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                  <text>Page- 10- The Daily Se:1tinel

CalendarI happenings

Beat of the. Bend

Keys found, tur-ned in to the Sentinel
You ' re keys missi ng?
If so. you must be fran lic by
now. HO\VC'vPr , not to

Tuesday, October 20, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

wOJT~,.,

maybE' they a rt&gt;
al Tht&gt; Daily Sen1in&lt;&gt;! office on
rourt St.
Diane Farley,
a n ,employee or
The Jaw offi ct&gt; of
Porter, Uitlc,
SheNs and F rcckN found a
dou ble key ring wilh some 10
keys Monda y on lhe Eag le
parking lot neJr 1he law firm
office. ThPy are_ keys to bolh
Chr·ysler a nd General Motor
n •hlcles on the r in g along with
ol he r ke)·s.
If you lhink they belo ng to you
drop by the Se n line! and. make
iden ti fic a 1io n.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Ter-rv Gardner
arC' more !ha n anxiou's 10 find a
good home for u dese rving
puppy.
The ap proximal e lwo monlh
o ld a nimal is what is known as a
blue heeler a nd is grea l with
c hildren. The animal appeared
on Sycamore St. in Middleport
a nd carr ied M idcnrification.
The Gardners arc willing to
pay for the ncPd ed puppy s hots, a
lice nse for the an imal and will
provide a quantity of food. to
someone who will give the dog a
good hqme. If yo u'rp interes ted.
ca ll the Gardn ers a 1 ~9 2 - 6o9R.
Mrs . Henriet ta O'Br ien , who
has been a res ident of Florida for

l'UESD!\ '!r'
•
Bradbury PTO
will meet in special session 7p.m.
Tuesday. The program will be on
c hild assault prevention.
BRADBURY ~

a numtJPr of vcars now . is in fo r a Aml'r ica n? Hca.l fh r .J !'f' CC'n 10r visi l with reid tiw•s a nd fri£'ncls in . an d ) 'OU can sC'nd cards to her
Gal ll a and Mr ig' rountl&lt;•s . She there. Th e address is 3G7o~ Rock
rrce nlly r·eturned from an in ter· Springs Road. , Pom(•roy, Oh io
es ting I rip to Alaska and is doing Ao7G9.
Wei L
Mend a! Jordan of Albany is the
of t h(' Oct. ll mystery
winner
Would you briirve that 1R7
parent s attended the recent open far m contes t of th~ Ti=shou se-workshop conduc ted b.v Sl'nt itirl. ThC'rc \\'C're two correct
teachers of Pomeroy Elemen· entrif's nami ng ihe my·s ter~' farm
tary School to acquaint paren ts as thai of Rex C'headle. The
win ner was selected from th e two
wi lh the activiti~s of thP school.
by lottery, J ord a n will rece ive a
Now thai shows good support .
By thP way the Robert B. $.i prize, via the mail. tor being
..
Morris Library-Media Center a t win ner.
the sc hool is now open to sta ff and
And how about those "Cal iforStudents. Dedication services for
nia
Raisins" ? Sw ingers, eh? Do
lhe CPhter which is a lribute to
kl'1'P
smili ng.
the la te Rober t B. Morris ,
long- time principal of the school,
''are In the making.
·
Reservations
MIDDLEPORT Toda y
Star Grange members and
1Tu esday \ is the last day 10 make
their gues ts planning on ane nd reservat.ioils for the .Jay ma r Go lf
ing the annual grangf' Ha lloween
Club
dinner -dance to be held this
party ha ve a week lon/;er 10 get
Sunday
aJ the Middleport Legion
together just the r ight costume
Hall.
Reserv
ations may be made
tor the judging to be held at fi: 30
by
callin
g
Bob
Fre&lt;'d at 992-2044.
p.m .
Music
for
the
evening will be
The pa rty was . originally
prov
ided
by
George
Hall .
planned for Saturday , Oct . 24, but
now has been postponed to
Saturday, Oc t. 3l ~ now that' s
about as close to Halloween as
you can get. A potluck supper will
follow cos fume judging a nd there
will be games.
·

Ohio Lottery

POMEROY ~ Pomeroy Nazarene Church will havP .Junior
Church Harvest Celebration on

•

Page 3

DOWN UNDER RESTAURANT
WELCOMES BACK

START TO FINISH
DINING

SYRACUSE
Syracuse
Homemakers will meet Wednesday. 10 a .m .. at the clubhouse.
Members are 10 bring one yeard
of ribbon and a small bird for the
craft session.

e

TONIGHT THR.U THURSDAY EVENING
OCTOBER 20 THRU OCTOBER 22
A glass of selected House Wine - Cup of
. French Onion Soup
Chorce of Roast Prime Rib or
Fillet of Sole Almandine
Baked Potato, Fresh Garden Salad, Rolls and
Chocolate Mousse

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lit erary Club will meet 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Roy Holl er. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
will review the book "Grace
Livingston HilL "
THURSD!\Y
HARRISONVILLE- Past Ma.
Iro ns of HarrisonviliP Chapter
255, Order of Eastern Star, will
'm&lt;&gt;et at the home of Bernie&lt;&gt;
Hoffman on Thursda:; at 7: 30
p.m.

sa so

LAFAYETTE MAlL - GALliPOUS, OHIO

WHOM SHOULD I CALL AT THE TIME OF DEATH?
'

phone calls will have to be considered after
the
of a member of the family. Here are the
calls you should plan to make immediately.

will

Daily Number
. 401
Pick 4
6409

THE

WEDNESDAY
SY RA CUSE ~ Syracuse VIllage Council ,l)'ll l meet on Wed·
nesday at 7 p.m: at the village
haiL

.Eula J. Wolfe
bE' marking
her 88th birthday on Su nday. Oc t.
25. She is temporarily at the

World
Series

Thursday from 5 to 7 p.m. JunloJ
church children welcome.

\
'

'.

IMMEDIATE FAMILY MEMBERS- perhaps one or
two could be placed and they in turn could call oth·
ers.
YOUR CLERGY PERSON - he can provide spiritual
support and sustinence to help you with the emo- ·
, tional difficult tasks ahead. He will also work di·
rectly with the funeral director to assure that the fu·
neral service meets all your needs.
YOUR FUNERAL DIRECTOR- he will provide the ne- . .
. ____...-''···c-c•
cessary professional servines required for proper _;~,~,----&lt;
· disposition of the body. His services also include ··
suggestions as a helpful guide to further calls that
may have to be made.

Vol ..37, No .1 15
Copyrighted 1987

at y

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer ·
Three Eastern Local School Distric t tuition
students , resid ents of the Meigs Local District,
were denied release for transportation purposes
to that district when the Meigs Local Board of
Education met in regular session Tuesday night.
Present at the board ineetlng to request the
release of the three students so they could ride
Eastern Local school buses which pass their
homes were David Mann and Paul Jones, fathers
of the three students. Mann and Jones aske'tl the
release of the three for tran sportation purposes so
they as pa rents wouhj n9t have to arrange private
transportation for the three students to a nd from
school eacb day. The contended that the Meigs
Local Board could co ncede 1he release for
transportatron si nce school had already started
before they were advised tha t their residences on
the Flatwoods Road are actually in the Meigs
Local School District.
Meigs Local Superintendent Dan E . Morris
questioned Jones who admitted that he knew the
property was in the Meigs Local School Di~trict
when he moved onto the Flatwoods Road .
Howev er, Jones contended tha t he had checked

OR 125 OUNCE

HARVEST TIME IS
BARGAIN TIME

vmu

TO $4.79

GRANO

22 OUNCE

PALMOLIVE
DISHWI$HIII
LIQUID

PAPER
TOWELS

40C OFF LABEL

3/1°~~

99!m
$1 ..19

OIE·I·DIY
MAXIMUM

30 COUNT TALL

IITCHEI BA&amp;S

OCT. 29th, 1987

TRASH BAliS

4.50
LESS REBATE 1. 00

PRICE FOR TWO

.SANDY'S
Register to win 5-$20.00 Gift
Certificates. Drawing to be held
at 10 P.M. during
" Moonlight Madness Sale".

&amp;!!G.
$1.59

24 CT. TABLETS
MAXIMUM-STRENGTH

TYLEIOL SINUS
REPRINT

No pur&lt;hase necusary - · Need not
be present to win.

SPECIAL

3!1!G.
$-1.29

24 CT. CAPLET ........ 4.29

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All Skirts, Suits,
Blouses &amp; Night Gowns

20°/o

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SIZE PHOTO

10~

MINIMUM

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MONDAY-SATURDAY

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222 EAST MAIN STREET

POMEROY, OHIO
LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

66, 48 &amp; 32 CT.

ULTRA PIIIPER
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8 OUNCE X-BODY

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SAL£ ~RIC£

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2!!1CEI

.

of litigation would be a n important matter tor Pomeroy
Chamber· to consider.
Nichols furth er stated that he
mus.t consider firs t th e n.e ed.s of
his neighbo rs a nd th e people of
Mason, be!or&lt;&gt; the needs of
Pomeroy.
He also pointed out tha t in the
future, it ma y be difficul t-to use
Mason' s st reet and e mbankment
lor a ferry service " without a
bette r expression than we' ve had
so far." On the other hand, he
said, we don't want Ill will and
"don't wa nt to allienate business
on eit her side of the river."
Speaking as a Pomeroy Village
Co uncilman and member of
chamber, Bruce Reed said it was
his opinion th at if Franciose had
reported th e street was dam aged
and needed to be repaved, the n
th ere would be no objections to
repaving the street. He sa id the
objectio ns stem from the failure
by Mason to a dhere to the
contract agreemen t to allow
Franciose to be the final say so In
Continued on page 5

involved .

back, left to right, are \\'.S. Michael, Long
Bottom, 52-years; Harry and George Holter,
Racine, 52-years; and Pauline 1\tklns; Rutland,
representing Halliday 1\tkins Farm, 69-years.
Other bureau members for over 50-years Include
Bank One of Athens and Poole and Parker Farm,
Pomeroy, both with 51-year memberships.

MORE THAN 50 YEARS- Meigs County Farm
Bureau's annual dinner meeting was held
Tuesday night at Eastern High School. Honored
lor more than 50-years of activity in the
association were, sealed left to right, Ada Holter
of Pomeroy, 57-years; Vernon Nease of Racine,
6!1-years; and May Holter, Racine, 52-years. In

Senate prepares for foreign
policy showdown with Reagan

60 TABLETS

OPENING
OCT. 20th THRU

attending the Gallia Christian School for transportation purposes. Th e board decreed that tra nsporta tiim by the distr.ict to the sc hoo l is imprac tical so
will pay the guardian s-parents for suc h se rvices.
the amount to be calcul ated by the Ohio
Department of Education.
The board enter ed into an agreement with
CompManagement , Inc., for an Ohio Workers
Compensation Claim Inqui ry Services for 1987~ 88
with the cost to be the annua l retainer fee of $250
and charges of $9 per claim per individual. A·
planned grievance sess ion to have been held in
executive session was postponed.
Named substitute schoo l bus drivers were
Denver Cotterill and Dean Sexton. A reso lution
tor the board to recogrtize the State Department of
Education's theme tor the current school yea r ,
'' Year of the A. B, C's ' '~ " Accou ntability, Basics
and Citizenship" was a pproved.
The board mov ed into execu tive session to
discuss negotiations, finances a nd personnel.
Attending the meet ing were Supt. Morris;
James Carpenter, assistant superi ntendent ;
Treasurer Jane Fry, and boa rd members, Robert
Snowden , Robert Barton, La rry Rupe, Richard
Vaughan and Larry PowelL

night' s meeting to say that he
By N!\NCY YO!\CHAM
was in agreement with Franciose
Sentinel News Staff
that the street is undamaged.
Although earlier this year. a
Franciose did not attend.
document was signed and a
However. Nichols sa id that
handshake took place, it would
complaints from residents along
seem after a mee11ng last night
Pomeroy St. that the street was
that the document and handdamaged by the additional trafs hake W!!re meaningless.
fic, and that aggregate in the
When Pomeroy Chamber of
paving is now more pronounced.
Commerce and Meigs and Mason
are·
what has prompted the
County merchants went to bat
village council to rethink their
earlier this year to secure ferry
pOsition on the release of the.
• servfce l&gt;etweeif F'Omeroy aM
escrow money.
Mason while the bridge was
Nichols, who is hlms&lt;&gt;lt a
closed for repairs, a key issue
resident of Pomeroy St. , rewas the guarantee _of possible
ported that he exempted himself
repairs to Mason's Pomeroy St.,
should the street be damaged by . from prior discu ss ions of the
street by Mason Village Council,
i!lCreas_~d traffic flow.
An escrow account was estab- - due to that fact.
And although much discussion
lished , made up of$6,600 worth of
took
place, and questions were
donations from Meigs and Mason
asked
and a nswered, it was the
County businesses, and $15,000
Ilnal sugges tion of Mayor Ni from Darrell Rodger, the ferry
chols that the problem be turned
operator. A document, es tablis!l·
over to legal coun sels for Mason
lng the account and stating that
VU!age and Pomeroy Chamber,
the West Virginia De partment of
to determine if liti gation would
Hi ghways would bE' the final
be necessary. The ma yor pointed
authority to decide If damages
out that the financial feasibility
had occurred to Pomeroy St. and
if repairs would bE' necessary,
was signed by the parties

SALE PRICES GOOD THRU
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25

VELVET

25 Cents

Suggest escrow account be
·turned over to legal counsel

.

BIG ROLL

2 Secti.ona. 14 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

releases which would end up seriously hurting the
financial pic.t ure for the Meigs Local District.
'The board hired Kim Adkins as girls' reserve
basketball coach; John Arnott as boys freshman
basketball coach; Rick Edwards as eighth grad&lt;&gt;
boys' basketball coach, and Rick Ash as head ·,
junior high girls' basketball coach. All are
·certified. Mitch Meadows, who is not .certified,
was hired as seventh grade boys' basketball ·
coach, a position which was advertised for
certified staff members but no suitable applicant
was found.
The resignation of Robert Eason as a junior
high football coach for the current season was
accepted. Cordon Ball was hired as a teacher In
the district effective Oct. 21 and Donald l{arr was ·
hir.ed as a custodian. Hired as substit ute teachers
were Teresa B. Davis, Ricky D. Edwards and
Debbie L. McGuire. 11 was agreed to create a
second junior high girls' basketball, coaching
position for the current year since there are so
many girls out for the sport and more games have
been sc hedui &lt;&gt;d.
The board agreed to enter into an agreement
with the parents-guardians of two students

with several school people on the matter and said
he was told he would have no difficulty with his
children attending Eastern Local Schools. Mann
said that he has Jived on the Flatwoods Road tor
several years and that his two childre n have
always attended schools In the Eastern District.
Recently, the Meigs Board of Education did
relea se Mann's · son , Mark, a senior at Eastern
Hi gh Sc hool, for transportation purposes because
of the fact that he is in his la &lt;t year of school.
However, the Meigs Board did not . release the
Mann's daughter for tra nspo rtation purposes last
night. She is a high school student.
Jones and Mann said that buses from the
Eastern District pass their homes but that Meigs
Local buses do not come that far.
However, the Meigs Board last night Indicated
that they felt they had done a "humarritarian" act
in releasing Mark Mann, beca use he Is a high
sc hool senior. but voted unanimously against
releastng the other three students for transporta tion purposes . The discussion brought out that the
Eastern District not only receives the tuition from
the students but also the state moneys for the
three student s and an action to release the three
students mil!h1 lead to a number of ot her such

WE IESEI'E l'IIE RIIIT
Tl LIIR ..AITITIESI

PUR EX
TREID
DETER8EIT
399

enttne

Meigs board denies release of three pupils

OlE

147 OUNCE

- ___________,

•

Pomeroy-· Middleport, ()hio, Wednesday, October' 21, 1987

Our services provide co-operative planning with clergy, fraternal and family members to make possible
a funeral service that is personally planned for you.

STOP
FOR
SAVI

Clear tonight , low around
25.Sunny Thursday. High near
50. Chance of rain zero percent.

WASHINGTON (UP!) :.... The
Sena te, 'preparing for a major
foreign policy showdown with
Pres id ent Reagan with a demand
fot· a say in Persian Gulf policy.
tempered the call today by
unanimously reaffirming his
right to protect U.S. forces in the
gulf.
The Senate is preparing a
showdown on an amendment by
Senate Demo,ratic leader Robert By rd and Sen. John Warner.
R-Va., dem anding a report on
gulf policy in 60 days wit h a vote
30 days lat er on an unspeci fi ed

resolution that could modify or
terminate the policy of escorting
re -tlagged Kuwaiti tankers.
But before tackling the ByrdWarner . measure, the Senate
adopted 94-0 an amendment by
Republican leader Robert Dole
of Kansas declaring that a ny
congressional vote in . 90 days
would not interfere with Rea gan's rigiJt as commander in
chief to safeguard American
forces In the war-torn gulf and
saying it is not a demand for a
pullout of u.s. air a nd ' naval
forces.

Even today 's vote on the
Byrd-Wa rner measure Is merely
a preliminary confro ntation between tl:tt' Senate and the White
House. Their ame ndm ent was to
a bill demanding lnvoca1lon of
the 1973 War Powers Resolution ,
which would give Congres s a veto
over troop use in the gUlf. Byrd ,
D-W.Va. , promised to set the bill
aside after the vote until the
Senate disposes of Robert Bork's
Supreme Court nomination .
Thus, even if approved , the
gulf policy issue would bE' deContinued on page 5 ·

And now, although Fred Franclose of West Virginia's highway
department reported, · by letter
dated Sept. 23, that after exam in·
ing Pomeroy St. and finding it
"substantially the same as It
was" befo r&lt;&gt; the ferry , and
recommend! ng "1 he escrow accoun t now be released." the
mon ey is stU! being held and
Mason Vlllage Council is planning to repave th e s treet in
question, · using $9,400 of the
escrow money .
After being informed by Mason
Mayor ·George Nichols of the
intent to repave the street.
Pomeroy Chamber of Com merce
President Bill Nease requested a
public meeting in Mason to discuss the proposed paving. The
meeting was held Tuesday nigh t.
Mayor Nichols acknowleged
Franciose' s letter, and stated
that Mason may not have a
position to "legally allow us to
use tne money to redo the
street," but he said that would be
up to a n attorney to decide after
reveiwlng the co ntract.
Me igs County Engineer Philip
Roberts wa s present at last

DISCUSS ISSUE - Bruce Reed, at left, a Pum~roy councilman
and member of chamber, stated his feelings in a pnhlic meeting
last night in Mason. John Kerr, of WMPO Radio, is at right.

Merit selection hottest issue on Ohio ballot
to be appointed by the governor
(Third of a series)
from a shorl list of qualified
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
candidates chOsen by a commit ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUP I\
tee of citizens and atto rneys.
''Justice mu st be blind. but those
The " merit select Jon " co alit ion believes voters know little
who choose judges shou ldn't be."
With those words , a coa lition of
about the qualifications of judi·
cia! candidates, who are slated
bar associations, civic groups.
women 's associa lions a nd farm
for the ballot by poli1lcal party
groups have propo!ed a change · leaders according to their electability and not tnelr judicial
in the syste m by which Ohioans
choose their Ohio Supreme Court
ex~ertise.
According to the coalition, this
justices, and appeals judges in
means that judicial candidates
the stale's 12 di strict s.
Those ju stices and judges
have good ballot names and are
backed by growing amounts of
currently are . nomin ated by
poll1lcal money . .
political parties and elected by
· Citizens for the Merit Selection
the people. Citizens for the Mer it
of Judges pointed out that $3
Selection of Judges "(ants them
\•

,)

million was spent on th e 1986
contest for c hi ef justice of. the
Ohio Supreme Court -Including
$1.7 million by the losing
candidate.
"Why would so many people
contribute approximately $3 mil lion to elect a chief justice?'· said
the coalition. "You hav e to ask ,
'Who gave the money a nd what
did they want in return ?'
"Ohioa ns need to kn ow that
judicial decisions will be made on
the basis of Jaw and precedent
and not subject to ever-changing
political winds, " said the
coalition.
•
Iss ue 3 wou ld set up s pecial
nominat ing commissions to re.
'

commend three candidates to the
governor every time a vacancy
occurs on the Supreme Court or
one of the co urts of appeal.
The new sys tem would not
apply to judges of municipal
courts or co unty common pleas
courts. Those judges would continue to be elected.
The non-partisan nominating
commissions for each appeals
court distric t would comprise
half attorneys and half non attorneys from that di s trict, with
the governor appoinling the
non-lawyers and the court of
appeals. judges appointing the
attorneys.
The Supreme Court nominal-

ing commission would comprise
one lawyer a nd one non-lawyer
f~om each of the 12 dist rict s
commissions. They would have
to be of opposite political parties.
The judges appointed by the
governor would serve for two
years , and would then have to
su bmit themselves to the voters
tor retention at the next election.
They would have to receive 55
percent of the vote to be retained
lor a full s ix -year ter m .
Opponents, calling themselves
Ohioans for the Right. to Vote
iORV). believe the people's right
to choose their own judges should
not be supplanted with a group
which ORV describes as "an

,,

el ite" corps or attornc)·s in
league wit h the insurance ancl
banking indu stries.
ORV con, isis mainly of orga nized labor an d the Demor rali&lt;;
a nd Republi can parties .
ORV says a ppointed judges in
the 36 s1a1es usi ng suc h a system
a re no bette r Ihan eJected judges ,
a nd that recall ra re ly works.
Since 1942, only one judge has
been recalled in Mi ssoufi. the
group said .
Recall is difficult with no
alterna1lve can didale , sa id ORV,
addin g that under the proposed
method, if a judge Is distni ssed
by the vote rs, his or he r rep lace,
Co ntinued on page 6

�'

\

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/''

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Commentary

~ednesday,

Page- 2 - The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 21, 1987

Cards rally, _down Twins 3-l ·
for first 1987 series victory

Cracking down _____B_:_y_J_a_c_k_A_n_d_er_s_on_a_nd_Jo_s_ep_h_S_p_ea_r
The Daily · Sentinel
Ill Court Street _
Ponwroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE I~TF.RF.~TS OF TilE ME1t.S-'1ASO'O \RE \

ROBER'I L. WINGETT
Puhlisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
1\"!St,mt Pubhsher; Controlle r

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana~o·r

1\ ;vlf.MRF.R p!Tht• l~ n llt d P1 t s" I n\! 1 n 111.-. n .11 l nl1nd D 11h PH"·'A'-..,fl( l.111rln a nd !hf' Aml't ll m "\P\\O.:P.IP£'1 Publ ~" h{ 1.... A .. \;(1( 1 IIWn
1 J- ' I 1 F:RS OF OP T:-.. 10' 11

r

11, 1

om• Thl 1

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Moynihan motorcade
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGtON (UP I) -Soondmgver~ much like a man m a great
hurry cut off at the mtersect10 n by a motorcade, Sen Dame I Patrick
Moy nihan s tuc k 11 to the State Departme nt
He s ugges ted, m leglSiallve form. that henceforth the State
Depa rtmen t cease convoy mg fo r e tgn dignita ries to lhe Capt tal m the
flamboyant manner t hat has become commonplace
Moy niha n, the New Yor k Democrat, offered a n amendment to
State's authonzat10n bill seekm g an end to the "recurrent spectacle
of sc reechmg, self tmportant , heav ily a rmed caravans of limousines,
some decoys " roarmg onto the Ca p1t ol grounds
The amendment sa td the pract1ce IS' dt scordant. d1srup11ve" a nd
·scarcely a serv1ce to the vtstors themselves "
:11
Moymhan suggested transport of fore1gn d1gmtanes to the CaprtoTe
by "two unadorned automobiles and no motorcycles would ensure
fo re1gn VISitors a warm welcom e and make clear to them that they
are vtsttmg the representallve body of a democratiC state, and not
som e besieged clladel of a fearful tyranny "
The day before, wh1ch m1ght have been the last straw, Moymhan
sa1d the pres ident of Moza mbiqu e arrive d here in a manner whtch
Mr Duvalier would have found excess1ve as he roared through
Port a u Pnnce "
'Indeed, that pres ident e njoyed such treatments as any dozen of
tyrants or dictators m the world a r e accustomed to," he sa1d "That IS
not our pract1ce That 1s no1 their place "
Moynihan sa1d se nators do not have "offlctal cars, do not have
motorcycle escorts, do not have praetorran guards" and told the St a te
Department " brrng them up but have them arnve the way we do "
Or as Moymha n sa id, wtth a shrug, "If anything befalls us,
m1sfortune of any kmd, we wtll be replaced by other equally free

WASHINGTON- Federal au •
thorltles are beginning to tighten
the noose around the counterfeit
bolt trade
F ederal prosecutors a re fl
nally tak mg our warnings se
riously Last mon th US attar
neys m Orlando, Fla , pers uad~;d
a grand JUry to hand up !he fir s I
Indictment In a case of a lleged
fraud by a stee l bolt supplier
And the Just tee Department ha s
JOmed -a lawsull filed by a bolt
salesman against a former em
player, In which he charges that
the company sold thousands of
counterfei t steel bolts to the
m11ttary.
For months we have been
reporting the potential danger
posed by counterfeit steel bolts
tha t can' t withstand the stress
put on them by military hara ware The substandard bo lts turn
to putty at htgh temperatures ,
possibly puttmg Amenca n mil ·
it a ry personnel m fatal trouble
ThiS action b,Y federal prosecu tors comes none too soon for
Pentagon mvestlgators, who
have been lrymg for the past

year to n a il the so called
"schlock hou ses" that sell lndustrlal fasteners to the armed
services
Severa l inveshgators have told
our associate Stewart Harri s
they' re worried a bout the magni
tude of the counterfeit·bolt prob·
lem and tts potential for catas
tr op he At the Pentagon' s
"hardwa re store" m Philadel phia, the Defense lndustnal
Supply Command, one out of
every three Grade 8 bolts is a
fa ke Grade 8 steel bol ts are the
workhorses of Industri a I
fast eners
Alerts on the danger of fa ke,
substand ard steel bolts led to an

appalling d iCOYEtry: Counterfeits
were m the replacement stockpile for use on t he cata pult
syste m s of the carrier USS
Vinson Catap ults that send
planes off the Vmson every 45
seconds generate extremely high
temperatures. whtch the coun
terfelt bolt s can't hand le
TIJe counterfetts are made of
cheaper bo ron steel, which can
lose their strength at ~mpera­
tu res above 600 degrees Fahren heit . Some counterfeit bolts fa ll
at room temperature Genuine
Grade 8 bolt s can wtthstand
temperatures as high as 800
degrees without crumbling
Sources tell us that the Navy
has 1ssued warn10gs to ti s atr-

Today in history
By United Press International
Today ts Wednesda} , Oct. 21, the 294th day of1987 with 71 to follow
The moon 1s almost new
Th e morning star IS Mars
Th e evenmg stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn
Those born thts dat e are und er the sign of L1bra They mclude
E ng lish poet Samuel Taylor Colendge 10 1772·

.

represent a t ivcs
It's true that the p resident of Moza mbique, Joaqu1m Alberto
Ch1ssano, could have come up to the Cap itaim an "unadorned" carthat IS 1f the police had advance not1ce he was coming and someone
cleared him through the dnvewa y gates
Otherwise, he could have hoofed 11 And he could have gotten Into
the Capitol a fter gorng through the meta l det ectors That IS, Lf
Chlssa no arrived when the Ca pitol t's open to vtsttors
Although the Ca pllolls a long way from the · besieged citadel of a
foretgn tyrannv," the secu rit y IS ngtd and becommg more so w1th
each pa ssing year The next step ma y we ll be a fence e nc~rclmg the
Capttol grounds
The State Department puts on the caravan wtth motorcyle escorts
in the mt e rests of secunty, although the assumption has to be that
some other factors- convenience a nd diplomallc recogmtwn- play
the1r roles
There m ay be less of a threa t on th e well guarded Ca pital grounds
than other parts of the cap1ta.!. but askmg a foreign d1gmtary to step
out of hts secure hmousme a nd swit ch to an " unadorned" car would
be a little too much
And what 1f some ot her natwns dec1ded play a little tit for tat
Would Moymhan be comfortable ha v mg President Reaga n
Secretarv of Stat e Shultz or Defense Secreta ry Wemberger toolmg
around m · two unado r ned' cars when they travel overseas
Moy mha n' s amendment was e nthuslaS 11Cally adopted by votce
vote wtth thr ee sena tors prese nt, whrch prompted the New Yorker to
comment · I think I wtll ma r k th1s day as one of per manent
ha ppiness "
Jn this case permanent ma,Y be short lived as the a mendment ts a
non-blndmg resolutwn that no doubl will be dutifully flied and 1gnored
m Foggy Bottom. the la lf of the Sta te Department Tha t would bea n
appropnat e act ton

Sowing and reaping
By ARNOLD Si\WISLi\K
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- " The} have sown the wmd, and they shall reap
the whlfiwmd " Hoiea 8 7
Tha t thundenng Old Testa ment Judgment came to mmd whe n
s upport ers of Judge Robert Barks nommatwn to the SupremeGourt
cned foul over the negat tve ca mpatgn op ponent s waged agatns t h1m
on telev iSIOn a nd m newspapers
Ma ny of t he very peopl e who were out raged at the slick TV attacks
on Bark e tther supported or looked awa y m 1980 and s ubsequent
campa1gn s when· New Rtght' groups. led by the late Te r ry Dola n's
National Conservative Poht lca l Acuon Comm1 ttee, spent $16 mllilon
to attack liberal ca ndidat es wtth the sam e kmd of Simpli stic appea ls
10 fear and loat htng
It 1s t rue t hat the NCPAC style attacks were a1med at e leCilve not
appomted . offiCials Dolan'cla 1med to have defeated Democra tic
Sens John \ulver of 1owa , Birch Bayh of Indtana. George McGovern
of South Dakota a nd Frank Chu rch of Idaho. and of course those
victones for Republlca us were mst rumenta l in gtv mg the GOP
com trot of t he Sena te fo r the fir s t t1me m a qua rter century
•
Bark a nd hts conser va tive advocates say the use of s uc h tactics to
mflu e nce th e confirmat ion of a Su preme Court JU Stice IS
unp1 ecedented , which LS true, a nd t hat they ~OnS!ltUte, a t the least, a
deplora ble degradation of the judlcta l co nf1rmallon p rocess. whr ch
also may be true
However, 1t should be reca lled that the so called mdepende nt
palllical express tons of opt mon reptesented by the New Right
campa 1gns since 1~80, were up~ eld by the Supreme Court that Bark
wa nt s to Jo in as clear ly wllhm the free s peech protectwns of the First
Amendment
Th a t a m e ndmen t does not hmll the s ubj ec t m a tter of free speech.
\ but as Bark sa1d durmg his conftrmat1on hea nngs, 11 certa mly ~over s
po li tical opm 1on
.
Whtc h ra 1ses anoth e r objection of the pro Bork-s 1de The claim LS
made that JUdtctal a ppoint men is. unlike cand id ac ies In elect tons , a re
or s hould be. above politics
Th a t might sound high-minded except it comes from many of the
eople who s upported inclu sl0n of a plank in the Repu~lica~
s~:::~i'm demanding t he appomtment of only "pro-family ' - for
P h'c h reaad ant 1 a bortion - federa l Judges and who hailed the
~0 ~ ma fl(ln of Bork as the daw n of a g lorious new conserva t tve era on

craft carriers about the deadly
potential of the substandard
bolts We 've also learned that
counte rfe its have been disco
vered m submarine tend ers.
wh tch resupply the nuclear ·
armed subs that make up a vrtal
pa rt of U !? deterrence agamst
Soviet aggresswn.
Last month the Justice Depart ment joined a lawsuit flied by
Nathan Ha ga, a steel bolt sales
man who Is cooperati ng With the
Defe nse Cnmlnal Investigative
Serv1ce, the Naval Investigative
Service and the Customs Service
Haga flied the suit under a 1986
a m e ndment to the False Claims
Act allowmg whislleblowers with
d~rec t knowledge of fraud to sue
the perpetrators If the federal
governm ent wms 1ts case, Haga
could gel as much as one third of
the monetary award.
The l awsUit Is asking for more
than $1 million from Aircom
Fasteners Inc of Arlington,
Texas, where Haga worked In
1984 and 1985 A1rcom sold more
than 43 shtpments of counterfeit
bolt s to the Defense Industrial
Supply Command, according to
court papers Co mpany officials
are not co mmenting on th e
Ja WSUll
Documents we've obtamed In '
dtcate that Alrcom sold the
Pentagon boron -steel bolts in·
stead of authentic Grade 8 bolt s
One purchase order ftom compan y fil es as ked a Japanese bolt
m a nufa cturer to supply 90,000
Grad e 8 bolt s
but the words
" boron steel · were typed Into the
spa ce marked "Descnptwn "
Hag a 's law s Uit charges furth er
lhat Atrcom sold the Pentagon
bolts plated with zt nc in s tead of
cadmtum, a more costly rust
res 1st a nt treatment
The mdtctments m Flor1da
charge officers Edgewater Fas
tener Inc w1 t h co nsp~racy to
defraud the P e ntagon and with
m a k10 g fa lse statements The
charges rnvol ve the alleged
supply of fo retg n made steel nuts
and bolts whe n domestically
manuf act u red fas teners had
been spe~tfled m the contract

•

By MIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
ST LOU IS tU PI J - Mmn esota
Twms Manager Tom Ke lly who
had yet to pa y for an October
mtstake, flunk ed Tuesday mght
1n hts first maJor move uf the
World Series, allowmg the St
Louts Cardinal s to s neak back
Int o cont en tiOn
W1th the Twms holdi ng a 1 0
lead , Kelly 1emoved s ta1 te r Les
Straker from a four-hitter to
start the seventh mnmg and
replaced him wt th playoff hero
Juan Berenguer Th e move ap
peared sound unt1l Berenguer
threw hi s fi rs t pi tch
St Louts routed the chubby
nght hander, who faced only live
batter_;; In one third of an Inning
Vmce Coleman, a flop a t Minneapolis in the Metrodome, doubl ed
home two ru ns to g tve the
Cardm a ls a 3-1 victory that cut
Mmnesota s lead to two games to
one
After the game, Kelly bns tled

mcluded sleepmg wtth a Jot of mar·
ned men who treated her as a convemence. Then, she became "born
agam" and be~an attendm~ a larRe
chansmallc congregabon headed by
a former salesman who!d been "annomted by God" to lead th1s tribe
Without benefit of theological semt·
nary Like Hahn, she worked at the
church m any capac1ty they'd have
her. She did not hold a paymg job, although she had held a very responsible one before her conversiOn
"You know," she told me when relatmg how much the church meant to
her, "I was down at the church work·
mg whe• Reverend B11l came by rldmg a btcycle A 10-speed, he wasn't
even dnvmg h1s car1 And he had on
Reeboks and a N1ke sweatshirt JUSt
hke anyone would wear He doesn't
thmk he's anythmg special "
The thought had never occured to
me that Rev Bill was too good to
wear clothes like the rest of us But I
was alarmed that th1s young woman
thought 1t JUSt a little shy of

Ra, t•llalll' ll~l ~t':L"Un :-it
Wnrld ~t•rtt""
!&gt;illl

When I read Hahn's story, I felt the
same ch1ll come up my back Contrast
my fnend's statement w1th these
comments of Hahn's
• "Profeta - the regular pastor would come up to me and say 'Could
you watch my son•• I thought, my
God. he asked me to watch his son
You've got to understand - to me,
lh1s was like God talkmg "
• "There 1s also a scripture that
says 'God's way IS not my way ' And I
thought, 'Maybe th1s IS God's way of
domg 11 who am I to JUdge'"
• "I wanted somebody to look up
to It IS obv1ous now that's what I
was lookmg lor - somebody 1n aulhonty to kmd of lead me around a httle bit."
• "I always wanted to be spec1al, I
always wanted to be m on somethmg
I hated be1ng on the outstde lookmg
m "

• "You know, when you're 14, these
preachers are hke what rock stars are

chtne w1th the trade name "Forest
Lme • Those ·machmes were manufactured m the 1970s by Railer-Forest S A , a French concern that was
merged m1o another company, Ma·
chmes FrancalSes Lourdes, alter go·
mg bankrupt 10 1982
The Pentagon asked the French
government to mvesllgate the
charges
France has not publicly announced
the results of 1ts mvesttgabon yet But
accordmg to Pentagon sourc~s .
French government mvesligators are
privately telling Washmgton that
whrle Rat1er-Forest may have sold
some m1lling machmes to the Sovtet
Union m the mld-1970s, they were not
high-tech machmes covered by export
controls
The Pentagon beheves France wtll
publicly reJect the charges
But Pentagon source say they have
hrst-hand evidence that Railer-Forest m1lhng machmes were highly sophlstLcated and capable of producmg
qu1et submanne propellers
The "proof" is 10 the form of an un
named US engmeer who adm1tted he
was hired m 1979 by Raber-Forest to
help solve some software problems
they were havmg w1th the1r seven
ax1s homontal milling mach10es
The engmeer reportedly told U S
lnvest1gators that he was taken to a
Rat1er-Forest plant in Capdenac,
France He was brought 10 to pro·
gram the machmes for certam pro·
pellef-makmg apphcahons for which
they had never before been used
He satd he was told the pro~ram·
mmg was needed for a sh tpment of
f1ve machmes about to leave for an
unnamed country It never occurred
to htm that the machmes were destmed for the Sovtet Umon
But when the engineer heard of the
charges contamed ln the Tosh1ba Machme mvesttgatLon, he realized the
mach10es he saw m 1979 had to be the

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PL~'{lNG DOC10R IS

A-'Nt\OLE NEW BALLGAME,
THESE DAYS.

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Berry's World

'I

''"til~
r atm,(~

Phi!&gt;iiEIR I

same ones Tosh1ba Machme eng1· Bryen, the Pentagon's top export control ofltclal, as saymg "There IS no
neers saw m 1983
doubt
10 my mmd that th1s was an 1lle·
Pentagon mveshgators are appargal
•ale
"
ently convmced by the man's story
Netther
the Pentagon nor Bryen
Th1s means that the machmes could
not have been shipped m the mld- w11l now e1ther confirm or deny the
1~70s, but m 1979 or 1980 They were accuracy of the quote But reportedly
clearly of the type covered by export there are high-level meetmgs takmg
place to discuss a US response to a
control agreements
blanket
French dental that any illegal
Recently a trade JOUrnal, 'Meta).
sale
was
ever made
workmg News," quoted Stephen D

" 'i)O 'iO

!II IIU tat h

M.!~pm

x I hur Od ' ! - 1\llnlll"ul.l 11 Sl
luul!&gt;i II !l 1tm
11 x -.'•Oat
Oct
St
l..oou"- 11
\hnm•-.t•t • I p m
}. -.t.;un
Oo t
ti - ~~ t... ut" 1l
Ulnno "'Ita JC !i I' tn
r/ n• t • "'.,;ar'

What better way for a woman w1th
low self-esteem to be "tn on somethmg," than to be near this power, to
mmrster to the man at the rtght hand
of God? It's the same desperatiOn that
seizes rock star group1es, and the result has somellmes been the same
Was Jess1ca Hahn, as she charges,
raped and brutalized' Or was she, as
Bakker alleges, the seducer' Whatever happened, both Bakker and Hahn
agree that J1m Bakker, the most famous chansmallc preacher m the
world, slept w1th a 20-year-old church
secretary JUSt hours before he wooed
the buck on a telethon He IS colossally human
There 1s a lesson m th1s, and a powerful one Men like Jtm Bakker are
not gods Smce the Bakker scandal,
some m1msters have worned their
1mage 1s tarniShed I believe, rather,
11 IS put back mto perspecllve If they
are messengers of God , that 1s all they
are

u

ht duh

11\1 hi"' h ud M•rlt"" ! I I
Uti li - i\llntJt!&gt;iUI.tiO ~ tlntll"'l

Ltml"' t ~ltlhtlo\"' )

Did France sell to Soviets? __B__:c_y_R_ob_er_t~_a_gm_a_n

WASHINGTON (NEA) - the Umted States and France may be on the
verge of a serwus breech over
charges that, a decade ago, a French
company tllegally sold sophiShcated
metal-workmg mach10ery to the Sovt·
et Umon
The charges are an outgrowth of
the Toshiba Machme Co affair The
Japanese machme-tool maker con·
sptred w1th a Norweg1an f1rm to illegally sell four large propeller-m1llmg
machmes to the Sov1et Umon
The sale vwlated Japanese law as
well as export control agreements
among Western nahons not to supply
the Sovtets wtth v1tal technology
The machmes can manufacture almost completely Silent submarme
propellers, and, as a result, they have
been high on the list of ttems banned
for sale behmd the Iron Curiam
When the Tosh1ba Machme sale became public knowledge, Congress be·
gan acbons to close U S markets to
products manufactured by Toshiba
Machme's parent, Toshiba Inc
In an effort to head thiS off, Toshiba
htred a U S law firm and accountmg
organizallon to conducl an mdependent probe Tosh1ba Inc wanted to
prove that Tosh1ba Mach1ne had deceived the parent company as well as
Japanese author1bes
The mvesbgat10n was conducted by
the presbgtous New York Jaw firm of
Mudge, Rose, Guthrie, Alexander and
Ferndon and the Tokyo office of Pnce
Waterhouse, tfie accounting gtant
Contamed m 1ts fmal report, whtch
Toshiba has made pubhc, IS the
charge that Toshtba Machtne engineers who went to the Sov1et Union to
mstall the company's machmes sa'l'
highly sophistiCated French m1lhng
the high court
.
70
11 mtght also be reca lled tha t co nservatives 10 the 191J9s and 19 s
machines already producmg qUiet
serio usly proposed impeachmg both Ch1ef Jus 11c~ Earl Warren a nd
submarme propellers
Reportedly , m a BaltiC factory, ToJu stice William 0 . Douglas for t helf views
I t th the consti t utional provlswn of c heck mg the presidential
shtba Machme engmeers saw "very
po~e:~r ~ppomtme n t wrth the Senate power of confirm~tlon assures twisted propellers" suitable lor qUJet
submarme use, bemg mllled by a rnaan exerc ise of po1Lt 1cs, tf not par ti sa n, t he n a lmost su~ely ideologica l.

~·Klon I l
I Culun1hu" \ ladtmY ltl ~I;.! R1lprt
16.00
I ( uul Gruvt na~~unRryant
lliiO I II rh•r!iun l nion Ill il i llho rl \
ln.Cin nOll 6 Arnandl(hartrlok 7
Slt•ttht•n\llh ( atiMtllt IIlli II Oak Hill
:J! 4MI
Ro,;iu11lfl
I ~~·"'t h fh'f,. ~lll lfl ~I ! \'1 r•oullh•"
I! 110 :J \\lu t•l1 r"'l"•rr.: ~~~ IMI I " ' mnln~
:II fll i (lh 1 Nt lo\ Ml tuJl l anil na~ton
0~klo\IMJtl
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(liM lnnali
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~
Ult 1 l.au:wlllt
\ llllt y anti Kit hmuntl J) 1l1 :-imllht IL"II rn

~un Ott 111- MinntMtlull i-ll lun"-1
1'ut Ott tti-St luu1.. 1 /111ttllt ... olnl
\\td Chi '1- IHlnm!'!uht ( \ltJia) tiiSI

\O 16-year-olds •

mtraculous

whe n qu es lloned repeated !\
abo ut r em ov mg a pltc het m the
mtddiP of a shutout
" I thmk I know m y ballclub
better th an you do.'· he snapped
"J uan pitched great for me all
Senes a nd hE:' s done the JOb for
me m that situation all year He
JUSt didn't have It toni ght
· If you look a t Les !Straker' s !
htstory, after the sixth or seventh
Inning he gets a little s haky ,"
Kelly sa1d "They wer e gettmg ·
ru nn ers on base In every tnmng
a nd he was getting out of It I
wanted to get two mnlngs out of
Berenguer and one out of (J e ff)
Reardon"
Kelly, spared laugh decisions
dunn g Twins rout s In the first
two games of the Senes. could
have gone wllh le ft-h a nder Dan
Schatzeder a move that would
have turned around all of St
Lou1s' switch hitters
· He has been tak tng me out m
the s1xth or seventh all year "
Straker sa id, lookmg unhappy

NHL results
Computer ratings

That charismatic appeai ___By_S_a_rah_Ov_er_:~Lr_ee_t
In the No¥ember 1ssue of Playboy
magazme - and not 1n the most balanced piece of JOurnalism you'll ever
read - JesSica Hahn has fmally told
her stde of the event that brought
down J1m Bakker
We'll probably never know whose
versiOn IS the truth - Hahn's,
Bakker's or the third-person account
Jerry Falwell used as a medJa tool m
the PTL power play
But havmg hved m a hotbed of fun
damentahst Chnsttamty--all my hie,
there's part of Hahn's tale that str1kes
me as absolutely accurate the hero
worship that some charlSmattc
preachers msptre m women
I've heard women talk about these
men as 1f the fellows were Just a notch
lower than God, and only a teeny-tmy
notch at that, w1th awe that these men
even exhibit human tendenc1es They
have pampered these men w1th a fervor that nvals the mourners at Rudolph Valentmo's funeral
A young woman I knew had an especially rocky young adulthood that

(t~lllrllllrl\\lurd ..l•l•l li l lh l \\ \n lurd
.tntl \\,111'01 &lt;1 11 II ill •'a• h: II \ll t•n f' I' I

T-ransat'lions
n, lnltodl'rc... ~lnh

n ... t..

r 1111tluntl

th•ll

~ll\ l&lt;lnocl \tlmt u llu~k" .Inti
lndtmu l'u t tt" :oo llo7~11 lm htnoht~
o II arln)ll ~ru M I ht~t 1 hurstll\
~at nu u• 1\ln - Ro It '"' tl lfUttrtl .. \or
rwn ( trr lou llull Olht r llrlllo\ n atul
&lt;4nhrl)tnltdorll1mn
"' ullh - \\ul\td )lillllrtl" Tnllllll\

He said to ffi(', r lnl' JOb \ ou
!hi ev. 90 'piiChE'S. tha t's II I
didn't say a nythin g I'm not llr&lt;.'d
now
The Ca1dtnals plan to send
Gr&lt;.'g Mathews agamst Frank
V1ol a Wednesday mght m a battle
of left hander·s m Game 4 of the
best of seven Senes.
Coleman m tssed the 1985 World
Senes wtt h a leg mjury s uffered
m a mts hap w1th the Busch
Stadtum ta rp Until Tu esday
mgh t. he had yet to make hts
presence felt 10 the c urrent

Senes
"In 1985 11 was a bttter ptll lo
swallow, no t ha\l ng an y mput
mto the World Senes,' Colem a n
sa td
Before a Busc h Stadium
record crov.d of 55,347 Sllt mg
through 45 ilegree te mperatures ,
John Tudor went seven tnnmgs
glvmg up foUl hit s . for the
victory Todd Worre ll pitched
one hll r e lief ov e r two mn mgs !01
the save Berenguer took the
loss
St rak e1, dended as a symbol of
Mmnesota s p1tchmg weakness.
held th e Cat dmals to four hLt s
through ,s tx mmngs Kelly re
moved htm for a pmch-hltler m
the seventh and Ber&lt;.'nguer let
the game get away
Jose Oquendo a nd Tony Pena
opened the seve nth w1th smgles
a nd pinch hitter TE&gt;rry Pendleton
sacnflced In an 0-2 hole, Cole
man sliced a s in gle down th e
"I! W».
ill
l'tl ~
~
'
m Wcdnesd,ty mght 's "orld ScrLCs conte~t
th~rd ba se ILne. bnnglng hom e
COLEMAN SCORES - The Cardinals' Vince
Coleman drove in th&lt;' first two wolh a douhle a' the
two runs He followed wtth h1s
Col
eman
is
congratulated
hy
teammates
after
Redbirds came from hehmd to wm G.&lt;mc 3 hy .t3-l
second stolen base of the game
scormg th e third ru'n in a three-run seventh fram&lt;·
marglll. (UPIJ
and scored when Ozz1e Smtih
s mgled to nght
" Fast of all. we're wLt hout our
big gun, Coleman sc~td, refe1
nn g to Ja ck Cla rk out v.Lth a n
ankle mJury
All three vtclones m lh1s Sene~
have come at home th e Twm s
captunng two game s m the
ST LOUIStUPl l-A buntt ha t m' own but I ga r out a nd pulled . double plav I was gomg to send
Metrodome and t he Cardmal s
tJo hn l Morns up to bat , He r zog
m vsclf toge th er "
dtdn't work a nd one th a t dtd
rebOundmg m Busch Stadium
smd
I chose Tcttl because 1! he
He
fou
led
of
f
a
pttch,
t
he
n
ft gu red p ro mm entlv m keepm g
Coleman reprcs&lt;.' nt ed part ot
touls
t-.;
o bun ts of( 1 "'II had m\
grounded
a
s
ing
le
to
tt
ght
that
ailve the hopes ol the St Lou1s
the reason for th e'ctr dmals ' lack
best
hrtt
et up there l dtdn I want
put
runn
el
s
on
fu
s
t
a
nd
seco
nd
to
Ca r dmal s Ln th e Wolid Senes
of success m Mln."lesota He wen t
to
take
a
c ha nce on a double pld:,
set
up
a
nothe1
bunt
srt
ua
tw
n
Th e two bu nt a ttemp ts set up
only 1 for 8 m the fu sl t-.; o games
Pendleton
latd down a pet feet
'I JUSt wa nt ed 10 put th &lt;.' balltn
Vmce Colema n for a two 1un
w1th one s tolen ba se Ht s mabtll tv
bunr,
though
a nd nea r.Iv beat 11
pl.ty " Pen a smd " I wa nted to h tt
double tn a three run seven th
to reach base left the Cat dm als'
out
as
thrrd
baseman
Ga1 \' G.lcltl
behmd the run ner stay out of the
mnmg Tuesday m ght, helpmg t he
runmn g game to effect tve, a nd St
r
el
dcd
11
a
nd
thi
e'.l
to
ftrst Tha t
1
Car dmals defeat Mmnesota 3 1 do ubl e plaay .1 nd I JUst dtd 11 It
Lou 1s was rou ted 10-1 a nd 8 4
brought
up
Colem
an
was a lastball. up a nd 10
and cu t the Tw ins' a dvan tage to
" Las t yra t after-.;ewere outof
Co ntmued on p.1ge &lt;
St Louts Ma naget Whttc y
two games to one
th e race. I expenmented with a
Herzog
th
en
fa
ced
a
chmce
He
Jose Oqu endo s mgled,toce nt er
b1 gger ba r · Coleman sa1d 'All
could send up Tcn y P endleton,
off
th e fi rst pttch from Twm s
wmter long I co ncentra ted on
nsklng that hts Mmnesota coun
1C'liever J ua n Bercnguer m the
hillin g the ball to t he other side
The Dailv• Sf•nlin e l
l et pa rt. 1o m Ke ll} . "auld m ser t
My approac h commg 1n was to seve nth Cardmals catchPt Tony
le ft y Dan Sc halz&lt;.'de t lwcause
Pena c ame up and wa s a sked to
tl!S PS 115 1160)
t r} to h1t the ba ll to th t:' lefl s1de
P o' nd iPion ca n o nlv htl left
bunt.
but
m1ssed
two
curves
a
nd
1\ J)t v l ~ t o n ttf Multlnu dl.t, In•
and not t r:, to pull 11 '
ha nded clue to h ts n bcage m;ur 1 ,
fell mto an 0 2 ho le
Of Bercnguer. Coleman sa td
Publt~lwd t\41\
lilfln,on Vlnridt\
01 he could send up clllOih er m a n
·
Thev
were
tough
pll
ches
to
1ht OU!.! h I I HI !\
I 11 ( ltllJ I !'-;\
Po
wtth dlsd a m "H e's a two pitch
hP cou nt s on to bunt To m
n'lf'l 0\ Olun h\ llw Ohio\ ulit \ Put)
built,' Pen a said 'H" th1Pw two
pttcher ·
lbhin'!,l-(omp,.n\ M1.1 l1tm odtt
lnt
La\\ Je ss
grea t bt ea km g ba lls After th a t I
PnmC'III\ Oh1n lrl'ili11 Ph 'l'll l1,..1h St•
Tudo1 a llowed a ru n m the
I told Tct n 1f P en a htt tnto a
thought about bunung agam. on
( fl11 rl ( I•"" )l4"1'ol 1)!r p 1111 11 Pomt't n\
s 1xth Wllh on0 out, he walked
Ohtn
Greg Gag ne and K1rby Puck e tt
M1•m hf'1
l ntlt rl Pit..,., ln11 111 llltln tl
Gagne ta gged a nd advanc0d
I nl unl D ttl\ P1 t ...... \~ ... 1 tl ron •tH! I h
w he n catcher Pcna caught GaryOhtlli\t\\t..l),ipf'! ,\~"•"! 1110n :\ lllfln,\1
Gaellt's popup while tumbilng
,\(1\ll ll~ m r.: 111 p1 ,.~C'nt 111', R• nh •m
Nt\-I"(Jtpt
Sd t ~ it\ lht!d ,\,•nut:
mt o the St Lou ts dugout Tudo r
r-..:r" Ynt 1.; '\['\\ ·~ m J.; HlOr
had Brunansky 2 2 and appea red
POS I MAI.ITr.:R S...nd Hlth ~" t h t!1t..:r&gt;&lt;:
to glVI' htm a good p1t c h , low and
10 ! hf' D,ul\ S&lt;nttml 111 Ci•tlll "lt •
away. but Br una nskv pok ed 11
i '(•mt 1m Oh1n l 'i~hi.J
m to nght fteld "ne t e Cu rt Ford
Reebok • children's shoes are built to
sl ' HS( ltii'IIO:\! U\1Ls
sermf'd to lose the ba II m the
outlast the .btggest brut sers on the bloc k
n, f arr•t r u r :\l t) l 11r lt11ull
lig ht s
:lnt Wf &lt;k
Sl!•
They're double-stttched and have leather
Fm d probably would not have
Otw Mornh
-.:in
toecaps for long wear Plus, the
Onf' 't ... u
i'ih1 Hn
caught th e ball a nyway bu t the
non marking sole won't leave a trail
~INf,JI ( 01'\
play con ta med a n u on1 Th e las t
['f{l( " ·
RczC!bOk~~-"",_....
lime Tud or pitc hed m Game 6 of
Dnh
the Npt10nal League pl a)o ff s'
Suh&lt;.;l"llbtJ-.nntdt"'ltinl"lf•P" ltlt't 11
Sa n F1 a nctSca 11ght !Leid e r
llfl n11\ ll'tllll In tth 111~1 (ltlt~tt Tl
Thr Do~tl\ St•nt lnr 1••n 1 ~ hot U monfh
Candy Ma ldonado lost a ba ll 111
hhi&lt;; C'IC'dll\\llihc t:l\ tntlliiCII u)l
the Bu«:h Stadtum lig ht s pro
\\ Pt'k
clueing th e onl} run of the game
.... '\1) ... uh~l ttpt1un ... h\ rn 111 ptl mt!lf'd tn
Thts game bore no 1 csemb
Hl' l'- \\httt htrnl t lJill! ' I I \ Itt I"
l\,itl tb1 1'
l a nce to thP fu st two a fact that
became evtdent when the Twm s
:\1 ul Snh .. t 'Hpltull"
fail ed IO SCO i e Ln the&gt; fourth
Jn .,llfl :H ti K" ( UUIII\
\I- 2 1
ll \\ t I).;&lt;,
1nn lng Th ey had assembled a
_h\\((\.:'
s ll {11;
seven run tourth mnlng m Ga m e
r)_ \\t'l k"
:-.hh 11~
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
1 a nd a srx run ou tbu tsl m Game
Ouhtdt 1\1• IJ.:" ( nu nl v
11 \\q k ...
SlH _U
2 ThiS t1m c. the\ "ere l l'ttred
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE
"i 1) lit
l 23
:-.t- f\H
Minnesota s btggc&gt;st thr ea t
O\ et t he fu st II\ e tnmn gs came m
_the thu·d when T1m Laudn er and
Dan Gladdc&gt;n s mgl ed to put
runnPl s on tu·s t a nd second
Gagne flted ou t to end the mnm g
St Lout s fared llltl P better
a g a m s t Strak&lt;.'r To m Herr htt
tnlo an mnmg e ndmg double plav
1n the first a nd P c&gt; na groun ded to
second wtlh 111 o on a nd two out m
the second

Bunt that didn~t work proves to be
turnaround for St. Louis Cardinals

I(

The Toughest Shoes
OnThe Block.

CHAPMAN SHOES

•

o

1!H!1 by NEA

nc

~

l ~
~

•

MARK 0. BROWN, M.D.

llo•t "' '
r .. - ( . lilt d up dt•lt ""' m uu

SPECIALIZING IN INTERNAL MEDICINE

'lo'l n a n ~·
lurl loroon!&gt;ilrantl lr oml ( ulurildll uf tlu
btltrUI( )ulltlllutli.t\ l A 11!;111 """1~11111
d t f1 ""' utall U t\ t l'lt ht Ill lu:\1 lo\ tl :.t\ 1 n
n f tl11 A m• r !o u n llntlit"' l A 11.:110

HAS OPENED HIS PRACTICE IN THE
MEIGS MEDICAL BUILDING
MULBERRY HEIGHTS, POMEROY

Nllt I r

ti an-.a" C II ' I ~II Iii ! - ~I jtll&lt; d nud
111 hi• rll trn \\ tlhu, 1n I \t tr t tllllfllt I
p lat ttl fur" trd 1nutllo hhr I ntth :\110
t huff '"l " th • r'

•

Ann Parker of New Haven $50.00
Carolyn Hartenback of Pt. Pleasant $25.00
· Missy Spangler of Mt. Altlo $15.00
WINNER OF GIFT CERTIFICATES

GINGERBREAD HOUSE OF GIFTS

Po1nt Pleasant
\

.

'

IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE

l'lmtnh - ltndtr td n lltr "httl l u
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CONGRATULATIONS TO

1

VETERANS MEMORIAL HO$PITAL

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Gingerbread Boy Says

,

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~~
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The Dally Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport. ·Ohio

October 21. 1987

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lustHr Acry11c ltnl!&gt;h tor except1onal
Mm •ng t~nd easy rnaln!tmi'o 11Ce
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necassarr wh en used as d 1 ec t(!d
Ideal lor alumtnu 11 Std nq

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Wednesday, October 21, 1987

W~nesday,

..--Local briefs---- ~old front moves into. Qhio

Kelly defends his decision

Will flush hydrants

MINNEAPOLIS !UP!)- In a
in -each of the first six ' innings, . "He pitched good ." Twins .
room awa s h with perfect hindwhen Berenguer entered the · catcher Tim La udner said of ·
Berenguer. "He just pitched in
s ight , Minnesota Manager Tom
game .
Ke lly defended his decision to
"He (Straker) was still getting tough luck. He was doing th e bes t
r ely ori reliever Juan Berenguer
us out," the Cardinals' Ozzle he could . They hit pre tty good
rather than a starting pitcher
Smith said. "I don' t know why pitches. It was just one of those
things. They were pitcher 's
who was throwing a -shutout.
they took him out."
pitches and the Cardina ls put the
Berenguer started the seventh
Kelly had lelt-hander Dan ball in play ,"
inning in relief of starter Les
Ilespite Bere nguer 's fa ilure to
Straker with the Twins holding a Schatzeder warming up along
1"0 lead Tuesday night. Five with Berenguer, but did not put Minnesota ahead 3-0 in the
batters later , the Cardinals led hesitate to go ":'ith ·the hard - Series, the Twins rna inta ined
confidence in their reliev er .
3-1 and Minnesota's edge In the throwing right-hander.
Jose Oquendo hit Berenguer's
"Ho!s been doing ·a s uper job
World Series was sliced In half.
" Juan Is our man In that first pitch for a sharp single, and all year," Laudner said. " With·
situation," said Keny to a crowd Tony Pena, after falling to bunt out him and Reardon, we
of reporters. " Juan pitched good , him over, fought off an 0-2 pitch wouldn't be here. Every body has
and slapped it to right for a their days . I'm not going to get
ali season."
single.
.
If "that situation" comes again
down over anything like this."
Terry Pendleton pinch-hit for
soon, the Twins will need more
Twins right- fielder Tom Bruthan strong alibis. They will need pitcher John Tudor and sacri- nansky said he felt re lax ed when
a strong performance Irol']l Ber- ficed . Vince Coleman lined an 0-2 he saw Berenguer warming up.
enguer, who sports a ERA of pitch for an opposite-field double
" I know when Juan and Rear. 33.75 in two World Series past third baseman Gary Gaetti don are getting loose in the e ighth
to put St. Louis ahead 2-1. Smith and ninth, l. feel confident, "
appearances .
Straker was working a shaky followed with an RBI single to Brunansky said . "Tonight It just
shutout, having escaped trouble cap the scoring.
didn' t work out."

play In Game 3 of the World Series, played
Tuesday night at Busch Stadium in St. Louis. Tom
Herr was retired at first by Lombardozzl's throw.
tUPI)

DO UBLE PLAY
Twins' second baseman
Steve Lombardozzl leaps over a sliding Ozzie
Smith of the Cardinals after Lombardozzi had
thrown to first to complete a first-inning double

Co ntinued from page 3
_
Bunt ... _______________
" He threw me two fastballs, I
think they were, both low, " said
Colema n, 1 for 11 in th e World
Series entering tha t a t-bat. " 1
knew the infield was back. I was
just trying to put th e ba ll in play.
If l did, l knew one run would

score.
" I swung at the fi rs t pitch and
took the second. l put mysel f In a
ho le. Then he th rew me a nother
low fast ball an d I was for tunate
enough to put it in play."
It may have hel ped tha t Gaetti
was s haded sli ghtly over to short.
guard ing agai ns t the ground ball
in the hole that was more likely
than the sharp ground er down
the lin e th at Co leman ac tua lly ·
prod ucPd.
Ozz ie Smith added a n RBI
s ingle a nd the Cardinal s had a 3-l
edge. Todd Worrell closed out the
game for Joh n Tudo r.

" When it was 1·0 a fter six
innings ," He rzog said , "I didn ' t

feel too co mfor ta ble. Our att ack
is n' t too good ri ght now ."

No incidents reported · as regular
Browns practice with replacements
BEREA, Ohio tU Pl i - So
much for a disruption of the
Cleveland Brown s' tea m un ity.
Any thou ght s of dissens ion
were quickly dis pelled when the
Browns started s inging the
them e song from the telev ision

se ries " Gilligan 's Island " a t the
conclusion of Tu esday 's pra ctice, the first sess ion combining
the ret urning Br owns, strik ebreaker s and 14 replaceme nt
player s.
" We needed to get loose," sa id
cornerbaek Ha nford Di xon, wh o
Jed the impromptu chorus.
Dixon was one of the mos t
vehement cr itics of

t ~a mm ates

Har-ru.mph!

that had crossed picke t lines.
"Tha t's histo ry," said the Pro
Bowler. "We' re back together as
.a

tea m . T her e are no hard

fee lings, no bad me mor ies.
We're all go ing to do wha tever 's
necessary to get to the Super
BowL "

Di xon and other pla ye rs a lso
ta lked to both the str ike breakers
a nd the selected replacements
throughout th e day.
''.Judging

from

th is, ever y -

thing is go ing to work out we ll, "
sa id quarterbac k Be rni e Kosa r.
"Th at' s very gra ti fy ing. Our
prime focu.s now is on (Monday
nigh t' s) game with the Los
Angeles Ra m e."

Expect the Irish to be· rude to USC
By Ma j. Amos 8 Hoople
Pee rless Prognosticator
Egad. friends ! One of college
footb a ll' s oldest intPrscct lonal
r i\'alries has its 59t h renewal thi s
week. Southern Californi a's Trojan s v.isit South Be nd . Ind .. to
challenge the rejuvenated Fight ·
ing Iris h of No tre Dal]le (on
CBS-TV l.
The set·ies commenced in J92G
when famed coac h Howard Jones
saw hi s Trojan s drop a heart -

break('!" 13-12. 10 fabled coach
Knute Rockne and the Iris h. The
annual ser ies was suspended
tl942-4H4l dur ing Wor ld Wa r 11 ,
but il

has co n1i nued un intcr ·

rpur ed evN s ince.
Currently, Kon·e Dame enjoys
a four-game wi nnin g strea k
again st USC. However , the 23
triumphs . by So ulhern Cal over
N.D. are mo re !ha n any ot her
irish opponenr. Notre Da me has
won 31 ga mes , a nd there were
four tiC's.
QB Rodney Peete is the key to
the Trojan offense. He's a very
accurate passer a nd ca n scra mble when necessary. No tre Da me
countNs with hig hly recruited
sophomore Tony Rice a nd it s
explosl\'e Heis man ca ndida te,
flanker Tim Brown. j,l1 a typica l
Trojan -Iri sh donnybrook , we

come down on the side of Notre
Dame, 34· 24. Harrumph!
Elsewhere. the Bi!( Eight has a
full plate. Polished a nd powerfu l
OklahOma is ou r choice to ru n
over tough but out manned Colora do. 42 20. HiglJly rat ed Nebraska figures to wallop Kansas
State. 49-12 . We look for Ok la·
homa State to keep its bowl hopes

'

a live by defea ting improv in g
Mi ssouri, 36-21. And the Ka nsas
Jayhawks fi gure to ou tscore
Iowa State. 24-7.
In the tight SE C race, the
Hoopl e Sys tem sees Vince Dooley's Georgia Bulldogs winn ing
a nother over .t he Ke ntuc ky Wild·
ca ts. 28-21. Aubu r n gets the nod
over Mississ ippi Sta te, 30-20.
Elsew here, the Pac -10 race
hea ts up with four cont ests on
tap. UC LA. with thei r all-time
leading ru sher Gaston Green
show ing th e way, wil l dunk
Ca lifor ni a, 44·17. Su r pr is in g
Orego n will notc h anoth er victory: 22·14 . over Sta nford. Also. it
will be Ar izons State, 42-H , over
Oregon Sta te; a nd Ari zona. 28-24.
over Was hington Sta te.
Ohio State's Buckeyes will nip
Minnesota . 21-17, in the Big Te n
headliner.
Mean while, Clemson will stay
on course wit h a 31-15 triumph
over No rth Ca rolina Sta te.
In the turbulent WAC, the Air
F orce will cool off hot Texas-E l
P aso, 38-35.
In anot her contest, you wi ll
fi nd the Mia mi Hurri ca nPs bl owing out Cin c innat i, 42- 14 . The
Baylor Bea rs a nd Texas Chr istian of the SWC will ge t it on for
the 95th time, with the Bea rs
e merging victoious, 24 -15. Utah
wil l wi n a close one, 27~25 over
Uta h Sta te In a back-yard scra p.
And Syracuse will cont inue Its
s parkling play, with a 38-12 wi n
over Colga te. Ha r-rumph!
Si\TURDAY , OC'I' . 2-1

Air F'orc{' :m Tl'xas El

P:~qo

31

Appnlach'n St 17 Tl.'nn·Challa nooga 15
Arizona 28 Wash i ngton St~lf' ~-1

Arka'n sus 28 Hou ston 21

Auburn 30 Mi:&gt;t; lss l'p pl Statt:&gt; 20
Bavlor 24 T('xas Chr l$llan I~
Bo~non Coll~f' 23 W('st VIrgi nia 21

Bueknd t .\1 Columbia 7
Cl(' rnson 31 Nort h C.:u ·o lina StuU' l :i
C'orn,ll 30 Dar tmout h 16
Df'l;IV.'/Irf' 2R Lehig h 1~
.
E: Mictt'igu n 31 W Mlt'hlga n 28
l?;~;st TC'nnessC' Stat(' 4U C il~df'l 1-1
F'rr'!-.110 St o ll' :iO Pacific 24

F'u lkrto n Stall' 18 Northf'rn Illinois

1~

G!'or,gla 28 K£' nt uckv ~ ~
Han·ard 17 Prill('C' ton 10

lbwa ii 40 Brlt::ham Young 3:1

Th e Defender s wC're more in

Holy CrOS!&gt;. :If! Brown 14

Iowa 22 Purduf' H ·
,lames Madi son 19 William &amp; Ma rv 17
Kansa!.2-l Iowa Stair 7
·
Kcn r St&lt;HI" 2ti Ohio Untvrr~itv R
Mars hall2l Vlndnia Ml ll tarV 1;1
.vtarvl:wd :J:; Duke 21
·
MC'niphi.~ St .11 Southt•t•n Mi:.slssi ppi 21
:vliami (0hiol 24 Tnlrdo 21
~ ll ami ( F' lor ill at 42 Cincin nati H
M irhigan 31 I ndian~ 21
Mh·higan Statfl ~n rtlt n ol~ 17
Mi~!lb stppi 1'7 Va ndcn•il! 16
'\irbr:1s ka .J9 Kansas Staff' 12
:--Jew M(•:'!.IC'u 21 C'oloctclo Starr 1 ~1
Notre Ua mc '3 4 Sout hcrn (';•114
Ohio St at r 21 M lnnPsOta 17
Okla ho m a 42 Co lorado 20
OklahOm a Stall' 36 M issouri 21
Or£'gon 22 Swnford 14
PPn n svlv&lt;~ n ia

21 Y:.tlC' 14

· f&gt;illsbUr~h 28 Navv 7

RutgC'I's 21 Army i4

San Oie,l:lo St :n Lo ng Bt•ach St 24
Sa n Jo~e St 2-J Nf'vada ·L a ~ Vf'gas 17
Suu1h Curolina 21 Ea st Cnrolln&lt;&gt; 14
Syracus(' ~Colgate 12
•
Tf'nni".SSN' ~8 Grorg i&lt;l T e&gt;ch 14
Tex&lt;.~~ A&amp; M 2&lt;1 Riel' 21
Texas 'J'('C'h 35 T u lsa 7
Tula n(' 28 Vll'gin la Tf'ch 18
UCL A 44 Ca lifor nia 17
Utah 27 Uta h 's ta te 25
Wa k(' Fori'S! li Virginia H
Wi!&gt;cQns ln 27 Nort hwC&gt;str..'r n 20

Defenders post
5-2 playoff win
The OVCS soccer team entered
the Wes t Virginia playoff picture
with a 5-2 victory over Elk
Valley, W.Va., Monday night.
Gillia m's two goals came out of
seven kicks on the goal. while
Keenan's two goals came out of
five shots on the goal. Dax Hill
con tributed the other goal for the
Defenders , out of his five s hots on
I he goal.
I
Brady Johnson had fiv e sajves
to keep the Elk Va lley crew ~{om
getting close.
The Defende rs, now 11-5-1, will
be in the West Vi rginia Christian
E du cation A-ssociation state
playoffs, with the next game to be
announced.

$500 OFF

STUDENT RED TAB LEVIS
Sl 799 REG. 522,9$
LADIES BASIC LEVIS

Leaf pickups begin Oct. 26
Leaf pickups will begin in the first ward In Middlepor t on
Monday , October 26. Residents a re a sked to rake their leaves
Into the str·eet along the curbs, where the leaves will be picked -.
up by the village. Pickup will continue for several weeks.

EMS reports 3 calL~ Tuesday
'

-

\

Hap•v 40th

NOW

Sl 699

Strike bound to
cause animosity,
Wyche says

Bill Haptonstall
K.R.D.
I

ill

290 North Second, Middle ort, Ohio
•

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OUr Pick Six
jackP9t's
grow1n·g !
Our Pick Six jackpot is still growing
- and it will keep growing each performance untJ! someone wins it! To
find out how much you couki win,
check your daily newspaper, or call our
PICK SIX HOTLINE (304) 776-1000,
anytime (24 hours a day).
·
. Remember, Pick Six and win the big
Jackpot! Or pick the. most winners and
wtn a smaller jackpot! Either way,
-you're a winner with Tri-State
Greyhound Parle.
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Fine 6 in Middleport Court
Six defendants were fined in the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Ho[fman Tuesday night.
.
They Include Johnnie E . Donahue. Middleport, $425 and four
days in jail, driving while intoxicated; Lisa Dawn Stewart, West
Columbia, W. Va., $10 and costs, stop sign violation; Anna
Williamson , Rutland, $100 and costs and 30 days probation for
failure to stop for a school bus, and $Hl0 and costs, failure to stop
after another accident; Bart Pearson, Middleport, $50 and
cost s, disorderly conduct : Jean L. Bel ph, Pomeroy, $50 and
costs, no financial risk.
In the mayor' s court recently, Marcia Terry, Middleport,
charged with keeping a bar open after hours , has appealed the
case to Meigs Coun~ Court, her attorney Steve Story reports.

Two more bomb threats
in Meigs this moming
Despite the fact that a l4 year
old Middleport youth was turn\'d
over to the permanent custody of
the Ohio Department of Youth
Services on Monday on charges
of making bomb threat calls in
the Meigs Local School District,
two more threat calls were made
to the district's schools this
morning.
Receiving 'bomb threat . calls
this morning were the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport
and the Salem Center Elementary School. The schools were
closed for the day .
However, parent -teacher conferences scneduled lor Thursday
in the district will go as planned
tomorrow . Parents of junior high

students are asked to call the
school between 8 and 9 a.m.
tomorrow to secure their appoi~tment Times with teachers or
they can just walk In as will be
worked into the schedule as soon
as possible. No change in the
scheduling plan for tomorrow
was announced by the Salem
Center School.
So far, this fall four youths
have appeared in courts being
charged with inciting panic as
the result of making bomb threat
calls in the Meigs Local Dls&lt;rict.
Three of them haVe been turned
over permanently to the Ohio
Department of Youth Services
and the fourth was sentenced to a
reformatory.

Fined in tthe court wer~
Thirty-one cases were proJimmy
Snldf'r, Pomeroy : $44 and
cessed Tuesday night in the court
cps
ts
,
speeding,
and $375, driving
of Pomeroy Ma yor Richard
while
intoxicated;
Charles LamSevier.
bert.
$50:
Anthony
Thomas,
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
Parkersburg,
$55
and
costs ,
charges were Penny Mullen ,
Michael
Conley,
Portland,
$47
Middleport, $32; Thomas Gilli lan, Chester, $46; Harold Carson, and costs , all on speeding
Middleport, $48; Richard Counts, charges; Vincent Knight, Jr ..
Syracuse, $46; Ramzi S. Abu - Pomeroy, $250 and costs, driving
lalt'd , Athens, $53; Shirley Lam- while intoxicated; $2'i and costs,
bert. Rutland, $45; Connie Mit- no financial responsibility, and
chem. Point Pleasant , $52; Linda $.100 and costs, leaving the scene:
Schartlger. Pomeroy, $53; David Norma Eakins. Syracuse, $43
Rouse, Belpre. $47: Donn R. · and costs, assured clear disPompa, Racine , $49; Larry tance , and $50, no financial
Gibbs, Cheshire, $53; Steve Hud - responsibility: Dennis Persons,
son. Middleport, $44; Arthur R. Syracuse, $63 and costs, expired
KopczinsRy , :Hinkley , $46; Dale plates, and Guy Shuler. Rutland,
G . Smith, Letart, W. Va. , $47. $53 and costs, driving urtder
Others forfeiting bonds were suspension, and $63, expired
Diana Cox, Gallipolis, $63, ficti - plates.
cious plates; Kevin Gibbs, Ru ·
tla nd, $63, expired plates; Diane
Withrow, Athens, $63, no opera·
Veterans Memorial
tor' s license~ Frederick · A. Zus·
Tuesday Admissions - Linda
pan, West Columbus, $60, ex· Brunty, Rac(ne; Mary Jones,
'pired plates; Thomas Stevers. Middleport; Edna Lee, Shade;
Jr .. Shade, $63, operating under Gertrude Bass, Pomeroy;
's uspens ion; Eric Priddy, Ru· Gladys Tuckerman, Pomeroy.
tland , $53, passing on a double
Tuesday Discharges - Nellie
vellow line; Steve Norvell, Point Perry, James Suttle,: Freda
'p r?aSant , w. Va., $63, traffic McFann, Flora Friley, Patricia
light violation; Margaret Holm. Smith, Mary Partlow, Donald
Athens, $63, expired plates .
Lovett .

K

Information: 776- i OOO

•I

Rena Fitch. 65, 50610 Bi,g ley
Ridge Road. Long Bottom, died
Monday at the Arcadia Nursing
Center fol\owing an extended
illness.
A homemaker , Mrs. Fitch was
born Feb. 5, 1922 at Racine a
daughter of the late Miller and
Addle McCloud Autherson .
Su rvivlng are her husband,
Oscar J. Fitch; a daughter and
son-In-law , Carole · and Billy
Dalley, Long Bottom; a son and
daughter-In -law, Thomas and
Sonya Fitch, Long Bottom; two
sisters , Emma Lyons and Patty
Pickens, both of RaCine; a

dropping temperat ure readings
northern and central Roc kies ported 5 inches of snow.
into the 30s throug h the Da kotas,
Snow flurri es were reported at
and the northern half of the
Plains. Readings were In the 30s DuPage County Ai r port west of Minnesota a nd parts of \}'isconas far south as the Texas Chicago, but no a ccumu l~tion si n and Montana .
Scat ter ed ra in sp read across
panha ndle.
was expected .
lower Mi chiga n, the Ohio Va lley
" We're still .above fr eezing,
Light snow was scattered from
and the cen tral Appalachian s.
eas tern North Dakota across everything's melting before it
Minnesota. Duluth , .Minn., mea- hits the ground or a s it hits the Shower s a nd thundersto r ms
sured linch of s now .
ground," said Rich Brumer, a s tretched fro m the Tennessee
forecaster for the weather ser · Valley across the lower MissisAn inch of fresh snow caused
sip)li and int o qentra l Texas.
slippery roads in north east Min - vice in Chicago.
Skies we re clear over the
Northerly
winds
gusting
to
30
nesota. Motorists still accu swes
tern third of the country
mph brought cold Canadia? ~i r
tomed to summer driv ing slid
whil
e fog bl an keted much of the
Into the middle and upper Mtssr saround, causing a few fender
Atla
ntic Coast.
sippl Valley Tuesday evening,
benders.
State Patrol officials ·s aid the
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.22·87
most serious accident was a
nine-vehicle pileup in Hibbing,
Minn. ,'on a four-lane bridge. No
serious Injuries were reported.
Snow showers along the Lake
Superior snowbelt produced 1 to 3
inches of accumulation by late
Tuesday at Ashland, Iron and
VIlla Counties in northern Wls- 50
conson, and Glidden, Wis ., re-

Byrd said. "Nobody's attempting to jerk the rug out from under
the president In the Persian
Gulf."
All that most lawmakers want,
the Democratic leader asserted,
is to bring a broader voice to U.S.
policy in the strategic region.
While most believe ina continued
military : presence In the gulf,
they are concerned about Reagan's decision to provide U.S.
flag protection to Kuwaiti oil .
tankers, he said.
·
"(That) has been the bone of
contention all along. ... It's
open-ended. It's a provocative
policy," he protested.
The Senate endorsed Tuesday
the U.S. attack on Iranian oil
platforms Monday in retaliation
for an Iranian attack on a
U.S. -llagged Kuwaiti tanker.
Also adopted were amendments
saying U.S. forces have the right
to attack Iranian military assets
threatening a warship or vessel
with Americans aboard and
saying the United States has an
interest in freedom of the seas
and an interest in taking "such
actions as are necessary" to
maintain that freepom.
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee, meanwhile, an·
nounced that hearings will begin
next month on the War Powers
Resolution and possible
revisions.

Firms seek to fend off takeover artists

Process 31 cases in court

Rena Fitrh

Post Times: 1:30 Matin~. Wed., 5at. I 7c30 Evenmgs, Mon.-5a t
Reservations: 776-5000

Jayed and then would have to
pass the House and survive a
possible veto to go into the Jaw
books .
The issue has been a testy one
because Reagan refuses to
comply with the War Powers
Resolution on constitutional
grounds. The Vietnam-er·a Jaw .·
requires a president to Inform
Congress within 48 hours after
U.S, forces are deployed in an
area of. hostility, and If Congress
neither declares war nor approves an extension within 60
days, the troops must be with·
drawn within a month.
Reagan sent such a notification
to the Senate Tuesday, but it was
"consistent with" the Jaw rather
than in compliance with it. The
president has refused to acquiesce to his opponents, even
the more than 100 members of
Congress who have sued in
federal court In order to force
compliance with the law.
After bFeaklng the GOP filibuster Tuesday, "Byrd argued that
Reagan should not oppose the
alternative he worked out with
Sen. John Warner, R-Va., because It "does not say pullout one
single helicopter, pull out one
batHeship, one frigate, man or
woman In uniform or airplane
Jrom the Persian Gulf."
"Nobody's saying get out.
Nobody's saying withdraw ,"

Three vehicles were damged 'ODd one driver cited to court as
the result of an accident on Pomeroy's West Main St., Tuesday
night.
Pomeroy Police said a car driven by Cindy Little, Middleport,
struck the r~ar of a vehicle driven by Fred'erlck Werry, Jr.,
Pomemy, which was shoved into the back of a truck driven by
Edward Wood s , Pomeroy , There were light damages to the
Woods vehicle, moderate to the Werry vehicle and heavy to the
Little car . Little was cited on charges offalllngto have financial
responsit.ility and assured clear distance.

Area deaths

T I~

I'IC

•·

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Valley area

Senate-.,. _co_n_H_nu_ed_fr_o_m_p_a_g_e_1_ _ _ _ _ __

Hospital news

Tri-State Greyhound Park

Birthday

Meigs Counly Emergency Medical Services reports three
cal is Tuesday; Tuppers Plains at 10:54 a.m. transported Edna
Lee to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:06 p.m. to
West Main St. for Harold Little to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5: 12 p.m. to Monkey Run for ·Gertrude Bass to
Veterans Memorial-Hospital.

Airman First Class Steve Carson of Middleport will be
appearing with the Air Force Honor Guard at the World Series
games tonight. He Is stationed at the Scott Air Force Base and is
the son of Russ and Pat Carson of Middleport. His wife, Renee,
is the daughter of . Ralph and Jean Trussell of Bashan.

Gino Cavallinl scored two :
goals and goalie Ri ck ,Wams ley •
stopped 23 shots to aid the Blues .
"We gave up more power play •
goals tonight than we did In a •
"You can't leave a' guy like · month last year ," Winnipeg :
Trots alone in front of the net like Coach Dan Maloney said . •
that," said Calgary's Joe Mullen, "We've got to do a better job of '
·
whose goal tied the score 3-3. fQrechecking."
"He'll stick It in every iime. "
St. Louis pulled away on •
Brent Sutter al so scored for the lhird·period goals by Nordinark, .·
Islanders, who extended the Cavallini and Rick Meagher .
"It was nice to open It up for :
Flames' losing streak to three
games. Rookie Brian ·Glynn, once, to win for once, " Mar-tin •
Hakan Loob and AI Macinnis said. "Maybe we' ve got the
added goals for Calgary, which monkey off our back."
rebounded from a pair of twogoal deficits to tie the score early
in the flnal ·perlod.
"The plays that gQt made to me
today were perfect plays," Trott·
ier said. "Derek King made a
great play. He held onto it and
I
CINCINNATI 1UP!)
The
made a great pass. Alan Kerr
24-day
NFL
players
strike
was
a
made a perfect pass. Could a
situation that was bound to leave
player ask for more?"
The Blues entered Tuesday ' s all parties involved with some
game the only team in the NHL animosity, Cincinnati Bengals
without a point. The Jets fell for coach Sam Wyche says.
' 'I don' t think yo~ go through
the second time after opening the
anything, especially something
season with three victories.
The Blues scored on three of with as much stress and attention
their five power play opportuni- a s this has had , that you don't go
ties and scored another goal one back and say, 'If I could do that
second after a Winnipeg penalty one thing again I'd do it differ expired. St. Louis had converted ently, !" Wyche 'aid Tues day_at
on Jy three df its 28 previous · his weekly news conference.
power play chances this season.
"The situation itself was such a '
"We've got to build off of this.
tragedy.
It set up everybody to
It was very positive," St. Louis
make
mistakes.
It set up everybCoach Jacques Martin said.
ody
to
be
left
with
some hard '
"This realty helps us. Our
feelings.
It's
a
situation
where
players have been pressing and
you're going to have some
not scoring much. This should
regrets."
help a lot."
Wyche said the teams that fare
the best for the remainder of the
season will be those that put the
strike behind them quickes t.
control of matters In the second
galtje. as they put up eight blocks
en route to a 15-7 viciory to take
the match.
The Defenders hit 36 or 41 from
the Spiking line, with lei kills.
Junior Marla Roach wa ~ lR of 21.
with eight kills, while Traci
Sisson was 6 of 7, with four klils.
~31 JACKSON PtKE • RT. 3!5 WEST
Phone 446·4524 )
Junior Bet I\ ' Wood served 10
points. followed by Rachel
BACK TO THEATRE DAYS t
* SPECIAL PRICE ADMISS IONS *
Danner with six, Edina VanMa ·
ADULTS $3 . 50- CHI LDREN $2. 50
tre, rive; Roach , four; Sisson,
SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY HATl NEES
three; and Becky Danner, two.
ALL SEATS $2,50
BARGAIN NIG.Iil TUESDAY $2.00
Wood and Becky Danner recorded four blocks each.
In the junior high matc.h, the
Defenders defeated the young
Bobcats with 15-6 and 15·2 decisions. Beth Blevins scored 16
points, followed by Pam Holley's
eight, Jenny Hughes' five and
Julie Hardesty's one.
The varsity Defenders are
perfect after 21 matches, while
the junior high Defenders are
unbeaten after nine contests.
The Defenders wlil travel
Thursday to Ashland, Ky ., to face
Paui_Biazer High SchoQI_.___ -r----------=--

REG. $24.99

'

AFC Carson on TV tonight

Trottier's third goal snapped a
3-3 tie at 12:41 of the rinal period.
Bob Hassen added a goal that
proved to be the winner.

$800 OFF

By United Press International
Cold air surged south Tuesday
from the Great Lakes to Texas ,
bringing temperatures in the
teens and 20s to much of the
northern Plains and northern
Rockies.
·
The chill zon e covered the
Great Lak es, the Ohio Vall ey, the
Mis sissippi ' Valley and the
Plains, the Nation al Weather
Service said. Temperatures
dropped into the low teens In
Montana and Wyoming and light
snow fell in North Dakota and
Minnesota .
It was 13 degrees at Yellowstone, Wyo., and 22 at Rapid City,
S.D. Temperatures were In the
middle 30s In Sioux City, Iowa,
Tuesday morning and the
weather service said winds of 15
to 25 mph produced wind chills of
10 to 20 degrees above zero.
Morning lows Tuesday were In
the teens and 20s across the

Vehicles damaged in accident

OVCS wins pair from Kyger Creek
Th e Ohio Valley Christian
School' s volleyball teams swept
Kyger Creek Monday night.
The var sity match saw the
Bobcats go ahead 11 ·5 in the nrst
gam e before th e Defenders
staged a comeback with nine
Bobcat ser ves broken. Defender
senior Rachel Danner served an
ace to put her teammates on top
1:i-11 in that game.

Thur.~day

Fire hydrants will be flushed. in Middleport , beginning
Thursday at 7 p.m . Some discoloration of water may occur In
areas when this Is being done.

Blues record first victory of year
By GERRY MONIGAN
UP! Sports Writer
A 31-year-old veteran helped
the New York'Islanders maintain
their fast start Tuesday night,
while a 25-year-old rookie led the
St. Louis Blues to their first
victory of the season.
. At Uniondale, N.Y., Bryan
Trottier 'notched his 16th career
hat trick to lead the Islanders to a
5-4 triumph over the Calgary
Flames. At St. Louis, rookie
defenseman Robert Nordmark
scored his first two NHL goals to
fuel the Blues to a 6-2 victory over
the Winnipeg Jets.
·
The three-goal performance
gave Trottier five goals and eight
points this season, both team
highs after five games. The
hat-tr ick goal moved Trottier
·into a tie for 13th place on the
all -time scoring list with former
Phiadelphia center Bob Clarke.
Each has 1,210 points.
With right winger Mike Bossy,
the fifth-leading scorer In NHL
his tory, s idelined for the season
with a back Injury, Trottier is
missing his favorite linemate.
Obviously, the Islanders are
finding ways to compensate.
"I 've always said that Mike
Bossy would do well without
Bryan Trottier and Bryan Trottier would do well without Mike
Bossy," Trottier said. ·'But we
work so much · better together.
Mike--and l both appreciate each
other and we certainly enjoy
working with each other. I'm
dying to have him back, but I'm
certainly not putting any of these
guys down ."

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

October 21, 1987

LOS ANGELES (UP!t -Flush
with cash and looking to keep
takeover artists from sneaking
up on them by taking advantage
of drastically lower prices, several big businesses are planning
to buy back millions of their own
shares, analysts say.
t _Companies such as USX, Ford
Motor Co., Merrill Lynch and
Allegis Corp. announced plans
Tuesday to repurchase outstanding shares that had been beatet:~
down In Monday·s record 508point plunge on the Dow Jones
Industrial Average. The market
regained 102 points on Tuesday.
Analysts said the corporate
reaction to the stock market was
prompted by fears that depressed stock values woufd ignite
a wave of buying by takeover
artists who see the situation as an
opportunity to gain positions in
target companies at cut rate
prices.

Stocks
Dl\iiY stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; I..Oewl

Am Electric Power ......... .. 27~
AT&amp;T ... .. .. ..... .. .... ........... .... 29?;.
Ashland Oil ....... ......... ..... ...... 53
Bob Evans ..... .... ...... .. .. .. .... ... .16
, Charming Shoppes ... .. ......... 16%
City Holding Co ... ............... . 31
Federal Mogul ......... ......... 35%
Goodyear T&amp;R ... .. .... .... ... .47)6
Heck's Inc . ........ ... ........ .. ... .... 3
Key Centurion .. .... .... .. ......... . 36
Lands' End .. .. .. .... ... .... . ,, .... . l8'V•
Limited Inc ........ .......... ... ... 22%
Multimedia Inc ......... ... .... ... 51 'h
Rax Restaurants .... .... .. .... .. . 3'h
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .".... ......... 9V.
Shoney's Inc . ...... ...... ..... ..... 21 \jj
Wendy's Inti ...... ....... .. .... .... 61'.

"It's insurance in a way.
Companies want to make sure
they don't have runs by all the
names we know," said Sarah
Stack. an analyst at Bateman
Eichler, Hill Richards Inc. in Los
Angeles .
"The companies believe their
stock prices are bargains at this
level. " sai'd Stack. "It's also an
attempt to secure control of more
shares in the event someone else
is trying to make a run on a
company at depressed levels."
Another analyst also said cor- '
porate insiders are , in effect ,
saying they think the price of
their stock is cheap.

RAIN

:~ r~-: :: ~ ·•e ~rec! pi~a110n

ino:catea

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Showers will be scattered from New
England and northern New Jersey across the lower Great Lakes
and northern Pennsylvania into Michigan and across Montana.
Showers will be snow or rain mixed with snow over upper
Michigan.

------Weather-----Ohio Exte.nded Forecast
Friday through Sunday
.A chance of showers Friday
and Saturday, with fair weather
on Sunday. Highs will be in the
50s Friday and Saturday, fallin g
-into the 40s Sunday. Overnight
lows will be between 35 and 40
. Friday and Saturday, mornings
and ranging from 25 to 35 ear ly
Sunday.

Plan rally
A Zone Youth Rally will be held
Friday, 7: 30 p.m, at Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on Route
684. Speaker wlll be Rev. Don
Adams from Columbus. Pastor·
David FerrE'Il welcomes the

®

~~ •

....,.·•

South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs
nea r 45 . Clea r toni ght, with a low
between· 25 and 30. Mostly sunny
Thursd ay, with highs near 50.
The probability of precipitation is near zero through
Thursday .
Winds will be from the west at
10 lo 20 mph today, becorping
southwesterly tonight.

Pomeroy funds total $216,028.16
Pomeroy Village funds a s of
Sept. 31 totaled $216.028.16 according to Clerk-Treasurer Jan e
Walton .
Receipts, disbursement s and"
the end of the month balance,
respectively, in each of the fund s
making up the total include:
general, $20.284 .44, $25,363,
$37,907.04; safety, $200, no disbursements. $8,675.61 ; street .
$10,188.38, $12,133.09. $69.61;
state highway , $2n 79, $1,465.41.
$560.94; fire, $ii2.2l. $1 ,485 .73,
$840 .50; c emetery , $800.14 ,
$947 .88, $1,394.54: wat e r ,
$22.412.07, $17.J28.13, $7 2,544.43:
sewer. $8,227 .24, $7 ,129 .87,
$483.77; guaranty met er. $800.·
$700. $12,810.12; utilit y. no re·

CorTection
Marshall Allen Slater. ,16, of
Albany, was arres ted las t week
ficking. A search wa r rant for
Slater' s Bedford Township property was issued by the Meigs
County Common Pl ea s Court .

Revival underway
Revival services at Mt. Hermon United Brethren Church are
underway through Sunday at
7: 30 each ('venlng. Evangelist Is
Rev. Cary Knittle of Lancaster.
Special singing featured . Everyone welcome.

sHoweRs

"C,old

(Continued from page 1)
the matter .
Bill Nease said that on the day
the agreement wa s signed, the
handshake was more important
to him than the document, in that
he expectep If the road was in the
same condition after the ferry as
before. the escrow money would
be returned.

Announcements

D

. . Static . . Occ luded
~.!;'!~ S"c·,.,:; mrnr"!1:;m lf?mperatures. At-:eas! 50% ol a n~ snaa=o area·rs :ofeCJS!

FRONTS: "Warm

in Pomeroy on a feder al warrant
charging him with coc aine tr af-

·'J

and was not a federal .search

warrant' as reported in Monday's
Daily Sentinel.

ce ipts, $2,660.54, $26.034.22: sal e
of building, $382.45, $382. 45, $.19;
perpetual care, no reccipt s 1 no

disbu rsements , $4,815.89; cemetery endowm ent. no teceipts, no
disbu rsem ents , $17.825 .16; police
per1sion, no r eceip ts, no di sburse-

ments , $1,5:l5.23; building fund,
$117Si , no di s burse m e nt s ,
$1,319.20: recreation, $35. no
di sbursement s, $1,000.40; permi ssiv e ta x, $1,272.oll, $8:l0.05,
$3,052. 27: bond ret ireme nt, no
r ece ipt s. no di sbu rsem ent s.
$10,151. 26; fire truck, no receipt s.
no disbursement s, $23. 690.63.
Receipt s for the mon th tota led
$fi 5. 429.77. Dis bu rse m e nt s
amounted to $70.625.15.

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
PH. 446-1699
HOURS: 8 A.M,·6 P.M.

~+~+o·~.,~

1

Special of the Week
~

\

t

'

11 pc. SHRIMP

$1.39 .

WITH FRIES ....................$1.94

,..

"

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2556

oo+ +---«••••o
ATTENTION
LOCAL AGGRESSIVE CAR DEALERSHIP
LOOKING FOR SALESMAN.

. _.

BUY 'A MASTER MEMBERSHIP FOR ONLY
S29 AND GET AN ASSOCIATE
MEMBERSHIP FREE. CALL FOR DETAILS.
HURRY - OFFER ENDS OCTOBER 31st

..-...

~

•

,... I® ~~P: ,!1~ ~~@{f) ~1); ® ~~·

•.
•

PHONE
'l'rtnel Agency • 446-0699
360 SECOND AYE., GALLIPOLIS

'.':J

•

Suggest ...

I·.:"·~~~·::~'~.~ ;.~ ;.:~ "~·:: ""

brother , Junior Autherson,
Texas; seven grandchildren,
Connie Murphy, Bonnie Milhoan,
Candy Milhoan, Teresa Dailey,
Dee Anna Dailey, Steven Fitch
and Annetta Fitch and several
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by a brother,
Maywood Autherson, and a sister , Grace Roush.
Services will be held at I p.m .
Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev . Gary Kendell officiating. Burial wllJ be In
the Morris Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
. home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.

G:SlsNow

,il]j) ® )

....
...
':.1

MUST BE ABLE tO DEAL WITH THE PUBLIC
AND HAVE .KNOWLEDGE· OF THE
AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY.
*GOOD BENEFITS
*COMMISSION
SEND RESUME AND ANY ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION TO:
THE DAILY SENTINEL
P.O. BOX 729-8
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

�Wednesday, October 21, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

,Popular bond, market helps state_set one-day profit record
'

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio tU Pl i Ohio's U. S. Treasury bond in·
vestm ent s have set a one-day

profit record followin g a selling
spree th at fl a tt e ned s tock
markets wor ldwide.
Suite Treasure r Ma ry Ell en
Withrow s aid the stat e' s ~2 billion
(nvestmcnl in bonds gained $1.1
mill ion Tuesday , a one-day re·
cord gain, and $500,000 Monday.
She said investors handling the
sta te' s money used about $200
million to $300 mlllion worth of

Community
•
receives
.e mergency
water supply
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP])
- Resident s of Poland Township
will have access to an emergency
water supply while local and
s tate agencies attempt to !den·
.tify the nature and source of well
water contamination in the sub·
urban Youngstown community,
Gov. Richard Celeste directed
an Ohio National Guard unit to
transport two 400-gallon water
trailers to the township Tuesday
after he discussed the situation
with officials from the Mahoning
County Health Department.
Preliminary results of Ia bora·
tory tests ordered by county
health , officials revealed that
water samples from a number of
private wells in the township
were contaminated by a · sub·
stance believed to be coliform
bacteria, Or fecal matteL
Similar findings have come
from tests on well water in
nearby Hillsville, Pa., and the
Pennsylvania National Guard
, delivered the first shipment of
emergency water to that com·
mun!ty last week.
There are some residents in
both villages who believe their
water problems may be linked to
a 900·acre Browning·Ferris In·
dustries landflll and an adjacent
'u.s. Cement Co. blasting opera·
tion. The facilities are located
just we s t of the Ohio ·
Pennsylvania border.
The companies deny responsi·
bil lty for the reported contamina·
lion, but BF! has agreed to pay
for the water testing in Mahonlng
County.
-·"" ·
D!vls!ons of the Ohio Environ·
mental Protection Agency and
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources have taken their own
water samples from Poland
Townshin wells , and the Pennsyl·
vapia Department of Environ·
mental Resources has obtained
wa!er samples from the Hills·
ville area.
. Several Pennsylvania law·
mak ers and representatives of
the OER are expected to discuss
the,; issue with Hillsville re sidents
at a m eeting set for Nov . 10,

s hor·t·lf'Pm bonds that w~r~ rna ·
ture to ma ke the pro fi t.
In ves tors who m anage por tfo·
llos for the five pe nsio n fund s fo r
publ ic em ployePs sa id their ac·
t ivit y, Mond ay a nd Tu esday in·
va lved picking up low. prl ccd
s tock. while offic ia ls at the Ohio
Bureau of Worker s ' Compensa·
lion said a 22.6 percent decl ine in
the bureau 's $3fi0 million por tfo·
lio wa s no cause fGr ala rm .
Withrow sa id s he is prohibited
by law from invest in g in corpo· _
rate stoc k, but . on a limited
bas is, the im·cs tors who man age
stale pens ion · funds and the

EASTMAN'S

workers ' compensation t:und arc
per mit ted to pu rc hase stock.
Warren Koo nt z, securitv ana-

lyst and portfol io m anager for
the Pu blic E mployees RPiire·
mcnt Syst r m. the larges t of the
i;ive sla le employcp pe nsio n
fiht ds. sa id a bou t 28 percent of
t hf' fund's $14 bill ion In assets
was inves ted in stocks as of
Friday.
None of the funds ~a n have
more than 35 percent inves ted In
stoc ks. Koo ntz said . The remain·
lng percent age is In bonds or
property.
''11 was to say the leas t fr•enzied

.

.

a nd unco m fo rta bl e Mond ay,"
Koont z sa id. "We have basically
. ta ken a selective approa ch and
bought some bits and pieces over
1he las t few days." ..
Koont z sa id the (riarket 's
bounce back Tuesday signaled a
"sigh of re lief" among investors
who manage the pension fund s,
but he said there was still tension
in the air.
He said by law any stock PERS
buys must meet certain criteria ;
most are blue·chip or are among
the 30 stocks that ma ke up the
Dow.
' 'PERSis cons ervatively man·

aged !J&gt; protect the pensions from
what happened Monday ," he
said. He added that calls came In
from concerned retired people
Monda y, but they relaxed when
re minded how the pension fund is
- -, , .
structured .
Asset s of the fiv e pensionfunds , which includ e the State
Teachers Retirement Sys tem
and the Police and Firemen's
Disability and Pensio,n Fund,
\otal $30 billion, said Cha rles H.
Weston , director of the state's
Retirement Study Commission.
"They have enough · money
there that they don't need to cash

In anything to pa y any benefits,"
Weston sa id. "Their posilion is
very secure and in fact it' s a good
1ime for them to ,buy ."
The Bureau of Workers ' Com·
pensation issued a s tatement
saying the 22.6 percent loss wiped
out the gain Its common stock
had realized during the first nine
month of the year.
·"Although we never Pxpected a
correction of this size, our
s trat egy (Of accumulating cash
in antielpatlon . of a market
correction ) wa&amp; correct," the
statement said. " We see no
reason for alarm. :·
,

STOCK UP NOW!
ON

99.~

TRICK or TREAT

up

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

Chiquita
Bananas

Chicken Leg
Quarters

FOODLAND GRADE 'A'

CHILLED

r

Large Eggs

Minute M-id
Orange Juice

·e

$

•

PJ\K·4 $1 stra ight bet pa ys
$fi. 928. Pi\K-4 $1 box bet pays
$~47 .

Merit ...
\o ntinued from page l
ment will be made throu g h lh r·
sa me appoi nt ive s,·stem wh ic h
produ ced the bad one.
Also. sa id ORV. there is jus t as
muc h politics in a ppointing
judges, onl y it is politics among
la wye rs a nd not politic ian s.
No r will the appoint ive syst em
rjjdu cC' expenditu res, said OR V.
ctt ing a 1986 retention e leci ion for
the Ca lifornia Supreme Court.
th ai wa s ·more expensive. th a n
Ohio's co nt est.
Mi chael F . \a lley is c ha irma n
ol the Ohi o Republica n P arty,
which opposes Issue :J. He a lso is
a: tri al Iawver in \olumbu s ,
: ro ll cy sa id tha i jus t beca use
fr) OSt vo ters don't per s~ na ll ,·
know judtc &gt;al ca ndtda les tn the
urba n a r&lt;' as "is not a va lid
reaso n for cha nge.· ·
: &lt;olley sa id the a ppea ls court in
F) ·a nktin roul)ty. wh er e he also is
~te publ ican c ha irman . ' ' is the
produ c t of the current sys tem
and ev idence th at it wo rks . II is
an excel lent be nch,"

•

'\ 1,.-.-

\/

LOW
FAT
MILK

$~5,81 8.

$

"'=: -

PAR KAY

I

I

~I
I'

-- LOW
FAT
MILK

.._;·/

/

•

GUOid Aralnsc High Prices
Ust Tht C/assJ(Jtd Sttrton

Looking ahead, volunteers of
Americare - Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabllitatlon Center will be
holding a bazaar from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m , on Saturday, Nov , 7, at the
American Legion Hall in Middle·
port This will be at the old
building on Fourth Ave.
The group will offer Christmas
craft items , baked goods and
other items for sale and ask for
your support as you get your
Christmas shopping staried
early.
Meigs County teachers are
fQrtunate In having Dr. Carl
Hurley speaking during two
sessions at their inservlce meet·
lng on Friday at Meigs High
School. The Rev. Fred Penhor·
wood of Middleport , highly re·
commends Or. Hurley whom he
heard earller at an event in the
Cincinnati area.
Of course, schools .will be
closed Friday due to the inser·
vice session .

Bombing of Iran bases and a
stock market crash all on the
same day - now how much can
these old hearts stand? Do. keep
smiling.

SALISBURY BROWNIES 1220
A costume party at the home of Christy Ramsburg was planned for
Monday when the Salisbury Brownies jllet recently at the Enterprise
United Methodist Church.
At last week's meeting the Brownies worked on a ''try-11 patch"

/

TREASURE CHEST- Bill and Louise Radford
have opened a craft shop In the cellar house
behind the Radford home, on old Route 33 near
Pomeroy. The emphasis Is on a wide variety of
decorative handcrafted Items, with something for

ASSORTED COLORS

BROUGHTON'S LITE 1%

ScotTo·w els

Lo-Fat Milk

New craft shop opening in area

craft shop was build In 1876, the
Christmas ornament s are In·
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
sameyeartheRadfordhomewas
eluded
in the ·stock,
An old cellar house, built more
constructed.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rad·
While
many of the items are
than a century ago, has been
ford
reside
in
the
homeplace,
made
by
Mr . and Mrs . Radford
converted into a craft shop by
located
on
old
Route
33
jus(
north
and
several
of \heir relatives,
Bill and Louise Radford .
of
Pomeroy,
with
his
father
,
they
do
accept
craft items on
Called ''Treasure Chest
Homer,
now
in
his
nineties.
consignment.
Hours
are Tuesday
Crafts", the shop opened over the
Wreaths for every season in
through Saturday, 10 a.m to 8
weekend with nearly 200 turning ·
p.m . and Sunda y 2 to 5 p.m. A
out to browse and buy the wide straw, greenery , ribbon, lace,
decorated with bears. birds,
special Christmas weekend is
Vjrlety of handmade items.
bells, bugles, and berries, some
being plann e d for mid ·
The country crafts fit attrac·
November.
lively into the rustle atmosphere other unique and colorful wall
hangings, handmade pillow
At the weekend open house,
of the old cellar house which has
cover, bask.ets galore, a wide
door prizes were won by Carrie
a brick wall interior and Is heated
array of wood animals and , Glaze, Bill Eichinger. Ellen · Pythian Sisters. Temple 591;
with a coal and wood stove.
novelties, candles, sachets , Fultz, Judy Marshall , Marilyn will sponsor a smorgasbord at
The cellar house which has
cuddly
dolls all dressed up, and
Deemer, and Linda Fisher .
been renovated
for the
' the Pythian Sisters Hall in
Wilkesville, on Oct. 31, with·
serving from 5 to '8 p.m. ThE:
public is invited.

Smorgasbord planneil

\

GIRL SCOUTS

~o, w1t",.

which Is a new program for the Brownie level. The youngs ters made
three containers of homemade butter
At another meeting a hike and cookout was held at the Janice
Haynes home. Meetings are held every other Monday at th e
Enterprise Church, Co· leaders of the troop are Mrs. Haynes, Debbie
Glaze, and Mrs. Ramsburg.
Brownies of the troop are Jenl)ifer Clifford, Betsy Houdashelt,
Carrie Glaze, Robin Hunt, Mica Haynes, · Holly Milhoan, Melissa
Werry, Melissa Ramsbvurg, Heidi Legar, Tamara Odell, Sabrina
Smith, Beela Stigel and Alicia Stigel.
Plans are also moving forward for the organization of a junior troop
at the Salisbury School with Mrs. Clifford as leader . A first meeting
has been set for Oct. 30 at the Clifford home.
At the request of several leaders, the Girl Scout Diary Is bein g
revived this fall.
Leaders should get reports of troop meetings to Charle ne Hoeflich
at The Daily Sentinel the same week as the meeting.

By United Press lnte~natlonal
Ohio has been na med as th e
second·cleanest state in the na·
lion and Columbus has been
tabbed as the cleanest bi g city in
the country by the Keep Ameri ca
Beautiful System.
Texas was picked as I he
cleanest state. said RogerBaum·

2% MILK
Gal. $1 49

.

~

, ja~
o.-~ ....

-~ ~-~"*

:em.;
-macaroni

'StRite' &amp; cheese

75• Off lAI!l ·
DElUXE

~dinner

II·RIU

,BHhtC!,

GRAPE
JELLY

~· · · - · ~·

LUVS
DIAPERS

-B'R'

~

20 01 ., Jof

:si·Ritc;
~81·Rite;

•60 •75 •100 WATT

:ai·Ritl!:

BI·RITE ·

THICK

Bi-Rite Catsup

Macaroni
&amp; 'C heese

MAXWELL HOUSE
• REG. •ADC • ELECTRIC PERK

Master Blend
Coffee

.

•W E RFSEAVF THE FIIGHf TO LIMIT OU A NT' TI ES •PH ICf-: , f H F'CflVE Tt-l 'I U SA !

OC I 2.4 19 tl 7 • IJSO A FOOD STAMPS A. CCfPTe:O •NOT RESPbNSIBL,E

,

' .

I

Mary 's Country Crafts and
Supplles Shop will open Satur·
day. Owned . and operated by
Mary Dprst, the shop is localed
on Route 681, I Y, miles off Route
33. The shop will be open from 10
a .m to 6 p.m Monday through
Saturday, and 1 to 5 p.m on
Sundays .

A food pantry will be started b.y
the Adult Class of the Rutland
Church of Christ.
Meeting recently at thP home..
of Bill and Myrvillc Brown, the
class decided to collect items of
food for the pantry and then
distr ibute them to needy people
in the community.
Plans for a soup supper to be
Kay Morris , Sue Kibble and
held Nov . 30 will be compl eted at
Nida·
Kearns were top losers in
th e next mee ting. For devotion s
Slinderella
classes held last
those present recit ed hi s or her
week
by
JoAnn
Newsome. At the
favorite Bible versP. Pra yer by
Mason
class
on
Tuesday,
Sharon
Herb Elliott closed the meeting.
CoiP and Melissa Hoffman were
Next meeting will be a t the
runners-up. Penny Davis lost the
Elliott home on Nov. ll. A family
most weight at the Point Plea·
weiner roa s t was enjoyed by the
sant
class , while Emma Work·
group following thP meeting.
man
was runner·up in the kid's
Donna Davidson and .lan e Wis0
class
and Tiffany Davis lost the
prov ided the refreshments.
most weight.

Slinderella meets

garten, direc tor of media rela ·
tions for the Washington·based
Keep America Beautiful Systern.
Columbu s was honored for the
se.cond year in a row as I he
cleanest amung cities of 500,000
or more population for combin·
ing litt er control, recycling and
education.
"We were looking for Involve·
mpnt by a cross section of the
community - government, busi·
ness and the communi ty- in the

Hughes birth

~

Craft shop hours set

FOA TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORA.l ERRORS .

.

•

Ohio second cleanest tn nation

Dairy lane

PLASTIC
GALLON

Rutland class
beginning
food pantry

,.

• $ 39

9

every season. While many of the crafts are
created by the Radfords and membe~s of t~elr
family, items are being accepted on a constgn·
ment basis.

Plans were mad e for · the
a nnual Hallowee n carnival to be
held Oc t. 31 at the school when
the Pomeroy Elementary PTO
met at the school recently.
The kitchen w!ll open at 5 ptrn.
for serving of hotdogs, sloppy
·
j oes and pizza.
At 6 p.m. costume judging by
classes will begin . Each class
w.ill be judged In Its classroom
with pr izes to be awaraed In
several catego~ies. Once the
judging has been pompleted,
there will be a parade of the
.costumes in the auditorium with
the winners to be announced at
tha1 time by Emcee Kermit
Walton.
Games booths , sweet Shop and
country . store, along with a
haunted hou se, will be operated
from 7 to 9 p.m. In lieu of
soliciting merchants for door
prizes, each of the children in the ·
school is being asked to contribute $1.
,
Fund raising projec(s of )he
PTO include selling Pomeroy
Panther T·shirts and animal
replica refrigerator magnets.
A demonstration on the Child
Assault Prevention program
which will be given to· all gradesin the Pomeroy School later thiS:
month was given by Phyllls~
Coleman , Jeffrey Weaver, andPeggy Marcinko in role plays. ;
The CAP program, being Of··
fered on a county·wide basts,:
teaches children how to identifY'
potentially dangerous situations.and how to act appropriately,·
The program is based on the"
P.otion that children have the·
right to be safe, strong and free_
Refreshments were served fol·
lowing .the meeting by the offlc~
ers, Kathy Price, president; _
Carol Ault and Cathy Haley, vice
. presidents; Barbara Smith, se-:
cretary, and Susie Abbott,
treasurer .
•

•

$
~

Dr. 'Margie· Lawson , Mei gs
County :flealth Commissioner ,
announces that the Me igs County
Health Department wlll stage an
open house from 1 to 4 p.m. this
Sunday at the 'deparlment quar,
ters in the multipurpose building,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. ,
You are cordially invited to
visit the department and look
over the facilities and chat with
members of the staff . Th e open
house is being held in prepara·
tion •for the upcoming health levy
renewal to be voted upon at the
Nov. 3 election. And -refreshments will be served at
Sunday's open house ..

JUNIOR TROOP 1276
Organizational meeting of Pomeroy Junior Troop 1276 .was held
. recently at the home of Ann Chapman, leader,
'
• ·' The girls divided into patrols, the "Roses" with Sarah Anderson,
leader, Ann Brown, treasurer, Heather Knight, attendance, with
Stephanie See and Megan Clark, other members; and "Sisters" with
Jessica Chapman, leader , Tara Erwin treasurer; Julle Young,
attendance, Alisha Haggy, and Erin Warner, troop reporter.
Projects and badge work fer the year were planned. It was decided
that the parent sponsors wnt have a hotdog concession at the
upcoming town party as a fund raiser for the troop. A fall outing was
plan'ned.
.
·
· •
At the meeting the girls learned how to sew on buttons and mend
clothing. Each scout brought an item of clot~ing which needed
maintenance, and worked on it at the meeting.
Refreshments were served by Megan Clark and Alicia Clark.
Meetings will be held every other Monday at the Chapman home.
High Street.

CTN

T·Bone
Steaks

By BOB HOEFLICH
Many of .:i,OU know David Pratt
of Bak er~Road , Pom eroy.
You ma y re·
member that on
July 17 , David
was seriously in·
jured when he
was hit .by a
falling- tr e e
limb. Already
handicapped by arthritis, David
suffered a fractured neck in the
accident. He was taken to St.
Anthony Hospital in Columbus
and then was moved to Dade)
Hall , University Hospital , also in
Columbus, where he has been
undergoing treatment following
surgery.
it has ·been a long time since
the accident and David' s hospital
bills are now in the neighborhood
of $250,000. Medicare Is absor b·
ing some of them, but I her e are
additional charges a nd· items
which he must have as a part of
his care. A David Pratt He lp
Fund has been established at the
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
and you can drop by. your
contribution or mail it to the bank
to be credited to the account. Do
•be sure that it is noted what the
contribution is for .
David's .brother·in· law , Rod·
ney Jones and another relative,
secured a van and recently
converted it so that David could
be transported and las I week!!nd,
tle got to come home on Saturday
and back to the hospital on
Sunday . This week they will try,
if there are no complications,
another trip home on Saturday
with the return being necessary
on Sunday.
Perhaps , you· didn 't know but
David's wife, Barb, is almost
totally blind - seems like some
of us get more than our share at
times.

Troop ·reports made·

DOZ.

LBS.

TENDERBEST USDA CHOIC:E.I\II

PTO plans
·carnival

Girl Scour Diary:

Lottery numbers
·CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues·
day 's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Daily Number
401 .
Ti c k et sales tot a l e d
$1,198 ..1!'i7.fi0, with a payoff due of
$!'i54.983.
PICK·4
6409 .
PI\ K·4 ticket sales tot a led
$190.64o}lll. with a pay off due of

I"·

CANDY

GOLDEN RIPE

Page-7 '

Contributions sought
for David Pratt Fund

ODLAND
Pumpkins

Wednesday, October 21, 1987

Beai of the Bend

Your Independently.Owned
low·PI'iced Supermarket

ALL PURPOSE

The Daily Sentinel

'

. 1

QUILTS - Women from the Sacred Heart
Parish in Pomeroy work together making warm
baby quills for the poor in Cuzco, Peru, Women
living In proverty there presently wrap their
bahies in rice hags. 1'hls prpject Is bel11g c'a rrled

out by all the Catholic women In the Steubenville
Docese. Hard at work at their table during a
Pomeroy work session are, I tor, Kathryn Wells,
~osephlne Myers and Mary Andrews.
~

Dinner guests in area are ·announced
Friday dinner gues ts of Pearl
L. Russell , Racine, were Maj.
Karl and Linda Lou Smith
Russell, Melissa and Ken Rus·
sell, Otlathe, Kansas. The Ru s·
sells also vi s ited her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy 0. Smith and Mike.
Rock Springs Road . Other Satur·

day dinner guests of the .Smlths
were Don Smith, Sabrina and
Marc, and Mrs. Mildred Arnold,
local, Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith,
daughters , Mandy and Katy,
Sou th Po int, and Mrs , Rus sell,
Racine.

Sunday night the Russells were
overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Flo yd T Chapman and family ,
Pickeringt on. Maj . Russell and
his fam!lv returned to Kansas
Monday . T hey were accompan·
· led by Mike Smith.

Mr. and Mrs. John Hugh es, the
former Roxanna Patterson , Wil·
liamstown, W. Va. are announ c·
ing the birth of a daughter , Kelll
Dawn, Oct. 2. Theinfant weighed
seven pounds and five ounces .
Mr. and Mrs . Hughes have
another daughter, Karl Renee,
five. Grandparents are paul and
Rose Patt erson, Rutland, Mon·
zell an Marcilene Hu ghes of
Looneyville, W. Va . and the great
grandparents are Audrey Pat ter·
son, Rutland . and Dixie Slawter ,
Mason , W. Va.

,Gage birth
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Scott
Gage, the form er . Li sa Ann
Burton, Orlando, Fla ., announce
the birth of a son, Joshua Scott.
The Infant wa s born at Orlando
am:( weighed seven pound s , s ix
ounces .
Grandparents are Aleta Lynn
Burton, DeBary, Fla ., and Mr.
and Mrs
. Wllltam J . Burton'
.
Orlando . Great ·,grimdparents
are Pearl L. Russell, ·Racine, and .
\he late Kenneth Rus sell, Donald
and Nancy Ga ge, of Florida , and
J e an and Clar en ce Smith ,
Alabama .

effort to reduce litter," Baum-

garten said. "Columbus showed
they accomplished that ."
The Keep Ar:nerica Beautiful ·
System is an organization of 470
large a nd small cities ,
Other clean cities included
Beatrice, Neb., in the under ·
25,000 category; Waco. Texas. in
the 75,000 to 200,000 category;
and Albuque rque. N.M. , in lh&lt;:'
200,000 to oOil,OOO category .

Dr. Randall A. Taylor, D.C.
YLOR CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
715 Main Street,
Point Pleasant, Va. 25550

w.

Cail Now: [304] 675-1380
•
Whiplash (known as
~"f-0.\ •
hyiertension/hyperflexion
(.0\\~\\'\
Injury is usually the result of a
(.0~~ ~0.~
backward-and-forward or sideways
~''
. motion of the head and neck, ~oth of
which are ohen caused by a forcefultmpact
from behind or the side. While whiplash occurs
in the neck area most frequently, it may also
strike in other areas of the spine, such as in lhe
low-bock or lumbar spine.
A whiplash inlury con happen to-anyone. A
bod fall, a cor acc1dent, a sudden blow tn o
foolball game- all have the potential for causing
whiplosli. ,

�'
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

C'ollegegraduatrs int&lt;'rPs tedin national women's orga nizat ion
co mmunit y probl ems. cultu ra l working for equity in educatio n,
interests. lmernational rcl a . . with over 150,000 members and
lions, cha llenges for eduCa l ion or 1,900 branches encompassing
th!' advancement of woincn are · c&gt;vcry s tate. the District of
invited to join lhl' Middleporl - C'olumbia, Puer10 Rico an&lt;f
Pomeroy Branch of the Ameri- Guam . In addition some 7r#J
can A'ssoclation of Univers it y colleges and universities arc&gt;
Women.
AAUW members.
Next meeting of the group will
E mphas is of the association Is
be held Tuesday at the Racine to work for the advancement of
United Methodist Cht~rch on women and for equal opportuni·
ties s ince it s founding in 1881.
State Route 124. at 7:30p.m.
AAUW is the oldest and largest Cyrrently it is actively in volved

~AAUW invites

:new members
.-

-I

•

,._~

Wednesday, October 21, 1987

..

·

- Wednesday, October 21, 1987

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Fire .Department held at the
·i n issues concerning pay equity
firehouse.
for women. both in the paid and
Cleo Smith presided at the
unpaid workforce. Branch activ imeeting with Lora Damewood
ties focu s on .support for public
and Opal Hollon giving officers'
education a nd personal Iibert)'
rcporls. Money for cards was
issues .
collected, and committee reports
College graduates interested In _
' were given.
becoming members of the local
Refreshments were served by
AAUW branch are invited to
Marcia Keller and Mrs. Hollon to
attend ell her next week's m eet·
those named and Opal Wickham ,
ing or the Nov . 24 meeting, both
Margaret Christy, Inzy Newell,
Cards were signed lor 'scveral
at 7:30 p.m. at the Racine sh~tin s at the r ecent meeting of
Paula Wood, Dorothy Hawk, a nd
Church.
Susan Cleland .
the Ladies Auxiliary o! Chester

Auxiliary .

has meeting

'

,-..
•

EXTRA SPECIAL WEEKEND SPECIAL
FOR OUR 1Oth

..--.
'

.

·~
..

. OCTOBER 22ND, 2lRD AND 24TH
8 A.M.-1 0 P.M •.

....

.•

.

...
.
'.

•

LIVE PUMPKIN IN THE STORE ·• FREE FRESH APPLE CIDER

·--

PURINA -

J

..
..'

99
Dog Chow B1g
••i•. 6 .

'

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

U.S. GRADE A 12-LBS. ANO UP

· Sunday Best
-Roaster

r

•

..
.
.
"

Frozen
Young Turkeys

'•

...•

JHOROFARE

Sugar

99+5

U.S. GRADE A

Farms

Pound ·

~·

$

s lB. FREE

Pick '0' Chix

~-

..•

lB. BAG

limit 1 with *10 Purchase

Pound

~

~

•
'

.-

THOROFARE

••
--•
•

Bleach

.

1 cat

~

FROZEN GRAPEFRUIT OR

-..

Citrus Hill
Orange Juice

..

12-oz.

.-• .
-•..

..•.
.
••
·~

FULLY PREPARED,
1 o/.-2-LB. AVG. AFTER COOKING

LOWFAT; WITH FRUIT, SMALL
CURD OR LARGE CURD

Whole BBO
Chicken "

Kroger ·
Cottage Cheese

Each

16-24-oz.

e

~~-

..••

--..
.-

For

Each ol thHO aovertrsll\1 itiiiT\6 111 IIIQuir!W to ~ reatl~v ~~ ~&lt;'l~ablo 1nr
s.o~ ,,., each Krogar Store, e•cept asspac:arcillly noted rn rhr$ ...:1. !t we
do run out of an atlvortrscd rt llm , we will otte r vou vour cholct~ ol ~
comp•rable it11m. whon a.-·a~able , rellllt !lnQ the sarno savlng11 cr a
la inchvcll. w nocl'l wo!l enlotle you 10 purcha~e Ihe aclvunts~d ttem a t th!l
aQv~;~nb;vd p•M:e .... thin ~ !Ui ys Only one vendor coucon wtll be
act~llt&amp;d J)et !1 11m pt.lrtllll!i!!d

· ...

•
•·

•
•~
R

:

~:
~

•

OAUtrDUS A" D POMEROYSTORES

..,..
:.,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE SOLD TO
Q[.4.lE RS

-.

Beans_ .. __ _

.r;// .-

I

;~

-.

~

.,. ,....

('_.

•.

--. . ··----

.. ,_

':...·--..-. . =-:
.- .·-:..._-_ . ... :.::_:_--=..:... ,..._____ --"""-·
- ----.
-=---

-.--:---_~·

10,75-oz.

-- - -

'

/,

-

Orange Crush
orA&amp;W

lr=--'----.

'~

SUPERIORS

Frankies Wieners

. MOUNTAINEER
MILD, SAOE or HOT

Sausage

limit 2

~:~~·

USDA CHOICE BEEF CHUCK

39

Charcoal
Steak

Springdale
2% -· Milk
Gallon

•

l~aho

12 oz.
Pkg.

99~

$229

lb.

GOlDEN RIPE

Bananas

Potatoes ·

•

'

;

$ 19

10 ,•• .

Bag

CRISP GREEN

38

C·

~-

.. , . ·. .·.:.....----

.. .. -:--::----'-•----......--·-

Pizzas

8/16 oz.

.•

.

~=

,~ ·

• j , \I

U. S. NO. 1

Campbell's
Tomato Soup

/

8&amp;W

•

'

~ if
~

'

I'

16-oz.

C Oreo
·$
Cookies ......... 2o-oz.

Sunshine
Saltines .. __ ..... 16-oz.

..

I

I

fl

REGULAR OR DOUBLE STUF

REGULAR OR UNSALTED
'

l

c·

C Pork &amp;

Pastry
Pie Shells .. ,._1o-oz.

COPY RIGH T 1967 . THE KROGER CO ITEMS AND PR ICES GOOD
SUNOAY . OCT 18, THROUGH SII.TU RDAV, OCT 14. 1987, IN

88

CAMPBELL'S

FROZEN PET-RITZ .

MILK
$129 GAl.

· lmlt 2 wlth-*10 Pureh81t

'

....

.•

ABVE1111SED ITE MPOUCV

'

2~

WHITE OR DARK CHOCOLATE LB. $1.79

18-CT ... 79¢

·.

MT.VERNON

Pound

e $

$

. KROGER GRADE A LARGE EGGS

'

Shelled
Pecan Halves

00

Head
Lettuce

'

BIRDE'/E

·;

·:~

-- --

Cool
Whip

CK OUT THESE LOW PRICES!
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,

~ -----~;_~---~~;-~(;;_.-~·--:. ·.. :
-.. .
. .
-.. --·-=.
· ~

..

- ·._;

:Jo

- _.-::;._~..A),·
-- -. . .
.. .

~~'hKDrinks

RED, BLUE DR

White
Seedless Grapes
• Pound

·

. ·. . . . , '"·

Cost Cutter .
· -White ·Bread .... __ .. _...... __ __ 16-oz.
VAC PAK

~~~:: ~~:~:~ Food

•

I

•

.

: ~lb$4

. . ... , :,

99

99 C·

FROM
OUR DELl

IN OUR
, D'AIRY

·

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

"

59 C
25C

8 oz.

•

SNACK 80)(

FRESH

Apple·
·CGall
·ider
oil

$189

..
.-

BAKED

Pumpkin Pie

*149

~--- Broasted

Chicken
2 pe. Chleku, Cole Slaw, Roll

69~

I

\

EeKRIC"

·Chopped 1

Ham
PerL~.

*129
.•
'

�.
Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

(Funny Prof to speak at meeting
Dr. Carl Hurley , billed as
"America's Funniest Professor"
will speak at the annual Meigs
County teachers and adminlstra
tor.s lnservlce day to be held
Friday at Meigs High School
A resident of Richmond. Ky.,
Dr. Hurley received his doctor of
education degree from the University of Missouri, and is
currently a full -time professor of
Industrial education and public
speaker. He has served as
director of personnel develop
ment for the Bureau of Vocational Education for the Kentucky State Department of
Education and previously was a
senior and junior high school
teacher He currently makes
about 200 appearances annually
for professwnal and business
groups, at educational conferences, before youth organizations,
conventions sales and marketing
semlnors and churches. He has
•

done radio and television commercials and prQjects His toptc
Friday wtll be "On a Clear Day
You can Sed Tomorrow" as the
keynote speaker, !rom 9;30 to
9. 45 a.m. and he will speak again
from 2 to 3 p m. to wrap up the
lnservice sessio n using "Givmg
Your Teaching the Human
Touch" as 1\1$ topic.
Registration will be from 8 to
8:30a.m. Friday with coffee and
donuts to be served Workshops
will be presented from 10 a.m to
11:50 a.m., and followmg lunch a
certification workshop will be
·COnducted from I to 2 p m by br.
Paul Halley, director of the
Dtvlsion of Teacher Education
and Certlfteatlon.
The numerous workshops to be
conducted will include studentteac her communications and two
kinds of teacher behavwr, both
by Dr. Hurley: motivating stu·
dents with alternative methods
of Instruction ·and stra tegies for

A total of $1.750 was made on
the fall carntval h&lt;&gt;id recently at
the Svracuse Elementary
School,· tl was reported at the
recent Syracuse PTO mcetmg
Several other fund t·alslng
prOJeCts were planned dut ing the
meeting including the selling of
first aid kits and Christmas
ornaments Orders for both will
be taken during the last week of
October
The PTO a lso has cookbooks on
the prepara tion of wildlife for
sa le and these may be purchased
by calling J oyce Sisson or the

teaching the talented and gifted
student, both by Vlrgmia Buz
zard: lear nin g Jnterventlon
sllategles lor problem learners,
Ann Mayle, computers m the
classroom, rookle,-lntermediate,
advanced, drug and a lcohol
education, Ivan Fask; Guidance
Counselors Workshop, Marie
Mulford , klndergerten work·
shop: special services for the
regular classroom and special
education students and teac hers,
David Roach, DH-LD course of
study and the I.E.P on Apple
Computer, Ann Fenton and Dan
Wade Teachers of Eastern,
Meigs and the Southern Local
Schools wtll do the hands on
workshops dealing with computers In the classroom Other
workshop presenters Include Dr.
Hatley, Juhe Kramer , Gail Horton, Dahle! J Wade. Gary
Walker, Fred Baloy, Jim Sheets,
and Suzanne Weaver, the las t

weiner roast at the church
Saturday evening, October 24,
starting at 6 p.m. Young Adults
class are furnishing welners and
buns; others bring a covered
dish. All welcome.
Osle Henderson ts visitmg her
daughter , Margaret Follrlld , m
Pomeroy thts month
Ruth Brooks and Charles Rrt·
chte are making satisfactory

recoveries
accidents.

CARL HURLEY

four all local.
The lnservlce pla nning commtttee includes Jenell Barker,
William Buckley. John Costanzo,
John Dudding, Connie Enslen.
Tom Kelly, Linda Lear, John
Perine , Carla Saelens, Carolyn
Smith, Ruth Stearns, Maida
Long, Martha Vennarl and Gary
Walker, all of the three loc al
from recent ~hoo,l districts and the county
office of Supt John RiebeL

James Kelly Is now at Pome·
roy Health Care Center after a
s tay at Vet era ns Memorial
Hospital.
Recent flu sufferers in the
community include Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Keaton , Mrs Bob Burke
and children, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Poole and Will .

Past Councilors conduct. meeting
Plans for a holiday party were
made when the Past Counctlor's
Cluli of Chestet Council 323,
Daughters of America. met at
the hall
The annual Christmas supper
and party was set for Dec. 9 at
Mom Perry's Bounty Table m
Ravenswood There will be a $2
gtft exchange
Elizabeth Hayes presided op-

the hostesses and games were
conducted by Laura Mae Nice
and Margat et Tultle. Sadie Trus
sell won the door ptl7.e
Others attcncung w~re Cora
Be~gie. Charlotte G1 ant , Thelma
White, Mary K. Holter. Betty
Roush, Opal Hollon lnzy Newell.
Ethel Orr, Lora Damewood,
Jean Frederick, Marcia Keller.
and guests. Sandra Whtte and
Bonnie Landers.

ening the meeting with readtngo!
the !34th Paslm. The Lord' s
Prayer and pledge to the Amencan flag were given in uni son
Margaret Amberger gave the
secretary's report. and members
responded to roll call by naming
their favorite season of the year
Several members read poems
pertaining to autumn and fall.
Refr es hment s were served by

•

Calendar/ happenings
WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vii·
!age Council will' meet on Wednesday at 7 p.m at the village
hall.

SYRACUSE
Syracuse
Homemakers will meet Wednesday. 10 a m, at the clubhouse
Members are to brmg one yeard
of ribbon and a small btrd for the
craft session
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club will meet 2 p m
Wednesday at the home of Mrs
Roy Holter. Mrs Dwtght Wallace
wtll review the book "Grace
Ltvmgston Hill."

be held Sunday at the Middleport
American Legion with music by
George Hall. Cocktail hour from
7 to 8; dinner at 8.

pickup times due to ot~er clinics
Makeup pickup da tes wtll be held
Nov 9,l6and23,9tolla .m . andl
!o 3 p.m

SUNDAY
POMEROY
The Meigs
County Pwneer a nd Historical
Society will hold Its annual
meeting on Sunday at the Meigs
County Museum The meetmg
w111 get underway with a potluck
dmner at I p m Featured
spea ker for the afternoon will be
Dr Frank Porter Ill, discussing
the "Survival of the American
Indian m th e Eastern United
States." Following the program ,
the society 's annual busmess
meeting wtll be held wtth election
of trystee~ and office" The
public is invited and encouraged
to attend

Special meeting
EAST MEIGS - Eastern At
hlettc Boosters will meet in
special sesswn IVJonday, 7 30
p m, to discuss the school levy.

DEXTER - Metgs County
C,:hurches of Christ Womens'
Fdlowship wtll meet Thursday,
7 :10 p m . at the Dexter Church
of C~rlst Speaker wtll be Jen
niter Sheets.
REEDSVILLE - The Rtvervlew Garde n Club will meet
Thursda y at 7 30 p mat the home
of Mrs Ronald Osborne
FRIDAY
POMEROY- Pomet oy Sen tor
Cit izens ts havmg a round and
sq uare dance on Fnday from 8 to
II p m Mustc by La1 ry Hubbard
and True Cou nt ry Band . Adm ts
sian $1 50 Brmg sna,eks for snack
table.
SATURDAY
ALFRED - Alfred Church I S
sponsoring a comm umt y weiner
roast at the church on Saturdav
s tarting at 6 ,p m The young
adult ~lass will furnish the
weiner ' an d buns Others to
bring covered dish es. Everyone
welcome

HARRISONVILLE - A Halla·
ween dance and haunted house
wtll be held Salurday from 7 to 11
p.m. at the Jiarrisonvllle School.
Music by Charlie Barrett Admls·
s lon $.50 at the door and $.50 for
the haunted house. The event Is
s ponsored by Harrison ville PTO.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Naza·
rene Church wil l be having
spectal services for Rally Day on
Sunday starting at 9· 30 a m The
New Life Singers a nd Den ise
Bonecutter with puppets will be
featured.
MIDDLEPORT
Jaymar
Gol f Club Dinner and Dance wtll

It was voted to purchase
five basketballs for the fifth and
sixth grade program, and the
group agreed to loan some game
equipment to the Pomeroy Elementary PTO for one of their
fund raiser..
It was noted that the Weekly
Readers have arrived and are
being used by the students.
Plans were made for both a
winter and spring book fair as
well as Santa's Workshop In
Decembe r.
The third and fourth grades
tied for room count

A .weekend party at Royal Oak
Resort was held lti celebration of
the eighth birthday of Biily
Young, son of Ramora and Bill
Young.
On Friday ev&lt;?nl ng the group
enJoyed skatmg at th e Ches ter
Skate-a-Way Rmk fo llow ed by
Ice cream and ca ke at a re ntal
ca bin on the l ak~ at the Resort
Gtfts were present ed to Billy a:nd
the group stayed overnig~t In th e
cabin wtth hts parents and sister.
Rayan
On Saturday after a breakfast
of pancakes, bacon, eggs and

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Notice is hereby gtven that
in pursuance of 1 ResoluttQn
of the Board of County
Qommtssioners of the
County of Metgs, Pomeroy,
Ohto, pas sad on the 12th
day of August, 1987, there
wtll be submtUed to a vote of
the people of satd Me1gs
County, Ohto at a General
Electton to be held 1n the
County of Meigs at the
regular places of vot1ng
therem. on Tuesday, the
thtrd day of November,
1987, the quest1on of levymg a tax. tn excess of the ten
m1ll limitation, for the be·
neftt of Me1gs County for the
purpose of supplementing
the general fund for the
purpose of maktng approprl·
attons for tha Metgs County
Health Oep,artment
Said tax bemg a renewal
of an existing tax of 1 0 mills
to run for five years. at a rate
not exceedmg 1 0 m1lls for
each one dollar of valuat1on.
whtch amounts to $0 10
!Ten cents) for each one

hundred dollars of valuation,
for five (5) years
The Polls for said Elect1on
wtll be open at 6 30 o'clock
A M and rematn open until
7 30 o'clock PM
By order of the Board of
Electtons, of Metgs County,
Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer
Director
Dated September 15. 1987

orange fulce, the group went
boating and fishing. Later they
enjoyed making body-sized bubbles, flying balloons and hiking
around the grounds
Those attending in addition to
Billy's family were Shawn Har
n s, Pete Sisson, Sammi Sisson ,
Evan Struble. and Ronnie Casto
Sending gifts were Mick Barr,
Kellh Mattox, Mrs. Elmora BoIce, Myrtis and Norma Parker,
Evelyn · and Hobe Young of
Sidney, carolyn Richardson of
Kettering, and Joan Dowd of
Columbus

(10) 7. 14, 21 , 28 4tc

5lal! ~I 0" D Do!~tr.mt!nl :II lns,rMte Cfn Cl ~ Ql Co&lt;~' pLt.-.::~-lh~ ,,_
Dt119"*! S~~~~t ~11!!10!!"1 Ill lr's•rlnto ot 111e Startol On.o ~ c~"" IMI
tDIInrmmt.IIISIJIWICf COol Cotm-o~ St110oal Neoo H•"'P''I•• n,u tompi fG "'In 1111 ll • lllf ll\'1 Sw~ ~tJOIIIO 0 and llulhll&lt; lel Out "Q l"f CU'
1!'1 \'N' ID "lnYCI n tfl I "ile~IIIJIPf(ICW~ l!uSII'IMI rJI 01W 111Ce II$ lo'Wo&gt;:ol
W'lllion IIIIC * n 0~ 11 iiOIIuil 511
Ill r.!•t befn .. lo:i•o-! 1)1'1 {)e('o'l"b9

,"'11 ..

jl l%e

Adn!IIIOU~II

51 Mli 5181700 l•ICoO 11!1 S12!1&lt;

28615~

Cl' S..r

Dlui ~7:JOl105tHII'&gt;CO!n!' U)(atl!r~OO f oprnrll.or!'i 573~!111 /'61;00

NOTICE OF ELECTION
O.N TAX LEVY
tN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Notice ts hereby given fhat
m pursuance of 1 Resolution
of the Vtllage Council of the
Vtllage of Middleport, Metgs
County. Ohio, passed on the
10th day of August, 1987,
there w1ll be submitted to a
vote of the people of satd
Mtddleport Village. Metga
County, Ohto at a General
Elec~ton to be held tn the
Vtllage of Middleport, Ohto
at ttle regular places of
voting therein. on Tuesday.
the third day of November,
1987. the question of levy·
tng a tax, in ax cess of the ten
mtll hmttation. for the be.,
neht of Middleport VIllage
for the purpose of prov1dmg
and matnta•mng fire apparatus. appliances, buildings. or
sites therefor, or sources of
water supply and matertals
therefor, or th6 establish·
ment and maintenance of
lmes of hre alarm telegraph,
or the payment of perman·
ent, part·time, or volunteer
ftremen of ftre f1ghttng com ·

pames to operate the 1ame.
tncluding the paymont of
fireman emplo~r·• contri·
bution requ1red under .ec·

lton 742.34 of tho Revtsetr
Coda. or to purchase ambulane equipment. or to pro·
v1de ambulance or emergency medical service

operated bv e fire depanmant or fue fighting
company

of an ekisttng tax of 2.0 milf11
to run for five years. at a rt~te
not exceeding 2.0 mtll1 for
each one dollar of valuation.
which amounts to eo 20
IT wenty cent at for each one
hundred dollars of valuation,
for ftve 16) vear1.
The Polls for 1aid Electton
will be open at 6 30 o'clock
AM. and rema1n open until

FABRIC &amp; CRAFTS

NOW OPEN
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.
10 A.M.-5 P.M.
Sat. 10 l.M.-2 P.M.
located on State Rt 7 ,
Reedsvtlle, Oh1o, 5 miles N
of Chester, Ohio

STORE·~

POmAfiS

Sing canceled
CHESTER - The sing at the
Living Word Chester Church of
God which \\WIS to be held on
Saturday. has been canceled due
to the illness of a member of the
Stnging Di sciples group

$

Cooked Ham •••••••••••.••••••.,•• 1.97
SUPERIOR

Big Red Bologna···············'~···· 99 &lt;.
HOMEMADE
Meat Salad •••••••••••••••••••••••'1••• 89&lt;
KRAFT SLICED AMERICAN PROCESSEO

CHEESE .......... l.l.~ .. $1.89
HUfFMAN S
SUPER SHARP
CHEESE .............. lJI. $3,39

HEAD
LETTUCE ............ l.4.f.l... 69c
NEW

YELLOW
ONIONS.. ...........J.JJI... 79c
CELLO PACK

CARRQTS ..... M.Ql,fJll. •• 29c

ORE·IDA 24 OZ.

WIC distribution
POMEROY- Ptckup dat es for
WIC I women. mfants and child
renl coupon s, a nu tn ttonal program, have been announced by
the Me igs County Health Depart ·
ment They are Oct 29. Oct 30
and Nov. 5. 9 to II a.m and 1 to 3
pm with no exceptions on

NOW ONLY

S4!!oo

SltllnQ fee

DALLAS tUP() - Federal
officials have b&lt;egvn processing
an asy lum application for a
dancer ·wit h the Moscow Balle!
who dtsappeared last week before . a performance on the
group's llrst Amencan tour
Alan Nelson. commissioner Of
the Immigration and Na turaliza tion Servtce in Washmgton. on
Tuesday told The Dalla s Morning
News that offtcta ls were working
to provide asy lum to Andrei
Ustinov ., 32, of the Moscow
Ballet.
Officials were expected ~o .
disc uss Ustinov's case at a news
conference today at the INS
offtce 10 Dallas
Soviet officia ls met wtth Ustlnov at their request Tuesday In
Dallas, The News reported , a
normal procedure in asylum
cases

one spec tal per familY.

•
1(8xl0) , 2(5x7s),

and 10 wallets for only .
' tpprollmtlt llze

S1tt1ng Fee $2 00 - Not tncluded m pnce of advertised special
Adver11sed spec1at 1~ only In blue and brown backgrounds
Advertised spectal ts tn two (2) poses · our selectiOn.
AckJ!ttOnal actver11sed packages are ava1table at regular pnce
Add1ttonal charge lor groups and scen1c backgrounds.

[TIJB\l ''l: 13 3~
STATE ROUTE 7-POMEROY
PHOTOGRAPHY DAYS
FRI., OCT. 23 &amp; SAT., OCT. 24
HOURS:
FRI. 10-2, 3-lh SAT. 10-2, 3-6

o~

1987. there wtll be IUbmrtted to a vote of the people of
said Rutland Townshtp. at a
General Elect10n to be held
1n the Townshtp of Rutland
at the regular places of

.

-

1

In lovtng memory of
my husband.

the 30th day of July,

Card of Thanks
Our special !hanks lo the
Pomeroy Heailll Care
Cenltr lor the care of my
mother. Mrs. Gertrude
Dttlmar, and to the
Vetetans Memorial Hospital
and tnlenSive care untt.
doctors and nurses.
IuwhAJ$-Coals-Biower
Futtml Home, AI Hartson
lor hts consolinc words
and lor lntnds and
nerghbors during our loss
Mrs. Burdell McKtnney
&amp; Family
11

Charles R. Mash Jr.,
who passed away Oct.

21. 1982.
Amtllton ttmes I've needed
you ,
A million limes I've cned.
II "Love" could have saved
you ,
You never would have dttd.
In hie I loved you dearly,
In death I love you sttll,
In my heart you hold a
place ,
No one &lt;an ever lrll,
It broke my heart to lose
you.
But you d1dn't go alone.
For part of "Me" went wtth
you.
The day God called you
home
Sadly missed by wife
Ann, Children and
Grandchildren.

Help Wanted

Hash Brown Potatoes •••••• S1.39
TASTE OF SEA
Ocean Perch Filets •.••.VlPlv•• S2. 99
WELCH'S
Grape Juice •••••..•. MJ~se~••.2/S1.09
LUCK'S

Fried Apples ...............VltP.1••••••• 99 &lt;
ARGO
Sweet'
Peas •.••••.••.•.....l.~PJ•• 2/99&lt;
ROYAL PRINCE
Yams ...........................1.~Ph •••••• 89&lt;

KELLOGG'S

Raisin Bran ••••••.•...•...•1.\Jl}••• $2.19
NABISCO QUAKER SOUR CREAM
&amp;
Onion
Crackers
...•.•
~r~.Qi •• S1.49
CAMPBELLS
Chili Beef Soup .•....WMI. 2/S1.19
WHITE CLOUD 4 ROLL
•
•
Bathroom Tissue •••.•.......... S1.39
LUZANNE
Tea Bags •.•..•.••.••.•••.••.~11u1.. S3.49
HUNT'S
Manwich ...•.•.•••.•••••.•• J.~''•.Ql. S1.89
HAWAIIAN
Red Punch ................... ~Ml. s1.2 9

REGISTERED NURSES
&gt; Immediate opening for full time and
.pan time R.N.'s to work in areas of
· :•Special ·care
:.•Emergency Room
•Skilled Nursing Facility
•Madical. Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience .
E11cetlent Fringe Banefits
SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY, R.N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 S EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
OR CALL

992-2104r EXT. 213
E O.E .

LABORATORY
SUPERVISOR
IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR A CAREER ORIENTED MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST TO WORK
FULL TIME IN SUPERVISION.
,
REQUIREMENTS: MT (ASCP or Equivalent
CURRENT CERTIFICATION : Prefer 3
Years General Laboratory Experience
SALARY NEGOTIABLE
Interested Appli&lt;ants my &lt;all

614-992-2104, Ext. 201
Or Sent Resume To:
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 S East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
AnfNTION: W. S. lutas. Admin11trator

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 premi_um pay,_
malpractice insurance, tuition
reimbursement and more.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant,
West Virginia, for more information.

(304t 675-4340
AA/

•

In Memoriam

•

SHREDED S2.29 LB.

MARGARINE ...... J.J\.. .... 79(

2

Nottce •s hereby gtven that
m pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of
the Townshtp of Rutland,
Metga County, Ohto, passed

•••

Talley Hams ............ ~ •••••••••11••• 99&lt;

BLUE BONNET QUARTERS

Limit

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION

Directo~

SMITHFIELD 6-8 LB. AVG. SMOKED

SWIFT ECKRICH

Public Notice

N ottce ta hereby gtven that
in pursuance of a Resolut1on
of the Board -of Town1hip
Trustees of the Township of

Public Notice

Date Aug 27, 1987.
110)7, 14, 21 , 28, 4tc

PRICES EFFECTIVE lHRU SAT .. OC 1. i tl. lYe/

EASTERN Hill
FABRIC SHOP

t10) 7. 14, 21. 28. 4tc

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION

By order of the Board of
Electtons, of Metgs County,
Ohio
Ev81vn Clark. Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer.

Phone 742-21 00

'"'''"!'!(&lt;

vot1ng the rem. on I uesday,
the thtrd dav of November,
1987, the quest1on of levy mg a tax, in Bkcess oft he ten
mtll limitatiOn, for the be ·
nefti of Rutland Township
for the purpose of maintain• no
and
operat1n g
1
cemetenes.
Sa1d tax be1ng a renewal
of an ex1st1ng tax of 0 3 m11l
to run for ftve years, at a rate
not e•ceeding 0 3 m1ll tor
each one dollar of valuatton,
wh1ch amounts to $0 03
lthree cents) for eacH one
hundred dollars of valuauon.
for fave 15) years.
Th~ Polls for satd Electton
w1ll be open at 6 30 o'clock
AM . and remam open until
7 30 o'clock P M
By order of tht Board of
ElectiOns. of Me1gs County.
Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer,
,
Otrector
Dated August 14, 1987.

Robert E Buck, Judge
(10) 21, 28: t111 4, ltc

7:30 o'clock P M

DEPARTMENT

N!'l ilisell S350869~~00 Cap.1al SSlW:l6000 IN WITNESS M•EIIEOf
I ~M he&lt;! ... ~ !UO§Ct be!J "'J 11t"11 100 CIJM'&lt;I /'lr &gt;fi i!O tJo 1H"oo II Coi.Jr&gt;
Du! Oooo._ tn 1o,, ilro;l [I,] hi n.orgr Fa~ S.pi r:J
o' OniQ 'iiHr

Sing canceled
SaturdaY''s hymn sing at the
Ltvmg Word Chester Church of
God ha s been canceled

INS begins
asylum process
for dancer

auch Decedent
Notice is hereby gtven thai
on the 16th day of October,
1987. Ltligh M fiSher, Per
sonal Representative of the
Estate of AUdra Flem1ng,
Deceued. leta of the City 9t
Fort Myers, County of lee,
Stete of flortda. flied m th1s
Court an authanticatad copy
of the letters of h11 appotntment granted h1m by the Circuit Coun of the Twent1eth
Judtciel Ctrcuit 1n and for
Lee County, Florida, Probate
DIViaion. All cred1tors of
such decedent must present
their claims to thiS Court
w1thin IIX months after the
date of auch f1llng, or then
cla1m1 wtll be forever barred
u a po111bte lien upon the
Ohio real estate of such de·
cadent

Said tax being: a renewal

RUTLAND

4

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
AU ORA FLEMING
DECEASEO
NOTICE
tO.R C. 2129 02)
To oil Ctodlton of

r-====:======-T-==::::==~===~:-r=====::::====i-==:==::7.=:~::;::===
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice

Bazaar
MASON. W.Va: - The Mason
Ftre 'Department Ladles Auxil
iary will be sponsoring a soup
sale and bazaa r on Saturday
Nov. 14, from 9 to 6 p.m. Any
person or group wtshmg to rent a
table for crafts or goods may do
so for $5. For more mformatlon
call 773-'&gt;437 or 773 5414

THURSDAY
... ~
HARRISONVILLE- Pasi)'Ja
trons of Harrisonville Chapte r
255, Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at the home of Bernice
POMEROY - Pomeroy NazaHoffman on Thursday at 7· 30 rene Church Will be hav mg
pm
spec tal services this Sunday, 9:30
a m , for Rally Day The New
POMEROY- Pomeroy Naza- Ltfe Singers and Demse Bonecutrene Churc h will have Junior
ter, with puppets, Tabttha a nd
Church Harves t Celebra tion on
Teddy. will be featured Rev
Thursday from 5 to 7 p m . Junior
Miles Trout wtll pteac h Eve
church children welcome.
ryone w elcome. ~

sch~ol .

11

Ohio

Public Notice

meeting

Young birthday is celebrated

Alfred com:munity happenings
Sunday School attendance Oc·
Iober 4 was 25; church attend·
ance, .15. On October 11 Sunday
School attendance was 20;
c hurch attendance, 20.
Recent church visitors were
Kathy and Ben Jackson, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs Steve
Weber, Sean, Sasha, and Shalyn,
Eagle Ridge; Mary Wells, Logan
County, Wes t Virginia
Alfred Cl\urch is sponsoring a

PTO has

Syracuse

October

21. 1987

Public Notice

Pu bhc Notice

Chester , Me1gs County,

wtll be open at 6 30 o'clock

~ah~o~fa:~:~~t.org~~~ t1~~~

;

~ :.~1o~~mp·~ open until

1

witt be submitted to • vote of
he poopto of satd Ch ester

By order of the Board of
Elections, of Me1gs County,

Townshtp, at a General
Electton to be held in the

Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman

Township of Chesler at tho

Jane M Frymyor.

regular

places

of

votmg

there1n, on TuHdav. the
thord day of November.
1987. the que1110n of,...,.

of an exlltmg tax of Yz mill to
run tor five years. at e r~ta
not exceeding "h m1ll for
each one dollar of valuation,
wh1ch amounts to $0 .05
Utve cents} for each one
hundred dollars of valuatton.
for five l5} years
The Polls for said Election

rr=========::r-;:=======::::;i
Howard L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW _

Ouector

Dated August 27, 1987
t10) 7, 14. 21 . 28. 4tc

t.._-------:-1

tng a tax, m exceu oftha ten i
mill limitation. for the be -

nef1t of Chester Townsh1p
for the purpose of mamta1n·
ing end operating
cemator~es.
Sa1d tax bemg a renewal

Business Services

B USJness
••

t-;::====:;:;==:;1

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE •••
•Child' s Birthday
PartY
•Wadding
•Parents' Anmversary
•Baby Shower

auuoa

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NilE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS
Buying Roots,
Beef Hidas and
Deer Hides
GEORGE BUCKLEY
614-664-4761
HOURS .
Mon.-Sat 2 to 9 PM .
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M.
10· 15· 1 mo.

Good Rates

TLC
25 Yrs Exp
References

992-6873
Joe or Pauley lowland
209 South 4th St.
Midtlleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Real Estate General

CHISTEI. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

992-6167
121 11-INCH 8 ITEM
PIZZAS $99S

REFERENCES

Green/Black Olivas,
Pappetoni. Cheese.
Onions, Green
Peppers, Sausage,
Gtound Beef.
NO SUBSTITUTIONS

Phane Day or Innings

985-4141
GINIIAL (ONTUCTOIS

2B· L mo

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
NEW LiSTING - At the
edge ol Pomeroy Appx 31'1
acres wtlh a i 1'1 slory home
4 bedrooms, tamtly room, TV
room, equtpped kttchen.
satellite dtsh and a camper
2 car garage and more
.. JUST $29 900
IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acres larm wrth older
home garage and other
bur ldmgs Close to Pome·
roy . . . ASKING $42 500
RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION - Split foyer home
wrlh 4·5 bedrooms all m
excellent condtbon Garage,
mce lot. WB Hookups Much
more'
$54.900
TUPPERS PLAINS - 3
bed room 2 story home wtth
a large kttch en, ltreplace
and wrap around porch
Storage burldrn g large lot
...... n... .. $23.400
LETART AREA- Mtnt Farm
- 2 ac res wtth a 1978
modular umt 3 bedrooms.
satellite diSh , tenctng to
sheds. small barn Dnll ed
water well . . $24,000
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
ra nch style hom e Wtlh huge
fam rly room 4 lots, drnrng
room ASSUME LOAN ASK
FOR DETAILS .. $31.900
MIDDLEPORT - Nrce garage apartment 1n town 3
bedrooms. lu ll basement.
AC all on a level lot close to
shopplllg .
$21.900
PRICE REOUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - Two unrt
apartment bu tldmg 3 bed·
room umts should rent lor
$200 / mo
p l us
each
. $16,900
NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - 2 unrt brtc~
apartment burldmg m town
Good rental mcome WANT
$28,900
NEW LISTING - Rtverlront
property wrth a mce cabrn
w1t h lull basement Plus a
larg e but ld tn g WANT
$27,900
HIN!IY ! !!RAND, .0

If AN TRUSUU ,...
DO TTl£ TUINU
lUCY RIHLI

oHtn. .. .

... 2 •!91

949-2660
n7 Sn 2
. 9.. 1f. 3010

.. •n-221•

rn
!!Ill OR

New Locat~on:
I 68 Norlh Sfcond
Mtddleport, Ohto 4S760
SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carrv f•th lng Suppltes

Pay Your Phone

Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHDNI
t~ 141

992-6SSO
RI!IDINCI PHONE
(~141 992 -

FIREWOOD
Locust,

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PARTS
NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
All MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
. RACINE
GUN CLUB

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16·86-ttn

RACINE, OHIO
10-9-lfn

Roger Hysell
Garage

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269
Evenings

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohto

- Addons and remodeling
- Roof1ng and gutter work

AUTO &amp;TRUCK '
REPAIR
Alto Trantmlsslu

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tlc

- Concrete work
1

- Plumb•ng and electrical
work

(Free Esttmatest

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -621S or 992-7314
Pomoroy, Ohio
4· 15 86 tc

DENNY CONGO

ACCENT

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

FENCE COMPANY

hi Us fence 'I ou In

992-3410

RESIDENTIAL ; CO MMI:A CI AL

FREE ESTIMATES

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

PH. 742-2027

~~1-l ;Q
r i'j'UI' l~;-Y.
I i',

'5..
1 ~

(I, (:r:

\111~· ~ :

-J l r

10-8-tlc

'llTI©~IK:
.oz..·J· '

.i~\~fli~1J~
FITNESS ClUD f!:
~·

FULL BODY TONING
ond FIRMING

., uu Tno

t 1u1 l..ook 4

~-,,,

Rt•llt•r At11 "' r f ''"'"" ( lull' ••
It' .. fun. Ht•ulllu &amp; lotlcotl For

'nu'-llrlnjZ .\ t'rlt'ml

I"CtAi RAllS fOI ITUOIH1S

PH. 992-2300 Ot Stop By

11 S W. S.oond, Pomeroy

l0..5 1110

5/ 1/ lln

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUN
•MUZZLELOAOtNG
SUPPLIES
OPEN llo 9 P.M.
II. 124 Atron: from

Happy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND
614-742-2355
9-24-1 mo

4

~ ~

~
UJ

:r:

NIASE CortWiod Moch.,ic
CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

•ALL MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES
CHESHIRE

367-0322
9-23 1 mo
ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

Riverine Antiques
I 124 Eost Moin St.
Pomeroy
HOURS, Mon.-Tues. Wed.
10 a.m h 6 p.m.
p.m.· ~ p m
By Chon" or Appomtmtnl

Su&gt;Wav I

d

•
'

2

male,

1 female

Melee ·oranye &amp; wh•tetlger grey
&amp;. wh1te F"'male•pure black Call
614 -367 -0629

4 k1ttena 9 weeks old, 1 gray
male, 1 blaGk male, 2 black
females. Litter !rained Call
614-446-3267

Earn extra money tor Chrlstmu
Sell at work , to frtend• or 1
terntory Avon Cell 614-448·

216ti
WANTED . PROGRAM DEVEl·

OPMENT SPECIALIST for Per·
ttal Hosp1tahlat10n Program at
Woodland Centert Masters De
gre e and experu11ncce with lfl
verltly mentally diNbled ad\Hts
preferred Coursework or expe·
r1ence •n group procest would be
helpful For 11\0te mformat•on
contact Sandra Mcfarland Per
sonnel De1Jar1ment. Woodland
Centers. Inc, 412 Vinton P1ke,
Galhpohs Ohto An equaloppor·
tunlty employer Woodland Cen·
ten does not discnminate o n the
basts of age. color creed ,
national ortg1n, race, ••• or type
ot dtlablhty

Ful~ · blood Great Dane to a good
home Call 614 446 7321
Evenmgs

Someone to llve-1n &amp; care for
elderly lady Not bed fast Ught
housewortt.. noo-1moker L1v111
1n Gallipolis Call 614-446 2386 or 446 -0322 or 446 -

Cocker Span1el dog· female to
giwe away to good home House
broken Cell 614 388-9787

36t7

3 blue gray long halted k1t1ene 2
male, 1 female , to good home

Advert111ng needs
h1gh energy persons tor the
Gallipolis area Pou1ble further
management opportunity Part·
t1me lull time. base and comTelev110n

1 male and 1 femalfl Re-ule to
gtve awav Full-blooded Call

61 4 -992· 5819 or 614-9926606

Local company has 1mmed•ate

opening for profestiOntl rec:ep
t1onai Must possess cleru:el &amp;
typ.ng sk1lls Opportunity for
advancement m areal of promo
t•on&amp;advert111ng 40hr. aweek
Cell 614-682 7728 weekday•

Only to loving homes gold
tabby, gray and black 9 week old
k•ttens &amp;14-843-5446

10 Cute pupp1es. need a new
ttome with lots of love

675·7856

304

aher 5 00 PM

REPS NEEDED

Black female 6 monttt old small
dog. part Sneu!'&amp;r good w•ttl
ktdl 304 882 2688

acounls Full-time,
S60 ooo. s8o.ooo Part-ttme.
S12,000-S18 000 No selling,
repeat bustneu Set your own
hours Trammg prov1ded Call
For busmeta

Beautiful biKk long heuad eel

304-675·3954

1 ·612-938 -8870, M·F

Bam·
5pm (Central Standard t•meJ

2 couches 2 chairs 304 773

SOCIAl WORK POSITION Program CoOfdinator tor two r1111
dent•al programt (5 bed / 1 bedl
for people with mental retarda·
t1on and development dia1b1h·

6468

6 Lost and Found

ttes tn Galha County, Oh10
IGalltpohs / Bidwelll Retpon••
bthtl&amp;l mclude the day·lb-rt.y
IUperVIIIOn of the prgrama.
Must have one ye~r exper~anca
and a degree from an accredited
program 1n one of the tollowtng
areu EducatiOn , Social Work,
Therapuetu;: Recrest1on, Rehabilitation Counsaling. OR •
degree m a f1etd other then
Soc1al WOfk end at leatt 3 ye•rt
Social Work exper~enca under e

lOST Male, wh1le&lt;:at.alsomale
long hatred Pers•an cat Shaded

silver (grBy -wl11tel From the
vtc1n1ty of locust St PI elise Call

614 446

4888

FOUND ,AJ logan baUgame, SIZ:e
1Q.wmter, Ptttsburgtt Stealers,
jA&lt;:ke~

bleck

glove s Call 614

446 9307 or 446 4144

--- -

--

Will tlle penon ~ho found 8
depos•t box key at Ra• Park•ng
MSW. Ekpelence wnh MediCaid
lot please return 10 C 1t1zen
regulat1o~a and prevtoua
National Bank Urgent Thank_ nence
w1th personnel tupervi-

••P•

you

7

SIOn preferred Vahd Oh10 Dnv·
er' s license and good drivmg

Yard Sale

recOrd requ1red Salary S16·
19 000/year Liberal benefit
package All applicatiOns mult
be pott-marked by 10·26 87
Send resume to Rob•n Eby,
8uclteye Community Servacea,
P 0 Box 804. Jackson, on
45640
Equal opportunity

·Ganrpolis ..
&amp; Vicinity

emptoye ~

Respectable downtown astab·

2 Family Yard Sale 603Jackson
P11te Thurs &amp; Fn

lfi hment saeks bartenders and

p·c;..r.-e·rov .. · .....

ava•lable to work day or evening
shift, Wtth emphasiS on weekends Salary negot11ble Sand
(esume With reference• to Bo•
Cia 109 c / o Gallipolis Oatly
Tnbune 826 Thard Ave Galhpo.
l11 Ol11o 45631

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

cocktatl watlre11es. Must be

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

985-3561

lUI Makes

•Washers •D•shwashe~s
•Ranges •Refrtgerators
•Dryers •Freezers

WI SELL USED APPUAIICII

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid bot I and rod
out radiators. We also
repatr Gas Tanks

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Mtddleport, Ohio
·
1-13-tfc

NOW HULLING

BLACK

I

WALNUTS

NEWELL'S SUNOCO
IT. 7, CHESTER
NOW THRU NOV. 14th
MON. THRU SAT.

9:00-4:30

•
0

$8° per 100 lb.
985-3350
10 -12-1 mo

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
Aulhorizll4 John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
F~rm (qutpment
Dealer

Farm Eq11lpmenf
Parts &amp; Service

1-3-'86 tic

LISA M: KOCH, M.S.

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

304 757-

Brown and white male Beegle 2

years old 814-992 -7634

10·!1-'87· 1 mo

POI'IIROY -985-3561

9 5

7881

992-2526

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.

Call

milliOn

RUSS MOORE

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Cert1f1ed Licensed Shop

Giveaway

•K1ttens.

Will do babys1ttmg 1n my home
Have Reference &amp; Ekpartence
Call'614 245-5578- Oua11 Ck

Thursday and Frtday Oct 22
an.d 23 NtJw L1ma Rd , Rutland
Wmter coats sewmg mach1ne,
baddmg, baby Items, b1cycle1 ,
house hold 1tems clothmg cars
and parts 614 742 2502

HElP WANTED
Need a few good people. good
phyttcel condition No ettpe
nence necesury Must be av ..labie tor immediate employment.

782 H1gh St
Mtddlepcnt Fnday, Oct . 23,
10 00 6 00 and Saturday, Oct
24, 9 30·5 00 Estale Sale

Garage Sale

8

for aftemoon and evenmg hours.
$300 a week Co pd vacation
and lnsuraf)ce. Call Thursday
and Fr.day forpersoneltnteMew
614-446-7451

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Government Jobs 816,040 $59,230 yr Now h1rmg Call
805 687-6000 Ekl R-9805 for
current federal hst

Rt&lt;:k Pears on Au ctioneer h ·
censed m Ohto and West Vtrg1
n1a Estate anttque, farm hqui
datton sales 304 773 5785

9

E11cellent wages lor spare ttme
assembly work electrontcs,
crafts, others Info (5041 641 0091 EXT 3026, open 7 dey•

Wanted To Buy

Hmngl Government JObi·YQI.Ir
We pay cash for late model clean
used cars
J•m Mmk Chev -Oids Inc
B1U Gene Johnson
8 '4·446 36 72
TOP CASH paid for 83 model
and newer used cars Sm1tl'o
Bwek -Ponuac, 1911 Eastern

area $16.000. $68 .000 Call
!6021836 ·8886 EXT t449
RN, lPN or EMT to perform
Insurance eumlnltiOnl m Middleport, Pomeroy. and New
Haven areas Sand resume to
PMI , P 0 8o~~: 2267 Hunttna
ton W Va 25723

Ave , Gelhpohs Cell 614 446

2282

Federal State: and CIVIl servtce
SU 707 10 666,819 year,
now htrmgJ Call job line 1-5 18
45 9- 361, ext F1822 for 1nto
24 tu s

JOb$

WANTED TO BUY Used wood
&amp; coal heatert Swam I Fumt·

ture, 3rd &amp; Ohve St Galhpohs
Call614 446 3159
Junk Auto' a w•th or without
motors Call 514-388 9303

Medtcal au1stant, part t1me for
phySICians off1ce Please send
resume to P 0 Bo• 729 W.
Pomeroy Oh10 •

Wanted to buy 40ft e•tenSton
Call
614 446 4866

AVON All areas Call Marilyn
Wea..,er 304-882 2646

ladder 1n good condltton

AV ON all areas. call Stmley
Spears 304 675 1429

Buying daily gold. 11lver coina.
rmga, Jewelry, slerhng ware, old
coma, llrge currency Top pn·
cea Ed Burkett Berber Shop
2nd Ave Middleport, Oh 614·

' HIRING IJ

Government JObs

your area

S68 ,000 Call
8885 fJII(t 1203

S15 000 ·

992 -3476

~602]838

Wanted to buy. standmg limber
Call AI Tromm It 614-742-

Servtce

2328

e11perience

Heat1ng &amp; An Condtltomng
Man With 5 years

Inc

Apply Orman Hell
1317 Oh1o St . Pt

Pleasant

QUILTS

Hig h prtces pa1d for pre 1950
q1.nlts

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY e11

Apphque , pntced. any

cond1t1on Call 814· 992 2101
or 814·992 5667

pe nence with accounts payable
accoun1s receivable bank dep·
Oltls btlhng procedures re -

Cash for atandln{l timber We
buy veneer wh1t6 oak and
walnut Cali AI Tromm. 814

qutred , full lime pOIItton. send

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
c:1 Swim Molds - lnterpretmg Se!vices

Most Foreign and
Domeattc Vehicles
A/ C Serv1ee
All M110r a.·Mtnor
Repairs

Styhtt ni!HK!ed w1th managert
license Call 614· 448·3703 or
446 8621

$500 Reward for mforrna tlon
leading to the arre st and c:onvic·
t 1o n of person or pertona cutting
our fences Eadtc.er Runell Jr .
Ea.dker Russell Sr. 304 468
1728 Or 458· 1 638

742

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

9· 10· 1 mo

11).19-87

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Gallipolis Oh1o 45831

3 Announcements

Call 61 4-446· 7693 aHer 6

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

10 16-1 mo. d

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Oak, Cherry

sgsoo

v.w.

GUN SHOOT

10-7-lfn

608

f. l.lfn

ht Dally Tr~bune Q25 3rd Ave

Ann oun cemenl s

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

' 10-8-1 mo

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

E. Ma1n

°

DONELLI'S
PIZZA

Basham Building

Hou s inq
Headquarters

or 949-2801
N S d
C II
un ay
1

HOME

Room &amp; loard For
Senior Citizens and

WANTED EnergetiC, people or
iented team member / d..,t.lat ·
a~stant to 10m our prKt•ce part
t""e You'll want to have all the
necasury quahtl" of a top
notch dental lstlttant (u:pe
rtence helpful but not necetsaryl W1lhng to work hard7 Send
us your resume and Ulery
h11tory to Box Cia 108, Gallipo

--:w Hames Bu•1t

•Family Reuni'ln
•Any Special
Occasion
PH. 992-6959
!1-18· 1 mo

· Real Estate~

9'2-3325

"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2860

4·22-87-tfn

. TEAFORDm

SYRACUSE- Modern 3 BR
tnsulated hom e Famrly rm
tn the full basement gas &amp;
wood heat. nrce krtchen.
range, 2 porches near the
school Only $35,000
TRAILER ONLY- 2 BR Ltb·
erty 12x60 Central atr &amp;
heat range &amp; refngera tor
Only $7,000 .
66 ACRES - West ol Rut
land you ng ltmber &amp; ail mt
nerals
100 ACRES - Mtnerals 2
otl/ gas wells. free gas, 2 wa
ler tap s, good gra,el Rd
near Rt 33 &amp; Rock Spnngs
Only $40,000
6 YR. OLD BRICK - On
Peac11 Fork 3 BRs 2 bath~.
burlt·m ran ge oven, carpettog, lull basement porch.
pallo garage &amp; 5 acres
RANCH - Ntce lg sundeck
8x38, lg lot. 3 BRs. central
heat &amp; carpelmg near Jhe
school Asktng $32 000
REEDSVILLE - 6 Rms,
bath , gas wculator, TP wa
ter , dnled well and lot for
trailer 2 septiC tanks Only
$16 000 Wantto hear an of.
fer
YOU ARE IMPORTANT
TO US

FREE ESTIMATES

L..----....:~~..:;;;.J

Real Estate General

216E 2ndSt.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

BISSELL
SIDING CO..
.. _

Help Wanted

Avon -Sell Avon for Chflstmat
Make 40 percent Caii814-44EI ·
3358

INSULATION

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

949-2263 .
or 949-2168

'WANT
ADS
ARE
JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

•BLOWN IN

REPAIR

Painting

Servt·ces

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING

11

232a

resume to 8ox 5 · 21 care of
Po1nt Pleaant Reg11ter, 200
Mam St Point PIAesant W Va
25550

•

Emplnymr.nl

12

Services

11

Help Wanted

Earn free merchandise by host
ing a ttouse ot lloyd gi ft and toy
party 304· 676 -3221
WBnted kitchen employee, we
wtlhraln nophone c•lls,applyin
peraon only Holiday lnrf. Gallipolit. Ohto

Situations
Wanted

Have room 1n pnvate home tor
&amp;lder person Good care Reaso-

nable Call614 258 &amp;509
Have room for two elderly led1et
m mv home Would hke them to
be part of my family 23 v••r• ,
uper~ence Plantyofrefm~a.

Call 614 -843-5222 anytime un •m_______
_111_9_oo_;_

1

�•
P.ge-1.2- The Daily Sentinel
18
"

Wanted to Do

LAFF-A-OAY

you nMd an aaperient:*d

46

Space f or Rent

Office Space lor rent

~cll181• - ••• · 7181

or
441-1422. Can oiv,• good refar.

heel.

downtown Gallipolis location.
lnqu iri.. call 614-446-42 22.

Hou11 CIMning or office cleanw.g by day. Can gtv. nrf~~r.nc;e .

Mobile Home lot 60 ft. or len.
9~0 4th .. GaUipolia . t76. Wet«

lrlllmMlulete clun.,. call 151 • ·

--=

paid. Call614-446-4416 after 7

tt.w room for etderly lady in my
home . Call &amp;1• · 388-819 3

Ground floor level- Appro~ . 560
aq ft . Commerc1al spaee. located at 417 2nd Ave. Call
614-448-3432.

. 441·1105.

PM

..........

Cen do light hauling and roofing
Reatoneble retet . Marion
Snidef. 11 ..-9..9-2829.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 514-9927479.

Experienced child care in my
home. Caring and retponsible.
R.,.,et~ee provided. I 1 4-9927038.

Spaca for 1mall trailefl, All
hook-ups. Cable. Alao efficien~
rooms. air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Ca11304-773-6661 .

Will baby ' tit in my home,
Uf*'-nced. non-smoker, between Ordn8nc. and Jr. High
tehoola, references, 304-675311&amp;.

Saddlebrook Inn has a two room
ofiice apace aYailable, no city
B&amp;O ta~ to paf. an lnduttrial
growth area. 304-876-6276.

Will do private duty nurs.ng.
304-576· 1191.
Will ~t in my home any
hourt. 304·176-7396 .

"My husband

was half
Scotch, too, before I had a
lock put ., on the liquor
cabinet."

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUBLISHING CO . racammand1 that you
~ do bu-'neu with people you
know , and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you have
investtgM.cl the offering.

Own your own apparel or ahoe
etore, choose from : jaen IPortlwear. ladies tpparel.
men't, childten•mllternity, large
tir:et. petite . dancewear·
HrOblc, brid... lingerie Dr accetsori• .tore. Add color anatyllia.
Brandt: UJ Claiborne. G..oline,
Helhtltex. Levi, Lee. Camp
a.v.rty HUla, St M,lChele, Chaua,
OutbM:k Red. Genetia. FonmJa,
Orttnica41y Grown, oyer 2000
others. Or 113.99 one price
dnlgner, multi tier pricing discount Of family thoe .tore. Retail
price~ unl*levable for quality
._,normally priced from 119.
to tao. Over ZIO b.-.nd• 2100
atvl•. t14.100 to 128.900;
inv.ntory, treinina. fhtturet,
...nd opening. airfare. etc. Can
open 11 d.ya. Mr. Loughlin
1112}888 4228.

32

Will http finance or land contract 10 yr. old house. 3 Sr.,
Patr~ot Village. Call 814-4461340. 44&amp;-3870.

1981 Nalhua, AC. all electric.
12x85, underpinning, deck,
ltorage building included. Cell
&amp;14-«8-736&amp; Dr 614-4467374 afler &amp;pm.
1974 Elcone 14x70. Built on
room. Excel cond. Must move.
Make offer. Cell61 4-388-8101 .
1974 C.rriegehouM 12x&amp;fi 2
br .. 2 baths. Beige &amp; brown-. On
Carter Rd., Northup. Call 614·
446-1611 .

4 BR .• fireplace, full bnament. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. 834,900.
Call Dayl-814-441· 1615, after
&amp;;00- -446· 1244.
Houae at 80 Chillicothe Rd. Very
Cheap. Call 614-446-2404
3 br hoUse In Crown City. Main
St. 825,000. Call 614-4461511 or 448-1522. ·
1 or 2 house•. Main St . Crown
City: 2 bf. rental houM. f8.500.
3 br. nica, t25.000. Call 614"46-1511 or448-1622.
SALE-RENT: Ranch atyle. Large
lcitchm. utilrty rm . Srngle gereae. Uke new. Carpet thru out.
Ca1l814·448-1358.
2 BPI home. kitch8n, utility
room, bath. living room. carport,
fuel Dil furnace 1 .26 acret. On
Rocktprlngt Rd. Pomeroy, OH.
Coli 114-992 -2338.
Hendi Man Special- 6 room and
beth , snlc. b~tsement . 110 Stale
St. Price negotiable. Call 614·
992-3726
IS room house in Rutland close to
Pott Office and 1tore1. S7000.
Phone 61 4· 742-2460, e~cept
Sunday•
2 bedroom house, full alze
beaemant double car ger-ae.
glasMd-in front porc h, large
lawn. No pet• and no small
children . Deposit necesury.
114· 992-7791 .
2 bedroom home in Pomerov. 2
bathl. 1wlmming pool, Mtillte.
CioN to schools. Call61 4-9923254.
For Sele;Und Contract. 3 br
hOuse. 2-story with beaement .
Nice 1.-1 acre lot. 2-car garage,
niceview. ln New Haven. 'Terms:
•300. down; $300. month. Cell
~- 882 - 2339 eher &amp; p m.
For Nle or rent. 3 bedrooms, 2
lull blt:ht, built-in kitchen, cental
air, barn, pond, 8 '/z acru. 3
mlle1 from town, Rt 2 North.
WHI conlid..- land coRtrtct,
304-876-2886 . Butch snd Pat
Greenlee.

32

Farms fo~ Sale

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 br. newwell·tO·W811 ClfPII, llr
cond. Parit:ad in Johnson· a Mobile Home Park. Will tell on land
contract. Ca11614-448·41 10 or
- -1401.
1Ox38 Mobile home. Gn hist.
Oood cond. f3200. Call 814441-8510 .

18 acre farm with mobile home.
Good barn 6m1 from town Call
814-446-1158
Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lea11.
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores,
offices. A-One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304875-5104.
"
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gih Shop. 1ISOOsq . ft. Commercii! or warehouse Parking on
aide. Adjacentto Third &amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 · 2382 tor
appointment .

35

Lots

Mobile Homes
for Rent

&amp; Acraage

1-7 acreage with county water.
10 plus rhilea from Moizer.
82000·87000. ' Land contract
excepted. Call 614· 446-6980.
10. 6 acres in Vinton Co. Septic
tank, water. Near Mine 3
Driveway off county rDad 8 Cell
614-388-930&amp;.

1

41

Homes fbr Rent

Unfurnithed house, 3 br. Rod·
ney Village II . $250. Call 814446 ·4418 ahar 7 .c)'o PM .
Nicely furnished 1mall house.
Adul11 only . References required. Off •treat parking. Ph.
614-446-0338 .
46 Spruce: 3 Sr., equipped
kitchen, wether-dryer. CA. No
peta Dep. &amp; Rei. rtKfuirld. 1300
• mo, Cal\614-446-2158
7 room house In Mlddlepon.
Option to buy. Call e14-992·
2363 Of 614·"992-7621 .
2, 3 , or 4 bedroom houiM end
apt . in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utiliti .. , deposit required. Call
814-992-5113, 614 -992-8723
or 814 ~ 992 - 2509 . Call after
6 00, plean.
•
3 bedroom In Middleport. Depoth required . Call 814-9922606,

3 BR~· partially furnished in
Pomeroy. cloH·In. Available immedletly . Mutt be employed.
Depoait Call 614· 843·6446.

'

51

Household Goods

New 1 6 lb. Hot Point We1her
and alec. dryer with vent kit and
pig tail for 8660 00. 304-6765760.

Rio Grande· Nice 2 br apt
Stove &amp; refrig. Furnished. 8226.
No pets. Call614-44-&amp;-8038 .

Electric wall clock, bunk beds,
twag light. 304-675-5431.

614-448-7627 .

Stockermatic. Used 9 mot.
I 1 000 · Firm. Call I 14-3888.. 62.

•

Boats and
Motors for Sale

~--------- ;

12' fiberglall Sears boat witt. 6
hrpw. Johnson engine 1300.
304-895-3031.

2· Remington 1100: one- 12
gauge with deer tle.,.r 6 fun
ehoke. One· 20 gauge with deer
slayer &amp; full choke. Call 614446-3413.

76

WED., OCT. 21
EVENING

•

Peavey M1.iticien Amp. 4 -12
speaker cab1net , grephict ,
phaM. 400 amps of mualc
pleasure. *760. Call 814-4489407.

11 Ill CIJ

'

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

SO'/?, IF We
FOI.LOW H&amp;~
PA~T A CIGAiit
STORc.COULP

PO YOU R.I:A"L'I THIIJI&lt;.

TH ~

POCTOF&lt; I~ MIXE'D UP
WITH TH I~ oM5E7.7.LIN(;,

a (I)

Hoapitet bed. woodburner.
dryer. electric Nnge, truck
topper. buffet, bed, bathtub,
curtains, womens clothes 1-6,
misc. Call 614-246·9241 or
266.'8268.
King wood &amp; coal atove. Call
614-446-2177.

Oragonwynd Canary Kannel.
CFA Himalayan. Persian end
Siameae krttens , AkC Chow
puppies New kittens; Penlana
Call814-448-3844 after 7PM
Registered AKC Bauet hound
pupa. Call 614-446-0974.

Misc . Merchandise

8 mo. old Schnauzer, AKC
Registered. Call 614-446-8024
after 5 :00 PM .

C.lloho n's u·-•
auu T1·, 0 Shop. Over
1.000 tirea. sizes 12, 13, 14, 16,
16. 18.6 . 8 mtiH out At. 218.
Call 814-268-6251 .

Dachstlund pup. One pureblood,
red female puppy Very cute and
plavfu 1. 1100 Call 814-448·
9407

54

I ,;;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;::;:::::::::l==·========~
t-

Pets for Sale

Mixed hay, t1 .26 . Hay for
bedding 80c. 304-675-5679 ,

2 regittered lemon spotted
Beaglea, male or femela. 1 veer
old, cen bread. S160.00 each.
304-576-2223 .

Mixed hey f1.00 bale, 304-773·
6165.

6 AKC registered German Shepherd pups, 4 females, 2 mal~e .
2 montha okl, 304-882-2077
2 rh1le Blue Tick coon dog. 6
months old. 110. each. 304875-5941 .

57

Musical
I nstrllments

Bundy cll!llrinet, new, used only
twD months . $200. 304-4681953.

58
&amp;

Fruit Vegetables

Dunrovin Fruit Farm . Appl81·
f6 -10 per bushel. cldar .
torghum, apple butter. Numer·
out food itema. 9 ·8 weekday•.
9 -l!i weekends. Sr. 881 SE of
lllbony. 814-198-8298.
Quality Fruits and Vegetlblet
retell and wholeula. B '&amp; S
Produca acro11 lrom Pina Hut.
Gallipolia, Oh10.
Big apples all verletlet . At11resh
fruhs end produce. Open 9:008 .00 daily Jeck1 Market, Route
35. Hend,,..ton, W Va

Fmn Suppl 11:~
&amp; Liv es to ck
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS 11o SONS ,
u .s . 35 West, Jackson, Ohio.
814·286-6451 .
Ma11ey Fergu10n, New HoMMid,
8uth Hog Seln &amp; Service. Over
40 lolled tractora to choote from
&amp; complete line of new at. used
equipment. Largeel telectlon In
S.E. Ohio.
Bidwell Cash Feed Store. Oct
Special . On Sale now- 6ft. · 8 fl .
6 8Yz ft. ateel post. Galcho berb
Wire. (:afl fOr the lateSt PJIC8!1 .
814-388 -9688 .

Free 1-800·643-8439.
Fith Deyllt's time tor ,atocking.
Cetfiah, Hybrid Blueaill. Ban.
Crappie &amp; Minnow• For more
Information on delivery, call Toll
Free 1-800-643-8439.

Oct 28· 8 :00 PM . We will be
holding a special feeder calf sale.
All breed• including .Hols1eins.
Cattle will be accepted ell day
Tues. end up to 1 :00 PM Wed.
Hauling eVe liable Athena Li'vestock S•le. 1 m11e eatt of Albany
on St. At. 50 Call Stock
yard-814· 692-2322 or 6983531 E\leningt.

One bedroo m furnithed apt.
Eldra clean and nice. Adults
Only. No Pat1. 304-875-1381.

Ouaner Horse gelding. Very well
trained end gentle with children.
Call 814·949· 2&amp;82 after 7 :00
p.m.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, dey. week.
month. Galli• Hotel. Cell 814441-9580. Rent aalow •• $120
month.

3 pah Golden Phe11ants, One
pair Llldy Amhearst. several
Ringneckt, duckt end turkey-e.
30·-773-6878.
Having thrown everything overboard, they
still needed to lose welght. .. ln desperation
they began doing aerobics.

Tran sportation
71

a

12 laying chickens 1nd 2 roostera, t26.00. 304-875-1926.

One set headtlfl and A cell dual
point ingition for Dodge 318,
30 .. 773-63)2.

77

Auto Repair

!MY HA%
10 '?Tf&gt;-fiD IHI~~,
\ Bf&lt;::.A~7"' 0&gt; THI'7

Struts. n 19.95 pair. in1telled .
MDst model,. Muffler Man. 9
Stimpson Ave. Athens, Ohio.
, -800•843-3767.

1980 Chev . Cit11ion, V-6, auto.
ps, pb, ac. new tire1 81460 or
bast oHar. Sae - 1710 Chathem.
Gellipolia.
1940 Dodge- 8utiness Coupe.
motor overheul&amp;d. Good cond.
02000. Coli 614-388-8820.
1972 Buick. Good running
cond . AM -FM -CASS . good
tires. good motor &amp; trans. Tuned
up rec:ently. f360. See at: 241
r.. r Jack1on Pike Apt. 1 .
1983 Buick Riviere. All black
with burgundy Int. 2 dr hardtop,
front wheel drive. fully loeded
with full power options. Excel.
cond. Must be 11en to -.ppreciata. 17900 Cell after 4 :00PM
814-446-2297 .
1984 Firenza GT. 5 tpd. beet.
cond All e~tras . Call 614·448·
3397 after 5 ·00 PM
Stainleu steal exhaust syatem1,
Now custom made for your
truck. motor homeorclusiccer
Witt'~ life-time warnmty. Muffler
Men, 9 SUmpton Ave .. Athens.
OhiO 1·800-843· 3787.
1976 Chevy Monza. Runs good.
low mlltage. t400. C. II e, 4 992-6396

78

Camping
Equipment

~F'IO@IG

" "GALL Hi'?

1983 Ford Van. 302 motor. PS.
PB. automatic oyerdrive, AC.
stereo. good tirea EKcellent
condition. 61 ,000 mile1. 614·
98&amp;-3353.
'83 Ranger Y·6, 6·1peed, bucket
Hats, ps. pb, ac, alpine deck.
03,300. 614-448 -3081 .

74

Motorcycles

198 7 Goldwing lntaratste,
8600 miles. 1981 CX Cuatom
600. nice cond . Cell 114-4460648 o• 448-0941 .
1986 RX200R Honda trail bike,
t800.00. good cond, 304~ 876 2495.

•

AAD
MAt:e. A

wu~.;,e

7' x8' utility trailer. $360. 304896-303&amp;.

DAT"' .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

•&lt;&gt;·Z-•

•

!let '' l'•r

:fl. -( ~ .

.,
1971 pop up camper. f500 9'
bett otter. 304-676-6118 .

Se rvic e~

81

'

You OOI'I'T N~Et:&gt;
.

NEC/&lt;il~

;J.:.:._

.,

WITH

HORIZONTAL.: HOLD..

i
~

•

i

•

~UMPING INTO THE
. COLD WATERS OF
THE ROIINOKE AFTER
THEIR ATTACK ON
l'HE CONFEDERATE
IOICLAD 1 ~LBE'MARLE~1
ALLEY 001' AND LT.
CUSHING EMERGE

FROM THE RIVER
ONLY TO FINO THEM·

SI!'LVES NEXT TO
A REIIEL GUN
EMPLACEMENT•..
WHERE AN
ALERTGUII.RD
DISCOVERS

THEM!

rr TAKtS 1)..(£ £CG£.

(1:54)

Cff A GUILTY
COUSCIUXE' .. . ·

8:30 CD l.att Fron1ler
(f) Drive-In Blues Take a
nos~algic look at the drive~in
movie busmess through
songs ..clips and
reminscences of drive-in
theater owners and goers .
9:00 CD 700 Club
D (2) I!SJ A Year in the Life
S•xty· hve and in love,.Joe
pops the question tO Or.
lllice Foley.
(f) (!]) A Job to Be oone
The second Project Literacy
U.S. (PLUS) program looks
at programs for read1ng
sponsored by businesses,
labor unions and private
organizations. C
l!al Ill 1121 MDVI~: 'Sadie and

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER 'S PlUMBING
liND HEIITING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Oh1o
Phone 614-446 -3888 'or 614446-4477

AH .. ~ THE:. FRWEiAL..
GOIJRMET'!. I
LIKE THIS aLJY.

Electric aewer cleaning, gaa,
water, &amp; teWer services. For all
your plumbing needs call the
PlUMBING DOCTOR . 1-8826663- 24 HOUR SERVICES .

(111 Larry King Llvel 'In dep1h

PROGRAM
SNE:EZING.

OUR REPORT CARD

iODAV ?

....

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
poola, cisterns, wells Ph 614·
245-9285.
A 8. A Wt~ter SerYice. Home
cislers. wellt,· pools f1iled Formerly James Boy1 W8ters .Call
304-676-6370.

..

Watterson ' s Water Maulmg,
reuonabl e ratn, immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, cistern•.
pools. well. etc . cell 304-6782919.
Dump truck deliverv . Coal,
Jtone, sand, greYel and d1rt.
304-675-3190.

87

HE: COOKS...

Son' C_
BS Special Movie

RESTOFTI·ll;

DID WE·UNS

Dillard Water Senice Pool1 · '
Cis'terns. Wells. DeiiY~ry Any: · •
time. Call 814-446· 7404-No .. · •
- ~:
Sunday calla .

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools, cltterns, wells Cell614446-3171 .

EVERYTHIN&lt;'&lt;

AND THEN HE
5PENDSTHE

~ c~cc '

Electrical
Refrigeration

General Hauling

A:;PPE:R ON

- /Ill~!

Residential or commercial wiri~g . New service or repaira
Licensed electrician Estimate
free Ridenour Electrical 304676-1786.
.

85

HE PIJ'TO IDNS

• HI ~H~ cHoo!

IIPPALIICHIAN WOOD STOVE.
Wood tnd coal stoves, furnaces .
end insart1. Brunco, Ashley,
Consolidated Dutchwast. Buy,
1811, trade. 1 0 yrs. experience
Rt ·143, Carpenter, Ohto. 814698-6121

&amp;

7:05 C5l Andy GriHi1h
7:30 Dill Hollywood Squares
(!) Schola&amp;tlc Sporla
Amanca (T)
(I) Newlywed Game
(I) Judge
1!§1 Wlleel ol Forlune E;1
1121 Cr0t11llre (0:30)
Ill 1121 I!SJ Jeopardy! Q
IDl Barney Miller
WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 C5l Sanford and Son
8 :00 CD Second Honeymoon
Gill I!SJ Highway to
Heaven II young black family
meets stron~ne1ghborhood
res1stance.
(!) Gymnio1 ca Rhythmic
Invitational from Princeton,
NJ (T)
Cil
(I) Wo~d Series
BaatbaU
(f) (!]) Mark Ruuell Comedy
Special Sa11nst Mark Russell
performs before a live
aud1ence. to turn the day' s
worrisome news mto fuel for
laughter.
l!al Ill 1121 The Oldest Rookie
Routine case turns up
witness who links powerful
developer to murder. E;1
1121 Prlmanews Wrap ups of
the day's work! news and in
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
IDl MOYIE: The Return of the
Pink Panther (G) (1 :53)
81 l1l MOVIE: Cleopatra,
Pari 2 (G) (1 :37)
8:05 (II MOVIE: Rio Lobo (G)

a

repair, partt. and supplies. Pick
up. and delivery, Uavla Vacuum
Cleaner . .,na half mile up
Georvn Creek Rd. Call 11444&amp;-0214 .

84

Cheers
\1) M• A•s•H

em

SWEEPER and Mwing machine

82

381
a

A

::::r.""E:~?) Tf"fAT OUTfiT .
· ) ' You NEE£&gt; A

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WIITEAPROOFING
Uncortdi1ional lifetime guarantee. Local reterenc•s furnished .
Free ntlmates. Call colhu:t
1-1514-237-0488 , day or night.
RogeraBasament
Waterproofing.

-----

.M~N'S FASHIONS'

·'

Vinyl Siding, over hang end
1978 Cemaro Rally Spon, auto. aut1ere. Ctli 614-446-6634.
AC, till, AM-FM stereo, air ' Fr" Estimate.
shocks, 360 four barrett. 304·
Electrolu• S.l11 and Service- ell
676-1139.
machinaa reduced: OJ- t849
1985 Couger 3 .8 V·8, take over now on Nle f419 . NeW Oitcov·
paymentt. Muat aall. 1-814- ery upright f429 now on ule.
1349 8 -9 Shampoo• t399•
446-4109 between 8 and 5
now on ule 1299. Euy pey~
'79 Plymouth Ch.amp, good ment plan available. Cell 614body, ~ill run, 1400.00 •• i1, 388·9918.
304-458-1844.
RON ' S Television Service .
1985 Cougar, 3.8 V-6, take over House call• on RCA. Quaaar. -.
paymen11, mutt sell, 614-448- GE . Speclailng in Zenith. Call
304-1178 -2398 or 614-4414109 between 8 :00 end 5:00.
2454.
1981 Plvmouth Reliant K-Car. 4
evl. auto, air. pt. fr-wh-drive. Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
nice little car 12.296. 304 -675- removal. Call 304-675-1331 .
2563.
Rotery or cable tool dr1lhng.
'77 CamMo Z28, auto. trans .. Mo1t walla compteted semedey.,
350 eng., good cond. $1 ,200. Pump selea and tervice. 304895-3802
3.00-5;00 weP. d~ after 9
p.m. 304-676·5668.
Starks Tree and Lawn Service. ~
1979 Honda Accord . Silver, lawn care, landscaping. stump
standard. 2 dr-hetchbaek. good removal, 304 -678-2842 or .
676-2903.
cond t1,100. 304-675-4139
or 875 - ~690

1978 J -10 4x4 Jeep truck .
Heavy duty, special steel bed,
low m1let. 82400. Call 614268-6434.

a

~1-U

Auto's For Sale

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIP MENT: Come in &amp; check-out our
fall sale prices on long traeton,
rioti tractors. wheel horse lawn
&amp; garden trtctora. Vermeer hay
equipment, Huagvarna chain·
uws, waodburning stDvaa &amp;
furnaces . • eneray free waterers
&amp; much morel Complete hne of
Bale handling &amp; feeding accet.,
grinder mixers, wagona, manure
1praedar, rotary tillers. rotary 1976 Ford LTD station wagon.
cutteJJ. blade1, diac. cultivators. u is, 2308 Monroe AYe.,
plows seede;s, post auger &amp; 304-676 -2179 .
drivere, wood · tpliner, trailer,
sprayer squeeze •hoot. head· 1979 Buick Electra, good cond,
gates, gates, feed bunks, truck $1, 100.00. 304-882-2832.
bed1, plastic tanks, batt:eriea,
cement mixer, Dower washers,
trupk rack1.
USED EQUIP; Trectora, round
baiera. square bales, cDrn picker 1986 Ford Ranger Yz ton.
elevator, drum mowen, plowa, S7800. Calt614-446-1420.
disc cultivator•. grinder mixer.
gravity wagona, lawn mowers. 1976 &amp; 1977 Chevrolet "h ton
h1ybine, chainuws, tobacco. truck. Call alter 5 . 614-448setter. Call 614-446-1676.
3243.
Ford one-row com picker, New 1985 S -10. PS , PB. Extras Call
Holland 450 feeder-grinder- after 6 :00PM 814· 246· 6626 .
mixer, 40 ft . John Deere grain
auger. No Sunday calls 614- 1978 Ranchero. 361 VB, AC,
388· 8624.
68000 mi. Tralierhitch, elec.
brk. control. Ca11614-'448-7622
16ft. cenletrailer, 14ft ditk, 24
fl grain conveyor, seed 10wer, Pickup truck beds.
creep feeder, call 304· 675Ford . Chevrolet. Dodge. Ab6979 attar 4·00 pm
solutely no rutt. Long end short
beds. 70 to 86 models 304676-2265.
62 Wanted to Buy
1987 510 truck, 5,900 miles.
Alr cond, AM -FM canett,
Naw buying shell corn or ear 16.800 .00. 304-675-6606 or
corn. Call fOf' leteatquotea . RiYer 304-896 -3427.
City Farm Supply, 614-446- 1969 ton truck, 360 eng., axe.
2965.
body, runs good , 2 aetsol racks.
304-882 -2248.
63
Livestock
1978 Chevrolet % ton pickup,
360 motor, automotive. good
cond. $1 ,0&amp;0.00 . Phone 304896-3001 or 304-676-4138.
cfl1hfi Day!HIt's time for st~cking
at lh. ybrid Bluegill, Baa,J,
Crappie 8a Minnow• For more
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
tnformation on delivery, ctll Toll 73

Regl1tered Anerlcan Seddle
8red hDrHt. Good blood line
Reuoneble price. Calli 14-4461842 Ext. 478 or 208 or call
266·8461 .

2 bedroom fumised apt, ref and
deposit. New Heven, W. Ve ..
304-882-3287 or 304 -773·
5024.

Grain

AKC registered Beagle pup1
066. 304·372·4702 .

AKC Chow Chow puppies. 860
Call614-388-9031.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
hou111 . Pt- Ple111ntand Gellipollt 614-446-8221 .

64 _ Hay &amp;

Upholstery

'' POMP AND
CI RCUMSTANCE''
B~ ELGAR ...

1978 Yemehe 7150 ltreet bike,
1600.00, good cond, call after
6:00pm, 304-876-8&amp;44.

R &amp; M Custom Couchet and
Reupholetery, St. Rt. 7, Crown
C1ty, Oh. 614-266·1470 Eve
614·448-.3438. Open daily 9 1 ~
4:30, Sat . 9 :30 to 1:30 Old &amp; •
new Uphosterad

Yamsha 490 42 183) •eoo.oo.
Honda tralle 70, t150.00 .
!New) rally flat caps, forofd ~tyle
railya, 1100.00. 304 -576 2629.
'

Mowrey's Upholstering •erving '
!rl coun~verea 22 years. The bast .. :
m furmture upholstering Call
:,
30.4 - 676 - 415 4 fo r free " .._•
est1mates.

..

low ro form tour simple

I

WOIO
GAM I

word~

DIPEEM

®I • 1121

@News
(!) SporloLook iT)
(f) Dr. Who
(!]) Square One TV Q
IDl FaCio of Life
81 \1) One Day at a Time
6:05 (I) Allee
6 :30 Dill @ NBC NlghHy News
(!) Inside the POll Tour (A)
(I)
(I) ABC News Q
(f) Nightly Business Roporl
®I Ell21 CBS Nowo
(!]) Degrassl Junior High
Melanie refuses to jOin race
when she' s teased about her
first bra.
1121 ShowBtz Today News o l
the entertainment world Is
anchored hve from New
York. (0:30)
ll]) WKRP in Cincinnati
81 \1) Too Close lor Comlorl
6:35 C5l Corol Burnett
7:00 1IJ Remington Steele
IIIli PM Mag ..lne
(!) SporlsCenter IL)
(I) Enterlalnment Tonight
(I) People'e Court
(f) (!]) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour 11 :00)
1!§1 News
(111 Monoyllne Current
re,arts on world econom1cs
and financial news w ith Lou
Dobbs. (0 :30)
Ill 1121 @) Wheel of Forluna

wr:-

66

T~~~:~:~' S©~&lt;JJ18-~t.trs~
Edited by CLAY R 'OlLAN
O four
Rearrange letters of the
scrambled words be-

•

8:00 CD Crazy Like a Fox

Remington 870 12 ga pump
aholgun . Uka new cond. 2
barr.!t. MOD • imp-cyl. t275.
Call daya 614-4-48-9407.

2 bedroom apt. Nice letting,
convenienc to shopping. Ap·
pliance1 furnithed, carpeted.
Call 614-992-6025 EHO.

Furnl1hed room. I 100. Utllill•
Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Qslllpolia. Cell
446-4416 afte r 7pm.

Television
Viewing

35 HP J ohnaont Motor, 11\f·
atart with get'tank. UOO. Runt
good, good condition. Alto 16
ft . fiberglellboa1withtrailer. 90 ,•
HP motor, just u·ebuilt with
power trim. 1850. 814-2474122

loreed air furnace. •110. Call

Nice one bedroom apartment
Newly earpetad, upatairs 4b2 Y2
28th St ., Point Pleaunt. Cell
614-992-58&amp;8.

~ peid .

75

140.000 BTLi lennox low -boy

Catalytic convartan, only
t89 .96. Moat models. lnm.llation alto available. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpton Ave , Athent, Ohio
1-800-843-3787 .

11 Court. 2 br., 1 Vt bath. kitchen
furniahed. carpeted. R88r parking . $360-mo &amp; utilities. Oep. &amp;
Ref Call .614-446-4926 .

46

Motorcycles

1986 XR200ff dirt bike, t800.
Good cond . 304-1575-2495.

Quality firewood , all hardwood,
lor ~ala . 125 e pick-up load. Call
614-367-0869 ,

SWAIN
2 br •. 2 very good mobile homes AUCTION • FURNITURE 62
for rent. Dep. and ref. requited. Ofiye St., Gallipolis.
C•ll 614-446·0627 after 2 00 NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 1399
Mixed herd wood llabs. n 2 per
PM.
Living room auitea- I 1 99-t699. bundle. Containing approx. 1 Yl
Bunk beds with bedding- $199. ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Very nice 14x70 unfurnished 3 Full size manreaa &amp; foundation P.omerov. Ohio. 814-192 -8461 ,
br , 2 bJ!tht. Heal &amp; water
starting - 199 Recliners
furnithed . 2 car gerege. Adults atarting- $99.
Fuwood-aplit &amp; delivered. 840 a
only., No pets. t275 a mo. Call USED- Beds. dresMJt, bedroom load
. Hlctcory, locust, oak, uua:
814-446-1&amp;42.
~•uites.
I 199-1299 . Dealcs
fras.
&amp; cherry. Call 614-992Wringer wether. a complete Un~ 6335.s,
Large trailer tpece. Addilon- of used furniture.
'
Bulavllle Rd. Call afler 4 :30, NEW- Westefn boots- 8 30.
Remington mDdel 742. 30-06.
114-446-42116.
Workboott 118 &amp; up . (Steel &amp; 3x9
WeeYer Widefield. Sling,
softtoe). Call814-448· 3159
case. Extra clip tnd 3 th boxes of
14x65 MDbile home 2 br. Sits
ammunition Excellent
on one acre. 2 chihken acciiPted. County Appliance. Inc. Good factory
8165 • mo. plus •100 dep. plu. uNd appliancet and TV tett . condition. t310. Ph. 814-992utilities. Avtlleble Nov. 1. Cell Open BAM to OPM . Mon thru 2583 Of 814·876-23115.
614-388-9861.
Set. 614 ~446 - 1699 , 627 3rd. Firewood I All herd wood. HEAP
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.
Vouchera 1ccepted. f31 . lerge
1 977 Oakwood Waaher, dryer,
8x10 deck, gaa heat AC. Call GOOD USEO IIPPLIIINCES pickup load. 614·7•2-2466.
614-245-9143.
Weshera. dryera, refrigerators, Hoapltal bed, lounge chair with
rangas . Skaggs Appliances.
1 2x60 2 br. Kitchen furnithad . Upper River Fld . beside Stone feeding tray. 886 General Her·
tinger Pkw. Middleport. 61"·
Large priYita lot 1 mile from Creat Motel. 814-441 -7398
992-6431 .
town. S200 a mo. Dep . &amp; Ref.
Call 614-446-2236 or 446·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Straw for ule. $1 .50 per bale.
2581
Call after 6 ;00 pm, 114-949Sofaa and chain priced from 3069.
Two bed room mobile home 8396 to $996. Tablet S60 and
Middleport , Ohio. References up to 1126. Hide-e-beds S390
and depoait required. 304-882 ~ to 1696. Recliners t225 to MDnroe copier Model RL-612.
under 15,000 copin, 304·876·
3287 or 394· 773-5024.
1376. Lamp• $28 to S125. 4067.
Oinett" S109 and up to $495.
2 bedroom. completely tuf· Wood table w-6 chairs •286 to For .ale by owner: Royal Oak
nished, pr1v1te lot, washer.
179&amp;. Da1k 1100 up to 1376.
dryer, AC. No Pett Adults Hutchea f400 and up . Bunk C081t to coast memberthip .
Preferred, Muon 304 -773 - beda complete w-mettreuea 84,796. 304-773-6985.
5751 or 773-6174.
1296 end up to 1395. Babybeda 4 pc . Stereo turn tabla.
111 0 . Mattrestes or box 1prings 8100.00. 304-676-7420.
2 br mobile home, furnithed
full Of twin $68. firm $78, and
1186. month plus t75 . deposit.
S88. Queen sets S225. Kmg Seweral window awning• and
304·675-651 2.
8360. 4 drawer chest 869. Gun lhuttert all in goad co'nd. quick
cabinets I gun. Gas or electric 11le, phone 304-1175-4B38.
range 1376. Baby mettretHI
44 Apartment
135 6 S46. Bed lremea $20, Firewood special one month
130 • King frame 160. Good only . $20.00 pickup load. No
for Rent
aelectlon ol bedroom suit ... dellveri... 304-876-7771 .
metal cabinet•. heedboardt S30\
and up to 166
Woodtplhter uaed 8 months.
1 and 2 bedroom apanmentt for
Paid t1,100. new. W1li take
rent. Basic rent for 1 bdr ..
90
Deya
Nme
••
cash
with
81 83 .00; 2 bdr., f219 .00 . Alao approved credit. 3 Miles out 1600. 304-676-7771 .
required a UOO.OO security
Rd. Open 9am to 5pm 1 Peerleu 50.000 btu automatic:·
deposit. CONTACT· Jackton Bulaville
Mon
.
thru
Sat. Ph. 614·446- propene heater~can be COil·
Estate1 Dept. Ph 448-3997 0322.
verted. 150. 304-676-3013 '
Equal Housmg Op.portunity.
PARSON
'S
FURNITURE
·
Firewood for sale. DeliYered
Furnished Efficiency $145. Utilities paid. share beth . 607 New wood 6 pc. li~o~ing wood anytime. $30.00. 304· 896 Second Ave , Gallipolis Ph. auitea. 1399 95; cheat of draw- 3448.
446-4416 after ?PM.
en, 4 drawer· $48. 6 drawer- Baby bed with mattre1s. love
$69.96; mattress &amp; bouprings- aeat and recliner. cell 304·676Upttain unfurnithed apartment. fuilsize;
312 coil, S149.95 aet, 3656
Util1ti11 paid C1rpetecl, no child·
S96
se1
ran or pets. Cell614-446-1637 twin manre11111.
THE WORKING
Gas beHboerd heater, brown
MAN'S FRI'END
sofa, 304-876-4413
2 BR . apts. 6 clo1eta. kit~hen ·
appl. furniahed, Washer- Dryer
hook-up, ~w carpet, newly
55 Building Supplies
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apts. Call 304-876 -n38 or
675-6104.
Building Metariala
Carpet. $6.50 &amp; up. Uvingroom
BlOck, brick, aewer pipea, WIR ·
Furniahed ept. ne~t to librery. suitea,
$326 8. up. Moliohen
dowa. lintels, etc Claude Win One profellional adult only. Furniture,
Upper Ri~o~er Rd. 446·
ters. RID Grande, 0 . Call 814Perking. Call 814-446-0338.
7444.
245-6121 .
2 br. apartment. Adults only. Trucklo•d Sale: New shipment
Inquire, Sheppard' •· F1r1t &amp;: of c arpet from Georgia Stop &amp; Concrete blocks ell sir_ea yerd or
delivery. Mason sand. Gallipolis
Olive St Galllpolia, Ohio.
CDmpare pr1c81. Mollohan Furni·
Block Co.. 123Vz •Pine St.,
ture 403 4th. Ave. KMR , GalliGallipoli1, Ohio Call 614-446Furnished apt. 2 br. '1 36 2nd.
2783
Ave. Gallipolit. 8196. Water polis. Call 614-446-7444.
paid Call 614-446-4416 after 94" brown tofa hide-a-bed,
Readv mix concrete and all
7 .00 PM.
e11.cel. cond. I 1000 new-1200
concrete tupplies. Call us Valley
Oak coffee table-amoke glan
Brook Cement and Supphet.
Tare Townhouse apartmentslop, briefly uted. S160 new304-773-6234
Fumiahed or unfurmthed. 2 br..
t85. Call 304-675-6200 or
1 v, baths Pr1vate entrMnce. 814-446-5201
ask for Nancy
Enclosed petio. Call 614 -36756
Pets for Sale
7850 .
Electric range. Good cond .
1 br. apt. ne• HMC . Stove, Green. Cell 614-245-9393.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
rehig .. drapea furnished . S225 e Hot Point 1ide-by-aide refrigera- Grooming All breeds .. All
mo . Dep.· Ret. required. Ct1l tor , copportone. 8160 . Call sryles. Julia Webb Ph . 814-448614-446-4782 .
0231 .
614-992-3856.

2 Building lots· 1 1 acres each ,
with county water. ,Jerryt Run Furniahed eHiciency apt· 3
Rd Apple Grove, --~ · Va. Call rooms &amp; btth. Cerpet thru-out
Single working person Dnlv. Call
304 -678-2383 .
614-448-4607 or 446-2802.
42 acres ~ith standing t1mber,
Gallia County, Ohio. 304-876- Graciout living. 1 and 2 badroom apartments at Village
4867.
Manor and Riverside Apartmanti in Middleport . From
8215 . tncluding utllitiel. Call
Rent il ls
614-992-7787. EOH.

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by UlrfY Wright

Plllatlc ci118rn sute •pproved.
pe ..tle ..ptic tankl, pl..tic
euhtena. metal culvert.. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack•on, Oh. 614~ 281 - 1930 .

I-----------

1 36 acres-approx. 20 acreJ of
bottom land. 2400 lb. tobacco
bese. Large bern. 3 outbuildinga.
Mobile Home hook up. Nice
house lite. located on Swann
Creek . Call 614-25&amp;-1n4.

34

Merchandi se

304-675-6104.

42

Merchandise

For Lease

400 tq . ft . commercial space
auitable for offices, retailing. or
services. Prime location ·corn,er
or 2nd. S. Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. 8360 per
month. Call 614-446-4249 or
446-2325.

Estate. Carol 'hager-broker.

Homes for Sale

Hom a for Sale by Owner.
Greenbrier Ell: .. 3BR ., bi-level
on 2.4acrH, AC, W.B.F.P., wet
bar, 2 cer garage. Ph. Before
4:00PM 814-441-4001 llhlf
4PM . Ph. 304-176-3816.

Homes for Rent

54 Misc .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

9

49

3 br , CA., buemtnt, garage.
patio, carpet. 1 cut Aone
firapl..:e. • 1 brick fireplace,
lnground pool. Ref. A-1 Real

SPECIAL SALE: Big tavings on
all sectional• and singlet by
Clayton and Schuh. , Buy now
and_ take advantage of gigantic
uvtnga on all dltphtya and
custom ordered homet .
FRENCH • CITY MOBILE
HOMES, INC . Gallipolit 614446-9340.

U 89 ONE PRICE SHOE 1988 Kirkwood. 2 bedrooms.
&amp;TOftE DR t10-t20 FIISHION 386 E. Main, Pomeroy. ImmeSTOREI Open e non·frenchise diate poueuion. $3000. Call
614-992-7314 or 614-742110ft wtch tfle Liberty Fa1hiont
. . . n..... over 1,300 brand • 2053.
....,... On•dme f•. lnventory.
flxturn, buyiAfl bip, 1\-IPPiiet. lmmeculete condition 1981 Vic·
ine1ore treining end more. Call 'Drien 14'x70', 2 bedroom,
any dme. Shirley Hunter 409- garden. tub. central air, fireplace, den, S1 3,900. 304-675·
132-1151.
1317.
Own your own apparel or ahoe
store, choo1e from : Jean- Holly Park 14x70. central air.
IPOrtiW•er. ladi.. apparel, porch, ah~d. underpenning.
men's, children-maternity, large' .. $8,000. or best offer. 304-875·
situ . petite, dancewur - 5417after 4 p.m.
HtObic. bridal, llng.,le or acee~ ­
aoriellto,._ add color anelylis. 1979 Go\l'ernor, 3 bedrooms,
Brandt: Uz Claiborne, Oa1oline, 1 1fJ baths, central air, c8n moye
Heltthtex, Levi. Lee. Camp or leave on rented lot. 304-773Beverly' Hlll1. St Michele, Chaut, 9126.
OutbRk Reel. Geneelt. Foren:u.
Organically Grown, over ZOOO 14'x14' add-a-room for trailer.
o1herl or 113,99 one price Separate entrance door and
dellgrw, multi ti., pricing dla- electrical bo~. farge window•.
co-..nt or t.mily thoe store. Retail two cloMtl end wall to well
carpet Call304-676-6979 after
pricel unbellev•ble for quelrty
lhOfll nQfi'MIIy priced from 119 4:00pm.
to flO. Over 2110 bnlnda 2100 32 acre• 3Y.I- mM .. from New
tt\'111, ., ..,800 to t28. 900.
inventory, training, fixtura1, Haven, 304-882· 2842
grand opening. airfare. etc. Can
apen 18 days. Mr. McComb '76 Park Vllla12x86, for uleor
uade, 16,200.00 or best offer
(112}888-5228
24 ft . Argosy treYel trailer by
Air1tream, 14,200.00 . 304·
576-2629.

31

41

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1977 FestiYal 14x70. All alec.,
central air, 2 br , 2 baths.
Pertically furnished . Many extras. Appointmlf1t only. CaM
after 7 :30 weekdeya 614-266·
8708.

33

Wednesday, October 21, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

I

I

interviews w1th top
newsmakers and celebrities.
10:00 CD Streight Talk
D (2) I!SJ St. Elsewhere
Craig performs h;s llrst
arttflclal heart transplant ... on
a sheep. E;l
(!) PBII Bowling
(f) Legacy of the Hollywood
Blacklist Look at the
personal tragect1es that
resulted from Investigation
mto Communist activities in
Hollywood. Examine long
term effects of the hearings.
(111 Evening News A wrap up
of today 's news and a lock
ahead to tomorrow 's news
stories. 11 :00)
fii \1),Senny Hill
10:05 (II MOVIE: Heller Skelter,
Par12iNR)(1 :30)
10:30 1IJ American Snapohota
IDl News
fll\1) Hogan's Heroes
11 :00 11J Remington Steele
IIIli l!al Ill 1121 IHJ News
(f) Sign OH
11J1 "agacy of the Hollywood
Blacklist Look at lhe
personal tragedies that
resulted from investigation
into Communist activities in
Hollywood . Examine long
term effects of the hearings.
1121 Moneyline Current
reports on world economiCS
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
81 l1l Love .Connection
11:301J ill @Tonight ShOw
(!) SporlsCenter (l)
(I) D (I) IIJI Newo
l!al Magnum, P .1.
1121 Sports Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Hubsr.
(0:30)
Ill (121 ' Addo~y· CBS Late
Night Adderly plays tour
director for a viSiting Middle
Eastem ruler.
ll]) Megnum, P.l. Sense of
Debt
81 l1l Late Show
12:00 CD Bums and Allen
&lt;IJ Scholastic Sporle
America(~)

(I) Cheen

D

(J) Nigh~lne
(!]) Sign 011

E;l

I

LEJLY
~--rl:....:;,-1,:..r--1..:,...-.il '

I
l
,--rG:. . .:;Oir5.,;H:.:..,:IU_D,_I--11 ~·
~1

The glories ot different seasons
sean from many different
views. A child sees them best
r ----:--~:-:-U:-:-..., from the middle of a mud .

.

_

.

_

_

are

_ e

1 C)

00 0 5 1
l. 1. 6 I. I_ I_ I.

_

Co mp lete the chuc kle quoled
by f1i11ng 1n the m1ssrng words

L--1-...L-.1--L-.....1--' ~ ou de11elop from slep No 3 below.

PRINl NUMBERED lETlERS IN
lHESE SQUARES

UNSCRAMBlE IIBOVE lEITERS
10 GEl IINSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
.. "
SYQ0118 - ErrHirld - Sheaf- Nood/9 - HONEYMOON
My aunt married vary late In life. So. late, in !act, that
Medicare picked up most of the C091 ot her HONEYMOON.

BRIDGE

NORTH

North-South had 10 on score, which
explains the pass of two diamonds by
the Hideous Hog, reigning expert of
Victor Mollo's bridge club. But East
was none other than Papa the Greek,
partnered by Karapet the Armenian,
while the HOfl's partner was the Rueful Rabbit. The strange bidding is ex·
plaiDed only by the interrlay of per·
IIOilalities. But notice al the honor
cards in East's hand - too much of a
good thing.
Ileclarer won the opening trump
lead in dummy, played the spade ace
and ruffed a spade,. crossed to the ace
of hearts and ruffed another spade.
Tben came a heart ruff, followed by
the club ace and a club ruff, another
heart ruff, another club ruff, and final·
ly the fourth heart ruffed by dummy's
last diamond, with East still to play.
That left the following:
Nort-

.A

+A KQ J
+A9 53

WEST

EAST

+8761
.10987

tKQJIO
.KQJ

+17

t!O

+a 161

+K Q J 10

SOUTH

+2

.6502

ti6~132

+2

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
.
(North-8outh 60 part-score)

•·+9•·

Norlll

Eul

2+
Pass
Pass

Pass

5+

6t

+9

West
+8

lt·ll·l1

+A 9 ~ 3

Dbl.
Paso

3+
Db!.
s+

••Pass

Redbl.

Opening lead:

.

SMill

2t

.''

Pass
Pass
P&amp;BS
7+
Pass

+ 10

•·+a•·

titJMA\tW
lty THOMAS JOSEPH
38 Playing
ACROSS

marble
1 Abject
39 Prod
5 Stand
40 German
the test
river
9 Border on
10 Hawaiian U Belgian
river
greeting
DOWN
lZ Mature
1 Au naturel
13 CommenZ Tolerate
tary
3
Period in
15 Nigenan
aviation
city
history
161ron
4
French
(Fr.)
·summer"
17 Seraglio
5
Procreator
chamber
Watchful
6
18 Wandering
7 Bribe
20 Craggy
8
Meteors
hill
11
Zeal
21 Religious
l-&amp;Sour
body
ZZ Gossip
23 Cereal

Yesterday's Answer

16 Certainty
19 Interpret
22 Ceylon
fishing
boat ·
24 Subside
25 Hold
out
26 City in
Iraq

27 Northern
- (Derby
horse)
29 Cabaret
30 Quibble
34 'The Hunter"
36 Zounds!
37 Broker:s
advice

.·..

plant

24 Came
in
ftrst
25 Debark
27 Mild
expletive
28 Friend
(Fr.)
29 Ostracize

'•

31 Air·

defense

group
32 Joined

together

33 Newsman
Koppel
315 Disastrous
371nvited

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTF.'!i- Here's how to work It:

w.~ 1

AX Y.DLBAA XIJ

lsLONGFELLOtw
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.
CRYPTOQUOTE
10-21
K ,O YKWCH

H Y H N F

zw

El'ZHW U H

AN R G

R A

K

WHO

IKE

ZEETHO

KTOK CZ LF

ZGKPZWKLZRW

LIRGKE
OHDHF
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE' 1S SOMETHING
ABOCT A CLOSET THAT MAKES A SKELETON TER·
RIRLY RESTLESS. - WilSON MIZNER

•

�WIN

World
Series ·

UP TO
We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS

$1,000'

c

Monday thru Su_nday

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., .OCT. 24, 19B7

'

FRESH PORK BUTT

Steaks/Roasts ••••• $119
HOMEMADE
Sausage •••••••••• ~~ ••• $129
LB.

MIXED

Fryer Parts. ..... ~~ ••..
HORMEL SLICED

•

at y

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Final papers a uthorizing a loan
of $434,750 from Farmers Bank
and Savings Company to th e
Meigs County Highway Department were signed yesterday In
the Meigs County Commissioners' meeting.
Bruce Reed, representing the
bank. was present at the meeting
to conc lud e th e money
transaction.
The loan, at a six-percent
Interest rate, made it possible fo r
County Engineer Philip Roberts
to tmve approximately 13 miles
of Meigs County roadway paved
this sumnier. including New
Lima Road and parts of Success
and Forest Run Roads. The
Shelly Co.. of Thornville, was

DElAILS AT OUR
STORE
'

Here Is A List
Of Recent
Winners ·

sso.oo

contractor on th e paving
projects.
.
·
Finalization of the documents
now clears the way for payment
to Shelly Co. for the work .
Rober ts a nd the commissioners expressed appreciation to
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.
lor the low-interest loan.
Roberts also reported that
edg&lt;;&gt;lines have been pain ted on
the newly ·paved sec tions of
roads, a nd that centerllnes will
be painted as soon as possible.
Low bids for two dump trucks
and an au tomobile lor the county
highway department were ap,proved by the commissioners,
based upon the recommendation
of Roberts . A bid of $29,300 from
Pat Hill Ford for a single ax le
truck, a bid
$48,527.52 from

of

RUTLAND

$10.00
JANE LAWRENCE .

NANCY VANMnER

LOUIS RICH

PHYLLIS SPENCER

PORTLAND
POMEROY

PRISCilLA SCHULER

•

RUTLAND

WANDA lYONS

'

RACINE

TERESA BARTLETT
POMEROY
POMEROY

·Ground Turkey •• ~·•• 99(
TURKEY
. ks.•••.••••~•• 39(_
.
Drumst1c

POMEROY

. AUDREY OURS
RACINE

CURTIS JEWELL
POMEROY

CATHERINE RUSSELL
POMEROY

$5.00
AUDRA WEll

,,

SHADE

KATHRYN WINDON
POMEROY

OLIN BOOTH
POMEROY

RITA BREWER
POMEROY

CONVOY PASSES THROUGH - A convoy of
two retlagged Kuwaiti tankers and six Navy

LINDA FERREll
SYRACUSE

TERRI CARSEY

Yams ••.•••••.••••••. ~~ •.. 29(

NELliE MYERS
LANGSVILLE

BELVA GLAZE

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Personnel with the offices of
State Representative Jolynn Bosler, D-Ga llipolis , and Stat e Senator Jan Michael Long, D lirclevilie. are wondel'ing why
the Ohio Depapment of Tran s portation dec ided to fund an Ohio
River ferry a t Powhat an Point,
free of charge to motori sts, after
refusing to fund a ferry for
Pomeroy ea rlier this yea r.

POMEROY

REATHA CLONCH
POMEROY

FLAVORITE HOMOGENIZED

RUTH CARTER
LINDA DUNN

Milk ••••••••••••••••••G:; ••

POMEROY

NELLIE MORRIS
POMEROY

$ 49
Cheese .•..••••.•...•1~~!·. 1

KRAFT AMER. SINGLES

·

BANQUET

lnst. Coffee .....~~;.

oz. 89(
.
TV Dinners .....,.....

SWISS MISS

LLOYD HARRIS FROZEN

MAXWELL HOUSE

IUse

so•

Coupon)

11

oz. $119
Pumpkin
Pie
·Hot (hocolate·•••••• 99~
••••••••
12 ENV.

26

WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PKG.

8.9(

Limit 1 Pet Customer
Good Only at Powell's Supermarket
Offtr Good Thru
Oct. 24. 1987

••••••

LYNN BROWN
POMEROY

RUBY DAVIS
HEMLOCK GROVE

DARLA STAATS
JANET NELSON
POMEROY

warships makes its way through the Perslim Gull
about 30 miles offshore from the United Arab
Emirates port of Duhal. (Reuters)

State requests explanation

RACINE

'WHITE SWEET POTATOES or

2 Sections. 14 Pages

1

Mark Hatch. aide to Bos ter.
report s th a t ODOT a nd the office
of Governor Richard CelPs tc
have been asked ·to ex plain what
would appear to be a discrepancy
in OD01' policy.

Scott Elisar. aide to Long, says
thai Ute sta te sena tor sent verbal
and written request s to ODOT
a nd the governor earlier this
week, and is an ti ci patin g
answers from the two offices
sometime today.
Hatch says Boster's office is
also quite anxious for explanations from ODOT a nd the governor. He said Boster will be
looking into the matter person·
ally when sbe returns to Ohio
later th is week.
Bosterl s currently in German y
where she is pa rticipating in a
bi-partisan work-study program
through the America n Counci l of
Young Politica l Leaders.
Bos ter and Long were grea tly

Bloodmobile 'receives
66 pints during visit
Supervising physicians were
Sevent y-one residents re·
Dr.
James Witherell and Dr.
por ted to'an American Red Cross
Wilma
Mansfield. Making up the
Blood mobile at the Senior Cit ilocal
nursing
staff were ·Beu la h
zens Center Wednes day to con·
Ward
;
Lenora
Leifheit al)d Joyce
tribu te 66 pi nts of blood to the
Ker ns. Peggy Har ris, ·Mary
Meigs Cou nt y blood program .
Nease, Jean Nease and Joyce
Twent y-one of I he donors were
giving -·blood to rep lace that Hoback made up the cler ical
staff. Wanda Imboden repres t·eceived by a relal ive or fri~!Jd .
Firs t lime donors were Mary ented the emergency m ed ical
Van Me ter, l\nna Wiles. Carrie services . Retired Senior Volun·
leer Program workers included
Young. Marsha Ba r nhart and
Pat Hindy. Lenora McKni g ht , Virginia Buchanan, Dorothy
Long, Marion Ebersbach, Lula
Dan Fo!lrod and Debbie Flnlaw
Hampton.
Hanna Queen, William
·beca m e one gallon donors; Law Hoback
,
Jessie
Curtis, Esther
ren ce Lemley, a two gallon
donor; Raymond Jewell, a three Harden, Florence Richard s,
Philomena Follrod, Evelyn Gil·
gallon donor; Billy J . Spence r, a
six ga llon donor; Leafy Chas· more, Jack and Joan Sorden a nd
teen, a seven gallon donor and Erma Roush. The canteen was
Virginia' Bla nd, an eig ht · gallon served by the Middleport Child
Continued on pa ge 6
donor . ·

member of Pomeroy Village
Council , Reed must live within
village limit s. Af ter Reed for"
maily petit ions the com missioners for the· annexa tio n, the
com missioners wmhave 60 day s
to act on the request. During th at ·
ti me, a public hearing will be
necessary . The commissioners
told Reed that Sutton Township
would be the only legal authority
with a r ight to object to the
annexation. Reed not ed that
a lthough his hom e is in Sutt,an
Township , those who occupy the
home-must vote .In the Meigs
~.ocal School District .

Kat hy Davis to a higher classifi·
cation within the depar tme nt . A
vacancy , created by Davis' promotion will be post ed within the
department . If not filled inter·
nally. the position will be fill ed
from the county 's curre nt civil
servi ce lis t.
Finally, Bruce Reed rep&lt;;&gt;rt~d
to the commissioners that he will
be petitioning them, as soon as
the paperwork is complete, to
annex a home which he rece ntly
purchased into Pomeroy Vlllage.
Reed explained that his house
lies in Sutton "J:ownship, while his
driveway Is in Pomeroy. As a

involved in a n effor t to secure
feiTy service ror Pomeroy whil e
the Pomeroy -Mason Bridge was
closed for repairs from late
March through mid -August . Both
were told by slate officials tha t
no money was available from
ODOT.

Missile hits
Kuwait island;
several hurt

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP I)- President Reagan, holding his fir st
nationa lly televised news confere nce In five months tonight ,
seems upbea t abou t the rebound
o! a jittery stockmarket and on ce
again not quite as Interested in
compromise with Congress on ·
th e budg et deficit .
The president, in a happy mood
on the eve of t ht&gt; sess ion with
reporters , said. it appeared the
market crisis might be over with
half of Monday ''s massive loss
recovered. The Dow climbed
186.84 points to 2027.85 Wednes·
day, according to an unofficial
tally, toppling the day-old record
climb of 102.27 set Tuesday.
"It sounds as if someone
dlseovered that the econdmy ts
stil! rather sound." Reagan said
as he left the White House
Wednesday evening fo r Bethesda
Naval Hospital. wherP the first
lady is recovering from breast
cancer surgery.
ThuS. a t the 42nd news conference of his pres idency, sc heduled •
fo r 8 p.m . E DT in the White
Hou se East Room, Reagan Is
expeci"ed to applaud a market
rebound alter it s his toric 508poinl ·plunge - and he also
appears likely to repea t his
strong opposit ion to new taxes as
a way to reduce the fedenil
deficit.
After the Wall Street panic
Monda y. Reaga n bac ked away
from his intrans igence agai nst

Mexico. ranking Republican on
the Budget Committee; said he
would expect' a bipartisa n group
of lawmakers to meet .soon with
White House officials wltl) "no
prescription and no restriction.''
" I clearly sense that this is a
for-real exercise," Domenici
said.
Congressional Democrats remained wary of Re agan's new
stance, say ing they want to deal
directly with the president.
"We' re serious about wanting
to sit down ," sa id Senate Democrat ic leader Robert By rd of
West VIrginia. However, " l! It's
going to be the same old game' of
a little meeting and going out and
keeping his feet in concrete. th at
doesn't accomplish anything."

any congressio nal deficit proposals that include new taxes and
agreed to meet with Democrats
in a "budget summit ." White
House spokesma n Marlin Fitzwater said Reagan wished to
"s how some leadership to the
markets."
But Wednesday. while reiierat ing his willingness for such a
meeting, Reagan seemed to
waver about compromising on
taxes and refused to ·promise to
meet persona lly wi th congress ional leaders.
" I will listen to what they have
to say if th ey wtll listen to what I
have to say: that ra ising taxes
has always ·resulted In lowering
the revenu e," he said.
The pres id ent dis patched
White House chief of s taff How ard Baker, Treasury Secretary
James Baker and budget director James Miller to Capitol Hill to
begin discussio ns on what Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole
of Kansas called "a domes tic:
Mar.shall Plan."
· House Republican leader Ro ·
bert Michel of ·Illinois sa id he
doubled Reagan woul~ have sent
his a ides to Congress without the
jolt of the market crash.
Asked what the instructions
were to the last -minute presidential envoys. Fit zwater sa id, "All
options areJ\ow open ...
Following an afternoon meeting between the White Hou se
delegation and Senate Republi ca ns, Sen. Pete Domenlci of New

House Speaker Jim Wright,
D-Texas , agreed It Is "toolate for
ga me playing" and said that
unless Reagan is ready to .meet
with lawmakers personally, "lt's
not a summit. Maybe a plateau;
not a summit.''
Told th ~t Wright and Byrd
wanted to talk to him, 'Reagan
said he had not"had a chance" to
confer wi!h them.
Miller, in a speech Wednesday,
reiterated th e president 's opposition to rais ing taxes and added
p~ly , "!don't care what th e
speculation Is ."
Yet he said R eagan might be
willing to meet personally with
congressional leaders · 'if something were orchestrated and
pretty far a long."

Economists say, 'country ·not
in recession, ·it's a warning'
By ALAN KRAUSS
United Press International
The turmoil in u.s. financi a l
ma r ket s is sending pol!cy makets
a signal that inves tors around the
world have lost patience with the
a pparent deadlock in America's
nagg ing budget and trade
defici ts.
But econom is ts said Wednesday that while the catacyllsmic
drop in stoc k prices thi s week is
like ly to hold back I he growth of
the U.S. economy, .11 does not '
s ignal the country is ent er ing a

MANAMA. Bahrain (UPJ\ -A
recess ion.
missile believed to be an Iranian
"As m at ters now sta nd. we
Silkworm blasted a tin y man·
huve
be ~n given a war·ning," said
made Is land off Kuwa ii today,
Fra
ncis
Schott, chief economist
se ll ing a n oil termina l ablaze and
F inancial Cos. in
of
Equitable
injurin g several workers , the
New
York
.
Kuwaiti De fense Ministry said .
.The econom is ls also said Inves "Iran I hi' mornin g committ ed
tors
want to see the budget deficit
a noth er aggress ion agai nst Ku reduced
and seek assurances the
wait by firi ng a Silkworm m iss ile
United
States
will not enact
at a n industrial island for load ing
legislation.
protectionist
trade
oil. causing a lire and wounding a
Mickey Levy, a senior vl_ce
number of workers ," a mini stry
pres iden t a nd chie f eco nomist at
s pokesman said.
Philadelphia' s fidelity Bank,
P entagon spokes man Cmdr .
and
ot hers .sa id a recession
Bob Prucha sa id the De fen se ·
proba
bly w ill not follow th e shock
Department " had a report that
of
the
stock market's record
indeed a Kuwaiti ~i l facilit y was
,
508-polnt
plunge Monday even If
struck ." But P r uc ha said there
prices
sta
bilize at signifi ca ntl y
was no U.S.
military
lower
levels.
involvement.
"My judgment at this point' is
·Shipping execut!vPs sa id the
the damage was not severe
that
att ack on Sea is land, an oil
.
e
nough
t.o tip us In to a recession,"
te rminal some 9 m iles from the
said, J e ffrey Leeds, managing
Kuwaiti coast . occur red a t about
director a t Chemical Bank in
10:49 a.m . (3:39 EDT ). The
New York. " We 're certainly
island, 20 mil es south of Kuwait
c loser than we were, but we're
City ,- ls in the samr area w·here
not there."
Iran fi red two other Silkworm s at
Schott said worries over the
the U.S . ow ned supertanker
U.S.
budget deficit are sy mpto·
Sungari a nd the U.S.·fla gged oil
malic
of unease about .the gen·
product ca rrier Sea Isle City
erallack
of economic co nt roL
Thursday and Friday.

"One reason fo r (Monday's
plunge ! was the open discord
over the weekend with Wes t
Germany ," S&lt;'hott sa id.
He was alluding to a meeti ng
Monday between Treasury Se-

t' retary J am es Baker and Wesi - ·
Germa~ officials th at ended with
word th e two ·count ries "agreed

to eontinue economic cooperat io n und er
agree ment. "

•

the

Louvre

____ pow Jones Average

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25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

President Reagan ·will hold
televised conference tonight

HATTIE SELLERS

LB.

enttrte

comm issioners through Nov. 4.
Gibson Truck Parts, Athens , for
a tandem truck. and a bid of The transfer applicat ion must be
$13,500 from Pat Hill for a 1988 submitted to the state by Nov. 13.
The board has received official
Crown Victor ia were approved . ,
notification that the ·Pomeroy
Roberts reported he is plan·
Masonic Te mple buildin g will be
ning a trip to the Spectrum Co.,
closed
per manently on Nov. 2.
Ci ncinnati. in a few days, to
The
county
pla t map office,
review the new Me igs County
currently
In
the
ma so nic temple,
.map before it goes to print.
will
be
relocated
on the ground
Among other :hlngs . Roberts will
fl oor of the courthouse.
be checking for spelling errors.
Upon recorriniendation of MiThe commissioners have r echael Swisher. director of the
ceived a request from Debra
Meigs County Department of
Jean Howard, doing business as
Human Services, 1he comtn is·
CWS Carryout, Cottrill Road,
sioners promoted De partment of
Scipio Township, to transfer a C1
Hum an Services emp loyee
state liquor license to Katherine
L. Deskins, doing bu siness as
Kathy's Drive-Thru Carryout,
State Route 684, Scipio Township.
Comment s on the proposed
transfer will be accepted by the

CHARLOTTE HYSEll

Chuck Roast •••••••'·$ '1·19
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
Rump Roast •••• ~~ ••• $1. .89

•

Loan deal completed for Meigs road ·projecJs

POMEROY

3.5

"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 22, 1987

'

. .

J

Vol. 37, No.116
Copyrighted 1987

Cloudy tonight. Sunny Friday. Low near40'. High Friday
near 60. Cfiance of rahi zero
percent.

7246
Super Loto
1-9-14-16-28-44

e

SENIOR CITIZENS

oz.
99 (
Pepperoni •••••••••••••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Daily Number
015
Pick 4

·Page 3

PLAY
OUR
"MONEY
BACK''
GAME

8 AM-10 PM

Ohio Lottery

!/ ~ J ·.I J •.I ;

J

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