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.

•

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'
· Pomeroy-M~hpport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

limes-Sentinel

- - --

\

..•.

Octot* 2. 1988

Be~gals

Phlbulf'IPN• 't, Ml;nlrnll

Majors

NI"A' York.&amp;. St, Loum ~

Cl.Jirhu•H 8. Ailula 1

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1988 FORD RANGER

A FEW LEFT WITH·
A LOT TO OFFER

r..

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Up pH' ArllllJlon U. Wonlllnllon U
Up~r S1U1du11iq It, Shelhy 0
UrhllM !3, Sl PIU'IM Gnth tu'h 0
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Vermilion !1, IAflll n SouiiWIPW 7
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Patal Valley !7, Pllll'lon U
PMdGFII-GIIt.a II, ,\r.,.dht li
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P~M~Idlal(

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'

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MODEL YEAR-END CLOSEOUT

$26630'0

SAVE UP TO

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Wachworth 1-1, RMif"f(' 0
W•n• K•anedy
St rutht'r .. ;
¥1' U'ft'll \ll11n He. M, Or .John H11y '
Yf1111hlnjpon C;H II, Gl'f'f'llarld 0

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'

RIO GRANDE- The schedule
of activities at Lyne Center for
the coming week is listed as
follows:

~hedule

recreation

Pool schedule
Sunday- ! -3 p.m .. open swim:
6-8 p.m .. college swim
Gym schedule
Monday - ~-8 p.m., college
Sunday - 1·3 p.m. . open swim
r--1
recreation: 6-8 p.m., college
Tuesday - 6-8 p.m., college
recreation
~m
·
Monday - 6-8 p.m., college
Wednesday- 6-8 p.m .. college
recreation
swim
Tuesday - 6-8 p.m., co llege
Thursday - 6-8 p.m ., college
recreatiOn
swim
Wednesday- 6-8 p.m .. college
Friday - CLOSED
recreation
Saturday - CLOSED
Thursday- 6-8 p.m ., college,
Sunday,Oct.9-1 -3p.m.,open
recreation
swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
Friday
CLOSED FOR
Hollie athletic events
HEALTH FAIR
Saturday - CLOSED FOR.
&lt;J:uesday - Baseball vs. Mar,
shall, 2 p.m.
COACHING CLINIC
Sunday, Oct. 9 -1·3p.m . . open
Saturday - Soccer vs. Blufrecreation; . 6-8 p.m. ~":lege fton, 2 p.m.

REVIVAL

LOADED
FLORIDA CAR

1986 OLDS CUTLASS
2 DOOR ·
•

1987 MUSTANG LX

NICE!

By RICH EXNER

198'8 TEMPOS - 4 DOORS

1984 F2 50 4x4
FORD

1986 RANGER
. FORD

FOlD FACTORY SAU CARS

460 engine
4 speed

RUTLAND

V-6, auto. trans.

,

7:00 P.M. Each Evening

1985 JEEP

$8995°0
s,e Rlek Tolllfer, Jay Hill or Pat Hill

· GRANDMASTER
WAGONEER

"

Elmer Geiser - Pastor, Fellowship Chapel, Vinton
~eland Alman- Pastor, Christiallllnion Church, Gallipolis
John Wood - Pastor, French City laptist Church, Gallipolis
lob Colvin - Pastor, Good Ntws laptist Church, Gallipolis
Poul Voss - Pastor, Church of God,' Gallipolis
Robert Mussman-Former Pastor, Rutlaml
•
Methodist Church
Pearl Casto - Retired Methodist Pastor
·~ ,, ..
•• Richard Vinson - Pastor, Uttle Kyger Congregational
Church,' lcklison
• '
Alfred Holley - Pastor; E6zabeth Chapel Church, Gallipolis
Jim Randas -)astor, lighthouse Tabtrncxle, GalliJIOiiS
Marvin Hocker ;_ Pastor, Chur(h of Gad, Rodney
Marvin Sallee - Pastor, Vinton lapfist Church
John Evans - Pastor, Church of God, lutlaM

PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

SPECIAL :\H:SJC EACH NIGHT

•·

A Racine youth was ciled in a two,car accident Saturday at
7:18 p.m. in Sutton Township on S.R. 124, near Syracuse,
according to the Gail!a-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Angie Hill, 17, was cited for not maintaining assured clear
distance after her 1985 Ford Escort rear-ended a 1983 Toyota
Corolla driven by Christine Ash, 1:1, of Racine. Ash and Hill were
driving we~t when Ash stopped to make a left turn before t_h e
collision. ·
Hill, Ash, and A'sh 's passengers - Brenda Zirkle, 16; Amy
Wolfe, 16; and Kathy Ihle. 17, ail of Racine- were taken by the
Meigs County EMS· to Veterans Memorial Hospitf1L No
evidence of injuries were found, and all were released.

· Your Complete Exhaust
Service Center
CALL TODAY AND ASK_(OR
PAUL HOOD . ·•

•

Pat Hill .Ford Inc.
461 S. 3rd

992·2,196

Middleport,

quartered In Cincinnati. the
largest publicly held company in
Ohio in 1987; has offered shareholders a special $48·a;share
•dividend and other incentives not'
to sell their stock.
Kohlberg, J{ravis, Roberts &amp;'
Co .. has offered $58.50 a share for
Kroger. The first bid, a $55-ashare offer from the Dart Group
Corp. was made Sept. 20.
Lamson &amp; Sessions, an indus·
trial products .firm from Beachwoad. led the gainers in the third
quar.ter with a 77.6 percent
increase from $10.63 June 30 to
$18.88 Sept. 30.
Forest City Enterprises, a real
estate firm In Clevela nd , showed
a 24.1 percent increase from
$34.25 to $42.50. Banner Industries , a Cleveland · industrial
products company, showed an
18.2 percent' increase from $22.63
to $26.88. And Mead, a paper
•

• d •
id
R. acine yout h cLte
tn ace ent

'

'

United Press International
Stoc.ks of Ohio interest experienced a general iy poor trading·
period In the third quarter, with
losers oumumbering gainers by
a 2-to-1 margin . .
. Twenty -six stocks showel,l
gains and 53 stocks sl!owed losses·
in a survey of 82 issues of Ohio
interest for the three-month
period ended Friday .
The trailing values of stocks for
three firms - Armco, Fa bri·
Centers and Society Bank were unchanged from Sept. 30 to
,June 30. .
·
I The Kroger Co., which late last
month turned back two hostile
takeover attempts infavor of its
own plan, showed the secpndlargest increase. closing Friday
at $56.63, up 58.1 percent from
$35.75 .June 30.
The supermarket firm head•

'· ·
manufactul cr in Dayton, showed
. an 18.2 percent increase from
$36.50 to $43.13 in the quarter.
The biggest loss among the
firms s urveyed, excluding companies splitting their stock, was
30 .5 percent for Sudbury, a
Cleveland Industrial products
firm . Its stock closed FridaY at
$6 .13, down from $7.38 June 30.
Other losers included the Ak·
ron computer firm of Telxon,
down 29.2 percent from $22.25 to
$15.75; the diversified LTV Corp.
of Dallas, down 26 percent from
$3.38 to $2.50; and the.diversified
Parker-Hannifin Corp. of Cleveland, down 21 ..2 percent (rom
$36.35 to $28.63.
Much of the fall for LTV. which
includes the LTV Steel Co. of
Cleveland, carrie Sept. 16 in
apparent · response to a Wall
Street Journal report that the
firm Intended to seek bankruptcy
court approval to pay its credl·

---Area news briefs----. ~'::r;$1ao':~~ge

.

PREACHING WILL BE BY THE FOLLOWING:

Caaaveral, Fla. Pllot Dick Covey (seco••d
left) gives a "thumbs up" as he and fellow
members George "Pinky" Nelson, Mike Lo11nge
and Commander Rick Hauck pose lor the UP!
cameras.

,
/
f
•
h
•
d
Oh·io stock s suJJ er· tn .-t ·z,r. quarter

Sunroof, 5 speed.
11 ,000 miles.

V-8. air, tilt, cruise, cassette.

DUE BACK TODAY -Discovery's astronauts
completed their lour-day mission today and
packed up lor a fiery glide hack to Earth. Above,
In photo taken last week, crew members leave the
headquarters bulldlng lor the shuttle at Cape

' '

6 cylinder
4 speed

SEPT. 26-30 Al CHURCH Of GOD
GAWPOLIS

1985 LINCOLN,
TOWN CAR

·1980 F150 4x4
FORD

TWO
WEEKS

OCT. 1-0CT. 8 AT GOOD NEWS BAPTIST CHURCH

on the bill to keep the Turnpike
sian decided to refinance the
Commission and another one
remaining ·$4.8 million worth of
may be held this week in the Ohio
debt, saying the federal governHouse Transportation and Urban
ment was not cooperating with
the conversion.
Affairs Committee.
When the turnpike opened in
Still. the tolls were to come of!
in 1992.
1954, the $326 million worth of
construction bonds were to be
"The whole thing fell
retired in 1992 and the tolls were
through," said Allan Johnson,
to be removed under an ironclad
executivt! director of the Turnagreement enforct)d by the,orlgl·
pike Commission , when asked
nal commission chairman,
why the commission reversed its
James Shocknessy, now
field . "It doesn't make sense anv
more to take tlle tolls of! the
de.;eased.
- .
Ten years ago, it appeared the
turnpike.' '
bonds would be retired by 1981,
Johnson. who earns $78,653 a
and plans were made to convert
year, testified in committee for .
the turnpike into a toll -free
the bill keeping the commission
interstate highway . However.
and the tolls, He said a "subs tan ·
aoouC$600 million W;!S required
to upgrade-- the bridges and - Hal ma-jo~ity.::_.&lt;lLusers want the ~~-1-­
guardrails, add interchanges
tolls kept on, and added " the
and remove service plazas.
public has said we are doing a
In 1984, the Turnpike Commis· good job."

Quayle, Bentsen debate·Wednesday

\\'utllt'On31, Byran o

Rio Grande's Lyne· Center

.

.

W.lllkinll Mt'mHiai3S. Gruvlh•19

Pym•ta-'nl Vlll ~1 . F~~t.lrporl Ul

WEEKS

· 1989 AEROSTAR

1989 F-SERIES 4x2 .&amp; 4x4

To[ ( 'f'nlnll 41, To I WDoth~~o•• l'd 0
To I Df'VIIJitu' Ill, Sylun ill Norih\' ll'W 0
Tol Uhhtoy !$, OtU.wa Hill!! 14
Tel Not Fr!lnd~ 11. Tol RolfLl!rM6
Trl-C••ftl)' N IS, Mltilllssllllu\'a i 12ut I
Trlmhlto S8, Flfdentl Hockin!( U
Trotwood t!, C1~mo111 No~mo• 7
Troy U, Grt"f'ftvllk' 1.&amp;
1\I~«·~~Nwall Clllh !l,ln!IMn Vid ti
Tu•·~~~w•r~t~o~ Vul .1J, TaMI.IIt.w n
Uhrlchlowt f'hcymonl
" 'oQfilt'r Tr~
WilY 1

P.U~~e~~ HIII'WY 38, ~hi Harbor i
Pailll'l'l HI'Yrr!lldll' Iii, ,lfotfll'f'~~~Gn 7

TWO

By LEE LEONARD .
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- The 34-year old
Ohio Turnpike is up for grabs in
four years, and two opposing
sides already are making a play
for it.
One side wants to keep the tolls
on the turnpike, retain the Ohio
Turnpike Commission to manage
the road and possibly extend' the
scope of the commission to
finance other transportation
projects.. .,.~
·
The other faction wants to
aboUsh the commission, bring
the 241-mlle east-west corridor
- -undPr the._jf!JisQiction of the Ohio
Department of ·Transportation._
like all other state highways, and
eventually eliminate the tolls.
There is legislation In the Ohio
General Assembly to accomplish
each goaL Hearings have begun

''

Tlnora 7, EdonB (~oo
11pp{11)· lloPtht'l Ill. Twin Vlli S 6

N•rwood 11, M'tt"ll• 0

26 Cents

cant compared to the resumption , "we can say at long last to Dick,
of the nation's manned space Mike and Judy , to Ron and Eland
program after a 2 ~-year hiatus . Christa -and Greg: Dear friends,
Readying Discovery for its we have resumed the journey
descent, Hauck and company that we promised to continue for
took time out Sunday to read an · you .
"Dear friends , your loss has
emotional tribute to the seven
astronauts who died Jan. 28 ,1986, meant that we could confidently
begin anew . Dear friends, your
in the Challenger disaster.
Killed on that cold, bitter day spirit and your dream are still
were commander Francis alive in our hearts."
In keeping with 'the conserva"Dick" Scobee, co-pilot Michael
Smith, Judith Resnik. Ellison tive, flight -test philosophy of the
Onizuka, Ronald McNair, civ- 26th shuttle mission, Discovery 's
ilian satellite engineer Gregory crew faced a relatively light
Jarvis and New Hampshire schedule throughout the four -day
school teacher Christa flight , operating 11 largely automatic experiments, taking pic,
McAuliffe.
' 'Today , up here where the blue tures or Earth and checking out ·
Continued on page 12
sky turns to black." Hauck read,

'

~~~

l&gt;ill'f'lillhoro ~. MMnl• Cr~wOod II
Sw~tnlen Ill, Evt•rl(rHn 1::1
Syrwnort' 36, Glt'n Elilf' It
SymmeM V itlley U, Rf•f"dt;YIIIf' EAii~r n

Ollk Harbor !tit, SIUitDilcy Pf'r li•!!to II
Oak Hill 30, HlUI•n TntrC H
Orall!lll' %11, Tw inlftal'l I~
0rll'lOaCia,y U, Tal " '.111.111' D
Orntllr tl.. fo•r•try 0
&lt;H~ao 1!1. Noru,..ooi e
thford Tal~~t.wtuu•ll. TrPnl EdKeM'ood

12 Pagea

A Multimedia InC. "fewspaper

Two factions are 'fighting
over· future of 'O hio Turnpike

Sll'tllihUJ'It %0, Srtrtnl( ll

Nortll Ohnliled 1-1 , 1\vn Lllk(' It
Nortb Hti)'IIIICMI1. BruMWidt6
s ... way .. !t. Shw,..vUh• (P~~t.l tl

,,

1989. ESCORTS

MaryM lU, ottaw• GI~Utdorf II
l'iletlhf'n\'111£' 8. Bourdm~tn i
Stow 1-1, Ravennt.l't

Norl:ll C.a11 Hoowr Ill, Lo11~"lll~ i
Can Glt'nO•k 3:1, Nrw Phlla 6
North C.oiiPIII" Hill I':!, Lovrl1111d 7
Norlll Gtdllll U. Rtu•lnl' Soulhf'rn 6

Nor~R&amp;~n4y

1989 TEMPO

~

Nur~

Pwm111

91

It 103

Hillman 2'0, Hllhcblco 1
RI\'Pr V.llt.l 1:1. Muton Plt'lllllollll 10

N-· IA'wlnKtM 7, rrook.~"lllt• 3 •
Nf'W 1An4on 311. Nor-Ill St faulll
Nt•w Mhmll2, fin l'ou.try Dit,v 7
N('wt•omrrMiown 3-1, Burkey(' 'l'rllll II
Nordoftia II, Taiiiiiiiiiii(P 0

•

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~wo.JIIon PPrry tl. nr Mu.a11.11 0
Massillon .Jurlu4on 7, C~nton S 8
M~Rtold 1!, Elltotlllk1• Norlh Ill
M~ ."Yillf' II, b'IPWir.n Trl-Vlllll•,, · i
ML&lt;Mntt 2!, Ulnty Bt"nton I
MtDonald !5, Lowt'llvlllt' II
Mt•ctlrw. Hi lN. . . I~ . fepley t
Mrlp:.; it!, Nt"INon,111P-Yorll 6
Mrntor 12, Wlll••htt.' S.ulll 10
MlllR11 Tr.l'f' S3. Wllmln.-.on K
Mhunl!dM&amp;rl( ID, Oily furolll3
Mldlldcnrn M•d :H, Prt•hi.,Sh~twrK't' til

EDWARDS AIR FORCE a.m. PDT to begin preparations odyssey ,
Edwards. ·
BASE, Calif. - Flushed with for re-entry later In the day and
Wearing bright-orange spaceFifteen of the ·24 previous
triumph, Discovery's astronauts landing on a wide-open desert suits as ppart of ~ post· shuttle landings were marred by
. packed up for a fiery glide back runway at E.d wards Air Force Challenger emergency ball-out . brake damage, but Discovery
to Earth today, winding up the Base In the high California system, Hauck and Covey was equipped with beefed up
first post-Challenger flight and desert
planned to fire Discovery's two brakes and landing gear as part
opening a new era for America's
"Life's a beach." Hauck braking rockets over the Indian of a post-Challenger effort to
resurgent space program.
drawled, after listening to a gag Ocean for two minutes 50 seconds improve overall shuttle safety,
Sailing through their final few versk&gt;n of the Beach Boys hit • to drop the 194,000-pound space- and no problems were expectell.
orbits, commander Frederick , "Fun. Fun. Fun." " I 'll tell you plane out of orbit for the
Left behind In orbit was a $100
Hauck, who said' Discovery had what. that is outstanding. Out· hour-long, powerless descent to million NASA Tracking and Data
"worked superbly" during the standing. Thank you very California.
Relay satellite crucial to the
four-day mission. monitored re· much. "
Discovery's flight path called space agency's plans for a
entry preparations as crewmate
Thousands of spectators began for it to cross the California coast space-based communications
George "Pinky" Nelson deactl· arriving at this sprawling Air between Los Angeles arid Santa network between shuttle crews,
vated on-board experiments.
Force . base Sunday and Vice Barbara at an altitude of 115,400 other satellites and mission
Hauck, 47, Nelson, 38, co-pilot President George Bush planned feet at more ,than four times the controL
Richard Covey, 42, John "Mike" to be on hand to greet the five speed of sound. Eight minutes
But the satellite launch, no
Lounge, 42, and David Hllmers, spacemen at the conclusion of later, the ship was scheduled to matter how important to NASA 's
38, were awakened 'about 12:50 their 1. 7-miiiion-mlle. M-orbi! touch down on runway 17 at long-range plans, was inslgnifi·

0 D 1.001 IlK ' 65
I 0 .758 97 7K

3

Friday's scores•..

....._

1989 TAURUS

.soo

C'hh:.._u

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11• 1
If I :

Pf PA

~ · z•
fli 11
t ! • .$10 'rt 70
t t (I .Mill 118 · JI3 1
13· 0.2SOHK2
Centnl
8 ' 0 :1!10 110 -11
3 ' 0 .150 A2 $1
I I 0 .2H IS 73
I :i 0 .2H 16 94
0 • 0 .oot :iS 1!15
" 't'B I

Phl... 4elpllla

1 Section,

Pomerov-,Middleport, Ohio. Monday. October 3. 1988

DiscoVery completes four-day space mission

s a .uo u a

""'

NY Giants

Ill

1\tbinta

! 0
J t

Vol.39, No. 103
Copyrighted 1988

71

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PhHnb

66 ,$)15 -

Ctnl'fnr.ut

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.atl 101 108
.!50 ~~~ 14

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1989 CROWN VIC LX

N .. kloMI Conference

"U-119U

San Fr&lt;~onds,~·o
Sun Dli•l!_!

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lfighs in mid 50s, Chance of
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Page 4

NFL results

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Daily Number
212
Pick 4
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Super Lotto
3-8-29-32-38-44'

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Ohio Lottery

lone .
unbeaten team
in NFL

Eastern Board extends invitation
OH~

The Eastern Local Board of Education today issued arother
special lrivitatlon to ail residents of the Eastern Local School
District desiring information or having questions about the
Contl~ued .on page 1~

of 50 cents for
LTV stock fell from $a.25 to
$2,75 Sept 16, and another 25
cents through the end of the
month . LTV ])as been under
federal bankruptcy protection
since July 198,6.
From a_n Industry standpoint,
stock prices for ail three steel
firms fell . during the quarter.
USX, the nation's No . 1 steelmaker, dropped 11.4 percent
from $31.75 to $28.13 in !he period .
Timken dropped 59 percent from
$78.38 to $32.13, but the Canton
firm split Its stock.
Stocks for the three major
automakers, while falling during
the third quarter, were relatively
· more stable.
Chrysler declined 2.1· percent
from $24.38 to $23.88. Ford fell 4
'p ercent·f rom $53.25 to$5l.l3. And
General Motprs dropped 6.4
percent from ~.13 to $75. .

returning astronauts of the space
shuttle Dls~overy when they
landed at Edwards Air Force
Base,
While the differences betwee11,
Bentsen, a conservative Demo·
crat, and Dukakis, the Massachusetts governor, have provided fodder for GOP campaign
1
speeches, Quayle said In an
interview published Sunday to Interview Sunday in The New
point up his differences with GOP York Times that he has dlfferen·
presidential nominee George ces of opinion with Bush, particuBush on defense matters.
larly over national security
"' Quayle and Sen..t,loyd Bentsen matters.
of Texas. running mate of Demo,
But Quayle said In the intercratlc presidential nominee Mi· view that if the Republican ticket
chael Dukakis, meet in Omaha. is elected Nov. 8. he will follow
Neb., Wednesday tor a 90-mlnute administration policy .
debate similar to the Sept. 25
Paul Brountas, chairman of
face-off between Dukakis and the Dukakis presidential cam' Bush.
paign, crilicized Quayle's sugThe presidential candidates gestion of a possible change of
had little on tap Sunday. Dukakis.. method in the Strategic Arms
spent · the day at his home In Reduction Tajks under way in
Brookline, Mass. Bush . was to Geneva.
leave Andrews Air Force Base
·'Two of President Reagan's
early today to fly to California, .. most significant foreign poli~y .
,where he was to greet the accomplishments have bljen the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Democratic presidential camp,
says Sen. Dan Quayle. R-Ind ,,
dltfers with President Reagan on
defense policy and some of his
positions show he "is very far
outside the mainstream when it
comes to national security."

p!~~~~ua:h~a!~~~~~~~~eJ :

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REAGA~ ATTENQS GOP FUND-RAISER Winding up a day of campalgniDII lor VIce •
. President George Bush, President Ronald Reagqn speak&amp; ftOIII the noor · of the Chlca"j

Mercantile Exchange during a late night
lund-raiser Friday . Dlt:ectly behind Reagan is
Dlinols Governor James Thompson. (UPJ)

1.
I

elimination of an entire ci~ /Jf
nuclear missiles through the IN"F
treaty and the establishment of a
,framework for U .S.·Soviet agreement on strategic arms reduc, lions to be completed by the next
president," Brountas said in a
prepared sta tement.
"Dan Quayle opposed the INF
in the Senate, and now he seems
ready to stand in the way of
START. This demonstrates that
Dan Quayle is very far outside
the mainstream wheri II comes to
national security," Brountas
said .
Quayle told the Times he
believes the United States should
consider making the comp letion
of a treaty to cut superpower
arsenals of long-range nuclear
weapons conditional on Soviet
concessions on non ·nuclear
weapons.
The Reagan administra Iion
has pointedly kept those two sets
,of talks separate lest it seriously
delay the comp letion of the
. START talks .

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Browns stay alive 'wirh 23-9 division .win

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. October 3, .1 988

PITI'SBURGH (UP)) - Pitts· 1-4, and may have lost quar ter· jud gment you can make at thjs
"We were able to capitalize on
burgh Steeler coach Chuck Noll back Bubby Brlstf!r to an Injury . stage. It's close."
some opportunities and 1 think
Brister , who completed only 4
said he doesn't plan any changes
Noll said Brister's injury is ,a
\he thing that was most evident to
even though the St~lers lost of 14 passes for 28 yards , suffered diffic ult one to evaluate.
me was we were able to get a ll
their fourth consecutive game ;a dislocated linger on his thr ow"The doc tors really don'! know three phases of our football team
Sunday, 23-9, to the Cleveland tng hand and left the game In th e how long"he'll be out,." Noll said. performing on concert," · said
Br owns at Three Riv e r s third quarter when the Steelers "OnlY time will te lL"
Clevela nd coach Marty Sc holte n. Stadium.
trailed 10-9.
The Steelers managed their heimer. "That 's what yqu have to
Backup Steve Bono completed only poin ts via Gary Anderson's -de In this business."
"We'll keep doing what we 've
been doin,g," Noll said . " Ob- ,only 7 of 24 passes for 83 yar ds leg Sunday. The seven-year
Noll, who has on ly lost four
vlously, It s not very successful · ~nd was Intercepted twice one · veter an kicked field goals fr om consecutive games only tw ice in
what~ver we've been doing- but which Cleveland safety Bri a n 49, 35 and 45 'yards as the Steelers his 20-year career with the
we are going to keep going Washington returned 75 yard s for 'jumped to a 9-1 halftim e lead.
Steelers, said the Steelers have to
· because It ls"the only thing we a touchdown . .
The Browns got three fie ld keep working hard ifthey wa nt to
knoW .' '
goa ls of their own however in th e rebo und.
,
Noll said he was not sute wh o seco nd half from ex-Steeler Malt
The Steelers had five second'.'Yo u play good defense, good
. half turnovers Sunday a s the would quarterback next week.
Bahr, fr om 22, 21 and 40 yards offense and good special teams,"
"l don't know what.'s going to out. The Browns also scored in Noll said. " If we ca n do that ,
Browns came from behind to win
their third game against two happen," he said. " We'll see .the seoond quarter. on a 1-yard w&lt;:' ll bounce back .:'
losses. The Steelers dropped to during the week. It Is not a
run by Tim Marioa .

I

The Daily Sentinel
''

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED
'J'O 'J'HE.IN'I'ERESTS
OF THE MEIGS·MASON
AREA
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~v

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOJJ1lOEFLICH ·
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Ynlted Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.
·LETTERS OF OPINION are wei rome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are si.lblect to editing and must be sighed with name, address and

'

· telephone number. No unsigned letters will bE- published. Lette-rs should be In
~

gocd tas te , addressing Issues.• no~ personalities.

B~sh

makes speech
to Ohio Republica~s
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Ohio Republicans were the guinea pigs last week
lor a new style speech from Vlce President George Bush, and many of
them seemed uncertain about how to take it.
The Rfpubllcan presidential nominee, on a midwestern campaign
swing, spoke to the biennial convention of the Ollio Republican Party.
Bush beiit'n in' the traditional, tough-talking style. He spoke of
America as''an ·economic glafit and a nation morally committed to
political freedom" - a country that must continue to be No. 1
mllltarlly.
Taxes? he asked. "Read my lips. No new taxes."
Then Bush raised other issues which drew cheers from the partisan
crowd. He wants to control government spending, be hard on
criminals, permit prayer In the schools and prevent overgrowth of the
government.
It was amusing to hear the reverent idea of prayer in the schools
greeted by a cheer befitting a professional wrestling match.
Then the pep rally ended, as Bush began to talk of a compassionate
and caring America, a "kind and gentle nation" with strong moral
values and a cohesion and "genetoslty toward each other."
"We love our prosperity," Bush said. "Some of us even remenber to
thank God lor it. But for all our wealth, I think we also feel a certain
·
unease." The unease in the room was palpable.
Bush said government and money cannot solve society's problems.
"The answer Is up to us," he said. "The answer Is in each Individual
act of kindness multiplied by thousands and tens of thousands. The
answer is In a new engagement In the pain of others."
Ironically, this was the same message that was met with contempt
by Republicans 10 years ago when President Jimmy Carter called for
" sacrifice" on the part of the American people to solve domestic
problems. Even now ; Bush sneers at that period of "malaise."
But here he was, calling ,for Ohioans and Americans to keep from
becoming "fat and happy" and to make their mark before the 20th
century ends . He called for a "purposeful and happy" society, and
said "idealistic and happy" would be eve.n better.
Idealistic. The very thing for -which he had just finished
condemning his opponent, Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis,
'1\l'hom he said Is in a cloud of "academic liberalism" and "outoltouch
with real world concernS."
His Republican list.e ners seemed to detect the dichotomy, but they
•
uncertain what to make of It_.
-;-----'"f~a;;·kll~ County Commissioner Roger Tracy said it "showed the
great contrast between liberalism and conservatism."
" George Bush was speaking to the country," said Hamilton County
Commissioner Robert Taft I I. ''I think he was seriously explaining his
·
.
vision of the future ."
Whatever th.e..c.ase . .it was Jhe tY.P~ . &lt;:&gt;f.speech that gave everyone
something to take home.
"'
Cuyahoga County Republican Chairman Robert Hughes said it was
an appeal to female and black votes, and he wanted to hear more of it.
But many of the more conservative delegates no doubt preferred the
sabre-rattling and flag-waving, and hoped that was the "real"
George Bush.

Should·White llonse back mountaineerS
By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

Why Is the Air Force roll(ngout
WASHINGTON - . When
the
red carpet for civilian moun·
Wyoming's "Cowboys on Evertaln
climbers? "We were given endorsed it. With his backing, the nla conservatives get the Air
est" climbing expedition ran Into
orders
to provide transportation expedition was vaulted to the Force to fly a band of CaliforniflnanciaJ trouble, Wyoming's
them,"
an Air F9rce spokes- status of White Ho.u se· ans to Cape TdWn for a "Surfers
for
cowboys In Congress rustled up a
In South Africa' ' competition? As
man
told
our . associate, Jim sponsorship.
deal with the White House.
far
fetched as that sounds, the
Lynch. Those orders came down · :E:verest climbs are costly and
Perhaps never before .has a
'climbing
expedition Is just as far
mountain climbing team had the from top brass at the Pentagon, teams normally raise mmoney
fetched.
Everest climbs are a
president's signature on Its back· .which gets its orders from the from corporate and . individual
personal
challenge
for climbers,
sponsors. The White House crepacks. ButoutlnWyomingwhere White House.
but
the
public
benefit
Is questionWyoming Sens. Alan Simpson dentials helped the cowboy
the state's conservative senators
able.
It
holds
nowhere
near the
and congressman have been and Malcolm Wallop, along with climbers trim $36,900 in transpor·
Interest
generated
by
·Olympic
Reagan loyalists for almost eight Rep. Dick Cheney, all Republl· tatlon costs from their $1 million
athletes who compete without the
cans, jointly sent a letter to the budget.
.
years, anything Is possible.
of Unci~ Sam's larges~ .
'benefit
"I've never .heard of anything
White House earlier this year
The 34 members of the expedl·
''Cowboys
· on Everest ' '
urging presidential support for · like this before," said a spokestlon are now ascending toward
eme~ged
as
a
promotional
brain·
the "Cowboys on Everest " man for Citizens Against Govern·
the 29,028-foot peak In the Himachild
,
for
the
1990
Wyoming
ment Waste, If the expedition Is a
layas. But unlike Climbers before· expedition.
Reagan's top science adviser, precednt setter, what will we see centennial celebration. The
them , this expedition arrived at
Dr. William Graham, took a the White House sponsor next? climbers plan to scale Mount
the foothills of the Himalayas In
liking to the expedition and Could a pack of powerful Callfor- Everest's East Rongbok glacier
an Air Force C-5 jet.
and the Northeast Ridge. Only .
six of the 34 memberS of the team .
will attempt the summit. Two
\c
female climbers hope to be the
first American women to reach ~
the top of Everest.
S~~Jentls.ts on the expedition
will do medical r~arch with ,a
new high-altitude llreathlng ap- . ·
paratus and geologists wlll study •
the terrain.
.:
When the Everest.adventure .is ·.
over in late October, the climbers' ·i
wlll lil.&lt;ely le;1ve China . on the • ,
I . Chinese airline and fly to .J11Pa1t
But from Japan to 'l)'avis Air ,.
Force Base In California •• they '·
wlll fly a commercial plane
chartered by the Air Force
Military Airlift Command. That
expense - $12,000 _: wUI come
out of the taxpayers' pockets.
The mllitary rarely uses its •
Military Airlift Command for
civilians. Mem!Jers of Congress
on official business are . the .,
exception.
.
The climbers won't even have r
to flash their cash to make the .
last leg of the journey. The •
Wyoming National G\lard ~as "'
orders to pick up te climbers In u
California and take them home.

.
By United Press lnlernatiOnal
Today Is Monday, Oct. 3, the 277th day of 1988 with 89 to follow.
The moon Is ln Its last quarter .
The morning stars are Venus and Jupiter.
The ev~ning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
Cherokee Chief John Ross, who led opposition to the forced move of
his people to what is now 'Oklahoma, In 1790; historian George
Bancroft In 1800; political cartoonist Herblock (Herbert Block) In
1909 (age 79); novelists Thomas Wolfe In 1900 and Gore Vidal in 1925
(.age 63); rock 'n' roll singer Chubby Checker in 1941 (age 47), and
actor-singer Jack Wagner in 1959 (age 29) .'
Ori this date in history:
In 1922, Rebecca Felton, a Georgia Democrat, became tbe first
woman to serve In the United States Senate.
· In 1955, thl\ children's show with Bob Keeshan as "Captain
Kangaroo" wd broadcast tor the first time.
In 1972, President Richard Nixon and Soviet Foreign Minister
Andrei Gromyko signed strategic arms limitation agreements,
putting. the first restrictions on the two countries' nuclear weapons.
· In 1981, IRA prisoners at Maze Prison In Belfast, Northern Ireland,
ended a seven-month hunger strike In which 10 men died.
..
. .
A thought for the day: Thomas Wolfe wrote, "Loneliness Is and
always has been the central and inevltableexperlenceof every·man."
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light on serious issues than
simply to give the voters a
change to size the candidates up
- to get some notion of their
personalities by watching them
under pressure. And that Is rio
bad thing.
In the case of Bush, who Is
much the better known of the
two, his experience In govern·
men\ Is widely recognized and
respected. And the so-called
"wimp Issue," which was simply
the strenuous effort of the liberal
media to .smear Bush as a
dithering nerd, was decisively
laid to rest by his Impressive
acceptance speecb at the Republican convention.
But there still lingered around
Bush a faintly professorial air,
reminiscent of Woodrow Wilson:
How warm a·man was he? A lot of
people who have been trained by
Ronald Reagan t() enjoy a genially good.-humored chlefexecu·

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.....

Robert Wagman .

will be approved with little or no deep to back candidates who to aid products already. deter-.-.
debate.
support them. The political ac- mined to be detrimental to the
With the Surgeon General' s tion committees of the Asso- public good Is, of course, nothing .
new report, and an upcoming ciated Mllk Producers, Mid· new. For years ·It has been the'
American Cancer Society cam- America Dairymen.- Dairymen official policy of the U.S. govern- :
paign (which will have as Its Inc., tl)e Nation.a l Cattlemen's ment that tobacco smoking Is a ·
central theme, "You can prevent Association, the Cattle Feeders leading health problem. Yet even "
cancer by eating · fruits and Association - as well as PACs as Congress passes new laws '
vegetables"), the natural food representing large cattleproduc- almost ·every session to further" r;
movement that had Its birth In ers like the King Ranch - fu'nnel restrict the rights of those who ~
the 1960s counterculture has more than $2 million annually smoke, It appropriates ever '
moved firmly 1nto the Into the re-election campaigns of greater amounts In support of the
•
faltering tobacco Industry.
...
mainstream.
·friendly members of Congress.
·~
Congress' appropriating funds
A great Impetus In moving
healthy eating to the forefront of
America's consciousness was the
1985 poubllcatlon of Harvey and
Marilyn Diamond's "Fit For
Life," which stood atop best·
4.
seller lists for an unprecedented
43 weeks while selll.l)g more than
5 million hard-cover copies. Its
·.·••
message was simple: Eat right
to live a longer and healthier life.
"
Millions of Americans have
already cut thelrconsumption of
meat and daicy products. Ac·
' ; .•
cording to official government
statistics, the per capita consumption of ted meat ·has fallen
. year by year during the 1980s. In
.. '~
; ),986, the most recent year for
. '
'INhlch figures are available, the
average American consumed
·~
150.5 pounds of meat. In 1980 the .
figure was 158 pounds, and In 1970
'··If
it was 162 pounds.
The same Is true for most dairy
' .....
products. Per capita whole milk
consumption dropped to 117.2
••c
pounds In 1986 from 145 pounds In
••
1980 and, amazingly, from 214
•
pounds In 1970.
"\ Ko.op applauds trend, but
warns that it must be accelerated. But to the meat and dairy
qz._~
Industries, the drop translates
,,
() lua DY,~- Inc •. f·f, ,
into th!! need for even greater
.
.,"
federal support payments. .. .
"Oh, I'm like everybody else. I'm o,bsesset;t'
To m;~ke sure that their meswt.th shopping, grooming and dating.•,.
sages are heard on Capitol Hill; ..
both industries continue to.{[ig
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head
for
.
home
Games end; athletes
•

SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) Olympic athletes and officials
shook off a collective hangover
t&lt;lday and started packing for
home, many with a peculiar
feeling of emptiness after the
•fruition or failure of•four years of
dreams. ·
"The feeling is like kind of a
sadness and kind of a happl·
ness, " said Mexican sychronlzed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) son," added Bell, his speech swimming coach Adriana Lol·
The tragic death of Alli!lJbert, broken by emotion. ·'Racing wlll tus, whose charges won a silver
winningest driver in Ilft!!J. hls- feE: I saddened by his loss. He was me&lt;) a!. ''There Is sadness betory, In a fiery airplane crash oneofthefinestambassadorsthe cause It is all over after four
leaves auto racing minus one of sport has ever had . I'm very years 6f working so hard, but
its finest· competitors, greatest sad."
there is happiness because we
engineers and truest gentlemen.
The nose of · Holber t's plane were able to achieve our goal."
Holbert's twin-engine Aerostar wa&amp;· buried two feet in the
Highways passing near Seoul's
lost power and crashed whlle ground, Columbus photographer . Kimpo Airport were backed up
taking off Friday night from Oon .Jerry Weave.r said alter return· for miles ~s police blocked off
Scott Field. Loaded with thou: .ing from the scene.
traffiC to permit a free flow of
sands of pounds offuel, the plane.
Joe Hart. who covers motor yehicles to the packed facility.
exploded Into flames when It hit ·· sports lor a suburban Worthing· Slightly misspelled signs on
the ground.
,
' ton newspaper, lives north of the freeway overpasses read, "You
A veteran pllotllying alone, the accident site and was out walking came as a visitor, you leave as a
41-year-old Holbert was taking a with his wile when the crash · firlend. "
break from activities at the occurred.
·
Juan Antonio Samaranch,
Columbus Ford Dealers 500 to go
''I heard the aircraft," he said. president of the International
home to Warrington, Pa. , for "It was obvious the engines were Olympic Committee, said today
dinner with his wile Joy and to sick and sputtering. It sounded the drug scandal surrounding
take his son Todd to a football like an aircraft In trouble. Thete Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson
game.
was silence and then a thud, then was the "low polnt"oftheGames
He had planned to skip Satur- a boom . "
and criticized boxing officials.
day's qualifying and return for
Hart was some 300 yards away
Wh lle lauding the 16-day extrathe race. Sunday.
but did not see the crash because vaganza as the "best Games In
"AI was a great m&lt;!Jl," Holbert trees were in the way . The craft history" tor attracting more than
Racing team driver Derek Bell , missed the nearest home by 10.000 athletes from a record 160
said.of the five-time IMSA Camel about 250 yards, he said. ·
countries. Samaranch cited the
GT champion. "He was the
"If there were choices to be
disgraced Canadian as a "lesson
greatest engineer of a racing car made - &lt;&gt;nd AI was a race car for the future."
I've ever known. Technically, he driver - he avoided the popu"After many years of work by
was outstanding.
lated area," said Hart.
our Medical Commission, we
"He was one of the finest
Holbert was the wlnnlngest have won the battle ·against
competitors I've ever known. He professional road racer In the athletes who cheat," Samaranch
was a great driver and great United States and also had three told a news conference. • '
24 H?urs of LeMans wins to . ~ls ,[, Johns.an ,was stripped of his
thinker.
''AI was just a' fantastic . per- credi\..
gold medal in the 100-meter dash
and banned two years from
International track. In Toronto,
he said he .did not take anabolic
steroids or any banned
substances.
Ten athletes, Including two
Bulgarian weight lifters who won
gold medals and a Hungarian
weightlifter who won a silver,
tested positive for drugs during
the Olympics.
Samaranch also criticized ofllcials at the boxing arena, the
source of much discord at the
Games. Samaranch previously
said he Is uncomfortable with.
boxing In the Olympics.
"There are two problems with
boxing, " he said. "It Is very
dangerous for health, and we are
not happy with the way judges
and referees are acting. "
In the most unruly outburst,
South Korean boxing officials
•
••.•.•;.&lt;:;..
at tacked a New Zealand referee
CRACKUP! - Derek Daly's Nlssan prototype (foljground)
after their fighter lost a close
decision. Afterward, the fighter
makes contact with •the Ford Probe prototype driven tiy Tom
staged a slt-down demonstration
Pumpelly In the hairpin turn late In the IMSA Columbus Ford
In the ring for more than an hou"
Dealers 500 Sunday. Neither driver was Injured, and both cars
On the final day of competition.
were restarted, although Daly's mount required a push from
A(llerlcan light middleweight
course workers. ( UPI)
Roy Jones lost 3-2 to South
Korea's Park SI-Hun . Jones
appeared to have easily won, but
judges from Uganda, Uruguay
and Morocco awarded the bout to
the South·Korean. ·
Ken Adams, the U.S. coach.
suggested the fudges may have
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) year won a record eight consecu - been bribed; Said Rod RobertDriving a "super ~ar" Ntssan,
tive Camel GTP races, took the
son, a British boxing judge: "I
Geoff Brabham led all but four
lead at the start and was not can only use one word lor the
laps of Sunday's Columbus Ford
overtaken until pitting on Lap 43.
decision - disgraceful."
It mattered not, howe:ver,
Dealers 500, defeating Klaus
Park Seh-jlk, president of the
Ludwig by 3.32 seconds and
cause a iter a 25-second time out Seoul Olympic Organizing· Comfor tires and fuel , he raced .right mittee, today reported a $348
clinching the 1988 Camel GTP
driving championship.
back to the head of the pack lour
mllllon surplus from the $3.1
laps later.
Mauro Baldi of Monaco. was
blllion budgeted to stage the
third in the 300-kllometer, 81-lap
Games
. He said the money wlll
"Mentally, it wa s a hard race
IMSA race, followed by Jack
go
toward
amateur sports.
Baldwin of Marietta, Ga .. Elliott to drive,'' said Brabham, who
"For
South
Korea, the Olymturned a fa st lap of 1:32.52 at
Forbes-Robinson of Charlotte,
.
pies
have
been
a unique sucN.C., and Mike Brockman of Los 89.494 mph. "When I crossed the
cess."
Park
said.
"The Olympic
finish line, II was like a big weight
Angeles.
Ideals
were
realized
with the
Brabham , an Australian na- 'taken off my shoulders. I didn 't
meeting of the East and West."
tive late of Nobles\!llle, Ind., want to abuse the car or make
In the Olympic VIllage today,
any
big
mistakes
.
It
just
came
toured .the2.3-mile,Jl-turndownresidents
were rising late and
down
to
picking
a
pace
that
would
town street course in two hours 18
moving slowly after a wild night
me
out
of
trouble."
keep
minutes and 18.564 seconds at an .
of partying that began with the
average speed of 80.819 mph. ·
It was Brabham'snlnth victory
this year In an Electramotlve
SALES SERVICE - TESTING
· Engineering Nlssan GTP·ZXT.
J
He earned $25,00o for the win and
a $125,000 bonus for claiming the
driving ti~le .
·
"I despe .ately wanted to win
this . one " said Brabham,
"mostly ecause of the cham172 North S.ceMI AwpiOnship. Things went our way,
llhl..epert, OW. U760
and we stayed In front. Winning
the championship and' the race at
the same time is q ulte , an
accompliShment.''
,.
Gar Snouffer- 992·7446
Brabham, · .whO, earll~r this

Racing world mourns
dea~h of Al Holbert

live wanted to know. In that
regard, I thought Bush did' '
extremely well In the debate. ·
Even his minor flubs helped him, .,
because he laughed at them
himself.
·.
·
"
Oukakts, on tl)e ot11er hand, has ' 1
httllerto 'sufiel'ect lroiil' a'personality reminiscent of a cigar-store •
Indian. His typical expression Is -..
a sort of Impatient frown, occa·. ·~
sionally tortifled by some ast- rlngently dismissive · gesture. •
But on the night of the debate he·""
must have had a 3-by-5 card In .A
front of him reading, "Smile,.·&gt;:
Mike, smile!,; l worked with him ::~
on 22 "Advocates" TV programs "
In the 1970s, and I doubt that he '~
smiled as often on all of them put ·
together as he did during that , ·
90-mlnute debate.
So, I'd say the debate left the
two gladiators about where they
were before It was held. At that
point, of course, Bush was ahead. · •

Berry's World

...

BRISTER SACKED - PIUsburgh
quarterback Bubby
Brister Is saeked by Cleveland Brown linebacker Clay Matthews
and lineman Sam Clancy for a loss ln the second quarter of
~Sunday's game in Pittsburgh. The Browns won 23,9. (UPI)

\

One of the problems with the least, as much in it as they were
custom of holding "debates" before.
For a really decisive debate,
between the presidential candl·
dates Is that our expectatlonsare one must look back to 1980. In
often pitched far too high. Will that year the American people
Cand)date X make some.horrible were throli'ghly tired of Jimmy
blunder that will haunt him for Carter,· but ctlley had heard•·
the rest of the campaign? WHI disturbing reports In the media
Candidate Y, whom the medla about Ronald Reagan'ssupposed
have been smearing dilegently, extremism. As tate as mid·
for some supposed character October, Dick Wlrthlln's private
defect, turttQliJ..qu tte clearly not polls for Reagan showed a huge
to have it after al,1 arunnel'eby ~ bloc of "undecided" voters. Then
gain hugely In public esteem? came the debate, and there on
Maybe- but not necessarily.
television '!(as a relaxed and
II not, then the debate may charming man with a self·
pass without greatly affecting deprecatory sense of )\Umor.
the race one way for the other, Thereafter, Wlrthlln's polls
and that's my guess about the one showed Reagan movin! steadily
held between George Bush and toward a victory of landslide
Michael Dukakls on Sept. 25. proportions.
Neither man · flubbed disas·
tr&lt;!usly; both may ;have so::ored . My guess, though, Is that both
marginally in terms of Improv- men slightly Improved their
Ing their public image; botli are public Image. Debates of tflls
certainly still in the ring- or, at type, after all, serve less to shed

•· ~

cl''

,

Is Congress funding ill health?

Today in history

'"

First debate wasn't decisive __w_i_llw_m_R_us_he_r .

WASHINGTON (NEA)- In a
classic case of political inconsistency, Congress will shortly
approve the outlay of huge sums
In support of the U.S. meat and
dairy industries. Meanwhile, the
Surgeon General wllldistrlbutea
massive report condemning
America's overconsumptl~n of
meat and dairy products. o
Surgeon General C. Everett
Koop's 712-page "Report on
Nutrition and Health" links the
average American's overindulgence In meat and dairy items to
some of the leading killers Including hea,rt disease, high
blood pressure, strokE:, diabetes
·
and cancer.
Koop says that, formerly,
diseases related to nutritional
deficiency were the problem. But
with Increases in the overall
standard of living, today "nutritional problems for most Americans have shifted to those
created by oversonsumption of
certain dietary components. Of
greatest concern is our excessive
intake of dietary fats ... .'"
Koop' s prescription lor better
health IS simple: Cut down on
tneat and dairy products; eat
more fruits and vegetables; and
exercise regularly.
But even as Koop launches his
campaign for fundamental dietary change, few politicians
question the continued high level
of taxpayer support given both
the beef and dairy Industries.
Congress appropriates
hundreds of millions annually In
th ~ form of price supports, lowor no-Interest loans, research
programs and outright pur- .
chases of oversupplies that benefit both the meat and dairy
Industries. The flscall989 budget
. is coming up for final congres'sional approval. Included in It
are record levels of meat and
dairy support payments: . They

The Daily. Si!ntinel - Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.

Brabham claims _GTP
crown in Columbus

bee

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; .SAFm EQUIPMENT·
PH. (614) 992·7075

• CLOSING CEREMONIES - Fireworks go off
during closing ceremonies ol the 24th Olympiad.
over the Olympic Stlidlwn In Seoul Sunday, with
(REUTER)
the weird "goodbye" spelled out In the stands
spectacular closing ceremony at r-----'------------.....--'------the Olympic Stadium and continued in the Vlllage and other
sites around Sebul until dawn.
. A ~an&lt;j lli!IYed, well into ttw,
night outside the Village's cen·
tral 1Jall and free beer was on
hand for the athletes, many of
whom had been "abstaining
throughout the Games. Groups of
athletes were still clustered In ·
the courtyard exchanging pins
aqp clothing at 4 a.m. as the
s~nd of a:;dozen parties filtered .
down from ov e rlooking
residences .
"The Village was wild, with
everybody finally letting their
hair loose, " said Angel Morales
of the VIrgin Islands delegation.
By morning, a calm had taken
hold described by Australian
synchronized swimmer Josle
. Hopkins as "the lllJlbo between
the Olympics and reality."
"You spend so much of your
•
Ute focusing on one event and
then it's over," she said as a
handful of villagers ambled by
with suitcases . I " The closest
thing for most people Is the day
after getting married. Everything Is a bit flat."
Many of the older athletes have
ettled lives to go home tO ,'.J&gt;lJCh
as Irish sailor Cathy McAieavy
and her husband and coach Con
Murphy , who said t.hey were
going "to paint the house and
face the Irish winter . "

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-188)

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NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, o·HIO ·

�.

Monday.

'

october 3,

1988

,r

Pomeroy-:Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

)

'

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 3, 1988 :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.,.

Bengals stay~""'en _after 45-21 ro~p

.

.
WOODS GAINS SEVEN - Cincinnati Bengal running back
lckey Woods charges up the middle lor a seven-yard gain In the
second quarter of Sunday's game against the host Los Angeles
JtaicJers. Woods, who scored a touchdown In the contest, helped the
Bengals become the NFL's only· unbeaten team after live games
with a 45-21 viet~. (UPI)

By JEFF HASEN
UPI Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES IUPI) - Cln·
clnnati"s Boomer Eslason. the
AFC's top-rated quarterback .
wishes there was a similar
system lor gauging sqme of his
Bengal teammates.
"The .o!fenstve' line should be
rated 100." Eslason said Sunday
after he threw lor 332 yards and
three touchdowns, helping Cin·
clnnati rout the Los Angeles
Raiders 45-21. "Quarterbacks
. get too much credit when you win
and too much blame when you
lose.' '
Eslason. who was 21 of 28. had
· TO throws' of 14 yards to Rodney
Holman, 9 yards to Tim McGee
and 15 yards to Ira Hillary. The
start Is the Bengals" best since
they won their first six games in
1975.
Cincinnati's other scores came
on runs o( 3 yards by Ickey
Woods. 5 yards by. Stanford
Jennings and 1 yard by Stanley
Wilson and Jim Breech's28-yard

field goal.
"Five·and·oh doesn't meant
much." Bengals Coach Sam
Wyche said. "You can lose a few
games anytime. Being the only
undefeated t~am means about
three days of bragging .... ·
The· Raiders. who came back
from a 24·0. deficit last Monday
night to beat Denver , fell to 2-3.
"You can't take anything away
from them.·· said Raiders defen·
slve line Howle Long. "They're
having a great year . You have to
re-evaluate on an individual
standpoint to see where you're
at. You have to be very critical of
yourseU.
"It's back to work. It sounds
real simple. You can't pac!&lt; It in,
or you're a loser. We're not
packing anything in." Jay
Schroeder. playing In his second
game as a Raider. was Inter-·
cepted four times. He was 17 of44
for 324 yards. Schroeder threw a
65-yard scoring toss JO rookie
Tim Brown, a · 24-yarder to

.Mervyn Fernandez and ran 5
yards for another TO.
"With inferceptlons and . no
thlrd-.down plays I the Raiders
were 4 of 12). you "re not going to
win football games. " Schroeder
said. "We knew we had to do the
same types of plays as we did at
Denver, but we couldn't make
the plays. Today, It wasn't our
. day...

' ·

Cincinnati rpnnlng l:)ack
James Brooks. who caught four
passes and carried three times.
suffered 'a broken right hand In
the first half.
Leading 24-7, the Bengals
broke the game open fn the third
quarter when Jennings and Wll·
son ran for touchdowns. They
pushed the lead to 45·7 with 13: 23
to· play when Eslason - who had
a 104;7 quarterback rating enter·
lng the game - teamed with
Hillary.
•
The Bengals had 499 yards in
total offense. The Raiders finIshed with 405.
_
The ft~lders moved to the

Majors

MoNI!fY, Ol·t. Ill
N\' Gi.nhat Phll~dt'IJflla. I p.m.

By UnMfd Prn!l .. lt'r..illu•l
AMEKK'AN L.EAGVE

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Kf 73 .S-It 1111 i4 .543 I

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Delre* I, N•w York 5

TDrcae1. a.uu ....... :1
Clf'W'I.-1 I, 8oMon t
Mllwu~ M, Oakkad :t
Ml•fthoia II, fallorllia $

ctllt'ap I, lan•M Cit)' 't
Se6ttho .f, TfiXllll S, II Ina.
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Toronlo I, BaltiMOre 3
Clf'\leliUid II, Bo•ton 5
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Sund.,;'~

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Chleaa-o II, PiUIIIu 111: h -1
Nf'W l'orll 7, St. t...llla 5

Mon&amp;re1113. Phlllldt&lt;IJ*IIIII
Clnclalldll, Atl110ta 0
San Dlt'l(l 5, Ho•lllo• I
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Ohio Slatlt' llt

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'

Ball Stu.te 1M Kent !l.llltf'
Qhio Unh Ill Bowllt~~ G~e•
Weurrn Mh·lllp~~lll Miami
Nor1hernDit.DMill Toledo tn )

ArW•II St.te Ill .Uron t•l
flltd•nlll I at Pt&gt;n• statif'
Vou.p~ow• Sl .U Nor•e•\ef'n ( Ma~tt~)
Me~~• Ualoaal S.l~•"' lllllu!t&gt; ( n)
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Hrldelheraal Mat'-bl
Mll*har;um al Findlay
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Prep scores
'"-lu Hl11h~khool Fuudtllll ~.II~
S!Uwd!O' . Ocl. 1
A.kr Bttt•bta•l 33. i\kr Kt&gt;nmon• A

Bat11\'kl 3, £.1n Cou•ry Dll)' 0

NFL scores
NI\TION.U. FOO'm..U.L LEAGUE

Suiii.IQ''!i ReMuth
Cbh:q:o 21, Bulllllo 3
!&gt;k'lltllt&gt; :Ill, All.a.. M
£'lf'\lt&lt;h&amp;IMI U. PtlhiiUIJ:h t
TIUII . . lay n, Green Blly U

Pbla.delphla 32. HouNton 23
N\' Gl•l!!~4 , W•ti•aton t3
N- EnPY.d21,1ndlanapoli,.l'l
Clnt!ln•U&amp;. LA Rahk•r~t 21
Kaa- Cllyl'7, N\' •ldKI'7 Coli Ilk•)
Oif'nM't' IZ, S• Dit'IP&gt; 0
SUI Franciil('fl 18, O.lron 13

,Miami u, Mlnat~~obl 7
Phoen~ .fl, LA RamK 'l7

Mo .. ~~,,· ·~~ Gllmt•

D11lllu;

* Nl'W OtleiUIJ&gt;J, 9f p.m .
SIUIIIQ' , Ot•L

Chlc,..-o 1&amp;1 [)(otrolt, I p.m .
lnclanap.,.bi a1 &amp;uH.Uo. 1 p.m .
KaniiUI rtty at Houlton. I p.m . ·
LA Ram11 llt Atllulla, I p.m .

New EIIAfand \'M. GtHnBay , I p .m .
NV

.l~•at

Sea&amp;tle

bestERA,3.44, on thefinaldayof
By LEN HOCHBERG
removed that chance.
UPI Sports Writer
"You can't ask for hitters in the the season. Bostonledthemajors
.
The Oakland Athletics enter
bottom of the eighth to go out • in batting. at .283.
the American League Champion·
there and make three outs," said
The Red Sox scored 43 runs in
ship Series having won the most .Oakland · Manager Tony La the 12 games; the A's ERA was
games In baseball, Including
Russa. "His 45 saves were all 3.34. Meanwhile, Oakland prO·
eight of their last 10, yet feeling straight . Nobody tried to set him duced 58 runs, batting .285 and
leaving the Boston staff with a
they came up short. The Boston up or manl!facture a way:"
5.12
ERA.
Red Sox, losers of six of seven.
The Red Sox, who some say
head Into the postseason satisfied. backed Into their second division
with their recent play.
title in three years (they lost
No A's player fared better
The AL West champion A's, Friday, the night they clinched), against the Red Sox than Eckers·
104-58, defeated the Milwaukee are happy with the past week.
ley, who snared five saves In five
"Naturally, we would've pre· opportunities against his former
Brewers 4·0 Sunday ' and the
East-winning Red Sox. 89-73.1ost ferr-ed to end the regular season team:
to the Cleveland Indians 6·5. The with a few better . r~sults,"
His one scoreless Inning Sun·
ALCS begins Wednesday night at Boston Manager Joe Morgan day' in relief of Bob Welch, 17-9,
said. "But we were able to give allowed Oakland to nip MilwauFenway Park.
0:11tland"s disappointment our pitchers a tuneup and · our kee (3.44 to 3.45) for the ERA
stems from not providing Dennis reserves · some at·bats and field- title.
Eckersley with an opportunity to . ing oppof!unltles and that's very
"It means a lot to me persontie a major league record by important going Into our meeting ally, but most of ali it ineansa lot
gaining a 46th save. The A's with Oakland ."
to me because of the guys on this
scored their fourth run In the
The A's captured the season pitching staff." said A's pitching
eighth inning to ·deny their series from the Red Sox 9-3, coach Dave Duncan. "I think lt"s
'
winning all six games at proper recognition tlli!lt they can
bullpen' ace. who was warming
Oakland .
now be called the fiest In the
up to throw the ninth.
American League."
It was a classic case of good
A lead of three runs tor less)
New York's Dave Righetti set
would have given Eckersley a pitching stopping good hitting.
save opportunity. The fourth run Oakland secured the league's the major league stand~rd for

Sllluldii,Y, Od II

W L Pet . GB
100 &amp;9 .6!5 !15 7$ .5!1 u

(biCiliCO

lalchri•W lll.brot•P ll, Olierhl'in 7
Mo11M Unlu• Ul, C.aplt.llJ It
Hl'l~bera U, M••ld•ll'lm 2S
Wllll'llhll'fK -111, M arlt&gt;llll II
OhloNor111ft'n!4, IKII.I.amllzoo {Michl 7
AJ!qht&gt;ny (Pal U. W•..Ur II
CaMe llel&gt;lf'tW II. Ohio Wt~tleylm j
· Dl'nblo• 35, OherU. 14
Albion IMich) -11\, Kenyo• 27
AJ;W..d !1, F1nclll)' 0 •
8Juffto•l2, Muchi!!Ht&gt;r jlndl2e
Dayj()n 21, Drllkt' u
Wllmln~on 31, DefllUK'I' 1
Hlnr.m Jl, BethiUiy f"'V•J 10

This week's games

~lillie%

(End ff'K!ihlt !IUIIOh)

rr.'t'W 1'orll

BMII ShUt• 45, MIJUni I~
Ohio U•lv U, Toledo 14
..Uron 33, Yo'*ll\lown S&amp;alt&gt; 'I
Ra!KerM3H, nDCin..Uitl
fl'nlNI Stalf' !tl, ,f.(. Smllh 19

Urhllllll Sl, Olivet (Mich) :J

Oakland 4, Mll-u let• 0

Pit ilhu 'l(h
Mollltt'ld

Ohio Collt'lt" Fooltlall Kc!IHihi
Sat .-d a.v. Ort. I
Oil~ 21 . Ohio Silltt It
Yl'.sli-rn MJch S'7. Bowlln11 Cifet"n 10
f'enlral Mlt·h 31. Kent Sta~t" l

,John C~t.t rvll .JO, Thiel CPal 7
Tllftn II. Gl'nf'\'11 IPal 10

Chlnp '· KuiM City I
Texu 7,

Ohio 11cores ·

C'lnda ... L I p.m .

nM·el•d, I p,m,
T11mll' lay at MIIIII!Notll, I p.m .
;ti

WaMin.. on •I b•llh , I p .m.

rttl.tlutJ;h 111 PhOt'fll.ll:, l p.m .

Buchwood 211, Allront 1
ereltllln- %7, Steuhenvllll' falh 6
Brooklyn 1-1. Ot' Rhoclf"'l
( 'am ..wlli, Po ..nd 8 .•

I~

' C'111n Ml·Kinll'y ~1. \'ou~ Moonry 12
('tn CAPE :15, DIQ' DunhiU' U
Cln Alltl'n ~. Cln WoodwlU'd 0 '
n.,. Gllmourts , Woodrld.-•• I~
Clf'Lulhrnn W:l7, f.nlwnhlali

('11• ~lt•no,&lt;Uie 12, Lllilj'WOIHI Sl Ed 7
fonotlon Val 3, E~l- '11ntun 2
Day de tlt&gt;r~n ~. Day l'lllic&gt;tKOn 0
E C'lt&lt; Sbllw iS., Clt• LIM-oln W II
Edllion..N 12, Hrldl(t&gt;pOrt fi
H11mUion Badin U , fol Hartl('y 0
Harri!lon t1, Cui W;tt ..... ~on 10
Huckon'W H11v 16 , IU!ild Prep CPll l 13
MrdiDII. But·kcyP 38 , C1e H11.wkl..&gt;n Ill
Middletown Ft•nwldl H , Lrmon Mol'l" •
tOt• 0

NJdiol'lll TNII12 , An·IUIUfll S
Par l'nll Patdlll4 I ~ , t1 t ('coni f11t h 6
P
For~· IH, Shaill't Hili J
:&lt;ihlld)'!41d 13, Buckeyr N 12
Southl..,;l.

l\prlnl N ~ .

17, GrwndVuJ 0

('arrollton I.J
.~prinK N'n,•IUIIII!'tn ~I , 1\t'nlon Hldltt" 0
To I Mat-omhrr a.., To I Scou 0
fol 's t .rohns lfi. \hl~h .lt'!!ult 7
To I Bow.othl'r !7, Ott•a:un !l.trltt·h 7
Union 1At•ai2CJ, I.in!ily \WVa) 1~ ('!oil
, t\'~1

Los Angeles closed to 17-7 with
5:35 to play when Schroeder hit a
streaking Brown running a post.
But Cincinnati ·pushed the mar·
gin to 24· 7 with 21 seconds to play
when McGee got free and Esia·
son found him for the 9-yard
scoring play.

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_OCTOBER ·2-8

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-

-.-

•

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'·

~ ToMorrow's

J

-Le-aders

Agriou_lture
..
I.

A's, Red .Sox square off in AL series
'

Nrw OrWani! a1 San Dh!JD . .t p.m. ·
Milmllll LA Raidl'r111, .J p.m.
Of!nw.r at SIUI Fr.,.d~o. -1 p.m.

Cinclnnatl1 on their fi rst posses·
sion. but Schroeder was picked·
off by cornerback Lewis Billups
following · a delay -of-game
penalty.
Cincinnati went 70 yards to
Breech field goal with six se'
conds to go In the first quarter.
then recovered a Marcus Allen
fumble at the Raider 34 two plays
later. Three plays after that ,
Holman crossed over the middle
and Eslason hit him with the TO
pass with 13:34 to go In the half.
· The Bengals upped their lead
to 17-0 seven minutes- Ia ter when
Eslason highlighted an 86-yard
drive with a 24-yard pass to
McGee, then handed off to ·•
Woods. who scored from the 3. •

WEEK

NATIONAL

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0

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; ' 1; J,'~
~~~l
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' ~ ' - J_~~·-~·~·~· ----

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we can win."

After a 9-3 mark vs. The Red
Sox. one might think the A's, too,
feel they can win.
Elsewhere In the AL, Detroit
downed New York 4·3 In 11
Innings, Toronto routed Baitl·
more 9-.3. Minnesota shaded
California 3-2, Chicago downed
Kansas City 5-l and Texas topped
Seattle 7-2.
In the National League,!! was:
Chicago 8. Pittsburgh 4; New
York 7, St. Louis 5; Montr.eal 3,
Philadelphia .1; Clnclnnitl ·1,
Atlanta 0; San Diego 5, Houston
1; and San· Francisco 1, Los
Angeles 0.

..

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•''
I

NL playoffs
•

Mets, Dodgers all set for

••

.

saves with 46 In 1986.
"I'd say 30 saves is a goodyear,
and I got 45." Eckersley said .."!
feel fortunate enough to p)ay with
a wl nner. ~· How can you be
disappointed with that?"
And Boston doesn't seem dis"
appointed either.
"We're not discouraged about
losing games In the past week,"
said Marty Barrett. "We know

•

·•

Reds 1, Braves 0
By United Press ln~rnatlonal
finishing with stretches of 19-4 season. Tudor had a muscle
At
pncln~n~U,
Keith Brown and
spasm in his right hlp Frid.ay
The New York Mets enter the
and·29·8.
thre~
·
relle.vers·"coinblned
·on a
National League championship
Jn Sunday's 7·5 victory over St. night but was expected to start
slx·hltter
and
Ron
Oester
drove
•
series in the same fashion in
Louis at New York, Strawberry Wednesday.
in
the
run
with
a
bases-loaded
In other games, Chicago
which they dominated the East: . hit his 38th and 39th home runs to
led by Darryl Strawberry's of·
secure the National League title whlppeil Pittsburgh 8-4, Mont· grounder. Cinclnnati. ·87-74, fin· ,
, real clipped Philadelphia ·a-1, !shed second In the NL Wes 1 for •
fense and deep pitching. The Los
and finish with 101 RBI.
the fourth straight year. Atlanta
Angeles Dodgers ·limped Into
Even Gibson realizes the knee Cincinnati nipped Atlanta 1·0, finished 54-106, last in, the
their confrontation against the
is not likely to instantly heal. He and San Diego clubbed Houston division.
Mets on the short end · of a has been plagued by ·elbow . 5-J.
•
three-hit shutout.. and with Kirk
hamstring and now the knee
Gibson sidelined. · ·
problem most of the month.
"Til play, I'll guarantee you
Jn Game I of the best-of-seven
that," said Gibson. who suffered
''
series , Los Angeles will match
a left-knee injury Friday , of the
Ore! Hershiser. who has not
playoffs. which begin Tuesday at
allowe!) a run In a major-league
•
Los Angeles . "But after I do. I
record 59 straight innings,
Paul Robertson had two. Wheel.
"While
we
didn't
play
competl·
have no Idea how I'll be."
against Dwight Gooden, who was
lively, we got through It," Rio ing Jesuit's Haggerty scored one
, ··For the Mets. things rould
3-0 In four regular season starts
Grande Soccer Coach Phil And- save. The hosts took five shots on
appear brighter only If left ·
against the Dodgers.
erson remarked Saturday after goal and Wheeling Jesuit had 27.
bander Bob Ojeda hadn' t suf·
The Dodgers, who finished the
"We've had a hard time," (
the Redmen feil 8·1 to Wheeilng
fere'd a season-ending injury last
regular season 94-67, are ex- Jesuit at Stanley L. Evans Anderson commented. ••we've "
week. They enter the postseason
pected to pitch left·hander John
lost a lot of people to Injuries.
Athletic Field.
having completed a three-game
Tudor in the second game
Rio Grande, now 3·7, scored Its While I don't like to use that as an
sweep of the Cardinals to reach
against David Cone. who has won only goal at 13:47 ,in the second excuse, right now we don't have •
100 victories for the third time.
20 games and lost only three this
period on a penalty shot by · the depth to handle all positions." :
\
The Redmen return to action '
Ronnie Goodson.
Tuesday at 4 p.m. at Musklngum. •
Wheeilng Jesuit got on the
Ill\ 4: 40 In the first
scoreboard
'
•
.
·I
period on a Don Bermon kick,
•
RJO GRANDE. Ohio iUPil Mary Dowler 'of Rio Grande was assisted by Darren Rowe. The
'
Ohio · University won the men's the top femalj' finisher, in 18:41 visitors came through again at
title and Cedarviile the women's over a 5,000-meter course.
10:15 on Quinton Thomas' unascrown Saturday in the 18th
•
sls ted boot, while Sean Stevenson
'
annual Rio Grande Cross Coun·
CEOARVIULE, Ohio (UPI) \
scored at 19:44 without assist.
try 1nvltatlonal.
Wilmington's Bob Atkinson and Rowe netted the next Wheeling
i Ohfo University had two fin- Tiffin's Wesley Funches were Jesuit "Point and Clift Wicks had
,,
ishers among the top th ree to win named Sunday as the players ot the visitors' final goal of the
the championship in the men 's the week in the NAJA District 22 period at 37:02 at lead Rio
•'
division. OU"s Mike Beetler DiVIsio.n ll. !
Grande 5-0.
finished the 8,000-meter course In
Atkinson, 5-fool-11. 185-pound
'
The Wheeling Jesuit push,
second and teammate Dan Dun- soophomore. runni9g bacil from
orchestrated by Coach Jim Re·
lap came In third.
Lorain, carried th8.bail34 times
gan, contlnped1in the second half
Cedarville finished S('cond in for 257 yards ll{nd sc 0red one
..
when Jamie Parks booted In the
the team scoring and Morehead touchdown in Wilmlngt,&amp;n"s 3a-7 ball at 2:47. Jim Culln scored at
••'
State (Ky. ) was third.
· victory at Defiance. '
13: 48 and the visitors, 5-J.l
•,..
Cedarville's Eric Fillinger was
Funch ~s. a 6-foot-2, 240-pound
entering the game: silpped
the lop individual fini sher for Jhe senior defensive guard . from
through for their last point at 28
second straight year In 25' 10.
Cleveland Heights. recorded · minutes on a Wicks goal.
·
..
In the women's division. be- seven tackles and recovered one
Redmen goalkeeper Chris
••
hind Cedarville were Akron in fumble In Tlf!ln"s 16·10 upset win
••
Krueger totaled l!ine saves and
. second and Marshall In third. at sixth-ranked Geneva (Pa. l. ·
,,•

.. "

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For youth; for Ame.rica, 4-H is the key to a bright
futur!3. We're proud of the way 4-H helps make
..
·
dreams.a reality.

"Support Our
4-H Clubs"

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Wheeling Jesuit ~hands RGC
8-1 defeat in soccer action

I

Ohio sports briefs _

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INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY

992-2342

992·2635

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

'

s

•

992-6687

POMEROY, OHIO

.'

992-5627

POMEROY, OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2975

MID..LEPORT, OHIO

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY INC·.

POMEROY, OHIO

992·2506

(. P_
OMEROY I OHIO

172,
.J.'A . ~
T!}/Of1W
', ~~-

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES.&amp; SERVICE

•'

992-3785 °
•

HERITAGE·'HOUSE
OF SHOES'

"'~(/~
·
@jf),

113 COURT ST;
I'OMIIOY
992-2054 .

••
•

.HILL FORD

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-2196 .

'A
••••

ISN'T IT
iiBOIJl s
TDIE. •'••

-RIGGS
USED CARS

••

985-4100

••

'

•''

POMEROY, OHIO

•·

BANKS.ONE.

. Eighteen ThOU$and People Who Care.

•
••'

lriiNK ON/ II III/ N S, f m tf! , NI\ I ONE PI\ HI O f rl/f ( ; A/tiN(, If JIM

MEMBER FDIC

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY CO.

992-6611

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

'•

t

-·•

-

0

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VETERANS MEMORIAL
·HOSPITAL

.
---+----------1
.
RIDENOUR

POMEROY, OHIO

.

1-,;_-----~~----.....;.-~----.
-~ PAT

342 2ND
GAWI'OUS
446-2691

'••
•'•

SUGAR RUN
FLOUR MILLS
992·2115

BROGAN-WARNER
INSURANCE

&amp;·LOHSE
PHARMACY

992-2955

•

992-2174

.;

•

POMEROY, OHIO

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

P~MEROY I . OHIO

992·2121

HOME NATIONAL
BANK

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANC~

•

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'·This Page Sponsored·
By These Many Fine Businesses ...
.

•

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985-3308

~

SUPPLY
'

POMEROY I OHIO'

STATE FARM INSURANCE

•

(HESTER, OHIO

992-2104

CHESTER, OHIO

MIKE ·SWIGER
992-61»85

, MIDDLEP~IO'

j

~:

,,

In the summer months just
past, the hot water In the
shallows again drove the !ish 1.0
the depths , where the coolest
water was found. Protection
from the heat and light of the sun
Is just as Important as protection
from the cold. as lar as bass are
·
concerned.
The good news lor most fisherman Is that the water In the
shallow part of the lake Is finally
just about the way the !Ish like to
see it . ·
·
There' s warmth. but It Isn't
excessive.
0.

COMPLETE PAYROLLPROCESSING AND
PAYROLL CHECK
· WRinNG.
UK A. DIUI Ill, CPA

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES
992-~270

618 East Main Str.-f,
Pomerqy,. Ohio
.

FARMERS.BANK .
&amp; .SAVINGS CO."

'
•'

992-2136
POMER"Y, OH.

~

:.•

992-2039
992-6454
POMEROY, OHIO

992-5141

POMEROY, OHIO

l .

·TROPHIES
992·6128

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•'

..~•

~MILY RESTAURANT

...••

.,•••
'•

985-3385
IUI'PDS PLAINS., OH.

MIDD~EPORT

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

~;:;.;,..~-...;...-.....;.~~--;.....----+--~----+---------1· ••·..
.
CROW'S .
FRUTH
BAUM

)

'

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

-.-s.

PHARMACY

992·6491

P.OMIIOY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2181

POMEROY, OHIO

. - TRUE VALUE
985·33th

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11,,~11! -"¥

~

~~, ......-~~- ~... --t""....,..;..~.. - '

.,....,.

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•

-~··---....-.--.·--- -

. *.

I

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CHESTD, OHIO ...•
~ ..

......~~~~A~~~-.:--~A~R-,~~~-~~
.. __····~·~-~7~·....................................................................................~......................................
---···---__ _

~

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992-WI • -.; ,;:~

MGM
FARM CITY, INC •

&gt;

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' Page-6. The Daily Sentinei

BIG. BEND

Monday, October 3, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiO

~Your

.•

•
r1ces.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTrTIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE WED.,
SEPT. 28. THRU SAT .. ·OCT. L o19B8 • USDA FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COU·

·~

.,

,

U.S. NO. ONE

Roll
Sausage

White
Potptoes

FRESH LEAN

FElT ELICTRIC
•60 •100 WATt

••

nd Beef

Light Bulbs

,•

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:·
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.:.
'•'
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,•
•

3 PACK

. ••

e

7• ·

:
:-•
-:·
:;.

ASSORTED COLORS
NORTHERN

Bath T'Usue

~

CASTLEBERRY'S

FOODLAND

•COLA •DIET

Beef Stew

Cottage Cheese

Rocky Top Pop

~

·••
·••

...-

4 RO~L

PKG.

.•
1•ntl\.tll

•MEAT •THICK eRI=ul

Armour Star .

oz.
.
3

White Bread

Pork &amp; Beans

Bologna

10-W30 • -10W40
· VALVOUNE

CHOICE

Boneless

Pork Loins

Chuck
Roast

39

•ADC •REG •DRIP •EP

ALL PURPOSE

Maxwell House

White
.· Potatoes

Coffee

99
ur.

limit one with $10.00 additional purdlost.

SLICED FREE
HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

PLAIN • SELF ·RIS,E.

SUPERIOR WHOLE STICK

Mixed Fryer

Mt. Brand

Parts

Bologna

LUSH'US

Hudson Cream
Flour . .

yre~n Beans

99

$

2S LB.

White
Bread
KAHN'S
HICKORY GROVE

TRAY
12-15 OZ. CANS

Boneless
Ham

PURE

Fischer Lard

79

BONELESS WHITING

Fish Fillets

s LB.

Leg
Quarters

I

Bacon
'

.

42

oz.:

$-1 29

_Kidney ·
Beans

·'

2
~t'6$1 00
tableS

~CANS

Pork &amp;
Beans

CANS

399

12. CANS $399

BRAWNY

Paper Towels

SHURFINE

-

.

Mushrooms 12 ~A~~-

$499 ·

I 0 LIS.

MT: DEW, PEPSI FREE
DIET OR ,REG .

Roun
Steakc;..~
S LB.

399

FOODLAND

DEL MONTE

V

$

1'!)ts oz.$.

9
LB.

Pepsi ~ol~

CHILLED

Tropicana
~

_O~ange

39

.,·
Audrey Clark who has lost 70
"•• pounds to reach her goal weight
:.- was accepted Into the Sllm·n·
• Trim class at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Mason Sllnderella
' Class.
Ms. Clark was presented a
... ,. special rlbbonand a certificate ln
, recognition of her accomplish·
.- ment. In the class Lois Ann
Reltmlre recleved fi most weight
lost ribbon and there was a tle for
•' runner-up between Beth Knight
and Enld Adams.
At the Flve Points Tuesday
· • class, Judy Eblin lost the most
weight, whlle at the Wednesday
night class, Calhy Hudson lost
the most weight and also re·
cteved her 35 pound weight loss
ribbon and certificate. Jo Ann
Newsome ls the lecturer for the
• classes.

2 LITER

BTL.

PERI meeting ·

Roush birt.hday
Derek -Wllllam Roush, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Roush, Syra·
cuse. celebrated hls first birth·
day recently at the home of his
paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan Roush.
A Blg Blrd Se!illme Street
theme was carried out with cake.
lee cream and punch being
served. Chelsea Amberger won
the door prize.
Attending or sending gifts or
cards besides hls parents were
Mr. and Mrs. Louts Bush ·and
S)1awn, Mr. and Mrs. Nathan
Roush, Bob Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Burns. Betsy Ryan ~nd
Dyana Hawthorne, Janie and
Abby Stewart, Chelsea and Meg
DEREK W. ROUSH
• Amberger, Donna and Darrick
1 Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. JeffMcCal·
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Richa rd
vln and Ashley, Mr. and Mrs. Rob Wolfe and Jordan.

BIGGER' GIRLS- Nine and 10-year-olds who received awards
at the cheerleadlng clinic sppnsored by the Eastern cheerleaders
were, left to right, In front, Tracey Heines, .first place; Patsy
\. Aelker, second; Kelly Osborne, third, and Jeanie Newell, bebst alkl
&lt;J over. Eleven to l3-year-old winners were, left to right, In ac ,
Nora Eastman, third; . Amber Well, second; Courtney Knapp, ·
first; and Rebecca Mcintyre, best all over.

~·

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POMEROY - The newly
formed Public Employee Retirees Inc. Chapter wlll rneet
Thursday, 10:30 a.m. , at the
Senior Citizens Center ln Ppmeroy. On the agenda are rev lew of
the constitution and bylaws,
program planning, membership
extension,, charter presentation
plans and\ committee assign.
ments. There wlll be no former
speaker at th~ meeting however,
input ls needed by members. and
guests. All retirees are urged to
attend.

OES meeting
MIDDLEPORT- Evangellile
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star. wlll meet at 7: 30Thurday at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

Rutland Friendly Gardeners~
meet
.
.

It was noteil that Mrs. Barnes
RUTLAND - A report on Margaret Edwards. members
wlll
host th e October meeting at
therapy work. with the learning named a garden they had visited.
disabled students at the Rutland The check for $100 from the State which tline there will be a basket
•
Elementary School was given by Fair Beaytlflcatlon Contest, demonstration. Cost is SlO per
Joan Fetty when Rutland fourth place winner, was pres· member for s upplies to make a
Friendly Gardeners met re- ented and members voted to basket.
Marie Birchfield had a procently at the home of Kimberly participate again ln 1989.
members gave comment's on a . prepared and will be distributed
A $250 check for second place ln
gram on bulbs giving Informa· "\Vlllford.
flower arrange ment by Judy by Krista! Bolin. .
. .
· the state In the Ohlo Association
'The Region 11 meeting on Oct". tion on how to plant bulbs, when
Mrs. Fetty asked members to
The combined fall flower show
,. of Garden Clubs plantings at the Snowden.
8
at Chester was announced as they should go Into the ground,
collect
and
save
severalltems
for
Officers'
reports
were
given
of
the
three
Rutland
Clubs
will
be
Ohlo State Falr was presented at
was
the Region 11 meeting to be and the differen t types that are
use
in
progral'!ls
with
the
chaired
next
year
by
Mrs.
Hill
fund
collected
.
and
the
flower
;· th.e recent meeting of the Friends
held
ln Marietta on Oct. 15. The avallalile.
chlldren.
with
the
presidents
of
the
clubs
to
, . ari'd Flowers Garden Club of The sunshine comm ittee recounty
meeting wlll be held Oct.
Refreshm ents were. served by
Lorl
Barnes
presided
at
the
serve
as
co-chairmen.
ported that some food and a card
;: •..Rutland held at the home of
11
at
Trinity
Church
with
the
the
hostess. Judy Snowden won
meeting
wlth
Mrs.
Wilford
havPictures of the convention
had been taken to the Davis home
,. Judith Hill.
Ru
ttand
Friendly
Gardeners
to
the
travellng
prize.
Ing
devotions
on
the
theme
following the deat h of Bruce were shown by Janet Bolin who
.•
The club voted during the
have
a
progrm
on
everlastings
.
"Trees."
For
roll
call
taken
by
will host the next meetfng. The
' meeting to participate ln the
Davis.
Mrs. Kennedy and Brenda program will be on pot pourri
·· plantings again next year. Janet
.- Bolln and Brenda Bolin will be Bolln of the civic committee, with each member ·to take an
reported that the club s ign has item to be used In the mixture.
~ co~chairman .
·•
Lllly Kennedy presided wlth been erected on Salem Stret. 11 Mrs . Kennedy tal ked on wa tering
.
Mrs. Hill giving devotions on the was agreed that handbooks will for the timely gardening tlp and
Peckham,: Tim Wamsley, Stan
Descendants of Lewis Harri- Pomeroy.
•. theme, " Flowers for Mother ." be purchased for cl ub presidents. refreshments were served by the
Richard and Vickie Ellis, Paul McGuire and Mike Harrison, all
son met at the Route 33 roadside
New program books are be ing hostess.
For roll call by Camille Bolin,
and Mary Lou Harrison, Gallipo- of Middleport .
park for a reunion recently .
Jack Harrison. John Martin
Attending were Ralph and lis; Cindy, Tony and. Jessie
Sadie Carl, Louise and Olen Hutton. Langsville; Adellne Harrison. Mike Fink, Rick Bolin,
Harrison, Mona, Jason and Amy , Snowden, Elaine Quillen, Floyd Brenda, Derrick and Brook of
Frecker. Don: Tina, Bonnie Jo and Lola Harrison, Rutland; Rutland, and John Harrison,
and Charlotte Harper, ' Pomeroy.
The descendants of Alexander and Mauhew, ME. and Mrs. Dorea David Strohmeyer, RushviUe._ and Clint Lambert. Rev. Clyde Gary
The group enjoyed a picnic at
Jeffery,
and Mat thew
and Isabelle Winebrenner met at Winebrenner, Beulah Ward, Maggie Ohio, Rita,, Mike, oROn and John and Margaret Henderson, Lloyd, PeckhamVIcky
noon
and spe.nt the afternoon
,
Greg
Peckham,
the Letan Community Center for Winebrenner, Syracuse, Ohio, Mr. Hreha, Nashpon, Ohio, Mr. and Eva, Brian, Phllllp and Brlll
visiting.
their 11th annual family reunion. and Mrs. Jim Daugherty, Mid· Mrs. Ronnie Winebrenner, Randy Klng, Cathy Hobstetter all of Steve, Deb. Danlella and Jason
Carla Winebrenner, sub¢tuling for dleport, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Henry and. Rita, "Burbank, Ohio,"Dorothy
the presiden~ called the meeting to King, Washington, W.Va., Mr. and Whaly, Shade. Ohio, Mr. and Mrs.
order. Henry King asked the bless- Mrs. Richard Garrett, Barbarton, Joe Russell, West Salem, Ohio,
Lois
Winebrenner, Mrs. Harold Weaver, Newark,
ing; remembering.lhe passing away Ohio,
of two family members since the Clarksburg, Ohio, Nancy Mc- Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Jarvis;
Three new members were
nounced that the society would gave the Invocat ion. Tables w~re
Hunlingtlln, Mrs. To~ Knapp and Initiated and new offlcers were
last reunion, Laura Winebrenner Kenzie, London, Ohio.
celebraie the 50th anniversary of decorated In a fall m&lt;&gt;tif wit h red
Charles Winebrenner, Marietta, Chris, Mr. and Mrs. Ross installed at the recent meetlngo!
Stanley and Richard Winebrenner.
tissue apples. red napkins. and
Its founding on May 6, 1989.
The fwnily · shared a covered dish Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Toni Price, Winebrenner, Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
M•s.- Parker read thank you red baskets as favors.
Lexington, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Winebrenner, Letan.
dinner.
Attending from Meigs County
Kappa Gamma, held at the
notes from Vlrglnta Atkinson
Those winning door prizes were
were
Twila Childs , Martha
family.
Hall,
Wellston.
Olive
Page,
Margaret
Presbyterian
..
Grace Jarvis, Beulah Ward, Mary
Parsons, and Beatrice Rinehart. Greenaway . Ne llie Parker, Re·
• Eleanor Essman. lnltlatlon
Winebrenner, Faye Winebrenner
The society signed friendship becca Zurcher. Donna Jenk ins.
chairman. conducted the lnltfa.
,. and Ruth Shain.
.
.
cards .fotr Lucllle Smith, Rosalie Chris Rouse. Carolyn Snowden.
tlon assisted by chapter officers
Marga ret Yost was presented
•·
New officers were elected, those
Story, Maxine . Philson, and a nd Paula Whitt . Next meeting ·
RUTLAND - Rutland Free· a pin from the Grand Chapter of and escorts, Debble' Hammond,
·• being, president, Donna Knapp,
will be Qct .'24 at the Holiday Inn.
Frieda Smith, and Dian Partlow . Esther Dauber.
.. vice president, Gordon Winebren~ · will Baptist Church will have a Ohio ln recognition of 50 years
Galllpolis
.
Initiated ,.!ere Cynthia Bateman,
Women of the church served a
,• .ner, secretary, Li~da Diehl and . two-week revival starting Mon· membership when Evangeline ~Ita Hartley, aild Jane Smith.
baked steak dinner. Mrytle Frl
day and continuin g through Oct. Chapte r 173, Order of the Eastern
·· treaSurer, Ruth Shain.
New
offlcers
installed
were
:·
There were 42 present this year: 8 wlth Rick Weaver, ahd Oct. Star, met at the Middleport Rebecca Zurcher: president; SuMr. and Mrs. Gordon Winebrenner, 10-15 with James Stewart . Pastor Masonic Temple.
san Will, first vlce president;
Mrs. Yost was i n iti&lt;~ted Into a Sandra Nodrulf, second vlce
:: Mary and Becky, Mrs. Sam Shain Paul Taylor lnv!tes the public.
chapter ln Virginia on Oct. 71938. president; Nellle Parker, secre·
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL .
MaRJng the presentation at the
meeting was Rowena yaughan,a ~a::~ ; Es~~~ ii'~~~rk~~·.~~a::
•'
long-time frten&lt;! of the recipient. . parliamentarian .
POMEROY - The Pomeroy others .
A
free
will
.
offering
will
be
, Also eligible for a 50-year pln
Seventh-Day Adventist Church
Pauline Burson led the.~tnglng
taken
to
benefit
the
new
church
but unable to attend was Dorothy which lficluded " Tell Me Why"
wlll host a hymn slni&gt; Sunday, ·
Yotmg who was Ill. She was and "God Bless America."
roof.
Oct. 9, beginning at 1: 30 p.m.
'I'he church is located on initiated into Evangeline ChapHA~E
Singers and musicians wlll
Mrs. Zurcher gave reports on • 1
Include· the' Johnsons, of Ma- Mulberry Heights, around · the ter In May, 1938 and has held a the upncomlng presidents' workCALL ·(614) 992·2104
hlll from Veterans 'Memorial star point offlce, was secretary shop and lhe state
rietta, the Clark Famlly. Steve
board
•
for several years and was worthy executive meeting which she
Hospital.
Nakamoto, the McDaniel Trio,
(304) 675-1244
matron in 1951.
Junior and Rlta White and
attended rece~y . She an·

Friends. and Flowers Club meeting }:leld

Harrison
family gathers
at reutJion
.
.

Winebrenners have family reunion

Delta·Kappa Gamma meet held

Revival set

OES meets

JOHN A. ·WADE, M.D. Inc.
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT ..
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE
HEARIMO AIDS"

..... _

''

A.~N LA.NDERSe

'•1988, L- An11dr..
DearAnnLanders: When1was
a way to a decent life.
Tim" Sy ndit'lllf'.and
171 ran away from home. (I'm a
Father Bruce Ritter , that
Creaton Syndl tJl.girl.) I was running away from
saintly priest In New'York who
an alcoholic father and a mother operates shellers for runaways,
who had a nervous breakdown says that their biggest problem
and was off the wall ni.ost of the
now ls :A.IDS. Most of the1dds who
•
·time. I have several brothers and
come to them .are already ln·
a sister. who were stoned a lot . . .' &lt;:;;:fected. He says no matter how take us anyway? - Burned Up ln
They sold drugs and stole to bad It -Is at home, It 1s better than Fresno
l)ear Burned: Personally, I
support their habits.
the streets. Thank you for glv!ng
think
the Idea ls geared to the
I knew I had to get out of that
me the opportunity to once again
·
mentality
of Idiots. But so long as
envlroDII)ent, bu I I should not
focus on this tragic problem.
the drawings aren't hard-core
have run away from home. It ls
too dangerous. Teen-age runaDear Ann Landers: 1 just read porn they cannot be outlawed.
ways are easy prey for pimps and something ln the paper that fias It's part of the price we pay for
drug dealers because they are convinced me that people are being a free people and, in my
naive and vulr)erableand have no going nuts because they don't Opinion, it's worth lt.
l&gt;ear Ann Landers: I have $10
money . They often get raped and have enough to d9.
end up as prostitutes.
·•
-~
A man ln San Francisco, whose rldlng on this one.
My three grandchildren laugh
I didn't know there were courts business It ls to sell chec.ks to
that could have put me ln a foster . banks, got botedonedaybecause at me when I said nicotine ls a
home where I would have had all the checks ldbked the same. · drug and that people who smoke
food and shelter, and maybe, He dreamed up what he calls are drug addicts. Am 1 right or
wlth luck, people who .cared "naughty checks.'' These checks wrong?. - Crazy Grandma ln
about me.
have drawings·that are supposed -Indian Lake, N.Y.
Dear Indian Lake: It may
Ann, please keep telling klds to·be tunny. There's one of a man
who are having trouble at home . making obscene 'gestures, sound far out, but the state{Jlent
that lt ls awfully dangerous to go another of a dog wlth his hind leg 1s correet. Nicotine ls a drug. If a
off on their own. Tell them again raised. A third Is of a mali person is addicted to smoking he
and again to talk to a school mooning. The creator of these or she may be rightfully classl·
counselor or a favorite teacher or checks says that hls job Is a lot fled as a drug addict. Collect the
·
a clergyman - or the parent of a more Interesting now and busl· 10-spot, Granny.
How
much
do
you·
know
about
friend. Anything ls better . than ness ls good.
.
Ann I am a respectable, pot, cocaine, LSD, PCP, crack,
the streets.
I found my way back from a chu.rchgolng woman who used to · speed and downers? Think you can
living hell and am determined to work ln a bank. I would be handl'e I hem? For up-~o-the minu're
make a respectable llfe for terribly upset lf I ran Into that information on drugs, write for
Ann Landers' newly revised boomyself. Believe me when I tell klnd of trash on the job.
Is there any law that could kl et. " Th e Lowdown on Dope."
you I am - Lucky to be Alive,
make such checks Illegal ? I Send 13 plu8 a self-addressed,
Batoa Rouge &lt;
Dear Baton: · 1 hope to heaven mean how far down are we going surmpf!!d business-size envelope (45
you stick wlth lt and that you will to allow the First Amendment cents postage) to Ann Landers, P.O.
help your brothers and sister flnd and freedom of expression to Box ll562, Chicago, Ill. 606ll-0562.

..
. Hymn sing planned for area .
.

•

Juice

'

Eastern's Varsity, Junior Var·
slty and Junior Hlgh Cheerlead·
ers sponsored a rec~&gt;nt clinic to
teach community girls about
cheerleadlng and to earn money
!or Items needed for the cheer·
leading squads. The cllltlc was
held at Eastern High School.
The clinic was open to girls
ages 3 to 18 .. Approximately 75 girls attended the clinic and
awards were presented In four
age categories. ·
.
Cheerleaders who taught at the
cllnlc included·Ay Mora. Debbie
LJTI'LE GIRLS- Winners ln the three lo six-year-old category
Brooks, Amy Murphy. Angle
during
competition at a recent cheer leading cllnlc at Eastern High
Murphy, Melinda Wells, Amy
School
were, left to right, Sara Putman, third place medaiUon;
Metzger and Kym Mcintyre,
Julie
Bailey,
SI!COnd place; Amanita Fetty, first; and Tiffany
varsity; Amy Well, Tlna Con·
Elchln~er
who
received the trophy for best all over.
nolly, Melissa Wells and Monica
Adams, junior varslly; Tracy
Murphy. Chastldy Mlllhone, Susle Francis, Carrie Connoliy,
Leticia Holsinger, Anita Cala·
way, AmieFrlend. Penny Aelker
and Andrea Dillard. junior high.
Cheerleaders ·who won spirit
sticks at the clinic were Carrie
Connolly, Melissa Wells, Melinda
Wells, Tracy Murphy, Ay Mora
and Amy Well.
·
Cheerleadtng advisors are
JoAnn Newsome and Tammy
Capehart. ·
-'
Al.so helping wlth the. clinic ·
were Ruth Brooks. Slna Mae ·..
Murphy, Doris Well. Connie
Connolly and Frank Newsome,
who furnished the certificates
MEDIUM AGE GffiLS - Seven and elght-year-olds who
which each gl~l received along
received awards at the recent Eastern cheerleadlng clinic were,
left to ·rtght, Valerie Karr, first place; Blllee Pooler, second;
wlth a parllclpallon ribbon.
Jessica McElroy, third; and Kelli Bailey , wllh the best all ov~r
Judges for the clinic were
Jahnee Johnson and Glna Tillis.
trOphY_.
Donations from several area
businesses provided door prizes
for tl)e cllnlc.

.

LUSH 'US

TENDERBEST

CENTER SLICED
,.

Sho.rtening

.

Navy Beans 12~:N~z.

MOUNTAINEER

SAUSAGE

FRESH CHICKEN

lB.

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3 20oz$149
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Chopped
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There's help for kids
·who're abused, hurt

...'' Slinderella
class meets
•

:I

1(_,

WHOLE

•

Motor Oil

16
LOAVES

Monday. October 3, 1988
Page-'-7

•

.

Cheerleader
Clinic winners
announced

.••

MOIJNTAINEER

The ·Daily Sentinel ·

By The Bend

·-•

PONS ACCEPT_f:D . • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL
ERRORS.

.

•

c

Independently Owr.ed
· Low· Priced Supennarket

.

II

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�Page-s-The Dillily Sentinel

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Pornet;o_y-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 3, 1988

Q

..----.--People in ihe news-.- - - Community calendar
.
-=~====================~==============~====~==================================-..,
.r

/
Ohio

• f'!'"".

By FRANK' T. CSONGOS
I
Unlled Preu International
BIG SHOW: It's billed as " the ultimate event"
In show biz. Frank Sinatra, Llza Mlnnelll and
Sammy Davis Jr. are on a national tour together,
and audiences love their concert.
Some 20,000 people at New York 's Meadowla nds
gave the trio a blg hand during the weekend with
women crying, " We loveya, Frankie!"- just like
50 years ago When Sinatra, now nearing 73, was a
kid but already a star.
•
.
Davis, once a pretty good boozer, told the
audience he has not had a drink In four years. Said
the Candyman, " Do I miss lt!"
CASH ON CENSORSHIP: Country and western
superstar Johnny Cash says radio and television
stations are wasting their· lime In bleeplng out
what they consider rough rock'n roll lyrics.
Cash told NBC TV's •' Later with Bob Coalas " tn
a show scheduled to air Tuesday; " I think It 's
pretty sllly, you know, for programmers of radio
or TV to think they're gonna protect eur youth by
censoring three minutes of life of the dialogue
they hear all day long from thelrfrlends, from TV,
radio, recotds, books, magazines. It doesn't give
parents too IIJUCh credit, and the teachers."
MYSTERY REDHEAD: Sylvester "Rambo"
Stallone and Ills bodyguards showed up at a New
York · jewelry store - recently where the actor
purchased some baubles.
Jewelry store owner Edward Faber told People
magazine, "He bought them for an Intimate
friend - a redhead, I b!!lleve, because he wanted
green stmies." Asked about the mystery woman,
Stallone publicist Paul Bloch said, "He has three
or four ladles he sees. I don't belleve any of them
have red hair."
GREEN SMASHES AUTO: Former heavy.
weight boxing contender Mitch ''Blood'' Green Is
in trouble with the law again. Pollee report Green
smashed hls automobile Into a parked car In New
York City Sunday and was arrested for drunken
driving. It was hts third bout with authorities ln

.

recent weeks.
Officials say Green was slurring his speech, had
alcohol on his breath and appeared lethargic .
They say he apparently lost control of his car and
crashed Into the auto. Green, who had an
unscheduled fight with heavyweight champion
Mike Tyson outside an all-night Harlem clothing
boutique last' summer, put up no resistance as he
was taken to a pollee precinct.
·
'TEMPTATION' FILM FIREBOMBED: Fire
ripped through Sunday a French movl~ theater
showing director Martln .Scorseae's "The Last
Temptation of Christ. " The movie theater at
Besancon In central-eastern France was extensively damaged but there were no casualties. •
Pollee say the blaze was triggered by an
explosive device and that the manager had ·
received telephone threats since he started
showing the film last week. Opponents have
condemned the film. which depiCts Jesus as
all-too-human and Includes erotic scenes of ChriSt
and Mary Magdalene.
THE ,G UNS OF THE ARMADA: Geoffrey
Parker has an, Intriguing theory. The military·
historian says England defeated the Armada In
1588 because the SpaniSh sailors were unable to
reload their heavy guns fast enough.
History buffs have long contended that Sir
Francia Drake outman~:uvered the Arma&lt;la with
England's own swift ships, thus ending a planned
Invasion and OCC)lpatlon of England.
But Parker writes In the Inaugural Issue of .
MHQ, The Quarterly Journal of Military His tory,
that Spain actually lost the battle because the
sailors could not load thel~;&amp;uns more than twice a
day .
Gllmp!le!l: Gary Crosby has been signed to star
as . a jealous gun-collecting husband ln an .
upcoming TV episode of the syndicated courtroom drama "Divorce Court ... Elvia: A Musical
Celebration comes to Plttbsurgh's Heinz Hall Oct.
25-30. It's aboutthe life and tlmesofEivlsPresley.

Vet hospitalized after 'Headstand'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A
veterinary technician was hospitalized with a broken pelvis after
a 3 \1,-ton elephant she was
·treating knocked her down and
did a "headstand" on her at the
San Francisco Zoo.
Gall Hedberg was nearly
crushed to death by Tlnkerbelle,
a 22-year-old Asian elephant,
who some keepers said had been
routinely beaten by her trainers.
Zoo officials had no comment on
the allegatlons~f mistreatment.
Hedberg, a ntne-year veteran
of the zoo, remained hospitalized
In stable condition Sunday at San
Francisco General Hospital. She
had been treallng an absce~s on
Tlnkerbelle's 'head Saturday
when she apparently hlt a sensitive spot. The elephant knocked

her over and stood on Its head,
with Hedberg underneath.
.

Two zookeepers later said
other zoo personnel had m Istreated Tlnkerbelle whlle trying
to teach her to · do stunts Including headstands.
"These elephants have been
beaten and are chained 15-16
hours a day," said Paul Hunter,
who has been a keeper at the zoo
tor nine years. He said the
abscess on Tlnkerbelle's head
was the result of someone hitting
ht:r too hard with a hooked
training instrument.
Hunter and another zookeeper
who asked not to be Identified
said It was the fourth major
Injury caused by elephants at the
zoO&lt; In the past decade.

Hunter. who ' said he was once
Injured by an elephant, said he
objects to "the dally routine of
tricks and stunts the animals are
forced to perform lor zoo
patrons.
"We're not a circus," he said.
"We're a zoo. There Is no reason
for this. "
Zoo director Saul Kltcfiener,
however , defended the use of
metal hooks and electric-shock
devices to control the big
animals.

~

MONDAY
EWINGTON - Pine Grove
Holiness Church begin~ revival
Monday wlth Rev, Kermit Webb.
.Services 7: 30 p.m.; special
si nging..

LETART FALLS - Letart
FallS PTO will meet 7 p.m .
Monday. All parents are urged to
' attend.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees wlh meel 7 ·
p.m. Monday a t the town hall.

The
lather
of three
sald
.ln32-year-old
an Interview'
publiShed
ln
The Tennessean Monday that he
thought It was a joke at first but quickly realized · It was
ruining hls life .
"It 's _kind of hard to face your
neighbors when they think you
are wanted for rape ," Buchanan
said. "Every time I went IQ a
store, I just put my hand over my
face because I didn't want them
to say 'Hey, there 's a rapist."'
The ordeal also has des troyed
Buchanan's nerves , he said.

v

EAST MEIGS - A Red Cross
Bloodmobile will be held Monday, 10 a .m. to 2 p.m. , In the
Eastern High School
gymnasium.

.

'

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, wlll
meet at 1 p.m . Monday at the
home of Mrs. Lula Hampton .
RUTLAND - Rutland Freewlll BaptiSt Church wlll have a
two-week revival starting Mon-

Mr. and Mrs. Homer B . Smith,
Jr., Pomeroy, are announcing
the birth or their first child. a
. daughter , Whitney Nlchole, born
on Sepf. 12.
The Infant weighed live
pounds, 10 ounces and was 17&gt;,?
Inches long. Maternal grandparefllS are Bud and Wanda Vining
of Rutland . Paternal grandparents are Ruth Smith of Pomeroy,
and the late Homer B. Smith, Sr.
Maternal great-grandmother
Is Goldie Graham, Rutland, and
the paternal great-granilparents
are Basil and Kathleen Cremeans, Rutland.

uu..
Gtralll frwtnan, 614·367-0662
IIIII Gilmore, 614-992-6121
,... lttird, 304:675-3306
Mlltld Casto, 304-675-3888
fUHI EASY! GIEAT EXIICISEt
MIU NEW PEOPIII

"TEEN CLASS"
(Sitw 1!111 Fast Dandng I
Pt. l'ltalllllt Youth Clllter
. ITUIIdaf)

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._......... - ............
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,____

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club meet fng, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the home of Mrs. Carl
Horky.
~
·

.....

'

REEDSVILLE
Lebanon
,
Township Trustees will meet -Tuesday, 6 p.m., at the townshlp
building.

'

-·

.•.

Hymn sing
STIVERSVILLE
Th e Stl- . ~.
versville Word of Faith Cqmmun - ''
ity Church, off Route 124 on ,.
County Road 131 , two miles out '
on the right, will have a hymn ••
sing on Saturday, Oct. 8, at 7 p.m. -•
Singers will be the rtoblnson ,-,.
Family, of Grove City. Pastor ,
Gary Holter welcomes the 1
public.
-~

ftlch. Pom•oy. Ohto 46769.

Meigs County Public Ubrary

lratrix, W.W.A. of the

tatH, to such of the following as are rnklentl of the
State of Ohio, viz: - theaur·
viving spoul8, the next of
kin, the beneficiaries under
the will; and to the attorney
or anorneya representing
ariy of the aforementioned

.

..

•

You •e h..., notified that

·Any person desiring to file
eXceptions thereto muat fila
them at least five days prior
to the date set fo •; hearing.
Given under my hand and
teal of said Coun, thia 27th
day Of September, 1Yt:la:l.
Robert E. Buck

Subscriptions:

and

News
·

Actual No. Copiet of Sin·
gle Issue Published NearBit
to Filing Date ;
10. Extent and Nature of
Circulation .
A. Totel
No . Copies

Printed: 6,600.

B. Paid Circulation .
1 . Salae Through Deal en
and Carriers, Street Vendors

and Counter Salea : 4, 764.
2. Mail Subscripttons:

. ·'-

431 .

C. Total Paid Circulation :

6,185.

·•.

0 . Free Distribution By
Mail Carrier or Other Means.

.,

Samplll.

Complimentary
and Other Free Copiaa : 35.
E. Total
Distribution :

....';..

6.220.

'\-

F. Copies Not Distributed:
1 . Office Use Left Over,

Unaccounted. Spoiled After ,

Prlnttng: 19 3 .

.
2 . Returns from News

Agents: 187.
G. Total : 6,600.

,,

I Certify that the state·
menta made by me above
are correct and complate.
Robert Wingett,

Public Notice

·.
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..._..;
...

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•''

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INFORMATION FOR
BIOS- SECTION 00010
Sooted bld1 will be received by the Meigs County

·Public Ubrary ot 200 Ea11

Second St., Pomeroy, Ohio
4578._. until 12:00Noon lo-

cal time. Tueaday. October

4. 1988. for tho Addition

end Renovation of an Existing Building loe1ted 11

216 W. Main St., Pomtfoy,

Ohio according to driiWings
.,.d ~pecificatlons on file in

· .,, Office of tho Library and

· ,lhe · Architect, Richard E.

t&gt;ittmar.

Bldo witt . be received for
tha following:
OENERALTRAOES
PLUMBING
HVAC
ELECTRICAL
COMBINED BIDS

P11n1 and Specifications

l

Box 84, Rutland. Ohio 457715.

Judge
Paid Circulation: !:.1-:0~1~3~,-:4-:-2-:tc-:---:::-..::...-:6' ):~... Diotribution by Malt
Real Estate General
Corrie' or Other Me.,s. Sam-

._

AD .DEADLINE
.

Alice M. Priddy, Route 1,
Box 84, Rutland. Ohio 4&amp;776.
Ru18011 L. Priddy, Rout8 1.

1
culldon.
A. Totti No. Copi• Printed:
5 600
' B. Pal.d Clrculat ion :
1 . Sal• ttwough Dealers

A: Total: 6,600.

·ASK FOR .
BRIAN -OR DAVE

'OPEN 24 HOURS!

dence:

tho 1""""'orv .,d Appraisemnloftho•tat• ofthoaforam...-ed. d..,..od, 1oto of
IBid County, _,filed In thl&amp;
Court. Slid Inventory and Appraloemont1 wilt be for h-lng
before thl&amp; Court on tho 17th
dor of Oct-. 1988, at 1 :30
o'clock P.M.
·

Printing: 1&amp;7.
2. Returns from
Agents: 217.

1·~988

OCTOBER 11 I 1988

Name of Decadent, Rasi-

villa. S. C. 29606.
·
B. P..a holdng notoo In
.,._1 of 1 pen:ont of total indelotodnMo: The Ch- M.,.
hllltan Bank, N- Yl&gt;'k. N. Y.
AIItl'aga No. Copioo Each
f1oue During Procoding 12
Months:
10. E-.t end nature of Cir-

Un'accounted, Spoiled Attar

NOW!

, 10 LIS. ·OR MORE

peraona:

c.' Totot

RESERVE YOUR AD SPACE

GROUND BEEF

80·

,.

~

:•

· "' the proposed constNC·
tion work ere on file in
the Office of the Architect
and miiY be obtainad from

~

INC .. 13 South
th~o~A~r~ch~:l;t;oct~~-~~AICHARD
E.

Zan•vllle. .

•100.00

upon

w~h

dopo1~

175,00,

poi~B. being refunded

,,

Power Steering

gina

Dome Light
Two bids ere requested,
with two wheel drive

and the second with four
drive.
Bids will be opened Mo.nday, October 10, at 12:00

whee~

Noon at the District Office
located at 3956t Ba r 30
Road. Reedsville, Ohio .
No mail will be rec,eived
after Friday. October 7th be·
cause of Columbus Day. The
District office will be open
one (1) hour before 12:00
noon to receive bids.
Also offered for sale is a
1981 4 Wheel Drive Pick-up
truck which can be viewed
every work daoflbetween the
hours of 4 :00-4:30 , and·

services

j..::l:..:::.:::..:::::,.:;::::;:::..;;:;;,;.:.t-..:.:.:::.::;.::;.;;.:::.;;:.____,
1_
~

B USI. ness

0

_:=_:.:.,:_:____-r---7'"------j

:

CHEESE PIZZA

(OUpoM

off•.

6-17-tfc

l.....,nable lates

56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

992-2196

446·3487

•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busines s

RACINE
GUN CLUB

168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

MIDDLEPORT- Recently remod~ed. induding kitchen. 3
bedrooms, I\? bil:hs, part basemen!, storage building and
much more! $32, 500.00

.
APPROX. 27 ACRES ol va-

cant grou~d. close to Pomeroy. Beautiful building
s1te lor a speci~ home.
$16,500.00.
. .., _....,
HENRY E. ClfUND
992-6191
Jean Trussell .... 949-266U
Dottit Turner ..: 992-5692
Tracy Riffle ...... 949-2807
Jo Hill.. ............. 915-4466
Offill .............. 992-225't;

lB

REALTOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

'
:

.

3-30·'87 tfn

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
b 14•662 -3821

16 14) 992-6550

RESIDENCE PHON!
16141 992-7754

Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

1128/ rlll

Cocker Spaniel, half Border

call

Kittens to give away to good
home. Also 4 month old stray
puppy Call 614-995-3884 or
see at first trailer oo Silwr Ridge
.near Eastern High School

One black and one white kitten.
both males. 304-895-3083

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pri&lt;es"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

' 992-6282

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16-86- tin

319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport r Ohio
1-28-'88-tfn

J&amp;L
INSULATION

MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES

Mastic &amp;Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772 .

Munlelooding Supplies
Modern Gun Supr.lies
Guns • Ammo • S ugs ·
22 Ammo
12 4 East of Rutland
A&lt;rou Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. &amp;14·742·2355

9/20/tfn 1 mo. pd.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Dealer for

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

992-3410

Mos1 Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

A/ C Service

Located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashln .

NEW I. USED MOWERS
StrYi&lt;t Cent• for Ryan
Pro duds
8 .7 Financing on Y•dman
Service on All Makes

We. Honor MC/Disc/Yisu
9· 1·88- tin

Wanted

l- ' - - - - - - - - - Gantleman n~~ads room &amp; board
ifl Gallipolis Will pay for laundry
done. PleMe r9ply to: Earnest
Mc Kinney. 76 Cout1 St., Gallipojls. Ohio 45631 or 814-446· ,,
3658.

13

lnsur&lt;rlce

6 Lost and Found
Call us for your mobil e home
Insuran ce 1',1ill er Insuran ce,
304-882·2145 . Also : auto.
home. life. health.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

.•

Schools
lnstru ction

Yard Sale.s

We pav cash for late model cle.1

used cars•., _....
"Jim Mink Chev.-Ofds Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
&amp;t&lt;l-446-3672

.......G.iillipolis--- .......

FILL DIRT

SYRACUSE, OHIO

All Major &amp; Minor
·
Repairs
NIASE Certified MechMiC

CALL 992-67 56
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

,

5-25-tfn

-------p ·---·--------------~--·-

omeroy ::\
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

&amp; Viginity
............................1"""'"

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used e.-s Smi1tl
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis. Cll1 _ 61~446·
2282.

4 Family-Vinton. Oct 3,4 , 5
Jeans, many houtehold items,
etc:. Gray house across fr om
Baptist Chuteh. •

.

Monday and Tuesday Corner of
Art l ewis (Pfum) and lau,el
Stritets, Middleport

&amp;rage sale. Oct. 3.4.5. Hou!99
plants, hand made i1ems. hutch
and table, lots of good clothing
Cheap . 782 High St .,
M•ddleport.

Complete households of furni·
ture &amp; antiquet. Also wood &amp;
coal heaters. Swein's Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp; Olive.
&amp; 14-'448-3169

Mo nday, Oct. 3 . 9 :00-2 ·00
Vine St.. Racine. Chlldrens.
juniors, adult clothing and morel
3 family . Oct . 3rd and 4th ~
9:00-4 ·00 at Carroll Dugan'!l 01)
Broudway St. in Ra cine

Farm Equlpmuf

DENNY CONGO '
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

PH. 949·2969

position Boy

3 lovable kittens, 7 weeks old
304--675· 19 28.

October lrd through 8th 4
f .-mlly. 685 Genenl Herting..Parkway. Home Interio r, Christ·
mas deCCH"ations. dothing, lin·

..

ens, coats, dishes, etc.
round bales of hay,
dP-'iwred or pid!.ad up. Call
Large

814-245-6600, 8-4 .

Want TO Buy· Undorpintwinf for
a mobile home Call 614- 561195.
QUILTS
cash paid for qu1lts Pre

1960's. Plectd. ap pllq ued,
unutUIIII· eny condllion. Call
614-992-6857.
We buy Black Walnut:a. Fund

raising opportunity ,• George
Shisback 614-992-3891. For
delivery instrwtions cell1 -80().
999-0727
wanted to Buy, Ford 289englne

and transmisSion. Call evenings
61&lt;1-247-4304.

Employmenl
Serv1c •:;
11

~~~:::~;~:(~~:

Sale-Monday 6.
3 &amp; 4. 9 · 4.

, Vinton. Lots of

cl othes , children and
bed, dresser, lotaofmlsc
hll clothes &amp;: misc . Wed. &amp;:
Henry Skidmore- At. 160

n.-..rs.

Garage Sele. Oct 3,4. 9·3 PM.
Children and adu It clothes, toys,
ga~es. nlcknacks. 111 Garfield
A..,.

.......p..................... ,...
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Help Wanted

4 femilv yard sale, Oct . 3rd
Forestry workers needed
December*April in all p11rts of
South East. Travel vehicle
quired. Very phv!lical iob- Grell
pay. Bon~.t~ . Adventure. CaM
919-799-8095. Collltll Reforettatlon, P.0 . Boll 343, Holly
Ridge, Notth C.,olina 28446.

r•

ADMINISTRATOR
Small chain tllking tnotlvtted
and dediceted licenl&amp;d ' Nursing
Home Admin.,tretor for Its 5
bed nurtlng feel! ltv In Southellt
Ohio. Good compent~tlon plu1

bonus, hdlthandHfelnaunnoe,
retir-wn.nt and more. ltnd
r•~e

to: Admlnletrat:Dr, 4011
North Park Aw., Wltllst:on. Ohio
45692.
.....,_

J_ family . Monday and Tuesday,
Oct. 3rd and 4th 9 :00· 5:00. Rt.
248, across from Chaster Naza ren e Church. Womens clothes,
size 18 up; bOys clothing. all
clean and good condition: deep
freeze . typ&amp;Writer; shoes: other
items too numerous to mention.

2 fam ily Tuesday. October 4.

9 : 00.4 · 00~ Adult

and Ch •ldren

clothing, e~~:e,eise b1ke, much
more . Pete rs o n residence,
across from Hubb ard Green·
house in Syracuse.
Porch Sale. 301 Wright St ..
Pomeroy October; 1st. 3rd 4th

9:00-5.00.

Garage Sale. College Ave ,
Rutland. Tues. Oe1 4. Adeline
Oet. 1,2,3. Paul Hill residence . 1, Snovvd en residence
mile above Racine locks and
Dam .
S ept 30 • Oct. 4th 9a m till
405 Page St. Middl eport
640 Grant, Middleport. October 6p.m
First one this ~ar . Clothes and
3rd. 4tt., 5th . Books, cl othes,
dishes. coats, pictures, jewelry, misc.
crafts, misc.
:Vard Sale. Mary layne, Cheshire, Ohio . OctOO. 1 . 2, 3. 4
9 •0().8·00 p.m .

8/15/~n

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Governmam Jobs S16.0•o $59,230 yr. Now hiring. Call
1-805-887·8000 Ext. A· 9805
for cur111nt federal list

Perh &amp; Sor~lu

AND

992-6611 '

992-2269

Authorized John
D ee re, Ne w Holland ,

Authorized Service
&amp; Ports

Micldlepart, Ohio

Puppies to good homes. Half

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK

Pay Your Phone

HJ.LL D MUZZLE
L DIWG

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

$3 s

and Cable Bills Here
.l
·
l BUSINESS PHONE

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Hom elite
Jacobsen •

6t&lt;I-99Z-27Z3.

OAK, lOCUST,
CHERRY

We •Carry Fi shing Suppli

We Service All Makes

Briggs &amp; Stratton

9 month old part SpringAr and
Beagle. Had all !lhots. Call

pc~n

15

FIREWOOD

HUDNALL .

•W11shers o'Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Be Repairable"

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY
w~h a n1ce 2 bedroom
cabin full basement, large
stora ge buildin&amp; sunporch.
WANT $27,900.00 .

2688.

992-6873

'2- 157' 88- tfro

NEW LISTING - LANGSVILLE~ Commercial store
building 100'xl25' lot. Has
water and electric ai a~/ able.
Has ~ad some remodeling.
WST$8,500 00

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-tfn

loveable, playful. busfJVtail, fe·

mala kitten . Call 614-446-

.

Joe .or Pouloy Bowland
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HoME"

or Leave Messaqe

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

. PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

One fluffy ~llow k1Uen·8 wks.
old. call 614-246-5484.

References

Between 9 o.m.-6 p.m.

DEAD OR ALIVE

POMEROY ...: Appro.. 55
acres ol ground w~h a mce 3
6edroom ranch home. Garage, new kitchen cabinets,
pat1o and equipped kitch en.
80% tillable land. ASKING
$45MO.OO.

4 kittens· 2 males. 2 ferna1ee.
Call 614-446-2153.

T.L.C .

614-742-2617

WANTED

New Homos Buh
"Free Estimates"

Free pups· part Collie. 6 wks .
old. Cell 614-446-32 32

25 Vrs . Exp.

WANT TO BUY WRECKED OR
. JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
- FRIIISTIMATISFor any of fhesenrvi&lt;enoll

RACINE, OHIO

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Gentle kinen s-7 wk s old Call
814-367-7120. '

~·

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work

•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

992-2259

PRICE REDUCED -MIDDLEPORT - 2 story home
in a great neighborhood' 3
bdrm s., I\\ baths, lu ll basemen t, 2 car garage, cen tral
air and heat. Woodburner.
NOW $29,900.00.

Giveaway

AAEOE. ~

Good Rates

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

4

H. full time &amp; part time
applications are being acc,p~d
lor pt 81181 nt Vatley ~spital
~rsing Care Cttnter . Contact
Personnel 304- 676- 4340

AVON all areas II ShiriBVSP••~
. 304-675-14.29.
:::::_:_::.:_.:._::::.:_-:-:-:::-:;---:sarviC.. compc~ny , seeks an Cosmetologist with W.Va. inindhllduel fo~ the position of t:~ulre In perJcm 8 t Wlllie',ll H!fir
Financial Aepresantattve .
Oes~n, 1010 Viand St .. Pomt
Our comprettens lve 1111ining pro- Pleasant, w Va.
gram allows person with or 1~=:......-----,..-,..~
without experience to progress
Pleasant Vallev Hospital curaccording to their o~ abilit ies
remtv accepting applications for
rf vou ere C()nfident end aggres- business of(iee manager, m.ust
sive with strong communiclrtion h 111e buJineu office related
tkil!s and would like to discu11 ex-perience and BS degree in
our opportunities, tend your business. If Interested contact
resume or contact Mr. Wl[jiams personn•l (lffice, 304· 675at 614--446·4113 durin g nor· 4340. EOE·AA..
man businMs hou rs.
Licensed Social Work« in new
Wanted lactv to live-in. hght long term care facility . Expe·
housework. Most tv for com· rience preferred. COmmensurate
pany. 1 1m1ll child Is welcome. uhry and benefits. E.O.E. Mail
Cali 614·446· 3419.
resume to Administreter Care
t41Nen ~f Paint Pleasant. At. 1
Boll 326. Point Pleasant. W . Va
25650.
Wanted: Dental Hygienist. Part·
time. Contl'flct b aSIS. If inter.loving family wants mature
estad appty or call at the Mei gs
live-in nanny. j703) 378-8387
County Health Depertment.
after S p.m.
Pomerov. Ohio 614-992-6628.
Join Th e Pho togn~p hy · Salas
JOB OPPORTUNITY
lndu.stry Today
Yod must be availabte for
If vou have alwavs \oWntad to
immedl818 employment. We ara
ad¥anee and nev&amp;r had the ..
hiring to, fu II tim e positiont.
you do now. with
Starting pay $1200 pat' mo. For opportunity,
Jo net Ptetnell Photography • •
-more Info. on interv\eW call
Studio We otter flr1 excellent ' :
Monday &amp; Tuesday 814-446IUit11R!; :IBiary with benefits *
6146.
including: Paid holidavs and - •
"~~ecation. profit stlaring and
Government Jobs. $16,0 40·
inturance. Fo, individuals that
$59.230 yeer. Now hiring. Your
ere self-motivated, enthusiastic.
•ea. 805-68'7-6000 El'lt. R·
hava a posttive attitude. a
9805 for current Federal list.
retiable auto and are able to
travel extensively No photoJob hunting? Need a skill? We grapt.v
experience is neceuery, 1
train people for jobs as Aut o
we will train youl if vou ere
Mechanics. Carpenters. Cosme·
interested. pleate call ys at
tologists. Diversified Medical
1-BOD-864·4910 ext. 284 alk :
Workers. Bect:ricians, Food Serfor Attrid on Oct. 4-6 between •
vlee Workers, Elacfrl]nics Tech·
tf-le• hours of 9 :00-4:00 EST.
niclens, Industrial Maintenance
E Q .E
•
Workers. NuningAasisfllntsand
Orderliet, Machinists. Office L.P.N . fuH time, homeearenur• ,
Workert and Welders Register needed. Point Pleasant area,
now for CIIIIJ9S beginning Ocnight shift, ex periane Preferred
tober 3rd Call Tri-CountyVoca- with high tech equipment. but
tionel A'dutt Center at 753-361 1 will train, comperable v.~agee ,
8l'tt. 14. A variety of funding mad resume to 1007 Main St.,
sources to pay for training are
P1. Ph , w .Va 25560, call
available for those eligible.
304-675-4403 for immediate
Interview.
McCLURE'S RES TAU RANT
HIRING. Cooka and waitres11s Farm hand needed in ellchange
needed. Res~.mes bemg taken for rent and utilities References
1 ~00-4:00 p m. Tuesdays and requi,ed. Call 614-448-1062
ThursdiiVS at 479 Jackson PikA. • fter 5 PM.
Gallipolis. white house behind ~~::,;~~~~~=::::;:=
McCiures restaurant

Room &amp; Board For
Senior Citilens and

l-13-tlc

GUN SHOOT

•VINYL SIDING
··ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN tN
INSULATION

EUM HOME

iddleport, Ohio

9/ 15/ 88/tln

l / 22188/tln

COMPANY
992-6461

PAT HILL FORD

eoe

PRICE
REDUCED
$3,000.00 on ·this home sitting on approx . 3 acres ol ·
ground in the country. 3
bedroom s, large family room
with a v1ew o~ the pond, 2
baths and many other n1ce
features. ONLY $43MO.OO.

PALLET

mo.

We (On repair and re(ore radiators and
heoter (Ores. We 'an
also odd boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Announcements

2 cats. 15 'MI&amp;ks old.
614-949-2669.

'OHIO

SER~ICE

Compl1t1 Drywall
S1rvice
FREE ESTIMATES

l ll.l/'88 ·1li:

6:00p.m .

DELIVERED TO

&lt;ombined w.ith this
916/ 8811

•

Collie.• 614-742· 2359 after

POMEROY r OHIO

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

KEN'S APPLIANl:E
SERVICE
985-3561

$14 PER TON

Sorry, no dtlivtry or other

9-19·881fn

E. Main

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END'

.:

PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

CAll AMY CARTER

or BOB'S ILICTRONICS
44P390

Blue-gray kittens to give awey.
Call 61,4-367·0600.after 6 PM

CHIPWOOD
POlES

;

: $6'.50 + 4 FlEE :
: SUPER LARGE DRINKS :
: Pick Uf. or lot tn Only :
~ ~~~r~..•J/j~P. ~P:. ~~~
992-2228 or 992-9922

7 13-'88 lin

a

-~-~~w~!;E~t~6~f£~r·\

FACTORY CHOKE

POMEROY, OH .

·

MON .-TUIS.-Wm.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
A1so Tr111111iulon

let us c;onwert thou old Movies
&amp; Slides onr to easy VHS.

V. C. YOUAG Ill

Pll~A
Bark To School S pedal

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohia

MAIN STREET

Roger Hysell
. Goroge

8mm MOVIES &amp; SltD!I. to
YHS TAPE .

work
(FREE ESTIMATES I

right to reject any and / or all
bids.

YOUNG'S
- Addo ns an d remodeling
- Roofing and gu'ner work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

sealed bids will be opened
the same as above.
"
The District reserves the

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

1. Office Use Left Over,

Daily Sent-i_nel

$5 99

PleM, Probate Divilion
The Executor or Adminia·

Oth• Froo Copi•: 3~.
E. · Total
Distribution :
6,226.
F. CopiM Not Oistributod:

'

9"92-- 2156 ;(.

County Court of Common

York. N-Y .: 10004: Phillip

Complimentary,

Smell truck - long bed
Automatic Power Brakes

Public Notice

Mary Kay Yoot,

J . Donahue, 30 Rockefeller
Plaza, New York. N. Y.,
10112; Marlin L. Herria. P.
0. Bo• 140&amp;, Greenwood,
S. c. 29646; James E. Jol·
IJIY, 161 lngleolk Ln..
Greenville. S . C . 29816; Ro bert A. Jolley. Jr.. 161 Ingleoak Ln., Greenville, S . C.
29816; Dorothy P. Ramuur
A. F. Burgna. Truateea
Under Will of Roger C .
PHce. c/o NCNB, Bo•

pl-.

·.•,•
••

By Order of the Secretary

476

•

•

gett. Syi"'IQJ-. Ohio 46n9.

B. Mail

/

The Tuppers Pleina-Ches·
ter water Diatrict ia inviting

opened, or reject ell propo·
1
1a1
bids.and advaniiO for other

Bowling Green Sta., New

r

Public Notice
TUPPERS PLAINS CHESTER WATER
OISTRtCT
39661 Bar 30 Road
Roodov~lo, Ohio
BIO FOR TRUCK '

Court St., Pomeroy.. Ohio.
Maigo
County 46769.
6. .,._tw:
R®«t L. Won-

Cede 8. CO. , P. 0 . Box 20,

or
Veterans Memori.al Ho!mit:al
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

:: :.:~.::.-,:-

on Equal Employment Op-

The State of Ohio. Meigs

licensed Clinical Audiologist

·----..

4.locltion of Known Office
of PubiiCIItion: 1 11 Court St.,
Pom.-oy, Ohto, Meigs County
46789.
15. Location of the Heedqu.tera or GenU Bulin..
Offl• of the Publilhers: 111

Publiaher

5LBS.

N-cl.f'IIR-1..-

Rubber-vinyl floor mats
Rear Step Bumper
Heavy duty vinyl selt
Red in color
Mud &amp; snow tires
6 cycl. fuel injection en·

and Clrri.-1. St,.. Vendors
and Counl:• Sal•: 4,716.

IN THE

COUNTRY SPARE RIBS

._

portunity shall be made a
pan ofthisContract. No bidder may withdrew his bid
within 30 d•v• after the
1e1ual date of the opening
th8reof.
.
If, in the opinion of the
Ownen. the acceptance of
the lowest bid ia not in the
beat intereat of ell concerned. the Owner' may ac·
cept another propo•l eo

(101 3

..,.

_

LfSA M. KOCH, M,S.

-z

··--...-...-..
.............
·--·-

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

E KCepttng applications for certifled Aerobic's lnsrructors Contract~l bl!lsis For funh er informatlon plea se call
61'4-446-4612. ea:t 256

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
J: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

.,_..,._ca.\.
....

Up Truck with the following
specification&amp; :

. Ohio Vallor Publlohing Co., {9)12. 19, 26: (10)3, 4tc
111 Court St., Porn oroy.
Ohio. Multimedia inc.. 306 s.
Public~· ce
Main S~. P. O.29602
Box 1688'
NOTICE Q.N ILlNG OF
S.C. ownirog
" 1
INV"• NT RY ANO
' G....,lla,
7. Stodlhotder1
pen:ont or montoftoteloh•a&amp;
APPRAISEMENT

I

WINTERHOME
IMPROVEMENT
E.DITION

liahed by the D,partment of

-az:

·-·--·-·--........
n--""'oll
.n-e-•-...,_
...._

Cl ...ified P•P• oour I he

complied with throughout
thit; project.
Bidders shall also note that
the Rules and REgulattona

outstandng: Donald J. Bar~
hyto, Or..,.•o. S. C. 29602:

__ ..

c:J

., ,.
,._
,,...,,.,.
n - v-•owo·,

seated bido lor a 1989 Pick-

Monaging Ecltor: Robert Hoe-

•

I

CORRECTION .

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

lnduotrlal Rolotlonooreto bo

ered.

_.,

AND

,,'

::=t.::::&amp;..

when documents are re-

OOily Mondor llwough Fridor.
A. No. of IIIUII Published
Annualty: 266
8 . Annual Sublcription
Price: $72 .80 Home Oeliv·

THURSDAY
.· •
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline. "
Chapter172, Orderofthe'Eas tern ,
Star. wlll meet al7: 30Thurday a t .~,
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

October 17,

...

IHDII
11111111

turned in good condition to
tlloArchitoct'IOfficew~hin
ten 110) day&amp; of. Bid Date.
Bidden 1holl notothattho
prevailing Weott rate~ pub-

No. 1i6-960.
2. Dete of Filing: October 1,
1988.
•
3. frequency of I•IU8:

FALL

P

--·... .......
·--·---·

UIDII
011 .

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT
AND
Dally Sonttriot. Publiccition

•'

WANT ADS bring . _
Vacation Money

-- HSDII
&gt;111111

Public Notice

CIRCULATION
1. Trtle of Publication: The

4

WHITNEY SMITH

11

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senlic• FINANCIALREPAESENTATlVE
Credit Thrill of America, subsiHearing Evalualions For Ali Ages
diery of an nationar financial

1 1 - - ... • •

11*

Public Notice

201 Chapman Rd ., Green-

by, was (n the room. But Mark
Buchanan said there was someone else there named-Mike.
Edwards said he brought an
affidavit to court signed by the
three men who were In the motel
room saying Leonard Buchanan
was not there.
The case never sl!ould have
gone to court and authorities
·should have acted much quicker
two months ago when they found
out they had the wrpng man,
Edwards said .
"The authorities should be as
Interested ln protecting the Innocent as"In prosecuting the apparently guilty, " Edwards said.

111M...
lfiiiOif!"

••

_
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2307. Columbia. S. C.
29202; GenovlovoL. Soku,

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MDII

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11'1---

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....
,
,.44

I IUYI

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with Louise Pennington.

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folio win&amp; 1elepho ne ~t!l'cft•,.&amp;e• .
- co. -c ... -

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WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club wlll meet at 2
p.m Wednesday a't the home of
Mrs. Charles · Gaskill. Bernice ,'',
PORTLAND -Lebanon Town- - Carpenter will review "Cold . '
ship Trustees wlll.meet Tuesday,
Sassy Tree.' ·
,
6 p.m. , at the township building.
' •
GALLIPOLIS- Bethel Ladles
Ald meets Wednesday, 1 p.m., :~

•

......

:::....

··-o... - ...... •---·•~•
·•~..,.,.
~-.,
'

.....__ ..... ·-·--

.. ·. ..·-·
... .. .
... · ·-"'
,,,.
A.t.TEI

,,.,_,_

MIDDLEPORT - The regular
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363
F&amp;AM wlll be 7: 30
p.m.
Tuesday. Refreshments foUow lng the meeting.

.- t::.., "'-'

CIOUO SUHDn

POUCIII

a.

r-----------------------t

Mid..port A1111rican l:egion
THURSDAYS (Beginners)
lllltructor: Mikki Casto
fOI llfOIIIATION 01 INIOUMIHT

TO P'U&lt;I AN AD &lt;AU 992-215.

MONDU thr11 f . .AT I A.M. Ia J P.M.
I A.M. Until NOON 5ATUlDAY

LONG BOTTOM ::_ Long Bottom Flame FellOwship will meet
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m ., at the MI.
Ollve Community Chu rc h, Long
Bottom. Special s in ging by J aoy
Singers and Kelly ThompsonEiclllftger and Crystal Folmer,
The pUbl(c Is welcome.

Smith birthday

"LEARN TO DANCE!"

Clltli.... AgH 4-Adult, 6:00p.m.
·'lallroom and Country, 7:00 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange
Township Trustees will m eet
Monday, 7: 30 p.m., at the home
of the clerk, Dorothy Ca laway.

The

Business Services

:::t

TUESDAY
RACINE - Sutton .Township
KYGER- &lt;':heshlre Township
Trustees wlll meet Monday, 7:30• Trustees meet Tu,esday, 5:30
p.m., In the Syracuse Municipal
p.m., township bulldlng ln
Bulllng. ·
:
Kyger .

'

"I cry about It all the lime," he
said. "When I go to court It's
worse because there are so many
people that go to jail for something they didn't do. I keep
thinking I'm going to jail for 25
years for rape and then I'll have
to explain to my kids I dldn ' tdo lt .
"I can feel every nerve In m y
body shaking when I go to court,"
Buchanan said. "And when I get
out, It doesn't seem to go away."
Bo Edwards, Buchanan's attorney, called the Incident a
'•farce. ·•
"Crime Stoppers Is made to be
a farce." Edwards .5ald. "And
worse, It has serlou.5ly defamed
an Innocent person."
Edwards said there Is an
abundance of evidence to point to
hls client 's innocence.
Mark Buchanan. Leonard's
brother, was ln court last week
for the same charge. He told
police he was ln the motel room
that night and gave authorlti&lt;'s
his brother's name because he
feared being arrested on an old
drunken driving warrant.
The girl said a man named
"Mike," a name Leonard goes

:E

day and confl nulllg through"Oct.
8 with Rick Weaver. and Oct.
10-15 with James Stewart. Pastor
Paul Taylor Invites the public:

"We have to use elephant
hooks and other methods that
may appear abusive because
we're not talking about puppy
dogs and pussy cats here," he
said . "How do you get a 10,000pound elephant's attention?"

Man says police goofed, mistake
ruined his life
on Crime Stoppers
.
NASHVILLE. Tenn. IUPI) Leonard Buchanan says his life
has been destroyed by a case of
miStaken identity by Crime
Stoppers, which publiCized him
on Its Top 10 Fugitives· list.
Crime Stoppers ran hls picture
ln The, TennesSean, Nashvllle's
morning newspaper, and several
area grocery stores after a
17-year-old escapee from the
Spencer Youth Center was found
ln a motel room w\th three men
on AprU 30. The girl picked
Buchanan out of a photo line-up
after telUng pollee she had sex
with one of the men. .
Buchanan was subsequently
placed on the list, which called
the crime " rape" · Instead of
"statutory rape ." Crime
Stoppers offers rewards for Information leading to the convlcllon
of criminals.
A Davidson County General
Sessions Court · judge recently
· postponed Buchanan'Siirelimi. nary hearing on the charges after
the district attorney asked for
more h me to investigate the
matter.

.
J111DDLEjPORT .._,XI Gamma·
Epsilon Sorority Ritual of Jewels•:...
Tea will be held 7 p .m . Tuesday
at the home of P)tyllls Ha ckett, ~
Middleport.

through 7th Daylight to dark

Rain or shine. Watch fOr signs at

Fomt Acres Park. New LIITUI

Rd .. Ru•land. Bea Wood,
742-2790.

~14-

...,

......PfPTeiisant ......
&amp; Vicinity

....

Yard sale Jericho Rd. 1/2 mil e
Oct 3-4 . 10 till3. First one this

2 f.nlly. Rollte 7. 1 mile north (If

Big yard sale Sa1UrdftY, Monda,y
• Tuetday. Cem~Conley , Taylof
Roed g . 7

Flva Prllnts. Babv clotheS ancl
acetei;OI'I•. dishes, misc. Oct.
4-5. 9:00.4,00.

5 Family Yard Sale, Oct . 3. 4 ,5,
Front Street. Meson, W .Va.

019antic Garage sale. 1V: mil•
south ofTuppetl Plains on SR 7.
Ever,thing from hou1111 to gil"age
for men and women Oont mill
thll OM. Oct. 8.7.8. Call 814117·3222 for information.

Blsement·Yard Sale above Mason half mile out Hanging Rock
Rd • a lot of baby Items, boysand
girls cloth111sandtoys. Plus milt.
Oct. 1,3_4,5. 9:00AM to 6:00
PM. 304-882-2886.
-~'

Oct. 3-l. 33"17 Bashan Rd..
"'t

long Bottom. lots of mise"
items.
·

YardS•ie,4femlly,Sat.Sunand
Mon. Beside Brown Pine ShiCk.

At. 2, G'alllpotl• Ferry. 8 :00 till1

•

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l

�-•
Page- 10 - The Daily Sentinel
18

Wan ted to

Oo

LAFF-A-DAY

45

Furnis hed R ooms

54

46

Wheelct.eirs·new or used. 3
w heeled electric acooten. Cell
Ro gers Mobiltv co llect. 1-6 148 70-9661 .

19815 2&amp;0R '3 .,.,....... Hold
over. Excel. cond. Clll814-3792.574.

Mu'I"IC lesson~ on all woodwind
rns1rumonts. Flu'hl, clarinet,
oboe. bauoon. &amp; SB)tophone.
C11!1 Lora.Snow . 614-266-1614.

Ya-d c•e: brush cu tt in p. light
haulin g. .,some tree t rimrmn g an d
rfl;.n ova l, Bill Slack 6 14-992·
2:269 evenings.

· Financial
0

1 NOTICE r

'll&lt;E OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH-

co.

lNG
recommends th111 you
uo business with people ybu
know. and N OT t o send money
thrCiug t't the mail u ntil you h ave

investigated the offering.
Aanml station e\lailable for st y·
ptet~sant a rea.
••qu1re 304-675-2 51 anyti me.

hst in Point

tl!l!'l': Real Est ate

attractive brick 4 bedroom,
2 I:Jat h, family room with firep{ttce. forma l di ning, large living
room, 30ft. custom oak kitcken
cilhinets. OR~ woo dvvork. fin is h
bMement . 2 car g•age, 18U'el
landsc aped lot, 4 miles from
l'lotzer Hospital off Rt. 35Porte rbrook Subdiv isio n. Ca ll
614-446-41.,89.
Vf.tfV

Third Ave., Gall ipolis. l.i\lin·
q.room. family room, 2 bedroom!!, one &amp; half baths. lg.
kltck en, Off st reet perking.
Close to school &amp; church. Priced
in the $20's. Call 814. 4461734.
Z srory ftaH anate bri ch house.
Ar"prox. 1 22yrs. old. 4 BRs.-full
bm:h upstairs, pa rlor- LA- DR·
~hr. h en- fu ll bat h· latndrydown"talrs. 4 roo m serwnt quarters
r~n back of kitc hen. 4 fireplacas.
Nicfl size rooms withapprox . 6 .9
acres. LDcated on Rt. 7-Eureka
behind Clay Elem. S chool. Call
for appoi ntmen t . 614-256·
1-6?8.
lbse you r job? Havin g problems

making you r payments? Don't
bf! forec losed on! I would be
.... Interested in bu yih g your hOme
for a fair price. If interested. send
name, pf1one no. &amp; address of
propert y to: BoJo.: Cia 174,
cl oGalli polis Oaitv Tribu ne, 8~5
Third Aw.. Gall ipoUs. Oh1o
45631.
3' BR .. fam ily room, 2 bat hs,
cAntral air, snell bsmt on PA lot

in Putrlot. Call 614· 379·2653 .
Nico 2 story home with garage&amp;
wor k sf1op. S28, 500.' G:a ll 614367-0138.
4 BR . ho use for sale, possible

lond c:onnact. B2 4 J ackson St ..
VintOn. $35, 0 00. Call 814-3889360 .

..

3 bedroom house. Lerge basemen t aluminum siding, fully
c:orpeted. in Pomeroy. Call 6149~2· 78 87 .

Hom e in country with land.
Good deer hu ntin g. 15 mi les
fro m Athens. 1 2 mil es from
Po meroy. 614-9 9 2·5848. ,
- 6 room hous&amp; for sa le. On

approx. 1 acre. Fo r informat ion,
1&lt;8116 14·992· 7409.

House for sale. 2 badroom !.
Cor ner lot, 2351 Founh St ..
Sy racuse. Ohio 620.000. 6 14·
992· 5105.
for sale by o~ner, Hk8 now. 3.
bed rooms. large fen cod ya rd. 2
car garage, Tay lor Road Camp
Conley, 304-675- 63 53 .
In New Haven. 3 br homR, 2
bat hs. large living room, firepl;~c e. gara~e. !!130,000 . 304273-2471 ------ _/1,
H o ~o~ se

· Farm for sa l e.
5 6.000.00 down assumable 8'h
Per cent loan tp qualified buyer,
very low closing costs, B6 ecres
wit h 7 yea1 old cedar co nmmporary home, priced reduced to
$58.000.00. Phone 304-675- ·
6956 Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
3 btldroom home, 1 'h bat hs..
!;dr peted, central air·heat, lor.:'1tQd in Point PleaSAnt . 3046/5·2702 or 304-576-2147.

32

Mobile H o m es
for S al e .

lnn d co ntract. large living room
w ' ex pan do room , 2 BR ..
w 'wa ll cnfpet. air condi tion,
w ' Of without furniture. Nat. gas

fur nac e nn private lot. May rent
lot Call 5 to 8 PM, 614-446·
1 409.

1979 14lll70 Nashua Ex . cond .
CA 2 BR • Lg . bath. Newer
ca rpel . Vinyl un derpinning.
Dnck &amp; building. Mus1 see to
illlprecia te at Quai l Creek
Num ber 98 Call614· 245-9594
or 61 4· 446· 9747.
Kir kwood i-nobile home, 2 bedri)On1. Flea! niee. S3500. Call
61 4-379·2566.
Bay ~ew .
p~~: pando. 3 BR ..

19 80

141170, 11121
2 baths, fireplace. 10 acres, 191120 2 car
g wege. S25. 000. Call614-4468750
85 fl . Alum Hou9A Trailar• for
~ale. 2 bedrqoms. S2400. 0 80.
C.all 614-949-2168 _,
1 970. 1 2x60 , Beverly Mannr
ho uso trailer for ~I e. 2 bedroom.
s 3500. Cell 614--992-3 949.
1979 Falrpoit~t 121180. 2 bedroom, porch. 85500. 6 14· 9 ~27 139 after 5 :30.
~
141170 mobile home. 2 bed
room, 304-675-7988 .

Two mobile homes. furrtlthed,
1211 76 1 21165. $3, 600 .00·
54,50ri.oo. Htlgh BurriA 304, 6:,75-6 512 or 67~3 9 00 or PD·
' II ell Dapt
'
1984 Schuttz 1 4x6 !S', 2 bedrooms, 1'h bat hs, ell el~. rtew
AC u hit, range. refrigerator,
water' b~;~d and covered porch
meluded, $12.500.00 S erious
Inquires only,' 304-875·3 117

•ft•.::~-~-M~-..----

_

IO · J

"I'm SO proud to be sele.cted
valedictorian! I ain't never
• had
no h'o nor lt'ke th
' a's
before."

for

R e nt

2 bedroom moi:JIIe home, qulal
n eighborhood, phone 304-675-t082.

LI'L ABNER® by AI Capp
!"::'"""----~__,~

Boats and
llitotors for Salt~

327 c .... motor.

stvte. Also need place to store

st.... 4 . 2

I===========l==========~

C.:

*··c•-

&amp;

Vegetables

1882 PontiacJ 20oo... to,oir,
11 4-992·!850
daytime. 814 -992-5086
...,lnga.

For Sale or Trade

260 CZ dirt bike. _., ortrlde for
rifle. 304-468-1869.

~or111 Supplii'S

&amp; L1veslocK
61

Fann Equipment

1070 Clsetrllcto.-. Super Bh•P.
0 5980. 8000 Ford di_. with
bal•. ntlke. mowing machine• 3896. Owner wll111ntnce. Call
614-296-11522.
John Deerw 7t50 trador 20 HP
dlasl!ll, 4 VVheel Drive, 6 ft. bush
hog A. scrapp• bleda-all teaa
th., one ve• old. *7300. Call
614-387-7187aft..-7PM.

63

1977 Oldl CutiMI, 360 auto.
EKcellent conctttion. call 114247·3891.
1987 EXP Ford EICOrt. AC.
AM·FM c•lltt. 26. 000 plus
mil., *8,800.00 or ··•ka OWf
payments. 814-4.8-0038 or
4411-4786.
1880 Buick IJt Slbre, leeo thM
80,000 mlee. 304-9S2-27SS.
1971 Dodge Monaco runs good,
need8 body work. ac. stereo.
front and beck speaker.
• 376.00. 304-875-686e.
19100rand Prbl: , 71 , D00ml•~
t1,100.00. Phone 304-175-

3044.

.

1985 Ch..,rolet 2 door •dan,
17 , 000 actual mllu.
• 8.400.00. 304-675-2808.
19700odge0ert, new ttretand
axhault run good, 1300.00.
304-875-1169- 8,oo.
1978 Plymouth Harii:on, 4 door,
automatic, lata modal engine,
Na1'1h Carolina car, •800.00.
. 304-875-1018.

Uvastock

SPECIAL FEEOER CALF SALE·
WEONESOAY·OCTOSER 6, 8
PM. All breeda k'tcludlng Hol- 1983 Pontiac, wall kept. new
tteinl. Catt .. will be accepted al tii'H, eleen. runs great. high
diV Tuesday-October 4 and up · mileage, th•p c•. t2,350. ~.
•
to 2 PM. Wednl8d811·0ctcbar 5. 304-8711-3213.
HMJIIng available. ATHENS ll·
VESTOCK SALf.1 mHeaHt of 197-'· Coprwtte Stingray, lB 2
380, AT, AC. PS, PI, AM·FM
Albany on St. Rt. 150. C.ll
Stoetcvard 814-592-2322 or ca.-tee, T·top, 64,000 miles.
• 8.800.00. 304-8711-223t .
898-3531 evenings.

'
Stendlfd bred

horua, 3 mares.
1 11ud , 2 coHo. 614-742-2456.

4 year old bleck Tenneaeee
Walker gelding . Gentle. well
broke. $400. Call 614-742·
2525.

72

Trucks for Sale

1800 Serl• flatbed. 1988 ln t'al. Good , cond. •1 500. Call
814-379-2331 .

Registared Symentlal boH. 32
months old. weighs ap pro)t
1,500 lb. 304-882· 3 110.

1980 4 wheel drive truck.
F-Um. Call614-379-2409after
8 '30PM.

Hay &amp; Grain

1981 CheY. PU. Io)'llrnll-. 1986
Dodge C.-avap-Nica. 1987 S10 PU. 1988 5·10 4x4 PU.

64

large round balM of hsv . S20
eaefl. Call 114·446-1062 after
5 PM. ·
- -- - - - - -Hay for Ill&amp;. Large round bat•.
814-949-2059.

Tr ans porl at1on
71

Auto's For Sale

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehlcl• from t100. Fords. Mer·
cedtl. COrvette~. Ch•ys. Sur·
plus . Buyer• Guide . C11
80~· 887-8000 Ext. S· t0189.
1974 Dltaun 8·210. $400.
197-' LTD Wagon, UOO. Call
814-3811-8842.
1978 Ford
cond.
lotsThunderbird
of axtras.. Excet.
Low
mileage. S1800. Calll14-2568704.
-:-:==:--::-:-:-~---

198t Oldl. Cult1t" Brougham,
4 dr., body &amp; Interior In good
cond. Cell 81o4-446-811Jl.
1983 Chwy. Impel~ 100% of
orglniel. t5600. 1987 C.m1ro
eo nvartibla, ax.cel . co nd .,
81.000 mil•. t9800. Call
304-176-1310 ohor 8 PM.

t9845·104x4~U. 19840odge

o .so 4x4 ~u . 1976 Ford
~u - 1896. 1980 Ford ~u­
t1298. All prioad to 1811. a &amp; o
Mo1on·HWV 1 80. 4 mi. N. of
Holzer. 814-4411-8885.
For Sale Pf Trad•19B1 Dodge
1'-ortbed pickup, 4 WD. 4 apd .
v..., good ....... Cati814-441197BO.

..

C-•

a

1183 Olctwnoblle98. Motor and
'trll'lsmlllk&gt;n.. 304-713-5851\

79

.So F.A~, .I'M TH~e&amp;
VNDER ... oNE. VNDER

Motors Homes

&amp; Campers

•eoo. Coll814-24~9tU.

1981 GMC Jln.ny. Automatic,
4 WD. EJic.l. cond . C.ll 8143711-2853.
.
Hondo av~

ox.

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

9ft. truCk • - · tBOO. Good
condltton. Call 014-448-9480. ·

Serv 1ce~

00 NFL Monda, Nlgh1

81

Horne
,,. Improvements

..

6 room unfu rnis hed apartment
fo r -- CliftOn. 304.875- 3216
or 67&amp;· 2418.'

. t99S 'CR 128. ·- r ,.cod
1974 Olcll. Rogenoy, t8SO. C!!_oot .,.._ tO mot. old. Nov~
1917_ Ch""y Van, t1100. Call r-lt. Coli- 4 PM 304814-387.0841.
.
878-8842.
•
•

~

RON'S Televltion Service. -'
Hou11 calls on RCA. Ou•ar,
G E. Spacioling In Zanlth. Call
304-6711-2398 or 814-446· :
2464.

,.I'

Mirage ~ Choke - Probe -

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

rerno,.I. 1Call 304-875-1331 .

HAVE 'IO.l "'VER 5EI:N

Rotarv or cltble tool dr•lng.
Most well• eo mpleted aamtdiY .
Pump sal• end terYtce. 304-.
895-3802

A BARN DANCE CJR A

Nq. BLJT ONCE I eAW A
KANqAROO HOP.

' FL.A65TONE WAlK:&lt;

_

_

Plumbing
&amp;
Heating
_
c . __ __

j

H
GUE55 WHAR l HIDE
MY FOLDIN' MONEY
FROM MY MAN
SNUFFY

CART£R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phorw 814-446-3188 or 814446-4477

&amp;

WHAR HE WON'T
NEVER LOOK II

a

Electrical
Refrigeration

a
a

General Hauling

•.

R &amp; R W•er Service. Poole,
ci•terns . wells. lmrnedlate · 1
1. 000or 2.000gaflonsde1Miry, ·
can 304-175-8370. .
,
•.
Wll:er delivery. 1000 gallona. .. ,
Re•onable prl.-. Immediate
;•
deilverv. Call 814-982-1275.
Watterson' a Water Hauling.
reasonable ratn, immediatl
. 2. 000 gllllon .delivary, cisterns.
pools, well. etc. cell 304-15782919.
Patrick' s Water Hauling. 2.000
ll delivery. 304-576-2311 or \
14-4411-4088.

I

PEANUTS

'.

I HAVE PLAN 5 FOR
IMPROVING Tf.lE APPEARANCE
. OF THE DESERT..

a

7 •rn·

(Z) European .Joumal (0:30)

1111 111121 Lyndon LaRO\ICht

FROM 1-lERE OVER TO THERE ..

~~~ .

'

Paid political announcer!J8nl
18 (f]) Newlywed Oome
lUI 8porte .,, I~ .
!HI Hhl . . . . : 'lllutl Hill.
SlrtttStelfon
American MIDI12:1111 ()) Piper Cha" The Day
Klngsfllld Mined Clan
IJ) NFL YHrllook 1987 New
Orfllans Sainta: Winners (R)
(I) 8 Ill !Ill NtWI
. (Z) (!) Sign Qlf

a

. .Bb
' ,.t . • • • •

IIJl .... ot Coraon

I1J SporteCanter (L)

·THE FIRST THING I ·PLAN
TO DO 15 MOVE THIS ROCK

Uphola_tery

Mow,.y's Uphols•ring •vine
trl countyarea 23¥~••· Thabtat
In fumiture udlol•rlng. Cell
304 · 875 -4154. for afrea

lit

'

...

. --~~

' ..:· ,
we
J

•

i

..

•s
tJ

WEST
• Q53

.2

EAST

· • J 5 •
· t ,_ Q 10 7
Q 9 ·s 4 ·

+

.KQ942

"

t9

86

• Jlo

p

SOUTH
. A K986
• A 10 8 7
t K 52

.A

Vulne rable : East-Wes t
Deal er : South

·

WeSI

Nof tla

East

Pass

Pass
Pass

2.

• PassPass

1.

South

~·

0pening lead: • 4

the result was down two.
Tbe contract is easily made if de·
clarer simply refrains from drawing
trump. At trick two, let. him play ace
and a heart. No doubt East will over- I
take tbe jack to lead a trump, but
South is in control. He can w i n the ace
and ruff a heart. Whatever he chooses
to do, he cannot be prevented n ·om
taking enough rufling tricks to make
four spades, as long as he does not play
A·K of spades before letting West gain

the 'lead.·
.
.
Though South er{ed , he dtd not let
h~ mistake throw him . In fact, he an.d
h1s partner won that event. So today s .
lesson in bridge psychology is: Don't
let a bad error on one deal keep -you
from h~vmg a pos&gt;hve attitude about
the hanas to come. But do remember
to play ca_ref_~lly.

CROSSWO.RO
by THOMAS JOS.EPH
ACROSS

3 Clemen·

1 Philippine . tine's
island
rather,
6 Trite
e .g .
11 One kind 4 Neronian
or branch
greeting
12 Fragranc e fi Restor;· • •
13 ~'abric
t1on
14 Donny·
6 .
brook
Rathbone
111 · - Got
7 Curve
a C rush
8 And not
on you"
9 ChllliCe
10 Disappe ar· 24 Bare.
,35 Eucharist
16 y ·a la
·
·ng
s
e
at
26
C
ut
t1mb
e
r
plate
1
slueIent
27 Fr 11't
36
'I
18 German - l7 Hat (sl.)
~
1g1 a~t
arti 1
20 British
• dnnk
39 Floor 1tem

v·

19
24

Fil~ ~at

- director
28 lly .
21 Likely
29 Overfill
22 On pension 31 Part o f
25
encdng
(abbr)
a min.
~wor te ·23 "L.A. Law" 33 ·Brink
26
S;i~~~~
s tar
34 O~erhead
29
30 Fragranc e
31 - et
lurniere
32 Ta.Ste
vengeance
34 Brazilian
tree
3 7 B eart t e st
(abbr.)
38 Dance

adYertiSina. C · ·
till lll1121liH1VIE: 'Unhol'

.•

10-S.. IB

.K8 75 3 2

Today's deal was badly misplayed
in a Canadian regional last July. After
spades were raised, South bid game
immediately . He might have first bid
thre&lt;: hea rts, s ince North might ho ld
five hearts a s we ll a s spade support. If
so, four hearts would be the supe rio r
game contrac~ But he was lucky his side did belong in spades.
Declarer won the ace of c lubs a nd
immediately played A·K of spades.
That was careless haste. Now he
played ace a nd a heart. West won the
jack; cashed the spade queen and
played another club. South won dum·
my's king and ruffed a club, hoping the
suit wo~ld split. but no suc h luck. De·
clarer ruffed a heart and led a diamond back to his king. When that lost,

Cab (R)

Malrlmony' CBS Special·
.
Movie t:;1
l!ll Larry King Llvol
..
QJ MOVIE: Murder; She
Wrote (2:00)
9:05 ()) King of the Olymplce,
Part II • .
New Counlry
9:30
10:00 ()) 700 Club
(Z) il!l Newe
Ill Statewide
ID (f]) Bamay Miller
IIJl Evening Newo
Crook and ChaH
10:05 ()) MOVIE: The Longeot
Yard (R) (2:03)
10:30 (Z) Eaotenders
II !1D Odd Couple
VldaoCounlry
11:00 (2) Remington at..io Now
You Steele it, Now You Don't
II !ll 11m 1111121 IIJJ11-•
I1J Mator Ltogua h-11'1
Qraatall Hlle '89 World
.
~
Series: Me1s vs Orloles(RJ
(Z) BIII.Moy.,.• Wor1d of
ldtoo Moyers talks wilh a
wide variety of people abou1
' America's choices. (NR)
Ill Canede: True North
Explore Canada's po!!£1 of
multlcul1urallsm. (NR) Iii
111 (f]) Love Connection
«J)M-yllnt
II)J Tale• from the Dorkelde
Let the Games Begin
QJ Miami VIce t:;1
You Can
I Star

NORTH
.• J10 7l
3

James Jacoby

Grand Prix ol Spain from
Jerez. Sp6in (TJ
(I) II (I) Monda; Night
Foolblll t:;1
(Z) (!) campaign: Tho
Prin1· Time Prealdenl
Examine lhe enormous
lmpacl • both posHive and
negative .. television has on
electing a President; also,
explore 1he Influence of

RON'S A~PLIANCE SERV1CE.
holtiB call Mrvicing GE, ~~
Point. wa1 hera, dr~r1 art d
....... 304-8711-2398. ~

82

BRIDGE

~ Auto Racing Formula One

T DON'T THINK 'IO/..l1LL
E.VSR Ei(:T THE H~
OF IT.

Uncoil- ICE CREAM

for. 11old her th e s trawberr ies and she asked, "Cant ha ve
ICE QREAM ins tead?"

marriage.

tO-

•

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ·

9:00 D (2) IIJl MOVIE: 'People
Aero. . 1hl Lake' NBC
Monday Night atlhe Movleo

Fet1v Tree Trimming. lttmp

1

eyes to reality bu t not to ---... . "

UNSC RAMBLE FOR
AN,WER

8:05 CD King of lhe Otrmplco,
Part I (t '38)
8:30 D (2) 10) The Hogan Faml.,
VIcious animal's loose In the
Hogan home when David's
·
prank backfires. D
IJl NFL Monday ~lght
Ma111z1ne
till 1111121 Cavanaugh•
Fa1har Chuck Jr .. a Roman
Calhollc prles1. considers

·"'

,.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

(t :40)

y

I overheSrd one seniOr citizen tell
·another ,that .. "You can close your

th e chuck Ie quoted
.
.
.
.
.
by ld l1ng in th e mj~S1ng "WOrds
L......l-...1..-.L.....J'-..J.---' you develop /ra m step No. 3 below .

a Naohvitle Now

.. .

·

L E W.V E I
f----.
,
1 :...:lr7. :-"-TI-::,\r;",=-TI---i O Comp Ie lc

«J)P~meNewo

MmtAAAER

Ak•s Tree Trimming and Stump
Aemowl. Free estimate•. Call
304-875-7121 .

of political satire 1ull of
wtttlcisms.
till 1111121 Newhall Michael
s1eals program Idea from a
s1udentln nls produc1ion
class.(A) D
1D (f]) MO'liE: Hoi Dog, The
Mov~ 1R) (1:36)

tB1 MOVIE: D.C.

~WSE. .. ~E.

Plintlng: .Interior &amp; Ek18rior.
Fnt• ••lrnatea. Call 814-4468344.

87

74 Moto_rc:vctes
1----:-_:
_____

'

RON EVAI'fS ENT£R PRtsESSeptic tonk pu..,oing- t90 ,.,
load. Caii1·800-&amp;37-9S28.

J S. J Water Service. Swimming
pools, cistafnt. well•. Ph. 614245-9285.

1181 Cutl111 Btouahwn. 2 tir..
IJtndeu roof. Coli 814-44119442.

Rogers In a one·man show

1000
gal.,1600gal. andJetMratlon
•Y~Mm· Fa CIQO'_ nln.cl ,.P.ir
lhop. RON EVANS ENl£A·
PRISES, Jac,..,n. Ohio. 1-800.
837-9828.

1987· Ford Aeroltllr )(LT Van.
Excel. cond. Custom running
boarda, l011ded. Call 814-4-'88778.

Apa;rtmttntt for rent, Wedgll
Apartmant Rtnlll. 304-8752072.

portrays humoris1 Wilt

eo,.,_ s.p11c T.,,..

Dillard . Water S•Vlce: Pools.
Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Anvtlrne. Call 614-448-7404-No
Sunday calls.

1 8114Ford4x4F1 SO Expioror, 4
tpeed STd. PS, PB, dual tankt.
•c oand. 88,00Q mllea. 3048'82-2788.

w

Actor James Whitmore

SWEEPiA .-d ltWing mechlne
repair. patt1. and suppU•. ptck
up end dtttvery, Divis Vacu.m
Cltantr, one half mil• up ·
Goo- Cleek Rd. 'Coli 8144411-0294.
.

Step Van-1982Ch-.,., 4154, 16'
alum. . new paint-generator.
burger system. •lr. $14,000,
Call 614-448; t021.

'79 OMC "''"· '10 Ford • Fairmont atatlon wagon. p hofle
304-8711-8412 oltor 4 ,00 PM.

Ml1ch·Up Dallas Cowboys at
New O~eans Saints
Ill Ill (I) TBA
m wm Rogers' u.s .A•.

8ASEMENT
WATER PROOANG
Unconditional lif•'h'M Ol*Mttee. Local ret.-.. furnlshld.
Free ettlrNtn. Call eolact
1·814-237.0498. d., or night. •
Rogar1Basament
Waterproofing.

85

1975 wn equipped tar flshlno.
hu ntlng. camping. New brlkea, ,
p81nt fob, 318 motor, held••·
t700. S14-912-SB8t .

a

ALLEY OOP

1971 Dodge Pa... Van, AC.
cruia. Re•onable. Call 814448-7021.

1988 S -IS GMC 4 wltMI dr.
Jimmy with V-1, 2.8 Uter,
loaded. 1!,DODmiiM. Must 8811.
t14, 800. Call S14-24f-9122.

A evsH I oNf UNPf8 A
~oCJc 1 ANP ONE UNl&gt;et?
WATfR.

hunll,. Spadol. 1800 080.
txtrl nice. Alto 2· hol'll, hone
trollar. 0700 080. Cell 814448-3158.

Residential or comm&amp;l'clal wirin q. New service or repeirt.
licensed electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour ElectriCal. 304175-1788.

1894 01&lt;11. 88 Rovel Brhm LS
Sedln. lowmiiNCfl. AU options.
ExCII.,.oondilion. 08498. Catl
814-4411-9988.

PB,
IUIC!'Mtlc. AM· FM stereo. Call
814-245-8011.

1 I ft , C8m1Mf. Sl-1 I. Compl . .ly salt contlin.t. De.-

-

.

.

380 l!o 400 omell biodt Chev·
rolet tngln81, alto pardng aut
lnternltlonaf dump truCk. Clll
·-1 ..... 814-246-5017.

·

Last summer my six-year-old asked me what I used manure

7:00 ()) Our Houoe The Money
' \Machine ·
·
8 (2) PM Mogezlne
IJ) SporloCenltr (LJ
Ill
II (I) CUrrant Affair
'
(Z) (!) MacNeil/ Lehtef
NewoHour ( 1:00)
till 1111121 IIJl Whtol of
Fortune t:;1
Gl (f]) Three'o Company
l!ll Moneytlna
·
II)J
QJ Miami VIce Bro1har's
Keeper. Part 1 &amp; 2
Crook and Chaoe
7:05 ()) 9 10 5
7:30 D (2) Family Feud
11) NFL Triva
11) En1-lnmant Tonight
II Ill USA Todey
till lllll2l Jeopardy! t:;1
18(f]) M"A"S"H
l!ll cro. .flrs
tBI Night Court
115) Jeopardy
Viclto&lt;:ounlry
7:35 ()) Sanford and Son
8:00 ()) MOVIE: Family Reunion, ,
Part 1 (NR) (1 :40)
D (2) 11JJ ALF ALF stows
away in the back seat during
~nn ' s .da1e a11he drive-in.

Gll'anteed
Automatic:: Rebuilt
Transmltliona
814-448·0986

Pick u'p bldl, 01&amp;Yrollt. long or
lhort. no rult. 304-8715-8288.

Now eccepting appilcatlons for
2 bedroom ap.tments. fully
c.-peted, ap pllancea. WIIIM a11 d
trash pickups provided. Mlinta·
nance rree ltving clo• t o eho~
ping. bankl and schools. For
moreinform~tlo n call 304--8823711. E.O.H.

"We' ll never .pu l it out. This is w he re 1hey
make lhose Iri c k b~rthday can dl es."

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessori~

84 -

1978 Ford Fairmont Stf'llght I ,
nav iraa. Rune. Ooodworkc•.

lsu

76

~
. .: O,.,. . .j, _~_!

.---.,.---....-'----.,

6:35 CD Andy Orlllltlt

1988 Ford 280. 7. 700 milaa.
351 high outout moto.-. auto-matic trtnsrnisa5on. f16.600.
Extended Wlrf1lr'lty. Call 814448-9460.

13

·

a

good condltkwt.

Melrose- red &amp; golden ·
Jonethan-MclntOih·Grlmn epplea , cider, peare, honey . '1979 Ch•y Malibu Cl111Pc. 2
torghum a. !Wsc. food ltel"ls. door. 305 en gin•. Good condlDunrovln Fruit Farm-681 SE of tlon. Cell 814-8-'3-5244.
Albany. Hours9-&amp;. ctosN Mondayt. e1 4-898-1 29 a.
1974 Oldll CuttMa. 3150englne.
4door.all power. N1M11 tuneup.
Half run,.. beans. You plek. cw t 3150. C.. l &amp;1..,992·3490.
alrwady' picked. 114-247-2083.
1982 Ariel Wagon. 4 tpaed.
Freezerbllef. bornfed, 304-175- Wll mlinuin.t. good bale
4182. ,
trlr'laporwt:lon. t1000 . 080.
Call ~14-992·1818.

59

22ft CuddV Clbin. 120 HP
Merc. I.O.AIIweldedllumnhull,
t2.1S00.00 negotable. 304·
895-3427 or 304-875-CIISOI.

1

...::U,.:M.:--r-1
6
I I J 1

S11rShol Nolan Cromwell
&amp; Jack Youngblood (R)
Ill II (I) ABC Ntwl t:;l
(Z) Body Eltctrtc
(!) lllflhHy Buolneu Report
till lllll2l CB!I N-1
Ill liD WKRP In Clnclnnau
113llnlklt Polltlct '88
IBl WKRP In ClnclnntH
liJ Clrtoon Expreto
You Can Be il S1ar

C.lll14-245-9122.

AKC S.uat Hound pu~ ... 6 1986 Ply. Horir«t, 191! Z28
wks. old. Wormed Wid r..dy., · Camero. 19811 DodaeDaytona.
go. S126. 814-992-2996.
19815 Ford Tempo,.l981 M•c.·
M1rqu.... 1984 C.m•o. 1988
Chev. c.v.ller, 1983 Ford Mut·
tan'Vt. 1982 Oldl. Cutlau. 1981
67
Musical
V·. . Rabbh
20 more. AH .
·Instruments
--~~~-·
t ,.1 a •- o
wnu - • pr
Mot
Hw 1•• o4 ·· N~ of
or..
V· uu- mtn. ·
Holler, 814-4-'8-818&amp;.
S~•l Bundy Instrument• for
mlly
1979 1 u"""
1~
aale, Call814-446-0840.
Oalu• fa
Elect.- 4
52,750 IICtUII
Individual guHI!r l•tons. be- mil•. good tb•. A-1 mectlant~
t
cllfy
.
AUpowi'I"IICIUip't
t3,G&amp;O.
•
91nnen, •r 1ous gu .... r11 · 9 ru.. •-- at Third • OINt sc. Call
c•~ Mutlc. 814-44&amp;-0887.
-.
Jeff Wamst.., ln~truttor, 814- 814-448-4807,4&lt;te-2102.
448-8077. Umltad openings.
1982 Flrablrd, •)tc . cond.
82.000 mil-. 4 cyl, 4 spd.
S~alight SVIMm contllting of tl.OOO. Call 11 4- 379 _2282 or
14 color Hghts, 2 whfte st~s. 24 5-11193 .
'2 COIQf whee4t ltrobH with
console and Ill in road CMBS. ·1981 Delta 8 8. Exc. Cond.
304-876-5370 after 4:30PM. · Oi-l. 27_30 mpg. good famlty·
wo.-k car. · Priotd riglttl Cell
58
Fruit
Evening~ 8t4'4411-~974.

;~--i-P

It

1987 27 h . Chriocroh Colaliw

r ~~T ~~

-11 -TIU-'-Mrr'l'S'-rt--U"1"-'-ll

a

lay. c~nva1, etc. 350 V-8 eng.
Sleepe 8 . Vflf'Y low ~ours.
$27,100. Call 304-722.8890.

C•bln Cruiter. Pl!r1i.tfy IHtored.

Newtv
redecorated
aparti"TM!nts
avail
able.
Utilities paid.
t 226. ~
permonth, depotlt required. Call S NAFU ® by Bruce Bcu.Uie
3 bedroom ho u• on Mulberry 614-992-5724 after 8 :00 or
Ave ., Po me roy. 8 176. per . 9 9 2-511 9.
m onth plu s deposit. Cell 814Furnished, 1 bedroom •part992·745 0.
ment, deposit mquired. No pets,
Tw o bedroo m 1\ou• in Poi"' utlitiBSpald 81~992 - 2937 .
Pleasant with garage, no pets.
New one bedroom •partment i.n
304- 67 5-13e6.
Middleport. Furrtlshed or unfur3 bedr oom tri l111el, 8426 .00 per n ls hed. Call 814-992-6304.
month, secu rit y depotit, refere nces tequft' ed, non-smoker. no APARTMENTS. mobile hom es.
hou. .. Pt. PleauntendGalllpO.
p ets. 304-87S.2JQ9.
lis. 814-448-8221.
3 bedroom hou•. New HavaR.
t275. month plusdepoah:. 304- Beech Stretrl, Middlepo rt, Ohio,
2 badroom furni1hed ~artmant,
875-2471 .
utilft ill paid. ref eren cea. Pho ne
304-882-2868.

2 be~oom mahlle horne half
'mila out Jericho Ao.t, Nfer.nc es requir•d. cllllllft• &amp;:O.OPM,
,3 04-875-1082.

'f ·

m

m

28 ft. Bllylin• cniitlr. 19BiiJ
'Nicte Beam, Ill electronic. gat-

.

.

2 b edroom trail• for rent. t200.
per month. Happy Hollow Rd.,
Rut l.,d 614-742-2781 .

EpiiiOdto The Last Mission
(I) ®l lllll2l
·
SportoLook
(Z) Colorsoundo
(!) Dr. WIIO The Inferno [6
Ill liD H~ppy Dayo
·
ll3l ShowBiz Today
IBl Facto of Life
QJ Fat Albert
Fandango
6:05 CD Lavame and Shirley
8:30 D (2) IIJl NBC NlghHy Nawo

• 11 rn Ill
IIJl Newo

G &amp; J CyteleP•tsan d I.-viae for
all Japan- blk• .,.d ATV.
faelory trlin.tteehnidlft, a-v
Kinnaird. 304-875-188!.

75

1:

1

6:00 ()) Bonanza: The Loot

::-==~~::-:-::-:-:;;::::;:::-;_ 8'

2648.

.

Hou se "for ~en t. 126 Lau rei St ..
Pomeroy . Cell 614-992· 6144.

EVENINQ

-,,.-;-;-- - ;- ;-:--;;:--:- 1-:-:::--:-----:-:---:-- --:--:: 1-;;;:=:::;;;;:~::;~;::::-r;:::;;:::;:;::;;:::;;;;:=i•lnkl, dove. bathroom. VWth
51
Household Goods Willtrada71t. uucktoPperfor6
trallar. Runs good. Oocltod ..
ft. truck topper. Small truck
66
Pets for Sale
71 Auto's For Sale.
GeiUpolia Boat Cub. •4&amp;00.

...-----1

Mobile Homes
for Rent

HotM
a• furnace. big attic. plica to
p.-k c.. Referanc» required.
•166 rncmth. Send lftume to
Doily Sentinol Box 7 29 G.
Pomeroy. Ohio.

Ko dak Proj ecf'or. 61 4· 742 -

bo at for winter. can 614· 992·
SWAIN
, _36_ 5_6_.__- _ ._'_ _ _ _ _
AUCTION a. FURNIT URE_ 62 •
33
Farms for Sale
Oliw St .. Gallipolis.
Mixed hard woOd slabs. $12 per
42 Mobile Homes
NEW- 6 pc. wood group - 8 39-9. bundle. Containing approx . 11ft
ton . Ohio Pallet Co., Pomeroy.
f or Rent
u~,~ ing roo m suites- 81 99-S599. Ohio . 614·992·8461 .
20.6 acres, 7 miles from Po int
Bunk beds with bedding- S249.
Pleasant. Rt. 62 South. Site for
Full ..;ze mattress &amp; foundat ion
;oo
Baseboard el ee. tleatars &amp; ther·
fl o rne. hunting and investment.
· S 99 . R oc l,· ners mosmts.
. t. •ting
304-675-2722.
Newty decorated. 2 BR ., fully starting- $99.
304-675-5699.
1:::--:-:---,-:--,--carpeted. aU. utilities peid .:c ept USED- Beds. dressers, I:J adroom
King-Cole wood burning stove.
elactrlc. Sec. dap. mquired. Call suitn . Oeskt, wringer was her, a call
34
Businass
304·882-3387 after 8:00.
614-446-8558.
complete
line
of
utod
furnitu
re.
Building_s
NEw. Western boo tS· 8 35.
2 BR ., furrMshed. 8160 a mo. Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp; 350 Case dazar 6 way blade,
• 3 1 59
verygoods hape.60sariM0ftch
Store building for •le or n111t , plus !ftC. dep. &amp; ref. Adults onty. .oftt. .l. ~.
11614 _ 44 u\...tf
Witc h. 304-273-3185.
34x36, 2 bay gar&amp;g8 "'30)[40. Se nd raplij!S to Box Cia 168,
hoist, 6 room hou!ID. 2 bllths, 1 c/ oGaUipolis Dally Tribune. 826 County .opplianee. lne. Go od- Antique oak buHm:, 6 leg Ollk
Third Aw., Galiipolls, Ohio
acre land. 304-675-1 668.
Used appliances and TV sets. tabla. 3 piece solid maple
46631 .
Op811 8AM to 6PM. Mon ttlru bedroom suite. 304-675-4579.
Sat. 61 4-446-189~ . 627 3rd.
N&amp;.- Wlllerloo-2 Br. Clean.
Ave. Gallipolis. OH.
Used gas unit ' haat•s I \NO
S1~5a mo. Ref. &amp; dep. Aduh:s.
50,000 btu $200.00 each.
Furnished. Call 614-446-7754 GOOD USED APPLIANCE'S 1One
SO, OOO I:Jtu ; 13 o.OO. O.ne
Or 643·2844.
Washers. dryers. refrigerators, new gas S,OOO btu infra red
50 acres for •I e.- 8 miles from
PomtH'oy on Rt. 143. Free gas. 3 BR unfurn'ad. All alec., \l)lh:h ranges. Sllaggs Appll&amp;nees. radiant c&amp;iliny heater 8120.00.
Up-r River Rd. beside Stone N
1 ·
- 250 000
$ 21 ,000. Call 61.. 992· 6239.' woodburner. Rt &amp;88 on private Cr.;;;
Motel. 6t4-446-739e.
aw 8 oct"c un•
'
wtt
218
three
phH•8800.00each.
lot. Adutta onty-. Call 614-446-As hton, farge building lots, 4807 or 446·2802.
One 7,!;00 wtt 480 v tloraa
mobile homes permitted_. public
phas a 8160.00. Onli 7, 500 wtt
L!IYNE 'S FURNITURE
water. also riWr lots, Ctvde 2 be«oom. fu.rnlshad, in Syta208 voh tflree phase 8150.00.
Bowen, Jr. 304-578-2336.
cu•. 8225 P• month. washer Sofas and chairs priced from One 4 .000 wn 277 V aingle
and dryer ho o k-up, air. water S396 to S996. Tab'• 860 and phase S100.00. One 5.000 wtt
Beautifu I river lots one •ere plus.. paid. 614-992-7880 or 814- up to S125. Hide-a· bedS' $390 277 V-, single phate $100 .00.
publi c water, Clyde Bowen, Jr. 992-6236.
to $595. Recllnera .9225 to One 4 KW recessed cabinet
304-576-2336.
$375. Lamps S28 to 812 5. heater 208, 240, 277 V single
Dinettes $109 and up to S495. .phase $325.00. One 3,000 wtt
25acres Broad RunRolld. New
Wood tai:Jie W·6 chair s 8285 to ceiling radiant healer 8100.00.
Haven. Owner fl,.ncing availa- 44
304-875-2385.
8795. Du k $100 up to ~375.
Apartment
ble. 304-882-3394.
Hutches $4QO and up. Bunk
for Rent
bedt complete w -mattresses 23 in Zenith console TV, good
lot s, one acre. level. wooded.
S296andupto S395. Baby beds cond. 304-675·4162.
city water, Jericho Road. owner
t 110. Mattresses orbo• springs
flnan'cing, gorxl terms. 304- 2 BR . apts. 6 closets. kitchen- full or twin $68, firm $78, an d Shallow well pump, 160ft No. 2
372-8405 or 372-2678.
lip pl. furnished, Washer-Dryer
S88. Queen sets S250 &amp; up, alumn und.-ground wire, 304hook-up, ww c arpet, nHW"tv Kin!=! $ 3 60. 4 drawer chest 869. 675-5490.
paintRd, deck. Frpm.$1~5 . Now Gun c abinets 6 gun. Baby
licceptlng HUD . Regency, Inc. mattresses $35 &amp; S45. Bed Gun cabii'IBt, solid walnut. holds
Rentais
10 gun•. 304-468-1078.
Apts. Call 304-675-5104, Of framas S20. 830 &amp; Kinq frame
875-5388or 876· 7738.
850. Good selection of bedroom
3 2 inch GE eleCtric range
suites. metal cabinets, headNew completely furn ished boards 630 end up to $65. • 75. 00. 36,000 btu g• wen
fu rnace with venl pipe 8100.00.
41 Homes for Rent . apartment &amp; mobile home .in
----- ~·-·--304-675-4801 .
:-:-~--:---:-:---::-:--- city. Aduits ontv. Perking. Call 90 ' Days Mm e as c ash with
IIPPfOV&amp;d credit . 3 Mil 8! out
NicWf furnished small houta. 814-446-0338.
Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
55 Building Supplies
Adutts only. Ref. requWed. No "a _E_A_Uc:nc:F:-:U L-:A--:P--:A--:R-111'
::-:cE
1 =N
- :T
::-S:-:-A=T Buhwille
Mon . thru Sat . Ph . 614-446·
81
44
8
pets. Call
BUDGET PRICES AT JACI&lt;- 0 322.
"" 6--0ll .
For Sale or Rent·2 Br. newly 'SON ESTATES, 538 Jackson
Building Materials
.
Valley Furnrtum
remodeled tmme. largefancedin · Ake from $183 a mo. Walk to
Blo dc, brick. aewer pipes, winyard, laundry room. Bidwell shop and movies . 614-446- New and used furnlturo and
dows. lintels. Eitc. Claude Winappll c ances . Call 614· 446sc ho~· district . 8275a mo. Call 2588. E.O.H.
ters. Rio GrandeJ O. Call 614-614-446-6320.
- - - - - -- - - - 7572. Houn 9 -5 .
245-6121 .
Upstairs unfurnished apt . CerJ &amp; S FURNITURE
Modern 3 Br hou• for mnt or psted. utilitias paid. No children.
Concrete bloCks· all sites- yard
141!5 Eastern Aw.
sale. located in Patriot. Stove &amp; No pets. Cell614-448-1637.
or delivery . Mason sand. Gallipo4 drawer chD!It, 848. 5 drnwer
refrigerator furnished. $250mo.
lis Block Co .. 12J1h Pine St ..
5100 deposH-. Call 814-446- Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; tNith. chest. $54.95. 5 pc. wooden
Gnllipolil,
Ohio. Call 614-446Clean.
No
pets.
Ref.
&amp;
deposit
dinnetta
119ts,
8
199.
9!5.
3870 or 814-448-1340.
2783.
retquired. utilit ies furnished.
4 BR . home. 7 miiD!Ifrom town. Adults only . Call 614-446PICKENS USED AJRNITUAE
WESTERN REO CEDAR
1519,. .'
Call 814-448--8346,
Complet&amp; house hold furnish·
• Channel Rustic
ings. Y2 mile out Jerricho.
and Be\leled .lap Siding
Two bedrooms. living. f.mily Luxuriou s Tare Townhouse 304-675-1450.
• Deck Mat•ials
room, lg. kitchen. one &amp; half ap artment s. Elegant 2 floors, 2
Guaranteed
QUality
BR
.,
ful
bath
upstairs,
powder
bath . No pets. Re_f. required, Call
For low prices on Quality Carpet
C
ET
tOE,
INC
..
Athens-614room
downlta
irs,
CA
.,
dis
614-446-1734.
IJ, Furniture COfTIB tl;) Mo llohan
594-3578
hwasher. dispoeal, private en· Furnitu re-Upper Ri\le r Ad .. 614New 3 bedroom horne. min- tr•nee. private encloeed patio, 448-7444.
utes from Holzer Hosp, min- pool, playyround. Utilities not
utes from dowrrt
S225 a included Starting at $299 per
ViAa's Furniture
56
Pets for Sale
month. Heat pump, entre! air.. mo. Call614-367-78 60 . "
Call 614-446-8780.
Open 7 days a week
Furnilhed apt. New . Near HMC . Monday-Saturday. 9 AM-6 PM
1
BR
.
$275.
Utilities
paid.
Call
Gro om and Suppty Shop-Pet
5 rooms &amp; bath. do I e garage.
Sunday, 12 noon· 6 PM
Gr o oming. All breeds ... AII
S300e mo. plus
. Must have 44~4416 afl: er 7 PM.
Living room suites 2 pc.-8269,
styles. lams Pet Food Dealer.
ref-erence. Ca 14-4-"l&amp;-3548.
lamps
starting
at
$19
.95,
wood
Apartments and houses. Call dinette sets - $149 &amp; up,
Julitt Webb Ph. 614-448-0231 .
4 BR . house, 24 Jack i on St .. 304-675-5104.
hutch es- $21"9 &amp; up, bakers
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennet.
Vinton. 5275 a mo. plu s ~c.
racks -$19 .96. TV stands. ent erFurnishedept .·1BR. 5 240amo. ta
CF A Persian and Slameae kitd ep: Calf 61
88-9380.
inment centers . d es k!-S49.95
Utilrties peid. 243JacksonPlke .. &amp; up. glass front gun cabi netstens . AKC Chow puppiet. New
Himalayan kittens. Calf 6143 BR . home-upper Rt. 7. Ne• Gallipolia. call 446-4416 after 7 $279, bedroom suitBS, full sll:e
4 46-j844 after 1 PM.
Shopping Center. 8285 per mo. PM.
mattresses starting at S4S:95,
&amp; Sec. daposit.. referen ce. can
bunk beds with I:Jedding-8 229,
Furnis hed apartments-1 tied- baby beds .
AK C Cocker Spaniel pups. $150
614-448-8189or 446-6885.
.
roo m. S1 50 &amp; up. Utilities paid.
each. UKC Reg. American Eskimo Spitz pups. 8100 each.
2 BR .-1/2ofdouble.1Z6StateSt Calt 4l1-6·4416 after 7 PM.
E)tcellent used appfiancas with
Call 6 14·388-8890.
.S 250 monthly, nJf, 8r: IBC. dep.
30 day s guerantee. Wes hersFurnished efficiencies- $ 145 &amp; $99 &amp; up, dryers, fr eeze rs,
required. Call 614-446-0254.
up. Utilities paid. Call 446-4416 refrigerators. ranges.
Na t urnl Bob-ltll fht Terrier
pup s. 15 month old En gliah Blue
HoUse for ~ent in Eureka. S200 after 7 PM.
Lavaways are wel oo ma. FinancTick CoonHound. C811614-441plus dep. S. reference. Hou•s
ing, . available with approved
341 3.
ovailabt e .s oon in Rodney Village DowntOwn apt. overlo oking the credit .
II. Bl ackburn Reahy . 614-448- park. 1 Br., 2nd floor. $180 a Rt. 141 in Centenary-'!( mile on
mo. Call 614-446-0644 or. Lincoln Pike. 614-446-3158.
2· Dachshundpu ppi• · shorthair
0008.
446-7602.
f emale, long hair male. 6 wks.
ol d . Call6, 4· 256·1704.
2-3 BR . tlo mes. atta c hed garGood uted color tv's fo r sale
ages. CA: S anders Or. S325 &amp; Furn'ed efficiencv apt. 3 rms. Call 614-446· 1149 anytime.
AKC Botton Terrier-2 females.
S360 monthly. Ret. &amp; n c. dep. bath, c arpet thrOughout. PrNete
&amp; quiet. Single w ortdng parson Was her &amp; dryer. Good shape.
10 AM to.6 PM CaB 614-268r,eq uiru d. Ca ll 614-446-0264.
o nly . Call 614-446-4607. 446- Uke new . $26 0 for set. Call
9 3 54.
2-ho ums on Main Street in 2602.
614-446-5697
Crown Crty . Ret. Call614-446AKC Miniature Schnauzars. 5
Apartment for rarit. $225 e Good used ft!fr igeretor. 17 cu,
pups and 4adults. $76. to $226.
1511 .
month. Deposit required. 614- ft ., Sears fr ost-free. Gua rilnAKC West Highland Tarrier, 1
Nicely fur nis hed snwll hou ae. 1 992-5724. After 6pm or 992- teed. 513 5. Call614-36 7·71 87 year old female. $225. 080 .
5119.
3 2 300 St. Rt. 143. Pomeroy,
SR . On e or two elderlv peo ple.
afte r 7 PM.
no pets. Ref. required. Call
Ohio, beh.,.en Harrisonvtlle and
in
Middl,eport,
1
bedroom
apt.
6 14-446-2643.
Carpenter.
Warm
Mo
rning'
wood
st
rwe.
5 150 month plus deposit. 814- go od shape. Call 6.1 4 -388For ren t. 1 bedroom co untrv 992-5545 or 614·949-2216.
AKC registered puppi111 mina·
8351 .
.
home. Close t o town. Excellent
ture Schnauzer. Coctl.ttr Spator cou ple, Deposit and ref er- Graciout living. 1 and 2 bad- Sears upright freelar, good
niels . Chow Cho w; shots,
e nce 'required. Oay catl 614- room apartmenu . at Village cond. $125 . 304-675·4210.
w Ofmed and health guarantte.
992-6 841 , after5 call 6 14-992- Man or and Rivers ide Apart304-675-2t93.
2627.
-ments . in. Middleport. From Dinette set. solid oak round
-:-c-----::---:- · S 1 82. Coli 6t4-992-77e7. table. si• chairs, f\rVO ft)tt raleafs. 2 registered AKCBoKerPuppias.
3 bedr oom house. Duplex. Hot EOH.
$399.00. Pho ne 304-67 5- S 200.00 eac h. call after 5:00
air gas fu rna ce, big attic, base·
PM . 304-675·8043.
5955
ment, place to park car. Refer· 2 bedroom Apts. for rent.
Carpeted.
Ni
ce
t&amp;tting.
l
aundry
Complet8 bed room J;ulte, full or 5 year old female 'Beagle ~ood
ence requ ired. 8165. per month.
Wr ite Th e Daily Sentinel, Box . facilities a\lailabla. Call 814- queen, i126.00 or bast offer. hunting dog lrom good hunting
992-3711.
EOH
.
304-675-6495.
stock. S75.00. 304-875· 2231 .
7 29G. Pomeroy.

1

C1- Thl TV Ulting Group. lf'IC.,_FI wann. TX

3 bedroorndupi~~~~;houll .

t&lt;odak Su,_ 8. mov;e Camara .

;.~~;:::::;::::::::::=11"::::

~,~.:.~~o~om~~1~~~5~o~_-:t:t~9o:·~ 42
~0 4-675-2722 .

•..,..• •_

Space

Misc. Merchandise

Office o r small bUsi ness space Uke "ew King wood &amp; coal
for tent. located N. 2nd. Ave. in burner w it h blower, .S28 6. 1
Middlep ort bu si ness district. Co rd teesMed wood. 885. Call
Call 614-992·5545 or 614- 6 14-388-9362.
949-2216.
1:-:-:--,.,---,----,---,
WRrm Mo rn in g wo od -c o a l.
CP UNTRY ~ OBI LE Ho rne Park. bu rner w / fen-uted 3 mos. 2
Roum 33.. North of Po meroy. kerOsen,Q heaters- 19.000. 9400
Renta l trailers. Call 6 14-992-· BTU wlfan. 614-367. n45.
7 479.
•
3 wood and ooal stoves for •I e.
Sp acio us mobil e home lots fo r Side by side refrigerator, Myers
rent. Fai-nily Pride Mobile Ho me deep wull pump. steel beMTI
Park. Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va. 16x36 ft. kmg. 614-949· 2195:
304-8 75- 3073.
Sears best wood and coal stove.
Brick pad also included. $ 300.
61 4- 742-2717.

Rtt:;pO.;,ibla mother of 2 would
like to do full time baby sitting.
CaH 614-256-1691 .
·

Motorcvcl88

74

KIT 'N' C ARLYLE® by Larry Wript

Rooms for 18nt-vveek or mo'n\h.
Starting a1 $120 a rno. Gallia
Ho1el- 61 4-446·9 580.

Palnu ng &amp; roofing &amp; carpentry
work by thfl hour or ;ob . Call
614 379-2416.

ci.. ...,..,.....~s,....,. 1rv -

Antiques

1986 bfeck Honde 1100 cc.
v -e 15 Magna . l',tllnt concltlo n.
very 'tow mil•. Call 114-448-•
4134.

Furnished · room -919 Second
Aw .. ~llipoli1. $135 n mo.
Utilities p~id. Si n We mele. Share
·b-! h. Call 446-44 16 after 7 Pr.-t .

Business
Opportunity

53

Buy or Sell. Rl\lerine Ant tquea,
1 124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours : M.T. W 10e .m. 10 &amp;p.m ..
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 814-992·
2528.

Doler &amp; Baclrchoe Worlrc· 850
CMe dout Reasonable rates.
E11periene.J operator. Cremeant
Con&lt;~:t C~ll 614-256-1718

21

Moodavl. Oi:tober 3, .1988

Pomeroy.-:.Middlei&gt;ort. Ohio ·

p
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Fsyc . 0 IC

40 Viva
Manole te!
41 S ummit
United
44 Debus sy's
· "La - "

42

(Fr.)
39 Drive
43 Work
on s tag e
45 Onward
46 Crrt
471ndian
abod e
48 English
~ river

DOWN
,

I

Unanimous
2 Breathing

.

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES - Here's-bow lo work It:

10/3

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLO&lt;W ·

One letter stand! for another. In thls sample A'is used
for the three L's, X for the· two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation 'of Ihe word! are all
hlnts. Each day the codelette'rs are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES

1'

10· 3

MVASA

xes

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YT C Z
' 0

cps

BPKBMFMPMA

FB

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YT C ZWAJ1A .

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OCPS '_BAWX,

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K P B F-T ·A B· B

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OCPS NAT , -SHTJHWW . UHGCKB
Yeeterday's · CI)'Jitoquote: '(HERE IS NO SUBSTITuTE FOR TALENT. INDUSTRY AND ALL TilE VIRTUES
ARE OF ~0 AVAIL. - AGNES K~~rliJ,~ GRAY•

�'·

..

. Page-; 12-The Daily Sentinel

~Area

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

By United Press International
Rain covered a large chunk of
- the East Coast and the South
early tOday but chllly autumn
· temperatues remained' in hiding
and the West enjoyed dry, warm
weather for the first working day
of October.
Showers were expected to
continue today from .s outhern
New England across parts of
New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl·
van !a, the Vlrginlas, the Caroli·
nas, Geor.gla and northern
Fldrlda.
Sunday,-thunderstorms spawning fierce winds swept through
the central Gulf Coast and a
tornado was sighted In south·
cel)tral Louisiana but it caused
no injuries .
The tornado near Scott, La.,
blew away signs and tree limbs . .
No serious property damage was
reported.
Winds gusted to 48 mph at
Baton Rouge, La.

Sheriff r.eports accident
An accident Involving a car anJI a motorcycle was
investigated Satilrday evening by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department. A clta'tlon fo,r improper backing was issued a
juvenile and Eddi~ Smith was charged with no motorcycle
endorsement . The accident happened on Route 124 in Syracuse.
Sheriff Howard Frank also reports his department answered
a domestic violence call at a·residence on County Road 28 on
Sunday evening :
·'
·
· ·

'

EMS 1ros 14 weekenc:l calls
Meigs County :EmergencyMedlcal Ser~lces reports 14 calls
over the weekend; eight on Saturday and two on Sunday.
Saturday at ·6:08a.m. , Racine to Trouble Creek ·Road for
.James Hinkley to Holzer Medica!" Center; Rutland EMS and
Columbia Township Fire Department at 10:21 a.m. to
·carpenter for Randy Jeffrey to O'Bienness Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 1:40 p.m. transported Eddie Smith from an auto
accident on Route 124 to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland
at 4:45 p.m. to Horner Hill for Terry 1-!ayes who refusetl
treatment; ~~ 5:18p.m. , Rutland was called back to Horner Hill
for Terry Hayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
6:17 p.m. to Wright St. for Qorothy Roach to Holzer Medical
Center: Racine Fire Departm\pt at 6:35p.m. to a car fire at the
Intersection of Routes 124 and 338; owner of the car was Kevin
Roush: , Syracuse at 7: 2lj p.m. to a two-car accident on Route
124; Transported from the accident l;ly Syracuse, Racine an
Pomeroy sq11ads were Kris Ash , Brenda Zirkle and Chad Diddle
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Missy Rainey to Pleasant
• Valley Hospital; Kathy Ihle and Christy Brumfield to Vete.r ans
Memorial Hospital; Aimee Wolfe to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Angie Hill to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunday at. 2: 29 a;J11., Middlep9tt to theSuperAmerlca Station
for Burl Blevins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at
1:01 p.m. to Dye Road for Lucille Lambert to Holzer Medical
Center: Rutland at 3: 39 p.m. to Bryant Road for Leuna Wise
who was dead on arrival: Pomeroy at 5:42 p.m. to MUlberty
Ave. for Helen Miller to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland
at 8:07p.m. to New Lima Road tor Diana Nease to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middlepol't at 10 p.m. to Leading Creek for
LaDonna Sears to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Discovery...

Radio line hit by bullet
Wagner Broadcasting of Galllpolis announced that WYPC·
FM went off the air Friday at 5:29p.m . when a bullet from a
high-powered rifle caused damage to the radio station's
transmission line, which runs the length of the station's 400-!oot
transmission tower. •
J
The FBI Is working with the. Gallla County Sheriff's
Department In the investigation.
·
Wagner Broadcasting is offering a cash reward for
information leading to the arrest and conviction of the
individual responsible for the shooting. Contact the sheriff's
department at 446-1221 or Wagner !3toadcasting at 446-3543 for
more information.

Elva Paul (Red) Haye, 57,
Rutland, died Friday In Charleston General Hospital at Charles- .
ton, W. Va.:
Mr. Haye• was born April 28, ·.
1931 in Proctorville, the son of the
late Eustis and Hazel .Langdon
Haye. He wa~ employed JJn· the
river all of his , life and was
currently a river pilOt with the
Madison Coal and Supply Co. He
served In the U. S. Army during
the Korean Conflict and was a
member of Veterans' of Foreign
Wars 15036, Columbus. ~
Surviving-are his wl!e, Phyllis
C'ullums Haye; a daugll,ter, Pam
of Rutland; two sons: Chris of
Rutland and ~hillpofKenova, W.
Va., two bro-s, a sister and
live granchtldr,en. •

Boosters to meet
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
will,meet Wednesday, 7:3!Jp.m.,
at the high school. All members
are invited to at tend .
Chester council
Chester Council323, Daughters
of America, will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday. The home and
orphans committee will serve
refreshments and members are
to take gifts to be used as game
prizes.

I·I
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I

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992·3481

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1
I·-------------~1

.· Ki:ng ·Builders Supply ··co. ·
~, 405 NORTH SECOND

. ..
:

.

992·3748 OR 992·5020
MIDDliPORT, OliO
•

it\W,, \'

-

windows, doric "columns" and a !orrnai entrance
which gives It a look of dignity and permanence.
Large east windows enhance lhe lighting &lt;!I the
large interior showroom. The building dales to.lhe
1890's and has become something of a local
landmark: Logan Monument Company Is Sou·
theaslern Ohio's largest monument company
with sales offices In Logan, ClrclevUie, Pomeroy,
, V~ton, Wellston and Piketon.
•

custody : She said Singh would be
offered facilities at the U.S.
military hospital In Wlesbaden,
West Germany, if he chooses to
take advantage of them.
Based on Information provided
by Syria, Oakley said , "We join
with Mr. Singh's relatives in
rejoicing in his release and call
· 'for the urge)lt, unconditional
release of all hostages in
Lebanon."
Asked if thi&gt;re were any Indicalions of any further hostage
releases, Oakley said, "No, this
is all we have." ·
There are now 14 foreigners
held in Lebanon. including nine
Americans and three Britons
who are believed held by at least
four pro-Iranian groups thought
· to be affiliated with Hezbollah, or
the.J'arty of God.
In Beirut Monday, Hezbollah
spiritual leader Ayatollah Mohammed Hussein Fadla.l iah said
the nine · remaining American
hostages will not be released
before next month 's p .S. pres!dentlal elections.

Grant application open for review

Alkyd
GiOII Porch &amp;

I

I

Area news briefs

8~~on

~·-

I

t
••

,

likes an enameL Custom·

Primes~mdseals .

·M . O.N G~·1E'N

I
I

DAMASCUS, Syria (UP]) The release of a U.S. resident
held hostage in Lebanon for 20
months has r!"k!ndled hopes for
nine American captives, but a
Moslem extremist leader · said
none of tliem will be freed before
next month's presidential
eleclions.
.
·
.Mithileshwar Singh, an IRdlan
citizen with U.S. residency, was
freed in west Beirut late Monday
and immediately rushed to Damascus, where he was reported
by Syrian officials to be resting at
a local hospital today .
U.S. Ambassador to Syria
Edward Georgian visited Singh
at the hospital, tbe officials sa·id.
' 'The freed hostage was picked
up by Synan intelligence (in
Beirut) moments a(ter he was
freed," a Syrian security official
said. "The freed captive was
hurriedly driven to Damascus."
Storte Department spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley said the ·
United States was informed by
Syria that Singh was freed in
Beirut and placed in Syriah

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Complalnis of skateboarders
on streets and sidewalks in the
downtown section of the village
were also discussed. Council
members say they have been told
that skateboarders are not always watching where they 're
going and that there have been
near collisiOIJS with walkers on
sidewalks, especially older ·
walkers. Council is concerned for
the safety of tM children on the
skateboards as well as for the
safety of the people walking the
sidewalks. For this rei!son, and

In an effor t t o prohibit skat e·
boarding on downtown s treets
and sidewa lks, a ny chHd reported
to be operating a skateboard in
an unsafe manner may be picked
up by ~ the pollee, Council·
members decided.
l\IIOnday, Oct . 31, from 6 to 7
p.m., was es tablished by council
as tri ck or treat night in
Pomeror .
And finally , the mayor 's report
of $2,832 of fines and fees
collected fo r · the month of September was a ccepted.

loan applications increases in local lc))ooi district income tax.
By LEE LEONARD
years when state assistance That district has passed only two
UPI Statehouse Reporte•
out of eight operating levies in
COLUMBUS- The severity of · stalls.
the
last 10 years .
State aid to schools increased
Ohio's school funding problem
Other
districts and their loan
by only about4 percent in each of
was highlighted Monday when
the state Controlling Board auth - the last two years. VanKeuren amounts are: Beaver Local,
orized loans totaling $18.56 mil - described it as " relatively fiat." Columbiana County, $60,000;
Government leaders have Belmont-Harrison Joint Vocalion to 23 school districts, includ·
hinted
a state tax hike may be tional, $389,000: Columbiana Ex·
ing two in Meigs County. Eastern
necessary
In 1989 to keep schools empted Village, $107,000: Eas t
Local will receive $38,000 and
afloat; three separate task for- Guernsey Local, $127,000; East
Meigs Local $92,000.
In requesting the loans, the ces are examining the system of Palestine, Columbiana County,
$84,000; Eastern Local, Meigs
Ohio Department of Education financing education.
$38,000; Edison Local,
County,
Van Keuren said bankruptcies
notified the board that another 15
Jefferson
County, ·$462,000; and
of LTV Steel and the Hunt Steel
districts will be asking for $11
Indian
Lake
Local, Logan
· · million in loans Oct. 17.
Corp. cost the Youngstown·
County
,
$121,000.
The largest loan of $5 million school district $3 million in
Also, Johnstown-Monroe, Lickwas approved for Youngs town property taxes.
ing
County , ·$505,500; Maplewood
The bankruptcies also hurt ·
City School District. Howland
Local,
Trumbull Count y ,
Local School District, Trumbull nearby Olrar.t:J City School Dis$218,000;
Mechanicsburg,
Chamtrict, • Trumllull County. The
County. Will receive $2 million,
paign
County,
$95,000;
Meigs
and Lake Local School District, $906,000 for that dlstrict will be its
Local,
Meigs
County,
$92,000;
Stark County, sl!ghtly more than '· third loan. Warren City School
District , also in Trumbull North Bat tim ore Local. Wood
$1 mlllion.
County, $53,000: Nor th RidgeCounty, will receive $657,000.
James VanKeuren, chlefofthe
Rep. -Robert Netzley, R-Laura. ville, Lorain County·, $1.3 mil Division of School Finance for
the Ohio Department of Educa· a board member, mamed the lion ; Sandy Valley Local,
lion, said the loan requests . lack of local effort, both in $109,000;, South Range Local,
resu!ted from a combination of. raising revenues and in operat- Mahonlng County, $272,000; and
local revenue losses, spiraling ing schools efficiently; for the Wellston, Jackson County ,
$242,000.
· costs and the reluctance of voters proliferation A state loans. ·
VanKeure n said all but four of
He particularly faulted Lickto pass operating levies.
Franklin Walter, state superln· ing Valley Local School District , the districts have lax levies on
iendent of public Instruction , which will get $591,000 and is in the November ballot.
said historically the number of receivership, for repealing a

8 us
· h' Du k. ak IS
• seek' spo
: nsor

None of rema~rung hostages Will be
• .
•
·
.freed before next month's elections for fmal pre-eleetto~ debate
,

•1299

•.

LOGAN MONUMENT FEATURED IN NA·
TIONAL MAGAZINE - The American Monu·
ment Assoclallon recognized Logan Monument
Company's classic storefront design In a recent
' publication. Logan's home' office ·showroom was
fealured In an article .emphasizing the lmpor·
lance of Intregallng archlleclural and merchan·
dlslng elements when planning a business
structure. The magazine noted the trl:le pa:ed

Galien

Best Latex Satin Gloss
Enamel

2 Seclions, 12 Pages
A Multif11.edia Inc. Newspaper

BOR·
authorizes EasterO and
•
Meigs Local District loans

.... ·.:

Gallon•

Interior Lata•
Semi-Gloss
Walt &amp; Trim

....., ..

I
I
f

-

sgee

~~~~0~-·1499
Gllllor(

Low in mid 30s tonfght.
Wedne.sday , mostly cloudy,
. highs in oOs_. Chance of rain .50
· percent.
·

•

The topic of zoning, which was
tors, fire and safety experts, and
up at the Sept. 19 Council
brought
banking officials, the commis·
meeting,
was discussed in
slon will present their opinion of
greater
deta.illast
night. Council. the proposed alterations to vilman
Larry
Wehrung
presented
lage council .
Council then has final say as to · copies of Athens' zoning ordinance to members of Council .
whether remodeling plans are
accepted or rejected . A fine of up Members are to review the
to ·$5{) a day may be charged for Athens' ordinance before the
next council meeting so that
not complying with the
plans may be undertaken to
ordinance.
.
Mary Powell, Sue Raub and develop a zoning ordinance for
Frank Porter III, who proposed • Pomeroy. Although the Athens '
the ordinance to council In the ordinance may serve as a model,
first place, were present for last Pomeroy's ordinance would be
changed to reflect local needs ·
night's meeting.

U• •.\\
WH\1\ll \1

Beet Lata• Flat Ceiling

O.Coratton

guidelines regulate what can and
cannot be done to exteriors of
buildings within the historic
district. The new ordinance plac~s all of Pomeroy within the
historic district, rather than just
the sections which are already on
the National Register. ·
With passage.o! the ordinance,
a five·member commission for
historic preservation will be
formed to review all plans for
alterat\ons to buildings. Upon
evaluation of the plans, and after
obtaining pr9,fessional assist·
ance from architects, contrac-

'

Gallon•

WrfH COUPON

.,

.•

percent.
Extended Forecast
Wedenesday through Friday
.
Fair through the period, with :·
highs In the 5{)s Wednesday and ::
Thursday and in the upper 5{)s or ·.
lower 60s Fr.iday. Lows will be . ·
mostly in the 30s.

Best Interior Alkyd
Prime&amp; Seal

.DDLEPOIT; OHIO

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
As of last night, Pomeroy
property owners have one new
'ordinance to get accustomed to
and may have another new
ordinance to get accustomed to in
the near future. ..
·
The ordinance which was given
Its third reading and passed last
night by Pomeroy Village Coun·
ell provides guidelines for renovation and remodeling of his tori·
cal buildings.
Much of Pomeroy Is already
listed on the National Register of
Historic Places and federal

$599

Interior LatOI
Ceiling Paint

.

Pomeroy Council considers zoning ordinance

-\

By United Press International
terrain vehicle slammed into a ·
At ·least 11 people, Including fence post along a Portage:
three motorcyclists, were killed County road.
:
In weekend traffic accidents in
Dayton: Walter K. Lauren, 61,
Ohio, the State Highway. Patrol anct William E. lfutcherson, 25:
said today.
both of Sarasota, N.C., killed
The patrol count showed seven when their tractor-trailer col·
deaths Saturday and four Sunday llded with a car and a truck on
after an apparent death-free I-70 In Montgomery County.
Friday evening.
Warren: Howard D. Carpen·
One multiple-fatal accident ter ,' 38, Warren, killed when his·
was reported Saturday. killing motorcycle collided with a truck
two North Carolina truck drivers on a Trumbul_l County road. (not
In Montgomery County.
wearing a helmet)
Another victim was driving an
Sunday
all-terrain vehicle, the count
Circleville: Fred Wendling Jr.,
showed.
28, Washington Court House, .
Victims Included:'
killed when his truck went off
Friday night
Ohio Route 56 in Pickaway
None.
County and overturned.
Saturday
Cleveland: Gary Miller,' 31,
Strongsville: Jacquelyn Kern, Cleveland, killed when II- motor20, Middl&lt;~sburg Heights, killed cycle on which he was drMng hit
in a one-car · accident on a a parked truck on a Cleveland
Sti'bngsville street.
city street.
Cleveland: Concetta L. Jones,
Cinctnnau: Lawrence Dlrek20, Berea; killed hi a two-car tor. 30, Cincinnati, killed in a
collision on I-480 in Cleveland.
two-car crash on a Hamilton
New Philadelphia: Inez M. . County road. ·
Armbrest, 73, Beach City, ~illed
Avon: Roy E. Schabel, 38,
In a two-car crash on U.S. 21 in Litchfield, killed when his motorTuscarawas County.
cycle collided with another vehi·
Matthew A. Sommers, 12. cle on Ohio 2541n Avon In Lorain
Hiram, killed · when his. all· County.

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OLGATE
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I---------------IIr-------------,
(
I
RADIANCE
YARN

Sou til Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low in the mid 40s, Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph,
Tuesday: Mostly cloudy, with
a chance of showers. Hig;h
temperatures will be between 55
and 60. Chance of rain Is 40
f

,

Pick 4
079~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. October 4. 1988

Ohio records 11 highway
accident deathS over weekend

Am Electrt.c Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 25%
Ashland Oil .... ... ........ .. ........ 33
Bob ·I;:vans .............. .. ........... l6
Charming Shoppes .......... ... :. 14
City Holding Co ................... 34
Fed~ogul ................. .. .49%
Goodyear T&amp;IJ. ......... ..........57%
Heck's ........ .. .. .. .. ................. %
·Key Centurion ........ .. ......... .16~
Lands' End ........ .. ............... 29¥8
Limited Inc ................ .. ...... 22%
Multimedia Inc .............. .. ... 74~
Rax Restaurants ...... ,.. ... .... .. 3Y,
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... .. , ... .. llY,
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7%
Wendy's Intl... ..................... 6~
Worthi!'gton lnd .. ............... 21%

COUPONS FOR JOHNSONS
VARIETY
WHICH
WERE PRINTED IN
THURSDAY'S SENTINEL
SHOUlD HAVE READ •••

I
I
I

ft

----~-Weather

Dally stock prices
(As oliO: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smitll
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

•CORRECTION•

Eln Haye

11

----Announcements-----

news

..

RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "
Cold
. . Static
OC~,:Iude&lt;J
Map shows minmum ta~ratures. At leait 50% ol any shaded area is forecaSt
to receive preclpitatlon
ted
.
UPI
WEATHER MAP- ~cold front extended southwest through a
low over nortlleast Maine across southeast ·Pennsylvania and
central Nor!Jt CaroUna·through a low over the Mlsslsslpplcoast
Into the Gulf of Mexico. A cold front extended soutllwest across
upper James- Bay and northwestern North Dakota to central
Mon\llna.

IJEisNOW

Stocks

~~fo s~~~.:"~i ~eh~~aJ~e~~:~;

. Daily Number
866 .

at

Discovery. strapped to a giant
external fuel tank and two
redesigned solid-fuel boosters,
blasted off Thursday at 11:37
a.m. EDT from Cape Canaveral,
Fla.
"It was really wonderful when
we lifted off, " .Covey said. "It
certainly was a lot more anxietyproducing than we had antlci·
pated, or at least I had, throughout the entire ascent.

Pleasant Valley Hospilal.
may call at the funeral home
Born Oct. 29, 1922, in Mason. he from 6 to 9·this evening. Burial
was a son of the late James and AI· will be in Riverview Cemetery.
lie Garren Johnson. ·
Lodge Hall, Chester. All officers
He was a fonner employee of the
are to wear chapter dresses .
Point Distributing· Company. He . ~na Wise ·
Refreshments will be served
served in the United States Anny
following the meeting.
during World War II. He ·was a . Leona B. Wise; 85, died at her
member of the American Legion home on Bryant Road, Rutland. Lodge to meet
Smith.Capchart Post 140, New Sunday following an extended
Pomeroy Lodge 164 will hold its
Haven.
Illness.
monthly meeting on Wednesday.,
Surviving are ol)e brother, Paul
A homemaker.,Mrs. Wise was ·7: 30 p.m .• at the Middleport
Johnson, Mason: rwo sisters, Mrs. tiorn Feb. 20, 1900 in Pomeroy , a Masonic Temple. Work will be In
Lola Kovalchik, Hartford, Mrs. daughter of the late Ellsworth the master mason degree. Re·
Mabel Cain, Sarasota, Aa; several ~nd Victor Diehl Bailey. She was !reshments will follow . All masnieces and nephews.
•
a member of the Free Methodist ter masons are asked to attend.
, Services will be Tuesday, at II Church.
a.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Surviving are her husband, the Trustees·to meet
Home with the Rev. Don Roach Rev. Cecil J. Wise; a son and " Olive Township Trustees will
officiating. Burial will be at daughter-in-law, Phil and Shir- crneet Wednesday, 7:30p.m., at
. ley Wise, McConnelsville; a
Fairview CemeleJ1.
the Reedsville Fire Station.
Friends may ca. Monday from 6 daughter, Rosalee Wise, Ru to 9 ~.m . at the funeral home. tland, and a brother, Carl Bailey
Salisbury Township Trustees
Military rites Will be conducted at of Pomeroy. Also surviving are will meet in regular 'Session
·
the graveside. ·.
. nine grandchildren and six great· Tljursday, 7 p.m., at .thelownshlp
grandchildren.
hall. The public is invited .
\
Irwin Meredith
Besides her parents. she was
preceded in death by three sons.
Former Chester area resident, Cecil, Jr. , Clayton and Richard
H~spital
Irwin Meredith , 99, died Sunday Raymond Wise; a grandson,
.
at Minerva Park Place . Terry Wtse, and three sisters.
Veterans Memorial
Westerville.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday
Admissions - None.
Born Jan. 11, 1889 at Sisters- Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Saturday
Discharges - Odie ·
ville. W.Va .. Mr. Meredith was a Home with the Rev. Amos Tillis
Karr.
· retired electrical eQgineer for officiating. Burial will be in
Suriday Admissions - BeaGeneral Motors and a member of Bradford " Cemetery. Friends
Rearden, Hartford, W.Va.;
·trice
Dearborn F&amp;AM and the Araba m;J.y call at the funeral home
James
Duncan, Pomeroy.
Shrine.
·
. .
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . · Sunday Discharges - Hattie
Survivors includ ~ a son and Tuesday~
McDaniels, Rick Hatfield.
daughter -in-law. , Paul and
Wanda Meredith; a granddaughter. Marsha. and her husband,
•
Richard Seizer; and a great
grandson , -Brian Keith Selzer, al~
of Westerville.
Friends may call at the Hill ·
Funeral Home, 220 ~outh State
•
St. , Westerville, on Tuesday
from 2 to 4 'and 7. to. 9, where
STO~E
services will be held 10·: 30 a .m.
Wednesday . Graveside services
will be '3 p.m. Wednesday at the
Chester Cemetery :

Ohio Lottery

•

smooth sailing for Discovery and
both redesigned rockets fell
away from the climbing spaceship about two ·minutes alter
blllstof!, right on schedule, '! or a
parachute desrent to the Atlantic
Ocean.

Eastern star
D
The regu Jar meeting of Po me-.
roy Chapter 186, .Order of East-

0

40

Discovery's systems.
The major goal 9f the flight
was accomplished six hours 13
minutes after blastoff when the 2
~ -ton, satellite was successfully
launched from Discovery's 60·
toot payload bay. The satelllte
later was fired Into its final orbit
22,300 miles over the equator.

Challenger was destroyed 73
seconds after blastoff by the
rupture of an 0-rlng seal in its
right·side booster. but it was

Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Forrest Johnson ,
Tuesdav at the Rawlings-Coats·
Forrest C. Johnson, 65, Hartford, BlowerFuneral Home with Mr.
died Saturday, Oct I, 1988, at Steve Little officiating. Friends

WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 A.M. EDT 10 4 88

Rain doused a wide area from
coastal Texas across the lower
Mississippi Valley to the south·
ern Appalachlins. Atll!nta re·
ceived 2 inches of rain in a
three-hour period.
Rain was also forecast for
tO()ay from upper Michigan
·across nbrtheast Minnesota.
Strong, gusty winds were exp~ted over North Dakota.
High temperatures were pre·
dieted In the 60s and 7{)s over
most of the nation, but in the 80s
from South Carolina across Florida, much of Texas, the central
and southern Rocky Mountains,
Great Basin and southern
Oregon: and as low as the 40s
over the northern Plains across
to northern New England and as
high as 105 In the Southwest.
Clear skies prevailed across
the western half of the nation
Sunday. while patches of dense
fog blanketed portions of the
central Gulf Coast and the
middle Mississippi Valley .

Continued from page 1

"I had !org.otten what !I was
like to accelerate at 3 (times the
force of gravity) for a sustained
period or time , and how helpless
you really feel during that time
period."

--Area deaths-.;.._-

•

Saints ~dge
·Cowboys ·in
final seconds

nelfs briefs- Cold autumn temperatures remairi .in hiding.

continued from page -!
upcoming November school levy, to attend the next special
baord meeting. •
· ·
The meeting will be held 7 p.m . Wednesday , Ocl. 5, In tbe high
school cafeteria.

•

Monday, October 3. 1988

I

The 1989 Community Service Block Grant Application,
prepared by the Gallia-Melgs Community Action Agency, to be
submitted .to the state, is available for reveiw starting
Wednesday and ending Oct . 19.
A copy of the application can be-reviewed at the county
commissioners offices in Gallla and Meigs counties and at the
CAA office In Cheshire. Apy comments on the application
should be received by the CAA no later than Oct. 19.
·' All comments received by the CAA will be forwarded to the
Ohio Department of Development, Of!ic.e of Community
Services.
· ·
·
·The CAA administers the block graQt for Gallia and Meigs
counties . The grant provides funding for a number of services to
low -Income residents. For more Information, 'contact Sidney
·
Continued O!J page 12

Fadlallah said In an interview
shortly before Singh's release
that the plight of "the American
hostagesheldinLebanonwillnot
end before the elections tn the
United States In November."
"Iran will eventually establish
relations with all countries in the
world except with South Africa
and Israel," said Fadlallah. " So ,
an Iranian-U.S. rapprochement
is expected. The key of the
American hostages issue is in
Tehran. The captives' plight is
only a detail on the agenda Qf the
negotiations."
Fadlallah said negotiations
between Iran and the United
States were underway , but Wa·
shington said no such contacts
have been made .
''They will discuss the release
of the Iranian assets in the United
States among other issues," the
white-bearded cleric said.
He ·said, the thaw in _the
U.S. ·Iranian relations will pe
established with the new U.S.
a,dministration, and "the hOS·
tages have to wait for the
outcome t'll'the presidential elec·
tlons, since the abductors have
learned from the lesson of the
French elections.'" he said.
Fadlallah was referring to
three French captives who were
released a few days before the
French · presidential elections
ended last May. There were
reports that associates of Jacque
Chlrac negotiated their release
in an attempt )o boost the
chances of the right-wing presldentlal candlc[ate.
The Christian-run Voice of
Lebanon radio station quoted
security officials Monday as
saying ·s;ngh, who was kidnapped on thesameday and held
along with' Americans Alann
Steen, Jesse Turner aiKI Robert
Continued.on page12

By United Press International
Democrat Michael Dukakis
and Republican George Bush
shruggE!d of! an angry refusal by
the League of Women Voters to
sponsor the final presidential
debate and Immediately agreed
to seek new sponsorship for their
last face-.of!.
As campaign representatives
worked ·out details today, Duka·
' kis was to address Northwestern
•. University students In Evanston.
Ill.. tour a Jeep factory In Toledo
·and attend a lund -raiser In
Washington, D.C.
Bush began his day in Sacra -·
men to, Calif., before heading to a
rally in Riverside, Calif., and
campaign activities in Albu·
querque, N.M., and Denver.
A new nationwide public opin·
ion poll published by Time
magazine showed the vice pres!·
dent leading Dukakis 48 percent
to 41 percent, compared to the 47
percent to 41 percent edge Bush
held in August.
The telephone survey of 1,101
likely voters, carrying a margin
of error of plus or minus 3
percent, was conducted Sept.
27-28. Immediately after the two
candidates met in the first of two
debates. ,
. Monday. the bipartisan Com,.mission onPresldehtial Debates,
which sponsored the first BushDukakis debate Sept. ~5, said' It
may sponsor !he second debate
that was abandoned In a surprise
announcement by the League of
Women Voters.
"We have been contacted by
both campaigns and the. two
national committees who have
asked the commission to con·
slder sponsorship of the . third
debate.
''We are ple~sed to have the
confidence of the campaigns and
we are pursuing the logistical
.~nd financial considerations ne-

cessary to sponsor the second
presidential debate, " said Janet ·
Brown. the commission's execulive director.
"Wehopetobeabletomakean
announcement In the next day or
two regard 1ng run d 1n g
partners," she sald .

The move was neces sllated by
the nonpartlsan league's with·
drawal from the second presidentlal debate , tenatively set for Oct.
13 or 14 m Los Angeles , on
grounds the two campaigns were
trying to impose rules and
Continued on page 12

PRESENTED AWARD -Congressman Clarence Miller was
presented with the Golden BuUdog Award by the Watchdogs of the
Trea8ury, Inc., for his 1988 voting efforts to cut federal spending,
eltrnlnate waste and reduce the delicti, the Watchdogs announced .
· 11. was the Congressman's 14th BuUdog Award. The award Is
presented to those Members of Congress who vole to contain
unnecessary government spending alleast 75 percent of the lime
based on a compUatlon of selected voles on economic and fiscai
Issues published In the "Economy Voling Record." Watchdogs of
the Treasury· Is a . Washington, D.C. based nonpartisan
organization whose ·award for fls&lt;lal Integrity in government Is
presented annually.
~

.

·~

)

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