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                  <text>Pega-14-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·EASTMAN'S. · Your.Independ-e ntly Owned

Grid
•
previews

Low-Priced Supermarket

Daily Numht'r

910
Pick4
:!399 .
Super Lotto
5-14-16-27-29-34

Sports

Bath Tissue

$

COUPONS

•WE RESEI!VE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
OUANTIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE
WED .• SEPT. 23 THROUGH SAT
SEPT. 28. 1987. • USDA FOOci'
STAMPS _ACCEPTED . • NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
· OR PICTD.RIAL ERRORS .

11 O;OO or More

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall
Come Dec, 1 when It's time
comes to purcha se new dog
licenses. Meigs County dog
owners wilt be pa ying more than
. in the pas I.
The county commissioners
raised dog licenses from $2 to $4
for a single license. a nd from $JO
to $20. for a kennel license. whe n
they met Wednesday In regular
session. ·
In I'Xplalni ng lhe ral sl' in fees,
Commissioner Ri chard .Jones
said t hal the commissioners
.were told by the slate audilors
that the fees would have to be
raised In order 10 make up for the
loss of approxlmalely $7,000 10
$8.000 In reve nue sharin g fund s

AtlolitioMIP..done

pi(. G.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .Thursday, September 24, 1987

2 Sections 1 4 Pages

25 Cents

A 'Mullimedia lf'!c. News'paper

Commission to increase dog license fees

limit 4 Pir Visit With s10.00 or
More Additional Purchase.
Set Store for Dttails.

limit Ono With
4 ROLL

Yol.37. No.96

ALL WEEK

enttne

aty

Copyrighted 1987

60s.

•

•

DOUBLE

Clear lunig!ti. Low 45 to 50.
Friday, su nny. Hlg!t In mid

which we re used in the past 10
supplement the dog and kennel
budge1. Because Ills unlawful to
use general fund mon eys for the
dog and kennel fund, according
to the s tale audllors. Ihe commis s ioners had no choice but to raise
Ihe fees, Jones said.
Operation or the coun ty dog
sh ~lter cos Is aboul $18,000 a nnu ally, J ones said. Inc luding wages
lor the dog warden. s upplies.
operallo n and m ai ntenance of
lhe do g warde n's truck . and
animal clai ms. Lasl year, lhc
dog a nd ke nnel fund look in a bout
$9,200. just half of whal il coSIS tb
operate I he facilit y.
Although the Bureau ol Suppori will be moved In the near
futu re from the jurisdictio n of the

Meigs County Common Pleas
Courl 10 the Department of
Hum an Services, pla ns to imple·
ment . the move have not been
fina lized. Co mmi ss ioner Ri c hard Jones said tha t Mic hael
Swisher. human services director , has attended meetings where
informal ion regarding the ru les
of implem ent at ion of the new
child support law , whic h necess ita ted lhe move, have been
disc ussed. A meeti ng is &gt;chedul~d fo r Ocl. 7 in Columbus at
which tim e ' the rules of implemenl a tion s hould be completed.
The commissioners pla n to meet
as soon as possibl e after the Oct .
7 meeti ng to begin finalizing the
local Bureau of Supporl move.
Meigs Counly Engineer Philip

Rober ts anticipates that berm·
ing and s triping of three recently
paved roads - Success Roa d.
New Lim a Road and Forest Run
-will la ke place some tim e next
week.
Alt ogether, Rober ts repor ted,
23 miles of county roa dw ays were
paved with hot mix, in cluding Ihe
13 mi les on the above na med
roads. On those three roads, e dge
lines a nd center lin es will be
Pa in ted, while on Ihe re maining
roa ds. only cemer lines will be
pai nted .
The co mmissioners au tho rized

Roben s to advertis e for bids for
two dump tru cks a nd a six
passenger automobile for the
highway depa rtment, wilh the
st ipulation that the vehi cles

would be paid for a ft e r the first of
the year.
Ted Warner, county highway
superint endent, re ported th ai
allhough the highwa y department has a good supply of cinders
s tockpiled for wint er snow and
Ice remova l. the cinders may
have to be mixed wi'th salt to be
usable, since they are too fine to
be used alone.
Commiss ioner David Koblent z
repor ted that the co unty's Office
of Utter Control is planning a
count Y·wide recyc ling drive dur-

ing October.
The drive is to be conducted
mainly thr ough lhe e lementary
sc hool s in th e count y, on the five
weekends in Oclober, with th e
purpose of teaching s ludent s th e

value of a cleaner, healthier
environment through recycling,
and also to aii!Jw schools to raise
money for school projects. In
addition, awards will be made by
the litter office to the schools
recycling the mos l materials.
Tri·Co unt y · Recycling ha s
opened a collection center at the
intersection of Route 143 and the
Route 7 bypass near Pomeroy In
the Meigs Local School District .
Arrangement s have been made
to' have collection places also in
Eastern and Southern Districts
on one Saturday, (probably Oct .
241, so that all county students
would have fair opportunity to
recycle.
·
The following business matters
Continued on page 10

t

Southern board, boosters install
new aluminum stands for grid tilts
Pr ior to this new in stalla tion
sea tin g was provided by an aging
sel of wooden bleac hers mount ed
on 11\e old gymnasium bleachers
fr a me. Numerous repairs over
pu rc ha se and cons truc tion of an
lhe past several years have
all new a lum inum grand stand
for th ~ Southern Hi gh Sc hoo l proven cost ly and Ihe old fixtures
were bec.oming qui ck l y
footba ll stadium.
irrepa ra ble.
The new gra ndsta nd measures
J8x90 feet and is W rows high
This prompted th e Soulhern
excrpt for havi ng just six rows in" Local Board of Educatio n to seek
fronl of Ihe press box. Th e fra me anot hPr form of seating, not only
and support of tho s tru ct ure a rc 10 avo id costs of repair, but to
made of we lded alu minum wilh
prov ide the utmos l in safety lo its
annod ized. c orr u ~a t e d a lumi - ath letic s upporte rs . With innum seats.
cr eased li a bility a nd availability
ThP g'rand sta nd exceeds alii and cos ts of insurance this has
r\1(1uirPm&lt;ent s of the Ohio Swte proyen to be a wise move.
bulldinJ&lt; code and is gua ra nteed
A section of the new bleachers
for lwent y years with a life having a capacity of 100 is
expPclaflCY exceeding 3;, .YC'ars .
por table and ma y be used a l ihe
ThC' new S&lt;'al ing was pur- foolball and baseball field s, in
chasf'd fro m lhe Dant Corpora- the gymnasium for basketball.
, lion Loui svittc. Ke nlucky. Con- · band co ncer ts, plays. gradua st ruclion wa s supervi sed b~
lion, or a ny oth er evenl where
co mpan.v representa ti ve and cer ·
they ma y be needed.
tifi ed supervisor Danny Da vis.
Th e in itia l cos t of th e
RACINE- A co mbined eflor l of
lhe Soulh ern Loca l Board, of
Education and Soulher n Ath letic
Boos ter s reci"ntly resull ed In the

SUCED '

Orang~

Meat Wieners

Quarter Pork Loins

$188

MINUTE MAID

TENDER BEST

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LB.
9-11
CHOPS

12

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98tr=

120Z.

ALL SIZES SUPERTRI

Juice

Huggles Diapers

$ 08

BOXsgaa

ii~~mfti

-

'nle!ie new bleachers

purchMed by the Souther• Local Board ol
Eduullon have certainly dressed up the much-

Improved Southern lootballstadlum. The athletic
boosters made the right preparation and did all
the construction work.

Compromise sought on War Act
WASHINGTON iUPli - Th e
White House. led by a chie f or
stall with years of Senate ex pi'rlence , Is looking for a compromIse with disgrunlll'd sena10rs 10
resolve the question over use or
the War Powers Acl for lhe
Persian Gu lf.
With lawmakers eyeing a vole
lhls evening upon · resumlns:
debate on the Issue today , chie f of
staff Howard Baker. the form er
Senate Republi ca n lea der fr om
Tennessee. said he was working
to reach an agreemenl amenable
to both sides.
" It oughl to be worked oul and I
think It wlit be," Baker told
reporters at a Whit e House picnic
Wednesday nlghl. He would not
provide details but sa id he had
been on lhe telephone all day
seeking to defus&lt;&gt; the Issue.
President Rea ga n. who opposes the War Powers Acl as a
matler of course, said Wednesday It would be a '-' grt&gt;al

liTnE DEIIIl

OAT MUL
COOKIES

CHEESE

89&lt;

$198

101

lb.

HOLLY FARMS GRADE "A"

Pick of the · Chix

~·

98 «(:

.ECKRICH CHEESE, BEEF or

s

Meat Franks ••;.':: 178

ECKRICH BEEF '2.38 lb .

Smoked
$
Sausage ••••••• ~.~tt. 2 28

SUNSHINE CHUNK

Dog Food
20 lB.
BAG

$288

THANK

_

Cherry Pie Filling ~
'

2~2J·98•

'mis take " 10 trigger th e Jaw th a t bill a lrea dy fa ci ng a Reag an
would rcqujre him to give Con- veto .
gress a say In whet her 'u.s.
As lea ders Sla lled for iim c
mtlltary forces re ma in In lhe
Wedn esday lo perfec l the la ngulf.
guage. Sen. John Warner. R- Va .,
Gr umbling la wmak ers from
sa id, "Both Ihe executi ve branch
both parties. however. renewed
and lhe Congress wa nl to work
lhet r lnsistf' nce for the ac l
wil hin the splr il oi-l he law .. . not
foll ow lnJ&lt; Monday nig hl' s fata l
the lc tler, bul cet·la inl y the
U.S. he llropler a ll ark on a n spi rit."
Irania n vessel Iha t offi c ia ls sa id
Th e Vi et nam-e ra Wa r Powers
wa s ca ught lay ln l( mines in 1hc
Act was adopted in 1973 to curb
strat egic waterwav.
preside ntial powe r to co mmit
Sena1e leaders worked Wed- troops 10 undecla red ivars. It
nes day on a n a lt ernati ve to
requi res a re port 10 Congress 48
provide Ihe cha mber. one tha i in
ho\lrs aft er forces are in an area
broad form would a llow U.S. • of aclual or imminent ho's tllities.
forces lo remal'n In the war- tor n and II Congress neither decla res
~rea for a given per iod, perh aps
war nor vott-:S a specif ic exten six months , and pa st that if the sion withi n 60 day s, th e forces
presld enl reported II was neces - mu St be removed within a month.
sary and Congress did not pass a
Whit e Hou se spokesman Marresolution of disa pproval.
lin Flt zwaler asser ted WednesBu t tempering th&lt;&gt; Ioree of the day the adminlst ration a lre ady is
proposal was the fact th at it " meeting Ihe spirit of the resoluwould be offered as an amend- tio n through extensive briefings
ment 10 lhe fi sca l 1988 "defense
Continued on page 10

6iden's speech recalls "Grapes of Wrath'
WASHINGTON tUPl) -Sen .
Joseph Blden. D-Del .. ending his
presidential bid amid c ha rges of
plagiarism, recalled even In his
withdrawal address the the mes
of another Writer
John
Steinbeck.
In his statement delivered
Wednesday to a Capitol Hill news
fOnference , Blden sa id :
"There will be other pres ide ntial ~ampalgns . And f'll be th ere
out front. I'll be there. There'll be

LOW

other opponunitles. There' ll be
other battles , other places , o1he r
tim es, and I'll be there. And I'll
be there ... "
In Steinbeck's Depression-era
classic, " The Grapes of Wrat h, "
character Tom Joad said In a
speech of defeat :
"Then It don 't matter . Then t 'II
be all around in the dark. I'll be
everywhere, wherever you look.
Wherever there 's a fight . so
hungry people can eat, 1'11 be

there. Wherever ·th ere's a cop
bea ting up a guy, I'll be there."
Aclor Henry Fonda made th e
speech famous in the movi e
version of Ihe nove l.
Biden was driven . from th e
presid e ntial ra ce amid char ges
he lilted passages of his speeches
from those of polttlcians British
Labor Party leader Neil Kinneck. Robert Kennedy and Hu·
bert Humphrey. and exaggerated his academic record .

bleac hers , which have a total
capacity of 900, was $23,000, but
are very cost-efficient in the
long run and are maintenance
free.

- ,.

The Southern athletic boosters
made site prepa rations , leveled
the area, and poured concrete
footer and slab the length and
width of the bleacher foundation,
forming a walkway in front of the
bleachers .
This labor was a ll donated and
took considerable time.
The bleachers are elevated four
feet above ground level. making
every seat a good one.
THe. boosters also conslructed
the !bleachers wilh the help of
school volunteers and em·
ployees. The project was supervised by Davis.
The bleachers. looking somewhat majestic, aga ins t the background of Southern High School,
have complimented a finc press
Continued on page 10

Consortium of four firms apparent
low bidder for locks, dam project
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . tU P ll
-A consortium of four companies is the a ppa renl low bidder lor
· a mutti -million-dollar project
a imed at e limina ting a bottleneck on the Ohio River, the U.S.
Arm y Corps of Engi neers sa id
Wednesday.
Th e corps opened bids Wedn esday for a co ntract to replace the
Ga llipolis Locks , which ha s
slowed regional navigation on

N.A. of Sa n Francisco and and
Ha rber t lnl ernational Inc. of
Shelby Cou ntv. Ala.
Other fi r ms s ubmitting bids
were Morrison-Knudson Co ..
$238.6 mtllion; Newberg Venture, $236. million; Bechtel
Corp .. $225.6 million: a nd J.A.
Jones , $2f&gt;0.6 million.
The corps will review GLR 's
bid to determ ine if the company's
figures are accurate and its

bonding is adequate. The contract
is expecled to be awarded in
spokes man Conrad Rlplev said.
two
to
four weeks, Ripley said.
' The a pparent low bidder wa s
"If
every
lhing works well, we
GLR Co nstructors , which ·£ubshould
have
construction begin
mitt ed a proposal of $217.6
million for the projecl. Th e by Ihe time we have the ground co nsoriium represe nts S.J. breaking ceremony at the loc k
Groves a nd Sons of Minn ea polis, site on Nov. 6," he said.
Re placement of the locks,
Guy F . Atkinson of Sa n Fran to ta ke about four
expected
eisco, Billingham Co nstruction
the

ri ver

for

~evenH

yC'a r s,

years , is the first phase of a
two-part plan to Improve commerc ial navigation on the Ohlo
River. The seco nd phase upgrading the Gallipolis Dam will begin when the locks project
Is completed: Ripley said.
"About 40 million tons of
com mod ities pass through those
locks every year," he . said.
"We're .eliminating a bottleneck.
It' s like e liminating a two-lane
brid!(e on an Interstate."
The corps also plans to· add a
third lock on th e Kanawha River
at Winfield Locks and Dam and
upgrade Locks 7 and 8 on the
Monongahela River. Those projects are "do)'Jn the road a bit ,"
Ripley said.
"They're at least two years
away," he said.

Observe school
bus safety week

FAT
•I MILK
I

MEDIUM

1112 DOZEN
EGGS
llct.cto.

88&lt;

~EN

JOSEPH RIDEN

This week, Sept. 20-26, Is
Nat ional School Bus Safety
Week, with the theme "Be
Smart, Be Seen. " ·
• In Ohio, approximately 1.3
million stu.d ents are transported
dally to and from schools on
14,900 buses. This week throughout the state, students are being
shown videos, sponsored by the
.State Department of Education.
which emphasize the importance
of school bus safe(y.
Locally, fifty school buses
travel Metgs County everyday
taking students to and from
school. Of that fifty, 26 are Meigs.

Local buses, 13 are Eastern
Local and the remaining 11 are
Southern Local.
Meigs Local's buses travel
approximately 2,350 miles a day
transporting 2,200 to 2,400
students.
Eastern transports the major·
lty of their 939 student.s by buses,
but could not report Thursday
morning exactly how many mile s
their buses ·travel on a dally
basis .
Southern transports approxl·
mately 800 students by buses
which travel routes totaling 829
tnlles each day.

HOW IT IS TODAY- Today, In Melp County, . off students, just like these Meigs Local buses
the big yellow school buses travel most every · stopped Wednesday morning at Pomeroy Ele·
mentary. (Note old photos on page 10 today of how
county and township road picking and droppln'
It used to be) .

�/
'

Thlnday, September 24, 1987

-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street'
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS" OF THE MEU;S-MASON ,\ REA

~'b

.

ts:m~ ~._...,...,I'"T"'E:!do=
~v

.

•

· ROBERT L, WINGETT
Puhlisher

PAT WHITEHEi\D
0
Assistant Puhllsher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana~er

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.

·Highs and lows of
.House debate
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - The House - for the mo st part tllstinquished Itself recently du ring consideration of a bill to make
restitution to the Japanese-Americans who were sent to internment
camps during Wor ld War IL
The sometimes emotional debate was ma r ked by deeply felt
e ~press ion s of how thi s co untry could best deal with what is widely
felt to be a dark stain on U.S. history- a "grotesque aberration," as
Speaker J lm Wright termed it.
Most members of the House agreed with the part of the bill that
offers a formal apology to th e 120,090 J apanese-Americans who were
wrongly suspec(ed of disloya lt y and forced from their harries and sent
to remote internment ca mps. Differences arose over the proposal to
pay restitution - $20,000- to each of the 60,000 internees still living.
Rep. Dan Lungren, R-Calif., argued well but unsuccessfully
against the pa yments, sayi ng the sincerity of the apology would not be
enhanced by money.
On the other side, Rep. Norm Mineta, D-Calif.. brought the issue
vividly to life by reca lling the day he and his family had to leave their
. San Jose home and board a guarded trai n that took them to one of the
camps.
, Rep, Ron Dellums, D-Cal iL, to ld of the day army trucks came to
pickup a J a panese- American playmate and his famil y - a moment
'.'burned indelibly " in Dellums' mind.
', Unfortunately, the debate deteriorat ed when Reps. Charles
Eashayan, R·Callf.. and Lawrence Smit h, D-Fia .. joined in.
,
; Pashayan , while supporting the bill, introduced an a bsurd note of
~&gt;artisan s hip when he suggested the Democratic Party -should
shoulder the blame for the decision to in tern the Japanese·
Americans .
·
'
Preside nt Roosevelt signed the exec utive orders that led to the
forced evacuations, ··an act of infamy for which he and his party mu st
forever. bear full responsibilty, " Pashayan sa id.
. He closed with the though t that If Abra ham Lincoln - a good
Republican - were alive, he would vote for the bill.
. .Fortunately, Rep. Richard Dur bin, D-111. , later pointed out that
Republican officials - fed eral and s tat e· - supported Roosevelt 's
actions . And he noted that Lincoln, " in the throes of the Civil War,"
Eommltted a similar constit'utional breach by suspending habeas
corpus and allowing unju stified imprisonments.
: Smith also succumbed to rhetorical excess and his torical
[nacuracy when he alleged , "We put people behind oars for rio reason ,
.we scarred them, we cruelly tortured them."
· · Fortunately again, reasonableness returned to the fore when
f.,ungren spo ke, sayi ng the Hou se should be "engaged in
.self-examination rather than self-fla gellation ."
: "This was not the Holocaust. This was not the Armenian genocide,
i).nd we do a disservice to those who came before us when we suggest
;lhal it was," Lungren said.
.
Rep. William Frenzel, R- Minn., a confessed curmudgeon, a lso
·enhanced the debate wtth 'hts comments on historica l revisionism and
;20-20 hindsight.
; Frenzel readily acknowledged the policy of 1942 was wrong, but
' suggested t he times, not the people, were at fault. " If we could
magically transport this Congress back to those days and undt&gt;r those
•circumstances my suspicion is that we would do about what that
:congress did in those days, which was nothing."
• The r estitution bill wa s passed, however , with a majorit y of the
· House agreeing with Mineta' s view that "t he burden has fallen upon
us to right the wrongs of 45 years go, Great nations demonstrat e their
greatness by admitting and redressing the wrongs that they commit ,
and it has been left to this Congress to act accordingly,"
"Those of us who support this bill wa nt not just to close the books on
the sad events of 1942; we want to make sure that such blatant
constitutional violations neve r occur again."

:Reagan enhances
job with ~s accord
.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP I) -President Reaga n's fortunes are picking
up as he heads Into what he likes to call the last quarter of his
presidency,
.
: While he failed in his goals to reduce Was hington to the size of a
·vlllage IJefore leaving the White House, and to slash the federal
' government payroll to a s keleton force, he will not go away
•empty-hand ed.
He Is on the verge of signing a medium range missile agreement
. with the Soviets at a sum mit with Mikhail Gorbachev, probably in
late November.
The accord will be a feather in his cap, since his achievements In
· superpower negotiations have fallen short of the qJark in the past ,
.; Reagan also does not ha ve too many successes In the use of United
•States power around the world to impose Its will. The invasion of
·:Grenada was ca rried off successfully, but he had 'to fold his tents and
:•retreat from Beirut before he enmeshed the country In a Middle East
&gt;quagmire.
, He learned late in the presidency that foreign policy and peace are
. the ~DOS I important items on his agenda as far as the_A merican people
:•are concerned. That's because no one else In government has the war
': and peace powers that he holds In his hand.
: And so, as 1t has been with most every president In this century.
;• Reagan came Into office, calling the Soviets every thing In the book.
·.The atmosphere was hardly conducive to detente, a word . of
:;superpower conciliation that was tossed out In the Ford era.
;~ In 1983, Reagan called the Soviet Union the ''evil empire'' and while
&lt;he probably has not changed his mind drastically, he has softened the
&gt;rhetoric a !Jlt and decided to see If two radically different states, each
::with the ability to annihilate the other, can live together on this earth.
·• The potential arms agreement did not come about by chance.
, Reagan and Gorbachev need It and want it. That alone was enough to
:start the wheels turning, a;1d to overcome the technical obstacles.
:• The Iran-Contra scandal put the president on the defensive and
&gt; brought Into question his credibility, He needed a 11ft to restore his
;: popularlt.y and prestige In the country. An arms agreement can do
•: that, especially with prospe.;ts for an even more Important pact by
:.;cutting the superpower long range strategic weapons by 50'percent.
•• Ironically, his main -opposition as he pursues tlte Holy Grall of arms
reduction lies with his conservative opponents.

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Southern to host -North Gallia in key SVAC encounter

Thursday, September 24. 1987

' By SCOTT WOLFE .
RACINE -Letting victory slip
away behind costly !l')lstakes, the
Southern Tornadoes football
team led 'to their own downfall In
a Bengal-type loss to Southwestern (1,4-13) last week In Racine.
" Great Expectations" 'for a
fine season could be slipping by
the way side If the Tornadoes
don't buckle-up and get In gear
soon.
This week Southern faces a
tough leagu e opponent In North
Ga llla, who survived a dramatic,
roughhouse VIctory at Symmes
Valley last Friday (20·11)..
One bright spot was that
Southern did sustain a somew hat
s uccesslul, bui yet unpredictable
ground game. Pete Rou sh netted
74 yards on 18 ca rries to boost his
season total to 62-for -298 yards, a
4,6 per carry average.
•
Freshman running back Ri·
chard Deaver added 64 yards ,
Including a 27 yard TD scamper,
whUe Todd Lts·le burst through on
a four yard run for the other
score. ·Mark Porter added the ·
ex tra points.
Southern's incons is tent ground
ga me was complimented by a
terrible passing game that saw
SHS pass 14 times for no yardage
as the rushed Tornado passer
had itterally no time to get off a
good pass.
The win was a big one for
So uthw estern Coac h Jack
James, whose team has co me

Buys· protection ____Br_J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_an_d_D_a_le_J!I_a.,-n_A_u_a
WASHINGTON - If a Cherno.byl-style nuclear disaster occurs
at ohe of America's nuclear'
power plants, victims and their
fa milies could suffer financially
as well as physically, ff Congress
re news the existing limited-liability law .
The Price· Anderson Act, passed
In 1957 and renewed In 1967 and
1977. limits a nuclear plant oper ator's liability to $700 million for a
single accident. This ridiculously
low sum wouldn't begfn to cover
the deaths, personal Injuries and
property damage that would result from a nuclear meltdown, specially at a plant located In the densely populated areas of the coun- •
try,
In fact, the General Accounting
Office estimated last June that .a
catastrophic nuclear accident
would cause $15 billion damage
under average weather conditions. Heavy weather that spread
radiation over a wider area could
increase the damage to as much as
$150 billion, the GAO figured .

Despite these ·a ppalling posslbllltles, Congress is considering
a renewal of Price-Anderson
that, aliough grea tly increasing
the cap on lia bili ty, still wouldn't
come close to raising It to a
realistic leveL The House passed
a renewal bill July 30 tha t raises
the stgnle·accldent liabilit y to
$7.4 billion. The Senate is expeeled to resu me debate soon.
How does the nuclear. power in·
dustry manage to main tain such
clout on Capit ol Hill? We'll give ·"
you a hint : The, crucial factor
may be cold, hard and green.
Nuclear power lobbyiSts outspent their opponents by roughly 6
to 1 during the six-month period
from last November to Apjil. Ac·
cording to Ralph Nader 's Public
Citlzen, nuclear Industry lobbyiSts
spent $356,797, while environmental
and public-Interest groups spent
$61,667. During the same period,
the industry fielded eight times as
many lobbyists as PricP-And!'rson
opponent s did.
Even more disturbing are the si-

last year tor speeches to nuclear
Industry groups.
Nuclear utilities and their con·
tractors have also plowed nolllions of dolla rs into the campaign
coffers of sy mpathetic members
In Congress through corporate
political action committees. ·
The U.S. Public Interest Research Group: a vociferous and de·
termlned opponent of Price-Anderson renewal, analyzed the industry's campalg11 donations.
Among other things, the research·
ers lound that members of Congress who voted for renewal of the
industry ·subs ldlzln~ law routinely
got two to three times as much In
contributions from nuclear power
PACs as those who -voted agai nst.
Not surprisingly, both .Johnston
and McClure are members of the
nuder power industry's "$100,001
cl ub." Since 1981, the two prO-nuclear senators have each received
more than $100,001 In campaign
conli'lbutions from Industry PACs, ·
according to the Public Interest
Research Group,
Foot note: An aldt&gt; for Sen.
McClu re maintained the contrib utions an d honoraria did not
influence the senator's thinking.
The country's energy independ('nce depends on the stab ilit y of
t~c nuclear -hisiory, th&lt;" aide
s~id, and It needs the P rice -An - .
dprso n Act to effectivel y pian tor

zable sums that key members of
Congress receivE' for speaking to
nuclear Industry gatherings, These
"honoraria" go directly into the
politicians' pockets, and often re- ·
quire the honorable member to do
little more than clear his throat at
the podium.
·
Sen. Bennett Johnston, D-La.,
has been a recipient of the nuclear
Indust ry's largesee. As chairman
of the Energy and Na tural Resources Committee, Johnston Is
expected to lead! the fight to renew
Price-Anderson In the Senate.
Our reporters Stewart Harris
and Jennifer Smit h reviewed the
senator's financial disclos ure
file and found that in 1986 he was
paid a total of $11.000 for six appea rances before nuclear re!a ted groups. Among the companles that paid John ston up to
$2,000 were General Electric,
Westinghouse, Edison E lectric
a nd Pacific Gas and Electric .
J ohnston's predecessor as committee chairman, Sen. J ames
McClure, R-ldaho, was aid $4,001

· Sf'n . Johnston was ·not ava il able for comment , but In the past
he has arg ued that fail ure to ex te nd the act could mean Insuffi ci ciden t victims.
CARVING UP SAM - Within
minutes after Sen. Sam Nunn, DJCa., announced tha t he wouldn '1

run for president In 1988, the men
he might have run aga inst were
(•age rly se&lt;'kl ng- and getting campaign contributions from
would-ha ve-been Nunn backers. ,
T he big benrflclary was Sen. Albert ' Gore, J r., D-Tenn., who
pick('(l up several moderate-toconservative Sou thern !at ca ts
who had been keep in!( the! r
checkbooks open for Nunn.

Get EPA out of urban planning Vincent Carroll
merely stabl]l •.cd. In most com·
muniliPs, .throul!h, air quality
ca n be rur th('r improvl'd through
non·dl sruptlvc means. Perhaps
thl' usc of o•ygcnated fuels (gasohol to most 61 usl ca n help.
They' II be used throughout Den·
ver this winter to test their l'ffccton ta rbon monoxide l evel~ .
T he EPA a t least seems a war~
of the choice we face: " Eit her
the na tion must implement the
harsh programs necessary to
ach!Pve. the desired health a nd
welfare protection afforded by
the ownc sta ndard ," a recent
press release observes. "or we
n;tust acce pt somc - heal th a nd
welfare ris k over th e next few
years as t hc necessary progra ms
to bring abo ut eventu a l at tai nment arc cra ft ed .. . "
At a time when Americans live
lo n ~e r than ever before, In hea lthier bodies, the choice should be
obvious. The las t thing we nf'ed ts
a nat ional land -use planning
age ncy pee ring over the shoulders ol loca l of!lctais.

as opposed to two on the House
side. The senatorial bu ilding was
known far and wide by Its initial s,
which may have been among the
reasons two other build ings were
constructed.
·
Les I you feel Ioo sor ry for
overcrowded Hou se members.
however , be a dvised that they
now have three office buildings
also. Of course, there are mo'r eof
them .
Likewise be advised that Philip
and Gary were by no means the
only Harts to serve in Congress.
There have been about a dozen
but mostly they were represent a·
lives, and hence had no chance of
having a Senate office building
named In their honor.
There has been at leas t one
other senator of that name,
Thomas Hart, R"Conn., who was
appointed in the 1940s to fill an
unexpired term . But he only
served a year or so, which
presumably wasn't long enough
to have a Senate office building
named In his honor. ·
If mistakes were make in
constructing the Hart Building,
they were more of an engineering
variety than the kind Gary Hart
admitted were made when he
spent a Saturday night here with
a woman other than his wife.
When the plastic sheeOng that
covered the building during Its
construction was removed, Sen.
Daniel Moynihan, an ,esthetlcally
offended Democrat of ~ew York,
Introduced a bill to have it put
back. ·
At that , no controversy erupted

at It s opening to compare with
the one stirred up by the Dirksen
building.
·
When the Dirksen edifice was
formally opened. a Sena te chaplain described its subw ay cars
as "s wift chario t s of

I

By Dick West

T-1-AH!.ll.OnThe

team effort ' we can turn the
'
season around.··
Southern is relatively healt hy,
but will miss the services of Jr.
offensive guard Brian Weaver,
who is out with a shoulder Injury.
Ga me time Is 7:30 p.m . in
Racine.

l

.

ATTENTION

hmtll_gt hou$e
SHOE PLACE

exhausted."
The union is seeki ng unrestricted tree agency lor players
wit h at least four years experience, eliminating th e league's
current system of co mpensating
with draft choices tea ms that
lose players. The union's plan
wou ld retain a club's right of fir st
refu sa l lor players with fewer
th an four years in the league.
Schramm said tree agency
remai ns th e sticking point In the
ta lks and added tha t the owners
refused to budge from their
position that they present system
should not be dra sticali;t al\ered .
" We reiterated our position
a nd they reitera ted their desire
lor cha nge," Schramm sa id.
Asked abou t the prospec ts of
quick set tiement , union pres ident Marvin Powell of t he Tampa
Bay Buccaneers sa id: " II Moses
Co ntinued on page 4

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" ... so much fot contra-mania and Persian
Gulf-mania - now for Bark-mania ... "

i

'

polL
.
Southern can avoid tossing In
the towel wit h a big win this
week.
.
" I hope the boys can motivate
themselves and bou nce back
with a win.We have seven games
\~f! to play. With a complete

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halves of footbalL "
Losing two In a row,especlally
last Fr iday's heartbreaker has
taken a lot out of the Tornadoes,
but good teams bounce back.
After all,in the coaches' poil SHS
was picked to place second in the
league and third In the media

TOOOR
SELECTION

Old .news that's discreet enough to print
WASHINGTON tUPii - Al though former Sen, Gary Hart
apparently has taken himself out
of the 1988 presidential race a t
least twice, by actual count.
opinions persist that the newes t
Senate office building stands as a
monum e nt to se n a torial
indiscretion.
Nothing could be farther from
the truth.
It ma y be that the IJuilding was
named for a former Democratic
senator - but that Hart ca me
from MIChigan rather than Colorado. Furthermore, there was a
difference In their leave-taking.
Sen. Philip Harl, for whom the
building wa s named, presumably died Involuntarily in 1976,
whereas Gary Hart volu ntarily
did not seek re-election about 10
years later.
There also was a matter of
es teem of their colleagues.
All senators, Philip and Gary
Hart included, customarily refer
to each other as "distinguished,"
but there is evidence Philip Hart
was genuinely beloved by his
fellows.
i\nyway-, they were fond
enough of him to name the
newest Senate office building In
his honor, the older structures
being named !or Sens. Richard
Russell , D-Ga., and Everett
Dirksen, R·IIL
There is no record of a similar
honor befalling Gary Hart, just
as there is no record that Philip
Hart ever ran for president.
I remember when there· was
on ly one senate office building,

a nd play a good game for all four!
quarters ."
Hensler continued,."We've had
a rough start. So metimes we
look good and sometimes we look
bad. Inconsistency and not being
able to play four good quarters
has hu rt us . We need two good

n~tt~ethls~ar~d~snff~r~=============~~==========~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
starts
dating back to las t year.
Meanwhile, Todd Lisle, John
Wi~ldS'de
McCitlntock, Danny ·Gheen, and
.Ji:l.Kt::
.
'VVd.IK
.
ll
Chris Stout led lthe way defensively .. Lisle had 8 unassisted
tackles: ·
Southern will have to match
wits with VIking Killer Keith
Eieam, Pirate junior running
back, who paved the way to
victory las week. Complimentin g
Elea m 's effort was senior David
Roush, part of the duo that
; combined for the biggest chunk
of NG 's 150 yard total rushing.
Greg Glassburn was 4-14 for 60
yards passing including a TD
Rugged, outdoor footwear for a rugged, outdoor lifestyle. As
pass to Craig Bickers.
durable as they are good-looking.
Southern Coach Bltl Hensler .
sta ted .- ' 'North Gallta Is a ballclub that will run the ball right
I~~·
USA I
'""" ,,
down your throat. They are
aggressive on the run, in order to
win we must take th e run away
-from Nort h Gal lla and have an
overall more cons iste nt defen'J1fe
sive ga me."
"Offensively , we must elimiMIDDLEPORT
nate mental errors and physical
mistakes to win.Our boys are
going to have to make up their
minds to play baiL .. to come out

PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
T he NFL Players Association
and management ta Iked for I · 2
hours before breaking off early
today , with negotiatio ns focusing
on fr ee age ncy as the players'
strike moved int o. its third day .
The maratho n session - th e
longest to dale In the · current
co ntract dispute- left th e unio n
cautiously optimis tic of a settle·
ment. The two sides ended their
discussions at 2:15a .m. EDT an,d
were sched uled to resume at 10
a .m. today .
Free agency - a player's
a bilit y to sell his servlcPs to other
teams - was at the top of the
agenda as the S{'Ssion entered the
ear ly mor ning hours.
" We're goln~ to play If. out. "
Qa llas Cowboys President Tcx
Schramm said ca1·1y Thursday .
" We're ~otng to co nti nue until
tht' subject lol fr!'e agency ) is

ent co mpensa t lon for nu cl rar ac -

ce nt ; airborne soot and dirt, 24
percent.
H avl n~t co m ~ so fi r , though,
regulat ors seem , attmctf'd to
l've n more draconia n policies and a ll beca use of an arbitrary
deadline pass('(l by Congress .
Some people a rgue that air·
poll ut io n df'adllncs and . tandards ca nnot be compromised
because they relate to health and
safl'ty, In deed they do, but somPwhat In the manner that hl!!h ·
way speed rela tes to healt h and
safety . LOWI'i'ing pollu tio n stan·
dard s even further , like loweri ng
the speed limi t' might save more
li ves, but Iher&lt;' Is a point a t which
cos t and Inconvenience shou ld
give us pause.
Beslde:s, if the worse pol lution
iPVt' ls of 15 years ago didn ' t ca ll
for li fes tyle - wrenchi ng mea sures, what makes them necessary toda y?
Sterner solutions might be
worth a look if a ir poii ution were
worsen ing. or even If it had

close the past couple of weeks.
The sl~gle wing had several
teams somewhat concerned a
couple of years ago, but James
clearly had his defense ready for
the Tornadoes this time around .
That was evident as Roush was
itmlted tounder100yards!orthe

Strike enters third
day; talks to resume

~~~future .

The Clea n Air Act was never miss ion, such measures Include
supposed to turn urban·pla nning · "restrict ions on vehi cle use, ex·
over to the Environmental Pro- panded controls on existi ng intection Agency. Yet the law may dust ri&lt;1i sources. restrictio ns 011
do that If the public isn't alert.
new grow th a nd development.
Here's·how: For dozens of cities, new contro ls on gasoli ne dis·
compliance with national clean- tribution , prohibit ions on the usc
air standards remains a distant of so111e consumer product s .. _
drea m. They aven't a chance of and the possibilit y shutdown or
achieving the ozone or carbon re location of so me major indu st monoxide levels required by the r ial emitters."
,_
·
end of this year. Like Sisyphus. a
Most people have no idea that
few could labor Indefinitely and thPi r c iti es. not to men1ion their
never reach their goa L
lifestyles. could be remade in the
Hence EPA's opportunity to ex- name of clea ner air. By wide'mapand its Influence. U the agency is joritles they favor cont ro llin g
diploma tic, bu t firm , it cou ld Ins in· pollution , but te nd to assumP the
uate Its way into a host of local job will be accom plished trough
planning and development deci- less in trusive means.
·
sions In which a national burea uNor can you blame them , for this
cracy has no legitimate claim.
Is how air quality has been im·
There Is some evidence th e prove up until now- and dramati·
agency int ends to do that.
cally so. by many measures . BetIn a " fac t sheet" put out by th e wf'&lt;'n 1976 and 1985, for exa mple,
agency earlier this year, EPA ca rbon monoxide levels dropped
warns that several contemplated an average of 36 percent ; sullurdiprograms " will be both ex pen- ox lde. 42 percent; a irborne lead, 79
sive and socially disruptive." percent ; ozone, more than 7 perJust so. By the EPA's own ad-

The Dally ~entinei - Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

•

"

-'·

�'\
\

Page 4 The Deily Sentinel

ThLnday, September 24. 1887

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol!io

lhurlday, September 24, 1987

•
•
·Eastern faces third toughie mrowm
Symmes Valley
EAST MEIGS·If there Is one
good thing about the Eastern

Strike ...
Continued from page 3
parted the Red Sea, it's always a
possibility ."
Meanwhile, striking players
demonstrated across the country
Wednesday and two Kansas City
Chiefs players arrived for picket·
line duty brandishing shotguns.
The marathon session marked
the first full-scale bargaining
session since Sept. 13, although
the chief negotiators - Gene
Upshaw, the union's executive
director, and Jack Donlan, Man·
~gement's Council's executive
director - had met privately
twice since.
Representing the owners were
Donlan, Schramm, Pittsburgh
Steelers President Dan Rooney
and . two staff officials. The
NFLPA was represented by
Upshaw, Powell and several
executive committee ·members,
including Brian Holloway, Mick
Luckhurst and Mike Kenn.
The talks are aimed at reach-·
ing a new three-year collective
bargaining agreement to replace
the pact that expired Aug. 31.
Commissioner Pete Rozelle
did not attend the ta lks at the
Four Seasons Hotel in Philadel·
phla, a site between the league's
New York offices and the union 's
Washington headquarters.
The league Is expected to
announ ce today whether this
weekend's games will be
postponed.
Donlan said before Wednesday's session: "The next two
days are critical. If there's no
movement after two days, we're
looking to a long one.''

schedule through
the fourth Wahama and Oak Hill. Eve·
week of the season, ll ls the fact
ryone, that Is, except the Eagles ,
that three of Its toughest games who lacked on offense,but still
will be out of the way. For the hung tough against two superior
third week In a row Eastern will clu!)s.
'
face a formidable opponent by
In Eastern's favor !will be the
hosting the Symmes Valley Vlk· fact that Symmes Valley has to
lngs here Friday evening ~ t make the draining, treacherous
Eastern, beginning !II 7:30p.m.
trip from Wlllow Wood and the
By chance of the schedule. fact that !Symmes Valley Is
Eastern has cough! perennlel coming off a shocking defeat and
power Wahama, burly Oak Hlll, . upset by North Gallla last week.
and Symmes Valley all on
Coach Arch Rose commented.
up-years; but there Is light at the "The key to victory thts 'week ls
end of the tunnel.
again consistency. We have not
Loslhg two In a row doesn't done well offensively since the
help &lt;~nyone' s morale, however, first game.Needless to say we
Eastern can stand proud to the are going to concentrate of
fact that many expected the offense this week."
Eagles to He down and die to the
Pen;llties, tlmlng, execution,
tune of severe beatings ;J.galnst and mental errors have kept the

'
Eastern with a good backfield
game and shared top tackling
honors with Mark Griffin . with
four assisted and four unassisted
tackles.
In a weak offensive effort.
Griffin at quarterback led the
rushing dept. with 6 carries for 28
yards, whlle Reynolds had one
pass for eight yards .
Last week Kyle Davis missed
much action because of an Injury
sustained in an auto accident, but
hopes to return to fullback this
week. Jeff Johnson had a spirited
game both ways and Steve
Horner, quiet last week, hopes to
return to form at wide receiver .
Last week Symmes was defeated 2Q-14 In their own backyard,loslng not only the game.

Eagles from offensively gettlllg
Into a groove, but one mistake
kills the momentum.
Rose continued,' 'I was pleased
with our ability to limit Oak Hill's
passing attack, however, we
were very weak limiting their
running game.Symmes Valley Is
a very physical team and we
must be 'prepared tp block well
and consistently."
Rose said. "I am looking forward to this .Friday's contest. If
we prepare well and work hard at
execution we will be In this game
from the beginning to the end. I
feel that the league champion·
ship ls a long way away and tnat .
any team has a chance at . this
moment .''

Defensively, Jay Reynolds 'led

but a key player In Dallas Tibbs.
Veteran runner Donny. Craft,
among league leaders last ye~r.
again Is Symmes· Big offensive
threat.
Eas tern's defense must 'concentrate its efforts In atopplni ·
the senior running back to
successfully stop SV.
Should Eastern give itself a
good slap jn the face, polish off Its
work habits, and boost Its own ·
Jl)orale It could just 'm11ke the
season' In its next two ballgames.'
Realizing Its Improvement,·
EHS could see the daylight at the·
end a! the tunnel soon; maybe

Fr~!~~-the·less

expect a good :
game Friday beginning at 7:30:
p.m.
.
, ... _.....:;.:....._

I'•

Tf'Ml
I. ( 'lnclnMU l'rlncf.4on (ll ) tJ.D)
t . Cant~»~ McKinlry i ll cS:tJ

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Ll•ul"

·Mets nip Expos, 4•3; Cards, Giants, and
Blue Jays and Detroit Tigers post wins
By MARK COHEN
UPI Sports Writer
_ The Montreal Expos may find
that the slimmest of margins
kept them from winning the
National League East title.
The Expos failed to · gain
ground on New Yo rk by dropping
the first of a two- game series 4·3
to the Mets . Wednesday night.
They a lso cou ld ha.ve picked up a
game on the first-place St. Louis
Cardinals who lost 2-0 to th e
Pittsburgh Pirates.
Montreal remains In third
place In the National League
West, 1'h games behind the Mets
and four games behind St . Louts.
Mets starter John Candelaria.
pitched six innings and recorded
his first NL victory since July 6. ·
1985, when he was wlt.h Pittsburgh . Ca ndelaria, 1·0 with !he
Mets , allowed three runs and six
hits In his second start for New
York. Roger McDowell pitched
the ninth for his 25th save.
Elsewhere in the National
League.· San Fra ncisco topped
Los Angeles 9-8. Philadelphia
blanked Chicago 5·0, Atlanta
edged Houston 5-4 and San Diego
beat Cincinnati 6-4 In 13 Innings.
Plr11tes 2, Cardinals 0
At St. Louis, Brian Fisher
threw a two-hiller for hls third
shutout of the season, to help the
Pirates end the Cardinals' tourgame wi nning strea k.
Giants 9, Dodgers 8
At San Francisco, Wlll Clark's
game-winning double hlghllgh·
ted a flve-run seve nth- Inning
rally, lowering the Giants' magic
number for cli nching !he Na ·
ttonat·Leaj(lle West to four .
Phlllles ~. Cubs 0
At Chicago, Bruce Ruffin
pitched a six-hitter and Luis
Aguayo and Lance Pa rrish hit
home runs to· lift the Phlllles.
Braves ~. Astros 4
At Atlanta. Albert Hall tripled
In the ninth inning to co mplete
the cycle and scored on a wild
pit ch to give Atlanta the victory .
Padres 6, Reds 4
At Ci ncinnati, Randy Ready
and John Kruk belted back· IO·
back homers In the 13th Inning to
lift the Padres.

Duplicolor Scratch Fix

Touches up nlcka, dings,
2.69

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13

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Water Pumps

Price good with exchange.
Reg . from 15.95

3 YEAR WARRANTY

88

2588
_.......____

rcoat

efter

ATTENTION:
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE
NOVEMBER 3, 1987 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 5, 1987.

repellent, with zippered
atoroge bog. Reg. 38.95

Glanllan Semi·

Reg. J0,98

Guardian
Brake Shoes

Reg. 12.49

llog.17.i5

1 YEAR WARRANTY

1 YEAR WARRANTY

1 YEAR WARRANTY

Guardian ·
Disc Brake Pads

8.88
.
- 3.00

.
mtr"s rebate

588

your cost

baseman Tom Brookens said. ···1
knew when he came over what he
could do, but I'd never expected
this."
The shutout kept the Tigers
one-half game behind the first place Blue Jays In the American
League East heading Into a
crucial four-game series In To·
ronto lonlght. The Blue Jays
downed Baltimore 6-1
Wednesday . .
Ellis Burks and Marty Barrett
opened the bottom of the first
with singles before Alexander
coasted. Bruce Hurst, 15·12,

allowed seven hits over seven
Innings to take the loss.
"Doyle put on a clinic," Hurst
sa id. " ... He just overmatched

Us. "

"I'm not pitching any harder
here than I was · In Atlanta,"
Alexander said. "It's just that
this Is a better ballclub."
At Baltimore, George Bell hlt
his 47th home run of the season
and Jim Clancy hurled a fivehitter, keeping the Blue Jays In
the top spot. Ernie Whitt also
homered and Clancy Improved to
15-10. John Habyan, 5·6, took the
loss.
.
Clancy walked one and struck
ou t seven ln hls fifth complete
game. He lost a bid for hls second
shutout when Cal Rlpken J r.
opened the seventh Inning with
his 25th home run of the season.
The Blue Jays a nd Tigers also
play each other three times
during the last weekend of the
season.

Elsewhere in ·the American
League, Minnesota downed
Texas 4-2, Cleveland outslugged
Oakland 8-6, Milwaukee out·
las ted New York 8-71n 10 Innings,
California bombed Chicago 10-6
a nd Kansas City crushed Seattle
9-0.
,Twins 4, Rangers 2
At Minneapolis, Dan Gladden
knocked In three runs wit h a ,
homer . and triple to send the :
Twins to their fifth straight
victory.
Indians 8, Athletics 6
At Cleveland, Joe Carter
singled in two runs to cap a
three-run eighth Inning and a
four -RBI effort, rallyi ng the
Indians.
Angels 10, While Sox 6
At Anaheim, Calif. , Brian
Downing drove in the go-ahead
run with a bad-hop single, and ·
Jack Howell collected lour hits
and two RBI to spark the Angels .

I.,:::::;::::::::::================~=~

CABLE TV NOTICE
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF
OLIVE TOWNSHIP

Will meet on
MONDAY, SEPT. 28 at 7:30 PM
at the REEDSVILLE FIRE DEPARTMENT for
the discussion of a Cable TV Franchise.

GREAT

VALUES
•Use as a mo istu re
bamer . drop cloth
• Available in c lear

......c=::::::J

Budge Wild West 27.88 sale price Budge Pacesetter
Seat Covers
~~!...!!!!!~~~Car
Covers
4 coloro •••liable.
your
Lightweight, water

convenient front
ltoroge.pockets.
reg. 34.95

American Lellgue Koundup
Doyle Alexander has proved to
be the best retread ln Detroit this
yea r.
Alexander, known f or per Iormlng best late In the season, Is
pitchi ng outstanding ball late In
his career. The 38-year-old threw
a two-hitter Wednesday night ,
retiring 27 of the final 28 batters
he fa ced, to send the Tigers to a
4-0 vic tory over the Boston Red
Sox .
Alexa nder Improved to8-0w!th
the Tigers since being acquired
from Atlanta Aug. 12. In the last
four years, !rom Sept.l to the end
of the season, he's 20·3. Before
joining Detroit, however, he was
5-10 this season. In nine starts
si nce the deal, he has recorded
three shutouts and combined
with relievers on two others.
" Anytime he looks Ukehe's In a
sit uation where he's In trouble,
he comes right back a nd makes
the p!tc)l he needs," Detroit third

~ " NV

MEIGS COUNTY ·VOTERS
lnd Chryaler vehictel, reg. 3.29

missed some practice sessions
due to Illness. Jared Sheets will,
return to the center spot on
offense after sitting out the•
Miller affair.
In their series dating back to
the days when both were
members of the SEOAL, Meigs :
holds the edge with 14 wins, 3 ' .
losses and 1 tie. Many of those
wins weres very close, however,
as the Rockets always seemed to
play their best against the
Mara11ders.
So, you can toss those figures
out the window Friday night and
look rfor a barn-burner. Coach ,
Fyffe summed It up quite well
when he said "This 'game will be
intense' '.

••1 grade/
Spruce

• 10' &gt;t 25' roll . 4 mil

j iiUDOt! _·_·_· ~-·

Your Choice

the backs the Marauder defense
will have to contaln while Travis
Staten has been one of their
leading pass receivers.
Meigs Coach Bob Ashley said
the Wellston squad will be a little
quicker thaq_Meigs and that their
front line is bigger and more
experienced. ''If Bragg plays, we
will have to try to cont'!ln him on
roll-'-olits and option plays . He Is
most dangerous when he starts to
run with the football and, of
course, ls an excellent passer.
We Intend to put pressure on the
quarterback as we have tried to
do all season", Ashley said. He
stated that the Marauders are
healthy so far as Injuries are
eoncerned although several have

dr black

o.•

1

- 3.00

14.•

life price

mfr"s rebete

YOU CAN CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE
YOUR NAME AND/OR ADDRESS OR REGISTER AT

88yourco~

Guardian Combi Kits everyday tow price . . . . . . • , • . • • . . . • . . .
Rex Gas caps Reg. from t .95 .............. From 125

588

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS

-rebate

695

Guardian Disc Align Kils everydey low price ....... .... •... .
'

Llttletuse Auto Fuses
Everydly Low Price ....... . ............. . .. From

Littlefuse Toggle Switches
Everyday Low Price •••............•.••..... .From

108 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
OR

pre~

AVA ILABLE

$5.19

·g·~,11Y ----,$""'3,.....,.4rl9~

assembled
fter.tiC"ns

••2 Graa~

•30 'f81tr

guaran1ee

•Resists rot &amp;
decay

c

©

PREMIUM STUDS

SOUD UINVL SIDING
O'o'er TUFF· R Sheatt11ng

•Lifetime
warranty
•Em bossed finish
•Many colors a11ailat:.•~
•B" wide or double 4 '

FIBER£0 ROOF COATING

•Preserves and waterproofs metal, felt. and

.

composij1on roofing
~s89

Tuff·R SHEATHING

x 4' x 8' ;

" R- val u~

......
,,__ $5 89
.,.,._,._

Wood. othor Shu Awallalllo

$2195

PLUMBING
ELECTRIC
HEATING

LATEX INTERIOR WALL PAINT
tR icn. fla1 11n11n
·
t 4va d• t.le ill many colOrs

3.6

6 FT. STEP LADDER

f"

5 gaL

100 sq . ft

• 112"

USED RAILROAD

~~J~~TIES

Reside you r hOme w1th \o'my l siOing

IAO..I01"!'jJtoo• uoiO&lt; ... I- c l -

HAVE YOU MOVED, CHANGED YOUR NAME, OR
FAILED TO VOTE IN I THE LASl4 YEARS?

16' X 8'

OT HER SIZES

~1N I ..

Malall(l: Brake

week .

"'

t . P&lt;ir lon ~· au· rw O J (H t

~ rArt UJt1· 1 1

Rex Locking Gas Caps Reg. 7.95 . . ... .. ..... .. .

OuMide Melp Co•nty

69

I OrrvM ... ( fl {:I-I )
t . ..UroaN., Viftf~&lt;nl

Subscribers not desiri ng to pay the car·
r ler may remit In advance direct to
Th£' Dally Sent inel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. C redll will bP glvPn can'h?r each

13 Week s ........ .. ........ : .............. $Ut20
26 Week s . .' ........ ... ................... . $35.10
52 Weeks.. ...... .... .. ........ .. .. .. .. $67.60

K3

~ - lr.lltt'!'l\'111" ( :t-1)
ll GahiUINII Un L"OIIl (:l·l )

l . ( 'o lumt&gt;u.l)o · ~lo.,. t:J-0)
I . \ ' rtlatla U -1}

..bate

70c: off

26 Weeks ...... ... .. .. .... .. .. ............. $34.06
52 Week s .................................. $66.56

I . Tolf'do M'hltnwr (!I-ii )

1, n rv ..l ..•d ...,..,.dtdiOf' t il t tJ. ftJ
1, T1HIR fulumhhYI ftl (,_.1!
ll. Clftl ''""*'li l"uro·tll l'brhuo ('!--1)
t A"h.lud t :l- 0)
'

.·t:

SINGLE COP\'
PRICE
Da lly ............... .'................... 25 Ce nt s

1.3 Weeks ........... .. .... .. ........ ....... $17.29

Ml

S, Y•IIIIIIIDIIOWo' n l 1 f~_,,,... i tl 1·:J- ft !
t ,, ........ (I } I'!&gt; I )

On r Mo nt h ............ .... .... .. .... ...... .$5.45
On P Yea r, ,,, .... , ..... ............ ....... $65.00

Mall Sub15crlptlons
Inside Meigs County

' "

DIYI!oton II

On(' W£'(&gt;k......... :................... ...... Sl .25

ava !lable.

I. ClndnnAII C'olf'ta.ht {1) Il-l)

S. "''Ntnvlll f' North H I 13-t)

:!1: UL Kl'llf'rlntt t ' alrmonl 1:3:
11. t:..dld 2t: I ll fto.r...an II; II .
fiiK·In~tl St . XaVIt-r l!lo: tl. lllfl l Toll!dp
('.-ntrMI .( 'alt""ll'· lll'd M'orlhln(tun, II
f' ll.dt.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

No s ubsc riptions by mall permitted In
1area s wh£"rc hom£&gt; carrier service Is

st. oltlllf'ph I H CH I

•.J1••ult...on

Duplicolcir Touch-Up
Pamt &amp;oz. For Ford, GM

Pu bllshE'd ('very afternoon . M onda y
th ro ug h Friday, B 1 Cour t St. , Pomeroy. Oh io. Dy the Ohio Va ll ey Publis hing Com pan y tM ult im ed ia , In c .,
Po me r oy . Ohio 45769. Ph. 992- 2 1~6. SE&gt;·

l~i

m
1-13

MIL'&gt; "IIt.n " 'Mhlnct on t7; 1,. ' MMIO MU·

SVA,C STANDINGS
(All-Games)
: TEAM
W L P OP
: oakHi11 ... ............ 3 o 62 15
; Hannan Trace .... .. 3 1 86 22
. Symmes Valley .. .. 2 1 102 34
· Southern .. ......... .... ! 2 33 65
·Eastern ... .. : .......... ! 2 32 77
Southwestern .... .... ! 2 34 48
North Gallia ......... ! 2 26· 61
Kyger Creek .... ... .. I 2 21 79
. Sept. 18 results
: Hannan Trace 38 Kyger Creek 0
North Gallia 20 Symmes Valley

I USPS IU-9601
A Dlvlslon or MuiUmedla, Inc.

C'k\1~.-d

P o lnt !i

II .M,IIIot ($-1 )
ol't
!H-t-oll!d lrn: 11 . Mlddh1 own at: l :t.
f' ltN'Innill Eldf'r !1.'1: 11. ~ .. nl• lt; U .

All tickets at SVAC league
games will be $2.50 at the gate for
both studen ts and adults,however,student tickets will be sold
the day of the game at league
schools for $1.00. All are reminded that only·onepricewi!l be
charged at the gate.

The Daily Sentinel

tt: II. stdftry Lehman

rft:O . . In parntllwtit'll );
IHViloMn I

-

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
Hannan Trace .. .. .1 0 38
0
Oak Hill ... .... .. ..... ! 0 23
0
North Gallia .. ...... ! 0 20 14
Southwestern .. ..... 1 0 14 13
Southern ......... .... .0 I 13 14
Symmes Valley ... 0 1 13 20
Eastern .. ........ .... .0 I
0 23
Kyger Creek .... .. .. 0 I
0 38
TOTALS
4 4 122 122
Sept. 25 games:
North Gallia at Southern
Oak Hill at Hannan Trace
Southwes tern at Kyger Creek
Symmes Valley at Eastern

I . Brllllaal Buelc~t North 1'" I)
31
Seoond ten : 11 . FOAiorla St. Wendelln

Prep ratings
IUJ United Pr~~~ lnlf'rnaltonal Ohi o

your coat

14
Oak Hill 23 Easter n 0
~outhwestern 14 Southern 13

Scoreboard ...
Kl. h
'
Sc hool 8o..-d ot Cuat•hef!' fDOth&amp;ll rail•«"~
I•Nh flr!ll pi!W:4" vote.. JUtd won-IQ..I

¢

SVAC standings

-·

-

COLUMBUS. Olrolo H IPI ) - Thr fiN-1

Kendaii10W40 &amp;5W30
Motor OilS Reg. 1.09,1imlt 12

. The Deily Sentinel-Page-S

"The game wtll come down to . we w111 most certainly have to ers In the race for the crown but, jury and was forced to leave thJl
trench warfare and the team who control that part of their game without a doubt, seriously game.
commits the leas terrors and gets . an(! play with great Intensity It hamper their chances to repeat
Although the blowout may not
·'I break or two will undoubtedly we expect to come away with a In 1987.
be fully attributable to Bragg's
emerge the victor" .
win. They are a super ball club
Also In the picture is Nelsonvil- Injury, he Is most definitely the
Those were the words of an\1 Coach AsHley will have them le-York who, with a win over team leader and his loss had tc
Wellston Head Coach Bill Fyffe well prepared"', Fyffe Belpre, could wind up 3 and 0 affect the outcome of the contest
regarding Friday's crucial clash concluded.
after Friday. Should Meigs and and the Rocket's offensive game.
The contest Is a very critical · Belpre post Wins, they would According to Coach Fyffe,
between his Golden Rockets and
t~e Meigs Marau\lers.
confronta(\on for both squads share second place ·behind the
Bragg's Injury has been dlag. "Meigs . is a good, fundamen - and will certatrily have a great league leading Vlktngs.
·nosed as hyper -ex tension of the
tally sound football team and Impact on the Trl Valley Confer·
Last week· s action saw the leg (knee) and may '(underline
when you have running backs ence championship race.
Rockets drop a lopsided game to that word) keep him sidelined for
such as they have In Mike
With Vinton County, who plays Gallipolis 48 to 7 while Meigs a game or two. Should Bragg not
Bartrum and Brent Bissell, along a non-league game this week, In whitewashed Miller 40 to 0. . be able to pl!IY, Sophomore Jeff
with (Jeff) McElroy and (Wess) . the top·spot at 3 and 0, a Wellston Wellston suffered a severe set- Hendershott will get the nod at
Howard, your defense definitely win could match .that record and back in the first quarter agah\st the signa l calling position.
. has their work cut outfor them", drop,the Marauders to 2 and 2 In the Blue Devils when Quarter·
Merle Kuhn, · leading scorer
he continued. "The Marauders TVC play. Mathematically, this back Scott Bragg, a very good all and ground gainer for the
have a terrific passing game and would not eliminate the Maraud· around athlete, suffered an In· Rockets, a nd James Dye will be

,.

Kendaii10W30 Motor Oil

Ohio

Meigs, Wellston clash Friday in feature TVC grid contest

I

SVAC tickets
are $2.50

I

Pomeroy-M~Ieport,

-

$1 .99
""
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s1.99-11'$.•o
oz
COLOR ... . . .
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WHITE ..

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PHONE 992-2697

through ·Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Saturday
allll 10100 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday.
Sale prices in effect Sept. 24through Sept. 30,1987.

RtL
GaHipelis, ·Oiaio,

2C)9 Upptr Ri.vai'

MONDAY thru FRIDAY: 8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
SEPT. 10, 17 and 24: 6:00 p.m. till 9:00 p.m.
SATURDAYS, SEPT. 12, 19 and 26: 8:00a.m. till Noon
MONDAY, OCT. 5: 9 a.m. till 9:00p.m.

29;59 Sady

•1 yr. warranly on all paris

HOURS FOR REGISTRATION:

OPEN
7
DAYS
A
WEEK
Stero hours; 8;30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday
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ATHENS
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I'.E.N.
594-4259

IINfYlJ) -0751.08

o

�Page 6-The

Daily

Sei1tinel

Pomeroy. Middleport,

Thlftday. September 24, 1987

Ohio

LSU ace Wendell Davis works out briefly Wednesday
BATON ROUGE , La . iUPiiLouisiana State wide receivN
Wendell Davis practiced briefly
Wednesday for the first time this
wee({, jogging )!ghtly while
catching passes from quarterback Tom Hodson.
Davis, whose r ibs were bruised
in the No. 4-ranked Tigers' 49-16

vicl'ory over Rlce la st weekend.
has been listed as doubtful for the
clas h with No. 7-ranked Ohio
Sta te Saturday.
,
'.'He (Oa,vlsl still hasn ' t been
clared to play by the doctors. and
I don't kno\1. If he will until
Sa turday." head coach Mike

ter: we had him fitted with a flak
jacket and we wanted him to get
used to wearing it today because
its very cumbersome.
''When the doctors tell me he's
ready to play, then he'll play,"
Archer said. "All I know Is ·that
he can't practice right now."

Archer sa id. "He· s feelinigiibieit ·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

By The Bend·
.In the spotlight

iiiiiiiii

Vest a Ca nod e recently celebrated her 90th bi rthday , receivIng cards, ca ll s of co ngratula tion s. a nd gift s from relati ves
a nd fri end s In observance of the
·occasions. Ca llers at her hine
Included Mr. and Mrs . Marvel
Ca nod e, Glbsonbu•·g: Mr. and
Mrs. William Gonode. Hamden ;
Mr. and Mrs . Frank J e nkins, and
Mr. a nd Mrs , Carl Irela nd.
We llston; Mr. a nd Mrs . Harold
Dixon, Mrs. Ronnie Bolen, a nd
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dave Dorst. loca l:
Mrs . Sara h Rife a nd daughter.
Palty, a nd Ja ck Rife. Florida.
a nd Mr s. Wanetta Sax ton.
Reynolds burg .

SALE PIIIC£

$9468

Shelley Dubose. wlfeofthenew
assoc iat e pa s tor of Middleport
Chu rc h or Christ . prese nt ed a
progra m on her homellfe In
Alaska at the rec£•nt meeting of
the Phllathea Women of the
l'hu rcn.
In co njunction with hl'r commPntar;· on lifes tyle In Ala ska.
s he· s howed a sNt('s of slldPS.
Phyl lis C:i lkl')' pr l'sided at the
mN' tlng whi ch Op&lt;' n&lt;'&lt;i with 1hc

LeBARON GTS

leaguer is a premier receiver
and main target of QB Mark
Griffin.

touchdQwn run in Southern's

Stodo N IJI&amp;:J, 4 docn hllfd lOP. !!idan.
front wheel drive, air cond .. auto. m1,
PS, PB. ~ &lt;W D:i&lt;s, cruise cortrui,
AM.fM radio, 13diat ltes.
WAS $7995

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
- Eastern's Jay Reynolds
earned player of the week
honors for his dub last week
a.• he was credited with an
outstanding defensive effort
by coach Arch Rose. Reynolds
had lour a.• sisted tackles and
lour unass isted tackles as well

SALE PRICE

0

Temple battles Akron tonight
PHILADELPHIA iUPII
Temple Coach B ruce A rians had
to decide whether to go easy on
his players or work them hard as
they prepared for -tonight' s game
agains t Akron.
Not surprisingly, he decided
not to spare the rod . even t hou gh
the Owls were coming off a very
physical 24-21 victory ove r Pit tsburgh on Sat~rda y night.
"The tiredness of our clu b a nd
the Jack of preparation time is
something that 's very hard to
decide on," Aria lis said . "Do you
work hard and ' teach and get
better or do you relax and try to
teach and res t? We decided to
take the work approach and try
to res t during the nine days we
have off before our next game. "
Tha t game is on Oct. 4 agai ns t
14th-ranked Pe nn State - the
team Temple would mos t like to
bea t - but Arians Ins isted his
players are In no danger of
looking past Akron and ahead to
the Nittany Lions.
' 'No, this is the first time we've

had the chance to be 3-1 in my five
years here," Arians said. "This
is the fir s t time we've been on
na tiona l telev is ion. To be hones t.
I' ve not heard Pe nn State's name
mentioned once this week . ..

APPEARING
FRI., SEPT. 25th
AND
SAT., SEPT. 26th

.~ RUPTURE

-EASER

Makes Life Worth Living

-

Of

lef'l

DOUBLE

"Small Town

adjuatmtnl Far mtn , .. a.
men , th1 ldrtn G•ve mu ·

"'f('

around lowut j*r't nf
abdomen , atale r&gt;lhl or left

Band"

ucle ~ r daublr

10 P.M.-2 A.M.

K"'""'' h McC"" '"'III! II ~~~

._:,,..,,. , 11. 111•, II''"

22-ycar-old actress found ·excit ('ml'nt In Fa yl'tt cv lllc, N.C ..
wl1Prl'' h~ was iapln~ a Rob Hope
&lt;how. by taki ng a high - speed
s pin on a Harl ey- Davidson with a
hlkrr known as Boda .
Shirl ds. in a leat her Jae kel a nd
holding on to th c420-pou nd Ooda .
i~

1••u$ft&lt; ~ o ti •M •c'" "'

1983 DODGE RAM
Stock N 82191, 2 doors. V-8. air COnd..
auto, ttans .. PS. PB. W.fM rldio, radial
tires. '' ton picilup. giUf!!S,
WAS $7795

a rich~ on a mol orry l{"a nd '' l was

the only sober P!'rso n around so I
bet' am~ th e logica l c hoice,"
ln a bcin·owed hr lmet and
leather jarkcl, Shie ld s took off on
a :10-mlnutr ridra t speeds of up to
9o m ph . Bod a told the m ~g&lt;tz ln c.
" I flgu rl'!l If the cops stopped
m e. I'd jus t show the m who I was
packing a nd the!·'d understa nd, "
. he said .

S" "~oy l!IOOII M oo4 00 1'M

~ IU§ CALPTION S
f

POMEROY, OHIO

•
Fnonclly S.wic•

"ti I l l 21!11ol

,..,..
I

ff'afu rNI on thc covrr of l hC'

m agazl nr's 1\:ovember Issue.
Thr heft \' biker met Shields
wi1L'n s h&lt;" . . h&lt;' r mot her and
bodn:uards reported ly stopped
a t ,, tOt&gt;lr ss bar a nd biker 's
h&lt;tn gout. Hr sa id Shi!•lds wan ted

SALE PRICE

ll o~ ol ft ""'""ll· 1'1 Ph

.,. , ~

a fNtturf" story about how the

:;:;:~ii;:::::::;a:::;;;::~17 J CHARGER ROYAl SE

Phormoc y

MilWAY
TAVERN

RrnokL• Shield• lakL-.
u motorcyc le ride
NF: W YORK iU P l l -It's not
&lt;'X(•ctly Vogue , but Brookr
Shirld.s Is fr ont a nd center agai n
this month - on the cover of
Outlaw Bikl'r magazine.
Ins ide the publication. there Is

$6873

SWISHER LOHSE

S2.00 COVER CHARGE

morning before the sun gets hot
but after dew on the 'leaves has
dried . Gently spray dirt a nd dust
from the leaves one day before
harvest so th e leaves ca n dry.
The reason: Wet leaves will
mildew.
'Your harvesti ng tools should be
shar p. Don't prune herbs If you
want their seed . Carefull y prun e
bushy perennial herbs to keep
their shape
'Gather the harvested herbs in
sm a ll bun ches . Hang th e m upside down for drying in a
well-ventilated. coot. da r k a rea ,
Mai nta in space between the
bundles. Keep the area dark.
Leafy herbs . seeds and flowe rs
also ca n be dried on window
screens supported so air circula tes through. Bu t don' t pile the
herbs. throw the m in paper bags
or crush th e m ,
The quicker a n herb dries. the
more fl avor It retains. In wa rm
wea ther, most herbs dry in two
weeks. A quic k dry for small
amounts of leafy herbs: set your
oven On wa rm , placr a tray of
herbs insid e. and tur n off the
heat. Drying will take 24 -48
hours. depend ing on th e herbs
a nd yo ur ove n .
'For bes t fl avor, keep dried

flavor, so take he rbs from the
garden only as needed .
Dried herbs such as th yme, sage
and bay will retain strong
flavors .
'Harvest herbs in the early

Freda Rawlings Smith hosted
a gathering of the Rawlings
fa mily at her home recently ,
Attending ere Mr. and Mrs ,
Clyde 'Ger oge, Massiln , Sylvia
Robenstlne. Ca nton ; Kathleen
Rawlings, Mr. a nd Mrs. Don
Rawlings. Que ntin and Angle,
Columbus: Mr. a nd Mrs. John
Walt er Dea n, and Mr. and Mrs.
J ohn Dean, Pomeroy: John Holiday. Dexter: Florence We ll .
Ardis Waggoner, Mr , and Mrs.
P au l Payn ter , and Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Rawli ngs .

Gera ld Collins , 66, who died
following a heart attack. Collin s
was born and r eared lri Meigs
Count y a nd graduated from
Co lumbia High School.

Mr. and Mrs . Lee McComas
and Mrs. Larry Clark, Middleport: Mrs . David , Wi seman,
Rutla nd: Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Wiseman, Albany: Ralph Jor dan , and Mr . and Mrs. Me nda l
Jordan , local, were c allers at the
hom e of Mrs , Om a Starkey, who
recently observed her 93rd birth.- - day . Mrs. Starkey received 30
Severa l of the Ca rpenter com- cards. flow e rs from a gra nd son
munit y wef e In Ga hanna re- in Virginia, a birthday cake and
cently to pay last respects to - ice crea m. a long with other gilts.

Freda Smith was in Kettering
for the fifth blrhday ce lebrat ion
of her grandson. Theron Prat her .
son of Mr. and Mrs. Reece
Prather, the former Nancy
Smith .
Milrl Calaway is convalescing
at her hOfTle a ft&lt;'f a !a li resulted
in broke n bones in her wrist
,Clay William. Jordan, Lak eworth , Fla. has been here vis iting
his grandmother, Ora Cottrill
and other area relatives.
Kyle Denver , two month old
son of Denver and Joan Queen , is
recuperaing at home following
surgery at Chi ld ren's Hospital.
Columbus.

Phllathea Song and prayer by
Ma rtha Child s. Members comm ented on a special bless in g in
r esponse to roll call. Devotions
were given by Betty McKinley
a nd Includ ed rea dings. ''C ha llenge". "ThP Tree Ga tes" , a nd
"Paths", c losing With a praye r
by Louis Bromfield.
Officers· repo rt s were given by
Bea Stewart, Farie Co le a nd

Mildrpd Riley . Included on the
prayer list were Mr. and Mrs.
Mar vin Kelly, Martha Haggerty ,
Edna Evan s. a nd Dennis Hockman. An appreciation card was
read from th e Leonard Van
Meter family. A food auction was
held with Maryln Wilcox in
charge.
·
Serving refr es hment s were
Clyda Allensworth. I;: Ua Mae
DaughNt _v . a nd Mrs . McKinley .

herb s no more t han one yec,tr.

Storage contai ners mu st be airtight, clean and dry. Keep stored
herbs Jn op aquE' cont ai ners or a
dark cupboard ,
•You can freezE' many c uli nary

Kathryn Evans will have a
program on ceramics at the
October meeting. Mrs. Wilcox,
Dorothy Baker, Thelma Boye r.
Nellie Boyer, and Cathy Cooper
will be hos tesses. Others attendIng the meeting were Delcil'
Forth, Donna Ha rtson. Carrie
Hartson, Grace, Hawley, Louise
McElhinny; Regina Swift. Colleen Van Meter. Sharon Stewar t,
Louise Heines .

tift '

" Hrll, s he loved It! She just
Ta lk show host Oprah Wlnfr e~
hung on. smiling , with her ar ms
pl aced second with 31 percent .
round me an,d her chin o.n my . &lt;tn d comedian Ca rol Burnett
right shoulder. "
came In third with 28 percent.
A spokeswoman for Shi e ld s ,
Turne r came In las t, with !i
who gradu a ted with honors from
pert'ent , while Taylor and Evans
Princeton UniVersity In .June. did
t ied with 7 percent eitch .
nor deny .the adventure a nd
" l doubt that me n would
offe red only. " We ' re saying no
answer lhe sa m e way ," sa id
eomme nt."
Ett en Lev ine . Woman 's Day
editor-In -ch iel.
SlllpStlt·k l&gt;eats llp~llck
Com ing in fourth wa s fir st lad y
NEW YORK iUP l l - Ma ny
Na ncy Reagan with 16 percent ,
Am e rica n men m ay drea m of · white Supreme Court Ju stice
s pe nding " da!· with dazzl ing
Sa ndra Day O'Connor and jource le br ities such as E liza beth
nalist Olanl' Sawyer received 15
Tay lo r or Linda E\'a ns, but most
percent each to tie lor fifth place.
wo men pre fer to la ugh than bask
Fourteen percent of the women
In another woman' s lig ht . a
in t!ie poll chose telev ision
new ly relea sed s urvey shows .
a nc hor Jane Pa uley, while 10
The two actre sses. a long with
percent chose a day with former
s ultry singer Tina Turnc•·. pla ced
a&gt;t ronaut Sally Ride.
)as t In a poll of women who
The respondents wer e se lected
sci&lt;'Cted _peoplc they would most
!rom more than 50.000 women
like to spend a day with,
who answered a poll published in
according to a n artic le In the Oct .
the February iss ue of the m aga27 Iss ue of Woman 's Day
zin e. The typica l respond ent
m agaz ine.
holds a job, is under 45 a nd Is a
The 3, 002 women in th e poll had
wife a nd mothe r . the magaz ine
11 well -known wo men to c hoose
sa ill.
fr om. Mos t selected humo r over
Over-enthusiastic police
glamour. the artic le sa id. Topchief draws council wrath
ping the list was humor writer
PLEASANT HILL. Iowa 1UPI1
Erma Bombcc k. chosen b!' 41
- Th e Pleasant Hill City Council
percent of those polled.

has cut its police chief' s $25.500
sa lary to Sl a year because of
complaint s by residents that he
int imidates motorists and is
unfriendly, counci l members
said.
Councilors in the Des Moines
suburb sa id Wednes day res ident s have co mplained that c hief
Terry Hudlk and his police iorce
have crea ted undue tensio n in the
communi ty during a recent
crack
-down on
traffic
.
Co uncilor
Ga len
Si, viol
Johna .tors
who
voted for the sa lary cut Tu esday,
sa id the cou nc il has been told
some motorist s are afr aid to
drive through Pleasant Hill beca use tht'y are a fraid of being
ticketed by Hudikora member of
his force.
Hucllk also ha s been accused of
being unfriendly to residents a nd
bus iness people, St . John said ,
Th e 'chief said Wednesday he
was "shocked" by the council' s
dec is ion and does not know if he
will resign.
" I 've been doing my job. and I
don 't feet I've been rude," Hudik
said. "Scmetimes I have to take a
firm stand on things, but If I
didn't , I wouldn't deserve be ing
chief of police ."

tJ..rteCI 5 oz.*llteak with baked potabi IUid aU-you-can-eat Salad Buffet faaturing
vr our new Pasia Bar. Two kindJ of pasta,
18Ut:ll prllc Jmtad and Italian spit:ll.

er

For

end-o f-s umm~r

cucumbers,

dill sauce ls a n excell ent choice.
CREAMY DILL SAUCE
Combine Y.i cup dairy souc
cr eam. '14 cup mayonnaise or
salad dressing , a nd V. teaspoon
fresh dillweed. Cover a nd refriger a te fo r one hour beforeserving.
Serve over cucumbers. Makes _6
cup,
DID YOU KNOW THAT: I
ta blespoon of fresh her bs equals
1 teaspoon dr ied. cracked herb
leaves or V. teaspoon powdered
herbs.

Mr. a nd Mrs. Bill Rous h are
announcing the birth of t heir first
child , a son. Derek Willia m
Rou sh.
Matern al grandpavent s are
Mr. a nd Mrs . Louis B ush, Eagle
Ridge, Ra ci ne, a nd pa ternal
grandparents are Mr . a nd Mrs.
Nathan Rou sh, Syracuse. Mater nal great-grandm other is Mrs,"
Martha C:rueser, Minersville.
Paterna l grea t-gr a ndpa rent s
are Mr . and Mrs. 'Elmer Burns•,
Middleport, and E li Bus h. Ma,
son, W. Va.

DEREK W. RO USH

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

ST.OCK
REDUCTION .SALE
•

20°/ooFF

ON ALL JEANS

It 's enough to leave even a
banker unbalanced .

Fortunately. there's newspaper a dverti s ing ... an in ves tment that's safe as houses. Mayb e safer.

29'0 North Second,

SALE PIIIC£

1

sc:&gt;rvings.

Now It's a ll about COs. c appe d mortgages. linked
~~~r~unts. equity loans. roll -

Stodo N 18022, 4 docn sedan. V-8. air
cond.. llinyl root. auto. ttans.. PS. PB.
Window1 power !ll!ll ._. !W
tilt wheel. cruise control. AM-FM
radio, ~~~~ tape, radial ti'es. white walls,
rear win&lt;ilw delog
WAS $&amp;995

·o\ IHand Cut Sirloin Steak Dinner!

· A favori te herb at Ol,lr ho use is

bas iL II has a sweet fl avor wit h a
slig ht licorice taste. If your
ga rd en has carrot s and basiL thi s
recipe might be a nice change ,
BASIL CARROTS
2 tabl espoons bu tter
6 medi um carr ots. thinly sli ced
on the bi as
.Y. teaspoo n fresh chopped basil
or V. teaspoon basil , crus hed
In a me dium skille t . m elt
butter; add carrot s. Sprinkle
with sa lt a nd basiL Cover:
si mmer 10 to 12 minut es, just till
carrot s a re tender. Make_s 6

LEE, LEVI AND CHIC
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

1983 FORD lTD
CROWN VICTORIA

herbs. Use sea led plastic bags.or
chop the herbs when fresh and
freeze them in Ice cu bes. ·
To enjoy fresn herbs throughout the winter months. plant pot s
of your favorites and put them on
a sunny windowsill, P ars ley.
chives , thym e. and basil ca n all
be grown us ing th is met hod .

Roush birth
is announced

Quirks -in the news ______________

SALE PIIIC£

PATENTED

Rqll

$6877
Stodo N 11480. 2 door\ 6 cyt. 4 speed,
stand. tans.. PS. Pll. W.fM '*'io. '-1m
piCkup, Shiw1 wl1eet blse. ""' llide bed.
siding r!ilf Rim 23.&lt;m miles.
WAS $7995

MOW IMPIIOV£01 tMSTAIIT
PUUSTRAP AOJUITIIEIITt

Ervny new freed om to run ,
•••m . d ancll! Work play ,
!letp tY~n b. thf ll/un njl
yo u r RUPTU RF. -EASER
Soft. nat rnun p.a.d Mlda reduc.:bl t •ngu• n• l hern1a with ·
uut st.H) or li!!al.,_.r . bands
No lact • Stmple pu ll1trlp

•

1985 FORD
F-150 PICKUP

as receiving Eastern's lone
pass Ior 8 yards.

13-14 defeat.

'Herb leaves used fresh or dried
are most flavorable before the .
plant flowers .
A lip: Remove the blossoms to
rpeserve the flavor .
'Fres h herbs have the most

Philathea Women conduct recent meetif!g

1985 CHRYSLER

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Southern's Richard
Deaver, an up·and·coming
freshman llailback, was
chosen as this week's SHS
player of the week as he
rambled fur !&gt;4 yards on 6
carries, Including a 27 yard

proper care in harvest and
storage can m~a n enjoyment
throughout the months ahead .
Barbara Wllllans. horticulturi st at Ohio Stat ~ University ,
shares these tips:

Carpenter community happenings _ __

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
- For week No. one of the grid
season Eastern's Mark Griffin earned player of the week
honors by sparking his club to
a dramatic come-from-behind
win over Hannan,WVA. Grlflln ran for one touchdown and
passed for another,whlle lead-.
lng Eas tern ru~hlng with 34
yards.

Stock ~ 11220, 2 dooB, h•d top. 4 cyl.
air cond .. auto. nns .. PS. P8, tilt wheel,
cruise comrot. NMM radio, 13diat li'es,
WAS $!1995

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
-The year's se.cond Player of
the week for the Eas tern
Eagles was Steve Horner, who
rambled H2 yards on kick-off
return lor Eastern's only
score In·a 34-61oss to powerful
Wahama.Th e former all-

September 24, 198'1'

Harvesting the herb g(\lrden: OSU tells you how

Fa ll Is jus t a round the corner .
For those with herb garde ns,

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Southern's Todd Lisle
· turned in an outstanding effort
in leading the Southern Tornadoes to its first win of the
season against Waterford the
first week of the season . Lisle
threw the winning TD pass of
27 yards to Mike Amos, ra 0 34
yards lor another TD and
grabbed a c rucial
interceptioq.

Thursday,

Page-1 ·

Ci ndy S. Oliveri
Co unt y Extension Agent.
Ho!Tle Economlcs/ 4·H

PLAYER OF THE WEEK
- ·In week two, senior Pete
Roush of ,Southern e_a rned
player of the week honors with
a 22-115 rushing effort against
Huntington Ross. The effort
was Roush's second straight
100 yard game as he ran for 109
the week before.

The Daily Sentinel

Newspapers provide plenty of room for detailed, fac tual information about financial services. When
you're talking to people about their money. glib is out .
facts are in.

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vinyl mol. auto. trans.. PS. Pll power
window~ power seat. ~ door Dells,
tilt wlleet. auise oontrol, AM-FM radio.
slereo !Jpe, 111dial tires, wlite walls, re•
window delog
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SALE PIIICE

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Newspapers provide a serious
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about financial opportunities:

And mo st important. In news papers the financial marketer re aches people who
have the m ea ns to use his services. Of those owning
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· Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Thtnday, September 21. 1~87

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

Communtiy calendar/ area happenings
THURSDAY
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will meet In regu·
Jar ses sion T hursday, 6: 30p.m.,
at the Rutland F ire Statio n.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Bet!\ Sigma Phi
Sorority will · meet T hursday,
7:30 p.m ., at Grace Episcopa l
Church.
MIDDLEPORT . - . Meigs
County C h urch of C h ris t
· Womens' Fellowship will meet at
Bradford Church on Thrusday at
7:30 p.m. Spea ker will be Ruth
Seevers on womens ' work in the
church.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden O ub will meet Th ursday
even ing, 7:30p. m., at the home of
Mrs. Lyle Ba lderson . Members
a re asked to bring cook ies for an

exchange.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Fraternal
Order of Eagles Ladles Auxiliary
will have a special meeting on
Friday at. 7 p.m. at the hall.
STIVERSVILLE - Silvers·
ville Community Word of Faith
Church will have weekend rev !·
val services F riday through
Sunday at 7 p.m. eac h evening.
The speaker will be George
Black from Portla nd, a nd special
si ngi ng will be feat ured including
Linda Damewood on Friday·,
Darlene Newell a nd Mary Dailey
() n Saturday, and the VIctory
Quartet on Sunday. Everyone

welcome.

-~

MlDDLEP ORT - Eva ngeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star. wil l have a spaghetti dinne r

Family reunion conduaed
The annual Romlne-Bickar
reunion was held recently at the
Eli Denison Pos t , American
Legion.
Attendi ng were Charles and
Otillia Romine, Ru tland; Ken net h, Bernard, and Tina Romine,
Rutland; Kat hry n Lambert.
. Margaret Welch , Edith Lam bert, Rutland; Bill, Barb, and
Loretta Romine, Bill, Jr. and
Jennie Rom ine, Robert Romine
and Rober t. Jr., Cookie, Crystal,
and Jeff Rom in e, Terry. Drem a,

Teresa a nd Missy Fleshma n, a ll
of Columbus; Melvin and Jessie
Romine, Groveport; Charles and
Melvin Romine, Jr .. Groveport;
Ernest Romine, Rockbr idge;
Mildred Bickar. Teresa Bro·
nasky , Hunt ingto n, W. Va. ;
David. Annette kand Clay R us-.
sell, Middleport; Clifford a nd
Alice P lan tz, Middlepof! . Larry
Rom ine, North Carolina, a nd
Jeffery La m bert, Fort Camp·
bell. Ky .

Friday with serving from 11 a.m
to 6 p.m. at the Midd leport
Masonic Temple.

Senior Citizens Center. Caller
will be Chad Johnson .

POMEROY- The.Dance Club
will have a dance a t the Senior
Citizens Center Friday, 8 to 11
p. m . with music by True Country. Those attending are I() take
snac ks.

EAGLE RIDGE -The home·
coming of Eagle Ridge Commun·
lty Church will be this Sunday
with morning services at 10 a.m ..
carry-in di nner at 12:30 a nd
afternoon service at l :30. The
Orr Singers, and Jerry and Diane
Frederick will be fea tured In the
alternoon. Rev. Car l HICkS, pas·
tor, Invites the
public to atte nd.
,__

SUNDAY

SATURDAY

POMEROY ~ The Belles i!Dd
Beaus Western Sq uare Da nce
Club Is sponsor ing a western
s tyle squa re dance on Saturday, 8
to 11 p. m., at the Meigs Coun ty

__

Prayer meetin g changed
POMEROY -

The weekly

Thtnday, September 24, 1987

prayer meeting of Calvary Pll·
grim Chapel. Route 143, Pome·
roy, will be held Thursday at the
regu lar time instead of Wednesday. Mr. a nd Mrs. Phebus,
representing their son. Don P he·
bus, and his mission work in New
Mexico, will be guests on
Thursday.
Rev ival
LETART FALLS- The Rev .
Pearl A. Casto, former pastor or
· the Letart Falls Un ited Methodis t Church, wi ll conduct evange·
listie services at the church, Oct .
Hl. 7 p.m. Specia l singing

nightly.
Hunter course
POMEROY - A hu nter safety
course Is being offered Sept. 28·29
and Oct . 1·3 on the second fl oor of
the Pomeroy Municipal BuildIng. Classes will be held 6 to 9
p.m . on Sept. 28·29 a nd Oct. 1·2.
The Oct. 3 c lass will be from 9
a. m . to 12 noon. Chief Instructor .
will be Da na Aldr idge and c lass •
s ize Is limited. All students mus t • •
pre-regis te r by Sept. 25 by ca lling
John Costanzo at 843-5405 or .
992-3883 du ring the day.,
·

IFernwood meets
Wllovene Bailey demonstrated
her craft or woodburnlng at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Fernwood Garden Club held at
t he Zion Church of Christ.
She dlp layed many pictures of
a nimals, flowers and other objects of nature which she has
created through woodburnlng.
Suzanne Warner, vice pres!-

The Daily Sentinel-Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

dent, conducted the meetlngwlth
Mrs. Bailey giving devotions on
"Thankfulness" Including a
poem, "God's Bounty." For roll
call members responded with a
recollection of their first grade of
school. There was also a display
of first grade pictures and grade
cards. Officers' reports were
given and state .and regiona l dues
were paid.
The fall regional meeting was
a nnounced for Oct . 17 at the
Hocking Valley Motor Lodge.

Pat Parson&amp; of Pat's Posy Patch
will have the morning program.
with Myra Cordray to have the
afternoon workshop.
Thelma Giles reported about
the recent trip to Old Man' s Cave,
Ash Cave, and Cedar Falls.
Net meeting will be hosted by
New officers were elected at
Helen Eblin with the program , the recent meeting of the S hade
" Diseases of Willow Trees and Valley Council of Floral Arts held
Their Care." Attending besides at the home of Diana Karr.
those named were Evelyn Tho·
They are.Sheila Taylor . pres!·
mas, Marge Purtell, and a guest, dent; Allee Thompson, vice presBernice Sarver.

·Shade Valley
has meeting

ident; Jan e t Kobientz. second
vice president ; Bobbi Karr,
tre asurer ; Denise Mora , secretary; and Pat Holt er. news a nd
,
publicity.
The flower show held over the
weekend was dl sussed. lt was
noted that several members
attended tt)e stat e convention
held in Dublin . Exlbiting in the
Meigs County Fair flower s how
were Pat Holter, Betty Dean,
Shelia Taylor, Janet Koblentz,

Al(ce Thompson, Sheila Curtis,
and Melanic St ethem.
A workshop on wreaths made
of herbs was co nduct ed by Mrs.
Koblentz with all members par·
ticipatlng. Bobbi Karr had a
program on seeds which can be
collected in the fall. She presented a poster on the subj ect and
talked about ga thPrln g seeds on
low humidity days and storing
them in cool dry places. Betty
Dean will host the next meeting.

RUTLAND FURNITURE GRAND
OPENING SALE FOR
Sl ONS MATTRESSES
INCLUDING BEAUTYREST

Local Grange has meeting
Mr. and Mrs Charles Aldridge
received the obligatio n of t hird
and four th degrees from Master
William Radford a t the recent
meeting of the Rock Springs
Grange.
Barba ra Fry an nounced the
Rock Springs winners in the
county contestsinclud ing first on
the group q uilt; Opal Grueser .
fir s t in afghan. and second in
st uffed toy; Bunny KuhL fi rs t in

Churchwomen
have meeting
Plans for making favors for
area nursing homes were m ade
when the women of Hope Baptist
Chapel met Tuesday evening a t
the ch urch.
· Mary Brya n co nducted the
meeti ng wit h Janie Coleman
reading scrip ture a nd givi ng
pra yer for miss ionaries . At next
month's meeti ng Perry Baer. a
missionarv to Chili, will be guest
speaker. All women of the church
arc invited to attend. Others at
th&lt;" meeting were Sa ndy Daniels,
Judy Mi ller, and Jenn y
Whi tlat ch.

pillowcases, and th ird In ski rt .
Mrs. Grueser gave 1he legislative report noting the ringi ng
bells across America which took ..
place at 4 p. m . on Sept .17 making
the bicen t ennia l of t he
Constit u lion.
A resol ution was pa~sed wher·
eby Rock Spr ings Grange will
incorporate with William Rad·
ford , Roy Grueser, and Frances
Goeglein as trustees. The lnfor·
mation papers are being filed
with the Secretary of State
thro ugh Attor ney Doug las Litt le.
1\ program of instrumenta l
mus ic was presented by Du rward Cum m ings a nd De nver
Rice. Reported ill were Mild red
.Jacobs. Sympat.hy was ex tended
to Lo uise and Bill Ra dford on a
deat h I~ t heir fa mily. Re fresh·
ments were served by Mr. a nd
Mrs. Jacobs and Mrs. Ann.Mas h.

Hospitalized
Eu la Wolfe. Route 2, Raci ne, is
a patient a t the Holzer Med ical
Center, Room 401-B. She was
admitted there Wednesday for
medica l treat ment.

Ladies' Diamond Fashion Rings, Handsome Diamond Rings For Men. Clu~ters,
Classic Solitaires, Bridal Sets, Trios, Duos, Diamond Pendants, Dtamond Rtngs.
Anniversary Rings. Gemcolor, Rubies, Sapphires Be Emeralds with Diamonds,
Total Carat Weights, Pendant Jackets, Two Pendants in One ... And Much. Much More !

ONE CARAT OF DIAMONDS

~~~~

$599
PLEASE NOTE:

Thi$ ottorex~ros
November30, 1987 and
is to be usect only for
the purdlase ot Slladium

Our store will close
Thursday at Noon to
prepare for this once
in a lifetime event

ArtCarwdH.S.Ciass

Rings Thisotfefls not
appt icabletopulthaseot

SILADIUM• H.S.CLASS RINCS

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RETAIL

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ONE CARAT OF DIAMONDS

RETAIL

OF DIAMONDS

DOORS OPEN
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY

$799
51495

RETAIL

S449

BIRTHSTONE &amp; DIAMOND

All GOlD

$9995

33°/o

9 A.M.-5 P.M •

OFF

TRUCK WILL BE BESIDE THE STORE 1 WEEK!
BUY RIGHT OUT OF THE TRUCK. FREE FLORIDA
VACATION COMPLIMENTS OF RUTLAND
FURNITURE WITH PURCHASE OF MERCHANDISE
OF S399 OR MORE DURING STOREWIDE SALE.
We hawe just-completed an adYertising trade out with
Vacation America! to offer our customers the most excitlnt Florida wacation eYer made awailable ... a Festiwal of
Florida Fun and SVnl

6

5,

Days &amp;
Nights
* * days* and thre1 sparkli11g
lmatint•• four sun drenched

nights witll lteautlful accommodations at the Citrus Sun
Club-only thirty minutes from the main entrance to
world,
Sea World and all the other

LA·l-BOY, BIOYHILL, MAYTAG

RUTLAN

,742-2211

attractions that make this area the "World's favorite
wonderland",

*PLUS*
2 ADDITIONAL BONUS NIGHTS
A special bonus of two additional nlthtt staying right on
the coast in exciting areas such as St. Augustine •• Day·
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NO TIME SHARE! - NO GIMMICKS!

Dlomond
Earrings

1/4 Ct. Retail $299

' $149

1/4'CI. Retail $299

1/2 Ct. Re ta il $450

*149

$299

1/3 Ct. Retail $399

1 Ct. Retail $899

Diamond
Solitaire

Gent's

1/5 Ct. Retail $299

1/4 Ct. Retail $399

$199

$199

$599

112 Ct. Retail $599

2 Ct. Retail $1999

$399

$1299

Total Wt.. -~

Total wts.

**Limited to the next 100 customers only I

ITURE

106 North 2nd Ave.

GET GREAT BUYS

I

112 Cl. Retail $625

$399 .

1/3 Cl. Retail $599

INGELS FURNITURE
and JEWELRY

LA·Z-IOY, BIOYHIU, MAYTAG

$199

1/4 Cl. Retail $449

$2"

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Diamond Ring

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992-2635

CALL TOLL fREE 800·582-1691

Middlepo~t,

Total Wts.

FRIDAY 9-7
SATURDAY 9-5.
SEPT. 25 &amp; 26

LAYAWAYS
WELCOME!

All Major Credit Cards Welcome!
Quant!ltes limited to In-stock men:hondiSe only

Ohio

•

All total weights are approximate

..

.

.

'

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Local briefs ----,
Nine calls were a nswered by local unit s Wednesday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medi ca l Services reports.
At 7:58 a.m., Syracuse took Elvira Barr from Route 124 to
:Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains a t 9:26a .m ., went
to Route 681 East for ·Louise Posey, take n to Ve terans
Memorial; Pomeroy at 9:51a.m. took Elsie W ~ge nhals from
Tuppers Plains to Veter ans Memorial; Middleport at 11: 24
a.m. , took VIrgil Co llins from the Holzer Clinic in Middle port to
the Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 11 :44 a.m., took Lucy
McCune from Pomeroy Cliff Apartme nt s to . Veterans
Memorial ; Racine at 4:25 p.m ., took John McC lintock from
So uthern High School to Veterans Me morial; Pomeroy at 6:03
p .m . took Shannon Scholderer from Ball Run to Veterans
Memorial; a t 7:44 p.m., Racine took Shirley Stevenson from
Bashan Road to Veterans Memorial ; at 8 p.m. , Shannon
Scholdere r was transferred from Ve tera ns Me morial to Holzer
Medical Cen ter.

Comp rf'Om; "e
I

~

Business Services

told he could submit a p!'oposal
for his company wh&lt;&gt;n the pres ·
e nt contract expi r·es April! next
year .
Si nce no commC' nts wcr(' I'C'·
celved regarding a request for a

liquor ll censr transfer from
George's Gun Shop to the Five
Points Express. the transfer
req uest will be forwarded by the
commissio ners to th e Ohio De·
pariment of Liquor Co ntrol.

YO PWI AM U UU. Ht-2156

MOIIDAY lllr•,.AY IA.M.t• J P.M.
I A.M. UIMI NOON SAWIDAT
(LOSID SUNOAT

------Weather-----Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
Sat
urday
through Monday
Tod ay, sunny this m or ning a nd
Sunny
Saturday
and· Sunday
part ly cloudy this a fternoo n.
with
partly
cloudy
skies
Monday ,
High In the mid 70s. Winds
In
the
mid 60s
.
Hig
hs
will
be
becoming northwest 10 to 20 mph.
Saturday.
near
70
Sunday
and in
Tonigh t. mos tly cl !'a r. L0w 45
the
lower
or
middle
70s
Monday
.
to 50. North winds 10 to 15 mph .
The
low
wi
II
be
In
the
mid
40s
F r iday, sunny with a high in
Saturday a nd Sunday and In the :
the mid 60s.
lower or middle 50s Monday.

"We continue to believe tha t
t here's no need fo r formal
reporting unde r terms of the Wa r
Powers Resolution ." Fitzwater
said. "We took defensive action
against the laying of m ines in the
gulf, but the general condition of
hostilities has not c hanged .... We
continue to believe that parts of
the resolution are unconsti t u·
tiona! and usurp t.he exec utive
branch prerogatives."
Sen. Lowell We.ick er ofConnec·
Iieut. one of the libera l Re publ i·
cans who fa iled Friday to get his
colleagues to de mand invocation

Edith Sauer
Edith E . Sauer. 88, formerly of
Brownell Ave ., Middleport. died
Wednesday a t Wes te r ville.
Mrs. Sauer was born Oct. 6,
1898 a t Ni les . Ohio, a daughte r of
the lat e William a nd Elizabeth
Say re Glaze. She was employed
at the Stiffler Department Store

Bork
hearings
take one

day break
WASHI NGTON tU PI I - With
t he politica l stakes so high in t he
Supre me Court nom ina tion of
Robert Bark, th e testimony at hi s
Senate co nfirma tio n heari ngs is
co ming from a barrage of'hig hly
pla ced offic iols. la wyers and
scho lars.
Supporting Bork . fo r example.
in the th ird day of out s id e
tes timony to the Senate Judi ·
ciary Committ ee we re retired
Chief Justice Warren Burger.
Il lino is Gov . James Thomp son
an d forme r pres id e nti al lega l
cou nsel Lloyd Cutler.
Al l sided with President Rea·
ga n in jud gi ng Bor k s quarely In
of American

legal thoug ht , with the conserva·
tive Burger draw ing a pa rallel to
his ow n views a nd Cu tle r pred ic ting Bark's high co ur t dec is ions
would be " fairl y close to those or
t he vPry d ist ing uis hed jus tice
w hose sea t he wou ld fill."
Opponents say Bark is a
right -wing ideo logue who wo uld
rip the balance of th e na t ion's top
be nc h inJureplacing
t heP owell.
mod e rat
retired
st ice Lewis
buet
Cutl er disput ed t ha t Wednesda y
a nd noted his 20· yea r fr ie nds hip
with Bar k.
' ' I appraise Judge Bor k as a

in P omeroy for a number of
years. She wa s a member of the
La di es Au~ iliary of Drew Webs·
ter Pos t 39, American Legion: a
pa s t pres id e nt of th e 8 a nd 40
a uxi liary group, and was a
m ember of the Middl e port F ir st
Ba ptist Chu rc h.
Surviving are her da ughter,
Jane Sauer Welker, Ga hanna; a
daughter and so n-in-law. Sally
a nd Jim Ill ingwor th . Phoenix.
Ari z.;
two gra nddaughter s.
Li nda K. Smith. Cres tline, and
Debr a J . McCa nn , Hou sto n. Tex ..
a nd several nieces and nephew s
Besides her parents, s he was
preceded in deat h by he r husba nd. Cha r les Sauer in 1976, and
a brother. George Glaze.
Se r vices will be held a t I p .m .
Saturday a t th e Rawling s-CoatsBlower Fune ral Home wit h thf'
Rev. Tom Sherrod offic iatin g.
Bur ia l will be in Riverview
Cem e terv . F r iends mav call a t
the funer:ar home fro m 7. to 9 p.m .
Frid ay.

numbers:
Daily Numhf"r
910.

Ticke t sales totaled $1,21l8,S&lt;IR.
wtt h a pa yoff due of $60!i.83fi.
PICK-4
23~~ -

Pl CK-4 ticket sa les total ed
$195.586.50, wit h a payoff due of
$88,091.
.
PI CK·4 $1 straig ht pet pa ys
$7.764 . PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$647.
Supe r Lotto
Ci, i4 . lfi, 27, 29 and 3" .
Supcr Lotto ticket sa les tota led
$R,265,49l.

~.-

N1 ...

...

_
=t=-__

:::~6

.,. ....

,,___--~~~~Mt--

,,.
:TT - - -

e-~ ·=

·-

2s(EACH

CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
Y SE
'nL 3 P.M.
Public
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
:

YOU 'VE COME A LONG WAY BABY - B&lt;1c k In 1920, students
up Portland way traveled to school In n hnrse drawn sc hool bus,
that is If the bu s was going their way : Siude nls not on th e bus route
wnl~ed -miles nnd mik'S- .. In 1928 In Chester , students could to
scttOul ride In relative comfort In modern •buses of that day . Those
students who couldn ' t catch a bus would still probably bP required
to walk - miles and mil es ...

THE MATTEA OF
;snTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
• Accounts and vouchen of

''" fottowlng nomed fldu·
cl•iee have been tiled in the

Southern •••.

Prob•te Coull , Me igs
Countv. Ohio, for approvtl
lind amtement :
, ESTATE NO . 24067 -

Use our •trmt, your
Vi1a

Of

M1nlfl (ard

FREE DELIVERY
FREE PARKING

446-3045

Flnol llld Olotributlve Ac·
co·unt of Frank W . Porte r.

OPEN
9-5 Daily
9-1 Mon.-Fri.

Jr,.. Executor of 1he Ettateof
....,ben F . Moore. deceued.
. ESTATE NO. 24067 Ftnal end D ia~ributht!e Ac·
count tor Item VII of Will ol
Frank W. Porter. Jr..
cu tor of the Est•tl of Herbert
F. MoOfe. Oec:eaaed.
ESTATE NO . 25187 -

FintlfiCitrtg Awailoblt

e...

CORNI;R OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE , GALLIPOLIS

(Continued from page 1\ _ __

__:_:~=-.:_:.=::._:__

box and loc ke r room faci lit y
which makes the South ern s tadium one of The fineST in south mstcrn Ohio.
T he s tadi um Is so me Thing to be
proud of. .. .a nd the folks at
South ern are graciously proud as
the football program ha s been on
the upswing during the last
several years.
But the Southern boos ters arc

1

Card of Thanks

The family of
JARET WERRY would
like to thank friends
and ntilhbors,
Pomeroy Emercency
' Squad, doctors and
staH of V.M.H. and
Ewin1s Funeral Home
for their kindness
durin&amp; our loss.
Henrv W~rry . and
Family

Hospital news
Ve te ra ns Memorial
Admit ted - Willia m Musser.
Pomeroy; Elvira Barr, ' Sy racuse; Cecil Ma ynard . Raci n ~;
E l s i~ Wag&lt;'nhals, New Hav en, W.
Va .; Gladys Short. Ches ter.
Discharged - David Hart·
wic k. Craig Fo ley .

Provided by
Bryce a nd Mark Smith
of Blunt Elli' &amp; Loc wi
Am
26',
FirmElect ric Power ........ .....
Price
Al'&amp;·T ......... . , ..... .......... ... ....... 14
Ash la nd Oil ... .... .... .... . ...... 66
Bob Evans Far ms ... .. .... .... ... .19
Char ming ShoppPs .... .......... 24 11,
Fedrra l Mogul .. ... ...... ........ . 4!ilfi
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ......... 72'&lt;
H ec k '~ In c.
. .... ... ........ ...... 4
La nds· End ................... .. .... 25';.
Limited Inc . ........ ............ 36%
M ult !media 1nc ............... .. .. 69 :~;,
Rax Resta ura nt s .. .......... .... .4 Y,
Robbins &amp; Myer s ................ 10 ~
Shone;··s Inc . ... ............. : .. ... 29 y,j
Wendy's In ti. ....................... 9 ~
Worth ington Ind ................ .24\i;

Ftnol ond Olatributlve Ac·

qui c k to add 'tha t a th c letJcs a nd
sc ho last ics go hand- In - hand ,
co mplim enting each ot her in a
well rounded edu ca tion .
Knowing that · thf'ir c hildre n
a re sc holas tically sound ha s
in spired many in g row ing suppor t and th e abilit y to wprk
t ogPt he r . ·

Daily stock prices

M'i:8:~1~~~~6°H,O

t!ol

The family of

r~~i~i~iii~i~~

CHARLES E .

HYSELL
would like to thank
family , frienda. and
neighbors for their

prayers. love. and
klndneu, during tho
Hlnau and lou of our
loved one. Thanh 1o
Rev. Mel Franklin for
hit many thoughtful
acta and coneoling

~J1 IACKSON PIKE · AT. 35 WEST

Phone

446· 4524

I• SPEC IAL PR ICE ADMISSIONS • I
BACK TO THEATIIE DAYS I

ADUL TS 13.50 - CH ILDREN 11. 50
SATURDAY&amp;SUNOAV MATINE ES
ALL SEATS 11.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUt SDA! 11 .00

vwords, to Veterens
Memorial Hoepital
and otaff for their
tender care and
thoughtfulneu . for
thoae who ..nt
ftowera, cerda, and
food or a11i1ted in
any way In our hour
of aorrow. Special
thank• to Hunter

L:~~CJ

conservative jurist w ho is c l oser

to the rrnter than to t he extre me
right. .. he sai d. di smi ss in g the

their 11rvice and
kindna11. May God
ble11 you all.

pt-\ pARlY" R
., u-roGRP' cALENDA

rcurs of t hose w ho war n Bark

,A.N P\ . UR ,qs8

EXTRA-STRENGTH
.CAPLETS

$189

BUY I BOX
Of SO GET
THE SECOND FRlE

.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26TH
11 A.M. TO 2 P.M.

We blt$r. Deceased.
ESTAT E NO . 25332 Final and Oist ribtJtNe Ac coun t of Harry Osborne , Jr..

-~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Giveaway

f It

__
,_,
_
··-._ .
,_
,
~~:n::.

2!:

·-::::_ , _
===-:r-.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Executor of the Estate pf
Wilma -Osborn. aka Wilma
Osborne, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 25427 Final and Distributive Ac·
count of Rose M . Zimmer ·
man, Administratrix of the
Estate of Donald Gordon
Yeater, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 25495 Final and Distributive Ac·
count of Freda Jacks, Executrix ol the Estate of Richard
J . Jacks . Deceased .
ESTATE NO. 25542 Final and Distributive Ac c ount of George J . Korn, .lr .•
Administrator of the Estate
of George J . Korn . Sr "
Deceased .
Unleu exceptions are filed
thereto. said accounts wil.l
be for hearing before said
Court on the 27th day of
October. 1987. at which
time uid accounts will be
conaldered and c ontinued
from day to day unt il finally
disposed of.
An¥ perton ·.interested
mav tile written exceptions

to said accounts or to
matters pertaining to the
execution of the truat, not
leal than five days prior to
the date set for hearing .
Robert E. Buck. Judge
Common Pleat' Court,
Probate DivisiOn
Meigs County, Ohio .
191 24, 1tc

Ht~lp

' 11

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER .

Ohio 45760.
Robert E. Buck.

Transaxle Repairs•

;;;;;;;~~~~~~

Full time R .N . to work in Emergency
Room/ Urgent Care area with nursing
supervisory responsibilities . Salary commensurate with experience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits
Pension Plan
Long- Term Disability
Hospitalization

992-2104

Farm Equipment

CLOSED SUNDAY

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Ser11ice

I:00 P.II.
Behind Blue Tartan.
Middleport , Ohio
!122/

llem 81rt~4tt, Bt~tl

~~~ · .. fllld ., lift
wit~ tt 11110~ hope u4

hppluu,
I Jut ~•P• I eu ••
th ..., for fot.
Real Estate General

lOTS &amp; lAND
FOR SAlE

Bu tld your ho me or cabtn on
this lovely land ;ust one mile
lrom Oh1 o R1ver. Woods. secl us,on. and cleared land. 2
acres up . A real bargam.
Two 1 acre build1 ng Sites on
Wr igh t Sl. Water and sewer.
$4,000 each.

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REALTY
1-614-386-6740Coll eel Calis AccepteG

New England, Ohio
Rt. 50 to Guynille-St. Rt. 329 to CR 48

BRING LAWN CHillS
SANDWICHES &amp; SOn DRINKS
ADMISSION - S9.00 PEl DIY
ADVANCE nCKnS S7.00
2 DAY TICKn •13.00

ADVANCE nCICETS
Haffa's
Blue Eagle Music
School Kids
VFW • 3477

NO SWI-NG

Not RISPONSIIU FOI ACCIDENTS

BODY SHOP .
SSO PAG£ STill!!
MIDOUPORT, OMIO

992-3537

9· 11·17

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
4-16-86-Hn

YOUNG'S

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and r.t modeting

- Roofing and gutter worlt

1124

- C~ na ete work

St•t 'J II •,

ll a.m. to 7.p.m.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sunday' I p.m.· 7 p.m.
ly Chon&lt;t or A..aintmtnt

992 -621S or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15.'86-lc

8-24·87-1 mo.

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE US!l

Re·O•n F11 Bulult

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

Happy Hour
6-1 pm-Drinks SO•
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W.VA. LOnERY
CARIY-OUT
9-18-1 mo.

YVONNE UlllY
Bridal Registry and
most complete line of
Weddinq Flowers and
Accessor~es in this area

TRI-C-OUNTY
RECYCLING
Now Open
DAllY 10 AM-6 PM

MONDAY fhru SATURDAY
Located at Corner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy

Purchasing all
types of
non -ferrous scrap
Current 53¢ lb.
Top Gradt;t
·A luminum Sheets

t -11-1 • .

40C tb .
Aluminum Cans
34C lb.
9-11-1 mo.

448-3824.

'

Garage Sale: 644 Third - Thurs.
&amp; Fri. Aduh&amp;childrttnsclothing,
pictures. Elect ro lu~~t sweeper &amp;
other household items.
Yard Sale: Thurs. &amp; Fri.- PorterBrooke Subdivision. FairfieldCentenary Rd.
Cttarolait Hllls · 25'1h &amp; 26th.
Clo.thinD. toys, sawing machine.
wood-coal stove, baseball cards
and moTe.

··-.. ··Pomar·c.iv·..······-

Subttttute lnatructor-B•chelora
degre•••o.OOi diiV. Hold m
litut one valid te•chlng certificate issued by the Ohio Depart·
mant ot Educ .. ion. AVailable for
1987-81 PfOgnm v•~· Call or
-w:rite: Oellla County Board of
MR ·DD P.O. Box 14 Ch•hire,
Ohio46820. 614-367-0102. Substitute Cook- Able to pr•
p•r• tehool luneh according to
manu and requlrementt by tht
Oivl1ion of School Food
Services-e&amp;.O&amp; per hour. Call 01
write: Gaftia Count';' Board of
MR -00 P.O.Boll 14. Ch•hire,
Ohio 46620. 614·367· 0102.
Subttitt.ite Sua Driver- Mult
paas physical DAamin•tion and
hold current bus driver llcensa
fortchool bus operator or willing
to obtain· $6.05 / hour. Call or
wrhe: Gellla County Board of
MR -00 P.O.Box 14 Ch•hire,
Oh;o 45820. 814·387-0102.
Wanted- ·B eeutici*" with Men·
agera licente end without. for
N11w B11au..., Shop. Cell .14388·9093.
Full-tim' federellv. qu•lified •
state certified OMRP tor ICF·
MR f•cllity for tlfi..ric popul•
tion. E ~~tperience in h.WIItetion
slrvic11 1 mutt . S1lary negotl•
bla. Excellent benefits. Contect
Ohio Job Service, 614-441·
t883.
Now ec~ting applic.tions for
Maintence Technician. Apply in
perton 10:00 em-1 :00 pm_
Frid.y-Sapt. 25 or Sat. Sept. 26
9:00 am-12:00 noon, It Uughlin Vending 44 State St .
Gallipolit.
Government Jobs. *1 8 ,040·
$&amp;9.230 yr. NDw hiring. C.ll
806·887-6000 Ext. R-9805 for
current federal list.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Earn excellent money in homti
aasembty w:ork. Jewelry. toys
and others. FT end PT AvaJI. Can
tOdiY I 1-618·459-3548 {toll·
refundable) OEPT 81822 24 hrs.

Leonerd B..s. Rt. 124, Syracuse. Thursday, 24th and Frida'¥'
26th . 614 -992 -6006 . Rain
cancels.

Immediate opening for exp•
rien~;ed cook. 9:00 3:00, Mon.Fri. Pey commensun~ie whh
experience. Send rMume to
Daily Sentinel, Bollt 729P.
Pomeroy. Ohio.

Yard Sale; · Fri. II. Sal. Paned
Selle Gall~try , Midctl...,art
W.M.P.O. Antiques, b1by items,· La
big mens clot,es. wicker furni- needs tales person experienced
in handlcr~ftl end willing to
ture. 8-7
accept re~ponslblllty. 1Appty i~
person Mon. -Set:. 9:30-4 :30.

··.. -·-Pt ·p1 ea'sii'iif ·····
&amp; Vicinity

3 femily yard tale, Fri,Sat,Sun;
Sept 25, 28, 27; 9:00 am till
dark; 7 '11 miles out Sand Hill Ad
to Oak Grove Road. firit treil.on left. Wat~h tor aigns. lott
mise th inga .

Garage Sale, Sat, Sept. 26, 142
EngUah Road. Point Plea&amp;l!nt,
rain or thine.
3 family yard t ale, 2622lincoln
Ava, Thursda'f and fJidi'Y , Set.
24 and 26 . 9:00 till 6!00.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson AuctiDneer licensed in Ohio end Watt Virginia. Estete, antique, farm. liquidation sale•. 304-773-6786 .

·9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash tor late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·446-3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 mod~
and newer uted cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Elltllfn
Ave .. Galllpolit . Call 614· 448·
2282.

Arcedia Nursing Center, Coolville, it currently accepting epplicetiona for availebla R. N.
poaitiont.
Driv..- niechanic to

Pert time relicl•t men8g.couple. Neec:tad for smlll apert·
mant community in Ath.,...
Hulband handles ~r~ainlanance,
wile h.ndln rental collectiont,
showing end renting apan mentt, etc. Small ulary, IPIIMmant and utilitl" aupplled. Brief
latter or resume to The Oaity
Sentinel. lox 729 A, Pom•ov.
Ohio 46789.

Free Christmas diaple¥ kitFriendly Home Partl• now h•
opening• for manag.,. and
daal.-. in your lfta. All new
Christmat line of quelity merchendite at reHon•bJe prlcM-no
service charg•no paper workhigh commiuion and override.
Call 1-800-227·1610.
AVON · All areu. Call Merityn
Waever 304-882-2846.
R.N. application• now being
accepted for full time poaition,
Plunnt Veley Nursing Care
Centtf, apply p•sonnel office
Pla~tent Veil..,. Hasp, 30-t-&amp;764340. AA· EOE .
AVON · All erea1. Call Shirley
Spears. 304-175-1429.
"HIRING! Government iObt ·

••e.ooo.

your •e•. t15.000 Coli (502) 838·8886 . EXT
1203"

Ohio Valley Tire· now hat Hunter
D-100 Computtriltd alignment
machine. Now taking appMc•
tiont tor whHialignm•ts. "Call
304-676-6332 . Gallipolia Ferry,

wv.

Wanted to buy: Stlndingtimbar.
Caii614·379· 2768.

Medicel recaptkJnlst, up. pr•
ferred , "nd ruUma Band Area
Medical Center. Box 779 , New
Haven, W. Va.

Wanted to buy: Long wood. Call
anytim• C &amp; R Firewood. (:all
814·367-04169 .

12

Wtnted to buy flashina arrow
aign. Cell 814-24&amp;-51182.

)\ ;mtl" dt;oralllt(l

Female minature Dachshund.
1-2 yra. okl with or wh.hout
papers. Ctll614·387-0487 .

up..rl~eon.

Building Site· 1-2 tern within
16 minutes of town. Cash or CD .
Cat! by 11-15·87. 814-388·
9789.

N• Willi 11M PII1W
UREN FA(EMYER

Ind. hc:oraflnt Comuhant

PH. 949·2860
or 949·2801

39504 lrodbury Rd.

Wanted to buyt A atetionary
eAercilaf bike. Ca,ll 814 -448 1183,

Middleport, Oh. 45760

(6141 992-S7S1

No Sunday Calls

3-11-tfn

1-24·1 ft\0.

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE.,.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOil
FILL DIRT

f.

10-8-lfc

Old outboard motors, any
condltion·ttrvlctble or 110t.
Price depends upon condition.
Call814-441-1802 Mk for Dan.

4

Giveaway

Pen Mahese kittens,· can sea
1301 Viand St., Pt. Pit., 304·
87&amp;·8720.
Angort ktuen, femalewhhewlth
bleck. e wetks old, 304-8711118 efter &amp;:00.

m*•

local
deliveries in Meigs County.
Wrlta experience &amp; qualific•
tians to The Dally Sentinel, Box.
729 s. Pomeroy. OH 457&amp;9.

Wanted to buy- atationlry exerclu blka. Call814-446-1183.

"Free Eo1imit1ea"

9-11-1 mo.

Yard Sale: Higley's BarberShop.
Upper AT . 7, 9 :00AM , Fri. 8a
Sat., Sept. 26 &amp; 26 .

ture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis.
Call 614-448-3159.

BISSELL

PH. 992·6959

&amp; Vicinity

WANTED TO BUY: Uatd wood

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Party

.... -.. Gaffiporrs..........

&amp; coal haatara. Swain's Furni-

9-10· 1 mo.- d.

•Wadding
•Parents' Annlvaraary
•Baby Shower
•Family Reunion
•Any Spe~lal
Occaalon

Yard Sale

Junk Auto's with or without
motort. Cill 814-388-9303.

"DOC" VAUGHN

•Chlld'e Birthday

7

#1 Copper

Certified Licensed Shop

•

Lost: black and brOwn Fox
Hound in Letart Falla area. It
~ean , call 814-247-2541 .

Yard Sale. 3 tamilies, 1 mile
beyond Union Camp Ground
back New Haven , Tuotday thru
Seturday 9:00·?,

IEASONAIL! PIIICES-TRY USI

\ .

Now Homos Built

LOST: Big Dog- part German
Shepherd S. . part Collie. Male.
Answero to "Rex". Child's pet.
Vicinity or Rio Grande-Thurm.-.
area. Call 614 -246-6126 or
246-5644 .3

Middleport-992- __ ~

CALL 992-6756

SIDING CO.

before 6;00 PM or 388-9780
after 6:00 PM.

LaSALLE GALlERY

IYIACUSE, OHIO

•ALL MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES

BEER &amp; WINE

EE WEDOING CONSUlTANT

SYRACUSE, OHIO

511 / tfn

CLIFTON, W. VA.

JANET YENOY

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
•
All Major Sa Minor
Repairs
.
NIASE Certified Mechanic

~@f1~
~~J ttfJtr

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

5HIRUT HOU5TON

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

PH. 742-2027

367-0322
9-23-1 mo.

BASKET WEAVING and
SIENCillNG ClASSES

•Ohio Souviners
•Music Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden Gifts
•Pictures
•Pottery
•Cement Products
" l'ou Nam ... II - W.-\·..
Gut It!"

•Ranges

FREE ESTIMATES

FOUND: Creme colored cet-3rd.
&amp; Grap!'. Call 614-446-1532

SIGN UP NOW FOR

Rl,ISS MOORE
992-2526

let Us fence Vou In

CHESHIRE

614-843-5248

Heir atylist nHdH to rtert work
the first of October. Woukl like
to hwe ttylitt wtth thMr own
client.... If interetted All for
intervit"W· Linde G•rr•t 114-

S1lnm1n Wantedl Mutt hllle
knowledge of construction.
Mutt be 1ggralive. Call 8144-tl· 7241 . efter 1 :00 PM .

Lost and Found

J.R.'s REPAIRS .

REASONABlE - REliABlE
· 8-20-'86 tfn

GET PAID for reading bookll
1100.00 par title. Wrhe: ACE·
338 , 2 Plm1, Nap..-viNe, Ill.
10&amp;40.

6

In Porter- left off 160 on 554 . 6
Family- boat , dinet1e. Evt~ry­
thing cheap. Call 381-9879.
9 -24 to 10· 3.

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

Help Wanted

Wanted a lady to livll-ln. light
hou" work. Monty for compeny. C•ll614· 441-3ot19.

Yerd Sale: Friday 25, 9-&amp;.
Centenary Townhouse. Bov•
and Glrls clothes. loya. sheets.

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

11

Smelt mixed breed female Beagle, frlandly, spayed , had all
ahota. 304-67&amp;-3252.

l /2&amp;/ l!n

Pomeroy
HOURS, Tuo.-Woti..Fri.

FENCE COMPANY

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

ll

t

Avon-Sell Avon fm Chriltmu.
Meke 40 pereent. Csll 814-44833&amp;8.

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here
BUSlNESS PHONE
t6141 992-6550
RES!DENU PHONE
t6t4l 9.92-7754

r

3 very nice kittens. 1 whh•litter
trelnH. Cell 814-446· 9287.

We Carry Fishing Suppl ies

~ast Main St.

(Free Estimates)

R ES IDENTIA LI CO MMERCIAL

Approx . ~ ot • ton ot furn•e•
eoel. You l01d 1nd hMJI . Cell
814-446;-7133- L.,.ve m•uge.

BUILDERS

ACCENT

:=

SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSELL

•Washers •Dishwashers

6-17-tfc

I 68 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

" At Rtasonoble Pri&lt;es"

•Refrigerators
•Drvers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tlc

Port•ble Whirlpool Oishwesher.
Might work-Might not. C•ll
814-448-4044.

New location:

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutt!lr Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

985-3561
All Makes

Al•o TrluMiulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

NEW- RJPAIR

4·ZZ· B7-tfn

1

ALL

ROOFING

949-2263
01' 949-2168

.

1-3-'86 tfc

Howard L Wrlt1111

work

GEARY

Dealer

BUY - SELL- TRAOE
8-7 -1 mo.

Business Services
SAT , OCT. 10. 1987

POSTON LAKE

Mom's Carryout
Miller's Poultry
B&amp;K Pennzoil
D&amp;J Grocery

12:00-6:00
Monday-Sa1urday

Ph. 949-2969

Send resume to:
Margaret Holm. Asst . Admin .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

From Savannah, Georgia
"FRESH" SHRIMP SALE

Sept. 26 _; 6 P.M.-Warmup

'

Authorir"" John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

NO SUNDAY CALLS

McGuffey Lane

FRUTH
PHARMACY
782 N. 2ND
MIDDLEPORT

Located Halfway letwe ...
It, 7 and lashan

Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING

U. S. RT. 50 ~AST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

HRS:

Probate J"udge
l e na K. Nesselroad , Clerk
(91 1 o. 17. 24, 3tc

REGISTERED NURSE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PARTS • SERVICE

54 Misc . Merchandise
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On September 2, 1987. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court. Case No . 26620.
Shoilo A. Carsey, 38900.
leading Creek Road, Middleport, Ohio 46780. wao
appointed Administratrillll of
the estate: of Jack L Clark,
dBceased . late of Route 1 .
Rutland Street. Middleport,

BOGGS

Repairs on All Makes

Happy Ads

5

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

·~·-

·--

tor hom• with tmall children.
Call 814-448· 44715 .

Co11114-258· 8314.

~ .Li~ensed Clinical Audiologist

· -- · ..

AKC Ragistered Gordc:ln Sener.

1I'I 1 11 '

Well trained. NDt r•camm.nd.t

2 female kittens to alveew•¥·

,,

Equo l Opportunity Employor

Sept. 25 - 6 P.M. - Warmup

(0~~.~~~!..~~.~........... $5 40
LINE OF GREETING CARDS BY •••
CARLTON CARDS, INC.,
CARDS FOR ANY OCCASION •.a

. ESTATE NO , 26152 Final end D iatributtve Ac count of Arthur Warner,
Co· Exec:utor and ln11 Roy .
Co-E.-.eculri.ll of the Estate
of Etha J . Werner .
Oac:eased .
ESTATE NO . 23338 Seventh Accou nt .of Elmora
E. Boice and Remora C.
Young. Trustees of the Rev ·
mond E. Boice Trutt A .
ESTATE NO. 23339 S•venth Account of Elmora
E. Boice end Ramora C.
Young. Truateet of the ' Rav ·
mond E. Boice, Trutt B. ,
ESTATE NO . 22462 Stventh Annual Account of
Roben B. Titus . Guerdian' of
Sttt&gt;hen E. Titua.
ESTAT E NO. 26519 Firat tnd Final Aeeount of
Judith K . Moore. Guardian
o f the Est.le of Benie G .

Phil Dirt &amp; The
Dozers

ltlD 0"

NALDECON DX

C0'1E IN AND LOOK OVER .OUR NEW

Gtadyal . Moore, Ooceuoed.

3 Announcements

fE.A1tJ~\N~£0(l\.£MDll MOD£\.
TYLENOL

coum of Frank W. Porter. Jr ..
EJutcutor of the Estate of

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Selvices

- Plumbing and electrical

Funeral Home for

The public hear ings, which
bega n las t week wi t h five days of
tes timony from Bark, are in
recess un til Friday morning
after r unning through a day
almost overshadowed by the .
drama surrounding committee
Chai rman Joseph Bid en. D-Del.
Biden , dogged by reports of
plag iarized speeches a nd exag·
gerated academ ic records , an ·
nounced he was wit hdrawi ng
from the 1988 pres ide nti al race in
order to co ncentrate more fully
o n d e f eating
th e Bork
nominat ion.
Anti-Bork witnesses Wednes·
day - like the s upporters a
di sti ngu is hed g roup - depicted
the former Yale Law School
professor as an extremist and
urge d the committee to view with
skeptiCi sm his recent c hange of
pos ition on key Iss ues.
"Vi ews can be c ha nged , of
course. but his tory can ' t be
recanted," said Duke University
historian John H'vpe Franklin.

1 -M

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO MAKING
HAMMERED LAMP SHADES,

ALL OM ~ALE MOW!

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;1

would tr&gt;· to set ba c k individu al
right s a nd civi l liberti es.
A self-described liberal Demo·
cra t . Cutle r was considered a
prize ca tc h by the co mmittee's
pro-Bark Republicans trying to
overcome widespread criticis m
in order to pick up votes in a
Senat e •be lieved eve nly split on
the issue.

lellooWt

• ...Ill
• ••.•
. .••

ALUMINUM SHEETS

Recliners: Wall Savers, Rocker Rediners,
Swivel Rocker Rediners
Sleep Sofas: Twin, ·Full or Queen, all
with deluxe innerspring mattresses ·
Sectional Sleepers: Condominium size
sleeper with reclining ends or queen
·sleeper only.

.

CLEVE LA ND iUPI \ - Wed nesday's w inn ing Ohio Lot terv

lllo\rl

...
Ill.
.., •

-··----

CONTINUES••• .

(A s of 10: 30 a. m .)

Lottery numbers

q•

~•

• .•
....
• •••

1114~

CloJJified paKe• cover the
jollowint 1eleplwne aclumr•··· ·

ONLY

,.,.
·=-

..w•-., ........... · ·-,.

-·-............._________
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SIZE 23X30X007

I

Area deaths

...

AAnl

FOR SALE

of t he War Powers Act, sa id
Wednesday that the comp romise
being worked on " is clea rly a
watering down o f the
req uirem e nts."
" There seems to be a fear of
Co ngres~ involving itself In ma tters of war a nd peace," Weic kcr
said bitterly, noting that 15
Democra ts sided wi th Reagan In
defeating his at tem pt F rid ay on a
50-41 vote.
Asked why Democrats would
he lp Re agan wi n a fore ign policy
dispute, Weicker sa id , " I th ink
they'd rather lie in the weeds and
wait for Reaga n to stumble. t han
c ha l lenge h im and ta ke
res pons ibility."

4

1

2 adorable gray &amp; whit• kittens.
Call 614-448-8015 or 4483731 .'

·

war .

mainstrea m

Court office, at a total cost of
$2,025 . A two- year leaS'!&gt; ·
purc hase agreement for the
copter, at $91.49 per m onth . was
fi11allzed with Mi chae l Kiger,
Chesapeake , an aut horized sales
agent for the Xerox Compa ny.
Dan Nolte, of Casto Tec hnical
Services, Charlesto n, asked that
his COI)lpany· be considered to
provide maintenance of the
courthouse healing and cooling
systems . The county presently
contracts with Johnson Control
lor this service, . but Nolte was

The Daily

Ohio

Continued
from
page 1 _ _
• • • _
__
__.:.__.:.:.__

with Congress" over the situa tion In the gulf am id the Iran-Iraq

the

24. 1987

Meigs commission ... _ ::,:Co::.::n:::tln:::u:::ed:..:l:::ro:.:.m:..:p::...a.:ge_l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ~
were a lso conduct ed by the
commissioners during yesterday's m ee ting.
A resolution was passed au tho·
rizing Michael Swisher, direct or
of the Department of Human
Services, Io expand that depart·
ment' s computer system to han. die a ll fi nancial record keeping.
Costs to expand the system will
be reimbursed by the state.
The com m issioners moved to
purc hase a new Xerox copier
machine. fo r genera l use to be
hou sed In the Probate-Juvenile

Squads receive nine calls

Thursday, September

_Buying dally gold. silver coina,
rings. jawelrv. sterling waN. old
coint. •ue currency. Top pricu. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ava. Mlddlepon. Oh . 114992-3478.

Situations
Wanted

Older man wentsto move in with
tomeone who will help care for
him . In Gallipolia. Cell c••
manager 614-387-0161 .
Have a video tape made of
child's birthdr, perty. wedding.
parent 's annlvernrv , beby
showers, family reunion or anv
special occasion. Call814-9926969.

16

Schools
Instruction

Plano teuona, beginning and
ln,.termadieta studants. Call
Tereaa Oevis et 814-887-1311 .

18 Wanted to Do

Wanted to buy, standing timber.
Call AI Tromm at 614· 7422328 .

Can do light hauling end roofing.
Reasonable ntas. Marion
Snider. 814-949-2821 .

Old fumtture, toya. quHte. dlt·
hware. •c. One piece or whole
houeehold. cash paid, 304· 878·
7218 or 87&amp;·8889.

Grover• u ·w n Mower Atpaif.
Will pick up and deltv..-. Good
uted mowers fOf 111•. Cell
814·742-2393 or 814-7423091 . •••

�'
Th&amp;nday,' ~ember 24, 1987

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

18 Wanted to Do

49

s.,.ic tank pumping, reaklentiat
• eomm•ical. •ao per loMI.

For Lease

Newty remodthld ch•mlnp 1
br .. unfurnished a pta. in Galhpo·
lit. 1176· 1226 p..- month. Dep.
&amp;. Ref. required. Calll14-441-

Ron EYIIns Enterpriln. Jackson,

Ohio. CeU &amp;1•· 218· 1930

2325 or 448-4426 .

Jim' tOddJob 1..-vlce- painting,

c•penter work, aundeck, tidfng.
roofing. C.ll 114-379-2411.

Mer ch&lt;lllll is~~

Haul and Stack firewood. t30 a
lold. Call Ed at 114-UI-3978.

51 Household Goods

Colll14-387-7633.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolit;. .
NEW- 8 pc. wood gr:oup- S399.
Uving room tuites- t199 -8599.
Bunk beds wlth bedding- t199 .
Full 1ize mattreu &amp; foundation
aterting - t99. Recliners
•tarting· 199 .
USED - Beds, dre 1...-1, bedroom
suites. t199 - t299 . Deak1,
wringer washer, a complete line
of uted furniture .
NEW· Wetlern boots- 830.
Workboota .18 &amp;. up . (Ste. . .
aoh toe) . Call 614-446-3169 .

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG co . recommends that you
do butin•• with people you
know. and NOT to sand money

1hrough the mall""'" yoo hove
lnva.tigllted the offering.

VIIIIOO Cot Rote for ule. Call
614-949 -2140 before s,oo
p.m. 614-9.4 9·2220 evenings.

"BUSINESS MAN". Own your
own
Building O.a!ership.
manufaeturer
1elecrting
MajorSteel
dHier in available areas. High
potential profh•·Part Time or

CIIIIT M~Df-.- 5 ,_... •

~

Eam While You learn
IY!ou are between the ages of 18
·'«1 v••rs old 1nd would like to

receive your GEO, contact the
Job Service Office at .226 6th

Stroet in Point Pleaunt or call
304-876-2770 between Sept.
21 · Sept. 30 for details on how

34

44

,Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for laue.
Downtown Pt. Pleaunt. Stores.
oHicas. A-One ~eal Estate.
Carol Ve1ger, Broktr. Call 304675 -6104.

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Deluxe.1 bedroom, unfurnilhad.
All new eat-in kitchet'l , Clfpet
thru out. Proie..lonal penon
desirable. Ca11814-44e -4e07or
446-2602.

1 'A ac lot on Jerrvs Run Rd .
Apple Grove, with rural w1ter.

Furnished efficiency. private and
quiet. Single working . person
onty . . Call 614-446-4607 ot

446-2602.
2 Br., carpet. Stove. refrig.
furniahl8d. Waahar-drvar hookup. Water. garbage Plid. Near
Silver Bridge. Call 614-446-

Rentals
Hunts Sewing Machine &amp; Vac·

702&amp; .

cuum Sweeper Repair. Parts In
stock. All work guaranteed. At
tried everywtt•• else and failed.
gtve me a try. Call 614-446-

1488.
Piano Tuning. lane Daniela.
23rd year of serviec in Meig• ~
Gallia-M810n counties. 614-

742-2981 .

41

Modern 2 br. unfurnished apt.
No pets. Ref. required. Call
614-U8-1873, 8 -6.

Houses for Rent

Nicety furnished smell houn.
Adults only. References required . Off street JMfking. Ph.

814-448-0338.
.t BR . houM for retlt. 3 mi. 10. of
t300 • month plut
dep. Rtf. required. Call 614446-1616. After 6 :00PM .. call
4 OR . hou,se on 1 acre. E KCel
location. Ref . Call A-1 Real
Estate Broker. Call 304-87651 04 or 676-n38 .

Will help finance or land con·
traot. 10 yr. old house. 3 Br.,
P1rriot Vlll-ae. Call 814-448-

1340. 446·3870.

4 BR ., fireplace, full basement. 3
mi. 10. of Gallipolis. S34,900.
Call Oay•-8U·-446-1615. after

s,oo- 446-1244.

Uke new, maintenance free, 2
br. raneh. fully carplrl:ed . 16 min.
to Gallipolis or Mercerville.
S27 .000. Call 614-266-6200
For Sale by Owner; 4 -6 br:. 3
baths. ApproK"imately 4000 1q.
fl .. 26 aacres with tennis coun.
•173,000. Will 1ell with Only 5
acres for 1155.000. Call for
appointment 614-448-3386 .
3 br. doubl•wideon corner lot in
Thurman. Conerete· patios &amp;
!lldewalk. Fuel heat. rural wl1er.
Well kept inside &amp;. out. Call
614-245·5643 anytime.
Mercervi11•30 acres. 3 br.
hou!lt, barn, out buildings. IO·
bacco bue. paa1ure. S46,&amp;00.

Coll814-256· 9350 .
Handi Man Speeial- 5 room and
bath. 1ttic, basement . 110 State
St . Price neg. Call 61,·992 3726.
Government Homes ffom 11 .
IU -Repair). Also till delinquent
and foreclosure propartiel .
Available now . For listing. cell

1-315-733-6062 EXT G2021 .
Modular home, Carter French
residence. Comer of S . Fourth
and Hooker Sta., Middlepon.
Must 1ee to appreciate. Call

614-992-3293 .
Ranch-style house with breath
taking view of rNer . 3 bedrooms,
1 Y2 baths. tull basement. attached garage. Shown by ap·
pointment only. 614-99 2·3850 .

4 room house with basement,
laundry room, Pomero'f . $6500,
Call 614-992-2720 or 614992-3589 .
2 or 3 bedrooms, double lot,
close to sctloola and !ltores.

$18.000.00. 304-675-7833.

APARTMENTS . mobile homes.
houses. Pt . Plf!lasantand Gallipolis. 614-448-822 1 .

614-992-3689 ,

2 bedroom furn ll&amp;d apt, rlllf and
deposit. New Haven. W. Va ..
304· 882 -3267 or 304 · 773 ·
5024 .

Band area 4 bedroom home.
family room . 2 baths, g.-age.
Nice 3 bedroom home. garage.
ba1ement, large lot. Homestead

House. 3.15 ac. 2 br. tOialelec.
earpet through. 1 mile out
Foglesong Rd . Mason, WV.
304· nJ-5011 .
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM
11 (U'·Repair) Also laK Delin ·
quent S. Foreclosure Properties.
Available Now. For Listing. Call
1· 316·733-6062. ext . Gl573.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Furnished 2B~ .. cable available.
AC .. river view in Kanauga.
fosters Mobile Home Park. Call
614-446-1602 .

45

Furnished 2 br . Mobile Home.
Located in Centenar;" area. t200
a mo. plus Oep. Call 614-446-

other hours.

Witamen Reel Ettata Agency.

304-875-8&amp;12.

Office Spac:e tor rent. Excel.
downtown Galllpoli• loeation.
lnquiri_es call614-448-4222.

Colll14 ·268· 9309.
1971 121CII Hallm•k. Under·
pinning , pertially furnilhed .
t4000 or belt offer. C1ll 114-

388-9769.
14x70 Wind10r whh 14x30
addition, oc cond, black top
rold, approlt 3 acrn. Gallipolil
304-87~ ·6 930 .

1 972 Artington ~ 2x50 nlobile
home. air cond. gal furnace,
etove end raf•iu81or. some
turntture included. Mull be
mcwlcl from pr....,t location.

U .IIOO.OO . 304-Sa2-3798.

Furnithed Efficiency $146. Utili·
tin paid, share bath. 807
Second Ave.. Gallipolis Ph.
446-441 I aft It' 7PM .
Upttairt unfurni1hed apa,tment.
Utllltlet peld. Carpeted. no children or pets. Caii814-4A8· 1837
2 BR. aptt . 8 c:lo1et1, kttchenappl. fumiahed, Waaher-Dry•
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
palntad. deck . Regency, Inc.
Aptl . C•ll 304-876 -7738 or

614-448·3644.

Catalytic co nverters, o nl'y
889.95. Most modelt. lnstatlational•oavallable. Muffi•Man.
9 Stimpson Ava.. Athent,:Ohio.
1-800-843-3767.

614-992 ·5968 .
Portable Kerosene Hutef .
Toyo1tovu. 22 .700 BTU . Like
new . 1126. Call 614-949 -

2091 .

Floor lamp. 3 light, 110. Exercise bike, 130. Large 3 the&amp;f
nicety finished bookca1e. 120. 2
white ceramic Spanish decor
end tablA lamps wi.t h new
shades, S26. each. Call 614992· 2•13 after 6 :00pm.
Green House for sale. 21 ft . K88
fl . w~h PA 200 Modlnefurnecc!t.
inflation fan and benchn.
11000. 814· 949- 21 15.
Seotonad oak firewood. eall
304· 67G-2767 after 4 :30 .

otter s,oo PM .

Selmer Signet. 100 Clatinet.
Played 1 year; heel. cond.
1260 . Cell 014 -448-1166.
Conn Trombone. ,Uke new.
•226 . Call614 -446-7421 .
Bundy Clarinet and musie atand.
1225 . Excel. cond. Call 014446-1080.
Ludwig Snare drum, eomplete.
1150 . Gerneinhardt tlut. 1100.

Co11614-44&amp;-4141 .
Good used trumpet with caae tor
sale. Reasonable. Call614 -992 -.
~2 14 .

58

Beautlful4 pc. poster Queen ai:re
Bu1ett bedroom s uite. Like
new. 304-676-4108 .
Hospital btd. tir mattrets com·
plele with air pump. 1uctlon
pump. bedside potty chair.
walker. Poster bed, chest of
drawers , 2 cabinets. 304 -676·

3696 .
Two kicker speak en_for pick up
8176 .00 . Phone 304 -676 -

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

246-6121.

.

Concrete blockI allalzas yard o r
delivery. Mason tand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123 '12 Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614 -446-

2783.
Aeady ml• concrete and ell
concra1e supplies . Call us Valley
&amp;rook Cement and Suppli81.
304 -773·6234.

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Gruoming . All breads ., AII
St'fl es. Julie Webb Ptl. 614 -4460231 .
Dra gonwvnd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan . Pers ian end
Siamese ~ittent . AKC Chow
puppia1. New kittens; Persian• .
Call6 14-446-38•4 after 7PM .
AKC regislered Pakingeae puppies, S75 eac h. Adult Pekingne,
8100. Call 614 -446-7920.
mo . old temele miniature
Schnauzer, AKC regist ered . Ca ll
614-440-8024 after 6 :00 .

1

AKC Boxer. male. Call614 · 2566313 after 4:00 pm .
Female white Geiman Shepherd. 0 mos. old. Male white
Eskimo Spits, approx . year and
half old . Call 614· 446-4666 .
Siamese and Himalayan Kittan 1.
6 weeks old. Seal or lilac Point.
Call614-992-7201 .
Mutt se ll AKC Samo'fad puppy
89~ . Alto AKC Sheltie 1125 .

.45 caliber Ohio 1 75th Com memorative pistol. f500. Call
614-446-9476 aher 6 :00 PM
weekdaya.

H1lf BoKer puppiaa, cute and
friendly , 304-675 -7368 .

1127,

CltOOK!!Io.

..

Now open ell fruils and v&amp;gelablel, hours 9 :00 t ill 8 :00 . Jack I
Ftuil Mkl, Route 3$ . Hendllf'Son.

CROSS I SONS
U.S. 35 WMt , Jackson. Oh io.
Mas.-y Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush Hog S~tle• _, Sarvice. Ovet
4 0 u~ed tract ors 10 choo1e from
&amp; co mplete line o l new • used
equ ipmen t. large81 a.tection in
S.E. Ohio .
325 New Id ea 2 row narrow corn
picker . Field ready . Call 304273-3447 ,
Trov Buih Iiiier- 8 hp. new tlfu.
new fun ow marker. t700. Call
614-388-8819.
Ba rs, chai n1. and sprocket• to fit
al mo 1t fllny saw . S IDERS
EQUIPMENT CO,, Hender ao n,
W. \Ia. 304-675-7421 .
Homelile and Jon ' s~tted Servi ce
&amp; Supplin.
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO ,
Henderson , WV . 3 04 -&amp;76 ·
7421 .
1981 0 rav81¥ s now plOw.
mower deck . rotary plow cultivator. 304-773 -6011 .
Gehl9!i Grinder Mixar . Fknation
tires, 2 screena. auget'eKtenalon,
uc. co nd. •2500. 304 · 2734215 .
Parts for 460 John Deere dozer.
all like new, one front cross bttf'
1600 .00. one rear ~:;rou bar
5150 .00. two sprocket shitldl
1100 ,00. 72 track 1hoes 16 inch
$400 .00. Will sell all or part.
304-676-1076.

1979 Lincoln Mark V. hc•l.
cond. 41 ,000 milts. Call 11•·
1972 Buick Skylarll . New tifu.
Body in good shape. 8410 or
best o ffer. Call after 4 :00 PM .
614-;J79-26Q7,
19n Mercury Monar ct,. R~o~n•
good. Ooodworkcar . 1400. Call
Stalntaa• at•el eahau•t J'fltetl'la.
Now cuttom m1de for ¥'OUr
trut k, motOf home or clastic car.
With llf•11me wananty. Muffl•
Men. 9 Sttmp1on Avt~ .. Ath..,l.
Ohio. 1-800· 843· 3787.

1976 Oldl Delta 18 . Auto.
control. 1~00 . Good work
ear Call 114-949-2779.
cruls~

Duroc Boars. Bred just like the
boars we tesled at th• Ohio
Teltation that gained over• 2 .6
lb1. per day. Roger Bentll'f ,
Sabina. OH , 513-684-2398.

f!egiatered Chow Chow puppies. one red and one black.
a 176.00, can after 6 ;00 304·

64

I,:==========J.:::::::::::::::::::::.J
~

6579.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Tra nsportal1 on
71 Auto's For Sale
1985 Mercury-Montclair, claaaic
model. Good c:ond, new paint.
11500 or belt offer. Call 614-

387-0824.

1984 Mercury Topaz· ps. pb, ac.
am-fm. 48.000 miles, auto.
15900. Call 614· •41· 6132 or

448-0212 .

47 Wanted to Rent

1983 Cadillac Sedan Deville.
Excal. cond. loaded. Call anytime 114-388-9718.

Trailer 1pace on priv.at1-country
lot in back of New Haven or
Muon CountiH. Call 304-773-

j!

ij

For Lease

1987 Nova· &amp; cyl., auto. 1968
Nova, ttand•d. 1978 Plymouth
Scamp, 1980 GMC pidc-up.
1981 Oldt Cutla11 Supreme, 2
d.-.., hardtop, nice . 1978 21 ft.
camper. 1985 Olds . 442, hardtop. 1987 Chevy pick-up . Call
atter 6:00 PM or early AM

814-446· 2588.

"It's handy whenever cuQtomers change
their order troll) small to large."

1986 Coug8r. 3 8 V· 6. digital
•pHdornMar. llkt over pay·
menta. Can sM 2212 Mad ison
Ave. Poin t Pleeaant.
1982 AMC Spirh . 4 cvl.. 4
speed . Own owner. uc. cond..
will seU or trade for 1977
throu gh 1980 tour whHI driYe
trutk. Phone 304-882-)389.
1980 Dat1un 310, good runntng
cond, new-tkes, 304· 876 ·8730.
' 75 Chevrolet Capriee. 4 door.
air cond, new tires. 1400.00.
304-875-4394 after !li:OO pm.
1979 El Camino SS . air. lill
WhMI , cruila, PS. PB. 305 Y· 8.
304-676-5912 .
1982 Volkswagen Rabbit,
prieed to •ell, 12,295.00. 304-

578-4030 or 17&amp;· 4218 of1er

1986 Cavalier wagon. Auto, pt,

pb, ac. Callli4-388-8240.

'

(]) D (I) ltadgo Hammer!

~ , oo -

vengeful enemy. g
(!) ~dHto Chranlttn John
Adams 11 drawn Into conflict
between BrKaln end 1he
colonies.
1111 e1121 Tour of Dutr
Young U.S. soldiers are
thrown Into combat In S.E.
Aste. (Premiere) D
illl Only ona Ealtll This
glObal report on trees looks
e1 why fores1s · survival
matters.
1121 Prlmenewo Wrap ups of
tl1tl day' a world news and In
depth fea1ure reports. (1 :00)
IDl MOVIE: An Eye for Ill

1978 S1ar Craft told dOw"
cam per. 304-891 -3882 aft•

s,oo.

Servll.i'S
81

Home
Improvements

Ere (1:46)

74

Motorcycles

1983 Hond8 V-46. Entercaptor.
11600 . Call 814·441 · 9781
Day. atk tor Cllf.
1981 Hond1 CM 400 ttrhl
bike. low mileage, elec. ttart,
$1160. 1979 Honda XR 210 din
bike. •426 , Both vary good
cond, Call 814· 251·1924.
1187 Harley 883. 400 miles.
like new. Must ull. 13200. Call

Zhlvogo (G) (3: 17)

19B8 Hond1 200 4 wheeler,

$1200. Coli 114· 3Ba·9818.
1982 Yam•h~tl!i!O . 4cyl. Good
cond. •eoo . Call 814· 256-

1393.
1986 Honda Rebel 210. Red.
1200 .mll81. t?IO. Call 814·

., 44,·8308.

8:151ll MOVIE: Zono (1 :40)
1:30 • ()) Ill) A Dllfer0111t World
When Denise returns to
·school, aha clashes ~lth her
new roommate .
(]) • Cll , . Charming•
SnoW; EriC aniflilllan
discover the magic of the
modem credit card . Q
1:00 Cil 7110 Club
(]) D (I) MOVIE:

EEK&amp; MEEK

ctJ£ (COD SA'l' Hl5 HEAD 15
euT lH£ 11P Cf fl.l£.IC€&amp;Ja3

.u,.,.....

._'AIC
Tlturlclay Night Movie (PGI

RON ' S hlevleion Service.
HouH catls on RCA. Quazer.
GE . Speclaling i'l Zenhh, Call
304-578, 2398 or 814-448-

11:47) g
C!J ([D Myateryt Moriarty

follows Holmes end Wa1son
to SwiUarland with Intent to
J&lt;WI. (I :00) D
ill
'rtiiMIIIJ An
ambitious special prosecutor
unwittingly endangers
Vlnnla'a cover.
11J ...,. King Uvel In dep1h
ln1ervlaws wfth 1op
newsmakers and calebrttles .
1:30 • (J) OJ Night Coull Harry
se1s out on his stunt, but Is
confronted by a potential
suicide.
10:00 (]) lb'atght.Talk
llll Unaolved
Mylllrtea Hosted by Carl
Malden, the four cases to be
examined In detail are Hair
Hunter; Wanted: University
Bomber; Hot Wheels
Homicide; end Final Appeal .

2484.
F•ny lrH Trimrnint. sturnp
removal. Call 304-87.15-1331 .

•c

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Mott well• completed 1amaday.
Pump 1el11· and •8f\'lce. 304·

898 -3802

Sttrkt TrM nd Lawn SefVloe.
lawn ewe, landacaping, 1tutnp
removal , 304 · 67ti .2842 o•

~

FI5H I~

WINTERIZATION
Security Llghtl. Storm Win·
dowa. lnaulatton, Roofing. General Rap~ra . 304-1715 -135 7.

82

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY 06.D lOOK NE
WI"Tl-' H IM
YEST'ERClA.Y.

876-2903.

LJH- HUH ... A OI.NCE, A ORAWBRID&lt;;iE
AN DA LITTLE OLD LADY5 A:..JRSE.

DIDYOUCA1'01
ANYTHING:?

e ())

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PLUMBING

AND HEATING

C!J Upatalrt, Downatalre

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Oalllpolia. Ohio
Phone 114-446-3188 or 114448· 4477

Hudson expresses his
patriOtism In a•aggarated
anti German behevlor.
ill • 1121 Knoll Landing
Peter Hollister's dead body
could destroy Abby and
Olivia. !Premiere) Q
illl ®Newa
11J1 Evening Nawo A wrap up
ol today's naws and a look

BARNEY '
Electrical

TELL LUKEV I'M

&amp; Refrigeration

1 THINK HE'S SEEN ALL
TH' PINS HE WANTS TO
FER ONE NIGHT

READY TO GO
BOWLIN' OVER IN

Reaidenl ial or commwclal w lr•
ing. New service or r•peirs .
Licen1ed electrician. htimate
tree. Ridenour Electrical. 30•·

TWIN FORKS

ahead to tomorrow's news

stories. (1 :00)
10:30 ()) Grut American Outdooro
10:30)
illl Adamo Chronlcl.. John
Adams Is drawn Into conflict
between Britain and the

675 ·1786.

B5

General Hauling :

•

colonies.

Dillard Water Service; Pool•: : • .
Cia1ern1. Weill. OeUvery Any. "
time. Call 614- 448 - 7404 - N~
SUnday cella.

10:451ll MOVIE: Tlltl Prince and
the Pauper (NR!-&lt;2100)
1t:OO Cil Remington 8IHie
• l2l (j) • (J) I1DI e1!21
llll(!) NFL'a ~~~ Momenta
(T)

J &amp;. J Water Serviee. Swimming
poola,. cisterna. wells. Ph . &amp;14-

248-9286.
R S. R Water Service. Mome
ci1tera. walla, pools fiflad . Formarty Jemea Boy• Watera .Call

(!)lllgnOfl
IIJI Moneyttna Currant

reports on world economics
and flnancllll news with Lou

304-876 -6370.
Paul Aupe, Jr . Water Service.
Ca11114-448-31 71 . Pools, ciuerna, wells.

Dobbl. (0:30)

18 lloMJIIIOOIIerl
•

Wattaraon 's Water Hauling,
reasonable rates. Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, cisterna.
poDia. well, et.t; . oell 30• ·676-

2919.

Dump truck delivery; coal,
ltone, sand. gravel, till and
18Wduat . 304 ·675- 3190 .

87

Upholstery

A &amp; M Custom Couehe• and
Reuphola1ery, St. Rt . 7. Crown
City, Oh. 114·258-1470; Eve. •
814-441-3438. Open dally 9 to

(!) llportaCent.r (L)
(I) WKIIP Ill Clnclnllllll

e

PEANUTS

. ~

([D Wllclllt. ClnematogNpher

Wotrg.tg lerer Follow
clocumtntlry producer
Wolfgang Bayer n ha
ahOOta a Nature apecllll on
t11t1 Saguaro cactus ol
Arizona. Howle MoshoviU

.

-

'

LUCI{! OUR LAST GAME
OF TilE SEASON! WE
COULD ~AVEWON!AND
NOW.SUMMER'S OVER!

'"'Z((1·

I-lOW

COULD
'(()()MISS
IT?!

r

10

YEsiEIDAY'S SCIAM-iEiS'ANSwiiS "

Heron

·

Nubbin ~ Plumb ~
~ Cement ~ NUMBER .
My friends are very creative In the recorded m-gei they
leave on their B!ISWerlng machines: My favoi'fte: "We shall
neither sleep nor slumber unless you leave your telephone
NUMBER."
·

=
;'-....,

____:;B~R=l::..::lJ:_G....;;.

_

·..----N-oRTH-•.u--n---,

+u

:~~:0"

Givetherri room
for error

WEST

By James Jacoby

EAST

+QJlO

+987&amp;S

•532

•a7

eK752

et.Q3

61NtMP~A,.r
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

3 Taffeta
or moire
1 People
of Kenya
4 Ripen
6 Lqnd map IS Meddle
6 Inquiry
10 Arrange
7lllumined
II Inflexible
8 Seaweed
13 Rental
sign
extract
14 Japanese
9 Enervate
city
12 Faulty homb
15 Horrors!
17 British
Yesterday's Answer
16 Filch
bestowal
27 Gardening 35 Moab
18 Blazing
(abbr.)
need
mountain
19 East
19 Medit. fruit 29 Combatant 36 Footless
Indian
20 Dauntless
at Breed's 38 Withered
fruit
21 Lard
Hill
39 Cattle
21 False
22 Commotion 31 Medit.
brander
front
23 Food fish
island
40 Orchestra
24 Imprudent 25 Fruit
(abbr.)
42 Roman
28 Venerate
beverage
33 Stratum
greeting
29 One of
26 King's
34 Coach
44 Golf
the media
address
Parseghian
score
30 Foofaraw
31 Stringent
32 Dashing
chap
34 Miscellany
37 Circle
section
38 Kinfolk
41 Retaliate
43 Soap
or horse
45 Looking
down
46 He hit
755 homers
47 German
river
48 Tendency

DOWN
1 Companion
2 Medicinal
plant
DAILY CRVPI'OQUOTES- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR

to work it:

Is LONGFELLOW
. One letter stands for another. In this sample A i~ 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.
·

0

HW

· X I I'

CRYPTOQUOTE
CWX
GPFOPKP

OC

0 X

0 0

VWNH

X I P

~~ 'Night Hear Cll lAte

SNP.

...

••sz

· The Jacoby transfer bid informed +965
+QJlO
·South that North held five hearts and
SOUTH
sufficient strength !c) bid three nDtAK5
trump. Perhaps South should simply
.AQ9
have passed three nD-trump (nine
t J 10 B
tricks could be easier to make than 10
+AK87
since South had no ruffing values), but
Vulnerable: East-West
be ha&lt;l good heart support and there
Dealer: South
was a possible weakness in diamoods.
Ten tricks in hearts appeared hope- West
North Eut
less, since a club would have to be giv·
en up and even a dull-witted opponent Pass
s••
Pass
; would see the compelling need for a Pass
3 NT P...
diamood shift. But declarer used a Pass ·
Pass
P...
•Jacoby transfer
, simple tactic to give the defenders
·room for error: He allowed West to
Opening lead; • Q
hold the opening lead with the queen of
spades. Despite the discouraging
three-spot played by East, West blind· L--------~-..J
ly continued with another spade. De·
clarer drew two rounds of trumps,
•
played the third spade to discard a monds. Tbe play ofthe diamond two at
club from dummy, and then A-K and a i the second trick w~uld set tbecoatract .:
club ruff made the last club a winner.: nght away: If a d1amond Is played at
(South had been careful to preserve tr~ck_ two, 18 there any cue for ~t
the heart queen as an entry hack to his · wmmn~ that diamond ace and CODling :
hand.)
back w1th the club queen? Em~tiNooe of this excuses West from cally no. If W~t had the _club ace rathblame. When East signaled for a er than .the diamon~ k1ng, be would
switch, West should have worked .out ha-:e sw1tched to ~ b1gb diamond (1mthat his best chance to set the contract ·plymg.top-of-nothmg) rather than the
was to find East with strength in dia- deuce .

D P FA

~

II

'

LETTERS IN SQUARES

0 Sparta Tonight Action
packed !lpOitl hlghllghtl with
Nick Charlea and Jim Huber.

Night A prooHute'a father Ia
lmplcatld In 1ha murder ol
her pimp.

c.. •_,.

..

Complete lne chuckle quolad
~v filling tn the missing words

A .J X P .

NPASTP

WA

narratu.

Up~oateract .

MoWrey '• Uphol1tarlng tervlng
,•
trl c:ountvarea22 veer•-The batt
·'
in furniture urholtterlng.
304 - 17! - 4 14 for tr , e . ·;
eltlmetea.

Dad telling son a story, "So
Jack ate the magic ben, grew
to be seven-feet, four.fnchea ~.
anci lived happily ever after wl1en
he 11~~ i multimillion doll•

PRINT NUMBERED

e (I) Nlglltllne Q

Ill Magnum, P.l.

4'30. Sl1. 9 ,30 1o 1 '30. Old &amp;
new

(IJ Love Connection

11:30 D l2l llll Tonight ShOw

.

614-286-6008.
1971 Honda 450 . Loadad.
12150. 1984 Thoma• moped,
t2110. Wreaked 1873 luldc
Opal. '76. Clll 814-318 ·9773.

(IJ MOVIE: Doctor

•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnoonOitk?n• llf .. ime guautn•
t . .. L.o cet raferenOM furnlahN.
,,.. attlmatu, Call cotlect:
1-014-237-0488. d., or night•
Rogeralaatmant
Wat•prootint,

114-446-8683.

1980 ford Van E1 60 custom
paint. ehrome wagon wheels.
new WSW tirn. CB. t4.600.00.
304-175-1731 '

Investigation Into a campus

CCHid killing unlltlsks a

1973 Dodge w..-fatl'f MoiOr
Moma CI•••A. Air ' con~i1ion• .
g_en.,ator. SIHps8 . Ooodc:ond.
•saoo. Ca11614 ·258· 133Z.

Trucks for Sale

1979 Volk1wagan van. Call 'atter

'

~

e

ClnciMad
8:00 Cil Hell Town Stumpy Boy
• ()) llll , . Colby Show
Sondra and Elvin return from
their honarmoon w~h
sU.prlolng news.
(!) Cohgl FOOIMI

MACf'.

8853 .

84

8o 4 W .O .

MAC'~-l!M

(8) ao.p
(l) WKIIP In

•

1969 To'fOta, 304·676-2507 .

Vans

•

24 h . Coachm1r1 c.-np•. like
new . Call aftl'f 6 :00 81&amp;-UI·.

1977 Chev Nova. good tires.
body, runs gfaat , t475 .00. Call
after 4 :00, 304-468 .1628 or

1979 Jeep CJ -7. Aulo , chrome
grille S. whiCIIa. 13200. 1870
GMC truck 12 ' dump, 16000.
Call614 -446-7017.

--A r•81c;

1111 WhHI of Fortune Q
. 11J1 C1011ttr. 10:30)
e1121 llll Jeopardrl Q

79 Motors Homea
&amp; Campara

6;00 pm .

675-1879.

No, ~OT

1-800-143-3787 .

441-0214.

1972 Ct,evy half ton. 4 wheat
drive, auto, good cond, dav• call
304· 876-4230 •venlngt 875·
4863.

Mlltld hay t1 . bale on wagon.
H1y for bedding 60c. 304· 676-

(]) Newlywed Game

AND ERNEST·

1977 Camero. runa &amp; lookJ
good. 304-773-11244.

73

l l l l'
_ _ _ _ _
1
7

(!) Sp11d.,..k (T)

Auto Repair

SWEEPER and MWing maehine
repair. perta, and
Picll
I.IP and deUvery, Oavi1 Vacuum
Cleaner. ont helf mile up
Georg• CtMII Ad . . Cell 1114-

a35.00 . 304-875-4589.

Hay &amp; Grain

7:30 D ()) Hollpood SquiNI

al ....onal. • each. radiat
P231R71 -1 5 Inch , all for
128.00. 304· 875· 1731 .

1985 Dodge baytona. furbo Z.
rMI-sHvar. alack tuthlf. aun·
r06f. loaded. Naw tir•. 30.t876-5301 after 5 p.m.

72

Pigs for ule, 8 weeka old, malt
and femal e, caa treted . wormed ,

876 -6799.

1979 P ontiac · 8onneY ille
8raugnam, 3&amp;0 anglnt , lqaded
with all op1ion1. hcellent condi·
tion. Call 014 ·992·6717.

2985.

livestock

(l)

1977 P!ymourh Volar e. Good
cond. 1300. Call 114· 843·
010t.

' 78 Chryller New Yorker.
$400.00, eall evenings 304Now buying shall corn or ear
corn. Call for 1ataat quotes. River
City Farm Supply. 614-446-

ia.naon
e M"A"S"H

1 e . ~- Can

Strut I. I 1 19.96 pair, lnatallad.
Mo11 modela. Muffler' M•n. I
S1impaon -' .... Ath.e ns, Ohio.

468-1728.

62 Wanted to Buy

reports on workt economics

Tire~.

1978.Ch..,y Monza . Runagood.
lo is of new per'ls. ~aceUenl work
car. sooo Call614·941 · 2•1o.

61 Ferm Equipment

63

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
•1121 llll Wheel of F-n•

77

Two 1914 Dodge connrtab+•.
Need rutoratlon . 13150. for
both. Call 114 -992.9922 aher
4:00pm,

Fum SUPillleS
&amp; Live stock

Dual exhauat kill, 199.98 in·
atallld . Malt Fords. Ch.vy
trucks. Vena. 4x4' a. Mutfl•
Man, I Stimp.on Aw., Athenl.
Ohio. 1-800-. . 3 - 3787 .

l

'--1-...I..-.1..-L.......I-...1 yQu develop frorn step No. 3 below.

CioN for Comfort
7:00 (J) flemington StHie
D ()) PM Magazine
(!) Sport.C.nter (L)
iii Entanalrlment Tonight
8 (I) PitOfM'o Coull
C!J illl MllcNelt/ l.ehNr
NawaHour (t :OO)

- - - - - - - - - -lc-

For Sale Of T,ada: 1 9BO Chav.
Wagon . elf . ~1500 . Ro toliller
175. Ctl.l 614--446·91584.

614 - 245 · 82~4 .

1973 Old•. 1660 or trade for
riding lawn mower of equal
value. Call 614 -448-1759

1

(IJ Too

I1DI Nawa .
IIJI Monertlna Currant

)II

5

®Jell-•

r.-

~~ I

1_ _ _ _
...__
N_I_L_U_S_T_.,

lll8 D1121 CIIS Nawa
illlllocll1121 Sllowetz Toclar News of
tl1tl entertainment world Is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)

Budg.t Tr~nsml11ion' : U1ed
buitt. all typea. Ouarsntee 30
deya. Cuh and Carry or lnatal.
Call 814 · 379-2220.

4 tirM to.- Nle. B. 7&amp;
11.-992-5911 .

~~l:l~
f ASRC •

.

.(I) Juclgt

248-9410.

Beautiful AKC German Sh•
pherd pupa, 2 black males
$260.00 e&amp;ch. 2 Saddle males
Sl 160.00 each. 61 4-886· 6086 .

s'PACES FOR RENT - Trailer
Iota. Rt . 1, Locust Road, back of
K &amp; K. 304-878-1076.

'

1986 S -10 Bluer. 10. 000
·m iln. Loaded, 1harp. Call 8H·
446·8281, Afttr 5:00 •4&amp;·

Qualit-y Fruita end Vevetabln
retail and wholeula. B &amp; S
Produce across from Plu1 Mut.
Gallipolis. Ohio .

304-576-2728 or 675-1867.

w .vo. Coli 304· 773-6681.

614-446-2326 or 448-4428 .

8305.

614-286-6461 .

Spaea for smaH t'{tllers, All
hook-up•. Cable. Als4 efficiency
rooma. air and cable. Mason.

1400 aq. ft , commercial space.
Suitable tor offlcea ur retailing.
Corner of 2nd. &amp; Pine. Call

1960 Olda. Super 88. Low
miles, run a good. Calll14 ·446-

1985 Ford Escort. Good cond.
Call 814 -388· B118.

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS.
01la end Wilma Wood repraaentat ivea. We spon1or fund rai1 ing
program•. 304-6715 .1090.
GE apt alz:e port1ble wuh..- and
dryer S226.00 . RCA Whirpool
trnh compactor. like new.
1176 .00. 304-675-1731 .

1985 Plymouth Hor izon. Auto,
ac .. 4 dr . 29.000 mlln. 13600.
l£aU 814-379-2721.

Canning t omaloes. You pick!
John Mills Farm. letan Falla,
Ohio. Bring conlalnera. 14. per
bu1h&amp;l .

'

ElectroluK .vacuum cleaner. runs
like new , wittl attachment s.
S58 .00 ca1h or term a arrang.-d.
Phone 304· 675-4418.

197B Ford Pinto. 1972 Ford
Pinto. New Lincoln Arc weldar.
Slide- In truck
camper. Call
614·446· 1•&amp;2 or 446· 8462 .

CRARE .I :l·
I'11~11_

e ())
e

HAVII&lt;&lt;:; FLJN CATCHING

ReMI&gt;Jt&gt;t; VOU OF .
t;MOI&lt;ItJ(;.

:,MOKioJGo

T~EiREi

$760. 080 . Coli 614-892 -

876·5104.
Furnlthed Apt.· 1 Br. 1225.
UtiNtl• paid. 701 4th Ave.
Galllpolil. C•ll · 814·448-4416

NOW , THE:

FIR~T !OT~P
IIJ ~UITTitJG

.

-wMtt 1:. OUT

t;TAV AWA'I FROM
AN'/ PLAC.&amp; THAT

•

Computer cash r~i1ter. very
good condition. Reasonable.
Alao buainMI showcase. Cell

I1DI • 1121

aq...,,.

9922 after 4:00 pm.

7479.

49

CAPTAIN EASY ·
•·.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

(I)

(!)Dr. Who
illl
0.,. TV 1;1 .
IDl Good Tlmea
• m 011e DQ at a nme
1:30
llll NIIC Nightly Newa
(!) Wlnner'a Circle (T)
(I)
(I) AIIC Newa !;I
(!) Nlglltly llulinMI lleporl

I'

MR . M&lt;K~e-

76

()) (I) •

Dead

(!)

Hob-" 1712 Meet Slicer. New,
sold for 82600 .. will aell tor

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailera. Call 814-892-

6828.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

•

~oz

!Ill-•
&amp;portel.ook (T)

11 ft. boat, motor, and trail• ,, •·
and all auppti•. •eoo or Mil ::·
offer. Call 814· 318·9871.
&lt;

Mixed hard wood slabs. S12 per
bundle. Contalnint ap'prox. 1 ~
ton. FOB . Ohio Pellet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-992-6461 .

One black Nebian goat and
ducka. phone 304-676-7717.

For Sale : Firewood. Now taking
orders. Hardwood. Large piekup
load . Call614-448 -1437.

75

I- -----,.-----

TIIAT DAILf
PUUUI

THURS.: SEPT. 24 •
l:tiO (]) CNzJ Ulce •
on Ar~val

..

1979 Honda Tra1190. low IY'Heia.
like new. t450.oo. 304-87&amp;?
1731 .

Sentinel-'!? u1?

EVENING

cAP!;!

....

Motorcycle Honda CRBO. uc
cond, phone 3Q•-175·1298.

Set of China: ServiCe for 8 &amp;
'e xtra pieaes. l.adl• wrisrwatch,
&amp; m lae. ltemt. Cllll 814-448·
B106 .

•

at iH!;

uaed vll"f' littta, 304-171· 216,9
or after 1 :00 cell 875· 1211 .

Cemetery tot for 2 pertons at
Memorial Clardena. $600. Call

or 614 -446-3978.

Sale or Trade: Bowa for firearms.
Darton compound Ban Pearson
Recurve, all accessories. lntlatable boat. C1ll 814-446k9636.

46 Space for Rent

bedroom mobile home. fur nished. 1185. Pius UtilitiM. Call

1978 Bayvhrw 2 br,, front den,
porch 6 awning, ac., 180d0.

firewood . Stock up for winter.
830 a piclc -up. delivered. Call Ed

. ,30 -4 ,30 . 614 -992 -2363

1

9966.

Big Dakota Farm home buill on
your lot. 1512.996 &amp; up. Call
614-886 -7311 .

Rooma tor rant by week or
month . Call 614-992 -7621 ,

2 bedroom house with ba••
ment, gll'age, one mile from 'V
on 82 Souttl . 304-876-8838 Or ·

1 end 2 bedroom apart menu for
rent. Basi c rent for' 1 bdr ..
1183.00; 2 bdr,, 1219.00, Also
required a t200.00 aecurlty
dePOiit. CONTACT; Jaekton
Estate• De·pt. Ph 448-3997
Equal Housing Opponunity.

Firewood for aele· 830 .00.
pick-up load. delivered. Ca11
Roger Ma1de- 614-388-9016
or 38B -9341 .

Furnished Rooms

Office Space for Rent. hcellent
for Attorney•. Accountant. etc.
Clo1e to Court House. Call

1970 Elcona12x66, 2 br .. elec.
heat. gas 1tove, refrig. Must
move. Financing po11ible, 10
per cent down. with approved
credit. t4600. Call 614 -4;46-

Qualit't firewood, all hardwood,
for sal,. t25 a pick-up load . Call
61 4-36 7 -0669 '

furnished room . S76. Utilitiea
paid. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416
ah8f
_
___
_7pm.
_:__ _ ·lc-

For Rent : Mobile Home, 2
bedroom, utilities paid . On river
in Middleport. 614-992-5949 or

Apartment
for Rent

Plaatie cistern state 1pproved,
plastic septic tanks. plast ic
culverts. metal culverts, RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Ja ck·
IOn, Oh. 614-286-6930.

Rooms for rent. day. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614·
446-9580. Rent aa iow aa 8120
month. .

2390.

44

Callahan ' s Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tire1. sizea12. 13. 14. 1 6.
16, 16 .5. B miles out Rt . 218 .
Can 614-256-6251 .

One bedroom effiency apt. stove
and refrigerator furnished , ideal
for one person, utilities eKcept
electric furnished . 304-675691 1 available Oct , 1.

Double wide. 4 bedrooms, located in Middleport. 1276. per
month. f100 . deposit. Call
614-992·2394 ahar dark.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

54 Misc. Merchandise

Two bed room apartment. 304676-2648 .

814-992-9903.

.

Tre1tle table. 60 inche1 plus two
leaves; wi1h bench and four
chain. very sturdy, call 304-

1t1A1-J lJ.IAT

1984 SuzuldJuntor motoraycla.

Building Materiall
Block. brick. sewer pipes. w)n.
dowa. lintels, etc. Claude Winters, Rio Grande. 0 Ca ll 614~

King Si!e 8ookce1e Waterbed.
complete. $239. Manreu . Waterbed and Fum lture Warehouse , 9ft Columbus Rd ..
Athens. Ohio 45701 . 614-5937191 .

~!25'S

Compound bow- Bear Griulyll ,
arrows. aights &amp; caae. heel .
cond. 1100 nag. Call814-388-

3 upright vacuum cloanert. A-1
condition. 2 tank type1 . Unconditionally guarntead. 3 sewing
machines. Call 614-448-1488:

Good used ctrpet: 1 piece111t 16 tan, 1 piece- t 2x24 .rusl .
Call 814 -446 -1618.

l.OeSTei&lt;S

1,000 CC, Goldwlng, full drna.
304-17~-2131 .

55 Building Supplies

Warm Morning heater. Completely automatic with blower.
natual gas. 86 ,000 btu. See; 87
Vine Gallipolis.

One bedroom furnished apartment, ground floor. private
entrance and parking. Outslcirta
Hendaraon. all utilitiet included.
8260 . 304-675-6730 .

GOVERNMENT HOMES for
t1 .00 (U Repair) BUV OIRE.CTI
Repos &amp; Tax SEIZED properties.
Call tod.., for factal 1-518-4593646 , ext . H2284 (totl refundebfel 24 hOura.

Forry.

1ltlt.Ee
2828.

Tt,::t Daily

Television
Viewing

.14 FOR At.ce:;~~AVJ, (.QjJE. ()1!1,7-:::::=:::_r-7, CAIJ

Motorcycles

0904 or 248-&amp;188.

vanwv Furnilure
New and used furnlture and
•pplicances . Call 614 -446 7572 HoUrs 9 -6 .

882 -2812.

882-2406.

Trailer for rent in Tupper; Plains.
3 bedroom. t200. month plu•
deposit and utilities. 614-6673487 .

Uud refrigeratprs. washers
and dryers. Mollohan Ap·
pUance. Call614-446-1957.

3 rooms and bath, gas heat,
ground floOf . washer and dryer
hook up, no children. immediate
ocoup1ncy. No pets. phone
304-675-44BO eKt 63 or 60.

Raolly, 304-675-6640 or 304-

2 bedroom, furnished, good
clean condition. One child. no
pets. 1160. PM month. New
Haven. 304-882-2466.

THE WORKING
MAN :s FRIEND

bedroom, upataiu, newly
r~modeled . Stove end refTlgerator furnished. t200. per month
plus utilities. 81 00. deposit
required . Call 614-992-3489
I!N&amp;nings. ·

Two bedroom house on Lincoln
Hill, Pom•oy. with refrigerator
and cook stove. $226 per
month. Call 614-992· 2720 or

2 &amp; 3 br. mobile homes. Call
614-446-0627 after 2 PM .
anytime week-ends.

New wood 6 pc. living wood
suites. 5399.96; chest of drawen. 4 drawer - 148, 5 drawer159.95; mattreaa &amp; buK springs·
full s ize; 312 coil, 1149.96 sat;
set.
twin manraaaea. 195

2

One bedroom apartment in
Middleport . 8150. p11 month
plus utilities. Call 614-992 5545 days and 614-949-2216
evenings.

814-247-2532 .

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

BORN LOSER

1988 HOnda ATC 70 3·whHier.
exc. cond. t400 . 304-871-

8"12111 1lh Braided rug. 1tereo,
aleetric he1t1r. Call 614-•41·

2688

· Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartment• at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart mef1tS in Middleport. From
$216 . including utilities. Call
614-992-7787. EOH .

3 br . whh garage. Rodney II .
t300 a month. O.p. Ill Ret.
required. Call aft..- 4 :00 PM
614-388-8624 .

2 br .. wall to wall carpet. Private
lot in Gallipolis. Call 614-4461409 after 6:00PM .

878-14041.

74

Ward wood burniH'. 12 gauge
32'' lull choke shotgun. Browning pt~tent. Call614-440-33•1 .

SliVa alot-Check u1 out for 2029.
car pet and furniture. 9 K12
Carpet. t&amp;O. 6 piece wood living lntartharm Iii" furnace. 1 year
room suit, S399. Mollohan · old . 52 .000 blu , t200 .00. Used
Furniture, Upper River Rd . Call Tappan gas took stove . good
cond. 175.00 . Phone 304 -88 2 614 - ~46 - 7444 .

Nice 2 br. apt. Stove, refrig.,
water fumiahed. 4 112 miles ffom
Gallipolis . 1210 a mo. No pets.
Call 614-446-8038.

45 Spruce St.- Nice 3 br. house.
Urge equipped kitchen, central
air. wuher &amp;. dryer. ~o pets.
Ret. &amp; Oep. required. t300 a
month. Call 614-448-2158 .

6 room house. two baths. new
root . Nusa1h windows. garage.
246 N. Fourth Ave., Middleport .
Make offer. 614-247-4672 or

90 Oay1- same 11 cash whh
approved credit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am t o 5pm
Mon . thru Sat . Ph. 814-4400322.

Furnished apt.- 4 rooms and
bath. Centralty located. Ref. and
Sec. dep. required. Call 614446_-0444. '

446-1243.

Unfurnished house. 3 br . Rodnev Village II . 8276 . Call 814446-4416 after 7 :00PM .

Sofas and chairt priced from
t395 to 8995. Tablle1 160 and
up to t126 . Hide-a·beds 1390
to 1596. Recliners 1225 to
S375. Lampl 128 to '1126.
Dlflaltes 8109 and up to 1496.
Wood table w-6 chairs 1286 to
1795 . Desk S100 up to 1376 .
Hutchea $400 and up , Bunk
beds complete w-m8ttreues
· 1295 and up to S395 . ·Baby bod1
11 10. Mat1;ressas or boK springs
full or twin t68. firm S78, and
S88. Queen 11111 1226. King
1360, 4 dr~er chest 169. Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Gas or electric
range 1375. Baby mattreaae1
135 a. 1•6. Bed fram" UO.
$30 &amp; King frame 160 . Good .
selection of bedroom auittn.
metal cabinet1, headboards f30
and up to S65.

Co11814-446-9244.

Hou. . $36 1st Ava . partly furnished. 1200 per month. Call
814-446-4038 or446-1615 or

Call 614-448 -9686.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Unfurnished apt. for rent. f275 .

Very nice. 3 br. houM. Nice
neighborhood. a c., gu heat.
dilhwhher , ltove. refrlg .•
w ..her furnithed. Ctll 814446-7026 . LEASE AVAILABLE .

for Rent: 2 br., unfurnished
house whh garage. One mila oU1
218 off Rt. 7 . Accept one child .
1200 a month plul dep . 6 ref.

W11hers.
dryers , refrlgeratQra.
ranges . Skegg1
Applilnce1 ,
Upper ~iver Rd. beside Stone
Crett Motel. 014- 44e - 7398 . ~

BroOkside Apartments: 4481932 or 446· 4639 . One bed·
room apertment with large
country kltohen. new appliances. utilhy room . water, sewer
and traah let'Vices provided.
Quiet area .

448-1244.

Homes for Sala

GOOD .USED APfUANCES

Ouplu: -e4e Second. 3 br.• living
room-dining room, full catpet.
new earpet, ni'W kitchen &amp; bit h.
Great loccation. t286 plu1
utiliti". Call 614-446· 0690.

~allipolit,

Re al Estat e

s.,.

Apartment

Furnished apt. ned to library.
One profeaaional adult only.
Parking. Call 614-446-0338 .

304-576--2383.

reasonally pricn. If you hwa

Opon BAM to 6PM . Mon thru
614, 44&amp;· 1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Glllip.olls . .01:1 .

for Rent

to appty. An EEO Emp_loyer.

Professional
Services

County ApPliance, Inc. Good
uaad appliancn and TV .....

~-;:;:=:;;;:::;:====::,r.~==;~======~

Full Time. l3031769-32oo EXT.
JTPA
HIGH SCHOOL DROPOUTS

~ -l~

....,..,.__

"Th'lS VCR remo t e control
h
inte.-. eres wit my grand's pacemaker·• When
father
.
you push
'fast-~orwar· d,' he
.
.11
break dances." "

2407.

31

Misc. Merchandise

814-441' 2520 .

Financ i al

23

54

. KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry WriGht

B282 .

Wanted to do HouteclewMng.

21

Thursday. September 24, 1987

.Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

QWCAPDDPH

P KP NU
A .1 0 F.I

-

JCHNPV
DWSX.JN
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: t'I..ATIERY IS FROM THE
TEETH OUT; SINCERE APPRECIATION IS FROM THE
,HEART OUT. - DALE CARNEGIE

.,

-

�•

PN•

Princeton tops UPI's first Division I ratings

o/nbeaten Waterford volleyballers
hand Eastern seventh loss in row
· f:AST MEIGS - In girls high
school volleyball action Waterford. undefeated at 10-0, handed
Ellstern Its seventh straight loss
without a win In a non- league
match recently, 15-3 and 15-4.
Lori Spencer led Waterford
with 11 Serving points, Christy
Berkheimer
added 6, Missy ·
~hilling 5, Tract Strahler 4,
Missy Watson 2, and Sharon
Neely 2.
Amy Hager and, Trlsha Spencer
each added 3 for Eastern. Llsa
Driggs added 1.
Servlrig wise Spencer was 11-11
and Schllllng 3-3- Watson had
&amp;-7 kills.
Waterford defeated Eastern in
ti,e reserve match 15-5 and

ls-5.
. Rachel Huck led with 8 aild.
•Darla Pugh 7. Carrie bernard
added 3 for Eastern .'
ln ' a recent . non-league game
Eastern gave it all they had In
taking Oak Hill to the limit before
running out of steam In a
disappointing loss in three sets,
1&amp;-14, 9-15, and 15-5.
Coach Pam Douthitt a dded,
"We played hard tonight. I was
very pleased with our playi ng .
We got our serves in and really
showed a lot of hustle . I think the
girls realize what it takes to have
a good match."
"We didn't win tonight bu t if we
C()ntlnue to play as we did tonight
we will begin tqget in the winning
·column." sa:td the veteran coach:

. Thursday, _September 24, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

14-The Daily Sentinel

Missy Ingram led the Lady
Oaks with 13 markers, M. Adkins ·
and Gallimore had six each, ·
Ondera 4, Welch 4, and Jenkins 3,
Senior Amy Berkheimer paced
Eastern with three serving
points and 3-for-4 Spiking with
a tremendous '2 3-26 · set ting
turnover. Mel Mankin turned In a
super effort with a team high 11
points, 3-3 spiking, and 17-19
sweep on setting conversions.
Amy Hager had 7, Lisa Driggs
6, Trisha Spencer 5, and Edna
Driggs 1. Trisha Spencer also
had 10-11 spiking game with two
big kills . '
A tough Federal HOcking club
laced the Eagles In two sets 15-8
and 15-9 as Eastern's offensive .
woes continued.
Mel Mankin led the EHS
scor ing with 7 points, Hager had
4. Lisa Driggs and Trisha
Spencer had 2 each, Berkheimer
one, and Edna briggs one. ·
.B erkheimer 'fas 1-1 spiking
and 7-8 In setting conversions.
Lisa Driggs was 5-7 spiking with
3 kills and SpencPr 3-3 with 2
kills.
Mankin had another great floor
game with n for 15.
In reserve action Eastern
dropped two competitive bouts to
drop to 1-5 ·overall and 1-3 In
the league .
Christy Tate and Susan Lea therwood paced the winning
attack with 7 and 6 respectively.
For Eastern Lori Baker had 7.

Lori Burke 6, Angie Chapman 2
and Heather FlnlaW and Mandie
Harris one each.
At Oak Hill Eastern went down
to defeat 15-5 and 16-i4 ln two
sets.
For the winners c. Carney led
with five, while Kern, Adkins,
and V. Adkinss each had 4.
Amber Short and Carrie Bernard shared top scoring honors
with 5 each for Eastern. Mandie
Harris had three, Burke two,
Flnlaw one, and Toby Hili one.
Eastern travels to Southern on
Thursday.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Cincinnati Princeton held a sllm
lead over Canton McKinl~y in tlie
first week of the revised 1987
United Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
football ratings. .
Princeton, 3-0 after a 42-0 win
over Cincinnati Sycamore last
Friday night , held a 187-177 point
margin over McKinley In the big
school Division I as the UP!
coaches ratings sw itched from
three classlflcatlons tA, AA and
AAA) to . five divisions for the
first lime tl\ls year.
The other four leaders In the
first of eight weeks of balloting
were Clevdand Benedlctlne In
Division II, Orrville In Division
lfl. Columbus Academy In Dlv·
Is ion IV and Newark Cathollc In
Division V.

Princeton and McKinley, also
3· 0 following a 34-7 w,.n over
Akron Garfield on Friday nigh I,
each collected nine first place
votes from ' the Division 1
coaches. Cleveland St. Joseph , a
22·0 winner over Lakewood St.
Edward over the weekend, was
third with 143 points, followed by
Cincinnati Colerain with 98 a nd
Westerville South with 86.
Rounding out the Division l top
tr n were Toledo Whitmer ln
sil(th , followed by Zanesville,
Gahanna Lincoln, Day! on Wayne
and Mentor. All have 3-0 records .
Benedictine, 3-0, held a big lead ·

FAMILY PRACTICE
CALL -FOR AN APPOINTMENT

In his kick-boxing career Nltz
POMEROY - ~ Brian ''The
owned
a 2-l-0 amateur mark
Blitz" Nltz, widely known area
with
two
knockout s and a profes·
boxer from Middleport recently
slon
a
l1-1-0
with one knockout.
retired as a professional boxer a t
1n 1986 Nltz claimed the runner
the young age ol20.
Nitz complied an amateu r up spot in tll'e Banda National
boxing record ol60-10-1 with28 Kick BOxing Champion ships a nd
knockouts enroute to winning the was the 1987 Middleweight WV
Ohio State Golden Gloves Cham- State Kick Boxing Runner-up .
Nltz's highest honor ca m e
pionsip ln 1983. In 1984 Nitz was
when
he won the I987 middlefirst runner up In the state
weight
World Kick Boxing Cha m championsh ips before also inpionship
for the WKA 1Worlding
volving himself in Banda Kick
Klckboxlng
Associa tion ).
Boxing_
Supportive of Nitz during his
Nitz later ·turned to profes - career were ,Carl Hysell, Roger
s iona l boxing, where he compil ed Stewart , Ha,rold Willis. Blll Hara 6-0-0-6 record Including a ris, a nd a hos t of other loca l
people Nltz car es to thank .
perfect 6 knockouts .

882-3134
DOCTORS HOURS
M-TH:· 10-1, 2-6 F: 10-12

IN ASSOCIATION WITll

Dd
Y1 ':!~.~~!.~~~~!~~!!!
..
Protession~ls
' The Fam1 ly ol

Vo1.37, No.97
Copyrighted 1987

•

The Senate .wi ll reconvene next Wednesday for
almost certain ratification of the package, which
Cov. Richard F . Celesle has promised to sign
when It reac hes hi s desk, e nding two years. of
torturous debate on the Is sue.
"This is the stro ngest, m ost comprehensive
insurance reform in the history of Ohio, and the
stro nges r, most comprehensive insurance reform
In a ny state in the country in the last two years."
said Rep . Mi chael P . St inzla no, D-Col umbus, the
chief spo nsor.
But Rep. Jose ph J. Vukovich Ill, D·
Young stown. spea king on behalf of organized
labor. trial lawyers and co nsumer groups,
characterized the pa ckage as "legislative

By LEE LEONARD
UP I S!alehouse ·Reporter
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUP l l -The Ohio House of
Re presenta tives has put thestampof approval on
a compromise insuran ce and civ il justice reform
bill th at sponsors hope will stabilize liabilit y
Insurance rates for bu si nesses a nd local

AND

KNIT

GIRLS'

SPORTSWEAR
All new look for fall. Sweatshirts, knit polo

i)

SPECIAL SALE!

S1033

REG. $259.00 AND '269.00

shirt, knit pants, sweat pants, slcirts and
dresses.
,
little Girls' Sizes: 4 to 6X and 7 to 14.
Reg. 512.00 Sportswear •••• 59.57
Reg. S14.00 Sportswear •• 511.27
Reg. s16.00 Sportswear •• 512.8 7
Reg. 520.00 Sportswear •• 515.97

Sale
SHARP

1

colt

rib knit collar. (a tars tnclude
rtd, black, grey, teal and blue.
Sins S M, L, Xl.

Steclal

CHILDREN'S

BUXTON
LEATHER PRODUCTS

JACKET SALE
:~::•• $700 to $2700

Sale $
Prleed

6°0t~ $3 600

MEN'S FALL JACKETS

S,

SALE MEN'S S1895

Springfoot - togulor

FLANNEL

lined, zipptr front, coat
style, solrd colors.

SHIRTS

WORK

112.95 - sim s 16·
8), . M (10.121. 1114·
161, X1 011. Flnco

We hove a storage unit to solve
any storage need!
Utility Cabinets - Base Cabinets
Wardrobes - China Cabinets

Sl 0''

ONLY

heavy weight, 100%
'cotton, two button thru flop
~octles. Sizes S, M, Lond Xl.

MEN'S SWEATER
SPECIAL!
L• Tigre

CREW NECK
SLIPOVER

Sll 0 Cabinets ......Sale S88
S139 Cabinets ... Sale Slll
S169 Cabinets ••• Sale S135

MEN'S JEANS SPECIAl/
BLUE DENIM

100% COTTON

JEANS
Sius to waist preshrung
29

42

in stright log.

Sale $129 9
Reguiar

S21. 9 5 stretch denim.
10'/o cotton, 20'/o polyttter.

Silts 29 to 40 waist. Straight
leg style - preshrunk prt·
washed. -

Sale
$14 99
.,

'

I

HOME FIX-UP SPECIALS
VINYL

FLOOR
COVERING

I

'" WALLPAPER
•Every book is included
•Give your home a frt~h
new look
•Quick delivery
•Qua6ty

12Ft. Width

No Wax Finish
Huge Color
Assonment in stock .

Sale

$5 45

plus big sizes 2X, 3X and 4X slightly bigger.

SALE

SQ. YO.

OFF

•IMt.Uetion bailaltlt

,
.

Tall sizes in medium, large, XL, 2X and 3X

$1788

POMEROY

'

$1599

Sins S, M, ond XL in o big assortment of solid
heather tonei - I 00% acrylic knit.

ELBERFELDS

STORE HOURS
9:30 10 5:00
MON.-SAT.

$2 499

~ L ond XL sins.

SWEAT
SHIRTS

CABINET SALE

MOVING DIRT - i\ considerable amount of
earth moving has been laking place all his site on
Page Sl . In Middleport. The land will be lhc

Waist length, 1ipper front, knit collar ond cuffs.
Quilt lined, iolid colon grey, novy or t!ln.

BOYS HOODED

METAL

527900

1ST FLOOR ELECTRONICS DEPT .

Lined ond unlined jackets. Juit right for
the cool foil weather. Many style~ ond
colon in children'ssiJtl: 12 to 24 moi.,
2 to 4, 4 to 61, 7 to 14.

REG. '7.50 TO '45.00

GOES GREAT WITH JEANS

ONLY

SALE

Billfolds .· Clutches - Key Cases
Buxtoi).-Quolity

$19 99

lawsuits and excessive damage . awards a nd
att orney fees, while providing for stricler
regulati&lt;&gt;n ·and more detailed data disclosure for
insurance companies. It a lso limits lawsuits
against manufaccturers for defective products.
"There are no caps or limitations on any jury
award," said Rep. Louis W. Blessing Jr.,
RCincinnati , the House Republican negotiator on
the bill. "The plaintiff is goi ng to be guaranteed
full compensat ion under the law. "
Opponents have objected most of all to what
they c laim will be a barrier to full recovery in
lawsuits lor neg ligence in personal injury and
product liability cases. ·

.

yea r. will add to tne c naos tnat
sentatives expla ined the comhas .rocked the Li ttl e Rock School promise reached by negotiators.
Dis tricl as it attempts to imple- The Edmonds School Board will
ment a federal court -ordered vote on the tentative contract
desegregation plan. !t is the first
proposal at noon today. Today is
teachers strike in Arkansas
the first day of work for the
history_ .
teachers, although c lasses will
The school board ha s offered
not start until Monday.
teachers a 5 percent pay raise ,
The agreement In Edmonds
hall of what teac hers have· sa id ca m e Thursday !ollowl!lg a mathey are willing to accept.
rathon 25~hdur bargaining .sesSiudents in Plainfield were sion thai e_n ded just 20· minutes
back · in c lass today a lon g with before a co urt hearing during
teachers and support staff. In· which · the dis trict planned to
s tructors met this morning 1nd demand a back-to-work order.
agreed to rei urn to their jobs and
Barring unforsee n snags, the
end a walkout that las ted seve n -·district's 950 teachers were to
school days and resulted in a new spend a full day on class
two-year contract.
prepara tion today a nd open the
The s trik e by 850 members of schoo l doors to 17,500 st udents
the Plainfield Education Associ- Monday.
ation affec ted classes for 7,000
The strike e nded on its 30th day
st ude nts .
Thursda y - breaking the record
In Edmonds, toache" apfor the s ta te's longest school
prtlved their contract about 9:30 · i!li'ike , 29 di!ys, set in '1978 by
p.m . Thursday after union re pretea chers in Tacoma, Wash.

Possible AIDS· treatment announced

- VHS

LADIES'

· SHIRTS
OO"'a
an, long s!tned,

malpractice."
"Yo u are submiitlng your prescription when
you don't even have a diagnosis," said Vukovich,
claiming it has not been fully determined that a
faulty civil justice system has been the cause of
allegedly unavailable a nd unalfordable insurance
coverage.
"1 think It's a fair compromise," said Riffe. who
was crediled by lawmakers of both parties [or
steering the controversial legislation throu gh this
year after a nother version was vetoed last
Decembe r by the governor .
" Joe gets carr ied away a little bit, " said Riffe .
" He's got a special inlerest. He 's a trial lawyer ,"
Hou se Bill 1 a ttempts to eliminate frivolou s

VCR SPECIAL

- 13 Function Wlrel8aa Remote

- 14 Day - 4 Event Timer

DISTRESSED, DYED

•

By PETER ROWE
United Press lnlernalional
Teachers In Litt le Rock, Ark ..
went on strik e today in the first
teacher strike In the state's
history while ins truc t ors · in
Plainfield. N.J.. a nd Edmond s.
Wash., returned to their jobs.
Nationwide, all -out s tr ikes in
three Pennsylvania school districts. two eac h in Mi chigan a nd
New Jersey. and one eac h in
Ill inois, Ohio. Ma ssachu se tts and
Arkans as interr upt ed regular
instruction for more than 500,000
stud ents .
The 1,200-member Little Rock
Classroom Teachers Associatio n
voted overwhe lmin gly Thursday
to walk off th e job if overn ight
negotia tions fa iled to produce a n
exce pt ab le offer . 'P he strike was
announced early today and will
affec t about 26,000 students .·
The strll&lt;e. whieh came fo ur
· weeks Int o Ihe 1987 -88 sc hool

Colorful plaid patterns in sizes S, M. l and
Xl - 2 pockets, utra long tails, full cut.

Beautiful display
curios .in ook or pecan
finish. Gloss shelves,
lighted.

25 Cents

Teachers walk in Little .Rock.

.

FLANNEL SPORT SHIRTS

CURIO
SALE

2 Sections 14 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

House approves. civil JUStice, insurance· bill

MEN'S

ru~ ....

enttne

'

-.

Clear lonlghL Low In upper
Sunny Saturday. High in
70s.

~Os.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. September 25, 1987

House SpPaker Vernal G . Riffe J r., D-New
Bos ton . predicted the measure will help do just
that shortly -after the 76- 16 vote which followed
just 10 minu tes of debate Thursday .
But Riffe sa ld It Is on I~ a "first ~ tep · • and sa id it
may t a~E&gt; time to realize a ny direct effect s on
insurant•c rates .

138 MAIN STREET, NEW HAVEN, WV.

•

at y

•

governmen t.

BEND AREA MED.ICAL CENTER

950
Pick 4
3151

•

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,

Area boxer Nitz retires

Daily Number

Page 7

Rounding the Division II list
were Ashland In fourth, fqllowed
In order by Co lumbu s DeSales ,
Urbana, Minerva, Steube nvllle,
Kettering Alter and Mentor Lake
Catholic.
Orrville a lso held a big first
week advantage In Division III.

JOSEPH J. GALLO, M.D.

Ohio Lottery

Church
page
•
notices

In Division 11 over Tiffin Colum·
bian and Cincinnati Purcell Mar·
ian. which shared the runnerup
spot. The Bengals, 20· 8 winners_ •
over Mansfield Malabar. col· · ·
lected 13 first place votes and 159
points. Co lumbian, with 2 firsts,
and Purcell had SO points each .

MEN'S HANES
RED LABEl

PLAYTEX

20°/o OFF
SALE

Includes All: Cross Your
Heart, Thank Goodness It
Fits, Nobody' s Perfect, living
Bra, Beige I Can't Believe It's'
A Girdle.

KNIT BRIEFS

I OO"Io cotton. Reg. 16.99 a
package of 3 briefs. Sizes 30 to

44.

$519

Special ·
All First

Pkg.
Seconds

MEN'S

BUXTON WALLETS _

Tri·folds ond convertibles. Choice
of color'S - lull grain leather.
limited quantity.
Stle
Prlet
00

$1

Elberleldt
PQ '" (~O ' lltUO
( ~ 1 ~ 1 U~ lUI

CHA.fi:C[ c-.RD

location for Middleport's nursing care ce nter.
Official ground breaking ceremonies are sche·
dule d for early Oclobcr.

Bork hearings _resume today
WASHINGTON tUPi l - Wit ·
nessos with wldr ly divergen t
vi('w s of SuprrnH' Co urt nominee
Robert Bork were summoned
again tod ay as confirm ation
hearings for ·lh r co ntrovcrslal
judge co ntinue before the Senate
.Judiciary C'ommitt&lt;•e.
Scheduled to testify both for
and al'!a inst Ba r k w~rc n number
or legal C'Xj&gt;('rt s. ucadcmJcs and

for mN governml' nt off icials ex pected to present shorply con·
trastlng vlrws of I hi' nomh1PI'.
In thl' hearings thu s fa!' , Bork
a nd ~I s s,uppor tcrs have cast him
as a moderat e malnst cam j uri st .
whil e his op,xments haw po rtra yC'd him a s a right -wing
ldeologuC' hostil e io the major
Supreme Court decis ions of the
last :10 \'Pars On Civil rights ,
women's rights , fr ee speech and
pri vacy .
..
The hra rl ngs were in recess
Thursda y beca use of a J&lt;'wish
holiday , but groups both support ·
ing and opposing Bork were
busy . A number of organizations

a nnou nc ed their opp0sltlon to
Bark. with per· hap~ the . most
s urp r ls in!( cri tici s m romlng
fro m the Int ernational Brot her·
hood of Teams ters. th e giant
un ion !hat e ndorsed President
Reagan In both the 1980 and 1984
C' lt:-ct ions .

Jackie Presser, the Teams ters ' genera l preside nt. said the
union wa s " unalte rably op posed" to Bork b(•cause of hi s
lac k of sensil ivlt y ··on s iglllficant
Issues involving labor unions ,
employee r ight s and job sa fety.'·
Presser c urren tly Is under
federa l Indictment on racketeer ing charges Involving a Ueged
·· ghost employees'· and payroll
.padding .
Also an nounci ng their opposi tion to· Bark Thursday were 26
nat io nal orga nizations for men tall y and physica ll y disabled
peopir and Environmental Ac tion, a national group that works
on toxics , energy and recyc lin g
Issues .
Also on Thursday, Ralph Neas.
executive director of th e Leader-

ship Conference on Civil Rights,
told a seminar. held by the
Co ngressio na l Black Ca ucus that
the effor t to block Bark 's nomina tion " may be as important as a
presidential election with respect to Its long-range consequences for ~ II Americans."
Neas. who is coordinating
anti-Bark lobbyi ng by severa l
hundred labor, civil rights and
religious orga niz ations , sa id he
believes " the tide Is turnin g
agai nst the nomination of Robert
Bark.-"
Rep , John Conyers. D-Mich ..
said at the same semi nar that
blacks are registering opposition
to Bork with the ir sena tors "as if
their life depended upon It -and
in some ways It does."
On the pro-Bork side, about 300
demon strators a lli ed with the
conservative Concerned Women
for America picketed the Su prem e Co urt to support Bork and
called for the resignatio n of Sen.
Joseph Biden. D-Del, as chairman of the Judiciary Committ ee.

WASHINGTON tUPll - A Na tional Institute of Allergy and
possible new AfDS treatme nt
In fectious Diseases, the primary
based on sta nd ard typhoid vac· coordinating agency for AIDS
ci ne restored strengt h to a sma ll research in the United States,
group of AIDS pat.lents. two said too many questions reresea rchers say, but healt h offi· mained for them to eva lua te the
cia Is warn the drug may not be as · claims.
beneficial as it sou nds .
A spokes woman at Wyeth The researchers. a laboratory Ayers! Labora tories in Philadeltechnician a nd a physician in
phia. maker of the typhoid
private practice,. said qt a news vaccine , said company re confere nce Thursday at least one searc hers cou ld not commen t
se riously ill AIDS patient given until they had seen data from the
the vaccine showed an 80 percent study.
improve me nt. including inAn FDA official, who declined
creased stami na a nd lowered
to allo~ his name to be used for
fever , and was able to retu r n to publication , said the study apwork full lime .
peared to have had no co ntrolsFifteen to 18 others were patients who would be given a
s howing signs they would expe- dummy drug for the sake of
rience the same improvement, comparis on.
a nd perhaps rem ission . by NoWithout controls. he said.
ve mber, sa id lhe researchers, " How do you determine safety
Salva tore Cata pano and Dr. and efficacy p~rlicularly
Migue l Clm a .
efficacy? Th ere are s tates of
However. officials at the Food
remission tha t ca n occur within
a nd
Adminls
and

the disease."
The FDA offic ial Invited !he
researchers to talk to FDA
a~thorllies .

"If someone has a proposed
treatment for AIDS, no matter
how unor thodox, we talk to
them ," he said.
Cima is an in ter nist in private
practice in Rockville Center,
N.Y. Cata pano Is a n immunologist and research medical techni cian who has run laboratories at
Princeton University, in the
ar med services and the Public
Heall h Service . He works now
from his home in Valley Strea m.
N.Y.
The vaccine, which boosts
immune system · activ ity, has
been give n to 55 patients, they
sa id . So me have received it for a
full year.
"The only resulls we are
getting is. be lieve rne , success ,"
sa id Catapano .

President will veto democratic
proposal to end escorts in gulf
WASHINGTON i UP I)-White
House spokes man Marlin Fltz ·
water said toda y Presidrnt Reagan will veto a dt'fe nse appropriations bill if It contaIns a proposal
th at could end U.S. escorts of
Kuwaiti tan kers In the Persian
Gulf, add in g Its consid eration
da ma ges U.S. interests.
Democrats sough t a vote perhaps tod ay- on their amend ment to the $303 billion defense
bill on the Senate floor. The hili
already Is und er a veto threat
ovf'r a "Star Wars" proposal and
th e move, if successful , would
give Reagan added reason to
scu.llle the bill .
Senate Democrats offered a
proposal that could end U.S.
warship escorts for Kuwaiti
tankers unless Congress approves an .extens lon . But Republicans termed th e move a "shot
across the bow" of American
\)

warships in the gu lf a nd sought to
delay or defang the meas ure,
s uggesti ng they might filibuster
if necessary.
Fit zwater told reporter s loday
that Reagan wlli veto the appro·
prlations bill with the De mo,
cratic a me ndment.
"Iran must be as overjoyed at
the prospect for passage as our
friends around the world are
di smayed," said Fitzwater,
charging thai the amendment
"could have the ultimat e effect of
... forcing the United States
entirely out of the Persian Gull
and the Gulf of Oman, places our
Navy has sa iled freely for 40
years."
"Legislation of this sort would
be highly irresponsible," Fitzwater said. "Although there
should be no doubt the president.
will velo lflls legislation, the
damage to U.S. interests by Its
'~

--

verv consideration ca nno t be
ove'r estimated."
Meanwhile . the Senate over·
whelmlngly approved, 91 -4, a
non-binding measure Thursday
night declaring it the ''se nse of
the Senale" thai the Navy Is
" full y justified" In sin king any
Iranian vessel thai threatens the
sale passage of a U.S. warship or
threatens any vessel with Ameri·
cans aboard, a phrase covering
Kuwaiti tankers with U.S. citizens as captains.
A U.S. helicopter this week
fired on an Iranian vessel laying
mines in the gulf. killing three
Iranian sa ilors.
Because of concerns both over
the gulf policy and over the 1973
War Powers Act, ·Senate Demo·
crats tailored their amendment
spec ifically for the esc.o rt
service.

EMPWYEES
- Three em·
l'loyes of the Pomeroy office, Farmers Home
Administration, have been preaented certificates
ot merit. Shelba Wickline, left, and Carol
Costanzo, center, were reco..-bed for having
helped the local office serving A.~ell!l, Vlnlon and
Meigs Counties achieve the lowei'&amp;t' dellnuency ·
rate In housing loans In the Marietta District.

Pamela J. Calvert, right, was presented a
certificate for exemplary job performance
exceeding her job requirements. Approximately
one mUIIon dollars In farm and home loans were
handled through the local office this past fiscal
year. In addition about $100,000 In grants wl•re
made to elderly home owners for home repairs.

~

•

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