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Local news briefs.. ~
Continued from page 1
Hospital.
The patrol cited Pierce for not wearing a seat belt and failure
to maintain control.
No one was Injured in another one-vehicle accident at 10 a.m.
Monday on CR. 5, 0.4 miles east of SR. 7. Troopers said a car
driveri by Maurisha A. Nelson, 38. Middleport, wentoftthe road,
striking a utility pole and an embankment. Damage was
moderate. No one was injured. There was no citation.
A Gailla County man was involved In a one car accident at 8
a.m. Monday on SR. 7, near Middleport. Troopers said a car
driven by Albert J. Shoemaker, 42, Rt. 2, Cheshire, went off the
road Into a ditch. Damage was moderate. No one was Injured.
The patrol cited Shoemaker for driving under the influence
and failure to maintain control.

EMS has five calls Monday
Five calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs
·
County Emergency Meqical ~rvices reports.
At 5:06a.m. , Rutland took Roy Sorrell from Meigs Mine 2 to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 9: 20 a.m. took Sarah
Theobald from S. Second Ave., to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Racine at 10:50 a.m. , took Susie Pierce from an auto accident on
Route 338 to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:54
a.m. took Sheila Patterson to Veterans Memorial Hospital from
Main St., and at 10:57 a. m., Mlddleporttook Lewis Taylor from
Rallroact St., to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Scouts gather food for project
Members of Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245 are visiting
homes in the community to gather food for underprivileged
families . Residents not at home during the visit will find white
plastic bags at their homes and they are requested to place food
Items in the bags and have them on their porches for pickup on
Saturday.

Two injured in auto wreck
Two Portland residents were Injured In a one-car accident
Saturday at 11 p.m. in Sutton Township on Morning Star Road ,
about a mile west of C.R. 28, according to the Gallla-Melgs Post
of the State Hi ghway Patrol. ·
Sheila A. Long, 32, was taken by Li!eFlight to Grant Hospital
in Columbus. where at last report she was listed in poor
condition. Dennis E. Long, 33, the driver, was taken by the
Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where .he
was treated and released for cuts and scrapes.
Dennis Long, driving a 1987 Olds Cutlass Supreme, was
driving east when he lost control on a left-hand curve. He went
off the right side of the road and hit a tree.
A West Virginia man was cited In a one-car accident Sunday
at 7:40a.m. In Chester Township on S.R. 7.
Gregory E. Scar bough, 25, of Parkkersburg, was cited for not
wearing a seat bell after he lost control of his 1980Datsun 200SX
and went off the left side of the road, hitting a guardraiL
Continued from page 1
State·· · ·
---------

Governor...

co ntinued from page 1

people need .to be convinced
a bout the merits of where we
need to go," Celeste told reporters. "When presented with a
vision for education, people support resources necessary for that
vision."

In a speech to the Ohio School
Boards Association, the governor said the Nov. 8 election was
not necessarily a referendum
against a tax increase for
schools. But he said any tax
increase will have to be won by
demonstrating accountability In
education. access to schools and
alliances between older and
younger generations.
Celeste co ntinued to evade the
question of whether he favors a
tax hike for education, saying he
will rely on the upcoming report
of his Education 2000 Commission, assigned to set goals for
edticajion in Ohio.
"First we have to say. these
are the standards , these are the
goals, this is what we expect
from education, an d then we
have to debate the resources that
will be necessary for that," he
said.
.
Celeste said one group around
the Statehouse believes the public has spoken out against taxes

Celeste
told
...
Continued from page 1
rJver. ''
Following the official opening
ceremony, Celeste answered
questions from area media, and
commented on the lack of federal
dollars made available to states.
Celeste said the money from
the gasoline tax Is being held up
in washington, D.C., in an effort
to balance the federal budget,a
nd the money Is not being
distributed to the states.
He has the U.S. 35 proposal In
Gallla Co unty, the governor said,
but would not and could not
commit funds to the project until
he sees figures for construction
costs.
There are "very lltte new
constr uction dollars available,"
Celeste said.
1

planning commission.
Reports to the commission
·were . also presented by Kim
Shields, the county's director of
development, on projects In the
county with which he Is involved;
Ron Ash, Ohio Power Company
office manager and Private
Industry Council member, on the
PIC's Partners Award; Gordon
Gilmore, soil scientist, on the
county's soli survey; Mike Duhl,
district conservationist with the
Soil Conservation Service, on
services available through SCS;
and Cindy Oliveri, county home
economist, on a recent Bed and
Breakfast Seminar held In
Pomeroy.
The meeting was held at the
·Farmers Bank and Savings Company and presided over by
President Theron Johnson.

In the election, while another
believes "we need to move
forward to provide additional
resources for education."
The governor commended the
local board of education
members for passing operating
levies for schools. ''I believe that
1989is the time when we mu'Stdo
our part in Columbus to keep you
company in that partnership (for
education), " he said.
Celeste said a majority of
Ohioans " want to do what is
right , even If it costs more
money, to support quality
education.
The problem, he said, Is
defining quality education.

Board to meet
Eastern Local Board of Education will meet in special session
tonight (Tuesday), 7 p.m ., In the
high school cafeteria.

Installation set
Harrisonville Lodge 411 will
hold an open installation of Jerry
W. Well as district deputy grand
master of the 12the Masonic
District, on Wednesday, at 7:30
p.m. A potluck dinner will be held
in conjunction with the
Installation.

-... --·-

SJI JACKSOII PIKE : RT.JS WEST
Pttont 448·4524

--;--

•

'

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

proposaL Middlepo rt Mayor
Fred Hoffman noted that vlllages
must also prepare separate plans
for possible projects.
Frank Clela nd, mayor of Racine and an active member ofthe
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council's Highway Users Committee, and Charles Blakeslee,
executive director of the planning commission, updated the
group on the status of the
co nnector road from Rock
Springs to the bridge at Rave nswood and urged support from the
group to keep the project at the
·
public forefront.
Blakeslee presented status reports on the connector route. The
status reports were prepared by
James M. Jen nings Associates,
Columbus, and are available
from Blakes lee and others In t he

----

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, Novanber 16, 1988

Snow blankets Plains; Southwest mUd _"
By United Press lnlerna.llonal
resort owners who . predicted
Heavy snow swirled by high they'll be running the l11ts to
winds left up to a foot-deep shuttle holiday skiers up the
bl~nket across much of the . slopes before Thanksgiving.
Alexander predicted heavy
freezing western mountain
states early today while parts or snow - blizzard conditions In
the Midwest and Southwest several places - for Colorado.
reached unseasonably warm Wyoming, the Nebraska panhandle and parts of the Dakotas as
temperatures for a second day.
Severe thunderstorms were the winter storm organized Into a
forecast for later today in the center over eastern Colorado
Southwest, and sunny skies were during the night.
to reign from New England to the .
He said wind chill te mperaMississippi Valley, said National tures would drop to below zero
Weather Service spokesman across much of South Dakota.
"Unseasonably mild air was
Lyle Alexander.
More than a foot of snow was present to the southeast of the
heaped on many spots In the storm," Alexander said .early
northern Utah mountains, with 6 today, adding that predawn
to 9 inches In the higher eleva- temperatures were in the mid 60s
tions of southwest Utah. Two as far north as Kansas City, Mo.
Severe thunderstorms were
inches of snow was on the ground
by 1 a .m. today at Minot, N.D., forecast for later today from
north-central Texas, northward
and West Yellowstone, Mont.
to Iowa and western Illinois.
The storm, which has already
Hot weather records were
left more than a foot of snow in Its broken or tied in eight clUes In
path, has delighted Utah's ski Texas, New Mexico and Kansas

on Monday with temperatures
High winds from the Rockies
ranging In the 70s and 80s.
across the Great Plains states
Monday's high temperature
and Into the Mississippi Valley
was 92 degrees at McAllen,
will cause blowing and drifting
Texas.
snow from the northern Plains to
Clear skies prevailed early
eastern Colorado today. and high
today from southern New Eng·
temperatures likely will reach
land, across the Ap(1alachians
6nly the 20s and 30s , Alexander
and Into the Mississippi Valley.
said.
.'
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11-16-88

Gibson
named NL's
Most Valuable

Ohio Lottery
Dai1y Number

421
Pick 4,
3322

Page 3

•

•

20

30

so

Vol.39, No. 136
Copyrightod 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport.' Ohio, Wednesday,' November 16, 1988

--Area deaths-HaiTY Bailey
A retired construction boiler
maker, Harry R. Bailey, 75, Rt.l,
Ga!Upolls, died at 10: 30 a.m.
Monday at Pleasant Val lay Hospital. A former employe of the
Marietta Manufacturing Com-

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. 26*
AT&amp;T ................................. 28~
Ashland Oil ........................ 32*
Bob Evans .......... ................. l6
Charming Shoppes ........... .. .13%
City Holding Co ........... ........ 33
Federal Mogul... ................. .48
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................49'!.
Heck's .......................... .. ..... ~
Key Centurion .. ................. .16%
Lands' End ............ : ............ 24~
Limited Inc ......................... 25
Multimedia lnc .................... 70
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12*
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7Y.
Wendy's Inti. .........................6
Worthington Ind ................. 20*
(Lands' End announced that
its third-quarter net was $5.5
mWion, or $.28/share, vs. 54.6
mWlon, or $.23/sbare. Sales were
$100.4 mWlon vs. 580.2 million.
Nine months' net was $16.2
mWion, or $.81, vs. $U.9 million,
or $.59. Sales were $267.2 million
vs. $204.9 mUIIon.)

pany, He had been In falling
health for several months.
Born March 17, 19131nAddlson
Township, he was the son of the
late George and Zelia Bailey. He
was married to Mary Lee Canaday In 1933. She preceded him In
death Nov. 1, 1984, A grandson,
Timothy Rutherford, who was
reared In the Bailey home, also
preceded him In death.
Survivors Include: one daughter, Mrs. Jo.hn iMona Lee)
Rutherford , Garden Grove,
Calif.; one sister, Mrs. Pearl
Canaday, Rutland, along with
two grandchildren and one great
grandchild.
Services w111 be held at 10 a.m.
Saturday at the Waughg-HalleyWood Funeral Home with the
Rev. Everett C. Delaney officiatIng. Burial will be In Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens. There are no
calling hours.

Hymn sing Friday
A hymn sing will be held at 7
p.m. Friday at the Morse Chapel
Church featuring the Harvest
Trio. The public Is Invited.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Merlin Godfrey,
Portland; Sheila Patterson,
Pomeroy; Shannon Sievers,
Pomeroy;· Lewis Taylor, Middleport; Sharon Pierce, Racine;
Harry Gilliand, Shade.
Discharged - None.

We're

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
"Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map sr-I minimum temperatures. At least 50o/. ol any shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitation Indicated
UPI

E5:.nsNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

11

ft

WEATHER MAP - During early WedneSday momlng,
rain/showers are forecast for parts of the upper Great Lakes and
the upper Mississippi Valley. Showers and thunderstonns are
forecastfor most of the Mississippi Valley. Showers are poaslbleln
the eeatral to aorthern Pacific Coast. Showers/snow showers are
possible In parts of the northern and central Plalll!l. Showers and
thunderstorms are possllbe In the lower Mississippi Valley and the
Gulf Coast States. UPI

State board adopts test guidelines
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The state Board of Education has
passed a resolution outlining the
basic proficiency test required
for high school graduation In the
nex I decade.
Under a law passed by the Ohio
General Assembly last year, a
student will have to demonstrate
.at least ninth-grade proficiency
- and complete course work
through the 12th grade -In order
to receive a high school diploma
In 1994.
However, Gov. Richard Celeste, speaking at a meeting of
the Ohio School Boards Association Monday afternoon, said he
would ask the General Assembly
to repeal the multi-tiered diploma plan.
The test guidelines approved
by the board Monday are general
In nature and cover a broad
range of subjects in four general
areas: reading, writing, mathematics and citizenship. The
board Is expected to adopt
guidelines for a 12th-grade test at
Its next meeting Dec. 12.
Approval of the guidelines
followed months of meetings.
"Nearly 100 educators and
other Ohioans were Involved in
work groups that prepared·prellminary lists of outcomes uMer
the four test areas," said state
Superintendent Franklin Walter.
''These lists were presented .In

looki~g

public meetings and were mailed
to residents around the state In
the summer and early fall.
"Written and oral reactions to
the preliminary Usis were taken
Into consideration when preparIng the lists presented to the state
board."
Once general guidelines for
both tests are approved, the
board will choose a test
contractor.
"It is important to emphasize
that the proficiency tests are not
the sole criteria for graduating
from an . Ohio high 'school,"
Walter said. "The student must
complete other requirements of
the school that he or she attends,
In addition to possessing this
common core of knowledge, to
receive a high school diploma."·
A student who falls to pass the
test - ·but still completes attendance requirements through the
12th grade - w111 receive a
certificate of attendance of high
school, rather than a diploma.
Diplomas w111 be granted In
three categories: diploma with
basic competency, to those who
pass the ninth-grade test; diploma with commendation, to
those who pass the 12th-grade
test; and diploma with distinction, to. those who pass the
12th-grade test along with meetIng certain criteria adopted by
local school boards.

for

'COATS FOR KIDS'
Can you help us?
Our 'Coats for Kids' program has been a great success! In the last three
years we have distributed more than 800 coats through area schools.
Please search your closets and look for unused coats. We 'll take care
o( the mending and dry cleaning if it's necessary.

Our goal is to deliver these coats to area schools by December 16.
Drop off your coats at our Pomeroy, Rutland or Coolville offices.

WE NEED YOUR HELP!

ALLI&amp;Ilnii.IO

i~IIIIIIOIIIVIRY,......

..... IUI'I 11.10

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA.
COATS FOR KIDS COMMITTEE
"WE REALLY REALLY CARE"

BANK:ONE.
.
Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
BANK ONE, ATHENS, OHIO, NAIONE PART OF THE CARING TEAM

I

2 Sections, 14 Paces
A Mullhn edla Inc. Newspaper

Riffe supports pay
hike for Ohio officials

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
70 percent.
Tonight: Becoming mostly
Extended Forecast
cloudy and breezy, with a slight
Thursday through Saturday
chance of showers towards mornFair Thursday and Friday,
Ing. Lows w111 be in the mid 50s. with a chance of rain Saturday.
South winds Increasing to 15 to 25 Highs will range from the upper
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent. 40s to the upper 50s Thursday and
Wednesday: Showers likely In the 40s Friday and Saturday.
and windy, with a slight chance Lows will be mainly In the 40s
of thunderstorms. Highs will be . Thursday and In the 30s Friday
between 65 and 70. Chance of rain and Saturday.

Tonight, low In mid 30s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday, mostly sunny, high
in mid 40s.
·

cember. Uiglslative salaries are state's workers' compensation
By LEE LEONARD
system was brought to the Senate
based at $34,904.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
floor , but was pulled back when
The
so-called
"cost-of-living"
5
COLUMBUS- House Speaker
Democrats
refused to furnish a ·
percent
could
be
extended
to
1989
Vernal Riffe Jr., Dsingle
vote.·
Wheelersburg, has lent his voice and future years. "If you're
A compromise had been hamof support to a pay raise for state going to do it, the cost-of-llvlng
mered
out between Industry and
legislators, but only In the (pay raise) Is probably the most
labor,
but the United Auto
context ·of a pay hike for ali palatable kind," said Aronoff.
Workers
Issued a statement
Riffe Indicated any pay raise
elect.e d county and state
saying
thE:
plan would make the
for legislators would have to be
officials.
workers'
insurance
system too
State lawmakers were to rec- attached to a hike for county
much
like
a
corporation
and
onvene today for their second officials. "We have to see
would
remove
public
day of a post-election session. whether counties can affQrd It for
accountability.
amid rumors the pay bill would local officials," he said.
The proposal called for the
But
he
said
legislators
deserve
start In the House.
transfer
of power from the
as
much
as
anyone.
a
raise
Any pay raise probably would
Independent
Ohio Industrial
''They
are
putting
in
more
hours,
have to be enacted this week or
Commission
to
the Bureau of
and
campaigns
are
becoming
next. The Legislature Is planning
Workers'
Compensation,
andesmore
expenslv.
e
,
''he
said.
''They
to\ adjourn soon for the year.
tablishment
of
a
new
board
of
pay
their
own
expenses
down
Slllee elected officials, including
trustees
to
oversee
the
system.
for
here.
I
think
they
(raises
legislators, cannot receive pay
Finan, who worked on the
raises enacted during their term legislators) ought to be cons!·
negotiations
for months, said he
dered
If
the
others
are
of office, an (ncrease for 1989 and
would
not
at
tempt
to pass the blli
considered.''
beyond would have to be enacted
agpln.
A proposal to restructure t he
before Dec. 31.
The Senate made plans to
adjourn Thursday for the rest of
,JUDGING -These five Meigs County women
judges Susan Clark, Iris Payne, Becky Anderson
the year, while Rille said the
Tuesday afternoon judged the 30 entries In the Bil
and Joan Wolfe. Eight winning creations were
House will probably be In session
selected and will be awarded prizes plus lour
Bend Minstrel Association's Create an Easter
for two days next week.
Bonnet Contest In conjunction with the .associaothers were given honorable mention. All12 olthe
In other legislative develophats will be modeled during the Easter Parade
tion's annual musical to be staged al 8:10p.m. on
ments Tuesday:
number, a part of a salute to song writer, Irving
Nov . 26 al the Meigs IDgh School. In the center,
-Organized labor torpedoed a
.
Berlin. The names of the creators of the winning
Shirley Quickel models one of the creations In the
Charles w. Barley was sent- The charge against i.audermilt
longstanding attempt to stream-.
hats wUJ not be disclosed until show night.
competition. Looking on, I to r, are the other
line the state's worker a' compen- enced Monday by Meigs County stemmed frorn an auto accident
sation system , probably killing It Common Pleas Court Judge on April 29 which resulted In the
Charles H. Knight to three to 15 death of Teresa Andrew. SenuntU at leasrnext year;
-efforis continued to spread years in prison on a charge of tencing for Lauder milt has.been
scheduled for Dec. 12.
the wealth of sevey11l Lake felonious assault.
Barbara J . Stroud, also apentered
a
voluntary
Barley
County school districts which
pearing
recently before Judge
plea
of
no
contest
to
the
charge
In
will receive a windfall in the tens
Knight,
entered
a voluntary plea
of millions of dollars next year a plea bargain arranged by
of
guilty
to
a
charge
of grand
when the Perry nuclear power Meigs Prosecutor Fred Crow III
theft
in
connection
with
the
plant begins paying property and defense attorney Steve
taking
of
several
Items
from
the
• Story .
taxes;
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Hav- secretary, sending a message of graphers, Bush made a point of
This was the same charge for Big Wheel store. Stroud's sen-legislative leaders from both
telling
reporters
the
West
Gerto
stabilized
economic
policy
Ing announced two Cabinet choiparties told lobbyists there Is no ·which Barley earlier stood trial tencing has also been scheduled
man
"
knows
how
strongly
I
feel
.
ces within a week of winning the jittery financial markets around mood In the General Assembly and was relea~ed when the for Dec. 12.
a
bout
doing
somethlpg
about
that
Probation
for
Rick
Eugene
White House, President-elect the world.
for Increasing taxes In 1989, even proceedings ended In a hung
deficit."
He
later
praised
by the
Hawley
was
terminated
Brady became the second
George Bush reportedly has
for education. Riffe said educa- jury.
Brady's
broad
"knowledge
of
court
and
Hawley
sentenced
to a
settled on an unannounced third, announced nominee to Bush' s
Crow decided to retry Barley
tors may have to take their case
markets
and
expefinancial
determinate
sentence
of
18
tapping New Hampshire Gov. Cabinet, following last week's
to the people II they want more. on the charge which stems from a
rience
in
the
private
sector."
months
on
11
charge
of
breaking
John Sununu to become his chief selection of campaign Chairman
shooting Incident on May 23, 1987,
money.
Bu'sh also claimed Brady's
James Baker, who served Presiof staff.
Sen. Richard Finan ,' R - at the Cove bar near Pomeroy. A and entering. Hawley Is to be
The Washington Post, The New dent Reagan as treasury secre- .six-month appointive term in the
Cinclnnati, said any pay raise blll gun specification, which would transported to the Orient CorrecSenate
from
New
Jersey
In
1982
York Times and WCVB-TV In tary and chief of staff, to be the
would start in the House, but he have required Barley to have tion Reception Center.
gave him Capitol fiill experience ' added II "Is very much In doubt " served an additional three years
Shock probation has been
Boston ·all reported today the next secretary of state. ·
granted
Johnnie K. Harrison who
selection of Sununu, retiring this
The retention of Brady, 58, had that should enable him to work
In
prison,
was
eliminated
from
because of the shortness of time.
"hammer
out
a
has
been
serving a prison sentwith
Congress
to
year after three terms in offlce. been expected. Bush undoubt "It'll have to be an orches- the charge.
.
budget
deficit
reduction
ence
for
receiving
stolen goods.
Although probation Is not guaHe was known to have been in a edly had influence In Reagan's
trated effort," said Finan.
In
other
court
matters,
Columagreement.
''
contest for the key White House selection of the Wall Street
Sen. Stan ley Aronoff, R- ranteed, It Is a possibility In the
"He
knows
that
our
most
bia
Gas
of
Ohio
Inc.
has
been
job with Bush's current chief of executive to replace Baker when
Cincinnati, was more coy. " Dis- plea bargain agreement. Barley
Is
to
keep
our
$16,446.11
Important
priority
granted
a
judgment
of
staff. Craig Fuller, who seems Baker resigned In August to lead
cussion of a pay raise is probably , was released Monday morning,
economy growing with low Infla- going on right now," he said. pending transport on Thursday from Scipio Energy Associates,
sure to f.lll a top position.
Bush's campaign.
The Post, quoting unidentified
Bush's determination to have tion and he knows we must resist
"It's been done in the past. and I to the Orient Correction Recep· Inc.
Parkersburg Billing and Colthe
policies
that
will
impede
that
sources as did tlie Times and the both men high In his administrasuspect It'll be done In the lion Center, Orient.
effort,"
the
preslden
t-elect
lectors,
Parkersburg, ')N.Va., has
Judith R. Laudermlll entered a
television station, suggested Su- tion sends a clear signal to U.S.
future. "
filed
an
action for judgments of
declared.
nunu, 49, was chosen partly a!Ues and to Congress that his •
The last pay raise bill was voluntary plea of no contest to a
Reaction
to
the
nomination
.
$48,306.56
and $845 from Harold
because as an elected leader he White He'iise plans to follow the
passed four years ago In De- charge of aggravated vehicular
was
lukewarm,
mainly
because
Smith
and Bonnie J. Smith,
E
.
outweighs Fuller, 37, In political course Reagan has set.
cember. A 5 percent annual hike homicide when she appeared
Brady
''has
taken
the
adm
inisReedsville.
statur e for dealing with
Indeed, Bush boas ted Tuesday
for legislators expires In De· recently before Judge Knight.
Congress.
that he Is fielding "a good team tration line and nobody really
Sununu is known by many here- a former secretary of the knows what his views are," said
polltlclans outside his state for treasury to be secretary of state Lawrence Chlmerine, chief econthe major role he played In (and) a widely respected secre- omls t with the WEFA Group In
helping Bush win this year 's New tary of treasury to continue. And Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
Hampshire primary election af- so you'll see some continuity and
ter the vice president was some change."
knocked down in the Iowa cauNevertheless, In the week since
cuses by Senate Republican Bush's election, world stock and
leader Robert Dole of Kansas, currency exchanges have shudwho was vying for the party'S' dered with steep declines, apparently fearing the loyal vice
presidential nod.
Bush would no t tip his hand president wlll have difficulty
when asked about the chief of coping with the blgges t problems
The Eastern Local Board of
staff's position Tuesday, saying of the Reagan years- the budget Education, meeting In special
only that he wanted to make a deficit and the nation's trade session Monday evening, took the'
decision soon ''so that person can Imbalance. ·
following actions.
Bush therefore 'announced his
start working toward staffing the
-Approved, on first reading, a
White House for what will be a choice of Brady outside the vice new policy on programs for
very Important early beginning presidential residence after a
handicapped children.
meeting with West German
there."
-Employed John Thompson
The sole announcement Bush Chancellor Helmut Kohl at which as assistant boys basketball
was willing fo make Tuesday was . economic concerns were coach.
his decision to retain his friend discussed . ·
·Dennis Newland
Posing with Kohl for photo- as-Employed
Nicholas Brady as treasury
an unpaid, volunteer assistant
basketball CQaCh, tO WOrk With
the junior high boys program.
-Employed C.D. Mcintyre as
an unpaid, volunteer assistant
basketball coach, to' work with
the high school girls program.
-Accepted the resignation of
A two-story frame house at Cheshire, formerly the old
JoAnne Newsome as high school
Cheshire Post Office and and Nate Rothgeb Store, was
cheerleader advisor.
extensively damaged by fire early Wednesday morning.
-Employed Lorle Ritchie as
Middleport firemen were called to the residence of Shirley
high school cheerleader advisor
Ferguson at 2:28a.m. to find the second story fully engulfed In
tor the balance of the 1988-89
.eduea&amp;Jonal prllll'am oa snulf and chewtu1
flames. They were on the scene for three hours. The Muse Is
DIPPING IS FOR DIPS -That's the m-1•
school year.
tobacco Ia tlmlld lo coincide wllh the Great
reportedly owned by Larry Craycraft.
of the Amerlcaa Cancer Society to thole who bave
-Met In executive session on
American Smoke-Out wblch takes place ThursAt 8:08a.m. firemen were called back when rekindling was
turned to Ullnl snuff or chewlag tobacco. Thai
personnel and financial matters.
day. Pat O'Brlea, fund raising chalnnaa lor lhe
suspected.
·m-ge wu taken to the schools Qlls week with
•'
Board members In attendance
local chapter, tell, Ia pictured with John Hunaell,
Information on the cause of the lire or the monetary loss was
p08lers
polnllDI
out
that
long
term
dlp8
may
be
were Jim Smith, president;
board member aad lnlonnatlon cbalnnan,
not available this morning.
much
more
likely
to
develop
gum
and
cheek
Kathy Manlcke, vice-president;
dlsplaylnc oae of lhe posters.
cancer
and
four
times
more
likely
lo
get
mouth
and members Susie Heines and
Continued on page 9
and
lbroal
cancer
than
aon-tobacco
users.
The
1.0 . McCoy.

Meigs man sentenced
on charge
by
judge
.

Brady another .Bush cabinet
choice; Sununu may get nod

Eastern
board adopts
new policy

-Local news briefs____,
Fire .damages Cheshire structure

�--------

-- - - - Wednesday, November 16, 1988

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Officials retain papers
'

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON /\REA
A~
~m~ ,..,..,__,~-r·~d·,:::~
~v

ROBERT L. WING;ETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
1\aolstant Publlsber/ControUer

AMEMBER o!The Un ited Press lnternatlonal,lnland Dally Press
ASsociation and the American Newspaper Publishers Associ ation.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
tong. All letters are subject to edltlng and must be signed With name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In
sood taste, addiesslng issues, not persG'Ialitles.
.

Take -the money

WASHINGTON - The full
''outrageous and ar.rogant."
truth about the Watergate scan- Kutler, will publish a history of
dal may not be told untU after the the Watergate era next year.
turn of the century.
Because they have sole authorOne reason: It could take . Ity over the disposition of their
almost that long for the courts to papers, Kissinger and Haig can
settle the legal battles being lay before the public a version of
fought by Richard Nixon to their activities during the turburetain possession of ·his papers . lent Watergate years which
He has blocked the release of cannot be challenged. Take the
thousands of the documents on case of Elias Demetracopoulos
the grounds of personal pr ivacy forcibly to Athens where he faced
and his purported need to protect possible execution by the milprivll.eged communications with Itary junta that was then ruling
aides.
Greece. During an exhaustive
Another reason: Henry Kissin- investigation of the matter ,
ger, who was Nixon's national Demetracopoulos dlscovere_d a
security adviser and secretary of cryptic reference to National
state, and Alexander Halg, the Security Council files concerning
former president's chief of sta!!, " Mr. Demetracopoulos' death in
managed to retain control of an Athens prison."
most of their papers . They gave
Since Kissinger bas copies of
tbe public their versions of those all his "personal" papers and
papers In the form of memoirs copies of NSC documents generthat earned them sizable chunks ated during his tenure as national
of money.
security chief, Demetracopoulos
Put another way , they "privat- asked Kissinger to help resolve
Ized" many of the documents the mystery. He flatly refused.
they accumulated at public exPrior to the Nixon years,
pense and profiled on them. prominent government figures
Their actions were, in the words routinely took with them the
of University of Wisconsin his- papers they accumulated during
tory professor Stanley Kutler.

'lack Anderson and Joseph Spear

their terms of office, usually with
no questions asked. According to
retired Washington, D.C., publisher _ Maurice Schnapper, a
recognized expert on the privatization of public papers, "It
always comes down to the fact
that government officials, Includin g Supreme Court justices,
have often just made off with
their papers."
Because the Nixon administration papers could turn out to be
needed In numerous court cases,
Congress passed a law in 1974
which ordered that ail Nixon
documents be turned over to the
National Archives '! or processing
·.and eventual public release. But
before the law took effect,
Kissinger and Haig took personal ·
possession of their papers.
In late October 1976, Kissinger
had his papers trucked to Nels on
Rockefeller's estate in Pocantico

Hills, N.Y. Two months later,
Kissinger donated his papers to
the Library of Congress, on the
condition that only he or his
appointed assistants have access
to them unt!l the year 2001, or
untU his death, whichever was
later. His attorney freely admits
Kissinger retained copies of
everything.
The Library of Congress,
meanwhile, is handling some of
the requests Kissinger receives
for permission to see the papers
as If he were stUI the secretary of
state. When Kutier wrote to .
Kissinger, for example, he got
this reply !roin a Library of_
Congress official:
" Dr. Kissinger is not prepared
to make the collection available
for public access at this time, and
he hAs .asked us to Inform you
that your request will have to be
denied."

By ELIOT BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Howard Baker's right. Washington Is an
expensive place to live, and $89,500 a year- as much as It soundS to
the rest of the country - Is not much If you have to keep up two homes _
A special presidenti!ll panel examining wage- scales for judges,
Cabinet members, senior bureaucrats and the federal judiciary, is
again looking at the Issue. This time there' is a reasonable chance
Congress will get a decent raise, l!lt is willing to wean itself from the
long-standing practice of taking money for speeches.
For members of Congress, the pan ells expected to recommend that
members give up honoraria for talks to corporate boards, trade
More mmhers nust Stride
associations and the like in exchange for large raises.
Rice®
rhan any othercompany.
House members are limited to pocketing no more than 30 percent of
Because no one knows more
By
United
Press
International
their salary In speech honoraria, and senators can keep up to 40
about the needs of healthy,
Today is Wednesday, Nov .16, the 321stday o!l988 with 45to follow.
percent - $26,850 and $35,BOO respectively.
growing
feer.
The moon Is In its first quarter.
· Would they be willing to forgo that largess -and the appearance of
Each shoe is designed for
The morning stirs are Mercury, Venus alid Jupiter.
a conlllct of lnteres t It presents - in exchange for a raise from the
protection, balance and flexi ·
The
even lng stars are Mars and Saturn.
current level of $89,500?
bility. Our exclu sive moccas in
Those born on this date are under the stgn of Scorglo. They Include
conscrucr io n breathes and conThis may be the year members are finally willing to do that, even
Tiberlus,
emperor of Rome, in 42 B.C., American composer W.C .
forms w your child's feet. And
though raises are a touchy subject.
Handy, known as the "Father of the Blues," In 1873, Broadway
no one has more widths and
, Just look at the cases of Incumbents who lost their seats s
izes than Stride Rite. Each
director
and
playwright
GeorgeS.
Kaufman
In
1889,
j
azzgultarist
and
Connecticut Sen. Lowell Welcker Is a case In point -or at the least
shoe
even com es with a trained
Condon
in
1904,
and
actor
Burgess
Meredith
In
1909
band
leader
Eddie
took heat from an opponent because of charges they missed votes by_
Srride Ri te fiuer.
(age79).
being out of town to get a $2,000 check for schmoozing with corporate
bigwigs over a plate of runny eggs.
On this date In history:
For members of Congress, a pay rate In the $150,000 range is most
In 1907, Oklahoma became the 46th state admitted to the Union.
often mentioned. If members' pay of $42,500 a year in 1969 had kept up
In 1933, the United States established diplomatic relations with the
with Inflation, they would be earning $137,000 today.
Soviet Union.
That's not an outrageous amount given the responsibility of the job,
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
the work Involved and the fact that becoming a public servant usually • In 1982, National FoOtball League players ended a 57-day strike.
In
1984,
the
space
shuttle
Discovery
returned
to
Earth
with
the
first
means keeping two homes. one here and another at home, and
two satellites ever plucked from space.
spending much of the time on airplanes rushing back and forth.
For folks like'Wisconsin's Herbert Kohl, who won a Senate seat by
MIE!.! Il'II S HI&lt; ST 1'1\11( I W :- II~ WS.
A thought for the day: Playwright GeorgeS. Kaufma n said, "I'd
pouring million~ of his own money into the race, the pay Is
rather be a poor winner than any kind of loser."
'
Strick:: Rite footwear is available in many sizes and widths, and fit led by trained Stride Rite specialists.
linmaterlal.
·
·, But lor young House members with families, it could mean the
(llfference between quitting Congress to avoid going broke and
S:taylng on. And without a raise, the temptation will still be there to
"
·,,,.". ·•• • , n 'I
~~~
MONEY SAVING COUPONS ~~~
"" ... '" · · · ·,,
accept that corporate check to ease financial pressures at home.
The commission will make its recommendations on pay scales to
President Reagan who, before he leaves office, can either modify
i~em or adopt them fully. Congress would get whatever the
¢ommisslon and Reagan recommend unless members, within 30days
after Reagan acts, specifically reject the raise. There are about3,000
Other persons -Judges. Cabinet members and sen lor officilals -also
!iovered by the commission's work.
' In 1987, senators got about $3 million In honoraria and House
members snagged about $6.5 million In extra Income from speeches
- a 30 percent Increase from 1986 levels. the citizens lobby group
l::ommon Cause said.
.
· ''The financial reality is it takes a lot of money to live in
Washington," Baker· told the panel. To serve in Congress, the
judiciary or In a senior goverrunent position, he said, "It Is not fair to
ask people to take a virtual vow of poverty."
Baker recommended that members get a "very substantial"
Increase and that each year the pay of top government officials be
automatically adjusted for inflation.
He also noted the pay for federal judges, $89,500. is seriously out of
kilter with what experienced lawyers get In private practice. They
earn far less than their peers, sometimes less than youngsters
.)
coming out of law school and youngsters who clerk at the Supreme
Traditional Che ~ Party Mia
Court can command six-figure checks.
~ CIJCI ('It 5bck) butter
22h cups Rice Che:ce
• Judges with children ready for college, noted former Chief Justice
or margarir.e
build cereal
tv~ 1ta5PQOI'I$ seasorled ~~~ 2'1.1 cups Wlleat Che~
Warren Burger , often quit the bench In their prime, suffering from
41h teaspooosWorcesterbran:! cereal
" maltuition."
$lire SMe ·
I cup salted milled
'Ph C\41S Corn C~xfl
nu~
"We should not come here expecting to get rich, but we should not
brand cereal
I cugpte!Zel sticks
expect to go broke either," Baker told th e panel.
~reheat Millo 250" 111 open ro.tosting pan melt t&gt;unerin
The lOlst Congress may just have the nerve to balance the scales.
Mn. Relr!IM. Stir ln seasoned sail and Worcesler&amp;hire.

Today in history

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·R edmen rout Kentucky Christian I 04-53
Unerring shooting and a set of
Impress ive per formances by the
freshme n allowed Rio e;·ranl)e' s
Redmen to run awa y with their
season Qpener over Kentucky
Christian Tuesday, lead ing to a
104-53 rout of the Knight s ai Lyne
Center .
Senior Jimmy Kearns milde
four of five 3-p.oint field goals and
freshman Brad Schubert sank all
five of his 3-polnters to highlight
th e Redmen control of the game
following a lukewarm start.
"Early in the game we were
not very good on our Intensity,
but we got things together and
shot the ball well," Rio Coac h
John Lawhorn, entering hts ·ninth

collegiate season. said. "Everyone went out and had fun.
"Rob Jackson did a Jot to get
our game going on the Inside,"
Lawhorn said 9f his 6-6 starting
center. "Our Inside game made
our outside game flow. "
Four · Redmen players -Kearns, Brian Watkins. Scott
Slusser and Mark Erslan failed to miss any of their
individual 2-point field goal attempts, with senior Marc Gothard posting 85 percent on six of
seven attempts . Watkins was
also 100 percent on his 3-pointer
and Gothard, Jackson and Anthony· Raymore sank every tree
throw t))ey tried.

" Tral)lt!on tells you that John
Lawhorn has a well-coached
team that protects the ball well,"
Kentucky Christian m.entor
Randy Kirk commented. "I'm
disappointed with our eflort. I
1 think our kids may have been
Intimidated by the name and
tradition here. I don; t want to
take anything away !rom John or
his players, b.ut l think our kid s
got down on themselves.
''The only good thing about a
50-point loss Is that you Jearn
something," Kirk added.
The game got underway
swi{tly with a Mike Tidwell
basket for Rio within the first
minute of play. The Knights ,
ente ring Rio with a 2-0 slate,
offered stiff competition by alternately edging and leading the
hosts during the ha,l!'s first 10
minutes. Effective offensive

work was performed by Jackson,
who scored most of his 11 total
point s during the first half,
paving the way for Watkins ' sole
3-polnter at 10: 40 to open up the
Redmen lead to six (22 -16).
That margin was Increased by
quick scoring from Raymore,
Schubert a nd John Lambcke.
KCC ,stayed In the game and
bene!itted from baskets by Eric
Sudlow and Bart Snyder. Kearns'
prowess with the 3-polnt shot
came to the lore In the hall's !Ina!
minutes as the Redmen led 54-25 .
Impressive inside play lnvolv lng freshman Larry Ben ning
helped Rio bulld a comfortable
lead over the frustrated Knights
as the ·remaining half progressed. Schubert's 3-point shot
wtth 1:30 left pushed the Redmen
to the century mark and
Lambcke pumped in the hosts'

•

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

season

In

final four points.
Kearns led all scorers with 18
points, while Lambcke supplied
17, Schubert 15 and Gothard 13.
Overall. the Redmen netted 34 of
47 attempts on 2-point Held goals
for 72.3 per cen(, and PUI in 10of12
three-point tries for 83.3 percent
to net a total field goa l percentage of 74 .5. The team was
successful on stx of eight free
throw attempts for 75 percent.
For KCC, Sutllow tallied 17
points and Snyder added 12 for
the team's only major scoring.
The Knights co nnected on 21 of 39
two-point field goals (53.8 percent) and had two (by Sud low
and Kelly Combs) of eight
3-polnters enter the net for 25
percent. The team's total field
goal percentage was 48.9. They
did better at the charity stripe,
sin king five of eight attempts for

JI\CKSON SHOOTS - Rio Grande forward Rob Jackson (32)
lets his shot fly In spite of a shot-blocking ·attempt by Kentucky
Christian's Mike Talbott (3) in Tuesday night's season opener al
Lyne Center. Jackson scored II points as the Redmen claimed a
104-53 win over the Knights.

·Hiram and John Carroll
lo rejoin OAC in 1989-90 .
MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS,
Ohio (UPI ) - Hiram and John
Cano n, two !omier members of
the Ohio Athletic Conference,
will rejoin th e 85-yard-old league
beginning with the 1989-90 sc hool
year.
The announcem ent was m ade

Monday at th e OAC's semiannual meeting by conference
president Phil Roach , athletic
(jirector at Marietta College,
after the applicatio ns of th e two
. schools were ap_proved.
. Both John Ca rroll and Hiram
will begin OAC competition with
111e 1989-90 academic year with
one exception. Due to scheduling
co nflicts. Hiram wil l play an
independ ent 1989 football schedule. The Terriers will have a full
OAC football schedule in 1990.
TheOAC,Iounded in1903, is the
third -oldest a t hletlc conference
in the nation. pre-dated only by
t)'le Mich iga n Intercollegiate At·
hletic As socia tion (1888) and the
Big Ten (1895) .
John Carroll and Hiram, both
current mem)lers of the P rest-

Myers honored
CEDARVILLE , Ohio (UP!) Wilmington quarterback Keith
Myers and Tiffin defensive back
Dan Weinandy were chosen
~unday as the players of the week
in NAIA District 22 Division II.
Myers , a 6-foot-4, 198-pound
jUnior from Logan, competed 30
of 45 passes for 375 a nd four
touchdowns in the 26-14 win over
Findlay . The Quakers won their
last seven games J o finish at
7-2-1.
Welnandy, a 5-foot-11, 175pound senior from Tiffin, recovered a blocked punt for a
touchdown to key the Dragon's
12-7 win over West Liberty State.
He also intercep ted two passes.
recovered one fumble and made
seven tackles as Tiffin ended a
flve -game losing streak.

Honor MAC players
· TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -Ken t
State tailback Eric Wilkerson
and Toledo free safety Jon
Bow sher have been selected the
Mid -American Co nference offensive a nd defe nsive players of the
week .
Wilkerson, a senior from
Cleveland, closed out his career
with 212 yards rushing and two
touchdowns In Kent's 17-11 victory over Miami. He scored on
ru ns of 1 and ~7 yards.
Bowslwr, a 'senior from Ga hanna, Ohio, had 10 tackles,
Including 7 solos in Toledo's 20-13
win over Central Michigan. He
also caused a tumbl e, recovered
a fumbl e, Intercepted a pass and
broke up another pass.
)

dents' Athletic Conference, will
join Baldwin-Wallace, Heidelberg, Marietta, Mount Union,
Muskingum , Caplt~l. Ohio Northern a-nd Otterbein to form a
10-team conference.
Wittenberg also 1~ a member of
the OAC this year but has
announced that it wUI s~ver Its
72-year relationship after the
current academic year to join the
North Coast Athletic Conference.
Hiram Is joining the OAC for
the third time. It wa s a member
of the conference from 1920 to
1935 and from 1951 to 1971. John
Car roll previously was an OAC
member from 1932 to 1949.
"We enthuslas tl caily welcome
bac k both Hi ram and John
Carroll to membership In the
Ohio Athletic Conference," said
Roach. "These well-established
and prestlgious institutions add
lustre to a conference that
al ready is nationally recogn ized
as one of the prem ier NCAA .
Division III conferences."

By JOEL SHERMAN
"I'm not a numbers person,"
UPlSports Writer
Gibson said. "I never set goals
NEW YORK - Kirk Gibson.
that I want to hit this many
who Inspired Los Angeles as
homers or drive In this many
much with his heart as his bat ,
runs. My goal is always to be
Tuesday became the first Dodger
world champion. There are InIn 14 years to win the National
tangibles In this game of slats
League Most Valua,bl e Player
that go unnoticed all the time. It
Award.
makes me feel good. I don't like
In voting by the Base ball" to foc:us on numbers or set goals.
Writers' Association of America,
I stated early in the year if we
Gibson outdistanced New York
were world champions, Kirk
Mets outfielders Darryl Straw- Gibson would ,have a positive
berry and Kevin McReynolds.
impact on the team and I guess it
Pitt.sbutgh outfielder Andy
did."
Van Slyke finished fourth, San
Gibson, 31, became a _free
Francisco first baseman Will
agent through an ar biarator's .
Clark fifth and NL Cy Young
ruling and signed with the
Award winner Orel Hershiser ot- Dodgers Feb. 1. He came to a
the Dodgers sixth.
club that had gone 73-S9 in
Gibson, a left fielder, collected
consecutive seasons. But the
13 first-place votes and 272 fiery spirit that drove the-Detroit
points. Strawberry had seven top Tigers for eight seasons proved
ballots and 236 points. McRey- contagious In Los Angeles.
no Ids, with four first-place votes,
In a spring training prank,
edged Van Slyke, who received t~ammates pu_t eye black In
no top ballots, 162-160.
Gibson's cap and he stormed out
Two writers from each of12 NL of camp. His mes sage was clear:
cities voted, with first place
to win you must be ser ious.
worth 13 points, second nine
"I just play the way l know
points, third eight points, etc.
how ," said Gibson, who often
The race was projected as a
played injuredduringtheseason.
choice between the combination "I'm not a fathering figure. I
may have helped some in certain
of Gibson's strong numbers and
motivational leadership, and
situations. I may have picked
Strawberry's superior statistics.
people up. But people helped Jlle.
"Some people probably don't I'm a hard worker, I'm pretty
feel I'm worthy of this award,"
easy going and If you play hard
Gibson said. ' 'I realize other between the white lines I have.no
people deserve the award also.
problems wlth you . .-.
But someone had to make a pick
Though voting is done before
and I'm glad It was me."
the playoffs, Gibson's season will
Strawberry led the NL in best be remembered for his only
homerswlth39,drovein101runs, at -bat in the World Series.
scored 101 times and stole 29 Sidelined by a hamstring injury,
bases to power the Mets to their Gibson hobbled to the plate and
second NL East title in three hit a winning two-run homer with
. years.
two out in the ninth of Game I .
Gibson, working in a relatively Los Angeles went 'o n to win the
weak batting order, hit 25 ho- Series in five games.
mers, knocked in 76 runs. scored
A Dodger ha s won the NL MVP
106 times and stole 31 bases in 35 award 10 times, second to the 14
tries to lift the Dodgers to the NL ear ned by the St. Louis CardiWest title. But Gibson's role nals. The last Dod ger to gain the
transcended a dangerous left- honor was Steve Garvey In 1974.
handed bat in the No. 3 hole.
No Met ever has won theMVP,
and McReynolds ' strong showing

Cross Country event
slated November 26
" KENOSHA, Wis ." IUP)) -Two
Ohio hi gh school cross country
sta ndouts will compete In the
lOth annual Kinney Cross Country Cha mpion ships Midwest Regional Nov. 26.
Misty Alison of Chillicothe a nd
Ira Wentworth of Zanesville have
been chosen to represent the
Buckeye State.
Alison was the fastest gir l in
the recent state high school
cross-country co mpe titio n.
Wentworth was the second tastes t In Boys Class AAA a nd
second fastest overall.
The top eight finish ers in the
regional will co mpete In the
na\ional finals In San Diego Dec
10.
.

Keady says Purdue five
may be scary this year
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UPl) - Gene Keady believes
his Purdue basketball team will
be scary.
But the ninth -year coach is n't
s ure If It's the opposition or
Boilermaker fans who should be
frightened .
"If we had to choose our
starters tonight, we'd have fo
have a lottery, I think," said
Keady, whose team is tied with
North Carolina State In the No. 20
position of UPI's preseason poll.
" It's frustrating for everyone."
The Boilermakers lost four
starters - including Everette
Stephens, Troy Lewis and Todd
Mitchell - from last season 's
third· ranked squad that won the
Big Ten IItle. This year. the
leadership will be provided by
seniors Melvin McCan ts and Kip
Jones.
However, that leader~hlp has
been missing because both Jones
and McCants have missed a lot of

OM SALE MOW
WARM 'MORNING
HEATERS

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lhrough Friday, 111 Court St., Po -

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Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. P h. 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

likely drew some votes from .
Strawberry. McReynolds , a left
fielder who led the league In
assists with 18, hit .288 wiih 27
homers, 99 RBI and went21for21
in stolen bases.
"One day I'm going to be
apprecia ted, " said Strawberry,
26. "1 thought In my heart I was
the top candidate. I thought my
(numbers) were good enough
this yea r, but I guess not. I
would ' ve fell much better Ill won
the award, but I can accept
finishing second. I was nt ' totally
overlooked. I finished second; I
could've finished fourth."
Strawberry, Van Slyke and
Gi bson were the only players
named on all 24 ballots. Van
Slyke hit .288 with 15 triples, 25
homers, 100 RBI and 30 s tole n
bases. Clark topped the league In
RBI with 109 while hitting .282
with 29 homers and 102 runs.
Hers hiser , trying to become
the first NL pitcher since' Bob
Gibson in 1968 to win the MVP,
ended the season with a major
league-record 59 straight scorelel!'s Innings and finished at 23-8
wllh a 2.26 ERA, eight shutouts
and 15 complete games.

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OPEN

practice lime with injuries.
McCants has been battling a
lingering case of the flu and
Jones wilt likely miss a few
games because of a bac k injury.
That ha s left the six Boilermaker newcomers to learn about
Big Ten basketball without lessons from the veterans.
''The lack of intensity , On
prac tice) is because the older
kids are hurt and (the newcomers ) haven't been through the
trials and tribulations of what to
do when you're tired," said
Keady.

opener _:~

62.5 percent.
The Redmen are to play Friday
at 9 p.m. at home against Dyke
College in the second game of the
opening men's competition of the·
Bevo Francis Classic.
Box sco re:
RIO GRI\NDE (104) - Anthony Raymore, 2-3-7; Jimmy
Kearns , 3-4-0-18; Mike Tidwell,
2-0-4; Rob Jackson, 5-1-11; Marc
Gothard, 6-l -13; John Lambcke,
8-l -17; Brian Watkins, 1·1-0-5;
Larry Benning, 4-0-8; Scott
Slus~r. 1-0-2; Brad Schubert,
0-5-0-15; Mark Erslan, 2-0·4.
TOTI\LS 34-10-6-104.
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (~3)
..,.. Rodney Persinger, 0-1-1; Eric
Sudlow, 7-1 -0-17; Jeff Kinney,
3-0-6; Bart Snyder, 5-2-12; Mike
Talbott. 2-2-6; Kevin Hart, 2-0-4;
Scott Vickers, 1-0-2; Kelly
Combs, 0-1-0-3; Paul Melton,
1-0-2. TOTI\LS 2·1-2-5-53. ,

Kirk Gibson first Dodger in
14 years to be named MVP

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•

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-•

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Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

the Rose Bowl by virtue of its
· victory earlier this season over
Michigan State.
.
"The game against Ohio State
wlll be a tough one to win, "
Michigan coach Bo Schem·
bechler said Tuesday. 'Then
we'll go to a bowl game and play
someone. Then we'll see what
kind of a team we have. Whether
J)le championship is hanging in
the balance or not, this is a very
big game."

"I don' t think we'll (take Ohio
State lightly)," he said. " You 've
got to understand, it's always one
of our goals to beat Ohio State.
And we could lose part of the title
if we don't play well down there."
Across the state In East Lans·
lng, Mich., the Spartans are
preparing lor their season !lnale
at home against Wisconsin. I! the
Spartans beat the Badgers, they
wlll go to the Gator Bowl,
Michigan State officials announced Tuesday.
Schembechler said Michigan,
''If we work hard and keep our
which romped over lllinois 38-9 mouths closed," Michigan State
last weekend, will not look past . coach George Peries said, "some
the 2-4·1 Buckeyes. Whlle Ohio good things could happen alter
State Is not in the running for any the season. So, lor that reason
post-season appearences,
(the Wisconsin game) is a big
Schembechler said the rivalry game.''
between the two schools will
The Spartans, 5-4-1 overall and
make lor an intense game.
5-1·1 In conference games, go

against a Wisconsin team that
collected its ltrst Big Ten win of
the season last week In a 14·1
victory over Minnesota.
"They played a fine game las·
week," said P erles. "They usear
option, and tha t bothers us. W&lt;
have a lot of work to do. I'm very
very happy about theopportunlt~
we have with the Gator Bowl, bu 1
it really comes down to this las t
game against Wisconsin. ' '
A number of prospective bowl
bids will add to the excitement of
the last week of the season.
Illinois, with a win over
Northwestern, will play in the
Ali·Arnerlcan Bowl. Iowa, which
faces Minnesota this week, Is set
for the Peach Bowl. And Indiana
will go to the Liberty Bowl if It
can best Purdue.

Citadel, Furman clash for ·share of title .
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)
-While The Citadel and Furman
clash at Greenville, S.C., Satur·
day to decide which team shares
with Marshall the Southern Con·
let ence championship, the
Thundering Herd will be in
Yciungstown. Ohio. for Its regular
season finale.
For Marshall, owning a 6·1
conference mark, it would be its
first piece of a football title in the
conference where it has been the

most dominating team In basket·
ball for five years.
The only way Marshall could
snag an outright championship
would be lor The Citadel· Furman
contest to end In a tie that would
leave them with 5-1·1 conference
marks.
If the conference finishes with
co-champions, the team that won
head-to-head games would gain
the conference's automatic bid to
the 16-team field of the NCAA

Division I·AA playoffs.
Marshall beat Furman 24-10,
but lost to The Citadel 20-3.
Both co-champions are ex·
peeled to obtain playoff berths,
and possibly the third-place
team. In this week's NCAA
Division I·AA poll, Furman, 8·2
overall, was rated fifth; Marshall, 9·1 overall, was No. 7; and
The Citadel, 8-2, was ninth. The
poll helps determine the at-large
berths.

Hawks hand Cavs first loss, 97-95
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) Aj1 edge in experience gave the

A1Janta Hawks a two-point vlct.&gt;ry Tuesday night.
:Moses Malone scored 21 points
as:Attanta survived a late Cleveland rally to hand the Cavaliers
tHeir first loss of the season,
97-95.
• ;'There no question that our
v~teran players, guys like Moses
aRd Dominique (Wilkins) made
ttle difference because games
ill&lt;£' this aren't new to them,"
said Reggie Theus, who added 19
pOints for the Hawks.
•"But the way Cleveland's
progressing, they'll soon be
w.here they'll be just as ready
down the stretch. We nearly got
beiil, and we were up18 points."
~Atlanta, 5-2, also got 17 points
from Wilkins. Cleveland, 4-1
alter winning all eight of Its
e:$hibltion games.- was led by
Brad Daugherty's 22 points but
rrilssed 13 of 33 free throws.
~troll, 6-0, is the NBA's only
u!1beateil team.

"It was a very intense game,"
said Wilkins, who was just 7-of-23
from the field. "I think It's lair to
say we had the experience edge
we we needed it, and · we just
pulled through."
Atlanta coach Mlk~ Fratello
said his team ''needs to extend its
periods of good defense. You
need 48 minutes or concentration f
and understanding, and that's
hard this early in the season."
The Hawks led 82-68 after three·
quarters and 94·76 with seven
minutes left before John ."Hot
Rod" Williams had ail 6 of his
points in a 16·1 run. Williams
missed four of eight free throws
in the burst, but made two to
bring Cleveland within 95-92 with .
2:02 remaining.
"We missed two many free
throws," said Cleveland coach
Lenny Wilkens, whose team was
held under 100 points lor the first
time this season. "II we had, we
probably would've won the
game.
"Last year's team might not

•'

Dayton, Wittenberg square off Saturday
•' DAYTON. Ohio (UP!) -Dayton and Wittenberg square off
:i\aturday in a first-round game of
the NCAA Dlv!son Ill playoffs at
Welcome Stadium.
Dayton, last year's national
runnerup, ended with a 9-1 mark
afler a 47-7 romp over Evans·
ville, while Wittenberg at 8·2
shared the Ohio Athletic Confer·
ence title with Baldwin-Wallace
after beating the Yellow Jackets
21·17 . .
Dayton has won the national
tournament once and been runnlarup twice. Last year the Flyers
lost to Widener. Wittenberg,
which leaves the OAC for the
North Cqast'Athletlc Conference
next season. has won the national
tournament twice and been a
runnrup twice.
This will be Dayton's seventh
appearance ln the playoffs, tying
the Flyers for second with
W-Idener (Pa.)and Ithaca lor the
nhmber of appearances. August;jlla (Ill.) Is making Its ninth

straight appearance. It has won
the national title lour straight
.times.
Augustana (8·1) hosts ACirtan
(Mich.) 7-2 In another pla.yo!l
game Saturday. The national
!tnals will be played In the Amos
Alonzo Stagg Bowl In Phenix
City, Ala.

: HUNTING
SEASON IS
HERE!
SEE US FOR· AlL
YOUR NEEDS
•LICENSES
:
•SHELLS

1987
FORD
THUNDERBIRD

Cleveland visits New Jersey
Friday night before hosting Mil·
waukee Saturday night.

WAS $11,900

PVH Welcomes·
Dr. Benjamin Sol

1986 OLDS
CUTLASS
CIERA2 DR.

Sports briefs
Baseball
,The Pit tsburgh Pirates hired
B;ruce Klmm as a coach. Ktmm
served as bullpen and third base
coach for the Reds . since 1983.
Ktmm , 37, played In the majors
w\th Detroit, the White Sox and
the Cubs.

have gotten back in the game,
though. Moral victories don't go
in the won-lost column, but we
learned something about ourselves aqd we'll be better prepared nex I time."
Wilkins sank two free tl\rows 13
seconds later, but was called for
goaltendtngona Ron Harper shot
and Atlanta was ahead 97-94 with
1:29 left. Alter the teams traded
turnovers and missed shots,
Harper's three-point attempt to
tie the game was short but he was
fouled by Cliff Levingston with
one second left.
Harper made the first free
throw and intentionally fired the
second against the backboard,
but the rebound bounce.d away as
time ran out. Harper . finished
with 19 points.
"We gave It all we could," said
Harper. ''We did a good job as a
young team just to get back in the
game. Everyone thought the
game was over in the third
quarter, except us. I know it .
won't make anybody feel betqor,
but this wlll help us."
·
Cleveland led 32·22 alter a
fast-paced first quarter In which
Harper scored 10 points. Leving·
ston had seven points as Atlanta
scored the first 11 of the second
quarter, and the Hawks tied the
game 53-53 at halftime.

Youngstown State poses a
threat to the Thundering .Herd
despite Its 4-6 record. In the view
of Marshall coach George
Chaump. The Penguins pounded
Southern Illinois 31-14 last week.
Meanwhile, Marshall had to
score the last 28 points of the
game to notch a 52·45 conquest of
Western Carolina, now 2-8.
"Last year at this time we won
our final game of the season to
gain momentum going Into the
playoffs," Chaump said. "It's
Youngstown' s final game of the
season and with the way they
have been beating people lately,
we expect them to be very
tough."
Marshall tallied the first 35
points In a 38-13 romp over
Youngstown in Huntington last
year but both teams reached the
playoffs. Marshall advanced to
the national championship game
before losing 43-32 to Northeast
Louisiana and Youngstown fell In
the first round to Northern Iowa
31·28.

•

Pleasant Valley Hospital Is pleased to
welcome Benjamin j . Sot, M.D.. to its Medical
Staff. A gynecologist and obstetrtdan, Dr. Sol
will have omces In Suite 215 of the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Medical Olllce Building.
beginning Nov. 1. Dr. Sol comes to Point
Pleasant from Grantsv!lle, where he has been
in private practice and on the medical staff at
Calhoun General Hospital since 1975. He also
worked with the Gilmer Health Department's
Family Planning O!ntc in Glen\lllle. Dr. Sol
earned his medical degree from Southwestern
University in Cebu Oty, Philippines, In 1961,
did a rotating internship at St. John's
Episcopal Hospital In Brooklyn. N.Y.. and
completed a four-year residency In obstetrics
and gynecology at St. John's in 1970, during
which time he was chief resident. He was on
the emergency room staff at St. John's
Episcopal Hospital. and was staff
phystdan and E.lt physldan at
' Mather Memorial Hospital in Port
jefferson, N.Y. or: sot is a member of
the West Virginia Medical
Assoclatlon, the Parkersburg
Academy of Medldne, the American
' Assoclatlon of Gynecologic LaparoSCQplsts and the American Institute of
Ultrasound in Medldne.
Dr. Sol will have office hours from
8:30a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.
Appointments may be made by calling

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1984 FORD
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•

•

I would like to thank everyone
who worked for, and supported
me, in mysuccessful re-election as
your County Court Judge.

PAT O'BRIEN

'•

SOVIETS SCORE- Sharunas Marchulenls (7) drives betwe1m
Ohio State's Jamaal Brown, left, and Blil Robinson lor two points
In the first hall of Tuesday night's exhibition game between the
Russian National Team and the Buckeyes. The Russians won SZ. 76.

Kaff-kaff

JUDGE OF MEIGS COUNTY COURT
The
O'Brien
Family

(left tu
right) are:
daughter,

Joy; Pal;
son, Sean;
and wife,
Mary
'. O'Brien.

1987 FORD

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-

I

them away, It kind of does -Jay. He's a ma rked man now."
something to your shootin g
The Buckeyes used a zone
confidence.''
press much of the time, forcing
Ohio State hit jus t 28 of 79 shots the Soviets into an uncommon 29
from the lleld, Includi ng only 4 of turnovers .
17 by Jay Burson a nd 4 of 13 by
Ohio State, will) Wi lliams using
·
Tony White.
11 players , led by as· ma ny as 11
" Jay (Burson) didn't shoot . points during the fi rst half, but
well," Willia ms said of last the SoviEits scored the final six
year 's leading Ohio St ate scorer , points to trail only 41·37 at the
" but I'm not worried. Jay wlll be Intermission .
· Three consecutive 3-poln.t field
goals early In the second half put
the·Sov_tet Union up 48-44 and the
biggest Ohio State lead the rest of
the way was one point.
J erry Francis, who led Ohio
Sta te with 15 points, hit a
3- pointer with 47 seconds to play
to get the Buckeyes to within
78-76, but Marchulents hit a pair
LOGAN- Ac hangeol venue tn of free throws at the 7-second
the trial of Kirk Hardman, mark to clinch It fo r th ~ Soviet
former Logan High School bas· Union.
ketball coach, has been granted,
"We're very tired," said Soviet
and the trial has been scheduled coach Yurt Sellkhov. "We were
In Montgomery County Common tired before we arrived in the
Pleas Court in Dayton.
United States . I think basketball
The trial lor Hardman, who Is a most di!flcutt game in the
coached boys' basketball at United · States. The zone press
Logan lor seven year s, has been
set for Dec. 5.
Athens County Common Pleas
GOOD ·USED
Court Judge Roger Jones wtll
preside at the trial in Dayton.
WASHERS, DRYERS,
The trial began last month In
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
Hocking County Common Pleas
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
Court, but the change gf venue
was granted when only 14 prospective jurors could be found
among the 200-plus prospects
called ln.
Hardman was indicted by a
62 7 3rd Ave., Galipolis
Hocking County grand jury on
PH. 446 ·1699
sex-related charged involving.

MaJigAmhting lris!!J!!~n! 10 keep ~!!~.~ high
•

OS B Hoople

Wizard of Odds

Egad, friends! This is the
Saturday ¥0U've been walling for
-the Saturday when the college
football bowl committees extend
their invitations.
No matter where you took
around the country there's a
BIG, BIG game on tap.
Starting In the Midwest, the
Penn State Nlttany Lttms invade
South Bend, Ind., to meet Notre
Dame (CBS·TV) for the 13th time
· In their Intense series.
The Fighting Irish .can solidify
. their top position by defeating the
Ntttany Lions this week and
- Southern California next week.
But Notre Dame, only 5-6-1
against Penn State's coach, Joe
Paterno, always gets his team up
' for the btg·ones.
·
The Irish attack, under QB
Tony Rice, gets better each week
-N.D. ligures to outpoint Penn
State, 35-20.
Also in the Midwest, mighty
Michigan, driving for the Rose
Bowl, meets disappointing Ohio
State (NBC-TV) for the 85th
time. In this ancient revalry
season records usually count for
naught. But our reasearch lndl·
cates the Wolverines are just too
strong lor the Buckeyes. Michl·
gan will prevail, 31-14.
In the West, UCLA and the
Southern Calllornta Trojans wlll
meet for the 58th time (ABC-TV) .
They wlll play in the Rose Bowl,
where eacl\ team would like to be
the host on Jan. 2. It will be a
battle of superlative QBs, Troy
Aikman of UCLA and Rodney
Peete of the Trojans. Southern
Cal, with Peete passing superbly,
wlll run its record in the series to
33·19·6 with a thrilling 28-24
triumph.'
In Baton Rouge, La., the
Fighting Tigers of Louisiana
State wilt entertain the high·
scoring Miami Hurricanes
(ESPN-TV), with both teams
looking for major-bowl bids. You
can expect a real aerial show as
Miami QB Steve Walsh, a prime
contender for the Hetsman
Trophy, goes up against LSU' s
talented passer. Tommy Hodson.
On experience, strength and
depth of personnel, the Hoople
System gives it to Miami, 31·24.
The annual Big Eight battle
between Nebraska and Okla·
homa lor the Orange. Bowl trip
will be staged In Norman, Okla.
As always, both clubs have
potent offenses: Nebraska is
scoring at a 45-polnt·per·game
clip, and Oklahoma Is checking
in at 35 points-per-game. Nebraska's running-passing QB' Steve
Taylor Is our choice to lead the
Cornhuskers to a nerve•tingltng
35-31 victory.
In "The Game," Harvard and
Yale wlll meet lor the 105th time.
In their customary down-to-thewire finish, Harvard wUI prevail,
28·22.
In the showdown for the
Lambert Trophy, signifying supremacy in the East, West
Virginia wlll down Syracuse,
42-31.
For you early risers, Army and
· Boston College wilt tangle In
Dublin, Ireland, vla.ESPN·TV at
8 a.m. EST. Egad! That's before
breakfast. The Army Mules wlll
come home lhe winner, 27·25.

Marshall 42 Youngstown State 24
Miami (Florida) 31 Louisiana State 24
MlchJgan 31 Ohio State 14
Michigan State 35 Wisconsin
Missoorl 38 Kansas 10
Nebraska 35 Oklahoma 31
Notre Darhe 3!5 Penn State 20
North Texas 17 Rice 14
Oklahoma State 49 Iowa State 20
Oregon 22 Oreg!;lD State 17
Pennsylvania 24 Cornell 21
Pittsburgh 24 North Carolina State 21
Prlnceton 28 Dartmouth 6

surprised m e. "
Sellkhov, whose team beat
Nor th' Carolina las t Saturday and
NC State on Monday night , said
he knew nothing about Ohio State
pr ior to the game. ,
" I read co llege magazines and
know a little about the big
scorers," he sa id.
Still remaining on the Soviet
schedu le a re games against .
Purdue, Vanderbilt , Kansas,
U N LV, Oklahoma and
Was hington.
"It's our]ob. " Seltkhov said of
the Soviet team. " We play
different opponents. It Is good
experience and maybe It will
help us be better next year. "
Despite the loss, Williams also
looked upon the game as asset.
" We appreciate the opportutty
to play this team," he said. :'This
will hopefully help us down the
road.
"There were about five or six
scouts out there, so I only used
one press," added Williams. "We
have a couple more that we didn ' t
want to show."

Hardman trial
scheduled for
DecemberS

FB
Y

992-2196

r

The Daily Sentinel-Page· 5

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State gave It the old college
try Tu esday night, but It wasn' t
good enough to whip the Soviet
Union 's Olympic golf medal
winning basketball team.
·
The Soviets, now 3·0 on their
9-game U.S. tour against Arnerl·
can collegiate teams, needed a
strong second-hal! effort, led by
7-loot-2 center Arvldas Sabonls ·
and 6-loot4 guard Sharunas
Marchulenis; to subdue the
scrappy Buckeyes, 82· 76 before a
sold out cr owd of 13.276 In St.
John Arena.
. "We made a game of It," said
Ohio State coach Gary Williams .
"We had a chance with 20
seconds left, but we just didn't
shoot the ball well tonight."
9abonis, a 260-pound lntimldat·
lng shot-blocker, had a lot to do
with Ohio State's shooting prob·
Ienis. He was credlled with live
blocks, but there were no stalls·
tics kept on the number of shots
he altered.
"He looked like a goalkeeper,' •
Wllllams said of Sabonls, whom
he labeled "probably one of top
six or seven centers In the world.
When he's out there swatting

HAMBURGER

461 SOUTH THIRD

Valley Drlvo, Point Ploaoont, W.Va. 2SSSO (304) 675-4340

-----~---

Soviet five slips _past Ohio _State, 82-J~ -- ~

·S.ecial of the Week!

PAT HILL FORD

The hunlly of profaulor!ala

.
---------·

j ___ _

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

WAS S4995.00

(304) 675·3400.

·-··---~

~

Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Michigan needs victory over Ohio State
for undisputed grid championship
By RICH,\RD BRUNELLI
United Press International
The ques lion of who wlll
represent the Big Ten at the Rose
Bowl Is moot, bu t the matter of
whether No. 11 Mi chigan wlll
nave sole possession of the
conference crown or have to
s hare with Michigan State Is 'stlll
up in the air.
With the Big Ten season
wrapping up this weekend, the
Wolverines, 7-2-1 overall and .
6-0·1 in the conference, must beat
Ohio State to take the Big Ten
title out right. But a Michigan
toss, coupled with a Michigan
State win over Wisconsin, would
give the Wolverines and the
Spartans Identical 6-1-1 confer·
ence marks.
If that scenerlo were to develop, Michigan would still go to

--~-

Temple 34 Tulsa 24
Texas A&amp;M 42 Texas Christian 12
Tulane 17 Mlsslsslppl State 13
Utah State 17 CAl State-Fulle1:oo 14
VanderbUt 24 Memphis State 21
VIllanova 23 Maine 16
Wake Forest 19 Appalachian State 15
Washtngtoo State 24 Washlnatm 21
Western Carolina 13 Vlrainla Mllltary 7
Western Michigan 28 Ohio Unlv. 10
West Vlr~nla 42 Syracuse 31
WUUam i Mary 38 Richmood 12
WyCI'I\lng 31 HawaU '11

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FOR PARTS &amp;
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CALL
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use warranty . .SOB-29

599

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lndrvidual aealersmay hmil quanllties.
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Some s1ores ma¥restrictrtems 10
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SATURDAY, Nov.'19
Air Force 38 UTEP 35
Army 2? Bostoo College 25
Baylor 24 Texas 21
Brigham Young 38 Utah 20
Brown 19 Columbia 14

Central

Mtchlean

36

Miami (Ohio)

Hardware Lumber

I

21 Lehigh 20

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

24

Clerruoo U South, Car !:Kina 21
Colorado 41 Kanl&amp;l State 14
COnnecuan 30 Rhode Island 1!5 ,
Delaware 22 BostCI1 University 17
Duke 35 North Carcitna 18
East CArolina 31 Cincinnati 28
Fresno State 44 Long Beach State 24
Furman 33 Citadel 28
Harvard 28 Yale 22
'
Holy Cr01s 35 ~ortheastern 17
HouStm 4-t Texas Tech 21
JUlaoll 28 Northwestern 14
Indiana 2f Purdue 14
Iowa 21 Minnesota 17
Kentucky 17 Tennessee 14
Laf~et"

Home Ce'\fers

405 North Second Avenue
MIDDLEPORT
•

�- --

---

Page 6-The Ollily Sentinel

Scoreboards
NBA results
NATJON.U. IMDTIALL ASIOC.
:.EIIWaCollerelet
Allutlc DIYIIIIIa

WLPd. GB
I t .114 t
.111 1
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Pb08bl
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New.Jer.eylll, Dl..wtetl
Beeto. M, Mlllftl e

BEREA, Ohio IUPI) - The
Cleveland Browns, seemingly
des tilled at the start of the season
to represent the AFC In the Super
Bowl, face a struggle just to
reach the playoffs following
consecutive losses at Houston
· ,.,.,
and Denver.
Pending the result of Monday
nlght!s game between Buffalo
and Miami, Cleveland could be
tied with as many as seven AFC
teams at &amp;.5 fighting for a wlld
card berth.
The Browns were routed 30·7
Sunday by the Broncos, who
Improved to &amp;.5 In converting
four turnovers Into 20 points and
a 30-0 halftime lead for their lOth
straight victory In the series.

"It's discouraging when you
work hard and the ball won't
bounce your way," offensive
lineman Rickey Bold~ said
Monday. "We need to take a good
look at each other.
"Personally, I'm very upset.
I'm ready to take outfrustrat!ons
on someone. I wish we'd play the
Steelers this Wednesday Instead
of this Sunday."
Cleveland has a two-game
losing streak for just the second
time In two seasons. Last year,
the Browns were 1·3 before losing
consecutive games to San Francisco and Indianapolis before
finishing with , three str.alght
victories and their third AFC
Central title.

Coach Marty Schot tenhelmer
says he will not remind the
players of the 1987 recovery,
saying "I generally have a short
memory, win or lose."
1
"I don't take any c~m!ort In
anything when we lose," continued Schottenhe!mer. "We're
going to have to start playing a
lot better than we did (Sunday ). "
Schottenhe!mer has. come In
for crtttctsm concerning his play
calling this season. Cleveland
has had no offensive coordinator
since Lindy Infante accepted the
Green Bay head coaching job In
the off-season, and Schottenhelmer has asswned that role.
The Browns are averaging 16.1
points a game this season after

·.o...

GoldeaS&amp;ateua..t.u. 1:•p.m.
. Chlc.,aaiP'hllallel ... a,1:••·m·
IWnllt at Su Alii ...., 1: • p.m.
Plleelllll.,t:•p.m.
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'l"'llll ... ., ••

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o..,.

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New Ju~Q at MliWMIIee, Dlpt

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• o.~-. •IIIII

RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE ON
UP TO 8 MAr,~f,~fF~pD~!,~S COUPONS

Su Alltonkl at: Den~r. •l&amp;bt
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lA Lakera M Seltdr, 111&amp;11&amp;

i $3.00 OFF iI
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NHL results

·

I

Steam Carpet and
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MIDDLEPORT, OH.•GEN. HARTINGER PKWY ~i-PEARLST~;992:3471

A CARDINAL AFFILIATED

......

Renlal of the

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Nl"Rupt~Mt..o.At!Fet,•IIW

U.S. Government lnspected•Grjide "A"
Basted, With Timer•10 lbs. and Up

Ohio standings
Ditto Colll!lt Foetb.ll Remrdl
By V•lll!d ,,.., ..eer •tio-.J

CARDINAL GOLD .

MID-WEBJCAN CONFERENCE
co•renl!t 4h·erall

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Eu&amp;eraMlcb

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OHIO CONFERENCE
Bal ..w.nau:
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Me••Unto.
JleiMIIJ!r&amp;
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NOR'IH CO..UT CONFERENCE
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PRESIDENTS' CONFERENCE
W111h I Jell
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t 20
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Hiram
.t 20
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Car-Mt&gt;lloe
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Cenlral St
Bluffton
Wllmtnston

•

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.........

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UP'IO

'

on Page 51 •

~ioning

Nov. 16)
U.S. Gov t. Inspected
Grade ''A''•tO lbl. &amp; Up

(Available

U.S. Gov't. Inspected
Grade ''A''•10 tbs. &amp; Up

PARK FARMS
FRESH TURKEYS
lb.

BUnERBALL
TURKEYS

ggc:_ age:
lb.

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Akron
Urbana

..,.....,.

4
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11111•

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Christmas
open house
scheduled

• ••
Enriched

Burball

30&lt;

GOLD MEDAL
FLOUR

Clnelud - Named .Jobi. Hart rn-,lorleape 1 pl'cl.a •alpmeat JCOaL
NV Meh- Picked up Oplloll )'@&amp;ron
ce~~ter ftt!lll!r Mao trite WUA«&lt;a'1 colllrsct.

Pltl. . l"'lll - Biped ovlftelder Gar;r
Redls to a Z..,e1r co ..,.et.

Lo•• -

Sl.
Plln:bued coatracb ot
p Me her• Cr .. Car pea&amp;er, le Hra..eroaad

Ass't. Varieties•Paper

BRAWNY

TOWELS

5 pound bag

oalflelder ,\ler; Cole;
cllkher Nd Zelle ••• l•ltt• GerotllmoPtaa.
Buletb.al
NIA - r1 aed Robert Parllh of Boston

A Christmas open house will be
held Nov. 27 from noon to 5 p.m.
at the Basket Weave, located on
Rocksprings Road · between
Peach Fork and Flat wood Roads
In Pomeroy. There will be a
l)asket door prize, favors, and
refreshments at the open house.
Pam Milhoan, owner of the
shop, handweaves the baskets at
her home. She makes many
di !ferent sizes and shapes and
has her shop open for business on
Saturdays from 10 a.m. tll4 p.m.
an4 evenings by appointment.
She sells many of her baskets
to 'Only from Ohio a specialty
shop for Ohio artists, located in
Athens. and currently has her
baskets featured . In that shop's
fa[\-wlnter catalog.
Mrs. Milhoan plans to add
basket making supplies to her
shop and to offer basket weaving
classes there In the future.

jumbo roll

Ahlt IUia!l';

69°

SI,Htud Btll~al~eroiDelroM Sl,IM
rorfllftlnJN011.1l ; flnediUckMabornof
Det!Wt IIIII lor two O.put foU

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defeaaemu Rlcllllle Duo to Recbfllil!r.

CoUege scores
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Br UniU!d Prw1 ..ter~aJional

Tuetd,., No11. II

ExlllblfiG• Garn•

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So riel Ualon 8!, OhkiSt&amp;te 'ff
. . ..,..W..Iace ltJ. Wladlor (O.t) 'I
Zadar (Y•PI•"a) II, a..l•rGr-.

MVP votes
Natkl-' Leape IIVP Votl•r

II)' Valle II , , . . ..~114»_.
( U.tllla nr..,.aee 11.._ • • ee&amp;als)

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16-ounce bottles

10 pound bag

Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Past matrons and past patrons
of Har rlsonv!lle Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star, were
honored at' a recent meeting held
at the Harlsonv!Ue Masonic
Temple .
Dana Hoffman. worthy patron,
and Bernice Hoffman, worthy
matron, welcomed the honored
group and had a short program
with the star points reading
poems. They were then Invited to
the East where each one was
presented a gift of appreciation
for help during the past year.
Recogn !zed and welcomed was
Ruby Diehl, a 60 year member.

happen on Nov. 27 when the
annual parade Is held to welcome
In the season and busllnesses will
enter~!n with open houses from
12 ·to 5 p.m. with, of course,
special promotions during those
hours.
. America's Schools: Invest In
Your Future Is tlie theme being
carried out tlils week at various
schools of the county In obser·
vance of National Education.
Week.

-------""'"1"'

Residents and the staff of
Amer!care-zPomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center are
pepped up for a holiday bazaar
which they wtll stage from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday at the
American Legion Home In Mid·
dleport. Proceeds from the event
wtll go towards purchasing
Christmas gifts for residents and
sponsoring special events for
them.
There will be a leaf pickup
service conducted.by the vtllage
In Pomeroy.
This year It's a little latter to
give you time to get them all up.
The pickup will be Npv. 28
through Dec. 2 and w!ll be done
by wards with . the first ward
being picked up on Nov . 28.
Long-time Middleport rest·
dent, Mrs.' Dorothy Roller extends a most sincere thanks to all
of her friends who remembered
her on her 85th birthday wtth
cards, flowers and calls. You
folks are so good at that type
thlng-Ithankyou, too, fQrallof
the kindnesses you extend In so
many directions.
Aren't Middleport's new
Christmas decorations Impressive and getting them up now
during a spell of good weather
was re~lly good planning; I look
forward to seeing them lightedreally nice.

Do you also get to the point
where your personal business
seems to be !nterferrlng with
your job? Not good - but let's
1u!ep sm11!ng·. · ' '

AMANDA D. SMITH

Smith birth
announced
Mr. and Mrs. James Smith. nee
Martha Pugh, announce the birth
of their first child, Amanda
Darlene, born Oct. 12 ai the
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She.weighed seven pounds, five
ounces and was 21 Inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Smith, Pomeroy, and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Pugh, Long
Bottom. Great-grandparents
are Sarah Smith, Pomeroy, and
the late Calvin Smith. Tom and
Viola Edwards .

A corsage making workshop
conducted by Janet Holsinger
highlighted the recent meeting of
the Chester Garden Club held at
the home of Maidie Mora.
Each of the members made a
gardenia corsage during the
workshop.
Dorothy Karr pres lded at the
buetnss meeting with a report
being given by the tour members
who attended the fall regional
meeting In Mar let ta .' Two

11

n

•

u

Harvest Dinner

being planned

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at 7:30
p.in. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Mary Nease.
·
HARRISONVILLE - Harrlsonv!lle Lodge 411 will hold open
Installation of Jerry W. Well as
District Deputy GrandMaster of
the 12th Masonic District, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. Potluck will be
served.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Literary Club w!ll meet
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, Minersville.
Mrs. Bernard Fultz will review
Mary Todd Lincoln by Jean
Baker .
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will hold a
special meeting with the fire
department, Thursday, 6:30
p.m ., at the Reedsv!lle Fire
Station.
RUTLAND ·- Leading Creek
Conservancy District will hold a
special meeting Thursday at
10:30 a.m.
LAUREL CLIFF- The Laurel
Cliff Health Club w!ll meet
Thursday, 7 p.m., at the home of
Jean Wright, Pomeroy.
RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department's annual turkey
dinner will ·b e Thursday, begin·
nlng at 5 p.m., at Rutland G.rade
School. Tickets, for $5, may be
purchased through the fire
department.

will meet at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. Invited:
at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church for a Thanks·
POMEROY - The Belles and
giving potluck supper. Members Beaus Western SQuare Dance
are to take baby Items.
Club w!ll sponsor an open dance
on Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at
REEDSVILLE - Riverview the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 Center. Caller for the evening
·Thursday night at the Reedsville w!ll ·.be Homer Magnet. All
Church of Christ. Nelle Wilson western square dancers are
and Ruth Ann Balderson will invited.
conduct a workshop. Members
are to take finger foods and
PORTLAND - Hazael C1Jm·
Christmas gifts for the health munlty Church Is having a hymn
sing on Saturday, at 7:30 p.m.,
care center.
featuring the Unroe Famllly.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Cub Scout Pack 245 w!ll hold a
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO is
father-son cake baking contest sponsoring a fall festival at the
at 7-p.m. Thursday at Middleport Rutland Elementary School on
Masonic Temple with trophies Saturday from 6 to 9 p.m.
going to prettiest, fanciest, most Everyone welcome.
original and most unusual cakes;
public Invited to cake auction
SUNDAY
LETART FALLS
Letart
following competition.
FRIDAY
Falls PTO Is hosting a fall
RACINE- Annual Thanksglv· festival Sunday at the Letart
lng dinner at the Racine Grange Falls Elementary. Serving of
Hall, Oak Grove Road, at 6 p.m. rood will start at 12 noon.
Friday. The ham and turkey w!ll Everyone welcome.
be furQ!shed. Those attending
are to take a covered dish and
their own table service. There
Pauline Atkins was presented
will be a ptg In a poke auction
20
year plaque and a sliver tray.
a
following the dinner.
for outstanding service when she
attended the recent two day
session of the Supervisors of
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Hymn sing Dairy Herd Improvement AssoSaturday, 7 p.m. at Morse Chapel ciation held.at the Harley Hotel in
Church with Harvest Trio; ubllc Columbus.

Adkins at meeting

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Democratic Executive
Committee will ineet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at Carpenters' Hall, E.
Main St., Pomeroy; all Inter·
ested party members Invited.

Our Staff Just
Recently
Received
Training In
Styles and Cuts
From Paul
, Mitchell.

MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
port Child Conservation League

'I

f
- -'-----

992·2550

Trudy Marthall, Susan Slaaon. Cheryl Willford, Lola
Eblin and Liz Luc••·

I

IIA&amp;I DATU: .....~., 1llllrl lltlll~ll 11, 1118 Cu•nllly rlgh11 ....-

f

. NOI '"""'11101&amp; ror lypcl9rephlcal "'

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

A

A75 Year Tradition
OfBeit}g
The Untradinonal
Thanks ..

•

Me~

•

Get Your
Holiday Hair
Styles Early!

MIDDLEPOIT, OH.

14
'7
•

............. . .
..........
.,

STYLING ST.IO &amp; TANNING CENTEI

u

Christmas meeting to be held In
the Vintage Room at the Down
Under In Gallipolis. Members
responded to roll call by naming
a friend who has Inspired them.
Sunshine girts were discussed,
with Edna Wood to take on to
Goldie Krackenburger, Jo H!ll
one tor Ralph and Stella Frank,
and Maye Mora, one for Altona
Karr. A dessert course was
served by the hostess assisted by
MayeMora.

Grange meeting conducted recen:tly

Shear Illusions

liS

members attended the count
meeting and it was noted that
Clarice Krautter drew the
classes for the holiday show to be
staged Nov. 26 and 27 at the
Meigs Multipurpose building.
It was reported that Jo H!ll
entered three wreaths tn the
French Art Colony wreath contest judged by Betty Dean or the
Chester Club, also Region 11
director.
Plans were . made for the

Scouting
for focxl
scheduled

48 ounce bottle

1M

·'

Chester Garden Club has me.eting

lit ·

Ill

treatments. A card was signed
tor her. Harvey Er!ewlne and
Lois Pauley was reported much
Improved.
A bakeless bake sale was held
at the meeting. Betty Bishop and
Bernice Hoffman gave a report
on Grand Chapter. It was noted
that the OES ts the largest
organizatiOn In the United States .
Thanksgiving poem was read by
the worthy matron as the chapter
closed. Mr . and Mrs. Jack
Warner, Lots Thompson, and
Helen Eblin served refreshments. Blll Hendrick and daughter were vis !tors at the meeting.

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter
The charter was draped In tor the Christmas parade.
memory of Fred Goeglein, a Members reported !II were Ho· • served refreshments.
charter member when the Rock · mer Radford and Grace Whaley.
Springs Grange met recently at ·
For the program, Mrs. Kuhl
gave a sign language lesson and
the hall.
Barbara Fry, women's activ!·
Pat Holter showed a film on
ties chairman, reported that a
bluebirds. Patty Dyer, delegate
potluck dinner w!ll be held Dec. 8 to the State Grange session, gave
Meigs County boy scouts are at 6: 30 p.m at the hall. Members her report.
531 JACKSON PIKE - RT.35 WEST
joining In the natiOnwide Scal,lt· are to take canned good for a
--4!520
lng !or Food program.
special Christmas project, and a
AU.IUI'SII.IO
According to the Robert Smith, white elephant gift !or an exACIIUIIIDIIIVIII¥',......
M.LIUI'SU.IO
MGM representative, here, plas· change. The turkey wlll be
tic containers are being put out furnished by Roy and Opal
L~=:~ ~U=Y~=oJ
on door knobs of houses around Grueser.
the county and w!ll be collected
Mrs. Grueser, legislative
The annual Harvest Dinner of
Chrtat ...
on Saturday. Residents are chairman, 'eported on the na·
the Presbyterian Churches of
asked , to put non-perishable tiona! grange session, the free
Middleport Syracuse, and Harr!food In the bags and put them farmers' tax guide from the IRS, sonv!lle will be held Sunday at
back on their door knobs for and noted that less than five
the Middleport Church hosted by
collection on Saturday.
m!llton now live on farms.
the Board of Deacons there.
All of the food w!ll go to the
Communications were read
The church service will also be
Food Pantry of the the Method IS!' !rom the Nation~! Blind Society a joint observance at 10:.30 a.m.
Parish for distribution fo needy and from Frances Goegle!n.
with the dinner to be served at
Meigs Countlans.
11: 30 a.m. Th~ attending are to.
Bunny Kuhl reported on the float
take a covered dish.

· OIL

tit

Donald Br!ckles and Betty Brlckles were Initiated Into the order of
the Eastern Star. Marjorie Rice
w.as voted In as a trusteee of the
chapter. .
It was announced that Instal Ia·
tlon w!U be held on Dec. 16 with
potluck refreshments.
Refreshments for the December meeting are to be cookies
and coffee, and there will be a $3
gift exchange.
A report was given on the
school of Instruction held Nov. 9
at Albany. Frances Young was
reported !11 and tt was noted that
her niece, Dr. Betty Ball, has
taken her to Arizona for further

Calendar

THURSDAY

Transactions

An~n

The Pomeroy Area Merchants
Association, It seems, It getting It
all together for the Christmas
holiday season.
Mayor Richard Seyler has
agreed to free parking meters as
of Nov. 25 - and employees are
to note that the free parking is for
the benefit of customers.
Fourth, fifth and sixth graders,
besides youth groups of the
countY are being Invited to
participate In a Christmas tree
decorating contest. Donated
trees will be placed along the
sidewalks and designated to the
various participants. Judging of
the decorated trees will be at 4
p.m. on Dec. 10.
Another feature worked out
with the merchants association
with Cathy Wood, job coorlnda·
ror for Meigs Industries, Is a gift
wrap station which will open on
Nov. 20 and will remain open
until Chrls.tmas. It Is located at
the Pomeroy Chamber Office on
F.. Main St.

· Ruth Young hosted a recent
meeting of the Chatter Club with
the anniversaries of Mary
Starcher and Dorothy Roach
bet'ng observed.
Dues and flower fund monies
were collected and officers'
reports were given. Games were
played with prizes going to
Delores Whitlock. Isabelle
Couch, Elaine Qu!llen and Do·
rotjly McGuffin. Refreshments
were served.
The door prize was won by
Doris Wilt.' A food sale was
planned for the next meeting
which wtll be held at the home of
Janice Fetty with Belinda
Adams as co-hostess.

I 0

t

By BOB HOEFLICH

An arts and craft show which
really has It all will be staged
Saturday !rom
9:30a.m. to4:30
p.m. at the East·
ern High School.
Not only will
there be a wide
display and sale
of arts and
crafts but at ll a.m. the h(gh
school choir will staged a concert
and at 1 p.m. the band will be on
hand to also do a concert. At 3
p.m.. the Midnight Cloggers
directed by Bruce Wolfe w!ll do a
show.
By the way, f! you are an arts
and crafts person and want table
space just call 985-3951.

Chatter Club
.meeting held

With coupon

4I

4 4J

T•om

··•z.oo Off
lDDITIOIIAL

U
31

t 3I
t

BeCII•J

It

pWS'-

The Daily Sentinel
Harrisonville OF.S honors members

Arts and crafts show

Adding to the atmosphere of
the town will be Christmas
scenes which will be painted on
some of the store windows by
James A. Smith.
To wrap It up, merchants of the
group wlll give away over $2,000
in prizes, gift certificates and
bonds during the holiday season.
And when does the season
begin trt'Pdml!'l'oy? Well·. that will

,__~SE__,AL t~dRKEYS
-

Beat of the bend

'

STORE COUPON - - - - - - - - 1

B~nd ·

Page-7

..

FALL IS
CLEAN·UP TIME
r--------

Portlu4 Ia. lA Qlll ..nltl

la•••at

By The

lenge (of calling plays) but It
becomes more difficult when you
- get- u~t!lrni:- We-obvlously have--,
scoring at a 26-point clip last not been efficient."
Kosar, who was 19 of 30 tor 175
season. Part of the reason for an
yards
and an Interception
!ne!tectlve offensiVe has been
against
the Broncos, reiterated
Injuries to quarterbacks Bernie
that
tile
Browns should be
Kosar, Gary Danielson and Mike
prepared
to
absorb criticism. He
Pagel, and Kosar has not mantapped
two
videocassettes Ia·
aged to regroup the offense In the
beled
"Pittsburgh."
four games · he has played since
"Extra film work. I think It's
being s!del!ned six weeks with an
necessary
for all of QS at this
elbow Injury .
,"
said
Kosar, battered for
point
"Out whole problem is that
the
second
straight
werk by a
.when you get behind early,
determl.
n
ed
pass
rush.
everybody In the ballpark knows
"We haven 't cashed In the .
you have to throw ," said Schotseason.
We do believe In our·
tenhelmer. "We have to avoid
selves
and
we'd better be pre·
those early setbacks. When
you're behind, we don't have the pared to shove aside the negatlv'
opportunity to run the offense the tty. It's time to show some
character, but It's going to be ·
way we want to.
· "I'm · still enjoying the chal- tough."

Browns discouraged, but .remain determined

Ollup Ill, PIIU..W,-.alt'f
Detroit 118, Dallas "
LA Lalle.wlfl. Deawr ttl (101')
VIall II&amp;. II . . . . II
Plloeatl.lll, S~~enM.Call

...

-

Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Atluta 11, Oewelu•ll
New Yoru•. BH•aattt

w~

-~---

•

:1

Field

;i~~"~&lt;

,&lt;:)y,,;,-&gt;:::-&lt;&gt;~ol&gt;&gt;':~.'

.

The'Taste~ve Grown10 Love.

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

�..

-~--

~

Page 8-Tha Daily Sentinel

Poma'oy-Middleport, Ohio

.

-.-

.,,, _

.

ENLISTS -

Attending
Baptist
•
convenuon

=2.

Twenty Southern Baptist ters In lour foreign l:ountrles and
- - Churehes -oHhe- Seloto-Yalley--.s!L.elhnlc and cultural gr_oups
Baptist Association are partie!- !"ithln our nation.
The program, sponsored by the
paling this week in a World
Mission Conference.
Scioto Valley Association, is
A banquet was held Saturday, designed to acquaint people with
Nov. 12, at Friendship Baptist the mission effort In .a cooperaCburch, Coalton, to kick off the live program of ministries at
conference and honor 10 mission· home and abroad. It challenges
aries who will be speaking In the the church to become more
participating churches. The spe- actively Involved In their support
clal speakers represent mints' of more than 3,700 missionaries
serving In some 100 foreign

"

COPYRIGHT 1988 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES, GOOn SUNDAY
NOV . 13, THROUGH SATURD:~Y , NOV . 19, 1988, !~ 1 GALLIPOUSNID~IEROYSTOIU

countries and more than 3, 700
home missionaries engaged In
meetllig the pnyslcal and spirit--- ual needs of people In all 50 states
of our nation.
Conferences Wtll be conducted
Thursday through Saturday evenings. 7 p.m. , at the First
Southern BaptiSt Church, Pome·
roy, and Hope BaptiSt Chapel,
Ml ddleport.
•
All meetings are open to the
public.

-DVERnS!D ITEM POLICY

.

Each of these advenited Items i1 required to be readily ava1llble

for

.
sale tn

••'eh

Kroger Store, except as speciflcaity not~ in this ad. If .,.. do . run out _afl Mn
advertised item, we will offer you yOUr1Choiee of a comparable Item, When ava1laDI.t ,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . .NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

reUecting the aame savings or a raincheck which will entitle vou to purchase tt}(t

adve'rtised hem at the advertised price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon Wll1
be accepted per hem purchased.

•

·

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE
WILL CLOSE 12 MIDNIGHT WED., NOV. 23rd.

OPEN
·THANKSGIVING. DAY
8:00am TIL 4:00pm
Re-Open Friday, November 25th.
At 7:00am
'see Store For Exact Holiday Hours ·

HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
14-17-LB. AVG. WHOLE

Frozen
Young
Turkeys

Semi-Boneless

Pound

Pound

0

California

House

Celery

Coffee

-~bocal-news br-iejSrn~ ..,_- AEP-plans to open economi£~develoRment ofjice i!l Tokyo:-.
-·-,-

Continued from page 1

Deltapoint was chosen be-

In a major new effort to attrac1
cause of its successful record in
new Japanese Investments to
recruiting J apa nese manufaccreate new jobs in the East
t~rlng Investment a nd Its knowlCentral United States, American
Meigs Co11nty Emergency Medical Services reports eight
edge
of Japanese business a nd
Electric Power is openfng an
calls Tuesday; Racine at 2:25 p.m. to Stlversville Road for
gover
1U11ent , Disbrow said.
economic development office in
VIolet Brewer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at3: 41 " Tokyo.
Mrs . Mle Teno, managing
p.m. to Mulberry Ave. for Ruby Frederick to Veterans
director of Deltapoint lnter na·
The seven-state utility Is be·Memorial Hospital; Racine at 8:46p.m. to Yellowbush Road lor
tlonal in Tokyo, will serve as
lieved to be the first major
Wally Haynes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
electric facilit y In the U. S. to · project manager-AEP represen9:39 p.m. to Riverside Apts. for Lucille Hendricks to Veterans
tative In Japan. Mrs. Teno bas 15
establish a full-time Industrial
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 10: 07 p.m. to Hayman Road for
years of consulting experience
recruitment progra m in Japan.
Charles Pyles who was treated but not transported; Middleport
with major Am erican manag"Our goal is to attract new
at 10:35 p.m. to Laurel St. for Christy Capehart who was treated
ment consulting firms and has
plants and create jobs lor our
bu tnot transported; Ru !land at 10: 56 p.m. to White Hill Road for
undertaken a number of recustomers by telling the Japa·
Fannie Miller to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
search and consulting projects
nese business community about
10:59 p.m. to Park St. fol' Allen Ward to Veterans Memorial
for both domestic and interna·
our seven-state service area and,
Hospital.
tiona! clients.
In particular, AEP's ability to
These projects included work
provide reliable, low-cost elect·
In the areas of marketing,
ric service to Industry," said
Investment, operations, straRichard E. Disbrow, president
tegic planning and Implementaand chief operating officer of
tion programs for a variety of
AEP.
Industry and servicing sectors in
Disbrow said AEP has hired
Japan, the U.S. and Europe.
the International management
Students from Meigs High
duled for about 4:30p.m.
"There are nine electric utiliconsulting
!lrm
of
Deltapolnt
School will be among the 120 top
Other schools participating In
of
Tokyo,
to
International,
LTD.,
ties
In Japan - all Investor
high school students from sou·
the class AAA division with
be
the
tull-time
representative
In
owned
- and their rates differ
tbeastern Ohio expected to par- · Meigs are Lancaster, Chilli·
Japan
for
AEP's
eight
operating
little,
" Pau I Gtelner, AEP
very
tlcipate In this year 's Bobcat
cothe, Athens, Warr-en, Logan,
companies.
vice president-marketing and
Buzz-In quiz tournament to be
Jackson and Marietta.
He
said
the
Tokyo
office
will
be
customer
services. said. "For
held Friday on the Ohio. Unlver·
A total of 24 teams are
this reason, electricity - which
sity campus.
scheduled to be In the tourna· an extension of the economic
development
programs
of
each
Is
very expensive in Japan when
The tournament, which Is In Its
ment, which Is coordinated by
compared to the AEP Systemeighth year, tests the ablllty of the Ohio University Office of AEP operating company Is virtually a commodity, and
students to recall quickly the Continuing Education, Conferen· Columbus-Southern Power Commanufacturers do not consider it
answers toques lions on a variety ces and Workshops. More than pany of Columbus; Ohio Power
of subjects, from current events 1,300 high school students have Company of Canton; Indiana- a significant factor In choosing a
location.
to science and literature. Awards participated In quiz tournaments -Michigan Power Company,
Fort
Wayne,
Ind
.;
Appalachian
will be given to the first, second,
at 'Ohio University since their
Four fined in court
Power Company , Roanoke, Va.;
and thit:d place teams In each Inception In 1982.
division and the wining teams
The public Is Invited to watch Kentucky Power Company, AshFour were fined and two others
may quality for the state the conies t which wlll be held In land, Ky.; Kingsport Power
forfeited
bonds In the court of
Company
,
Kingsport,
Tenn.;
tournament.
Room 20 and the ballroom In
M!Pdleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Members of the Meigs team Baker Center and In the Patio Michigan Power Compa ny,
Tuesday
night.
Three
Rivers.
Mich.,
and
Wheelare seniors, Monica Turner, Theater In Kanter Hall. .
Fined
were Richard Little,
Ing
Power
Company,
Wheeling;
Charles E. Carson, Scott Ed·
$25 and costs, open
Syracuse,
W.Va.
Divorces sought
monds and Jared Sheets, juniors,
container;
Toni Little, Middle·
Kristin King, Ed Crooks, and
port,
$25
and
costs, no operator's
A divorce action bas been flied
Daniel Kennedy , sophomores,
license;
Steven
T. Fink, GallipoIn Meigs County Common Pleas
Aaron Sheets, Nancy Lynn
lis,
$10
fine
only,
expired tags.
Court by Paula Kay Bowen,
Baker, and Heldt Caruthers. The
Charles
Dean
Mercer,
Clifton, W.
Albany, from Terry Lee Bowen, Dally stook prices
group's advisor is Rita Slavin.
Va.,
$10
and
costs,
wrong
way on
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Kansas City, Missouri.
Three competitions, one each
a.
one-way
street.
A dissolution of marriage has Bryce and Mark Smtih
for schools of relatively the same
been
granted Charles Thomas of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
size and enrollment, will be
Tag day Saturday
and
Tammy
L. Thomas.
conducted concurrently' with
Am
Electric
Power
......
.....
..
26~
compettton beginning at 9 a.m.
Tag day for the Eastern High
AT&amp;T .................... .... ........ .27Y,
The championship
licences issued
. round Is scheAshland Oil ..... ......... ...... ....32'1. School junior varsity and varsity
boys basketball team, will be
Marriage licenses have been Bob Evans ........................... 16
continued this Saturday In the
Charming
Shoppes
...........
..
.13%
Issued In Meigs County Probate
area.
Court to Benjamin F. Upton Jr., City Holding Co ............ ... .... 33
Federal
Mogul.
...................
48'1.
31, Reedsville, and Brenda Lou
Rowe, 32, Reedsville; David Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................ .48')4
Three defendants were fined
Lawrence Grate, 42, Rutland, Heck's ....... ,....................... .. %
$375 and costs on charges of
and Jeanette Marte Moss, 27, Key Centurion ....................16')4
driving while Intoxicated In the
Veterans Memorial
Long Bottom; Lew IS Wesley Lands' End .............. ,.... .. ..... 25
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Tuesday
Admissions - Wll·
Limited Inc ................... ..... 24%
Jr.,
28,
Racine,
and
Harper
llam Brlckles. ·Middleport;
Seyler Tuesday night.
Brenda Annette Buckley, 25, Multimedia Inc ........ .... .. ... ..69~
Weber Wood, Pomeroy; Dorothy
Fined on the charge were
Rax Restaurants ...... .... ........ 3%
Racine.
Michael Atktns, Racine; Mark
,Brewer, Portland; Debbie
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. .;.. 12
Fisher, Middleport; Ruby FredAtkins, Pomeroy, also fined $53
Shoney' s Inc ........................ 71A.
Ewings
SAR
to
meet
erick,
Pomeroy .
and cosdts on a charge of
Wendy's Inti.. ... .. ......... ........ 5%
Tuesday Discharges - Meoperating under suspension; and
Ewings Chapter of the Sons of Worthington Ind ... ...... . ..... .. 20'4
relln
Godfrey, Ora Sinclair,
Homer Hill, Jr., Pomeroy, who
(Ashland Oil and Federal
the American Revolution will
Sheila
Patterson.
was also fined $63 and costs on a
meet Thursday at the Meigs Mogul are ex dividend lod.ay.)
charge of failure to transfer
County Museum on Butternut
license.
Ave. In Pomeroy. There wUI be a
Others fined In the court were
catered
meal at 6:30p.m. Dinner
Debra Thomas ; Pomeroy, $63
is.
by
reservation
only. Guestsand costs, expired license;
male
or
femaleare welcome to
Wanda R!lfie, Racine, $4,8 and
attend.
costs, speeding; Christopher
The program will be at 7: 30
Hutton, Rutland, $57 and costs,
p.m.
with Dale the Tinker of St.
speeding; Jeanette Roach, Mid·
Albans,
W.Va. and his apprent·
dleport, $63 and costs, expired
Ice.
They
will be discu-ssing and
plates; John Proffitt, Racine,
showing
their
work on reproduc$20, seat belt violation; Ronnie
tions
of
guns
and other revolu·
Bolin, Lancaster, $50 and costs,
tlonary
period
Items such as
speeding; and Aaron Morris,
Huntington, W. Va. , $67 and · lanterns and carriage horns.
costs. speeding.
·
Clinic slated Friday
Forfeiting bonds were Michael
Smith, Pomeroy, $63. defective
Planned Parenthood of Soumuffler; VIctoria Imboden,
theast
Ohio has scheduled a
Bradbury Road, Middleport, $48
ALL WOMEN'S
family
planning
clinic for Friday
speeding; Max Laudermllt. MIfrom 1 to 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
nersville, $48 speeding; Bryan
Durst, $63 Reedsville, $63 . office, 236 East Main St.
Birth control services, preg·
squealing tires; Jerry Aleshire,
NATURAliZER, HUSHPUPPY, MEYERS
nancy tests, V. D. tests, cancer .
Jr., Syracuse, $43, wrong way on
screening and supply pickups are
a one-way street; Edward RickAlL WOMEN'S
among the services available by
ard. Letart. $63, expired license;
appointment. All services are
Robbie Jacks, Pomery, $47,
confidential
and charges are
speeding; Teresa Davis, Cincln·
LAGEAR, AUTRY,2
based
on
a
sliding
fee scale. For
natl, $43, failure to yield right of
more Information or an appoint·
way; and Nathan Arnold, IV,
ment,
resld.e nts may call the
Pomeroy, $43, assured clear
Pomeroy
office, 992-5912.
ALL MEN'S ACME &amp; DINGO
distance.

EMS has eight calls Tuesday

88

Three fined in
Pomeroy court

Each

c

MAXWELL HOUSE DECAFFEINATED
COFFEE 39-0Z ... $7.59

1·ow

Prices.
And More.

We Gladly Accept
Your Federal Food
Stamps

REGULAR OR BUTTER FLAVOR

Country Club
Ice Cream

Crisco
Shortening

%-Gallon

3-lb.

38
I

TENNIS
SHOES •••••~~.~(~....

FROZEN MOUNTAIN TOP

Land-O-Lakes
Butter Quarters

Real Pumpkin
Pies

1-lb.

8-lnch 26-oz.

: Willis Anthony

BOTILE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
COCA COLA CLASSIC,

Diet Coke

·or

Coke
2-Liter

, Willis L. Anthony, 84, of 453
' South Front St ., Middleport, died
. Tuesday night at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born 1\Ug. 30, 1904 in Athens
County, be was a son of the tate
James Hubert and Sophia GIIU. Jan Anthony. He was the owner of
: Anthony Plumbing and Heating
: In Middleport until his retire. ment. He was a member and
• deacon of the Middleport First
: Baptist Church, and a member of
• the Middleport Board of Public
: Affairs and Middleport Masonic
; Lodge 363, F&amp;AM.
Survivors Include hls wife,
' Kathleen Tovey Anthony, whom
be married Nov. 23, 1927; a son

Fresh
Red
Yams

••

C·

develof&gt;ment effort in Japan?'
Greiner said. "AEP operatln~
companies have previously;
made several economic develop·~

ment trips to the Far East and·
these will continue. We also have.
produced a bilingual Aqerica~- ·
Japanese economic devetopmenc
brochure to luther promote new
jobs," Greiner sajd .
·
Mrs-. Teno also has assisted in
the planning and implementa1ion
of

manufacturing

investmenl

projects for Japanese manufacturers overseas that i ncl ud e
Investment feasibili1 y studies,
site selection, procureme nt investigation, star t-up assistance
and governmental negotiations.
She has represented a British
gover1U11ent agency - Telford
Development Corporation since 1980, in planning and
Implementation of Its Industrial
promotion activit ies targeting
Japanese investors.
AEP serves seven million
people In seven states - Ohio.
Indiana, Michigan, West Virgi·
nia, Virginia, Ken1ucky and
Tennessee. '

WORK
SHOES ••• 20°/o OFF
REI) WING • WOI.VERINE • WEINBERGER
'

ALL MEN'S

LaCOSS &amp; TINSLEY

RUBBERWEAR... 2
MEN'S SOCKS

0

BUY 1 PAIR GET 1 PAIR

ALL ADIDAS, LAGEAR, PONY

O/
10 OFF

FREE

TENNIS
,
.
~
SHOES.............. 200tO OFF

SETS UP PROGRAM IN JAPAN- Richard E. Disbrow, right,president and chief operating officer, AEP, Is pictured with :Z
William J . Lhota, left, president of CC~Iumbus Southern Power, and '-'
Mle Teno, center, managing director ofDeltapolntlnternatlonalln· ,.
Tokyo who will serve as project manager and AEP representative"-'
,-In Japan.

SUPERIOR

Package Wieners ••••• JM~•••••• s1.8 9

SMITHFIELD

SHREDDED..... Ib. $2.19

Cooked Ham •••••• ~~~Ef••••••••••11•• S1.97
SWIFT'S ECKRICH
Turkey Breast~ ••••••••• ~~••.•••••. S3~29
HOMEMADE

Meat Salad ..•••••.••••••• l\•••••••••••••·a9c
KRAfT 16 Sllcl

AMER. PROC.
CHEESE ............!?..% .. SJ.87
HAMMOND GRADE A
LARGE EGGS .....1!9.~!~..... 9 7&lt;
KRAFT. MARGARINE

RED YAMS ............1.'!. ..... 49&lt;
PINK .FLORIDA
GRAPEFRUIT ,.,,,U!:.. 2/ 69&lt;

PARKAY
QUARTERS ............~....... 89&lt;

NEW YELLOW

BANQUET or MORTON REGULAR

.

ONIONS ............}.•tJ...... 89'
~

TV Dinners ••••••••••••••• u.~...... S1.69-

REAME's

Egg Noodles ••••••••••••• H.~~•••••• s1.2 9
S OZ. ASSORTED DIXIE

Kitchen Cups ........................... 89-&lt;
NESTlES

Chocolate Chips ••••••• H.~~•••••• $1.69
Dream Whip ............. Z.6.~!.~~~ .. .$1.89
Jello Puddings •••••••••• l~~~l•• 2f$1.09
Hershev' s Cocoa •••••••••\~!..... $2.19
REYNOLDS w(AP
Aluminum ,Foil ••••••••• m~~g..~••• $1.59
MORTON'S
Table Salt ••• ~ ••••••••••••• lt.~~......•..• 39(
DEL MONTE
4' oi.
$1 •4
.
Ie Ju·1ce ...................
P1neapp
THANK YOd APPLE
Pie Filling •••:............. z~.~~•••..• $1.2
Libby's Pumpkin •••••• z:.~~...... $1.1
Celery Soup •••••••••••••• J2MJ.... 2 I 99
IOUNTY

6-PAK 12-0Z. CANS ••• $1.79

•

AEP service area .
.
"Thls is not our first economic"

CAMI'BELL'S CREAM OF

-lbs.
~.

and daughter-I n-law, Gerald and
Dorothy Anthony, Middleport; a
grandson, Joe Anthony, Middleport; a granddaughter and
grandson-In-law, Barbara aQd
Steven White, Fort Lauderdale,
Fla.; a brother, Charles Anthony, Middleport; and a nephew, William Pierce,
Lancaster.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In death by two
brothers and one sister.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday
at Rawllng-Coats· Blower Funeral Home with Rev. James A.
Seddon. Burial will be In Gravel
Hill Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home !rom 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday.
Masonic services will be held 7
p.m. Thursday.

00/10 OFF

WESTERN
,
BOOTS ••••••••••••• 20010 OFF

--Area deaths---

88

,

Hospital news

DRESS SHOES ••• 30°/o OFF

BREYER'S ICE CREAM y, -GAL. .. $2.99

•

"As a result, 1he Japanese
manufacturing community bas
little experience In working with
elect ric utilities in the United
States. a nd does not think about
such factors as supply. relia blllty
a nd costs when determi ning
where they will locate a plant. We
are hoping 10 cha nge that with
the help of Deltapolnt, .. Greiner
said.
Deltap 0 int's primary responsibilities will il\clude promotin g
the capability a nd assets of the
AEP System as a power supplier
and developer of Industrial sites;
searc hing out and co ntacting
prospective investors and coordi-·
natlng meetings between AEP
offi~lals and Interested Japanese
business firms .
Direct Investment from Japan
to the United Sta1es has continually increased since 1984 , In part
or as a result of the appreciation
of the yen. As of July 1987, the
number of fi rms esta blished by
Japanese In ves tment In the United States totalled 2,204. As of
March 1986 , 545 Ja panese-owned
manufacturing plants were established in the U.S. Twenty-one of these are located In the

.

Stalk

39-oz.

SLICED
FREE

.n

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9: _

Stocks

Maxwell

Smoked
Ham

--------T

~.

.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Meigs students to participate
in Ohio University quiz meet

U.S. GRADE A MARVEL
16-LBS. AND UP

-

Wednesday, November 16, 1988
Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Robert Owen
Wlllla. Jr,, SOD of Robert
Wlllla, Sr., and Shirley Rill of
Syracuee, recently enllated In
the United States Anny Delayed Entry Program. Wlllla
bepns his four year army
enllslmenl on Nov.
ThrOUib the Army's Guaran·
tee Tralnlnr of Choice Pro(1'&amp;111, be will be an altborne
lnfantrymaa. He will attend
bMic aad advanced Individual
tralnlnr at Fort Bennlnr, Ga.
WUllll Is a 1887 graduate of
Southern High School, Racine.

.

«

'

Towels •••••••••••~~m~ •••••• ~99&lt;

�'·'--.-

-.

-----~1
---~

Wednesday, November 16. 1988

---

Y oui lndepenaently Owaell Low-Priced Supermarket

BIG BEND

.

MT. DEW AND

FREE

~

PEPSI PRO.DUCTS

0'

.,·
•'

..•

TURKEYS

RIO GRANDE
BASinBALL

y

0

GOLDEN
DELIGHT

NOW AVAILABLE
AT FOODLAND

-·

SHAWN~~ STATE
•'

FOODLAND NIGHT
MONDAY I DEC. 5TH
7:30 P.M.

t .60. discount for ads paid in adva nce.
- GNeBWay and Found ad s und er 15 w ord s w ill be
at no ch•ge .
.
all t:apital letter s is double pr ice of ad t:on .
•7 po1nt
type only uted.
,
•Sentin .. it not rnponslbl e tor err ora aft er fi rst day. (Check
for erron first d..,. ad runs in paper ). Call before 2 :0 0 p.m .
d., after publicetion t o makec;onectton.
•Ads t~ .. must be paid in advan ce are
Ctrd of Th~nkl
Happy Ad s
In Memoriam
Y~rd Salea
•A clanifled a~artisement pla~i!!d in Th e Oaity Sentinel /811 ·
capt - cl•"f•ed. display, Butln&amp;fl Card and legal notices!
will alto appear '" the Pt. Ple1111ant Regit ter and the Galli·
polit Daily Tribune. reachin g ovar 18.000 hornBI.

COPY OEAD~INE ..C
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
l)iURSDAY PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

SUNDAY PAPER

Classified pages cove r th e
following telephon e exchanges...
ARMOUR

BOB EVANS

LEAN BUCKET STEAK

Gallla County
Area Code 614

Me igs County
Aru Codt 614

Masgn CD.• WV
Area Code 304

4·6- Gsllipolis

992- Middleport
Pomeroy
986- Chester

675 - Pt. Pleasant

BACON

SAUSAGE

19
1 LB . RO!

1''

C.67- Ch•hire
388- Vinton

12

oz.

245- Rio Grsnde
251- Guyen Dist.
143- Arabia Oist .
~379 -Walnut

$119

•

uan
NESCAFE

WHITE
POTATOES

MT. BLEND

60 LB.
BAG

each one.

CUT YAMS

2/$5

30

89(

oz.

$159

GRANULATED

KRAFT

II-RITE

SUGAR

Plci(•A•PAIR
POMEROY

Announcements
123456-

Card of Thanks
ln Memo ry
A'nnouce mant s
Give iiWay
Happy Ads
l ost and Found
7 - Y•d Sate (paid in advan ce)
8- Publie Sal e &amp; Auction
9- Wtnled to Buv

BOGGS

1 1 - Help Wanted
12- Situation Wanted .
1J..,.. Inturanc:•
14- Businau Trai!'ling
1&amp;- School• &amp; lnttructio n
16 - Rad io. TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Misullan·eous
1&amp;- Wanted To Do

21- Butin•• Opportunity
22- Monuv to loan
23- Prof•aional Services

Real Estate
31 - .Homes for Stle
32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33- Farms for Sale
34- Butin•• BuildlnQt

35- lols &amp; Acreage
31- Real Estate Wanted

53 64 55 66 57 58 59 -

41 - Housas for Rent
42- Mobile Homes fo r Rant
43- Fsrms for Rani
44- Apartment lor Rent
45- Furnithed Room s
46- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equipmeot for Rent
49- For LeMe

--· ---Gollipoliii _________ _
&amp; Vicinity
GALLIPOUS FLEA MARKET·
Rts. 36 &amp;. 160. Open rNfltY Stt.
&amp; Sun. 9 AM·6 PM ,

Sale at Centen_.y Townhouse.
Nov 17, Cklt'-. furntture,

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
61 62 6384 65 -

lampt, home Int.. IQ¥1. mit e.

9-e.

Aut ot for Sal a
Truckl tor Sale
Vans &amp; 4 WD ' s
Motorcycl•
Botts A Mot ors lor S al e
Aut o Parts I. Ac cauori•
77-- Auto Repair
78 - Camplng Equipment
79- Campen &amp; Moto1 Ho m"
71 7 273747576-

DOG
FOOD
20 Ll. lAG

Ao if you're los1 in nigh1
And heavy clouds make
• thinga ao dark
ihot ahadows swallow
light:

When noi•e• of a busy

69

Of crickets. songs of
birdl, and loovaa
That rustle all around:
WhMO even thooe you
love 11em gone,
Although you know
they'ra nearWall for the whisper
that will uy.
" f - not for lam here."
•J
Always loved by
Family end Friends

HOMEIEST

FOIL ·

MIRACLE WHIP

~,sr39
..
...
.0.·
'

0

CU\55Iflf05
For All

'

.

&gt;

Your Needs
SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABIJ PUNCH!

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992-2725
MIDDlPEPORT, OHIO
"'WaJk.. Jns Wel~ome"

10·31-88-1 mo.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•TILE woRK
•PORcHEs

FKEI! ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Welmrne

•12 Years Experience

CARPENTER
SERVICE

12

•

fa&lt;tory Choh
Gouge Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforced

SER~ICE

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

PAT HILL FORD

992 -2196
Middleport.

l0·7·Hn

•

GUN SHOOT

RACINE, OHIO

fACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY .

BEAUTIFUL

,...;: ~

,.';~~;, , •HAIR

\~\;i
· ~~";,~:•CLOTHES
•., •TANS
TOP OF THE STAIRS

work
(FREE ESTIMATES)

Featuring: Commlidaled, Dutch
Weot, Bronco, Aohley
LOWEST PRICES .
WE TRADE

992-6215

CARPENTER, OHIO IOff St. Rt. 143)

an e

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POMEROY, OliO
992-6461

"At loosonable ,rites"

PH. 949-2801
or R•s.· 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING
AND

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

Acrou Happy Hallow Rd.

Au1horized Strvitt
&amp; Partt
Briggs 8t Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

''Free Estimates"

J.ll-lfn

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INiERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain aut of
pain~ing. let me do
1t for you.
Very RHsanable.
Have References.

61

I.Hsa M. MurpiMy
Fr•-Lanc• Writer
SpMches.
Computer Graphics,
Pultlic RelatioM,
Advertising ~
Phone:
·~

614-992-3643

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Sttond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.

180

RISIDINCI PHONE
(6141 992-7754
1128/tln

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

·'

CAKES
by Donna

Your Hometown Place

Has olways offered

THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
If any local

competitor offers
you a better deal,

tell

us and

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays
Speciolizlng in
character and novelty
cakll

lt. 1, lox 136, Vinton

742-2235

we'll

ALARM
SYSTEMS

'
•Residential
•Commercial

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY
614-992-5952

11·9-1 OIOd p4.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410

AlSO ....

COOKED
li.INCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
HO~E

UNDER $300

MAIN mEn PIZZA
Our Delivery Staff

Knowe Where You
Live.

can 992-2228
or 992-9922

10· 12·11-1 mo.

·

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
haler fer

YARDMAit &amp; ECHO

locoted H-oy
between Rt. 7 A Bit han.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
SIIYico (•t• for Ryan
Produds
8.7 Flnoncing on Y•dmanl
Sorvlce on AH
Wt H- w ,lftl.."'

Most Foreign and
Domest.ic Vehicles

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992·67 56
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Lice•nso'd Shop

Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace '110.00
Blem Batteries
IJO.OO &amp; Up
Salem Street
Ohio

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Toys, Collectables.
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.·4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main.
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Behind Citv Hall)
IG-27-lllo.

CHESTEI, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING II REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

985-4141

GENEitAL CONTRACTORS
1 1 -18· '8B· tfn

TOP CASH p_.d for '83 model
and n-.ver u... cera. Smtth
Buldc·Pontitc. 191'1 Eatt•n
Aw., Gallipolis. Call &amp;14-C412282.

Complela houMholdl of t.trnlture &amp;. tntlqurM . A•o wood •
coal helttn. Swain's F11nlture
li Auction. Third • OIN&amp;
114-440-3159.
,(_.
Junk Cart with or wtthout
molcn. Coli Lony Llvoly-814385-9303.

Us.t llrnttu"' bv the piece Of
entire hou .. hold. 814·7422466.
Tr.pplng IUppll•. Buying glnOeorg~luckl-v 114-le44761 . Houn 2'0().9,00. Closed

''"9-

Help Wanted

11

UP TO 116 HOUR PROCESS·
lNG MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED. FREE Dot.Oo.
WRITI!o SO, 1087 W. Phil-Phi&amp; Sune 239-00. Ont•kl.
Colli. 91782.
Now acc~lng r-.!nw tor a

Self hrve/ Convenl• Store
Managw in Middl~ort ....

Sand to: Box Cla179, c/ oQalll·
pol~ Dolly Trllunt. 8211 Third
Avo .. Clolllpollo. Ohio 45831 .
T•11 Refln.-y Corp. needl
now In o.llipolil
Rag•dl.. of training.
Wrtte: D. l, Hopklnt, Box 711,
R. t'Vorth. Tx. 71101.

m•u,.. .,..on

ar•

Ann ou nGe 111 en ts
3 Amouncem.-.ta
We wiR htul coal for em•gen 01
HEAP. M.. gs County Oop1. of
Hum., A~WVIcel, and HEAP
vouchers. We em glva you
prompt dallilferi•. EJIIICellior Sah
Works. Inc. Pomeroy, Ohio.
814-992-3891 .
140 free merehand•a guar.,teed for hosting 'Chrtstmas
Around the World' p.-ry, 814992-5316.

NO huntingortrup. . lngon my
f•m. eny onec .. aht or....,will
be protecaJted. t7;' Taw or thol on
li9ht. J lm Stew.-.:.
No hunting or trMPauing .. eto
gtt:•left'open, fenoetorndowf\
r-.!ttlng In loa at
on Rt.
3115. formerly John DIM! f•m.
Rnl.,. Canon prop..ty.

hor••

Secr••rvIR•ctptlonilt wtth ~­
perl•oa in lrultpendent office
m~nagement . MedlclllntuNnoa
billlng/COIIICtioM II word pro.
eetslng. Sal.,y comrnansunlte
wtth •petiMca &amp; qutlitlc.
tio.._ Privata group inGalllpol•
Sendrau,.,..toPenonn... P .O .
lox 910, CloUipolo. OH41831.
Halp W.,ted- henlng Cook.
Apply In person. No phone ellis.
Holldty - lnn , 450 Pike
Golllpollo.
'

Mc0on81d'sln GsHipolil 11 now
tccepllng applications. ltwtlng
PIPI· 83.75 an hoUr. 90 d.,s84.00 ., hour. ~o ..,pllalion
ac-od from 11 '30 AM -1,30
PM. Apply 1r1 parson.
Fed• Ill. St.. a Md CNN Service
Jobs. Now hiring. Your • •·
t11550 to t69, 480. lmm•
dillleop...ingt. can 1-315-7338082 Ext. F2788.

AVON · AI

•ea. C.l

w.... 304-882· 2141.
4

Giveaway

M.rilyn

AN'S &amp; LPN'S .PH, luU time &amp;
.,.n time appllcarions tre being
.:cspt.t for
Vall.,

,.._.,t

Kitten. smart. bvlng • active.
Coll814-445-037&amp;.

Hotpltal NUlling Cara Cent«.
Conttct Partonn" 304-175-,
4340. AAEOE

Yorkshire TllfTI•-full bred-No
pap••· Hllall•vr· Mustbeabla
to PfOVIde medical ' attention.
Coll814· 266-1924.

AVON .. I .. _It Shtrlsi Spe••
304-875-1428.
•

All whhe kltten. Call I 1 4- 4-t&amp;8830.

4 kitten• to give .w..,.2 mos.
old. Call after IS PM , 814- 4-t&amp;-

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Refarencas

Wicks

SYRACUSE. OHIO

motch it!

FILL DIRT
I

JUST OPENED

· MAIN STREET·
PIZZA

Ker Heaters

992-6282

ll

NO SUNDAY CAllS

"Mus1 Be Repairable "

MOlliS
EQUIPMENT

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

1-28-'88-lfn

Bill GtneJohnlon
614-445-3872

E11111 to Yllll:nt
S1:rvlc1:s

Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

p.,

Wa
ea~:tt for late model deen
utad ca'l.
Jim Mink Chw .-Oidllnc.

onMonUt'.

Mastic &amp; Certainteed·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Re~lacement
I
I Windows
I .
own nsu allon

• end Cable Bills Here
IU!INIS! PHONE
16141 "2-6550

ar R•s. 949-2860

•Washers •Dtyers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

WANT ADS

INSULATION

We Carry Fishing Suppli
Pay 'Your Phone

PH. 949-2801

WANTED

Thingo .... -·mlho

J&amp;L

HUDNALL

REPAIR

Now Ho-s luilt

'========:::;r-;r;:;;

t

8/l5/~n

Ph. 614-742·2355

10-21-'88-1 mo.

698-6121

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

992·6720

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

DEAD OR AUVE

DELIVERED TO

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

111 West S.C~ P-oy

AND

CHIPWOOD
POLES
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Muzzleloading Supplies
Mocltrn Gun Supplies
Guns • Ammo · Slugs •
22 Ammo
124 East of Rutland

.9-19-81 Hn

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

- Addont tnd remodeling
- Roofing and guner work
-Concrete work
-PI.umbing and electric.l

~ Pomoroy, Ohio

•

IBTH LYIICH

WOOD STOVES

v. c. YOUNG Ill

RACINE
,IRE DEPT.
Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6·30 P.M

$)4 PER TON

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
1

•DRYWAll
•DECKs

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

CHECK THE
•.&gt;'

QUIInt~ill • Prien .Good thru Sot.. Nov. 1, .191111 • USDA Food i&amp;tomp.
Glodly Acc.pted • Nu Kt,po~olble, for Typogrophicol Errors
.
.

PER LOAD
DELIVER ED

'•

37.5 FT.

• We R....,. the Right to Limit

·•oo.•a

Formerly Meigs Excavating
Full Excavating and Construction
Residential &amp; Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential &amp;
Farm Work
Rt. 1 , Vinton
388-B745
Owner &amp; Operator,
Tony Cardillo
11-1-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

81 -- Homelmprovem8n tt
82- Piumbing &amp; HeMing
83- Excwating
84- Eiectrical &amp; Refrig8fation
86- Ganaral Hauling
·
81- Mobila Home Repair
87- Upholsterv

•AEMODILINO •PAINTING

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVI.LE, OHIO

day
Have deafened you to
sound

S3S

Services

•CEILING '"""INSTALLeD

The Staff Is
Back!!!

alone

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

8- 8- 88-tfft

GUN SHOOT

·•LuMol•o

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

FIREWOOD

Transportation

Speetallzlng In Cbaln
Unk and Wood Fencing

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

B

farm Equipmen!
Wsnted to Buy
Liveltock
Hay &amp; Grain
Seed II Fenili:tar

LYNCH'S
GENERAL
REPAIR

1 - 3 -' B~tfc

Whenever you feel all

LOST &amp; montht old red and
white Brittain'! Sp.-.1111 Galtlpo lil
Ferry 1r11. If found REWARD,
304-875- 1310. .

Antiquel
Mil c . Marc h.ndi l&amp;
Building Suppli et
Pets for Sale
Musicallntlruments
Fruits &amp; Vegetabl es
For S al e or Trade

l;lijdl{111

EVERY SUNDAY

F1r11 Eqalp111nt
Parts &amp; Str~ let

TRAIL ILAZII ·

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE
$44995

Merchandise

Employment
Services

SALES &amp; SERVICE
614-662-3821

LOST l •ga W6er mille do g.
whtte whh brown m•klngs.
vicinity of Llt ltrt and Racin e
fockt. answert to BID, REWARD, 304-875- 34 t 5.

51 - Houtlthold Goods
52- Sporting Goods

11-11-'18-1 mo.

Equipment Dealer

LAUNDRY
DOERGENT

32 OZ. JAR

SIMON 'S

Bush Hog Farm

$389

BRAWNY
PAPER TOWELS ·

$6 &amp; $12

Mary, Naomi, Ja111,
Grace, Danna, Angie
and Gwen Folmer

PIE SHELLS .

$149

1

Deere. New Holland.

99
PI.LSiiniY

S lOAF PIG.

1

Authorized John

Limit .1 With '1 0.00 or
Mora Additional Purchase.

HEARTH BREAD
DOUGH

:e:

REMEMBERING
LINDA LOU
STEWART
ON HER
BIRTHDAY.
NOV. 16.

COFFEE

DAKOTA

8

21n Memoriam

MAXWELL HOUSE

CAKE MIX

BOOTS
$3 $5

whit t with dwk brown mtud

have ,..., him pt. .e c.ll
304-875- 7278 ho h• gon• for 2 weeks.

Racine, Ohio

11-14-'88-tt•
I~=:::::::::::;:;=;r;::::~::::;:====trr=::::::====::;il';;:::::::::==~

GIRLS&amp; LADIES
SNOW &amp; FASHION

most.,_

LO.Sl..OR
pu
pt:J¥, 9 ST.QLEflt.
months mWe.Bttglt
ohl.

for e • r.h diiV 81 JeParat eadl .

Business Services

IN THE HEAD OF

ADC • EP • REG.

PILLSBURY

:e:

oz.

n F mil

-

''
ASST.

:.,!S

-

Frances Goeglain

''

SHOWBOAT

PUPPIES

CHICKEN
BROTH

:e=;

latart Falls
Racina
Rutland
Coolville

We want to thank all
who halped during the
loll of our laved one.
To the Rock Springo
Chun:h, Rev. Franklin,
the em.-gency squad.
Veteran• Hospita~ EwIng Funerol Home and
to all who ..nt food,
tlowero. cards and
co·~tributlona
to the
ch on:h and the log
c•bln fund. God bless

0

9

SWEET SUE

:'!!Ssugar

247 949742667-

Leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New .Hav en
Letart ·
Buffalo

and Found

10-25-1 mo. pd.

ALL PURPmiE

FFEE

pure

843- Portland

468 576773882895937-

Get Results Fast

...

PUMPKIN
29 oz. CAN

CAlli

11 '00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 '00 P.M . MONOAY
2 :00P.M. TUESDAY
2 :00P.M WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M THURSDAY
2 ,00 P.M . FRIDAY

$10 .00
$15 .00
$25 .00
&amp;60 .00

$ 8 .00
$13.00
$21 .00
$51 .00

lih8hlijBII

COUNTRY STYLE

· -~~:·

-

WEDNESDAY PAPER

•

99&lt;

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION

s1:oo

ss.oo

Lost

with
v.... '"""""·
..., blod&lt;
11\rlng......
down. enswen to
Elmw, if y ou h at~e t . . puppy or

tlET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAl

11· 26 WORDS · 26-35 WORDS

$4 .00
$5 ,00
$8 .00
• $13.00
$3 3 .00

6

Aa1ea ar e for consecutive runs. broken up day s will be ch•gud

MeigJ , !lallrll Of Mason cou nt ies must be pre·

WIN: GROCERIES, CASH AND A
FREE 90 SECOND SHOPPING SPREE

S2

0 -15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAVS
6DAVS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

MEIGS
FURNITURE

3rd St

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

.·

'A'

1

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

...

TICKETS

LB.

Business
Services
-1::==~~~~~~~;~~~=~~;-~;:;:-;~~~~~-;::;:::;~

~ Clas-sified
Butterball
Turkeys
Available

8 ITLS.
16 oz.

The Daily Sentinai- Page- 11

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

09!2.
To give MfJV· outllcla CICI.
Good hunten-to wild 'br pew:s.
Coll814- 245-6811 .

26"" RCA console oolor TV, 8-1
yrs. old. Works. Ctll 114· 4481021 .

Puppl•to gNeaway-11 wb. ohl
Mboed brood . Coli 614-4459598.
Conv. . a Tennll Sho81. Slu14.
s.., ... pM. Call before 4p.m.
814-1192-2483.

licensed Social Wlrker ifl """'
long t•m c.e ftc:lfty . E ~~:p•
rien ce prffferr ed. Commensurate
sal.-y tnd bBnefttt, E.O.E. Mlil
r MUme to Adminlltrlter Ctra
H1Yen of Point Pl-lf'lt, At. 1
Box 328. Point Pte • .,t. W. Vt.
26&amp;60.

Someoneto Wveln andhetp ctte
for disabled gentlemen, 304'&amp;75-2694.

Situations
Wanted

12

Have room for 2 efderlv ..dl• in
our home. located in Middl ..
pon. Call 81~992-2760 .

c••

Dobermen Ptncher. Cafl 614742-2488.

tor alct.ly and
hlndicapf*l. 1600 pkls. Cal
814-992-8873.

Mlttr.... Qood cond•ion. Call
814-892· 3814.

15

6

Lost and

Found

LOST:Large ,.., dog. whlt'a
ch.t. lmaH•-b41dt. whtla •
brown Walk• Coon Hound.
RMtrd. If 1_, ctll Oollac:t
114-132· 0238 0&lt;132· 7981 .
Found: Rid bone hound. Femal.. Llngtvll••-. 114-li22238. ldonttty n u -

In-·

Double bed ••• quit.
- - 11. 814-912·

Lov ing

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. lzt Jaakeon Aka
COli 445-4317. Rog. No. 85-1 1·
106158 .

1B

Wanted

to Do

1- - ------Dozer •

Blckhoe Worlt 8110

Clle dour. R. .onllble rlt•.
EJCJ•Ience optrMor. C'*"t~rtl
CDnot. Col 814-2118-1718.

';

�--·--- -----···~·· ·~ ·~

..

...._""'_ .
~

-- ------

·-

-

-·

-----~

--·

--'-

.,..

-·--

-·~-- ---~-

... --... -

·

~·:r ·,.,;:

•

44

1AFF-A-DAY

Ap.-tment
for Rent

tt.aroomln PrilteteCareHome
far elderty man or lady·

-·eop.

Col 114-2511-11501.
Tr• _
__ . , , trimmln&lt;&gt;
pruNng. • r~. Hecla•

APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
hou ... Pt. Pl. . ant .. dGalip~

Ill. 814-4411-8221.

trimmed. Free ..e:lm.e:•. C•ll

F-hA.... 514-4411-2123.

Now eccepting ll)plfclt6otts lor
2 be*oom ap.rtments. ~lly

•br .ttl• ..,.. ...,,

Clrp81:«1, IPPHatc., wM• 111d
tr•h pickups provided. Maint•

lnY time.

Refw.n.-. Loc•lld tn Ch•
...... GDOCI c.e proWt.d. 114-

f III.IIIWI

blctoom apt In Point
Pia•.,._ ¥ely ele• and good
oond, will rent furMhed or
unfurnished. no p«s. phone

B111inass
Opportunity

oro-v
star~ Ga. for ..,.. 1e
your ownbou. EJCII.Wmtrl.,

mlklne _ _ u,. tor .. ,..
..,.. ooodio..,io"Ovmormull
ool ct.ro to lllrl- Reply to:8•
Clo 180. a/ ofhllpollo Deilv
Tribuna 125 Thlrd Avo .. Gall•
polio. Dhlo 411131.
Own your own •p•tl or ahoe
1tore, choope from : j . .n .

1porUweer. IedlN. men'e,
clllcr_..,....,lly. 1.-.. olzel.
. . . . dlnc.ww. .·e.roblc. bridll, Ungll'ieor80CII8on.str~a

••II. Bnnd urn• :
Uz Cllllbo&lt;""' HoiiiiiWec, Chaua.

Sm .. 1pt, JHtc:aon Ave . ,_.,
r-.t •1315.00 month ~rtty

' ~~..
/

"That'S
him!"

SO YOU Aon't
\-1

,.,.11*

prloo dolignor.
pricing
fiiCDUrw or f.mlr ahoe ltore.

32 Mobile Homes
0
for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1968 New Moon 12di0, 2 BA .
t23!JO. CoR 814-4411-0310.

1911 Fl. .wood. 12x54. loltlle
g• h. . Md hot wn.. e3000.
can 814-843-5310 .. 81484:J.S408 .,-time. Alk tor

non-fr•u:ltlle ..,._... 1nd shoe

.,.,. . . . . . 11 tiO.·UO. .,d
undlr.
« ....~~.~ ..
Ov• 2,000 bnnd ...... On•
lime lw 111.100. ·1&lt;1 t25. 900.

tDOdlr••

1971 81yvi.w moble horM.
14x70 Wllllh 7X21 • .,..,,

1980 lh•wood ,_k 1~70 11
lledric whh fluplace. i81Md
flnBC' 2 bit*OOrnl, 1 blth.
houoo typo _ _ ,. pluoh

c•pltl. m111 lneut•lon. •eel·
lent oond. brand natV' 11, 000 btu
lrtcludet lnvtnt~, lxtuf'81,- Whirpoolllr
cond. Montgomery
llur_,8 .,_., ., • · lnltare
dryer Included .
tr•lng. more. al l1lfll time. Ward
t12.BOOOO firm. phono 304Don KOIIodly 501-327-1031 .
8915-3841 .
Own yourappR or lhoettore.
cftooee fram: J.m-lport~. 1Z.I515 trder. 2 bectoonw, new
Ladln. Men't, children ·

m•,..lty. ••ee •R•. ,_,. ..

. d•OIW•---oblc. brld... lfn.
gerie or ecc. .oriet store. Add
CDior anlly• lr111d ntm•: Uz
Cllllbor-. Hl•hl•. Ch.,l,
L8e. It Michel&amp; Fortna. Bwale

Bc.v,

levL Camp Bwwtv Hilt,
Org-.lc:oly Grown. Lucia ov•
2000 ot:twl. • t13.81 one
prloo dollgnor. mullt* pricing
dllaou nt or fllftlv shoe stew&amp;
R. . . .,._ • .......,..,.,lorklp
~ ohD• normolly ..-iood
from 119. to •eo. av• 210
2500 oty. .. 117.900 to
.29.100: ltW~,f, trlll'llng.
tlldu,... *f•&amp; p .. d otMnln g.
..c. c.n open 11 d.,s. Mr.
......... 1812)111-4221.

Inn•

roof and Tt-11 1idng. .. eeh'lc
pole .nd box. W'!dwp.,nlng 1nd

blo~.

good oond. e2.1500.00.
304-41111-1531.
1978 Uberty 141170. 3- bedroom, 17,900.00. 304-1751871 .. d 5711-1783.

2 IR ., Ill electric. t.uniahed.
"- 000. Coli 304-87&amp;-11113 ..
can •• 2 mil• out Jim HHI Rd.
33

Farms for Sale

Complllolr ...,.dilled 3 BR .
ranch ltyll home. flriPIIICe in
t.R. rorll wet•. 3acr• m/ LEc.
Coll814-2411-1204.

SALEB MULTI LINE INSU.
RANCE. Lw. - - h - - .. .
hD- CAREER OPPORTUN· 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
~4-~~C:~4-743-1030 or

Attwon. b18Jtlfull•ga lluldlng
Modern H* llton In Pl. Pie• loti. moble hornt1 p•mltted.
ttnt. E.::. hlah tr.rR c loCitiDn. public' water, also rht• lots.
Vory ......obfo. CoH Huntlnglon
Sowen. Jr. 304-578
304- ii25-30M or 523-7277.
2331.
LIIIERTY FASHIONS. INC.
off. . non-franchlleapp•ll .,d
Rent~ls
ahoe atora R«ll M •10. e20
.,d u.-. MODERATE. 0&lt;
EXCLUSI\IE. Ov• 2.000 br.,d
n.rn-. on.. tlmt fel .,1,100
to e25.900 I n 41 H omes for Rent

av•

...,.,ory,
ftltur• lluyln1 trip. auDDI•.

inltore trlinlng. mar• ~~ ~ny
tlrno. D.. Kaotodly !101-3278031.

Nlcetv lurnilhed smal house.
Adu~o onl,. Rol. requred. No
-.eon 514-4411-0331.
38R ,. AC.c•p._ poot u•l9e.
2 fe'eplll*, fence. Good locatio" Con A·1 Re• Eltote
....... 304-875-5104.

31

Homes for Sale

v.., .nr.ctN-e bridt 4 bedrool'l\
2 bllth. ftmiiV room wllh ftr•
p1- lormlll..,lne ..... living
roam. 30 lt. custom o* kitchen

c-111. ... w..,....ort&lt;. flnilh
bllem.M. 2 ... 9•111&amp;
ltndiOIP .. lot, 4 rnl•
- · Hoopltlll off Rt.
Ponwbrook Subdivillon.

814-441-4189.

,., ..

lrpm

'35·

Clft

fu- u•t•
...,,_

4 IR ., lull bal.mtnt • g•ege.
wp«.t {tome n~ . City
td1oofl.
low. WoodIJurMI'. N•urll Qll furrwce.

Pdcod to 1111. CoR 814-448
0278 ollor 8 PM. ...

Pl.,, lub.-4 BR .. ..II b•emll'rt. c.p.._ a• rang&amp; cttv

IChoolll. Adutts

on~ - ane

chllcl

No ••~ Dop. 1 Rof. requrod.
•350 p• mo. Cal 814-44&amp;0278 .tt• e PM. ,..,....,.

.nylirn&amp;

Furnllhed homewllh 3roomt•
bllh. Llrgeyard. On Madilon St.
Coli 814-44&amp;-4109 .. 379-

2740.

3 lA .. tully c•petad. C•rport.

Rtf. I dop. requirod. Locoted
within 1 mle of Clllllpalil. Coli
814-4411-3413.
House- 7 room~. unllrnilhed.
•225. 29 Ntil Ave,.. Galllpolll.
Coli 4411-4418 oft• 7 PM .

3 blctoom A1n cit. 11h b8tlw.
ftmllv room. dnlng room. 1 cw
9 • ..., ltorege bulclng. poot.
/ wooer.. · Spring Vllllor
arH. Ceit 11~440. 7903.
Darling 3 IR . I'Wtc:h 1n country
on 110. 7 mil• from Holz•
Hoo ..lll. loncod In bock yord.
ontv 7 YJ'I. old. rurtll w .. er.
copper plumbing. deck .

Houu wtth b8th. Ne• Recine.
Nice ywd. g•dlln •.-=a CiM

814-992-1158.
VfltV nice houM. 2 t.drooms.

buement . 1832 Lincoln
Heightl. t200. Aef•tr~c. and

1 ·30;;;4-:17~5-~2;3;":·;;::====

3becr- 1'hbllh. booomont 1·4 2 M bll H
.,d g.-ego. Control olr. In
0 e
om81
Mld•opon. Coll814-11112· 7182
for Rent
.. 114-11112-1257.
In Eurlllka. 2BA . Adultl ont;-. No

t200 1
D
•
poto.
mo. IP· -.od.
I·C_oi1_8_1_" '_2_4 '"
_ 88_8:..:'-_ _~­
Llrgellv1J.room wilh .. pendo
room 2
.. ntw c•ptl. CA.
~;:.lot. Col 114-4411-1401.

45

Furnished Rooms
'

Furnllhtd roorn-911 Second
Ave., O.llpolil. • 135 1 mo.
Utlllti• 1111hi Slnalemala Sh••

46

Space for Rent

COU NTRY.MOBILE Home P11&lt;~
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Ramel trWiers. Call 814-992-

7479.
SpKIDus mo.. e ho,.. lots far
rw. Famil¥ Pride Mobile Home

44

Apartment
for Rent

49

.

73

;:-;.--

IPPI. furnilhed. W81h«·D..,_

c•p•

hook--up. ww

p-od. -

rNMt,

From t175.

. -- : - : - - - - -

A ntique8

Coli 814-2411-5829.

Apta. con 304-8711I""104."'I· Iorno. 8?6-5318
"' 8711-

Merchanrl1sr.

7731.
New

fur nil hed

complete~

ap.-tmMit: &amp; mobile home In

city. Adutta ontt.

P~rklng.

CaM

51 Housahold Goods

814-4411-0331.
BUUTIRIL APARTMENTS AT
MIDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON EBTATES. 531 Jockoon

P•e from •183 a mo. w•k to
•hop and mova. 814-441-

2888. E.O.H.

.t. C•r·

Uplt-. unl.lrnithld

potod. uoiMI•pokLNocllilcr.,.
No poto. Col e14-4411-1137.

. T•• Townhou•• . . .menta- 2
BR1., 1 'h bill hi. CA.. dil·
hw•tw. dilpaal, prtnte ...
cloood Pllio. pool. olorground.

SWAIN
AUCfiON 6 RIRNII'URE 82
OlNe St .. CWIIpoll.
N~· 8 pc:. wood grodp- t319.
Living rDDm •tt• t 199- •&amp;99.
Bunk bedl wtth beddlntt 1248.
Flll 11M mllltreea 1: foundation
starting· •aa . Recliners
ltllrtlng- *99.
UI&amp;D- Bedl. drenen. bedroom
lult&amp; O.b, wringtr .......... .
oornpiMe Nne of u•• -.rnlture.

Hour~ :

.,ndoy 1 to 8p.m. 114-992·
2521.

1987 Dodae Raid•. 4

or ctll814-441-4139.

Moct.n 1 BR , downtown. com-

pl81:e Wtch-. air. c•plll DepOIIt, no peb. Call 114-44101 39 evening~, aft• 1.

238 Firat Avo. 1 BR .. ldtch.,
turn•had. c.p•ed. No ddl·
dren/ Pett.

•ns

p~u, utllltl•·

••s

•so

up to t125. Hlde-o-bOdl 1390
to 1695. Aedln• 1226 to
I 371.
28 to 1125.
Dinett• 11 9 end up tO t495.
Wood table W·l chain tZ85 to
t795. DHk 1100 up to 1375.
Hulch• t400 .,d up. BuM

Lamg• •

bedl compllee w-mattr. .ee

uee ..duptoe395. 8•11r• 110. Mattr.... or biD; tpringa
fun or twin • 88, firm ne. .., d

t!81. Queen . . . t2SO &amp; up,
Dop. I ref. Col814-44&amp;-4925. King •3&amp;0. 4 dr..,• chtlt tet.
· Gun cabint~t• 8 . B 6 10 gun.
821'/a Sec. EJICel. oond., 2 BA .,
rnettr.... I 31 &amp; •45.
equipped kitchen, air. Awlleble lab¥
Bed tram• • 20. UO &amp; King
Nov. 11t. t225 pluo dep. Coli frame tiO. Good a~ection of
814-441-01030&lt; 4411-2158.
bedroom tutl81. maill cablneta.
headbo•dl 130 and up to •os.
Nl~2 BR . IPC. 4'1.1; mil• from
Gallipolis. Stove, refrlg. &amp;I w..•
90 Days same M CMh .wkh
fun1ilhed. •225a mo. No pets. approved Cl'edtt. 3 Mit• out
Coli 814-441-8031
Bul•llle Rd. Open 9.-n to 5pm
Mon. thru SM . Ph. 814--44&amp;6 Court:21Ning•-· 3BR .. 11A 0322.
blllh onOt'eskle. 1 BA . &amp; bath on

other. Both ldtoh.,, furnlohod.
!dell lor family whh g,.,.., •.

ent. Overloohl J*k&amp;rlv•. Walk
to echools. Downtown. 137&amp; 1
mo. pk.t1 utlttl•. Dlposll &amp;
rtrf~renca . Cal 814-441-4928.

1 6 2 BR ..,.,,__ t300
month. lnd1uM an utlttl•.
requ~od.

no pratt, dep.

CoH 814-4411-4222

V.lll.,- Furniture
New .,d Ullld furniture Md
applicencM . Call 514· 4481572. Hour• 9-B.

J IS RIRNITURE
1411 Eelltern A....

4 drMer chelt, 148. 11 c~r...
ch•t .14. II. I pc. wooden
dlnnette • • •111.11.

Check lor opecloll on ALL
Mo-. Big •oount·l.,yoor'o
stockedSecond
modtli.
Allton,
1210
A RonQeiUpolll.
4414¥133..1
Ohio' 114.
.
Wood spUtter, splits 11 lnd1
logl, almost nM. 8ft bushhOg
dioc. 3 point. Coli 814-381814B.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Complete hou11hold furnlaft.

Sh ..... Lewn A.... 721 Seoond lniJII. 1AI mAe out Jerrlctw:t
Aw. Fllf'Mhed tffldtnq' .-t· 304-5711-1450.
lng •• *175 a mo. lndudlnt

56

F.... hod Z IR trol• nMiy

I ..... . . _ 1'h bllha. - - Nice 3 be4-ooma. ,. . . yord.
- rPl•ont.
l l · -- -304-8711.....od 314 1hlrd II .. ICon•ga. Col
potod.
1r1 Point
,114-4411-7473.
2702 11048711-2147.
.
2 . . _ ........... Loollod In
, _............ g .._
....
.J-odo Pork. Rol. • dop.
ment. fourteen ecret, requ~od. Coli 114-4411-1071.,
uo. 000.00. 304-875-1311.
104-1784113.
.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Suppt,o Shop-Pit
Grooming. All breeds ... All
.ry.... lams Pet FOOd DNI•.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-4411-0231.

Trf.SW VaQiurns wtth unused • Dr~~ganwynd Cettery Kennel
powemazi!JIII •d llttachmenta. CFA P. .hr'l and SIMt•e kit·
guarent•. • 220. C.Omi)M:t Yl- tene. AKC Chow puppi•. New
cuumt •o rebuilt. 1180. c.ll Himlll ..., kltt.,. . Coli 814-

441-3144 eftor 7 PM .

304-217-1324. Llmhod quollty
•o
unulld 1988 Rein-~ Klrb\11. 6 Eleet"!lux.

h••

AKC Regllterod Woot Hlghl.,d
White Terriers. Male &amp; female.
Shot1, wormed. Cll 814-3889913.

Men's • t...c:JI•"• dDt~goltke
niiW, 1ntlque d~,__mllk gl•s.
ltldi•
kltch~n hems. &amp;
Iota of mile. Colll14-4411-2923
or . . It 102 Fourth Awa.

lho•.

t._.
.. ,. .,.......
112·3711. EOH.

c.11

e,._

Pl......

Point
304-171-2081
10 Qal1et Up •14.99tnd10 gill

complete •4325.

Hound. I monthl old. Ilk• to

•ppro•.

hunt, 304-8911-3183.

67

Avactdo 13 cu. ft. Frostfr•
Glblon Refrlgentt:or. Ex. Cond..
•200. Old electric train, 1100. &amp;
old qultts. 2 r.ttroad IW1m1. 5
tchool marm belle, Old stone

Musical
Instruments

w.r~o

-

lono. Antiquo dr-. 114-949·
2801 .

1703.

lndtvkll•l •lt•r

Four ticket• to Cl.,ellll dB row no
Pltt.ergh Steel•• game. No-

'••one. be·

ginnen. •rlou• guttarfn 1 BNl-dio Mu'"' 514-441-0187.

vern ... 20th. Coli 114-9814339 •"• 4:30 .....

Jeff

W~m•ltrf

hutructor, 814-

4411-1077. Llmkod op.,lngo.

Wheelchair with remoYiblt

Trombone. great cond. griM fDr
beginner~, 30~329-8018 or
0

pwts fDr medium alzed pnon.
U.ed onty twloe. like nBW,

304-8711-3384.

reMonlbly prfcod. Coli 01499 2-2483 ..,,,_ - · · 4:00
p.m .

58

Fnlit

Ounrovln Fruit Farm wil close
Novem blr 23 for the IIIIIGn.
Milcell~neous ttems •te prk:ed.
Houra 9·1. ,doted Mondlve. At.

014-182-2201.

•ao.

2727.

tnd MVe ' " · Spa' a starting M

tft«II :OO.

t1 ,5!10.QO. Coli A"'o Tech.
304-523-1288.

C.l

Ono-hFrwQuolflod ,.,. . poy t200.
dopoalt .,d
lor tho

no..,
month. Novtmblr •

De-

only. VII""-..
.,c..,blr
dI'Uvonlde
A,_,_,, In
- -· FNm
814-112-7717.
EDH. t182.

.

be•ln~ ---12moo. c;¥C .
jointi•IR ty. .. Cell 814-3711- ,.
2220 .. 304-1711-8788.
•c•" •'

. .. -;..
fnt. . .. .

Used tnnl,.lionl. AI
...,. lnopected. 30 d......111: ·· '
t". WI b.lv trll'l•mitelona. Call i

814- 445-0911. Rebuilding

1

f~m.

...... ebl..

.'

1988 Pontiec 8onnwlleLE . air,

310 Chewy motor. Au,. good. ~ ..
t100. Call 814-Hll-2594.
1

1980HondaAcoordLX. 72.000
mi. AC. Fod conc:ltlon. c.n

•

A ..bl .. m•e. ly. .aald. Orev.
~ regitt•ed. •1500. 1IJ: quwt•
mere, II y... ald. Bleck. e100.
Woo.plltt• on tts own trill•.
•300. Coon hounds mountllln
ktrr~, walk .... redbon•. •150
a up. Regilt:ered bMI.rt hound,
mete. rltd a whtte, 1300. C.H

458-1728.

104 aq ft brown 1h1g cwpe~
1200.00. 2 gold reclln• chelrt
t100.00. Phone 304·8753123.

114-742·2412.

rollll Supplil!:i

O,rlftrnas tr... 3 mH• out

s.. d

Hill Rood. t1&amp;.oo .,d
120.00.

&amp;

1984 Block Chry~or l.a- XE,
turbo. •callent CDnd. &amp;8.000
ml•. I opd.. A C. PS. Pl. tit.
Q'U lie. povoAr windOw e. ,.,..,.
..... power door ladle.
wtndowa. AM·FM -C.•«e.,...
empltt.r, ,.. defoger, power
mlrroro. tQOO F - CoR 814387-7757.
.

•m•

good cor. e1100. Coll814-44140411.

1979 Buick Electr~ high ml•.
350 V·8. lui power. Rune good.
t9!10. Coll814-255---281ft•
&amp;PM .
1979 AMC SpriL 8 cyl., outo.,
t425. Coli eft•5PM,I14-44&amp;09&amp;:Z.

- ~:

LIVI!:illli:k

61 Farm Equipment

•orieo. SAM SOMERVILLE' S,
OLD RDUTE 21. NEW · ERA For ..I~A•c:ondttloned 1 I ft.
304-273-&amp;851, Noon-8 PM . lold-uptx.ohhog. Col1814-285Nov, Dec:. (lntul8ted Coveralh 4821 .
t27.110). Jungle-· U.S.A..
Orlalnll Army clothing. Non- 190 AC trtc:lorwtthround bel•.
miOterv camlleuge pents htlv btnd. Dlow• • disc. cultlvtt12.00.
tora. •n&amp;o. AC WD45 tractor
wMh-o, chc.lft. tx.ohhDII

•••oned
Oak flr~Mtood. 128.00
pick up IOid. phone 304-171·

•1 .4$15. Ownwwlll flnan01. C.ft
814-215-55~2 .

1304.

l..8te modal 510 Ollrter dl•ll
plow• 6 dhc. buoh hDII t315lf
&amp;Oe lnt•n•tlonal ll•eltnctor

Antique oak dr-er. mahogany
dining room Illite, 4 piece
bedroom sutte. I.IHd hospttll

wMh loll. buoh hoe t4250.
Own• wl 11n.,oe. Cel 8142811-M22.

bed. 304-875-4579. .

Building Supplies

Bull...g Mllert•

k-'"""'
1984 Buick Clntury

Stlllon

Wagon. Exclllent condition.
44.000 mil• C.H 814-11112·

33411 oft or 5:00p.m.

1917Fordhoorf. 4 op.ocl rool
ahlrp. On• owner. EJCellent
ooncalan. CeH 114-742· 3142.

1911 BMW3201. 1tpeed.•n
roof. new Brtdg. . onetlr-. NW
IXh•tt .. d brill.•. Mull sel.
Coli 814-992-28411.

.

1977 PotWIIC Orend Prill. c.n
eft• 4p.m. 814-11112-1287.

1985 Chevy 28ft. Mal•dw~h
ec:reened room. ....,lng". .IMIgen••or. other atr111.

R•.
Low

..-..... Like naw cond.

•11.100. 304-8711-45&amp;1 .
' 77 Trant

·~

• I""

•

.•

Horne _..,_..... .......... .·,
Improvements"'*

&gt;·;' {

•'9'•

Registered
Bull for Ill•.
Also Anep.~a heif. .. Call 8149815-3191 .

-=:--;.:._,.:___ ____
Sir&lt; chick.,., coli

304-075-

j84~,H~~I!t;;::G;;:;;::=
ay
rain
19 28.

--------.,.~
~rgeround btl•

ofh.,forllle.
t 2 0 - Coli 814-4411-1052.

lncl.lm

EFAP

Allo. will 1u
•nd
denver uwdu lt.
4- 35332. 1:001111:00 AM .
Ground shell oorn •

n

e.00

p~

100. Prom.. m AWIIIolo U.OO.
ltrM" 11.10, Round 8•1•

I r &lt;ill:ipliiLiliiHI
71 Auto'• For Sale
11114 Chivy Chovotte. Auto-

n•

..... - . nooo. F"'

moro Information ollll Poul It
l114-4411-23.42.
Moy be • - 11

.

TheOIIflpollo Dolfi' Tribune 1·5

Remaonllnr11oa, l'lrt 3' ABC
Novel for Tlll'rii!On Q
Ill • • McQiilre
1:00 e CJI dll Nlgllt c-t A

.,'

~g..:~~~' '"..~~~~~,{
- - .•

Am .

..

Rot.-y or cable tool ctllln'g. :

Moltweboompl•edumedav..
Pump lal• .,d • ..,Ice. 304- .,

8115-3102
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE . ..
house clll ,...,Icing OE, Hot ;,

\!JUMPY AND
,•
' .
'·
'"I

PER ILOUS .

BOTTL.ENECKSAND
R::l5 61BLE O\TA511&lt;oP/-'ES
II

THAT's NOTA HOR05COPE'
lHATSA TRAFFIC REPORT.

L-It= IN WAIT FOR YOLI."

(1:38)
(!I

Town National Pro-Am 1r0m
Lao Vegaa, NV (R)
• Now Cotrnlly

..

10:00 (J) 700 a.
eCJI dll T~alltlln.,.._,. Two
Tattlngen araln romantic
tangles - one beginning , one
8ndlng.
•

".,

Ron' s Chlmn., Sweep, IOedtl···

82

Plumbing
Heating

'

.·
f

~

...

I

.. .

I·,., ~

•'
,1

CZl IIINen

WE GOTTO

WORIC. FAST,
PAW II

HERE COMES

OL' DOC
PRrrCHART !l

I'M lOOKIN'
FER A

YO'RE NOT
OUT IILL
COLL!CTIN'?

CH!CKIR
.AMI! II

T-Top .

'82 Plvmoutl! Roll-. 4 cvl. 4
....d. eeoo. oo . 304- 895·
3427 .. 304-875-1104

Clollt&gt;ole, Ohio • • · •
Phone 814-44&amp;.3888 or 814- 1' :

Mink Chevrolll ·

&amp;

0&lt;

1111 Nhnn Maxime
t:J,IOO.OO. Pl. PB, AC. AAHM
c . .«te, 14.000 ml• call
304-1711-8723oft• 4 :3.0 PM .

1881 Ohl1 Cud•• Cl•a. one
~. low nil~~ge. exc oond.
304-1711-1238.

1180 Thu- B~d. outo. 1980
G..,odo outo. 4 door 31, 000
d • 1179M.. I:u w.gon .,to.
304-1711-7858.
1981 B~dl Lt S.br• on•
ow. .. •c cond. 13..1100.00.

304-1711-3030. 87&amp;-4232 .,d
875-3431.
Trucks for Sale

1179 ChtiiV 4rl4. 380, 4 bb..
outo .. y, tcm block. Col 114-

241-9415.

Electrlca I

.

..... r...·-

A•Identllll or oomm•ciM .'v ;t!
ing. New s.-wlce or riPA

Llcen1ed efedrid.,. Estimatefro• Ridenour Eleclrlctl 304-

875-1788.

85

.

.

..

con d. Low
Colll14-44114072.
11182Dotounplc:k·up.KingCob.
high mlloogo but ru,. good.
e1ooo. 114-112-7841 .
'71 Chevy tnldc. "',. good,
ei!JO; oo. c., be • - behind
C lfton poet office.

-. ·'

,.

Bernice Bede Osol

'

W•• Service. Swimming
paoli, cilt•ne. wen•. Ph . 814-

J• J

- .•

R I R Wllor Service. Pbolf :~
cl1tern1. well1 . lmmidlit ,;.,•,,
1.000or2. 000golonodlllvory.!
Coii304-875-8370.
. ·. '
1'

i'
.
~~:;,';~o~~·~:~
.
..~- •
~~~:;;:;~;:::====·"''

I ir7

Upholltery
•'
____ _ _ _...:__.;_
I•

••'

Mowr.,·s Uphollt•ing servln~ ••
1rl CDUntylrH23ye. .. The bMt ''
In *-'rnllure ufholnering. Cd ..

304· 871 ·4
ntlmltea.

54 for l•tii .. •'
, 1,

.L.---J

Como (ele lhe chuckle QUOied
by filling in the missing wo rd1

vo u develop fr o m step No. 3 be fow.

Sultry - Goose - Hutch - carate - FUSSY
After giving precise lnetructlons on how she wanted 1w
brHkl-' cooked, the woman 11.1d, " Bring me anything to

iiJ Monlyttne
8a.allaml Yloll &amp;:;1

o

CAPRICORN (OeC.
1111 Big GEMINI (May 21-.lune 201 II you lack
rl..l ahould not be taken 10 . achieve faith In your ldeu today, don't expect
nominal gains. Keep this In mind today others to andorte them. In order to IIUC·
NoY. 11,1II· aomeone brlnga y011 a bordorllned ceed and gain IUpportera, you mull
•
propoal11an .
· hive courage In your canvlc11ans.
In Jhe year ahead opportunity might AQUARIUS (JIIn. a.Feb. 111 The CANCER (June 21-.luly Zl) Un- you
ari~ 1hrough 8 friend who dabblea In
strength you marshal today to advance keep yo~~r prlarltlea In proper panpocunl~ue.anterprlaas. Don't diBCOUnt wha1 ·
a personal ambition might be lneflec- live today, your non-prpductlv. IIC11vl·
hei.lhe•prOPOMSIVIn If It appeara a bit 11ve. The ltlpparters you raally need · tiel could receive graater anentlan than
aullandloh alllrat.
may lind r..-a to avoid you .
lhe dutleo you're obllga1ad 10 perform.
scpRPtO (Ocl. 24 N••· 221 You and PiSCES
(Peb. - h 201 11'1 com- LEO (JuiJ 21-Aug. Zl) The option to
yaut~ m•t• are likely Ia be on the same
fartable to have lhe reapeci a1 your make your own decltlons today could '
wavelength today concerning damaollc peen~, bu1 this shouldn't be your prima- be taken away from y011 II you place ·
ocanom1C1, bu11n other areas thertl'o a ry conlldera11on today. Dtlclde 11111 yourHIIIn a poalllon owrly clepandent
chance you'll be polea apart Scaiplo,
Ia bell lor you .
an alhera.
treat yo~~raelf to a birthday gift. Send lor what
AIIIIS (March t1-Apr1111l Be dlocrlml• VIRGO (Aug. 23 Sept. Zl) II someone
your, Aotro-Graph pradlcilona far the , nallng 1oday regarding your Involve- who helped yo&lt;~ In the pall .... yo~~ lOr .
yea! ahead by milling S1 to Aatrb- • mania end uaaclatlons. If you let your a Javor IO&lt;Iay end you do not comply, '
Graph, c/o thla ..-paper, P.O. B~ g rd clown, you could be drawn lnlo this person may n.o1 help you In the
1111
91428, Cleveland. OH 44101-3-428. Be
something rather undellrable.
future.
aure to alate your zodiac algn .
· TAUIIUI (Aprll31 MIJ 3llln leather· ' LJIRA (Bepl. 23-0et. 231 Ueuaily yo&lt;
SAOmAIIIUS (..... 23 - · 211 Auo- lng your own -11oday y011 mlghl be l are - a b l y cauilouo- n clli,~ can be fed tOday. bU1 not pullhld.
ltlmpted to ull tacllclthat companlona : fo rl..lng your reeJ~UtCII on "II·Y" ,.,.
In order to gel otherl to do your bid- could flnd oflenalve. Be ltlrllhe prl281a . tureo. Today, h -, y011 mlghi le~
ding, phraM your ln11ructlono u ,..._
.OOh 1he procedure.
Into 1 loeer.
queeta, not ordero.

v

drink. I' m not FU$SY."

BRIDGE

&lt;I

18YouCanlea8ter
11:01 (I) MOVII!: I'T 101 (NR) (2:20)

1t:30eCJI

a~~

•u

.AH
WEST

EAST

•u

'IU73
• K"Q 109

'IA102

.J87

.QJOU

.AH2
SOtJTJI

411.\ J 10 !1

'I"Q5
tJII

•Ku
Vui.Derable: North-South
Dealer: North

Norll
,.

p-

PUB

z•

Pou

Eool
p-

P..
P. .

Openlns lead: • K
hearts.
This line of play worked becauae tMi ·
ace of hearts was (11Ulrded oaly twiee.
U East bad started with four beartl,
declai'er's play would ba~ 11111 s~­
East a cbance to
the error of
thinldnl that be needed to 8f'ab llleearly in cue declarer bad Q.J double- •
ton In the heart ltllt.

r.

make

CROSSWORD
lily THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 Murphy's
1 f1accld
and others 2 Gaucho's
II P88Chal
"farewell!"
symbol
3 "But the 9 Loved one
endureth
10 American
for ever"
soprano
(Bible:
12 Muddy
I Peter)
13 Managing
4 Foxy
Ill Housing
5 Hiatus
for peas
6 In the
16 "The Sound
midst or
of Music"
7 Road guide
extra
8 Good
17 Dissemble
thinking!
18 Departing 11 Charged
words
particle
20 Destiny
1 o&amp; •-- horse!"
21 Greek
16 Norse
cheese
night god
22 "Strange
19 Jay or
Interlude"
comedy
heroine
28 Explosive
24 Wire

221bsen
charac~r
24 Role
211 Historic
periods
28 Casal's
concern
27 Garden
worker

29Mountaln
ridge
30 English
composer
34
38 "I Did It
My-•

Afford

37 Building
wing

grass

211

Repeat
27 Give
notice
28 Sandpiper
29 Make
bubbly
31"-That

Jazz"
32Soak flax
33 Badly
35 Reduced
speed
37 Advantage
38Take
the stump
39 Raw-boned
40 Cleaner's
partner
UFat

DAILYCRYPTOQUOID-Here'shiiWtoworklt:

IIIII

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

11·16

Arl PONIII

!~t,Y•&amp;:;I

91 iiJA ToclaJ ·
el!lltlutued Clalne

Ill lpaltl1onlght
'1111111 Htlt' Clll Lilli
flllht Lt. Hogan lnd O'Brian

•a

teamupto-ana
,.opened I'OIIbely 0111. (R)
8 IW
Ptrlonal

a-..,_

FOUl
.Amll1111 ........

12:011 (J) ..... a..
IJl c:,ctlna FIM World

Suptrblitl Ollmpionlhip

r=~Aui!N(RI
eiJl

D-111-U

'IKIH

.•u

T......,. 1111ow

~=·An•-

(ZJ

NORTH
.KQU

When you must lind your crucial
game-(IOing trick in a side-suit, it can't
burt to practice a little deception.
From time to time, malting the ri&amp;ht
play will win anyw~when the
right play is nat goilfg to wark':'maybe
you ·can trick the opponents into mak·
In&amp; a mistake .
In tolday's four-spade contract, declarer had three certain losers- two
diamonds and a heart. Since be also
bad a club loser, he bad to set up an
extra winner in the heart suit for a
club discard.
The defenders look the king and ace
of dliUIIOIIds, aDd East returned a club. .
Declarer won dummy's club ace and
put all drawing trumps. (He needed
communleatioa back and forth in the
spade ouii.) Illllelld he led a low heart
from dummy. East played low and
South won the queen. A spade wu
layed to dummy't king aDd another
ow heart wu played from dummy.
East correctly played the 10, wlnninl
the trick, and continued with the queen
of clube. Declarer won the king,
played a low opade to the nine in dum·
my, and played another heart. Up
came the ace; declarer ruffed and got
back to dummy with a bl!lh spade to
shed a IOIIDI club oa the gOod king of

choloe•c(NR)

ZW.n.

Cillerrw, Wallo. Dellvory Any.

tlma Call 814-44&amp;.7404-No
Sunde,t c..l1 •

..

I

SCRAM-lETS ANSWIIS

(ZJ (!) . . . ., _ . · - ol
Ideal Moyera talks wl1h a
wide variety of people abOUt
Allllrica'l

el!ll Lov. CotwleOIIOn

'hlr
'Birthday

.,'
011.-d W•• S.-vi01: . ~jl,

2411-1255.

tJI VldeoCou tbW
_11;00 (J) Reo .............
eCJI IJl eiJl a ea
III)Nen

ASTRD•IiiiAPH

lo

Wllor delivory. 1000 QolloN.· ~
1184 Chwy 1AI ton CUitorn Ae•onlble priCM. lmmedlai~ '
DHn•e. 1 cyl., •uto.. new delivery. C.lll14-992·52711t· • ~
·~--C"Int.
hlah ml• Wltterson' s W•ter Hauu.,,a:~.•"
•4.000. Cl 114-446-378;
aft• t PM.
re1101\1b11 rM-. volJrne clil= l•.-

~:~--.::0c1i1,~~..=~!:!;

J

General Hauji~J.g
,,

chronicle of the llvet of
residan11 In London's Eaal
End. (0:30)
.
.l!ll Ocld Couple

I

f

.--:.

Refrigeration ~ -

Inflammatory TV talk shoW
llllda to murder.
el!ll.._ IWir

CZl 11.4 dirt A continuing

·.-~ ~

84

ea

appearance on an

• CftiOit lltCI Chall
10:30 (!18torflng ChamplaMhlp

.. '

' ,....;

(!)On . . . . II WOlf Trap
ill
Wlllguy Poolay'a

IIJI!...........

,·

Cor. Fotmh Md P•e 1· · •

446-4477

dll...., LP8T loilllltll Sam's

t:30 • (JI

' ..

Ak••TreeTrim.,..gandltump .,
Remcwal. Frw eetrm.t•. Ca" ~

thru Decom..., t31.95. ~
304-773-&amp;3411 or 773-11Hiif.. •

e

iiJ LllrY Kina Uvel
i1J MOVIE: ihort ~ ('Pfl)

"

CARTER'S PWM81NG
AND HEATING . ,

72

':·Yd:!R DA-1L..Y HOROSCOPE:
-"'':ijE; Ro-&lt;\D AHEAD IS

Point, w•h..., dryers and ,,

....... 304-171-2318.

pretty builnept
baUII-In-tralnlng allows
to aiCipt. &amp;:;1
mental
(ZJ (!)
FollOw
Mexjca'a 1988 81ect1on1 and
how lnltitutlonl hlv.
aval¥8d.
IIIII a:ll The lquallaer A
,..n ..ge roc!&lt; star 11
lnflUIInced by hlr rulllleta
manager.

C

2454.

8t

mil•.

m.tlc. AM radio. al.,_.
•~•- 10.000 ml•. Re.- , ..

fiJ Munier, ........ &amp;:;1

' ·• ,-~.. '

ofuritp ·
removol. Call 304-8711-1331: •.

riiH

18NirhvlleNow
1:011)) Klrowly
1:30 (J) eiJl •war and

fl(l.-,.,.. ..•;

'

dll un.-

(btl)

Painting: lnt•lar &amp;
Fr• ..tirrwt•. C1ll 114-.ae. •'\

.

(1:31)
(JI

cold. &amp;:;1
DPIIIINNen
ill MOYI!: The Gauntlet (R)

q,; :i

.•

1:00 (J) MOVIE: lnclan PrUnt (G)

raraa

Glorgoo Creek Rd. Coli 114- .•
4411-~4.
•

"'~

=~
7:361J) llnfonlantl Bon

money lOr 1 theater lumace

i'
SWEEPER .nd 1..-v_,g mechine,,·
NP*~ perts, end suppll•. ~ide .,. .
up and d.UUery, Devil Yaa.tum f ' ~
Cle.,er. one h•lf mile

,

IIIA·f.~'~

~..iOn.

BASEMENT
.,
WATEAPROOANG
·.1.. ,-.
Unooncltlonel lfttlme .....,. .....
tee. Loclll r.,..eno. .,,......._ -"~
F- 1111..,.._ Coli ""'""' .1-114-237·o.t88. d., or i'llg{,l.~
Aagarsl•••men r"
Wet•proofing.
.. ,' ""'":'·

Aonnie Nell.

eiJl UIA ToclaJ

Tonlglrt

&amp;:;I
• e a TM Van Dyke
Show Gala benall1 to

---------------7~~ ~~.,

Fetty Troe Trim...,~

(I)~-

vanlohed.
(J) Ill rdll 9-Ball from
AUtnta City: Mixed Double
ComJlltitlon (R)
(I) .Ill QfOWing , .....
Jaaon ·1 111rlllad When hit
widowed mom v11111 - at
laall 11 first C
CZl (!) The Mlild Study
relatlonlhlp batWIIn natura
and nurture In causing

'"
'oh-....····,
'

8344

AmlriCa

MJID!Iu CaoH: A 82 yaar
Olcl auai!IC*l 1mnea11 vlctin

'.

81

(J) lcholaatlc lpor1l

e

Jl

t1,800.00. '72 Buick Lelebre.
no rust. runs goocL *371.00.
304-8711-2457.

Oldomolrla 814-44&amp;-3172
304-773-5134.

Livestock ·

-dar..

PE'/&lt;l.SCOf&gt;ES
&lt;:OMlN~

Ill CftiOit anti Cllroae
7:01(1) t to I
7:30 e (JI Parnlly Peud

GJCiollh

1188 C•mper, good cttnd.
t400.00. Col 304-773-584.1.!

'

at Jim

-

AT THE iWo

, .a .

304-8711-7121.

c.. tNckorvan. . . tc.nnylaa

Will h.,l oorn.

w~e THAN
TH~Y'~E' L.t:TT'ING
ON,., L,.OOjc:

;II

... -:.

For•gr.cdetlon•n.., oruMd

Block. brick. IIWer pip-. windows. ....... etc. ct ... Wlntera. Rio Q;.,de. D. Call 814-

63

o Miami Yloll c

evEN

1181 Spartan. 30 fl . cnR-·· 4
trait•. 17.400. Cen 114-441- '·· ~

8808.

8a.a-

IT'$ GOING 'ji;) i~

- - - -.·
. .
' ~

Ollanewtll..

Will do ,.,d bl.,ln, :alit;,
15040.
I)IMntlng. lnl•ior &amp; IICterlor :~
_decor••o. 21 yrs. •plrlenoe.
1987 Chr;osl• Le.,_on Cour.
Cllll814-241-8097.
•
Turbo. Excllln concltlon. I
optlono. CoH 114-441-1050, RON"&amp; T•lnlelon S!!_v~~~
House c..ll on RCA. uuuwr~·

1984FordEICOI1. Pl. PB.tuto.
AM ·FM c•IMI&amp; Emelent concNtlo" t2200. SM • hou11
peat Poet Office In Long Bottom
eft• &amp;:00 p.m.

SURPLUS ARMY. DENIM,
CAR HART. Aentel clothlno.
Smal Armr E'qulpmant Aca.-

FRANK AND ERNEST

~

8t Campers

1980 Trani Am, T·top. many
optlor-. turbo400wtthehlftldt.
•27150. 080. Coli 114-241198114. 245-1123 .. 44&amp;-230&amp;

1974 VW Bug. Goad oond.

59 For Sale or Trade

AriiNood t!!O. 00 pick up lood,
local . . .. 304-458· 1838 or

• ea IIIl-o! .
,._&amp;:;1
el!ll 'lhiM'• Cetnprrny

"'"

~:;:;=:~==
/.~
79 Motors Homes

Elccel. work c•. Call 114-245-

Olyumpus OM -10 31mm C.mere Clots of Extras) 1210.00;
Rowtng Machine (new) t40.
304-1711-1181 oft• I p.m.

l i e • - (1 ;00)

a

'

. -.1..-.1..-.L.1- -.1.

WKlll' In t;lnOinnatl

(i) eiJl c...nt Ana~r
(ZJ (!) lllcllrl~ IAinr

corwert. .. StancWd clutch.. :
pr• .,,. pi••
tlwow o:ut .

n• Col 814-379-2882.

1984 Pontloc Fi.-o. 4 epd, new
t~•- low. low mll!!!fe. Cooh
price. e3989. John • Auto
B•l•· below HoiiUV Inn In
Ken.,ga.
.

HOWNAT

" Found
lurs owner
and flydollldt by you"!!
boy
who...
hopes
- .

(J)

(!I ~ 11CI- (L)

BUDGET HANSMISSION:;·:
Uud • rebuilt all typn.' ·
W•-·3Q d..o. Pd.,. t99&amp;, .'
up. Uud 8t rebu Itt torWJ e ....

19815 Ch•a•. 2.2. arto.. air.
PS. PB. AM-FM -C.... .,n roof.
tlr•. eo. 000 rnl•. 14200

1978 Cflewrol« lmplla. 350
arto.. Pl. Pl. 711.000 mi. Vitry

1!. Vegetables

t20.; Regul•f.dcup. t25. Coli
814-742-31 1 .

'"7"'6-7A-ut:-::
o-.P"'a=-=m
:---.:......:..··•.:
&amp; AoceiiSOries· • ~ :.

Coli 114-4411-7075.

Lowery 44 Genie orgen. E-=ellent condition. C.lf 614-440.

...,.,. .,..,.

814-992-5142oft.-I:OO.

114-317·0401 .

I

_:_,

paper:

Ad seen in our local

1--T&gt;I'-TI-"-TI:....;.:,.1..,;_,1.,...7-l Q

fiJ c.,_, 1 . • You Can le 1 Stir
8:$111l Anclr Ortflltll
7:00 (J) Ol!r llouM Out of Step
e CJI PM MPI"ine

81tEI'n.tor a shoddl. AC. Automille overci'lve. 11800. 010.

*21. 00. Mor~'• Woocl•n

potod.

1870 Chivy lmpolo. Dop.,ofo.

ble. 1600 or belt off•. Cell

8

. ~·.i.;:

..

,...~-=~·~-=~·~

91 eaCIINen
•GJ l!ll
WKJIII
"' Cincinnati
lnaltle
,_
..

Satllnn• New Pol•ll 4 w .........
_. ._, .:
•.,...._~
Mdulad4wheel••·
, •,.;~ .,"" ..

--------------~~~.

~~ 3

(ZJ lady IIIDIIIO
(!) fllhtlr lurl rn Raplllt

,

B2 Ltd. -point. llreo, brlk•.

F•m. Rt. 35. Pliny, W.Vo. 8:00
till 12:00 Mon-l.o~ 304-137·
2018.

Olpollt •d r.t• .. ~·

1973 01•. II. 2 dr. 1700 Of
belt offor. Call 814-"'41-9317.

814-379-2798.

corn.

tWwtr Nldeaorlt.t aplftmn•
ovllllllla OOMI• paid. I 225.
P• montl\ dtposll r.quhd. Cal
114-812-5724 oft• 8:00 or
11112-5111.

mil•.

4411-8157oft• 5 PM .

Fish Tank. 2413 JICkson Ave.

~='3.=000::.:Co:l:l8:1:4-:44::1-:1:9:99~.:.l=========J

2 ._.,oom Apa, for rert.
Corpotod. Nlco a ottine Leundry

1982 Hondl Acoord ._chbedl..
B3. 700
5 opd. No AC.
&amp;eel. oond. One owner. Cell
814-4411-4928.

door lock. cruil&amp; tit. E-.
oond. Priced ta ... C•l 814-

Aegluered Norwegian Elk

..

t23B5.19B&amp;fordEXP, 3S,OOO
mH•. 13250. CoH 814-28118522.

AM~M.~wln~. ~

Mixed hM"dwoodtlllbl. t12per
buncle. Contelnlng
1'h:
ton. Ohio Ptllet Co .• Pom•ov·

1

Con-llo
blo- Ill 111 ...

1984 Ford ·Eecort, Me ow,.,

I

. . .,Gis;-L:::.,I.;.;N...,II;;...;C.-1

.,........

J·

dill.: Nlgh1ly .....
/j) NIA Today
(J) eiJl MC Newi 1:;1

Rt. 35 Cycle Sol•. Souto.il4' ;
WV. Ph . 1·304-871-4130. 111"'::: ."

r.:d

I

NIELT

r'-·

8Paot8ofllfe
fiJ Pat Alii!!

11:30.

GOVERNMENT SEIZEO Voh.
d• from • 100. Fordo. Mer·
~ COfYII:t81, Chwye. Sur·
ce.._,
plue . Buyers Guide . (1)
805-88?-IOOO. Ext. 8 ·10189.

27 8 ·

1·5150 gill. underground fu ol
tonk. t3150. Colll14-4411-0577
aft• 4 PM.

w.t• • 9•be9• StnAie ack.IHs For low ..Ia. on Qulflty Carpet
.,..,. Coli 814-4411-~7 .. &amp; Furniture come to Mollohan
814-4411-2802.
2411-5121 .
Fumlture-UpporRiverRd .. 8144411-7444.
,.
Nicely furnlohod 1-2 Ill . Wit•
&amp; g.-~apllld. Prlllotop.-~,. B
WESTERN
-v
uv. a.ll. Trade. Cell 8trpln• Ch RED
e1 A CEDAR
1
Daposl;t requi'ld. C.l 814-44
land. 114-448-8444.
•nd aev:.'~ U:~~ng
4 34SIIft• I PM . M·F·
• De~ Met•l•
Furnlohod ..,.,,_,, 1 111 . Uood Ch"!!r Eth.,AE., "CloorG..,.,, .... Oulll~v
t225. Utlltl• pold. 507 So· r.,Court' formol ...lngtoble.
CETIDE, INC .. Ath.,l·814oond. Gellloolil. Col 4411-4418
ch*•· • chinolrutcll. A,..lng
814-3578
7
tftor PM .
Aport...., lor ,.,_ t225 •
mont~ DopooR required. 514112-5724. Aft• lpm or 992·
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
1111.

,.., '•

I

el!ll HIDDr 0r1ya
GJIIIewiiiT*J

-~.

.

lnlo. CoHI14-4411-"4737. · ~j

ordellv.ry.M•on..,d.GiilllpoIll Block Co.. 123'h Pine St ..
Oell~olla, Ohio. C..l 814-446-

Pioneer AM -FM -Cau with
equattz•. 1125. Mutt ''" bV
Frldor. eon 114-2511-1123.

55

THE SUN ROOF OPEN

CEKNOB

1---r-1-=-ri-ll:...r:l-.:.,1",.....-1

1111111 ......

8:01 (J) ~ anti Shlltey

71 Auto's For Sale

Buy dlra:t from manufaetu•

tlo,. nlor beplckodupll Spring
Vtll., PI••· 129 Jack1Cf1 Ptke

M GLAD Tf!E'( LEFT

1•

65 !;iuilding Supplies .

2 regiat.,.edAKC Boa•puppi•.
9 weeks old. 1 tem•e 1 mlle.
t200.00 ooch. 304-8711-1043

Sot• .. d ch•re priCed from
to •&amp;95. Tat&gt;~•
..,d

4-

=

.IJ) !Ill •

(ZJ OeprHI J-lllgh
Tough guy Rick takes an
1 - In Environmental
Action Comm-. (NRI Cl
(!) Dr. The Curae ol
Pteadon, Part 2

;8~711-;::71;11~.;·~;::::;:=~·; ·;&lt;
•:
·' •,

';;"'·

881 SE of Alt...,. 814· 8988298.

and HM cle«Pptd P . .Onl. Equ ..
'-•lrlg opportunity. Appllc•

(!I

lpecllll. 1188 tlig ROd.
h~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~~~~·~~~NE~·~· ~ H...,n
~ ;.
Erell., ohlpe. Ridden v-v I

Compact eweep• with att.Dhmtntl
Portable Singer
HWing machine ••· 814-9•9-

"LAYNE' S FURNITURE

diiNen

74 Motorcycles. · ...- :•
.
.....
.~~ ....:

s...

A.-rim.,, lor the Eld&lt;O'Iy.
Galli a Minor Al*trntntl. IISI
Buht Morton Ao.:l. Deelaned far
the S..lor Clttl., 182 • olda-1

drtve. Mlto. 1172 Dodge.

rl-1~

Wheelcll*•- "' uood. 3
w._..ed ateetrlc scoot. .. Call
Rog. . Mobllty oollect. 1· 814870-9881 .

Furnilhtd IPt. Nt.. Hr.1C.18A .

rang• . lk•ggl AppllanCft,
Upper River Rd. betide Stone
CNit Mot ... 814-44&amp;-17398.

GOES INTO THE MALL, AND
TMLEFT ALONE IN THE CAlC

a••• 4 apood. .,rt
(
iw . :•

1978

814-387-7850.

GOOD USEO APPUANCES
WMhert. *Yen. rtfrlgwators,

:..VhHi. ;.

r .... lt. 1177 Ch• tour

AeN-rWoodbur,.. far•le. Call

814-441-1199, 127 3rd.
Avo. Golllpalil. OH.

SO Tf!E REST OF Tf!E FAMI LV

drllle, Mlto.l:elll14-11112.·3111f. ·:

"54 Misc. Merchandise

your
lot. Fwm
t12.11111
I up.
Soeour
0.k011
Home.
, 81Mf:
on
Model. Coll1· 814-llll-7311 .
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS·

:- -;,

.

M,T,W 10•.m. tolp.m ..

County Appll .. ce. lr\c. Good
used IPPii.,CII 1nd 1TV •••·
Open lAM to IPM . Mon thru

-. :

Coli 114-24...15040.

1124 E. M•ln StriiBt, Pom•Ov.

NEW· _ , . , boot, t31.
Workbooto • 18 I up. (Steel 1
loft tool. Coli 114-44!1-3159.

U35. Ulllti• paid. con 44114411 oft• 7 PM.

~'
......

'

1979 .Mop Wogan- I.Jm,lt¥.•

Flr-.vood for •le. Smlfl pickup.

W••· .,..., a tra1h .,dudld.
St.-ti!t.l It IZ89 P• rno. Cal

lpiiDIIU

• (J) (i)

Laeded. nM dr-. Eacel . oond1 ,

Ohio. 814-992-1411 .

Senior Ctttr . . Welcome. Re-

8:00 (J) Bclnanu: The l.ol1

New. tlr.- · "
chromew._.· tMtt-v-CMitne "
piJ¥'•· Loolal • ruM rael ~go'od . ,.
Mud ... to1pprecl11e. 11800. ..

•w.

Pl......

•

.....;;..;,_...,.,_

r.1. ~

four scra mbled words below 10 form four simple words.

I

EYE NINO

..

W.O.

1978 Ford v...

10.. Miler .-w. 1-18 1ft. Rock'4WIII door plana. 1-111•
Recipro NW. Cell 814-441-

Commwcl• Buldfng for leale.
Pt.
Coli 304-8755104.

Vans&amp; 4

..

o ~eorro•g• ~ot~o.. ·a••~•·-;.,.;;,;:~,..-

1
'

;­
---~------~-----;~
.

3 D1ece bedroom IUite. ttSO. Call
1 14-11112·2077.

2807 oftor 5 PM.
2 BA . optl. 8 cloolll. khch-

14i,.4 ~y CLAY I . POlLAN

o

;30;4-;::87~·;3~5~7~0;.::;;:;:;::;;;= ;

1-K 1: E Bulct.~ Tr•stt. with
zoom lens. 1-Bleck 1: Deck•

For Leese

v-teWing---•

~

j

Effldtnot IP. . mft. II Clr·

carwldlr t.,d OOntNGI, llfl• ·Moorlted. 'IS mi. • • of Port•
&amp;:OOI'Mpllane304-175-5712. 'on 114. Col 814-3.11-8183.

(

1 bedroom opt, ollutlllti•plld
acept lloc:tric. Gollloolil Fenv.
304-8711-1371 err 8183112.
4 room apt, ullfcl• peld.
150.00 .,.. - · 304-87113.1 00 .. 8711-&amp;1509.

304-875-3073.

3 bl'*oonw. 1221. ,_month

- - 1 - 4:30 PM .
304-ID:I-3394.
.
3 lA . hou.._ 'h mi . from ch:y. H
lo
Grill' School Dllt. Can 1 14OUI8 r , ..., 2314Mt. Vernon
4411-8541oft• 5 PM.
Avo. t2150.00 momh. ....
lnd diiPotl, unt.JrMhed. on•
Gov""rnent Hom•l e1.00 fU chllcl 304-8711-2151.
RIP *I Feredoeutel. T• Datln- 2 btctaom hou .. ,_..~ _
Prop-'¥. Now Sellin•
·-~ ·~·~
'IIIIo •Ill Col ~-~~ ideled. gr. . lo..,lon, Point
1·511---38411
. H182Z ......... coli oft• 8:00 PO\

Furnllhed .-.nmant. edutts. no
peu. 304-8715-2267.

Park, Oalllpolil Ferry; W. Ve.

between 9•1.

w•

Ill• prloo e.u.ooo. Col: lob
· Schwelk•t lf4-423· 5050.
C..ury 21 C•INd(• Rellfly.
For • • or rn : 2 blct'oom
houoo. good locotlon, nlco
ntigMiorhood. ltllft •d rttrlst
•••· no ohldr., poto. wll

1971f0fd'&gt;i ton trudt UOO.OIJ.

304-&amp;75-

beth. Cob 441-4418111• 7 PM.

2 be~oom mobile home C.mp
Conlor. 304-8711-3812 oft•
5:00PM .
- - - -----"»'11. . tor rent. an unlarn61hed.
Nee tnd el-.. aoupl•. smll
ahll cten accepted, · rUenCM
and depolh:. Rt. 1 loOJit Ad,
fourth mle behind KloK. City.
304-1711-1078.

Adults ontt.

Oldlr 2 story home. 3 BR ., plus utlltl• and depoel. 2
.scttlonll 4 room hou•CIIn be bectoom tr.U• tor re'll tn
wed•bu•ln•&amp;Aiv•front~ge. Tuppn Plaine. t171S month
131.000 or own1r
tnanoe '*-'• utlltl• and depostt. 114wlhsrftlltdownPI'Vft'llrlt. 8'h% &amp;17-3417.
lnt••· 3 mM• e. of Mldcleport 3 ~oom home with full
on AI. 7 · C•• 814-44&amp;?040: b11emtnt toCIIIed New Hwven.

...,. . . . .. 3M*oomhomeln
1U-• Plolno. t2150 mont~

c.n

Aoonw tor rent- WNk or month.
Starting at •120 e mo. Galla
Hotel-8 14- 4411- SIB!). ;

diPool. 114-742·2728.

t31.000. Nogotlbla Contoot pluo diPool. Col 814-992·
NeaHinry-Agertt for Jan Oettl• 1724 or 114-992-11119.
Aafl, Jackson, Ohio. 81 4-- 3 bld'oom houM, 2 barh .,
, 211- 370.
Tus»pn Plains. 12715 month

lor lltlnp.

Coil 814-

g.-boa• ....... 251-11010.

and dryer, unct.p~nning and
dedc. all •c cond. ·Cel 114-

phone 304-1711-8141.

Ublrty flo1hlan1. Inc. offn

Sale or Rent. WM•. IIW-cl&amp; •

on hUt pump. 1Y.t b.thl, w.th•

Foroole1970Ch...,plonmoblle
home. 12x50 13,800, worygood
cond. 304-1711-157&amp;

opt~~

2 Bedroom mobile home In dly,
unlJr,.hed. Aduho onlv. Prtvlle .... ~. t2!10 o mo.
Dopo.. requhd. Coli 814-44113791 oft.- I PM.

141110. 3 BA .. 1182 Uborty lor

Don ...

zaoo..,...
fiJrtuNI. *'•• gr.. d opening,
ete. C..
11 d.,,, Mr.
l.oul#lln 18121 BBI 4225.

t175. UtiMi• pokl. SeCIUrlly

~;;:::;;:;:;;::;;:::;:::;;::::-r---------1
I~

317· 7120 "'304-1711-2047.

ohD• normolly prfood
from t11. to .t iO. Ovor 2&amp;0
b' .. dl
t17.900to
t21.900: .......ory. """'"'"

Apt, for,.,.. 807 Main St. Rant.

4480. Ext. 10 "' 53.

A..al Pficll unbllletabletortop
~

step on

dep. required.

2 bectoom 1 2x150. 11900.
..... II Mh::tt•a For-e, Bugle 304-875-2722.
..... LovL Comp Bovortr H... 1983Triumph. 1._80, new add
Orown. Lual&amp; ovw
2000 Dlt... Or e13.19 one

dep ... requrod, cofi304-8754480•t.IOorl3.

e ,• ..._,....,......,. .. ...,..,._..,

Add aalar

Otg~nf~

Sot&amp;. ••cellent concNUon. 83

304-8711-1388.

\

them .. und you h••

-lv. 1250. Call 814-387·

Buy ot Sell. Atvertne Antiqu-.

One

ttwou•
lrw4iotlptod the oflertng.

0322.

Fti)!::S.QII .

-,--::,--~~-:~,-S~@=-~-cl.l-=--lA~--~~r_=-t}~S-·-:--::.....
:

Television

'I'M!Wol Ll t:E Will&gt;~ 'tJU COIIFF?.&gt;S

- '
1114 Chevy S -10 pick up.' :
AM-FM .. ..,. tinted wlndowa. !.
304-8711-5388.
..

n ., .. t• living cion to ....,.. . 53

3711. E:D.H.

Trucks for Saki .:..

72

O.E. W11her .,d 0'"' par.
Extra nice. 3 cyde. works

ping. btnkl ... d Schoo... FOf
moralnforrMI:kJn call 304-882-

317-7211. .

i NOTIC£ 1
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO . I"'IOmmll'ldl th.r vou
• bulln- with p.,ple vou
llnow. .,d NOT to - d monor

Wright

lncll• lone t25. RCA 28 Inch
.,d whtta T.V. E-*'ent
oonditlon. t25. Col 814-812·
5431.

WllwefDr tldertt wonwt In my
home with hDIIMI prtv...._.I02

21

KIT N' CA RLYLE® by Larry

51 Ho111ehold Goods

hi-*

114-4411-1071 "' 304-171141153.

WediRnautey, Novem:!b:181'::.!1~6:..•!19~8~8!________________.2P~OI~m~.a~o!y~M~it~d-~dl~a~~~Jrt~,~Oh~io~----T"'"-----.:..---The Daily Ssatinei- Paga 13

...· J.t

Wednesday, November 16, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

.

·-

-.·.

·-llrlnl-

Tonltll!t

NCKARGK

ICDAUM
OIU

NR I KA

OIU

0

.

ACX

PRKA. CPW .

VQUMMCPW
NAR

XOLUM

.VQUMMCPW
.
·-

yc u

Q

DAOICKJ

zc p w

K R

K AU J

RPQJ
KAUX

KR
0

RKAUIM .

Yesteni&amp;J'• er,ptoqtiOte: IN MANY TifiNGS

rr IS

' NOT WELL TO SAY "KNOW YOURSELF"; IT IS BE'l"I'E.ft
· 'TO SAY "KNOW 011fERS." - MENANDER

.,

�-

~~-----~

Paga

----

-~

-

-~-----

---------

14:_The Daily Sentinel

Conseco
named AL's
Most Valuable

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
702
Pick-4
4502
Super Lotto
1-18-26-27-35-39

Page 6

We Reserve The Right lo
limit Quantities

STORE HOLIRS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

•

•

DOUBLE
COUPONS

298 SECOND ST. _
POMEROY, OH.

Vol.39. No.1 36

ALL

PRICES EFFECDVE SUN., NOV. 13 THRU SAT., NOV. 19

·House, Senate·to get pay hike proposal today

-----·-~

GUNNOES .

.

$ . 09

.

.

SUPERIOR

..

Lunch Meat •••••• t..

BUTTERBALL

ISAYE UP TO 60'. lb.
BUY $100 OR MORE)

Turkey ...•••..••.••• ~~ ..
U.S.D.A. CHQICE BONELESS

..

Rump Roast ••••••

LI••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Chuck Roast ••••••

KY. !ORDER ·

...c:»

(":

&gt;

~=
I:"'
•
1:'1
•
Ill

(")

lA

0

~

"'c:0

0

0

..

"C::

lz

2

J

$ 19

1
9(.

.

W1eners •••••••• ~~~z.::·•• 7

9 9(

!z

&lt;
&gt;
I:"'

"'
or Roast •••••••••••••• 1
0
.,..
9
(
Sausage •••••••••••• ~~ •• 9
-----La.

Sl 69

1

--------t

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va.
(UP!) -A manhunt spread Into'
adjoining states for two '"ex·
tremely d,angerous" k11lers who
knocked down a barbed-wire
fence with a van and escaped In a
transport car, using fellow In·
mates on a recreation break as a
cover.
Authorities could not..say for
sure just what direct ion the
murderers took, but Warden
Jerry Hedrick suggested that
Ohio was the logical choice.
The Ohio Highway Patrol was
Upped about a possible sighting
•· •ar&lt;!\in~H'1' .m.'"'ll''fdnesday, a lew
minutes alter the men broke out
of the maximum security prison
In West VIrginia's Northern
Panhandle, just across the Ohio
Hlver.
A caller told pollee the two
were seen near Shadyside, Ohio,
in Belmont County. A truck

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GRADE A EXTRA .LARGE

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Eggs •••••••••••••••••
:o;•• 59&lt;

MOUNTAIN TOP

99&lt;
Pumpkin
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Dressing ••••••••••••••• 79&lt;
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69&lt;
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260Z.

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In floor action Wednesday, the
Senate unanimously approved
and sent to
Celeste a bill
requiring elementary schools to
require lnstr.uction in assault
prevention and personal safety.
Sen. Grace Drake, R·Solon ,
said that despite a high Incidence
of child abuse In Ohio, there Is no
statewide progra·m to help
youngsters deal with lt. Her bill
would require training in kindergarten through sixth grades In
public schools .
Drake said the program would

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

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Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powlll's Supor Valuo
ltoliiood Sun.,..,, 13 tlrv Sat."""· 19, 1911

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only.
•Only one mant~factur ­
er's coupon per item .
•The total value of the dou ble manufacturer's coupon cannot exceed the
purchase price of the item.
Money will not be re .
funded .
•This offer does not apply
to Powell's Super Valu
Coupons, free coupons
or any competitor's cou pons.
•Thi.s offer excludes ciga rettes, or any other items
prohibited by law.

PENNISULA

$119

Limit 1 Per C•tomtr
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•
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I

'

help children recognize potential against a current spouse.
supplementary insurance poll·
assault, defend against it and
ctes. That bill went to the House,
Also passed unanimously and
deal with guilt that follows child returned to the House for concur· but will have to wait until at least
next year for enactment.
abuse. She called the bill "a renee In changes was a bill
Sen. ~Lee Fisher, D·Shaker
milestone on the road to child ·granting Immunity from law·
Heights, said Medicare covers
abuse prevention.
suits to farmers who offer public
only 40 to 50 percent of medical
On a-related matter, the Senate access 'for '• "pick your own"
bills for those over 65 years old.
passed and sent to the governor a produce or for "gleaning. "
He said elderly people often
b111 clarifying the domestic vlo·
Gleaning Is the term used for
purchase supplementary cover·
lence law.
picking the residue of crops left
Drake said an ambiguity In the after harvesllng by farmers . age, and that in 23 percent of the
cases, they receive duplicate
law has caused problems, be- Charitable organizations glean
•. ca(lse certain pollee forces have and glve ·the produce to the poor. · benefits. ·
Fisher's bill provides .for a
been instructed not to write
Sen. Neal Zimmers, D·Day ton,
rating syste.m of such insurance
citations If an actof violence Is said lhe original bill sponsored
coverage, and penalties against
against certain members of the by Rep. Thomas Roberts, D·
false advertising.
offender's family, such as sisters Dayton, applied only to gleaning.
Sent to the governor by the ·
or brothers .
He said another bill should be
House was a bill extending the
Drake also said the bill cor· passed to grant lmmunlly to
Ohio Department of Agriculture
rects a loophole by permitting farmers with pick-your-own poll·
fund which pays farmers whose
protective orders to be Issued cles. But his amendment to
livestock are killed by coyotes.
against a person who. formerly change the bill failed.
That
fund was due to expire In
lived as a spouse with the victim
The Senate passed another bill
February
.
of domestic violence, as well as regulating the sale of Medicare

Patrol on alert for escapees ·

&gt;
I:"'

SWISS MISS

the people who work for him
(Cabinet officers) to get less than
they should."
·
Celeste will not be able to get
the Increase. Public officials,
Including legislators, may not
receive a pay hike enacted
during their terms of office.

------·

a:~'on ................~~. 69(

BEnY CROCKER

Increase the base legislative
salary, now ai $34,904; by 5
percent a year for the next four
years. Elected county officials
are operating under the pay
tables enacted1n December 1984.
Legislators built In their own 5
percent annual escalator that
year, but It expires at the end of
next month.
Finan said elected state officials would receive the 5 percent
annual hike, but the governor
would be paid $100,000 Instead of
the current $65,000. The Legislature has voted twice to raise the
governor's salary, but It was
vetoed by both Gov. Richard
Celeste and former Gov. James
Rhodes.
"It's time we started paying
the governor," said Finan, who
compared the job to a corporate
executive's and said "this forces

A

LI• •

STOVE TOP

•

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - In a typical
end·of·sesslon maneuver, state
legis lators were positioned today
to start pushing through a pay
raise for elected state and county
officials, judges and themselves.
Sen. Richard Finan, R·
"Cincinnati, said late Wednesday
he was hav lng the pay raise bill
drafted for Introduction today.
He said he would not sponsor It
and did not know who would.
But House leaders, who would
receive the bill and presumably
pass It Friday, had already
counted the 50 votes necessary to
-pass lt. "I've got 50 votes for It,"
confirmed Rep. Clifton Skeen,
D·Akron.
The Senate was to meet today
atlO a.m. and the House atlp.m.
As proposed, the bill would

"'
·0

$18 9

2 Sections, 14 Pages
A Multbnedla Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 17, 1988

Copyrighted 1988

WEEK

FRESH PORK BUTT STEAK

Clear tonight, low In 20s.
Friday, mostly sunny. High In
mid 50s.

•Offer is good only for
product on hand. No
Rainchecks.
•TherJI is a limit of 20
'
coupons
you may redeem .

STUFFED TOYS FOR SICK KIDS- Tblals the
lith year thai )VOmeo of Melp County Granges
· have made stuffed toys to be given to children
confined to Veteran Memorial Hospital. The
pro~ct Is sponsored by the Fairfield Procenlng
Company and the National Grange. 'l'herewere42
toys given to the hospital Wednesday by the

'
'
grances. Pictured
here when they were
presented
'to Rhonda Dailey, R. N., supervisor of nursing,
were from the left, Emma Adams and Mary
Easterday, Racine, Barbara Fry, Rock Springs;
Mrs. Dailey, Westlna Crabtree, Melp County ·
Deputy and Pal Manzey, Columbia, front, and
baek, R1111e Barrows, Columbia, and Jessie White,
Hemlock.

Housing Starts
Seasonally adjusted annual rates
in millions of units

Millions butt out in 'smokeout'
determine whether the product Is
a cigarette or drug.
"They're bad for people," said
Ruth Iliff of the University of
Arizona Cancer Center. "We
don't want anything that makes
It any easier for people to get
more tobacco or more nicotine In
any way at all."
The society, the American
Medical Association and Amerl·
can Lung Association have urged
the Food and Drug Administration to ban the product, saying It
ls a "new and hazardous system
for would-be smokers."
R.J. Reynolds President Rl·
chard Kampe rejected the Ariz·
ana board's request, saying the
product essentlallyJs a cigarette
like any other.
In New York City, television
sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westhel·
mer was among a dozen celebrl·
ties who helped kick off the
Smokeout at the Big Apple
Circus.
"If we could say with some

conviction that those people Who
don't smoke are going to have a
much better sex llle, · I think
they'd give up today," Westhel·
mer said. "So let's make believe
that It Is true and stop smoking. ''
" It Is true!" quipped June
Walzer ol the American Cancer
Society, w)lose "Stop Smoking"
programs have helped thousands
of New Yorkers quit the habit for
good.
Westhelmer said her experience with tobacco was short·
lived.
"! did smoke three cigarettes
In my life, In Paris when I was a
student and wanted to be like the
big shots. And then lucky forme I
read someplace that It stunts
your growth," the 4-foot, 7-lnch
sex guru said. "I thought, my
gosh, and you won't be able to see
me at all!"
Actor Christopher Plummer
said he smoked for most ol his life
but quit just last year fo r
professional reasons .

..--- Local news briefs-...,

Columbus
to get first
'Smart House'

By JEFFREY K. PARKER
United Press International
The American Cancer Society's 12th annual Great American
Smokeout deployed celebrities
and health experts from coast to
coast encouraging the nation's 51
million smokers to give up
tobacco for 24 hours, or for life.
Last year 19.5 million people.39 percent of all smokers buited out for the day , and the
cancer society said It believes
that millions or them quit lor
good.
The society blames tobacco whether smoked, chewed or
taken as snuff -lor some 320,000
cancer deaths each year and has
set a goal of a "smoke-free"
America by the year 2000.
In Tuscan, Ariz., the state
Board of Pharmacy Wednesday
urged R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
to remove Its new ''smokeless
cigarettes" from test markets
there and In St. Louis, saying the
U.S. government has yet to

No one hurt in auto accicent
No one was Injured In a two car collision at 3:27 p.m.
Wednesday on SR. 7, near Chester, In Meigs County, according
to the Melgs·Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Kenneth Kelch, 70, Slstersvllle, W.Va., stopped
In traffic. His vehicle was hit from behind by another car driven
by Ben Gabriel, 14, Rt . 3, Glouster. Gabriel was cited lor no
operator's license and failure to stop with In the assured clear
distance.

Vandals strike in Gallia
-The Gallla County Sherlfr s Department received three
vandalism complaints between 12 and 12:30 a .m. Thursday on
the parking lot at Robbins &amp; Myers, Inc., Bob McCormick Road.
Officers said someone vandalized cars owned by Geneva
Denny, Galllpoll&amp; Ferry, W.Va., broke Into the vehlcie, opened
the glove box and left all lour tires flat; Curtis A. Ramey, 224
Continued on page 14

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Columbus Southern Power Co.
President William Lhota Wed·
nesday announced plans by the
utility to buUd the nation's first
all-electric "Smart House."
Columbus Southern Power w111
build the experimental "elec·
tronlcally smart" ranch-style
house near Its headquarters In
downtown Columbus next year,
said Lhota.
·
The one-story, 3,000-squareloot house represents a preview
of tomorrow's lifestyles and
home technology, Lhota told a
board meeting of Downtown
Continued on page 14

driver also said he was chased orr
the road by two men In a car
fitting the description ollhe state
vehicle in which the convicts
fled .
Pollee formed a posse at once
and spent much ol their time
running down worthless leads .
"We've got the whole ' area
covered , but we . don't really
know where they are,'' one
lawman said, noting deputies
manned roadblocks and pa·
trolled the county overnight. •
The convicted killers, Freddie
Rakes, 29, and Dickie Wimmer,
36, were In pr!SOJI lor life wltli DO" .
chance lor parole. They were
working In a mo(or pool outside
the prison 's gray walls before the
escape.
Rakes. a native of Lincoln
County, has been at the prison
since 1981, serving a life without
mercy murder term. Wimmer

2.0 .------------~
1,8 1----------'--1

Up7.2%

1.6
1.4
'

1.2
1.0
ONDJFMAMJJ AS 0
1987
1988

HOUSING STARTS - Construction of new houses leaped 7.2
percent In October, the biggest Increase In eight months, a signal
the housing Industry may be moving out of a nearly year-long
slump, the Commerce Department said Thursday. (UPI)

was sent up fr om Wyoming
County lor llle without mercy ·
sentence ' lor murder and ,a
75-year term for robbery since
1979.
After changing a tire on the
car, Rakes hopped Inside a
maintenance van and bulled hi s
way through a chain-link fence
topped with barbed wire enclr·
cling the motor pool. Wimmer
was close behind In the sedan. A
block away, Rakes ditched the
van and teamed with Wimmer .
''It could have been planned, or
It could hav ~ been a spur PI the
moment thing, " Hedrick said .
"Maybe It was planned an hour
before, or maybe two hours
before.
"I don 't know If they'rearmed,
but they must be considered
extremely dangerous because of
their sentences."
Hedrick acknowledged no one
could say where the fugitives
went, but added, " If eel they may
have went to Ohio ... It Is much
easter to get into Ohio" than to
risk the backroads leading Into
Pennsylvania. .
Hedrick planned to conduct an
Internal Investigation•.
" ! have not had the opportunity
to talk to the supervisors," he
said. "It happened so fast that I
doubt that anyone could have
stopped them ."
Hedrick said the escape OC·
curred In the presence of un. armed supervisors, at a time
when other Inmates were m11llng
about in the prison yard on a
recreation break.
' 'There was plenty of diver·
slon," he said.
Neither man apparently had
ever given theprtsonadmlnlstra·
tlon any trouble, Hedrick sa id.
"! have not seen their names
come across my desk as being
disciplinary problems," he said,
adding the two were allowed the
privilege o.l working at the
outdobr motor pool.
The gold, four-door sedan th ey
stole has a large Department of
Corrections decal with the
number 212. The car bore an
official state license of 9273. The
car was· equipped with a radio,
giving the convicts access to
Continued on page 14

Housing starts up in October
year, were stable In October,
By LYDA PHILLIPS
rising a modest 0.2 percent.
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON - Construe·
Every region In the country
lion of new houses leaped 7.2
percent In October, the biggest except the Northeast reported
Increase In eight months, a signal solid Increases In housing conthe housing Industry may be struction, led by the West where
moving out of a nearly year-long projects took a 15 percent leap to
slump, the Commerce Depart- an annual rate of 498,000 units.
The Midwest had a 7.6 percent
ment said Thursday .
Housing projects were started Increase to an annual rate of
In October at an annual rate of 268,000, and the South saw a 4.6
1.554 million units , a 7.2 percent percent jump to a 586,000 annual
jump, after dipping 0.8 percent rate.
· In the Northeast, where a hot
from August to September .
Single-family housing also took market last year has cooledoffln
a turn for the better In October recent months, construction
rising lO percent to a seasonally dropped 2.4 percent to an annual
adjusted annual rate of 1.146 rate of 202,000 units.
The total 7.2 percent jump
million units, reversing the prefrom September to October was
vious month's 3.a percent drop.
Multi-unit projects, which the steepest since February ,
have been volatile for most ofthls when construction Increased 9.9
·'

.~

percent, the department 's Census Bureau said .

Car, train collide
on SR 7 at Cheshire
A car and train coUided at
approximately 11 : 30 a.m. Thursday· above Cheshire, near the
GaiUa-Melgs County line, according to an Ohio Highway
Patrol dispatcher.
While no specifics were avalla·
ble on the Incident at presslime,
units from the OIIP, Gallla
Coumy Emergency Medical Service, the GaiUa County Sherur s
Department and Its re!ICue team
were dl1patched to the acen,e, and
LUeF11Jitt medical helicopter
was placed on standby alert.

.

I

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