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                  <text>Ohio Lottery

NFL action

TAYLOR NI.S SAN
.

Daily Number

close Sunday

365
Pick 4

5,000° 0
Trade

Page4

On Any

Super Lotto

Pa'lmen\s
'1\\ '\999 ~
'IJ\\h

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..-:Rotex Watches&gt;When You Buy ~
This
''~
Dealership

~

TAYLOR USED CARS
'

S113
$113
S125
'
..... !.,............... *59.95 S140
· ~apn,&gt; ~ .••••••....•.•••• sst~s .. •140 ·.

if

Motor Trend Magazine says
that the MAXIMA is the best
buy under $25,000 ... THE

THING IS. IT

DOESN'T COST ANYWHERE
NEAR $25.000.

CASH
$18,238
BACK ...... .. ..... ..... ..... 2,250

'

$15,988·

1
1·98.4
' ,&amp;&lt;·
.&gt;1983

Stock ,No. 4071

NISSAN.
PATHFINDER

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4JJJ•...SOL0____

$20000°
CASH BACK ON
The 4x4 Of The Year!

.$12 700

business of painting, high above the park on Court
St. The. buDding Is owned by Carson ()row,
Assistant Meigs County Prosecuting -Attorney.

'

Albany man pleads guilty on· ·clrorge today

Check Out These Back Row Beauties

5 speed, radial tires,
double walled cargo bed
nd protection package.

...
HOLD TIGHT - One side of the building which
houses Pomeroy Sundry'Store Is getting a coat of
paint ..Workers have been busy the past two weeks
preparing the surface and are now down to the

1980 AM&lt;t CONCORD ••••••••• ~~••~••u.....:••••••• u••···· ..··•······· S149 5
,1'

~

•

.1982 CHEYROUT CHEVETi'E, black ............................... S1995
1981 .PONTIAC T.~. 100.............
. ................-•••••••••••••~••••••• s129 5 '
'

'Payment figured !Vitti $1,0(10 cash or trade pillS tax and title. 88-87 for 60 mos., 86-85 for 54 •
mo., 84-83 for 48 mo., 82 •nd oldfr for 36 mo. ·

Per Month

WE'RE HERE TO STAY!!

NISSAN

1200 E. State St.
Athens, Ohio
594-3528

In Charleston, S.C., Mayor Joseph Riley Is
strongly favored for a fourth term over
. Republican Roy DeHaven.
And In Tucson, Ariz., Republican William
Gllkinsort, the city's former police chief, IS
battling a 3-to·2 Democratic edge in voter
registration In a close race with Thomas Volgy, a
Hungarian refugee on the city council for 10years.
New Jersey 's Legislature Is currently divided,
with Democrats holding a 23-17 majority In the
Senate and Republicans holding a 50-30 edge in the
Assembly, but without popular Republican Gov.
Tom Kean 'at the top of the ticket, the Democrats
think they have a chance to grab control of both
houses.
Among the major ballot Issues being decided
·nationwide:
Texas voters wlil weigh In on the Issue of
legalizing parimutuel betting on horse racing
statewide and dog races In coastal counties. A
Virginia state lottery looked like a sure bet less
than a month ago, but now few are willing to
wager the legalized games will gain voter
approval.

Maine voters for a third time wUJ cast ballots on
a referendum to close the Ma.lne Yankee Nuclear
Plant. The Issue was defeated In 1980 and 1982.
Citizens In Washington, D.C., must deCide
whether the district government should adopt a
law requiring at least a nickle deposit on bottle
and cans.
In Washington state, the future of the federal
Medicare and monetary systems could be
affected by two ballot measures. Liberal groups
are behind a proposal to put a cap on the amount
doctors may charge Medicare patients; conserva·
lives back another requiring the state to file a
lawsuit in the Supreme Court that would
challenge the constitutionality o! the Federal
Reserve System.
And finally In San Francisco, voters will decide
whether to build· a downtown baseball stadium In
a non·bincUng ballot. Candlestick Park, on the
outskirts of the city, has been criticized for cold
weather and swirling winds, and Giants owner
Bob Lurie wants to see how many-support his push
for a new home.

A Meigs County Common Meigs County. The FBI look the
Pleas Court jury trial which was case to the office of Deputy U.S.
scheduled for this morning (Man· Attorney Barbara Beran, Colum·
day) has been canceled and the bus, Gerard said. This is the first
defendant, David Paul Cain, of such forfeiture undertaken in
Goose Creek Road, Albany, has · southeastern Ohio and possibly
entered a written plea of guilty to In the state he ~dded.
the charge of traffl~king In drugs
(cultivation of marijuana).
Gerard reported that Colum·
bus Attorney Max Kravitz stated
Cain was arrested Sept.ll, 1986 this morning In court that the
by authorities from the Meigs federal government has agreed
and Athens County Sheriffs to take one parcel of land owned
Departments and agents from by the defendant, and will a11ow
the Bureau of Criminal Investi- him to keep another parcel of
gation (BCI). London, Ohio.
land on which his home stands, In
Juqge Charles Knight ordered return for $30,000.
·
a pre-sentence investigation In
A counter offer has been made
the matter and set Nov. 30, 9 by Cain's attorney, Herman
a.m., for sentencing. Meigs Carson, Athens, to keep both
· County Prosecu ling Attorney parcels of land, pay the $30,000,
Fred Crow III recommended and forfeit two vehicles, a Dodge
that ,• Cain be sentenced · to six . truck and Honda 4·wheel vehicle.
months in prison, according to
Gerard expected to hear later
Paul Gerard, investigator for the today If the counter proposal
pro;ecutor .
from Cain will be accepted or not.
Aithoqgh Melgs County is not
Proceedings are also under·
way for a federal forfeiture of involved with the actual forfel·
real estate and personal property ture proceedings, nor the related
owned by Cain. Forfeiture pro· decision-making Involved in the
ceedlngs were filed by the FBI Jorfetture, the county would
through the Southern• District receive a portion of funds from
Court in Columbus, based on the the forfeiture. Athens County,
criminal case against Cain in BCI and the FBI would also

receive a percentage of funds
from the forfeiture.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Stocks
opened lower today but quickly
turned mixed in early trading
amid signs "that the market may
sustain its first Monday advance
In three weeks.
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which climbed 42.77 last
week, was down 1i.27 to 1982.26 at
10 a.m.
But advances led declines by a
4·3 ratio. Volume was moder·
ately heavy, amounting to about
32.93 million shares during the
first 30 minutes of trading.
..
Wall Street's surge last week
was no guarantee that the stock
market_ w.quld keep cllmbill_i.
from Its record pluhge, and one
analyst said the market is "still
In the intensive care unit."
sun, broad-based rallies
Thursday and Friday gave lnves·
tors hope that panic had given
way to relative stability.
The Dow's rise last week came
after It had dropped 295.98 points
a week ear Her when the Dow
plunged a record 508 points on
Black .11-fonday, Oct. 19, ·before
recouping some ground before
the week ended.
The Dow lost 157 points last
Monday. ·
"(It) Is better than 508 points
down," said Hugh Johnson, head
of the Investment policy committee at First Albany Corp. "Some
of the selling dried up a little bit
and SOJlle of the mania and
hysteria started to subside. "
Monte Gordon, research direc·
tor at Dreyfus Corp., said the

market may have bottomed another, relievedtheworstofthe
somewhere In the are11 between gloom hanging over Wall Street.
1700 and 1800 on the Dow, butthat Tuesday's 52-point climb was
the market remained fragile.
followed by a gain of 0,33.
"The market is still !n-Ib&lt;&gt;-. Wednesday, 91.51 points Thurs·
intensive care unit," Gordon day and 55.20 points Friday.
c__
Johnson said the chaotic flnan·
said.
The broad market did less well cial markets had sent a message
than the blue-chip stocks that are to governments of the major
reflected by the the Dow. On the · Industrialized nations that they
New York Stock Exchange, los· must cooperate more effectively ·
ers outnumbered gainers 1,138 to on exchange rate and monetary ·
862 among 2,178 Issues traded.
policy.
Prices fell sharply on the
But· Johnson said while the
American Stock Exchange and In market was more stable last
over·the·counter trading. The week, the bill question remaining
Amex Market Value Index lost is whether the economy wUI turn
3.85 to 260.36 after sliding 59.34 doWI\ In 1988.
polllts a week earlier. The
"We don't know how . the
National Association of Securl· economy will turn out," agreed
ties Dealers index of over-the- John Connolly, equity research
counter stocks dropped 5.15 to director at De ail Witter Reynolds
323.30; it dropped 77.!!81ast week. Inc. Connolly said Interest rates
have been "artificially deThe week started badly. The pressed" by the central banks
Dow moved down relentlessly, and that what monetary policy
losing 156.83 points in a session the United States and its trading
that was two hours shorter than partners follow once the flnan·
cial crisis passes Is still
usual.
The nation's exchanges closed uncertain.
Connolly said "a hard edge of
at 2 p.m. EST every day to allow
fear"
lfngered in the market·
the financial community to catch
place
In
the first days after the
on a backlog of paperwork left
crash,
but
that there was some
over .from record trading volume
"return
to
normalcy"
last week
the week before. The NYSE will
when
"some
greed
returned
and
close at 2: 30 p.m. this week
Investors
bought
stocks
that
through Wednesday, and at 3
p.m. Thursday and Friday. The looked cheap."
But Connolly called the market
·normal 4 p.m. close is expected to
at current levels "fairly valued."
resume Nov. 9.
On Tuesday, the Dow began a He said the Dow is likely to swing
series of four consecu live advan· between 1800 and 2200.
ces, which as one followed

up

Dr. Apling issues statement on plan
A statement made Friday by the same health Insurance pack·
Dr. Dan Apling In regard to the age as in thecurrentcontract and
Insurance plan offered by the had offered to pay 100 percent of
Eastern Local Board of Educa- the cost of a single subscriber
tion to Eastern Local Teachers and 90 percent of the cost a! a
who have Issued an intent to family plan. The Board subsestrike did not list percentages · quently offered the same plan as
above and offered to pay 100
correctly.
Following · Is the statement percent of the cost of both single
and family plans. The Board has
with the corrected figures:
"Dr. Apllng reports that the never proposed any decease in
Board originally offered ELTA Insurance plan benefits.

NEW MINE SHAFI' - Construction on the new ventilation
mining shaft for Southern Ohio Coal's Raccoon No. Smine began In
August. The shaft, which Is located halfway betwee Wilkesville
and Salem Center of! Ohio 124; Is being built because mining has

b

,•

continued eul. When the shaft, which wben complete will be 18 feet
wide and 308 feet deep, Is finished, an elght·foot fan will be lns\alled
at the WllkesvUie air shaft, converting II from a ventilation shaft to
an e,:haust air shaft.
-

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---...-,--...1..- - - - - - - - - ---- ---~- ---'- -- --

2 SectiOns, 12 Pag• 26 Cenll
A .M ultimedia Inc. NoWIPIIPBr

Stocks mixed in early trading

1984
ACCOID, 4 door, ted••··-·-···~· S6495 S156
1985 CIIYSUR U8AION GTS .. SOLD····$7495 $163
1985 OilS
. CI'RASS, biN, doth interior. ....... S8495 S186
1986. PCIImA(
GlAND
All, ~y •..,•...••••• S8995 $199
' '
.
1986 .Nls$itfs"I~NIA
wag01p, toacW •••••• •995 S224
-1985 ·~IIIYIOLEJ CAPIICI ••••••:••••- ••••••~.··~~··-·*8995 · · S199.
198711SSAN SEITIA
,$10,500 - - .
1983 OATSUN 280 D., aff••~.l• ilreat~~ car ;,_ S8995 SJ25
1986:CIIEYY CAIUIO •o&lt;~Z, ssoo •Iiies.""' S12,900 · - 1914 .SAil SIIIIU 4 door •••- .....~......:............ SS995 S140
';.

1987 NISSAN
. 4x2 TRUCK

·In the major mayoral races:
Miami's Xavier Suarez, the nation's first
Cuban-born mayor, faces four challengers
Including Maurice Ferre, whose 12-year reign as
mayor ended In 1985, and former Reagan
administration official Arthur Teele Jr. An
expected heavy Hispanic vote favors Suarez and
could avoid a runoff.
Philadelphia's Wilson Goode, the city's first
black mayor, Is challenged by the flamboyant
Frank Rizzo, a Democrat turned Republican who
was mayor from 1972 to 1980. Polls show Goode
with a comfortable margin despite widespread
disappointment In his job performance.
San Francisco's Dianne Feinstein is unable to
run, and Assemblyman Art · Agnos has held a
slight edge over John Molinari, a 16-year member
of the board of supervisors, with former chief city
administrative officer Roger Boas leading the
remaining nine candidates.
..
In Hartford, Conn., Democrat Carrie Saxon·
Perry is heavily favored to defeat Republican
Philip Steele to become New England's first black
femaale mayor.

By United Press International
In Election 1987 Tuesday, Kentucky and
Mississippi will select new governors, cities from
Miami to San Francisco will choose their mayors
aild vo.t ers across the country will decide Issues
ranging from nuclear power to horse racing.
A light schedule of varied off·yearelectlons"also
will determine control of New Jersey's Leglsla·
lure, whether Vlrglna gets a lottery and whether a
new baseball stadium w!ll be built In downtown
San Francisco to rep,l ace chUly and windy
Candlestick Park, home of the National League
West ch.amplon Giants.
In Kentucky, self-made multimillionaire Wallace Wilkinson used his own money and a promise
of a lottery to avoid a tax increase to b\llld a strong
lead in the 'polls over Republican John Harper, a
state representative.
In Mississippi, .businessman Jack Reed bas
made the strongest Republican bid lor the
governor's office since the post-Civil War
Reconstruction Period, but he still trails Demo·
cratlc State Auditor Ray Mabus.

FIEIO. blaciJ;'svntoO,t: alr ...... $6495 ~,. •1$6 ·

;~ ~ !

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 2, 1987

· s.:.~f!;····:-·~·..;..SJ9~;,, .!1~1

'

.
ent1ne

Schedule light for national elections Tuesday

WELL NOT REA~L Y •• ·• But Seriously·
Folks WE'RE DEALINI

AMAZING

e

VQI.37, NQ.123
Copyrighted 1987

5-8-25-27-30-41

.•
at y

Submarine

NO

Clear tonight. Low In 508.
Sunny, high Tuesday In low
808. Chance of rain near zero
percent. _

1908

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�Monday, November 2, 1 987

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Sl reel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

(Sim~ r-T""-"L--....,....~. =·~=~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER nf Thr lJnilf'd Prf'ss l.ntPrnat ional. Inland Dail ~' Prf'~ s
Association and !he Amc-ri c:m Nrwspapf'r' Publ ishf'r S Associat ion.
LETTERS OF OPfNION :tn' " 'f' l('omf'. Thf'~ · ~l]ould hf&gt; l£&gt;ss than 300 ...,wds
lnng. All lf'llf'r~ Hr f' ...;uhi N•J rn Pdllln~ und mu-.:1 bP l'igm'tl with namP. addrPss :mtl
IPli•phorlf' numbf'r. Nd' un .~ ip:ned lf'!lf'rs will 1)1' publishf'd. Ull&lt;'rs shoulcl bf' in
good J :L&lt;: l£' , atldrf' ~~l ng lssuf's. not p('rsun&lt;tlillt•s.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

.•

.Arms COntrol _____B_y:___Ja_c~k~A~n..,..de.....,..,rs~on_an_d-::-_D_al-=-e-~_a_n_A_t_ta
for su!tab!lity. This, he says, will
be cheaper than the DOE plan to
test all three sites at once provided, of course, the first
choice tests out all right.
On the other hand, Rep. Morris
Udall, D·Ar!z .. author of the 1982
law, claims the disposal program
has been botched so throughly
that the best thing to do is stop
everything· and start over. He
proposes a moratorium on plan·
n!ng while and independent nu·
clear waste policy commission is
created and can study the mat·
ter. He argues that the issue has
become a political one imd that
the public has lost confidence In
the current, behind-schedule
program.

Autos of the future
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP!) -It is reported that the car ofthe future will
hav.l' a plastic body and a ceramic engine.
But will it be domestic or imported? That is the big question.
Man and boy , I have been attending auto shows for more years than
1 care to remember and I have yet to see a "Car of the Future'' reach
production lines.
·
There it is, resplendent in dust.free newness, possibly because no
one has ever driven it, much less produced it.
At any rate, for the next several years, the nell' models are
introduced and not one looks more like a seagull than an auto. ll's
disheartening, that's what it is, and the trend must drive futuristic
designers wild.
Now I read that researchers are on the verge of perfecting a
ceramic engine. Not that the average motorist spends that much time
Ipok!ng under the hood. At least not at auto shows, where the average
motorist more likely w!U be seen at the "Car of the Future" exhibit.
The new engine is said to resist cracking and breaking better than .
ceramics thus far tried. Thus, if I know anything about futuristic
cars, it would be both lighter and better able to withstand higher
temperatures than old·style metal engines.
This not only would boost fuel consumption and reduce pollution,
but rE";earchers claim ceramic engines also would wear better and
·
result in fewer mechanics' bills.
Sounds like something tailor-made for the Japanese. If there is
anything that country Is big on, it Is mlleaqe,
II can be anticipated that cars of the future will be a lot like Japan's
cars of the past - that is, cheap to buy and operate.
If, as predicted, the ceramlc·eng!ne market will be close to the $5
billion mark by the turn of the century ,•we can expect that many sales
will be made in Japan.
As for plastic bodies, I don't have any forecastfor them. However,
Critics of the proposed INF
if ceramics are almost here in auto manufacturing, plastics can't be
treaty,
from hard·sheiled conser·
far behind.
vat!ves
to N!xon-K!ss!nger Ma·
Indeed, if the Japanese aren't careful, they may miscalculate and
·
ch!avelllans,
fail to realize how
start producing "the car of the future.''
heavily
they
themselves have
If I were In charge of advertising at General Motors, Ford, Chrysler
contributed to the creation of an
or some of the other U.S. auto·makers, I would try to pin a futuristic
atmosphere in which such trea·
label on foreign competition.
Silicon carbide Is said to have played an important part in the ties are inevitable. Now that a
ceramic breakthroug~. Does that speak well for the future of such treaty is nearing signature, their
protests ring correspondingly
U.S. centers as S!!!con Valley, or what?
The first auto company , domestic or imported, that brings out an hollow.
The pressure for the reduction
all·s!l!con car may own the world. I can see them now- the ads for
or
elimination of nuclear wea·
the S!l!con Six, that is.
pons has two sources: a convicEven during a period of stock market uncertainty, they look like a
tion, nurtured by the left, that
sure bet.
nuclear
weapons are horrible in a
I would make certain, however, that the S!l!con Six isn' t hit with a
way
that
simply transcends ail
"car of the future"
previous categories of military
awfujness; and a belief - in·
dulged , I am sorry to say, by a Jot
of centrists who ought to have
known better- that it Is possible
and desirable to reach arms
agreements with the Soviet
Uri ion.
:
Once these two propositions
By HELEN THOMAS
were accepted, It was inevitable
UPI While House Reporte
that the West would seek agreeWASHINGTON (UP!) - "I cannot forecast to you the actions of the
ments with Moscow to limit ·
Russians. It Is a riddle wrapped In a mystery inside of an enigma."
nuclear weapons. If I may
Those words were spoken by British Prime Minister Winston
intrude a personal reflection
Churchill years ago but they still apply.
here, I and my conservative
And they certainly were fitting last week when it appeared that
colleagues defended the West's
President Reagan had gone through the debacle of Reykjav!,k all over
again. There was high anticipation of a date for a Reagan summit
meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev when Secretary of
State George Shultz scheduled a news conference in Moscow last
week after meeting with Soviet officials.
But one look at his expression, the rebuff to the United States and
When historians write the story
disappointment was obvious.
of the Reagan years, they will
Shultz said that Gorbachev had linked a summit meeting to
marvel that he was able to sell
concessions by Reagan on the Strategic Defense Initiative or the
Congress, and much of the
president 's dream of a "Star Wars" shield in space against Incoming
American public, on funding a
missiles.
war to overturn Nicaragua's
And on that point, Reagan is in concrete. So It appeared that
government
Gorbachev had reneged on his promise to visit the United States. A
Reagan has defied Congress,
few days later, Moscow sent a different signal with Gorborchev
the lessons of history and the
contemplating a trip to Wash!ngton to sign the nearly completed
realities of Central America in
agreement ridding the world, mainly Europe, of superpower medium
pressing for more dollars for
range missiles .
what he calls the· "freedom
A gloom descended over the White House when it first appeared
fighters" of Nicaragua. _Notw!th·
that the Kremlin leader had second thoughts and was reneging on
standing the !nternatl&lt;&gt;nal em·
previous statements. The summit had been contemplated as a way of
barrassment involved in the
restoring the perception of a strong president in a h!gh·prol!le
illegal transfer of funds to the
siatesman·like role.
contras, the president is now
Aides were truly puzzled having been certain that Shultz would able
pressing Congress for another
to nail down the details of a third East-West summit. Speculation
$270 million to back this hopeless
centered on the rposs!b!l!ty· 1hat Gorbachev was having hls own
enterprise.
internal problems a nd did not want to leave the Soviet .Union next
To a considerable extent the
month.
contras are the creation of the
They wondered aloud what "fear" could have motivated the Soviet
CIA, O!!ver North and other
leader. One aide said he "got cold feet on peace."
freewheeling agents of the ReaGorbaehev, who has embarked on a new era of "Glasnost,"
gan administration. They have
indicating a more open communist society, within limits of course,
llttle popular support in N!cara·
has had his problems with hard· liners who resent the changes.
gua. They have neither the will
GorbacMv's absence from public lor 56 days also may llave played
nor the capacity' to seriously
a role in his decision to pull back on a trip to the United States.
challenge the Sand!n!sta Army.
There also was speculation that the Soviet leader had decided that
They are, for the most part, thugs
Reagan was a weakened lame duck with a·proliferation of problems,
and oppi&gt;rtun!sts.
including the stock market crash, and would not be able to deal. ·
In short, the contras are the
He also has a major address scheduled for the Nov. 7 anniversary of
creatures of Reagan, North and
the Bolshevik revolution, which may seek to rehabilitate some of the
Co., and they will vanish as soon
old line revolutionaries who were purged In the '30s.
as Congress cuts of! the Amerl·
But the Krem!!n leader lost a lot of ground in the process, in effect
can dole. They will vanish, that
confidence that he was a man of his word. He lost credibility in U.S.
is, unless the administration gets
circles that had been willing to go along with the view that Gorbachev
out Its tin cup again and begins
was trying to give a new look to Soviet diplomacy .
begging foreign governments
Reagan's conservative sqpporters basically were saying "we told
and wealthy rlght·w!ng Amerl·
you so' • and that the president had been foolhardy to trust Gorbachev,
ca ns lor funds.
. who had impressed hlm In their previous meetings in Geneva in 1985
One of the most searing indict·
• .and in Reykjavik, Iceland, in 1986.
ments yet offered against the
Kremlinologists have been trying to figure out the Soviet Union
scandalous contra business Is
since the revolution .. From World War II until the '60s, the State
that o! respected author Frances
Department had some crack diplomats who could read the signs in
Fitzgerald in the Oct. 22 issue o!
Moscow and it were able to keep Washington on top of events.
Rolling Stone. I do not .know how

Our reporter Gary Clouser has
studied three r~ent reports on
the disposal problem, which
address it from d!!feren t pers·
pectives. They were prepared by
the DOE, the General Account.
!ng Office and Public j:it!zen, an
anti·nuclear·power group aff!l . •
!ated with Ralph Nader.
All three reports agree that the
1998 deadline is no longer realls·
tic, and that costs are skyrocket·
lng. They also acknowledge that
the cost problem Is complicated
by ·the uncertainty over how
much nuclear power (and radioactive waste) w!ll be gener·
ated .in the next few decades.
Obviously, this affects the size of·
the waste depository to be built,
and the amount of revenue that
will be coming in from the power
companies to build it.
The DOE report estimates that
me permanent dump won't be
operational until the year 2003,
and projects completion of an
above·ground, temporary storage site by 1998. Congress has not
yet authorized funding for a
temporary facility. The three
sites under consideration for the
underground dump are situated
in the Yucca Mountains of
Nevada; Deaf Smith County,
Texas; and Hanford, Wash.
The GAO report notes that 1988
is a crucial year !or site determl·
nation if contractors are to meet
the 1995 deadline for the building
application permit for the per·
manent dump. Because of delays
and more stringent testing·stand·
ards, the GAO concludes, the cost
of testing all three sites has
soared from the orfg!nal 1981
estimate of $240 million to $4.8
billion.
Public Citizen's unreleased
report charges that the lee paid
by utilities to cover the dump's
eventual cost - one-tenth of a
cent per kilowatt generated- Is
to low.

Taxes, anyone ?___""""-"-______W_il_lia_m_R_us_he_r

Russian foreign
policy remains an enigma

reliance on nuclear weapons, on
pub!!c platforms and in columns
like this one, for more than 30
years, during which the Amer!· ,
can left, the unilateral dis armers, anirlarge segments of
orthodox liberal opinion cater·
wauled incessantly about the
unspeakable horror of the very
Idea.
If, during those three decades,
those of us on the front line got so
much as a word ofpub!!c support
for our efforts from Richard
Nixon, Henry Kissinger, any of
the successive political leaders
of the NATO countries, or the
foreign policy establishm&lt;;!nt of
the United States It escaped my
attention. Apparently, they pr!·
vately agreed with us all along,
hut they preserved a discreet
slience, and with it their entree
into all the best liberal salons,
while we were doing picket duty
on the frontier.
Similarly, a good many of my
hardest-core conservative allies
have never fully appreciated that
the only way to forestall success·
ful pressures lor negotiations
with the Soviet Union is to Impose

on it a total moral quarantine; of
the sort that en!!ghtened Western
opinion would favor against a
resurgent Nazi Germany if one
were to develop today. Instead,
many prominent ·conservatives
traipsed cheerfully back and
forth.to the Soviet Union, personally quite immune to its blandish·
ments but b!!ssfully unaware
that it is impossible to take and
eight-day Aeroflot bargain tour
of Moscow, Katl!n!n and Lenin·
grand at Christmas time and then
sound convincing when one
argues that "You can't do
business with Gorbachev."
We are going to do business
with Gorbachev, and it's simply
too !ale for Richard Nixon, Henry
Kissinger, NATO's Lord Carrington (! ruui quanri. tO come
bounding out of the liberal
woodwork they have inhabited so
comfortably lor the past three
decades and confess that they
have loved nuclear weapons all
along.
Fortunately, the recent arms
negotiations have been guided,
on our side, by President Reagan, who refused to be slam·
peded into negotiating at all until

Contras don't deserve funds

,.

any member of Congress who
reads this article could even
consider giving Reagan another
$270 m!!l!on.
Ms. Fitzgerald points out that
the administration approached
at least 10 countries lor J110ney
for the contras. these . efforts
apparently produced $32 m!!l!on
from Saudi .Arabia, $10 m!!lion
from Brunei (subsequently mis·
placed in a Swiss account), $2
million from Taiwan, plus $1.6
mil!!on from private American
Reagan!ties.
"In effect," writes Ms. F!tzge·
raid, "administration officials
put the country's ·fore!gn policy
up for auction and came back
only with the Saudi money plus$2
million and change;"
One illustration points up the
deceptive character of the Rea·
gan administration's efforts. On
March 1, 1985, at a meeting in
Costa Rica, the three civilian
directors of the contras came up
with a statement o! principles
· and hailed the document as a
formula !or peace and used it to
·persuade Congress to give him
another $27 million.
During the congressional in·
vestigation of the Iran·contra
scandals, North said the Costa
Rica contra declaration was
"just like our own Declaration of
Independence and our own Con·
stltution... it was hammered
out... in the same way as the
founders of our own Constitution
did, in a hot, sweaty room ... I get
a little emotional about It,
perhaps ... but whel\ the president
of the United States referred to
the similarities between the
Nicaraguan resistance and our

he could barg!n from strength.
He will also insist upon adeqate
verification. Finally, he is committed to replacing the whole
dangerous concept of deterrence
through mutal assured destruction as promptly as possible with
a far saner and more humane one
based on deterrence through
effective space-satellite
defenses.
We are warned that the reduci!on, let alone elimination, of
nuclear weapons in Europe will
"de·couple" the United States
and its European allies, because
the latter would have to increase
their conventional defenses but
are too stingy to do so. (SDI
would presumably have the
same effect, but conservative
anti·de·couplers are, incongruously, working hard for it any.
way.) The short answer to the
objection is that, it Europe is
unw!!l!ng to spend what it costs to
defend•itself, its conquest by the
Soviet Union is only a matter of
lime anyway - perhaps postpo·
nable, but not ultimately avo!da·
bte·, through American efforts.
The Moral: Trying to have it
both ways is never a good idea .

George McGovern
----------------~-

own Founding Fathers, he meant
that."
This was the kind of emotional
TV spectacle that created a wave
of "Oll!eman!a'' among non·
thinking Americans, but it had no
basis in fact. Indeed, as Ms.
Fitzgerald points out, in the
committee documents Is a memo
from North to Robert McFarlane

dated April 1, 1985 in which he
describes the document,. as follows: "The document was writ·
ten by Calero, Cruz and North in
my hotel room In Miami on Jan.
29 and30 .... " So much for North's
sincerity and rellablllty.
Please, co11gressmen andsena·
tors, don't throw another $270
million down the contra sinkhole.

Berry's World
'

·'

By SCOTr WOLFE
throughout the nigh\ was tossed
against the Eagles on a faceSentinel Staff Writer
RACINE ..:. The duo of Mark masking call which sparked the
GrJffln and Steve Horner along . Tornadoes In a very emotional
with the rest o! the Easiern game.
However, the Eagles quickly
Eagles seemed to:be too much for
archr!val Southern as the Eagles put out that spark as Southern
'of Coach Arch Rose handed Blll was forced to punt on their first
Hensler's Tornadoes a 44-0 possession of the game. The
SVAC loss.
Eagles wasted little time in
The Eagles broke a two game putting the first ptonts on the
losing streak against Southern to scoreboard as the outstanding
up its record to 5-4 whlle play of Griffin to Horner con·
Southern dropped to 1-8. The nected on a 30 yard touchdown
Tornadoes had some outstanding pass at the 8: 10 mark. Mike
individual ef!orls but costly Weber's PAT kick sailed through
turnovers and m)stakes limited the uprights making- the score
7-0.
their offensive drive.
The purple and gold also were Neither team could get the ball
unable to stop Griffin and Horner moving upf!eld as both were
who connected on many key forced to punt alter alternating
aerials lor maximum yardage possessions. W! th 2:03 remaining
the longest being recorded at 66 in the first quarter Eagle Tony
Hendrix intercepted a Tornado
ya rds.
As Southern received the kickoff pass for 30yards to set up another
one of the many flags thrown

outstanding catch by Horner a
6'3" senior with :39 left in the
first quarter.
As the horn sounded to mark
the end of the first quarter it was
the Eagles 7 and theTornadoesO ..
With the ball resting on the SHS 5
yard line a quick snappy TD pass
from Griffin to Horner started
the second period of play making
the score 14-0 alter Weber' s
PAT kick. Southern again could
not gain yardage offensively as
the Tornadoes were intercepted
by Horner.
A 6 yard touchdown pass at the
10: 35 mark from Griffin to Kyle
Davis after being set up by
another aerial being snagged•by
Horner for 21 yards and a PAT 1
run by Davis made the score
22-0.
Southerns defense seemed to
tighten .up as the Eagles did not
score again until 1: 29 remaining

Oilers edge Rangers
National Hockey League Roun· from Nova Scotia of the Amer!·
dup
can Hockey League.
By United Press International
Reaugh was shaky at times in
The Edmonton Oilers over· · net but the Oilers received two
came two scares Sunday night unexpected offensive contributhe New York Rangers and tions from Kevin McClelland and
All·Star goaltender Grant Fuhr' s Tom McMurchy, who each
Injury.
scored two goals.
The Stanley Cup Champion
The triumph snapped the Oil·
Oilers escaped one scare by ers three-game losing streak and
holding off the Rangers 7·~. but extended New York's losing
the second Is pending. Fuhr's left streak to three games. ·
shoulder was numb after taking a
"We gave up 15 goals over the
skate in the back during a last two games," Ranger Coach
scramble in front during the Michel Bergeron said. "And how
second period.
many of those goals came on
"It is stiff and still numb," rebounds? We're not being phys!·
Fuhr said. "It's better. It's not cal enough."
dislocated. I've liad that pain
Edmonton took a 4·0 lead in the
before. It dld not pop out. "
first period on goals by McCiel·
"He should be okay tomor· land, McMurchy, 'Glenn Ander·
row," added Oilers Coach Glen son, and Charlie Huddy. Ander·
Sather. "But, I'll probably start son's goal was his 11th of the
Daryl (Reaugh) ."
season.
To replace Fuhr, the Oilers
recalled goaltender David Roche
New York closedwithin4·3.on a

kicking the PAT the score was For the Eagles it was Jeff
44-0 where it remained through· Johnson who led with 76 yards
out the game.
•
rushing on 14 attempts followed
As the Tornadoes seemed to be closely by Davis with 51 yards
inching their way to the goal line --on7 tries, Griffin 38 .yards on 5~­
dur!ng the remainder of the and Hendrix 7 yards on 3
game, turnovers proved to be attempts .
costly in their effort to register
In the receiving department
points on the scoreboard. Sopho· for the Tornadoes Amos gained 4
more Tim Ryan contributed an yards on 2 snags and Horner
outstanding offensive effort for gained 142 yards on 6 complete
the Tornadoes carrying the ball aerials for the victors. Davis also
several times but the Eagle added one catch for 6 yards !or
defensive hampered the teams - the Eagles. Defensive statistics
ab!l!ty to score in the fourth were not available.
·
quarter.
The Tornadoes will visit
Many young Eagles saw play· Southwestern next Friday night :
!ng time during the final period with game time slated at 7:30. :
and as the horn sounded to end The Eagles travel to Waterford
the game It was Eastern over on Friday to end the 1987 football
archr!val Southern 44-0.
season with game time at 7:30.
Offensively the Tornadoes
Statistics
were led by T!rn Ryan with 33
Yards Passing 10-148,3-4:
yards rushing on 17 carries .rushing 31-172,34-114. Total
followed by Rick Sellers with 28 yardage 320-118; fumbles-2,3,
yards on 6 tries, Mike Sharp 16 recoveries 1,2 ; pena lt!e .:_
yards on 6 carries, and Mike s-16-165,5-60; interceptions
Amos 17 yards on three attempts. 2-0.

Fuhr injured l

the conference standings at 5·0
By United Press International
Florida State and Auburn and solidified their grip on a Rose
Bow 1berth. An overflow crowd of
outscored their opponents by a
70,754
at Sun Devil Stadium saw
combined 102·20 Saturday, set·
the home team grab a 9·0
ling the stage for an explosive
halftime edge before the nation's
meeting between the two teams
leading passer connected twice
this week.
The Seminoles, 7-1 and ranked with Craig.
fifth last week, blasted Tulane
"Aikman had a· fabulous
73-14. FSU erupted for 31 points in game," said UCLA Coach Terry
the second quarter.
Donahue. "(Oklahoma Coach)
The Tigers, 7·0-1 and rated Barry Switzer said he was a good
sixth, held the nation's leading player, but didn't say he was this
rusher Emmitt Smith to 72 yards good."
and defeated Florida 29·6. Jeff
The nation's No. 2 rusher,
Burger threw for 220 yards to UCLA's Gaston Green, was held
spark the Tigers offense.
to minus five yards on six carries
"This Is. a great win," Tigers before leaving with a shoulder
Coach Pal Dye said. "But we Injury that w1!1 keep him out of
don't have any time to enjoy it next week's game at Oregon
with the schedule we face down State. Brian Brown replaced.
- the road."
Green and gained 134 yards,
Alter playing the Seminoles, Including a 74·yard TD with 2: 12
Auburn finishes its season left.
against Georgia and Alabama.
Nebraska quarterback Steve
The Tigers, 3-0-1 in the Southeast- Taylor threw four TD passes and
ern Conference, trail 4-0 Lo\IISI· running 22 yards for another
ana State. The two groups of score in leading the second·rated
Tigers don't play each other in Cornhuskers to a 42· 7 victory
the regular season, possibly against Missouri at Columbia.
setting up an aii·SEC Sugar ~aylor hit on 8 of 13 passes for 139
Bowl.
yards and rushed for an add!·
At Tallahassee, Fla., Danny tiona I 75 yards before leav!ngln
McManus hit on 14 of 17 passes the third period. Nebraska, 8·0,
for256yards and threeTDs!n 2~ plays Iowa State and then Colo·
quarters and Sammie Smith ran rado in preparation for the Nov.
for 111 yards and scored three 21 Big Eight showdown against
Tf' . to lead the Seminoles.
Oklahoma.
"It's been a long time since I
At Lawrence, Kan., the top·
d!&lt;' something like that," McMa· ranked Sooners also went to 8·0.
nuo said. "Things are starting to Behind a 565- yard ground attack,
cl' ~ k for me now."
Oklahoma humiliated Kansas
vlhile most of the Top 20 71·10 to give Switzer his 145th
rr'Tiped Saturday, Troy Aik· triumph, tying hlm with former
m "n's performance at Tempe, Oklahoma coach Bud Wilkinson
Ariz ., led No. 7UCLAtoacr!t!cal and Nebraska's Tom Osborne lor
Paclf!c-10 victory. Aikman, a most career Big Eight victories.
transfer from Oklahoma, com- Patrick Collins ran !or two TDs
pleted 22 of 31 attempts for 328 and the Sooner defense forced six
yards and his two touchdown turnovers.
passes to Paco Craig in the third
Elsewhere, No.3 Miami (Fla.)
quarter lifted the Bruins past defeated East Carolina 41·3,
Ar)zona State 31·23.
fourth·ranked Louisiana State
The Bruins, 7·1 overall, lead beat Mississippi .42·13, eighth·

ELECT

ELECT

JEFF WERRY

VOTE FOR

HAROLD "Butch"
BRINKER
Salisbury Township Trustee
· Thank You
Pd. lor by the candidate. H. Brinker, 31714 Bailey Run

•

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RE-ELECT

Delbert "Deb" Smith

CLERK OF
RUTLAND VILLAGE

'Sutton Township Trustee

Your Vote Appreciated

Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated
Pd. for by the candidate,

.. Pomeroy, Oh.

This morning 23,316 P-eople
brought you your coffee.

Gregory
Van Meter
Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand. lox 296,
Rutland, Oh. 45 7 7S

·I

· SV AC standings

13
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP Oct . 31 Game:
Oak Hill ............. .9 0 298 76 Eastern 44 Southern 0
Hannan Trace ..... 6 4 216 147 Nov. 6 games:
Eastern ............... 5 4 137 126 _.):;astern at Waterford
Symmes Valley ... 5 4 170 127 Oak Hill at Alexander
Kyger Creek.. ..... .5 5 88 153 Southern at Southeastern
North Gall!a ........ 3 6 123 207 Southwestern at Portsmouth
Southweste.rn ....... 2 7 78 152 East
Southern ............. .1 8 101 277 Chesapeake at $ymmes Valley
SVAC ONLY
(Final)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Oak Hill ............ 7 0 257 61
Hannan Trace ... 4 3 168 125
Symmes Va!!ey . 4 3 123 105
Eastern ............. .4 3 105 72
FOR
66111
Kyger Creek ...... 4 3
North Gallla ...... 3 4 117 160
MEIGS LOCAL
Southwestern ..... 2 5
58117
SCHOOL BOARD
Southern ............ O 7
81 226
TOTALS
28 28 977 977
Your Support '
Oct. 30 results:
A ppreciQied
Kyger Creek 7 North Call!a 6
Poid Pol. Ad~ (andidott, 109 Pltosant
Oak Hill 37 southwestern 0
lidgt, Pamerav, OH . .t5169
Symmes Valley 34 Hannan Trace

Florida State and Auburn roll to
·impressive wins Saturday night

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Eton a · head behind Paw Paw Tiger.
Hill, driven by Jerry Landess, Eton Hill paced the mile n 2:01
won Sunday night's featured 3-5. Waving Sam was third.
Ruflian Red and .Allwood
pace at Toledo Raceway Par-k, 2
wonthe
first two races to return
1·2 lengths ahead of Paw ..P_a"':,.
$26
on
the
dally double comb!·
Tiger.
natln
of
2
and
2.
Landess guided Eton Htll in
·
The
crowd
o! 1,859 wagered
third half way through the race,
and by the top of the stretch, was $200,804.

•

7~6;

ln the first half.Jeff Johnson
scampered into the endzone from
12 yards out making the score
after tl)e PAT kick by Weber
29-0. At halftime it was the
scoreboard showing the Eagles
on top of Southern.
The Eagles received the foot·
ball to start the third quarter and
again wasted.llttle time as Mark
Griffin kept the ball on an option
play and ran 3 yards for the score
at 9: 35 mark. The PAT was ran
Into the endzone by Griffin
·
making the score 37-0.
After numerous flags . being
thrown against the Eagles and
Tornadoes hampered the action
of the second hal! Jeff Horner
recovered a Lisle fumble to set
up the l!nal touchdown of the
game. At 5:45 left in the third
quarter Griffin tossed a pass to
Steve Horner who made an
outstanding 66 yard reception
lrtto the endzone and with Weber

F1yers 4, Kings 1
goal by Kelly K!slo, his fifth, and
At Philadelphia, Brian Propp
second-period goals by Mike
collected his 300th career goal in
Donnelly and Ron Duguay.
a three·goal third period to lift
Fubt left the game after
Donnelly's goal at 5:02 of the the Flyers. Philadelphia's Magnus Roupe, Dave Brown and
.second period following a scram·
ble in front of the net. He was Murray Craven also scored. The
Kings narrowed Philadelphia's
replaced by Reaugh.
In other games , the Islanders lead to 2·1 at 3: 58 of the third
slipped past Boston in overtime period on Dave Taylor's goal.
Sabres 5, Blackhawks 3
6·5, Philadelphia defeated Los
At
Buffalo, Mike Fol!gno
'Angeles 4-1, Buffalo stopped
scored
the game·winn!ng goal 48
Chicago 5-3, Hartford beat Quseconds
into the second period
ebec 5-1, and Vancouver sur·
sparking
the Sabres. Ray Sheppr!sed Winnipeg 3·1.
pard, Phi! Housley, Pierre Tur·
geon and Christian Ruuttu added
Islanders 6, Bruins 5, OT
At Boston, Pat LaFontaine set goals for Buffalo. Denis Savard,
up Alan ·Kerr's game·ty!ng goal Rick Valve and Steve Larmer
with 2:06 left in regulation and scored for Chicago.
Whalers 5, Nord!ques 1
scored 1: 41lnto overtime to lead
At Quebec, Ron Francis scored
New York. Kerr also scored a
powerplay goaL The Bruins' Ken a pair of power·play goals in a
L!nseman, Geoff Courtnall, Lyn· span of 9 seconds to lead
don Byers, Ray Burridge and Hartford. John Anderson added
two goals and · Sylvain Turgeon
Steve Casper scored.
recorded one for the Whalers.
The Whalers posted their sixth
decision without a loss. A deflec·
!ion by Peter Stastny accounted
for Quebec's only goal.
Jets 7, Canucks 3
At Winnipeg, Ray Neufeld
scored three goals to pace the
rated Syracuse beat Pittsburgh · Jets. Winnipeg's Doug Small,
24·10, No.9 Notre Dallle coasted
Steve Rooney, Dale Hawerchuk
past Navy 56·13 and Iowa de·
and Hannu Jarvenpaa also
feated 10th·ranked Indiana 29·21.
scored. Vancouver was outshot
Steve Walsh threw three TO
9·3 in the . second period ·but
passes at Greenville, N.C., as the
received goals from Tony Tan!!
Hurricanes raised their regular· and Greg Adams to tie the score
season winning streak to 27
3·3 after 40 minutes .
games ... At Jackson, Miss.,
Wendell · Davis caught three
scoring passes from Tom Hodson
and LSU remained unbeaten In
the Southeastern Conference ...
At Pittsburgh, quarterback
Don McPherson threw for two
scores and ran for another as the
Orangemen Improved to S.O ...
Anthony Johnson ran for four
TDs and Tim Brown caught a
51·yard scoring pass at South
Bend, Ind., to lead the 6-1 Irish ...
Chuck Hartlieb threw !or 271
yards at Iowa City, Iowa, as the
Hawkeyes handed the Hoosiers
their first Big Ten setback. ·

Hill wins feature at Raceway Sunday

"How would you and your team like to go to
the Persian Gulf?"

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Eagles blank Tontadoes 44-0 for fifth win

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, Novanber 2. 1987

. ,.

WASHINGTON - Nuclear
Under the Nuclear Waste Pol·
power may not be the wave of the Jcy Act of 1982, the Department of
American energy future, as Its Energy was ordered to provide a
enthusiastic advocates once permanent, underground d!spo·
hoped. It may even be withering sal facutty, paid for by industry"
away because of astronomical tithing, no later tl)an 1998. No one
costs and ·continuing concerns seriously expects to DOE to meet
about safety, as Its critics hope . this deadline, and everyone ,
But whatever the future holds seems to have a d!!ferent solution
lor nuclear power - · dynamic for the problem.
expansion of slow demise - it
Sen. J. Bennett Johnston, D·
has already created a serious La., for example, proposes con·
problem that won't go away !or struction of a $3 billion tempor·
centuries: safe disposal .of the · ary dump above ground to store
radioactive wastes produced by . the nuclear wastes until a per·
the nuclear plants. Yet the manent underground facility Is
federal government and the built. Johnston, who is regarded
nuclear industry · continue to as a friend of the nuclear power
dither as time goes by and deadly industry, also proposes that the
wastes pile up all over the DOE pick one of the three dump
sites it is considering and test it
country.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio •

4630~

Bowman Run Rd., Racine. Ohio

••

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 2. 1987

.P omeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Oilers rally, stun Bengals
·31-29 in·final 55 seconds
Although Tillman was stopped
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
for
no gain on two carries, on
· surprising Houston Oilers are
third
down Moon leaped over the
atop the AFC Central division
top
of
the Cincinnati defensive
with a 5-2 record because they
nne
for
the game-winning touchkeep bouncing back from deficits
down with 55 seconds left.
in the final quarter.
"We were having a tough time
The disappointing Cincinnati
movlng ·the Clnclm\ati defensive
Bengals ar'e In ttie AFC Central
line, so I decided to go over the
cellar with a 2-5 mark because
top," said Moon. "I went right
they k
e!f·destru~ting In the
over
our best offensive linemall"
closing seco
-Mike
Munchak."
Sunday was a rfect example
"Curtis'
kickoff
return
juiced
Cincinnati's
last gasp ended on
of both teams' unc
y abllltty to
us
up
and
got
us
believing,"
said
the
first
play
following
Houston's
win and lose games in e clutch.
Moon.
"And
Zendejas'
field
goal
kici!off
when
Eslason
was
interCincinnati built a 29lead
was
very
Important
because
if
he
cepted
by
Keith
Bostic
at
with stx minutes to go. H ston
make
it,
we
don't
have
a
midfield.
doesn't
then reeled of! 17 straight po ts
chance to win."
The . last three games the
to post a 31·29 victory.
On the next kickoff, Cincinna- Cincinnati regulars have played
"We've won three games so f r
ti' s Barney Bussey fumbl1id have had similar sudden - and
this year coming from behind i
o- bad- endings. On the last game
the fourth quarter," said Hous· Houston's Ken Johnson
ton quarterback Warren Moon. vered on the Cinclnnati21. oon before the players' strike, San
crambled for 20 yards to the l Francisco's Joe Montana threw a
"We think the fourth quarter is
d Spencer Tillman crashed TD pass on the last play of the
ours. We're developing a new
er from 1 yard out !or a TD that game to beat the Bengals and last
slogan on the Oilers - 'Find a
way to win.' And, somehow, we pulled the Oilers to within 29-24. week Cincinnati was unable to
"Our plan on that kickoff was get off a field ·goal in the closing
found a way today."
It was the third time this year for our first man to reach the ball seconds that could have averted
Cincinnati blew a game down the carrier to sland him up and for a loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers.
•'There seems to be a dark
stretch and coach Sam Wyche the second man to rip the ball
out,"
said
Houston
coach
Jerry
cloud
over thls team," said
could barely believe that a 29·14
Glanville.
Eslason.
"Maybe we need an
lead evaporated in five minutes.
The Houston defense then exorcist.
"It's hard to put your finger on
forced Cincinnati to kick and ~ "We'll see now how many
how It got away," said Wyche.
· "It did look like It was out of punter Greg Horne shanked a ' believers we still have," added
reach, " said Moon. "But we 19-ya~der to just the Cincinnati Esiason. "I still believe."
Houston's comeback overshadidn't panic. I think .that was the 45. Moon zipped a 33·yard pass to
key. We didn't panic because Drew Hill and two plays later, dowed great games by Esiason
we've been through this so Moon ran 7 yards to the 1 for a and teammate Jim Breech. Esia·
first down.
son completed 26 of 41 passes for
much.''
38:7 yards and two touchdowns.
Breech kicked a Clnctnnatl
record-tying five field goals- 32,
32, 33, 26 and 39 yards.
Penalties helped kill the Bengals. While Houston was only
Watson's first comeback win penalized three times for 42
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (UPI)
-Tom Watson stood on the 18th finally came Sunday and lt just yards, Cincinnati was penalized
tee Sunday knowing if he could happened to come in the richest 15 times for 132 yards.
"We were fighting a yellow
hit one last, good shot he would golf tournament ever played end the longest stretch otfrustra- the season-ending Nabisco flag battle," said Wyche. "Every
time we turned around we
"llon in one golf's greatest Championship.
seemed to be looking at a
careers.
"I was nervous," Watson said.
After going 39 months without penalty."
Rightly so. Watson had seen a a triumph and answering endless
five-shot lead dwindle to one and questions about w(ly he hadn't
the possibility was very real that. won, Watson produced a wire-tothe win which seemed so sure wire victory that earned him
earlier in the day might slip .. $360.000.
away.
"I felt like a leopard who was In
"Honestly, the money doesn 't
the gunsights of some hunter," mean that much," he sal d.
he said. "The first win Is always "Maybe tomorrow I will think
tough . But the first comeback about It and It might )telp offset
Will Be Open All Winter
win is even tougher."
some of my losses In the stock
Offices Open 4-6 pm Daily
market. But the victory is the big
thing. I'm about the happiest guy
Call 675-7153
In the w~ole world. This is worth
the wait."
or 675-4276

Sunday's match ·against the Bengais In Clncln·
nail. Bengal Barney Bussey, right, give chase.
The Oilers won 31·29. (UPI)

·Play at halfway point ·.in NFL '87
.

I N,

By United Press International

San Diego, Houston and Indianapolis own or share AFC dlv·
is ion leads with this unusual NFL
season reaching the midway
point.
The Chargers, 6-1, are first in
the AFC West, the Oilers, 5-2.
lead the AFC Central and the
Colts, 4·3, are tied with New
England atop the AFC East. The
season, marred by a 24-day
players' strike, would be half
over if not for one game being
cancelled and the campaign cut
from 16 to 15 games.
The NFC has more traditional
division leaders. Chicago heads
the Central, Washington leads
the East and San Francisco is
first In the West - all with 6·1
records.
The AFC surprise leaders
passed tough tests Sunday. The
Chargers defeated Cleveland in
overtime, 27·24; the Colts upset
• the New York Jets 19-14 one day
after acquiring Eric Dickerson
from the Los Angeles Rams; and
the Oilers scored 17 points in the
final six minutes for a 31·29
victory over Cincinnati.
At San Diego, Vince Abbott
atoned for two missed field goals
w.ith a 33-yarder 2:16 into over·
time to lift the Chargers. Abbott
had tied the score with a 20-yard
field goal with 1: 46 left in the
fourth quarter.
"It's a tremendous lift for this
team." said Chargers linebacker
Chip Banks, who was traded to
San Diego from Cleveland last
spring. "It was very Important
for us to stay together in the
fourth quarter and not crumble.
"It's still early, but the attitude
is there. The guys are coming
together as a team."
At East Rutherford, N.J.,
Albert Bentley, who will go to the
bench to make room for Dickerson, rushed for 145 yards to pace
the Colts. Dickerson gained 38
yards on 10 carries Ia spot duty.
Indianapolis Colt~ Ron Meyer
says he now has key piece that
was missing from his offensive
puzzle.

· "Eric Dickerson obviously
gives us a premier running
back," Meyer said. "Eric has a
chance to be the Ingredient, the
cad.lyst to go with an already
good football team, and I would
underline already good, and
bring us to another echelon."
The Colts are home against the
Chargers Sunday.
At Cincinnati, quarterback
Warren Moon capped the Oilers'
rally with a !-yard touchdown
leap with 55 seconds left. Houston
trailed 29-14 with tess than six
minutes remaining but the Oilers
have become used to fourthquarter comebacks.
"We've won three games so far
this year coming from behind In
the fourth quarter," Moon said.
"We think the fourth quarter. Is
ours. We're developing a new
slogan on the Oilers: 'Find a way
to win.' And, somehow, we found
a way today."
The NFC leaders also won
Sunday. Jim McMahon brought
the Bears a 31-28 comeback
victory over Kansas City, the
Redsklns rolled over Buffalo
27-7; and the 49ers crushed the
sorry Rams 31-10.
At Chicago, McMahon threw
two fourth-quarter TD passes to
Willie Gault to lift the Bears.
Making his first start in nearly a
year, McMahon completed 23 of
34 for 287 yards and three
touchddowns. Last week!)ecame
off the bench to lift Chicago over
Tampa Bay.
. "This isn't exactly the way the
Bears pull out victories," McMa·
hon said.
" I think we have sent a
message to the rest of the league
that you may get the Bears down
but not out."
At Orchard Park, N.Y., Jay
Schroeder threw two touchdown
passes and George Rogers led
the Redskins' ball-control of·
fense by rushing for 125 yards.
Rogers carried 30 times in his
first extensive action or the
season after being sidelined with
shoulder and toe injuries.

Scoreboard ...
Campbell CoafereDCe

NFL results

Norrill Division

_NATION,\L FOM'BAI.J.. LEAGUE
Sund"''' Refiulb
lndlanapnll&lt;! 19, NY ,lf'l!l 1-1

HouMon 31,

flnclnna~ll

i
I II
51 52
45tlfln40
Minnesota
St. l.nuirl
35172:1132
Smythe Division
Edmonlon
i 5 0 14
H .fi7
Wlnnlptl
6 of o n
35 3%
Calpry
5 5 I 11
44 44
Los A1111:'le8
3 II I
'I'
!II It
l'anc6uver
2 1 I
5
36 d

2!

CI"~IIUld

Francl~co

llol (tYI')

SUnday, No\' . 11

SUndiQI'I ~lult!l

fhll"ltKO al Green Bay , I p.m .
Dallas at Detroit. I p. m .
OrnH!r al Bullalo. I p. m .
l.A Raldrr.t al Minnesota , I p.m.
San DleKO ut lndianapolbi, I p.m.
T11mp1L Bay 111 Sl . Loulll, I p.m.
W*'ihinll:1-.orlllt Philadelphia, I p.m.
Htm... ton at San Francisco, 4 p.m .
Mhunl at fln&lt;:lnnatl, 4 p.m.
NPW 0flf'W15 Ill L!\ RamK, -1 p.m .
No•w En~laod 111 N\' Giant", II p.m.

NY IAianders 1. U.scon 5 (01')
l"blladel phla I, Lo!l A.nJ~If'.sl
auflalo 5. Chtcaro 3
Hartlord 5, Quebec I
F..dmomon 7, NV Rangers 8

OLD TOWN
CAMPGROUND

Squad has 16 weekend·calls

The Athens Association of
Basketbail Officials will be con·
ducting an adult education class
for those who want to become a
licensed basketball official for
the 1987-1988 season
Upon completion, those who
pass may officiate at all levels
other than the varsity level. The
class will be held at the Meigs
Jaycee. Quarters on East Main
Street in Pomeroy beginning
Nov. 3 at 6: 30 p.m.
Further Information may be
obtained by contacting Dave
Jenkins or any other local
basketball official.

Nameomiued
Coach Mlck Childs name was
unintentionally omitted from
Sunday's sports article concerning the Meigs-Federal Hocking
football game. Coach Childs,
defensive coach, was very instrumental in the Marauders success
this season.

Mln~11ota at Detroll , nlxht
\'ancouwr

SeiUtll' at N\' deb, 9 p .m .

NATIONAL HOC KE\' LEAGUE
Wale. Co nrerencr
Pat. lick Dlvbilon
W I. T Pho. (if" GA ·
!'II'Y h;landers
7 l 1 I~
$0 32
1

l

D

1-1

3&amp;

30

6

I
II

I
3

13

ot!

II

'""'

33
5·1

Jloo'\' Rllnlllf'f8
l'hlladelphla

-1

4 6

2

18

31

n

PIU!IhiiJ"Ih

3

3

I

45

50

·Adams Division

1 I 2 lfl
II . .tO
5-llll-1545

B~ton

5

S

II

-II

43

HJ.rtford
Qu ebec

1'1

5

S

~

II
II

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41
40 .

al

Wultlngton, niiJhl

D

Transactions
"' ! n orr.ll'ro"H ln/•'""'''"1141
R11ol11•r hall
•·

Jle.1lped

Mlhwaukee - Stpd pard John Lucas

10 a l · year conlnct 11nd

l{lll.nl

Cra ll

Hodlf!lll to a Z.)"!!ar t.o ..ract .
~' Mhlnllon Obtained free-ag~nl
forward 1\o'!rnard Klak When New York ·
Kntckllalled tu malch hbt uffe.- llheel.

VOTE FOR

JOHNCandidate
MURPHY
For
Southern Local School Board
Your Vote &amp; Influence Appreciated
Pd. for by the mdld1te P. 0. Box 17, Racine , Ohio, 949·2222

WAN.TED
EXPERIENCED
BODY MAN
•MUST HAVE OWN TOOLS
. PHONE 992-7013 OR
992-5553
CALL BETWEEN 8:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M.

VOTE YES ON
THE EASTERN
SCHOOL
EMERGENCY
LEVY
DO IT FOR YOUR KiDS AND
YOUR COMMUNITY
Paid For By the Eastern Emergency'School Levy
Campaign Committee
David Weber - Chairman
Reedsville, Ohio

'I

Meigs Local School District Superintendent Dan E. Morris
had · not received word Monday morning as to when a
federal mediator will arrive to attempt to iron out problems
between the Meigs Local Board .of Education and the Melg~
Local Teachers Association.
However, Supt. Morris indicated that he has been assured
that the mediator will be here before the Meigs Local Teachers
go on strike which has been set for ~: 01 a.m. on Nov. 6. It is
reported that teachers met Friday evening and voted to proceed
with the strike on the scheduled date. However, they are
scheduled !or another session on ·Thursday evening, the day
before the scheduled strike. It is also reported that the teachers
association is willing to continue negotiations at anxtime.

,
'

~till

;

Lodge to meet
The stated meeting of Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will be held
7:30 p.m. Tuesday. Election of
officers will be held. Refreshments wilt be served.
Canceled
The Nov. 3 meeting of Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority has been
canceled.

Mans death ruled suicide

!

Special service
The Voice of Victory Inc.,
representing Halt!, will be holding a service on Wednesday· at
7:30 p.m. at the Harrisonville
Holiness ChapeL The public Is

Meigs County Coroner James Conde reported Saturday that
Maurice Durst, 63, of 511 Park St., Middleport, died at
approximately 1: 25 p.m. Friday afternoon at his homj! from a
self.Lnfllcted gun shot wound to the head. On the scene In
addition to Conde were Middleport Pollee and Middleport EMS.

•

•'I'
•

"' news
Hospital

•••

Area deaths
Leroy Richards
~·

Leroy Richards, 80, a resident
of Arcadia Nursing Home, died
early Mmiday morning at St.
Joseph's Hospital in Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
Born May 19. 1907 in Wlrt Co.,
W.Va., he was a son of the late
Frank and Sarah Richards. He
was retired from the Cadillac
Division of General Motors In
Detroit, Mich., and was a
member of Eden United
Brethren Church In Reedsville.
Survivors include three sons,
Johnny, Jason and Paul Richards, and one daughter, Susie
Rtcliards, all of Reedsville; three
sisters, Geaiah Phillips of Reedy,
W.Va., Wilma Wright of Hocking·
port and Juanita Woodford of
Piketon: and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides his parents he was
preceded In death by ·three
sisters and one brother. ·
Services will be Wednesday, 1
p.m., at White Funeral Home In
Coolville with Rev. Roy Deeter
officiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the cemetery from 2
to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Tuesday.

SHALL A LEVY RENEWING ONE HUNDRED THIRTEEN THOUSAND
THREE HUNDRED THIRTY NINE DOLLARS ($113,339.0DI AND PRO·
VIDING $36,756.00 BE IMPOSED FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROVID·
lNG FOR THE EMERGENCY REQUIREMENT OF THE
SCHOOL DISTRICT (AVOI~ING AN OPERATING DEFI·
CIT) AND ALEVY OF TAXES TO BE MADE OUTSIDE OF THE TEN·
MILL UMITATION ESTIMATED BY THE COUNTY AUDITOR TO AV·
ERAGE 5.0 MILLS FOR EACH ONE DOlLAR OF VALUATION,
. WHICH AMOUNTS TO FIFTY UNTS ($0.50) FOR EACH ONE
HUNDRED DOLLARS OF VALUATION, FOR APERIOD OF FIVE IS)
YEARS?

AGAINST THE TAX

Free clothing
Gallla-Melgs Community Ac·
lion Agency will be holding free
clothing day on Wednesday from
9 to 12 p.m. at the old high school
building In Cheshire.

No word yet on mediator

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT

G. ALFRED

St. Loula al Quebec, alpt
NewJf'rae)' •NY l!danden, nipt
r.-'V Rllnpn at Cal1ary, nlrht

, LoM Ansele~ Clipper• center Earl Cureton.

ol

lA majority affirmative vote is nHenary for passage!

[X]

Trustees to meet
Lebanon Township Trustees
will meet Wednesday, 7 p.m., at
the township building.

A list of signers
a petition agaln~t the Racine VIllage
wet·dry Issue in .Friday's Daily Sent111el VIllage carried the
name of Rex Thornton. Mr. Thornton reports that his name was
erroneously listed amQng the signers. The Issue will be voted
upon at tomorrow's general election.

PIOPOSED TAX LEVY

FOR THE TAX

General Election Nov. 3, 1987

&gt;

,

. '1

Scattered showers hit
.

\

sisters .
. Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. William
Mlddleswarth officiating. Burial
will be In Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call' at the funeral
home at anytime.

Charles Walker

Velerans Memorial ·
Saturday Admissions - Ronald Hewlett, Long Bottom;
Ernest Wood, Pomeroy. ·
. Saturday Discharges - Rex
Butcher, Edna Swick, Helen
Miller.
Sunday Admissions- Richard
Jeffers, Pomeroy; Helen Miller,
Middleport; Chester Young,
Long Bottom; Neva Seyfried,
Pomeroy.
Su·nday Discharges - Alberta
Spaun, Elaine Corsi, Lawrence
Scarberry.

· southbound lane ·on Box Canyon like a ballerina, were on top of the
Road early Sunday.
car when firefighters arrived
The rain posed a problem for early SJ!.nday to rescue them.
two men who were on their way
About 5,000 homes and busihome from a Halloween party nesses experienced short·term
Dense fog reduced visibility to and got their car stuck. in the power outages· caused by the
as little as one-eighth of a mile middle of the Los Angeles River, rainfall.
early s.unday in parts of the ottlclals said.
In addition, the storm swept3.8
Plains and Midwest. Fog advisoThe men smashed through a million gallons of partially
ries also were posted for parts of guardrail and ended up In the treated sewage Into the Santa
Texas and Louisiana.
man-made drainage system, Monica Bay Saturday, forcing
Temperatures In the 70s and which was filled with rushing closure of several beaches, said
80s prevailed from the southern water from storm runoff. The Anna Sklar, a spokeswoman tor
Plains to the lower Mississippi men, one of wllom was dressed lhe city's Department of Public
Valley a11d the southern Atlantic
Works.
states. Paducah, · Ky., lied a
During the worst of the down·
record high !or the date ·with a
pour, the partially treated sewreading of 82.
age gushed at about 1 miLlion
South Central Ohlo:
A Pacific storm dumped more
gallons an hour Into a creek,
Partly cloudy today with a high which feeds into the ocean, Sklar
than an Inch of rain throughout
near 80. Mostly clear tonight with said. The overflow lasted for
Los Angeles during the weekend,
dampening Halloween spirits a low In the tow 50s.
about seven hours.
Mostly sunny Tuesday with
and triggering more than 100
traffic accidents that claimed at near record highs In the low 80s.
The probability of precipitaleast three lives.
The California Highway Patrol tion is near zero through
said a mudslide blocked the Tuesday.
NEW BALLROOM DANCE CLUI
Winds will be from the south at
nor.thbound lane and part of the
DancH htld at tht Holiday Inn
five to 10 miles an hour today and
Gallipolis, OhiG
tonight.
"A Thanklgiving Dinner/Dance"
Ohio Extended Forecast
(Sat.l NaY. 21, 1917
Invited.
Wednesday through Friday ·
Holiday
Inn, Gallipolis, Ollio
Chance of showers Wednesday
$40 Couple, Stmi-fO&lt;mal
and Thursday and fair Friday.
Trustees to meet
7:00 p.m. luffot (lttf-Pork-Turktyl
Highs will range between 65 and
Salisbury Township Trustees
9:00 p.m. "Mary lucas &amp; Frionds"
75 Wednesday, 55 and 65 Thurswill meet Thursday, 7p.m.,atthe
R.S.V.P. by Nov. 4, 1987
day and 45 to 55 Friday. Lows will
township hall on Rock Springs
Tickets or Information Call:
be in the low 50s Wednesday,
Road.
Mikki Casto 676-3888
between 45 and 50 Thursday and
Betty Kyger 448·1038
Revival slated
Mary Lucas 448·9787
In the 30s J&lt;riday.
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church wlll be in revival Wednes·
day through Sunday with services 7: 30 p.m. nightly and an
additional service at 10: 30 a.m.
on Sunday. Eyangelist will be
Rev. James Mason.
Annual meeting
AND
Tl\\! annual oyster supper of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, Pomeroy, r will be held
Tuesday evening at the post
TO THE
home following the regular bus!·
ness meeting.
Poi• lor by Harold G. Roush! Rt. I, lox 38, Rocine, Oh.

Weather

RE-ELECT

HAROLD G. ROUSH
ORIS' SMITH

MEIGS CO. ·BOARD OF EDUCATION

·One person has
super number ·

CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
ticket from Saturday's Super
Lotto game bears the same stx
numbers as chosen in the drawing that · was worth $6 million,
Ohio Lottery officials said.
Numbers picked were 5, 8, 25,
27, 30 and 41. Officials said
$4.949,962 worth of tickets were
·sold for the drawing.
The holder of the ticket can
redeem it today and become
eligible for the 20 annual Installments of $300,000 - before
taxes.
The 163 tickets with five of the
six ·numbers are each worth
$I,OOO while another 7,090 tickets
have four of the numbers and are
worth $80.

Re·Eiect

WANDA EBLIN
Salisbury Township

CLERK
Pa1d tor by the Candidate .

Stocks ...

Stocks

PAT'S ..UFFLER SHOP
YOUR COIIIPLETE EXHAUST
SERVICE CENTER.
CALL TODAY AND ASK FOR:
PHIL HOOD

DAILY SENTINEL 'CARRIER

RE-ELECT

THE DAILY-SENTINEL

CHARLES F. PYLES-

992-2156

VOTE FOR

FRANCIS ANDREW

TRUSTEE OF OLIVE TOWNSHIP

The Meigs County Probate and
Juvenile Court office will be
closed Tuesday afternoon for
election day.

states

Sunday morning at Payson,
Ariz., and showers· also dotted
parts of Southern CaiUornla.
New Mexico and Utah,

Services were held Oct. 26, for
Charles R. Walker,' 70, of 610
Halcyon J\venue, McConnelsville, Ohio, who died Friday, Oct.
Continued from pagfe 1
23, in the Good Samaritan MediThe stock market's next turn
cal Center, ZanesVille following a
depends on how the economy
Dally stock prices
long Illness.
turns out, and that will takettme,
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
. Born Sept. 9, 1917, in Capehart,
analysts agreed. ·
he was a son of the late Steril and · Bryce and Mark Smllb
Broad·market indicators
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Oral Wolfe Walker.
'climbed last week. The New
He was a retired automotive
York Stock Exchange Composite
mechanic, a member of the New Am Electric Power .... ... .. .... 27+1 Index rose 1.58 to 140.80 after
Haven VFW Post and a World AT&amp;T ................................. 29% plummeting 19.91 the week beWar II army veteran. Ashland 011 ........................ 51\ii fore; Standard &amp; Poor's 500Surviving are his wife, Coral L. Bob Evans ........................... 17
stock Index rose 3.57 to 251.79
Roush Walker, whom he married Charming Shoppes .... ... .. ..... 17'1.! after plunging 34.48 in the prein 1950; one son, Charles R. City Holding Co ................... 33
vious week.
Walker Jr., Stockport, Ohio; two Federal Mogul.. ................... 30
On Friday, the second day in a
brothers, Dallas Walker, Mason, Goodyear T&amp;R ................ , .47\ii · row, prices advanced In active
Maurice Walker, Gallipolis; two Heck's Inc .... ....... ............. ..2%
trading of over·the-counter and
sisters Mildred Westphal, Chi- Key Centurion .................... 33'1.! · American Stoc.k Exchange
cago, Ill.. Mary Workman, New Lands' End .......................... 19
Issues, but those markets still
Limited Inc . .......... ·............. 20%
Haven and four grandchildren.
lost ground tor the week.
The funeral was conducted at Multimedia Inc ................... .47
"It's too early to say we hlt
the Tatman Funeral Home in Rax Restaurants ... ............... 3%
bottom and that we will go higher
McColl!nsville, with evangelist Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 7Y.
in the short run, but the market's
Erma! Allen officiating. Burial Shoney's Inc ....................... 20%
action has been very positive,"
Ina Kautz
took place in McConnelsville Wendy's Inti. .............. ......... 6%
said Eugene Peroni Jr., techniWorthington Ind ................ :.t5Va
Cemetery.
cal analyst at Janney MontgoIna E. Kautz, 93, 35537 State
Route 7, Pomeroy, died Saturday , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. mery Scott Inc. in Philadelphia.
at the Holzer Medical Center.
A homemaker and a teacher,
BECOME A
Mrs. Kautz was born Sept. 30,
1894 at Chester, a daughter of the
late Wilbur and Catherine Pfarr
Stobart. She was a member of the
ASH ST.-POWELL ST.-PAGE ST.-MAPLE ST.
St. John Lutheran Church, Pine
MIDDLEPORT
Grove. She was a graduate of the
Syracuse Teachers College and
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL
was a teacher for several years.
She belonged to the 3-A Council of
the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
Surviving are a daughter,
Grace Swiderski, Monroe,
Mich.; a son, Dale Kautz, Pome· -!--------------------"""':-----+
roy; a sister, Norma Stoltenberg,
Tipton, Ia., and eight grandchildren, Bob Kautz, Joy Russell,
e~treme
Shelia Guzi, Sharon Smyth, Su·
zanne Gruhl, Sandra Cavell,
Pamela Massie and Blll Kautz.
She Is also survived by 15
great·grandchildrE\!!·
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her hus-Life·long resident of Olive Township.
band, Elmer Kautz In 1976; a son,
Carl Kautz, a brother and two
-Strong defender of township taxpayers' rights.

Office closed Tuesday

Midw~t

-----Announcements-----

.· Thornton did not sign petition

SAMPLE
BALLOT

VOTE FOR

Chester Township
TRUSTEE

T\lesdQ 'II Gam!!S
l"hlladelphla at Pllt8buf"JI:h, nl1hl

•

The Daily Sentinei.:....Page-5

.

By United Press International
Thunderstorms In Arizona
spawned downpours that prompted a desert !lash !lood warning
and 98 mph winds that smashed
windows and tore down fences,
trees and power line!;. Sunday,
whtle dense fog blanketed parts
of the Plains and Midwest.
Scattered showers hit the
Mi(jwest, with rain falling In
Iowa, Missouri and Illinois. Rain
also fell on parts of lower
Michigan. and In central and
southern Florida.
In Arizona, a flash flood
warning was posted Sunday
morning for the western half of
Mohave County in the northwest
pa,rt of the state. Winds of up to98
mph broke windows and brought
down fences and large trees at
Gtla Bend, the National Weather
Service said.
Strong winds also knocked
down power lines In western
Maricopa county near Phoenix .
Nearly 2 Inches o ~raln fell

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
over the weekend; 10 on Saturday and six on Sunday.
Saturday at 2:20p.m., Middleport to Walnut St. for Richard
Lewis who was lreated but not transported; Middleport at 2: 32
p.m. to th~ Meigs football field for Jake Kennedy to Veterans
Memorial Hospitaf; Racine at 4: 10 p.m. to Long Bottom for
Ronald Hewlett to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
4 : 2~ p.m. to Pomeroy Pike !or Elma Epple to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 4:30 p.rn. to County Road 14 for Ernest
Wood to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 5:05p.m. to
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Harry Shain to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6:43p.m. to the football
field for Shawn Diddle who was treated but not transported;
Salem Township Fire Department at 7: 56 p.m. to Township
Road 625 for a brush fire on the John Welsh property; Pomeroy
at 9:45 p.m. to Route 7 !or l{elen Miller to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 10: 28 p.m. transported Jodie Hysell from ·
an auto accident on Pomeroy Pike to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday at 3: 45 a. m,, Rutla.nd to Dexter for Randy Harrison to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 10: 14 a.m. to Route 124 for
Myrl Warner to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Olive Township
Fire Department at 2:27p.m. to a brush fire in Long Bottom;
Tuppers Plains at 2:40 p.m. to Bigley Ridge Road for Chester
Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:11p.m. to
Mulberry Ave. for Neva Seyfried to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 10:03 p.m. transported Dennis McKinney
to Holzer Medical Center.

.Cage officials
to meet Nov. 3

WOLFE

Wlnnipel( i ,' Van ctJ u ~· • •r 3
Moaday'1 G&amp;mfli
st. LouiJI at Montreal, i : 35 p.m.

Mondmy , Nov. 9

Bulr".. o

-

Hartford 7, Philadelphia .a
Toronlo &amp;, Clllt.I.!IO'
-~BMioa 3, Monil"'!al 3 (lie}
W•kln,ton :1, MJnr~Hoola 3 (tie )
Dttroll: 3. St. Louis 3 Cllel

Pltt"hurghal Ka n!lhCity, 1 p. m .
,\tlunta at Clrvelll.nd, I p .m.

Montreal

ANNOUNCEMENT

h1lander~

PIUAhUfJII. ~. QUetW'c 4

H. I.A. Ru.ms Ill

G

·To:t:n Watson scores initial
comeback win on PGA tour

Sah1nl"''' Re&amp;ull8
M. NV Ran,en 2
New ,Jer~rey 6, Edmonton 5

Nl'

Den\-E"r :14, Detroit 0
Monday's Game
/11'\ ' Gh•nh at Dalla!i, 9 p .m.

N~!W ,J t: r~y
WMhln&amp;~on

5

Cblcago

Ne"'' EnJIM.nd :&amp;. LA Ralden U
Nf'"'" Orleans 311, Allanll. 0
TamtM Ba_y :z:J, Green BaJ ,.,.
Wadllnl;ton 27, B~llalo 1
Philadelphia 2!1, s.. Louis t1
Miami "· l'tltJIIurJh U
!ka.ttlt• ~. Mlnnt'sota 17
San llif'40 "n",

~41113333

DetroM

Ollca,;n 3 1, Kan!W' City 2R

Sun

6f01%46-l%

Taro IIIIo

At' Anaheim, Calif,. Joe Mon·
tana threw three TD passes for
the 49ers and the Rams rushed
for 62 yards in their first game
without Dickerson to fall to 1·6.
''I have to deal with the people I
have on my team,'' Rams Coach
John Robinson said. "The people
who are competitive and are
willing to play are the ones I have
to be concerned about.''
In other games Sunday, New
· England shaded the Los Angeles
Raiders 26-23, Denver slammed
Detroit 34·0, Seattle nicked Minnesota 28·17, Miami dumped
Pittsburgh 35-24, New Orleans
crushed Atlanta 3S.O, Tampa Bay
defeated Green Bay 23·I7 and
Philadelphia tripped St. Louis
28-23.
Tonight, It's the New York
Giants at Dallas.
Patriots 26, Raiders 23
At Foxboro, .Mass., Tony
Franklin, given a second chance
after an offsldes penalty, kicked
a 29·yard field goal with one
second left to lift the Patriots.
Broncos 34, Uons 0
At Denver, John Elway passed
for one touchdown and ran for
two, and the Broncos recorded'
their first shutout since 1984.
Eiway scored on runs of 3 and 7
yards, and also threw a 35-yard
TD pass to Vance Johnson. He
completed 16 of 30 passes for 274
yards.
Seahawks 28, VIkings 17
At Seattle, Curt Warner ru shed
for 94 yards and caught a 30-yard
touchdown pass to . lift the
Seahawks.
Dolphins 35, Steelers 24
At Miami, Dan Marino threw
four touchdown passes, including
two bombs to Mark Clayton and
one to Mark Duper, to lift the
Dolphins from a 21-7 halftime
deficit.
Salois 38, Falcons 0
At Atlanta, Dalton Hiliiard ran
for two touchdowns, Rueben
Mayes rushed for 112 yards, and
the Saints intercepted five
passes.
Buccaneers 23, Packers 17
At Milwaukee, Donald Igwebulke kicked three field goals and
the Buccaneers scored two touchdowns In a 1:08 span of the third
quarter.
Eagles 28, Cardinals 23
At St. Louts. Randall Cun·
ningham threw for three touchdown" passes, including the
game-Winner with 40 seconds
left, to lead the Eagles.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~---LocruNews--~

The Bengals were celebrating
when Boomer Esiason's 3-yard
m pass to 27S.pound tackle
Anthony Munoz gave Cincinnati
a 29-14 lead with just 6:41 to go.
But Houston's rally began on the
ensuing kickoff, .when Curtis
Duncan returned the ball · 62
yards to sel up Tony Zendejas'
47-yard field goal with 5:38
remaining. That made it 29-17.

RECOVERS OWN FUMBLE- Houston Oilers'
quarterback Warren Moon falls on the ball to
recover his own fumble In the fourth quarter of

'

Monday, November 2, 1987

,,

-When formerly Trustee. obtained the only Block
' Grant ever to be received by Olive Township.
-Served as State Highway Inspector under
Governor Gilligan.
-If elected, will attempt to obtain a block grant
for much needed township equipment.
-:- Promises honest. dedicated and sincere taxpayer

MAYOR- VILLAGE OF RACINE

With the shutdown of the Foote Mineral Corp. in 1986,
it became mandatory for me to accept employment in the
northern part of the state. I have since been
transferred home, working in Marietta, Ohio.
I am regretful of the time spent away from my duties as
Mayor of Racine Village, and am, now ready to take on the
office of mayor, again, full time.
Please, with your support for me as Mayor of Racine
Village, I promise to serve you with the dedication I have in
the past, for a better future for our village.
Charles F. Pyles
Mayor
·
Village of Racine
Pd. Pol. Ad by Cal)didate. Bo• 278. A"acine. Ohio 46771

•

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1

Monday, November 2. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, November 2. 1987

Page-7

Auxiliary makes plans for Education Week
Plans for the observance of
National Education Week, Nov.
15-21, were made at the recent
meeting of the American Legion
Aux!Uary or Dtew Webster Post
39, Pomeroy . .
Francis Hunnell, education
and scholarship chairman, announced plans tor the obser·
vance. She wUI visit the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport

Racine UMW meets

•
Plus Value, Variety And One Stop Shopping
COPYRIGHT 1987 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUI\IDAY
NOV. 1, THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV. 7, 1987, IN GALLIPOpS &amp; POMEROY :
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LII'~IT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

.

.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARAN11E
Everything you buy at Kroger is ~u.aranteed for Xour total satisfaction regardless of

manuf~cturer. If you are not sat1sf1ed, Kroger Will replace your item with the same
brand or a comparable brand or refund vour purchase price.

Embassy
Syrup ......................24-oz.
Embassy
$
Syrup ...................... 36-oz.
Kroger
Cake Mix ......... .. 18.5-oz

c
19

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·
ADVERnSEO ITEM POLICY
Each of these advenised items is required to J)e readily available fof sale in each
Kroger Store, except as specifically noted in this ad. If we do run oul of an
advert
item, we will ~ffer you vo~r choice of a co'"!'~ parable item, when available,
reflect~ng t!'e sa':"e sa'l!1ngs .o r a ra1ncheck which w1ll entitle you tiJ purchase the
advertised 1tem a~ the advertrsed price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon will

!Sed

be accepted per Item purchased .

·

Kr~ger
·$
Ou1ck Oats ... ;.......42-oz.

Kroger
Corn Flakes ......... 18-oz.

Cost Cutter
Spaghetti .............. 2-lb.
Cost Cutter
Applesauce ......... 16-oz.

I'

c
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09

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Blue Bonnet
Margarine .....

$ 09

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

c

Cost Cutter
Cheese Food ...... 12-oz.
FROZEN

c

Downyflake
Waffles .................1o-oz.

c

Kroger
Flour....................... .5-lb.

c

Cost Cutter
Orange Juice ...... 12-0z.

c

Kroger Mixed
Vegetables ........... 2o-oz.

c

KROGER

Vegetable
·Soup ......................1.~ o/c~~-

c

Nov. 15 was announced as
"food Sunday" at the Racine
... · "'_.,.,.,,...,.
United Methodist Church when
:s;:
;:
..,
the United Methodist Women
met there recently.
Marlene Fisher presided at the
meeting with final plans being
made tor the election day dinner
' to be ~erved Tuesday, beginning
at 11 a .m and continuing through
the dinner hour.
It was noted that all or the
apple butter made at the church
has been sold. Cards were signed
to be sent to sick and shutin
members of the community, and
visits were reported.
The Christmas meeting was
discussed with plans to be
announced later. Betty Roush
was welcomed as a visitor. Sue
Grace had the program on
VCR WINNER- Wanda Mohler of Middleport was the winner of ·
"Won'len and Health Care'' with
a VCR In a drawing at VaughiUI's Cardinal. Presentin1 the
several
members joining In the
equipment to her Friday morning was Gene Spurlock, asslstaot
discussion. Prayer closed the
miUiager.
meeting.
Refreshments were served by
Marian Knlghtstep and Sue
Grace.
Jason Alan Parker, son of Carl
· and Arlene Parker, Tuppers
· Plains, celebrated hjs ninth
with patients confined there. Several of the
TRICK OR TREAT - Costumed Pomeroy
Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman Is
: "birthday recently with a party at
residents joined In the spirit by (lvlngtreats to the
r.ecuperating at home following kindergarten boys and girls paraded the halls ol
· his home.
youngsters. Audrey Swett Is pictured treating
treatment at Veterans Memorial the Veterans Memorial Hospital's Extended Care
:: Cake, Ice cream, and punch
Kim
Conde, Tiffany ~lckle, and Missy ·L ehew.
Facility Thursday morning sharing halloween fun
Hospital.
: were served. Games were played
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
; with prizes bel.ng awarded to the
Sarah
and Matthew, Texas Road,
, winners
.
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Attending were Jason's grand·
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald'and
parents, Ted and Marge Con·
at which time a "do your own
Gladys Tuckerman.
A donation to the Tourettes groceries for a family. It was thing" auction w!ll be held.
; nolly , Sandy and Christie Mills,
Mandy Russell of Racine was Syndrome Association was made noted by the service committee
~ Debbie, Misty and Travis Lyons,
'the social committee thanked
the Friday visitor or Stephanie at Tuesday night's meeting of ~he that a hailoween party had been those who helped with the preferBill, Beverly, Blllena and Daniel
Haggy and Mr. and Mrs. Steve ·Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta held for the patients In extended ential tea jleld recently at the
Buchanan, Shawn and Brian
care at Veterans Memorial HosHaggy and Brad.
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Long,' Jeff Rankin, Erma Jean
home of Ann Chapman. A trip to
Charles Sayre was the recent
Kay Logan spoke to the group pital with donuts and elder being Fenton Glass was set tor Nov. 14
and Darlene Connolly, Jenny and
visitor or his parents, Mr. and on the syndrome, the symptoms served and favors being given to with members to leave at 1:30
Jim Bob Parker, Sheila, Jeremy
Mrs.
Charles Sayre.
JASON
A.
PARKER
and Implications In tasks of dally each patient.
and Christopher Connolly.
A quilt wUI be used In a special p.m from the old Pomeroy Junior
Elsie
Bratton,
Radcliff,
spent
living. Maurlsha Nelson presided
Sending gifts were Jason's
High . School parking lot In
several days this week with at the meeting with plans being fund raising project for the group
great grandparen•s, Everette
Gladys Tuckerman and Mr. and made to provide a sack of and will be awarded at the Dec. 1 Pomeroy.
and Beulah Schul'.z, his great- and his great-great ·
The Christmas party with
Mrs. Eu&amp;ene Han.tn.g and Ronald.
gr!YldiQPwer, Erma Connolly grandmother, Lola Grlftjn.
other chapters ot t/18 .Ori&gt;r.Jty on
Dec. 5 was discussed. Mlck
Childs will provide the records.
At the costume party held In
conjunction with the meeting,
prizes were awarded to Linda
Bates, ugljest; Janet Peavley,
POMEROY - Drew Webster Raymond Walburn.
MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Colum· Pastor O.H. Cart welcomes the
prettiest; Carolyn Colllns, most
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town· bla To\l'nshlp Board of Trustees public to attend.
Post 39, American Legion, will
original, and Lynn Shuler
WEDNESDAY
have Its annual oyster supper
ship Trustees wUI meet Monday. w!ll meet Monday, 7: 30 p.m., at
funniest.
ANTIQUITY - A bazaar and
7: 30 p.m., · at the Syracuse the fire sta Uon.
Tuesday night at 8 p.m.
Election dinners
bake sale, sponsored by· the , - - - - - - - - - - - RACINE - The Reorganized
Municipal Building.
Willing
Hands Ladles of Antlq·
of
Latter
POMEROY
XI
Gamma
Mu
Church
of
Jesus
Christ
POMEROY - , Meigs Local
ulty Baptist Church, will be held
EAST MEIGS - Parents of Band Boosters will meet Mon· Day Saints wUI be serving Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
Eastern High seniors are asked day, 7 p.m ., In the high school election day dinner on Tuesday lty, w!ll meet at the Senior Wednesday, from 9 a.m . to 4
p.m., at the Mildred Spencer
to attend a meeting at 7 p.m. band room.
from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Everyone Citizens Center, 7 p.m Tuesday .
._
residence,
Route 338, Antiquity.
Monday In .the school cafeteria to
welcome.
Everyone
welcome.
RUTLAND '- Rutland VIllage
RACINE -The Racine United
dlsuss a class trip.
EAST MEIGS - Patents of
Eastern High School seniors are Methodist Church will serve Council will meet Tuesday at 7
FRIDAY
· CHESTER- Chester PTO w!ll having a meeting Monday, 7 election daY. dinner on Tuesday p.m . at the Rutland Civic Center.
TUPPERS PLAINS - A rum·
meet Monday at 7 p.m : at the p.m., In the cafeteria, to dlsuss starting at 11 a.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap· mage and bake sale w!ll be held
RUTLAND - Rutland EMS
school.
class trip.
will be serving election day ter 186, Order of the Eastern Friday and Saturday, Nov. 6-7,ln
RUTLAND - The Rutland
POMEROY - A public test of dinner on Tuesday at the EMS Star, will meet at the Chester Tuppers Plains, next to the post
village water committee will Meigs County's ballot tabulating building. Serving time will start Masonic Temple, 7: 30 Tue!!.day. office. Time both days will be 10
Officers are to wear chapter a.m . to 4 p.m .
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the equipment will beheldMonday,1 at 10:30 a .m.
dresses
and members are to take
RACINE
Racine
Volunteer
Civic Center.
p.m ., at the Board of Elections
SATURDAY
soup
for
refreshments to be'
Fire
Department
Ladles
Auxll·
office In Pomeroy.
LONG
BO'ITOM - A rock
served
following
the
meeting.
ORANGE TOWNSHIP - The
lary will serve election day
dance
will
be held Saturday, Nov.
Orange Township trustees will
Letart dinner at the tire station on
LETART FALLS
7,
8
to
11
p.m
., at the LongBottom
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the Township Trustess will meet Tuesday starting at 11 a.m .
Community
Building. $1 admiS·
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sororhome of Dorothy Calaway , clerk. Monday, 6 p.m., at the office
slon.
Free
Pepsi.
LONG BOTIOM - Flame Ity, 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the
building.
·
Fellowshp Chapter w!ll meet home of Mrs . A. R. Knight.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Mt.
TUESDAY
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, w!ll
Olive Community Church, Long
HYSELL RI:JN - Hysell Run
RUTLAND
Regular
meetmeet at 7 p .m. Monday at the
Holiness
Church, off Route 124 on
Bottom
.
Speaker
w!ll
be
Elder
American Legion hall In Ing of Rutland Vlllage Council Gary ·Taylor of the Church of County Road 15, will be In rev ival
will be held Tuesday at 7 p.m. at
Pomeroy. ·
Jesus Christ, Lancaster. Su- Nov. 3 through Nov. Sat 7:30p.m .
the Civic Center.
zanne Bush, president Invites the nightly. Speaker will be Pastor
POMEROY ·- A rummage
.
George Wllliams from Point
POMEROY - XI Gamma public to attend the. meeting.
sale will be held Monday and
Rock Church. Song leader w!ll be
Tuesday, from 11 a.m . to 2 p.m., Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
at the Grace Episcopal Church in Sorority, will meet at the Senior
Citizens Center, 7 p.m. Tuesday.
t'omeroy .

Wolfe Pen notes

1-lb.

Cost Cutter
Shortening ........ ~ .. 42-oz.

Kroger
, Tomato Soup .... ~~ 71c~o~.

and 4. Members are urged to
donate to the bake sale.
A $25 check was •s ent to Mrs .
Robert Waldnlg, Racine, toward
the purchase of special equipment for her grandson, Joey
Holmamn, a victim of cerebal
palsy. A flower was sent to Lanny
Hankla, junior Eighth District
president.
Memb\!rs was reported at 82, 32
short or reaching goal. Marge
Fetty won the traveling prize.
Refreshments were served by
Iva Powell and Mrs. Fetty.

Parker birthday is observed

QUARTERS

COST CUTTER

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner: 7.25-oz

c

Kroger
Tuna ........................ 6.5-oz

with donuts or apples for the asked to take a covered dish.
Catherine Welsh and Mrs.
teachers. She encouraged par·
ents to visit the schools during Rough gave a brief report on the
recent conference held In Well·
the week.
ston.The
first reading of the,
Ellen Rought presided at the
'budget
was
glvtn by Veda Davis
meeting announcing plans tor the
and
the
newly
revised constltu·
November membership night
tion
was
read.
·
meeting. At that time a Thanks·
giving dinner will be served at 6
Allee Freeman was elected
p.m. with the meeting to be at correspondll)g secretary filling a
· 7: 30 p.m. All past presidents of vacancy created by the resignaUnit 39 will be honored along "Mith tion of Robin 'Campbell.
the juniors. Mrs. Mary Moose,
It was announced that a
Eighth District president, wlil be Christmas bazaar and bake sale
the guest speaker. Members are wUI be held at Kroger's on Nov. 3

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Kroger
Corn ........................ 2o-oz.

Xi Gamma Mu sorority chapter.meets.

•·

Community calendar

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Kroger Fruit
Cocktail .................16-oz.
Avondale
Peaches ................ 16-~z.
Avondale
Pear Halves ........ 16-oz.

c
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Kroger
Orange Juice .... :.46-oz.

c

Kroger Cherry
.Pie Filling ............. 21 -oz.

c

Kroger
Brown Sugar ...·... 2-lb ..
Kroger
10-X Sugar ..... :..... 2-lb.

c
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Cost Cutter
Crackers·............... 16-oz.

c

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.Kroger
Peas ....................... .'20-oz.

KROGER

Chocolate
$
Drink Mix ............. 32-oz.
COST CUTTER

Chocolate
Chips ..... :................. 12-oz.
Cost Cutter
Egg Noodles ........ 16-oz.
Cost Cutter
$
Peanut Butter .... 18-oz.
Cost ·Cutter
Canned Milk ....... 12-oz.
Eagle .Brand
$·~
Milk ......................... 14-oz.

79

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Country Club
Ice Cream ......... ..

$
Yz-Gal.

Springdale
$
2% Milk ............... ..Gal.
.

.

Cost Cutter
White Bread ....... 16-oz.

..... '

39

c

Embassy
Mayonnaise ........ 32-oz.

c

Vac Pack
·$
Kroger Coffee .... 3-lb.

99

VOTE FOR AND ELECT

E. JANE BEEGLE

MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Chapter Order of DeMolay w!ll meet
Monday, 7:30p.m., at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
'
RA CINE- Racine Chapter 134
Order of Eastern Star will meet
Monday, 7:30 p.m., In regular
session. All members urged to
attend.

POMEROY - The regulJlr
meeting of the Board of Elections
w!ll be held Tuesday, 6 p.m ., at
the office.
·
RUTLAND - Hysell Run
Holiness Church will be- In
revival Tuesday through Sunday
at 7: 30 nightly , with George
Williams of Point Rock Church ..

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
(Dining Room Onlr I
Served with whipped potatoes . chocken gravy. cole
slaw hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry. no substitute; except beverace with additional price.

s

FOR JUST

$ 3•2

NOW FEATURING HO'M EMADE DINNER ROLLS

39.
'

Country ~ven
$
Potato Ch1ps ....... 16-oz .

19

PH. 992-5432

FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OH.
Fried Chicken •

LEO MORRIS.
TRUSTEE
RUTLAND TOWNSHIP
ELECT

DENNIEFORE. HILL
Sutton Township Trustee
Your Vote &amp; lnOuence Appreciated
Pd. for by the c.ondidote, D. Hill . 47854 SR 124. Racine; Ohio

ELECT

CARL GORBY
FOR

MEIGS COUNtY BOARD Of. EDUCATION
PAST EXPERIENCE IN .....
•County School System
•County Attendance Officer
•Juvenile Probation Off\cer
•First OAPSE President' •
Your Sup pori and Confidence Will Be Appreciated
Pd. Pol. Ad by Candidate, Rt. I, langsville, Ohio
_ _. . . c - ; . . _ _ - -

--~--·

)

.

Pd. for by the candidate, 66 6th St .. Racine , Ohio

FOR

Paid for lly 11M C•lllllnta, lo:a 212, Rutland, Ohio

ESOAV NIGHT SPECIAL

Clerk
Racine Village

VOTE

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The Daily Sentinei-

'

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 2, · 1987 '

Monday, November 2. 1987

Pomeroy.:.. Middleport, Ohio

s~",'"''IS
)$· ~

,

BIG WIN · Larry Powell, at left, owner of
Powell's Super Valu In Pomerory, presents a

check lor $1,000 to Forest and Ad aline Summers of
Portland. Tbe couple won the Sl,OOO In the store's

''money back card'' promotion.

Llamas gather for Jamboree
By SCOTI' HOGENSON
CUbPEPER, Va. (UP!)
Fifty-six llamas and their
handlers paraded before 2,000
. curious spectators Sunday at
· America's first annual National
Uama Jamboree.
Some who attended the day. long event had never seen a
llama.
''I think they are cute. I think
they are pretty nice too," 6·year·, old Danny Cohen of Springfield,
: va.. said after his first llama
· exposure. "They are not mean,
they just eat grass."
"We had a better turnout than
we ever expected," said retired
Col. Robert Dinning, chairman of
. the Jamboree Committee of the
International Llama Assocta·
!ion. "We got a lot of enthusiasm
from llama breeders In Virginia
· and across the entire nation."
Uama breeders, handlers and
their llamas came from as far
away as the state of Washington

for the event at Culpeper's
CommonwE!alth Park, an eques·
Irian CQ1!1petltion center. The
event drew about 2,000
spectators.
Some children begged parents
to take the gentle animals home.
But the 56 llamas sported price
tags averaging about $2,500.
Llamas, like their camel cousins, sometimes spit, and hum
when nervous, but they do so only
to establish territory, breeders
said.
Sunday's events included a
llama costume contest and the
parade of . llamas. 011e couple
dressed as punk-rockers while
their llama carried a ''boombox' ' ·
portable casette-player and 12·
pack of beer.
A professional llama breeder
who came to Culpeper from
Wyoming dispensed advice
about what the judges would be
looking for In the competitions.
"Basically what we are trying

People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROri
United Press International
BLESSED EVENT: Hollywood's shortest couple has another
baby. Rhea Perlman gave birth Friday to a son, her third child
with husband Danny DeVito. Jake Daniel Sebastian DeVIto
weighed 7 pounds 11 ounces and was in good condition at
Cedars-Sinal Medical Center trr Los Angeles. "They are
ecstatically happy to have a son," said a spokesman for DeVito.
Perlman, 39, the 5-foot l-inch actress who won an Emmy for her
portrayal of the brassy Carla on "Cheers," and DeVIto, 43, who
stands 5 feet and will soori be seen in the movie "Throw Momma
from the Train, " have two daughters, ages 4 ~ and 2 ~.
LEGAL EVENT: Mary Beth Whilehead, the natural mother
of Baby M in the landmark surrogate mother case, Is pregnant
again and WCBS-TV In New York reports that the father is not
Whitehead's estranged husband. The sta~ion says the
pregnancy, which was revealed in court papers flied late
Friday, is not another surrogacy.. deal. The father-to-be Is
identified only as Dean. Whitehead and her husband, Richard,
separated in August, blaming the glaring publicity around her
case for their problems. The guardian for Baby M is trying to
have Whitehead's v)siting privileges revoked because her latest
pregnancy is further evidence of her "personality problems."
Custody of Baby M, now known as Melissa, was awarded to
Elizabeth and William Stern in March when a judge upheld the
$10,000 deal in which Whitehead was Impregnated with Wilitam
Stern's sperm.
INTROSPECTION: Barry Manllow is back with an
autobiography . a new record and upcoming television special
after a two-year layoff that included a lot of self-examination.''!
started examining my llfe and heard all these cllches in my
mind llke, 'Who am I, wha( am 1 doing, do I llke myself?" ' he
says in People magazine. "! was the most alone that I've ever
been. I was angry . I wept. I was frustrated but I never hit rock
bottom.' ' Manllow say s he no_w realizes that his ego has a
tendency to get bloated and that after watching some of his old
tapes, " I can see why the critics were absolutely vile to me."
Manllow says he has one big regret in life- nochlldren. He says
a few y~ars ago he calied his ex-wife and was crushed when her
son answered the phone. "My heart sank to my knees," he says.
"1 thought, ' he c0uid be mine.' I don' t know if I'll ever have a
blond -hatred, blue-eyed kid and a white pic ket fence. Maybe my
legacy will be elevator music."
•
·
COMRADE'S BOOK: It' s probably no surprise tllal Mikhail·
Gorbachev's new book is getting good reviews at home. Some
300,000 copies of " Perestroika -New Thinking for Our Country
and the World." are on sale in the Soviet Union for the heavily
subsidized cost of $1.20. Nikolai Shishlln, chairman of the State
Committee for Publlshlng and Book Trade, called the 271-page
edition ' ' a sincere and courageous book permeated by a spirit of
glasnost." The book Is primarily an elaboration of the themes of
reform that have appeared in his speeches since he took power
In March 1985. Ne ws about the book has been leading Soviet
newscasts and Tass Is carrying reports from abroad on the
appearance of newspaper articles about the book.

Re-Elect

to show here Is that a well-trained
llama will follow you wherever
you want them to go," said Sue
Rolftng, who has a herd of about
50 llamas. "In a good llama,
performance-wise, you want one
that's built sturdily for using In
the woods, and for backpacking
you want one that can carry his
pack and who can carry It far."
Though llamas originally appeared on the central plains of
North America about 40 million
years ago, there are only about
10,000 to 12,()()() of them in the
United States now.
By comparison, there are
about 7 mtllton llamas In South
America, where the pack animal
, was domesticated some 5,000
years ago.

- i
I

YOO CAN'T E SC ~rE :-1-E -:)f J f
BUY\ IN rh£ ( lAS :HuS

Record Service, a non - Document Service. We have
governmental agency, will han- complaints from people who did
dle the paper work and clerical not receive the (Sochii Security)
details for you."
card once they ordered it."
A Social Security spokesman In
"We' have a long report on
these guys," Barnes said. Baltimore said Federal Record
"Three years ago, the same Service had been around for a
outfit w.a s operating as Federal while. Although there is nothing
wrong with what the company
does, he said they are not official
and their service is unnecessary .
Calls to an answering service
at FRS were not returned.

SMALL
WANT ADS

PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE · &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104

"WE

(304) 675-1244

VOTE FOR AND ELECT

Sarah Gibb
Salisbury Township Clerk

Salisbury Township

FIRST TERM

Paid for bv the Cand•date

CAPABLE- QUALIFIED
"Your Vote Appreciated"
Pd. PoL .U loy Conol, 34046 lal ltuollld., P-oy, Ohio 45769

former Brown Chip Banks, and
Abbott kicked the game-winner
field goal after a Vencie Glenn
pickoff in the overtime period.
"The Chargers are a good
Joo.tball~ tgam, " $l!ld Browns
Coach Marty Schottenheiinei;
who watched his 4-3 club tumble
from atop the AFC Central. ,;We
had some turnovers and we had
some penalties . When you have
two good football teams playing
against each other, little things
build up and make a big
difference."
The battle before 55,381 at San
Diego Jack Murphy Stadium was
evenly fought until Abbott kicked
his game-winner.
San Diego outgained Cleveland
414 to 339 yards. The Browns
averaged 4.8 yards per play to
San Diego' s 5.8 yards.
"We started out the game with
a big defensive play and ended it
with one," said quarterback Dan

Fouts . who was 25 of 42 for 315
yards and two touchdowns.
Lionel James scored two touchdowns to lead the San biego
attack, including a 15-yard run to
open the scoring with little more
than a minute gone in the game.
James ' s sprint around r ight
e nd came one play after Banks
grabbed a pass intended for
Ozzie Newsome and rumbled 20
yard s to the Browns 15.
The Browns evened the score
at 7-7 on their next possession a:s
Kosar marched his team 82 yards
in nine plays, capping tile drive
with a 20-yard TD pass to
Webster Slaughter, his first TD
reception of the season.
San Dlego made It 14·7 at 10: 30
of the first (ierlod with a 10-yard
pass to rookie tight end Rod
Bernstine, the Chargers ' firstround draft choice thts .year. It
was only Bernstine' s second
catch as a pro.

RATII
0 ·00 WDitDI II· · -0.

MONDAY thrv fiiDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

David Snyder of administration
and Geraldine Webb of food
services.
10-YEAR PINS - Add a
Baker, Judith Blue, Susan
Bowser, Minnie Humphreys, Or·
pha Hussell, Peggy Jones,
Norma Keefer and Leona Little,
all of nursing services; Carla
Bryant and Jennifer Six of the
laboratory; Mark Gtllespie and
Thomas Reynolds of the radiology department; Shirley Loo·
mis, David Lovejoy and Cheryl
Sayre of the business office;
Sharon Stephens of food servi·
ces; Betty Sturgeon of medical
records; Richard Sullivan of
cardio-respiratory services and
Mona Wagner of the anesthesia·
/ recovery room.
15-YEAR PINS- Earl Bar·
ton, Judith Doty, Sharon Hanshaw and Dorothy Hlpes, all of
nursing services ; Kenneth Doty
of the anesthesia/recovery
room; Shirley Fields of environ·
mental services;, Joyce Hall of
the laboratory and Debra Roush
of the busine~s office.

I A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
•"04•
oucon
wo....,

O(IUf

ClOUD SUNDAT
.... . ,..,. , ., .,,..,._,,.. ,. • ., ... .,,

.r.::,
.. '- to ..............
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-_
-. ..
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,•. ..,,.. - ..
'"" ..........
c.,...
... ,. •' ........... ,......... " ' '*'-blo . , ........ " " '
.,,....,... ,,,. ...... .
o~

tUIII

1 DUI

...110

tCI•••
"' ""''
1110.,,.

...IICI
" ' ·""
UIOI&gt;

~

-_ __

................. ......
..., .... _, ... ..............
t... ........ . ..,. ••.

•,...
,.~ ....... · · -· ·... ~ ........... '""' . .. IC'•t&lt;•
"" "' '"''toot ... , .,_,.,,_, &lt;;ol ... o&lt;O• Clelpm

'"-·- ····-

ooo,m

...
H 1.....

tllllll
fnllll
110M

•u•

::::::c:.:-:.:....
::~::t.:::&amp;;..

,

........

·t__
4--·-,,_

-..·--. ... ............
7J·-:::::::o;r.

ool'lo

LiS (614) 446-7619 or (6I, l !1'32-2104
417 Second Avenue. box 1213
:!!!: Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

:I:

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy. Ohio

TRAPP.ING SUPPliES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEAT£ LIGHTS
Buying Roots.
Beef Hides and
Deer Hides

'"'VI

-~­

~~

liT··-

~

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

"'·"""''

........
•U-"-•

WIOfi [ IO U PAP!! ~
!&gt;fJOIDO~ PAPER

MON. THRU SAT.

614·664-4761

9:00-4:30

()

IIJ"OAYO""l"

··---11--··D - ....- -

Make&amp;.

PH. 949-2969

DONELU'S
PIZZA

CRAFTS

992-6167
!21 11.-INCH 8 IT.EM

PIZZAS

mo.

. 7011: Sew a charming
kitchen caddy to . hold
your wooden utensils.
Use muslin for caddy,
yarn for hair . Directions,
details included.
Each paftern $3.25 plus
75¢ postage/handling.
(N.Y reSidents aOJ saes tax.I
Send to:
llNdtr Mall

DEEM
SUnON TWP. TRUSTEE

The Daily Sentinel

•Sutton Twp. Rooident lor 38 y...,..
Children in Southern Schools

62-!111 Nat1l1em Blv4, Woodside.
NY tt3n. Print Nlme, Address,
~p. Size, Plttem !Wmber.

•Live on Rural Sutton Twp. Road
Your Jl ole Will Be

· Greatly Ap,£1r.ecia•ted

Cand.
Ohio

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
when you order one of the
$2.95 books listed below.
1t 1-Hairpin Crochet
It &amp;-Easy Ripple Crochet
t t7-Art ol Needlepoint

ELECT

REBECCA (Becky)
TRIPLETT

Paid for by the Candidate, Ri&lt;hard W. Vaughan,
671 South Third, Middleport

Per Pickup Load
De.livered
7101: Dress up a classic
dress or sweater with
dramatic collars and
cuHs. Use bedspread
thread. Directions lor 2
collars and 1 set of' cuffs.
Each paftern $3.25 plus
75¢ postage/handling.
(N.Y.reSidents aOJ sales tax 1
Send to:
Atldw IIIII

{Inter! rllffit of your I1IW1jllpel~
62-01 NoriMm lltvd., Woodside,
NY 11377. Print Nlmt.ldelms,
Zip. Sizll, Pattern Number.
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
when ~er one of the
$2.95
listed below.
119-Art of Flower Crochet
121-Pilow Show 0118
127-Aighans and Doilies
129-0uick/Easy Translers

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Md $1 .05 tor poslagelhandling.

Columbus, Ohio

October 23. 1987
Contract Salas
Legot Copy Na. 87-867
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed' proposal• will be
received at the office of the
)

DireFtor of the Ohio Depart-~ant of Transportation, Col·
umbus. Ohiq, until 10 :00

A.M.,. Ohio Standard lima.
tuesday. November 17,

1987, for improvement• in :
Meigs County, Ohio, on
MEG -33-(0.00) (10.26) - U .
S. Route 33, ond MEG -33·
(1 1.21-11 .33) ·U. S. Route
33 In tho Villogo of Po·meroy, by resurfacing with
asphalt concrete.

Project and Work length •

26 ,347 feet or 4.99 miles.
Pavement'Width - varies .
"The date ut for comple·
'tlon of this work shall be as
aet forth in the bidding pro·
posal. ••
Each bidder shall be re·

quirod to tile with hlo

bt~

a

certified check or cathier·s
check for an amount equal
to five per cent of his bid, but
in no event mora than fifty
thouund dollars, or a bond
for ten par cent of his bid,
payable to the Director.
Bidder~ must apply, on1he
proper forma, for quaiHicalion at least ten days prior to
the date aet for opening bids
In accordance with Chapter

5626 Ohio Revlud Coda.
' Plans and s~oclflcotlons
ere on file in the Department

QfTraneportatlon and theof-

flce ol ttte Dlatrict Deputy

Director.

The Director rasfuves the
uyrn lU "IIJ8C1 any IRa all

bldl.

.

Warren J , Smith. Director
11112, 9, 2tc

992-3410

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP ·SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tlc

BILL SLACK

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice

POMEROY
VILLAGE COUNCIL

I WANT TO SEE THE 'KIDS GET THE
BEST EDUCATION POSSIBLE

SJSOO

FREE OFFER

FOR

•EXPERIENCE
•DEDICATION·
•CARING

S9 95

Green/Black Olives,
Pepperoni, Cheese.
Onions, Green
• Peppers. Sausage.
Ground Beef.
NO SUBSTITUHONS

p

CRAFTS
A T T E R

N S

In Memoriam

l'n loving memory of

DORIS I. MILLER

passed away and
was buried
Oct. 30. 1985.

who

It's been 2 years now.
but still her, with love,
we do endow.
We think she was a wonderful gal,
.
· and to some of us, our
best pal.
We do ·ereatly miss her,
thoueh upon death, Heaven has, lor us the same
lure.
Maybe she looks here. be·

low,

and effects our hearts to
be mellow.
II we could see her. but one
mort time,
· tholtlh momenllri ly. t1t1t
woufd bt sublime.
So we cmy her memory. in
our h11rts,
and eweil the day that
we'll depart.
Remembered by Ronnie
Miller Jr. &amp; Family

10-19·17

NEW LISTING- POMEROY

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!

Guarant..ct the Sam• ro,
81 Yaars

.-

...., L (l!UHQ, Jl ..... 907-6191

.-....

JfAN lltJSSilt ............ 949 ·7660
,DOmE fl'"'tER ........... 991 . 5692
lUCY ~s
949·3010
OFFKr ..
.. ........... 992-2259
'

AW

•GUNS
•MUZZLELOAOING
SUPPLIES

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
Rt. 1 24 Across from
Happy Hollow Rd .

RUTLAND

614-

We P•Y ca1h for late model clean
u1ad cars.
Jim Mink Chav.- Oid• Inc.
Bill Gena Johnaon

814-446-3672

TOP CASH paid for •93 model
and newer u1ed ca.... SMith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eutern
Avo .. GellipoU1. Call 614·4482282 .
WANTED TO BUY : U1ed wood
&amp; coal haatan. Swain'• F!,lrnlture, 3rd. &amp; Oliva St. Gallipolis.

Colt e14 ·446·3159.
Junk Auto's with or without
motors. Calt 614 -388 -9303.

AUTO.&amp; TRUCK

Wantad to buy· lltanding timber.

REPAIR

Co11814· 379-276e.

Also Transmiuion

Buying dailv gold, 1ilver coin• •
ringt, jewelry, ·sterling ware, old
coins, laJQe currency. Top price•. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 114992·3476 .

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17 ·tic

QUILTS
High price• p•id for pre-1950
quilt•. Applique. piaclld, any
Condition. Call 614-992-2101
or 614·992·66&amp;7 &gt;

Annou nee men ts
3 Announcements

Cuh lor standing timber. We
buy veneer white · o•k •nd
welnut. Call AI Tromm, 614-

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE, OHIO

10-9-tfn

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RftJOl!l

PAT;HI LL FORD
992-2196

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4·16-86·tfn

Middleport, Ohio

742-232e.

Control your Weight - Take
"New Shape Oi8t Plan" and
E·Vap Water Pills . Fruth
P11armacy.

Coal heating 1tove with good
gr•ta. good cond. that u... No.
I atove pipe. 304-&amp;71 - 2707.

Turkey Shoot. Alternating thOt·
gun rifled slug and patched
roundball muzzle , loading rifle
matchft. Bring own ammo. 12
noon, Nov . 8 . Located Hysell'•
Muuletoading Shop, Rutland.

4

Employmenl

Services

Giveaway

11
0 kittena: Mother-Si•mase,
Father-Alley Cat. Ca11814 -4410816.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

Telavison Advertising needs
high energy peraons for thilo
Galllpoli• erea. Po..ible furttter
management opportunity. Parttime. full-time, b81e and commis•ion. Call 9'· 6, 304 -7577881 .

Female gray &amp; wt'!ite cat with.
green eye1 found in G. &amp; J .
parking lot. Need• good ttome.
.
Ca\1614 -448-8022 .
· 4-6 wks. old kittens. Catl 614446-7100 .

REPS NEEDED
For busine11 acounts. Full -time.
860. ooo-•so.ooo. Part-time,
812,000-118.000. No sallin1 ,
Set vour own
hours. Tr1ining provided: Call
1-812-938 -6870, f\11-F, 8am6pm !Central Standard time) .

Puppie• to give away. 614 -446 2218.
I

,..,..t ...,..,.....

Male or femele kittens to give
away. 4 montlls old. Call 614 986-3.884.

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
time asaembly work; electronlei. crafts. Others. Info !504)
641 -0091 EXT 2987. Open 7
day•. CALL NOWI

Sat of concrete l•undry tubt.
304-61&amp; -21 04.
10 week old kitt8n1 and tom cat.
Cute. 304·676-8747.

Registered Nuues- full- time
and part-time openings. Long
term care facility. W.Va. license
reqllired . For appointment cell

Lost: Orange tiger cat with 4
white paws &amp; orange collar.
Vicinity of Washington Elementary. Ca\1614·446-7626.

614·992-76ee .
Lo1t in Ball Run •nd At. 143
area. mele Pekinese. Black with
tan markings. Lost Oct. 22. No
question• asked, we love him.
Call 6,4-992-5678 or 614 992 -3614.

Government Job•. 816.040 •
•69,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
ere•. 805-687-6000 Ext . A·
9806 for current repo f&amp;defal
list.
;

FOUND small female puppy
with brown •nd black marklng1.
White flea collar, Ordnance area.
304-675-1379 after 4 :00.

Federal. State. and Civil Servic~
Jobs 814.707 to 81116 ,819 year ·
Now hiring I Call job line 1-618~
459-3611 ext. F-1622 for Info '
24 hrs.
·•

LOST one •teele pocket knife,
Camellas U.S. on it, lottatSllper
America , call 304-676,1379
attar 4 :00.

FOUND - Solidwhita male dog,
304·676· 7448.

10-7-tfn

AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SO)I,
THEASTERN OHIO· AAA
tf you are interested in a •etling
career in the Oallia County area,
why not con1kter AAA. Send us
some information about yourseH
and yollr work ttistory. We will
contact you tor an interview,
Send to: The AutomobUeCillbof
Southeutern Ohio - AAA
P.O.Box 371, Port• mouth, OhiQ
45662, Att: Bob Bate•.

Lost in Rutl•nd area. Black
Angora Cat. Reward oHered .

6:30 P.M.
Fodory Choke

LPN or Practical Nurt.e for care
of elderly man,fwork straight •
days / • nigh11) , References required. Good working condt~
lions. Call between 7 II 8 PM. i}
Interested, 614-.UO-7001 ,
•

REWARD! LO.ST: Black le•ther
jacket in Spring Valley arrta. Call
614-448 -95,3 or 4•6-4460.

LOST - Small black puppy in th~
alley bettlnd Johnton' s Super·
market . Reward ! 304-675 -

12 GotJge Shotguns Only

304·676-3006. E. 0 . E.

6 Lost and Found

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

~andyman for rental properties.:
l!p keep and repair . Plumbing •
electric and CJrpenter. 614:..
992· 7727.
"

7746 .

Ya~d

7

District Technician . Must haveo
kn~wladge in no• ti~l, equipme•nmelnten~nca. ba11c surveying •
and des1gn work. be•ic knowl-•
agronomy. Ferming•
edge in
background preferred. To apply:
contact the Meigs SWCD office •
221 West Second St .. Pomeroy' •
Ohio. Or phone 614· 992 -0647: •

Sale

1- 13- tlc

'IT'JJ~~ill

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

AddonS and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Piu!llbing and electrical
work
IE~ee Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
q92-621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

-~
FITNESS

C\~

••

fUll BODY TONING
unci FIRMING

··You Too Can Look &amp; r .... l
IJ..Itt'r ~I Till"' Flln""" Cluh! ''
ll't~ Fun, Ht'•llhv &amp; Good For
l'nu!- Brintt A 'r ri .. nd.

SPIC!Al RAllS FOI STUDINTS

.PH. 992·2300 Or Stop By
115 W. Second, Pomeroy

10.5·1 mo.

EUM HOME

loom &amp; laard Far
Senior Citizens and

Handicappetl;- · ·

GoodRatos
T.L.C.

•

.

26 Vrs, Exp.
References

992-6873
Joe or Pauley Bowlond
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh ..

"LOW INCOME HOME"
10- 18· 1 mo.·

BOGGS

.. ·----GallTpi:i ns-·· ·-· ···

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY, SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER
1:00 P.M.
AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE
FACTORY CHOKES .
10/29/1 mo.

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

POMEROY--985-3561

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Authoritlljjlohn Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
iarm Equipment
Daaler

Farm Equl.ment
Parts &amp; Su11lce

1· 3-' 86 tic

985-3561

All Makes

•Washers •Diahwaahers
•Rangel •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freeurs

WE SEll USED Arrru•n•n

EKecutive Secretary -·
Recepti onist. _Needs knowledge :
of ~ompu_teJJ, account• p.ayabie,.
~yp1ng skills, ~witch board, abil· •
·~v to wor~ w1th public, Applic.- •
t1ons ava1lable at Ameri-Care •
36769 Rocksprings Rd. , Pome: •
:
roy. No phone calls, pleue.

&amp; Vicinity
218 Tttird Ave ., 9· 4, Wed.-Nov.
4th., Thurs.-Nov.·6th, Fri.·No1o1.
6th. Tools, Christmas dec.•
di1has, P?t•. pens, picture•.
some furmture. lamp•. etc.

Substitute teachers will be :
needed in the event of .- ·
threatened teacher work nop- •
page. Daily rate of pay will be ·
~ 100.00. Certified teachers wil - ~
lmg to cro•s a picket line should y
immediately contact Dan •
Apling, Superintendent, Ea1tern •
local School Dl•trict, Meigs •
County, 614-986-4331 . You •
mus_t 1h•ve a 1o1alid Ohio teaching '
cert1f1oate to be considered.

:--···-P-orii'iirov ·-·-··-···
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
- tc ~

Chri•tmas Flea Market Inside.
Nov. 2nd, 3rd. and 4th. Fourth
and Crook St., SyracuH, Ohio,
Turn acroll from •wlmmlng
pool. wateh for lign1. New and
u1ed mdte.

.-·-.--p..t

Help Wanted

Excellent Income for part time
home . auembly work. For inf.
ea11312 -741 ·8400 ht. 313.

6 wlta . old puppies. Good pet• or
hunters. Mother ragillered Eng·
lish Setter . Call614 -246· 6497
or 245-6231 ,

Free puppits to good home,
304-675 -3809 .

RACINE
GUN CLUB

4·15-'86·fc

HEMLOCK GROVE - Coun·
try home on one &amp; two·
thirds acre. 3 berooms, new
carpelin~ attached garage,
big yard for the krds. PRICE
REDUCED. $30,000.00.

•SLUGS
•AMMO

10121/ 1 mo.

POMEROY - I ~ Story home
overlooking river. 3 bedrooms,
·full basement equipped kitchen. Also a W.B.F.P., workshop in basement Much
more! $29,il(IO.OO.

RUTLAND- III story home
with 3 bedrooms, bath and
storage building. Front sit·
ling porch, all on a nice lot.
ONLY $19,900.00.

SUN.) P.M..Ee 1:45

or

We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
MIDDLEPORT - Nice re·
heater cores. We can
modeled I ~ story home. ' also acid boil and rod
Fenced in yard, storage
out radiators. We also
building, nice front porch.
repair Gas Tanks.
MUST BE SEEN. MAKE OF·

$31,000.00.

EAGLES CLUB- POMEnOY, OMIO
THURS., 1 P.M.·&lt;e 6:4S

SHIRLEY COlfMAN
7•2-2125
"It's A Great Fund
Rai5er"

RUTlAND - Nice 10 year
old ranch home, 3 bedrooms.
bath, garage all on a level lot
Many ·new features. PRICE
REOUCEO! $33,500.00.

RACINE - Neat 4 bedroom
home w/ large modern kitchen and dining room. Family
room w/ woodburner. Large
lot GOOD
CONDITION.

BINGQ

FOR FUllER IRUSH
PRODUCTS
OR ro BE A REPRESINl'ATIVE
CALL
SUSAN COlfMAN
742-2771

RACINE -MAIN STREETClose to everything) Cute 3
bedroom home on a level lot
Carport, uliily room, storage
building $19,900.00.

FER. $19,900.00.

2

Evenings

- I Y, lots with an older

HYSELL RUN - Nice ranch
homewit a &amp;Org6ous
k.itchen, huee lamilrroom.
fireplace. plus a trailer
'hookup. Approx.20 acres .
$53,000.00.

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

614-992-2269

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

home. Lots lay pretty nice.
JUST $10,000.00.

10·8·1 mo.

Wanted To Buy

Rt. 12 4, Pomeroy Ohio

'Parts &amp; Service on all

~ATTERNS

JIMMY W.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL
BOARD

9

Roger Hysell
Garage

10-12-lma.

· 135-Dolls and Clothes
Add 11.05 tor postagolhondHng.

ELECT

Richard W. Vaughan

985-3350

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Paar1on Auctlona'e r 11cen•ed in Ohio and Wnt Virginia. Estate. antique. farm. liquid•tion ..,.,, 3Q4-773· 5785.

11 / 2 / 871 mo.

' locust, Oak, Cherry

RE-ELECT

B

100 lb.

trimmers. saws, blowers
- Snowofl blowers, Ore·
aon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push fiiOiiers picked up and tuned and
returned 120.00. ,

No Sunday

FIREWOOD

Pd. Pol. Ad by Candidate, 298 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

saoo P.r

'llrd- Man mowers. Echo

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Thank You For Your Support

464e.

!Pam
•14-9•J2-l;o;

Located half way between Rt. 7 and Bathan .

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801

=~=- ,

OARAGE SALE - 2221 Jefferlon Ave., M on .• Tues., Wed ..
winter co•ts, sweater•. je.1ns.
3· 6-7 -8, .furniture. 304-876·

HOURS : Tues.· Sat .

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

"Free Estimates"

:~··-·-

Rumm•ge Room. open 0 dey• •
Week. New and used ltem.1,
some tumiture, bridal aown •nd
much more.

SALE

IT. 7, CHESTER
NOW THRU NOV. 14th

GEORGE BUCKLEY

New Homes Built

··-...
,,.....___
"--·
::::::...-.::.,_

··· ····--·······-··············· ..
Now open in Apple Grove, W .v •.

Cross Stitch Supplies
SO% Off
8osket Supplies
20% Off
Discount on Selected Items

NEWELL'S SUNOCO

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

Country Gifts
and Decor
StiTH n ., SYIACUSE, OH.

NOW HULLING
BLACK
WALNUTS

Page- 9

--··--·pf Pleiisiiif .. ·--

BERRY BASKET

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1'71- - Q -

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
All MAI&lt;ES AND
MODELS'
CALL 742-2315

Licensed Clinical AudiolOgist

0

- c •. wv

--~
,.,....f'L_
••-w__,_

PARTS

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a:

SIDING
ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

:.:==:.:.~'='

v.w.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services ·..

0 YINYL

Cl•ifi.ed poge• cover the
followlnK aelephane ucllanfel ...

CO~OU!lUhl
110 ~ o••

r...:aoo•

-Oil

u ...

ao

11

- ___.................................

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

~

IO· ·

.. 1111

__ .. _

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,.. ....

7

r::-------r-------T'i========M

HOURS
Mon.-Sot. 2 to 9 P.M.
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M .
10-15·1 mo.
TO PUC[ AN AD CAU 992· 2156

FOR

GREGORY EBLIN
·TRUSTEE

than anything why we can call
ourselves 'The Family of Profes·
sionals', " Sellards said. "The
administration is proud of Its
employees and the commitment
·they have made to Pleasant
Valley Hospital and the people of
this community."
·
Hartley expressed apprecla·
!ion on behalf of the Board of
Trustees to the employees. "I am
here today not only to congratu·
late you for your years of service
to Pleasant Valley Hospital, but
to thank you for helping to
provide vital medical care to the
people of this area," Hartley
said.
"This year marks our 28th year
of community service, and those
of you seated here today are ·the
prime reason we've been able to
provide that continued service, "
he added .
The welcome was given by
Geoffery M. Polen, director of
personnel and public relations,
who also introduced special
guests. The Invocation was given
by the Rev. Malcolm Mciver of
the Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church.
Award recetpients In addition
to those named above were:
FIVE YEAR PINS - C. Jean
Bailes, Kathy Blevins, Marie
Edwards, Betty Hammack, Sonia Thornton, all of nursing
services; Stephen Burnett and
Michael Edwards of environmental services; Gailla Cowdery
of the radiology department;

Firm charges for unnecessary service
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
Federal Record Service may
sound I ike an official government
agency, but it Is really a firm that
offers to perform a service -for
a fee - that the government
provides for free.
FRS culls marriage application llsts and sends of!lciai·
looking letters, notifying appllcants their name change must be
filed with Social Security immediately. FRS then offers to do the
paper work for $10, according to
Christine Barnes, trade specialist at the Cleveland Better
Business Bureau .
The letter reads in part:
"County marriage records Indicate that you have recently
changed your name. It is important that this change be processed by the Social Security
Administration immediately so
that you may be issued a new
Social Security card .... Federal

SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The lack
of a killer in stinct , which the
Cleveland Browns exhibited in a
win over the inept Rams last
'Monday night, cost .them dearly
against the surging San Dk'go _
Chargers Sunday.
The Chargers defeated the
Browns in overtime. 27·24, on a
33-yard field goal by VInce
Abbott 2: 16 into the overtime
period.
The Browns had~ 10-potnt lead
with less than six minutes to
play, but San Diego quarterback
Dan Fouts, long a Cleveland
nemesis, rallied the Chargers to
a tie to throw the game ' into
overtime.
But despite Fouts' s heroics, it
was two uncharacteristic Inter·
ceptions off Browns' quarterback Bernie Kosar that helped
the Chargers.
The Chargers scored after an
opening-series interception by

and other hospital publications.
and has been involved with
" While I greatly enjoyed my fundra.i sing projects tor the Mawork a t the Register, especially son County Chapter of the Amerithe contact with the community can Ca ncer Society.
it afforded me, I am looking
In August, Morgan won first
forward to new challenges in my place hono·r s tn the West Virginia
new position, " Morgan said. Press Association's Better News"There are some exciting things paper Contest for her feature
going on in the field of health care story on. Mason County's ilteracy
and at Pleasant Valley Hospital, program and one of the proand I am happy to be a part of the grams participants . During her
hospital ' s family of tenure ·at the Register, the
professionals.
newspaper won several WVPA
"! hope to maintain the rela- awards, lnclu&lt;ling a first place
tionships estabilshed in my eight award for "Best Single Issue,"
years with the Register and plan and honors for best ilfestyle
to remain active in the commun - section and best special section.
Ity," she added.
Morgan earned her Bachelor of
Morgan is a member and past Arts Degree in Journallsm from
president of the GFWC Point Marietta College In Marietta,
Pleasant Junior Woman's Club, Ohio, where she was editor of the
chairman or the Point Pleasant student newspaper and a
Committee on the Bicentennial of member of the Sigma Sigma
the Unlled States Constitution Sigma Sorority.
and a member of the Point
A 1975 graduate of Meigs High
Pleasant Historic Landmark School, she Is the daughter of
Commission.
Richard and Sara Owen of
She is pubilc relations chair- · Pomeroy. She and her husband,
man for the American Red Cross Damon. reside in Point Pleasant.
Blood Program In Mason ~ounty,

Service ·awards given at PVH
POINT PLEASANT - Isabel
Lutton , R .N., of Point Pleasant,
received her 25-year service pin
during Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal's annual Employee Awards
Luncheon Friday.
Lutton, one of 45 Pleasant
Valley Hospital employees honored during the luncheon, held
. at American Legion Post 23's
Epling Hall, has worked in the
hospital's obstetrics department, operating room and pharmacy , and is currently charge
nurse in the South I surgical unit.
Three Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal employees received 20-year
pins, including Betty Martin and
Lucille Swann, both of nursing
services, and Iva Norman of the
accounting department. Pins
were also given to employees
with 15, 10 and five years of
service.
Michael G:.sellards, executive
director of Pleasant Valley Hos·
pltal, and Vitus Hartley Jr .,
president of the hospital's Board
of Trustees, made the presenta·
!ion of awards.
Sellards pointed out that the
employees honored Friday represent a total of 465 years of
service to Pleasant Valley Hospital, and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center and told those
attending · the luncheon that 75
percents of all full-time employees have invested more than
five years or employment.
"Your years of dedlcatlon and
commitment exempllfy more

Business Services

Browils lose 27-24 OT tilt

PR coordinator n~ed at h9spital
POINT PLEASANT- Michael
G. Sellards, executive director of
Pleasant Valley Hospital, 'today
announced the appointment of
Jud:. Ow.en Morgan as public
relations coordinator.
-Morgan, a native of Middleport, Ohio,- came to Point Pleasant in May ol1979 os news editor
of the Point Pleasant Register.
She was named editor of the local
newspaper in 1986, and .held that
position untli resigning recently
to accept employment with Plea·
san! Valley Hospital.
As Pllbllc relations coordinator. Morgan will he responsible
lor producing news releases and
feature articles about Pleasant
Valley Hospital actlvtues, programs and employees, helping to
coordinate production and placement of hospital advertising,
organizing pubilc relations programs and assisting in formula! ·
lng hospital marketing strategy.
She will also edit "The Pulse,"
Pleasant Valley Hospital's hi·
monthly newsletter. and help to
design departmental brochUres

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

AVON · Ail areas. Call Marilyn •
Weaver 304..--182 -2846 .
•
•
" HIAING"II
Go1o1ernment jobs • your area . ,
•16 . 000 - •6a , ooo . Call
(602}838 -8886 ext 12q3,
•

.. -· -·--... easan't

- p~ ----.-

&amp; Vicinity

. AN SUPERVISOR
One fut~ _time nur•ing Supervi sor, poSition available. 1 1 :00 till
7:00 shift with our high Medi
Care c_en1ut we naed a AN
Superv11or with experience in
akilled long term care and
rehabilition nursing . Contact
Hltlview Nurslna and Rehebilltion Center, 1720 17th Street,
Huntington, W. Va. 304 -629-

Yard Sate, 212 Camden Ave .
Saturday, Monday, Tuead-v.
Colts, sweaters, dith", misc.
10 ttl!?
Garage Sale: Maple St. , Masol\,
W.VA .. Nov. 3-4 . Adult &amp; baby
cloches. we1tem books, lou of
dl1hea II ml1c.

8031 .

'

.

•
:
,
•
,
•
•
•
·~
:
r

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

LAFF-A-DAY

Secreury with nursing
,.,,... mediul
blUing , office menegemut,
houri flt•ible, 304 -675-1373
ev.nlnge.
Medic,~!

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 afld 2 bedroom 8p4rtmerttl for
rent. Baalc rent tor 1 bdr,,
1183.00; 2bdr.,l219 .00 . Alao
required a 1200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Ja ckson
Emt" Dept. Ph 446· 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.

Sldln'iil Appli-.etore end replecement window lntulleu . Mu11
heve huck end too11 . Ellp.
Preferred. 304-B75-!ii2!ii2, 10
em - 4pm.

2 BA . epts . 6 closets. kitch&amp;n·
eppl. furnished. Washer -Dryer
hook-up. c8tpet, newly
~Minted, deck. Reoencv. In c.
Apts. Call 304-675"·7738 or
8715-6104.

E•cellent W~e1 for tpere time
1nembly work: electronin,

crafta . Other information
150411!141 -0091 •~t3867 . Open
7 deys. Cell nawl!
Full I. P8rt time commi••lon
uhtt position. 304-676-1726.
. GET PAlO for retdb1g booktt
t100 .00 per tide. Wrhe: ACE ·
5178, 161 S. Lincolnway. N.
Aurora. IL 60542.

Insurance

Cetl ue tor yoor mobile tlome

lnturlnce: Millar ln1urence.
304 -882 - 2146 . Also: auto ,
home. life. health.

1B Wanted to Do
HouH CINning or office clean·
lng by clay. Can give reference.

ImmaCulate cleaner. call 814·
446·8106 .
Will do babylinlng In my home-aryv hot,~ra . No age limit. Call
K1m - 614-448 -9378 .
Do you nNd 1 substitute
mommy while you work?lat me
baby · your be by. Christian
mothw of 2 achool age children
will lovingly care for your child,
New born up to schoof age. Will
givee•cellent care during school
calender v-er. Mon. · Fri. I live
approximately 1 0 mlnutea from
HoiEera. Vary co11wntent for
North GeiHe teachers. If you
would like to know moJI,I would
=~ 4~;:~! 8 ~7J:Ik with you at
Can do light hauling end roofing.
Reesoneb~e rates . Marion
Snider. 614-949-2629 .
care for elderly In compfort
oY'thelr own home. Referencet .
Call 614-742-2371 af1er 5:00
p.m.
~~I

Smell aand bluting jobs. 614·
992-2789 after 6p.m.

. wm baby lit in my home, have
references and uperience. 304·
173-5896.

• Will do house clean_lng In New

Haven area or baby siUing In my
• home, 304-882-2408.

F1nanc1al
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends thet you
do bualness with paople vou
llndW. and NOT to aend money
through 1he mail 'Until you have
Investigated the offering.

Car Wash Equipment . .2 baya
with Wllh, rinn end foemy
brusfl . U1ed little. 304-4691948.

I'm not a construction
I live in a tough
neighborhood!"
· 32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

121180 Community· 2 BR .• 1
bath, 10•14 add on . Rented lot.
$3800 or contract. 1160 e
mo.-3 yu. Phone 1!114·44e7716.

New hou.. in Rocklpring1. Ohio
lor rent. 1350. per month. Cell
1114· 446· 8898 or 1!114-992 ·
6304.

1991 Nuhua 14d6, All elect·
ric. unfurni.J,ed, 2 bedrooma
with room for 1 . third, air
conditioner, atove. refrigerator,
large decll and storage building
included . Park Lane Coun, clol8
to hoapllll end Spring Valley
shopping. Cell 614-448-7366
or 814-446-7374 attar 6pm .
1 968 Kirkwood, 2 bedrooms.
368 E. Main. Pomeroy. Immediate poua11lon . 13000. Call
614-992·7314 or 614-742·
2063.

Nice clean home. Large kitchen,
eppllences. AC . utility room , 3
BfL cerpet thru-out. me11er BR .
. ceiling fan. Finished garege.
Price U7,600. Reduced l!o. neg.
Ct11614- 448 - 1~68 .

Split level 3 Bft , 2%1 beth, 2
fireptacea . alnlng on 3 ecrus
overlooking the Ohio River.
located on Rt. 7 toward Eureh.
t615.000. Call for appt . 614·
U6·4614 .
Great starter home. 1979 14x 70
mobile home on 1.3 acres. Front
, porch . .fue~lece, 2 Br., 2 lull
· baths· 1 with garden tub. 10
mllea from town . Priced to aell.
116 ,500. Call today . 614-2686702.
Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
Locks on Rt. 7 . 2cargarage, nice
lot. Immediate poueulon. Will
conalder trede in of Mobile
home, property. ete . Bargain
priced. Cell614-448-8038.

Government home• from 11 . lU
repair) . Ol!!llinquent tu property.
Repouetaions. Call 805-687 eooo E.t . GH -9805 for cu"ent
repo lilt
Owner tinar~clng . 4 bedroom
frame home on 40 acret 20
acru wooded. Meig• Co. Gib·
son Rd . $38 ,000 . 61 4· 664 ·
826.1/ .

2 BR . trailer-nellt door to Rio
Grende Collage. Call 614-4461323 or 24&amp;-9170.

1979 14~70 Govenor 1 'II baths.
C· A ell electric-stove, refrig.
dishwasher, 3 b.clroom. car·
peted. On rental lot. t8000.
304-n3-9126 .

2 BR .. Patriot area 1200 a mo.
plua deposil. Call 614-379·
2880.

12•66 Mobile Home with 121l24
add on, wllh exlre lot. 304-e75·
7889.

6 roo m ho use. 2110 N. Main
Strut. uppet 20'1, 304-468 ·
18715

Rio Grande- 2 Bedroom Mobile
Home. No pets. Adults pre·
ferred . Referencs and deposit
required. Call814·448· 9430.
2 Br. trailer. Soward• Rklge Rd.
1160 dep., 1150 e mo. Ref.
required. Call814-2!6-6208.

2 bedroom mobile home.
12x60. putiV furnl1hed.
15,700.00 or belt offer. 304 ·
675-5268 between 10:00 and
5 :00 or efter 6:00 304-876·
4840.

2 bedroom 'iurniahed. WHhllr
and dryer. · t191i. plus utilitie1
and deposit. 614-992-7479 .

198\9 Fairmont mobile home.
14•60, c&amp;ntralalr, electric heet,
e•c cond. phone 304- 676·
3118 .

Two bed room mobile home
Mlddlapon, Ohio. Aaterences
end deposit required . 304-88232e7 or 394-773-5024.

Two mobil&amp; homes •Ito one
mobile home with fenced lot end
bldga. Hugh Burrt1, pflona 304.·
876-8612.

33

· Farms for Sale

34

Business
Buildings

Commtrelel building• ior leeaa.
Downtown Pt . Plaasanl . Stores.
offices. A·One Rui Estate.
Cerol Yeager, Broker. Cell 304675·5104.
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop. 1800 sq. ft. Commerciel or warehouse. Parking on
•Ide. Adj•centtoThlrd &amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appointment.

,35lots &amp; Acreage
2 Building Iota· 1 \12 acres each
with county weter:-·Jerrya Run
Rd. Apple Grove. W. Va. Cell
304-676-2383.
80 acre1 located Saaufras and
Poners Creek Road1. Good
hunting and severel building
sitea 304-875 · 3030 and 675·
3431 .
Ma1on County. Cnlognedlauict.
95 plus acres neer Linle Mill
Creek, hunter&amp; dream. 3 mil11
from Rt. 87, 135,000.00. 304722· 3389.

Renlals
41

Homes for Rant

Unfurnished house, 3 br. Rod·
ney Vlll1ge II , $250. Call e14446-4416 after 7 :00PM .
N lcely furnished small houu
Adult• only. Reierence~ re·
quirad. Off street perking. Ph.
614-446· 0338.
3 br., CA., llaaemant. garage.
patio. carpet. 1 cut ltOne
fireplece, &amp; 1 brick fireplace.
inground pool. Rat. A· 1 R..l
Estate, Carol Yeager· broker.
304 -675-6104.

44

Apartment
for Rant

1 br. apt. near HMC. Stove,
,.,._lg., dr•Pft furnithad. •22&amp; •
mo. Dep.· Raf. ~equlrctd . Call
614-446-4782 .
11 Court. 2 br., 1 'hbeth. kitchen
furnished, ca.rpeted. Reer parking . 1360-mo. &amp; utilities. Dep . &amp;
Ref. Cal1614-446 -4928.
Downtown· ~ Modern 1 BR ..
complete kitchen. carptt, air ,
electric heet, Cell tt14-448 4383·d•ys. 448-0139-even. &amp;
weekends.
2 BR . unfumiahed geraqe apt .
Excell. cond. $250 a mo. Adulta
only. No pet1. Call 614 -4462300 . .
Nice one bedroom garage apt.
Central air. Good location. Ref·
erences &amp; depoait requhed . Call
614-446-4169.
Rio Grande- Nice 2 Br. Stove.
ntfrigeretor furniahed. 1226. No
peta. C•ll814-446-8038.
furnl1htd apt.· 4 rooms &amp; bath.
1 or 2 edulll. No pats . Ref. &amp;
11e. dep. required. Cell 814448-0444 .
Brookalde Apanments· Urge
country kitchen, stove l!o. refri~ 1
eretor. Unfurnished. 1 BR. beth.
quiet eree. Cal/614-446-1932.
apt .. Modern 1 BR .
Sto\le &amp; ratrig. Close to town.
No pete. Sec. dep. Call 614·
446-2065 evenings.
08k~~Vood

Furni1hed Apertmenl in town.
Call 614 -448-1423.
Gracloua living. 1 and-- 2 bed·
room apartments et Village
Manor and RiVer1ide Apart·
menta In Middleport . From
1215. including Ulllitles . Cell
614-992-7787. EOH:
Nice one bedroom apertment.
Nawly carpeted. upstairs. Cetl
614-992-6868 .
Apartments for rent in Pomeroy,
1 and 2 bedrooms. 614- 992·
6215 .
1 bedroom ap1 . In Middleport.
a175 per month . Ca1l614-9926763 .

3 8R . houn. unf. spacious.
enractlva, In Gallipolis . Quiet
neighborhood. 2 car garage.
t275 &amp; utllitlea. Oep. &amp; Ref.
r&amp;Quiled. Call Eart Tope. 614 448·0181 eve.

Ranch ttyle brick home. 3
bedrooms, 2 tiatht , 1800 sq ft
on 27 plus .urea Grandvlsw
2 BR .. large living room , stove,
A1dge, Putnam Co., 38ll130 wuher . Neaf tow~ . No pet1.
hotS&amp; barn with l .B comfort Oep . &amp; ret. Caii614J448-1617.
•tails: (3Bx40 workout erea
ln1idal foaling 11e111. feed and Nice 3 BR. hom.- town. 1300
tack room . Mo•UY pasture, . p~r mo . piul Sec. dap. Call
fenced, h81 pond. 189. 900 ; 10 614-446 -6189 .
per cent down . l &amp;llerwill finance
balence to eligible applicanta. Sell-Rent: Nice home. t..rge
Contact Pete Sommer, PO Boll kitchen. 3 BR .. garage, Muat
231 . Point Pleuant. W.Va. have refa~ence1 . C el~ e14-446·
26560 . 304-676 -3280, Mon -. 1358.
Fr i. 8 :00 -4 :30.
P icturesque home 3 miles south
Aluminum 1ided, 3 bedrooms. of Oallipo ll•. Rt. 7 , Adult•
1 ~ baths. dining room, !emily prefMred. Reference•. deposit
room in basllment , 2 ca r garage. ;equired. Cal/614-446- 9430.
304-67!1 -4804.
Houu , Th ird St . Muon .
115 ,000.00. Sell on t•nd cort·
tract. 12 ,000.00 down and
mortthly P"Ym&amp;nta. 304 -982·
2971 .

12•80 mobile h·o me. 1Ji mil&amp;
from city limits. No pata. Adutta
preferred. Ce/1614-446-1168.

1970 Beverly Manor 12d0. 2
bedroom. t2800 . 614 · 9927646.

Low bl11s l!o. maintence. woodburner in FA . Call 814 -4460905. (Excellent termll -

2 b&amp;droom home in Pomeroy. 2
bethl, swimming pool. satllite.
Close to sehool•. Ca11614-992·
3264

1 2Jte0 2 br. Kitchen furnished .
Larl)&amp; private lot. 1 mile from
town. t200 • mo . O.p. &amp; Ref.
Call 614-446 -2238 or 4462681 .

2 BA. trailer. Near Bidwell. Ref.
llo. Dep . required. Ca11814-2459659.

Lease Purchaae· 3 BR . home.

76 a crAl , newer house. County
water. Etec. &amp; phone hook-up .
Approx . 1.0 mile road fronttge.
t78.000 or beu offer. Call
614-446-8980 .

73

3 bedroom house for rent In
Pnmaroy. Ca/1614-992 · 7277or
614-992-7857 .
2 bedroom house for rent.
Unfurnished. Storm Windows
end d oo r~ , lnsuletad . Nice and
c leen. No Inside pet• . Dapotit
required. 814 -992-3090.

64 Misc. Merchandise

RoOms for ren1. day . wuk.
month , Gellle Hotel, Call 614·
44e-9680. Rent u low as 1120
month.

Electric editing machlna. tlO .
304-773-9126 .

Furniahed room. 1100. Utlllti..
paid. Shere balh. Single male.
919 Second. Oaltipolls. Call
446-4418 efter 7pm.

Save t10 .00 on GoldweU
Parma. Finally e Perm yqu c:an
live with. Healthy looking curls
seem like an impoulble dream
untiltheGoldweiiPerm .Syatem.

46 Space for Rent

614-992
-6720
. EJtpirea
Staira.
Reg. $45
. Sala 135.
Top
of the
Nov ·7th .

For lease

400 1q. ft . commercial $pace
sulteble for offices. retailing. ot
services. p,ime location-corner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in r&amp;ar. $360 per
month. Cell 814-446-4249 or
446-2325 .

Merchandtse
51 Household Goods

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

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
O~lve Sl ., Gelllpolil.
NEW· 6 pc . wood group- 111399.
living room suites· 1199-1699.
Bunk beds with bedding· 111199 .
Full 1ize met1r011 &amp; foundation
1tarting- $99 . Rl!iclinert
stanlng· 899.
USED- Beds. dreuer1, bedroom
suitea, · $199-$299 . Desks,
wringer washer. a complete line
of u1ed furniture.
NEW- Weatern boot•· $30.
Workboota 118 l!o. up. !Ste&amp;l &amp;
aoft toe) . Cell 614-446-3169 .
County Appliartce. Inc. Good
used eppllancea end TV sets.
Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1899, 627 3rd.
AVil. Gellfpolla. OH.
GOOO USEO . APPLIANCES
Washerl. dryers. refrigerators.
rengu . Skaggs Appllencea ,
Upper River Rd. beaide Stone
Crllt Motel . 614-44e-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofs1 and chein prlead from
$396 to 1996. Teblet 160 and
up to &amp;126. Hide-a•bedl 111390
to 1696. Recliners ' $226 to
$375 . Lampl UB to $125.
Dinettes 1111 09 end up to 1496
Wood t•ble w-6 chaira &amp;286 to
1795. Desk *100 up lo $376.
Hutches 1400 and up . Bunk
beds compltte w-mattreue1
1296 and up to U96. Baby bed a
$1 10. Manre11e1 or box spring•
full or twin t68, firm $78, and
$88 . Queen seta J226, King
$360. 4 drawer che11 169. Gun
cabinet• 8 gun. Gas or elecuic
range 6376. Baby mattrtiii&amp;IS
136 &amp;. 146. Bed framet 11120.
130 &amp; King frame $50. Good
l&amp;lection ol bedroom 1uitas.
metal cabinets, headboards $30
and up 10 166.
90 Days lame as cath with
approved credit. 3 Milas oul
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 814-4460322 .
Valley Furniture
New and u1ed furniture and
applicancel . Ca11 614 -4467672 . Hours 9 · 6 .
Cerpet, 1116.60 8o up. living room
suites. 1325 &amp; up. Mollohan
Furniture, Upper River Rd . 4467444 .
New queen size Waveleu waterbed mattreu, boll 1prings, 8o
he111vy duty frame. $275!-best
offer. Call 614-446· 4220 .
l(enmore we1her &amp; dryer , coppenone. Working cond. $100.
Call 614-446-4769 or 4462502 .
New 16 lb. Hoi Point Washer
and alec. dryer with vent lilt end
pig tail for $860.00 . 304 -6756750.

76

SURPLUS ARMY. DENMIM,
RENTAL ClOTHING. ICarharts
10 Plf cent over cost) Originel
ermy cAmouglage. H. 0 . ''Sarn''
Somerville'•· Old Rt. 21 EeetRavenswood. Fri. Sat, Sun,
Noon -8:00PM . Other deys11fter
3:00PM. 304 · 273·~665 . I"IU•
tated camouflege coverall•.
$25 .00.
Upright piano with bench. Mi·
maograph machine. St . Paul
United Methodist Church. 31)4.
875-6452 or 875-3326 .
Store cleanup · miac. items.
Picken'a Furniture. 1f.r mile out
J,.richo Rd. Pt. Pleeunt. 304676-1450 .
Cu1tom draperies. 1'' mini venl·
tie.n blinds, louver varticel blk1d1,
installed. 304-458·1078. P. A.
S&amp;yre.
Buy 6 Toning T11bies and receive
e free Suntan bed. Offer good
until Dec. 30, 1987 . Call Caribbean Tan1. Inc .. 304-422 -4200 .
~lastl c

citterrt state approved.
ple1tic septic tanka, plaatic
culverta, metal culverts . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jeckaon, Oh. 614-286·6930.
Quality firewood 1 all herdwood,
for se]e. $26 e pick-up load. Cell
614-367-0689.
Big Dakota Farm Home- built on
your lot only. t12,995 &amp; up . Cell
814-8B6-7311.
Hardwood firewood ior sale.
120 pick-up load . Cal1614-2661870.

NOVEMBER SALE :
Maynerd'• Quilts 6 Fabrics: 20
par cent off crafts and meteriaL
t5 to 126 off on quilt1. 36 wnt
of Rodney . Ca/1614-246-5682 .
Sears heavy d1,1tV washer ,
dinette 1et, box springs, mat hen &amp; framll, recliner. wooden
&amp; storm door1. Call 614-4463224.
Ceptain's lounge r.bed. Good
clean mettresa, dresser. rTairror,
new set encyclopedln. antique
bress bed. Call614·258-1768 .
Catalytic convarten, only
$89.96. Most mbdel1. ln•tell•·
tion also available. MufflerM•n.
9 Stimpson Ave .. Athen1, Ohio.
1-800-843-3767 .
Mi11ed hard wood slebs. 612 per
bundl•. Conteinlng epprox . 11JJ
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-992 -6461 .
Firewood! All hard wood. HEAP
Vouchers accepted. •36 . large
PICkup load. 614-742-246e .
CoUch and lo\18aeal . Excellent
condition. E)Cerclae Treadmill.
He -Man Toys. Call 614-6673785.
1972 Plymou!h. Run1 good
S176. Used prime doors and
1torm door price 110.00 end
530 . 00 . ~ Cell 814-742· 3073
between 10e.m. to &amp;p. m.

Storm wlndowa for aale. Call
8 14·992·2021.

55 Building Supplies
Bulkling .M eteriell
Block. ~rick . ..ewer pipes. windows, lintele, ate. Claude Win·
ter1. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614246· 5121.
Concrete btocklallalzea yard or
delivery. Meaon 1and. Gelllpolia
Block Co.. 1 23'12 Pine St ..
Oallipolia, Ohio Call 814-4462783.
Reedy mi• concrete and ell
concrete suppllas. Call ua Valley
Brook Cement and Suppllel,
304-773-5234.

56

Pets for Sale

Groo"m and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeda . .. A/1
atyln. lama Pet Food Dealer.
Julia Webb Ph. 614-448-0231 .
Dregonwvnd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan. Partlen and
SismiH kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. New kittena: Penlana.
Call614-441!5·3B44 after 7PM.

One bedroom turnlahed apt.
E:t&gt;tre clean and nice. Adult1
Only. No Pats. 304-676-1386.
117 N. Fourth Ave., Mlddhlport;
Ohio, two bedroom furni1hed
apt. 304 ·8,82· 2668.

1977 Buick LaSabra· 3150", V-8.
auto .. air. PS. PB . New paint.
Serviced regularly. 11200. Call
81.4-U8-0877.
1982 Cua-fomlzed Chevy van.
Cruiae, tilt. air. auto. trana.
Elcel. cond. t6600. C1ll 614258·8780 .
. 19815 Plymoulh Horizon, 4 apd.,
AM-FM -Tape, 12999. John's
Auto Sthn on At. 7, below the
Holiday Inn In Keneuge.
1981 Plvmouth Turiamo TC3· 2
door hatchback, 4 apd. , AM·FM·
Case .. front wheel drive. low
milea . Extra cleen. Call 614245-15040.
1976 Camero,
614·286- 1236.

11000. Call

1982 Chlr\lette. Great 9111 mlleegt, 4 dr . Hetchback, 4 spd.
Good cond. Call 614-446·
3383.
1979 Datsun SW. Runs excel.
35 MPG. &amp;litre perts, good tires.
1600. Call614-448- 3340.
1980 ChevtolalMallbu SWwith
air. Good cond. 11150. Call
814-446-9584.
1977 Cordobe. Runs good.
Body fair, taoo. 1978 Yamaha
125 dlr1 bike. good cond., 1200.
Call &amp;14·448·1021.

I

mIU1

rn AUce

!It Ill

1-r:G-=El-"-R.;;.o...::sr.--~1

I
I
•
If::.,-,;,,;....:.T-1..:.....;.1:.....;rl-l , room
S A P NY

-

I!S) NBC Nightly Nowa

.

Cell 814-

Blue Merrill collie. 126. 304·
. 675-6043 after 7:00 p.m.

1982 Camero . Auto ., V-6,
72,000 miles . Oood cond .
14700. Cell614·245·9477.

AKC Chlhueh1,1a
448 -n&amp;&amp;.

57

p~p1 .

Musical
Instruments

For Sele: Spinet· Consle Piano
8argtln . Wanted: Responsible
part to 1eka over low monthly
psymenta on Spinet Plano. See
localty . Mr. White, 800· 327·
3346, Ext. 102.

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Qu1llty Comb Honey and Raw
Liquid Honey for Nle; whole.. le
and retail. Caii614·246-15Z03.

-,,._,_·~·~·-·--------I
1

F.trm

Sii!IIJiit:s

&amp; LIVI:s lock
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 W•t. Jackaon. Ohio.
614-Z88·6-461 .
Mll ..y Ferguson, New Holland,
8u1h Hog Saln &amp; Service. Over
40 u1ed ttactort to ehoosefrom
lo coMJ)tete line of new 6 used
equipment. largest telection in
S.E. Ohio .

1983 Plymouth Hori1on. Good
running cond. Call 614-448·
8440 or 387·0507.
Stainle11 steel e.tthauet 1vattma.
Now custom made fM your
truck. motor home orclaaaiccer.
With life-lime warranty. Muffler
Man. 9 Stimpson Ave .. Athena.
Ohio. 1-900-843-3767.
1973 ptvmouth Satalllte Cus·
tom 4 door sedan. Good condi·
tlon. Asking t800. 080 . Call
.614-949-2893,
1978 Camero Rally Sport, •uto,
AC, tift, ·· AM·FM stereo. air
ahoc:b, 350 four barrel!. 304·
87!-1139.
19B6 Cougar. 3.8. V-8, must
sell, take over payments. call
814·446-4109 week days 8:00
till 5:00.
1977 Olda Cut1a11, 465 CIO.
new tires. dual exhaust, bettary,
air shocks etc. Good cond,
f1.060 .00. Phone 304·875·
3841 Or 676-4437 .
1987 Celavier, AS. fully loaded,
take over payment•. 304-678·
2681 .
Beautiful 1977 Lincoln Contln·
ental Mark V. low mileage. e•c
eond. 304-875-3029 or 675e
8727.
1986 Flrebird, beautiful white, 6
speed. elltres. V-6, economical.
110.396.00. 304· 6"16· 2617 .

36 Mu"y fel"{luson tractM
with plowa 6 diiC· creem puff.
Mull be setn to eppraciate.
13460. Cail814-286· 8622.

1978 Monte Cerlo. pb, pa, air ,
no rust. 88.000 miles. $1,950 .
304-675-4828 .

3 grade tobaccn bating preu
with •ir cylinder. 1460. Call
614-25&amp;-e011 .

1984 Delta 88, loaded, 4 dr,
V-8. 23 mpg. good Urea .
17,195. 080 . 304-876-6086 .

D-2 dour. No blade. No winch.
Run1 good . A1king 12000. Cell
614-682-7348 .

1981 Plymouth Reliant atation
wagon, 68,000 milea, 304-6765442.
.
.

For ule. 420 John Oeere
geaotlne dozer with wench .
614-992-2789 eiter 8 :00.

1984 Chevy. loaded. extra
sharp, hlgh mileage, booka for
ae.ooo . to 1117.000. priced
$4,900. 304-67&amp; · 26e3 .

lntllmatlonal1 050 grinder mixer
magn,et. Hay feeder, 3 acreens,
good eand, 304 ·273-4216 .

62 Wanted to Buy

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

72

63

19e9 Ford Pickup. V-8. 400
eng.. auto trana. seoo. C1ll
614-742-3076.
.

64

Hay 8o ·Grain

"41xad hey. 41 .26 . H111y" for
bedding 60c. 304-675-!679.

Tronsportation

1986 Ford Ranger XLT, V-6,
euto. ovardrive. AC. AM -FM
cassene. etmost 39,000 miter,
Tonneau Cover. 2 toned· blecll
111nd titver paint, burgandy up·
holatery end carpet. lettered
tires, sliding beck window,
16.500.00 iirm. 304-882 -2211
anytime.
1982 Toyote lruck, )~ lon with
topper, a111c cond. 17.000 miles.
30.1/·676-1616.
Pick up truck bade
Ford, Chevrolet, Dodge, Abso lutely no rust. long end short
beds. '70 to '86 models. 304676 -2:265 .
1969 GMC 10C hell ton truck
with topper. 304-676-6821 .
1977 Ford F-260 trailer apecial
480, air. cruise, ••c cond, very
clean, $3,000.00 firm . 304675-2302 .

71 Auto's For Sale

In Middleport. 2 large room apt,
completely furni1hed, private,
both utilities paid, 304-882 2668 .

1983 ford Fairmont. 50,000
mll1s, one owner, like new.
12300 . 1984 Dodge Colt,
69,000 mlle1 , muat ba ann to
appreciate . Ca/1614-286 ·8622 .

Three room apertment utilities
paid, edults onl~ , 304-876 ·
3030 or 675· 3431 ,

1977 Chevy Monza V•8, 1un
roof, euto ., 304-676·2406. befo ra 61 304·676-1604.

73

Vans 8o 4 W .O .

Is It true you ctn buy Jeeps for
t44. thrOugh the U.S, Governm'enl? Get the facts today! Call
312,-742-1142 EXT. 4069 .
'78 Jeep CJ7, eutomatlc. PS,
t900 .00 iirm, 304-675-6799.

by f•ll1 ng m the minmg words
you develop fr om ~tep No . 3 below.

reports on world economics
Q}) Wheel of Fortune

iill 11JCheers•S•H
M' A

7:06 C!l Andy Griffith
7:30 IIIli Hollywood Squaroa

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

(IJ NFL Monday Night
Mamorllil
Cl) Newlywed Game
(I) Judge

20 tt. Beeline cemper. _1850.
Cell 614-266-6309.

You INC/(

LAB

TH!:RE~

THt: CAAIN

8:00 CD Pap8r Ch111 The exploits ·
of lew students are explored.

Cf:L.L. AND THE 'rUMMY

cELl. THE TUMMY &lt;;e:L.LI

Services
81

AN AJ?(;UMt:NT

~ETWE'EN

1973Winnebago, 29,000 miles.
good shape. e8 .00o .oo. 304·
676 ·4664, 2614 Jefferson!
Ave .. Pt. Pit .

11a1 Wheel ot Fortuna g
IU1 Crooollra (0:301
tll!Ul 1151 Jeopardy! g
® Barney Millar
ill l1l WKRP In Cincinnati
7:36 CIJ Sonlord and Son

NoTICE WHeN

Home
Improvements

ALLEY OOP

CIJ llJ Cll MacGyvar

Up New York Giants at

Dallas Cowboys
MacGyver must find and
downed secret aircraft. 1;1

(J) First Eden Look at the

creating of the
Mediterranean Sea and the
lands around it. C
llal mIU1 •Joaap~
Wambaugh'l Echoes In the
Oarkneu, Part 2' CBS

story of Brian Zimmerman,
age 11, the mayor of Crabb.
Texas. (1:001

~

Q

.

Prlm6news Wrap ups of
the day's world new$ and in

deplh toeture repons. (1 '001

EEK

Unseen Wor1d Special
Effects ,

(1)1

MEEK .

Ill l1l MOVIE: Private
llen)omtn (RJ (1:40)

8:05 C!) MOVIE: Giant INRI (3:211
8:30Uill I!Sl Volorto'o Family
David risks a friendship In
order to save the friend's life.

Fetty Trte Trimming. ltump
remove!. Ca/1304-676· 1331 .

lilMlig1zlne
NFL Monday Night

9:00 ()) 7011 Club
II (2) I!Sl MOVIE: 'Oh, God I

1
I

You Qewll' NBC Monday

Night at lila Moviti(PGI
(1 :361
I!J Triathlon Third Annual

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I VI/&amp;\SN'T5rARI~ ... I WAS
TRYING TO FALL ASLEEP .
WITH MY EYE5 OPEN.

Electric sewer Cl$8ning, gu,
water. &amp; ~ewer services. for all
your plumbing needs call the
PLUMBING DOCTOR. 1 · 682·
8663· 24 HOUR SERVICES .

Iron Kids National from
Phoenix, AZ (D
Cl) CIJ (I) ABC Monday Night
FootbaU Q
&lt;E [IJ Oil When oil prices
failed to rise as expected,
Mexico faced bankruptcy.

!Ullarry King Llvel In depth

interviews with top

newsmakers and celebrities.
tH) UHie House on the
Prairie

9:30 I!J su~lng A Day at tho
Beach from Huntington
Beach, CA IR)

APPALACHIAN WOOO STOVE.
Wood and coelalovet. furnaces.
and insert1. Brunco, Ashley,
Consolidated Dutchwe1t. Buy,
11111. trade. 10 yr1. eJtperlence.
Rt . 143, Carpenter. Ohio . 614698 -6121 .

Ret idential or commercial wir·
ing . New aenrice or repairs.
Licen1ed electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304676-1786.

10:00 ()) Streight Talk
I!) Trying Times 1;1
liD IBJ News

01l Evening Newe A wrap up
of today·s news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)

GOES

HE DON'T DRINK,
SMOKE, CUSS OR
PLAY CARDS

ill Cll Benny Hill

1H' DADBURN
NEIGHBORHOOD

10:30 Ill Courtohlp ot Eddla's
Fath81'

I!J Swlmoun '87 IRI

OR··

{!) Alive from Off Center

Some of the most offbeat

and daring rock

videos

are

shown.

B5

([J) This Old Houee Norm
supervises the raising of the

General Hauling

wall to the new kitchen

addition. r;1
fll CZJ Hogan's Heroes
11:00 ())Remington Steele
IIIli llal lll!Ul I!Sl News
llJ Sign 011
l!ll Only One Earth This

Dillard Wate~o Servic'e: Pools,
Cisterns. Wells . Delivery Anytime. Call 614-446·7404-No
Sunday calls.
J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, ci11terns. wells. Ph. 61 4·
246· 9286 .

'

NORTH

ll·!-87

+AK1084

By James Jacoby

+74

+Q 6 53

WEST

EAST
+Q1074
99 8 5
+Qs
+A 10 9 2

..
9AKQJ762

+9732

SOUTH
+AJ86532

'1'4

tJ&amp;

Budapest hosted the first world championship, in which an American team
led by Ely Culbertson competed
against 18 teams from European
couritries. Although Culbertson's team
was beaten in the finals by Austria, the
play of Helen Sobel in her first inter-

+KJ 8

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

1

West

North

39
59

••

Sou til

4+

Pass

Pass

national competition was outstanding.
Note her careful defense in today's

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • K

West's opening bid of only three
hearts ;;uggests that the time was won the ace. If she had now casua1ly
1937, but Sobel was quick to raise to returned a heart, declarer would have
four, if only as a defenslve measure. ruffed, played jack and queen of cltibll,
When the bidding heated up, she felt
her spade holding and side ace warranted a penalty double. West opened
and continued hearts, declarer ruffing. Declarer played a spade to dum·
my's king and a spade back, Sobel cov·
ering dummy's nine with her 10. After
winning the spade jack, South put the
club king on the table. Helen Sobel

ruffed a club and then played A·K of
diamonds. That would have resulted in

a two--card ending with the lead in
dummy and South left with the A,B of

trumps over East's Q-7. Instead, after
taking the club ace, Sobel simply returned lhe club 10. Declarer could no

longer develop the required end position and had to go down a trick

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

1 Caesar,
e.g.
6 Slope
11 Twaddle
12 French

composer
13 Biblical
junip~r

reports on world economics .
and financial news with Lou

Dobbs. 10:301
Qll Jerte11ons

• CD Love Connection

11:30 II &lt;aJ I!Sl Tonight Show
(IJ SportoCenter (ll
!Ill Magnum, P.l.

'Ji..

Upholstery

Ti-lE NURSES ALL

LOVE ME ...

A~D

I LOVE ME !

crest
3 Subsequently ·
4 Consumed
5 Satanical
6"The-

cession

town

37 Greek
letter
38 Work unit
39 Howard
of the
White
House
43"-on
Sunday"
45 Vibrant
46Actress
Papas
47 Belief
48Jewel
weight

DAILY CR YPI'OQUO'I'FS- Here's how to work It:

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
· for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
o apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different,
11-2

relationships. (0:301

G B P

Action

10:301

OPWD

poJiceman with a contract
McCall's lito.

!l!l Magnum, P.l. Dream a
Little Dream
&amp;I Cll M"A'S"H
12:00 ()) Bumo and Allen

on

uzw

AZMYFYZGP

M F N P

'
F J M

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PEPAGFCM

tl) (121 'Hunter' CBS L•t•

Night Hunter finds a former

1112

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTES

packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

\

2 Mountaln

laws
29 Shabby
30 Final word II
31 Cash roll
32 Favorable
prospect
34 New Guinea b-+-1-

([)) Make Prayers 10 the
Raven Look at how ttie
Athabascan Indians vie'(v'
(!]) Sports Tonight

DOWN
J Sail holder

tree
Santini"
14 Foe
(1979.film)
Yesterday's Answer
15 Dweller
33 Cap
7 Hurried
20 Plant
ln (suff.)
8 Tribune's 21 Mlneral
34 Pry
16 Mouths
greeting
22 Well - of 35 Sports
(Lat.)
9 Joe Biden 23 Anthem
settmg
18Thrice
is one
writer
36 White heron
(Lat.)
(abbr.)
24 Tight spot 39 Face a
19 Peter
10 English
26 Droop
pitcher
Finch
cathedral 27 I love
40 Brew
film
town
(Lat.)
41 Cousinry
24Command 17 Morocco's 28 MGM lion 42 Sundown
25 Canal city
national 29 Devilish
44 NOW
26 Royal SUC·
color
31 Moisten
concern

0 Moneyline Current

Watterson's Water Hauling,
reasonable rate• . immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, clsterne,
pools, well, ate c•ll 304-6762919.

Mowrey 's Upholstering serving
tri countv aree 22 ytan. The best
in furniture upholstering . Cell
304 - 67 5 · 4154 for tree
ostl mates

..

+K9
9 10 3

·-

rise in Africa 's population.

Paul Rupa, Jr. Water Service.
Pools, cis tern l, wells, Cell 614·
446 ·3171 '

R fJI. M Cu s to m Co uches andd
Raupholstory. St . Rt. 7. Crown
City, Oh . 614· 266 -1470. Eve,
614-446-3438 . Open daily 9to
4 :30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1 ·30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

Com~l~te _r~e

Brilliancy
of a bygone era

report looks at the geometric.

R II&lt; R Wiler Service. Home·
cltters, wells. poole fillld Formerly James Boys Watera .Cell
304 -675 -6370,

B7

_

Mlnl·s.rtU 1;1

RON'S Television Service .
Houae cal~a on RCA, Ouazar.
GE. Speciallng in Zenith. Call
304-676- 2398 or 614-446·
2454 .

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

•

[D Wonderwortt1 The tru~

SWEEPER and sewing machlnt
repair, parts. end 1upplles. Pick,
up and delivery, Davia V1cuum
Cleener, one halt mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614446·0294.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614· 446·3888 or 614·
446-4477

boost her self-image. C

L:::::::::~==::~~~~~~~~W~~NS~E~VE~Y TIME!
WE KNOW WE SUNK
THE ALBEMARLE!

.

deal.

destroy wreckage qf. a

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran·,
tae. local reierences furnl1hed.
Frae estimates. Call collect
1-614-237-0488, day or night.
RogeraBesam•nt
Waterproofing.

B2

(!II ALF ALF enrolls

lynn in a beauty contest to

I!J NFL Monday Night Match

WELL,AL,AT LEAST NOW

Sterks Tree and Lawn Senric•.
lawn cere, landsceping, stump
remov•l. 304-576 · 2842 or
578·2903.

~R~

.

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the formation of the America!!
Contract Bridge League. In June 1937,

m

78 Jayco camper. 24ft. Good ,
condition . 13000. Sears lXh
terln cam-corder. 1 veer old . •
tlOOO . Cali 614 -379·2177 or
614-379-2897 .

.

James Jacoby

Dobbs. 10:301

m~

.

BRIDGE

and financial news with Lou

19778ronco. 302 duel exhaust ..
Good shape. 12600. Cell 614379-2162 after 6:30PM .

1976 Ford. 300 engine. 6 cyl .,
64,000 actual miles. Good
running and body condition.
1860. Call614· 992-6904 .

0

.

~-------,

IJ§I News
(!3} Moneyllne Current

Struts. 1119.96 pair, lnaulled.
Most models. Muffler Men, 9
Slimpson Ave. Athens. Ohio. '
1-900-8'13-3767 .

chvckl_e quoted

~-,,-::,-T,-,,-.,,,,.-,,--i

Calkin - Quaff - Unm - Inlaid - FIND IT
When you grow up in a sm~l town you realize it's easier
to resist temptalion than It Is to FIND IT.

CIJ (I) People's Court
llJ liD MocNait/Lahror
Nawallour 11:001

~:;::::;:::~"
77 Auto Repair

l

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

(i) Entertainment Tontght

WANT 'rO BUY Pontiac or
Chevetta four cylinder motor,
phone 304-675-8348.

84

63 Ford truc:k,1000waterunk.
Call 81 4 · 250·6206.

ladies nice winter coet, 1ize 16 ;
nice dreu , 1ize 18: cordurov
jean•. size 18 . 614-992-3111
.:.flar 4 :30 pm .

Magnum XE qr GT, factory
fef'd&amp;r tleJea end other miac.
trim pieces. Call 814-9492693.

Trucks for Sale

Now buying 1hell com or ear
corn. Call forlataat quote• . River
City Farm Supply, 614 ·4462986.

Livestock

anchored live from New
Vorl&lt;. 10:301
IBJ WKRP In Cincinnati
fil Cl) Too Ctou for Comfort
6:35 (l) Leavell To Beaver
7:00 ()) Remington Steele
IIIli PM Magazine
I!J Sportaeentor (LI

Wantedfor1978or19790odge~

DA y E ST

Raceptionlsl: "Do you want a
with ashower or ona w~h a
bath?" Traveler: "What's the dll·
lerence?" Receptionist; "Well,
with a showsr, you have to-'-."

'--'--'--'--L-...1..-.J

the entertainment world is

- --:--:--:-::=-==::--:::

. _

I

Nightly l!uoinaao Repott
llal .!Ul CBS Nowa
l!ll Cotorooundo
OJ ShowiNz Today News o1

ltalled. Most Fords, Chevy ,
truck•. Vens, 4x4's. M1,1fflar
Msn, 9 Stimpaon Ave ., Athens.,
Ohio. 1-800-843· 3787.

~

. I I I I' . ·

1

I!)

Budgel T11n1minion•; Used and. ,
rebuilt. all typal. Guarantee 30
days. Cell 614-379-2220 or

R.U N BE R
~

@ Surfer Magaz:ine (R)

&amp;IS Chevy, 4 dr. New paint. tire•.

12500. 19n Plvmouth sw.
t300. Call 614-446-4462 or
388-9888.

limousine and Cher0fai1 bull.
500 lbt:. f400. 614·843-6185.

2 bedroom lurnisad apt , ref and
deposit. New Haven, W . Ya.,
304 -882-3267 or 304 · 7735024,

6:30

COA$T

•~hautt

For Mle . Registered 3 veer old
Suffolk R•m 1100 . Good
breeder. 304·773-6536 or 304773·964i aflar 8p ,m ,
,

APARTMENTS . mobile homea,
hou ..a. Pt. Ptaesant•ndGellipolla. 614-4U-e221 ,

Auto Parts

&amp;:05

~~~~~~~;;:;;~~~;;~;;~·~~~;~ .:.:_:_:..:,::.__,.----:c:-=-=
304~75·4230.kite.· ·199.95· lc-....
Duet
in-

Mouburg 12 Ga. WI deer 1leyer
and 30 .. full barrel . Cell 814·
266-9316 .
HALF PRICEI Fla1hing arrow
1igns t2991 Lighted, non-arrow
$2.891 Unlighted $2491 Free
lenersl See locally. Call today!
Factory: ·1 (8001 423·0163,
anytime.

the
be·
low Ia form four simp le words.

CIJ CIJ Ill ABC Newt t:;l

.)-l..

Bidwell Cash Feed Store now
handling spring 1t11i1rap1. Cell
61 .&amp;-388-9888.
For Sale: Firewood· larg,. .pickup load, dellvered. All hard·
wood. Call 614-446· 1437 or
446-9266.

O four
Rearrange leiters ol
scrambled wo rds

l!ll Squore One TV t:;1
IBJ Focts ot Ute
ill l1l One Day at a Time

CAPTAJN EASY

, WOlD
lAM I

Edlltd by CLAY I. POLI.AN

(!)Dr. Who

&amp; Accessories

Callahan's Ua.cl Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires, tizes12. 13, 14, 16,
16, 16.11. 8 mlln out Rt. 218.
Ce/1614-258·1251.

Space for 1mell trailers. All
hook· ups. C411bla. Al1o eHlciency
rooms, air and cable. Ma~on ,
W.Va. Ct~~/1304 - 773 · 6661 .

w

IIIli
o Ill 11a1
I!Sl News
1!J SportaLook IT)

Hondlll Goldwlng Interstate, axe
cond, bes1 offer, 304·882-2668
after 8:00.

Firewood for lela. OeUv•r~
anytime. t30 .09 . 304· 896 ·
344&amp;.

Chain Mwa Homelite, Super Xl
12, uaed very tittle, t196 .00.
Remington Yard Maater. good
cond. *66.00. 304-8B2-3376 .

· 49

'

EVENING

11

LIHIIIV

·::~:t:~· ~©~~1A-~t-trs·

•

MON., NOV. 2

6:00 (]) Crazy Like 1 Fox

._,.;. ~

54 Mise:. Merchandise 71 Auto's For Sale

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailera. Call 614-992 ·
7479.

Stor•ge building for automo·
biles. di"JJ and secure. 614-992·
7843.

Motorcycles

.

Monroe copier Model RL-612,
under 15.000 copies. 304-6764067.

All Christmas Trees 112.00.
Come early before cold weathat,
tag your tree •t Nawell'a Christmas Trae Farm on Hanging Rock
Road, 304 -773-6371 or 304·
882-2886.

PM.

•

1987 '"(]oldwing lnter1tate;
8600 miles. 1981 ex Cusrom
1500. nice cond. Call 614-446-.
0648 or 446-0941 .

//

The

Television
Viewing

A CAT ~ ... WJ.IAT~
'lt&gt;U~ I-I"''':'

1977 Jeep CJ7, 4WO. Good
cond. Good tires. 67,000 milas .
Cell 614· 268-8228 or 2661417, .

l - - - - - - -- - -

45

Mobile Home lot. 60 ft. or less.
920 4th., Gallipolis. 176. Waler
paid. Call 814-44e-4416 efter7

Ohio

l. c-.o.;c::c:-oc.-:::;;:::=:.-;::::

29 ,000 BTU Aftlana Air Condi·
tioner . S.crifice 1400. Cost
11200. 614 -n3-9128 .

Office Spac:t for rent . Ex.cel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call814-446-4222.

i'rHoiVill!:o \Jl' ·
ft-'{11\f:l . I JV~i
H~t&gt; A 1'\10'1\R MI~S
Wl\\l A /~7.

74

Furnlahed el)t. neJtt to library.
One profe..lonel Klult only.
Parking. Celle14-448· 0338 .

Furnished Rooms

November 2, 1987

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1981 Ford 160 Econollne Con·
venlon van. Good cond . 40.000
mila•. t7600 Firm. Call 61.&amp;246-6878.

Naw wood 6 pc living wood
su itea, 1399 ,96; chest of drew·
ars. 4 drawer~ 148, 5 drawer·
159. 96; mattrtsa 6 box sprirtgl·
full tl1e; 312 coil, •149.95 nt:
twin manrea. .a, 196
set.
THE WORKING
MAN ' S FRIEND

Nover Burglar Alarm with tape.·
fle•hing eye. Co1t 1700. Will
aacrllice for $260. 304-773 9128.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1974 Hillcrest trailer. Pertly
tumished. Can be INn Wolfe
Pen Ad. 1 end two·tenth mile.
130,000. 614-367-0511 .

Homes for Sale

4 BR., fireplace. fullbeaement . 3
mi. 10. of Gallipolis. 1;14,900.
Call Daya-614-446-1616. after
6:00- 446-1244.

Homes for Rent

1976 B-ayvi8'N 14x7D. 2 BR .,
front den, porch • awning. AC .
t7000. C•ll 614· 256-9309 or
258·&amp;205.

1 B acre farm with mobile home.
Good barn. 8 mi. iromtown. Ctll
e14-448-1158 .

Will help finenc8 or tend con,
trect. 10 yr. old houM. 3 Dr ..
Patriot Village. Cell 814-4481340, 446-3870.

41

2. 3, or 4 bedroom house• erd
apt . in Pomeroy arte. Pay own
utilities. depotlt required. Cell
614 -992-5113, 614-992-6723
or 814 -992-2609. Call after
5:0_0, pluse.

1/e,i/ bl.ilt:
31

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br lArry Wright

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

1killt or vi..

.13

51 Household Goods

Monday, November 2, 1987

DCS

c l! u
A Z M

WPA C V -

ZAW C JJ

G B P

(])NFL Theatre The Great

J G W P P G . - R F M
B S Q Q Z ·w Y
· Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE OBJECT OF PUNISH-

Ones (AI

MENT IS PREVENTION FROM EVIL; IT NEVER CAN BE

Explorer

MADE IMPULSIVE TO GOOD. -

(1) National Geographic

HORACE MANN

�Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. November 2. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1.23~D

'·

Dallas
topples

Ohio Lottery

Giants

Daily Number
320
Pick 4.
4.697

Page3

•

••

·We're Celebratla With Hu

Sa~ln

·A•alvere•rv S•l• ~ .
DESKS

Throu hoot The Storel

FALL DRE.SS
SALE
Cute fall styiH. One and

A•n•lmmv Sale Prlee4

In- tho boaoty of your homo wHh (OU choke of an ologantly
styiH .,.lly Dill loch il IKUfttoolwHh lor_,;m.tloardwaroaftd
fWihlll.ifl DW' s owa D~ .-d prottdiu lini.Wnt prCKIIS to in·

swo har....t _ . "'cilolllly ogointl "'""' spilh and dainL
.... 1249 Double' PIIIIHtal Duk ..........Salel199
111. 1279 Prlncn1 loU-top Desk .........Sale 1229
111. 13U Pecltstal loll-t., Dosk .........Sale 1279
leg. 1439 .Double Pedestal Desk ........:.Sale 1349

TUBE SOCKS
'

unu apYs

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

Quality
Devon skins. pants,
jeckete. blouaes end knit tops.

CHAIR SALE

Our Berkline Chair Sale

contrnuaa with tantaatlc
uvlnga on quality Berk·
line W•llaway recliners,
swivel rockert and rocko-lounger recliners. .

AliMSTRONG &amp; CONGOLEUM

Miaay and Petite sizes in black.
taupe. khaki end teal.

VINYL FLOOR COVERING

SIIB p,l6Bd

Huge assortment of patterns to
match any decor. No Wax finish.
In stock for immediate delivery.

$1350 TO $3600

GREAT STYLES,
GREAT COVERS,
GREAT PRICES!

OPEN STOCK
ester olacks, poly/cot·
ton slacka.. and colored

and colors
Reg. 811 to •21

jeans.

Missy and Junior Sizes
Sale Priced

From Only

S~LE $769

$900

~0 $14 69

TOWEL SALE

WOMEN'S

Casual ind dre11y atylea.
Pant suits. jacket outfits.
bibs end tops.
Sizee 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 7.
' ,Reg. '14.60 to 032.00

Sale Prlet4

under the regular state school subsidy formula.
·currently, the·lottery proceeds go Into the state
General Revenue Fund and are divided among all
government 'services. However, If the money
were segregated and sent to the schools, it would
amount to only 6 percent of their budget
requirements.
Issue 1 will not divert any more money to the
schools than they currently receive.
State Issue 2 was a $1.2 billion, 10-year bond
Issue providing funds for repair and replacement
of local roads, bridges and sewer and water
systems, and solid waste disposal facllltles.
It was placed on the ba!lot In a bipartisan move
by the Ohio General Assembly, whose leaders
reasoned that badly-needed repairs would not be
tackled unless local governments are given a
.financial hand.
Under the proposal, up to $120 mllllon worth of

bruahed tricot. flannel.
aw•tahirt knit and challia.

Rag. 112
SIHpwear .... Sale
Rag.'l15.00
Sleapwear .. Sale '11 .99
Rag. '21.00
Slaepweer ............. Sale
118.79
Reg, '32.00
Sleapwaar .. Sale '26.59

s,..,.,

· WOMEN'S
WRANGLERS

Parehtu

FLOOR
.lAMPS
Beautiful
bra11 plated
floor lamps.
Perfect for
reading,

Special rack of Pandora,
Ocean Pacific and Russ.
Reg. '24 Pants ........ Sale '18
Reg. '28 Skirts ........ Sale '21
Reg. '32 Knit Tops ..... Sale '24
Reg. '44 Sweaters ..... Sale '33

sewing or

everyday use.
3 stylet.
REG. $79.99

ONLY

$5 711

A.. lvermy
MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT

FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS

Same excellent quality we'vesold
for years. 100% cotton, colorful,
plaid and solid colors. Two button
thru flap pockets. Extra long taila.
Reg. Sizes S, M, L and XL
Tali Sizes M, L, XL. XXL
Big Sizes 2XL, 3XL. 4XL
'18c96 Work Flannels .. '16.29
'19.96 Work Flannels ..... $111.:llfl
'2Z.96 Work Flannels ... '19.69

SPECIAL GROUP

MEN'S S44.95

A1111lmmg Stls

JACKETS

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
Solid colors. whit... stripee and

$'3 300

17. Slaavelengths 32 to 36. Top·

SALE

Sizes S, M, Land XL. Warm,
to weer and an excellent buy.

'19.00
'22.00
'23.00
'24.00

~tasy

~~

VOTERS WILL DECIDE ISSUE TODAY Intensive campaigning, both for and against, hu
been underway In recent weeks on· lhe wei-dry
issue In Racine. Voters will decide Ihe outcome of

neat patterna. Neck 1i1H 14'12 to

ered and fuller cut .tyln. Buy now
for chrlt1m111 or layaway.

Shirts ........ . '16.30
Shirts ..... .... '17.70
Shirts ......... '18.50
Shirts.........
.30

Reg. •1 0.95 Standard Pillow ... : ........... $9.29
Reg. $12.'95 Queen Pillow ................ '1 0.99
Re g. 114 . 95 K'•ng P'll
1 ow .................... '12

•

Annhtersarv Sale!

MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
Big selection of styles and colors
in flannels. poly cotton blands.
plaids. stripes, solid colora. S, M,
Land XL, plus Big Sizes and Talis.
'

Buy Now For Chrislmas!
114.95

Westerns
016.96 Westerns
'18.95 Westerns
'22.95 Westerns

9:30 TO 5:00
MONDAY -SATURDAY

... •11.95
... $13.60
... '15. 10
... '18.30

BOYS $1

A•u•htirmv Salt

HOODED SWEAT SHIRTS

MEN'S NECKTIES
Our new fall selection in solids
and stripes. Clip on tiea and
four-in-hands.
Buy Your Favorite Now
an d S ave.

Reg. 58.50 Ties ...... ,........ S6.35
Reg. $9· ·00 T'liS............... $6 •75
Reg. 512.50 Ties ............ S9.35
Reg.o/13.50 Ties .......... SlO.OO

ELBERFELDS

Solid colors in oizes s. M, L, and XL Warm
fleece lining. Poly cotton blend by Wrangler
and Springfoot.
.

SPECIAL!$ 99
Packaged In 4
which include
fitted
sheet. 1 flat sheet. and 2
pillow caset.
All are no-iron percale in
colora and prints.
1
'F•····,-sSet ..... Only '16.99
ul · et ...... Only '19.99
Ouetn Set ... Only S28.99

A11alverm~

Stle

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

Walat tlzu 29 to 60. Plain and pleated
front ' ltyles in many excellent. Solid
colors. Our Hubbard slackt included.
'16.95 Slack&amp; ............. .'........ '12.77 '
'19.95 Slacks .............. .. ...... '15.87
'22. 5 Slacks ...................... '18.27
Slacks ..................... ·•23.87

'

fllmltldr
PDIUU, . OHIO
(5i .. )ttJ lUI

CHAIHlE CARD

POMEROY

---·- - -

--~~

---·-·

bonds may be sold annually, with· the proceeds
distributed to local governments. Priority of
projects wlll be determined by the local
governments, In eooperation with a special
state-operated commission.
Opponents complained that the Interest payments will soon .outstrip the annual outlay for
construction, and that future generations will be
saddled with debt payments totaling $600 million.
State Issue 3, the most hotly-contested of the
state Issues, was to change the way Ohio's
appellate court judges, Including the Ohio
Supreme Court, are selected.
1
Currently, the Supreme Court justices and the
judges In the 12 appeals court districts are elected
by popular vote, with candidates nominated In
political party primaries . ·
II Issue 3 passes, they would be chosen by·the
governor, .who would fill each vacancy (after

By NANCY YOACBAM

5°/o

SAVE -2

26 Cents

current terms expire) from a !lst of three
candidates recommended by a panel comprising
lawyers and non-lawyer citizens.
The nominee would serve lor approximately
two years, then face a retention election: There
would be n~ opponent, bu I a judge would have to
receive 55 percent of the vote to remain on the
bench.
Among the school levies, a 12-mlll emergency
levy lor Farmington Local School District In
Trumbull County appeared the most critical. That
district has applied for a state loan lfthe levy falls,
and It already receives 30 percent of Its operating
funds In loan money from the state.
Mogadore Local School ·District In Summit
County also had a 12-mll!'einergency levy on the
ballot, while South Amherst Local In Lorain
County had an 8.2·mlll emergency renewal and a
5. 79-mlll new emergency levy on the ballot.
The polls close at 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy council is pleased
with erosion effort thus far

Maternity jeans.
slacks, knit tops,
blouses and
corduroy jeans.
.-

SWEATS

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI StatehOUlMl Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Sprlngllke weather
greeted Ohioans voting today on three statewide
issues, 236 school tax levies and bond Issues, and
countless local government contests.
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown .forecast a
turnout of less than 50 percent of the 6 million
regislered voters.
In addition, the off-year election featured
mayoral contests In Akron, Canton and Toledo,
and uncontested mayoral races in Columbus and
Youngstown . .
State Issue 1 was an attempt to settle the'
question of whether the state lottery profits go for
·
schools.
If adopted, Issue 1 would change the Ohio
Constitution to require establishment of a
separate fund for lottery profits. The money
would go for primary and secondary education

MATERNITY
WEAR

Long gowns, long robes,
ihoot gowna and robes.
pejaiTIIIII, night shirts,
hotpltal gowns, bed
jackets, nuroing gowns
and dusters.
Nylon, poly/cotton blond,

1 Section, tO Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Springlike weather greets Buckeye voters

$11 59 TO $2559

SlEVAfiAR

DAN SKIN
LEOTARDS
Assorted style·•

PANTS SALE
Corduroy pants, poly-

OUTFITS

I

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, November 3, 1987

LADIES-

SALE

0239 Swivel Rocker ........ ..
'419 Wall away Recliner .. ..
'399 Rock· 0-Lounger .... ..

Excellent quality by Hanes. White
or grey with stripe color tops.
Boys 9 to 1 1; Men's 9 to 15.
Reg. 82.25 Socki ... Sale •1.79
Reg. 1 2.60 Socks ... Sale •1.99
Reg. •2.76 Socks ... Sale '2.19

$ 799 TO 4479

DEVON

QUALITY BERKLINE

Sale

MEN's and BOYS'

two piece dresses. Sim 6 ·
months to size 14. ·
Reg. s10.00 ta 156.00

lOLL-TOP DESIS, DOUIU PEDESTAL DESIS,
PIIIKESS lOLL-TOPS AND SECinAIIES

Vol.37, No. 124

~•nl~ertary

UnLE GIRLS'

at y . enttne

Copyrlvhled 1887

Cloudy tonight. Lows In mid
Increasing cloudlnet18
Wednesday. Jtighs In mid 70s. ·
Chance of rain near zero
through Wednesday.

50s.

· that campaigning today. H puaed, carry-out of
beer, wine and mixed beverages would be
permitted in Racine.

..

CBS News reported Carlucci in
turn Is likely to be replaced by hls
assistant, Lt. Gen. Colin Powell,
who would be the first black
nallonal security adviser.
Powell, Weinberger's military
a~slstant until he went to command Army troops In Europe
about two years ago, carried out
the orders to send missiles to
Iran In an effort to free U.S.
1 hostages held by pro-Iranian
terrorists In Lebanon.
The sources who spoke to UPI
on the ,condition of anonym!ty
refused to offer a reason lor
Weinberger's decision, but NBC
News pointed to the poor health
of hls wife, Jane. One source told
UP! Mrs. Weinberger underwent
a hysterectomy about a year ago,
but no reason was given for the
surgery. The Washington Post
reported today that she Is suffer·
lng from cancer and severe
arthritis.
Weinberger, 70, was meeting
with NATO defense ministers
Monday In Monterey, Calif., In

MHS seniors will
.tour SEO prison

Fifteen Meigs High School
stui:lents will be given a look at
lhe realities of life Inside the
Southeastern Correctional Institution during a visit there
Wednesday.
The young people will be
accompanied to Lancaster by
Fenton Taylor, high school prln·
clpal, Jay Evans and Carl Hysell,
Juvenile Court officers.
The program which has been
what one source described as hls
Instituted
by the Southeastern
"last hurrah.'' Pentagon spokesA
federal
mediator
wlll
be
In
Correctional
Instl tutlon and Is
. man Fred Hoffman said the
Middleport
at
6:30
p.m.
Thurs·
tagged
"Youth
Affairs" Is
defense secretary would not
day
lo
meet
with
the
negotiating
geared to help bring to the
answer quest)ons.
teams of' the Meigs Local youth's attention his or her
"My only statement Is we' re Teachers Association and the negallve behavior patterns, by
Meigs Local Board of Education, introducing a preventallve Internot commenting on the reports,"
Meigs Local Supt. DanE. Morris action between the juveniles,
Hoffman told journalists at an
said
this morning.
staff and Inmates , according to
evening reception. Mrs. Weln·
·
Teachers
of
the
district
have
Paula Duplessis, Administrative
berger attend~d the reception
Issued
an
Assistant at the Instltullon.
Intent
to
strike
at
12:01
leaning on a cane and limping
a.m.
on
Friday
morning.
She says that the program Is
slightly.
The district's board of educa·. designed to offer .youths an
tlon wlll meet in special sisslon oportunlty to see flrsl hand the
at
lhe Centrgl Office In Middle- end result of crlmlnallsllc behavAdministration officials told
Ior, and to Introduce appropriate
UPI there had been no formal . port at 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Meantime, Supt. Morris re- behavior so the youths will
paperwork In the matter, bul It
ported this morning that no bomb become aware of' their life
appeared Clear Weinberger al·
threat calls were received mak- choices and accept responslblllty
ready had spoken to Reagan Ing the seventh consecutive day for their actions.
and hls resignation was expected
It also offers something lor the
to be announced as early as the district has been free of such
calls. So far, this fall, lour youths Inmates, the admlstrallve assisttoday.
have been turned over to the ant says, In that It gives adult
White House spokesman Mar·
permanent custOdy of the Ohio Inmates an opportunity to justify
lln Fitzwater refused to comDepartment of Youth Services the!r own lives by making an
ment Monday night except to
and a fifth has been sentenced to Investment In the juveniles who
say, "We have not received any
a reformatory for making such will become tile adults of
letter of resignation."
calls to schools of the district.
tomorrow.

Carlucci likely Weinberger
successor for defense post
WASHINGTON (UPI) ..;,. Pres·
ldenl Reagan Is likely to name
national secur!ty adviser Frank
Carlucci to succeed Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger,
who plans to resign to care for hls
a !ling wife, administration sour·
ces say.
Officials told Un!ted Press
International Monday night that
Weinberger, a longtime Reagan
confidant who has overseen the
costliest peacetime military buildup In U.S. hlstory,ls expected to
';give up his Cabinet post In the
near future. They said he probably wlll be succeeded by Carlucci, who was deputy defense
secretary for the first two years
of the president's
administration.
White House officials were
continuing to say "no comment"
· today when asked about the
reports of Weinberger's pending
resignation, &lt;\pparently at Weln·
berger's request. They Indicated
the formal resignation may not
come
for several days.
' .

Sentinel News Stall
Although Mayor Richard
Seyler and members o! Pomeror
Vlllage Council are still concerned about the con tlnulng river
bank erosion along East Main
St., they are pleased with efforts
so far by vlllage workers to
alleviate at least some of the
problems.
For approximately four weeks,
vlllage workers under Jack
Krautter have been working on
the wall of the Pomeroy parking
,lot, puttlng";'"Ui ' dralllqe ami'
repairing th~ stone work. CounCilman John Anderson reported
at Monday's nlght''s regular
council meeting that Michael
Spoor, an engineer for the Army
Corps of Engineers, was in
Pomeroy recently to Inspect the
parking lot wall and commended
the village for the work. AccordIng to Anderson, Spoor said It was
some of the best repair work he
had seen. Anderson, the mayor
and the rest of council also
extended commendations to the
workers who are still not quite
'finished with the repairs on the
wall.
Anderson explained that It Is
always necessary to obtain a
p·e rmlt from the Corps before
commencing work over the river
bank. He reported · that the
vlllage now has a permit to put
rip-rap along the bank by
Kroger, but was not exactly sure
when It would be done.
All bank work Is being done
according to recommendations
from the Corps., based upon a
preliminary study by the Corps
of the East Main St. bank. Based
on the pre!lmlnary Clndlngs, the
Cqrps estimated overall costs to
combat the on-going erosion
problem at $1.8 mllllon.
Corps engineers divided the
river bank Into 16 sections, to be
repaired at different times over
the next few years, depending on
the extent of problems In each
section. Costs per section varied
from $500,000 lor section 15 and
$213,000 for secllon 16, both In the

Middleport Mayor Fred Hofvicinity of Kroger, to $30,000 for
fman reported , at their last
the lower parking lot.
council meeting that the MiddleAlthough the Corps conducted port Board of Public Affairs met
the river bank study at no cost to on Oct. 22 and discussed the lssuj!
the village, actual repair costs and agreed that sewage service
are the responslbllty of the . should not be provided to anyone
vlilage. Projected cosls to make outside the Middleport corporathe repairs were based on 1987 tion limit, based on past i)ollcles.
prices and are sure to Increase It was also pointed out by
wlth' time.
· Hoffman, after discussing the
Councllmembers also dis- proposal with a staff member of
cussed briefly the proposal from the Ohio Environmental ProtecMiddleport Village Council to tion Agency, that problems could
annex property in the lower end possibly develop If the system
of Pomeroy &gt;to be used for wer''I!I&gt;XIl!Pded lpto Pomeroy.
coml!lerdal -apment. MidNevertheless, Reed stated that
dleport feels the property should after consulting different authorgo to them because of the Ities on the matter, Including
apparent difficulty which Pome- EPA, he has still not found .any
roy would have In extending their legal reason why the Middleport
sewage system to the location.
line could not be extended .
However, Councilman Bruce
Middleport has anticipated
Reed reiterated comments by that about 40 jobs would be
Mayor Seyler that no 'regulatlon created If the property were
or law has been found which developed.
would legally prohibit the VIllage .
"Pomeroy Is for creating jobs
of Middleport from .permfttlng In Meigs County," Reed sal d.
Bill Haptonstall, owner of tl]e "We're willing to work with
property In ques tlon, from ex- Middleport on this project," he
tending his present Middleport said, "but we can find no reason
. sewage line onto his adjoining why they can't provide th~
Pomeroy property.
sewage line to our property."
Mayor Seyler recently sent a
In other business, It was
letter giving Middleport VIllage reported thai the village col·
and Haptonstall wrltlen permls· lected $5,090 In fines and fees
slon to extend the exls tlng during October.
sewage system of Mlddleport to
It was also reported that a
· the property In Pomeroy. How- "children playing'' sign has been
ever, the five members of Mid· requested for Wehe Terrace.
dieport Council voted unanim- Parents In that area have comously last week against plained or' speeding drivers. The
permitting Haptonstail and the mayor said he would locate a
developmer from extending the sign.
Middleport system.

will

Mediator
meet with teams

When the students arrive they
will be required to clear shake·
down procedures upon entering
the faclllty . The students and the
adults will then be escorted Into
the meeting area where several
Inmates will already be present.
Topics for the group discussions wlll include:
Cl..Sslflcation, dealing ' with
lockers, bed assignmenls, state
clothing, ID. Infirmary, assignments, and Institutional number.
Privacy , dorm co ndll ions, censorship of packages and· mail,
visits, strip searches, contraband, property searches, and
attitudes.
Homosexualit y, how II begins,
results~ of the act !on, rape and
different lifest yles.
Extortion and Assaull , extortion games. weapons, viet lm and
extorter.
Education, the importance of
education, results of lack of..
education. vocational training,
lmporlan.ce of adult counselor,
and peer pressure.
Students will be taken on a lour
of the institution going Into the
living ' quarters, showers and
restrooms, the food service area,
the Infirmary, the control center,
and the cell house.
Hysell rep'or ts that the Urst
visit of studenls wlll be eva luated
and lilt Is felt that seeing prison
life Is a del erent, then another ·
group wlll be taken to the prison.
v

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