and Sen. Bennett John·
ston, D-La., one of three men
vying to lead his party In the
other chamber next year, deli·
vered some advice ofhls own sort
Wednesday.
"If he wants confrontation,"
Johnston said of Bush, "like he
did In the campaign, he w!ll get
more than he bargained for."
Likely areas of conflict for
Bush Include dealing with the
budget deficit and arranging
priorities for fu lute federal
spending. The vice president also
drew himself a line with his
campaign Vow of "no new
taxes.''

dents have enjoyed.
"All of asud&lt;!en George Bush Is
no longer a pretender," Ornstein
said, "and I don't see anybody
saying, 'Let's give this guy the
benefit of the doubt. Let's help
him out.'"
West Virginia Sen. !\'Jbert
Byrd, who won easy re-election
but Is stepping down as the ·
chamber's Democratic leader In
order to run ·the powerful Appropriations Committee, said he
hopes confrontation can be held
to a minimum next year. He
noted, however, that he expects
his party to keep pushing its own
proposals.
Bush Insisted he will be able to
work with Senate Republican
leader Robert Dole of Kansas,
,who called Bush a liar in the
campaign for the GOP nomination and blames the vice pres!·
dent for not working hard enough
to elect senators.
Bush also said he will beableto
work with Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of
Texas, the . Democratic vice
presidential candidate, who was
returned for a fourth term and
will continue as chairman of the
Finance Committee.
As the last Senate cliffhanger
awaited a winner Wednesday,
Democrats had 55 seats to the
GOP's 44, a gain of one from the
end of the tOOth Congress.
The outstanding Senate race
was a true nail-biter. Conserva·
t!ve Republican Rep. Connie
Mack I II; grandson of the baseball legend , led by a mere 4,936
votes out of nearly 4 mUllan cast

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ney general ever to serve a
prison term - for Watergate
·crimes he said he never committed as a top adviser to Richard
Nixon.
The pipe-smoking Republican
was found to be the man who
pulied the strings t,tlat le&lt;! to the
June 17, 1972, break-In at the
Democratic National Committee
headquarters at the Watergate
complex. He then participated in
the Byzantine cover-up that tried
to distance the Oval Office from
the burglars.
During the next two years, the
scandal exploded with revela~
tlons from legal and congressional Investigations. In the end,
25 defendants were jailed for
Watergate crlmes; Nixon resigned In disgrace Aug. 9, 1974,
and was pardoned one month
later bv President Gerald Ford.
Mitchell, convicted of conspiracy, obs tructlon of justice and
perjury, was sentenced to two to
elght years In prison by Judge
John S!rlca. It was upheld on
appeal and he arrived In June
1977 at the federal m!nlmum
security facUlty In Montgomery,
Ala.' He was released 19 months
later, Jan. 19, 1979.
Mitchell spent his final years in
the city of his downfall as a
consultant for Global Research
Inc., a public policy Institute.
Former Watergate prosecutor
Jim Neal said Wednesday in
Nashville, Tenn.. that he was

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defeat Democrat Michael Dukakis Tuesday night .
"I will try very hard," Bush
promised, but as a former Texas
congressman he acknowledged
he Is unlikely to get "everything
my way .''

"I want good and open and
friendly relationships with- the
U.S. Congress. I don't want us to
talk at each other (but) to each
other," he told supporters who
welcomed him back to the capital
from his adopted home of Houston, where he watched himself

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weeks.
Bush sounded a note of conclll·
at!on as he sought to soothe hard
feelings from the bitter campaign while asserting his own
new polltlcal power.

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WASHINGTON (UPI)- Over
at the White House, where
Republicans rule, George Bush is
appealing promptly for peace
with Congress. But under the
dome of the Capitol, where
Democrats call the shots, that
may be easier said than done.
Democratic leaders listened
carefully Wednesday as the vice
president they know well, now
the president-elect, urged coop-·
era lion between the executive
and legislative branches when he
enters the Oval Office In just 10

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WASHINGTON (UPI )
Former Attorney General John
Mitchell, dead of a heart attack
at 75, wanted to be " a fat and
prosperous Wall Street lawyer"
but wound up a disbarred common criminal jailed In President
Nixon's Watergate scandal.
Mitchell died Wednesday at
6:27 p.m. EST, about an hour
after he was admitted to George
Washington University Medical
Center In cardiac arrest, accordIng to hospital spokeswoman
Claudia Domlnltz.
Mitchell was walking home in
the fashionable Georgetown sec·.
Uon of the nation's capital when
he collapsed on the street. A
passerby, Robert H!lger of Boston, administered cardiopulmonary resuscltallon until an ambulance arrived.
A Washington television sta. lion reported Wednesday night
that a breakdown In radio communications prevented the medIcs treating Mitchell from Jetting
the hospital know they were on
the way.
WUSA-TV said it took four
calls before the medics were able
to get through to the hospital and
by that time the ambulance was
at the emergency room. Such
communication difficulties have
been a recurring problem, WUSA
noted, but It was not known
whether the incident contributed
to Mitchell's death.
Mitchell became the f!rstattor-

Bush could get 'more than he bargained for'

POMEROY The Meigs
County Courthouse will be closed
Friday In observance of Veterans Day. ·

Harrison birth

The Daily Sentinel · Page-11

Ex•Attomey General
John l\titchell dead

Tuppers Ptatns Jetementary
Scho'ol!s having an open house on
Monday, Nov. 14, from 7 to 7:30
p.m . The open house Is being held
in observance of National Educa·
tlon Week. The school boosters
will meet following the open
house.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls PTO will be hosting a tall
festival on Sunday, Nov. 20, at the
Letart Falls Elementary School.
Dinners w111 be served starting at
noon and the menu will Include
ham, turkey, baked chicken,
mashed potatoes, noodles, green
beans, corn, slaw, ron, dessert
and drink. Prices are $3 a meal,
$1.50 for children 12 and under ·
and ch!ldloen under two, free.
Also on the agenda for the day Is a
country store, a bake sale,
games, entertainment and
prizes. To top off the day's
activities, a prince and princess
from grades 1-3 and a king and
queen from grades 4-6 will be
crowned. Everyone Is welcome.

-~---

POI'Ileloy Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
BALD KNOB - The Freedom
Gospel Mission located on county
road 31, Bald Knob-Stlversville
Road, will hOld a revival Wedneday through Nov: 12, 7; 30 each
evening with the Rev. George
Hoschar speaking; special sin·
gers each service.

-~·~-----

--

773-5514

I

2212 J1ckson A-u•·

·Point Pleu1nt, W. V1.
675-1121

I

5th StrHI
New Hma. W. V&gt;.
882-2135

Simple Interest - Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal

MIDDliPOH, OHIO
992·6661

I£1B£R FDIC

•

COATS, PANT COATS &amp; JACKETS
REDUCED

20 TO 30°/o

mlonoon

lruF00

8

·

BAHR CLOTHIE.RS

145 N. 2ND

992·2351

MIDDUPOIT

OPEN 9:30-5:00 MON.-SAT.
'

'·

�--.....,--------Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

-~-

--

------'-~--

Pomeroy~Mtddleport Ohto

----

-~-

Thursday November 10 1988

Meigs County Delinquent Land Tax Notice
09 00156 000
Bobo
8orn1rd Fr 30 2 SA of
98 18A SE of l_A SE Two
Succeu Rd 2 50 83 92
09 00611 001
Bobo
Bernard. Sect 29 near M1d
on W hne 1 00 4 62
09 00304 000
Cook
John &amp; Peggy Sect 9 Sect
D NW &amp; near M1d of NE /•
10071764
09 00312 000
Cozort
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T Lot

Thursday November 10 1988

~ /t1926

ALARM
SYSTEMS

II !1-1 mo4 pd

v,

w

s

I

•
•

417 Second Avenue Box
Gallipolis Oh1o 45631

1213'

or at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy Oh10
8 13 ttn

GUN SHOOT

Ptmnllflon

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Sp"'l'/111

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

FrM·lance Wrtter

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

SpHChes
Computer GraphiCs

Factory (hakt
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Stmtly Enforced

10 7 tfn

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt 124 Pomeroy Ohto

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Translllltston
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Publ1c Relations
~

AdvertiSing

Phone
~
614 992-3643

FIREWOOD
OAK LOCUST
CHERRY

$3 S

Mary, Naomt Jane,

Grace,

Donna Angte
and Gwen Folmer

~l~.v~tE0o

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992-2725

BILL SLACK
992-2269

MIDDLPEPORT OHIO
Walk lno Welcome
10 31 88 I mo

8 11-88 ""

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOR

OWNII: GREG I ROUSH

EXTERIOR

FREE ESTIMATES

oettlememant

ESTATE NO 19404- Ft
nal Account of Patr~ck H
0 Br en .Gua~dtan of Mary
E Ruoootll
ESTATE NO 24768 Second and Current Ac
count of Unda Evans Guar
d an of Malan a Adams a
Mnor
ESTATE NO 25485- Ft
nalend 01atr butiYe Account
of Mary E Hughas Execu
trut of the Estate of Arlen A
Hugh11 Sr Deca11ed
ESTATE NO 15482 Ft
nal and Di1tnbut1Ve Account
of Oougl• W Little Admen
11trator DBN of the Estate
of Jacob Abner R1ggs Oe
ceased
ESTATE NO 12148- F
naland Dl•tnbutNB Account
of Douglaa W L ttle Admtn
aatrator OBN of the Estate
of Rilla Shuler aka R1lla
Shuler Withee Docoeeed
ESTATE NO 15626- Ft
nal and D11tnbutwe Account
of Dougl• W L~tle AdminIStrator D BN olthe Eotato of
Amanda B1ggs Deca•ed
ESTATE NO 25697 - F
nal and Otstnbuttve Account
of Charleo E Frtley Jr Executor of the Estate of Charles
E Friley S r Decoeeod
Unl•s eKceptiOnl are filed
th&amp;"8f.o aatd accounts will be
lor hearing before oald Court
on the 12th day of Decembot
1988 at whtch t1me 111 d accounts w1ll be consid•ed and
cont11ued from day to day untl finally dlopooed of
Arry p•son nter•tad mav
file written exceptions to 11 d
accounts or to matters P•
Willing to the •ecutmn of the
tru.t, not lela than five davs
pnor to the date set: tor he•
ng
Robert E Buck
Judge
Common Plea Court
Probate D v1110n
Me1gs County Oh10
(111101tc

2

In Memortam

Take the patn out of
pa1nttng let me do
1t for you
Very Reasonable
Have References

614-985-4180
10 19-88 I

RALPH KELLER
who passed away 9
years ago today
Nov 10 1979
As the years roll by
Memones will never dte
Wtfe Marcta and
chtldren R01er and
Fam1ly and Jeanette
Wtlhams and Family

110

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S RT SO EAST
GUYSVILLE OHIO
614 662 3821
Authonzed John
Deere New Holland
Bush Hog Farm
Equ pment Dealer

Far11 Equ lp11ent
Parts &amp; Strvlce

DONALD (Bud)
MILLER

who passed away
nm8 years ago
Nov 10 1979
Gone but never for
&amp;ott en
Memories st1ll hnger

on
Lew11 &amp; Ruby Miller

,

•

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

COMMERCIAL

-

•CUSTOM K TCHENS &amp; BATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODEL NG

.VINYLS DING. ROOANG
•METAl BU LONGS
HOUS NG llo APT PROJECTS

MI\ C£ 969

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING
AND

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES
Muzzlelood~ng Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Guns Ammo Slugs
22 Ammo
124 East of Rutland
Atross Hoppy Hollow Rd

Ph 1114 742 2355
920fn11Mpd.

Howard I. Wrttesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleanmg
Pamtmg
FREE ESTIMATES

992-7611

949-2168

10-6 88 I

mo

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

JUST OPENED

CAKES

by Donna
SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
81rthdays Holidays

Spec1allzmg n

319So 2ndAve

character and novelty

Middleport, Oh1o

Rl I Box 136 Vloton

1 28 88 1fn

cakes

742-2235

II 3- 811-1 mo

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Ho1111t Built
Free Estomates

PH 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY ULIS
3 II Un

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
At Reasonable Pnces
PH. 949-2801
or Res 949-2860
Day or N1ght
NO SUNDAY CAllS
41686tfn

BEAUTIFUL

J&amp;L

... •HAIR
~~{£ ~ •CLOTHES
•TANS

INSULATION

'"""~

1:#6-

TOP OF THE STAIRS
AND

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
Ill Wosf Sec Pomeroy
992-6720
10 21

88 I mo

SMALL ENGI'ift1
REPAIR - I
Authortzed Servt&lt;e
&amp; Ports
Br ggs &amp;. Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Hamel te
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Oh1o

992 6611

17 In

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•W II Do Haulmg W1th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Serv1ce
•Junk Yard Bus ness

WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS 01 TRUCKS
-FREE ESTIMATESFor any of fhes e serv ces coU

614-742-2617
Betwetn 9 am 6 p m
or leave Messoao

HUDNALL

PLUMBING &amp; HU TING
168 North Second
M1ddloport, Oh1o 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wo Carry Ftohtng Sut&gt;Pii•~
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bolls Here

IUSINESI PHON!
1.14) 992 6lSO
IISIOfNCE PHONE
(614) 99

Masttc &amp; Certatnteed
Vtnyl Sid1ng
Roofmg
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Wmdows
Blown lnsulat1on
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Est1mates
Call 99 2 2772
8 15 ""

SER~ICE

MEIGS
FURNITURE

Jrd St

Racme Ohto

GET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL
3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

$449

95
10 15 I mo pd

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI

992 3410

814-446-3159

WOOD STOVES

Want to buy Used fu nitu eand
anttquh Will buy entre Mu11e
tlold turn 1h1ng Ma In Wedl!t"

•1 2 Years Experience

. . . . 814-2.6 5152
Junk Cart

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431
10/ 13/ 8812 mo

Bmm MDVI£! &amp; SLIDES

Located Halfway
between At 7 &amp;. Bas han

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sen ce Center for Ryan
Products
8 7 F nanc ng on Yardman
Sarv ce on All Makas
We Hooor M(/0 S&lt;/VISo

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN
Toys Collectables
Clowns Porcelam
OPEN
MONDAY FRIDAY
10AM 4PM

992 7204

324

East Mam
Pomeroy Oh1o
(Beh&gt;nd C1ty Hall)
10-27 I mo d

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
K8r Heaters

W1cks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceram1c

Furnace 110 00
1

Blem Battenes

Emplovmenl
Services
11
to

let uscon•ert tho1eoldMov•
&amp; Sl des onr to easy VHS
CAll AMY CARTER
or BOB S ELECTRONICS
446 7390

L_________...,::lo:,:2::.,1:::;i;:::.,al

Annou ncemen Is
3

Announcements

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons and emodBI ng
Roof ng and gutto wo k
Concrote work
P mb ng end e ect cal
wok
(FREE ESTIMATES)

V C YOUNG Ill

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE OHIO
Most Fore1gn and
Oomest c Veh cles
A/ C Serv ce
AI MaJOr &amp;. M nor
Repa1rs

DOC VAUGHN
Cert f1ed L censad Shop

5 15 lfn

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

CHIPWOOD
POLES

Your Hometown Place
Has always offered

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

If any local
competilor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll

dl!fo.

Specializing In Chain
Unk aad Wood Fencing
•CEIUNO FANS NSTALLEU
•FIEMODEL NG •PAINT NG

•PLUMBING

•ROOANG

•DRYWAll
•DECKS

•T LE WORK
•POACHES

FREE ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Welceme

KBTH LrNCH

992 3723
10 ll 18-1 mo

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY r OHIO

992-6461

II 6 88

1800 weekly POitible Assem
blln g products SASE to Homo
Cralll P 0 Box 9006-G DT
Huntington WVa 25704
9006
Somaaneto b117(srt 111 my home
nlghta Muat be rei able. Refer
ences required Cal 614-38S.
93U
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY 01

Wa w II haul ooal for emergency

HEAP Meig1 County Dept of
Human Serv cea and HEAP

home Assembtv work Jewelry
toy• oth•s Ca I 1 819 6851857 at T8410H 24 hn

We can ghle vou
E Meel1ior Salt
Inc Pomerov Ohio

LPN 1 We •elooldngforquallty
oriented LPN 1 to wOJk lfl 1
h gh!v skilled long term c•e

New Farmers Union Tobacco
Warehouae R pi I';' Oh o Re
eelvlng tobacco ,.,., dlr{l a
week F nt Ale Nov 21 Free

for new grMII over 20 pa d dava
off first
E:~~cellent heatth
nsu ence ava1lsble Tu ton
r.,bursement Many other benefit• Contact Barb Mt:Calla.
DON P1necrt1t Ca e CentCW'
666 Jedcton Pike. Gallipolis
OhiO 41131 814-446 7112

voucher•

prompt da lver •
Worka

814-992 3891

baler tw na

tags

tobacco

seeds 83 00 per 100 for haulIng 304-176-1858 ., 513-

nu sing faciltty Earn $14 000

.,.If

392 .385

EOE

InteriOr EJCter10 You name i1:
P ofa.. IDnal pamting 14 yrs
a•p

Re•onable

81'\-258-1224

••

Call

Will do babvaitt ng n my hom~
Centenary area Ca I 614-44&amp;-

3181

Wi I do babvtitt1ng n my house
little wtllte houl&amp; n ... R o

Elementary School Ca I 614-245-9623

W II do bebysttt lng n Merc«vitle
Call 614-448-4717 or
after 6 30 PM 8 14-25&amp;-9313

Remodeling; Insulation: 100fln!J
ny Jldlng; p1 ntmg elect cal.

SIGNS Portable Lighted t299

Need g•l• to •ell Avon through
Chnstmll CaH to ...tormetkm

Free delivery letters Plaet c I.C:
tert {Half Pr eel 847 SO box
Offer axptra. Nov 115th AAA

814-. .6-2156

S1gna

son to work wfthout supervis'on

WV 1 800..842 2434

Ohio 1 800.633 3453 anytime

4

G1veaway

To good home-Wh te Doe Ra~
bit 9 moa old Call 614 446-

4585
6 moa old. long h11red bl adc
mete Cit Call 614-446 3005
1 m.le pUppy brown miXed

5 puppl• M xed br•d Part
Chihuahua Call 614 256
1584

To good home 1 year old
Austral!... Sheep Dog Call

814-992 5952
Khtena 1*1 Blue Mattese 304875 67~.
Box

ALSO.

Urgentfv Need Dependable Per

Found

FOUND Female. bteck II white
dog with tllky ha r Friendty
Coli• but no name. Call 814-

256-1568

Smell gntr tool box from prck up

truck on S•lern St In Autt•cL
R8'W'ard J•ck K eutter 814742 2733

Staff

Where You
Live

Call 992-2228
ar 992-9922
1012881mo

W I ca e for elderly pareon In my
home 304-875-4338

Financial

HELP WANTED

llfhng nvotved S3()0 per week
Profit shar ng &amp; other bMaflts
For pBI"soMIIntervhM• call814446-7451

Man ag ng CosmetoiDg at Hair
HappB1'1 ng. C.U tnY diY but
Thura &amp; Sun to make an appt

814-446-3363
Sill• Aepr•entstlv eWanted for
lo011l buam•• Some oollage
nec•aarv Pr..,lous set• experience helpfUl Sand reaume to
P 0 Box 195 B t:t.vell Ohio
45814

Now acespling app11c11110ns for
employment Lorob a P zza
SIIv• Bridge PI•• Apptv n
person

Part dme ttoor penon at Am•tc. e. Pom•ov (Pom•ov Heatt h
Care Cent_, Muat be able to
strip 8nd wu: 11oors 20 hours
P8l' week can Maraa at 614992 8606
AVON
Wet~~•

AI ar111 Call M• ty r1
304-882 2645

AN S &amp; LPNS PH full t me &amp;

LOST Male eh•tnut brown •
white Englilh Spring• Spaniel

AVON all eraas Sh rley Spe•s
304-875-1429

7

Yard Sale

8us1ness
Opportumty

NOTICE I
THE OH 0 VALLEY PU8LISKING CO recommend! thlt you
do bus ness with peop a you
know and NOT to _..d mon.,.
through the mall und you h..,a
lnvestig•ed the off• ng
P zu Aeatlllrllnt fur sale Be

your own bou E.:enent locatiOn In e growmg area s.., d

lnqu rM to Box Cia t78 c oGall pobe Da ly Tnbune 825
Thrd Ave
Gahpohs Oho
45831

1400 1 dlffl At home Process
phone orders Peop e cell you
Nationwide S45 ttart up Call
(refundable) 1 618 459 8697
Ext l1822B

Own your apparel or ehoa store

chooae from Je., Sportswear
Lad u
Men 1 ch ldren
mat•nltv large sizes petite
d.,ceweer aerobic. bridal lingene o acc•son• store Add
color anatvss Brand nam• Liz

Claeborne

Heatthtax

Lee. St M ch.re.

Cheu1

Forerva Bugf•

Org., calv Qrown lucla. over
2000 otkars or 113 99 one
price design• mutt• t er pnc ng
d scount or farnity' sOOa ltOfll
Retail pr cet unbel .wablefortop
quellty sho• normally pr ced
from t19 to $80 over 260
bratdl2800 sty lee: $17 900 to
129 900 lnviM'Itory tr11n ng.
fiKturas alrf•e. grand open ng.

SALES MULTI llNE NSU
RANCE life heatth 1uto
home CAREER OPPORTUN
1TY Ca I 304-743-8030 or
304-662 3309

.r;cepted for Ple•.-.t Vall"f
Hosph:al Nursing Care Center
Contact Personnel 304-876
4340 AAEOE.

676 2225 g

.. 773-

UP TO 016 HOUR PROCESS
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED FA EE Oats Ia
WRITE: SO 1067 W Ph IadolPh a. Suite 239 GO OntariO
Ca II 91782

Lo•t White female B81utt
Hound w th red Spoil In Laurel
Cliff Big Wheel •ee Lost
Monday Nov 7 Call 8,4-992
3028

wtth bobbed t1H ABWard 304-

~4-773-5402

etc

Stodryerds Clty limits Child'•
pet GlenDavs 814-446-7912

p.t time applications a e being

c..

open 16 d.,-s Mr
lDughl n 16121886-4228

Modern Hair Salon 11 Pl Pie•
a.n E.c h1gh traffic locattOn
Vf!IIY profit•bla. Call Huntington

304-525-3055 .. 523-7277.

23

Professional
Serv1ces

PIANO TUNING Lan&amp; Dan ahi
Also ep•s S noe 1965 Cell
614 742 2961 A so bab\1
grand p eno tor sela

Real Estale
31 Homes for Sale
,-:----.---.--:-:-:-;::--;-Very anracth'e brldc4bedroom
2 b•h. f.mlfv room w+th fir•
place formal dm ng. lwge lh'lng
room 30 ft cuatom oak kitchen
eabin«s oak woodNork. flnilh
b•ement 2 c• g.. lga ,.,...
l_.diCIPid lot 4 mil• from
Holre Hoaplt&amp;l oH Rt 35
PDrtarbrook Subd1V•10n Call
814-446-4189
4 BR ful baeement &amp; g•sga
fu tv ca patad (some nti!N)
Pr ced to sel Call 814-4480 276 after 6 PM weekends

anvt me.

3 be!i'oom RWich 1 V:! bathe
fam tv room d mng oom. 1 c•
g•age. storage building. poo._
wooden deck Sp ng Vallllf
a ea Cal 81~446-7903

Llcens.t Social Wo ker n n""'
long t•m care facdtty Exp•
rlence p fff• .:t Commensurate
salary end benefits E 0 E Mall

r•urne to Admlniltreter Care
Hav... of Polrrt Ple•ant R t 1

Galhpohs
8t Vtctmty
Mov1ng Sli•E"tlkvthlng must
gol Furniture dlth ... clothing.
etc 602 Fourth Ave Nov 10.
11 &amp; 12
GALLIPOLIS FLEA MARKET
Rt• 31 &amp; 1eo Open rNflfY S.t
•sun 9AMIPM

MAIN mEET PIZZA

mot,.
6086

for T.:aa 0 I Co In Gall polls
area Wetr1ln WriteT J 0 ck•
son Pres SWEPCO Bo•
981005 Ft Wonh. Tx 76161

LOST Female Beagle VIc nity of

Box 321 Pont Ple•ent W Va
26550
Old• wortl.ertage 515 and over
r•ldent of W..t V~rg n a. pert
t m&amp; 20 hn week t3 35 Mur

must meet DepartmMt of Labor
ncorne gu de lnee 304-8752770

w...

ted Live In comp~~niontodo
light houNkeep ng Condh Onl
negotlllble upon lnt.-vlew Alk
for Rulty 304-675-7416

Pomeroy
Middleport

&amp; VICinity
Thursdly •nd Frlct.v Nov 10th
•nd 11th 2 ml• Hysell Run

Cloth-. houallhotd ltema. tov•
Rltln at 8hlna 114-992 7113.

Nov 1Oth throuah 121h. 88t5
G.n. .IH•rtlno-Parkw.y Clothtng. home int.tor winter
COlli

bedlpr•dl mise

Govetnment Hom• from..s1 00
(U RapMr) Foraciotui'M nepoa
Tu; De nquent Proparti• Now
se ng your areea. Call, 316
736-7376 Ext 3POH-H for
eurrMt tin 24 hours
Complltet,o ,.modllled ma nt~
n.,ce fl'ee 2 story with PltiO

and b•emen.t Nice locatton
AeWced

6107

to

40 s

614-992

! room houae end blth. 11

acr• Call 814-9921844 or

12

EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER $30D

Knows

&amp; mattress for full

6 Lost and

HOME COOKED
LUNCHES

Our Dehvery

t~Pringa

tize bed 304-882 3104

THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES

match '''

Pant ng nten01 and exteno
odd jobs mferanOM free Mtl-

Boy lavl Camp Beverty Hffl1

2 dogs to give t6Way 'I small 1
mad Botti good wnh e!Uidren
Call 814 388 8132

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refngerators
Must Be Repo&gt;roblt

REPAIR

0896 Ext D 1149

YOUNG'S

CALL 992 67 56

DELIVERED TO

EJ!Perlenee op•etor Cntmeant
Conat Call 814-258 1718

HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME

A11omble proWcts at home
Pwt time Exp• ence unnecee
Sir¥ Details ca
B13 327

amp~ment No IIIDtpenenoe n~
ce~aarv Even ng work. Light

FACTORY CHOKE

GENERAL~ li'

Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work 850

Case dour Re•onebfe ates

Help Wanted

LoeaiCo nowhlrngforfultima

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

LYNCH'S

Wanted to Do

11

breed Part Pug. Call 614-266-

992 2196
M1ddleport Oh1o

$14 PER TON

2456

1648

NIASE Certified Mechamc

We Servoce All Makes
111V88/ Ifn

Used llrnituru by the pace or
entire househo d 614 742

13000 &amp; Up
Salem Straet
Rutland OhiO
742 2466
10 28 / 1 mg d

RACINE OHIO

ante

18

erea

John Dear a Mow ng Mach noModel 6 or 8 o 9 or 38 Call
614-.t48-1856 after 6 PM

VHS TAPE

Dealer for
YARDMAit &amp; ECHO

PAT HILL FORD

DEAD OR ALIVE

RHAAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE 529 Jackson Ake.
Call446 4387 A"'f No 86-lt
10558

21

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

EVERY SUNDAY

WANTED

Schools

16

Conal uc:t on.)

Full Excavatmg and Construction
Res1dent1al 8t Commerctal
Free Est1mates for Res1dent1al 8t
Farm Work
Rt 1 Vmton
388 8747
Owner &amp; Operator
11 9 t mo
Tony Cardtllo

71388tfn

9 1!1·88 Hn

Have room tor 2 eldertv 6ad• n

ou home loc.red In M ddl•
POrt Call 814-992 2750

Formerly Me1gs Excavating

10 8 tfc

ONLY

FurnitUre and applances bv the
piece or entire househo d Fa r
prcesbemgpad Cal 614 446
3158

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

We can repair and re
core rad1atars and
healer cores We can
also ac1d boll and rod
out radtators We also
repatr Gas Tanks

I 13 tft

Situations
Wanted

Btc.Call614-245 9448 B&amp;W

992 b21Sor992 7314
Pomeroy Ohto

1:00 P M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

with or without

motors Cell larry Lively 614386-9303.

We8l Brunco A8hlev
WE TRADE

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

GUN SHOOT

:u2

Complale householdl of furn

Fealurm~ Consolidated Dut("h

1 mo

"''J',:'MtnkChov Oidslnc
8 ll GoneJohnoon
e 14-.. &amp; 3872
TOP CASH ps d fu 83 model
and nMer used c•• Smhh
Bu de Pontl.c 1911 Eal'lern
Gall ooho Call 814-448

· ~-----------_;;;.;;;;..;;.;.;;;;,;;;;,_ _ _.:.;:;,;;;:;..:..;;::;..__.., tu e &amp; antiquet Also wood &amp;
I
coal heM era Swe n 1 F urnhu e
&amp; Auction Th rd &amp; 0 IVe,

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

DUSKY ST ITIIACUSI

1 3 86-tfc

2 1 ~· aa 1ttt

In lovmg memory of

WE PAY '60 00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66 00 PER GAME
L1c #006 32
10 24 1 mo

9188-fn

3~

IN MEMORIAM
In lovtng Memory of

bingo seas 1an

698-6121

The Staff Is
Back ! ! !

Wopay&lt;aohlorleltmodelcleon

THURS E 8 6 45 PM
SUN E 8 1 45 P M
DOOR PRIZE
2 H 0 FREE with coupon and purchase of mm
H C Package L1m1t 1 coupon per customer par

LOWEST PRICES

12

lns1ruct10n

224 E MAIN ST
992 9976

1171mG

6 17 tfc

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SEnLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
Accounts end vouchers of
the following named fiduc1•
181 h•e been filed tn the Pro-bate Court. Melgo Countv
Oh1o for the apprcNal 1111d

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

CHESTER OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
986 4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
10 4

EJtate. antiQue f•m hqulda
tlon sal• 304- n3-5785

BINGO

MARCUM CONTRACTING

L..sa M Murphey

Basham Bulldtng

Administration in transition stage

City Holding announces dividend

J:

614-992 5952

1-------.,---.....l-~~------....I.-------------L-------------­

s

:z
-

HUNTER
SECURITY

a.

Mason election winners announced

B

TeleviSIOn l1slemng Dev1ces
Uependable Hearmg A1d Sales &amp; Servtc
Heanng EvaluatiOns For All Ages

z LISA M KOCH M S
a: Licensed Chmcal Audiologist
~ (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104

10 Years Expertence

s

v,

(!)

•Res1dent1al
•Commerctal

w

Ohio grain report

The Daily Sentmei - Page- 13

-------------------r----------------~~------------------~--~---------------r-------------------;------------------~ cen1ed
Rl~ Pewson
A~ one. I
Oh o and West V rg n 111

~: ~6 ~~ "!,8 ~~ ~:"' f~ ~~

•1

v.

Pomeroy- Middleport Ohto

Business Services

o

~ s to3B6

~---

Pubhc N ot1ce

NOTICE OF
neth W &amp; / or Donna M Lot oon Los Sect 35 (6401
Dottle S Lot 377 59 W (640) Mid on NW I. 8 14
18 01226 000 Teaford
A':,_PF?~~Tc~!~J
OF
Sact 19 SW part OK 1 59 A
83 388 61
side Trt bock. 365 65
58 23
Gordon
Bruce
Sect
13
0
o
_
...
_
21
1988
1154160134
n 01 ~
n
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE
16 01764 000
Tumor
17 00663 000 ReevM 56 x11 0 bat rd &amp; 8erham
the
Mttgo Coumv Proboto
11 OOB42 000
Sm th
33
12
2
MEIGS
Dott a S Lot 584 n SW Jeoote Lot Sect 11 (640)W
Court. Cue No 26036 Lda
Ronald &amp; / or Charles Sect
15 00628 000
Bake
pan 441
of NE /, 1 60 13 80
1 8 01227 000 Teaford
Ebotobach. 2273
Avoro
16 SECor .2 88 19 85
Melody L Lot172 Palmer s
16 01765 000
Turner
17 00664 000 Reeves Gordon Bruce Sect 1 3
Olivo, Reynoldolxtrg, Ohto
~e~am.-.tt
and Penlltt81
11 00843 000
Smtih
3rd Add
10D S ond
Ootto S Lot 5B4 ox lou Jeoote Lot Sect 17Epertof 50 x100
below Juhler 43068 W8l appointed e....
ch•ge thareon agreeably to
Ronald &amp; / or Charles Sect
133 54
sold 8o Elberlold 18 40
NEv. 1 50 11 07
Store 06 49 90
he
law are COntained and de15 Tr NE Cor 88 9 20
18 01262 000
Turley
cutnx of t
eotate of lgo
16 00126 000
Blount
16 01786 000
Turner
17 00872 000 Whitting
SCribed n the following hat
11 OOB44 00
Smllh
Kenneth A &amp; Karen E
Pi•ott• diiCIOIId l•eof218
Rooemory
lot
15
23
N
Dottte
S
Lot
585
29
59
ton
Clifford
E
Jr
Stet
7
Vll
Ronald &amp; /or Charles Sect
stdo 16 30
16 01899 000 Van Vron
w of NW y, 1 76 6B 57 Sect 16 W aide of 4 00 A Eeot Sooond Straot. PomaName. O..crtphon Acraa,.
15 NE Cor 1 62 10 29
rat M81gl County Oh o
15 00235 000
Carsey
ken Matthew lot 189 Bur
17 OOB67 000 Winner tr.ct n..r to Beever 1 60
Total TaxN AI:-Jment'
Robert E Buck
11 01031 000 Snowden Jock W Lot 43 36 W end
nap Add Sub 20 8o 19
Brylen Edward EtAI Sect
129 45 (Land Coniroct to
Probeto Judge
andPenMI•
2 McKee Add eJt part bet
Robert L Lot Sect 3D NW 1 0 1
4 9
Manon
Sloterl
Lena
K
Ne
..
elroad Clark
BEDFORD
rd &amp; rlvor 24 44
part 13 84 85 62
000 Day For
000 w 181 Or
RACINE VILLAGE(10127 (11) 3 10 3tc
TOWNSHIP-MEIGS
09 00313 000
Cozort
11 00701 000 Stewart
rell W &amp; / or Patr c a Lot 80
val &amp; /or Betty Sa / or John
68 23
SOUTHERN
01 00033 000 Baohom
Darrel &amp;/or Florance T Lot Rou J &amp; l or Gertrude Lot Bosworth Add ex 20 part
Lot 89 8901 h
Sub 2
sunON TOWNSHIPG1ryG Jr lot Sec 18 S ~
2 McKee Add pert bet rd &amp; Sect 3 NE CorE partofNE lot 381 5!1:
19 00177 ODD &lt;lrunm
p bl Not
14 x90
Off Lot 89 V.
SOUTHERN
Rodericlt Elmer&amp;/or Mar1o- _ _ _u__
te___
~c_e_ _
nver 1 32
ofNEV. 1596 7936
v. 2545 5515
1
15 00426 000 Elhs Oren
10 79
18 00676 000
Ceoto
01 00066 000 Burson
09 00314 000
Cozart
rtt
Virgin••
Sect
1
115
~
11 01153 000
Turner
L &amp; / or Peggy L lot 15
1601927000Wioo Or
Antal Lot83 1883
!100 279) SW partof4 86A
Mark Owon Sect 13 18 all
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T Lot Dottto S
Sect 28 #2 Horton&amp; Bosworth Add
NOTICE OF
val &amp; / or Betty &amp; / or John
18 00279 OOQ Cundiff WI-I
16 1888
3 McKee Add 2 31
ofS ~ofNW V.ofrood
Langsv1lle 27 291 14
APPOINTMENT OF
51
30
Lot
B9
~
Sub
2
50
x200
Jameo
R
&amp;
Thelma
Sect
14 77 287 B3
19
00426
000
White
09 00315 000
Cozart
15 00727 000 Fox Mor
NWpartex 14 x90 80 93
30 54 321 74
FIDUCIARY
11 01154 000
Turner
Herbort J &amp;/or Patsy S
01 00067 001
Burson
Darrel &amp;/or Florence'T lot
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP1B 00283 000
Curt 11
On October 21 1988 n
Do1t1e
S Sect 26 out of tho L Lot 38 Behan s 2nd
32A out of 6 23A tn NE tho Melga County Probota
M1rk Owen Sect 18 S I'; of 3 McKee Add ex pert bat
Add about 40 x80 70 48
MEIGS
Charlee T Sect 16 port of Cor
52 38A NW part 07 1 83
of Ul d parcel 32j
NW v, 1 80 19 93
rd &amp; river 23 14
Court Caoe No 26037
15 00519 000
Goorv
17 00516 DOO
Ander
1064AtractWofWolfRun 50 82
11 01155 000
Turner
01 00354 000 Hazelton
09 00316 000
Court
Max
EtAI
Lot
pt
2B6
W
~
son
W
II
am
&amp;
Ltnde
Lot
3
00
27
74
Farndora Schaefer Story
Dottto
S
Sect
26
part
of
19 00428 000
Whitt
James A 8./or Vada J Lot
Darrel 81/ or Florence T Lot
ofS V,286&amp;W Y, N16 Lot
Sect 21 Fr 30 W end.
18 012B1 000 Doerfer
40675 laurel Chff Road
63A 24 771
Sac 13 8 N Part of SE V.
HarbOr! J &amp;/or Patsy S
4 McKee Add ax port bot
11 01324 00
Turner
284 104 87
8 236 182 66
Henry &amp;/or Mary Stet 24 Sect 18 (840) 10 47A W Pomeroy Ohto 46769 woo
17 50 73 27
rd &amp; rrvar 6 96
15 00529 000
G lkey
17 OOD71 000
Ebl n
s part of 30A NE part of pert #4 of Rae ne 6 234 appointed E•ecutriX of the
Roger C &amp;lor Dotte S
01 00891 000
Nollam
09 00317 ODD
Cozart
Betty Lot(45)#45 23x45
GeraldS &amp; / or lnde Lot 107AN 300 25757
estate of Edna P Schaefer
Sect
26
Langsv
lie
34
78081
Otl &amp; Goo Corp lot Sac 1
Darrell&amp;./ or Florence T lot
dece01ed late of 40575
154
08
W
o~d
5
29
Sect
15
SW
Cor
ex
1
A
S
18
00599
000
Holman
SYRACUSE VILLAGE 16401 SE Cor 99 36 83
5 McKee Add 2314
15 00530 000
G Ikey
16 934 189 90
Jooeph w Sect 23 SW
Laurel CI1H Road Pomeroy
11 01325 000
Turner
SOUTHERN
01 00648 000 Sautero.
09 00318 000
Cozart
BottyLot(45)#4545x90 N
17 OD071 001
Ebhn
Cor~ 31A 1106&amp;
Melgo Counly Ohio
Roger C &amp;/or Dottle S
20 00634 000 Counto
E leon •/ or L Chnat ne
Darrel
or Florence T lot
s de 300 85
GeraldS &amp; / or L nda Fr 2
1B 00988 000 Proffitt
Robert E Buck
Sect
26
2
on
W
11de
of
Lot
Vtrglnte
lot Sect 1 N E part of SW V.
A
13
Crooks
1
ot
8 McKee Add 6 96
15
00531
000
Gilkey
N
Stdo
of
Twp
Rd
259
out
Dorothy
w
Sect
3
of
w
Probate Judge
3
8o
Tn
05
3
02
43 00 269 75
Add 9 D3
09 00319 000
Cozart
of1900A 2068 1292
~ex coal 4000 9824
Lena K Nu•lroad Clerk
11 00472 00 Wtnebren BattyLou LotSect 29S29
20 00186 000 Limbert
01 00649 000 Sautero
Darrel &amp;/or flornce T Lot 7
(10) 27 (11)3 10 3tc
1 7 00274 000
Estep
18 00987 ODO Proffitt
ner Roger G S./or Oelor s 44A M d of 5 41 A W ol
Allah A 7 Crooks ht Add
E Leon &amp;/or L Chnatma
McKee Add 6 95
James E &amp;lor Debbte L
DorothyW Soct 9EofRd
J
Lot
Suet
1
SE
Cor
of Carney 44 449 34
59 41
lot Sect 13 1 S of SW v.
08 00320 000
Cozart
Harper
Lot Sect Fr 13Wend1 42A ox 12 V.A
46 00
15 01787 000
22 27A NE Cor &amp; Cor
21 21 74 74
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T lot
Carol Ann Lot 3B Sheff aid
out of 2 B39A 466 77
120 25
And not-,. herobv given
Hgwy 90 216 22
01 00660 000 S1utero.
8 McKee Add 6 95
#38
18&amp;
85
17
00947
000
Htll
Fred
18
00265
000
Stophon
!hot
tho whole of ouch RUTLAND
VILLAGE
E Leon &amp;/or L Chr tttne
09 00321 000
Cozart
16
01788
000
Harper
8
&amp;
/
or
Annalu
Lot
Sect
1on
Doneld
C
Sh~rleyA
eral
tracts.
loti or part1 of
lotSect 131 NEpartofSE
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T Lot
12 00025 000
Black Caro Ann Lot 3914 offN
25 (6401 und Vt 1nt 1ncoal Sect 17 SE Cor out of Iota. w1ll ba certHied for fo-v, of NE v, 8 00 31 31
122 part of mtll lot 3D
Warren G &amp; Sharon L
3980
&amp;othermln 7100 23fi0
229A 115 5781
,.cloou.,bvlheCountyAu
CHESTER
2 31
Sect B (640) out of 3 63A atde
15 01789 000
Harper
17 00548 000 M tchell
1B 01399 000
Stoke
dMor pur..,.nt to lew or
TOWNSHIP-EASTERN
from
Sam Sm1th 023
09 01630 000
Cozart
Carol Ann Lot 39 Sheffield
PatE &amp;/or Marcello S lot Clyde F &amp;/or El11aP Sect
forloltad to tho State unleoa
Darrel &amp;/or Florence T Lot 8 06
03 00616 001
Fttch
24 x96 N s de 67 73
8 93 S ode 38 10
29 NW part of E 24 V.A
the Texeo A-omenta. end
1 McKoe Add 18 21
12 00408 000
Houee
Steve T &amp;/or Tere11 A
15 01790 000
Harper
17 00549 000 Mitchell
1 00 7 67
Penaltleo are pold
hold of Fatth Church 8 Par
09 00343 DOD
Elkins
Sect 3 NW Cor 1 50A out
Carol
Ann
Lot
39
Behan
PatE
&amp;/or
Marcella
Lot
7
18
01225
000
Teaford
Will1am W1ckhne
sonego 16 23
Dev d l &amp;/or Jud th C
of1041A 160 1733
Add 40 x96 off S otde
32 BO
Gordon Bruce Lot 100 301
Aud tor of
Sect 36outof90 96A 45
012 00296 00
S11oon
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
420
82
17
OD863
000
Reaves
NW
of
1/16A
of
Wtlllemo
Metgs
County
Ohio
38 98
Luctlle EtAI Sect 8 (640) W
15 01791 000
Harper
Ethel N EtAI Lot Sect 32 lot 16 3 83
Nov 10 17
ALEXANDER
09 00444 000
Elkins
of German Lot 67 80 82
06 00093 000
Ceoto
Carol
Ann 21LotS4045Behan
Dav1d l &amp;/or J ud th C
12 00312 000 Spengler
Add ax
x96
Jeff &amp; Moore Larry A 51 ot Sect 36 out of 90 96A 45
Jamoo S./ or Phyllis Sect B 309 9D
Add N ~ 3 85
73 04
(640) W of Cr port 50
15 01792 000
Horpor
05 00094 000
Caito
322 54
09 00528 000
Hall
Carol Ann Lot5266 x100
Jeff &amp; Moore Larry A 6111 Glenn Robert Sa./ or Mary K
12 00313 000 Spangler
88 59
Add 3 65
Sect18W~ofSE ~outof James &amp;/or Phylhs Sect
16 01793 000
Harper
05 0026B 000 Milliken
80A 20 00 80 98
14B(840)EofSt Ad Nof Carol Ann Lot 53 14 off N
Quayle the junior Indiana
Shetle A Stet 9 10 Fr 12
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres
team arranged a breakfast
Cr &amp; alley 60 8 84
DB 00529 000
Hall
sdo 15 25
NE port 49 512 115 23
senator
said he was delighted
meeting
today
ldent
Reagan
elated
that
George
with
the
Cabinet
12 00314 000 Spangler
Glenn Robert &amp;lor Mary K
15 01794 DOD
Harper
05 D0259 ODD M lltken
Sect 18 SE v. of SW ~of James 811 or Phyllis Sect 8 Carol Ann Lot 53 Behan
Bush
will
follow
h1m
to
the
Oval
lo
give
them
their
Instructions
to
be
part
of lhe team But he
Sheila A Sect 3 SW of NW SE V. 20 00 BO 98
(640) N part ol3 D7A 65
40
x42
SE part back of lot
left
after
the Rose Garden
Office
called
the
Cabmel
to
Later
In
lhe
day
Reagan
was
!. &amp; NWof SW V. 1000
7 64
#39 1145
09 00661 000 Huffmon
appearance
while Reagan and
gether
today
to
begin
the
process
26 23
10
preside
at
a
Cabmet
session
lo
12 00399 000 Ttllll Jaf
16 01795 000
Harner
Denz•l&amp;./orlule Lot15Ar
OS 00260 000 Mtlllken
Bush
got
down
to work
of
transferring
power
to
the
new
thank
his
advisers
for
their
frey L &amp;/or Debra J NW Carol Ann Lot 63
ex
2nd
Sub
Shetlo A Sect 9 15 Fr 2 S bough 1
part of 84A E end eK Lot N
Before
adjourning
Inside the
administration
support
and
45 x54 S part&amp; 40 x42 SE
to
tell
them
their
100
x140
22
68
hna of N ~ E ofroad 35 67
21 281 32
part 17 77
09
00708
DOD
Joneo
resignations
are
expected
by
Bush
arnved
at
the
White
White
House
the
president
said
BB 66
SALEM TOWNSHIP Franklin &amp;/or Diane N part
1501796000
Harper
06 00261 000 Milliken
House
upon
returning
from
Jan
20
to
give
Bush
a
free
hand
to
he
approved
of
Bush
s
first
MEIGS
Carol Ann Lot 54 Behan
ofEand 50 19442
Shoola A Sect 9 Fr 3 N of
Cabinet choice of campaign chief
Texl}s Wednesday one day alter make his own appointments
13 00403 000
Ba11
Add 22 x42 NE Cor 6 74
09
01544
DOD
Magnum
Throckmorton&amp; W of road
John L lot 9 146 71
Meeting
with
Reagan
for
the
his
victory
m
the
presidential
James Baker as secretary of
15
00805
000
Keaoee
Gu
6.
011
Inc
EtAI
M1neral
47 00 109 24
13 00404 000
Bass
JamosE &amp;/orlndaE Lot
Rtghta under 40A 40 00
sweepstakes
Reagan
welcomed
first
time
smce
winning
lhe
state
Baker who was Reagan s
05 00623 001 Sanders. 24
John L Lot 10 9 62
65 Colhn S Sub Dtv Sub 4
05
his
Ronald L &amp;/or Audrey J
v1ce
president
at
a
Rose
presidency
Tuesday
Bush
was
chief
of staff and treasury
13 00096 000 Canter
5 87x50 411 54
Man
09 00859 000
Sect 20 Fr 25 E part 188
Garden ceremony and said he grateful to his boss for going secretary
has been fine in
bury Gary &amp;/or Teresa
15 Q0957 000
Mart n
doloon
Jeffrey
EtAI
Sect
99
Sect 1 8 near m d of Sect
mterpreted
the
vote
as
a
vlndica
Frankhn &amp; / or Ida Mae Lot
that
extra
mile
to
campaign
every
job
thai
he shad here In the
3
9
NW
part
of
43
45A
pert
05 00622 001 Sanders.
18 on W
o do 11 00 13 Bohon Add 37 NWCor
ex
1
60A
W
1
DO
2
31
tlon
of
the
admimstrat1on
s
con
administration
Reagan said
for
him
Ronald L &amp;/or Audrey J
284 61
33 x100 386 74
09 00880 000 Mandel
servat1ve
policies
Sact 20 Fr 19 N part6 79A
Once
viewed
as
a
political
13 00200 000 George
son Jaffrey EtAI Sect 9
15 01171 000
Roush
out of 88A 6 79 70 71
I thmk the mandate has been moderate the vice president who
Everett &amp;/or Sandy Sect
10
E
V.of42ASE
port
of
ox
Harry
C
Jr
&amp;
/
or
Ella
0 Lot
05 00196 001
Werner
31 N y, of SE ;, of SW II
unmistakably
delivered Rea wrapped himself In Reagan s
2A
SE
part
21
00
48
57
480
Horton
s
Add
70
Jo Ann Sect 34 N of SR
10 50 26 33
09
00881
000
Mendel
x124
342
89
gan
said
asserting
conservative mantle said
I hat Bush had
I
348 18A out of 59 44A
13 00201 DOD Goorge
oon Jeffrey EtAI Sect 3 9
15 01172 000
Roush
1800 8277
helped
make
our
change
now
a
don
t
believe
there
s
a
case
in
Everett &amp;/or Sandy Sect
NW part of 43 46A E part
HarryC Jr 11. / orEIIaO Lot
LEBANON TOWNSHIP permanent feature of American modern presidential politics
COLUMBUS Ohio (UPI) 36 N V:z of NW ex 6A ex
1506346
part of Lot 477 SE part of
SOUTHERN
4 516A 70 484 303 66
09-D0871
ODD
M
llor
government
The
average closing prices (per
where
a
president
has
worked
so
lot
Pomeroy
Add
D7 00882 ODD Bell Terry
13 00390 000 Lambert
ROIJOI'
0
EtAI
Sect
19
of
10
6x70
3
66
This
is
not
the
end
of
an
era
bushel)
paid to farmers by grain
hard
to
help
someone
else
L &amp;./or Ceria Sue Sect 19
R chard L &amp;/or Barbara S
15 01536 000
Saun
N ~ of 20A S part of 40A S 37A in NW Cor of 70A Sect 15 12 E of NE y, ax
time
lo
refresh
and
but
a
elevators
In the principal mar
achieve
this
office
#120 2 00 45 28
ders Da11y Lot 1 68 Bosof NW II 24 31 104 86
streng1hen
our
new
beginning
Reagan
opened
keting
areas
his
remarks
of Ohio today
#4
VBIO
C081
59
88
09 00887 DOD Mtyosh
worth 41x111 132 74
07 00079 000
Carter
539 61
he
said
In
facl
to
those
who
ro
Wayne
&amp;lor
Karen
Sue
wearing a wide grin If anyone
Northeast Ohio No 2 wheat
15 00734 000 Scarber
John J Lot 26 Old Port
13 00645 000
S Ivers
Sect 17 N V. of NW V•
ry Bernard &amp; / or Frances
sometimes
flatter
me
with
talk
of
wants
to
know
how
I
feel
just
$3
92 No 2 shelled corn$2 63 No
land 5 31
Danny A Sect 26 M1d on Lot 4 Webb &amp; Earnshaw 4
07 00181 001
Clark 8000 83414
a
Reagan
Revolution
today
my
2
oats
$2 63 No 1 soybeans $7 78
read
our
smiles
he
said
a
S
I
ne
of
N
Vl
ex
#4
ve
n
09 01220 000
Young
39 90
Terry &amp; / or Tracy Sect 30
hope
Is
this
You
aln
t
seen
Northwest
Ohio No 2 wheat
coal 4 613 444 44
variation
on
Bush
s
trademark
David
E
&amp;/or
Daphne
G
16
0023B
000
Sp
ras
NE Cor of SW y, 10 0017
13 00646 OOD
S Ivers
Sect
31
NW
part
ofthe
NE
nothing
yet
Jack
lot
146
&amp;
165
lme
of
the
campaign
Read
my
$4
02
No
2
shelled
corn $2 65 No
58 34
Danny R Sect 26 out of 229 99
v. 1000 693B
Appear
ngoverwhelmedbyhls
hps
no
new
taxes
2
oats
$2
80
No
1
soybeans
$7 85
07 00105 000 Cooper
20A 393 5 00
09 01525 DOD Zartman
1501321000
Stone
Garv Sact 11 S of 1 OOA
v1ctory
and
somewhat
subdued
Central
Ohio
No
2
wheat
Reagan
also
offered
his
con
13 00697 000
Stress- Renee M Lot 413 E part of
Pat EtAI Sect 36 S E part of
lot182 55 65 33
Bush called Reagan a giant
man Joseph Sect 5 N E Grant
gratulations to the defeated $3 96 No 2 shelled corn $2 67 No
sw v. 30 50 75 35
St Pom
Add
07 00168 001
Do 1v
Cor 18 86 521 68
ORANGE
TOWNSHIP
679
89
said
It
s
sinking
In
the
and
Democratic ticket of Massachu
2 oats $2 78 No 1 soybeans $7 80
Sue Sect 18 1 40A out of
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
EASTERN
15 01130 OOOTyree Da
enormity
of
all
that
has
setts
Gov
Michael
Dukakis
and
West Central Ohio No 2wheal
61 04A 1 40 94 00
-MEIGS
1 0 00155 000
Carns
v1d Lot 69 Coalport 30 x60
07 00181 000
Deeter
happened
Sen
Lloyd
Bentsen
of
Texas
$3
97 No 2 shelled corn $2 70 No
14 00240 OOCox Jemao Wend. 27 70
Arovle L Sect 30 E hne W han Dav1d L &amp;/or Janet K
After
the
ceremonial
welcome
Speaking
lo
all
the
candidates
he
2
oats
$2 98 No 1 soybeans $7 89
Sect
11
NE
Cor
ex
&amp;.
I
or
Margaret
Sect
34
POMEROY VILLAGE
v. 19 2483 56 34
!3271
of
NW
part
1
lOA
NE
1D
60A
E
13
00
9408
VIce
President
which
included
said
MEIGS
Each
of
you
Is
better
for
It
Southwest
Ohio No 2 wheat
D7 00389 000 Long. Eu
pertof22 97AWSR#7 55
10 OOD61 001
Pull ns
1 6 00275 000
Caton
elecl
Dan
Quayle
his
wife
gene V Sect 2&amp; Lot 840
and
so
Is
the
country
$3
98
No
2
shelled
corn $2 62 No
131 12
Joaeph W II am &amp; E Faye
M chael &amp; / or MarJor e Lot
SW Cor 2 5A out of 10A
Manlyn
and
Barbara
Bush
The president Indicated he 2 oats not available No 1
14-01417 000 Cox Jomao 1 1 Naylors A un 84 71
Sect 23 N of SR 681 ou1 of
2 50 32 00
Reagan
and
Bush
discussed
knew
the candidates were llred soybeans $7 84
Ba./or
Margaret
Sect
34
37A
6
80
59
84
16
00276
000
Caton
07 D0524 000
Patter
(100
3271
of
10
47A
NW
nf
plans
for
the
transition
penod
10 00594 000 Russell
M chael &amp; / or Marjor e Lot
o! polillcs but he could not resist
Trends No 2 wheat un
aon James B Sect 36 ••de
SA #7 60 98 60
262 18 SE Cor of Farm
Edd e Jr Lo1 Sect 10 Mtd
and Jan 20 maugural
of SW V. 3 7586 109 89
delivering
a
few
partisan
shots
changed
No 2 shelled corn
14 00247 001
Cox
75 3 61
on N hne. 2 50 5 98
07 00487 000 R fa Ken
and
saying
Bush
got
a
mandate
unchanged
No 2 oats un
While
House
chief
of
staff
James C &amp;. I or Margaret A
10 00696 000 Russell
16 00280 000
Chap
neth Wayne •/ or Donna
on
critical
matters
to
carry
on
changed
No
1 soybeans
Sect
34
35
100A
Lot
329
to
Kenneth
Dubersteln
chosen
Eddie
Jr
Lot
Sect
10
Span
man Anna Mar e Lot 206
Mere Sect 19 Mid on W
11
16A
of
23
6BA
11
15
unchanged
of
E
V•
42
99
150
09
25
V.
x57
~
SW
Cor
his
legacy
head
the
president
s
transition
lneofNW v. 1713 4001
28 81
37 97
10 00624 000 Sharpe
07 00766 000
Sellars
14 00255 DOD
Oatley
Will
am
B
&amp;./or
Sharon
16 01226 000
Cl ck
Darrell Lee &amp;./or Wanda
JamBI Jr &amp;./ or Bonn1e
Lou 1416 E and N V2
Sab a J lot 632 S ;, oflot
Sect 22 (70 1901 ex 1 A 11 463 53 34
Sect 32 (640)1n N partE of 532 3B6 808 69
NW 89 00 386 97
road 8 60 291 75
1D 00390 000
Stutler
16 00339 000
Cr tes
07 00969 000
Whrta
14 00256 DOO
Oat I ey
Lnda Lot2621776x100
OeWayne &amp;/or Martha Lot
Herbert J &amp;/or Patty S
Sect 27 Und '!. of 28A NW James Jr &amp;I or Bon me
S of Un on Avanue 10 40
I
Sect 8 m1d of NW v. on N part 28 50 66 26
Sect 33 (6401 M d of S hno
16 00667 ODD Grueoar
line 2 38 6 31
Republican Gov Arch A Moore Jr her Bill Wtlhers a Democrat ofSEV•ofSW~ 50 393
10 00391 000
Stutler
By Charles A Mason
All e EtAI Lot 262 17 25A
LETART TOWNSHIP 14 00302 000 Duckett
DeWayne &amp;/or Martha lot
for Democrat Gaston Caperton 5 618to4 807
SofUn
on
Ave
Pom
Wline
SOUTHERN
Sect 33 Und of 76 95A Stanley 0 &amp;/or Leona G
3part 361
6,261
10
4
602
accordmg
to
unoffi
Mason County also decided to
Republicans
won
the
sheriff
and
DB DD136 000 Cooper
Sect 27 (2621 W of cr ex
16 00668 000 Grueoer
Mtd ""' E
line 57 71
Garv Lot 18 Youngs Add N
cia!
totals
m
all
39
county
keep
mcumbent magtstrates Paul
county
commiSSioner
s
races
two
133 83
1 30A to St rd
2 17
All a EtAI Lot 436 2 79
y, 8 07
318 57
precmcts
The
last
precmct
rolled
m
Snooky
Sm11h and John Andy
10 00392 000
Stutler
mcumbent
Democrat
county
16 01167 000 Jaspers
08 00137 000 Cooper
14 01455 ODD Ferry Do
DeWayne &amp;/or Martha Lot
at
about
2
a
m
Uus
monung
Wilson
who
bolh beat back a chal
Nancy
J
Lot
1
198
58
magistrates
retamed
theu
pos&gt;l!ons
Gary lot 15 Youngs Add
Sect 27 Und V. of 38A NW v d A Sect B (640) on
1
8'
01168
000
Jaspers
The
Democrats
stale
mandate
and
long
lerm
GOP
mcumbcnts
at
lenge
from
lone
Republican Btll
23 83
part 9 50 22 18
Athans R d n #7 Radford
Nancy J Lot 2 Plantz Add
wh&gt;ch
saw
all
but
one
state
office
08 00138 000 Cooper
assessor
and
prosecuung
atiOmey
Wellman
Sm11h
led
lhe race WIIh
2
84
10 00393 ODD
Stutler
ex 25 E 1 de 6 01
Gary Lot 14 Youngs Add ex DeWayne &amp;/or Martha Lot
end
up
Republican
Cleve
14 1456 000 Ferry De
6
943
votes
followed
by Wilson
waltzed
to
v•clory
m
Mason
1601169000 Joapars
50 Node 6618
Sect 33 Und y, of 79 96A 11Jd A Sect B (6401 E of St
Benedict as agncultural comm1s w11h 6 557 Wellman pulled m
Nancy J Lot 100 299 06A County Tuesday according to un
DB 00274 000
Heyao
N of Mtll Lot 292 53
M d onE I na19 24 44 73
30 x77 Jo nmg Lot 1 E part
s10ner - faltered when It h1t the 4523
offic&gt;allotals
~
Paul W &amp; Katr1na M Sect
14 00419 000 Forrest
10 00394 000
Stutler
15 20
Mason County line and lhe county
Nearly
70
percent
of
the
county
Voters
retained
mcumbent asses
32 on N line of NW
Ed th L S. Homer Sect 31
DaWayna &amp;/or Martha C
1~ 01897 000
K ttlo
16 50 47 29
{640) near M d on S part ex
Lot Sect 33 '" center aec
sor Orv1lle Buck Sturgeon - a
James 8 Lot 1 2 Naylors voters took advantage of Tuesday s GOP from garnered several offices
08 00275 DOD
Hayeo
2 60A N pert
64 02
!ton 45 00 276 97
Run60x113 31786
perfect fall wealher srud County mcludmg a GOP maJonty on lhe 16 year Republican veteran - m a
Paul W &amp; Katr.na M Sect
404 25
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP16 01668 000 Klatn Wtl
Clerk Tommy Hanes Officials srud counly commiSSion on Jan I
battle WIIh mcumbent shcnff
11 32 N of W y, 6 25
14 00420 000 Forrest
MEIGS
ham L Lot 306 40 x50
Republican Paul Em1e Wauer Robert Bob Fruth a Democrat
II 313 out of 16 318 voters cast
14 85
Ed th L &amp; Homer Sect 36 204 06
11 01578 000 Chovar
08 00278 000
Haves
(100) E 22A Wend of E y,
r a Carloa &amp;. Brenda R I
lhetr ballots for a 69 perccnl tur son was catapulted to a resoundmg Sturgeon got 5 720 votes 10 Fruth s
16 01 68B 000 Kle n Wtl
Paul W 8t Katnna M Sect
Herald 011 &amp;: Gas Co Carlos 59016BOO
shenff s race victory over meum 4 924 Incumbent GOP prosecutor
ham l
Part of lot 307 nout
32 onE hnaofW ~ 19 25
14 01766 000 Gruesar
Chavarrta #1 L 0 4 16
40 x50 96 75
bent Democrat CommiSSIOner Damon B Morgan unopposed
Mason
County
embraced
Mas
631 18
A L Coal 1 57 1 11
11 00159 000 Cleland
16 01568 001 Klein Wtl
Thomas
D 'Tucker Mayes sachusetiS
Gov
Michael
Dukak.is
08 00277 000
Hayes
won easJI y w&gt;lh 6 592 votes
14
00497
000
Grueoer
Conme Darlene Sect 19
I am L Part of Lot 307
Peul W &amp;. Katrma M Sect
Alho EtAI Sect 26 (640) SE 3119
lot 1 out of 35 07A 1 00
and Sen Lloyd Bentsen by a small 5 548 10 4,227 - and voters put
Mason County voters turned
32 NW 13 60 24014
port Ex 2A 25 52 83 71
108 40
political newcomer Larry Sayre down Amendment No I which
16 01567 000 Kle o Wtl
margm
over
na110nal
wmners
Vtce
11 00981 002
Daley
08 00495 000
Par..,.
14 00699 000 Hatfield
leml Lot40x50 1919 Pres•denl George Bush and Sen
also a Republican m lhe comm1s would have given county school
Robert E &amp;:/ or Carolyn A
Jooephino,
l&lt;rt 128
Wallace P &amp;/or Donna J
16 01118 000
Marttn
s1oner s chaJr over fanner Mason boards more financ1al ftex1b1lity
x126 X120 x160 X181
50
Sect 2 NW Cor of Werrys Sect 18 (6401 SE part of Herman Lot 53 Naylors Dan Quayle - 5 460 to 5 323 County
Board of Educauon mem w11h I 638 for and 5 728 agams~
NW
;,
9
07
24
93
8319
out of 12 70A 1 70 43 72
and JOined West Vugmta m ousl!ng
Run 56 59
14 00897 000
Hyeall
08 00524 000
Prof
11 00315 000
Faw
16 02345 000
Morns
fitt Dorothy W Sect 2 Mtchael Shay Sect 24 N Roger W1ll am Sect 31 Jeffrey A Lot 465 Cor Lao
(640) 1 30A of 66 59A nr
(160 1211) E part of 180 I na of NE v. 7 37 14 32
loy 8o Mulberry 232 97
M d N y, of N ln 32
lot 1211 2 00 14 18
1100318000
Few
16 00138 000 Perkins
30 24
08 00525 000
Prof
MlchHI Shay Sect 24 SE
Jameo W &amp;/or Jud th L
14 009B1 000 Jeffers
fltt Dorothy W Sac! 2 par IX 23A E 141 25
Lot 262 17 1 DBA pert of
John R Sect 9 (262) out of Sub 435 ex coal 1 08
(1110 1211) N 1h ofW V.&amp;E 702 95
The board of duectors of Ctty will recetve one add11!onal share assets of $290 mlllion and cap11al
9 34A SW Cor ex 10 34A
ondofS
4675 15601
11 00572 000
Keo . .
61 16
Hold
ng Go a bank holding com The board has taken lhts acuon due of $25 2 million Th1s represents an
30 3 93
Jameo E &amp;/or Linde E
16 00139 000 Perk no.
pan
y
headquartered m Charleston to lhe excellent growlh and mcrease of more than $54 mtllton
08 00713 000
Vance Sect 7 M d on N llna ex
14 00982 000 Jaffera James W &amp;/or Jud1th L
John R Sect 9 (262) out of Lot 262 17 15A Sub 435
Lawrence B Sect 36 (214) cool und 3 71A 47 71
West Vug1ma has announced Its eammgs of C•ty Holding Co m assets and almost $5 miii&gt;on m
1-1 19 92 102 86
NE Cor ol 9 91A
57
162 06
fourth quarter div&gt;dend of 15 cents dunng the past year accordiog 10 capnal over the same penod m
'A ex coal 15 13 69
318 111
OLIVE TOWNSHIP11-001179 000 McKnight.
16 00742 000 Powers
per
share Th1s represents a 15 per president and chauman of the 1987
14 01240 000
Roach
EASTERN
Caro1o &amp;/or Betty A Sect B
Robart F &amp;/or June A Lot
cent
mcrease from the third quarter board James L Bums The stock
Raymond Sect 27 (262) 425 Wohe Add Sub 16
08 000011 000
Adamo of SE V. 0&gt;t cool out of 20A
Record earmngs of $1 777 000
dividend
of 13 cents per share The dlVldend IS an actJOn wh1ch w11l were posted through September
Dala&amp;/or Bonnie Sect 17 2 199 413 51
Fr 24 W of creek out of 3440
3213A 235 35129
SW V. of SE y, 41 00
11 00229 000
Naut
cash cti v1 ie 1d to shareholdelll of g1ve to the shareholders of C1ty 1988 compared 10 $1 764 000 for
16 00743 000 Powers
1811 07
zl ng Chorleo &amp;I or Carolyn
14 01394 000 Sprouoo
Robert F &amp; / or June A Lot
record Dec I 1988 will be prud Holdmg Co lhe benefit of this fine lhe same penod of 1987 C!ly
08 01779 000
Adamo. Sect 12Mid olE !-INofCr
Charles Ia/ or
Erneat1ne
425 Sub 17 299 99
Dec 15 1988
perfonnance Bums srud
Dolo B &amp; Bonmo D Rl
110 6916
Holding Co common stock ts
Sect 8 (640) S port of 7 A
16 01389 000
Quells
Clly Holding whtcli recently ac
The
Board
has
also
declared
a
50
WhMnem
1 BBO II Dalt
11 00117 001
Powell
NE part of 8 of Pom Ches
James Edward Lot 266
lraded on NASDAQ under the
Adamo #1 land Owner Tern Sect 1 Mtd ofS ~out
percent stock eli vldend to sharehol qmred Bank of Ripley operates 10 symbol CHCO and Ctl{fently 1s
80 21 52
Traina Add W 28 115 40
11110
of 65 26A 1 00 383 25
1401395000 Sprouee
16 01371 000
Qualla
ders of record Dec 15 1988 and full semce banking locauons m tradmg between $30 and $33 per
01 00935 000
Blade
11 01083 000 Rile Ken
Marv Lot 31 8 78
Chart. 6/or
Ern..tlne
will be prud Dec 30 1988 The ef West VIrgm•a Charleston Cross share Th1s represents an apprec1a
bum. Burford Ann &amp;/or noth W &amp;/or Donne M Lot Sect 8 (840) pert of 4 26A
16 00777 000
Slotor
feet
of the stock d1v1dend w1ll be Lanes Pomt Pleasant Mason New liOn of more lhan 114 percent m lhe
Dlkt lot 19 24 N ~ of
Sect 25 on E line of NE V.
Mid E of NE V. 1 DO
Marion D Lot 172 S 45
pert of E 11de pert of 17 42 400 1287
for
every
two shares of stock Haven Ramelle Rupen and last two years
709 63
SW end 289 11
A 7 88 186 64
11 01084 000 R fa Ken
14 01474 000 Thomo
16 01763 OCO
Turner
presently owned the shareholders Ripley Ctty Holdmg now has tollll
DELINQUENT LAND TAX
NOTICE
The IMido lotundPortsof
loto returned Deltnquent bv
the
Tr-urer of Meiga
Coomv With the Tax• Ao-

--

Situations
Wanted

Would like 1 ltv•ln fenlllle
complnion Pie•• w lte ThoR~~e• At 2 BOll 34&amp;

m•
VInton. Ohkl 415888

Will ewe for llld•h' man or
women In our home. Call
814-992 8515
Mother otonewll 00 beb¥alttlng
in "- home M F Ex!*l .. c»d
rtf•tnc. a~allable 114-992
5036

614-742 2385

3 badooom home lwge 1v ng
room and kitchen 1 b•h. utility
room 24•31 blade p-ea.

chlln Nnk ,_,oe lot 100~;119
phone 304176 •12a: after
50DPM
3 bedroom home wfth c. pon
maintenance free •terior 1
bel~
equipped k• .., ..
oenlrt •r elecJtrlc he• fin,
c•pet. fireplace wtth luclt
satelh:e dlth. OelllpoUt
Ferry a ea. •&amp;2.100 00 Owner
fin.,c ng wlltlable. 304-8756033

runv

•ow

�-·-.Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
31

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

3 be$oom home, 11h b.thl.
c•patad, central air· he•. tocited in Point Ple•ant. 304-

32 Mobile Homes
• for Sale
1988- Moon 12x50. 2 eR .
t2300. Call 814-4411-0390..
19 71 Eloono. 2 BR .. r..v wiring.

• 12x85. 4x8tip.out. t3000. Call
, 814-3&amp;7-711111ft• 8 PM .

·· ------------------1984 2"" 52
3 BRo.. 2
lll blllttw,

cond.

ooctiono~
grtNit room.

Frend'l

814-4411-9340.

Ctty

14x.70, 3 SR ., 11-l batha. GOOd

1918 Flootwood. 12x54. bottle

o• h... ll'ld hot w•••· *3000. .
Ask for

2 bedroom 1 2x 50. $1900.
30 4-11715-2722.

1988

8riunv 1 .4x70,

t10.000.00. 304-882-2B44 ...

, . 5:00.

19aosherwood
f'ark 14k70,
•II
electric wtth fir.l.ce.
'-1-.d

'""""' 2 bedroomo. 1 bath.

houM type windows. plush
c•pet1, m... inlulltion. exc
con(ltion. brand nav 18~ 000. 00
btu Whlrpool elr cond. al•o
Montgomery W•d dryer In-

for Rant

3 bedroom•. t226. per month

• 1983Tr&gt;.mph, 1""80,- odd

3 be*oom home Yllith ful
b•..,., loC11ed N8IN Haven,

' WId dryer, und•penning ., d

' tt.ck. .., «c cond. Call 814-

: 387-7120

Of

304-8715-2047.

; 1980 Patriot 14xiSO. wa1her &amp;
• dryer. ic. front porch with

Menor and Fnv . .ide Apert·
menu In Mlddl~tPOrt . From

304-6711-2389.

, Good cond. Fwnilhed. AC. 1
, acre l.,d Stor~ge bldg. &amp;
• u•eo• Loclll:_. on Lam bert
· Butler LanttRt. 2 Vinton. 4mll•
' from Rio Grande. 814-388-

: 9825.
' 80 acie f•m. Free gM. Last
pleoeonHytell Run Rd . With or

' wtthout tral•. 81'-992-3890

e14-992-8057.

J,, 304-5715-

·,2336.

Rentals
' 41

Nlctllv furnithed •maM houn.
. Adutts only. Ref. required. No
" pets. Coli 614-4415-0338.
~ 3 BR ., AC. c•per. pool. i•llf&amp;
2 ftretl-=-. fen~. Oood Joe.
tlon. Calf A-1 Real E.t ..e
Brok•, 304-87&amp;-6104.

Unfu,.nilhed houM, 2 BR .
NeighborhOod Rd. 8 226. Ref•
en&lt;* &amp; deposit required. Cell

4411-4-qllottw7PM .

1 BR .• unturn'-hed. 142Fourth.
t18&amp; p• mo. Deposit 6 mo1.
leMa No chil~en . Prlftrllngle
person. C.ll 114-446-3867.

Hou••B rooms • bath. $200 a
mo. 160 dep. Al1o 2 Br. mobile
home, full'f' c•peted, panially
furnished. t200 I mo, t160
dep. Both 3 mil• from town on
588. HUO approve!. Cell DeblOa

61f-44&amp;-8180.

3

bedroom r1nch, 2 blll:lw.
famitv room.t426 piC' month. 3
bec*'oom bUwel aoro11 from
North O.llie High School- S426
er m011th. 3 bedroom ranch. 2
Cattw. efficient helt pump, 2 c•
g•eo&amp;•450 per month. 3 bedroom rench wh:hin walking dlatance of aowntown-t3&amp;0 P•
month. Private 3 bedroom, 2
story brldl; on 1 acra Crown
Citv· 8375 p• month. 2 ltory
home whh 3 bactrooms. 2'h:
bllttw, PfiY•cv· $450 per month.
gM induded. 3 BR .. 2 ltory
home. cou ntrv atmoaphere.
George's Ck. Rd. 1175 Ptf' mo.
Referencet~ and aacurtry deposit
r~uirad on all properti•. Wlaemen Real Estate. 614-448-

3844.
Nicety furnished small houae.

one bedroom. re•ontble rent.
In town. Adulta. No pelll. Ref.

n1quoed. Co11814-448-2543. ,
House for rent in the oountry

Pbm•DY'· 2 bet:toom .,rt. Part tv
furMhedln Naylor~ Run. Seon·
lty dapoall.' Call eft• &amp;p.m.
814- 892-88&amp;e.

Plivotolot. ean 114-4411-1408.
4· 8 PM .

2 moble homas. both-2 BA ..
,.vi'( decorated. tJfM hed. One
w/ W111h•/ c:trv-'· 'AI mi. eat of
Port• on 55.4. Call 814-318-

9983.
Rent

t11

Sal• 10x40, 1 BR .

Uberty b'oil• ot EUJeka Call
814-2611-1529.

0'

379-

3 BA .. fully c•peted. Carport.
Ret. .. dep. required . louted
wh:hin 1 mile at Galllpoli1. Call

814-4415-3413.

HouH with bit h. Nt• Recine.

Ni~

v•d. g•'*'
1114-992-5888.

·~··

c..

3 blldrooms, 2 llll blll:h&amp;.. large

ltving room, dining room and
kitchen. Alao laundry room, 2
c• a•11• central air, Ellttrn
School Dlltrlct. Ref•en&lt;* reo

qulrod. CaR 814-247-4281 .

VBII'Y nlct houM, 2 bedrooml.
besement . 1132 Lincoln
Helghta. t200. A.tarence and
dopoo~ .

814-7§2·2728.

• •
.
Chrilt,.o gilt' ~-ne
"~ u 1~ 992
2328.

Complete hou•ehold
furnilhlngt- AI beddin~ rustic
bunk bedl with ru•tiC cheat.
vari.ty of sof• li chairs-ell on
ula Exeellet'lt used IPPiiencn.
Chr'-tmu toy• now In 81ock.
Christmas lllyewey, now being
t.ken. Plus flnandng IVIIIable
wtthapproved C7edit. Rt. 1411n
Centen.-y-'h mile on lincoln

Pike. 814-4415-3,1 58.

land. 814-4415-8444.

·

t 150. W01lw, 075. O,yer, $75.

Rlv"'Rd .. 814-4411-739a.

direct from mMufac:tu,_
and liVe ••• · Spa's starting It

e1 ,550.00. Call Aquo Tech.
304-523-82B8.

614-4411-3780.
Country lltmothpere. 12x 80, 2
Br., total electric. watw plid.
•2001 mo. Ref. &amp;dep. nqulred.
Call 614-4415-0885.

••ae

Ni&lt;» 3 .,_.oo,._
verd.
314 lhfrd St., Kana~ga. Cell

614-4411-7473.

Now accepting 1pplic.llon• for

2 bedroom IPa'tments, fiJHv
c•ptted. IPPil .. c.. wet• and
trash pidcupa provided. Malnt•
nance .... Uvlng doae to shopping. btnka end schools. For
mare Information caii304-882-

3716." E.O.H.

Furnlahed one bedtoom apt.
ad..lttt only. no petl.. cell.,..,

5'00. 304-11715-3788.

2 be&lt;toom. furniahed. Qood.
cteen oondttian. 1 child. no pets.
Above New Hilv... 304-8:822488 anytime.

One bedroom apt in Poll"d
Ple•Jnt. wry clatn and good
cond, wt11 r.,. furnished or
unl.lr .. hed. no pete. phone

44

SmaH apt. Jacklon Ave r....
rent $135.00 month secur~
depoak requhd. call 304-6754480 ekt 60 or 53.

Apartment
for Rent

304-6715-1388.

5104, o' 675·5388 or 87157738.
New completely furni1htd
apllftnatt &amp; mobile home In
city. Adult• ontv. Parking. Call

614-4415-,0338.

BE.AUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES, &amp;38 Jocbon
Pike from e183 • mo. Walk to
shop and moviea. 814-448-

loft t041) . Cell 814-446-3169.

County Appllence, Inc. Oood
Uled applf.,CII end 1V lets.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sot. 814-4415-1~99. 627 3,d.
Ave. Gelllpolil. OH.

Wllh... drytrl, refripatOI'I,
renge1 . Skegg1 Appti1nc11.
Upper Atver Ad. beside Stone

C - Motel. 814-4415-7398.

Furnithed IPt. 3r~andbeth.
carpeted, priv•te entrance.

Buy or Sell, Riv•lne Antiquea,

ecllhs. no pBI:I, clo•etaPI••ent

Vallov Hoop. 304-e7&amp;-2257.

Upsteirs unfur~hed apt. C•r·
peted, utlitl• peld. Nochllct&gt;en.
No
Call614-44&amp;-1837.

814-387· 7880.

45

Furnished Rooms

Furnished roorn-919 Second
Ave.. O.lllpollo. •13&amp; o mo.
Utlltti• peid. Single mille. Sh•e
bath. Call 4415-44'18 oft• 7 PM.
Rooms tor rent· 'NMII or montH.

Starting .. t120 • mo. Gallle

Hotel-614-4411-95aO.

46

Space for Rent

Hous• Upp• At. 7• .,lteble b
office tpace. Cell 81'-448-

8189"' 4415-888&amp;.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk. .

Route 33, North of Pom•ov.
Rentel trlil•s. Cal 614-992-

uri. Col 814-4415-4928.

Spedou 1 mobile home lots for
rent Family Pride Mobile Home
Perk, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va .

304-8715-3073.

49

For Lease

Coml'nll'clal Building for Ieese.
Pt. Ple•ant. Call 304-87rr

5104.

Merchand1 se
51 Household Goods
GE dryer. htre nice. Warkl

..,.,.... $90. Call 614-3870322.

equipped kitchen,
Awllable
l'lov. ht. 0225 pllu dtiP. Call

New Whirlpool window untt

Furnllhed efficiency. 8150. Utll·
hl• ,_tct. 7 Nell. Galllpalll. Call
4415-4418 oft• 7 PM .

Hoover oompect waaher'. Good

614-4411-01103"' 4411-215e.

apa1ment, 1 BR .

0225. UtiMI• pol4 920fou"h.
Gollipollo. Ca11448-4418oft•7
PM.
Nl•2 BR . IPf. 4'1:1 mU• from
Galllpolil. Stove, Nfrlg. • wet•
lurnillhed. *226 1 mo. No p•s.
Call 814-4415-1031.

z.r,·

Redacorlted furrVahed
268
State. Adutta on.,. t50
o•tt.
12008 mo. Call &amp;14-44&amp;- ee7.
5 Court:2llving ..... 3 SA .• 1 'h
blthonon81ldi.11R . &amp;.._hon

fUio·-

otlw. Bot~ klcllldool lor fomlly with • • • •
1nt. Overtoob park.rW•. w.tk

5,000 BTU air condttlorMtf'. CaH

114-387-0182.

oond. Call614-448-3410.

••e

steel entrance door, H,c:lrll.lllc
pump,
roofing. Stokw
Metic coel1tove, ofdetelr reHinSJ,
old weathered gray b•n alclng
from the 1B80 ere. one lneh
popl• bo•dl •orne up to 24
inchea wlde. 814-388-9884.
TrHdmll 150.00 . end g• fur·

noce e80.00. 304-875·41149.

2880.

Sale~

For

King Woodburn..-.

1100. 304-882-3387 "' 117153988 . .
6 pc. French Provincial bedroom

.. ~e $1200. 304-87&amp;7734.
leiYe Mneeue.

Long Burn• Free Sten~g_coal
B. wood burn• heats 3.000 aq.

h . 304-67S- 74418.

Otyumpus OM -10 3firiun C•-

mera flott of E.dratl t260.0Q;
Rowing Machine (n8N) •40.

304-878-188111ft• 5 p.m.

dow•.

Concrate blockl- ell 1lze1- yard
or delhlery. Melon send. Gallipolis Block Co .. 123'h Pine St .•
Gallipolis, Ohio .•Call 814-446-

2783.

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Cl'tannel Aultic
and Beveled Lap Siding

' Deck Material•
OUII r~nteed QuaUty
CETID I:. INC., Athens- 814·

56

Pets for Sale

Model Call1 · &amp;14-886-7311 .

Check for
tpeclals on ALL
Modele. Big dlscount· l..tyear's
11oeked model•. Ron Allison.

1210 Second Ave., GallipoliS.

Ohio, 814-446·4338.

New 18ft. Tandem BJIIIetreller,

reinforced tongue, 7 ,000 lb.

.1.395. Call 814-4411-9664
e SAVE t

Buy mail order Video1 / CO'a and
Mag•lnea. Caii814-446-0459.
sa. . corn• wood burner. Complete outftt. •100. Cell 814-

•4S-7Be2.

Artlflca17ft. Chrlst,.,.streewkh
some decor. 1200. Cell 614444-3005.
,.

Colle14· 2&amp;11-9301 .

Chlnon. Super 8 movie e~amera
&amp; protector. lieU &amp; Howell tilde
a. be · projector. All In niW'

Groom and Supplv Sho~Pe1
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
styles. lama Pet Food Oeel•.

Julie Webb Ph. 814-4441-0231 '
Dragonwynd Cattery KennM.
CFA Persien end Siem•e klt:·
ten1. AKC Chow puppl~t~. New
Hlmaievsn kittiRI. Cell 11444&amp;3844 aft81" 7 PM .
• '
Dog hou .... 1'12 mil• out At.
141. Weyne Shoernllk•. C.ll

1984 Ford EICOrt, one OW'ntr,
I 2396. 1 9 85fordEXP. 38, 000
mil-. 03280. Call 814-28118152 2.

up. Used &amp; rebult torgue
convert... Stsnd•d cluteha,
prOIOUnl pill-. &amp; throw out
12
eve
be .. inO: Wltrl/lftV·
moe.
Jolnt••M ty.,_. CaH 814-379-

·
1985 Buick Perk Avenue.
lDedecl with utr11, 4 ci'. C1ll

lndlvlclitl ~·· 1•101'11. . . .
Vlnners. llrioua gulerilt:. Brulo
c•dla Mualo. 814-441-0887,
Jflff Wamalev lnslruotor, 81444&amp;8077, limled openings.

58

&amp;

1ft• 4:30 PM,

Call

814-4411-4212.

814-4411-9418.

1982 Handa Accord hMehblck.
83. 700 mila 8 opd. ~ 0 AC.
EJu:el. oond. One own•. C.l

814-4411-4921.

1978 CONette L82. 4 ..... .numben motcll, AC, PS. PB.
PW', TandT,newttr•.blldcon
• · 814,-247-4811 wenlngs.

Fn.lit
Vegetables

Open Tu•dllv Nov. I for bulineu, ell fruits end vegatebiM,
Jacka M•ket. At. 31, Henderaol\ w. Ve.

f ,j r 111 Supp I II' s

614-94&amp;-2888 dor.
198BCOfVotte PI'Ojoct. 84. 327.

For ..ltt-Recoi'KII:Ioned 1&amp; fl.
fold-up bush hog. C•ll81 4-2818-

4821 .

180AC tr.atorwllhroundbal•.

he¥ bind. pfaws a die. culttve-

tora. tl950. AC W046 triCtor
whh - o . dloc. 6ft. buoh ho,.
t1.~5. Own•wifl finance. Cal

814-2811-8822.

late model 5&amp;0 Ollv• dl•eL
plows • dltc. bu1h hoSJ, t3150.
808 lnternltionlll dl•ef tractor
with left. buoh ho,. •4250,
Own• wll flnMce. Cell 114-

2811-8522.

conditio" 49.000 ,.,., Call
814-949-2637.

1977two door DOdge Monicel.
VB. auta, no rutt. niiW tlr• on
ffont. A-1 oondltio" l891!. Call

814-9811-3844.

1987 Ford EICOrt. 4 speed. ,..1
1twp. One ow'*. Ecellent:

conditio" Coli e14-742· 3142.
19BOioicll Rlv•a

8cy~

,... .
ltlck•. AM ·FM, air con d. ell
_ .. phone 304-e?&amp;-7541.
s,oo. e ,oo PM.

Rd .. Jocklon. Ohio. 814-28155944.

Farm Equipment. ZltorTrectort.
How•d Jlouvetora. Blad•.

1988 Cftwy No¥0, ee. 700.00.
30 ... 676-4480,

1984 Flreblrd. 2 door.

304-882-2210.

•77 Cern•a. V-8 ILitor'Ntic.

good oond •1.000.00.

30~

Ohio 814-742-2488.

1974 Ford lTD tour door, PS.

PB. AT, tih, l591&gt;00. 304-1764881

Livestock

1181 Btiak La S,a bra one
OWI'IW, exc cond. '3.500. 00.

One Polled purebred Simmental
bull Cllf, 8 moa. old. wll r egllter
if buv• d• .. •· One Polled t..M
oalf·sutteble for 1howing.. own•
wHI c.tnrteH talyer delir•. Ben
Bide . ., Doub4e B Farm, 814-

387-n27.

8782.

1584.

'

1978 Dodge Dart oua1om.

Nice Alpine Milk Goat. Cell

tor 11le.

For lllt:'78 Olcll, 2 door. 2&amp;0
englna 8900. or Trade for

Regllt.-ed An"-'' B IJI

81~ '

AJ1o Angu1 heifers. Cell

9811-3891 .

picllup. 304-8715-5821.
1981 Nlann Mulm• 13800.
ps, pb. ec. ~fm CM,a. 14.000
mil•. c.n 304-1715-8723 aft•
4:30p.m.

&amp; Grain

U rge round IMI• af hl'f for ule.

120 eech. Coll814-448-1062.

Will he.~l oorn. Including EFAP
corn. AIIO. will aupptv and
deliver uwduet. 304-773-

5332. a ,oo till 9:00AM .

•e.oo

Ground 1hell corn
p•
100, Premium Atfllafa t3.00,
Strew •1 .1!50, Round 81111

t25.00. Motgan'• Woocllwn
F•m. Rt. 35, Pllnv. W.Va. 8:00

till u,oo Mon-Sot 304-9372018.

Tran SIJOr tilt 11111

19778 MerCIIry Z•l?(r. auta:
1980 Ford Granado; euto, air.
39.000 actual mil•.; 1976
Dodge Charger. 304- 876 ·

72

Trucks for Sale

19&amp;5 GMC ~all ton piclwp. All
t1000. Call 814-4411-4888.,.
tor4PM.
Aun1 good.

Asking

w.,.,..,

u..miuton. Air

16 apeed 00

d• from •100. Fords, Mercedal. Corvett•. Ctt...ys. Sur·
plu1 . Buyer~ Guida . !1)

h.. t"'"• 48 fl.. oldeklcll. 100

1984 Chevy Chwatte. Auto-.

0&lt;

1914 Chovolor Lo- lCE with
turtm. Excellent cond. Loaded.

0111 814-367· n87.

1917~1...,

SontroSE. AC.SR,
PS. PB. 25.000 mft•. Excel.

cond. Must Mil. Cell 30 .. 87&amp;-

1471

1980 Dotllln 310. '400. Call
814-4411-8288.
1912 Tov•· 1980 Chryolar
Lolloron. Col 814-3117·0888.

Plcll- Uood F,.nllun. 3048715-14110..

•37e •
" I'll have a glass of Immortality potion with
a cyanide chaser)"

(1 :59)

0 Muflllr, Site Wrote D

1-1114-237-04118. d.,"' nlgtru

Q!l Nalllvllle Now
8:05 CD MOVIE: Good Quya Wear .
lllack (PG) (1 :36)
8:00 II (2) (J2) Chelra New 20
year old boss develops an
lmmedla1e crush on
Rebecca.
I1J II Ill Dyneoty A strange
phone call directs Blake's
saarch for Kry&amp;11e to Day1on,
OH. C
(!) I]) Myoteryl A woman Is
found dead, and her two
brothers are b&amp;bbllng

Aoger•Batemeni
Wat•prooflng.
SWEEPER ., d eewtng mechlne
replir. parta. and 1uppll•. Pidl
up end delivery, Davia Vec:uulf!
Cleaner, one half mila up
Oaorgas CIMk Rd. Call 814-

:
'

do 11nd bl•tfng. 1pr.,.·
pMntlng. lnte..lor &amp; .:terkw
decorating. 25 yrs. expa-lenct. \
Wll

lnsanei~C

~

Coli 814-2415-9097.

1111 Ill (]211iaracllae
IIJ) Lany King Llvel
(IJI Thurad8y Night Flghta

RON ' S Televltlon s\t.rvice.
Houl8 calls on RCA, Quazar.
OE . Spedaling In Z~r~lth. C.ll t
304-8711-2398 or 614- 44e-

245~

I HEAP YOU

Rlcla. PS, AC. Aloo 1988 Frue-

p•cent rubber. •:JO.OOO for

both. c.11 114-742-24110 lift•

a

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE
houae clll s.vlclng GE, Hoi '
Point, w•her•, cfryen and

lr,~ " Jo.J"O.J-•• ·,

1181 four wheal drive Detaun
pick- up. Run• good. bo cat rough.
tc5o. OBO. c.11 814-992-

motol--02.500.1)0. 3048715-3073 .... 8~01981 Fa&lt;d CLT 9000 b'octor.

IIICC cond. low mil•. plenty
lleap• room. Ideal nt up for
double OJ*at ion. C wnmina fDr.
mula 350 Mgln' good tfr-.
..,. ., •tr.l, ... u ...... wer..
ranty, e38, 100.00. fin1nclng

...rloble ..11 304-8711-15-408.

1977 Cflw tour wheel dr~e
truok; 1971 Ch., tNdt: a.no:
19 72 Dodge truck lUI o. 304-

"'
LET'S 10 TO

TH' IARIIY•O,

Plumbing

.'
&amp; Heating
'
--------------------~
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AN 0 HEATING

::

Otllipolil, Ohio

'"'

Phone 814-448-3888 or 614-•

4411-4477

TH' WRONG WAY.
SNUFFY!!

'

'

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Reeidentlal or comma-cill wir-

ASTRO•BRAPH

ing. New service or repaln.
Ucenud atea:rlclan, Ettimate
free. Ridenour Eltdrlaal 304-

8715-1788.
85

.

Bernice Bade OSQI

General Hauling

8AQtTTARtU8 ( - . 23-0ec. 21) Take . In sor11ng ou1 your own a11alrs. Use your ·
the leadership role In a collec11va van- 1alents where you'll get tho best results '
ture today, oven II your par11clpa11on Is GEMINI (May 21...June 20) When mak· ,
limited or reatrlc1ed. Suc:ceas could de- lng decisions 1oday follow 1ha course
pend upon your Input and strengths.
your hunchea dlclate. Thla should en· .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.1... 11) Your abla you 1o make daclalon&amp; mora accusell-lntereat can be advanced 1oday, ra1ely and Imaginatively.
provided you look ou1 lor 1ha welfare of CANCER (June 21...JuiJ 22) II aomeo1hara as well aa your own. Measures , 1hlng In which you're pr8Mrt11y Involved
that aro merely sell-serving could fall : naada 10 be aytrtematlzed, you ahould j
• nat
be well-equipped 1o do It loday. lJse ,
AQUARIUS (.llln. 20-Feb, 11) There are your smarts 10 bring order ou1 ol .
- . 11,1two people you recently me1 with whom confusion.
you have more In common than you 1 LEO (July 2J.A... 22) The right ally lor
Without being self.MnJing, more em- may realize. Each of these l~dlvlduals a program you went to lnltla1e can be
phalli will be piiCed on your peraonal could become a real friend .
! found In the ranks of 1hose you know
lnt-tsln the year ahead. Aa you pro- PIICII (Fob• ......,.. 20) Focus your socially. Seek help In thla area. ra1har
gr- and m~ upwarda, you'll c.,ry alforta today on matters 1he1 are pi alg- 1han among busl,.. contacts.
-:you love along u - 1.
nlflcance to you car--wtee or· 11nan- VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 22) tl :you're conICOIIPIO (Oot• ....-.II) Strive to be clalty. Th- ere the areu whore you 1, lamplatlng a change that allecta merna bit aloof today In your - - deal- are likely 1o enjoy the greatea1 r.wards. bari of the !amity, don'1 make you1
lnge, beea- It could atrangthen your . ARtiS (March 21-Aprlt 11) AIIIOC181U move without diiCUUing It wl1h every ..
bergalnlng pOiltlOn. Let otherlcome to will be ..-ptlve 10 your auggutlons 1o- one flrst lt't Important 1ha1 all are puN·
you. Gat a lump on 11,.-tly underatand· day If you altaro your knowledge and ax- · lng In the ume dlrec1lon.
lng the I n " ' - whiOh .,.. QOWml~ perlenCI wl1h them. rather than trying LIIRA (llpl. 23-0ot. :II) Your powen
you In thl YIW ....... 8encl lor your AI'- , to lola! you' opinion a down !heir ol peraullion IIIOuld be Dtremety atIra-Graph f)l'8dlcllona today by mailing 1hroata.
.
fec11ve today. Thll could be very evident
S1 to Aatro-Qrapll, c/o IIIla ~·(April - y 20) You'rellka· 11 you are promoting aomelhlng 1hat hBt
P. O.~ 91428, C-nct, OH 44101 - ty to be more adroll 1oday a1 handling , commercial ovartonu.
3421:. Be aure _to .atate yO&lt;Jr Zodiac alg~ . the diHicuiUes of o1hers than you will be_

DIU .,d Water Service: Poole,
Ci•terns. Welts. Deltv.y Anytime. Call 614-441-7404-No
Sundev calls.
J &amp; J Wilt• Service. Swimming
~ •. ciltll'ns, wells. Ph . 614-

2415-9285.

R Water Serv ice. Pools. •
cl1tern1, wells . lmmediat•
1.000 or 2.000gallontdtUvay
R &amp;

Coli 304-8715-8370.

.

Wit• delivery. 1000 glllons
Ae•onable pri~:~~~. lmmedial~
Watterson·, Water Hauling.
,. . onRie r1t11, volume dl•countt. 2,000 to 4.000 capac·
lty, ciltarnt, pools, wells atc

'

87

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSC RAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Peahen - Drink -- Dusky - -Gunner - IN !he KNEE
"My wile insisted on buying a new bathing suit," complained
the old gent, · ' simply because her old suit had a hole IN 1he

KNEE."

BRIDGE

'

Upholstery

ntimatBI.

J

'1

...... .

.. .

sa-n

1D Mlllml VICII;I

a

!liOneonOne
~;:
Nl~ltnel;l
illll u Tocay

:;~:....:cuLate

Night O'Srten II
unoucceululln ~topping a
gl~ from commltllng sulc:lde.
(8 . . hHt IIUII 01 Man
and Mouse
Amtrtclln Magazine

a
'

WEST
.Al0753

t.

..

EAST
• J 962

.3

•

t8 7
.QJ 10763

•a

SOUTH

.AQJI092
.AQ954

.9

By Jameo Jacoby

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Last summer, whe n Jim Mahaffey's
team won the Spingold team-of-lour,
Jim entered the ranks of sonr who
have won North American championships that their lathers had won earli·
er. Today's deal shows Jim making a
lull contribution to his team's victory
by shrewd card-placing based on
West's vulnerable overcall.
South bid three diamonds on the
way to lour hearts to guide the defense
if the opponents bid four spades. But
West thought he could happily defend
against lour hearts with what looked
like plenty of defensive tricks. He
cashed the ace of spades tben the ace
of clubs, and played a ~ond club.
'
Mahaffey won the king oJ clubs and
cashed the K-Q of spades throwing di·
amonds from his hand. u'looks nonnal
• to now take a heart finesse; if It loses,
return to dummy with the eight of
hearts for a diamond finesse. But declarer thought . It likely lhat West

Nortb

Wel1

I.

Eaat

Soutb

3t

1•
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • A

would have bid four spades if he held a
singleton small heart or a heart void.
And vulnerable overeat~ are not
loosely !'lade at the championship level. To J1m Mahaffey, that spelled reel
kings in the West hand. So he ruffed
dummy's third club with his nine of
hearts and pla~ed ace and queen of
hearts from h1s hand. That placed
West on lead with no escape. A diamond would be into the A-Q, and a
spade would_allow d~larer to ruf~ In
, dummy wblle sheddllljl his 108lng
queen of diamonds.
·

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Acaoss

39 Before

I

Subside
4 Venetian
legend
8 French
cheese
9 Swedish
island
II Bohemian
12 Street
eyesore
14 Fishy
product
15 Thailand
language
18 Aussie bird
17 Pay a visit
19 Born (Fr.)
20 Require
21 South
Mrlcan

tee

DOWN
I Oversight
2 Act
nervous
3 Turhan __
4 Lech
Walesa's
homeland
5 Medley
6 Anc. lang.
7 Anxious
21
8 Poet
10 Bring down
I3 Regretted 22
15 Committed
perjury
23
18 Pod
24
occupant.~ 26

lmmedi8 tely!
(Med.)
Can be
effected
Food fish
Boast
Wine

28 Island of
immigrants
29 Evaluate

31 Greek
letter
34 Expected
315 College
in Iowa

town
22reckonlng
23 British
gun
24-Twee d
25 Burn
26 Scurried
27 Figaro's
need
30 Lawyers'
org.
31 Nasty
32 Palm leaf
33 Sailplane
35 Young
pinto
36Remove
chemically
37Tom Joad,
e.g.
38 Membership

DAILY CRYFTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

11110

AXYDLBAAXR
·laLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In lhis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CR~UOTE

11-10
AQFG

eo :;:t" Game

IJ.lG-81

•Kas

Bidding clues
aid declarer

ae

YO&lt;J can
a 1111r
11:30e(2) 11m Tonight Bilow
w~
I1J CMira

'
~

NORTH
•KQ4
• 8 6 54
• J 10 6

JAMES
JACOBY

w

!

dollvery. Call 614-992·&amp;275.

304-5715-2919.

a

'lbur
'Birthday

'

'

the.DlfenH Sacntarlll
Elgh1 former defense
secretaries discuss how our
nation's defanse policy mlgh1
be most effectively handled.
Moderoton: Edwin Newman ,
Henry Trewhltt.
0 II (]21 Knoll Landing
Paige, Michael and Johnny
are abandoned and left to
die. 1;1
e aD 18rney Miler
0 1!-lng Newt
II Crook artd Chase
10:011 (I) MOVIE: Death Wloh II (R) ,
(1:33)
t0:30 (!) !aatEndera A con11nulng
chronicle of the lives of
rasldents In London's East
End. (0:30)
• (!]) 0ctc1 Couple
VlderiCountry
11:00 (]) R•niiiiiJIOII 8tetl8
• (2) (I) • CIJ 1111 Ill (J2)
IDl Newt
NFL'a .Oreatell Momenta
T~umph &amp; Destiny 1987
AFC-NFC PlayoHs (T)
(!) CD 1111 Moyera' World of
ldtet Moyers 1alks with a
wlda. variety of people about
America's cholce:J':)
•aDLoveConn
n
0 Moneyllne

HeY II YO'RE GOIN'

'

Cor. Founh and Pine

84

WILP!RO II

1878 Ford Van. N.w · t~• . Mowrev's Upholtt.tng 181'Ving
chromew--.-bttt..,· c•.n• 1trl oountyerea23yeen, The best
"'""•·
&amp; "'"' ""11800.
good. lin t,jrntture upholat.tng. Call
Must .Loou
. co eppradtla.
304- 876 · 4154 for free

1984 T- 8~11 ol · Llka
- · 44500. Coli e14-3688488.
' Coll814-2411-5829.

CD®

CD s-.d Annual Report of

876-78118.

Vans&amp; 4W.D.

measures the viewer's
capadLiove and be
loved.

,

304-875-7121.

82.

a (2) !l2l Dear John
a New CO&lt;Jntry

10:00 (]) 700 Club
11 (2) (J2) L.A. Law A 1orn
Van Owen holds 1he key to
the fa1e of a known cop
killer.
11J II Ill National Love &amp;
Se1 T11t Joanna Kerns and
Ed Marinaro hos1 this
revealing and provocative do
It yourself TV quiz 1hat

Rot.-y or cable tool drRIIng. '
Most wella completedumed-r.
Pump .. 1.. .,d MrVice. 30~

5:00.

73

SAID 6HE 5HOLJLD KAVt=

THE L-EAD, I KIO&lt;EDHER .

CLA'55 PlAY,

Fetty Tr10 T'lmmlng 11ump
,....,..1. Coli 304-8715-1331.

1:30

EVER'!' TIME E'MMALINE- HARRIS

~T

11-IE LeAD IN YDUR

j

oriQtntl. Good cond. Asking

1981 FTL Conv.nlonol, 350
Cummins. BkiCam, Jakel•ke.

matte. AM red~. almolt new
tlr•. 80,000 mil•· Rew ••I

Unoondttlon1l ifallme UUWIPtw. locll rftenc. .,,. .heel.
Free ... lmal•. C.U cuUecl

Ak... Tr" Trtmmln~ 1nd Stump '
Remowl. Free lltimMM. Clll

*8500. Coll&amp;14-4411-2107be-

4113 ask for

e... S-10189.

BASEMENT
WATEAPROORNG

fore 5pm.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veh&gt;

BOS-8B7-80oo.

Home
Improvements

stove•. 304-1!578-2398.

pickup.

U50. Caii814-446-481B.

"'"g

••

Se1v11:es

78 Ford7000dl••· CetmottW.
24 ft. boK. Stra_lght truck.

1979 Chovy 350 oho&lt;tbed 4 WD

1978Ch811Y Nove, AT., PS, PB.
19,000 mil-. Good work cer.

Jult r.cetnd good clean bedtvwin- fuM, dr...... ch•ts.
din.,.., ""'•· .~ ..... cloou •
many mor•ltema to Hleat from.

1:35 (]) Sanford and Bon
8:00 (]) MOVIE: Mado lor Each
Oiher(NR) (1 :33)
II (2)' !l2l The Coaby Show
CIIH and Clair become
grondt'ts lor 1he lirst
1lme.
(I) Co
Football
(J) It (J) Knll!htwatch
Young inner City volunteers
band 1~e1her to battle
crime.
(l) Fuel ng tile FuMe Look
at the nation's rapidly
growing rosycllng movement
and beneflts.
(IJ AmMlcan Caoear
MacArthur's youth and eMy
career are chronicled. (NR)
1111 1111121 48 Houra
Ill liD MOVIE: The Godfather
Saga, Part4
11J1 PrtmeN® MOVIE: Iron Eagle (PG13)

e9S-3802

t1950. Coli deVo 814-4411-

t2300. Call 814-448-230e
2411-98114.

•no. Pitlle
""''-814-3117-n1e.
·

® Nlltht Court

1211 VlileoCouptry

Just In time for de.r . . .on.
Co.chman Cad«. 8 ft truck
camp•. nice. 304,-171-2824. :

8344.

by ftlltng in tl'te mi ~s•ng words
you de'fe lop from step No_ 3 below.

• K 32
.A 4 2

IIJ CIIIHIIII

ON.

Complete the chu ckle quoted

.• K7

I '"A"~IOpllntyll;l

m••·

Painting: Interior &amp; Exterlor.t
Free estlmttll. CaN 114-.WI-•

*•

Tappin Oaa A1n e.

Home. Has Chary ch••l&amp; gen·
..-ltor. awning. air condition on
motor lind roof. 12.000
A-1 •hap&amp; Iota of extraa. price
-lobi" Coll814-992·5320.

1980 Olwette, loolal 1hlrp.
runs greet. g•MVer, 304-17rr

~~========~~~~~~~ ~~
-~~0·~~--1:""

bed ( n - ,_ mattl"tiUI. Call
e14-11411·28-1 .

SHO~TS

4411-0294.

needl r~pleced . e1000. For ,
2828 after 5 :00p.m.
SlemBH Cit. l% yr. old. Good mor!!l lnformetlon call Paul lit
for breeding. DechfNed. 61 ._ 11~~2342. May bluen at
1977 Ford pick· up. Extra good
CGndition. Coll814-448-7928.
949·23&amp; 5.
ThaGolllpolliOolly Tribune, 8-6 condition.
New tlr•. m.,y,
many IXtn!ll. IUtO shift. $1996.
1980 VW Robblt. F,.llnjactod, e14-992·1719.
2 dr., engin• good, new
SNAFU® by-Bruce Beattie
W.oclcod. Call 614-448-027e 1978 Ford pldt·up. 4 wheel
drW• VB, runs good. M.lto. PS .
ott•BPM.
PB. radio, running boardl,
1986 Cutl_, CierL Runs Ike t o -. Aaldng •2200. Call
niW'. 39.000 mil•. Auto.. AC. 814-949-2477.
orville. ft. AM -FM ••eo. Cell ,
1979 Ch.,rolll one ton SWB
e14-3811-8240.
cab chMIII. 4x4, 454 four
1984 Chov.,e, 4 opd .. 33.000 IPted. pol trectlon. 77,000
mlea. AM-FM·CIII. VtlfVde.,. mn-. •tre lpringl, front .....

tlon. Ou..,..lilehlr'ldmadtqultt
(Jecobl Leddart. nw• used.
Dark oreen recliner. rock•. B•by

r

I. P1DN 1T RfAL.IZE
you Sjl t.L HAP Yo up!

1986 27 ft, RociiWood Min&gt;

G)

of

7:30 11 (2) Family Feud
(I)Bpeed-k
I]) En-~1 Tonight
Ill]) USA Tocay

TfiOUGHi' ..

1175-2013.

1

7:05 (]) .9 to 5

IT

AS GAP AS

304-8715-3030 Ill' 8711-4232.

•en 304-8715-3846 or 87&amp;
32n

814-448· 2200, 446-3131 "'
304-675-7842 .
71· Auto's For Sale

Be&amp;~tiful Thoroghbred Germal\
Shepherd pupa. Have hadlhoU.
Reasonable. Cell 814- 898·

P~I?HAP.S

Str.-n) camper. Ua.-1 3 timM.
SoldnfW"o •14,280. Prfv81ebec:f.
room (tJH ••• bedl ••a••or·
/ lr-"', 13,500 BTU w oond..
ro.,ptventenna. 21ft. c•efree
.vvnlng. AI the eKtraa. Firm
*7910. MUll ... to apprlcate.
Call 304-11715-11881. oft• ?PM

81

8

IIJI Monoyllne
®Cheers
0 Miami Vice C
Q!) Crook and Chaae

Moto" Homes
&amp; Campers

.

5

Fortunoi;J
Ill aD Th'"'' Company

hub c.-1 • Countrt Corvett11.
RICin&amp; O~io. 814-948-2888.

~eded.

875-73711.

9 mo. old Cock1r
SpiWliel, ahota. wormed. housebroken. Registered. t160. Call

ill 111121 !l2l Wltoel

1983 Chrv• New Yorker.

F-Rin •. auyln9oldbotter-

Hay

Hall., Carb.lralors. Weltnd we
40 412wh~ . .buroton. Elcr.brodc str• !Mitw Intake (for
quad). Vet atock ahlft•, 2 Hurst
shift.., M-22rockc:ruaher,220
M
19•8 eo-011 ~-b
uncv.
v
• ..- e flU
cq~s. 1988-70 ltock COMttte

t2,400. oo: 304-8711-4480.

ill. Morril Equipment, Rutl.,d.

6&lt;l

block Ch""V Crltftl ,2x4.

I"=

l I I 1I

8:35 (]) Andy Grlltllh
7:00 (]) Our House Balance of
Power
II (2) PM Mlltlazlne
(I) Sportac.ntor
(J) Ill]) Cu'11nl AHalr
(l) I]) MorcNII/ Lehrer
lllwaHour (1 :00)

$7. 200.00. 304-6711-4480.

Ford tractor· 8 spd forward,
corn tidurs. m.,t.ne lpread••·
WI(IOnl, used pull bushhog.
Mast.,. .... cllk. othlr field
r~ aqulpmtnt. Howe's Farm
Mtchln.-y. Rt. 124 • Mlyh..v

I. I'. I. I.

l •__.l__.J__.-'L-1..--.l-.J.

0 Cafloon l!xpreao
1211 You c,.., Be a Star

Welond Tunnel R. . !tolll w~h

1987 Pontiac Gr1nd Am,

3

® WKRP In Cincinnati

1986 Fox Foa 28 fl. lby Gull

1981!5 Ch.,-., AC . Excelllnt

~

ill IIIIIJI CBS Newt
Ill aD WKRP tn Cincinnati

ARLO AND JAN

1984 Sulek Centui'Y Station
Wegon. Exoellent condition.

1980 Chwy Impala. $1250.
Coli 814-892-3822

.

IIJI tnakll Potltlca '88
® Facta of Ule
1D Fat Albert
1211 fandango
&amp;:05 (]) Lavema and Shirley
8:30 II (2) (J2) NBC NlgltUy Newa

ZAMBONI ..

I

· KELAB

I

I learned a valuable lesson last
summer. You never know how many
real lriends you have un1il you rent
r~-L
-E~G-C_
A _N-....., a cabin on the --.
·

Ill aD Happy Day•

WOODSTOCK

I

AR!FY

r---,:,lzi-'-i-'
1 :..,;--1~~ i

2

DIUVIN6TI-IE

(-.Qr-..,.1&amp;..------i

N-•

(J) ei1J ABC Newal;l
(l) Body Eleetllc
(IJ Nlgldty luolnoaa Report

79

44.000 mil• Coli 814-992·

61 Farm Equipment

Be-.,tilll

5PM.

~EAR

U1ed tr-rM•ions. AI int8flo
na11y inllpoctocl 30 deVo 1111.,,..
181. We buy mntrM:slom. Call·
814·448· 0908. Rebuilding
welebl&amp;

sm•

HECRND

~ Oukl- lportaman

386. llltonwtle. h•d top with
1111tr11 roKlng frame. -14-247·
4881 wenlnga. 814-949-2888
day•.

3348 •ft• 5:00p.m.

614-448-0593.

Coeker SpaniOl puppl•. full
blooded. 8 wka. old. 1126 eech.
1 Pomeranlen-full blooded.
$100. Call814-379· 2103aft•

1 COULD

Auto Parts
&amp; AcceMOries

71 Auto's For Sale

78&amp;1l

Dakota Ferm Home. Built on
your fot. $12.99&amp; &amp; up. See our

IT WAS COLD LAST NIGHT ...
1:LL BET AI«TI-!IN6 M'{
WATER DISH 15 FROZEN ..
e

304-e76-7849.

TRANSMISSION·
Uood &amp; 'obullt 011 typoo.
Wll'onty-30 d.,_ P~ceo 099.

cond.

Musical
Instruments

814-2515-1291.

Brown ovemuffed 2 • • Berkfine redlnw. Vwy goad cond(-

'

57

63
Building Materials
Block, brick. .ewer pip•. wintintell. etc. Cia~ de 'A1nters. Rio Gr.-.de. 0 . C.R 814-

PEANUTS

1977 8oicll llogol. Llka n"" 2220 &lt;&gt;&lt; 304-6715-8768.

55 Building Supplies

Call 814-4415-1149.

rtf•encea. Cd 01~441-4928.

wheel•.

ale&lt;:t'lc otort, t?OO.OO. 302

Good uaad color TY '1 10f •Je.

mo. ptua utili•. O.,otll A

10 gel let up •14. 99 end 10 gal

870-9881 '

Flr-.vood for •le. t36 1 load.

B21 Yt Sec. Eclf. eon d. . 2 DR .,

*·

Whaelchair•· naw or utl!lld . 3
wheeled electric •cootets. Call
Rag81'11 Mobilty collect. 1· 6H-

Point Ple•ont 304-11711-2013.

Fireplace treest.,dlngfJI inaert,

694-3578

after 6 PM .

304-8711-5104.

Apanmentt for the Eldtrfv.
Qallla Manor Apartmna. 865
Bll'll Morton RoiKt Dealred to'
the Senior CttiiM (82 old«)
an dHandlcappedpnon~~ . Equal
housing opportunity. Appllc.
tion1 m-v beplckedupet Spring
V•llet Plu:e, 629 Jeck1on Pike
Of call 814-448-4839.

54 Misc. Merchandise

WHITE'S METAL OETECTORS-

7479.

end houses. Call

1124 E. Main Stra.t. Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T,W 10t.m. 1o 6p.m.,
SundiiV 1 to' &amp;p.m . 6U-992·

Fish T.,k. 2413 Jecbon Ave.

call 304-578-290311ft• e,oo,

2526.

P••·

Tare Townhou1e apwtment• 2
BR1 .. 1Vt bathl, CA., dll·
hwelh«, diiPGMI, private encloud p•to. pool. pl~ground .
w............er, It trllh included.
Starting at 8 289 P• mo. Cell

Antiques

Pe•~ for Sale
..

56

"' LIVI:SIIIi.k

26 chlmnav blocks. flue liners.

""

Honda CA 10 end HoneS. Mo·
pheed. Bothatclltent condition.

76

I I I I 1· I'

(I) Sportalook
(l) CE lllwa Magazine
PTV's versiOn of 60 MinuteS
draws on journalism of
Children's Express. D
(IJ Dr. Who The Daleks, Part

~~;;~~~~;:~;;:~~~~~~~~~~ BUDGET

4408.
c

245·5121 .
53

f

'

THURS.. NOV. 10 •

(J2)

Rt. 35 Cyclo Sol•- Sauthllcla.
WY. Ph. 1-304-8715-4130. Now
Selling N'eW 01•11 4 whMI81"1
and uiMI 4 wheal..,

1,.. 1ry NEA. 111(:

yellow fire brick. 83 ft of 1 1.4"
used bl~tek pipe. 11 ft of 1 ~··
gatv pipe. Phone 304-875-

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

dep. 'equlrod. Call 304-8754480. Ext. eo "'53.

2688. E.O.H.

to IChooll. Downtown.

Nrtlnst 199.
USED- lld1. dr•atr~, bedroom
tuh•. Oe1k1, wringer waaher, e
complete Hne of uaed furniture.
NEW· W81tem boots- '36.
Workboot• •11 a. up. fSt ... &amp;

fo''""'

Apt
807 Meln St. Ront.
t17&amp;. Uttlitl• plid. SeOJrity

2 BR . apt•. 8 closBis. kitchen.
appl. furn•hed. W11her-Dryer
hook· up. ww c:wpet. newt;'
p lint~ . deck.
From t1715.
Senlbr Citizena Welcome. Re·
gen Of. Inc. Apts. C1ll 304-675-

Furnilhed

Living room suit•· $199· •599.
Bunk becll with bedding- t 249.
Full ab:e m.nreu &amp; foundMion
starting· •99 . Recllnen

0

\

Two storm doon one·wood and
one aluminum. 90 new curved

Fordenginetzoo.oo. 304-676-

Small moble home. Upp•Rt. 7.
Rot. &amp; dep. '"'IUood. CoN

•

.

\

.I

304-273-5856.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Golllpoh.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399.

304- 8B2· 258e.

I

/1·{0

camouflage coventlll $27. 60,

a uy

~11t

-

Reo&lt;roriga lone" of 1he
foi.Jr scroi'nbled words below to fo,m fov• s;mple wo•ds

Q

6:00 (]) Bonanzl!! The Loat
Eplaodea
II (2) I1J II (J) 0 Ill !l2l

tlo" e..,• . eall814-992· 7291
lftlr 8:00.

- - - - - - - - - - - Eclittd ~y CLAY R. POLLAN - - - - - - - - - - -

o

EVENING

SUaukl AM 125. Good oon..._

•

-

•

Motorcycles

E•callent condition. Never
,ocod. vorv 1n1o. 1saa

0

I

o

-, 988 Suzuki 250 Quod Roc•.

0

_________
T~~~~t:~y S@\\J)lA-lGttfSS::!:

VlCWIDg

1988 Hondo 200 X 3 whool•.
aeoo. co11 e14-288-1924.

- 0

complete 143215.

SomervMe's, Eelt·AIY... wood
Junction Independence Raid.
old Rt 21. (NIIW Era( Insulated

74

- 6

8JII30 ft. aluminum awning,

Beoch "'""" Mldcleport. Ohio,

Clop . &amp;

Call 814-4441-4109
2740.

Pr.ttvC•bbegePatchDoll. *36.
Cllh. In hw own boK . Nice

2 bet:toom .,rnithad IPertment
utlltl• paid. nrfwanc.. Phone

238 First Aw. 1 BR .. Ieitch.,
furnished. c•peted. No oM«en/ Pets. 8175 plut u1ilitl•·

Fur nil heel home with 3 rooms &amp;
b.th. Ltrgeyard. On Madil:onSt.

·

3 8R .. in OrMn tchoot diltrid.
Wat• &amp; a-.vege inet.ded.. t300
1 mo. Dep. &amp; ref. Cell 814-2&amp;&amp;

3 bedroom home on Rt. 141 In
Centenrt. 1/r mile from Gr..,.
IChool. S3215 per month. Cell

245-9588.

-e

BAM
PM.
Suh .• 12 noon . 6 PM

Skaggs Applianc.. 579 Upper

Cell

1-. Amlqu•"'•oer. 814-949·

Surplu1 lfmy camoufl-..ge, denim. rental, Carhart dothing.
Smell army ecc•eeori8a:. Fri.
Slit, Sun, noon til 8:00 PM.
(Nov, Dec op., 7 ctav•l· s.,

Depotlt and r... ence.

814-992-894211ft• 8:00.

1chool
merm
bills. Old 1tone
old qullta.
2 rellraedlenterftl,
&amp;

Fumhu,..Upp• Rivlf Rd .. 814- 1.2::-3_0_5_.- - - - - - - - - - - 4411-7444.
. .
I .

Effldanot epa1ment, all c•·

poled. W..klng ocllflo only.

Avecado 13 ru. ft. FrostfrBI
Glblon Refrigerator. Ex. Cond..
•zoo. Old eiec:trlctreln. e1oo. 15

For low prier. onQulllity C.rptt
&amp; Furniture come to Mollohan

Refrlgarltor fro•t· fr ... whh:e.
*126. Refritifetar frost.fr•
avocado. .121. 30 lneh g•
reng .. IIYocedo, •7&amp;. 30 hlch ua•
reng•ooppertone, 196. 30 Inch
a• .-npooven top &amp; bonomwhite, e150. Woodburning
heatin9 atove. 171. 0.• lp8Ce
hut .. so,ooo BTU. '76. Wringer wa1her. t71. Freezer. u~
right. •110. Fr. . er. ch•t type.

Addloon. Call e14-992·5304 ..
8 , 4- 99 2- 2778.

l3&amp;. C•ll 814-742-2845.

Pool ttb4e. 4ft. ~~: B ft. Solid•late
top, ooln operated. Oood concHdon. 1800. firm. Call 81'-992-

Buy, Sell. Trade. Call Bargain-

One bet:toom furnished or un.
furnlahed apartment in Mlddl ..
port. Also 2 bll~oom houae in

Herd s . .onect Dak. hlduwy. ••h
flreNood for Ill e. Big truck lo.t.

t200. C•lle14-992·3859.

VIR•'• Famllure
Op., daily, Mon.·Set.

W.O.

01.900.00. "72 Olcll Cutl•o
t471)00. 304-1715-2457.

- {)

Ohio. e14-992-5481 .

2801 ·

Vans lit 4

73

&amp;~s!

I

1::;-;-:--:---:--:--:--:--

inga.

~ 'mile out Jerrlcho.
30~17&amp;-1410.

Larry Wright

\

10pl. flshtankwlthst.,d••ll
ICCIIIoriel.•60. Cell 814· 3888739.
;:C:-.--:Ic--::~:--dl-::::-.._---:::::::-:.,:1 0 '-'~~ 1 1 1 9 77 - __ 1-::.,.n
loaded. Aorida C.· no ruat13!00 or trlde. S • W Madel
83, 22 cal.· ntw'. t225. Hot
tub-n~MN, 1&amp;00. C•M 814-448-

814-387· 0322.

Modirn 1 BR. downtown, como
plate kitchen air. c.pet Dep·
osit, no pBta. Cell 814-4480139 evenings, aft• 5 .

Roomy 2 BA . home. Good
looi!*Jon In Pt. Ple•lflt, Corner
lot. W / W c•pet. Buement &amp;
c .. port. Reaaoneble r.,t. Sec.
dep. &amp; ref. required. Cell 814-

Complote houoohold l•unloh·

I

.

GnN...,. tractor ckJII

3 bedroom witfl b111ement.
natural g•. central air, ctry
w•ter. Convenien11ooadon. Aef·
erencBI and deposit. Rent t300
month. No pets. Call 614-44&amp;1 288 afiM e PM.

814-4415-6586.

PJCICENS USE.D RJRNITURE

·

Frigidelre w .. her • dryer. Real
nice. Workl perfect. t225. Call

~ partmet'lts

Pl.,tl Sub.-4 BR ., full b••
ment, cerpet, range, city
achaola. Adult• only. No peta.
Dep. &amp; Ref. required. t350 per
mo. C•ll 814-446-0278 after 8
PM. w•IWids anytime.

Mixed hardwoodtlebe. t12p•
bundle. Conteinin_g approx. 1V.
tan. Ohio Pallet Co .. Pom1roy,

Slgntrture lew'ing machine with
cabin• fvr ..1• . Approx. 3 vrs.
~d. Cell 814-258--&amp;BBS.

388-9378. .

3 BR . houte. Otposlt r&amp;quired.
10 Old Fort Trail. Call814-448-

doHy.

frime teo. Good ,.,ection of
beci'oom suit•. malel cabin ala.
hudbo•ds t30 Md up to 186.

dl•l. '54.95. 6 PC.. wooden
dlnnette •m. •119. 96.

CARLYLE® by

AH "Nl! AN

7011.

J. S FURNITURE
1415 &amp;starn A-.
4 dr.War cheat:. •48. 5 drMNar

N'

.

APARTMENTS, mobile homBI,
hou••· Pt. Ple•.rt en dGalllp~
1111. 814-4411-8221 .

Furnllhed apt. Ne• HM C. 1 BR .
8235. Utllttl• paid. Call 4484416afi•7PM .

9- ~

.,_.manta

Ndeoorated
avalltlla ~,.ltla paid. '225.
P• month, diPoslt reQuired. Cl"
814-992-5724 oft• UlO 0&lt;

Urge IW lng room wtth -.paneD
FOOrT\ 2 BR .. nav ~ptt. CA.

ne• Dllrwin. Will redecorate.
Rent negotlble. Cal 614-5938438.

2583.

992-3711 . EOH.

992-8119.

8010.

Homes for Rent

2 btt:toom Apts. for ,.,..
Carp•ed. Nice , .. lng. Llunctry
fadUtf• av-'libfa Call 814-

Call e14-246-5883.

' Athton. bllaulfull•ge b.lllding . 12&gt;&lt;50 ot Port•. Aduho o.nly.
lot&amp; mobile hom• p•mitted.
$175 • mo. pkla $100 dep.
public water, also rNer lots.
Aef•.,ca required. Cel 814· Clyde Bowen.

e1u. c.11 814-982-7787.
EOH.

New~

In E._.ek&amp; 2 BR . Adults ontv. No
• •· t225 a mo. Oep. required.

: 1 2K 60, 2 BR . mobile home.

' Ill'

Mobile Homes
for Rent

furnished.

: 35 Lots &amp; Acreage

992·

For rent or •le. niiW'ty .. ~
delld 2 bedroom hou•, grHt
~cellon new rtlllklantltl community, eft• 6:00 PM call

. For Sale: 88-VIntage 12x5!
: trailer. new roof, tiding, 2

. $2.700. 304-458-1538.

0&lt;

304-882·3394.

42

, bedroom, perti11Uy

992-5724. All• 8pm
5119.

GrKious lving. 1 1nd 2 Hdroom ap_.,..,., at VIII age

· awning. Tlke over pavmenta.

' 30 ... 773-5475.

Apartmtrrt for rant. •225 a
month. OlfiOIIt required. 814-

5891.

KIT

Thursday, November 10, 1988
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Th8 Daily Sentinei-Page-15
BORNL
~----~------------------------~T-e_l_e_v_t"s-t"_o_n-.~~~------------._

1977Trllll Am Limited Edition

•395 to 1995. Tabl• ~ISO end
up to '125. Hlde- a· bedl t390
to 8595. Re:cllnen e225 to
'375. Llmg• UB to '125.
Olnett• 11 9 •nd up to 't495.
Woad tabfa w -1 chekt U81!5 to ·
'795. DMk •100 up to '376.
HutC;hM • .400 .,d up. Bunk
bedl complate w· m.ttr•s•
1295end up to 1395. B•bV beds
'110. Mattr.... orbox IIJI'Ingl
ful or twin 188, ftrm 178, end
tiB. Qutw~ • • t260 It up,
King U50. 4 draww ch•t 189.
Oun cabin•• 8, B &amp; 10 gurt
Bebr m.ttr.... '36 a 14!.

Vlllev Fumlture
Nav end uaed furniture 1nd
•ppllcence•. C•ll 814- 441·
7572. Hours 9 ·8.

t-:;.;::::;::;===;=:;=~r;;=:::;;:;:;:;:;:;;==:'j
41 Homes for Rent
44 Apartment

' eluded. t12.500.00flrm. Phone

• on._. pump, tlhbMhl. w.•h•

CannonA1 cern•a.60mmlertl.
zoom len1, flMh. trl.rod. c•rv·
lng CMe. $400. Cal 614-245·

0322.

"I'm sorry your husband has
been obnoxious throughout
the cruise, ma'am, but we no
longer force people to walk
the plank!"

pluo depoolt. Call 1114-892·
5724 D&lt; 814-992·61 19.

' 304-8915-3641.

LAYNE'S FURNrruRE

90 Dava ~..,, •• CMfl wtth
IIPPnwed cndit 3 MH• out
Bulwih Rd. Op., 91m to 5pm
Mon. thf'u Sat. Ph. 614-.W&amp;-

cond. t9.000. Call 814-44118885.

843-5408 .nytime.
Donny.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Bod lr. . oo t20, l30 &amp; King

E .:.1.

Brokage.

Coli 814-8U-8310 .&lt;&gt;&lt; 814-

51 Household Goods

Sof• and chairt priced from

876-27020&lt; 304-57&amp;-2147.

Thursday. November 10, 1988

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Paga 16-The Daily.Sentinel

Ohio wttery

Nov. ll
Veterans
Day- 1988

Daily Number
253
Pick 4
6515

AFTER 124 YEARS, WE'RE QUITTING BUSINESS!
.'.

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Copyrighted 1988

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday. November 11, 1988

the SEORC highway committee,
right of way acquisition for U.S.
35 In Gallia County is resuming.
The 12.9 mile' project stretches
from Gallipolis to Thurman.
~ Three projects are scheduled
for plilnning completion in 1989S.R 32 from Athens to Coolville,
five miles of the route In Pike
County, and the connector road
!rom Pomeroy to Ravenswood,
W.Va. on U.S Route 33.
In addition, the Portsmouth
ex ten~ ion linking U.S. Route 23 to
the Carl Perkins Bridge at
Kentucky is scheduled for planning and environmental studies
to be complete by 1990.

Beyond these, several projects
will begin planning -on U.S. 33
are Nelsonv!lle and a distance
between Athens and Darwin, and
two connector sections of U.S. 35
between .C hilil c othe a nd
Jackson.
Looking even further toward
the year 2000 are two projects
slated for feasibility studies - a
Portsmouth eas t bypass (U.S. 23
and U.S. 52) and a direct route
between Chesapeake and
Jackson.
Ten months ago, Bush said, the
highway committee decided to
look at the needs of the region by
theyear200,anddeterminewhat

can be done.
accomplishments .
The committee sought inp1,1t
From Meigs County, J im Dld·
from each area- what would dlewasselectedmanofthe year.
have the most Impact, and be the Diddle, president of J .D. Drilling
biggest benefit to the region.
Company In Racine, was unable
"I'm confident we have an · to attend, butsenthlsson, Chris,
agenda we can live with and as a representative.
stand behind as a region," Bush
His company operates natural
said.Healsoemphasizedthefact gas wells in Hocking, Perry,
that more can be accomplished if Gallla, Vinton, Meigs, Lawrence
the region works together on one and Jackson counties.
project at a time. " We stand to
Diddle was introduced and the
gain more."
award presented by Middleport
Individuals Honored
attorney Bernard Fultz .
The person of the year llano·
Gallia County's man of the
rees froin each area within the year was Dale Iman, who was
region were Introduced and pres· Introduced by Chamber of Com·
ented awards fo r their merce President Charles I. . Ad:

.

klns Jr.
!man, who is Gallipolis City
Manager, has been responsible
for $3 million of grant funding
.funneled into the ar,ea during the
pas t three years. He look the
opportunity to tell the region of
what 's happening in Gallipolis as
the bicentennial approaches in
1990.
"Everyone (in Gallipolis) pulls
together" to reach their goals,
!man said.
He briefly au tilned the accomp·
lishments of the city in the past
few years, inlcuding downtown
storefront renvoatlons, neighborContinued on page 10

-

'

Elberfelds Department Store
closing doors after 124 years

. ,··

By NANCY YOACHAM

•

.,

..

2 Sections, 14 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Council _reveals highway plans through
By LEEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Wrller
The highway needs of Southeast Oh lo topped the agenda of
the SEORC annual meetil)g In
Athens Thursday night.
The Southeast Ohio Regional
Council has made a highway plan
through the year 2000, which was
presented to those in attendance
Thursday. In addition, the person
of the year from each area within
in the region was honored.
Gallla County Is In the fore·
front of the highwaJ list as the
only project among 12 proposals
·
ready for construction.
According to Kenner Bush of

;,

Clear, tonight, low near 30.
Saturday, partly cloudy ..
Highs In mid 50s. Chance of
rain 50 percent.

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,:____

Thursday. November 10. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,._~

_____

ALL

Sentinel News Staff
"Advertts ing Is what keeps
newspapers In business. But a
.full page ad on the back of
Thursday 's Dally sentinel is one
which this newspaper would
rather not have sold,' ' said Brian
Billings, Daily Sentinel. adverlls·
ing account representai!ve.
The loss of Elberfelds Department Store will affect 110t oil'ly
Pomeroy, but all ol Meigs
County. Pomeroy will have an
empty building in the middle of
Its business section, but all of
Meigs County will be losing what
~an be ·descri'bed· a'fter-124-·years
In business, as a landmark.
In 1854, at the time 20-year-old
German Immigrant Jacob Elber·
feld arrived in this country , the
Ohio Valley was synonymous
with growth and opportunity.
From New York, Elberfeld tra·
veled to the Ohio Valley where he
selected Pomeroy as his new
·home. For a while he practiced
the trade of stonemasonry·, as he
did In Germany. Then he took a
job in the coal mining Industry
but .eventually ended up In the
retail business, first as a clerk,

ERCHANDISE .INCLUDED

•FURNITURE • · cLOTHING • APPLIANCES •TV'S
INCLUDING STORE FIXTURES
•

MEIGS HONOREE - The penon of lbe year
honorees from Soulbeasl Ohio were recognized at
The University lnn Ia Athens by the Soutlaeast
Ohio Reponal Counell 'nlursday evening. From
Meigs County, Jim Diddle wu selected penon of

lbe year, DldcUe, president of J.D. Dri!Ung
CoJ1!pany In Racine, was _unable lo attend, but
senl his son, Chris, left, as representative.
Diddle's award wu presented by Middleport
attorney Bernard Fullz, right.

:Meigs
Health
.
Department
awarded
.
:3 separate grants totaling $18,335
'

All -Sal Final
Cash or Bank Cards Only!

'

,.

•

Govenor Richard F. Celeste
announced today that the Meigs
. County Health Department has
: been awarded three seperate
grants totaling $18,335.
• A breakdown .of the grants are
· as follows: $6,000 for funding a
Child and Family Health Services (CFHS) project; $5,335 to
fund community operated health
promotion programs addressing
the leading causes of death and
dls \lblllty In Qhlo a11d $7,000 to
fund a special dental health
project promoting oral health.
" Child and Family Health··
Services grants help assure that
each of the children born In Ohio .
each year is wanted, born
healthy and stays healthy. " the
Governor said.
. "The establishment of the
CFHS program is an · tmP.rtant
step in meeting Ohio's health

wllfl.t It believes Is an official
government snub of the USS
United Press International
Americans In towns big and Pueblo captain and crew who
small planned a day of parades, . survived 11 months of captivity
memorial ceremonies and con- in North Korea in 1968,
Angered by the exclusion of
.certs to salute the country's
servicemen on Veterans Day, retired skipper Lloyd Bucher and
while war buddies In Los Angeles his former crew from a Defense
gathered to honor Bob Hope and Department prlsoner-of·war
San Diego veterans called atten· tribute In September, Vietnam
lion to a government snub of a Veterans of San Diego Invited
Bucher to deliver a keynote
group of POWs.
address
at a ceremony today.
A 103-year-old ve ieran of the
"The
U.S.
government needs to
Span.lsh·Amerlcan War era said
step
forward
and say, 'Yes, these
.he plans to celebrate the day by
men
were
military
personnel on
delivering a message to the
a
mIss
ion,
they
were
brutal !zed
.nation's active duty soldiers, and
and
held
against
their
will, this
Coloradans were to launch. a
was a sacrifice,'" said Robert
·fund -raising campaign for a
Van Keuren, the grQup' s
state veterans ' memorial
director.
monument.
Bucher said he would not
Parades were planned across
address the official slight in his
the nation in such cities a$ Salt
remarks , but said he "will pay
Lake City and Pittsburgh, and
respects to those people who
'several memorial ceremonies
answered the call of their counwere to climax with monument
try and were left In the lurch.''
11nve1lings at 11 a .m., the time the
The spy ship Pueblo was seized
Armistice was signed In 1918,
off
the North Korean coast In
markinll the end of World War I.
January
1968. One crewman was
A San Diego Vietnam veterans'
group has decided to redress
kll.led by ene~~ g11nfire and the

'

other 82 men aboard were held
captive - and often beaten and
tor tured - until their release
was negotiated in December
1968.
A centenarian regarded as the
last surviving veteran of the
Spanish-American War era plans
to celebrate Veterans Day this
year by sending a greeting to
U.S. military personnel around
the world.
Nathan Cook, 103, who lives in
the Veterans Administration
Medical Center nursing home in
Phoenix, will telefax a message
today to 500,000 American men
and women ser.ving at 21 military
bases and on numerou s Amerl·
can warships.
"I'm glad to be able to send
greetings to all servicemen this
Veterans Day," Cook said In the
prepared message. "You can be
proud of your military service."
The greeting Is part of Lanier
Voice Products Division's
"From America With · Love"
program, designed by the telecommunications firm to ensure
Continued on page 10

malis .
But there is a generation of
residents In this county who can
remember when Saturday night
meant dressing up and going to
Pomeroy where one lady recalls
"people elbow to elbow" on the
streets and shopping at Elber·
felds was not only a necess. ty,
but a meeting place for friend$.
One of the slogans that Elberfelds · had during its years In
operation was " Meet Your
Friends At Elberfelds."
Then there is another generation that remembers when their
parents bought all their school
clothes at Elberfelds. And where
else could you save your receipts
to return to the store and get two
cents back for every dollar
spent?
Perhaps the best way to
explain what Is· happening to
Meigs County with the closing of
Elberfelds Is to quote one of the
store's employees . " I feel bad
that I'm losing my job, but I !eel
worse for the store. I feel like I'm
losing a part of my family."
Meigs County is losing a part of
its family, too.

/

. CROWD WAITING crowd was waltlag on
the sidewalk this morning In Pomeroy for
Elberlelds Department Store to open the doors.

Americans salute all senricemen
By JULIE BRIENZA

SORRY, NO LAYAWAYS ••• NO -ELBERFEL_i&gt;S CHARGE CARDS

needs. We are committed to viduals can significantly lnfiu·
Implementing these services In ence personal health status by
adopting positive health habits.
· all of OHio's 88 counties."
Funds were awarded In the The grant was awarded by the
first of a five year CFHS Ohio Department of Health
program cycle, through the Ohio through the federal Preventive •
Department of Health using a . Health and Health Services
combination of state and federal Block Grant.
The 7,000 grant Is to fund a
doUars form the Maternal and
Child Health (Title V) block special dental health project
promoting oral health.
grant.
The grant Is part of an
In regard to the$5,335grant the
Governor stated "pr.Qillotlng on-going effort by the Ohio
good ~ealth practices and reduc- Department or Heal!h;-wlilch
ing the risks of premature deaths ensures access to dental services
and dlsa bllltles will' help a v old by population groups who in the
needless suffering and will also past have had trouble obtaining
services, the Governor said.
hold down health care costs."
Funding is provided by the
Most premature deaths and
Ohio
Department of Health
disabilities are due to heart
(ODH)
through the Division of
disease, cancer, stroke and ac·
elden tal injury. Evidence indi- · Dental Health using federal
cates that individual lifestyle Is a maternal and child health block
major contributing factor. Indi· grant funds .

and then going Into business for
himself .
The first Elberfeld store
started as a grocery. Eggs,
chickens and rabbits were ac·
cepled In return for food supplies
and yard goods.
The store was In Pomeroy's
lower block, where Mitchell's
VIdeo Is now located. The orlgi·
nal store was destroyed In a fire.
Another store, made of wood,
was rebuilt on the same site and
used for many years until it was
replaced by the brick building
which still bears the Elberfeld
name and is now occupied by
Mitchell's . .,The present Elber·
!elds' location, In Pomeroy's
middle block, was purchased in
1911 when It was the Grand
Dilcher Hotel.
Five gen,e ratlons later, Elber!elds Is still family owned and
operated. Butas soon as the store
can be emptlell of all merchandise; the doors will close for the
last time.
Perhaps the younger residents
of Meigs County did not shop
Elberfelds, opting instead to
drive to out-of-county shopping

•

Is going out
The store
of business and wUI be selling all merchandise at
bargain prices.

Ohio Senate Derns look for
ways t~ change leadership-

t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio Senate Democrats, dis·
gruntled about los ing ground to
the Republicans, are looking for
ways to change leadership In
January ; Including the possible
overthrow of Senate Minority
Leader Harry Meshel , DYoungstown.
Mesne! dismissed talk of the
budding revolt Thursday and
said he has enough support to
maintain control of the Democrats' 14-member caucus when it
meets next week to choose
leadership for the 1989·90 session.
In the tradition of such post·
election coups, no one would talk
openly about It, but senators
were figuratively wearing
grooves in the corridors between
each other's offices , Including
Meshel's; to choose sides.

There were even reports, denied all around, that Gov. Rl·
chard Celeste would support
leadership In the caucus more to
his liking.
''There's an assessment process going on, " said Sen. Richard
Pfeiffer, D·Columbus, one of the
catalysts In the movement.
''There' s also a strong counter·
assessment process (by Meshe!),'' he laughed .
The Democratic caucus was
trimmed from 15 to 14 Tuesday
with the defeat of Sen. Thomas
Carney, D-Girard, a close ally of
Meshel's . .
That means it would take eight
Democrats to band together and
form a new leadership team .
The existing Democratic lead·
ershlp Includes Mesne!; his assistant le\?er, Sen. Neal

Zimmers of Da yton; Sen . E ugene Bran stool of Utica, the
minority whip, and Sen. Michael
White 9f Cleveland , the assi stant
whip.
Reports had Pfeiffer and Sen.·
Lee Fisher of Shaker Height s
engineering an overthrow with
this· leadership slate: Sen. Ro·
bert Boggs of Je fferson a s
leader, followed by Sens. Charles
Butts of Cleveland, Linda Furney
of Toledo and Alan Zaleski of
Elyria.
· Pfeiffer and other Democra tic
senators are disgruntled that the
Republicans are beatilig them in
elections, tak ing issues awa y
from them and increasing their
Senate staff.
"We want to help Improve
conditions within the Senate
Contln'Wf on page 10

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