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Parts of Ohio may get some snow today

Squads have 9 weekend calls

Weather
Soulh Central Ohio
Tonight: Cloudy, with a chance
of showers or snow flurries. Lows
will be In the upper 30s. Winds
west 15 to 25 mph. Chance of
precipitation 40 percent.
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 50.

Setting out to stump for the get the jobs . That's the substance
Massachusetts governor in of it."
Bentsen, the senior senator
nearby New York, the black
Chicago preacher and civil rights from Texas, spoke sternly on the
leader accused the Bush cam· Issue of racism In a . Sunday
palgn of trying to spread "horrl· morning television Interview,
ble" fears - and In a union rally suggesting a subtle fear tactic In
at Kll~Jllesha Lake, N.Y., he · Bush campaign advertisements
denounceed the vice president that focus on a black murderer's
for contriving star-spangled escape from the Massachusetts
themes In repeated attempts to prison system while on furlough
question Dukakis's patriotism.
under Dukakis's administration.
"We love the flag. We pledge
''When you add it up," Bentsen
allegiance. We love our country. said, "I think there Is (racist
That's not the Issue," Jackson .appeal) and that's unfortunate. I
said. "More and more American think that's one ofthereasons the
nags are made In Taiwan and American people will turn
South Korea. We get the joy; they against them, with that kind of
campaign."

By Unlled Press lnl.e rnatlonal
Eight people were killed In
seven traffic accidents across
the Buckeye State during the
weekend, Ohio Highway Patrol
officials said today.
·
The only multiple-fatality accident occurred Saturday on a
Columbiana County road. Killed
In the .one-car crash were Ed·
ward J . Delrio, 18, and Daniel S.
Connley, 15, both of Alliance.
Also killed this weekend were:
Frlda.v
Batavia: Jesse R. Combs, 14,
Milford, when his bicycle was
struck by a car on Ohio 131 In
Clermont County.
Saturday
Akron: Donald E. Miller, 22,

I

Thelma KellenbeJ'8'lr

"';

ThelmaM. Kellenberger, 63, of
Dublin, died Sullday at Riverside
Hospital In Columbus.
A daughter of the late Eber E.
and Ethel Gorell Ours, she was
born Sept. 13, 1925 In Portland.
She was a member ·of the
Worthington United Methodist
Church and a retired office
manager for Carter, Schwartz
and Schmidt Radiologists,
Columbus.
Survivors Include her husband,
Rollin V. Kellenberger; a son and
· daughter-In-law, Gregg and. Kat·
hleen Kellen berger, Worthing.
ton; two grandchildren; and a
sister, Garnet Johnson, Belpre.
. Besides her parents. she. was
preceded In death by a daughter,
Janet.
Services will be 10 a .m. Tuesday at Rutherford-Corbin Funeral Home, · 515 High St., Worthington. Burial will be In
Concord Cemetery, Grove City .
Friends may call at the funeral
home !rom 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 today
(Monday) . In lieu ot fiowers, the
famllly askS that .contributions
be made to Worthington United
Methodist Church, the American
Cancer Society, or another favor·
lte charity.
·

Gamet Williamson

243

Pick 4
. 6590

Page 3

•

..

NYQU/L

NIGHmME
COLDS MEDICINE
IIEG. OR CHERRY FLAI.tll!
6 OZ. 8/ZE

TRI·BUFFERED

BUFFERIN
.I'Ktl. OF IIIII

Dukakis ·acknowledges soine
points in campaign hindsight

I

Hemlock Grange 2049 has
scheduled a community potluck
dinner this Saturday, 6 p.m., for
all Meigs County grangers and
guests. The guest speaker will be
Diane E. McVey, audiologist,
Athens, speaking on the topic
"Why Can You Hear but Not
. Understand."

MENNEN

THERASRAN·M
MUU/VITAMINS
I PKS. OF 1IJO.f'I.US 311 FIIEE

SPEED STICK
A~TI-PERSPIIIAIITmEmiOIIANT

SPORT T.UC, IIIUSK, UIISCEIITEII.
FRESH 011 SI'ICE
Z.Z$ OZ. SIZE

!
.
1

WHITE RAIN

CDNAIR

•

Veterans Memorial

SHAMPOO OR
CONDITIONER
ABIJirlt

SHAMPDOOR
CONDITIONER

Hospital news
I HAIR

EXTRA BOIIY-15 OZ. SIZE OR
SPRAY-REG. UNSCENTED, lll1IIA

OZ. SIZE OR HAJR IIWAY-ll Dl.
tHf NDff-AEIIOIOL-1 Dl. lllf; IIOfllllUTIIA IOIW-1 OZ. lllf;

SCENTED OR ULTIIA UNSCENTED

1 OZ. IIZE

STYUNG SEL
4 OZ. SIZE 011
STYLIIIG
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B OZ. SIZE

REG. OR MINT
6.4 OZ. TUBE

'"''·'7'1•'"

By United Press International
With two weeks until Election
Day, Democrat Michael Dukakls
acknowledges "a certain amount
of frustration" In his presidential
campaign and thlnRs "maybe ....
1 should have tried to respond
earlier" to at tacks by rival
George Bush.
The Republican vice president,
meanwhile, leading the Massa·
chusetts governor In public opin·
ton polls, calls It a "ridiculous"
sign of desperation that the
·Dukakls camp Is alleglnk-· his
advertisements are filled with
lies and racism.
The two men stumped on
opposite sides of the country
Monday, with Dukak!s In Callfor·
nla and Bush In New England.
Dukakls arranged to move
through the San Francisco area
today befor~. going to Denver,

'

.

...

-~;,1~.'-t•

.,...

~I' ·

where he will appear tonight on governor acknowledged It took
ABC's "Nightllne" program,
his campaign a while to realize
while Bush planned events In that In a national conte~t "you're
Ohio all day.
suddenly In a very different
Dukakis, lighting perceptions world."
thhathehasfallenbehlndtostay,
"I think there's a certain
was asked In an interview amount of frustration," he said.
televised Monday night on CNN's "Who says what for 45 seconds on
"Larry King Live" program how · the 6 o'clock news makes :the'
he lost a 14-polnt lead over Bush difference In the particular day,
In polls following July's Demo- and It took us a while to
cratlc National Convention.
understand that."
"Well, I'm not sure these poll
However, he mainta ined, the
numbers are ever really real," Democratic effort Is coming on
he began, but went on to say, strong down the stretch toward
"You know, the Republicans Nov. 8 - and even though he is
made a deliberate decision to run dissatisfied With the campaign
a kind of negative attacking bitterness, he does not have
· campaign and maybe, with the lasting personal animosity tcr·
benefit of hindsight, I should ward Bush.
have tried to respond e&lt;~rller . "
"I get angry at some of the
Asked If he now has a feeling of things that I see," he explained.
"gee, we should have done It "(But) we've got a shot. We're
(dllferennvl." the three-term
Continued on page 10

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Members of Middleport VII·
!age Council will meet lnfor·
mally Thursday evening to dis·
cuss further possibilities of a vii·
!age-owned cable television ser·
vice for the town.
Meeting In regular session
Monday night, Mayor Fred Hoi·
!man reported that Cable Servi·
ces, Inc. , has completed Its study
on the construction ol a vlllage·owoed system. Cost would ·be
almost $300,000, based on 800
cable service customers In the
community. This would include a
system with at least 29 channels
plus other features and village
officials would select the chan·
nels to be supplied to the system.
Council members and Mayor
Holtman decided to meet Thurs·
day evening and discuss the plan
further and to discuss which
channels would be offered In a
village-owned system.
Meeting with cou neil Monday
night was John Koebel, local
area manager·tor Columbia Gas
of Ohlo, who explained that
according to present proposals
. Middleport VIllage will not be
permitted to negotiate as an
Individual community for gas
service contracts In the future. A
hearing
before the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio will
probably throw Middleport lntoa
regional group of communities
all of which' will have the sa me
rate for nat ural gas service.
Koebel was apologetic about
the development placing Middleport In the regional area plan
since the community bas always
negotiated Individually with the
company for gas rates In the
town and had Indicated that It
wish~ to continue that plan.
However, It was pointed out that
Consumers Counsel had for some
time been promoting the uniform
system and a hearing Is now

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will hold Its annual
Halloween party this Thursday
on the upper parking lot, starting
at 6: 30 p.m . with a performance
by the Meigs Ma rauders Band.
Costume judging, on the parkIng lot stage, will begin right
after the band's performance.
First, second and third place

'

of murder by Mason County jury
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStaiT

RITE ACCEPTS
ALL
MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

The \tinning numbers were
seven, 15, 22, 29, 35 and 38.
There were 231 tickets sold,
each worth $1,000, bearing five of
the numl5ers. There were 9,580
four-of-six tickets sold worth $69
apiece.
The top prize lor Wednesday's
drawing will be an estimated $3
million.

l4l•*

Files foreclosure suit

HERR'S

Farmers · Bank and Savings
Company has flied a foreclosure
action against Yvonne Scally,
Middleport, administratrix of
the estate of Thomas Christian
Scally II, deceased, et al ..
An action by Trlna T. Lee
against Lawrence R. Lee Jr. has
beer&lt;'lsmlssed.

No one hurt in accident

11Ja OZ.

1'11/CES EFFECTIYE OCT. 14 THRU OCT. JD. 1188 • WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUAMTITIES • MGT RESPOMSIBIE FOR TYPOBRAPHICAl ERRORS

RITE

Meeting Wednesday .

AID

A special meeting for Wild·
wood Garden Club's 50th ann!·
versary will be held Wednesday
!rom 1 to .3 p.m. at the home ot
Mrs. Michael Elberfeld.

nocent Monday of killing her
common-law
husband
Fred
Facemire last year.
Perry maintained throughout the
10-day trial that she and her
children were beaten and abused by
Facemire and that she reacted in·
stinctively in shooting Facemire after he threatened her life with a .38·
caliber Travis revolver in their

-LOcal news briefs___,

SMALL BAGS

A square dance will be held at
the old courthouse IQ Chester on
Friday from 8 to "11: 30 p.m.
Caller wfil be Jolin Coss. $2
donation at the door. $1 for
children under 12. Refreshments
will be sold. Everyone welcome.

POINT PLEASAN'r, W.Va. - Norma Jean Perry was found in-

living room at 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Point PleasanL
The 30-year-old Point Pleasant
woman . sat motionless apparentl y stunned - between her
defense
attorneys
Raymond
Musgrave and Stefben Littlepage,
when the verdict o the 10-woman,
two-man jury was announced in
Mason County Circuit Court Monday afternoon after one hour and 15
minutes of deliberation.
Afterwards she said, "I didn't
know what 1.o think. I didn't want
to move. It was like I froze."

•

No one was Injured In a car-tractor-trailer collision at 10 a .m.
Monday, In, Meigs County, on SR. 338, 0.2 miles east of mile post
2, according to the Meigs Gallla Post, State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Wilma L. Powell, 38, Racine , was attempting to
make a right turn when her car was hit by the tractor-trailer
operated by Arthur J . Parks, 27, Trimble, Ohio, as Parks
attempted to pass. Damage was moderate to the car and minor
to· the tractor· trailer. There was no citation.

Council to meet tonight

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY

Racine VIllage Council will meet In special session tonight
(Tuesday}, 6 o'clock, at the Shrine Park building'.

208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

Trick or treat set Thursday .
.

I,

Tuppens Plains Trick or 'fl:eat night wUI be Thursday from
6 to 7 p:th.
Continued on page 10

Perry, who was hugged by
several family members and friends
after the trial was concluded and
who cried a few tears in their arms,
said the toughest part about lhe 10·
day trial was what to say to her two
children, Brian, 10, and Hope, 8.
At one point during the trial, the
children were in the counroom, but
Perry said she asked that they
leave, noting she didn't want them
to see the proceedings.
Asked what She would do Mon·
day afternoon now that she was
free, Perry thou$ht a moment, and
said, "I'm gomg to Ordnance
School...no, my kids are at home.
I'm going home," she said, her race
breaking into a wide grin.
'
Perry said she wanted to thank
h!lf attorneys, and people who supported her through the long ordeal.
"People were praying 'for. me. I
never really knew thai there was
. that many people who cared.".
Perry; who took the stand m her
own defense for the better part or
three days. said she hadn' t piepared
herself menially to testify. "It (the
testifying) was a last-minute thing."
The strategy or the defense at· ·
tomeys was to employ psychiatrists , .
to explain to the Jur,&gt;' the "battered
woman syndrome,' and how a
woman would react under il
"Bat~ woman syndrome" is
when a woman is physically,
sexually, emotionally and mentally
abused by her boyfriend a husband
in between intermittent periods or
carirlg and compassion by the
boyfriend or husbarid.
Continued on page 10

\
_,

~- -~

""--'"""'---

_,__ t _....____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ ..._ ___ ' - - - - · - - - - - - - " " " · - · - " - - · _ _ ; . - - - " --- - · - - · · - - " - ·

j ___ -·

I"'

sc heduled for the regional proposa l In November.
Mayor Hoffman and council
members expressed objections
to the new plan, but Koebel
commented that It was beyond
his doing anything about it.
Will Cost VIllage $17,000
Mayor Hoffman said that as a
result Middleport will probably
be paying a higher rate for gas
services and in addition, the town
will lose about $17,000 in free gas
each year used to heat the town
bulldhlgs. As a result of that loss,
the town will now have to pay out
· that $17,000 which will take
money from other services of the
town.

slon in Columbus.
A communication from the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources was read Indicating
that there has been no decision
reached by the department an
the town's appllcat)on for rtver
improvement funds . Mayor Hof·
!man also reported that the
charge for liability ins urance for
·town olflclals which comes due In
November Is up abeut $500 over
last year's charge.
Mayor Holtman was authorized to proceed with an appllca·
tton for Issue II funds amounting
to about $95,000. The funds would
be used for street and drainage
improvements on Pearl Street
between Hartinger Parkway and
Laurel St. An estimate prepared
by Floyd G. Browne and Associates Indicates that the Improve·
ments would cast $67,850 plus 15
percent lor engineering and
other services Involved in the
project.

Mayor Hoffman also said that
according to a notice on the
proposal regional plan, some
eight communities whose con·
tracts with the gas company will
not be expiring In time to fall
under the regional plan will he
permitted to negotiate IndividuIssues Reminder
ally for their future rates. How·
A reminder was Issued by
ever, Koebel commented that he Mayor Hoffman on .a one mill
does not believe this will happen. renewal levy to be voted upon In
He said that h~ expects those the town at the November
communities also to be placed In election. This levy will provide
a regional plan when their money needed to pay on the new
contracts explre.
fire truck, the mayor reported.
Going a bit further, Koebel also Mayor Hoffman also pointed out
commented that he could foresee that Middleport residents will
the possibility of one gas rate for vote on a one mill levy being
every community and city
placed before voters of Salisbury
served by Columbia Gas In the
Township In the November elecentire state. Pomeroy and Galli·
tion for cemetery malntainence.
polls are among the eight com- Middleport will vote on that
munities whose contracts do not measure since It Is .located In
explre at this time and hence,
Salisbury Township. However,
they do not !all into the regional
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that
plan. The entire matter Is In the
no cemetery within the village
hands of the Ohio Public Utilities will receive any benefits if the
Commission, Koebel stated.
levy Is passed. Passage of the
Mayor Hoffman expressed dis·
levy would mean that Middleport
satlfaction with the plan remark· · residents would pay out some
lng that the regional system $12,000 without receiving any
gives Middleport no say In the
benefits to cemeteries within the
future unless officials wish to go
Continued on page 10
to the Public Utilities Commls·

Pomeroy Chamber Halloween party
to be held on par!cing lo~ Thur~day

Nonna Jean Perry found innocent·

One person has winning lotto ticket

Square danoo Friday

........

~

Hynm sing scheduled

freak fruit and will light It with two candles. Her
JP'Bndson, Luke Ferguson, son of Amy and Glenn
Ferguson, New Haven, 'Is fascinated with the
pumpkin and all other Halloween things.

SIAM&amp;&lt;IE PUMPKIN - When Carol Sisson
selected her pumpkin for a j ack-o-lantern, ·s he
went for this Siamese one. While It Is attached at
the center and hal only one lop the Interiors are
completely separate. She carved two faces In the

;:::::::::::::::::: TABLETS OR
CAPLETS

Plan pot lu~k

Garnet' L. Williamson, 97,
Salem St., Rutland, a Rutland
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
businesswoman for a number of
ticket was sold bearing all six
years, died Saturday. Her birth·
numbers In this weekend's Super
day anniversary , at the Amerl·
care Nursing Center near Pome- . Lotto drawing lor a $9 million
jackpot, Ohio Lottery officials
roy following an extended Illness.
said Sunday.
Mrs. Williamson was born In
·Meigs County on Oct. 22, 1891, a
daughter of the late John William
and Retta Lyle Lutz. She oper·
ated the Williams Farm Supply
Gloria Sue Musser, Pomeroy,
IIi Rutland for,a number of years.
has
filed In Meigs County Com·
She Is survived by two nieces,
mon
Pleas Court lor a divorce
Helen Saxton, Logan, and Ka·
from
Michael Todd Musser,
thryn Sheets, Gaqtpolis; two
Racine.
nephews, Dr. John Lutz, Charles·
Connie Chevall!er, Racine, has
ton. W. Va. , and Hetzel Folden,
flied
for a divorce from Allen K.
· My.rtte' Beach, S. C, and several
grand nieces, nephews,and cou- Chevalier, Reedsville.
Restraining orders were
sins .
issued
against the defendants In
Besides her parents, she was
both
the
Musser and Chevalier
preceded In death by her bus·
acllons.
.band, Loren Williamson In 1953;
Dissolutions of marriage have
three brothers, Ray , Howard and
been
filed by Kimberly Ann
· Wayne Lutz, and a sister, Flor·
Hudson,
Pomeroy, and Kevin
ence Folden. ·
Hugh
Hudson,
Rutland; Charles
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
R.
Simms,
Langsville,
and Em·
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
mogene
J.
Simms,
Albany.
Home with tile Rev . Lloyd
blssolu ttons have been
Grimm officiating. Burial wUI be
granted
to Orva Jean Holter and
In the Danville Cemetery .
Harold
H.
Holter; Gary L. Griggs
F r iends may call at the funeral
and
Connie
L. Griggs.
)lome !rom 4 to 8 p.m . Tu esday.
A divorce was granted Edwina
Scott from Charles F. Scott, and
. . Qufzt •• 7 I
Edwlae Scott was restored to her
lormfr name, Bell.
Erla" (!Ietty) Christopherson,
A divorce was granted both
78, 1100 Powell St., Middleport,
parties in the case of Ronald Lee
died Sunday at Riverside Hospl·
Wag11er against Betty Louise
tal In Columbus following an
Wagner.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newap~~per

Middleport to discuss
own TV cable senrice

There will be a missionary
service at the Harrisonville Holl·
ness Chu reb on Wednesday, Nov.
2, at 7:30p.m. Sand artist, Rev.
Bob Everly, will be the guest.
Rev. Everly will be at the
Coolville A. W. M. Church on
State Roule 7, north of Tuppers
Plains, on Saturday, Nov. 5.

Saturday Admissions - Cecil
Karmen, 'Pomeroy; Dayton
McElroy, Racine.
Saturday Discharges- Bryan
Hoffman, Edna Leach, Lovercia
Evans, Cecil Smith.
Sunday Admissions -Charles
Bissell, Long Bottom; Wilda
Brinker, New Haven; Darlene
Johnson, Mason; Thelma Col·
llns, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges - Hazel
Oliver.

-.

1 Section. 10 Pageo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, October 25, 1988 •

Vol.39, No.1 19
Ccipyrlghtod 1988

·.

.

.

.

Am Electrlc 'Power ...... .. ... .. 27*
AT&amp;T ........ .. .......... ...... .... ...27~
Ashland 011 .. ... ... ... ... ........... 35
Bob Evans .......... ....... ..... .... 16*
Charming Shoppes ... .. ......... 15~
City Holding Co .. ......... ........ 34
Federal Mogul. ..... ..... .........49~
Goodyear T&amp;R ..... .. ...... ,..... 50%
Heck's ..... .. ..... .............. ....... ~
Key .Centurion ............ ........16%
Lands' End ........... ...... .... .... 26%
Limited Inc .. ..... ................ .25*
Multlmedla Inc ................ .... 71
Rax Restaurants ............. ,. ... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ........ ...... ... 13
Shoney's Inc .. .... ..... .......... .. .. .8
Wendy's Inti ...... ........... ... ... . 6%
Worthington Ind ........... ~ ..... 21~

A hymn sing will be held at
Morse Chapel Church, County
Road 35,
Racine-Portland
Road, on Saturday at 7 p.m. The
Gabriel Quartet wfil sing. Everyone welcome. A revival wUI be
held at Morse Chapel Church
Oct. 31 through Nov. 5 with Rev.
Ralph Workman of Gallipolis.
Revival services will be at 7 p.m.
nightly.

Mos tly clear lonlght. Low lo
mid· 30s. Wednesday, mostly
sunny, highs near 50.

'

Missionary servioo

extended Illness.
Mrs. Christopherson was born
Nov. 5, 1909, at Harrisville, Pa., a
daughter of the late DeLoren and
Lulu Clair McCue Martin. She
was employed as an office
worker at Midwest Steel and at
OhiO University In Athens before
her retirement.
Mrs. Christopherson was a
member of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, the Women's
AuxUiary at Veterans Memorial
Hospital and the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Organization.
Surviving are five grandchildren
Harry Pickens, Jr. , Janet Peav·
ley, both of Pomeroy, and Nels
Pickens, Marte Phillips and Luke
Pickens, all of Racine. Two
nephews and three great·
grandchildren also survive.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband Nils Christopheson In 1969;
a daughter, Chris Pickens In
1971, and a brother, Bob.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
•Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. James
Seddon officiating. Bur tal will be
In Greenwood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 9 a.m. until the time
of services on Wednesday.
Friends may make contributions
In her memory to the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center.

Divorces sought

Daily Number

Dally stock prices
(AI of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt. Ellis .. Loewl

Akron, In .a one-car accident on
an Akron city street.
Ravenna: Steven M. Francis,
20, Rootstown, In a two-vehicle
accident on Ohio 14 In Portage
County.
Hamilton: Kevin Scenters, 20,
Hamilton, In ·a two-vehicle accl·
dent on U.S. 127 In Butler
County .Sunday
Upper Sandusky: Wlllls J .
Henline, 50, Gibsonburg, when
the car In which he was riding
striiCk a tree along U.S, 23 In
Wyandot County.
Bellefontaine: Mildred B.
Orss, 76, West Liberty, In a
two-vehicle accident on U.S. 681n
Logan County.

•

Ohio Lottery

Stocks

deaths

Area deaths

and Berryville, in northeast
Arka nsas, registered 1.341nches.
Lesser amounts fell In much of
the res t of Arkansas, Tennessee
and Texas.
High pressure over the Pacific
Nor thwest and the cent ral Rock·
les created a balmy autumn day
fr om the Wes t Coas t eas t to the
Pl ains states.

' Forecast
· Extended
Wednesday thrOIJih Friday
A chance of showers In the
northeast Wednesday, otherwise
mostly cloudy. Fair Thursday,
with a chance of rain Friday.

1

8 weekend

first snowfall of the season
Rain was also forecas t over
moved south and east ear ly today
Pennsylvania, New York state,
and wa s expected to spr in kle
New Jersey and New E ngla nd,
more snow over par ts of Michl· . but sunny skies were expected
gan, lll lno ls, Indiana, Mi nnesota,
today for most of the rest of the
Wisconsin and Oh io.
nation, the National Weather
The weather system also Service said.
spread as far south as Texas a nd
Live Oak, Texas, a suburb
Mississippi, bringing showers
nor theas t of San Antonio, r e·
and thunder storms with lt.
cetved 1. 7 Inches of rain Sunday,

By 1Jalled Press International
A cold front that·dumped snow
over the upper Great Lakes
states and brought Chicago Its

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend; three calls Saturday and six calls Sunday.
saturday a t $: 25 a . m., Racine to Eagle Ridge Road for Dora
Hysell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:09a.m.
to Bailey Run Road for Cecil Karmen to Veterans Memorial
_Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9: 23a .m. to Bigley Ridge Road fo r
Edna Tanner to St. Joseph's Hospital.
Sunday at 12:23 a.m., Middleport to Diamond St. for Terry
Harper who was treated but not transported; Pomeroy at 12: 24
a.m . to an auto accident on Bear Wallow Ridge; no Injuries were
reported; Tuppers Plains at 6: 41 a.m . .trinsported William·
Grueser to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 11:16 a.m. to · •
Stlversvllle Road for VIolet Brewer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 6:56 p.m. to Hartinger Parkway and
Pearl St. for Charles Searles to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 8:44 p.m. to Scout Camp Road for Nellie Perry to
Holzer Medical Center.

·Ohio records

Bears edge
San Francisco
49ers, 10-9

•

-Local news briefs·-

Bush. .. Continued from page

Monday, October 24, 1988 •

Pomaroy_;.Middlaport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

prizes will be awarded to child·
ren In four dllferent age groups.
including, preschool through kin·
dergarten; grades one ·through
three; grades four through six;
and grades 7 and 8.
Candy will also be given out to
the children and eacl. bag will
contain a gift certificate from
Pleaser's Restaurant.

TOYS COUECI'ED FOB CHILDREN- Area
motorcycll&amp;lll collected eDOUJh toys to require six
vehicles 1o transport t}lem Monday to the
Salva&amp;loa Anny Headquarters In Pomeroy. The
collecttoa was the re~ult of the annual toys for loll
ride beld Sa&amp;urdiQ' from the Boad81de Park on
Boote S3 to the River boa&amp; Inn where a party was
held. OJect of the ride was to collect toys lor

'

Local merchants and restau·
rants have all joined to make the
party a success by donating
candy, p r izes and gift
certificates.
.
WMPO Radio will also do a live
remote broadcast during the
party.
The party Is being held In
conjunction with the merchants'
Moonlight Madness Sale.

underprtvUeaed children of Melp Couoty·fot the
upcoming holldiQ' season. Pictured are Erica
Meadows and Mrl. Dora Wining, of the Salvation
Army, seued oa couch, an4l standing al back,
lrorn left, Pete WIIUa11111, Dudley Meadows,
Nancy Woolard, Sherry Swisher, Jo Frye, Jenny
Thabet and Kallay Meadows and son, Matlhew.

.

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.. -·
•

•

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Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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

S&amp;Ls

mov~g· closer· to

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
1'1~

.

~m ~ r"T"1-1~
- , - , f"'1'""EE!d•t==t
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A.ulstant Publlaber/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Pres s lnt~rnatlonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and th~ AmeriCan Newspaper Publishers Association.

,,

'

LETTERS OF OPINION are wei rome . Th ey should be less than 300 words
long. Allletters aresubject toeditlng and mu st be signed with na me, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wU l be published. Let ters ~h ou ld be In

aood taste, addresstne tssues, not

pers&lt;~~alltles . .

The Answer .
Man remembers
ByAKNOLDSA~SLAK

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON -The Campaign Answer Man, who has been lylngdoggo this fall to protest the low level of the presidential contest, has
consented to a brief Interview to glvt' us his oplnlonsabouttbe stateof
the campaign.
Question: Welcome back, sir. How·do you view the 1988 campaign.
Answer Man: Dimly, sonny. dimly. But first, let me say something
-this Is the last Interview I'm giving on this subject. Tbepeopte have
had It up to here with interviews about the campaign. J:l_ead my lips:
No more Interviews!
Question: Well, In that case, perhaps we should get right to the nub
of the matter. Who Is going to win Nov. 8?
Answer Man: Let me tell you a story, sonny, There was' this election
some years back that was supposed to be won by the Republican
candidate. The pollsters said he had It In the bag. The politicians said
he had It In the bag. The newspapers, well, one of them wrote, "The
election must be held If for no other reason tha n to .flnd out which
national pollster conies the closest."
Well, after the election, which was won by the Democrat, another
paper ran a cartoon showing the fat rear end of a guy labeled "All us
political experts," with the title, "Kick me. "
. So I tell you what. I think I know who Is going to win come
November, but I'm sure as heck not going to go running around
making predictions In October.
·
Question: As you wish, sir, but the experts and the polls do seem to
agree that Mr. Bush Is leading. Do you doubt that?
Answer Man: Of course not. Those pollsters say he's ahead, and he.
sure Is , .. In their polls. And I'm certainly not going to knock experts;
where would I be If you folks dldn'l come around asking us what Is
going to happen.
But let me tell you how this business of experting Is done. Somebody
asks me who Is going to win this game or that election. Usually I have
bunch, but sometimes I call uponeofmY buddyexpertsandcheckout
his hunch. Sometimes I even go to watch the team play a game or
watch the candidate campaign. But you know, after all that my hunch
usually turns out to be my expert opinion.
Now, I'm wrong sometimes. So are m()st of us experts. But if just
one other expert Is right , ·he gets a lot of praise and attention and
usually nobody asks me how I could have been so dumb. The only time
that happens is when all of us experts are wrQng. And when we're all ·
rlght.-nobody seems to think It was a big deal.
Question: So what does all that mean this year?
Answer Man: It means, sonny, that all those pollsters and all us
exper.ts may be right and we may be wrong. But nobody Is going to
find out until after the votes are counted and then It makes no
.dl!ference what we said. .
Question: But what Is your advice to us common folk who want to
know what Is going to happen ?
Answer Man; Go vote and make what you want happen. Obyes, and
remember 1948.

WASHINGTON - What was
once a dirty little secret Is now
·headline news: The American
taxpayer will have to toot a bill,
estimated at between $50 billion
and $100 billion, to pay for the
pro!llgate pursuits of savings
and loan operators.
Deregulation, once hailed as a
panacea, turned out to be little
more than a license to turn S&amp;Ls
Into federally Insured casinos.
S&amp;Ls historiCally had the job of
loaning mortgage money. Under
deregulation, the " honest" oper·
ators went broke pursuing daredevil Investment and lending
schemes. "The more dishonest of
the breed turned the thrifts. Into
their personal piggy banks.
Our associate Michael Bins teln
Interviewed Edwin Gray, who
was the chief regulator of the ·
Industry totally out of control,
and of Washington politicians
either too arrogant or too ldeolog·
leal to head off what has become
a national emergency,
Excerpts of the Interview with
Gray appear In the October Issue
of "Regardles ," a Washington
·
·
business magazine.
Gray recounted one tale from
late summer 1984. The Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance
Corp. , which Insures nearly $1
trillion In deposits, was almost
wiped out when the nation's
largest savings and loan almost
collapsed. The California-based
Financial Corporation of AmerIca was reeling from reckless
Investment and lending decisions. Officials at the Federal
Home Loan Bank Board, the
agency that regulates S&amp;Ls,
worked feverishly to prop It up.
Gray called his bank board
predecessor, Richard Pratt, who
occupies a senior position at
Merrill Lynch. Pratt llstene.l
sympathetically to Gray's plea
and assured him that $1 billion
would be forthcoming within
days. The funds would give
regulators and FCA breathing
room to quell the panic.

But then Pratt called Gray
back and said the deal was off.
Pratt would only say that he had
been overruled by his superiors
at Merrill Lynch, according to
Gray's account.
Gray scrambled and raised the
mo':leY from other brokerage
houses.
More than a year later, the two
men ran Into each other at an
economic conference In San
Francisco's Fairmont Hotel.
Pratt pulled Gray aside Into an
lee cream parlor where they
could talk privately.
Gray recalls that Pratt
dropped a bombshell. He said
that · Donald Regan, who was
Treasury secretary during the
FCA crisis, bad Intervened with
Merrill Lynch top brass to kill the
deal. Regan bad run Merrill
Lynch before joining the Reagan
administration and had prom·
!sed he would not touch any
Issues that Involved the company
By United Press lnlernatlonal
after
he joined the cabinet.
Today Is Tuesday, Oct . 25, the 299th day of 1988 with 67 to follow .
If
Regan
meddled In the FCA
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
deal,
as
Pratt
alledges, It raises
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
serious questions about that
The evening stars are Mars and Satur n.
promise. Gray belleves Regan's
actions put the whole financial
system at risk and that Regan
allegedly did It our of revenge In
· a petty bureaucratic feud be·
f : t}l'een himself arid Gray.
In response to a question about
Dear Editor:
Regan's
motives, Gray told "Re·
I recently read a letler about '
trapping In this column.
I have caught dogs and cats in
my traps and have let them go.
The dogs wag their tails when I
come up to the trap and when I let
their paw out they just walkaway
(not limp) . My father's beagle
got caught In a trap, and was
hunting again just seconds after
he was let out.
If there wasn't any trapping or
hunting, there would be diseases
like rabies that would kill off
these wild animals, plus our own
pets.
Deer would overrun themselveS by over-grazing the woods
and pastures, that our own
domestic animals need. Then
they would die off because of lack
of food.
· The Bible In Genesis 1: 26 says:
"Then God said "Let us make
man In our Image, In · our
likeness, and let them rule over
the fish of the sea and the birds of
the air, over tbe livestock, over
all the earth, and over all the
creatures that move along the
ground.''
Of course, as In all thlnp, there
are some (so-called) trappers
who don't trap properly. But that
doesn't mean that all trappers
shOuld be given a bad reputation.
That Is why the trapper educa·
tlon course Is so vital. The course
will teach our young boys and
girls or anyone, how to respect
. trapping. It will also teach them
the proper ethics In trapping.
Greg Stewart
Rutland
742-2969

.

:Today in history
Letters to the editor

Responds to trapping letter :

-

gardles" magazine that Regan
was angry' at blm a few weeks
before the the Merrll! Lynch deal
fell through. "Regan 'was obviously very angry I'd made a
suggestion that he check with me
before. he commented publicly
about our very ticklish situation
with FCA,'' Gray said. '
In the middle of the FCA crisis,
Regan had been quoted In a story
In the "American Banker" mag·
azlne saying that the government
would not stand behind the
uninsured deposits at FCA, and
Gray wanted him to be more
careful about what he said.
" Given tbe extremely sensitive
liquidity situation at the lnstltu·
tlon, all we needed was something like that In the financial
press. In fact, that very day
(when Regan's remarks appeared In- 'American Banker' )
the institution suffered a $400
million out!low of deposits,"
Gray said.

Chicago defense .shines· in 10-9 triumph::

Tuesday, October 25, 1988

•

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei - Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

CH ICAGO (UPII - The Chicago Bears av~nged an embarrassing loss to an offensive
power house with an Impressive
defensive dis play, even by their
own sta ndards.
The NFL's No. 1 defense
slopped Roger Craig, the NFL's
leading rusher, a nd sac ked quarterback Joe Montana fo ur \lines
en route to a 10-9 vic tory Monday
night over ihe San Francisco
49ers, who e n ter~d the game with
the league's top-ra ted offense.
The last time the two NFC
rivals met was on a Monday night
In 1987 when the49ers humil iated
the Bears 41·0 at Candlestick
Par k.
" It was a trem endous game
and we give a tremendous
a.mount of credit to the Chicago
~efe n se," 49ers Coach Bill Walsh
sal d. " We have for many seasons
been a ble to r un a nd th row the

taxpayer bailout:

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

YOU'LL FIND SAYINGS ON DEVON,
LADY DEVON, POITE CONCEPT •••
IF WE DON'T HAVE THE SIZE YOU NEED WE WILL
ORDER IT FOR YOU.
OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE

31D mnT

RACINE, OHIO

949·2100

MASTERCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE

~----------------------~~ •;
DR. JAMES P. CONDE, D.O.,·
announ"s that his medical practice
at 155 N. 2nd St. in Middleport,
Ohio will' be continued by
DR. EDWARD P. ISAACS, D.O.

ANDERSON BROUGHT DOWN- Chicago Bears running back
Neal Anderson, with ' ball, Is brought down by San Francisco
defenders Michael Waller (99) and Michael Carter during the first
quarter of Monday night's game In Chicago. The Bears edged the
49ers 11-9. (UPI)
.

Dr.lsaacs plans to begin In December, 1988, and a
definite opening date will be announced later. Dr.
Isaacs wHI accept all of Dr. Conde's patients in·
eluding Workman'i Compensation patients. Dr.
,.Conde urges his patients to continue to receive
their care under the direction of Dr. Edward P.
Isaacs.

Woodrow Wllooa
Woodrow Wilson was tbe first U.S.
president wbo was the president of a
major university (Princeton), nates
the "World Almanac of Presidential
Facts.• While president there, he expelled would-be playwrlte Eugene
O'Neill. for lhrowinl a beer bottle
through his office window.

NF1.. results
Bullalo
Nl' Jetl
Indianapolis
New En «&lt;and

992_:~~69

NEW LISTING - Eastern
District - Spacious living
wHh privacy on a deadend
road. Large home wilh 4
bedrooms, family room, din·
ing room , living room with fi.
replace. nice kHchen cabi·
nets. Many other nice features.
NEW LISTING - Pearl
Street - Middleport- A
nice 14K65 mobile home in
beautiful condition. New
front deck and screened
rear porch. New carpet,
vinyl, paneling and ceiling
fans. Storage building and
chain link fenced yard.
Nothing to do but move in.
$27,000.00.
RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION - Really nice home!
4·5 bedrooms in excellent
condilion. Garage, nice lot,
W.B. hookup. Many extras!A
mu st to see. REDUCED TO
$47,000.00.
CARPENTER - Nice doublewide silting on 1.86 acres
in a country settin~ Hi car
garage, dec~ equipped
kllcnen, renceo yaro. UNLY
$32,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Re~ty nice
older home in town. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basemen~
I ca- garage and a nice Jig lot.
OWNER WANTS AN OFfER!
$45,000.00.
MIDDLEPORJ' - 2 unit
birch apartment building in
town. Garag~ ale units,
good rental income. Close to
shopping. $28,900.00.
POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED - Beaullful view of
the Ohio Rive~ 2 st~JY home
features 3 beltms, full basement, Ill baths, attic area,
garage. Only $17,900.00.
. NEW LISTINGS NEEDED We h1111 buyers for Meip
County Property. list with
us for bill mutts.
Henry E. Clellnd... 992-6191
JtM Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dattie Turner ..... 992·5692
Trecy Rilfte ....... 949-28D7
Jo Hill .............. 985-4466
Office................ 991-2259 ;

AHANDFUL
OFCASH •
IS BETTER
THANA
OF STUFF .

aflfVice u ? t l rate schedule i1 dl•co·n tlnued at tha request of any customer,
Columbia shall not be under obligation to re~umeaervlce to that cu 1tomer on the 1ama
prerniMI until that cuttomer h81 made payment of an amount equal to the ' 'Cuatomer
Ch•ge" for aech month of the Intervening period but not to exceed seven (7) months.
ANY PERSON, FIRM, CORPORATION, OR ASSOCIATION MAY FILE PUR ·
SUANT TO SECTION 4909.19 OF THE REVISED CODE. AN OBJECTION TO SUCH
PROPOSED INCREASED RATES BY ALLEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSALS ARE
UNJUST AND DISCRIMINATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
Rooommtndotlono which differ from the Application may be mode by tho Staff of ,
tha Comml11lon. by Columbia. or by Intervening pertlea and may be adopted bv the . .
Commission .
.
Further information regarding the Application may be obtained from Columbia
Goo of Ohio, Inc .. 200 Civic Canter Drive, P.O . Box 117, Columbus, Ohio 432160117, (114) 480-4803, or from the Public Utilities Commiuion of Ohio, 180 Ea1t ·
Broad Bt-t, Cofumbuo. Ohio 4321 6.
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM PRESENT RATE
Becau• tJd• AppUcatlon propoHJ to attabllah a uniform rate for gas service
which is currently provided under 47 different rateachedulea. the ch~~nges1rom preINI1t rat.. will vary depltl"'ding on theretescheduleunCiarwhich a customer is currently
receiving gu oorvlce. The rate chongaa propooed by this filing rengo from (0.81% to
7.8% for coMumptloh of 17 Met per month during the winter month1and 10.5% to
20.4% for con•umption 'D f6 Mcf per month during the summer months. Thue percentego chargn oro detailed below.
- WINTER INOVEMBER ·MARCH)- - SUMMER IAPRIL·OCTOBER) BILL
BILL
AMT
%
BILL
BILL AMT
%
AT OLD AT NEW INC INC . AT OLD AT NEW INC INC .
,_ _.lAif!RiEEAA_ _ _
RATE BATE (DEC .I (DEC .I BATE RATE IDEC .IIOEC .I

I.

•

31.54
33.03

, ,

36.50
36.50

3 '
3 •
6 •

NEW YORK (UP I)- Th e Un lie d Pre~~!!

lnlerrMUO...,I Board of Coach e&gt;~ T op 'lO
t-ollele loolball ral\np, with rt!t~ rd ~Ut d
flrHI·place ' 'OW. In par e nth ~es , t ntul
point s i ha!ll•d on 15 p oint s for ftr st place,

4 0
4 I)

lA Halden

s

s o .:m 114 2811

San Dl~tJ(l
Kan!IU C ity

'l
I

f 0
C I

•

%

4.96
3.47

15.7
10 .&amp;

L T
5

s

Philadelphi a
Dollu

4
..
'l

.500 141 110
.5110 1&amp;'7 140
.230 lOt liS
. IM IOZ 1~ 2:

Pel. rF

PA

3 0 .825 171 Ill'&gt;
3 o .m '" Ii i
4 0 .100 ItA IA6
4 0 .500 1'2t lfO

8 0

.2511 138 1641

Central
1 I 0 .87:1 15"l

Chlea1u
Mlne1oU

..

.,....

' '
'

Green Bar

....,

3 '

% ••

T llm.. 8a)'

New Orleans
LA. Rams
San Fran .

83
1114 138
160 J:lt
.UO U l U 6
. 6~&amp;
. m~

.2Sil 182 IU

2

• '

7
8

I 0 .875 1 ~0 131
'l II .710 %80 UO
3 o .lt:i m n1
7 e .1~5 m 2210

s

UPI ratings

.12S 130 11 £1
.2ilfl 119 ti S

w...

KaniiBS City al L A Raldt!r &amp;, 4. p.m.
Mlnnes ola at San t' ranell!co, 4 p.m.
San Dl e 1o a t ·Se allle, 4 p.m .
Wadtnpon at Hou!llo•, 8 p.m.
Mond a)' , 0 ~1 . 31
Denve r at lndlanapollts. 9 p.m.

.ftS 1'74 Hi ll

4

Plloenbl

RE~NNECTlO!;f,RGE

%

.m ue m

Den\1!f

N" Glanta

he propoMd r1t11 are also subject to an "Ohio EKcisa Tax" clause. purauant to
which all billa rendered shall be adjusted to Include the etfecU of Ohio Excise Tax on
groSI r~ceipta Imposed by Ohio Rev. Coda Section 67.27 .38, &amp;Kcepting those ac·
counts exempted for such tax .
BIL~~~~DJUSTMENTS
'
i: l'lndered &amp;hall be adjusted to include the Interim. Emergency and Temporary PIP Plan Tariff Schedule Rider ut forth in the Columbia' a Rules end Rt:tgulationa
on flit wMh tht Commlulon.

•

s o .ns 12s 1tt

..

W M IIIn~t o n

PHI~ EXCISE TAX

•

•~s t &amp;K
IMl n G

SeiiiUI!

W

e

•

111 139

.5U Ult l&amp;ol

~

Eaol

tor DriVe, P.O. Box 117, Columbus, Ohio 43216, haa filed an Application wMh tho
Public UtHitiu Commialion of Ohio (Commission of PUCO) In which it requestl that
the Commis1lon e1t11bll1h a uniform rate to be charged and collected for all gas urvlce
within the Southee.tern Region, eaCilpt for service where the aalatlng rates have bean
•tllbllahed by certain municipal ordinance contracts or by special r~e contracts. !he
South111tarn Region will ba compoted of the countlo of Athena, Gall_ie, Hock1ng,
Jackson, Lawrence. Meig1, Morgan, Perry, Ron. Scioto, Vinton and Washington.
Ohio.
The exiatlng rates In these areas are unjust, unfair end areln1ufficient to yield raeaonabla compenution for Nrvice rendered by COlumbia. The rates pr81~ntly baing
collected from approximately 82,000 cuttomar1 that will be ~lffected by th11 App!lca·
tlon era those pra~cribed In 47 different PUCO Rate Schedulet. pur1uant to vanout
orderalnued by the Commiuk&gt;n, various muNclpal ordinance contracts that have expired or will expire by September 30, 1988, and exi1ting municipal ordinance con·
tracts will 018' expire by September 30, 1988, but thot are currently being billed tho
Southelltern Region rata pursuant to the Joint Stipulation and Recommendation
filed In Caoe No. 87-881-GA·CSS.
·
Columbia further requ•ta that tha CommiJ&amp;ion fix and determine uniform. jult
end reuonable rates to ba charged and collected by Columbia fortheservicerenderad
to the ganarelaarvlca cust:omaraln the Southeastern Region and substitute such ratn
for tho11 rat• currently being charged.
The munitipaUtiBI affected by thi1 Application are:
· Rio Granda
Adelphi
Chillicothe
Ironton
Middleport
ROMVilla
Albany
Coal Grove
Jacksonville
Murray City
Shawnee
Am•vllle
Coalton
Junction City
Nel1onville
Somerset
Athens
Coolville
Kingaton
New Boston
Beverly
Corning
Laurelville
New Straitsville South Point
South Wobltor
Buchtel
Gfouator
Lowell
O~k Hill
Stockport
Chauncey
Hamden
Lower Salem
Portamouth
Trimble
Che~~peake
Hanging Rock McArthur
Proctorville
Wellston
Ch81hire
Hemlock
McConnelsville Rendville
ChMtarhill
The Application will also affect the rites of Columbia's cu1tomera in the unincorporated area of the counttn of Athena, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence. Meigs,
Morgan, Perry. Rou. Scioto, Vinton and Washington, Ohio. Btcauae the proposed
SouthMitern Region rate will be uniform. It IIHntlally represent• an "average" rate
for the region . Thu1. 1ome of the exl1tlng rate~ within the naw region may be in·
creased. while other &amp;Kilting rates within the region may be dacreuad .
Columbia pr ...ntly hu 8 existing municipal ordinance contracts within the pro·
poled Southeutern Region that are eKcluded from thi1 filing. These contracts are
with the municipaUttll of:
Croobville
Jackson
Malte
Pomeroy
Gallipolis
Logan
New Ledngton
Thornville
BecauM the Comml11ion do" not exercise juriadiction over 1uch rates, the costs of
providing aervice to these municipalities will not be included in the Application to II•
tllbliah the uniform rate~ 1or the Southeastern Region. However. et the expiration of
any euch ordinance. If the municipality prefer~ to be 1ubaequentty incl~de~ in the
Southeastern Region for ratamaking purpoae1, It may do so by not renew1ng ita ordl·
nance contract with Columbia. If a new contract ia not established. the municipality
will thereafter be included in the Southeastern Region for ratamaking purpol8a.
PREff.NT RATE
pr&amp;~ent rates vary by rate schedule, depending on location within t.he·araa affected by the Application.
PR~POSEQ BATES
n thill case Columbia i1 propo1ing a rate"design under which Columbia will bill ita
cuttomersa ''Cultomer Charge" o1 $8.03 per meter per month duririg the month• of
November through March. and $9.19 per meter per month during the months of April
through October, ragardl811 of gas consumed . The rata for all gu consumed In each
billing month are 64 .81 1 C par 100 cut.lc1eet for the first600,000 cubic feet delivered
ond 62.3&amp;3C par 100 cubic loot for all dell•eriM oxcoedlng600,000 cubic foot. Thooo
rat• wlll generate an incr. . e of e1,756,9441n operating revenue• . However, to the
extent thlt operating concltlona or axpenaes change during the pending of the ca1e,
Columbia may revi11it1 proposed rat.. accordingly .
COlll, OF la'BCHASEp GAS ESCAWION
.
Oth-t present end the propoled rates are subject to decrease or increase in ac·
Cordance with the "Gas Coat Recovery'' provialona of Columbia's Ruin and Regula·
tiona on file with the Commission u required by Commisalon Order~ dated October
11, 1978 ond October 18, 1979, in Caoo No. 78-166-GA -ORD .

MIDDLEPORT CORP 99.28 · 98.88
0.82
0.6
MEIGS COUNTY·
99. 70 98.88 - 0.82 - 0.8
UNICORP
110111, 18, 26. 3tc

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·s o .:ns

3 I

PA.

NaUonal Conferen ce

Notice is hereby given that Columbia G• ofOhio, lnc. (Columbia), 200 Civic Cen·

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· PlttJI;Iurs h

POMEROY, DH.

.sn

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Ct'ntrul
1 I 0

Houallon

101
E. Mllin

PL't . PF

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&lt;: tevebnd

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO , INC .
APPLICATION TO ESTABLISH A UNIFORM RATE
FOR NATURAL GAS SEVICE WITHIN THE
SOUTHEASTERN REGION OF ITS SERVICE AREA
ENCOMPASSING THE COUNTIES OF
ATHENS, GALLIA, HOCKING, JACKSON,
LAWRENCE, MEIGS, MORGAN, PERRY, ROSS,
SCIOTO, VINTON ANO WASHINGTON
PUCO Cue NO. 88·720-GA· AlR
NOTICE

L T

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at Detroit I p.m.

rhlirix at Dall al, I p.m .
rttllbu flh al NY ld f?, 1 p.m.

Ea• l
W

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NY Gl•ls

NATIONAL FOOTB..U.L LEAGUE
Amer k•IUI Conf ere n ~

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Real Elllate General

Miami at

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NY Gl_._. 23, Adanbl II
PltUad~lptia24. o.Jiu!3
Ptlhbu l'lh 8, Denwr 'U
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10. Wr omln~; ( 8·0)
II . Arkar1M8 (1- 0)

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13. Syntt'\l se (6- 1)
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18. ClemMn (,U)
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Clnd•aalt &amp;4, Houlton 21

New Orle11111 • • LA Rahll~l'll 6
Ml•nuota tl, Tam-r- k)o !I)
S.lf.Jo a. New Ell pod 1:0
NY kt11 +1, M1111111 JO
Inti~Mpollli II, Sap Dle p 0

Calend-ar

W•Wn..ont:l. Gree11 Bay 11

Cle¥el•d %11, Phoettk ! I
, l.A Kam1 SI, Me Illite 10
Menday'11

Re8ult

Ollcap It, San FranciKU !
Stnld~, Ucl. 3D
Atlanta .t rhlladeiJ*a, I p. m.
Chl ~ap

at New E•llaad. I p.m.

Clndn..al at Clftelllld,l p.m .
Gre~n lla)'

at Bulf.ao, 1 p.m .

LA Rams at New Orl r ans. I p.m .

llowllnK

Hou:&lt;fon -

$40,1100 1.1"81' La fb· Fair

l.arif'fiOptm

Football

San Jo'r iUldsro at Chh•al(o. 9 p,ITI .
Ho('k~· ,
!ll:ln:dull'd
Tenli!i
a.dlan• pull-" - Sillii,OOO VIr gi nia Sll rn~

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Eighth graders top VC, 28-22
McARTHUR - The Meigs Viking back for a 1 yard loss on
eighth grade team defeated the their next play . Then Mike Still
Vinton County Vikings 28-22, In a with a savage hit knocks the ball
game that was dominated by the · loose and Vince Reiber recovers
at the Viking 35.
Marauders despite the score .
The Maraud ers move to the
VInton County starting the
game from their own 35, looked to VIking 7 on a John Bentley to
be tough after · 2 consecutive Cremeans pass, but a fumbl e on
losses bit a 68 yard pass for the the next play gives the Vikings
TO at the 6: 35 mark of the first the ball at their own 8 yard line.
Stewart aga in penetrates the
quaf(er. The exira point was
unsuccessful and the VIkings backfield to sack the QB for a 6
yard loss at the 2. Again Stewart
held an early lead 6-0.
: Meigs from their , own 35 reaches th e QB to knock the ball
advanced down filed with a free In tbe~end zone, wher e its
strong ground attack and on the recovered oy a VIking back,
excellent blocking of the offense who' &amp;promptly dropped for the.
line. From the 41 of the Vikings, safety by VInce Reiber . Meigs
Mike Cremeans scamped-In for leads 10-6.
On the fr ee kick following the
the TD with 4: 21 showing In the
1trst quarter and Shawn Hamon safety, Hamon returns the ball to
added the two-pointer to give . the VIking 37. A penalty moves I(
to the 47, where Bentle y hits
Meigs an 8-6 lead.
: Richard Stewar t drops the Cremeans for 7 and Jam es
Pullins fo r 7, to set up a 4th and 7
situation from the VIking 33. A bit
of razzle-dazzle found Bentley
pitch to Hamon, who lofted a 33
The Daily Sentinel
yard pass to Creameans for the
TD . The extra point try came up
1USPS 145-MO)
A Division"of Mulllmedla, Inc.
short and Meigs lead 16-6 with
7:15 left in the second qua rter.
1
Published every aft ernoon , Monday
On Vinton County's next series,
tbrrugh F rida y, 111 Cout l St. , Po·
, mer oy, Ohio. by the Ohio Vall ey P ub·
Hamon Intercepts a Viking aerial
Ushlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
returning It to the Viking 20. A
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, Ph. 99 2·2156. Se1 cond cl ass postage paid at Pomeroy,
penalty forced a Marauder punt,
' Ohio.
the VIkings take over at their own
9 followin g a penalty on the
Memb er : United Press Inter national,
Inland Dally P res s Association and t h e
return. Another penalty moves
. Ohio Ne wspaper Association. Nat iona l
the
VIkings to the 4 and on 1st and
Advertising Re presentative, Branha m
15, Cremeans Intercepts at th e 10,
Newspaper Sal es, 733 Thi rd Aven ue,
New Yo r k, New York 10017.
returning It for the score with
3:27
remaining In the half to give
' POS1MASTER: Send address changes
' to The Dolly Sentinel, ll1 .Coul1 St.,
Meigs a 22·6 lead.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!S'Tfll,
VInton County marches to the
Marauder
29 wher e Mike Welsh
SUJISCRIPTION RATm!
By Carrier or Motor Route
recovers a Viking fumble to stop
One Week ...................... .. ...........$1.40
the &lt;jrtve as time expires in the
: On e Month ......... .. .... ,.................$6.10
first half.
One Year ... ............ .. ................ $72.80
Meigs starts the second half
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
,
with their powerful ground at·
Dally .. .. .. .......... ................... 25 Ce nl s
tack moving to the Viking 7, Two
· Subscribers not destrlngtopay the earplays
later Bentley scores on a 1
ner may remit In advance direct 10
yard
plunge
to give Meigs a 28·6
The Dally Sentinel on a J, 6or 12 month
. basil. Credit wUI be given carrier .e ach
lead with ~ : 32 showing In the 3rd
week.
quarter.
No s ubscriptions by mall permi tted In
Coach Ashley, giving his star·
area s wbere home carrier service Is
ters
a rest, saw the VIkings score
a'Jallable.
·
twice In the final period, but
Mall llubecrWUoiUI
opted to give his less exper lenced
Jlllllde Melp 'touaty
players some valuable playing
. 13 Weeks .................................. $19.24
26 Weef&lt;s ........... .. .............. .. .. ... $37.96
time.
· 52 Weef&lt;s ........................ .......... $74.36
The Meigs learn, now 3·2 on the
O..tllde Melp Coun&amp;y
year. face a .very tough opponent
13 Weeks ....................... ..... ..... . $20.80
26 Weeks .................................. $40.00
when they travel to Wa rren next
52 Week• .......... , ....................-.. $75.40
week.

ball, and we couldn't do it
!onight.
"We played as bard as we
could and they played just as
hard and we just couldn't get it
done. But · we do n't have any
excuses. Chicago has a great
football team. 'J'hey have a great

anything bad on defense."
Duerson's lnlercept!on of a Mon·
Montana. who gave San Fran- tana pass .
cisco a 7-0lead in the flrs t quarter
San Franci sco drew within 10-9
when he hit Jerry Rice on a
In the third quarter when Larry
23-yard TD pass, was taken out of
Roberts and Charles Haley
the game late in the fourth
sacked McMa hon In the end zone
quarter wit h 1~ o! 29 pass lor a safety.
completions fo r 168 yards, but
The 49ers had a chance to go
only 44 In the second ha lf.
ahead midway through the
"Their defensive line played
fo urth quar ter when John Taylor
great a nd their pressure took us
returnee a punt 30 yards to the
out of the game," Montana said. Chicago 35, but Mike Cofer
McMahon, who was 10 of 22 for missed a 51-yard field goal
132 yards, helped Chicago tie t he attemp t.
score 7· 7 in the second quar ter
when he dove Into the end zone
Craig, the NFL 's leadi ng
from the 1-yard line afte r bitting rusher entering the contest, was
running back Neal Anderson on a · held to ]\1St 31 yar ds on 10 carries.
32-yard pass. The Bears started
the fo ur-play dr ive at the 37 after
"You have to give t hem cre dit.
San Frimc!sco was forced to punt They did a good job of shu tting us
fo llowin g two Montana sacks.
down," Craig said. " The defense
Chicago took a 10-7 lead before was prepared for us. They di dn' t
halftime on an 18-yard field goal do any th ing fancy, bu t they were
by Butler that followed Dave effective." ·

defense. ''

Chicago quarierbac k Jim
McMaho n r ushed for a touchdown and Kevin Butler booted a
field goal to hel p Bears, 7·1, deny
the 49ers, 5-3, an NFL-record 12th
straight victory on the road.
Bears Coach Mike Dlt ka said
he would like to have seen
Chicago put more points on the
board, bu t the defense made sure
10 points was enough to wi n.
"We were really fo rtunate to
win th is football .game ," said
Ditka. "The way we played
offensively, we made too many
m istakes. But we didn't do

Southern volleyball team advances to district
ATHENS- The Southern High
School Tornadoettes of Coach
Suzanne Wolfe captured the
Clas s " A " lowe r bracket c ha mpionship Saturd ay evening at
Athens Hi gh School with 15-12,159, match win over the Eas te rn
Eaglettes.
So uthe rn advances to the Class
A Dis tri ct tournam e nt at the Oh io
Universit y-Chillico th e bran ch
Shoemaker Center on Wednesday, Oct. 26, at 6 p.m. aga inst
Lucas ville Valley . This will be
Southern's lhlr d . trip to the
district to urnam e nt, the las t one
being In 1983 when lhey were ·
di str ict runner-up.
Southern Coach Suzanne Wolfe
was ver y pleased with the overa ll

team play and the positive
atti tude shown· by all the players.
"All nine players co ntribu ted to
our sectional championship win
and this Is the most Importa nt
part of teamwor k...everyone
must do their part ,wbether it's as
a starter or as a s ubstitute. "
So uthern was led In scoring by·
Becky E va ns and . Jane Ann
WUllams with 7 points each, with
Williams' points being the last
seven served to claim game
number 2. Becky Winebrenner
added 5,Trlcla Wolfe 4,Aimee
Hill 3,a nd Junle Beegle ~ nd
Tracy Bee gle each with 2 apiece.
Dawn Johnson and Tracy No rris also played and had grea t
floor games , but did not score.

Eas ter n was led by Amy Hager
with 6, Lee Gillilan and Trlsha
Spencer with 4 each, Mandie
Ha rris 3, Toby Hll1 2, and Lorrie
Baker and Lisa Driggs 1 each.
Edna Dr iggs and Heather
Flnla w had good floor a nd

.· STOP
the
PAIN

Marauder reserves
top North Gallia, 14-0
The Marauder reserve de fensive unit limited Nor th Ga llia to
just 56 ya rds, all on the ground,
and accounted for one touc hdown
as they closed out thei r home
season with a 14·0 win over lhe
Pirates.
Nor th Gal!ia 's deepes t pen etration of the evening cam e late
in the second quarter as the
result of a qua rter back sack and
fumbl e. Taking possession at the
Marauder nine. the Pi.rates were
denied a score by a s tron g
defensive s ta nd led by Burt
Kenneddy, Scott Whobrey, Mal t.
Ha ynes and Geoff Cogar. The
first ball ended in a sco reless lie.
Meigs first tou c hdow ~ came on
'ihelr seco nd possessio n In quar·
ter three. Starting at their 18, the
young Mara uders put together a
14 play drive t hat took up sL'
minutes. J eremy Rupe a nd Who. brey combined to handle the
running ga me and J ere my
Ph al!n co mpleted two aerials,
one to Shawn Lam ber t for 30
yards and the . ot her to Kevin
Musser for 25 yards a nd the
score, Musser made a great
ca tc h of the ba il as he tipped it
into th e air and caught lt on the
second try. Whobrey drove In for
the two point convers ion and an
8-0 lead.
Tra din g possess ion thr oug hout
quarter fo ur , North Ga llia had
one more sho t at a tie as they
recoverd a Ma r a uder fumble at
the Me igs 30 with 1: 40 showing on
the cl ock. Fol!owlng a net loss of
nine In three p lays, Clay Smith
a !tempted a n option pass. J ames
Howerton, on a fine defen sive
effor t, stepped in lo Intercept and
raced 61 yards for the fin al six to
lee the game. .
J eremy Ru pe led Ihe Marau·ders on th e gr ound with 77 yards In
22 car r ies and Whobrey add ed 22
in 6 tries. Micah Bunch and
Howe rton eac h had an Interception and E r ic Heck had one
reception for 34 yards, Musser 2
for 51 yar ds a nd Lambert had 2
for 46.
Leading the defense In solos
and assists were Kennedy, Rupe,
Cogar, Robby Wyatt, Whobrey
and Hay nes. Tt was a n overall
defensive effort for the entire
squad , however , that prevented
the Pirates fr om getting a first
down In the second balf'of play.

Si at lstlffl

De partment
F!rst downs ..

l\1
.. ... ........... ... · ... .R

NG
· ti

Yds rushing .. ....... .. .. ........ .. .. ... 88
Yds pass lng ......... .. .. .............. 131
To tal yards ...... .... .... ...... 219
Co mp-alt ..... ... .. .. ... .. .. ...... .... .. 5·13
1ntercep tl ons .. ... ...... .. ... ............ O
Fumbles- lost .. ... .... ,......... .. .. .. 4·4

56
0
56
0-8

PhOne 446 ·4!24

with Pain Management, now available at

Westmoreland Family Care Center

2

in c~operation with

2-2
Penal! IL&gt;s . ... ........ ..... ,... .... .... ..4·_
35
4-35
P unls-avg ... .... ........ . ........ ...... n-0 3-:J9 .2
Score by quarterK
Meigs............. ................... o 0 8 6-14
No rth Ga l lla .......
.. ..0 0 0 0- 0

m

Meigs cross country team
finished seco nd in TVC competl·
tion held at Alexander on Tues·
day, October 18th . Chris Stewart
came In fifth earning ail league
honors . Cary Bet zing finished
tenth a nd was awarded second
team all league recognition.
Other Mara ud ers finishing were
Sco!t Edmonds In 11th, John
Haggy 17th , Keith Mat tox 19th
and J er emy Heck 20th.
In the girl's race, Meigs also
fi nished second and Missy Ne lson cam e in fifth each be ing
selected for ail league honors.
Second team recognition went to
Amy Rouse with a tenth place
fi nish. Apr il Hudson finished
12th, Tar a Gerlach 14th and Resa
Har ris 18th In the girl's division.
In the boy 's J .V. ra ce, Ryan
Lemley of Meigs took first place
and Chr is Sloan came in second.
IN the district meet held on
October 22nd at Athens high, the
Meigs boys finished In eighth
pla ce In a fi eld of 21 schools.
Onlythe top seven teams qualifi ed fo r regional competit ion.
. Chr is Stewar t finished 14th out
of 134 runners to qualify , as an
individu al runner at the regional
meet in La ncaster on Saturday,
October 29th. Also scor!ilg for
Meigs were Scott Edmonds , Joe
McE lroy, John Haggy a nd Ryan
Lemley.
In a field of 66 runners in the
girl's division, Missy Nelson
fi nished 34th and Amy Rouse
41s t.

Pleasant Valley

lQi] Home Medical Equipment

Meigs cross
country results

If you suffer frC&gt;m low back pain, migraine and
tension headaches,post surgical pain, carpal tunnel
syndrome, acute muscle spasms and other forms of
pain, you may find relief in this new program
through electrical nerve stimulus and back braces.
This form of treatment has been proven successful!
For additional information on Pain Management
and how it may help you call (304) 675-6100.

Westmoreland
Family Care Center
Westmoreland Family Care Center it'! locat.cdon Rt. 1, Mason, WV.

r.-uNDER THE

CA.-I

ble anglers to manufactur·
er's original specifications .
Most domestic and import

~$14so

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Parts extra, if nHdecl

See Us For Dependable Quality and
Courteous Services for All Your Under
Car Services.

I
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.I CJ !~?:!~.~!r~k~~~dl. '$29' . 5. 1·
lncludet. ln1t8llatton.
(Additionll brtke hardware
andllml-metalllc padsaxtra.

Rear Brakes

.
I

It you are and have a safe
dnving record , we probably
53 1 JACKSON PIKE .· RT. 35 WEST

defensive games for Eas tern ,bu t
did not score.
All district tickets will be sold
at the door, $2 for adult&amp;and $1
for students. South er n Is now 14-7
overall E;as ter n ends their season a t 6-15.

a'

can save you money on your
car insurance. with tl1e
Medalist Auto Policy. call us
today.

We'll in1t1ll rear brake shoea,
tnd rebu
. Ad whelit"cy~n~r•.
Price indudea cups e"f
in1t.llation.

..

Rotate

Balance 4 Tires

Roteta your&amp;vehicle' a tir81.
check theif air pretaure and
bring them ell up to recom mended prauure. (Lock-on
Hub Cap10dd U .OO)

51 2ool.

New nres

On •II your new tire purchaa ...
we wuh tha aldewallt, mount
and belance.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

1

600 EAST MAIN

992-6687
llofo Auto
ln•uronoo

POMEROY
992-2094

L-----

c.,.. ....

Serving The Area For 22 Years
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Pomeroy .Home &amp; Auto

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Tuesday. Oi:tober 25. 1988

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

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Funding meeting slated in area

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Oliver Jones of the Ohio
Humanities Council and Patricia
Moots of the Joint Program in the
Arts and Humanities will be In
Pomeroy on Nov. 4 at 12:30 p.m.
.for an Informational meeting at
the Meigs Museum, 'Butternut
Ave.
.
At the meeting proposal Ideas
and application guidelines lor
those Interested In obtaining
partial funding for a special

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program will be outlined and
discussed.
Attendance·Is limited to25. The
meeting Is free and open to the
· public.
Those unable to attend but
Interested in learning more
about funding possibilities may
call 231-6879 lor the Ohio Hu·
manttles Councll, or 461-1132 for
the Joint Program In tlleArtsand
Humanities.

992-3671

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1930 CLASS - Pictured are members of the 1930 gradualing
class of Racine JHgh School. The group}nciudes: back, I to r,
Esther L. Herron, teacher; ,WilHam Stewart, Richard Hayman,
Charles Capehart, Lewis Stobart, ~rtram McDougal, Coach

____..,._co_m_m_u_n--=ity_c,_al_enda_r_
. __ ·Continue
WEDNESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Rev'tval
services are being held each
evening 7:30 p.m. at the Harri·
sonvUie Holiness Chapel, 38428
State Route 684. There wUl be
special singing each evening.
Evangelist . will be the Rev.
Steven Manley, general superln·
tendent of the Holiness Associa·
tlon of Churches. The Rev. David
·Ferrell, ·pastor, invites the
public.

Craft show
JACKSON - The Jackson
Craft Guild will hold their 12th
annual Winter Craft Show and
Sale at Lick School, located on
Route 35 West in Jackson.
Hours will be from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. each day, Nov. 5and Nov. 6.
Admission and parking are free.
The craft show wlll feature many
original hand crafter items, gifts
and seasonal decorations.

Group 2 holds meeting
Plans for the annual Thanks· opened with devotions by Mrs.
giving dinner were made when · Dwight Wallace. She read an
Group 2 of the Middleport Presb· article entitled 'Does God Know·
yterian Church met at the home Us Personally' by EugeniePrice.
of Mrs. Carl Horky.
Mrs , Myron Miller conducted the
The dinner will be held on Nov. Least Coin and· read aq article
15 at the American Legion hall.
from Ideals magazine.
Announced at the meeting was
Mrs. Horky had the Bible study
the harvest dinner sponsored by from Concern magazine, Chapthe deacons of the church for ter8. Refreshments of ice cream,
Nov. 20 wtth all three Presbyter· cake, nuts, candy, and coffee
·4' tan churches attending the morn· were served around the dining
tng worship at the Middleport room table by the hostess. Sheila
church with tHe dinner to follow . Horky joined the group for the
Mrs . . Paul Haptonstall pre· social hour.
sided at the meeting which

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Jenkins celebrate first birthday
Sarah Dawn Jenkins cele·
brated her first birthday recently
at the Rutland home of her
parents, Steve and Donna
Jenkins.
Atendtng a weiner roast and
party were her brother, Gabriel,
maternal grandmother. Mar·
garet Weber, Rutland; paternal
grandparents, David Jay and
Ruth Jenkins, Portsmouth, and
paternal grandfather, Ear l Ro·
blnson, Gallipolis.
·Also attending were Duane
Weber. Rutland; Robyn Pitzer,
Pomeroy, Dallas, Tammy and
Zachary Weber, Langsville;
Jean Somerville, Point Plea·
sant; Gerald and Dorothy An·
thony, Nick Robinson and Nancy
Kime, and So nny Zuniga,
Ml dd leport.
Sending a gift but unable to
attend were her p;tternal grea1·
-grandparents, Harold and
Oeida Chade, Middleport .

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Snyder; middle row, I to r, Elsie Spencer, Wilma Lee, Mattie
McKenzie, Wilma Sayre, Emma Easterday, Helen Roush,
Harriett McClintock; front, Ito r, Lewis Miller, Franklin Norris,
Principal D. B. WIIUams, Oren Nease and Donald Bradford.

Cochran birth
announced
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Cochran,
Route 3, Gallipolis, announce the
birth o! their daughter, Sarah
Nichole, on Oct. 5.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Max DavIs, Middl !!port. Paternal grandparents are
Mrs. Charleen Cochran, Galltpolis, and the late James Robert.
Cochran ; Paternal great ·
grandparents are Mrs. Mary
Kathleen W!IJiams, Middleport,
and the late C.P. Williams.
II'

SARAH D. JENKINS

Angie Morris, Tom, Frances and
Joy Anderson, Bill, Becky, Ryan
and Bethany Amberger.

Jl m and Carol Anderson of Ray
recently hosted a birthday party
honoring thler son, Jimmy Tyler
on his fifth birthday.

.

C.o ngratulations
JOHN IS THIS WEEK'S
WINNER .•N THE DAILY
SENTINEL CO~SPONSORED
FOOTBALL GAME.

Good Laek To All This Weeki
"'

\

Second SIIWI
1t11on, W. Va.

Jadson Avtnue
Point Plouont W. VI.
&amp;75-1121

m.ss!4

5111A-

JilW "-'· w. h.
112-2136

"· N•"" Gllll•
AVENUE.

MIDDLEPORT I OH.

PAT HILL FORD
461 S. 3rd

992-3322

Mlddle,Oi't, Ohio
992-2196

be drawn from all correct entries.

614-992-5141
Middleport, Ohio
Ulllo Unlre,tlty u. fttfetlf Mll.lfll

FOOD
AND
CAR WASH

...................,..lliliil..~l--·--·--

I

Pomeroy, Ohio

GROCERIES - GAS • SNACKS·
BEER AND WINE CARRYDUT
G,.n S.g u. 8uffllo

ADVERTISER

..................
WINNER

'

-

r.:1Farmers

MEIGS AUTO SALES

992-2136 - -

.... .

•

~/JJJA

113 Court St.
Pomeroy, ' Ohio
992-2054

Ashland,.

342 S.cond An. ·
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2691

•

••

•

•

.

•

POMEROY, OHIO

~

LlnLE DAN'S
--EXXON
AND FOOD STORE
East Main St.

OWNER: DAN SIDWELL
flt"d" U. WIIIOIIII

Serving The Entire Area

Pomeroy

Self Serve Gas • Ohio Lootary Tickets
VCR Rentals · Milk • Breed
Hunting Licenses

992·9907

Also Available ·
•

COMPARE OUR
PRICES

•'

,.

•

'

Football '88
Catch All The
Excltementlll

PLAINS

985-3315
667-3161

-

Member FDIC

Member Federal Reserve

Clnelnlflfl u. Clsteltnd

..
MEIGS
AUTO SALES, INC.

RAWLINGS-COATS~BLOWER

"F~NE LINE OF LATE MODEL

PEOPLES BANK

USED CARS AND TRUCKS"

992-3011

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
K&amp;C JEWELERS

605 G1n. Hartinger Parkway
· Middleport, Ohio

r1. Nsw

ELBERFELDS

~--~------------~----~----------DAIRY QUEEN
VALLEY LUMBER
JOHNSON'S VARIETY STORE
COOPER CHRY .-PLY .·DODGE

Syracuse. Ohio 46779
Phone 6t4-992·6333

LITTLE DAN'S EXXON

Colottdo v1. /Otlt St.

Prepare .For The Winter Season ••••

..

EMPIRE FURN!TURE

I

TUPPERS

We'vf' Gro'W'n Becautlt' We Hav e Ht&gt;lpt'd 01her• To (;row

JIM COBB

...

Bank

992-2137

FOOD SHOP

SH Us For Thot New or Used Vehicle Todoyl

L:.:J

PoMERoY

EWING .FUNERAL HOME

CRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
DODGE

JIMMY T. ANDERSON

308 East Main, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6614

VAUGHAN'S

Stlf IJiego VI. Sllffll

Wlllllngtolf u. Houtton

CHEVROLET-OLDS-CADILLAC

The Community OwnPd Bank

FARMERS BANK

446-3995
State Rt. 7
Gallipolis, Ohio

Jim Cabb,

BAUM LUMBER

PH. 992-S432
Pomeroy, Ohio
228 W. Main St.

s.

low• rt. lndlllfl

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

··

CROW'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT

992-6421
399
Third
Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

•

992-5552
820 East Main

108 W. M,ain St•. ·

All entrants must uae the entry blank below.
Games for this week will be found in tho odvartilomanta on thlt page. Lilt the name of the team you
think will win opposite the name of the adv.-tiler.
Deciaion of tho judgas will be final and entrioo become tho property of The Daily Sentinel.
This contest will continue for l.lln weeko from the date of first insertion.
If mailed. blanks must be postmarked not later than Friday.
Clip the coupon below .... ... fllllt out end send to ....
THE DAILY SENTINEL
1 1 1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 46789

Home

MARATHON

992-3307

The contest is open to anyone except employe• of The Daily Sentinel and their immedilta famlll•.
An award of '20. 00 will be given to the peraon picking the moat wl[lnera. t n cooe of a tie one winner will

Blowef
Funef•l

'

"COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS"

NOTHING TO BUY - ANYONE MAY .ENTER!
$20.00 EVElY WEEK TO THE WINNER

Co•t1

NIASE """&lt;&gt;TIIcicr•l

H. 8. McCLURE
DISTRIBUTOR

JIMMY DEEM

NORTH SECOND

POMEROY, OHIO

f/1111011 rt. Mlll,lltl

I--~;;;:;,;.~-----

GASOLINE
ANn-FREEZE
COMPLETE LINE Of
VAL VOUNE OILS
&amp; GREASES

" - 949-2710

.._ 949-2318

FOOTBALL CONTEST
$200 IN CASH PRIZES

MEMBER FDIC

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

STATE ROUTE 124

992-6160
Pomeroy, Ohio

fetf,r rt. Sollf/N,,

"The Better Bank" ·

$3895 6 CY. $3495 4 CYL. S279

ASHLAND
OIL
992-5111

949-2551
Racine, Ohio
CHERYL CARPENTER

985-3308

PE0~--~--~-----1-9~8~~~--------~-EM-P-IR-E-FU-R-NI-TU_R_E~
BANK . ~
Of POMEROY

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
$1500
TUNE-UPS

JOHN EVANS

LOCATION 2

AT THE END OF THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

COOPER

AVAILABLE AT

CHESTER, OHIO

LOCAnON

l&lt;gf" c"'*

"Wedig s,ul•l•"

Uhlo St. rt. Mlehlgtlf St.

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

HEAliNG OIL, KEROSENE and #2 FUEL OIL

"'

99'2-2556

Middleport, Ohio

J

RIDENOUR SOPPY

RACINE
MOTORS

992-6611 _ Middleport

SOFT DRINKS - FRIES - SANDWICHES

~WI IBIIIor11

992-3481

Mlt11111;,1 rt. L.S.U.

ADOLPH'S
, DAIRY VALLEY .

.CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301

lck, Fred and Frances Goegleln,
and from Janet Price, deaf
activities chairman of the Ohio
state Grange, for a contribution
wlllch the local grange sent.
Barbara Fry reported on com·
munlty awareness project. Opal
Grueser, legislative chairman,
talked on the exemption on
drivers of farm trucks jind
distributed pamphets for the
members to read.
It was noted that three new
tables have been bought for the
hall.
, ·
Mr. and Mrs. William Grueser
were honored on their 67th
wedding anniversary with cake
and Ice cream being served by
Bill and Louise Radford. Pat
Holter had the program. Bunny
Kuhl gave another lesson In sign
language. Fred Goegletn was
reported 111.

LICENSED SHOP

··

~. . .-·IJ:ttUiE1/

BAUM LUMBER

BRAKES
AS LOW AS $3995 FRONT $377.5

8 CYL.

5$5 Park St.

1&lt;utg111 ~•.

· OTHERS .SLIGHTY HIGHER

Theme for the party was Duck
Tales. Mrs. Anderson baked and
decorated a theme cake. The
party was video taped by the
youngster's father.
Refreshments of cake, Ice
cream, pop and favors were
served. Games were played with
prizes going to Clayton Ray,
Brandon Ray, and Ryan Souders.
Those attending were Lrot,·
Chrts, Alex, and Andrew Waugh,
Brandon Brend·a and Clayton
Ray, Maureen, Ryan and Adam
Souders, Roger and Josh Ste·
phenson, Lora, Tisha and Seth
Jenkins, Kathy, Koree, and
Bradley Aberts, Robin, Shaw.n
and Erin Glland, Jim's grand·
parents. Walter and Nancy Mar·
rts, and his brother, Ross Ml·
chael Anderson.
Sending gifts but unable to
attend were Helene and Avery
Goegleln, Jo Goodnlte, Roland,
Fern and Matthew Morris, Eldon
and Phyllis Morris, Danny and

NOW OPEN
24 HOURS

CRAFT SUPPLIES • BULK CANDY ·TOYS
MUCH MORE

VALLEY LUMBER

·.

FALL SPECIALS

Anderson celebrates birthday

South Ci'Dillfe rt. NoHh 01,1111 St.

111 East Second
Pomeroy, OH.
992-2342

hospital authorities vehemently heartstrings.
but she dentes It and makes ex·
denied this.)
Dear Ann Luders: I am a 19· cuses tor !alllng asleep In front o!
It later became known that the , year-old whose mother Is an al·
the :rv. She also has high blood
woman spent $200,000 on luxury cohollc. She has been drinking pressure and doesn't give a
Items Including a dlamond·sa~ for as long as I can remell}ber.
damn about her llealth.
phlre ring, a diamond-studded
Mom ts not your average
How can I get through to her? I
gold cross, a diamond and gold drunk. Slle never becomes un· want my children to llave sobracelet and an expensive watch. pleasant, In fact she is kind and metlllng I never had - a grand·
Please, Ann, urge Mr. and sweet all the time.
•mother. Unfortuqately Dad su~
, Mom starts drinking wine while 1ports her habit and never raises
Mrs. Big-Hearted America to
continue to be generous, but to preparing dinner, around 6 p.m. any complaints about it. Please
use a little common sense. - J . She sits In the kitchen in front of llelp me. -Hurting In Callt.
E.L., Long Island
the TV with her wine glass and a
Dear Hurting: Your.dad Is an
Dear Long 1.: Thanks lor the pack ·of cigarettes and doesn't Sfop "enabler" and you are too, to a
wa):t!!-up call, but I doubt that It drinking untO she passes out.
lesser degree .
Dad says we should leave her
will help.
Both of you should go to Al·A·
Americans are a generous pea· alone, so we do until about 11 non and learn how you are helppie and they lead with their o'clock when we get ready to go Ing your mother continue to
to sleep. By that time she has drink. Look In the pllone book
hearts Instead of their heads.
For those who have money to passed out and we carry her to and find out where and wllen the
spare I recommend legitimate her bedroom.
next meeting of At-Anon will be
I have confronted Mom with held. Then go. It could save your
charities, of which there are
many, but I certainly can nder· the fact that she Is an alcoholic, mother's life.
· sland the desire to res pond to a
specific case that tugs at the

Whenever a hard-luck story
appears In the newspaper people
rush to send cllecks. Being sym·
pathetic Is an admirable trait,
but It's appalling the way folks
send money when they have no
Idea of how the money will be
spent.
Recently a Miami resident
whose 7-year-old son needed a
liver transplant received nearly
$700,000 from strangers wllo had
read about the boy In the paper.
After the child died, the judge
held the woman In contempt of
court for refusing to make an ac·
counting of what she had done
with the contributions. She re·
fused to pay the balance of
$262,000 on her son's medical bill,
claiming that the hospital failed
to give him adequant care. (The

992-347f

.

.

JOHNSON$
VARIETY STORE

MIDDlEPOIT, OH.

INSURANCE

your generosity, but with caution

DeiU' Am Landers: AmeriCans
are the biggest-hearted people in
the world. Also the biggest chumps.

'

POMEROY, OHIO

DOWNING CHILDS ·
MULLEN MUSSER

Rock Springs Grange
conducts recent meeting·
Recognition of charter
members and other long-time
members was feature of tile
Thursday night meeting of the
Rock Springs Grange held at the
hall.
Fl!ty-nve year stickers were
presented to lour cllarter
members, Beuna Grueser, Wil· ·.
l!am Grueser, Homer Radford,
and Fred Goegleln.
.
· Qualifying for 50-year gold
sheaf certificates but unable to
attend were Edison Hobstetter
and Otho Keenan.
Plans were made to particlate
In the ChriStmas parade with
Bunny Kuhl to serve as chairman
ot "tile committee for a float.
One. candidate was given the
obligatiOn of the first and second
degrees. Tllank you notes were
read from Charles and Bunny
Kuhl, Linda and Frank Broder·

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

W.V.U. rt. fltlflf St.

Diana · and Mandl Carpenter,
Racine· Earline and Rollle.Bare,
Ed, N~ncy, Hllliary, arid Katie
Hysell, Gary Diane,• Drew and
Laren Hysell, Kim and Andrea
Hysell, and Mark and Mary.
Hysell, all of the Columbus area.

The Daily

Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohio
982-2121
.

E

King family picinic is conducted
Four generations of the King
family attended a family picnic
held recently at the home of Ed
King, Pomeroy.
Attending were Ed King, Gene,
Judy, Kevin and Kristen King,
Pomeroy; Kara King, Sam,

..

COLOR TELEVISION ,
HEADQUARTERS

Page-4

'

'

RGJI'

Tuesday. October 25. 1988

,'

Ohio

t.A.

f&lt;tllll

Racine, Ohio 45771
Phone 614-949-22tO

rt. New /)t/Binl

BANKaONE.

CHOW'S RESTAURANT
RACINE MOTORS .
HOME NATIONA( BANK

Eighteen Thousand People Who C.1re.

CLARK'S JEWELERS

BANK. ONE, ATHENS, 0Hf0, NMONf PART OF THE CARING rEAM

·{ .

BANK ONE

MEMBER FDIC

PAT HILL FORD

NAME •••.•.••..••••••••.••• :~·······················
~

ADDRESS ••.•.•.•••

..............
PHONE ' ••

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"Good Luck"
SUPPORT THESE
FINE AREA ·.
BUSINESSES!
•

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~~----

Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

..

Tuesday. October 25, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Racine lodge meets

Tuesday, October 25, 1988

·Classified

Mason.
A brief memorial service was
held ror Ben Philson. Ralph
Webb, Charles Hayman, Glenn
Wolfe and Charles Theiss, all or
whom have died during the past '·
year. This service was conducted
by Ted Reed, a past grand
treasurer ol the Grand Lodge of
Ohio and a 33rd degree Mason
and Roger Grace, pastor of the
Racine United Methodist
Church.
.
..
Among those present were nine
past district deputy grand
masters and 12 visiting members
of other lodges.

Fifty year pins were presented
to live members when Racine
Lodge 461, Free and A ccepted
Masons met recently.
, Receiving the 50 year member·
ship pins were William McKel·
vey. Clarence Price, Thereon
Johnson, Elza Birch and Robert
Durst.
Sixty-three year
member, Maurice Lott, was
Introduced and honored. Sixty-five year member, Eldon
Kraeuter, was reported Ill and
unable to attend. Presenting the
pins was Roger VanDyke,
Athens. a past district deputy
grand master and a 33rd degree

Meigs, Gallla or Maton counties mutt be prepaid.
•Receive $ .50 ditc:ount for ads paid in advance.
•free Ids - Giveawa'-1 and Found ads under 15 wordi will be
run 3 ~avs at no ch.-ge.
•Pri~:;_e of ad for all capital Ietten is double priC411 of ad ~ott.
"7 poinl line type only used .
·•
•sentinel is not rnponsibte for errors after tirtl dav. !Check
for BH0r• firtt d8'( ad runs in paperl . Call before 2:00p.m.
day after oublicatlon to make correction.
•Adt that mutr ba paid in advance lfa
Card of Ttt anks
Happy Adt
In Memoriam
Vard Salea

Ashley McKinney. Amanda
Smith.
Fourth Grade: Jamie Evans,
Hillery Harris. Greg McKinney.
Amy Rizer, Joshua Roush, Sarah .
Mallbrown.
Filth Grade: Robin Gillispie,
C.J. Harris, Denise Roush.
Sixth Grade: Michelle Harris,
David Pickens, Toni Sellers.

Literary club meeting
held recently in:county
'Thumbs Up' by Mollie Dickinson was reviewed by Mrs.
Wendell Hoover at the recent
meeting of the Middleport Literary Club held at the home of Mrs.
Eileen Buck.
In her review, Mrs. Hoover
discussed the book which Is the
story of Jim 'Bear' Brady who
was with President Ronald Rea·
gan when John Hinckley did his
assaslnatlon attempt on the
president.

MORE TOYS- Here Is the overflow oftoys wl\lch were coUected
for Meigs County's underprivileged children as a resull of ihe
annual toys lor tots ride by area motorcyclists Slllurday. [n the
• ·picture are, sealed, Brenda DavIs and daughter, Coda; second
~ ·"row, from left, John Ingels and Lenny Tennant, and back, Mrs.
Dora VIning of the Salvation Army which will distribute the toys
" lor the hoHday season, and Brian Nitz.

Brady was shot In the Mad but
recovered miraculously through
the support of his loving wife,
Sarah, friends, and co-workers.
He was soon sitting · up in his
hospital bed and when asked how
he felt, he would give the thumb's
up sign. Mrs. Hoover noted that
before the accident, Brady was
the president's press secretary
and Is still in that position, mostly
in name only. The book reviews
Brady's surgeries. his extensive
therapy, and his upbeat attitude
which the reviewer described as

Public NOtice

Public Notice

Notice of Election On

equipment. or to provide
ambulance or emergency
medical Hrvicea operated
by e fire department or fire
fighting company.
Said tiX being: e renewal
of an eKisting 1.0 mill My to
run for five(&amp;) year I It 1 rate
not exceeding 1.0 mills tor
each one dollar of valuation.
which amount I to ten cants
(*0.10) for each one hundred dollara ot valuation, for
five {15) year~.
Thit Poll1 for uid Election
will be open at 8:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until

T.. LO¥Y In
Excels of the

Ten Mill Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of a Resolution of the Board of
Townahip Tru8l:ees of the
Town1hip of Scipio. Meiga
County, Ohl_p, pas•d on the

5th' day of August, 1988,

there will be submitted to a
vqte of the people of said

Scipio T-nohlp ot e GE·
NERAL ELECTION to be
held in the Township of Scipio, Ohio, ' •t the regular
places of voting therein, on

Tueodoy. the eight doy of

November, 1988, the queation of levying, in axcass of
the ten mill limitation. for
the benefit of Scipio Township for the purpoaa of providing and maintaining fire
apl)llratus. appliances, buld-

inga. or lites therefor, or
sourc• of water supply and
materials th•lfor, or the es-

,
KEYNOTE SPEAKER Unda Pickens-Jones will be
· the speaker lor the West Ohio
. Conference United Methodist
Women's annual meeting to
beheld lnColumbusonNov .3.
. UMW units of Meigs County
wUI be represented at that
meeting. Ms. ·,Jones is a
· mlnl~ter ol the California·
·~PaciDc Annual Conference
and is currenty serving as
Associate Program Director
of the Los ' Angeles District.
She served on the Mission field
. In Sierra Leone, W. Afr,ica lor
- three years and ls a . much
· sought-after speaker and
· mission Interpreter in confer·
ences and districts of the
United Methodist Church.

Slinderella meets
Laurie Reed was the top loser
In the Tuesday night Mason class
of Sllnderella and there was. a
three-way tie for runner-up
between Lois Ann Reltmlre,
JaniCe Reltmlre, and Enid
Adams.
At the Wednesday night Five
Points class. Judy Martin was a
top loser. Jo Ann Newsome is
lecturer.
·

Church women meet
Key women of Church Women
United of Meigs County will meet
at 1 p.m. Friday at the Middleport First Baptist Church for a
planning session.
At that time plans will be
completed for World Community
Day to be observed on Nov. 4 at
the f&gt;'llddleport Church.

If you like to watch your rates, consider investing in a Rate
Watcher CD from Central1rust.
This J -year CD offers ycx1 an escalating 'rate of return lhroughool
Lhc term with built-in withdrawaJ options.

WITHDRAW YOUR
MONEY WITHOUT PENALTY.
A Rate Wal cher CD is the ideal investment because yoo can get
your money back without penalties atlour·m011th intervals. This way,
you have the freedom to ckmge ycur investment strategy if y·ru see
interest rates shift.
Of coorse, the longer you keep a Rate Watcher CD, the more it
earns for you. Because the rate is compounded monthly and rises
twice during the term.

LOO%
!'lEW

7.00%
YIELD

7.72%
RATE

6.79%
RATE

9.00%
YIELD
8.65%
RATE
Tllinl4 Mmlhs

s..md4Mmihs

YBD

RID

So Uw: lirst fou r months, yoo'JI earn 7%. From five to eight
months, it's 8%. And from nine months to the end ol the rerm, you'll
get a hefty 9o/o.
So if it's a greatinveshnentyoo're cravin~ lor, open a new Rate
Watcher CD with as little a5 $2,000. For com'*'te details, call oc slop
by any coovenient Central'frust of!ice.

THE CENTRAL TRl.Sf COMPANY
Tlw BaWl That Mr.hs Things Happen.

Af/ilitllt. 1lf CftM/8r~titN. Cilltillllali, C»lil

Mmtni /ll'fllll/11.~ 11/'1'" i&gt;r "ltM11111nb 11f li~ I'll,_., /lrr111 lltr .f._,../1, i11"""'4

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO

446..0902

7:30 o'clock P.M.

By order of the
Board of Elections • .
of Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman

Jane M. Frymyer, Director

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

992·6661

By order of the:
Board of Electtona.

of Meigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. F·rymyer. Director

Doted Sept. 1. 1988
(10) 11, 18. 25: 111) 1. 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF ONE
HANDICAPPED BUS FOR
MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Soolad propooelo will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Meigs Lo-

cal School Dlotrlct of Mid-

dleport, Ohio, at the Trea-

ouror'o Office until 12:00
noon on Wedn•day, No-

vember 1e. 1988, and at

thot tlmo oponad by the
Treaaurer of said Board, tab·
u lated and a rep on thereof
made to Rid Board at it1
next achaduJed meeting as
provided by low for ono (1)
handicapped school bu .. according to specifications of
eald board of education.

Public Notice

bido will bo received

w~h

r"pect to the chenil and
body type 1nd will state that
the but when aa•mblad and
prior todlllverv comptywith
all school district apecifications. ell alfety regulations
and current Ohio Minimum

Stonderdo for School Buo
Construction of the Depart·
ment of Educ.tion punuant

to Section 4811 .76 of the
Ohio Ravisld Code and all
other pertinent provttione of

Specifications and instruction• to bidden may be
obtained at the office of
the TrNiurar. Middleport,

Notice of Election On
Tax Levy In
Exc111 of the
Ten Mill Limttation

NOTICE io hereby given
th.-t in pursuance of a Resolution of the Village Coun·

ell ol the VIllage of Middl•

port Ohio, pa11ed on the

8th dey of Auguot. 1988,

there will be •ubmitted to •

, vote of the people of lllid Mid-

Ohio.

A certtfied check payable
to the Treaurer of the above
board of education or 1 satisfactory bid bond executed
by

the blddtr and the ouroty

Company,

in

an amount

oquol to five percent 16%1 of
the bid oholl be oubmittad
with uch bid.

Sold boord of education

r•erv81 the right to waive
lnformalitiae to accept or re-

ELECTION to bo held in tho
Vllloge of Middleport, Ohio,

joct any ond ell or porto of

at the regular plac• of voting therein, on Tu~d.y, the

"· No bidl can be withdrawn

8th doy of November. 19BB.

the quHtion of levying a tax,
in excese ofthaten milllimi-

totlon, for the benollt of
Middleport Vllloge lot tho
purpo• of Providing and
Maintaining fire apparatus,
building~, or
si1al therefor. or aourc• of
water euppty and materiel•
thll'afor, or the establish~
ment and maintenance of
lines of fire alarm telegraph,
or the payment of permanent, pert·timt, or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting com- .
paniea to opelate the ume,
Including the payment of fl.
appliances,

Public Notice

poolld on tho 9th dey of Au-

with no trade in vehicle com-

gust. 19B8, there will be

plete ond dollvered to the

aubmitted to a vote of the
people of nid Ch11ter

above eddr••·

Towr.Hp It 1 Clennl Election
to bo hold in the TownoNp of

m•kld "SEALED BID -'

Ch81ter of Meigs County,
Ohio. at the regular ptacea of
voting therein. on Tueeday,
the 8th dey of November,

1988, tho quoition of tevv·

ing a tax. In eJC.ce. . of th.a ten
mill limitation, for the benefit of Cheater Townahlp for
the purpose of Providing and
Maintaining fire apparatus.
appliances, buildlnge, or
sites therefqr, or sourc• of
water suppty 8nd materials
therefor. or the establishment and maintenance of
lines of ftrealerm tel-areph,
or the p.,-mant of permanent. pilrt-tlme, or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting compani81 to operate the same,
including the payment of fi·
reman employer' 1 contribution required under uctton
742.34 of the revised code.
or to purch11e ambulance
equipment. or to provide
ambUlance or emeroencv

tional tax of 1 . 0 mills to run
for five (6, years at a rete not
exceeding_1.0 mills for each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten cents

(t0.1 0)

any and all bi ...

for at l101t thirty (30) deyo
after tha acheduled cloaing

tlmo for receipt of bldl.

Meigs Local Board of
Education
Jene Fry, Treuurer
621 South Third Avenue

Middleport. Ohio 467110
1 (8141 992-58110
110) 26; (11) 1, 8,16, 4tc
Public Notice
Notice of Election On

tor each

one

hundred dollars ofvaluatipn.
for five (6) years.

The Polio for 11id Election
1

will be open at 8:30 o clock
A.M. and renlatin open untH

7:30 o'clock P.M.

By order of the
Board of Elections.
of Meigs County, Ohio

Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer. Director

Doted Sept. 1, 1988
(10) 11,18. 26: (1111.410
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 18, 1988, in

Dexter Church Road, Dax-

tO&lt;, OH . 46728.
Robert E. Buck,
Proboto Judge
Lena K.

Na~aalroed.

Clerk

110) 25; (11) 1, 8, 3tc
Public Notice

NOTICE TO.
AMBL!I.ANCE DEALERS
In adcotdonce whh the
Ohio Revised Code, Malad
bldl will 'bo teceived by the
Mllgo County Boord of
Commisaioners In their office located in the cour1"
hou•. Second St .. Porn•

roy, Ohio 46789, uoitll 12

o'clock noon on November

843 - Por11and
247 - Letart Fellt

949 - Racir'le
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolville

773-Maton
882-New Heven

WOOD STOVES
•12 Years Experience

52- Sporting Good.

1 3-lnsuranca
14- Busin•a Training
1 5-Schoola &amp; Instruction
16-Radio, TV S. CB Repair
17 - Misc:ellaneous
18 - Wented To Oo

61 62 636465 -

22-Money to Loan
23-Profesaional Ser~o~ices

Real Estate
31 - Homet for Sale
32- Mobile Homes for Sale
33 - Farma for Sale
34 - Butiness Buildings

36 - Lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Real Estate Want&amp;d

Featuring: Consolidated, Dutch

.

.,

•TANS

KETS.

of County

theloweot bldorthobootbid '

&amp; Ports

MODEIN GUN
SUPPLIES
Munloloading Supplies
Modem Gun Supf.&gt;Ues
Guns • Ammo • S ugs •

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

Homelite
Jacobean

AIID

VALLEY LUMBER
· &amp;· SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio

111 West Soc. P-•••

for the intended purpoee,
and r81erve the right to reject any or an bidltnd or any

lOADING
AND

Briggs 8t Stratton

TOP OF THE STAllS
DESIGNER BOunQUE

Commltlioner• mey accept

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

22 Ammo
12.4 Eosl of Rutland
'AtfoSI Hoppy Hollow Rd.

Ph. 614·742-2355

99t-661'1

3-:JO. '17 lin

Listenina Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~.n,;r~ I
Cl Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~
-2

licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (1!14) 992·2104

GET ACQUAINTEIJ
SPECIAl
PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

.Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
SIX SCHOOL BUSES
FOR MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Soolod propo11lo will be
received by the Boord of

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al10 Trantmlsclon
PH. 992-5682
or 9t2-7121

Education of tha Melge Lo·

col School Dlotrlct of Mid·
dleport, Ohio, ot the Treooum'o Office until 12:00

6·17-tfc

thot time oponod by tho'
Treeouret of ..td Boord. taiJ..
ulaled and a report thereof
made to said Board at it1

EUM HOME
loom &amp; loard For

no•t ochaduled mHtlng u
provided by law foroO&lt; 111171

S.nlar Citlz11111 and

pueenger 1chool buaee, according to sPecific.tlont of
uid board of education.
Separate end Independent

T.L.C.
26 Vrs. Exp.

bidl will be tocelved whh

References

'192·6873

body type and willotatothot

the buswhenuMmbledMd
prior to delivery compty with
all school diatrict specifications. all safety regullttlons
and current Ohio Minimum
Standards for School Bus
Construction of the Depart·
ment of Education punuant

Jot or Pauloy lowland

209 South 4th St.
Middloport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"
9·27-1 mo.

Complete Drywall
Service

OAK, LOCUST.
CHERRY

FREE ESTIMATES
Reasonable Ratts

$35 ~tMRlfo

56

STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

8 LANE AMF
BOWLING LANE

FOR SALE

the Troeourer, Mt'ddleport. ·

MASON. W. VA.

A certified check payable
to the Treuurer of the above
board of education or 1 aat· •
iafactory bid bond u:ecuteci
by the bidder and the surety
company. in en amount

[,.•;u&gt;lll:nt comhtton,
srH;lil
down
p.:ty
n1et1!. owtlt'r financl!lq av.atldhit' Prtcl•d

for qu.ck ·o;lit• tn

oquol to five petcent 16%1 of

5t~t

til~ f",lit\!'

the bid shall be submitted
with each bid.
Said board of education
reserves the right to waive
informalltteltoaccapt or reject any and all or paru of
any and all bidl.
No bids can be wi1hdrawn

1-614-qn-2403 or
l-bl4·qq2-2780

446-3487

·8·88•tfn

9/15/88/tfn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATIO,N '

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNIW: GREG I. ROUSH
,..~
GENERAL
'' '•'
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
•CUSTOM KITCHENS. 8ATMS

Now Ho-o luilt
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-tfn

-EJC.TENSIVE REMOOELING
•VINYL SIDINGS. ROOANO
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING I. APT. PROJECTS
SINCE 1969
Sl., SUAQISI

oUSIJ

992-7611

Middleport. Ohio 46760 '
1 (814) 992·&amp;1160
110)26: (11) 1;8,1ti,4tc

SER~ICE

the people of oold MelgoLo·
cal Sct'tool Diatrict at aGE ·

1-13-tfc

wHibooubm~tedtoovoteof

Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

10·11-'88·1 mo. p4.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd

Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
FACTORYCHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

NERAL ELECTION to bo I ~==::i::ii:::ii::;:;;::;;:::

h61d in the Meigs Local District of Meigs County. Ohio,
at the r-aular pllcet of votIng therein, on Tua.day. the

totion. for tho benefit of

time for receipt of bidl .
Mei(ja Local Board of
Educatien ·'
Jane Fry, Treasurer •.,
621 South Third Avenue

Gutters '

Meigs Local School District
for the purpo18 of current
expen.... '
Said tax being : an· additional tex of 6.0 mills to run
for a continuing period of
time at • rate not exceeding
15 .0 mills for each one doll•
of velu.. ion, which amounts

t

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Recuonoble Prices"

•

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNOA Y CALLS

WANTED
DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

98$-3561
We Service

to filty cento (10.601 for

each one hundred dollus of
valuation, for a continuing
period of time.

ber 9. 1988 ond rNd aloud

•

Spoclflcotiono may be of&gt;.
Mejgs

Tho Polio for uld Election
will bo open ot 8:30 o'clock

A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the
Board of Elections,

Tax Levy In
ExcHs of the

of Mel go County, Ohio
Evelyn Clerk. Cholrmon
1. 4tc

•

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRA(USE, OHIO
Moat Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A I C Service
All Major 8t Minor
Aapaira

NIASE Cer11fied !l'echanic
CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified licl•ns·&amp;d l

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing 1n d gutter work
- Concrete work
- Piumbi~g an d fltectrioal
Wotk

!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C.

YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992-731'4
Pomeroy, Ohio
·1·13.'88· lin

HUDNALL
&amp;

LINDA'S
PAINTING

PL0MBING
HEATING
168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cetrv Fishing Su1&gt;pli·~
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Here

INfERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take t11e pain out of
pain~ing. Let me do
11 for you.
Very Reasonable.
Have References.

~'- · BUSINESS PHONE
16 t 4) 992-6550

IISIDEN Cl PHONE

614-985·4180

16141

10·19-'88-1 mo.

LYNCH'S
GENERAL

MOVIES &amp;

111011 to

VHS TAP(
ltd uuonvarl those old~'fies
&amp; Slides over t o e01y VHS.

CALl

AMY

CARTER

or BOB'S ELECTRONICS
446,7

.

~_ff

•Dozer • Backhoe
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

Specializing In Chain
Unk and Wood Fencing

WAN1 TO IUY WRECKED 01
IUNK CAliS OR TRUCKS

•CEILING FANS INSTALLED
•REMDDEUNO •PAINTING
•PLUMBING
•ROOFING

•DR't'WALL

•TILE WORK

•DECKS

·•PORCH ES

B~keye

ESTIMATES

Card Welcome
KBU LYNCH 992·3723
10.31·'18-1 mo.

Announcerncn Is
3 Announcements
Lonlln•• tndt when your Heartsearch begins! Select singles
w10t to meet you. Write Hellftlearch. Box 6846. Athanl, OH

46701.

Lo&amp;eweight fast with Maximum
Strentfl GoBese and E-Vap
"Water Pill s" at Fruth
Ph•macv.
Gift Shop open. ·Toys, gifts,
collectabl111, downs, thimbles.
porcelain. 32• EaatMain, Pom eroy. Ohio. 814-99 2-7204.

Procrastination Is a hftbit. Need
we ...., more Dad? love, Your
daughters. Pem and Brenda.

4

Giyeaway

614-742-2617

Klnent to give ttoNay. Utter
trained. Call 814-446 ·9319.

PuppiM to glwaway . BeM~tiful,
fluffy, adorable. Wanting e good
home. Call 304-676-86 33.

INSULATION
Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
~amless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm ·ooors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

1/ 15/ffn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Dealer for
YAIDMArt &amp; ECHO

Basham Building

Located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp;: Bahan.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sanito Contet for Ryan
Products

6:30P.M.

Factory (holoo
12 Gouge Sholg101s Only
Strictly Enforcod

8. 7 financing on Yardman

Sorvlce on All Mokeo
Wo Honor MC/Di11/Vita
9·t·'"""

10·7-lfn

6, 4-448-4836.

Large female Cit &amp; 3-8 wk. oid
kltttnt. Call 814-446-7075.

J&amp;L

RACINE
FIRE DEn.

1 gray &amp; wfltte stripe tom cat,
vrwv tmall. 1 slightty bigger
female • .n wfllte. 2 teenage
toma-1 orange, 1 gray. Cell
814-4&lt;46-1822, evening• only .
Big Wood to give ttWay. Call

or Leave

GUN SHOOT

Black &amp; white male cat. long
h•r.t. fla bean deci~..t. 14
moa. old. Call 814-446·2415.

-FREE ESTIMATES- '
for any of thne~tnim

Between 9 o.m.·6 p.m.

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

coal heater&amp;. S!Neln's F\l'nihtre
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive,
614·446-31 59.
•
Want to buy-: Used turnitul'll and
antiques, Will buy entire houtahold furnishing. Martin Wed&amp;

meyer, 614-2415-6152.
Junk Cars

with or without
motor, . Call Larry Ltvaly ~ 614-

3B8-9303.

Furnftura and ~piiM'Ices by the
piece or antini hou•lllhold. Fair
prices being paid. can 814·446-

3168.

Wanted to buy Tran•am or

Camero bocfv. Cel! · 814-388-

8647.

We buy Blec:k Walftuc.. Fund
ralting opportu~ity . George
Shltback 814-992-3891 . For
dalivary rt•tructiont call 1-800-

999·0727.

'
WMtad to buy: Standing pine or

11

CLRSSIFIED RDS
I

Help Wanted

Eltperlenced Barlender for
downtovvn Gallipolja .teblltft.
ment. Fh1ci~e hours. Send r•
suma to BQJ( Cia 175. c/9(;a!l;.
polls D•llv TribJne. 826 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, Ohio 46631 .
HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME

Assemble product• at home .
Part-lime. Experl ..ce unnece&amp;sery . DatU•. Call B13· 327·
0896,Ext. D-1U9.

UOO weekly poui~e. A•em·
bling prod.Jct.. SASE to: Home
Crafts, P.O . Box 9008-GOT.
Huntington. W.Va. 26704-

9008.

PART-TIME

OR

FULLTIME

COUNSELOR , Matt:•' a Degree
preferred. Strong background in
addiction recovery and adol•
cent programming. Highly chathinging and retpontlble potitlon
available in an adoletcent reti·
dantlal program for tober, retpontlble indlltlckltL Com:aC' Dr.
Joe Gay. Ph.D., Bessert Hou1e,
P.O.· Boll 724, A~ens, Ohio

45701 1814-594-81091 w•h
letter of int.-.t and 3 ref.-W~cea
~November 1, 1988. E.O.E.
Needed aperiW~ced sal• rep .. in

Medical rehll:ed field. Complete
line of medical suppll• &amp;
equipment. lmmediMe full-time
position CQvering the Trl-stSte
ftrM. Sal.-y, e~epena•&amp; bo!"UI.
Ple•e•endr•umeto: P .O. Box
8456 S . Ch~~rl.-t:on, W.Va.

4 kitttl'ls '1h: wks. old lo give
IIWIV to good home. 3 male. 1
f~llt . 300 Chet'ry St., Pome-

roy, Oh.

.ROCK-N -ROLL'88
If you •re· new to tha area or

temporary dlecorrtlnulng your

ed.lc.tinn, racantlv dlsch•gad
from the service or any othll'
re•on~~ seeking tampoqry or
c•eer work, consider thfa a
unique opportunity in •1•. The
young m . . . . d woman we are
looking far m81ft. llred of
typing. foi«Ung pap•t. war•
hou11 jobt ~ worldng 1or Nmlt«t
Income. Worlcwfthvoungp«~ol'fl:
In our y-outh oriented na'tlonel
company .wfth flock-N-Aoll -.,;
moephere. Rapid advancemf(tt.
lfvour are 18 or older and ableto
ttart work immediMely 1M Mfr.

Hathway, Wedne1day oniJ
10 :30 AM-4 PM at the Eco~
Lodge. Par.-.ts welcome.
""'
Gov•nment Joba S1B.o40.:.
t69,230 yr. Now hiring. o.ll
1-805-887-8000 Ext. R-9806
for current federal list.
""

Get peld for reading boo'ktl
•~oo. oo

per title. Write: PAS!~

181 s. un..,lnwov, l'(.
Aurora, IL 80542.
•

01536.

Up to 116HOURPROCESSINEI
MAll IM!EKLY CHECK GU.tt.
RANTEED. FREE DETAlLS.

Wrhe: SO, 1067 W. Phllldelphla. Suite 239-GO. Ontario.
Cellf. 91782.
po~ltlof\ .,-.~ • .
Clerk-Ty-ping tldlls, knowledge
Gf Office Pt.ctlce .,d Pro. .
durea, abllitv to meet public
required. AppiiCMions will be
liken October 28, October 31.
November 1. 1988. 8:00 to
12:00. t :00 to 4:00PM. Al!lllv
at the GeUia Countv Heatth
Oep.-tment. Equel ()pportunitv

Contrtlet

Emplover.

.

AVON • Allar. .. Call Marilyn
WeiNer 304-882·2645.
RN'S &amp; LPN'S ·PH. full time &amp;
p•t time applications are baing
accepted for Ple•ant Vall911
Hospital Nurting Care Center.
Contact Personnel 304-8754340.. AAEOE.
AVON all . . . ushirii!IY Spe•s..

Blick male dog. 'It Poodle. V::
Terrier. Approx . 2 Yz vrt· old.
Qood with kidt. Call 614-742·

304-675-1429,

.

. Licens.t Social \Norkar in naw
long tarm care facility. ·Expe"rienDl'l pref..-r.t. Commensurate
Stray t'omcat. 1 or2yrs. old. To ulary and benefits. E.O.E. Mail
good home. Call 81 4 _g 92 . rosi.nne to Admlni:ltrater Care
31577
H11..,., of Point Ple•ent, At. 1
'
Bo• 328, Point Pleasant, W. Va.
' Fluffy 7 wk, old kittens to good . _
2_&amp;_se_o_.- - - - - - home. 614-843-&amp;44&amp;.
RN , Director of Nutting. needed
Churcl1 banc:hes, phone 304- for intermediate heahfl ewe
facilitv . ExpMieneedln longterrh
875-1388.
care required. Sel.-v 1nd benef-

2t03.

Puppl• Codter Span iel mixed.

30 ... 876-7829.

6 Lost and Found
LOST ! Grey Minia ture
Schnaazer, male with 1td coli•
Plltrlot-O.ga •ea. R....,ard. Cell

ltt comm•••• with expe.
rlenot. Send reaume to Bo~~: p
16, car a of Point Pie• ant
Ragluer, 200 Main St., Poi~
Ple•ent. W .Va. 25560.
w.,ted lead gJitlrftt. dr_ummer
an d key bowd pi~~ . mala or
female tor Rock Bend now

forming. 304-875-6370 after

6:00PM.

.

et ... 379·2932.

Att.ntion: exctlhmt iumme tor
home a•aem~ work. Info call
Por~*i•lnNort,._,p vic;intty. No 504-646-1700dept. p 2303.
coli• or caga. Call 614-446EARN MONEY AT HOMEI At-.
0990.
umble jawetry, tov•. electronic,
LOST! PPHS c:lats ring Point othert. FT &amp; PTworkavallable.
Pt....,l area, Reward for tingor c.tl !Relundoblol 1-407· 744any Information please t:all 3 4- 30.0 0 ext. S 2289. 24 hrs.
LOST: Bmal female rtdd.,h

937·24e3.

Read the

-

25303.

Mixed breed · pUppies to gtva
awav. Call 814-448T3845 .

REPAIR~

FREE

We can repair and recore ra!fiaton and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and roil
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio

the qu ..tlon of levying a tax,
In excen of the ten mill lim I·

after the acheduled dosing

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

Our Delivery Staff
Knows Where .You
Live.

Coli 992;2228
or 992·9922
1 O· 1 2· 88·1 mo.

F•fm Eqaip11enf
Part• &amp; Sarwlae
l·l-'36-tlc

Howard L. Writuel

10-6-88-1 mo.

Notice of Election On
Toxlevv In
Exc.. o of the
Tan Mill Limitation
NOTICE lo heroby given
thet in pursuance of • Re·
oolution of the Boord o!Education of the Meigs Local
·school Dlottict, Middleport.
ohto. patoed on the 18th
doy of Auguot. 1988, there

8th doy of Novombor. 198B,

for et leoot thirty (301 doyo

follows.

BILL SLACK
9-9 2-2269

- -Public Notice

to Section 4611.76 of the ·
Ohio Reviled Code ond ell

dition• and opecificotlono ot

FIREWOOD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Good Ratat

r•pect to the chMsis and

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

MAIN mEET PIZZA

Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Mary Hobatetter, Clerk

Roger Hysell
Garage

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST 'PRICES.
H any local
competitor offers
you ·a better deal,
tell us ond we'll
match it!
ALSO ...
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
0
UNDER

Authorized John
Deere, New Holland.

10.25-1 mo. pd.

Complete ~outeho,dt of fur,ilure &amp; entiques. Also wood~ &amp;

SerVILeo

6\4-662-3821

$44995

2282.

Your Hometown Place

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. ~T. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, fHIO

3

and MfiNM used cera. Smith
B.uick-Pontlac, 1911 Eutern
Ave .. Gallipo{lt. Call 6tC..•4&amp;-

EiiJIJIOylltenl

BOGGS

Racine, Ohio

TOP CASH paid for '83 mode'

PIZZA

:J: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
·
·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy.

MEIGS
FURNITURE

61C..446-3672.

MAIN STREET

S3°

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

port thereof.

(10) 26: (111 1 2tc

9·23-'88· 1

J im Ml11k Cfl8'ol .-01dllnc.
Bill Gene Johnton

log timber. can 814-314-5182
a her ?p.m.

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS ·
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
9B5-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
·
'10·4-1 mo.

81 -- Home Improvements
82-PiumbinQ 8t Heating
83-Excavating
84 - Eiectrical fll Refr igeration
85-Generai Hau li ng
86-MobileHome Repair
87- Upholttery

9110/ttr. I mo. pd.

992-6461

698-6121

Services

3rd St.

POMEROY, OHIO

MARCUM CONTRAcTING

·71 - Autoe for Sale
72-Trueks tor Sale
73- Vanl &amp; • WO ' s
74-Motorcycl81
L
75 - Boats &amp; Motors for S&amp;le
76- Auto Parh &amp; Accessories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment
79-Campers &amp; Motor Homes

l;l§htnl

West, Brunco. Ashley

LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE
CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431

Farm Equipment
Wanted to Buy
Livestock
Hay &amp; Grain
Seed &amp; Fertili.let

Transportalion

41 - Houses for Rant
42 - MobHe Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent
44- Apanment fa.r Rent
45 - Furniahed Rooms
46 - Space for Rent
47 - Wantad to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For Le•e

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

Farm Supplies
&amp; ltvestock

1 1 - Help Wantud
12-Sftuation Wanted

DELIVERED TO

4S

.53 - Antiquet
54-Mi\IC . Merchandise
55 - Building Supplies
56 - Pets tor Sa,le
57- Muticallnalruments
58 - Frultt &amp; VBQetabl•
59 - For Sale or Tt8de

Employment
Services

Authorized Servic:t

~'

LARGEST END

$)4 PER TO N

51 - Household Goods

2-ln Memory
3-Annoucements
4- Giveawav
5- Heppy Ads
6 - loat and Found
7- Yerd Sale (paid in advance).
8-Public Sale &amp; Au ction
9- Wam:ed to Buy

895-Letart

937-Butfalo

I

WE PAY '60.QO PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
lie. #005-32

Merchandise

1- Card Of Thanks

SMALL ENGI'NE
REPAIR

.d~.:;
- ":.,f"''•CLOTHES
'
e.,

•
•

676-Applt Gro'ol&amp;

S6Q.QQ '

H.C. Package. limit 1 coupon per customer per
bingo session.

Business Services

for the following velcle.
Each bid mutt meet the con-

the

Pomeroy
985- Chetler

Get Results fast

9, 1988. The bldl will bo

tllin«&lt; from

367-Cheshire

675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon

246 - Rio Grande
256- ,Guyan Oist.
643 - Arebi 11 Dis t.
379 - Walnut

opened at 2 p.m. on Novem-

County Emetgency Medico!
Strvlceo Offico. locoted on
Mulberry Holgh1o, P.O. Bo•
Ten MIIILimhotlon
NOTICE lo horoby given 748, Pom01oy, Ohlo467.9.
.
ramen employer'• contrtbu- that in pur.euance of a Re- 18141 992·8817.
Vehlcletobeone(1) 1989
tiof1 required under section tolutlon of the Bo11d of
742.34 of tho rO¥illd code. Township Tru ...et of the · Type Itt Cillo I Em•goncy
or to purchua ambulance , Townohlp of Cheotet, Ohio, Ambu l•ce. Price will be

992 - Middiiii)Ort

1 11tr,."

Ohio.

ceooad, toto of 30040 Old

446 - Gellipolis

, ~ ~'t--· '· •HAIR

vid

w•

Mason Co .. WV
Area Code 304

,, ,

the Me;igs County Probate
Woolen, 30040 Old
Dexter Church Road, Dexter, OH. 415728,
appointed Executor of the ntate of Minnie Wooten. de·

Melgt County
Area Code 614

,..{.:· ~

other pertinent provltlons of •
lew .
Specifications and . inatructlons to bidders may be
obtained at the office of

Court. Caoo No. 28030, Do·

Gallia County
Area Code 614

388 - Vinton

EMERGENCY AMBULANCE
VEHIClE." MUST
FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS
ENCLOSED IN BID PAC·
Board

$5 .00
se .oo
$13 .00
S21 .00
551 .00

MAXIM UM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON

as separate ads.

21-Bualnass OpR,ortunily

following telephone exchanges...

The front ofthe-po.,..
doli&gt;g the bid mull be

The

2:00 .P.M. TUESDAY
2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
2 :00P.M. THURSDAV
2 :00' P.M. FRIDAY

Classified pages cover the

medical service• operated
by a fire department or fire ·
noon on Wedn•dey, Nofighting company.
vombor
16, 1988, ond tt
Said ta• being: an ildi·

Separate end independent

Doted Sept. 1. 1988
(10) 11. 18, 26; (11) 1. 4tc law.

dt-' Vllogo ot o GENERAL

FTrst4 Mmtl~

7.n%

tablishment and maintenance of lines of fire alarm
telegraph, or the payment of
permanent, part-time. or volunteer firem1111 or fire fight·
ing companies to opame: the
•me, induding the payment
of firemen employer's contribution required under Ill&gt;
tion 742.34 of the reviled
code, or to pun:hMe ambulance equipmenl, or to provide ambulance or emergency
mediCII services
operated by a fire departt:nent or
fire
fighting
company.
Said t .. being; a renewal
of an existing 1. 6 miUs tevv to
run for five 16) years at a rate
not exceeding 1.6 mills for
each one dollar of valuation.
which amounts to fifteen
cents ($0.16) for each one
hundred dollars of valuation, for five (6) years.
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.

Public Notice

. .:. .

$4.00
$5.00
se .oo
$13.00
533.00

DOOR PRIZE
2 H.O . FREE with coupon and purchase of min.

Wanted To Buy

We PlY cash for lite model eleen
used C8ft.

-CHIPWOOD
POLES

992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M .

26·35 WOROS
$7.00
610.00
s 15.00
S25.00

18· 26 WORDS

111161114@11

Chester trick
or treat slated

an Inspiration serving as an
eloquent example.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter pre·
sided at the meeting with Mrs.
Nan Moore and Mrs. Forest
Bachtel reciting the club collect.
For roll call members answered
with a !ate!ul event. The hostess
served candy and snacks.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A.M. SATURDAV
- 2:00P.M. MONDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

Costume judging and games ing. A potluck supper was
were featured at a Halloween served.
Those attending In addition to
party sponsored by Star Grange.
those
named earlier were Rlek
· Costume winners were ages
1-5: funniest, Mike Macomber; and Vicki Macomber; Chuck and
most original, Carson Yost; Nita Yost; John Halliday, Fred ·'
scariest, Chelsea Montgomery; Smith, Wald Nicholson, Ray and
prettiest, Ashley Colwell, and Bernice Midkiff, Larry Montgosillies-t, Eric Montgomery; ages, mery, and Maxine· and Opal •
5-16: funniest, Bridget Dyer.
Vaughan; most original Cryslal
I
Vaughan; scariest, Denise
Shenelleld; prettiest, Chip Ma·
comber, and Silliest, Scotty Col·
well. Adults division winners
Trick or treat night in Chester
were: scariest, Patty Dyer; most
original, Linda Montgomery, will be observed on Monday. Oct.
31, a~d will be supervised by the
and prettiest, Alan Halliday.
Bobbing for apples, donut on a Chester Fire Department. Hours
string, bubble blowing, word rwlll be from 6 to 7 p.m. The town
search and sock hockey were siren will sound to mark the start
games played during the even- and conclusion o! the activity.

quartets, singln1 southern gospel with an occasional mid·
die-of-the road son1 thrown ln. The voup has been singing
together. for 30 years. Advance tickets In 1\felgs County may be
purchased at the Mill Street Book Store In Middleport.

POMEROY ·EAGLES CLUB
. 224 E. MAIN ST.

consecutive runs, brOken up day swill be chltl'ged

•A class ified advertisement placed in The Daily Sentinel (ex·
c~pt - classified display, Butin•• Card and legal not icet)
Will alto appear In the Pt . Pla•ant Regitter and tile Galli·
polis Daily Tribune. rea ching over 18,000 homes .
.
COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
l:'HURSOAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER

DAY

3 DAYS
6 DAYS
tO DAYS
t MONTH

..

Costume winners announced
APPEARING -The Hoppers will make a personal appearance
at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Point Pleasant, W.Va. high school. The
Hopper Brothers and Connie who travel annually across the nation
doing concerts features Its usual mixed quartet plus two male

1

0· 15 WORDS

9

ante

BINGO

RATES

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

The Daily Sentinel. Page-7

Business Services

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

Honor roll announced
The tlrst six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Portland
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subj eel's to be
named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Jessica Cooper,
Ty Johnson, Patty Lawrence,
Stephanie Roberts, Jason Roush.
Biille Jo Sellers.
Third Grade: Jonathan Dalley,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

•

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Scr~

JOBS AVAILABlE

~··metal procas.or,
10elung: drivers, tow·motor o~
erators, labort, seml· .. illed •

grading ~onnal tor our recv·
cling fedltty In Columbus, Ohio.
Call or wrlle: GlrV GroastnM'I;
Rldl Pe•son Auctioneet', li· Groum1n lnduttrie&amp; , 1980
censed Ohio Mtd West Vfrglnia. South Fourth St .. Coturnbus,.
Ettete, tntiQue, f•m. liqulde- Ohio 43207. IWVI BOO· 387·
t)Ofltl'le~

304-7'73-61SS.

8,477, (Ohio} 8D0·44S.St81.

�Tuesday, October 25, 1988

Paga- 8- The. Daily Sentinel
12

LAFF-A-DAY

Situetione
Wanted

Tuesday, October 25, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
44

Apartment
for Rent

61 Household Goods

m

'N' CAJlL\'LEe hy Larry Wrlabt

73

VaneS.

BORN LOS

Television
Viewing ·

4 W . O.

' f AVNE 'S FURNITURE
So f-.

EJdstingDAY CAREtn my home

hao op.,lngo b 2 c:hlldr.,, COli
814-4411-e!47.
Eld-'v litl"tlernM need tl...,tng
room. Someone to do t.undry •

cootdn~

Call814-44e.OI03.

Exlotlng D"Y CM E. 7 doVe o
wk.. 24 tn. 1 d ... f\IH/ ptrttlme.
· Fen eM VWd. E MCtll. Nfwencee.
Re•onebler., ... Cell 114-4460839.
BEAUTII'UL APARTMENTS AT
SUDGrT PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 531 Joob..,
P•e from 1183 • mo. Wlllk to
ohop ond .._.... 114-44112118. E.O.H.

Schools
Instruction

15

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASn'RI\I BVSII\IESS
COUEGE, 529 Jecklon Pike.
Coll44e.4387. Roo. No . BS-11·
1015118 .
18 Wanted to

D'O

Drnor .. Backlolo Work-S80
. Call dol:•. Re•onlble rata
....,.i.,co
_..or. Cr.,..,.
Conot.
COl 114-21~1
.

718

Upataln un•nmhed apt. Car·

,-ld.

p II ad. utllll•
No chlhten.
No pM• Coli 814-4411-1h7.

Fur,.hed- 3 rDC)f'N • bath.
Cr-. No polo. Rot. &amp; dopooM
....... ,..,_.,..._ .. ._,.......,. IO·.tf

"Is this the same creep who
was harassing Little Red
R"din
1
g H 00d?"
,

required. Utilttlet fur,.had.
Adulto only . · COli 814-4481819.

Tree" work wanted·topplng. .

~\.'::.'=t. ;;o:;: ':;,".."'~ ~

814-4411-80 78 or 304-B 7 54853.
WHI oot fltawood. Cell aft•
8
PM, II. 4-7 •
.
1 42 2381
Wood furnltuN rap* and!•
r8flnllhad. Fr•
Cell
814-4411-3814.,448- 2s 9 a.

••'"*•·

31

Homes for Sale

41

3 ba*&lt;tom home with c. port.
maint.n•ce fr• •terlar, 1
bMII. lollv _,uiDD.r khhen.
c.m:rel
.!-ric hHI. ftn•
c•pet. flrtDI. . wtth luck
lltow. . .llli:e diah. CJalllpoll
U2.BOO.OO. 304-

:;;t.o;:

Yf/IY nlct two ba~oom. Bas•
mn. U21. monthlv or ..U on
llr'ld oomr-cc. Aaf...,oe .nd
dopoolt. 814-742·2728.

32 Mobile Homes

Modarn 3 bedroom oou ntry
home.looetldonAihtonMitton
llood. 0111304-175-1113.

*•

Mo . .• horne moving. 1. . 111

with Morgan Drivo·Awoy,
ownar 1nd operator Jim
Mc:Guir&amp; .,..;....., .,d .,.
_ Nred. 114-448-2131.

42

w / axrndo room. 2 lA .,
w/we c.pc. elr conc:ltiol\
Vi/ OitWilhoutllrnllura.. Nlt. gM
furneca on prNetelot. Mev rant
lot. Colt 5 to a PM, 814-44111409.

Business
Opportunity

~

for S•le

1il8 NIIW Moon 12dl0. 2 IR.
• 2300. Coll814-448-0380.

I NOnCE!

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISK-

tNO CO. r.a»rnrMn• tMI fOU
do t.Jeln- with people ,ou

Moble Home IDr a.t._ 12x110.
Col 814-4411-2003.

Own pur apparel or lhoe .. ore.
ohoa.t fTom : Jelft-lporttwt•.

l:.adlet. Men•e. children·
maternity. lerge ail... ptttte.
din CIW. .·Mrobic. brict.l, Hng.Je or ecceuon. dor&amp; Add

•II¥•·INnd n.-n•: Uz..
Cllllborne. litah..,._,
~.,

2000

ot.,..,

1972 moble hom&amp; 2 BA .•
p_.i.,. furnlohod. U.OOO. Cal
114-4411-1844.

•13.99 one

price dlllgn•. muttl tier prfelng
dlsCOlnTt or f1mlv shoe store.
Rttll priCII unbell ..•blefor top
quattty tho• norm1ttv priced
. from t19. ro •so. over 250
,.;o brencll 2t001ty. .. •17,90010
t29, 900: lnwntory. tNinlng.
flxtUNI. •""'•• gr.nd op.,lng.
etc. C.. op.n 15 d.,s. Mr.
Lou""ln i812181S.4U8.

814-843-1310 .. 814843-11408 anytime. Aok lor
Coli

o.nnv.

-oom

2
1 2&gt;&lt;00.
304-8711-2722.

e1900.

1970 Wlndlor, 12KU, wood-

bur...-, w.aha' .. d

*v-.

1ir

cond, must be moved, 304-8953802.

1979 Bayview moble home.

Rt~l Estate

31

Homes for Sata

3 beG'oom Rtndl, 1'1J bttht.
famt,o room. dining room. 1 c.
g•aga storage buRiing. pooJ.
/ wood., d•dl. Spring Vall.,.
• •· Calll14448-7903.

Vall.,- PI••· 629 Jaek1on Pika
or cell 814-448-4839 .

*· c•pM. Deppata. C.H 814-UI-

oait. no
0131 ev.nlnp. .ttar 8.

238 Ftm Aw. 1 BR .. kitchen
furnl1hed. c•peted. No chltdrln/Poto. n75 ..,, utlltl-.
Dop .• rol. CoK 814-4411-4921.
F urnilhld one bedroom apt,
ecllth on~. no pl'tl, elll aft•
5:00, 304-117&amp;-3788.

46

Fumishad Rooms

Room1 for rent-week or month.
••rtlng at •120 a mo. Qallle
HotoU14-448-9580.

2 bedroom mobile home half
mb out Jericho Aold. referan- roqu~od. coli- 5:00PM,
304-87&amp;-1082.

46 Space for

Apartment
for Rent

Fw-nillhld 2 room eplr'tment
with privata beth. Utlltl• peld.
Soa&gt;ndA ... •1s0pormo. con
81 4-4411-2390.

a. .. tKul river lots one.,eplua,

By Owner· 508 Ridge Ave., Rlo
Oranda . Good narurRetlrement-lncoma Prop.-ty. 2
M .. LA, DR. n,JtN b-th. new
kltdlen. tun porch. full b••
mint. new- g• fca., new plumbhlg •llectricservice. New Vinvl
aiding, l•ge lot. 2 blodts from
college By tppolntment only;
1· 1114-882· 7424.

houtlna opportunity. Applle.
tiont m., beptc*:.:luplt Spring

Nice bright Mobile Homaln the
Cou mry. VIcinity of Flvo Polrlto
and Baahen. Adutt1 ontv. t186
month. 814-949·29119.

Dalulll 2 BR .. furnllhtd lcttchan.
low ultllt._ EJC:IIIInt locatk)n.
No P•a. See. dap. C.tl e 144411-1817.

GOVERNMENT HOMES from

public w1ter. Ctyct. Bowen. Jr.
304-178-2335.

2 BR. dupl• . t2251mo. Stow.
refrlv-ator. C.. 11h mil• from
Clollipollo.., 180. Coli 114-44113763from a.5.

Rant

Tral.- Space for Rant. 011111
814-44.. 41534.

=::::::::::-7::=:::::--~--

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k.
Aouta 33. North of Porn.oy
Rental trill•'- Cell 114-992~
7479.
'

B211h Sec. EJC:el. cond.. 2 BA ..
equipped kitchen. lir: A~llebla
Nov. 1ot. tz25 olu• dop. can·
814-4411-0803 or 448-2158.

•cr•

2 BA .. ell utlltl• peld at Rio
Ortnda. Allo 1 BA .. totllelac. et
Rio Grande. Cell 114· 2415223.

ais
.

Nicety fllrnllhed tmlll hou•.
Adult1 only. Ref. P"'lqulred. No

pMo. COli 614-448-0338.
3 lA .. AC, c•p8t poal. a•~&amp; a
2 firepl.c•, f.,ca. Ooad locaUon. Call A·1 Reel Eltlte
Broker, 304-878-1104.
Unfurnished hou•. 2 lA .
Neighborhood Ad. t2211. Ref•
enca &amp; depoelt requlr.t. CeH
448-441hfter 7 PM .

Apartment for r'ent. t2215 1
month. Deposit" required. 81 4992· 11724. After 8pm or 9926119.
Gn~ek&gt;ut living.

1 1nd 2 bedroom ..,_.mentl It Ylll191
Minor and Riverside Apart·
ments In Mlddlepon. From
•112 . Cali 814·992·7787.
EOH.
2 bedroom Apt1. for rene.
Cerpatad. Nice setting. Leu ndrv
hclltMI avllllbta C.ll 111C.
992·3711 . EOH.

M

House in Elat•n Locli School
District. C.ll 814-992-8161 .

49

For Lease

Comm•eill Building for leMa
Pt. PltMint. Cell 304-8765104.

Merchomlise

Olive St., 01lllpolis .
NEW· 8 pc. wood group- *399.
Living room sutta. t199-•1599.
Bunk beds with tMddlng- t249.
Full sin mettr- It foundltion
atarting - t99 . Recllnen
.tartlng- t99.
USED- • •• dr•aen:. bedroom
autt•. Dilks, wrlne- wuhar, •
compiMa line of used furntture.
NEW· W•tem boot• t315.
Worlcboots t18 It up. (Steel •
ooft too). Coli 814-4411-3159.
County · ADpll~noe. Inc. Good
uHd appll.nCII lftd TV 111ta.
ap., BAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sat. 814-44&amp;-1899. 627 3rd.
Aw. Golllpolil, OH.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wa~h.... dr;'an. refrlgwatora.
rang•. Skeggs ApPfitncet,
Upp« River Rd. blllde !;atone
CrMt Motol. 614-448-7398.

74

12 ml• from Pomeoy. C.ll
114-99:Z.11848.

Houte -

F~rm

m••

.
.
.
.
,....- -- --

a

_

PICKENS UiiED F\IRNITURE
Complete houaehold furnllhings. 1h mUa out Jarricho.
304-871&gt;1400.

Meelchair..-niW' or ulld. 3
wheeled alactrlc toooten. Cell
Rogor~ Moblty oolloct, 1· 81+
871).91181 .
•

For low prioea on Quality carp ..
&amp; Furnttura come to MollohM
Furnltu,.Upper Rfvar Rd .• 114448-7•44.
"

All oak floo-ood. Good Dldlup,
.30. Split &amp; loadad. Co~ 8142118-1718.

VIAe' s Furniture
Operi dollv. Mon.·Sat.

9AM - 8PM
Sun., 12 noon - 15 PM

Co -m plete houtahold
furnilhlnga- All bedding. Nltic
bunk beda wfth ntlttc chatt.
variety of •ot. ·&amp; ch.,._•ll on
Ill&amp; f:lii!Cellent used •pllanc..
Chrfltmlla loy• now In ltock.
ctutltma. layaway, now beln g
t1ken. Plus fin ..dng .,.. ebla
wfth epproved credit. Rt. 141 In
Centlnary- '.4 mila on Unoaln
Pike, 81"1·441&gt;3158.

53

Building Mat.tola
Block. brick. _._. pip•. wt.
dow1. lint•. ale. ct.. cte 'Mnter•. Rfo OrMde. 0. Cell 11 ...
2411-1121.
.

Concrete blocb- 111 .a:... ..,d
or diUvery. MelonaMd. Gltllpollo Slodl Co.. 123'AO Plno St ..
Gelilpollo, Ohio. Coli 814-441·
2783.

For Sale

Misc. Merchandise

FlrMood for lale. t 315 a load:
Call 614·21&amp;-9301 or 25116H4.
Bunk bedl·coinplata. extra long
lin·giJ m.ttreu. CaH 014-4484922.

1973 F"'"klin 132 AXL Skidliter. Oood condition. Priced for
quick s•le. Call
0 PM.
614-21111-1696.

•fl•

WHITE'S METAL OETECTORS.
Ch&amp;ek for tpacllla on ALL
Modell. Big dllcount· llft
ltocked rnoclell . Ron Alllton.
1210 Saoond Aw., O.lllpoH•.
ot.io, 814-446-4338.

ya.-·,

1 27&amp; gallon fuel tank ,wfth
ltand. Oood condttlon. t50. C. II
814·441-0218
MobRe horr. tralhr frtme for
..,.. t150. Cell 814-218-1889.

anvdmoF~dll'.

Pete for Sale

Grooming. All brHde .. . AII
IM'II Pet food o.at• .
Julio Wobll Pit. 114-4411-0231.

lty....

pu-.-

Drogonwynd Cot1.., Konnol.
CFA Pertlln •d Slam•• ktt·
,.,,, AKC CMw
Hfmelaven
e.u 114448-3844 aft• 7 PM.

ldtt-. ·

AKC Aog. OldEngliohlllloopdog
........ Coli 814-2411-8575.
AKC r'tllat•ld 811*1., Hu•kav
oupPI•. 4
old. both
1*11111 can be eean, •200-oo.
304-1711-5800.

-k•

AKC regltterld tamlfe Be~~gl&amp;
115 monuw old. not trllnad.
•80.00. 304-875-1184.

Warm Morning G11 Stove .
8s.ooo BTu. 0275. can 61499.2·522&amp;.
Roll top d81k. Llk8 new. Solid
INOod. Walnut flnllh. t300 or
bost olfer. 614-992· 7183.

67

Musical
Instruments

lndhoidull ~ltlr l... on&amp;. beginners. . .lout gutteril1. I"NIc•dil Music. 114-446-0187.
Jeff Womolor lnl-or. 814448-8077. Limited op•dnp.

Whtte e., opy b•trt bed lor .ee.
In good condition. CAU 814992·7175.

1974 Corvotlo Strlngr.,. e,,el.
cond.. AC.. t·top, 1ter10.
e71oo. can 814-4411-9421 or
4411-7441.

1987 Skyllfk. AC . crulee,
Cll..,e. Gr.. 011 mlfaega.
•8aoo. Coli 814-44&amp;-9330 ot·

t•4PM .

1979JoopCJ.t5. V·B. 3opd., 2
topt. A1klng t 1800. 1979
Monte C.to. •100. c.n 1144411-2511.
l

Antique timber bldg 111d86,000
btu Warm Morning g11 heat•.
304-57&amp;-2438. .
Siegler oil heater, 80.000 btu,
phone 304-175-8412.
Uaed R -85 Ditch Wtteh
Trencher. 814-894-7842 or
1194-11008.

~3m'.. ft chest type deep freeze,

used 42 Inch wood blthroom

f "'111 Supplu~s

c;

LIVI~,!ill.k

I boUght new. 1914.01dl88: 4
door, l110ugh.n peck ..... Sable
With brown vinf'l top. tm8ll VB .
raelwlrawh..... etw.ysgerave
kept.. nort-emok.-. A fuH ·elze

1uto In 1how roo"' c:oncltlon.
uooo. 114-192· 2781 .

19B5btueZ-21. 301auto. 1981
Nil.., Stann. 4 cyl.. fuel
loloclod. lop- Both•col.,.
concltlon. Coli 1114-742·2875.

1984 Cryol• Loo• X£. wMh
'IUrbo. PC cond. Ill optlone. for
lnbrnotlon call 11 4- 38,7· 7757.
1913 Gr111d Prill. good oond.
run• good. high mll11ge.
u.•&amp;o.oo. 304-571&gt;3213. ·

1981 Oldo Cull- Cal:oio. 2
DAHT. nice. 1910 Mercury
Coup. 2 door, like nM muat
• ... 304-87~15281 .

John o . .e2010dl•lltraelor.
lllioe. with pl..,o. dioko, groin
drll,. t3810. John D••• 2020.
1000hrs. ~lo Sh•p. mult . . . to
11ppncfale. •..ueo. Owner wll
fin.,oo. Coli 114-288-8522.
10 loch plow, 42 loch dioc, 48
lnoh bl.rowlth-polnt hitch.
Ftt• s... o.rdanTrRI:or. Good
condition. Allf300. t..ldDCI-v
ChMtor, 814-9SI·4483.
'

1977 M -Gie.n• oombln• •
row corn haad. 13ft grain table.
txc oond, k~ In *v- 1150-C
dorar, winch, good cond.
30.000. 304-937·2018.
63

Livllltock

Spa' t and Whlrpool bathtubl,
buy direct from m.,ufacturar
and save t U . C.ll Aqus Tech. ,

72

Trucks for · Sale

1986 FOfd XLT 1/.z ton. Excel.
c:ond. Col814-4411-2117.

d...,._ bu_mJ*,
ona owner. -,ad
... llldt

OOVIJI", ltlp

window , AM -FM..C.• st.-.o.

Elrtenct.d werr.ntv. 28 MPG.
~"" Sail. "'' olf •11000. Coli
~4-388-9080.

1888 Cheuy 8 ·10 King Cob.
Automll:lc Ov•ttlve, AC , AM FM rldo, jump 11111. tporlwhee61. 3 tone Will '*nt
814-992-3950.

1188 Btu• Otwy Yt ton tnd .
VII, AC , AM-FM tt•ao. Pav off.
Coli 814-742·3080.
1178 one ton CrM Cab Ooolfll
484 V8 ..to. call 304-812·
2132 or 182·2219.

1871 Ford F-100 half ton.
eng_l_na rebuilt In 1980 ,
• 1.300.00. 304-17&amp;-1810.
73

Vans

&amp; 4

W.O .

1987 Chwv Mtro V111 1J¥ M•k
Ill. L o - .,d onrt 14.000

3 BR . home,..- Sliver Bridge
Shopping Com or. •2711per mo.
Seo dop. &amp; rol. c .. 814-4488189 .. 4411-88 . ..

ml•. ElCallent oon,cltlon. Alk·

log .12.900. .4.000 off liot.
Call 114-4411-2048 woningo. .

19el Plymouth Voroo• SE.

mil•.

Log Cobin. 02110. 2 BR . COM
after II PM , 814-2411-8097.
Largaroundbll• ofh.,for•l•.

•20oaoh. Colt 114-44&amp;-1012.

Hay far •le-round blf•· Mottt,
In dry. Coli 81~248-5117.

hou•.

Informalion.

Ford ArrtJW motor home,. 1 B ft
long. good c:ond. 82,995.00.
304-8711-151186.
RON'S Talevitlon Service.
Hou .. cells on RCA. Ou1zer.
G£ . Speelaling In Zenhh. Col
304-178· 2398 or 114·448·
24114.

. iMT'$ GOoP,
~MAYlE 'T'HE Tf?UTH

MY oppoNfNT
I&lt;EEp.&gt; TELLING
LIE$ A~OUT ,__...:::;,_

WON'T COME" OUT
UNTIL

Mfl•

~~~;..))'

Af"!'"Efie THE

SL.e:CTION!
\"'A"es
oo. zs
c_.., .........

RON'S

APPLI~CE

ALLEY OOP

w•ha'•.

Point,
dryers and
lloveo. 304-5711-2398.
Remcwef. Free a.tlmltn. C.ll
304-871&gt;7121.

EEK &amp; MEEK

~~':'~!'50)

1;1
ill Crtmee of Vloltnce
, Bha Wrote 1;1
aIIJ Naehvllte Now

1:05 (I) MOVIE: Raid an Rommel

Ground ahall oorn •a.oo p•
100. P..,um Alfalfa U .OO.
StriiW e1 .10. Round bal•
.21.00. Mor-' o ,.,.od.,d
.,_"'Ill. 31. Piny, W.va: 8:00
til 1~:00 M-Sat. 304-937·
2018.

(1 :39) :

1:30 Cll elll Roeaanna Dan and
Roseanne awaar to pay off
billa with Dan 's cash
atlvanee. I;J
9:110 (!] Top Rank Botting

Cll eiJl MOYIE: 'David'

ABC Movie lpaclaii;J
W W The Amarlcln

HOINWA5THE
TODAY~

a

9:30 Naw Counlll
10:00 (J) 7110 Club

8 CD illl Midnight Caller

Killian becomes the only link

NEVER GUESS
WHAT IT lSI!

81&lt;-.

10:05 (I) MOYIE: Part 1 INRI (1 :44)
t0:30 (D EaatEnclara A continuing
chronicle of lhe lives or
residents in London's Eaat
End. (0:30)

811D Odd Coupta

a Vld1aCountrr

t 1:00 CD Ramlnglon . _ Steele
In 1111 Spotlight
• ()) (I) • (I) Ill 81121

1111 Nawa

(J) Uglttar 8lda of 8porta
(D (f) IIH Moyara' WOIId of

kiNa Moyers talks with a
wide variety of paopta abbut

Auldarulll or co mm•cili w IrIng. New HNICI or repairs.
Ucen..d elacfficltn. Ellimeta
Irk Ridenour Elattrical 304871&gt;1788.
•
85

Dlhrd Wet• Service: Poolt.
Citlerns, Wells. Oelt~ttery Anytime. Call 114-44\8-7404-No
Sundav rlllllt.
J • J W atar Service. Swimming
poolt. cltterns. wellt.· Ph . 6142411-9215.
A 6 R WRer Sefvice. Pools.
cl•ternt, wells . lmmediate1.000 or 2 , 000 gall o nt delivery
Coli 304-878-8370.
·

Watterson ' s Water Hauling,

noo. 814-982-8881.

87

•liD Love Coto-'il

Bernice Bede Osol

General Hauling

Upholstery

Mowr.,.•• ~hollt.tng ten~lng
trl DDUntylrH23y. ., , Thabllt
in -.rnlture uDhollltering. Cell
304- t71 - 4il4 for free
tttlm.Cet.

.

!HI T - ' - t 1111 Dalkttkla
dll Miami VIce 1;1
aYouCanlaaStar
11:30. ()) (JI) .... of CaiiOII

'

'-Your
'Birthday

.

e

W Window on 1111 War

·~"!:'""1;1

(o.ic. ·

i

.the chvdde quqted

by ftl11ng 1n the miss•ng words

.

.L.-..J you develop lrom step No . 3 below .

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARE S
.
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LE TTER S
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Choler - Youth - Thump - Oirecl - TEETH

. White helping a dentist with patients ' charts,~ was apparent
·that he was distracted, and I had to repeat myself many times .

No"Y 1know

what pul!jng TEETr_H__;;is:..l:..lk;:,e:..
. --------.

BRIDGE

I\IORTH

•so2

+AKQI
overcall could have been severely.
• K Q 10 6
punished, but my friend Joe Silver of .
EAST
Mootreal was South, and lois partner· WEST
3
•su
ship· agreement was that a double of +AKIOI
~
'AJI0976
three hea rts would be negative, show·
• 10
• 9 763
ing four spades and values to play at +7543
+J9 8
the three- or four·level. U he passed,
be was not sure that North would have
SOUTH
.J976
the right cards to reopen with a take'KQS
out double. Had be made a negative
tJBS 2
double, his partner might have been
+A2
smart enough to pass, but that is conjecture. With two heart stoppers, Joe
Vulnerable: Neither
made a decent decision to try three noDealer: North
trump. Then be bad to back his bid
West
Nortb Ea1t
Soatll
with strong play.
It
SNT
When the four of spades was led,
Pass Pass
South knew immediately that West Pass
was void of hearts. Since the oppoOpening lead: + 4
nents were playing fourth·best leads,
the play of the two from East suggest·
ed that West had led from a five-card played A·K-Q of clubs and bad nine
suit. Obviously nine tricks had better tricks when the jack fell from East.
be taken without letting East on lead. And what would have happened if
When declarer cashed his diamond West did hold the jack of clubs? No;
'tricks, West showed up with four cards problem. The last club would have •
in the suit. If West was indeed void in been played from dummy, putting
hearts, be was left with four clubs, West on l.ead, forcing him to lead away
very likely to the jack, but South from the A·K·IO of spades to give dewasn't tempted to finesse. He simply clarer his ninth trick that way.
··

...

s•

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Frenzy
1 Romanian 3 city
staridstill
S Swiss city 4 24 Across
10 Violin
wild dog
maker
II Increase
11 Col\ioin
6 Katherine
12 29 Across
- Poiter
portrayer 7 Yellow
13 Sheltered
O&lt;;her
. bay
8 Parisian
1.&amp; Sailor's
season
assent
9 Pennlt
IS Outburst 10 I've got
17 Jack or
you!
Mlljorie
16 Altar
18 TV puppet
constel·
21 A bit
lation
17 Territory
balmy
24 .12 Across 18 Map giant
• e.g.
' 19 Suit
26 Set right
nuisance
28 Gist
20 Lavish
29 "Crocodile

-.•.

Yeaterday's Answer

21 Take
.
on cargo
22 Asian river
23 "Victory"
heroine
25 Middling
27 A:nnounce
30 Guido's
note
34 Ham it up
311 · - Funny
That Way"

rir"r.-rr-~

•

36 NBA star

37 Theater
group
38 Football
holder
39 Stubbol'l\
- mule
40 Study
rodrn
41 Eggs
43 Horne
for

31 Gratil'y

~ UlA Tadltr

ei!D NaOIIlr- Game
lllllpolla Tonight

Cll Nlgli.. lll;l
". (DIIjnOft .

elll ~ Tontaht

III...,_,P.L

etlll Twltlgltt ZCIIII
IIJ
(JJ~ .

"""'light .

aNUlWUia- .
t2:011Jl Waotd of Audubon
Myatwy oflhll Sea Turtle
tl:30. ()) ill Llrle Night wllh
O.vtd Letlen111n

(I) Running lltdllaolng (R)

'

.'

' '

;.

10125

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

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

ea 'Night Halt' CBS Litle
Night Tom's new protege
, lind hla source are murdered.
IRI
(II ... - - 8luoa
• - • Magulna
12:00(J) ,.,_.. Cltlaa Nancy
(J) lnalde 118 PQA Tour (R)

..'·

.

I

CllYPTOQUOTE

10.25

.H X Z
X. L B Z

ELQ
CZZQ

URQJ

ELK

TYNQHZF

YNH

UXY

JZBZMLD

H R E Z J

C N H

FRFQ'H

X Z L M

H X Z

MZOZMZZ

X . Z

GLQJZQ

Yesterday'• Cryptoqaote: BEFORE YOU ORGANIZE
YOU OUGHT TO ANALVZE AND SEE WHAT TilE
ELEMENTS OF TilE BUSINESS ARK - GERARD

SWOPE .

•
\

'·

tt.U.II

.Q

Of course East's brash three-heart

~=--(L)

CAPRICORN
22.......,, 111 You . mantle nature.
might nollearn of It today, but someone • QE- (MIJ 21-.lune 201 There are
who Ia quite lond ol you Is olnglng your forceo at play behind the ...,.. today .
Oct. 21, , . .
praises. It's someone with clout whose . that should prove helpful in lu~ng .
words carry weight.
your objecti... H - . you re atlll
Your financial picture should brighten a AQUARIUI(....,, 20-Feb. '18) a. willing required IO do your part.
bit in the year ahoad 1111 you find new to share either inlorma1ion or things of a . CAHCIR (.IWM 21-.luiJ 22) Thll corrac:t
ways 1o supplement your oarninga. Be material natura, because you are likely . . reoolutiona are at hand ntgll'dlng altii'I~:~:S =::;::g"'\!':1u=~·opportu· ~ giVe
to receive mora In raturn than you'll oua maner. lllaw hopea will at.rt dllpoi.
ling old double.
ICDRPIO (Oct. at No•. 22) Standing PlaCEI (F..._ 20 Mom aG) Partner· LIO(.IIIIJII-Aug.lla) FOCUiyour-·
firm on a Mcitlon you'wo recently made ahlp arrangemenll are your atrong auit glel today on oltuatlona that could
appoara to be rhe right action. A lrland today, oapectdy H you're alilttd with a malta you money. YtNr cttancae of gel·
will a110 be glad you_,., dioauadad. penon who Ia 1111 Imaginative and deter· ling wltll you want look vwy good.
SCorpio, treat youroeil to a birthday gift. mined 08 yourllll
VIRGO (Atlll• 21 lopL 221 You'rtt vwy
Send lor your Aatro-Graplt pradlc11ont · ARII!I (MMoll · Z1·Aprll ' 111 Your · ttklllfui and ~ve '""" in Mllng
lortite year ahead by mailing $1 to Al- l chan,_ lor career otlvancement look ,. your-tootherll. HyouCIIOOMtodo
tro-Graph,, c/o thit newspaper, P.O. · very promillng today. Your grea- re- , 10, you could...., pro111Qta oomathlng
Box91&lt;i28, Cleveland, OH44101-3428.
, intangible
Be sure to lla1e your zodiac tlgn.
warclo are likely to coma along linao of '. UIIIA I.e,.. 2I-Oct. 211, Othllrt are
IAOmAIIIUI ( -. 21 Dec. 21)11 ~ " la8ll1 -IUICII.
likely to be 1Urp~llngly willing to t1tare
toagin an Important aoaignment today, ' TAUIIUI (April . . _ , 201 Involve- : with you today provided you let them
don'l eallll quits until you ooe It through
manta you hawotoday with memberS of 1 • ak the Iter ' Don't be clttmlndl
10 I IUCC!IIIui conclualon. leave no . lhll oppoalte V&amp;nder eltould work out m a
0
.
ng.
IOOH ends. ·
wall; be they of butl11811, social or ro-

.

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES-Here's bow &amp;owork it:

a CJook and Cltase

WHEN YOU
SEE rr--YOU'lt..
NEVER &amp;UESS
WHAT IT IS !!

•

IIJ Matllytltll

(!) lt1elt R.M.

8® Iamay,Millar
11111!-lng Nawa

I CAN'T WAIT
TO SEE WHAT
IT IS!!

.

AmeriCa's choictt~

W iiiNawa

1 GOT A 91RFDAY
PRESENT FER YE,
PAW--YOU'LL

•

32 Me~nora•ble
time
t;;-+-++-t-33 Queenly
name
311 Tennis's
grand36 Night
creature
39 Hello or
goodbye
42Think
4.&amp; Frugal
fellow
411 Gennan
cake
46 Degrade
47 Norse epic bc++"'-+-11-00WN
1 Chinese
port

klliar.

Refrigeration

1978- .......... for floNng.
hunting; e~ml'fng. Nwr brlk•.

•

..... "-... .... ·· , .

Electrical

1971 .loop CJ .7. Good cond.
Rebult •tina No rult. t21150.
Coli 814-4411-3040.

Weelclftdll ,

to a mysterious female serial

~411-4477

r... oneble rllt•. lmmedlat e
2.000 gallon delivflty, eisternt,
poot1. Will, etc. cetl 304-67112919.

Chwy Surlurbon. 4whMI
drlvo. •1.400.00. 304-871&gt;
I 1891ft•l5:00 PM .nytlme on

Ae,WHAT~

SCHOOL. WJNCH

BARNEY

Wat• dethr.., . 1000 gallons. ,
Aa•onllbl• prlc:ee. Immediate
dolivery. Coli 814-992· 5275.

•n

Expe- The joum4!ill's
experlencas du~ng Hitler's
rile ant chronicled. 1;1
IIJI LIIITf King Llvel
dll , _ Time WNatllng

NOTA&lt;oqooo

Will do tand bt•tlng. spray
pllntlng, Interior 6 •terlor
demrlll'lng. 25 yrs. experience.
C1ll 814-248-9097.

Low
AT, AC. crufte,
AM-FM • ...,. Cuetom strip•
., d ruMino bo•clo. •9995.
obo. Coli 81,...4411-8300.

118a Bronoo 2 XL 4&gt;14. &amp;tendo
•cL P8. PB. mll'f¥ mora.,,. ...
8000 ..... 1114-1143-1183.

;.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES ·
lloptic tonk pumolntt 090 por
lo.:l. C•ll 1-800-837· 9528.

&amp;

Waat Point (NA) (1 :42)
!1m DeVIl Woraltlp:

!i! liD MOVIE: The t!uddr

SWEEPER .nd aewlngmachine
rap .... p.-tt, ., d auppll•. Pick
up and daltvery. Davit Vaoo11m
Cle..,llr, one half mile up
Goor""' c - Rd . Colt &amp;1444&amp;-0294.

84

7:35 (I) lanfonl and Son
1:00 (J) MOYIE: Tan Qantlatnan

MOVIE: 'Panc:ho
CBS Spacial Movie

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NQ
Unoondltlon.al lfllllme guaran-tee. LoCIII rllf•ence~ furnilhed.
Free eet:lrnet11. c.tl collect
1 ·114-237-0488.
or night.
RogersBasement
Wlt•prooflng.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
.Cor. Founh and Pine
Oellpolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or 014

a Ylc1aoCotlntry

iS.mea'
•1121

WHYS!-UID
11-IE.Y?

Home
Improvements

Plumbing
Heating

ill Night COUrt

Tony dumps his Brooklyn
.
accent In favor ol
u~ra-propar speech style. 1;1
W (f) No'ltl Examine ihe
frequency and eflect1 of
fraud In aclentillc research.

·Ak. . Tree Trimming .,dStump

&amp;

· IIIA$~aoperdyii;J
IIJ Cnlaallra

Cll elll Wlto'ellll aou?

~~~~c------ P

82

Cll E-lnmant Tonight
elll USA Today

Eltpaalng S.ten'l
UnclalgtoUnd Garaldo Rivera
explores lhe complex and
hidden world of Satanlam In
interviews with experts In
Satanlsm and families of
victims of Satanic murders.
l!l Boclybulldlng USA
Women and Mixed Polrs
Championships trom Las
Vegas, NV (T]

SERVICE,

Cancrete Septic T.,kll - 1000
g .. .. 1100 gil. and Jet Aeration
.,-narn. F1ctory trainlll rap1ir
thop. R 0111 EVANS £!\ITER ·
PRISES, J1cbon, Ohio. 1-800137·9128.

Mogulna

fntm

houM clll servicing GE. Hot

81

Ill Crook IIIII Chaoa
7:05 (I) e to s
7:30 • ()) Family Feud
(!] Major Laegue lloaabell .

e CD

Rot1ry Of cable tool c.-HUng.
Moat \Witt compt•edaerfled-r.
Pump llll• .,d ..,..Ice. 304S911-3802

paint Job. 318 motor, heM••·

"I thought he was offering a great price for
our stuff IIIII realized he meant the car."

IIJ)-.yttna
IBI Cltaara
11J Mlllltl VIce D

fltrtty Trea Trimming. stump
removal . Call304-876-1331 .

1987 Ford R.nger, •etv.. • tpd,

ov•

;eao Ford F280. Autom•le
tranam6ttlon. 814-949-2008.

304-5~3- 8288.

Nlcatv furnllhed 1rnal
onebedl'oom. Oneortwoeldartv
p .opi6 No pMt. Aef. r.qulred.
can 814-448-2543.

!Ill • tal Ill Wheel of
Fortuna 1;1
811D Th-·· Company

Painting: Interior &amp; E ld:tlt'lor.
Free estimates. Call 814-4418344.

61 Farm Equipment

. vanttv. 304-87!!5-5280 after
4 :00pm.

3 bedroom hou. .Rutl•d • •·
U2B loclucloo - •· g•bogo.
hM. •200 IICIIrlty~d,.,.....
1:1!1 814-317-7217. •

for' mor.e

1981, Fotd Eaoort L. 4- door
haloht.dl. Vary good concltlon.
,.... t4328 .• •kina t3900.
Coli 114-742· 3114.

Surplu1 1rmy c1moufla~ge. d•
nlm, (ental, Clirhert clothing.

Sat, Sun. noon till 8:00 PM.
(Nov, Dec OJ*1 7 dey1). Sam
Somerville's, Eatt-Aeventwood
junction lndependlflCI Ao.ad.
old At. 21 . (New E ref lntuleted
camouflage coveralls $27.50,
304-273-6865.

(!] 8pari8Cantar (L)
Cll eiJl ~ Alfttlr
W (f) MacNeil/ Laltm
NawaHour (1 :00)

d.,

AnttQuel, CB b•e. Much more.
Rt. 1181 ; weal of At. 33, ne•
Whll.,'•· Sit .. end Sun. 10 :304:00. Coli 814-992-.6013. .
Wood Chief Woodbu rner. Paid
*2015 .. aaklng t160. Cell 814992·7288.

1977 Monte C.rlo. Ails. t2215.
Coli 814-4411-8811 oft• 8 PM.

1987 Mere Lynx. EliCtl. cond.
Coli 814-448-2857.
Groom end Supptv Shop-Pet

8 CD PM Magulne

taeoo.

1978 Monte Corio. V·8. 2 dr.
1971 Delta Royolo. Y·l. 2 dr.
Coli aflor 3 PM, 814-4411-2157.

56

Businesa

-;;:;;::::;:::::::;;;::==

1881 ·Dodge Omnl • dr..
31,000 ""•· a opd. •1000. · "
Coli 114-3711-2728.
79 Motors Homes
· S. Campers
19911 Dodge OmnL 4 dr.,
21.oooma . . ..to. •38oo. con
114-37.. 2721.
1978 Dodge Motor Home. 2~
It,. 11..- e. roof elr. 81~.
1984 MorOUf'( Topor GS . PS,
:rtB. air, AM -FM, 14.000 ml•· hook·up. battery. g-. 34,000
"'glnlll mil•. Excel . eonll
U70Q. C.H 814-448-0212 or
Firm. COli 614-44114411-9271.
9421 or 4411-7441.
1912 Hondl Acoord hatahback.
ExOIII. oond. C.lll14-4411-4928
1982 Holld., Rombl• 31 ti.
lift• 10 PM.
camp« trel• for Nle. t9260.
1978 Herl~rt Low Rjd•. 9000
' GOVERNMENT SEIZED Valli·
1e1ua1 ml•- UOOO. C•ll aft•
d• from •100. Forck. Mlr·
5:00p.m., 814-742·2304
cadel, Corvette~, Chtyys. Sur·
plut. Bu,oro Guido . 11 I
1973 Sh•te 21 It good corui.
S0&amp;-817· 1111011. Ext S·10189.
1871 Momo Corio "" .ra or
Indo ' for 4 WD Dldcup. Coli
114-4411-8741 .. 4411-1847.

Steel Building~. Mutt Mff 2from
c... catt.r~on. br.nd niiW, nw•
lrct.t. Wll HI for balenca
owod. Call Den 1·8011-527·
4044.

a

11 ft. out bo•d. new tral•. 30
HP M.-oory motor • troltv
motor. 4 b•• • •· •1 1100. Cefl
814-387-0211.

304-773~ &amp;828

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Rtv•lna Antlqu ...
1 12• E. M•ln Street, Pom•ov.
HouPS: M ,T ,W 101.m. to 8p.m .•
Sunday 1 to 8p.m. 81 ... 9922128.

54

71 Auto's

IIJ Carlaon Eltprelt
Yoil Can S. a 'Star
1:35 (I) Andy Qtllftllt
7:00 ()) Our Houaa Giving 'om lhe

t was proud to have my l irsr

.
.
was out shopping, I beamed with·
- - --, pleasure . Pleasure rurned ro embar·
~=~~.ntwhen a voieesald , "--is

'-....1-..L....;L--...L-

11211- Pollllca '18

75 · Boats and
Motors for Salt!

!

~o' beeper, and when it went off while 1

. p OE T A I
If--i~:.~..;~...::-~r-.:.;.1.!..."'1~,...-1 Q Com~l~te

Ctnctnnetl

rench. fernllv room wood burn-

bldg. prload mid eo·.. ownw
mu• ..n
ofle, 304-1757438 afterii:OO PM.

t

I• I I I

ill 81121 C88 m
liD IBI WKRP in

1114-387· 0102 oft• 5:30PM .

One be*aom IPt In Point
" ' -.... . , . .. _ .. d good
oond, no pit•. phoM 304-1711386.
'

WE MISSED Tl-11:
f DIDN'T
~0 WAKE 't'OV

-r.U~CrN..;..:H....:..:,H_,-ll

tun of her.
(!) llf. Wlto Colony In Space,
Part 1
.. liD H8JIIIY Dayt
l!lllhowllz Today
IBI Factaol uta
IIJ rat Albert
Fanclongo
8:05 (I) Laverne and Shlrlly

(DtlociJE(1) Nlglttly Bttalnaaa Raport

M1in. frN ett•lor, 3 beEtoOm

Ing flr...roe. neN cant,.. etr.
l•,a dedi. wooct- • .,...

2

1:30. ()) illl NBC Ntgltlty lnllda lhi ·PGA Tour
Cll 81Jl AIIC Nawai;J

cant..,.,

3 bectoom hom&amp; 1'h bitt..
c•ptted, centrll lir· halt. ~
c•ect in Point Ple~unl. 304171&gt;2702 or 304-5711-2147.

I-lAVE I DISCOVERED 50METMIN6 ?

)

for l l h ,

2 bedroom houte. Extr11 lot.
304-17&amp;-4384.

TEN o'CLOCK ..

CoiiiCior't ttem-1807 Hond•
300 Droom. 100% or..,iol.
Show room COndltiOfl. Call
114-317· 0680.

•1.000.00 down111um1ble8'h

p•
to qulllfl .. talv«.
VllfY Dw doalng mt1t1. 8t ecr•
with 7 ve- old cad• ~ntem­
oor"Y ho- priced rO&lt;tJcod to
•ee.ooo.oo. Phone 304-1171&gt;
119118 Golllpollo F•rv. w .vo.

TARPA

(!] 8portaLoak

away when Beazus makes

Government hom• from•1 .00.
(u- replirl . Alto tilt delinquent
and foreclosure proPerties.
Awlllbla now. FOf htlng. cllll
1 · 3111- 733-00114 •t. G2788.

4 nice modern one floor pl1n
houaH. Owner nlocatlog.
Needl quldc tel&amp; Will oonaidlr
l.,d cantracl:. Atso take lite
modal v .....lde • partlllll trM•
Aoldng •&amp;4.000. lot oH 4.
814-742-2721.

S NAPOR

I!IINiwl

Motorcyclas

1987 Hondo · 4 t -. EJ£ol.
c:ond. •1000, Coli 814-2581721 aft• 5 PM.

amall chalt. Frend1 a-aam wtth
blue • yellOW' flowen. Clll

hunting 15 mH• from Athent,

I
l I I' I I
I.........._1_._I..J..Il....J.I-...~I l

Cil R1mona Ramona runs

Qlrls bedroo m sult .. lncludee
h•ad bo•d. lntme. boll spring~
It mattr-. corn• dftkltchalr.

tn country with lalCl Good de.

Iefier! of the
four scramb led wo rds be·
low to form four simple words

M.

iii

Small ermy ICC. .HOfiel. Frt

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FU RNITUR£ 82

0 lleorrange

1:00 CD Bonanu: The Loot
Ept-• The wa-ry Willie s
8 ()) (l) • (J) all 81121

----------·-

bundle. Contelning 1pprox. 1 'h
ton . Ohto Pallet Co ., Pomeroy,
Ohio. 614-992·8481.

47Wanted to Rant

TUES., OCT. 2~

WOlD
GAM I

EVENING

10 O.V• •.me •• c.h with
approved credit. 3 Ml• '"''
I ~MI'IIe Ad. Op.n 9em to IJpm
Mon. thru Sal. Ph. 814-44&amp;0322.
.

Mixed hard wood tim.. •12 p•

' 51 Household Goods

821 Second. E-*. cond. 2 lA ..
.,uippocl kHchon. air. UISO pluo
dop. COli 014-4411-0603 or
4411-21118.

25
Broad Run Rold. New
Haven. Ownar financing avlilable. 30 .. 882-3394.

Homes for Rent

pnons. Equll

1 2&gt;&lt;00 fur'*hod. 2 bodroom. ln
SVn~a~M ar•. Wetar paid. C•ll
II 14-992· 7180.

44

3 lots-Venice, Fla. , 3 mil• from
beech. Sale or uadeforanythlng
of equal value. C.ll 114-4418891.

41

~ndH.nclctpp.:l

Fwnllhed room-919 Second
Ave. , Ollllpolil. •1315 a mo.
Ulllltl• aahl. Sinalamtfa Sh•e
both COh 448-44'18olt•7PM.

Community, 2 t.droom. fur.
nlohod. 1'2&gt;&lt;80, 304-871&gt;3019.

Ashton, l•ge buldl~g lots,
mobile homet permltt... public
1water, •Ito river lots, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-578-2331.

DONT LOSE YOUR PROP·
ERTY IN FORCLOSUR£11 Send
n.-neatdphoneno. to: CII174
cloGIIIipoliiDIItyTribune. 826
Third Ave.. Getlipolia, Ohio
411131.

the Eld•ly.
Ollila Minor Apartments. Ill
8uhl Monon Ao ... Oaslaned for
the Senior Clt•en (12 &amp; oldal1
for

Routh L.ne Ch•hlre. 2 bedrooms, nice lot, 30.. 773-5828
for morelrdonretlon.

•a-•

Rnnt

Fumlollod ofllci.,ci• t145 &amp;
up. Utllttl• paid. Sh•• bllh.
Colt 448-4418 aft• 7 PM .

rent. F1mltv Pride MobhHome
Par~ Golllpoilo Ferry, W. Vo.
304-171&gt;3073.

21h
bottom l.,d Located
approx. 115 mi. • · of Olllipolls,
old At. 7 (Vallfll VIM Dr.) C.ll
814-2511-1774.

3 BR .. LA , DR. kitch•. full
b•ernent. 2 cw unlttedled
g•og• Bulerlle Rd. 049,900.
Coli 814-44&amp;-4535.

10

Specious mobile home 1011 for

Modern 3 BA . home. Vinton.
Femlty room,. e.C· In kitchen,
storage bu II ding. large lot .
t 39.000. Coli 614-388-9042.
•1
(U-Repairl Alto
T• DeUnquent &amp; Forldoaure
Prop..tfs. A.,.ileble NOW. For
listing. CALL 1· 316-733-8014
Ext. G 271511.

1

Ap~ ~a on4.d hou . .. Call
30- .-~~rv
Furnil .. d ap ..tmentt-1 badroom. t240 &amp; up. Utllti• ptld
Call 448-4418 1ft• 7 PM .

Nice ,.,. . tnllw with •(IMido,

1988 Britt.;., 14x70, all ol•·
ri~ lot 78x173 ft. na.ooo.oo.
Hartford n- ,_.,. oourt1.
304-88:1-2844 aft• 1:00PM.

Vf/IV ltt,.CINe brick .bedroom; 1989 llmm• d ..... 121:80,
2 ~h. fwnlty room wfth • • wood .nd co• ttuwe, .-rtlllly
pi .::e. for mil dtnlng, l•ge lilt lng furnished. mult . - 1o 1ppr•
room, 30ft. c:u11om oallldtch• dale, 1-304-678-2911.
ceblnMI. oak Woodovork. finilh
b.. ament. 2 e• g•ag._, 1.. a1 1984 Schultz 14&gt;&lt;. .. 2 .....
' ltndiCIPed lot, 4 m1,. from roOtN. 1'h bait.. 811 eledric;.
Hotztr Hospital off At. 36- nav atr oondurh. ..,~ · Nfr~t­
Portebraok SubdNillon CaM erator, wat• bed end covered
614-4411-4189.
porch in du ded. • 1 :Z.IOO. 00.
S•ious inqui"• ontt 304-8764 BA .• full b•am.,t &amp; 9•119&amp; 3117 aft.- 7 :00PM .
ful~ carpeted (some new).
Pri ced to S8ll. 0.1 114-4480276 eft• 8 PM , weeksu:illl
35lots &amp; Acreage
envtima
3 be&amp;oom t.Jrnilhed. 1 eae Of
moret .. tt t12.000.00. \i: mile
from 4 ,.,. end CenterviUe on
Coun1'f Rd. 8, 614-241&gt;9279.

1 BA . .. 275. Utlthl• paid. C•ll
448-4418aft•7 PM.

plete ldtchan.

2 be*oom mobile homa, qui•
neighborhood, phone 304-871io
1082.

1 411t70 with 7x21 -~do.
phone 304-8711-8141 .

.t. N.w. Ne•HMC.

Mod.-n 1 BR , downtown. com-

•zoo

2 BR. mobla home. Total efec.
Pticed raMonllbl&amp; CIH 8144411-0722.

F..-nlelwd

Colll14-241&gt;1813.

For A.-.t or s.l•2 BA .. mobl•
holM.
par month · or
t3800wlll buy. Coli oflor5PM.
'14-4411-1345.

1988 F... wood. 12x54, bottle
Bevorlv Hlllo, a•
he• Md hot water. •3000.

Of

In Eur.. &amp; 2 8A . Adutt1 onty. No
Petl- t221 1 mo. Dep. required.

2 I r. uftfur•had ltove &amp;
refrlaeretor turn. Fuly carptnd.
UOO mo. • 180 clop. Poy o1
utlitl• •
half Wit•. c.ll
Debllle. S1 4-4411-8110.

t.e&amp; St Michele. Forenu, Bugle

Orglf'llcely Grown. Lud1,. over

Ne• Wlt•loo-2 Br. CIHn.
•1. 215 1 mo. Raf. a dip, Aduttt.
Furnlollod. Cal 8t4-44e. 77154
or 843-2844

priced irom

" -

u ro. CA.,
' · ....,...
room dow nota
dlo'h'MOI. private endoud patio,
prtvete enpool. ~.-ound. Utllftiet
not
loctuclad. st. .log at e21s P•
mo. Col 814-387· 7180.

Apei11T*t11

314 Th~d lt. Kon .. p . Coli
114-4411-7473.

ttwough them .. untl you h•e
• ~ettlpled the ott• me.

Boy, l.oiiL Comp

Mobile Homes
for Rant

..,lng room, Wge yard. See It

llnaw. M'ld NOT to .-td monev

color

Houte for rent. 504 Ead Meln
St. Pom•ov. t14-182·1144.

Land oontMCt. lwge lhflng room

~lildllCirll

21

Homas for Rent

ch*'

~~=.
~:;:.:~"'.':,'=.~
BR fun •-h ~ -·~

hwt~ahlr. dtlpo~~l,
~;?n;:.~j~~~~~~J;;=;.:==:;=:;;::;::-r:;:;:::::;;===::;:::;;;::=:-1
1
1
.

1n d

I 3115 to t9915. Tebl• *150 1nd
up to t121. Hld•e-bedl U80
to t5915. Ractln.. 1221 to
U711. Lornpo 029 to •125.
Dlru111• t109 and up to •4911.
WoDd tebl• w -1 qhllrs 1211 to
t7915. D•k t100 up to 1:1715.
Hutch•· t400 Md Up. BWik
bldl: COmplete w-m.ur. . .
tZSIIOnduptot381. ..b r t110. M.ttr.... orbo• Ping~
full or twin tiS. firm •?a. end
.... Qu- 0280 .. up,
King • 3150. 4 drMw eMit " '·
Oun ceblnlltl I gun. 8111¥
menr...., •• &amp; •41. Bed
frern• t20, .no • Kine frane
I 60. Good ..taction of bedroom
tuftll. m ..el Clblnata, heldbo•ds •30 1nd up to •ee.

The Daily Sentinei- Page...,.9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1

�,..

-

•

Page

10-The Daily s.ttine1

Tueadly, October 25, 1988

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

LOcal news briefs... ---. Snow, :rain~ fog reported throughout. Midwest
Continued from page 1

Free clothing day Thursday
Free Clothing Day will be held at the Salvation Army
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, this Thursday, from 10 a.m . to 1:i
noon. All area residents In need of clothing are welc&lt;ime to
come.

EMS has six calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Monday; Middleport at 2:20a.m. to North Third Ave. for Teresa
Byer to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4:39 a .m. to
Children's Home Road for Mary Francis to Holzer Medical
Center; Syracuse at 8: 43 a.m. to Route 124 for Marte Rizer to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland at 9111 a.m. to Route 143for
Rosie SearleS to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
10:09 a.m. to Village Manor Apts. for Teena Rose to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2: 56 p .m. to West Main St. tor
Shane Randolph who was treated but not transported; Rutland
at 5: 33 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 1lor Errol Conkle to O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.

SIIOW advisory for New York
By United Pre8s International
Cool air watung across the counties bordering Lake . Erie
warm waters of the Great Lakes wher e accumulations of 2 to 4
let II snow early today while Inches were predicted for today.
For ecaster Brian Smith said
'Nor th Carolina turned frosty
overnight and light rl,lln fell on the rain and snow results when
cold air flows across warmer
Nebraska.
The National Weather Service water.
reported "Jake-effect" rain and · ·A snow advisory also was
snow south of the Great Lakes Issued over parts of upper
over nor theast Ohio and western . Michigan.
New York state arid Issued a lake

Light ralnshowers were scat·
tered early today over northeast
Nebraska while light rain and fog
shrouded Maine.
Fog · reduced visibility to an
eighth of a mile at the California
towns of Aracata and Eureka
late Monday.
Smith said an overnight frost
warning was In effect for parts of
North Carolina where the mercury slipped Into the mld-OOs.

Agents arrest two high-ranking _
Mexican policeme-n in drug scheme

about how they had used their
NEW YORK (UP!) -Under·
position as 'comandantes' to help
cover agents who wined and
smuggling and trafficking go on
dined two high-ranking Mexican
In Mexico and how they had
policemen hoping to enter the
down highways and air·
closed
U.S. heroin trade arrested them
Continued from page 1
fields," Stutman said . .
and may have blocked the debut
"They told us they had numerof "black tar" heroin on New
iudge Clarence L. Watt said the
Thkfng up on the analysis by the · York City streets, authorities
ous- airfields to use," 11\e DEA
court furnished thll Perry case three clinical psychologists, Musgrave said.
official said. . "We should not
attorneys, the use of a privale in- said Perry was trapped by the
Pedro Gulllen·Gonzalez, 39, r worty about smuggling the drugs
vt.o;tigator and sustained costs in syndrome and the intermittent was arrested late Saturday with
to New York, and In fact they had
excess of $3,000 in lnlnSporting beatings. "She could not have left a ·s econd Mexican pollee officer,
numerous sources of supply."
defense witness Dr. Lois J. that house any more than an animal Margarita VIllagrana, 42, In a
The Mexicans enjoyed an eleVeronen, a clinical psychologist that is in a cage with bars so thick yearlong sting conducted bY
gant dinner with federal agents
who specializes in resean:h on the you can't see through them."
and were arrested at the Hilton
federal and local law enforce"battered woman syndrome." Dr.
Morgan, asked bis reaction to the ment oftlclals, the Drug EnforceHot'el after they accepted a
W'tlliam Fn:mouw, a clinical verdict, said, "I never argue with a ment Admlnstratlon said $15,000 downpayment for "expsydlolQKisl in Mcrganaown, also jm:y's verdict"
penses," Stutman said.
Monday.
testified for the defense about "batMorgan said the murder trial is
The Mexicans .- pollee com·
tcred woman syndrome."
one of the longt.'lt in Mason County manders In the Mexican state of
Gulllen-Gonzalez also bragged
Prosecllllll' Damon B. Morgan Jr. in recent memory. The 1o.day trial Guerrero - boasted to under- of Investigating the murder of
said a&amp;:r the trial be offered Pmy is matched by a 10-day trial for cover agents that they easily U.S. drug agent Enrique Camar·
the cblnce to plea to involmwy · Kennit Keith Clary in September could bring tons of Mexican · ena, saying the defendants conmlllslauglller - a misdemeanor and October of 1986. Clary was black tar h.eroln toNewYorkand victed so far are "not the people
poni"'-ble by a year in the county · found guilty of invo!unwy reached agreement to Import 50 responsible for the assasslna·
jail. - in the Malch 8, 1987 inc•- manslaugter.
•
kilograms of heroin a month.
lion," authorities said.
dent, but sbe declined the plea bar'IWo other lengthy murder trials
Robert Stulman, the head of
Guillen·Gonzalez quickly grew
gain and the murder case went to in the county include the July- the DEA's New York office, said I(! trust the agents during the
trial.
August 1981 seven-day trial of Mexican black tar heroin Is Investigation and confided to
In bis final argument to the jury Dexter Mays, who was found guilty common everywhere In the Uni- them that he was closely In·
Monday afternoon, Musgrave of first-degree murder with a ted States but New York, which Is volved In the Inquiry Into Camar·
dcsaibed Perry as "a lady who was recommendation of mercy; and, the dominated by Southeast Asian ena's drug·related death In the
in fear, but who loved a man."
nine-day re-trial of John Lewis ·heroin.
province of Guadalajara, Stut· .
Musgrave pulled out for the jury YoWJg in December of 1981 in
"If we had been dope peddlers
man said.
a long-handled knife that the which he received first-degree Instead of pollee officers, there Is
The officer "said he was the
defense said Facmire used to murder. That trial, Morgan recalled, no doubt In my mind we would
first forensic expert on the scene,
threaten Perry with in the middle of also hlld night sessions, unlike the now have black tar heroin In New that he was heavily Involved with
the night in bed, calling it an "ugly- Perry trial.
York,~ · he said.
the Investigation," Stutman said.
;looking" weapon.
Although Mexlcann govern· "He further said that the people
ment ofl!clals said the ,suspects convicted In Los Angeles were
are not high· ranking officers but lower-level people and not the
_c_o_n_u_nu_ed_fr_om_
._p:..a.:g:...e_1_ _ _ _ _ __
merely adventurers, . the DEA people respon~lble for the assas·
said the men boasted about their slnatlon ol Camarena."
closing now, getting tighter. I travel halfway around the world rank.
· Three men were convicted In
think a lot of people In this while the truth Is stU! putting on
"The pollee officers bragged California last month In the
country are unhappy about the Its slices. Mr. Bush must have
read Mark Twain."
campaign generally."
'
The Los Angeles Times pubBush spent Monday In three
lished a poll today showing the
states not solidly for either
Democratic presidential ticket
candidate- Vermont and two of
running 11 points behind the
his adopted home s).ates, Connec·
Republican ticket In the state.
tlcut and Maine. Responding to
The poll of 1,37611kely voters In
the new charges that his adver·
company was playing one state
California. taken from Thursday
By LEE· LEONARD
tlsements have ·smeared Duka·
off against another In terms of
to Sunday, showed Bush leading
UPI Stateho111e Reporter
kts with deliberate cllstortlons,
Dukakls 53 percent to 42 percent
COLUMBUS - The Celeste tax breaks and other t!nanclal
Bush told a crowd In Waterbury,
In California. Four percent oflhe administration Is trying to put an Incentives.
Conn., "I stand 100 percent voters were undecided, and the
"They had no Intention of
behind those ads. These ads have remaining 1 percent planned to end to "bidding wars" In which coming to Ohio, " said Baker.
Midwest states fight each other
been on the air for a long, long
vote lor other candidates, ac- for expanding Industries and "They were using Ohio's offer to
time."
cording to the poll with a margin companies try to blackmail them raise the ante ln Indiana."
The allegations, he declared,
of error ol plus or minus 4 for large t!nandal lncentlvesto
Working through the Great
are "absolutely ridiculous" and
percentage points.
Lakes
Governors' Association
locate outlets there.
" people see this for what It Is, a
Dukakls's running mate,
and
the
Midwest Governors'
· Gov. Richard Celeste and the
campaign tactic (of) despera·
Texas Sen. Uoyd Bentsen, Ohio Department of Develop- Association, of which he Is
tlon." He vowed, "We are not
agreed at a news conference ment are pursuing what they call chairman, Celeste Is trying to get
going to let up. We are not going
Monday In Grana Rapids, Mich., a "multl·state cooperation other states to tell each other
to be deterred by the negative
that Republicans have appealed agreeme~t." In which the states when ,they are approached by. an
attack."
to ''some of the worst Instincts In report to each other about Industry, and If they are tnterDukakts "Is upset not because
people"- but he stressed that he negotiations with expanding es ted. The financial packages
it's false but because he Is weak
had not raised the Issue ol racism Industries.
offered by each state would
on crime and defense and that's
personally.
"We want to compete vigor- remain confidential.
the Inescapable truth," Bush
On ABC's "This Week ·with ously for jobs, but we don't want
Baker said· that way, If a
concluded.
David Brinkley" Sunday morn· to put ourselves through any company tells his agency It Is
Dukakls has accused his oppcr
lng, Bentsen said, "I was asked
more bidding wars." said devel· looking at Michigan as a possible
nent of lying In several ways,
about it. I said I thought (the opment director David Baker In site, and will go there unless Ohio
particularly In two ads that
racism charge) was true .. . but I a recen I Interview.
ups Its ante, Ohio can check out
critiCize his stance on military
didn' t raise it. You shouldn't win
the
reliability of that claim.
Baker recalled the negotla·
matters and domes tic crime ''The
objective Is to save Ohio
an election that way ."
lions for General Motors' $3.5
the latter point with regard to the
In suburban St. Louis, Bush's billion Saturn auto plant several taxpayers money," said Baker.
Massachuse\ts prison furlough
running mate, Indiana Sen. Dan years ago, In which "every
The director said Mldwes t
program.
Quayle, Ignored the question of governor was beating a path to states alrl)ady have Informally
He has not Involved himself
who raised the Issue and ripped Detroit to meet with GM ofll· agreed not to raid each other for
directly In Democratic charges
Into Bentsen as an example of an clals." Ohio, anp 'the Midwest, existing companies.
of racism, which center on
"Maturity has set ln." he said.
"absolute desperate campaign lost that war to Tennessee.
Bush' s highlighting of the case of
that Is folding and falling Into the
"All the football-type cheerlead·
black convict Willie Horton, who
Baker said early In 1987, lng of the 1900s and '70s Is gone.''
night."
on a weekend furlough granted
Celeste ordered Ohio to drop out
For Saturn·type proposals,
under the Masssachusetts proof the bidding for a New Core Baker said, Ohio wants to com·
Wilt
to
speak
gram raped a white Maryland
Steel Co. facility adding 100to200 munlcate with other Mldwes t or
woman and stabbed her
The Rev. Art Wilt, pastor of the jobs when II became evident the Great Lakes states so It can
boyfriend.
Cornerstone Church In VIenna,
make the strongest possible
Nevertheless, at a rally In
Sorority to meet
W.Va., willbespeakeratrevlval
pitch.
· ,
downtown Los Angeles Monday,
services to be held Thursday
"We want to pool our knowlDukakls continued to blast Bush
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter edge and figure out what's the
through Oct. 30 at the Reedsville
for "distortions and distractions
of
Beta Sigma ·P hi Sorolty will best fol' all of us," he said.
United Methodist Church at 7:30
and outright lies."
meet
Thursday, 7:30 p.m ., at ,
each evening.
"We' re not going to let him get
Grace Episcopal Church In New players .welcome
away with It," he vowed. "Mark
Pomeroy.
Twain once said that a lie can To meet Thursday
Attention bridge lovers! Are
Plan
Christmas
auction
you aware there's a duplicate
Members of the Riverview
bridge game every Thursday
Garden Club will meet at 6:30
Syracuse Volunteer Fire De- evening, at 6:30p.m. , In Athens?
p.m . Thursday at Sebastian's
partment Is sponsoring a Christ· New players are welcome. For
Res tau rant In Parkersburg
Continued from page 1
mas
auction on Nov. 5, at 7 p.m ., further Information, call William
where they will hold a dinner.
with
auctioneer Dan Smlt!t
Harmon at 592-1560.
village limits, the mayor said. ·
Attending the meeting were Group to meet
Mayor Holtman, Clerk-Treas·
urer Jon Buck and Councilmen
The Women's Fellowship ol
Jack Satterfield, William Wal· Meigs County Churches of Christ ·
ters, Bob Gilmore, James Clat· will meet at the Rutland Church
worthy and Dewey Horton.
of Christ at 7:30p.m. Thu~ay.

Norrna Jean...

Dukakis....

Celeste trys to put an
end to 'bidding -wars'

February 1985 abduction, torture
and murder ot Camarena and his
, pilot, Alfredo Zavala Avelar.
Only three are In U.S. custody
and are awaiting sentencing. The
others are In Mexican custody or
dead.
Gulllen-Gonzalez confided that
Cama~:ena's killers had botched
their coverup ol evidence, Slut·
man said.
"He said, I think thequote·was ,
'The problem was that the guys
who ordered the assassination
didn' t knock out and dispose of
Camarena's teeth," ' Stutman
said, noting that the federal
agent's .teeth were used to
Identify his body.
The officer divulged to the
agents the name of a person
whom he believed ordered the
killing, but federal investigators
already had obtained the same
Information, Stutman said.
Nearly one year ago, local
Investigators learned that the
Mexican officers had been In·
volved In heroin dis trlbu tlon In
the United States and assigned
undercover agents to make con·
tact with them.

Danre slated
Pomeroy Senior Citizens are
sponsoring a square dance on
Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m., a~ the
senior center on Mulberry
Heights. Admission $1.50. Music
by True Country. Halloween
dress, If desired. Bring snacks.
Everyone welcome.

Plan Halloween event
The sixth grade class ot Racine
Elementary Schoo! IS sponsoring
a haunted house on Saturday,
from 6: 30 to 9 p.m., at the school.
Admission Is 75 cents for students
and $1 fpr adults. Refreshments
will be served.

William l)odson
William E . Dodson, 81, Toledo,
died Thursday at his residence.
He was a retired truck driver
for the R. A. Trucking Co. He was
a son of the late Walter and Ella
Borham Dodson.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Margaret June Hepps of Arizona
and tlve l!l'andchlldren.
~~ .,.

.

..

.. . . ..

~

\,

-

r

.

"SPEAKERS"

SPONSOIED BY THE MPGS COUm

'

•.

Dally atock prices
(Ali of 11:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, EIIIB lo Loewl

•.
•.;

•·

Am Electric Power ............. 27Y&amp;·
AT&amp;T .. .... ........ , ....... .. ,.... :... 27%~
Ashland 011 ..... .... .... .. .. .. .....36'JF
Bob Evans ......... .................16\1.. ·
Charming Shoppes .. ........... .15~t
City Holding Co .. .... ............. 3• ..
Federal Mogul.. ............ .... .. 49\4 ·
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... .............51% :
Heck's .............. ... ....... ...... ... '% :
Key Centurion .............. ......16% ·
Lands' End ............ ............. 26~'
Limited Inc .... ............ ........ 24% ·
Multimedia Inc .................... 71 ·
Rax Restaurants .... .. .. ......... . 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ........... 13
Shoney' s Inc .. .. .. ......... .......... .8
Wendy's lntl .. ...... ........ ........ 6',4.
Worthington lnd ... ,........ .... .21 ~ ·

Hospital news
Velerans Memorial
,
Monday Admissions - Rosie
Searles, Pomeroy; Teena Rose,'
Middleport; Mary Madden, Mid·
dleport; Hugh Thompson, Langs·
ville; Allen Lowery, Syracuse;
Kenneth Payne, Pomeroy; Ken··
neth Hartley, Pomeroy.
Monday Discharges - Walter
Haggy, Homer Radford, Charles
Blake, James Kelly.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
(FOIIIEILY VIllAGE PIAIMACYI
STOlE HOUIS: MGn..Fri. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.; Satw•y 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
271 IIOnH SECOND
992-6669
IIIHLIPOIT, 01110

SUPER C.D.

.,

122 DAYS CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

•

·: '10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT

.PEOPLES

BANK

"The Better Bank"
Second Strltl
lllson, W. ¥1.
nl·5514

I

of

Daily Number
178
Pick 4

the Year

8991

7

· ~---

Clear, co ld tonight. Lo w In
30s. Thursd ay, sunny, ni Ud.
Highs In mid 60s.

•

2212 J1cklo1 A'ltiiUtl
·Point Plllllfll, W. VI;

&amp;75-1121

5th Street

11ft Hmll.

w. v•.

112·2135

.
Simple Interest • Substantial Penalty For Early Whhdrewal
\

MEMBER FDIC

2 Section•. 16 Pa ges

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October ·26, 1988

Vol.39, No. 120
Copyrighted 1988

JYation's economy
iS ·slowing dmvn
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
nation's economy slammed on
the brakes in the third quarter
with total economic growth dropping to an annual 2.2 percent
because of slower exports and
drought losses, the Commerce
Department said today.
Real gross national product,
the nation's total output of goods
and services, Increased $22.1
billion In the third quarter, a 2.2
percent annual Increase that was
the lowest since a 1.4 percent
Increase In the fourth quarter of
1986, the department said.
Most economists had predicted
tHe advance report would show
the economic growth curve began to flatten out during the third
quarter, but not so abruptly.
The forecasts called lor In·
creases between 2.5 percent and
3.2 percent after jumps of 3.4
percent and 3 percent In the first
and second quarters,
respectively.
Robert Ortner, Commerce
under secretary for economic
affairs, said the report Indicated
tbe economy was "doing very
well" and should relieve fears of
runaway Inflation caused by an·
overheated economy.
"Now there will be some fears
the economy Is underheating, "
Ortner said. "That fear as well
would be premature."
He predicted the economy
would grow more quickly In the
fourth quarter, as ImportS level
oft and exports and capital
spenrjtng plc)l \Ill· . , , · ,
Jnfiatto·n also licked ~own a
notch In the third quarter, the
department's Bureau ol Economic Analysis said. The deflator, which measures the composition of GNP as well as price
changes, fell from 5.5 percent to

26 Centt

A Multimedia Inc. Newapepfn

Ground broken for
,
·Meigs County ·library Tuesday

4.4 percent.
Lawrence Chlmerlne, chief
economist lor the WEFA Group
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
of forecaster s In Bala Cynwyd,
Sentinel News Staff
Pa., was one of those predicting a
G~oundl!reaklng
ceremonies
3 percent growth rate during the
fer
the
new
Meigs
County Ll·
July·to-September period.
brary
building
on
West
Main
" If we' re right, that will be the
Street
In
Pomeroy
,
an
overall
biggest number· we're going to
renovation and construction proget for quite some time," Chlmeject of more than $400,000, were
rlne said Tuesday . "It doesn't
held Tuesday.
tully reflect how much ol ·a
Pat Holter, library board pres!·
slowdown we're starling to see In
dent,
Don Mullen, and Wanda
the economy."
.
Eblin,
the building committee
The adminiStration set a mod·
members,
turned the first sho·
est 3 percent overall rate for the
velsful
of
dirt for the new
entire year, which means GNP
construction which will more
would have to grow 3.4 percent In
the fourth quarter to meet the than triple the space ol the
current 25 x 50 foot buDding
goal, the department said.
Next year, the administration purchased last spring from Bank
and most economists expect even One for $150,000.
Rodney D. Rogers, president of
slower growth.
R.
D. Rogers, Inc., Columbus,
Losses In . crop and livestock
general
contractor, announced
output from this year's drought
that
construction
would begin
reduced lhlrd·quarter GNP by
today
(Wednesday)
and assured
about 0.6 percentage point and
thai.
the
project
would
be com·
reduced the second-quarter In·
pleted
on
time
and
within
budget.
crease by about 0.9 percentage
The
overall
project
Is
scheduled
point. the bureau said.
Drought losses lor the entire for completion In May.
Also speaking briefly at the
year are expected to total $13
groundbreaklng
was Raymond
· billion In constant 1982 dollars ,
Proffitt, president of Great Bend
the bureau said.
Real net exports, which had Electric, Racine , the electrical
spurred economic growth earlier contractor. The plumbing conthis year, dipped $2.3 billion ln tra~tor Is C. &amp; C. Plumbing,
the third quarter after an In- Charles Conrath. ·
Charles E . Blakeslee, long.
crease ol $16.4 bllllon In the
ttme
member of the library
second. While actual exports
board,
Introduced other
Increased, rapidly rising Imports
members
Including Holter, Pat
resulted In the net loss.
Mills,
vice
president; Mary Kay
The federal government also
Yost,
secretary;
Mullen and
pumped $5.5 blllfon less money
Eblin,
building
committee
Into the economy In the third
members,
and
Theodore
Reed.
quarter, .after a $3.8 billion
Also
Introduced
were
Ruth
Increase In the second, clipping
Powers,
librarian;
Agnes
Dixon,
GNP, the bureau said. State and
local governments spending library staff; Bill Wickline,
county auditor; Carson Crow,
Continued on page 12
, attorney for the library board;
William A. Nease, manger ol
Bank One, ·Pomeroy, who assisted In negotiating the sale of
the building to the board for 25
percent under market value; and
neighbors to the site, Dr .. Hugh
Davis and Mr. and Mrs . Leonard
Jewell.
coach.
Mrs. Holter gave a resume of
-Approved on first reading a
funding ·for libraries from 1880
new policy on Educational
when each township had Its own.
Options.
She said that before 1935, llbrar·
· -Accepted two students as
ies were financed by special
tuition students.
endowments from the county,
-Approved an activity fund
state and Individuals, and from
budget for the newly formed 1935 to. 1986 they were financed
Chester Elementary School Stu· with Intangible taxes.
dent Council Organization.
She explained that In 1984 the
-Approved several amended state did away with Intangible
appropriations, appropr iation taxes and like many other states,
mod~flcatlons and
budge! designated a percentage ol the
modifications.
income tax for library operation.
-Met in executive session on In Ohio that figure is 6.3 percent
matters related to personnel and of the Income tax. A supplemen·
the upcoming levy.
tal fund was also set up to help
In attendance were Jim Smith, smaller county libraries come up
president; Kathy Manleke, vice to the standards of service of the
president; and members Susie larger metropolitan libarles .
Heines and Ray Karr.
It Is with that funding, Mrs.
The board set Monday, Nov. 21, Holter explained that the Meigs
at 7p.m., as the date and time for Library Board has been able to
the regular November meeting. advance to today 's stage.
·
The meeting will be held in the
She talked about the commit·
high school cafeteria.
tee's search for a suitable site out
of the flood area. Renovating the
library building on Second Street
was ruled out due to lnsufllclent
expansion space. "We had to do
something with the IT)Oney now
rather than perhaps Jose It," she
commented.
-Approved Portland Elemen·
The total project budget (In·
tary teacher Patty Struble for an
eluding
the cost of the standing
additional 80 hours employment
'structure)
Is '$650,000, Mrs. Hoi·
to IdentifY talented and gllled
ter
said.
students In all grades in the
Mrs. Powers talked on future
district. as required by stale
plans
for the library, noting that
standards.
there
will be space for 50,000
-Approved junior high janitor
volumes,
a county bookmobile, a
Bernie Salser to work an addi·
meeting room sutllclent to ac·
tlonal one-half hour per day .
comodate
200·300 people where
- Approved a new organlza·
children
and
adult programs will
tlon, the Coa)ltlon of Rural and
be
offered.
Appalachian Schools, to assist
Plans call for a 20 toot
school districts of Southeastern
extension
on the tront of ~he
Ohio In lobbying activities with
bull&lt;llng
with
the current archigovernment offlcals and legisla·
tectural
design
to be retained. On
tlve bodies, especially the Ohio
the
east
side
of
the
building there
General Assembly and Gover·
will
be
a
20
foot
extension
running
nor's office. Currently, 70 school
the
full
length
of
the
building
districts from Southeastern Ohio
participate In the Coalition 111 a which wlll be 74 feet, while on the
cost of $250 each. The Idea behind west side there will be a 22 x 21
the Coalition Is that by combining foot extension.
The main entrance to the
numbers and resources, the
building
will be on the west side
Coalition can be a political force
equal to some of the larger clUes although there wlll be entrances
in the state , and thus have a say at both the front and rear ot the
main floor. The entrance to the
In future educational bills.
Continued on page 12

OROUNDBREAKING CEREMONIES - Doni.

Muilen, Wanda Eblin, ,aad Pat Holter, buDding
co~lttee lor lbe Melp l;mrary Board, turn the

lll'llt shovels tun of dirt at Tuesday's groondbreaklllglor the new library buDding on West Mala St.,
Pomer~.
"·
.

Easter11 Local 8Qard
seeking more· funds

OIDEIS MUST IE PHONID II IEFOII 3 P.II.
•s.OO"IINIMIIM PUICHASI ON PIISCMPnONS PLUS '
. HIAL111 AND aam AIDS.

FREE DINNER
SDVING WIU IIGIII PIOMPILY
AT 6:00P.M. AND COIIIItUI THIU 7:00 PJI.

Stocks

MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSYIW,
RUTLAND, SYR.ACUSE, MASON, W.VA.

SENIOI CmZENS CENTEI
POMEROY, OHIO

BesideS his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Frances Dodson In 1977. Hew as a
member of the Church of Christ
in Toledo.
Burial win be at 10 a .m .
Thursday In Gravel Hill Cemetery In Cheshire. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home
anytime after 2 p.m. Wednesday.

Soudl Central Ohio
Mostly clear, with a low In the
mid 30s. Winds west 10 to 15 mph.
Wednesday: Mostly sunny,
with highs near 50. ·
Extended Forecaat
Thul'lldlQI thrOUih SlliiU'day
Fair Thursday, with a chance':
of showers Friday and Saturday:.
Highs will be In the mid 40s or In
In the 50s. Early morning lows
will be near 30 Thursday and
between 35 and 45 Friday and&lt;
Saturday.
: ·

TO THESE AUAS

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1988

Man~ger

Weather

"FREE DELIVERY"

REPUBLICAN RALLY

. Area deaths

Overnight temperatures hovered In the 20s and OOs across the
Plains, the 60s and 70s along the
Gulf Coast and In the 40s and 50s
t hroughout most of the rest of the
·
nation.
Smith predicted snow showers
over Michigan througoout the
day today and rain over northern
New England and the '
Appalachians.
A cold front trekked through
the Pacific Northwest, promls. lng scattered rain over Washing·
ton and parts of Oregon today.

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE *

.Middleport. .•

Ohio Lottery

IaRussa AL

I

I

Eastern Local Board of Education, meeting Monday evening In
regular session, conducted the
following Items of business.
-Passed a resolution seeking
additional educational funding
assistance from the State of Ohio
and directed Superintendent Dan
Apllng to send the application
directly to the state legislature
and the governor.
-Employed Judith Young
Browning as a substitute
teacher, to be used on an as
needed basis only, for the
1988-89 school year only.
-Employed Charles Riley as
head boys basketball coach;
George Gaga! as head girls
basketball coach; Don Elchlng·
teras junior high boys basketball
coach; and Bob Lang as junior
high girls basketball coach. The
district Is still seeking an add!·
tlonal assjstant boys basketball

MOCK- UP-This arcbllectural mockup shows
what the new Meigs County Library will look like
once the exlsllng structure has· been renovated
and the addlllo118 on tbe front and both sides

completed. Coll8tructlon was scheduled to begin
today and the completion dale lor the more than
$400,000 project Is May.

Southern Board approves
substitutes; OKs resignation
Southern Board of Education
conducted the following business
matters when they met Monday
night in regular session.
-Approved MichaelS Miller,
Carla R. Holley, Ricky D. Ed·
wards and Margaret Amberger
as substitute teachers.
-Accepted Tony Deem's· re·
slgnatlon , as girls junior high
basketball coach.
·
-Approved · a contract between the Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation-Developmental Disabilities to provide
specialized services on a weekly
basis for a handicapped Southern
Dis trlcl resident who attends
classes at Carleton School.
-Approved a job description
for tile position of teaching
prillctpal, as required by state
minimum standards, since
Southern no longer employs a
supervising principal at the
elementary school level.
-Employed Dennie Hill as
treasurer on a four-year
contract.

EXISTING BUILDING - This structure on
West Main St., Pomeroy, wlill purehased from
Bank One for $1110,000 last sprlnr; by lbe Melp
'r

.I

·r

;

Uhrary Board. It will he renovated and
Incorporated Into the new library building.

'r

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