<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12591" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12591?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:26:15+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43563">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/8e94e36fbf6271316126b1db448d4c62.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0e073a50a7ba74b6ebcd576bd6969504</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39496">
                  <text>'

Page D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Horseshoe pitchers are invited to ,
Middleport block party Sept. 19
By JIM SOULSBY
Times-sentinel Stall
MIDDLEPORT - Like lo try
your hand at the art of pitching
horseshoes?
If so, then the place to be Is the
Middleport Block Party on Sept.
19 at the Mini-Park In
Middleport .
.
According lo Mr. Harry Bailey. one of the premier horseshoe
_enthusiasts in the area, therewJll
·be lhr'!(' groups-of contestants for
the event. The first group will
consist of. those in the Junior
Class In age group 12 through l7
who will not be c harged a lee to
partlcipale. The Adult Class will
be made up of those who have
r~ached their 18th birthday anniversary to whalever age they
.may have attained. For this
group !here will be a five dollar
entry fee. The third group,
according to Mr. Bailey. will be
composed of man and wife
couples of any age.

First and second place trophies
will be awarded llle winners or .
lhe first two groups mentioned
and a trophy, which wm be an
annual roving trophy , will be
given to Ihe couples wlnner(s 1
Mr. Balley,and a small gro~p
of local pitchers, are lrying lo
revive the lnlerest in the sporl of
-P11Ching horseshoes which, like
so many popular pastimes or
yes leryear such as marbles , has
been pushed aside in I he age of
co mputer r games.
Unlike the days of yore when, 1
remember, we scrounged up a
cou pl e of rusty shoes that had
been discarded by some old nag·
and threw them at a peg In the
ground, horseshoe pitching has
not only become an art but a very
lucrative sport if you are among
the best. According to Mr.
Bailey, some 'of the top guns ih
the gam e grossed $150,000 la st
year .. .. which 'ain' t hay '

I

'

I

·

Announcements

Planners to meet
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Block Party planning meeting 6
po.m. Monday at the .offices of
Dr. Larry Kennedy a nd Dr. Craig
' Matthews, Second St.. for
committee member s. Las t m eeting for the block party will be at 6
p.m. Thursday at lhe same
location; chamber of com merce
mgmbers please attend.

Trustees to meet
BEDFORD - Bedford Town ship Trustees m eet at 7 p.m . at
the town hall.
PTA meets Monday
RACINE ~ Racine PTO meet·
ing, 7 p.m . Monday at Racine
Elementary School.
Plan revivar
ROCK SPRINGS - Tent revival beginning Monday and runnlng through Sept. 30 with
Evangelist Charles Spencer
from
Rainell,
W. Va. and
Pra special
yer for
the sick
eac.h evening
music , 7: 30· each evening. Servi. ces at the Rock Sprigns
Fairgrounds .
Monday meetings
M!DDLEPORT - Heath United Methodist Churc h Women
will meet ·at 7: 30p.m. Monday at
the church wilh Emma .Kay
Clatwortliy as program leader.
and Grace Johnson as devotional
leader. Hostesses will be Nancy
Cale, Dorothy Roller, Juanita
Bachtel and Zelia Taylor.

.

dist Chu rch at 7 p.m . Monday.
with Mr. and Mrs. Gary Brugger
and Mrs. William Gale to be
present . Due to rescheduling of
the service there will be no
weekly prayer meeJing on Sept.
16
.

lottery results

Mr. Salley participated in the
Governor's Open Horseshoe
Tournament at the Ohio State
Fair and took second place
having six wins and one loss with
a 38 percent average and eight
forty point games. In the 1987
Class G championships at Gre~&gt;n·
ville. Ohio, Mr-. Bailey qualified
by pitching 100 shoes for a 47
percent aaverage (wringers)
and again took second place with
a 46.7 percent average and !lad
seven 40 point games.
Mr. Bailey stated .that there
are only three pitchers in the
area affiliated with· the state and
national associations. They are
Charles (Cricket) Searles, Carl
Casto and himself. He stated that
another .olci pro, 'Toad Brlckles,
retirtid from the game some time
ago;
So, If you want to get In on the
action get tn touch with Harry
Bailey at 992-3408 or Jeff Tillis
a.t 742-2243 or you can sig)l up al
the Mini-Park courts on the day
of the event. Who knows, you may
develop a passion for the sport
and betheonetograbsomeofthe
big bucks someday In thefulure.
Mr. Bailey has also scheduled
a meeting for Tuesday September 18th at 6:30PM al the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) James Traflcant, D-Ohlo,
says a conviction on federal
income tax evasion charges will
not deter him from running for
P_resldent next year, and it may
help establish a forum for his
views.
At a news conference Friday,
the congressman told reporters
he will notoftlclally announce his
candidacy as long as !Je can gain
. Iree. news media exposure.
Th~&gt; Youngstown Democrat,
who was convicted Thursday on
the tax evasion charges, said the
a bllity to air his views In publlc Is
. the key to his campaign.
.
"! 'm going to go foro/ard ,"
said Traflcal\t, 46, a se!J- descrlbed "average man
and
former Mahoning County sheriff
who was ordered· to pay taxes on
$108,000 worth Of bribes from
alleged crime leaders.
''!don't give a'damn If they pu t
me In .San Quentin, " he said,
"I'm going to Iowa (to campaign
for presidenn. "
Traflcant said be would 'fight
confiscation of !)Is property by
the IRS with "what~ver it
lakes ," adding that some people
use firearms ,
The congressman said .he Is
studying the " legal terms" of a
run for the presidency, mainly
whether he could still run for a

oppor.rumty to oe near&lt;l , and get
the real Issues placed on the :
agenda . That's all I'm about." c
Traflcant said he had already •
been · prOven "absolutely lnno· ~
cent" by 12 jurors, a reference lo •
his 1983 acquittal of racketeer- :
lng , ·bribery and Income tax :
evasion.

.

:

He attributed Thursday 's con- ~
v ictlon to· the fact that U.S. Tax :
Court Judge John Williams was :
an appointee of PresidE&gt;nt Rea - •
gan , "and I am the leading :
oppon enl of Mr. Reagan in ·
Congress and in the Senate."
•

DR • ·A• JACKSO
.
N BAILE5-

Visual Examinations - Glasses
Children's/Pediatric Vision
Low/Geriatric Vision
Contact Lenses ~ All Types
OPEN SATURDAYS- CLOSED MONDAYS
Evening Hour By Appointment

•

TWO OFFICES FOR CONVENIENCE
250 2nd Ave~ Gallipolis - 446-3300
llO Mechanic St., Pameray - 446-32_79

Got the.

tra·ns orta
. .tl•
bahs1.

ITALIAN

REST~~RANT
Spring Valley ·Plaza

·

Check _The,.e' Super Buy,. •••

PASTA-PIZZA- SANDWICHES

_,

PIZZA BUFFET

l

Every Wed. &amp; Sunday
5 9 p M.

~ '.

~$~2~.38~9-====:::====~~==~=to~~~·~·===j

•

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

'

"CONVENIENT 'HEALTH CARE -THAT
DQESN'T COST AN ARM AND A LEG"

URGENT
CARE CENTER

RUTI..AND- Miss ia nary services at the Rutlnd Bible Metho-

1987 Buick Park Avenue TType

MANAMA,. Bahrain (UP)).- U.N. SecreiaryGeneral Javier Perez de Cuellar today began
r talks In Baghdad on ·arranging a cease-fire In the
7-year-old Iran-Iraq war and Iraq said Iranian
forces s helled the souther n city of Basra through
the night and laun ched a ground attack.
An Iraqi military communique said Iran
Ignored th e presence of Ja v ier Perez de Cuellar In
Baghdad and was bent on creating an '.'atmosphere of military esca lation" to s abotage the
secretary-general' s peace effor ts.
At the sa me time, Iran warned it would pursue
Its policy of striking a "blow for a blow" even ·
!hough the entire world may turn against it. A
senior official from Syria, Iran 's last Arab ally ,
arrived In Saudi Arabia Su nday a nd . met with
King Fahd in a sign that Damascus may drop
support for Tehran , as Libya did lasl week .
Perez de Cue llar today held his fir st round of

talk s In Iraq on Implementing a U.N , Security
cease-fire call with Foreign Minister
Tareq Azlz . the Iraqi News Agency reported.
The secretary-general was expected to meet
wlth President Saddam.Husseln, who has -pledged
to accept the cease-fire If _Iran does. Perez de
Cue llar evidently failed to gain Iranian acceptance of the resolution after two days of talks in
Tehran.
Iran ~nnou nced Sunday It would consider
e ndin g the conflict only If Iraq Is named in the
resolution as thee aggressor, a condition Iraq has
re jected.
On arrivi ng In Baghdad Sunday , Perez de
Cue llar was · quoted by INA as saying he was
"neither optimistic nor pessimistic" about the
outcome of his mission .
In a military communique also carried by INA,
a n Iraqi spo kesman said Iran launched a t leas t17
C oun~ll

..

..

~

I

NOW ON . DISPLAY

It's easy to apond twico u much- and not got •
~&gt;otter world clau touring carl This factor execu-

1988 Pontiac
LeMan's Aero Coupe ·

tive demo i1 loaded with convenience and aafety

111i11 itomo including the et..:tronic enti·lock
broke ayatem, keyless entry syatem, beige
loether interior. electric instrumentation. end
much !"ore. Tho ultimate in driving piNsure .

ONLY

$8 5 )400 ·

lnctudoa:
I
•foctorv oir •Power Steering •AM-FM •Twotone paint "Reor defogger '5-Spoed • And much

SAVE A FULL 20°/e OFF FACTORY LIST

more.

RELIEF IN A CRISIS- City and stale workers In Oxford, Ohio,
begin to lay nearly three mUes of waterll!le pipe over the weekend
to help relieve the city's water crlsh due to the lack ol rain and the
return of 15,000 Miami University student.• at lhe end of August.
The pipe~~ will connect Oxford's water system wllh a well at Acton
Lake In Hueston Woods state Park. (UP I)

446-5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday-Friday

5:00P.M.

IO

9:00P.M.

• Wer.kr.ndM &amp; Holid8y s
I :00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

-

.

1987 Dodge DlOO Pickup

1986 Chevrolet 112 Ton Pickup

JUST LIKE NEW
Only 6.400 low mil• . Automatic. V-8 engine.
power steering. rear 1tep bumper. Extra sharp.

Automatic. factory olr. bedliner. oluminum aide
rai11, stop bumpon . 19,000 mitoa. AM / FM.
R1llye wheelo. •

PRICED TO SAVE YOU MONEY

NOW

Featuring
Our Amazing

1983 Buick Park Ave.

1986 Buick Park Avenue

Local one owner, extra cle1n, with only 48,000
milea. Lt. Jadeltone exterior. Expect Premium
Quality.

Power aeat, windowa. door locks, AM / FM ·
/ Cauatta . Only 21,000 miles. Chestnut with
beige interior.

Quick Start Plus.

liiSe up to eight ~unds

in the first two weeks!

The reason Quick Start• Plus is so effective is ·
because we've added two e&gt;«:iling programs the!
speed the resuhs and then keep you on a winning

- ..

1984 CHEV.
CElEBRITY 4 DR.

oourse.
Rrst, !heres a Self-Discovery plan that shows you
how to change your eating habits in order to control
your weight. Then, theres our optional exercise plan.
You can walk-jog-run-cycle or swim .. .all at your

Registration Fee .... $13.00
First Meeting Fee .... $ 7.00
Total ....... ........... $20.00

awn pace.

Combine all this' with our delicious food
pmgram and strong group support and you're on
your way to losing weight like you never thought
po88iblell!
Come on ... now you 've got Weight Watchers•
working for you!

YOU SAVE

. $13.00

•

Oller ends October 3, 1987

Come to the Weight Watchers meeting nearest you.
GALLIPOLIS

POMEROY

Sl PETER'S
EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7 p.m., Wed: 9:30a.m.

SENIOR CITIZENS' CENTER ·
Mulberry Heights
Wed; 6 p.m.

NOTillNG.
WORKS
WATCHERS!
.....
_., __ ,_.•,.................
,..oN...LIKE
........ WEIGHT
(800) 582
1399
!WI..., OIWfiiiiiDIIIflr""'ll!lfllllll "*"'*' ' ~ ~ lllllfti.IIW!II!III'/OIIIII''"""'ll*lll•m
............ Oiodo:SIIII ... I.......... ., WfJGHl*-TCHUlSIIiTFAIIAfi!JW INC
.-..n'.mtf.IIUrTEMIAIIOIW. IJI; " "
,I

TOLL
FREE

-

Black.
Auto., · AC. Alpine
AM/FM radio and cassette.

8 cyl., PW, POL. Blue.
47,000 mileo.

$4,995

$6,295
1983 BUICK
PARK AVENUE
Till• car runa gopd and io
loaded with option•. A little
heavy on mile• but wonh thlo
low price.

1982 PONTIAC
BONNEVIUE BGN.

Loaded with optiono. Chercoal
grey. 43,000 ml!eo.

WAS 55995 NOW

$5,495

FOR NEW MEMBERS: PLEASE ARRIVE ONE HOUR EARLY FOR REGISTAATIOII AND WEIGH-IN.

,

' 1983 CAMARO

$4,99 5

1984 PALAMINO
POP·UP CAMPER
Hunter' a Special. Sleeps Six

Was 51495 NOW

Pipeline helps
water shortage
OXFORD, Ohio (UP I) - Oxford officials say a temporary
water supply system will deliver
about 500,000 gallons a day to the .
communlly, alleviating Its water
shortage but providing no long·
lerm cure.
·
City Manager Dennis Sruckey
said a water emergency Imposed
Sept. 4 will continue Into October.
Stuckey said the city has
purchased about 50 acres with
·well sites near Seven Mile Creek.
Those wells may eventually
solve the city's water shortage,
but won't be in full operation for
at least two years, he said.
Work on a three-mile lempor-.
ary water piping system was
expected to be completed early
this week. Oxford has struggled
with a water shortage because of
dry weather and a sudden
Increase In waler use with the
return ol 15,000 students to
Miami University .

enttne

1 Section.. 10 Pages 25 Cenu
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper .

' .

The Ohio National Guard was
ca lled In to deliver 13 tractortrailer . trucks of pip~, hauled
from Camp Perry near Toledo.
The line will run from Acton Lake
at Hueston Woods State Park to
the city's water system.
Oxford residents were advised
to boll water because low levels
posed a threat of contamination.
Other emergency measures
were also being taken:
-Use of laundry machines was
restricted to four-hour shifts
during lhe weekend at Miami
University, and dining halls were
using paper plates and plastic
utensils.
-The city's largest manufac·
turer, Square D Co., putconservation measures in place, allowIng the return to work of
employees who were sent home
Thursday as water levels
dropped.

long-range missiles I hat slammed into residential
areas of Basra beginning aboul 10 p.m. Sunday,
"causing the destruction of some res idential
houses ." There was no immediate report on
casualties.
The shelling was followed early today by an
Iranian ground attack - backed by tanks.
artillery and mortars - along the warfront's
central sector, The assault was "repulsed and
destroyed," the Iraqi spokesman said.
. The Iranian News Agency today quoted Iranian
Prime Minister Husse in Musavl as denying Iran
had Initiated any attacks and insisting all its
military actions were in retaliation for Iraqi
a ttack s.
Musavi told a Ca binet meeting Sunday Iran
.would "Invariably respond each blow with a blow
even though an e ntire world m ay turn against
Iran." Musavl also warned the Italian govern·

ment against s~ndlng warships to the gulf, saying,
"It Is easier to come through the waterway tha n to
get out."
The talks came as the eight h U.S. escorted
convoy of re· flagged Kuwaili tankers approac hed
the Strait of Hormuz today, shipping sources sa id.
Sea Stallion mine-sweeping helicopters from the
USS Guadalcanal probed waters ahead of the
81,283-ton Surf Cily and the 79,999-ton Chesapeake
City for mines.
The gas carriers began their 550-mile journey
fro m Kuwait's main oil terminal at AI Ahmadi
Saturday, the sources said. Warships in the escort
group went to the highest state of alert as the
convoy approached waters where Iranian attacks
on shipping have been freq uent a nd the Strait of
Hormuz where It Is believed Iran has set up
Silkworm missile batter ies.

HUNTIN GTON , W.VA . - The
start of construction toward
eli minating one of the worst
navigation bottlenecks In the
nation will be celebrated with a
public ceremony November 6 at
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam, on
the Ohio Riv er near Eureka.
The first coiuract In a twophase, nin e-year project will
cover excavation of a two-mtlelong. bypass canal and construe'
lion of two new lock chambers In
the canal.
The 'j{}-year -old Gallipolis project spans the river between
West Virginia and Ohio, about 30
miles uoriver from Huntinp-ton
The ground-brea king cerem·
ony, with dignitaries from local
and regional organ lzations, the
federal government and at least
four states. will be slaged at the
existing locks on the West VIrginia side of the river at 2 p.m.
The project, constructed under
superv ision of the Army Corps of
Engineers between 1935 and 1937,
has a 600-fot main lock c hamber
and a 360-foot auxiliary
c hamber. Both are 110 feet wide.
Th e new main locks. built along
the river In the past 25 years , are
l, 200 feel long and are expected
to speed delivery of bulk commodlt(es by modern barges and
towboals.
·
In addition the Corps oi Eng!·
neers , the other principal sponsor Is DINAMO , an interest
group dedicated to navigation
Improve ments In the Ohio
Valley.
Co-sponsors Include Chamber
of Commerce chapters of Boyd
and Greenup Counties In Ken tucky ; Gallipolis. Mason (W .Va. )
County and Huntington, W.Va.

Opposes selection
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -Caul)·
ell 8 of the American Federation
of State, County and Municipal
Employees has approved a resolutio.n opposing the merit selec·
tlon ol appellate and state
supreme court justices.
Jim Grossfeld , a spokesman
for the public employees union.
said Saturday that merit sel~&gt;c·
lion of judges is something the
union "strongly opposes."

DAM CEREMONY NOV. 6 - A public
ceremony has been rescheduled November 6 at
the Gallipolis Locks and Dam In Eureka to mark

the long-awaited construction project of the 50
year-old structure. It Wll$ originally scheduled
Sept. 23.

Settle 1 teachers strike; 2 continue
By MICHAEL O'MALLEY
United Press International
Teachers In the Berkshire
School Dlslrict In Geauga County
were back in their classrooms
today after a two- week strike,
but teachers In Youngstown and
North Ridgeville remained on
picket lines .
The 82-member Berkshire Ed ·
ucatlon Association approved a
three-year contract Sunday
night, calling for a 6 percent raise
the first year and 5 percent
Increases In each of the subsequent years.
Union president Jo Ann Po·
dany said teachers were not
happy with the package and
reluctantly approved the contract in order to ~&gt;nd the walkout.
"In this small community, we
felt It would be dlstruptlve to
continue the strike," said Podany. "We felt In order to hold the
community together wl&gt; would
take this package."
Podany said It was the first
teachers' strike In the district's

history .
"We never felt it necessary to
take a stand until this bOard and
s uperintendent, we felt, wert• not
bargaining In good faith," she
said.
Podany said when negotiations
began in March, teachers were
asking for 10 percent salary
Increases for each year of the
contract.
· She said the new package still
places Berkshire teachers' salar·
ies the second-lowest In Geauga
County. The new base salary Is
$16,642.
The package also calls for an
Increase In the number of sick
days and an increase In lnsu·
ranee premlu,ms.
The strike affected the dis·
trlct' s 1, 700 studenls for only four
school days while substitutes
supervised the students.
Meanwhile, a strike affecting
15,000 students In Youngstown
entered Its sixth day Monday
after teachers refused two proposals from the board of education

'.

Sunday.
. Superintendent. Emanuel Cat.·
soules has canceled classes unill
the walkout ends. No new talks,
were scheduled as both sides
were waiting to hear from a
federa l mediator.
The 1,043-member Youngstown Education Association has
asked for raises of about 5
percent in a two-year pact, but
the administration has proposed
a three -year contract containing
a wage freeze in the first year
·and renewed negotiations on
salary In the final two years.
The strike by the 243-member
North Ridgeville Education As·
soclation in Lorain County remained deadlocked as no new
talks were scheduled,
About five teachers accused
the administration Friday of
locking them oul of classrooms,
·but Superinte ndent P a u I
Murphy denied the accusa l ion,
saying It was a ploy by teachers
to collecl un emp lo y ment
compensallon.

Dole plans to resign, campaign for her husband.

-1982 FORD EXP
Sporty 2-sa'a tar·, Sunroof

WASHINGTON (UP!) Transportation Secretary Eli• zabeth Dole will llieet with
President Reagan today to tell
him she Is resigning effective
Oct. 1 to help her husband
campaign for president, offi·
cials said.
Dole, the only woman In the
Reagan Cabinet with the longest tenure In history as head of
the 'I)'ansportatton Department, is stepping down to
campaign for Sen. Robert
Dole of l&lt;jlnsits, the officials·

$2,995

••33 YEARS IN BUSINESS"

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
.

1900 EASTEIN AYE•

•

Dam
event
reset
Nov. 6

$1,250

We Proudly Welcome MR. TOM KESSEL To Our Sales Teaml

.

Clear tonight. Low between
55 and 60. Sun!ly Tuesday.
Chance of rain 00 percent,
Tuesday.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday. September 14, 1987

.. ~...
~

Located at Holzer Clinic ·
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

POMEROY- Disabled Amer ican Veterans Chapter 53 and I he
Ladies Auxiliary of the Chapter
will both meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at lhe hall. 124 Butternut Ave.
The state commander of Waverly will be present.

I

at y

HOLZER CLINIC

RUTLAND - Rutland PTO
meeting Monday at 7 In the
elementary gymnasium ; mem bership signup and plans for the
new school yoea r to be discussed.

I.

•

.

.

..

Page3

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

_,

.

--

. 306
Pick 4
4260
Super Lotto
16-20-27-33-34-42

Talks begin on cease-ftre in Iran-Iraq war

·

DR. T. JAY BRADSHAW

BONELLI'S . '.

Daily Number

edge
Colts

. Vol.37. No.BB_
Copyrighted t987

OPTOMETRISTS

P/t~B Tfg

Ohio·Lottery

Bengals

•

District while he Is on the
presidential ballot.
He also said that it he can raise
$200,000, he will campaign in New
Hampshire and Iowa next winter. "! have $1,000,'' he said In
response to a question.
Traflcant said If he announced
his candidacy, his free media
exposure would end. " Without
money, without tmedla) time to
get my message across, my
chan.c es are remote," he said.
"I may not be able to win, but
they are going to hear from me."
he said. "I want to have an

R~&gt;p .

FDI ANl~- Cleen

numbers with ticket sales and
payouts:

8488.
PICK-4
PI CK-4 ticket sales totaled
$209:657, with a payoff due of
$94,309.
PICK-4 S1 1 straight bet pays
$9,556. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays

Rep. Traficant may still run for president

r:M=I~n~l~P=a~rk~re~g~a~r:d:ln:g~t~hl:s:e:ve:n:t~.j·~tih;lr;d~te;r;m~;ln~th~e;·;1;7;th~H;o;u;s;e~~;;~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~

da;~SEv;i~~~~ ~:~) Lotre~~

517 _ DailyNumber
Ti cket sales totaled $1,38ll,994,
with a payoff due of ss79,289.

-

September 13, 1987"

Pomeroy Midcleport...:..Galllpolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

said.
"She Is · meeting with the
president today to tell her she
Is resigning," said one official, who asked · not to be
ldentl!led. ''Th~&gt; effective date
Is Oct. 1."
Dole, 5~ •. has been thinking
for monthS about quitting her
government position to work
full-time on her husband's bid
for the 1988 Republican
nomination.
Just last week,.Dole told The
New York Times her decision

whether to ~eslgn was proving
"extremely dltrlcu.Jt," With
her husband's supporters
working hard to make her
aware of t11e importance they
see In her commitment.
"It's a tough decision, very
tough, because I love the job
I'm ln. It's an extraordinarily
challenging Job," she said.
Nonetheless, presidential
strategists backing Dole, the
Senate Republican leader
widely considered the top

GOP challenger to V.lce Prest·
dent George Bush, agr~ the
move should help the senator' s candidacy.
Dole Is a Harvard-educated
lawyer and top-flight bureaucrat who s~&gt;rved 4~ years as
secretary of transportation.
. A North Carolina native,
Dole has held a lengthy list of
federal posts, culminating
with her appointment by Reagan as the first woman In his
Cabinet.

She presided over somt&lt; of
the mos t turbulent years in
U.S. aviation history that saw .
public confidence shaken in
airline safety and angry over
deteriorating service.
From her sprawling office
near Washington's mall, Doh~
advocated requiring air bags '
or self-buckling safety belts ,
for new automobiles and got ·
her way In an adinlnlstration ~
not disposed t.o more govern· ·
ment regulation.

ELIZABETH DOLE
fJ

•

.~

�Monday, September 14, 1987

Commentary

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -Despite 403 yards of offense and two
Boomer Esiason touchdown
passes, the Ci ncinnap Bengals
needed two fourth· quarter interceptlons to win their first season
opener since 1982.
Th~ Bengals, featuring last
years most productive NFL
offense, defeated Indianapolis
·23-21 Sunday, leaviltg the Colts
winless In four straight openers
since moving from Baltimore.
Cincinnati intercepted t hree
passes from Indianapolis quar·
terback Jack Trudeau , who fell
to 0-12 as an NFL starter. ·David
Fulcher ,int ercepted a pass and
returned it 28 ,yard$ to set up
Cincinnati's final touchdown.
Safety Robert Jackson's inter·
, ceptions late ·jn the second and

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS Ot' THE

MEIGS - MASO~

AREA

~~

I

~ m~ "'-~L..- .-, r'""l'""E::3 =·~

~v

.

RO&amp;ERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

•

A MEM BER nf Thr UniiPd Prrs~ lnt&lt;'rnal inn a l. In lanrl Da II~ Pr P!'~
Associ at \on and, thf' A mPrir:1 n N{'W!'pap{'r Publ1shrr!' A ~so l'ia1 ion.
LF.TTF.RS OF OPII\: I Oi\ an• \\f•li ·nm l•, Thfl' o;hou ltllw j (·~:- 1h:1n 'lfiO word)':
tn nJ:! . Allli'lll'l"" nn · "UhJ N •I lnf•«lllin E! and m u!i l h t• .. ig nr-.:1wil h n :1mr· ar lfl l'f'!'S u nrl
tt•lr~vhmw

numht •r. Nn uns i,e:n t'(l lr•IIPrs w ill bt ·

~t •t•cl l a .•:tl .

p uhl i~hl' d .

:td&lt;ll 'l'"':ing i!'I:OO:UPS. nn1 pi'rsnnal l ll f'!i .

L«' llf 'ts :o; houl (l bt • 111

..

Celeste hangs tough
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - In the immortal words of Kenny
Rogers , Gov. Richard F . Celeste knew when to hold 'em and when to
told 'em on the controversial issue of civil justice and insurance
reform.
Despite pressure to negotiat e, Celeste flat out told the business and
insurance communities that he wasn' t going to accept any further
tinkering with a legis la tive compromise that was reached privately
during the summer.
The business group, including manufacturers, retailers and small
businesses , wanted more protection from law suits for defective
products and protection ·against getting stuck with large damage
awards when they were not particularly at fault.
But Celeste could afford to talk tough, and he knew it . He already
vetoed one version of the bill that favored business even more, and hi s
constituent groups- organized labor and consumers- were on hi s
back to veto anything else that came his way.
Labor, consumer groups and trial lawyers prefer no bill, claiming
any change in the civil justice system will tip the balance away from
the ordinary citizen in terms of recovering compensation lor injuries.
Majority Republicans lack the 20 votes in the Senate to override a
gubernatorial veto, so Celeste knew they eventually had to come hi s
way If they wanted any civil justice and insura nce reform at all .
Otherwise, there would be no bill, anq the governor's constituencies
would be happy .
So last week, the Ohio Alliance for Civ il Justice dropped Its
opposition to the legislative compromise. which Celes te sa id was the
only version he'd sign.
·
All that remains to end the two-year stalemate is for the package to
be ratified by a legislative conference committee and the e ntire
General Assembly , probably in October.
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer of the Ohio Supreme Court walked
softly last week when he addressed Ohio's judiciary on the is s ue of
" merit selection" of judges, which is supposed to take politics out of
the process.
Moyer didn' t come right out and say he endorses what probably will
be State Issue 3 on the November ballot. Instead, ·he commended'. to
his colleagues the advice of Judge Learned Hand , who counseled thaJ
"compelling judges to qecome politicians in many jurisdictions has
almost destroyed the traditional respect for the bench."
•'! think everybody knows my view on merit se.lectlon- my support
of it ts much stronger than I indicat ed there, " Moyer told reporters
iat~r. "There are a lot of judges here who think that wtien the chief
i!Lstice says something. that' s sort of a command, I didn't want them
t&lt;rihink that ."
Moyer is a product of the Ohio State Bar Association, which
cdntributed mightily to his election last fall, toppling Democrat
Frank D. Celebrezze.
'The Bar Association is one of the main cogs in the effort to get merit
s£(l€ctlon. where all of the state's appellate judges would be appointed
by; the governor from a list of three candidates submitted by a
committee of legal experts. Those judges currently are elected
ditectiy by the people.
'1;/nder "merit selection, .. the appointed judges would serve !of two
years, then be subject to a vote of confidence by the public. A 55
pei:cent vote would give a judge a full term: otherwise, another
appointment would be made .
' )oronically, Moyer, who was able to turn Celebrezze out of office in a
dliect election, wants to hand the selection of appellate judges over to
a panel of legal expe~ts so more qualified judges will be chosen .
lf the people approve the change, Moyer himself will have to submit
tC( the 55 percent vote of confidence.

~s

Iowa goes,

~O ••• _______B....c:.y_D_ic_k_W_es_t
'
WASHINGTON i UPI I - AI·· have been some doubt on that
score.
th&lt;Iugh nothing much else·ca me
At the time the average age of
of,•it, Alfred M. Landon, who
chief
executives was about 55,
c""ebrated his lOOth birthday
five
years
older thm the young
anniversary this week. gave the
Kansas
governor.
Furthe rmore
Uhited Stat es a new political
that was before Ronald Reagan ' s
slpgan after his unsuccessful1936
75 years or Dwight Eisenhower 's
pr~sid ential ra ce against Frank·
70 years were added to the
lin· D. Roosevelt.
equation.
1'he Kansas Republican captured both Maine and Vermont
Landon haqn ' t reached th e
fo:ia gra.n d total of eight eiectorai
half-century
mark when he ran
votes as the GOP s.ta ndard·
against
FDR.
!Kiarer trying to prevent FDR's
For the record, the youngest
s!jaond ter m .
person ever to serve as president
At the time, you should know,
was Theodore Roosevelt , who
' one of America's favorite elec·
was 42 years and 10 months old
day sayings was : "As Maine
· when he was elevated from vice
goes, so goes the nation."
presid ent to succeed the assassiBut that was changed to : "As
.
nated
William McKinley. DemoMaine goes, so goes Vermont.'
.
crat
John
Kennedy was just past
·I· always thought a more
43
when
he
became the youngest
memorable slogan might have
person
to
be
elected president.
~n: "As Maine and Vermont
go: so goes Maine and Vermont."
••
For thosewhoaren'tasold now
as
Landon was ln. 1936, Franklin
jhat, of course, was long
Roosevelt was elected four
b~:Core the controversy arose
times, a record that won't be
. over television "projecting"
beaten unless the constitutional
winners of national elections
limit of two terms is changed .
before the polls closed on the
As a trivia quiz, sometime, you
w~st toast.
c" ~
might pose the question: "What
:Today, the slogan might be:
"M exit polls In Maine, Vermont other Republicans opposed
FDR?"
aR!l other eastern states go, so go
!ale voters In California, Oregon,
washington and . other western
To spare you the trouble of
wracking your brain or looking It
sietes."
:Sut although his 19;16 achieve·
up, the answer Is: Herbert
men! has never been duplicated,
Hoover, 1.'Vendell Wlllkle and
tht?re is little doubt that Landon
Thomas E. Dewey. Landon,
nbw Is old enough to be president.
although h~ · got few electoral
j:'Jfty years ago there might
votes, outlived them all.

tlan

~

~

Caught m Navy's net By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear
nlte errors in documentation of
ficial record has been lost, altraining and service recordd
tered or otherwise fouled up that maintenance." Sauer's record
it can never be accurately recon· should be "expunged of any posstructe d.
sibly delet erious information,"
The Navy's position is that
Bair added.
Sa uer is exaggerating the proCommodore Cat he rine Spe rry ,
blem so he can duck out of the
the Great Lakes c hief of staff. ·
obligation he signed up fo r when
told our reported Gary Clouser
he joined the reserve.
. that all errors have been corLast fail, Sauer sought he lp rected - and would have been
from Rep. Fred Upton, R·Mich.
correct&lt;'d sooner if Sauer had
In a letter to Upton, Navy Capt. G.
gone though proper c hannels inB;\ir of the Great Lakes (Ill.) Nastead of asking for congressional
val Reserve Center, suggested
Interve ntion . She acknowledged
that the best solu tion to Sauer's · "improper docume ntation" of
case would be a transfer and a
his
Indian a polis training re·
" clean ·Slate start over."
cords.
The captai n admitted "deliSauer a-nd confusion were s hipmates from th e start. He first
tried to join the Navy. in Septem·
ber 1984, but his test scores wer e
too
low. He as ked fo r a waiver;
By United Press International
the
Navy refus ed. So in April
Today Is Monday, Sept. 14. the 257th da y of 1987 with lOR to fo llow.
1985,
he joined th e less demand ·
The moon is in it s ia s l quarter .
Naval
Reserve. He reported
ihg
The morning s tars are Mars and Jupiter.
to
lildianapolis
a nd requested
Th e evening sta r s are M ercury, Venu s and Satur n.
...
trainin
g
as
a
sea
m
a n a pprentice.
Th ose bOrn on this dat e are urd e r th e sign of VIrgo. They include
At
Great
La
kes
boot ca mp,
Russ ian physiologist Iva n Pavlov , known for his resea rch int o
Sa
uer
was
told
to
choose
a spe·
condi tion ed behavior in dogs . in 1849: artist -illu strator Char les Dana
cial1y:
he
picked
gunner's
mat e
Gibso n, "Gibson Girl " cr eator, in 1867: Ma rgaret Sanger. Am&lt;'riran
comple
ted
the
first
of
thre~
a
nd
pioneer leader in the birth control moveme nt, in 1883: film
training phases, but wa s dropped
direc tor-produ cer Hal Wallis in 1899 (age 88t; Clayton Moore,
when hi s math scores didn ' t
telev ision' s Lone Range r . in 1914 (age 73). and actress Joey
measure
up. He the n tried lor
Hea the rton in 1944 tage 431.
bas ic electrion. but flunk ed out.
In October 19&amp;'5. Sa uer was
On this dat e in history:
transferred
back to Indi a na In 1847. Mexico Ci ty was occupied by the United Sta tes Army.
WASHINGTON - To the fie·
tiona! exploits of Beetle Bailey
a nd " The Good Soldier Schwelk",
we can now add the true, story of
Brian Sauer and his star-crossed
attempt to find a career in the u.
S. Nava l Reserve.
Alter more than two years' entangle m e nt with the Navy bu·
reauacracy, Seam an Sauer just
want s out. But the Navy has In·
form ed him that a ny disch a rge
at this point would be "other than
honorable." Sauer doesn'i want
that black mark. on his bizarre
Navy career, a nd he maiillains
that such a di scharge would be
un(air because so much of his of-

Today in history

II

polis, where he studied damage
control and preventive maintenance . In July 1986, he requested
a nd was granted a transfer to
Grand Rapids , Mich. But wh en
he got there, he was lold there
wa s no record of his time in Indi·
anapolls. a nd officials didn't
know wher e to pla ce him . Sauer
decided he wanted to be a Seabee
and started training for Ibis without authorization .
In Nove mbe r 1986, he received
only ha lf his salary a nd was told
he had been training with the
wrong unit. He was later In·
fo r med tha t he had missed too
many sc heduled drills - but the
lette r was sent to the wrong ad·
dress .
Beca use of the m issed drliis ,
Sa uer was ordered to 16 months '
active duty. He co nt ested the
order. The n it was discove red
that so meone had altered a docu ·
me ht In "his servic e record to
read that a bsences mu st be ex·
c used by the day of the drill
rather than up to 15 days a ft er .
That ha d been the policy when
Sa uer missed his drills . When the
Navy discove red the alteration.
It ca nceled Sa uer 's orde r to ac ·
li ve dut y.
Early las t month , Sauer was
to ld he' d be tra nsferred to a res·
erve un it In Muskego n, Mi c h., as
a S~abee , though he doubt s he Is
qualified . He was also told that
hi s [ndlanapoil s int e rlude · had
bee n ·· recrea ted"
a nd his
evaluatio n was 3.8 on a 4-point
sca le. Sa uer sus pects ht s score
was Infl a ted to pacify him which the Navv de nies.
F ina lly. he was 10ld by tele·
phone .tha t a notifica tio n of ht s .
transfer had bren sent - to the
wrong address .
EDITOR IAL - New
MINI
York's "Son of Sam l,aw" whic h p•·evc nts those co nvic ted
of a cr ime fro m profitin g by th e
sale of their memoir s a nd movie
right s - posess a touchy pro·
blcm of prpgmatism as well as
pri ncip le. Much as it disgust s us
th at "books by crooks" have en·
rlc hed so ma ny loalhso me cha r·
aetcrs in recent vears. we ca n' t
help feelin g that ,.on ba la nce. It's
pro bably betler to e ncoura ge
s uc h C!lorts in the Int e rest of in·
for ming th e publi c . Wa iergat e
memoirs. se lf-serving as- they
were , provided tnsif!ht a nd tnfor·
matioD th a t probably would not.
havP been forth coming without
the lure of royalties . W• say, Let
th~m pu bli sh.

' Airport ta1es" are, of course, a fa miliar (and annoying) aspect of air
travel to anyone who has flown in other countries. This surchar~te. amount·
mg to anything from two to 10 dollars,
ts imposed at many airports on depar·
lure and patd, in &lt;ash, by the passen' ger himself.
. In thill country, so far, the local taxmg authortttes haye preferred to
leave collection of the surcharge to
the airlines, which in turn have right·
ly passed it along to the passengers listing it separately, rather than ineluding it in the overall price of the
ticket, so the passengers will know
whom to blame.
As a result, every passenger flying
out of Logan Airport in Boston pays
$1.00 to the city, allegedly as a fuel
tax imposed on the ·airlines. People
fl_ying out of Las Vegas are hit by the
ctty fathers for $7.50 aptece to help
defray the expense of the new airport,
designed along the lines of the Taj
Mabal and costing several times as

much .. And the state of Florida is the
first of the sovereign 50 to tap this
handy source of revenue, charging
airlines a $1.00 ' fuel tax" for everv
p~ger boarding a plane anywhere
in the state.
But the prize for the biggest surcharge (so far, anyway) g&lt;ies to Chicago, which imposes a tax of nine bucks
lor every passenger departing the
Windy City. What's more, there's no
nonsense about using this money· to
pay lor airport improvements or any.thing like that: every nickel of it goes
straight into the city's general revenues. American Airlines battled Chi·
cago all the way to the state Supreme
Court on this one, but lost.
Why isn 't this kind of 'surcharge"
imposed by all the other states, coun·
ties, and muni&lt;ipalities? As far as I
can see, only because they haven't
thought of it yet. But you can bet they
will; and when they do; the tesult will
be the biggest and most chaotic dis"
play of determined human greed

Majors
By

Sl.

the nation.
. People of Nunn's pollical persuaDespite his support for Reagan's ston used to tell me that I should move
fiscal and military policies, Nunn Is toward the political center, if I wantshowing clear signs of his capacity to ed to be elected president after winbreak with the president to some
degree.
,
He ill surely realistic enough to
know that we cannot go on indefinitely with huge annual deficits. He must
also know that if those deficits are to
come under control, there must be
some limit over military spending
and a willingness to enact new reve-

Saturday' A

NI\TIO!'\AJ, LEMme
Ptf'M!i lnlf'l'n_..lou.l

\JnU~d

·~· 113\\'

Lvu~

L I'd . GR

.Slit II .11t !1,.,
Sj(

Nf'W t 'Mil

~I

Monlrnl
l'tllla

lie II .&amp;17 3
,, '1 1 ·.Mit 1! 1/i

Ctlh&gt;IIG

,. 11 .. . 13

rtth•brafl

P

'14 •.f'jt 111,;

"n
11
7t
II
It

Ill .$31t 12 . Wl I

~

Fr•

l.o. Anvl!l
s... D...p

72

•• ,

Ill . W

' '"

I~

~t

I:U ll''r
lt 11!1 .m 1114

SasurM)' ' MR~1u1 I A·
!'Aolllr".. 1. ( 'llil'a&amp;'l I "
~ ~ - l.1111 ft II, N ~ w l'wk I
1\llllltall. ~ Aal'l'lf'll

I , It ~nlnp
~~~ fi'ra~~.~ .. u:t 1, Clndll•l!il I
Pllbhllr~ l t. f1111Mtlfllla ~
"'-lldJQ''II R.r.ll ll
Nr• f11rlr: "- Kl . 1...-M t
I'IU"hurp I . l'bll.lptwl a I
lAIIi Aflllf'lh &amp;. AllM111:

l'Wup S. AhMrf'al I
Sil.11 Fr•cl1111•l. (" ..u:lllft .. l I
~~~

Ok'p tt. H..114ott t

M ... ._,..,. fllr,mt~&lt;
(ltlnp Ul•n...-...,.1·1Jal Nr•· \"ark.
( AI.Wf'f•~ f) .

1;11 p.m.

S&amp;. l-Ito {FanK•IIII-,l al f'tlll . .plll-..
I Ka.. lt") IH) 1:3) p.m.
MHirr~ ( MIAI'Iillft t-31 a1 PtuiltM.Ir~~:h
c rul•~

l·t J, 1:S5 p.m.

r•nt••••

(ll a ffm• .. , , .. .\!l.waht.

rtllnhlr 1-:IJ , 1: .. p.m.
Hmw_.1111 ( R )'a• 1-14 ) .. I~ " 1\n~~: r lf"&lt;&lt;

! HWitl• U 1. lt: S! p. m.
-~ II

llloop ( Whlho&lt;,&gt;ll If. II ) , 111 Sat.n
fTM dlot'O !K,.vlr.oW S. l l. lt:D p. m.
n.f"tU,Y'Il U•m~
t' MIII'Innlll;l al All Mia
M•fllr•ltol J11 PUt""-ntl.. •IIIII
Si.
..a t"hll ..... lpllla. ni«N

Lo•e.

fhl••ace

Iii

Nf'W )'orll, ftiiM

Cincinnati was kept out of the
end zonedu·rJng a fourth- quarter
possession at the Colts' 1-yard
line. The Bengals settled for a
20-yard field goal"by Jim Breech, ·
who earlier had missed an extra
point. The kick put the Bengals
ahead 16·14 with 10:36 to piay .
They never trailed again.
Esiason was not concerned
about the team's lowest winning
point total in two years, citing the
team's success at moving the
ball .
"!sure know our passing game
a nd our running game were
working," Esiason said. "! don't
care if people are Impressed with
us . We won the game. I don't care

"'' I. ..... . (; 8
llolir nlll

llS ll1

TOf'eM o
~r• lurk

1'4J7 .MI -

Mlt•!Wie.t

1! U

'7'1 II '
•

...

.»t

1': .• ,

I' ,
., • •

lllillim11r

I'! lit . U 7 "tl

C~· rhul

~

,, ,. ,

M

ns u
.w -

Ml1111not11
b ........ ,

n

71 .JU

1'-1

f)AIIIMd

i1 11 .113
111 n t7t

11 r
•• •

r.n..,.!li

Tt.Uill

1~

fi

.. ,~ .t1t

LA Rm,.
S!ln Fm,

T~u11 ~

C::.IUonla ~
f'hh'aao !. seaUk t
KansM f lly I. Oalda~~d IIi

Tcorollt•l

MlnM!Mta ( Viola I!H ) at

Ch ka 11a

K..n.o~• Cit)' 20, Su DII'II:U 13
Pin1t111rjth 31, SM.n Franl'i!Ot'11
!&lt;II. l.wb.
U all~U~ l:l
Mlnn..,;ot a :u , lt..ltoli II

u,

.. 0)1 al Tt&gt;uS 1\\-IH

H ), i!.:U p.m. '
fallfernla l SuUOflf.ll ) &amp;l Han sa il City
( I"H"f'l 1•1) , I:SS p. m.
f~et•d (Ydt 1-1) .111 Sullie, CMor

JKundii.Y'II Gamr

l'l'\' fi!ant!O lll. f'lllc-Mso . !I p.m .
SundiQ' , Sepl . to
l)l'fl\q'f v~&gt;. GN"t'n l'la)' jMIIw . ) I p.m .

IM II•U\ , II: IS p.m.

H'"ulton 1M RunaJo . I p.m .
Mtamlal lndl~o~~~~ll:!l, I p m

1\aMIIa.f'll Gam••

IIO!Oton .W ~r.,M , 11l11ht
BI.Htmor.. .a TwoMfl . •IIIII
Mltwa•llff • NI'W \'or II. al11hl
Ml••"'""• a8 Chlcaao. nl11ht
faHfernlaal KantiM fll)' . rli11ht

l'l' f' ~' Orkan~t

Mond"'-¥ , .10\e pl . 'll
,
.trh . ' p n1,

~

Prep scores

I I I 1.111'111 :11 'tK
I t

I 1.0811 2JII 1: 1

Roy .. Oltlo Hl•h :O:..·hool f'ooiiNI.ll

I I (I , f)Oij ~ :u
I I I .MI '! I :tl
I I II .1811 t l :til

S!l h1rd11y'11 IWMIII"'
lk'lllllrl' li, ~I Clllluvlllf' M
811.tlup Dueu.tlUP t \o\'\'MJ :n , Fronlll'r

f 1•nlral
I II t l. ifOO t:l 2: 1 ·
I il I 1,11011 H Ill
I I II 1.11111 :II ' li

' 1\.,Jth Klc1• ( Mkh J I,
f'~t. nlon f "f "

0 I 9 .tOt "I ~
" 'not
I II n 1.0911 Ill 11
I· I 411 .. . ~I ll

Kn,.. C I

lA

N~w Enl{hu•d-' l'&lt;o'Y

M' L T I'd, J'F t' ,\

n.lnd

Hdr~o

~Oir

a "'·•
l l l l l .. .

Sr11Uir

~

t

n

II ( 011

ra.. ftenf'lllc·tlnf' , • • "''a rrtn " "· IC4•!'if.'f'\ t'
t: r1co ( l'a 1 Tr1 h 1, \ 'uunp E11.M 6
Hu~n Yt Rt s :1), G;,t,U'I Mill~ Gilmour

~

n
ll " '

' Nllf"'o ·'"I'IUnll•)' i S. fll' E. T..c·h II

I • . !110 11 Ill

t:a..c

Mldcllf'to~· n

1:1, ra•o•11mlu·n II

C'ullln .~~ "'' R4'1i 18. Otw rlill Flrr-lunl'l!o n

l'f'"let llhartS.,rlnllt , Pol~~r~dll
11flln f'll h ·,.,tl.\, f'r .... llhll' ~
M'•rrm U'K 18, I..:. BriM' It

Nw.tl•1nw.l f"unlt'l'l'll!'f'"

.

._., I. T J'.-t l't' I"A
I I lll ,tll :! 1 1:1

"'•

I p.m.

K.i&amp;n ~ IWO ( "lly Ill Sl•l&amp;ltl1•. ·I p.1t\
Mlnn"'Vh Oil LA ~m!" , I p.m .
Sl . lnlll'l 1111: S!ul Dl e~1 , I p.m .

r\nwrt n u1 f ' onfrrcon•·c-·

ltt1'1\ ,.,

Pl'llladt'lp~a,

" 'a.,.hin,;ton Ill Ml~~nt a. I p.m.
0.1111'111 Nl' Cil~&amp;elllli . I p.m.
DMro.oll ill LA. ~ldt&gt;~, 4 p.m .

NFL standings

l'n .. l.-

.11

"'l'~t'land, I p.m .
S...n fo' riMicl~-o Ml findnnlllll. I p.m .
TatllPII 811y •I f 'hh• &amp;~\1, I p.m.

Pllll!lhllr&amp;fl

Olllll•ll .t TI"Jib. ~tl1hl
fiM l't~na AI IW .IIllr. nl1hl

f'no·•tll

n

Wl&amp;!ihln~~:ton 31. Ptllli.dt•lphilt ~
NV ·ll'b 31. BunaJo 'Zit
Nrw 0114'anll ~ . ( ' k&gt;\'rlllftd 21
L;\ RMidl'no; ... (ln"•n ib)l 0
Den v1'1' 10. Sultll• 17

I LaPtllnt lUI . R p.lh.

!'I'\' _
,,.,,.

I 0 0 1.1110 2M 'll
0 I II .1180 10 -1M
o 1 n .ooo 11 2t
I I 0 .000 1"2 00
Sund"'" '11 Rt&gt;11ulls

HooSion 210. Ll\ Karns 16

t Aiella~~.S.r

.....

0 I 0 .DOO 18 :J.I
0 2lt

0 I 0 . 000
M'e111

Tampa Ra)' I K. .\IIIMih 10
C'lnd•nlil 23, lndll¥1 apoll'l 'll
New Kn~~:h,nd 2:tl, Mhunl ~ I

Mundi&amp;)o'11 C"h llllll!"ll
Mlhnullf:"f' (llarkl'l' 1- 1) ..r NrW \ "nrk,
~H ullldi11- 2- 1), 1:H p. m.
RI!Non !C k!ttt'' '"" 11- 11 ) at ll o!!'lroll .

).1) , 1:35 p. m.
· R..lllmortt ( ~~~... 1·1) al
(CIMt'Y 11-111. 't.:SS p.m.

IB

I 0 0 1.1100 411 10

N~

Orl
AUIIIIIII

;u

I ll 0 1.000

D D 0 .... 0811 1110

Dt1rail
Grm B)'

lntroM. $. .MUwawk""' I

Hou~n

.Uil

Mlnn~&lt;~t

Tmp By
Chlt:Jt

S.nd.,.'" (iaunf!!i
Blolllmore .t lk.IQR, ppd., raJ n
New Yorll.ll. 1'M6Mo 5
MI•MW.t• 1, ClievetiUid t lllnnlnp

Ml.11ml

t:a:.;~

0

Texu I, Calllorlla I

COni~,

U

too

( 'tmtrld

sume l t. C::hh:ap !

Oakl•4

I 0 0 1.000 :"
• 0 0 . 000 000

I I B .8118 13 U
I 0 . 010 U :J.I

ftt. ~ulh

c•y

lndn•'"

,un: tUCA.N l.t:AHUt:

......

t

81111ton l BalllnNrt: .l
Turunh• IS. N..w Vork I
f'lf!\lr.land 5, Mlnna«J~ M ~
IUntu•
10, O•kiMd '7
Mltwaulu~e 11. Detrolrl !

N" t:nk
Bullllfn

""!!:"""'·

Huu~un itt lAio
nlaN
SU OW.. Ali Sill! Yrutiloii'G. nl~tl

" 't&gt; lh'\·lllr ~ ~. IJ..t.1n II
l'UIUII" Ur!iiu ltnr II, nn M04·ll rr

i

Meigs volleyball, cross country teams see action ·
Th~ Me igs Mara uder Volley·
bailers had a rou11h week of
competition startlnjl( with the
past Tuesda y as both "the varsity
a nd reserve squads went 0 and 3
during that period. On Tuesday
at Belpre, the varsity dropped a
two game set by lden tical 15 - 7
scores a nd t ht' reserve unit lost 15
- 0. 9- 15 amd 15 - 5 in a three
. game set.
Both the varsity and reserve
squads lost to a strong Southern
team . The Marauderette varsily
dropped a two game affair 15-5
and 15 - 13 and the Junior
Va rsity wa s blanked 15-0. 15-

since the Oklahoma Land Rush. Ev·
ery city and state will have itt own
Idea of how much ought to be &lt;barged,
and its own excuse for charging it.
There may be some interesting battles based on prestige (should San .
Francisco charge more than Los Angeles ?) and competition for tourists
(will Miami charge less than
Honolulu?).
All .this could be avoided if Congress would only drag itself away
from its new fascination with foreign
policy long enough to "preempt the
field" and rationalize the whole affair. There may be no sound reason
why states and municipalities
shouldn't be allowed to tax airline
fuel or airport services if they want to
(though they are barred by law from
directly taxing the sale of air trans·
portation), but there is every reason
to simplify and regularize the procedures. As matters stand, we are head·
ing straight lor a major restraint on
' interstate commerce.

0.

.

Traveling to Wells ton to take
on the Golde n Rockets, the locals
found the going no easier as
again they came out on th e s hort
e nd of the score, the varsity
ladies losing 15 - 4 and 15-11,
the reserves 15 - 3 and 15 - 2.
The Marauderettes hope to get
on the winning side of the ledger
when they face the Federa l
Hocking Lancers in a .match at
Meigs ronight starting at 5:55 p.

m.
Athens Cross
Country Invitational
At Saturday's Invitational
meet at Athens High School, the
Marauder Cross Country
runners finished fifth in a field of
ten representative schools from
the Southeastern Ohio area.
The ten representatives were
divided into two groups,AAA and
A-AA schools . There were three
representatives in the AAA
group with Athens taking first
place in that division as well as
first in the overall ev&lt;'nt with all
ten schools entered .
In the overall event, Meigs's

ning the nomination. I advise Nunn to
move toward the center of the Democratic Party, if he is ever to be nomi·
nated at some future time.

nue measures.
More than a decade ago, when the
Pentagon budget had a lower level of
costly boondoggles than it does today ,
Sen. Barry Goldwater told me that if
he were secretary of defense and bad
the Services of Sen. William Proxmire
. as undersecretary, he could, cut the
military budget 10 percent or 15 percent "without weakening the country
a damn bit."

Rod Brewer fini shed 16th and
Chris Stewart 18th to pick up
medals white Cary Betzing was
29t h, Robbi e Jacks 34th and Hank
Clela nd came iri 371 h in a fi eld of
63 runners .
Morgan captured first place in
the A- AA division with Trimbl e
in the runner up spot and Me igs
nailing down a third place fini sh.
. Medalists fort he Maraud ers in
the Junior Varsity race, fca tur·
ing 22 rUnners , were Derek
Cremeans In e ig hth position and
Sha ne• Phillips who came in
ninth. ·
Maraude rette Dee He nderson
ran ninth In a field of 33 to win a
medal in the girl's division.
Meigs Junior
High Football
Meigs's Eighth Grade foot ·
bailers opened their 1987 season
In good fashion last Thursday
with a 12 to 6 overtime win over
arch-rival Gallipolis in an al ·
most exact repeat of i he 1986
affair which the Little Blue
Devils won In overtime by a 20 to
14 score.
With the score knotted at 6 all at
the · e nd of regulation play,
Gallipolis had the ball first in
overtime. Four consecutive
sacks, two by middle guard
Frank Bla ke and one each by
center Kevin Musser and defen ·
sive end Shawn HawiO'y, saw the
Blue Devils at minus 25 yards.
The Little Marauders took over
the ball on the Gallla twenty yard
line and live plays later, behind
the blocking of Kevin Musser,
Dennis Edmiston and Terry
McGuire, Frank Blake tallied the
winning touchdown .
In the stats department. Meigs

whO you play, if you' re not ready,
you're going to get your head
handed to you."
Trudeau camp-feted 13 of 23
passes for 206 yards and threw
touchdown passes of 52 yards to
Bill Brooks and 1 yard to Tim
Sherwin. Brooks caught six
passes for 146 yards. But Trudeau was especially dlsap·
pointed with his third intercep·
Uon which came as the Colts
dro~e In the final seconds.
"What do I say? It hurts . It cost

us a chance to win the game," he
said. "It was kind of a •gotcha.' I
read the defense one way and the
receiver read It another . It was
my mistake for not throwing the
ball away."
·
The Colts offense remains loo
Inconsistent tor coach Ron
Meyer. Indianapolis rushed tor
only 85 yards, with Albert Ben·
tley gaining 77 of those in 25
carries including a 2-yard TD
run.
'
"Tiu!. three lnterc~ptlons were

Predict record TV crowd .
for Bears-Giants encounter
Bears' 38-24loss at Miami Dec. 2,
CHICAGO (UP!) -The golden
touch of the Chicago Bears 1985. that drew a 29.6 rating a nd a
should serve as a mighty spring, 46 share. It was Chicago's lone
board for ABC's 'l8th year of loss of their Super Bowl
campaign.
Monday Night Football.
Last season, the three highest·
The inaugural gal'l)eoftheABC
rated Monday night telecasts
coverage Monday night . from
Soldier Field between the Bears ,were the ones that included
Chicago. The Bears' 25·12 )llln at
and the · Super Bowl champion
New York Giants promises to be Green Bay drew a 22 ra ting and a
36 share, high- water marks for
the highest· rated Monday Night
the ABC coverage.
game In history.
"The Bears are a great mal ·
ABC officials are cautiously
chup
and it is important to start
optimistic in public. But in
off
well.
It could be the kind of
private they are beaming over
thing
you
used to get the viewers
the anticipated . rating s
hooked all season long," Kamm
blockbuster .
"Monster rating? Well, I don 't. · says. "I'd rather have It coming
know about that. But it has all the first. It's a blockbuster."
Wolfe hedges on whether It is
Ingredients," says director
bene ficial for ABC and it s sponLarry Kamm , starting hi s first
sors to have a powerful mat chup
season at the controls for the
to kick off the season.
Monday Night package. " Sure,
" If it were later in the year it
It's a great way to start."
'·
could
be even bigger in terms of
Th e ingredients are all. the~e :
significance,'
' Wolfe says. " The
Two huge viewer markets, the
winner
could
be vying for home
Super Bowl champions of the
advantage
in the playoffs.
field
past two years and Bears team
I'll
be
interested
to see what it
dripping with intrigue a soap
does In the West Coast. But of
opera writer would envy.
course, the Rams and 49ers
"You've got McMahon and
figure to be in the hunt in the
Ditka, 'The Refrigerator,' Wal·
NFC, too. and they are bound to
ter Payton, the great defense,"
be interested ."
says producer Ken Wolle . "The
The only potential negative
Bears have that kind of interest
statistic is the way the (wo clubs
beyond what goes on ~ he field."
History also Is on the side of have played on Monday Night.
ABC In reaping the reward s of Chicago Is 7·13, the Giants 5·11·1
in Monday Night appearances.
the opening matchup . .
ABC's highes t-rated season
The highest -ra ted Monda y
opener
was the Sept. 13, 1982,
Night game In history is the
game between Pittsburgh and
Dallas won by the Steelers 36· 28.
It drew a 24 .9 rating and a 42
share.
'
ABC figure s the competition
DELAWARE. Otrio (UPI) from other prime time shows on
Bright Sahbra driven by Jerry
the opening Monda y night will be
Bookmeyer set a national season
less than in previous years.
and world record in winning the
further solidfying the network's
$56,896 Ohio Breeders Champion·
hope lor a hug&lt;' rating.
s hip two-year-old filly pace in the , The Bear s are on Monday night
opening program of Grand Cirtwo oth er Times, both on the road ,
c uit Racing at the Delaware
and that may help continue
County Fair Grounds Sunday.
ABC's. rev iva l in the ratings.

a

Sets world record

~~:

costly. There Is no question abouf
It," Meyer said. "It was dlsappointing but there Is a long season to come. There were a lot
of optimistic signs and some
other things we had to work on.
"We wanted to generate olfensive firepower to keep the ball
from them . We did that only
once.llwecouldhaveduplicated
that In the other· three quarters ,
certainly we would have had the
game the way we wanted it, "
Meyer said.

Toledo results
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -Miley
Direct, driven by Mike Thomas,
led all the way to win Sunday.
night' s featured pace at Toledo
Raceway Park by a length over
Jets Rick.
Thomas had Miley Direct in
front by one and one- half lengths
at the top of the strecth and
crossed the finish line In 2:001-5.
Paw Paw Tiger waS third.
Varsity Star and Shadows Doll
won the first two races to return
$107.80 on the dally double
combination of 3 and 8.
The crowd of 2, 122 wagered
$222,129.
.

The Daily Sentinel
(USI'S

145-9601

A Division of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon . Mo nday
th rough Frida y, 111 Court St .. Pom eroy, Oh io, by the Ohio Valley Publlshln g Company ~Mult lmedla . . Inc. ,
P omeroy. Oh io 45769. Ph . 992·2156. Se· •..
l"Ond class pos tage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
Member: Unitcd Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Ne-wspaper AssOciation. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Nt&gt;wspaper Sales , 73.1 Third Avtflue,
New York. New York 10017 .
POSTMASTER: SPnd address changes

to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St .,
Pomt'l'oy, Ohio 45769.

SUBSCRJPriON RATES
By Carrier or Motor Reate
On£' Week ................................. $1.25
On£' Month ..................... .... ...... $5.45
On£' Year ...................... ..... .. $65.00
Dati~·

SINGLE COP\'
PRICE

... . ............ ................. 25 Cents

'•

"'

'..
~

··. ·

.,

Su bscribers not de slr ln~ to pay the car·
· r ier may rem it In advance direct to
Thl' Daily Sent lnel nn a J, 6or 12 month
basts . CrE'dil will be ~tven carrier each
wee k.

No su bscri ptions by mall perm itted In
ar eas where home carrier service Is

avallublt&gt;.

Mall Subscriptions
Insid e Meigs County
13 W('eks .

.................. ... . $17.29
.. ..........•..... .... ... ... $34 06

.

'

, 211 W('£'k S..
~
52 \V£'E'k ~ . ~ .............. \ ... ......... $£16.56 ....,.

Outside MeiKS County
13 W('ek s ..... ~ .. ...... ........... ..... ... $18.20
· 26 \V('f'ks ..... ........... ..... ... ......... $3!UO
52 Weeks .......... ..:· ······· ...... ,.•.... $67.60

•· •

had 10 firs t downs t.o Gallipolis's
7, outru shed the Ga llians 152 to
113, out passed the m via the air 18
yards to none. the Meigs yard
comi ng on their only pass while
Ga llipolis attempted three with
·
no completions.
The Marauders were hit with
three penalties f.or 40 yards and
Gallipolis had o ne for 15. Both
teams had troub)e holding onto
the ball as Meigs fumbled five
times losing them all and the
Blue Devils had four miscues
als o losing each. Jeremy Rupe,
Frank Blake, Shawn Hawley and
Kevin Musser each had a fumble
recovery for Meigs .
Blake carried the pigskin 21
times for 97 yards an4 two
touchdowns, Terry McGuire had
8 carries for 42 yards and Jeremy
Rupe picked up 13 yards in three
tries .
Getting th e tackles for the
Marauders were Blake with 10,
Rupe and Chuck Mash had 7
each, Hawley, James Howerton
and McGuire garnered 6 each,
Mu sser and Robert Caruthers
chipped in with 5 apiece and
Edmiston had 3.
The remaining schedule for the
e ighth grade :
·-·Date
Opponent
Sept. 16 ..... at Nelsonville-York
Sept. 24 .. ... ... .. .... ... ... .. at Belpre
Oct. i ................ ..... at Jackson
Oct. 8 .: ...... .... ............. Well~ton
Oct. 15 .......... ..... VInton County
Oct. 22 ......................... Warren
Seventh grade
Sept. 15 ............ ... .. at Gallipolis
Sept. 22 ......... Nelsonville-York
Sept. 29 ...... .. .............. at Belpre
Oct. 6 .. ...... ....... ... ...... . Jackson
Oct. 13 ...... ...... .... .-... at Oak Hill
Oct. 20 ..... .. .. ............. ..... Belpre

Cheer Up!
-

Only ONDUUNE can cover
your roof with a lifetime
·
warranty

kiil:l

Nunn is sufficiently intelligent to
know how to cut military spending
without weakening the country. Furthermore, the Senate will follow hill
lead in controlling exeesslve arms
spending and in balancing the defense
burden between us and our allies.

I•

more points," said Cincinnati
center Dave Rlmington.

u

Ill Ill ..Jail

f • r lnul
. . . ~011
t\IIMia

Berry's Worl

As a moderately liberal Democrat,
I would like to see Nunn lead a fundamental reform of the defense structure that goes beyond simply •cutting
the fat." I also want to see him contin·
ue raising thoughUul questions about
the Persian Gulf operation, the Reagan effort to reinterpret the ABM
treaty and the acceleration of Star
Wars.

117S .·In

\\'f:OII

The role Nunn should play_B_yG_eo_rg_eM_c_Go_ve_rn
The decision by Sen. Sam Nunn not
to seek the Democratic presidential
nomination in 1988 was a wise one.
Nunn has an opportunity to play a vital role in the Senate that could have
been weakened by a long-shot bid lor
the presidential nomination in an already crowded field.
The Georgia senator's conservative
backers ~re understandably disappointed. They saw him as the best
hope for a conservative Southern can·
didate who would take a hard line on
foreign policy and national defense.
Those who see Ronald Reagan as a
model of conservatism recognize that
he has no.closer follower among Senate Detfiocrats than Nunn. '
But the same factors that make
Nunn attractive to conservatives
make it unlikely that he would win the
Democratic nomination. Perhaps it is
true the typical Democrat is more liberal than the average American, and
does not represent the current mood
of the country. If so, this means that
the kind of Democrat who can be
nominated will be more liberal than
the prevailing mood of the American
establishment, and perhaps more liberal than the American majority.
The public's mood or the Democratic mood can, of course, change.
But as of now, N nnn is too close to
Reagan 's conservatism to win the
Democratic presidential nomination.
This, I tblnk, was the bottom line in
his decision not to seek the nomina·
lion, despite strong urging from many
that he do so.
· But In the Senate, Nunn, as chairman of the Armed Services Committee, can render a valuable service to

fourth quarters killed Colt
drives.
"Fulcher and Jackson made
key Interceptions for us. Our
defense played beautifully, " Cinclnnatl Coach Sam Wyche said.
"However,. our.offense will need
tQ score a few more points ."
Eslason completed ·17 . of 26
passes for 236 yards , including
llrst·quarter touchdown toss,es of
61 yards to Rodney Holman and
18 yards to James Brooks .
Running back Brooks also
rushed 19 times tor 86 yards and
scored on a 1-yard run with 7:50
to play.
"The yards were there, but
obviously , we could 've been
sharper. Frankly, with t.he yards
we had, we should have had a lew

Scoreboard ...

Picking money out of the. air __W_i_llia_m_ R_us_he.:..t__
Ripoffs &lt;om~ in assorted sizes, and
as ripoffs go, the one I have just come
across is thus far only medium-sized.
But it is already a pain in the ne&lt;k to
travel agents, and it has the potential
of becoming a serious burden to &lt;ommer&lt;ial aviation and a major additional expense to every airline
passenger.
In a nutshell: Three cities and one
state have made the delightful discovery that they can impose an indirect
tax on every passenger who flies out
of their territory and require the airlines to collect it for them. As soon as
the other 49 states and America's
thousands of municipalities and counlies with airports find out about this,
they will proceed to impose similar
taxes themselves, and the cost of airline tickets will zoom accordingly.
The -paperwork imposed on the airlines - collecting and remitting
varying amounts to every city and
state - simply doesn't bear thinking
about.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Bengals escape ·H oosier Dome with· narrow 23-21 victory

•

The Daily Sentinel

.

'

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Monday. Sf.llrtember 14, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

.

IN THE DAILY SENTINEL
SEPTEMBER 30, 19~7

n.. uretlme lloonng
4'x6'7" -26 Sqaaro foot ShHI
hrruglf.~~~~!Phalt Roofing and )IGing~J"JI

Reg.

510.99 -$ 989
NOW

G 11M7 lr, NEA, Inc

FALL CAR CARE EDITION

If your aid roof· is
rusting away, put up
one that won't rust.

SAVE ON
' .ROOFING

.,............. ,,.,
Colen In Sttck:
Whitt, ltd. o, ....

C&lt;Jl

Appre•Nwettly I 00
,..,,. cvrr•tly ill

" ... and finally, do you think there is a growing
uncertainty about air travel?"

Por ShHt

IDEAl FOR RISIDINflAL, AGRICUlTURE
&amp;
APPUCATIONS

"Reserve Your Ad S.pace Now"

~ ;I

. t.,.:J,
.

992-2156

L.,;~-:...____::__..::_.::.__....::__ _

in1ulatu agil"l hMI
wont' rust " ,.,,..
90tf up f•t Iilii nttl

ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

light wli!Jht 11Mt1
11-"•t• !heM IMMII

••r to Instal

AD DEADLINE SEPTEMBER 18; 19 8 7

1•o1 ,_ .. wrooflftt or rlfotfll'lt

stedt.
~J

..

"''

..

�-.·
P~y-Middleport.

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 14. 1987

Ohio

·LaCoss stops Reds 6-I; Giants hike.· lead
four hit s and one run over 5 i -3
By MIKE SULLIVAN
innings. Craig Lefferts kept the
UPI Sports Writer
Roger Craig. managing a team · Reds hitless for two-thirds of an
that last won a division title in lnning'and Don Robinson gave up
1971, refuses to· al jow the Sa:t only two hits over the final three
Francisco Giants to celebrate innings to earn his 17th save.
their six-game lead in the Na·
· " We 're playing like a cham·
tiona! League West.
·
pions hip club," Craig sa id.
"We're playing e xceptionally
Cincinnati starter Tom Brown·
well in all phases or the game and ing, 7-12. yielded seven hits and
we're going out t!)ere every day four runs over 6. 2·3 innings to
with a lot of emotion," Craig said ta ke the loss.
Sunday after the Giants beat
The Giants scored three times
second-place C!ncinna ti for the in the seventh to seize a 5· 1
second day in ·!" row with a 6·1 advantage. Jose Uribe reached
triumph. " It's.· a great feeling, on a !!elder 's cho ice and pinch·
but it's not over yet. Nobody' s hitter Dave Hende.rson dl'ew a
going to give it to us."
walk from Brown ing. 1 Pinch·
San Francisco s tarter Mike hitter Harry Spilman sing led off
LaCoss, 12·10. limited the Reds to reliever Frank Williams to score

time In his !asi eight starts to
spark the Cubs.
Pirates 6, Phlllil!'s I
At Philadelphia. Brian Fisher
pitched a five- hitter and struck
out 10 batters to lead Pittsburgh.
Darnell Coles doubled in the
go-ahe ad run and scored twice .
Padres 10, Astros .2
At. San Diego, Carmela Mar·
t!nez, Randy Ready and Chris
Brown each hit homers and
Jimmy Jon es fired an eighthitter to lead the Padres.
·
Dodgers 6, Braves 2
At Atlanta . Orel Hershiser and
Brad Havens combined on a
six-hitt e r and Mike Marshall
home red anddrove in two runs to
lift Los Angeles.

Uribe and Kevin Mitchell fol·
lowed with a two-run double to
left.
. Else where, Pittsburgh routed
Philadelphia 6·1, Los• Angeles
defe ated Atlanta \i-2, Chicago
stopped Montreal 5·2, Ne w York
held off St. Louis 4· 2, and Sa n
Diego trounced Houston 10- 2.
Mets 4, Cardinals 2
A! New York. Gary Carter
produced the go-ahead run with a
bunt single, helping David Cone
and New York claim the final e of
a three-game series . ·
Cubs 5, E•pos 2
At Chicago, Leon Durham
drove in a pair of run s, Da ve
Ma rtinez scored tw ice and Ric k
Sutc liffe. 16·8. won for the firs t

Tigers, Jays deadlocked for first place

HIGH THROW - Sl. Louis llllrd baseman Terry l;'endleton leaps
hlp;h Into the air to calch John Morris's lhrow.Jn fourth Inning
• action at Shea Stadium Sunday. ( UPI)

.. .

:~Saints
•

jolt ,Browns

;·: NEW ORLEANS (UP!)- The
; qwner danced, the band played
: a;nd the crowd whooped it up
· alter the Saints defeated the
::cleveland Browns 28· 21 for an
;:extremely rare opening-day win
·jlt the Superdome.
:. Saints owner Tom Benson,
carrying a black-and-gold urn·
· ticella festooned with !leurs-de·
:Its. danced a jig on the field .
·Sunday afternoon after he
:~atched his team punish the
· ~Browns and quarterback Bernie
·){osar In the upset win.
;. From an opposite end of the
held, a four-piece jazz band
marched Into the arena to the
:cheers of the crowd.
.·: The mood was just as jubilant
ln the Saints dressing room.
• "We took it to · them. we
:ron trolled the line of scrim mage
;.. I think that was a big part of
.It," said quarterback Bobby
:Iiebert, who was 13 of 22 for two

t

·t:O u c .h d o w n s

a nd

no

''i t\terceptlons.
~ l n addition to Hebert's good
,performance, ·a nother key area
,for the Saints was the kicking
i£ame. The Browns started no
drive past their 20 yard line.
·"Their kickoff guy a nd their
punt guy kept us backed up,"
said Browns head coach Marty
Schottenhelmer.
· Punter Brian Hansen, who

pinned the Browns at their 15·,
12·, ;;. , 9· , and ! ·yard lines, said
the spirit on the be nch was
Infectious.
"I kind of got caught up in the
game, " said Hansen . "Every b·
ody was playing so well, so I
thOught I better jump on the
bandwagon ."
The results of Hansen's punts
were two safeties - the differ·
ence. in the game.
With the score knotted in the
fourtli quarter a I 21, defensive
end Bruce Clark wrapped up
Kosar a yard deep in the end zone
for the safety. On the play, Clark
grabbed Kosar by the leg as he
was attempting to scramble and
pass. Kosar did throw the bail,
but the official ruled him in the
grasp.
"The rules say the le gs must be
under control. They we re not,"
said an angry Schottenheimer.
"I didn't feel like I was in the
grasp." said Kosar , who was 28 of
39 for 314 yards with one
Interception and a TD.

with 4 2· 3 innings of two-hit re li ef.
By IAN LOVE
The
right -bander was demoted to
UP! Sports Writer
of the International
Columbus
In the next 20 games the
Leagu
e
dur
ing the first half of the
Detroit Tigers and Toronto Blue
season. Dave Righetti got two
Jays wil! meet seven times and
outs tnthe nintht orecordh ls 27th
probably decide the American
save
. .John Cerutti dropped to
Le ague East pennant.
10·4.
The Tigers and Blue Ja ys are
At Milwaukee, wllh the score
tied for first in the AL East with
tied
1·1. Ala n Tr a mmell led off
B5·57 records. Detroit scored fou r
wit·h a s ingle off loser
the
ninth
times In the ninth inning Sunday
Chr
is
Bos
io,
10·6. One out la ter ,
to de feat Milwaukee 5·1. whil e
Ma
tt
.Nokes
s in gled, m ovin g ,
the Blue J a ys were beaten 8·5 by
the New York Yankees to create T rammeii to thi r d. Che t Le mon
fol lowed with a s ingle down the.
the first -place tie.
ief1 .fi cld line. sco ring Tra mmell :
" I'm guessing you 've got to
Pa t Sher idan was Int ention a lly
win 14 and lose s ix, " Detroit
walk ed to load the bases and
Manager Sparky Anderson said
of his team's re maining 20 ..rPIIever Chuck Crim was brou ght
''·games. "I don' t know what' s in. Crim walked pin ch· hitt er
Dave Bergm an. scor in g pi nch·
going to happen."
runn er Jim Wa lewandcr . Re·
Detroit and Toronto meet for a
li
ever P aul Mir abell a e nte red
four-game set at Exhibition
a
nd wa lked Lou Whi ta ke r . scor·
Stadium starting Sept. 24. They
in
g Lemon. Bill Mad lock t hen
finish the seaso n in Detroit for
lift
ed a sa crif ice fly to right ,
three· game series.
"We' ll take iwo out of three sco ring Sherida n.
from anybody, especially the
Wa il Terrel l has wo n fi vr
Yankees because they' re a good
team ." Toronto Manager Jimy consecuti ve deciS io ns, including
Wl!!iams said. "They hit the bali, two straight on the' road . He now
has a 3-S roa d record, while
they sure did."
compiling
an 11 ·2 ma rk a t hom e.
The Blue Jays were stopped by
"
Th
e
bes
t pa rt of th is is tha t we
Charles Hudson and Neil Allen. a
won."
Te
rrell
sa id. " We easily
pair of pitchers who have had
could
have
los
t
if
it didn ' t get wild
their s hare of problems this
for
a
whil
e
.''
season . Allen was discarded by
E lsewhe re , Minn esota r out ed
the Chicago White Sox after
Ceveland
7-3, Chicago bla nked
going 0·7 with a 7.07 ERA earlier
this year. He ga ve up one hit in 3 Sea ttle 2-0, Texas topped Cali for·
ni a 8·2, Ka nsas Cit y de fea ted
1·3 innings of relief Sunday .
" He likes it here," New York Oa kl a nd 6·5 a nd Ba ll imor e a t
Mana ger Lou Pinlella s aid of Bos ton was postponed beca use of
ra in.
~ lien . " I wished the y'd re leased
Indians i, Twins 3
him sooner. "
A
I
Cleveland
. Kirby P uckett
Hudson, 10·6, earned the win

lin ed a one- out single to ~core
At Anahe im. .Ca lif. , 'Larry
Greg . GagnP from seco nd base Parri sh home red a nd singled to ·
and ignit e a four-run lOth innin g, dr ive lr\ three runs and spark
lift ing the Twins.
Texas. The defending Amer ican
White So• 2, Mariners 0
LPagu e Wes t c ha mpions los t for
At Sea ttle. Pat Keedy a nd the nin th time in the last 11
Donnie Hill hom ered to bac k t he games.
one · hit pit c hin g of Floyd Ba nn is·
Royals 6, Atheltl~s 5
ter, 13·10. Ba nnist er face d the
At Oa kl and . Cal if., S teve Ba !·
minimum 27 ba tters In compiet· bani homered fo r the third tim e
ing his ninth gam P.
In fou r ga m es tq lead Ka nsas
Texas R, Angels 2
Cl t.v .
_ _..:.;;;:,:::...;::..;,::::::=...:..----_:_--------

ARE Y

YOU DON'T NEED
A CREDIT CARD?
rr/(1

kuo w y nu do,·, ll (•t•d rw nlht"' f IJill I n
Bu 1 harf' Tl '1 vou (l r p r -

•·v f',,flfkd i fld(Jntij i f ation rn lf'rir ,. n du•ck :
•R pr•ll .' &gt;lruntlt •fl out of l f HNI u1irl1uuf cn.~l1 :'
• JJ'nntrd to o rfl r•r ti,·kt•l,.,. or mn"·•· room n •.ou• n ·otiuwt
ovt• r I h (J t'h fm fl ?

IJ P ff« '('

o.f mittd -

if

(' 'l'f U
1

if

fH'I '(• r

~· o u ~ r p nl,• r

ll• nr •t• !'~ y nra .JH U'.k t• l.

"fo n •i·••i1 'f'' Y""r npplir ;t!fion . ,.,,// Hmu(~· J 'arrr\f e tt•r or

Mark Grot '&lt;'.&lt; nl

'

.,

No parking Tuesday - Hoffman
Ther e will be no parking In Middleport on No. Second Avenue
from Rutland Street to Mil! Stret between 6 and 11 p.m.
Tuesday, September 15, and no parking on Mill Street a t the
" T." Mayor Fred Hoffman stated that the fire departml'nt will
be cleaning the s treets in pre l?aration for the block party.

Open house Wednesday
The first anniv er s ary of the Gingerbread House In Middleport
under the direction of Mrs. Shirln Nuggud will be observed with
an open hour Wednesday from 9:30 to 11: 30 a .m. Parents,
frie nds a nd relatives are invited and refres hments will be
served .

Blame outage on storm
.

A severe storm in Meigs County Sunday int errupted electrical
service in Syrac use , Racine and Pomeroy , Ron Ash, local Ohio
Power Co. manager. reports.
In Syracusp and Racine about 50 customers were affected by
the outage but s ervices was restored several hours later. In
Pomeroy several t hrCii" phase customers were affected . Service
was res tored in a couple of hours, Ash reports. The outages
occurred about 4 p .m .
Cause of the outage in Racine and Syracuse was trees coming
into contact with the lines. In Pomeroy, the outage wa s caused
by a fa iled regulator on West Ma in St.1Th e reason for the failed
regulator is being investigated.
,

Arrest two on charges
Two Meigs County men wer e arrested over the weekend .on
cha rges of stealing a golf ca rt from Jaymar Golf Club. Meigs
Count y Sher iff Howa rd Frank reports tha t the young mPn,
Ro be rt Ha tfi eld of Rutland a nd Rodney Harrison of Pomeroy,
accompanied by a juvenile, took the golf cart from the Jaymar
propert y about .\ a. m . Sunday morning and drove it down Route
7 Int o Pomeroy . They were s potted on Nye Ave. by Pomeroy
Police a nd went as fa r as the car was h on Eas t Main before they
stopped a nd fled int o ihe woods . They wcr.c lat er ta ke n into
cus tody. Ha tfiel d has bf&gt;en chargedwith theft In Me igs County
Court . Harr ison has been charged with complicit y. Charges
aga ins t the juvenile are pending in Meigs Count y Probate
Cour t.

Me ii(S Count y EmC'rj(ency Medical Scr vic~s report s n call s
over th weekend .
Sa turday at 2: 25 p.m .. Middleport tra ns ported Loneva
Mullin.&lt; from a n au to acci dent on Sycam ore St. to Ve terans
Me m or ial Hos pit a l; Tuppers Plains at II : o6 p.m. to Silver
Ridl!e Road for Aut tie Hl ve rs to P leasant Va ll ey Hqs pi m i.
Sunday at ) ~ : ;,~a . m .. Middleport to High St. for La ura Lu ellen
to Ve trrans Memor ial itosp!ta !; Rutland Fi rr Dept. a ( ~: 11 a .m.
to a n au to fi rro n Rou le 12&lt;: the a ut o w;~ s owti &lt;•d U\ Tom Owens: ·
Reedsv il le ao6::14 a .m . tra ns port ed Jea n Jones io St. Josrph's
Hos p ital: Rut la nd a t !1 :12 a .m . to Point Rock Road tor Wes ley
Grounds to O'Bie n&lt;'Ss Memorial Hos pit a l: Ra c ine at I : 38 p.m.
to Trou blr l'rcck R o&lt;~ d for Ray mond Ker ns to Holzer Medic al
C ntC'r : Racinr a t o&gt;: .\o p.m. to Fourth St. for Donna Hay ma n to
Vetera ns Mrmoria l Hospit a l: Middl eport a 5:43 p.m . to the
policr depar tme nt for Willia m Anderson to Veterans Me m orial
Hos p ita l; Middlepor t r lrr Dept. at 5: 46 p.m. to a tree tire at the
Mid d lepo rt Hill Cc mrt rr)·: P omeroy at 6:43 p.m . to681 West lor
.Jua nit a Hoscha r w ho wa s treat d but not tra ns po rted;
Middleport a t 7:42 p.m, to High St. for Ma r)' Hu ghes w ho was
dead on arri va l.
· ~~

Tide upsets Lions 24-13

PEOPLES

BANK~
''J'h• l•tt•r lank",

. . . . F.D.I.C.

ScOtlll S1Mt
.,_,W. Va.
m-5514

'

Poirt

.......
'*•"
671-ll2l

i

w.va.

5111-...

""' liMn.•. ¥a.

112·2136

_jL________________________

Tuesdoy tmdWednesdoy Night Specials

·Salod

·Entree

·Sundae JliJr

Rains wash out roads in East; boy killed
heavy rain in New England , New
Jersey , Pennsylvania and New
York. Almost four inches of rain
fell in Steuben County. N.Y ..
Saturday , when a three· car
accident killed 5-year-o!d An·
drew Lawton and injured his
mother and brother during a
downpour that restrlcted .driver
vislbllity.
Alexander said a separate
band of showers and thunder·
storms poised off the Pacific
Northwest coasl early today was
expected to move Inland.
"The storm system over the
Pacific is out in the ocean off the
western Canadian coast. That
wi!i be bringing a lot of offshore
winds and rain Into Washington
and Oregon." he said.
Rain was forecast today from
the southern and central Rockies
through the southern and central
P lains, and into Louisiana, ·Mis·
sisslppi and the Florida

By United Press International
Heavy rains In the Northeast
that washed out roads in New
York and New Jersey and
contributed to a 5-year-old boy' s
death di ss ipated today , wh!l ~ a
new batch· of storms blew In off
the Pacific.
"The precipitation in the Nor·
theast is over eastern New
England right now and almost
over with," National Weather
Service forecaster Lyle Alex·
ander said early this morning.
"It's moving out to sea northeast
and east and Into portions of
Canada and out into the
Atlantic. "
The relief follow s a weekend Q.f

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions- Brian
· Ritchart, Syracuse; Patrick
Mahaffey, Albany; Held! Gorby,
r
Pomeroy: Gergor y Tyree. Seeks divorce
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - V!rgi·
Filing for a divorce In Meigs
nia Michael. .
County Common Pleas Court is
s·unday Admissions - Laura Ronnie Vance, Rutland, from
Luellen , Middleport : Alma Hay· Nancy J . Vance, Pomeroy.
man, Racirie.
Granted a divorce was Jeffrey
Sunday Discharges - None .
'. Clair Shiflet from Melissa Renee
Shiflet. Melissa Shiflet was res·
Licences issued
tored by the court to her maiden
name Black.
A marriage license has been
A divorce was granted to both
issued in Meigs County Probate parties ·in an action by Deborah
Court to Kent Eric Eads, 18,
Davis against Jas on Davis .
Rutland. and Kimber ly Ka thleen · A dlssolu lion has been granted
Dee m , 18, Middleport.
Tonia Becker and Greg Becker.

NOOOflPONNEI!DBD .

4PMTOCLOSE

Sharp

Mary Householder

Cha rley Sha rp . 98. of 86~4
Mary E . Householder. i t. of
Meadow Virw Dri ve. West Ches· Pho('nlx , Ariz .. died Sa turday ln
ter Ohio, died Sunda y a t Bonnie ' s a Phoenix hospit a l.
Nurs ing Home ther&lt;&gt;.
Born April 6, 1916 in New
Bor n Feb .. 23, 1889, he was a sen Bright on. Pa .. she was a daugh ·
of the la te Charll's Sharp a nd ter ot'the late Harvey and Louise
Rose Mayes Shaql In Ashto n, Wcrliug Ours.
W.Va .
Surv!vlnn are thr~ dauaht er s
He w as married to Iva Ma C'
..
~
-~
Ca milla Cook
and The
resa"Wixon'
Booth on Junl' 4. 191.3. and s he of SurpriSP, Ariz. a nd Pauline
preceded him In de ath in 19R!\.
Pr!'slon of Phoeni x, Ariz.; one
Surv iving a t'e one da ught e r , son. De nzil Hous eho lder tif PhotHel en F .) Lee of e nix , Ari2 .; nine grandchildr en;
Mrs. D ' Flusseli
'
Wes t Ches ter ; tw o grandso ns. one great grandchild; two s is·
Dav id Lee of Bowlin g G r&lt;'C n, Ky. ters. Martha Wolfe of Racine and
a nd Cha r les R. Lee In Cincinnati ; Olive Wolfe of Clev eland: one
one g reat gra neh!id. Harper Lee brother , Rev . Harvey Ours of
or Bowling Green, Ky. and Dunbar. W.Va.; and one half·
severa l ne lces a nd ne phews.
brother, Russ ell Cll'ne of Racine.
Besides her parent s 's he was
He was a retired Lockmas tcr
with the U.S. Army Corps of preceded In death by her first
Engineers, working 3!\ years. at husband, Leo Greene.
the Gal!ipoils Lock a ndDam . and
Services will be 10 a .m. Tu es·
also in Ironton and Huntington. day at Golden Door Chapel, 11211
W.Va.
Mic higan Ave., Youngtown ,
He was a member of Weste rn Ariz.
Star 11 Masonic Lodge in Guyan dotte, W.Va . for . G-~ yea rs, and a Mary Hughes
member of the United Methodis t
Church .
-Services will be conducted 2
Mary Glassburn Hughes, 85, of
p.m . Wednesday, with visitation High St ., Middleport , died Sun·
from 1: 30to2 p.m .. at Ridgelawn day at her home.
Cemetery in Huntington. W.Va. ,
Born June 17, 1902 to the late
and 7 lo s p.m. Tuesday at • Judson and Zoe Denney Glass·
Shorten Funeral Home In Mas on, burn, she was a graduate of
Ohio. Masonic ser\' lccs will be at Bidwell· Porter High School and
7 p.m .
Rio Gra nde College. She was a
Memorial contributions m ay me mber of Middleport Firs t
be made to Faith Community Bap tist Church where she was a
United Methodis t Church in west Sunday Sc hool teacher and held
Chester.
severa l churc h offices. She was a

Making apple butter
Rutland Cliurch of God w!!! be
making apple burt er Tuesday. To
order , call 742-2060. or pick up at
the chu reb after 2 p.m .
Meeting tonight
Racine Board of Public Affair s
will meet tonight (Monday), 7
p .m. , a t the Shrine Park building.
Sorority mPets
, Xi Gamma Epsilon Sororit y
will meet Tuesday . 7 p. m .. at the
sen lor cit lzens cPn ter, Pomeroy.
Hos tes sPs will be Kaye Walker ,
Rho nda Conde. Carol Crow and
Da ria Staat s.
Homemaker's club
ThP Third Wedn esday Hom emak ers' Club will m eet Wednes·
day. 11 a .m ., at the Sy racuse
Communit y Building before proeeeding to the ir annual picnic.

Bradhury PTO
Bradbury Ele mentary PTO
will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday . Open

w_i_ll_be_o_b~se_r_ve_d_._ _·

life member of Cheshire Chapte r
No. 4&lt;.0. Order of li:astern Star
and was a past matron of the
chapt er. She was also a past
grand representative of Ka nsas.
a District 24 pres ident . a past
president or Ohio Stat e District
Officers. She was a m e mber and
pas t wort hy high priestess of
Mary Shrine No.37, White Shrine
of Jerusalem, and held seve ral
appointive supreme offices with
the s hrint'. She was a member of
Thea Court and Twin City
Shrlnette. She was a retired
sc hool teacher and a life member
of the Ohio Retired Teachers'
Association a nd a m e mber of the
Meigs County Chapter ORTA .
Shewas marriedtoAilenHughes
in Ma y 1939. Mr. Hughes die d
Sept. 19, 1982.
Survivors include two step·
daughters and their husbands.
Alberta and Thurman Hellyer of
Nelsonville and Grace and Don
Shamblin of Alexandria, Va.;
one sister. Lola Shafer of Nitro,
W.Va.; five grandchildren, Jim
and Bill Hellyer, Ron and Don
Shamblin. a nd Eva Jane Don ley;
nine great grandchildren; one
sister-in· law, Gay Glassburn of
Bidwell; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents s he was

husband , Halleck Hicks. and a
brot her , Stanley Glassburn.
Services will be Wednesday. )
p.m .• at Rawling·Coats· Biower
Funeral Home with Rev . Mark
McClung official !ng. Burial w!!!
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery .
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 on
Tuesday . Eastern Star services
will be 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral· home.

Spocloto_ ..._ _
ltHIIhou. . only'.

.._iiiiiiiiiiiiii =-=po=NDER::-=-:OS::-:':11{.~~~":"
,.=iiii-;~~

ATTENTION!
RIVERFRONT
HONDA
UPPER RT. 7, (iALLIPOLIS
,..

CLOSED
ALL DAY THURSDAYS
Beginning
Thursday, Sept. 17th

An action by George M. Col·
llns. treasurer of Meigs County,
against Russ el l R. Shields, et al.
has been ' dismissed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

BEGINNING KARATE
CLASSES
STARTING SEPT. 15
AT 7:00 P.M.
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE.
Far Information Call:

614-992-6839 or
614-992-5896

r~p:rec~e~d~ed~i~n~de~a~t~h~by~h~e:r~f~lr~s~tJ.~===========-4

BLUE JEAN BALL
'

FRIDAY, SEPT. 18
8-12

• • •
A • •

(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
. Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith · .
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Case dismhosed

CROSSOVER
.

Offer Expires 9123187

Daily stock prices

Weather

Child mnservallon
Middl eport Child Conset·vat ion
Leagu e will meet Thursday, 7: 30
p.m .. at the Ohio Power Office in
Pomeroy. Devotions and tra vel·
ing door priZe will be by Thelma
Simes. Hostesses will be Nancy
Morr is and Ann Colburn.

FEATURING

J..ast Two Weeks

National Park in Utah, and
thunaerstorm winds hit 48 mph at
Grand Junction, Colo.
Scattered, less heavy , rainfall
was repor.ted over North Carol·
in;~, Georgia , and parts of Flor·
ida . Marble-size hail pelted New·
nan and Douglasville. Ga.
Temperatur.s Sunday ranged
from highs I the 60s over the
northern thlr of the natiou from
the P&amp;cific Northwest to New ·
England. to . the 90s over the
southern Plains and the Gulf
Coas t. Parts of south Texas
recorded highs a bQve 100 degrees , while tor the first time
since May, there were no readings above the century mark
over the desert Southwest.

Extended Forecast
Firin
Price
Wednesday through Friday
Am Electric Power .........•... .27 \i,
Chance of showers Wednesda y
AT&amp;T ..... ..................... .. ... .....33
through Friday. Lows will be in
Ash land Oil .. .. ....... ...... .. .. .. .67%
the upper 50s to upper 60s. Highs
Bob Evans Farms .... ..... ........ 20
will be in the mid 70s to mid 80s.
Charming Shoppes .. ... ........ .27~
South Central Ohio
Federal Mogu!.. ....... .. ......... 45%
Mostly sunny today with a high
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ... .... .... .. .... 7214
between 80 a n·d B5. Clear tonight
Heck 's Inc . .. .... ... ....... , ..... ... , 4\i,
with a lot between 55 and 60.
. Lands' End .... .... .. .................. 29
Moslly sunny Tuesda y mornLimited Inc ..... . , .... ...... ........ . .41
ing with increasing-clOudiness in
Multimedia Inc ..... .... .. ........ 70:!4
the afternoon. Highs will be In the
Rax Restaurants ..... .. .... .. .... .4%
mid 80s.
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. .. .. .... .. .. 10~
The probabili! Y of precipita·
Shoney's Inc .............. .. ...... .29 %
tion is near zero today and
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 9%
Retired teachers
tonight and 20 percen t Tuesday.
Wort hing! on Ind ... .. ... .... ... .. .24 Y.
Mei .g s County Ret ired
Winds will be light and varia·
Teachers' Associ at !on will have ble toda y a nd nea r ly calm
(note: Boh Evans Farms stock
split)
a luncheon meeting on Saturday, tonight.
12: 30 p .m. , at the M i d d l e p o r t . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Masonic Temple. If not con·
tacted , make reservallons by
calling 742·2251 by Wednesday .
Mr. Albert Durose. president·
elect of the Ohio Retired
Teach e r s ' , Ass ociation , will
speak.

NEW AMERIClN LEGION
BUILDING
299 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT

.

peninsula.'
Sunday 's hea viest rainfall was
reported in northern New Jers ey
and southeastern New Yor k
state. where roads flooded in
West Milford, N.J., a.nll Phoenicia , N.Y .
Flooding al so was reported
along Tanner Fa lls Creek in
Wayne County, Pa .. and a flood
warning was posted for Ulster
County In New York , where
several small strea ms rose ove r
their banks.
But as the precipitation late r
diminished, flood wa tches posted
throughout the day for New
York, Vermont. New Jersey and
Pe nnsylvania were a llowed to .
'expire.
Thunde rs torms tri ggered hail
the size of golf bails Sunday in
northern Texas, and winds up to
65 mph wer e rl'ported a t Ha s kell.·
Small hail fe ll 3 in ches deep near
the entrance to Bryce Canyon

- - - - - Allllouncements-----

Area deaths ------------·- ______
Charl~y

By CHARLIE McCARTHY
has chan ged his m ind .
UPI Sports Writer
" I didn 't have any qua lms
Alabama 's Bill Curry a nd a bout Andrys iak today," Holt z
David McWilliams of Texa s, sa id " I d id have a lot of qualm s
hired to mold winning progra ms up until 13 daysago, whe n !didn' t
in the tradition of predecessors think we were on the sa m e p age
Be ar Bryant and Darrell Royal , or even the sam e book. The last
see thPir teams headin g in 13 days he rea lly ca m r al ong."
opposite direction s.
Andrys iak completed 11 of l o
Curry Saturday reveled In his passes . for 1:17 yards and a
17th-ranked Cr!msonTide 's 24· 13 touchdown a s the Fi ght ing Iris h
upset vic tory over No . 9 Penn de fens e took t be ba ll· aw a y fr om
State at Universit y Park whil e Mi chigan seve n limes on fumbl es
A few minutes later. Kosar McWilliams' Longhorns fell22·17 r~a~n~d~~~~::=::~_ _ _ _
again was victimized by the to BYU at home. Te xas is 0· 2 for
Saints when safety Brett Maxie the first time since 1967.
In other games Involv ing
bllnds!ded him. Th e bali was sent
squirting through the end zone. ranked team s. No . I Oklahoma
but officials again ruled Kosar in sty mied No. 19 North Carolina
28-0, No. 2 Nebraska tripped No. 3
the grasp.
UCLA 42·33 , No. 4 Auburn
crushed Kan sas 49·0, No. 5. Ohio
State defeated West Virginia
great team effort. The total team 24·3, No. 6 Louisiana State routed
concept was weB -praised by F ullerton State 56· 12, No. 16
Coach Wolfe.
Notre Dame surprised No. 8
Southern made a clean sweep Michigan 26· 7, No. 10 Cle mson
of vo!leybali action in a non- No. 11 Florida State drubbed
league tilt aginst Meigs as the East Carolina 44·3, No. 12 Arka n·
Tornadoes defeated the TVC sas stomped Mississippi 31 ·10,
power Marauders, 1;&gt;.5 and 15·13 No. 14 Arizona State downed
to ream in undefeated.
Di!nols 21· 7, No 15. Tennessee
Hili had nine, Beegle six(with trou,nced Mississippi State 38·10,
fo ur aces)and Arnold five, and No. IS Pittsburgh · routed
Meigs' Sheila Hendrix had 8.
"North Carolina State 34·0. No. 7
SHS bl anked the Meigs' gals Miami and No. 20 Sou thern Cal
15-0,15·0 In the reserve match to were Idle.
raise its record to 4·l .Junle Notre Dame Coach Lou Holtz
Beegle had 11 a nd Che ry l Pape had been uncertain about quar·
eight for the winners .
terback Terry Andrysiak's abil·
Setting up a possthle battle of it y 11nd Michigan Coach Bo
the undefeated and league- Schembech!er was 'confident
championship game with defend· about both his passers for 1987.
!ng SVAC champion Kyger After Notre Dame' s 26·7 victory
Creek, Southern defeated in Ann Arbor, Mlch, at least Holtz
Southwestern in two sets, 15·10
and 15·12.
Angie G rueser had 10 points
including three aces , Becky
Evans' eight points with three
aces and Jennifer Arnold with 7
and five aces.
Arnold also had two blocks a nd
one kill.
53t JACKSON PIKE · AT, l~ WEST
Keili Kessinger paced SWHS
Phana4411·4Ut
w!ih 6 a nd Vl~ki Hammond 5.
lACK T O , . _ MYS t
Southern won the reserve
• SPECIAL PRICE AtJHSSlON's •
~DULTS 13 . 50 • CHILDREN 12 . 50
match 16-14. 15·10 led by Junie
S~T\JADAI 6 SUNOAI ~TJNEES
Beegle with 9 points, Williams .
All SEATS 12 . SD
6.Tracy Norris and Andrea
BARG.ItM NIGHT 1\JESD~Y $2 . 00
Theiss five each.Willlams led
SWHS with 8.
Southern swept the tri-match
1&lt;&gt;-8.15-9 wilh a two-set win ih the
Jr. High match.Renee Russell
had 9,McPhail six and Wolfe 5.
THE SHS Jr. High defeated
Gallipolis 15-3,3·i5,and 15·8 In a
match in which Megan Wolfe
dominated wit h 17 points.
Southern plays Miller on Men·
day, Fort Prye Wednesday, and
Oak Hill Thursday~

Pomeroy-Midd"port, Ohio

....;_h..
ou...
se...
·

6 ~5· 11 2 1.

SHS volleyball results released
. RACINE- In Its second m atch
(lt'the year, Southern dropped the
first game 15·1.then came back to
win the next two of the set 16-14
And 15-8 over TVC contender
Federal Hocking in a non-league
match at Stewart:
Jennifer Arnold turned in a
great performance with 7 'POints
and several key splkes,wh!le
Crystal H!ll and Angie Grueser
had six each.FH was led by
Mindy Hodge with 10 and Lori
Williams' 9.
Federal Hocking won the reserve match 15·9,15-0 as Michelle
~hanks had 14 points. Aimee Hill
had 5 for Southern.
; Team Captain Tammy Holter,
'fracy Beegle, Becky Evans,
9awn Johnson, and Becky Wlnelirenner also turned in good
efforts.
Southern ran Its record to 3·0
and il·O In the SVAC wit h a 15-7
and 15-4 with a win over North
Gallla.
; Jennifer Arnold had 13 points .
~nd four aces and Tracy Beegle
seven points and four aces to lead
the Tornadoes.
; Tina Parsons led North Gallla
With six points.
: SHS won the reserve game 15·6
and 15·5 as Aimee Hill and-Trlcia
Wolfe had -13 and 7 respectively.
: In the Jr1 High Match Megan
Wolfe scored ten points and
Glenda Holter,Heather McPhaiI,and Stacy Theiss four each to
lrad SHS to 15-10,15-7 victories.
Southern ran Its string to 4-0,
~ 0 SVAc with 15-6, 15·12 wins
aver Hannan Trace.
: Arnold again paced the Torna·
does with seven points, four
l(l!es, and two kills.
.
•. Dawn Johnson had six pQ!nts,lhree kills, and Tracy Beegle and
&lt;':cystal Hill five eacp In another

,......--Local briefs-_,

Squad.~ report 12 weekend calLs

l'fl )' ,

Tht •n y ou ,,..,.,/ n P(•,p/(' .'0 l1or1 f...· J 'IS A or
\/A ST E II C 4Rn.
)1ut lrrrl'in jl thot '"pi e(' f' nf pl woti l' •. •·nn Jl il 'l'

Mondaay, September 14, 1987

f'

The Daily Santinei-Page-5

TICKETS AVAILABLE AT DAN'S,
ACE HARDWARE,
RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER .
FUNERAL HOME
AND MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES
'3.00 PER PERSON OR ss.OO COUPLE

EVERYONE INVITED

B.Y.O.B.

GOING BACK·TO
SCHOOL? TAKE A

FRIEND. THE

DAILY SENTINEL
9 MONTHS

0
N
l

y

'$48.75

�,.

.'

.

-· Monday, September 14. 1987
'

By The Bend

The Daily

By Ruth Powers
GLORIA GOLDREICH .. West
to Eden. This engrossing and
~pellblndlng
story of one
women's struggle to forge a new
life in the American West begins
in Amsterdam in 1894, as young
Emma Coen Is betrayed by both
her father and her love.
Left penniless and alone, deter-

mined tocontroi herowndestmy,
she sails to G11lveston, Texas,
where she meets Isaac Lewin, an
embittered survivor of the Russian massacre. They marry and
move to the desert hamlet of
Phoenix, Ariz., where they open
a tent store which thrives and
becomes one of the West's most
successful department stores.
West to Eden chromcles their
life together - their passionate,
troubled marnage, their imagt·
nation and pioneering courage,
and their ultimate triumph.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
THE CARSON ERA: Johnny Carson say he recently
re-enlisted for another tour as "Tonight" show host because
he 's sill! having fun. "I certainly don' t want to retire," says
Carson, who will ce)ebrate his 25th anniversary as host with a
91!-minute pnme-tlme special Oct. 1.
" If you like to work and enjoy what you do, and you retire, It' s
a way to grow old very quickly." The anniversary show wUI
feature clips of all-star "Tonight' ' guests like Jack Benny, Judy
Garland, Groucho Marx and Martin Luther King Jr. but when It
comes time for his final show, Carson says he wants to keep
things low key.
"My final 'Tonight' show wUI not be a star-studded one .
because then It would be a mawkish trlb~te," hE\- says. "I
couldn't handle that. I may just sit there with Ed and Doc. I
think you ought to go out like you came in- low key. After all,
it's just a television show and nothing more than that and I've
never tried to make It any more than that."
"
KISS FROM BOWIE: When it comes to David Bowie, Janet
Ware is the kind who kisses and tells. Ware, 27, caught Bowie's
show in Chapel Hill, N.C., recently and then was hanging around
the stage hoping to get autographs from the band lor her
8-year-old daughter, Cozett e.
Suddenly a member of the !,and climbed over the railing and
handed her an invitation fDf' the post-co ncert part y at a hoteL
She was afraid that the party might be a bit too wild for her
tastes but found out It "wasn't that way at aiL It was set up In a
ballroom," she said. "It was really nice. I met David Bowl_e and
Peter Frampton."

WILLIAM SAF!RE ... Free dom, An epic novel of the Civil
War. William Saflre' s epic Clv II
War novel Is based on the real
people who struggled and bled
for what Southerners hailed ,as
Independence, Northerers con·
demned as disu nion.
Thrpugh the years of defeat
and desperation, Sa lire's Lincoln
looms as' a figure of towering
controversy, as he approaches
the moment of emancipation.
This unforgetable Lincolnpolitically devious, grimly humorous, cruel when necessary,
tortured and above all, Intense ly
purposeful. will surprise many of
his countrymen who revere the
myth without understanding the
man.
Eight years in the research and
writing, Freedom plunges the
reader mto the reality oft he most
critical mbment In the life of our
nation .

TOPS group meets, reports
TOPS Coordinator Kay Sage
will be in Meigs County Saturday
to conduct a workshop at the
Coon Hunters Bhllding on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
TOPS Club ~70 is hosting the 10
a.m to 2-P-11\ workshop and wi ll
provide beverages. Those attend-

ing are to take a sack lunch.
Best losers fo r the past two
weeks have been Nancy Gillespie, Teresa Wood, Bernice Durst
and Mary Snyder, with Virginia
Dean as a runner-up. Mrs.
Snyder and Ms. Durst were
winners of the fruit baskets.

Star Grange has meeting
Annual hayride and weiner will be conducted, on Oct. 3 at 8
r;oast of Star Grange was held p.m the regular meeting with
following the recent meeting at Installation of officers wUI be
the hall during which time held at Star Grange.
.upcoming events were reviewed.
A legislative report on some
A potuck dinner will be held at cur rent Issues was discussed.
6: 30 on Sept. 19 folowed by an The women's activities chairofficers' conference. On Sept. 20 man announced winners of this
at 2 p.m. at the Albany Grange year's contests and announcep
ball, the Athens County Pomona - the contests for the coming year.
Inspection and dinner will be She also reported that Star
held ; on Sept. 25-27 at Friendly Junior Grange will have a
-Hills Camp a lecturers, junior meeting Oct. 3 at 8 p m.
leaders and master workshop

:Past Councilors have meeting
.. Laura Mae Nice and Ma rgaret
Tuttle were hostesses for a
-- recent meetlrtg of the Past
'Councilors Club of Chester Council 323, held at the hall.
•
_, Elizabeth Ha yes, pres ided at
the meeting. She read the IOOth
Psalm and led in the Lord's
Prayer and pledge to the flag
Margaret Amberger had , the
secretary's report, and Mae
McPeek, the treasurer's report
:Members answered roll call by
naming their favorit e color.
· There was a reading by Eliza· beth Hayes, "A merica" , one by

Erma Cleland. "Just for Today " ,
and a poem "Monday's Child" by
Debbie Osbor.ne read by Margaret Tuttle. ·
Games were conducted by
Jean Frederick and Betty Roush.
Sandy White won the door priZe.
Refreshments were served by
the hostesses to those named and
Goldie Frederick, Ada Blsell,
Thelma White, Mary K. Holter,
Lora Damewood, Marcia Keller.
Opeal Hollon, Inzy Newell, Sadie
Trussell, Charlotte Grant. Cora
Beegle, and guests, Bonnie Landers and Sandra White.

Bl!ld winner lacks
hair and humility
MOREHEAD CITY, N.C.
(UPI) - Disdaining "cover-ups,
drugs , plugs and rugs," the
Baldheaded Men of America
gathered all heir annual convention so five female judges could
select the most beautiful bare
dome In the nation. ·
The winner, Steve Burke, 27, of
Greensboro was as lacking in
humility as he was in ha ir
"I think the judges really do
know what they're doing. " said
Burke, tilting his head to display
the lipstick Imprints of a dozen
kisses. "They' ve got good taste.
I'm proud to be bald."
The judges refres hed their
llpsttck frequentl y while sampling 21 different bald pates
Saturday before declar in g
Burke's the most kissable at the
group's 15th annual "Bald Is
Beautiful" convention.
John Capps, a Morehead City
printer, said !le founded the club
- now 18,000 members strong-

In i973 " to eliminate the vanity
thatls associated with the loss of
one's hair and to Inspire pride
a nd dlgnlly In being
baldheaded."
The group holds in disdain such
remedies for baldness as hai r
transplants. miracle drugs and
toupees.
"We In the baldheaded men
don 't ha ve any room for drugs.
plugs or rugs," said Capps.
" There's not a halr's worth of
difference between all those
concoct ion remedies "
As for toupees, Capps said,
" We feel like America's had
enough · cover-ups, and we don't
need to cover up a baldhead."
Ca pps said a select group of
participants will be chosen from
a videotape and fl own to Holly·
wood to appear on the Dolly
Parton ShOw
'Joke' l!ombs out
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (UP I) Two New York City men fac e
possible fed eral charges for

Return home .

WANTED J.5it 2 5 HOMES

PARKEI~B~RIURG

illllacen11nt W'nlow Co.

304-~22-1000

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
1
' WE HAVE HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244 .

.

making what may ha ve been
joking comment s abo~t hijackIng a charter airliner to Puerto
Rico.
in vestigators said the US
attorney would be presented with
documents today to decide
whether t he case should be
presented to a federal grand
jury .
Michael Kast rzak, 25, and .
Joseph Medina. 23. were questioned about comments. mad e
aboard a charter flight bound for
New York, according to Jamr.s
Weller. specia l agl'nt In charge of
the FBI's Las Vegas office.
Some airline employees said
the men may ha ve been joking.
"The two passengers boarded
and apparently as a joke. one of
them asked the chief stewardess
If the plane was going 10 Puerto
Rico , and when she said ·no' , the
passenger said, ·r think It will go
to PuE'rto Rico aft E'r you see the
bomb my colleague-has stuck to
his chest,"' Key Airlines dls · patChE'r Don Anderson said.

Siamese twins moving slowly

Community calendar

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Ware said she spotted Bowie In the ballroom and walked right
up to him. " ! said, 'I came all the way from Decatur, Tenn.. to
see you, " ' she said. " He reached over and he hugged me and I
kissed him. He said, 'I'm so glad you came. Enjoy the party,' In
that British accent, you know. It thrilled me."
HAMMER HOME FOR DOCUMENTS: Armand Hammer,
the Industrialist and citizen diplomat , plans to donate his
personal papers to the Library of Congress. The Hammer
collection will Include correspondence and personal papers
from his career In business, the arts and public service, along
with !ilms and recordings documenting his contacts with world
leaders.
A special exhibit Is planned for Hammer's 90th bir thday next
May 21. "Armand Hammer's life is a brilliant American saga of
ent erprise, energy and Imagination," said Daniel J. Boors tin,
the librarian of Congress. "His career shows us, too, the role
that leaders in our nation of nations can play In bringing the
world together. All future Americans and future historians wut
be grateful to Dr. Hammer for letting them share his struggles.
hopes and triumphs.'' Hammer currently Is on a business trip In
China.
GLI MPSES: The Constit ution will get star treatment
Thursday at Federal Hall In New York. Folks like James Earl
,Jones, Judy Collins, Grer;ory Hines, Tony Randall, Kathleen
Turner, Joanne Woodward, Christopher Reeve and basketball
S!ar BernlU'd KJnr; will take part in a day long public reading as
part of the Constitution's bicentenniaL The reading Is being
sponsored by People for the American Way, the group founded
by TV's Norman Lear, who also will read.

Quirks in the news_
-. ________

BALTIMORE IUP! ) - Sia- surgery began Sept. 5, they
mese twins who were surgically
shared a large mass of skull bone
separated more than a week ago
and a major VE'in. but their brains
began st lrrlng from a chemically
were completely separate.
Induced coma by mov ing their
A team of 70 doctors, nurses
arms and legs , but doctors said
and technicians participated In
the big test comes In several days
the 22-hour operation to separate
when the boys are fully awake.
them . - During the procedure,
"The process of waking them doctors reduced the twins ' body
up from the coma wIll allow temperature and induced cardoctors for the first time to see If diac arrest to reduce blood loss
there are any neurological prob- and protect brain tissuE's.
MONDA¥
meets Monday, 7 p m., elemen- lems." said Dr. Randall Wetzell,
Doctors placed the twins In the
LONG BOTTOJI,1 - The Py- tary school.
director of pediatric anesthesiol- artificial coma after surgery last
thian Sisters, Temple 1615, will
ogy at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Sunday to reduce stress on their
meet at the Long Bottom ComBEDFORD TWP - Bedford
Doctors began bringing 7· brains, which in Benjamln'scase
munity Building, Monda y, 7 30 township trustees mee t Monday, month-old Patrick and Benjamin
was severely swollen.
']l.m .
7 p.m .. town hall.
Binder out of a coma during the
Wetzell said doctors will not be
weekend by reducmg their bar- able to tell how· Isuccessful
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
TUESDAY
biturate dosage, hospital spokes- surgery was until the twins are
International Order of Job's
MIDDLEPORT- Group 1 and woman Joann Rogers said Sun- fully awakened, which will likely
Daughters, meets Monda y night 11 and the Women's Association day. She was not able to say take several days.
at the Middleport Masonic Tern- of the First Presbyterian exactly when the process began.
II the Infants appear to have
' pie, 7:30p.m.
Church, Middleport, will hold a
By Sunday afternoon, Rogers trouble functioning on their own,
potluck supper Tuesday, 6:30 said the West German twins, who Wetzell said, doctors would reMIDDLEPORT -A meeting to p.m. at the ~hurch. All three remained In critical condition, sume
administering barbitu·finalize Middleport Block Party groups wUI have meetings follow- were moving for the first time
rates
and
the twins would be
plans will be held Monday, Sept. Ing the supper.
since their separation .
placed
back
Into a coma.
14, 6 p.m .. at Drs . Mathews' and
"They are moving their arms
Kennedy 's office, Second St., Reunion
and legs a bit. I think this Is
Middleport.
RUTLAND - The annual exactly what doctors anttci·
reunion of the Charles Reed pated," she said . "They are very
POMEROY - DA V meets Hysell and Oscar_Hysell families- careful not to speculate what this
Mr. and Mrs. David B. Sayre of
Monday, 7 p.m.
will be held September 20 at the means, however, because It Is Antiquity have returned from a
Forest Acres Park near Rutland. really too early to tell. "
three day trip to Nashville, Tenn.
RACINE -Racine PTO meets
Reunion
With
the
arm
and
leg
move- They stayed at the Opryland
Monday, 7 p.m'. at school.
CHESTER - Moore reunion,
ment, the Binder twins, for the · Hotel and highlights o! their trip
Sept. 20. Rodney Keller Farm,
first time since surgery, were Included the Grand Ole Opry
-- MIDDLEPORT - Health Unl· Chester.
functioning on their own. Joined Show and the Boots Randolph
ted methodist Women meet Monat the back of the head until the Show.
day, 7:30 p m.
Tournament
MIDDLEpORT - Middleport
Industry D&amp;E men's slow pitch
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
softball tournament wUI be Sept.
Church of Christ In Christian
19 and 20. Entry fee $65 and two
Union revival is Monday through
26 qualified homeownere in the general area will be givballs. Call 992-2576 or 992-6224.
Sun~ay . Speakers and s ingers
en th~ ~pportunity of having inatalled In their home
vary nightly. Services 7:30 p.m .
A~ertca • moat up to date custom-made replacement
Family organizing
~tndowsl!t a very spaciallo'!" coatfor their participation
BROOKINGS, Ore. - DesROCK SPRINGS - Miracle
m
thle llm1ted offer. Thle wmdow is better than alumi· Dellverence Ten Revival Is Mon- cendants of Johyn Bamhllse of
num,
st~onger than vinyl, certified by archltecta, and, al·
day through Sept. 30, Meigs Culpepper County, Va., are form though
1t has the beauty of wood, ia not made of it. So, if
Fairgrounds. Evangelist Charles Ing the Hlsle·Hysell Genealogy
you are tired of tho~a dirty old wlndowa that stick, slip
Group. For information, contact
Spence. Services are 7:30 p.m.
and
are hard to operata, taka advantage of thie offer
Corinne Hisel , 10011 Easy Manor,
now.
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO Brookings, Ore., 97415.
81

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. h1ce

Sentin~l

Peopkmthenews--~------------------~

Collect

1002 lroadway Ave., Parker.urg, WV 26101

i---~vfi~M~f~r~-ouu-roRilioows~o-1

I
I
I

l
I
I

WOULD LIKE IIORE INFORMATION.

NAME

l

ADDRESS

CITY

I
I
I

H.

YOUR HOME W1LL BE THE IHOW"-ACE OF YOUR Nt!IOHBORHOOD
AND WE WILLMAK! fT WORTH YOUR WHILE: IF WE CAN UIE YOUII HO.MI.

I
I
I

~----------------------------·

Welzell said before the s urgery
the twins had Identifiable separate personalities, but doctors do
not know what course their
recoveries will take.
" They h'a ve large ly responded
In similar fashions, but they are
two Individual personalities and
they have continued to ha ve
Individual problems," he sa id.

The Incident delayed 124 pas
se ngE&gt;rs several hours ~·rlday
night while Key Airlines Flight
130 from Las Vegas to New York
was searched for explosives by
federatagents and bomb sniffing
doi(S . No explosives were round
Weller said I he men were held
at the Clark Cou nty DPtentlon
Ce nter Friday night and released
several hours later.

Or Wntt Da•IIY Stnhnel CluSthtd Dtpt .
Ill Colltt Sl , Palllltoy, Olllo 4S169

'

All lnt.areeted parttee
will be Slten t.n opportunity to be heard. Further lnformt.tton may be
obtt.tnl&lt;1 by contacting
the Commlaaton.
THE PO'liLIC UTII.1TIE8
COlDUSSION 01" OHIO
By: N&amp;noy L. Wolpe,
Secretary

S•••lnf U.S.

New Super "FatBuster"
Lose Weight - No Dieting
SALT LAKE CITY, UT • An
amazJna new super u FatBuster"
pill tra&lt;lemarked Cal Stop ' has
recently been perfected that rrponedly "guaranten" weiaht losses of
10, 20, 50 pounds or more while
allawing you to "eat as much as you
want of your favorite foods until you
achieve your ideal wei&amp;ht 111d figure!"
CaiStop, the FatBuater, docs Ill
the work with NO SIITVItion "diet
menus" 10 follow, NO Cllorie
counting, NO exercise and NO
hunJtr pangs. 1be FatBuster is
absolutely safe. It---- contains no
stimulants or amphe11mines. No
harmful side effectS have ~n
rrponed.
Sdeatitlc:ally Proven
In a carefuUr controlled
"double-blind" chniCII study,
doctors found that every sitllle
penon who took the FatBuster
formulltion lost 1 subsllntill
amount of weight. These drallllltic
results have been scientifiatlly
and are published in the
fr'!:!!~~~- Britult [Hntlll of
as follows: 'Bodyweifhl
·
reduced dur1111
the
even though r•tlentl
wen apec:lflc:ally aakc not to
alter their dietary hablla."
Doctor Endoned
Dr. j.B. Dorius, a public health
M.D., states: "The FatBuster
bonds with food preventina
abtorption of 1 substantial portion
of the calories, forcina the body to
bum fat, Jlab and cellulite for
energy." Now you can eat mel laic
weight autollllltically, without
willpower and without dietina! No
matter how 1111ny times you have
tried to lose weight and faiicd
bcforr, you will rrach your weiaht
loss goal with the FatBustcr. It's
guaranteed!
Herr are some: $amplcs of the

CRAns
PATTERNS

Sind to:

•

lloadollllll

The Daily Sentinel
Public Notice

i24 Notthlm Blvd., Woodlldt,

NY t t 377. Prtnt Nlme, Addtw,
l4t, SID, l'ltttm ltumOir.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

glowq repom of wy and fast
wci&amp;ht
loss
from
formerly
ovcrweiaht people:
"llos1 60 lbs. with rill FarBusr.,,
Y011 art rill pearm."
Mr&gt;. j.C.A., Loo An&amp;et&lt;s, CA
"Y011r prodU&lt;r u IM llllly Ofttlilar's
worlud for ""· ANd btlievt ,.. l'w
1rild - Y· W11h 1/N Fa1hluur, /lost
Jl potmd1 Ull'tltour d#lirrt!"
Mn. E C., Lauderdlle, MS
"TIN Fadlrurtr itltrrific! l'w losr
51 lbs. and I'"' mlllosiJ!l. Ewryont
says lloo/r btu., rilaN lllaw in ytars.
I /ttl great and how /tad rso sitlt
tffws. Mr. R G., Lo111 Beoch, CA
"I loll U lbs. ,,. 11 d4ys with tht
FatBullrr."
Mn M.L.W., }lld&lt;sonvtlle, TX
"I lost 19 lbs. with tiN Fadlr;sttr.
Now "'Y husband dOtm 't W&lt;JIIt , . out
of his fithr. " Mn. C H., Carmi JL
"Thty said I was roo fat to b. a
flight aumdant, but with tht
FatBusrtr l'vt loll 41 lbs. and
achitwd "'Y goal!"
Ms R.B., Los Vqas, NV
Bonllll Free Gift
Join the group of happy wei&amp;ht
losers. Place your order now. If you
are liOl completely satisfied with the
thinner "new you" sim~ly murn
the empty container within 30 days
for a fUll refund of your entirr purclwe price. No questiona lliled.
You aiD order a 3 week supply of
these rrnwkablc pills for S24.9S or
order a 6 .week supply for S39.95
(plus 53.00 for shipl'inl lrul han·
dlina) and we'U send you a one
piece quanz diailll desk clock, ruler
mel llllpifyina llua • • 520.00'
value • •baolutely free!
To order simply call FatBuster •
24 hours a day, 7 days a wce1t TOLL
FREE l-800-f5J-t840, and usc your
VISA or MasterCard. FatBuater
wiU also accept C.O.D. orders bver
the phone.
"'1917

AN TIQUES
Buy OR SELL

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
wllen you order one of the
$2.95 books listed below.
111-Halrpln Crocllet
11 !;-Easy Ripple Crochet
117-Art ot Needlepoint
135-0olls and Clotlles
Add $1 .05 Ia&lt;

pos~ldfng

Aocbpnngt ' Ro•d.

11

Pom-

i91t4. 21. 28. 3tc

Card of Thanke

6

Happy Ads

4t0: Butterfly chair set.
Bacl&lt; (t2 x 16 ln.) has
lacy pineapple design
repeated In arm rests (7 x
9 in.). Use No 30 cotton.
2

In Memoriam
In Loving Memory
of REV. LEROY
HIETT who passed
away September

14, 1967.
Sadly missed but
not forgotten by
daughter,
son-in-law and
grandeon.
Mr. and Mre. Phil
Wiae and Don

Pomeroy

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your
Phone Billa Here

t6141 991-6SSO

985-4141

IIIDINCI ,HONI

G. .Ul COIIJUCTOIS

1-20-1 litO

SYRACUSf, OHIO

d

A/ C Service

SIDING CO.

All MeJOr • Minor
Repairs

Now Homes luilt

C.rtKied Mecho01iclt

CAll 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

" Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
ar 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

~icttniOtd

JANET YENOY

YVONNE !ClU I
Bndal Registry and
most complete line of
Wedding Flowers and
Accessories in this area

LaSALLE GALLERY
Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

4-22-87-lfn

Let Us Fence 'f u In

: ·H1 ~Jf'f&gt;.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

~ornetl

Farm Equipment

N1111 IWI"' H.., ,.,.
KAREN FA&lt;fMYER

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

Ind. hcCHttin t (aMuhanl

39S04 lrodbu•z•d.
Middttport, Oh. 5760
16141 "2-5751

PARTS and SERVICE

8-24-1 mo.

614-843-5248
REASONABlE · REliABLE
8-20-'86 tfn

-~I. (!nAND, .Ill.
991··191
JEA~ TRU55EU ............ 949-%6.0

DOni TURNER ....... . 992-5692
TRACY tltfflE .............. 949 -3010
OIFKI ........ , ........ 992 -?259

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl &amp; Alurp . S tding

PARTS • SEIVICE

Complete Gunor Work

Repairs on All Makes

Complete Remodeling

Transa~tle Repairs-

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons and remodeling
Rooftng and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrtcal
work
(Free Est1matesJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

4 15-'86 lc

locoiH llolfwoy htwoet1
It . 7 and Iathan

HRS · tZ ·00 -6 ·00
Monday-Sa1urday
CLOSED SUNDAY

Ph. 949·2969

BUY- SELL- TRADE

Male kitten. wtme w1th orange
spots, to giveeway to good
home Call 614 ·446 . 3897
Male German Shttpherd dog
Very good with c;llildren. Call

614-446·0997.

Germtn St'lepherd Colhemix All
thou Friendly 614-992-2735
To

Gi~o~e

Away- K1tten1 2 black

&amp; white, 7 weaks old. Litter

trained. Cell 304-675-7242.

WANTED TO BUY: Used wood
• coal heaters. SWIIin't Furm·
ture. 3rd, &amp; Ohn St. Oalllpolia.
CIII814-.U6-3169
Wanted. Octog8n flah lllnk 20
gal. or more. C•ll 814-446-

0922 .

6

Lost and Found

Found On Vmton Ave• Male,
white dog, with black. Hound
dog face Approx . 30 lbs. Pickup
•
at dog pound
lost Nylon tri-fold wallet Navy
Upp11r River Ad Contalnl impor·
tent document. Ke~ money.

Coli 114-317-n46

LOST - Male Be1gle short·
legged, 1tocky, named "&amp;o··.
Thursdey between Lock 11 Road
and 3 M•le Road, near Redmond
Ridge Reward. 304-676-2838

7

Yard Sale

-----·Ganrp-ons- ··--..
&amp; Vicinity
Mon !I Tues., 9 - 5 156 Garfield
Ext Home intenor, coffee table,
end t1bl". clothing. lots more.
6 FamityYard Sale. Mon• Tues.
Sept. 14 &amp; 15. 2 mil• out
B•dweii·Rodney Ad turn on to
Fa1rview Rd 1 at house on left.
Gills. boys. gnts -ltldiesclothmg.
lots of hems to numerou• to
mention

---- ·-Pom&amp;ro·.;------··---

Moving Stle: 2 •awmg machines; houtehold misc. item•.
rotot1llen. riding lawn mower,
toolt, lots of mise Sterttng
Fnday till? Orville Fielder. 1 mtle
out 01hel Road off Sand Hill

B

Public Sale
8t Auction

Trantlllluloa.
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

~

Now Open

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992--6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

6-17-tfc

tin

v.w.

OPEN FOR

t

PARTS

ANN'S
Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items,

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

Costume Jewelry,
Action To~s. Musrcal
Toys &amp; Trtnket BoKes

Open tO A.M. to 4 P.M.
bv

Catlj614) 992-7204
Rotai~

8-ll-1 mo.-pd.

8-10·1 mo P&lt;'

•'

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. ¥We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. ¥We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

\ DAllY 10 AM-6 PM
MONDAY thru SATURDAY
located at Carner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
Porntroy

Purchasing all
types of
no'n-ferrous scrap
#1 Copper
'
Currant 53¢ lb .
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheats
40¢ lb.
Aluminum Cane
34¢ lb.

!I-ll· I mo.

R1ck Pear1on Aucl1oneer li·
cen1ed In Ohio and W•t Virgi·
ma Euete, antique, farm, liquidation sales. 304·7r3 · 57B6
SA LEI 15th to 2-4th Sept~ber ·
All But Frldey Old toolt tnd
furniture. Rout• 2:. Allhton, W.
Va., 1 mil• out ...nnen High
School Road. Watch for aignt.

304-571-2216.
9

992-3471.

Wanted to buy. 11andlng tlmbtr.
C1ll AI TrOmm at 014· 742·

2328

Wanted to buy: acrtp steel and
metalt Rlder1 Satvtge 814·

992-5468

AndquH, llilver colna, gold
ringa, fumiture. old gunt, com·
pl..• hou..ttold, Etta... Cath
paid. Call Irion Loo. 11•·311-

~

ill)l)llyi!IPII1

11

Help Wanted

"Hiring! Government jobs· your
$1 B.OOO-t68.000 Call
102-838-8886 . Ext . 606 " .
AVON · Sell Avon for Chrtstmas
Make40 percent Cal1614-4463368
Easy teleptlone work at home.
Excallent income. For info. call
504·649· 7922.ut.T -313 .
Person for general farm work &amp;
m•lkmg assistant. Mu1t have
1ound family' hfe &amp; no drinking
Benefits, depend on experience
Sa attitude. Repty with 3 ref•enCH to Box T·905, care of the
Gallipolis Daily Tr~bune, 826
Third Ave.. Gallipolis. OH
45631 .
Onver ' a Wanted Male or
lemal• mu1t be 21 yrs old and
hcwe Chauffeur llcenu Call
814-992· 2321
Dental ISsiunt for G111ipoh1
area otfictt Des~re e~~openenced
Of trained per1on but Will also
cons1der otttan Reply to Sox
909, c / o Gallipolis Oaity Trtb·
une, 825 lrd Ave Gallipolis,
Ohio 46831

Jim's Odd Job S•vice- pain1ing,
carpenter work. 1undeck. siding.
roofing . Ctlllli14-379-2418
Quality roofing Free est., 110_.
IqUiri C011t11ct Randy at 814·
448-6967.
Want to do ligflt hou"cl..,irlg
in Galljpolit .,... Celli 1 4 -448·
7411 .
Can do light hauhng and roofing
ReuonJble reus Marion
Snider 614-949· 2629.
Teachers Wife with 4 year old
ch1ld will baby sit in her home
New H1ven. 304-B82-3776

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO recommends that you
do business With people you
know , and NOi to send money
through the mail until you hi'Vs
Investigated the offering.
..
AAA· SaiH R•prel.· Gallia and
Me1g1 County Ideal lor hom•
maken Sell AAA memberships
to your fr~ands , neighbor~ .
relatives - Everyone needs onel
Great opportunity to work with
great people sellmg a great
product 1nd make a grut INing
Vou·11 love th1s JOb Send a
resume or work h11tory to AAA
-The Auto Club of Southeastern
Ohio, 710 Wallar St. Port•mouth, Ohio 45652 . Attn , Bob
Bates.

Rea I Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Will help finance or land con·
tract 10 vr old house. 3 a,..
Patrio1 V1llage. Call 814-446-

1340, 446-3a70

'

4 BR , fireplace, full basement. 3
m1 so. of Gallipolts $34,900
Call Oayl-614-446-1616, after
5 ·00· 446-1244

Now accepting application•·
Subway Sandwich• a. Salada303 Upper River Rd. Mon - Fri
10.00 AM·4.00 PM . Apply m
per1on. Management posit•on
open

3 br ,-ft nished basement ,
8lec1;r1c-wood heat, applil:ancn,
garage Appraiaed at $64,000
Sale $49.900. Call 614·446·
3040.
.

Needed: Dental H'(gentist lor •
people or1entad lligh qualhy
dental office S11nd complete
rnume to DtiiV Sentinel Box
729-K Pomeroy, Ohio.

Like new , maintenance free. 2
br ranch. fully carpeted 1 6 min
to Galhpohs or M&amp;rcerv1lle Call
614-256· 8200
'
4 room house for sale or rafl._t.

We need 1 ctraer minded people
oriented person to work tn a high
quality dental off1ce The perfect
job for the right person Ple..e
send complete resume to Oatly
Sentinel Box 729-K, PomafOy,
Ohto.

Government Homea from 11. (U
rep11r) Delinquent tak property.
Repos111ss•ons. Call 805-687·
6000 Ext GH -9806 for cu"ant
repo list

Government Job1. $16,040·
169,230 yr Now h~rtng Call
805· 6B7· 6000 Ext R-9805 for
current federal list
Friendly Home Parttes hal openIngs for mantger• and dealers in
your •rei Urgat line In party
plan -free kit-brand new Chrilt·
mas catalog-toy, g1ft, and home
decor catalog. Over 800 item1.
Top commiSSIOn and hostess
g•fts·c:all for free catalog 1 -800·

Co11814-441-2666.

Government Homes for $1 .00.
{u Repair) Buy direct! Repa. a"d
Tax •••zed propertt... Calltod-v
for factsl 1-618-469·3646 Ekt.
H1 6221toll refundable} 24 hrs .
6 room hoo se, two baths, new
roof Nusash windows. garage
246 N. Fourth Ave .. Mkldleport.
Make offer, 614-247· 4872 or
614·247-2532 .
'

227-1610.-

Hand1 Man Spec:11l· 6 room and
bettt, att1c. basement 1 1 0 Stata
St Pnca neg Call 614-992·
3725.

Two openings available in your
area. Candle party plan. Good
quality m•chtndlle, r...onebly
priced Free kit, free auppllea No
collecting. No delivenH. For
mterview or party Call614-986·
4171

4 bedroom, 11/J baths, baY..
menl, cental air. 2 car gara911.
Lynn St. New Haven. 304-8822956.

Park Custodian for Fort Buffington Island pirk on SA 124 at
Portland, Ohio Year round
caretaker. yearly contract. Application deadline 10·02-87
Con ..ct Ohio Hiltoncal Soctety ,
19B5 Velma Ave., Columbus,
Oh . 43211. Att Steve Wolfe.

61•·297-2631

AVOW · All area• Call Mar~lyn
Weaver 304·882·2846
A N eppltcations now being
accepted for full time poaitlon,
Ple...nt Valley Nursing Care
C•nter. apply personnel off1ce
Pl..sant V1lley Ho1p, 304· 876-

4340. AA -EOE.

AVON · All areas Call Shirley
Speers. 304-876· 1429
"HIRING! Government jobs ·
your area t16 ,000 · 868,000
Call (802) 838 -8885 EXT
1203 "

REPS

NEEDED

for bu1inns eccount1. FullTime. t80.000·t80.000-Part·
T1me. I 1 2.000· t1 8.000-No
Selling, rep ..t business. Set
your own ttours Tralnmg pro·
vided C1ll 1·612· 938-6870 ,
M· F. Bam to 5pm (Central
Standard Time).
Bookkeeper wanted H S grad
with some computttr experience
preferred. Flexible hours posai·
~e . lnqu1re at Southam s ..tea
1619 Kanawlla St. Pt. Ple..anl
Ac~epting b1ds for removel of
house. tree•. and 2 small butld·
ings Payment on completion
Proof of tnsuranee required
lnqutre at Southern Stites 1519
Kanawha St. Pt Pta... nt, M-F.

8-6

Situations
Wanted

Will care for persons with
nervoua or mental disorders and
lllderly m my private home. Eli.m
Home, Middleport, Ottlo 61 4 ·

992-6873

1 8 Wanted to Do
Give piano and organ l•eons In
my home ta bavlnn••· ad·
venced student a and aduh•. AIH
teectt chording end trtnspaalng.
If interested, c ..l 61 •· 112 -

&amp;403.

Grovers Lawn Mower Repair.
Will pick up and dtllwr. Good
used mowers fM ul•. Call
114· 742- 2393 or 814·742·

3091 .

Hysell's uud can Rutlend In
novr doing cer body work.
painting and ciNn· up. Calll14·

7U·311• .

P..nttng hOUMI, root., b•n•.
mobile home root.. Free Ettlmatet. Aeaeonllble Rat•. 304·

171-2211.

Wanted fill dirt II ell times.

1ft my homo, Mondoy t1uu Fltdoy, coil 3o•-n3.
5740 efter 2:00.

hby

3CM·I7&amp;-&amp;121

&amp;U-317-7&amp;81.

S~:r v H;es

1011.

P~on•

!loll

Ctsh reg1ster w1nted in perfect
condition Cell 30•·676-1401 .

Wanted To Buy

Buying dally gold, silver coins,
ring• , Jewelry, ttertlng ware, old
coins. large currency. Top. pncel Ed Burkett hrber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 814.

Will do baby lining in my home

Wanted to buy Standing timber.
Calll14-379-2768

K1ttent 304-676-6781

&amp; Vicinity
.............. .......... ··-·······

4·16-86-tln

~ licensed Clinical Audio,logist

REPAIR

Whotouto &amp;

Wooden Pallets on F1rst-come,
First-serve basis - lnqutre in
par1on at Galhpohl Daily Trib·
une Ofttce, 826 Ttmd Ave
Gallipolis

.... ·--p·t-Plea saii·t·- ·--·

Day or Night

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Mon. thru Fri. or
Appointment

6 wk old puppn!ls, wormed. Call
614-256 -1688

Sept. 16. 1J~ mile off Rt 78ypast
on fU . 124 . 9 .00-3;00. Girls
clothe•. coatt. toyt, misc. Rain
cancels

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds · Interpreting SeJVices

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

324 E. llaln St.
Behind City

Junk Auto's with or without
motor• . Ctll614· 388-1303.

12

Roger Hysell ·
Garage
~Ito

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Black female dog. part cocker
1paniel Call614-266·1911 af·
ter 4 00 pm

Seneor Citizen's Center s.ra.
Mulberry Hetghts, Sept 16·
18th, 9-4 p .m Clothing all
si.ues. houlehold lterrts. small
,appllancH, collectibles. jewelry,
Including Sarah Co\lentry

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1-614-84-3-5425

614-446-7904

Sept 14 15. and 16 10:00·
6.00 pm. Househokl items.
clothing. etc . XXXL shlrtL
48x30 trouaers . Wilma H. C.uto,
Portl1nd

BISSELL
BUILDERS

"AI Reosonablo Pri&lt;es"

Pretty 1ft grown kitten· litter
trained always been 1n11de Call

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Roofing of All Types
Worked in Home Area
2S Yton
FREE ESTIMATES
CAll

Old pl..,er upright p1ano. Call
614-446-1464

YOUNG'S

4 5 1fc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALl ENGINE
CENTER

Giveaway

1-3-'86 tfc

Installation

992-3410

Alllt11kt1

Farm Equl~"'"''
Parte &amp; Ser11lee

Satellite Sales

SERVICE
985-3561

np'ftl'f•~~~ .

Dealer

· TYs, Antennas
S~rvice
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

John Deere,

New Holland, lush Hog

J.R.'s REPAIRS

APPLIANCE

KEN'S
A tNia ll•• dtcorttltg

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

FENCE COMPANY

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CAL~!

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE US£)

KOUSTON

949-2263
or 949-2168

~AR~

BISSELL

Molt Foreign •nd
Do mastic Veh ic le•

Conillod

5~111Y

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 742-2027

SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BlOWN IN
INSULA nON

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

NIASE

BASK!l WEAVING
STENCiliNG ClASSES

llvtn g room dmmg are a and

RUTLAND - Ntce'IO year
old bnck ranch house in a
good location. Over 1 acre of
gtound With 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, lull basement, large
patio, eqUipped kit chen,
. many other mce features
MA~E OFFER $39,900

s.tu Mgr., Plu1 l•sociotH
lnfor~~~ation 1111111 lrodtUrt
16141992-llllor 992-SLSO
Midditport ·Athen•· Porhmouth
1· 1·-1- pd

4

51 1/ lln

old as owners were tran s·

Kt NGSBURY ROAD - Approx 143 acre horse barn
House needs repa;r, barn ,
horse corral, free gas to
house, 3 011 and gas wells
av1labte for purchase (nol
producmg at present t1mel
All mmerals. Ask for deta~ s
on wells.
PRICE REDUCED $47,500

C. F. Scott, Mar., R. CrtmeaM field

11•·«1-3172
TOP CASH poid lo1 '83 modol
•nd newer used C8fl . Smith
Bulc:lt·Pontloc, 1911 Eeet .. n
Avo .. Golllpolla Cell 61•·«12282

~rea.

RESt() f.NT IAL I COMMER CIAl

"'••• Day or lwenln

16141

HERE tl IS! - Your home m
the country, over 21acres ol
ground, plus a 2 story larm
house with 3 bedrooms,
cellar, garden area, shed
and woodburner for extra
heat
WANT $29.500

sat. Completely elimmates
~~~.:nd of tha month lillsur-

Absolutly no t.unting. No ucep·
tlons M any lime on Eber Roush
Farm in Syrac:uae, Ohto M•rjorle Dunt. owner

FREE ESTIMATES

REFERENCES

"-"'• - IUiiNm ,HONE

SYRACUSE - Remodeled
two story home. Includes
3·4 bedrooms, l 'h baths
basement, garage and and
older barn on appro!lmately
I acre of ground
PRICED TO SELL
AT $39,900

that allows Dolly Ooola to bo

o.... Jo~neo~

3 Announcements

ACCENT

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOfiNG •GENERAl
REMOOHING &amp;
REPAIRS

W• Carry flahing Supplia•

a b1g level lot Must see!
$38,500

Cond Hour• or Min . ofoper·
ating tlma v ..uabla Data

llll

An nuu nee me nts

(304) 675-4340

CHISM, OHIG

Middlepo•l, Ohio 4S7 60

PRICE REDUCED - RUTLAND - Avery ueat, mce
ran ch style horne w1th
central a ~r . gar age, low
ulthlte~ front and tear
porch, 3 bed rooms, large

Commerei.t u M Monitors
to display Furnace and A1r

EAGLES CLUB· POMERO'I',OHIO
THURS., 1 P.M
.·EB 6:4S
SUit, 2 P.M.-EB 1:~

NEW -REPAIR

CONTRACTING

New LDC.ation:
I U North Soconol

!erred. You l1n1sh landscapmg and decks Call lor an
appointm ent to see thts one'
Reali) N1ce!
ASKING $45,000

Manufacture end Sal• of
Recording an~ Control In·
ltr~ments lor Home and

Russ MOORE
99 2.. 2S26

FREE WEDOtNG CONSilTANT

MARCUM

NEW LISTING - SOUTHERN DISTRICT - Would
you entoy a ~ 6" •64 " Nashua
doublew1de 'hom e wtt h ~
b•ths. 3 b~ roo ms. all
electr~c, central arr, eal·tn
l1tchen w/ slyhght. lorma l
dlll mg room. hvm g 1oom
w1th cathed ial ce11ing,
garden tub off master
bedtoom. located on approx
22 acres ol wooded land?
Th1s home IS only 2 month s

S

HOUAS: Tut.-Wed..Fri.
11 a.m. 10 7 p.m.
Su nday: 1 P· m•• 7 p' m'
By Chance or Appeintment

Pleasant Valley Hospital
and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center are seeking highly
motivated registered nurses
for full and part-time employment. Current benefits include: medical and dental insurance, retirement plan, life
insurance, shift premium pay.
malpractice insurance, tuition
reimbursement and more.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Val ley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
West Virginia, for more information.

Business Services

E M1 inlo.IOII!
POMEROY, 0 .
992-2259

eMe

Help Wanted

AA/ EOE

C

1124 East Main St.

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES

woo ap·

The family of Roy
McCool and Syville
McCool and Atecia
Worner wish to thank
everyone who sent
cards, flowers and
especially for your
kind worde during
the lou of our father,
mother and aunt .
Donna and Fred
Wittiamaon &amp; !amity
Bill McCool and
Children

·

BINGO

pointed Executor of the •• ·
t1te of Je11ie l Saunders.
deceated, late of 38282
Rockaprlngt Road. Pom eroy, Ohio 46769 .
Roben E . Buck,
Probate Judge
lena K Netaelroad, Clerk

1

(OiiStlllt _.-01 SY!TfMS
U I - h St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760

Rl'vert'ne Antt'ques

rold H. Blackston. 36160

eroy, Ohio 45769,

uNd car,.
Jim Mink Chw ·Oidt Inc.

8-24-87-1 mo

On September 8, 1987. ifl
the Meigs County Probllt
Coun, Case No. 26677, Ha·

The Public Utllmea Comm.tsslon of Ohio hu toet
for pubilo hearing C&amp;lle
No. 87-102-EL-BFC. lo
retlew the fuel procurement practloee and
pollotoe or Columbua and
Southern Ohio Elecl.rto
Company, the operation
of lt.a Electric Fuel Com ·
ponent, and relat:ed matt.are. Thle hearing 1a
eohl&lt;1ull&lt;1 to begin at
10:00 a.m. on September
21. 1987 at the olftoea of
the Publlo UtUitlell Commioeton, 180 Eut Broad
Street. Columbua, OhJo

ADVERTISEMENT

Dlel Pill

Each panern $3.25 plus

75¢ JIO'ilagelhandhng
(N Y . r8Siden~ atld sales tax.)

LEGAL NOTICE

43~66·0873 .

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

~~~~~--~--~~-~~~--~----~~~~~~~
The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992-2156
Business Services :.pov~=:~.::::::,..., 18 wanted to Do

Monday, September 14, 1987
Page- 6

.

Meigs BookView

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

o~tlftg

Leon, M81on County tor sale by
owner beeutiful ranch home on
20 acres Small batn, PDild.
good hunting, horselovets para·
di ... 304-458-1542
2 or 3 bedrooms, double lot.
close to schools and storM

$18.000 oo. 3CM-676-7e33

Country Cuatom Stone rancher.
50 rollmg acres . Mettculou• first
owner upkeep. F1raplaca. central
air, 3 br, 1 Y2 battt1, patio
courtyard, man1cured lawn,
barn, 48x64 maca! bid and
more Call Sharon Stevens 562~
2216 or Century 21 Shamrock
7&amp;7· 6989 Leon eraa, Rt 62.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 976 Buddy Mob1le Home
1 4w.66 with 1 Ox32 additi9n
including woodburner Owners
moved-must sell . Beat offer Cell
614-446-8427 alter 6.30 PM
1986 Clayton Newport mobile
home 2 BR , bay wmdow fl"l
kitctten Oishwash•, underpmning Call 614 · 388 -9013 .
$16,000. Negotiable
2 Mobile homes· 1 acre lot ·2
mtlea from Hannan Traee
Schools. Rural watet, black top
road Call 614·266·6343, '
1974 Concord 3 br, 14x70.
total elej:: • new carpet, extra
nice &amp;8960 Call 61 4· 4460175
RepoSiesaad Mobile Homes We
hiWe'em. we tinance'am E••m·
pie: 1984 Clavton 14x70, thre&amp;
bedroom. 1 % bath. Total electric , very good condition. $500
down. payments al $21 0 per
monttt 800-828 · 0762
1977 Fairmont Bayvnilw .
14•70, all electric, 2 bedrooms.
centrale1r, washer, dryer , sto\le,
refrtgerator. underplnmng 614-

388-9837

1974 Mobile home 2 bedrGom
Underpmnlng , blocks 8l4·992

&amp;741

1970 Holly Park. 2 br , 12x60,
ready to move t3500 Call

614-992-3100

Located on Moming Stsr Rd
Racine. 14x70, 2 bedroom.
fttnlly room with fueplace, hv•ng
room wit~ sliding doors tully
equipped kitchen, front and back
porches. storage bldg. sat up and
re1dy to move in. Two acre 191
for rent. Call after 6 00 pm

114-364-.084.
33

Farms for Sale ;

.

20 acre farm with 3 BR , hous•,
Hann~~n Trace Road. Glenwood,
W. \l't. for more informltion c~_ll

!104-773-6118

01

after&amp; 00

773·618,1
"'

Six acre min1-ftrm , fenced pei;
turt plu1 woodland. ont bara.
1W0 OU1 buRdlnga, thrM bed-

I'OOm, all el~rlc brick rancl\,
overlooking river, near tow6.

Coil

30•-175-7,119.

•

�.'

Pa&amp;,-:-8-The Daily Sentinel
34

LAFF·A·DAY

Business
Buildings -

-=c:-o_m_m_•_c-:i:-al:-b:-u-:K-:d:-ln~g-a7
for laau:
Downtown Pt. Ple .. ant . ·Storet,
oHicas. A-One A..l Estete.
Carol Yeager, Brqker. Call 304-

575: 5104.

Vacant lot on Pif\e ' Street In
Gallipolis. Water anct sewage.
Parc;:al No. 007-023-021 -00.

54 Misc. Merchai'ldiia ,CIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br Larrr Wright

Foor sale: New 12 speed. 21
inch boys bicycle. S126 . New 26
inch. girls 10 speed 850. New
hand crocheted quilt. full size·
e75 . Call &amp;1 4 -992-6529.

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1 ,000tirn, sizes 12, 13, 14 , 16,
16, 16.6 . 8 mil&amp;a DUI Rt . 218.
Ca11814-268 -6261 .

Electric range 8150, refrigerator
1200. Both green . ekcellent
condition. Manual Hospital bed.
5100. 614-992 -6775 or 614-

•s.ooo. CaiiiS14-694-3833 or
514-446-1729.

992 . 528~

Approx . 3 a'c (ei . Fruit, trees. rural
water, well. saptictal"!k- Rt . 160

Electrolux Cleaners. co mplete
attachments 878 cest't or term•
arranged. 304-876-4418 .

between Bidwell &amp; No. Gallia
H.S . lots ' of road frontage.
$11 .500. Call 614-388-9364.

Seasoned -oak tirewood, call
304-676-2767 after 4 :30.

3.86 acres on C. R. 122 inMaiga
County. Thurman Martin, Jr. on
Ad . ~

54 Misc . Merchandise

Hospital bed, other furnishings
for sale. Aee1onabte. J oe Bow·
land, 209 S. Fourth. Middleport,
Ohio.

35 Lots &amp; Ac"'age

Roy Jones

55 Building Supplies

Syracuse.

{Above Syracuse water ttnk) .

1 - Masoni te primed aiding
7 1 1 6'lx8"x16 i hom:onal lep.
$25.60sq. or 21 sq. lin. •16.00

1Ya ac lot on Jerrvs Run Rd.
Apple Grove, with rural water.

304-676-2383 .
PRICED RIGHT - One ac.a
building lots on Rt . 2 at Ashton
Public water and mobile homes
pOrmitted, 304-576-2336.

"I Can tell YOU What he ' S 00t
talkm'g abOUt - - - ht'S grandchl'ldren,"

One acre lots on Meson 80 at
Ashton.
· public water,
homes permitted,
8600 mobile
dawn. r-;;:::;::::;:::::;:::::-t.~=~~~~=~==i
1160 JJer month. ~04- 57844
Apartment
49
For Lease
2336.
·
.
o
for Rent
1400 sq. ft. commercial apace.
For sale: Ideal huntQ\g land. 26
SuitJble for offices or retailing.
acres of woods with neWly built
Corner of 2 nd. &amp; Pine. Call
cabin, 20 mfnute drive from Pt. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments for 614-446· 2325 or 446-4426 .
Pleasant on Owl Hollow Rd .
rent. Basic rent for 1 bdr..
839,000. Call 304-675·6548.
$183.00 ; 2 bdr., 8219.00 Also
required a 1200.00 aacurity
d&amp;poslt. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dept Ph 446 -3997
51 Household Goods
Equal Housing Opportunity.
Furnished EHiciencv S146. Utili·
SWAIN
ties paid, shere bath 807 AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE &amp;2
41 Houses for Rant Second
Ave .. Gallipolis Ph.. Olive St., Gallipolis .
''6 4416 8 h 7p••
NEW· 6 pc wood groun. 8399.
•
er
"" ·
..
NiCely furnished small house. Uving room tuites - $199 -t599 .
Adi,.lts only . Referencet re- Upstairs unfurnished apartment.
Bunk beds with bedding· I 1 99.
qu'r~ - Off .street parking. Ph
Utilities paid. Carpeted, no child- Full size mattress &amp; foundation
614-44,8 -0338.
"
ren or pets. Call614-446-1637 starting - 899 . Recliners
starting- $99.
4 a'R . house for rent. 3 mi. so: of Furnished apartment , $210 . USED· Beds. dreuen , bedroom
Gallipolis. t300 a month plus utili, in paid. 1·bdr. 920 Fourth. suites, 1199 - t299 . Desks,
dep. Ret. required. Call 614· Gallipolis. Call 44&amp;-4416 after wringer washer, 8 complete line
44f-1616 . After 5:00 PM ., call Spm .
of used furn•ture .
44f-1244.
NEW- Western boots- $30.
2 BR . apts. 6 closets. kitchen- Workboota $18 &amp; up. !Steel &amp;
4 BR . house on 1 acre. Excel appt furmshod, W•har-Dryet soft toel., Call 614-446 ·3169 .
10ca1ion . Ref. Call A-1 Real hook· up , ww . carpet. newly
Estate Broker. Call 304-675- painted, deck. Regency , Inc. Countv Appliance. Inc. Good
6104 or 675-7738 .
Apts. Call 304-675-7738 Of used appliance• and lV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon tl'lru
676-6104.
Ve_? nice. , ;I ' br. house. Nice
Sat. 614-446-1699. 627 3rd.
ntNghborP,ood. ac. , gas heat, Furn ished Apt .· 1 Br. t225. Ave. Gallipolis, Otl.
dishwasher. stove . refrig .. Utilities paid . 701 4th Ave.
wather furnished . Call 614- Gallipolis. Call 614-446-4-416 Vaalley Furniture, new &amp; used.
44,·7025.
Yrge I&amp;Ction of quality rurniafter 8 :00PM .
ture . 1216 Eutern Ave ..
Ho3se-936 1st Ave. partly fur- 1 Bedroom Garage Apt .. canna! Gallipolis.
nis"ed. 8200 per month . Call air. good loc;;ation . Ref. and dep.
614-446-4038 or 446-1615 or required. Call614-446·4169.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
44,·1243.
.'
Washers. dryers . refrlg•ators,
Availabel Oct. 16. 1 Br. apt. near r'a ngea . Skaggs Appliances ,
4 a.r , hoUse and 1 br .. house HMC . 1 adult. No pets. Ref. and Upper River Rd . betide Stone
bottr"J'(Jrnltd in Rio Grande next dep . required. S225 . a month. Crest Motel. 614-446· 7398.
to COllege. Call 614-245-9170 Call 614-446-4782.
or 44&amp;r.1323 . . ,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
UJ!sta~rs . furnished. 2 rooms 6
4 Am ., &amp; bath. 19281!1 Chestnut bath. Clean. No pets. Dep. &amp; Sofas and chairs priced from
St ·-..:tlilf; a mo .. 876 Dap. Call Ref. required. Utilities paid Call 8395 to 8995. Tables 850 and
614: 4U·.3870 .
614-4A6 -1619.
up to $125. Hid•a-beds 8390
to S595. Re(;lineu S226 to
2 B~. 2-·b~ths. f250 per monttl. 3 or 4 br .. 11f2 bath, kitchen 8376 . ...fJ'IPS 128 to 1126.
DepT i&amp;q;)ired. Brookh..-t Yne. furnished. 5 Court St. $250 a Dinettes $108 and up to 1496.
Calf!· &amp;.1 1 -446-4222 betweem mo .. plu1 utilitin. Dep. II Ref . Wood table w · 6 chairs 1286 to
9-ft. 1 ~- ;
5795 . Deak 8100 up to 8376.
Call 614-446·4926 .
Hutches $400 and up . Bunk
For ""~6nt': 2 br., unfurnish8d· Furnished apt. neAt to libr~ry . beds complete w-mattreues
P,ottse\Whti g.araga. One mile out One professional adult only . S295 and up to 8395 . Baby beds
218 off Rt . 7. Accept one child. Parking. Call ~4 - 446 - 0338 .
1110. Mattresses or bok springs
$200 a month plus dep . &amp; ref.
full or twin $68, firm t78, and
Call 614-,..6-9686.
2Br. , carpet. refrig . and stove. 888 . Queen eets 8226. Ktng
661 ]rd. Ave. $260 e mo. plus $350. 4 drawer chan 869 . Gun
U8 Staie. 91 r· V2 of daob\a'. dep . Ca11814-246-9695
cabinets 6 gun . Gu or electric
Adults with 1 child acceptable.
range 8376 . Baby mattresMs
ROt. and.f.ec. dep. required. Ca'll Downtown. 1 br.. furnithed apt. 835 II 845 . Bed frames 120 .
614 - 446 ~0254
ac .. carpeted. t225 a mo. S100 S30 &amp; King frame 850 Good
selectton of bedroom suites,
dep. Call 614· 446-1788.
2 BA Hs. full size basement. FuM
metal cabinets, headboards 130
oil furnac8 . In Eureka 1200 per 3' room, unfurniahed . 1150 a and up to 165 .
month. Cf11"614-256-6647.
month. In l!ity. Call Oays-614448-7572, Evenings446-1980. 90 Days same as caah with
Mercervilte, OH-. Nice 3 BR
approved credit. 3 Mile. out
1
,ouse.
• to school. $300 a
Furnished epar1ment: 3 rooma &amp; Bulav1lle Ad. Open 9am to 5pm
month pi s dePQsit. Refetencn bath , close to Washington Mon . tluu Sat. Ph. 614-446required. opets. Call614-446· School. Call 304-676-2990 .
0322 . "
7610 .
+
'
Oak Wood: 1 br. apt., stove. Save alot -Check us out tor
4 bedroom, near Meigs High rafrig. Located close to town. carpet and furniture . 9x 12
School. Pay own utilities. Dep- Sec. dep . &amp; ref . Call 614 ·446- Carpet. 860. 6 piece wood living
osit rqulrad . Call 814-992room suit , $399 . Mollohan
2055- Evenings.
2381 .
Furniture, Upper River Ad . Call
Grac:ioua living. 1 and 2 bed· 614-446-7444 .
2 bedroom house. newly redone. room apartments at Village
New bath, new kitch&amp;r~ . For rent Malior and Riverside ApartPARSON'S FURNITURE
as of Oct. 1. 1 montP, rent. 1 ments in Middleport. From
mMth security required. Call
S21 5 . including lltilities. Call New wood 6 pc. living wood
614-992 -5587 between 9 ·0o ' 614-992-n87 . EOH .
suites . 8399 .95: chest of draw&amp;nd 5:00.
"Brt, 4 drawer · $48, 6 drawer·
2 bedroom, upsteirt. newly $59 .96, mattreu &amp; bo~o: springs·
For rent or sale: large stately remodeled. StoVe and refrigera- full size; 312 coil, 1149 .95 set;
home in Middleport. Furnished tor furnished . $200. PM monttl twin mattresses. $96
set .
or unfurniahed. Call Yvonne plus utilities. e100 . deposit
THE WORKING
Scally at 614-992-7521 or required. Call 614-992 ·6539, MAN 'S FRIEND
992-2363.
814-992. 2433 Of 614 -992·
Kenmore washer , S76 Speed
3489.
Available immediately in MiddleQueen wasP,er. S 76 D ry&amp;r,
port . 2 BR. house. $200 plus APARTMENTS . mobile homes. $95. Magtag wringer waaher,
utilities. Deposit end reference houses. Pt . Pleasant and Gallipo- S95. 30" electric range, f76 .
required . No pets . 614 -992 - lis. 614 -446· 8221
36" electric renge. 175 20"
5018 .
gas range. $76 . 30 " gas range.
2 bedroom furnised apt , ref and $95. Small washer 6 dryer,
, deposit, New Haven, W. Va., 895 each. Upright freezer,
42 Mq.blle Homes
304· 882· 326 7 or 304-773 - S150. Harvast gold refrig ..
$125. Skaggs Appliances 569
Jor Rant
5024 .
Upper River Ad. Gallipoli•. Oh.
3 rooms and balh, gas heat. 814-446-7398 '
ground floor. washer and dryer
Furnished. 2BR .• cable available,
Used refrig ., washer &amp; dryer.
AC., riv8r view in Kanauga. hook up, no children, immediate Mollohan Fur.nllure. Call 614Fosters MObile Home Park. Call occuQancy. No pets, phone 446-7444
304-676-4480 ext 63 or 60.
614 -446·11 602 .
One bedroom furnished apan- 25 " RCA-XL 100 color solid
1 2x60 M0bil.e home. Furnished.
statu . Excel cond. S100 Call
AC . Located in Centenary area. ment 1n Point Pleasant. Extra 614-446·2390
.
$200 a mpnth. 614-446-2390. clean and nice. Adults, no pets,
Phone 304-675-1386.
G .E. heavy duty washer. $100.
Trailer fo~ rent · 260 4th. Ave.
Call
614-448 -6763.
$175 a mo. All utilities paid. Call
45
Furnished
Rooms
. 614-446-0544 .
Aefrig. boA springs and mat ·
trets. Call814· 446· 3732 .
Furnishedt-3 tir. house trluler for
Rooms for rent. day . week .
rent , ac. ~ in Rio Grande. Call
month. Gallie Hotel. Call 614· Hotpoint portable dishwasher.
614-245-6162 .
446-9680 Rent as low u *120 $50. Call 61 4 · 256·6709.
month.
2 br .. wall ·t o wall carpet. Private
Queen size water bed': bookcase
lot in Galfipolh~ . Call 614 -446Furnishect .foom S75 . Utilities headboard, 6 drawer Pedestal.
1409 aftet 5:00PM
pai ... Shara bath. Single male. Very good cond . $260. Call
919 Second . .Qallipolis. Call 614-245-9548 .
2 &amp; 3 br: mobile homes. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.
614-446-0527 after 2 PM,
New wood &amp; coal heater. Used
any1ime week· ends .
Rooms for rent by week or 30 " electric range, In good con d.
month . Call 614· 992 · 7521 , No Sunday calls. 614-379Trailer tor rent or sale. N1t:e and
9 ' 30 - 4 , 30 . 614 -992 -2353 2602.
(;lean. Call614-992-2357,
other, hours.
Furniture for Sale: Oak hutch.
14x70 Mobile home. 3 br .. H '2
wa•her·dryer.•love seat &amp; chair,
bat~• · Zuitan Hollow Rd. Call
46 Space for Rent
color tv. Call 614-446-8252
614-992-3229 .
after 6 :00 PM.
2 bedroom mobile home. fur·
Office Space for Rant . E~tcellent King Size Bookcase Watetbed,
nished, S185 .00 plus utilftiea.
for
Attorneys, Accountant, etc. complete. t239 . Mattress. Wa call304-875-6612 .
Close to Court House. Call terbed and Furniture Ware·
Mobile homea for rent Upper Wiseman Real Estate Agency. house, 98 Columbus Rd . ,
Athens. Ohio 45701 . 614- 693River Rd,1 At. 7 . Will consider 614-446-3640 .
construction work en 61 4-446- Oftice Space for rent. E ~~:eel . 7191 .
0608.
'
downtown Gallipolis location. May tag Dittt Washer. l100 . Call
814·843-6294 .
3 bedroom, rent plus utilities, Inquiries call 814-446-4222 .
Gallipolis Ferry, for information COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
China cabinet for aale. Rustic
call 304-676-4088 .
Route 33, North of Pomeroy. solid oak, handmade. 3 bottom
Rental trailers. Call 814·992- shetvet . e150. C1ll 614-9B6·
7479.
43915.

Rentals

CE

-::--...--.,.-----···-

44

Apartment
for Rent

Space 1for small trailers. All
hook -ups. Cable. Also aff.iciency
rooms. air and cable. M•on,
W.Va. Call 304 -n3· 15851 .

One and two bedroom apta,
Point Plaaaant, 304-176-2480
evenings c'a tl614-441·2200.
Furnished apt. Aduhs only. 2
rooms and bath. clean . Call
304-676-2482.

SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
lots, At. 1, Locuat Road. btck of
K &amp; K. 304·875· 1 076.

49

For Lease

V8fy nic&amp;, 3 bedroom all electric
ap11rtment, large porch. city .
wat•r. Nq . pate. D1poeit and
rat.,ence required . Cr•b CrHk
Rd. 82215. month. Plus utllltl•.
304-675-8809 altor 5&lt;30. 676·
1017.
'

.,--

~---

Monday. September 14, 1987 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

54 Misc. Merchandise'"
Set of diamond wiNding ring•
for ..... he. cond . Olamondt
could be remounted. 304-6761622 .

...q .

2 - Abitibi aiding or ponoling
prefinsihtd 7 / 18x4'k8.' 14.96
pc.. 25 p(;. up 13.95 .
3- Aiuminum siding with insu latod backer. 025.00 ••· Only 40
or 50 sq's.
4- % Wafer
oriY, "x4
'•8 ' . Sheeling
tongUe or
&amp;
groove
board
flooring 88.96 and $7 95 each.
6 - 901b. wt . rolled roofing.
White &amp; Green 6 Drihwood &amp;
Earthtone. 88.95 roll .
1- 151b. wt. tett paper. Black.
$6 .96. Roll .
7- 29 gage white Or brown
2vae!!e6v0, o;1 9119o&amp;•hi~lg metal
It
·
·
• ro ·
8 - Bath panels tile board. 4 ' k8 '.
!;"2b~~ed and smooth. $.4 .99 to
9 - Wood and masonite paneling
4'k8' • several patterns. 54.96 to
IB.95 .
10- Molding to match paneling.
1- (;orners. 0 · corners . cep and
divider strips. 11 .25each.
11 ...... AII wood turned Spindlfl .
column. porch p01t1 4 "e nd 6 ",
p· and9' long. 2 forS36 .00and
2 for $46 .00.
12- W'~t12 " x8 ' ceder boards.
$8.00 each. 2 for 515 .00.
13- Cottage grade pine plank·
ing, channel groove 16 sq. h p6r
bundle. 18 .00 per bundle some
ceder.
14- Window and door trim.
prefinished end unfin ished ,
11 .25 to 13.00 . 1 ' pea.
15 - 32 " ~t76 " ko/t" tempered in·
suleted gla11 panels, $25 .00
each.
16 - Epoxy coated neel w ire .
Closet and cabinet shelving. 50
per cet:~t below retail.
17 - Bruce prafinishad oak ftooringn1turaltndmediumfinishes.
20 sq . ft . pack 845 .00 and 10
pks. •nd up $39.95 .
18- 6 gal. aluminum fibered
roof co1ting 820.95.
19- Cannon craft pine louvered
interior shutters at wholesale.
20- High glou 5 pc.tubwall kft
with glue, $29.96 .
21 - 28 " ,;20" sliding glass med·
icine cabinet w 1tP, light s,
139.95.
22 - 30" almond double door
vanity with marble top. t79 .95 .
23- 17• 19 mini vanily with
marble top , $29 .95.
24- 0ver 200 van1ty1 aet up on
ahoW room floor. Oak 60 "
double bowl with marble top.
S199 .96 .
25 - 0ak M e di cint~ ca bina ts
$79 .95 end 889 96 .
26 - 0sk toilet seats, S19. 9 6
27 - 30 " ~~:30 " plata mirr ors.
$24.96 .
28 - Solid brass high polished
vanitY feucet~t . 819 .95 . Ant~u e
bran, $19.95.
29 - Solid bran high polished 3
handle~ub and shower fa ucet,
$44.9
30- Brig t bras1 and antique
brau u; p ltNttr tub dra ins.
$19.96 j
31 - Chrome washerlns vani1-y
faucets, $9 .95 .
32- 4 pc. solid oak towel barset.
119.95 .
33- AII types of hand toolsMechanic and (;arpenter. Big
D•scounts.
34 - Two Pouch ell leather car·
penter apron w ith belt. $16 . 95.
35- Perma. A-Rigid sheeting
i nsult•on , foil one tide ,
W' x4'~~;8 ' - $4 . 99 . lk $5 .99. 1" ·
$6.99 .
36- 72 " Birch starter k1tchen ·
72 " base. 2 -16" wall cab ..
1 -vslance, 1 -72 " pc . top ,
.1199 .95.
45- 1 pc.. Fiberglass tub and
1hower, white and colors ,
8149 .96 to $179. 95
46- 2 pc fiberglass tub and
shower white and co lors.
$176 .00 to $199.95 .
47- 1 pc. acrylictubandshower
with ceiling, S249 .96 t o
8299 .95.
48- 1 pc . fiberglass and acryhc
shower stall only . $179.96 to
1299 .95.
49- White steel bsth tub only
non skid bottom. $69 .95 .
50- Kitchel\ and bathroom and
bar counter top. 82.99 lin. ft .. e·
&amp; 10' &amp; 12: pes.
61 - K-Iux white brick c;;ountrv·
slde5sq. ft perctn." l1 .60eech.
monor, 85 .96 · 2 gal. bucket.
52- White cummodes 3 gallon
water savers grade A, 839 .95.
53- Miscellaneous sizes and
colo,. of marlba vanity tops (B )
grades, 815 .00 each . Some
double bowl.
64- 36" k80" white crossbuck
storm doors, &amp;39.95 each.
56 - 8 -grade •teel insulated
doors. 32" and 36", black only,
$19 .95.
56 - 8 -grade interior wood
door~ , finished and unfiniahed,
28" wide down to 12 " wide,
86 .00 each.
67 - Fiberglaas oval whirlpool
bat,h tubs, almond, 72" long,
36 " deep , 22 " high. Complete
with pump and plumbing Reg .
$1896, now $895, only a ffJW .
58- Wood burning fireplace
stove. 839 .95 each or 3 for
0100.
59 - Prices good only while
supply last.
PENN 'S WAREHOUSE
WELLSTON, OHIO · 614· 3843645

t-ltiVIilt fl.d,~ YOiiR.

"fee'tH Wl1H A Kl'l'T\:tl
11-1 ~" Ra;M .

r•

~~~~~~=~~==:::r~~~=~~=~~~~

·C atalytic converters, only
$89.95 . Most models . Install•·
tion also availa,ble. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpaon Ave .. Athens. Ohio.
1 -800 -843-3767.
Mixed hard wood slabs. 12 per
bundle. Containing appro•. 1'h
ton . FOB. Ohio Pallt1 Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 614-992-6461 .
Old Oriental rug . 9k12 with
matching runner. $160 firm .
614-992· 3966 .
Gas furnace. 100,000 BTU,
80.000 output. 4 years old .
Alr-eesa. S260 . Call 614· 992·
2517 or 614 -992· 6293 .
1975 Dodge Stant -siJt engine.
stand. trana .. eacel. cond.,
$350. car goes wltP, it , Add·l ·
furnace b&lt;t Mo narch with
blower , was used as independ•
ant furnace , Uled 3 seasons, .
8500 Ralph Truuell. Call 614- 1
949·2660 Evenings.
'
Us&amp;d Ken more wash&amp;r for ule.
$126 firm . Aeal nice. Call
614 · 367-0322
Forced air elec tric lurnace.
5100. Color 25 " hr , S10. Call
614·742 -232 1
Bedapread , drapes , pillow
s hams, and qu ilt. like new.
304-882 -2038. cellahet 4 p.m.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Bloch , brick, •ewer pipes , win·
dows, lintels. ete. Claude Wlnten. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814·
245-6121 .
Concrete block a all situ yard or
d .. ivery. Mason sand. Gallipolis
Hloclc Co . 123'h Pine St..
Gallipolis. Oh io Call 614 -446·
2183 .
Ready mill: conc;;rate and all
concrete suppliea. Ca ll us Valley
Brooll Cement and Supplies.
304· 773-5234 .

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groom ing All breed• .. All
swles . Ju lie Webb Ph . 614 -44&amp;,
0231 .
Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan , Panian and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
pupplea New hittens; Parsi1ns.
Call614 -446· 3844 after 7PM
Pure ·btod. red Doberman pups,
8 wks . old . S50 each . Call
614 · 379-2813
4 Pekingese• &amp; 4 Dachshund•
for sale. Call 614-446 -7920 .
Meigs Co unty Hum1ne Society
has cats and kittens to adopt.
Spayed and neutered and P,ad
s hots Adoption fee required .
Ca ll 614· 992 ·6506 or 992 ·
3026.
English Poin ter Elhew-Aed Wa·
ter Rex Breedlng. 6 yr• old.
t300. 3 Run Mason Kennell,
12 x1 4, 5 600. Ja ck Reynolda
304 · 676· 2392
German short hair pointer bird
dogs 304 -676-2159
Beagle Dog for Had e, good
hunter. 304-57 6· 2886 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Epiphone Classical guitar . Call
614-742 -2171
Cleveland trombone, $80. 304 ·
773-5867.

58

"'"'" Ill" """

Fruit
&amp; Veg!ltables

58
,

71 Auto's For Sale

Fruit
&amp; V:egetables

:1981 M~rcurv Couuar· ellitra
d1en, 4 'dr., 1uto. t21500 . Call
814-446-'&amp;127.

Oun~Ovin Fruit F~rm
Ckler, MelroM. Su..-r Gold, Red
6 Y .. low O.Hdous . Maclntoeh,
and Qrlm" 1ppl", pears. ho·
ney . •orghum. end apple butter.
Pic* yOYr own grapn 21 cents•
pound. We" dav• 9 · 1, week·
and• 9-5 . At. 1581 So . of Alban.,.
Phone 814-691-6298 .
·

79 Volkswagon Rebbit , 73
Dodg• Charger. Call 614-4487879 or 514; 448-1821
Stalnleu ttul IIhautt syatams.
Now custom mad• tor your
truck. motOf hOme or cla11ic Clf.
With lif•timt wtrranty. Mutflw
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave .. Athens.
Ohio . 1-800· 843· 3767.

Yellow Frtaslona Canning
Peaches Now Awllable. Call for
variet in and ptic• .
BOB'S MARKET
Muon 773-&amp;721
Open 7 D•v•

r ,n rn
&amp;

-----------------N
For sale; 1114 Camaro Z· 21 . 5
lpeed. PS, PB , AC . AM -FM
radio. low mileage. Sh arpl
•8200 or trad1. Call 614·9493003.

Supplll's

,979 Subaru , Good motor , tirft
lih "~ · Body un .. t• for roed
use. 614· 949· 2687,

liVI!SIIlr:k

1981 AMc E•o•• 4•4 15 evt
auto. PS . PI!J . Good condition.
N..d, minor ,.., • ., . &amp;14 · 742·
2930 attar 15:00, atll lor Kar~

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W•t. Jackson. Ohio.
614 · 288-5451 .
M••MV Ferguson, New Holland.
BuSh Hog Sal" &amp; Service. Ov.,
40 used tractors to chool8 from
S. complete llna of new &amp; used
equipmeont. Urget.t lflleefion in
S .E. Ohio.

1917 Cadillac tor Ml•. Joe
Bowland. 208 S. Fourtl'l, Mlddlepon. Ohio.

990 Oevld Brown, 54 hp d!asel
uect o r. low hours. locally
ownld with e It buaP, hog.
13650. Call 614-281-6522 .
Re p on•ssedl Must ull 2
quonsal ·lt'rlt 1te11 buildings.
Brand new. nev••e~.ct . One is
40 h . ~~:40 ft . Will uti for btla"CI
owed. C•ll Carl 1-800,6274044 .

1982 AMC Spirft. 4 eyl , 4 IP'!~ .
on• owner , exc cond, will"" Ot" '
trade lor 1977 thru 1980 four
wh.at drhl• lru~k . phone 304882-3369

CA. Allis Chalmers tuetor,
2- 14" plows. 7 h . disc. 2 row
culthoetor, 7 ft . mower , spare
part•. I 1500. Call 6U · 742·
2034.

1980 4 whQI dr;...e Dodge
pickup. t 1500 1 980 4 whMI
drive Eeglt, t2600 1980 Ply.
mouth Volan , 53 ,000 mi.
81200. 1977 Cht¥y Malibu
stttionw•gon, 1500. Honda 70.
Call 304 -4&amp;8· 15&amp;8,

B•'•·ch1ins. and aproekets to fit

almoat any uw SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO •• Hend..-son,
w Va. 304· 675 ·7421 .

1986 VW Golf. 2 door , 5 •peed.
Than red. air cond . AM -FM
radto, 16 ,000 mil .., eac ..ll'l"tt
condition. 11.100. 304-15715·
5325.

Homellte and Jon ' tered Servic•
&amp; Supplies.
SIOERS EQUIPMENT CO
Hendenon , WV , 304 - 676 ·
1421 .
'

1985 Cevsllar wagon , 2 flte~ , 4
cyl ' 5 •mad 1rans .. fual lnj..
AM -FM c eneu•. 26 .000 mllet.
s5.800. 304-8715-n41

Tobacco or tomato 1t.ak .. . 304·
675-1020 •tter 5 •00 call 304·
675-2288

197• Monte Carlo, 8360; 1968
1100; top tor CJ. 7 Jeep,
304 ·675-2886

N o~o~•

Farmhall H 1ractorw1th lront M~d
loaded, 1500. Gr1velywlthbush
hog, 1400 . Call304· 468-15&amp;6 .

72

62 Wanted to Buy

Trucks for Sale

1978 Datsun picll-up . runs
good. Body rough . I 300 or bt~t
oHer No Sunday calls. Ct ll
614 · 379 ·2602.

Now buying shell corn or oar
co rn , Call to r lattat quote• . Rlv..City Ftrm Supply. 6h-4412985.

1961 Ch8\ly Pick-up , t1 200
Call 614· 441-2306
1971 ln18rnatlonal Grein truck,
16 11 . with twin hoist. 900 tiraa,
4 spd ... 2 •Pd·, clean , low miles.
Call 61ol -379-2671 .

Livestock

1980 Chevy lh ton\ pickup ,
12800 . 1971 Yellow•tone
Camper wi1h beth. 81800. C•ll
&amp;14 · 992 ·1717.

Ouroc 8oars. Bred just like the
boars we teated al th1 Oh io
Testat ion that gained over 2 . 15
tbs . per d1y . Rogll' &amp;.ntley,
Sabina, OH . 613 ·584· 2398

1973 Ford pictlup truck for
614-247· 3824.

.
d .S u Ifo lk ewes. Call
R eg1nere
614-379-2424 .
Aiding

Hor111 tor ale. Call

73

64, Hay &amp; Grain

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
"

1979 Dodge Pick· up , 80 ,000
miles. 4Jii4., 82400. Call 614379 -2726.

Barley 12 .60' bu .. 1traw 11 .60
bale. long Bottom . Ohio. 614 986-3681 .

74

Miud hay t1 . bale on w•gon .
Hay for bedding BOc. 304· &amp;76 6579

Truck load . Sale: Hardy Mums,
$2 .99- buy 6 get 1 free. S lb.
Virg inia eppies. 1Ul9. 60 lb. ·
Russet potatoe1, 84 .99 . 6 lb.
bskt. homegrown tomatOI!II.
$2 .75 . 10 lb. bag No.1 Idaho
potetoes . S1 .49 Freestone
peaches, .39 cents lb .. 110.99
busheL Foodstamps welcome. 8
8. S Produce acrou from Pitza
Hu1. Gallipolis 446·8733. Open
9am-7pm Daily . Closed Sunday.

1974 Dodge Dart. 1200. C.ll
614-379-2804 .

Quality Fruits and Vegetabl"
retail and wholaaale. 8 &amp; S
Produce across from Piua Hu1.
Gallipolis, Ohio .

1972 El Camino. 1880 VW.
diesel . SW. 1960 Plymouth.
1960 Ford . 350 Chw. motortrlnl. Ca11114-387· 7473.

71 Auto's For Sale
2 · 1979 Dodge Colts. Call
614-446-0169 attar 6 :00PM .
1976 Dodge Dart Swing•. 225,
Slant slk . Great cond. •aoo or
best offer. Caell614·26&amp;· 9301 .

MGB Aoadttlf. 16ft. fib8fglast
bo1t, 40 hp. Johnson motor on
trailer. 1974 Ford picll-up. C•ll
&amp;14-441-1&amp;28 or •4e. 1339 .
19n Chev. Malibu. 6 eyl ..
slandlfd. No reaaoneble off•
refused . Call 614-446 -2783.

-=-:--::---::---- 3

1981 Old• Cutlass Supreme
Brpughman, Power a..t•· lock•·
windows, am·fm-u ... No rust.
121915. Call 1514·446-9718.

1984 Ford T1mpo- ps. pb.
am-tm, •c. 136915. 1913 Ford
Fairmont. one owner, 12360.
Cell &amp;14-2Be-e5Z2.

1110 Okla. Delta II Royela, air.
n.w 11r"·btUery, good cond.
01100. Call 814-2&amp;e-e&amp;BO.

Two
Dodgepickupt(on•4
whMI1977
drNe).
1974 O•tsun.
197e Plymouth Vol~te. Call
30• 46&amp; 1•e•
...
· "' ""' ·
Chevy 4 sp transmi11ion. Bell
· housing, presaure plata, clutch,
throw out bearing, fly whNi,
Hurst shifter 822&amp;. Good 4 cyl.
engin1 wfth 4 speed trtnsmis·
~on out of 1980 AMC Spirit.
0360. 304-112 ·2152.

Auto Repair

Struts, 1119.96 pelr. installed .
Mo•t models. Mutfltr Man, 8
Stimpson Aw. Athlf'ls, Ohio.
1-800-843· 3717.

1986 Honda 126 4 wP,Hier,
good condition . 8900. J im
Baughman . Call 614 -258 ·
6535 .
'
1986 Yamaha Enduro XT -360.
low mileage. Call '14· 446·
67153 .

15 f1 . c.mper, stove. rlfflg..-a·
.t.ow.. snd toilet. Sl..- I .
1150 .firm. Jo• lowlemt. 201 S .
Fourth, Micklleport. Oh'o.

PE~~oNAL

CL-C:Afc:.

SP.rv11:r:s

'Nm-1 ME.
MJD MOJ(QIJE IS .. .

IJ) NFL Monday

C1J D Cll NFL Pregame"till lllllZ Kate &amp; AIMI An

WINTEAI2ATION
S.r;;uritv Lighta. Storm Win·
do-•. lf!lul•tlon. f'oofing, Oen·
sr•l Rtpalr1, lOol-816-153157

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

HAVE 'ICU ALWAYS
HAD CURLY HAIR,
ROBBIE"'l

NO. .. WHEJ\1 I WASA BABY

r

i-IAD STRAIGHT HAIR,
UN11LOJ5 0&gt;-Y...

MY MO'vl FOI&lt;16i-OT TO D-iECK
THE TEMPEiRATIJRE OF
MY M1H WA"'TER.

CAATER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth 1nd Pine
. Gallipolis, Ohlo
Phone 814-441- 3888 or 114 446·4•77
APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE .
Wood 1nd coal 1towa, furnae ...
end inserts. 8runco. Athley ,

Consolidated Dutchwftt. Buy.
sail , trtd1. 10 yn. ••per-'n(;• in
carpenter. Cell614· 1598· 1121 .

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

GtT IN THIS
HOUSE QUICK,
LOWEE'ZY !!

R•aldantitl or commerei .. wiring. Naw serviee or repairs.
Licensed electrician. Estim1te
fr . .. Ridenour Electrical, 304175-1786 .

R • A W1ter Service. Home
ciateu. walla, pools filled . Forrnerty James Bo.,a Wetera.Cell
304-e76-5370.

Watterson 's Water Hauling , . ,
reesonable r•te1, lmmadi•t•
2:.000 gallon dallvery. cisterns 1
poole, well, etc. call 304 -578·
2919 .
I-

Moving 01,1t of state: Kawa~alli
200, 3 wheeler, ••c cond, eaoo.
ot boot olf•. 814· 245· 8401
weninp.

Dump truck delivery; c oal,
ttone. send, gravel, fill and
aawdust . Phon• 304 -178 3190.

75

1978 Pinto- Auto., new motor,
1610. GMC 1000 - I n dump
truck, 12 ft. bad, 04800. Call
814-448-7018.

Pontoon Boet· 10 HP. Johnaon,
trailer. 12760. C1ll 814·441·
4043 after 6 :00 PM '
I

Boats end
Motore for Sale

16 ft. Chfyll• bollt, 2 moton.
trellar. Asklngl1000 for all. C1ll
814-388-8878.

ARE ICE COLD !~

THAT AIN'T
ALL!!

Paul Rupe. Jr. Wtter Service.
Caiii14-446 · 3171 . Poola, cist· .,
erns, wslls.

87

star
'/

J

aduH Chip takes his oon
Scotty beck to tho '80s.
(Premiere) 1;1
9:00 (l) 700 Club
D (]) iUJ MOVIE: ·
'11'1'8Concllllble Dlffersnceo'
NBC Mondlr Night II the
Movl.. PG) 1:54) t;1
IJ) Tennlo In ornatlonal
Jun;or Tennis Challenge from
Sydney, Australia (T)
C1J D (I) ABC Mondly Night
Footbell
(I) l!ll Amerlcon Maotere
Performance footage from
productions by the N!llro
Ensemble COmpany. 1;1
a)) • t121 Newhlft A
teenager's crush on Joanna
gets an unexpected reaction
lrom Dick. 1;1
IIJ)I.llrry King Llvel In depth
Interviews with top
nowsmakers and caleb~tlaa.
9:30 till • ~ Daalgnlng Women
Conteat winner wants his
dilapidated gas statiOn
remodeled. (Premiere)
10:00 (l) Streight Talk
(!) Splelh '17 Summer
Edition (R)
!Il Alive from Off Center
Women of the Calabash, all
female percussion and vocal
ensemble, play. .
till
t121 Cognay end l.llcey
·Chris's despondency &amp; Mary
Beth's limelight threatens
partnership. (R) 1;1
IIJ) Newa
i1J Evening Ne.,. A wrap up
of !Odey's newa and a look
ahead to 1omorrow's news
sto~es. (t :00)
e!D llennyHIII
t 0:15 Cll MOVIE: Brllking Up
(1 :40)
t0:30 (]) \111 TBA
(J) Youtll Golf Chllnplonohlp
Spon:Mred by the
lndlpendlllt Insurance
Agents AssociatiOn (T)
(I) Elephent Qemeo Examine
Thailand's spectaa~lar
annual elephant rodeo. EaCh
year, some 150 pachyderms
compete In this unusual
sporting event Q
II))- .
e!DHGglln'oHIIOII
' 11:00 (]) Remington Steele
• ()) ill) • C iUJ Newe
I!) Sign Off
0 Moneytlne Currant

e

1984 Honda TRX200. 1986
Honda TA~126 . 4 wtleel•a.
12000. for both. Wetkends. ctll
814·982·15641. weekdays e14·
949-2162.

1985 Oodgl C1rtv1n SE,
26,000 mil•, ac, crut•. privacy
glau, •m· fm stereo. Atklng
010,900. Caii614·UI·1817.

HANDS

General Hauling

1977 Ytmaha 126 , dirt bike,
good cond. Pricld to sell 1 Call
151 4-446·1021 .

I Longing
5 Thunderstruck
9 "Jaws"

(R)

C..-pet in1talled Monday thru
Sahuday, work guerantMd, fr"
Mt4mettl. 304-176· 1020 b•
;=~;l~~:zi'8~ 5:00. lal• can

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, ci1terns. wells. Ph . 614·
245· 9285.

ACROSS

the dey's world rn~ws and In
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
Ill (IJ MOVIE: Dejl Vu (R)
(1 :35)
8:30 e (]) iUJ v...rte David
takes his dad's prized sports
car lor a joyride, and wrecks.

'Tl-\E, ~t.

PEANUTS
T&gt;IANKS FOR WAITING

Upholstery

report&amp; on world

and financial

·llll T1lla Old House Q
iiJ 8pom Tonight Ai:llon

MOWftV'I Upholstlring Mrving
trl countyare•22yaars. The belt
In tumlture uDhollltlrlng. Call
304·17&amp;-•114 for fr•e
a.tlmttlt.
"

'\~

I

econOmlca

new• with Lou

Oobbl. 10:30)
• !D Love Connection
1t_~.()) !UI&lt;~-ol c . (J) llpciQ · - (L)
Gil Megnum, P,l.

R &amp; M Custom Couchn and
Reupholltlry, St. At. 7, Crown
City, Oh. ef"4· 251-1470, Eva.
1114·44&amp;·3438. Opon dally I to
• :30. Sal. 9:30 to 1:30. Otd •
n.w Uphotllll'ed.

,.

packed sporte highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huller.
(0:30)

+

•Kz

+K5
+Al0t7

WEST
+732

EAIT

.4

+AQIDI
.J105

+11

+Jl0832
+KQ84

+nn

by THOMAS JOSEPH

soa.C
i1J Pnmenewa wrap ups of

Sta•ks Tree •nd lawn Ser~.
lawn car•. landsc.ap lng, ltump
remov1l. 304 -1571 ·2842 or
578·2903

1979 80 GTYamaha.1975CB
126 F Honda. Call 614· 3888364.

New Orleans restaurant.

(PrevieW) ·
IIJ) Rtirer Joumeyo Follow
Australia'• great811t river
from the mountains to tho

Aoury or e.ble tOOl 6tlttin~ .
Moet wtlls compllted umed.,.
P11mp Sllta an&lt;\ allf'Yi c• J04.
895. 3802

85

•az

Fronk's Place New
EnQiand college prof Inherits

EEK &amp; MEEK

NOBTB

+KJU4

''

natura.

Feny T1u Trimming. 1t11mp
removal. Celll04·671 -1 331

-•

.J .

.

Up New. York Giants at
Chicago Bears .
(I) II (I) Heed of the Clau
Charlie tries to teach his
eggheads how to play
volleyball. (R) !;I
(!) Onlf one Eirtll Examlrn~
man's dependence on llle
saving drugs produced from

RON ' S .Television S•rvlca ,
Hou.. c... , on RCA. OUIIur.
OE . Speci•Ung in Zenith. C.n
304· 1578. 2398 or t14 -441 ·
24!54

h~l "

SOllTB
Although a misinterpretation of so+5
.AQUTU
. phisticated bidding can lead to disasfAQH
ter, I admire the smooth way that
l~
North and South arrived·at .six hearts.
When North bid five clubs, that was
Vulnerable: Nei. ·
. obviously a first-round control implyDealer: South
ing slam interest. South's jump to
Nardi Eul
· slam in his seven-card suit was a gooil Wool
ihrust. Unfortunately, here we have a
high;level bid followed by low-level Pass
Paa
play.
Declarer won dummy's club ace and PBBs
ruffed a club. Next came a low spade, Paaa
but no guess could succeed against the
Opening lead: • K
I strong holding In the East hand. De' clarer ruffed the club return, played
7==w.~
K-A of diamonds and ruffed his small L....,Be::-:-tte,.-r7
1o-r-=So-u~th:-:-10-C_!OII_aplemiM
diamond with dummy's two of hearts. sophisticated biddinl wl~ llmjlll
Unfortunately the third diamond was down-tg.,earth play. At Irick tw Ill
overrulfed by East.
can play a heart to biJ ace aDd black to .
The hand could h&amp;;c been made dummy's king He lbeD playli
7'1
even at that late _stage if declarer had 10 of clubs, ~rd!Dc hill loae ......
simply run all l!is trumps, ~~queeung Later, after dnwilll tbe lllll tnBif,
West between the club queen and the he can return to dummy'• ldDI ol die'long diamonds. But even that strati- moods and shed bis llitle dlt.,.... •
gem would have failed if East had re- the gOOd club Dine. Tbat's 12 trk:lla,
turned a diamond alter winning the · without even a trace of pessplraU.
spade.
on South's brow. _. _
-

to move into Tanner
household. (R)
(!) NFL MondiJ Night Mitch

a

Our servloe"'

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER

By· James Jacoby

(2) iUJ ALF An Inter
galactic cockroach decides

till

A

V

.Good bidding
was a waste

Day

SW£E PEA and MWing meehlnt
P"" 1. and ~t.tpPMa. _.ldl
up •nd dativer;o. Otvll Vec:uum
Cl••ntr, one half mile up
O.arg• C ,._. Rd. Call I, 4446-0294,

I

James Jacoby

D

rep~~ lr .

I16 E

BRIDGE

7:35 Cll Mljor ....... Bueball

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UncondiUonal IUetfmt gu.r .....
tM Loc" ret.r.,..ew turnl.,.ed.
Fr.. ..tlmat... C1ll coHect
1-814· U7 -04ea. dtw or night.
Rogtrs&amp;a,ement
W a1erproafi~.

I I

S 0 GT

7

lrn.Jd - Juice - Known - Qual1:z - WIN 'the RACE
G1111111pa g&amp;VII ue a pat on the back for ~ tiilon • mMe.
His phlloeojlhy was that praise could give crltlcllm 1 liled
around·the. ftrat tum and stl!l WI~ l!!f_8ACE.
,.

1:00 (l) Fother Murplly Dream

•

1"-

not-10-brtght employee ~ • .

·. YIStEiDAY'S SCIAM-Im'IIISWIIS

e (IJ WKRP In Clnclnnotl

'j

t_ --------'

Home
l1t1provement1

Oilfard1 Water Strvlc•: Pools,
Ciaterm, Weill. Delivery Any·
time . Cell 614· 446-7404-No
Sunday c1lls.

One 400 KaWaHki mo1orcycl1
tor ula or 1,.de for Coon Dog or
aomethinl ot equal value, 304S78·251 .

A

V

® Mljor League llelllblll

I

_i

PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

.112l GSl J-rdyl t;1

j

1~

A

till Wllllll of Fortuna 1;1
I!J) CioHtlre (0:30)

CHe:t::fc:

I I

Complale
o c UC• • quotby filling in the mill4ng worct.
.1
L.-1.-..L...--1-..L...--1-.J- you develop from slop No. 3 bolow.

.

II Cll Judge

THAT MeAN5 He
tiAS fAITH you~

1983 XR ·600R · Iikenew. 1776.
Call 814· 388-8711 .

1884 Honda V-30. Mqnal!iOO.
Weter cooled. Burgandy. Exc•l·
lent condition. Call 114· 4462143.

·.I

(J) NFL Mondly
(I) Newlywed Clll!11e

tOI'.

82

1~

I

7:30 e (2) HQIIywOOd Squorso

1976 Motor Home. 22 ft ., low
mile-ega. 31 .000 mlltl. Mitcontained. Price ti&amp;OO. C.U
814- 441·2589 .

11 ...

I

.11-......,;L;:-;U,..:G:.,.:.I...:Tr---11 • "Hbw . c.n we improve our
5 16 1·
:r- quality
Image
with our
1
L-....1-'--..1.-..1..
- ' - ·_ . ;:. customer~?" ukld .,. boa The

llf(IJ M'A'S'H

Motorcycles

Kawasaki 200. 3 wheel &amp;f. stoo
or best offer. E~tcel. (;Ond. Hurry
moving OUI of atat•-9 -13 . Cell
114-245-9401 · Even.

.r

7:05 Cll Andy Griffith

84

·

iaen1on

Uill

-,.::G_,A~D;.:.A-=ET.--1!1

till • ~

!!lil2l

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

81

I 111

2

e

~ala.

19150 Ford trucll. good eand.
0800 . Calloh" 5 ,00, 304-6753556

6, 4-992 -2703.

Transportation

1979 Subaru. 1973 El Camino.

1977 Chwy Nova VB 1450.
1976 Buick lllyt.rk VI 1350.
Both run gQO'J. e14· 992·1775
Of 816 -992-5218
1976 Mercury Montego, n~
paint. new bralle•. n4tW tires: PB,
PS , AC . 351 Clev .. and. AM -FM
stefeo, 1850. Call 114-949·
2879 or eu. $49 · 2046.

63

.

77

. . (Jl

Part3
(!] Owl TV t;1
®GoodTimeo
• (IJ One Day 11 1 nme
8:06 Cll Allee
8:30 8 &lt;Il 1151 NBC Nlghily Nowa
(J) Fllhlng Baas'n llal
Classic from Kon Lake,
Kentucky (A) .
(I) D&lt;ll ABC Newe t;1
(!) Nightly Bualnel!l Report
till • i121 CBS Newe illl Voyage of IIIII MIIJil 1;1 ·
~ Showlllz 1adey News of
. tho entertainment world Is
ancNorod live from New
York. (0:30)
IHI Jeffersonl
(IJ Two Clou lor Comfort
8:35 Cll Carol Bumen
7:0,0 (l) _Romlng10n StHII
1 D &lt;Il PM lilegazlne
(J) Sport.Center (L)
' (I) Entertaln!MIII Tonight
Ill (I) People'• Court
(I) IIJl MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
till Newo
~ I!J) Monayllna Current
repona on world economics
·and financial news wl.th LOO
Dobbs. (0:30)
till WhHI of Fortune

in America's No. 1 s.,.ctatOf
sport. duup . Call 114-MI·
2879 or 814-949-2045 . Mutt

...
·

tM
belfmpl. wordt.

~v A R s o I

1

!Il Dr. Who City of Death,

3 stock car tram•. Ott lnvotved

.....

low to form four

(J) SportoLook (T)

1974 F100 Ford pickup true~ few
part• or fb• up . 1918 Ford. 421
enCfina, 111 naw parts. N. .dt •
.... mblad. Se• Randy Smith fit
238 E. S.oond, Pomllt'oy, Ohio.

Seers washer , Emerton stereo"both as it. Zenith st1reo. Accord ian. Kimball Magic Chord or·
'g an. Ca11614-446-6747 .

56

.. &lt;Il (I)
1151 Nowo

Du••

Big Dakota Farm home built on
your lot. $1.2.995 !I up. Call
614-886-7311 .
.

EVENING

m

letters of
0 Rearrange
lour Krambled words

••

MON., SEPT. 14

s .I n

~~~~~, S~\\ci\l.A-~-e~se
_ _ _ _..;,_...;; 1411o4.., CLAY I. I'OUAN

1:00 (]) Cr11y Uke 1 Fox Fox end
Hoonds

Chevrol« engin•; 360, 3015.
Call 814· 246· 6067,
- - - - - - - - -_·lcekh•U•t kite. 199.95 in,Jtalled . Most Fords, Cheovy
trucka, Vans, 4x4's. Muffl•
Man, 9 Stlmpaon Aw .• Athens.
Ohio. 1 -800-143-3717.

Firewood for Sill&amp;• S30 .00,
pick-up load. delivered. Cell
Roger Meade- 614-388-9018
or 388-9341 .

stove,
bed· compl.-1:1,
reclineu,regular
twin beds,
table &amp; 4
cttain . Call 614-446-3224.

•

Budget Tranlmiuians! used
buitt, •II type~ . OuarantH :JO
daya. C.sh •nd Carry or intUI.
Call 114-379- 2220.

Heatiletor fire place. compl~e .
Good cond . Call 614-446·
1340.

·

Television
'Viewing

fi!DV6 ll\M AMIIJ~CQA..T CAloi'T MA'?.f.IJ.f- AAPP'(!

•

The Daily Sentinai-Paaz

'

Ua-.1 •nd rebuilt transmluions.
lnt.-nalty inspected and guar•nteed. fn.WIIa1ion available. Wt
buy junll tranaml ..lons. Call
&amp;1.&amp;-446-0981.

Quality firewood fo r sale. $26 a
pick-up load. Bidwell, Ohio. Call
614-367-0669 .

Aelrig.-trost -free. washer. gas

s

"

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

BORN LOSER
.~!~[ft.~'%[ ~t.t.I k&lt;;!'.i?AC~A~~ 10

Auto Parts
&amp; Acces1orie1

A 1iP fOit IQ'f'$ OO»tERS:

Plal'fit cistern state approved,
plastic septic ttnka. pla1tic
culverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jackoon. Oh . 814-286-5930.

SNAFU 0 by Bruce Beattie

tilt

76

-

Monday. September 14, 1987

'

380fNorway
39 Whetstone
40 ElCtremities
41 From
way off

I 0 Hypnotist's
word
12 Pirates
hiding
place
13 Military

DOWN

!'Neckwear
2 Errand
3 Beat;
outdo
4Grown
lambkin
mission
5
Classify
15 Rich rock
61leam
16 By what
7 Over
method
(poet.)
17 Threefold
8
Be outdone
(pref.)
11 Teach
18 Picket
or Kidd
20 African
14
_duck
lake
21 "Body-" 16 Cure
(1981 film) t9 _ Keller
22 Anatomical
network
23 Hypnotic
state
25 Ed Norton's
domain
26 Future
27 Foe of
Carthage
28 Nothing

20 Greek

island

30 Ros.'!
of

song
23 Bell
31 Aquatic
24 Agent
animal
orange
33
Model
is one
36Anger
25 Except
37 Shinto
27 Wind
temple
instrument

(Fr.)

29 Exaggerate
32 Pack
animal
33 Prior to
' (pref.)
34 Perch
35 Witch's
brew
37M.Q.'s
"immedia~ly"

DAILy CRYPI'OQUtti ES- Here'l bow tq wort It:

1114

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
· One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

for the thnie L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the iength and fonnation of tbe words are all
hints. Each day tbe code letters are different.
' '
CRYPI'OQUOTES
9-14
F M

S W Z H J

I

I G J

N I G P
I

D R L

sz

G Z L

0 -

w

E I S U M

lJ

Z E

TIAAUWP

NFSLRWUM .
DISZH
Yet~t,!rdaJ'I Ceyptoqaote: EXCWSIVENF.SS IS A

CHARACTERISTIC OF RECENT RICHES, HIGH SOCI·
ETY AND THE SKUNK. - SOURCE UNKNOWN

.

·. '

r

'

-

-- -- ~-· -··-

. ...

-

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

�Page- 10 -The Daily Sentinel

...

Pope supporting sanctuary movement·
SAN ANTONIO (UP!) - Pope
John PatH 11 dropped the first
surprise of his U.S. tour with
words of support for the sanctu·
ary movement , praising Its
· "courage ·a nd generosity" in
sheltering illegal aliens fleeing
civil wars In Central America.
The pope, who also refused to
budge from his position on

Sunday, the pontiff stopped short
of a direct call for Jaw-breaking
by members of the 5-year-old
sanct uary movement, some of
whom have run afoul of federal
Immigration r ules, but he
praised their "compassion In the
face of compte)&lt; human, social
and political realities ."·
The most moving moment of
the Polish-born pontiff's grueling
Sunday came ne~ r Its end, when
he met 1,000 citizens of Panna
Marla. the n ation 's first Polis h
community, 60 miles from San
Antonio. They sang "Mary, the
' Queen of Poland" at exact ly 9
'• p.m .. when It traditionally Is
Among those also at the
sung each night In Poland.
gathering were 13 Polish nuns
"1 had tears In my eyes.! never
who run the small, colorful
shrine of Our Lady of Czesto- dreamed this would happe n,"
chowa In San Antonio. The shrine said Adrian Wlartrek. "He held
was built in 1966, the year Poland my hand ."
celebrated 1,000 years of
"I said 'God bless you,' and he
·
sai d, 'You are .very welcome,"'
Christianity.
"I know hlm . He blessed me whispered Mary. Januszewski.
when 1 went to Texas,'' said
"That' s all I could say. I started
Sister Helena Marek, who knew
crying. I'm so elated, I just can't
talk."
the pope when he was a bishop in
Poland. "I don't see any differ·
John Paul Is intensifying hls
message of firmness for the
ence. He's the same for the
Catholic family.
people - the same energy even
after so many speeches."
He went to Our Lady of

divorce and the Integrity of the
~amlly, was to fly west to Arizona
today at the midpoin t of hi s
nlne·city U.S. tour. His Itln3ry
Included a meeting with a
t
16.000 Indians and an event
mass In Sun Devil Stadium
Arizona State University .
At amass for 300,000people In a
.barren fleld outside San Antonio

Polish Texans sing~
laugh, cry with pope
SAN ANTONIO (UP!)- Pope
John P a ul IT 's vlslt with 1,000
Polish Texans. had the elements
of a friendly family picn ic - a
little food, a spot of bragging and
tears of joy as the descendants of
America's first Polish colony
met the first Polish pope.
The pope ended a daylong
series of ·appearances In San
Antonio by speaking Sunday
night to a group that Included 300
people from the Roman Catholic
parish at Panna Marla, Texas, a
farming town 60 mlles south of
San Antonio that was the site of
the first Polish settlement in the
United States.
Guests, some dressed In tradl·
Ilona! costumes, spent the time
before the pope's arrival In a
picnic atmosphere, eating Polish
sausage a nd pastries and com·
peting to see who had the closet
links to the pope's home village in
Upper Sllesia, the area that
spawned most of the Polish
immigrants to Texas.
John P aul was greeted with
signs reading "Witamy ojca
swlatego" - Polish for "Wei·
come holy fa ther" - and "Kochamy cie" - " I love you" In
Polish. He responded with a
10-minute speech in Polish in
which he said Panna Maria is
still a famili ar name to Poles.
" I gteet you. the oldest Polish
parish in the United States," the
pontiff said.
"The bishops of the Americas
said the (Texas ) climate was hot
for our Immigrants. Some of
them fled to Chicago, " he said,
drawing chuckles. "But the par·
Ish of Panna Marla stays. The
whole Polish co lony of America
looks to its roots here."
The pope joi ned with the Polish
Texans In singing the hymn
··Mary, the Queen of Poland" In
honor of Our Lady of Czestochowa, Poland's patron saint.
The hymn was .sung at 9 p.m. , the
same time It traditionally is sung
each night in Poland.
The 90 residents of Panna
Marla, whose population is dwln·
dlltig as young people leave for
larger cities, had hoped John
Paul would visit their town. The
Rev . Canon Bernard Goebel, 82,
pastor of Immaculate Conception Church, sai d " the future Is
bleak" for the rural church,
founded by the 100 families who
settled Panna Maria, Polish for
Virgin Mary, in 1854.
Cynthia Mlka of Panna Marla ,
although disappointed the pope
passed up a chance to visit the
town, said Sunday' s visit was

Mooday, Septembef 14, 1987

Pome;-oy,-Middleport, Ohio

Guadalupe church In the San
' Antonio barrio Sunday night to
tell parishioners In Spanish that
the church. will not sanction
. "trial marriages, civil mar·
rlages, com mon-law marriages
and divorce."
"We cannot Invent t)le faith as
we go along," the pope said. "V:Ie
must receive It In and from the
universal community of faith,
t he church to whom Christ
himself has entrusted a teaching
o!llce under the guidance of the
spirit of truth."
Part of the teaching, John Paul
said, is the importance of the
sacrament of marriage, which
"forins the stable basts of the
whole Christian community."
The pope also turned recruiter
Sunday, urging more Hispanics
to consider the religious life both
in hls sermon at mass and at the
parish meeting.
"I am happy to know that the
number of Hispanic priests and
men a nd women religious Is
grow ing," he said. "But m a ny
more are needed. Christ needs
Hispanic laborers for the great
harvest of the Hispanic community a nd the whole church."
The crowd that gathered for

mass was the largest the pope
hils seen so far In hls second tour
of the United States, which
entered its fifth day today. But
the pitiless sun and the lack of
shade took a heavy toll. Three
hundred people were treated at
Red Cross flrst-ald·statlons In the
field for heat -related problems,
but the most serious trouble
arose when the mass was over . .
The throng flooded onto the two
roads serving the mass site, 15
miles outside San Antonio, until
empty buses could not reach
their loading points. It took some
pellple lour hours to reach town
In temperatures flpproachlng 100

degrees .
Thirty-eight people were hasp!·
talized, three In critical condlt ton
with heat- Induced heart problems. A 62-year-old man was ..
killed In an auto wreck trying to
work his car through tlie crowds.
But not all complained.
"My skin Just wrinkled," said
Judy Brooks. 72, a ~etired nurse,
when the PQpemoblle brought
John Paul within a C\&gt;Uple of feet
of her. '' My husband and I
argued about lt . He said, 'No
Babe, don't go,' bUt there was
something burning Inside me. It
was wonderful to see him stand·
ing there, blessing everybody."

Bears
humble
Giants

(Dining Room Only)

Served with whipped""potatoes. chicken &amp;ravy, cole
slaw. hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry, no substi tutes except beverage with additional price.

POPE JOHN PAUL II

·Meigs County
Land Transfers
Charles R. Snider, Jennifer
Snider to John Baker, Lot 86,
Raclrie village.
Ezra E. Sheets, Frances M.
Sheets to David L. SHeets, Mary "!
M. Sheets, 20 A., Orange.
Amber Lohn. Ella Smith, Dale
E.• Smith to Ronald Edward
Freeman, Rebecca Ann Ward,
Pt. lot 3. Sutton .
Mary Lou Schwab to Ralph
. Butcher, Nina Butcher. lot 23,
Middleport Viii.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday. September

15.

1987

...

1 Seption. 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Must register all Middleport dOgs by Oct. 15

FOR JUST

25&lt;

$ 3•

By BOB HOEFLICH
Senllnel Nrws Stall
Come Oct. 15, all v icious dogs
in Middleport - lhis automat! ·
cally Includes all plt bulls- must
be registered with the Middle·
port Police Department.
This Is only one provision of an
ordi nance approved by Middle·
port Village Council Monday
night to localize a new state law
gover ning vicious dogs .
Own&lt;'rS of v icious dogs- and
pit bulls have been nam&lt;'d as a
vicious breed by the s t.at e leglsla·
ture mtJst reg is ter their
a nimals with the Middleport
Pollee Department begl~ ·n ing
Oct. 15. They will pa .v $5 . a one
time charge. at th ~ time of
regis trat io n.
The ordinan ce fu r th er prO·
vldes thai owners must carry
$50.000 in llablllly insurance;
that plt bulls and o ther vic iou s

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992.5432
POMROY, OH.
·
Featuri•g Ke11tuck Fried Chkk1n

ower 1nes
to

dogs must be kept In a pen that
ha s a cover, and when off th e
owrler 's premises. mUst be on a

village's application lor federa l
funds to be used in purchasing
the right of way and for prelimi ·
nary e ngi neering costs involved
in laying out a bikepathalongthe
river on the Chesapeake and Ohio
Railroad property. The request
has been turned down. The
project fail s to meet the criteria
for such grant s in that it Is not of
regiona l signifi ca nce, accordi ng
to the departme nt.
Counc il dis~uss ed the probl~m
and agreed to attempt to work
wi th Pomeroy in the es tablishme nt of a bike path which would

chai n a nd mu zzled.
Pen alty for vio lation of th e
ordinan ce is a maximum of six
monthS In jail and a fine up to
$1.000. or both.
Middleport Co uncil also
agreed Monday night to !lle a n
application for , a comm uni ty
block grant through the Meigs
·Count y Commis sione rs for th e
ins ta lla tion of 22 hand icapped
ac(·ess ramps In th e business
section of the town . The ramps
will cost a pproximately! $400 r un from one community to the
each.
ot her . It Was s uggested that.
The a ppli catio n mu s t be fil ed · perhaps, th e fact that it would be
by Sept 29 and Mayor Fred
a two-community endeavor
Hoffman will proceed with the
might makr the project one
which would fall i111o the regional
detai ls.
Ma yor Hoffman read a lellcr
s ignifica nce criteria needed for
fr om th e Ohio Department of
gra nt s. Mayor Hoffman will
Transportal ion In regard to the co nta ct Pom eroy offleials to

determine in terest of that com·
· feCO nd readmgs were given on
munity working with Middleport
two ordinances which will In·
on th e project .
crease sewage a nd water rates in
Mayor Hoffman read a letter
the town a nd council agreed not
from Allee Struble , executrix of
to request a hear ing on the
request of the Riverboat Inn
the esta te of the late Bessie
Rud is ill , indiCa tin g · tha t Mrs.
which under a D-3A liquor permit
Rudisill had made provisions for
as ks to be able to stay open until
a $5.000 gift to the Riverview
30 a.m. rather than the 1 a.m.
Ce metery in Middl eport. A le tter
present closing tlme.
of ackn owledgement and thanks
Officials discussed the final
plan for traffic in th e communit)l
will be sent to Mrs. Struble .
A groundbreaki ng ceremony
for Saturday's Block •Party
for the new health care facility to staged by th e Middleport
be buill In the town was anCha mbe r of Commerce. North
houn ced for ear ly October . Sen.
Third Ave., no r m a ll y one-wa y,
Jan Long a nd others will be on ' ' wil l be used for two-way traffic
hand for the ceremony. the · during the part y hours. Counc il
mayor reported .
discussed the possibilities of a
Three bids were received on minia ture go lf course and batthe sale of a 1982 veh icle no ling cages al Hartinger Park
longer needed by th e Middl eport
with Co uncilman Ja mes Clat·
Police Depanment. The high bid
worthy outlining aspects of suc h
of $400 by Candy· Smith. Che·
opera tion s a t a spot he vis ited
sh ire. was accepted.
recently in Richmond. Ind. Co un·
..
.

z:

cilman Bob Gilmore reported on
upcoming activities at the new
American Legion Hall in Middle·
port. A blue jea n ball will be
·sta ged Friday night and on Oct. 8
a wrestling card has been sche·
duled. The building has Friday
and Saturday even ing Chris tmas
dinners booked through De·
cember. Gilmore sa id. Care less
bicycle riding by so me youngs·
ters in the communit y was a lso
discussed. Mayor Hoffman said
the offenders have been id e ntified and talked to.
The mayor's report showin g
receipts of $4,486.22 in fines and
fees for the month of August was
approved.
Attending the meeting were
Ma yor Hoffman, Cler.k·
Treasurer Jon Buck, and council
members, Dewey Horton, Jack
Satterfield, William Walters, Gil·
more and Clatworthy.

Meigs marijuana growers are
out $10 million due to raids
Meigs Co1J.Ilty marijuana grow •
ers are out O\"Pr 10 million dollars
in harvest ed cro ps this year due

to the seasona bl e raids con ducted by th e departme nt of
Sher•lff Howard Fra nk a nd th e
Ohio

Bu r eau

of

C riminal

Inv estigat ion .
Whilr the raid season normallv
doesn't begin until Ju ne, lhls
~ 0ar offirrr s report l hr first raid
occurred as ea rly April a nd lhe
program is st ill ongoing.
Dan . Snyder, deput~· sher lf!

,.

GENEROUS OONi\TION - !I sizabh• donation
lrom Farmr' rS Rank and Savings Co. Is helping lo
bring COSI (the f&lt;•nt&lt;•r of Selene~ and lndusl~y.
Columbus) lo Saturday's Mlddlt'J&gt;ort Rlock Party.
FarmerS Rank 's donalion wlll pay fur COS I's
main e~hlhit In Middl e port, lh&lt;! "Stardo!llC." The
purlabl• s tar lht•al er stands 12 feel high and 16
fee l wide. and lnflul es with fans. Once tht• Ilghls
are turned down, the star projf'clor rt!t:realf'S a
dazzling night sky fill&lt;~d wilh slurs and takt's
St"ardome vlsllors a cross the unh•ersl? fron1 tht•
Milky Way to the hlg dipp&lt;'r and bryond.

··· we get a personal audience
with him, " she said. "Everybody
is thrllled as long as we see him."
Boguslaw Lesniak of Wylie,
Texas, a former member of the
outlawed Solidarity union who
came to the United Stales In 1983,
said the only shortcoming of
Sunday's visit was "it was too
short."
"I had tears in my eyes. I never
dreamed this would happen,"
said Adr ian Wiartrek. "He held
m y hand."

•

Cloudy tonight. Chance of
showers. Lows In 60s. Highs
Wednesday In mid 80s.

•

a1y

Vot .37, No . 8!~
Copyrighted 1987

"just as good. "

·I

0911

•

•

' .1• veyou
start

077
Pirk 4

Chica o Bears

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

Daily Numlwr

Page 3

TUESQAY NIOHT SPECIAL
·

Ohio Lottery

Presenling a !!heck lo Doh Freed, cenlcr, a hlo&lt;:k
parly &lt;:ofllmltlcemun. arc Ted Reed, at right ,
president of Farmers Bank, and Paul Ret•d, hank
co ntrolle r . · Donalions from Midwesl Slcel.
Downing -C hilds -M u I lt•n - t\1 U!SSf'r I nsu ran~P ,
Fis he r's Big Whee l and ·laymar Golf Club arc
bringing a COS I ex hihit callt•d "Buhhles" to tht •
block purly. Aclivilles ul lhis cx hlhil are s ure to
provide a &lt;!hallengc to all ages. Stardome wlll he
inside the Plant Parlor and Bubhles oulside the
Plant Parlor, on lh• "T" In Middleport

Your local power company is a
part of American Electric
Power, .a family of power
comparues.
So the electricity you use to flx
breakfast comes from our shared
electrical transmission system,
the strongest in the world.
We also share a network of
people and power and resources
that links seven states. That's how
we deliver electricity quickly and
efficiently, while keeping down the cost.
From now on, when you see our
name, you'll also see AEP. As a part
of American Electric Power, .we're still
your local power company, with a lot
of power behind us. ·

..,

finan cing ca mpaigns last Scp·
billion, th e government sairl,
tembrr and December·.
whlle grocc"i·y s tores followed
The gove rnm e nt C'Stl m a ted · wllh a 1.2. percent gain to reach
America's retail outl e ts so ld $24.3 billion .
$128.6 billion Worth of goods in
Energy and food prices both
August. Thai figure was adjusted
rose during the s umme r . so it is
s lightly to reflect seasona l fac ·
possible the sales increases a t
tors but not c ha nges in price.
groceries and serv ice station s
Dealers in durable goods co me from more expensiv e mer·
a utos . ironing hoards an d a ll cha ndise rather tha n Increased
other iiems meant to last a t least
busin ess.
t hree years - increased their
General merchandise s tores
sales by 2.3 percent to reach $50.5 recorded onl Ya O.o percent rise in
billion .
sales, totaling $US billi on. and
Herr the ga in in au to sa les had apparel and accc!!Sory s tores
1o.overcome .a 1.1 percent drop In saw thei r business drop 0.4
business at building materials. pe rcent to $7.2 billion . Analysts
hardware a nd garden stores to believe the bleak sa les stem from
$7.3 billion and a 1.5 percent fa ll · th e fact tha t Lahar Da y came
In sa les of furniture. home r&lt;'latlvely lat e this year, so most
fu rnis hings and eq uipm ent
ba ck-to-school shopping took
outlets to $6.7 billion.
place in September.
Purch·ases of non -durable
Eating and drinking places
goods increased 0.6 percent· for saw their busin ess Increase 0.~
the month to hil $78.1 billion. perce nt to $12.9 billion, whil e
Gasoline service stations led the drug and propri etary stores feli
way with a 1.9 perce nt rise to $7.8 0.5 percent , reaching $4.4 billion .

U. N. chief concludes peace
MANAMA, Bahrain (UP!) U.N. Secretary·General Javier
Perez de Cuellar wound up hls
peace mission to the., Persian
· Gulf, with Iraq· demanding Iran
be puni shed for rejecting a
cease-fire proposal and Tehran
Insisting Baghdad be labeled the
aggressor In the 7-year-old
conflict..
The U.N . chief planned to leave
Baghdad today· and return to
New York Wedn esday after

~-

OHIO
POWIR
~

....

~

.'

"

'

spending two days each In Iran
and Iraq trying to persuade the
i lwo countries to end hostillties
under.,U.N , .fl,~olution 598, which
calls foi'"a cease:.flre, withdrawal
. to international boundaries and
peace talks.
As Perez de Cuellar met
Monday with Iraqi President
Saddam Hussein, the U.S. Navy
took advantage of a lull in the
southern gulf to slip two convoys
.o f re·flagged Kuwaiti tankers

•

•

ffilSSIOn

through the perilous Strait of
Hormuz In range of Iran's
Chinese - made Silkworm
missiles.
U.S. m ilitary sources sa id Iran
recently took steps to reduce the
risk to shipping caused by the
Sllkw!)rms, but did not elaborate.
The two convoys, one north bound toward Kuwait and the
other southbound to...,ard the
Gulf of Oman, passed within 1,500
(Continued on page 101

of cu ltivatin g marijuana. More

indiclmcnls m ay be returned
when 1he gra nd jury convenes
again on Oct . 8.
· assig-ned to ~er\'e as marijuana .
Snyder , pnd Deputy Kenn.v
Klein, who also works closel y
officer, re port s 1ha1 JO. R65 marl ·
juan a plants- Pach with a $1,f00 with the marijuana era di cation
program . point out that some·
s trrct va lw' - were c ut this vea r
limes a property ow ner can be
ln som e JOO locations aCross
relat ed to a crop by the di sta nce
MPigs County. This is in co mpa ri ·
son 10 10.1;~~ cut by law e nforce- of the pla nt s from the hou se. well
defined paths be tween the hou se
ment offic ia ls in 1 ~86.
and
the field, and l;&gt;eing found in
Th e "' ha rvps t "' ca n only be
thP pa tch . LifPs ty les of individu·
burned through a court ord er
recei\·ed from .J udge Cha rles als arc also a fa ctor to be
considen&gt;d in relating a property
Knight of t h~ Meigs County
Common Pleas Court a nd man y owner to a crop of marijuana
plants, th ey say.
tim es must be kept as rvidE'nce.
The Bureau of Cr iminal Jm·csSo far this yea r. there have been
tigat lon th is year e nt e red t he
only th ree crop burnings - these
loca l picture in August and has
fakc place at 1he Meigs Co unty
used eit hC&gt;r a he licopter or a
lnnclfill - so consequenll.v the

pla ne in locatin g th e marijuana
plant s across the count y. Snyder
usua lly r ides in th e plane to he lp
pin down the loca tion of the
illegal crops.
Once located . ground officers
are directed to the location.
Rarely arc a ny persons found at
th e ~pot. A hou se near th e plants
is ap p roached -. and very
carefully--usually by Klein who
iS covered by other officer s.
Questions are asked and thE-crop
is c ut down and hauled away by

oHicers. One crop "this summer
consisted of 760 plants and
r eq uired five days for removal.
Snyder and Kl!'in report that
cutting down and removin g
plants from the sce ne is hard ,
dirty work and particularly In the
hot weather of thi s summer. A
jeep helps to get officers close to
the plants and officers m im y
times lfse their own vehicles in
help ing to remove plants from a
field.
Officers entering a . field often
limes find trip wires placed there
10 make them fall and rnany
times nea rby, a plywood board
Co ntinued on page 10

Sentence man on
Middleport B&amp;E

Retail sales up 1.3 percent
WASHINGTON I UP[) - Re·
tail sa les rose a s m aller than
expec ted 1.3 percent in August .
with auto sa les ge ne rating three·
quarter s of the grow th , the
Commerce Department sa id
today.
Exclude motor ve hic le pur·
chases and the seasonal ly adjus ted sales tota l for the month
would ha ve been only 0.3 percent
higher tn an in Ju ly. the governme nt said.
Many analyst s had expected
an overall sa les increase of
nearly 2 percent because c ut rate auto llnanclng deals had
generated a 7 percent gai n In
sales of U.S.-made cars.
In dolla r terms. however. the
motor ve hicle sales e nded up
producing only a 4.5 percent
increase from July, reaching
$30.5 billion . That's s till the best
Increase since February , bul i1
was too little to produce the sharp
sales gains seen during similar

sto ra ge space for the result s of
the raids in the basement of t he
sheriff's quarters have had to be
e nlarged. All of thC' cut crops arc
tied and lagged as evide nce.
Officials ha ve fo~nd that it is
difficult to tie th e grower into the
crop. However . la s t Thursdav. a
Me igs Counly Grand .Jury ·did
indi ct fo ur resid~ nt s on charges

TOP C!INDID!ITE - Ac·
curding lo Reagan Administration sources, Patrida Gold·
man,

vin~

chairman of the

N ailonal Transporlallon
Safety Huard, is a . leading
candidate to s ucceed Trans·
portatlon Secrelury Ellzabelh
Dole, who Is leaving h.c r posl
on Ocluber I lo help her
hushand, Sen. Robert Dole of
Kansas, with hls presldenllal
campaign. (UP!)
•

Teachers still out

By Unlled Press lnternallonal
Teac hers ' s trikes continued In
Youngstown and North Ridgeville today, but teachers in
Norwalk averted a walkout by
agreeing to work without a
contract while negotia tions
continue.
The strike a ffec ting 15,000
students in Youngstown e ntered
. its seventh day toda y as negotia·
tors for the board of education
and the · Younstown Education
Association walled to hear from
a federal mediator to resume
conjracl talks :
Superintendent Emanual Cat soules has c~ nc el ed classes untlk
th e walkout ends .

William .J. Atwood. H of indi ct m ent charging c ultiva tion
Washington Cour t House, ap- of marijuana. Th a t hea r ing was
peared Monday morning in continued one week until Sept. 21,
Me igs Count y Comomn Pleas 9 a .m. , to permit Parsons to
Court to e nter a voluntary plea of obtain an a ttorney. A not guilty
guilty to a charge of breaki ng and plea was entered on his behalf by
e nteri ng which was contained in the court a nd Parsons was
a grand jury indictment returned released upon a $10.000 pC&gt;rso nal
las t Thursday. Th e charge re- recogniZance bond.
sulted from an incident on July :n
II is expected I hat others who
in which Atwood and two juve· were indicted a t la s t Thu rsday's
niles broke into th e administra- grand jury sessio n will be ar.
tive offices of Me igs Local School rai g ned throughout the week .
District's central offi ce building
In a related mat ter, t~ e prose·
in Middleport , according to cuting attorney pl ans 10 file
Meigs County Prosecuting Allor· noti ce of in 1rn1 to see k forfr iture
hey F red W. Crow IlL
of certain re a l. and pcrsonul
.Judge Kn ight accepted At · property in con nection with srrwood's plea of g uilty a nd sent · eral mari juana cultivat io n
e nccd the F aye tte Count y man to cases.
s ix month s in pri son In the
The prosecutor reports tha t his
Chillicothe Correctional lnsti· office int e nds to s0ck the forfri ·
lute. Atwood was remandE&gt;d to ture of properly ow ned or used b~'
th e c ustody of Sheriff Howard Victor Perr~ · . Michael Richard
Frank pending transpor tation to Hay man . E lmer Parsons a nd
th e Chillicothe facillty .
Henry Paul Price in the cultiva . Atwood was ineligible for pro- tion of ma rijuana. Pen· ~· and
bat ion because of a prior co nvic· Parso ns have each had th eir
lion in Fayette County 1Washing- initial appearanees on the cull i·
ton Court Housel, reported Paul vation charges. Price and Ha,·.
Geran.l. · Investigator fo r the man will appear before the judge
prosecutor .
later in th e week. In each of the
In other court business, Victor cases. and upon the filing of the
Perry,!\!\, of Rt. J, Albany : a
notice of inl!'n.t to S!'!'k fol'f ~i tu re,
Columbia Township trustee, Judge Knight will be asked to
made his initial appearance on a order that the property may not
fourth degree felony charg"e of be sold." . tran sferred. encu m·
cultivation of" marijuana. Perry, ber ed , altered . di vided or
through his attorney, e nte red a · changed or othct·wise disposed of
plea of not guilty to the charge Until the cases ar€' concluded.
and Judge Knight se t Nov. 2 as
This morpin g. at 10 a. m ., '
trial date in the case. Perry was Charles W. Bbrley was arraigned
.arrested Friday bu.t was released on two addllional counts of
on a $10,000 recognizance bond. felonious assault in connEX·tion
Bond was continued by the judge. with '!he May 2.1 s hooting at fhr
Elmer Par ~o ns, 35, of Apple Cove Bar, Rt. 7. Pomeroy. in
Grove-Dorcas · Road, Racine. which David Mark Talbott was
Sutto Township, also appeared wounded.
before ·.Judge Knight on hls

,.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="191">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2781">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39498">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39497">
              <text>September 14, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="602">
      <name>glassburn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5616">
      <name>householder</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="546">
      <name>hughes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1369">
      <name>ours</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="131">
      <name>sharp</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
