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                  <text>.Ohio Lottery

Browns
triumph;·
Bengals
defeated
Pages 3-4

e

I'

RECOGNITJOJ'i' - Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman, center, presents a plaque from citizens
and businessmen to Mr. and Mrs. E.O Rail at a
bean dinner Friday, opening the town's block

Reststop killer
muse waic for
his death wish
GIFI' PRESENTATIONS - Bill Blower,
president of the Middleport Chamber of Commerce, presented personalized shirts to Mr. and
Mrs. E.O. Rail at Friday's chamber-sponsored

bean dinner. A floral arrangement were donated
to the chamber from LaSalle Gallery, and
presented to the Ralls. (Times-Sentinel photo)

COALVILLE . Utah tUPI)
Confessed highway rest stop
killer James Louis Holland, who
claims he wants to be executed,
mus t wait until the end of
September to find out if his deat h
wish will be granted, officials
say.
Hoiland, 47, Orlando, Fla ., has
pleaded guilty to the 1986 Utah
murder of Samuel Fra nk Patt,
71, Winter Haven, Fla .. a nd
asked 3rd District Judge Homer
Wilkinson to sentence him to
death.
But district cour t offic ials said
Friday the judge too k Hoila nd' s
reques t under advisement and
wilt make a se ntencing de&lt;'ision
"during the week of Sept. 28. "

DRIVERS
EDUCATION
CLASSES
STARTING OCTOBER 5
CALl .... 6·0699
OHIO

Ugandan boy
will return .
after surgery

HOLLAND'S SPRING
FLOWERING BULBS
ARE HERE!

PLANT BULBS NOW!

SELECT YOURS
FROM OUR WIDE
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GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

summer.

, The burns on his nec k and face
left several scars and made it
difficult for Phillip to open or
close his mouth.
Dr. George Balbak , the ·piastic
surgeon who performed much of
the surgery, said the reconstruc·
tion work will improve the
quality of life for the boy .

"CONVENIENT HEALTH CARE -THAT,
DOESN'T COST AN ARM AND A LEG"

•

FIVE MIN UTES OF FUN - The younger Middleport Block
Party goers had a great time Saturday making bubbles for five
minutes for the price of a quarter . The bubble ma king was offered

·.

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY .

. AffiPI,ANE CONTEST - Rain held olf at the
Middleport Block Party ion!( enough for the
annual paper airplan e flylnc contest to he
completed. Ryan B11kcr of Middleport Is pictured
taklnc his turn In the event. Winners, first through
third, respectively, In the various age groups

were: Justin F'acemyer, Jason Chlldoff, Aaron
Pangto, seven and un'd er; Brian Holtman, Bert
Mash, Shawn P etrie, eight to 13; Bill Ramey,
Jason Black, Jaml Walters ove r 1:1 through
adults; uverail, Bill Ramey, Brian Holtman and
Bert Mash. (See additlorial phutos on page 6) .

Phone
finn gets
no-bid
contracts

446-5287

Last Friday, after an eight·
hour bargaining session, Thorley's mood was different as he
expressed optimism that the
strike would be over by today ,
aliow!ng the district' s 15,000 to
return to classes.

CLEVELAND !UP!) - A
telephone firm linked to one of
Gov. Ri char&lt;l Celes te's ca m·
paign cant rlbu tors rece ived a
number of no-bid co ntracts fr om
the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services. a published report
says.
The Cleveland Pl ain Dealer
reported Sunday that while the
debt -ridden OBES was closing
offices a nd . cutting ·back on
services. Tele-Communications
Inc. of' suburban Cleveland re·
ceived no·bld contract s worth
$5.2 'million to Install telephone
lines in unemployment offices
across i he state .
The chairman of T ele·
Co mmunicatio ns Is developer
Carl Milstein, whose son-in-law.
Jeffrey Friedman contributed
$50,000 to Cele$te's re-election
campaign.
·
Former OBES managers ques·
t!oned the legality of the contracts, the need f9r the new phone
system and whether the state
was being overcharged, the
newspaper r eported.
- But the managers were told
that the order s to buy came from
OBES Administrator Roberta
Steinbacher's office.
·

Today mprks the eighth day
that schools have been closed to
students.
Youngstow n teac hers are
pressing for pay raises, but
administrators In the city school
district clabn there Isn't enough
money for salary In creases. ·

"1\ was like a steamroller to
put these In," said former OBES
business man ager Robert
Ya hner, who retired in July.
''There was always something
strange about it . No one comes In
like these people !TCI ) and gets
Continued on page 10

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24 Hour Emergency Room
Urgent .Care Open 9 AM-9 PM
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•Physical Therapy
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(M. .collqulflllltnt for Sale/lontl -

WE ARE HERE FOR YOU

~

are nine-year-old Matt Titus, seven-year-old Missy Titus and ·
ll·year-old Ginger Holcomb.

WASHINGTON (UP l l -The
Senate J udiciary Committee.
reconvening today to open more
tha n a week of testimony from
supporters and opponents of
Judge Robert Bork, still has
members undecided on the controversial . Supreme Court
nominee.
. . l'rQlJl . the outset of £\Ofk ' s
confirmation hearings a week
ago , att ention has foc used on the
three or four co mm itt ee
members who ap pear to hold the
" swing" votes on the arch·
conservative opposed by civil
right s leaders and oth ers.
Those members inc lude Senate
Democra tic leader Robert Byrd
of West ·Virglnia and Sen , Howell
Heflin , D-Aia . As the commit tee
prepared to resume it s work
after qu estioning Bork for fiv e
days, ihcluding a rare Saturday

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Open bids·
Wednesday
on locks,
dam project

..ELBERFELOS

y

.
'•.
.·

Ohio. MondaY.· September 21. 1987

party. The Rails recenlly retired after 33 years"" :.
owners-operators of the Ben Franklin Store. •
(Times-Sentinel photo)
·

We 'II help you selilet from
our wide assortment 5o
car\ enjoy nature's .,;,,~,;111""
next Spnng. ·
• Easy-to-plant
• Finest quality Imported
bult.
• su,..to-bloom .

Cloudy tonight. Low In 50s.
Chance of showers Tuesday.
High In 60s. Chance of rain 30
percent Tuesday .

entine

at y

HOLZER CLINIC

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!-) - A
young burn victim from Uganda
who underwent three reconstructive surgeries since arriving in
Toledo July 30 is to ret urn hom e
Sunday , hospital official s said.
Phillip Magezi Kyambadde. 4,
of Kumpaia , suffered burns in a
household accident with hY·
drochioric acid when he was s ix
months old . The boy was fiow 11, to
St. Vincent Medical Cent er as
part of a Rotary International
hum a nit aria n proj ec t th is

/aM"

•

depot. Members of the group are Roger and Mary
Gilmore, Jennifer Sheets, Tim Glaze and Ron
Ash. (Times-Sentinel photo)

SWEET SOUNDS - Sweet Mountain Sound
provided music for the Middleport block party
bean dinner, in front of the old C&amp;O Railway

i~

Daily Number
302
Pick 4
8051
Super Lotto
21-17-7-22-24-12

SLOW DANCING - Middleport Councilman Bob
was
Instrumental In organizing Friday night's Blue Jean Bali which
preceded Saturday's Middleport Block P.arty. Here Gilmore, and
his wife Jean, who was j also a big help In organizing the
get-together, enJoy dancing to the music of the Crossover Band.
The dance was held at the new Middleport American Legion
building.

Youngstown teache~ still. deadlocked
'
YOUNGSTOWN, .Ohio (UP!)
- Youngstown public schools
reD\ained closed today and
teachers continued 'picket-line
duty after a four -hOur bargaining
session Sunday fail ed to produce
an agreement.
Federal mediator David Thorley said be was " disappointed" in
Sunday's talks aimed at setliing
the walkou t by the l,Ool3-member
Youngstown Education Association that began Sept. 9.
Thorley siild he has not yet set
a time for further negotiations..

1

By United Press International
HOGSETT, W.VA . -The U.S.
Army Corps of Eng inee rs is
forging ahead with plans to add
.and upgrade locks aiOl)g West
Vi rginia's rivers - an effor t th¥t
will cos t millions of dollars and
take several years to co mplete,
officials say.
T he overhaul of the state's
lock-and-dam structures will
provide new co nstruction jobs
and improve wa terborne com·
merce, an important part of Wes t
Virginia's economy, said Barry
Palmer, executive dlr'ector of
DINAMO-OVIA. a . waterways
trade organization.
The corps wi ll open bids at 11
a. m. Wednesday for a new
two-mile canal th rough the bend
of the Ohio Ri ver at the Ga llipolis
Locks and Dam. The locks,
expected to cos t about $237
miilion. could open as early as

'

Gray's Landing Lock and Dam
will replace lock 7 for an
es timated cost of $12:l million.
Lock 8 will be made larger and
renamed Point Marion Lock and
Dam. The project is still in thw
planning stages, and is expected
to cost about $83 miliion.
On the Kanawha River. the
corps plans to spend $159.2
million to add a third lock at
Winfield Locks a nd Da ms. The
Kanawha loc k. expected to
stretch BOO feet long and 110 fee{
wide. wa s approved by Congress
ta st year a nd officials currently
are conducting a feasiblity study:
Construction is expected to
begin in 1992 with operation
scheduled for 1996.
•

Also on the Ka nawha , the
Ma r met Locks and Dam needs
replace ment , offici aIs say. Cur·
rent plans are to make a larger
1991 .
'
New locks also are planned lock, 'similar to the one planned
a long the Monongahela River, for Winfield. But completion of a
where offi cials say locks 7 and B feasibility study on the project is
still three years away.
are badly eroded .

sess ion, two other uncommitted

members reiterated their sta n·
ces in an interviel" S und ~y.
Speaking on CBS's "Face the
Na tion ," Sens. Arlen Specter.
R-Pa .. a nd Dennis DeConcini,
D·Ariz., urged their colleagues to
consider the testim ony planned
for this week and nex t week
before deciding on the historic
nomination.
·
' 'I have not yet made up my
mind," Specter said. " ! think
that we really have to hea r the
other witnesses who are coming
on, and there are some very
complex qu es tions which have to
rece ive s ome con sid era ble
thought."
"I was cri tical ... of anybOdy
jumping ou t for or against Bark
t immediately) a nd I wrote all the
Democrats. urged them not to do
that ," DeConcini added .
However, he said, "I talked to a
number of Republica ns who do
not sit on the com mittee (and)
had never read a thing about
!Bark), and quit e frankly , 1 think
they would vote for Darth Vader
or Mickey Mou se."
Today the committee expected
to hear support for Bork from
four former U.S. attorneys gen·
era! and opposition from ligures
such as former Transpor tation
Secretary William Coleman,
former Rep. Barbara Jordan,
D-Texas, and a former colleague_
of the judge at Yale Law School,
Burke Marshall.
Both Specter and DeConclni
questioned Bork direc tly about
his sultabllity for the court, and
they again Sunday raised the
Issue otunpredl,ctabllity from the
judge now on the U.S. .Circuit
Court of Appeals for the 'District
of Columbia .
"I accept the judge' s state·
ment that he will do his best to
apply the law," Specter said,
"but tf he disagrees with the
philosophy, where will he come
down? And that' s a judgment call
that I as a senator have to

make."
Bork, 60, denied repeatedly
last week that he had toned down
some of his most controversial
views on issues such
civil
rights and women's equality

as

TAKING A BREAK - Five-year-old Jon Mason, ol Ashville,
enjoys a quiet moment at Saturd11y's Middleport Block Party just
sitting outside the soon-to· be bed and breakfast facility which Is
owned by his grandfather, John Fultz.

GOLFERS TRY SKILLS - YQung golfing enthusiMts were '
· given a chance to try their sklll at this miniature golf setup ofthe
Meigs County Jaycees at the annual Middleport Chamber of .
Commerce Block Party. Kevin Arnott, Syracuse, tries Ills hand at
a hole-In-one.
'

�1

Commentary
111 Court Street'
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~v

.

.. - ,· ,

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
A MEMBER

BOB HOEFLICH
General Managt&gt; r

~I.Thr l'f'rl Prf's!'&gt; lnl l 'rn31 ionaL Tnl:10d D;lil." Pn&gt;.~&lt;:~

A~~(l(·ja1in n a nd l h(' Amf'r·ic:: tn 1'\Pwspap~r.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. September 21, 1987

Pu'olis hf'f'S /\ SS(1ci:l1 iOf) .

WASHINGTON - Home equity loans have become the
. cocaine of the financial world.
They are the trendy. way for
American homeowners to keep
up with the Jones- at risk of an
addlcllon that can be as disastrous as1 a craving for !he
expensLve white powder that
brings temporary Nirvana.
The big trouble with home
equit y loans is not just that they
are so easy to get in an era when
real es tate inflation has given
many homeowners a paper profit
beyond their wildest dreams.
The big trouble is that these loans

- lf they are abused to the point

where monthly _payments can't
be met - may caus~ a wave of
foreclosures that will rock the
American economy.
Consider that Americans borroweed $27 billion by means of
home equity loans in just.the last
three months of 1986, and will
probably borrow an additional
$125 b1lllon this year. With more
than $4 trillion in private hou sing
eq uit y nationwide, it see ms
llkely that the market lor home
equity loans has barely been
·
tapped.
Have AmeriCan consumers

t.F:TTFRS OF oP tl'\!01'\ ,u·&lt;· Wl'kllnlf' . Tht•\ .... hnuhl b• • l l'~-" Hw n :11'11 ~\Ol( l~&lt;
lon e. A 1! IPI 1f'i ' ~ :m • ..:uhji'f·l 1111 ·II i lin :1 nd r'n\J !' I tw ... ig nl'&lt;l wi 1h nt~ m1 •. :u!drn.:o ~ :1nd

.c

IC'I(·phnnf· numtwr. Nn

u,1~i~m'tl

~ • ,od t :t&lt;.:lf '. : H I Iil' l''~ ..:: ln ,c ls~ w's .

I••III'J'S w i ll be· puhl i!&gt;hPd . l.l'l ll'r"

~ h o ul d

bl' l n

m't pr'nw nal ili C's..

Backstairs at
the:White House
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UP I) -The White House press corps, referred to
by John · F . Kennedy as the "thundering herd," lived up to Its
reputation during a picture taking session betwee n President Reagan
and Pope John Paul II in Miami.
Reagan and the pope were meeting in a small room in a museum
when reporters and photographers .were summoned. They plied
through a small doorway, cussing and shouting as they jockeyed lor
position . Watching them , Reagan put his hand up to his forehead .
Reporters then threw several substantive questions at the
president and the Pope. When no answers were given, a newswoman
asked the Pontiff, "Would you give us your blessing?
Frowning, the Pope waved his hands at the media and the crowd
departed. As they left he made a sign of the cross.

White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater likes to smoke cigars.
But two wome n aides in his office strenuous ty'object to the smoke and
the smell.
•
As a consequence. Fitzwa ter pays more ca lls than his predecessors
to the press room where he ca n esca pe censure lor smoking.
ABC 's Sam Donaldson spearheaded the no smoking rule in the
press room, but that apparently applies only to c igarettes .
Fitzwater was asked r ecently whether the president eve~ i.ntends to
hold a news confl'rence agai n. He has had only two this year. His
previous average was seven a year.
" Nothing is sc heduled yet," Fitzwater told reporters with a smile.
But the president is beginning to give Interviews again and ali of
them are avoiding the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal, which does not
make the White House unhappy.
•

All signs point io a summit mee ting betwen Reagan and Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev in tate November. If it takes place. some of
the talks will be held in Wash ington and then Gorbachev will tour·the
country, winding up in California where Reagan Is again expected to
be host to the Soviet leader.
It is expec ted that Reagan will invite Gorbachev to visit his ranch in
the Santa Ynez mountains some 20 miles from Santa Barbara . And
rtporters are betting that come June, the President and Mrs. Reaga n
will be heading lor Moscow.
Transportation Secretary Eliza beth Dole visited the White House to
deliver her resignation to President Reagan.
Dole, leaving the Cabi net Oct. 1. wants to de vote lull time to
campaigning lor her hu sband who will mak e a big bid for the
Republican pres idential nom ination .
: As Is customary, Secretary Dote agreed to meet the press after
delivering her message.
She was invited to the press room to be quizzed. But she prefe rred to
talk to reporters outside the West Wing. Thai way , Dole and her
husband , Sen. Robert Do le, R-Kan .. could be photographed together
with the White House as a backdrop.
· The pres ident showed up at the USA Teday headquarters to join in a
celebration of the national news paper 's filth anni versary. And there
is nothing the 76-year-old presid ent enjoys more than joking about
.
age.
"II always feels good to be cele brati ng someone else's birthday,"
h'e sa id .
'
Then Reaga n told the gathering that "somethi'ng always brings to
mind a story."
He said it had to do with a cub reporter whose first assignment was
logo out to a senior c itizens home where a man was celebrating hi s
95th bir thday . After introd ucing him self, the reporter asked the l!lan :
"To what do you attribute your age, your longevity?"
The man replied: " I don't drink. I don' t smoke. I don ' t run around
with wild women. "
Reagan said just the n there was a '' terribl ecr as hing noise upstairs
a nd the re porter asked. " 1What's th at?'"
"A nd the old ma n says. 'Oh. that's my father. He's drunk again.'"

Letter to the editor
Wants public to know
On behalf of the Orange Township Trustees, I would like to le t
the publ ic know Ihe situation
between the Trustees and the
representative for Cab le
Television.
The rumor has been s tar ted by
a few people in the tow ns hip that
the trusteens have refused to
consent to sign for the cable. The
trusteens would like these lew
people as well as the general
public in Orange Township to
konw that the representative
from ca bl e has not been In
co ntact with the trustees since .
notlfication through the mall
about the firs t meeting that was
held in Coolville. This represen-

tative was to have attemded the
regular trustees meethig of Sep!ember 2nd; but was not present.
I would like to say, as clerk, I
was ~ontacted by a trustee from
another Township and this representattve had s tated to this same
trustee t)lat Orange Township
had already signed this contract
-for cable.
I would like to clear the at rand
say that the trustees have no
adverse feeli ngs as far as cable is
concerned and would l!e very
much to talk with tlils r rese n!alive a t his conventlenc .
-·
Th k you, .
Dorothy Calaway ~
Orange Township Clerk

~·~~·~

'

CINCINNATI ;UPi l - San
Francisco 49ers coach Bill Walsh
says his team's wac'ky lastsecond win over Clnclnatl will be
socko materlalfor funny football
films .
In one of the NFL's most
Improbable finishes Sunday; San
Francisco stopped Cincinnati
two seconds short of running out
the clock on a 26-20 lead and Joe
Montana heaved a 25-yard touchdown pass with no time left to
leaping Jerry Rice to rally the
49ers to a 27-26 win over the
Bengals.
"This happens once In a
century ," said the astonished
Walsh. "It has to be the most
amazing finish. II will go Into
those funny football movies. It
was crazy. I can't believe II. I j'ust
cannot believe it."
Moreun~llevablethanMonta-

na's game-wlnrtlng pass on the
last play was the sheer fact that
San Francisco somehow managed to get the ball back on
downs after the 49ers had punted
to the Bengals' 45-yard line with
just 54 seconds left .
;
"We didn' t thin!&lt; we would get
the ball back," admitted Walsh.
"1 mis-calculated two seconds," said Cincinnati coach
Sam Wyche. "I thought we would
eat up the clock."
Cinci nnati. protecting a 26-20
lead. was prevented from run-

••
' GAME'S · HERO - San Francisco quarterback .roe Montana,
paaslng under pressure, threw a *yard touchdown pass to-Jerry
Wee u lime ran out to rive the 41el'!l a 2'7-ZG come-from-behind
victory over the stunned Cincinnati Benrals at Riverfront Sunday.
(UPI)
·.
·
·

· Few lend ers offered fixed-rate
loans. and !lO percent of the
lendin g lnstliutlons refused to ,
put a cap on the jump that
interest rate~ could takt' In a
year. These practices cou ld
throw millions of home equity
borrowers into defa ult practica lly ovPrni~ht.

Is Canada's PM 'too American'--:-_R_ob-"-~r_t

1

By IRA KAUFMAN

UPI Sports Writer
Death Valley never seemed so
alive.
In a contes t boasting more
drama and verve than most bowl
games, David Treadwell's fourth
field goal, a 21-yarder with two
seco nds remaining. lifted No. 8
Cle mson past No. 17 Georgia
21 ·20 Saturday, The outcome
touched off a wild cele bration
from an overflow crowd of 82, 5(10
at Memorial Stadium. dubbed
Dea th Vaiiey .
Last year, Treadwell's 46- yard
kick as .ttme. e ~pired beat the
Bulldogs 31 ·281n Athens. Ga. The
winning kic k Saturday was set up
by Rusty Seyle's punt to the
Georgia 1, which led to a safety
and a free kick thai gave the
Tigers possession at their 42.

a_gm
_ a_n

OTTAWA (NEAl
Prime
Min ister Brian Mulroney of Ca nada is in deep trouble. Many of
rhe problems he f~ces can be
traced to the perception that he is
pro-Amerian at a time when
growing a nti -U.S. feeling · is
sweeping his nat ion.
Three years ago, Mulroney, 48.
and hi s Conserva tive · Partv
routed the Liberal Party th at had
ruled Canada for 15 years und er
Pierre Trudeau . In the 1984
election, Conservatives won a
huge majorit y in Parliament 208 out ol.282 seats.
The predictions were that the
Conse rvatives would rule the
country into t he next century.
But no'¥ alm ost a ll polls indi cate
a major Liberal victory in tht'
next na tion al election. which will
probably be called in mid -1989.
Mulron ey's popularit y has
plummeted at a rate that is
nothing short of amazing. In the
latest nati ona l Gallup Poll hi s
approva l ra ting ha s dropped
below 17 percent. This is the
lowes t rating ever recorded by a
si tting prime · minister si nce
Gallup starti ng keeping records .
What is as tonish ing about ail
this is that it is taking piac&lt;&gt;
against .a backdrop of un riva led
Canadian prosperit y. Ci ting Ca nada's 1986 output and employment growt h ast he highesto l a ny

Western nation, the Paris-based
Organization for Economic Developme nt (OECD ) rated Canada's e&lt;!onomy the best or any
Western co unt ry.
·
Analysts here say th at part of
Mulroney's problem is that he ts
seen as too pro-American . Ca nadians co ns id er him "an
America n-s tyle politician" - in
oi her words. he i' viewed as too
political and too slick. He has
also been hurt byrevelattonsthar
he ha s spe nt large sums of money
renova!lng his ollicial reside nce.
includin g repainting some rooms
four times because his wife could
not decide on a co lor scheme.
But the American issue Is
emerging as the key.
Take. as an example, a bill on
patent drug copyright protection
that Mulroney's government has
introduced Into Par li ame nt.
Almost alf prescription drugs
so ld in Canada are eit her Imported 'from the Unit ed States or
are manufactured in Ca nada bv
subsidi aries of U.S. -bascd multi nationa l drug co mpanies . For
yea rs the co mplaint ha s been
tha t U.S . drug co mp a nies
cha rged unconscionably high prices for their produtts a nd have
been ta kin g hu ge profits out of
Ca nada.
So two years ago th&lt;' Liberal
gover nment .passed a new law

allowi ng lor the manufacture trade treaty tx&lt;t.we~•n the two
and sale in Canada of generic
nations .
drugs. The law also lowers the
Almost unnoticed In the Unitrd
ti me !h at drugs are protectC'd by States, these n(•gotlallons are
patents to only four years. Altrr consldl'rNI lht&gt; most Important
thr four-year limit any maker undertaken by Ca nada In thr last
cou ld come out wit h 11 g&lt;&gt;neric 20 year·s .
version .
Polls indicate th'at most Ca naAs a r('sult , U.S . drug mak!'rs dians tX' lleve the Mulroney gothreatened to aba ndon Ca nada
Ver'nment is engaged In a major
a.lt oghethcr.
giveaway to the United States .
Mulron('y came up with a This Is whtping up a nti-U.S.
compromise. Patl'nt prot&lt;'ctions sentiments and further Wt'aken would be mturned to their . lng Mulroney's position.
orginal 10-ycar limit . In exPolls suggrst that the main
change, dru·~ compa nies agreed tx&lt;nell tary of Mulroney' s probto put millions into basic dru g l&lt;•ms is tht' lar-irlt New Demo·
research In Canada .
crali~ Party .
Mu lroney a nn ounc1•d that
The NDP has never won ~
more than 3.000 jobs would lX' national election and currenliy
crea ted and Canada would be- hol ds onl y 33 eats in Parliament .
come a world center' of drug But Its. leader. Edward Broadresearch. Further. the compa n- bent , is very popular, and a
Ies agreed to aCCI'pt g()j(crnmcnt - recent Gal lup Pool gave the NDP
imposed ceili ngs on drug prices . 41 p&lt;'rcent , the Liberals 35
But Mul ront'y's opponents In- p&lt;'rcent and the Conservattws 23
sist that the profits drug compa n- p&lt;'rC!'nt .
ies make from their !'Uarantt'Pd
Should the NDP win th e next
monopolies will be vast ly grea ter election. it would be very bad
than what they put back In to news for Wa shington. The NDPis
Ca nadian -based research. 1'h'is pledged to pull Ca nada ou t of
had il'd to charges that Mul ront'y NATO. dissolve thr ·u.s. has capi tul ated to the U.S.- bascd Canadtan North American Air
multi -na tio nals .
Defen se Agre&lt;•ment, close Ca na But the mos t burning issue In dian markets to U.S. imports a nd
Canada these days Is the ro und - increasr nationalization of indu sthe-c lock negotiations by Cana - try - especially fore ign-ow ned
dian a nd U.S. team s over a new industry .

refugees from a Faulkner nove l.
"Separa te but equal " ass umes
many forms: A third of all
inmates on death row are now

co nfined in only four Southern
s tates: th e largest percentage of
people living below the poverty
line is to found there.
AIDS . however. is not a " separate bul equal" disease.
Anybody ca n be infec ted, In
severa l ways.
Its most heartbrea king side
effects are children infected al
birth.
Lasr week, a Newsweek COV(•r
story described their ha rd lig ht
for lifeby focusing on the miracle
of a cut e, little pig-ta fted Hispanic gi rl, Celeste, born with
AIDS- s t!U a i·iv e at 9 ~.
Should we punisti this child
beca use of the sins of her'
parents? Florida Arcadians
would say yes.
. _C
Looking at th e hop~lest e's
pretty dark eyes, I cou ld on ly
think of Marvin Gaye's classic
song, "Save the Children":
Wh.en I look at the world, It !Ills
me with sorrow.
Little children today are really
gonna suffer tomorrow.
Oh, what a shame, such a bad
·
way to live.
But who really cares?
Who's willing to try?
In Florida-, three newspapers
published near Arcadia care.
The St. Petersburg Times
called Its governor "irresponsibly silent" and urged him to
. speak out "lor the right reason."
The Fort Myers News-Press
wondered why those Arcadians
wlto were now trying to help the
three boys had not shown the

T oday In lstory

'

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.I

sa me co mpass ion before the fire .
The Brandcnton Hera ld denouncC'd Arcadia's " hypocritica l
show or mercy" aiiN the besieged family had !eli town.
These newspapPrs represent a
new and enlightened voice · of
reason - the ot her voice of the
'South.
Unfortunately. Arcadia , the

ltl!'l REDWOMEN VOLLEYBALL TEAM
Members of this year's Rio Grande Redwomen
volleyballtellm are, front row, from left , ,Jennifer
Couch.- Krls Cochran, Shannon Hu•ton, Usa

Schmeltzer and Lori Storer; ' back row 1Irom left,
Coach Patsy F1elds, Sharon Headings, Laren
Wolfe, ~elly Hoop, Amy Dixon, Chris Williams,
Sheila Brammer and Vonda Stiles.

RIO .CRANDE - Rlo Grande participated in games this past
volleyball action shifts to the weekend against Georgetow n
home . court Tuesday when the ~Ky.) Co llege and Wilmington
Redwomen host Mount Vernon at College on Georgetown's court.
Rio Grande Is ca ptained this
Lyne Center.
Rio Coach Patsy Fields ter.mcd year by senior Laren Wolle and Is
the meeting of the two Greater benellttlng from the Racine
Ohio Athletic Coniere oce teams Southern High School graduate's
as a ''big game," primarily thr!!E' years of participation In
because Mount Vernon and Rto' volleyball. In the past week,
Walsh are expected to compete junior Lisa Schmeltzer ha s dislor top honors In the GOAC this tinguished herself on the offensive line, scoring multiple kills
season.
Because Mount Vernon is ex- against opponents at Elmhurst
pected to be powerful, Fields sa id and Urbana . Schmeltzer has
some offensive changes are in been paced by freshman Shelly
store for the Redwomen. Defen- Hoop" in kills, while both have
sively, Rio Grande has s hined In C&lt;intributed to the defensive
Its opening set of games last , strength of the team. The season
weekend at the Elmhurst till.) has also seen Impressive w'lrk by
Invitational and against Urbana Sharon Headings and Krls Cochran and freshman Chris
University last Thursday .
Williams.
At Elmhurst, the Redwomen
Mount Vernon, coached by
lost three of five competillons
Paul
Swanson, will be led by
against colleges from Illinois,
three
juniors - Cindy Gable,
Indiana and Iowa, but won Its
Connie
Gough, Jandt Ferrell and
road trip to Urbana, winning
Cherie
Harsh. Four sophomores
three of live sets from the Lady
Joan
Potts, Sonja Bame, Kim
Blue Knights. The Redwomen

•

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Rain forces postponement of GMO

••

~&amp;v-.
~ 111!17 by NEA. Inc
9 C!

"Pity ain't it? I have plenty of tim'e and
no money, an' YOU have plenty of money an'
•·
no time."

2

Redwomen face Mount Vernon at home

Berry's World ·

..

By MII(E SULLIVAN
·
UPI Sports Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates' magic
number is 1988, . and they ' re
showing signs of It against the
World Series champions.
"It's the nature of the tea m
In Birmingham , Ala .. Emmitt already eliminated," New York
Smith, making his lirst college Manager Johnson said after the
start, led . Florida past No. 10 Pirates ambushed the Mets 9-8.
In 14 innings . "They're loose.
Alabama 23:14.
They're
tryi ng to get something
Two mor~ members oltheTop
going
lor
next year ."
20, No. 12 Was hington and No. 16
Barry
Bonds
tripled Into the
Pittsburgh, were also upset.
right
-field
corner
and Andy Van
Texa s A&amp;M beat the Huskies
29-12 at , College Stat ion. Texas . Slyke delive_red a sacrifice fl y In
and Temple stunned the Panth- the 14th inning to help th e Pirat es
drop the second-pla ce Mets 1-2
ers 24-21 at Pitt Stadium.
El$ewhere. No. 4 Oh to State games off the National League
defeated _stubborn Oregon 24-14, . East lead . The . Pirates mov.ed'
No. 5 Louis iana State beat Ri ce pas t the Chicago Cubs Into filth
place.
49-16. No.7 Florida State topped
John Smiley, 5-4. went 1 2-3
Memphis State 41 -24, No. 9 Notre
hitless Innings for the victory.
Dame trounced No. 18 Mi chigan
Bob Ojeda , 2-5, was the loser
State 31 -8, No. ll Arkansas beat
despite
allowing three hits and
Tulsa 30-15, No. 14 UCLA bea t
two
runs
in 4 1-3 innings.
. Fresno State 17- 0. Southern Cal
"
Losing
Is losing, " Ojeda said.
edged No. 19 Boston College 23-17
"
We've
got
to put this one behind
and No. 20 Pe nn State blanked
us."
Clnctnnati4J.O.

The Pirates tied thega me8"8in
the 12th. Bonds led off with a
single and moved to second on a
sac rifice by Lind. Lind went to
third on a fly to center a nd scored
on Bobby Bonilla's single.
TheMets hadgoneahead8-7in
the top of the 12th when Tim
Te ufel doubted home Keith
Miller from second .
" ! think the tables are turn ing, " Bonds sa id . " Las t yea r, we
would get a lead and they always
came baek fi nd ~at us . Th is time
we ca me bac k and beat th em." ,_
Strawberry set a Me is club!

S 'k

tri e cou

Jd

record with hi s 38th homer of the
year. Ho"(ard Johnson tied Ihe
NL record lo r most hom e runs in
a season by a sw itch- hitter, and
Teufel add ed a three-run shot.
E lsewhere, St. Louis rout ed
Chicagolt\-2, HoustonPdgedSan
Di ego 3-2. Los Angeles defea ted
At lanta 5-:l, Cinci nnati rallied
past Sa n Fra nci sco 10-6, and
Philadelphia ~; t opped Montreal
4-1.
Ph lilies 4, Expos 1
At Montreat. 'Kevin Gross
earned his firs t vieto ry in more
than a month and Mik e Schmid\

,
,
Wipe .out entire NFL season

NEW YORK t UP])- With less
than 24 hours remaining before
NFL players planned to walk off
th e job, the two sides had no
meetings set a nd the head of the
union said the strike could wipe
out the entire season.
"Today is a daywhPn everyone
is sort of getting pre pared for the
ultimate dea l a nd that' S a
s trike," Gene Upshaw, execu ti ve
dlreclor of the NFL Players
Associa tion. sa id Sunday in
Was hington .

"We have to be willing to stay
out. And t-ho players under s tand
tha t when you wa lk out, you' re
wal kirigoutfor the season. ldon 't
wa nt a nyone Jo think that it' s
going to be a week ,. a day. two
weeks or eight weeks. It 's fo r the
duration and they know tha t. "
Despite ou tw ard sig ns of normaicy wl.t h,a full sla te of games
Sunday. a stri ke deadline remai ncd fixed for Tuesday and
there seemed little possll&gt;ility of
an agreement before then .

BOB

If you wanna lovt', you got to save
the ba bies .
Let's save all the children.

I

punt.''
·
· Ri ce also was surprised he was •
covered by Thomas · on his •
game-winning TD catch, especlally alter Thomas !tad been
burned on two earlier long TD
passes.
"He was covering me a ll by
himself.'' said Rice. "At least
you might expect them to give
him some help."
Thomas, a third-roupd draft
choice from Tulane, w~ equally
s urprised.
"I expected help," he said.
" Rice ran, stopped ani! the ball
was In the air. It dldn'tmatter at
that point.''
The 49ers trailed 20-7 at halltime, but outscored Cincinnati
13-0 In the third quarter to tie It
20-20. ·Cincinnati's J.im Breech
kicked fourth quarter field goals
of 41 a~d 46 yards to boost the
Bengals' lead to 26-20 before San
Francisco's fantastic finish . .
Montana, besides his gamewinning pass to Rice, ·had TD
tosses ol 34 yards to Rice and 38 .
yards to Mike Wilson. Werschlng .
had field goa ls of 31 and 24 yards . .
Breech, who kicked lour field
goals, had field goals of23 and42 yards inJhe first hall. Cincinnati
got touchdowns on Esiason's
46-yard pass to Rodney: Holman
and Larry Kinnebrew's two-yard
run.

set a major-league mark for
homers by a tl!ird baseman to
help Philadelphia.
Astros 3, Padres 2
At Houston, Jim Pankovits
singled home Kevin Bass from
third base -with one out In the
ninth inning to lift the Astros .
Dodgers 5, Brave$3
At Los Angeles, Ralph Bryant
knocked in two runs wil.h a single
in a lour-run first inning to lead
the Dodgers.
,.
Reds 10, Giants 6
At San Francisco, Nick Esasky
cracked a two-out grand slam to
cap a six-run rally in the ninth
inning, sparking Cincinnati.
Cardinals 10, Cubs %
At St. Louis, John Morris drove
in a career-high four runs and
Te rry Pendleton had four hits
and scored twice to pace the
Cardinals.

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

REFLECTIONS OF YOU
PEIM SPECIAL

'soo Off ALL PEIIIIS

SEPT. 22-0CT. 6
CALL 773-5 388 FOR: APPT.
OPEN TUES.-SAT.
MASON , WV

VILA~!:!
·

H-----

HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT

old voice from the pas t, eems ;
closest to a regional heartbea t •
th a t still find s Southe rn comfort
In it s "separate but equal' '
legacy.
,

I

game won when it began to run• ·
the clock out on a first and 10 a t
its 45 with 54 seconds left .
Ci ncinnati quarterback Boomer Esiason took a two- ~ard
loss. The 49ers called time out
with 49 seconds left. Esiason took
a three-yard loss. San Francisco
used its last lime out to stop the
clock at 45 seconds . On third
down, Esiason took a five-yard
loss and the Bengals let the clock
run unt-il they were charged with
a five-ya rd delay of game penalty with six seconds left.
On fourth down. James Brooks
ran wide. hoping time would
expire before he was tackled. It
didn 't. Kevin Fagan tack led
Brooks with two seconds left and
the 49ers took over.
" He just bear-hugged me,"
said ilroo ks.
" I made a mis-ca lcula ti on that
cos t us the win;·• said Wyche. " I
" This is the ultimat e catch. the don 't blame anyone but me. This
drea m catch, " said Rice. "A is a game of inches a nd second s
receiver dream s every night of and that's what it was today.
making a catch to win a garne
"We decided to pitch out to
like this...
Brooks on ou r last play : figuri ng
"I knew the pass was there," . it would eat up the last few
sa id Montana. "The problem is. seco nds ." said Wyche. "We had
it's tough to make the catch in thought about a punt and thoug ht
that s ituation. The receiver has about taking a safety . But we
to out-jump anybody around him. were afraid of some thing going
But what's rea lly amazing is tha t wrong with either one. " .
we got a chance to ge t a play tik&lt;'
Said Rice, " I can' t believe they
that off."
·
ran the bali on their last play. I
Cincinna ti seemingly had lhe thought fo r sure they would

"The heat pump does it all~
· heats, cools and saves."

AIDS and Southern discom£ort __
Ch_uck_S_ton_e
Souther n pare nt s like those in
Arcadia. Fla . , have ma rched
across our weary co nsciousness
before. Arcadia was a sickenin g
deja vu.
In the '60's, we watched hysterical parents shr iekin g e pithe ts at
children with a different skin
co lor. Enough parental venom
flowed to m a nulact urea bomb in
1963 that ki lled four little girls
atten_ding a Birmingham c hurc h.
But in 1987. the ski n color oft he
children and protesting parent s
is the sa me. And the screeching
voTicherseehalvitet lbeeeAirrcioawdlearebdr' others

nlng ou t the . clock by San
Francisco's last two times outs
and quick 49er ta ckling. Two
seconds still r emained alter the
Bengals ran four plays lor a total
loss of 15 yards and took another
five -yard loss on a delay of game
penalty.
That gave San Francisco first
down a t the Cincinnati 25 with
two seconds to go and Mont an&amp;
wasted no time lolling a pass to
the corner of the end zone .for
Rice. who had stepped in.front of
Cincinnati rookie cor nerback
Eric Thomas. -It was the third
tim e in the ga me that Thomas
had been beaten on a long TD
pass and Rice eas il y outjumped
Thomas lor the bali to tie it 26-26
with no time left. Ray Wersching
kicked the extra point to give the
49ers the win and leave both
tea m s with 1-1 records.

Pirates ambush Mets; Reds jolt·Cards

Upsets mark college play

w
·
_

with AIDS-infected blood were
the targets. No bombs this tim e,
only bomb threats. death calls
and a house-gutting fire of
suspicious orgin.
Southern bigotry had exchanged white sheets lor white
T-shir ts.
If that cen~ure appears to
indict and enl rre region, _co mpare a tale of two cities. troni rally with the same name.
..
In Arcadta , Ind. , the Hoosiers
warmly we lcomed an AIDSinfected youth to school.
In Arcadia, Fla., rednecks
declared communal war on three
.
AIDS-infected brothers.
The differing response may lie
By United Press International
Today Is Monday , Sept. 21, the 264tlj day of 1987 with 10110 follow .
in the South's still cherished
"separate but eq ual" mentality.
The moon is almost new.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
From the Southern "Super
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Tuesday" presJdential primary
Those born on this date are under the sign of Virgo. They include
and sell-deluded arrogance that
assumes only a Southern DemoLouis Jolliet. French- Canadi,a n explorer of Ihe Mississippi River, In
1645; a uthor-his torian H .G. Wells in 1866; composer Gustav Holst In
erat ca n be elected president in
1874; British publisher Sir Allen Lane, who pioneered the low- priced
1988 to public displays of aflecpaperback book, In 1902; actors Larry Hagman in 1931 (age 56) and
tlon for that divisive symbol Henry Gibson in 1935 (age 52\. a nd comedian Bill 'Murray in 1950 (age
ihe Confederate flag - many
37).
.J\ Southerns still come on like

•. h •

Montana's desperatio~ shot tops Bengals:

equity in an existing home as
gone on a sudden buying binge?
collateral. . And the loophole
Not really. The fuel lor the boom
didn' t limit home equity loans to
in home equity loans was proany pa rtlcular purpose. As a
vided by the 1986 Tax Reform
resu lt, these loans . have been
Act. The riew.law phases out the
taken out for everything from
deduction lor Interest payments
med ical blus to vacations in the
on consumer loans - except lor
Caribbean.
Interest on home ioans. After
1990, tax papers will no longer be
able to deduct interest pay on
The. banking industry ,was
credit card balances, auto loans
predictably quick to capltallzeon
a nd other borrowing not backed ' the new version of a n old form of •
by a mortgage on one's house.
credit. The ba nkers have enticed ·
But thanks to a tru ly revolu - · homeowners with low lnltal intertionary loophol e, Interest on
es t rates a nd disarmingly easy
home loans !s still deductibl e loan procedures. Once a hoeven on new loans that use th&lt;;&gt;
meowner goes through the minImal pain of applying lor a loan,
he ca n start·•borrowing - and '
start paying Interest- as easily
as he would write a check or flip
out a credit card.
In , fact the ru le for hOme
eq'ulty loa n applicant s is a simple
one: Buyer beware. Studies by
Congress and consumer groups
show ev ide nce that loa n hustlers
are usi ng dubious claims to
promote their pricing and repay ment requirements.
Two-t hirds of the banks s urveyed in one study said they
demand lull payment at a deferred date, while other lendt'rs
required on ly an interest pay.
ment during the loan term. Both
se t up a terrible crunch at theerid
of the term .

In Miami, Reagan had more motorcycle escorts than the Pope. He
had 24 while the Pope had only 16 outriders.

The Daily Sentinel- li!Jge- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Home equity loan __B_y_J_a_ck_A_n_d_e_r.s_on_an_d_D_a_l_e_~_an_A_tta_

The Daily Sentinel
Bm~ ~._-r.~c·~

..'

Monday, September.21, 1987

.,

•••

\.

afternoon showers, Gary HalFRANKLIN, Wis. (UP)) The $600,000 Greater Mllwaukee lberg, Dan Pohl, Wayne Levi and
Bill Kr11tzert were tied lor the
Open has ·a new first name lead at 15- under par.
Rain Plagued.
Because over hall th(' field -15
ol29 groups - had finished play ,
Heavy rains midway through
the round must be completed
the GMO's rtnal round Sunday
!arced postponement ott he rtnish : under PGA rules. The !lnal
threesome, including Levi and
"ntll today (at 8:30a.m. CDT).
Hallberg,
stJII had 12 holes to
When play was suspended lor the
play,
second and rtnal time after heavy .

Betz and Samatha Sadowski and .freshman Annette Lower
round out the visitors ' squad.

The Daily Sentinel
I USPS IU-9110)
A DiYI81on of Mulllml'dla, Inc.

One improvement that will
keep you comfortable all yearround is the nameless electric
heat pump.
It's the only ail-in-one heating and cooling system. In the
winter, it lieats your home very ·
efficiently, In the summer,
you get the bonus of
whole house central air
conditioning.
.
Find out more by contayt·
mg your power company at
000-0000.

Published ('V("r:v aft£'rnoon, Mo nday .
lhl'o u ~h Friday; JU Co urt St .. PO·
mer oy, Ohio, b:V thE' OhiO Vall&lt;'y Publlshlnjl: Company/ Multlml'dla, In c..
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' I

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�------·- -,. - ..... .... -.- ·-r-·--··· .. .,. . _.. ..

··~·· ···

" ··- -

..

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

~

, J ; ...

~ - - --

'•

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Browns fitti~h strong, t~ump Pittsburgh

-·
Majol'!l

This week's games

N,\TJO," 'IAL u .:,\GUE .

Ohio f.oll .. ll' t"uolhall Sc.•ht'tNit"

By Vatted Pr"'"' lni«IIMIIo•..i

'l'hunoQy , Sc'pl . 'U
Akron at Tempk' i n)

F..l.,;t

~-.Urdll)''

" ' L Pt•l . GB

St. l ..!olli!"

tri II . S!IIl -

N1•w 'fori!
Muntrt•ul
f'llllll

Ohio Slldf"ld

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~

IQ ,, .57fl

It .liM 3
71 .GIS l:! llt
"'~ i1 .w 11 1'1
71 ,., ,.f80 II

Clllt•a,;o
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Sat! t' ran

ll'l &amp;i

nn..tnnM.t

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F.as&amp;.-rn Mkh

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( '!~pial Ill Of\loNortht&gt;rn

n ·.a ;

Hf'l*lhrrlal OUt'fhof-111 (ftl

Motiftl Unlo n111 Q••nr n !1)111
t\'Mt t-nho!'r,; IAI , ~u"kln«Um .
Otwrll• iU AUt•&lt;hPn~· ! Pill )

53 M5 .I'll ~ ~ ~
li.1 IIi ..&amp;'t.'i 19
Salurd~U" ' " 'fttol'lulh
San Frandst-o 1. (' lndnnuU I
;\ tort r e lloll t. Phlhutt&gt;lphla ~

.\IIIUM11
Slltf Dk-'-1(0

Kenyon 111 fiUil' " 'r11lt&gt;rn
Oll"t'l {Mit•h) al Dtn~o•
Ohio Wt 'Sil')'all Ml \\'Oostl' f
1\MI~d

st . L.,_ts _t fhl t ap 3
!'oit'"' \ 'ork •l Pilbihur~h .f
S..n Dlf'l\l t Houl'ilon 1. 1-1 innln~
:\llltlltll Ill, t.o . . An~f'lt.'l' 1
.
l~ul~

Orand Vad ley IMh·h J w.t ( \ •nt rv.l St
Dllyton at Bullt'r' (lnd)
Flndlll,\' Ill lth au tN\'1
Hlum at BdhllffY C"' \ 'a!

~

Ill. ( 'hlt'II.I{O

1'hh•l (Plll ) at ,fnhnC'Iirru\1
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Urbuu. id t\..._,. rM'l'ihurl( ( Pli )
"llml•l(ton 11.1 Knox\-1111• tTt•nnl

HouMon 3. Slln Dh•JCD '!

li. 14 lnni•K!"

PIIIJtOhvr•h t , ~~·1'1· \ 'ork
Cindnnall Jlt,

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1'~

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11

i. t\tluntll &gt;i

~lu•day 's ~mes

~f'"'' nrk IGoodf'n l.f-&amp; 1 at f"hln l{o

I Llm • ~~~;tt•r , _, 1. t: ft p.m.
l'llls hllr~:h {llr•b..lr. 8- 1":1 Ill MoniN&gt;al
rN·hrll·lt- H, . ; : ;t3 p.m .
Phill4dt&gt;lphla !farm1111 11 -10 ) ut Sl.
l .out.. ('1\tdor 7-%) ; M:35 p.m.
~ r\nl{t'lts ' "'f'h ·h 1 ~!1) a t ~ 111 ,.
Fn.nd,L-v \ HIImm ~krr 10. II) , IO::U p. m .
Tuff&gt;ldlU' '~&lt;G•nwt~
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PUt!&gt;lhur~~;h Ill Monlrt'»J, nla:ht
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SIUI Dlt' JIU al flnl'lnn,atl, nl~~:hl
Phlladelph!l • .t St . Loulli, nl.:hl
Los r\nrteh'!t! a t SIUI t ' rw.nds(·o. nl~ht

High school
grid scores
Ohio HIJh S..twol Footblloll
S.at urd~ty, ~ · pt .

lj

E;t,.(

\\' L Pl'l . GH

•

1'orontlt•
,'f1J1''1&amp;Ukl'
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Roston

98 5K ,Sll!-'1
!II :58 .i6.1

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67 .5311

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•

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N,.• . \'ork 1, Tortnll!l:!
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Ulit.'llf{O HI, St•aitlt' II
Oakhr.nd tl,' H~tn~~ ( 'My ,ii
T ..:..a.~ I. t 'allfornia :1. llllnnlnl"
Bosttln lli ftulllmort·. ppd .. r11in
Sund-.l'' " GanH'!'
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•
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6.
Rultim•r~· 3
1
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Mllww.uk ... • 11 . [h&gt;troll I
Mln~lllu 3, ('IM ~~llltd ~

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College scores
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hhiM' II :Ji , ~~ - l..a•·rmt'1' 111 "
.Julliala 7. Df'law•rt• \ ' aUt•y I
L..•hl~h 2-1. Not\' Y &amp;
Malnt• !-I, IUlodt.• Is land 2fl
Manhattun foil. -at, N .\ '. M•rltlmt• O
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.,.,.,. \ "l&gt;l"k 111 Mllwotultl't•. nil(hl
Clllc~ :II fil llfurnl tL ni JI ~
K.:.nsu. flt,·. ll. t ~ lllltll'.' nl1ht

NFL results

M+'l'l'h&gt;Anl Marilwtl', CM'. I'lll'll II
Mllltt'S\'Uit' r.. Su. c·u••· lti
Monlt·hUrSt . 1:1, E . S troud~hur~~tSl .
~-· H•mp.-htrf't7, B~onl' . 2&amp;
St•w Han• U, Sllppt•ry Rot ·'- lti
Nort ht'~h·r n 20, fun~llt•ut I t

S i\TIOSi\L FOO'I'MI.l LEi\C.I'f:
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I II I .7511 5; :u

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fatuwh:a ~;t, Mars Hill :!II
f1•ntn • t Hy. J6.. Mar,\' \111;• tTt•nn. 1'!
( ' ltadt-1 ti, Prt'!&lt;ih)'ll•rlllfll t
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t:Us t t•rn Ht••uw•k,\' :r.. Mar!Ohall :1-4
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t: mory &amp; Ht•nry ~t. Brid ~t·v.· uh•r i
t' l\)'t'ttf'\' Uit• Sl . :Ill. St . Pu.u1· ~ j
Fludd11. 'l3, filah~a 1-1
Fltlr\da '\" M 10, Mill,., \ ' all;•y !41 . 0
t' lorldLl ~ - II. Mf'mphb; St. '!-1
Furl \ 'alltoy St . tl, Mort•tNIUst' 1:1
t'ru.~thur(l St . :ti, \\'+'llh')' II
{:ardnt'f Vlf'hh 34i. Nf'v.'hf'i'ry 29
flt•tJrllia St1, 1'0, Mlddlt• Tt•nn. ~1 . 13
(ill•n\·111•• st . 'U , Sht•pht.•rd j
Hanonr :m. F.arlhMm II
Hu1'1'11rd ~ Bt•thunt'-fooltl'nun l l

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.•VHJ .l-1 1;1
.tiHI :1:1 311

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Pt•nn Sl. 'II , nndnftllll 0
Plymouth st. 17, M';•,.tht •ld~ . ~
Prlnt~'ton :\.-1. DlllrtmoUih :t
Rut • ht~.. r U , Unlun to
Shl PpMI~&gt;'hllfl( 13, Kut'l.to•· n!l
Susqut• h~~nna ~ 1 . Mur1u-1ant1
Syrut'II!Ot' U , ,\ 11*'"1 ({M;Iol Ul
Tt•mplt• :!4, l'lll!ihur~h 21
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Dt•n\·t•r li. l&gt;rt•1•n Ra.1· 17 Hk-l
Ruffalo :11. lloustun :111
Mluml ~:1. lndlunupull~ HI
Phlladt•lpblu ~7. Nt•v. Otlt •lln~ li
l ' l••nland :u , f'lt l~hur~h II
S11n rranl'is.t.·n !'i. nnf'lnnau :.'fl
l ' hlt • a~:u "!II, Ta•upu 1\;ty :J
!\tlanl:t '! I, M'lll-'ihlnJihm '!U
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1.,\ K~tl*• r" :n , lh·trult ;
"'••utll•· u. K:t n...t~ n1 y 11
.\tlnnt'SIItu :! I. J.,\ R a ni ~ IIi
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-lamt'!t!Ma dlsun 1-1. Mort•lwad~ . Ul
1-'-" U I! , Hlt•t• IIi
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Kt ..t!JI.·k.r :u . Indiana U
K~·•t~~t · k.\' St. l (i. l,h· -~tnnt· l~
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MUnda)·'s r;anw
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llru• n 17 , \' alt• ';'
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( ' hlu~to ,;.
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'

HudJ.oon \It,' Rt&gt; ~ aM. fO \'t•nt !'!' 0
.It'll Union 1!1.. Budof')'' ' J'oi \~
Kt·•lon Rldll;f' -;-, Sprln«fMd Cw.t h n
IUrthutd 'lt. Rh·hmond Hili 0
IJmMSrnklrtl , ( ' lf'dt'KII
U -.hon n. Sfahrl•l 0
Lorain Mhh'l- 8, E lyrill W II
·,\lid Ff'nwlck S.'l Tr .. Cnunly N;
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Nt'Will'k ( 'ath 17, Sl,;h·...,~· llh• ( " '\ ' 11.)

as

KG ;o .l:l:l
it ; :I .1 111
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7:1 jti . 1941

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Kilns~ C'ly

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Eudl d""' •J o.~ tt. l.akt-wood St F.d II
t 'a lrHtoJ• U , Cln hn:e\1 M~tri~U~I
par Ill~ Trl~l)' 16. Stov.· K' lll~h 10•
G•tto,.; Milk (ill Ul, ( 'It• l!nk• &amp; ·hool 0
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t\MF.HI('M' I.EAGl 'E
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BollrdiiiiUI ;u;, Lnrilln ,\dm Klnl(l
( 'hllllt-utht• 2-1, Ml*'"l Trlllt't',
( ' In Summit f Duy :t ~ f linton M~~.~ !&gt;i h •

r.

I p.m .

Rllffalu :11 OII.IJU.'i. I p. m .
( ' hh·af{t• al llt•lrult , I p.rn.

(ir;•;•o lla )' at Tamp11 Kay , I p. m .
lndiWiapul\!1 at St. I Ai ul~. I Jl .dl
1. ,\ Kuldl•r,. 11.1 Huustnn, I jt.ru.
l'linllt•-"nota at Kan..a .~ nay, I p .m .
N\' filanl !t! 111 Miami . I p. m .
St•,. ~: "'-"'and at \\'ahln~:tun. I p. m .
PhUud••lphla :tl Sun t 'r and,;•·n. I p.m .
St•alllt• at Sun Oh'•J('n. 1p. m .

NY ·h't" at Plll.•;hurl[it, I p.m. ( 'hwinn a l lu t l .o\ Hum'-'i ; I p.m .
Munday. St•pt . til
l);•n \'t•r al ( ' lt• \tol~tnd , !I p. m .

1:1
N11. fila hama '!I. !t-'11-"'-""'"'PPI( 'ull. :!0
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U, NW La. 1:1

Klt'lllnlt)nd U, Ma~t~ltli l' hll !ot'l(~ $1
Sah•m :!I. ( 'llllfornlll. ~Pa. l U
Samfurd l!t.·f umhl'f'land 2:1
So. C ';~.rolhtll !&gt;!:1 - 12, N .t'. r\lrTtl
Soulht.•rn :tl, 'l"r; !&gt;ioulhl'rn"l:l
Sto. Ill . Ill. ,\u~lln Pt•ay :1
Snut ltt•rn Ml~t~!tll'4!dppl :n,'I'IIIIUit' tl
~ ' IU!hmorf' !~ . .I ohm~ Hopkins '!I
Tr.,~. St . U, ft'!•!!l Tt• ~ u" )It , II
,
TU~t~kt•l( t~·ln!Ot Hutt '!i, Morrloo Brown li
t ·. nf Soulh 17. Mlllsa.ps l:l

blame both players, management
..:, Fans
By United Press Inter national
establish the upper hand . But
••

:;
Profess ional football fan s In
•,• Ohio blame both the players and
•• management for the ever- im •
,• pe nding s trike .
••~
Fans Int e rvi ewed at th e
•: Browns-Steelers game In Cleve:: land a nd the Benga ls-49ers clas h
Cincinnati also agreed on
,,.·• In
another point- the ticket buyers
;.: 1wou ld be the biggest losers if a
,. wa lkout does occur Tuesday.
' 'I'm a union man , but IJeellt's
.~•• a ·very
unjustified s trike," Don
;. MeMI!Ien of Coshocton said at
:: the Browns game. "It 's unjust!.• !le d on both sides ."
~
McMillen silld he would sup:~ port the "s.cab'' teams owners
•: are considering fielding "be•• cause I'm a good sports fan. But
:• I'm afralct'thls might ruin lt all."
·••
" It doesn't seem llke anyb; ody's doing much talking, "
K evin Hayde said at the Bengals
·' game. "They 're both taking a
: . ·'power stance' and try ing to

"

be.cause of that noth\ng's
happenin g."
Ha yde sa id he read that only
five team s made money last
year. "The owners have got to
, show that they 're In charge of the
paychecks."
Brian Hayde, Kevin's 23-yearold brother who was wearing a
Cr!s Collinsworth jersey, said he
would s upport
learn . of free
agents. "but I would do It In a
sense of protesting what the
players did."
Nick d' Angelo of Wll\opghby
Hills called the situation " a
joke."
"The guys are making a ton of
money and they want. to go on
strike," he said.' "Just like the
last strike (In 19821. It 's golnl' to
alienate the fans . There are some
legitimate beefs, but I think
·they 're both at fault. And they 're
going to s tl~k It to all of us who
pay $20 a ticket ."

a

By·ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
, CLEVELAND (UP!) -Games
between the Pittsburgh Steelers
and the Cleveland Browns generally . Involve tug - of -war
strui!&lt;les. ·
For 45 minutes Sunda y . that
tradition remained Intact. Then.
the Browns' defense waved aside
history and dominated the
Steelers.
Cleveland· linebacker Clay
Matthews Intercepted quarterbackMark Malone twice, returning one for a fourth - quarter
touchdown and setting up a
Clarence Weathers touchdown
with the other.
Bernie Kosar threw two touchdown passes tha.t Included an
11-yard toss to Geralq McNett.
rookie Jeff , Jaeger kicked two
field goals and the Browns
defense finished with six Inter. ceptlons - five of Malone - en
route to a 34-10 victory.
Cleveland· beat Pittsburgh for
the third straight time. the
longes t streak since winning
seven consecu five games during
the 1967-70 seasons. The 24-polnt
victory .margin was th&lt;' largest
by Cl~veland over Pittsburgh
since a 41 -10 victory at home on
&lt;;&gt;ct. 8, 196b.
"This was a game where we
pla yed very well on defense while
Bernie a nd the offense made the
most of opportunities." said
· .Cleveland Coac h ~arty Schot,
tenhelmer . " I won't use the word
'dominated .' because ·aggressive' Is the right one."
Kosar. who grew up In Youngstown , Ohio, halfway bet~·een
Cleve la nd and Pittsburgh.
praised hi~ teammates. ·
" I think we had the whole team
clicking," he said. "All 4!'&gt; guys.
which Is what you need to be
.successful in this league. If' s
good to be back on the winning
track . Especially against a div Ision rival. Especially against
Pittsburgh."
The Steelers have dropped six
straight ga m es- a nd seven of
eig ht at Clevela nd Stadium. Both
tea m s arE" l -1:
. " We wanted to run the foo tba ll
and They stuffed us." said Pitts burg h ·coach Chuck Noll. noting
his team was out r~shed 1 2~ :58 .
" It' s· as s imple as tha t. We made
mis takes and mental errors on
who to block a nd where to block .
Our offense couldn't get anything
generated.·: Noll did not Think the Cleve land
Stadium fi eld. patchy alter two ·
concerts by the rock group Pink
Floyd last week. had an y e ffect
on the out come.
•
Trailing 10-3 at halftime , Pittsburgh fled the game on strong
sa(ety Donnie Shell 's )9- yard

-- ..

Willis lor a touchdown enroute to liM! BrowM'
:1-1-10 triumph In Cleveland Sunday. (UPI)

MACK SCORES - Cleveland's Kevin Muck
hurdles over th• defense of Pitts burgh's Krlth
r etu1·n of Kevin Mack 's' fumbl e
just 34 second s Into th!' third
quart er.
After t ra d ing possessions.
Pitt sburgh wa s on its ow n J:l
WhE"n Ma lone a tte mpt!'d to pa ss
to wld eou t Louts Lipps. Th e ball
hit Lipps in the foot a nd popP&lt;'d
Into the air before ll n!'backe r
Mike John son mad!' a bas ket
catch a t the 23.
"We got mu gged pretty mu ch
all day." sa id Ma lone. " We we r e
still in th . gam e until the third
quarte r ana th e n the WhPe ls f!'IJ
off. You have to give th e m c redit.
They defe nsed us well."
Fiv e plays later . . Kosar
scra mbled to the r ight a nd fi red a
pass at the I to McNe il, who s pun
into the e nd zone.
After fr ee safety Chris RockIns's second interception of Ma loQe. Clev!'land J'OOki (' kick ('r

t ion a fter the o!)(' nln g kic koff ."
Kosar lln lshC'd 17·of-29 for .174
yard s a nd two t.ou c hdowns . Earnes t Byner a nd Ma c k each rushed
for S:l ya rds. and the lattrr added
e ight rPci&gt;pt!ons for 45 ya rd s .
Malone was 12 of 36 for 1!'&gt; 1
yru·ds a nd fi ve lht crreptlo ns .
11ubby Rrlst!'r wa s 1-of-!'J for 10
yards a nd a n lntC'rccptlon. Ea rn &lt;•st .Jackson was held to 19 ya rd s
th e gume.
" This wa s ol cl -!ashton('() loot- . on 10 carr ies a nd Lipps finished
ball In the mud ." said Matt hews. with five ca tcht'S for 68yards .
"I Hi s ru nl)al'ks l 1·cmi nd ed mf" nf
After Pi tt sbu rg h's Gary And·
m~' dars as a run nln ~ ba c k In
Nson m!sSf'd a 29-yard f! Pid goa l
hi gh sc hoo l, where I averaged ~ . 8 at tem pt wid'' left . Clevp land look
(yards per ca r ry!."
a 3-0 !('a d 3: 05 In to thc second
Th e crowd of 79/ &gt;23 r hantrd quarter on Jucgcr 's 29-yard field
"No strikc " in the ti na I mlnutcs goal. Mack' s t- yard plun ~tc with
of play .
3: ~6 left In thc fir st ha lf ma de It
' 'Nonr of us thought abOut thr 10-0.
cha nces of a st r!k(' during the
And erson made a 27-yard f!Pid
ga me." said Matth('ws. " Pla yi ng goa l with four s&lt;'Conds left In the
football wa s thc only rons ld cra - ha lf to c ut the defic it to 10-J .
Jrff JaegC' I' added hi s seco nd
fie ld goa) of the ga me. a 22·
)'arder at 4 : 43.
Six tv-s lx seco nds I:Jt er. Ma tthew s Int ercep ted Malone at the
l'ie\'(•ia nd 2fi an d rumb!('() cl own
th e rig ht s id elines for his fir s t
NF L touc hdown . Kosar c• PI~I
th!' sror ing with a 37 yard p; 1 s~ to
WPa th er s v.·lth 7:r&gt;2 t·cm a'ln lng in

two runs a nd Sc hr(lt'd(•r hi t his
n th hom &lt;' run to make If 10-2.
Braggs IN I off the nin th with his
J:lt h hom e r .
Gibson hit his 22 m! hom&lt;'r 10
open the eighth . Trammell fol·
lowed with a single. went to thi rd
on a si ngl e by pinch hltt!'r J ohn
Grubb a nd scored on an Infield
Elsew he re , Toronto ~ow nPd
New York 6·2, Boston swept the
Orio les 5-I a nd 6 -~. MlnnPsota
edged Cit' veland :l-2. Oakla nd
downed Kan sas Cit y Hi, TPxas
nipped Californi a 2-lln 10 Inni ngs
a nd Chicago,dc!eated Sealt le 5·3.
Uhw ,Jay!ti ti, V o.lllkt•f'S 2
At New York. Nelson Llriano
highlight e d a illi'CC· J'UII seventh
inning with a two-run hom er.
pa cing the Toront o to a vic tory
over New York.
r·
Re d Sox 5-6, Orioles 1-:1
At Baltimore, Todd Benzin ger
ripped a two-run hom er to
highlight a thrl'e-run Bos ton
ninth inn ing, givi ng the Red Sox a

day after his triumph In the
Crestar Cla ssic near Richmond .
"It was a great pep talk . And
Gary gave me a lot of compliments on the course today."
Mowry precise ly follow ed the
urging of Rodri guez by draining
a 25-blrdie putt on th e 18th hole to
win the $325,000 tournam e nt ,
finishing with a 5-unde r-par 67 .
Hi s three-day 54-hole total was a
13-under -par 203.

MONDA\'
POMEROY ·- Gos(X'I meetIngs will be held at the Wl's t Side
Church of Chris t, through Sept.
25. Sunday services at ID a .m.
and 6 p.m .. weeknights at 7:30
p.m . Maurice Barnett , spea kl'r .
PORTER - Rev ival. Mo nday
through Se pt. 26 a t Va ll ey Freewill Baptist Church with eva ngelis t Bill Price a nd Ro ger
Breeded. Services 7: 30 p.m .:
spetcal sin ging.
POMEROY
Mothers of
Twins Cl ub will meet Mond ay at 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Met hodlst Church.
LETART FALLS- The Letart

victory in a s many s tart s and
fva n \a ld cron we nt 4 for 4 to lea d

thc Wh!W Sox .

HYIRID
4·6" .30/each BlUEGill

lARGE

l-3"

MOUTH

BASS
TRIPlOID
GRASS
i'CAIP · ·•

1· 3" .35/oach
3·5" ,55/oach

.65 /each CRAPPIE

3· 5': .95/each

. S7.SOteach FATHEAD
MINNOWS
.·

DEtVERY WILL BE:
TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER 28

C--

s5.7Stl~ . ,

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(Ordert do not have to H placed In 1dv1nce)

Toll frf!111 ·800-247-2111 &amp;

FARI FY S fiSH
"!!&lt;,,~,',/\,

~ARM
!.

l 'l

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Cattle will b~' accepted all day
Tuesday, up to 1:00 p.m. Wednesday
•HAULING AVAILABLE•

Call your locil itore to pli!ce your order or call.

I ,l' I'

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Page-s·

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ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

U. S. RT. 50 11' Mi. East of Albany, Ohio)I
592-2322 DAY- 698·3531 IVENING
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Elisha, Bill and Naomi King,
Kathy Johnson , Jessica and
Derek, Darrell and Carol Brewer
and daughter, Stacey , Larry
Paula Haynes, Krtstt and Matt ,
Matt Riffle, Steve Caru thers.
Tim and Edle King, Libby and
T.J .

Camp.
Officers' reports were given
and collections taken. Cards
were sent to Olive Smith. Thelma
Sines. Kermit Walton, and Gertrude Andrews who Is residing In
California with her daughter .
Devotions were read from
Psalms ll3 along with a poem,
"Thankful for the Sun" read by
Pauline Kennedy .
The · mlsslori study was by
Cl!arldlne 'Alkire. Mrs. Thomas
had the closing prayer, and Anna
Lockhart served refreshments to
those named and LaOonna
Clark, Janet Venoy. and Gertrude Bass.
·

RIVERVIEW PTO
A patriotic program In observance. of Constitution Week was
presented at the r~ent River:
view PTO meeting:
Sue Suttle, president ; Tersa
Evans, vice presldnet; Cathy
spencer, secretary, and Angle
Morris, treasurer, presided at
the meeting with teachers and
new parents being Introduced by
Grace Weber, head teacher.
Hoom mothers were named lor
the year . They are Del!ble
Spurlock, Sue Douglas. Patty
Hayman, Teresa Church, and
Sonia Circle, first grade: Sue
Kauri. Faye Westfall, Angela
Rucker , second grade; Jill Holter. Kay Epling, Carol Tolliver,
and Mary Newlun, third grade:
Cathy Spencer, Avice Spencer,

EVANGELINE MISSIONARY
Plans for continuing work on
comforters lor the Grundy Mountain Mi ssion were made when the
Evangeline Mlsslnary Group
met at the Pomeroy Chuli'h of
Christ Tuesday night.
Pat Thomas presided at the
meeting with Sherrie Might FRmNDLY CIBLCE
A contribution to the fund or
giving the opening prayer and
members responding to roll ca ll the two youths, Tony Riffle and
on school days . Betty Spencer ·. Sam Smith, severly burned In a
read an article on prayer In the job related accident a:t the
schools. Also read was a letter Lancaster n;~all, was made when
from Pat Arnold concerning Friendly Circle met this week at
cleaning rooms at the Ohio Trinity Church.
Allee Globokar opened the
Valley Christian Assembly
meeting with the thought for the
month . Officers reports were
given and Mary V. Reibel, Mary
E. Chapman and Mary V. Stewart were named to the nominat Ing committee.
A rummage sale will be held at
the church on· Oct. 1 and 2.
Arrangements were made to
purchase large serving trays and
Individual trays and cups of
plastic for the church kitchen.
Erma Smith presided at the
program using "Run Away to
Pray" as the topic, with se lected
scriptures from Matthew and
Coor lnth alns. The offeratory
prayer was by Miss Smit h. A
friendship prayer circle closed
the meeting and a dessert course
was served to 17 members and
Elizabeth Flck and Maye Mora .

Teresa Evans, Angle Morris,
fourth grade; Sue Suttle; Sue
Reed, Donna Wolfe, fifth grade;
and Gladys Thomas and Nancy
Buckley, sixth grade.
Mazlne subscriptions for the
students were renewed as well as
money allocated for each classroom teacher and librarian to be
used for materials. Gladys Toomas and Mrs. Weber will served
as PTO membership chairmen.
Attendance award was won by
the sixth grade for the highest
percentage of ·parents In attendance. Discussion on carnival
planning concluded the meeting.
Refreshments were seved by
sixth grade mothers.

CHESTER COUNCIL
Erma Cleland. Dorothy Rit chie and Esther Smith were
given special recognition and ·
presented gifts at the recent
meeting of Chester Council 323,
DaugiJters of America. held at
the haiL
Margaret Tuttle, councilor,

presided at the meeting. Devotions and pledges were given.
Bonnie Landers was reported
hospitalized and Ethel Arbaugh
tiL The death of Nelle Warner's
husband was noted. A report on
state session was , given by
Margaret Tuttle, and Mrs. Ritchie thanked those who helped on
a reception. at the session.
Meeting time was c;hanged to
7: 30 p.m . Cora Beegle, Shirley
Beegle, Doris Koenig and Beulah
Maxey served refreshments .
Observing quarterly birthdays .
were Mrs. Ritchie, Doris
Grueser, Lora Damewood, Doris
Koenig, Mary Holter. Betty
Roush, Jean Frederick, Eliza beth Hayes, Cera Beegle, Faye
Kirkhart. Beulah Maxey, and
Brenda Holter.
The cake lor the observance
was made by Jo Ann Baum.

UOl10TtSWUJMDIItl1

• SPECIAL PRICE

A~tSSIONS

•

ADUlTS 13.10 • CHILDREN $2.50
SATURDAY I SUNDAY MATINEES
All SEATS 12.50
BARGAIN NIGI1T TUESOAY $2 .00

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
(Dining Room Only)

Served with whippiCfpotatoas. chicten &amp;tavy, cole
sin, hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry. no substitutes excl(lt btvtriJI with additional price.

s

FOR JUST

$3•2

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-5432

Fried Chicken

MARTHA BIBLE CLASS
Bob and Bessie King hosted a
potluck cookout at their home
Saturday night for the Martha
Bible Cla ss of the Bradbury
Ch urch of C)lrlst.
Bill King had the prayer.
Attending were John and Ma rtha
Wright , E lizabeth and Jessica.
Dan and Karen Meadows and

Fa lls PTO will have a spec ia l
m eet ing a t 7 p.m Monday.

School Alumni Association meets
7:30 p.m . Monday at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church.

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Count y Men 's Fe llowship of
Churches of Christ will meet at 7
p.m . Monday at the Bradford
Church of Christ. A movie, " The
Wl'lght or the World" wil t be

POMEROY - Meeting of the
Meigs Cou nt y -LITter Contra!
Advisory Board, Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m . at the ·Metgs County Agricultural Extension Service offlee, Mulberry Heights .

shown.'

TUESDAY
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Chapt er, Beta Sigma Ph! SororIty, will meet at 7 p.m . Tuesday
at the home of Mrs. Ev e lyn
Knight , Lin coln Hill . for a card
party.
POMEROY

-

Revival
LETART FALLS- The Rev .
Pearl A. Casto, former pastor of
the Letart Falls United Methodist Church, will conduct evangelistic services at the church, Oct .
7-11, 7 p.m. Sp~lal singing
nightly.

Me igs High

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Mrs . Ernest Baker. Mrs . Becky
Smith, Je r e my, John and Kenda,
Mrs . Wilma Rl'lber , VInce and
Jesse, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Reiber. Rachael, Robert and
Russell,- Mrs . Lula Circ le, Dixie
Circle, Joe Sayre. Car t Circle•
Jarrod and Jason, Mr. and Mrs.
Edson Roush , Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Little. J esse and Tyler,
Mr. a nd Mrs . Barry Micha e l and
Rachael, Douglas Circ le. Mrs.
Judy Harrison and Todd, Mr . and
Mrs . Roger Holter and Jamey,
Mrs . Kathy Johnson, Kim Follrod. Pam Foreman, Billy and
Joey Rice, Mrs . Martha Lee,
Jimmy Randolph, Rev . Paul
McGuire and Alan.

e Always Knew People
Fro Meigs Cou11ty ere
A.hove Average!

FLORENCE CIRCLE

Reunion held by family

THIS SALE INCLUDES H.OLSTINE

Co.. fot4 Slon-WO to 9.00 o-. Ph- 1311-9.11
''""'If-RIG fot4 &amp; s..,ty
tthOO to t t.OO 0.01., PhoM ~992-2 164
"'
(eoiA-Snttth't fltii-1MO le ltOO p.&amp;, ,.._ 1.6J. JJJO
GIMiw-khulh ftH I F••- JtOO te !tOO p.m.. PM• #767-JIU
MarloHo-A,u fot4 &amp; !uJOir c_,-4.ot to 1.00 p.m., PhoM 1373-440t
llho~I-Biho.

Miss Florence Cir cle rccenlly
celebrated her 83rd birthday
with a surprise party at th e home
of Larry and Patt y Circle when
the Carmel, Sutton, MorningStar
and Bethany Churc hes met for a
cooko ut. The event was co-hosted
by Linda Patte r son an~ Sue
Hager.
Miss Circle Is a retlrl'd school
teacher having tau gh t 55 years
before substituting for another
three years . She Is the daughter
of the late Sullivan and Clara
Moore Cl·cle and resides on
Carmel Road, Racine, where she
was born on Sept. .3; 1904 .
Attending were Mrs. Donna
lh'e, David and Paul, Mr . and

I''

"All Breeds Sale"

.55/oach

1-3"

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SEPTEMBER 23, 1987
8:00P.M.

II s Tttne For Stock1ng

CATfiSH

Monday, September 21. 198:7

Circle birthday is observed

SPECIAL
FEEDER
CALF
SALE!

T-.,----------------------------l
~.
Fish Day
CHANNEl

The Daily Sentinel

Communtiy calendar/ar~a happenings

doublc· h&lt;'ader sweep of th e Orioles with a 6-.1 tl"lumph .
Twins 3. Indians 2
At Mlnnea pplls. Ki rby Pu ckett
went .1 for ~ a nd sma cked a
two-r un home r to ca rry Mlnne·
so ta 1\vins to th!'ir third consecutive vic tory .
A.thl&lt;lllcs 7, Royals 6
At KaMas f lt y, Regg!~ Jack son collected two RBI and four
other 0Hkla nd pl ayers a lso
kn ockPd In r un s , carrying the
At hle tics to a victory a nd a
three-garnc sweep of Ka nsas
Cit y.
Range rs ~. Angels I, 10 Innings
AI Ar lin gton. DeWa ync Bui ce
wa lked Darrell Port£'1' on four
pitches to force In Seot t Fletcher •
wIth one out in t hc HJth Inning and
lift thr Rangers .
Whlfl• Sox 5·. Mariners :1
At Chicago, .lack McDowell
ear ned his seco nd m a jor-l{'ague

out .

Krautter and Maidie Mora, who ,
prepared them.
The program was on nuts,
fruits and berries with Dorothy
Karr, Jennie Machlr, and Maidie
Mora displaying arrangements
which they had made using those
Items. · Mrs·. Mora also had
specimens of various branches
with nuts, fruits and berries.

WINNER - Debra ln1eb, Rutland, wu liM! winner of a 1% fool
sallbo&gt;\1 11ven In a promotion at 811 Bend Foodland Friday.
Pictured with tiHl winner Is Don Perry. local store manaser .

Mowry captures seniors tour crown

V

,•

By The Bend

GARDEN CLUB
Plans were 1inal!7ed lor the !all
nower show to be held this
weekend at tile Chester United
Methodist Church when the Chester. Garden Club met recently at
the home of Jennie Mac hlr for a
picnic.
"Thank you, God " Is the theme
of the show to be held Saturday at
1 p.m . Ruth Erwin and Sheila
Curtis are co-chairmen.
Edna Woods was appointed to
take care of sunshine for o ~.
•ober. It was announced that the
county meeting will be held on
Oct. 5,
Twlla Buckley was . co-hostess
for the meeting with members
responding to roll call by telling
, what they have learned about
herbs this year . Thank yous were
exterided by Mae Holter and
Edna Wood ,- r~ent sunshine gift
recipient s.
Program books for next year
were distributed by Janet )l:oblentz. Eleanor Knight. Partee

By .JOHN 1\. TORRES
Tigers m ay face as m any a s
UPI Sports Writer
seven left - ba nders over the final
Although Involved in a tight
weeks of the season.
pennant race, Sparky Anderson
Paui'Mo!lt or . Yount a nd Gle nn
prefers pla ying a tea m that
Braggs opened the game with
hasn:t given up. ·
singles to g lvP Milwauke(' a I-0
"Here's a club iM!Iwaukee t lea d .
that can' t win It and they' re out
Le ft (!elde r Kirk Gi bson mis here every day ," Anderson said
played B ..J. Surho!f's fl y ball to
Sunday afte r the Brewers belted Opeil Milwaukee's lour- run se three horne runs off his ace , Jack cond inning. Two ou ts later,
Morris, to beat Detroit, 11-4.
Sveum hit hi s 2:trd hom l'r .
" It' s a pleasure to see," Molit or doubled and Yount fol ·
Anderson said. " I have a lot of lowed with his 18t h hom er.
respect lor clubs like that.
" Early he didn ' t have his good
''What bothers me Is beating a stuff," Milwaukee Mana ger Tom
club that doesn ' t want to be Trebelhorn said of Morri s . " Then
there," he added.
he got It but fortun at!'ly we got a
Juan Nieves , 13-7, won for the couple of good hit s. We got pretty
seventh time - In his la st eight _good swings off everybody ."
decisions and Chuck Crlm
Larry Herndon lined a two- run
worked 3 1-3 innings for his lOth si ngle in the thi rd to ma ke It !'J -2.
save. Morris, 18-9, .Jost for the
Molitor hit his 14th home run .
third time tri nine decisions.
leadin g off the fifth · innin g. to
Nieves only went 5 2-3 but he give the Brewers a 6-2 lead .
dropped !Jetrolt 's r~ord aga ins t
The Brewers added four m ore
southpaws to 18-27, a statistic runs off re liever E ric King In the
that may bother Anderson who's seventh . Surho!! doubled home

·:Chi Chi worked with me l~st
night on the practice green, and
thlsmornlng hetoldmeto'goout
and s hoot a 67 and win this
tournament," ' Mowry said Sun-

•

Area organizations · conduct recent meetings

Tigers beaten;. Blue Jays half game out

Rl,y HMOND, Va. tUPII Rookie Larry Mowry gave much
of the credit for his fir st triumph
on the PGA Seniors Tour to his
c hief competitors, Chi Chi Rodrlguez and Gary Player.

-·

BlftTRDAY- Erica Nleole
Hanlnl celebraled ber first
blrtltd~ recently with a party
al her home. Attendlnl were
ber mother, Cathy Haning,
matenal Jl'aDdparenta, Mr.
and Mra. Raymond Manley, .
Jae and Kevin. Sendln1 1lfla
were maternal 1rea · ·
Jl'aDdparea&amp;a. Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Mclllnaey.

..

Survey data shows 71%
of Ohioans read a daily
newspaper in the past
week.*

The annual Sinclair family
Gibbs. Gina, Rhoda. and R. J. all
reunion was held Sunday at the of Pomeroy.
home of Ora Sinclair and Mr. and
Mike and Diane Bowles, NichoMrs. Charles Sinclair and Chad,
las. and Jenny, Sonny and
Sumner Road, Pomeroy .
Carolyn Van Meter . Shawnda,
A basket dlnne1 was served
Taunda, and Misty, Middleport;
beneath two large weaptng wil- VIrginia and Lou Freeman.
lows to the 69 persons attending. Christina and Christopher' CoGames of horseshoes, football.
mer , VIola and Nikki Sturgill,
badmltten, and water sports . Cherie Aldrich, Jackson; Sfielly,
were enjoyed. Families enjoyed Kyle, Lyle Sinclair, The Plains.
old plclures and noted changes
Michelle and Amanda Adkins,
and addlltons to family groups . Oakhlll, Denny and Gayle RosenTwo .sets of twins were In holler and Sarah, Crls and Duane
attendance.
Miller. Seaman; Paul, Carolyn
At tile reunion were Boyd and Rrenda Sinclair, Shade;
Sinclair and Ashley, Noel and Craig Sinclair, Shade, and his
Ann Sinclair, Loretta Douglas !lance, Sue Myers, Athens;
and Leland, all of Athens;
George, F1orla an~ Georgina
Delores Hawk and Robbie, Ro- Bing, Lancaster, Sonny and Barb
bert and Mary Allee Bowles, Kegler and Sandy, Wallingford,
Clarence and Maxine Jordan, Ky.; David Haggy and Ruth
Pat and Cindy Aelker, Penny, Wells, Wilkesville; Clyde
Patsy, Patrick. Ora Sinclair. Adams, Paul and Mildred
Charles and Margaret Sinclair Hauber, Melody Roberts, Long
and Chad, Randall and Shirley Bottom.

'

Our survey shows more
than 83% of the people in
Meigs County read The
Daily Sentinel**

The Daily Sentinel
We Deliver
For Subscription or

~dvertising

lnforrMtion ·

Call 992-2156
"Market Opinion Reuarch

••Telephone aurvey of 2,0011 Mlig• County realdenta taken
November 1888 ·January 1.887

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~d

ltN IN

L; !Hh

Monday, s&amp;ptember 21. 1987

t:

fOR
ONL l( A :OOlLA)
~

. ....-,,

v

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Monday. September 21. 1987

Bus)· ness . Serv·t·ces

TO PUC:I AN AI WI. ttl'·tl SI
*'"NT ftn f_,T I AJl .. S P.a
I A.a ..... NOON UoTIIIDAW
ClOWD$MAT
-.oc.. ,

•

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following telephorw. uchanfet ...

.... _·-

-c-..----

...._.......,. ::~~.
,......_. ...... .
!C:e:="·
....__
..... ,.,_.._,
............. :;:::::........_.......,_
_,_

..

....~-.o.­

··--

lU -~-

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipo(is, Ohio 45631

..

8-13 lfn

nal /dress .

Direclions,

Jlolder IIIII

n. Daily Sentinel
H 1b1wn BMI., Woodlldo.

Lillie lhi11g;
arc \'llqrth 'Alot
I

You Don't Hove To Look Far
To Spy the Best Buys In
!he Clasll(&lt;eds .

the C/a;si{ied Section 1

608

E. Mainlo.wli
POMEROY;O.

992·2259

A SHORT WAIT - Only a limited number of
Saturday's Middleport Block Parry goers could
enjoy COSI's Stardome exhibit at one time.

Groups were admitted to the exhlbll every
15-mlnutes. Here, several Individuals walt their
I urn to go Inside.

Add lt .051or;

The 941h blrlhday of I va
Johnson was observed reccnll y
wit h a dinner parry followed b)'

homemade icr cream at her

WIJO IS THAT BEHIND THOSE FOSTER
GRANTS? -It's Ramora Young of Pomeroy , hut
don't tell anyone. Ramora, a member of Syracuse
Elementary PTO. · was on hand at Saturday's

Middleport Block Party to help sell buttons for thr• ,
school. Her whole outllt was covered with buttons,
each bearing a popular slogan.

home.
Cards and glfls wer~ present('(!
to her . All endlng were Mr . and
Mrs Howard Thomas. Mr. and
Mrs . Charley Smith. Mrs. Doy le
Knapp. Mrs. J. R. Murphy ..
Peggy. Mrs. Joseph Eva ns. Ty '
son and Jonatha n , Robert
Murphy. Robbie. Gi nn)' and
Chad. Mr. and Mrs . Greg Da,· ls
and Cassa ndra. Mr. an d Mrs .
Harley .Johnson. Tammy. and
Mr. and Mr. Jerry H oi!~)' and
Ca lvin lee.
Mr. a nd Mrs . Donald Ru ssell
spenl a week recently In F lorida
wllh her father and while I here

v isited

many area

poi nt ~

of

interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Char ley Smith
were Sunday vis lto t·.&lt; of Mr. and
Mr s. Harley Smith , Kanauga .
Mr. and M rs. T erry .John son
were Thursday visitor s of M r .
and Mrs. Har ley .Johnson a nd

Tamm y.

"·

Public Notice
.ORDINANCE 1188·87
Be it ordained by the

GIANT BUBBLES - El&lt;~ ven·year-olds Sandy
Whitt of Middleport, at left, and Ronda Raymond
of ·Albany, w er e among the many youngsters at

Saturday's Middleport Block Party who enjoyed ·
COSI's bubble making activities.

Senior Center provides activities
The M eigs County Senior Cili·
zel)s Cenler. Pomeroy. has lhe
following activit ies sc heduled for
the week of September 21·25:
Tuesday - Chor u s, 1·2.
Wednesday - Social Security
representative. 10 a.t'n .·noon;
knilllng circle, 10 a.IIJ.· noon. In
which volunteers will be present
to instruct beglimlng knlllers and
tell advanced knitters how lo
read patterns and Instruct more
detailed work: bingo, 1·2 p.m .;
bOwling, 1:30 p.m .; and bridge,
1·2.
Thursday - Blood pressure
clinic, 9:.30·11: 30 a.m.; ceramics ,
10 a.m .·2 p .m.
Fi-iday - Round and ·squae
dance, 8·11 p .m ., with music by
True Country. Admission $1.50
per person.
The Senior Nutrition Program

m enu for ! he week Is:
T uesday - Beef and noodles.
Harvard beets, cole slaw and
cream p ie.
W edn es da y Chill, peanut
buller sa ndwic h, pineapple, cot·
!age cheese and cake.
Thursday - Liver and onions,

'

m as hed potalies. carrots and
apple crisp.
Friday - Chicken patty sand·
wlch. baked beans, ma caroni
sa lad and orange section.
Choice of bever age ava ilable
with e.ach meal.

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

1AR, NOSE &amp;.THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992·2104
(304) 675·1244

.

Council of the Village of
Middleport that the following Chapter &amp;D!i it hereby
adopted :
' 505. DANGEROUS AND
VICIOUS DOGS: DOGS
RUNNING AT LARGE .
(1) A. " Dangoroua dog "
means 1 dog that, without
provocation, and subject to
subsection Ia~ 11} B. hereof,
has chased or approached in
either e menacing fethion or
an apparent attitude of attack. or has attempted to
bite or otherwise endanger
any person , while that dog is
off the premises ol · ita
owner. keeper. harborer and
not under the reasonable
control of its owner, keeper,·
harborer or some other
responsible person , or no·t
phytically restrained or con·
fined in a locked pen which
has a top. locked fenced yard
or other locked enclosure
which has a top.
B. " Dangerous dog" does
not include a police dog that
has chaeed or approached in
either a menacing fashion or
an apparent attitude of at tack. or has .attempted to
bite or otherwise endangar
any person while the police
dog is being used to anilt
one or more law enforce·
ment officers in the perfor·
mance of their official
duties.
121 "Menacing fashion "
means that a dog would
cauee any pereon being
chased or apprqachad to
reasonably believe that the
dog will ceuH physical
· injury to that per.un.
131 "Poli.,..dog" mean• a
dog th1t h11 been tr1ined ,
end may be ul8d, to eSiil1:
one or more law enforcement officers in the perfor-

mance
dutiu .

of their official

(41 A. "Vicious dog"
meana 1 dog that, without
provocltion and subject to
oubMCiion tal j4) B. hereof.
maeta any of the following :
B. ' "VIciou• dog" does not
include either Of the

following:
1. A pollee dog thet hao

Court , CouNo. 26677 .'Ha·
rol,. H. Blackston , 36160
Rt.tc;;ilspring•

dog.

(51 " Without provoca·
tion" means that a dog was
not teased, tormented. 0{
abused by a person, or that
the dog was nol coming to
the aid or the defense of a
person who was not · en gaged in illegal or criminal
activity and who was not
using the dog as a maans of
carrying out such activity.

!OAC 956.111
(b~ No owner, keeper or
harbort~r' of any female dog

shall permit it to go beyond
the premises of the owner.
keeper or harborer at any
time the dog ia in heat,
unless the dog is properly in

adequately Jestrained;
{21 While th•t dog is off the
promises of th e owner,
keeper o; harborer , kee p It
on a chain-link luash or
tether that is not more than
six teet in leng th and addi ·
tiona lly do at least one of the
followiflg:
A . Keep that dog in a
loc ked pen which has a top ,
locked fen ced yard or other
locked enclosur e which has
a top ;
B. Have the leash ortether
controlled by a person who
is of su.itable age and diacre·
tion or securely attach. lie or
affix the leash or tether to
the ground or a stationary
object or fiuure so ·that the
dog is adequately restrained
and station such a pe rson in
close enough proximily to
that dog so as to prevent it
from causing Injury to any
person;

C. Muzzle that dog .
{e) No owner, ke eper or
harborer of a vicious dog
shall fail to obtain liability
insurance with an iniurer
authorized to write liability
insurenco in this State pro·
viding coverage in each
occurrence, subject to 1
limit, exclusive of interest
and costs, of not leas than
fifty thousand dollars
1860.000) because of damage or bodily injury to or
death of a perSon caused by
the vicious dog . (ORC
966.22)
(f) 11} Whoever violates
subsection {b) or (c) hereof is
guilty of a minor misdemea·
nor for a first oHer)el and a
misdemeanor of the fourth
degree for each subsequent

No owner, keeper or
harborer of any dog shall fail
at any time to keep it either
physically confined or res trained upon the premiael of
the owner, keeper or harborer by a leash. tether.
adequate fence. supervision
or secure enclo1ura to prevent escape or under reasonable control of some
person .
offense.
(d) No owner. keeper or
(2} In addition to the
harborer of a dangerous or penalties prescribed in sub·
vicious dog shell fail to do
section (f) (1) hereof, if the
either of the following :
offender is guilty of a
~ 1 ) While that dog is on the
violation of subseCtion lbl or
premillt of the owner. (c) hereof. the cOurt may
keeper or harborer:. securely order the offender to per·
confine it at all times In a
sonally supervite the dog
locked pen which has a top,
that he owns, keeps or
locked fenced yard or other harbors, to cause that dog to
locked enclosure which has complete dog obedience
a top, except thilt a danger- training', or to do both.
•
au• dog may, in the alterna{g) If a violation of subaoctive, be tied with a leash or tion ldt hereof involves 8
teth8r 10 that the dog is dangerous dog, whoever

,.

19114. 21 , 28. 3to

E. Hysell.

Box

381 . Rulltlf1d. Ohio 45775.
w•s appointed· A.dminiitra·
tor of the estate of Nellie
Hysell Copeland, deceased ,
leta of Roule 1 , Middleport ,

Oh.io 45760.
Robm E. Buck.

11 · Help Wanted

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center are seeking highly
motivated registered nurses
for full and part-time employment. Current benefits include: medical and dental insurance. retirement plan; life
insurance. shift premium pay,
malpractice ir.surance. tuition
reimbursement :!nd more.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Point Pleasant. ·
Wes~ Virginia, for more information.
AA/ EOE

(9121 . 28: 11016. Jtc

NEW liSTING - MINERS·
VIllE - Buildong lot wilh
dozet wo1k already com·
pleled Eleclnc availa ble &amp; 2
walet laps. 1.69 aete can be
yours lor only $2.600.00.

ROOFING

949-2263
or 949-2168

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tr•••111iulan
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6· 11-tl c

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
114 E Moln St.
Pomet oy
Behind C1ty Halt

ANN ' S
Gilt Shop &amp; Toy Store
Collectors ilems ,
Costume Jewelry,
Act ion Toys . Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes
Open 10 A.M . to 4 P.M.
Mon . lhru Fri. or by
Appo ~n tm ent

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE •••
•Child ' s Birthday
Par1)1
•Wedding
•Parents' Anniversary
•Baby Shower

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

A t C Service
All Major 8i Minor
Re pairs
NIASE Certijied Mechanic

"At Reasonable

•Family Reunion
•Any Special

Whol e-sale &amp; Retail
· 8-10-1 mo. pd.

PH.

992~'6959
!H8· 1 mo.

BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour
5·6 pm-Drinks 50¢
VCR TAPE RENTAL

w: VA. lOTTERY
CARRY-OUT

CHISTII, 01110•
•HOME BUILDING

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic: Organs
• Mobile service

degree. (ORC 96&amp; .99)
01 That . all vicious doge

1124 East Main St.

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

REFERENCES
rhont Day or heni•gt

8-20-1 mo. pd.

8-14·87-1 mo.

0 VINYl

SIDING
•AlUMINUM SIDING

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

*BlOWN IN

VinylS. Alum . Siding

INSUlATION

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling ·

BISSELL
SIDING CO •.
New Homes Built
"Free

Pomeroy
HOURS: Tue.-Wed..Fri.
11 o.m. ta J p.m.
lonclay: 1 p.m.· I p.m.
ly Chan" or' Appointment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

985-4141
GINRAI CONTUC1011

9·18·1 mo.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG

Estimates~"

614·843-5248

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

REA50NAILE • Rt:UAill

No Sunday (ails

Roofing of All Types
Worked in Home Areo
· 25 Years

FREE ESTIMATES
CALl

1·614-843·5425

3-11·1fn

BOGGS

•I -

(;ul II !'.

R!AIONABLI PRICII - TRY US!
CJ -18 · 1 mo.

RADIATOR
We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks,

SALIS &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO
Authoriuo~

John Deere,

Now Holland, lush Hog
Form Equipmtnl
Doolsr

Fer111 E,alp111ent
Part• &amp; Sentlea

1·3·'86 lie

·'

KEN'S

PLIIMIING &amp;HEA nNG
Now location:

APPLIANCE

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

PAT HILL·FORD
992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1 - 13-tfc

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Rooting aild gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electricol
wo rk

(freo Estimates)

SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

985-3561

SIGN UP NOW FOR
BOW &amp; WREATH MAIING

16141992· 3718" 992 · 1150
Mitldlepor t • Alherts ·Por flmou th

1· 19· 1 mo. pd.

.GEARY
BODY SHOP

V. C. YOUNG Ill

S50 PAGE SIRIET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15-'86·fc

992-3537
. !HI-87

EAGLES CLUB· POMEAO\',Cfjl)

THURS. 7P. ~·EI1:45
SUN.,2 P.ll·EI 1:45
'

v.w.

PARTS

NEW AND USED
WIDE

,

PARTS and SERVICE

1· 13·1 mo.· pd.

•Walhetl •Diahwashen
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

tmp loyment
Serv tces

LaSALlE GAlLERY
Middteport-992· .. ~

: ~

-

~

.:s

:-:::--=:--:-:----· .,

-::

12

.. •

Situations

,. :::,

..

Wan1ed

· "

Older min want• to move in wrtt. ··,
tomeone who will help care lor ..:..
him. In Gallipolis. Call

c•• .

15

.

,

Schools
Instruction

-.

••

Piano ll!ll!isons. beginning and ~ :
intermedi1te studanll. Cell .."".
Tereu Davis et 614-81!17-838,1.•,. •

-- - - -.,..-----:.._.•".
.,'! .
4
1nB~W~a~n~~~d~to~D~o~~.:~

- -----_,;,····
.-..
~

I•

....,

Jim 's Odd Job Servic• pelntinQ. ~
carpenter work, sun deck , aidine;-'
rooting. Call 614- 379 -2418. " ·..,. ·
' ~~~
Quality roofing. Free etl. , ,,
tquare. Contact Randy at 614- ·

0; '

11

Help Wanted

" Hiring! Government jobs· your
area. • 1 5.000. t88, 000. Call
602-838-8885. Ext. 606".

Excellent income ·for part time
home atseml!'lv work. For info.
cal\312-741 -8400, Ext . 313.
A c r~all v.t ~~~~art !ID g .tk(l~trl.tnc...: .

Nfllll Wing Ho1111 P,Hia
IAIEN FACEMYER
Ind. Dtcoroting Com;ultant

39 504 lrodbury Rd.
Middlopart, Oh. 45760
8-24·1 110.

Televison Advertising needs
high energy person• lor the
Gallipolis area. Pouible further
management opportunity . Parttime, full· time. baae and commission. Call 9-5. 304 -7!57 7B8t .
GET PAID for reading books!
$100.00 p• title. Writ1: ACE 338, 2 Pima. Naperville, Ill .

60540.

Gallipolis area-Sales 1kllls necellary. Computer training preferr8d . Mull be abieto daal with
public. Soma travel involved.

Giveaway

448-8957.

Trailer rooft painted. Reuon•
ble rltH. For free estimate call
Bill 614· 246-9264 .

Haul and Stac~lflrewood. J30 1
load . Call Ed at 614-446 · 3978.
Mature lady to ·baby til in h•
home . for 1 child. Mon. -Fri.

Addieon·Bula'llille area . Call '

614-367-7813.

Would like Jo do babytittinu in
my home, near North GallieHigh
School . Cell614· 388 ·9091.

Can do light hauling and roofing.

Reuonable retes . Marion
Snider . 614-949-21129.
Grover• Lawn Mower Repair.

Will pick up and deliver. Good
used mowers for u le. Call
614· 742 · 2393 or 614-742 ·

3091 .

Send resume to Box T·910 c/ o
Gallipolit Oiily Tribune 825 3rd .
Ave . Gallipolit, Ohio 4&amp;831 .

2 adorable black kittana. 7 wks.
old. Boy &amp; girl. Need a gafld HORSE SCIENCE PROGRAM
COORDINATOR - Respontibili·
home. Call614 -367-0883.
tin include: Coordinating and
6 Spaniel mixed puppies to good teheduling horte tcience pro·
home. Call evenif'!gS 61 4-446- gram actlvitin: animal c•e.
equipment and horse facility
7054 .
m.intenance; teaching 111igned
Two· 7 wk. okl melekitlens,litter clatses; development of traditrained, very frhHldly . Must flnd tional and non-traditional deliv·
a home thit week. Callll14-446· erv modea; developing and
cerring·out new horae acienca
2467.
releted programt; horte aci.nce
5 klttent to giveewey. Different and related fi.,.d b•ed atudent
colors, short St long hair. Call reCI'Uitment and job plecement;
detlv•rv of private and public
614·446· 7075.
honemanthip lesaont. Auo English Mini-,lop Rabbitt-male. ciate DegrM in Animll Science
Needs excellent home. C.ll or related field dllired with
Bachelor'• Degree JWef•red .
1114-446-4838 .
Minimun of three years relevant
3 m•lek ittens. 'tO· 12 weeka old. work exparienc;:e required and
Litter trained. Tame. Cell 614- taeching experie!"ce deairad .
Contact Personnel Office. Hock246·9572. .
ing Techftitat College, NeltonFree to good home. 8 week old vllle. Oh 46764; (11141 713·
puppies. Will be small doga. 3611 . Deadline to apply
September 23, 1887. AN
304-676-6009.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER.
Bt~utiful 8 wee+t old kittens.
304 · 87~·6224 .

6

Center, apply personnel office . •
Pleuant Velley Hoap, 304·675:• :
4340. AA· EOE.
...~ ..
AVON - All areas. Call Shirley.';."

Wanted to buy: Long Wood. Call Will care for; persons with!::
anytime- C 6 R Firewood. Call nervous or mental ditorders and..: .
. ald•ly in my prlvllte home. Elim ... ,
614-367-0669 .
Home, Middleport. Ohio. 814- ~·
W•nted to buy- stetionary exer- 992·6873.
-·
.cise bike. Ca ll 814-446-1 183.
Have a video tape mede ot :
Wanted to buy flathing arro~ child' • binhd..,. party, wedding,
perent'a anniversary, beby
sign. C1ll 614·246· 6582.
ahowers, tamify reunion or any
special occasion. Call 814·992- ·
Buying daily gold, tilvar coins. 6969 .
ring•. jewelry, sterling were, old

c.u 614 ·992· 6308.

Bridal Registry and
most complete line of.
Wedding Flowers and
Ac~ssories in this area

Sales

month Bill sur -

R.N . application• now beii'JQ
accepted for full time politton, _
Ple11ent Vellev Nuraing Care .,.

menager614-3:67-0161 .

of land loceted In Meigs County.

VVONNf SCillY

An nou nee men ts

pr.se.
C. F. Moll , Mgr.;· R. Crtmeant Field
Solu Mgr., Pl111 ASIOCIOte l
lnformatien and lra,hur•

La Salle Gallery, Middlepon
needt ulu peuon experienced
in handicrafts a"d willing t o--, ....
a ccept rHponalbilitv. Appty in:'·-:
peuon Mon.-Sat., 9 :30-4 :30 . • ::·"

Fairly late model Chrysler product. good condition. low mileage. Phone 61•-266-6038 .

Interested In buying 2 to 5 acres

IE WEDDING CONSIITAfl1

441 B.e&lt;h II.
Middltport, Oh. 45760

th~ en;t of the

Immediate opening for expe-...'"
rienced cook, 9 :00-3:00. Mon.·
Fri. Pav commenaurt~te with
experience. Send r11ume to
Dilily SentineL Box 729R ,
..
Pomeroy. Ohio ,

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

2328 .

.JANET V'INO\'

16141 992·5751

Recording and
strum8n ts for Home and
Commercial u se. Monitors
to display Furnace an d A ir
Cond. Hours or M in. oloper ·
ating time. Valuable Data
that allow5 Da ily Goals to be
set. Complel ely eliminates

Earn excellent money in ho mt
••embly work. Jewel.rv. toyt '
and ottlera. FT and PT Av•jl. _Cilll·
iodavl 1-518-4&amp;9- 3&amp;48 !toll·""
retundable) DEPT It 822 24 hr• .;

Wanted to buy; Sllmdingtimber.
Call 814-379-2758 .

Wanted to buy. atanding timber.
Call AI Tromm at 814-742-

IIIILIY HOUIION

4

Get ·plkl tor reading bookil
1 100. per title. Write: ACE ·31 B, -•
2 Pima, Napervrlle, IL 60540 . ..

992·3476.

IASIET WEAVING ond
STENCiliNG CLASSES

Current 53¢ lb .
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheets

o'
Con trol ln-

227-1!10.-

" HIAINGI Government jobl . · ..,:
your aru. t16 ,000 · S8B.ooo . ....
Cell (6021 838 · 8886 . EJtT .. ,.
1203"
•

coins. large currency . Top prtcet . Ed Burke't Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middlel)ort, Oh. 614-

Purchasing all
types of
non-ferrous scrap

SELECTION
All MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742~2315

All Makes

,, f~;&gt;). ...,j
' ·.' [!!.'
:
.,, '4

5/ 1/ tln

992-6215 or 992-7314

.

D~ u I ,;r. --'!:·

.;~OJ ~'J' I ~;";"l!.
·. If'r 1 Lf/./!h

c
•M•
s
Manufacture and

gifts-cell for fru catalog 1 -800·

2282.

Coll&amp;14·446·3159.

742·2027

CONIIM!t MONITOR SYSTEMS

Friendly Home Partia hat open··
ingt tor man1gers i nd dealers I~
your ltll . Larg~t liu in 5)11rty
plan·free kit·brand new Chritt·
mat cataloQ·toy. gift. and home
decor catalog. Over BOO items.
Top commi11ion end ho.,ess

Spear•. 304· 1!176-1429.

WANT EO TO BUY : Ut&amp;d wood
&amp; eoel heatan . Swain 'a Fumtture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis.

RESIO ENTIA L/ CO MM ER CIAL

lb.
9· 1H mo.

80&amp; -817-8000 Ext. R-980! fo r

t~:.:::..:'.":od~•::•::'_::":''::_·- - - -

Bukk-Ponti.c,

Junk Auto '• with or without
motors . Call 814· 381 -9303.

FREE ESTIMATES

34¢

clean

191 1 Ea t t•n
Ava., Gallipolll. Call 614· 446·

Let Us Fence '(au I•

40¢lb,

Government Jobs . e1 8.040- •
'59.230 yr. Now hiring. Call

AVON - All areas. CaH Marilyn
WeiNer 304 -882- 2845.

TOP CASH patd for ' 83 model
and newer used cart . Smith

FENCE COMPANY

located at Corner of
Rt. 143 and Rl. 7,
Pomeroy

.

9 . Wanted To Buy

814 -446 -3872

ACCENT

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

446 -3624.

Catipns for •vailable R . ~ . :~
positions.
'
· o~

Jim Mink Chev .·Oida lnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

IO·B·tlt

.,

th• firtt of October. Would likl •
to have ttyliat with their OWl'
clientele. If intar..ted cell for
iriterview· Lind• Garratt 814-

dation sales, 304-773-5785 .

uted cers.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

)' f1

One of tha Tri·StltH fwtnt
grownlng chain in now hiring a
few good people for fuiJ.tlme
work. No experience requlr•
flpible hourt. c:omplete trlining
and compettve pey and b...t'rts. ~ ~
To achedule your interview c..- : ..
IIS14· 448·11411aft• 9 :00AM .• -

Orivi!H' mechanic to make loc~"·-~
deliveriet in Miligt County .: ,..
Write experience &amp; qualifica- · ....
tions to The ·Oaily $tntinel. Box :_...
729 S , Pomeroy, OH 457.18 . . -:

We pay caah for late model

992-3410

.

STAAT IMMEDIATELY

ville. i• currently accBpting appll· .....

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioneer ,1.
cented in Ohio and Watt Vi rgi-

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SER~ICE

BINGQ.

lCUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

B

4-16· 86:Hn

PH.

dry well. C.ll

114-441·0824.

Arcadia Nurting Center. Coo1· -:

nia. Estate, antique, farm, liqui-

1

mayor's office on forms .provided and that a $6 ,00
fee shall be charged for thia
r.egistration .
(k) Whoever violates sub·
sect~on (jJ hereof is guilty of 1
a m1sdem~anor of the firlt
degree.
(I) That this ordinance shell
take effect on the earliest
date provided bv law .
Passed this 14th day of ,
September, 1987.
Dawey Honan

10 families.

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Certified licensed Shop
9·10·1 mo, d.

Aluminum Cans

RAILROAD
JUNCTION
cunoN. w. VA.

Sept. 21 tt. Large communlty-

Pri.ces"

#1 Copper

•Cement Products
"' l u u :"\o mt •
\\",··\t '

Occasion

Call (6141 992 ·7204

•Pictures
•Potte ry

Yard sales on Leon-Baden Ro.d .
Monday thru Saturday, starting

Day or Night

"DOC" VAUGHN

Someone to

_..·•

-~-------'''

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

CALL 992.6756

·

&amp; Vicinity

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

SYRACUSE, OHIO

MONDAY ihru SATURDAY

lrRl(UIE, OHIO
•Ohio Souviners
•Music Bo•es
•Candles
•Wooden Gifts

Thurs . and Fri., Sept. 24, 26 . !i
fam ily. Furn itura, drapila, toya
and more. Next to State High-

··.. ,...,,t·Pieiisaii·t·.. ···

BISSELL
BUILDERS

DAILY 10 AM·6 PM

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

.......P.omerov .....-....
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity ·

BUY - SELL- TRADE
8 ·7 · 1 mo.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Now Open

For Bulluu

cupboard,

way Garage.

IDIIY [. (l(l.t.N D. 111.. ... 997-6191
JUN TRUmU ........... 949 - 2b60
OOt1J( TUii:NIII ........... ~91 - 5Mi
TRACY Rlfflf ............. 949-- 3010
OHKL ................ 9'l2· 22S9

Rt ·O~en

Hooti•

bookcBH, tabln, atoneware,
kitc hen collectibles, o!attware,
toDia, Iota mora. Cententrv
Townhouse. Sept. 24.

Ph. 949·2969

4·2 2·87·110

TUPPERS PlAINS - Brick
ranch lhal has everything'
Full basemen! wolh linished
rec . room. I ~ bath s, beauli·
lui k1tchen , forma l dmrn~ 3
bed1oom s. oa k 111m . qualily
wmk: Spacoous lol. 2 car
·garage. patio. Excellenl con·
'
dillon. $68.000.00.

RlAllOR

Antiquet,

lt. 7 and lashan
HRS : 1 Z :00 -6:00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED SUNDAY

RUTlAND - A I 'h sl ory
home w1lh 3 bedrooms. en·
closed honl po1ch. eq uipped
kilchen , storage lxlildrn g and
part basemen!. $21.000.00...

AlB

coffH tlbl., be!:~ · ate. Alto v~rd
sale items.

PARTS • SERVICE

0

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

E\Hirgreen Qn

out Rt.
141 . . tat.
Sept .end
22,23
,24·
9·6.
Dinette
tablet,

Repairs on All -Makes
Transaxle Repair.s ·
LocatH Halfway Bttw11n

APPOINTMENT' $39.500.00.

Business ·Services
Roger Hysell
Garage

·~

old Rt. 180 .

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAll ENGINE
I CENTER

SYRACUSE - Bnck and
l!ame !anch lype home wrth
basemen!. One CaT garage. 3
bedToom&gt; on level large lot.
l.a1ge fenced rear play 81ea.
Home is rn excellent condll&gt;on
1n a good tocalion. CALL FOR

..

(304) 675-4340

Probate Judge
Lana K . Neue'lroild. Clerk

dog, that he owns. keepa or
harbors. lo cause that dog to
complete dog obedianc•
training, or to do both, and
the coun may order the
~ffe~er to obtain liability
Insurance purauant to eub·
section te} hereof . The court,
in the alternative. may order
the ~angerous dog to be
humanely destroyed by a
licensed ~t~~eterinariaf'!. the
Dog Warden or the humane
society.
{h) If a violation of subtec tion ldl . hereof involves 1
vicious dog, whQever vio ·
lates · that subsection · is
guilty of one of the
foll owing :
11 J A misdemuno r of the
,,lit degree on a first offen 11 .
.Additionally, the coun may
order the vicious dog to be
humanely destroyed by a
licensed veterinarian, the
Dog Warden, or the humane
society .
(2~ A milde_meanor of the
~i~lt degree if the dog causeS
InJUry Othar then killing or
serious injury, to any person.
(i} Whoever violates sUb·
a&amp;ct~on (e) hereof is guilty of
a misdemeanor of the first

(9). 21 , 28, 2tc

polnled E"ecutor of the es tste ol Je..ie L. Saunders.
decta•ed. late . of 36282
Rocksprings Road, Pom ·
erov. Ohio 45789.
Robert E ~ BuelL
Proba1a Judge
Lena K . NlsHiroad , Clerk

Lewrenc:1

each subsequent oHenaa.
Additionally, the court may
order the offender to personally supervise the dangerous

Council President

eP·

NOTICE OF ·
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
· On Stptomber 15. 1987.
i.n the Meigt County Probaite
Court. Cooo No. 26830,

violates that autJ•ection il
guilty of 1 misdame.nor of
the fourth degree on a firet
offense and of a misdemea·
nor of the third degree on

Jon P. Buck,
Clerk-Treasurer

Pom-

w01

Public Notice

Public Notice

shall be registered at the

Road.

eroy. Ohio 45769.

S kldmor~ .

P ublic Notice

•

..

On Sepfember 8 , 1987, !n
thl! Meiga County ~robate

••
•
•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

duties;
; 2-. A dog that has killed or
caund serious injury to any
Person while a person was
committing or attempting to
commit a trespau or other
criminal offenae on the
property of the owner.
keeper or harbore r of the

lcJ

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

: Has Now Moved To :
•
•
: 319 South Second Ave. :
•
:
Middleport, Ohio
:
•
•
:
992-6282
:

ki lled or ca used serious
injurv to any person or that
has caused Injury, other than
killing or serious injury, to
any person Whila t he pollee
dog is being u sed to assist
one or more lf!!w e nfo rce ment officers in the perfor ·
mance of their official

188oh.

Public Notice

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••
••
••
••
•••
••
• Plumbing &amp; Heating ••
••
••
!FORMERlY OF POMEROY)
••
••
•
•

Public Notice

$5.900.00.

7154-Ar:kl lhis darling
12" mouse to a collection
of &amp;tufted pets . Has cute

of the brlde·el ecl .
Sharon Haw ley and Tammy
Morton assisted with the gills
wit h M s .. Morton making lhe
bouquet of bows. Others sending
gi ft s were .Janice Danie ls, Nora
.Jordan. Dorolhy Anthony. VIcki
Morton. Dol Ncut zllng , Susie and
Jcn nlf ~r llPck. Qulda Chase.
Rhoda Hall. Mar)' Hu£hcs. Paula
Swishc1·. Mar)' WPbster , Pam
Crow . Marge Barr, Darla Tho·
mas . Jerry Pu llin. Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Johnson. K enny and Sue
I mboden. a nd M ·arjorle

CARTER'S

lOT NEAR 5 POINTS
He re is whal you hav e been
wanlon g. lev el buoldmg lol
with wat er &amp; electnc availa·
ble near 5 Poinl s. Destrable

locatiOn &amp; one acre lor

moth~r

•

tal. smal l lol and a home
wilh potenlial PRICEO TO
SE l l AT $15.900 00

PATTERNS

Bridal shower ·conducted tn area

Wolfe Pen note.r

view &amp; a low pnce. You can
move nght in or use as a ren-

cuns

•

Pam Ri ebel. brlde·elecl of
Fow lN. Louise and Tammy
Bryce Buckley, was honored
Monon. Louise Thomp so n .
wlrh a brid al shower reccntlv at
Sharon Hawl c\·. Lori Louks.
the Middleporl First Baptist
Lillian Dcmosky. Belly Denney,
Chu rch. The shower was hosted
Marjorie Walburn . Elizabeth
by Corri ne Ambrose. June Kloes Slave n, Freda Edwards . Si!&lt; Van
and Fran Parker.
Maire, Coke Ambrose. Fran
Games were played with prizes
Parker. and Carolyn Davis.
awarded l o Ellza bel h Searles.
Dorolha Ri ebel. Ruby W arso n.
Na di ne Bar ron and Audrey Gal·
gra ndmot hers of the bride-elect:
!ney. Re!reshmenl s or in sc ribt·d · Dar lene Bucklcv and Henrl ~llu
ca ke, "" Besr Wi shes Pam and
Ba iley. m ot her ~n d grandmother
Bryce". punch. nu rs and mini s of the prosper! iv~ b r idegroom.
were served.
Aud rcv Ga rrn cy. Lillie Hubbard .
Olhers all ending were Sarah
Jra n ·Thomas: Nola Swisher.
Martha Kll'in. Glenna Riebel.

NEW LISTING - MIDDLE·
PORT - This older 3 bed·
room home leatum a r~ver

: .,.,."'·

L Writesel

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ~STIMATES

•

FREE OFFER
3 Cran Bocl&lt;s (value $8.85)
when you Older one ollhe
$2.95 boclca lllld below.
It t-HU'pln Crochet
115-Eaay Ripple Crochet
117-M or tlndll!lt*tl
13S-Oola and Clolhes

Howard

NEW- REPAIR

111

'" 11m.l'llnl Nlmt. AddNa.
21p, sa. Pllllm ~U~t~Jor,

at the Middleport Block Party writing people's ,
names In Chinese.

residence

Moving SMe: 33 Holcomb Hill

details. !Issue pahem lor
Mouse &amp; outfit.
Each panarn S3.25 plus
IS~ poslagel handling.
(NY. teSidenls add sales Ia! )
Send lo:

IS THAT MY NAME?• - Athens resident Wan
XIng, formerly of Beijing, China, spent Saturday

Wed. 8a Thurt .o Sept. 23 81 24 .
Cox

_1_1_H_•_Ip_w_._n_t._d_

Hair atyllst needed to ttlrt work ...

&amp; Vicinity

3;. (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

n1'-~

0 &gt;~

Yard Sale

.......Giillipolrs..........

~ Licensed Clinical Au:;oiogist

)

:tt.~':.":.

w-o. .-

IU- M -

..

Lott in th• Mechanic St. erea.
long·helred femele black elf
with 4 white pewa and white
throat. May hiiVe flea coll•r on.

7

·-ca: LISA M. KOCH, M.S. .

·-·- '

~

=-(~71 .

On M'O~I I'WIU~IIIIIIO
H ' NAM UIIH\0. .
I 00 • M OIOIOD&amp;•
IIIO•M IVflll&amp;&gt;
I DO • M WlO~UO to&gt;"

..

tl-f_._._
:
-·
..::::::::.·

IIID

Lolt and Found

Answer. to Muffin. C•ll 814882-2121.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Mold.s • Interpreting Setvices

..

..,._'* 1•·•-• ••-•

IOU'I

6

LPN for private duty, part· time.
start lmmed!Mefy. Need good
cllnlcel tkllls. 11.00 per hour. Pt.
Pleaum area. Cell Mr. Hutchlnt

Loot and Found

lOST: Gray Male Weimaran•

1 · ~04· 757·78&amp;6.
FrkiiY onlY .

GET PAID for reeding bookel
S100.00 pw title. Write: ACE-

LOST: Aluminum exttntiOn

10~0 .

117A, 2 Pima, Naperville. IL

Ohio Vlllev Tire now hM Hunt•

Old outboard motori.' eny

D·1 00 Comp.rterlald llignment
m-.
NIIIPM. .
tiona fur whlll alignments. Call

Price depertcla upon oomldon.
Call814-441·1102 Hk tor Dan .

..

tolling

30,..171·1332. Cloi!IPotloFo"V·

wv.

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
.. '•
THE OtiiO VALLEY PUBLISH -·
lNG CO . recommend&amp; that you
do busineu with people yoU
know, and NOT to aend money"' •
lh roygh the ~~~ until you have.·
in\lestigated ~ ~· offering .
_

"BUSINESS MAN ". Own your
own Steel Bu ilding Dealers hip.

Major m1nulecturer selecting

de aler in available areas. High
potential profits-Part Time Or '
Full Time. (303)769·3200 EXT . ,:
2407.·

JTPA

HIGH SCHOOL DROPOUTS

Eam While You Learn If you are between the ages of 1 8
· 21 yun old end would like tC?"

receiv e your GEO, contact the
Job Service Office at 225 lth
Street in Point Pleeaent or c..l
304· 875· 2770 between Sept.
21 - S81)t. 30 for detail• on how

to apply . An E£0 Employer.

..
;,

., ,

'
_;

1

23

Professional
Services

- - - - - - - ' -...
'"
Hunh Sewing Mechine &amp; Vac·

114·441-3U1 .

c:ondi110n·tlrvloeble or not .

.21 ·

9·4 Mondav·

Dog in Eno area. Childs pet, CaH
811·445·449&amp;.
l•dcler. , Rt. 110 •r11. Call

Financial

cuum Sw•eper R1pelr. P•ts in
stoCk. AH work guar•nteed. Ai
1'811onaUy pricea. If you hiwe fl
tried everywhere el11 end faMed, , tv• me • try . Cell 114'- 441- ·

488.

'

.

--;

-'·

�.,

r

r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-,a-The Daily Sentinel
49

LAFF·A·DAY
31

Homes for Sale

Will h ..p f i nance or land con -

tract. 10 yr. old houM. 3 Br.,
Patriot Village. C1ll 61•·•·'6·
.1 J•o. •·ta-3870.
4 HR .• lir4tJ)Iace, full buement. 3

mi. 10. of Gallipolis. t34.900.

For Lease

Newly remodeled charming 1
br., unfurnished aptt . in Gallipolit. $176- 8225 per month . Oep.
&amp; Ref. "fec1Uired. Call 614 -4462326 or 446-4426.

-Call1h1n ' s V•ed Tire Shop, 0\ler
1,000tirea, sizes 12, 13,114. 115,
16, 11.11i.,B mil• 001 Rt. 2\~ Call 614· 266-6251 . .
'\\

Kawasaki 200, 3 wheeler. 1900
or best offer. Excel. cond . Call

1400 sq . ft. commercial space,
Suitable for offices or retailing.
Corner of 2nd. &amp;: Pine. Call
614· 4415 -2326 or 446 -4425.

Plastic cistern 1t1ta approved,
plastic septic tanks, phutic
culverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jackson, Oh. 614· 2815· 6930.

Merchandise

Like new, mamtenanc. free, 2
br. ran c h, fully carpeted. 1 5 min . .

to Gallipalia or Mercerville. Call

614-266·6200

8 room home whh gara;e on 6

acres. Small woodt, gardenpasture area. County water.
Near Jackson . Call 614 -286-

~ -l '

"After the operatl'on I &amp;eel
1
twenty years younger

5447 or 988-3171 .

1

For Sale by Owner: 3 Br. house

with attached gerag:e. ec. 39
Chillicothe Rd . Call 614-446-

I.

For
by Owner: 45 br.,sq.
3
bathsSale
. Approximately
4000
h .. 25 ascres with tennis court.
$173,000. Will sell with onty 6
acre• tor $155,000. Call for
appointment 614-446-3386.

· "
fiffianCl·any, th a t 18.

Go\lernment Homn from 11 . tU
repair) . Definquent till proPerty.
Repossessions. Call 806-6876000 ht. GH -98015 for.cu"ent
repo list.
·

Handi Men Special- 6 room and
beth, attic, basement. , 10 St1te
St. Price neg. Cat! 614-9923726.
: Government Homes from &amp;1 .
. (U-Rapalr) . Also tax delinquent
1nd foreclosure properties .
• A\lailable now. For listing. call
1-315-733 -6062 EXT. G2021 .

Reduced $ 24 _500 to UO.OOO.
Surveyed and Mineral ri{lhts
37 789 acrea. Call 61 4-446·
2071 .
'

Renlals
41

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.
Adults only . References required. Off street parking. Ph.
614· 446-0338.

4 BR . haul&amp; for rent . 3 mi. so. of
Gallipolis. S300 a month plus
dap. Ref. required . Call 614~14 - 992- 2389 .
446-1615. After 5 :00PM ., call
•Modular home. Carter French · 446 -1244
· re~~idenc;;e. Corner of S . Fourth
' and Hooker Sts.. Middleport. 4 BR . houn on 1 acre. Excel
Must aee to appreciete. Call location. Ref Call A-1 Reel
Estate Broklf. Call 304-676614-992·3293.
5104 or 675-7738.
House and 1ft 1cra on Wvllis Hill
in Pomeroy, behind Kroger' s. Verv nice. 3 br. houH, Nice
n.ighborhood. ac.. gas haat,
84000. Call 614-986- 4437.
dishwasher, stove , rafrig .,
'hnch· •tvle houu with breath washer furnished . Call 614taking view of river. 3 bedrooms. 446-7026. lEASE AVAILABLE.
1'h baths. full banment. attached garage. Shown by ap· HouM-936 11t A\le . partly furnished. •200 per month. Cafl
pointment only. 614-992 -3850
614 -446-4038 or 446. 1615 or
2 or 3 bedrooms. double lof,, 44&amp;·1243.
close to schools and stores.
4 Am ., a. bath. 1928Vr Chestnut
$18,000.00. 304·676-7833.
St . S185 a mo .. $75 Oep. Call
Hout.e. 3 .15 ac. 2 bt- , total alae. 614-446 -:)870
carpet through. 1 mUe out
Foglesong · Rd . Muon, WV, 2 BR . 2 baths. S-250 per month.
Oep. r equired. Brookhart Lane.
304- na-5011 .
Call 614 -«6-4222 betweem
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM 9-6.
fl (U -Aepllir) Also Tax Dalin guant &amp; Foreclosure Properties. For Rent : 2 br .. unfurnished
Available Now. For Listing. Call house with.g•age. One mile out
1-315-733-6062, ext. GL 573. 218 off Rt. 7 . Accept one child .
1200 a month plus dap . a. ref.
GOVERNMENT HOMES for Call 614-446-9686.
t l .OO (U Repair) BUY DIRECT!
R'i.lpos &amp; Tax SEIZED propBrcin. Unfurnished house, 3 br. RodCall tod.,- for facts! 1 -518- 459- n"ey Village II . &amp;276. Call 6143546 , ext . H2284 (toll - 446-4416 after 7 :00PM .
refundable} 24 flours .
6 room house, big lot on state
highway. electric heat. Reasona ble rent. Call 614-446 -0974.,.,

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12x65 Mobile HOme. 2 br.,
carpet. stove. refrig. &amp; underpending. $1700 down and t1ke
over payments. S2800 Call
61 ,_ 245 -!5662.
1970 Elcona12Jt65. 2 br .. elec.
~eat , gas sto\le, refrig . Must
mova. Financiog pouible, 10
pBJ cent down, wtth approvad
credit . 54500. Call 614 -446 -

9956.

1979 Fairmont mobile home.
14x54. Gas heat. t6000 Firm.

Ca11614-388·9054.
1977 Fairmont Bayview .
14K70. all electric. 2 bedrooms.
central 1ir. wuh..-, dryer, stove,
refrigerator, underpinning. 614 -

3 rooms and bath, unfurnished
cottage. Electric and water paid.
4 White Ave . Call 614-446·

9779.

2 bedroom house, newly redone.
New bath. new kitcj,en For rent
as of Oet. 1. 1 month rant. 1
month sec\lrity required . Call
614-992 -5687 between 9 :00
and 5· 00.
Available Oct. 1st, New Haven,
very clean 2 br house. Deposit
and Reference required . No_
Pets. &amp;276 .00 month. 304882 -3202 .
2 br house, 3218 Howard AVe.
Accept one child. t185 00
month plus deposit. References
Required. Good location. 304·
675-6621 .

42

388-9837.

located on M orning Star Rd ..
Racine. 14x70. 2 bedroom,
family room with fireplace, living
room with sliding doors, fully
equipped kitchen . lront and ba~
porc;;hes. storage bldg, set up and
ready to move in. Two acre lot
for rent . Call after 6 :00 p.m.

614-364-4084.

Mobile H'o mes
for Rent

Furnished 2BR ., cable available,
AC ., rivlf view in Kanauga.
Fosteu Mobile Ho"m e Park. Call
614-446- 1602.
2 br .. wall to well carpet. Pri\late
lot in Gallipolis. Call 614-4461409 after 5 :00PM .

12x65 , fully carpeted. stove and
dryer included Price reduced to
t5BOO. Cell 614· 742 - 2795 or
614 -742 -2777.

2 &amp;: J br. mobile homes Call
614-446-0527 after' 2 PM.
anytime week -ends.

Patriot mobile home. Wall insu·
lated underpenning, porches ..
aii- cond . 304- 676 -7321 .

2 br , unfurnished 12x80. 1 mile
passud HMC . Oep 6 Ref.
required . Call 614- «6- 4369 or
304-675 -9760

33

All alec. 2 bt. mobile home for
rent Adults only . No pets Call

Farms for Sale

~14 - 367-

20 acre farm with 3 8R . house,
Hannan Trace Ro ad, Glenwood,
W. Va. for mbre information call
304-773 -51·18 or 773-5186
1fter 5 :00 .
Sill( acre mini -farm, fenced pasture plus woodland, one barn,
two out build!ngs, three bedroom, all electric brick ranch,
overlooking river, near town:.
Call304-675 - 7119 .

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for leape.
Downtown Pt . Pleasent. Stores,
offic;;es. A -One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304-

676-5104.

--------------- p
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
1 1/J ac lot on Jerrys Run Rd.
Apple Gro ve, with rural water.
304- 676 -2383
PRICED RIGHT - One acre
building lots on At . 2 at Ashton .
Public water and mobile homes
permitted. 304-576-2338.
One acre ~tl on Mason 80 at
Ashton, public water. mobile
tlomas permitted. f600 down . .
•150 per month, 304 -676 2338.
Ideal hunting land, 26 acr8s
wood• with newly buih cabin.
20 minute drive from Pt. Pie•
sant. Owl Hollow Rd. $30,000.
304· 675·6648 . E.R.A , Town &amp;
Country Real Estate.
Rt. 62 S ., 20A. secfuded. timber
and meadOw. Ideal hunting or ,
home tlte. 1. 5 mi. off black top.
Phone evening-weekends 304- ~

875-5699.

Apartrnent

for Rent

In Go~lciin Subdivision, cl_osa to
schools. Call 614-992- 3608 or

32

44

7438.

Traillllf for rent . 2 bedroom, all
alec. Very nice. Call 814 -4469847 or 446 -9521 .
Furnished, large living room,
bath. 3 br. Good cond . Call
614 -388-8732 .
Trailer for rent or sale. Nice and
clean . Call 614 -992 - 2367.
2 bodroom. Syracuse. 8160. ptlf
month plus utilities and deposit.
Call 614 -992-5587 or 614-

992-6732.

12•60, 2 bedroom mobile home
for rent . Call614 -992- 6694.
2 bedroom, furnished. good
clean condition . One child, no
pets. &amp;160. per month. New
Haven, 304· 882· 2466.
Mobile home1 for rent Upper
River" Ad , At. 7 . Will consider
co.,struetion workers . 614-446 -

0608.

booll-

304-675-65,2.

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom lurnlsed apt. ref and
deposit , New Haven. W. Va.,
304- 882- 3267 or 304 -773 5024.

J rooms and bath, gas heat,

(j)

Budget Transmissions: Uted re·
built, all types. Guarantee 30
days. C.sh end Carry or instal.
Call 61-- 379 -2220.

County Applian ce. Inc Good
used appliances and TV s-ets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-446 - 1699. 627 3rd.
A\le . Gallipolis, OH .

51111 ~

1976 Dodge Slant -Sill engine &amp;
~uto trans . Very 1100d con d . Still
in van . S360.· Call 6 -1 4 -388-

TO 61VF: OUT A'oJ'-1 iNFO!':·
MATIOIJ.At!OUT T~EIR
CLIE'NT?.

~APTAIN EA~Y
BANK!'

REFU~E

9074.

Harba1ife. Call 614 -448-2200
or 446- 3131 .

Furnished Efficiency I 145. Utili·
ties paid, share bath 607
·Second Ava ., Gallipolis Ph.
446- 4416 after 7PM .

Sofas and chairs priced from
S 395 to S995 . Tables $5 0 and
up to 8125 . Hlde-a-bads S390
to S595. Recliners $226 to
S376. lamps S28 to 5125 .
Dinettes 8109 and up to 5495.
Wood table w -6 chairs 5286 t o
1796. Desk $100 up to t 3 7!5
l-lutches $400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w •mattrenes
S296 and up to S395. Baby beds
$1 10. Mattresses or box springs
and
full Of twin $68. firm
188. Queen sets $2 25, King
$350. 4 drawer chest $69. Gun
cabinets 6 gun . Gas or electric
range S376. Baby mattresses
$35 &amp; $45 . Bed frames $20,
t30 &amp; King frame S50. Good
sel&amp;etion of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets, headboards &amp;30
and up to '65.

Upstairs unfurnished apartl-nent.
Utilities paid. Carpeted, no child·
ren or pets. Call614-446 -1637

2 BR . •P:ts. 6 closets. k•tcttenappl. furnished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet , new~
'p aint8d, deck. Regency , Inc.
Apts. Call 304- 675 -n3B or

676 -6104,
Furnished Apt .- 1 Br. $226.
Utilities paid. 701 4th Ave.
Gallipolis. Call 61 4-446·441 6
after 8 :00PM .
Availabel Oct. 16. 1 Br. ept. near
HMC . 1 adult. No pats. Ref. and
dep. required . 8225. • month.
Call 614-446- 47B2.
3 or 4 br .• 1 'h bath, kite: hen
furnished 5 Court St . S260 1
mo., plus utilities . Dep. &amp; Ref.
Call614-446- 4928.
F'-'rnished apt. next to library.
One professional adult only.
Parking CaH 614-446· 0338 .
2Br .. carpet , refrig . and stove.
661 3rd. A~e . 1260 a mo. plus
dep. Call 614 - 245 -9595.
Oak Wood: 1 br. apt , stove.
retrig. located close to town .
Sec. dep. • ref. Call 614 - 446 ·
2055 - Evening•.
Delu11e 1 bedroom, unfurnished.
All new eat -in kitchetl. carp_et
thru out. Prof&amp;asional person
desirable. Ca11614- 448 -4607 Ot'
446· 2602 .
Furnished eHiciencv. private and
quiet. Single working person
only . Call 614 - 446-4607 or

446-2602.

2 Sr.. carpet. Sto\IO, refrig.
furnished . Washer -dryer hookup. Water. garbage paid. Near
Silver Bridge. Call 614 -446-

lAYN E'S FURNITURE

na.

90 Days same as cash with
approved crltdit. 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat . Ph . 614 -446-

0322.

Save alat -Check us out for
carpet 1nd furniture! 9111 2
C~rpet , 160. 6 p_
i acewoodliv ing
room suit. S399. Mollohan
Furniture, Uppet Ri"ller Rd. Call
614 -446-7444 .
.'
PARSON ' S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. living wood
suites, $399.95; chest of drawers. 4 drawer - S48, 5 drawart59 .96; mattress &amp; bo~ springsfull size; ~12 coil, $149.95 set;
twin mattresses. 895
set.
TI-lE WOFIKING
MAN ' S FRIEND
Used refrigetaton . wuhers
snd drvers. Mollohan Ap ·
pl1ance. Call 614 -446 -19 57.
Valley Furniture
New and used furnit4re and
applicances . Call 614 -446 7572. Hour-s 9 -6 .

7025.

3 upright va cuum cleaners. A -1
condition 2 t ank ty pes. Un conditionally guarnteed. 3 sewin g
machines. Ca11614 -446 -1488

Nice 2 br. apt . Sto\le, refrig .,
water furnished 4 'h mi. from
Gallipolis. 1210 a mo. No p efs .
Call 614- 446- 8038.

Wooden kitc:l"\ en U ble w ith 4
chairs , &amp; glass top kit chen t able
with parlor chairs. Call 814446 -6629 after 5 :00 P~

Moctern 2 br. unfurnished apt .
No pats. Ref. required . Call

White w ooden bedroom suit,
gold trim . S2 2 5 . Call814 -446-

614-446-1873. 8-5.

1969.

Furnished apartment. two tiedroom . Two adults only , no pets.
,Deposit and reference required.
Call614- 446- 4571 .

Warm Morn1ng heater. Com pletely automatic with bl ower,
natual gas. 85 ,000 btu. See: 87
Vine Gallipolis.

Oupl811 ·646 Second 3 br ., living
room-dining room , full c arpet, '
new carpet, new kit chen &amp; bath.
Great loccation. S285 plus
utilities. C.ll614 -446-0690.

West ingh.ouse washer , 8 5 0 .
Maytag dryer, &amp;] 5. New Dressmaker portable S8'Ning mac: hine.
&amp;100. 1976 Plym outh Arrow
Mobile home lot for rent -Rout e
688 . Call 614 -446 -3 969

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room spartments at V1llage
Manor and Rivers1de Apan ments in Middleport. From
$215. including utilities. Call
614- 992-7787. EOH .
2 bedroom , upstairs, newly
remodeled Stove end refrigera tor furnished. S200. per month
plus utilities 5100 . deposit
required . Call 614 -992 -6539,
614- 992 -2433 or 614 - 992·
3489
1 bedroom apanment in Middleport, 8165. per month. Refer·
ence required. Cell 614 -992"

8763.

4 room . bath . Carpet. stove.
refrigerator. Deposit and reference required . Adultt only . No
pets Call614 -949- 2646.

King Size Bookcase Waterbed ,
complete, 5239. Mattress, Waterbed and Furniture Ware house , 98 COlumbus Rd ..
At11ens, Ohi o 45701 . 614 -59 3 ·

7191 .

Kin g 111e water bed, tulip light
heed board , good condit ion. 3
veers old. 304 - 675 -1714.

53

Corner cabinet (orig . glass} ,
$800. Chest fo drawen-t lger
maple &amp; cherry, $600 . Ch erry
night stand with rope twist legs.
$260 All from 1800' s. Excel .
cond. Call 614 -446 -7895

54 Misc. Merchandise

APARTMENTS , mobile homes,
h(uses. Pt . Pleasant and Gallipolis. 61 4-446 -8""2:21 .
One bedroom furnithed apart·
ment, ground floor. private
entrance snd parking. Outskirts
Henderson. all utilities included,
8260. 304-675-6730.

Antiques

1980 Chevette 4 ·dr., go od
second car; 14 h . jon boat &amp; o art
1162.; 1977 125 -Honda trail
bike t226 . 304 -676 -1229.

Furnished Rooms

RDoms for rent . day . week .
mont~ . Gellia Hotel. Call 614.448- 9580. Rent as low as $120
month.

SURPLUS ARMY , DENIM ,
RENTAL CLOTHING . (Carharts
1 0 pel. over c;;ost) . Or1glnal Army
Cemoullege . H .0 . '' Sam ''
Somaf"\/ille's. Old At . 21 , EastRavenswood. "Fri., Sat , Sun .,
Noon·8 :00 p.m . Other days
appointments 304 -273 - 6666.
(Kids CamfJ"flagel Green Metro.

CollapJible walkflf . Call 614·
446 -8105 or see at 1638
Chatham A\la .
Good yellow locust posts. Call
614 -266 -1902 after6 :00 PM .
HALF PRICE I FLASHING AR ·
ROW SIGNS U991 Lighted.
non -arr o w S2891 Unlighted
S249 1 Free letters! See loc1lly.
Gall t oday l Factory: 1 (8001
423 -0163, anytima.
.46 caliber Ohio 175th Commemorat ive pi stol . 8600. Call
614 -446 -9476 after 6 :00 PM
weekdays .
Wood &amp; coal keatet. Suburban.
5160. C&amp;ll 614 -319 -2436

0231 .

Dragonwvnd Canary K~nnet .
CFA Hlm•laven. Persien and
Silm... kittent . AKC Chow
pupplh. Naw tr.inens; P'rslens.
Call 814 -441 -3844 aft• 7PM .

3026 .

E11er ci se b ike, 1140. Room di·
vider, 115. Ca11614-256 - 6639.

6 wks . old. 160. 2 meta 1 Yt•

AKC Beegln,

Catalyt ic eonvertars , o nly
$89.95 Most models. Install•
tion also available. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpson A ve .. Athens , Ohio.

Ml~ad h..,- *1 . b•le on wavon.
Hey for

1985 Ca-.-ali.- wagon Auto , ps,
pb,. ac. am-fm. Clean. Call

e

Buutlfut m1le Blue PcHnt Him•
layan c:atJ AKC Pomat..-.lan.
Vorkshlra Terri• and Shltl:u
pups. 304-896-3961.

Seuonf!d o all firew oo d, call
30 4-67 5· 275 7 after 4 :30 .

Fruit

Bu!tding Materials
Block. brich . sewaf piJ]ea. windows, lintels, etc. Claude Wint en . Rio GrMda. 0 Call 614·
245 -6121 .
Co ncrete blo cks alt sizes yard or
delivefy . Mason sand. Gallipolis
Block Co.. 123 'h Pine St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614 -446·
2783.
Ready mi)l concrete and ail
concrete supplies. Call us Vetlev
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304 -773 -5234

56

Fi! rm Suppli ES
t. LIV1 ~s tock

CROSS &amp; SONS
U .S, 35 W11t. Jeckson. Ohio.
614- 288- 1461 .
Mas.-y Fer9Uson. N• l-lolland.
Bush Hog Sales&amp; S8fvlca. Over
40 used tractors to choosa from
&amp; completa line of new • uatd
equipment. Largest 1ei8C'IIon In
S .E. Ohio.

Siamese and Himalav•n Kittens
6 weeks old . Seat or Lilac Point.
Call614· 992 -7201 .
Must sell AKC Samoyed puppy
695 . Als.o AKC Sheltla S125.
304 -676 -2728 or 676· 1867.

990 David Brown. 54 hp dl•et
tractor , low hours, Locally
owned with 8 tt. bush hog
t3560 . Call814 - 286- 8522 .

919 socond. oampol;,_ can
446-4416 '""' 7pm.
--.,.- - -- - --

by Bruce Beattie

1972 Skylark Buick,
Firm, 304 -6715 -2338 .

Bars.'chaint, and sprockets to fit
almost 1ny . .w . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO .• l-lenderson,
W. Va. 304- 678 - 7421 .

1982 AMC Spirit, 4 cyl., •
speed. Own owner, ••c. cond.,
will sell or trade for 1977
through 1980 four wheel drive
truck. Phone 304- 882- 3389.

73

SIOERS EQUIPMENT CO .

Henderson , WV , 304 - 675 -

7421 .

1981 Gravely snow plow,
mower deck, rotlry plow cuhivetor. 304-773· 6011 ,

63
Office Space f&amp;-Rent : Excellent
for Attormry•. Accountant. etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Real Estate Agency .
Office Space for rent . Excel.
downtown G1llipolis location.
lnquiri• c11l 614-446-4222.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy,
Rental trail••· Call 1514- 9927479.

One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Point Pleasant. Extra
clean and niCe. Adults, no pets.
phone 304· 675-1·386.

Space for small trailers . All
hook-ups. Cable. AlsO efficiency
rooms. air and cable., Mason . .
W .Va. Call 304-773- ~661 .

In Middleport. Ohio. 2 bedroOm
furnished apt .. Also 2 rdom
efficiency apt ~ 304-882-2586.

SPACES FOR RENT - Trailer
lois. At. 1.,Locust Road, back of

K &amp; K. 304·675-1076.

Will gi\le rt110n1ble price for ' 83
to '85 Toyota 4x4 pic;kup. Mutt
ba c;lean, unebultd. low miln.
Will consld..- Nl11an. 114-441·
7013 from 4 p .m.- 9 p.m .
JttP Wagon.., 4 whHI dri\le,
V· 8, sgnd · trans .• reel good

cond. UOO. 304-&amp;76 -2704

Livestock

74

(1 :34)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Father Gooae
(NRJ (1 :55)

&lt;CRFU'IlH£5£ t:::r\'6 ...

8:30 11 ()) 1111 Valerie'• Family
(j)

Rotl ry or cabl e tool dr illmg
Most W~~eiiJ co mp lttad u meday
Pump sale• and servic e 304

896.3802

Statk.l Tree and lawn Strv•ce .
la"!fn c • u . l •o dscapmg, st um"
r em o val. 30 4 - 576 ·2 64 2 or

576 290 3

MORTY MEEKLE AND
WELL1 HE RE'5 ANOTHER 1..0-iG
SCH::XJL YEN&lt;' S TRE TCH lNG
A H EAD OF US.

YES/THINK OF ALL THE
KNO~WE'LL

ACGL.JIRE "IN fl-\ATTIME .

CARTER ' S PLUMB i N G
AND HEATING
Cor Fourt h •md Pine
G1lllpol is, Ok19
Phon e 614 -448 -38 8 8 or 6 14·
APPALA CHIAN WOOD Sl'OV E
Wood and coalnovu , i u rnace1,
and inserts. Brunc:o. A shhry,
Consolidl!lted D utckwest . Bu \',
aell, trade. 10 yrs, •~pe r81n ce In
carpenter . Call 614·898· 6121 .

84

Resident ial or co mmttrcial wir ing, New service or rapah s.
U eensed electrician. Estim at e
tree. Ridenour Electucal. 304 -

85

ELVINEY'S
Ot.lT P,T
'!H' GOSSIP
FEN...:E

--·10 TELL ME P.LL

SAIRV'S
WEODIN'!!

ABOUT

O~llard Wat er Servi ee: Pools,
Ctsterns. Wells . Delivery Any.
time. Call 614-446· 7404 -No
Sunday calls .
1

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, ~istern s. wells Pk . 614246-9285 .
R &amp; R Water Servi ce Home
cisters. wells, pools f1ll ed Formarly James Bovs Waten .Call

304-675-6370. .

Paul Rupe, Jt . Water Ser\lice.
Call 614-446 -3171 . Pools , cit t erns, wells .
Watterson ' s Water Haulin g,
reaton1ble rat es, Immediate
2,000 gallon delivery , cisterns,
pools. well , etc . call 304-676 --

.

con &amp;14-44&amp; -97&amp;1

~--------------·
1884 Honda Y-30 Magna 100.
wat..- cooled, burgandy. EM:el.
cond. Call 814-441· 2143.

PEANUTS
B7

Upholstery

1983 110 Honda 3 wheeler.

0325. Coli 1'4·246-582&amp;.

1883 lua:ukl RM 280.

Coli 614-247-3861.

•aoo.

11815 Honda ATC 70 3-whetler,
811(C. cond. •400. 304-1715-

2826.

288·249&amp;.

1986 Hondl Rebel 280, only
176 mla IVjtka Offer. 304-

Bunnle, 1for sele. Ca11614- 849-

a?&amp;-7ne.

2017.

..,

A &amp; M Cu1tom Couches end
R~pholstery, St. At 7. Crown
Ctty, Oh. 614- 256 -1470, E\le.
614 - 446.- 3438 , Op en t;laily 9 to
4 :30. Sat 9 ·30 to 1 :30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

11-ie; I&lt;NOWL...EO&lt;;ie'

9:30 1!11 111112l Deolgnlng Womll'
Mary Jo tlnds hersoll in a
bidding war for the affections
of her kids.
10:00 ()) Straight Talk
(f) Health Century Trace
triumphs and tragedies In the
fight against lntoctious
diseases.
1!11 •112l C~gney and Lacey
Cagney and Lacey aid a
schizophrenic witness.
(Premiere) 1;1
ltlJ llJJ Nawl
cr1J Evening Newo A wrap up
of today's news and o look
ahead to tomorrow's news
storlas. (t :00)
Ill CZl Benny Hill
10:30())TBA
II] Thlt Old HouM
Ill CZl Hogan'l Haroea
10:35 (I) MOVIE: Operation
· Pettlco.t (NAI (2:04)
11:00 rn Remington Steele
U ()) 1!11 ' • il2l iiJI NeWI
(J) Sp u llworid Barber saab
Series lrom San Antonio,
Texas (R)
Cfl Sign Off
II]) Health Century Trace
triumphs and tragedies In tho
fight against Infectious
diseases.
.112l Mo1111yllne Current
reports on world economics
and flnan,clal nowa with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
llJJ Honarmoonera
• CZl Love ConlltiCIIon
11:30 • ()) i1J1 Tonight ShOW
(J) SpartaC- (L)
1!11 M~~gn~~~~~, P.l.
0 Sparta Tonight Action
pecked sports hlghllUhts with
Nick Charios and ~lm Huber.
(0:30)
•111 'Hunter' CBS Lata
NIFt Hunter tracks oop killer
who choo&amp;aS his vlctlma by
video game acoras.
® Tieppar John, M.D.

General Hauling

2919.

LIKE

THAT rffi A l..CNS WAY TO
01_
R ISTMA5 VACA.TION~

causes a dilemma by finding
a boyfriend as Jennie loses
hers. r:;l
'
9:00 ()) 700 Club
.U ()) i1J1 MOVIE: 'If lt'l
Tuelldoy, It Still Muat Be
Belgium' NBC Monday Night
ot the Movies (NRI C
(J) Speedworid NAS'CAR
Winston Cup: Delaware 500
lrom Dover, Delaware (R)
(l) U Cll ABC Monday Night
Footbetl
(!) II]) American Mutoro
This film draws on material
!rom Truman Capote's last
unfinished work. C
1!11 111112l Nawharf Larry's
troubled by tho deep, dark
secret that Darryl No. t is
oldest. 1;1
cr1J Larry Klng Llvel In depth
in1ervlaws with 10P
newsmakers and celebrities.

BARNEY

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

NFL Monday

1!11 111112l Kala a AUla Emma

Day, 11k for Clif. •

Freth Hol11eln heffert, also
Spring••· AltoaomeAeglltered
cowa. D .H.I . records. Call 114·

•

Motorcycles

•noo.

Club cahte1 for 4 -H a FFA
merntt.s. Call 614-441·2724.

"You're supposed to kiss her, y,ou Idiot,
·
not give her CPR Ill"

JUST Aea.Jr E.VE~:S

t=.tty l• ee Tmnming, 11um p
removl l. Call 304 -67 6 - 1 JJ 1

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

garage.
NFL Monday Night MitCh
Up New ~ngland Patriots ot
N.Y. Jots
m lit (I) Maca,.er
MacGyver becomes pawn In
a Soviet plot to steal a
Chinese artilact. C
(f) Onty One Eartli This
global report on trees looks
at why torests' survival
matters.
1!11 111112l Fronk'o Place
Series of odd events makes
Frank take a &amp;OCOnd look at
ocademlc life.
II]) The Greet Space Race
Insights and theories on the .
how the universe began are
discussed.
ll2l Primenews Wrap ups of
the day·s world news and In
depth teature repons. (t :00)
(j)

® Movll
Ill (l) MOVIE: Annie Han (PGI

1983 Honda V-46. Entereeptor.

••t

COUNTRY MOBILE HomePetk.

ground floor, washer and dryer
hook up, no children, immtdiata
occupan~ . No pets, phone
304· 87&amp;! 4480 a11t 153 or &amp;0.

1979 Volktwagon "an . Callaher

6:00- 614-448·8663.

Sept. 23· 8:00 PM . We will be
holding aspeolel fNdtrollfsalt.
All ••Ida lnclucMng Holsteins.
C•ttlt will be aooeptl'd all dav
TUN. end up to 1 :00 PM W.cl.
Hauling available. Athens Uvntock Bale. 1 mil•
ot Albany
on St. AI. 50. Cell Stock
yard-814-192-2322 or 6_983&amp;31 Evenlnga.

614-448-3644.

W .O .

3Ba-9074.

Gehl96 Orlndtr Mixer. Flotation
tiret, 2 screens, augeraxttntlon,

2986.

46 Space for Rent

Vans &amp; 4

1 977 Chevy Sport Van 'VIfy
goOd cond . 11200. Cell 61 4:

Now buying aheU corn or aar
corn. Call forlat..tquotes. River
City Farm Suppty, 814-"8·

other hours.

t200.

1 977 Dodge passenger van, v-8,
ac:. ps, pb, cruise . Needs work.
Call614-44&amp;-7026

62 Wanted to Buy

-lc-

EEK &amp; MEEK

675-1786.

•

Rooms for rant by week or
month Call 614 - 992 -7621 ;

G!THER:, AU

44&amp;-4477

Grlvity bed with heavy duty
ga•s. Also 20 ft . small grain
elevator. C•U614 - 949- 2631 .

axe,
4216 .eond. t2600 . 304· 273·

:-.r~AFU ®

24~4

82

1985 Cougar. 3.8 V · 6, digit1l
ap.adometer, tiki over payments Can see 2212 M1dl1on
Ava. Point Pleasant.

273-3447.

TI-H;Y 1VE SUR1lOUNDED THE
ALBEMARLE WITH LOGS li-I,._T.
HAllE 8Et!'N CHAINED "10-

FIUlM 1\11 TMG!;T,
LIEUTENANT?

1988 VW golf 2-dr, 5 tp., ac.
em -tm radio CHI, '15,000 m11es.
eAc. Cond. 304-576 -15325.

7945.

- - - - - - - --·1&lt;-

.,

WHV'O WC lURN "WI..V

Home
Improve-ments

1977 Camaro. runt &amp; loolls

1977 Thund•blrd, 1982 Honda
XR100. mint cond . 304- 675 -

326 Newldu2 row narrow corn
pick•. Field ready Call 304-

\ &gt;&lt;AV£$ 9 -zi

ALLEY -OOP

WINTER IZ AT ION
Seeurity lighu, St orm Wtn dows, Insulat ion, ~ oo flng , Gen eral RepAirs 304 -6 76 -6 357

158&amp;.

----------- 1==========:.1.:==========~ -;;;:;;;:=;=:;::=;:===
Furnished room . t75 . Utilities ~
paid. Share bath. Single male.

Ser vices

RON ' S T el e"111110n S• • vice
HOIJU t: all a on RCA, 0 U A11 t .
GE Specn•Ung in Zeni-t h Call
304· 576 - 2 398 or 614 · 446·

1973 DcH:Ige Sump. 6 cyl. runs
good. Make good work car.
1300. 304- 676 -4856 or 6715 -

maka a home lor him in

•.

• , ..l ... ..U. ...

Two 1964 Dodge con..,ena.,. ..
Ne.-d rfttOfation . •350. l or
both. C.ll 814-992 -9922 attar

good. 304-773-5244.

18)Soep
Sl (Z) WKRP In Cincinnati
i':35 (I) Sanfonl and Son
1:00 ()) Father H!urphy Laddie
U ()) 8J ALF ALF's bad
behavior prompts Tanners to

Ail e •

SWEEPER and ww ing m •chtn e
r•pait, p.,-ta, and t u ppH", Pidl
up .Jtnd d.-ihlery, Oavis VaQJurn
Cleaner. o"a hatf mile u p ·
Geo'g" C reek Rd Cafl 6 1 a.
446 -0294

1t8&amp; Dodge Deyto~a . T'frbo Z.
ted· ail\ler, blacll l•ethet . sun roof, loaded. Naw tirH . 304 87&amp; -flilot after &amp; p.m .

Homelite 1nd Jon' aered Service
Suppn...

Pets for Sale

&amp;:00.

Stainleu 1te8'1 a•haust systems
Now cullom made tor your
tr~cll . mota.- homtOf"clanicc•Wlth llt•tMne wenentv . Muttt•
Man. 9 Stlmpaon A~ .. Athans.
Ohio, 1·800· 843 -3717 ,

' 77 Dodge Dipklmat V -8. auto
tr•ns. Good Cond. 1800.00.
Call '304-576·2704.

ll2l Crouftre (0:30)

111112l 8J Jeop~rdyl 1;1

do¥o-11

1984 Mareury Topu- ps, pb, t t ,
am -fm. 41.000 mil•. aut o.
f8900. C.ll &amp;14- 441 ~ U3U or
«6- 0212.

1978 Ch ... y Monu Runs OQOd,
lots of naw pans. E~cellent w ork
car, 1600. Call &amp;14 - 949 - 2410

Ou11tty Frults and v..-etabln
retail and wholtUII. B &amp; S
Produce •~ross from Pizu Hut.
G111ipolls. Ohio.

a.

1 978 St• r Cuft told
camp..- 304· 8 95 -3682

BASEMENT
WATERPRO OFIN G
Unconditton al lifetime guaun
••• l ocal raf ltfencel furn ished
FrM "timatu Call collect
1·814· 237 ·0488, d_..,. or n•ght
A o g s r s l e semtnt
Wet .,pr ()O itng.

1980 Chevy Monza . 1800. Call
114 -992 -5312 .

61 Farm Equipment

55 Building Supplies

I
¥1,
I_ I' I I ·I" _
N AR c K

(T)

GCIJ Judge
1!11 Wheel of Fortuna r:;l

1971 R over , 1 9 II
te l l ·
contai ned. n avel tra iler. Excel
co nd 1160 0 l1rm Call 6 U -

B1

4:00pm.

Beautiful 4 pc. post er BuseM
bedroom su it e. Lika new 304-

Ga s range . side by side, refr iger at or, di nette set. computer table.
304-675- 1386.

8&amp;53.

1978 Tropic:.•nA T ra~el Trlller
36 f\. wi1h 110 ou t 1nd AC Good
condrtion. 1&amp;000. 0 80 Cali
614 - 98 6- 43 40

1170 Captlct, gqod body . bad
.ngint, 13&amp;0. 197&amp; Impala
1&amp;10. 1971 Cordoba. tiOO
1950 Ptymot.~tk , nooo 19l&amp;
Ford &amp; w indow Str!Ht Rod
Proj ect, Ca,ll 114· 245 -6826

&amp; Vegetables

676·5907 .

New Tandy EX1000 computer.
mon itor , printer. desk t900 .
304-896- 3647.

l 1· I 1 I I I

• ll2l

7:05 m Andy Griffith
7:30 U ()) Hollywood Squares
(j) NFL Monday
(l) Newlywed Gama

2 4 tt. Coachman cemp er, like
new Call s tt ~tr 5 '00 61 4- 44 6

1988 4 dr . Sedan Peril Avtnu eluic:k. Call 814-441 -0882.

387~ 0824 .

Bundy It Alto Sax and ca~e . call
after 4 .30, 304 -876 -6460.

Firewood. :5:36.00 load. 304·

675-4108 .

low 'o form tour simple words.

~

i~~ansan
e Cll Mws·H

Sh as1a Cern per. Ellcel co nd
1900 Call 6 ,4 · 256- e459

19&amp;5 M.,cuty Mrtntclafr, clas• lc
l"1't0dfll, Qood cond, new petnt.
11&amp;00 or b81t otter Call &amp;1• ·

Musical
lnatruments

58

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

ALL RIG~T. TEAM,Tl-115
15 OUR LAST GAME OF
TI-lE SEASON! tET'S

l.li14AT IF WE DO
OUR WORST?

ALL DO OUR BEST!

M_owrey' s Upholstering sr rving
tn ~ounty area 22 year1 . TtJebest
in turniture upholstering, Call
304 - 676 - 4154 for free
estimates

.

.

.

• CZl Lllte ShOw

..

Rearran;. letters of the
four scrombiM:I words be·

ZABALE
2

(!) II]) MocNoll/ Lehrer
NewsHour (1 :00)
1!11 Newo
ll2l Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and finanCial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
•112l 8J Wheel of Fot1une

1-800·843-3767.

'

0

t

--r'T_OT-M-r.O_T..,...;.

12:00 ()) Bum1 1nd Allan

I

!

Famous wi&amp;e'saying: "It Is best
to learn the wisdom of comproL--L--'--....J.L-..J.L-J .. mise, for it Is better to bend a lit.-----------------, tis than to In - ."

· 1 1 Is I'

7

I Is w1uII NI EI' I0
7

•

•

•

.

.

L......JL....-L-..L.-.1--L......J

8
A
V

Complele lhe ch uckle quoled
~y filling in lhe m issing wor ds

you de-..elop lrom step No. 3 belo w.

PRINT NUMBERED
lETTERS IN SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

FORI

•

YESrEUAY'S SCI AM· LETs. ANSWEIS .
Tlllong - Bella - Omega - DBinty - TIGHT. .
My cousin started oil her marriage by being a nag and showing jealousy. Her mom explained that it takas a loose rein to

make 1 marriage TIGHT,

e Cll People's Coun

Struts, t119 .96 pair. in stalled
Most model s. M ... tfl ttr M1n, 9
Stimpson Ave . Ath ens. Oh io

318·H01 .

Dunrovln Fruit Farm
Hoban 171 2 Melt Stlc81'. New,
Cidet . MalroH, Super Gold. Red
sold for $26 00 .. will sell for
S76 0 0 80 Call 614 - 992· • &amp; Yellow Delicious, Macintosh.
and Grim.. apples, ptars. ho·
9 9 22 aft er 4:00pm.
ney, sorghum. and apple buntt.
P i ~ your own grap" 215 c:.ntsa
2 si ngle barr el 410 guage
pound Week d-vs 9 · &amp;. w•elt·
sh otguns. t40 for both Call
ends 9 ·5. fh . &amp;81 So . of Albany .
614-985-4312.
Phone 814 -1591· 8298 .
King Wood snd Coal Burner.
Canning tomato... You pidt l
160.000 BTU 911 fum ace. Horizontal fuel furn• ce and 2 t1nks . John Hitlt Farm , Letar1 Fells,
Ohio. Bring con taln .. s. 14. per
Cal l 614 -949 -2571 .
bu1hal
Girls ttJttra nice w 1"n1er coat for
sa le. Fitt&amp;d , Si tfl 15. Call 614 992 -31 1 1 after.6.00 pm .

fUll

(J) S~rtaeenter (L)
(l) Enterlalnmont T011lght

?OWl POWt

Auto Repair

l67-0fli8 2

1979 Chwene. Ac . lactory
am·fm, re..- defrost . No rusr,
Runs OOOd · 1700. Call A14 -

1-800-943 ·3767.

16 ineh tiomellt e Chain Saw.
$ 125 8 HP t iller, f850 . Self
propelled electric start lawnmower. 8 26 0 080. Maytag
wr inge• wa sher, 1100. VI HP
deep well pump , tank and pipe,
·
Call 614 - 98~ - 3839 .

77

&amp;14 38a-a240,

1979 M\llt•ng Good cond
N.w Paint, 11600 neg. Ct.ll
&amp;14· 44&amp;- 10n.

AI&lt;C reQIItertd German Sh•
phatd p...ppi ... 6 weeks old.
females, 1&amp;5. tech . 2 maiM,
1150. lteh. 304 -882 -2077.

Old upright pi..,o for 1111. C.ll
614 -992 -7810 or 304 -7736681 .

304 - 67~ -

1984 Ford- lampo- p1, pb.
am-fm. ac. • 3895. , 983 Ford
. Fairmont, one own..-. 12360.
Gall 814· 281· 15622.

e

Channel M u ter Sui!Hite with
remote control. f 1 100. Kenwood Ca ssetta car stereo. $100.
Call614· 992·7 467.

SOc.

71 Auto's For Sale

old Running. 175. 814-981·
4, 43 after p.m .

57

!:*~ding

Trnnspor l atwn

2 mala. 2 ftmtla.

M ill ed hard wood 1labs . t 12 per
bundle. C o nta i nin~ appro•. 1 Yt
t on. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pom eroy, Oh io. 614 -992 · 6461 .

2747.

1&amp;79.

Female AKC Rev. Boston Tar·
ri• . 8 wkl. old. 81acfl a white.
t160 . Call614 -317-7422 .
Meigs County Humtne Soci-'Y
has cats a14"d ltlnens to tdopt.
Spayed and ntu1trR and had
shots . Adoption ftt required.
Call 114-1J92-8505 or 992 -

Set of snow tires . good condit ion. Mounted Ofl , 6 inch rims.
140. to, both. Call 614· 992·

64 Hay &amp; Grain

AKC Raglstltf'ed German Sh•
pherd pups. 8 wks . old. tiO
each. Call &amp;14 -441· 0373

Flegisttred Coelt..- Sptnitl puppin. Alto Himaii'Yan ktttens . No
c hecks. C1H 814· 992· 2107.

275 g•llon fuel oil t1nk wit h legs
and hookup. Good 1hape S25.
Cal l 614 -446 -266 3

Ouroc Boars. Ired just like the
boars we t .. tett at the Oklo
Testatlon that Dalned ovet' 2.6
lbs. per diiY . Rog,- Bentley,
Sa.,.na. OH . 513 -58•- 2398.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All bratds ... Ail
styles . JulliiWtbb Ph. &amp;14-«1-

C alif. waterbed. e•tra king size.
baffled manress, mirror headboard. 8450. Firm . Call 614367 -0682.

Copper kettle. 16 gallon. 8100.
Cal l 614 -44 6 -2658

....

-•1;1

8683 .

Firewood &amp; slates. Already cut .
Can accept HEAP &amp; Emargency
vouche s. Call 614 ·266 -1363 or
256 -6202 .

M

(!)Dr. Who
II]) Square One TV 1;1
®Good Timet
Sl CD One Day at a Tlma
6:05 (I) Allee •
6:30 G ()) OJ NBC Nightly News
. (J) Flehlng Kasba Trophy
Trout from Kaslla, Canada
(R)
(l) eCIJ ABC
(!) Nightly Butllllltt Report
1!11 .112l CBS NeWI
II]) CoiOI'IOUndt
ll2l ShOWBIZ.Todoy News of
the entertainment world Is
anchored live "from Now
York.'(0:30)
® Jelforo0111
81ll Two Clale for Comlot1
6:35 (I) Carol Bumell
7:00 ()) Remington Steele
U ()) PM M~gezlne

ooft toe}. Call614 -446-3159.

GOOD US ED APPliANCES
Wuhers. dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Applian c es.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motet. 614 -446 -7398 .

-

IIJI-•
BportaLook

s3o

. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments fQr
rent. . Basic rent for 1 bdr .•
&amp;183 .00; 2bdr., $219 .00 Also
required a 1200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dept. Ph 446-3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.

45

Sears 98.000 BTU fuel stove
with blower and 275 galiOn fuel
tank . t400 firm. Call614- 388 -

9 :30 -4 ,30 . 614 -992 -2363

2 bedroom mobile home. furnished. $186 . Plus Utilitiu. Call

44

~·E~~d (!;~~\'::

1:00 ()) Cra•y Uke a Fo•
· Requiem lor a Fox
. . ()) (JJ . . Cll 1!11

614·446-0968.

Big Dakota Farm t.oma buih on
your lot, 812,996 &amp; up. Call
614-886- 7311 .

MON .. SEPT. 21
EVENING

Workboots s1e &amp; up. !Steel &amp;

~;;;::r:=.::i~~=::::==,~:;;::::;::::::::;::::::1
1
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., 4atlipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399.
Li\ling room suites- f199- t599 .
Bunk bed1 with bedding· S199.
Full size mattress &amp; foundation
starting · $99 . Re c liners
starting· 199.
USED
- Sods. d ........ bedtoom
suites . S199 - S299 . Desks,
wringer washer, a complete line

The Daily Sentinet- Page- 9

Auto Partr
&amp; Accessones

Us«&lt; and rebuilt 1ransmiuion1.
Internally inapeeted 1nd guarfl fJ •
teed. Installation l\llilable. We
buy junk transmissions. Clll

Firewood for nla- 830.00.
plck·up load. delivered. Call
'Aogar Meade- 614 -388- 90115
or 388 -9341 .

.

Television
· Viewing
M

76

(

51 Household Goods

Motorcycles

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

• 14-441-7026 '

Qualhy firewood, all hardwood,
for sale. S25 a pick-up load. Call
614-367 -0669 .

'

' 21, 1987
Monday, September
BORN LOSER

74

5 :00- 446-1244.

2683. 19-SJ.

Monday, September 21, 1987

54 Misc. Merchandise

Call Days-114-.t46-1616, after
3 br ,- t ini1hed buemant ,
electric-wood heat, applicances.
garage. Appraised at t64.000.
Sale $49.900. Call 614-44&amp;3040 .

•

BRIDGE

NORTH

1-ZI-87

•A

IKQ 7 6

'A New Approach to Play and Dea
t A K 10 S
fense," last year's award-winning
+J&gt; 4
book by Eddie Kantar, was so well received that a second volume has been WEST
EAST
published. The deals are different but 8 A J 10 I
898
tbe theme is the same. You first have .9 7 6
"KJIDS!32
the chance to place yourself in the role tJ972
tQ6
+76
of declarer. Later on, the same deal is +9 2
repeated sometimes with slight
SOIJTH
changes, 'and you have the opportunity
+s 3 2
to come up with the winning defensive ~
"Q
play.
t84 3
In today's deal, South bid six clubs
+AKQ1083
after North had cue-bid the heart ace
Vulnerable: North-South
to show a maximum no-trump opening
Dealer: North
with both heart control and club support. Declarer won dummy's ace of Well
North Eosl
SouIll
hearts, came to his hand with a club
I NT
and Jed a spade toward dummy. He did Pass
Pass
6+
not draw trumps rigbt away because Pass
Pass
Pass
he needed communication back to hi~
hand. West ducked and the king won in
Opening lead: \' 6
d~mmy. Declarer returned to his hand ding his small spade on it. He can now
wath a second club, exhaustmg the op- ruff dummy's third spa!le, .leaving
ponents of trumps, and played a ~· West holding the master spade in front
ond spade. ~est ducked once agam. of dummy. But now the trump suit is
and dummy s queen won.. If declarer run, and West is squeezed between his
plays a tb1rd spade, hopmg that the last spade and his four diamonds to the
suit will split, Wes~ can play a fou~~ I jack. Eventually he must either throw
spade and South Wlli later lose a
away the high spade or unguard the dimond. Instead, decl.arer should now amond suit and the slam is made.
play dummy's remammg heart, shed·...
'

!

3. ••
••

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 TV's
'"Tarzan ..
1 Nonsense!
4Japanese
DOWN
dry
1 Trite
measure " 2 "Cakes
7 Nimbus
. and -"
' 8 Crawler
3 Why?
10 Start
4 Lovable
afresh
5 Loving
11 Provide
term
Yesterday's Answer
6 Ninth,
13 Constellation
25th, e.g. 22 lmpu30 Small
14 Palance
7 Medal
dence
ravine
lilm
31 Standrecipient 23 Layer
16 Irish
9 Coach's
24 Greed
ard
rebel
concern
25 Behan's
quantity
10 Hooray! ,
"The - " 32 Craving
group
17 Reluctant 12 Police van 27 Father's 37 Prior
15 - and cry
Day gift
to
athlete
18 Stupor
29 TV's "(pre f .)
19 Poor
21- Goriot
· of
39 "Diamond
mount
20 Soul
(Balzac)
Fortune"
"
(Fr.)
~I""""R'21 .- Alto ,
Calir.
22 Catch
fire
25- Hayes
26 Enthuse
27 Craggy hill
28 "Today I
-man"

29 Wisen·
heimer
33 "-Echo"
34All- up
35 One (Fr.)
36 Marsh
bird
38 Fatigued
40 Israeli
port
41 Gold
42 Lamprey

'

D.,.U.Y CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
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 fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

9-21
I

F X

U Z Z M ,J U lJI T M S

F M .1

R F M. R

I

u w

· wsM.JFX.I
'

EM N X

PXI,J.JMROUT

,JOSXTZX
F 0 ,J

Z U T -

LX!.,)WXZRSK

.G X S 0 Y F R W R S . -

.J KG 1' X K

.JEORF
Yestenlay's Cryptoquote: THE BELLY CARRIES
THE LEGS, AND ' NOT THE LEGS THE BEU.Y.
,.
CERVANTES

�r

•

··Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Monday, September 21, 1987

,...----Local briefs-----. Nine hurt ··
Police probe woman's de(lth
by stonns
POINT PLEASANT- The Saturday evening shooting death
of a 27-year·old Point Pleasant woman was apparently
self·lnfltcted, according to a spokesperson for the Polnl
Pleasant Police Department.
Pollee were calle_d to the residence of Judith Gall Leonard,
1129 Evergreen Dr., at approximately 5: 39 p.m ., where they
·found Leonard dead of a .22-callber gunshot wo~nd to the
stomach, the pollee spokesperson said. Leonard . was pro·
nounced dead by Mason County Coroner Breton Morgan, M.D.,
the spokesperson added.
·
The body was transported to the state Medical Examiner's
Office In South Charles ton for an autopsy, the spokesperson
said.
·
Whlle the Incident remai ns under Investigation. foul play Is
not suspected, according to the pollee spokesperson .

Home destroyed by fire
Fire clatined the Pomeroy Locust St. home of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie BachteJ.and famil y shortly before 3 p.m . on Saturday .
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar reports his departme nt
was called to the scene at 2: 44p.m. arid were back at the station
just before 5 p.m.
'
Legar reports there was heavy fi re damage to the downstairs
of the two·story frame home which was owned by Mae Mayle.
There was smoke a~d water damage to the upstairs of the
structure.
Or igin of the. !ire is still undeterm ined Legar said.

Meigs EMS 9 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weekend.
·saturday at 9:23a.m .. Racine transported Eric Guyszks from
a two·vehlcle accident on Route 124 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine Fire Department assisted; Kim Umberger
and Oscar Wallace Jr. were treated at (he scene; Middleport at .
11:06 a.m. to the pollee department for Steve Hanning to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11 :54 a.m . transported
Brerry Hudson from a two· vehicle accident on County Road 1 to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Salem and Columbia Township
Fire Departments assiste&lt;l; Pomeroy Fire Department at 2:44
p.m . to a structure' fire at the Mayle residence on Locust St .;
Middleport at 2:58 p.m . to Lincoln Hlll for A.R. Knight to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 3:41p.m. to Water St .
for Kenneth Cundiff to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
at 7:11 p.m . to County Road 35 for Clifford Kristie to Holzer
Medical Center.
_
Sunday at 4:01a .m., RaclnetoHlll Road for Harry Douglas to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Pomeroy at 9: 45 a.m. to Long
Hollow Road for Betty Butcher to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 11: 40 a.m. to Sixth St. for Fran Parker to Holzer
Medical Ce nter.

Hunter safety course, offered
A hunter ;afety course has been scheduled ior Sept. 28·29, and
Oct . 1·3, from 6 to 9 p.m. on Sept. 28·29 and Oct . 1·2, and from 9
a.m. to 12 noon on Oct. 3. The classes will be held on the second
floor of the Pomeroy Municipal Building wlth Dana Aldridge as
chief ins tructor. Class size is limited and students must
pre·reglster by Sept. 25. To register. call John Costanz'? at
843·5405 or at 992·3883 during the day.

Chamber office moved
The Pomeroy Area Chamber 'of Commerce is now located In
the former Diamond Bank building, West Main St., Pomeroy .
Office hours are Monday . Tuesday and Friday . 9: 30 a.m. to 4
p.m . The Chamber phone number remains the same at 992·5005.

Youth committed to ODYS
A lJ.year·old Middleport area youth was permanelty
committed to the Ohio Department of Youth Services Monday
morning when he appeared before Meigs County Ju venlle
Judge Robert Buck on a charge of Inciting pa nic.
The youth was charged with making a bomb threat telephone
call to a school in the Meigs Local School Dis trict.
The youth is one of three who have appeared In local courts
during the pas t week to face charges of inciting panic by making
bomb threat calls to the schools of the Meigs Local District . The
ells have led to the dismissal of classes at various dchools in the
district.

I

Larry Neal Sr.

Larry Nelson Neal Sr., 48, of
Akron, formerly of Point Plea·
sant. dled Saturday mornlng, ln
Akron General Medical Center
aft er a long Illness.
Born July 12, 1939, he was the
son of William He nry Neal and
Opal Brown Neal of Poin t
Pleasant.
Surviving in addlllon to his
parents are two daughters, Mrs.
Mary Wilkey and Mrs. Cheryl
Brooks, both of Akron; two sons.
Larry Jr. and Blll, both of Akron;
two sisters, Mrs. Betty Sue
Stover. Mars hville. Ohio. and
Mary Lou Ma llette, West Colum ~
.bia; two brothers. Terry Ray
Neal, Leo n. and Harry Allen,
Akron; and eight grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews;
and very special frie nds. Carol
Carpenter and Mr. and Mrs.
Lancil Morris, all of Akron.
The funeral will be at 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Wllcoxen Fun·
eral Home, Point Pleasant. wlth
the Rev. James L. Bunn offfclat·
lng. Burial will follow In Fores t
Hill Cemetery, Letart.
Friends may call at the fun era l
home from 6 to 9 p.m . Tuesday.

Judith Lenoard
Judith Gail Leonard, 27, Point
Pleasant , died Saturday even·
lng at her home.
Born Oc t. 15, 1959, at Point
Pleasant. she was the daughter
of James M. Leonard and Mary
Wolfinbarger Leonard of Poin t
Pleasant.
Surviving In addition to her
parents are one son, Joshua
Ryan Leonard; one sister. Lydia
Susan Woodall, Point Pleasant ;
two brothers. Jeff Kerwood,
Hillsboro, Ohio, and Nick Ker·
wood, Middletown, Ohio; mater·
· · nal grandparents , Mr. and Mrs.
George Wolfinbarger, Hlllsboro;
several nieces, nephews, aunts
and uncles.
·
Th e funeral wlll be at 1:30 p .m .

·· --

By United Press' lnternatlonai
· Thunderstorms lingered In the
southern Plains today after
Texas with damaging hall and
raking Oklahoma with high
winds that knocked down a tent
at the State Falr, Injuring nine
people.
The storms were reported
ear ly today In sou th.east Colo·
rado. northeast New Mexico,
northwest Texas and southwest
Oklahoma, and rain also was
expected in Great Lakes and
northern New England, the Na·
tiona! Weather Service said.
Nine people were Injured Sun·
day ln Oklahoma City when
. a tent
stretched over a stage at the
State Falr used for Indian dances
and gunflght demonstrations col·
lapsed during a thunderstorm
packing winds of more than 60
mph.
Six of those Injured - lnclud·
lng one who suffered a broken leg
- were taken to hospitals for
treatment. Three were treated at
the scene.
" When the rain started, eve·
ryone went Into the tent to s tay
dry," Oklahoma City police
Capt. Harold Campbell said.
"There's no way to know just how
many people crowded In there."
Rain Sunday stretched from
eastern Minnesota to New York,
from Maine to Florida and from
the Texas Panhandle to southw·
est Colorado.
A violent 15·mlnute storm
pelted Borger, Texas , with hall
as big as golf balls, breaking
windows. damaging cars and
roofs · and knocking out power.

Pick 4

Page 3

•

Velma Lane

South Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness today with
a high between 70 and 75. Mos tly
cloudy tonight with a low be·
tween 50 a nd 55.
Considerable cloudiness Tu es·
day with a chance of s hower s a nd
a h lgh between 65 and 70.
The probabillty of prec iplta·
lion Is 20 percent today and
tonight and 30 percent Tuesday.
Winds wlll b€ .from the southw ·
est around 10 milt:s a n hour tod ay
and from the wes t at less tha n 10
mlles an hour tonight.
Extended Forecast
.Wedneday through Friday
· Parlly cloudy Wednesday and
Thursday and mostly cloudy with
a chance of showers Friday.
Highs wlll be in the upper, 60s to
mid 70s. Lows will be In the upper
40s to mid 50s.

Weather

Order of sale filed
An order of sale has been flied
In the. Meigs County Common
Pleas Court case of George M.
Collins against Ronald Davis.

Seek divorces
Filing for divorces In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court at
Ruby Nakao. Racine, versus
Michael Nakao, Stocton, Call!.;
Brenua Kay Randolph, Reeds·
·vme, versus Marvin Dale Ran·
dolph, Racine; Barbara
Jeannette Lanier Cullen, Middleport, versus Terry Lynn Cullen,
Letart, W.Va.
Amy Beth Haning, Langsville,
and Ronald Allen Haning, have
f!led for a d!Ssolutlon of their
marriage.
·

2 Sections 12 Pages

25 Cents ·

A Multimedia In c. N ewspaper

Pomeroy, Middleport to apply for joint grant
WINNER NAMED - Pomeroy resident Belly
Whitlatch was the winne r of a SilO gilt certificate
which was given away recently at Powell's Super
Valu in Pomeroy. i\ store·wlde sale and the give

away at the Pomeroy market were held In
co nj"ncllon with a national sale by a top brand
manufac turer. Presenting Whitlat ch with the $110
prize Is Tom Haw ley. store manager.

Pomeroy Village Co uncil
agreed Monday night following a
45·mlnute exec ut ive session to
app ly jointly with Middleport
Villa ge for a . fed eral grant
through the Oh io Depar tme nt of
Transportation to acqu ire rig ht s·
Of· way on the Chesa pea ke a nd
Ohio Railroad Compan y prop·
erty for a bike pat h through the
two vlllages.
Mlddl~port' s init ial appllca·
lion for fund in g to purchase th ei r
rlght ·OI·wa y wa s denied by
ODOT becau se the project wa s
not of regional significance. a
(u ndlng req uireme nt. repor ted
Pomeroy . Councilman Bruce
Reed . If Pomeroy and Middle·
port apply jointly for acq uisition
fundin g, the projec t s hould meet

t)le neces sa ry criteria Reed said. . Welshtown Hill Road. abo ut
Middlepor t already has con·
one·fourth of which Is within
structlon dollars for the bike
Pomeroy Village limits . Council·
path. continued Reed. and now
man Bill Young expressed his
Pomeroy must apply fo r co n·
feelings regardi ng the need for
s tru ctlon dollars. If Pomeroy' s
resurfacing. pointing out that
requesi for cons truction funding
sc hool buses are no longer able to
Is approved, the two villages will
travel the road. Despite the
then combi ne on the joint ap pll·
somewhat hazardous condition
ca t ion for the proper t y
of the road, Young sa id t ha t a bus
acq ulstlons .
from Carleton School mus t travel
In Middleport, properly must
the road to pick up a handicapped
be purchased from the railroad
studen t.
company . In · Pomeroy, the
Pomeroy wlll also be app lying
former rai lroad property Is
for Commu nit y Development
owned pr iva tely.
• Block Grant funds through the
In ano th er jolnt · venture,
co unt¥ commissioners to rep la ce
Pomeroy will be combining with
the Main St. downtown s idewalks
Sutton Towns hip to apply for
In the village.
Co mmunitY Developme nt Block
Grant applications for CDBG
Grant fund ing to resurface
fundin g must be subml ttM to the

•

commissioners by Nov. 1.
In still another joint 'project,
Pomeroy wlll be combining
funds with Jackson City Council
to hire an attorney to oppose the
proposed rate increase by Geh·
era! Telephone Company of Ohio.
According to a letter from the
Jackson board . GTE's proposed
ra te hike would Increase tele·
phone costs to cust omers by
abo ut 45 percent. Costs .for an
attorney would be less than $500
per vlllage accord ing to a letter
from the Jackson Council.
Councll agreed to release fund s
of $1,806 from this year's budget
to subsidize the Blue Streak Ca b
Company , as req ues ted earlier
by Middleport Village officia ls. A
let ter from Middleport asked If

~·

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Po lit ·
ica l co nservatives and profes-

.1'..'· .
::;::-.---

ENTERTt\INS - Denver Ri ce and Company
was only one of a number of groups featured a.~
ent ertainers at thr main s tage during th e annual

•

-----Announcements-----.;.. ~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;
Meeting tonight
Ra cine Village Council will
meet in recessed session tonight
!Monday ). 7 p.m .. at the Shrine
Club Park.

ter of the Delta K•ppa Gamma
Societ y ha s been c hanged to the
Racina United MP th odis t
Church. Tlw meetin g will begi n
a t &amp;: 30 p.m .

Trustees
Rutland Township Trus tees
will meet In regu lar sess ion
Thursday. 6: :lO p.m .. a t th e
Rutland Fire Station.

J)eMohiy mePIIng
Meigs Chapt e r Order of DeMo·
iay will m('(' t this evening , 7:30
p.m ., at th e Middl eport Ma so11tc
Te mp le . Mothers' Club will meet
I
al so.

Change of location
The location of the Sept. 28 . . . - - - - - - - - - -- - - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - meeting of Alpha Omicron Cha p ~

Phone
...
Co ntinu ed from page 1
red carpet treatment to sell you
gear. "
Ro y Scott . who was OBES's
telecommunicatio ns man ager
for 16 years. said he became so
disgusted tha t he took an ear ly
r~tlreme n t

in .June.

"I didn't hire on as a thief and I
was n't abou t to retire as one, "
said Scott. " We were spendi ng
$1,500 to $2 ,000 for phones that
you and 1could go out and buy for
$500."
Scott said phones that were
only five years ol d a nd paid for
we re torn out in order to install
the new ones.
David Potter, who works fo r a
firm that a ppraises phone eq uip·
ment for fedcra I bankruptcy
courts. major banks a nd national
leasing companies, exa mined
the co ntracts and said the OBES
was paying "larcenous " pr&lt;ces
for the equipment.
OBES Is the most fi na ncially
des pera te 'a gency In the state,
having declared a fiscal emer·
gency to cope with budget
defi cits of~ million.

Daily stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m . )
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ......... . ... 26V,
AT&amp;T ......... ......... .... ........... 32')(,
Ashland 011 ........................ 66~
Bob Evans Farms ............. .l9Y,
Charming Shop_pes .. ..... ....... 22Ji
Federal Mogul ..... ............... 46%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................ ...... 70 ·
Heck's Inc ...................... ..... .. .4
Lands' End ..... .... ......•.... ... ....... 27'
Limited Inc ........................ 34')'8
Multimedia Inc..... .................. 71
Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ....... ..... JO Y,
Shoney's Inc .................... ... 29~
Wendy's Inti .. ,...................... 9)1.
Worthington Ind .................. 23%

I.
AID TO PROGRAM - 1\ SIO.OOO grant from the
.lacoh G . Schmldlapp No. I Trust, · administered
hy the Fifth Third Bunk of Cincinnati. hll!l enabl ed
the Rio Grande College and Community College
Holzer Sc hool of Nursing to purc ha.~e computer
equlpmcni and Instructional film s. Us ing th e

~

.

..

Middleport Chamber of Commerce Blucl.&lt; Party
on Sa turday.
'

I

equipment are. seated. Mark Poctker of J ackson
County and Mllagros Jordan·Bosc of Gallla
County. They are flanked by Brenda Russell of
Melgs County, left,andbyAmySwango,assistant
professorofnurslng,atrlght.

$10,000 'grant· pemti.tS Rt·o· Gra· nde·
•
·t.
t 0 purehase compu.(er equtpmen
A $10.000 ~ra nt fr om a trust
fu nd has a llowed t he Rio Grapde
Colleg£' ~ nd Communit y College
Holze r c hool of Nursi ng to
purcha se compu1 e r equipment
a nd Instructional fi lms for it s
programs .
The gran! from the J aco b G.
Sc hmldlapp No. 1 Trus t. admi niS·
tPr&lt;'d by the Filth Third Bdflk of
Cincinnati . made poss ible the
pu&lt;·chasc ot two computers. a
printer. re la ted software and
ins tructional films .
' · I I ha s b e c n w c 11 ·

demonstrated tha t utilization of
a udiovis ual equipment and co m·
pu ler softwar e Is a pract ica l a nd
economical way for s tudents 10
bridge the gap between class·
room theory a nd clinica l nursing
pracl!ce." sa id Ja net Byers.
R.N ., dean of the School of
Nursi ng.
Mrs. Byers noted that ··one of .
the greatest problems fa ci ng the
Rio Gra nde College and Com·
munil y College Holzer Sc hool of
Nursi ng Is th€' limit ed availabll·
lly and access ibility to audiovls·

ua llnstruclion aids."
Purchase of the equipment will
build co nfid ence in decisio n·
making in a risk· free classroom
setting. she a dded. It will explain
how to establis h priorities and
iden tify the most Important
nursing goals a nd Interventions.
Also. stud ents will be given an
opportunit y fo r self·evaluallon
and Improvement. as well as
becoming famlllar wit h the kind
of computerized syste ms they
wlll encount er In their profes·
slonal careers, Mrs . Byers said .

Pymatuning teachers strike
•I

WASHIN GTON (UP! ) - The
ad min istration Is defending the
fa tal U.S. helicopter attac k on a n
Ira nia n ship In th e Per sia n Gulf
as a justified ac tion under the
rules of ·c ombat e ngagement
given to American forces in the
war· torn reg ion.
Pe ntagon and White House
officials stood flrm In th eir
ex pla na tion of the Incident about
which more detalls were lear ned
ear ly today, saying the Ira nian
vessel was caught la ying mines
in interna tional waters of the
oll·rlch gulf.
"U.S. .actions were purely
defe nsive, " said Pen tago n spo·
kesm an Fred Hoffman. "Plant·
lng mines In International waters
far from Iran Is a violation of
International law - an lndls·
criminate, unju stifiable threat to
the shipping of all nations.
"We have said throughout that

DAILY SENTINEL
q· MONTHS

L
y

than 1.000 public school teac hers
In Youngstown has entered It s
14t h day. and federal m ediator
David Thorley had no t called for
a new roundofbar'galnlngbylate
Monday ni ght.
In the area of higher education,
faculty members at Lakeland
Comm unity College In Lake
Coun ty repor ted for the fir st day
of fall classes. jus t hours aft er

a pproving a new labOr co ntract
that ended the threa t of a Monday
walkout.
ln. the Pymatunlng Valley
distri ct. the 79·member teac he rs
umon Is seekmg a two. yea r labor
contrac t. but sc hool officials are
proposing a three· year package.
Peggy Chavez. an official fr om
the Ohio Education Association.
Co ntmued on page 12

sional co lleagues now opposi ng
Rober t Bark's nominati on to the
Supreme Court cite evidence of
his judicial disregard for women.
minorities · a nd the right to
privacy.
The reasoning of at least two of
Bark' s fellow Republicans a nd
four of his fellow lawyers
emerged on the flrsl day of
outside tes timony to th e senat ors
consltler ing bls nomination . Th e
GOP oppositio n came from one
current and one former govern·
ment leader a nd the legal criti·
c is m cam e ifl--. lhe explanation of
Am&lt;'rlran Bar Association re·
viewers who judged him unquaii.'
fled to be a justice.

Bot h developmen ts were sig·
nifica nt , but the ABA exp lana·
tion revealed thoughts behind a
his toric decis ion - the fi rs t time
in two decades that the lega l
organiza tion 's review panel has
not stood unanimously behind a
nominee to the nation' s highest

$48.75
'

we are not seeking to provoke.
trouble but will ta ke defensive·
action as necessary ," Hoffman
added .
At the Whit e House, spokes·
ma n Marlin Fitzwater Iss ued a
s tatement Monday sayi ng, "We
have prev iously communica ted
with the Iranian government the
way In which we wou ld respond
to such provocative acts which
present an Immediate risk to
United States ships and to all
ships. United States forces acted
In a defensive manner and ln
a ccordance with existing rules of
engagement."
Fitzwater said President Rea·
gan was told of the action whlle
returning to Washington on Air
Force One after addressing the
United Nations In New York.
An American military team
fo und 10 un~ e rwater ex plosives
and four dead crew members
when It boarded the Iranian

. landing vessel !Ired on and set
ablaze by a U.S. co mmando
helicopte r Monday nig ht, the
Pentagon sa id.
The United States ha s asserted
for months that Iran has been
sowing mines In International
gulf waters , and Navy sources
said scores of them appa rently
planted by Iranian vessels were
discovered recently off the coast
of Bahrain.
The mines apparently were
placed to damage U.S. warships
· on their way to a small refueling
facility In the area operated by
the Navy, the sources ·saM .
Iran has denied such activity
repeat edly, and today the go:
vernment of the Ayatollah Ruhol·
lah Kh0melnllnslsted the vessel
that was struck, the lranAjr, was
peacefully carrying food supp·
lies and not "wartime defense
equipment."

co urt by vir tue of his "high
intellect" a nd his broad legal and
governme ntal experience.
That earned the 60·year·old
federal appea ls co urt judge the
traditional ABA highest rating.
wh ic h was an nounced by an
eager Whi te House that .jumped
the gun before the Bark hearings
bega n last week.

cour1.

Attorney Harold Ty le r Jr., the
.review pan~! cha irma n, elabo·
ra ted on its split vote at the end of
12 hours of testimony that
dragged la te into Monday night
before the Sena te Judiciary
Committee recessed wi th plans
to reco nve ne today.

However, f our ABA reviewers

fou nd Bork " not qualified" and
one chose to voice his op inion as
" not opposed ... It wa s the flrst
sp lit since 1969, ·when the· ABA
grant ed a non·unanimous appro·
val for Supreme Court nominee
Clement Hayn.1worth, uJHm.afRlY
rejected by the Sena te · amid
questions a bout his fi nancial
dealings.

Tyler confirmed for senators

that )0 of the 15 members of the
rev iew panel co ncluded Bark is
"well qualified" to sit on the high

Three Iranians
found
dead,
d
£II
•
k
16 rescue 10 owmg attac .
MANAMA, Bahrain (UPIIAn American military team
boarding an Iranian vessel a t·
tacked by a U.S. helicopter
gunshlp lnt hePersla n Gu lffou nd
three dead crew members and 10
mines aboard. a n Air Force
spokes man sa id today .
Iran, in Its first official report
on the incident , today denied the
vessel carried "wartime defense
eq uipment " a nd said it was
loaded with a cargo of food when
attacked Monday by "U.S. gun·
s hip helicopt ers in the high
seas."
Ira nian parliament s peaker
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsa njanl
said today the United States
"would regret the cr ime they
perpetra ted in this part of the
world" and vowed that the attack
would not go un answered .
U.S. offlcials said the crew of
the Iran Ajr was observed
putting the mines ove rboard with
night observation eq uipment .

"Apparen:Jy six mines were
laid. " Pe nt agon s pokesman
Capt. Sco tt Wus thoff sa id today.
"Mideast Force c hoppers a r e
sea rching for the mines at this
time. At least one mine was
observed floating in the water .
' 'There .were 10 mines and
various fu ses and pins used In
arm ing the mines found on the
la nding craft," he said.
Wusthoff said three crew
member s were found dead on the
craft by the boardin g party.
a not her "lOwerefo und aliveina
lifeboat and 16wererecovered in
the water by Mideast Force ships
opera ting in the area. Two are
stlll miss ing," he said .
Ear lier, the Pentagon had said
four crew members were fo und
dead .
Wusthoff said the rescued
Iranians are "not prisoners of
war. The Unit ed States is not al
war. (It is) still neutral."
He sa ld U.S. ships and planes
were sta nding by fo r ass is ta nce

and U.S.forcesp lckedupsurv i·
· vors from water and took them to
the USS LaSa ll e, the flagship of
the Middle East force .
The White House said a U.S:
special warfare operations helic·
opter launched 2. 75· inch rockets
and 7.621T)m mac hin e.gun fire at
the Iranian s hip In a "pure ly
defensive action" after the ves·
set was s potted planting mines 50
miles nort heast of Bahrain in
international wa ters ·at abOut
midnight.
The U.S. attack ca me shortly
afl er an Iranian speedboat am.
bus hed a British·fl agged tanker
a nd devastated its crews quar·
ters, killing a Fillpino crew
m,e mber. .
Pentagon spokesma n Cmd r.
Bob Prucha said a team from the
U.S. Middle Eas t Force boarded
the s tr ic ken Iranian vessel a t
10: 40 p.m . EDT Monday. and
about two hours later an Iran ian
li feboat was observed and
boarded.

IRAN
Iran fires on
British tanker

'\

U. S. defends Persian Gulf action

GOING BACK TO
~SCHOOL? TAKE A
FRIEND,. THE .
0
N

By BRANT NEWMAN
United Press International
Teachers In t'he Pymatunlng
Valley Public School Dis trict In
Ash tabul a County are now In
their seco nd day of a stri ke after
a weekend negotiating session
fa !led to resolve disputes over
seco ndary salary Iss ues a nd the
lengt h of a new labor contrac t. ·
Meanwhile. a s trike by more

an additional $3,500 for nex t yea r
noted that alt hough he has heard
wou ld be forthcomi ng to subsid· · some complain ts of higher than
ize the cab compa ny. as was
necessa ry fares, he has also
requested at the same time the
heard that compa ny employees
Sl,806 was requested. Both
are very helpfu l to older people
amounts equal one·thlrd of the
using the cab service who m ay
f\ecessary local matc h needed
need assistance getting in and
for the cab company's operation.
out of the ca bs, or may need help
Middleport Village a nd the Meigs
carryi ng packages to the ir
Co unty Comm issioners a re each
homes.
paying one· third of thecostsa lso.
Pomeroy businessma n Guido
Councilman Bruce Reed said
Girolami has issued a complaint
he thinks the cab company
to co uncil regarding a req uest for
prov ides a great service. but is
a C1·C2 license from the Oh io
co ncer ned a bout rece nt com·
Department of Liquor Co ntrol for
p l a int ~ he has heard of high
the Beacon Gulf Station. Accord·
fares. Council and Ma yor Dick
ing \o Giro laml. Be1)con Gulf is
Sey ler agreed tha t before ear·
located within Pomeroy Village
marking the S3.500 for 1988. they
and not in unicorpora ted Salis·
should invite p~bllc commen t on
bury Township. a nd as suc h
the ca b compa n y'~ service. Reed
Continued on page 12

Conservatives give reasons
for opposing Bork's selection

.,...

Hospital news

l

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. September 22, 1987

'

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions ..-Clark
Taylor, Long Bottom; Burl Blev ~
ins. Langsvllle.
Saturday Discharges - Car·
nell Vance Jr.; Eva Lawson. l ola
Wilson, Rollin Dill.
Sunday Admissions - Donald
Dorst , Shade; Harry Doug las.
Racine; Delores Barber . Dex ·
ter; Betty Butcher. Pomer oy;
Dreama Owens. Ma son.
Sunday Discharges - Clark
Tay lor, Donald Dorst. Burl
Blevins.

•

aty

Vol.37, No.94
Copyrightud 1987

Chance of rain 40 percent
Tonight, clear. Low near 50.

9590

CLEVELAND (UPII - For
the third straight drawing. there
was ·no winner In Saturday
night' s Super Lotto game. boost ·
ing Wednesday's jackpot to at
leas t $12 million.
Although no one picked all six
numbers correctly, 280 people
have fi ve of the numbers correct.
earning payoffs of $1,000 each.
Some 12.736 had four of the
numbers. worth $59 each.
The winning numbers were 7.
12, 17, 21,22and24. Total sales for
the drawing we re $6,594,057.

Rev. Don Archer officiating.
Burial will be In Reedsville
Cemetery. F r iends may call a t
the funeral home from 2 to4 a nd 7
to 9 on Tuesday .

Marlon Augustus Hall, 85, of
Reedsville, died Saturday at
Veterans Mer.1orlal Hospital.
Born Oct. 30, 1901 In Great
Bend, he was a son of the late
Edwin C. and Annie Mitchell
Hall. He was a merchant and
farmer, and was a mel)lber of the
Great Bend Methoulst Church.
Surviving are one daughter .
Ire ne E. Walker. LOma Linda ,
Call!.; three sons and daughters·
ln· law, Charles Edwin and Do·
rothy Hall, George Wllllam and
Amy Hall. all of Reedsville, and
Randall Kevin and· Judith Hall,
Long Bottom; one sister, Elsie
Shahan, Portland; nine grand·
children. eight great grandchlld·
ren ; several nieces aild nephews.
He was preceded ln death by
his wlfe, Edna Belle Hall, In
March 1967; two brothers, Dale
C. and Ira E . Hall; and two
sisters, Kate Furbee and Amy
Kimes.
Services will be 1 p.m. Wednes·
day at White Funeral Home with
'

Daily Number

060

Jackpot $12
million Wednesday

Tuesday In the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, Point Pleasant, with the
Rev. James L. Bunn offlclat lng.
Burial wlll follow In Beale Chapel
Ce metery, Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 p.m . Monday.

Marion HaD

NFL players
walk out

.

Area deaths

Velma L. Lane. 80. Columbus.
formerly of Pomeroy, dled.Satur·
day at the Heartland Thurber
Village Ca r e Center In
Columbus.
She wa s preceded in death by
her husband , Hugh, and a son,
Mllton.
Surviving are a daughter Glen·
nadene Balr. Columbus, and four
grandsons .
Services wlll be held at 2 p .m.
Tuesday at the Deyo·Davls Ftin·
era'! Home. 1578 W. First Ave.,
Columbus. Burial will be In
Union Cemetery.

Ohio Lottery

U.S. helicopter attacks
Iranian shi .

..
..
.

SAUDI ARABIA
0

(

200

\

....

UNITED ARAB
EMIRATES

_

..._----

!WHERE ACTION TOOK PLACE MONDAY. A·n lranlan gunboat attacked and •et afire a
· · British tanker In the Persian Gulf Monday,
forcing the crew to abandon ship, according to

I

_..

,•

'

Gulf of
Oman

' • .:

OMAN~.........
.. ~
· .. , .

I

'

1,

Uoyd's Shipping Intelligence. A U.S. helicopte r
fired on an Iranian amphibious ship thought to be
l!~ylng mines and sel it ablaze, U.S. admlnistra·.
tlon sources said. (UP!)

•

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