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'

Page-E-s-:.Sunday Times-Sa 1titlel

,

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November 6, 1988

Pomerov-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Ohio Lottery
.

Many medical students seriously depressed study reports
CHICAGO (UP!) -One-eighth
to one-fourth of medical students
sutler from serious depression, a
" disturbingly high" rate far
exceeding that In the general
population, researchers said
Thursday .
"The psychiatric Illness of
.m ajor depression is a signutcant
health problem for medical students, Interns and residents,"
said Dr. Mark Zoccollllo of the
Health Sciences Center of Texas
Tech University In Amarillo,
commenting on the study .
"Major depression is not a
trivial disorder. It accounts for
hall oil he students who drop out

of medical school. There Is a
strong association between ma jor depression and suicide," said
Zocco!Uiq, noting · 52 medical
students had killed themselves
between 1974 and 1981.
ZoccoU!Io said In an editorial in
the Journal ol the American
Medical · Association the incidence of depression in medical
students reported in a study
published in the mectical journal
was "disturbingly high."
The study showed at least 12
percent of students in one medical school class "showed considerable depressive symptoms" at
any point when they were studied

during their first three years of
school.
Near the end of the students'
second year. shortly before final
exams and the first part of a
national medical exam, the largest number ol students - 25
percent - had serious signs of
depression. A passing score on
the national board exam is
needed to advance in medical
training at most schools.
Zoccollllo stresses that over
their entire lifetimes just 4.5
percent of·other people now ages
18 to 24 will have a major episode
of depression - showing the

lifetime prevalence for the gen- to do medical studies in• the
eral population is less than half Midwest. They are not revealing
the rate ~!X'rlenced by students the school to protect lheconlldenin just tile first two years of tlallty ot the students.
The researchers rated stumedical school.
dents
as having "major" depresDavid Clark, associate prolession
it
they scored 21 or higher on
st&gt;r of psychiatry at , Rusha
standard
self-report of depresPresbyterlan·St Luke's Medical
symptoms
sue h as sense of
sion
center, and Peter Zeldow, olthe
'
!allure,
crying,
social withdradepartment of psychiatry at
wal,
sleep
or
eating
problems
Northwestern University Medical School in Chicago. cooducled and loss of Interest In sex, for
the study, involving 121 medical • example.
Although high scores on the
students "at a Midwestern meditest
are not proof of depression,
cal college."
Clark said the school had a studies have shown there is a
typical curriculum and might be strong link between the two.
Clark and Zeldow found no
a fjrst choice of students wishing
difference between male and
female medical students' levels
of depression and that depressed
students were not more likely to
abuse drugs or alcohol or have
pearance during a period of relatives with a history of
cltmatlc cooling that began 66 depression.
million years ago, occurred long
The study did not analyze
before the advent oft he great age whether medical schools tend to
of glaciers, which led to the accept a disproportionate
extinction of such giant mam- number of compulsive students
mals as the mastadon and prejllsposed to depression, or ..
mammoth 1.8 mUilon years ago. whether the "pressure cooker''

Scientists develop thoory of ·dinosaur demise

-·····

..
~

LOS ANGELES (UPI) -In the
demise.
continents took their present
Prevailing ideas suggest they shape and the climate was
continuing search for the ancient
became extinct alter a series of primarily arid.
culprit that killed the dinosaurs,
scientists said Wednesday that It extraterrestrial objects hom:
They stlll existed during the
may have been neither meteors barded primordial E·a rth caus- Jurassic geologic period, which
Ing d)lst and debris to blanket the
nor vulcanism but possibly the
ended about 140 million years ago
upper atmosphere.
effects of massive global cooling.
when the climate was sttll
This dusty shroud, thorettResearch geologist Lowell
primarily warm. Their dlsapSlott and James K-ennett of the caily, blocked out sunlight caus-'
University of California, Santa
lng temperatures to plummet. fiiiii~iijijiiji~~
Barbara told the_ Geological Without sunlight, the photosynSociety of America that such a . thettc process that provides
major climatic shif! apparently energy for plants stopped, explaining why many plant species
preceded the dinosaurs' demise.
disappeared
along with animals.
"Climatic cooling had to play
of iridium, a
Elevated
levels
some part," Stott said In a
telephone Interview from the mettal!c element found mostly in
Denver meetln", summarizing space and only at theCretaceousthe scenario that ended the reign Ter)lary boundary on Earth of the largest animals ever to the place where dinosaur hones
have been recovered - suggests
roam Earth.
"If you change the Earth •s the Iridium came from an extraclimate dramatically, orga- terrestrial source.
The other theory suggests the
nisms that were adapted to a
climate will be pulln some stress dinosaurs disappearance ocby the change. So It may be that a C\Irred as a result of massive
climatic change could have· con- volcanic eruptions that threw up
tributed to, but may not have so much smoke that again
been the final cause of the sunlight was shut out· and the
climate cooled.
extinction," Stott ••'"
The coup de grace, he said, Is
But Stott said because his
still under study and while he evidence suggests the climatic
shirt precedes the extinction
would not say what It was,
period 65 ml!Uon years ago this
evidence collected so far In the
Investigation suggests It worked would ·tend to rule out the
hand -in-hand with massive posstbltty of extraterresttal objects waylaying the planet from
cooling.
Stott and · Kennett concluded on high.
global cooling led to the extincAlso, he said, vulcanism may
tions after analyzing icy cores notbave been theculprttbecause
drilled from the Weddell Sea In
the cores from the Weddell sea do
Antarctica that essentially held not contain volcanic particles.
In suspended animation the com•'We're not In a position to say
position ol ancient air that once what brought about the climatic
pervaded Earth.
cooling,'' Stott said of his theory
Their studies of oxygen iso- because that much of his study is
topes in the cores reveal a 2 to 4 slated for another scholarly
degree Fahrenheit drop _In the paper.
temperature of Antarctic surSuffice It to say, he noted,
iridium was found In the Icy cores
face waters.
''There Is published evidence and that the rapid drop in
of cooling In the south Atlantic at Antarctic ocean temperatures
this time, as well as one Indica· appears to be one in a series of
lion from a northern latitude," climatic changes that took place
Kennett said of the period 66 over the last several milliOn
years.
mUUon years ago.
"So · the temperature drop
' 'The iridium might have come
appears to have been wides- from bolides," he said of smali
pread," he said.
extraterrestrial objects that may
or may not have had any bearing
Because this climatic shift
preceded the mass extinction of on the existence of the dinosaurs.
the dinosaurs and n\uch of the
Dinosaurs first appeared on
planet's flora, marine and other
terrestrial life, Stott and
Earth during the Triassic geoKennett say their new evidence
logic period, the advent ofthe.age
does not dovetail with popular .
of rep Iiles 230 mtllton years ago.
This was the period before the
theories of the dtnosau rs

078
Pick 4
5416
Super Lotto
11-15-24-26-35-41

Page 4

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Many elderly dying
from flu, pneumonia
due to lack of shots
ATLANTA (UP!) - Many
The COC blamed the low levels
elderly people die needlessly
of adult immunization on ignor!rom flu and pneumonia because
ance about the vaccines and
they do not get the shots that
•'unfounded concerns about adcould prevent the lifeverse reactions" among doctors
and patients.
threatening . diseases, federal
health officials sajd Thursday.
"Many of the DeKalb County
The national Centers lor Disand Fulton County residents
ease Control said influenza kUJs
interviewed were unaware of the
about 20,000 people over 65 each
availability ol vaccines against
year and pneumonia claims
influenza (10 percent) and pneuanother 40,000 elderly, although
mococcal disease (47 percent),
vaccines are readily available
and many expressed negative
for both illnesses.
attitudes toward the safety and
Walter Williams, a medical
effectiveness of these vaccines,"
epidemiologist lor the CDC's
the study said.
divlson of immunization, said fill
The CDC based Its study · on
shots prevent hospilaltzatt0n and
Interviews with 716 senior cilideath In up to 80 percent ·of all . zens with a median age of 78 . .
cases, white pneumococcal vacOllhe people aware of the flu
cinations are effective 60 percent
vaccination, 55 percent said they
to 85 percent of the time.
had been immunized, with whites
"It's playing a numbers game
(59 . percent) tending to use the
... but you can estimate how
shots more than blacks (37
many of those lives can be saved
percent) In the past year. "No
through vaccines," Williams
dtfterence was found In vaccinasaid. "Assuming all those 20,000 tion status by sex," the COCsatd . .
who died from influenza had been
Fifly·flve percent of the revaccinated. we could prevent spondents aware of the pneumoapproximately half of those
nia vaccination said they had
deaths. We could prevent about been immunized, bu 1 the study
12,000 of the pneumococcal found "no association between
deaths, plus a lot ol hospitalizarace or gender and pneumococtions and significant health-care cal vacctpatlon status." ·
costs."
Williams said too many doc·
tors
fail to identity patients who
Clllna a study of adult tmmunt,Jitlon j~Qctlcea Ia lwlt Atlanta need to be immunized, and he
urged physicians to treat routine
efflce
vllllts as oppurtllnltlel te
'
~-Illypk ..... .
.,.
•
· · 10 administer lmmunlzlltloa tlleta .
"Recommendations for vaccipercent have ever been vaccination from health-care providnated lor pneumonia.
''We're doing a very poor job ers markedly Influenced the
when four out of every five decision to be vaccinated, even
persona at large ri.Sk of a disease among those with negative attiIs not immunized," Williams tudes toward immunization,'' the
CDC said.
sal d.

The snowfall averaged nearly
an inch In the Dayton-toColumbus areas and near Zanesville in eastern Ohio, but northwestern Ohio near the Michigan
border ha(fatltlut 11-2 inches.
Toledo'~ first measurable
snowfall of the season began
around 9 a,.m. Sunday, and by
early afternoon,. was beginning
to accumulate.
Some areas n northwestern
Ohio near the Michigan border
received as much as 11-2 inches
of snow.
Ofltclals at the Toledo Raceway Park said the day's sn.owfall
had made the track sloppy for the
evening's card.
Snowfall was varied in the
Cincinnati area. Some sections of

Local news briefs-....
Patrol cites two drivers
A Pomeroy woman was cited in a car-van accident Sunday at
7:30 p.m. tn Chester Township on C.R. 82, a quarter of a mile
north of C.R. 26, according to the Gallla-Metgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol. ·
Melanie L. Mall kin, 18, of 35340 Texas Rd., was cited for
failure to yield alter her 1988 Pontiac LeMans caused a 1985
Plymouth Voyager van driven by Ronald B. Hill, 32, of 27740
Twp. No . 223, Pomeroy, to go into a ditch.
Hill was driving north when Mankin pulled from a driveway
and Into Hill's path. HUI, trying to avoid hitting Mankin's car,
went offthe left side of the road and hit a mailbox before the van
came to a rest in the ditch.
Another Pomeroy woman was cited in a one-car accident
Saturday at 4:20a.m. in Scipio Township on S.R. 143.
Barbara A. Whittington, 30, was cited for failure to control
after her car hit a guardrail.
Whittington, driving a 1977 Chevrolet Monte Carlo, was
driving north when she lost control on the rain-covered
pavement. She went off the left side .of the road and hit a
guardrail.
·

Pomeroy has six Octobe_r alarms
Six calls were answered by the Pomeroy Fire Department in
October, according to a report from Danny S. Zirkle, chief.
There were calls to five automobile accidents or fires and one
brush fire, all out-of-town. The department's trucks werectrtven
a total of 312 miles.

e ·- CDCSI(12

Squads receive 12 weekend calls

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i

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Twelve calls were answered by local unit&amp; over the weekend,
the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 2:05 saturday, Pomeroy answered a brush .cali fire on
Route 881; Middleport at 3: 42a.m. took Willis AnthOny !rom
Front St.,to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at9: 15 a.m.
took Nora Houdashell from College
Road to Veterans
~"'
Continued on page 10

.

Record Ohio
vote forecast
by officials

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohioans. who have voted on the
wtnntngslde for the tast28years,
are expected to join tn the voting
tnrecordnumbersTuesdaywhen
the nation selects a president.
They also wlll choose a United
.states senator.
An estimated 4.88 mtllton _peoPie - 74.1 percent of registered
Voters - are expected to vole tn
- S IN COLORADO - Democrattc
DUKAKIS CAMPAIGN
the Buckeye Stale' according to
Kilty Ve
presidential hopeful MichaeID ukakls • I ett • an dhls wif•
wa
to the crowd at a rally at the Westmlnister City Hallin Colorado,
Secretary ol State Sherrod
Brown. That would be a record,
northwest of Denver. (UPI)
but inclement weather could
depress the turnout.
Also up for election are 21
congressional seats, two Ohio
·
Supreme Court seats, 99 Ohio
continuation of a Reagan-era than 20 years of public service,
House seats and 16 state Senate
'legacy of peace and prosperity. continued to insist while cam- seats which holcl the key to
In Michigan, where he holds a paigntng Sunday in Colorado and control of that chamber, now
slight lead, Bush evoked cheers California that the race would dominated 18-15 by Republlcans.
from his supporters by announc- • 'come right down to the wire."
Also. on the ballots wtll be 233
At the same time, the candtIng his intent to ''run down to the
school issues, many ol which will
finish line, not in a power walk date of the "kinder, gentler . determine whether school disbut in a sprint." He urged his nation" delighted his audiences
trtcts have to borrow money to
loyalists to "pound the pavement by dismissing Democratic cofnk
h
d
tl
eep sc 001s open, an coun ess
and hit those phone banks to plaints of negative campaigning
local contests and tssu~s.
ensure a largeturnoutTuesday." as "whining" and "crying" and
Pollsters have placed the Re"When you go into that voting painting Dukakts as a dangerous
booth, I ask you to think about threat I? a Reagan era legacy of' - · ~~~:n ~~~~t 0~~~cei:~est~:~
what you are doing," Bush said. peace and prosperity.
Quayle of Indiana in the role of
"Think about the fundamental
"This is not the time to take a
favorites, both nationally and in
question: Is this country headed
Ohio.
Over the Democratic ticket
in the right direction? . The chalice on spinning our economy
0 1 Mas••chu-tts Gov. Michael
answer is·; that, yes, it isand1wlll out of control again," he said.
Dukakts and Sen. Uoy d Bentsen
I
t
"Don't
play
recess
on
rou
et
te
keep it that way."
·
Of .Texas.
you go into t h at vo ting
For his part, Bush, who has when
booth."
"We know George Bush ts
won only two elections in more
going to carry Ohio," said a
"cautiously optimistic" Keith
McNamara, chairman of Bush's
Ohio campaign.
"Dukakts Isn't done yet." said
a
hopeful 1 Democratic State
.
Chairman
James Ruvolo.
the city had quite a bit, while Pacific Northwest, with a few
Ohioans
have voted Republtothers had no accumulations.
snowshowers over western Pencan
for
the
last two presidential
nsylvania and the central Appalelections,
and
the last time they
Snow blanketed the Great achians, NWS spokesman Dan
voted
for
the
loser
was tn 1960,
Lakes region, floods destroyed McCarthy said.
when
Richard
Nixon
was beaten
homes and roads in upstate New
Temperatures around the na·
by
John
Kennedy
.
York, and residents cleaned up lion at 2 a.m. EST ranged from 17
For those who like neither
after off-season tornadoes sur- degrees at Duluth, Minn., to 76 at
Bush
nor Dukakts, and there are
prised North Ca:roUna but the Naval Air Station near Key
said
to
be many, these lndependtemperatures warmed up West, Fla.
ent options will be on the ballot:
quickly and milder weather was
High's today were expected to
Ron Pau 1 of Lake Jackson,
forecast for much of the nation be in the 50s and 60s across most
Texas. and Andre Marrou of
today.
of the nation, but in the 40s In
Homer Alaka, . Libertarian
The Chicago area received its most northern states, in the 70s In
Party; Lyndon LaRouche of
first snowfall of the season Florida and the lower Mississippi
Leesburg,
va., and Debra FreeSunday, causing a dozen fender· Valley and the 80s In parts of
man
of
Catonsvtlle,
Md.; Ed·
benders, but the snow melted Texas and the Southwest.
ward
Wlnn
of
Brooklyn
and
1
quickly as the weather warmed
Sunday's high was 98 at BorBarry
Porster
of
Hamtramck,
up.
rego Springs, Calif.
Mich.; and Lenora FulantofNew
The snow hit western upper
Illinois Stale Pollee reported
York and Mamie Moore of
Michigan throQgh Wisconsin, nearly a dozen accidents on
Somerville,
N.J., New Alliance
central Illinois and central lndi· major roads and expressways in
Party.
_
ana Into western Ohio and and around Chicago Sunday
Write-i
n
candidates
include
southwest lower ' Michigan. morning as the snow sltckened
Larry Holmes and Naomi Cohen
Gusty northwest winds lowered the streets. There were no
of
New York, Workers World
wind chill factors to the single serious injuries. Chicago deParty;
James Warren of Jersey
digits across (he upper Great ployed 10 salt-spreading trucks
City,
N.J.,
andKathleenMickells
Lakes. .
to ease the slippery conditions.
of
Westover
W.Va. ,' Socialist
Up to 2 feet of snow blanketed
"We're trying to cut down on
Workers
Party;
Henry and SanGrand Rapids and Wakefield, Icing problems so that we don't
dra King; and David Wobser and
Mich .. and more than a loot was have any severe accidents," said
Donald Parker.
measured at Ironwood and Ca- Kirsten Svare, a spokesman for
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, Dlumet, Mich., the National the city's Streets and Santlation
Ohio,
Is seeking a third term
Weather Service .said.
department.
against
his Republican opponent,
Heavy snow was expected in
Today, scattered. ratnshowers
Cleveland
mayor George Volnowere forecast in the northern Washington state's Cascade
vtch.
A
write-in
alternative ts
states from New England to the Mountains

Northern part of Ohio blanketed by snow
By United Press International
Some parts of Ohio, especially
In the north, havea while blanket
today as storm system passed
through the Ohio Valley area ,
leaving behind some snow and
cold weather.
Snow fell in nearly all of Ohio
Sunday, and some areas had a
mixture of rain and snow.
Most of U&gt;e snow accumulated
on the grassy areas, but melted
as tt'hlt the warmer pavements,
leaving the roads wet and
slippery.
The snow won't last long as
temperatures today climb into
the 40s. Rain is expected to begin
tonight and continue into Tuesday morning. Skies may begin to
clear late Tuesday .

•

'

.
t•d
f
.•
•.
us
appears
con
I
ent
on
eve
0
e
ec
IOn
8 h
SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (UP!)- where he made. three appearanTasting victory, George Bush ces last week, and Ohio, which he
sprinted to the finish line of visited twice, were characterCampaign '88 today, asking -, ized only as insurance in battlevoters to install him as the ground sta &lt;es he does not need to
nation's 41st presld~ nt to keep win under a oottom-Une strategy
the country "headed In the right · devised months ago.
direction."
His advisers. however, were
"This is no time for the United
States to turn dramatically left," both hopeful that the two states
Bush declared at a boisterous would fall to the GOP and
morning campaign rally . "It is confident that Dukakls was not
close enough in any other state
tim.e to play on our strengths."
As Michael Dukakts waged a locked up or leaning to Bush to
desperate, frenzied finish to a deny the Repubttcans control of
campaign that has seen the the While House for another four
.
fortunes of each rise and fall, years.
As
he
headed
to his hometown
Bush wor ked to run out the clock
of
Houston
lor
a
huge campaign
and run up the score on Election
.
windup,
Bush
hammered
away
Day .
at
Dukakts
as
a
threat
to
Campaign stops in Michigan,

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 30s. Tuesday, mostly
cloudy, highs In mid 1108.
Chance of rain 40 percent.

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Canto
A Multimed~ialnc. New..,.per

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, November 7, 1988

Vol.39, No.128
Copyrighted 1988

RALLY IN THE VALLEY- Vice Pres ld ent George 8 ush an d
his wife Barbara wave to photographers after his speech at "the
raally In the valley" Sunday at Warner P ark • In Woodlan d lUlls •
CalU. AI one ol the biggest rallies of his campaIgu, Bu sh accused
the Democrats of "whining" about negal Ive cam palP tng an d
warned that American would not "risk the potential of world peace
on the Inexperience of a liberal governor." (UPI)

•

---- ----·-·--·

curriculum caused it.
In an interview, Clark said he
was glad the majority of students
were not depressed, "bu I the
fraction that is is pretty profoundly affected, with it lacerating their sell-esteem in a way
that affects their social relationships, friendships, love and marriage- pretty severe consequen,
ces thought by some to be ' the
price you pay to go to medical
school.' Some of us object· to that
assumption."
Clark added he was bothered
by something the stu,dy could not
measure: "the absence of joy."
He noted medical stUdies "can be
very rewarding and stimulating,
but tbe tun part ol -the process
goes ou 1the window lor a Q'!arter
ol them," he said of the depressed students.
Noting anll-d~!preaston psychoth,ii!tapy or drug treatments result in 'll.l percent of patients
Improving, Clark said, "II is a
condition we can help." He urged
students and medical schools to
make a greater effort In identify
and treat depression.

Daily Number

1

David Marshall, Cleveland, Soctalist Workers Partv.
Metzenbaum, 71, has mounted
an unusually strong defense of
his Senate seat, claiming to be a
friend of the consumer, working
person and farmer. Votnovtch,
51, has attempted to paint Metzenbaum as an ultra-ttberal who
d
votes one way in Washington an
talks another way In more
conservat tve Obi o.
That contest has b een th e mos t
Oh
1h
expensive in
to history • w t
the candidates ratstng$14 million
bel ween th em, muc h o1 it from
out of state.
\. Onerace!ortheOhloSupreme
Court will produce an elected
woman justice for the firs I lime
t 60
n years.
Runn tng ror th e sea1 be t ng
vacated by the retiring Justice
Ra1Ph Loc h er are J ud ges J oyce
George of summ tt Co un t Y Cour t
o1 Appea1s, a R epubitcan, an d
Alice Robie Resnick of Lucas
cou nty Court of Appeals • a
Democrat.
George, 52, has stressed her
continuing education, which she
said has prepared her to render
opinions on complex cases o'f the
1990s. Resnick, 49, claims to have
tried more cases, including one
death penalty case .before the
s supreme cour 1,asaprosec·
U..
d
h
b
tt
utor, an as een ac ve tn c tv tc
affairs.
G
vi
ld td
A eorge ctory wou w en
the Republican advantage on the
high court to 5-2.
Justice A. William Sweeney, a
Democrat who has served on the
high court since 1977, is being
challenged by Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court Judge Paul
Matta, a Republican.
Sweeney, 67, Is the senior
justice and says his opponent has
never tried an appeal. Mat Ia, 51,
of Westlake, says Sweeney is
rated as unqualified and was part
of the notorious "Celebrezze
court'' that made headlines from
1982-86 for politicizing the Supreme Court.
Twenty of 21 incumbents are
running for the U.S. House, and
all appear safe. Generating the
most interest is a race in
northwest Ohio for the 5th
District seat of the retiring Rep.
Delbert Latta, dean of the Ohio
delegation.
Attorney Thomas Murray .of
Sandusky, 51, is the Democrat
competing against Paul Gtltmor,
49, Port Clinton Republican and
president of the Ohio Senate.
In the Ohio Senate, Democrats
are battling fiercely to win a net
two seats and turn their deficit.
into a 17-16 advantage, They are
attacking 12 incumbent Republtcans, while only fo11r seats of
their own are at stake.
Observers give the best chances to Democrats Mark Henry of
Dayton and Dan Stevens of
Bethel, who are trying to upset
Republican Sens. Charles Horn
of Kettering and Cooper Snyder
of Hillsboro.

Dukakis addresses crowd in Cleveland
CLEVELAND (UP!) -Demo- .
crat Michael Dukakts, determinedly campaigning around the
clock until Election Day , crossed
the 'country early today to urge
stalwart unions members to vote
and help ·htm win a come-frombehind victory.
Arriving in the pivotal state
before sunrise with a light snow
falling, Dukakts hoped his dramatic, last-ditch personal appeal
would help garner him its pre·
clous 23 electoral votes.
After the brief rally, arranged
on only a day's notice, Dukakls
planned a ~tmtlar stop In St.
Louts, before returning to the
West Coast and a previously
scheduled noon rally In . San
Francisco.
There was some disappointing
ne}Ys with three fresh polls
showing Dukakts trailing Republican Vice President George

back to Boston early Election
Bush by 9 and 10 percentage average American family?' •To a
Day
but with yet more stops
points, after a weekend NijC crowd in Tacoma, Wash., at a
possible.
News-Wall Street Journal poll function Bush declined to attend,
''Tflere's no reason for sleep
showed Dukakts had narrowed Dukakts asserted it was "the
nooJ/. We're charging," Dukakls
fundamental question of this
the gap to 5 points.
told
reporters early in the day
campaign."
But a dogged Dukakts, greeted
Sunday.
,
Dukakis,
summoning
huge
at each stop by overflow crowds
Throughout the weekend, the
of fervent fans, continued the crowds as he traveled through
governor
pressed his new -found ·
the Midwest, West and back and
battle entering a second day of a
11
l'm
on
your
side" message on
48-hour marathon final push that forth across the country In the
voters,
alternately
reminding
final days of the campaign, left
began Sunday morning.
them
that
another
son
of MassaIn the Cleveland suburb of the Northwest early today for a
chusetts,
Jolin
Kennedy,
came
Brookpark, the Massachusetts last-chance bid for the electoral
from
behind
to
beat
Vice
Presigovernor asked a crowded Uni- bonanza of Ohio. With word that
ted Auto Workers hall, "Is Ohio new polls showed him only 6 dent Richard Nixon In 1960, and
that only he, the Democratic
going to let the pollsters and the points behind Bush In the Buckchoice lor 1988, will be the
pundits decide this election? Or eye State, aides scheduled a
president of the people.
quick
trip
to
Cleveland
before
the
are you going to send a message •
tomorow that will be heard all governor headed back to California by way o!St. Louis, in another
"They can't match It," he said
around the country"
of the GOP before a huge crowd
key state, Missouri.
Alter another tour ol Call1or· in Portland, Ore. "They can't
Sunday night, In rallies in
nta, · whose big block of 47 match us. Sure they've got the
Washington state, Dukaktsasked
electoral voles ts well within ads. They've got the malltngs,
exuberant crowds, "Which canreach, Dukakis planned to head but they haven't got the people.'
didate wtll stand up for the

�·-----

-·

--

____

-------~----

.

~

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.

Monday, November' 7 1988

Commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, November 7, 198!J

NFL results

Repon u:

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
,~
~m~ ,. ~~.-.,...,..-e:!d·~

_____ _

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the Ame[!can Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are we~rome . They should be less tban 300words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wttb name. address and
telephone number . No unsigned letters will be published. Let ters should be In

goOO taste, addressing is sues, not persooalltles.

like them or
not, vote for one
ByARNOLDSAWJSLAK
UPI Senior Editor ,
WASHINGTON- Several national polls In the closing weeks of the
campaign have revealed that a bout two-thirds of the public Is
dissatisfied with both candidates the major parties nominated for
president.
The first thought that evokes Is , "My God, what If two-thirds of the
people refuse to vote?'' Th,e second thought is, "My God, almosthalf
of the people already refuse to vote."
Walk down the street and count off 10 adults. Ask them If they plan
to vote. As many as seven or eight may say they do, but in fact the
experts wlll be ama2ed if slx do.
In large numbers, that means we will be lucky if the total vote
Tuesday much exceeds 90 million of the 183 ,million Americans who
are 18 or older and the 120 million or so who bothered to register.
That also. means if the winning candidate gets 55 per cent of the
vote, less than 50 million of the 200 m!lllon·plus Americans o! all ages
will have participated in the selection of a new president. And that
compares unfavorably with many countries we Americans look down
on because they don'tglve the majority of their people a voice in their
own government.
.
In 1984, the cheery news was that an estimated 53.1 per cent of
Americans 18 or older voted because the comparable figure for 1980
was 52.6 per cent. But this year, students of voting patterns are
predicting that turnout will be barely over 50 per cent.
There used to be a theory that low turnout was a sign o! voter
satisfaction with things as they are. In view of what was going on In
thiS country in some of the lastfew presidential election years such as
the Inflation of 1980, the after-taste of Watergate In 1976, and Vietnam
in 1972 and 1968, that is hard to swallow, but It hardly applles this year.
In 1988, there Is no status quo - whoever is elected, he won't ,be
Ronald Reagan .
• There is also the possiblllty that people refrain !rom voting as a
form of protest against the poUtical establishment. In most cases,
that can be easily detected as In South Africa recently when
opponents of apartheid organized a boycott because the government
permitted only whites to vote!or whlteg;; blackS !or blacks.
Of course, citizens in most states can find a minor party candidate
.-a Ron Paul ora Lenora Fulanl- for whom they can vote, either as
a better choice than the RepubUcan and Democratic candidates or as
·a protest against them. At the minimum, those votes will be part of
the total turnout and signal that those who cast them had something to
say.
,
·
Simply put, not voting is a cop-out. It dishonors and damages oneo!
the few systems of government In the world that even tries to
empower ordinary people. Even when citizens do not like the choices
they have, they shot~ld vote for whoever they think Is the lesser o! evils
• and then get active in the political process to improve their choices
next time.

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, Nov. 7, the 312th day of 1988 with 54 to follow,
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
Marie Curie, discoverer of radl•tm, In 1867, Nazi SS leader Heinrich
Himmler In 1900, French novelist Albert Camus In 1913, evangelist
Billy Graham in 1918 (age 70), ja2z trumpeter AI Hlrt!n 1922 (age66),
•Australian opera star Joan Sutherland in 1926 (age 62), and singers
;Mary Travers in 1937 (age 51), Johnny Rivers in 1942 (age 46), and
·Joni Mitchell in 1943 (age 45).
On this date in history:
_
.
In 1805, the Lewis and Clark expedition arr(ved at the Pacific
.Ocean.
1n 1874, the first cartoon depicting the elephant as the symbol of the
Republican Party was printed in Harper's Weekly.
In 1914, Bolsheviks overthrew the Russian government In St.
Petersburg; because It took pface under the old Czarist calendar, it Is
known as the October Revolution.
In 1916, Republican Jeannette Rankin of Montana became the first
woman elected to the U.S. House o! Representatives.

.

Berry's World

G 1111 Dy MIA, lnl:.

II-A

"The servlc8 was fine. I don't tip because I
don't want to be loved and I don't need
approval. "

r

Witness details U.S. 'plot against Castro
WAS}ilNGTON - After a
25-year. silence, a witness has
stepped out of the shadows to tell
how a covert ClA mission to
liquidate Cuba's ~1del Castro
backfired . The Marxist ruter was
tipped orr that the ClA was trying
to kill hlm. instead, he may have
turned the hired guns agalnst
John t" . Kennedy .
The witness , a Washington
. pollee officer named Joseph
Shimon, played an undercover
rote In the btz"a rre tragedy. He
sat In__ on the actual meetings
where the ClA 's William Harvey
and the Malia's Johnny Rosselli
plotted Castro's assassination.
The covert operation had the
blessing or two of America's
most notorious crime figures sam G lancana, boss of the
Chicago mob, Santos Tralflcante, who controlled the Cuban
underworld before castro came

to power. Shimon quotes 'l'ratncante as saying, ''1'11 get you the
contacts, give you a tot or names.
l:lut keep me out of it."
been jailed and his gambling
Harvey and Rosselli recruited
casinos seized by Castro, for
killers recommended by Traffl-.
some unexplained reason, Tra!fl·
cante. Six assassination teams "'- cante got out or Cuba unscathed
were dispatched to Cuba; all six
alter Castro came to power.
not only failed, but disappeared.
Shimon recalled, "Suddenly
Harvey and Hassell! concluded
Trafflcante ts released. ... He
that professional hit men
comes back here wttll au his
wouldn't" have !ailed repeatedly
assets, with the yacht... . Others
unless Castro had been waiting
eventually got out, but they left
for them. "You don't have that
Cuba broke. Trafllcante came
many misses, and these fellows
out with all his money, Immeare not coming back," said
diately went Into business and
Shimon.
look how big he got overnight. He
Only six people knew about tlte
spread out all over the South."
ClA plot to use the Malta to knock
The easy treatment may have set
off Castro. No mention of the
up a bond between 'l'rafficante
operatiQn had been committed to
and Castro.
paper. Yet Castro must have
been Upped o!f.
Shimon confronted Glancana
The finger or suspicion pointed and asked whether TraUicante
to Tra!flcante. Though he had was reliable. "Franldy," con-

ic~

was mostly finger-pointing and
vague overviews of rosy scenarios. While some of Michael
Dukakls' Ideas sounded good In
theory, he never convinced us he
had put the slide rule to them. He
overestimated our willingness to
take hlrn at his word, put two and
two together and come -up with
,
hls live.
George Bush failed to convince
undecided voters that he knew
what he was talking ' about. He
was long on clinches and kneejerk euphemisms and campaign
objectives tending toward sub·
stanceless hash - "a kinder,
gentler America ... ," "1,000
points of light."
When he veered from programmed speech, his mind ping·
ponged helplessly from one halt·
!In!shed thought to another, He
was line at exciting us against his
opponent - but not for himself.
Vague allusions to "1,000 points
o! light" and "values" (whose?
what?) aren't exciting; they're
abstractions. There was never a
sense that this man had Ideas

This election day, there are
some voters eager to gel to the
polls to vote for their presidential
favorite. They either thought one
or the other man exemplified
their beliefs, or were s,o convinced of their 'Party's object!-'
vies that just about any candidate their , party picked would
have been fine.
The rest of us lumber to the
polls with about as much enthusl·
asm as when we get our teeth
cleaned. And a lew of us in that
group punch our cards with extra
vehemence, one last protest o!
disgust !or the Campaign That
Wasn't.
I'm not sure Whl!t we have a
right to expect from a political
campaign, but I am fairly sure It
Isn't ·boredom, depression and a
lot of whining. I know what I'd
like to receive from a campaign:
a sense of excitement, of ideas
that will touch and Improve our
lives personally, and of a man or
woman with enough personal
passion and power to push them.
What we got from these guys

and no

Clnel.a•U
OII!Veland

6:
"My fellow Americans: The
polls Indicate th,at on Tuesday
you are very likely to elect me as
your president. · I have sought
that high honor,.-and If you confer
It on me I will of course do
everything In my power to serve
you honorably and well.
''But, my friends, no president .
can serve you really well - can
serve you as you deserve to be
served - I! he Is compelled to
work with and through a Con·
gress dominated by his political
opponents.
''Every president comes to the
office with a program: a series of
things he hopes to do, and which
presumably you hope he will do.
Almost all of these things,
however, require the approval of
one or both houses of Congress. If
his opponents dominate the Congr_ess, It follows as night follows
day that the president will be
unable to Implement many parts
of his program.
"Now, I certainly do not
criticize the Democrats In Congress for this fact. Indeed, It Is
precisely the function of the
opposition party, under our system, to subject the president's
proposals to sharp scr.utlny, to
make alternative suggestions,
and to thwart him (If they can)
when they believe he Is wrong.
"At !lrst this may even strike
you as a good Idea - as an
extension of the familiar prlnci·
pie of the separation of powers.
But do you really want to cripple
your government In this way? •
Wouldn't It be better to let one
party take charge of both the
presidency and the Congress and
do Its very best !or you - and
then replace It, I! you felt the
other could do better? .
''Accordingly, I am asking you
tonight to consider most seriously the structure and composition of your government. If you
want me to ·be your president,
and to do !or you the very best
tha! I can do, I ask you to elect
also a Republican Senate arid
House that will work with me and
not against me.
"I realize that there are many
Democratic members of both
Houses who are splendid public
officials. I know, moreover, that
every Democratic candidate wlll
promise to support me 'when I
am right' and oppose me only
'when I am wrong.' But we also
know that every Democrat
elected to either the House or the

Senate on Tuesday wlll vote to
place that body under the control
of his party, and that his party
would inevlta bly use its power to
thwart my program and diminish the success of my administration. Unfortunately that administration would also be your
administration - the only one
there was.

"If, therefore;' you are unwilling to give me a Republican
Congress that will work with me,
I suggest in all sincerity that you
consider voting for Gov. Dukakls, who will at least not be
thwarted routinely by a Democratic Congress. I cannot In all
conscience recommend that you
again put political opponents In

'

PIU~U11h

..

fA.
14%

ru

11:1
!Ill
281

.800 294 185

' •
3 •
3 0

.661 153 13'l
.1161 %1!1 'liS

·* "'

n&amp;
.510 %07 !0 11
lA Raiders
5 5 0 .!110 %04 !II
Seau~
5 5 0 .stQ 111 187
San Dl e«&lt;
:l ~ 0 JtO ll&amp; 189
KaniJI.I City
I 8 I .150 I~ Ill&amp;
NA!tonal Conference

!lded Gtancana, "he's a rat. " The
ClA came to the same conclusion
and abruptly called o!f the Mafia.
l:!ut the ClA continued to lOOk !or
other ways to eliminate castro.
Without Inside Information,
castro no longer knew where the
ClA would strike next. So he
Issued a Pl!bllc warning In
september 1~63. 1! the ClA ·
persiSted in trying to kill Cuban
leaders, he said, then "American
leaders wll! not be safe."
Two months tater, ~;&gt;resident
Kennedy was gunned aown In
!.&gt;alias. Shimon figured that
castro had conspired With 'l'ra!fl·
cante to beat Kennedy to the ·
draw. Shimon said his conclusion
was "conllrmed by liarvey,"
who had other Information !rom
theClA.

w~•
$ 5 0

Denver

Dhillon IV
Repon II
AI CMnlv.~ Fawcett Stadium
Canlpll Cenusl Catholic (8·2) v•
LouboWDie A.quhuu (1-S), f'riU)' , 1:30
p. m .
At Warn!• M~llf!'lllwpl Stadium
Wr;rrtn Kenredy (7-3) vsGarM11vllle
Garlleld {K-2), Frlca.y, 1: 3Cl p.m. '
Reato• U
At Ledn,;lon
BellvUieQearForll.j8-l ) wWelllnlf.on
(3-1), Friday, 1 : 311 p.m.
At Athland
Loudo,.vUie (1-3) n Elyria Catbollc
ol-4) , FriG,y, 7:30p.m.
Hel(ktn IIi
At Gah•• Uncola tl e ld

Ea•t
W LT

NV Glanls
Pboelbt
Wlllflhlnston
fhlladelphha

Pd . PF

3~ 0

4 f)
4 0
5' 0

Central
8 • •

Chlca(o

Mi•mso&amp;a
Dd•..
Green

,
II
8
S

·z s o

Dalt..

.700
.800
.8111
.1011

PI\

!19 199
!311 219
ItS Ui
!Ill 211

.200 llltl

eu

naY

AUan~

Bellon II

••

.280 171 2&amp;1

:roo zes 180

Dlvlslvn V
ReK~Gn 1"1

'

6
3

8 •

4 I
1 I

IH 210
110 207

:roo

Ut 116
.100 Z!!: 1M
.380 18!1 U-1

Su nd IQ' 11f Re•ult•
NY Giants 2t, Dallas :1
Mhinesota U, Del roll 17
Allanta 20, Green Sa)' 0
PbUadelpWa Sl, LA Ram11 Z4
New E.IJiaad%1, MlamiiO
Clncta•tt U, Plumul'lh 2
Chlcq-o ttl, Tampa Bay 10

.. 41anapitlla !18, NV Jeh 1-1
Ph~nlx U, San Francisco U
WaaNnatont7, New &lt;JINUIII 2-1
Ikner J'J , Kll.niiU City 11
O..ff.Jo 13, Sutt~ 3
LA Ral*n 13, San Dlero 3
Mandai' a Game
Ut"Wiud,at Houlllon, I p.m.

speak so loudly we couldn't help
, but hear lt. During the last
weeks, he attacked peripheral
Issues like Bush's commercials
and what Bush personally stood
to gain !rom Bush's capital gains
tax cut; but he didn't hit the
blg;ticket topics.
·
Somewhere a campaign staff Is
congratulating ltsel! on a win;
backs are being slapped and
strategies praised. They're cal·
ling It a "successful campaign."
I'll consider It a successful
campaign when they can send
me Into a voting booth on !Ire to
vote for s.omeone Instead of (a)
against someone else, (b) for one
or two Issues within a platform.
This election I call a concession,
the result o! a group of generally
disenchanted people picking the
lesser of two medl'oCre
candlpates.
When someone comes along
who does know how to Inspire
passion and create vision, the
high-paid, so-called "political
image-makers" will be out o!
work.

At .\thefts

BelpR (1-1) vaColumbusHartley ti-4),
SaiUrdi\Y, 1 p.m.

WMI
7. s &amp;
7 3 t

.800 II! IZ3 .

•• •• •• .2011
.zoo
2

LA Rama
New Orlean•
Saut Fun.

Columbu• Academy (I-I) va Marion

ElKin (8-1), Frlda,y, 7: H p.m.

At Portunouth ~artan Stlltllum
Whederlbu 1'1 (1-11 \'1 West d e lrerMOa
(8-1), Fri.,_, 7;36 p.m .
A.t MtddletOWb Bar..U Stadium
Clnclnnat IWyomlna: (11-Z) vs Vet!&amp;llles
(9·1), SiUuniJQ', 1 p. m .

.lOCI Ut 119

Tam,. Blq

College scores
Ohkl Colle&amp;e Football St:ores
R)' United PreulnternltloJifll
No\', :I

Ohio State 3-1, Wlsco nsln 12
Kent State 31, How Un.r Green It

A.t Ma~~!JIUon JackAon Sladh1m
Mopdure t•l) VI MJap olunction
(11)-0), Friday, 7 :30p.m.
A.t Lorain Clearvtew
lbraln, ClearW!w (8-Z) VII lntlepa'ld·
ent'fl

(.8-2), Frlda.Y , 1:30 p.m.
Re,SOn18 ,
A.t Napoleon Loose F1eld

Archbold~

IIJ-0) VA Fremont 81. J'ostph
1: 31 p.m.
At BellevW!
Moni'GeVUJie ( IG-0) vs Sudusl!;y S&amp;.
MIU')''II (7·3), Frhi!Q', 7:111 p.m .
Rl!llon 19
At Groveport-Ma!Urum
Canal M'lncheeter (I· I) vs Portpouth
N..tn! Dame ( 10·0) , Frld!Q', 1:30 p.m.
AI New111rk White t1eld
Newark CMhollc Cf-1) n EMt Kn~•
cm-o), sa&amp;urday, 1 p.m.

(t-1),

Frl~,

Re~on211

At Monroe
Mldcletown Fenwick 18-Z) v11 Ct!dar·
vUie (9·1 ), F'rl~ , 7:311 p.m.
AI St. Marys Memnrtal
New Bremen (t-1 ) v11 Minatn
Friday, 1:30 p.m .

Ohio Prep
Pairings
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPIJ - Palrlnp
for lhe flrlll. rouad oftbe Ohio HIKhSchool

A.lhJI'tkl AHM~Ia.tlon ref(lo ..l lootball

playoll1:
Dl\' lslon I
Re,ton J
At Beru Fin nle Stadium
Clevt!IIUid St. IIIUltiUII(I0 -0) t il
Euclid (1-1). Saturday, 1 p. m.
At Berea f1nnle St111d... m
MlddleWI'K" llellhts Mldplark (9-1l ys
Stow (t-t J, saa urcl-.v, 1: 30 p.m.

Region%
At Sandu1ky Strobel Field

Sandu1lcy ( 10-8) vs Toledo Wbltmer
(9-1), Sa&amp;urday, 7 p.m.

AI Uma Stadium
Lima Senior (8-Z } ""Sprlnl{fleld North
(11-2 ),SaturdQ,1 p.m.
Re&amp;ton 3
AI WestervUJe North
We~~tel-vllle North (t-1) l'!l Upper
Arllncton i&amp;-%1, Saturday 1 p.m.
A.l Massillon Tl get" stadl•m
.
Warren We!Jiern ft~Sene (S-1) vi..
Groveport-Madison (8-Z ), Saiurd~ 7
p.m.

Region 5
At Mentor
Cleveland St. J!oHeph (6-t ) \'I' Cbardo n
(8-tl, Frld8)',7:30 p.m.
A.l Brull'lwlck
•
BrE-cl.noUie (1-l) \'NSolon(ll-2), FrldQ,
'1':30 p.m.
Re~onfl

AI A.llron Kullller llewl
Akron Buchtel (K-1) u Fo!ltorta (9-1 ),
Sal.urd"-", I:JO p.m.
AI Berea F1n nlc stadium
NonloNa(ll-2) v~Ro•· llnrGreen (.t-1).
Frida¥, 1:38 p.m .

Rerton1
At Steubenville Hardin« Stadium
steullel!l\'ille ( 10·0) V8 North Canton
Hoo\·er, Sllluni.Q, 1 p.m.
AI Mou• VerDINl stadium
UnkHhwn Lakr (J0-0) v!i Col•m!'ourt
kll'c•crol (1-1) , Salurd!V, 1 p.m.

Reston 8
AI Loct.IMd Memorial Stadklm
{11-0) \''! r-orl~o•lh (1-3) ,
SllfurdB,y , 1 p.m.
AI Darton Welcome Stadium
FTuklin tt·)) v:~~ Lebanon (K-u.
Friday, 7:30p.m.
Division Ill
RePJn 9
AI Barberton Ma11lc Stadium
Akrllll St. VIncent-st. MIU'Y (8·1) \'II
Palneii\'Uie Har'Ye)' (9-1), Saturdl\f, 1
Harr~n

POLITICAL ENDORSEMENT

The Meigs-Gallia Fraternal Order .of
Pol ice Lodge #95 Has Endorsed

,.m.At Younptown Slamballa:h Stadium

Younptown MoonP)' (7-3) vaC1mpbell
Memorial (t-1), Salurda,·, 7:30p.m.
ReKJon 11
At Cllnton Fawcett Stadium
Ornllle (IO·tH v~ Cle\'eland Oran&amp;e
0 -3), SailrilQ', 1 p.m .
a
AI Marlon Hardin11Shadlum
l.lma Ba.th (9-IJ vs Willard (7·3),
&amp;&amp;turd~. 7 p.m •
Reaion II
At.lront•n Memorial Stadium

Howard E. Frank
FOR RE-ELECTION AS
MEIGS _COU_NTY SHERlFF

lrontoa 110-()1 vs PortlllloUth \\o"est
p.m.
At Zanerntll• Mem•rtal Stadium

Cleveland Orange, 83.H each;

6. Pembervllte Eastwood
81,50; 7, Bucyrus 7UO; 8.
Elyria West 78.50.
Beglon 11
I. lronlon 142.05; 2. Philo
100.00; 3. Licking Valley 93.50;
4. Portsmouth Wesl 83.00: 5.
Fairfield Union 80.00; 6. Thom·
ville Sheridan 7UO; 7. Colum·
bus WhOlstone 78.50; 8. Waverly 77.00.
Region 12
I. Urbana IZI.OO; 2. CAPE
119.11; 3. Spr!nglleld Norlheaslera 103.00; 4. Brookville
99.00; 5. Hamuton Badin 93.50;
6. Carlisle 83.00; 7. Lillie
Miami 77.00: 8. Cincinnati
Forest Park 76.00.
Division IV
Region 13
1. Canton Central Catholic
94.00; 2. Warren Kennedy
82.00; 3. U.ulsvute Aquinas
75.00; 4. Garrettsville Garfield
67.00; 5, Easl Palestine 58.00:
6. Columbiana Crestview
54.50; 7. Beachwood 50.00: 8.
VIenna Mathews 49.00.
Region 14
1. Bellvtlle Clear Fork 9UO;
2. LoudonvUle 77.00:3. Welling·
lon 68.00; 4. Ely rla Calhollc
65.33: 5. (lie) Ontario and
SmllhvDle, 65.00 each; 7. Wynfonl61.50: 8. Wauseon 55.00.
Region 15

6. Springfield Catholic 54.50: 7.

INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -Indiana Pacers coach Jack Ramsay

cites careless ness in the team' s
loss to Cleveland, · but says

steadiness and determination
will build a stronger Indiana
squad.
"To win thes~es , we must
mainta in our Intensity and poise
to execute, " Ramsay said.
"We're not doing the job to win a
lot of close games. We made
some good runs and got careless
anc:l tried to make a lot of blg
an honor they won In 1986.
plays. We just need to execute."
North Canton Glen Oak girls
Brad Daugherty scored 24
took the Class AAA honor and the
Ci ncinnati Elder boys w·on the points and Mark Price added 22
to give Cleveland its second win
Class AAA division .
of
the young NBA season, 105-99
The fastest boys' time of the
over
th e Pacers Saturday night.
rainy day was the 16: 12.3 posted
Cleveland's
next game will be at
by Dave Briggs of Sylvania
home
Wednesday
against the Los
Southview, second In Class AAA,
Angeles
Clippers.
over the 3.1 m lie course s ur·
Cleveland coach Len Wilkins
rounding the Scloto Downs harcalled
the matc h "a great testror
ness track. Misty Allison o(
our
kids.
" ·
Chillicothe Class AAA turned in
"I
ndiana
played a hell of a
the fastest girls time at 19:32.1.
Times were slower than usual game, eswclally In the fourth
quarter," Wilkins said. "We had
because of the rain-soaked field.
Tom Woods of Wooster Trtway some open shots, but they
led the Class AA boys In 16: 26 and wouldn't go down in the fourth. ,
Mondo Tijerina of Columbus We got a lot of Inside baskets in
Grove was the fastestClassA boy the first half, but they collapsed
on our · inside game the second
In 16: 30.2.
Monica McHenry of Cleveland half_. "
Heights Beaumont was the top
The Daily Sentinel
Class AA gtrl at 19:43.5 and Jana
Woehrmyer of Minster paced the
(USPS 14..960 )
Class A girls In 19:52.
A Division of Multimedia. In c .
The top 12 finishers In each
Published every afiNnoon, Monday
class were given.all-state honors.

Caldwell .wins fourth
straight Class A title
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Often that sixth man can be a
determining factor for a :basket·
ball team, but Saturday It was
the slxth man that gave the
Caldwell boys their fourth
s traight Class A state high school
cross-country title.
Caldwell and East Canton had
each scored 67 points, so score·
keepers were forced .to use a
· tiebreaker to determine a
winner.
Each team entered seven
runners, but only the times of the
first ,five were counted for the
team finish. In the event of a tie,
scorekeepers ~hecked the times
of the sixth runner. Caldwell's
s ixth boy finished two places
ahe&lt;1d of East Canton's slxth
runner.
Siindusky St. Marys girls retai ned their Class A title and the
Sandusky Perkins boys retained
their Class AA title, and the Avon
Lake girls won the Class AA title,

"We played the best we could
play. I don't think we could have
played any better," Rio Grande
Volleyball Coach Patsy Fields
commented after the Redwomen
lost to Walsh in the District 22
playoffs at Bluffton College
Saturday.
Walsh, which took first place in
the Mid-Ohio Conference, went
on to lose to Bluffton in the
championship game.
The Redwomen · completed
their season with a 32-10 slate and
third place In the district.
Entering the competition, the
Redwomen defeated Lake Erie
College 15-6, 15-5, 15·5 on Friday.
Lisa Schmeltzer recorded 11 kills
to lead the Redwomen offense.
Shelly Hoop and Sharon Head·
lngs added eight apiece, Teresa
Zempter had five, Sheila
Brammer and Chris Williams
had four and Krls Cochran
recorded two.
Cochran, Schmeltzer and

cond class postage paid at Ppmeroy.
Ohio.

Member: United Press Internatlonaf,
Inland Dall y Press Association and the

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
A~vert\slng

Headings each had a serving ace,
while Schmeltzer and Hoop- re·
corded six digs each. Two block
. solos each were offered · by
Schmeltzer, Hoop and Zempter.
Rio won two games against
Walsh 15-10, 17-15, but lost the
other three 13-15, 5-15, 8-15.
Schmeltzer had 17 kills, Hoop 11,
and seven each came from
Headings, Cochran andZempter.
Williams and Brammer provided
one each.
Recording a serving ace each
were Cochran, Hoop, Headings
and Zempter. Hoop also had 14
digs, Schmeltzer addeed 10 digs
and Headings had elght. Hoop
had nine biock solos, Schmeltzer
had seven and Zempter slx.
"1 saw a lot of improvement
this season and we accomplished
some goals,'' Fields commented.
"We dido' t go as far as we would
have liked, but overall, we're
pleased."

Representative, Branham

Newspapl!r Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
~ New

York, New York 10017.

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1989 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

SAVE UP TO S850 WITH AVAilABLE EQUIPMENT PACKAGES:·

1989 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER LANDAU
1989 PLYMOUTH

VOYAGER

•

".':- - Sports briefs-Auto Racing
Tommy Byrne took the lead on
l he first lap Sunday and won an
•l\merlcan Racing Series event at
;Miami's Tamiaml Park. Byrne,
'of Jacksonv1lle, edged Juan
~anuel Fangio II. Jon Beekhuls
1Jf Salinas, Calif., flnlshed fifth
·and captured the season championship.... Swiss driver Gregor
:foltek has signed a Formula One
contract to compete for
'E:uroBrun.

FAK

_...._

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

PIMT~·ID

1'-1

ur•-oou•uo

uco......-•
··-·
Dt1
nillalv'
Alii

L

FOP #95 PRESIDENT BRUCE SWIFf

I
a.IY
ALL ...... II.ID

--~~4 tllrll10__j
FA! MY thru TMURSOAY!

"Will Bring A Commitment of Equal Justice For
All and Accessibility of the Court to the Public."
•Lifelong resident of Meigs County
•Graduate of Meigs Local High School, 1969. BS
degree from Ohio University. 1981. JD degree
from Capital University, 1984.
•CI'Irrently engaged in the general practice of law in
Meigs County.
Serving as Assistant Prosecuting Attorney in
Athens County.
Special Investigator for Meigs County Prosecutor,
•Member of the Meigs County Bar Association Ohio Bar Association - Association of Trial Lawyers of America- American .Bar AssociationNational District Attorneys Association - Ohio
Academy of Trial Lawyers."
·
•Became a member of the Ohio Bar College in 1986
and is a 13 year member of the Meigs County
Jaycees.

1989 COIJ HATCHBACK,
IMPORTED FOR PLYMOUTH

1989 PLYMOUTH

RELIANT AMERICA

18878'

Th1t W"k•l
ELECT

COUNTY COURT
JUDGE

-SHERIFF-

AMERICA'S BEST SELLING CONVERTIBLE

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

D. MICHAEL
MULLEN

HOWARD E. FRANK

114,446'

1977-1979.

·

RE-ELECT

Pd. Pol. Adv. by Cand.,
105 E. Second St., Po11woy, Ottlo 45769

MEIGS COUNTY

tBase Slicker price &amp;&gt;eluding title and ISJ&lt;es. •cash back for buyers on new 1989 dealer stock.
"Savings based on Slicker price ol options if purchased separately.

CHRYSLER

Plymoulfi

COOPER
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE
992-6321
399 South Third Ave.

Paid for by the Mei1s-Gallia Fmernal Order of Police Lodp #95

'I

thr ough Friday, 111 Co urt St.. Po·
meroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pubfishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se-

Rio loses to Walsh
in district playoffs

Delphos Jefferson; 8. Willi·
amsburg 51.00.

Philo OtHll vs Ucklnf Valley {11-0},
Safurday, 7 p.m.

531 JACKSON PIKE • RT.35 WEST

''

83.00; 8. Canfield 81.50.
Region 10
I. OrrvUie t08.00: 2. Lima
Bath 107.50; a. Willard 85.00; I.
(tie) Sl. Marys Memorial,

Henry and Minster, IIIJ.OOeach;

(9-1), SaturdJI,f, 7

ALL MEIGS COUNTIANS ARE URGED TO VOTE FOR

H WA

ville Harvey 92.00; 3. Akron
Hoban 90.3a; 6. Youngslown
Ursuline 90.U; 7. Kenston

59.00; 4. Columbus Hartley
SUO; 5. Oak Hill 51.72; 6.
JohnsiOwn Northridge 48.00; 7.
Tuscarawas Valley 47.50; 8.
(tle) Grandview Heights Hlld
NelsatlvUie-York, 43.00 each.
· . Region 16
I. Wheelersburg 102.50; 2.
Wyoming 72.00; a. West Jefferson 70.00: 4- Versailles 69.00; 5.
Dayton Jeffer!lln 67.00; 6.
Marlemont84.50: 7. Deer Park
59.22: 8. WaynesvUie 57.50.
Division V
Region 17
I. Mogadore 82.00; 2. Lorain
Clearvlew 78.55: 3. Mingo
78.00: !.Independence 62.50; 5.
McDonald 61.50; 6. Beallsville
56.50; 7. Dallon 52.28; 8. Woods·
field 49.00.
Region 18
I. Archbold 85.00; 2. MonroevUie 76.00; a. Sandusky Sl.
Marys 64.50; ~- Fremont St.
Joseph ~9.88: 5. Liberty Center
59.00: 6. Van Buren ~3.50; 7.
Ayer.-vUie U.OO: 8. Hicksville
39.50.
Region 19
I. Canal Winchester 80.00; 2.
Newark Catholic 78.55: 3. Easl
Knox 65.00: '4. Portsmouth
Noire Dame 54.47: 5. Colum·
bus Wehrle 52.00: 6. Ridgedale
47.00; 7. New Albany 35.00; R.
Plymouth 34.541.
Region 20
I. Middletown Fenwick
94.30; 2. New Bremen 59.11; 3.
CedarvUie 56.50; 4. (tle) Sl.

Division ll

control o! the legislative and
executive branches and compel
them to fight like two scorpions In
a bottle.
"America deserves, and
needs, better than that. I! you
want me to be your president, I
l!lik you most sincerely to give me
a Congress that agrees with you.
"Thank you, and good night."

(11-'!~) .

ColumbusBeechcroft 135.50; 3.
Unlonlown Lake 132.50: I .
North Cantoo Hoover 124.00; 5.
Columbus Independen ce
119.50; 6. Cambridge 1\4,50; 7.
Delaware ,Hayes 109.50: 8.
Columbus Watler!O&gt;n 98.50.
Region 8
I. Harrison 158.70; %. Frank·
ltn 119.50: 3. Portsmouth
100.50; 4. Lebanon 98.00; 5.
Clnclnnall Pureell Marian
90.00; 6. Elida 77.50; 7. Nor·
wood 75.50; 8. Cincinnati AncJ.
erfO&gt;n 68.00.
Division Ill
Region 9
I. Akron St. Vincent.Sl.
Mary 150.25; 2. YoungsiOwn
Mooney 120.58; .3. Campbell
Memorial 103.05; 4. Palnes·

· 1. Colwnbus Academy 81.00;
2. Bet pre 79.16; 3. Marlon Elgin

114!glon .a
, At Prlnt.-eton Stadium
ClnclnJMI\ Princeton 11-11 ,., Daylon
W~m: tt-l J, Sat.•nla.f. 1 p,m .
A.l Dayton Welcome &amp;adklm
Clndnl8ti Elder (t-1) VII Clnli•fllll
Moeller tt·l), Saturd.,., !: 30 p.m.

What Bush should say ___~W_il_lia_m_Rus_he_r
I realize It's asking a lot o! a
man within inches of the presidency, but here's what I wish
George Bush would say to the
American people "tn a television
address on Sunday evening, Nov.

8
'
6

Houi!ion

fire_O_ve_rst_re_et

that would touch and improve
our lives personally, and that he
was just the passionate leader
who could Implement them.
Dukakls was just as unsuccess·
ful at exciting us against Bush.
And look what he had to work
with: clear indications that Bush
was a silent accompltce In the
largest abuse of power s !nee
Watergate; association with an
administration staffed with the
biggest group of cheats ever
brought to public light; and a
running mate · with a dismal
aca.d emlc record who used his
family's influence to get out of
possible military duty in Vietnam and Into law school, who was
caught fudging on his resume
and Is hands·down the most
medlcre Republican leglslator·of
any ·c onsidered for this vice
presidency.
Dukakls didn't make many
points with any of this, with the
possible exception of a little
Quayle bashing. During the early
part of the campaign, he acted
like he expected the evidence to

p,

Centnd

Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

Campaign was all

"""'

W L T
Pd. _
9 I 0 ,M(J t 12
s .. 1 .»&gt; 2iG
ki.an&amp;polll
5 !i 0 .$f{J . zu
Miami
5 5 0 .Mil IK6
New En-'and
5 0 .3111 171

RuH_.o
NYJ'eb

At Sprlajlfleld Evan• Stadium
Urb&amp;M I IHl VI Spr~lfleld NorIIM!Mj,r,UI (I-I), Sllurd_,, 7 p.m.
AI Day loft Weloome Sladtum
CAPE (8-1!) VII Broob'Ui e ( IG-41).
saaurday 1 p.m .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Cavs ·topple Pacers, 105-99

Scoreboard ...

Page-2-The Daily SentiWJI .

Amer ican Conler~tm:e

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

'

)

Middleport, Ohio

�..

---

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 7, 1988

Monday, November 7, 1988 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bengals dismantle Steelers

••

WOODS TRIPPED UP- Ben gals nmnlng back
·· 1ckey Woods Is trl[lped up by the Steelers' defense
after a short gain In the second quarte~ of
Sunday's game In Cincinnati. Defending on the

.,

play are Cornell Gowdy (29), Dwayne Woodruff
( 49) and Gerald WIIHams-, right. The Ben gals won .
42-7. (UPI)

Bears wallop Buccaneers;
Giants edge Cowboys, 29-21
games against AFC East oppoBy JEFF SHAIN
Steelers.
UPI Sports Writer
Eddie Brown set a Bengal nents. Miami's Dan Marino comrecord with 216 receiving yards.
The Chicago Bears won withpleted 29 of 51 passes for 359
out th ei r coach and quarterback
and Boomer Eslason passed for yards and a touchdown, but was
Sunday, while the Pittsburgh
318 yards and three touchdowns. intercepted twice.
Cardinals 24, 49ers 23
Steelers were humlliated to the
James Brooks scored three
point their coach suggested the
touchdowns.
At Tempe, Ariz., Nell Lomax
players not accept their pay"This was probably our best hlt Roy Green on a 9-yard
effort, top to bottom, in all touchdown pass with three sechecks this week.
The Bears, playing with Coach
aspects of the game," said conds left to cap a Cardinal, 6-4,
Mike Ditka in the hospital and
comeback from a 23-0 deficit.
Esiaso~o completed 16 of 23
passes.
first- string quarterback Jim
The 49ers fell to 6-4.
McMahon on the sidelines with a
In other games, the New York
Redsklns :n, Saints 24
knee injury, generated four
At Washington. rookie Chip
Giants beat Dallas 29-21, Minnetouchdowns over the second and
sota swamped Detroit 44-17,
Lohmlller kicked a 23-yard field
Atlanta blanked Green Bay 20-0,
goal with 47 seconds to play to lift
third quarters Sunday to easily
Washington, 6-4. Doug Wllllams
defeat the Tampa Bay BuccaPhiladelphia held off the Los
Angeles Rams 30-24, New Eng- fired two touchdown pas~s and
·
neers 28-10.
Dltka watched the game !rom
land downed Miami 21-10, Pho- ran lor a score lor the Redsklns.
Morten Andersen missed· a 49enix edged San. Francisco 24-23,
his room at a Lake Forest, Ill.,
hospital, where he was recuper- Washington nipped New Orleans yard field-goal attempt as time
at ing !rom a mild heart attack
27-24, Indianapolis whipped the expired for New Orleans, 7-3.
suffered Wednesday. Defensive . New York Jets 38-14, Denver
Colts 38, Jets 14
At Indianapolis, Chris
topped Kansas City 17-11 and
coordinator VInce Tobin served
Bullalo defeated Seattle 13-3. The Chandler ran 30 yards tor a
as the team's coach.
. "I talked with Coach Dltka,"
touchdown and threw for a score
Los Angeles Raiders beat San
Diego 13-3 in a night gart)e.
robin said. "He called after the
as the Colts scored 31 unans·
game. He said it was a great
wered points. Indianapolis, 5·5,
Houston was to host Cleveland
has won four straight games, Its
effort by a lot of people. EverybIn the Monday night game.
longest winning streak since
ody, I thought, was under some
Giants 29, Cowboys 21
1977.
The Jets fell to :&gt;-4-1.
tremendously adverse condl·
At East Rutherford. N.J ., the
Broncos 17, Chiefs 11
lions this week. But they hung Giants converted three Dallas
At
Denver,
JohnElway threw a
t9gether and they played well. I
fumbles Into first-hall touchand Sammy
touchdown
pass
was extremely proud."
downs, two on scoring passes
: Mike Tomczak ran the Chicago from Phil Simms to Stephen
Winder ran lor a score as the
offense in the absence of McMa- Baker. It was the fourth straight Broncos rebounded from two
blowout losses. Denver. 5-5, had
hon, who suffered a knee injury wln lor the Giants, 7-3. and kept
been outscored 94-44 In losing Its
in last week's loss to New them one game up In the NFC
previous two games. Kansas City
England.
East. Dallas, 2·8, lost its sixth
"I think subconsciously it straight.
are an NFL- worst 1-8-1.
Bills 13, Seahawks 3
(,Ditka's absence) was In the
VIkings 44, Uons 17
back of oyr minds the whole
At Seattle, Robb Riddick ran
At Minneapolis, Wade Wilson
for a touchdown Sunday and
game." Tomczak said. "But we passed for a career-high 391
Buffalo's defense stretched Its
knew we had our job to do; to go yards, 188 to Anthony Carter for
out there and win the ballgame." Minnesota, 6-4. Wilson com- streak for not allowing a touchTomczak completed 18 of 26 pleted 28 of 35 passes, including down to eight quarters. The Bills
passes for 269 yards with two 14 straight at one point. The Lions improved to an NFL· best 9·1 and
expanded Its lead In the AFC
touchdowns, and rushed for 28 fell to 2-8.
East to a league-best31-2 games.
yards on three carries.
Falcons 20, Packers 0
VinnyTestaverde, returning to
At Atlanta, Chris Miller com· Seattle, . 5-5, remained In a
three-way tie for first ln the AFC
.s tart for the Buccaneers after pleted 10 of 12 passes In the first
being benched last week, com- half, Including a 45-yard touch- West.
Raiders 13, Chargers 3
pleted 22 of 52 passes tor 305 down strike to Gene Lang to help
yards with two Interceptions. Atlanta. 3-7, wln two straight
At San Diego, Steve Beuerleln
threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to
Tampa Bay, 2-8. lost its filth games for the first time since
-straight overall and its 11th In a September 1986. Green Bay fell Trey Junkin with 12:24 left to
break a 3-3 tie. Chris Bahr kicked
row to the Bears dating to 1982.
to 2-8.
two field goals for the Raiders.
: At Cincinnati. the Bengals
Eagles 30, Rams 21
5-5, which moved Into a threerolled up 559 yards total offense
At Philadelphia, Randall CunIn a 42· 7 rout of Pittsburgh, the nlgham passed for 323 yards and way tie for first In the AFC West.
San Otego dropped to 2-8 with Its
' targest victory margin in the three touchdowns, and the Easixth straight loss.
Steelers·Bengals r ivalry.
gles~ 5-5, intercepted four Jim
• "What we s hould do is donate Everett passes. Everett had
:Qu1 sala ries." Pll tsburgh Coach entered with only five intercep- ___;·;...Sports briefB - ,€huck No ll said. "That wasn't tions. William Frizzell picked off
professiona 1 football."
an Everett pass at the Eagles'
Horse Racl ng
Pit t.sburgh, 2-8, is off too Its · 7-yard line with 16 seconds left to
Firm Tribute went wire to wire
. worst start in 20 years. Cincin- drop the Rams to 7-3.
in 1:55.3 to win the $393,506
· nati accumulated the mostoffenPatriots 21, Dolphins 10
Breeders' Crown at the Meadow:slve yards ever given up by the
At Foxboro, Mass., rookie John
lands in East Rutherford, N.J.,
Stephens ran for 104 yards and a
defeating a field of 3-year-old colt
touchdown as the Patriots, 5-5,
and gelding trotters. Last year's
won their sixth straight game
leading money winner increased
over the Dolphins, 5-5. The
his total winnings to $1,295,000.
(All games)
( Dolphins a~e winless In four
p
·TEAM
/. W L
OP
&amp;lpre ................. 9 1 223 69
:Meigs .................. 6 4 2-22 194
Vinton ....... .. ........6 4 86 88
Nels-York ............ 6 · 4 156 160
Trimble ............... 4 6 138 116
Wellston ............. .4 6 179 162
Fed. Hocklng ....... 2 8 105 199
l\'11! ler ... ..... ..........2 8 68 167
Alexander ........... 1 9 65 264
(TVC Only)
(Final)
TEAM
W L
P OP
f!elpre ....... ,......... 8 0 200 47
Meigs .................. 6 2 203 89
Nelsonville .......... 6 2 136 -lil-.VI nton .................5 3 80 66
J'rimble ............... 4 4 115 110
coJ~fidence
Wellston .............. 3 5 143 134
Fed. Hocking ....... 2 6 93 186
Alexander .... : ...... 1 7 33 211
Miller ..................1 7 55 158
Nov. 4 res111ts
flthens 34 Nelsonvllle·York 20
Oak Hill 49 Alexander 26
Minford 17 Trimble 6
Vinton 6 Zane Trace 0
Galllpolis 55 Meigs 9
Warren Local 16 Belpre 0
saturday's result:
Paid lor by Candidlle Fred W. Crow Ill,
Rd ..
OH.
Wellston 27 Jackson 15

r

TVC standings

CINCINNATI (UP I) - In the alone at the top of the AFC
56 years the Pittsburgh Steelers Central "dlvlslon. The winner of
have been playing professional tonight's Cleveland-Houston
football, they've never given up game wlll be one game behind
as many yards - 559 - as they Clnclnnall and the loser two
did In Sunday's humiliating 42-7 games back.
loss to the Cincinnati Bengals.
Cincinnati amassed Its 559
But Pittsburgh coach Chuck yards on 36 rushes for 221 yards
Nolllsn' t that surprised. He says
(an average gain of 6 yards per
he Jsn' t sure the Steelers are carry) and on 26 passes lor 338
really a pro team any more.
yards (an average gain of 13
"What we should do Is donate yards per pass ). Meanwhile, a
our salaries," Noll said alter stubborn Bengals' defense II·
Sunday's embarrassment. "That mlted Pittsburgh to just 198
wasn't professional football."
yards.
The Steelers, 2-8 and olftothelr
"This was probably our best
worst start In 20 years, were effort, top to bottom, In all
pushed all over the lleld all day aspects of the game," said
long by the Bengals. Last deEslason, who completed 16 of 23
cade's "Steel Curtain" seems passes.
'
like ancient his tory.
" It was a special day because
"This Is the worst I can we dld so many things right,"
remember since I've been here," added Cincinnati coach Sam
said seven-year veteran SteelWyche. "Through all four quarers' linebacker Bryan Hinkle.
ters, it was probably our best
"It's embarrassing to play like
game.''
this."
Brown, the NFL' s top receiver
The Bengals' 35-polnt win
with 1,015 yards In 42 catches,
represented the biggest margin · shattered Crls Colllnsworth' s
of victory In the 37-game history
single-game Clnclnnatl receivof the Bengals-Steelers rivalry.
Ing record of 2Q6 yards.
Cincinnati's potent offense was
"I coilgralulated him, then I
paced by Eddie Brown, who set a
kicked hlm," said Collinsworth.
club record with 216 receiving
''It feels great to set this record
yards, and Boomer Esiason, who
and I'm looking forward to many
passed lor 318 yards and three
more," said Brown. "I've altouchdowns.
·
ready surpassed one of my goals
The win boosted Cincinnati's
for this season - 1,000 yards."
record to8-2 and kept theBengals
One of Brown's seven recep-

Ohio Outdoors

When is the right time to
buy first gun for y~ur child?
when a child Is old enough to
By JERRY PICKRELL
handle a gun comes from the gut.
Outdoor Writers
If he's been mowing the grass
Association of America
without much of a problem, and
Distributed by UPI .
I saw an advertisement the hasn't broken the neighbor's
other day lor a Daisy Red Rider window with hls slingshot..
BB gun and. lor a brief magic maybe It's time to take him
moment, my aching knees and shooting with your gun once or
falling eyesight were replaced by · twice.
Watch how he reacts to the
the exuberance of youth.
It was almost llke having my safety lessons •- and these need
life pass before my eyes. I to be good ones because they are
remembered the first one I ever the ones most remembered and how he handles the gun when
held.
'
It felt big, powerful. Not one of It's his turn to shoot.
Respect
Is
the
order
of
the
day.
those llghtweight cap-shooting
If
he's
afraid
of
it,
maybe
It's
too
toys I'd hefted before, this was a
gun. The sound of the smooth soon .
If he waves lt llke a baton, It
rattle of the BBs In the barrelchamber was . reassuring and certainly is. Wait for next year,
thrilling at the same moment. I and If he asks again, give hlm
another chance.
loved it.
On the other hand , if he's
But this was not my gun; it
belonged to a friend. At my age caref~tl, but Interested, you have
(and I don't recall how old I was a d!!Cislon to make.
then), I was told I was too young
for a gun.

Kings down Blackhawks, 5-3

tlons from Eslason went for an
86-yard touchdown, the third
longest TD pass In the Bengals'
21-year history. Eslason and
Brown also teamed on a 6-yard
TD toss, whtle Esla~on fired a
5-yard scoring strike to Tlm
McGee.
James Brooks scored three
touchdowns on runs of 9, 3 and 2
yards. Rookie Ickey Woods
rushed 10 Urnes for 110 yards.
"They ran the ball on us, they
passed the ball on us; they dld
whatever they wanted against
us." said Hinkle. "We simply
could not stop them. I can't recall
a game wl)en we couldn't stop a
team at least a few Urnes. ! really
don't even remember stopping
them once."
Pittsburgh's lol)e score came
In the opening quarter on a 9-yard
run by Bubby Brister. After that
score !led the game ·7-7, the
Bengals exploded for 35 straight
points.
Brls(er said he agreed with
Noll that the Steelers dldn' t
deserve to be paid Sunday.
"I know I didn't earn my
money ;" said Brister, who completed only 11 of 29 passes for 147
yards. "Cincinnati played a
helluva game and we played like
crap. We were terrible.
"I think everybody on our team
should be upset," added Brister.
"Nobody played well. We
couldn't get . anything going on
offense or defense. This was one
of the longest days I've ever
spent on a football field."

•

--Sports briefs-College
Kentucky freshman Shawn
Kemp, lmpllcated In the theft of
two gold necklaces from the son
of basketball coach Eddie Su !ton,
has transferred to a community
college In Florida. Kemp, a
Proposition 48 CjiSUalty, was
named by Lexington pollee as the
person who sold the necklaces to
a Lexington pawn shop.

SACRED HEART
CHURCH BAZAAR
THURS., NOV. 1Oth

6Ji&gt;~~~

AnENTION VOTERS
OF
CHESTER TOWNSHIP

Ohio weekend sports briefs...

VOTE "YES"
FOR THE FIRE LEVY

BLUFFTON, Ohio (UPJ.) Two Blu!lton College alumni
were enshrined into their alma
mater's Sports Hall of Fame.
Richard Rosenberg, a 1952
graduate, and Blll Ramseyer,
1958, were Inducted Saturday
prior to the Bluffton-Wilmington
game.
Rosenberger. who earned
seven letters In football. basket·
ball and track, practices law In
Quakertown, Pa. He is also a
trustee for Bluffton College.
Ramseyer earned six letters In
football and track, and is now the
hel!-d football coach at Wilmington College.
Wilmington went on to hand
Bluffton its first loss of the
season. 27-24.

ON NOV. 8th

Pd. for by Ch•tor Vol. Firo Dept.,
Robort Woods, 4698CJ St. lt. 241,
l.o •• Bolt om

MEIGS COUNTY
CLERK OF COURTS
Your Vote And
Support

NEW CONCORD, Ohio /UPOl
· - Musklngum won the fifth
annual Ohio Athletic Conference
women's volleyball tournament
Saturday, beating lour-time
champion Ohio Northern.'
Musklngum won 15-10, 15·11,
and 15-12.
This league victory sends Mus,
kingum into regional competition with a 36-9 record.

Appreciated.
Paid for by Cand .. larry E. Spencer.
Box 335, Racine

DELAWARE, nhto (UP!) Wheaton (Ill.) defeated Kalamazoo (Mich.) 1-0 In a shootout
Saturday to win the NCAA
Division III Great Lakes Regional soccer tournament.
Wheaton takes Its 18-2-2 record
Into the quarterfinals against the
New England regional winner .
Wheaton and Kalamazoo had
played scoreless through regulation and Into overtime where a
shootout was necessary to decide
the game.

PURCHASE AT REGULAR PRICE
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fOR DINNER

GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP I) Gretchen Rupp scored with 2:42
left In overtime Saturday, to five
Worthington a 1-0 win over Kent

TO ALL VOTERS

Thank You. for
your support in
the May Primary. I
would appreciate
your vote of
on
November 8th as
Common Pleas
Court Judge.

FRED W. CROW Ill
f

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right, during the first period of Sunday night's
game. ( UPI)
·
·

CRASH! -New Jersey Devil Kirk Mulller, Iell,
goes Dying between hls teammate Pat Verbeek,
center, and the New York Rangers' Michel Petit,

DAI1.Y AFTER 4 P,M, All DAY SUNDAY

I

In other games. Boston topped
this pace and tie Howe's record ·
Vancouver 4-2, Philadelphia
Aprll1 against Vancouver at Los
nipped Plt tsburgh 5·4. Detroit
Angeles, he would have achieved
dumped
Edmonton 5-2, and New
1,850 points In 163 fewer games
Jersey
tripped
the Rangers 6-5.
than did Howe.
Bruins
4,
Canucks 2
Fitzpatrick did not have long to
At
Boston,
Bob
Sweeney resavor hls milestone. The 19-yearturned
from
a
two-game
benchold, who was theKings'No. 2 pick
Ing
to
score
a
goal
and
set
up two
In 1987, made numerous spectacothers.
Including
the
tie-breaker
ular saves, but knew he was to be
by Andy Brickley 3:03 Into the
demoted to New ~ven of the
third
period, lifting the Bruins to
American floc key League follow11-0·1
In its last 12 home games
ing the game.
against
Vancouver. The Canucks
"They told me no matter what
are
2-31-3
in Boston Garden.
happened I'd be going back
Flyers
5, Pe nguins 4
down," he said. "They made it
At
Philadelphia,
TlQJ Kerr
clear that there was no pressure
scored
his
second
power-play
on me. They just wanted to give
goal of the game to glve the
me a taste of NHL life. "
At his current pace, Gretzky
Flyers the lead and Brian Propp
Kings Coach Robbie Florek
will pass Gordie Howe to become sent off Fitzpatrick wlth a note of
contributed three assists. The
the all-time scoring king in Los optimism.
Flyers ex tended their undeAngeles' 79th gameoftheseason.
feated streak against Pittsburgh
"He'll be back sometime," he
By then, he could be helping the said. "He was impressive."
at Philadelphia 38-0-3 since Jan.
20, 1974.
Kings gear up lor a run at the
Gretzky assisted on Dave Tay·
perennial powers in the playoffs. lor's power-play goal 5:22 Into
Red Wings 5, Oilers 2
" Any time you reach a mlles- the first period for hls milestone
At Detroit. Gerard Gallant
stcuck lor a pair of third -period
tone, It's really exciting. These point. He scored a goal in the
are the best 450 players in the second period and added his 13th
goals, including the go-ahead
score, to s park the Red Wings.
world here," Gretzky said of of the season In the third .
NHL talent. "It's a nice feeling.
Tim Higgins scored on a breaka·
"Los Angeles Is a muchway to boost Detroit's lead to·4-2
Each milestone mea!l s more as improved hocl(ey team, no quesat·16: 19 and Gallant produced hls
you get closer and closer to the tion," said Black hawks Coach
end (of your 'career)."
fifth
goal of the season 27 seconds
Mike Keenan, whose team fell to
later after stealing a clearing
''The Great One" entered the 4-10. "But those bits and pieces
pass.
season needing 181 points to you saw !rom us don' t compenDevils 6, Rangers 5
match Howe's total, and already sate !Or a lack of overall team
At . East Rutherford, N.J.,
has 33 points this season, lnclud· effort."
Mark Johnson scored two goals
lng at least one In every game as
Bernie Nicholls broke a 2-2
a King. He has scored at least 183 second period tie With hls 14th · and added an assist, and llnemate Patrlk Sundstrom contribpoints slx times in his NHL goal of the season, giving the
uted a goal and two assists,
career, and should he maintain Kings the lead for good.
leading the Devils. The thtrd
member
Johnson's line. John
- - - - - - - S p o r t s b r i e f s - - - - - - MacLean,·ofrecorded
two assists
4-under-par 68 that included against goaltender John
Boxing
three birdies .... Doug Tewell and Vanblesbrouck.
Antonio Esparragoza of. VeneBob Gilder shot a tournament
zuela floored Panamanian chal·
record-tying 32-under-par four Ienger Jose Marmolejo twice
round total of 256 to wln the
m ldway through the bou I and
$400,000
Acorn Doubles Men's.
completed the knockout in the
at Tokyo, winGolf
Tournament
eighth round to retain his WBA
ning
$88,000.
featherweight title at Marsala.
Sicily .... South Korea's undeTennis
John McEnroe won the$600,000
feated Yoo Myung-woo made a
DINNER
Europea~ Community Chamsuccessilll defense of hls World
GAMES-PRIZES
Boxing Association junior fly- pionships at Antwerp, Belgium
for the third time, defeating
weight crown. knocking out BaDINNER 6 pm-7 pm
Andrei Chesnoko\' of the Soviet
har Udln of Indonesia In the
Everyone Welcome
Union, 6-1, 7-5, 6-3. The victory
seventh round at Seoul, South
was worth $220,000·for McEnroe,
Korea .... Top-ranked cqntender
Chesnokov was hampered by an
Napa Kaitwanchai of Thailand
wlll challenge World Boxing ankle injury.
Council strawwelght champion
NOW OPEN IN
H!rokl Ioka of Japan Sunday in a
:.'-••••••••~ I
rematch for boxing's lightest
DINNER FOR FOUR
I
crown. Ioka, 19, retained the title
DOMINO'S '
LARGE 16" 5-ITEM PIZZA
I
in a controversial draw with
;, With Pep ..roni. SIUUQ•. Mu1hrooms. .
:1
PIZZA
Onlo .. 1nd Gr•en P~per•
Kaltwanchai ·In Osaka last June,
DELIVERS
PLUS 4 · 16 oz. Sofld1inks
'I
and the WBC approved a reFREE.
match alter examining a vide&lt;&gt;limited Dtliury
•
HOI/..
West Main St.
tape of the bout .
Ana
POI(RO't'
11 ... , ,. SI!IIL·Tlllll$.
992-2124
STOAl OIU'I'
11
. fri.-Sel.
Golf
Wayne Grady defeated Greg
Lunch Spacial
DINNER FOR TWO
Norman at the fourth playoff hole
ANY 12" 2 ITIM PIZZA
t 2" 1 ITEll PIZZA
to capture the $380,000 Australian
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Softdrinks
PWS 2 . 16 oz. Sofldrlnks
PGA title at Syndey, Australia.
Grady had seven birdies and one
bogey for a final round of 66 and
Lunch Onty-11 AM ·1 PM
won $71,000, ending a four-year
110111151
POIIIERO¥
POIEIIO'f
11 AM ·I .1M S~IL·11""r~o
~OOE OIIILT
1l All ·l .. S.IL·!'-'~o
drought since winning the 1984
SfOIE OMlf
11 AM-I 11A ffl·s.t,
, , ....., All
German Open. Norman fired a
By GERRY MONIGi\N
UPI Sports Writer
Prior to the trade that brought
Wayne Gretzky to Los Angeles.
his passage of mllestones had
grown anticlimactic. Now. however, they serve to lllustrate the
ascent of the Kings.
Gretzky became the \hlrd
player in NHL history to score
1, 700 points and rookie Mark
Fitzpatrick made 34 saves in his
debut Sunday night, leading the·
Kings to a 5-3 victory over the
Chicago Blackhawks. Los An·
geles moved wlthln one point of
first-place Calgary In the Smythe
Division.

LARRY E.
SPENCER

Begging, crying and pleading
all served only to reinforce my
parents' conviction that! was not
yet mature enough to assume the
responsibll!ty of a BB gun.
Looking back now, Iljdmlrewhat
my parents did and the judgment
they exercised In making that
decision.
When (or whether) to buy your
child hls or her first BB gun (or
shotgun or automobile) Is never
an easy decision. Age may be a
guide, but It Is only one element
in a complex equation. I know
some grown men who shOuldn't
be allowed to own a BBgun, and I
know some 8-year-olds I'd trust
to drive a car l! their legs were
longer.
Probably the best Indication of

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

SVAC standings

(All games-llnal)
TEAM
W L P
Oak Hill ............ 9 1 297
Symmes Valley . 7 3 266
North Gallia ...... 6 3 172
Hannan Trace . .. 6 4 170
Southwestern ..... 5 5 159
Kyger Creek ...... 2 7 84
Southern ............ 3 7 95
Eastern ............. 0 10 38
(SVAC only)
Final
TEAM
W L P
Oak Hill .............. 7 0 222
Symmes Valley ... 6 1 218
North Gal!la ....... .4 3 146
Hannan Trace .... .4 3 133
Southwestern ....... 4 3 113
Southern .............. 2 5 69
Kyger Creek ... ..... 1 6 64
Eastern .'.............. 0 7 19
'. Saturday's result
Symmes Valley 36, Ironton
Joe 0

Roosevelt and the girls high
school field hockey state title .
Worthington had defeated
Cleveland Heights 4-0. and Kent
beat Dayton Oakwood 5-0 in the
semifinals al Denison
University. •
Worthington finished at 21-0·1
whlle Kent ended at 12-6-3.
Cleveland Heights bowed out at
7-5-3 and Dayton Oakwood had an
8-8-3 season.
OBERLIN, Ohio (UPI) Allegheny defeated two-time defending champion Kenyon Saturday to wln the North Coast
Athletic Conference women's
volleyball tournament.
Allegheny emerged the viet or
with two wiQs out of the threegame set. The Lady Gators
dropped the first match ~-15, but
won the next two 15-5 and 15-7.
Finishing In order were Woos·
ter , Den !son, Oberlin, Ohio Wesleyan and Case Western.
TOLEDO. Ohio (UP I) -Green
Bowl, driven by Todd Buter. won
Sunday night's featured trot at
Toledo Raceway .Park, going the
mile in 2:071-5 on a sloppy track.
He defeated Hey Hey Fitzie by
one and one-half lengths while
the favorite, Fabio W, was third.
Leading Shot and Millies Marquis won the first two races to
return $242.40 on the dally doullle
combination of 7 and 8.
Sunday's crowd of 1,491 wagered $177,018.

I

OP
92
98
146
168
202
203

OP
44
57
123
125
115
145
158
217

$9.99 .

$6.17
.....

$4.99
fr~ ·Sel

.ACTIVE LEADERSHIP FOR THE FUTURE
AKRON, Ohio /UP I) - Amy
Bottke scored both goals for Kent
State in its 2-1 victory over Ball
State to win the Mid American
Conference !leld hockey title.
Bottke scored unassisted less
than two minutes after Sunday's
title game began, and then
scored early in the second half.
Heather McNamara scored Ball
;Stale's lone goal, one minute
' after Bottke' s first goal.
Kent State, which finished
13-6·1, defeated Miami 3-2 In
Friday's semifinal, while Ball
State. which bowed out at 11-4·2,
beat Toledo 2-1 in the other
semifinal.
The championship game was
to have been played Saturday,
but wa s rained oUt and rescheduled for Sunday. It was played
in the snow.

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

"If's time lor 1 changt In the war wt trt rtprtlfnttd In Wathington. We ntad octlrt reprtltnfotlon In
Congrest, senslflve to . the problems, needs, anct luture of our district. I tnrltlon a new style of
representation with an unprecedented open access and two-way communication between rour
congressional office and aU the people of the district."
·
"/ am seeking the prM/ego to serve as rour rtprestnfltlrt In Congreu. I will be accesslblo to rou,
responsible to rou, and will work harrl lor til the people of our district, and will hold what Is In your best
Interests above tho special Interests."
"I will work with local, state and federal govelnments, citizens, citizens groups, farmers, educators,
unions, and representatives of business and Industry to define the problems lacing our district and
determine how tho resources of our /ederal goremment can best be utlllzecf In helping to resolve them."
"Working togolhtt we can c &gt;ate • ria/on of the tuturt and begin to build the foundation lor a betrer.
stronger, and more secure future for our district. our stste, snd our nation."

John Buchanan Will Work for tile Future of the loth Dlsfrfc( .
* FAIR TRADE LAWS· to protect jobs, prevent unfair foreign competition, and export
of jobs by our own U.S. corporations. Stop the $171 billion per year balance of trade
deficit. Let's put made In the USA back on the products we buy.
* CONTROL OF CORPORATIONS • to stop the rising tide of mergers, leveraged
buyouts, and hoslile lake-overs which are destroying our local economies for the
enrichment of a lew. Let them get rich the old-fashioned way, Invest, create jobs,
produce a product or service, and earn II.
* EDUCATION • to Improve education at all levels and extend the opportunity lor a
quality education to all. Education Is vital to the strength and future of America. ·
SOCIAL SECURITY AND RETIREMENT SYSTEMS. We must protect and Improve
these vital systems.
·
* FAIR HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS COSTS AND POLICIES ·to provide the proper level
of care lor all.
* FAIR ECONOMIC POLICIES • coordinated fiscal/
monetary policies to reduce waste/spending,
balance the budget, and truly stop Inflation. For
stable economic expansion.
* CONTINUED DEVELOPMENT OF TECHNOLOGY·
for use of Ohio's high sulphur coal.
* ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION • to speed up
the clean·up, to protect our environment,
ourselves, and our future, to prevent other states
from dumping their trash and toxic wastes In

*

Ohio.

VOTE YES
FOR

241
339

On Saturday night's card,
Brave Champ, driven by Hugh
Beatty Jr., won the featured
pace, coming from behind for a
one·lengtli wln over Flying
Majestic.
Brave Champ, last much of the
way , took the lead in midstretch
and paced in the mile In 2:03 2-5.
Towanda Princess was third.
Spring Jet and Charity Caper
won the first two races to return
$184 on the dally double combination of 7 and 5.
-.,
Saturday's crowd of 2,205 wa -'
gered $213 ,574.

POMEROY, OHIO

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

Cemetery Maintenance Levy
1 Mill For Operating Expenses
5 CEMETERIES
SERVED

ROCKSPRINGS BUNKER HILL
BRADFORD
HOWELL HILL
AUSTIN
Paid by SalisbuiY Township Trustees.
Sarah Gibbs, 34046 11111 Run Rd .. Pomeroy, Ohio

St.

&gt;

* NATIONAL DEFENSE ·Improved management of
defense department to atop waste, fraud and
exce11lve coats, to maintain a strong, flexible
defense capability.

I

* INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT· to create jobs.

* ·A FAIR MINIMUM WAGE POLICY.
* A REAL WAR ON DRUGS. .
* PROTECTION OF OUR CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS.

I

·
•

JOHN BUCHANAN
FOR U.S. CONGRESS
Pilei trw by olotln Buchan• tor Congre11 Commlttn, 11713 Marn1 Ad., 'kE, Ne"arll, Ohio 43055

�•

--P-aa

8-The Daily S.llltinll

-

Ponwoy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, NcMmber 7. 1988

Holiday service projects .planned by Girl Scouts

·,

Holiday ser vice projects were
pita! Extended Care Center and 1204, led by Barbara Lawrence;
must be started right a way,
the main concern at Thursday
the. Arcadia Nursing Home. Syracuse Brownie Troop 1120, Cogar said, and a meeting to
evening's meeting of Girl Scout Troops In the service unit will be led by Connie Collins; and discl!SS the event Is set for Nov.
leaders of the Big Bend East combining to visit these lac1litles Chester Brown le Troop 1067, led 14, 7 to 9 p.m., at the field center
Service Unit. The meeting was during .the holiday season.
by Anna McCoy.
In Athens. One person to repres·
held at the Syrac11se United
A !i4!rvice unit Christmas party
In-service training dates for ent the service unit should at tend
Methodist Church.
was planned for the Dec. 1 ' multimedia first aid and troop the meeting where Ideas lor the
· A project to encompass all m~ting. An ornament exchange managment sessions, were re- program, a location and -time lor
troops In the service unit for the will be held and those planning to viewed. Ho llday Plug-In events the program, are to be shared.
benefit of the Athens County attend the party are to spend no for junior-age level were also Anyone wishing to represent the
SineCara Home for ju venUes was more than $4 If an ornament Is announced. Dis trlbu ted to lead· service unit at the Athens meetapproved. Donations of clothing, purchased. Refreshments for the ers were copies or a new Ing should contact Shirley Cogar.
personal grooming Items, and party were assigned.
A director for this summer's
Council-required parent permls·
recreational Items such as
A combined Investiture- slon lorm for any type of Gir I Girl Scout Day Camp Is also
games, are to be provided by rededication ceremony for new Scout activity, including walks. needed and anyone who might \le
e.ach troop In the service unit. and exper-Ienced leaders will be Additional copies ol the new lorm
Clothing sizes and needs at conducted at the party. Field will be available from Cogar-as
SineCara are to be gathered by Director Dee Lawrence, Athens, soon as she receives them from
Aprll Harmon and provided to wlll also be at the meeting and CounciL
Shirley Cogar, Big Bend East party. The meeting will be held at
Cluster 041, which Includes
Service Unit director. Cogar will the Syracuse United Methodist Meigs and Athens Counties, and
The annual holiday party was
· then pass the Information on to Church, with the January and Jackson County, W.Va, of the planned for Dec. 6 when the
troop leaders.
February meetings to be held at Black Diamond Girl Scout Coun· United Methodist Women of the
' Locally, Individual service pro- the Chester Fire Station.
Asbury Church met recently at
cil, ts hoping to schedule a special
jects are being planned for the
the
church.
Super Troop Awards for the outdoor event sometime during
Meigs County Infirmary, past year were presented by the year. To ensure the successor .
In lieu of a gift exchange
Amerlcare·Pomeroy Nursing . Cogar to Syracuse Junior Troop a cluster-wide event, planning members will donate money for
Ci!nter, Veterans Memorial Hosgifts to the Sine Cara residents.

Interested In fllllng this position
should also contact Cogar. The
director will need to participate
In day . camp training so the
sooner the position Is fllled the
better, Cogar said.
Leaders were remind~ to
provide QSP magazine sales
lnfqrmatlon to Cogar and to get
troop sponsorship forms turned
In as soon as possible.
Cogar also asked leaders to
carpool to and from service unit
meetings as much as possible
during the winter months.

UMW meeting conducted

: :;===================================== .
Community calendar

'

MONDAY
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.
REEDSVILLE - Reedsville
United Methodist Church will be
In revival Monday throughSatur·
day with services starting at 7
p.m. each night. Special shtglng
will also be featured nightly.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church ofChristwlll be In revival
Monday through Saturday with
different speakers and singing
groups each night. Services start
at 7:30p.m.
POMEROY- The Meigs High
fall sports banquet for football,
volleyball, cross country, golf
and cheerleadlrig, will be held
Monday, 6:30p.m., at the school.
Bring two covered dishes, veget·
able, dessert or salad.

~

..

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Middleport
Presbyterian Church lor a
Christmas workshop . All
members should bring
materials.
TUESDAY
Free
HARRISONVILLE
blood pressure clinic will be held

Tuesday from 10 a.m to noon at
the Harrisonville Town Hall. The
clinic is sponsored by the Harrl·
sonvllle Senior Citizens Club.
There will be a luncheon at noon
!allowed by a business meeting.

at the Chester United Methodist
Church. Serving will ~ tart at 11
a.m . On the menu _will be ham
loaf dinners, vegetable soup and
chil, hot dogs, sloppy joes and
pie. The dinner Is sponsred by the
United Methodist Women.

FOREST RUN - The Forest
POMEROY - Election day
Run United Methodist Church
will have an Election Day dinner. luncheon will be served at Grace
Serving will be from 11 a.m. to 6 Episcopal Church, Pomeroy. .
p.m. There will be homema~
--vegetable soup, ,bean soup, sand.RACINE -An election day
inner will be held at the
wlches, cake pie and beverages.
.
--eorganlzed Church of Jesus
HEATH -Heath United Meth· Christ of Latter Day Saints at Old
odlst Church wlll serve an Town Flats, near Racine. Veget·
Election Day dinner In the able soup, chill, bean soup, corn
church basement. There will be a bread, sandwiches, ple and cake
chicken and noodle dinner with will be served all day. The public
beverages and dessert. Carry out is welcome.
service wlll also be available.
Dinners will be served from 11
RACINE Election day
a.m to 7 p.m.
dinners
and
suppers
wlll be
'.
served Tuesday at the Racine
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock United Methodist Church. ServSprings United Methodist ing wil start at 11 a.m. with
Women will be serving election vegetable and bean soup, corn
day dinner In the church base- bread, sandwiches, desserts and
ment starting at 11 a.m.
beverages on the menu. Eve·
The menu will include vegeta- ryone welcome.
ble soup and chill, ham sand. WEDNESDAY
wiches, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
CHESTER
- Chester Townhomemade pies and cake.
ship
Trustees
will
meet WednesBring your own con tal ners for
day,
7:
30
p.m.,
at
the
town hall.
takeout.
CHESTER - Election day
dinner and a bazaar wilt' be held

Plans made for
S&amp;W dinner Nov. 15
Opal Dyer
The 1988-89 Multiflora Ril ~~
Dlslrlcl Program Administrator program was discussed and an
POMEROY - The Meigs Soli · agreement was signed with t he
and Water Conservation District Ohio Department of Natvr·~I
met In regular session recently Resources. Meigs Count:-· ' ' ''"
and made llnal plans for the receive $2,000 In cost-si'"' " :·,; ..
Mel.gs SoU and Water Conserva- nles. Signup for the progrerr. w i ·,
tion District Annual Meeting and be November 14-Deceml •~r ~ .
Rules for the program will be
Banquet to be held on Tuesday
Nov. 15, at· 7:18 p.m. at Eastern the same as In the pas 1. A
landowner wlll be eligible for
High School.
•
cost-share
·lf he has at least one
Speaker for the evening Will be
equivalent
acre of multiflora
Emerson Martin, Livestock AucIn
pastureland.
A llmlt of
rose
tioneer, from Washington Courttwo
equivalent
acres
per lanhouse. Topic for hls talk will be
downer wlll be followed. Appli"Let's Laugh at Ourselves",
Tickets lor the Annual Meeting cants must agree to become
and Banquet are $6.75 each and cooperators of the Meigs Soli and
may be purchased from the Water Conservation District.
S'Y\'CD or ASCS Offices on the They must also attend a Multi·
second floor of the Farmers Bank flora rose training session probuilding, or from any SWCD vided by the Cooperative Exten·
sqpervlsor. Tickets must be slon Service, if they have not In
.
purchased by November 4, 1988. the past two years.
Those attending the meeting
In other business, the dlstrlcl
decided to participate In a water were Supervisors Rodney Chevalier, Thomas Theiss, Alan Holter
t~sting program provided by
and
David Gloeckner. Others
HJ!Idelberg College. The tests are
attending
were Gordono Gli·
for nitrate~ In well, spring and
more,
Mike
Duhl, Blair Windon
pc)nd water. The cost of the tests
Opal
Dyer.
and
will be $2 each.

Turkey dinners
RUTLAND - The annual
Rutland Fire Department turkey
dinner wU) be held Thursday,
Nov. 17, 5 p.m., at the Rutland
Grade School. Tickets are $5 and
may be purchased from fire
department members.
TU!'i'?;;s PLAINS -

L.., :110::.

The

.' :,, 1• ::,;· J( the Orange
i ·rnvns hijJ Vo !:· ·1fnf'r Fire Depart·

1aent are hc'dlng their annual
1 urkr)' ~inr ce~ on Saturday, Nov.
12, nt th~· Tuppers Plains fire
' •.. " "P ~:- c·,·ing w.lll start at 4:30
v.m. The menu will Include
tu'~ ,~y . dt·essing; mashed potaloe, , ''' dvy , green b~ans, homemade noodles, cole slaw , dinner
rolls , pte and drink. Cost, $4 .50.
Everyone welcome.

Toys
are also
be brought for
hospitalized
c'hto
lldren.
Mary Usle, president, opened
the meeting with a Thanksgiving
reading. Devotions were by
Helen Teaford followed by the
treasurer's report by ·Ann Sauvage. A thank you.card was read
from Anna Hlldore for flowers.

The birthday of Bernice Winebrenner was noted. Mrs. Sauv
age read a letter from Sine Car a.
A total of 18 sick and shutin
calls were reported. Mary Cundiff had the program on World
Affairs. A thank offering was
,taken and Mrs. Cundiff closed
with a reading from Guideposts.
Hostess, Kathleen Fryer
served refreshments to Mary
Lisle, Ann Sauvage, Beulah
Ward, · Hope Moore, Marcia
4

Karr ,

Bernice

Winebrenner~

Ruth Shain, Irene Parker,..[dary
Cundiff, Harriet Slnclillr · and
Helen Teaford .

Literary Club meets
Mrs. Chester Erwin reviewed Mallowan was a very happy one.
the book, Agatha Christie, an
Mrs. Erwin said that Agatha
Autobiography at Wednesday's was a world traveler, and writer
meeting of the Middleport Liter· of the most popular mystery
ary Club held at Americare- · novels ever published. One of her
-Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabil- plays The Mouse Trap has
itation Center. Mrs. Roy Cassell played for well over 30 years In
was hostess.
New York. She willed that play to
Mrs. Erwin noted that the her grandson, the son of her only
author wrote 68 novels, 100 short daughter, and died at 85 In 1976.
storels and 18 plays. As a young
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter pregirl growing up In England, the sided at the meeting and welIdea ol her becoming a writer comed members. Mrs. Cassell
never came into her head, the Introduced Blll Bias, administrabook reveals. All she wanted In tor of Amerlcare. For roll call
life was a happy marrlge. She members named a well-known
was about 17 years old when she
who done It story. Ref~h­
started writing poems .' Her first ments of cookies, nuts, mints,
marriage to Arch Christie failed, lemonade and coffee were
but her second one to Max served.

Eight and Forty meets
The annual holiday dinner was aumonier, the prayer; and Lu Ia
planned_for Dec. 1 at Dale's in · Hamptqn, le surentendante, the
Gallipolis when the Meigs County national anthem.
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, met
Mrs. Hampton and Julia Hy·
Thursday afternoon at the Le· sell, second dem\ chapeau dugion hall In Pomeroy . .
exleme, read Flanders Field.
Partners are to meet at the Partners were reminded that
home of Florence Richards at dues are payable now and should
12:30. In lieu of a gilt exchange be sent to Mrs. Richards. Part·
each member will make a nershlp was discussed and Inforcontribution to the treasury to go mation will be sent to several
toward the annual project work inviting them to join.
of the salon.
It was noted that pecans and
Mary Martin, chapeau, pre· cashews will be here in two
sided at the meeting with Eunle weeks. Mrs. Davis, assisted by
Brinker, Ia concierge, leading in Iva Powell, served donuts, elder,
the pledge. Veda Davis, Ia nuts, and candy,

Weight Loss Pill
Approved for
u.s~Govt Patent
'Lazy Wily' to Lose Weight
Already Sweeping u.s.
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)An amazing new weight loss pill cplled
"Fat-n,agnet" has recenlly beendevel·
oped and perfi:cle!l by two prominent
doctors at a ~M&gt;rld fiunous hospillll in
Los Angeles that reportedly "guaran·
tees" you steady fat loss and calorie
reduc.tion by simpl).' Ill king their tested
and proven new pall.
The U.S. government hao just approved the doctors claims [or a hard-to-get
patent that confirms "there bas never
been anything like their tilt-bonding pill
process beFore." It is a totally new major
scientific breakthrough and is revolu tionizing the weight loss industry.
You Can "Eat Normally"
Best or all, "you can continue to
eat your favorite roods and you don't
' have 'to change your normal eating
habits. You can s111n losing fat and
reduce calories rrom the very first day,
until you achieve the ideal weight you
desire without exercising",
Flushes Fat Out of Body
The new pill is aP.propriately called .
the "fat-magnet" pall because it breaks
into thousands of panicles, each acting
like a tiny magnet, "attracting" and
trapping many times its size in undigested tilt panicles. Then, all the IraPiled
fat and calories are naturally "tlu~shect"
right out or your body becaus hey
cannot be absorbed.
Within 2 days you should notice a
change in thecolorofyourstool, caused
by the fat panicles being eliminated .
"Automatically" Lose Fat
According to one oft he inventors, Dr.
William She.ll. heart specialist and
associate professor or medicine at
UCLA medical school, "the new Fatbonding process is a "lazy way" to
lose weight because the pills alone
"automatically" reduce calories by
eliminating dietary [at . lt is 100% sa(e
and not a drug."
The !at-magnet pills arc already
sweeping 1he cm.ntry with glowing
reports oF weight loss rrom Formerly
overweight people in all walks or lite
who are now slimmer, trimmer and
more auraclive again.
Nnw Available to the Public'
If you arc trying to lose 20. 50, 100
pounds oi more, you can order your
supply oF these ·:no-risk" highly successful fat-magnet pills directly [rom the
doctors' e•clusive manufacturer only
(includes optional calorie-reduction
pian For even better resull~). Send $20
tor a 90 pill supply (+$3 handling), or
$351oral80pillsupply(+$3handling),
to: Fat-Magnet, 91116 Wilshire Blvd.,
Dept. W705. Beverly Hills, CA 90211. '
(Uncondiliontd money-back gullranlee if not 100% satisfied.) Visa,
MasterCard and Amencan Express
OK. (Send card number, expire date,
and signature.) Par fastest service for
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
24 hours, toll rrec 1(800) 527-9m,
CKI .

W705

\C}f-M "'""

P!ll!ical Advertisement

Vote •••

Menu set

BURG~ARIES

•

WILLI

Jim Soulsby is interested in the future of our young people and
will seek to institute a program to recognize Meigs County's
outstanding youth.
Each newly elected sheriff must possess a peace officer's train•
ing certificate, or obtain one, and participate in the continuing
education program. Jim Soulsby has the ability to fulfil those
requirements.

~ Jl"!,s:,~~~!!f,SHERIFF
Pd. Pol. Ad by C1nd., 117 Union Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

Classifie
0- 15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

111-26 WORDS
85 .00
$8 .00
$13.00
S2t .OO
S51 .00

84.00
$5.00
$8.00
$13.00
$33.00

211-35 WORDS
$7 .00
$10.00
S15.00
$25 .00
S60.00

H.

/

for
Judge, Court of Appeals
"The Na111e That Mean• Pu•nc Trustl"
'

ENDORSED BY MEIGS CO. REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMinEE

10, 1979.
Gone but never forgotten .
Memories still lin&amp;er
on.
Lewie &amp; Ruby Miller

Fast

R•t• are tor con•cutNe runs. bfoken upd~swill be ch•ged
~tar.h

rhw .as HParate ads.

Business Services
BOGGS

LINDA'S
PAINTING

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES

Take the pain ailt of

Authorized John

or you.
Very Reannable.
Have Rtferen,ts.
11

Equipment Dealer

F•n• E~ulpMul

61

P.ert1 &amp; Serwlu

P
EXCAVATING

GENERAL~H'

·

REPAIR~

Dump Truck

Specializing In Chain
Unk and Wood Fencing

•WreCker Service

•Junk Yard Buainess

WANT TO IUY WRICMID OR
JUNI CAliS 01 TIUCIS
-IR II ESTIMAIISFor •J of tht1uvvicts caU

•CEILING FAN&amp; INSTALLED

•REMODEUNO •PAINTING

614-742-2617

•PLUM ..NO
•DRYWALL

•AOORNO
tTilE WORK

•DECKI

•PORCHES

FREE ESTIMATI!S
Buckeye Cud Welcome

p.m.

18111 LYIICI

or lll!vt

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addona and remodelingi
- Roofing ar,d gutter work
~Con erate work
·
~ Plumbing and
electrical
WO&lt;k

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
101
E. Molo

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio .

POMEROY, OH.
992-2259

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

NEW LISTING - Remodeled 3 bedrQOm home on a
good street in Middleport.
Woodburner, AC, equipped
kitchen. Priced to sell.
$19,500.

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M.-4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main, ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
I Behind City Halll
10.27-1 mo.

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER
- Chester-Sumner Road
- A neat 3 bedroom home
wrth large recreation room,
lull basement, 2 baths on
approx. 3 acre lot with
stocked pond and storage
building. Good location.
ASKING $46,500.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNR: GREG I.

~RES
~~ COMMERCIAL
•CUSTOM KITCHENS I lATHS

•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING A ROOFING

•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING &amp; APT. PROJECTS

DU51Y ST., SUAtv•

t6~~~~~1-lll::=::~~~~

/_if&gt;
'~

,.: : ~

\~~~-·:~~~~HES

Tecumseh
Weed Eater

Homelite
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
SUPPLY
Ohio

AIID

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 Wut S.C., Po11111'oy

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

992-6720

ID-21-'88-l mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION

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

8/15/Hn

BISSELL
B.UILDERS

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minar
Repairs
NIASE Cenilied Mechat1ic

"At Reasonable,, Prires"

PH. 949-28.01
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night

Ker Heaters

Furnace 1110.00
Blem Batteries

•30.00 &amp;Up

Salem Stroet
Rutland, Ohio

JUST OPENED

CAKES

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays

far Ryan

Specializing in

cakes
· It, 1, In 136, Vi lifo•

. 742·2235

11·3·'88-1 mo.

GUN SHOOT

'

POMEROY - Frame house
with upper and lower one
bedroom apartments. Good
rental investment!
$300/mo. potential income.
REDUCED $12,000.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

SALEM TWP. - Approx. 50
acres of vacant land, immediate possession. Old .dug
w~l. minerals, no coal.
SELLING PRICE $18,000.00.

319 So. 2nd Ave.

992-6282
Middleport, Ohio

The Staff Is
Back Ill

Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Gran,
Angie

D-•,
and Gwen Folmer
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
992-2725

llow HomH Buil.t

'
Pat• for by CammitiH tallod Hatsha far Judgo., Troat. Willi'"" H. llorsha, ....,.aod Dr. Port_.., 0.

We Carry Fishing SUI&gt;Pii•~

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
' IIISINISS I'HONE
I~

t•l

992-6550

IISIDINCI PHONE
(.141

lrnm MOVIES I SLIDES to
YHS TAPE
Let u1 convtrt thos1 oldMovill
&amp; Sli. . over to o01y VHS.
CAll AMY CAIITill
or BOB'S ELECTRONICS

West, Bruneo, Ashley

WE TRADE

CARPENTER, OJIIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

446·7390

MIDDLPEPORT,

OHIO

h\Va1k-ln• Welcome"

Will bab¥ sit in .,.,. hom&amp; wHit
days ont;'. Call 814-441-8199.

lnt•iorJ E ~klr- You nam• lt.
Prof••klnal painting. 14 vrt.
Blip.
RIIMOnable rll: ... ' Call
614-26&amp;-1224.

Compllte houaeholdl of .. rniture &amp; antiques . Also wood a.
ocel ha.t••· Swain's Fllfnlture
a. Auction. Third 8t Olive.

Fin~nctal

W.nt to buy: Used furniturs and
antiqull. Will buy entir e hous&amp;hold furnllhln_g. Marlin Wademover. e14-2415-5162.

21

Junk Cart

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VA~LEV PUBLISH-ING CO . racomm.nds th.t you
do butin•• with people you
know, •na NOT to ... d monev
t~ough the msH untl you h1ve
inv&amp;lligllted the off•lng.

with or

motors. Call Larry
388-9303.

whhout

llvely~ 814-

F ... ntture 1nd appli111001 bo( tt.
piece or entire hou1ehold. Felr
prier. being paid. Call614-4483158.

11

AIR UNES CUSTOMER SEA·
VICE
S19,500-$29, 700peryear. Clll
304-743-7198 ..1. A -1, Sot. flo
Sun. only.

Pizza Aeat.,rll'lt for tate. Be

your 'own bo11. E ~eeUent
tlon in 1 growing ar...
lnquir• ta:B011 Cia 178.
GallipDNI D1ily Tribuna,
Third A..-.. Gellipolis,
4!831 .

O.Vn your 1pp1ret or ahua 11ora,
ehoo81 h'om: J ..n·Sportswew,
ladles , Men't, childrenmaternity. l•ge 1izea,
dtnDIW'•ar·..,Oblc. bri~Mi, lingerie or •cc••ori• ttore. Add
co lor . . . . ..
d n.m•: liz
Claiborne, Heattht•. OtiiUs,

•It•

HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME
A11.nbte products at home.

FWt-tline. EJ(J*'Ienoa unnec•·
..... Ootoh. Call 813·3270896, En D-1149.
po11lbla A•.rnblln g proctJctt. SASE to: Home
Crtfh:, P.O . Box 900&amp;-GOT.
Huntington, W.Va. 257049005.
Up Ia •11 HOUR PROCESSING
MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUA·
RANTEEO, FREE DETAILS.
Wrko: SD. 1017 W. Ptlllodolphi&amp; Suite 239-GO, Ontl{io.
Calli. 91762.
•

Som.,netababvsit in my home
nights. Mutt be reliable. Refer·
en.- r«fUired. Call 814-3889342.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY at
horr.. A•eml:lr work. Jewelry.
tovs. other•. C•ll 1·819-5&amp;61617, ext. T8410H, 24 1.-..

toe.

Send
c/o8211
Ohio

•400. • dart! At homel Pro0111
phone ordws. People clll you.
N•tlonwide. $45. ltlrt up. c.n
trelundlblol 1·118·4&amp;9·8197
Ext L 18228.

Help Wanted

•eoo wHidy

Business
OPPOrtunity

TRAVEL AGENCY
If vou are interMted in owning
your own trwal agency cell
World Wide Trwlll 41:2-Bitr
6594.

a,.,

lAte, St Michel• Foi--•. Buaf,t
8ay. LovL Comp BovOIIy Hllli,
Organictlly Grown. Luci&amp; ovar
2000 othWs. or 113.99 one
ptlce deotg-. muhltlw pricing
disOOu nt or

famltv

lihue .tare.....

Rll•l prioae unbllllllflble for top
queUty tho• n~nv priced
from e11. to 110. ov• 2aobrondo 2600otvloo. 117.900 to
129,900: Inventory, tNWIIng,
fixturee. airf•&amp; gr~nd opening.
etc. Can open 111 dart. Mr.
L.ou~lln (112)888-4228.

-

22 Money to loan

- --------·'·.
·~

I

LOANS UPTOI10.000-Aetutta ·~
gu.-.-.teed reg•dl . . of CJ".:ilt. ~
Consumer Flnancilll Servicts. 613-29&amp;-0791.
~

...

Bib, .itter neededlnRioGrande

er..: Call I 14- 246-5970.

·Roger Hysell
Garage

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

Rt.

124,

Pomeroy

Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

REPAIR
Alto Trans1111111o•
PH. 992·5682

or 992-7121 ·
6-17-tfc

Listening Devices
Dependable Heariag Aid Sales &amp; ~~·i-.
Hearing Evaluations For All Aps

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Basham Building

a: .licensed Clinical Audiologist

EVElY

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

Cholet

12 Gougo s~:::~ Only
Strictly I

10-31-88-1 mo.

•
'·

doz•.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
. .d n.,• used e·ars. Smith
Bulak:Pontlec. 1911 East•n
Ave.• G•lllpolla. Call 814-448·
2282.

11 / U'II·tic

698-6121

3-

Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work-8150
Case
Re•on.ble r••·
Exp•ien"' op••or. Cram. . .
Const. can 814-26&amp;-1718.

Wep.,CMhfor late model dHn
uud 011'1.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
814-446-3672

Services

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860

Ftaturing: Coneolida1ed 1 Dutch

~

1B Wanted to Do

f IIIIJliiVIllCill

161 North St&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

"Free Estimates"

Schools
Instruction

R E·TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 629 Jackson Plk•
Catl44&amp;-4387. Rog. No. 811-1 1·
10558.

Went to buy ~tanding timber.
614-379·27&amp;8.

DNALL
PLUMPING &amp; HEATING

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

CJ

Public Sale
8o Auction

9·19·88 lfn

BISSEll
SIDING CO/

1·28-'88-tfn

HenlY E. Cl.nd 992-6191
Jun Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992-5692
Tr1cy Riffle........ 949-2107
Jo Hill .............. 985-4466
Office ................ 992-2259
NEW LISTINGS NEEDED ...:
We have bu)llrs lor lie Ip
County Property. List with
us tor best results.

15

Mulberry.

4711. Houn 2:00-9:00. Closed
on Mon..,. .

AlliiiiU 11 ~I! IIIB II tS

'CARTER'S

mull MU. Furnhura, appliances
.,d dothing. Mon. Nov. 7TuUI.
Nov, 8 . 10a.m . ·11 . 234

RACINE, OHIO

WOOD STOVES

LOWEST PRICES

Glrege tale. owner h• moved,

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
.
ON!.Y

NO SUNDAY

LHsa M. Murphey

Will care tor eld•l&gt;f man or ·
Mme. C.H

woman in aut
614-992·6515.

TriPping tupplifJ8 , Buying gin·
,.,g.
George Bucklav 614-884-

RACINE
GUN CLUB

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

bingo session.
WE PAY 160.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME

&amp; Vicinity
..------.. ·- ..... -.. ·- .. .. -··--· -·

8

Situations
Wanted

Would like a live-in femtlle
oo mpanion. Pl. . a write: Thom• Racer, AI. 2 Box 346,
Vinton, Ohio 4St88.

2~56 .

1:00 p.M.

111-IFII·l mo. pd.

992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:46P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D. FREE with coupon end purchase of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon per customer per

12

Yare! Sale

u.~ llrnlture by the pieea or
entire hou ..hold, 614· 742·

EVERY SUNDAY

949-2168

224 E. MAIN ST.

7

Wll'lled 10 Bllf· Good used pieno
for Church. Call814-882· 7812.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

POMEROY-EAGLES CLUB

.

character and novelty

NEW- REPAIR

BINGO

lott It Foodland. lerge wnoun1
of c.h. lottThurtdsy afternoon
bv wid&lt;M on fixed incomt .
Rew1rd. Cell 81 .. 985-3884 or
a,e .... a at Foodland.

Sonogrepher
Jactcson Q., eral Hotpilel. AI·
pi«Jt, W. Va. now accepting
appliartions for l.lfl time X-Ray.
Ultrasound, mchnldan. Send
resume P. 0 . Box 720. Alpl.,,
W.Va . 26271 or call 304-372·
2731 t!l(t 312.

814-4411-3159 .

by Donna

ROOFING

4-16-86-ttn

MT·MLT

Jaebon General Ha.pltal. AI·
pl..,., W. Va. Accepting SQpllcations for full tkne 3:00 ll'ld
· 11 :00forlabtechnld.._ Send
r•ume P . 0. BO~e 721), Rlpl~.
W.Va . 26271 or call 304-372·
2731111.t312.

ller Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic

Howard L. Wriftstl

PAT HILL FORD

.w..._d.,•

Rick Pe•son Auctioneer, li·
censed Ohio and Welt Virginia.
Eltate. antique. farm. ltquidatlan ...... 304- nJ-5785.

Wicks

B. 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Makes
We Honor MC/Disc/Visa
9-1-81-tfn

992-2196
Middleport,

NO SUNDAY CALLS

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

Products

We can repoir and re·
core radiators ond
heater cores. We can
also acid boil ond rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tonks.

Wom., tO work d-v tndnlght to
c•e for elderty lildy, 2
end
one night off p•
Phone
304-&amp;75-3715 onf¥ between
8:00 and ,0:00AM and 7:00
•nd a ~oo PM .

Middleport

YARDMAJt &amp; ECHO
Service Cenler

AVON•II•-11 Shirlfi(Sp . .t ,
3
:.0:.4o
:..8:.:7.:5-..:1:..
~2:;9:_._ _ __
. Licensed Sodll Wortc.r tn new
lof'g t•m cere facility . E••
riMoe pref•red. Comm ...8urlte
sal.-y end benefite. E.O .E. 1'1.4. .
resume to Admlnilt,.ter Care
Hl\llrl of Paint Pl. . lrlt. At. 1
loK3:28. Point PleMant. W. Ve. J
26550.
\

....... P'om.erov ..... .... .

9/201thl 1 . .. pi

located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Baahan.

"DOC" VAUGHN

~340. AA~OE.

Ph. 1114-742-2355

Dealer for

Certified Licensed

eccept.:l for Plea11nt V.N-r
Hotph:al 'Nursing Clfa Cent•.
Contact Pertonn.a 30.875--

wtth coli• In Tupper• Plains.
614-ltl7- 8178 .

Munlelooding ~.plies
Modern Gun Supplies
Guns • Ammo • Slugs •
22 Ammo
124 East of Rutland
Across Happy. Hollow Rd.

PH. 949·2969

CALL 992·6756

AN'S &amp; LPN'S -I' H. lull time.
p.-t time .,pll~lons •r• t.\ftg

Found: LArge Jong h., bl.ck dog

AHD

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and

A.,v•rd. c.! I 304-675-7604.

lOADING

10-8-tlc

SER"ICE

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

,,,.,.,;,.
s,,,,;,,

Speeches,
Computer Graphics,
Publk Relations,
Advertising ~
Phone:
-~
614-992-3643

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

LOST: Luwer ~rtiel dental plate.
Downtown vicinity-Park • ...

MODERN GUN
SUPPliES

mo. pd.

992-3410

Port• Rd. Children• petl. Call
1ft• 4:30PM, 814-387· 7810.

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
.

dor.,

LOST:2 mila Fox Terrier

white/ black •pots . Bulawil •

11·6·'88

DENNY CONGO
WILL .HAUL
JUST CALL!

TOP OF THE STAIRS

6 Lost and Found

992-6461

$44995
10·15· l

Kitten• to ,glve•way, Utter
trolned. Coli 614-44&amp;-9319.

POMEROY, OHIO

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

'

Puppi•Mixad breed, C•ll 614446· 3274.

~411-3845"'

PALLET
COMPANY

Racine, -Ohio

,.-,~ ~~ ,, •HAIR

Briggs &amp; Stratton

frtt·Lanct Writ.,

PORTlAND - Have you
been thinking about buying
a tr~ler, bul don't want ihe
hassel of setting it up,
l)uying the land and all the
other headaches thai go
w~h il? Well, here is the
answer! 20 acres ot land
w~h a 1981 14x70 trailer.
Everylhing is done tor you.
Move in, prop your feet up
and turn the kids loose.
SELLING PRICE $22,900.

l/ 11/88/tfn

BEAUTIFUL

Authorized Servi(e
&amp; Ports

7·13-' 88· lin

I..DJi;

We Service All Makes

Frtendtv dog. Need:! ne.v horne.
Colt 514-%415-5131 .

OHIO

GET ACQUAINTED
SPECIAL

985-3561

10.11-'11-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

3rd St.

Young dog to good home. Good
\Wtch dog. loves c hildren. Call '
114-379-2435.
fr• puppl•. Call , fttol-" 1.
1247.
u

DELIVERED TO

MEIGS
FURNITURE

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

REPAIR

992·3723

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

8111;' kittens to good home. Call

114-379- 2~35.

$14 PER TON

or 992-9922
10-12-88-1 mo.

DEAD OR ALIVE

"Must Be Repairable"

1-8-88-tfn

'81-1

LYNCH'S

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling
i

$3 s

BILL SLACK
992-2269

·4180

1·!-'86- tic

TRI

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY
PER LOAD
· DELIVERED

pain~i,. Let me do

Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm

BotwMn 9

FIREWOOD

WANTED

Help Wanted

AVON · Att • -· CaM Merilyn
304-882· 28415.

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

Our Delivery Start
Knows W!tere You
live.
CaD 992·2228

11

Giveaway

Wer~~er

CHIPWOOD
POLES

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.
If any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
teH us and we'll
match it!
ALSO ...
HOME COOKED
lUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER 5300
MAIN STREET PIZZA

who passed away
nine years ago, Nov.

Results

RATES

4

ante

Your Hometown Place

DONALD (Bud)
MILLER

7

The Daily

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

2 · In Memoriam

Get

y

f(u

--~

Bush1ess Services

· In loving memory of

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

porthome in A
.c~
New front deck and
screened rear pilfch. New
carpet-vinyl, pan~ling and
ceiling tans. Storage build·
ing ~nd chain link fenced
yard. Nolhmg to do but
move in. $27,000.

As Sheriff, Jim Soulsby pledges a strong
effort to eliminate these problems and
seek convictions against the perpetra·
tors of crimes against society, regardless
of whom it may be.
,
·

---

. -·

• The Area's Number 1· Marketplace

PEARL

&lt;"

,_

Ohio

SINCE 1969

TWO OF MEIGS COUNTY'S MAJOR
PROBLEMS ARE DRUGS ·AND

__

.

'

EASTERN DISTRICT- Spa·
cious living with privacy on a
deadend road. large home
w~h 4 bedrooms, family
room, dining room, living
r0001 with fireplace, nice
kitchen cabinets. Many
other nice features. Call lor
an appointment. $38,500.

The Nov. 7 menu for cafeterias
of the Eastern Local School
District has been announced as
follows:
Monday - bologna, cheese,
french fries, fruit, milk.
Tuesday- chili, peanut butter
sandwich, relish tray, fruit , milk.
Wednesday - chicken, noodles, homemade roil, butter,
mashed potatoes, applesauce,
milk.
Thursday - macaroni and
cheese, corn bread, butter, green
beans, fruit, milk.
Friday - pizza, lettuce salad,
fruit , milk.

----

November 7.1988

Mnndll,v.

New Docf018 Dlacovery

.

·-------

----~

3 Amouncamenta
We wll ha~looal for em•gencv
HEAP, Meigs Counl'l Doot. of
Human Serv~. end HEAP
vouch... We cen ghre you
ptompt delhtorieo. hoololot Soli
Workl, Inc. Pomeroy. Ohio.
614-992-3891.
ll.ond woov Fridoy nMo •• Tho
Rht-ot Inn. 8:00 tiU 12:00.
a..d-Tha Meigs County Bind.

4

Giveaway

Kitten to GNMW.y to good
homo. Calle14-19Z·3177.

0.. cooking etQIIM. Come .nd
JHck· up. 477 Syc1more St.,
IW...._n. Ohio.

NURSING EXTERN
.
A 300 " bed ··regional referrel
r..w•andt•chlng hospital hM
Nu,..E-nposktonuvolloi&gt;IL
The pu.fllon requlr• thl1 you be
a CMdldlle for greclJ atlon In
M8y 1989 from a college or
school of profenlonal nursing.
M.OO per hour. PleMe call
oolleer 304-&amp;26-2070 or sand
r..unw ta: C8bla Huntlnglon
Hotpltat Peraonnel Dept., 1340
Het O.rw Blvd., Huntington.
W.Vo. 2!701. E.O .E.

LPN'a.. We • eloo kln g tor quality
oriented LPN'I to work In a
hlght;' tllll.d lang t•m c•e
nura.g f1cllty. Earn t14,000
for nwt~ gredl, IW'8f' 20 paid dl'fl
off ...t ye•. Ellcellent he.tth
insur1nce .VIilable. Tuition
reimbursement. Meny oth* benefttl. Cont..:t Barb McC1Ha
DON. Plnecr• Clre Clftt•.
151 Jocbon Plk• Gelllpoh,
(IIIIo Cll31 . 814-448-7112.
E.O.E.

NiM4 Pll to eeU Avon through

0111• 8f to ~d home. 1 yr.
atd -~~ .. Shoop dog. Cell
814- . . 2·1852.

Chn.tr11111. CaH far lnfornwtion.
e14-44f.Z15e.

Adorlbla fluffv, Ylhw kiltto QOad ho""". Con 114-MJ.

Plrt-tlme beiJftlttw want .. In
my home. DIIV thlft. P1y1 very
well. 114-742·23B5 eftor6p.m .

!441.

lloatc lomolo Poollo. Foci wlh
c:hlldron. 3114-..11-liJI.

Hou• kitten bl. . ~nil whll&amp;
d e d - 304-6711-71111.

.,

Real

·-

••

f:slille

=---_;_~~~-

31

Homes for Sale

..

--------------- '

Very attractive brlc*: 4 badroom. ~
2 bat h. f..-nlty room with fir• ..
place, formal dlninQ lwgellvlng
room. 30 fl. oust am oak ldlchen
cebineu. oak woodwork. finish

baement. 2 cw gwege.

I~Wel

landsc.pad lat. 4 ml• from
Holzer Hosphal off At. 35A:&gt;rterbrook Subdtwilion. Cll
814o44&amp;-4189.
'

- ------Home in country wtlh land

Wi• :

oontld• land oontraat wllh
down pavment. can 114-892·
5848.

For •leor ntnt I roqm on 1•11
lot. Depot StrMt. Rutland.
I 20. 000. or I 250. month r-.t. _
814ol92-5610.

Own• wll tnenoe.

sm•l dow I\

::

PIV Ike r.m. 3 bedrDDml, 2 1.11 ..,
bltlw. ba.ment. Ju.t remo- ·~
deled. N.,... cabin-. c•P"- al
wiring •dplunting.IIOVe.
refrlg~W.. or. Withe' .-.d *v•
wtth house. Priced ln teena. Ctl
614o992-214&amp;.

n•

3 bo*aom homtt, l•go'llvtog

, _ , ond kltchon. 1 boll\ utility
toom, 24x31 lllodl 11101111. """'" llok . . . . lot 100.1 It, •,
phone 304-171·41'23 aft:er
I
6 :00PM .

�-

P.aga 8-The Daily Sentinel

-

31

P00181oy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Homes for Sale

•

blo.,_.

• 1111 .• liU
V•lll"
fult, c•peted (IOml n::~ ·
P~ood to otl. Col 11~
OZll oft• I PM. _ . , .

51 Houuhold Goods

...,._

•

ontt 7 yn. old. rur.a wM•,

c~pp~r

plumbing, deck .

Marchandiae

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriaht

llok&lt;&gt;!l IWm Homo. 9uJM on
woour ktt. t12.995 &amp; up. he our

Pll!g. .. llceggs Applfenc••·
Upl* Rtv• Rd. t».:l• Stone

Modll. Caii1 -114-88Bo7311.

81~44.7398.

f~tUfll~ Qi:lt'l:cf~
~~I fbPMY
Cf..t\W~

WHITE'S METALDETECTORSChodl far opool• on ALL
Modolo. llg -rw-loot~·o
81~4411-.a3,1.

Flrowood-Hord wood. Lorge
plclrup lood, *31 doiiY•od· Coli
814-44.1437.

• Ulhnduptot3U. Bobybodl

'110. Mlftrlllll or box springs
luft or twin •18. flrm t7e. Md
•ea. Qu.., . . . • 2&amp;0 &amp; up,

"Ah, that's much better
I
have SUCH a hard tun•e wt'th

.32 Mobile Hanee
for Sale

hands

I,"

lood. Coli
-

Gun cUin.U

ralnforcecf tor91., 7. 000 lb.

e. 8

a...,.
Bid ...... f20, •30 &amp; King
h-ordo··t30
..~ -d~ up to t85.
· ·~~~--

90 Deys lime a ~h with
-·"""" orodl. 3 Ml• out

Jolnto-ol ,typoo. Coli 814-379-

1/· 7
-

•1.395. Coli 81~448-SIU
8_P_M_. - - -- - -

7748.

Hou11 tor Nnt In the ODUnll'y
n•• D1rwln. Wll ndeoorll..

Rom n-llllo. Col
tll42.. 82uc:tionll. 3BRo.. 2 1.31.

.1 ..

tJI bitt., • • room. E....
Concl Frendt City Broklg.,

..a.9MO.

,.II Flootwood. 12kM.IJottlo

a• .._ ll'ld hDt: wl't•. t3000.

Col 11~M:J.8310 or 11~
U:J.MOI
Aok lor

-•lm•

~""

)983 8chull2 1.. 70. Front
pord\ do&lt;*. il•arro. 1'1
ecra ByiPpolntmn Oftlv. 2'AI
ml• from tiarrllonvl!e. 614'11-IMI.
•~oorn

121&lt;150. neoo.
;,o .. l711-2722.
2

.1t7• mo..o homo. 1""70.
untlr,.twd. mult be mov-.
located In lufhlo. W.V1 .
•e.ooo.oo .. o11•. 30~
;773-1028 oft• 5:00PM.
~ 1111

Mlnsion moble home. 2
Jl'., 1.. 70. ol-lc wMh
.tlropl- 30.. 773-8233 ""•

8:00.

'1181 Brlt•ny 14•70 .

't10.000.00. 30.. 11~284411·

i• 15:00.

81~893-

For Sale 01 Rent·Lot wllh tral•
&amp; hou• In Crown CMy. Col

hooltup, ww c•pC. n.wto;'
paint ... deale.
From .1715.
Senior Cltltlnl Wlloorna Ae-

g.,,., Inc. Al!ll. Coll30~17•
510" or 8711-1381 or 57•
n311.

11~258-12011.

New completely furnf1h1d
•p..ment
moble home In

4 8R . homa 7 ml• from town.

dly.

a

t •110 pw mo. pluo dopoolt. Col
51~ .... .,...

""eo
living room. dlnlnroom and
3

bo~oomo.

2 lll b•ho.

ldtdl ... Aloo lou
i'oom. 2
c• g•age. c.n:NI , E11t•n
School Dlltrld. Ref«tnMI re-

qulrod. Con
3

81~2•7-4211 .

homo wMh ll I

bo~oom

A*'ko onr,. Pltldnr. CoM

11~448-0338.

1.1&gt;.,_ u..,r,.hod

304-8715-2359.

pllod, .utiMI• oolcl. No ohl~ ...
No P•L Coli 41~44S.1137.

Furnllhod- 3 roomo •

a .... No p•o. Rof.

bolr.

&amp; dopoolt

"".,"*"•·
8R .. trH b l l h - _.r..

CO 1NI 11y NEA. Inc.

1·ti3Trllmph, 14xllll, ,_odd

8715-7120 ... 8711-20.7.

Rof. •

Farms for Sale

33

lnoludod. B..,lng • t218 P•
mo. CoM 11~317-78110.
opt. No• HMC. 1 BR .

Ap.......

ond hou30 .. 1711-1104.

eon

W••.
trooh
._!rod. Col

pold. .
Modern 1 8R, downtown. com-

11~38S.

Port• on 58"' Col
9813.
35

Loti II&amp; Acreage

Aolllon.

bo&amp;~tllll

Rom or Sol• 1Ox.O. 1 BR.
U~ tral• 81 Eweka. C.l
11~28S.1828.

30~57•

O.do 1 - . Jr.
2331.

Moble henna 14 mH• outStnd

HIM Rd.

30~1711-38M .

w...

Onew•tot:wlhlt.te•proved
atPtlc ""em ., d
Lint•

Slot- MHo Rood, s...thlldo,
t7,1500.00. 30~8711-5102.

44

m..._
Ptiv811 b.th. 8•cond1A¥t. UtillFurnlsMd 2 room . . .

H anee tor Rant

892-11724. Aller 8pm.,. 982-

5, 19.

Nlool¥ llr,.hod omoll houoo. Gr.dous lttin!J 1 tnd 2 bed- • • onlr. Rof. roqulrod. No room IPWimfts at Vlhae

- ·eon ,, .. ...,0338.

Minor 1nd Rtv..ade A..,.~
ments in MldciiiJort. ,rom

t1B2. Coli 114-892-7717.
EOH.

be$-oam Apt1. for rent.
C1rptted. Nice s~ing. Laundry
2

lA . focllll• ovolhill&amp; Col 114Nolghlrorhood Rd. t225. Rof•- 992-3711 . EDH.

Unfurnlthed houM, 2
enCII •

dtpo.ll: required. Cal

448-4411 oft• .7 PM .

Newt';' ~•oor•ed ..,. .. ment•
ovol obi&amp; Utilkl• pold •221.

3 blctoom hou. .Autt1nd • • ·

p• month.diposttnqu ..ld. Cal

t 325 lnoludOo - · · g•bogtL
h••·
e20o MQ.Irltyandref•..,.
- · Col 51~317- 7217.

81 .. 99~57:M oftor UJO or
99~81 19.
Pom•oy. 2 bo~oom opt. Portlv

3BR . houoo. 1'-\b,.hl, g•og• 'klrnilhld In NIYiorsAun. S.a.nflropl- Wolk to Clolllpollo lly dopoolt. Col oft• lp.m.
e:choola. Scenic vi_.. E-*lent 11~912-1181.
n•ahllothood. e321 p• mo.
celf l'ft• 5 PM &amp; w.-endl, One bed-oom furnkhed ot' unfurnished l!plftment in Midcl•
114-44.1410.
port. Alto 2 bl«oom hou .. In
3 IR .
Close to town. Addllon. Coll81~992- 130•or

,.,c:h.

1278 P• mo.

eon

81~44•

81 .. 992-2n8.

281151ft• 5 PM, or ,..8-.. 208.
18A .• unturniltw:l. 142Fourth.
t111 p• mo. Depotlt. 15 mos.
1. . &amp; No chilct-en. ,,.,.. elngle

pnon. Coll81~..e.3187.

Ft.nilhld. In cluing utHttl• tor
1 p . .on. e1eo Ptr month. C.ll
11~182- 25411.

APARTMENTS. ma .. o homoo.

hou. .. Pt. ,.._.,..,dOIIIIpo-

31111 .• cMy ocr..or.o .... Elom. llo.
•30oo mo. Rof. • Soc. dop. No
- · Col Stutn Rollty, 11~
ue.uoe.

11~-8221.

or 448-~181.

F.... hod ollld.,lft. •110. Uti~
" ' • pold. 7 Noll. Oolllp- Col
44.4418 oft• 7 PM.

15 roonw •

Nl ... 2 1111 . opt. 41'/o mil• from
GolliPollo. ltovo. rofrlo &amp; wot•
Coli

1 Br. apt. unt..rNihed nw
HMC. t111 1 mo. \WI• In-

du- o100dop. Nop•o.Col
11~44S.3117.

--p-ono.
..,go-..., ....

...- - · ·"'· 30 '"""goo
30 Inch
goo
top &amp; bolto,.
white, •110. Woodburnlng
hllll:lng stow. e75. 011 space
hootor-110,000 ITU. t75. Wrlno-' Wllltw, •11. F,..•• upright. t1110. F-or. oh•t typo,
t110. w••.•78.
078.
Sk- Appll.,_; 179 Uppor
River Rd .. 11~4411- 7388.
un ll'ld peech. c.U 304-1575-

H.-y for ule. Clover. t2 p•t.la
Blilt1 weigh approx. 801bs. ·

a..

.pw-,. . " '. . .--.23_

•.

_.. - - 2

dol&gt;•• -···

ooll
•410- 10 ... 83.

30~17S.

••-•480pw_3_
room ..,oh wkhln wol= clio. . . . of downtown-e
P• Apt. lor -107 Moln 11 Ront.
f 178. Ud-loo pold 8o111rlry
mantr. PrWote 3 - - 2 dop. _ roqulrod. Col 30~1711ltOfY brick on 1 ICif&amp; Crown
City- t371 pw - " 2 otooy 4qQ_ bt. 10 or 13.
" " - wllh 3 - - :110
bllho.lniildell.
- · 4410
mondl.
••
...,..pw
.,_
•d
-•IV dopool -lrod on ol

..._ ..... - - ..... Eot-

.... 11 ~44· 3844.

Dr&gt;., Tulldoy Nov. I for

buo~

n ... ell frultl 111d "1Qit1bl-.
Jacb Mtrklt. Rt. 35, Hen der-

eon.. w. v•.

I dllll SIIIJIIill':;
/; IIVI''I•Ir:h

Rod Tog Solo

... ••• 30.. 8711-1.50.
Hlny" 1 Balrgllin

lf'ld Porter Aotld. furntture,
tDI(I. aiMrMr&amp; llot• rA mlsc.

11 .. :J8•eal3.

Can ldf., wood taun. was

f7Q.OO now UOO.OO. Oood

53

415

Dvne~bou

nc•

- · till. MF rolla "88.
N- Hollond 211 bll•. t988.

w•
21.11122.
Ownw

flnlnM. Call

114-

Fumlahed Rooms

Furr*Md room. 918 8eoond
Ave., Gllllpolls. •131 • mo.

Utllkl• aolcl. llnalomolo. lh•o
both. eo• ... "'18ofler 7PM.
Aoomt tor

rent~WMk

or month.
It • 120 • mo. GaHia

a~ttln_g
Hotol-11~..e.llll80.

For ... e:M•gnus Electric chord
org1n: Stereo , i'ldlophont:Jgl'aph oansole wtth tt•eo
c•orto t.,o dodl: Kirby Up~ght
wcuum

aw•er. San kyo Sup•

lmm movie

c~m•a;

Mamtv•·

Slkor 31mm SLR a8m•a wtth
28mm, IOmm • 200mm
l•tt h•d
elea-

Lin••·
tronlc flooh &amp;
1318.

c••
30 .. 178-

t~d.

46 S p - for Rant

Dolt collection."' 40 to choos•
from In Iota of four. .v .y
r8Monable. call 30... B71J. 3138.

Hou . . Upp• Rt. 7, ~ttlble for
office apece. Clll 814-441-

1Wo llorm doon one wood •d
on• 1luminum, 90 nfiW curved

1188 or 44S.IIII.

COUNrRY MOilLE Homo,•k.

Route 3 3, North of Pom•oy.
81~912-

w. Yo.

lrouQhern. 4doM.BeanlliiOM".
lnoldo .,d out. F.. powor 302

VI . •2188. Coli
1719.

11~882-

1884 Buldl c ..tury Stotlon
Wegon.

E-=eltent condition.

4"-000 ""'• Coli 11 .. 18233.. oft• 8:00p.m.

w..t.r to tory: Wood Splitt•.
Coll81~992-1031 .

63

~"-\'

Anp Holt... 1 _...,

1980 Chwy

lmp~olo.

Colll1~182-3822.

t 1250.

Plgo 1or ••• 4 r. old
ltud. 2 - - brood ho.....

1981 Ford Tompo '"'300.00.
304-1711-4480.

Roglot- Chl.,lno bull born
Ar&gt;r112... 1918.- r.dbull.

'83 Chwy Cl-.y, now 11roo.
brok-. PI, PI, Ai' C, C1'ullo.
71.000 mloo. u.eoo.oo. 30~
8715-20.0.

Blodt, brick. .....,., pip•.

wtn-

otc. cr.,do wrnt .... Rio o ..... o . eon 81 ..
2•&amp;-6121 .

dowo.

umoro.

Concr•e blocks- ell sizes. ~d
or delivery. M•on..,d. Gall o-

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Channel Auetlc

and llevolod Lop Siding ,
• Deck Mst«i.
Guersntllltd Qulllty

1

au...

Coli 114-812-2703 oftor
4:30p.m.
30~74:1-1011.

1980 Toyoar Collco Surwo.

8 Whlto Slldo - - ti.OO
aolr. lmoll Duok Wing Bomomo
M .OO

pr~lr.

One pair Frlzzl•

a-..,. ti.OO. Four Ill! Co-

chins Roos ... •2.00 Nch.

30 ~·~-, 1110.

64

Hay 8r. Grain •

totdtd,. cle1r1. no rust •c cond.

coli 30.. 1711-3131.

1810 luldl Rlvwo. I cyL roc.,t
otldc•. AM.-FM, oil oond. oil
- · · phone 304-17.7541,
8~0- 8:00PM.
1880 FordG,.,odo. IUIO. olr. 4
- · 8 oyl. 3t. OOO mil•. d-.
1t8~ Dodgo Omn! arlo. 1810
arlo. 1878
Pont loa Sunblrcl.
Doloun INdl oton•d 30~
1711-71118.

*·

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Callery ~niL
CF A Pnl., and Sl.m•e ldt·
,., •. AKC C- puppioo. NHimolovon kilt.,., Coli 81 ~

225 bol• ol ,.,.lor ••• t1 .110
euh. ••• •We modtls..,..,,
record .,..,.,, 8 tr8ck. •100.
Coli 114-IM&amp;-2179.

44&amp;-31.-oftor 7 PM .

W.t Highland white T«ri. .
AKC puDDI•. sm1ll Wid 1rmrt.

Coli 814-:187-082..

Will hell (l)rn, lnc*l:;r. EFAP

corn. Allo. wil 1

Tr dll'flrrrldlillll

11~318-9382.

71 Auto'• For Sale
Sholllo Mlnloturo Collla AKC · - -.....- - - - - - t1150. Sobb .,d whM• 32300 OOYERNMENT SEIZED Vohl- .
9R 143 bot_, Horrllo1W8o ttl• !ram UOO. For •. MorOnd Corpontor.
• C_ , . , c~
·-••· 8 ur·
pluo. luyoro Guido. !11
AKCrogiotwodSibori.,Huolloy.
80.517-I!OCJO. Elll. 8-10189.

SNAFl!® by Bruce Beattie

· 51 H0111ehold Good•

1873BuJdclMobro. 3110, v-a.•
·r tdltlor. Fair oond.
• -~.~~I8Pie.M. I331 or
· Col
nM

•t•rttne· •••· fhcltners

~til.

UIED- . . . . ._.., ••••am

"It's from the last Ice age . Says they're
worried the Earth's climate Is grad.ually
g e tting warmer."

72

''.·

tiiOO. Coli
torelpm.

CALL,$' WHIL~ Cf(&gt;o$$1NG

THfN THEY oWE ME fo~
57 1\'UNUTI:S.

•

nogotloillo. CoU 81~992- 1320.

18 78 Wlnnet..o motor home.

te. 200.00. 304-8711-4480,

RON'S Televl1lon Service.
HouH calls on RCA. Ouu1r,
OE . Spoolollng In Zonkh. Coli

••e-

Fetty Tree Trimming.

ltump
removal. Call 304-875-1331 .

Aot.-y or cable tool drlllng.
Mottwellt (X)mpl•ed•amedl¥.
Pump Mill llld service. 304-

RON'S APPUANCE SSIVICE,
hou" clll s.-vicing OE, Hot
Point.
dryers •nd

w•h••·
...... 30.. 57.2398.
30~17S.7121 .

.

"

Serv1ces
81

BASEMENT
WATERPRDORNG

Unooncltlonal lfll:lme • •.,.

••· Local r*enca lunlshed.
Fr• estlm••· C.ll ooHec:l

dov or night.

WINTHROP

MORTY MEEKLE

RogersBasement
Wal•prooflng. .

MY LJNCLE ~RT
PAID $300 FCR

SWEEPER end sewolng machine
, • • • PW1L •d suppll•. Pldc
up tnd diiWery, D1vlt V1ouum
Cleaner, onit helf mile up
Ooorgoo C - Rd. Coli 11 ..
4••o28o~.
_

A

MY AUNT EMNIA e.AYS THE
Bl RD SHOL.lL.D CAL.L.OWT
MYLJNCL.E ~I&lt;T '6 NA/11-E;.

Will-I A LITTLE' BIRD
THAT COME'S OLJT AND
~ "COO-CDO."

CLQO( . ..

11~2411-9097.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Ira••·

•.

BARNEY

i

HOPE YE DO GOOD

CARTER'S PWIIIIBINO
AIIIDHEATINO

IN TH' HOSS-SHOEPITCHIN' CONTEST,

OoHipollo, Ohio

HONEY POT

Cor. Fourth and Ph1e

Phone 814-448-3888 or 81~

1887DodgoD-opldcup. 3.9
L. Y-1 ..... AM-FM. Pl. PI,
arlo.,
· E*'"'lont
Nnnlng ooncl.
19.000-mi.
t8850. CoU 81~..e..a11 oft• 8 PM.

I'M BOUND
TO WIN ME
SOME

FOI.OIN'
MONEY
TODAY!!

44.4477
84

Electrica I

Ael l derrtl~ or commlll'eial wiring. New service or repairs.
Uc-ed eltclrldtn. E.a:knme
tr... Ridenour Electrlc81. 304-

·8715-1788.

General Hauling

Bernice Bede Osol

;~.:;:::'~:;,'
rt,;'o~i
8U-24B-M70.

e~rtre' a. Low rnl-u .. v_., good

m l - E-t. ooncl. Col 11 .._
251-1431 .

- · •2800. 11~11~2811
..8,~112-5188.

ISH Toyoto ll•ion W-n.
1uto.,
Pl. PI, Galtllte. on
dom.,d.WD. o~O. E-Iom

1981 FTL ConvontlonoL 3110
cum-.lllrrCom.JokolrolctL

t,..,,,.._,lon. Air
Rldo. PS, AC . Allo 1888 FN•
11 , , _ OD

c:-

c• lor · Coli 30~1711- hof trol• 41 ft.. oldoldok. 100
7878 0\l ..lngo,
N-· t30,000 fDr
1817 Chry* Lob•on Coupo
"Coiii14-7•2·2AIBO 1111•
8:.;'0..:.
0·;__ _ _ _ _ __
llrrlro. 14,000 mla Exoollont ' ;:
condllion. AI opt- Col 11~ 1981 tour whool ~lvo Dotoun
4•1-1010. Kaop trvlnr.
olck-up. Runo goocl.lrocl,l roul!h.
c~~ovy
a-.....
Aut&lt;&gt;
.oftoeo
•
1114
1 :0 0c.rr 11~9f2·
2 11t10
28
m•rc. AM or- • · p.m.
tlra 10.000 mla .... oool
73 Vans 8r. 4 W.O.·
mt&gt;&lt;o lr\brr-• nooo.
ool I'Oul, ...
•
11~1148-2342. MO¥ 110 • - •
Tho O.ollpolo Doly T~tuno. B-11 ,, ... _11,30.oooml-. 8
opd.. orr. 1111 loauld ..,,L
h•d top. 21.000 ..... 188.
1879 c ....... blodl. 301 ... Dodgo 0-80 pickup ••4.
rrlrra Good - d ti.OO. Col 51.000 mH•. 8 • D Motoro.
llwy 110.• ,~ .... 1111.
11~441·0182 1111• I PM pr
-1711.
.
1910 vw ... btlt. fuolln]ootod. 1811Chollr- hollt..,pldl-up
4 whHI ~Iva 17.000 ml•.
2 • .• .. ... 0 good. now
,wrodlod. Coli 11~448-0278 . Lito-. tatoo. Coiii1~1B•
43811.
i•fi.•BPM.

I HEAR TELL
TH' PARSON
IS GOIN' TO BE
TH' JE06E

II&amp; Refrigeration

85

A &amp; R Water S.V lea Pools,
cisterns, Willi . lmmedlat•
1, 000 or 2.000gllonsdtltv.-y,

Coli 30 4-8711-8370.

Wot• dollv-v. 1000 glllono
Re•onebl• prlc.. lmmedl••
51~982-8275.

"""''dc'o Wit• Houlln~ 2.000
qll dollv-v. 304-57S.2311 or
11~44 .. ~88 .
Watterson' 1 Weur Haul in g.
r. .oftlbte rat-. volume Ill·

•.ooo

30~57.2818.

-· !
I

87

Upholstery

a

ra

rm

Sian Off .
®I UfA 1:\)CIIIY

U&amp;-9286.

aountt. 2.000 to
cap~
My, clot . . .. r&gt;OOII; wollo. ·~

NewtHour (1 :00)
®I •1121 1111 WhHI of
Fortune Q
18 (1]1 Three'• Company
li2J Moneyllne ·
®ChHn
0 Miami Vice
Crook and Chaae
7:05(5) 9 to 5
7:3011 rn Family Feud
@NFL Trivia
(l) Ent-lnmant Tonight
II (J) UIIA Today
liD) 1111121
Jeopardy! Q
ID(I]I M'A'S'H
1121 Croaaflre
IIJ) Nlghl Court
Q!l VldeoCounlry
7:35 m Sanford and Son
8:00 (J) MOVIE: Jumping Jacka
(NR) (1:36)
11 rn CII • Cll 91 lllli2J
III) Michael Dulclkll Paid
pollllcal announcemenl I;!
@ Monday Night Match-Up
Cleveland Browns va
Houslon Oilers (R) .
!I) Norman Rockwall
(I) Nonnan Rockwall, An
Ame~can Portrall Chronicles
Rockwell's work and his
astounding popular success
over a 60 year period as he
palnled llle as he wanted It
to be . INRI
. . (1]1 MOVII:: Raging BulliRI
12:08)
1121 PrtmeNawa
IIJI MOillE: The Breakfaat
Club JR)(1 :37)
·
0 Murder, She Wrote Q
Q!l Naahvilll Now
8:05 (5) MOVIE: The Baaatmaatar
(PGI(1 :58)
8:30. (2) (l) • (J) 1111 lllli2J
!D) George luah Paid
political announcement
" @ Monday Night M-aaz1ne
9:00. (2) !D) 'The Great Etcapa
II: The UniOid Story, Part 2'
NBC Monday Night 11 tire
MO¥Ia1 Q
'
(l) Skate Amartca Pairs &amp;
Ice Dancing Comp. (T)
(l) • (J) Mondey Night
Footbal
!I) (I) campaign: The Lilli
Word Famous journalists use
documenlary reports and
studio discussion lo remind
viewers of the central Issues
facing lhe nallon and lis new
president. 1;1
®I •1121 'lntomal AHalnt,
Part 2' CBS Mlnl-1-ortaa Q
1121 Larry King Llval
liJ) MOVIE: Pretty Baby jR)
11 :49)
9:30 Ill New Counlry ·
10:00 (I) 700 Club
18 (1]1 Barney Miller
li2J Evening Newt
(JJ)NIWI
Q!l Crook and Chaaa
10:30 ID (1]1 Odd Couple
Q!l VldeoCounlry
1
10:31 (5) MOVIE: MaalbaliiiPO)
11 :3?)
11:00 CJJ Fred Travaltna'a
Prealdandal Debatt
e !2l ID IIDI •1121 rm
Nawa
(l) Magic Yaara In Sporh
1973: Larry Csonka
(I) BUI Moy-' World of
ldlllt lllloyers !Ilks with a
wide variety of people about
America's choice~
18 (1]1 Love Conn
IIJM-rflna
®Chaere
9 Miami Vlcl Q •
Q!l You Cln Be a Slllr
,11:30(l)TBA
,
8 (2) !D) Tonight Show
@ 8portaCinter (L)
ID EIIIEndara A continuing
chronicle ollhe lives of
resident&amp; In London's East
End . l0:30)
(I)

J • J Wet• Service. Swimming
pools, citt•ns. wells. Ph . 814-·

dollvery. Coli

1~

1· I I _

t

UC E AT

, .

I
~:_.;,,~;. . V;.I.::G~,E:....;Eic.i-7 -jl 0
~-.,:,s;-;:,.1...::...;1.;_;,1--1

o;"Sometimes." warned Grandpa,
._
J._._
J..
_
J._
.
J..-...J
=
"
when
people are moving in the fat
I
. - - -- - - - - -,lana, lheir wheels - -."

L=-,.-,

_

.

..

•

•

Cbomfp rete .•heh chuckle q voledd
y 111 1ng tn t e mining wor s

•

you develop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

CAPRICDiiN jllei:. 22-J.on. 18) Dare to GEMINI IMay 21.June 20) New life may
be a dreamer loday, because you'll be a · be brealhed rnro a prolecl 1oday lhat
Nov. 8, 1818
pragmatic visionary. Things !hal you vi- you have leH to collecl dust. Wllh a lew
In the year ahead greater emphasis suallze will have real posslbllllles.
changes and Improvements, It can be
lhan usual will be placed upon your re- AQUARIUS (J.,. 2Q.Feb. 11) Your be- - turned lnlo somelhlng conalrucllve.
havlor will command the artentlon of CANCER (J..,. 21.July 22) Being In lhe
lallonllhlpa. The lhlnga lhat are apt to olhers today. Don'llet 1hls disturb you company ol people who lake life looM·
bring you the greatest succeas will be lhe rmpr-•lon you make w!ll ""nerare rioualy won't alter your oullook loday.
traceable 1o Id ... you got from olhers..
·~
•·
lh
SCORPIO (OcL 24-Nav. 22) Your natu· good publicity.
Your enthualaam w111 1nap 1ra em .
ral charm and enchantmenl can be uti· PIICEI (Feb. ZO.March 20) Be ·com- . LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) II you feel ere·
ilzed today. You should be able to gel passlonsre and understanding loday If atlve or lnvenllve today, experlme~l .
what you want w!thoul appearing ag- a friend comes to you w!lh problems. wllh your Ideas. Your lmaglnallon len 1
greulve or demending. Know wherelo This parson may only musler enough running amok, ll's working tor you.
lOOk tor romance end you'll find 11. The nerve 1o lalk ro you aboutlhe lip of the YIIGO (A,.. 21-lept. 22) People tend
k 1 t 11
Iceberg.
lo recall actions bert• lh., lhay '';
Astro-Gwhrlapchh•~alchma emar~~C:ryyper~- ARIEl (March 21·Aprll 11) The de- member words. However, loday you II
veals
..,.na are ro
• mands of others could be heavy loday, be ablelo gel your polnla acron so el·
feci lor you. Maii·S2 to Matchmaker, c/o . bul you should be able lo prollt lrom lectlvely lha1 whal you aay w!ll be easily
lhll - - · P.O. Box 81428, Clevede ood d
lad
land OH 441 01·3428.
taking care ollhelr needs. The urvlce un rsl
an_~ .
'
23-Dec 2 11 ,If
you oHer haa value.
LIIRA (hpt. .......,L 211 Be aler1 1or
IA~~•u,a
roday
~ TAURUS (Aprlt 20-May 201 Conlror aoma cemounaged daveropmenll lotreo ~re a ~ t!.v:::ost heiptul will be might be more In lhe hands of ...o- : day that could an~ble you to add to your
wh
wit~ a compasolonale nature. clalas today lhan your own. H"""""", ·. r~rcea. If you re ~live Mlough.
tho~
lfort
peallnn to . lhls could be lor the best so don't get ' you II recognize whal lsn t obvious to '
Don I waate your e
• ap
•
h
'
. others.
the hard-hearls.
_Pus y. .

1:&lt;:""'·

ihe

·

a (1]1 Nawl)wad Gan111

iiJ Spor1l Tonight

IIIID 'Huntef' CBS Lat.

Night Hunler travels 1o
Australia to sOlve lhe murder
of a lonner lover. (R)
G1 HIH 8lrMt IliuM
PNiolozzl's Revenge
aD Amerlcln M••llla
12:00 (I) Paper ChiH
·
(jJ NI'L'a Greateit Momenta
1984 Delisa Cowboys- Sliver
Season
(l) • (J) Newa
!I) Sign

Gabled - Lunge - Plaid -'- Relief - ILLEGIBLE
My brother returned from the druggist aflerwhat seemed
very long time. "I was so late, " he explained , "beeauae
the mark of a real doctor is always ILLEGIBLE."

NORTH
• 853

•

a

Hane
Improvements

1-11~237-0481.

.~

BRIDGE

a

8915-3802

81~44A-2107b•

·1975Joop CJ8 . -top. othw

*•

MY TH(?fE-

INTO THe' NE)(i TIMf zoNE·· ·

Home. Hu Chery ch••ie. gen•ltw. aWning. llr concltlon on
motor •d roof, 12.000 ml•.
A· 1 lhiP• Iota qf llllltru. price

TNcks for Sale

Beu•tlll whtte CldiHec. Low

v ••

MA~E

MINUT~ l-ONG PI&gt;TANC~

1181 27 ft . Rodcwood Min&gt;

82 -

!!e'J72 1

......

llunk- w•h boddln• t248.
Ful • • m - • loU-ion

---1-

Stre.m, camper. U18d 3 lim•.

Coli

uOoo. Coli 11~44.41188 ofI• 4 PM.
842-1011, • t 2824.
.:.:_..:_:..::::__ __ _ _ _ 0
1875 Dodao Slont I, Nno 1100c1.
111• Covill•. Pl. ,S, Ut. t350.1t12ChwoUoEIComlno.
otoroo.-o..AC.1188-GJry ~ocloond. t1991. Coli 11 ..
Top•. oton~d. AC, ...... 4
4 e.lll8.________
dr. Col oft• 5 PM. 11~381- _:.::....:..:..:..:
8•.a
1173 Chovy hoovy 'I ton. 3110

-

Olvo 11.. Oollpolo,
NEW· I pc. wood grouP' o311.
Living- ""'• 0111--.

2574.

Fordo. Chovyo. CorvMI-. oto.,
In Y'"'' •oo. For Info coli 11021

~

FRANK AND ERNEST

81~448-0208.

Ak•• TreeTrimning •d Stump
Remov1t. Fr• Mtlm.t•. Cell

_.;.,.F_:O;...:F:_,:..T...:Y..--11 ~!

Ma~azlna

@ SportCanter (L)
(l) 11 (I) Current Affair
ID (!) MacNeil/ Lahrer

1918 Fox Flro 28 II. jby Oull

.:.:_------------

bbl ..

II !2J Pfoll

,.,(1

:~~v~r:~~~~:o~ !.'r::.M&amp;:o~f ':'n~"""~i.r::

n- ··-

IWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURIIITUIIE 12

m

1971 Tri'JII trail ... 2• ft.. full
bed,. llr, n.w tir•, toil at, c•pet.
penllllne. cu1hlona. curtllnl,
elec:trle weter hMt•. e2600 or

78Ford7000.._et. Cet motor.
24 ft. box. Strolaht INCk.

2topBoogl• foroolo. 81~8Q2•u

~=::::::;:::::::==1=========~

8:35
Andy Griffith
7:00 (J) Fred,Travalena's
Presidential Debale

hinting: lnt•lor a Exterior.
1980Chw.n•lookllhwp. N,.. Free 81tlmat•. Cel 114-441lll'ool. goo - • · ti.IIOO.OO: :_83:_.:_::__.....,..--~.
304-17S.181"Will do
bltsting. spr~
'73 Corvette 8tlngrly. polmlng. lnt«ior • • • u .80o.oo. - · · 304-8711- deoorlllng. 25 yra. exp.lence.

deliver uwdu11.
.... 773~
8332. B~O til 8:00AM.

Hou11 brotc.,. Oood dltpoaltlon.

ahols end wormed. heelth gu•

Wracked 1981 Dodge Cott,
good motor, 4 speed. good
oooro. •200.00. 30~8711-1450

304-57• 2398 or .81 42U4.

""

a

Q!l You c;an Be a Slllr

and

Purobrod.lomlloPk 8ul. 4moo.
Coli

liJ) Cartoon expre11

1883 Cltwy Mollbu -ion
4:fo."'
o3.100.oo. 30~1711-

Building MotMolo

11~~1-

*·

Now·-... us. ·
.Workt ... til. UP:Jitool •
loll •..,. Coli ~~~ .... 3118.

1810 Mercury Merquls

Ans.n Cl.il coil Coli
1158.

For Leaae

-o.o
... - . . -.•
•..:.-:rl•• lin• of ulld tlrnltvre. '

0500. Coli ., •• 992·2513.
Mwy ...tz.

155 Building Suppliee

G101 .. blnM. oolldwolnu~ holdo
. 10 guno, 30...511-1078.

4~7.

ml• but h• miiiY ,..,., .-ts.

For oolo 1911 Hondo Proludo
outo. po. pb, olr cond. oun roof.
t2200. 30~1711-5354.

Floh T.,k. 2413 Jockoon Aw.
P&lt;&gt;lnt -~ 30~8711-2013.
10 golo• up tl"-99 ond 10 gil
oompiMo t4328.

UMd black pipe. 11 ft of

giiY plpo. Phone 304-878-

1880 Molltu • door. 100.323

1 bo •· 2 oawololt..ry brocl). 8
plgo . Coll11~378-2118.

ccw•••

1~ ..

llro brl&lt;*. 83 II of 1W'

1878 Porrlloc Tr.,oAm. AC, PS.
PI, COIIotto. 11~882-7811 .

old Rt. 21. IN- E..llnoulotod
cemoufteg•
t27.150,
30~273-8181.
.
~

romorod. 30~17•2183.
AKC roglol•od Slblllon Huoloor
puppl•. 8wool&lt;o clcl. 3 mol•. 3
fomoJM, both p•onto C.. be
- · 30~17S.8800.

yollow

81~1M&amp;-28BI

I 1I I I
2

liD) 111112J CBS NtWI

1D (1]1 WKRP In Cincinnati
® WKRP In Cincinnati

8oldn.W-t14.280. Prlvate~d­

.811 ovonlngo.
doro.

I

R IL F O C

(!) Nlghlly Bullneal Report

Small blodc Chwy hoodo. 202'1
.,d 19..-o. Coll81~992-5974.

-all«. Coli

t~e

CI1 II Cll ABC News Q
1D Body Eleclric

1971 c;orvotto 1.82. 4 opood . . room (fullslr:l bed) refrlg•ator... ..... .-oh. AC. PI, PB. / fr. .•. 13,500 BTU .W co net,
PW. TandT. nM
bl.c*on ro... ptvantennL 21ft. c.afr•
.... 8;~2•7· ..81 ..,.,,• .,. Mning. AI the extras. Firm
114-IM&amp;-2811 dor.
t7910. Mult •• lo appriCite.
Coli 30~8711-5881 . oft• 7 PM
1811CorvottoProj.... M. 327. 1711-2013.

1----------

69~3678

~~;::;:::=:;::;=:;::=;;:::

1884 Clvyor. Loz• JCE wlh
turbo. E-1- oond Loodod.
corra1~317- n87.

Somlf'liHe'a. Eni·R.,enlwood
junctlon lndlpandlnce Aold,.

CETIDE. INC .. Athono-81•-

Buy or Sell. Alv«lne Antlqu11,
1124 E. Mlln Street, Pom•ov.
Houra: M,T,W 10a.m. to 8p.m.,
8undoy 1 to 8p.m. 81 .. 9922121.

18815 Chevy Cel41brlty. Auto ..

1885 Chworto. AC. E&lt;eollont
aondMion. G. 000 ml•. Coli
814-IM&amp;-2837.

lio Blade Co.• 123'1 Plno .,
Cl.olllrlollo, Ohio. Coli I 1.. ..._
2783.

Antiques

Mercury Monarch, ltndiU ,
ee10. C..ll14-44.8810 aft•
8 PM.

Livestock

Hou~e

Off 1110 Corner Cl•k Chopol

Farm Equipment

Small army ICCMMGrlel. Frl,
Sur), noon til 111:00 PM.

s...

Cl•olc 1889ChovylmpoJo. 327
.,elno. •11100. Firm. 1978

381. IU'tomllllc. h•d top wtth
• ... rolling """'" 11~247-

Athl81f Wood .,d ooll burn• for
oolo. Hoo brldcllnw. blowor. Elm
St.• bMide Eb .... s Gulf, Recln&amp;

Surplus •rmv camoutl.,ge. ct.
nlm, renltl, Clrhert dotNng.

81~38S.82.0.

GAM I

Edit• d by CU. Y R. POLLAN

/lGiacomo
Sportraltl Greg Norman &amp;
Agoslonl

.0 4Jt2 with carburel:ora. Elder·

brodc otr• mootor lntoko Jfor
quod). VOl "ode ohlfl•. 2 H....
shift .... M-ZUodl C:ru,._, 220
Mun .... 1988 CorvMio hub
eopo, 1988-70 otodc Corvolfo
hub copo. Country Corvotttli.
Roclno. Ohio. 81 .. 9G-2BU

*•

8701.

.

lm• .._ JecUon Aw , ....
ront •131.00 month _,,~y

8r.

furnace t&amp;O. Phone 81 ... 992-

Hou•l room1&amp; ~h. t200•
mo. 1110 dop. Aloo 2 lr. mobllo Furnilhed on• bect-oom · apt.
ho- liB, -p•od. .,...,.., eclltt. ont,. no !Mil. CIH eft•
*rr,.hod. t200 o mo. olllll 1:00. 30~171-3718.
dep. lath 3 ml• from town on
Ill. HUD oppr-1. Col Dol&gt; Dno _ _.. opt In Point
Pt. .ant. ._., ct.., sn d gOOd
rrro. .,~..._l,lo.
304-17.1388.

FNit
V. 11118tabl81

t2881. MF

Avll.ble Dec. 1st. Clll 81~

._.oom blt~tll 8CI'OII from
NO&lt;th-oHigh-al-4425

58

'31 MFtr•or. good point. - d
rubb.-. Nc• with ICI'tp• lillcla.
1 970 Oodge SW t 260, 25 Inch
ookJr console T.V. •us.

1985 Cutlooo cr... Runo lko
now. 38.000 ml•. Auto. . AC.
orullo. tilt. AM-FMot•oo. Col

front ~r.o. v.,., rod
conll Col 81~44.931 or
44S.8317.

81~742-2331 .

44S.1113.

3 -_,.
- 4428
, .. ""pw 2-b"
....3
,..,.,

Umlt.t op.,ings.

11~992·M81.

!Nov. Doc o - 7 dovol. Swn

SHADY LAWN AI'TS.-728 So- oondAvo .. lurnllhod ollldon- 54 Misc. Merchandise
.tll'tlng • •17th mo. in cluing
wot• &amp; v•bttrl• Slnalo o4rko
only. Coli 81~44.~107 or Buy clract from m~nuflcturer
44S.2802.
1r1d IIYe . . .. Spa's lllrtlng lit
tUIO.oo. corr Aquo Toch.
304-523-8288.

49

oond. · wHI rent t,r'*hld or
....,,....... no 1*1. phone

•••eon.

11~44S.I031.

P•k. Oolllpolo F.-rv.
304-1711-3073.

Ulh. IMI...m.

Ohio.

- - -- -. Sm.. . blodc Chwy Creitt 2x.t,

1877 Chovy y.,. f710. 1874 doyo orl1 .. 311-9n3ov.,lngo
Ohto.-1310. 1881 Dotoun 200 llflw 8:00PM .
SX-UOOO. CoHI1~387-05.1 . ~~;::::;::==;:;::===
lndlvlcllol g.~k• . I - bo- 19M Chwotto. • opd , 33,000 79 Motors Homes
elnnltl, - · ..." -· 8nr~ ..... AM-Filii-CoR Vorycloon.
&amp; Campara
..... Muolc. 11~-0887. t2300. Col 81 .. 44.2301 or
Jofl Womolor lnotruetor, 81~ 2411-8114.

Mbced IW'dwoodsltlll. 812p•
bunclt. Conlllnlng 1t1Jprox. 11h:
ton. Ohio hllet Co.• Pom•ov.

furr*hld. •2215 • mo. No pat1.

rtnt. FMnttv Prtde MobleHome

Carp• • IPPiitnCII. Adutts
onr,. No pill. Rof. &amp; dOP

3 wholl bllftciO far oole. Coli
81~44 .. 3188.

l)!llrnllhod -.&gt;t.. 2 8R .. llr
con,.lonod. f200 o mo. t200 Model10 R""lnuton. Very good
depostr:. 8 mos. ,.... C.l
oond. Coli 81~448-33U
81~317-CK31.

Spoclouo mobllo homo loto lor

., ...... 31 ...

• 1110. Coli I 1.. 248-BU3.

frost~fr ... whlte,

52 Sporting Goods

Rontol trolero. CoM
7479.

2 lr. hou ... Clot• to town.
Prlood t278 pluo dop. &amp; rof. Col

Warm Morning woodburner.

t125. Rofrlgorotor froot-frooovocodo. t125. 30 Inch a•

Some 1111111 up 10 30 per cent
otr, furnltuN, al-.wefe. Mlf'IY
moralt8ml. Plciklftl U81d Fwn~

Apartment
for Rent

Ap8nment tar rsnt. 12215 1
month. Depostt required. 114-

41

Refrlgerltor

ship.; 304-178-2886.

tl• oold. f1110 • mo. .....
dopod. Co" 11~44S.2380.

Hen! ols

t200/pr. Coll81~317- 7284 .

231 Flrot Avo. 1 BR .. kltoh.,
_,,,._ -pllod. No ohll~on/...... t175 pluo . - r•.
Dop. • rol. CoU1~44S.q28 ,

C...p kJt on IW'IMiw Rtv • ·

304-17.3030 ... 8715-,.31 .

a.

383B.

11~..e.01103

r.go bulclng

Hot Point h""'Y duly Wllhlr

dryer . Very good cond.

plolo ldloh.,. olr. - - Depoelt. no p..._ C.U 81•..._
0138 ....rn., oft• 8.

821'11-oc. EICOL concl., 2 BR .,
oqulppod kkohon. olr. A... olllo
Nov. lot. t225 pluo clop. Col

loto, mo .. o homoo pormlttod,
pubtlc wltw, alia rW• loti.

81~-3181 .

lwgollvln9roorncholr.llkenow.

dop.

2 moblo ho,_ lroth-2 IR ..
rwwtr demr•ld. tJr..hlcl. One
w/Mshlr/dryer. ~ mi. IMt ol

._.,l'fl

ChrfltmM
now being
tlk... PILle fln1ndng_ IIVIDible
with IPPf'O'II'Id ll'edtt. Rt 141 in
Centen.-y-'A mile on Uncoln

o.,..

11~44S.1.01.

11~448-01101.

25 ln. Zenith console color tv.
Good cond. f110. Coli 8144 ...7534oft•4PM.

71 Auto's For Sale

Mueical
lnatruments

For oor..Roconclllonod 1I ft.
folcl-upluoh hor. Colll14-281.
4121.

l.wgollvlng room with •pondo

2 BR . tnl•.

8B31.

57

pool, pl10ground. Uttllrl• not

rGOI1\ 2 . . ., nM c•Pit. CA.

Prlvotoiot Col
4-8 PM.

6 PM

Compt .e te ho·usehold
furnllhlnp AI bedcHng.. IUIIIc
bUnk bedl wfth ru•tlc ch•t.
-'IIY
of · - • chorr.oH on
lola E-lont uood oppllonooo.
Chrlol...., toyo now In otocl&lt;.

Plko.

ar- top'""'·· omortolnmont

rn.. chlllo-. Coli 81 .. 38•

tr.,oe. pn,ete endoltd pltlo..

Colll1~2411-5183.

on tw.t pumJL 11Jibltt..w.tah•
and *Jer, undlrp..,..g and
d - oil •• ooncl. CoR '30 ..

noon~

•eoo. 19 ln. color tv, dlo-ohw. LR atMo. 3·
Moving-lt•eo-

Good uood tarcld olr g• lurnooo, t100. Uood blcyciM. Coli
. 81~44. . .23.

Dpon dollv. Mon.-Sot.
9AM - I PM
Sun., 12

k«o..,o h. . . . wlfon. AI
••col. cond. Coli 814-31777411.

1 ..9-23515.

61

f2311. Utlkloo pilei. Col 448•418 oft• 7 PM.

In Ewlk.. 2 BR . Adulls only. No
• •· e2215 • mo. Dep. rwqulrld.

VIAl' I Fwnltu,..

Warm Morning wood·COII
bur,_ w/f~u.t 3 moa. 2

Used trlntmllllont. A. Int ...
Mllv lno-od. 30doro gu•ont•. We buy ti'Wl&amp;dllona. C.ll

r~=~~~~~;;:::r~:;:::;:~~~~~ -ond
Tunnll RomWelandWC
~olll w-h
Holt., CarburetorL

room dow nttllr1. CA.. dl1·
hwoohw. dlopoool. . , . - on-

F~Wnllhod

42 Mobile Han11
for Rent

30~8711-1.10.
'
Fcilow prlcoo onQuoiMyCorpot

opt. Cor-

Luaurlous Tera Townhou•
Elagn 2 llo""' 2

For rent or .... n•lr;' ..,...,...
dolod 2 bo~oom hou• grNI
loCIIion n• relidlntlll oornmunlly, oft• 1:00 PM coli

PICKENS USEO RJRIIITURE

Compl.te hou•hotd furnishlngo. ~ . .o out Jorrlcho.

2588. E.D.H.

2 boli'oom houoo locolld lre----Ripl.,...,.
mle of1 Rt. 17. lohool Md mal
routo. !lo~IBII-3888.

Nlw Hw-.

ohOII. ""'81. 5 pc. wcodon
dlnnottoooto. o189.1111.

Pike from e183 • mo. Wllk to
ohop .. d """'"'· 11~44·

30 .. 882-338"-

locM:_.

1415 Etst•n A¥1.
4 dntw•• ch-. t48. I drM'•

BUIJTIFU L APARTMENTS AT 6 Furniture come to MoHoha't
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK- Fll'nttu.UpperAhrlt"Rd. , 81..
ION &amp;TATES, 538 Jodcoon . . .7....

roqulrod. Utllkloo llr,.hld.
Aduko onr,. Coli 11~44•
1519.

bMemlftl

J. S RJAMTURE

304-875-8758.

114- 448-0888. Robulldlng
ovollobl&amp;

_II_•_
1o

loodod. Oood pldcup.. t21. Coli
114-2151-1788.

01

FOR61VE T~EM , SIR .. THI5 1S T~E
FIRST TIME.T~EV'VE EVER SEEN
~~{ONE EAT POPCORN WIT~ A FORK..

W~AT
ARE 'IOU 6U'l'5
ALL LOOKING
AT?!

!50

WOlD

be·
low to form fou r sirnple words

1I

make choices that are rlghl
tor yoursell.
(!) Dr. Who The Daemons,
Part4
Ill (1]1 Happy Dayo
li2J lnalde Pollllce '88
® FaCia of Life
liJ) Fat Albert
12!1 Fandango
6:05 m Laverne and Shl~ey
8:3o II !2J III) NBC Nlghfly Newt

S© ~~ lA- "~ trss

Reorronge letters of
0 four
scrombled words

Discover how to loam to

Ua.t &amp; rebuilt toriJit
convertn. Standard dutct.•.
pr•sure pllf•. &amp; throw out
be•lng. W.rlf'lty-12mot. CVC

18 II. T.,dom oxlotroll•.

0oorr.or...1on o1 , .
Mdroom Mlttll.- mtt.t Clblnel.. FireNood-all h•dwood. Splh: •

frwno •110.

·~

up,

1911- Moon 121&lt;150. 2 8R .
H•ovv7mo. oldlovlngh-.o.Coll 56
Pats for Sale
t2300. Colll1~..e.0380.
t::=:::::==::::::::=:'1r::::::::::::::::::::::::::18ul.. llo Rd. Opon 9om to 5pm 81~25•8•13.
Mon. thru Sit. Ph. 814--4481171Eioono.2BR .. -wlrlng. 41 Hanes for Rant
44 A':artment
0322.
•
• SAVE.
Oroom .nd 8upp!r ' 8hoj,.Pot
12kll....8tlp-out. t3000. Col
--...,.-...,-,.--,,--.,-..,.-r Rent
BuymolordorYidooo/CD~'oond . Grooming. All broedo .. . AII
11~387-7111 oftor:8PM .
"
Voll.ovF.....rture
llll•g•ln•.Col81~441'0489.
otyloo. romo.., Food llool•.
Nlool¥ _,,,.hod omol houoo.
ond uood lurn~uro end
JulloWobb Ph. 11~44S.023! .
1ppllc.nces. Cell e14-448· Cast iron wood bl.lrn ..~ Medium
1982 1.. 70 Llbll1y-3 Bod- one bedroom rMionlble r.rt.
llizo. Front doont. *100. Coli Slon)OIO 011. 3;\ yr. old. Good
room.. 2 bite.. nM c•plt. In town.lr~ CAdu ~· .No P•••Rof. . 2 8R , opto. 8 cloooto. klloh«&gt;· 7572. Houro 9-5.
••·up.o,...r... -. t11.ooo. roqu - · 0 11 v 1 ~..._ 2v•1
op~L trrnlohod. W•r...D814-4411-..80.
lor ....... no DociMod. 11~ ·
or ..._

BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·
Uood &amp; rebu lit all ty poo . .
W•'":'!)'-30 dovo. Pricoo. 099 8o

....,_

•

8:00 &lt;If Bonanza: The Loll
Eplsodet
11 !2l m a Cll IIDI mli2J
III) News
(l) SportoLook
ID Tha Power of Choice

Auto Partll

2220

r::~:t~~y

EVENING

II&amp; Acceuories

0

81~441-0109.

King 0310. 4 dr-or ch•lf89.
&amp; 10 gun.
mottr- 036 &amp; t45.

11~25•1010

76

0

Flr.vood for •1._ t35 epldcup

MON., NOV. 7

cond. esoo.oo. 304-ol611- 1522.

Wood •bl• w-8 chW1 e211 to · 1- -- ---4- - -•ne. DHk t100 up to t375. Mit• Copy Stw · 900 copv
Hutch• t400 arid . up. Bu'* m-=hlne. •310. Call 814-448beds complete w~m.ttr.... 4042 or....,7827.

'2IS.b70.

Coli

1878Hondo 750 four. vory good

0O

1210 Slt;Ond Ave., Oalllpoh.

•

YZ 280 E Ywnolta Stric:tlv dirt.
Coli 81 .. 44e.2.27 oft• 5 PM .

DIIT!

stocked moct.ll. Ron AW61on.

Television
.Viewing

Motorcycles

1881 Kawolokr•~Lid. 17.000
m..a. e300. Runs good. C•ll
11~~8-6&amp;87••11 tar John.

I Wi£ IHf: WAY "ftlt;

~------------

Ohio,

74

.

uttd. 3

0000 USED APPUANCES
W•MrL dryers. rftlg...ors.

Sot• .,d chtirw priced from
- ·u sa to 8995. Tobl• tllo ond
up to •125. Hld••-bo• t310
to t885. Rocrrn . . t221 to
o378. L.ompo 028 to t125.
Din,.,.. •101ond up to ••85. ,

Nee Hlnry•Aotnt fof'JenOettl•
RIIIIYc Joolloon. Ohio. 11~

01

S•. 11~44.1899. 127 3rd
AYO. Golllpolo, OH.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

t311.000. Nogotllllo. Com ...

Whettchllr•rww

w,_.ed electric 1cootn. Cd
Ao... Moblty oolloct, 1-81..
870.8111 .

C- Motol.

@
r,,,,,

Do~lng 3 IR . ..,., In c:oumry
on 110. 7 mH• from Hob:•
ltoopllol f.,ood In l&gt;ock yore!.

54 Misc .

The

Ohio

Monday, November 7 1988

Monday, November 7, 1988

C041my App... oo. In¢ Oood
used •pU_IftCM .,d lV •••·
Op.. lAM to IPM . Mon t hru

3 _ _.. R.. d\ m bllho.
f.m., rDOI'I\ cln6ng room. 1 c.g•oao. • - tu-g. pool.
, _ d - l"'lng Vol10
• • CoM 11~..._ 71103.

--~-

-~--------------------

Off

.AJ 7
.AH
.KJ63

Learning to play
with assurance

.4

By James Jacoby
Do you know some youngste rs who
you think would love to lea rn to play
bridge? "Teach Me to Play" by Jude
Goodwi'n and Don Ellison is the book
for them. Winner of the American
Bridge Teachers' Association's "Book
of the Year" award, it offers delightful
activities that make learning the
game easy for anyone - not just the 8to 14-year-olds for whom it is designed. (It is available from Pando
Publications, 540 Longleaf Drive, Roswell, GA 30075, for $12.50 including
postage.) Next year there will be a
play, defense and leads. "Teach Me to
Play" is filled with hundreds of line
drawings. cartoons. puzzles and projects that hold the learner's intel'l!st.
In today's hand !rom the book,
North-South bid quickly to three ,notrump and West led the king of diamoods. South plays low lrom both
hands on the first two diamond tricks .
On '\'inning the third diamond, declarer tries a losing club finesse. South
wins the spade return, cashes his high

.AKQ

;

• K 10 t
t9B2
.A 52

Vulnerable: Neither
Deale r : South
West

Nortb

Eul

Pass
Pass

3NT

Pass

Soollt

1 NT

Opening lead:

Puo

+K

spades and the club ace ana kin&amp;.
When West shows out on the third,
round of spades and East 011 tbe third
round ol clubs, declarer has a com-.
plete count on the band. West bad two
spades. six diamonds and four clubrr;
. and therefore only one hear!.. With a,.:
·solute 3$Surance he leads a heart to
dummy's ace and a heart back to his
10, makilig his contract.

. by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Tiff
5 Lean-to
9 Aspire
I 0 Flutte'r ·
12 Spot
13 Dental
sUbstance
15 Lamprey
HI "Memories

-Made

2Tough
question
3 Flatterer
4 Novelist
Josephine
5 Wine
6 Whetstone
7 Soprano
Manon
8 Be humiliated
11 Qualm
14 French
Ye~~terdeJ'• All8wer
river
16 Top rating 25 Wooden 33 Grandson
19 French
piece
of Jacob
painter
27 Attach
36 - for
20 Phillip30 'Cavell
the
pine
or Barton
book
Island
31 City on 37 · 23 Bombard
the
and

of This"
17 Conceit
18Quake
20 Hindu
garment
2 1 - express
22 City of
Manasseh
23 British
cake
24 Assail
25 Whacked
26Aperture
27 Comic King
28Shoot off
29 Progenitor
32 French
article
33 Ukely
34 Big - ,

·

M~ose~ll~e~_,~:J~~

b--+--+-4-

35

Calif.
City In

Pakistan
37 Actress

Garr
38 Mortise
fitting
39 Different
40Foxx
of comedy
41 Southwest
wind

DOWN

I

1 Covering

DAILY CRYPTOQUOO'ES- Here's bow to work It:

111'1 ,

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

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

11-7

.·.

HLBX

UCMUAN

· ZIKRJKZCX
JWXIKNW

.. URV
BWX

IIJNanllght

HLBX

•llll TWII8ht z-

SOUTH

CROSSWORD

TCXJBKLR

12:30. (2) • Lat. flight with
o..tdl.to........
(J) NI'L 'I1IMIN Waniorl,
Wlzardt and WCJnder1)oys
(J) • (J) Nlghtlilll Q

.J 10962
.Q86532
--•Qs

.KQJ1063
.10974

second volume, focusing on declarer

·~:=,~·1·ZOM
e(l]l

:~=.Now

.

EAST

WEST
' .74

K N

T. Ll
ALO

NMXXB

U
FUA
I X-

A L 0 I

B W U B
R X H X I

CLNB

SLWR
G
UVUFN
Yeetenl&amp;,•a CI')'Pt.Oqaotei GOOD HUMOR IS ONE OF
THE BEST ARTICLES OF DRESS ONE CAN WEAR IN
SOCIETY.- THACKERAY
.

..

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 7, 1988

-Area d e a t h s . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Middlepon, Ohio.
Servtces will be at II a.m.
Tuesday, at lhe Crow-HusseU
· Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
with the Rev. Donald W. Johnson
Jr. officiating.
Burial will foUow in . Kirltland
Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Monday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
7-9 p.m. Friends wishing '!nay conaibute to the American Cancer
Society.

Virginia Hartenbach

VIrginia Hartenbach, 73, Point
Pleasant, died at 12:40 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 6, 1988, at Holzer Medical Center in GaUipolis, Ohio.
She was a graduate of Pomeroy
High School, class of 1933.
. •
Born Sept 28, 1915 in Pomeroy,
Ohio, she was a daughter of the late
Arthur and Glenna Jenkinson Hess.
She was also preceded in death
by her husband, A.E. flanenbach, Robert Carson
who died July 26, 1978.
,
She .is survived by two spns and
Robert D. Carson, 68, Route 1,
daughters-in-law, Kip 1111d Carolyn Middleport, died Tuesday, Nov. 1
Hartenbach, Point PleaSant, Jeff at Ohio State University Hospital
and Judy Hartenbach, GaUipolis; following a two month Illness.
one granddaughter, Jamie; one sisHe was the youngest son of the
ter, Gwen Baker, Bucyrus, Ohio; late Burton H. Carson and Clara
one step-brother, Arthur Hess Jr., · VIrginia Rife Carson.

. .'

Local

n~s

briefs... ___,

Continued from page 1
Memgrlal; Tuppers Plains at 10:15 a.m. took Raymond
Holsinger !rom Success Road to Holzer Medical Center; at 11:14
a.m., Middleport returned Willis Anthony to Veterans
Memorial; Racine at 5: 05 p.m. took Paul Arthur from
Barringer Ridge Road to St. Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg;
Tuppers Plains at 5: 11 p.m. took Mary Murphy from Third St.,
to St. Joseph Hospital; at 5:16p.m. Racine took Goldie Roberts
from Pfne Grove Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 9:33 p.m. took Buddy Kuhn from Fifth St., to
I ],eterans Memorial; Pomeroy at 9:36p.m. took Janet Roinlne
I/"' ;;om the Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial;
Racine at 10:21 p.m. treated Barney Hiles on Wells Run Road.
On Sunday, the Pomeroy unit took Susie Windon from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to Veterans Memorial and
Middleport took Lewis Taylor from Railroad St. to Veterans
Memorial.

,.

..

Stocks

Veterans Memorial

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis ol Loewi
Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................................. 28%
Ashland on ........................35~
Bob Evans ........................... l6
Charming Shoppes .............. 15~
City Holding Co ........... :....... 30
Federal Mogul. ................... 51',4
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... ......... .51',4
Heck's .. :............. , ................ %
Key Centurion .................... 16'h
Lands' End ....... ................ .. 24%
Limited Inc ........................ 26?1;
Multimedia Inc .................... 70
Rax Reslaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .12'h
Shoney's Inc ........................ 7~
Wendy' s Intl ........................ 6'h
Worthington Ind .................. 21
(Wendy'S Inti. Is ex-dividend
today.)

Veter1111s Memorial
Saturday Admissions-Wen·
dell Frecker, Racine; Wlll!s
Anthony, Middleport; Goldie Ro·
berts, Racine; Buddy Kuhn,
Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges-Martha
Konkey, Edna Leach, Sarah
Reynolds.
Sunday Admissions-None.
Sunday Discharges-Shannon
Hubbard.

Election day dinner
An election day dinner will be
served at Heath United Metho·
dlst Church in Middleport from
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

He Is survived by three sons,
Robert Donald Carson, Jr., San
Diego, Cal lf.; Nickolas Eugene
Carson, St. Louts, Mo.; Thomas
Chr tstopher Carson, Kent, Eng·
land; one grandson, Christopher
Carson, Kent, England; a
brother, Charles W. Carson,
Pomeroy, and a sister, VIrginia
Carson, Middleport.

Rosaltha Ginther

Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home w!th the Rev. Richard
Freeman officiating. Burial will
be In Beech Grover Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from nool) Wednesday until
time of services. Eastern Star
services will also be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday. Friends may
make contributions to the Trinity
Church Inlier memory.

Nora Houdashelt

.

Rosaltha (Rose) M. Ginther,
87, Waynesville, former Meigs
Funeral services for Mrs. Nora
County resident, died unexpect· Barbara Eichinger Houdashelt,
edly Sunday at the Clinton 89, College Road, Syracuse, who
Memorial Hospital In Wllmlng· died Saturday foUowlng an exton.
tended Illness. were held Monday
A hOmemaker, Mrs. Ginther morning at the ,Ewing Funeral
was born In Syracuse. She was a Home with the Rev. Wesley
res !dent of Meigs County for Thatcher officiating.
many years before moving to
Born Sept. 10, 1899 In Miners·
Waynesville.
ville, Mrs. Houdashelt was a
She was a member of Trinity daughter of the late WilHam and
Church In Pomeroy, a member of Clara Partlow Eichinger. She
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of was a homemaker and a member
Eastern Star, and of the Wayes- of the Asbury Unl,ted Methodist
vllle Garden Club.
Church and the United Methodist
Surviving are a son an~ . Women.
daughter-In-law, James E. and
BesideS . her patents, she was
Vlrc~:tnla Ginther of Waynesville;
preceded In death by her hustwo grandchildren, George and band , Wllllam Houdashelt In
PhiHp Ginther, and three great 1977, and two brothers, Earl
grandchildren.
Eichinger and Leroy Eichinger.
Besides her parents, she was
Surviving are a daughter,
preceded In death by her hus· Allee Marie Houdashelt, Syraband, Oris Ginther.
cuse; three sons, Edward James
Services will be held at 2 ,p.m. Houdashelt, Middleport: John

Elmer Houdashelt, Grove City,
and Donald William Houdashelt,
Syracuse; five sisters, Edna
Wayland, Middleport; Mrs .
Mildred . Seyfried, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Ruth Leifheit, Akron: Mrs .
Mrs. Clara Sayre, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Betty Darst. Miamisburg;
two brothers, Allen Eichinger of
Pomeroy and William Eichinger
of Syracuse; seven grand·
chldlren; one great grandchild,
and several nieces and nephews.
Bur~! was In the Gilmore
Cemetery .

Rosie SearlsRosie Belle Searls, 70, Route
143, Pomeroy, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Searls was born In Gallla
County on Dec. 14, 1917, a
daughter of the ·late Jess and
Rachel Miller Robertson,
Surviving are four daughters,

Faye Swisher, Bidwell; Anna
Mae Cumbo. Albany; Carolyn
Little, Middleport; . Sharon VanCooney. Pomeroy; lour sons,
Jerry Searls, Pomeroy, and
Bobby, Jimmy and Roger Searls,
all of Columbus; 21 grandchild·
ren, 17 greatgrandchlldren; a
sister, Mary Cobb, Middleport.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her hus·
band, Hammer Roy Searls; a
son, R9y E. Searls; two daugh·
ters, Mary Lou Searls and
Delores Sturgeon: a grandson,
Jerry Wayne Searls, Jr.: a sister,
Cora Might: a brother, Robert
Robertson. ·
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Wednesday at the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home
with the Rev. Paul Taylor
officiating. Burial will be In Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday:

at

ACTIVE LEADERSHIP FOR THE FUTURE
"11'1 time tor • change Ill the war we are
repretallfld In Wathlngton. We neld ocll,..
repmentatfon In Congre11, sensltlvo to the
problems, needs and tut~re of o~r dlotrlct. t .

CaudUI said he had not voted Dukakls-Bentsen with 44 .5
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohioans rushed to the poHs early ·since moving to Ohio, but that percent.
"We think we have a real
today to cast their ballots to help years ago in Kentucky It was not
oppOrtunity
to win this thing,"
the nation choose a president and unusual to vote 30, 40 or 50 times
said
Paul
Bograd, a senior
to select a U.S. Senator. a hbstof In each election.
adviser
to
the
Dukakls campal gn
The ballot-box stuffing was
other officeholders and decide a
done for money and a few do liars working out of Columbus.
variety of financial issues.
Lines .w ere reported at several would buy votes for anybody, he
said.
Bograd said Dukakls has
polling places In the state.
Caudill said he decided to closed to within 5 points In Ohio,
At ohe precinct on •the far west
side of Franklin County, 27 register to vote In today's elec· · with ,10 percent of the voters
people stood In line shortly after lion because he supports a unde.clded. "That says to the
the polls opened at 6:30a.m. One candidate for appellate court electorate, 'Hey, walt a minute,
voter said , that only two people judge from Waynesfleld. Projec· this thing Is still out the.re to be
were' In line at that hour In the !Ions of a record turnout were won,"' said Bograd.
enhanced by the perception that
Republican officials were still
May primary.
the
presidential
contest
between
cautiously
optimistic that Bush
One elderly Auglalze County
Michael
Dukakls
and
Vice
Pres!·
would
carry
Ohio.
man made a special effort to vote
dent
George
Bush
)Vas
tighten·
Sen.
Howard
Metzenbaum, D·
today.
lng.
Both
candidates
visited
Ohio
Ohio,
sought
a
third
term against
Tommy Caud!ll, 81, Waynes·
Monday.
his
Republican
opponent,
Clevefield said he will cast his llrst
But
the
National
Weather
land
mayor
George
Volnovlch.
legal ballot today, and without
Service forecast a . cool day,
Metzenbaum, 71. mounted an
being
. paid to do. lt.
overcast at best. with showers unusually strong defense of his
of coats may be · submllted to Bank One. Gerl
BANK ONE SPONSORING COATS FOR KIDS
likely In northern Ohio and Senate seat, claiming to be a
Walton, at left, chairperson of the Coats for Kids .
- Once again, Bank One, Athens, N.A., will be
possible In the southern half of friend of the consumer, working
project
In
Meigs
County,
and
Becky
Anderson,
of
coU~ctlng "Coats for Kids" during the upcoming ·
the slate, perhaps dampening person and farmer. Volnovlch;
the
Fabric
ShCip,
are
pictured
with
the
coDectlon
hoUday season. Coats for needy children from
enthusiasm.
51, attempted to paint Metzen!lox
that
~n
sit
In
the
lobby
of
Pomeroy
Bank
One
kindergarten through high school age will be
Democrat
Dukakls,
·
s
hown
by
baum as an ultra-liberal who
during
the
holld!&gt;y
season.
Both
Walton
and
gathered at the Pomeroy, Rutland and CoolvUle
the
polls
to
be
6
to
9
points
behind
votes one way In Washington and
Anderson
hope
the
Pomeroy
coUectlon
box,
and
branches of Bank One. If necessary, the coats wDI
Republican
Bush
In
Ohio,
made
a
·talks
another way In more
the collection boxea· at the other Bank One
be mend~ and cleaned, with the Fabric Shop of
last·mlnute
grab
for
Ohio's
23
conservative
Ohio.
locations, wlll be filled many times over before
Pomeroy providing these services. Schoqls In
electoral
votes
by
visiting
an
That
contest
was the most
Christmas arrives.
Meigs County have been contacted so that the
early
morning
labor
union
breakexpensive
In
Ohio
history, with
names and approximate sizes of children In need
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The fast In Cleveland Monday. Jesse the candidates raislng$14mllllon
director ol the Ohio Poll says Jackson campaigned for Duka· between them, much of It from
George Bush wlll beat Michael kls In Dayton Monday night and out of state.
Dukakls In Ohio by "eight or nine urged his audience to vote.
One race for the Ohio Supreme
percentage points" In today's
RecalUng the ctvll rights strug- Court will produce an elected
presidential election.
'
gles of .the 1960s, Jackson said woman justice for the flrst time
.
•. ~ .Ohio P~JI dlrecto&lt;- .Al Tuch· ••we died to.il young, suffered too ·- In 60 years.
·
profusely,
bled
too
much
...
We've
Running
for
the
seat being
farbef bases his prediction on a
new statewide survey that shows got to exercise this right to vote.'' vacated by the retiring Justice
Bush leading Dukakls by eight
Meanwhile, Bush attended a Ralph Locher were Judges Joyce
points.
campus rally at Ashland College George of Summit co·unty Court
"The Indications In the survey
to solidity his support In the of Appeals, a Republican, and
In other matters, Council reBy NANCY YOACHAM
sugges.ted that Council not com·
are
that
Bush's
lead
will
hold
up
hea'vlly
Republican territory.
Allee Roble Resnick of Lucas
mit to more than Is affordable by named Betty Baronlck and ·through Tuesday, leading to an
Sentinel News Stall
Secretary
of
State
SherrodCounty
Court of Appeals, a
Waterline replacement on Mul·
the village. Seyler pointed out Danny Zirkle as Council's repre· eight or nine point victory In Brown predicted that 4.68 million Democrat.
berry Heights will be considered
that the v1llage's revenue from sentatlves on the Firemen's
Ohio," said Tuchfarber.
people - 74.1 percent of regis·
. George, 52, stressedhercontln·
the one percent Income tax Is Dependency Fund Board. Also
by Pomeroy VIllage Council as
However,
the
new
Ohio
Poll
tered
voterswould
vote.
ulng
education, which she said
soon as estimated costs are
down approximately $4,000 this named to the board were Danny
shows
that
Dukakls
has
gained
Also
up
for
election
were
21
has
prepared her to render
year as compared to last year's Zirkle and Bryan Shank, represfigured In the project.
on
Bush
In
the
past
week.
congressional
sg(lts,
two
Ohio
opinions
on complex cases of the
Council member Betty Baron- collection for the same time enting the Pomeroy Fire Depart·
A
week
ago,
the
poll
showed
Supreme
Court
seats,
99
Ohio
1990s.
Resnick,
49, claimed to
ment, and Homer Baxter, Pomelck suggested at last night's · period.
Bush leading Dukakls by 14 House seats and 16 slate Senate have tried fOOTe cases, Including
meeting of Council that pipe for
Council will be considering roy citizen.
points. Monday's survey showed
seats which hold the key to one death penalty case before the
It was reported that a repre·
the replacement be purchased Frank Porter III, Carson Crow,
that
Dukakls
had
gained
six
control
of that chamber, now U.S.SupremeCourt,asaprosec·
now, so that Installation could Mary Powell, Hugh Davis, Ann sentatlve of the Work America
points.
dominated
18-15 by 'Republicans. utor, and has been active In civic
begin as soon as weather per· Chapman, Bill Quickel and Sue Program. which originated In
"We've
had
a
burst
of
success·
Also on the ballots were 233 affairs.
mils. Leaks from the Mulberry ~aub as members of the village's Springfield, Ohio, has been In
ful campaigning by Dukakls," school issues, many of which will
A George victory would widen
Heights' line have been a prob· Commission for Historic Preser- contact with village officials and
said
Tuchfarber.
"But
It
looks
determine
whether
school
dis·
the
Republican advantage on the
lemforthevlllageforsometime, vatlon. Once named, this Com· would 'like to speak to Council like Bush's lead has stabilized· trlcts have to borrow money to high court to 5-2.
• Baronlck said. Once figures on mission wlll review requests to about starting a similar program
since the first of November."
keep schools open, and countless
Justice A. WilHam Sweeney, a
the costs of replacing the old remodel or renovate buildings In In Pomeroy. This program prolocal
contests
and
Issues.
Democrat
who has served on the
The
latest
Ohio
Poll,
which
Is
two-Inch water line with at least Pomeroy, lnkeeplngwithvlllage vides training for young, under· conducted by the University of
Three
state
newspaper
polls
high
court
since 1977, was chatfour-Inch, and possibly six· inch guidelines for such construction. privileged youths.
done
In
Ohio
last
week
brought
lenged
by
Cuyahoga County
Cincinnati's
Institute
for
Polley
In final matters, expenditures
line, are presented, council will However, Village Council will
Dukakis
and
his
running
mate,
CommonPleasCourtJudgePaul
Research, surveyed 500 regis·
make a decision on committing make the final decision In all of $500 for Christmas lights and tered voters throughout the
Sen. Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, to Matla, a Republican.
$1,500
for
a
roller
for
the
street
to the necessary expenditures construction requests. Council
within six percentage points of
Sweeney, 67, Is the senior
state.
Involved in such a project.
recently ·passed an ordinance department were approved, and
Bush
and
his
running
mate,
Sen.
justice
and said his opponent has
In the poll, 53 percent said they
Although Mayor Richard placing guidelines on remodeling the mayor's report of $4,570 In would vote for Bush, 45 percent
Dan
Quayle
of
Indiana.
never
tried
an appeal. Malia, 51,
Seyler Is In favor of replacing the and construction within the fines and fees collected for said they would vote for Dukakls
However,
a
new
CinCinnati
of
Westlake,
said Sweeney was
Odobecwas accep,ted.
MU!blfrry Heights' line and other- v-lllage...-Post-University
of
Cincinnati
rated
as
unqualified
and was part
-f J,
- -affirtwo percent were undecided.
problem lines In the village, he
.
poll
of
511
respondents
between
of
the
notorious
"Celebrezze
A week ago, the poll showed
last
Thursday
and
Sunday
court"
that
made
headlines
from
that 50 percent Intended to vote
showed Bush and Quayle with 1982·86 for politicizing the. Su·
for Bush, 36 percent for Dukakls,
53.1 pecent of the vote and preme Court.
with 14 percent undecided.

new

111rltloll a
style of reprosentltlon wllh
an unprecldonter! open access and rwo-way

communle~~tlon between pour congressional
office and ell the people of the district."
"Wotfrtng togothlr wo can create 1 rio/on
ot 1111 tut~re end begin to build the
foundation lor a better, atrongar, and more
secure future tor our district, our stilt, and

t:tJJlTS

Paid for by John BUchanan tor Congraas Committee, 11713 Marne Rd., NE, Newartt, Ohio 4306&amp;

1:(1/l

•Experienced - 8 Years on the Bench with record of being
Tough but Fair.
•Received Superior Justice Award for last 7 years from the
Ohio Supreme Court.
•Interested in the

/(IJJS

The

Poll says

O'Brien

Family

Licenses issued

Bush will
win Ohio

(left to

Parts Ruford Hess, 32, Pomeroy, and Paula Ann Adkins, 23,
Pomeroy. ·
Douglas Curtis Grover, 40,
Middleport, Rhonda Fern Booth,
34, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

right) are;
daughter,

· Joy; Pat;
son, Sean;

Pomeroy Council . may replace
•
h
t
e
lg
s
waterline on Mulb-erry H

and wife,

Name speaker

Mary
O'Brien.

The Rev. Jimmy Stewart of
Albany wlll be speaker for
revival services being held at the
.Reedsvllle United Methodist
Church at 7 p.m. each evening
this week.

Clndldltt. Pit O'Brien. 1001'&gt; Court St.. Pomero • Oh., 45769

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DHS ends 97-day-old strike

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As a result of a six hour

bargaining session held Friday,

i"12!!' sg!~

Patrol probes deer-truck mishap
The Gallla-Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol, Investigated a
deer· truck
accident at 7:30p.m. Monday In Meigs County, on
CR. 75, 0.3 miles east of SR. 7.
Troopers said a deer was struck and.kllled when It ran Into the
path of a pickup truck driven by Jason Nottingham, 16, Rt. 1,
,; LongBottom. No one was Injured. Therewasmoderatedamage
to the truck. There was no citation.

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VOTE YES ON

•

Sheriff probes Xutland wreck
A two-vehicle accident occurred Monday afternoon on Main
St. In Rutland. The accident was Investigated by the Meigs
County Shertfrs Department but the report of the accident had
not been flied Tuesday morning, therefore, details of the
accident could not be released, a sheriff's department
spokesman said.
According to a Meigs County EMS report, three Individuals,
Brandon Black, age 3, and Amanda Black, 19, both of Pomeroy,
- and Angle Spangler, 23, also of Pomeroy, were transported by
Rutland squads !rom the scene of the accident to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The squads were called at 4:58 p.m. All
Continued on page 10

KING SERVICSTAR HARDWARE

(

•
•

•

•os North Second

992-3748

Middleport, Ohio.

Office to close Friday
.Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient Services
Pomeroy office will be closed Friday, Nov. 11, for a staff
meeting. Offices will reopen Monday, Nov. 14, at 8:30a.m.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, NOV. 12th
'' .

AFSCME Local 3520 and the
Meigs County Department of

.---Local news briefs---.

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A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohioans visit polls to
cast presidential ballots

FOR U.S. CONGRES$

JUDGE
MEIGS COUNTY COURT

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. November 8. 1988

Vot.39, No. 129
Copyrighted 1 988

Low tonight In mid 30s.
Wedllesday, partly cloudy,
with highs near 60 •

•

•

JOHN BUCHANAN

PAT O'BRIEN

Daily Number
873
Pick 4
9868

Page4

our nation."

RE-ELECT

Ohio wttery

Eastern fall
athletes are
honored

Eutern Committee to pass the levy:
Eloise Boston, Sec .• 38900 St. Rt. 7, Reedsville, Oh.

Paid lor by The

'

l

Human Services reached a tenta·
tlve agreement to a 97-day old
strike.
Before Friday's bargaining,
session. six Issues remain unresolved Including: wages, fair
share (a requirement to have
non-union members pay a fee to
the union), Insurance, duration,
management rights and· a no
reprisal clause.
Through the efforts of SERB
mediator, Ron Auteri, the parties
reached agreement on all out·
standing Issues .
Under terms of the agreement
reached on Friday, AFSCME
agreed to the county's request lor
a three year contact at t!le
existing salary schedule.
Also agreed to was the county's
management rights language
·and the union's request for fair
share and no reprisal were
dropped.
The county agreed to pay 100
percent of employee Insurance
for the three year duration of the
contract.
Members ol Local 3520 un·
animously approved the tenta·
tlve settlement on Friday and the
Meigs County Commissioners
unanimously approved the settlement at a special meeting
Monday, Nov. 7.
Striking employees were scheduled to report back to work .
today.

FIRSTVOTEROFTHEDAY-PoDworkenln
the Raclae Precinct went right to work as 1100a as
the poll&amp; opened this morning at 8:30. Jill KnCII'P•

.,

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>hess</name>
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      <name>robertson</name>
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      <name>searls</name>
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