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•

··Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Monday, September 21, 1987

,...----Local briefs-----. Nine hurt ··
Police probe woman's de(lth
by stonns
POINT PLEASANT- The Saturday evening shooting death
of a 27-year·old Point Pleasant woman was apparently
self·lnfltcted, according to a spokesperson for the Polnl
Pleasant Police Department.
Pollee were calle_d to the residence of Judith Gall Leonard,
1129 Evergreen Dr., at approximately 5: 39 p.m ., where they
·found Leonard dead of a .22-callber gunshot wo~nd to the
stomach, the pollee spokesperson said. Leonard . was pro·
nounced dead by Mason County Coroner Breton Morgan, M.D.,
the spokesperson added.
·
The body was transported to the state Medical Examiner's
Office In South Charles ton for an autopsy, the spokesperson
said.
·
Whlle the Incident remai ns under Investigation. foul play Is
not suspected, according to the pollee spokesperson .

Home destroyed by fire
Fire clatined the Pomeroy Locust St. home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie BachteJ.and famil y shortly before 3 p.m . on Saturday .
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar reports his departme nt
was called to the scene at 2: 44p.m. arid were back at the station
just before 5 p.m.
'
Legar reports there was heavy fi re damage to the downstairs
of the two·story frame home which was owned by Mae Mayle.
There was smoke a~d water damage to the upstairs of the
structure.
Or igin of the. !ire is still undeterm ined Legar said.

Meigs EMS 9 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend.
·saturday at 9:23a.m .. Racine transported Eric Guyszks from
a two·vehlcle accident on Route 124 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine Fire Department assisted; Kim Umberger
and Oscar Wallace Jr. were treated at (he scene; Middleport at .
11:06 a.m. to the pollee department for Steve Hanning to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11 :54 a.m . transported
Brerry Hudson from a two· vehicle accident on County Road 1 to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Salem and Columbia Township
Fire Departments assiste&lt;l; Pomeroy Fire Department at 2:44
p.m . to a structure' fire at the Mayle residence on Locust St .;
Middleport at 2:58 p.m . to Lincoln Hlll for A.R. Knight to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 3:41p.m. to Water St .
for Kenneth Cundiff to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 7:11 p.m . to County Road 35 for Clifford Kristie to Holzer
Medical Center.
_
Sunday at 4:01a .m., RaclnetoHlll Road for Harry Douglas to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 9: 45 a.m. to Long
Hollow Road for Betty Butcher to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 11: 40 a.m. to Sixth St. for Fran Parker to Holzer
Medical Ce nter.

Hunter safety course, offered
A hunter ;afety course has been scheduled ior Sept. 28·29, and
Oct . 1·3, from 6 to 9 p.m. on Sept. 28·29 and Oct . 1·2, and from 9
a.m. to 12 noon on Oct. 3. The classes will be held on the second
floor of the Pomeroy Municipal Building wlth Dana Aldridge as
chief ins tructor. Class size is limited and students must
pre·reglster by Sept. 25. To register. call John Costanz'? at
843·5405 or at 992·3883 during the day.

Chamber office moved
The Pomeroy Area Chamber 'of Commerce is now located In
the former Diamond Bank building, West Main St., Pomeroy .
Office hours are Monday . Tuesday and Friday . 9: 30 a.m. to 4
p.m . The Chamber phone number remains the same at 992·5005.

Youth committed to ODYS
A lJ.year·old Middleport area youth was permanelty
committed to the Ohio Department of Youth Services Monday
morning when he appeared before Meigs County Ju venlle
Judge Robert Buck on a charge of Inciting pa nic.
The youth was charged with making a bomb threat telephone
call to a school in the Meigs Local School Dis trict.
The youth is one of three who have appeared In local courts
during the pas t week to face charges of inciting panic by making
bomb threat calls to the schools of the Meigs Local District . The
ells have led to the dismissal of classes at various dchools in the
district.

I

Larry Neal Sr.

Larry Nelson Neal Sr., 48, of
Akron, formerly of Point Plea·
sant. dled Saturday mornlng, ln
Akron General Medical Center
aft er a long Illness.
Born July 12, 1939, he was the
son of William He nry Neal and
Opal Brown Neal of Poin t
Pleasant.
Surviving in addlllon to his
parents are two daughters, Mrs.
Mary Wilkey and Mrs. Cheryl
Brooks, both of Akron; two sons.
Larry Jr. and Blll, both of Akron;
two sisters, Mrs. Betty Sue
Stover. Mars hville. Ohio. and
Mary Lou Ma llette, West Colum ~
.bia; two brothers. Terry Ray
Neal, Leo n. and Harry Allen,
Akron; and eight grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews;
and very special frie nds. Carol
Carpenter and Mr. and Mrs.
Lancil Morris, all of Akron.
The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Wllcoxen Fun·
eral Home, Point Pleasant. wlth
the Rev. James L. Bunn offfclat·
lng. Burial will follow In Fores t
Hill Cemetery, Letart.
Friends may call at the fun era l
home from 6 to 9 p.m . Tuesday.

Judith Lenoard
Judith Gail Leonard, 27, Point
Pleasant , died Saturday even·
lng at her home.
Born Oc t. 15, 1959, at Point
Pleasant. she was the daughter
of James M. Leonard and Mary
Wolfinbarger Leonard of Poin t
Pleasant.
Surviving In addition to her
parents are one son, Joshua
Ryan Leonard; one sister. Lydia
Susan Woodall, Point Pleasant ;
two brothers. Jeff Kerwood,
Hillsboro, Ohio, and Nick Ker·
wood, Middletown, Ohio; mater·
· · nal grandparents , Mr. and Mrs.
George Wolfinbarger, Hlllsboro;
several nieces, nephews, aunts
and uncles.
·
Th e funeral wlll be at 1:30 p .m .

·· --

By United Press' lnternatlonai
· Thunderstorms lingered In the
southern Plains today after
Texas with damaging hall and
raking Oklahoma with high
winds that knocked down a tent
at the State Falr, Injuring nine
people.
The storms were reported
ear ly today In sou th.east Colo·
rado. northeast New Mexico,
northwest Texas and southwest
Oklahoma, and rain also was
expected in Great Lakes and
northern New England, the Na·
tiona! Weather Service said.
Nine people were Injured Sun·
day ln Oklahoma City when
. a tent
stretched over a stage at the
State Falr used for Indian dances
and gunflght demonstrations col·
lapsed during a thunderstorm
packing winds of more than 60
mph.
Six of those Injured - lnclud·
lng one who suffered a broken leg
- were taken to hospitals for
treatment. Three were treated at
the scene.
" When the rain started, eve·
ryone went Into the tent to s tay
dry," Oklahoma City police
Capt. Harold Campbell said.
"There's no way to know just how
many people crowded In there."
Rain Sunday stretched from
eastern Minnesota to New York,
from Maine to Florida and from
the Texas Panhandle to southw·
est Colorado.
A violent 15·mlnute storm
pelted Borger, Texas , with hall
as big as golf balls, breaking
windows. damaging cars and
roofs · and knocking out power.

Pick 4

Page 3

•

Velma Lane

South Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness today with
a high between 70 and 75. Mos tly
cloudy tonight with a low be·
tween 50 a nd 55.
Considerable cloudiness Tu es·
day with a chance of s hower s a nd
a h lgh between 65 and 70.
The probabillty of prec iplta·
lion Is 20 percent today and
tonight and 30 percent Tuesday.
Winds wlll b€ .from the southw ·
est around 10 milt:s a n hour tod ay
and from the wes t at less tha n 10
mlles an hour tonight.
Extended Forecast
.Wedneday through Friday
· Parlly cloudy Wednesday and
Thursday and mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers Friday.
Highs wlll be in the upper, 60s to
mid 70s. Lows will be In the upper
40s to mid 50s.

Weather

Order of sale filed
An order of sale has been flied
In the. Meigs County Common
Pleas Court case of George M.
Collins against Ronald Davis.

Seek divorces
Filing for divorces In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court at
Ruby Nakao. Racine, versus
Michael Nakao, Stocton, Call!.;
Brenua Kay Randolph, Reeds·
·vme, versus Marvin Dale Ran·
dolph, Racine; Barbara
Jeannette Lanier Cullen, Middleport, versus Terry Lynn Cullen,
Letart, W.Va.
Amy Beth Haning, Langsville,
and Ronald Allen Haning, have
f!led for a d!Ssolutlon of their
marriage.
·

2 Sections 12 Pages

25 Cents ·

A Multimedia In c. N ewspaper

Pomeroy, Middleport to apply for joint grant
WINNER NAMED - Pomeroy resident Belly
Whitlatch was the winne r of a SilO gilt certificate
which was given away recently at Powell's Super
Valu in Pomeroy. i\ store·wlde sale and the give

away at the Pomeroy market were held In
co nj"ncllon with a national sale by a top brand
manufac turer. Presenting Whitlat ch with the $110
prize Is Tom Haw ley. store manager.

Pomeroy Village Co uncil
agreed Monday night following a
45·mlnute exec ut ive session to
app ly jointly with Middleport
Villa ge for a . fed eral grant
through the Oh io Depar tme nt of
Transportation to acqu ire rig ht s·
Of· way on the Chesa pea ke a nd
Ohio Railroad Compan y prop·
erty for a bike pat h through the
two vlllages.
Mlddl~port' s init ial appllca·
lion for fund in g to purchase th ei r
rlght ·OI·wa y wa s denied by
ODOT becau se the project wa s
not of regional significance. a
(u ndlng req uireme nt. repor ted
Pomeroy . Councilman Bruce
Reed . If Pomeroy and Middle·
port apply jointly for acq uisition
fundin g, the projec t s hould meet

t)le neces sa ry criteria Reed said. . Welshtown Hill Road. abo ut
Middlepor t already has con·
one·fourth of which Is within
structlon dollars for the bike
Pomeroy Village limits . Council·
path. continued Reed. and now
man Bill Young expressed his
Pomeroy must apply fo r co n·
feelings regardi ng the need for
s tru ctlon dollars. If Pomeroy' s
resurfacing. pointing out that
requesi for cons truction funding
sc hool buses are no longer able to
Is approved, the two villages will
travel the road. Despite the
then combi ne on the joint ap pll·
somewhat hazardous condition
ca t ion for the proper t y
of the road, Young sa id t ha t a bus
acq ulstlons .
from Carleton School mus t travel
In Middleport, properly must
the road to pick up a handicapped
be purchased from the railroad
studen t.
company . In · Pomeroy, the
Pomeroy wlll also be app lying
former rai lroad property Is
for Commu nit y Development
owned pr iva tely.
• Block Grant funds through the
In ano th er jolnt · venture,
co unt¥ commissioners to rep la ce
Pomeroy will be combining with
the Main St. downtown s idewalks
Sutton Towns hip to apply for
In the village.
Co mmunitY Developme nt Block
Grant applications for CDBG
Grant fund ing to resurface
fundin g must be subml ttM to the

•

commissioners by Nov. 1.
In still another joint 'project,
Pomeroy wlll be combining
funds with Jackson City Council
to hire an attorney to oppose the
proposed rate increase by Geh·
era! Telephone Company of Ohio.
According to a letter from the
Jackson board . GTE's proposed
ra te hike would Increase tele·
phone costs to cust omers by
abo ut 45 percent. Costs .for an
attorney would be less than $500
per vlllage accord ing to a letter
from the Jackson Council.
Councll agreed to release fund s
of $1,806 from this year's budget
to subsidize the Blue Streak Ca b
Company , as req ues ted earlier
by Middleport Village officia ls. A
let ter from Middleport asked If

~·

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Po lit ·
ica l co nservatives and profes-

.1'..'· .
::;::-.---

ENTERTt\INS - Denver Ri ce and Company
was only one of a number of groups featured a.~
ent ertainers at thr main s tage during th e annual

•

-----Announcements-----.;.. ~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;
Meeting tonight
Ra cine Village Council will
meet in recessed session tonight
!Monday ). 7 p.m .. at the Shrine
Club Park.

ter of the Delta K•ppa Gamma
Societ y ha s been c hanged to the
Racina United MP th odis t
Church. Tlw meetin g will begi n
a t &amp;: 30 p.m .

Trustees
Rutland Township Trus tees
will meet In regu lar sess ion
Thursday. 6: :lO p.m .. a t th e
Rutland Fire Station.

J)eMohiy mePIIng
Meigs Chapt e r Order of DeMo·
iay will m('(' t this evening , 7:30
p.m ., at th e Middl eport Ma so11tc
Te mp le . Mothers' Club will meet
I
al so.

Change of location
The location of the Sept. 28 . . . - - - - - - - - - -- - - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - meeting of Alpha Omicron Cha p ~

Phone
...
Co ntinu ed from page 1
red carpet treatment to sell you
gear. "
Ro y Scott . who was OBES's
telecommunicatio ns man ager
for 16 years. said he became so
disgusted tha t he took an ear ly
r~tlreme n t

in .June.

"I didn't hire on as a thief and I
was n't abou t to retire as one, "
said Scott. " We were spendi ng
$1,500 to $2 ,000 for phones that
you and 1could go out and buy for
$500."
Scott said phones that were
only five years ol d a nd paid for
we re torn out in order to install
the new ones.
David Potter, who works fo r a
firm that a ppraises phone eq uip·
ment for fedcra I bankruptcy
courts. major banks a nd national
leasing companies, exa mined
the co ntracts and said the OBES
was paying "larcenous " pr&lt;ces
for the equipment.
OBES Is the most fi na ncially
des pera te 'a gency In the state,
having declared a fiscal emer·
gency to cope with budget
defi cits of~ million.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m . )
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ......... . ... 26V,
AT&amp;T ......... ......... .... ........... 32')(,
Ashland 011 ........................ 66~
Bob Evans Farms ............. .l9Y,
Charming Shop_pes .. ..... ....... 22Ji
Federal Mogul ..... ............... 46%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ...... 70 ·
Heck's Inc ...................... ..... .. .4
Lands' End ..... .... ......•.... ... ....... 27'
Limited Inc ........................ 34')'8
Multimedia Inc..... .................. 71
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ....... ..... JO Y,
Shoney's Inc .................... ... 29~
Wendy's Inti .. ,...................... 9)1.
Worthington Ind .................. 23%

I.
AID TO PROGRAM - 1\ SIO.OOO grant from the
.lacoh G . Schmldlapp No. I Trust, · administered
hy the Fifth Third Bunk of Cincinnati. hll!l enabl ed
the Rio Grande College and Community College
Holzer Sc hool of Nursing to purc ha.~e computer
equlpmcni and Instructional film s. Us ing th e

~

.

..

Middleport Chamber of Commerce Blucl.&lt; Party
on Sa turday.
'

I

equipment are. seated. Mark Poctker of J ackson
County and Mllagros Jordan·Bosc of Gallla
County. They are flanked by Brenda Russell of
Melgs County, left,andbyAmySwango,assistant
professorofnurslng,atrlght.

$10,000 'grant· pemti.tS Rt·o· Gra· nde·
•
·t.
t 0 purehase compu.(er equtpmen
A $10.000 ~ra nt fr om a trust
fu nd has a llowed t he Rio Grapde
Colleg£' ~ nd Communit y College
Holze r c hool of Nursi ng to
purcha se compu1 e r equipment
a nd Instructional fi lms for it s
programs .
The gran! from the J aco b G.
Sc hmldlapp No. 1 Trus t. admi niS·
tPr&lt;'d by the Filth Third Bdflk of
Cincinnati . made poss ible the
pu&lt;·chasc ot two computers. a
printer. re la ted software and
ins tructional films .
' · I I ha s b e c n w c 11 ·

demonstrated tha t utilization of
a udiovis ual equipment and co m·
pu ler softwar e Is a pract ica l a nd
economical way for s tudents 10
bridge the gap between class·
room theory a nd clinica l nursing
pracl!ce." sa id Ja net Byers.
R.N ., dean of the School of
Nursi ng.
Mrs. Byers noted that ··one of .
the greatest problems fa ci ng the
Rio Gra nde College and Com·
munil y College Holzer Sc hool of
Nursi ng Is th€' limit ed availabll·
lly and access ibility to audiovls·

ua llnstruclion aids."
Purchase of the equipment will
build co nfid ence in decisio n·
making in a risk· free classroom
setting. she a dded. It will explain
how to establis h priorities and
iden tify the most Important
nursing goals a nd Interventions.
Also. stud ents will be given an
opportunit y fo r self·evaluallon
and Improvement. as well as
becoming famlllar wit h the kind
of computerized syste ms they
wlll encount er In their profes·
slonal careers, Mrs . Byers said .

Pymatuning teachers strike
•I

WASHIN GTON (UP! ) - The
ad min istration Is defending the
fa tal U.S. helicopter attac k on a n
Ira nia n ship In th e Per sia n Gulf
as a justified ac tion under the
rules of ·c ombat e ngagement
given to American forces in the
war· torn reg ion.
Pe ntagon and White House
officials stood flrm In th eir
ex pla na tion of the Incident about
which more detalls were lear ned
ear ly today, saying the Ira nian
vessel was caught la ying mines
in interna tional waters of the
oll·rlch gulf.
"U.S. .actions were purely
defe nsive, " said Pen tago n spo·
kesm an Fred Hoffman. "Plant·
lng mines In International waters
far from Iran Is a violation of
International law - an lndls·
criminate, unju stifiable threat to
the shipping of all nations.
"We have said throughout that

DAILY SENTINEL
q· MONTHS

L
y

than 1.000 public school teac hers
In Youngstown has entered It s
14t h day. and federal m ediator
David Thorley had no t called for
a new roundofbar'galnlngbylate
Monday ni ght.
In the area of higher education,
faculty members at Lakeland
Comm unity College In Lake
Coun ty repor ted for the fir st day
of fall classes. jus t hours aft er

a pproving a new labOr co ntract
that ended the threa t of a Monday
walkout.
ln. the Pymatunlng Valley
distri ct. the 79·member teac he rs
umon Is seekmg a two. yea r labor
contrac t. but sc hool officials are
proposing a three· year package.
Peggy Chavez. an official fr om
the Ohio Education Association.
Co ntmued on page 12

sional co lleagues now opposi ng
Rober t Bark's nominati on to the
Supreme Court cite evidence of
his judicial disregard for women.
minorities · a nd the right to
privacy.
The reasoning of at least two of
Bark' s fellow Republicans a nd
four of his fellow lawyers
emerged on the flrsl day of
outside tes timony to th e senat ors
consltler ing bls nomination . Th e
GOP oppositio n came from one
current and one former govern·
ment leader a nd the legal criti·
c is m cam e ifl--. lhe explanation of
Am&lt;'rlran Bar Association re·
viewers who judged him unquaii.'
fled to be a justice.

Bot h developmen ts were sig·
nifica nt , but the ABA exp lana·
tion revealed thoughts behind a
his toric decis ion - the fi rs t time
in two decades that the lega l
organiza tion 's review panel has
not stood unanimously behind a
nominee to the nation' s highest

$48.75
'

we are not seeking to provoke.
trouble but will ta ke defensive·
action as necessary ," Hoffman
added .
At the Whit e House, spokes·
ma n Marlin Fitzwater Iss ued a
s tatement Monday sayi ng, "We
have prev iously communica ted
with the Iranian government the
way In which we wou ld respond
to such provocative acts which
present an Immediate risk to
United States ships and to all
ships. United States forces acted
In a defensive manner and ln
a ccordance with existing rules of
engagement."
Fitzwater said President Rea·
gan was told of the action whlle
returning to Washington on Air
Force One after addressing the
United Nations In New York.
An American military team
fo und 10 un~ e rwater ex plosives
and four dead crew members
when It boarded the Iranian

. landing vessel !Ired on and set
ablaze by a U.S. co mmando
helicopte r Monday nig ht, the
Pentagon sa id.
The United States ha s asserted
for months that Iran has been
sowing mines In International
gulf waters , and Navy sources
said scores of them appa rently
planted by Iranian vessels were
discovered recently off the coast
of Bahrain.
The mines apparently were
placed to damage U.S. warships
· on their way to a small refueling
facility In the area operated by
the Navy, the sources ·saM .
Iran has denied such activity
repeat edly, and today the go:
vernment of the Ayatollah Ruhol·
lah Kh0melnllnslsted the vessel
that was struck, the lranAjr, was
peacefully carrying food supp·
lies and not "wartime defense
equipment."

co urt by vir tue of his "high
intellect" a nd his broad legal and
governme ntal experience.
That earned the 60·year·old
federal appea ls co urt judge the
traditional ABA highest rating.
wh ic h was an nounced by an
eager Whi te House that .jumped
the gun before the Bark hearings
bega n last week.

cour1.

Attorney Harold Ty le r Jr., the
.review pan~! cha irma n, elabo·
ra ted on its split vote at the end of
12 hours of testimony that
dragged la te into Monday night
before the Sena te Judiciary
Committee recessed wi th plans
to reco nve ne today.

However, f our ABA reviewers

fou nd Bork " not qualified" and
one chose to voice his op inion as
" not opposed ... It wa s the flrst
sp lit since 1969, ·when the· ABA
grant ed a non·unanimous appro·
val for Supreme Court nominee
Clement Hayn.1worth, uJHm.afRlY
rejected by the Sena te · amid
questions a bout his fi nancial
dealings.

Tyler confirmed for senators

that )0 of the 15 members of the
rev iew panel co ncluded Bark is
"well qualified" to sit on the high

Three Iranians
found
dead,
d
£II
•
k
16 rescue 10 owmg attac .
MANAMA, Bahrain (UPIIAn American military team
boarding an Iranian vessel a t·
tacked by a U.S. helicopter
gunshlp lnt hePersla n Gu lffou nd
three dead crew members and 10
mines aboard. a n Air Force
spokes man sa id today .
Iran, in Its first official report
on the incident , today denied the
vessel carried "wartime defense
eq uipment " a nd said it was
loaded with a cargo of food when
attacked Monday by "U.S. gun·
s hip helicopt ers in the high
seas."
Ira nian parliament s peaker
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsa njanl
said today the United States
"would regret the cr ime they
perpetra ted in this part of the
world" and vowed that the attack
would not go un answered .
U.S. offlcials said the crew of
the Iran Ajr was observed
putting the mines ove rboard with
night observation eq uipment .

"Apparen:Jy six mines were
laid. " Pe nt agon s pokesman
Capt. Sco tt Wus thoff sa id today.
"Mideast Force c hoppers a r e
sea rching for the mines at this
time. At least one mine was
observed floating in the water .
' 'There .were 10 mines and
various fu ses and pins used In
arm ing the mines found on the
la nding craft," he said.
Wusthoff said three crew
member s were found dead on the
craft by the boardin g party.
a not her "lOwerefo und aliveina
lifeboat and 16wererecovered in
the water by Mideast Force ships
opera ting in the area. Two are
stlll miss ing," he said .
Ear lier, the Pentagon had said
four crew members were fo und
dead .
Wusthoff said the rescued
Iranians are "not prisoners of
war. The Unit ed States is not al
war. (It is) still neutral."
He sa ld U.S. ships and planes
were sta nding by fo r ass is ta nce

and U.S.forcesp lckedupsurv i·
· vors from water and took them to
the USS LaSa ll e, the flagship of
the Middle East force .
The White House said a U.S:
special warfare operations helic·
opter launched 2. 75· inch rockets
and 7.621T)m mac hin e.gun fire at
the Iranian s hip In a "pure ly
defensive action" after the ves·
set was s potted planting mines 50
miles nort heast of Bahrain in
international wa ters ·at abOut
midnight.
The U.S. attack ca me shortly
afl er an Iranian speedboat am.
bus hed a British·fl agged tanker
a nd devastated its crews quar·
ters, killing a Fillpino crew
m,e mber. .
Pentagon spokesma n Cmd r.
Bob Prucha said a team from the
U.S. Middle Eas t Force boarded
the s tr ic ken Iranian vessel a t
10: 40 p.m . EDT Monday. and
about two hours later an Iran ian
li feboat was observed and
boarded.

IRAN
Iran fires on
British tanker

'\

U. S. defends Persian Gulf action

GOING BACK TO
~SCHOOL? TAKE A
FRIEND,. THE .
0
N

By BRANT NEWMAN
United Press International
Teachers In t'he Pymatunlng
Valley Public School Dis trict In
Ash tabul a County are now In
their seco nd day of a stri ke after
a weekend negotiating session
fa !led to resolve disputes over
seco ndary salary Iss ues a nd the
lengt h of a new labor contrac t. ·
Meanwhile. a s trike by more

an additional $3,500 for nex t yea r
noted that alt hough he has heard
wou ld be forthcomi ng to subsid· · some complain ts of higher than
ize the cab compa ny. as was
necessa ry fares, he has also
requested at the same time the
heard that compa ny employees
Sl,806 was requested. Both
are very helpfu l to older people
amounts equal one·thlrd of the
using the cab service who m ay
f\ecessary local matc h needed
need assistance getting in and
for the cab company's operation.
out of the ca bs, or may need help
Middleport Village a nd the Meigs
carryi ng packages to the ir
Co unty Comm issioners a re each
homes.
paying one· third of thecostsa lso.
Pomeroy businessma n Guido
Councilman Bruce Reed said
Girolami has issued a complaint
he thinks the cab company
to co uncil regarding a req uest for
prov ides a great service. but is
a C1·C2 license from the Oh io
co ncer ned a bout rece nt com·
Department of Liquor Co ntrol for
p l a int ~ he has heard of high
the Beacon Gulf Station. Accord·
fares. Council and Ma yor Dick
ing \o Giro laml. Be1)con Gulf is
Sey ler agreed tha t before ear·
located within Pomeroy Village
marking the S3.500 for 1988. they
and not in unicorpora ted Salis·
should invite p~bllc commen t on
bury Township. a nd as suc h
the ca b compa n y'~ service. Reed
Continued on page 12

Conservatives give reasons
for opposing Bork's selection

.,...

Hospital news

l

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. September 22, 1987

'

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions ..-Clark
Taylor, Long Bottom; Burl Blev ~
ins. Langsvllle.
Saturday Discharges - Car·
nell Vance Jr.; Eva Lawson. l ola
Wilson, Rollin Dill.
Sunday Admissions - Donald
Dorst , Shade; Harry Doug las.
Racine; Delores Barber . Dex ·
ter; Betty Butcher. Pomer oy;
Dreama Owens. Ma son.
Sunday Discharges - Clark
Tay lor, Donald Dorst. Burl
Blevins.

•

aty

Vol.37, No.94
Copyrightud 1987

Chance of rain 40 percent
Tonight, clear. Low near 50.

9590

CLEVELAND (UPII - For
the third straight drawing. there
was ·no winner In Saturday
night' s Super Lotto game. boost ·
ing Wednesday's jackpot to at
leas t $12 million.
Although no one picked all six
numbers correctly, 280 people
have fi ve of the numbers correct.
earning payoffs of $1,000 each.
Some 12.736 had four of the
numbers. worth $59 each.
The winning numbers were 7.
12, 17, 21,22and24. Total sales for
the drawing we re $6,594,057.

Rev. Don Archer officiating.
Burial will be In Reedsville
Cemetery. F r iends may call a t
the funeral home from 2 to4 a nd 7
to 9 on Tuesday .

Marlon Augustus Hall, 85, of
Reedsville, died Saturday at
Veterans Mer.1orlal Hospital.
Born Oct. 30, 1901 In Great
Bend, he was a son of the late
Edwin C. and Annie Mitchell
Hall. He was a merchant and
farmer, and was a mel)lber of the
Great Bend Methoulst Church.
Surviving are one daughter .
Ire ne E. Walker. LOma Linda ,
Call!.; three sons and daughters·
ln· law, Charles Edwin and Do·
rothy Hall, George Wllllam and
Amy Hall. all of Reedsville, and
Randall Kevin and· Judith Hall,
Long Bottom; one sister, Elsie
Shahan, Portland; nine grand·
children. eight great grandchlld·
ren ; several nieces aild nephews.
He was preceded ln death by
his wlfe, Edna Belle Hall, In
March 1967; two brothers, Dale
C. and Ira E . Hall; and two
sisters, Kate Furbee and Amy
Kimes.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednes·
day at White Funeral Home with
'

Daily Number

060

Jackpot $12
million Wednesday

Tuesday In the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant, with the
Rev. James L. Bunn offlclat lng.
Burial wlll follow In Beale Chapel
Ce metery, Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m . Monday.

Marion HaD

NFL players
walk out

.

Area deaths

Velma L. Lane. 80. Columbus.
formerly of Pomeroy, dled.Satur·
day at the Heartland Thurber
Village Ca r e Center In
Columbus.
She wa s preceded in death by
her husband , Hugh, and a son,
Mllton.
Surviving are a daughter Glen·
nadene Balr. Columbus, and four
grandsons .
Services wlll be held at 2 p .m.
Tuesday at the Deyo·Davls Ftin·
era'! Home. 1578 W. First Ave.,
Columbus. Burial will be In
Union Cemetery.

Ohio Lottery

U.S. helicopter attacks
Iranian shi .

..
..
.

SAUDI ARABIA
0

(

200

\

....

UNITED ARAB
EMIRATES

_

..._----

!WHERE ACTION TOOK PLACE MONDAY. A·n lranlan gunboat attacked and •et afire a
· · British tanker In the Persian Gulf Monday,
forcing the crew to abandon ship, according to

I

_..

,•

'

Gulf of
Oman

' • .:

OMAN~.........
.. ~
· .. , .

I

'

1,

Uoyd's Shipping Intelligence. A U.S. helicopte r
fired on an Iranian amphibious ship thought to be
l!~ylng mines and sel it ablaze, U.S. admlnistra·.
tlon sources said. (UP!)

•

�Tuesday, September 22. 1987

Commentary
T~e Daily Sentinel
til Court Street
Pome roy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS- MASON .\REA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishe r
BOB HOEFLI CH
General M anag~ r

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhlisher/ Controll er

A M E MBE R nfThf' l'nilf'd Prr:;o;s Intl 'r n:Jtin n ~ll. lnl:1ncl D a ii~ · P I'Pss
A,:;!'lC\Cia tlbn and lh C' Am&lt;'ricll"l 1\f'" ' spapPI' Publi~hf' l' s A-:soC'bTion .
l.F.TTER~ OF OPl )';JOI'\

; tl't '

1n·lt-nmf' 'Th f'\ ~h(lulrl b~"&gt; lr·~~ 1h:tn :~1H1 wn1 ds

lflng , Al l h ' I HT ~ :1n· subjrt •l 1n !'! llllnt! :tnd mu st hl' ~ il"nl'&lt;i 11 it h n:thW. :tddrf'j..S ,tnd
lt'll ;phon(' numlx•r Nn un ).i,enc'( l ld l f'l's will tw putili~hl •il. Lr t ~t •rs should twin
):!flfl~] l aSh'. ;tdd !"l •l'~ in g iSS Ul' )o., nOI pi'I' S(•n :lij fif' f' .

Colley to step down as
-GOP party chairman

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday, September 22, 1987

---

Whe n you're in the government, it 's not easy to try to save money,
Everybody wants to spend it , especially privat e indu stry..
Two cost-cutting measures by the administration of Gov . Ri c ha rd
F . Celeste received a roug h way to go in the state Controlling Board
last week.
The administration presented its plan, authorized in the stat e
budget. to pare $27 million from Medicaid cost s by redu ci ng the
nursing home reimbursement for administra tive and genera l
expenses.
A swarm of nursing home operators showed up to protest.
The reimbursements being reduced are not for a ny ex pe nses
directly related to patie nt care, but include office supplies. la und ry,

security and, surprise! - administrative

salari~s.

The nursing home operators point ed out that these ite m s wi ll
indirectly affect patient care. But it should be noted thai the cuts a re
being made to control overall hea lth care costs , whic h have got te n out
of hand .
Then there's the matter of e xhaust system em iss io ns, which musi
be checked in the Cincinnati and Cle veland areas starting in January
by order of the U.S. E nvvironme ntal Protection Agency.
The Legislature voted to do&gt;it in service stat ions and the Ohio E PA
set up the least costly system for visual ins pections .
But when the contract came before theControfli ng Board last week.
several disgruntled companies who weren't considered showed up to
complain that the work ought to include expens ive gas a nal ysis
equipment that would cost each serv ice station $3,300.
Virginia Aveni, a deputy director of the Ohio EPA, said one of th ese
companies runs New Jersey 's "horrendously expensive" sys te m a nd
makes a habit of trying to bully 01,he r s tates into buyin g its equipme nt .
The Co ~ trolling Board blew the whistle and took the less expe ns ive
deal.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Tuesda y , Sept. 22, the 265th day of 1987 with 100 to follow.
The moon i~ new .
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evenhig stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this dat e are und e r the sign of Virgo. They inc lud e
English s tatesman and wit Philip Dormer Stanhope, earl of
Chesterfield, in 1694; Englis h chemist and physicist Michael Faraday
in 1791; humoris t Frank Sulilvan in 1892; film director-actor Eric Von
Stroheim in 1885; actor Paul Muni In 1895; producer- actor John
Houseman in 1902 (age 85); Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy
Lasorda in 1927 (age 60 ); singer Debby Boone in 1956 (age 31), and
actor Scott Baio in 1961 (a ge 261.

l

'

On this date in history:
In 1776, the British hanged American Revolutionary Wa~ hero a~d
patriot Nathan Hale. HIS famous last words were, "I only regret that I
have but one Ufe to lose for my country. "
In 1862, statesman and military theoreliclan Otto von Bismarck
beCame premier of Prussia .
In 1949, the U.S. nuclear monopoly ended as the Soviet Union
detonated its first atomic bomb.
In 1975, self·proclaimed revolutionary Sara Jane Moore, 46,
attempted to kill President Gerald Ford as he walked from a San
Francisco hotel. A bullet she fired slightly wounded a mim In the
crowd.
In 1985, more than 50 rock and country-western stars staged the
14-hour Farm Aid concert for 78,000 rain-soaked s pectators In
Champaign, Ill. The event raised $9 million for debt-ridden U.S.
farmers .

A thought for the day: Philip Stanhope wrote,''An injury Is much
sooner forgotten than an insult."

By ffiA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
The last time the NFL pla yers went on strike, It
took 57 days a nd an estimated $275 million in
losses before the union and management could
reach an agreement.
The.first NFL strike during the regular season
e nded Nov,. 16, 1982 with I he union settling for the
same amount ($1.6 billion) owners had offered on
Sept. 8, a figure that forme r union chief Ed
Garvey had branded, " an insult."
The NFL Man agement Council quickly ap·
proved the 5-year pact and union representatives
voted 19·9 to recommend ratification of the

Flirts With ·bankruptcy Jack Anckrson and Dale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - As Iran's
minister of heavy lndu slrles,
Behzad Nabavi is the proverbial
s te war t rearranging the dec k
c hairs on the sinking Titanic . The
Khomenl regime is foundering on
· the icebergs of fundamentalist
Inefficie ncy, corruption a nd,
most of ali, the war with Iraq.
Though Nabav i makes numerous speeches and gra nt s interv iews to -the kept Irania n press,
he is ge nera lly closed-mouthed
a bout the devas tating effect the
·war has had on Iran's indu str ial
base - a key indi cator of the
Iranian economy's slide into
ba nkruptcy.
But even his c heerleadlng
public sta tements some times
conta in nugget s of infor mation.
And secret convers ations he ha S
had with confida nts, the gist of

which has bee n s lipped to us by
Tehran sources, are even more
candid , First the public
relations:
-In a speech at Tehran's Melli
University, Nabavi compla ined
that his . ministry "should be
ca pable of bu ildlng fac\qrles, but
It lacks the capacity to creat e a
fan-making unit." As a result, he
said, the ministry bass interhlted
"a bunch of little, inefficient
vehicle and engine assembly
plants."
-In an int ervie w with the
newspaper Jomhouri Isl a m I, Na ·
bavi disclosed that he had ~ut
down the Iranian Mazda fac tory.
" Of course. in reality . I did not
shut it down ," he said. " The lac k
of foreign currency did. If foreign

currency were avallable, 1 would
not have done this. We would
hav~ had to com e up with $45

.

million to keep Mazda from
c losing , whic h we could not do ."
- In a speech repor ted by the
government new s paper Kay han.
Nabavl said: "Planning for
heavy industries is a difficult job.
For example, although we have
not made our plants depe ndent
on foreign currency, they are
dependent .on electricity. In the
wake of frequent blackouts, our
production proj ects are a t a
s tand still. "
·
- In a speech at Te hran Univer sit y's school or economics,
Nabavl voiced this pitiful pla int:
"Some people say , 'Cha nge t he
line of pr oducts; don ' t s hut down
Industry .' .But how can ~:Ve
mlrculously c ha nge our produ c t ·
line? To do so, we need for eig n
cQrre ncy."
At a hu sh-hu sh meeti ng wtrh '

gave a n astonish ingly frank
appraisal of Ira n 's desperat e
economic sit uation, so that the
editors could do a be tter job of
censoring and keep hints of
tr ouble from reac hing their r ea der s. He ordered that no notes or
ta pes be made of themeetin g, bl(t
not everyone obeyed . A deta iled
summary of the m eeting wa s
sum ggled out of Tehran to us .
Nabavi revea led that the only
way the regime made it through
the year that ended in March was
"to d raw on $2 billion of foreign
currency reserves, whic h was
against the law a nd wh ic h we
fal sely denied. But (t his yean.
we can no longer do such a th ing
a nd the s ituation wil l be that
muc h worse."

OUT AT THIRD - Giants' third sacker Kevin
Mitchell applies the tag to the Dodgers' Steve Sax
for the flrst-innln' out In Monday night's gumc at

has had fo r us."
UPI Sports Writ er
Howard J ohnso n, who earlier
this m onth joined the 30-30 club
Howard Johnson set a record
a nd a wokt' the slum bering New
for homers a nd s teals. eclipsed
York Me ts wilh his career-high
t he record set by Ripper Co li Ins ,
36t h home run of the season who sm acked 35 for the Ca rdinals
Mo nd ay.
In 1934 .
Johnson set a Nationa l L('ague
" It was as big as any I' ve hit ."
m a rk lor homers by a sw itch·
Howard Johnson ·s aid. "Every
hitt e r by belting a lwo· out gra nd
j:(am e from he re on out Is
s la m th a t se nt the Mets 10 a i -1 import a nt. we haverotroa t them
a ll as if lhcy're p layo ff ga mes .. ,
victory over th&lt;• Chi cago ubs a t
Wrigley Fi eld . ,
Dwight Gooden, J0,-6. s Lruck
out nino a nd did not wal k a ba ti'Cr
The Me ls remai n d 2'h g&lt;1 m ~s
behind 1hc Na tional League
In his secon d strajght co mplete
East -lea dlni&lt; St.Louis Cardina ls.
game and seve nth !h is season.
:t- 1 winners ovN thP P hi !adelphia
Rookie Les Lancaster fe ill o 7-2.
·Ph lilies Monday night.
The game was delayed 6t rriinMets Ma nager Davey Johnson.
ut£'s by rain In th e third inn ing.
whOsP tea m lost 1wo of three to
· Lancas t('r re tired 14 stra ight
!he Pitt sburg h Pira tes over lh o
before Darryl Straw berr y
weeke nd. sai d the ho m e run was . s ingled with two out In the e ig hth .
o ne of his lhil'd b ~seman ' s
Siraw berry s 1oic his second base
of the ga me a nd 30th rif the
bi Rgcs t co ntr ibut io ns thi s
season. e nablin g . t he Me ts 10
season.
" We clidn ' l play wf' il In Pitt s- become !he fir s! ma jor- league
burgh ." ih c ma nager sa id . "a nd
tea m to have tw o players with a t
we looked list less until !hat
least 30 ho mers a nd 30 s tolen
inning. Tha t ra nk s rig hi up thNC bases In the sa m e season.
wilh the maS! lmpor lant hit he
Kevin Mc Rey nolds was intenBy CH.\RUE McC.\RTH\'

th~ - parks~_--:--__R_oh_er_r_W_al_t.e_
rs

itor loads it was not intended to han·
die, from development on its perimeter, and from a fierce political
struggle at the National Park Service.
This year, 292 million people are
expected to visit the 337 parks, monu·
season.
Visitors to the park's popular Ava· ments and other units administered
iancbe Creek Campground are as- by NPS. That figure is almost 4 per·
signed tent sites so close to each other cent higher than last year and reprethey can hear their neighbors whis- sents the third consecutive substa n·
pering. That obviously' doesn't do tial annual increase.
much to enhance · the wilderness • In a landmark 1980 report, NPS
identified Glacier as the country's
experience.
The discovery of oil and gas depos- most threatened national park, but
its in the region has produced pres- also cited dangers faced by Yellow·
sure from petroleum companies to stone, Yosemite, Everglades, Great
drill on three sides of the park - Arco Smoky Mountains and other major·
and Chevron on the east, American parks.
"Most of these great parks were at
Petrofina on the south and Cenex on
oqe time pristine areas surrounded
the west.
bn the north, not far across the Ca· and protected by vast wilderness re·
nadian border, a proposed open pit gions,' the NPS report noted . "Wiih
mine on Cabin Creek would produce their surrounding buffer wnes gradu·
ally disappearing, many of these
1.5 million tons of coal annually and possibly contaminate the Flat· parks are experiencing significant
head River drainage basin that also and widespread adverse effects associated with external encroachment.•
serves the park.
In a report issued earlier this year,
Like other national parks, Glacier

the General Accounting Office said

On the other side are NPS's ranger.!
and Director William Penn Molt Jr. A
feisty 77-year-old Jlepublican , Molt
haS waged a determined - but only
partially successful - struggle to
protect the parks against the assaults
sanctioned by Hodel and Horn.
Even well-Intentioned NPS manag·
ers cannot resolve the fundamental
question of whether to place a higher •
priority upon serving current visitors
or preserving the parks for the enjoy·
ment of future generations.
Meanwhile, \he imposition of fees
has not stemmed the tide of tourists.
Glacier National Park has hosted a
relatively mi&gt;de.st 1.6 million visitors
have encouraged entrepreneurs and annually in recent years - but the
have taken punitive action against park's isolation and harsh winters
NPS employees who don't sha re their mean thai the vast majority of those
views.
people visit in the summer.
That led the National Parks and
The 1,583-square-miie park reConservation Association, a private mains spectacularly beautiful - but
group, to recently charge that senior to survive It must ·constantly cope
Interior Department officials were with pressures from both within and
waging a determined campaign to without its boundaries.
"harass, sabotage and politicize the
park service."

NPS generally had failed to mitigate
the threats it documented seven years
ago. "Most problems remain,' said
the GAO analysis. "As long as the situ·
ation continues, there will be coolin·
ued deterioration of park resources ..•
Within the Interior Department,
NPS' parent organization. a major
schism has developed over how to
deal with those issues. On one side are
Interior Secretary Donald Hodel and
Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife
and Parks William Horn.
They generally view commercial·
ization and industrialization as posing
little danger to the parks. Indeed, they

chauvinism."

,

Personally, I think it's a bum rap;
it's racial McCarthyism. But it also
obscures an important problem that
should not be clouded by a smoke·

screen of race innuendo.
At issue is this: In America , and in
the entire Western democratic world,
birth rates are at the lowest point in
history; over time they will yield declining populations. But birth rates
elsewhere show: a) steady moderate
growth in the communist world, and
b) soaring p()pulation growth in the
Third World. My sense is that as the
peoples of America and the other in·
dustrialized democratic nations he·
come an ever"smaller share of the
world,. democratic values may be
. hard to preserve or extend. (I also
think that our very low fertility rates
will cause personal misery and economic turbulence.)
The charges against my view fall
into two categories: global and Arne!'·
1can. u1ooauy; 1 am accused of saying
that white people In tbe modern, free
nations are somehow better than nonwhites in the Third World - and
therefore whites should start reproducing more. Tbe accusation about
America is that I'm saying tbat white
Americans are somehow more important, and better, than Hispanics or
non·'iVhites, and therefore whites in
America should siart reproducing
more.
. I think my critics are so hung up on
race that they can't read straight. In

"The Birth Dearth,' I write about values and fertility - but my critics
read race and ethnicity.
Globally, I make a not-uncommon
claim: that the modern Western values - democratic, capitalist. scientifica lly oriented - have been benefi·
cent. These values have not only
helped us, but set progress in motion
in the lesser developed countries and
even in the Soviet bloc. These values
have a better chance of flourishing
and spreading if the Western nations
flourish and grow.
What's wrong with that? Does that
mean I think our values are "better"
than Soviet or Third World values'
Yes. I guess that makes me a cultural
chauvinist. But I think most of my
critics believe the same things, but
are afraid to say it. They favor democracy and technology for the Third
World. Most of them by now believe
that market-oriented economies yield
prosperity.
But they say I'm pushing white superiority. I'm not. I'm tallting about
Western values. I include Japan
among the Western nations. I have not
noticed that the non-white Japanese
are deficient in running a democratic,
industrial, scientific country. I didn't
invent the world. As it happens, most
of the nations in the Western modern
bloc are mostly white. So what? That
should not ·dissuade us from promo!·
ing Western values.
What about America? Poor people
here have more children than middleor upper-income people. That's unfor·
tunate, beeause people who aren't
poor are better able to provide for
children. So if one Is for higher fertilIty, it's wise to stress that you're for It
among the middle- and upper-Income
groups, not for poor teenage mother.
As it happens, American whites are
less likely to be poor than blacks or

Hispanios (although Asian-Americans
are most affluent). I didn't invent
America. But I favor of an increase In
all middle-class fertility - white.
black, Hispanic, and Asian. I favor a
racially and ethnically diverse Amer·
ica. Because I think America and the
West has a down-side population
problem, I favor more legal immigration. I favor that knowing full well

gr a nd slam was J oh nson' s se-

cond of the seaso n a nd fo urth of
his ·c areer.
Elsewhere, Pi tt s bur g h up e nded Mon treal 5-2. P itt sburg h
bumped Montreal 5-2 a nd Los
Angeles shaded Sa n Fra ncisco
4-2.
Cardinals 3, Phillics l
At St. Loui s . Vince Co lema n
belted a two-r un ho mer and
David Green added a so lo shot in
a three-run fif th inning.
Pimtes 5, Expos 2
At Montreal. Doug Drabek
sca ttered : five hits over seve~
Innings and Andy Van Slyke
doubl ed twice to help the Pi rates
to thei r 12th vic tory In 15 ga mes.
Dodgers 4, Giants 2
At Sa n Francisco. pinc h hitt e r
Danny Hee p s troked a two-out .
two-run double In the ninth inning
to lift the Dodge rs.

age, 21s t at 28:06; se ni or Curl
RIO GRANDE - It was a case ' led In blocking assis ts with three
He rron, 23rd a t 28: 18; sophomore
of win onP. lose one !his wee kend eac h.
Trov Coc hran . 24th a t 28: 25;
The Redwomen ope n on their
whe n the Rio Gra nde volleyba ll
junior Tony Fa Ilea, 26th a 12a: 54:
home court tonig ht at 7 In Lyne
tea m e nfl(agcd Crorgetown (Ky.)
fresh man Ru stv Ede ns , 27 th at
Center aj:(a lns t Mount Vernon .
College and Wilmin gton Coi!Pge
29:24: a nd sophomore Jim Lut e,
on Grorgetow n's court.
Fie lds sa id she co nsiders the
La dy Cougars to be toug h co mpc-. 28th a t 29: 35.
The Rcdwomen bested George·
Two me mbe rs of the Rio
titia n. but the Redw ome n wil l U('
tow n in two ga mes. 15-11 a nd 10,-8.
Gra nde women 's tea m competed
a nd lost two to Wilmingt on. 11 ·15
ready .
agai nst OU and KSU, From a
" We' ll be up for Mount Vera nd 7 - 1~ .
fi eld of 20 runners . junior Mary
"Offensive ly. we pl ayed we ll. ..
non." she sai d.
Dow ler pla ced 16th a t 19:51 a nd
Rio Coac h P a tsy Fi e ld s co msophomore Gin a Kllchenm an
m e nt&lt;•d a ft erward . "Defen ·
. Cross Country
placed 20th at 29:06. OU's
s iveiy , not so well. We played
RIO GRA NDE - Rio Grande's
Tammy Wal s placed fir s t at 18 :02
bett e r a t the net, but when it
c ross country tea m held Its own
on the 5,000-m e te r course.
aga inst Ohio University and Ke nt
cam e to de fe nse we didn 't get it
Redman Coach Bob Will ey felt
Stat e Universit y in a weekend
togel her. "
"everybody ran well" a nd said
However. Firtds ra ted Geo rgemee t on the OU trac k.
the cooler weather aided condiOut of a fie ld of ' 29 mal e
!own as one or the be lle r team s
tio ns for the runners .
the Red wome n have e ncountered
runners. OU's Fr·ank Zoidak
"Again, we had people run
thi s smson, while Wlim(ngt on placed first at 25:31 . Rio junior
probably the best times of the ir
Brian Lungabeei wa s the first
ha s a lready compi led a s trong
lives," he said, " Wh en that
Redman to finish the fiv e- mile
record.
happens two wee ks in a row, we
Th e offensive st re ng th Fie lds co urse nea r the universit y golf
must be doing some ! hiD!( r ig ht."
mentioned wa s seeri In the course. Lunga beel ca me in with a
Both the me n's a nd women's
performa nces of three players in
time of 27: 03.
team s wlii run again Saturday at
Lunga beel was soon followed
th&lt;' Georgetow n ga mes . Fresh·
the Moreh ea d (Ky. ) St a te
man Shelly Hoop compil ed seven by freshma n Ma r k Cline, who
Invitatio
na L
finished 16th with a time of 27:28.
kills , senior La ren Wolfe had four
a nd sophomore Amy Di xon had Sophomore Tim Warnoc k was
three for Rio Grande. In addition, 17th at 27: 30andBob Fritz. a lso a
Dixon led lri block ing with six sophomore, was 19th at 28:02.
Lungabeel, Cline a nd Warnock
serv ing aces .
The Wilmington m atches saw were also the first three Red men
junior Li s a Schme lt zer record to fini sh in the Marshall Invita·
eight kills . Hoop added seven a nd tiona! on Sept. 5.
Also fini s hing for the men's
junior Krls Cochran c hipped ,in
with five. Schmeltzer and Di xon team were fres hman Jeff Sav·

that over time it will reduce the proportton · of Americans who are of
"white European stock." Ironically,
many ol my critics who clai m to hear
racial overtones in my book are in fa ·
vor of reduced immigration' Whose
policy leamo toward a racist view?
Summing up: The problem is not
white , i\'s West.

Berry's World
..

Bruce: Bucks ·
•
are on upswtng
'

'"Don't think of them as TAXPAYERS. Think .
of tham as SHEEP that have to be
. SHEARED. "

tiona liy wa lked before Gary
Ca rl er reac hed on an infi eld hit to
loa d th e bases . J ohnson greeted
relieve r Ed Ly nc h w ith a home
r un Int o th e ce nt er-fie ld
bleachers lo s nap a 1·1 1ie. The

The Oh io Va lley Christ ia n
School Defenders voll ey ball
tea ms captured a three matc h
sweep over the visiting Hannan
Trace Wildca ts In recent voll eyba li action . Th e Defenders Junlo r Hi gh tea m ha ndily won 15-3,
15-9 on strong ser v ing by Pam
Holley a nd Bet h Blevins. Pam
served 13 points in th e fi rst ga me
wlt h 12 co nsecutiv e aces while
Bet h B levins co nt r ibu ted 10
Poi nts with 8 acres in the second
ga me. The re-serve m atch proved
to be the most exciti ng as Ohio
Valley ra llied fro m behind to wi n
10·15. 15·12, 15·4. Juli e Hardes ty
se rved 9 point s lnciud ing 6a cr ess
in the c ruc ia l seco nd game .
The Defend e r s eas ily out scored the ir varSity counte rpa r ts
1-1, 15·3. Se nior Rac he l Danner
led a ba la nced se rving at ta ch

The Daily Sentinel

Me igs reser ves 15-8, 15-11.
At Athe ns on Thursda y, the
varsity was again bested in a two
gam e set by the Lady Bulldogs
16-14, 15-4 and t he reserve
squad went down to defea t 15-6,
8-15, 15-10.
Alexander's Spartans reserve
unit kept Meigs out of th e win
column by taking a t hree ga me
~e t 15-13, 5-15, 15-11.
Meigs will host Vinton County
tonight a t Larry R. Mor rison
Gymnasium and then be on the
road traveiih g to Eastern for a
match on Sep t. 23 and to Trimble
to face the Lady Cats o n Thu rsday Sept. 24 . AU gam es star t at
5:55p. m.

'
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Publi shed pvery a fternoon. M o nday

thro uj!h Friday. 111 Court St .. Po·
mProy, Ohlo. by th e Ohio VallPy Publishing Com pany/ Muii ii'J'IE'dl a. Inc ..
POil)!O'fOy. O h iO ~571;9, Ph. 992-2156. Se·

co nd class pos tag(' pa id at Pom e roy,
Ohio.
Member: Unlf('{! PresS International.
Inl and Daily P ress Assoc ia tion and t h ~
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,

with 7 points . Beth Wood added6 ;
Traci Sisson 5; Marla Roac h,
Becky Danner a~d Nancy Lanier, 3 each; Edina VanMater 2;
a nd Connie Pearson I .
Ma r ia R oach led ali hitters
with a pe rfect 6 for 6 incl uding 3
kills. Edina VanM atre cont rib·
ut ed 5 hit s while Be th Wood and
T rac i Sisso n both add ed 4. Jun ior
Co nnie Pearson showed Improvement in !he passing de pa rt ment.
The victories left a li OVCS
squads undefeated fo r the season
with varsity curre ntly a t 7-0. Th e
Defenders next trave I to S out h
~W~e!::bs~t~e!:.r~to~la~k~e~o~n~t~h~e.:.J~e~e~ps~._

Dall~·

SINGLE COPV
PRICE
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Subl:icrlbC'rs not d C&gt;S ir ln~ to pay l hecar ·
r i('r may r &lt;'mit in advance- dlrC'ct to
Th r Da ll y SC'ntlnrl on a:\. 6 or 12 month
· ba ::;!::;. Crf'd it will bt&gt; giv&lt;'n earrler each
. W('('k .

No s ub sc ript ion.~ by mall perml11£'d in
ar C'as .WhC'r£' home ('a r rll'r S{'rvicP Is
av&lt;1il;.~ bl (' .

Mall Suh&lt;ertpltons
In side Mel~ County

13 Week&gt; ...................... ........... $17.29
...............................
52 woeks
WC'€'ks ...
.......
....
. ... $3&gt;l.06
$66.56
26

Outsldf' Meigs County

13 Wooks ........ .. .................... .... $18.20
26 Wt&gt;C'k!'........
.. .. $35.10
;2 weeks ....... ...... ... .... .. .... ...... 567.60

_r::===========-

RUTLAND. TIRE SALES
.
"GETTING VOU THERE SAFELV"

LOWEST ltRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

Big lO honorees
~C H AU M BURG.

Ill. (UP])
iowa running back Kev in Ha rmon a nd lll inois de fens ive e nd
Scott Davis were named the UPI
Big Te n offe nsive and defen sive
Pl ayers of the Week .

*ALIGHMENTS *FRONT-END WORK
*BAnERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED : MAIN ST .. RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN: 8 -6 MON .-SAT .; 8-8 FRI.
PH., 742-3088
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Rio splits contests over weekend

Race..and birthL.____________B_en_ W_a_t_te_nb_er_p;
My new book "The Birth Dearth"
has engendered a controversy. Some
examples: A Time magazine article
carries the headline "Is it racist to
urge the West to have more babies?"
A review in the Los Angeles Times
maintains that my views may echo
earlier American views about "race
suicide" and a "Yellow Peril." I have
been
accused
of
"cultural

San Francisco. Sax tried lor third on a Mik e
Devereaux infield hit ( UPI)

Johnson ·belts 36th homer as
Mets romp 7-1 ;· Giants lose

Factories arc kept runni ng at a
loss. Nabavl said . bPCause they
tu rn out material fore th e mil
itary as well as their normal
produc ts . Obviously, none of th t'
creates revenue produc i ng
heavy ' indu stry for Iran. and
Nabavl knows th is better than
a nyone. "The situa t ion is so bad
that It ca nn ot be cont to licd ." hP
lamP nlcd at the S('Crcl mccling.

is under inc.reasing stress - t rom YlS-

Marauder gals win third encounter

Defenders defeat HT volleyballers

Nabav i comp la ined to thn news
executives: "The parliament ray
de puties ha ve madP so ma ny
requests for Nissa n ( vehic l~sl
th at we ha\'e bee n force d to
resor t to tottery for the prople
who al ready paid for Nissa n light
truc ks and were supposed tot ak~
de li very ."

WEST. GLACIER, Mont. (NEA) .It's easier to find a parking space at a
regional shopping mall on a Saturday
afternoon than at the Logan Pass Visitor Center in remote Glacier National Park during the summer tourist

The Players Association had sought the NLRB
in junction to force the league's bargainin g arm to
negotiate on wages .
The agreement hammered out the night after
the NLRB tu r ned dow n the un io n's reques t didn' t
appear to differ markedly from the offer te nd ered
by owners nine weeks earlier.
"Ed Garvey should be sho t," Da llas defensive
ta ckle John Du tto n said the day after a tentative
agreem ent was reached. " He's a ridiculou s fool, a
total incompetent . .This is cons ide rably less
money tha n we voted on a week ago ."

Jack Donlan .
,
At one point early in the strike, a group of NFL
player representatives walked out of the hotel in
midtown Manhatta n w)lere negotiations were
taking place and strolled a few blocks to the
headquarters of the United States Football
League - where th ey were greeted warmly by
then-Commissioner Chet Simmons .
The union's resolve s uffer ed a serious blow
when the National Labor Relations Board in
Washington refused to seek a n injunction to force
t he Managemen; Council to bargain in 'goodlaith .

Me igs' Varsity Volley ball
squad picked up their third win
this pas t week to put their season
total at 3 a nd 5 while the reser ve
un it is still striving to brea k Into
the win column .
The varsity victory ca me
aga inst th e Lady Spartans of
Alexander as the Maraudere ttes
took a three game . set 15-11,
12-15, 15- 12. For Meigs, Mary
Butcher garnered 20 points while
serving, Shelly Stobart picked up
l4 points and Wendy Fry had 9
s pikes during the m atc h.
In a Mond ay match a t home,
F edera l Hock ing defeated the
varsity g irls 15-12, 15-11 a nd
the Lancer reser ves downed

Iran 's once-thriving au to in dustry is a shambl es, Nabavi
confided. To pay sa laries at the
Khodro plant. the governme nt
had to sell sha res at ru inous ly
low prices. A Britis h man u!a c·
tu rer " has totally s topped send·
ing spare pa rt s because o r our
fa ilure to meet our debts," a nd
the parts on hand are ta ke n by
Influ ential o ffl ~ ial s "for the mse l·
vesx a nd thetr famil ies a nd
friends ."

Problems in

te ntative agreemen t after several last·. m inut e
additions to the pact. Two days la ter, approxi·
mate ly 75 percent of NFL players agreed to the
contract, which Increased m inimum salaries for
rookies from $22,000 to '$30,000.
·
Also Included in the co nt ract was $60 mill ion t.n
seniority bonuses and an agreement by owners to
offer seve rance pay for ali pla yers with a t least
two years experience.
Paul Martha, a former runn.ing · back for the
Pittsburgh Steelers, served as an informal
mediator In the final stages of t he '82 strike, which
featured frequent confrontations betwee n Garvey
and ManaRemen t Council Executive Director

newspaper executi ves, Nabavi

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)- Look for Republican State Cha ir man
Mlchilel F. Colley to relinquish his job to someone else when his te rm
expires next spring.
Colley, who has been the state GOP c hairma n s ince 1982, has come
under Increasing fire in recent years for the low standing of
Republicans at the Statehouse.
The once-mighty GOP lost the governor's office in 1982, giving ail
the elected state offices to the Democrats . That position ha s improved
only by recapturing the Ohio Supreme Court a nd the stat e Senate, and
Colley hail nothing to do with the latter.
Colley, 50, also is Franklin County Republican chairman a nd has a
highly successful law practice. His crit ics among part y leader s
believe he has too many irons in the fire to be effec tive.
Earlier this yea r, the Republican State Committee appo inted a
spec ial panel to study the idea of hav ing a full -time party chairman
with a commensurate s alary. - $65,000 to $90,000 ins tead of the
current $40,000. which Colley voluntarily s topped ta king la st
February.
That recommendation , which has Colle y 's bl ess ing, is ex pected to
be adopted this week when the 42-member par ty central co mmitt ee
meets in Dayton.
If it is, Colley said he will quit when his te rm is up . " I pra ctice law ."
he sa id, referring to his profession which he will not abandon . ·
Colley is expect ed to keep his hand in politics after he leaves the
chairmanship, possibly signing on with Vice Pres ident George Bus h's
ca mpaign in a regional or national capacity .
The Bush campaign tried to get Co lley to get aboard th e campa ign
train this year, but he declined . As chairman of t.he stat e par ty, he
must remain neutral toward ali the GOP pres id ential c andidat es . and
he did not want to leave his state post yet.

players strike second tif!le in 5 years

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

~

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) Ohio Slate Coach Earle Bruce
says the Buckeyes are "on the
upswing" is they prepare fort his
week's game against unbeaten
(3-0l LSU.
" I thought our offense improved," Bruce said Monday at
his weekly press luncheon. "I
thought our offensive line did a
better job, but stili has a ways to
go. I see some things getting
better."
Bruce said he also saw im·
provemen I in the running of
tailback Vince Workman, who

•
r ushed for 162 yards , in Saturday's 24-14 win over Oregon and
was named the offensive player
of the game. Against West
Virginia In the opener, he had
only 51 yards In 23 carries .
' 'I saw Vince do some real good
things With the football ," said
Bruce.
" We should be Improving," he
added. "If you're going back·
wards, that's terrible. But you're
never staying the same. Right
now , I think we' re on the ·
upswing.
.

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•

Pomeroy-

Sentinel

The

Ohio

Jets humble Patriots, then-take a hike
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(UP!) - The New York Jets
were trapped today between
team success and union - management failure.
When they walked off the
Giants Stadium field at ~2: 29
a.m. EDT, the Jets had further
removed doubt that last year' s
late-season collapse had lingered
into 1987 by Improving to 2-0. But
as the Jets and Patriots headed
lor the locker room following
New York 's 43· 24 tri\lmph, a
playe rs ' strike had started that
overshadows the first two weeks
of the season .
During halftime of Monday
night's game, Players Assolcla·
lion chief Gene Ups)law announced that the players were
striking because no co llective
bargaining agreement had been
reached with management.
The Jet and Patriot players
will meet today to decide how
they will deal wi.th the work
stoppage. The coaching staffs
also set meetings to discuss
plans, mainly how they will fulfill
management's desire to sign free
agents and conti nue games during a strike.
"We met last night tSunday)
and decided to just put everything about a strike off." Jets
light e nd Rocky Klever said. "We
decided to play the game then
worry . We decided it was no
advantage to be 1-1. It is to our

advantage to come back 2·0."
How the team feels about each
other when it comes back Is also a
question. Jet defensive end Mark
Gastineau said after the game he
will cross a picket line. Several
other team members Indicated
they had not yet made a final
decision.
·
The Patriots seemed inore
unified behind the strike, with
none saying they would cross a
.
picket line.
"We're a union, we're a body, ·
we're a team," Patriots fullback
Most Tatupu said. "Like today,
we all lost together."
For the Jets, the strike breaks
the momenjum)hey had gener·
ated following last year 's 0-5
finish. During .their 0-5 swoon ,
Ken O'Brien went from the .
NFL's top passer to one that
threw 12 Interceptions.
o•Brien has rebounded over
the first two games. Monday. he
completed 19 of 26 passes for 313
yards. He hit 13 straight at one
point, Including a ll seven during
a 21 -polnt third period. In that
quarter, he threw a 58- ya rd
touchdown strike to AI Toon that
gave New York a 13-3 lead.
After a defensive struggle in
the first half, that score Ignited
the Jets .
"That big play turned the
game around," said cornerback
Raymo nd Clayborn, who was
outj umped by Toon on the play .

Scoreboard ...
Majors

C.rt'f•n Rll.y 1.1 Tampa Bay , I p.m .
lndl...,upolls 111 St . Lu uis, I p.m
L.,\ R11ldus 111 Houston. I p. m .
Mla ...,oU 111 KIUII'iiiiS ( ' il y , I p .m .

,\ME:RIL\N LE,\ Gl:E

By Unlh•d

Pr~~ lat ~rMtlonal

Ea.'il

\\' L Pd. (08
91 31 .6tli -

Torunto
IMrult

90 39 .60..
l't
K'l Iii .S;W ~ h
M~ Iii .!UO
~ 1._
1:1 7i A!NI If I t
ti:t lli .Ull ::11
5j !J.l , ,;l'jj :U I :

Mii"''IIUit('
!'lit""' \:ork

Boston
a..u1mo~r

fh'"t"t•lnd
Wr.st

)10 71 .5:tl 16 ... . ~'; ~
·a 71 .ue 61,t
1:1 " .-t!lt 6 1&gt;r

Minnt"sut

oa•t:md

...

K ans.-; f t,v
Ttox~o;

10 ~ .un 10
10 jq . n-~ lfl l"r
511 It'! . .t~ I!!

Sl:&gt;atl k•
Callforni

M4ndu..\" .~ ft(&gt;sults

Ro""'"' !. Dl&gt;t roll

~

toronto i , BILitlmon&gt; I
Clt'Vt'IIUid 6, Ua•land 3
(lllca~ l, ('a llfornla l
~at ll f' 3. K110"-ii.S flly I
l'\:t'~' \ 'ork 111 Mlhnukt•t•, ppd .. ndo
Tull'!'ldlly '!&gt;i fOamt'S
Nt•w \ 'orlt.(·hthn 1'!·5andTruul ~ ~ ~ a t
M.llwaulu&gt;tf ~ IBa rkt'r :!· 1 1111d Hllt\U' rll
IHI) , 2. li: jiB p.m .
Ot-t.roll (Tf'rn'll 1a. 10 1 a l Boston
JSt•lh•rs 7-lt or ""Oodlll•ard 1· 0). i : J!'i p. n1 .
Toronto f riant•)' 11-l Of at 814\t lm ort•
( 1\alllll"d ~· &amp; ). i : :U p.m .
011klan d.. ( Hon('Y('UII ...! l at flt•no1and
(f.'arn•ll 1-0 ), 7::13 p. m . ·
'
Tf'~:.&amp;.'i
(Harr i!o S.ll) at M lnftl'~ula
(Ni o•krn G- 1 ~), tl; llri p. m .
('"hiC.'".(V (I..Polal -"·1! nl ( '11lllorllll•
1\\'ht 1$- l:?l. IO: l$ p.m .
Kafll _ _., .rlly ( lllhr'.t.ndt 11- lft J 111
N&gt;:Ut lt• tBunktw:ul ~M ), 10: 35 p.m .
\to't'dlf'"*IIQ' "s Gl&amp;mt"'
Dt'lroil :d BoslGn. nlj~:ht
Toronto 111 Baltlmort•, nl ~thl
Oa k h1.nd at ( ' lt•vt-ht.nd, nij!:hl
TnlL'i at Minnt•sotu . OlidM
N o · ~· l'ork al Millll"a ulu .. •. ni,;ht
( 'hit ·aii:O ~~ (';,t.llfttrnla, nl~t:ht

Kan ...a~ ft l y at St'I&amp;Uh'. nl ~~;ht .
N1\TIONM. LE,\C ;UE

P\tt~rllt:h

" L Pd . c;H
KM &amp;I .lr.l Mli .... . l1:\ 2''1
~~~ 65 .lti-1
~
iii .5 .iifltl 1:11-1
7:i 11 .t K'i 131.1

( 'hit' UII;tl

' ' 111

M01UPaJ

Ph IIi!.
"''e"l

San Fran
( 'indnnal
Htm'il o n
Lo!&gt; .\nxt·ls
Atlanta
S;an Olt• ~~:n

.n; n

II:! &amp;II .$H 74 i .i . ~97 1 ' ~

7'! 17 .111:1 !ll ;
115 K.i . 1 ~1 li
S:l ltij . 1 ~ Ill
i :t K6 . 1 ~1 1)11.1
M o nd~t.V'" Kt&gt;sult !'i
Nt&gt;'-'" 1'oJk 1, ('hltll.ji:O 1
Plll!'ihUrJt:ll S, .'Uu nln•W!
,..,. , Loul!'i :1, t"hUa delphi :l I
Lu ~ 1\n ~t:t' l t'!i -t, ' S~tn · · randst·u "!
Tu t'liday's Gamt'l'
N1•w \ 'urk (C'unt• 5-H at {'ltlc·axu
(Suldlffo•. 17-Kt . '! : 211 p.m .
Pillshurxl• (l&gt;unrlt'" l:!·.i ) at 1\lontn·a.l
( PHt'l, I·Dl, 7: :tii p .nl .
H uu,.tun rKn c•ppc•r Il- l~ ) ;.at ,\lla nta
(('oUman ..._3 t. • : -1!1 p.m .
San Dlt•Je (G ranl i · i ) at C"lrwlnn..tl
!Ra-omus.,f"n '!-I ), 1: 33 p. m.
Phih~odt• lphla (('arma n 11· 111 ) 111 St.
Lout~ /Mathew !" tl}.llll, k: :\3 p.m .
l ..o~ An.l'it'!&lt; (VuJcon:u w&gt;la 1:!- 11 ) at Sun
Fr~nt'l~co IDrll\"f't' kY III- I 0), 10: :1~ p.m .
" 'l'diN'!od a,.V 'N (iami'S
•
f'hlladl&gt;lphla at Ch lt•aiU
Montrc ·al Ltl ,~,·~· l "u rk. niRht
San l)it•Kl• ;d ( ' lndnnuti. niRhl
Houl&gt;lon tll tltl anta . ni~t:hl
Plttl'hur-,:h at Sl . Lou t ~ . nl~hl
w ~ .\nj(t'lt~ :at !'i:t.n t' randS~..• u , nl.:hl

NFL standings
N,\TIOSr\1, ..' OOTRi\1.1.• 1...: 1\Glll-:
,\mt&gt;r• ·,in f "nnl1•r1•nt1'
..:a ~ l

1
I
I
1

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Bulfal
Mlam
N~· E n

lndnp

0
I
I
I

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rco ntr-.11
Cnt·n
f'l v lnd
Ho,.;ln
Pn!'lh

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1 I lJ

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I 1 0
1 1 n

..1110 5~ :!K
.5110 50 ~~

I I 0

.5110 10 :\1

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L t\ Rd
Dtonn

I fl

I

1.000

n

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~~

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I I 41

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.5110 · &amp;~ 56

2 0

.otO 3t .t l

S..nd"'" IUIIuiiA
lk-n,·cor 17. Grt.'t'n Ba~ 11 Uk&gt;l
Ruffalo!«, H011lllen :Jfl
Miami U.

ladfu~opoll~

It

Phll•d..tpphl a ln. New Or&amp;f'anM 17
Ck'\'f'land :t-t, Plttrffiu~"Kh Ill
S•n t' rauH~htco :n, nnrlnnall %6
Olcqo _., T•mpa Billy :1

AU¥1•1• 21. Willlhln~tton 211
Ollll_.. lt. NY Glanl8 l.t
LA Ral*r" 27, DHroll 7
&amp;-IIIIi it! H. 1Lan8U rtty U
Ml11--ol• %1, LA Rat.mll I&amp;
San Dlei(O 2M. 81. IAuill U

.

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t 'e ntnd
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U, Nf'w EnJiand U

• · :otinday 's Gamts
Alh1nht 111 Nt"W Orlt&gt;anJt, I p.m.
BuUal1f Ill DaiiMM', I p.m .
Otlc"IIV al Pf'lrllli , I p. m .

Ohio standings

'
Ohlll ( "o ll ll'l!;l' Fol)(bal l Rcoti~rd,.

MID·:\,'\iERif',\ N fONFERt: M ' t:
ftan (f' r cont·t• 0\• c r;~ll
' "'' L T \\' I. T
:.! un
~ 111
I 00
:! I 0
I II 0
I :! 0

T l' llm
TniNto
East..rn Mlt·h
ftowlinJ G r N•n

M,hunl

I 1B

I '!0

Kt•al Slal f'
Wt,oh•rn Mkh
Ohlo Un lv
C'o•ntnl Mh· ~

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fl 0 0
010
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I I0

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II :! 0

OHIO ( "0Nfo' E R EN{'E

Mtluntl'n lon

I II II

I

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Ohio Nor'lht•rn
HPtd&lt;i•l ht-rll;
Caplllll

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II 0

I

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II I 0
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M'HMI'r
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Kt•nyun

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OTHE RS
C'controll Sla te•
"''llmlnl{ton
.John fur roll
Dayton
1\shland
Hlufft on
Hiram
Findlay
\'OUO JSl OW n S(u.it •

C'ind n011ll
A.k ron

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0

TUIIn

UPI ratings

0

II

:'Of:\•. VOKK ( UI"U - Tht• l "nllf'd
Pres" lnl t• rnllllonal Ro11rd of Cou.l'ht"'
1'np ~"ll o · oll f'll;l' f!M.Ith :1ll rat in~ . wll h llr M·
p il.u-t• viM"' a nd rt•t•ord In pllr•nlhl'1iit'S,
lol~l ptol nlli (hw-t•d on U point ~ fur llr~t
pll&amp;t'C', II for !K't~ o nd, r t t·. f. 11nd IUNI
wc•c•M',. r~~ nkln ~t: :

TC'am

l. Oklah-om a t..j'i t t:!· hl
~ . Nl'bt' a~ ku t..jl d -Ill
:1. Aubu rn t2·111
1. l.ouisl anl:l !i:.t alt' 1'1- 41 1
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.

Not n · DamP

ti.

t:l· Ol

-:. Mi ami (FJa . lt \ 1 1101
M. flor ida Staff' t.l-111
!+ . riC'm !IOn tJ·OI
111. Arka n ~s 12-01
I 1. TPn11f'!'ISN' t:\-01
12. Arizo na Stat(• t 2·1h
1:1. UC' L A ~ ~ · I t

F'lnt lda t 2· 1 f
W. Ml t hlji:Hn t l · l l
17. Tl'x a ,; r\ Bt M 11-11
Ill S\' rl:lr U'If' 1."\-01
1 ~. C.toorJd&lt;~ t1· 11
20. Wus hin jZ"Ion t1· 11

BOSTON tUPI)- Altertaklng
sole possession of first place in
the American League East over
the weekend, the Detroit Tigers
responded with a pair of losses
that cos t them the divis ion lead.
Monday night the Boston Red
Sox thumped Detroit 9-4 be hind
Mike Greenwell's leadoff home
run that triggered a four-run
second Inning. The loss dropped '
the Tigers a half-game be hind
the Toronto Blue Jays in th e AL
East.
The Tigers los t Sunday to
Milwaukee 11·4, while Toronto
topped the New York Yankees
6-2. The Blue J ays defeated the
Baltimore Orioles 2·1 Monda y
night to gain first place in theAL
East.
" We got our ia ils kicked two
days i!'l a row ," said the.Tigers·
Alan Trammell. "The edge is
gone."
.
Trammell belted a solo home
run in the fourth to become the
first Detroit s hort stop to drive in
100 runs since Billy Rogell drove
in exactly that number In 1934 .
The Tigers, who ope ned a 1 ~ ­
game lead Saturday tn Milwau kee, were looking to stay in fr ont
for th eir four-game s hOwdown
with the Blue Jays star ting
Thursday in Toronto.
" It' s going to come quick
enough ," said firsl baseman
Darrell Evans . "Two days ca n' t
get much closer . We've got seven
games left wlt h them. we know
that. We' ve got to go our and pla y
tommorrow ."
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - Get ·
ting both timely hitting a nd
timely pitching is a uncommon

ti)(..j

2

:m

:1

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1
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li
7

fi i-1
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e.n

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t!l

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211 17
11112

7. ·unrankf'd
Orhr-rs rf'C&lt;'Ivl n~ votes: 1\l&lt;~ ba ma ,
Ar lzo nu . Boston C'ol\C'gC'. Dui&lt;f'. Iowa ,
KPnhiCkV. M l nm~o tu , Ok iahomll Sill II',
Pitl sbur~h and SO ulti ('11rollna.

pleasure for Cleveland Manager
Doc Edwards .
" It 's about time our pitching
stall has been rewarded ," said
Edwards . "This is doubly we] ·
come because we beat a tough
team and a ve ry tough pitcher."
Brook Jacoby led of! the
seventh inn ing with his 31st
homer Monda y night, lea din g the
Indians to a 6-3 victory over the
Athletics and thwarting Dave
Stewa rt's third bid to become the
fi rst 20-game winner In the
majors . Doug J ones pitched 3 1-3
perfect Innings to get the dec!·
slon, strikin g out seven .
"He (Jo nes) is one o! those
hard ones to figure.' ' sa id Oak ·
la nd Manager Tony LaRussa .
"He had good stuff. but there
isn' t anyone In this damn league
who s hould s trike out bat tcr s like
that.
" We s hou ld have don e some·
thing . We should have a t leas t got
som eo ne on base."
Oakland !eli to lour games
behind the first -place Minneso ta
Twins in the American Lea gue
West. The Twins were Idle.
" I'll get a not her chan ce for 20
\victories), but the Important
thing is tha t we will still win
games." said Stewa·rt. " We kn ow
what

Wl'

ha ve to

do .· ~

Wi th the sco re tied 3-3. Ja coby
hit a 1·1 pltchlromSt ewart.19 · 1 ~.
over the wall in right -cen ter.
The Indi a ns added two Insurance runs In fhe eighth. Brett

But Ier lined Stewart's first pitch
of th e inning to rig ht for hi s
eig hth homer. Tomm y Hlnzo
later scored on an error by
shortstop Tony Phillips.
J ones. 5-4, he lped Clev&lt;'land
f' nd a fou r -ga me losing streak .

Ill

" tn

Nalloalll lRitoltUl' - Surt,entlt'd fhlca~o
Fran It Ltu·c ht-!tl for twn dll)'ll
and lined him 11n u..tis cloKI'd . Mum lor
humplnJ: 1t.O amplrl'.
M anatt~: o •r

Toronto
SharPI'r~on

.Juan

- Trdf'd tnlltlder MikE'
to 1..-ol; AnJ:f'l('ll for pll t•h..r

(;uzm~~n .

Health conference features Meigs woman

RECOVERS FUMBLE - The New England Patriots' i\ndr~
Tippell looks ba&lt;:k at the New York . ,Jets•· quartrrha,c k Ke~
O'Brien, right, who unsucccsslully tried to stop th e I lltrools
linebacker .from scoring In the third quarter or Monday n l~hl · ,
game In the Meadowlands. Tlppeit reco•ered the fum hi~ lroon lht•
,Jets' Roger Vlck and ran It In from 2!1 y:)rd• out. ( 111'1 )

Arbitrator decides
in favor of players
NEW YORK (UP I) - The
ar bitrator who r uled majOr·
leag ue ownPrs co ns pired to hold
down sal a ries by s tiflin g thr
free -age nt ma rk et will next dP.·
1er mlne If the action \va s a
punlshabl~ olfc nse.
Thomas Robe rt ' Mo nd ay
fou nd In favor of the Maj or
L ea~ ue Baseball PI ayers Associ·
ation . which claimed own rs
violated the co llective barga fnin jZ a~ree m e nt by not oflerln !t
frl'e agent s co ntracts . thu s foreIn!: the pla yers 10 re· sig n with
their teams lor less m oney .
" Thev decided . y&lt;'s . they are
crooks ·.. sa id Det roll pll ~h er
Jack Morris, who wa s s nubix'&lt;l in
the fr ee-a gent marke t before thi s
season. "But now they have to
dPcidt• what do we do with the
crook s. "
r epre-sl' nting

th e

NV GIMl!l - A.ctlv•tf'd llnt'hacker
Ga r y Rt&gt;•o1111 a nd plltcf'd wide recelvH
U•.el M1nurl on Injured r e!M!ne.
Hocby
Detroit 1\8111.-'(ld ,l:t'IAit u derM
Darnon Ellol , R and)' R•n11(! h, Mark
Retmew and SllDl Sfi. Laurrnt : df'f~ nllt'­
mf'n lhnnl!o Smith , Du ld Korol. Peter
Di._.n, Pkll DeGaf!lano, .Jtm Smllh ud
Roh Do)'le; lrfl win~ Dalt&gt; Krt&gt;ntz a nd
Nell MeJannriy; center~~ Murnt)' EaveM,
Dour Krultyn•ill and IIIII Shlhlcky; a nd
rl.-hrl wlnp ,, oe Kocur, ThollliL'I BJullr.
Warren Ha rpt&gt;r a1111 Rhr Sellin&amp; t o
..Wirond ac ll ol lhe Amt'rk . . Hacke)'

Leap.

NY Ruren - Slpd wl•l Gordon
Walktr.
8l. Lou~ - A.l .. ped 1oalle Alan
Prrry; forwardM Marc Tttumltr, Marc
O.mont, Dllvt' Thomll..o•. Grer RelMon
.... RIQ' Savar11 aad d ef~n Jl!!rrJ
WatM•, Joe Sldaa and91epftenl.attNrlo
P ea rl• of tlw. lnll'rullo•l Hockey
l.upe; rttutntd Glen Ff'alhrrMone,
Mlkf' Wolak, 'l're11or Pobl , 'l'roy Pohl and
&amp;~rt Dumu to thf'lt.Junlor team!!.

NEW YORK (UP I J -At a time
when attention usually turns to
basketball at Syracuse. the loot ·
ball team has attained nationa l
prominence.
The Ora ngemen ear ned their
first Top 20 ranking in 16 years
and Ok lahoma secured the No. 1
spot in co ll ege football for th e
th ird co nsecu tive week in votin g
by United Press In ter national 's
Board of Coac hes.
The Sooners, who were id le this
week . earned 45 of 50 first · place
votes tall ied Monda y to total 743
of a possible 750 point s. That
figure eas il y outdistanced No. 2
Nebr aska, which received four
No. 1 votes and 684 po ints.
· Oklahoma, 2·0, also was voted
No.1 In preseason balloting.
Auburn maintained the No. 3
position while Lou isia na State
jumped a spot to No. 4 a nd Ohi o
State s lipped one noich to No. 5.
Notre Dame useu a 31 ·8 trounc·
ing over then-No. 18 Michigan
State to leapfrog three positions
to No. 6. The Fighting Irish were
fo llowed by No. 7 Miami with one
first · place vote. No. 8 Florida
State, No. 9 Clemson a nd No. 10

Arkansa s.
Round ing out the Top 20. It
was : No. 1l Tennessee. No. 12
Arizon a Sta te, No. 13 UCLA. NO.
14 Penn State, No. 15 F lorid a. No.
16 Mi c higan , No. 17 Texa s A&amp;M ,
No. 18 Syracuse, No. 19 Georgia
and No. 20 Wa shingt on.
The Orangemen last appeared
in the· Top 20 early in the 1971
season. Don McPherson passed
for two touchdow ns and ran fo r
another Saturday to he lp lhe
ind ependent sc hool Improve to
3-0 with a 24-10 victory over·
Miami !OhiO ). The Ora ngemen
defense. which has a llowed a n
average of just over 51 yards
rushing, recorded three sacks
and made th ree Interceptions.
"Once you get into the Top 20,
there's a special. sect ion of the
sports section you always get In
across the nation," Syracuse
Coach Dick MacPherson isald.
"Nationa l newscasts will feature
the Top 20a nd every thing you do .•
They'll never mis s you. It 's a
huge, huge bonus."
The Syracuse basketball team,
which plays In the Big Eas t
Conference, reached th e cha m-

Congratulations
CHUCK ALLENSWORTH

ruling on thai issue.
" W&lt;' wi ll sugg&lt;'SI

SJ'EAKEit - Norma 'hrreN, nurs ing supervisor at the Meigs
County IIPalth De partment was one ol sever al speakers at the
third annual Adolescent Health Conference held at Ohio State
Unlverlty last week.

By Cindy S. Olh:erl

County Ext. Agent
What did )'OU ha ve for brea k·
fas t today• Was It a quick cup of
coffe&lt;' on I he I'Un or did it Incl ude
a ~las. of ju Icc and bowl of
crrcal '? Ma ybe 11 wa s a douglmut
or c heese danish as you packed
the kids off to sc hool.
A n i nt ('rf\!o; lin g art!clr cam e
urros. mycles k today thai I'd Il k

to share hi ghli g ht of In this n&lt;&gt;ws
artlcl&lt;'. The toplr i' How I mpor -

dama ged wllh an oppor tunlt1 no

ta nt

Ill•

a se para te hearing 10 hal'e tlw
injus tiCe CO IT('CIPd, " S:.dd IJO·
nald Fehr. CXPCUII\t' ctJreCt Or of
the players· un ion . " We will a l;.o
as k him to fa shio n a •·em •d; to
C'nsun~

f ree agf'nc·y

p1

0\ !' ions bl"

lived up 10."
Among possible soluilons rould
be H\\'Ufdtn,g pl a) t 'l'!- ~alaJIP."l
lhc\' would h a1·~ rerr lvrcl In an
open market. awarding punlr1\t'

i~

Norma A. Torres, R.N.,
B.S.N., M.S .Ed., nursing super·
visor at the Meigs County Health
Department, was one of several
speakers at the third annua l
statewide Adolescent Health
Conference held last week at
Ohio State University.
"Age of Choice: Opportunities
and Obstacles In Adolescence"
was the overall theme of the
conference which was geared to
disseminate Information abou t ·
successful programs for a dolescents . Emphasis was on ways to
encourage young people to take
action to Improve their health,
choices and lifestyles.
More than 500 health profes·
slona ls attended the Adolescent
Hea lth Conference which dealt
wit h eating disorders, minorit y
health probems, emotional and
physical abuse, a lcohol and
drugs, se ll-es teem, sexua llY
transmitted diseases , 'weight
problems, teenage depressio n.
destructive lifestyles, welfare
dep e ndency , a nd teenage
pregnancy

Ms. Torres discussed "The
Impact of Teenage Pregnancies
on Families In Appalachia.: •
In her talk Ms. Torres gave
St;ltisllcs on teena ge pregnancy
in Meigs County noting that one
of every four births occured to a
teenager, that 20 percent of all
births are illegitimate, that two
of every five marriages are teen
marrages, a nd that 51.4 percent
of all marriages end In divorce.
She noted t ha t nationwide 80
percent of pregnant girls never
fi nish school and 50 percent of the
10 billion dollar ADC welfare
budget goes to teenage mothers.
In Meigs County, Ms . Torres
note&lt;) that approximately 40
percent of the We lfare budget
goes to teenage mothers . ,,
In emphasizing the need for
family planning and improved
moral val ues. Ms. Torres said
that the United States is the only
co un try where teenage pregnancy is increas in g. Nine of the
50 sta tes in this cou ntry account
fr 50 percent of a li teenage births,

and Ohio is one of the nine. she
reported.
In Me igs County one-third of
the 24,641 population receive
some welfare assistance. The
high teenage pregnance here Is a
major co ntributor to those fig·
ures si nce many drop-out of
school and continue In the !ami·
ly's tradlt.io n, many times not
only their mother but their
gqmdmother's dependency on
the welfare system.
Ms . Torres emphasized the
Importance of ed ucating youth so
that the cycle of welfare depen·
dency can be broken. She dlsc u~sed intervention, and said
that once rapport is es tablis hed,
then tee nagers show ease In
aski ng . abo ut " anyth ing and
everyt hing."
She spoke of the need for
consistent love, development of
self-esteem a nd guidance In
making responsible decisions .
The need to "belong" and the
feeling of be ing "out of the
In-crowd", the resulting lonell·
ness and feelings of worthless·

ness, cause many to tu rn to

alcohol, drugs a nd sex , she said.
Ms. Tor res blamed part of .the
problem on "soap-opera " par ents who are so involved in tne
television world tha t they won' t ·
even talk to their children whil e
the "soaps are on ."
She pointed out that one out of
every five gi rls gets preg nant the
first time they hav e sex, bes ides
putting themselves at risk for
venera! diseases as well as AIDS.
According to Ms . Torres, 67
percent of the fami\ies in Meigs
Count y are " unchurched" leavIng a'void in traditi ona l Christia n
values.
In conclusion, the nurs in g
supervisor ta lked a bout the
" Postponing Sex ual Involve- .
me nt " program now avai la ble to
sc hools. ch urch es and civic
groups free of charge from the
Meigs County Hea lth Depa rt ·
men t, and the perso nnel' s philo·
sophy of bei ng there to provide
Information and encouragement
as well as famil y planning
assistance..- ·

just how important . is breakfast? Depends on cor,tent

In the spotlight

pro vidl' rarh playPr Who was

fir ' t

Page-5

Bn·nk fasl '!

Most o! us wc•rc broug ht up to
bclicv&lt;' that brc&gt;akfa s t Is th e most
Important meal of the day .
Should you worry If you arc no1
Ntl! ng: brea)&lt;l ast? ThP ansv.•f'r l s

it dept&gt;n&lt;ls whal yo u cat.
Somro l the Q{'St and worse
fovd&gt; &lt;&gt;a tr n In th(• America n d l~t
arr "'rved at br ca kf a~ t. U. S.
Dietary Guld line reco mmend
r ut tin ~ dow n on the Intake of fa t

and sugar In thE:' diet , as well as
lo wering c holes terol intakes .
Th ink agai n about that brea kfast
you had thi s m orning. Did It
contai n foods htgh In fat s uch as
ba con. sa usage. butter and
cr ea m c heese? All yummy food s,
but ones co ntainin g sat urated
fats . Many of the cerea ls on the
market are loaded with sugar
and sodium, up to 51 7. sugar
Jnsome cereals? The key Is to
rea d the l a bel s b e fo r e
purchasing .
In genera l, the s horte r the lis t
of Ingredien ts on a package of
cereal. the Jesse r the a m ou nt of
process ing . Th a t means more of
!he nutr ient s are left Inta ct.
Chec k the Ja belfor carbohydr ate
to protein ratios. This will give
you an idea of the amou'nt of
ugar In th e cer£&gt;a l. For exam piP
If you a rc getttng 30 grams of
ca rbohydrates to every 2 grams

of protein, . you are probably
getti ng a lot of sugar. One cereal
on the market that has a 26:1
ratio ha s listed as Its first three
ingredient s sugar, mars llmallows and the n grain nor. Ingredients are listed In descendin g
order of quantity, so this particular cereal has a high amou nt of
sugar prod ucts.
II the first Ingredie nt listed Is
"W hole" wheat, cor n, etc .. you' ll
be getting the most vitami ns,
minerals, ~Jrot eln and fi ber for
yo ur money . Be sure to rad the
-labels.
Did your breakfast this mornIng Include eggs? The eggs
Ameri ca ns eat for breakfast
make up one-l hird of all the
c holesterol consumed In the
United Sia tes.
If In evaluating your breakfast,
It was high In fats. cho lesterol,

sugar or sodium , It may be
difficult to compensate lat er on
In the day. However, It Is
probably easier to add wholesome foods to your m en u at
breakfast than it Is for any other
meal. For those who eat break·
fast, It pr ovides an average of
one-t hird of the dally calcium. B
vitamins and VItam in C, alon g
wit h one-fourth of the iron,
vitamin A and VItami n B-12
accord ing to USDA surveys.
Breakfast also contributes im·
portant fiber to the diet.
To date, research .ha s not
proven that skipping breakfast is
harmful to the hea lth of adults. It
does make se nse that eating a
nu tritious breakfas t will help
sa tisfy you through the morning
though. Foods affect blood sugar
leve ls. and your body needs
refueling after not having ea ten ·

all nigh t. The effect on blood
sugar ·levels a nd feelin gs of
hunger, tired ness, and performa nce are not fully understood.
It depends in part on the person
and \he foods that are eaten.
There's no reason to believe tha t
eating any old thing for breafkast
is okay . Nutritious foods will just
get your day off to a good start.
What seems to work best lor
most people is some form of
complex c·ar bohydrate such as
breads or cereals conta ining
fiber , protein , vita mins and
minerals in addition to some fruit
or juice and a sma ll amount of
lat. These foods will provide you
with a steady su ppl y of blood
sugar through the morning a nd a
se nse of fullness.
Wha t about dieters? S tudies
suggest that skipping breakfast
doesn't help In we ight con trol.

You a re· more likely to feel
starved when it's lunch time or
snack on a high fat don ut or high
sugar and fat ca nd y bar. People
who skip mea ls are more likel y to
snack on high calorie foods than
those wh eat th ree balanced
meals a day .
Eating a high fiber cereal with
s kim milk, or whole wheat toa st
with peanut butter ca n help you
feel lull without adding lots of
sugar or fat calories.
How does your breakfast stack :
up?
DID YOU KNOW THAT : ·
Twen ty-four percent of all adults
usually skip breakfast and fewer
people than ever are ea ting
breakfast at home. Today, one of
the major fas t food restaurants
does 15 perce nt of its Iota!
business during the brea kfast .
hours .

dama g£·~

and d(•&lt;·laring lhf' pl;ly
('rs free' age n ts .

Barn• Ro na . thP chi f labOr
spokf'sT-nah f01 thr&gt; ownr-r... . aid
the tl:'ams would ··omply wl1 h
whulcv('r rrmed r I• dec ided
upon.
~• II

dut..,

rf\~Jl(lel

lb th('l

arbitrator , wp di ~agrf'r \~ ith h!'
conclus io n ro ncNnlng r lutJ C"On

and

owners In coming d ays to disc uss
possible&gt; r Pmedies. The· arbi1ru-

durt In HlR!l," Ronn !-.,_tid

plo nshlp ga mr of thP F'ina l Four,
onl y to Jose IQ Ind ia na in th&lt;' final
seco nd s.
F lorida . Michi ga n and T(•xas
A&amp;M re lurned to iheTop 20 th is
wee k while Al abama , Mi c hi ga n
Stale. Pittsburgh a nd Boston
Co lleg e fel l fr om th e ra nklngs .
Th e Southeaster n Co nfere nce
placed li ve sc hoo ls in the Top 20 ,
while the Pacifi c 10 had th re('

w ill

l'f'(' • l v~

a s:~2 . 000 non

:11

hle tlc scholarship from ttl&lt;' (;rr r lts Foundation nnd LJ PI.

GENEV.A · ON -THE -LAKE ,
Ohio (UP! )- Kar l Zoller fir ed a
3-under -pa r 67 to grab th e lead
after one round of the 63rd Ohio
Open Monday at Geneva - on-the·
Lak e Golf Club.

The flr sl round wa s &lt;lc i" Y"d
thr ee

hours

beca usP

of

W('1

pla y ln~

cond iti ons. Th r G~ n &lt;'Va
area received one hal f Inch of
rain Sunday eve ning,

NUIIB.R ONE WORLDWIDE

Put a Boss to Work
-for You!
SPECIAL
PRICING
Save now on
the 024 Stih l
Wood Boss®.
Easy-to-handle, with
an outstanding powerto-weight ratio, the 024 Stih l
Wood Boss® is tough enough.to
meet the demanding standards of
professional use, as we ll as jobs
a1'9und tile home. Quickstop••
Inertia Chain Brake standard .

EVERYTHING YOU HEAR ABOUT THEM IS TRUE .

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

600 E. Main St.
.

.

.

·

992-2094

Pomeroy

TW Ill! MOIIR tmW(

_ g-.·.:::
- - !..'!..."!&amp;-

Factory
Direct

SHIP 'N' SHORE

BLOUSES

$1200

9 -30-17

CHUCK TIED WITH ONE OTHER PERSON.
THE LUCK OF THE DRAW GAVE US CHUCK
AS THE WINNER.

"'

r nces two rue h. ('lr m,on was th r
lone At la nt ic Coa't Co nf rrrncr
team r-a nked , a' wt•ll '" fiv l'
indepc nclc nl s
Th (' IYAA national rh.lmpion

. BONUS PACKAGING
NOW THRU

.CHUCK MISSED ONLY 5 OF
THE 26 GAMES IN THE DAILY
SENTINEL CO-SPONSORED
FOOTBALL PAGE.

~

reprl'sr ntiltiveh .1nd rh lll g T&lt;•n,
Bi g F:lgtll and Sou1h\H' "' ro nrc•t'

Zoller has lead in GOLGC tournament

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.·

union

tor will thC' n issUe ~' c.,ep..lrat t'

" With

Roberts will meet wlt hoffklals

t'oothal,
1\llanta - Si pu.•d wldt&gt; n•ct'h•erfharlle
B rttwn ,

Tuesday, September 22, 1987

Syracuse jumps to 18th in UPI ratings

Transactions
ftllHt'ha.ll
Dt-truiC - A.c qulrt'd pltdlt'r Dll"kiP
Nolf't\ lr oftl ( 'hi • 'I.JtO (f!ri'L) lor 11 plt.L)'t 'r to
lit' niUIIt'd.

By The Bend

goal In the second quarter that
drew New England withln&lt;i-3.
When the game was close the
Jets ' defense- ranked last In the
AFC In 1986 - was dominant.
Outside linebacker a problem
last year has been a bonus this
season.
Bob Cra bl e, apparently
healthy from knee surgery, and
second-round pick Alex Gordon
each had two first -half sacks,
The Jet s allowed just 13 passing
yards through three periods .
" I was particularly pleased
with our defense." Jets Coach
Joe Walton said. '"They are
playing wlt.h a lot of young i&gt;eople
and wegotsomesacksearly. It's
going to hold us in good stead in
the future. "
·
However, the future lor the
Jets a nd the rest of the NFL Is
now a mystery.

Tigers lose, drop
·out of first place

110

II II 0

1 ~.

II 1.000 7~ ~'!
fl
..'100 S:! 61
0 .$00 U :IK
fl .300 &amp;2 6-1

0 2 Cl

f ;l&lt;jiU"

l ~ . l'f'nnStatf' ~2 · 1 1

\\ I . T Pl"l . PF P r\
~"'l ·

1/ ,.,,./lj\ ',

[)(onvo"r at ( ' lt'Vf'IIUid, !I p.m .

Wt~.. ·n~ln

•::a~t

St . La uls
!lit · ~· '\'urk

1\T Glut!'! ui Mlaunl, I p.m .
Nt•w t :n . hr.nd ut Wa hinpon, I p.m .
Phlhuh·lphi!l a1 Sat.n fr~tnd!iot O, I p.m .
S.·utllt• at Sa n Dlt••o. ~ p.m .
N\ ' ·lft!O 111 Pltt.~urjith, I p.m .
('l nd nn~tll lll L"- H11m:. . .t p .m .

Johnny Hector. who gained 75
yards on 17 carries, rushed for
touchdowns of 5 and9 yards In the
third quar ter.
The only touchdown the Patrl·
ots mana,ged over the first three
quarters was produced by thei r
defense, a 29-yard fumble return
by linebacker Andre Tippett .
Tony Eason, who started be·
cause Steve Grogan developed
neck and back spasms before the
game, was harassed for most of
the first three periods . In the
fourth quarter , he threw rei a·
tlvely· meaningless touchdown
passes of 1 yard to Greg Baty and
12 yards to Stephen Starring.
Also for the Jets, Nuu Faaola
had a pair of 1-yard TD runs , Pat
Leahy kicked two field goals and
Marty Lyons ta c kleq 'fatupu In
the end zo ne lor a safety . Tony
Franklin kicked a 32-yard field

The Daily ·Sentinel

lADIES
STONE WASHED

JEANS
Factory
Direct

$900
ASST. SIZES

NO NEED TO
DIG DEEP FOR
THESE BUYS.
NOTHING OVER

$1200
'

LADIES'

PANTS

SWEATERS

ssoo
S-M-l - 38·44
ASST. COlORS

ssoo
SIZES 8 to 16
ASSORTED COlORS

�22, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

ROll

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

PRESCRIPTION SPECIALISTS

AND

For Quality Drugs, Sundries. Etc.
SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNTS

VIDEO CITY
OPEN TILL 8; SAT. TILL 9

ELBERFELDS

POMEROY

992-3830

POMEROY

n. Wel111on

Pomeroy, Ohio

698 W. Main St.

Ohio $lei• ~•- l.S.U.

992-6669
271 N. Second Ave.

Hmu n. HtMII•

Middleport

/'rfltllll (Fie.) u. At'-""'

~----~------~~------~------+---~----------+-~~
EWING
DOWNING CHILDS
RACINE
MULLEN MUSSER
MOTORS
FUNERAL HOME
INSURANCE

111 East Second
. 992·2342

Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy, OH.

Pomeroy

992-2551

FOSTER MAYS

. 982 -2121

lacini, Ohio

13041273 ~9494

JIMMY DEEM
16141 949-2388

Syracuse. Ohio 45779
Phone 614-992-6333

S~t~~u" u.

VALLEY
LUMBER
55 Park St.
Middleport

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

BAUM LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

992-6611

SOFT DRINKS - FRIES - SANDWICHES

POMEROY

Mluirrlppl u. Tul""

Rawling•

-~
--·

Coats

OF POMEROY
108 W. Main St.

FORD

992-SSS2
820 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

entritl.
Alltnlrants must uuthe •l'lfry blank below.
Gamesforthisweekwlll be found In tM: advertisements on this pagt . llstlhe name of tt'leteamyou think will win opposltt the name

BANK iii
. •:rhe Belfer Ionic"
IIOIItn I 0.1 C.

Jacuon Avtlluo
Point PIOI..,L W. Yl.
675-1121

5111 AWIIut

~I!W HMII,

W. 'IJ.
812-2136

•

•

(OiJD~

•

113 Court St.
Pomeroy. Oh 1o
992·2054

PH. 992-5432 '
228 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Alhenr n. Akton

HARTLEY SHOES
POMEROY

992-5272

Rutgm n . Kutuek~

Ohio 45769

-·-----------...I
..---------WINNER
- ADVERTISER

POMEROY (

DOWNING-CHILDS

~M~U~LL~EN~-M~U~S~SE~R----------~-------------------------

I

I
I

I

EWING FUNERAL HOME

._VI_DE_O_C_IT~Y--------~---------------------1
I EMPIRE FURNITURE
_RA_W_L_IN_GS_-C_O_AT_S-_B_LO_W_ER__+---------------------1
PEOPLES BANK

992 -2136
992 -2137
',.

- - --

667-3161

w..·v·· G rown
Member FDIC

TUPPERS PlAINS
915·3315

8f' ("II U iU '

Wt• Ha\ t' Hrlp..d Olh~tr8 To Grow

Member federal Reserve

Yl111111 Co•nlg "· P11. N11" PtMe

cun

bC'

Sf' nl

to h!m

at

LOCUST &amp;
PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 992-3471

MEIGS AUTO SALES, INC. ·
"Fine Line of Late Model Used
Cars &amp; Trucks"
605 General Hartinger Parkway
992-3011
Middleport, Oh.

· /nil"'' rr. ftflmatl

I HARTLEY SHOES
I ELBERFELD$
I PLEASERS
I .VALLEY LUMBER

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
I

I

CHESTER

985-33081

I

rt. Pen~.

BuiOI

Slelt

RACINE MOTORS

------------~--------------~--CLARK'S JEWELERS

I

BA.NK ONE, ATHENS, NA
Athen1, Ohio Member FDIC

.-J

BANK ONE
PAT HILL FORD

7"'"'""

•

Ha zel McC loud of Mulberry
Ave .. wa s In the Columbus area
v isiting her. daughter whe n s he
fe ll receiving a frac tured hlp.
She's now conflend to St. Ann 's
Hos pit a l. Ca lls ma y be sent to 500
So ut h Cleve land Ave .. Weste rs·
vil le, Ohio. - - - - Man y of you will re member
about e ight years ago when Steve
Fifl' of Middl eport wa s serious ly
Injured In a hunting acc iden t . He
was just a youngs ter at the time
a nd the accident shook thP
communit y. I'm happy to report
th at Steve has now received a
degree in petro leum engin eer ing
from th e Mu ski ngum Area Tech ·
nica l Co ll e!(~ .
~tevr s till is n' t al l tha t g-rea t bu t he' &lt; m aki ng II a nd tha t 's
fant as tic.
By the wa y. th e Fife fa mily wi II
never forget the klndn&lt;:'sscs of th e
communit y at the tim e of the
a cc ident Grea t pla C&lt;' to li ve.
t hey sa y - a nd of course·. yo u
kn ow they ' re r ight.
Wed nes day marks th e officia l
e nd of a s hort . very hot summ e r
and the begin nin g of fall - did
~o mronc mPntl on pumpki n pic?
Do keep smiling .
·

Nt'wsomr, l('ct urrr

Di\ NCE CLUB
'!'he Dolla r·a·Monlh Dance
Club of thP&amp; nl or 'itlwnsCc nt er
had a weiner roast and pic nic at
the home of Sam a nd Cora
Michael. Por tl a nd . on Se pt. Ill.
Aft e r the pic nic danci ng wa s
e njoyed on the spacious pa tio.

Andrews. Bill Thurs ton a nd
Ca rol and Da ,·ell Tay lor.
Oth er att·ending were Don a nd
Ruth Betzllng, Fa y£' a nd Gera ld
Wilde rmut h. Julc ~ nd Jill Chap·
ma n. Orv ille Hogue. Nellie Hat ·
f!Pld . Vona Gillenwater. Car l
Hysell. Pauline McLea n, Charles
Rogers. Lawrence BiossN .

Na ncy Far ley. Eva Robson.
Clarence Story. Octa Ward,
Marie Chapman. Helen F is her.
Loretta Beegle. t.llll e Randolph.
Alta Dill. a nd Margaret
McKenzie .
G RO U P ~

Crou p 2 of th e Firs t Pres by te r ·
ia n Church of M l ddl~port enjoyed a potlu ck suppe r a t the
c hu rrh Tuesday nig ht.
Mrs. Harry Moore, c hairm a n,
presided at th e meetin g. read ing
two artic les, " A Li ttle Mixed Up' ·
a nd "Co mpa nionship ,'' Mrs. Ed·
die Burkett had devotions. a nd
read "God' s Stairwa y" from the
devot ion a l book by Amy Holde n.
The least coin and th ank offer ·
ings we re taken and Mrs. Burkett
a nd Mrs. Har ley Brown wa s
named to the nominating .com·
mittee to secu re new officers for
th e coming yea r .
Mrs. Brow n co nducted th e
book study fom Cha pt er 5 of
Concrr n Magazine.

Shower given for new bride
Pa ula K Swisher . who was rles, Jea n Thomas , Freda Ed ·
married Saturday evening to wards . Lillie Hubbard , Dorothy
Mike R . Bonnett. was honored Anthon y, June Klees, Fran
wit h a brlda I show ~r recently at P ar ker , Ci ndy Boso. Nola
th e Mi ddleport Firs t Baptist Swis her , and Mar ilyn F ult z.
Others presenting g ifts were
Church . June Kl oes and Fran
Rh oda Hall, Marge Ba r r. Pam
Parker hos ted the s hower.
Ga mes were pla yed wit h ]lr izes Crow, Darla Thoma s, Quida
going to Doro thy Antho ny a nd Chase. Dot Ncutzllng, Louise
Garnet Powers . Ca ke, punch. Thompson, Edna Wilson, Marg
• Walburn, Ma ry Webster, Janice
nut s a nd mint s were served.
Attending were Li sa Bonn ett , Daniels, Mary Beth and Mary
Car leen Powers, Ruby Bonn e tt , Brewer, Sue Imboden, Nora
Co nnie Thorne, and Ga rnet Pow· Jordan, Carolyn Davis, Ancll
e rs, a ll relatives of the groom, Van Meter, and Cor rin e
Sharon Hawley. Eliza beth Sea· Ambrose.

r1.

AubuM

Mr and Mrs . Harold S. Rusk
(the for mer Lettie Fugate),
former residents of Middleport ,
will celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary on Sept. 30.
They were married In the
Bap tist parsonage by the Rev.
F .C . Kreager on Sept. 30,19:!7. He
· was a m ember or the State
Highway Patrol for over 25 years
and ret ired from the Ca mbridge
Ohio DHQ In 1962. He lat er '

became assoclatloned wllh th e
Department, qf Natural Resour·
ces In Athens. retiring In 1976 due
to Ill hea lth.
The couple moved to 106
Cherokee Drive In Eatonton. Ga .,
31024 , to be near their son,
Robert, and his family, whO will
host a family reception at their
home on Saturday In observance
of the anniversary.

School subsidies announced

I NAME •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~················ I
1 ADDREss •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I PHONE ... ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••• I
_,
'

---- --- - - -- ____

The Me igs Count y Ministerial
Association is under taki ng the
formation of church athletic
leagues and m embe rs are hoping
your chu rch will be taking part .
The emphasis is one basket·
ball, bow ling and softba ll.
If you don ' t have a tea m in
these sports In your church then
it is being s uggested that you !(et
together with another churc h.
The blggie right now is for
chu rches to nam e ath letic chairme n who ca n be In c harge of ·
getting action started .
If your c hu rch Is In teres ted.
then you are as ked to put a ll of
your information In writin g a nd
send it to the Rev. Fred Pe nhor·
wood, o82 Beec h St. , Middleport.
Now. Rev. Penhorwood would
prefer to have your Information
writt en down a nd mailed to hlm
si nce he is one and you are many.
However, if worse comes to
worse. you ca n ca ll him wi th the
info at 992-5289.

Rusk anniversary is planned
I

FRANCIS FLORIST

member were wf'l comcd . I nfo r·
ma tlo n on prtva tc to un s e lln ~ is
being schf'dulcd b;• .Jo Ann

Mu sic wa s furnishe d by Fra nc is

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

CROW'S RESTAURANT
no" f."

David Pratt. Pomrroy. who
"'"' Injured In Jul~· · hJs been
tra ns fcn•d to Docld Ha ll. C'olum·
bus. H&lt;' Is pa ra l.v wd from the
ches t clow n a nd Is und e1·golng
&lt;'X tc ns ive rehabillta t ion. The
lengt h uf hiSs ta y at th e hnspltalls
still und ertcrmlned but It al·
r~ady ha s IJI'c n ~ long haul.
r·., rc" are reall) app rC&lt;'i ~I t cd

SLJ NDE RELLi\
Bclty r::. Dill lost th&lt;' most
we ight and Linda FostN was
runner-up at the rece nt m0 tlng
or Sli ndPrclla held at F ive Poi nt s.

.I

--~·
HOME ----------~---------------NATIONAL BANK

Ou /J Pd

You ca n count on the Poll'clls to
give activities th eir "o il" they 've ar ncd a I'est .
By the wa y th • musi cal pl ayed
to owr 7,200 po'Opl e during its
run

ters as a public sessio n. The
session is only fo r fire chiefs or
their rep resentatives and school
administrators. Steps to be fol ·
lowed In emergency situations
are to be reviewed.

Area groups meet

~

1 VAUGHAN'S

Colum6u1 P.S1l11

fB) ~Ba
""'":kl'''

night s.

At the Maso n class . nin(' new

HERITAGE HOUSE

rt.

Mary and Gera ld Powell a re
attemptin g to ge l rested up from
their appearances - a long wi th
their gra nddau ghter. Mi sty- In
the mu s ica l dr a ma, "Eden on the
River' · which played on Blenn er hasset Is land over many night s
during t he past month .
Fjrs t ttwre wer~ ma ny re hea r·
sa l tr ips to Marietta , ex haus ti ng
In it self - a nd I hen the nutnerou .~
trips to Blenner hasse tt on show

I crronrousi;· a nn ounced a
dl sa~wr dls~us~ lon m !'&lt;'t ln~ on
Wedn esday t'vcnln~ at the Meigs
Em ' rgency Sf'n' :c Hcadqu a·r·

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Logan

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Ronnie Bachtel family lost
Its possessions
In a fire on Sun·
day and an appeal ha s been
Is sued on behalf
of
f a mil y
members.
Clot hing and
furn itu re are needed a nd If you
can help just get In touch wi th
Ruth Spaun at 992-3992 or Sue
Tracy at 992· 7810.
T he father wears 30-32 trousers. medium shirt s and e ight or
eight and one- half shoes; Diane
wear s 11-12 dress and slac ks,
medium tops and a seven a nd
one-ha ll shoe; a daugh ter. Trln a.
wear ~ a s ize 13·14, lar ge size tops ,
and " an eight shoe; a nothe r
daughter , Kandi wear s a 12
s lac ks a nd dresses. youth size.
12-H tops, and a s j z~ three shoe;
a son. Ronald wears 30-32 trouster s, large size shirts and a s ize
nine s hoe.

UnlvCI'S lt)' Hos pitals, Dod d Hall.
Room 41&gt;6. 47 1 Dod&lt;l Drlv£'.
C'o lumbu,, Ohio.

FOOD SHOP

CROW'S
FAMILY REST AU RANT

Lend a helping hand

and

~F-AR_M_ER_S~B~A-NK--------~--------------------1

Neltmllle· Yotk n. 81/ptl

210 EAST MAIN

C192 -2196

111 Court StrBBt

MEIGS AUTO SALES

342 Second Ave
Gallipolis. Ohio
446-2691

Middleport

ol tht advt~lsor.
·
lltc~lon of lhtjudgto witt bt llnatand entries become the property ol TIM O.lly Sentinel.
This contest will continue for ten weeks lrom lt'le date ot first Insertion.
I malted, blanks 01111 bt postmarked nollaler than lridoy.
Clip tht coupon btlow ... fill h ouland send to
THE DAtl y SEt.tnNEL

PEOPLES~
.

PAT
HILL
FORD
461 S. 3rd

The contealls open to anyone except omptoytes of The 0.1~ Stntlntt and their hnnedlatolallillos.
An award ol $20.00 will be given to the person piCking the most winners. In case of a lie ont winner will be drawn lrom all correct

GROCERIES · GAS - SNACKS

773-5514

992·3307

Middleport, Ohio
$gMmu Vell1g

FOOD SHOP AND CAR WASH

Mason, W_Va1.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

,_.,. .....

Blower
Funeral
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352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614 ·992-2644

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"Weeklv Specials"
992-2556

Racina. Ohio 45771
Phone 614-949· 2210

~

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

614-992-5141

RSVP workers
are honored

Beat of the bend

COLOR TELEVISION
HEADQUARTERS

992-3671

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Tuesday, September 22, 1987

1

The ,September State School
Foundation Payment for Meigs
Co.unty Schools totaled
$609,181.28 after deductions for
retirem ent, according to State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
Amount s rece ived by the three

local districts are E aster t1,
$121,688 .46; Meigs Local ,
$351,735,23, and Southern Local,
$135,757,59. In addition, Ihe
Meigs County Board of Educa·
tlon ·recelvea a direct allotment
of $31,205.65.

VISIT- Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Morris and son,
i\Ir Force Capt. James E . Morris, pause for a

picture during the Reunion in Korea Tour.

•

More than a vacatton, an official visit
Summer va c ation meant more
than rest and relaxation for a
Rutla nd fa mily which was reu·
nited Aug . 31 in the Re public bf
Korea through the Reunion in
Korea program. sponsored by
the Korea National Tou rism
Corp.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Carl E . Morri s
joined their son. Air Force
Captain .Jam es E . Morris. who Is
comma nd er of the 51st Hea dd·
qua r ters Squad ron sta tioned at
Osa r Air Base . for a fiv e day visit
m th e Republic of Korea.
Th ey were welcomed by top

United States Force and Korean
officials who br iefed the group on
the America n Comm ittment to
the Re publ ic of Korea and the
threa t fa c ing peace and secur ity

designed to demonstrate ttie
Republic' s app recia tion of Amer·
ican ·contribu lions to secuirt y on
the Korean penninsula.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Morr is were on
tours of the United Nations
in the area .
The U. S Air Force has some Command. joint securi11y area at
20.000 airmen in the Republic a nd P anmun jom on Korea' s demilit·
mo re than 90 percent of t hem are· arized zo ne . the ancient Ch anduk
serving one yea r tours of du ty Palace in Seoul. Mu rkuksa Te rn·
pie and the Na tiona l Museum in
away from tlte ir families.
Reunion in Korea was establ· Kyongj u. the Korean folk villa ge
s ihed m 1981 in recogmtion of th e in Suwon, and the . ma ssive
centennial of diplom atic rel a· Hyunda 1sh ipyard in Ulsan. They
lions between the United States dined on traditional Ko rea n foods
a nd the R epublic . T he program Is and were enterta ined by top
Korea n mu sicia ns and dancers.

Cancer:

The 14th annual recognition
luncheons of the Meigs Cou nty
Retired Senior Volunteer Pro·
gram will be held thi s week at
Dale's Smorgasbord to honor the
300 members currentl y enrolled.
The volunteer program pro·
vides volunteer servic e at n
sta tions wit h over 60,000 hours of
volunteer service bei ng cont rib·
ut ed annually.
Receivi ng 10 year service
plaques will be Mar y Frances
Baumga rdner. Louise Bearhs,
Eunie Brinker. Mary Buc k, Ma·
linda Christy, Gaynelle Clark ,
Lucille Clay, Virgil McElroy,
Russe ll Radclil!, Mari e Roy ,
Effie Sanders. Ed na Schaefer,
Paul Smith. Velma Taylor,
Bly the Theiss, a nd Eilee n Swai n.
For ty.four first year vo lun ·
leers wil l be recognized. Also
recognized will be RSVP Avisory
Cuncil member s. John Costanzo.
Evelyn Cl ark , Willie Da vis,
Bett y F ultz, Sue grace. June
Kloes. Marga ret Parker, Ha rold
Rice . Florence Richards, Flor·
e nce Smith, a nd Sonia Wolfe.
Pomeroy Piza Hut, Craw's
family Restaurant , Pleasers
Resta uran t . Powell's Super
Valu. and Pomeroy Flower Shop
have contributed gift cer tificates
which wil be awarded as door
prizes .
T he RSVP prog ra m provides
volunteer opportunil ies for re·
tired perso ns age 60 a nd older
wh o are willing to share their
time a nd ta lent wit,h ot hers.
I ndiv iduals int eres ted in becom·
ing a volun tee r may ca ll992 -2l62.
The progra m staff co ns ists of
Susan Oliver, director; Jeanne
Braun and Alice Wolfe. coordina·
tors. and Doy le Hudson. dr iver.

Cancers don't always cause pain

By Dr. Thomas Nlms
Director Su r gica l Oncology
Gra nt Hospi tal . Col umbu s .
Ca nce r rarely causes pai n! I
hc slta t&lt;' to make suc h a sta te·
ment for fear that m any of you
will stop readi ng right there. Let
me cxpl al n. Ca ncer growths ar&lt;'
ve ry similar in s truc ture to th€'
cells of the organ they are
grow ing ln. They are simpl y
growi ng out of the norm al contro l
of the bod y For exa mpl e . a
breast ca ncer act uall y form s
little milk gla nds - not no rm al
a nd not functional. bu t neverthe less. they are glands. Since the
human body makes millions ot
new cells each day without pain ,
th ese cance r growth s co mmonly
grow to la rge sizes wit hout ever
ca usi ng us a ny pai n. In fact, they
do not cause pam until they

'actually Interfere with the nor
ma l fun ctionin g of an org a n. I
have see n breast ca ncers th at
are as large as softb a lls and still
cause no pa in at all .
We've all grown up associating
pam with illness . Colds cause
sor e t hroa t s: ulcers hurt ; we

ac he with the flu ; art hri lls hurts;
infection s hu rt. Surely. we think
a disease as awf ul as ca ncer
mus t hu rt. Ce r ta inl y, when
ca ncer is advanced, it can cause
serious pa in. and we therefore
assume that it mu st s ta rt out
hu rt in g. Not true!
I freq uent ly see patient s with
cancer who are, di sbelieving. " I
have no pain - l feel line - J
ca n 't have ca ncer!" Even th e

P resid ent was SUI'j)rlsed. He had
no pain al al l.
Cancer rarely cause s pai n es peciall y in it s early stages.
Conseque ntly, it we are going to

fi nd cancer ear ly , we have to pa y

at tention to other changes in our
bodies.
It is not "normal" for people to
beco me co nstipated just because
they are get ting older! Continuing co ns tipa tion may be a s ign of
narrowing of th e bowel due to
ca ncer. Pay attention.
Menopause does not sta rt wit h
heavier. more fr equent periods.
They should get lighter a nd less
frequent. Excessive menstrual
bleedin g a t any age , but es pe·
clally In older wom en , may be a
sign of early ut er ine cancer. P ay
attenti on .
Breast s are readily accessible
for self examJnatJon. New· thick~

enlng or lumps need to b&lt;'
evalu ated. Early det ec tion of
breast ca ncer ca n now save your
life and yo ur br eas t. P ay
at tent io n.

Yo u get the point now . I see
peop le daily who not iced cha nges
in their bodi es bu st ass umed that
these cha nges coold not be
seriou s because they didn 't hurt.
I have sa id before a nd w ill say
many times aga in- a ll cancer to
curable now - i! we find it early.
To do this , we mu s l pay at tention
to body c ha nges ot herr tha n pain.
I wis h ca ncer did hu rt. We
would probably find it muc h
sooner tha t we do in ma ny cases
now . If you notice a chan ge. see

your doctor. You do not have to
be sick or have pain to justify a
visit. Tak e thi s art icle with you.
If y_o~ do . you m ay__no,t _~e !'d t
r'i'ad !he next article th11t lljllll
deal with tlte ma nagement of
ca ncer pain when it does ha ppe n.
I wa nt to dea l with !he issues
tha t co ncern you. Your comm e n ts a nd questions are
encouraged.

Nursing students obtain
degrees at Ohio schools
Co nnie Hend ricks a nd 'Ma ry
Lynd , dau ghters of Mr. and Mrs.
Elm er Hyse ll, State Route 143.
ncar Pome roy, have received
co llege degrees In nu rsing.
He ndrtcks received a n a sso·
ela te deg ree in nurs ing from Rio
Grande Co llege lust June and has
begu n her career in nursi ng as a
staff nurs e a t O' Bieness Hospital
In Athrns. She recently success·
fully completed her lice nse examinat ion to pract ice as an R.N.
One of her goa ls Is to seek an
adva nced degree in nu rslng. Sh e
res ides a t Langsville with her
husband, David, and so ns. Clin·
to n and David.
Ly nd gradua ted m agna cum
laude In J une from th e Unive r-

sity of Cinclnnat i with a m aster's
of sc ie nce degree in nursi ng with
·a clinical specia lt y in nursin g
se rvice adm inistration. She be·
gan her nu rs ing career as fl
g-raduate of Holzer Hos pit al
Sc hool of Nursing in 1962 a nd then
gradua ted summ a cu m laude
from Oh io Univ e rsit y wi th a
bac helor of sc ience degree in
nursing in 1981. She' a member of
Sigma T heta Tau Internatio na l
Hon or Society of Nursing, Phi
Kappa P hi and the Ohio Un iver·
s lt y Honor Society of Nursing. In
J a nuary, thi s year, s he received
cer tifi ca tion as a geron to logi ca l
nurse from th e Am er ican
Nurse s' As sn. She Is list ed in the
1986-87 Who's Who in Ameri ca n

CONNIE HENDRICKS

Nursing . She ha s been ac tively
emp loyed in nu rsing for 25 yea rs
and is presentl y emp loyed as an
assistan t professor a t Shawnee

MARY LYND
Slate Un ivers it y in Ports mouth.
She r es ides in Minford wilh her
hu sband. Jim , and so n, Chris.

Alfred community happenings _ _ _ __
Cora and Sa muel Mi chael, fields in Nebraska ; Sa nd Hills
and F ossil Beds, Nebr as ka;
Portland, a nd Nellie Parker,
Alfred, returned from a three· ranch lands of Montana; Custer' s
Battlefield, Plains Indi ans Mu ·
week, 6,160-mlle trip In the West
seum a nd Glacier Park, Man·
on August 2.
They went espec ia lly to ·visit tana; Dry. Falls a nd Mt. Ranier
re latives In the West. They Park. Wa shington ; downt own
visited Mr. a nd Mrs . Harold areas of Salt Lake City, Utah,
Fritz, Marengo, Jlllnols ; Blanche and Abilene, Kansas .
Hervert , Mr. a nd Mrs. Ron
Hervert. Ravenna, Nebraska ;
Alfred UMW signed a card for
a victim of musc ular dy strophy ,
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Avery and
Nick Shaefer, of Red Bud,
Tina, Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Jacobs
and Tori, Weston , Wyoming; Mr. Illinois, when they met August 4
at the church. Ma r tha Elliott
a nd Mrs . Gilbert Powers, Marian
pre pared the card and note to Mr.
and Ben, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Powers, Kelly and Nate, Robert
Shaefer.
Preside!)! Nellie Parker ap·
Powers, Mr . and Mrs. Dave
pointed Mrs. Elliott to the com·
Schmidt, all of Otter, Mon ta na;
mlttee on nominations to take the
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hess. Great
place of deceased m ember , Anna
Falls, Montana; Mr. and Mrs.
Thompson. Other commltttle
Edward P arker and Tamml,
members are Gertrude Robinson
Randy. Everett. Was hington ;
and Florence Ann Spencer. The
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Avery, Seattle
committee Is to report at the
Washington; Mr. and Mrs . Rex
Smith, Greg, Kirk, and Erin ,
September meeting with election
Woodinville, Washington; Mr . of officers following.
Mrs. Parker gave a r eport on
and Mrs. Philip Powers, Grand
Junction, Colorado and their sons
District UMW visitation at Wa·
who were visiting at their home,
terford June 25 which she,
Thelma
Henderson and Nina
Robert of California, and Bruce
and wife, Peggy, of Austin,
Follrod attended .
Texas; Mr. and Mrs . Edson
Secretary Martha Poole an·
Parker, Aurora, Colorado; Mr. , nounced the annual count of
and Mrs. Dick Harper, Parker
members Is being reported to the
and Krlstan, Parker, Colorado.
district.
Due to the. death o! a relative,
They toured lrrlated corn
. '.

several membe rs were un able to
T helma and Cla rence Hcnder·
attend . Fou r members a nswered · son accompa nied Bertha and Bill
roll ca ll : those named and Wood of Zanesv ille on a Great
Flo ren ce Ann Spencer . Nine sick Lakes vaca tion. Aug. 24-Sep t. 2.
The visited Mackin aw Isla nd ,
ca lls were reported.
Ma r tha Elllo·It led the pro· C h rist ma s -A II · Yea I' · Round
gram, Task of Mending God's Farm, Mac kinaw Bridg&lt;' ilongest bridge in th e worldl. Sault
Crea tion, with all taking part.
Mrs. Poole and Mrs. Par ker Ste . Marie Loc ks. They took a
served refres hm ents of sand· boat cruise th rough Lakes Su pe rwlches , chips, a nd fruit plate ior. Michi ga n and Huron . They
traveled the scenic rout e through
during the social hour.
Ca nada.
Ontario.
Next meeting will be at the
church September 15. Gertr ude
Robin so n will lead th e Pledge
progra m. Th elma Henderson
and Osie Mae Foll rod will be
hostesses .
Sunday School a tt enda nce Au·
gust 30 was 26; chu rch a t tend ·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert .kwell.
ance, 20. On Sept . 6 Sunday
Cheryl Lynn and Pauline Atk ins
School a tt e nd a nce was 27;
spent a w eek vi siting Mr . and
church attendance 12.
Mr s. Tom Hill and Alice Hoffman
Alfred Hom eco min g were
a t Mactison on Lake E I'Ie
scheduled to be held Sept. 20.
recently.
Regular services In the mor ning,
Mr . a nd Mrs. Doug Bis hop
basket dinner at12 : 15. afternoon
spent
the pas t week at Myr tl e
program a t 1:30 featuring Unity
Beach,
S. C.
Singers and loca l choir.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Robert Gibson,
Charles Ritchi e Is recovering
Columbus,
and Mr. and Mrs .
In a Charleston hospita l following
Walter
Burke,
Pomeroy were
a serious auto accident Aug. 29.
recent
guests
of
Mr. and Mrs.
His address Is Room 315, E.
Bob Alkire .
Charleston Area Medical Cel\ler,
Esther Brandu of Vinton was
Charles Ion General. Washington
the
weekend gues t of Mrs. Lola
SI. , Charleston.• Wes t VIrgini a,
Clark
.
25301.

Harrisonville
happenings

�•

Tuesday, Se~ember 22. 1987

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Stewart birthday
~-

The fourth bir thday of J a mes
Tyler Stewart, son of Barry and
Judy Stewart, Middleport. was
observed with a party at his
home.
An Alf cake was served with
homemade lee _cream and soft
drinks.
Persenting gifts to htm· were
his grandparents. Mac k and Bea
Stewart, Buc k Hall. and Betty
Reed, his great-grandparents,
Ardith and Edith Barton, Evelyn
'Murray, Erthel Hall, Crystal and
Tyson Lee, Greg, Dinah, Cindy
and John Stewart, Terry,
Brenda, Robby , Adam, Mike,
and Tara Wyatt, Mia Bass.
Pearlle and Judy Jewell, Brian
and Deanna Denny, Marvi n
Murray, James and Grace John·

POMEROY - Me igs High
Sc hool Alumni Associa tio n meets
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Pomeroy United Methodi st Church.

J.

''

'•

Riffle birthday is observed
A dlnosauer theme was carried Linda Carney, Walter a nd Sy lvia
out for the observance of the Ridenour, maternal grandparsixth birthday of Frank Riffle II. ents, Harold Ridenour, a n uncle,
Angela Ridenour, assisted by a nd Alicia and Angela Ride nour,
Alicia Ridenour, created a
cousin s, a ll of the Leon-Point
" triceratops" c ake for the occaPleasant area .
sion. Sylvia Ridenkour conChu c k Wrig ht , Pomeroy;
structed a prehistoric times cake John, Charlene, Tom, Mary and
featuring caves, s na kes, bolders, Sam Ball, a nd Richard, Brenda,
topped with a megalosaurus
J.R. a nd Matthew Hoffman ,
dlnosauer.
Gallipolis. Others presenting
Games carrying out the theme gifts to the youngs te r were Bill
were pin the plate on the
a nd J e nnie Riffl e, Jr .. paternal
sckel!dosaurus·, fishing for artiigrandparents; Mabel Riffle, pa tflcialllzards, and dina targe ts . , ernal grea t-grandmother; Mary
Attending the party were Nick
Patterson, the Rev. a nd Mrs.
McKinney. Shawn Crewel, Mi - J.E . Ferrell, Po int Pleasant; Joe
chael . Wilcoxen, Sarah Perry . . and Susan Clark , Mr. and Mrs .
Brandy Morrow . Angela and He nry We rry , Pomeroy .
Susan Liberatore. Daniel and

Your SocSec:

POMEROY - Meellng of the
Meigs Coun ty Li tter Contra!
Advisory Board, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m . a t the Meigs Count y ('grl- ·
cultural Extension Service offlee, Mulberry Heights.

THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland. Town-

Manley birthday
Shawna Ann Manley, da ughter
of Rod a nd Angie Manley,
Pomeroy, cele brated her second
birthd ay recently with a party.
Attending were her parents ,
Dena Ma nley and Teresa Fields ,
a unt s; Sha r on Manley, paternal
gra ndmother. a nd Ashley Fields.
Tony a nd Joe Davis . Se nding
gift s were John Ma nley. pa ternal
gra ndfa ther ; Ann Hysell a nd Mr.
and Mrs. Char les Ma nley, Mid dleport, paternal grea t gra ndparents; Homer a nd Hattie
Hysell. paternal grea t-greatgrandparents, and Mr. and M r·s .
David Pratt , maternal grandpar ents, ooth hospita lized at th e
time.

Dispel the myths of benefits

by Lou Horvath, Field Rep.
I believe most of those folk
wisdoms m y father told me. The
"Iron Man" always said that
snakes didn ' t stay In yards
mowed with a powe r m ower.
That seemed like the cosmic
truth until earlier this year when
the copperhead tried to s trike the
mower while Stemple was cut . tlng the grass.
Some of those "old Tru ths"
stay with us for years even If they
don't quite sound reasonable.
That's why it's no surprise that
there are plenty of m yths ,
misconceptions , anq just plain
wrong idea s concerning Social
Security. Believe them and you
can possible lose out on some
benefits. At the least. those·
mlsconceptlons can give you a
misrepresentation of what Social
Security Is and does . Here are
some of the most common ones:
" IF YOU TAKE EARLY RE TIREMENT BENEFITS AT 62.
THEY AUTOMATICALLY GO
UP AT 65." Ignore this o ne. Full
retirement benefits are paid a t
65. At 62, there Is a reduction of

twe nt y pe rcent. Th e reduction is
permanent and is based on the
number of months benefits a re
received before age 65 . .
" YOUR SOCIAL SECUR ITY
BENEFITS BASED ON YOUR
LAST THREE (OR FIVE\ YEARS OF EARNINGS." Thi s is
proba bly the most popular misconception and the mosf lingering. Your Social Security benefit
amount Is a percentage r eplacement of your average lifetime
ea rnings. We look a t your e nti re
work history, not just the last few
years . For someone born inJ925,
for example, the benefit compu ta tion would be based on hi s or
her highest thirty one inflationadjusted yea rs of earnings .
"I PAID OVER $1,000,000 IN
SOC IAL SECU RITY TAXES
AND WILL NEVER GET A
DIME. " Nobody has paid th at
much . A person who had t ha t
m ax imum taxabl e ea rnin gs
from 1938 through 1987 will have
paid a round $30 thousa nd for
those flrt y years of contributi ons.
During those workin g yea rs, tha t
pe rson would have had conti nu-

ing survivor protection for his or
her famil y in addition to disabil ity a nd re ti reme nt benefit
coverage.
''SOC I AL SECURITY I S
BROKE BECAUSE THE TRUST
F UN DS WERE USED TO FJ ,
NANCE THE WAR." Thi s is
s imp ly un true. Socia l Secur it y is
not only In the bl ac k c urrently,
the program is solid well into the
middle of the nex t century. Social
Secur ity funds are used only to
pay monthly benefit s and adm inister the programs . (Only a little
over a penn y from every Social
Security tax doll ar is used to
operate ttie system. ) Reser ves
are invested in specia l govern ment oonds which bring current
interest ra tes, bonds whic h
brought $4 billion into t he t ru st
funds lasl yea r In Interest
payments.
Do yourself a favor the next
tim e you hear one of those o ld
saws a bout Social Security .... lgnore It. Give your Soc ia l Security
office a call instea d to get the
ri g ht infor mation .

ship Trustees will meet in reg~ ­
lar session Thursl!ay, 6:30 p.m. ,
at the Rutland Fire Station.
POMEROY - Free clothing
day will be held Thursday. from
10 a.m. to 12 noon, at the
Salvation Army in Pomeroy . All
area residents ln need of clothing
welcome.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wil l meet Thursda y,
7:30 p.m ., at Grace Episcopal
Chu rch .

FRIDAY
STIVE RSVILLE - Silversville Commun ity Word of Faith
Church will have weekend revi val services Friday through
Sunday a t 7 p.m . each evening.
The s peaker will be George
Black frolfl Portland , and specia l
singing will be featured including

t,lnda Damewood on Friday.
Darlene Newell and Mary Dalley
on Saturday. and the Victory
Quartet on Sunday, Everyone
welcome.

I

Manning D. We bster, dec. to
Ric hard E. Jones, Trustees. cert.
of trans ., Meigs.
Manning D. Webs te r , dec. to
Richard E . Jones, Trustee. cert.
of tra ns., Meigs.
Ke nneth J ess Stewart , Arizona
Stewart to P at Hill , Na ncy Hill.
parcel, Chester.
Dana S. Turner , Phy lli s M.
Turne r to Virginia K. Count s,
parcel, Syracuse.
Luthe r G. Ha rvey to Leading
Cr ee k Co nsv . Dist. , parc el,
Columbi a.
Dav id W. Haggy to Frances L.
Ha ggy, pa rcels, Rutland .
Glen R . Caton, dec., Kathleen
Caton, a!fld .. Salem-Porn. Vill.
Ka th leen Caton to Kathleen
Caton , Di a na J ar vis , parcel,
Porn . Vlll.
'
Car t er French, Caro l yn

Poet's corner:

Dearest Michel e,

This is just a note to say
My heart cords beat every day
Express ions of love and feelings
so gay
, What I've so ma ny times failed to
say.
I'm no poet as you'll no doubt see;
I'm just a dad who's proud of
thee .
Please excuse m y lack of tal ent
But I love you and am going to t ~ll
it.
My memories fall upon times so
free
When you and Pamm y and me
made three.
On that special day so me years
ago
What lay before us, we rea lly
didn't know.
From your first steps
To your first date,
I thought at times
My heart would break.
But you came through,
I always knew you would,
Conquering the bad, and enjoyIng the good .
I've suffered with delight
The life I've lived,

To watch you grow
Punkin ' !love you so.

I

My life is surrounded
With specia l thoughts of yo u,
Pleasant ; and fr ight e nin g, too.
On now to coll ege in pu rsuit s of
success,
Rely upon God to do your best.
In this new ,c hallenge on your
life's pa th ,
HE 'LL give you the strength :
HE 'S GOOD AT THAT.
I

I hope this message will e n·
courge thee
To be all tha t you can be.
I wrote this note
'Fo be honest and true,
To tell I love you 'cause you're
m y kid ,
And I like you because you are .
you.
From:
Dad
(Michael Zirkle)

IEFUCYIONS OF YOU
PEU SPEOAI.
. *5 10 Off ALL PIUS
SEPT. 22-0CT. 6
CALL 773-6388 FOR APPT.
OPEN TUES. -SAT.
MASON, WV

Business Services

Texas.
Glenn , who cond ucted the
researc h wit h Char les Weaver Qf
St. Mary's University of Sa n
Antonio. Texas, said one reason
for the cha nge could be tha t
lifestyles of married a nd unm arr ied people have become more
a lik e.
For instance, mo re unmarried
people have sou rces of sex ual
grati fi cation th ese days - ad ding to their ha ppiness. Mean while, m a rriage does not always
provide the finan cial stability it
once did .
The s tudy, based on data from
the National .Opinion Resea rch
Ce nt er at the University of
Chi cago, fo und "w hen people of
all marital statuses are lumped
t_oget her, the happiness of m e n
stayed about the sa m e durin g th e
pa st 15 years. but that of women
dec lined dramatically ."

Fren ch to Robert L. Mas h, Dill sr.·. pa reel. P orn . Viii.
Tama r a L. Mas h , par ce l,
Earl Willford, Clarice Wi llford
Pomeroy .
to Lyle J . Swain, Ma ry R. Swain,
Carol S: Love to Drerel C.
parcel, Olive.
Vance , Parthenia L. Van ce,
Jack ie L. Stol lings, Ella June
parcel , Scipio.
Stolll ngs to Robert L. Reeves ,
James Gheen by his ally In fac t Marjori e Reeves, 0.84 A .,
to Carol Hubbard, parcel, Lower Chester.
Pomeroy now Midd .
Robert L. Reeves, Marjorie
Reeves to Jackie L. Stollin gs,
Willl a m E. Ke nnedy , Ear le ne
E ll a J un e Stoll ings. parcel.
A. Kennedy to Richard Man zey ,
Chester .
Patrlca Ma nzey, parce ls. Scipio.
Hel en E . Bailey dec' d., Donald
Westside Churc h of Christ to
E
.
Bailey, affid .. Salisbury.
Ja n. M. P ickett, Darla J a ne
Chesapeake
&amp; Ohio Rallwa qy
Pickett , 1 A., Salis bury.
Co., Ma nufac tu rers Hanover
William E.Gu tnth er, Beverly
Trust C9m pany. Trustee to ConH. Guinter to Billy R . Goble,
Judith M. Go ble, parcel , Syra- solid a ted Rail Corpor a tion, 8.80
A., Salisbury .
c use Viii .
Floyd Cumm ins, Addle Cum Cecil Maynard , Fannie Maymins to Rex A. Thorn ton, parcel .
na rd to Cecil Maynard. Jr ..
De bbie K. Mayna r d. parcel , Letart .
Racine VIII.
Roger L. Mowery , Wanda Jun e
Mowery
to T homas R . Kennedy.
Homer Mills, Goldie Mllls to
parcel,
Salisbu
ry .
J eff Davis. Brenda Dav is, 1.69
A .. Sutton.
Ronald G. Wrig ht, Lind a A.
Wright to Ernest Wright , RosaCha rlott e E. Wright dec'd .,
lee Wright , parcel , Safem .
Rodney D. Wright a ka Rodney
Norma Lenora T ass la n ,
Wright . affid ., Rutl and Viii.
George T assia n , Ro se Lee
Cha rles H. Theiss, Bonnie L.
Clarke , Fred Clarke to Henry L.
Theiss to Thomas M. Th e iss, 2 A.,
Moore , E . Lois Moore, 0.44 A. ,
Lebanon ."
Racine Vill .
Ric hard Rupe, Alta Ann Rupe,
Wa nd a June Lambert a ka
Dever Biggersta ff. Mart ha S.
Wanda ,June Mowery, Roger L.
Biggersta ff by a tt y-ln-fact to
Jerrena M. Robson, Ger ald L. Mowery tp Roger L . Mowery,

i

It sa id that among women 25 to
39 years of age, 39 percent
reported during the 1970s they
wer" "vt!ry happy," while this
figure dropped to 30 percent in
1986.
The authors said this cha nge
came about m ai nly because of a
decrease In the reported happiness of married women .
Mad am Belle's bed
still draw s lop dollar
LEXINGTON . l&lt; y . (U P!)
With an a ntiqu es dealer by th&lt;'
name of Robe rt E. Lee being
outbid, the bed once owned by a
brothel madam who wa s the
Inspiration for Belle Wat ling in
"Gone With the Wind " has been
sold a t auction.
The walnut bed, its elabora tely
carved headboard a nd two companion dressers o nce ow ned by
Lexi ngton madam Belle Brczlng
went Sunda y for $13.230 to a
Lexi ng ton attor ney. Kirtley
Amos .
"I'm the trustee of a very
unique piece of his tory," Amos
said. " 1 was prepared to pa y
$20,000 ... I'm surprised II wen t
for as litt_le as it did . ..
Amos was delightl'd he had
outbid Lee. a Cinc innati ant iques
dea ler, saying , "I'm just glad a
Yankee didn ' t buy a oouthern
lady 's bed."
Belle purchased I he bed ai th e
1894 St . Louis World 's Exposi tion. accordi ng to E . I. "Buddy"
Thompson, who wrote the 198-1
biograph y " Mad am B lie
Breztng ."
The bed wa s used to en te rtain
va lued customers at Brezlng 's
upsca le brothel, wherP a 19th
century vtsli cost Sl. The broth el .
under wartime pressure fr om the
Army as It tried th e cont rol lh&lt;?

Wanda June Mowery, parcels,
Sa lisbury.
Tessie V. Well s to Edward
Devon Riggs. Doris L&lt;•c Rigg s.
parcel, Lebanon .
Joseph D. Almcndingcr, Ha zel
M. Almendinger to David M.
Bricklcs, Edith A. Leach, parcel.
Bedford .
Samuel J . Bennett to Bonnie
Bennett. 102 A., ScipiO.
Lawre nce E . Hysel l. Jr .. Dorothy Hys&lt;'ll , Rosemary Hysell to
Rosemary Hysell , parcel, Mldd .
Vill .
Everett W. Hei ney. Almeda P.
Heiney to Everett W. Hein ey,
Al m eda P . Hein ey, parce l.
Mi egs.

off-dut y activities of the Doughboys, closed In 1917 a nd never
re-opened.
Brezlng di ed in 1940 at the age
of 80 and her ·bed wa s sold to Onl'
of her girls. Clara ayre, for
$1 ,600. T he bed lat er beca me the
propert y of F lora Hudson. who
bought Belle's house In 1940 a nd
turned it Int o a hotel.
Hud so n d ied this y&lt;'a r ann the
auction was held by lr c r ('sta te•.
Florida hu ~l n cssrn an
Is Monopoly king
WASH INGTON tU PI I - A
Florida inve s tmrnr bon ker
reigns as the new national
Monopoly game king after d('
!eating four other fi nalists in the
long es t-rver U.S. Monopo l;·
Championship .
Gary Peters , 48. of Hallandale.
Fla . , won a tr ip to next year 's
world Monopoly tournament In
London and $5,000 in lJ.S Savings
Bonds for lasling through thr
final round Mo nda y , whirh too k a
r£&gt;cord 2 hour s and ~l(J 11ll nutl·s to
ro mph~ l e.

" It
vC~ry
h&lt;.~d .

was a. vrry

IOUAh

gamf'.

hn r d ,'' said Pefl •rs . " \Vf' all
to be \'Pry aggn.~~sl\' f' -

bidding for th ose ho uses . ..
Fort y -e ig ht .&gt;tatP Ch(lmplo ns
wcrr flown to Washin gto n for the
t hree-dav event tly Pa rkt•r Flrot h
crs In c. , rnakrr of thr gam&lt;'.
Peters and Sunday '' leader
Paul Ingrey , a r -Insura nce
pres ident frot ~ Mountain Lake,
N..l ., fa ced each other In the tlt1c
s howdown, with ·Jn gn·~ holding
the \'a luable Boardwalk and
Park Plarc proper ties .
The o ther finali s ts were Ma r k
Rice. a fl oor trader fro m D nvcr.
Noah Burcz~ k . a 1 ~ - )'rnr-o ld
s tudr nt from Crown P oin t, Ind ..
and reigning champion Jim
Forbes. of Winter Haven. Fla .
'hnage' hmk
gelling a lace llft
FOSTOR IA. Ohio i UP I) -A
lresh roat of paint is bring
applied to a soybean oi l tank
where thousa nds of people ga the rt•d last s ummer to sec an
image that was rrported to be
Je sus Chr ist.

Behin~~~!~~~rtan,

.1{'

Middleport,

&lt;;

9/ 22/

·HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE •••
•Child's Birthday
Party
•Wedding
•Family

BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 12.00

Delmas Goff to Leading Cree k
Co nsv. Dlst. , parcel, Sa lem .
Ernie Kenton Davis to Leading
Cree k Co nsv . Dis t. , parce l,
Salem .
Ric hard E . Jones. Trustee,
Manning D. Webster dec' d, affld ,
for notice of preservation of In t.
in la nd, Meigs .
Howa rd C. Birchf ield, Marie L.
Birchfield to J a mes 1C.. Birc hfield. parcel, Rutland .

~redit

Farm

WASHINGTON tUP f )
House debate on the most co ntraversla l aspec tsof apla n torescue
the Farm Credit System, lnclud ing I he amou nt and source of
federal he lp , has been delayed
un til nex t month .
The House approved some
farm credit provisions Monda y.
but a third committe.e chairm a n
joined two ot he rs who previ ous ly
ralsed objection s about s ubsta ntivc Issues In th e bill.
Chai rman Kika de lJI Garza.
D-Texas. of theAgrlcultureCommlt tee was forcl?d to delay a n
amendment tha t would prov ide
initial e m er~e ncy assistance of
$2.5 bi llion for fi scal 1988 raised
with the sa le of government loan s
on Wall Street.
The language, as passed by the
Agrlc u ltu rr · Committ ee last
mont h, would m erC'ly authorize a
rescue without specifyin g the
amount or source of fund s.

PLAIN SKIRTS

ONLY

The
FABRIC
SHOP
110 W.

M-TH: 10-1, 2-6 F: .10-12
BEND AREA MEDICAL CENTER
138 MAIN STREET, NEW HAVEN, WV.
Cleaning

IN ASSOCIATION WITH
by:

Dd
~~~~!
..
~~~~!5~~~~!~4~
Y1

Classic Cleaners

'" The Family of Professionals'" ,

.

-·

'

a-·
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fO P\.6(1 1M At (AU. HJ. Jl U
llw• r•ar I A.A •• J ' ··
I &amp;.a U.tiiiiOOH SAIUIOlf

••u

....... ... ..
.......
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........ __ ...

.

NW~ Wl~~g H~1111
~ARIN

httltl

FACEMYER

.,d. Docarating (oMultant
,39504 lrodblnl Rd.
llliddltpo•t, Oh. 1760

Ca rl Ritchi e, Long Bottom, has
been elcctcllo me mber ship in th e
American Angus Associatio n
headqu ar tered at St. Josep h, Mo .
The associa tio n wit h over
20.000 ac.tive ad ult a nd junior
members, i• the largest beef
cattle registry associatio n in th e
world. Its co mputerized reco rds

SIGN UP NOW FOR

·-··
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--. ·--- .....
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--·... .............
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........
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.... _....,_
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YYONNI SCAllY

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:: j:T.! .. 1-

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

Coun. ciao No. 25633.
H..old B. Grimm , B48

848 B•oadwav . Raci ne.
Ohio 45771 .

FIDUCIARY

Rac i ne ,

Ohio

Robert E . Buck,

On Septoi"I!O• 17, 1987.
intheMeiQSCountvProbata

wuappointed ExectheestateofVioletH .

Proboto Judge
Ne 1uollroo1d,, Clerk

·oU. SIDeSS serviCeS
0

o

Form Equipment
Dealer

flrlll Equlplllell·t

d••c.ibed
••• "crououav
-&amp; Sert~lee
unincorporated
Vii togo and
of Maninavitto
running
~========::;r.;::::=:::::;:;:;::==::;;r;:========;i· L..____.,:l;.:-3:.;,-',::8::,6.,:1f:.::c.J
eatt
wett between
Lots 1

in the

~h=~~~~ :;~~07'~~~do~~~:

weot by tho Williom and
Patricia Chapmen propeny.
Said
Boord
a finll
ho,.ing
on wm
thehotd
p&lt;Opoaod
vacotion of uid "c.aas

1

ROOfiNG ,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Gutters ·

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1
ownspou 9

"At Reasonable Prius"

Howard L. Writesel

NEW - REPAIR
·o

Gutter Cleaning
·
Painting
.AEE ESTIMATES

FR

949-2263
or 949-2168

4-22-87-lfn

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY

Commiasionert ' office ,
Meigs County Cour1hou~e,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

RESIDENTIAL I COMMERCI AL

Hob1tener. Clerk

(91 16, 22, 2tc
•

·

Real Estate General

LOTS &amp; LAND
FOR SALE

Build your home or cabin on
this lovely land'iusl one mile
from Ohio River. Woods, seclusion , and cleared land. 2
acres up. A real bargain.
Two l acre building sites on
Wright St. Water and sewe(.
$4,000 each.

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REAlTY
1-814-386-6740
Col_lect calls Accepted

Or

949-2860

D
N' h
ay or tg 1
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-lfn

EAGLE RIDGE ,
PARTS • SERVICE
Repairs on All Make s
Transaxle Repairs·

lo~~:aled Halfway lttween
If, 7 and lashan
HRS : 12 :00-6 :00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

Ph. 949-2969

BUY - SELL- TRADE
8-7-t mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 742·2027

:~j@Jr

' '

5/lttln

RAilROAD
JUNCTION
CLIFTON, W. VA.
BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour
6·1 pm-Orlnks SO&lt;
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. LOTTERY
CARRY-OUT
9-18-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FfLl DIRT

OPEN FOR BUSINESS

324 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
Behind City Hall

ANN'S

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors Items,
. Costume Jewelry.
Action Toys , Mustcai
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Mon. 1hru Fri . or by
Appointment

Call 1614)992-7204
Wholesale &amp; Retail

10:S-tfc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. I 24, Pomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR
Al•a Tt..lllllufo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

.

1

8·10-1 mo. pd.

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHISTR, OHIO

•HOME BUilDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • B.~THS
•ROOFING •GENERAl
REMODEltNO &amp;

REPAIRS

REFERENCES
....,tDay or h111ln•

985-4141
GIIIIIAL CONTUCTOIS

-

8-!o-1 ~ ·-

pd.

Building ·s ite· 1· 2 acres Within
15 minutes of town . Cash or CO .
Call by 11 -15·87 , 614.·388·
9769 .

Emp luvm rn1
Services
11

Help Wanted

" Hiring! Government jobs· your
ltee. $15,000-'$6B ,OOO. Call
602 -838- 8885 Ext. 606" .

IEASONAIL£ PRICES- TRY US!
fl -11· 1 mo.

LONG'S

CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling

Roofing of AU Types
Worked in Home Arecr
2S .hars

FREE ESTIMATES
CALL

1-614-843-5425
7/ 23/ 2 m!. d.

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843-5248
RUSONABLE • RUlABLE
8-20-'86 tin

Announcemenls
4

Giveaway

, '

6 Spaniel mixed puppies to good
homo. Call evenings 614·446·
7054.
Two- 7 wk . old male kittens, lilter
trained. very ffiendly . Must find
1 home this we8k. Call614-4462457. "

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

· All M1hs
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

4-5-tlc

v.w.

3 male kittens . 10· 12 weeks ald .
litter tra ined . Tame. Call 614245-957 2.

Gavernment Jobs . 81 6,040 ·
859,230 yr. Now hiring. Cell
806-687-6000 Ext. A-9805 tor
2 adorable gray &amp; white klrten s. · current federal list.
Call 61 4·446· 801 6 or 446373t .
Earn excellent money in home
~aaembly work. Jew .. rv. toys
Small milted breed female Boa·
and others. nand PT Av•il. Call
gle, friendly , spayed, had all
today/ 1 -618 -459-3&amp;46 [toll shou. 304 -675 -3252 .
refundable) DEPTB1622 24 hra.

LOST: Aluminum ex tension
ladder. Rt . 160 area. Call
614-446 -3131 .
Old outb oard motors, any
condition · serviceble or not .
Price depends upon cond ition.
Call614· 446 -1602 ask for Dan.
lost in tfle Mecttanic St. area.
long ·flaired female black ut
with 4 whit&amp; pews and white
throat. May have flea collar on.
Answer&amp; to Muffin. Call 614992-2121 .

7

Yard Sale

Wed . &amp; Thurs .• Sept . 23 &amp; 24.
Co11. residence at Evergr een on
Old At. 160.
Moving 5•1•: 33 Holcomb Hill
out Rt . 141 . Sept . 22.23.249-6. Dinette set. end t1blea,
coffee table, bed, etc . Also yard
sale items.
Antiques. HoosiM ' cupbaJrd.
bookc.•e. tables. stoneware.
kitchen collectibles. glauware.
tools, lot• more. Centen•rv
Townhauae. Sept. 24.

8-13-L mo.- pd.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Setvices

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

.Licensed Clinical Audiologist

!

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601

3368 .

S.lesman Wanted! Must have
knowledge of construction .
Must be aggressive. Call 614·
448-7241. after 6:00PM .

&amp;Vicinity

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

Avon-Sell Avon for Chriatmes.
Make 40 percent . Ca11614 -446·

English M ini-lop Ftabbitt· male.
Needs I!IKCellent home. Cell
614-446 ·4838.

----· ·aampoli"S" --------

PARTS

Heir stylist needed to stan work
the fiflt of October. Wou ld like
to h•ve stylist With their own
clientme. It interested call for
inter\l'iew· Linda GarriJit 114446·3624.

W•nted a lady to live·in. Light
house work. Mostty for com·
pany . Cal\614-446-3 419 .

PARTS and SERVICE
•

Ga llipolis area-Sales skills n~
cessarv . Computer training preferred. Must be lbleto dHI with
public. Some travel in\l'olved.
Send resume to Bo~~: T·910 e/ o
Glllipolis Dailvlribune82&amp; 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

5 kittens to giveaway. Different
colors, short &amp;: lang' hair. Call
61 4·446 ·7075.

6 lost and Found

16141 992-6550

(6 t41 992-7154

Female minature Dachshund.
1·2 yrs . old with or without
pepen . Call 614- 367 ·0487.

Wanted to buy, standing timber.
Call AI Tromm at 614· 742·
2328.

.. You Na mt-' It - \l'l''H·
Got II! "

SALES &amp; SERVICE

R!Sto!NCE PHON!

Wanted ta buy flashing arrow
sign. Ca11614-246-6582.

• .W ooden Gifts

We Carry Fisl'llng Supplies

IUSINISS PHONE

Wanted to buy· st,ationary exer ciie bike. Call614·446- 1183.

Buying daily gold. silver cains.
rings , jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins, large currency . Top prtces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614·
992 -3476 .

•Pictures
•Pottery
•Cement Products

New location:
I 68 North St&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Pay YQur
Phone Bills Here

Wanted ta buy: long wood. Call
anytime- C &amp; R Firewood. Call
614·367 -0669:

Want8d to buy : A station•rv
exerciser bike. Call 514-446t t83 .

tCUT OUT FOR FUTURE USII

SMALL
ENGINE
(ENTER

i l2fl/ tlll

Let Ut f••ee Yilu I•

Commissioners

PH. 949-2801

Parts

Fei rly late model Chrysler pro·
duct , good co ndition. low mi leage . Phone 814-268· 6038 .

•Candles

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE OHIO
'
Authoriz ... John Deere,
N H 11 d 1 sh H
ew 0 an' u
og

Wanted to buy: Standing timber.
Call 8 14 -379-2758.

SYRACUSE, OHIO
•Ohio Souviners
•Music Boxes

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
S. coal he1ters . Sw•in't Furn l·
lure, Jrd . &amp; Olive St . Gallipolis.
Cell 814 -448-3169.

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Public Notice

10:30

Addon s and remodel ing.
Roof ing and guner work
Concr ete work
Plumbin g and eiectricul
work
I Free Estimates)

BOGGS

Public Notice

1987, at

-

Pdmeroy, Ohio
4-15-' 86-tc

N - CI . . . . . _ . _ ...

u-u
--•••- -

· ··~

,_

n - r...... ._

... 111_

~-

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.,.

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___.... · . . . .
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....... '":.':....
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·-···~·

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. . . . . . 0 " 1 -M' d o(l&lt;&gt;

,. ~

UIM

"'..

Ciauifit&gt;d p•re• oav~tr 1h.11
follotdrtl !el,p hotu! .... r:h•n1•• ···

~

••-r::.: ~.._""':::"........::-._
........

:::~

··

t l--#- 1 • • -

2282 .

Re·Open For Butineu

LaSALLE G.ALLERY

11 - - . . ....

01•

#1 Copper
Current 53¢ lb.
Top Grade
Aluminum Shee1s
40¢ lb.
. Aluminum Cans
34¢ lb.
9-11-lmo.

992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio
1 -13-tfc

JANET VINOI

CARPENTER
SERVICE ·

. ..._
.......
..·-__._......
'·-..... . ·--·-··--

It • - -

01•

...

-- .~-_.

. _.._ _ _ ........ o - , _

...

Rl. 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy

PAT HILL FORD

Ulll!Y HOUSION

Bridal Registry and
most complete line of
Weddinq Flowers and
AccessorHtl in i his area

We PlY c11h for l1te mod &amp;I clun
us&amp;d cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc.
· Bill Gena Johnson
614 ·«6-3672

DAILY 10 AM-6 PM
MONDAY thru SATURDAY

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

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING
.

Wanted To Buy

992-3537

No Sunday Calls
3-IJ -tln

BASKET WEAVING ond
STINCIUNG CLASSES

E WEDDING CONSUlTANl'

9

Junk Auto's with or without
motors . Call 614·388 -9303 .

RADIATOR
SERVICE

A erutlu decortUQg otlp..e rl..:u~:ll.

Rick Pearson Auction••r li·
c~nsed in Ohio and West Virgl·
nia. Estate. antique. farm. llqu ld•tion tale•. 304-773- 5785.

Now _Open

PH. 949-2860
ar 949-2801

8-24-87-1 mo.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

550 PAGE STRE(T
MIDDL(PORT, OHIO

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

992-2526

8

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uted c••· Smitfl
Buick-Pantiac, 191 1 e.at•n
Ave.. Gi.llipolls. CaH 814 -441-

Purchasing all
types of
non-ferrous scrap

or Appolntmen1

SaMdoy g ,OQ.).

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

(614) 992-57 51
8· 24-1 mo.

Ritchie named
to membership

IIIAtU

I •I - I N I I

l kn

CIWD W.U

the Petition pre..nted to the
· :Joard of County Commlsisonera ia for the public'•
convenience and welfare.
The Petition to vacate this
Orange Townahip road may
be viewed and copied at the

DOCTORS ijOURS

LADIES 2 PC. SUITS

to take up the entire farm cred it
l:jill In o ne piece, but Chairmen
John Di ngell. D- Mich .. of the
E nergy a nd Co mmerce Com mit tee and Fernand St . Germain,
D-R .!., of the Banking Committee co mplained they were given
too little time to review a
mea sure th at would establish a n
al ter na t ive source of agricultu ra l cred it .

. 9·10· 1 mo. . d.

Located at Corner of

YOUNG'S

: Commiuione•a. Court haute. Pomuoy . Ohio
46769.
THo purpose of lhe alo•a·
aaidviewlngond hearing w-itt
ba to determine whethe•"'
not the vocation of said
"croas attey" II described in

882-3134

99C

Earlier this year. the farmerowned syste m a nd r a tion 's largest far m te nder, which has lost
$4.8 billion s ince 1985. asked for a
federal loan of $6 billion , bu t its
losses this year have been less
than expected a nd lawm akers
predict the ultimate bailout will
be sma ller.
A bill before t he Senate Agri ·
c ulture Commit tee would a uthorlze t he FCS to sell $4 bllllon in
bonds, wit h interest payment s
s hared by the 1axpayers and the
F CS. A Senate subcommitt ee
resumes work on Its rescue plan
Wednesday.
On Monda y, the House easily
approved provis ions that would
guara ntee the va lue of farme rs '
stoc k in the ir FCS banks , would
require FCS le nd ers to restru cture loans of many borrowers
·a nd would give borrowers new
rig ht s.
Originally, t he House planned

l'DOC'' VAUGHN
· CarJ:ifiad Licensed Shop

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RUSS MOORE

debate is delayed

CALL 992-6756

m.. pd.

1 p.m.- 7 p.m.

Sunday:

Repai rs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

•·,,.J

Pomeroy

By Chance

.

1614) 992-3718 ••~92- llSO
Middleport· Athens-Port smoufh

HOURS: fue.·Wed.-fri.
II a.m. Ia 1 p.m.

Middleport-9~2-

alley " at 1 o'clock P.M. in
the office of Meigs County

FAMILY PRACTICE
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

SPECIAL ENDS SEPT. 30

used the national telev ls on broad cast for the
pledge and preamble. The hallw ay scowcase for
the week was arrange d with appropriate mate rial
for the.wee k by the librarian who also used posters
made hy students. Sixth . grades presente d a
patriotic the me program for th e first PTO
meeting."
·

: A/ C ServiCe

All MajOf &amp; Minor

BODY SHOP

1124 East Main St.

bevond
G... nd
back Now Ho•on. Tu"d .. thfu

Moat Forei·g n and
Domestic Vehicles

GEARY

Riverine Antiques

M•rv

Drv Cleaning·S.ecial
At The fahric Sho•

c.SaltS
f. Scott, Mclr.; •. (re,.ans field
Mgr., Plvs A•sociates

Reunion

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

view tho propoaod voco tion

SATURDAY I SUHOAY ~IINEES
All SEATS 12.50

SYRACUS(, OHIO

9-18-87

of an Orange Townthip road

ADULTS n . 50 ·CHILDREN 12. .50

~

set. Completely eliminate&amp;
the end of th e m onth Bill surprise.

9-18-1 mo.

t-

• SPECIAL PR ICE ADMISSIONS •

c8

lholottows DoityGoatsoobo

PH. 992-6959

GUEST SPEAKER - ,Judre Robert Buck of I he
Melp Probate and Juvenile Courts, ls pictured
s peaking al Riverview School as a highlight of lhe
ohservance of Constitution Week. He spoke to
grad es four, fiv e and six on Ci tizens' rights and
respons ibilities. Students dressed in red, white
and blue and wore Constitution Week stic ke rs.

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

M
enufactl.: ." ' ..nd Sales of
Recording t ·cl '":ontrv' In·
strumenla :or Jiame and
Cammereial use. Monitor&amp;
to display Furnace end Air
Cond. Hours or M in: ofQ:per·
ating time. Valut~ble Data

•Any Special
Occasion

A .M . the Board of Meigs 1 ----------l.!~!!!::::....;d~e!!:c!eo~a~e~d.~ta~t!e_;o~t~~,!!::_!!j!i2l,!;2
County Commlttionert will
:;..._~

IIACK TO THEATRE DAYS r

&amp; Vicinity

Information and liro,hu rt

•Parents• Anniversary

tember.

Phone 440· 4524

8

•Baby Shower

on tho 30oh day of Sap-

.IICMSON PIKE AT 3S WEST

Ohio

a.., h St.

Middlepon, Oh . 4l760

SAT .. OCT. 10. 1987

'.fl

Notice it.herebygNenthat

~31

441

"FRESH" SHRIMP SAlE

·t'/

Mtiga County

Main
Pomeroy, Ohio 992 ·2284

From SaVInnah• GIOIJII

.,{

Quirks in the news_--:.,._ __
Marriage. happiness
. on the decline
NEW YORK (UP!) -Married
people tend not to be as happy as
they once were while sing le
people tend to be happier than
unm arried people in the past ,
according to a st udy of happi ness
a nd wedlock.
In a n a r tic le published Monday
in Psychology Today, two sociologists sa id that In previous
decades. "married peopl e, as a
whole, were co nsiderably happier tha n· those who had never
married or who we re divorced .
separat ed o r widowed. "
By compariso n, " In the past
decad e and a half. the relatio nship between m arriage a nd happiness has grown considerably
weaker In the United States. for
both m en a nd wo m en." said
Norval G lenn of the University of

·--····pt-Piiiiisiiiif .....

r.::::::::::r;:C;ONStMR::::::::=MOHIT==OR=S:YSliMS=:;!:::::::::~
~~~--~~-~~~--~··;~~:~:~~--~--~~~~
•
VAUGHN'S
Union Camp

afternoon service al 1:30. The
Orr Singers, a nd Jerry and Diane
Frederick will be featured in the
afternoon. Rev . Carl Hicks, pastor, Invites the public to attend .

MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline . Prayer meeting c hanged
POMEROY The weekly
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, wi ll have a spaghetti dinner prayer meeting of Calvary PilFriday with serving from II a.m grim Chapel, Rout e 143, PO!fleto 6 p.m . at the Middle port roy, will be held Thursday a t the
Masonic Temple.
regular th;ne lns teaq of Wednes day. Mr . and Mrs. Phebu s.
POMEROY -The Dance Club · rep·r esentlng their son. Don Phewill have a dance at the Senior bus , a nd his mission work in New
Citizens Center Friday, 8 to 11 Mexico, will be g uests on
p.m . with music by True Coun - Thu rsday.
try. Those attending are to take
snacks.
Reviv al
LETART FALLS- The Rev .
SUNDAY
Pearl A. Cas to. for mer pastor of
EAGLE RIDGE - The home- the Letart Falls Unit ed Metho·
com ing of Eag le Ridge Comm un- dl st Church , will condu c t cvangC'ity Church \viii be this Sunday llstic services at the church, Oct.
with morning services at IOa .m. , 7-11. 7 p.m. Special s inging
carry-in dinner at 12: 30 and
nightly .

Meigs· County property transfers _ _ _ _ _ _ __
David C. Bradley, Theresa
Schweller -Bradley to Da ve
Weeks , Jeanie Wee ks, 16.95 A.,
Orange.
Marlon D. Slater to Re ta
Sloter, 2 A., Sutton.
Ernest L. Kibble, eta!., to
Richard Kibble, Sheriff deed,
Olive.
Harvey S. Martin to Thurman
Junior Martin, Geraldine Marti n, 3.85 A., Sutton.
Richard Carter, Daisy Carter
to Richard D. ' Carter, Helen G.
Ca rter , 1 A. Olive.
Charles Williams, Allee Williams to William H. Cleland, Jime
W. Cleland, Wllllam L. Cleland,
Sharon L. Cleland, ease., Racine
Vlll.
Joel K. Kitchen , Sallie E .
Kitchen to Ma r y Messler, .]a mes
Shook, 1.92 A., Rutland .

The

1987

Communtiy calendar/area happenings

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, wi ll meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
Knight, Lincoln Hill, lor a card
party.

TYLER STEWART
son, Kenny, Beverly, Brad and
Ashley Baylor :

Tu~y, Se~ember22,

...... ·p·omero-v·····----Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Thurs. and Fri .. Sept . 24, 26 . 6

Immediate opening for experienced cook, 9 ~ 00- 3 : 00 , Mon.·
Fri . Pay commensurate with
experience. Send resume to
Daily Sentinel , Box 729P ,
Pom•ov. Ohio.
La Salle G1llery, 'M iddleport
needs sal81 person experienced
in handicraft,• and willing to
accept responsibili1y . Apply in
penan Mon.-Sat., 9 :30-4:30 .

Arcadia Nursing Center. Cool·
ville, is currentlv 1ccepting apPII·
cations lor available R. N.
pot it ions.
Driver mechanic to mahe loc81
deliveries in M eigs Cauntv.
Write experience "' qu&amp;lific e·
tions to The Daily Sentinel. Box
729 S, Pomeroy. OH 46769 .
AVON • All areal. Call Marilyn
.Weaver 304·882· 2645 .
R.N . applications now being
accepted lor full 1ime position.
Pleasant Valley Nursiny Care
Canter. apply personnel otfic•
Pleasant Vallev Hasp. 304- 6754340. AA -EOE .
AVON · All •reas. Call Shirley
Spears. 304 -875- 1429 .
" HIRING I Go'llernment jobs .
vour area. $15,000 . 868 ,000 .

Cat! 16021 638 -8886 . EXT
1203"
Ohi o Valley Tire now hat Hunter
D-100 Computeril8d alignment
machine. Now t•king .applic•·
tions fo r wheel alignments. Call
304· 676· 6332 . Gallipol is Ferrv .
WY .

Medical recapdonist. 011 p. pretoned, send resume B•nd Are•
Medical Center, Box 779, Ne\1¥
Haven. W. Va.

12 lr Situations
Wanted

family. Furniture, drap•. toys

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
tfn

1nd more. Nekt to &amp;t1te High·
way G1rege.

First houn Sumn• Rd. Wltd.
1nd Thurs. 9 :30-4:00. 6 flmi ·
Ilea . Beby, 1dult clothes. alt
sizes. dishes.

Have • video tape mad• of
child ' s birthday part¥, wedding,
parent's anniverury , b•by
showers. family reunion or any
specl•l acc11io.n . Call814-992·
6969

�...•

..

15

School•
lnltNction

18 Wanted to Do

r

Jim's Odd Job Sentice- painting,
aundeck , siding,
roafing.. C.ll 614-379-2416 .

Cll'pef'lter work,

53

46 Space for Rent

LAFF-A-DAY

Pieno l...ons. b~t~~~innlng 1nd
intermH iltt students. C1ll
r., ... DIVilatl1·· 817-8361 .

Comet cabinet )orig. gla11L
1800. Chftt lo drawers-tig..maple a. cherry. 1800. Cherry
night ttand with ropa twistlegt.
125Q. AU from 18DO's. E~cel.
cond. Call614-44&amp;·7896.

Office Space lor rent . Excel.
downtown G•lllpolis IQcation.
lnqulriiiiS call 614-446-4222 .

54 Misc . Merchandise

Quillity roofing. Free en .. t10 a

7479.

square. Contact Randy at 814-

Space for smell trailers. All
hook-upt . Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air end cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call304-n3-6651 .

Trail• roofs pt~inted. Reasonable rates. For frH "timate call
Bill 814- 246-9284.

SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
Iota. Rt. 1. locuat Ro'ad, back of
K &amp; K.. 304· 675· 1076 . '

H1ul 1nd Stack firawood. $30 a
load. C111 Ed 1t 814. 448- 3978.
Would like to do babysitting In
mv home. n..r Nonh G11111 High

49

Sctlool. Ctlll14-388 -9096.
Can do light hMJIInrj i.ndrMfing.

Gravers Lawn Mower Repair.
Will pick up end detNer. Good

used mowan tor Ale. Call
614-742-2 393 or 614-7.42-

3091.

F1nancial

'' BUSINESS M~N" . Own your
own Steel Building Dulefthip.
Major manufacturer selecting
dealer in nailable areas. High
potential profrta-Part Time or
Full Time. (303) 759-3200 EXT.

2407.
JTPA
tUGH SCHOOL DROPOUTS
Eam While You Le«n
If you are tt.lwtten the aQ81 of 18
· 21 years old and would like to
r8ceNe your GED. contact the
Job Service Office at 225 6th
Street in Point Pleeunt or call
304·675-2770 between Sept.
21 · Sept . 30 for detaits on how
to apply. An EEO Emplover.

. 2.3

Professional
Services

1977 Fairmont Bayview .
1 4x70, all electric, 2 bedrooms,
central air. washltf, dryer. stove,
refrige:rator, underpinning. 61 4·
388-9837.

1 2x60, 2 bedroom mobile hpme
for re.,t . Call 614-992- 6694 .
2 bedroom, furnished. good
clean conditiOn . One child, no
pet~ . 8160. P*' month. New
Haven, 304-882-2466.

,12x65, fully carpeted. stove and
drver included. Price reduced to
$5800. Call 614·742 -2796 or
614-742-2777.

2 bedroom mobile home. fur nished. $1815 . Plus Utilities. Call

304-675-6512 .

Patrtot mobile home. Well 1nsU·
lated underpenning. porchea ..
air cond. 304-675 -7321 .

44

14x70 Windsor with 14x30
addition , exc c:ond, black ti;'IP
road . apprax 3 acres . Gallipolis
F.erry. 304-&amp;75-8930 .

• 3.600.00 . 304· 882-3796.

33

31

Homes for Sale

Will help finance or land con·
tract. 10 yr. old house. 3 Br ..
Patriot Village. Call 614-446-

Furnished Efficiency 1145. Utilities paid. share bath. 607
Second Ave.. Gallipolis Ph.
446· 4416 after 7PM .

Farms for Sale

Si~t . acre

minl· f•m . fenced pas' ·
ture plus woodland. one barn,
two out buildings, three bed·
room, all electric brick ranch,
owerloollinG river, near town .

3 br . ,- finithed baument.
electric-wood heat , applicancet,
garage. Appraised at $&amp;4,000.
Sale $49.900. Call 614·4463040.
like new, maintenance free. 2
br. rench. fully carpeted. 15 min .
to Gallipolis or Mercerville.
$27,000. Call 614- 256·6200
For Sale by Owner: 3 Br. house
with attached garage, ac. 39
Chillicothe Rd . Call 614·446- .

2583, 19·5).
For Sale by Owner: 4· 6 br., 3
baths. Approximately 4000 sq.
tt ., 25 ascre1 with tennis court.
1173,000. Will sell with only 6
acreS for $165.000. Call for
appointmertt 614-«6-33B6.
3 br. double-Wide on cornet" lot in
Thurman. Concrete patio• &amp;
sidewalk. Fuel hiNt. rural water.
Well kept inside &amp; out. Call
61.4-246·6643 anytime.
Government Homes from 11 , (U
repair). Delinquent tax property.
Repossestiont. Call 806-6876000 Eltt. GH -9805 for current
repo list.
Handi Man Special· 6 room and
bath, attic , basement. 110 State
St . Price neg. Call 614-992·

3725.
Government Homes from $1 .
(U· Replir) . Also tax delinquent
and foreclosure propertiel .
Available now . For listing, call
1-316· 733·8062 EXT. G2021 .
Modular home. Carter french
residence. Cornet" of S . Fourtf'!
and Hooker Sts.. Middleport.
Mull see to appreciate. Call

614· 992· 3293 .
Ranch· stvle house with breath
taki"g view of river . 3 bedrooms.
1 % baths, full basement. att·
ached gerage. Shown by ap pointment only. 614- 99~·3860 .

Commercial buildings tor lease.
Downtown Pt. Pleaaan•. Stores,
offices. A-One Real Estate.
Carol Yeflg..-. Broker. Call 304675-5104.

lots &amp; Acreage

1 1fll IC lot on Jerrys Run Rd .
Apple Grove , with rural water.

Furnished apt . next to library.
One profeuional adult only.
Parking. Call814-446-0338 .

35

304-571· 2383 .
PRICED RIGHT -

One acre

Pubf!c w:at..- and mobile homes
permitted, 304 - ~76 - 2336 .

2336 .

2 bedroom house with besement. glfage. one mile from Y
on 82 South . 304-8715-15831 or

175 -1401.

-

32- Mobile Homes
for Sale
1970 Elcona 12Jt86, 2 br., elec.
heat. gas stowe. refrig. Must
move. Financ,ng pOtslbla. 10
per cent down , with approved
credit. $4500. Cell 614· 441·

9955.
1979 Fairmont

mobile home.

14~~:64 . Gas heat. 180()p Firm . .

Coli 814·388-9054.

Deluxe 1 bedroom. unfurnished.
All new eat-in kitchen. csrpat
thru out . Profnsional person
de_sirable. Call614-446-4607 Of
446-2602.

.

ld..l hunting land , 26 acres
woods with newly bultt cabin.
20 minute drive from Pt. PI••
sant. Owl Hollow Rd . 130.000.
304· 676-5648 . E .R.A. Town &amp;
CountrY Real Estate.

Furnished efficiency , prfvateand
quiet. Single working person
onl~
Ca ll 614-446 -4607 or

446· 2602.

41

.

2 · Br., carpet . Stove. refrig .
furni•hed. Wather-dryer hookup . Water, garbag~ paid. Near
Silver Bridge. Call 614 ·446·
7025 .
.

Rentals
Houses for Rent

51 Household Goods
SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE '62
Olive St., Gallipollt.
NEW - 6 pc. wood group- $399.
llwing room suites- S199 ·t699.
Bunk beds with bedding- 8199.
Full size mattress a. foundation
starting· t99 . Recl iners
starting· $99.
USED - Beds, dreuers. bedroom
suites . t199 · 5299 . Desks.
wringer wutter . a complete line
of used furniture .
NEW· Western boots· S30.
Wor kboo\1 818 &amp; up . )S to~ &amp;
soft toe). Call614 ·446- 3159 .
County App1ianee. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat . 614-446 ·1699 , 627 3rd .
Ave . Gallipolis. OH .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refriget"ators,
ranges . Skaggs App lia nces.
Upp..- River Ad. bnida Stone
Crest ~otel 614-446-7398 .
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

I

Sofas and chairs puced from
t396 to &amp;995 . Tables 150 and
up to S126. Hide-a -bedt &amp;390
to 8595. Recliners 1225 to
S375. Lamps 128 to 1125. ·
Dinattet S109 and up to 1496.
Wood table w· 6 chairs t286 to
$795. Desk I 1 00 up t o S376.
Hutches 1400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w -m,ttresset
1296 and up to 1395 . Baby bedt
t11 0 . Mattrenes or box springs
full or twin 168 , firm t78 , and
188. Queen sets 6225 , tc;ing
1350. 4 drawer chest $69. Gun
c1binets 6 gun . Gat or electric
rar'lge 1376. Baby m1ttresses
135 &amp; 846. Bed frames 120
830 &amp; King tr8 me 150. Good
selection of bedroom suites.
metal cabineh, headbolfdl 130
and up to t66 .
90 Days same as cash with
approved cr~it . 3 MUu out
Bul.vitle Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat . Ph . 614-4460322 . '
'

Save alot·Check ut out for
ca rpet and furniture . 9lll 12
Carpet, 150. 6 p iecewoodlivlng
room suit,· 1399 . Mollohan
Furniture. Upp8r Rfver Rd . can
614-446-7444 .
PARSON 'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. living wood
tuites. 1399.96; chest of drawers. 4 drawer- t48, 5 drawar&amp;69 .95: mattress &amp; bolt spri ngsfull•ize ; 312 coil. 1149.95 set;
set.
twin mattresses, .S95
TtiE WORfONG
MAN'S FRIEND

Used refrigerators , wuhers
end dryers . Mollohan Ap ·
plia"ce. Call614 · 446 -1957.

4 BR . house for rent. 3 m i. to . of
Gallipolis. 1300 a month plus
dep. Ref. required. Call 614446 -1616 . After 5 :00PM .. call

Modern 2 br. unfurnithod ept.
No pets. Ref. required . Call
614-.U6-1873 , 8 · 6 .

VaiiiiiY Furniture
New end used furniture and
epplicancea . Call 614 -446 7572 . Hours 9 -5 .

Furnished apartment, twa bedroom . Two adults only, no petl.
Depotit and reference required.
Call614-446-4671 .

3 upright vacuUm cleaners. A-1
condition. 2 tank types Unconditionally guarnteed. 3 sewing
machines . Call 614 -446-1488 .

446 -1204.

.

4 BR . l'louse on 1 acre. Excel
location. Ref . Call A· 1 Real
Estate Broker. Call 304-6756104 01"675-7738 .

Ouplel!-646 Second. 3 bt-., living
room-dining room. full carpet,
new carpet. new kitchen &amp; bath.
Great loccation. $285 plus
utilitiaa. Cal16~4 - 446 - 0690 .

Very nice, 3 br. haute. Nice
neighborhood, ac.. gas heat.
dishwuher. stove. refrig .,
washer furnished Call 614·
446 -7026. LEASE AVAILABLE .

sjo'b kside Apartments: 446·
1932 or 448 -4639. One badroom apartment wittt large
country kitchen, new applian·
ces. utility room, water, sewer
and tresh servlc111s provided.
Quiet area.

House-936 1st Ave. p1rtly fur nished. t200 per month. Catl
..&amp;14-446-4038 or446-1615 or
446 -1243.
4 Rm .. a. bath. 19281fll Chestnut
St . &amp;186 a mo .. 176 Dep. Cell
614-446-3870 . .

Gracious llwing. 1 and 2 bed·
room aptrtments at Village
Manor and Alwerslda Apart·
me"ts in Middleport. From
t215 . including utilities. Call
614·992-7787 . EOH.

For Rant : 2 br .. unfurnished
house with garage. One mile out
218 off Rt. 7 . Accept one chi ld.
$200 a month plu• dep . &amp; rof.

4 room . bath. Carpet. stove.
refrigerator. Deposit and refer·
ence required. Adulta only . No
pets. Call 614-949-2646 .

Unfurnlthed house, 3 br. Rod·
nev vmage 11 . '275. Call 614-

446-4416 aft., 7 ,00 PM.

APARTMENTS , mobile homes,
hOuse•. Pt. Ple.. &amp;nt and Galllpo·
Us. 614-446-8221 .

Warm Morning heater. Complllitely automatic with blower.
natual g1s. 86.000 btu. See: 87
Vine Gallipoll• Westinghouse washer. 160 .
Maytag dryer . $75. New Dr&amp;ts·
maker portablaaewing machine.
1100. 1976 Plymouth Arrow.
Mobile home lot tor rent· Route
588 . Calll14-446-3969.
Good used carpet: 1 piece11x16 tan. 1 piec&amp;-12K24 rust.
Call614 -445-1618.
King Size 8ookcate Waterbed.
complete. &amp;239 . Mettre11, Wa·
terbed and Furniture Werehouse , 98 Columbus Rd ..
Athena, Ohio 46701 , 61 4· 693·
7191 .
King siz,e water bed, tulip light
head board, good condition . 3
years old. 304·675-1714 .

76

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack-

son. Oh. 614-286-6930.
Uted ~nd rebultt transmissions.
Internally inspected and guo ran.
teed. Installat ion av1 ilable. We
buy junk tr•nsmlssiont , Call

Quality firewood. all hardwood.
for aale. $26 a pick· up load. Call
614-367 · 0669 .
Firewood for sale- 130.00,
pick-up load. delivered. Call
Roger Meade- 614 · ~88 · 9016
or 388-9 341 .

Budget Trantmittions : used ~ • .
built , all types. Guarantee 30
days . Cash and C11rry or instal.
Call 614- 379-2220.

Big Dakota Farm home built on
your lot. t1 2 .996 1!1. up. Call

...,·_8_8_&amp;_-7_3_1_1_.- - - - -6_14
Firewood. Stock up for winter.
830 a pick · up. delivered. Call Ed
at 614-448-3978.
Firewood • slates. Already cut .
Can accept HEAPS. Emergency
vouehu. Ceii&amp;U -266-1363 or

HALF PRICE! FLASHING AR ·
ROW SIGNS $299 \ lighted.
nan -arrow 82891 Unlighted
&amp;2491 Free letters! Sea loc 1Uy.
Call todeyl Factory: 1 (800!
423· 0163. anytime.
.45 caliber Ohio 176th Com memorltive pistol. 8500 . Call
614 ·446-9476 after 15:00 PM
weak~ay s .

Wood &amp; coa l heater, Suburban.
&amp;160 . Call 614-379-2435 .
Calif. waterbed, e,;tra king sin,
baffled mattress. mirror head·
board 8450. Firm. Call 614·

367·0682 .
E.erci.. bike. 540. Room . dl·
vider. 815 . Call614-266-6639 .

~-=·=··:·:~:-="'=:;::::::::::;;:::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:;::==~~
56

PetJ for Sale

AKC registered Peking•• puppi". $76 e1ch. Adult Pekingese.
1100. Call614·446 · 7920 . ,

AICC Re-el•• · 2 male, 2 female.
&amp; wks. old. $50 . 2 male 1 year
old t:tunn ing . 175. 614-9864143 after~ p .m .
Siamese and Himalayan Kitten s .
6 weeks old. Seal or Lil1c Point .
Call614 ·992·7201 .
·
Must sell AKC Semoyed puppy
$96. Also AKC Shaltle 1126 .
304 ·576-2728 or 87&amp;-1 B67 .

275 gallon fuel oil ttnk witt. legs
and hookup. Good shape. t25 .

One black Nabiao goat and
ducks . phone 30&amp;-676-7711
Halt 8o11er puppiea . cute and
hiendly, 304-675 · 73GB.

57

S:ilhner Signet

100 Clatinet.
Playad 1 ye•r · Ellice! con d
t250 . Ca ll614 · 446 · 1 U&amp;

Channel Maner Satelite with
remote control. t 1 100 . Ken ·
wood Casaette cat 11..-eo. 1100.
Call 614 -992· 7467.

Iundy II Alto Salt and cue. call
after-4;30. 304· 876 -6460.

16' inch Momelite Chain S1w.
&amp;125 . B HP tlllet, 1860. Self
propelled electric start lawn·
mower, 1250. OBO . Maytag
wringer washer. 1100 . 1,.; HP
deep well pump , tank and p ipe!.
Call614· 986· 3839.
'·

675·4624.

Hobart 1712 Moat Slicer. New.
sold tor I 2500-. will sell for
&amp;760 . 080. Call &amp;14· 992 99.22 ahlllt 4 :00pm.

Dunro'lin Fruit Farm
Cld., . Melrose. Super Gold. Red
&amp; Yellow Delicious. Ma clntoah.
and Grimes apptes , peat'S, ho·
n8'1ji , tOrghum, and apple butt•r
Pidl yovr own vr-.n Zl cents a
pound. Wealol d-va 9 · 8. waefol·
endt9· 5 . Rt , 181 So. of Albany
Phone 514-698-&amp;298 .

2 tlhgle bar(•l 410 guage
shotguns. t40. for both. can

614-985· 4312 .

.

King Wood and Coli Bu'"er.
150,000 BTU gu furna ce. Ho rilontal fuel furnace 1nd 2 tanks.
Ca ll614 · 949-2571 .
Girls eura n ice winter coat for
sale. Fined. Size 16 . Call 614·
992·31 11 ahet 5:00pm.
Computer Clsh reg ister, verv
good condition. Reasonable.
Also buaineu showca.e. Call
614-992· 5966 .
Seasoned oak firewood . cii1
304-675-2757 •her 4 :30.
Beautiful 4 pc. poster Bassett
bedroom tulte. Like new, 304New Tandy EX1000,computer.
monitor. printer. da1k 1900.

WANT 1'0 BUV good used spinet
plano reasonably JMiced. 304·

58

.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Canning tom•toes. You · ~ck t
John Hills· farm, letart Falla.
Oh io, Bring contain••· 14. pet
buahel.
Quality Fruits and Vegetable$
retail and wholesale. 8 &amp; S
Produce across hom Pizza Hut.
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Now opan aU fruits and veg..: t• ·
bles. hours 9 :00 till 6 :00. Jacks
Fruit Mkt. Route 3fi . Henderson.

·59 For Sale or Trade

304·895· 3647.

f.1r111 Suppiii~S

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block. brick. tewer pipes. windows. lintels, etc . Clau de Win·
ters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614245 -5121 .
Concrete blocksa1lsizes yard or
deliwary. Mason sand. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 123\fr Pine St .,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614 -44&amp;-

2783 .
Ready m ix concrete and all
concrete supplies. Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies,

&amp; L1ves1ock
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp;

SONS

U .S . 35 Wnt. Jackton , Ohlo.
814-28fl· 5451 .
Massev Ferguson. New Holl111d.
Buth Hog Saln a S1rvice. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; co mplete line of new &amp; uud
equipment. largeat selection in
S .E. Ohio.

304 -773-5234 .

990 Dlvid Brown, 64 hp dielel
tractor, low hours . Locally
owned with I ft . bush hog.

56

•3550. Coli 614· 286· 6522.

Pets for $ale

1984 Fofd Tempo - ps. pb.
am -tm. ac, 13595.. 1983 Ford
Fairmont. one owner. 12350.
Call 614 · 288· 6&amp;22.
1986 &amp; dr. Sedan Par It Avenue·
Buick. Call614."446-0682 .
1979 Ch...,etle Ac , fl(;1ory
am -fm, ,.., d•trost No rusr
Runs good. •700 Call 614·

325 New Idea 2 row nltrOW earn
picker. Field ready . Call 304 -

273·3447.

Groom end Supply Shop -Pet
Grooming . All breada ... AII
styles. Julie Webb Ph. 614-446·
0231 .

Troy Built tiller· 8 hp, new t ires.
new furrow marker . •700. Call

Dnlgonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Peulan and
Siamese kinena . ,I.ICC Chow
puppies . New kittenM; Peraians.
Cal1614-448-3844 after 7PM .

Bars, chains. and sprockets to fit
almost any .. w . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .• Hender1on,
w . Va. 304· 67!i-7421 .

614· 388· 8619 .

62 Wanted to Buy

1 9?0 C1puce. good bodv. bad
envln•. 1360. 197 ~ lmptla
•e. so 1 97&amp; Cordoba. 1600
1950 Plymouth. t1000 . 1936
Ford 15 window Strut Rod
Project. Cell 614 · 24~· 15826

Now buying 1hell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotes. River
City Farm S~pply, 614-446·

1260. 304-676-8730.

2985.

1967 Nov• -1 cvl., auto . 1968
Nova , atandllfd. 1976 Plymouth
Scamp. 1980 OMC piclt-up
1981 Olda Cutlau Suprem1. 2
dr ,. hardtop. nice. 1976 21 h
tamper, 19815 Olds . 442, hard·
tOp 19&amp;7 Chevy piclt ·up Call
ahM fi :OO PM or eertv AM

114-448-26&amp;8

1978 Fmd Pinto 1972 Ford
Pin to. N.w lincoln Arc welder
S1lde--1n ,tructl
c::amper . Call
014· 446-14&amp;2 Of' 446-84$2
19815 C•vall• waoon. Auto. pa..
pb. .. c. Call 11 4 · )11·8240
Stainl .. l steel •heu .. 1y1temt,
Now euttMn m.cta tor your

truck, motOf' home or elastic: C.ltf.
With llf•time warr1nly 'Autfl•
Man. 9 Stimpson AWl , A thttns.
Ohio. , : aoo -B43· 37fl7
Two 1954 Dodge convertlblet
Need rutoration s 3&amp;0 rot
both . Call 814 -992 ·9922 aflet

4:00pm,
1978 Ch...,.y Mo nza Runs good.
tot s o t new parts EltCe41ent work
cer t600. Call 814 -949 -2410
198 6 Oodga O•vtona . Turbo l .
bllclol laather. sun·
roo( loaded N~ tirn 304 675· 5308 after &amp; p.m .
r~ - a1tver .

19n C1maro, tuns &amp; looks
'82 O!ds Cutl•u Supreme
70,000 miles. Nlc• car. 304·
675-2700.
1973 Dodge Scamp, 6 cyl. nms
good. M•ke vood w ork ear
&amp;300. 304 -675 -486fl or 6?6·

63

Roomt for rant. day. wetk.
month. Gallla Hotel. Call 814441- 9680. Rant at low as $120
month.
'

All elac. 2 br. mobile home for
rent . Aduht onty. No pets Call

Duroc Boars. Br~ jutt like the
boara wa tnt:ed at the Ohio
Tntadon thM gained over 2.1
lbs.
d-v . Roe• Bentley.

'*
S-o. OH. 513·584·2388.

Furn ..had room. •75. UlilitiM
paid. Share bath. Single mala.
918 Second. GaiUpolla. , Call
448•4411
7pm.

614·317-7438.
Trelltt' lor rent. 2 bedroom. ell
alec. Very 1\iee. Call 814-441·
9847 or 448-1621 .

-«•__;__;___ ,c____

Furnished. large living rqt!m.
bath. 3 br. Good cond . C1ll

9 ' 30-4 ,30. 814-992 · 23&amp;3

Rooms -for rent by week or
month . Call 814-912.,7521 .
olher hours.

814-388-8732 .

livestock

Fresh Hol.,aln ' h ..t... also
Springen , AlsoMJmeReglatered
cowL D.H .I. records. C811 814·

"There will be a slight delay..• there's a
strike at the aircraft assembly plant."

fOR MAKI»G 11!AT MOVIL

1 977 Thund..-bird, 1982 Honda
XR100. mint co nd. 304- &amp;75
7945.
1985 Cougar, 3 .8 V· 6 , dig it II
speedomet...-. talle o-..:er pav·
menta. Can see 2212 Madison
Ave . Point Pleasant .
1972 Skylark Buick.
Firm. 30&amp;· 676· 2338.

1200.

1982 AMC Spirit . 4 cyl .. 4
speed. Own owner, exc. cond,
w"l sail or trade for 1977
through 1980 tour wheel drive
truck . Phone 304-882 · 3389 .

1979 El Camino SS, air, tilt
wheel , cruiu, PS, PB. 306 V-8 ,
304-675-6912 .
1982 Volklwag on R1bbit ,
priced to sell, t2 . 295.00. 304876-4030 ar 675 -&amp;215 after
6 :00-pm.

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

4863 .

Motorcycles

-.

(l)

:t!P L.lfc:E iO
GET A G~lf' oN
M'f5eL..f

1978 S t a r C r11 lt told Oown
campet 304 · 895-3682 a!t O;r

--

Ser vi ces

::::-' '

-

~- - =

"···--

Home
lmprovemen1S

7:35 &lt;D Major League Beoebllll
8:00 C2l Crooobow Scavengers
II (2) Q5l Matlock Matlack
travels to London to conduct
a mack re-trial. (Premiere)
(j) Sutiorbouto 1986: Heams
vs Shuler from Las Vegas

BY THUNDER .
HE COULD

and Sims vs Duran from Las

RE RIGHT,

(iJ

Vegas
.
G (I) Who'o the Booe?

SKIPPER.'

BAS EM ENT

Angela com&lt;os to startling

WAHi RPROO ~I N G

conclu&amp;Jon abOut her true

feelings for Tony. 1;1
·
llll Novo Nova chronicles
ambitious and lang delayed
Galileo mission to Jupiter. 1;1
~
Houoton Knlghto

Un co ndition•J li letrme guaran
tee Local r#lfiH' M CM fur nllh~
FrH Mllmttes Call coll ecl
1-614-237-()488, d..,. Of flltJhl

(!J

R ogar•9at~tment

eaz

Wat er proo fing

AON ' S Ttlev is ron Seq,.tcf
Hou•e call• on R CA , Ouaur ,
GE Sp.clahng rn Zenrth Call
30&amp;. 576- 2398 Of 61 4 446
2454
Tru Trlmcnln Q, t tump
remowtl C All 30 4 ·6 75 1331
fe1ty

0 Prlmanewo Wrap ups of

I
j

• (%) MOYIE: Poycllo (NAI
(1 :48)
.
1:30 C2l Butterfly leland Bad
News Boat
(iJ G (I) Full Houoe A
recently widowed

EEK &amp; MEEK
IM~

I HA\1£ A 3 0(1.00&lt;.
APR:&gt;!~MEJJT WITH
A [:(RIJIA1DI..OGlSr... .

t.U1r\ LDJ£ ...

sportscaster tries to raise his
three little girls. 1;1
9:00 Cll 700 Club
(j) Speadworld IHRA Drag
Racing: Motorcraft World
Nationals from Norwalk , Ohio
(T)
(iJ 8 (I).Qrowlng Paino
When Mike works for a

"· • dishonest sterso store, hs •
learns a lesson. 1;1
Ill IIJ) We tho People Look
at constKuUonal guarantaas

WIN l'E RIZATION
Seeurit)' ltgh ts, ~ t e rm Win
dows. lnaulat ron . Roo fing. Gun tnal R•P•" * 304 675 6357

of freedom of expression &amp;

religion. Q
Ill Ill 1121 MOVIE: 'Angel In
CINon' CBS Spoc:lat Movie

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY DADS A B IG BEL.IEVER
IN CONSE'RVING: E NERG-Y-

8Interviews
Larry King Llvel In depth
with top

HE HASN'T BE:5N OOT OF 6ED
S INCE LAST 'Tl-14NK6GriVIN&lt;:&lt;- DA.Y.

newsmakers and celebrities.

CARTER 'S PLUMB IN G
AND HEAT ING
Cor Fourth and Pme
Galllpoll•, Ohto
Phon e 614-446 -388 8 o r 614 .
446-4477

e

1:30 (l)
(I) I Married Dora A
Widowed architect marries
his housekeeper for the sake

of his kids. 1;1
10:00 I]) Straight Talk
C2l a5l Crime Storr The
Outfit's crime bosses are
outraged by subpoena .
(Premiere)
(j) Blltlardo Third Annual
Rasons International 9·Ball
Championship lrom Atlantic
City, New Jersey: Mike Sigel

APPALAC HIAN WOOD STOV E,
Wood and coaiUQves. lwnsces.
and Inserts Brunco, AaMiey,
Contolidated Outchwo s t Buy.
sell. trad e. 10 yra , OJ1J)$r ei nc11 in
carpen1er. Call614 · 698· 61 21.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

675-1-786.

85

e

BARNEY

'Residential or c0mmerc ict1 w"
ing. New Jer-.-ice or repain
Licensed el&amp;«;tr lci an Est1m ate
fr ee. Rid enou r E1eC1 ric aL 304 -

vs Jose Garcia (T)
(I) II (J) Moonlighting

I HEARO ELVINEY

WAS LAID UP IN BED
SO I BRUNG HER
A LITTLE SURPRISE

OH ··SHE'S UP

AN' GONE

8ERRY PICKIN:
LOWEEZ.Y

Maddie tells David it's aver
blltween them: an heiress
hires them . IR) 1;1
Ill Other Prloonen 1;1 .
IIJl ® Newo
IHI Evening Nowa A wrap up
of taday 's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
Ill (I) Benny Hill
10:15 Ill Couoteeu'a Rodlocovorr
of tho World (NR) (2:00)
10:30 I]) Celebrity Chofo Colleen
McCullough and Paul Sorvlno
IIJ) Btacko and the
Conoatutton Examine the
historical treatment ol "blacks
with regard to the United
Stetes Constitution. as the
Issue is dlecussod by·a panel
of expert11.
• (!) Hogen'o Heroeo

ONE GOOD
SURPRISE
DESERVES

ANOTHER

General Hauling

Dillard Water S er wi ce: Pools.
Ciaterns , Wells , Delivery Anytim e. Call 614-446-7404-No
Sundev calla .
J &amp; J Water S8rvice. Swimm1ng
pools, clsternt. wells. Ph. 614-

245· 9285.
R &amp; R Water Servit,. Home
cis1ers, wells. pools fillod . Fnrmerly J ames Boys W~;~ter s . C ol l
304-675-6370 .
P•ul Rup• . Jr. Water Service.
C1ll 614-446 -317 1 . Pools. cisterns. wells .

11:oo C2l Rlllllngton s-1•
• (2) lil • (I) till •

Watt urso n ' s Wat o r Hau li n g ,
reuonablu rates. immediat e
2 ,000 gallon deliverv , cistems,
pools. well. etc. call 304 -576·

.

Dump truck delivery , coni.
stone. lind. gr11ve1. fill and
sawdust . 304 -675-3 190.

1983 Honda V-41. Enterceptor.
11500 . Call '814-446-9781
Day, ••k for Cllf.

87

1114 Honda V-30 Magna 500.
water cooled, burttndy. Excel.
cond. Call 114-448·2143.

R &amp; M CUstom Couches and
Reupholstery, St. Rt . 7 , Crown
City, Oh. 614·266-1470, Eve,
614-446-3438 . Open daily g·1
4·30, Sit . 9:30 to 1 :30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

1113 110 Honda 3 wheeler.

t325. Coll614· 241· 1828.

1981 Honda CPIJ 400 11rHt
2e8-Z496.
bike, low milaege. alec. •tart.
$510. 1979 Honda XA 260 dirt
Bunnies for .. le. Call 814-949- .bike, •4211. Botti very good
2017.
cond. Call614-266-1924.

Upholsterv

Mowrey:s Upholttering serving
trl county area 22 years. The be!It
~ furn itu re upho ls t ering. Call
30_4 - 676 - 4154 for fr 'e e
estimates .

IF WE LOSE Tf.IIS LAST

GAME OF THE SEASON,

WE SHOULD SUE .,.

IBI Honoymoonera

....
SUE?Wf.lO ARE
60NNA SUE?

WE

•

11 :30 G

·'

(I) Love Connoclfon
(2) IISIIIolt of Cereon

(j) BportaCinter (L)
·
(iJ WKRP In Cincinnati

• (J) ABC Newl Bpac:lll
CIJ)Itat to Capital 1;1
Ill M8gnum, P.l.
IIJ) Human FICI of 1111
Peclftc Proflls Micronesian
notlvoe who ware evacuated
from the Bikini Atoll. C
liJI Sportl Tonight Acflon
packed spans highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

(0:30)

'

WONNER

I

"How does ij feel to be 85?"
asked the party-goer. " When 1
feel 85," said the birthday gent,
" I'll- you-."

Ie

Complete

o~e c~uckle

quoled

by fillin g in the missing words
1.-..L.-....L.-..1.-....L.-..1.'--..J you develop
from step No. 3 below.

8
f)

PR INT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THE SE SQUARES
·
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS

FOR ANSWER

2

,

4

I I I

I I I I

TESTE iDA Y'S SCRAM-lETs' ANSWERS

iwo

Ablaze - Crank - Motto - Unwise - BREAK In
Famous wise saying: "It is best to learn the wisdom of com-

promise, lor~ is better to bend a little than to BREAK in TWO."

..

~

BRIDGE

NORTH
+2

I·ZI· il

.QJ86
t AI 32

+J 6! 3

Coming down
to an endplay

EAST

WEST
+K9ti7 3
.I 2

+Qo 4

•s

tK

By James Jacoby

. • Q J 10 9 8

+AI0872

+K95

West's two-heart bid was a Michaels
+A J 10
cue-bid, showing five spades and a
.AK10973
five-card minor suit, but not too much
t76 5
in high cards. So East sacrificed, and
+Q
South carried on to five hearts.
Vulnerable: Neither
Declarer took East's queen of
Dealer: South
spades with his ace and played back
the .jack, which West covered. Deciar- West
North East
er ruffed in dummy and now played a
low club from dummy. This was a test
4t
for East. If he played low, South's
Pass
queen would force out the ace. Later
Opening lead: + 7
two club ruffs would bring down the
king, and the remaining club jack in
dummy would provide the lith trick.!' - - - - - - - - - - - - _ J
But East rose with the club king right
away and played 'back the diamond
queen to dummy's ace,. West's king
popping up along the way. Declarer nothing left but spades and a club,
now ruffed a club and cashed the West now had to play a card that alspade 10, throwing a diamond. He then · lowed deClarer to ruff with dummy's
played a heart to dummy's jack and ' last heart while shedding his remainruffed another club with his heart ace. ing diamond loser.
A second heart was played to the
This deal is from Kantar's •A New
queen, and the jack of clubs was led Approach to Play and Defense, Vol.
from dummy. When East discarded .a 2." You can get it direct from Edwin
diamond, declarer threw a small dia· . Kantar at P.O. Box 427, Venice, CA
mood. West had to win the trick. With :'90291-0427, for $10.9&amp; postpaid,

40 Highway
ACROSS
signal
1 Batman's
garb
5 Float
9 Border on
10 "ThePurple"
11 Dullard
12 Dangerous
emotio.l
14 Hoosier
wit
15 Dry wine
16 Needlefish
17 Grassy
ground
18 So what'
19 Poem
20 "No"
in Minsk
22 Falana
of song
23 Yield
25 The same

41 "Essays
of-"
42 Lavish
affair
43 Willing
DOWN

1 Clique
2 Dwelling

Yesterday's Answer
4 Summer
15 "Ain'L
28 Paddle
(Fr.)
30 French
Sweet?"
5 Hal or Max
river
6High (mus.) 21 Yesiree 32 Ancient
7 That's It!
22 Cover
Greek
!I Foot lever 23 Abyss
colony
10 Deceive
24 Relax 33 Money ( sl.)
13 Bemuse27 Greek
38 Love tap
merit
island 39 Seek alms
3 Obvious

(Lat.)
26 Clasp

27 Musical
passage

29 "-was
going to
St. lves"
30 A Gershwin Jr..+-+--1. 31 Pen point
34 Ham's
brother
35 Indian
weight
36 June
beetle
37 Little
girl
39 Curse
DAILV CRVPTOQUOO'~- Here's how to work II:

9!22

AXVDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE
9-22

Dobbs. (0:30)

PEANUTS

o

1121

IISIN(j) lnllda the PQA Tour (T)
(!J Btgn Off
IHI Monorllne Current
report11 on world economics
· and flnanclal news wHh Lou

2919 .

Kawasaki 200, 3 wheeler, •900
or beet offer. Excel. cond. Call

~

18-

678· 2903

84

~

the day's world news and in

S tar~s Tr 11-e and La .... n Se, vlce,
lawn care. landtcaplng 1\ump
r em owal , 30 4 676 - 2842 or

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

~- r=C. ...:A.;. ...:.:. R,..:.T.....:Kr.---1,11":,
!:
.
_
I I I I

depth feature rapons. (1 :00)

Flotary or t able tool dnllmg
Mo st wt ll l comptet&amp;d aan\ed ay
Pump aatM end urvr ce 30 4
895 -3802

82

N-lrwod Game

II (I) Judge
Ill W-1 of Fortune 1;1
1121 Croooflre (0:30) ·
eiD! IISI Jeopardy! 1;1

IDI Soep
Ill (I) WKRP In Cincinnati

9 -l..L..

1 I I 1~

SOUTH

OUtdoors (A)

If~

WOR'fe
... our ALONe-?

1978 Tr o pr eon• Trave l 1rerlm
36ft. w ith llp o utand AC Good
condrti-on S6000 0 BO Cal!
614 -985 4340

• 00

Benson
(I) M'A'S'H

7:05 &lt;D Andr Orifllth
7:30 81]) HollywOOd Squar8o
(j) Bell of BHI Dance

NIINP

1980 Datsun 31 0, good ruMing
cond, new tiret , 304-676-&amp;730.
' 75 Chevrolet Caprice 1 4 door,
air cond, new tires. 1400.00.
304-676·4394 1fter 6 :00 pm.

FRANK AND ERNEST-

iIll

Ii

3

James Jacoby

NawoHo..- (1 :00)
I!INewo
IHI Monerllne Current

r&amp;ports on world economics

SWEEPER and stwrny machine
repeit , part s, and supplies Pk k
up 1nd delivery, Oa •.m Vacuum
Cte•na r , one half m•ls up
Georges Cr..k ~d Call 614
446-0294

TIRLF

1---,1,..;.:....;1~·:,1.;.6;_.:;1___:,,.,.7-l·

Ill IIJl MacNeil/ Lehr8r

367 0682

81 .

I
.

(j) SportoCantar (L)
(iJ Entertainment Tonight
II (I) Paoplo'o Court

and financial news with Lou
Dabbs. (0:30)
eiD! IISI Wheal of Fortune

6&amp;85.

814-446-7025.

45 Furni1hed Rooms

P61mE. TOOK C~E.DIT

&amp; Campers

1983 Cadillac Sedan Seville.
heel .~ cond. Lo.cted Call any ·
lima &amp;14· 388· 97HI.

74

One bedroom fumiahad apart·
ment. ground floor, privilte
entrance and p1rking. Outskirts
Henderson, all uti11ti• Included.

2~~

79 Motors Home s

19 7 1 ~ o..,er . 1 9 ft
ul t
contained. trAvel 1111ilet E•cel
cond l1600 fir m C•ll 614

1972 Chevy half ton, 4 wheel
drive, auto, good cond, day a catl
304-67&amp;-4230 evenings 676-

One bedroom fumiahed apartment in Point Plaa1ant. Extra
clean and nice. Aduha. no pets,
phone 304-676-1388.

I COU~TW TJ.IU.\.

Struts, 1 119.95 pair. install ed
Mott mod els Muffler Man. 9
Stimpson Ave Athefl s, Oh io
1·800· 843 · 3767 ,

19155 Meteury Mont clair. c laulc
model Good cond, n"""" pamt
$1600 or best oft "' Ca ll 614·
367-0624

TWAESY

IBI Jeflersono
Ill (I) Tao Clooe for Comfort
6:35 Ill Carol Bumen
7:00 Ill Remington StlHIIe
G (2) PM Magulne

Auto Repair

388· 9901 .

1979 Volkswagon van. Call aft•

u

S.et of snow th at, good -condi·
tlon. Mounted on 1 6 inch rims
S40 . for both. Ca ll 614"-99 22?47.

24 f1. Coachman camp&amp;r, !rk l!
new C•ll lif ter 5 00 61 4 · 44 1i
865 3

I

anchored live from New
York. (0:30)

71 Auto's For Sale

good. 304-773 -5244.
1973 Olds . 1660 or tr•de for
riding lawn mower ot equal
value. Call 614-446 -1769.

auto
trans$360.
. Ver-t goo~
d. St ill
in wan.
Call con
614-388907 ...
.:;:_:...:;_ _ _ __ _ _ ,lcDual exhautt ~iu. 199 .96 inata11ed. Most Fords . Chevy
trucks. Vans , 4lll4't. Muffl er
Man , 9 Stimpson Ave., Ath ens.
Ohio. 1-800-843-3767.

77

1984 Mercury Topaz - ps, pb. ac.
am-fm. 4&amp;.000 miln, auto
$&amp;900. C1ll 614-446-9312 C)r
U&amp;-021'2

Musical
Instruments

1-e00-843 -37&amp;7 .
Mixed hard wood slabt. 112 PM
bundle . Containing apptox . 1 'h
ton. FOB . Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy , Oh io. 614-992-6461 .

Transporta tiOn

3026.

Copper kettle. 1 5 gallon . 1100 .
Call614· 446 -2668.

Catalytic co nveners . only
$89 .95 . Mot t modelt. lnstalla·
tion also avai!able. Muffler Man.
9 Stimpson A\18., Athent. Ohio.

hay 11 . bale on wagon.
H•y for bedding 80c. 304-676·
6679 .

1- - - - - - - - - --

Meigs County Humane Society
has cats and ki«ens to adopt.
Spayed and neutered and had
shots. Adoption fee r&amp;quired .
Call 614-992-8605 or 992 -

Hay &amp; Grain

Mi~tttd

7 IT'O. 'old female miniature
Schnauzer. AKC registered. Ca11
614-446·8024 after 6 :00.

Beautiful male Blue Point Him a·
layan cat; AKC Pomeranian,
Yorkthlre Terrier and Shlt2u
pups. 304-895 -39!8 .
·

c.n 614 ·446-2663.

64

5 ,00- 114·448· 8663.

2 a- 3 1M' . mobile hom... Cal
614-441-0127 after 2 PM .
anytime weetc;-ends.

low to form four simple woros.l

TUES.. SEPT. 22 •

e

1976 Dodge Slant-Silt engine &amp;

388-9074.

2 br., wall to wall c•pet. Private
lot in Galllpoll1 . Call 114-441·
1401 after 5:00PM .

~y

8:00 (I) Cr8ZJ Uko 1 Foz Murder
Is a Two Strok~ Penalty
• (2) (iJ • (I) all • 1121
IISINewo
(j) SportaLaok (T)
Ill Dr. Who
IIJ) Squar8 Ono TV 1;1
1B1 Goad TlmH
• (I) One Dor at a Time
8:06 &lt;D Allee
8:30 G C2l IISI NBC NlghtJr Newo
(j) Surfing The Blllaboog Pro
from Oahu (A)
(j) II (I) ABC Newo.!;I
(!J Nightly luolne'" Report .
all
1121 CBS Newo
IIJl Sollpboz with Tam Cottle
Students talk about stress
and tho feelings that can
lead to suicide.
1121 ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment wortd is

Auto Parts

f

T~~:t:~y S@tt41~-L££trs·
::::
ldho4
CLAY I . ,OLlAN __;:.__ _ __
O four
Rearrange letters of tht
~erambled words

EVENING

&amp; Accessories

New bath. new kitchan. For rent
as of Oct . 1. 1 month rent , ;
mooth security required. Call
614-992-5587 between 9 :00
and 6:00.

814· 448· 1102.

•

PlaStic cistern st1te approved,
plettle ..,ptlc tanks. plaltic
culverts. metal culwerts. RON

2 bedroom hause. newly redone.

Furnithed 2BR ., cable awallable,
AC., river view In Kanauga.
Foat•• Mobile Home Park. Call

1985 Honda ATC 70 3 · wheelef,
a.Me . cond. S400. 304-676·

17&amp;-7478.

19n Chevy Sport Van . v.,v
good cond. 11200. Call 614·

for Rent

1971 Honda 450 . Loaded.
t260. 1984 Thomas moped.
U!SO. Wrecked 1973 Buick
Opal. $75. Call614-388-9773.

Call .5 14-258-8251.

73

42 Mobile Homes

1

Television
Viewing

614-2&amp;6-6009 .

1986 Honda Rebel 260, only
175 milet. Make Offer. 304·

675·4108.

Nice 2 br. apt. Stowe. refrig.,
water furnished. 4 1ft mi. from
Gallipolis. S210 a mo. No petS.
Call614-446 -8038 .

The Daily Sentinei- 0 Page- 11

I

2825.

Good yellow locust posts. Can
614-256-1902 after 6 :00PM .

Nicely furnished tmall house.
Adul1s only . References re·
quired. OH street parking. Ph.
614-446-0338.

46 Sptuce St.· Nice 3 br . houae.
Large equipped kitchen , central
air. washer S. dryer. No peta.
Ref. • Dep. required. $300 a
month. Call 614-446· 2158.

GOVERNMENT HOMES tor
t1 .00 (U Repair) BUY DIRECT!
Aepos &amp; Talll SEIZED properties.
Call today for tactsl1 -151 B-459·
3540. · &amp;Itt . H2284 (toll ·
refundable) 24 hourt.

Oak Wood: 1 br. ept .. 1towe.
refrig . Located close to town .
Sec. dep . &amp; ref . Call 614-4462055- Evt~ningl .

One acre lots on Mason 80 at
Aahton , public wat..-. mobile
homes pet"mitted. 1600 down .
&amp;160 per month, 304-576 -

2 or 3 bedrooms, double lot.
cloie to schools IU'Id stores.
&amp;18,000.00. 304-675-7833 .

GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM
t1 IU· Repair) Al1o Tax Delinquent • Foreclosure Properties.
Available Now. For Listing. Call
1-315-733-15062. e1tt. GL 573.

2Br., carpet, refrig . and stove.
661 3rd. A'Ve. t250 a mo. plus
dap . Call 614-245-9595.

bullclb'l tbta on At. 2 al Aahton.

Call 614· 448· 9686.

30•· n3 -5011 .

2 BR . apts. 6 closets. kitchan·
· appl. furnished , Wastler·Oryer
hook·u p, ww carpet. newly
painted. dack . Re'gency . Inc.
Apts. Call 304-675· 7738 or
675· 5104 .

3 or 4 br.. 1 '12 bath. kitchen
fumished. 5 Court St . t260 a
mo .. plua utilities. Dep . &amp; Ret.
Calll14-446-4921.

6 room haul&amp;&amp;, two bath's , new
root. Nutash windows, garage.
248 ,_. , Fourth Ave., Middleport.
Make offer. 614-247-4672 or
614-247-2632 .

Houte. 3 .16 a c. 2 bt-, total alec.
carptrl through. 1 mile out
Foglesong Rd
Mason. WV.

Upstairs unfurnished apartment.
Utiliti" paid. Carpeted. no child·
ren or p.ts. Call614 -446-16,37

Furnished Apt.- 1 Br. $225.
Utilities paid . 701 4lh Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 614-446· 44 16
aft,r 8 :00 PM .

1340. 446· 3870.
4 DR .• fireplace, full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. $34.900.
Call Oays-61 4 -446-1615, after
5 :00· 446· 1244 .

Apartment
for Rent

1 end 2 bedroom apartm&amp;nts for
.rent . Basic rent for 1 bdr ..
t183 .00; 2bdr,. $219 .00. Also
required a t200 .00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dttpt. Ph 44&amp; ·3997
Equal Housing Opportunity .

1972 Artington 1211.60 mobile
home. air cond, gas fumace.
stove and ref•igator, some
furniture incklded. Must be
moved from present location.

Hunts Sewing Machine &amp; Vaccuum Sweeper Repair . Parts in · Coli 304·875 -7119.
stock. AU work guaranteed. At
riesonally prices. If you have
34
Business
triad averywhMe else and failed.
gNe me • trv. Call 614-446Buildi?gs
1488 .

Real Estale

Merchandi se

for Rent

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

1987 Harlav 883, 400 miles
Like new. Mutt st:ll. t3200 . Call

Callahan's Used lira Shop. OV..1,000tlras,li!es 12,13, 14, 16,
16. 16 .5 . 8 miles out Rt. 218.

256-6202 .

for Sale

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE!
THE -}'O HIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommends that you
do business whh people you
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you hwe
invettig81ed the offering.

1400 sq. ft. c'omme~c:ial spece.
Suit~ble lor officea or retailing.
Corner of 2nd. &amp; Pin e. Call
614-446-2325 or 446-4425 .

42 Mobile Homes

32 Mobile Homes

21

For lease

br .. unfurnished aptiJ. in Gallipo·
lis. $175- $226 per month. Dep.
&amp; Ref. required. Call 614-4462326 or 446-442&amp;.

"My bill proposes that the
government .stop biting off
more than the taxpayer can
chew!"

Tu'!,*dav. September 22, 1987

Motorcycles

614·4·6-0986.

Newly remodeled ch'arming 1

Rauon1ble rates . Mulon
Snid..-. 614-949-2629.

74

KIT 'N' CARLYl.e ®br Lllrrr Wright

Antiques

Office Space for Rent. EKoellent
for Attorneya. Accountant. etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Real Ettate Agancy.
614-446 -3644

COUNTRY MOBILE HomiPark.
Route 33, North of Pom&amp;roy.
Rental trailers. Call 614-992·

046-8957 .

1

Tuesday. September 22, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

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S .1 ,I X
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Yesterday's Cryptoqoote: HE liAS OCCASIONAL
FLASHES OF SILENCE THAT MAKE HIS CONVERSA·
TION PERFECTLY DELIGHTFUL.- SYDNEY HMITH

••

�. Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
,,

..

--Local briefs----Man hurt in accident
A!l.Athens man was Injured in an accident involving a s talled
van occurred Saturday, at 11: 40 a .m., in Columbia Township on
County Road 1, about eight miles north of Ohio 124, according to
the Gallia-Me igs Pos t of the State Highway Patrol. ·
Barry D. Hudson, 27, of Athens, was ta ken by the Meigs EMS
to O'Bieness Hospital, wher e he was treated and released for
fac ial and shoulder abrasions .
Lar ry W. Birchfield, 36, of Albany, was driving south when his
van stalled in ine road. The car behind the van, driven by
Hudson, did not ·stop in tim e to avoid hitting the van.
Huds on was .cited for assured clear distance.

EMS has 249 runs in August
The Me igs County Emer gency Medical Services made 249
runs in August , Administrator Bob Byer reports.
There were 216 emergency calls answered plus 33 transfer s to
round out the totaL Eyer report s that 66.86 percent of the
pa tients involved in the runs were taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: 18.02 to Holzer Me dica l Ce nter, and 15.12 to other
ins titutions. ·
Runs made by each uni t included Pomeroy, 65: Racine, 39:
Syracu se, 11; Rutla nd , 27: Tuppers Plains, 29; Middleport. 45,
and 33 transfers. Ve hicles were driven 9,211.6 miles during the
month, average of 36.99 miles a call. In addition, there were
several Lifeflight and Healthnet calls during the mont h.

'' '

Squad has four calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday: Syra cuse at 9:28a .m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center
for Florence Windon to Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Middleport at 4: 53p.m. to Dr. Conde's office for Arlene Justice
to HoLZer Medical Center: Rutland at 6:54p.m , to Meigs Mine
No. 2 for Mark Richmond to Holzer Medical Center: Tuppers
Plains at 7 p.m. to Route 7 for Ja son Riggs to St. Joseph's
Hos pital.

Meigs has 2 patrol graduates
Two Me igs Countians we re among the 48 trainees to gradua te
with the 116th Academy Class of the Ohio StateHighway Patrol
in Columbus on Friday .
They are Michae l Go re, son of Mr. and Mrs .. Drewy (Cq )
Gore, Route 1, Rutland , and Bradley W. Alexander, son of Mr .
a nd Mrs. Jim my Al exande r. Rutland.
The 48 newly -tra ined troopers comp lete d 20 weeks of
intensive law enforcement tra ining.
William M. Den ihan, director of the Oh io Department of
Highway Safety, greeted the aud ience of graduates , their
families and frie nds. The commencement speaker was Judge
Thomas Moyer, chief justice of the Ohio Surpeme Court and ·
Judge Homer E. Abele of the Fourth Appellate Dis trict.
adm ini stc rerd the oa th of office to the new trooper s.
Gore began
act ive dut y . Monday in Portsmouth and
Ale xa nder began work in his assignmen t at Marietta . ·

State Issue 3 certified Monday
CO LUMBUS
(UP!) - State
,.
Issue 3, a proposal to c ha nge how
judges are selected in Oh io, was
certified fo r the Nov . 3 ballot
Monday by Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown.
Election· officials determined
tha t Citizens for the Merit
Selection of Judges gathered
347,093 valjd signatures of regis·
tered voters on pet itlons to get
rhe issue placed on the ballot.
'The group needed 306,661 sig·
na tures, or 10 percent of the
number who voted in the last
gu berna torial election.
The i s ~ue is a proposed amend·
ment to the Ohio Constit ution
t ha t would abo lis h the direc t

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

election of state Supreme Court
and appella te court judge ~ a nd
create a n appointment process.
Vacancies on t he high cour t
and the state's 12 appeals courts
would be filled by the gover nor,
who wou ld choose from a llst of
three names sent to him by a
n onpart i sa n nominating
committee.
The judge selected would go on
the ballot, without an opponent,
at least two years later and would
need 55 percent of the vote to
retai n the seat.
If elected, the judge would face
retention electio ns ever y six
year s.

appli~ations

HEAP

Applications for the Home
Energy Assistance Program are
now available according to the
Gallla·Melgs Community Action
Agency. HEAP is a federally funded program designed to help
eligible Ohioans meet the rising
costs of home heating this winter.
Eligibility for the program is
determined by income and need.
To be eligible, a household must
have total household income for
the last 12 months equal to or less
than 150 percent of the federal
poverty guidelines . Income ls
based on the 12 months prior to
application. The annual Income
for a one person household
cannot exceed $8,250; and $2,850
is added for each additional
member; for example, two peo·
pte, $11,100.
Eligible applicants will receive
credits on their natural gas bill
while others will receive
vouchers which can be used to
purchase fue l from local partie!·
paling Healers,
Applications are available at
Community Action offices in
Cheshire. Gallipolis and Pome·
rdy: the Department of Human
Services, Senior Citizens Center,
Ohio Bureau of Employ me nt
Services, Soc ial Security Office,
utility company offices, bulk fu el
dealer s, area post offices and
ot her public places . Those who
participated last year should

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9·23-87

available

•

Pomeroy...

FRONTS:

11 Warm

G

Bj RAIN
"

· .
SHOWERS
Cold · " ' Static
Occluded

ft

Continued from page 1

Map shows minimum temperatures . At least 50 % ot anv shaded area Is forecast
to recei\le precipitation indicated
UPI

should not be issued a llcense for
a Salisbury Township establlsh·
ment 4He noted that Pomeroy's
a llotment of llquor licenses have
been Issued, and that other
Pomeroy parties are on a license
waiting llst.

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will be
scattered from the lower Great Lakes region through the upper
Ohio Valley a nd the middle .\tlantlc Coast states, over the Florida
peninsula, and from the so uthwestern third of Texas throug" the
mountains of Southern California. Ralnshowcrs. will conti nue over
northern New England, the upper Great Lakes and the lower Ohio
Valley, Most ofthe nation will have high temperatures in thr 70s or
80s.

In other matters, Councilwoman Betty Baronick reported she
has heard complaints of excessive t lcketing for speeding wit hin
certain areas of the village, while
other areas where speeding al so
takes place are neglected by
me mbers of the police. Mayor.
Seyler said he would check in to
the matter .

Conlinued fr om page
Pymatun ";ng···--~----

Issac Wallis
Isaac Frank Wal lis, 86, 409
Henderson St ., Henderson, died
Mo nday in t&gt;leasan l Val ley Hos·
pita l after a long Illness.
Born May 29 , 1901 , a t Apple
Grove, he was th e son of the late
J .W. Wa llis and El vira Susa n
Conrad Wa llis .
He was a Wes t Virginia funera l
direc tor, with a business at
Seven-Mil e Ridge Apple Grove
for several year s, was retired

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Elli' &amp; Loewi
Firm
Price
Am Elec t ric Power .... .. ....... 26%
AT &amp;T . . ... .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. ........ .. 32 :Y,.
As hland Oil .... .... .. .... .... .... ..... 66
Bob Evans F a r ms ... .. .. .. ... ... .. 19
Charmin g Shoppes ........ .... .. 2:3%
Feder al Mogu 1... .... .. ... .. .. .. ..... 46
Goodyea r T&amp;R ... : .. ............. 67 ¥.,
Heck' s Inc: ..... ..... .... ,...... .. .. ... .4
Lands· End .... .. .. ... ... ... .. ..... .25%
Limited In c... .. .. .. .. .... ... .. .... 35 \6
· Mu II imed Ia Jnc . ................. . 69'h
Rax Rest a ura n Is ... ...... .. .. .. .. .4 )',
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. .. ...... .... 10Y.
Shoney 's Inc ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... ... 29
Wend y's !ni L ...... ............ .. ... 9%
Worthington .1nd .... .... .. .. ...... 23\4

from the International Nickel
Pla nt a t Huntington with 21 years
service a nd worked for the West
Virg inia Department of High·
ways in ,Mason Count y.
Surviving are a special friend ,
Margaret Blaine, Gallipolis
Ferry; four sisters , Mrs. Frances Henry, Apple Grove, Mrs.
Be lva P la nts, Trov. Ohio, Mrs .
Alma Stewart, ·Chesapeake,
Ohio, a nd Mrs. Rilla Edmonds ,
West Milton, Ohio; two brolhers,
William Earl Wallis, Gallipolis,
a nd Orla nd o W&lt;\)lis. Henderson:
a nd several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by
two brothers, Freeman and
Millard.
Fune ral services will be at 1: 30
p.m . Thursday at the Wilcoxen
Fu neral Home wit h the. Rev .
Eddie Kinnard officiating. Bur·
ial will follow in Beale Chapel
Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Fr ie nds may call a t the fu ne ra l
home from 5 to 9 p.m .
Wednesday.

lEW LE.I
FRESH

.

mem bers of the Lakela nd Fa c ult y Associa tion. It also rai ses
the pa y for pa rt · time fac ult y
members and restructures a n
ea rly reli r e mcnt In centive plan .
In Youn gs tow n, a s pokes ma n
for the teac hers uni on sa id fou r
hours of d iscussions Sunday
produced some movement on
minor poi nt s, but he sai d the
ad min istra tion showed no sig ns
of com pro m is ing on the key Iss ue
of teac he r salar ies.

WASHINGTON (UP)) ~Sup·
porters of Supreme Court nom!·
nee Robert Bork are sta nding
firm In their efforts to portray
him as a mainstream jurist, with
one key ally saying she belleves
he would uphold a woman's right
to abortion .
"'I would predict from his
statements that he would respect
the precedent" of the landmark
1973 ,Roe vs. Wade abortion
decision, declared attorney
Carla Hills in the second day or
outside testimony In Bark's con·
flrmalion process .
Hills told the Senate Judiciary
Committee she had not talked to
Bork about how he would vote as
a Supreme Court justice on a
future abortion case but was
"'speculating" based on his live
days of testimony to the commit ·
tee last week.
·
The committee, today entering
•

99

NOW

JOY

OUR REG.
$6.99

, NOW

69

Now•

EIERGIZER.
SUI'EICIIIIIED

1!.!.

BATTER
IE
CORD SIZE .
2-PICI

$1.3!

10 DZ. SUCK SIZE

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - E lmer
Hysell , Rutland.
Monda y Discharges - Laura
Luellen, Ivo: y Bush, Dreama
Owens, Donald Dorst.

SIGOTHIE OR
IlLLO CUP

8 GUICE

CHERRY

NYQUIL

1!!~

0UIIl8UW SlAt

r.~[
LESS RENTI

• , COST
Af'UII(IIT£

2.99
1,10

A recent decision handed down
by the Fourth District Court of
Appeals In the case brought by
Citizens Organized Against
Longwalllng (COAL\ against the
Division of Reclamation, Ohio
Depar tment of Natural Resources, is viewed as a victory by
COAL.
COAL had s ued the Depart ·
ment of Nat ural Resources Rec·
lamation Board ol Review , saying that the Southern Oh{o Coal
Company's coa l mining permit
application was inadequate In
several areas, noktably Its provl·
slon for water prot.ectlon and
replacement.
COAL alleged that the longwal·
ling me thod of mining damaged
and estroyed area water rersour·

OUR REG.
Sl.99

CREAMS

Now
~....J

1 !.~
$2.31

U-4PACI

2!9

UJIT I

~j{ections

ofY"ou

is proud to announce the addition of
MARSHA SISSON
to the staff
We Are Offering A PERM SPECIAL
Effect: ALL
~~ PERMS
•
OFF

$5 00

Call Sandy, Marsha, or Diann
for appointment Tues. thru Sat.

Zuspan St.

Mason, WV,

28 GUICE

PHILLIPS'
IIU OF
liliES II

SPECIAL PIIGUIEI

PWN Ott lilT

5.2 01. HL
5.2 01.
6.5 01. MtiUSSf
7.1 01. SPUY

4!R~G.

2~WE~

$Ut

10 COUll

L'IIUL
STIDIO LIIE

CIEIIE

TIIIID

lllfiiE ¥11 ASST. CIIIOIS

ggcOOIIEG.
$1.19

BIC
SHIVERS
1[8UlAI Ott
SENSITIVE SKIN

99

Mu~imodlolnc.

25 Cen11
Newopopw

.

.

August:s 0.5 percent CPI increase.
. Gasoline cost 3.1 percent more and fuel oil rose
1.4 per~ent In price. In the tran.sportatlon
category, air fares leaped 1.5 percent.
August's Increase was the biggest since prices
shot up o. 7 percent In January. Then as now,
energy was the reason. Food and beverages cost
only 0.1 percent more in August, after seasonal
adjustment, than they did in July, the Labor
Department said.
Apparel and upkeepr costs were unchanged.
Entertainment qJSt 0.1 percent more and other

g6ods and services, including .educatio11al ex~
penses a nd tobacco products, rose 0. 7 percent.
Gasoline's ~.1 percent Increase was partly
offset by a ~-4 percent drop In auto finance
charges. Used cars co~t just 0.3 percent more
after hav ing·gone up a percentage point or mor,e
every month since February.
August's 0.1 percent drop in food and beverage
prices followed a 0.2 percent decline in July. Fruit
and vegetables cost 2.3 percent less while meats,
poultry, fish, eggs and dairy products cost 0.4
percent more.

.

Prices at restaurants and fast food stores grew
by o.:l percent. Medical care cosis grew only 0.4
percent in August, marking the first time since
March the category did not rise more than the
inflation rate as a whole. Drugs and med!CIII
supplies led the way with a 0.5 percent increase.
The 0.6 percent rise in housing was triple July's
incre ase and came mainly because natu ral gas
cost 2.6 percent more and fuel oil rose 2 percent .
Renter's costs grew 0.3 percent while the tab for
maintenance and repair declined 0.3 percent.

Its ninth day of hearings,' also
heard Tuesday from writer Wll·
llam Styron and artist Robert
Rauschenberg , who warned
Bork could pose a threat to First
Amendment protections for liter·
a ture and art.
Hills, secretary of Housing and
Ur ban Development under Pres!·
dent Ford and a lormer Justice
Department colleague of Bork,
has played a prominent role in
the confirmation fight for· the
conserva tive fed era l appea ls
judge.'
She assembled a group of legal
scholars to write essays rebut·
ling oppone nt s who argue Bork Is
a far· right Ideologue ready to
overturn major high court rul·
ings on civil rights, women's
right s a nd free speech : The
essays have been touted by the
White House as evidence of
Bork's moderate views, and four

of the scholars Hills recruited
joined her in testifying Tuesday.
In his own testimony, Bork,
who has criticized the Roe vs.
Wade decision in past writings,
would not discuss how he might
vote on a future abortion case,
but he did say, Hills noted, that
there are precede nts not easlly
set aside.
"
"! would not expect that the
first case Judge Bork would set
out to fix would be 'Roe vs.
Wade,"' Hllls said .
Her prediction drew skeptl·
cfsm from Sen. Howard Metzen·
baum, D·Ohlo, who said the
hearings have been marked by
"'a-deliberate effort on.the part of
the White House and Judge
Bork" to portray him as more
moderate on Individual rights
a nd c ivil liberties Issues than ls
shown by his writings and
Speeches of 25 years.

'

Co mmunications Inc,, of Brook
Park Is partly owned by devel·
oper Carl Milstein whose son·ln·
law , Jeffrey Friedman, contrfbuted $50,000 to the campaign of
Gov , Richard Celeste during the
t lme the con tra ct s were
awarded, records s how.
The newspaper also reported
that the contracts were steered
by an OBES paid co nsultant who·
was also a lobbyist for Te le·
Communications.
"Neither the governor's office
nor I have directed that any
vendors be shown preference in
awarding s tate contracts at
OBES," Roberta Steinbacher,

administrator of OBES, said in a,
prepared statement Monday .
"This allegation is absolutely
of the century. So lar, a buDding !ouadatlon of
HARD AT WORK - For the put two weeks,
false."
hewn stone baA been uncovered. The foundation
Pomeroy Vlllace worker Robert Curry, assisted
Former OBES managers said
wlll probably be left as Is, and the site beautified
by Joey Reltmlre, wearing hal, has been dlggfnc
the prices Tete-Communications
with benches and Dowers. Curry wasn't sure how
out a secllon of the riverbank across from Francis
charged for the phones were two
much longer It would take to complete the pr&lt;!ject.
Florist. According to old rallroad maps, a shed of
to three times higher than retail.
some
sort
was
located
at
this
site
around
the
tum
Records show Steinbacher and
her top deputies ignored propos·
als from two other companies ,
that were three to six times lower
than OBES paid Milstein's com ..
pany, and ignored warnings !tom
By RICH EXNER
board approval, Will be retroac· Monday and Tuesday, the first
senior OBES managers that TCI
two days of the strike.
'
United Press International
Uve to Sept , 1.
systems were outrageously .
Teacher
pay
would
be
raised
On
the
Pyma
tuning
Valley
Teachers In Ashtabula Coun·
expensive.
picket lines Tuesday, elementy's Pymatuning Valley school 5.5 percent across the board,
Continued on page 7
tary
school teacher John Shae(er
system ended their walkout increasing base salary from
today, but more than 1,000 $15,100 to $15,930, she said.
was hit by a car dr iving through
instructors In another northeast·
During the second semester of picketing teachers, the unnion
ern Ohio district re mained on the current academic year, pay said. Shaefer was trea ted · at
strike and at leas t two more would be ra!S&lt;d an additional Warren General Emergency
Attorney for COAL, Jonathan
ces in viola tion of the 1977
walkouts are threatend across $200, said Cha\ ez, and negotla· Medical Ce nter in Andover for
Sowash,
characterized the vic·
Surface Mining, Reclama'tion
the state.
tions would te reopened on bumps, cuts and scrapes, . a
Pymatuning Valley teachers salary and fringe benefits during hospital official said.
a nd Control Act. COAL says that tory as "David prevailing over
The Ashtabula County She·
this Is a particular problem Goliath". He noted that the Court
returned to the classroom after the second year of the contract.
because the legislation predated placed the burden of proof and
ratifying a tentative two-year
The agreement also calls for a riff's Department said no one
knowledge of the longwalllng responsibility squarely on the
"longevity step" that would give was cited and the incident was
contract negotiated in a court·
assure
affected
coal
operators
to
ordered bargaining session with extra pay to teachers with 24 under Investigation .
methods,a nd the Impact that
their
access
to
landowners
that
In You~gstown, meanwhile,
s ubsidence would have on the
their school board' s negotiating · years experience, starting next
there have been no classes since
water supplies and surface land. water would be ma intained.
year , she said.
team Tuesday night.
'
Betty Wells, COAL organizer,
The members of COAL look
The proposed contract was
The board originally offered a Sept. 10, one day after the strike
applauded
the Court's decision.
upOn the decision of the Court of
approved by all78of thedistrict's
three-year contract ca lling for a by 1,043 teachers bega n iii the
15,()()(J.student school district.
Appeals as a victory because the commenting:
striking teachers but has yet to 5.5 percent pay hike.
"They recognized that the cost
Negotiations are to resume
Court upheld the absolute res~n·
be signed by the board.
Substitutes had been replacing
slbllity of the coal operator to ol water replacement is a part of
Ohio Educ11Uon Association the strikers, but only about 200 of Friday between Lima's public
the cost of doing business.
provide an adequate water renegotiator Peggy Chavez said the system's 1.400 students re· school system and the union
placement immediately and Further, the Court pointed out
the agreement, pending school portedly showed up for classes
Continued on page 7
that the Reclamation Board of
without cost to landowners.
A copy of the complete opinion Review is required to do a
ca n be obtained by writing to · balancing or economic and envfr."
COAL. P.O. Box 107, Wllkesvllle, onmental interests. That 's what
we were asking for."
pressure at the sound of the s hots told United Press International
MANAMA , Bahrain ' tUPI)
Ohio 45695.
U.S. forces caught the Iranians ·
and
came down onto the water.
U.S. forces on heightened aleri in
laying mines, but that th e quality
"It
was
one
way
for
them
to
the Persian Gulf fired warning
were
no
bad
of
photographic evidence of Ihe
show
that
there
shots across the bow of a
Intentions," one source said, activity was poor,
speeding Iranian hovercraft a
"Possibly they were looking for
" This was the first time that·we
day after U.S. helicopter gun·
caught them red-hande d,"' sow·
ships attacked an Iranian vessel survivors . Nothing happened ."
caught "red-handed" planting
Iranian President All Khame- lng mines, a Pentagon official
nei, speaking before the U.N. said.
mines .
Crowe said naval forces were
Three Iranian crewmen were General Assembly in New York
kllled and 26 captured in the Tuesday, called the u:s. account engaged in "'prude nt" precaustrike Monday on the vessel Iran of Monday's attack a "pack of tions that he s uggested were
Ajr , which was spotted planting lies" and threatened retaliation. aimed at thwarting any Iranian
" ! unambiguously announce reprisals for the gunship attack.
mines in international waters off
U.S. officia ls sa id thec apturejl
that Washington wlll receive the
the coast of Bahrain.
Iran has denied the vessel was appropriate response to Its mi· Iranian seamen would be re·
schfevious act," warned turned to Iran through the Re d
armed and vowed to retaliate,
Crescent, the Is lamic versipn of
The U.S. frigate Jarrett, tow· Khamenel.
He also rejected President the Red Cross. No decision had
lng the disabled Iran Ajr, fired
warning shots ove r the bow of the Reagan 's call for an immediate been made on the disposition of
Iranian hovercraft as It ap· cease-fire In the gulf and blamed ' the ship.
The Iran Ajr will be a nchored
proached at a high rate ol speed the United States, which he
at 10:30 a .m. EDT Tuesday, called "the arch· Satan," for in international waters off Bah·
rain until officials determine Its
Ignoring a request to stop, ihe tensions in the region .
Pentagon said. "The hovercraft
Pentagon sources said naV'al tate, Pentagon o(flclals said.
Aboard the LaSalle, 11 capthen turned away and stopped," forces in the gulf were put on
alert In anticipation of attempted tured Iranians were guarded by
officials said.
,
The Jarrett fired the warning Iranian terrorist attacks against eight U.S. sailors armed with
when the hovercraft - which U.S. ships in reprisal for the M·14s and 12-gauge shotguns in
rides over the water on a cushion . strike by two AH·6 commando an upper vehicle storage room .;
hellcopters against ' the Iranian
The remaining 15 prisoners
· of air at speeds up to 40 mph ship.
were
being held aboard the
was
a
nautical
mile
away
from
are llllpeded b, a boardiDI pal1y from lbe USS
the
frigate,
the
Pentagon
said.
Crowe,
chair·
amphibious
assault ship tJS~
Adm.
William
Lualle: Tbe' USS .Jarrett 18 In the
The craft tu•ned off the air man of
Joint Chiefs ol Staff, Guadal~tnal.
~
b.cllcround. (VPI)
.. .

Pymatuning· teachers return

Group claims victory after decision

WHITE•ASSf. COlORS

12
IGETZE CUIIEL

2 Sections 14 Pegn
A

OBES official calls.- for
audit
COLUMBUS.. Ohio tUPII The head of the Ohio Bureau of
Em ployme nt Services wants a n
audit of her af(ency"s purchasing
practices and has denied published reports ol possible wrong
d o I n g or mismanagement.
In a series of stories this week,
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
reported tha t the unemployment
bureau awarded $5.2 million
worth of no-bid co ntracts be·
tween . 1985 and 1987 to a
Cl evel~ nd - area telephone equip·
inent dealer to put new phone
systems In 54 unemployment
offices.
The
firm , Tele ·

DISHWASHIIG
LIQUID

•

Bork supporters stand firtn

BIG 32 DUNCE

DASH
LIUIIIY'DETEIIEIT

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 23. 1987

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sharp price rises for
fuel a nd air fares sent the Inflation rate up 0.5
percent In August. the biggest increase In seven
months, the Labor Department said today.
The jump in the Consumer Price Index was
about twice as high as many analysts expected
and works out to an annual rate of 5.8 percent.
Through the first eight months of this year, the
United States was on track to end 1987 with a 5.1
percent increase In prices.
The government said higher energy a nd shelter
costs caused a_l)out two--thirds of the rise In

in the

147·00

enti ne

Clear tonfcbt. Low in tb
50s. Tllursclay, variable cloud
lness. Chance of
rain
percent.

August inflation rate biggest in seven months.

1

sa id the two sides tent a lively
a greed Saturday on a 5 ~ perce nt
ra ise in the firs t year of a new
pact. Howeve r, she said the
district would not accept the
te acher s' proposals on .longcv lt y
pa y and creation or a new s tep 9n
the sa lary schedule.
Pyma tunlng Va ll ey schoo ls
were open Mond ay, but Chavez
es timated that only 200 of the
di strict's 1.400 s tud ents were in
attendance.
A school dist r ict empl oyee sai d
only that ther e was a s ufficient
number of subs titute teachers to
supervise the stud ents whO ap·
peared for c lass&lt;&gt;s . ,
At Lakeland Communit y Col·
lege. facult y member s a nd ad·
minlstra tors reac hed a co ntract
agree me nt atJ :.&gt;Oa .m . Mo nday,
a llowin g classes for th E' instltll·
lion's 9,000 st ud e nt s to bc!(in as
sc heduled.
,.
The tw o-year pact wi ll provide
annual pa y ra ises of 6\6 percent
and 4\6 perce nt lor the 110

at y

Vot.37. No.9&amp;
Copyrightlld 1987

Area deaths

\

Daily Number
944
Pick 4
3613

PageS

~SNOW

Baronick also brought up complaint s about liming of the tra ffi c
light a t the Pomeroy.Mason
bridge. Sey le r said he has bet'n
try ing to reach the r ight poplc at
ODOT to see if the timing could
be altered. He said he hopes the
reopening of th e one-way road
under the bridge will help elimi·
nate traffic tie ups.
Council also discussed outi ln·
1ng in yellow t he handicap ramp s
at . the cor ners of th e vill a ge's
sid e walks to he lp oid er people
weari ng bifocals adjust to the
inclines, a nd approved a request
from Pomeroy Chamber or Com me rce to schedule the community Halloween party on Thurs·
day , Oct. 29, from 6 to 7 p.m.

Ohio Lottery

Hoople's
forecast

receive their application in tt(e
mail. Application deadline is
Jan. 31. 1988.
CAA staff Is available to assist
individuals needing help with
their applications at the central
office In Cheshire, the Gallia
County outreach office at 220
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, and the
Meigs County outreach office in
the Pomeroy courthouse.
Further Information is availa·
ble by calling Community Action
at 367·7341 or 446-0611 In Gallla
County; 992· 6629 or 992-5605 in
Meigs County; the senior citizens
centers at 992·2161 or 446-7000; or
the State HEAP hotllne at
1-ffi0-282-®10.

Weather ·
South Central Ohio
Today, considerable c loudiness with a chance of showe rs or
thunderstorm s. · High 65 to 70,
Winds becoming northw es t
around 10 mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Tonight , becoming clear. Low
near 50. Winds mostly northwest
less than 10 mph . Chance of rai n
20 percent.
Wednesday, sunny. High close
to 70.
Ext•nded Foreca.•t
Thursday thr()ugh Sat urday
Chance of showers Thu r sday
and Friday 'with fair wea ther
Sa turday . . Highs throughout the
period will range from the upper
60s to mid 70s with a low in the
high 40s or lower 50s.

Tuesday. September 22. 1987

"

U.S. forces on alert after incident

'll.f

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