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-------P.ge-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport

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October 30, 1988

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Livestock produeers should . choose their feed carefully · ·
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) _
Livestock producers should
.
·

choose their feed carefully this
fall because this year's crops

Farm Flashes .

·cos·tIy
.
8 a d reports
·

could be contaminated by alia·
toxin, specialists at Ohio State
University say .
Aflatoxin is produced by a
mold that grows prlmarlly on
corn. Weather conditions were
right this summer fo r aflatoxin to
be produced, and a few cases
have cropped up In the Midwest.
Dairy specialist Maurice East·
ridge §ays two main concer ns
with aflatoxin are Its effec~ on
animals and the possibility of it
getting Into human food.
-

By Edward M . VoUborn
County Extension Agent,
Acrlcultufe II CNRD
GALLIPOLIS- Bad reporting
In the last live years will cost
Gallla County farmers thousands
of dollars in 1988, The State ASC
committee Statistical Reporting
Service data have established
county yields for mixed hay at.
1.95-tons per acre as normal. The
1.95 tons per acre normal was
calculated by dropping the high
year and low year and averaging
the remaining 3 for the last five
year · period. Each year some
30,000 persons In Ohio receive a
survey that estimates yield for
various crops. Perhaps we
should look at ways to Improve
the accuracy of these reports.
Under present regulations a
farmer whose actual production
of mixed hay per acre is 4 tons In
a normal year would not meet the
4oper centloss requirement to be

These measures are: Repeal of
Helfer TAX; rebate on federal
tax for off·road U!i&lt;' of diesel fuel;
and a change to limit the fastest
methOd of depreciation on 3, 5, 7,
and 10 year property .
Starting In 1989, farmers with
dairy and beef herds will be
allowed to currently deduct ex·
penses of raising dairy and beef
cow replacements and use any
method of depreciation. The rule
is to either capitalize or use the
slowest rate of depreciation for •
1988. A December 31, 19881nven~
tory will be very Important for
future use. .
According to Dr. Duvick, proba bly after December 31, 1988,
farmers will not have to pay the
15.1 cent per gallon federal tax on
future purchases of diesel !ueltor
off-road use. Farmers will need ·
to file Form 4136 with their 1988
tax return to get credit for diesel
fuel tax paid alter March 31, 1988.

production dropped below 1,2
tons or about 30 per cent of hls
actual normal production. If only
%of the Gallla County hay acres
signed up through the EFP
1he d0 llar dlfference
program
between 1.95 established yield
and an actual of around 4 tons
would exceed $1 mllllon In lost
cost-share benefits ·10 Gallla
County a Ione. Sorne 0 I t he other
crops have similar low estab·
llshed yields.
The Technical and MlscellaneOus Revenue Act Of 1988 Was
passed late Friday nile On
October 21. According to Dr.
Richard Duvlck, O.S.U. Exten·
sion Economist, •at least three
measures Of importance to
farmers are Included in this bill.

mark according to the October 24
Ohio Ag. Statistics service re- ·
port. This compared to an 82 per
cent completion for the same
date last year and a five year
average of 47 percent. A week
earlier the national corn harvest
was set at 63 percent complete.
Many of tite reports Indicates
that the Ohio corn crop simply is
not dying down quickly. The
O.D.N.R. Division of Water stili
shows South Central Ohio to be

ren, Sandy Ray Davis Napper,
Dawana Lane Davis Black, Tara
Mele Davis, Delmar Glen Davis,
Jr., Leann Davis Tackett · and
Leanna Jo DaviE. ·
Dallas G. Debord, outside
supervIsor a t th e Me Igs No. 2
mine. Debord resides in Pomeroy with his wife, Janio:e.- and has
two daughters.

about 23 Inches of rainfall short
for the previous 30 months. This
!I gure Is a bo ut equa1 to what 1s
norma I for Ga ill a Count Y dur Ing
"
I" A u o t 0 be
a norma
pr · c
r grow·
ing season. How long will it take
to catch-up with this kind of
s hor t-fa il·

CHARLESTON, W. VA - Key
Centurion
Inc., an. anBancshares,
nounced
agreement in prlnclpie with the board of directors of
Guyan National Bank for a
merger with The First Huntington National Bank, a Key Centurion subsidiary ~
The proposed transaction,
valued at $2.9 million, provides
for the exchange of each of the
$28,500 outstanding Guyan Na·
uonai shares for $1021n cash. The
transaction Is subject to execu·
tton of a definitive merger
agreement and 'approval by
Guyan Nat lonal shareholders
and regulatory agencies.
Guyan National, with assets of
$25 million and shareholders'
equity of $2 million as of June 30,
is located In Barboursvllle,

10

However. high doses of the
aflatoxin can affect any anllr\al;
Eastnd ge says. Loss of appetite,
slower growth. reduced -milk
production and reprod uctive
problems are a few of the effects
of aflatoxin In ruminants.
Swine specialist Gerald Shu r·
son says young pigs have more .
problems with aflatoxin than
mature hogs. If a sow has a high
concentration of aflatoxin in the
diet, It can be passed through the
milk to baby pigs, he says.
"Baby pigs wlil develop liver
lesions if exposed to aflatoxin,
~.,~
.affecting performance as the
reCOe;•~
pigs mature." Shurson says.
Studies a lso show that swine
David W. Edmonds, mechanic suffer a reduction in feed intake
at the Meigs No. 1 mine. and average daily gains when fed
Edmonds resides in Rutland with corn with aflatoxin, he says.
hls wife, Sharon, and sons, Eastridge and Shurson agree
David, Rusty and Phillip.
that all a nimals are more susGeorge L. Hawley, mine office ceptible to disease and Infection
administrator at the Meigs No. 1 when fed contaminated corn.
mine. Hawley resides in MiddlePoultry specialis t Mike Lilport with his wife, Sharon.
burn says . aflatoxin· affects
Edward D. Neece, mainte- mal illy the economical traits Iri
nance supervisor at the Meigs . poultry such as feed intake, feed
No. 2 mine. Neece resides In efficiency and egg production.
Middleport with his wife.
Eastridge says that aflatoxin
Rhonda, and daUghters, Marjorie, Amanda, Michelle, Lynette,

Meigs
• emp}oyees
ALBANY - The following
employees from Meigs County
are being recognized for ihelr
years of service at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
this month:
U YEARS
David A. Acree, section
supervisior (belt construction)
at the Meigs No. 2 mine. Acree
resides In Middleport with hls
wife, Linda, and children, David,
Stephan and Johnathan.
Delmar G. Davis, mechanic at
the Meigs No. 1 mine. Davis

that isingestedw!llgodirectly t~
the hver to be stored an
metabolized.
"Itcanshowupinmiiklflevels
are high but aflatoxin Is not
stored In meat ," he says. The
contamination of milk and dairy
prod ucts IS the concern for
human health.
.
The Food and Drug Admlmstratlon has set gUidelmes for
aflatoxin. Contamination in feed
grains over 20 parts per billion or
in milk over 0.5 ppb requires that
some action be taken to prevent
human health problems from the
toxin.
If producers know the amount
of toxin in the feed. they can
figure out how much of the grain
to feed their dairy cows without
going over the FDA limits, he
says.
"Approximately 1 percent of
aflatoxin consumed in . feed is
passed along in milk," Eastridge
says. "Therefore, dairy cows on
a 50-percent grain diet that are
fed grain with 20 ppb co ntamina·
tio n, wlil produce milk with onlY
0.1 ppb contamination, That is
well below the FDA guid elines
for milk."

"At this point. we arP not sure
whether we will have a problem
in Ohio but we shou ld be awa re
of the ~mount of aflatoxin lives·
tock can co nsume," Eastridge
says.
The Ohio Department of Agrl·
culture wtll be sampling corn
around the slate to see ·if
aflatoxin Is present.
Cattle and sheep can tolerate
grain contaminated with afla·
toxin better than pigs and other
non-ruminant animals.

.....

~~r!~tnfo~hl:h~ea~~~~~~~~ on~;"~h:ars-e~;nc~:t c~~~~~ ~TI~~e~~~n~~~~v~!~ :~~h~~~~ angl!~r"A~:r~e~.~fn~ral inside Takeovers .. •

·T h'e•e's
sti.II plenty
.a'
the'
garden
•
do
m
to

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) Just because the temperaturt"
has dropped toward freezing is
no reason to ignore your garden,
says Jim Utzinger, horticu iture
professor at Oh io State
Un lversity.
There are several things you
should be doing to prepare your
garden for next spring:
·. -Start a compost pile wlth
your leaves instead of sending
them to rapidly filling landfills.
Dead plant tops and other garden
debris can also go into the pile.
Composting turns natural ma te·
rials Into soil organic matter that
benefits the garden.
Locate the pile in an out-of- theway spot. A bin will keep it from
being scattered by wind or
animals. Begin with an 8· . to
12-inch layer ofleaves. Scatter a
cupful of garden fertilizer , an
inch of garden soil and a half-cup
of ground limes tone over lt.
Water lightly . Repeat the pro·
cess with each layer.
Make the top of the pile
bowl-shaped to catch rain. Keep
diseased and insect-infested
materials and weeds with seed
heads out of the pile. Beginning In
spring, turn the pile over at leas t
once a month. The pile you start
this fall should be rich organic
material'by next summer.
-Plant bulbs that will flower
next spring. You can do It until
the ground freezes between
Thanksgiving and Christmas,
but planting them now gives thei r
. roots a chance to produce fall
growth that helps them prepare
for spring.
At planting, mix bone meal Into
the soli below the bulbs. After·
ward, water the area over the
covered bulbs. Plant bulbs at a
depth of 2 Y, times their length
with the root plate down and the
point up.
Tulips form new bulbs In the
ground every year and last three
to four years. Daffodils flower
longer but old bulbs need to be
divided after several years.
' Hyacinth s produce quality
• blooms lor no more than three
years.

-Protect roses with mulch
only alter one or two hard frosts.
Use 8 to 10 inches of garden soil,
peat moss or sawdust to protect
the crown. Be sure to remove the
mulch in mid-March.
Rose cones or collars -can also
protect the plant and are sold at
garden centers. They are fitted
over the plant center and filled
with peat .moss, sawdust or wood
shavings. You may have to prune
the rose to get them to fit.
Otherwise, wait until spring to
prune roses to remove canes that
died during winter.
-Give trees and shrubs, es peclally evergreens, an Inch of
water each week it doesn't rain.
Water them until the ground
freezes. Woody plants that enter
winter in dry soil are subject to
severe in jury from cold , dry
weather.
-Remove and compost the
tops of cannas, dahllas. gladiolus. tuberous begonias and sweet
potatoes that are killed by frost.
Cut the tops off just above the soil
ilne. Remove the underground
parts before the soU freezes .
Place them in dry sand or peat
moss. Keep them at 45 to 50
degrees during winter. Utzinger
suggests a basement corner or an
insulated box in an unheated
garage. Check the stored parts
periodically. Remove any tha t
rot.
-Store unused flower and
vegeta bie seed In a cool, dry
place.
- Keep leaves from plling up
on aily newly re-seeded lawn. A
thick layer of wet leaves can
smother young grass.
- Refrigerate harvested apples as close to freezing as
possible. Try to keep them moist.
-Wail to mulch strawberries
until the ground freezes. Use
high-quality, clean, weed-free
s traw. Mulch keeps the plant
crowns from being Injured. It
also helps maintain an even soil
temperature. This keeps plants
from being heaved from the
ground because of temperature
fluct uat ions.

New standards focus of .math conference
Rio Grande College/ CommunIty College was the site of an Oct.
8 conference on proposed s tand·
ards for the teaching of mathe·
matics that drew 70 elementary,
junior high and high school
teachers.
College officials said 55 inservice and 15 pre-service were
In attepdance for the conference,
sponsored by the Rlo Grande
School of Education and the
School of Math and Science.
The conference centered on the
proposed stan~ards for the teachIng of mathematics drawn·up by
the National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics (NCTM).
Group sessions were con-

ducted for teachers In grade
levels K·4, 5-8 and 9-12. The
proposed standards were out·
lined and teachers were treated
to discussions of curriculum and
sugges lions on how to teacil the
curriculum.
Conference speakers included
Tom Payne and Art Stevenson,
Jackson City Schools; Carla
Shuler, Southern Local Schools,
Racine; Dr. Jan Oprea, Miami
University; Dr. Carl Benner,
Wright State University; and
Kay Meister, Columbus City
Schools.
The conference was planned by
a committee of teachers from
GalUa, Jackson, Meigs and Vln·
ton counties.

Merger appro
_ ved

wv

· a.

laborer at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Turner 1s a res !dent of
Middleport.
FIVE YEARS
Ronald P. Cpscl, clerk at the
Meigs No. 1 mine. easel Is a
resident of Middleport.

Ohio grain report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices (per
bushel) paid to farmers by gral n
elevators In the principal mar·
ketlng areas of Ohio Friday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.74, No. 2 shelled corn $2.63, No.
2 oats $2.67, No.1 soybeans $7.49.
Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.85, No. 2 shelled corn $2.67, No.
2 oats $2.80, No.1 soybeans$7.59.
Central. Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.78,No. 2shelledcorn$2.65,No.
2 oats $2.92, No. 1 soybeans $7.50.
West Cent~al Ohio: No. 2wheat
$3.77, No.2 shelled corn$2.68, No.
2 oats $3.02, No. 1 soybeans $7.60.
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.78, No. 2 shelled corn$2.65, No.
2 oats not available, No. 1
soybeans $7.52.
Trends: No. 2 wheat, unchanged; No. 2 shelled corn,
higher; No. 2 oats, unchanged;
No. 1 soybeans, sharply higher.

*

,.., NO TIME SHARE
,.., NO GIMMICKS
JUST FUN I I I

1 Section, 10 Papas

Pomeroy-'Middleport. Ohio, Monday, Octobar 31. 1988

Vot.39, No.123
Copyrighted 1988

_

26 Cents

A Muttlmedialnc. Newspaper .

Ohio Democrats try to
gain control of Senate

:
'

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politics. His campaign emphas· and this year Is no exception.
ized developing the high techno!· Mary Dunning, an attorney and
ogy resources of Wright Patter· Parma councilwoman, Is pu tung
son Air Force Base, which Is in pressure on Suhadoinik.
Suhado)nik has taken heat In
the 6th District.
In general, the Republican the Cleveland media this year for
candidates are running TV com- trying to rewrite a waste disposal
mercials pointing out that they bill to the wishes of waste dump
were in the forefront of repealing owners. Steiner predicted he will
the higher income tax rates that sur\'lve on the basis of his 100
Democrats enacted five years percent record of voting against
By LEE LEONARD
taxes.
ago.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
Also In the Cleveland area,
Democrats are contending that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Democrats appear to be fighting each of the RepubliCan state Rep. Leroy Peterson of Maple
a Republican tlde in their effort senators Is owned by the special Heights is challenging Repubii·
to take control of the Ohio Senate Interests. "We are letting the can Sen. Grace Drake of Solon In
public know that these guys are normally Democratic territory.
lor the first time since 1984.
Peterson has waged a strong
In the House, it's the other way not representing the voters, but
grass-roots
campaign based on
the
Interests
of
big
contrlbu·
around, as Speaker Vernal Riffe
the
Idea
that
Drake is "a rubber
said
Greg
Haas,
a
consul·
tors,"
Jr.'s utter domination for the last
stamp
for
the
powerful special
14 years seems destined to tan! who is working on the
Interests."
Democratic Senate campaigns.
continue for two more.
But Republicans say that PeIn Columbus, Sen. Eugene
The Republicans, who control
terson
never did antyhing during
·the Senate 1~·15 , and the Demo- Watts, .also a first-term Repubii·
his
six
years in the House and
crats could spend up to $3 million can, is under attack by David
that
Drake
has been out front in
:jplece on the 16 Senate contests Lanclone, 36, an attorney, lor
trying
to
reform the motor
at stake this year. A dozen of the raising taxes.
vehicle
registration
system.
Ironically Watts, an Ohio State
Incumbents running are Republi·
In
southwestern
Ohio, ninecan, while only four are University professor, has a repuyear
Republican
Sen.
Cooper
tation as a conservative who won
Democrats.
Snyder,
a
folksy
hardware
dealer
Thus if the GOP loses· just two the seat four years ago on a
from
Hillsboro,
faces
a
challenge
oi their incumbent races while tax-cutting platform and kept hls
from Mt. Orab funereal director
the Democrats hold all four of promise.
Sen. Gary Suhadoinlk, a sena· · Dan Stevens, a Democrat.
their districts, the Democrats
Once again Snyder, 80, is
will have a 17·16 advantage tor from Parma since 1981,
always
faces
a
tough
challenge
Continued on page 6
again.
·Democrats control the .House,
60-39, and all 99 seats are at
stake. Most . incumbents are
expected to win. In fact, 29
Democrats have either no opponent or only write-In opposition
from the Republicans. Three
Most of those arrested were
Republican . Incumbents are·
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
college
students from throughout
unopposed.
What's usually been a wild and
Ohio.
However,
live were high
Senate Democrats are focusraucous Halloween weekend in
school
students
and 37 were
Ing on five districts where they
the streets adjacent to Ohio
perceive the Republican Incum- University seemed pretty mild non-students.
Officials attrlbu ted the In·
bents as weak. "We think we've
this year, officials said.
creased
number of arrests to the
got a cMnce.ln i'tleast two out of
City pollee chief Richard
the ·five races." said Senate Mayer said the crowd was presence of the Ohio Liquor
Democratic Leader Harry Me·
smaller, but noted that the Control enforcement officers.
Arrests ranged from altered
shel of Youngstown.
number of arrests Increased
Identification
·cards, disorderly
"We are reasonably optimistic
from last year.
conduct,
disorderly
conduct
that we will keep our majority,"
Thousands of Ohio University
said Curt Steiner, the press aide
students and other young people while intoxicated, and under age
to the Senate Republican caucus.
traditionally crowd onto Court consumption.
Mayer said there wasn't as
"Fortunately •. we are running in
Street, the main street in this
much
garbage left In the streets
what appears ·to be a better than
southeastern Ohio city, running
and
wasn'
t as much broken
average Republican year."
In and out of the many bars, and
glass,
so
the
street was opened to
The Democrats will narrow
dancing In the streets.
traffic
sooner
than In previous
their heavy financial support to
"The crowds came later and
years.
two or three races this week, but
left earlier, " said Mayer, est!·
This year there was no live
they aren ' t telegraphing their
mating as many as 8,000 to 10,000
entertainment
and Mayer thinks
punches.
were partying In the streets.
that's
why
the
crowd was
The weakest Republican ap·
Crowds dldn' I begin forming
smaller,
or
also
the
lack of an
pears to be Sen. Charles Horn of
until 9 p.m., Mayer said, and by 2
organization
commiltee.
Dayton, a first-termer who is _a.m .. the_ only remnants of a
In years past, merchants had
being challenged by Mark
party In the s.t.reets was the paper
become
accustomed to the party·
Henry, 32, a cily commissioner
work for the 188 arrests - 125
with a strong environmental and
Saturday and 63 Friday night. A lng and had taken precautions to
consumer record.
year ago, 134 students had been protect their businesses. This
Horn, 64, Is' described as a
arrested during the Halloween year no fires nor Injuries were
reported.
"good government" type and an
party.
engineer who does not play

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the
first ' in a series of six articles
prepared by United Press International's Ohio bureaus on the
candidates and Issues Involved In
the Nov. 8 election. Today's
article deals with the hat.l le for
the Oblo Senate and Ohio House
of Representatives.)

.
HALLOWEEN ON THE EHS GRID - The
Eastern Wgh School band members always have
a gOGd time wltb what they do and Saturday nlsht
was uo exception as the band celebrated
Halloween by wear,ns their costumes. Chris Hall,
Jeremy Buckley, and Sarah Barris are among

.

·those shown here, dawning bunny costumes and
aiL Both the EHs band directed by William Ball
and the Southern hand of Roberta Maidens were
excellent.and well-prepared for their perfonnan_ces Saturday.

Philip Morris Companies and
·Kraft, Inc., agr~ to merge
,......,

Buy Any Ne.w Chevrolet, Chevy
Truck, or Oldsmobile and We
Will Give You A•.•.

NIGHTS

~

'
(UPI)

.

' NEW YORK
The
merger of Philip Morris Cos. and
Kraft Inc., at $13.1 billion the
second largest in U.S. history,
would create the world's largest
consumer goods producer to
'compete with huge European
firms, officials and analysts said.
"I'd like to emphasize that this
is not a leveraged buyout situation," said William Murray, vice
chairman of Phlllp Morris, said
In announcing the agreement
Sunday. "It's not a sltuatlon
where the company wlll be
broken up.
"It's not a situation where the
surviving company ·takes on
enourmous amount of backbreaking debt. Our objective is to
grow Kraft," Murray said. "We
bought the business to grow It,
not to shrink it.. "
Kraft and Philip Morris placed
the total value of the transaction
at approximately $13.1 billion.
The deal was made when Philip
Morris sweetened its cash bid to
$106 from $90 per share.
•'We believe the combination of
Philip Morris and Kraft will
create a U.S.·based food company that will compete more
effectively • in world food
markets," Phlllp Morris Chair·

man Hamish Maxwell said.
"Kraft's products provide an
excellent ·complement ·to our
existing product lines and position us to capitalize on marketing
opportunities worldwide."
The re~ulting company of the
merger between the tobacco
giant and nation's No. 1 food
company would be the world's
largest producer of consumer
goods, displacing Unllever, a
British-Dutch company, as well
as the Swiss Nes tie Co., a Philip
Morris spokesman said.
"Our shareholders are receivIng lull value, and thls merger is
the best possible outcm:ne for our
employees, customers, and the
~ommunltles In which we oper·
ate," said John M. Richman,
Kraft's chairman and chief executive officer. "The addition of
Kraft's strong brands and operating units to Philip Morris will
clearly result In the world's
leading food business."
The Kraft board of directors
accepted the sweetened bid by'
recommending t))at shareholders accept the offer, which
expires Nov. 15. Under the deal,
Kraft would become a subsidiary
of Philip Morris. , .
"Kraft is going to help Phlllp

Morris a lot," said James J.
Murren, an analyst with C.J.
Lawrence, Morgan and Grenfell.
•'Through Its existing distribution system and combined goods,
basically they'll have a lock on
the frozen food section and
refrigerated area.
'That will give them a lot of
shelf space in the supermarket,
and shelf space is the name of the
game,'' he said.
· Philip Morris was a partlculary strong company with a high
cash flow, permitting the huge
cash offer, Murren added. "Its
profit margins are so high," he
said. "It throws off a tremendous
amount of cash flow."
The largest merger In history
was Chevron Corp.'S $13.3 billion
purchase of the Gulf Oil Corp. In
1984. But the Chevron-Gulf mar·
rlage could be eclipsed by
Kohlberg, Kravis &amp; Roberts
Co.'s $90-a-share offer last week
to acquire tobacco and food giant
RJR Nabisco Inc. lor $20.3
billion.
Besides creating the world's
largest producer of consumer
goods, the Philip Morris· Kraft
merger would create the natloit's
eighth-largest Industrial company .based on 1987 sales. Philip
Morris alone Is now ranked 12th.

Halloween party not
so large this year

--Local news briefs---. ·Democrat Riffe hires adviser tied to GOP

~Q H1dden
~ Costs!

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) :..... Ohio larly praises the speaker and
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe encourages his possible guberna·.
Jr., who political analysts say torial bid.
will likely seek the Democratic ..• In one newsletter· this year,
nomination lor governor In 1990, Dudgeon wrote: "We've said it
paid more than $75,000 In cam· before and we'll say It again:
palgn funds to a right·wlnrr There Is no one more qualified in
Republican for political advice Ohio polities to be governor of
and to write his biography, the Ohio than House Speake~ Vernal
Akron Beacon Journal reported G. Riffe. It Is our opinion that a
contribution to the speaker Is an
Sunday.
Citing campaign expense re' Investment in good
ports since 1987, the newspaper government."
Dudgeon has never mentioned
said the Riffe Election Commit·
in
his newsletter that he's retee has made 16 payments
ceived
some of the political
'averaging more than $4,500 to
contributions
raised by Riffe, the
Thomas Dudgeon, a former
newspaper
said.
newspaper man with strong ties
to the Ohio Republican Party:
Dudgeon said the book on Riffe
Dudgeon writes the newsletter Is a "political biography" which
Ohio News Service which regu- he. described as "the politics of

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;

Continued from D-1
Index fell 4.32 to close at 301.75,
while the National Association of
Securities Dealers index fell 5. 79
to end at 382.80.
Declines topped advances 528289 among 1,054 issues Ira ded .on
the Amex. Volume totaled
44,819,680 shares, compared with
45,283,255 traded a week earlier
and 103,240,445 traded in the
same week a year earlier.
d
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"WE MAKE DEALS!"

The deed for the Price property, (old Holzer Airport) located
on SR 7 In Gallla County beside the Blue Fountain Motel, was
handed over to David Gllmcher Co. on Friday. Oct. 21,
according to the Gallia County's Recorder' s office.
.
The deed for the property of James W. Price, Inc., a West
VIrginia corporation. sold lor $500,000, purchased ~Y Ohio River
Plaza Associates Limited Partnership, an uhlo limited
partnership.
.
,
The new shopping pla~a. to feature a Big Bear and Hill s
Department Store, Is under tlle develop~ent of David J.
Gllmcher Co. of Columbus.
,
The deed transfer was flied in the Gallla County Recorder s
,,
office on Tuesday, Oct. 25.
According to Jim Olsen, site su(:!ffi'vlsor· of Robert Darden
Contracting Co. of Cleveland, Big Bear Is eX!l4;Cled to open first
in the spring.
Jim Graham, general manager for Mouis Excavation of
Columbus, said excavation should-begin by the middle of next
week. Top soil is being removed.

the time during which he (Riffe)
has been In the Ohio General
Assembly."
A registered Republican, Dud·
geon worked In the 1964 presidential campaign of former Sen.
Barry Goldwater. He was also a
key campaign adviser . and
speech writer for former Gov .
James Rhodes.
Dudgeon said he has known
and been on good terms with both
Rhodes and Riffe fat years.
"I am a political practitioner,
and I don't have any apology or
need to explain which side of the
political fence I'm on," he said.
"Because I'm always on the
conservative side."
Rit!e has reportedly used his

Four Middleport residents injured
•
•
accident over weekend
ln
car-traln

Meigs County group honored
The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society and the
Meigs county Retired Senior Volunteer Program are among 21
· individuals and groups .who will receive statewide recognition
for outstanding achievement at the Ohio Association of
Hi~torlcai Societies and Museums annual meeting.
They will receive an honorable mention award for the youth
·
Frld
d
program Yesteryear.
Award'wlnners will be honored at a reception this
ay an
the awards presentation to be -held Saturday at the Ohio
Historical Society In Columbus.
·continued on page 6

Injured were the driver, Ram·
ona K. Smith, 18, S.R. 7; and
passengers Mark A. McCloud, 22,
of 359 N. First St.; Johnny
Ratliff, 21, S.R. 7; and Charles A.
Knapp, 21, of 300 Hudson St. All
were taken to yeterans Memor-

Four Middleport residents
were Injured in a car-train
accident Saturday at 10:05 p.m.,
at the railroad crossing on C.R.
21, between Middleport and S.R.
7, according to the Gallla·Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.

Ia I Hospital by the Meigs County
EMS except for Knapp, who was
taken there by prlva te car.
Smith was admitted, and at
last report was listed In stable
condition. The passengers were
Continued on page 6

\

•

:""""- -'t--

-

-·-~

-~-~~ --

•..

,--~

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

1\

\;

.

position· to co llect millions of
dollars In campaign contri butions from special-Interest
groups doing business wilh the
Ohio General Assembly.
He has passed much of that
money on to Democratic ·candi·
dates seeking House seats.
Earlier this month the Akron
newspaper published· a series of
articles detailing how Blue Cross
&amp; Blue Shield Mutual of Ohio
spent thousands of dollars on
lobbyists, lawyers an~ lawmakers, including Riffe, to Insure
favorable treatment on a piece of
legislation.
The bill, which has since
become law, was designed to
save the Insurer millions of .
dollars in costs by enabling it to
force Cleveland-area hospitals to
compete against one anrther for
Blue Cross business.
The newspaper said Rille
organized a "pay-to-play" system In Columbus which expected
those seeking favors from Ohio's
government to pay for them with
campaign contributions.
Rlt!e has de-n ied the charges,
saying he has never pressured ·
anyone to give money to his
various campaign funds, which
have raised nearly $6.5 million
since 1980.
·

�..
-~~- ----------'-----------~

Monday, October 31 , 1988

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE IN'J:E.R ESTS OF THE MEJGS·MASON AREA
~~~

t;!m~ rT1.....I . _
...... , ~o:::~,.,.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

AMEMBER of The Untted Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Waste poses serious health threat
WASHINGTON- Sunbathers
fled East Coast beaches · last
summer when hypodermic needies and syringes washed ashore,
but vacationers aren't the only
Americans tostumbleontonlght·
marlsh medical waste.
An Oregon waste-disposal firm
has reported blood guslting out of
a trash compactor and body
parts falling out of a wastepUe. In
Rhode Island, offshore fisher·
men tell stbrtes of hospital bed
sheets becoming snagged In their
nets.
The needles and bloody vials
that washed onto Atlantic

beaches last summer brought
widespread attention to medical
waste dumping in the east, but
they are just a sampling of a
crisis gripping the entire nation.
For years, federal agencies
charged with protecting the
public from exposure to health
risks have lett the job of supi!rvislng medical waste to states and
cities. The result has been a
hodgepodge of rules, leaving
hOspitals and medical labs confused about how to dispose of
their garbage.
:
. One thing Is certain under the
law- medical waste, like other

Jack Anderson and Dale Van. Atta
hazardous material, cannot
simply be dropped In a garbage
can for delivery to the city dump.
How hospitals comply with that
restriction Is a crap shoot. Some
trust their trash to private
haulers who {Ire supposed to take
it to approved dump sites, but lax
federal oversight has led tb
Illegal dumping.
"These foul products are only
the residue of a national waste
management system that is
broken and overloaded and be-

'

Bush and Metzenhaum
campaign strongly in Ohio
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Continuing his policy that the best defense is agood
offense, Vice President George Bush struck back quickly last week at
the allegations he is running a racist campaign.
, In an appearance before the Ohio Association of Broadcasters in
Coiumbus, Bush referred to Michael Dukakis' s "Irrationality" ori
economic policies, then segued neatly to the Democratic presldentlal
nominee's "Increasing appeals to class conflict."
"In my view," said the vice president, "there is no place In
- American public life for philosophies that divide Americans one from
another on class lines and that excite conflict among them."
This followed by one day the Democrats' charges, attempting to
light a fire under their own lethargic campaign, that there is
subliminal racism in the Bush TV commercials blaming Dukakls for
the fUrlough of Willie Horton, a black convicted murderer who fled to
Maryland, beat a man and raped his fiancee.
Raising the rhetoric a notch, Bush said Dukakis and Ihe Democrats
are trying to promote class conflict.
"We will move forward, not by succumbing to the base temptations
of division, fear. and envy," said Bush, "but by following, as Abrabam
Lincoln said, those 'better angels of our nature."'
This was the Bush that calls for a "kinder, gentler" nation every
other day; the day that he Isn't referringtQ Dukakls with a sneer as an
elitist liberal from the East Coast, accusing him of polluting Boston
Harbor, questioning his reverence for the American flag or warning
that he will tax people into poverty.
Sen. Howard Metzenbauni, D-Ohio, ever the master of the art of
campaigning, also made his mark In a speech to the broadcasters, an
appelV'ance that could have been ticklish for him.
Metzenbaum has refused to debate h1s Republican opponent,
Cleveland Mayor George Voinovich - which should have provoked
broadcasters and other purveyors of information.
The senator tackled it head on, saying Voinovlch cost himself the
opportunity to debate by embarking on a personal campaign of
"sleaze" against Metzenbaum.
"A debate between George Volnovich and me would neither
educate nor enlighten anyone," said Metzenbaurn.
The senator said both broadcasters and public officials have a
responsibility to educate the public on momentous Issues of the day,
and he said public figures must share in the "shame" of the
presidential "campaign of the quip, the (sound) bite, the slur and the
photo opportunity."

Election-letter deadline Wednesday
The Daily Sentinel welcomes letters regarding the Nov. 8 election.
However, In · the interest cit fairness, no electiOn letters, as stated
earlier this fall, will be accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov. 2.
Individuals should address address Issues and not personalities.
Letters purely endorsing candidates will not be used. Letter·s should
contain no more than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing and
must be signed with Individual's name, address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.

ginning to regurgitate what it
can't keep down," says Rep. Ron
Wy\len, D-Ore., who chairs a
congre8sional subcommittee in- ·
vestigating the problem.
Vice President George Bush
has vowed to stop all ocean
dumping and punish the
dumpers. But the administration
In which he has served for the
past eight years has not acted to
keep medical waste at bay.
Lawmakers and government
Investigators complain -that
agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency and
the Occupational Health and
Safety Administration have not
made a concerted effort to create
uniform disposal standards. Congress has been taking steps to
combate the problem.
The Office of Technology As·
sessment recently Investigated
·the medlcal•waste problem. The
OTA, law-enforcement officials
and other watchdogs gave a grim
recital of the facts to a House
Small Business subcommittee
c~alred by Wyden:

Rocked by polls showing Michael Dukakls trailing George
Bush by wide margins, the
Dukakis campaign and its tireless allies In the media have
launched a counterattack of
sorts. Its tone Is a petulant whine,
and Its glst Is that the Bush forces
are running an exceptionally
"dirty" campaign.
On Sunday morning, Oct. 23,
NBC's flagship talk-show, "Meet
the Liberals'' (you know the one .
- it runs opposite CBS' "Face
the Ll berals") , opened with a
15-mlnute interview with a lady
professor from Texas who was
Introduced as a towering authorIty on campaign advertising.
In response to Chris Wallace's
first question, she pronounced
this undoubtedly the dirtiest
presidential campaign of all
time. In response to hls second, •
she Identified the chief malefactor as George Bush. Things kind
of went downhill from there.
There is some danger that this
sort of thing wUI work -I.e., not

that it wUl elect Dukakis (that Is
probably out of the question), but
that It will create a durable myth
that George Bush won the 1988
election by unlalr means. That is
untrue, and understanding the
real reason w!IY he Is going to win
Is too Important -to the country,
to the forthcprnlngBush adrnlnl$tration, and even to the Democrats themselves - to let It be
obscured by self-serving liberal
propaganda.
Have a little sympathy, first of
all, for ·the problem facing the
voters. By choosing one of two
men, they are expected to
indicate how they want America
to be governed for the next four
years. Obviously they must paint
their answer with a very broad
brush, and nuances are going to
get lost.
But there are clues In what the
two candidates have been saying
to the voters, In speeches, In the
debates, and In television corn·
rnerclals. One of them - George

Bush - clearly proposes to build
on Ronald Reagan's record:
maintain our defenses, continue
to negotiate (cautiously) with the
Russians, freeze domestic spending (with unspecified exceptions), and hold the line grimly
against new taxes.
The other, Dukakis, told the
Democratic convention that this
campaign would not be about
"Ideology," but rather about
"eornpetence." And his early
campaign rhetoric seemed to
bear him out: It lashed the
"Reagan-Bush" record on Iran/contras, drugs, Noriega, and
''sleaze," and declared that
Dukakis Is ready . to make the
"tough choices" (without specifying what the topics or the
alternatives were, let alone what
choices he would make).
It was at this point that the
Bush campaign began to focus on
Dukakls,.record on three highly
symbolic Issues: his bitter opposition to requiring Massachusetts teachers to lead their

classes each day In the Pledge of
Allegiance; his strenuous support for a policy of furloughing
murderers serving life sentences
without hope of parole (and his
appalling refusal even to meet
with a Maryland couple brutalized by one who escaped); and
his boast that he Is "a cardc arrylng member of the American Civil Liberties Union," a
once-respected organization that
for the past 20 years has gone In
lor defending child pornographers and calling for the
legalization of all drugs - even
crack and angel dust.
It is not too much to say that
there will be no Democratic
comeback in our presidential
politics until the Democratic
party starts nominating candl·
dates who understand .why the
voters believe such Issues are not
trivial, but vital. The Republicans are r.endering an Important
service in pointing out where
Michael Dukakls stands on them.

* * * START HELPING YOURSELF TO BETTER HEARING TODAY * * *

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ADJUST!
! **NO
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The M.S.I. AUTOMATIC Ill hearing aid is· designed to help those who suffer from sensori-neural hearing loss, or NERVE
DEAFNESS, to hear more clearly in NOISY SITUATIONS. Remember, while no hearing instrument !!lay help every kind of ,
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THIS EVENT IS FOR YOU ! ! !

2th
3th
.
. and THURSDAY, NOVEMBER
.

NOLLY HILL INN
1-8-00-223-33.41
.....__

11.4 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio
I

.

·holds on to make the tackle In Saturday night's
annual skirmish on Eastern's home field. The
Tornadoes blanked the Eagles 30·0.

'Gadgets'
nog~d
•

agatnst
·Browns

isSUeS COUDt ___W_il_lia_m_R_u_she_r

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9 A.M.-5 P.M.
CALL AH.EAD FOR APPOINTMENT

HAGER C,O NTAINED- Eastern running back
Jason Hager (32) Is denied further progress
uplleld as Southern' delender Ryan Evans (70)

- Trash haulers have found
med1cal waste mixed In with
regular garbage. Waste handlers
tell stories of children playing
"doctor" with old needles and
tossing blood bags around for
fun. The handlers report finding
amputated limbs In refuse comt nil to landfills.
- Officials In New York and
' New Jersey want illegal dumpIng to be a felony. As It now
stands, a trash hauler may find It
cheaper to dump the debris than
pay fqr legal disposal, state
officials say, A hauler could
dump 50 ions of waste on a beach,
pay a $2,500 fine and stU! walk
away with profit from the job.

Why symbolic

The Daily Sentinel-Page-a .

Southern blanks Eastern 30-0
•
m final SVAC grid contest

Monday, October 31, 1988

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shOuld be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subj~t to editing and must be signed wlth nam.e, address and
telephone 'number. N.o unsigned letters Wtll be published. Letters should be In

gooo taste. addresslng Issues, not personalities.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~-

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Did
Sam Wyche believe his Cincinnati Ben gals would be unable to
beat the Cleveland Browns playing basic football?
Appar~ntly not: at least based
on the evidence of Sunday's 23-16
Cleveland victory.
The Bengais had won seven of
their first. eight games by disdaining most. of the gadgets and
trick plays that marked their4 11
season last year. The week
leading up to the game, the
Cincinnati coach closed some of
his team's practices, apparently
to install some secret strategies
designed to stop the Browns, who
had lost the first meeting of the
teams, 24-17.
Sunday, they showed up with
no-huddle plays, sideline huddles
" and strange calls in crucial
situations.
'!'he first questionable call
came with a little more than five ·
minutes left in the first half, .with
the Browns holding a 3-0 lead.
Mixing running and passing,
Boomer Eslason drove Cincinnati from its own 14 to the
Cleveland 12, where fullback
Ickey Woods was stuffed by Mike
Johnson and Bob Golic on a
third-and-one play .
But rather than attempt a
nearly certain 29-yard field goal
for a tie, Wyche elected to go for
the first down, and Woods was
stuffed again.
It did not have an immediate
negative effect. since Cincinnati
strong safety David Fulcher
intercepted Cleveland quarterback Bernie Kosar four plays
later and rumbled 16 yards lor a
touchdown.
But Cleveland took a 10·7 lead
almost immediately thereafter.
as Herman Fontenot ran the
ensuing kickoff back 84 ya rds
and fullback Tim Manoa bulled
: into the end zone two pia~~ later.
· Midway tbrough t~• fourth
: quarter, with the Browns holding
a 23-13 lead, the Bengals had a
third-and-goal at the Cleveland 4
yard line. Wyche had the Bengals

LYONS BAGS EAGLE -Southern's Matt Lyons (60) hlowsln olf
the line befo,r e makl~g a sack on Eastern !jUarterback Jeff Durst In
Saturday night's. annual rivalry on Eastern's home field. The
'l'ornadoes claimed ttoe · cont~st 30-0.
go without a huddle. preventing
the Browns from getting their
''nickel" defense on the field , but
he haclr called a running play,
anyway.
Stanley Wilson was stopped fo r
no gain and the Bengais were
forced to se ttle for, a field goal and 23-16 was the final score.
Browns' cornerback Hanford
Dixon said the no-huddle call on
that play actually helped
Cleveland .
. "They outsmarted them ·
selves. " .he said . "We couldn't
get the 'nlc~el' in . If we'd had the
nickel, they had a running play
called. they would have proba biy
gotten (the touchdown ),"
As for the Bengals' failure to
get a first down on that fourth
down play in the first quarter,
Dixon said, ''lt took the game to a
higher emotional level. "
He continued, "I think they
arfe a much better team when
they just come out and play
football . ! don't think they played
as well as they are capable."
F'or his part, Wyche credited
the Browns' defense, and nearly
blamed the officiating for his
team's loss .

Ohio Outdoors

How to keep your feet warm
takes so long to be effective that
By JERRY PICKRELL
It isn't very satisfying.
Outdoor Writers
Far and away the best way to
Association of America
k~p
your feet warm is to first
Distributed by UPI
keep
them dry . Wet feet, even
One of the nagging problems of
damp
ones from sweaty toes, get
doing anything outdoors when
cold
a.lotfaster
than dry ones do.
it's cold Is that of keeping your
And
they're
harder
to get warm
feet warm . It seems that often
again.
everything else will be Jusi
Some of the fancy materials
toasty, bu t your feet will feel
that
are said to let moisture out
frozen .
In are very costly and can
but
not
Electric socks are always an
do
a
passable
job of keeping your
option and, though they really do
feet
dry,
but
there'sa
better way .
work, a problem often experienced is that when the batteries It's a lot cheaper, too.
Simply wear boots over · your
wear down or the circuit breaks,
boots.
your feet wlll get even colder
Rubber arctics - with the
than normal.
·
buckles
- or sllp-ons don' t cost
Besides, It's always seemed
very
much
but they keep your
somewhat dangerous to have my
feet
dry
,
lnclu\llng
the boot,
feet bathed In electricity, even
which
Is
providing
the
insulation
though I don't see how a flash·
light battery could electrocute value .
anyone.
Another trick Is to remember
. one of the Scandinavian countries reportedly has a saying that to dress your feet as loosely as
goes something like this: "If you can. Very tight-fitting boots
your feet are cold, put on your or socks carf restrict the flow of
blood to the surface area of the
hat."
There's some sense to that, foot, causing It to feel cold very
since your head represents the quickly.
Heavy clothing worn in layers
body's single greatest heat loss
and
loosely is best.
area. It probably works, but If

.

'

"On the day we played them,
this was the best defense that we
played this year," Wyche said.
" We had a couple of opportunities, but they knocked the ball
loose !rpm us .... . (and) down at
the goa l line, they would stiffen
up."

SVAC standings
SVAC STANDINGS
(All games)
'I'EAM
w L p OP
Oak Hill ...... ........ 8 1 248 66
SymmE's Valley .. .6 3 230 98
Nm·th Gallia ........ 6 3 172 146
Han nan Trace .... 6 4 170 168
Southwestern .... ... 5 4 127 154
Kyger Creek: ....... 2 7 84 203
Southern .. ............ 2 7 75 226
Eastern .... ........... 0 9 38 312
(SVAC only)
f'inal
TEAM
W L P
OP
O;tk Hill .............. 7 0 222 44
Symmes Valley ... 6 J 218 57
North Gal!ia ....... .4 3 146 123
Hannan Trace ... .4 3 133 125
Southwestern ...... .4 3 113 115
Southern .. ............ 2 5 69 145
Kyger Creek ....... .l 6 64 158
Eastern ............... 0 7 19 217
Saturday's result
Southern 30, Eastern 0
Friday's games
Southern at Piketon
Waterford at Eastern
'
Portsmouth East at Southwestern
Alexander at Oak Hill
Saturday's game
Symmes Valley at Ironton St. Joe

intitial gains came at the line."
By SCOTT WOLFE
Southern's 19, while plays from
Altho~gh young and somewhat
Sentinel Stall Writer
scrimmage ran 42-65
EAST MEIGS- Stormlng .out inexperienced, EHS made some respectively.
mistakes they · knew they
of the gate like a thoroughbred,
EHS had 64 yards on the
the Southern Tornadoes' football shouldn't have at this point in the
ground and 43 In the air, while
team bLitzed to a 20-0 halftime season. EHS also showed a Iaack
SHS was 55-342 and 70 in the air
lead, then stood tough behind its ol aggression in the trenches, an
for a massive 412 total.
iron-curtain defense to post its area where SHS dominated.
EHS was 6-19 passing and
second straight victory, a 30-0
SHS 3-6.
triumph over the Eastern
Eastern however, had several
Individually, Gheen had three
· TD's and 17 carries for 115 yards,
Eagles.
good sticks; the most visible
Leaving no signs of its old body were those coming from senior
while Mike Amos had a fine slate
that saw the Tornadoes lose 16 Chris Lance, who was literally all
of 13-114, Richard Deaver 8-65,
straight over the past two sea- over the field . Lance had several
and several good runs by Todd
sons, the re-incarnated Sou- key sticks as well as both of
Lisle.
therners looked quite impressive Eastern's interceptions.
Jeff Durst led EHS with 6 for
in picking up the win. Southern is
Junior Smith, Mike Weber,
49, and Hager 12-29 yards.
now 2· 7 overall and 2-5 in the Jason Hager, and Dan Tripp also
Todd Lisle was 1-49 and a TD ,
SVAC, while Eastern drops to 0-9 were also in on numerous tackles
for SHS, while Lance caught two
for 28 yards.
and 0-7.
and proved to be the heart of the
The pre-game festivltte,s and defense that tried so hard to get
Southern mentor Hen·sler elablarge crowd in attendlmce·helped things back In perspective.
orated, " Our boys really played' a
set a stage that was filled with
It appeared that SHS would
good game tonight. We' ve looked
electricity, much like the old carry a 14-0 advantage into the
like a team the past two weeks.
Eastern-Southern battles of days lockeroom at the half, but with 17
We're reaching a peak now, sort
gone by. From the onset, how- seconds before the half, Gheen
of late bloomers I guess, but now
ever, the result was different rambled In for his third TD. The
we know we can play . If we could
from any other
E11stern- PAT kick was blocked and SHS
play some of the te3,ms that beat
Southern game yet played, as held a one-sided 20-0 lead.
us early right now, I'm sure the
res uIt would be dIfferent, bu t
this game would be totally
Although the score wouldn't
dominated by the Tornadoes.
reflect It, SHS again dominated
that's In the past and we 'll just
Saturday's contests did have the third frame, however, a tired.
have to look forward to next
Its moments as early on both but newly inspired EHS defense
week .''
lines crashed head-on Into the kept them off the boards.
Hensler also praise d Eastern
line of scrimmage, filling the
One thing Southern did not do
for a fine job and added that,
cool,brisk air with crashes of all evening tong was "punt the
"they'll be really tough in tile
thunder and grueling pain. bail", which very well could be a
future.''
Slowly, Southern gained control modern-day record. Easterner
Eastern hosts Waterford in a
in the trenches and proceeded to Lance had something to say in'
non-league season-finale next
drive the ball right at.the hUngry that matter as he twice robh\!d
week. while Southern travels to
Piketon for the first time.
Eagles.
SHS of certain scores, Intercept· Piketon js 3-6 overall and is
Southern first hit paydirtat the ing two Porter passes, each at the
6:23 mark In the first frame, one yard line.
known as a "b;&gt;sketball school" ,
much like Southern.
when Southern's often unsung
In a "Deja-Vu" type situation
Statistics:
heto, senior Danny Gheen, ham- Lance twice swept the ball away
mered into the endzone for the from the receivers.
Deparhnent
E
S
Firsl Downs
10
19
first score. The always consistThe second theft was for
Yds. Rushing
64
342
ent Mark Porter drilled the naught as moments later, Lance
Vds. Passing
43
70
extras through the uprights and was hammered in his own
Totals
107
412
CompleUons
6-19
3-G
SHS led 7-0.
endzone for a safety as a broken
Intercepted
1
2
Aliwasquietfornearly12full play left the EHS QB
Fumbleslost
6-4
4-3
Penalties
5-57
16-1 60
minutes as Eastern ate up some unprotected.
Punts
15-127 f25.4)0 0
The score now stood 22-0 with
time on the clock, before yielding
Score bJ quarte'rs:
to Chris Lance's punt. Southern 17 seconds left in the third frame.
Southern ... ,........................ .. 7 n 2 8-30
-Eastern ................................ o 0 0 0- 0
took over possession and fabriIn the latter portions of the
cated a sustained drive behind thli-d frame and to the mid-point
the efforts of Gheen, sophomore of the final go-round, Eastern
running back Richard Deaver, had Its best offensive penetraThe Daily Sentinel
seniors Mike Amos and Todd lion. Some of that yardage came
(USPS 145-960)
Lisle.
on the option by freshman QB
A Dlvlslun of Multbnedla. Inc.
Deaver set up the next score as Jeff Durst, senior Jay Reynolds,
SHS marched onward; his run to and some hard-nosed carries by
Pu,b l tshed every afternoon. Monday
through Friday , 111 Court St., Pothe goal line stopped just shy of a Jason Hager.
meroy. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubscore by a fine desperation tackle
In the third period a small
llsh.lng Company / Multimedia, Inc .•
rumble marred the otherwise
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Seby the Eagles.
cond c lass postage paid at Pomeroy,
Gheen got the call and plunged sportsmanlike game, sending
Ohio.
in for the score at the 7:26 mark; Eagles Durst and Bissell to the
Member: United Press Tnternatlonal.
Porter adding the extras 8,!_1d the showers along with Southern's
Inland DaHy Press Association and the
score stood at 14-0.
Stout. Stout had made a fine play
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Although the backfield always In stringing out the option and
Ad\•erllslng Representative, Branham
New spa per Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
gets a lot of credit, Soutehrn' s had tackled Durst, when !Is tiNew York, New York 10017.
line was noticeably tough from cuffs flew. The officials with
start to finish. The men with a flags in hand were ali right on the
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, lU Court St. ,
mission included Petie Hendrix play and Interceded.
Pomeroy, Ohto &lt;1.1769.
at center, Ryan Evans and Kevin .
At any rate EHS's offense got a
SUBSCRIPTION RI\TES
Grueser at tackles, John McCiin- boost from Southern mistakes as
By Carrier or Mol or Route
tack and Matt Lyons at guards, it was hard to distinguish the
One Week ........... ......... . ...... .. .... $1.40
and Bryan Weaver.
dandilions from all the yellow
One Month ......... ....................... .$6.10
One Year ......... ......... ..... ..... .. $72.80
Jarod Moore and ScottHlllalso nags. Southern was penalized 16
SINGLE COPY
took their turns on the line.
times for 160 yards, most of
PRICE
Southern coach Btll Hensler which came in this period of
Dally ............. .. ....... . ........... . 25 Cent s
stated, " Our line really opened time.
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carup some holes tonight. These
Finally, In the fourth period
rier may remit In advance direct to
boys came 'ready' to play. They Porter threw a perfect spiral to
The Datly Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wUI begtven carrier each
did a good job getting off quick , receiver Todd Lisle, who
week .
and iow and controlled the line of rambled the rest of the way Into
No subscrlpllons by mall permitted In
scrimmage. Our backs gave It a
the end zone for a 28-0 SHS lead.
areas where hom(' carrier service is
lot of second effort also, but our Mike Amos burst in for the PAT
available.
score and SHS held a 30-0 lead.
Mall Subscriptions
Lance now subbed at QB and
Jntlde Meip County
13 Weeks ........... .... ... ....... .. ....... $19.24
Tennis
looked quite well, while fresh26 Weeks ............ ... .............. ..... S37.96
West German Steffl Graf,
man Wes Holter filled In well at
52 Weeks ................... .. ............. $74.36
Outside Meigs County
.ranked No. 1 in the world,
tailback. Both looked good In
13 Weeks .................................. $20.80
crushed Bulgarian Manuela Matheir new roles, butt ailed to rally
26 Weeks ... .................. ............. $40.30
leeva G-2, 6-0 In the final of a the slumping EHS oJfense.
52 Weeks ....................... , ... ...... $75.40
s275,000 tournament at Brighton,
Eastern had 10 first downs to
England. Graf, who won the
Grand Slam and an Olympic gold
medal this year, needed just 54
minutes to defeat the world's No.
6 p1ayer ....
Top-seeded Nicholas .Pereira
of Venezuela defeated Tomas
Zdrazila of Czechoslovakia 7-6,
6-3 to win the men's final In the
Japan Air Lines Super Junior
tennis championships at Tokyo.
1
Pereira also swept the junior
titles at the French, British and
•
u.s. Opens.
'
College Hockey
•
Minnesota, 6-0, was chosen the
nation's top team in the College
Hockey USA Coaches Poll conducted by KBJR-TV, Duluth,
Minn. Michigan State was chosen
•
.
second and Maine third.

I

Sports bn"efs

,.

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Close. ,s, &amp;,M.o
CAR

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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __!

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Pomeroy~Middleport,

----~~'-

•

Monday, October 31. 1988

Ohio

By United Press International
Doug Flutle threw sparingly,
but effectively, to lift New
England past his former team
Sunday as Chicago counterpart
- and nemesis - Jim McMahon
was sidelined with another
Injury .
Flutle · completed just six
passes, but lour went lor touch·
downs to lilt the Patrl!ltS to a 30-7
victory over the Bears. ·
. ' 1You got to hand It to Doug
Flu tie," Bears center Jay Hll. genberg said. "He was hot and
had a great game."
.
Flutle completed six of 18
passes lor 165 yards to help New
England, 4-5, win Its third
straight home game. Chicago,
7·2, lost quarterback McMahon
early In the second quarter with a
strained right llnee.
McMahon, who was two of six
for 4 yards with one Interception,
wlll be sidelined at least a month
and possibly as long as 10 weeks.
Mike Tomczak and Jim Har·
baugh each played poorly In
McMahon's absence.
Flutle,· a Helsman Trophy
winner at Boston College, joined
the Bears In 1986 after a stint In
the U.S. Football League. His
All-American reputation clashed
with the rebel personality of
McMahon, who recently referred
to Flu tie as "Bambi." Flu tie was
traded to the Patriots last
season.
"I'm not caught up In all of
that, " Flu tie said olthe attention
given to the game. "I'm not going
to worry about it. They were the
Chicago Bears and we played
good football."
HIGH FIVE - Patriots Stanley Morgan (86) and Irving Fryar
(80) celebrate after Morgan caught a fourth period pass lor a
touchdown against the Bears as New England romped, 30-7.
(UPI).

Prep results

NFL

Ohio Hl ! h Sc hool Football ReJub

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Buck ere N 19, United Loc 1
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Can Cent C&amp;Sh 8, can Meklaley I
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Denver ot lndlllllapolls, 9 p.m .
Sund._,.·, No11 . 6
llu.llll.!i 11t ""'V Glanhi, I p.m .
Dei roll at Mln~"ota, I p.m.
Green lla)' ac A lllanta, l p.m .
LA Ranasat Phlladtlplda, I p.m.

. The game marked the teams' lord kicked four field goals to York lor the second time In three
!)rst meeting since Chicago help the Rams, 7-2, tie the Saints, weeks.
At Los Angeles, BD Jackson
routed New England 46-10 in 7-2, for first place In the NFC
and
Marcus Allen each ran for a
West.
Super BDwl XX.
touchdown,
and quarterback
At Tampa, Fla., three third·
"The one everybody will reSteve
Beuerleln
marked his
member will be the Super BDwl. quarter fumbles by Tampa Bay
starting
lineup with
return
to
the
They won't remember 30-7 on rookie runners led to a pair of
an
efficient
performance.
The
October 30th," New England Mark Clayton touchdown recep4-5
overall
and
4·0
In
the
Raiders,
Patriots cornerback Raymond tions and a Tony Franklin field
AFC
West,
beat
Kansas
City,
Clayborn said. ''But what we wUI goal for the Dolphins, 5·4, who
remember Is that we beat one of notched their fourth victory In 1·7·1, for the second time In three
five games. The Buccaneers, weeks. ·
the elite teams In the NFL."
1 At San Francisco, quarterback
Elsewhere, It was: Atlanta 27, 2·77, suffered their fourth consec·
Philadelphia 24; Cleveland 23, utlve loss. Joe Ferguson, at 38 the Steve. Young avoided a sack, ·
Cincinnati 16; Buffalo 28, Green NFL'S oldest player, started at weaved through the Minnesota
Bay .0; the Los Angeles Rams 12, quarterback lor Tampa Bay defense, then stumbled Into the
ahead of struggling VInny Testa· end zone lor a dramatic 49-yard
New Orleans 10; Miami 17,
Tampa Bay 14; Phoenix 16, verde and completed 26 of 35 lor touchdown run with 1: 58 left to
Dallas 10; the New York Jets 24, 291 yards, but his efforts were help the 49ers, 6-3, move a game
Pittsburgh 20; the New York undermined by five Buccaneer behind New Orleans and the Los
Angeles Rams In the NFC West.
Giants 13, DetroltlO In overtime; turnovers.
Minnesota,
5-4, dropped two
At Irving, 'Texas, a 42-yard
the Los Angeles Raiders 17,
games
behind
NFC CentralKansas City 10; San Francisco pass from Nell Lomax to Ernie
leading
Chicago.
24, Minnesota 20; Seattle 17, San Jones set up a 1-yard touchdown
At Seattle, rookie Kelly
Diego 14; HoustOn 41, Washing- · run by Earl Ferrell · with 50
Stouffer
threw two touchdown
seconds remaining for Phoenix,
ton 17.
passes
to
spark the Seahawks;
On Monday night, Denver 5-4. The Cowboys, 2-7, lost In the
game's final seconds for the 5-4, who assured themselves at
plays at Indianapolis.
At Philadelphia, Chrts Miller second straight week and third least a tleatoptheAFCWestwlth
Denver, 4-4, which plays Monday
threw three touchdown passes, time this season.
At East Rutherford, N'.J., John night at Indianapolis. The
Including a 49-yarrder to Michael
Haynes with 5: 58 to play, allow· Booty blocked a Harry Newsome Chargers, 2·7, suffered their
lng the Falcons, 2· 7, to snap a punt to set up a 5-yard touchdown third straight defeat.
At Houston, Warren Moon !Ired
live-game losing streak. Phila· run by Freeman McNeil with
three
touchdown passes to Drew
8:36
left
to
lift
the
Jets,
5-3-1,
to
delphia fell to 4-5.
Hill
and
ran 3 yards for a score,
their
first
victory
over
the
At Orchard Park, N.Y., Mark
helping
the
Oilers end Washing·
.
Steelers,
2·7,
In
10
tries.
){elso returned an Interception 78
ton's
three-game
win streak.
At
Pontiac,
Mich.,
Paul
yards fort touchdown arid rookie
6-3,
won
Its eighth
Houston,
McFadden
kicked
a
33-yard
field
Thurman Thomas ran lor 116
game
~o
stay tied
straight
home
yards to help the Bills Improve to goal 73 seconds Into overtime to
with
Cleveland
for
second
In the
8-1 - their best start since lift the Qlants, 6-3, to their third
AFC..Central,
one
game
behind
joining the NFL. Buffalo was 9.·0 straight win. McFadden's field
In 1964 while playing In the goal came three plays after Cincinnati. Washington, 5·4,
American Football League. The Giants linebacker Lawrence dropped one game behind the
Taylor recovered a fumble at the first-place Giants In the NFC
Packers fell to 2·7.
At New Orleans, · Mike Lans- Uons' 22. Detrolt,2·7,lost to New East.

gals' offense, which entered the
game as the top-rated In theAFC
and the second-best In the NFL,
was held to three Jim Breech
field goals. David Fulcher's
16-yard ' Interception return accounted for the other Cincinnati
scoring.
.
"We just hope there's a rubber
match. We'd like to play them
again," said Bengals Coach Sam
Wyche. "We can claim we broke
down or they can claim they
outplayed us. You can argue It
either way, but they're stUI
chasing us. It's our ballgame
still."
The game was tied 10.10 at
halftime before a Cleveland
possession ended with Bahr' s
39-yard field goal at 7: 48 of the
third quarter.
Alter Cincinnati's next drive
ended at their own 23, Scott
Fulhage's punt was swatted
down by Minnifield, who eluded
linebacker Ed Brady and broke
through tbe line. Fontenot
scooped up the ball on the 1 and
!ell Into the end zone at 9:03.
"Marty and Kurt (special
teams coach Scholten helmer and
the head coach' s younger
brother) designed the play ear·
ller this week," said Minnifield.
"We didn't execute ·It right the
first time, but the second time It
worked like a charm. The guy
(Brady) didn't chase me."
Fulhage said he ''tried to speed
up when I saw him (Minnifield),
but It was too late."
The Bengals crept within 20-13
on Breech's 32-yard field goal

with 1: 04left In the third quarter,
but the Browns countered victory '
with Bahr' s 29-yarder at 5:40 of
the fourth quarter. Breech's
22-yard field goal with 5:25
remaining capped the scoring.
"We moved up and down on
them pretty regularly. For wha·
tever reason, we just couldn't get
the ball In the end zone," said
Cincinnati quarterback BDomer
Eslason. ·"We're stU! In first
place and there's nothing to be
sad about."
Cleveland quarterback Bernie
Kosar, suffering from a sprained
lower lback, was 18 of 28 for 210
yards and two Interceptions.
Manoa had 89 yards on 23 carries
and Clarerice'Weathers ·caught a
career-high seven passes for 140
yards.
Eslason was 12 of25lor just173
yards. IThe Bengals' Eddie
Brown had six catches for 91
yards.
Cleveland led 3-0 on Bahr's
34-yard field goal 6:57 into the
first quarter. Fu Ieber then
picked off a Kosar pass at the 16
and ran past Manoa and Into the
end zone at 11: 31 for a 7-3 Bengal
lead .
"It was a battle. I'm glad we
won because I'd hate to feel this .
bad and lose," said Cleveland
nose tackle Bob Gollc.
Just 65 seconds later, Cleveland went ahead 10-7. Fontenot
took the kickoff 84 yards before
he was dragged down by placek·
lcker and ex-Brown Lee Johnson
at the Clnclnnatl10 and a penalty
on Jim Riggs cost the Bengals

Mlamlltf- NPw-l!:n&amp;fandr+p.m~
. - -

. Pltt!lln J1h at Clnclnnat I, I p.m .
Tarn~

Bay at Chi CillO, J p.m.
NY olet11at lndlanapolhl, 4 p.m.

San Ftatld!IOO at Phoenbi:, 4 p. m .
New Orleanaal " 'w;tln«fon, 4 p . m.
Kan!lll!l City tti Denver , 4 p.m .
BuU!do at Seallle, 4 p.m.
lA Kaltllrs at SUI Diego, 8 p.m .

Monday, NO\', 7
nevriMd at llouston, 9 p.m.

This week's games
NHL results

• This Weell' s
Obl11 College FoolballSCiudlle
By United Pre.M lnt er•tlo-..1
Sat urd 1Q', Nov 5

Ry Unlltd Press lntcrmllonal
NA'fiONAL HOC KEY LEAGUE
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NV R.nlf!f"l 6, Philadelphia I

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Wlnn1pe~ 8, Lo1 Ancele. 4
Ollcara 5, Edmonton 2
Monda~'• Garners
Ollca(D at Cal pt)', D:U p .m .
TueAdfl)' 'l G&amp;nH!S

Montrul at HarUord , nlcht
IAil iUIIelaJ ai Q•ehec. nip&amp;
vaaoou-.er at Plttlbui'Jh, nlpt
W•hln~nat Detl'dll, alpt
Phlkdelphlaat New.ler!IB_r, niiM
Wtan1pel at NV I•Jan•ert; Dlltf

WIICG D!tl n at Ohio State

Bowlin&amp; Green at Kenl State
Ohio Uah· at Central Ml chlpn
Toledo Ill Eastern Mlehlpn ( n)
New Me~~: leo Slate a4 Akron (•)
" 'et!lt Vlr&amp;lnla a1 ClaclnMtl
Indiana Stat Vounptown S&amp;
Mar letta at 8aJ dwtn-Wallace
H~l del berg al Cap ltal
Wllt.e nOOr11 iu Mouli Union

Ohio Nprt!M!rnat Mu•Jdnaum
OUcrbelul Centre (KJI

· Ohio We~~leyaa at A.llerheny ( Pa)
CiuJe ae.erve lit Oberlin

Kenyon at. Denison
Hiram at Woosier

St. Josep h Cln41 a\ 1\slllN'Id

Wllmlnston a1 Bluitt on
r:entraiSt U Northern Ml clllpn
YJI.lp!lrabo ( In d) at Da)'IOO
Defiance a1 Anderson (lad)
W-.viWl &amp;ate tMich) at Fla • ..,
,lohn Carroll at Grove CHy (Pa)
TUDn a1 Fra.lbtll"' Sta&amp;e (Md)
UrbUJA at U•kln (It)')

n - de••• nlpt JAmf!

Calendar
FoOiball

Denver at lnclanapolll, I p.m.
Hoefle,

Ten...

DOMINO'S '
PIZZA
DEUYERS
FREE.

'

Transactions
&amp;l nday's Spo"• Tnntadlo•
BU!tetball
Milwaukee- Rei eMed forward Bruao

Konpwola.

Football

Atlanta- Placed wtdenclehrerS..er

Baller on lnJultldrMerw; adtvatedwltle
receiver .lam• Mtllln1 lrom l~uN:d
re~erw.

Wlndp~ Jotwltrera-o~·

,.

Lucasville Valley. Pictured are team members,
DISTRICT RUNNERS-UP - The Soutbern
1-r,
Dawn Johnson, Jane WIIHama, Tracy
Tomadoe VoUeyball learn of Coach Suzanne
Beegle,Crystal
IDII, Becky Winebrenner, Aimee
Wolle recently completed the season with a fine
IDII,
Becky
Evaaa,
Tracy Norrls,Trlcla Wolle,
14-6 record and &amp;-8 SVAC mark, cood lor second .
and
Coach
Suzanne
WoUe.
place. Soutllern won the Sectional crown at
r------::-~==
Athene, then advanced . to the District at
Chillicothe where they met defeal at the hands of

Chlcqo at Cal prJ, l r31 p.m.

WorcNier, Mu.. - ....... Vlr&amp;tnla
Sllml of New EaiiMd
SltMlll..,lm, Swedeft - Stctdl ..lm Ope~~
810 r .. -. Bradl - Me~~/a t-.er ....
u• ..a tounatn eat
·

Hook.,.
Plred GenenJ M ......,

..

DAR gives .history of. Our H9use Museum
Mrs. Clyde Ingels of the lng and became a famous tavern
Daughters of the American Re- visited by Lafayette and other
volution gave a report on the notables.
In 1933, Dr. Charles E. and
history of Our House at a recent
meeting of Alpna Omicron Chap· Mrs. Holzer bought Our House
ter, Delta Kappa Gamma, held at and restored .!!. They gave It to
the Ohio Historical Society In
the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
Carolyn Smith, research com· 1944.
Mrs. Ingels gave highlights of
mlttee chairman, Introduced
tour of Our House which
the
Mrs. Ingels who de$Cribed the
Includes
the separate kitchen, ·
French settlers who came to this
area, fleeing from the French · parlor, and ballroom where
Lafayette was entertained.
Revolution. Noblemen and professional people reportedly suf· · Society members enjoyed a
fered under the hard life In turkey dinner. Nellie Parker had
the Invocation. Favors were
America, but showed their spirit
by hOlding a dance on their donated by area businesses.
Wykle Whitney was chairman of
arrival in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ingels noted that Our the hostess committee. Other
members were Olive Page, Chris
House was built by Henry Cush·

MONDAY
RACINE - Morse Chapel
Church, County Road 35, Racine-Portland Road, will be in
revival Monday night through
Friday night at 7 p.m . . each
evening. Hev. Ralph Workman,
of Gallipolis, will preach, Everyone welcome..
SYRACUSE - Trick or treat
night In Syracuse will be Monday
from 6 to 7 p.m. Sirens will sound
the beginning and ending of the
hour .

.,.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. l. nc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ,
EAR~ NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL~ ALLERGIST

"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS!'
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

OH.

Umiltll hlinry
Art a

Wnt Main St.
992-2124

..,

POMEROY -BeglnnlngTues-

.

..

...
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'

People in the news

day the Ladles Auxiliary' of the
Fraternal Order or Eagles, Aerie
2171 meetings wlll start at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Sam
Anderson will be speaking at the
Old Bethel F .W.B. Church, located behind Gilbert's Service
Station on Story's Run Road on
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. Pastor Bob ·
Grubb Grubb Invites the public.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants Association will
meet Wednesday, 8 a .m., at Bank
One. The regular meeting date
has been changed to accomodate
more members. Please attend.
HARRISONVILLE - Sand artist Rev. BDb Everly wlll be at a
special missionary service on
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., at the
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on
Route 684. Everyone welcome.
CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees wlll meet Wednes·
day, 7:30p.m., at the town hall.

Christmas auction
SYRACUSE - A Christmas
auction will be held Saturday,
Nov. 5, 7 p.m., at the Syracuse
Fire Station, with auctioneer
Dan Smith. Everyone welcome.

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
DOUGLAS IN JAPAN: Michael Douglas's new movie has
htm traipsing the mean streets of Osaka, Japan, with oneolthat
nation's top actors.
Douglas, who won an Oscar this year lor "Wall Street," plays
a New York detective searching lor a Japanese gangster In
" Black Rain" and his co-star, the rugged Ken Takakura, Is a
Japanese Investigator helping him. "I am very excited about
the possibilities of cultural exchange- the opportunity for us
both to understand each other better and lor the world to
understand Osaka and Japan." Douglas told reporters In
Osaka.
"Movies are an lnterantlonal language." Ridley Scott, who
directed "Blade Runner','' starts fltmlng Monday In Osaka,
which has a tough Image and long been a stronghold of the
Yakuza, Japan's version of the Mafia.
THE WORLD ACCORDING TO ZSAZSA: A lew things about
ZsaZsa Gabor that you probably didn't know, from a recent
Interview with The Washington Post: "Jack Kennedy wanted to
sleep with me. He said I was the only blonde he never slept with"
., . "I drlnk40 cups of coffee a day, maybe 50. Before I go to bed I
have a big cup of coffee" ... "I swim In my pool every day with
diamond earrings on and nothing else" ... "Every morning my ·
mother calls up and say, 'How fat are you?"' ... "He (eighth
husband Prince Frederick von Anhalt) Is wonderful. This Is my
best marriage.. I just gave him a purple Rolls-Royce. Don1t
mention the name of another man! He's desperately jealous.
That's the only tragedy!"
TBE LANSBURY LOOK: Angela Lansbury Is becoming
something of a geriatric Jane Fonda- she's coming out with a
video, "Angela Lansbury's Positive Moves: A Personal Plan

.for Fitness and Well-Being at Any Age."
·
·
She says the key to aging Is to continue to project dignity,
liveliness and a sense of mystery. And plastic surgery doesn't
hurt either, she told People magl!-zlne.. ,_.
"Absolutely! It's one of the most~ helpful things we can do to
fight aging," she said. "If you need lt. have it. I had my neck
nipped and tucked and . it made a tremendous dllleren~e. I
haven't had anythlg done to my face , though, because I fear
changing my expression."
COOPER HONORED BY MU..ITARY: Former child star
Jackie Cooper wlll be presented the mUltary's highest honor for
broadcast journalism Monday In Sanford, Fla., whePe Cooper Is
directing three episodes the syndicated television series
"Super boy."
The award Is for Cooper's narration of the TV documentary
"First To Cross" about the first trans·Atlantlcfllght, which took
a Navy crew 32 days to accomplish In 1919.
Cooper, 65, was an active member of the Naval Reserve for
more than 40 years. His previous journalism experience
Includes playing the role of Editor Perry White In the
"Superman" movies .
.
ROCK AROUND THE WORLD: The United Nations will be
filled with the sound of rock 'n' roll.lor 24 hours Nov . 12-13.
Randy Newman, the Fabulous Thunderblrds, Blood, Sweat and
Tears, Steve Forbert, AI S&amp;ewart and others will be playing In
the visitors' lobby~part of a benefit for the U.S. Committee for
UNICEF and Wor Hunger Year.
There also will
tie-ins with Southside Johnny and the
Asbury Jukes elsewhere In New York and Nell Young, Jackson
Browne and Crosby, SlUts and Nash at the Roxy In Los Angeles.
The show will be aired nationally and radio listeners can call
In to make donations.

The first six weeks grading Ashley, Stephanie Burton, Carrie Amber Blackwell, Ronnie Casto,
Bridget Vaughan, Clinton ~~~e. ~~~~~rff~~~is,J~~ J~~~:
perlOdhonorrollattheBradbury Hartson, James Hudson, Wendy Jerod Cook, Kelley Grueser,
H':Fh~:~~ade: Leigh Ann Can- son, Tamra O'Dell, Crystal
Salser .
School has been announced. Sizemore, Nancy Whaley, Raenl Reggie Pratt, Adam Sheets,
531 JACKSON PIKE· RT.35 WEST
ve
In
Wood,
Brandon
Smith.
Jaclyn
Swartz,
Michelle
Ward,
terbury,
Rebecca
Russell,
Matt
Making a grade OrB Or abo
Ad
K
czyn
Metheney, Amanda Napper.
Third Grade: Vincent Broder...... ~uraiWI
all their subjects to be named to
Fourth Grade: Brooke Dalley,
am raws
·
Fourth Grade.: Jenny Ervin, tck, Jesse Eastman , Chad
&amp;LLSUTSII.IO
D.H. I: Joey Congrove.
H
A d M
J 0 Folmer, Jason Frecker, Michael
the roll were:
Libby King, Darrick St. Clair,
.aru-orilciaeeo! 1IVaY , _
&amp;LL . . . . . II.IO
·Fifth Grade·. Alison Gerlach, Chrissy Williams, Ryan Bares·
11: Adam Barton, Eva
Carrie armon, n Y yers,
c D.H.
btree Lynn Kennedy Mat
Sandy, Stacy Silvers.
Frymyer, Myca Haynes, Heidi
OCTIBthru-3 ~
ra
'
'
·
Fifth Grade: Bryan C,olwell, Legar, Michael Leifheit, Randy
April Halley, Kenda Reynolds, wilt, Paul Epperson, Anna Fink,
FRIDAY thru TllJRSDAY:
Jlll Burch, Laura Penhorwood, Amber Slaven, Stephanie thew Sellers.
Jake Gannaway
Mayles, Shera Patterson, MeTonya Phalln.
Stewart.
The first six weeks grad!,
Sixth Grade· Kim Janey An· lissa Ramsburg, Sabrlrta Smith.
Sixth Grade· Becky Diles
period honor roll at the Rutlan .
s · p ge Brian Fourth Grade: Tim Peavley,
1 Kl
Walt Wllllams, Wllley Childress:
The first .six weeks grading Elemenljlry School has befeBn ·-·· ~;;lth ~~ys.:l~~ug:an.'
Chris Roush, Melissa Whaley,
Vanessa Compston, Stephanie period honor roll at the Pomeroy announc~d. Making a grade 0
'
·
Brian Withrow.
Thomas, Melissa Wilfong.
Elementary School has been or above In all their subjects to be
The first six weeks grading
Fifth Grade: Dorothy Leifheit,
DH: Carl Carmichael, Kelly announced. Making a grade of B named to the roll were:
period honor roll at the Salisbury M at t 0 ' B r y a n t , MIndy
Smith
or above In all their subjects to be
Second Grade: Jamie Barrett,
Elementary School has been Patterson.
named to the roll were:
Kristin Brown, Robbie Diddle,
announced. Making a grade of B
Sixth Grade: Crystal Day,
'
The first six weeks grading
Second Grade: Melissa Dar· Ben Fowler • Kelly Gilkey'
or above In all their subjects to Jarrod Folmer, Heidi Huffman,
period honor roll at the Harrison- nell, Jennifer Morris, Corlney Amanda Hays, Justin Je!!ers,
named to the roll were:
Chuck Legar, Joey Lipscomb,
vllleElementarySchoolhasbeen Scarberry, BDnnle Smith, John Matthew Justice, WaylonMcKln·
Second Grade: Lacy Banks, Shllo Moore, Amanda Well.
ney, Tonya Mlller, Alyson Pat·
announced. Making a grade of B Michael Davidson, Jennifer
or above In all their subjects to be Heck, Stefani Pickens, Rachel terson, Melissa Priddy, Tonya
Reeves, Brandy Snider, Jared Powell, Brandy Stanley, Heidi
named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Christopher Woods, Jonathan Wyatt, Karlssa Stewart, Clayton Tromm, Clark
D'Augustlno, Erin Dlllon, Mat- Branham.
VanMatre, Kasey Williams,
Third Grade: Michael Brown,
Stacy Williamson, Jason Young,
thew Dlllon, Kristina Kennedy,
Jennifer L!!inbert, Jason Preas!, Danlelle Grueser, Erin . Hag·
Bambi Breeding.
Franco Rom uno, Shan nan gerty, Usa McGhee, Candace
Third Grade: Carly Chasteen,
Stevers.
Miller, Sheila Neace, Christina Brandle Elliott, Emily Fowler,
Thlr4 Grade: Michelle Bissell, Neece, Roy Powell. Jason Roush,
Brandee Gilmore; Ronnie Hirth,
Jerrod Clark, Joseph D'Augus- Scott Sellers, Amy See, Adam Jlll Lemley, Jer.e my Michael,
tlno.-Kelly Dalton, Scott Dodson, Thomas, Wendy Shrlmplln.
Sean O'Brien, Danlelle Plckham,
Robin Donohue, Tina Fraley, Jared Warner, Jennifer
Lisa Snodgrass, Melissa Titus,.
DAILY AFTER 4 PM, ALLDAY SUNDAY
Amanda Goodman, Rusty Han- · Yeauger, David Anderson, Aaron Vaughan, Melissa Willi·
tng, c.w. Hatfield, Jeremy Wayne Barnhart, Jerlca Clark,
ams, Sandra Young.
Lowe, George Mlller, Jesse Wend! Daniels, Amy Hayes,
Fourth Grade: Chad Bartrum,
PURCHASE AT REGULAR PRICE
Molden, Melissa Reeves, David Steven McCullough, Llnzle Not·
Elizabeth Ellis, Shawa File,
PONDEROSA'S ALL•YOU•CAN•EAT
Staats, Ezra Thobaben, Eddie !Ingham, Michelle Ramsburg,
Frank Herald, Michelle Miller,
Trader, Jessica Wheeler, Jesse ChrlsStobart, Anna Thompson.
Beverly Stewart, Jamie
w od
Fourth Grade: Darnell J.
Wllllamson.
~o~rth Grade: Laura Arix, Blanks, Benjamin Freeman,
Filth Grade: Phyllis Clark,
Jessie Blackford, Stephanie Tara Gr.ueser, Erin Krawscqyn,
Jeremy Coleman, Lore ]'tussell,
Cotterill.
Leigh Mash, Kimberly Petrie,
Clndi Stewart, Candice Walker,
Roxane Wllllams.
Fifth Grade: Amber Bennett, Jodie Sisson, Nathaniel Sisson,
Bethany Cohee, Marla Hall, Matthew Ault, Crystal Bartlett,
Sixth Grade: Bridget Davis,
Gary Stanley, Donald Yosl
Taryn Doidge, Whitney Hapton·
Phillip Edmonds, Beckie Elliott,
stall, Shawn King, Jessica McEI·
Travis Grate, Lori McGhee,
Sherr! Ramsburg, Carrie
The first six weeks grading roy, Chad Molden, Stacey Price,
Williams.
period honor roll at the Middle- Stacie Reed.
Fifth
Grade:
Israel
Grimm,
port Elementary School has been
The llrst six weeks grading
announced. Making a grade of B Anne Brown, Suzanna Henderperiod
honor roll at the Salem
or above In all their subjects to be son, Travis Abbott, Alicia
Haggy, Megan Clark, Cynthia Center Elementary School has
named to the roll were:
been announced. Making a grade
Cotterill,
Bert Mash, James
Second Grade: Philip Burch,
of
B or aboye In all their subjects
White.
Jessica Cale, Austin Carr, Jennl
to
be named to the roll were:
Sixth
Grade:
Sarah
Anderson,
AND GET OUR SPECIAL CUT
Howerton, Jessica Johnson, Pa·
Second
Grade: Tara Butcher,
Tara
Ervin,
!lenny
Ewing,
Jered
trick Martin, Josiah Rawson,
Hlll, Jason Taylor, Julie Young, Andrea Dunfee. Lori Kinnison,
Wllllam Scanlon, Sean· Smith,
Meltsha Swisher, Tiffany Aliens·
AND ALL• YOU ~CAN • EAT-rliWt M'./'
worth, Jessica Evans, Becky
SALES • SERVICE - TESTING
Karr, T.J. King, Beth Knight,
Sarah Larkins, Joshua . Lynch,
Melanie Matthews, Joshua
Price, Jeremy Rowe, · Joe
Weaver, Kyle Werry.
Upper River Rd.
Third Grade: Jason Childress,
172
North
Secolld
A•••
(Aerooo from tho Airport)
Brad DavenpOrt, J.R. Deem,
Cortney Haley, Chad Hanson,
llltl••part, Olllo 45760
Amber Hayes, Tara Michael,
(11988 l\1nderosa, Inc.
Jason Nelgler, Justin Seymour,
Tory Swartz, Jennifer Vining,
we know the value of a good family meal'"
Anthbny Whitt, Matthew Willi·
Snouffer - 991-7446
ams, Michael Wyatt, Rachel

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POIEJIOT
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Several members brought dec·
orated pumpkins ·which were
judged by popular vote. Mrs.
Miller was the winner of the
contest.
VIrginia Chadwell wlll send
program books and cards to the
honorary members, Mrs. Rose
Guinther and Mrs. Altona Karr.
Pauline Ridenour was an as·
· slsting hoste.ss.

L

'.

1·. Wtllll PtppM"onl . s .. _,., MulhrOQmiJ, 1

Lul)ch lpecl•l

a workshop.
For roll call member related a
short ghost story. A program on
herbs was presented by Mrs.
Edna Wood for Edna Knight who
prepared A Witch's Garden.
The paper dealt with herbs used
for medicinal purposes and told
how they are to be gathered and
when.

---

I

DINNER FOR FOUR

.
POIEIOY

Installation of officers highlighted the recent meeting of the
Rouse, Jeanette Thomas, Anna 1.
.Chester Garden Club held at the
Next meeting will be at St.
Elizabeth Turner, Fern Grimm.
home of Mace! Barton.
Ann Webster, Martha Greena· Peter and St. Paul Parish Hall,
Installed by Maurita Miller
way, Winifred Naas, and Paula Wellston, Nov. 21 . Silent auction were Mrs, Dorothy Karr, pres!-....
wlll be held and programs for dent; Mrs. Josephine Hill, vice
Whitt.
1988-89 dlstrlbu.ted:
president; Mrs. Pat Holter. seRebecca Zurcher presided at
cond vice presldnet ; Mrs. Ka· .
the meeting with music chair·
Members from Meigs County
thryn Mora, secretary'; Mrs.
man, Sandra Nodruff, conduct· attending were Twlla Childs,
!Eleanor Knight, assistant secrelng a game with songs lor Marjorie Fetty, Jo Ann Hyaes,
tary; and Mrs. Twlla Buckley,
committee work and discussion. Pau Une Horton, Donna Jenkins,
treasurer.
Thank you notes from Rosalie Nan Moore, Geneva Nolan, Nel·
New program books were
Story and Lucille Sm lth were lie Parker, Margaret Parsons, . distributed by Mrs. Hill. proread. A get-well card was Mary VIrginia Reibel, Chris gram chairman, with the golden
Rouse, Carolyn Smith, Emily anniversary theme being carried
signed for Avice Frecker.
VIola Gettles, legislation, re- Sprague, Jeanette Thomas, out on the cover. The club will
ported on a children's booklet by Anna Elizabeth Turner, Ann
observe Its 50th year In March.
the Columbia Gas Co. Roma Webster, Wykle Whitley, Paula
Devotions were given by Mal·
·Nichols, scholarship committee, Whitt, Dorothy Woodard, Ma· die Mora who wlli host a meeting
repprted on scholarships avalla· rlnda Young, Rebecca Zurcher, of the group Wednesday night.
ble. Deadline for applying Is Feb. -and Lee Lee.
Members are to take floral tape,

·Meigs County school honor rolls _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'

LARGI 18" l-ITEM PIZZA

12• 1 ITIII PIZZA

'

LONG BOTTOM - The Long
BDttom Flame Fellowship Chapter will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Mt. Olive Com·
. munlty Church In Long BDttom
with Mary Bush of Racine as
special speaker.

Horse Racing
Balbonella, a French-bred
filly, came from far off the pace
to capture the $112,600 Mldwlck
Handicap on the grass course at
Santa Anita In Arcadia, c;allf.

ANY 12• 2 ITIM PIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Solldrinks

11 • ·• 1M M..·n.n.
ll •.t .. Frl•J.t.

..

By United Press International
Auto Racing
Jeff Krosnof! of Flintridge,
Call!., Sunday gained his fourth
Coors Racetruck Challenge vic·
tory of the season at the Fall
Festival of Races at Sebring
(Fla.) International Raceway.
Krosnofl, driving a Genuine
Nlssan Parts Nlssan, took the
lead for good on lap 17 en route to
a 3. 791-second victory over teammate Ray Kong.
Basketball
Indiana Pacers center Steve
Stlpanovlch Is scheduled to undergo athoroscoplc surgery MO!)·
day (ln his left knee. St!panovlch
has been In pain for more than
three weeks and a series of tests
has not revealed the nature of the
problem. Team offlchi.ts, physicians and therapists agreed the
surgery would be necessary to
pinpoint the problem. "We'll be
In a much better position to know
exactly what Is wrong with It,"
Pacers General Manager Donnie
Walsh said. "We feel It's the
proper procedure to take because by looking at It (via the
scope) we'll have an exact Idea of
what It Is."
Bowling
Jeanne Malden of Solon, Ohio,
built a 22-pln lead over Wendy
Macpherson of San Diego after
one round of the $40,000 Ladles
Pro BDwlers Tour Columbia 300
Classic at Desoto, Texas.

DINNER FOR TWO

,OIERO'J
SlOIE OMl~

TUESDAY '
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star,
will hold open Installation of 1989
officers at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Shade River Lodge Hall In
Chester.

re.: ·

STOll OILY

$6.17
......

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Monday at thehomeo!Mrs.
Pearl Kennedy.

Minnifield's blocked punt was
Cleveland's first since Fontenot
victimized Indianapolis last Dec.
6. Fontenot's 84-yard return was
the longest by a Cleveland player
since Gerald McNeil's 100-yard
touchdown sprint Oct. 5, 1986 at
Pittsburgh.
McNeil's 16-yard klcko!l
turn In the third quarter. made
him the career Cleveland leader
with 1,000 yards, surpassing .the
990 of Leroy Kelley.
A fourth-qquarter reception by
Ozzle Newsome extended his
pass-catching streak to 136
games.

Sports briefs

Chester Garden Club
meets
wire cutters and corsage pins lor

Community calendar

another five yards. Two plays
later, Manoa ran two yards Into
the end zone.
Eslason took the Bengals 73
yards downlleld, but was stopped
by Mike Johnson on a third-down
rush at the Cleveland 1. Breech
tied the score 10-10 with a 19-yard
field goa) as time ran out In the
first hall.

I

Monday. October 31, 1988 .
Page-S

··.

Cleveland defense stops Bengals, 23-16
By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND - Rather than
let football block his holiday
plans, Cleveland Browns corner·
back . Frank Minnifield Instead
knocked his team back Into the
AFC Central Division race.
Minnifield swatted down a
Cincinnati punt and Herman
Fontenot took the recovery o.n e
yard for a touchdown with 5: 57
left In the third quarter, helping
the Browns tighten the AFC
Central Division race with a 23-16
victory over the Bengals.
"We want to win the division.
We don't want a wild card game.
We're used to ,going home lor
Christmas," said Mlnnlfleld, not·
lng the opening round of the 1988
NFL playoffs wlll be held during
the Christmas weekend. "With
effort and will and God-given
talent, we can accomplish things
on special teams."
Matt Bahr added three field
goals and Tim Manoa a two-yard
scoring run as Cleveland ·1m·
proved to 6·3 alter nine games lor
the third straight season and
Improved Its chances of a fourth
consecutive division title.
"(Minnifield) actually had the
opportunity to block one earlier,
but he and Herman bumped Into
each other," said Browns Coach
Marty Schottenhelmer.
"I've been here nine years, and
It's the finest defensive performance we've ever had."
Cincinnati, 7·2, had Its AFC
Central lead narrowed to one
game over Cleveland. The Ben·

The DailY Sentinel

By The Bend

Patriots rout Bears; McMahon injured

PH. (614) 992·7075

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tiOUn.

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SIBLOIM S'li&lt;AJC

· SUDAJBAR~

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Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

_---Local news briefs ---....
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Bush, Dukakis both support

Coni inued from page 1
· There were 109 entries entered In this year's competition for
awards.

.

UNITED NATIONS (UPI) -

Four...

Commissioners to meet

~'

EMS has 14 weekend calls

..••••

..•
•

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 14 calls
over the weekend: eight on Saturday and six on Sunday.
Saturday at 8:19a.m., Racine to Mile Hill Road forCarlShultz
who was dead on arrival; Rutland at 10:58a.m. transported Jay
Mathews, Joy Skidmore and Melvin Stewart from an au)o
accident on Route 32 to Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Middleport at 11:13 a.m. to Lincoln St. for Edna Leach to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 12:11 p.m.
transported Rusty Capehart from an auto accident on Route 7to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Middleport at 4: 49p.m. to Beech
St. for Downey Kennedy to Veterans Memorial Hospl\81;
Racine at 7:51 p.m. to Route 124 for Jack Ritchie to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10:14 p.m. transported Kay
Smith and Johnny Ratcliff from an auto accident on Hobson
Drive to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:23 p.m.
was called to assist at the accident on Hobson Drive and
transP&lt;&gt;rted Charles Knapp from the scene to Veterans
Memorial Hospltal.
Sunday atl: 47 a.m.. Pomeroy to Amerlcare-Pomeroy
Nursing Center lor Charles Blake to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:38a.m. to the Maples Apartnients for
Nellle Connolly to Veterans Memortal Hospital; Pomeroy at
8:10a.m. to Pomeroy Cliffs Apartments for Opal Cummins to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:52 a.m. to
Fairgrounds Road tor Fred Goegleln to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Pomeroy at 11:33 a.m. to Park Road for Ola Smith to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plains at 5:40p.m. to an
auto accident on Route 7; no Injuries reported.
·

I

...,

C. FRED GOEGLEIN

' C. Fred Goeglein
,.. C. Fred Goegleln, 89, widely
• known Meigs County resident,
died unexpectedly Sunday morn·
tng at his Rock Springs
residence.
, . Mr. Goegleln died In the same
· ~ome In which he was born, a son
of the late Jacob ·F. and Amanda '
·Goegle!n.
He was a charter member of
the Rock Springs Grange serving
as ltslnaster lor 21 years. He wa&amp;
also master of the Meigs County
Pomona Grangefor10years. Mr.
~ Goegleln was a member of Drew
• Webster Post 39, American Le·
,glon, and of the Pomeroy Ma·
sonic Order.
.
In 1918, Mr. Goegleln was
,. honorably discharged from the
• United States Army . He was an
elected member of the Meigs
County Fair Board for 22.years
having retired from the bOard the
past year . During the past
summer. Mr. Goegleln and his
wife, Frances, were awarded the
Outstanding Senior Cl1lzens
Award lor Meigs County . Mr.
Goegleln was a ret Ired rural rna II
carrier with 39 years of service.
In addition, he carried on a farm
, operation for many years.
· Besides his parents, he was
pr~ceded In death by a sister,
Louise: his first wife, Evelyn,
ariel an Infant son.
Surviving are his wife, Fran·
ces; a son, Frederick, Col um·
bus; six grandchildren, Kathy,
:. Daniel, Paul, Dawn, Shawn and
· Amy, and six great·
grandchildren.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Melvin
Franklin officiating. Burial will
be In Rock Springs Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home !rom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
"
·Tuesday.
Contributions In his memory
may be made to the building fund
of the Rock Springs U. nlled
Methodist Church.

.Martha Howard
Martha Margaret Howard, 80,
Hanford, died Sunday, Oct. 30,
1988, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Dec. 11 , 1907 in Hartford,
she was a daughter of the late
David H. and Blanche Rebecca
Schools Riffle. She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Mack D. Howald in 1983, and
three brothers.
She was a member of the
Hanford United Methodist Church
and the Hartford Nutrillon

Program.
a_!lurviving are a son and
,JIO&amp;hter-in-law, Donald David and
Vera M. Howard, Rockford, IU.;
one sister, Helen L. Rifne, ·
Hanford; two grandchildren: three
great-grandchildren.
S«vice will be Wednesday at

Saturday at 9:15 p.m In Gallla
County's Addison Township, on
Johnson Ridge Road, approxl·
mately two miles north of
Georges Creek Road.
Wayne E. Flint, 20. Rt . 1,
Ga!llpolls, was charged with
DWI and cited lor driving with·
out a license after a colllslon
between his 1988 Chevrolet S·lO
piCkup truck and a 1982 Oldsmo·
bile Cutlass driven bY Randall W.
Clonch, 32, of Gallipolis.
Clonch was driving south, and
Fll11t was driving north when
they sideswiped their vehicles on
a hlllcrest.

Uni~ed

klsdo not seem to agree on much. dismissed out of hand." Bush
but both presidential ca ndidates said . "As a minimum. the UnltPd
have stated their support for the States should t ~s t thP SoviPis to
United Nations Jn statements determine how Sl'rlous they
released by_ a non-partisan are .' '
group.
ln his statement, Dukakls
ln a statement prepared at the
charged
the Reagan admlnlstra·
request of the U.N. Association of
tried
to undermine the
lion
the United States of America and
orga nization by
international
released Sunday, Vice President
withholding
U.S.
dues.
Bush said the world situation has
not
refer
to the huge
Bush
did
made the Un !ted Nations a
U.S.
debt
to
the
U.N.
regular
"more positive arena lor con·
$451
budget.
which
stood
at
struct(ve U.S. action ... and
leadership In dealing with crltt .. . m llllon at th e beginning of
October and was reduced to $337
cal global problems."
million last week when Washing·
"The dramatic turnabout In
ton sent two c hecks to U.N.
the Soviet approach to the United
Nat Ions, Including the pa yment Secretary-General Javier Perez
·
of Its back dues, should not be de Cuellar .

Stocks

Classi II

~-o~

Get Results ·Fast
SER~ICE

LINDA'S
PAINTING

core rad1aton ond
heater cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
our radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.
PAT HILL FOlD

INtERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.
Very Reasonable.
Have References.

from the left are Jnhn l'IIUs, band boosters
president; Black, Bill Quick, asslstanl manager
at Big Wheel, and Toney Dingus, Meigs High
School band director.

1 Card of Thanks
I would like to thank
all thoee who helped in
any wey during the
death of our Grandoon,
Rodney Paul Harrleqn.
We appreciate
oo
much all tho food.
carda, phone call• and
prayore you've oharod
with our fomlly during
our looo. Thonkuloo for
the loving oupport of
our Poator, Rev. Wit·
llam Wllllamo.
Pout and Mildred
Hudann

IIH9-'•I·l

the
eat,bllshmenl and
maintenance of linn of fire
alll(m telegraph. or the payment of permanent. parttime. or volunteef firemen or
fire fighting companl~ to
operate the same. Including
the payment of the firemen
employer's contribution re·
quired under eection 742 .34
of the revised code, or to
purchase ambulance equip·
ment, or 10 provide ambulance or emergency medical
services operated by a fire
depar1ment or fire fighting
company.
Said ••• being: a renewal
of an exlning 1 .0 mill'-tvy to
run for five (!I years at a rate
not exceeding 1 .0 mills for
each one dollar of valuatkm.
which amounts to ten cent•
1•0.101. for each one hun·
dred dollars of valuation, for

five 16) yeoro.
Tho Polio for oeid Election
will bo open at 6:30 o'clock
A .M . and remain open until

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

Meigo County', Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Dated September 1. 1988

for five t!) yearaat a rete not

..c..dtng 1.5 mltto tor eoch

Jane M . Frymyer. Director

one dollar of valuation,
which amount• to tiftun
cents t•0.15) for each one
hundred do !lara of valuation,

t10t1o, 17, 24, 31, 4tc
Public Notice

for live 15) Yton.

The Poll1lor Hid Election
will be open at 8 ~ 30 o 'clock
A.M . and remain open until

8oord of Eloctlono of

Notice ot Election on Tax
Lavy in Excest of the Ten
Mill Llmttadon

,

Buckeye Card

Middleport, Ohio '
992-6611 I

NOTICE io hereby given
thlt in puriuance ot a Re-

District

tor the purpose of
current eKpenses.
Said tax being: an additional tax of 12.4 mille to run
for a continuing period of
time at a rate. not e•ceeding
12.4 mills for each one dollar of valuation, which
amouni\ to one dollar and
twenty-four cains for each
one hundred dollars of
valuation,
for continuing
period of time.
The Polls tor said Election
will be open at 6 :30 o'clock
A .M . and remain open until

7 :30 o'clock P.M.
'By Order of the
Board of Electtons of

Meiga County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark. Chairman

GENERAL ELECTION to be

held In the Towllthip of Sal ·
isbury ot Mnig1 County,
Ohio, at the regular placae of
voting therein.
Tuesday,
the 8th dey of November.
1988. the que1Uon of levy.
ing a tax, In e~Citll of the ten
mill fimitation, for the benefit of Salisbury Townahip for
the purpose ·of maintaining
and operating cemeteriea .
Said tax being: an addi·
tionalta• of 1 .0 mill to run
for five (6) years .. at a rate
not eJIIIceeding 1.0 mills tor
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to ten cents
1•0.101 for each one hundred dollar• of vtluBtlon. for
five 161 veart.

o"

Tho Polio for uld Etoctlon
wll.t bo open ot 6:30 o'ctoc:k
A.M . and r&amp;fOaln open until
7:30 o'clock P,M.

oolutlon of the Board of EduMelgl County, Ohio cation of the Eeatern Local
Evolyn Clark. Chairmen School Oiotrlct. Roedovllle,
Doled s.,.tombtor 1' 1988
Ohio, Plllld on tho 27th
o;der of thft
Jone M. Frvmyor, Director
deyotJuno,1988.thorowWI
Bo~rd ot Election• of
beoubmltttdtoovotootthe
(10)10. 17. 24. 31. 4tc
Molgo County. Ohio
pooplt of ooid Eootorn Locol
Evelyn Clark, Ch•irman
Public Notice
School Dlotrict It o GEN· Doted September I, 1988
ERAL ELECTION to be hold Jane M. Frymyer, Director
In the Eastern Loc•l Olatrlct (10) 10, 17, 24, 31. 4tc
Notice of Election on T..
of Moigo County, OhiO&gt;, ot
Thlngowo buuln' In t~o
Levy In Exca11 of the Ten
the rB9ular plecea of voting
~lit Limitation
NOTICE lo horoby given therein. on Tuesday, the
eighth doy of November,
thet in pursu.nce of a Re...
oolutlon of Villlgo Council 1988, tho queotion of tovyof the VIII~t~o of Pomeroy. lng a lax, In ell' CHI of thet•n
Ohio, Plllood on tho 11th mitt llmltotlon. lor tho bonedoy of July, 1988. thorow.Mt fit of Eutorn Loco! School

av·

WWTADS

Roger Hysell
Garage·

NEW -REPAIR
G~tters

Rt. 124, Pamoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

30.00 &amp; Up

1

Salem S1reet
Ru1lend, Ohio

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

that in pursuan~e of ..a Re solution of Board of Township Trustees of tha Township of Rutland, Maio•

County, Ohio. pu•d on the
7th day of July. 1988. thoro
will be submitted to a vote of

the people Of seid Rutland
Townlhip at a General Elec-·
tlon to be hetd In the Township of Rutland of Melga
County. Ohio, at the regular
place• of voting therein, on
Tu&lt;!ldav. the 8th dao; of Novomb«, 1988, th'queotion of
levying a ta• . in excett of the
ten mill limitation. for the

water supply and materiels
therefor, or the establish-.
ment ond maintenance of
line• ot fire alarm telegraph,
or the paymen't of permanent, part· time, or volunteer
firemen or fire fighting com·
panles to operate the same,
including the payment of the
fireman employer ' a con·
tribution required under sectiQ.n 742 .34 of the revised
code, or to purchs.e ambu·
lance equipment. or to provide ambulance or emer·
gencv medical ler'Jices op·
erated by a fire department
or tire fighting company .
Said rex being: 1 renewal
of an existing .3 mill levy to
run for five {61 vearsat a rate
not exceeding .3 mills for
eech Ono dollar of valuation.
which amounts to three
cents (&amp;0.03) for each one
hundred dollars of valuation •
for five (6) yearl'.
The f:-olls tor said Election
will be open at 6 :30 o'clock
A.M. and remain- open until

7:30 O'QIOQk P.M.

By Order of the
B'Oerd of Elections ot
Meigs Countv, Ohio
Evelyn Clerk, Chairman

Dated Soptomber 1. '1988

Jane M , Frymyer, Director

(10)10. 17. 24. 31 , 4tc

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money
\-,...__
.,
.., ~
·.

&lt;6.~\"....

~~
'

'

NEW LISTiNG - PORT·
LANO .,... Have you been
thinking about buying a
trailer, but don't want the
hassel of setting it up, buying the land and all the other
headaches that go with it?
Well here is the answer! 20
acres of land with a 1981
14•70 trailer. Everything is
done for you. Move in, prop
your feet up and turn the
kids loose.• Selling Price
$22,900.00.
NEW LISTiNG - POMEROY
- Frame house with upper
and lower one bedroom
apartments. Good rental in·
vestment' $300.00/mo. potential income. REDUCED
$12,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Salem
Twp. - Appro•. 50 acres of
vacant ~nd, immediate pos·
session. Old dug well. minerals, no coal. Selling Price
$18,000.00.
JUSt RIGHT FOR THE BIG
FAMILY- 4 bedroom home
sitting on appro•. 6.47 acres
of ground. Nice bi~ dining
room, carport, lamliy room
anti much morel ONLY
$29,000.00.

POMEROY - Appro•. 27
acres of vacant ground close
to Pomeroy. Beautiul site lor
that special home!
$16,500.00.
ST. RT 338 - River front
property with a 2 bedroom
cabin. Full basement, sun
poteh, metal wilding appro•.
42'x30'. ASKING $27,900.00.

Dottle Turner ..... 992-5692
Tracy Riffle........ 949-2807
Jo Hill .............. 985-4466
Office ...............: 992-2259
NEW LISTINGS NEEDED We hiVe buwen for lleip
Coutlly PIOptrty. Ust with
·us for b•t reoutts.

....

RfB.:

LOCUSTl
, CHERRY

$3 s

•

NO SUNDAY CAllS
l·I Hfn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
Dtaltlr for

Located Holfway
betwoon Rt. 7 &amp; Soahon.
NEW .&amp; USED MOWERS
Servict Center for ~yon
Produ&lt;ls

YOUNG'S

AND

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons ond romodollno

SUPPUES

-- Roofing nn(t UUIH)r wotk

M,zzl•loGding Supplltl
Modern Gun Supr,lles
Gum - Ammo • S ug1 22 Amma
12 4 Eoot of Rutland
Acrou Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614·742·2355

8.7 Financing on Yardmen
Service on All Makea

We Honor MC/Diu/Visa
9·1·88-ttn

BEAUTIFUL

"20/tfn I

/" ~

Me.

- Concr11tt work
- Piumhiny
work

ttmi

elu(:triCAI

(FREE EST IMATES )

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992; 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7 13 'BR· lin

p&amp;

, '.~ ~ ' •HAIR
I

~

I

•

I '.II:
-&lt;iue~
;·CLOTHES
l.
.~

... ..,:

,

'

&lt;"''

'.

'.' '

. •TANS

AIID

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
992-6720

992·7204

10·21-'88·1 mo.

324 Ealt Main •.
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Behind City Hell)
10-21·1 mo.

Halp Wanted

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
SECRETARY

em
•Of

'191-1~11

lnformullon
10 • 4 I rno

EUM HOME

BOGGS

lao,. &amp; loard For

SALES &amp; SERVICE

proficient in
medical
terminology,
shorthand and
typing. Excellent
working .
conditions nad
fringe benefits.

Send Resume to:
PeJSonnel Department
PO Bo~ 344
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Frrdnys &amp; loturdoys
Only
ARlS &amp; CRAFTS
und Other Item\
fOR SAlE
hill£ liMON
I I 4 w.. r Mwn

OPEN
MONDAY·FRIDAY
10 A.M.·4 P.M.

Ill Wut Soc, Pa1111ray

11

SPACES FOR RENT

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain

TOP OF THE STAIRS

Senior CltliHS

U. S. RT. SO EAST

Good Rates

: GUYSVILlE, OHIO

T.L.C. ·
26 Yro. Exp.

614-1162 ·3821

Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Buah Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

992-"1171
Joo or Pauley lowland
209 South 4th Sf.
Middleport, Oh.

"LOW IIICOMI HOME"

l·J.'I6-tfc

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work

•Will Do Hauling With I
Dump Truck
1

HELP WANTED

•Wrecker Service

LOCAL CONTIACYOR

•Junk Yard Buaine..

IELL
CONSTRUCTION

WANT TO IUY WlECKID Ol
JUNK UIS Ol TlUCkS
-flEE

IACIJII, OHIO

ESTIMATES~

,

for 111y olth•••••iCKtall 1

Working .. lkhmond,
Ya. Nttds Wllld • Un·
skllltd Help. Pay Negotl·
able. Start lmmldlatety.

61.·742-2617 '
lotw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
orLtauMeu~

Moat Foreign and

Domettlc Vohiclet
A/ C Sorvlce
All Mojor &amp; Minor
Aopoln
NIASE Cortlflad Mech101lc

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Liconood Shop
5-25 tin

~-~-

Call •••·27•1

jrJ!'fl!!f/!ltlilfj /tJf'(/t/j /111/(ij ..

9106 Tarlusst Drive
lkhmond Va. 23233

CARPENTER, OHIO !Off St. Rt. 143)

698·6121

I

-

fNt wtth Mu lrnum

Pilla "

11

HUff*'

Service~ ,

ttOUCh...

tnd HEAP

We CM gtv• 'fOU

et4-H2·3891 .

No hunting 11~ on property
uf Th.. m• larton Campbln.
S.R. 124. Rutlend . . ..

JEWELRY

"SELL our·

80-71" oft. Ju11 In time for
Chrlrtmla. Come •• • 11&lt;*"11
bur.., lnPom•oy onNov..-nb.1 n through November •ttL

a,J9 fo. 2nd Ave.
; Middleport, Ohio
,.,.

1·28-'88·1fn

2 y,., old 11ble• whftaCobieto
give away to good home In

Slll•person 10 cllll on Mlnlnglnckls1rial NOOunt• In lou-

fiN.,_LJtt•

country. Coll814-«e.3219.

Blbv klttene 10 good home. Call

114-379-2.35.

2 uotumlohod ot 127 Mulborry

Avt., PO"*'OIV· • roonw lind
blth. Adultt onlv. no Ptt•·

114-992-

22'71 .... 8 p.m.

Fluffy 7w... old gold klnen1to
good hom•- Ctlt 141-143·
I ....

Tlgor kitten e wtoo. old. to
glvuwoy to good home. Ut•
trllntd. 300 Ch•rv lftd corn«
of Condor St. e)4-H2·3771.
2 whltottuttv
3013.
. ldttano. 304-He.
.

Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Grace, Donna, Angie
and Gwen Folmer
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992.2725
MIDDLPEPoll, OHIO
"Walk-Ina Welcome"
10-31- 8-1 mo.

7

Yard Sate

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reasonable,. Pricu"

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUDES to
VHS TAPE
tot ustonvor1 lho11oldMowlol
&amp; Sll .. ovor to IWY VHS.
CAll AMY CUTD
., IOI'S ELECTRONICS
446·7na

1112f ll·t!t

· PH. 949•2801
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16,86-tln

Complete Drywall

S.rvlct
FilE ISTIMATIS
lea10nallle

late~

56 STATE

st.

GAWPOUS, OH •
U6-3417

9/15/11/lln

furn .. hll1~ortltkm. A.lh·•
1umn wll Iii oaneld•lld· hnd
to: . Box

Cto 177. c/oOottlpplll
Dotlv T~lalno. 125 Third -.....
Oottlpolll. Ohio •ee31 . "
Holp WMtod

T.. amtrketlng POIIUo,. open.
Aftwnoon • Wining houri.. tall
Mandly and Tu•d-r end W.6-

noodoy. e14-4441-7ol41
HELPWANnO

:

,.;.od
ohvolcol ooncltlon. No .,..
rt81\~ nec••rv· Muet: be .....
.... to&lt; lmmodloto ..,...,.,_
Nood • !ow flOod poopto,

for afl:•ftOOft ll'ld .,ll'll"nghoun.
S300a wHk. Co. paldYI'C .. km
end lnturanae. C.H Moft. and
Tu... tor pertonll ..,..,..,_,

11 14-~l-1114e.

Coin Leundry/Ory
-

Clt~nlll'l

l*'lonl.

AVON· All • -· Cojt Morllyn
w .... 304-882-28.8.
'
IIN'I &amp; LPN'S .PH. fUll tlmo &amp;

p81 tfmt .piiOitloM art being
8Cct1Pt_, for 11'1-•t VIII ...
Hotpftll Nurelng Car• Cent lr.
ContiCt l'ereonn•l 304-1.78-

43&lt;10. AAEOE
AVON oil or-It tlltlrlao; lpooro.
304-171-1.29.
..Licenood laclol Worloor In . -

tong t•m c•• fiCfllty. EJ~~J•
rlenoeprftrlld. Comm.Nurare
ul.ry tnd blnlfltt, E: .O.E. M•ll

r"'""' to Admlnlltnner Care
Haven of Polm Pl . . ant. At. 1
low 328, Point Ple•tnt. W. V1.

2~880.

WM11d someone to join lo~
Ga1pll group, pref• 10meone
with VMatH• tinging •bfUtv IRd
d•lreto promottOolptl Mullo.
S..d r•umt P. 0 . Box 78"L

Moo on. W.Vo. 282eo.

·
Sort ..... tor Flrooldo Inn. opply

in pnon ltttr 3:00 'M.

&amp; Vicinity
BooomMt •I• Mon. Tuoo. 9·1.

MEOICAL TECHNOLOGIST
MEOICAL LAI 1'ECHNIQAN

FO&lt;-~ Jo'o Gilt Shop. Herold
''
Ohio,
.. d Jo Smith, lyrsou••·
Nlc. ohlldrlnt clothing. elmoat
ntw toy1 ch11P, Hotpolnt

mlorowav•.

Jobl. Now hlrlnQ. your ••·

I tUton County MlmoMI Hoepllelli eoctPtlng•pN•Io.,. for
MT or MLT. Plrt-l.llltlme, Cell
304-314-5181- Equel Oppo,._
tunhv Afflrm.wtvs Action Em·

1
Oorogo oolo. lot, 2nd 3rd. • :..P_
"~'.:.."'_M_P_H·----~
Ctot-ollollH. Bovo pon1otiM
8,4\LES·MOMT CM EEA
3·7 oliljl, toyL booko. lowolry. OppOrtunity to -n 121.00o

mllc. 32280 Mln-.vtil• HUI.

"""'Pt"Plti'iisiinf"'"'
&amp;

Vicinity

4-f~mltv yard lilt 1ft ml• out
J.INAd. Turnonlern«tiAd .
Clothll. 'llrntlurt. gl•twWt.
toto of mloc. Oct. 28.21,31.
No\if. 1 thN •th. 9 · 5.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Alck P•••on A~lon..,, If.
cenaed Ohio and W•t VIrgin II.
Ettltt. lfltiQut, flf'm. liquid•

9

Wanted To Buy

Went to buv! Utld furnttUH lnd
ontlquM. Wttt buy ont tro hou ..

hold fllmlohln~ M_,ln - ·
mao;•. e14-241·1112.
Junk Coro with ., without
mo!Cft. Colt Lony ltvoly.et 4311·9303.

Furntture Wid IIPRIIIROII by the
pleae or .mtr• houllhold. F•lr

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

••Jf-

Fadwol. Stoto ond CIYN llorvlco
t13. eeo.oo to 189.4110.oo.
lmmtdl•• optnlng~. Olfl 13111-733-8012 Eot. F 29311 ...

tlon •lw. 304-773-1788.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

WMt Vlrglnll wM. Pretw _,..
r l•n cd. eg gr .. elv •·

837·2413.

Middleport

10·8·tfC

t-orn Ohio .,d nolghborJng

Apply: o ....
CII.,.M, Oalllpoll 1ft• 1 ,M,
Mondoy thru Wodnwdoy.
ATTENTIO~ TAUCK!t!l
8 LOit and Found ·
w.,tld OWftll'/op.r•or T•·
Mm or tt•l• to hael1tone trom
WotorlooCoot Co. toC-nCity
Lon: FM'Ial• G•m.,. ShtJPhlrcl
· Clll otllc. 11'-"
Melon Count;o dump. Any lnfor- Min• PI'~
.....,, .. , 1 AM·4:30
mldon cell collect 1114-992- 28e.&amp;512
PM.
7153.
Jobo ete.040 .
L08T: PPHS cl•• rklg Point. OOvOin..-1
1119.230
yr.
N- Nrklg. Colt
Pl...ent •r11, Rewlrd fur rhtaOf
1·BOe.ta7·8000 Ellt. II·IIOe
011y ~fo&lt;-lon ploooo coli 3il4fur wrr.n W•ll nn.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

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

'

niOhtt. Murt M rllllbl• Ref•·

mothfeted lndtv'lctJtl. Compeny

HvttH AHidtnat.

The Staff Is
Back I II

~ODT.

..... IOQUirod. Coli 114-Jae.
9342.

Kttten1 to aN•

......'Pomerov········· ..

Strictly Enforcorl
10-7-lln

bUng prcdJct1. SASE lo: HOme

Creflt. P.O. loJt

ap.tment. Ntedl good aountrv
horr.s. Call 1114-317-7214.

Giveaway

GUN SHOOT

Factory Cholto

..,..,.,01:

Someone to beb(att .In mv hofne

4

dothll. mite.

12 Gauge Shotgun• Only

HOME ..SSEMBLY INCOME
A"""'blo r..O..oto ot ho-.
Plf'l· tlmt.
u rtn..:e.
..... Ootoh. Colt 113·327·
0898. Eoct. D-11.9.
1100 woolllv -ibla A....,.

Mother c.t·verv good mou••·
R...on for glveewav-movfng to

No hu ntlng Of tretpllllng. 111
permha canceUed. Ed M11tto11 .

Yord 8ol•28 Modloon Aw.·
Nov. 1. 2. 3. g.e. Storoo.

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

1 1 Help Wt~nted
---------

trolnod. Colll14-448-9319.

10:00 om·4&lt;00 pm.

THURS. E.B. 6:45P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.
;-~~~.:.·~~~~~;r.t';f=
OOOR PRIZE
• _
3-•. 9 AM-8 PM. Ctothln&amp;
2 H.O. FREE with coupon andpurchaaeofmin.
llllalmo, coooott•. homo lnt•
H.C. Pack-e.
dopr-ton
• ., Limit 1 coupon per cuatomar per
: rtar.
prl011
under t1 .gt-o. moot
bingo senlon .
·
WE PAY '60.00-PER GAME OVER 110
Omgo 8ot•et8 Ook Or.
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
(Spring Vo110'11. Ootttpolo. 9·5.
Lie. #0011·32
10·24·1 mo.
NoYM~w , 1.2.3.
L.______.:;::;;.:r,~::;.;:,:..,_..;.:::;::;;.;.,:::::;_""'! lnam.nt l.ta Nov. 1st 2nd. •
. 3rd. 2•• 8 . 3rd. Middleport.

992-6282

f lllllillVIIIt:lll

Huntington. W.'lo. 211~•·
sooe. .
.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY! ot
home. A•-.nbfv work. Jt~Wetrv,
tovo. otlwo. Coli 1-e19-BU·
1887. Pt. T e•10H, 2• tw~
Up to 118HOUAPROCESSINO
MAIL WEEK LV CHECK OUA·
ftANTEEO. FREE OETAILI.
WINo: 80, 1057 W. PhMphla. Iuiie 239-00, Ont•lo.
Cell!. 91782.
•

&amp; Vicinity

Basham luildlng
EVERY '

OINI,

S~:rvtLt!S

POMEIOY ·EAGLES CLUB

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEAliNG

Auction. Thl'd a

114-44.. 3119.

.w. wiU hM.II coli tor emergeney
HEAP. r.totgo County Dept. of

BINGO
992-9978

Compl... houMholdl of .. ,n ~
tur41,• .,tlquet. Allo wood •
oo• hNt~n~ . SWtin'• F\l'nltu,.

Ph•mtcv.

.......Gallipolis ..........
224 E. MAl N ST.

c:••·E•awn
Sndth

Avo .. aollf1&gt;. .. Colt t14-44e.
2282

E-Vep
Fruth

10/13/88/2 mo.

Reference•

F1r111 E•ulp111e•t
P1rh a. Servlu

.f

STOVES, INSERTS AND
•FURNACES
Feoturlnf!• Con1olldated, Dutch
Wet I, Brunco, AAhley
LOWEST PRICES
·
WE TRADE

NEW MINI MART

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

"Watlr

PER LOAD
DftiVERED

lftLLSIDE MUZZLE
MODERN GUN

WOOD STOVES

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD

·8·88-.Hn

LOADING

YAIDMArt &amp; ECHO

LOIIWtlght

Strllrth Golen and

O.oett. ,.,.,en.,..

'PALJiltHIAN

und
""'"
Jim
Mink C.......Qidllnc.
liM QeneJohnlon

&amp;

Uood corpot. l04-e7&amp;-2oiOe.

BILL SLACK
,9 92-2269

or Ros. 949-2160

Henry E. Cleland 992-6191 .

Jt.. Trussell ..... 949-2660

OAK,

Now HoltMis Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949·2801

10·25-1 mo. pd.

992-2269

FIREWOOD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

$44995

101
E. Mom , 1"""~ ~~~.&amp;.a.
POMEROY, OH.

1/ 22/ 88/ tln

3 AnnoUnC8mants

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

We Service All Makes

I mo.

Ann uunt.t: ntt:n ts

OlvMay _Klttttnlto good hon'tt.
Colt 114·992·7312 oft• Bp.m.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio
·
8·13 ttn

W. pllyte1h tor'l81emodet de.t

1nd nM'• uMCI
1911

Television Listenin&amp; Devices
· · Dependable Heariclg Aid .Sales &amp; Se.rvic
C!J Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

985-3561

742-2455

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

Wanted To Buy

8tilek~ Pontiac.

Workl, Inc. Pom•ov, Ohio.

Ollt

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.Blem Batteries

Racine, Ohio

DEliVERED TO

9

114-ol4e.3e72
TOP CASH pold lor '83 mQdoo

prompt •nvttrl•. EJK:elakH' Bah

~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist
J: (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
;a 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Mu1t Be Repairable"

Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace '110.00

GET SOMf BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

Colt 814·37t-243B.

•W~shers

Wicks
Ker Blowers

MEIGS
FURNITURE

$14 PER TON

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

8m1ll bfetk hoUII dog fraf"to
good home. P1rt Chlhuthul.

DEAD OR ALIVE

Ker Heaters

10/ 28/

LARGEST END

986-4141

WANTED

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

111!/Ho

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
'10-4-1 mo.

RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
9·19·88 tin

949·2168

.Call 992·2772

Our Delivery Slaff
Know• Where You
Live.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Downspouts ·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estlll'letas

MAIN n11n PIZIA

EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

ROOFING

J&amp;L
INSULATION

CHIPWOOD
POLES

GUN SHOOT

Howard L. Writosel

6ET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAl

Notice of Election on Tax
Levy In Exceas of the Ten
Mitt Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given

-

111-6·11-1 mo.

10.11.'18·1 mo. pd.

Public Notice

'\

992-7611

I-40JJ tfn

MIDDlEPOIT, OHIO

~

DUllY IT., IIUQI.

Welotme

Your Ilomelown Place
Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
H any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll ·
· motch it! .
ALSO ...
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER $300

MARCUM CONTRACTING

SIJ\' C~ ISI69

10-ll·'lf.1IIO.

3rd St.

Dated July 6. 1988
benefit of Rutland Towflahlp
Jane M . Frymyer. Director . for the purpose ot providing
(10110, 17, 24. 31. 4tc
and maintaining fire apparatus, appliances. buildings. or
Public N atice
tlte1 therefor. or sources of
Notice of Election 00 Tax
Levy In Exceu of the Ten
Mllllimh:atlon .
NOTiCE is hereby gi'W'en
that in pursuance of a Re·
•olution of the Board of
Township TrU steel ot t hA
Township of Salisbury.
Meigs County. Ohio, pa1110d
on th• 1st of day of July,
1 988. thoro will be oubmit·
ted to a vote of the people of
said Salisbury Town1hip at a

HOUi~fo~: :¥~~~~~~CTI

KllH lliiCM 992·3723

STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.: Saturtlar 9 A.M.· I P.M.

fire epperatue. appliance•.
building•. or situ therefor.
or sources of water supply
and materials therefor, or

Sold lox bolng: on oddl·
tlonel tax of 1. 6 mill to run

•PORCHES

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
IFOIMEilf YIUAGE PltARMACY I

the ten mill limitation. for
the benefit of Pomeroy VIllage for the purpose of
providing and maintaining

pollution.

•DECKS

6·17·tfc

Public Notice

•EXT!NIIVE fiiMOOILING
•VINYL SIOINQ 6 fiOORNO

FREE ESTIMATES

ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN IEFORI 3 P.M.
ss.oo MINIMUM PURCHASE ON PRESCRIPTIONS PLUS
HEALTH AND IIAUTY AID.S.

Tuoodoy. t11e 8th dav of No·
vember, 1988. the ques1ton
of levying a tax, in exceu of

ohlp Trustooo ot the Township ol Orange. Melga
County. Ohio. pouod on the
8th doy of Auguot. 1988,
thoro wHI bo oubmittod to a
vote of tho poopte ot ooid
Orenge Township a1 • Ge·
norot Election to bo hold in
tho Townohlp of Orange of
Meigo Countv, Ohio. et tho
l'lflulor ptoce of voting thoroln. onTuHdly. me 8th day
of November, 1988. the
quootlo~ ot tovylng o tox. in
o•c .. o of tho ton mllltimho·
tlon for tho banoftt of
Or•nge Townehip for the
purpoH of prevention, con·
trol, ond obotom'!"t of air

IN8TAllED
fPAINTINO
•ROOF1NO
•riLE WORK

RUTLAND, SYRACUSE, MASON, W. VA.

meroy. Ohio. at the regular
places of voting tharein, on

solution of Bo•rd ot Town·

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY .

•CEILING FA,NS
•AEMODELINO
•PLUMIINO
•DRYWAlL

ante

992-6461

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

110.

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

Pl!MBING
HEATING ·
POMEROY, OHIO
161 North Second
Call
992·2228
Middleport, Ohio 4S760
or 992-9922
'88·1
10· 1 2-1111-1 mo.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We-4:errv Flohing Suppll
Pay Your Phone
' ~'ltt=otiJc::tt••D4NleiMM••INNle•"'
and Cable Billa Here
c
-.
IUSIN!IS PHON!
16Ul 992·6550
CHESTER, OHIO
USIDINCI PHON!
16141 992·7754
•HOME BUILDING
'" " 1'"
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE OAV OR EVENINGS

co~~~~~Rs
·

Specializing In Chain
Unk and Wood Fencing

Briggs It Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

HUDNALL
&amp;

•CUSTOM KnCHINI. IATHI

GENERAL~ rr
REPAIR~

MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,

be hold in tho Village of Po·

Mitt Lim notion
NOTICE Io hereby given
that in punuance of e Re-

By Order of the

TO THESE AREAS

992-6669

u seperete ads .

r.t,

LYNCH'S

Alto Ttlaemlllloa
PH. 992·5682
or 11,92-7121

'-'FREE DELIVERY"

be •ubmitted to a vote of the
people of said Pomeroy VII·
lege at 11 _General Election to

Notlce 'of Election on Tax
Levy in Exce11 of the Tsn

7:30 o'ciMk P.M.

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE*

Public Notice

Public Notice

_ __ _ __

by Republican John Quillin of Democrat, by Republican Ken·
Cuyahoga Falls l n the 43rd net.h Miller of Mansfield In the
64th District.
District.
-Arlene Singer, Sylvania De· . -Robert Doyle, Beavercreek
mocrat, also a freshman, by Republican, by Democrat Rl·
Republican Tim Greenwood or c hard Estes of Xenla ln \the 65th
'
District.
Toledo In the 48th District.
Next: U.S. Senate
-Frank Sawyer, Mansfi eld

271 IIOITH SKOIID

lttt:h ,....,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCOON
OWNO, GREG I. IOUSH

614·985-4180

Authoriud Sorvite
&amp; Paris

In northwest Ohio, Democrats
believe they have a chance for an ,
open seat with Wood County
Commissioner Alvin Perkins, a
licensed plumber and former
mayor of Bowling Green who has
won seven out of seven elections
In the county.
But the RepubliCans have
countered with well-known Wood
County Prosecutor Betty Mont·
gomery for the 2nd District seat
being vacated by Senate Pres!·
dent Paul Glllmor of Port Clinton
after 22 years.
In the House the main chat·
lenges are being put to these
Incumbent representatives:
-Wayne Jones, a freshman
Democrat from Cuyahoga Falls,
.·

fnr

...... .

SMALL ENG E
REPAIR

playing the anti-tax message,
while Stevens, 45, has attacked
Snyder for voting for the gasoline
tax Increase and ag~tlnst wheel·
chair access to public buildings
and strong enforcement of the
drunken driving laws by mayors'
courts

Ra!a~art tor conllcutNe run1, broke" updtfVI Yl!'ill be eh~tged

Business Se..Vices

992-2196

Ohio Democrats... _c_on_u_nu_e_d_fr_om_p_ag_e_l_ _ _ __

RATES
O·t5 WO,~OS 1&amp;·2&amp; WQ~DS 2&amp;-35 wo~os
85.00
87.00
1 DAY
84.00
88.00
. 810.00
86.00
3 DAYS
813.00
815 .00
88.00
6 OAYS
$21 .00
813.00
825 .00
10 DAYS
8 61 .oo
860.00
$33.00
1 MONTH

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

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

NAMED CONTEST. WINNER- Jerry Black,
Rutland, was the winner of a 19 Inch color
lelevlslon set awarded by the Meigs Band
Booslersln a lund raising program. The television
sel was donated by Fishers Big Wheel. Pldured

•

• The Ar.ea's Number 1 Marketplace

We tan repair and rt·

I
)

.. .....

..

.....

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

.,.
....
' ...... .
....................

. ...

.•

'
Business Services

Monday, October 31, 1988

Nations

Weather

South Cenlral Ohio
Tonight, increasing cloudiness
, with a chance of showers by late
1:30 p.m. at tlie Foglesong Funert
tonight. Low around 40. South·
Home, Mason, wilh t!'e Rev. R~.
erly winds 5 to 15 mph. Chance of
Young oflicial.ing. Bunal will be m precipitation Is 40 percent. Tues·
Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleasant
day, variable cloudiness with· a
Friends may cal! on Tuesday chance or showers. High 50 to 55.
from 7 to 9 p.m. at the funeral Chance of rain Is 40 percent.
home.
Extended Forecast
WedDesday through Friday
A chance of showers In the
Carl Schuhz
Northeast, otherwise fair on
Wednesday. Fair Thursday and a
Among the survivors of. Carl
chance
of rain Friday. Highs In
Schultz, Sr., 81, who died Sat ur·
the
upper
40s to the 50s Wednes·
day morning at his Mile H!ll
day,
and
mostly Jn the 50s
Road, Raclne, are a son and
Thursday
and
Friday. Lows In
daughter-In-law, Jack and
the
30s
to
lower
40s.
Shirley Harless of Racine. Servl·
ces w!ll be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday
at the E:wlng Funeral Home . Files judgment suit
where fr iends may call from 7 to
·
9 p.m. this evening.
Chemical Bank, Chicago, lll.,
has flied a judgment action In
Willard Wolford
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Ronald E. Collins,
Willard Eugene Wolford Sr., 58;
Pomeroy.
Mason, was pronounced dead on
A foreclosure action has been
arrival Friday, Oct. 28, 1988, at riled by Farmers Bank and
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Savings Company against Do·
He was born Aug. 25, 1930 in nald Scott Reuter, Gallipolis, et ·
Chillicothe, Ohio.
a!.
He was retired from the Wire
The cases ofBank One, Athens,
Drawing
Depanment,
Kaiser against Mark Warner, et al, and
Aluminum and Chemical Corporathe State of Ohio against Martin
tion. He served in the United States and David Schuler, have been
Army during lhe Korean War. He
dismissed.
·was a member of the VFW
Stewart-Johnson Post 9926 of
Co1Tection
Mason . .
Surviving are l!is wife, Georgie
U. S. District Court Judges
R. Wolford, Mason; one son, WilJohn
Holschuh and Joseph Kin·
lard Eugene Wolford Jr., at home;
neary
were mistakenly referred
one daughter, Debra Lynn Perry,
to
as
U.S. magistrates In an
McArthur, Ohio: his father and
article
In Friday's Dally
step-mother, E vereu D. and Faye
Sentinel.
'
Wolford, Chillicothe: one sister,
Carolyn Schnider, Chillicothe; his
step-father, Theodore Chaplinger, To meet Tuesday
Piketon, Ohio; four step-brothers,
Lebanon Township Trustees
Lonnie and Melvin Chaplinger,
bOth of Chillicothe, Gerald will meet Tuesday night, 6 p.m .,
Cravens, Belpre, Ohio, William at ihe township building.
Cravens,
Chillicothe:
three
grandchildren.
Licences issued
He was preceded in death by his
mother, Gai I E. Woodbridge WolA marriage license has been
ford Chaplinger and one brother, Issued In Meigs County Court to
Clarence M. Wolford.
Terry Wayne Matthews, 36,
Service will be Tuesday at 3 p.m. Middleport, and Donna J,.ee
at the Ware Funeral Home, Chil- Slaven, 36, Middleport.
licothe, with the Rev. W. Paul
Waldren officiating. Burial wiU be
Seeks divorces
at the Mt. C.armel Cemetery.
Frient!s may call at the
Divorce actions have been tiled
Foglesong Funeral Home Monday
. eas ,
from 6 to 9 p.m., and one hour In Meigs eounty Cammon PI
prior to services at the Ware Court by Kelly R. O'Brien,
Funeral Home. Military services Rutland, against Barry O'Brien,
In care of Henrietta O'Brien,
will be conducted at the graveside.
Shade: and bY Trud Y A· Swar t z,
Pomeroy, against Jerry D.
Swartz, Middleport. A restrain·
Judy Smith
tng order has been Issued against
the defendant In the O'Brien
Former Meigs County rest·
dent, · Judy Josephine Wigal
action.
Smith, 43, of 16 Falrtord Circle,
Divorces have been granted to
Char tes E . Blake from Karen L.
Taylors, S.C., died Saturday
after a lengthy lllness.
Bl Bke, an d L! nda D • Cr ltes f rom
Mrs. Smith was bOrn In Par·
Timothy Lee Crites. ·
kersburg, W.Va., a daughter of
Albert Wigal , of Marlon, Ohio,
and the late Sylvia Bailey Wigal.
She was reared In Racine and
was a graduate of Southern High Dally stock prices
School. A realtor with the Co· (As of 10:30 a.m;)
thran, Sims and Barker Agency, Bryce ltiiii Mark Smith
she was a llfemember of the of Blunt, I'lllll 6 Loewl
Million Dollar Club. She was also
a member or the American Am Electric Power ............. 27%
Business Women's Association AT&amp;T .................................28~
and the Brushy Creek Baptist Ashland on ........................35%
Church.
Bob Evans .......................... 16~
Survivors Include hef husband, Charming Shoppes ..............15%
H.C. (Charlie) Smith; twodaugh· CJ ty Holding Co ................... 32
ters, Mindy Jo, at home, and Federal Mogul .................... 54Y.
Mrs. Deah Edmonds, also of Goodyear T&amp;R .... .... ...........51%
Taylors. S.C.; a sister, Mrs. He.ck'&amp; ................................. %
Phyllis Kline; ana four brothers, Key Centurion ................... .16'h
George, Harry, Jack and Brian Lands' End .......................... 24
Wigal, all of Marlon, Ohio.
Lim lied Inc ........................ 25'h
Services were held 2 p.m. Multimedia Inc .......... .... .....70'h
today (Monday) at Brushy Creek Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Bapt!~tChurch. Burial was In the
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12 3t~
church cemetery. Arrangements Shoney's Inc ........................ 7'h
were made by Mackey Mortu· Wendy's l1Jtl .. ............. ,........ 6%
ary, Greenvllle, S.C.,
Worthington lnd ................. 21%,

·Area deaths:

George Bush and Michael Duka·

Continued from page 1

treated and released.
Smith, driving a 1968 Pontiac
Flreblrd, was heading west when
she (alled to stop at Uie railroad
crpsslng, hltdng the train, a
Conrail locomotive carrying two
additional englnes,.22loaded coal
cars with 6,000 tons of coal and 92
empty cars. F.E. Cole was the
co11ductor on board the train.
· A Galllpol!s man was Injured In
an accident Sunday at 5: 35 p.m.
In Meigs County's Orange Town·
ship, at the junction of S.R: 7 and
Locust Grove Road.
Charles W. Thomas, 26, of 2216
Eastern Ave~ was treated at the
scene by the Tuppers Plains EMS
after his car overturned at the
junction.
Thomas, driving a 1986 ford
Ranger pickup truck, was travel·
lng south behind a 1978 Buick
LeSabre driven by Barbara J.
Pooler, 40, of 37960 Spencer Rd.,
Pomeroy. ThOmas passed Pooler
and attempted to return to the
southbound lane, but hit the lett
sIde of ·the car. Thomas lost
control and overturned his truck.
Thomas was cited for lm·
proper passing and not wearing a
seat belt.
An Addison area man was
charged In an car-truck accident

The Meigs County Commissioners will meet this Wednesday,
1 p.m., In regular session. Last week's commissioners meeting
was only a very brief session to pay bills and appro.ve paytoll.

:

Monday, October 31, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

prtaoo bttng ROlli Cotlt14-44e.
3188.

flrlt .,..., old tlOmpllfl¥ 'It
•PI"dlna op•ttlons In the
Point Pl. .~nt • • · No •-.

rlonco nocouorv. hcott;;t
trolnlng .,d trlngo bon lit~ WHI
be lntorvllwlng on Wodn•doy
11·2·81 fnlm 10:00om to '7:00

pm • the MuonCountyUbrery,
lth St. and Yl .. d St., Point

,. . . n .

12

Situations
Wanted

Eld•lv gonttom.. nlodiiOOplnJI
cooking. Coli et 4- 44e. oe03.
room. Someontto do laundry •

EJ!IIetlna DAY CAA: E. 7 d.ye, •

wk .. 2ofhno. odw.

flllll porttlmo.

Fenced yard. EICCII. ,.._.. on.

A••onebt•r..• .Call814-'-'1- '

0839.

WMI CWI for lldWJ!( man Of
wo.,., In our home. C.ll

114-992-8518.

15

Schoo Ia
lnatru ctlon

RE-TRAIN IIIOWI
''
IOUTHEAST!AN IUIINEBS
COLLEGE, 129 Joc:koon Plko.
Col1·44e.4317. Ro~ No. 18-11•
101M.
'

w.,tod to e....uood Moblto 18 Wanted to Do
"""'"'· Colll14-441·0t71. 1-----....:.·
"
Coro tor the oldwly In 1holr
Wonted to buy: St.,df!l.ll alno or ho.,.. Doyo ontv. Colt 814-441-'
lag 11-. Colt 114-314-11122-•:.:.%:.:.1_.- - - - - - - :
•ft•lp.m.
~
Mablo homo mavlnt- l-td
lrownle tnd Junior Girt loout with Morg.n Dri'W'~toAw•v.
unltor-. end -Girt laout own•r and op•fltar Jim
m-oblllo. Coli e14-t4t· MoOuh •,.,tenotd .,d lri' '
ou..S. e14--1131.
,
2081. ·-lntll """'·
. . by ""'"' In 1ft¥

Intent

8111.

ho mo. 1111•

up to cnov... 30 ..77,.
'

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel
18

·44

Wanted to Do

Dozer •

Furnllhecl- 3

r••

E)lp•ltnQe Qperttor. CremNM

Conat. CoU 8t4-251-171a.

Tree work wented·topplng,

45

pruning, removats. bushes

Crlmmed. Free lltimlte. Cell
~ 14- UB- 8078

4883.

•

:.

Of

304-878-

Aoom. for rwrt·v.eek or month.
!11.-.lng 01 0120 o me. Oolllo
Hotol-814-4411-9880.

46

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recomm.-..- IJ\11 you
do busin- with people you
know, ondNOTto-dmon.,
t twough the mill! untit vou hwe
lnvolligOiodlhe oflwlng.
Ownyour apparelorthoettore.
choooolrom; Joon· Sportowoor,
Lodlos , Mon'o, chlldnnmlterntty, l•ga tb:81, petit-.
daneew•r-eeroble. bridal. ling erie or acces•ori• ttore. Add
colo• onolyolo. a.ond nom•: Liz
Cloll•••ne, Hoolthl... Cha~~
Le o. St Mlchol&amp; Fcrona, Bugle
aoy, lw~ Camp Bevertv Hlllt,
Organlealy Grown, Luola. over
2000 others, or e13.99 one
price dllfgn•. mutr:l tier pricing
ditoou nt or fam:r, thoe store.
RBI:all prices unbal.,•blefartop
quality thoet normeltt priced
fl;o m t19. to 180. ovllf' 210
brands 2800 lltyltt. e17. 900 to
• 29.900: invtntorv. tl'llnlng.
n xturet. •lrf.-e. grend opening,.
.. c. c.n open 1! d.,.,, Mr.
IJ&gt;ughlin 181 218a8-422B.

.

Real Eslate

31

"''mol

for Sale

2 be«oorn 1 2lll5 moble horne,
lo..,od -olt LMia Choohlr&amp;
Ohio. 304-773-8128.

Moble Home for Sale, 12;Kt50.
Coli 814-448-2001

44

2 BR . moble horne. Totat elec.
Pricld r._onable. C.l 814-

446-0722

2 BA . •ts. S cloaets, ldl:ch•
oppl. tun• hod. W• hor-D....1973- Moon. 2 8R .. l•ge hook-'4). ww c•~ navtv
front porch a. undwpinnlng.
pl!nted. de~
From 117&amp;.
03&amp;00. Coiii14-37B-227a.
S.lor Chlune Welcome. R•
. g.,cy, Inc. Apa. Coll304-8751 41&lt; 70, 3 BR .. 2 botho. 19000. 6104 or 87~5388 or 6715Coli 814-448-8886.
7738.

33

Farms for Sale

New completely __furnl1hed
., wtmMt &amp; mobil• home In
city. Adutt1 onfV. Pwking. C.l

----------

814-&lt;148-0338.

10&amp; prW•• aa• wfth e-v
ICC•t. Oelllpolll Ferry, New
horne aleo 2 lou wllh wella.
070,000. 304-5711-4831.

BEAIInRJL APARTMENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 138 Joakom
Pike from e113 a mo. Walk to
oltop Md movloo. 814-448·
2518. E.O .H.

35

Lota

&amp; A.craage

l•ge b1.tldlng lot ..
permitted. public
Wit•, allo rlv• loti. Ctvde

'

3 btlct'oom Ran ch, 1 'h bllt tw,

rmble

home~

BoWtot,

Jr. 304-578-2338.

BeiUtlful rN• tota oneacrepk.lt.
public wet•. Clyde Bowen, Jr.
304-578-2338.

room. dining room. 1 c•
poo~

/ waoden deck. Spring Valle¥

.,.-------8

.-... Coil 814- 4&lt;18-7903.

215 acr• Broad Run Road. New
H.ven. Owner ftn.,cing well ..
Ill&amp; 304-882-3394.

Modern 3 BR . horne. Vinton.

Ftmity room. olt· in kttch.,
1torag1 · building. large lot.

e39,000. Coll814-3a8-9042.

Rentals

3 BR .. LR, DR. khchen. lull
b.um.,t, 2 c:• unathched
g•ege. Bli.,lle Rd. t48.900.
Coll8t4-448-463&amp;.

,.,ce.

3 BR .. AC, c•pot pool. g•ogo.
2· fireplace~;
Good locetkJn. Cell A-1 Re~ E. . . ,
Broker, 304-871-5104.

Bv ·owritr-608 Ridge Ave ., Rio

Gnnde . Good starter·
Rellremen1·1ncome Property. 2

---------1

Unfurnished houst, 2 BR .
Neighborhood Rd. •2215. Ref•
en~ &amp; depotlt r'IQui"..:l. Cat!

BR ., LA , OA, nav bath. n....v
kkctlen. am porch, tun b••
m ent newv
fee.. new plu .,._

a•

Spodouo moblo homoloto !0&lt;
rent. Femltr Pride Mobile Home
P1rk. Oampolil Ferry. W . Va.
3o.a.e7&amp;-3073.

49

For Lease

Comm•ci~ Bulding for lelia

Pt Plo•.,•·
110
4.

304-875-

u-

luxurioua Tara Townhou11
op.-.monto._Eieg.,t 2 !looro. 2
IIR .. lUll both
powdor
room dow nn:•lrs, CA.. dlt·
tw..
dll~l. prtvete entrance, prlwosta ., . . . . p.tto.

pool, i&gt;I"'II'OUnd. Ulllhl• not
In dudod. S-Ing 01 0288 I*'
mo. Col814-3117-78150.
'
FurnlahechptNe•HMC. 1 BA .
I 2315. Ull~loo oolli Coli 4454411oft.-7PM.

....,m..., far lhe Eldorly.
Galli• Minor Al*tmlntt. 851
a .-.1 Morton Rood. 11a1f"" "''
llle llenlo• Ch- ·112 oldorl
.,dHMclooppodponono•Equol
houolng op-unlly. Appl. .
tio,. m.,. Mpldted upet Spring
Votlor Pl•o, 528
or coli 814-&lt;148-4838.

,_..,Plio

Modern 1 BR, downtown, camkh:ohen. .,,. cwp«. o..,.
01tt. no p•a. Cel 11._._...
0131 evenlnge. eft• II.

pi••

51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION II RJRNITURE 82
OIIYo Sl .. Oollpollo .
NEW· I pc. wood grou~&gt;- t399.
Uvtno room lutt•· 8199-$599.
Bunk bedl with bedding- •249 .
Full aln rnllttr. . &amp; foundation
lllrling· 199. Recllnara

USED- Bodo, d•-""· bo,dl-oom
sutt11. Delkl. wrin~ wether, a
oornpiMe line of used furniture.
NEWboolo- 13&amp;.
-kboolo 118 • up. llllool &amp;
......... Coll814-4411-3158.

-•n

County Appll~nee. lne. Oood
us• ippllsnDIII lf'ld TV •••·
Op• 8AM to IPM. Mon ttwu
Sot. 814-4411-1891, 827 3•d.
Avo. Oolllpollo, OH.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
w..
refrlg•atart,
r~ngH . Sk•gge Appllencea.
Upp• Rfv• Rd. bellde Stone
c - Motol. 814-448-7398.

h... '""'·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sof• and chal,.. p'iced from
1311 to till. Tobl• 1150 and
up 10 1128. Hldo-O·bodo $380
lo •511. Roollnn 0225 to
U7S. Lompo 02a lo • 125.

Din Itt• t101•nd up to 14915.
Wood .... w-8 ehalrt •zs&amp; to
1785. Doole 1100 up 10 1376.
Hutch• e400 end up. Bu'*
becM compl•• w·m. .ren•
e295andupto•39&amp;. Bebw' bedl
e110. Mett,...•orboxeprlng~
ful or twtn eee. firm 178. and
•a a. Queen Hll • 2&amp;0 St up.
ICJn~ • 3150. 4 driiWer ch•t ee&amp;.
Gun c•bln•a 8 D!Jn. Baby
- - 138 II 045. Bod
frn•
eaq • King frame
eso. Oood telectlon of be*oom
suit•. metal cabinet•. head·
botrdl e30 .,d up to eelS.

•20.

90 D•Y• tame "

cah wfth

epproved credh. 3 Mfl• out
BUietlle Rd. Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon. ttwu Sat. Ph. 814-4460322.

3 8R . home n• Siver Bridge
Shopping C~•· 1275 per mo.
Bo~ clop. • •ol. Coli 8t4-448-

J . S FURNITURE
14115 E..lar!"' Ave.
4 driiWer chett, 148. 5 drawer
chllt. e&amp;4.96. a pc. wooden
dlnnene ..... e199. 95..

•tt•

Home in cou ntTy wft h land Will
c::onsid• land eonr.ct with
down psvment. Call 814-992·

5848.

.

8 1a9 or 4411-8a8&amp;.

For sale or r.-rt. 3 bem-oom

Log Cabin. e280, 2 BR. Call

houae. in1ullted, g• furniCe.
No pett. Ref,.-~ee .,d •oatt.
8 14-992-5479. LeiWem•~o~ge.

oftor 5 PM, 814-245-9097.
3 bedroom hou•Au11snd . . ..
8325 incku... water, g•baga

House - Farm for ,.le,
t 8.000.00 down anui"!Wbla triJ
P• cent loan to QUIIIfied tuyer,
very low closing colt1. 88 •cr•
wtth 7 year old ced• oontemporarv home. prioed reduced to
•8a.ooo.oo. Phone 30.a.87&amp;695S GallipoUa Ferry, W.Va.

h.C. 1200 -.rllyondrol•on... Coli 814-387-7287.

Nicely furnllhM arnll houu,
one be&lt;i-oom. One or two elderlv
people No pets. Ref. required.
Coli 514-&lt;148-2843.

3 BR .; 2 b.r~. fsmJv room.
N.O .-Bidwoll SchooiDiol. A..oilhome whh c.- port, oblo
maintenance free exterior, 1 9898.Noll. ht. Coli 8t4-3811bat~ fully oqulppod khchon.
c.,tral air, electric heat. fine HoUN. 1Y, blthl. Ill elec. It
c•pet fluplace 'IIIith Buck E-gr-.
Soc. dop. Coli 114stove. ..tilltte dish. Gelllpolil 446-2686 oft.4 PM.
Ferry area. •&amp;2,1500.00. 304875-6033.
4BR . home. 7mH• fromlown.
$460 per mo. plutdepOift. c••
814-446- a348.
32 Mobile Homes
HOUII wtth blth. Ne.• Racine.
for Sale
Nice v•d. g•den IPIC&amp; CaM
814-992-1859.
1985 Conoord mobile home,
12x65, 2 BR ., AC.awninga. Call Houta for rent. 504 Eelt M•ln.
814-248-9222 .
A&gt;rnorov. Ohio. Coli 814-882·
8144.
.
19 71 Eloono. 2 BA .. rHrN wlrin g.
12x86, 4x8tlp-out. f3000. Call For rent or Sal.e. n•tt Nm~
814-387-7111 oft,. 5 PM .
deled 2 be4'oom houll, at••
tocatlon nM retlclentl.! 00~
1968 Flee~wood . 12x54, bonia munlry.
8:00 PM call
gM heat 10d hot wlter. f3000. 304-5711-2389.
Call 614-843-5310 or 814843-5408 •nvtlme. Alk for
. Canny.
42 Mobile .Hcmea
for Rent
•
On large lot. 2 bedroom. In
Middleport. Alao 1979 Chev·
rolflt. Excellent condition. Call
814-992-8616.
In e..,.. ._ 2 8R. Adu~o only . No
pitt. •2215 1 mo. Oep. requi"ed.
2 bed&lt;oom 12x60. etsoo. Coll8t4-248-5B83.
304-675-2722.
For Rant or le1•2 SR., mobtlt
1970 Windsor, 1b:65, wol'ld. home.. 1200 I* month or
burnar, waahw and dryer, all' 13800wll buy. Call lifter IS PM,
con d. mutt be moved, 304- 89&amp;- 814-448-83415.
3602.
1--,.-------2 Br. mobile home. tWnodllld.
1979 BIVVIIIN mobile home, clean. 1200 a mo ... Requlr•
14,;70 wtth 7x21 ~~~~:pando. e1eo· aee. dep. • ref. C.ll
phono 304-875-814t .
814-24!1-9847.

3

be~oom

•ft•

1986 erlllonv t4x70. oil oltcl·
ric. tot 781r.173 ft. e15.000.00.
Hlrtford na. teenil ~rtl.
304-882-2844oftw &amp;oOOPM .

2 bodl-oom unturnlohod; 12ll80,
w/ d hookup. Y.t mi. pelt H .M .C.
on Rt. 35. Adulta onty.' Cllf
304-878-9750 or 514-44114389.

1----------

1989 Zimmer deluxe 12k80,
wood and coli atOYI, partlalfv
furnllhed. mull see to ippr•
dOl- 1-304-578-2819,

2 bedroom unfurrHhed. 12x.80

In C.._ .... Cell304-871-9780
o• 814-4411-4388.
l..lrge lll,dno room wllh •P.do
room. 2 lA ., ntw c•,.a. CA.
eon 814-448-1401.
4-IPM.

1984 Scl1ul!z t 41&lt;86. 2 bodJOOrlll, 11h blthl. ell electric.
n_. air oond unit. tw~ga. refrlst
.,artor. wwt• bed Ill d ccw•ld

"'"'"•lot·

po•ch lnckldo&lt;l 112.1500.00.
S.loua Inquire~ on.,. 304-6753t17oftw7:00PM .

Nice brlghl Mobllo Homo In lho
Couno.y. VIcinity o! Flvo Polnu
ond a..h... Aduho only . • 181
niO'lth. 814-948-2989.

A• electric 141170. 2 bedroom.
1 1h blrthl. partltltv furnished
•trlf. good (:Ond,. 89, 000.00.
Coli 304-875-1985 bolo•• 2:00
PM or llflV1ime Saturd*'fl.

2 ba&lt;toom mobile homt on 1
acra FLJBI furnaca. 814-7422783.

Mobile"""*· ~ mlo out&amp;., d
Hill Rd. 304-878-31134.

CommJI1ftv, 2 MG"oom. tJr-

'niohod. t2xllll. 304-875-3019.

m"

3 bod&lt;- oil oiCirl~ t b 88,
f200.00 month pluo utMIII•.
phon&lt;l 304-875-40aa.

Moblte horne 14• 70,
tUV
, on renud lot on• year.
012,600.00. 304-773-5983,

'

~

BA .. ol utlhlw pold 01 ~lo
G..., de. lllo 1 BA ., tot8l elec. at
Rio O'lndo. Coli 814-2458223.
Furnllhtd ipartrnent for tent In
IDwn. Col 814-UII-1423.
Furnlohod ollldonar. 11150. Uti~
hlw pold. 7 Noll. OoHipollo. CoH
4411-&lt;1418 oft.- 7 PM.
Fu•nlohod ..,.,...,., 1 BR.
0225. Ull~loo polcl920Fourth,
Oolllpoh. Coll448-4411oft.- 7
PM.
'

v.n., Furniture
New and used furniture and
lppllcances . Cell 814-448·
7172. Hour• 9·15.

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Complete household furnlsh l_nga. 1h mle out Jerricho.
304-878-1480.
FOr tow pr!CII onQu•lif-1 Carpet
&amp; Furnlu,. come to Molloh.,
Furnltu,..Upper River Rd ., 614·
448-7444D , F
~..
VI .,,
I utnllu r&amp;
Opan diMly. Mon.·Sat.
9 AM· 6 PM
Sun., 12 noon · 5 PM

A~ment for rent

e22&amp; a
month. Dopcolt _.lrod. 814992·5724. Aft• lpm or 992·
1119.
0111ciou• lvlng. 1 and 2 bedroom IP .-trnent• at VIII lUI
M.\or and Rtv. .lde Apart·
ments In Middleport. From
•112. Call 114-992-77a7.
EOH.
2 bedroom Apt1. for rent.
Cerpetld. NlcetenlnSf. Laundry
f•clltl• tvlilllbla c.ll 814992-3711. EOH.
_ .. IOdocorotod op-lo
"'
•u•-•
evehble. Udlttl• Pllld. e225.
•month
d~--·-u•od
Coli
•
·
~' · - " ·
114-192·17 4 aft• 8:00 cif
992••
"t18 ·
Pom•ov. 2 bedroom ept. P1rttv
..,rnlahad lnNaylon~Run. Seenlty d~otft. Clll aft• &amp;p.m.
814-192·1888.

1 bet*oorn ept. In Mldcleport.
1150· per month J)lu1 utiiiUe~.
CaU 114-992·1154&amp; or 114949;2217.
2 unlurnlohod ot 127 Mulbony
Aw., Porn•0'(·4 roome&amp; Mth.
Adult• on~No
~~~.. Dep, "PM
a rtf.
Coll •t•
v.,.. 2· 2 7•~
uo .... wu
·
Now scceptlng appla.tlont for
. 1 - . . . . ........... Only
olclorly, mobility lmpol•od 01'
h~dlcep

53

1988 8"'"00 2 XL 41&lt;4. Sl.,d•d. Pl. Pl. mlf'IY mor••ne'L

ch*.

.f1

•t.

Montgomery Ward Energy
l•v•r·•lectronic eontrol·alr
condhlonw· ulld one summer.
pold t8110w1Ht•kel360. ltving
roomauhe&amp; d;nnattelllt·t100.
Coii81"3•7-0274.
~ v
Re I r Igentor-136, ping pong
tab4•120, 6diningroomchair•
17" b &amp; w tv with
11an~•26, wa1her &amp;: dryert400, mlcroweve-.,50. All
~od shape. Call 814-4481 10 .

•ao.

SaUd Moplo 3 oe. bedroom

auh•twln bed. m1ttr•s &amp; box

oprlngo-llko now. Coll814-4482411.

Goodu111dmlorT.V.' •farsale.
Coii814-U8-1 148.

tlon. Equal housing opportunity.
Appll.-:lo,. are welllble Mo.,.
dO¥ tlwoul!l&gt; F•lclor. lo.m. 3-p.m. only, It thl offtoe at
Sto.-ooclo ODIL 208-t100
Puwoll St., Mfddloport, Ohio.
e 1 4-992·3011.

Antiques

a7Q-9881 .

78

W•••n Boots. Red Wing work
sho•. HUih Puppy dr•• tho a
Qualtty, 1111-.::t:lon, greet priO..
Wad• work • wan.-n. ~.
Rt. 141, Iouth of WltM'Ioo.

on~~~;;;;~~~;;;~;;;;·~~;;;~

your
lot. Form
112.99&amp;&amp;up.S
.. our
Dokoto
Homo. 8ulh

WHITE'S METAL OETECTORS·
Check for specillt Of'l ALL
Mod.ta. 81g dllcou nt·lllt .,...,
ltooked models. Ron Aftllon.
1210 Second Ave., Oeftlpolit.
Ohio, 814-4411-4338~
Wood 6 co_,
304-87&amp;-6331.

burnw.

C.ll

64

Misc. Merchandile

Flrewood-H1rd wood. lalrge
pleloup lood, 035 dollvorod. COli
814-U&amp;-1437.
Kendelfwood flreplace ina.-t
lliOO, Firm. Call 114-448•
0148.
--------Chlnon Suplll' 1 movil cam we.
projector. Bell end Howtll1llde
cube projector. Both nswcondttlon. Cal 814--448-7928.
Cast Iron wood burner. e100.
Coli 814-448-4180.

S • W Modol 83 22 col .. 0221.
1977 C.dlltec. Fla.
e3&amp;0C).
Indo. 880x18.5. 178. Coli
814-448-7019.

c•.

Mixed hardwood •labl. 112pw

buncle. Cont•lnlng -.pro•. Ho\
ton. Ohio Pellet Co.• Pom.-oy,
Ohio. 814-992-8481.
3 yr. old M.yf8SJ port1bl1
dlahwash.-.. 12 ft . John bo.r
with Mlnn K011 35 motor.
Evonlngo 814-992·8880.
Lov....e:. oouch and chair tor
ool&amp; Priood right 10 ooll. CAll
814-992-2974.

For sale. You cHeconntct and
h&amp;~l.

Good kltcfiM tlnk with
fbltur81, e28i. Ltvltory \ttttth
fb:ture~. 121. aommode. e2&amp;,

bolhlub, t e o . - atol, 025.
Hell fuel oH tnMCe wtth wal
tbermo~tat 1150. Ciill ....

r..... et&lt;~-992-5988.

Ben Pe. .on oompound baw. 38i
to SIS tb. pull. 1 doun mows,

I ah.n, t100.00. Long thr"
cuohlon 1150.00. 304ea2-U08.

55

Building Supplies

Uud R-85 Ditch Witct,
Trencher. 814-184-7842 or

894-6006.

Warm Morning wood burning
ltove. good cond. t2150.00. Call
lltOI' 4;00 PM, 304-875-8870.

Conoroto bloclal· oil ok~d
or
-..· U3'h
· - "Plno o-.,
Ill clollyory,
Bloc:l&lt; Co
Oollloollo. Ohio. Coli 114-44112781

Signa. portable hlghled
8299.00. Free lett. .·dtiiYery.
Plaatlc letters lhalf price)
847.60. Offer explrel Nov. 8,
WV 1-800-842·2434, Ohio 1·
800.!33-3453.

10;00 om 10 4;00 pm. 12 In
cement blocks, hoapltli bed.
u1ed tlr•. looult poet. Olnnlng
1.,., eewlng mochln•• IMn
mowera. gu he• ... ho~ old
Cll'l, vw Mid Hondo·.·-·
-m•ol wo•drobo, picnic lobi&amp;
rol a way bed. dei'N"**Ifl•
rOiotHI•. c• Cll'rlw, traM.;.
frtmes , lertlllztr apreader,
clothee Hne pott•. ICrep alumfnum, hou•lhold . . .., oomo
1
"
c: othet and Jho•. Junk.
23 ru ft cheet type cMtp
Und 42 inch wood bsthroom
"'nh~ 30 ••7 •. 8288 oftor
4 ' 0 0 M. .... uo .,.

fr-•·

Buy &lt;Hrect ft'am mll'lufaetur•
.,
. d '""" too · Spo'o ,..~In
I 11
11,1510.00.. Cell
Aqua .. Tech.

304-823-B2a8.

~;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::J.::::::::::::::;::;::;J

Hoy, 7 Holololn
Holl.,..wll t•IMn In Fob. Coli
114-3811-8483 or :1418-11150.

Wll h., I co•n. I n · =EFAI'
corn. Allo. wfll IU
end
deltver uwclult.
4-773·
533:!. a:Oo 1118:00 AM .

and Bovolodlop Slclng
• Deelk Met•l•
GLJirll'lteed Quality

CETIDE, INC.. A-o-814594-3878
Sloollulldlngo. Muotool 2from
cMoell.rion. brMd ...-. n..,•
erecled. Will lei fDr bii!WIDI
- - Coli D.. 1-800-5274044.

56

Pete

Auto's For. Sale

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh~
d• from o 100. Fotdo, - codoo, Ccrwlla Chwyo. 8urpluo. Buyon Guido. (t)
aOe-887-9000, Ext. S-10119.
1187 lkylerll. AC, orul..,
c.t'"e. Grtllt: gas mleege.

011100. Col 814-4411-9330 ott• 4PM.

tea4Ponlloc 8000, AT, PI, PS,
AC, v-1, cruloo. Ill. AM-FMCooo. ell40o. eon 114-258-

for Sale

nao.Groom Md SUpply Shop-'-!
Grooming. All brHdl. , .All
rtyiM. lems Pet Food Deal•.
Jul!. Wobb I'll. 114-4411-0~31.

•••ana. .,._
gtnn.... •rioua gubrta:.
BN~

cardlo Mutlc. 8t4-.WII-0887.
Jeff WMIII~ lrmruotor, 814--

4411-9077. LlmMod op.. lngo.

1974 c_,oalrii.-. E111ol .
oonli AC .. I·IIJii. - · 07180.
Coli 114-4411-1421 . or &lt;1487441.

[IVI:Silll.~

.&gt;;

61

ao._.,

Farm Equipment

••eo.

For N'*-Atoondltlonad 115 ft.
fald--upbuth hog. c.n 114-21f.
4121 ·
-~-------35 MFinelot, good point. good
Nbbtr, nloe with acnpw blede.
t2985. MF Oyna·bau nee
e111. MF rill• e111.
N.wv Hohnd 218 btl•. e89&amp;.
OWn• wll fln.nae. C.H 1142
••22
mct'NW,

FwrnEquiDment. ZIItorTreaton.
How•d Rotav1tor1. ll•d•,
FMdorRinf.euvlngolclboll,..
11
1;,-loM
Ull.,d.
74

if:" f.'f..":r.'

1977 M-01-or oomblno. 4
rowcornhled.13ftgraln1BI.,
oxc ocnd. koop In dr;. 11110-C
do . . r. winch. good cond .
30 000, 3Q•t37 201a
~

•

'

63

In

I yr. old loy Ooltln• Good
looldng. No bod hobll~ Como
ond rldo him eon 114-882·
moe.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

Ground •hell oorn

ee.oo

P•
100. Premium AIWI• e3.00.
8tr.w t1.10. Round bat•

0215.00. Morgon'o -cl.. d
Form. Rt 38, Piny, W.Vo. 8;00
Ill 121&gt;0 Mon-lot. 304-837·
2018.

1:00, 304-875-3711.

Com ... •lo. 304-175-422t.

"Maybe I should do this one alone ... "

Cl ........... ...

T~NES

\0-31

81

...

EEK &amp; MEEK
M

aMEMENT
WATERPROOANO

Til~ AM~ICAfJ

~

SWEEPER .,do..,lngmochlno
ropolr, ..,., Mid oupplla. Plak
up snd dtlt.tety. OM V.cuum
CI•Mier, one helf mile up
Goorgoo c- Rd. eon 8t44411-0284.

MORTY MEEKLE AND~~------.,---, ,.---,~-------.:----,
HOW MUCH 15
25AND 25~

NOBODY' KNOWS
I-lOW MUCI4 '2.'5
AND2.5 15.

HOW MUCH ARE

25AND~

..on.,.

Pointing: lnt•lor II E
l'l'oo - - ·- eon 814-.WII8344.
\WI do ,.,d bl_,lng. IPnll'
polnllniJ lni•IIN &amp; • docor•ln•
211 yn. · oxporl.,co.
Coli 814-2411-11087.
Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

I ONLY TOLD
FOUR FEMALES-5TR.ICTI.Y
CONFI()tNTIAL. !I

CARTER'S PWMBINO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth lnd Pine
Clollpolo, Ohio
Phono 814-4411-:14181 o• 114448-4477

. WHO'S
THE OL'
BLABBER·

MOUTH?

w .. gina Una.

8719.

*•
814-182·

2• _.. CDrn for ·~ Mor·
gon'o -ciMn Form, 111. 311,
Pliny, Wtla 304-937-2011.

rod

1877 Ford Oren Me. wry
cond. •lmott MW, 35 W
.,olna 1700.00. 304-81222H.

t811 ILiek Lo Sobra ono
ow'*, •c oond. easoo.oo.
304-875-3030 .. 878-4232.

Refrigeration

Ing. New

a.-vice or rtp*t.
Llaen111;1 alectridlr'l, Etdrnlte
lree. Ridenour Eleatricel, 30+
l 7 e-nae.

86

General Hauling

w....

8..-wlce: Pools.
Clnwno, Wollo. OollyiiY Anylim&amp; Coli 114-4411-7404-No
Sundlrr calla.
·
Dll•d

J &amp; J Wet• S.-wie&amp; lwlmrnlftg
- · clol•no,
248-92815.
' 814-

- -Ph

A A R Wit• 8ervi01. Pool1,
cisterns. wells. lmmedlat•
t .000 or 2,000gollonodollvory.
Coli 304-875-8370.
.

w... dollv..,, 1000 gollono.
Ttucks for Sale

19a4 Dodgo D·80 41&lt;4. 1884
Ford v.,. 11S8 Toy010 PU.
1971 OMC PU. I • D Moton.
Hwv. tao, 4 mlo. n. o!-.-..
Coif 114-4411-88H

Re•onlble prlcaa. l~meclce
dollvory, Coli lt4-182·S271.

I'Oirld!'o Wotor Houllng. ~-000
ol dellv"V. 304-175-2311 or
1 4-4411-4088.

l

18 Ford 7000dloool Col m01or.
24 II. box. Slrolglll truck.
oa1100. CoH 814-44t-2107bo!arollpm
1178Joop CJS, tOfl, Olher
- · .. Low mloog• v.., good
•2800. 814-882-2818
or lt4-88:Z.8811.

•hiP•

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Dancer's

87

l,lpholstery

Mowr.,·s Uphollt.tng llfYW!g
trl countyarll23~. The belt:
In llrnllure ufholltlrtng. . C.l

304-171 -4 14 for free

estfm1t11.

•

.

.

I

Bernice Bede Osol

A
'Your
~, 'Birthday
CAPIIICORN. (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Your GEMINI (MIIJ 21..June 20) Your popu."
lalenls lor resolving the dilemmas Ql larlty )a al a high point and lrtandl are
olhers could earn large rewards today. likely to dQ things lor you thal1hey'U not
Now. 1, 1188
Offer . your asslslance willingly when do lor others. Be sure to properly acA number of reslrlcllons thai have ham· needed.
· knowledge their effort•.
pered you will be alleviated In the year AQUARIUS (Jon. 2&amp;-Fob. 11) Function· · CANCER (J,... 21-Julr 22) A matter
ahead . You'll have greater freedom to lng as a middleman Is a role you're par· abou1 which YOII have been anxious
operata, enhancing · your poaalbllllles 11cularly wall-aultad to perform today. toalca Mkelt may be reiOived to your HI•
tor succ888.
Under your capable guidance, all In- · 181actlon loday. Luck wil only do so
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22) you could . volved will gel a lair shake.
much, you'n have to do the r"t
be extremely lucky al lhls time where PISCES (Fob. 10-March 20) Condlllono LIO (.IIIIJ D-Aug. 22) 118 hopeful today
loin! venlures ara concerned. especially continuo to look promising where your regarding the outcome of 1V8!111, reIn arrangemonlslhat Involve a member material lnlor..ta are concerned. In gard- of whal occun In the early
ollhe opposlle gender. Know where to
tact, you may even benoftt from some- , stag... You should begin to shine when
look tor romance and you'll lind It The 1hlng which you did not lnllla1e.
the ftnlth Nne Ia In sight
Aslro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly reAlliES (MIIroh 21-Aprll 11) Think big · VIRGO (Aug. D-lept. 22) Oblectlvu
veals which signs are romanllcally per·
today, because you'll be In your ela- 1 . can be achlallad todiiJ IIHher financially
' lecl tor you. Mall $2to Malchmaker, o/o f mont when large oblactlvea are al l or car:t-:~ H you give them lop prl·
thla newspaper, P.O. Box 91428. Cleve- , st11ke. Slzewlll be lnstrumenlllln awak· ~·, orlty. S
II likely wher- you
land, OH 44101·3428.
enlng your lull potan11al.
i c-trate your ellorta.
'
SAQmAAIUI (New. 23-Dec. 21) This , TAUIIUI (Aprll:zo.Mty20) Stay on top ~ (lepl. DoOoL II) Your leader·
Ia a good day to negollata Important ' of ma11era 1oday lhat can contribute to lhlp qualtlel, u well u olher enviagreeinents lhal have tar-reaching el·
your security. You're on a lucky roll In '- attrlbu!lla, will be very evident to o1hera
Ieete. All of the parties Involved should ·, lhla area, so make hay while the sun ,.. today. When you uy or do eomethlng,
shines.
11 aU will Ill up and take no11C8.
1, ,bo pleaaad wllh the results.

DOWN

1 "Jack

could eat
6 Boastful
no fat..."
walk
2 Spanish
11 Alnerlcan
museum
soprano
3 Perk up
12 Softly
4 Rink
(mus.)
covering
13 Plunder
5 Two Overs
14 Lotus- 6 Trident
15 Ending
7 Aunt (Sp.)
for lemon 8 Rodent
18 Health
9 One (Fr.)
resort
10 Anderson's
18 Cargo
"High - "
weight
17 Favorite
19 Sheet
20 French
fabric
city
move

GDNe....,._Now
8:05 Cll MOVIE: Tille HouH
f'-8-INR) (1 :40)
1:30 Dill lUI 'Fav- Son, Pert
2' NBC Monday Night at the
Movi11C
(J) NFL llllondar Night
Mepzlne
- Ill)
aJ Coming of Age
Dick Is offered a lul~llme
management job •• and a red
company car. 1;1
9:00 (J) Qymnaetlc• Rhylllmlc
Invitational from Springfield,

. MA&lt;n

liJ D (I) Mondar Night

24 "Some

Footblll
(!) campelgn: A Cry tor Help
Look al the American
pollllcal syslem through lha
eyes of one community, the
people of Jamaica, Queens,
an area torn apart by drugs
and violence. 1;1
91 mID) 'Dadah lo Death,
Pan 2' CBS Mlni-Strteo r:;J
QJ Llrry King Uval
i!t MOVIE: Trick or T,.lla
(NRI (1 :3t)
1:30 12!1 New Counuy
10:00 I]) 700 Club

Uke

It -"

25 Moslem

23 Tenninate 35 Darth -

24 Present

of "Star

26 Cape-

Wars"

27 French

38 Belgian

fllm

king
28 JosefSternberg
29 GunOre
31 "To Helen"
poet

gibbon

34 Overhead U

21 Dean
Martin

22 Malay

prayer call
28 Wish for

33 Scoff

port

39 Shinto
temple

40 Sty
41

42

Tatter
She raised
Cain
Forbid

29Late
cookbook
author
30 Redolence
31 Criticize

32AII
washed up
34 Batter's

CZl SN-

(!) 81a18wlcle
D ill) 118...., Miller

concern
(abbr.)
;
37 Celtic deity
38 Cry of
derlslon

ll2l E-lng Nawo
12!1 Crook and CllaH

h-::-+--1-+-

39Wild

43

abandon
Elec. ,..
tenninal

4iThrow

GIII:D Ddd Couple

48 Assumed

lUI Lyndon .Lalloucht Paid

47 Infuriate

pollllcal announcement

48 Bring

12!1 VldeoCoun1ry

198SN- MalmoOL.Mony
•l,.tlnok.ldftg aliiCIIrtc aun roof
Md t.l"etoUrlty .,.unt.IO.OOO
mila •9000 eon 814-8823710 oft• 8:00p.m,

72

CROSSWORD

10:05 ([) MOVII!: Dark Night of the
Scarecrow (t :40)
10:30 IJ) ChHtlladlng Nat'l High
School Championships (R)
'(Zl EaoiEndera A conHnulng
chronicle of the IIvas ol
residenls In London's Easl
End . (0:30)

Electrlca I

8o

(I) MacOyver

e

AON EVANS ENTERPRISES·
Soptlc IMk pumping- 090 . .
lo... Collt-800-&amp;37·9128.
·

84

1!J Mini Mun.,.,.

l1J Pillli&amp;NIWI
g IIOVII: Dracull (AI (1 :49)
I!! Murder, She Wroll r:;J

Roger,aesement

82

3.

MacGyvor Investigates a
friend's Inheritance •• a
haunted house. r:;J ·
CZl Elecllon PIIIMr
(!) Survival lped81 Look at
the world of the frog and Hs
adaplabiii!Y lo cllmallc
change.!;!.
1111 • iD) Newhart r:;J
DII:D MOVIE: Hallow"n (A)
(1 :34)

SAR AS50CCA110#J
IS (Q(Ilf'lAIIJik&gt;G...

Cona-01• llopllc T..llo • 1000
gil.. t800gol . .,dJot Aorotlon
...,....,, Foetor,- - - r"'!olr ·
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISES, Jookoon. Ohio. 1-90~
137-9128.

.,,,..,~rdyiQ

ll2l Cro1111N
® Night coun

Hei-(lpeclal

Home

Wlll:•proaflrig,

(J) NFL T~va
liJ Enllrt.tnment Tonlgh1
.D (I) USA TOiter

of Fllcka (NR) (t:18)
Broken .
conlldences lead IILF to
make plans 10 return to
Melmac. g
,
(J) NFL Monday Night
MIICh·Up Denver Broncos at
lndlanapolla Colts

Akooo T... Trimming .,d Slump .
RemOVIII. FNI _.lmll• Cel
304-875-7121.

S1nv11:r:s

Albert and his friends spend
Halloween at a horror movie
and visit creepy old Lady ·
Bakewall's house. (0:30)
Q!l Crook aod CltaH
7:05 ([) 8 to &amp;
7:30 D (2) Family Feud

lil D

.K3Z

.J4

C.,_.

So~

R..ldni~ or co,...,..dal wir--

1911 Iuick Umllod. B..., ill I
e«- Full¥ oquloood. N..,

r:;J

Dill GS ALF

Ratery or Cllble tool ' driMno.

•

11-11-11

tJ7532
The National Team-oi-Four cham·
•to
plonshlp for tbe Spingold trophy was
won In Salt Lake City last July by the WEST
EAST
team of Jim Mahaffey, Ron Andersen, ; • 10 2
.AJIO~
Paul Soloway, Bob Goldman, Eric • Q 9 6
tK94
Rodwell and Jeff Meckstroth. AI· + A Q10
.J987
though this was Mahaffey's first ma- • K g 54 2
jor North American championShip,
SOUTH
the others on the team are previous
.KQ863
world champions. One unusual aspect
.874
of this year's win Is that Mahaffey's
+a&amp;
father won the same event two years
.A63
earlier. Also Interesting Is that their
Vulnerable: East-West
victory this year was by one of the
Dealer: North
closest margins ever - a mere three
International matchpoints (IMPs).
w.11
Norlb Eul
There migbt have been a different
Pus
Pass
wl011er If Eric Rodwell, West in toPus
~ass
day's deal, bad not come up with the
p.,.
rlgbt defeasive play. Against the
three-spade contract, Rodwell led a
Opening lead: • 2
trump. Oe&lt;:larer won in band and A·J·!O or even just the A·J, since with
played a diamond to the 10, jack and the latter holding, declarer would Ukeklnl. Back came the jack of dubs ly duck with lO·X·X In his own hand.
from East, won by South's ace. Now
The score for defeating the contract
another diamond was taken by Rod· combined with the plus IICOre In the
well with the queen. He knew that it other room netted the team four
waa crucial to now attack the heart IMPs. Since the wiimlng marstn wu
suit, but what card to lead? In fact he only three, It doesn't take aD Albert
led the queen of hearts. That parttcu- Einstein to figure out that Rodwell 1
lar play eaten to biB partner holding · careful shill to the heart queen wu a
play he and biB teammates will lona
remember.

12!1 VldtoCountry

Trim"*'•

1981 Ch""' Chwlll&amp; Aod. 4
opd., AM -FM Cooo... 01-.
lnt...,_E xtertor •cellent oondltton. Oood tlr•. New • ._,lt.
Aoklng •3,200. Coli 8t4-2481,038 ""• 4;30 .....

7048.

By James Jacoby

e Q_ lUI Wheel ol

7:3&amp; Cll SaniOfd and Son
8:00 I]) MOYIE: Thundt!tiNd,

Follv T...
01ump
- - 1 . Coll304-875-1331.

t980HondoAccordLX. hpel.,
AC. Good ocnli Coli 114-3792791.

Livestock

Booch a ....._ Mldcloport, Ohio,
2 be*oom llrnilhed IIPartmtm.
utlttlel ..ld. tWf•anoee. Phone
304-882-2188.

Furnllhtd one bedroom apt,
ecllltl oniV. no pete, c.. eft•

ELfCTloN PAY

:;8:;11-:_::~=:..·---:::--::--- 1980 Mozdo RX7. 114-882-

_no., Hoi I• t-•honlng
110 cloyo wllh •-nd colt.

3718. E.O.H .

Tlif TIMING 1$ PE(&lt;fECT!
--THE T'RIC/&lt;·O~·TRfAilNG
AL.WAYS G{:T5 THeM
SoFTENEP up Fo~

RON"S Tel.vlslon l~r~lce.
Hou• cells on RCA, Quaur.
OE. Spoc:lollng In Zonlh. Coli
304-1711-239a .. 114-&lt;1482454

f800. CoH 114-.W8-U25.

tlll .... oZ-28. 3080Uio. 19ae
N - ,,_,, 4 cyl., fuol
ln)OCiod.lopoocL Both•collont
COnclllorL Colllt4-742·2175.

·.

NORTH
.At7S

BRIDGE

CZl (!) MlcNall/ Leh,.r

Ford Arrow motor home. 11 ft
long. good conli 12.118. 00.
304-8711-1111.

1974 Forli V-B. LTD, 4 dr., AT,
PS. AC, cru .. e. Good G~ncltlon.

JohnDeere2010dl•altractor,
Nl
wllh low1 dl ~ oe.
P
• • - II
drMI.
JolwtD. .e ·2020,
1000tn.-8o .,.,, rnult . .to
eppreclat&amp; •4110. Owner w•
ftn.,oo. Col 114-218-8822.

~---------------,

(J) Sport•Cenl8r (L)
lil • (I) Cu,.m Altair

'
-""·
=

Unoondltlonel llt•l~ ......
t ... Locll r.t•MOM l.tr. . had.
FrM lll:lmll•. Clll aaltiCII
1 - 814-~37-04118. dor or night

1971 Chrvolor LeBoron. t887
Ch""' OOmiOIIIbl&amp; Coil 814448-9219.

I .rr11r Suppl"'~

Gill PM Magezlne

ol-

19n DodgoCh.-gor tor 02150.
Coi1814-.W5-8487.

t988 Bulak
2 •·
Meny utJQ.. v..., nloe.
t5800. a.. ot 841 Fourth A110.

The receptionist had placed me on hpld. When she
re1umed, she asked, "Are you the one I was holding?" "Yes,"
I laughed, "and il was TERRIFIC!"

1!J Fat Albert Halloween Fal

lmprovenlenta

B.

SCRAM-lm ANSWERS
Merger - Flock - Chirp - Kitten - TERRIFIC

Ill You can 118 a Star

8:35 (I) Andy Qrlfllth
7:00 I]) Our HouH A Silent Fallen
Tree

1978 Dodge MoiO&lt; Homo. 22
8, roo! olr, oloc.
gw, 34,000
or
mile~. EJIDII. aond.
•
Film. Coli 114-4481421 or 4411-7441.
II.,

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES

I!! Cartaon e•.,...

Motor• Homes
8o Campers

1178 Mor111rv 8obcot. A..o..
PS, AC, AM.fM otono-Co11.
Rl&lt;no good. Good aond. 1710,
Coli 814-2811-8251.

oou~.

Boldwln 2 kO¥ bo•d ol-onlc
orgon, liken..,, 304-773-8007.

f~ lllE !.A':IT n~, 00...

ll2l Moneyllne

1181 Dodgo 800....... olr,
AM-FM, n.., llrw. Cooh prlco,
e411 •. John"• AYI:o lei ...
below- Hollda¥·1nn, Ken.,ge.

1183 C•d . Fl•ttwaod
B""'lil&gt;om, nlco. tla4 Chov.
Com•o. rod. 1881 Olclo. CulloiO. 2 .d,, t911 Iuick
8omon01. 1983 -curv G""
-oulo.47,000ml. 1115Chov
Chlllon. 1884 8ulak LeSobro.
1984 Pontloc Bonn. 18a4 Po..
doc GP, 30,000 ml, 1988
Pontloc ...... " 2 dr. 18S8
Covoll•. 1978Bulak 8W. 1978
FO&lt;d Movrlck. 19a1 luboru 4
WD.
D Mot.,.Hwy, 180, 4
mlo. n. o! Holz"'- 8t4-4411la88.

$

Comp leTe the chuckle quot'd
by filling in the missing words
you dell"eiop from step No. 3 below.

Qlnlldt Pol111co '88

I]))

AKC •oalot•od Coli&amp; Louie
..,.,._ f 100. Coli Junlo Bootie
1114-843-8355.

Individual IJLIIt•

111W:'S A LOT 10 BE
51-ID FOR IT'

8

I])) WKRP In Cincinnati

Fottun~

19IOVWRobbL - o d - CoR
814-4411-0171 oil• I PM.

Musical
Instruments

f /#U.IJ, If'S 1'188, lfii.I'T
IT? f.¥1 A/&lt;IOD£R~ !'.AA 1

,

I I I I I 1e

17

L-'--·- '--.1.-.1-.1--1

Gill] Th-'• Company

Rot O.chltund. H11 pepn .
17 Coli 814-4411-0924.

57

,ARLO AND JANIS,.......;------.

Camping
Equipment

RON'I APPLIANCE II!RVICE.
hDuH call 1.-vldng OE, Hot
Point. w•t... dry•• end
.._ •. 304-175-2388.

0

,_,. . . . lltilng aloH IO tho~
ping. bonllo ., d odloolo. For
morelnforr'ftltlon cell 304-812·

78

1971 Tovoa eo.ono. 75,o00
miM. Good wOfk c•. 01000
OBO. CoD 814-4411-9348.

AKC roglororod SIIMirl., Huo~
puppl•. 2 male. 3 femll•.
1200.00-- Phono304-5782413 •k for Jonnllw.

.

NawoHour (1 :00)

looglo ·
-· Aloo
v- old
Boogl&amp;
Coli I 814-4411fomolo
2724.

Booglopupo. 304-878-2078.

Granny, who wanted us to be In-'
_ valved wilh many lacels of life, was
fond of saying, " If you don'1 make
r ,--N-A_Y_S_U_E_..., waves, you're n o t - -."

1

N-•

Ill

- - oomplotodo_d.,.
PUmp Ill• end ..-v6c&amp; 304al&amp;-3102

AKC roglll•od Cockor 8p.,lol
for ltud service (Buff), CIH
304-878-8889.
-'-'

6::...;.;N-=.LJ6.-ll ~ ~ ·
-TIO:...:.;Airrs
~

Lee Purcell (R)
liJ • (I) ABC
r:;J
CZl Body Electrtc
(!) NlghiiJ lu-10 llaport
®l 8112l C88 Newo
GIII:D WKRP In Cincinnati

olzo cor. 15 Inch. Coi114-M827aO.

19a7 M•cury LVM OS. l i PS, PI, olr, AM·FM, 4 opel.
Sh•p. Col 304-878-1331.

AKC •ogill•od lwnolo Booglo.
1 S monttw old, not trlin ld,
0110.00. 304-875-8984-

·

~ S18IShot Adam Arkin and

!,1J~I·OS8I . Robulldlng
e lulciiRolly-typew,_for~M

eau ,,..,

8 Chi·Anguo Club c*•· 041501800. Coiii14-:N7-7411.

Now - l n g oppiCOIIIN" for
2 INid&lt;oom . . , . . , _ tun,
a ..p ...., ippliMMI. Mt• Md
tr•h olckupo pn&gt;vldod. Molnl•

uo• ,..,...,ole.,..

AI lnl•
..rlylnlptetMI. 30dlfepr•
'"· w. 11ry -.mioolo,., eon

l.,o. AKCC- - - NHimall¥., kfttft. ·
446-3844 oft• 7 PM.

11M M•ca.~~ Top• Ql. PS.
PB, olr, AM-FM. 815.000 ml•·
02700. CoN 8t4-.W8-0212 or
441-8278.

r_ _ _ I I I _

QtFandango
8:05 Cll Lav•me aod ShlriiiJ
8:30 8 (2) ll2l NBC NlghiiJ Newo

oe••
uo.. • ....... -·

o._nwynd ColltrY Konno!.

CFA P•tlan end SIMM~e ktt-

--r.~7~E:;..I2 N~S.;.E..::.E.....-~, .

QllhowSiz TOitey
QP-oiLHe
Q Fot Albert

P~-

llJV GOVERNMENT Bolzod .,d
8J'JW• Vllhld• from •100.
For•. Chwya. Corven•. etc.,
In v......... Far Info coli (11021
142-1011, •• 2524.

'

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

TON16~T 151-lALLOWEEN .. I-IOW COME YOU'RE
NOT 51TTIN6 OUT IN A PUMPKIN PATCH WAITIN6

Tr .liloiJIIrldlrrrn

71

Nch ~Wenhlg.

SALEGrl!ld'( . .mBoxea.B,Jirn
Hill Road, Hender•on. W. Va.
Monctav Oct. 31 thru Nov 4,

Hayfor .... roundWaM«mtr"
In «v. Coll814-24&amp;-11 17.

low to form four simple words.

(!) Dr. Who Colony In Space,
Part 5
GIII:D HIPPJ Daye

FOR TI-lE 6REAT PUMPKIN, AND MAKING A TOTAL,
COMPLETE AND ABSOLUTE FOOL OF YOURSELF'?

convorton. l..,dord dutch•.
preuur. ·platiL • throw out
-.In g. Warrny-12 moe. Cr/C
JolnU--al typn. C.l 114-37f.
2220or304-l78-1711.

79

• ChMn.. Ruttlc

Toy cheat. cheet of
mlac pieces of h.. d made
furnfture,tor prices orOI"derscall
304-773·&amp;879 efl• 7:00 PM
c ch
d h ~ b~
Nh
ou
""
c -bMkat
· •9•
w
golden
flower
dellgn,
t126.00. 304-896· 34152.

U_rgaroundbll•ofh•for•l•.
120 ooch. Collet4-448-1012.

the
be·

D ()] Ill D Cll ®J 111112l

rm New•

Uted • flbullt
111 types.
BUDGET
TRANSMIISION·
up,

Grain

WESTERN RED CEDAR

Banners : Video andGrtr~dOpen­

ing 147.60. FIM ... g Chll'lg ....
ble letter window alan t98.00.
Sidewalk eurber Whh lttt ...
S149.00. Free shipping. WV1
t -B00-842-2434, Ohio 1-aoo.
533-3453onvtlmo.

8o

700 bol• of

lulldlng Motorloll
I loch. brlak. - • pip•. win.. .,.., Ole. Cla~do WI,.
1... Ric Orondo. 0. Col 8142415-1121 .

d•

nlm. ;ental. Cllrh.-t clothing.
Small armv tcc••oriel. Fri.
Sat, Sun, noon till 8:00 PM.
(Nov, Dec open 7 ctwtl. Sem
Sorn.vm.-,, E•II-Aav.uwobd
junction lndtp.,dance RoM,
old Rt. 21. (N-Ero( lnoulllod
ctmouflege coveralls t27.10.
304-273-6886.

Hey

'-cWI dlnnM •bl.. 3 I_,• md

equlppMI for hunting. 11215.
514-992·8349.

•rmv camouft.,ge.

64

--=------

CZl Colorooundo

Auto P1rta
8o Acceaaorles

w• ....,.30 doro.

Modol. Col 1-t14-8a•731t.

•

8:00 (J) Bonolnza: The Loot
Epleodae Love Cl111d

Complata alit of louverw for
E1mrt or lyhll, 2 •· IIY~t71.
s.. h• side • rwlouWN. Call
814-&lt;148-8332 .........

814-843-2158 .

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

EVENING

Motorcycles

1911 y..,oho vz 80. 08150.
814-992-8349. .

·

ldlrod by CLAY l , POllAN

WOlD
GAM I.

(J) SportoLGok

74

Wheetchllra· I'WIIV or usa:t. 3
wheelad electric trootwa. Call
Aog. . Moblty oollect, 1-814-

Surpk.la

MON., OCT. 31

~~~:~~~ SCC\\~lA-~f..~S®

&amp;!968 l ht!! TV U II"IIQ G!!)UP loc rt WDr lh TI

1987 8ronco. Auto .. O.D .
&amp;.nch . . . . . . . . ~ .. 1. .
th., 7500 . mla Ike """·
114-992-7329.

8uy or Sell. Riverine Antlqu-.
1124 E. Main Str. .. Pom.oy.
Hou,.: M,T.W 10•.m. to 8p.m .•
Sunday 1 to 6p. m. 614-892·
2!28.
-::;:::;::;:;::=~=:;::::;:;::::
=
54 Misc . Merchandiea

Cion •II clopoolllcn. op,
prox. 1100 .._ Good oonflrm•
lion. fl80. Col 8t4-248-8414.

'

•

11000 mil•· 814-843-8181

APARTMENTS. mobllo hohou . .. Pt. PieeNnt~ndGihlpo­
Us. 81+44-t-8221.

Ono -oom opt In Point
llleMant, wry cl ... md good
oond. no Plfl, pbone 304-1711388.

Television
Viewing

814-387-0502 oft or 5:30PM.

need appfy . Fln.,oed

1Ft F•rmn Home Admtnilf...

•

81 4W.O. ·

84 Ford f-2150 he"" dury. 410
4 opel. N - wO&lt;IL f4300. II
l'ord 11 .. .., 41&lt;4. 5 cyl. 1 opd.
... IIII•P· CoM 814-448_1112
_;_
____ p
... _
114-448-0813.

dr....,.,.,

Com p lite h o u ae h9 I d
furnishings. Atl bedding. rustic
bunk bedl with ruatlc ch
variety of aof• &amp; cheirt-ell on
slle. EJCDellent uMd appliances.
Christ,._ , ........
... ,. now In ttock:
ChrlttrMs II'(IWI'fl now being
lllk.,, Ptut fln.-dng available
wtth.,proved CJedft. Rt. 141 In
Centenarv·'l4 mile on Unc:oln
Pike. 114-448-3158.

Van•

Oltll bedroom eufte-lndudll
headboard. fnme. box IP"Ino-&amp;
m.nr.... corn• dMk •
afMII chtlt. Fr.,d'l ereMt with
blue S. yellow flow.,.. Clll

8 ll'lek tope. 11M -FM at•oo .,d
•-rd pl-. Goo.d oonclllon.
Co11304-488-1997.

238 Flm A... 1 IIR., khcll ..
lng• electric"rvtce. New Vinyl
Arrmhld. c•p.tec~. No ehlf..
tiding. •ge lot. 2 block• from Pimtz Sub.·4 BR., full tt..• *•IP11t1. 1171 plu• udllt ...
college. By appointment onty. ment. c•pllt 1aome nM"I, 1'8nge.' Dep. &amp; rtf. C.M 814-448-4928.
1·614-682-7424.
ctty chooll. Adutts onty. No
· .
pels. Dep. &amp; rtf. rtquw.l. •350 821'1.! S.c. Ecel. cond., 2 BR .,
4 Bedroom home. Auume loan. I* mo. Coli 814-448-0278 oqulppod kllchon. olr. A'"'obl•
Coli 814-U&amp;-0148.
e PM weekenda anytime.
Nov. 1st. 1221 plue dep. C.l
'
814-448-0803 or 448-21 as.'

448-.W18oft•7PM.

73

KIT N' CARLYLEII by Larry Wrlaht

·eo.. coblnot modolol•oo ond

ltlrtlngo- 199.

Upotoln unlun11ohod opt. Cor·
polod. utiMI• pold. No chlhhn.
No poto. Coli 'S 14-448- t 837.

h•.

eon

Mercl1and1se

Apartment
for Rent

Ashton,

lf'IVtlma

9'•898. etorage building.

for Rent

1958 N- Moon 12x80, 2 BR :
02300. Coli 814-448-0390.

4 BA ., furl b•emart &amp; &amp;•age.
fully e~•peted (tome new).

Priced to aetl. Call 814-4480278 after 8 PM. weekt11dl

OffJoe or arNII bu•ln•e apace
for rent. Loc•ed It N. Second
Ave. in Mldclsport Bulin••
dl1trltt. Can 614-992-151546 or
114-948-2217.

L.;;::;;:;::;;::;:;=::==i.~=ij~if,;~=;::=:;:;=:::=i
I
42 Mobile Homes
32· Mobile Homes

Household Goods

Space for Rent

COU NTRV MOBILE HomoP•k.
Route 33, North of Pamer~.
Rental trell••· Call 614-992·
7479.

"H ey, Marge, COffie }00k at
,
this one! Its
a scary
Wt'tch .. And She'S got S0ffie
lt'ttle kt'd Wt'th her,"

H cmes for Sale

.. vorvomoctlllobl'lc:l&lt;4boll&lt;oo"'
2 balh. f~mly room with fir ..
pidlnln" 1.-ve 10. lng
~ rn. 30 ft. cuttom oak ldtd\en
cablnat, oak wooctNork. ftnilh
b11emtnt, 2 c• o•,.,e. lwei
landl ... ad lot, 4 mH• ft'om
Holzer Hosptt.t off Rt. 315F\:Irt.tl-ook Subdlvilion. C.ll
.14-&lt;148-4189.

ftwnl~

Furnished Rooms

Furr•hed roor.919 Second
Aw.. G.llipoh. $1311 • mo.
UtHII• llllld. Slnalemale. Sh•e
bM:h. Ceii448-U181fter7PM .

Financial

21

room~

6 Nth.
Cl..,, No poto. lief, &amp; dopooh
required. Utllttlet furr1ished.
Adullo only. Coli 8t4-4481119.

Btckhoe Work-850

Cue dozer. Ae•onHie

51

Apartment
for Rent

The

Pomeroy-Middlepoit, Ohio

'

Monday, October 31, 1988

to bear

11:00 I]) Ramlng1Dn Slltll Bonds
of Steele

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOO'I!S- Here's bow to work It: IMI

Dell 1111 • iD) lUI Newo
CZl (f) lilt Moyara' World ol

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

ldaao Moyers talks with a
wlda variety of people about
America's choice~)
DII:D Lava Con
n

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

ll2l Montrtlne
QChHra

1!J Miami Vlctl r:;J
· GD You Ctln 118 1 S1ar
11:30 D (2) lUI Tonight 8ltow
(J) lpOIIICJ- (L)
&lt;D I!Ufllplln Joumal (0:30)

CRYPTOQUOTES

(f) Sian Oil

. 10.81

«&lt;)UIIAToclay

• ·~"~Lallo
~~~udO.me

HBTVBNNSXUN

C I R

GVSUQ

Night A group of nao-Nuls

takll Hunter and McCall
.

TBXTPB

(R)

;~..... lllula The 2nd
OLdalt Prolesalon

YAWVYA-GWF

• Alnerlaan Mag·•tnt
12:00 I]) Piper Cline Da Dl
(J) NI'L'a 0-11 Momenta
1977 AFC Champion Denver

:1

Broncoe (R)
lil Dill H-.
(ZlllllftGn

1111 M~gn~~~~~, P.1.
~ IIJ) TwlllabtZona

YPXNBV

'I

NX

F X

FA 8

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HX

OWU-

8 V I P N . - Y P 1 V. 8 U Y 8
H I V V X E
Yeetenla)''a Cryptoquote: DECiSION AND DETER-

MINA110N ARE 111E ENGINEER AND FIREMAN
OUR TRAIN TO OPPORTIJNITY AND SUCCESS.
.BURT LAWLOR

OF

�Page-1 0-llle Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND

Your Independently Ow~d
Low-Priced Supermarket

IISI~US::

ODLA

~ \

·. an.-·,
·,
, ., ,; sw't.t·

.

Ohio Lottery

Indianapolis
Colts dump
Broncos, 55-23 ·

Daily Number

671

'

Pick 4
0463

Pear~:"''

.

•

*

Vol. 38, No. 124

By LEE LEONARD
. being vacated by Rep. Delbert
UPI Statehouse Reporter
Latta, who lias held ilfor30years
(Editor's note - Second In a and Is Ohio's senior
series of six Ohio pre-election congressman.
articles. )·
In the other 20 districts, incumbents are running and all are
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) heavily favored to retain their
Mention congressional contests posts in Washington. Democrats
in Ohio this year and all eyes turn have an 11-10 edge In the Buckeye
toward the northwestern.corner delegation.
of the state. That's where the
Murray, 51, is a former
most vigorous race is being member o(the St. Marys school
waged.
board who has a college degree in
Sandusky attorney Thomas economics and was a C&lt;Jmmand·
Murray, Democrat, and Ohio ing officer of a military police
Senate President Paul Glllmor, a unit in the Army.
Port Clinton Republican, are
He has campaigned for
battUng for the 5th District seat stronger environmental laws,

Foodland 112 GAL.
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Charm in
Bath Tissue

TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

BONELESS BEEF

Chuck Roast

a

4

.RQLL

MT. BRAND
BOLOGNA

CAKE MIX

stronger enforcement of those
Jaws and stiffer penalties for
violations. He also favors higher
pay for officers fighting drug
abuse.
Gillmor, 49, is an attorney who
has served for 22 years in the
Ohio Senate, where he has 'been
Republican leader since 1979.
He has beeri in the forefront of
efforts In the· Ohio General
Assembly to reduce taxes and
increase aid to education.
Murray, who operated a small
business selling educational videotapes to attorneys, has attacked Gillmor's record on the
environment, saying the senator

•PLAIN •SELF-RISING

$

99

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ......................~.tR~: ..$519
J

Crisco
Shortening

39

J

N;

'

liMIT ONE WITH 10.00 ADDITIONAL

BAG

10 \as.

ASSORTED

Pork Chops
COUNTRY STYLE

Morton Dinners

Beef Bucket Steak

gg•

MEAT

Kahn's
Bologna

Superior
Frankies

Fresh Lean

Ground Beef

•

12

oz.

PKG.

NABISCO

BI-RITE

Premium
Saltines

Macaroni &amp;
Cheese Dinner
1-LB.

6.5

BOX

oz.

BOXES

LAY'S POTlTO CHIPS ... ~..%.SJ.19

II RITE

Sugar

MT. DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET OR REG.

Pepsi-Cola
.

S

LB.

BA~

69
2 LITER BTLS........ 99C

•

147

oz.

99

LUX'S DELUXE DIAPERS ..........................JRt....... $999

S99!.

MEAT SLICED

24

Surf
Detergent

-

lB.

Republican. "
Murray has Sen. John Glenn,
D-Ohio, making appearances
and commercials for him, while
GU!mor has · President Reagan
describing him as "my kind of
congressman."
The only incumbent viewed as
even remotely challenged Is Rep.
Thomas Luken, a Cincinnati
Democrat who has served for 12
yj&gt;ars .
Luken, 63, is being pressed by
Republican Steve Chabot, 35, a
Cincinnati councilman since
1985, who has portrayed Luken as
a pijppet of the special interest
groups.

FLU SHOTS ADMINISTERED - There were
linea Monday at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center Monday as the first round of lnDuenza
lnununlzalions were administered by stall
members of the Meigs County Department of
Health. At 4 p.m. when operations were shutdown

for the day, 718 shots bact been given, a sizeable
Increase over the approximate 600 given on the
flnt day last year. Today the Immunizations were
being given to the general public at the health
department quarters.

EPA denies 18ndfill permit
for site near burial ground
INDEPENDENCE, Ohio
(UPI) - Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency Director Rl·
chard Shank Monday denreq a
permit for a solid-waste landfill
near an Indian burial ground in a
national recreation area south of
Cleveland.
The EPA six years ago approved a plan by Boyas ExcavatIng Inc. to locate the landfill on a
114-acre site it owns in the
Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area.
Shank, however, reversed' that
approval, citing geological and
engineering problems, including
the contamination of ground

water and nearby river waters
and an inadequate system for
monitoring methane gas.
Shank said the proposed landfill down an abandoned 200-foot·
deep shale quarry would have
been thf largest such waste
faclllty In Ohio.
"Quarries of this nature are
not proper places for building
landfills," Shank said. "Ground
water is always an Issue, particularly. when It is this deep.
'"l'he bottom of this landfill
would have extended well below
the bottom of the Cuyahoga
River, and therefore with the
ground water connection with the

Local News briefs-....,
$19,000 grant awarded
COLUMBUS - State Rep. Jolynn Boster (D-Gallipolis) and
State Sen. Jan Michael Long (D-Circievllle) announced the
award of a $19.934 grant to the Rural Offender program In
Athens, Hocking and Meigs Counties.
The Rural Offender .program is a court-refl!tred day
treatment program for drug ·and alcohol abusers. In its second
year of operation, it has adolescent and adult programs, and
Includes Intensive educational sessions combined with. drug
testing.
.
Each program lasts six weeks, and clients meet twice a week
for three-hour sessions. This year Meigs County has had one
adult program . .
The staff found In its progress report that repeat offenses by
clients in the program were lower than the national average for
such programs.

V~iTWVich, Miller to visit here
George Collins, Met'gs County chairman of the George
Voinovich for Senate Committee, wishes to remind all Meigs
Countians that Candidate Volnovich and Congressman
Clarence Miller will be in Pomeroy on Wednesday morning,
9:45a.m., on the upper'P8rklng Jot.
Both will speak from the parking lot stage and will then hold a
news conference at the Republican Headquarters located on
East Main Street.
All Meigs Countians are urged to attend.
Conunued on page 10
\.

river, contamlnaton of the Cuyahoga would have been quite
feasible, which was certainly a
concern of ours in denying the
permit," he said.
Shank said Boyas Excavating
can appeal his decision to the
state Environmental Board of
·
Review.
Company off!clals were not
available Monday for comment.
Shank said the fact that the
proposed landfill would have ·
been located near indian burial
grounds had no bearing on the
EPA decision, but "this decision
is based in part on my continued
belief that a landflll has no
business being placed in or near a
park or recognized recreation

area.''

ning for the highest office in the
land by waging the lowest level
campaign in modern history."
"They are engaged in a
scorched-earth policy against
the truth - on concerns ranging
from crime to the environment to
national defense ," Dukakis said,
adding that if he and running
mate Lloyd Bentsen win, "AmerIca will be a better country."
For his part, Bush said in a
newspaper interview published
today he has no regrets about the
tone of the campaign he has
waged.
·
"Suddenly, I'm the guy that 's
the attack dog. I mean, I don't
accept that at an. Same old guy I
used to · be," Bush told The
Washington Post.
"I don't consider the way I am
campaigning as personal;" Bush
told the newspaper. And, asked if
voters In general approve of his
approach, Bush said, "My supporters sure do."
Continued on page 10

Farmers under less financial stress
according to reports issued Moriday
.

$1.50 OFF LABEL

90

Pre-election campaign financIng reports show that Murray has
contributed $472,000 .of his own
money to the campaign, while
Gillmor, also a wealthy man, has
donated $55,000 of his own
money.
Glllmor survived a )Jitter Republican primary battle with ,
Latta's son, Robert, winning by
27 votes.
Mark Wellman, his campaign
manager, .said there is little
resentment left, and that the
Latta supporters are working for
Gillmcr, "They 're Republicans
first," he said, "and they want to
make sure the seat stays

meanwhile, showed Bush ahead
By ANNE SAKER
51 percent to 44 percent. CallforUnited Press International
A week before the nation elects . Ilia's 47 electoral votes are
its 41st president, front-runner critical to any hopes Dukakis has
George Bush is ridiculing Mi· of pulling off an upset a week
chael Dukakis for embracing from today. ·
Today, Bush planned to speak
"the L word" whlie the Democrat Is taunting the well-born at the University of Notre Dame
Bush by telling him he cannot before traveling to Wisconsin for
campaign stops.
.
inherit the White House.
A
new
poll
released
Monday
"Fired up" by reports that
day-to-day tracking polls indi- showed Bush leading Dukakis in
cate he may be closing the gap Wisconsin 44.6 percent to 39.5
with the Republican vice presi- percent. The statewide poll of
dent, Dukakis - a newly self· 1,019 likely voters was conducted
christened "liberal" ~ ham- Oct. 24-27 and had a margin of
mered Monday on his populist error of 3 percentage points.
Dukakls was to appear at a
theme with appeals to women
town meeting tn Youngstown,
voters.
But surveys taken over several Ohio, then visit Milwaukee, Dedays lind Bush's lead may be troll and Kansas City .
The Dukalds campaign rehardening,_One national Gallup
poD, taken last week for the leased the text of a 5-mlnute
Times-Mirror media group, gave television commercial to run
Bush an 11-point lead, 52 percent today in which the Massachuto 41 percent, among -likely setts governor continued his
attack on Bush's TV ads, convoters.
An ABC poll in Call!ornia, tending Republicans are "run-

BIRITE LIGHT

Hudson Cream
Flour

failed tq_ support strong antidumping'1eglslat ion.
Murray said Gillmor also
voted against a provision in
waste-hauling legislation which
would have given the public prior
notification of shipments of hazardous chemicals in their areas.
Gillmor has been stressing a
strong national defense, protect·
ing Social Security benefits,
keeping taxes low and strong
constituent service. He also
points out his experience In
representing much of the conservative 5th District during his
years in the Senate.

Presidential battle heats up

89&lt;

Bounty
Paper Towels

$

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Incumbents favOred in cOngressional contests

MEAT SAVINGS

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1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, November 1: 1988

. Copyrighted 1988

White Potatoes

Partly cloudy. Low In mid
30s. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High in lower 50s •

By CHARLES J. ABBOTT
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON - •F armers
started 1988 under less financial
stress than in past years, aided in
part by large federal spending,
two reports said Monday - but
one warned the drought may
prolong hardships for some
farmers.
"!'~early 80 percent of farms
were profitable In 1987, up 10
percentage points from that of
19!!6," the Agriculture Department said in a 171-page report.
"The largest share of profitable
farms in 1987 was found in
poultry, nurSery or greenhouse
and tobacco operations and in the
Corn Belt, Appalachia and the
Delta states."
Farmers' financial condition
Improved because of record- high

.

lncQme, a 45 percent rise In 1987 was 39 percent.
government payments to
In 1987, 15 percent of the
fiumers and ranchers and a farmers had debt-asset ratios
"modest" rise In sales .
higher than 40 percent, comIn addition, land values, which . pared to 22 percent the year
represent 70 percent of farm
before.
assets. went up while farmers
The report said the number of
reduced their debt. Owner equity "vulnerable farms," based on
went up during 1987 to$571 billion
Income and the a bliity to pay
from $537 billion, "reversing a
debts, was halved last year,
six-year decline and helping to dropping to 101,000, compared to
Improve income and cash flow,"
204,000 In the preceding year.
the report said.
"The adjusted data continue to
Debt dropped 8 percent last show that 40 perc~nt of the
year, the fourth straight year,
vulnerable farms were in the
declining to $143 bl)lion.
Corn Belt and (Great) Lake
Nearly 44 percent of aiJ farms
States and that cash grain and
started 1988 debt-free and 41
livestock operatiOns' accounted
percent had debt-asset ratios of
for most of the stressed operaless than 40 percent, indicating a
tions," the department said.
fairly strong position. By comThe General Accounting Ofparison, the fignre for both of
flee, a congressional agency,
those categories at the start of
Continued on page 10

·

The city of Indepel\dence and
neighbors to the area had been
fighting the proposal since it was
put forward In February 1982.
Independence Mayor Gregory
Kurtz said the city has spent
more than $800,000 In legal fees.
Shank said there are 180
solid-waste landfllls In Ohio,
many of which have become
environmental hazards.
He said the landfills are
''major contamination sources
around the state, due primarily
to the degradation of trash and
other wastes and introduc~lon of
household hazardous waste."
He said each of the 10 million
people In Ohio generates. about
one ton of solid waste a year .
"While landfills will be a part
of Ohio's solution to the problem
we are facllli, we will be
encouraging recycling, reusing
and reducing the waste we
create," Shank said. "Landfills
by them~lves are not the answer
and we will not approve them
unless they are absolutely necessary and meet the strictest
standards to.t .d esign and
operation.
"~

HALLOWEEN DISPLAY - Darth Vader,
by a number ol"creacben" visited

accom~led

Pomeroy bullla-• aad offices Monday. The

costume display was In observance of llaltoween
of course.

•

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