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                  <text>NFL

•

Farm

Page-0-8

' .

regulars

October 25, 1987

CARMICHAEL RECEIVES AWARD - John
Carmichael, Bidwell, right, received the bronze
award for highest premiums earned 10 months out
of the 12-month base period at the recent district
10 Milk Marketing Inc., meeting held al the

.

Salisbury School. From the left are Roger
Tedrick, MMI Columbus division field supervisor; Mrs. John Carmichael; Harry Carter, MMI
Columbus division field representative and
Carmichael.

Carmichael earns bonze
award
for
•
production of high quality milk
POMEROY- With the emphasis on the production of highest
quality milk, one loca I area
member of Milk Marketing Inc ..
was honored at the District 10,
local 6, 7 and 8 annual meeting
held Tecently at the Salisbury
School near Pomeroy.
Earning the bronze award fo r
10 month premiums out of the
12-month base was John Carmi·
chael or BidwelL
Under the theme, "You make
the difference'' memb ers
watched and audio-visual presentation on the production of
highest quality mil ~ and ha d
opportunities to discuss quality •
production- techniques with
members of Milk Marketing, Inc.
· District board director Harold
Schacht, Canal Winchester, an-

..

nounced that 361 MMI producers
will be honored this year in the
Milk Marketing quality pri,cing
program . These recipients consistently earned quality premiums for 9, 10, 11 or 12 month
production in the last 12 month
base periiod. Thirty-one producers in Milk Management's eight
states area met the stringent
st randards to be honored a
spremiere producers earning the
prem(um 12 times out of the 12
morft h base period.

should bP thinking about C'Sia l£'

pl a nning . There will be a regisfrat ion fre of $10.00 per person or
S1 o. OO per cou ple . This fee covers
coffee'. doughnut s, lun eh, and a
pa c ket of ma te ria ls. Please call
the l::xtension .Office at 992-6696
with your reservation by October

29th.
Steer Show a nct Sale - The
Kcntuckv DE'par tment of Agri·
cultur&lt;' and the Kentuckv Beef
Cattle Assoc ia tion ·is s pon sorin g
a stN•r show ·and sa le on October
24, at Dan ville, Ken tu cky. I have
furth er details if needed.
North American Livestock Ex position - The Galii a Cou nt y
Extension Service is s ponsoring
a bus trip to I he North American
Livest ock Exposition in Louisville, Kentucky on Wednesda y,
November 18. Cattle s hows that
day are Chiana, Hereford , Red
.Poll. and Maini Anjou . Cost is
$24]Kt per person whi ch covers
bus and admission. Food is on
vour own . ReservationS will be
accepted on a first come-first
serve basis. Deadline is November 6.
And So rt Grows - Proper carr
and the right environment produce perfect spri ng-flowering
bulbs. The conditions a bulb is
exposed to in the fall affects next
year 's fl owering. F'or example.
most bulbs require a cold period
tb flower. No cold period means
short flower s tems or no flowers
at all.
Bulbs fa ce many per ils before

Page 5

•

at y
Vot.37. No.1 18

By
Constance White

• coeyrighted 1987

they reach your gacden. Protonged storage in a warm, dry
garden center or home causes
the tulip flower in the bulb to
shrink. Bulbs stored in cool,
moist locations can quickly become diseased.
Tulips are annuals--unlike per·
ennials such as narcissus or
hyacinths. They form new bulbs
in the grou'nd every year. Under
good conditions, tulip bulbs will
flowe r acceptably for three to
four yea rs., .
Narcissus flower even longer,
but old bulbs will need to be
divided . Hyacinth s usually
fl ower for no more than three
years.
Plant bulbs in October to allow
them to' prepa re for spring. This
gives the roots a chance to
produce fall growth. reducing the
competition between root and
stem growth in the spring.
At planting, mix a llalanced
bulb fertilizer or bone meal into
the soil below the bulb. The soil
below the bulb should be well tilled and contain substantial
orga nic matter~ Wat er the area
thoroughly after planting.
Don't press the bulb into hard
so il. This can damage the root
pla te and the bu lb's ability to
root.
Avoid poorly dra ined sites.
Waterlogged bulbs will rot.
Avoid bulbs with blue or green
mold spots . This is penicillium
mold. It can severely damage a
hyacinth's rooting potential and
injure tulip bulbs.
Plant bulbs with the root plate
down a nd the point up .
. Remove the seed pods afterthe
fl ower is spent but leave the stem
a nd leaves, allowing them to turn
yellow. These continue to produce carbohydrates that strengthen the bulb for lhe next year .
When · it comes to bulbs, one
bad apple can spoil the whol e
bunch. If 5-10 percent of tulip
bulbs in a storage box are
aJ(ected with fusarium rot , a
di sease that Infects bulbs in the
field, other bulbs in the box will
be affected· by the ethylene gas
coming from the rotting bulbs .
The gas is harmless to humans
but causes tulip flower stamens
to grow in the bulb, making them
availabe to bulb mites. The mites
eat the stamens and the flower
rots in the bulb.
Fusarium rot will even tually .
kill the bulb. Here's how to tell if
a bulb is Infected:· ·Pick a bulb
fro m a bulb box . If It 's light ,
.papery and ha s a sour smell, It 's
Infected, with fusarium. If many
bulbs in a box are infected·,. don't ·
buy frqm that box.

.'

~Sections ,

16 Pages

25 Cents

. A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Prices closed sharply lower in Tokyo, posted
'record losses in Hong Kong and were lower in
London.
Wall Street is mostly caught up on tremendous
backlogs of paperwork-from last week's tumultu•
ous stock trading but still nervous about what the
new week will bring.
·
Some relief from the Intense activity may come
from shortened trading hours today.
Leading exchanges cut trading hours by two
hours at least through Tuesday to give the
financial community time to process the record
numbers of transactions that occurred last week,
when about 2.3 billion shares traded on the New
York Stock Exchange.
John Phelan Jr., chairman of the New York
Stock Exchange, predicted trading hours would.
return to normal by Wednesday In an Interview
with ABC's "This Week With David Brinkley"

NEW YORK (UPi) - Stock prices opened
lower today with Investors wondering whether
their worldwide confidence crisis will push
President Reagan and congressional leaders to a
compromise on cutting the federal budget deficit.
One week after the worst stock market plunge
ever, lnle!lse negotiations in Washington today
will focus-on an agenda of spending cuts, tax hikes
and other measures capable of trimming the
deficit by at least $23 billion this year. .
The Dow Jones Industrial average was down
36.64 to 1914.12 in thefirstelght minutes of trading.
Losers led gainers ,by a 8-1 ratio among the 919
Issues traded but first trades had not been
executed in many blue-chip issues.
A trader at Charles Schwab &amp; Co. Inc. said he
was getting a lot more sell orders than buy orders.
Early declines In New York followed a
worldwide pattern of losses in heavy trading.

ended Oct. 16, surpassing the previous week's
record drop of 158.78 points. ·
A sharp declfne in the value of the dollar,
symbolizing the difficulty the United States and
Its major trading partners have had coordinating
policies to promote stability in excha nge and
interest rates, sent the market plunging Monday
In a fall greased by panic and program trading.
In program trading, huge blocks of stoc k are
traded as professional investors, known as
arbitragers, seek to profit from the diJference
between the current value of a stock and its
estimated future value.
.
·The volume of s hares traded last Monday
totaled 604.3 mtllion, nearly double the previous
record of 338.5 million set on Oct. 16.
Last Monday's drop wiped out more than a year
of bull market gains and sent the Dow to Its lowest
level since Aprll7, 1986, when It closed at 1735.51.

Sunday.
"The important thing is that Monday and
TueSday are the settlement days for the two
800-mllllon share days th~t occurred last Monday
and Tuesday, " Phelan said. "Once we get through
those two days, we will know whether there have
been any real systemic damages done or not. "
Only a week ago , the Dow Jones industrial
average plummeted 508 points to 1. 738.74, losing
22.6 percent of its value in a plunge eclipsing the
12.8 percent loss that occurred Oct. 28, 1929. ·
For the week the Dow fell 295.98, closing at
1950.76, nearly 800 points below-its· record closing
high of 2722.42 set on Aug. 25.
The collapse followed two weeks of record
losses amid rising anxiety about a brisk upward
spiral In Interest rates and the na'!'!on's trade
imbalance. ' .
The Dow dropped 235.47 points In the week that

Iraqi delegation meets Kuwaiti

~IYSTERY _FARM This week's mystery
farm, featured hy the Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation District, is lOcated somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to l'articlpate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769 or' the Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may win a$5

c... h prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing· Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No telephone calls will he
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m.-each Wednesday.
In case of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lottery. Next week, a Galli a County farm will he
featured by the Gallia Soli and Water Conservation District.

Rev. Jackson guest speaker for meeting
plastic tree wrap or a simple four
sided chickenwire screen around
each tree.
Your evergreen plantings also
need special attention. The drying winter winds can be very
damaging. The best protection Is
a four-sided burlap screen set up
around the seedling. Make sure
the bottom edge of the screen Is
several inches above the ground.
Don't wrap durlap or plastic
around the plants themselves.
The plants will be damaged
because the air can't circulate.
If this Is the first winter for
your evergreen seedlings these
younger plants should be pro·
tected even more. Stretch the
burlap down to ground level and
fill the area directly around the
base with leaves and straw.
A. little time taken now will
ensure a healthier tree and a lot
of satisfaction from a well
landscaped area or well 'established windbreak.

Gallipols - The key note
speaker for the 43rd Annual
Meeting and Awards Banquet
will be Rev. John Jackson of New
Life Lu theran Church. Rev.
Jackson ha s been active in
conservation programs here in
Gallla County assisting with the
Soil Stewardship Week and Farm
City Day. While serving with the
Dearborn SWCD In Indiana as an
associate Supervisor fie was
selected Indiana 's State Conservation Minister.

Aladdin®

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PORTABLE KERO
HEATER

Recently, Rev. Jackson was in
Korea as chaplin with the Army
Reserve. His talk will focus on
agricultural practices he observed while there.
Tickets for the banquet may be
purchased at the District office
at 529 Jackson Pike, Rq~m 308-C,
the Gallla County Extension
office at 1502 Eastern Ave. or
from Board Supervisors Buz
Mills, Mike Hughes, Noel Mas·
s ie, Jim Baughman and Lawrence Burdell.

Aladdin®

TRSOOO
PORTABLE KERO
HEATER

10,500 BTU

18,500 BTU

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$13995

with "Saved By The Belt Club" certificates and
pins. Ms. Johnston and her son escaped serious
Injury in an accident in late September because
she was wearing a safety belt and he was riding in
an approved child safety seat . .

PRESENTATION - Ueulenant Dan Henderson, commander of the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol, presents Langsville
residents Rebecca J. Johnston and her son;Kelly.

Residents saved by seat belt
POMEROY -Lieutenant Dan
Henderson, commander of the
Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol announ(!ed Friday that two more local residents
have joined Ohio's "Saved By
The Belt Club" after they escaped serious iujury in an
accident that occurred Sept . 29
on State Route 124 In Meigs
County.
According to official reports,
Rebecca J. Johnston and herson,
Kelly, of Langsville, were westbound on State Route 124 when
Ms. Johns ton lost control of her
car on the wet pavement.
Sliding off the r ight side of the
roadway the ca r struck an
embankment and overturned.
WhilP the car was heavily dam-

aged in the accident, Ms. Johnston sustained only minor injuries because she was wearing a
safety belt. Kelly escaped uninjured because he was riding in an
approved child safety seat.
Ms. Johnston and her son were
each presented with a "Saved By
The Belt Club" certi-ficate signed
by Governor Richard Celeste,
Highway Safety Director William M . Denihan and Highway
Patrol Superintendent Colonel
Jack Walsh. They were each also
presented with a "Saved By The
Belt" lapel pin.
The "Saved By The Belt Club''
Is a joint effort by the Ohio
Department of Highway Safety
and over 400 police agencies to
· recognize people who have bene-

MANAMA, Bahrain (UPI ) -A
senior Iraqi delegation met today
with the Kuwaiti foreign minister
and said an "honorable Arab
stand" would force lrari to accept
a cease-fire in the 7-year-old
Persian Gulf war.
The Iraqi $tatement came a
day after the six nations of the
Gulf Cooperation Council, a loose
defensive and economic grouping,' condemned Iran for firing
three Chinese-made Silkworm
missiles at Kuwait.
The Irar;l officials, Deputy
Prime Minister Taha Yassln
Ramadan and Foreign Minister
'l'areq Aziz, visited the city of
Kuwait for several hours today
~nd met Kuwaiti Foreign Minister-Sabah al Ahmad al Sabah, •
Thl; Iraqis conveyed a message from President Saddam
Hussein to Emir Jaber al Ahmad
al Sa bah of Kuwait. Details oft lie
message were not made public
but it was believed to be about the
Iranian attacks on Kuwait.
Kuwait, although officially
neutral in the war, has supported
Iraq, angering the Iranians.
Kuwait helped introduce . the
massive U.S. presence in the
Gulf by placing 11 tankers under .
American flag and U.S. naval
protection.
Ramadan said the message
from Saddam Hussein was "In

filed from their wise decisio ns to
wear their sea t belts. ·
A "seat belt s urvivor" is a
living testimonial to th~ effec· Two drivers were cited in a
tiveness of safety belts , sa id accident Sunday, at 1:15 a. m. , in
. Salisbury Township on Ohio 143,
Lieutenant Henderson.
"We hope this example of how according to the Gallta-Meigs
safety belts can save lives will Pos t of the State Highway Patrol.
influence others to vo luntarily
Benjamin P. Hickel, 33, of
comply with Ohio's mandatory Pomeroy , was cited for reckless
safety belt law and help us driving. Brenda K. Hickel, 36, of
reduce the number of deaths and Pomeroy, was cited for speeding
serious Injuries on our high- and no seat belt.
way s," he added.
The report indicated that both
"If everyone wore their safet y
Hickels were driving north when
belts, 400 fewer people would die a deer crossed the road in front of
in traffic accidents on our high- Brenda Hickel. She tried to stop
wa ys. Four hundred fatal acci- but lost control and we nt off the
dent victims could literally be left side of the road, going
saved by the belt," Henderson through a field before overturning in the creek. Benjamin
concluded.
Hicke l, whose car was behind
her, was unable to stop when she
stepped on her brakes. He then
tried to pass her but lost co ntrol,
spun around and hit an embank·
a permanent basis as the
m en! on the right sideoft.he road.
result of such calls and a four
A Corning man was cited in an
older young man was sent·
acc ident Saturday, at 10: 45 p.m .,
enced to a reformatory on the
in O_range Township at the
charge.
intersecUo n of Ohio 7 and Ohio
Monday morning at 10 a.m.
681.
no bomb threat calls had been
Dou glas P. Nutter, 16 , was
received in the Meigs Local
cited for failure to yield from a
District Which has bee n
plagued with the calls this falL .
Co ~ tlnued on page':I

BATiERY POWERED KEROSENE PUMP ••.• $965
KERO-AID •••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••..•••••••. $J99
S GAL. KEROSENE CANS ......................... $449
LINED LEATHER GLOVES ................... ONLY $6 99
BROWN JERSEY GLOVES ................... ONLY 88( .

"All Breeds .Sole"
THIS SALE INCLUDES HOLSTINE
Cattle will be accepted all day
Tuesday, up to 1:00 p.m. Wednesday
•HAULING. AVAILABLE•

ATHENS .LIVESTOCK SALES
U. S. RT. 50 (1 Mi. East of Albany, Ohio)

bomb had been also placed In
the Meigs .Junior High School
at Middleport. Both schools
were closed.for the day as a
result .
So far, three Meigs Local
Dis trlct youths have been
turned over to the Ohio Department of Youth Services on

Applications being
accepted for grants
The Meigs County Children's
Trust Fund Advisory Board has
announced that applications are
now being accepted for grants
from the Children's Trust Fund
for programs designed to reduce
child abuse and neglect.
Applications may be obtained
at the offices of the Meigs County
Superintendent of Schools John
Riebel in the Pomeroy Village
Hall. Deadline for submitting
applications locally has been se(
for Nov. 20 and the local board
will meet on Nov. 24 to review
those applications.
The Children's Tru.st Fund has
been established statewide with
revenue co ming from special
surcharges on certain docu ments iss ued by the state and
counties. Meigs County has bee n
allotted $10,000 as Its share of the
state moneys.
Funding is to be furnished to

programs which provide societal
and community policies and
programs to tlie gene~l,l.l ,popula·
tlon which strengthen family
functioning so that child abuse
and neglect are less likely to
occur. Funding may also be
given those programs which
provide In tervention during
early signs of child abuse and
neglect and-or provide services
for at -risk populations, treati ng
the problem and t hereby preventing further problems from
developing. Both public and
private p rogra m s are e ligibl e to
make applications.
Ali new and continuation
gran,ts will be funded by the Ohio
ChiWren' s Trust fund a t 90
percent of the total budget. The
Ohio Children's Trust Fund req u Lres a 10 percen I rna tch of loca 1
funds to complete the total
project budget.

Reagan feels ·Gorbachev d-id .n ot go back on his word

OCTOBER 28, 1987
~--- 8:00 P.M.

A Rutland area youth will
face c harges of inciting a
panic before Judge Robert
Buck in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court Tuesday.
The youth allegedly made
bomb threat calls to the Salem
Center School last week and in
the same caillndlcated that a

two states' support of Iraq in the
war.
Diplomatic sources said at
least three CCC members- the
United Arab Emirates, Oman
and Qatar - were resisltlng
Saudi and Kuwaiti pressures and
argued that dialogue with Iran
shOuld be maintained if there Is
to lie a settlement of the war.
Bahrain is the sixth member of
the group.
UAE 011 Minis ter Mana Saeed
Al Otaiba recently described his
country 's friendly relations with
Iran as a "valuable channel"
needed to encourage Iranian
leaders to soften their hard-line
views on ending the war.
Tehran has repeatedly said it
wl\1 stop lighting only If -Iraq Is
branded the aggressor and If
Iraqi President Saddal1) Hussein
is toppled.
The CCC statement coincided
with the meeting between King
Fahd of Saudi Arabia and the two
Last week, the pro-Iranian senior Iraqi officials, discussing
terrorist group Islamic Jihad "Iranian aggression on Iraq ,
warned in Beirut It would avenge Saudi Arabia and Kuwait."
U.S. confrontations with Iran In
The United States Is trying to
the Persian Gulf by striking protect Kuwaiti merchant ship·
American targets.
·
ping by re-flagging 11 KuwaltiThe CCC communique, carried ta nkers and providing them with
by the Saudi Press Agency, U.S. naval escort.
strongly denounced "Iranian agThe official Islamic Republfc
gressions and practices" but did i'/ews Agency reported Sunday
not mention breaking diplomatic that iranian naval vessels interrelations with Iran.
cepted and searched 10 merchant
Severing ties with Tehran is ships In the narrow Strait o(
strongly advocated by Saudi Hormuz at the southern end of
Arabia and Kuwait, which are the gulf Sunday in a bid to
singled out by Tehr~n in Its prevent war material from
frequent retaliatory raids for the reaching Iraq.

the framework of continued .
coordination between the two
countries to face the challenge ...
of repeated Iranian aggression."
· Ramadan said "our steadfastness along with an honorable
Arab stand" would force Iran to
accept U.N. Resolution 598,
which Includes a call for a
. cease,flre in the fighting._
"This will impose peace on the
Iranian rulers," he Said.
A communique Issued Sunday
by the CCC at the conclusion of
two days of talks in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia, also reiterated
t hat an attack on a member state
would be considered an attack
against all members of the
group.
The communique !o\lowed·.the
Saturday bombing of a Pan
American airlines office in Ku wait and of renewed Iranian
threats to attack the tiny gijll
nation.

Two
drivers
·
•
•
hurt
m
ffiJShap

Youth faces charges on inciting panic

SPECIAL
FEEDER
CALF
SALE!

592-2322 DA:J -

Chance of rain W per..,nl
tonight. Low In 40s. Chance of
rain 90 percent Tuesday.

Stocks down; investors watch ·budget talks

At the local meeting members
reviewed Milk Marketing's new
membership districts and
elected voting delegates who
include: local 6, Bernard Allen.
Albany: John Robinson, Sr ..
Shade; local 7, thomas Hamm,
Racine: Jack Ervin . Langsville;
local 8, John Carmichael. Bid·
well, and John Payne, Vinton.
Milk Marketing, Inc ., is a 7,000
farmer owned cooperative encompassing an eight state midw estern area including Ohio.

.Gallla SWCD
GALLIPOLIS - In areas
where winter temperatures drop
be low 20 degrees we need to
winterize young deciduous and
evergreen trees. Most species
should have winter protection .for
at least the first three or four
years after planting.
You wlll increase the survival
rate of the seedlings planted this
past spring with a little add!·
Ilona! care now. Young decidu·
ous trees should be securely
fastened to a sturdy, well anchored pole to give added
strength against high winds.
Remember to tte the trees with
heavy cord to prevent any injury
to the bark. Don't wrap wire
· directly around the bark.
Young trees are susceptible to
sunscald because of their thin
bark. Su.n scald occurs when the
bark of the tree Is warmed during
the day by the · winter sun and
then Is suddenly subjected to
freezing temperatures at night.
This can cause the trees to
weaken. What you can do to
prevent this is to wrap the trees
·with a long strip of burlap or Iree
tape. This will act as a protective
barrier until the tree Is old
enough to develop the thick bark
that mature trees have.
Another problem during the
winter can be rabbits. When the
snow cover hides their natural
food supply these ravenous ro·
dents may gnaw the bark off of
young trees. The tree wrap will
prevent minor damage, but eventually hungry rabbits will chew
through the tape. If rabbits are a
problem in your area use hard

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 26, 1987_

protuction
listed for _young trees

Wllls, estate session
scheduled November 5

(lveryonC' 10 have a will and
cvf'ryonr with somr asse ts

289
Pick 4
4990
Super Loto
3-7-16-20.21-34

W~nter

Meigs
. . County Agent~~ corner

John C. Rice
County Ext. Agent,
Agriculture
Wills and Estate Planning
Seminar Set - A meeting has
been set for Thursday , November 5th at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomerov on
wills and estate planning. ·The
meeting will slart at 9:30 a.m.
with coffee and donuts a nd
conclude at 3: 00p.m.
This seminar will be presented
by Jennifer Sheets, attorney for
the law office of Porter. Little.
Sheets. and Frecker: and Paul
Wright, Extension Specialist, Ag
Law . Paul has published many
articles in the Ohio Farmer and
has conducted many seminar s
over the state on wills and es tat e
plann ing. Topics to be discussed
are: Estate Taxes; How to Own
Property; Wills; Living Wills;
Power of Attorney; Pre-Nuptial
Agreements; and Leners of Last
Jnst ructio n.
Will s and estate. planning are
very important to eve ry ind ividual. I believe it is important for

Daily Number

return

Experts ·say ·lawmakers did
not go ·far enough on. limits
By SONJA HILLGREN
A tighter llmttoncashaccount · . change " didn ' t go far enough"
ing largely would affect large but he called it a step In the right
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON - House t~x
poultry corporations that are direction because it would mod·
writi!rs voted to limil"tax benefits family he(d ..:. tho m.ost famous ify the role that cash accounting
of using cash accounting for
being Perdue Farms Inc, a nd plays in encouraging corporate
large family-held agricultural Tyson Foods Inc. They have been fa "ms to expand.
corporations, but a tax expert able to enjoy the tax benefits of
He said some large corporate
says lawmakers failed to go far cash accounting enjoyed by hog operations and large cattle
enough.
farmers .
•
feedlot s would lose a tax break
The House Ways and Means
Ways and Means Committee
that gives them an advantage
Committee also voted last week Chairman Dan Rostenkowskl,
over smaller family -r un
to stretch out the period during D-Ill., had sought to raise $600 operations.
Which producers can write off million over I hree years with a
· Firms In other businesses are
costs of single--purpose agricultu - change in the cash . accounting
not allowed to use cash account- •
ral buildings, except for poultry law . But by an 11-10 vote. with the
ing If ·sa]es exceed $5 million. The
production ..t thus reducclng a
help of a proxy vote from Rep . new farm corpora tlon provision ·
tax Incentive for overproduction Richard Gephardt, D·Mo.. a
for the first time would put a limit
of livestock.
· Democratir presidential aspi- a higher $25 million - on sales
Those provisions were small rant, lawmakers from poultry of a family -held farm corporaitems in a $12 billion tax package states were able to modify
tion eligible to use cash
approved by the committee as
Rostenkowski's .proposal so that
accounting.
part of its contribution to a $23 it would raise only $100 million
Unlike other businesses, those
billion reduction in the federal
over three years.
corporations like Perdue and
budget deficit required under the
The Wall Street ,Journal re- Tysons that would be forced to
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act.
ported last week that the Tyson
switch from cash to accrual
The agricultural tax provisions family had donated $168,900 in
accounting would be able to defer
face an uncertain fate because political contributions in the past
indefinitely their' tax deferrals
they are not contained In an $11.6 2 ~ years .
left over under past use of cash
billion uix package approved by
Chuck Hasse brook, an agricul- accounting. ·
the Senate Finance Committee tural tax expert with the Center
"There's simply no public
and.-President Reagan has vowed for Rural Affairs . in Walthill,
policy reason for doing that,' '
to veto any final tax package,
Neb., said !he cas h accounting
said Hasse brook in an interview.

Ohio Lottery

WIMP-ON
_
Fiberglass Insulation is r;,
35-_lt. roll holds termperature. 6 tn. wtdth·. •
206691
tn. lhtck.

$289

WASHINGTON ( UPI) '-PresIdent Reagan today played down
his rebuff from Moscow on a date
for a superpower summit and
said If Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbaehev is playing games with
U.S. -Sovlet relations, "he's play! ng solitaire."
Reagan Indicated to reporters
during a photo session with
congressional leaders that he
does not believe Gorbachev went
back on his word by declinlnglast
week In talks with Secretary of
State George Shultz to nail down

698-3531 EVENING

•

a summit date.
Asked whether Gorbachev was
playing games by tying the
summit to limits on his "Star
Wars" anti·mlsslle program,
Reagan replied, "If he Is, he's
playing solitaire." The admlnls·
tration has flatly rejected the
testing limits sought" by
Gorbachev .
Shultz Insisted Sunday that the
lack of a firm Soviet commitment to a summit In Washington
by the end of the year In
Washington does not dampen

...

I

prospects for an arms reduction
treaty that had beeo regarded as
the probable focus of such a
meeting.
Indeed, he ,aid a treaty to
eliminate intermediate- and
short-range U.S. and Soviet nu clear missiles remains "very
close to ha ppening" and added
Gorbach ev s till could have a
cha nge of heart on the Issue of a
third summit with Reagan.
"ThPre's no point In painting
h im Into a corner that he hasn't
p ain ted himself in . I think a .,

summit is desirable. Good things
happen," Shultz said on NBC's
"Meet the Press."
In Moscow, the official Communist Pprty newspaper Pravda
reported Sunday that progress in
the area of space and defensive
·weapons - the main point of
contention In the Geneva arms
talks - could ·come In time to
clear the way for a summit this
yMr, but added, "We are still
, wary."
. Reagan, who took time in his ·
weekend radio address to again

practically all the problems.
refuse to accept any curbs on the
It
's very close to happening, " he
Strategic Defense Initiative, met
said.
with Shultz late Sunday afterAt a wEiekend news conference
noon to discuss the Moscow talks,
from which a summll date was a ,after meeting with NATO allies
In Belgium, the secretary of state
central exi&gt;ectation.
On the NBC program before- had noted a treaty could be
signed even without a summit
hand, Shultz pointed out that the
Soviets had taken the original . · between Reagan and Gorbachev,
and he reiterated that view-again
stance of proposing a summit
this fall to conclude the missile Sunday .
"In Moscow , once again, I
treaty . He asserted the treaty
didn't
bring the (sum mit) sub·
remains on track . despite the
ject
up
. It \\•a s raised by Mr.
latest setback.
"We have basically worked out
Continued on page 3

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�Pomeroy- MiddlePort. Ohio

il/londay, October 26, 1987

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
·'

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlisher

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P .~T WHITEHE~D

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Assistant Puhlisher/ Controlier

1\ MEMBER n fThf' l nlll'd Plf'"" 1nlf'rn~11(1na 1 tnl.•nrl 0 Hh Pl('""
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1

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 26, 1987

WASHINGTON - I f someone
calleq the FBI and told them that
a bank robbery was In progress
downtown, you can bet the place
would be surrounded by pollee
and federal agents within minutes Marksmen would be silhouetted on nearby rooftops and
a steely-eyed lawma n with a
bullhorn would be calling on the
desperadoes to come out with
their hands up
But what If the robbery was
taking place m the bank's executive suite instead of the lobby,
and the crooks were wearing
three-piece suits instead of ski
masks- and It took 17 telephone
calls over a period of eight days
to get a response from the FBI?
The average American would
figure it was just another Woody
Allen parody of Ute in our times,
and laugh till the tears rolled.
Well , this very e pisode actually
occurred In California not too

many months ago, and nobody
laughed. In fact, William Crawlord, the state's no-nonsense
savings and loan commissioner,
can be forgiven if he cried a little.
He was the guy who placed the 17
phone calls to the FBI and waited
eight days for some action while the owners of the S&amp;L he
was calt!ng about were carting
off cash by the carload
Crawford, who is lair as well
are tough, doesn't blame the
FBI. As he explained to our
associate Michael Binstein, the
bureau's Santa Ana office had
only 12 agents to deal with the
deluge of white-collar crime that
threatens to engulf their olf!ce
a nd 'every other FBI outpost in
the West
The Los Angeles FBI office, for
example, has roughly 32 agents
to grapple with 450 bank fraud
cases. And there are only about

By DICK WEST

WASHI~GTON ' ((J)PI) I- You might think everything et hically bad

that couldll\appe~ during the 1988 presidential ca mpaign already has
taken pl~ ce, but you could be wrong
The l~ct that a couple of Democratic candidates dropped out of the
race upon presentation, of evi dence that they engaged in sexua l
pec cadtllo&amp;or indulged \n plagarism might be only the beginning.
Wait uptll tile outbreak of morality hits Republican candidates and
you will ~ee 'fhat I meah
Suppo~~. 'f~r lnstan.c~. that George Bush, along with general
wlmp!shhess, should ' be accused of putting bananas m the
refnger4lor Then where would we be•
Minus both a candid!lte and a vice preside nt, I'm th!nkmg
I mean , was Spiro Agnew accused of hall so serious an tmpropnety
when he res igned as vice pres ident?
Not only would t hat offense offend about hall the banana republics
at a time when thts CO\lntry 1s trymg to butid bridges to Central
America, but it could a)lenate Chtquita as well
Didn't she used to tell us in the famou s commercial jingle that
bananas have to ripen in a certain way?
I don't care how much Bush might plead that he was only trying to
preserve the frUit Putting bananas m the refrigerator is, of cours e,
an unpardonable evil
Or suppose word Ieailed out that Sen Robert Dole or Rep Jack
Kemp or one of Bush's other opponents had served r ed wine with the
fish dis h at a dinne r party.
Maybe a couple of reporters staked out the candidate's town house
and wrote a story about hts color scheme. It matters little how the
matter comes to public attention Servu1g red wine with fish still
could be grounds for folding a campaign
Particularly If the candidate wanted to spend more lime with hts
family. And parttcularly 1! political reporters ke pt asking questions
about his soctallile.
Dole or Kemp mtght contend until they were blue ID the face that
hail the guests already were inebriaied by that time and couldn't ca re
)ess what color wine they drank during the l1sh course.
But all presidential candidates a re expected to follow certain rules
of et iquette during dinner parties, serving only whtte wtne wtth ltsh
And the list goes on and on
It could develop that a certain candidate had in h1s youth struck a
match from a paper pack without first closing the cover
Or 1t could be a candidate while In college had npped a tag off a
mattress m clear violatiOns of the Instructions
Either way, I would recommend that presidential candidates of
whatever party be prepared to whistlestop along the stra ight and
narrow lor the r es t of the campatgn.

Deadline for election letters Thursday
Deadline lor submtttmg letters to the editor concerning Nov: 3
e lection Issues Is noon Thursday, Oct 29

W eed~g out losers
ByARNOLDSA.~SLA.K

~

UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- A recent letter to The Washmgton Post said, "By'
this time next year, all the Democrats and all the Republicans except
George Bush will be out of the presidential race Bush will run
unopposed and lose."
So it might appear, what with the rash of involuntary departures
from the 1988 presidential field and the outbreak of gaffes, goofs and
gaucheries by the survivors.
But lear not, gentle voter, you will have a choice 54 weeks hence
What is happening here seems to be the latest development In a
changmg process lor selecting reasonably electable presidential
candidates. In this, the press has a somewhat more prominent role
than m the past
The way It used to work, political party leaders got together and
dectded among themselves who would be their best presidential
candidate and then selected a group of deserving (and obedient)
party members as national convention delegates to award the
nommatlon to the person they chose
The fun began when the party leaders disagreed and put forward
two or more candidates for t he nomination Then came the multiple
convention !)allots- as many as 102 when the Democrats deadlocked
In 1924 - and the deals c ut m the smoke-filled rooms to find a
consensus or a least a compromise candidate
That system worked because (1) the political parties were tightly
organized, especially at the state and local levels a nd had the firm
allegiance of their members , and (2) because the means of both
communication and tra nsportation made It d!fltcult lor potential
candidates to go over the heads of the political leaders to reach the
rank-and-file party members
Technological advances after World War Il~ - specifically jet
aircraft and televisiOn - accelerated tire process of party
disintegration that began with the growth of a new middle class that
moved out of the ethnic neighborhoods of t he old cities to the new
s uburbs, where the bosses and the precinct captains never got a
•
foothold.
Finally, the two major parties themselves, by trying to move
toward the poiltlcai center, began losing the sharp Identity
differences they once had .
The upsurge of both social and political dissent, which at Its most
constructive grasped at popular democracy as a means to give voice
to its concerns, all but finis hed off boss rule In American presidential
politics.
,
"
'
Wide open primaries and caucuses operAting under strict
guidelines of proportional representation in delegate selection
replaced It in selecting candidates.
This system lacked one great advantage of boss ru le up close and
personal knowledge of the weaknesses a nd closet s keletons of
would -be candidates that often acted as a filter to screen out the likely
losers before they were presented to the public as the best the party
had to offer
Now, candidates' hidden psychological problems, sexual antics,
financial irregularities and a long lis t of other potential
embarrassments remain to bE: dug up by Inquiring reporters with the
help of "opposition research" staffs in .competing campaigns.
For our competitive e lectoral system of Informed selection to work
best, somebody has to do the preliminary weedlngoutol phonies and
sure losers. That used to be done privately by the political bosses;
now 1t has fallen to the press to do it In public .

'

c;ee, DX

40 prosecutors In all of California
with the know-how to follow the
devious tracks of financial
swindlers. Small wonder , then ,
that it sometimes takes two
years to prepare a fraud caseor that California has become the
world capital of white·collar
crime

Meig.~ Joble.~s

One reason lor California's
preeminence is the laws it has
passed that make life dill!cult lor
prosecutors. The pro secution
must compile all available evi
dence before bringing Its case.
That includes bank records , but
these can be obtained only be a
search warrant. And to persuade
a judge to approve a warrant,
investigators generally have to
have an insider who is prepared
to link on the targeted bank or
S&amp;L. Tha t's not easy.
The FBI has declined to pursue
many tenuous cases In order to
'

"10

H~ WAS JUST Fl1't'C'
TMe OTHeR D4Y ...

Misconduct by Ins iders In the .
California S&amp;L mdu stry over the
past severa l years has cost
shareholders, creditors and the
federal deposit -insurance lund
hundreds of millions of dollars,
according to investigators for a
House Government Operations
subcommittee In a review ol35
!ailed or falling financial inslltu
t10ns , they found lns1der m!conduct In 27 of the cases

..

Squads busy over weekend
Meigs County's emergency units were kept on the move ov~r
Ihe weekend , answering 16 ca lls , the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports
Saturday calls included : 4,; 53 a m , Pomeroy to West Ma in St.
for Janet Ward, to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
7 05 a m to Route 33 lor Margaret Hutton, to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 10:18 a.m. to Route 124 taking Betty
Hu lchmson !rom the scene of an auto acctdent to Veterans
Memorial; Tuppers Plains at 2:29 p.m treated Shirley Harns
on Route 681, no transportatiOn, Salem Center Fire Oepartment
to the Kay Anderson residence at 3 37 p m. lor a c himney lire;
Salem Fire Department to Boles Road where a truck
overturned. no Injuries; Pomeroy at 7:24 p .m to Maples
Apartments takmg Etollla Cassell to Veterans Memorial;
Mtddleport al 8 23 p m took Travis Robinson from the junior
high sta dmm tn Mtddleport to Veterans Memorial, Pomeroy at
8 55 p m. Darla Miller from East Main St., to Pleasanl Valley
Hospttal, Tuppers Plains to an auto accident m the community
treated Emd Cole, Doug Nutter and Mmdy Ltpps, no
tra nsportal ion .
On Sunday Pomeroy went to the sce ne of an auto accident on
Route 143 Brenda Hickle had to be removed from the car by use
of the Jaws of life and was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 6· 49 a.m went to Route 681 for Rute Manley,
to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine at 7 55 am. took Lora
Baker from Bashan to Veterans Memorial ; Pomeroy went to
the Dav1d Workman residence on Welshtown H!ll at 9· 02 a m
lor a furnace ltre; Racine at 10:25 a m took Beulah Bradford,
Mam St, to Veterans Memorial; Middleport's Fire Department
answe1 cd a car hre on Ratlroad St at 11· 24 a m. , Racin e at
12:49 p.m. took Shtrley Harris to St. Joseph Hospital m
Parkersburg, a t 3 32 p.m., Tuppers Plains took Rule Manley to
Pleasant Valley Hos pital; Tuppers Plains at 5 21 p.m took
Jessie Harris to Veterans Memorial ande Rutland at 8:53p.m
took Betty Grueser , Main St., to Veterans Memorial

•

..

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'

.,
'

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•
Th e crtm tn al misconduct
ranged all the way from stickylingered tellers stealing small
amounts of cash to executives
and their buddies conniving in
sophisticated schemes that netted them millions A common
thread the investigators detected
was that many of the corrupt
S&amp;Ls were owned by one Individual or a small group, with passive
managements a nd directors.
They also found th at Insider
fraud is not confined to failing
financial instttutlons; the successful ones can just cover it up
longer.

What the stock market
Isn't 1( about hme for the NBC To- the stock market's performance, NBC
day Show's Bryant Gumbel to start may decide to restore the market to
askmg assorted experts 'what the 1ts former digmty as a prophet and
bring on a few carefully selected "exstock market IS trymg to tell us"?
Back m 1982, when the market, re- perts" to read Ronald Reagan's doom
spondmg to the recession, was under- in the tea leaves once agam
One can almost sympathize w1th
standably sluggish, NBC treated 11
tbe
liberals' longing for a little bad
wtth almost rehg1ous reverence, as an
economic
news Practically every
lmportant mdtcator of economic
trends Gumbel interviewed one liber- economiC md1cator is favorable, and
al economtc quack after another, all ElectiOn Day IS barely a year away
of whom agreed that the market's be- Only tbe budget deficits remam grimhaviOr reflected 1ts convichon that ly mtractable, and who can be sure
Reaganomics was bad news for that 1f the Amertcan people suddenly
Amenca
dec1ded to worry about those tbey
Then, of course, came the longest would turn to the Democrats to solve
sustamed economic boom in the post· the problem•
war hiStory of the United States. The
So a' few "Black Mondays" on Wall
bull market has roared on for hve Street, followed by a general recesyears, during wh1ch the Today Show swn. or even another Great Depreshas wandered the globe disconsolate- s1on, would appear to be exactly what
ly, from Moscow to Peking and even the Democrats need, stnctly as a poAustralia, but has shown extremely litical proposihon. The trouble IS that
little mterest m what the stock mar- the stock market is far too unreliable
ket here at home has been trymg to a weathervane to enable anyone to
forecast such an outcome on the basiS
tell us
Now, however, that there have at of its current behav1or
As I warned reade'l of this column
last been some dramatic down-dtps m

means_Wt_·uia_m_R_u.~_he_r

back m 1982, the stock market isn't a
dependable md1cator of anything
More than anything else, 11 resembles
a hystencal little dog that overreacts
. to both good developments and bad
ones In recent years, as the U.S. economy has gone from strength to
strength, the market has yowled w1th
delight aod broken through every prev1ous resistance level to reach new
heights Now, mevttably, 11 1s overreachng to transient negahve developments by falling back from 1ts r!d!culous record highs.
The bare bones of our economic situation are plam to see By beelmg up
our m1lltary strength, Pres1dent Reagan brought the Russians to the bargammg table By cuthng taxes dramal!cally , he has gtven us the
healthiest economy smce the end of
World War 11 But th1s combmation,
coupled with Congress's refusal to cut
pet domest1c programs, has inev1ta·
bly resulted m large budget deficits

these deficits •f Europe, the Arabs and
the Japanese hadn't rushed to invest
in Reagan's version of America This
enabled the Treasury to borrow money on the open market without wholly
preempl!ng pnvate credtt and thereby dnving up mterest rates
There is no reason why th1s process

"Can't contmue mdeflmtely, as long as
the rest of the world likes Amenca's
economic climate But no sane Arab
shetk, or European or Japanese businessman, 1s gomg to shck a round to

try h1s luck under (say) a Dukak.is admtmstratwn Our "reverse Marshall
Plan" (as one shrewd foreign businessman descnbed 1! to me) would
grmd to a sudden halt, foreign mvestment m Amenca would dry up, inlla·
tlon would come roaring back, and the
roof would fall m on the Amencan
economy
~eanwhile, however 1 It ts a positively healthy thing for a few beansh
sessions to wrmg out the present
The government would have been bloated market
forced to mflate the currency to cover

Paying·the piper _ ___._____.:,____B__.:..y_G_e_or.::._ge_M_c_G_ov_er-=-n
An

alarming

article about

America's economic future appear'l_)n the'October issue of The
Atlantic under the title " The
Mormng Alter " Written by
Peter G. Peterson, the article
diagnoses the strains on the
American economy and warns of
the storm ahead. I hope that all
pres idential contenders and
members of Congress read this
important piece.
Mr Peterson warns t hat
~~A mericans

are about to wake

up to r ea lity
The realities P e terson sees
Include the following:
1) In manufactured goods, the
Uniteil States had a trade surplus
of $17 billion In 1980, but in 1986 we
had a trade deficit In manufactured goods of $139 billion;
2) The domestic increase In
imports over exports in the last
three years ha s resulted In
upwards of two million factory
workers being squeezed out of
jobs by foreign competition;
3) Our inability to compete as
we once did in International
markets stems from "the inca!
culable damage we have Inflicted on our economy In recent

years."
P e terson believes the root of
our problem Is our preference lor
consumption over Investment a tendency encouraged by the
Reagan administration. Reagan
has replaced Democratic " tax
and spend" policies with "bor
row and spend "
During the Reagan years we
have witn~ssed a series of
unintended results :
1) A feeble productivity growth
of 0.6 percent annually In the
19~0s has become even feebler,

dropping to 0.4 perce nt.
2) Both private domestic investment and public investment
in our nationa\ Infrastructure of

bridges, roads, streets, transit,
water and sewage lac!l!tles are
down from the 1970s. Far from
Increasing our savings and tn
vestment percentages as supplyside policies were supposed to do,
"the 1980s have turned out to be
the most consumption-based 'de·
mand side' decade experienced
by any major industrial country
during the post-war era."
3) Mr Reagan promised less
federal spending and a balanced
budget But' in 1986 federal
spendmg claimed 23. 9 percent of
our GNP compared to 20 5
percent In 1979.
Having nearly tripled the national debt during the Reagan
years, we are laced with annual
debt interest costs that reached
$136 btlllon In 1986
Mr. Peterson s ummarizes:
"So there we have It: a conservative Republican Administration
that promised us high savings,
high productivity, highly competitive economy, with trade
surpluses, and gave us instead a
torrid consumption boom fi nanced by foreign borrowing,
and overvalued currency, and
cuts in private investment, with
debt-financed hikes In public
spending and huge balance of
payments deficits. "
In year-"&lt; gone by many Americans consoled themselves by
arguing that we need not worry
about the national debt bec ause
"we owned It to ourselves." But
two factors have changed In the
last six years: The national debt

has tripled, and we now owe $400
billion, not "lo ourselves," but to
foreigne rs .
Only six years ago the United
States was a net creditor to the
world with a positive balance of
$141 billion The negative balance of $400 billion we will hit at
the end of 1987 means that we
have ''burned up'' over $500
billion in llquldatmg foreign
assets and borrowing from

foreign ers
Peterson believes a key factor
In Japan 's productivity growth
and trade expansion is that
Japan has devoted three times as
high a percentage of its GNP to
priva te Investment and to Improving its public facilities as has
t he United States.
What to.do about thed!sturbmg
,"morning after" which Mr Peterson sees wtll be the subject of a
future column

Berry's World·

at 9.2 percent

The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services reported that 9.2
per cent , or 700 persons, of Meigs County's 8,200-member work
force, were out of work for the month of August.
The Bureau's report Indicated that in August, there was a
demand for registered and lice nsed practical nurses In the
county
In Gallia County, OBES reported that 9.5 percent, or 1,100
persons , of Gallla County's labor force, estimated at 11,900,
were out of work lor the month of August.
Emplo~ers were reported to be looking for persons qualified
to fill positiOnS as registered and licensed pr.actical nurses,
manufacturing engineers, machinists and automobile
mechantcs

concentrate on those it has a
chance to win. But even this
strategy often comes to naught
because judges are often lenient
toward the fewwhlte-collarcrtminais brought before them
Consider this absurd appeal by
the attorney for a crooked banker
not long ago in California· "It
was not an IntentiOnal act of
thievery or stealing, Your Honor.
It was manipulation of funds, and
I hope you can see the difference." The judge, with keener
eyesight than most , apparently
did see a difference - and
sentenced the banker, Involved
In a scheme to steal m1lllons of
dollars, to one year In prison Not
too long after that, another thief
was sentenced In California to
three years - lor purloining a
parrot

',

Chester trick or treat set

'

Tri ck or treat mght wtll be held m Cheste~ from 6 to 7 p.m.
Thursday. Th e siren wtll sound to ma r k the beginning and e nd of
the acttvlly Chester firemen will be sta tioned throughout the
village to assist with the safety of the c hildren

of the people...
KI\I(L MARX ~ 1844 B. t:"

Helen Johnson Jones
Helen Johnson Jones , 81, Gallipolis Ferry, W Va , died Sunday
m Pleasant Valley Hospital lot, , lowing a long illness
."
Born March 20. 1906 m Hender
.. ,· son, W Va., she was a daugher of
the late James Emmett Johnson
and Minnie Hallh!ll Johnson
She was a member of the
Henderson (W Va ) UnitedMeth' od lst Church and retired from the
former Quahty Manufacturing
Plant of Pomt Pleasant
She was preceded m death by
one son, James Johnson Jones;
one granddaugter, Amberatta;
' one sister, Ruth Henry and one
brother, Woodrow Johnson.
Surviving are her hu sba nd ,
Dewell W. Jones, Gallipolis
Ferry; two dau ght ers, Juantta
Jones Shamblen. Gallipolis
Ferry, Mrs Williams (Joy)
Martin, Shade, Ohio. one
brother , Late Johnson, He nderso n, eight grandchildren and 14
great -grandchildren.
Services will be Wednesday a t
2 p m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home w1th the Rev Bennte
Stevens and the Rev. Lon Mtlle r
~ officiating. Burial will follow at
• the Hend erson Cemetery
Friends may call Tuesday
from 2 to 4 and 7 9 p m
"

.' Tom Drosos
,

Thomas (Tom 1 Drosos, 47 of
Route 3 Bidwell, dted Sunday m
Columbus. He was a coa l m1ner
at Mme No 3
He wa s born Jan , 30, 1940 m
Columbus to Helen William s of
Columbus and the late Charles
Drosos
He wa s preceded m death· by
his wtfe Audrey Campbell Drosos
in 1980.
He ts also survived by a
a ughter, Lara Drosos of Bid- .
ell , llve brothers, Bill and
harles D1 osos of Columbus,
Donald and Frank Drosos of Las
Vegas. Nevada , and Dale Hudson
of Kenton, Ohio, one lstster ,
Shiiley Young of Broken Arrow.
Okla.
Arra ngements will be an
nounced by McCoy Moore Fun era l Home of VInton

Phillip M. Garlic

'it 9/iPCJKE FoorBALL

~ ~bVNEA

lne

By United Press International
Stormy weather lashed the
Plams today , with high winds
toppling power lines and ripping

'

of! a gy mna sium roof tn
Oklahoma
Ram today was scattered
along a band oH~understorms

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

At least 17 die on
highway accidents

Reynolds.
''This sort of severe weather Is
unu sua I lor this time of the
year." Reynolds said. " We ex·
pect the storms to let up during
the day but the log should
co ntinue "
Fog advisories were called lor
southwest Louisiana , the Texas
coastal bend and north central
Kansas.
A warm front that extended
Gusty winds from the storms from the Dakotas south through
early t&lt;Jday damaged a home and western Oklahoma was expected
ripped of( part of a gymnasium to raise temperatures about 10
roof in Lone Grove, Okla ., as degrees above normal, the
power lines toppled In Oakland, weather service said.
Temperatures around the naOkla., the weather service said
Hail the size of golf balls pelted tion early today ranged from 22
Cyril, Okla., Sunday evening, at Wate"town, N.Y, to 76 at
sa id NWS spokesman Pete Junction , Texas

from Oklahoma throu gh Arkansas, the National Weather Service said Showers fell on much of
MlssGuri and Iowa.
A severe thunderstorm watch
was called early today for
portions of southern Oklahoma,
north central and northeastern
Texas, a small part of southwest
Arkansas, and northern ;
Louisiana.

Toledo city street.
By Unlled Press ldternatlonal
Ashtabula Genny E KlemenAt least 17 people were killed in
16 trafl!c accidents around the clc, 30, Williamsfield, in a oneBuckeye State this weekend, a car accident on an Ashtabula ,
· spokes man for the Ohio Highway County road
Athens David J . Kurchask!,
Patrol said today.
The only multiple-fatality 29, Athens, in a one-car accident
cras h of the weekend occurred on Ohio 681 in Athens County
Cleveland Pedestnan Willie
Saturday on a city street In
J
Taylor, 76, Cleveland, when he
Cleveland . Killed In t)le one-car
struck by a car while
was
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1().27-87
accident were Gary R. Kolacrossmg
a
city
street
kowski, 34, and Dale A Mleze40 30
Ashland Patience N Odoyo,
jewski, 26, both of Newburgh
27,
Ashland,
passenger
In
a
car.
•
He1ghts
The state's non-holiday wee- killed In a car pickup truck on
kend roadway death count runs u.s. 42.
Celina Mark E Buschur, 29,
from 6 p.m. Fridays until midCehna , In a on~- vehicle accident
night Sundays.
•
on Ohio 219 in Mercer County
Killed this weekend were:
0
Painesville: Pedestrian Ran
Friday night
Napoleon Paul H Deitrich, 59, polph L Roby, 31, Madison, when
Napoleon, when struck by a car struck by an autombile on U.S. 20
in Lak e County.
on a Napoleon street.
Sunday
Youngstown: Jeffery J. Miko
Ross: L.B. Towns, 62, Colum
lay, 31, Salem, when his truck
bus, m a two-car accident on T,J.S
slammed Into a culvert aiJiiig a
35. '
Mahoning County road.
Toledo. Donald L. Gargac, 39,
Toledo· Norman A.. Randolph
Toledo ,' in a one-vehicle acc1dent
Jr., 42, Delta, when his pickup
truck collided with a car on a on a city street In Toledo
Wooster Matthew D. Dlpollto,
Toledo street.
Hocking Scott Henton, 20, 15, m a one-car accident on Oh10
57 in Wayne County
Laurelville, in a one-car accident
E!:;:;:JsNOW
-RAIN
SHOWERS
on State Route 327
Saturday
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Athens
Kim Mucha, 18,
Map shows m1n1mum temperatures At toast 50% of any shaded area 1s forecast
Continued from page 1
Broadview Heights, when the car
to recerve preCipitatton Indicated
,
UPI
in which she was riding co!Uded
Gorbachev," Shultz said "Not
WEATHER MAP - Rain and thunderstorms will reach from
head-on with another vehtcle on
only a summit here, but he
eastern
Texas across the lower Mississippi Valley. Rain will also
u.s. 50.
clearly has In his mind President
extend from the middle Mississippi Valley to the upper Great
Cuyahoga Heights: Gary R.
Reagan coming to Moscow next
Lakes. Rain showers will be scattered over Tennessee, Alabama,
Kolakowski, 34, and Dale A
year, which Is fine tf we have
Georgia, Florida and South Carolina. Winds will be gusty from
Miezejewskt, 26, both of Newsomething worthwhile to do
east~rn Wyoming through South Dakota. The rest ofthe nation wlll
burgh Heights, m a one car
"But then he somehow Isn't
enjoy pleasant weather with mostly sunny or partly cloudy skies.
accident on a Cleveland city quite comfortable. He hasn't
High temperatures wlll be In the 50s or 60s across a majority of the
street
made up his mind ."
Toledo
Karen Straw, 25,
nation.
Toledo, when hit by a car on a
Reacting to a suggestion that
he was manipulate!~, Shultz retorted: " I'm not getting jerked
South Central Ohio
around. We ' re on a steady
t Gerry) W Hager were conToday , sunny this mormng
course, and he Is having a hard
ducted Monday, 1 p.m from
time making up his mind about
The Meigs SOli and Water w1th mcreasmg cloudiness this
Willis Funeral Home. She IS
afternoon. Htgh In the mtd 60s.
the summit "
Conservation Distnct will be
survived by her husband VIctor
wmds 10, to 15 mph. Chance
South
National security adviser
accepting applications for cost
Hager and a brother, Earl Wills
of rain IS 20 percent
_
Frank Carlucci dtsmlssed the share on the control of Multtllora
of Manetta.
Tonight, rain. Breezy with a
idea that 'Gorbachev backed rose \n Meigs County
She was the dauglher of the away from a summit because of
low In the upper 40s. South winds
To be el!gilble cost-share under
late Russell R. and Gwendolyn Internal pressures, -saying on
15
to 25 mph. Chance of rain is 90
the multiflora rose program, you
Barker Wills.
percent.
ABC's " This Week with David must be a cooperator of the
Tuesday, ram likely High near
Brinkley" Sunday, "He seems to Meigs Sml and Water Conserva60
Chance of ratn Is 70 percent.
be a man very much In charge .
tlen District, and have at least
m-exte nded 10-26
If he wished to come to the United
one eqmvalent acre of muittflora
Extended ForecaSt
Community association
States, he Is fre e to do so."
rose In patureland and be w1lhng
Wednesday
through Friday
The Long Bottom Communtty
to follow an approved conserva-Chance
of
showers
Wednesday
Association will meet at 7:30
Sen. Sam Nunn of Georgia, the tiOn plan lor the control and
and
Friday
with
lair
weather
p m . Wednesday at the communInfluential Democratic chair- trea tment of the multiflora rose
Thurs.day
Highs
throughout
the
Ity building. Those attending will
To signup lor the cost -share
man of the Armed Services
period
will
be
between
45
and
55
be lined if they do not attend the
Committee, suggested Gorba- program, stop by the Meigs Smi
wtth
a
low
In
the
30s.
meeting inasked.
chev may have made the sur- a nd Wale! ConservatiOn D1stnct
pnse demand In light of Rea- Office, 221 West Second Street m
Cancelled
gan's troubles last week with the Pomeroy, Oh1o, second floor of
Tops 1456 scheduled to meet m stock market, the Persian Gull the Farmers Bank buildmg
The Daily Sentinel
Rutland at 6 p m Tuesday has
No
applications
will
be
taken
conflict and the Senate defeat of
been cancelled due to a Hallo- Supreme Court nominee Robert over the phone. S1gnup will end
(USPS 115 9601
A
DIVI&lt;~~Ion of Multlm••dlll., Inc
ween party
on November 20, 1987 a nd the
Bork
Pu hiLo;hNt f'VI'IV .Lflf'rnoon Mond av
Nunn told CBS's "Face the cos t-share rat e ts $100 per eqUI Missionary service
tht11ug h F't lcll\ 111 Co ull Si
Po
Nation" that Gorbachev made a valent acre approved. There Is a
mf'ltW, O hm hv i hf' Ohio V,lllf'V P u l&gt;The Rev Okey Cart will speak
"fundamental miscalculation" two year maint enance penod
llshmp: C'ompmv MulrimNlla I nc
a t a missionary service to be held
Pn mrr ov Oh m .J57h9 Ph 9 ~2 215H S£'
in !Inking the SDI project to a following the year of trea tment
!'Ontl f'l, Jss po st &lt;J.gP p;ml d l PomP! ov
at 7:30 p m Wednesday at the summit date
lor control of the bushes
Oh10
Hobson Church of Christ in
For more informatiOn, or to
Chri stian Union The pubhc IS
MPmlJPr UnJI('(! P rc·~!'i ln1 N n.t 110nal
s1gnup, stop by the Meigs SWCD
lnl.•nd D &lt;~ rl v P!C''-si\ssocwt •onand t hp
mvited
Olftce.
Oh10 Nf'wsp:J pC't As scx l.11 10n Na t lon&lt;~ l

Reagan...

Area deaths-------~-----

~

"Religion ... is the opium

.

,.--_;__Local briefs----. Plains states lashed ' by stormy weather

Anderson and Spear

Desperadoes in pinstripes

'

Ph1ll!p MIChael Garhc, 41, of
Route 1 Addison. died Su nday at
hi s residence following an extended Illness. He was a heavy
equipment opera tor. •
Born Jan. 13, 1946 in Gallia
County, he was a son of Mary
Garlic of Addison and the la te
Max Ga1llc
Also surv1vmg me a sister,
Mrs Charles (Rhonda) Ta ber of
V1nton , two netces, Cindy Bennett of Dunbar, W.Va and
Roshelle Conwe ll of Vinton, one
nephew, Timothy Max'Co nwell of
VInton

He was a member of the
Church of Christ and also lollov.er of Jimmy Swaggart OrganIzatiOn. A 1964 graduate of Ga!lia
Academy High School, he was a
member of Eureka Masomc
Lodge and Scottish Rite Valley of
Aladdin Shrine;
Columbus,
Buckeye Sheriff's Association
and the Ohio Opera'lng Engineers Local 18. He was a United
States Army veteran, serving
dunng the Vietnam Conflict.
Services will be conducted 3
p m Wednesday from Waugh
Halley-Wood Funeral Home,
Rev. Keith Eblin officiating.
Bunal follows In Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens Friends may
call at the fun eral home Tuesda y
from 2 to 4 p .m . and 7 to 9 p.m
Masonic services w!ll be conduted by Eureka Masonic Lodge
469, Tuesday at 7 30 p.m. Flag
presentation at the cemetery wtll
be by VFW Post 4464.
Pallbearers will be Steven
Henderson, Richard Eblin, Mark
Ebhn. Mike Eblin, Roger Garlic
and Franklin Garlic. Honorary
pallbearer will be Cecil Watson.

Harvey M. McCormick
Harvey Mer ril McCormick, 80,
of Patnot Star Route, died
Sunday at Holzer Med1cal Cente r
following an extended 1lln.ess He
retired alter 35 years of servtce
as a game warden m 1974.
Born Dec · 15, 1907 In Gall!a ·
County, he was a son of the late
Charles McCormick and Gwinn
Jones McCormick.
He was also preceded In death
by hiS wtle, Virginia Pearl Gray
McCormick. in 1984, three broth
ers and one sister
Surviving are two so ns, Louis
McCormick of Patnot Star
Route. Charles McCormi ck of
lndtanapolls , lnd , daughter,
Gwlnetta McCormick of Patnot
Star Route , f;v e gra ndchildren
and five great grandchildren ,
one s tster, Mrs. !rene Smeltzer of
Orv ille. Ohio
He was a member of Alexander
Church, Patriot Masonic Lodge ,
where he was a past master and
50 year member , Scottish Rite
Valley of Columbus , Aladdm
Shrine, VFW Post 4464 , Conservatio n Club, Gallia County Rural
Water Association He served m
lhe United States Navy during
World War II
Services wrii be co nduc ted l
NJl Wednesday at WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Hom e,
Rev Allred Holley ofl!clatlng.
Burial follows in. Mound Hill
Cemetery . Friends may call al
the funeral home 6 to 9 p m on
Tuesday
Masonic services will be Tues day, 8 30 p.m , by Pat•·iot Ma
some Lodge. Military graveside
services will be conducted by
VFW Post 4464

Gerry Hager
F uner al serV Ices lor Gera ldine
I

f/.&lt;?J

11

Applications are
being accepted

fW

Weather

Announcements

i\uxlllary tomorrow
The Wome n's Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
meet at 1: 30 p.m Tuesday
afternoon at the hos pital

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Ruby
Morris , Pomeroy; Etollla Cas
sell, P omeroy
Saturday Discharges - Freda
McFann, Amber Lohn, Hughie
Ogdm , Myron Miller, Brenda
Rankowltz, Sarah McCarty, Gertrude Bass, Mary Jones
Sunday Admissions - Joe
Lockhart, Pomeroy, Glenn Edwards, Clifton, W Va .; Laura
Baker, Long Bottom, Beulah
Bradford, Racine; Betty FrazIer, Middleport, Gati Dickson,
Albany
Sunday Discharges - none.

One ticket has $9
million Superlotto
combination
CLEVELAND (UP!) A
Superlotto jackpot that had
grown to $9 million over 10 days
awaits one lottery player or
group of players who guessed the
six numbers drawn Saturday
Lottery officials said Sunday
that one of t he 6,011,125 tickets
sold has the numbers 3, 7, 16, 20,
21 and 34 The winner w!ll receive
a before-tax payment of $450,000
a year for 20 years
The number of $1,000 tickets
w1th live of the six winning
number s is 226, officials said.
Another 10,064 tickets match lour
of the numbers and are wort!\ $68.

Two drivers ...
Continued from page 1

stop stgn alter pulling from the
mtersectwn and being hit by a
car driven by Edna R Cole, 44, of
Reedsville
Nutter was traveling west on
Oh1o 681, while Cole was drivmg
north on Ohio 7 When Nutter's
car was hit by Cole's car m the
int ersection, Nutter's car was
knocked into a power pole and a
stgn.
Two Reedsvtll&lt;' m en were
mvolved 10 an acc1dent Satur
day, at 7 30 p.m., In Ol!ve
Township on Count y Road 44,
nearly a m1Ie south of Township
Road 313.
Keith A Putman, 16, was
dnvmg north when a car driven
by Kev m L Hetzer, 34, went le ft
of center and hit Putman's car In
the left side
Hetzer was ct ted lor failure to
y1eld

Only ONDULINE tan cover
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�Pomeroy

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 26,.1987

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-

.Monday, October 26, 1987

Twins win 4-2; claim first World Series title
By MIKE TULLY
UPI National Baseball Writer
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -The
Minnesota Twins, model exam·
pies of what a good home can do,
won the World Series under their
roof with a game they often lose
outdoors.
_
Without so much as a single
home run - the lifeblood of the
Twins - Minnesota dispatched
the St. Louis Cardinals 4-2
Sunday night in Game 7.
In a game fliled with controversial umpiring, the Twins became
the first club to capture a Series
by winning ail four of Its home
games and losing three times on
the road.
Greg Gagne's Infield single
with the bases loaded broke a 2· 2
tie in the sixth Inning, giving
left-hander Frank VIola ~ the
Series MVP -his second victory
of the Series. Danny Cox, rellev·
ing oh only two days' rest, took
the loss.
"Everyone on this roster contributed," Viola said.
Gagne saw very little of his
winning hit because he was
trying so hard to beat it out.
"I had to have my running
shoes on," he said.
Before a handkerchief-waving
Metrodome crowd of 55,293, the
Twins ended years of frustration
for Minnesota sports fans, who
have endured four VIkings'
losses In the Super Bowl, a Twins'
loss in the World Series and a
North Stars' defeat In the Stanley
Cup final. The Twins finished
next to last in their division in
1986.
"You can't describe it," said

second baseman Steve Lombar·
dozzl. "It'il take some time to
sink ln. It's the culmination of 24
guys working together."
St. Louis Manager -~Whitey
Herzog alluded to that
frustration.
"We've been to the seventh
game tbr.e e times In the last six
years and we're one and two." he
said. "I'd like to be three and oh,
but It's better to be one and two
than oh and three. Ask Bud
Grant."
Grant, the former · Vikings
coach, lost four Super Bowls ·
without winning one.

Walks big
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - St.
Louis Manager Whitey Herzog
talked about a number of things
- umpiring, Injuries, the Metro·
dome, the strength of the Twins.
But in the end, he said, It all
came down to three bases on
balls. In his mind, that was the
reason Minnesota defeated St.
• Louis 4-2 In Game 7 of the World
• Series Sunday night.
• "Those three walks In the sixth
' ' Inning turned the game around.''
. Herzog said. ". ·.. Joe Magrane
' got me to where I wanted to go. If
: we hadn 't had that call In the
'· sixth, I wpuld have let him go

•'" on ''

1

: ;. After G~eg Gagne was ruled
safe at first on a fifth-inning
grounder to first baseman Jim
Lindeman, Magrane was removed in favor of Danny Cox.

When third baseman Gary
Gaetti threw out Willie McGee to
end the game. the Twins raced on
the field and hugged themselves
into a ptle between the pitcher's
mound and first base. Lombardozzi waved a towel, exhorting
the thunderous crowd for more
noise. Former Twins great Tony
Oliva, who never won a World
Series, strolled Into the mob.
Later. several Twins returned to
the field, saluting the fans.
"They're very enthusiastic
and we love them," Minnesota
Manager Tom Kelly said of the
fans. " But the players on the field
have to get the job done. I'd like
to have a drink of champagne.
My mouth Is dry."
Viola, a 27-year-old New
Yorker, pitched eight Innings,
allowing &gt;~...hits. l)lcludlng four
In the second' Inning. Jeff Reardon, whose offseason acqulstlon
solved the Twins' biggest we a·
kness ·from last year - lateInning relief- picked up his first
save of the Series.
'

diff~rence

,.

..•• · NFL results

faced In the sixth and Worrell
was brought ln.
The hard-throwing St. Louts
closer got the first out but walked
pinch· hitter Roy Smaller on a 3·2
pitch to load the bases. Dan
Ghidden struck out but Gagne
worked the count to 3-2 and
grounded a single to third that
broke the 2-2 tie and proved to be
the winning tun.
"'Catch it. Catch It,' that's alii
·was thinking," third baseman
Tom Lawless said. "I knew my
only play was at first. It was my
only chance. Maybe If It had been
anybody else but him I would
Cox's first pitch went for a have had a chance. But he's one
game-tying double by Kirby of the fastest players on their
Puckett and he managed to get team.. '
the other two outs of the Inning
"I did everything I could. II
without retiring a batter. But he just wasn't enough. Maybe If the
walked the first two batters he count had been different, I would
have been able to beat (Kent)

NATIONAL FOOTBI\LL LEi\,GUE
AmericWI Co nference

Sandusky Mary H. Cl}4e 6

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.R33 lfll

.,.,

.M3 Jti II:J
.500

,.wo

w

Ill

3S 115

. lil 1111 17!1

West
~

SIUI Fran .

3

Ne,.· Orlean .~
Atlanta

3

Ram~

I

LA

2

I
:J
I
I

0

This week's games

.333

0

S11n DIPlO
Dt•n"er
Sf'atlll'
LA Halden

.tl33 Jill lU

0

.500 141! 123

0

.333 117 1111

0

.0011

!13 123

Su nd Ill' '~ Jl.e.,uh ~
J(ouston n 1\.lllUita 33
W;~~ihlnr;ton 17, N\' Jet.11 I&amp;
BuUalo s.l, MIIU11131 fOTl
lndlanapoiiM :• , Nt'Vt' t:n~and 16

r.. T11.mpa Ba.v 241
l'rand!lco 'H. Nt•w Orlt•an~ 22
PUt!llur,;h ~!1. n nl'lnnatl ~
l'hlladelphla 3"1, l}.diW~ 'W
(lri'PO Ray :H, Ortrolt :U

TilL! Week's
Ohio Colle&amp;r Foolhall Sd11edv.le

By United Prt!!&amp; lllterraUonal
Saturday, OcL. Sl
MlchiiU state at Ohio State
Bowltnr Gre~ at Miami
Ohio Unlv at Ea"tern Ml th
Toledo at Kent Stace
TennTech at ClnclnMII (4 pm)
founphtwn St. at Middle Tenn
Nlchells' St ILa I at ;.\kron
Baldwin-Wallace al Oltertwla (n)
Ca pll;al at Heldelber&amp;
Oberlin al Marid.ta
M11sklnl\lm » Moant llnlon
Olllo Jll' ort.hern at Whtenberr
KPnyon at Alle1beny (raJ
case Reserve at. Den61Jon
Ohio WHie:y•n at Hiram
Wooliter at Roclwt!ler
E\'ansrille lind) at Ashlaa,d
IUullton at Ander1on (lnd )
Hll\8dale {Mic hl at Central St
St. Jo!W!ph (lnd) a1 Dayton
Ot!llance IU Vrblllla
DePa11w Und) at FIBd.lay
Grol'e City (P•l at John Carrol l

'nflln ac Wf'slmiMier / Pa)
Wllmlncto• ILl WeJII-:rn Conned leu!
n - nt~~:hlKam f'

fl•h:a~~:o

S~n

Sun Oll•~~;o U . Kan);II.'O (' II,. t l
N'll' Giants :10, St . l.oul11 1
S e ~tle 15, 1.,\ K~ldf'rto 13

Monday '" G1unf'io!"7
l}(&gt;nvt;r at Mlnnt'!HlUI, It p.m .
LA Ram~ ul (' lf'VPiand , !I p.m.

Sundp.y , No\'. I
lndiarutpoll.• at N\' oiPbi, I p.m.
Hou ston lit Cincinnati, I p. m .
Kan!oill.'O City 111 C hlra~o. I p.m .
LA Raldtor!' 11i Nf'W En~IIUid ,l p.m.
Nj'"' OrleiUIK at Atlanta , I p.m.
Tampd Bay VK. Gr. rldy ! MIIw . J, I

p.m.

W~~!&gt;ihln~on ~

Buflll.lo. I p.m.
Plllladelpbia al st . Loul &lt;r~~, I p. m .
I'IUsttUrlh at Miami, I p. m .
MlnnoM~ota at SeaUll', ~ p.m.
Cit\' eland ttl S11.n Ol t'JO, 4 p.m .
Slln t' runclsco at Lj\ Ram11, I p.m.
Uelroll at Oenver , ~p . m .
Monday, No,·. :e
N\' GIAJd8 at Dallat~ , !I p. m.

Prep scores
Ohio HIKh School Football RelluHs
,.Ur Eut 7, Allr Kenmore I
BuckeYe N 17, &amp;rMivUie It
llullaloWayne tWVa) %11., Cheu.pu.kd
Cia ~lken W, Cokraln )
C ln Mc Nicholaa Jl Amelia I
Cln Country Dey 34, BAtavia 3
Cln Summit C lry nay 41 , Lo ckland H

.•'

.,''

Cle Wlh W 28, lrOGkiJn 14
Cle St .Jo1eph II, MUIUIOn 0
Col O cSal~ 18, Col ChiU' Iel D
Cuyahoga Hts17, 8 Amherst 8
Day Dunh11r W, Duy ( 'ham•Jull&amp;
Franklin~ . Middletown Fenwick 0
HudsunWiin He' 1, GateAM1118Hawkvn
6

Uma (;C J'l, Ailr Co\lentt')' 0
MoJadOre :13, Gilmour 17
N Rld~tevUI~ ~ Loral n fl
Newbury 'l%, Be•chwood 12
Nll8 11~ Howland t

NHL results
NATION.-\L HOCKEY LEA.GU£
Saturday's Rtsu1t11
Nf llilan.:Wr!!o ~. Nrw .Jer!"K'y I
NV RUJI(tr8 5, Philadelphia :I
Hartlord 5, Chl cA ~o 3

PIUIIbu'lh 5, Buffalo 3
Montreal S.. Wv.hincton 2
Calrary 1, Quebec I Minnesota 7, Toronto~
I"Aimo .. ont. Vancouwr 5
!!lt . Loub!. &lt;1, lk:l!lton D
SundM,Y'8 Rt'!ull
Los Anrett'!l 'Z. Wlnnipel I
Monday'• GamH
Philadelphia a&amp; NY Raa1ers, 7: lS p.m .

Calrary at Monlro;:al, 7:35p.m.
Tuetllday's Game~~

LAI!! Anaeles at Plttlhur1h. nlpt
EdmoMon at Qlehec, nllhi
Phlladelphlll at NewJuse)', nlrhl
Otearo at N'V l•lande"'· nl~~:ht
Mlnnr.llota at St. Louts, nl1ta
WMhlnaton at Vaa.eouwr, nl(hl

World Series
World Serlt!ll
[twins win Serll'll 4-11)
Sat. Oct . l i - Mlnne•uta ta, St. Loullll
Sun. Oc l . 18 - MlnneAQia 8, st. Lout. 4
Tu e. Oct. 20- St. Loui113, Mlnrno&amp;a 1
M'ed. Oct . 2:1 - St. LouiA 7, Mla-.ota 2

Th111r. Oet . n

Worrell walked pinch-hitter Roy
Smalley, loading the bases. After
AI Newman ran . for Smalley,
Gladden fanned. Gagne, 5 for 28
going to the plate, singled to third
base. Lawless made a divingbackhand stop but his only play
was to first, where Gagne beat
the throw as the tie-breaking run
scored.
St. LOuis reached baseball's
ultimate game .despite playing
virtually the last six weeks of the
regular season without slugger
Jack Clark. The Cardinals have
lost two of their three World
Series In this decade.
The Twins won only 85 games
during the season and their
winning percentage of .525 was
the lowest ever for a World Series
champion. They capturell the
American League West and
ambushed the Detroit Tigers In
the playoffs, then showed why
they were the best home team In
the majors this year. They went
56-25 during the year and 6-0
during ppstseason.
The Twins moved from Wa·
shlngton to the Minneapolis-St.
Paul area for the 1~1 season.
Before Sunday night, the fran·
chlse had only won one World
Series - In 1924 when the
Washington Senators defeated
the New York. Giants In seven
games.

HONORED- The presentation of awards was a
'highlight of !he Jaymar Goll Club dinner-dance
·held Sunday night 11t the Middleport American
Legion Hall. Among those honored at the event
were, from left to right, Blll Nelson, club
champion: Mary Bowen, presldentoftheTuesday

- Si. Loulll 4, M111-.ou r

Sat. Ocl . U- Mlane8ot.a II , St. Loul!lli
Sun. Oct. 25- Mln111:!8otal 4, 81, Louli!Z

ASHLAND, KY. - The _1987
Ohio Valley Christian School
varsity volleyball team, at 22-0.
became the first varsity Defend·
ers team to" complete an undefeated season by beating Paul
Blazer High School15·5, 9-15 and
15·11.
The Defenders were 5 for 5
from the spiking line, with five
kills registered. Sophomore
Becky Danner served · six
straight points, incl)ldlng five
aces, to pace OVCS's first -game
attack.
··

Name NAIA honoree

MOUNT VERNON, Ohio
(UPI) - Tiffin University quarterback Greg Freeman and Find·
lay corner-back Randy Ham·
brick have been selected as
NAIA District 22 offensive and
defensive
players of the week.
The second game was a differFreeman.
a six-foot. three·
ent matter. Paul Blazer, playing
before their fans . at Senior Inch, 205-pound ·senior from RoParents' Nigh!; beat the Defend· meoville, Illinois, threw for two
ers 15·9. The Defenders were touchdowns and ran for another
limited to two kills as they In Tiffin's 30-27 loss to Bluffton
College. which entered the game
missed key serves.
The third game was more of a ranked seventh In NAIA Division
battle, as the visitors came from II. Freeman completed 13 of 26
behind to close the gap to 11·9. At passes for 257 yard'l., and two
that point junior )'vlarla Roach Interceptions. He also ran for 53
put In . four points to put her yards, Including a 35-yard
teammates on top to • win the touchdown.
Hamb•lck, a five-foot, . ninegame 15-11 and the match.
Inch.
173-pound sophomore from
Roach led In serving points
·Ci
ncinnati,
Intercepted two
with 11 and In hits, going 11 for 11
at the spiking line and getting passes and .recovered a fumble In
four kills. Becky Danner 'had 10 Findlay's 27-0 victory ovel!::Ken·
points, followed by Beth Wood lucky State. He was part of a
with seven, Rachel Danner's Findlay defense which allowed
five, Edina VanMatre's four and Kentucky State only 67 yards,
Tract Sisson's two. Wood was 6 including just four yards passfor 6 from the spiking line and ing. Findlay College Improved
5-2 for the season, while Tiffin fell
had five kills.
In the match, the Defenders to 1·7.

ATTENTION
LOCAL AGGRESSIVE CAR DEALERSHIP
LOOKING FOR SALESMAN.
MUST BE ABLE TO ·DEAL WITH THE PUBLIC
AND HAVE KNOWLEDGE OF THE
AUTOMOBILE INDUSTRY.
•GOOD BENEFITS
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SEND RESUME AND ANY ADDITIONAL
INFORMATION TO:
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P.O. BOX 729-B
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
t .

VIOLA IS MVP - The Twins' Frank Viola, voted the World
Series Most Valuable Player, savors his moment as he holds his
trophy foUowlng the Twins' 4-2 victory over the Cardinals Sunday
night In Minneapolis, clinching the Twins' flrst·ever world title.
(UP))

Kuwait hosts volleyball ·game
"Sports Is the language of
KUWAIT (UPI) -Riot pollee
stood guard as Iran and Iraq, peace spoken by people all over
which have been at war for seven the globe," said Shelkl\ Fahd AI
years, played volleyball In Ku- Ahmad, chairman of the Asian
wait, the tillY Persian Gulf state Olympic Council and brother of
Kuwait's emir. "The outcome of
caught .~mid the conflict.
The Iraqi team strode across the match today, which was held
the court before the beginning of in 'such a good spirit, is clear
the match Sunday and presented evidence that people believe In
the team from Iran with an olive peace and In love ."
Iranians and Iraqis were
branch and flowers. The crowd
among the 700 fans In the sports
applauded wildly.
The match was part of the hall and after the game, the
Asian Men's Volleyball Cham- Iranian players waved to the
Iraqi fans. The Iraqi team then
pionship. Iraq defeated Iran 15-7, 8-15, 15-12, 15-U-ln the first waved to the Iranian fans as
sporting event between the two scores of riot pollee watched.
nations In several years.

1

SPECIAL
FEEDER.
:CALF
SALE!
OCTOBER 28, 1987
8:00P.M. ·

"All Breeds Sole"
'

THIS SALE INCLUDES tiOLSTINE
Cattle will be accepted all day
Tuesday, up to 1:00 p.m. Wednesday
•HAULING AVAILABLE•

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
U. S. AT. 50 (1 Mi. East of Albany, Ohio)

592-2322 DAY - 698-3531 EVENING '
.;

'

during the presentation of awards. With Freed, at
left, Is Lenny Jewell, second flight winner. At
right Is Bob Miller, first flight winner.

WINNERS - Bob Freed, center, organized this
year's Jaymar GoH Club dinner-dance held
Sunday night at the Middleport American Legion
· Hall. Freed also assisted In presenllng trophies
I

•

NFL regulars retum; Giants wm·~ ' Bengals lose another

Hrbek to the bag."
"Basically, we just didn't get
enough runs ," Herzog said. "If
we had gotten five runs, we would
have been all right.
"In all fairness, they had a
better ball club than we did.
Though · I would have liked to
have played them with my full
club. But I'd rather be 1-2 In the
World' Series than 0·0. ::~St. Louis only had two baserunners ·after scoring twice In the
second and one of them was
erased In a rundown after being
picked off first.
"It was a good game, an
exciting · game,.. Herzog said.
"Throwing out those two guys at
the plate kept us In the game. We
had those guys 'r ight where we
wanted them. But the trouble
was, it was the wrong ballpark."

were 27 of 28 at the spiking line:
They picked up 12 kllls and 11
blocks, four. of . those bl&lt;icks
coming from Sisson. Wood,
Becky and Rachel Danner had
two blocks each, while VanMatre
had 1.

Night Ladles' Goll Association; Becky Triplett,
president of the Monday Night Ladles' Assocla·
·lion; an&lt;l Bill Childs, Jaymar pro. · Childs was
recognized · for his efforts In promoting the
Jaymar facility.
•

1987 OVCS volleyball team
ends _campaign undefeated

Norwalk P&amp;~&amp;ll7. s ee .. ral 2:
Parma Padlaa S8, Parma H.ay Name&amp;
Port.11 ND 31, Ironto• St Joe 0
BldttNood 33, Malvern 0

By U•iled i'rf!M• International

fielded Gagne· s bouncer and
tossed to Magrane, who ap·
.peared· to brush his foot over the
bag. Weyer called Gagne safe.
The play resembled the one In
Game 6 of the 1985 Series when
Don Denklnger's call paved the
waY for a Kansas City victory in
the ninth.
After Gagne's single, Cox
relieved and Puckett hit his first
pitch for a double, tying the score
2-2. Puckett blundered on the
bases, trying to advance ,when
Lake lost a low pitch. Lake
recovered and easily threw out
Puckett. Baylor singled and
Coleman again fired borne.
Gaettl crashed Into Lake as the
throw arrived but the catcher
held the ball for the third out. The
St. Louis bench rushed the field to
congratulate their. wobbly
catcher.
The umpiring deterlorat~d
further lri the St. Louis sixth,
Herr was caught off llrst and
tried to escape a rundown. Weyer
could have cited Hrbek for
obstruction or Herr .safe for
beating the throw to the bag.
Instead, he called Herr out.
In the bottom of the inning, Cox
opened by walking Brunansky
and Hrbek and Todd Worrell
relieved. f'hllllps ejected Cox,
who shouted at the umpire as he
left the field . One out later,

in Game .Seven

Cox had pitched Thursday In St.
Louts and was working on only
two day's rest. And It showed.
"Cox had his good fastball but
he didn't have his location,"
catcher Steve Lake said. "He
was struggling to throw strikes."
"I had no Idea what he'd do,"
Herzog said. "I've never pitched
him on two day's rest. I wanted
him to give me two innings. I
wanted him to get me to the
eighth and ninth so I could pitch
(Todd) Worrell. Then I would
have had Ken Dayley for extra
Innings."

Scoreboard ...

""

" I told Frankie I was very he called out Herr at first. But he
proud of him," Kelly said. "He said he was sure he was correct
did an outstanding job. He knows
In ruling Gagne safe.
as we all know that Reardon gets
• "I got blocked out of the play,"
the ball In the ninth Inning.
he said of the "play Involving
Fr,ankle understood that's the Herr. "(Minnesota first base·
way we did It all year."
man Kent) Hrbek rari right ln
Pitching on only three days'
front of me as I was going to call
rest, Viola permitted just two the play. I didn't see (Viola)
touch the bag. The replay showed
baserunners over his last six
Innings. He won Game 1 and lost It was very. very close. There
Game 4. He has not lost at home · was no obstruction In my opinion.
lnhlslasl16starts,dattngtoMay The timing of the play, In my
22. Viola, 17·10 with a 2. 90 ERA oolnlon. was he was out."
this season, Is the wlnnlngest
St. Louis took a 2-0 lead In the
left-bander In baseball.over the seC,ond. but blew Its chance for a
last four years.
bigger Inning. Jim Lindeman,
St. Louis catcher Steve Lake, McGee and Tony Pena opened
In the lineup Instead of Tom with singles for one run, leaving
Pagnozzl,taggedout two runners runners on first and second. Jose
at home earlier In the game. But Oquendo's pop failed to move the
he could not prevent a Minnesota runners and that proved costly
Insurance run In the eighth.
when Tom Lawless fljed to
With Tim Laudner on first and center. McGee raced to third but
two out, Dan Gladden doubled to Pena retreated to first. Lake
right-center. McGee threw to singled to make It 2-0.
second baseman . Tom . Herr,
A careless mistake 'by Ma·
whose relay to the plate caught grane set up a Twins run In the
Lake on the short hop. Had Lake bottom of the Inning, though a
controlled the throw, Laudner call by home-plate umpire Dave
would have been out. Instead, the Phillips deflated the rally. With a
ball skipped · past and Laudner 1-2 count, Magrane hit leadoff
scored. giving Minnesota a 4·2 man Don Baylor, and Tom
edge.
Brunansky ·singled. · One out
First-base umpire Lee Weyer later, Laudner singled. Left
was Involved In two controver· fielder Vince Coleman threw
'sial calls. and a replay Indicated home on a fly, but Lake looked
he missed both. On one, he called shy In applying the tag at the
a Minnesota runner safe at first. plate. Baylor appeared to slide In
On another, he called a ·St. Louis safely, but Phillips ruled hlmout.
runner out at first.
"Lombardozzl singled home
"Lee Weyer ·has been calling Brunansky.
The Cardinals. burned by a
the plays too fast all season,"
said St. Louis Coach Red Schoen- close play at first In the 1985
dlenst. "He was a good umpire." Wo'rld Series, may have seen
Weyer admitted he did not get another poor one In the fifth
a good look at the play on which .. Inning. With one out, Lindeman

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
The NFL regained a familiar
look Sunday , bolstered not only
by the return of previously
striking players, b~t - also or the
New York. Glarits to the win
column and Jim McMahon to the
field.
The Giants won their first
game since Super Bowl XXI,
getting three touchdown passes
!rom Phil Simms and a smothertng defensive performance at
East Rutherford, N.J., to rout the
st. Louis Cardinals 30-7 and
Improve to 1·5 on the season.
At Tampa. Fla., McMahon,
sidelined the past 11 months with
a career-threatening shoulder
Injuries, revived his career an&lt;l
-the Chicago Bears, running for
one touchdown and throwing for
a score In the rtnal5 ~minutes to
produce a 27-26 triumph over the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
The slate of games Sunday
were the first by the enUre NFL
:,I nee Week 2. The 24-day players"
strike wiped out Week 3 before
league management held three
weeks worth of substitute games.
The Giants were one of the big
losers during the strike, going 0-3
in non-union games to combine
with an- 0·2 start with their
regular ·players.
Simms set a regular-season
club percentage record (80.9) by
completing 17 of 21 passes for 253
yards, and the New York's
defense forced four turnovers
and complied five sacks against
St. Lou!&amp;, 2-4.
Simms's numbers were. close
to the 22 of 25 for 268 yards with
three TDs showing that earned
hlrrt · the MVP award In Super
Bowl XXI, a 39-20 victory over
Denver. Simms hit Lionel Ma·
nuel with touchdown passes of 38
and 16 yards, and Mark Bavaro
on a 3-yard score. Raul Allegre
added field goals of 28, 35 and 32
yards.
" We have to be real!stlc that
the season might already be over
for us,' ' Simms said. "We just
worried about this week, know·
tng if you look ahead you look at
something that 's just about 1mpossible to do (win 10 straight).
"I don 't think we're back in the
·groove yet, ~hat ·will take Ume. "
McMahon showed he Is nearing
'the groove that helPed him' lead
the Bears to a Super Bowl XX
triumph.
A. Tampa crowd of 70,747
watched McMahon run 1 yard for
a touchdown and hit Neal Ander·son for the winning score from 6
·yards with 88 seconds to play.

ningham threw two touchdown rallied from a 31·7 deficit and Chiefs are 0·5 since a season·
Tampa Bay, 3-3, jumped to a Anderson was wide on a 52-yard
passes to John Spagnola and had a. chance to win, but Eddie opening triumph over · the
20-0 lead. But the Bears, 5·1, field -goal try with seven seconds
Paul McFadden kicked three Murray missed a 45-yard field· Chargers. '
rallied behind McMahon, who to play.
·
Seahawks 33, Calders 13
field goals for the Eagles, 2-4, goal atteml?t with four seconds
came on In the second half to
. Steelers 23, Bengals 20
At
Los Angeles, Curt Warner
left.
complete 17 9f 24 passes for 195
At Pittsburgh, Gary Anderson · against Dallas, 3·3.
ran
for
two touchdowns and Dave
Chargers 42, Chiefs 21
Packers 34,- Lions 33
yards.
·
. ..... _kJcked a 20-yard field with 1:47 to
Krieg
passed
for a pair to Ray
At
s
·
a
n
Diego,
Dal)
Fouts
threw
At Pontiac. Mich., AI Del
·~He's a tough son of a gun," . play to send the Steelers, 4·2,
Butler.
helping
Seattle, 4·2, ~nd
Greco kicked a 45-yard field goal for two touchdowns and ran for
Bears Coach Mike Dltka said of over Cincll)nati, 2-4.
the
Raiders,
3-3,
to their third
with one minute left to lift Green another to help San Diego, 5-1,,to
McMahon. "We're ·going to try
Eagles. 37, Cowboys 20
straight
loss.
Bay, 3-2·1. The Lions, 1·5."had Its best start since 1968. The
and keep him healthy. Jim !sour
AI Philadelphia, Randall Cunstarting quarterback and wlil be ~...:...------------------------------------------------our starting quarterback until
something changes .. Mike
(Tomczak) Is a class kid, but
Jim's our starter."
McMahon hurt his shoulder
Nov. 23when he was slammed by
Green Bay's Charles Martin on a
celebrated late hit. He underwent offseason rotator . cuff
surgery that put him on Injured
reserve and his career In
jeopardy.
Elsewhere, It was: Houston 37,
Atlanta 33; Washington 17, Jets
16; ,Buffalo 34, Miami 3f In
overtime; Indianapolis 30, New
England 16; San Francls~o 24 ,
New Orleans 22; Pittsburgh 23,
Cincinnati - 20; Philadelphia 37,
Dallas 20; Green Bay 34, Detroit
33; San Diego 42, Kansas City 21;
and Seattl~: 35, Raiders 13. "
Tonight, Denver Is at Mtnnesola and the Los Angeles Rams
are at Cleveland.
Oilers 37, Falcons 33
·At Houston. Warren Moon
threw a 14-yard touchdown pass
.to rookie Curtis Duncan with 27
seconds to play, lifting Houston,
4-2, over Atlanta. 2-4.
Redsklns 17, Jets 16
At Washington, Jay Schroeder
threw a 2-yard touchdown pass to
Kelvin Bryant and All HallSheikh kicked a 28-yard field goal
with 54 seconds left , helping the
Redsklns, 5·1, to their fourth
straight victory. The Jets, 3-3,
have never beaten the Redsklns,
losing all four meetings.
Bills 34, Dolphins 31
At Miami, Scott Norwood, who
had a short kick blocked earlier.
converted a 27-yard field goal In
overtime to help Buffalo, 3-3,
defeat Miami. 2-4, for only the
eighth time In 43 meetin gs.
Colts 30, Patriots 16
At Indianapolis. Jack Trudeau,
winless In 12 previous NFL
starts, threw a touchdown pass to
help the Colts, 3-3, equal their win
total of last season and end a
six-game losing strea k to the
Patriots, 3-3.
49ei'S 24, Saints 22
At New Orleans, Joe Montana
threw three touchdown passes to
offset five field goals by Morten
Andersen and lead San Francisco·. 5-1, over New Orlpans 3·3.

Browns host Rams in
f Monday night football
'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - AI·
though NFL statistics include
three replacement games In
• which few regular players partie·
~. ipated , one Item may influence
' tonight' s meeting between the
••· Los Angeles Rams and tl)e
: Cleveland Browns.
" The Rams ' pass defense Is last
: in the teague, allowing an aver:; age of 241 yards per game. In the
: two games he ha s played,
~ Browns quarterback Bernie
,t Kosar has averaged 244 yards.
•' "It's difficult to say how the
~ tnree-week layoff wll! affect the
:• e!f1ciency of ·each team," says
;. Kosar. "Preparation Is impor~ tant. and I'd say we had' a good
;: week of workouts."
:• Cleveland tight end Ozzie New.; some says short passes Into Los
:• Angeles's ' zone defense may
·~ work
: · "That defense may give pos;~ session receivers an advait;' tage," he says. · 'I guess we'll see.
•: "This is an Important game for
•,
I'm sure Bernie Is ready to
t; ~~~rt pulling the trigger again."
;. Rams Coach John Robinson
•• says .Kosar has matured as a
• :: quarterback.

'

"He's doing many mor.e little
things . - his footwork , for mstance- with added poise," say s
Robinson . "A lot of people say
Bernie Kosar has no style. Well,
he certainly can put points on the
bo ar d"
.
But both Robinson a~ eve·
land counterpart Marty Schot·
tenheimer may decide to play
matters conservatively, and
primarily use a running attack.
Ra~s running back Eric Dick·
erson s contract dispute appears
to have demoted him to th e
second team, meaning ex-Brown
Charles White may star,t.
White is Los Angeles leading
rusher, with 330 yards and one
touchdown In 75 ca~rles.
White'; Cleveland s first-round
pick In 1980, played four seasons
before being released during
training camp In 1985. Scholten·
helmer said that transaction was
prec.lpated by the Browns' dec,l·
ston to Increase Earnest Byner s
ro~~·
Earnest has great all-around
skills as a runner, pass catcher
and blocker," says Schottenhei·
mer . "He and Kevin (Ma ck) are
quite a tandem.

it
Th e regulars from the original
Bob Evans Steakhouse have
been s inging the praises of our
new Bob Evans Restaurant::-in
!heir own unique way.
"Food's just as good. But why'd
they go and make a whole new
menu? All I need is the usual."

·11 y9u like the old menu, you'll
love our new one. We offer a
whole new assortment of usual
meals. Yet. each is prepared the
same careful, homestyle way.
"I'm glad the old staff is here.
I'd hate to spend 40 years breaking in new people."

and

Along with the new improve·
ments, you'!! find the very best
parts of the old place sti!! hereour smiling. friendly people.
Yet, despite our best efforts,
the regulars have one major
complaint.
'This new location is too

convenient. Now everybody
is gonna want to come here."
We sure h9pe sot

~&amp;'Va.t~&amp;
Ht SlAUHAN I

Just a few smiles from home: '

10 1987 Bob Evans, Inc

'

r

�•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

f'age-6-The Daily Sentinel

eigs eighth
graders finish
perfect season
By JIM SOULSBY
Coac h John Blake' s Eighth
Grade Ma rauders became only
th e second team In Meigs Junior
. ~igh history to post an undefN ted season. Using a ground
Hnd air attack that netted a total
J! 377 yards and an awesome
defense that destroyed and dem.ralized' · a Warren Warrior
eleven. the Marauders shut out
the visitor s 44 to 0.
Meigs got on the scoreboard
fi rst at the 4:05 mark in the first
•1uarte r after tlle Warriors
urned the ball over on a fumble
11 t heir 46 yard line. On the
;..eventh play of their first series,
Ter ry McGuire took a pitch from
Quar terback Darin Logan and
fir ed a 24 yard touchdow n pass to
Shawn Hawley . The conversion
attempt failed.
After competing one pa ss for
an 18 yard gain, Warren again
gave Meigs good field position! at
.he Marauder 48, turning the ball
uver on downs. With McGuire
a nd F r ank Blake doing the
carrying chores, they moved to
t he Warrior 28. After a proceedure penalty pu t the ball on the
33, McG uire hit Hawley with a 32
y ard aerial to the , Warren one
from where McGuire balled his
w~y Into the endzone to give the
M'a'r auders a 12-d lead as the
•'onverslon run was stopped short
uf the goal.
.1
J e remy Rupe's fumble recov·
e ry at the Warren 23 set the stage
fo r th e next Meigs score as
Btake, on two consecutive carries, pu t the Marauders up 18 to 0
with McGuire tacking on the two
pomt converston.
Aga in Warren surrendered the
ball on downs at the Marauder 36
fo llowing a 39 yard drive. With
4:05 left in the second stanza.
McGuire galloped 64 yards for
the fou r th Marauder touc hdown
a nd Bla'ke's two point conversion
run made it . 28 to 0 In the
~ar auder' s favor.
.,
Meigs wasted nQ time in the
second half in upping the sGoreas
Blake hit for nine on the first play
f rom scrimmage and followed
that with a 54 yard touchdown
scamper. McGuire tacked on the
two point conversio n and the rodt
continued 36-0.'
Four consecutive penalties
,tymied the next Mar11uder series as they advanced to the
War r ior 44 but wound up in a 3rd
a nd 35 s itu ation at their ow n 23.
McGuire punted to the Warren 28
afte r a Logan to Blake picked up
24 yards.
The defense got .into the scor·
mg act on the next play as James
Howerton pilfered a Haller aerial
and spr inted 32 yards for a
.&lt;ix- point er. Jeeremy Rape's
two pomt conve rston r un closed
ou t th~ scorin g with the Marauders on top 44-0.
It would be very difficult to
smgle ou t any member of the
defense lor praise as each one
contri buted to hold Warren to 29
net yards on the ground and 37
via the air lanes.

For Meigs, Btake had 8 carries
for 110 yards and caught one pass
for 2•. McGuire picked up 77
yards in 7 tries and also had one
reception for 25 yards Phillip
Hovatter ca rried 3 times for 18
yards; Jeremy Phalln twice for
11, Mica h Bunch had 5 yards in
two carnes, Matt Haynes 17 in 3
and, Jeremy Rupe picked up 9
yards on one try.
McGutre completed 3 of 4
passes lor 97 yards and two
touchdowns while Logan connected on 2 of 3 for 49 yards .
Shawn Hawley snagged two for
~6 yards and one six-pointer and
Kevin Musser caught 2 for 41
:,ards.
Meigs had 18 first downs to the
Warrior's SIX (3 via penalt ies) .
\!cGu1re punted once for Meigs
for 25 ;,ards and the Mara uders
. were zapped With nine pe na lties
for 105 yarcts.
Prior to game time, a tribute
was read in honor of Coac hes
F'rank Blake and Tom Probst and·
each was presen ted a plaque in
appreciation of the effort they
~ave put forth in \he junior high
program
From all indicatlons, if this
sq uad can remain together as a
unit over the nex t lour years,
future Marauder foes cou ld be in
for some tough go ing.
The Meigs Senior and Junior
lligh bands were present to play
the National Anthem and put on a
halftime show tor the fans.

Meigs Boosters to.
meet Tuesday
The Me1gs Athletic Boosters
wtJI mePI Tuesday at 7:30PM at
the high schooL The primary
purpose of the meeting is to
appoint a co mmittee !rom the
junior hl~h to coordinate all
~VP'
L•t facility lot ''
boo,wr'(lllb. All parents. especially t·hose with y()ungs ters
Involved In the junior high
program or those whose c hildre n
will enter the program next year,
aFP urged to attend.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 26, 1987

· Monday, October -26, 1987

Marauders
•
runnerup m
TVC meet

I

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANA'I:IONS, ARGUMENTS AND RESOLUTIONS
FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND BALLOT LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS AND THE
FULL TEXT OF AN AMENDMENT TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS
AT THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 3, 11187

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
·TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

PROPOSED AMENDMENT . 2
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
nos

'

1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

To adopt Section2k of Article vm oftheConstirution.ofthe State of Ohio.
'
PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:

1. PERMIT THE STATE TO FINANCE OR ASSIST LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN FINANCING THE CONSTRUC110N OF IMPROVEMENT
OF ROADS AND BRIDGES, WASTE WATER TREATMENT
SYSTEMS, WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS, SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL
FACILJTIES, AND STORM WATER AND SANITARY COLLECTION,
STORAGE, AND TREATMENT FACILITIES THROUGH THE ISSUANCE OF BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS.
.

To amend Section 6 of Article XV of the Constirutioil of the State of Ohio.

THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD REQUIRE THAT THE ENTillE
NET PROCEEDS OF THE STATE LOTTERJFS BE USED SOLELY FOR
THE SUPPORT OF ELEMENTARY, SECONDARY, VOCATIONAL, AND
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS AS DETERMINED BY THE OIDO
GENERAL ASSEMBLY, AND WOULD ESTABLISH A SEPARATE FUND
FOR THESE ENTIRE NET PROCEEDS.

2. LIMIT THE TOTAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF BONDS AND OTHER
1 OBLIGATIONS ISSUED TO 1.2 BILLION DOLLARS. IT WOULD
LIMIT THE AMOUNT OF BONDS OR OTHER OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED IN ANY YEAR TO 120 MILLION DOLLARS. THESE WOULD
BE GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS BACKED BY THE FULL FAITH
AND CREDIT OF THE STATE OF OIDO.

If adopted, this amendment shall take effect on January I, 1988.

(Proposed by Resolutulll of the General Assembly of Ohio)
A ml\lorlty yes vote Is necessary for passa11e.
YES

PROPOSED CONSTITIJTIONA!- AMENDMENT

3. REQUIRE THE USE OF OIDO PRODUCTS, SERVICES, AND LABOR
TO TilE EXTENT POSSIBLE.
•
If adopted, this amendment shall take immediate effect.

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

'

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

NO

A ml\lorlty yes vote Is necessary for Jl8SSIII!le.
.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I (as prepared by lhe Ohio BaUot Board)
The Ohio Constitution currently requires that the net proceeds of state lotteries be
depoSited m the General Revenue Fund , the main operating fund of the State. The

YES

General Assembly now appropriates an amount in excess
educat&amp;on from the Genera] Revenue Fund.

NO

or these net proceeds to'

2.

This amendment would requtre that the net proceeds of state lotteries be deposited
in a separate fund for educatiOn m the State Treasury .

3.

All monies for this fund would come directly from the entire net proceeds of the
State lotteries and would be used solely for the support of education (not including
higher education) .

4
5

No greater share of the proceeds of state lotteries would be available to education
as a result of this amendment.

I.
'

This amendment would allow the General Assembly to use the State's bonding
authority to help cities, villages, counties, townships , and other local governments
pay for roads, bndges , and other capital improvements.

2.

The General Assembly could limit the amount of obligations issued in any year in

date of issuJtnce.

Currently. the provisions of the Ohio Constitution that permit the General Assembly
to authorize an agency of the state to conduct lotteries also requires that the entire net
proceeds of such lottery be paid into the General Reyenue Fund, the main operating fund
of the state. Passage of thi~ amendment would amend the Ohio Constitution to require
that net lottery proceeds be paid into a fund of the State Treasury that would consist solely
of net lottery proceeds and would be used exclusively for the suppon of elementary, secondary, vocattonal and special education programs as detennined by the General Assembly .
The Oh10 Lonery came into existence in 1974 with all lottery profits going to the General

Revenue Fund w1lh no specific earmarking . Even though the Generiu Assembly ear~

marked these lottery profits for elementary and secondary use m 1983 , these funds still
went into the General Revenue Fund for distribution.
This constilutional change would eliminate lottery profits first going to the General
Revenue Fund and set up a spec1al fund of the State Treasury solely fo; net lottery profit•
to be used by elementary. secondary, vocational and special education. Passage of this
amendment would also make the earmarlting of funds to education a permanent feature
of the Ohio ConstitutiOn and assure that future General Assemblies cannot use Ohio Lottery profits for uses other tha~ elementary, secondary, vocational and special education .
Ronald M. Mottl, Sr., Ronald V. Gerberry, Paul
P. Mechling, M1chael C. Shoemaker, Gary C.
Suhadolnik, R1chard Schafrath, R1chard C.
Pfeiffer, Jr. , Robert Burch

ARGUMENT FOR TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Issue Two enables Ohio communities to end decades of deterioration of their local water
and sewer systems, and roads and bridges. These facilities, which constitute the backbone
of any community. are in desperate need of repair or replacement.
Some 56 percent of the 27,272 miles of county roads in Ohio are substandard, an? a
similar percentage of the 26,836 county bridges need repa1rs or replacement, accordmg
to The Road Information Program (TRIP) report.
Many of Ohio's water and sewer systems, some dating to the Civil W&amp;I era, have been
patched together in a piecemeal fashion through the decades and need major work.

' Issue Two:
•

Stands for the safety and health of Ohioans by providing better roads, safer bridges ,
cleaner water and more efficient waste disposal systems.

•

Had overwhelming bi-panisan support throughout the legislative process (98·1
m the House and 32·1 in the Senate).

•

Will enable Ohio communities to qualiJ' for federal improvement monies.

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

•

Will not raiSe taxes. ThiS is especially important to senior citizens on fixed incomes.

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT WILL DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO
HELP OHIO'S SCHOOLS .

•

Will put thousands of people to work rebuilding Ohio's infrastrucrure .

•
In' fact , this amendment Will not have any affect on school funding . State funding levels
to local schools will remain the same. The state legtSiarure will simply shuffle the ac·
counts from wh1ch funds flow to schools to accomodate the money generated by earmarkmg lottery profits. The actual amount of money going to local schools will not change
regardless of whether 11 comes from the state's general revenue or from an earmarked
accounl

I

,In addrtion, state statute already d1ctates that lottery profits must gG to education. A
constitutional amendment reiterating thiS policy does nothmg to change school funding
reahhes.
THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT WILL ONCE AGAIN FALSELY. RAISE
VOTER EXPECTATIONS THAT SCHOOL FUNDING PROBLEMS HAVE BEEN
SOLVED.
When the lottery was first approved in 1975, voters were led to believe schools would
rec~ ive large amounts of money. Today. twelve years later, lottery profits constitute only
12% of state funding to schools- about 6 % of total dollars spent on education.
Voters may behove , if this issue IS approved, that schools will rece1ve additional funds .
Should that be the case. school districts will have great difficulty explaining the facts to
the public and may lose levy elections because of the confusion.

Will make local communities more attractive to new and expanding businesses that
generate economic opportunities .

•

\

•

Enables Ohio to keep its ciedit rating, maJor rating agencies say. And, long-term
bonds are more economical than the "pay-as-you-go" system, according to the National Council on Public Works.
Should·not be confused with Ohio's gasoline tax mcrease. The main purpose of that
is to raise revenue for state roads.
·

•

Guarantees the use of Ohio products, serv1ces and labor whenever possible on the
projects.

•

Will save Oh1o money m the long run.

A yes vote for Issue Two is a vote for the health , safety and economic growth of a
rev1tal1zed Ohio.
Committee For the Amendment: Stanley J. Aronoff, Harry Meshel. W. Scott
Oelslager, Ross Boggs, Dean Conley. and Robert
L. Corbin

-'

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT DOES NOT DECREASE THE NECES·
SITY OF RAISING LOCAL PROPERTY TAXES TO SUPPORT SCHOOLS.

''
State Issue I " thetfirst issue on the ballot at this election. Many school di;stricts
have
lev1es on thts same ballot: the need for local funding is not changed regardless of passage
or fatlure of this amendment. We fear that people , after voting for State Issqe I, may,
not support levtes, assummg the lottery solves the problem.

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
The members of the General Assembly who voted agamst Substitute Senate Jomt Resolu·
uon I did not choose to prepare or submit arguments against the proposed amendment.

C. J. McLin, Jr., Donald P. Czarcinslci, Ronald N.
Amstutz, Joan W. Lawrence, Paul Pfeifer

ISSUE 1
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
&lt;,House Joint Resolution ~o 9)
JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposmg to amend Sec11on 6 of Art icle XV of the
ConStJtution of the State of OhiO to requ1re thlt the enure net proceeds of the state louery be earmarked for
edUCiitJOnaJ purposes
Be it resolved by the Genera] Asstmbly of the Sw:e
of Oh1o, three-flfths of the- memlx:rs elected to each

house concurrini herein. thai there shall be submitlcd
to the electors of the stale m the manner prescribed by
law at the general elcctJon to be held on lhe firs1 Tuesday after the first Monday 1ft November, 1987, a proposal to amend Section 6 of Article XV of the Conslttu\lon of OhiO to read as follows,

ARTICLE X:V
.
Soc. 6 Lonen Ci EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE PRO·
VIDEO IN THIS SECTION , LOITERIES. and llle
sale of lottery tickets, for any iJUrpose whatever, &amp;hall
fore ver be prohibited in this State 1 ~--··

ARTICLE VW

JOINT RESOLUTION

THE General Assembly may authonze an agency of
the state to conOOctlottenes, to sell nghu to par11e1pa.te
the rem, and to award prizes by chance to participants,
pro'Jk\ed THATiheenure~net of any such lottery are plld into W...,._ A fund of the
Slate ....U. TREASU Y THAT SHALL CONSIST

SOLELY OF SUCH PROCEEDS AND SHALL BE
USED SOLELY FOR THE SUPPORT OF ELEMENTARY, SECONDARY , VOCATIONAL , AND
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROORAMS AS DETER·
MINED BY THE YJlNERAL A$SEMBLY .
THE General Assembly may authorize and refll&amp;te
the operation of bUIJO to be t:onducted by chanll.ble
orsanuations for charitable purpoaes.
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
If adopted by a majority of electors votma on this
arnendmen1, the amendment lhall take effec;t January
1, 1988, and exi11lng Sec1l011 6 of Article XV of llle

Consurution of Ohio shall be repeak:d from such
fec11ve dale

ISSUE 2
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Amended Substitute Senate Jomt Resolubon No 1)

ef~

JTopos\ng tO amend Article Vill of the Cons1Jtut10n
of the State of Ohio by add1ng thereto Section 2k to
authoru.e laws for the issuance of general obhgation5
of the State of Ohio to finance local government public
infrutnletv.re ct~pital 1mprovementa, and to provide
tenns and condn:ions for those obligations
&amp; 11 resolved by the General Assembly of the State
of Oh1o, three· fifths of the memben elected to each
house eoncurri.na: lhcrein, lha.t there sh.all be submitted
to the electon of the state 1n the manner pracnbod by
law at a special elcc:tion to be held an the first Thcsday
after the 6nt Monday in November, 1987, a proposal
ttf amend Article VID or the Conilitution of Ohio by
.&amp;ling 1mmed1ately followm1 Section 2j a new section
as follows:

•

Section 2k &lt;!!J IN ADDITION TO THE
AUTHORIZATION OTHERWISE CONTAINED IN
ARTICLE VW OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION ,
THE GENERAL ASSI!"'BLY MAY PROVIDE BY
LAW, IN ACCORDANCE WITit BlTT SUBJECT TO
THE UMITATIONS OF THIS SECilON. FOil, THE
ISSUANCE OF BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS OF THE STATE FOR THE PURPOSE OF
FINANCING OR ASSISTING IN.THE FINANCING
OF THE COST OF PUBLIC INfRASTRUCTURE
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS OF MUNICIPAL
CORPORATIONS, COUNTIES. TOWNSHIPS, AND
OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES AS
DESIONATED BY LAW AS USED IN THIS SECTION, PUBLIC INFRASTRliCTIIRE CAPITAL JM.
PROVEMENTS SHALL BE LIMITED TO ROADS
AND BRIDGES, WASTE WATER TREATMENT

3

1

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
To adopt a new Section 7 and amend Sections 6 and 13 of Anicle IV
of the Constitution of the State of Ohio.

PRESENT OIDO LAW PROVIDES FOR TilE DIRECT ELECTION OF TilE
JUSTICES OF THE SUPREME COURT AND JUDGES OF TilE COURTS
OF APPEALS.

nos PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:
I. CHANGE TilE WAY OIDO SELECTS ITS SUPREME COURT AND
APPEALS COURT JUDGES BY ABOLISHING THE DIJ{ECT ELECTION METHOD.

l. CREATE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSIONS 'IHAT WOULD
NOMINATE THREE PERSONS FOR EACH VACANCY ON TilE OIDO
SUPREME COURT OR COURTS OF APPEALS. THE ,COMMISSIONS
WOULD BE MADE UP HALF OF LAWYERS AND HALF OF NONLAWYERS. OF '1,11ESE, NO MORE THAN HALF COULD HAVE THE
SAME POUTICAL AFFnJATION. A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COM·
MISSION SHALL NOMINATE THE PERSONS WHO IN THE JUDG-

~~ P~oWss~8~J~~MrJAWor~~IGf:t~MF~~~

AVAILABLE. THE GOVERNOR MUST APPOINT ONE OF THE
THREE NOMINEES.

3. REQUIRE PERSONS APPOINTED AS JUDGES TO RUN WITHOUT
AN OPPONENT IN A GENERAL ELECTION FOR RETENTION IN
OFF1CE IN TWO TO FOUR YEARS. A 55 PERCENT "YES" VOTE
WOULD BE REQUIRED FOR RETENTION FOR A FULL SIX-YEAR
TERM; LESS THAN 55 PERCENT WOULD CREATE A VACANCY
IN TilE omcE.

4. ALWW JUDGES WHO ARE PRESENTLY SERVING EITHER BY
ELECTION OR APPOINTMENT TO RUN IN THE GENERAL ELEC·
TION WHEN ~Ill CURRENT TERM EXPIRES.

5. ALWW A MAJORITY VOTE OF THE ELECTORS OF ANY COURT
DISTRICT TO APPLY TIDS PROCEDURE TO THEIIl TRIAL
COURTS.

r.fAI)E BY LAW FOR
, PRACfiCABLE OF
LS, ~ERVICES, AND
, OF ANY PROJECT
R tl'i P&lt;\RT, UNDER

6. REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO.ENACT LAWS TO IM·
PLEMENT THIS AMENDMENT NO LATER TitAN 180 DAYS AFTER
ITS EFFECTIVE DATE.

(Proposed by Imuative PetitiOn)

(,9 THE STATE MAY F RTIOi:IPATE IN ANY
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCl Rl! . I:APIT AL IMPROVEMENT UNDER ' S S~CTION WITH
MUNICIPAL CORPORA IONS; COUNTIES. ~
TOWNSHIPS OROTHER VEllNI&gt;IENTALEN·
TITlES, OR 'ANY '6NE
MOI\E OF THEM
SUCH PARTICIPATION . y, l!)i BY GRANTS ,
LOANS . OR CONTRml! NS·•TO THEM FOR
ANY OF SUCH CAPITAC' H,DVEMBNTS THE
ENTIRE PROCEEDS'OP • IIQNP&amp; SHALL BE
USED FOR THE PUBCI ,INFRASTRUCTURE
CAPITAL IMPROVEME ~ -Qf MUNICIPAL
CORPORATIONS, CO
, TO\'{NSHIPS, AND
OTHER GOVERNK!Il~ A f.!fi'IifiES, EXCEPT
TO THE EXTENT' Tit T, .YHE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY PROVIDES
lAY.' THAT THE
STATE MAY BE Rll'ASON LY CQ.MPENSATED
FROM SUCH MONEYS
fl~.O.NN1NG, FINANCIAL MANAOEMENT, t:lR ' ,OTHER AD ·
MINISTRA TIVE SERVI
PERFORMED IN
RELATION TO THE'- liON JSS~ANCE.

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.
'

YES

SHALL THE ·PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO
ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Special interest money and politics
are creating a crisis in our courts.

Vote Yes on
Issue 3 tO
Improve Ohio's
Judicial Syste.n

(!?) (l ) EACH • ISSUE Of .QBLIGATIONS
ISSUED UNDER THIS S . N SKALL MATURE
IN NOT MOI\E THAN '
T¥ YEARS FROM
THE DATE OF ISSUANC, OR·, IF ISSUED TO
RETIRE OR REPUNIJ · H£'R, OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED UNDER THIS SE J9tJ\ :w'fTHIN THIR·
TY YEARS FROM 'TilE 'D if£. THE DEBT WAS
ORIGINALLY CONTRAI&gt;~- IF OBLIGATIONS
ARE ISSUED AS NOTES *ANTICIPATION OF
THE ISSUANCE OF BOND! :PRPV IS!ON SHALL
BE MADE BY LAW FaR THE EST.ABLISHMENT
AND MAINTENANCE. DUf1NG1'HE PERIOD IN
WHICH THE NOTES ARE ~UTST ANDING, OF A
SPECIAL FUND OR FUI'iD INtO WHICH SHALL
BE PAID FROM THE SO RCES . .. UTHORIZED
FOR THE PAYMEN'R Of iSUCH BONDS, THE
AMOUNT THAT WOULD 111\YE BEEN SUFFICIENT, IF BONDS . MATURING . DURING A'
PERIOD OF THIR'IY'YEAIIS HAD BEEN ISSUED
WITHOUT SUCH PRIOR ISSUANCE OF NOTES .
TO PAY THE PRINCIPA L TH:Af. WOULD HA VI!
BEEN PAYABLE ON • S~CH BONDS DURING
SUCH PERIOD. SUCH FUND OR. FUNDS SHALL
BE USED SOLELY FOR THEfAYMENT OF PRIN·
CIPAL OF SUCH NOTES OR PP BONDS IN ANTICIPATION OF WHICH SuCH NOTES HAVE
B,EEN ISSUED.
(2) THE OBUGAliONS ISSUED UNDER THIS
StiCTION ARE GENERAL 08WGA1:10NS OF THE
STATE. THE FUlL FAITH AIND CREDJT,
REVENUE, AND TAXI~O POWER OF THE
STATE SHALL BE PLEOOf.O 'I'P THE PAYMENT
OF THE PRINCIPAL ' 0F AND -INTEREST ON
SUCH OBLIGATIONS :O.S1HEY,BECOME DUE,
HEREINAFTER CALLEIJ,OEBT&gt;SERVICE , AND
BOND RETIREMEifl' A:IN P¥RQVISIONS SHALL
BE MADE FOR PAYM ENf flti•Df,BT SERVICE.
PROVISION SHALL DE M,lOE BY• I./\W FOR THE
SUFFICIENCY AND 'APPJIOPRIATION, FOR PUR·
POSES OF PAYING DEBT SERV!Ct!, OF EXCISES,
' TAXES, AND REVENUES SO P ~EDGED TO DEBT
SERVICE, AND FO~ · ctlV.ENMITS TO CONTINUE THE LEVY,' CO'LECTtON , AND AP·
PLICATION OF SUFPICif NT EXCISES, TAXES ,
AND REVENUES TO THE f XTENT NEEDED FOR
SUCH PURPOSE. NOT~1THSTAN DtNG JECTION 22 of ARTICLE n, OHIO CONSTITUTION ,
NO FURTHER ACT OFArPRQPPJA:rtON SHALL
BE NECESSARY 'FOR THAT PURI'OSE THE
OBLIGATIONS ANDTHE'fRQ'IISION FOR THE
PAYMBNT OF DEBT SERV\CE AND THE REPAY·
MENT OF ANY LOA NS HEREUNDER BY
GOVERNMENT AL·ENTITIES ARE NaT SUBJECf
TO -SECfiONS 5 6 AN D I I OF -ARTICLE XU.
OHIO £0NSTITUTION

..

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT IS UNNECESSARY, INSIGNIFICANT
AND MISLEADING . FOR THESE REASONS, WE URGE ITS DEFEAT.
Comminee Agamst the Amendment:

(2) PROVISION SHALL.t!
THE USE TO THE EXTE
OHIO PRODUCTS, MA
LABOR IN THE MAKIN
FINANCED, IN WHOtE
THIS SECTION

The bonds and other obligations would mature not later than thirty years from the

ARGUMENT FOR TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

.·.

(!!) (I) NOT MORE T
• O~E HUNDRED
TWENTY MILLION 110 ·L•RS. . PRINCIPAL
AMOUNT OF 'BOND&amp;' A i)THER OBLIGATIONS AlTTHQRIZED \J ER THIS SECTION
MAY BE ISSUED IN ANY CALE!'lDAR YEAR,
PROVIDED THAT' THE
!~£PATE TOTAL
PRINCIPAL AMOUNT t'IP Ql'iQS AND OTHER
OBLIGATIONS AlTTHO ED,. AND ISSUED
UNDER THIS SECTION•'-1A , NOT EXCEED ONE
BILLION TWO HUNDRilD ~LtllN DOLLARS
FURTHER LIMITATIONS Y Jjl; PROVIDED BY
LAW UPON THE AMGU !olF.OONDS THAT
MAY BE ISSUED UNDER s ~ECTION IN ANY
YEAR IN ORDER ' THAT THE TOTAL DEBT
CHARGES OF THE STA'l'E t!ALL NOT EXCEED
A PROPORTION OF GBN
IU':VENUE FUND
EXPENDITURES THAl'
Ul,D ADVERSELY
AFFECT THE CREDI'r RA NQ OF ,THE STATE
IF OBLIGATIONS ARE I U!ip UNDER THIS
SECTION TO RETIRE 0 SEFWND OBLIGATIONS PREVIOUSLY ISS
U.NQER THIS SEC·
TIQN, THE NEW Olll.IGA ONS SHALL NOT BE
COUNTED AGAINST T
CALENDAR YEAR
OR TOTAL ISSUANCE '1.1 ATI@NS TO THE
EXTENT THAT THEIR
q~;,L AMOUNT
DOES NOT EXCEEt:iTiiE NOIPAL AMOUNT
OF THE OBLIGATIONS , BE . RETIRED OR
REFUNDED.

order to protect the State's credit ratin£. ·

3.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

IT IS HEREBY DE'I'ERMJNED , THAT SUCH
PUBLIC tNFRASTRUCTUf.E • CAPITAL IM ·
PROVEMENTS ARE NECESS~~X TO, PRESERVE
AND EXPAND THE ' ptJI!;IC CAPITAL IN·
FRASTRUCTUliE OF SUCH MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS, COUN'ri'Es . WWNSHIPS , AND
OTHER GOVERNMENT ~l ~NTmES, ENSURE
THE PUBLIC HMLTH; SAFaT Y, AND
WELFARE, CREATE· AND P~ERVE lOBS,
ENHANCE . EMPLOYM ENT· QPPORTUNITIES,
AND IMPROVE THE ECONOMIC WELFARE OF
THE PEOPLE OF THIS ST.I.TE ,.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. 2 (as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

If adopted, thts amendment would take effect January I , 1988.

Comrmttee For the Amendment:

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

SYSTEMS, WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS. SOLID
WASTE DISPOSAL FACILI!If.'l · .AND STORM
WATER AND SANIT ~RV &lt;;O~LECTION.
STORAGE, AND TREATMEIIf AAGILmES, INCLUDING REAL ~ROPER'I'Y ,• INTERESTS 'IN
REAL PROPERTY, FAClli!IEi· ·AND EQUIP·
MENT RELATED OR tNCIOENf.U. THERETO
CAPITAL IMPROVEM!NTS s)ff\LL INCLUDE
WITHOlTT UMlTA'FlO!'/ THE 0JST OF ACQtnSITION, CONSTRUC'I'ION , RECONSTRl1C110N,
HXPANSION, IMPROVEMENT, PlANNING. AND
I!QtnPPING.

Endorsed by:
League of Women Voters • Oh1o PTA
Ohio State Bar Association
Farm Bureau • Ohio Chamber of Commerce
INCREASE YOUR VOICE AND RIG liT TO VOTE IN THE JUDICIAL PROCESS.
Over the last twenty years over 40% or almost half of all Supreme Coun and Courts of,
A'ppeals candidates had no opponent in the November election -they had a "free ride ."
Oh1o voters were effectively barred from a choice in these races.
Issue 3 lets~ not political bosses, choose our JUdges . Every Supreme Court and Couns
of Appeals JUdge would be reqmrelj to face the voters under a sttffer reqmrement - each
candidate would have to receive 55% of the vote to remain in office.
ELIMINATE THE POLmCAL "NAME GAME."
Consider Ohio's bizarre fascination with cenain names. In 1978, three of the judges serv·
ing on the Supreme Court were named Brown. The political bos~, when choosing judicial
cand1dates, consider someone's name as a critical criteria. -,

Issue 3 shifts greater attention onto the candidates' judicial record and reduces the need
for special interest money . ~

•
Committee For the Amendment : D1ana Winterhalter, William W. Milligan,
Jack R. Alton

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Present Oh1o law provides for the direct election of judges to all courts in our state If
State Issue 3 is adopted, direct election of th~ Ohio Supreme Court and Appetlate Court
JUdges would be aboliShed.
The issue would:
I.

Take away your constitutional right to vote for judges on the Ohio Supreme Coun
and Appellate Courts . Never agam would voters have the ability to cast their ballot
to choose between two or more candidates for any Appellate Court poSition.

2.

Trade the ability to vote for jud1cial candidates for a system where every appellate
level coun judge. including the Supreme Coun, would be appomted by a comm1s·
sian made up of one·halflawyers and one·half non-lawyers . There would be no public
accountabiltty by the commission to the voters .

@THIS SECTION SIULLQTHERWISE BE IMPLEMENTED IN THE ~AN~ER· "NO TO THE
EXTENT PROVIDED BY LAW•B\' THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY.

If adopted by a m&amp;Jont)' ofthe'elecKir.s voting on this 1
amendment, the Wncndment~hall take inunediate effed.

16(A) EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN
ARTICLE·

17 OF THIS

(1) The ch1ef jusace and the justices of the supreme
coon shall be elocted by the do;tor&amp; of the state at large,
for terms of not less than SIX yean.
(2) The Judges of lhe courts of appe.tii 5haU be etec&gt;&lt;d
by the electors of che1r respective appellate distncts,
fo r terms of not less than SIX years

(3) The Judges of the courts of common pleas and
the div1s1ons thereof shall be elocted by the electors or
the counties, districtS, or, as may be prov1ded by law,
Olher subcbvisiMs, in which their respective courts are
located , for tenns of oot less th$11 :ilx yevs. Wld tach
judge of a court of common pleas or diVISIOn thereof
shall res1dc dunng h1s term of offiCe m the county,
di stnct. or subd1v1sion m wh1ch h1s ooun IS located

(H) THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL BY
LAW PROVIDE FOR THE PAYMENT OF THE EX·
PENSES INCUR RED BY COM MISSION
MEMBERS IN THE PERFORMANCE OF THEIR
DUTIES, AND PROVIDE FOR THE PAYMENT OF
THE EXPENSES OF THE COMMISSIONS IN·
CLUDINO STAFF ASSISTANCE. A MEMBER OF
A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION IS NOT
ELIGffiLE TO RECEIVE COMPENSATION FOR
SERVICE ON THE COMMISSION THE SUPREME
COURT JUDICIAL NO MINATING COMMISSION
SHALL PRESCRIBE THE PROCEDURES OF ALL
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSIONS

(C) No person shall be elected or appomted to any
judic1al office if on or before the day when he shall
assume the office and enter upon the di$Charge or &amp;ts
duties. he shall have attained the age of seventy years
Any voluntarily retired judge , or any judge who IS
retired under'lhis section, may be assigned w1th his con·
sent, by the ch1ef JU&amp;lice or acting chief justice of the
supreme coun to acuve duty as a JUdge and while so
scrvmg 1hall rece1ve the established compensation for
such office, computed upon a per diem basis, in addiLIDn to any reurement benefits to which he may be en~
nded. laws may be passed prov1ding retmment benefits
for JUdges.

§7 (A) THE GOVERNOR SHALL FILL A
VACANCY IN THE OFFICE OF CHIEF JUSTICE
OR IUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT, OR
IUDGE OF A COURT OF STATEWIDE JURISDICTION , COURT OF APPEALS , OR OF ANY OTHER
COURT TO WHICH THIS SECilON IS MADE APPLICABLE FROM A LIST OF NOMINEES SUBMITI'ED BY THE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION FOR THE COURT ON WHICH THE
VACANCY EXISTS IF THE GOVERNOR FAILS
TO APPOINT FROM THE LIST WITHIN 60 DAYS
OF THE DAY THE LIST IS SUBMIITED, THE
SUPREME COURT IUDICIAL NOMINATING
COMMISSION SHALL MAKE THE APPOINT·
MENT FROM THE LIST
(8) THERE IS HEREBY CREATED!\ SUPREME
COURT IUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
WHICH SHALL NOMINATE THREE PERSONS TO
FILL A VACANCY ON THE SUPREME COURT
OR ON A COURT OF STATEWIDE JURISDIC·
TION . THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION IS COMPOSED OF
ONE NON-LAWYER AND ONE LAWYER
ELECTED BY EACH DISTRICT JUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION FROM AMONG ITS
MEMBERS THE MEMBERS ELECTED FROM
EACH DISTRICT CANNOT HAVE THE SAME
POLmCAL AFFILIATION

(C) THERE IS HEREBY &lt;:REATED A DISTRICT
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION IN EACH
APPELLATE DISTRICT WHICH SHALL
NOMINATE THREE PERSONS TO FILL A
VACANCY ON THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR
THAT DISTRICT.

(D) THE IUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMIS·
SION FOR ANY OTHER COURT TO WHICH THIS
SECTION IS APPLICABLE ~HALL NOMINATE
AT LEAST TWO BUT NOT MORE THAN THREE
PERSONS TO FILL A VACANCY ON THE
COURT. IF AN APPELLATE DISTRICT CONSISTS
OF ONLY ONE COUNTY, THE DISTRICT
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION IS ALSO
THE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
FOR THAT COUNTY

(F) THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY BY LAW
SHALL ESTABLISH AND FIX THE SIZE OF THE
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION FOR
EACH TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION IN WHICH
THIS SEC110N tS APPLICABLE TO A COURT AT
A NUMBER OF EIGHT, TWELVE, OR SIXTEEN.
THE GOVERNOR W1Tit THE ADVICE AND CON
SENT OF THE SENATE SHALL APPOINT THE
NON-LAWYER MEMBERS OF EACH JUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION . A MIUORITY OF
THE MEMBERS OF THE COURT OF APPEALS OF
A DISTRICT SHALL APPOINT THE LAWYER
MEMBERS OF THE DISTRICT IUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION AND OF EACH
OTHER IUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISS IO N
IN THE DISTRICT
(0)(1) HALF OF THE MEMBERS OF EACH
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION MUST
BE ELECTORS OF OHIO NOT ADMITTED TO
THE PRACTICE OF LAW IN THIS STATE, AND
HALF MUST BE ELECTORS OF OHIO ADMIT·
TED TO THE PRACTICE OF LAW IN THIS
STATE. NO MORE THAN HALF OF THE
MEMBERS OF A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COM·
MISSION SELECTED BY EACH APPOINTING
AUTHORITY CAN ItA VE THE SAME POLI11CAL
AFFILIATION. A MEMBER OF A IUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION FOR A TER·
RITORIAI. JURISDICTION MUST BE A RESIDENT
OF THAT TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION .

Make it extremely difficult to remove a Slttmg judge by inslitutmg " retenuon Flee·
(2) A PERSON WHO HOLDS AN ELECTIVE
tions " m which a judge faces no opposition on the ballot as the only means for • PUBUC
OFFICE. PUBLIC OFFICE APPOINTED
removal , Even Even if a "retention election" removed a judge unacceptable to the
BV THE GOVERNOR, OR OFFICE IN A
voters. the judge woul~ be replaced by the commission, not the voters.
POLITICAL PARTY IS NOT ELIGffiLE TO SERVE

6

Lock in all present judges to the court o'n which !hey sit, subjecting them only to
"retention election" at the conclusion of theif present term in office.

State Issue 3 1s not in the best interests of the voters 01 Ohio. To retain the constitu!ional
right to ~oJe for judicial candidates, voters should vote "No" on State Issue 3.
Committee Against the Amendment: Stephanie Tubbs Jones, Dav1d Lauridsen,
Deborah Pryce. William Seit&gt;., Joel Teaford

Miami rips
Cincinnati
Bearcats

(3) A IUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
ACTS ONLY WITH THE CONCURRENCE-OF A
MIUORITY OF ITS FULL MEMBERSHIP

(B) The JUdges of the supreme cou n , coons or appeal.s, courts of common pleas, and d1m.ons thereof,
IU1d of all t:aurts of record established by law, shaH,
at staled tunC$ , rece1ve, (or lhelf serv1ces such com·
pen$Bl10n as may be prov1ded by Jaw , wh1ch shall not
be dmunishcd during tbeu term of office The com·
pensauon of all judges of the supreme coun, excep that
of the ch1ef JUsbce, shall be the same. The compensa·
tlon of all JUdges of the courts of appeals shaJI be the
same. Common pleas JUdges and /udges of divis1ons
thereof, and judges of all courts o record established
by law shall teee1ve such compensauon as may be proVIded by law Judges Will receive no fees or perqwsites,
nor hold any ather office of profit or trust, under the
authoriry of this state, or of the Uruted StateS All votes
for any judge, far any elective office. exce~t a judicial
office, under lhc authonty of dus state, g1ven by lhe
jeneral assembly, or the people stwt, be vo1d

4.

s.

(I) THE FIRST GENERAL ELECTION IN AN
EVEN NUMBERED YEAR HELD MORE THAN
TWO YEARS AFTER THE APPOINTMENT IF, AT
THE TIME THIS SECilON IS MADE APPLICABLE
TO THE COURT ON WHICH THE CHIEF
JUSTIC E, JUSTICE OR JUDGE SERVES,
MEMBERS OFTHATCOURT ARE ELECTED AT
GENERAL ELECTIONS HELD IN EVEN
NUMBERED YEARS; OR

APPOINTED TO A JUDICIAL NOMINA TJNG
COMMISSION TO FILL A VACANCY OCCUR·
RING FOR A REASON OTHER THAN THE EX·
PIRATION OF.\ TERM SERVES FOR THERE·
MAINDER 0~ THE TERM OF THE
PREDECESSOR. A MEMBER OF A DISTRICT
JUDICIAL NOM INATll'/G COMMISSION
ELECTED TO THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL
NOM INATING COMMISSION SERVES ON THE
SUPREME COURT 'JUDICIAL NOMINATING
COMMISSION FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE
MEMBER'S TERM ON THE DISTRICT IUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION

(4) Terms of office of all JUdge&amp; shall begm on the
days fiAcd by law, and laws shall be enacted to prescnbe
the limes and mode of the1r electiOn.

Not prov1de any system of review or confirmation for an appomted JUdge by any
legislative body thereby restricting the voter's pan1cipation.

8

EFFECTJYE QATE _

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO THAT A NEW SECTION 7 OF
ARTICLE IV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE
CREA TE,D AriD SECTIONS 6 AND t 3 OF ART I·
CLE IV OF THE OHIO CONSITUTION BE
AMENDED TO PROVIDE A MERIT PLAN FOR
THE SELECTION AND RETENTtON·ELECfiON
OF JUSTICES AND JUDGES TO READ AS
FOLLOWS.

3.

Provide no guarantee ofreducing 'the cost of judicial campargns. In fact, the most
expensive coun race in our country's history was in a "retention election " in another
state.

(I) A CHtEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE OR JUDGE APPOINTED UNDER THIS SECI10N SERV ES FROM
THE DATE OF APPOINTMENT UNTIL THE
FEBRUARY FIFTEENTH FOLLOWING THE
ELECTION AT WHICH THE CHIEF IUSTICE.
IUSTICE ORIUDGE MUST STAND FOR RETEN·
TION IN OFFICE IN ACCORDANCE WITH SEC·
TION J(l) TO SERVE A FULL ELECTIVE TERM
THE ELECTION AT WHICH A CHIEF JUSTICE,
JUSTICE OR IUDGE MUST STAND FOR RETENTION IN OFFICE IS

Meigs' Cross Country Boy's
team wa s runne r up tot he Belpre
thlnclads In the TVC meet held
this pas t week at Alexander with
Federal Hocking, Alexander and
Trimble finishing In that order
behind them.
Marauders Rod Brewer and
Chris Stewart finished in third
and fourth place and, since they
were in the top live finishers,
earned a spot on the All TVC
squad . Trimble's Chris Burdette
captured first place in the run.
Also scoring for Meigs were
Hank Cleland in 15th place; Keith
Mattox who was 17th and Cary
Betzlng who finished 19th.
In the girl's division, Marauderette Seniors Dee Henderson
and Wend! Klees won a berth on
t he All TVC unit. Henderson
placed second In the event and
Kloe finished fifth, making the
fou rth consecutive year that she
has won All TVC honors. Amy
Worth took sevent h place and
was named to the second team.
Julie Lewis , of Alexander, was
top runner in the girl's event.
Derek Cremeans was first,
Shane P hillips third, Chase Cleland fifth and Stacey Shank
finished seventh in the boy's
Junior Var&amp;lty race.

.... · ~·

REDUCE THE NEED FOR VAST SUMS OF SPECIAL INTEREST MONEY.
(E) A JUDICIAL NO\IlNATlNG COMMISSION
There is nothing so corruptmg and destructive to a system ofjust1ce as money The average . SHALL NOMINATE THE PERSONS WHO IN THE
cost of Supreme Coun races increased 750% from 1976 to 1984. Last year almost JUDGEMENT OF THE COMMISSION HAVE THE
HIGHEST PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL
$3,000,000 W":' spent to elect a ch1ef justice
QUALIFICATIONS AMONG THOSE AV1\II.A.BLE

(3)

(4) THE OBLIGATION! ISSUED UNDER
AUTHORITY OF THIS SECTtCJJ&lt;, TRANSFER
THEREOF, AND THE JNT!!REHAND OTHER IN COMB THEREFROM. INCLUDIN(l ANY PROFIT
MADE ON THE SALE Tf!Eil£01", SHALL AT ALL
TIMES.B&amp;FREE FROM l'AXATION .WrrHIN THE
STATE

.

'

Issue 3 eliminates the political •' name game '' smce candidates for the ·court would be screen·
ed and nominated on the basis of their personal and professional qualificattons by a bipanisan commission.

-

THE MONEYSREFEAAED,TO IN~ECTION
5a OF ARTICLE XII, OHIO£.0NS;rtTtmON, MAY
NOT BE PLEDGED TO fHE PI\YMENT OF DEBT
SERVICE ON OBLIGArlONS ISSUED UNDER
AUTHORITY OF THIS SECTION,

'·

ISSUE 3
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

ON A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION .
THE TERM OF A MEMBER OF A DISTRICT OR
COUN"&gt;Y IUDICIAL NOMINATINO COMMIS SION IS FOUR YEARS EXCEI'T THAT THE AP-•
POINTING AUTHORITY FOR A COMMISSION
SHAl.L FIX THE TERMS OF THE INITIAL
MEMBERS OF A COMMISSION SO THAT THE
TERMS OF AN !'QUAL NUMBER OF MEMBERS
EXPIRE EACH Y1W1 A MEMBER IS NOT ELIGIBLE TO SERVE SUCCESSIVE PULL TERMS ON
THE SAME IUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION, OR BE ELIGffiLE FOR APPOINTMENT TO
A JUDICIAL OFF)CE WHll.E A MEMBER OR FOR
A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS FOLLOWING THE
END OF THE MEMBER'S SERVICE. A PERSON

TilE FIRST GENERAL ELECTION IN AN
ODD NUMBERED YEAR HELD MORE THAN
TWO YEARS AFTER THE APPOINTMENT IF, AT
THE TIME THIS SECTION tS MADE APPLICABLE
TO THE COURT ON WHICH THE JUDGE
SERVES, MEMBERS OF THAT COURT ARE
ELECTED AT GENERAL ELECTIONS HELD IN
ODD NUMBERED YEARS
(2)

(1)(1) A CHIEF JUSTICE, IUSTICE OR JUDGE
OF A COURT TO WHICH THIS SECTION IS AP·
PLICABLE IS ELIGffiLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL
TERM BY FILING WITH THE SECRETARY OF
STATE A DECLARATION OF CANDIDACY FOR
AN ADDITIONAL TERM NOT LESS THAN
SEVENTY-FIVE DAYS PRIOR TO THE GENERAL
ELECI10N NEXT PRECEDING THE EXPIP.ATION
OF THE CURRENT TERM OF OFFICE. IF THE
CHIEF JUSTICE, IUSTICE OR JUDGE TIMELY
FILES THE DECLARATION , THE NAME OF THE
CHIEF IUSTICE. JUSTICE OR JUDGE IS SUBMIT·
TED WITHOUT PARTY DESIGNATION TO THE
ELECTORS OF THE TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE COURT ON A SEPARATE
JUDICIAL BALLOT TO READ SUBST ANTIALLV
AS FOLLOWS.

SHALL CHIEF JUSTICE (OR JUSTICE OR JUDGE)
(N AME OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE, OR IUDGE)
OFTHE----~'-=~~~~~~---­

(NA ME OF THE COURT)
BE RETAINED IN OFFICE FOR THE TERM PRO·
VIDEO BY L o\W?

YES--- - - - -

NO _ _ _ __

(2) IF FIFTY -FIVE PER CENT OR MORE OF
THE ELECTORS VOTING ON THE QUESTION
VOTE "YES," THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE OR
JUDGE IS RETAINED IN THE OFFICE FOR THE
NEXT FULL TERM COMMENCING THE DAY
AFTER THE CURRENT TERM EXPIRES IF NO
DECLARATION OF CANDIDACY IS TIMELY FILED OR IF LESS THAN FIFTY-FIVE PER CENT OF
THE ELECTORS VOTING ON THE QUESTION
VOTE "YES," A VACANCY IN THE OFFICE IS
CREATED UPON EXPIRATION OF THE TERM

{3) SUBDIVISIONS (J)(I) AND (2) OF TillS SEC·
TION ARE APPLICABLE TO A CHIEF JUSTICE,
JUSTICE OR JUDGE SERVING EITHER BY ELECTION OR APPOINTMENT ON A COURT WHEN
THIS SECTION IS MADE APPLICABLE TO THE
COURT THE GENERAL ELECTION AT WHICH
THE CHIEF IUSTICE,IUSTICE OR JUDGE MUST
RUN tS THE GENERAL ELECTION AT WHICH
THE SUCCESSOR WOULD HAVE BEEN
ELECTED HAD THIS SECTION NOT BEEN MADE
APPLICABLE TO THAT COURT.

(K) THIS SECTION IS APPLICABLE TO
IUDGESHIPS ON A COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
AND EACH DIVISION THEREOF OR ANY OTHER
COURT CREATED BY THE GENE RAL
ASSEMBLY BY LAW UPON THE AfFlRMATIVE
VOTE OF A MAJORITY OF THE ELECfORS, OF
THE TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE
COURT VOTING ON THE ISSUE TO APPLY THIS
SECTION TO THE COU RT. THE COMMISSION
FOR THE TERRITORIAL IURISDICITON OF THE
COURT SHALL MAKE NOMINATIONS FOR A
VACANCY ON THE COURT IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THIS SECTION . AN ELECTIO N MAY BE
HELD IN THE SAME MANNER TO DlSCON·
TINUE THE PRACTICE OF SELECTING SUCH
JUDGES UNDER THIS SECilON . THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY BYLAW SHALL FIX THE METHOD
OF SUBM ISSION OF EITHER QUESTION

§13 In case the office of judge shall become va&lt;:ant,
before the expmttiOO of the regular term for wh.ich he
was elected, the vacam:y shall be fi.lled by appo111tment
by the governor. until a successor is elected and has
quahfied. and suc h successor shall be ele(:t~ for the
unellpired tenn . at the first general electiOn for the of·
fice wh1ch is vacant that occurs more than forty days
after lhe vacancy shall hu.ve occurred, prov1ded,
however, that when the unexpired t.erm ends Within one
year munedlately following the date of such general
electiOn , an election to fill such unex.pned term shall
not be held and lhe appomtment shall be for such unet·
pired 1enn. THIS SECTION DOES NOT APPLY TO
A VACANCY TO WIIICH SECTION 7 OF THIS ARTICLE IS APPLICABLE.

SCHEDULE
The gene ral assembly shl\ll enact laws to 1mplemem
th1s amendment no later than 180 days af\er lt.'i effectiVe date The governor and each dimict cou n of ap-peals shalt appoi nt the members of the judk1al
norrunating comm1SS1ons no later lhan ISO days after
1he enactment of legi!it. lation Implementing th1s
amendment
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OHIO
I, Shenud Brown, Sccn:tary of State, do hereby certify that the foregomg is a true copy of House Jmnt
Resalul&amp;on No . 9, Amended Substitute Senate Jomt
ResolutiOn No. I. and the full text of a constitutional
IUT'ICndmenl proposed by lrut&amp;aUve petition filed m the
Office of the Secretary of State pUrsuant to Atticlc ll
Sect1on Ia of the Constitution of the Slate of Oh.io,
cogether wtth the ballot language and explanations certified to me by the Ohio Ballot 8oird and arguments
llubnuned to me by the propoll(nts and opponents of
the jUUes, as prescnbed by law
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF , I have hereunto
subscnbed my name and atfuted my official seal at Col·
umbus, Oh10 ttus 4th day of September, 1987
Sherrod Brown
Secretary of Stale

CINCINNATI (UP! ) -Fresh·
man Leonard Conley sco red two
touchdowns and Greg Cox added
a pair of fi eld goals Saturday
night in leading third-ranked
Miami (Fla.) to a 48·10 thrashing
of Cinclnn ali.
The Hurricanes, collecting a ·
school-record 33 first downs,
remain unbeaten after five
games.
The Bearcats, playing in cold
and ra iny weather at Riverfront
Stadium, fell to 2-5.
Miami's Melvin Bratton was
first to score, on a three-yard
touchdown ru n In the opening
quarter, but the Cats took a 10-7
lead on Danny McCoin's six-yard
TD pass to Roosevelt Makes later
in the same 1rame and Phil
Insalaco's field goal from 31
yards in the second period.
' From that point on, though, it
was all Mi a mi, Warren Williams
putting the Hurricanes back on
top, 14-10, on a three-yard touch·
dow n run and Cox giving the
winners a 17-10 halftime lead
with a field goal from 40 yards.
Steve Walsh threw touchdown
passes of 13 yards to Brian
Blades and seven yards to
Charles Henry in the third
quarter before Cor! ley put Miami
ahead 38·10 on .14 two-yard TD
run.
Cox, a 6-foot-5 202-pound senior
!rom Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
kicked a 30-yard field goal in the
final frame, and Conley, a 5-9
170-pound running back from
Holiday, Fla., closed out the
scoring with a touchdown run of
37 yards.
Conley, Bratton and Wlllliams
each rushed for more than 100
yards.

Indian Hills cops
Class A-AA crown
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The Class A·AA state high school
tennis singles tit le appears to
have found Its resting place Ctncinnati Indian Hills.
The title has gone to that school
for the last four years, and the
last three it has gone to Andrea
Farley . T he 1984 title went to
Tracy Barton, who tried her best
to wrest the crown away from
Farley Saturday, only lo fall6-1,
6-1 in the tiel march .
,_,._

_,.

~

SV AC standings
ALL G1\MES
TEAM
W L P OP
Oak Hill ..... ..... 8 0 261 76
Hannan Trace .... 6 3 203 113
Eastern .......... A-4 93 126
Symmes Valley .. 4 4 13&amp; 114
Kyger Creek .. ... 4 5 81 147
North Gallia ........ 3 5 117 200
Southwestern .. ... 2 6 78 115
Southern ............ 1 7 101 233
S\ 'A{' ONLY
P OP
TEAM
W I.
220
61
Oak Hill ... . ... 6 0
r:.s
91
Hannan Trace . ~ 2
8!l
92
Symmes Vo ll~)' . 3 3
111
15:l
North Ga llla .. . 3 3
Easter n . .. • .. 3 3 61' 72
61 105 .
Kyge r Creek ..... . 3 3
58 80
Southwestern ..... 2 4
81 182
Southern ., ........ 0 6
TOTALS
24 24 836 836
Ocl. 23 results:
Kyger Creek 14 E astern 13 (ot)
Oak Hill 52 North Gallla 15
Hannan Trace 56 Southern 12
Symmes Valley l4 Southwestern
0

Oct. 30 games:
Jo;yger Creek a t North Gallla
Southwestern a t Oak Hill
Symmes Valley Hannan Trace
Eastern at Southern

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Monday, October 26.~7
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By The Bend

Page- S

TO PLAU AN AD CAll 992 21 J6

New Civitan ·--officers elected

Jimmy Carter builds a simple life
prevallmg hke N1xon, or frivolous
hke Ford, be instead hods digmty m
being himself He came to this town in
a pla1d sh1rt and b1b overalls; it's rumored that Nixon goes to bed in hiS
he.
Carter toured the Sudan last year
to brmg attention to the drought and
starvahon 1n equa!orial Afr1ca He
was m his sh1rt-sleeves tben as well
He told one aud1ence that he was not
there as a former president, but, in·
stead, "I'm a farmer,• and he made it
clear that 1t JS Just as 1mportant.
It's furthermore less restrictive
Carter bas been free to make mistakes. He has wntten a couple of forgettable books; he bas !ned to negotiate
soc1al
enlightenment
m
NICaragua and fa1led, and be bas responded to the poh!Jcal rummahons
of Jerry Falwell by telling the evangelist be can "go to bell."
Carter bas also advanced a plan to
turn his hometown mto a nallonal hiStoric Site He tfierefore wants the gov-

JIMMY CARTER, former U.S. presi·
dent, often does carpentry for charily
projects across tbe nation.
n1zed food rehef after World War II
Then there are R1chard Nixon and
Gerald Ford ttiey Jllq;;trate other
roads taken
N1xon bas devoted h1mseif to elder
statesmanship The only man to qu1t
the preSidency m diSgrace has wntten
a half dozen books on the flexuosJIJes
or mternatJOnal affairs , he has hkeWJSe advtsed h1s successors, but he

has never offered an explanation for
the concludmg events of his term.
As for Ford, grump. He has turned
h1s two-year preSidency mto hscal
gam He collects $10,000 for speakmg
engagements, he has been named to
the boards of a hall dozen corporatiOns, and he ts now satd to have accu-

mulated assets that are worth in excess of $6 m1lhon.
That leaves Carter as the other surVIVIng former preSident. People in
Charlotte say he 1s not trymg to be

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MliCfO

Officers were elected at the
newly organized Civltan Club at
Meigs High School.
They are Tract Bartels, president, Melanie Beegle, vice president; Tracie Richmond,
secrelary-trreasurer; Aimee
Rupe, sargeant ·at arms; Beth
Pierce, chaplain; Stephanie
Walker, advisor, Chrissy Rich- '
. mood, chairman; and Lori Frye
and Daisy Haggy, ways and
means committee. Sponsor of the
group is Debbie Musser, teacher,
with Yvonne Young, assistant.

Forty-five students have en·
rolled in the club which will be
serving as guides, hosts, and
ushers for special projects at the
school and in the community,
promoting safety programs ,
sponsoring blood mobile and
generally promoting good citi·
zenshp among students, faculty
and the community. The group
also assists as aides at special
olympic events.
Other member are Sonja
Steele, Tosha ,Landaker, Vanessa Young, Stacey Gibbs,

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TOPS meets

:8vans, president, Mrs Van
Meter. secretary, Farie Cole,
assistant secretary; Dorothy
Roach, treasurer.
Clay Tuttle has the opening
prayer with Mrs. Evans acting as
emcee for the evening The
dinner was prepared and served ,
by the Phiiathea Women Committees thanked by Mrs Evans
included Dorothy Roach, Thelma
Boyer, and Bud Wilson , tickets,
Mrs. Van Meter, Geneva Tuttle,
and Doris Carder, decorating,
and Flo Grueser, Clarice Erwin,
Willard Boyer and Mrs Evans,
program.
Gourds and pumpkins decorated the table which also lea-

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Betty Darst, Stacey Young, Amy
Brothers, Angie Black, Sean
Walton, Belinda Bailey, Rachel
Robinson, Shelly Black, Bobbie
Blessing, Chris Alkire, Lo1 I
Mundry, Jason Black, Chris
Bass. Susan Pulhns, Tricia J?a·
vis, VIcki Priddy, Sherr! Blair,
Melodl Carl, Traci Wright , Sheila
Hendricks , Kim Peck., Amy
Might, Angela F1elds, Pete
Br lckles, Mike Fetty, Jim
Grueser, Ada King, Ryan
Jeffers, Randy Arnold, Bill Gilkey, and Doreen Hadsell.

The Eastern H1gh School
Marchmg Band has q'ual1hed for
the OhwMusic Educatwn Assoc1
allan State Marchmg Finals 10 be
held at Oh1o StadiUm 10 Colum
bus on Nov 7.
Last Saturday, the Eastern
band qualified whtle compelmg
at the Fort Frye Pageant of
Bands held at t~e high school

stadium 10 Beverly Needt ng 225
pomts to qualify, m Class C (small
schools ), Easter n's "Green Ma
chme' · scored 239 7 - h 1gh·
enough to qual1fy m Class Band
to place them third in the entire
contes t, beatmg all Class A and
most Class B bands
in the Class C competitio n,
Eastern toppled previOusly un-

beaten ;sistefsville, W. Va , as
well as three other area sc hools
Field Commander Maraiyn Bar
ton also won the award as the
outstandmg field commander in
Class C
The unpected highlight of the
day was Easterns's ta king the
overall high marchmg categor
with a sco re of .82. This acomp

hshment usually goes to one of
the largeer schools and is virtually unheard of for Class C. This
1s the first 11me Eastern ha s won
an overall award
Saturday, Eastern traveled to
Meadowbrook and to Claymont
entering Class B competition for
the first time to sharpen up for
the s tale finals

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Community calendar
MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern At hletic Boosters will meet 10
special session Monda). 7:30
p m , to discuss the school levy
EAST MEIGS - Eastern AI
hletic Boosters w1ll meet Jn
special session Monday, 7·30
p m , to diScuss the school levy

ity, will meet at 7 30 Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Evelyn Knight
for a halloween party

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE -TheHarnsonvtlie Senior Cillzens Club
will meet at 7p.m Tuesday at the
town hall.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror-

Amateur gardeners have meeting
New officers were elected at a
recent meetmg of the Middleport
Amateur Gardeners held at the
home of Elizabeth Burkett
The new officers are Mrs.
Burkett, president , Marjone
Fetty vtce prestd ent; Elizabeth
Lohs~, secretary, and Emogene
. Crooks. treasurer
. Gladys Cummings conducted
the meeting wtlh a readmg,

"Wha t About Your Ltfe" being
given t;&gt;Y Jean Moore A letter
was read from Virgmla Covert,
regional offtcer
November 11 meett ng w1ll be
held a t the home of Daisy
Blakeslee with Mrs Lohse to be
co-hostess. A " nutt y" workshop
wtll be heldwJih members to take
mixed nuts m shells, pine cones,
s tyrofoam wreath or cone

Birth announced by family
Mr and Mrs Jeffery Scon
Gage. the former Lisa Anne
Burton, Orlando. Fla , announce
the birth of a son, J os hua Logan
The infant was bor n at 01 lando
and weighed seven pounds , six
ounces Grandparents are Aleta
Lvnn Burton, D~Bary, F'la, Mr

and Mrs William J Burton,
Orlando, Donald and Na ncy
Gage of Flonda and Jean a,nd
Ciar~nce Smtih, Alabama Mrs
Pearl L Russell of Racine, and
the la te Kenneth · Ru s.sell, are
great grandpa1ents.

town hall.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chaapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet at 7:30 Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Evelyn Knight
for a halloween party.

MIDDLEPORT- Revival ser·
vices will be held at the Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 75 P earl
St., Middleport, starling Tuesday, Oct. 27 and continuing
through Sunday, Nov 1, 7:30
each evening. The Rev. B. J.
Walker of Rockwell , N.C. will be
the speaker. The Rev Ivan L.
Myers, pastor, invites the public.

MIDDLEPORT- Revival ser·
vices will be held at the Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 75 Pearl
St., Middleport, starting Tuesday, Oct. 27 and continuing
through Sunday, Nov. 1, 7:30
each evening. The Rev. B J.
Walker of Rockwell, N. C. will be
the speaker. The Rev Ivan L.
Mye rs, pastor, invites the public.

HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club
will meet at7 p m. Tuesday at the

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAl ALLERGIST
"VIE

HA~E

HEARING AIDS"

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

'(Ill
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roo o u

IN!O ~~son
r~u~so••

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NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Not1ce ts hereby given that
1n pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of
the Township of SahsburV
Me1g1 County, Ohio. passed
on the 7th day of May,
1987, there will be submtt
ted to. a vote of the people of
sa1d Salts bury Townsh1p ala
General Election to be held
tn the Township of Saltsbury, Metgs County , Ohto,
at the regular places of
votmg ttlerem, on Tuesday,
the th1rd day of November,
1987, the quostton of levy
tng a tax, in excess of the tan
mtll hmttatton , for the benefit of Salisbury Townshtp
for the purpose of mamtamlng and operattng
cemetertes
Sa1d tax betng an add1toi
nal tax of 1 0 m1lls .to run for
f1ve years, at a rate not
exceedmg 1 0 mtlls for each
one dollar of valuatton,
wh1ch amounts to $0 1 0
(Ten cents: for each one
hundred dollars of valuat1on,
for five (6) years
The Polls tor sa1d Electton
w1ll be open at 6 .30 o 'clock
A M and rerriatn open until
7 30 o'clock P M
By order of the Board of
Electtons, of Me1gs County.
Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer
Otrector
Dated July 7 1987
110) 5, 12, 19, 26. 4tc

Others attending were Mrs.
Walter Crooks. Mrs. WUlard
Boyer, Mildred Long, Richard
DuBose, Dorothy Long, Virginia
Buchanan, Dorothy Baker, Dorothy Bryant, Hazel Wilson,
Raymond Cole, William
Gr.ueser, Mr . and Mrs Raymond
Birchfield, and Marie Curd.

source Center for continued
services for the school year
Several school acttvities were
announced by Grace Weber,
head teacher
The award for the highest
percentage of parents In attend·
nace was won by the sixth grade
class The PTO membership Is
now 263 Refreshmen ts were
served by the fifth grade parents.
Open house wUl be held at the
November meeting in observance of Amencan Education
Week

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Nottce 1s hereby gtventhat
1n pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of
the Township of Orar~ge,
Metgs Covnty, Oh10 , passed
on the 20th day of July.
1987, there Will be submitted to a vote of the people of
sa1d Orange Townsh1p at a
General Election to be, held
1n the Township of Orange.
Oh1o at the regular places of
voting theren1, on Tuesday,
the thtrd day of November ,
1987, the question of levy·
tng a tax m excess of lhe ten
m1ll ltmnatton. for the beneftt of Orange Township for
the purpose of preventton.
control. and abatement of
atr pollution
Satd tax bemg an additional tax of 1 0 mtll to run
for f1ve years at a rate not
exceed1ng 1 0 mills for each
one dollar of valuation,
which a moun's to $0 10
(ten cents) for each one
hundred dollars of valuat1on.
for ftve {6) years
The Polls for sa1d Electton
Will be open at 6 30 o'clock
A M and rematn open unt1l
7 30 o 'clock P M
By order of the Board of
Elect1ons. of Metgs County,
Ohto
Evelyn Clark. Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer.
Dnector
bated July 27. 1987
110) 5, 12, 19, 26. 4tc

Next meeting wtll be held on Nov
3 with Donna Gibbs. Kathy
Chadwell, Marilyn Epple, and
Pauhne Greathouse as hostes ses Carolyn Korn ml!oduced
Phyllis Hackett who used Psalm
100, and commentaries on faith
and on the tota l mmis try study
program wh1ch s h e has
co mpleted
A desser t s morgasbord was
served by Maniyn Me1er, Ma
nlyn Poulin, Alita Heighton, a nd
Mrs Blackwood w1th Caro l
McCullough contnbutmg Mass
preceded th e m eet in g.

Public Notice
- i.OTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Nr 1ce 1s hereby gtver~ that
lh p 1 suance of a Resolut1on
of t • Village Council of the
v1u 0 of Pomeroy, Me1gs
Cc .. v. Ohto, passed on the
2t , , dey of July , 1987.
th
w 111 be submitted to a
vo . uf the people of sa1d
PC~
roy Village. Metgs
Ct
1 Oh10 at a General
El~oh
m to be held m the
li e:.
of Pomeroy, Ohto at
e r· dar places of vot1ng
er .. ,, on Tuesday the
1j trd day of November,
1SB7. the questiOn of levylhg a·
1n excess of the ten
:+;1H I (atton for the be~~ftt c Pomeroy Vtllage for
tho r 1, p ose of current
e'xpen r;
Saa.i 1 ux bemg a renewal
._J,f an c· '.i ting tax of 1 9 m1lls
to run 10 r five years, at a rate
~ot ex (;eedmg 1 9 m1lls for
l,ac h one dollar of valuat1on ,
1\,h 1c:, amounts to $0 19
(Nmek en cents) for each
(Hle h l~r 1 d red dollars ofvalua
f. 1on . for ftve (5) years
The Polls for said Elecuon
Wtll be open at 6 30 o clock
II\ M and remam open unttl
7 30 o'clock I' M
Bv order of the Board of

All SEATS 12 50
~IGHT

00 f ltt(l~f I'UI C~l DN
O IOII~ N 5AOIIACOI
1CIIlPW " DNO. .
lCI!lPIO rune••

Public Notice

·tured fall flower arrangements.
Miniature ears of corn were
given as favors . For the program, there were read10gs by
Mrs. Van Meter, Dorothy Roach,
and Boyer, Clarice Erwin had a
B1ble quiz , and AI Hartson and
Glen Evans sang a duet. Wilson
bad the closmg prayer.

BARGAIN

oo••o

.,..,,.no••
., """"

Frances Goeglein hosted a and Mrs Hysell wmnmg the
recent meeting of the Rock prizes. Next m eeting will be Nov
Springs Better Health Club
19 at the home of Mrs Skinner.
Mildred Jacobs had devotions
Others attending were Nancy
with officers' reports being given
Morris, Ann Mash, and Car a Ash,
by Ann Mash and Helen Blacka visi tor.
ston. Phyllis Skinner and Beuna
The meeting closed with the
Grueser reported on cards sent to
clu\l prayer and Mrs Geogleln
the Jilin the community For the
served refreshm e nts
program, Mrs. Skinner read , - - - - - - - - - - - "Chest Pains". Trec1e Abbott,
"Good Eating Cabbage", Beu_na
Grueser, "Oats, a Good Food",
V10Jet Hysell , "Don't Stop
Fidgeting". Lenora Le1the1t,
"Folk Lore Remedies", and
Helen Blackston, "Caffeine."
A donation was made to
Christmas seals. Agnes Dixon
BACK TO THEATRE DAYS I
• SPECIAL PRICE ADMISSIO NS •
had the contest with Mrs. Skinner
ADULTS $3 50- CHILDREN $2 50
•
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDA~ MATINEES

Halloween
party slated

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~ """ DfAD~ Nl
WON OU OOOfO

Better Health Club meets

Band qualifies for state marching finals

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••••
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o11110
0111110

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TUESDAY $2 00

A Halloween party for the
commumty and the area served
by the Racine F1re Department
will be staged on Fnday, Oct. 30,
be'ginning at 7 p m at tne
fire house. The party 1s being
sponsored by the firem en and the
auxiliary Games will be con
ducted, there wtll be Ihe JUdging
of costumes , and refreshments
w1ll be served.

Meigs County
i
History-Volume II
Available Early December

11

CluUt/ted patft!l C'01ier lhl'
jollounrag lelephomr exchange•

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t:-~ot1ce

Elect1ons, of Metgs County,
Ohto.
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer,
D1rector
Oated July 28. 1987
110J5, 12, 19. 26, 4tc

Public Notice

Public Notice

Sa•d tax betng a renewal
of $113,339 00 and ar1 ad·
dtt1onal of $36,756 00 for
ftve (5} years at a rate not exceedtng 5 0 m1lls for each
one dollar of valuatton,
which amounts to fifty cents
j so 50) for each one hun
dred dollars of valuat1on , tor
ftve (51 years
The Polls for sa1d Elect1on
w1ll 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 Me1gs County,
Ohto
Evelvn Clark Charrman
Jane M Frymyer, Otrector
Dated October 1 , 1987
1101 5. 12. 19 26. 4tc

45760 Terms of Sate Cash
on day of sale I reserve the
nght to reject any and all
b1ds Robert W
Foster,
United States Marshal
Southern Otstrtct of Oh1o
Subject to real estate taxes,
penalt1es and assessments
not yet due and payable
(iOI5.12.19. 26

Slartmg at $23.900 00
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Not1ce 1s hereby g1ven that
tn pursuant of a Resolution
of the Members of Board c&gt;f
Educatron of the Eastern Lo
cal School Board. Chester.
Ohm passed on the 29th
dav of September 1987,
there w1ll be submitted to a
vote of the peopla of satd
Eastern Local School Otstnct at a General Election to
be held 1n the School D1stnct
of Eastern Local
Metgs
Countv. Oh1o, at the regular
places of votmg therem, on
Tuesday. the thtrd day of
November, 1987, lhe ques
tton of levymg a tax, tn
excess of the ten mtll hm1ta
t1on , for the benef1t of Eas·
tern Local School D1stnct
for 1he purpose of providing
for the emergency requtre
ments of the school dtstrtct
javo1dmg an operattng deft
Cit)

Help Wanted

POMEROY - PRICE RE DUCED! Beauliful modern
kitchen 3 bed1ooms. fu ll ba
sement, lots of closet space.
DICe woodwork N1ce deck
MUST SEE $42,900 00
ST RT 33 - About tou r
m1les to Co Rd 14 App• 25
acres of vacant grou nd
Good bU1ld111g s1te WANT
$11,000 00
MIDDLEPORT
Cute little
one floor plan 3 bedroom
N1ce kitchen and bath
Shed equipped kitchen and
other leatures $16,500 00
RUTLAND - N1 ce ranch
style home w1th central air,
garage, 3 bedrooms front &amp;
rea r porches Lg livmg
room, low ulilllies &amp; b1g level
lot $38,500 MAK E OFFER
POMEROY - Trailer only, 1n
good cond1t1on 1973 12'x60'
plus underp1nnmg and new
honl porch WANT $4,900 00
SYRACUSE- Remode led 2
story home 3-4 bedrooms,
I ~ baths, basement, garage
&amp; older barn Appx I acre ol
ground PRICED TO SELL
$39,900 00
~RYE

ClHAND JR

JIAN TRUS~Ell
OOTJtE TURNER .
TRACY RIFFLE

99261111
1149 7660
IJIJ2 5692
IJ49 3080

OFFICE ......................... 992 2219

AW

Public Nottce
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby g1ven that
Columbia Gas of Oh10, Inc
has ftlod an application to
amend 1ts tariffs for the
provisiOn of gas service
Under the proposed amendments to Columb1a's tariffs,
Columbta w1ll delete or
amend certa1n provisions
that require customers to be
responsible for house p1pmg
or appliance costs or to
make deposits and genarally
replace those tariffs with
new tanffs that a'low Co
lumbia not to require deposIts Under certa1n Circumstances and not to require
customer respons1bth1'( for
other sarv1ces. A public
heartng on thiS metter, Case
No 87·1528-GA-ATA. woll
be held on Wednesday .
November 4, 1987 at 10 00
a m. at the offices of the
CommiSSion. 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Oh1o 43266-0573 Al the
liearmg, the burden will be
upon Columbia to sffow that
tho proposed tariff rev1sions
are JUSt end reasonable.
Further mformation may be
obtatned by contactmg the
Commission
110) 26. 1tc

SWEET

HOME

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
ILl ltcensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

YOUNG'S

ACCENT
Let Us Fence You In
FREE ESTIMATES

-

RESIDENTIAL ICO MMEACIA~ ,

PH. 742-2027
-;?o.rl

l'r l

'

Yard Sale

--Poiilero·v· · .....
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

8 t3 tfn

FENCE COMPANY

r~~'

los1 dog Reward Small sliver
gray malo poodle. long hatred
Nama ' Mufttn Hartford vtc:ln·
tty October 21st 304-8822434

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

9·24-1 mo

ct n~,.
ul C""
~ A\.1
,
gJil
;Br4?A,.,'
·

lost tvf. of wooden tnpods tor b
trans11 On 4 l1Jl8 •cross from
B1g Wheel Rewerd Call 614·
992·7089 or 614-992 -3626

Galltpohs, Ohto 45631

614-742-2355

5l1fl

LostandFound

7

:t:

RUTLAND

===~::"'~-

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY '
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Notice IS hereby gtven that
1n pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of
the Townshtp of Lotart
Meigs County. Ohto, passed
on the Jrd day of August,
1987, there wtll be submit
Public Notice
ted toe vote of the people of
sa1d letart Townsh1p at a
General Electeon to be held NOTICE OF SALE By v1rtue
1n the Townshtp of letart, of an Order for Sale 1ssued
Oh1o , at the regular places of on the 28th day of August,
voting theretn, on Tuesday. 1987, by the Untted States
the thtrd day of November, Dtstr1ct Court for the South·
1987. the questton of levy- ern o 1stnct of Oh1o, Eastern
1ng a tax, 1n excess of the ten Oivtsion , at Columbus, Oh1o
mill hmitat1on, for the be- 10 Ctvtl No C2-87 -0469.
neflt of letart Township for UNITED STATES OF
the purpose of mamtatn1n9 AMERICA -VS· WILLIAM
and operatmg camatenes
T FINK, at al , 1 will offer for
Satd tax betng 1 renewal sale to the highest bidder on
of an 8KIItl0g tax of 1 0 mills November 4, 1 987, at 1 30
to run for five years, at a rate p M at the front door of the
not exceedtng 1 0 m1lls for Me 1gs County Courthouse.
eact't one dollar of valuatiOn, Pomeroy, OhiO, the followwhtch amounts to $0 1 0 tng descnbed real property
(Ten cents) for each one Situated in the State of
hundred dollars of valuat1on
Ohio, County of Metgs and
for fiVe (6) years
Vtllage of Middlepon The
The Polls for sa1d Electicm follow 1ng descrtbed real estwill be open at 6 30 o'c:loc:k .j. ate, s 1tuated m the Village of
AM and remam open unttl Mtddleport, Metgs County,
7 30 o'clock PM
OhiO Stung 30 feet off the
By order of tho Board of south s 1de of Lot No 111 ,
Elections, of Meigs County. and 30 feet off the north s1de
Oheo
of Lot No 1 1 0 , in lower
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman Pomeroy. now Middleport.
Jane M Frymyer. Oh1o Also, the westerly
Dtrector one-half of that portton of
Dated August 27. 1987.
the alley wh1ch is contiguous
t10J5. 12, 19, 26 , 4tc
w1th the 60-foot easterly
boundary · of the abovedescribed real estate Sub·
Public Notice
1ec1 to water ltne easement
to the Vtllage of Mtddlapon,
NOTICE OF ELECTION
Oh1o PROPERTY AD ·
ON TAX LEVY
DRESS 244 Svcamore
IN EXCESS OF THE
St{eet
, Mtddleport, Ohto
TEN MILL LIM•TATION
Notice 1s herebv given 1hat
m pursuance of a Resolution
Real Estate General
of the VIllage Counctl of the
Vtllage of Syracuse, Metgs
County. Ohio, passed on the
13th day of July. 1987,
there will be submitted to a
vote of thf! people of satd
V1llage of Syracuse, Meigs
Cour~ty, Ohio at a General
Electton to be held 1n the
V1llage of Syracuse, Ohto at
E . Main......
the regular places of vottng
POMEROY,O.
theretn, on Tuesday, the
third day of November.
992·2259
1987, the question of levying a tax, in excess of the ten
NEW LISTING MIDDLEPORT
mtll hm1tatton. for the be- Umque 3 bedroom home
nefit of Syracuse VIllage, for
1n good condillon Equipped
the purpose of current
k1tchen Owner w1ll sacnfice at
expense
$18.500 00
Said tax be1ng an additiOnal tax of 1 0 mill to run
for ftve years at a rate not
NEW LISTING - Good one
exceedtng 1.0 m1lls for each
floor plan. 3 bedroom home
one dollar of valuatton.
on level lot m Middleport Ba
wh1ch amounts to $0. 10
semen! good location Must
(ten centst for each one
be seen to be appreciated
hundred dollars of valuatton,
Firm at $29,900 00
for five (6) years
The Polls for sa1d Election
PRICE REDUCED fm sale
w11\ be open at 6 30 o'clock
before w1nler Really DICe
AM and remam open unttl
7 30 o'clock P M
mob1le home &amp; lot m !he
By order of the Board of
coun try Salellile d1sh elc
Elections, of Metgs County
Ready to move mlo NOW
Ohto
$13,500
00
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer,
MAKE AN OFFER on th1s
Otrector
grand 2 story home w1lh a
Dated Julv 27, 1987
nver v1ew looks good
11015. 12. 19. 26. 4tc

Public No11ce

_,..

U ..CI TY·-1-•..r

z

OPEN I to 9 P.M.
Rt. 114 A&lt;ross from
Happy Hollow Rd

1t I I - Nl.ct~-­
llMio-o

IJJI- ·-'0 ....

Jtl - ftlo~ .....

Computerized Heanng Atd Selectton

CJ Swtm Molds · lnterprettng Servtces

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUN
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

-c-.. _.___
...
-::-:_,
··----·
··--fll-11··..
_
_
__
·____
··----- ..---..-·

«•-o-"'
~n..e•-•

(614) 446-5105

•

::~:":"*-

.,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
385 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

;

.......

.......

~o

Immediate openings for medical·
surgical R.N.'s. Excellent salary and
fringe benefit package .
Contact:
Rosie Ward, Director of Personnel

MEIGS COUNTY HISTORY
BOX 145
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

D'~!_

• HILLSIDE
MUIILELOADING
GUN SHOP

o,,.,.,.. _ _ ...wo......... ,,_.,..,...,..

REGISTERED NURSES

9rder now at S43.00 plus ·5·3.00 mailing.
The price will raise mid-November.
Payment must accompany order.

:tr ~-

nao

••~111
fiiiiO

An AA / EEO Employer
)

'"""

"'""

01111

•-c• -

l

Eastern Marching Band

,.~

•o•n

...,..,.,....,...,.., .. , , . _ , Col ..... 10\llo"'

Catholic Women rpeet
Plans for the annual fall
bazaar to be held on Nov 12 at the
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
were discussed at the recent
meelin'g of theCathohc Women' s
Club held m the social hall
II was noted that in prepara
lion for servmg that dinner,
members who will be workmg
will be given skin and blood test s
on Oct 26 by Joan Tewksbary, R
N tuberculosis nurse, and Dr
Wilma Mansfield.
Anna · Blackwood prestded at
the meeting w1th plans being
made to serve the Regwnal
ExtensiOn luncheon on Nov ;;,

.........

"'"""'""""'''""..-'"'"'
.......... ""' .. 1"'
~

f Riverview PTO has meeting
Dr. Dan Apling, superintend·
ent of the Eastern Local School
District, led in a discussion on the
levy to be voted on in the
November election at the recent
meeting of the Riverview Elementary School PTO held at the
school
The PTO endorsed the levy and
made a $150 donation to Its
promotion.
The fall festival was discussed
and the PTO voted to pay the
requlred fee of $1.90 per student
to the Educational Media Re-

to_ ........... -

··· ·~

Homebuilders class banquet held

The 48th annual Homebuilders
Class banquet was held Tuesday
night at the Middleport Church of
Christ.
Features of the meeting in·
ernment to unllerwrtte tour1sm m eluded a history of the class,
Plams, Ga Cnt1cs say the govern- recognition of teachers, and
ment already spends $27 million a election of new officers. The
year on former presidents, to pay for history was given by Coleen Van
personal and archival needs, and the Meter who also presented KaPlams proposJ!Jon JS excess1ve
thryn Evans and the class
But forget that No one expects teachers, Danpy and Jeanette
Carter to be perfect He succeeds by
bemg pnmarlly gulleless He still Thomas gifts fl'bm the class. Mr
hves m the borne of his pre·presiden· and Mrs Thomas afterwards
cy, and he m1gbt be forgiven for thmk- announced that for health rea ing Plams IS spec1al. He still rides hJS sons they are resigning as class
b1ke there and talks to everyone, he teachers.
New officers elected were Mrs'
has never forgotten hiS roots
He's not forgotten hlS real calhng,
e1ther Carter has always been in·
voived w1th mankind. He still delivers
sermons in church, he still thmks
A halloween party for TOPS
statecraft IS an extenSion of brotherhood, and be still thmks brotherhood, OH 570 will be held Tuesday at
to quote Adlai Stevenson, means peo- the Coonhunters Building on the
ple should not hve on a shrunken globe fairgrounds The costume party
as strangers
wUl begin at 6 p.m. At last week's
The former pres1dent worked side meeting the top loser was Donna
by SJde w1th former strangers here In Aleshie, with Pearl Knapp being
Charlotte And he held hiS own w1th a the best KOPS loser The fruit
hammer and a rule. If anybody asked basket was won by Mrs. Knapp
him about pohtlcs 1t wasn't noted The
guess " he m1ght have changed the Club information may be obconversatiOn, however, he's no lanKer tained by calling Lennie Belie
the
after all, he's J1mmy Aleshire, · 992-7564 or VIrginia
Dean, 992-2774

___

a.... . ...... , ........ ....,, .. , ..

O.II .. CII!DI . . _ _ ,_It&lt; _ _ ,_

ro.. o

_.__
·__--,,_..

. ··. .
:a--.
·---..

JIA"TE8

Senti
6

Monday, October 26, 1987

Charity work

It's not JUSt that he's rolled up h1s
sleeves for the needy He has demonstrated character doing 1t Carter was
. ridiculed for hts decency in Washmg. ton, and decr~ed as a stumbhng dogooder, he d1d not leave ofhce w1th a
sense of dehverance from a complammg nation, however, or retreat
into self-mdulgence
Rather, he turned h1s cheek. He
contmued to beheve in the kmd and
the unkmd ahke He has chosen to forgtve others, 1f not btmself, as 1t's sa1d,
and he has m the process set a new
standard for those who rellre, or are
retired, from the h1ghest elected of·
fice m the land
Not that the old standard was d1ffl·
cult to pass Amencans have never
expected nor gotten very much from
former preSidents SOC~al cr~bc H L
Mencken once sa1d they should all bJ!
hung, for the sake of publlc samtat10n,
but, other than that, the men have
• • been left to the1r own 1deas of
;: "" deportment
'". · Some, such as John Qumcy Adams,
cootlnued to be pohtJcal, he was elected to the House of Representatives
Others, such as Herbert Hoover, were
on
ass1gnments, be orga·

The

Business Services

'

MONDAY fhn fiiDAY 8 AM. 111 5 PM
I AM Unhl NOON SATURDAY
ClOUD SUNDA'

. memory

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

'

CHARLafTE, N C. (NEA) - Jimmy Carter came to VlSlt a couple of
weeks ago, and many of the people in
th1s community are still talking about
1t He did not breeze through m a bornbasile rush, you see, as is the hab1t of
men of his rank, he stopped to qu1etly
lend a band m a char~ty proJect
The former pres1dent belongs to an
orgamzahon called Hab1tat for Humanity In that regard, he helps bmld
or refurbish homes for the poor He
has pa1nted walls in a New York City 1
slum, as exampl~. and framed wmdows m Ch1cago, now he has cut the
lumber of hope and pounded the na1ls
of compasSion here m Charlotte
The locals thmk 1t's grand Other
Amencans m•ght agree. More than
s~&gt; years after he was turned out of
the White House for what some called
incompetence, Carter has at least
won back respect as a human being.
He may have been a dlSappmntment
as pres1dent, but he may also be Me of
. the most encouragmg ex-presidents m

'

FIREWOOD

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Locust, Oak, Cherry

v.w.
PARTS
NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742·2315

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

992 -6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh1o
415 B6 1c

Evenings

10 19 87

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Roger Hysell
Garage

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ru;:k Pearson Aucttoneer h
oensed m Ohto and West V1rg•
ma Estate ant1que tarm. liqul
da1ton sales 304-773 6786

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for lata model clean
uaed cars
J1m M1nk Chev ·Olds Inc
B1ll Gene Johnson
614 446-3672
TOP CASH potd for 83 model
and newot used cars Smnh
Bu1ck Pont1ac 1911 EattMn
Ave , Galhpoha Call 614 446
2282

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Oh1o •

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"At Reasonable Pmes"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Also Transmicslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

6-17-lfc

10·16-1mo. d.

8

$3500

Addons r;tnd remodeling
Roof1ng and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and ehtc1ncal
work
{Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
'

Yard Sal&amp; Saturday Oct 3, .
9 30 AM til 1 Dav1s Res1dence.
Rose H11l, Pomerov

4 16·86 tin

Junk Auto's wrth or without
motors Call614 388 9303
Buvtng dally gold, ttlvar coma
r~ngt jewelry, sterling ware, old
coma, large currency Top Pfl·
cas Ed Burkett Barber Shop
2nd Avo Middleport Oh 614
992 3478
QUilTS

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.
POMEROY -985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
•

SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrtgerators
•Drvers •Freezers

WE SELL USED APPliANCES

4 5 lie

H1gh PIIC&amp;S pa1d for pre-1950
qurlts Applique precad any
cond1t1on Call 614·992-210,
or 614 992-5657

RADIATOR

SER~ICE
We can repair and recore radtalors and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tariks.

Cash for stand1ng Umber We
buy veneer white oak and
walnut Call AI Tromm 814
742-2328

FULL BODY TONING
and FIRMING

Employment

IAo uk .11: h•••l
H••Ut•r -\1 ltt.[r•r titn••,.,. ( luh !..

"lou lou ( un

11 .. tun. U•·uhh\

PAT HILL FORD

Serv tees

l,utHI F11r

&amp;;

'"u' - HrtnJ! ,\ Fru n1l
SPt:CIAL IAHS FOR STUDENTS

992-2196
M1ddleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

PH. 992-2300 Or Stop By
115 W. Second, Pomeroy
10-5 1 rna

11

Help Wanted

Excellent 1ncome takmg short
phone messages at home Call
for mfo Ext S 313 504·6497922

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO £AST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authomed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

How-los for decor·
allng baskets, garbage
cans, makmg Granny
square orga"'zer, stuffas-you-sew puff qu1ll. 10
projects for home 1n all.
Each pa~ $3.25 plu~
75¢ postage/handling
(Nv resoonts add sales Ialli
Send to
l1eotler Mall

The Daily Sentinel

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

I-3-'86 tfc

HAVE A VIDEO
TAP,E MADE •.•
•Child's Birthday
Party

62ill Nor1hem Blvd , Wooctsidt,
NY ttm. Print Name, Addles~
Zit. Size, Pltlem Number

•Wedding

Business

•Any SpeCial

Services

•Parents' Anmversary

•Baby Shower
•Famtly Reumon
Occasion

PH. 992-6959

918-1mo

DONELLI'S
PIZZA

NOW HULLING
BLACK
WALNUTS

992-6167

NEWELL'S SUNOCO
RT. 7, CHESTER

4

NOW THRU NOV. 14th
MON. THRU SAT.
9:00-4:30

(21 11-INCH 8 ITEM
PIZZAS $9 95
Green/ Black Oltves.
Pepperoni. Cheese,
Onions. Green

Peppers. Sausage.
Ground Beef

$800 per 100 lb.

98S-33SO

NO SUBSTITUTIONS
10·8·1 mo

10121mo

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Fore1gn and
Domestic Veh1cles
A/ C Serv1ce
All Major &amp; Mtnor
Repatrs
NIASE Certified Mechantc

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

.ACINE, OHl~9- ttn

Certlfted l1censed Shop
9-t0-1 mo d

Styllst needed wnh managers
ltcenu Call 614 446 3703 or
446 -8621
Telev~ton

Advertrsrng needs
energy persons for the
Galltpohs area Possttsle further
managemen1 opponun1ty Parttime full t1me bue and commlltStOrl Call 9 5 304-7577881
high

REPS NEEDED
For bustnell acounts Ful1 t1ma.
S60 000· 180.000 Part-ttme
S12,000 1!1118,000 No sethng
repeat bustnets Set your own
hours Tratntng provided Cell
1 612-938 8870. M -F. &amp;am 5pm (Central Stendard t1meJ
Wdl do baby11tt1ng 1n my home
Have Reference 6 E~tperlence
Call 814-246 6678 Quail Ck
EXCELLENT WAGES for tpara
t1me assembly work: electron
tcs erahs Others Info (504)
641 0091 EXT 2987 Open 7
days CAll NOW!
Part t1me Socre1ar•ai!Recep
tlontst Posttlon Avtulable Exeel
lent Fnnge Benefits Salary
Mrntmun wago or negot1abl8,
deper1d1ng on sk1l1 and expeuence Contact the Gallta
County Cooperat•ve Ex1onston
Serv1ce, 1602 Eastern Ave
Gal1tpohs, Oh 45631 Tele
ptlona 614·446-7007 We Will
accept resumes through No
vembor 2 Equal Opportun1ty
Employer/ Affumattve Ac:t•on

accepting apphc:auons for
pam1ars S. laborers Con1act
M1ke Oatnes of Mac's Sandblas1tng &amp; Patntlng 614-256
1247

Now

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

Riverine Antiques
1124 East

Motn
Pomeroy

St.

HOUNS: Mon -Tues.- Wed.
10omtobpm
Sunday 1 p m ·6 p m
By (home or Appomtment

RUSS MOORE

992-2526

10-9-'87-1 mo

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODE LING &amp;
REPAIRS

REFERENCES
Phone
ar heningt

Oav

985-4141
GENERAl CONTUCTORS

9-18 ) mo. pd

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR
•ALL MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REAS ON ABLE RATES

CHESHIRE

367-0322
9- 23-1 mo

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS

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

Buying Roots.
Beef Hides and
Deer Hides

GEORGE BUCKLEY
614-664-4761
HOURS
Mon ·Sat 2 to 9 P.M

Sunday 5 to 9 P M
10-15-1 mo

10·8-tfc

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New lftomes

Built

''Free Estimates· ·

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
3-11-tln

Howard L. Writesel

GUN $HOOT

ROOFING

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleanmg
Pamting
FREE ESTIMATES

Boshom Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

949-2263
or 949-2168

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10· 7 tin

1-22-87-tfn

An no unee menIs

ELIM HOME

Roam &amp; loard For
Senior Cltluns and
New Locatton:
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We ,..rry Ftshing Supplies
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hero

BUSINESS PHONE
16141 ''2-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 9'2-7754
1/:?ll/lln

Good Rates
TLC
25 Yrs Exp
References

992-lo873

4

Giveaway

season ia ~are 2 male
cats &amp; 1 female Great mousers
Call614 446-71:162

Someone to l1ve-m &amp; care for
elderly lady Not bed fast L1ght
housework non-smoker Lrves
1n Ga lhpol ts Call 614 4462386 or 446-0322 or 446 3617

SEEKING
Htghly mo11vated 1Jld1v1duals m
rerested 1n tratn1ng for a man
agftft"'ent pos1t1on w1th one of tt'te
fastest growrng mark et1ng orgamlattons 1n the country EJ~
cellant rncorne po1ontra l To
reque51 311 tn htrv1ew call 614
593 5370orwnteto GaryDe&amp;l
35 E Carpenter St Athen!
Ohro 45701
Government Jobs S 16.040
$59 230 yr Now htr1ng Call
SOS 687 6000 Ext R 9805 for
current fudaral hs1 '
H1rmgl Government JObs your
area 915 000 -$68,000 Call
(602)838 8885 EXT 1449
Medtcal asststant part trme lor
phy:u cmns off1C&amp; Please send
resume 10 P 0 Box 729 W,
Pomeroy Otuo
Federal state and c1v1l service
$14 707 to S66.S 19 year
now htrmg l Call JOb Ime 1 51 B459 361 1 ext F· l 622 lor mfo
24 hrs

JODS

SEEKING

Hrghly motrvated respon!rble
mdtvrduals Interested rn tratJl
mg lor managomBnl posthon
wrth one of tho fa nest
growmng markettJlg organrze·
t1ons the cou'ntry EJ~cellent
1ncome polentlal To rBquest
l111ervtew call 614-593 6320
or wrrta Gary Deal 33 Easst
C11rpentar St , Athens Oh1o

.n

Mouse

45701

Puppres- Will be small dogs Can
814· 266-1688

Governmen1 Jobs $16,040
$69 230 yr Now hrnng Your
area 806 •687 6000 Ext A
9805 for current repo tederal
llt1

Joe or Pauley Bow land
209 South 4th St.
M1ddloporl, Oh.

Houae trained bunny - beautiful
Ruas11m blue cat. self mOIStii"'Q
heat&amp;ng pad 304-675 5136

"LOW INCOME HOME"

Large dog houae, 304-676
8173

AVON - All areas C• U Manlyn
Weaver 304 892 -2645
all are•• call Shuley
Spear$, 304 676 1429

AVON

�I

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

'.'HIRING''! I
Governmem jobs - your area.

51 Household Goods

&amp; Air conditioning
Service Man wit11 • 6 years
exper•tmce. Appl\' Orman Hall
Inc . 1317 O"io St . , Pt ,
Pleasant

Hullng

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St , Gallipolis
NEW- 6 pc wood group· $399
Uvmg room suites- 8199-8599.
Bunk beds with bedding· t199.
Full 11.18 maHre11 &amp; foundallon
starting · $99 Recliners
ltantng- S99
USED- Beds. dressers. bedroom
tuitea. S199-U99 . De1ka,
wrmgarwaahar, a complete line
of used furniture
NEW- Western boots· &amp;30.
Workboot1 $18 &amp; up ~S tee l &amp;
soft teal Call 614-446 -3 159

EXECUTIVE SECRETARY: ex perience w•th accounts payable,
account s receivable, bank, dep-o

osha, billing procedural re·
qu•nKi. full lima position, send
resume to Bo~ S -21 care of
Pat~t Pleaant RegiateJ, 200
Mam St. Point Pleasant W Va
•

Wente~ kitchen emPloyee. we
W!ll tra1n, no phone calls, apply m
parson only Hol•day Inn Galli·

polis, Oh•o

13

County Appliance. Inc, Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat 614-446- 1699, 627 lrd.
Ave Galhpolill OH

'

Insurance

Call us tor your mobile home
l nsurance· Mill er Insurance.

304 -882. -2 146 . Also : auto .
home, life, health

"He was ready to buy it for
$250,000 until you started

18 Wanted to Do

laughing at him!"

House Cleamng or office clean·
ing by day Can QIV8 reference.
lmmacula1e cleaner call 614446 -8105.
Can do lig ht hau ling and roof1ng .
Reasonable rates Mari o n
Smder 614 -949 -2829 .
W1ll do private duty nursmg
304-675-1691
W1H babysit i~ mv home any
hours 304· 675 · 7396

Financial
II

;;:;;::~=;::=====l-:::--':""-----+

r 32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 br new wall-to·wall carpet, air
cond. Parked in Johnson' s Mobile Home Park. Wilt tell on land
contract. Call 614-446- 41 10 or
446-1409
SPECIAL SALE: B~g 18vjnga on
all nct1onals and singhtl by
Clayton and Schult. Buy now
and take advantage of gigantrc
savings on all display• and
custom ordered homea .
FRENCH CITY MOBILE
HOMES. INC Gallipolis. 614·

4~6 - 9340

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VA LLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO recommends that you
do bus1ness w1th people you
know, and NOT to send money
through th e mail until you have
investigated the oftermg

THE $13 99 STORE
Open your own $13 99 (and
less) ladiee; or cl11ldtens apparel
5tore featurmg hundreds of top
name brands for the incredible
J)f!Ce of $13 .99 and less.
$24.975 includes mven1ory, fill ·
tures, tra1mng, suppliers and
more Ci!H Marianna Fash 1ons
anyttme 1-904-785-411 1

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Will help finance or land con
tract 10 yr old house. 3 Br ,
PatriOt Village. Call 614-446 1340, 446· 3870.
4 BR .. fireplace. full basement 3
mi so. of GallipoliS. $34.900.
Call Oays -614 -448 -1615. after
5.00- 446 -1 244
House at 60 Chillicothe Rd Very
Cheap Call614-446 2404.
N•ce clean home Large kitchen,
appliances, AC . ut1hty room , 3
BR , carp et thru -out, master BR
ce1ling fan F1mshed garage
?rice $37, 500 Reduced &amp; neg
Ca1161 4 -446 -1 358

2 BR , dining room, full basement, 1 car garage. fully
equipped kitchen. A -1 cond ,
Lot:s of :s tora ge Near pool &amp; golf
co urse Call 614-446-8389 af·
ter 2 PM
lease Purc hase- 3 BR home,
low bills &amp; mamtance, wood·
burner 1n FR Ca ll 614-4460905 ~ExceUent terms)
Split level 3 BR .. 2111 batfl 2
fireplaces. sitting on 3 acres
overloolung the Ohio R1ver
Located on Rt 7 toward Eureka
565,000 Call for appt. M4446 -4514
2 bedroom home 10 Pomeroy 2
baths, swtmm1ng pool, sattllte
Ctose to schools Call614-992 ·
3254 .
Government hornes from S1 IU
repair) Oehf'lquen t t ax property
Repossessic:~ns Call 805-687 6000 Ext GH-9805 for current
repo list
Ranch style brick home, 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, 1800 sq ft
on 27 plus ocrM Grondvtew
Ridge. Putnam Co., 3Bx130
hor1e barn with 18 comt ort
stalls [38x40 workout area
1n51de) foaling stalls, feed and
tack room Mostly pasture.
fenced has pond $B9,900, 10
per cent down, seller will fmance
balance to ehg1ble applicants
Contact Pare Sommer, PO Box
231, POint Pl~asant. W.Va
25550, 304 -675 3280, M onFri. 8 00·4 30
FORECLOSURE HOMES From $1 00 on up and local tax
delinquent propertHls. Call 1 •
800 -541 -9474 Al so open
evenmgs

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Shultz ·12K60, furn1shed.
2 BA Mun sell. Pr1ce negotia·
ble Ce ll 614-446 -684 6
1968 Ktrkwood, 2 bedrooms
366 E Ma1n Pomeroy. Imm ediate possession $3000. Call
614 -992 -7314 or 614 -742 ·
2053.
1 Ox50 remod~ lad, very good
cond1t1on M ight take veh1cle or
gun as pArtial hade-in. 81 BOO
Cell614 992-3596
12.1155 Buddy trailer , e)lcotlent
ca nditron Underpmning. bricks,
porch SSOOO . &amp;14 -992-3755
or 304 173·5621
1974 14x70 Monarch-, 2 bed
room , total electrrc. $6800
614-985-3582
HQIIy PArk 14~t70, central air,
porch shod. underpennrng
58,000. or be•t offer 304 -676 5417 a her 4 p m
3 2 acres 3 lf2 miles from New
}-iaveo. 304 882 -2642
12x6S Mobrle Homewrth 12K24
add on. w1th extr!IIOt 304 -675·
7669
1984 Skyline, 14K70, eltt cond,
new catpet. 2 bedrooms, central
air, undurpennlng, small bldg.
two Bx16 tt deck!l with roofs.
kit chen applrance!l. cnll alter
5 00 304-675 1294.

I

.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
14x65 Mobile home 2 br Sin
on one acre. 2 ch1ldren ecceptud.
S166 a mo. plus 8100 dap plus
ut1litias Available Nov 1. Call
614-388-9881
12.1160 2 br . Kitchen
large pr1vate lot. 1
town. $200 a mo Oap
Call 814-446-2U6 or
26B1
2 BR tra1ler Sowards Ridge Rd.
$160 Dep.. t160 a mo Ref
required. Call614-266· 6206.

19B1 Naahull, AC. ell electric.
1 2x66 , underpmmng, de~;k ,
storage bUIId~ng included Cell
614 - 446- 7356 or 614 -4467374 after 6pm

Furnrahed 2 BR. mobile home
located '" ce,tenary are• Wa·
sher / Dryer hooka.lp *200 a mo
Depoait Call 814- 448 -2390.

1974 Elcona 14•70 Built on
room . E•cet cond Must move
Make offer. Caii614-38B-8101 .

2 BR unfurn11hed 12x60. WI D
hookup 1h mile put HMC Ref
6 Oep. req Call 614-448 -4369
or 304-675-9760.

1974 CarrtaiJ&amp;house 12x65 2
br .. 2 baths Be1ge &amp; brown 01'1
Carter Rd .. Nonhup Call 614446 -1511 .

Nice furn111hed 2 BR mobile
home. Upper Rt 7 •:l:OD a mo
Coli 614 -245 -5818.

1974 Concord 14x70 Total
alec , 3 br • new carpet. Extra
mea tflrough-out t7900. Call
614-446-0175 .

44

1--'-"-- - - - - -- - -

1976 Bayview 14x70 2 BR,
front den, porch &amp; awn1ng, AC
$7000 Call 614-266-9309 or
266-6206

12•60 CommuM1ty- 2 BR , 1
bath, 10x14addon Rentedlot
8 3800 or contract, t160 a
mo.-3 yrs. Phone 614-4467716
1973 Cameron 12•60, 2 BR .,
WB .. Cent. air, fuel oil furn on
renled lot. Vary good cond.
S6,000 Call 614-246· 6240 or
246 -9219

34

Business
Buildings

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apanments for
rant.
Baa1c rent for 1 bdr ..
&amp;183.00, 2bdr.,t219 00 . Also
required a S200 00 security
deposit CONTACT· Jacbon
Estates Dept. Ph 446 - 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
2 BR apt1 6 closets, kitchen·
appl furnished, Washar-Dryer
hook-up. Ww carpet. newly
painted. deck. Regency. Inc
Apts Call 304·675 -7738 or
676· 5104
Furmshed apt. ne~~:t to library.
One profau1onal adult only
Parking. Call 614· 446·0338
1 br. apt. near HMC . Slave,

J&amp;frig , drapes furmahad. 1226 a
Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown pt Plea11ant. Stores,
offices A-One Real Estate
Carol Yeager, Broker Call 304675-5104
749 Thm1 Ava Presently The
G1ft Shop 1600 sq ft Cammer·
c1al or warehouse Parking on
11de Adjacent to Third &amp; Pine St
Call 614 - 446-2362 lor
appoint~ ant.

35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

10 6 acres in V1n1on Co Septic
tank . water. Near Mtne 3 ,
Dnveway off county road B Call
614-388-9306
Homes•te 10 ac (aprox ) secluded, ptly wooded. At. 36 W.
Crty schools. $26.000. Call
614-245·9448
2 Building loti- 1 Y2 acres each
w ith county water. Jerrv1 Run
Rd Apple CJrove, W Va . Call
304· 576-2383
42 acres With standing timber.
Gallia County, Ohio 304 8764657

Rental s
41

Homes for Rent

Unfurn1shed. hpu1ft, 3 br Rodnay V1llage II. 8260 Call 614·
446· 4418 after 7 00 PM
Nicety furniahed 11mall house
Adulis only References ra·
quned OH street parkmg Ph
614·446-0338 .
3 br , CA,, basement, garage.
patto. carpet. 1 cut 1tone
fireplace, 8a 1 bnck f~raplace.
tng round pool. Ref A- 1 Real
Estate. Carol Yeager-broker
304 675 -5104
3 B R house. unf spac10ua,
attractive, in Galhpolla. Ou1et
nei ghborl'lood 2 car garage
$276 &amp; u1llit1at. Dep, It Ref.
raqu1red . Call Earl Tope, 614·
446-0161 eve
2 , 3 ~ or 4 bedroom hou1es and
apt. 1n Pomeroy area Pay own
ut1hties, depo11t requrred Call
614· 992 -6113, 614-992-6723
Of 614-992 2609
Call after
5 DO. pleeaa
Beautiful new house Al1o 1
bedroom furnlahed apartment in
M1ddlepor1 Call614 -992 -5304
or 814 -446· B898
2 bedrooma, TV room, half
basement. fenced back yard,
very good location Call after 6,
304 675-4265 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Large 2 bedroom trailer with
room addition .• Free gas, on 20
acres t225 per month plus
deposit Call 304-3'72 -9336 elt~r 6 .30 pm
Two bed room mobile home
M i ddleport, Ohio References
and depo11t required 304 8823287 or 394':'"7 73-1!1024.
2 br nloblle home, furnished .
$1 B5. montfl plus 876 deposit
30 4- 675· 6512 ..
2 bedroom traihw on A11hton
Upland Road •160. month plu11
ulilltitt•· BotUed gas heat , HUD
approved 304·675· 4088

mo Dep -Ret. required
61 • ·446·4 7B2.

Call

11 Court: 2 br , 11Ja bath, kitchen
furn111hed, carpeted. Rear park·
ing S350-mo • utilit1e1 Dep. &amp;
Ref Cal/614-446-•926 •
Furmshed efficiency apt - 3
rooms &amp; bath . Carpet thru·out.
Single working parson only Call
614-446-•607 or 446-2602
Modern 2 BR garage apt. Aef.
requtred Call 614-446-1B73·
Mon.-Fn , 8·6
Downtown- Modern 1 BR .•
complete kitchen. carpet, air.
electnc heat Call 614-446·
4383-days, 446 · 0139-e~,~en &amp;
weekendt.
Gracious hvmg. 1 and 2 bad·
room apartment• at Village
Manor and R1vers1de Apartments 1n Middleport From
$216 Including utilities Call
614-992 -7787 EOH .

Sofas
ct1a1rs
Prrced
U95 toand
t995.
T1:1bles
860from
and
up to 8126 . Hide-a-beds $390
to 8696 ReCimers $225 to
$375 lamps 828 to 5125
Dmeues $109 and up to $495
Wood table w -6 chairs $2 86 to
S795. Desk 5100 up to 8375
Hutches 8400 and up Bunk
beds complete w -mattresses
$296 and up to $396 Baby beds
$1 10. Mattresses or box sprtngs
full or 't;WII'I S6B, f1rm $78, and
$B8 Quean sets S226, K1ng
$360. 4 drawer chest $69 . Gun
cabmets 6 gun Ga s or electric
range S375. Baby mattresses
S36 &amp; 846. Bed frames S20
$30 &amp; King frema 850. Good
select1on of bedroom sunes
metal cab1neta, heRdboard:s $30
and up to S66 .
90 Day11 same as cas h With
approved credit
3 Miles out
Bulavllle Ad Open 9am to 6pm
Mon tt.ru Set Ph 614-446·
0322
PARSON ' S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc lrvrng wood
suites, $399.95; chest of drawers. 4 drawer- $48, 5 drawer
S69 95, mattress &amp; box springs
full SIZ8, 312 COli, $149.95 set,
twin maltresses, S95
set
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

Furnished room i 100 Utilities
paid Share bath Single male.
919 Second GallipoliS. Call
446 -4416 after 7pm

Catalyltc converters, only
$89 96 Most models. Installation alae available Muffler Man,
9 Stimpson Ava ., Athena, Ohio .
1-800·843·3767

Truckload Sale New sh1pment
of carpet from Georg1a Stop &amp;
compare prices Mollohan Furniture 403 4th Ava. KMR , GaUr
pohs Call 614·446·7444.

Firewood ! All hard wood. HEAP
Voucl'len accepted $36 large
p1ckup load 614-742-2466

Tan sofa bed
4986.

Call 614 -446 -

Modern couch, 16 mos old
$100. Call614 -446-4262 after
4 .00 PM.
New 16 lb Hot Pomt Washar
and elec dryer with vent k1t and
p1g tell for $650 00 304 -6755750 .

Mi~ted

Hospital bed. lounge che11 w1th
leedmg tray. 686 General Hartinger Pkw Middleport. 614·
992 -5431
Straw for sale $1 50 per b•le
Call alter 6 .00 pm, 614 -949
3059
Steel buildings, smallest 9x9,
largest 200x680 Some con
tractors may qualify to buy at
factofy cost . WedgCor
(3031759 ·3200 ext 262

55

Building Supplies

la!Y Boy cha1r, good condition.
qutlted leather bar &amp; 4 stools,
SUitable for fam1ly room, kerosene heating stove, almost new,
electr.c roaster w1th aU accessortes 304· 675· 4563

Bu1ldmg Materials
Blo ck, bnck, sewer p1pes, wmdows, lintels, etc Claude Wm ten Rio Grande. 0 Call 614 245 -5121

54 Misc . Merchandise

Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
delivery Mason sand Gallipolis
Block Co . 123'h Pine St .
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614 -4462783.

Seasoned firewood All hard
wood Save number lor luture
orders 614-742 -2545
Couch and loveseat E~~:cellent
cond1t1on EMerctse Treadmill
He· Man Toys Call 614 ·66737BS
Monroe cop1er Model RL-612.
under 15,000 copies, 304 -6754067

for sale Delivered
t 30 00 304 -895

Signs, ponabl e lighted sign with
letter:s $299 .00, free delivery
Welt V~rgm1a . 1·800 -642-2434
and Oh10 1-800· 533-3463.

Ftrewood lor sal.§, haul your
own. $20 00 pickup load phone
304-675 1304.
FOR SALE
Sorghum Molasses S6 00 qt
Apple Buner $3.50 qt
Corn Meal $1.00 21b bag
Whole wheat gound $1 .00 lb
bag

W Va State Farm N!useum

c-:-c:-c------ -lc-

400 ft walnut lumber. S1 OOft
4000 ft pine and poplar, S 30ft
Air seasoned for 4 years Phone
614 -992 -3921

Ready miM concrete and all
concrete supplies Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies.
304 -773-5234 .

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groommg All breeds All
stylus Julie Webb Ph 614 -446
0231
Dtagonwynd Cattery Kannel
CFA H1meleyan, Pers1a n and
S1amese k1ttens AKC Chow
pupp1es New kittens. Peraians.
Call614 446 -3844 after 7PM .
-Dachshund pup One pureblood,
red female puppy Very cute and
playful !:1100 Call 614 -4469407
1 Yr old red &amp; white female
Beagle Never been hunted Call
614 -446·3413
Musl Sell. AKC show quahly
cha mpion bloodline blaclr:
Standard Poodle pups. $200.
Call 614-446· 3289 or 446 7904
AKC Reg. femal e adult Doberman. $100 Raise d w1th children Call 614· 388 -9354.
AKC registered Beagle pups
$65 304 372 4702.
3 Beagles 2 females. 1 male,
runnin g good. S40 00 each.
304 -675 -6941

46 Space for Rent
Office Space for rent. bcel.
downtown Gallipolis lo catiOn.
lnqumas call 614 -446 -4222

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

Bundy Trumpet Call 614 -4482868

19B1 Plymouth Horizon. 4 apd,
4 dr 60,000 miles. $1200. Call
814 -379-2726.

5B

19B6 Ford Muatang Call 614·
256-1670

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Ounrov1n Fruit Farm • Apples 56· 10 par bushel , crdar ,
aorghum, apple butter. Numer·
ou• food ttems. 9· 6 weekdays,
9-6 w~ends Sr. 681 SE of
Albany 614-69B-8298
Quality Fruits - and Vagetables
reta11 and wholesale B &amp; S
Produce acrota from P1ua Hut,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

F~rm Suppl ies

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, Nof'lh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 614 -9927479

&amp; Liv es to ck
61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 W811t, Jackson. Ohta
614-286-8451
Maney Fetguson, New Holland.
Bush Hog Salea It Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment Largen .-lectiol'l in
S.E Ohio.
JIVIDEN ' S FARM EQUIP ·
MENT Comern &amp; check-out our
fall aale prices on long tractors,
rioti tractors, wheel horae lawn
&amp; garden tractora, Vermeer hay
equipment, Husgvarna chamaews. wDodbuming stoves &amp;
fumaces, &amp; anergy lreawatarars
It much moret Complete line of
Bale handling &amp; feeding acces ..
grtndar mllcera. wagons, manure
spreader rott!lry tillers. rotary
cutters, bladet, dille, culti~,~ators,
plow:s seeders. post auger &amp;
drivers, wood sphlter, tra1ler,
sprayer squeeze shoot. head·
gates, gates, feed bunks, truc:k
beds. plastic tenlcs, batteries,
cement mixer. Dower washers.
truck racks
USED EQUIP· Tractors round
~elars. square bales, corn p1cker
elevator, drum mowers, plows,
disc cultivators. grmdar m11ter
gravity wagon11, lawn mowers,
haybrne, cha1nuws, tobacco
setter Call614-446 -1675
Ford one· row corn picker, New
Holland 460 feeder-grinder·
m1xer. 40ft John Deere grain
auger No Sunday ca\lt 614·
388 -8624

1980 Chevy Citation, V-6. 4
dOOJ, automatic. good gas m1·
leage Alita Chalmers bulldozer,
6 way blade Call 814 -379·
2586.
1976 Toyota Corolla, 2 Dr. , lift
back, auto , AC ,cruise Call
614-446 -2143

78

•

7 ' K8' utility trailer 8350 304895 -3035.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1973 Rover 1 0 1h ft uuck
camper fully contail'led .
1600.00 304 -675-4435.

19n Plymouth Volere Station ·
wagon 4 new ttres, body fair
8200. Call 614-992·3305
1978 Ford Granada 8 cyt ,
auto , looks and runs good
t696 Call 614-247·4292
1968 ChB\Iy Nova 6 cyl. , aUIO .
runs good . 614- 992-2866
1976 Camero. 81000 or best
offer 614-742-2367
1981 Datsun 610 Wagon. 4
1peed. good mechanical cond1·
tion. Call614 -992-6041
1978 Camara Rally Spor1. auto,
AC . tilt. AM-FM stereo. atr
ahocka. 360 four barrell. 304·
676- 1139.
1981 Plymouth Reliant K-Car 4
cvl. auto: air, ps, fr-wh-drive.
nice little car. $2,295. 304-6762563

'17 Camero Z2B, auto tren11 .•
360 eng . good cond $1 ,200.
3 00-6 .00 week days after 9
p.m . 304· 675· 666B
1979 8u1c~ Electra, good con d.
01 , 10000 304-882 -2632
1981 Escort, 4 cyl, auto, new
brakn and eMtlaust, eeay on gas.
good cond , 304-882-2664

Home
Improvements

63

Livestock
1986 S-10 PS , PB Extras Call
after 6:00PM 614-245-6626 .

Reg1s1erad Anencan Saddle
Bred horses. Good blood hna
Reasonable price Ca\1614 -446 1642 Eltt. 47B or 208 or call
256· 6461
Oct 2B· 8 ·00 PM . We Will be
holding a special teedarealf sale
All breed• includmg Holatelns.
Cattle w1ll be accepted all day
Tue!l and up to 1 00 PNJ Wed.
Hauling available Athens Livestock Sale 1 mile ea!lt of Albany
on St At 60. Call Stock
yard-614 ·692 -2322 or 698
3631 Evemnga
Polled Charolais Bull Call 614367-7456
P1gs tor sale S30 each. Call
614 266 -1662
Polled Hereford bull weighing
approx 800 lbs. Call 614 -446·
405~

One miKed breed heifer, 600
pound $300 . 304-676 -4210

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

Wheat Straw for
614 -379 2769

sale

Call

Mrxed hay, 81 25 Hay for
beddmg 60 c 304· 675· 6579

19B3 Chevy Cu11tom 10 ahort
wheel base p1ckup 305 eng1ne.
360 turbo auto trans. Fled on
Jed Sharp. Ca11614-246 -9185.
1979 Ford F-260 4x4 Needs
painted
Good condition
82860 Call 614 -446 - 1492
446 -4044.
SF S TRUCK SALES

588 Jackson P1kt1, 614-446 0361
1 977lnternationallowatai' gram
truck. DT 466 engine, 5/ 2
trans .. 21ft matlock alum bed.
PS. a•r brakes 1976 Ford 360 1
ton , 300. 6 cyl 4 spd , PS , 12ft
flat bed. 1977 Ford F-360. 1 ton
V-8 , 4 spd , PS, 12 ft llat bad.
1969 GMC Ton Truck, fUI'IS
good, body good. 2 sets of rack'S
304 -882-2246.
1978 Ford Couner pickup Runs
good 8600 Call 614· 949·
2715

1979 Chevrolet 4 wh dr,
PS / P8. s1tt1ng in a parking lot of
Btg River Electric. 814 -4464360
.

1977 Bu1ck LeSabra· 360. V-8,
auto , air, PS. PB. New pa1nt
Serv1ced regularly t1200 Call
614 4~6 - 0677

__
,

I

1983 Ford Van. 302 motor, PS,
PB, automatic overdrtve, AC.
stereo, good t ires E~tcellent
condition 61 ,000 m11ea 614·
9B5·3353
1984 Chevy Convenon Van,
low mileage, loaded With ellltras.
a~c cond, 304-676 -6877

74

Motorcycles

1987 Goldwi ng lnteruate,
8600 miles. 1981 CX Custom
600, nice cond. Call 614 -446 0648 or 446· 0941 . '
1985 XR200R d1rt b1ke, S800
Good cond ,304 -676-2496.

(!) crD America by Dealgn
See how farming, slnp
min1ng and h1ghwa~ affect
shape of the land
iiQl 1111121 Frank's P ace
Hanna has second thoughts
about her fiance. ~amar .
Q1) Prlrnonewa Wrap ups of
the day 's world news and 1n
depth feature reports (t :DO)
@ MOVIE: The Omon (R)
(1 .51)
Ill Cll Hoover vs the
Kennedya, Part 1 (NA)
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Paper Dolls (1 40)
8:30 D (2) IIJ) The Slorytetter A
carefree young man w1th an
inability to expor~ence fear Is
at odds with his father until

-·

IF ~ME.OIJE. MAKES
A SPE.W-L

~V£~

ELSE. IS

he seeks out the amotion

fRE£ lD USE IT

11

Plumbing

•

MORTY MEEKLE 'AND WINTHROP

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614· •4&amp;-3888 or 614
446 -4477

and Is 1tlrust Into danger.
NFL Monday Night
Magazine
IDJ Ill a2l Kala &amp; Attie Kate
sets up her friend Angela
w1th her ex-Q!)yfrlend . 1:;1
9:00 CD 700 Club
II C2l IIJ) MOVIE: 'DHp
Dark Secrets' NBC Monday
Night at tho Movlea 1:;1
(!) USTS Triathlon From
Rilton Head, SC (T)
•
CiJ 8 Cll ABC Monday Night
Football
(f) []) Oil Gadhali sets pace
(!)

d'l.
1M

&amp; Heating

for pnce rises as OPEC

announces 1ncreases.

Oil 1111121 Newhart A
WHERE ARE 'lOLl
EiOING AND CAN I

GO

Electrrc sewer cleanmg, gas,
water, &amp; sewer service• For ell
your plumbing needs call the
PLUMBING DOCTOR . 1-682
6663- 24 HOUR SERVICES.

WI T H YOU~

1/IA qcJING TO THE
LIBRARY iO HELP

THEM 60Rrf300KS_

DROPMEOFFAT
!HE Rf&lt;STICECREA'A
Sl'ORE WE !=)\55.

Halloween party is
Interrupted by news of an
alien invasion C
@ ~arry King Lfvel In depth
interv1ews w1th top
newsmakers and celebrities .
9:30 I!§) 1111121 Designing Women
Suzanne 's ex-husband turns

up to announce he 's

APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE
Wood and coal stoves, furnaces ,
and insert11, Brunco. A1hley ,
Consolidated Outchwest Buy,
sell, trade. 10 yrs experience.
Rt 143. Carpenter. Ohto 614698 -6121

contemplatmg suiCide.
10:00 CD Streight Talk
m SpoedWorld Off Road
Racing: Colorado 300 (T)
(!)'Trying Times An art
history profeasor dec1des 10
learn to drive

84

[]) ®

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Restdanttal or commercial wtr·
lng New serv1ce or repa1n
Licensed electriCian Estimate
free R1den our Electr~cal, 304 675 -1786

85

General Hauling

&lt;:.eVIOU51.V. ..

R &amp; R Water Ser111ce Home
c1sters. wells. pvols filled Formerly James Boys Wat ers Ca ll
304-575 ·6370

Watt erson's Water Haul1ng ,
raesonoble rat es immediate
2 000 gallon del1ver y, Clstern.s.
poolsr well, et c cs ll 304-576•
2919

Upholstery

Fl &amp; M Custom Cou chas and
Aeupholstery, St Rt. 7, Cro wn
C1t y, Oh 614-256 14 70, Eve
614 -448'· 3430. Open dally 9 to
4 30 Silt 9 30 to 1 30 Old &amp;
new Uphost ered

Mbw1ey's Upholstering servrng
io furniture uphOlstering . Call
304 - 676 - 4164 fe r free
estimates

i

(!J Hogan's Horoea

II (]) iiQl 1111121 IIJ) Haws
(!) Speedway American
Sariaa From Ascot, CA (A)
(f) Sign Off

•

[]) Annual Report of the
DafanM Secroterl'ea For the

first time, all seven former
defense secretaries meet to
discuss how U.S. foreign
poticy Is made and who
manages the defense
establishment
IU) Monerllne Current

Dump truck dehvery. Cot~l .
stone. sand , Qravel and dlft
304 -675 -3190 .

87

Q

Newa
Q1) Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1.00)
Ill \l2l Ca!JIIey and ~acey
Cagney and Lacey fmd one
of their early cases resulted
1n injustice.
fll (!J Benny Hltl
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Portrait in Black(NR) (1 :52)
10:30CD TBA
(f) jlllve from Off Center
ThiS series features 1he work
of a new generation of
artists. (0.30)
[]) Thte Old House Bob V1la
and Norm Abram discuss the
~ogress of the restoration.

11:00 CD Remington Steele

Paul Rupa, Jr. Water Serv1 ce.
Pool s, cisterns, wells Cell614·
446 -3171 .

trt county area 22 yeart The best

1978 Yamaha 750 street bike.
8600 00, good cond, ~a ll after
6 OOpm, 304·675·6644

lrlend of MacGyver's IS

murdered dur~ an
!nvestigation Q

..

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Moat wells completed same day
Pump salea and service. 304 896-3802

J &amp; J Water Serv1ce Sw1mmmg
pools. crstem s, walls Ph 614·
245-9285

&amp; 4 W.O.

Cleveland Indians

Ill liJ (I) MacGyver A close

ALLEY OOP

Fatly Tree Tr1mmmg, slump
removal. Call 3Q4-676· 1331 .

'72 Chevy truck. good body,
new pamt, canvas cooler, 4
alumn tlota, need s motor,
$550 00 304-882· 3674

Vans

throws. D

(!) NF~ Monday Nlgllt Match
Up ~os Angeles Rams at

~

,!•

RON'S Television Service.
House calls on RCA, Quuar,
GE Spacialing 1n Zen.th Call
304-576-2 398 or 614 -446 2464

Dill ard Water Safvrce Pools,
Cisterns, Wells Delivery Anytime Cal l 61•- 446 -7404 No
Sunday cells

73

..
0

448-9~46

1978 Chevrolet 3A ton pickup,
350 motor, automotiVe, good
cond, &amp;1 ,660 00 Phone 304895-3001 or 304 -675 -4138

0

•

Tree &amp; stump removal. atone,
mulch, topsoil. shade triiHis,
ahruba, flf8WOod . t120 dum·
pload Don't LandiiCIIP"· 614·

82

1986 Ford Ranger lfz ton.
87800 Call 614-446· 1420

..

N

q

Vinyl Siding, over hang and
guHefl Call 614·446-6634.
Free E1t1mate

1977 Monza, V 8 , 306 . :sun
roof, automatic. 81200 304 ·
676 -1604.

Trucks for Sale

GETTINCS
A N~W

G~EAT.
.
WtiAT fLAVo~?

"' j•
&gt;

SWEEPER and sewl,g mechlna
repair, parta, and supp1ia1 Pick
up and delivery, Oavi11 Vacuum
Cleaner, one hall m1le up
Georges Creak Ad . Call 614446-0294.

6 2 Wanted to Buy

72

-

:t HfA~ Wt:'RE
L,.ION TAMER.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondll1011al hfetiiTll gu1ran·
tee. Local relerences turn11had.
Free elllmates Call collect
1-614-237-0488. day or night.
RogersBasement
Waterproolmg

Starks Tree and lawn Sen11ce.
lawn care. landscaping, stump
removal , 304 - 676 -2842 or
676 -2903 .

Now buymg shell corn or ear
corn Call for latest quotes River
CIIV Farm Supply, 614 -446·
2985

•

Serv1ces

1975 Cardoba. GE electnc
furnace 110,000 btu, Kmgwood
and coal sto1,1a, 304 -676-4656

I

1111121

Cheers
M'A'S'H
7:05 Cil Andy GriHith
7:30 U (]) Hollywood Squares
[!) NFL Monday Night
Memoria•
Ill Newlywed Game
8(1) Judge
I!Ql Wheot of Fortune 1:;1
Q1) Cro11flre (0-30)
1111121 l!ll Jeoparclyll:;l
IHJ Bamoy Miller
Ill Cll WKAP In Cincinnati
7:35 (!) Sanford end Son
8:00 Cll Father Murphy
D (]) IIJ) ALF ALF takes
center stage st the
Halloween bash Willie

FRANK AND ERNEST

1973 Starcrah 23 ft saH con
teined, air cond. eKc cond.
304-676-4B47.

B1

•

iIIHD

1987 fifth wheel Scamper
Camper, fully contained. Call
814 -992-2794.

Stamla11 steel e~thaust sylltems
Now cuatom made for your
ttuck motor tlome or clanic car .
With life-time warranty Muffler
Man, 9 St1mpson Ava , Athens,
Ohio 1·800-843· 3767.

Reortange )etters of Ike
four Jc:ran,blad words below 10 form four simp!o words

PEANUTS
SOME FRIENDS OF OUR
FAMILY JUST !-lAD
A NEW 6ABI' ...

reports on world economics

T~E~ 1 RE GREAT 1-iOCKE~

T~6V T~OUG~T OF GORDIE

AFTER A~OCKE'I PLAVER ..

AND WA'ii-IE 6RETZK'i,BUT
THEV COULDN'T DECIDE ...

FAN5 50 T~E'{ WANTED
TO NAME THE 6A6'r'

I-10WE, AND BOBS~ &gt;lULL

and rinanclal news with Lou
Dobbs . (0:30)
® Honeymooners
llliD Lovo Connection
11:300 Cll IIJ) Tonight Show
(!) SportaConter (~}
IDJ Magnum, P.t.
\l2l Sporta Tonight Ac11on
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0.30)
1111121 'Hunter' CBS Loll
Night

TRAODI

r

..:..M~~

--r:-s..:c;....::..u;::..u

_J

l

:

I I ll _i

t----,;.:.N_:.;A~R..,::.C...:H~-1~ !

I I• I

_

_

_

_

1
_

_

:

Sign on vending machine: " If
tha mach1ne is out of order, con·
tact the ·vending mach1ne
operator. Do not bang on this

I

machine He Is not - . "
NI FLEE
f-.,.;~5;....;1...:..,.:16;....:;1_:~~- Q Complete .the chuckle quoted
\L.---'--___,__.__..J.__ _..___.J_
by hll.ng in the m1SSIOQ words
you develop from step No 3 below

8

PRINI NUMBERED LEITE RS IN
IHE5E SQUARES
UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GET ,ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·• •
Asthma - Choke - Saute - Larder - SOAK their HEADS

a

Camping
Equipment

New pickup truck beda.
E Stephens Farm Machmery,
304 -372 -6866

1983 Ford Fairmont, 60,000
m1las, one owner. like new.
&amp;2300 1984 Dodge Colt ,
59 ,000 m1les, muat be seen to
r¥Preclata Caii814- 2B6 -6522

" It's hard to tell if thi S 'wal · erect'
bus1ness IS a fad or an evolutionary trend _"

CAPTAIN EASY

S©ttcl\1A-&lt;Z£~S" :~!:

0

(!)Dr. Who
[]) Square One TV 1:;1
IHJ Facta of ~lfe
IIH!l Ono Dar at a Time
6:05 (I) Atlce
6:30 II (]), (I)) NBC Nightly Newa
[!) Sui1ar Magazine
Ill liJ (I) ABC Newa 1:;1
(!) Nlghlty Bulino11 Ropon _
IDJ 1111121 CBS Newa
[]) Coloraoundo
Q1J ShowBIZ Today News of
the entertainment world IS
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
1HJ WKRP In Cincinnati
IIH!l Too Cloee for Comfort
6:35 (I) ~eave II To Beaver
7:00 CD Romlng1on St. . le
II (]) PM Magazine
[!) SportaCenllr (~)
Ill Enllrlllnment Tonight
(I) Peopte'a Court
(!) []) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
I!Ql News
Q1) Moneytlne Current
reports on world economiCS
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
1111121 l!ll Wheel of Fortune

Auto Repair

'80 Chevy Monza. 4 cyl, auto.
pa. pb. ac. am-fm call Great
shape 81496 Celt 304 -6757921 .

1987 Candy Apple red Fiero.
9800 mil~ts Perfect cond. Call
614-446-9206 after 5 30 PM .

For Lease

77

ruzun

----......:......:_:::; Uitod by CLAY R. rOLLAN - - - - - - -

[!) Sports~ook (T)

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

35 Maney Ferguaon tractor
w1th plow• &amp; disc· cream puff.
Must be seen to appreciate
t3460. Call 614-286 6622

1984 F~renu GT 5 spd Excel .
cond . All extras. Call 614 -4463397 after 6 .00 PM

Space for small trailers All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, air and cable. Muon,
w va. Call 304· 773· 5661

1981 Rabb1tt-Oainl . PS, PB.
a~r , good t1res. 83,000 miles
Good cond *2296 Call 614
256-1924

, 984 VW JeHa, turbo, dleael Gl,
high m1laage, new tires Mint
cond. E~tcel service reeord.
~0 - 60 MPG average. 84800
Firm Call 614-446-2206, 9 ·5

1983 Buick Riviera Al l blacl4
With burgundy int 2 dr. hardtop,
front wheel dr~ve , lully loaded
with full power opt1ons Excel
cond . Muu be seen t o appreCiate. 87900 Call after 4 ·00 PM
61 4· 446-2297.

Larg e trailer space Addlaon
Buhtvltle Rd. Call after 4 :30.
614-446·4266 .

Auto Parts
Accessories

Struts, $1 19.96 pair. 1n1telled.
Most mcdels Muffler Man. 9
Stimpson Ave Athene. Oh10
1 -800-843-3767

71 Auto's For Sale

71 Auto's For Sale

PM

400 •ct ft co mmercial apace
•urtJble for offJces, retaiU ng, or
serv1ce• Prime location -comer
or 2nd &amp; Pine in Gallipolis
Ample parking In rear $360 pef
month. Call 614- 44fl -4249 or
446-2325

Musical
Instruments

Transportation

Mobile Home lot 60 h Of leu.
920 4th . Galhpalis $76. Water
pa1d Call614· 446-44 16 after 1

49

57

~14-886-7311

Hardwood firewood for sale.
S20 p1ck up load Call614-266 1670

6:00 CD Cre&amp;y ~lko a Fox
D CD CiJ fil (I) 1DJ
IIJ) Now1

One sat heeders and A cell dual
point ing1tlon for Dodge 31 B.
304-773 -5312.

I.:=======:;==:;:=======
·:":":~:·:.:~::.
~

MON., OCT. 26

THAT DillY

EVENING

Oual e~~:haust kits, .t99 .95 In stalled Most Fords, Chavy
trucks, Yant , •x4's, MuHier
Man , 9 Stimpson Ave.. Athena,
Ohio 1-800 -843-3767

Big Dakota Farm Home- built on
your lot only . $12.995 8t up. Call

Firwood·spht &amp; delivered $40 a
load H1ckory, locu11t. oak. sassafras. &amp; cherry. Call 614 ·9926335 s,

Travel trailer jacks 211faJeckets,
one adult and one childs, never
been used. 304 -675 -3098.

Rooms for rent, day week.
m onth Gallia Hotel Call 614446· 9580 Rant as Iowa• 8120
monttl

6· 12 ga •hotguns&amp;1 - 20ga.
All full choke Call 614·4463346

Carpet, $6 60 &amp; up L1ving room
suites, $325 &amp; up Mollohan
Furniture. Upper River Rd. 446
7444

SURPLUS ARMY DENIM , AEN
TAL CLOTHING (Carhans 10
per cent over cos t) Or igrnal
army camoullage H 0 "Sam"
Somerville' s, Old Rt. 21 East ·
Ravenswood Fn, Sat. Sun
Noon-S 00 pm Other days alter
3.00 pm 304- 273 -5666 ln!lulated camouflage coveralls
S15 00

Furnished Rooms

Wood Splitter. heavy duty.
Mounted on trailer. Max 8500
Call 614 -2 66-6574 or 256·
1941

haJd wood slabs. $12 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 'Ia
ton . FOB Oh10 ~allet Co
Pomeroy, OhiO 614-992-6461

2 ~edroom furnised apt. ref and
depo11t. New Haven, W Va,
304-882 -3267 or 30•· 7735024

45

12 mch BMX 81cycles- 840,
colors· IJ;Iack, blue. red &amp; p1nk.
Alpha Scooters 840. colors·
Black. purple, blue &amp; pink 26
mch Smoke glass touch lamp·
830 Batt. towels· 81 00 each
Ptu11h toys starting at 82 DO
Open Da1ly 10-6, Closed Sun &amp;
Mon Located off Rt 141 at
Centenary, v. m1le down Lincoln
P1ke

•

--------,-::-lc-

Browning 150 tb . pull crossbow
w / Redl1eld scope &amp; mounts, 10
bolts. Excel. ccnd 8260 Call
614-446-9407

VIRA 'S
General Merchandise

IT\;;

JD• 10~ 1(?HT

Budget Transmission I Uted and
rebuilt. all types. Guerantea 30
days Call 614·379-2220 or
304-675- 4230

Rem ington· "Scoremaater" clip
fed 22 cal rille Excellen t cond.
8100 Call61•·446 -9407.

Valley Furn1ture
New and used furn 1ture and
appli cances Call 614 - 446 7572 Hours 9- 6.

Oak coffee table-smoke glass
top, bnefly used, $160 newS85 Call 304-675-5200 or
614-446-5201 ask for Nancy

&amp;

Remington 870 12 ga pump
shotgun like new cond. 2
barrels. MOD &amp; imp-cyl 8276.
Call days614-44&amp;-9407

9407.
% HP submergible pump, tank,
60 ft - 1 ln. watef line, electrrc
cable like new $300 Call
614-266·601 1

Firewood
anytime
3446

2666

76

LAYN E'S FURNITURE

APARTMENTS. mob1le homes,
housea. Pt. Pleasant and Gelhpo11• 614 -446 -8221 .

In Middlepon, 2 large room apt.
completely furnished , prlv'Ate,
both ut1lltt81 paid, 304-882 -

Quality firewood, all hardwood.
f or sale. 825 a p1ck-up load C.ll
614-367-0669

Peavey Musician Amp 4 · 12
speaker cabinet, graphiCS,
phase 400 amps of mu11c
pleasure. $760 Call 614 -446-

Firewood speCial 'One month
only $20.00 p1ckup load No
dellver1es 304-675 -7771

1 17 N . Fourth Ave .. Middleport.
Ohio, two bedroom furnished
apt, 304-882 -2666

8a~tboat - HiH , 75Mercury 15
ft . boat, 85 HP Johnson. Suzuki650 All 82200. Call 814·266•
62 15

Television
Viewing

OC:W~to

16 ft. Seaatar w1th walk thru
wmdthteld 70 Honepower
Mercury motor Call 614-446·
6691

Plude ciltern t una approved,
plast1c septic tanka. plattic
cu lverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son, Oh 614·286 -6930

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers, refngerators,
ranges Skaggs Appliances.
Upper River Rd beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446 -7398.

Nice one bedroom apartment.
Newly carpeted, upstatrs 402Y:z
28ttl St , Point Pleasant Call
614-992 -5858

One dedroom furnished apt
Extra cleen and 111ce Adults
Only. No Pats 304-676· 13B6

Callahan 's Used T~re Shop Ovar
1,000 tires, sizes12, 13, 14. 16.
16. 16 6. B miles out Rt. 218.
Call6 14· 256-6261 .

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

BORN

Boats and
Motors for Sale

11$'{ SAY

116.000 · $68.000 . Call
(602)838-8885 ext 1203

25550

75

Merchandise

LAFF-A-OAY

Monday, October 26, 19$7

Monday. October 26. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

OVerheard In board room ol larga corporation: "That motion is out ol order. Executives do not go SOAK the11 HEADS."

BRIDGE

NORTH

J0-!0-87

.KJ9

This week I invite you to watch two
fictional ~eclarers at work, Willy Nilly and Careful Charlie Their counter·
parts can be found the world over.
Which of these players do you most
resemble?
Willy Nilly watched his opponents
take the first three heart tricks and
then switch to a club. He rose with the
ace and made what lor him could be
considered an advanced play. He
played his diamond queen, and a low
diamond to the ace, and then ruffed a
diamond with the spade 10 If dia·
moods were 4-2 (the most likely divi·
sioo), he could then draw trumps end·
ing m dummy and cash two more
diamond tncks lor his contract Alas,
although diamonds were 3-3, trumps
divided 4-1, so Willy was out of luck.
When Careful Charlie played the
same deal, he too realized there was a
way of protecting against the likely 42 diamond split, but he was careful
enough to first lind out how the
trumps were divided. After the defenders took their heart tricks and
then played a club, Charlie won the
ace and played a spade to the nine.
Then he cashed dummy's Jack of
spades. When East showed out on the
second spade, Charlie knew that his

•Q6S
.A K654

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EAST
t6
.A K97
.J8 2

WE'ST
· -8 7 4 3

• J 10 8

.K

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J 10

.Q6U 2

SOUTH
.AQ10 52

•oz •Q3
.A 98

Vulnerable Neither
Dealer: North
Wesl

Pass

Pass

I.2.

North

Pass

East

Pass
Pass

Pass

Operung lead. • J
only chance to make the contract rested with the less likely 3--3 diamond di·
visiOn. So he drew trumps and played
three rounds of diamonds. When all
followed on the diamonds, he diScard·
ed his losmg clubs to make 10 tncks.
Of course, if both defenders had lol·
lowed to the second round of spades,
Charlie would then have played the di·
amonds just as Willy Nilly had

lly THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Terrible
II Estate
house
10 Sun-dried
brick
12 "The
Quiet
Man"
co-star

2 Graven
· Image
3 Libertine
4 Subside
5 Cover girl
6 Gotcha!
7 Western
alliance
8 Russian
city

9 U~aine
13 Partied
22 Hamilton
in couples
legisbill
34 Cato's
115 Stout's kin
lature.
24 Prefix
garment
11 N.Y. c1ty
for cycle 35 Trumpeter
16 Form
of Mary
14 Facility
AI
25 B
17 Palm leaf 18 Patois
u~!tom 37 Nomadize
18 Stocki~ 19 Be a .
amount
38 Pitcher
thread
thespian 26 An
39 The
20 Go on
20 Slum
28 G:~ler
Bard's
problem
30
Sect~
wife
pension
23 "Juarez" 21 MeJ?orable 32 Blustered 41 Born (Fr.)
penod
Old oath 42
star
ir-T::..;;;;;;r..~
27 Sports
site
28Goof
29 Flavor
30 Smallish
31 Make a
speech
33 Biblical
suffix
36Wherethou?
37 Turmeric
40Whooping
it up
43Concur
44 Plunder
45 Passe
46 Simple

DOWN
1 Art

DAU.Y
A'XYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes the length and fonnalion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different..

CRYPTOQUOTES
10·26
SNH

OXBSDADVB SDKGL

WDAH

K A

UDXSRH
XD.ONS

A X ,K T

0 X K E

PQ

ZXDGVDZWH

S N H

K A

S N 'H

J K D G 0

XD0 NS

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X R G H L
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IMPERFECT KNOWLEDGE IS THE . PARENT OF DOUBT; THOROUGH AND
J

HONEST RESEARCH DISPEL.S IT. - TRYON EDWARDS

�Page-12· The Daily Sentinel ,

People in the news

••'

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
KANSAS VICE: Don Johnson s haved lor his appearance at
the Univers ity of Kansas and had a wisecrack to offer about the
Midwes t. The "Mi a m i Vice" star , a Missouri native , made his
first a ppe arance at the sc hool s ince he was a theater student
there in 1968 and was presented with the first Buddy Award,
which is named in honor of another former KU student, 1920s
actor Buddy Rogers. "I've always joked that most of our
ta lented people come ou t of the Midwest because there just isn't
a damn thing to do here," Johnson said Saturday· night.
Clean-sh4ven and wearing a blue suit, Johnson told a news
conference he would like to teach acting in a university
a tmosphere because it would be " heartless" not to give
something back to the profession.
FAULKNER surr: A Connecticut woman who says she had a
relationship with William Faulkner is suing the University of
VIrginia for possession of the handwritten first draft of "The.
Sound and the Fury." Joan Williams says she met Faulkner In
1949 and began an affair that was marked by secrecy and the
morality of carrying on with a married man. Last month she
flied a ~ ult saying Faulkner entrusted "The Sound and The
Fury" manuscript to a Random House editor and told him to
hold it lor Williams ." There is a letter to the publishers saying
hold this manuscript for Ms. Wllllam's-,' ' her attorney, Douglas
Shrader , says. He said the manuscript was mistakenly put In a
travelling exhibition that wound up at the University of
Virginia . "She sa ys it's hers. We. say it's ours," says Chip
German , a spokesman fo r the school. "But the courts will have
the last word. " Faulkner was a wrlt.er-in·resldence at VIrginia

sharply gain altitude and go
away from the landing site. Only
then was the swan lost."
Fugitive caught
with money In
artificial leg
PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!)
One of the nation's 15 "most
wanted" criminals, a Kentucky
prison escapee. has been arrested by federal agents. who
said they found $1,500 stashed
inside his artificial leg.
Benjamin Charles Smith, 47, a
convicted drug smuggler who
fled a Kentucky federal prison
five years ago, was arrested
Saturday at a truck·bed manu·
fficturing plan!, where he was
working under an assumed
name, officials said.
"He has a prosthetic left leg
and we lou nd $1,.500 inside it,"
Deputy U.S. Marshal Lori Abra·
ham said in Portland.
Sm lth escaped from the fed·
era! correction institution in
Lexington, Ky., ln September
1982 after being convicted for
escape, conspiracy to distribute

In the 1950s and the schOol' s Faulkner collection is considered
the world's best.
THE Tll\IES AREN'T A'CHANGING: It's been 20years since
the Smothers Brothers were kicked off television because their
political satire was too barbed. But Tom Smothers says even If
he and brother Dick converted their ~s Vietnam matertal to
Nicaragua and applied the Nixon jokes to Reagan, the networks
still wouldn't accept them. "We couldn'tget any of tliat stuff on
the air today,'' Tom told the New York Daily News. "We'd still
get censored. still get criticized, still havethenetworkschopout
sections of our shows or forbid us to tape others. That's the way
It Is with the networks- they just don't want to touch i&gt;olltlcal
Issues. They're just .as sticky today as they were' in . 1968."
BASEBALL ON FILM: D.B. Sweeney plays "Shoeless" Joe
Jackson In the upcoming movte "Eight Men Out" aboutthe 1919
Black Sox scandal and says It will be a realistic baseball movie.
Sweeney says most baseball movies are flawed because the
actors don ' t know the game but Sweeney has plenty of baseball
expertise. "1 live In Manhattan and I play In four different
softball leagues." he said. "This year I tried out for the San
Francisco Giants rookie team just for the hell of it. And this
summer I spent seven weeks travellng with the Kenosha Twins
In A League ball. A producer wouldn't think of making a film
about ballet dancers without using real dancers, but they will
cast actors who have never held a bat in baseball films. The
actors in 'Eight Men Out ' really know· how to play and the
background athletes are all professionalism," he said.
Sweeney's co-stars include Charlie Sheen, who was a hot-shot
pitcher at Santa Monica High School, and the screenwriter and
director Is John Sayles, another big baseball fan. ,
.

narcotics and international drug
smuggling, Abraham said.
"He had developed at least
nine · aliases while traveling
throughout the country," Abraham said. "Smith was a pilot and
he'd also established residences
in at least three states."
Also arrested was Smith's
wife. Constance Camille, and his
son, Barrymore Rockefeller III,
Abraham said.
Constance Smith also was
arrested In November 1973 for
helping her husband escape from
a · federal prison in LaTuna,
Texas, the deputy marshal said.

number. Both of them have
fathers named Larry. ·
The trouble began after Jen nnlfer G. Wright. a senior at
Columbus DeSales High School,
filled out her name, Social
~curlty number and blrthdate
on her ACT college aptitude test
last June. On the same day,
Jennifer G. Wright in Falmouth,
submitted nearly identical
information.
Jennifer's parents were told to
contact the Social Security office
about the matter.
"Before we could." said Carol
Wright, the Columbus Jennifer
Wright's mother, "the mother of
Jennifer in Kentucky called us."
Jenqlfer mirrors
She said they discovered that the
Jennifer In more
two girls have the same middle
than just name
. name, Gail, but the Kentucky
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Education officials must have Jennifer spells hers Gayle.
Social Security computers con·
thought th ey were seeing double
when they received tests from firmed the duplicate data but had
no explanation. Both numbers
two Jennifer G. Wrights.
The high school seniors -one were issued in 1977.
"Now we have the long walt for
from Columbus, the other from
computers to correct the
the
. Falmo~'h, Ky. - not only share
the same name, but the same problem," Wright said.
blrthdate and Social Security

•

America keeps truckin' .full stze or compact
-·

By BRAD SMITH
United Press International
They say love is blind, and soi l
is with America 's passion for
that clunky , slightly overweight
a nd squaris h pickup truck.
Pickups. both compact a nd
full -s ize. are commanding a
larger sha re of th e U.S. market
every year . In 1962. ·one ou t of
every 10 vehicl es sold in the
United Sta tes wa s a truc k.
Today, the margin is one tru ck
. so ld for ev ery tw o c a r s
purch ased • 1n the !irst eight month s of
1987, three o f the top fivE&gt; sellin g
vehicles in the United Stat es
were pickups with the full-sized
Ford No. l. the full· sized
Chevrolet No.2 and the compact
Ford Ra nger No. 5.
"Pickups are the ma ins tay of
Ihe !a utom o tive) bus iness." sa id
Ray Wind ecker. a n a nalys t ior
the F'ord Motot' Co.
Whar are the reasons behind
t his popu larity' The drawbac ks
oi owntng a pickup would seem to

far outweigh the adva ntages .
In this da y of sleek , aeror;Jy·
namic s tyling, pickups seem to
be built to catch every wind
current. Their poor gas mileage
is notorious. The ride isn't
es pec ially smooth, and the seat ·
ing is none too comfortable,
althoug~ optional upgrades have
improved the latter.
So what's the attrac tion?
"Mainly, it 's because trucks
have become domes ticated and
civilized," Windecker said. " We
s ta rted adding such things as
llldopendent front suspension.
ai r

conditioning ,

automati c

tran s mi ss i 0 n s .

car - typ e

multi -vehicle family. "
One salien t point that keeps
America trucking seems to be
survivability.
As someone' who's owned a
truck for the pas t 15 years. 1 can
speak fr om experience. The
odometer on my Ford ~al!- ton
reads 180,000 miles , a lot of them
spent on rpads that were an y~
thing but. It has the original

en gine and clutch.
However. it is getting on in
years and demands a little mor~
attention th an it used to , but it
still. carries me to work ev ery
day, haul s a son's belongings off
to college. brings back firewood

int eriors.

from th e mountain s and goes on

" We ha ve dom Ps ticat ed the
light tr uck and in vented new
forms of the sam e thing witll
vans and utili ty vehicles . The
compact pickup· has become the
vehi cle of choic e,. often as the
fi rs t vehicle for young people a nd
you ng families. a nd often a s the
second or third vehicle in a

an occasional trip.
Of course, there is the ima ge of
a truck being the ultimate ma(·ho
ma chine. Marketing studies indi·
cate that men own 9.3 p('rccnt of
the na tion ·s full - size tru c ks and
87 pcrccnt of the compact s.
The median age of the full siw d truck owner. is 43 (:15 for
compacts) and 16 percent of the

owners have a college degree.
Thi' occupation of 22 pf'rcent of
the owners is in a skilled trade,
while 19 percent are a manager
or proprietor and 14 percent hold
professional or technical jobs.
Oddly enough , only 6 percent of
the trucks are owned by farmers
and ranchers .
The Automotive Information
Council reports that the leading
domestic pickup truck manufacturers .are: Ford t544 .969 sold in
19861; Chevrolet 1413 ,051);
Chry s ler 1106.4ol l ; GMC
1112.7991. and .Jeep 11.51!1) .
Imports. primarily Toyota and
Nissan compacts. ha v&lt;&gt; gained a
bigger share of the markt&gt;t, with
937.031 total sal es last year .
So, anyone who ma y be think·
ing about replacing that old
clunker car might cons ider doing
so wilh a !ruck. In an era where
vehic les g-et repla ced eve ry four
o'r five years, I sometimes
wonder why I don't get a new
truck. The an s wer is simple this one is jus t getting broken in .

The first six weeks grading,
per iod honor roll at the Salem
Center Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above In all their subjects
to be named to the roll we re:
Second Grade: · Leigh Ann
Canterbury , Laticia Metheney,
Matthew Mcthenry, Amanda
Napper, Larry Ogdin, A.J .
Vaughan .
Third Grade : Melissa Barrett,
Amy Clefand, Carrie Harmon,
Jenny Smallwood , Jenny Ervin,
Timothy Lewis, Jo Sandy, Stacy
Silvers.
Fourth Grade : Bryan Colwell ,
Jake Gannaway, Michael Jarvis .
Filth Grad e: Kim Janey, Su·
san Page, Crystal Vaughan.
Sixth Grade: Matt Clark. An drea McDonald, Denise Shene·
field, Steve Smith.
The first six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Salisbury
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Billi Jo Bentley, VIncent Broderick, Chad
Folmer. J'lson Frecker, James
Geiger, Myca Haynes , Michael
Leifheit.
Thb·d Grade: Jared King,
Timmy Peavley , Melissa Wha·
ley, Adam White.
Fourth Grade: Dorothy Lelf·
hell , Bobby Mash , Karyn
Thompson.
Fifth Grade: Melissa Clifford.
Jarrod Folmer, Heidi Huffman,
Annie Jessie , Emily Johnson ,
Joey Lipscomb, Shilo Moore.

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Several
thousand people - ranging from
the affluent to those who only
dream of being rich - attended
the "Toys for Adults" consumer
trade show , at the Cincinnati
Convention Center during the
weekend.
There was no chance of confusing the event with a flea market
as sellers hawked expensive
cars, boats, furs. hot tubs and
other high-priced delights.
Several hundred businesses set
up shop at the convention center,
converting it to an upscale
shopping mall. Organizers said
the event was intended for
•.. affluent Americans," described as people having incomes
of at least $50,000 a year. All
, adults, whether affluent or not,
had to pay a $5 admission fee.
"The show attracts our kind of
person - those consumers who are interested in going beyond
the norm when it comes to caring
for their dogs," said Carla
Addington of the Bow-Wow Boutique. Among canine accessories
offered for sale at the boutique
were jewel collars and brass
beds.
Starkey Labs di splayed a
$3,000 "stereo egg" chair.
"The chair is shaped like an
egg and Is on a pedestal, " •said
John Orston . "You hook it up to
your stereo and the music plays
so that only you can hear it
without disturbing the rest of the

'

Threatened With Extinction
Number ol endangered epeclee

Mammals

I
ReptHes I
Fishes I

snow tires mounted or batteries
c harged 'up .
.
Here are a few items to chec k
thi s fall . For owners of new ca rs,
it does not hurt to open the hood
and become familiar with these
checkpoint s, either :
-Oil : The lifeblood pi a ny ca r
is it s engine oil. Change it eve ry
3,000 miles. After a s ummer' s
a bou t worn it self out . Change the
filter as well. Otherwise. about a
quart of dirty oil will stay in the
motor. Use a good qualit.v filt er
and follow all direct ions .

Insects

Oa

Sna1ls

JJ 4

Cru s1aceans

(J 3

Mo ~ t

An endangered species is in danger of becoming extinct throughout all o"a
major part of its natural habitat. There are 768 endangered specl~s In the
world today. Of these, 259 are found only In the United States.

at y

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Unless Pomeroy and Middleport VIllage officials can reach
some type of agreement, approxImately 40 new jobs are appar·
ently going to go down the tube.
That was the Indication Mon.
day night when Middleport VIllage Council met In regular
session and re_vlewed the com·
mercia! development of property
north of the Sears Store property located within the
Pomeroy VIllage corporation
limits.
A letter from Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler was read stating
that William Haptonstall, owner
of Sears, had indicated that a
developer Is Interested In buildIng a food service business on the
real estate riorth of the store.
The . developer Indicated to
Haptonstall that prior to leasing
and developing, however, that an
approved sewage system would

roy, In question.
have to be made available, the
Mayor Seyler wrote that he
letter stated.
1
knows
of no regulation or law
Continuing, Mayor Seyler
'
which
would
legally prohibit the
wrote, in part:
·VIllage
of
Middleport
from per·
"As you are probably aware,
milling Haptonstall to extend his
Pomeroy's sewage system expresent system onto his property
tends only as far as the Pizza Hut.
which does lie In Pomeroy.
It would not be financially
However, the five members of
feasible to extend this system to
Middleport Council voted Un·
the Haptonstall property. Mr.
animously against permitting
Haptonstall Indicates that MidHaptonstall and the developer
dleport's sewage system extends
from extending the Mid91eport
to the rear of the store location
sewage system onto the property
and that only 300 to 500 feet would
located In Pomeroy VIllage.
be necesS.ary to connect the
Middleport Mayor Fred Hofpresent system with the deve·
said that the Middleport
fman
loped property . .Mr. Haptonstall
Board
of Public Affairs met on
also says that all expenses would
Oct. 22 and discussed the Issue
be paid by tlie developer, and
and agreed that sewage service
that there would be absolutely no
should not be provided to anyone
expense to the VIllage of
outside the corporate limits of
Middleport."
1
The letter gives Middleport
Middleport.
There are reasons for this,
and Haptonstall written permis·
sian to extend the exls ling Mayor Hoffman stated. He comsewage system of Middleport . mented that it has been the policy
for a number of years to provide
Village to the property. In Pome·

Meigs
teachers
file intent
to strike

t transaxlel:

NetV craft .shop opens in Darwin

owners lea ve s. uch muin 0

s

FOR JUST

$3•2

HALLOWEEN PARTY
WEDNESDAY EVENING
OCT. 28th
PRIZES FOR ALL COSTUMES

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

BLUE TARTAN

POMEROY, OH.
Fried Chicken

Darwin opened last week. Mary Dorst, owner.operator of the shop, Is planning a11 open house for
Nov. 13-15.

NEW CRAFf SHOP - Mary's Country Crafts
and Supplies located on Route 681 oft Route 33 at

r

803 So. Third, Middleport

·.·

25 Cents

,

Donald, and son. Donnie, on the
lot next to their Route 681 home
near Darwin.
The sh'op, located next to
Whaley's Used Cars, Is open six

For Mary Dorst a dream has
come true. Last week she opened
Mary's Country Crafts and Supp·
lies In an attactive building
constructed by her husband.

Eastern Teachers file inntent
·to strike on Monday,. Nov. 9
teachers association reached lm·
passe on ~pt.l5 and the teachers
contract which expired on July 31
was extended to Sept.30. The two
groups have been meeting with a
federal mediator since the Sept.
15 Impasse.
Dr. Dan Apling, district. super·
lntendent, said that he has been
in touch with the Federal Media·
lion Service which Indicated that
a mediator will be returning to
the district for further discussion
before the Nov. 9 strike date. In
accordance with regulations, Dr.
Apllng also has notified the Ohio
Oepar!ment of Education that
the Nov. 9 Intent to strike has
Continued on page 4

The Eastern Local School
District Teachers Association
this morning issued an Intent to
strike.
,
The intent was delivered to the
high school Tuesday morning
with the strike date set for 12:01
a.m. on Nov . 9. An intent,
according to law, must be Issued
at least 10 days before a teachers
strike can take place. If teachers
do not strike on the Nov. 9 date
then they must !Ue another Intent
which would give a new strike
date and would have to be Issued
at least 10 days before the second
strike date.
Negotiating teams of the East·
ern Local School Board and the

days a week, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. on
weekdays. 11 a .m. to 4 p.m . on
Saturdays, and 1 to 5 p.m on
Sundays until after Christmas .
Emphasis of the shop, .accord·
lng to Mrs. Dorst, is more on
supplies than on finished crafts,
although she will be stocking
some creative items which she
makes herself as well as some
things made by others.
She also plans to offer craft
classes and wants anyone Inter·
ested to sign up at the shop so !hat
groups can be organized.
Christmas craft supplies are
among the many items she has
stocked, along with forms for
wreathes, ribbons, colorful mats,
fill for pillows, dried flowers and
plant filler for arrangements, as
well as a large selection of
wooden art pieces and basket
making materials. Mrs. Dorst
also has art paints and supplies,
embroidery floss and yarn, along
with a wide selection of lnstr.uc·
tlon books, and more supplies are
arriving dally .
Mrs. Dorst will have a n open
house on Nov. 13, 14 an n 15.

for a solution since the develop·
ment of the property would be a
shot In the arm to the economy of
both towns. Councilman Dewey
Horton concurred .with Mayor
,Hoffman that extending sewage
li1Ies outside of the village one
time would encourage other
requests for services outside of
the towri's limits. Councilman
Bob Gilmore commented that he
feels that the time has come for
the two towns to join forces and
become one town under one
jurisdiction.
In other matters, Mayor Hoffman reported that a community
development block grant for
$9,200 for . tbe construction of
handicapped ramps In the busl- w
ness section has been approved · ·
by the Meigs County Commls·
stoners and will be a spring or
summer project.
Mayor Hoffman reported the
approval of a pre-application for
(Continued on page 4)

Fund raising fete
for Long set Friday

SEN. JAN LONG

$35,400

•

1 Sect ion. 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

utility services only within the problems to work out with such
village because officials feel an arrangement and that the
their obligation to residents and EPA would not recommend that
businesses of the community is to Middleport attempt to provide
provide adequate services at the sewage service outside thecorpo·
least possible cost. Sewer exten- rate limits of Middleport. Mayor
sion outside the corporate limits Hoffman said that 'the EPA
would result In additional lines to suggested that the most logical
be maintained to property where solution would be for the Pomeall other taxes go to another roy property to be made a part of
Middleport VIllage.
community, the mayor said.
The bottom line of council's
"We do not feel this would be
fair to the residents and busi- decision Is that the council is
nesses in our own community," against providing the sewage
service unless Pomeroy agrees
Mayor Hoffman remarked.
It was pointed out that prob· . to allow the property to become a
!ems could possibly develop over part of Middleport Village.
Mayor Hoffman indicated that
the years In servicing lines In
as he understands the situation In
another community.
Mayor Hoffman said that he regard to the Haptonstall propalso had discussed the matter erty, two businesses, botb nawith a staff member of the Ohio tional chains with 35 · to 40
Environmental Administration permanent new jobs, are interand It was the opinion of the staff ested In the location.
Councilman James Clatworthy
member that there would be
many legal problems involved, expressed a need for Pome·roy
that the Ohio EPA would have and Middleport to work together

shares during the first 30 minutes Nikkel average of 225 selected
NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks
·stocks posted Its third largest
of trading.
moved sharply higher In heavy
rise In a single session.
i\nalysts
said
gains
in
overseas
trading buoyed by sharp advari·
But ultimately tbe focus was on
markets
were
encouraging
some
ces In overseas markets and by
the
economic summit between
"reflex
buying"
after
yester·
buying Interest fostered by Mon·
President
Reagan and coilgres·
day's
sharp
drop.
day's sharp declines.
.
slonal
leaders
seeking ways to
The Dow Jones industrial aver- • The Hong Kong stock m.arket
cut
the
federal
budget deficit,
recovered slightly today from its
age, which plunged 156.83 points
is
expected
to reach
which
worst day In history, closing up
Monday In its , second-largest
between
$164
billion
and $179
more than 150 points on the
decline ever, was up 84.22 to
billion
If
no
action
is
taken to
strength of additional backing
1,878.15 at 10 a .m. EST.
Gainers led losers by a 4·1 ratio , for the shaky futures market and reduce it.
"We must have some sense
a government pledge not to back
among the 1,835 Issues crossing
that
It's not just business as usual
away
from
the
financial
crisis.
the New York Stc :k Exchange
Washington,"
said John Conin
Stocks
scored
a
s
trqng
rebound
tape. Volume was active,
npliY
•.
a~~otnv,e.f!q\entalratept
at
In
!Ieavy
on
\he
aroCI,WIUiltl,, w aboul.. 4l! miiUon
Dean Wltter'RI!Ybo11fs Illc.. ·
Tokyo Sloe k
key

Median household Income

".

enttne

Gains encouraging, analysts say

Who buys what
$35,000

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday, October 27, 1987

DOMESTIC CARS VS. FOREIGN CARS

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS .

PH. 992-5432

•

Cloudy tonight, 30 percent
chance of rain. Low near 40.
SunnyWednesday.JUghsnear
50.

Agreement sought for approximately 40 jobs

Even toys for children were
expensive at the "Toys for
Adults" sh·ow. A brass, handmade locomotive was available
for setting up around the Christmas tree - for $3,500.
Other adult toys offered at the
show included juke boxes and
antique game machines, Rolls
Royce and Mercedes· Benz auto·
mobiles, designer sunglasses,
hot air balloons, trips to exotic
places, antique clocks and
robots .
·
The U.S. Census Bureau says
affluent Americans spend about
$75 billion a year on leisure
items, which ts why Gary
Kirschner organized the Toys for
Adults show.
An avid consumer of "toys"
himself, the former scrap metal
recycler was looking for a way to
combine his Interest with a
career when he organized his
fir st show five years ago.
"We had lots of doubts alone:,
the way and shed a lot of blood':'
sweat and tears," said
Kltschner . "But we knew we had
something hot."
The show currenily plays at
convention centers In 10 Ameri·
can cities and pla.ns are under
way for European shows. A
' 'Toys for Adults" catalogue also
is being considered "to prolong
the life of the shows year-round."

tenancc to repair .shops bPcausf'
· , J•.' .,.o:. :.::::.•.:. ·.
age ,-.::~~. . .:: . ~ ·.. ·..•: : ~
changing the fluid and fiiiN is
- .. ~~~~~~~-~
·:·.·.:.
:,: .:. :··
··· c:....:.:~~is·
uSually a m essy chore. Usc a ::--ci
. ' . •'
v•ouwvr~"
reputable garage. Remember
NEA GRAPHIC
that small metal shavings lin the Source: Amencan Demographics magaz!ne
tran smiss ion 's oil pan are a The more aftluent and better educated people are. the more likely they are
no rmal sign of wea r. If you ha ve , to buy an imported car, particularly one made in Europe
no problem shifting gears, chan ces are there is nothing wron g ~--------------------:-----· -­
with it.

(Dining Room Only l
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy. cole
slaw, hot roll , butter and coffee. Sorry. no substitutes except beverage with additional price.

NF.A GRAPHIC

No.119
·Copyrighted 1 987

would like you to think that the
only way to fix "n ailing trans mission or t r ansaxlr is to over haul the whole thing- at a \'cry
expensive price . ( Transaxll~s ilfC'
the transmissions in front ·drivr
car s.)

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

Source· U S Fish and Wildlile Service

2510

Many tran smis sion repair shops

)52

[J 13

e

Vo~37,

instruments."

174

c::J 25

Daily Number
059
Pick 4

Page3

Cleveland Browns

family. The chair Is 'vlbro·
tactical' so the listener can 'feel'
the sounds of the drums and

TUESOAV NIGHT SPECIAL

193

P!ants

Amp h1 b1ans

snow. cars lineup waitin g to have

-Transmis s ion

The first six weeks grading
period hOnor roll at the Meigs
Junior · High School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Seventh Grade: Debbie Alkire,
Gary Adams. Kevin Arnott, John
Bentley , Abby Blake, L1nd4
Chapman, Jennifer Chasteen,
Kelly Doidge, Elizabeth Downie,
Heather Franckowiak, Allison
Gannaway, Tarcy Grueser, Tanya Hudnall, Jodi Imboden,
Randall Johnston, Penny Klein,
Kevin Lambert, Adam Little,
Courthey Midkiff, Isaiah Nor·
man, Kelly Phelps, James Pullins, Jessica Silvers, Tina Smith,
Rusty Triplett, Katrina Turner,
Michelle Young. Yvette Young.
Eighth Grade : Barbie Anderson, Frank Blake. Julie Buck,
Micah Bunch, Misty Butcher,
Beth Clark. Dodle Cleland,
Sharla Cooper, Heather Daven·
port. Kimberly Dickson, Stacey
Duncan, Tara Gerlach, John
Harrison, Jeremy Heck, James
Howerton, Tammy Jewell, Darin
Logan, Bruce McCloud, Joe
McElroy, Nikki Meier, Tammy
Miller, Kevin Musser, Melissa
Neutzling, Miranda Nicholson,
Melanie Qualls, Jason Reynolds,
John Sargent, Connie Sauters,
Michelle Scott, Amy Searles,
Bobby Vance, Chrissy Weaver ,
Robby Wyatt.

279

Birds

Clams

Everybody rushed in the fir s t
really hot day of summer to have
their' radiators checked. On the
first cold da y ~ the fir s t sign of

worth o f dri ving, any oil has ju st

· Endangered species worldwide
Type ol animal

season to take care of bu siness.

Ohio Lottery

wallop
LA Rams

Matthew Morris, Erica Roble.
Amanda Well. Tony a Will.
Sixth Grade: Eric Jacks, Anthony King, .}ason Morris, Jason
Witherell.

'Affluent Americans'
targeted by trade show

Don't wait for .old man winter's car bite
Even if some summer upkeep
By ,JAN t\. ZVERINA
was done. now is the time to
UPI Auto Writer
make sure Old Reliabl e marches
DETROIT !U P!l - For the
on into the cooler seas on and
millions of rnoto1·isls who esca pe
temptat ion to buy a new cat· 1his . _ does n' t leave you stranded.
For do·it -yourselfers. fall is a
vear, some main tenance on thr
perfect time of year to give one' s
otd chariot Is just as crit ical this
wheels. a on ce over. It' 9- cooler,
fal l as ever y other season.
m aking any repair s or oil
Cons ider : Your car or truc k
c
hanges an e asier tas k. It's a lso
has just traveled thousa nds of
war
mer tha n fa c ing those sam e
summer-scorched miles a nd
tasks
i n frPPzi ng winter .
probably spent hund reds of hours
F'or those who take their cars in
sitting in traffic on blis teri ng hot
for servicing. fa ll also is a good
days.

Browns

Meigs honor rolls

Quwksinthenews __________________
Swan attacks
helicopter
MOSCOW (UPI) - A helicopter carrying ga s pipeline
workers in Siberia was forced
into a sharp climb and had to
change its la nding site because of
a n attack by a swan, a Soviet
newspaper said.
"There was the danger of the
bird getting caught in the rotor."
Sovetskay a Rossia reported
Sunday.
The swan may have either
been trying to defend its fr ight e ned brood or perceived the
machine as responsible for the
death in the past of a member of
its family , Sovetskj'lya Rossia
said in the article, which did not
say when the incident took place.
"This unusual flight lasted 13
minvtes," the helicopter's navigator told the newspaper.
The newspaper added. "The
pilots thpught that the bird would
drop behind, but the swan re·
peated every m~neuver of the
copter. (The copter crew) tried
to land, but the swan went to the
tall rotor and the pilots had to

•

Monday. October 26. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Meigs t.ocal Teachers
Association has flied an intent to
strike.
The Intent to strike, which
must be Issued at least 10 days
before a strike takes place
according to law, was delivered
to the Central Office of the Meigs
Local School District in Middleport Monday afternoon.
The strike dale Is Nov. 6 at
12:01 a.m.
It Is reported that the filing of
the intent does not necessarily
mean that a strike will take
place. If It does not take place on
the designated date then the
association must file another
intent to strike naming another
date at least 10 days in the future,
if members do agreed to proceed
and do not strike on the Nov. 6
announced date.
The last session betlyeen the
negotiating teams of the Meigs
Local Board of Education and the
teachers association with a mediator was last Thursday and on
Friday the teachers notified the
board that they were canceling
an " unofficial'' extension of their
contract which expired on Aug.
31, this year.
A federal mediator will be
contacted by the board and an
attempt made to have him return
to the district for another meet·
lng with the two negotiating
teams and as required, the Ohio
Department of Education will be
notified that the association has
filed an intent to strike on Nov. 6.
Negotiations are continuing
between the teams of the board of
education and the non·certified
employees of the district. The
last- meeting between the two
groups scheduled approximately
two weeks ago· was cancelled
upon the request of the em·
ployees. These negotiations are
expected to be resumed when the
employees indicate to the board
of education team that they are
ready to proceed, It Is reported.

A fund -raising dinner for the
campaign fund of State Senator
Jan Long, a Middleport native, Is
scheduled for Friday evening
from 6 to 8 p.m. at the old
American Legion Hall, Fourth
Ave., Middleport.
Sen. Long won election to the
17th district Senate seat last year
by defeating long-time state
senator, Oakley Collins.
Long is the sponsor of five bills
pre~.ntly ill \)le,&amp;!Djlte, 01111...91 .
them being Senate Blll279 which
would reestablishment employment service agencies (OBES
offices) In areas where . the
poverty levels are high and Ahe
employment rates are low. This
would Include Appalachia Ohio of

which Mel~ County Is a part.
IntrOduced In late September,
the bill Is pending commiHee
assignment as of last report.
Long attended Meigs High
School and Is a graduate of Ohio
State University and Capital
University Law School. He Is
engaged in the practice of law In
Circleville where he resides with
his wife, Susan, and their three
children.
S!!II.__Lo~ will be on hand
··~'i1I1i"Y1!ventng ana the publiC Is
invited. This event is sponsored.
by the Meigs County Democratic
Party. Tickets are $7 each and
may be obtained from any
Democratic Central Committee
person or at the door .

Durable goods
orders are \up
By ANTHONY 0. MD..LER
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ma·
nufacturers wrote $1.2 billion
more In new orders for durable
goods in September than they did
in August, a 1.1 percent increase,
to $107.8 billion, the Commerce
Department reported today.
The rise In the orders repres ·
ents the biggest jump since a 2
percent Increase In June and
continues an upward swing In
new orders that began In Janu·
ary - except for a 2.4 petcent
drop In August.
September's rise means new
durable goods orders so far this
year are up 6.4 percent over the
first nine months of 1986.
Durable goods shipments
jumped $3.2 billion, or 3 percent,
to $107.3 billion In September.
with all Industries increasing
except lumber. This also repres·
ents the largest one-month percentage rise since February's 4.3
percent gain and exceeds the .
December 19!!6 _.hlgh of $106.7
billion.
September's Increase means
shipments are up 4.3 percent this
year over the first nine months of
1986.
Among new orders, primary
metals Increased the most, up
$900,000, or 9.7 percent, to $10.4

billion- the first lime they have
reached the-no billion level since
early 1984.
Transportation equipment suf·
fered the largest drop In orders,
down $500 million, or 1.7 percent,
to $26.6 billion, the fourth consec·
utlve monthly drop.
The drop In aircraft and
shipbuilding orders more than
offset a climb In motor vehicles
and parts orders.
Shipments saw their largest
increase In transportation equipment, a $2.1 billion. or 8.4 percent
rise, to $27.4 billion. Shipments of
aircraft and motor vehicl'e units
and parts showed the largest
increases . Primary metal deliv eries rose to $9.7 billion, an
Increase of $400 million, or 4.4
percent.
New orders fol' non-defense
capital goods - machinery,
railroad and communications
equipment, for example - declined $400 million, or 1.3 per·
cent, to $29.1 billion, with a large
decline In aircraft and parts,
more than offs etting a jump In
communications equipment.
Defense capital goods orders
declined $400 million, or 4.5
percent, to $9.1 billion. Defense
orders have been relatively stable since March, averaging $9.9
billion per month.

Eastern cqaching positions filled
Several coaching positions were filled Monday night when the.
Eastern Local School District Board of Education met In
regular ses.Wn. ~ '
Dennis Eichinger was hired as head boys basketball coach for
the current school year and Ralph Wigal was named as head
girls basketball coach for the upcoming season. Don Eichinger
and Ron Hill were named assistant boys basketball coaches .
The board for the purpose of equality of· offeri ng~ and based
upon the number of girls Pal'tlclpatlng, voted to reinstate th~
position of girls assistant basketball coach. ·
Robert White was hired as a substitute bus driver on a
probationary contract and an appropriation modification In the
Riverview Elementary School account was approved.
Bernadette An(lerson was hired as a home instructi~n tutor
and the board agreed to advertise for bids on fleet bus
insurance.
Following the open session, an executive meeting was held
with a delegation of teachers to hear statements regarding the
.status of negoiatlons .

•

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