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•

•

P•ga 16-·The Daily Sentinel

•

Wednesday, August 31. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Ohio I.Dttery

Maraud~

open
season on road

OAD

Daily Number
235
Pick 4
8333
Super Lotto

Page 5

5-17-24-34-3743

-

-·

Vol.311, No.82

•

•

at
... .

enttne
-

.

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, September 1. 1988

Copyrighted 1888

$

THOROFARE

s

Sauerkraqt t21t6 oz. e•s · 00 · Ml•ed ~eget1~ •• oz.· e•s •~ SO
THOROFARE
$ 0O THOROFARE PCS. &amp; STEMS ~ ~ OO
Slleed Carroll t2116 oz. eMS
Mushrooms t41 oz. CN~S • ;,
TIIOROFARE SLICED OR WHITE $ 00
THOROFARE ·
.
Ho11hty
t21ts oz. c•s
Slleed Potato11 t2/u oz. CAliS $ 00

S
S
4

THOROFARE

121t6

1
5

SA~E

A Multbnedla Inc. Newtp-r

oz. c•s $ SO

Green Llm11

t2/t6

OZ. CAliS .

Tomatoee

t21t6

THOROFARE
LO~ALTY

FRESH

79+

1 LB. BOXI

U.S. NO. 1
WHITE ALL PURPOSE

Ground
Beef ...

10 LB. OR MORE

~

hite Grapes ........ ,~~.... 69

LB.

(10 OR 12 LB. A~O.)

•Roact •$teak
•Ground Chuck
CHICKEN
.

$ 39

CALIFORNIA JUICY

·

.. · ~

NECTARINES·•••••••••••• It· 79
Juicy Oranges ,.,.tiJI..Yf. $399
YELLOW COOKING
Onions •••••••••••••••v.Lf..w. $499
TENDER SWEET CALIFORNIA
Carrots •••••••••••••••J~I~t¥. $149

•

~ALENCIA

LB.

.

49+
$4''

Leg Quarters ...wn.oMW •• ~,.
STOREMADE

· .

I

Sausage ·····~·······s.Y.t\••.
Ground Chuek m.,,.,.~.Jt·$149 FRESH
COUNTRY STYLE
Kale
Greens
........
Jt·
.....
79+
$699
Spare

COURTHOUSE PROJEcr PINDIHED Workers tor Danny's United Roollq Company,
Columbua and Athena, finished Wednesday with
repairs to the dome or the Melp County

CHOPPED

12

5

I

I

2

MEW CROP

BULK SLICED

(SLICED)

RED SKIN

Bologna
LON8HORN

Cfieese

89t

~,

BALLARD

Wieners
CRISPY SER~E

Baeon

8

0
4LIS. *1°

12

CALIFORIIIA CRISP

.... Haa~ Lattaea ·······"'·

'Les.FoR

quire fewer agencies.
Last year deputy registrars
handled 77 million transactions.
Den than said the state expects 30
percent of the people to choose
mall registration.
Agencies that are awarded a
two·year contract must be In a
free-standing location and not
part or another business. Coady
said this will eliminate reglstra·
lion service at 33 AAA Clubs In
the state.
"Some of the people who are
deputy registrars will not be
deputy registrars next year ·
unless they make a change,"

Coady said.
The criteria for selecting agencies will Include a full-time
manager, provisions for parking,
location, hours and experience of
staff. Coady said the state will
encourage new agencies to hire
workers whose agencies have
lost their contract.
"Our challenge Is extremely
grea\ In that we are to Introduce
and effectively Implement an
effective optional mail-In service
beginning Jan. 1, to change a
design of a system that Is geared
for failure on this day every
month," Denlhan said.

CourthoUJie, Equipment and scaffolding were
beq taken down about noon. The dome and the
roof ot the courtholl8e were repaired by the
company tor a total cost of $64,0~.

checks drawn on the same bank,
. wire transfers, U.S. Postal Ser·
vice money orders and the first
$100 of any other deposits.
Funds from local checks must
be made available by the third
business day after deposit and
money from out-of-state checks
or checks deposited In another
bank's automatic teller machine
by the seventh business day.
In 1990, the hold periods will be
further shortened to the second
business day for local checks and
the fifth. business day for out·Of·
state checks.
.
· Banks had said the long hold
periods were necessary to guard
against. bad checks and exces·
stve delays In transferring
checks from one bank to another.
But Gainer said banks were
receiving credit for 99 percent of
the checks within one or two
days. The law allows exceptions
to the shorter hold period for
redeposits or bounced checks and
for customers who have repeat·
edly overdrawn their accounts .
•'Congress separated truth
from fiction and arrived at a
solution which sets reasonable
and fair standards for checks

hokls," Gainer said. "As a result,
customers will no longer have to
fear being held up at the bank. •:
In 1986, the organization sur·
veyed 458 banks In 11 states that
showed 76 percent or the lnstllu·
lions held out·of-state checks tor
more thana week, and 20percent
for more than two weeks.
•
The survey also showed 53
percent of banks held local
checks for three to five business
days and 37 percent held out-ofstate cashier's checks for more
than a week, even ll)ough "people 11ay ~eavy fees thinking a
cashier's check Is justllkecash."
The survey also found that 17
percent of the banks held govern·
men I checks for more than three
business days.
The new .taw also requires
banks to calculate Interest for
lnterest·bearlng accounts on the
same day a bank receives credit
for the check.
The law provides substantial
penalties for banks that violate
..
the check· hold periods.
"Not many Institutions would .
want to risk the bad .publicity of ·.
breaking a federal law, " Gainer •
said.

Ninety-one receive checks on time

Ninety-one households In ces' employees became aware of ·of those cases had been removed .
Meigs County who rely upon 114 deletions sometime last Improperly.
general relief checks, and in week. according to Swisher's
The bulk of the deletions
some cases, medical cards, from report. The deletions were disco· occured during the week ol Julv
the Meigs County Department of vered when employees who are 25 through July 29.
·
Human Services, arefortunateto still working during the strike
lt took 56 employee hours to
be get ling their September benef.
matched the August payroll to make the necessa r y co rrections
lis on time.
the Septel)'lber payroll and real- to the General Relief payroll,
According to a report pres· !zed there was a dramatic Swisher reported.
ented Wednesday to the Meigs . change In the number of checks
"This Is a serious s ituation, "
County
Commissioners
by
Ml·
to
be
mailed.
Swisher
said. And althOugh he
" Hell, there must be a God ,"
chael
Swisher,
Meigs
DHS
dtrec·
Is
an
abnormally
high
rate
did
not
wish
to elaborate on the
This
said Incredulous paramedic Bob
tor,
during
a
period
of
one
work
of
deletions,
Swisher
said.
options
of
punishment
available
Downey who saw most of the
week,
91
cases
or
portions
of
After discovering the dele- to the department If 'the 91
'
survivors flee the burntngwreck.
"Nobody lives from something cases were Improperly deleted lions. employees then had to deletions are proven to have been
from the department 's compu- begin checking the deleted purpbsely made, he did sav
like this. But people did live.
There were survivors. · terized General Relief payrolL names for eligibility, since some "we're not ruling out any of the
The report by Swisher was of the names might have been • options available."
AmazJng."
The crash came three years prepared at the request of the legitimately removed from the · General relief eligibility is
commissioners.
determined by a certain time
payroll. After reviewing the 114
after the Federal Aviation Ad·
Department
of
Human
Servl
·
It
was
determined
that
91
Continued on page 7
cases,
ministration ordered an lnvestl·
gatton Into Pratt &amp; Whitney's
JT8D engines because of reports
that cracks In the combustion
chambers of one engine contrlb·
parched Interior.
By ROGER BENNETT
uted to a crash In Manchester,
the park and In the Teton
In besieged Yellowstone. one of wilderness.
England, In August 1985 that
United Press International
killed 55 people.
Despite Improved weathercon- the six major fires still burning
Yellowslone's largest blaz.e,
Pratt &amp; Whitney , after meet· dltlons that encouraged tlretlgh- · has been contained, but two
the 321,000-acre Clover· Mist fire,
lngs with the FAA and NTSB, ters struggling against major others. and possibly a third,
drew Ull a revamped list of forest fires In or near Yellow- merged and blazed out of control slowed down Wednesday night ,
but remained dangerous because
service procedures and malnte· stone National Park, at least two despite cooler temperatures and
Its close proximity to Cooke
of
calmer
winds
Wednesday
that
nance recommendations for the of the !Ires merged Into a single.
City,
Mont.
firefighters
said
were
an
encou·
engines.
Inferno.
raging
sign
In
the
nearly
twoFlight 1141 was powered by a
Spreading flames and new
"Almost '1 ,500 people fought It
modified version of the JTSD outbreaks pushed the total month battle.
today
and reported some pro"Right
now
It
seems
like
engine. In Atlanta , a Delta acreage ablaze today past the 1
gress,
but the fire Is not con·
spokesman said t.he three en· million acre mark - greater they're making progress besaid Iobst
tatned
yet,"
glnes on the plane, which was than the size orthe state of Rhode ,cause of the Improved weather
built In 1973, were ''fairly new'' Island -In the tinder-dry Amerl- conditions," park spokesman
Steve Iobst said. "I think the
and not original equipment.
can West
'
Flight 1141, which originated In
In Oregon, the state's blillest weather has firefighters encour·
Home
delivery
Jackson, Miss., tried to take oft tire will be allowed to grow until aged that some progress Is being
·
at 9:03 a.m. Wednesday but It reaches containment lines, made."
price lo increase
Fires
were
raging
over
480,000
crashed 1,000feet south otthe end while-vast areas of the state have
Home delivery price or The
at runway 18-Lett.
been closed to Labor Day acres In Yellowstone, where 22
Dally
Sentinel will Increase
percent
of
the
2.2-milllon
acre
Airport spokesman Joe Dealey campers, and hundreds of re·
tram
SUS
to$1.48perweekefpark
has
been
charred
by
12
fires
Jr., said the pilot, Capt. Larry crults are being trained to relieve
fectlve
September
4. It Is the
thll aummer.
Davis, 48, of Greenville, Texa'S, weary firefighters.
tirat
rate
adjustment
In over
Two major conflagrations told thP control tower by radio
With two new tires Wednesday
two
years.
there was smoke flilld fire lnalde In Montana and another In each over 100,000 acres - have
Carriers will receive a sl&amp;the plane and be was tryiJII to . Washington, 65 maJor blazes already burned together and
nltlcant
portion of the In·
abort the takeoff.
were aflame over 1.~.uo acres were· cloee to jolntne other
creaae.
Wlt1181. . on the ground said . lnWesternstatesoutsldeAlaska, nearby tires.
Single copy price will reThe 111,500-acre Red-Shoshone
tllefrolltotlhe~IUtedupand
where more than 2 million rieres
malll at 25 cents weekdays
tile cnft bare!¥ rolt off the
detolate scrub land wu beltlll tire hal linked up with the
and 50 cents on Sunday.
Continued 011 page 7
,. allowed to bum harmlessly In lhe ll2,500-acre Mink fire, bumln&amp; In

.NTSB will study possible
engine failure in Delta ·crash

JUMBO CALIFORNIA

Cantaloupes CT.
*849
Sirloin
Patties
••••
.11•'
'
·
··
NEW CROP WHITE SWEET
·
$
CUDDAHAY
Potatoes
or
Ya
...
s
.......
1
89+
Sausage ••••••••• J!\11'*···"··
.
.
$249
$s69 Russet Potatoes •••••• JfJI~H\.
Bacon •••s.Lf-.'11·
PREMIUM CHIQUITA
Lo •1n............ .• $169 8ol.en Ripe Ba~anas

way Safety and Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has undertaken since
1936," he said.
· Underwood said the system Is
designed to provide convenience
tO families and fleet owners by
allowing them to register only
once a year.
Where practical, It will also
allow agencies to combine with
driver testing and vehicle lnspec·
.lion and tilling agencies, he said.
The change also will affect the
state's 272 deputy registrars.
Tom Coady, deputy administrator for the deputy registrar's
service division, said the mall
reglatratlon provision will re·

WASHINGTON (UP!) Banks, beginning Thu,rsday, will
no longer be able to hold deposits
for weeks, collecting Interest on
the money and fees from customers who Inadvertently write
bad checks written on the held
funds.
A lederal law passed In 1987
goes Into effect Sept 1 and
severely limits the length of lime
a bank can hold deposited
checks.
"Banks will no longer be
al)owed to . play hide·and-seek
wll.ll ,..cus.lllmerS:. c~kllQ~."
said Leslie Gainer, a lobbylstfor
. the U.S. PubliC Interest Re·
search Group, one of the organ!·
zatlons that pushed for passage
of the new law.
The Federal Reserve Board
estimated banks were collecting
$290 million a year in Interest on
the held funds, Gainer said, and
added that banks were also
collecting $145 million In fees
ranging from $14 to $27.50 for
bounced checks.
The new iederal law requires.
all U.S, banks to make money
avalllible the next business day
for cash, government checks,

so LB. BAO

THOMPSON SEEDLESS

.Boneless Ham WHOLE
Chuck Combination Pak

.,

Federal law limits banks ·o n
how long deposits can be held

'89

Potatoes

LB.

FISHER

-

SALTINES

Because or the change, some
fees next year may be more or
less than .those In previous years.
Denlhan said. No one will reregister In less than six month's
time, and no one will pay for
more than a 17·month period.
Steve Underwood, the chief of
research and development In the
registrar's office, said the conversion Is the most sweeping
.since the deputy registrar system was esta bllsned.
"Each of those changes lndl·
vldually Is a major concern.
Combined they are the . most
aggressive, most Important
change the Department of High-

HOT PRODUCE BUYS

MEAT DEPARTMENT SA~INCS
..

TOLEDO, Ohio . (UP!) Gov. Richard Celeste directed
Ohioans who groan when It's that deputy registrars be · ap·
tlrnetorenewthelrautoreglstrli· pointed on the basis of competl·
lion will see an end to the long tlve contracts and not party
lines and short tempers that affiliation, he said.
frequently accompany the an·
Denlhan and other state high·
nual chore.
way of!lclals who held a briefing
William M. Denlhan, director In Toledo stressed that 1989 will
ot the Ohlti Department or be the tina! year that motorists
Highway Safety, said beginning will be required to tallow the
next year, 'II 11ew system will , ritual of visiting a deputy regtselbnlnate ·political ' patronage trar's office.
and the end·ot-the-month rush at
After a vehicle owner registers
deputy registrars' offices.
In 1989, theblrthdatewlllbecome
"Our challenge Is to Improve the deadline for renewal, at
thesystelnandtorernovepoUtlcs w)llch time motorists will have
!POrn the system," Denlha.n said the option to renew their reglstra·
Wednelday.
tlon by mall.

TIIOROFARE

S
$7OO
oz. c•s $6 OO

t21t6

·sneed Beets

.

New;· license renewal system effective·Jan. 1

PLENTY".

THOROFARE

.,
ZSedloaa, 14 foaceo

.

STOCK UP NOW-"YOU'LL

·"

' -

e

AU8USl28 THRU SEPTEMBER s

Partly cloudy lottla'hl, low Ia
mid 681i. Friday, partly
cloudy. tHigh Ia mid 888.
Chance of raJa 48 percent;

'

'

GRAPEVINE, Texas (UP!)Federal Investigators were glv·
lng a "hard look" to the engtnes
as the possible cause oflhe crash
or Delta Air Lines Flight llflln
which 13 peo~ died, but are
equally lnteretted In learning
how 94 people managed ioescape
from the burning wreck.
Lee Dickinson, a spokesman
tor the National Transportation
Safety Board, said the "black
box" flight recorders from the
Boeing 727·200 were recovered
and would be examined today at
the agency's headquarters In
Washington, D.C.
So tar, Dlcklnlon, said, the
only suggested cause of Wednes;
day's crash at Dallas· Fort Worth
International Atrpo~t was a problem with the jetUner's three
Pratt &amp; Whitney engines.
"We're obviously golD&amp; to be
taking a hard look at the power
plants (engines), but we're not
going to look at themanymoreor

any less than any other facet of
the plane," Dickinson said. "Our
lnves,tlgatlon will be a slow and
tedlou~ process, but we'll get the
Job done."
Thirteen people aboard the
jetUner bound for Salt Lake Citv
were killed In Wednesdav morriblr's"trash, among them three
members or one famtlv, two
other couples and two" flight
attendants, but 94 survived.
DJcklnson said that unlike the
last Delta crash at the airportFlight 191 In which 137 people
were killed on Aug. 2, 1985 Investigators wtll be able to
question flight crew members
and the many survivors.
''One thiDi we're very Inter·
ested In Is why somanv survivors
got out. It's quite unusual, .. the
NTSB spokesman said. "Hope·
fully the crew can tell us about
what they did and how they felt
and help us tit the pieces
together."

Local news-briefs---Patrol reports one auto accident
The Gallla-Melp Post, State Highway Patrol Investigated a
one ell' acclctel\t lt 21ao a.m. Tllllrlday on SR. 143 0.8 miles
nordl or SR. 7. Troopll'i sald'TIIItotiiY E. Erwin, 27, Shade, lost
control and his car went ott the rOad. striking a ditch and road
slp. No one wu Injured. Erwin was charged with driving under
tile lnfiuence and failure to malntaln~ntrol.
The patrol also was called to an auto tire ,at 2:50 p.m.
W~day on SR. 7, near Chetter, Troopers said Donna MIUer,
fl,.Pomeroy. was headed1011th when bel' li'IIIBulckcaucht fire.
T'lie Pomeroy tire 4ellll'tm1111t was called. Damage was
IRQderate. No one was bljured.
CodtlniiN on pace 7

Weather improves for firefighters

:at
4

.

~

�'

Thursday, September 1, 1988

..

Comment

Page-2-The

'

The Daily 'Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeruy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERES'l'S OF THE MEJG!J.MASON AREA

.

~lh

BmlitJ ,.,_,.__.,..., ....--c:J.,.
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaalstut Publlsber/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Mana&amp;er

A MEMBER o!The United Press lnternalional, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclalion.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tiley should be less than 300 words
long.AIIIettersaresubJecttoedltlngandmustbesJ&amp;nedwlthname,addres.. ncl
telephone number. No unsigned letlers wUibe published. Letters should be In
good taste, addresalng lssu... not personalities.
.
L:.:.::.:
. .::.::.:.::.::.:::.:.:..:..:.:.::.:.:..::..:;.:..:..._____~,------....,..-.t,

•

:Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Thursday. Sept. 1. the 245th day of 1988 with 121 to follow,
The moon Is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury .and Saturn.
Those born on this day are under the sign of Virgo. They Include
German composer Engelbert Humperdinck In 1854, author Edgar
Rice Burroughs !"Tarzan") In 1875, labor leader Walter Reuther In
1907, boxing champion Rocky Marciano In 1923, actress Yvonne
DeCarlO in 1922 (age 66), symphony conductor 8eljl Ozawa and
.country music singer Conway Twitty in 1935 (both age 53) ,
comedian-actress Lily Tomlin In 1939 (age 49) , and Barry Glbbof the
Bee Gees pop music group In 1946 (age 42) .
On this date In history:
In 1807, Aaron Burr, vice president of the United States under
:t'homas Jefferson, was acquitted of treason charges growing out of
an alleged plot to set up an Independent empire In the nation's south
and west.
In 1914, the last known passenger pigeon died at the Cincinnati Zoo.
In 1923. an earthquake struck Tokyo, followed by a disastrous fire .
An estimated 74,000 people died.
In 1939, Germany Invaded Poland; Britain arid France served an
ultimatum on Adol! Hitler but it was Ignored.
In 1983, a Korean Air Ll nes Boeing 747 strayed Into Soviet air space
and was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter. A11269 people aboard died.
In 1985, the wreck of the U.S. luxury liner Titanic, sunk by an
icel!erg In 1912, was found by French and American scientists in the
Atlantic south of Newfoundland.
A thought for the day: Lily Tomlin said, ''We're all In this together
- by ourselves."

Letters to the editor

---

Appreciates support
Letter to the Editor:
I'd like to thank our local
Busin~ss People for all their help
and assistance and donations
throughout the year and especially at Fair time. We know the
Businesses are always being
asked for donations and they get
tired but they always come
through for us and thats why we
have such good ~nd upstanding

I

"Young People" in / all our
communities and why we are so
proud of them.
Again we thank all of you for
helping make our years activities a lot easier l!ecause you're
always there to help us.
Jo Ann Newsome
Cub Scout Leader
and Jr. Fair Board Advlsoc

Are people being denied, too?
Letter to the Editor:
,
People on Public Assistance
are you being denied, too?
Monies sent from the State of
Ohio for raises for the staff of
Meigs Co. Dept. of Human
Service who serve you were
spent for a new telephone
system. ·

How much money do you
suppose was used for computers
that could have been spent for the
new programs to help you?
Why can't the commissioners
end this strike and get your staff
back In so they can continue to
serve you.
Marlene Hemsley

'

\

•.

Let postal

and Joseph Spear

"classified" stamp "to conceal
an agenda Intended to avoid
more aweeplnl congressional
reform&amp; of the defense procurement system."
Dlngell's fellow Democrats,
flElps. Jack Brooks and Jim
Wright, both of Texas, demanded
last year to see all of the secret
directives that the Reagan ad·
ministration used to set national
policy. They have not yet recelved a response.

matters of national security, Welnl!erger. The way Olngell
others appear to l!e classified as · sees It, Poindexter was recom-,
secret simply lor political mending that the White House
expediency.
couldgetplentyo!mlleageoutof
The Packard Commission re- the good publicity surrounding
port Is a case that may have the Packard Commission. Poln·
crossed that line. Reagan ap- dexter wrote that the work of the
pointed Industrialist David Pack· commission "gives the president
ard to head a blue ribbon panel In · considerable leverage In dealing
1986 to study defense manage- with the more radlcl\1 proposals
ment. The panel reported back to for reform that now abound In
Reagan thatthe defense procure- both Houses."
ment system needed a major
The White House told us
overhaul.
Dlngell's charges were un·
Reagan didn't Invent the pracReagan took plenty of bows for founded because much of the
ticeofmaklngpollcydeclslons In the conclusions of the commls· president's response to the com·
secret. His predecessors were slon, but wanted to keep the mission was made public.
guilty of the same thlnll. But this document that spelled out his
Still, the complete document Is
year • the Democrats are closing response a secret.
under wraps. Rep. Brooks also
Iri on Reagan In a deliberate ·
Dlngell, In his Jetter, said that demanded to see It and Is now
attempt to change the atmos· the president's response, In some negotiating with the White
phere of secrecy that has per- ways, negated the commission's House.
vaded his administration. Critics recommendations.
Brooks has Introduced a bill
of the president say many of his
Along with Reagan's response, that would force the presldenl to
secret directives should be open Dtngell saw a memo from share his national security dlrecto public scrutiny, or at least then-National Security Advisor tives with the speaker of the
should be shown to selected John Poindexter' to then- House and thepresldenlprotem
members of Congress, because Secretary of Defense Caspar of the Senate.
the directives set national policy ~~~~~~~~=-..::::~::.___:::_:::::_:::::::.::;;_______
and commit government
resources.
To date, Reagan has used
national security decision direc·
lives to ·approve training for
Nicaraguan contras, direct the !
Invasion of Grenada and start a 1
dlslnformatlon campaign
1
against Libya, Brooks said.
While some of the subjects that
have been classified as secret are

oft

time that you want to be placed
on the agenda, for the next
meetlitg. This right can not l!e
taken away, unless Mr. Snowden
can over rule the state
legislature!
Paul McElroy Jr.

.......

992-3411

•

MIDDLEPOII, OHIO

llt)'

{GuhiC'U

at

11-n

ao..-.

(Ganhler l·h at Callfor••
(CI•••t), It: H p.M.
.
ll'rNQ'• GamN
MUwau~Re

.a DetraM, ni.W

Otlcqo at Clet"el•d, nl&amp;hl

Texu at TorOIII .. •liM

Kan. . Cit) at MI•Raota, nllht

BaiUmo~ at Sea&amp;lte, nl1ht
New \'ork at Oaklnd, •l&amp;hl
~~oe~
at C.. ltornla. niJM
NATIONAL LEAGUE

..

'•
•

•
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New York
FIU!Iilu rKh
Monll'l'aJ
O.lcaao
St Lou ..
Philadelphia

LoliAilple.

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.~ 54

17 0

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16 1$ .514 11 ~
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WednndlQ's Rel'lllills

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San FriWcl!ieO
ClnelnMtl
SaaDII.'p
Mlanta

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.,. 1w1er..e1o.a _..._....

_.....

ud olo•lllklltll ,_ftdewaler af Ute
Leape (.4i.U.): ealed up

·,..-..-uape {AA).

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Oalaa.H - le..Ued 1.ae1... Laace
m.........,, ...,lelMr Peltr: '••· ..d
pllchen D.ve Otto ... ,Jim Coni frGm
Taeoma of 11M! radle Cout t.aa(t\.U,J,
rtiiiiiNIIh - Pur.:hue• colllrad of

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18 It .lUI I
5I 11 .-l92 12

s . . DiefOI, New Vork3
Oil capS, Hou!llon 1
Montreal 4, lA)IO Anplea3
s .. Francb&amp;eo 3. Phllaiklphla 'l, I linn
CJndn.att, Plttllburah 1
St. LoW• I. At'-'a 4
,_,....,.., GameA
No ,rames Mlheduled
FrW.,..'•Gaml!t;
Clncln.atiM Chtcap
lA• An pies .. New York, nllht
s .. rr ..c~~co at Mo•reaL .,,.
Diepal ntiMitlpNa. niKt&amp;
PlUM ISII M AUan&amp;a, at PI
81. Lolllil at Ho11-.., nll1fl

slilerU&amp;ep AI Ptdrtcl• to •rtare.
8u Prudlce- Jlowoe• Jlkll• Dawe

......

p•e•

Dranclo'fr• tl· ~o-....,
1111:
plklller &amp;ell)' Daw• oa %1-4..,.
dllablell lilt, m . .c:uw to .U~o zs;
ree.-led Jalelller P'I'Aad~o Melndez
lr11m PhCM!IIix of Paclllc Coul LeaaCAAA).
Sudle - Named Geol'le Zuraw
ualltut to die \Ike prftikteat lor
huebaoll apenlkl•
Bulletbnll
New JerJe)' - 81pe• pard Kuln
WUI . . .; wal..e• par• Otla Blnlloac.
Cal ....

Jacboavllle-

Aa~ed

anollmeut

of forwartl Chrll Capera.

Mar-all - Named Bolt starkey
• ... ..,., women'• bMIIetball "aclll.
Net"a• ..ae•o - Rel..Wetl rw.lnc
back Cll•vea Fopr tntbre loodlallleam. •
Snlem - Nametl PM Geom and
Hobert S•lt'ldl. aaa ..lant football

...,..... ........

N\' •••••u- Artneunced rllhl wtn1

Da\·ld VoW.

•IP"lt~d

co•racl.

lo a

m•lt~year

s..

'

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'

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'&lt;
.'

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.

'

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..

NOWI$7A95

'

COLT DL.
IMPORTED FOR PLYMOUTH.

·-'.

$8098 BASE PRICE'

·,

500 CASH
FACTORY
BACK"

NOWI$l598

Transactions
Bueball
BallhiHire - Ree.aled pl&amp;cht rl!l Gren
OIAon IUid Curt Sc . . .n1 from Charlotte
Olllle So•dlern~~ !AA).
lotfton - Recalled pltehen Slen
Curl')', Roh Wnlldwar•, Mike Rochford,
Jo,.. Tr..tweln an• Infielder R.. dy
Kulclllrr tonn Pawllll!kd •ahe lll&amp;erM·
llond Leape (.4..\A); rt~calll!d cak'ber
.htn M.,..o lrem New Brbln of lilt'
Eaater• Lr.,.e (.\o\J,

Scioto Downs results

• Base sticker price. Tide, ta. . and destination chargnextra. ••C•Ih back for rellll bU)'Irs on new 1988 deller stock

.

IT'SOVERI
0.. DOlt Hill

'

1

Norris Northup Dodge, Inc.
GAWPOUS, OliO
IUCIU ....AND PIUSE DIIVE WILY

.. . .
~

••

0

This week's games
Ohio C.lkre P,_.a118e . . . le
1'11und1Q, Sept I
Flllllq at Wl~~e-Willletrater fa)

SalMI.,. Sept I

To!Hio

•

at Ball Slate

low Ina Green .. Wed VlrwJnla
Miami at I • ~em Mlt"Npn (a)
l'Gllnplowt~ 81ale at Kent Sfatl'

Allr•llt Northern lllDola
Cenll&amp;l Slate at umWh.or (0..1} af Wlllnh•Jion
f•J-IIIJIIIJIIIM

The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPI)
(USPS 1411-980)
Sulky's Dand)b charged to the
t\ Dlvlrllon of Muhlmedia.lac.
front of the pack lri th.r,'stretch
Published every afternoon, Monday
Wednesday night to win the
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
featured eighth race pace at
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohit&gt; Valley Pub·
Ushlng Company/MuJtlmedia, Inc.,
Scioto Downs.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
Thj! 4-year-old gelding covered
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
the mile In 1:59 2-5 in posting his
Ohio.
third win In his last four starts.
Member; United Press International.
He returned $4, $3.20 and $2.80.
Inland DaUy P•sAsloclatlon and the
Ohio Newap~per ASioclatlon. National
Whitewater AI paid $12.20 and
Advertising Representative, Branham
$8,80 to place and Max Miss
Newspaper Sales, 7ll Third Avenue.
returned $2.80 to show,
· - New York, New York 10011.
Legend BluechlpJ, guided the
~R: &amp;Dda~euchM~
victory by Jay Doug Lough In his
to The Dally &amp;Dtlnel, ll1 Coon St.,
Rlmeroy, Ohio 457119.
first parimutuel drive, headed a
4-3·2 trlfecta that was worth
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
$1;417.20. Clown Time Brad and
By Carrier or Mot• Roate
Koka Kaream rounded out the · One Week ...................................$1.25
One Month ................................. $5.45
combo.
One Year ................................. $65.00
' A crowd of 2,499 wagered
SINGLE COPY
$200,168.
PRICE
Dally ................................... 25 Cents

Toledo results

446·1UI

18 It .Stl -

~5

lthlrd bMemall Kea

ca... lllllll from 'l'llcaon of the PallkiC.O.t
Le.ape (At\A); Hill piiCberDave Meadl
to hllllrn of the Roolde Lupe.
Mllwau ~e- Rec.-led Infielder car,.
SheHl .. d, niflel•r• MI .. Filder aad
Darl)'l HamUtotl, • • pltellen Tom
F1hw, Marlri llnudaon . . . .,.. Clutier·
bud1 from Df.•ver of the .t~Mrlcan
Assteladoa CAAo\) ,
New Vorll (.tl.) - ~rtt ll'lkh• Scoel
Nlet.en WCol ... bua•f•el.eer . . - . .
Leapr CAAA); ~fi!lledpllc••AILeller
lrom Col.-nblla.
New Yof'k!NLJ- RecaUedelllllf!lldtr
Mvk ear....... ltllc•en David . . .,

olihc Amfl'lc• o\aNtlldo•(A.U.); aeel

WLPd.GB

,.

'"'

r~alled

" foregoin'to NATIONWISE,
only filter
ever
was on

o.n..•r • • • Dltllf•o from a.n.ae

H 12 .154
10 " :5211

HouMa

FACTORY
BACK••
500 CASH

300 JIIID AVE.

KaniU Ctty I, Cleveland t
MlnEae&amp;a 10, Texu 1
New l'ork4, Seattle I
california 7, Balllmo~ S
Thunde,y'aGamm

Kan..

Yw'l ... Ow a..11ty thy·of . . . I •• 111
~

For~ll;

MllwauEe 4. Tnronl:f&gt;!
Oakland 7, BoMion 2
Ddrek 8. Otleqo I

.M I•.,•• (lll)'leve• t-11), 8:01 p.m.

, Sit Mllct Northup, Pete S.IIJII'vlllt, Tommy Sprague,

MarkLe.- and minor ll!apec•••Rey
Palac&amp;.e to Kaa. . CIIJ for plle••Td
Power.
Houllhn - 'lftuled ........ ne • .,
w....., to ~· toula for Jillk!her Bob

I
13
151,-1
22+;
21'11
30

tl , 'l':~p. m.

HURRYI

CHAPMAN ·SHOES

lo he 11a111ed 10 llalllmON lor Mdllfll*r
Fredl.)oan; trad~•la•le..-erJIIb:•er

8458 .1%7-

'74 58 .HI
,. 61 .••
California
88 ., .su
TO&lt;M
80 71 .&amp;18
Chlcqo
S8 75 .U6
Seattle
14 80 •.&amp;ell
WednelldiQ''Ihulh ,

$7,995 BASE PRICE'

'HRYSLER

41 81 .141 21

Mlnne•ota

PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE

IN THE WEDNESDAY DilLY SE1111NEL
THE PIICE GIVEN ON lED IDIT
Ylll WAS INCOIUmY PIIIIIED.

1'4
8

Mllwu~e (Birlclleck 8-fi) at Delrolt
(Alexander 11·1) , 7:!5 p.m.
Texu (Holllh ll· l4)at Torolllo(Ke)' f..

NOW~$2995

99&lt;_

.....

'l

U M .&amp;81 111,1
It II .181 II%

Kana~Ciiy

•

$10,995
1000

•

It II .117
• 17...,

Oalda~~d

-300~:L:K"

ALL -RED HEART YARN

25°/o OFF

u..-

GB

1s u .sa

Clefttand
Baltimore

$6,318

•

W L Pd.

15 17 .HA -

New Verk

•••••••••••••••••••
~·
•••••••••••••••••••

Johnsons
Variety Store

Eul

MUwauwe

YOUR EARS ITCH, BURN OR BREAK
CONCE~• Allergy Free Earrings were created just
tor you ... Just for your sensitive ears. Fashioned In a
HUGE vorle1y of s1yles that won't Itch. burn or Irritate
ears EVER. Need convincing? Try o pair of

*

f.lc!czbdk

oll&amp;llelder Mike Brow• Iram IWI~&amp;~..aeaol
dte Padne Coul a.e..- (AAAJ.
Ollc:qo fALl- Rec..letl plkller Ilea
PallleJ'SHiromVaaeo•..er of tile Pad~
Ceut
(AAA).
Cllleqe (HI.) - ~~Hilled pile·~
Mille Capel ....... ..,..,.oatnd•• \
DH&amp; Dalc:eau •d RoiMdl .........,
uduleW RlclWr- frcnlowa aft IIi
Amerleu ABod . . . . (..\AAJ.
Detroii-Tradedllw'eell'll.... le..-ra

1\MERICAN LEAGUE

.......

rt~h~u~s~d~em;o~lls~h~t~h~e~m~o=s~t:po:we~r~tu:IJ~~===~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~

--CORRECTION_......,.

, . . GROUP OF

Calt•r•a - Jleellled ellklter Briar/
Ooraeu. l•lel*r ,.... .... Ramt~and.

BJ' U•lle• Prw" laterratkt_.

doesn't
nave tbe
to flgllt
torservice
custo_. argument against competition In
But, lhen,
postal
mers. If someone can't lake time first-class delivery).
ott work to visit a neighborhood
post office that closes at 5:30
AT YOUR CHRYsLER-PLYMOUTH DEALERS
p.m., or If that person cringes at'
the prospect of standing In a long
line during the modest Saturday
hours typically offered, tough
luck.
As far as most classes of mall
are concerned, the Pas tal Ser·
vice remains the only game In
town.
It's time to Introduce tbe
Postal Service to additional
competition. The agency won't
like It, of course, and no wonder.
As the President's Commission
on Privatization pointed out this
year In Its report: "As with any
monopolist, the U.S. Postal Ser·
vice faces few Incentives to
provide high-quality, Innovative
service. Even In the area of
parcel post, where the Postal
PLYMOUTH HORIZON AMERICA~~
Service faces competition In the
BASE PRICE'
form of UPS, It has failed to
compete - Instead, It has virtually ceded the market to Its
competitor."
The same could l!e said of
overnight mall, another rare
arena where the Postal Service
clashes with hungry rivals.
The next obvious candidate for
private delivery? Third-class
CHRYSLER LEBARON COUPE
mall.
Regulated third-class consists
BASE PRICE'
mostly of junk mall: direct-mall
FACTORY
advertising, catalogs, that sort of
•
CASH
BACK"
1
thtng. In short, not a single Social
Securlt check, bill or letter to

BACK TO SCHOOL
TENNIS SHOE SALE
CONTINUES

~~~

Majors

Vincent Carroll-

Grandma would !all Into the
hands of private carriers If
third-class delivery were opened
,(o competition. ·Universal firstclass service would remain
Intact. .
Meanwhile, the reform would
settle two importantlssues: first,
whether private carriers can
deliver yet another category of
mall inore efficiently than the
Postal Service (any bets?); and,
second, whether those firms
would limit their attention to
urban areas or ·extend service
Into every town and hamlet (and

- 0-;.;;-Mi: O:r I

Scoreboard ...

service compete ·
The U.S. Postal Service, In a
gesture of noblesse oblige typical
of bureaucratic monopolies, has
promised to restore window
service It cut In March In order to
save money.
How very kind of it.
If you're like many people, you
probably considered window ser·
vice- even before March- to l!e
scandalously Inadequate. What
private company fighting to
attract customers would offer
such limited evening and weekend hours at the majority of Its
outlets?

Paga 3

starts.
.
York 6~3, St. Louts stopped Innings for the victory.
Reds 4 Pirates 1
"We're just notl!elng consist- Atlanta 6·4, San Francisco edged
Expos 4, Dodgers 3
·At Cincinnati Kal Daniels hila .-:•.:a_ve::.-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ent offensively," Houston Man- Philadelphia 3-2 In 11 innings,
At Montreal, Tim Wallach three-run ho~er to snap an
ager Hal Lanier said. ' 'Jim Montreal sUpped by Los Angeles singled home pinch runner Pas- eighth-Inning tie to lift the Reds.
pitched a good game except for 4-3, and Cincinnati outpowered cua!Perezfromsecondbasewith Daniels' homer came off Jim
one pltc~. Sutcliffe I~ a good Pittsburgh 4-1.
two out In the ninth Inning to halt Gott. S-5, and followed singles by
hitter. It sa shame l!ecause Jim
Padres 6, Mels 3
the Dodgers' five-game winning pinch hitter Herm Winningham
2K labor Day
worked.so hard·to get two outs In
At New York, Roberto Alomar streak. Jeff Parrett, 11-3, was the and Chris Sabo. Norm Charlton,
Extravapnul
that Inning.
· drove In two runs, Including the winner. Alejandro Pena, 5-6, 1-2, gained his first major league
Monday
MaiiJ1te
. "What we need Is to have more tie-breaker with a sixth-Inning suffered the defeat.
earned his 29th
consistency on offense. It's going double, to pace San Diego. Andy
Sept. s, 1:30 p.m.
to take good pitching down the Hawkins, 13·10, allowed five hits
• l'llldnrt • Admillion
stretch and everyone up and and three runs over 61-3 Innings.
• Ptogtam • Season Pales 1
·down the lineup has to help us Mark Davis gained his 24th save.
0 Ups (whle ·~·lies last) .
score more runs."
Terry Leach, 6-2, relleved Mets
•Coffee
Chicago took a 1·0 lead In the starter Injured Sid Fernandez in
• ttotOop•
I
• Soft Drinks• • l'opwm'
second on Damon Berryhlll's the second.
and otheupecial ihms... 1
RBI groundout.
St. Louis 8, Atlanta 4
The Cubs went ahead 3-0 In the
At Atlanta, Curt Ford and Tony
AUONLY254EACHtl
fifth. Palmeiro opened with a Pena each drove In two runs and
double and stole third, Deshaies St. Louis turned four double
BRING ntiS AD
struck ·out ·the next two batters plays. Scott Terry, 6-3, allowed
AND aT IN FREEl!
before Sutcll!fe lifted the first seven hits over seven Innings,
• +me 1n CI'MIIItand ~
pitch over the right-field fence.
struck out one and walked two.
!opioa9130188.
Ken Dayley pitched one-plus
"He (Lanier) · had two sltua· Inning, and Todd Worrell fintlons- he could've put Darrin lshed for his 27th save. Pete
Jackson on base to get to me and Smith, 7-13, was the loser.
he didn't," Sutcliffe said. "You
Giants 3, Pblllles 2, lllnnm1s
'
.
just don't outmanage Hal
At Philadelphia, Ernest Riles
Lanter."
drove ·Jn the winning·run with a
Desha lei; said he simply let a bases-loaded sacrifice fly In the
sllder get away.
11th. Bruce Ruffin, 6-10, came on
"It's real!rustratlng," he said. In the 11th· and walked Bob
"I'm throwing as well as I have Brenly, who was forced at
and don't have anything to show second, Ruffin walked Will Clark
for II . I threw him a ·bad pitch. I and Brett Butler. Kent Tekulve
tried to aim itlnsteadofthrowlng relieved and surrendered Riles'
it."
sacrifice fly. Scott Garrelts, 5-7,
NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN
",. 1
Elsewhere In the NatiOnal s~t~r~uc~k~O~\l~t_:ro~u~r~in~th~r:.!:e!e_!h~l~tl~es~s~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~-=-~-=-~-=-~-=-~-=
League, San Diego defeated New r-

'

~.$6,018

,Expresses feelings
I would like to express my
feelings about the discontinuation of public participation at the
Meigs Local School Board
Meetings.
First, I would like to thank
Robert Barton and Larry Rupe
for trying to keep public partie!·
pation for the parents of the
Meigs Local students.
At the meetings that I have
attended, after the Y, hour public
participation segment, Mr.
Snowden would thank the people
who spoke, for their concern and
Input. Now, since hls vote on the
Issue, it would seem he was just
being hypocritical.
Since the public segment was
set up by the board, It was to have
a duration of Y, hour, and a limit
of 10 minutes per speaker. How,
If Mr. Snowden, Mr. Werry, and
Mr. Vaughan do'not have that Y,
hour per month to commit to the
Interest of the school, then
mayl!e they should step down and
let someone, with a little more
concern, have those board
positions.
Perhaps, the time Involved
with the public sessions Is not the
reason for stopping them .
Maybe, It Is because of the
embarassment of the board,
caused by Mr. Snowden, the
president, losing his temper
when·someone, during the public
segment, disagrees with him.
In clostng, I want to let parents
know that, according to state law
parents do have a right to be
beard at acbool board meetings.
H you have an llluethat you want
to brine before the board, you
need to notify the board ahead of

WASHINGTON - Nearly two
years before the Pentagon procurement scandal erupted, a
coneressman began a paper
chase for a document that he
thougbt would prove the Rea1an
administration was deliberately
side-stepping needed reforms In
the Defense Depariment.
Rep. John Dlngell, D·Mich.,
wrote to President Reagan In
October! 1986 with a simple
request. He wanted to see Rea·. gan's written response to the
Packard Commission- a presl·
· dentlal commission that bas
recommended an overhaul ofthe
: military procurement process.
Reagan had written a response to
the commission's suggestions,
but It was classl!led secret under
' the gUise of "national security,"
I jus I li~ nearly 300 other policy
papers that have come out of the
Reagan White House.
"Oftlclals In your admlnlstratlon ... are mlsusln1 national
- security classifications In order
to withhold InformatiOn from
Congress," Dlngell wrote to
Reagan. "This Is unlawful and
should be Immediately
Investigated."
TheWhlteHousewouldit' tglve
Dlngell the document he wanted.
But he and his staff got a copy
from a source they decltne to
name. Now, Dlngelllsconvlnced, ·
as he wrote to Reagan, that the ·
White House stat! used the

By MICHAEL SULLIVAN
· UPJ Sports Writer
Rick Sutcliffe employed the
element of surprise against the
·Houston Astros Wednesday.
The Chicago pitcher belted a
two-run home run and fired a
six-hitter to spark the Cubs to a
3-~.victory over Houston.
Obviously, It was a big
surprise," said Sutcllffe of his
homer. "I was as shocked as
anyone In the park,"
Sutcliffe's homer, his first of
the season, fourth lifetime and
first slnceAprll24, 1986, came
Jim Deshaies, 9-11, and gave
Chicago a 3·0 edge In the fifth
Inning. The right-hander also hit
his fourth double of the season.
Sutcll!fe, 11·11, struck out five
and walked one In his lOth
09mplete game. He retired 13
consecutive Astros from the
third to seventh Innings .
. "I was realillsappolnted with
my last outing (against
Atlanta)," said Sutcliffe, the 1984
National League Cy Young
Award winner. "I don't know
what It Is about that club. I just
haven't fared well against them.
Today I just wanted to be more
consistent."
Deshaies surrendered three
runs on five hits over six IQnlngs,
and struck out seven. Des bales,
who came within six outs of a
no-hitter In his last starfTues' (lay, has received only four
, Houston runs In his last five

By Jack Anderson

Reagan s response sought

The Daily Sentinel

Sutcliffe .pitches, bats Cubs to 3-1 victory over Astros

oanv Sentinel

Pom&amp;l oy-MiddlepOI't. Ohio
~undav. Septanber 1, 1988

: ~--------------------------~

romeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

.. , ..

Before I left for work this morning, Emm~, my wife, didn't
know a carburetor from a percolator But on her trip to the market
today, her car started coughing and wheezing. She knew I always
went to NATIONWISE for parts and advice, so she popped in. Turns
out all she needed was a new fuel filter
So she picked one up, along with some free advice on
how to do the job. The guys at NATIONWISE must have taught
her well, cause she says she doesn't need any help.
But I'm helping anyhow. While Emma's working
on the cat; I'm working on dinner The car's getting a new fuel filter
And were getting bean burger surprise. The filter's guaranteed.
Dinner's not.

Subscribers not desiring to pey the car·

rter m~y
TheD~

remit In advance direcl to
Smtlnel on a3,6or Umonth
baall. c'redll wUl be atven carrier each

.......

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Fa!· ·
cons Dame led all the way
No sublcrlptiOIII by man P'""ftted In
Wednesday nlgbt to post a
areas where home carrier aervlce ll
·2-length victory In the featured
available.
11th race pace at Raceway Park.
MaiiSubooripl ....
Driven by Char lie Brown, tbe
. lnotde Metp c• .,
winner covered the mtle In 1: 58
13 weeu ....... :.......................... SI7.29
26 Weeu ..... """,, ... ,................. $M.06
4-5 and returned ~.60, $4 and
52 Weells ..... """ ...................... , 1116.iltl
$3.110. Watch Me Go Boy finished
Ooollllde Melp CouiiiJ
13 Weeu .................................. SIB-:10
second, paying $3.40 and $3.20,
26 weeu ................ :................. a•o
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�The Daily Sentinel Page-5

P01)181'oy-Midcllport, Ohio

Page

4 lhe Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Septanblr 1, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Marauders travel to ·Alexander for 1988 football opener

Twins rip Rangers; Royals slip past Cleveland nme, 1-0
e

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Spons Writer
In lieu of gaining ground in the
standings, the Minnesota Twins
took Frank Viola's personal
accomplishment as compensation. VIola became the major
leagues' first 20-game winner
Wednesday night, coasting to a
10-1 victory over the Texas
Rangers.
"It's nice to be the firsttoget to
20 this· year," said VIola, 20-6. "I
won't lie to you. But I want to be
the first to get to 21 and 22. I don't
want to stop here.
"The main thing Is that we
won. As long as we still have a
chance to catch Oakland (for the
American League West crown) ,
we have to keep trying."
The leffhander had failed In
his first two attempts at his 20th
victory, but Texas proved an
easy mark. The Twins scored
five times In the second Inning off
Paul Kilgus, 11-12. who in his last
start bad retired the first 19 men
he faced.
" We didn't do much to chal-

lenge them tonight," Texas Manager Bobby Valentine said. ''Viola Is tough to deal with when he
gets one or two runs ahead, much
Jess the way It was tonight. "
Viola allowed five hits over
seven innings before giving way
in the warm, humid weather to
German GonZalez. The only run
scored off Viola was unearned,
and he lowered his ERA to 2.36 .
"He had some long innings and
he got tired so out he came,"
Twins Manager Tom Kellv said.
" It was the same old thing. He
had his fastball, his curveball,
and he was getting the ball over.
'When he first came to the
majors he was throwing 100
pitches in live innings and
couldn 't do anything. Now he has
comma nd or his pitches and he Is
a tremendous pitcher. Throwing
strikes is what it ts ali about in

this teague. "
The Rangers resorted to using
utility Infielder Jeff Kunkel to
pitch the flnallnnlng. Kunkel, the
first position player to pitch in
Rangers history, retired all three
men he faced and struck out Greg
Gagne on three pitches.
In other games, Milwaukee
dumped Toronto 4·2, Oakland
thumped Boston. 7-2, Detroit
crushed Chicago 9-3, Kansas Cit v
nipped Cleveland 1·0, New York
edged Seattle 4-1, and California
tripped Baltimore 7-5.
Athletics 7, Red Sox Z
At Oakland, Calif., Mark
McGwlre and Dave Henderson
each homered to help the A's
complete a three-game series
sweep and win all six home
games against the Red Sox (or
the first time. Storm Davis, 14-4,
gave up two runs over 5 2-3

drove in three runs, helping New
Innings to pick up his ninth
Tigers 9, White So&gt;&lt; 8
straight victory to tie the league
At Chicago, Jack Morris al- York Yankees snap Its seasonseason-high.
lowed five hits over etghtinnlngs high six-game losing streak.
Brewers 4, Blue J IIYI 2
and Lou Whitaker drove In three Rhoden, 8-10, struck out five and
At Milwaukee. DonAugust,S-6,
runs, helping the Tigers snap a walked two In his third complet~
and two rellevers combined on a four-game losing streak. Morris, game or the season, ending the
nine-hitter and Robin Yount· 12-12, who had a one-hit shutout Mariners' five-game domination
drove in two runs with a single entering the sixth, struck out two or the Yankees.
and a home run, Mike Flanagan, · and walked one. John Davis fell . - - - - - - - - - - - 11·12, allowed rour runs on nine to'2-5.
hits in seven innings. The leftAngels 7, ()rtoles 1
bander has lost four straight
At Anaheim, Calif., Tony Arstarts and six of his last seven.
mas doubled home Wally Joyner
Royals I, lndlans 0
from third base with one out in
At Kansas City, Mo. , Bill the eighth inning, lifting the
Pecota scored Dannv Tartabull Angels. Bryan Harvey improved
with a seventh·lnn.ing suicide to 6·4 despite giving up a single
111 Second St., Pomeroy
squeeze, and Charlie Leibrandt that tied the score In the eighth.
outdueled Greg SwindelL Let- California won a season series
fOUl INDEPENDENT
brandt, 10-11, earned his fifth against Baltimore for the first
AGENTS SEIYING
straight victory. Swindell, 14-13, till'e since 1978, 7-5.
held the Royals hitless for 4 2-3
Yankees 4, Mariners I
vMEIGS COUNTY
innings and finished with a
At Seattle, Rick Rhoden scat J
SINCE 1868
rour·hitter.
tered six hits and Dave Winfield

point spread and the largest blitzing and use a tight man to
margin of victory being 66 points. man defense. On the defensive
Alexander, though sma 11 In front, the Marauders have made
Meigs and Alexander will be numbers having some twenty a couple of adjustments as they
among a host of schoolboy two grldders, Is not to be taken will put Dennis Boothe at the
elevens to get the 1988 football lightly. however. The Spartans tackle slot and Freshman Frank
se·ason into high gear as they run the so called "side-saddle" make will see at !east part time
square off at Spartan stadium In of!ense using a lot of spread . duty at middle guard. Jerry
Albany Friday at 7:30 p.m.
formatiOns. Their signal caller Jacks and Matt Peterson will be
The Marauders will be looking may throw frequently to two among the front line defenses
to defend their TVC crown , wideou ts and can be very decep- and Terry Fields and Wes Young
. against a squad . they have ttve on handoffs from the unusual may get the nod at defensive end.
domi~U~ted, on the gridiron, dur- formations employed by the Scott Nelgler, Wes Howard and
Vince Vanaman will be In the
· ing the past five seasons. Meigs Spartans.
Meigs, to counteract the Alex defensive backfield along with
• has won all five encounters with
• the closest contest ending in a 19 offensive thrust, will probably be
By JIM SOULSBY
· Sentinel News Stalf

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSEl

INSURANCE

;Syracuse quarterbacks are
questioiunarks ·McPherson
~

SYRACUSE, N.Y. CUP!) Coach _Dick MacPherson claims
this year's Syracuse football
team, Ohio State's season-.. Dpenlng opponent, ha,S as much
$ ,talent as last seas~n·s unbeaten
...,.: -squad, but says lne pertence at
,q uarterback mak
it hard to
t:{.:Predlct how the team will

t':

:1:~-perform.

=

Junkin

1t's a decision I guess was
made tn the last 48 hours. Mike is
still ImproVing and developing a
better understanding of "'hat
we're trylng to do."
There had been rumors Johnson would be traded In order to
reduce the roster to the NFL
regular-season limit of 47. Tuesday, however, the Browns sent
reserve linebacker Anthony
Griggs to Indianapolis for a
low-round draft pick. "I antici pated this moment for quite a
long time," said Johnson . " My
main interest is to play for the
Cleveland Browns. One way or
another, I'll be back. In . the
course or the season. you'll see
Eddie Johnson."
Junkin had 17 tackles ~nd one
sack as Cleveland went 3-1 In the
preseason. The Browns went 10-5
last vear and won the AFC
central tor the third straight
season but dropped the AFC
Championship game to Denver
tor the second consecutive year.
"(The starting assignment)
seemed to happen overnight,"
said Junkin "It's been a presea·
son of steady improvement.
Things have gradually getting
clearer. I feel the coaches have
put me In there, they must have
felt I've earned the job. It was
hotly contested. The Injury never
was a factor and I'm much more
comfolrtable inside."
The Browns, losers of their last
five season openers, visit Kansas
City Sunday to start the 1988
camP.Bign. The Chiefs, 4-11 last
year after going 10·6 and gaining
the playotts In 1986.
/
On the injury report, four
Browns are probable. They are
tackle Paul Farren (neck, knee),
wide receiver· punt returner Ge- •
raid Mcneil (thigh), defensive i
end Marlon Jones (ankle) and
free 18fety Felix Wright (rib) .
'

.,.,..~ week.

No WaHif19. No S,tamps. No Mail-In Coupons.
84e qt. Sale Prlc;e
.- 15£ qt. No Walt Rebate

to start
Sunday
BEREA, Ohio (UP!) .,-For the
second time this week, the
Cleveland Browns have replaced
a veteran starter with a secondyear player.
Wednesdav, Coach Mar tv
Schottenhetmer named Mike
Junkin the starter at left inside
linebacker, where eight-year
veteran Eddie Johnson had
started 61 of Cleveland last 62
games dating back. to the final
two contests of the 1983 season.
Mike Baab, the starting center
since 1983, Monday was traded Ia
New England for a draft pick
after second· year player Gregg
Rakoczy had an Impressive
camp and preseason.
"We're not going to stand pat
because we're afraid to rock the
boat," said Schottenheimer.
"This isn't like golf, tennis or
bowling- you're only going to be
as good as your team. Any player
who Is here is going to help us
win."'
·Junkin. the Browns' first·
round pick last season, missed
the first two weeks of camp as a
contract holdout, broke his wrist
Nov. 1 and was credited with just ·
seven tackles in four games.
Johnson, the Browns' seventhround pick In 1981 out of Louisville, had been vocal during
training camp over the possibilIty ·of losing hls starting spot.
However, Schottenheimer said
he talked with Johnson Tuesday
and termed the meeting "a
forthright discussion."
"Eddie Johnson is a hell of a
football player," Schottenhei·
mer said at the Browns' complex
on the campus of Baldwinwallace College. "He wants to be
In Cleveland. I want Eddie
Johnson to be in Cleveland. He
wilt play in goalline (situations ),
the 3-4 defense and the kicking
game. Junkin will start.

""" "I think we're · an excellent
;::{::football team that cannot afford
~njurles, butl ca/l't tell anybody
: Jtow the quarterbacking Is going
..... 10 be," MacPherson said this

:J:J''

•••

Browns trim roster,
~· to 47 players Monday
•

••

~

BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - The Puzzuoli, Baker and defensive
~ Clevelanp Browns trimmed their lineman Reggie Camp, linfl~
roster tolthe regular-season ltmlt backer Lucius Sanford, safeties
•• of 47 players Tuesday by an· . Ray Eilts, Chris Rocklns and AI
; nouncing the trade of veteran Gross, wide receiver-kick re~
linebacker Anthony Griggs to turner Glen Young and tight end
~
Indianapolis for· an undisclosed Travis Tucker.
draft choice.
Griggs, a seven-year product
,;
The trade came a day after ol Ohio State, was acquired by
~
Cleveland traded starting center Cleveland tn a trade from Phila- •
:. Mike Baab to New England for a delphia AprU 29, 1986.
'!"t. draft pick and Included veterans
The 6-foot-3, 230·pounder
:\~ defensive linemen Dave Puzzuoll started 15, of 16 games at left
~· and AI "Bubba" Baker and tight
Ollji;ide linebacker In 1986 before
~ end Trayts Tucker among eight
relinquishing that role to Sanford
• · players :waived.
last year. Griggs, Philadelphia's
~
GriggsandCoachMartySchot· f~ll!'th-round pick In tpe 1982
.#. tenheimer were unavailable for ·~raft, playedln28gameswiththe
::-.. comment. Griggs's reserve role Browns the past two seassons
- · will be assumed by veteran Jand 85 games in his career. He
Eddie Johnson, who also has I had just 14 tackles In 1987,
been mentioned In trade rumors./' Including five In the post-season.
=--~ Griggs's departure means 11
The 47-player Cleveland roster
.... veterans have been displace&lt;! Includes six rookies, all on
;::• from the Cleveland roster since defense. The Browns oj)en the
January via a trade or release. regular season Sunday in Kansas

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The Tri-Valley Conference golf
season got underway Monday at
Cl'OSS
theOxbowGolfCiubnearBelpre.
- . Belpre captured first place ho·
Meigs finished second lOLa nors with a team total of 163.
Cross Country Tri-meet at Other team scores were Trimble
Warren Tuesday with the host 183, Vinton County 192, Federal
Warriors grabbing first with a Hocking 194, Nelsonville-York
low score of 20 and Trimble's 200, Meigs 209 and Wellston and
Tomcats finishing third with 73. Miller tying at 221.
The Marauders posted a 54 score.
. Match medalis.ta were Todd
Stephenson or Belpre· and Brian
Top finishers tor Meigs were McPherson of Federal Hocking
Scott Edmonds In 7th place, cary who shot rounds of 38. Low scorer
Betzing In 9th, Chris Stewart for Meigs was Matt Baker white
finishing 9th, Keith Mattox 13th, other Meigs golfers were Scott
John Haggy 17th and Jeremy Barton, Jamey Little, Phil HoHeck 18th. ·
vatter, Mike Van Meter and Tim
Peterson.
The Meigs golfers will continue
Teh girls participated In the
action
tonight starting.at 4:OOPm
event with the Marauders' Missy
when
Bill
Childs and the Jaymar
Nelson gaining second, Amy
Golf
Club
will
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TVC
teams
in
a match.
and Resa Harris Fifth.

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in action first time

•
•"

-

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snap when the Orangemen begin
their season Saturday by hosting
Temple, but the coach said
sophomore Bill Scharr may also
see action.
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MacPherson has tabbed senior

:i;"' Todd Phllcox !o take the opening

two who I think caul&lt;llead us to
victory," MacPherson said of the
quarterbacks. ''Right now, we
want to get both of them Into
game situtatlons and see what
happens."
Last year, MacPherson predicted great things for the
Orangemen, who finished the
season with an 11.0.1 record and
ranked fourth In the nation on
United Press Internattcll'lll's
Board of Coaches poll.
MacPherson said that p1;1!dlc·
tlon was based, In part, on his
confidence In All-America quarterback Don McPherson, who is
now with the NFL's Philadelphia
Eagles.
This season, the coa&lt;;h admits
the strength of his two drop-back
style quarterbacks remains untested, but said he Is happy to
have two strong-armed players
to choose tram.

Randy Hawley , Kelly ·Ogdln and
Terry McGuire. Ed Crooks and
Kurtis English will go at safety.
Crooks will handle the signal
calUng duties and will have the
option or getting the ball to. Jeff
"Cheez" McElroy., Wess Howard
or Fields or may lay out aerials to
Kevin Oiler, English, Randy
Hawley, Jay Humphreys or
Ogdln. Also flankers Neigler and
Vanaman will figure greatly In
the offensive pattern.
Wes Young will snap the ball on
offense and he will be flanked on
either side by Doug Stewart,
Peterson, Jacks and Sophomore
Burt Kennedy. Jared Sheets will
be sidetined for a couple of weeks
due to an ankle Injury.
Aside from Sheets, the Marauders are basicly healthy and
hope to continue their win streak
over the Spartans. On paper It

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�a

Paga 6 The Daily Seatiael

Thursday, September 1. 1988'

Pqmeroy-Middleport. Ohio

opene~

Bowling Green faces WVU in '88 grid
BOWLING GREEN , Ohio
(UPI) - West VIrginia has a
veteran-laden team to throw at
Bowling Green In the 1988 foot·
bill I opener Saturday, and on top
of that the Mountaineers have
some transfers who should provide added power, BG coach Moe
Ankney said Tuesday.
''!'hey have a lot of weapons, "
Ankney said. "When you have
eight of your starting 11 on
defeqse returning and nine of
your · starting 11 on offense
returning, that Is a pretty good
start."
Ankney said West Virginia
Coach Don Nehlen enjoys many
transfer students from strong
schools -like Pitt and Miami of
Florida - while he has but one
transfer - from Wittenberg, an

NCAA Division 1li school.
"Maybe It ought to be called
Transfer Tech," Ankney said of

wvu.

Meanwhile, Bowling Green has
a young team going Into the
opener at Moun tal neer Field and
has question marks along the
defensive line and at linebacker.
Charles Dotson, a linepacker
who was runner-up in the voting
for Mid·American Conference
Rookie of the Year last season, Is
doubtful because of an Injured
shoulder, said Sports Inform&amp;·
tton Director Chtis Sherk.
The linebacklng wlll count on
sophomore Dal McDonald to lead
a young corp. The defense Is
anchored by safety Kyle Kra·
mer, a 6-foot -3, 185-pound senior
stalwart

The Falcons return only four welL Although he complied only
seniors on Its offensive and 300 yards last season, two of his
carries were school records lor
defensive units.
However, senior quarterback distance- 89 yards and 93yards .
Rl~h Dackin alreadY has reAnkney said theMounlalneers'
ceived the attention of West offense line Is especially
.
VIrginia's coaching stall and frightening.
'1thlnk
they
have
a
really
good
defense. Entering his third year
offensive
line,"
he
said.
''They
as a starter, Dackin has passed
formorethan.3,400yards the past are all old. They are all veterans.
two seasons. In 1987, he was That Is a big concern because
they are going against what we
selected second-team All· MAC.
consider
a real concern of ours."
Dackin's top targets, Reggie
That defensive line Includes
Thornton and Ron Heard, are
both returning juniors.
Also returning Is the Falcons' several players whose ftrst start
leading ground-gainer In 1987, Campbell honoree
tailback-fullback Shawn Da·
ALLIANCE, Ohio (UPI)
ntels, who rushed for 324 yards.
Charles
"Chick" Campbell. a
Tailback Mike McGee Is expected to produce this season as three-year basketball letterman
In the mid 1960s, has been named
to the Mount UniOn College
M-Club Hall of Fame.
Campbell, a guard, led Mount
Union tp the Ohio Athletic Confer·
ence championship during the
1965·66 season, the last title for
victory at Oklahoma In 1982.
The coach said .he Is tired of all the Raiders, averaging 17.3
the pre-season talk: West Vlrgi· points per game.
Campbell finished his career
nla unranked, West VIrginia
·
with
1,092 points, one of only 14
number seven, West VIrginia
players
In Mount Union history to
number one.
score
1,000
or more points. He
ESPN's Beano Cook report·
ranks
11th
on
the all-time list
edly Is going to rank the Mountai·
neers No. 1 when he displays his
college rankings during a televised game Thursday night.
"Like I told Beano," Nehlen
joked, "'No one llas ever cons!•
dered you very smart.'"
In fact, Nehlen sees himself as
answerable on the won-loss re·
cord to few people, and that
Includes West VIrginia's fans.
"I can't beconcernedaboutthe
·rans," he said. "II I were
concerned about the fans, then I
would really go crazy. No matter
where it Is - whether it's
Michigan or Ohio State or West
Virginia - they all want the
same thing: an 11·0 record."

without
putting
youryou could
win pressure
football ongames
self to win .."
Although the past two seasons
have been dreary, Mountaineer
fans have been treated to a
winning tradition In Morgantown
during the Nehlen years. In fact,
should West VIrginia win Its
home opener against Bowling
Green on Saturday, Don Nehlen
would become the wlnningest
coach in the school's history.
His current record of 58-35·1
over nine seasons has him lied
with Art "Pappy" Lewis, who
compiled a 58-38·2 record during
10 seasons with the Mountaineers
In the 1950s when seasons con·
slsted of 10 games Instead of the
present 11.

Quakers get two
military .veterans

In recent seasons, West Virgi·

nla has counted on Ohio University, a Mid-American Conference
school like Bowling Green, to
give It an opening day victory.
Nehlen said Bowling Green, his
alma mater, will not be an easy
contest.
"They have a good offense, a
good quarterback,'' Nehlen said.
''They have all the ingredients to
be a good ball team, but nobody
believes me when I tell them
that They laugh at me when I tell
them that.
"Well, anyone who thinks
Bowling Green is going to be easy
has another think coming."
Still, Nehlen has history on his
side, never losing an opening
game during his nine-year tenure
with the Mountaineers. Some
people might say that West
Virginia doesn't play tough open·
ers - It Is true, but that record
does Include a 41·27 Mountafneer

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-----Announcements-----

Continued from page 1
•
l !o
WI. ... - - - - - - - - - - - Band boosters to meet
home of the clerk, Dorothy
·, ground, then appeared to stall everybody orderly."
Calaway
.
The Meigs Band Boosters will
Another survivor, Dr. Dan meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
and slide back down tall-first.
, The tal) exploded and the Irani Walker, praised the flight crew high school band room.
Trash plcku p
.
for brlng)ng the plane to rest
fusela~;e slammed to earth, snapOn
Monday.
Labor
Day, ManTownship Trustees
despite a cockpit that was
ping ttre craft Into three paris.
Chester Township Trustees lev's Trash Service will be
"squeezed up like an accordion" will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at piCking up trash as usual in
The cockpit broke free and
lolled,at an angle, and the main by the Impact. "The pilot did an the town hall.
Middleport and Pomeroy.
fuselagl' broke apart where the excell;nt job or getting {the
MFL tar; day
wings had been attached. Most of plane) flat," Walker said. "He
Big Bend Midget Football
Orange Township Trustees will
the dead were found In the saved a hundred lives."
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at the League cheerleaders and foot·
The crash was the first involv·
• charred aft section of the jeball players will be holding tag
ing
a major U.S. air carrier in the
• tUner, Delta spokesman Bill
dav on Saturday from 10 a.m. to2
United States In 1988 and the first
\ Berry said In Atlanta.
p.m . In Meigs County and Mason
'\
Some passengers escaped since a suspected shooting by a
and New Haven in Mason
' through emergency exits on one P{ISsenger caused a Pacific Dally stock prices
County, W.Va.
• side of the plane. Others crawled Southwest Airlines plane to crash (As of 10:30 a.m.)
•
In California on Dec. 7, 1987,
- ~ outofaglantgashlnthefuselage
Bryce and Mark Smith
where the wings had been and killing all43 aboard. ·
Investigators used· dental re of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
dropped a bout 10 feet to the
•
! fuel-soaked greund,.then moved cords · to he_lp Identity the dead. Am Electric Power .. ............ 27
' as far as possible from the Dr. Nlzam Peerwanl, the Tar- AT&amp;T .................................24%
. rant County medical examiner,
burning wreckage.
Ashland Oil ........................ 35%
"When we got here, survivors said seven people died from Bob Evans .......................... 1514
were popplrtg out of the wreckage burns and six from smoke Charming Shoppes ......... :.... 12~
like jackrabbits," said Ned Thur- Inhala lion.
Nine hospitals In the Dallas· City Holding Co ................... 31
mond, an Irving pollee officer.
Federal Mogul. .................. .43%
''People were running scared Fort Worth area treated 98 Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 59%
and screaming off to.the woods." people, four more than the 94 Heck's .... ..... ......... ............... ')(,
But passenger Dennis Selvage, Delta listed as survivors, but It Key Centurion ................... .16~
• 42, of the Salt Lake Cttysuburbof was possible some of those were Lands' End .........................26%
,. West Valley City, who suffered rescue workers, hospital officials Limited Inc ....................... .19%
cuts and bruises, said passengers said.
Multimedia Inc .................... 70
One of the survivors, Bernard
were remarkablv· calm. "What I
Rax Restaurants ................... .4
thought was a miracle was that I Gltjn, 69, of North Port, Fla., said Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 1114
'· saw nobody panic," he said. mj\ny passengers were Injured Shoney's Inc ........................ 6% ·
"The heat. the fire. the smoke- by touching the searing hot Wendy's Inti. ....................... 6~
fusllage as they leaped to earth.
Worthington Ind ................. 21¥.

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Gallipolis workers
vote on pact today

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tlonhas been plentiful forthelast
enjoyed dry. cool weather Wed·
two weeks.
nesdav, and more of the same
Showers and thunderstorms was forecast for today.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Continued from page 1
were expected to continue today
High temperatures were exWednesday: Racine at 10:08 a.m. to Old Portland Road for
and tomorrow from the Carol!- · peeled to be In the 80s over most
Herbert Walter to Veterans Memorial Hospital: Chester Fire
each month and after that time, County Engineer Philip Roberts nas Into southern Florida and of the nation. In the 70s In New
Department at 2:42a.m. to an auto fire at the Intersection of
there Is no reason to be Into the reported that the bridge on across the Gulf Coast states . England and the northern Great
Routes 7 and 248: Middleport at 2:53 p.m. to Pomeroy Cliffs
computer storage for the general Ora'nge Township Road 279 (Owl Rain was also forecast for.upper Lakes and the 90s In most of the
Apts. for George Cummins Sr. who was treated but not
relief payroll, Swisher Hollow) has been repaired and Michigan, and widely scattered West,exceptpartsoftheSouthwtransported: Middleport at 3: 15 p.m. to Mechanic St. lor Faye
showers and thunderstorms est deserts, where highs were
explalned.
reopened to travel.
Ransom to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 6:22p.m. to
A security system Is built Into
Also related to the Meigs were expected to continue over expected to be In the 100s again.
Pagetown for Allee Jones to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
the DHS computer system with a County Highway Department, a the Southwest and southern
password, which Is changed on a bid on a 1989 International plateau .
The mercury dipped to the 50s
dally basts, to get Into the tandem truck with a spreader at
"Showers have been unusually and 60s In most U.S. cities early
system. When an employee Is a total cost of $57,835 . was continuous In the Southwest for Wednesday, and Into the au tum nTwo defendants forfeited bonds and two others were lined In
Into the computer system, the received from Gibson, Inc., about two weeks now ," National Uke 40s In New England and the
the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
name of the employee, the Athens. The spreader atone from Weather Service forecaster Lyle northern Plains.
Forfeiting were Tho!Jlas c. Porter, Middleport, $40, posted on
Alexander said early today. "It
program they are working In, Gibson was bid at $5,385.
Record-low morning temperaspeeding, and Ersel Blevins , Middleport, $100, disorderly
and the time they are working In
A bid of $6,190 from Southeast- *'ems to fall just about everyday tures were set or lied In Hunts·
the specific program, are ern Equipment Company of In the Southwest, but not in one ville, Ala ., which reported 60
·
conduct.
Fined were Kenneth R. Shuster, Neville, $425 and costs and
recorded.
Gallipolis was also received on place every day. It's very seal· degrees; Paducah, Ky., 47; and
three days In jail, driving while Intoxicated: $10 and costs,
Although Swisher did say the the spreader alone.
tered. It seems to be beginning to Wichita Falls, Texas, 57.
spinning tires, and $100 and costs, driving under suspension.
deletions mav relate directly to
The bids were tabled by the wind down a little bit ."
Temperatures across the na·
the strike by Meigs DHS workers commissioners for review by
More rain hit the Southwest lion were expected to get a tittle
which began on Aug. 1, he would Roberts who said he was not sure Wednesday. particularly in west· warmer, however.
not say If he has Information to at this time if a spreader would ern Texas and New Mexico, and
The five-day forecast for Sept.
Implicate a particular striking or be purchased.
further north in Nebraska. South 1·5 Issued Wednesday by the
non-striking employee In the
Roy Vaughan, representing Dakota and Minnesota. Winds National Weather Service
CLEVELAND {UPI) - One picked five of the numbers to win
matter.
Gibson,
was present for the bid gusted to 35 mph across parts of showed higher than normal
player Is eligible to claim a $13 $1,000 each, while 11,502 players
Even though 'the Department opening.
Kansas and Nebraska. the temperatures for the West and
million jackpot aft~r picking all had four of the numbers, winning
of Human Services Is operating
A letter from the Olive Town· · weather service reported.
seasonable conditions elsewhere
six numbers in Ohio's Super $85 ap'iece.
Most of the nation, however, in the nation.
with only 12 employees and six ship Trustees requesting the
Ticket sales for the Super Lotto
Lotto drawing Wednesday night,
supervisors, Swisher said the reopening and placing on mt·
a lottery commission spokesman game totaled $8,529,629, while the
department has been able to leage of Township Road 314
total prize payout was
said today.
maintain services to the public !Heiny Road) from County Road
There also was one winner of $14,234,670. Saturday's Jackpot
and eligibility deadlines are still 44, was approved by thecommis·
the $100,000 grand prize In the wlll be worth $3 million.
being met. Despite the correc- stoners at the recommendation
South Central Ohio
A chance of showers and
In addition to the one person
accompanying Kicker game.
Uons that had to be made to the of Roberts.
Tonight : Partly cloudy, with a thunderstorms across the state
The name of the Super Lotto that had the six Kicker numbers
September General Relief payBldswerealsoopenedforthree
low In the mid 60s. Winds Saturday, with a chance of
winner will be announced after - 214061 - In order, ·12 players
roll, all checks and other benefits vehicles which are available
southwest 10 to 15 mph. ·
showers In the north on Sunday
the wlnnlng~cket Is validated at had the first five, which pays
from DHS were In the mall on from the sheriff's department.
Friday: Partly cloudy, with a but lair elsewhere. Fair stale·
a reglonai ottery office. The $5,000; 98 had the ,first lour.
11 me, Swisher told the These vehicles• were among
chance of showers late in theday. wide on Monday. Highs will
winning nu bers were 5, 17, 24, which pays $1,000; 89o had the- commissioners.
several for which bids were
Highs will be In the mid 80s. range from the lower 70s to the
first three, which p~ys $100; and
34, 37 and ~3.
"Overall." Swisher said, taken before, but did not sell.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
lower 80s, with overnight lows In
The priZe will be paid in 20 9 590 had the first two, which
"there has been no degradation
BldsfromCarlHysello!$U6.30
· Extended Forecast
the 60s early Saturday and
' $10.
i'
annual pre-tax payments of pays
of services" since the strike for a 1982 Chevrolet and Robert
Saturday lhrour;h Monday
Sunday and In the 50s Monday
Kicker ticket sales totaled
$650,000, the spokesman said.
In addition to the top prize $1,061,618 and the prize payout
In other matters discussed by Pontia were
ofaccepted.
$100unsold.
for A
a 1983
1979
began.
winner, 257 Super Lotto players totaled $442,900.
the commissioners, Meigs Johnson
PlymouthSr.
remains

.
N lnety-one...

continued to fall in the Southeast
and Southwest, where preclplta-

------Weather------

'

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llOUSH'S BOl)Y
SHOP &amp;. PARTS

(frost frH)

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Friday's games

Mike Bartrum. Shawn Grant
and Larry Huffman are three
area football players who will
travel west to Morehead. Ky.,
when Marshall University takes
on Morehead State University's
Eagles Saturday night tn the
season opener lor both teams.
Bartrum, a 6-4, 220-pound
freshman, Is a recent graduate of
Melp High School, where he was
a principal performer on the
Marauder football, basketball
and baseball teams. A quarter·
back for Marauder Coach BOb
A.lhley, he will play tight end for
the Herd.
Grant, a 5-11. 209-pound fresh·
man, Is a recent graduate · of
GalUa Academy High School. A
running back for Coach Brent
Saunders' Blue Devils, he will
play linebacker for the Herd .
Huffman, a 6·1, 215-pound
seniOr, Is a 19811 graduate of Point
Pleannt High School. A princl·
pal player for Coach Steve
Safford's Big Blacks, hels slated
· to start at outside linebacker for
the Herd.

''

1M

While most of the nat ton
enjoyed cool, dry weather, rain

Stocks

GIBSON
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Area gridders on
1988 Herd roster

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Parkersburg_ I!! H~.!ltlngton High
Gallipolis at Coal Grove
·
Barboursville at Point Pleasant
Watkins Memorial at Athens
Jackson at Wheelersburg
Logan at Nelsonville-York
Warren Local at New
Philadelphia
Marietta at Cambridge
Meigs at Alexander
Rock Hill at Symmes Valley
Green at North Gallla
Hannan at Eastern
Southern at Waterford
Southwestern at Southeastern
SATURDAY
Wahama at Kyger Creek
Oak Hill at Minford
Wellston at Trimble

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Most of nation enjoys cool, dry weather

Two forfeit bonds in court

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WILMINGTON, Ohio (UPI) Wilmington College football
coach Bill Ramseyer has added a
couple of real veteran players to
his offensive unit this season mtlltary veterans.
Wide receiver Keith Regenh·
ard and running back Bob
Atkinson, who starred for the
Quakers In 1984 and then went off
to join the Army, have returned
to school and rejoined the foot·
ball team.

Loca~o~~!m~~~efs...- -

Saturday

r~d;e;n;ts~p;res;';sl;n;g~f;o;r~p;os;l~tl;o;ns;.;";;;;;y;th;ln;g;;need;;;;ed;;;to;;;wi;n;.;;;;;;~

r-;::=========:::-1

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

. ~~~~~~~~~~~~::--------------------------~------~~~.;;~~'i~&lt;~~~~~~~------------------------------------~~~~~~--------~----

willbeagalnsttheMountalileers,
Another particular concern Is
Including sophomores Doug the effectiveness or Mountaineer
Fossen and Duane Crenshaw and quarterback Major Harris, he
juniOr Derrick Carr.
sa!~e has all kinds of ability;"
The Bowling Green coach Ankney said. "He is the type llf
noted, however, the Mountal· quarterback that creates so
neers have some problems.
h
''!'hey have some problems at many problems because e can .
inside linebacker, with one of , make good playsoutofbadplays. ·
their players (Darnell Warren) Those quarterbacks drive
being kicked off the team and a coaches crazy."
couple or three being hurt," t)le '
Ankney made no predictions
Falcons coach said. "They also about the outcome, but allowed
have a couple of transfer stu· ' that the Mountaineers have ever-

Nehlen doesn't feel pressure
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
!UPI) - Sportswriters across
the nation believe West VIrginia
will be successful In 1988, bu I
even If they are not, Coach Don
Nehlen said he Is not under any
pressure.
"Never as a coach have I felt
pressure outwardly," said
Nehlen. explaining that no one
has ever threatened him with his
job should he not produce wins In
Morgantown. But In the last two
years, Nehlen's wlnn)ng ways
have left WVU, as the team
pas ted records of 4· 7 and 6-6.
This year, the Mountaineers
have the talent and the depth to
make a run at the Top 10, but
Nehlen said the only pressure he
Is feeling Is that which he puts on
himself.
"You put pressure on yourself
to produce, of course," Nehlen
said from his offices at Mountal·
neer Field. "I don't know how

, Thursday, September 1, 1988

Iotts

SILYII .DGE PLAIA
446-1051

'.

STOlE HOVIS
MON. THIU SAT. 9 TQ 7
Fil. 9 TO I; SUN. 1 TO S

~~~~c1~n~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~

; Woodall.
,
' The current contract between
: the city and union workers
~ expires at midnight Sunday.
·. Union members voted to reject
i the proposed contract on Tues• day, and met again Wednesday
: evening, but chosen not to vote at
· that lime.
• Representatives or the uniOn
~ have been meeting with city
' officials since late June In an
: attempt to reach an agreement.
• The major stumblin« block In
• negotiations has been Insurance
:·and wages, Woodall' said.
: According to Woodall, the
:union has a tentative agreement
•with the city In which 100percent
; of the employees' premiums
: would be paid. However, he
· added, it "Is a lesser Insurance"
: through Blue Cross and Blue
' Shield but would be paid for by
'lthe city.
, Should the proposed contract
tbe accepted Thursday, Woodall
1said, workers would pick up eye,
; dental and prescription coverage
! through AFSCME.
.· &gt;· Th~ Gallipolis City Commls·
:stan will meet at 5 p.m. In the
municipal courtroom. It Is ex: pected the commission will dis·
;cuss and and sign the proposed
·contract If accepted. II the
:proposed contract Is rejected,
City manager Dale Iman said the
commission will discuss a strike
contingency plan.

•Correction
Tuelday's public hearing to
·. dii!CII&amp;S the sewage problems In
;Tuppers Plains was hellt,'t the
Tuppers Plains fire station and
not the Rutland fire station, as
:was nUstakenly reported
' Wednesday.
J)

The 24-member union ol city
employees Includes street main·
tenance, water and sewer treat·
ment plants, water meter read·
ers and . cemetery and park
maintenance workers.
The union does not include
pollee and fire department

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
WednesdaY Admissions- Herbert Walker. Portland: Terry
Carpenter, Racine: James Mea·
dows, Portland.
Wednesday Discharges- Carl
Schultz.

GALLIPOLIS
TH~

FURNITURE CAPITAL Of
GALLIA, MEIGS AND MASON
COUNTIES WITH OVER lQ
FURNITURE STORES IN THE
AREA TO SERVE YOU.

GRANDER!
-spread of over 80
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including hot appetizers .
All included in the
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Sug. ll.eell 1218.811

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Upper Rl•er Rd.
Rt. 7, Golllpollo
(aerooo from Alrpon)

C 1988 lbnderooa, Inc.
n&lt;w Orand Bufft:t at
paniclpatlnl steakhouaes only.
Certain items availablt on ~lecttd days.

-

••

,,

�•
Thursday,

By The Bend

The Daily

S~ntinel

~.~am~1.1988

Page 8

-

Katie's Korner

Dewhurst named
to Who's Who

Fair reflections of
junior livestock sales
By KATIE CROW
I have covered the a nnual 4-H
J unio r Livestock Sale at the
Me ig s County
Faldor so many
years that I
don't c are to
remember.
There Is no
doubt In my mind that the
Farmers Bank and Savings Company made his tory on Friday ,
August 19, wh en they purchased
23 animals.
The sal e is th e end res ult of
hard work bv manv 4-H
members . These youngsters
s how their anima ls with pride.
You can tell their hear t was In lhe
- job they set out to do and they did
it wel l.
To all those business men and
women who took time to attend
and purchase a s teer, lamb or
hog you are to be congr atulated.
For without you there would not
~ be a s uqcessful sale.
The Farmers Bank and Sav•. Ings was the largest single buyer
for the sixth consecutive year.
The second largest single buyer
_. was the Home National Bank,
Racine and Sy racuse. There
were many others too numerous
to mention.
Follow in these guys footsteps .
they will " steer" y ou straight.

..

There Is a lady that lives In
Pomeroy that de serves the re·•. spect and admiration of many.
'
Her name Is Norma Goodwin.
.' Mrs. Goodwin has for many,
many years remembered me on
many occassions as she has
others. .··
... many
She h as neve r missed mv
birthday nor our wedding anniversa ry. Ladies like Mrs. Geed-

.

'

win come by once In a lifet ime.
I'm glad she passed through
mine.
Thanks · you deserve the best the very best.
Best wishes for a speedy
recovery go to Maxine Griffith
and Olive Weber. Sure hope you
two fine ladles are on the road to
recovery. Thinking about you.
The Meigs High School Cheer·
leaders will sponsor acar wash
Saturday , September 3, at Pleas·
ers Restaurant beginning at 9
a.m. Proceeds will be used to
.purchase new uniforms.
Help the kids out - having a
clean car will make you want to
cheer· cheer· cheer.
After attending the State Fair,
I have decided that italn' twhat it
used to be.
When I was a kid, the State
Fair was great. You packed the
old picnic basket and the entire
famll)l , including grandparents,
set out for the fair. You could
always find a nice grassy spot to
spread out the tablecloth . And
the food. that came from that
basket would make the finest of
connoisseur's mouth water:
In those· days, you didn' t have
to walk mile after mile to see the
fine exhibits. Laughs were never
heartier, appetites never greater
and money never more limited
but, did everyone have fun! .
A far cry from today, I m lght
add. It Is hurry, hurry, walk ,
walk and spend, spend and not
nearly as much fun .
Give me the little old Meigs
County Fair · bigger Is not
always better.
And so It goes.

·Harris chosen
to Who's Who
Mrs. Robin Dewhurst Harr is
recently received notification of
her Inclusion In the 1988 edition of
" Who's Who Among Human Ser·
vice Professionals."
Mrs. Harris holds a Master's
Degree In Community Counseling
from Ohio University and cur· rently serVes as Vocational As·
sessment program Coorcllnator
for the Gallla·Jackson·Vinton J .V.
S.D. She has also served as organ·
izer and to the Teens In Action
Club, a group addressing such Is·
sues as drug and alcohol abuse,
self-esteem, teen pregnancy, and
AIDS education. In this capacity,
Mrs. Harris serves on the Jackson
County Adolescent Health Consor·
tlum and has been a guest speaker
for various conferences and work·
·shops ;&lt;cross the state.
The daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Dewhurst and grand·
daughter of Mrs. Audrey Patter·
son, Mrs. Harris resides In Rut·
land with her husband, Dean and
. daughter Erin.

Penny Dewhurst, Rutland, was
recently named to the 1987-88 edl·
lion of "WhO's Who Among Students In American Universities
and Colleges."
A student at Marshall University, Dewhurst was one of only 67
students chosen from the approxl·
mately 12,000 enrolled there. Selection criteria Include scholar·
ship, leadership, and extra-currie·
ular activities.
• While a student at Marshall
University, Dewhurst has served
on the Hall Advisory Council In
the capacity of president, vicepresident, and secretary. She
has served as floor representa·
tlve to the Intramural Sports
Committee and done volunteer
work for thJ! West VIrginia Aut·
Ism Center':' In the fall, Dewhurst
will be Inducted into Kappa Delta
Phi, an honorary socorlty for
Education professionals.
Dewhurst Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dewhurst
and the granddaughter of Mrs.
Audrey Patterson, all of Rut-

'Mama Board, rurns 90 years young Saturday
By Jean Warner
For Tbe Register

"Fame is a vapor, popularity an
accident. riches take wings. Only
one thing endures, and that is
character." • Horace Greeley. ·
Character, a distinctive quality,
can very well be associated with
Mrs. B.F. (Flom) Board, well
·: remembered by many. In the Bend
·• Area of Mason County, persons
. today still think of and still ask
· . questions about Mrs. Board, affec·
tionately known as "Mama Board."
Mrs. Board, soon to be 90, is
happy singing and still quoting
poelry as she ~']lends most of her
time in a wheelchair, at Morris
Memorial Convalescent and N urs·
.: ing Home near Milton.
Heanbroken over the tragic
• death of a daughter, Mary Lucille
• Berry, has taken itS toll .and while
• she doesn't remember lots of
things, tears stream down h'er face
, at the mention of Mary's name.
·:
Perhaps she is best remembered
in Mason during ber active years as
, a Sunday School teacher at the
• Mason United Methodist Church,
and as a co-owner of the B&amp;B
MarkeL A flare for pretty hats and
pins, and once groomed to her own
satisfaction, she drove to the local
church. There, to many, she was a
symbol of goodness and especially
to her class of young girls, where
she instilled a religious foundation
in them. For seveml years, she
taught the S.F.R. class, so named
for the late Sadie Fmncis Rutten·

cutter. Altogether, she taught 35
years.
Those who knew her best smile
fondly when they think of her endeavors. She had yearned 10 play
' the piano and well past the middle
years, took piano lessons. Any
morning at 6:30 a.m., before she
wenllo the store, she was known 10
be practicing. In the late 50's, fas·
cinated with things her family was
doing, she took il upon herself 10
learn to swim, so it was nothing 10
lind her in the Ohio River in an in·
nertube paddling about. One friend
noted she was well anchored to a
tree with a rope,
For a number of years, it was a
Sawrday night ritual for B.F. and
his friends to play Rook. II was also
a ritual for "Mama Board" to cook
hamburgers for the card player.;.
Flam Caroline Blaine Board was
born at Rayburn Chapel, West Vrrginia on Sept. 3, 1898. Her parents
were Frances Elsworth and Louisa
Evaline (Rollins) Blaine. Mr. and
Mrs. Blaine had six children, four
boys and two girls. Sarah, an older
sisler ofFiom's died in 1918 during
lbe flu epidemic in Columbus,
Ohio. Mrs. Flora Board has outlived all her brothers and her only
s1ster,
She married Benjamin Franklin

Station, Aora and Frank moved 10
Middleport, Ohio, where he had ob·
tained employment with the
railroad. In 1922, Benjamin
Franklin Board went into store
· business in Mason City, West Vir·
ginia, in a building- residence just
below Foglesong Funeral Home.
The depression years made it impossible for them 10 stay in business long. By then, there were four
girls · Mary Lucille born May 13,
1918, Mildred Irene, born March 9,
1921, Ruth . Marie, born June 3,
1924 and Wilma Mae born Sept 7
1926.
'
Mr. Board worked on his
parent's fann, did painting and wall
papering and any other jobs to get
the family through th~ . economic ·
~haas the coun1ry was experiencmg.
Flom worked too, at home as
well as away from home. She
FLORA BOARD
milked two cows and canned
everything possible. She pumped
gas and attended the Gulf Gasoline owned by the Gerlach Family.
Station that was located mid-town.
Later, Mr. Board was employed
She worked as an inspector and by the Works Progress Adminisualater as a ringerfor the apple pack- tion as soon as the Democratic
ing house back of Mason City Pany formed the work group. He
which was owned and operated by was soon made a supervisor and
Mr. "Patcheye" Lions of Mid- with careful saving, Mr. and Mrs.
dlepon. She also worked as a
Board were able to get back into
"Presser" at the Ganncnt Factory
Continued to page 9

Board
1916 athome
the a$e
of
18 ·onat Nov.
her 19,
parents'
m
Rayburn Chapel . the home and
farm owned by the Gerlach family

rm;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;,e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;t;;;;;;;;,;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,;;;;jip;Rf

of Point Pleasant. After a shon
period of livin~ with Mr. Board's
PIJfents on therr farm at Graham

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HOME
ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER
992-3524
391 WESI JiliN SUEn

POMIIOY, OHIO
10 All·l PM MON.-SAT.

Community calendar
THURSDAY

RACINE - A work night for
fathers will be held Thursday, 6
p.m., at the Southern HighSchool
football field. The work night Is
sponsored by the Athletic
. Boosters.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Olive . and Orange Township
V.F .W. Auxiliary will meet
Thursday , 7 : 30 p .m. All
members and new members are
welcome.
·
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middleport, · will hold a
regul!lr meeting on Thursday at
7:30p.m. Fifty-year pins will be
presented and 50-year members
will be honored. Potluck and
special entertaining will follow
the meeting. Each member at·
tending should brl,ng a covered
dish. ·

FRIDAY
EAST MEIGS - A soup and
sandwich supper ·will be held
before Friday night 's football
game at Eastern High School.
Serving will start at 6 p.m.
Proceeds will go towards extra•
curricular activities In the
district.
MIDDLEPORT - A weekend
revival, with Jeff Smith, will be
held Friday through Sunday at
the Middleport Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church. Services will
start at 7 p.m. each evening.

SATURDAY
ATHENS- The Guthrie and
Story reunion will be held Satur·
day at the Athens County Fairgrounds. Basket dinner at 12
noon. All friends are Invited.
NEW HAVEN, W.VA. -The
Goodnlte reunion for famllv and
friends will be held Saturday,
starting at 1Q noon , at the Zion
Lutheran Church on Broad Run
near New Haven. W.Va. A
covered dish plcn ic will be
served at 1 p.m. Call 992-39ro for
information.
HARRISONVILLE - The reg·
ular meeting of Harrisonville
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Will be held
Saturday., 7:30 p.m., at the
temple: All masons are welcome.
REEDSVILLE- Olive Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment's Sixth Annual Chicken
Barbeque will be held Saturday,
from 12 noon to 6 p.m., at the
station. Garden tractor pull at 2
p.m. Entertainment from 7 to 10
p.m .
SALEM CENTER -' Star
Grange 778 and Star Junior
Grange 878 will meet In regular
session on Saturday, 8 p.m. , at
the grange hall on County Road 1.
Harrisonville Grange will visit.

SUNDAY
RACINE - The annual John·

son reunion Will be held at the
Shrine Park, State Route 338,
Racine, Sunday. There will be a
basket dinner at 1 p.m. followed
by an afternoon of games.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio patient
services offices will be closed
Monday In observance of Labor
Day. Offices will reopen on
Tuesday, Sept . 6, at 10 a.m.

TU&amp;'&gt;DAY
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Fla!Tie Fellowship will
meet Tuesday at 7: 30p.m. at the
Mt. Olive Community Church,
Long Bottom. It will be testimony
1
night.

Work meeting
RACIJI&lt;'E - Southern Athletic
Boosters are having a work night
for fathers , to finish work at the
football field , on Thursday at 6
p.m.
Eastern Star
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star, Middl~port, Will hold a
regular meeting on Thursday at
7:30 p.m . Fifty-year pins will be
presented and 50-year members
will be honored. Potluck after the
meeting and each member at·
tending should bring a covered
dish. Special entertalnrnen~ Is
planned for after the meeting.
Reunion
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -The
Goodnlte reunion for family and
friends will be held Saturday,
starting 12 noon, at the Zion
Lutheran Church, Broad , Run,
near New Haven, W.Va. A
covered dish picnic will be
served at 1 p.m. For Information,
call 992-398il.

Ubrary
POMEROY - September has
been designated as "fine free
month" at the Meigs Libraries.
Residents with overdue books
are encouraged to return them to
the library this month. Time and
place of the Pomeroy Library
children's story hour have been
changed. It ·wm be held at the
1 Pomeroy Ll~rary at .10:30 Wed·
nesday mornings throughout the
rest of the year Instead of
Tuesday evenings at the Diamond Savings building.
Barbeque
REEDSVILLE -Olive Town·
ship Fire Department's Sixth
Annual Chicken Barbeque will be
held Saturday, 12 noon to·s p.m.,
at the fire station. A1 garden
tractor pull will be held starting
at 2 p.m. and there ~Ill be
entertainment from 7 to 110 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
Grange
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange , will
meet Friday, 7:30 p.m ., at the
Coatlnued to page 9

Church mid-week services will
and Columbus, and from New
resume September lat 7 p.m. All
York, Texas, and Florida. Mr.
welcome.
and Mrs. Bill Wood, Zanesville,
Church visitors Included Mrs.
and their son, Paul Wright, New
Lynn Miller and Colby, Walker,
York City, remained for a
West VIrginia ; Fannie and Bob
two-days visit.
Bernard, Bearwallow Ridge;
Youths ofthecommunltymade
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Weber,
outstanding exhibits at the Meigs
Shannon, Sasha, and Shalyn,
Fair and won many prizes.
Eagle Ridge.
The Swartz Reunion was held
The church and community at the Carr Grove on August 28'.
were shocked and saddened by
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Render·
the accidental death of Scott son, Brenda and Kl11th Weber
Burke, son of Gay Ann and Bob
attended Meigs Co-operative
Burke,
Parish open house on August 28.
The Young reunion was held at ... The Hendersons visited Osle
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Henderson at the Brenda Darst
Clarence Henderson with an
Home on Mulberry Avenue,
attendance of 64 . Family
Pomeroy.
members came from Zanesville

built .by the Quickel family of Buffalo. The merchandise was con·
tained only on lhe first floor and
Mr. Board moved his family to the
second ftoor. Mrs. Board went into
the store as manager and with the
assistance of Tommy Ryan as a
meat quuer they were able to hire
more clerks in a shon time and ex·
pand the store to a ttue general
merchandise business.
The
store
was
opemted
throughoot the late thirties, the
early forties and throughout the
Second World War. Mr. and Mrs.
Boald sold the store to Nease and
McGrew and moved their living
location to Second and Roush
StreeL MQdilications were made
and they were busy with this for
two
· Shortly. thereafter, Mrs. Board
and her daughter who had returned
from Charleston, Mary 'Lucille
Berry, went ·into business on the
Comer Of Second and Horton call.
•
theniselves the B· and B·
mg
MarkeL Mrs. Board handled the
meat seetion of the store and Mrs.
Berry did the bu~~ and handled
the business up
t. This operalion continued until the death of
~LucilleonDec.l, 1976 . .
SIIICe that period Mrs. Board has

years

·1~1.49

•197.24
•262.99

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
TO JOHN ANDERSON
DEETER, ADDRESS UN·
KNOWN, BEING A PEA·
&amp;ON HAVING AN INTER·
EST IN THE ESTATE
OF GLEN 0 . DEETeR, DE·
CEASED, LATE OF STATE
ROUTE ~48, LONG BOT·
TOM,
OHIO.
MEIGS
COUNTY PROBATE CA&amp;E
NUMBER 289&amp;4. DOCKET

late of Meigs County . Ohio.
WM
produced In open
Court. and an appliCition to

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

cutor of the estate of Lelah
V. Winebrenner, dacaMed.
loto of 320 ~ South Third
Avenue, Middlepon. Ohio

N, Page 48. You are hereby
no~ifiad thlt on Augult 22.

1988. on lnttrumen11n writ·

fng. purportingtobethelast
Will and Testament of An·
drew N. Myers, Deceased.

BANK
straat

Muon
773-SI14

1988.

LPNoRCMA
MOVING SALE

Cement mixer with motor, other garden
equipment, white bed with mattress &amp;
springs, clothing &amp; more.
Old Rt. 33, Rock Springs, past
· Health Care Center. Watch for signs.

FRIDAY, SEPT. 2
9:00-2:00

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OCTOBER 3, 1988
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Box 729 D
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Our linest portable! Hi-speed dubbing, continuous·
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Probata Judge

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POMEROY
11 0 WESI MAIN

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Help Wanted

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CHEVROLET
SPRINT

Robert E. Buck,
Probata Judge
Lena K. Na..alroad, Clerk

Route 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789, was appointad Eo·

Rob on E. Buck.

•30°/o Off Summer Fabrics
.•30°/o Off All Crqft Panels

·

46760.

Court. Cooo No. 269&amp;1 ,
Choote&lt; 0 . Aogora. 37320

(81 25:
(911, 8, 16, 22. 29, 6tc ·

:

~

N~ 1988

the Coun. The 1pp1ication .
hM been tit for hearing before thia Court on Friday,
October 7, 1988, ot t :30
o'ctoclc, P .M.
Witness my hand and the
teal ·o f the Court, at Pomeroy. Ohio. August 22,

On August 19, 1988, in
the Meiga County Probata

·c=::J·----

2 DAYS ONLY
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

271 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,.

admit the ..me to probate
was on the umeday made in

Low A• $15 Per Month•

SEPTEMBER SALES

·9 92-6669

•

Other Terms And Amounts Upon Request
Loans Subject To Qualification Of Borrower

Point PI-nt
175-1121

Public Notice

Reg. 419.95

r;;;iiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;tl

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

•

ONLY 10% DOWN - FIXED RATES

New HIVIn
112-2135 ~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
. FIDUCIARY
On Auguot 211. 1188, In
the Meigo County P - e
Coun, Cooo No. 211118,
Mory G. Nap,., 31141 Aoct
Hilt Rood, Longovlllo. Ohio
46741 • woo oppol- E••
cutrl• of tho - • • of Dor·
da N
~-od
woo
• •PP•· - - ,
lotoof31114AodHttiAood,
Lengavllle, Ohio 41741·.
Robert E. Buck.
uno K. NH,!;~=·c1::l.9 "
19) 1, a, 11. 3tc

Tee ott for Tuesday's Ladles
League at Jaymar Golf Course
has been changed tor the rest of
the season from 8:30 to 9 a.m.
Winners after 18-holes of play
this past Tuesday were Nanc)l
Hill, low ~rross; Julie Hysell, low
net; JoAnn Childs, low putts and
chip-In-hole.

\

13.75%
13.75%
13.75%'

I

Public Notice

Revival underway
POMEROY - Revival servl·
ces are underway at Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene through
Sundav with David Canfield,
evangelist, and Jim and Cathy
Sisson, singers. Services will be 7
p.m. each evening but Sunday .
Sunday services will be 10: 30
a .m. and 6 p.m.

changed for seaSOn

*CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
*SUNDRIES
*PRESCRIPTIONS

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE

5th Sti'Mt 2212 JaCkiOn Avenue 2nd

Reunion
CHESHIRE - The descend·
ants of James Claudlous and
Cicero !Finney ) Hoffman will
have their annual reunion on
Sept. 4 at the Gavin Recreational
Area In Cheshire. A covered dish
dinner will be served at 12 noon.
If possible, alt'famllles urged to
bring something tor the white
elephant sale.

·
, gOlf tlffie
LadleS

'

PLES

Pack meeting
POMEROY - The Sept. 1
meeting of Pomeroy Pack 249
has been cancelled and will be
held Sept. 22.

shared the homes of her three other
daughters, but has maintained her
home in Mason. Two years ago she
broke her hip for the first time, and
last year for the second time.
Wlille most of her relatives in
Mason County are gone, she still
has a granddaughter, Mrs. Samuel
(Sharon) Hoffman here who lives
near New Haven. Also. thRe great·
grandchildren are in the area.
· At Morris Memorial, she joins
all the activity and enjoys getting
mail Her birthday is Sept 3, this
year will be her 90th. To those most
· closely associatt.d with her, they
remember her as being ''90 years
young. • Mrs. Board may be
reached at Morris Memorial Convalescent and Nursing Home, P.O.
Box 6, Milton, West Virginia,
25541.

SEE US TODA~

NEW MANUFACTURED HOME FINANCING

•1o,ooo
•1s,ooo
•20,000

Conlillued from pare 8
Rock Springs Grange Hall. All
officers are asked to dress In
black and white. The annual
Inspection will be held, In addl·
tlon to judging or sewlrig, baking
and needlework contests. Rock
Springs Grange will serve
refreshments.

Board'... ___u_on_t_tn_u_ed_f_r_om_;,p_ag:.e_s_ _

the grocery business. They bought
· the John Martin business just after
the 1937 flood. The business in·
eluded the building which had been

•MOBILE HOMES
•MODULAR HOMES
•DOUBLE . WIDES
15 YEAR 'I'ERII
(180 llontllly l'lymlnll)

Community
calendar

Mid-week services resume

~ma

The Daily Sentinai- Paga-9

Ohio

0\'ER 1~0 1988 MODELS MUST GO!

l.S WITHIN
YC&gt;UR REACI-I!

AMOUNI'

1, 1988

.THE · ~ MODELS
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10-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, September 1. 1988

Ohio

1, 1988

Business.
Se"ices
:"
..
:.·::
v·~w
"":::·":::=:~=::nr·======i===;-1
I~

11
1-;

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Ad don• and remodeling

THURS. I FRI. -LUCKY 8 DAYS
RECEIVE DOUBLE THE COUPON VALUE
· ON UP TO 8 MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS

TUESDAY- SR. GTIZE•' DAY
RECEIVE 5% DISCOUNT ON
MOST PURCHASES.

- Roofing .nd gutter work

'

- ptumbing
work

electric.l

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992 -731

MIDDLEPORT, OH. •GEN. HARTINGER PKWY. &amp;· PEARL ST. •99_2-3471

ACAIJDINAL

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(FREE ESTIMATES)

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- Concrete work

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969
IMler for

YAIDMAN I ECHO
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batw.., Rt. 7 • Buhon.

NEW I USED MOWERS

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161 North Second
Midd!*port, Ohio 45760

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.,•

••
~

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Sept. 1.2.3. School elothn·
much to choose ' from. wash
basin w / r:abinet &amp; all, crefts.
Wrvne Phillips, Cecil KingBidwell AOdn81f' Ad., firt1 off AI.
564. Watch tor signs.

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Yard Sale- 1083 Second Ave ..
Aug. 31 thru Sept. 5 . All good
eteen clothes. 26 C«WI each
item.

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Thurs., Fri .. Sat. 9-7 S Famllie~ .
.4 mi. paat 218 junc1lon on Rt. 7
to..-r~

9

Dam. Bedroom auhe.
OCICMIOnal tlble, bedding, love
seat. new crafta. 90od cl-'
clot'hn, boy 12-14 and all sizes.
Comm .... loU of goocli11.

Wanted To Buy

ROOFING

used'*''·

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

Gutters
Downspouts

FREE ESTIMATJ:S

949-2168

SERVICE

DRYWALL CO.

core radiators and
hooter cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wa also
repair Gas Tanks.

Complete Drywall
Service
FREE ESTIMATES

lates

Reasonable

56 SlATE

PAT HILL FORD

sr.

GALLIPOUS, OH.
446-3487

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio

8/18/81

1-IJ·tfc

Repairs

CAll 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licensed Shop

5-25-lfn

lmm MOVIES &amp; SliDES to
YH$ TAPE
Let us convert thott old Mow in
&amp; Slilln onr to easy VMS.
446- 7390

lllllonwhil lilt

l~ suf .. l:t

Co·, Coklnu5. Oh

.

'

...

CHESTER. OHIO
ot-IOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Fir• E••IP•••t
Parts &amp; Sarvln

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

References

8·22·1 mo.

.. . Television Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servic4
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

PER lOAD
DELIVERED

(614)446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
,:::t 417 Second Av..ue. Box 1213
! Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
VeteranS' Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

BILL SLACK
992-2269

8-8-81-lfn

Someone to live-in whh eldertv

ladv p1rt-time in Pt. Pla-nt.
Ca11814-448-4782·after I PM.

111C8
e14-44&amp;-9824

Call us tor your mobile home
Insurance: Miller Insurance,
304· 882· 2145. Alto: auto,

evening~~.

hCMN, Hfe, he.tth.

Buyfn!J deity gOld, altwer cotns.
ring~, Jewelry, tterllng w.e, old
coins. l•o• currency. Top prl-

cn. Ed 8urkett Barber Shop
2nd. Ave. Mhldl.,twt. Oh. 81~
992-3478.

15

Reg. No. 88-11 -10568.

Help Wanted

EARN EXTRA MONEY ct.rring
the Summit'. O.t out of the
hou... become 1 Dally Sentintt

popor canlor, Rou•• open In
Mlddlaport. Cllll Scott at The
Sentfnel Office at 814-992·
2166.

Free • 300 ktt. No inYIItmem

Fllmitv planning agencv needi a
train ad ln-.,ldu•l lo prOYid•
medieal•d ofR ceaupport ..,.viCII In OIIUe. Lawttnce and
Meig1 countt11. Part-time poaltion requfta exr: ..l.n .,.,bel
corr.nurWCllltlon .WIIa; •eeu,.cy
with figures; knowfedat of and
stnaiCNoity' 10 I"'Productr.. heMth
needl of clients: relilblt trllnsportation: tt._lbt• hour~~ to ln.
elude evenfng. wtlkdflv and
Saturdlt;' momlng chedulet.

Mu1ic lAIJon on •II woodwind
lnttruments-Fiute, oboe. cia·
rlnM, •x 1n d beuoon. Clll Lore
Snow. 614-268-1114.

18 Wanted to Do

1- --------Clrpentry. remodeling. EJcperienced, honest. re•onable.
Free estlmatll . Aeierences.
G.M. Oordon. 814-448-8958
evenings. ThMk You.
Painting &amp; roofing &amp; c•pentry
work by the hour or job. Call
814-379-2418 .
'

Oonr &amp; S.ckhoe Work-850
Cate dour. Re•oneble ratet.
Experience operator. Cremeent
Conlt. Call 814-268-1718.
B&amp;btsltling In my home. Excellent .ef•ences. Agee 3-6. oav •.
Rt. 1 Kelly Dr. George' s Creek
Rd. Coli 814-446-0804.

E-lonoed bot&gt;v oltlor will do
bot&gt;v olttlngln my home onvoge,
.... rhlfl. Call 814-448-4039.
Y.-d c••· bru.-. cutting. light
hauling~ eome tree trimming 1nd
rwmo1oel. Bill Slack 814-9922289 evenings.
BttJvstttllr IVIU.a,le, . fledblt
hour11, pert or ful time. fenced
't'lrd, behind Ordanee School,
304-17&amp;2784.
Babfslttlng in my home in Point
Pl ....nt area. Full or pert time.
Cln furnlthld: refnncn. 30487&amp;.3774,

Wilt do any odd lobs call Rick or
Amy, 304-882·3872 o• 304773-5048 tfltr 8 :00PM.
Will do hou11 and offia. cl•n·
lng, la~ndry, pertonlll c•e.
304-876-3964 ask for Berb.
Will do babv lftting In my honw
M11on .... Hive referiiRCM.

304-89&amp;.3899.

~llldllCiill

21

Businaes
Opportunity

111! OHIO VALLEY PUIILISHINO CQ, .... . . . , . . . 11101 you
do bualne. with people you
know, Md NOT to .-nd moner
1hroutlt th1 .,.... und yau h.we

Reel Ellete General

183 ACRES, 2 BAINS
2 STORY FUME DWELLING
IN mLAND TOWNSHIP
ON S.R. 124
Contact

·' Paullloes er Bruce Reed At

4

'

of ...,_ 11toropy.

..,.1.. 8 ..-. old.
114-448-2111.

Coli

1 Y'' old bird dog. Coli 114-28&amp;.
1388,
pu""'oo to ~·"""' IWI~ 10
good homo. C. I 814- 481041.

~

..

H I~

Call 114-912-2104 ··- ""
Donloo.

2 Dog•-1 IMrt O.chahund Hair 8tylm. Aor011Thelw.t
f_,....l moe. old. 1 m ..H ~r IIIIo It -

1
'I

-·-tho
v......... .,........ ......

Glveawav

oddlt'l:n.. ..;.... w1to ~"l:.:.:;

for.,.,. lhan

mite.

olltllng,

II l \I '

I'

at. -Sapt. 3 . 9 AM to 4 PM. 579
..1-v Or. Children's &amp; adutt
clothe~, hou18hold item•. etc .

Hom11 for Sele

~~~om~ lf4- 44S.I810 fol

17"------Government
t11,040·
tl8,230 'fll•· Jobt.
Now Nrlng. Your
• •, 10&amp;.117-1000 E'X1. R·
980111o• ..."'"' Fe-lllt.

Bidwell.

. .

Sept 2nd. and 3rd. At Irene
Baxter 31 5 Mech snic St .• Po
roy. 8·4 . Furniture. good. clsan
clothing, miiiC.

m•

Yard .. le. Syracuu . Sept .
1.2.3. 9 · 6 . Gordon Filher R•.
Toy a. home deoor, etc.

home interiors. much,

Y•d Sai•Matv Layne's, Ch•
ahire, Ohio. Sept.1 .2. 3,4. 9 AM
ttll 8 PM .

3 Family- Thurt. &amp; Fri. Meaige's
Carryout beside Kanauga Driveln. 8-3.
1111 Famitv· Honevtuekle Rd.-Old
Rt. 7, Addison. Collector bot·
ties. IUppervvere. 11ble • chairs.
dlft-chlldren-bsbv clothing. lit·
tleairltldreqetto3T. Thun,, Fri.
8. S'tt. 8 AM-8 PM.

much

morel
Septwmber 111. 2nd, 3rd. Fruft
j1r1, tmall appliance, dishes,

clothing, etc. Finl hou• past

8 Famity Ylfd Sale- 9-6 . Sept. 2
&amp; 3. Cltv Comm. Bldg. on
lovera Lane Rd.
• Famity Yard Sai•Rodnev.
Stpt. 1.2.3 'on Dlctwell Rd.
Clothing, thoea, nice c•pet.
elec. stove. much, much, mont.
9 t1117. If rain -net weekend.

S_.e-810 F'ourth Ave .. Fridev·
Sept. 2 . G1111•re, crafts, lawnmoWer perts. rota ofrnlac. item•.
Yltfd Sale-· Friday-Sept. 2 . 861
Fifth Awt. 9·5 .

Inside Sele-Sept. 1, 2, 3 . 218
Third Ave. Lott of goocll•.
Come find your trteaure.

Garage Sale-234 Jackson Plk1.
FridO'f. 9-5 . Clothol. dlohoo.
cuf111nt, NOS. mise gOH ctub1, •

·

4 Femlly-Antlques, _turn.. cloUting. mite. Sept. 1, 2, 3. 1 Ya
mile on Centenary Ad. WitHams
,..I&lt;Nnce.

hpt. 1 through 8th. Lots of
ittml golnt cheep. Beck of Pott
Offl.. ln Bldwott. Call 114-3889947 far infornwtlon.

LIIOO V/lld Stle-IOflt. 2 -3. 2;&lt;,
ml• uoKomperHollowRd, Co11
814-448-0924-Rubv MoCov'o
rwldtnce.
St .. Fri .. 501, 9·1. a150 Ollw
l..-cl jeans, khtl clothll,

co••·Or• •uHI

Sept. 2nd and 3rd. 632 Grant
St .. Ml ddleport.
157 High St., Middleport. Sep..
ttmber 1tt, 2nd, 9:00.4:00;
September 3rd. 9 :00.12 :00.
Everything priced to •"·

4

•

.&amp;r.::

One d., only. Nlllon
Aedovia1 v-rd ..te at ~
Nehon't IIH. on FI•WODCII R
Fridav Sept .
hou• windOw wtch
,.lo
antique lowe •at. tNIId
• •;,
bl.,keta, IIMI'n ctun, g.n~ :
toys.ndelothet. Men, ~~~~~~~ ; 't
chll*ens.
. ~- : .~ ~~

2.9-S.O.t;u-:i \
•,,

Patio •It Sept. z.). 2 Mil• Wfl
at Darwin on 181 t~ra. I
Albany . Hou•hold itemt,
clothes, andq\11:1. Oualh:yitems.

$
•••

2 fomHv. Sopt. 1. 2. 3. Clothing.
gi•IWira, n...., 10 lpleCI bike.

•

•••
~

c•sstte car Ptreo. ..... Items.
316 Condor St., PorT*O¥.

Dedt Sate. SMurday. Sept. 3.
10:00.4:00 p.m. 442 S . Sb:th, ·•
Mldcleport. Lott nice Items. . ~

Corner of ThWd and Elm Sts.. ~
Aedne, Ohio. Sept. 3rd. 4th, •"
5th. 9:00-7

•••
•
•••

Sept. 2nd end 3rd, 11ft mile
north of Cheet• on At. 7 . Stone
jart. old gl•"~ houllhold 90Dc11,
much more.

•

4 femlv . Sept. 4th. 5th, lth. Jo
7th. Men, women and cttldrln ...
clothing. hou• iterna, wMI: C
nots, 1 10dryer, floorhumlclt* W
some wood craftt, new ....W It
each diV. 9 :00.? FlrttM~ •
right PMt V.Ctranl
:
Hospi.. l (HIIend Rd.). Rl
.. •
and Zelma GHmDre.
"' ·" "

~~~~~~~~--~~·~·
3 f1milv . .F&lt;klov ond S1tun1.YI=:
Sept. 2nd and 3rd . 9:0G-:I:O~tW
p.m. Twins clothn Include§
40830LIOnMCIIIRd .. 0... an
Janet Eblin's.
~

'"

Front Porch lata Items ~~~
numerou1 to mtntk&gt;n.
•~
Wright St ., Middleport. 8:0g.:~ ~
4:00Thurt. andFrl .. 8:00-12:00' Iii
Sat.
,.., If!
~--~~~~~~~~,, 1
IAogo 3fem!1v. Sllunlov. Soptj .
ontv. Beige trail• clo.. to 't
Rutland Caf W11h. 9 :00.4:00. )

.
~

Big:, family . Sept. Sthand lth. '

Loll of mit~. ~ndgoodwomen~ s ~
md c:hHchn' a clothing. Bell •

SIVre residence on YtiJawbu~ t.
Rd .• Rscina. A INn canc.ls. .
;

Bahan. Sept. 1st. 2nd. 3Jd.
Couch, Eurekl, Electrolu,
women's clothes, r:hlldren't
clothet, din.U.
cr011
bow with arrow• . itufftd
anl~ls .

"
:
•

~.

ch*•

4 family . Clothing fall tbesl.

gum. tools. flute. trumpet, 1
cameras. al ectric typewriter, '
exteniiOn ladc*s. C.R. 28 In \
Bashan. Sept. 2nd •d 3td.
'

•

Sapt. 1.2. 3 . 4 .5 . Furniture. ,,
home interior lnd mile. 2 mil•
out Leading Cr. OH At. 7. ,

810 S. 2nd. Mldd1.,.,.. Sopt. ~
1 · 7. Bedding linens, diahel.
furnkuN, drepea. curtaint, J•
w!lry, small eppiiM'ICM; lamps, 1
m'IC.

f

t

Mufti 't'lrd Ulfl. Sept. 2 , 3. "
Clothing, crafts. etc. lr01dway :
St. Racine. Dudding Res.

~-=-=~==~~--- t

··--··pfPfeiisiiirt...... !
&amp; Vicinity

•

1

1-97ti--w.;;.;;;,--·;2,;&amp;5--;.;;.; I
10~e12 add on. woodbu,..rJ •
waaherand drfer, alrr:ond, mu• •
be mowd, 304-89~3602. • " :

•

•

Yard Sale. ThurundFri. 8 :00~ •
1. 2418 Monroe Ave.
.. :

I

Yard Sale. 6 mles out Jerryt
Run Roed, Apple Grewe. • •
1.2.3, New end uood ololhlnf. ~
Western Novel• and misc. 304 fJ
878-2835.
• •

September 2nd and lrd. Hou11·
hold, clothing, flute (t1715.)
trumpet ($100.). 286 MulberrY
Ave.. Pomeroy.

.

-V ---------Sole. Thu" llvu 901, Rt. 67 l
ord

bet~

Leon Baden Ad . Mid "
Baden Presbyterian Church.
•
0

572 High 81:., Middleport. Art
Conant gar1ge.. Thur~, Frl, and

Sat. Sept. 1 tt. 2nd and 3rd.

Leonard Bass residence, Syr11·
cu• Rt. 1 24. Thurad"' and
Friday, September 1tt end 2nd.
814-992·5008.
Sept. ht and 2nd. 341 Rutland
St .. Middleport Ohio. Rain or

•hine.
Sept . 2nd and 3rd. 9 :00-4 :00.
Rutlend, Sub-division '!.mile on
New Lima Rd. Petfte ladles,
men, &amp; chHdren clothes. bedroom sufte..mtttreu and boiC
•prlng•, stereo . Niclnsky

Resldtnoe.
4 iamlty . Items too numerous to
mentlorw. 4 mil• out SA 143.
Sept. 2 ond 3.
·
Moving ,.le. Soot 1 · 3. 383
P•k St. Middleport. Ut11a of

.,eryt~~lng.

Sept. 1 ·1. 9 -?. EwrvthingchMP.
Oreen and white tr~~Jier In
aur.,gt~•m on SA 33.

IOflt, 1.2 .3 , !1-1. Toyoln ••••~
lent condition. lacl•. men. end
chll*-n1 clothing. furntturt and
houlthold Items, booka, Je.
wolry, croflo. 32210Minonvlle
HHI. Follow ligno, Hvoell R...
Beall toschoolv-rdtsle. Sept. 3,

Fri.. 9-5. Bob MoCtw- Rd,
Clot,_.. bab¥-adull. dltha bl·

t-4. Aero• from Fermer's lank
In Tupptr~ Pflln1. Je ..a. girls
r:lothlng. wlndowa. eta.

3. 9 1111 1

S..,r. 2 fnd 3 . t -&amp;. Church St.,
SVr•cu• . Clothing, plc1uq
.,..,..., furnftufe. llec. own,
.nd ooumw top ~tawe. IM~Pt.
boolo,..,., bo ....
mo...

\

'

Sept. 3. 8 :00.4:00. 8 East St. .._
(Monkey Run). Pomeroy. Aft. •
1ique1, jeans, hou81hold hml.
ather clothing.
~:

Church In Chl!llter.

302 LtGrande Blvd.·Thtira. &amp;
Fri.-Sep1. 1 &amp; 2. 9-4. v.,., nl01t
1dutt1 &amp; children• clothes 6.
leckatt. new crafts. a. misc.
'Three FamHh•.

3 Fom!l, o.r... l•l•lopt, 2.
1 :30-7 201 Lo- R - Rd.
Chllchn' t c l -.

.,v

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

2nd •d 3rd. Rutltnd St ..
3 Family Yerd Sale In
Middleport. Baby bed. bas ·
MerOBrville-hou• below Han- slnette•. clothes Cinfants to 14),
nan Trace Grade School. Thurs., women 1 large stres, walker.
Fri., &amp; Sat. 9·5.
. boob end more. Rein can e.ts.
Fri. &amp; Sat.· All kindi of things. Sept. 2nd. 3rd, 4th. Cf8W'i Ad.
Bittersweet Dr.-ilrtt road to Cbehlfld Fairgrounds) Pornerov.
right off Butav•te irom 160.
10:00-4 :00. Adult and Children•
clothes. Watch for signt.
Fri., 9 to 5. Rototill•. gas weed
eater. S '" ·ben~ grinder. kl1chen Sept. 1 •t 2nd, 3rd at the
utensilt, dinette Mt. single bed Harrltion Smhh retidenee on
frame 8. miJC. Rt. 141 in
Pfne Growe Rd. Toys, linens,
Cadmus, flrtt hou• left across antlqut cesh register. misc.
bridge.
biCVCifl.
Gi .. t Yard Sal• Fri.-Sept. 2 &amp; Saturday, Sept. 3 through MonSat.-Sept. 3 . 8·4 . Avon bottles, day. Sept. 5. 1 mile south Of
aome antiques, lots of dot.hlng.
Chester on St. At. 7, Kautz Farm
furniture. tools, mise. Winnie (in warehou•l . Old dlshn,
Phillips Resld.· Se cond St .. formal gowns. much clothing.

.,.... Lolo oh,.,..lhln,.

~.,...,.jOb,

--····'Pomerov·--········

S~t.

boob,

31

syJtam. Baldwin fun mechlne
organ. 430 lariat Or.

·

8 Femiiii!II·Fwnlture, toya. children' a clothes, hou•hold. Sat.
9 -5. Unwood oH lake. RJo
Grande.

more.

SMI

o........

u•••·

Schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOW! .
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 529 Jackson Plh.
Ohio lnstructioMI Grant D~~~td­
llne Aug. 19. Call 44&amp;.4367.

Empioyoo.

AIHIOU 11 CP.Illl:lll o

Huge Garage Sal&amp;- 8 Family Sept. 2 &amp; 3-Fri. &amp;. Sat . 9 -5. 4!56

Wanted to Buy· Go Cart. Call

Situations
Wanted

I N011CEI

FARM FOR SALE

2.

Thurs.· 1 at., Frl. ·2nd., Sllt.-3rd.
Jutt aft 141 •• Centenary an
lincoln Pike, •th
Hull &amp;
McCoy Brown atone&gt;Nare. baby
through adult clothlng-25 centa.
50 cents. tUMl lots more

Send letter of lnternt. Ntume,
and two employment ref•enCM;
to Pl.,..ned P..mhood of Southeaat Ohio. 398 Richland
AWnUI. Athena. Ohio 45701 ,
tri Septtm'- 7, 181B. PPSEO
I• en Equal Opportunity

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Oarega Sale-&amp;10 Circle Ave.,
acrou from Spring VallevPiua.
9 AM to 2:30PM. Friday-Sept.

Friday-Sept. 2. 10 to 4. Children' • r:loth•. crib, changing
table. c• seats, man' a welt«n
shirts, suits, houtehold, P.A.

Air ConcltiOfling. h..-t pump &amp;
service m1n. Taking epplic•
tiona. 01111• Aetrkl. .tion Co.
1 52 Third Ave., OelllpoNI.

985-4141

Moving-House for Sale. houl8·
hold furniture, electric fireplace.
he•••· Sept. 2. 3. 2 miles pslt
Vinton Grade.

YMd Sai•Morn. tM D•rk. 843
Second A\111 ., Sun.-Stpt. 4 Ita
Mon.·Sept. 5.

DewNne Flatbed Dlv. l. . ing
owner/ op.nttor, fleet owner•
welco.,..l Long / 1hort hatl
mo\ements. Required 23 vrt.
old, 2 'f'*· OTRMP'flente. Heve
good MVR, ,.,.od DDT phy~ ·
eel. T•mlnlll payl You buy
permits first year. we replace
M.cond vewl E,ccellent bentftta.
1·800· 999- &amp;150 US / WV
Watts.

MARCUM CONTRACTING.

Sept. 2-3. 3 Family yard S11.,2
riding mo"""rt-Bolint• .,.nellng.
curtains, like new bunk beds·
1125, chUdren clothing. Rt. 35,
Rio Orenda next to Gift Shop.

3BB-9303.

12

motora. C.ll Larry LIYefv·I14-

- -OWNER
: -/ :--OPERATOR

~

Aantt Sub. 9·? Sept. 1.2.3.
Electric wMe'chlir &amp;i 1979
Thunderbird 6 lots more.

Fri.-Stpt. 2 . 8,30-3:30. 350
Debby Dr. 2 girls bike.18" S.
2o:· , clottMng, mile .

llso Booking PartJel. Call 814L----..i:.lJI~,J.J""-J 144&amp;.8897,

1112/'81-lft

Thurt.1hruSet.• 9· 701dR1. 180
et Evet'gre..,, Look for sign1.
lo11 of goodies.

6mileoutAt. 218, 11t, Znd.3rd.
Children, adutt clothing. hou•
hold. btdlt.,d. baby mattress.

814-448-31 89.

Ambitious 11U •rtera needed
to demonttme Hou• of Uoyd
tova&amp; c.,dla. Workownhoun.

CAll AMY CAIITER
or IOI'S ELECTRONICS

Back Yard Sale-Friday -2nd,
s.turday-3rd. On Rt . 7 in
Ot111hlre. Watch lor tign.

Lariat Dr., ecrou from Fair
Grounds on Rt. 35. Baby ~ boys,
girls, teen, women, lit mt~n
clothes. furniture, hand mllde
wood work-all lcindl, poreh
swing. grain grinder &amp; many
misc. Hems.

11

NIASE Certified Mechanic

Thuiot. &amp;. Fri.

high chair. winter coals, more!
Right off Rt . 36, RodniiiV I'Jke
first drlve·right
'

E.:cellent school clothel, mens,
WOmtniCIOthn. EvtrythingA·1
shape. Mite.. two tvs, toys.
Don't ml11l Sept. 1 A 2 . 9 till 1
South on At. 7 to 218, approx.
21ft miles-In gall• Rd., right VI mi.
Watch for -,.Uow ligna.

Complete hou•holdt of furni·
lure &amp; anUques. Alto wood &amp;
coal heeters. Swain'• Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third 6 OliVe.

St~f'llf:l!S

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major l!o Minor

tov•.

antiques.

Drapes, glus•re. breakfllt
set, hand toots, dthumidtfi•.
clothi!"g, misc.

SYRACUSE. OHIO

1-8-1 mo. pd,

~

naw•

Thur:tdiP( &amp; Frld&amp;y· RodneyPike,
4th houM on rtght . Bedc§ng.
trunk,
childrent clothes &amp;

1 mi. out 141.

E111 pI ov 1111'111

Most Foreign and

LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

Sp-·· 304-87&amp;.1429,

TOP CASH pold lor '83 model
and
uted c••· Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 E. .tet'n
Ave.• Gallipolis. Cell 614-4462282.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

. "LET GEORGE
' DO IT"
HAULING

FIREWOOD

AVON, all areal II Shirley

~unk Cart whh or . wHho~t

TRI-STATE

We can repair and re-

BOGGS

Jim Mink Ch•-·Oidt Inc.
INII Gene Jo hMon
814-448-3172

Want to buy: Used furniture and
ant~ue1 . Wilt buy enth'e houaehold fumilhins. Merlin Wade.,....., 814-248·6182.

8-18-1 mo. pd,

1-l-'86-tfc

.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CUSTOM BUllT

Howard L Writesel

AUthoiized John
Deere. New Holland.

C)

&amp; Vicinity
8

FrldiiV· SaturdllY- 9 · 5. 1st this

.,..,. Boys 4·6, glrla 24 mos.•l ,

.................................·•

We peycashtor late model d_..

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILlE, OHIO
614-662 ·3821

.

.......Giillip·ons··· .......

J.30·'87 till

NO SUNDAY CALIS
J-11-tfn

1122/88/lfn

$35

~~ ':

MicldlepDI't, Ohio
'99i-66H

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Makes

f.,

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

"Free Estimates" '

SAliS &amp; SERVICE

503

p•.

J1coblen

Now " - • Built

985-3561
We Service All

Lott: male Welrn«&lt;inw. Large.
gray, bobbed Ifill. In Rt. 33
KlniJibury ar• Thund.,., AuQuat 28. F•mly
614-992·
7201 ,

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homalite

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

DEAD 01 AUVE

lEN'S APPUANCE
' SERVICE

LOST : In Cadmu •·Waterloo
aree. Male A•d Chow. Reward.
Call 814·379-2730 "' 3792292.

&amp; Pcrts

•VINYL, SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

WANTED

•Washers •D ryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Musl Be Repairable"

6 Lost and Found

Brigp &amp; Strenon

SAND-GRAVEL
•'

Homaa for Sale

31

Authorized S.nill

10-8-llc

'

HamBI for Sale

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

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

CARTER'S

31

Ham • for Sale

6-17-lfc

Gutter Cleaning
Painting

992-6282

Alto Tr••••lnle•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

p.m.

Batw•n 9
or lean

1·12 1 mo.

QUALITY, SELECTION &amp; VALUE
THROUGHOUT EVERY AISLE!

REPAIR

614-742-2617

992-5083

ALL YOUR FAVORITE HOLIDAY
NEEDS AT SPECIAL SAVINGS!

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
JUNK UIIS 011 TRUCKS
-flU ESTIMATESFar way af thlltstrVim:

Hours 10-4
Eveninp by Appoinlment
2 milliS toward Albany on

PLUMBING
'
·&amp;HEATING

Rt. 124, p_,oy Ohio

•Wrecker Service

•Junk Yard Business'

NEW- IEPAIR

'i

Roger Hysell
Garage

EXCAVATING

Gently used
consiJnment
clothmg for
children.
SR 681.

;;He;;lp-:;Wa~n;-;ited;;;:-;

31

kitten
.. m.... 12w.-. otd. can
814-379-2438.

;;

YOUNG'S

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

tld....__

Yard Sale. ptelllnt Ridge Road '
Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va. Frld.; :
8 :0().5:00 and SlllurdiPi 8 :0(). 6
12:00.

1

!
•
Sate Harmon P•k. Sept •

Yard Sale. ThurtdiV, Friday
Saturday, 320!1 Jackson Aw. ' •

YMd
1,2 ,3 .. EveryttMng relf ch. .. :
Mtt•nily 1nd nw~bornCtothn. •

'

Y Md Sale. Fri. Sat, StPt 2 and !I. 1
2625 Jefftft on Ave.
l

Yard Sal e. Gallipolis Ferry, Sat. }
Sttpt. 3; hou • on rlller bMk "
bet-Mtn Ba .. School Md 84 'I
Lurnbtr.

:

'
l family yt~rd . .1., Sept. 2 end3. W
9:00 dll 77. FoOl"' Dood - · · •
Cui'WI. At. 82. Whitt hou• on ~
right.

1

So9t. 1.2. 3;
Leon. Adutt .,d chlctNtt olothing. 8ookl. hou-e;
w•re, motorcycle, much more
3 FomOVY... Sll'

I

II•• ~~•

=--:--::--'--..:..___:.;::.::._· 1

n....,. lllrllly ,_,d lilt. F~, lept.

______________

~

__ ,

2. 9 :0011117. Konnyc.u.. _
High Schooht 231rd " '..:._
- '·

~

'

~

t
..

Mooing Solt.
a. K - ·
Home Ptrk lot No. 13. Lua• ..
Lane, Frlhpt. 2 , 10:00Ar..4tot·.,
Homtt lnt•iDf, Mftr:.
4
~...,.--.....:.:.:.___

Yerd Salt, lept. 2 t~nd 3. Lat 41 ~
K • K Mobile Homes, tot.11Cho01 1J
r:lotheltndmlsa .
'f i

Fomly 'l'•d lot e. 1110 ~
Jaoklon Aw, Frl tn.t 1-. a.,., 111
2 •

3.

Curtains.

kttch., •bla. more.

v..s

IMciiJJIICI, "
i'

IItie. , . _ D - -

:

H -. Fri-lao. lept. l -1 . aoM"- ~
rena ctothing.
·
y

�..

-·

'

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel
31

tlomee for Sale

Thunday, September 1, 1988

Pom•oy- Middleport, Ohio
51 Household Goode

LAFF-A-DAY

55 Buildln g Suppliee

KIT 'N' CARLVLE® by Larry Wri1ht

ViAl '• Furnhu,.
New ldfs • ch•s-on• to fit

304-1711-4131 .

.wry budg•. bed'oom sulls.

ch•.
wood dlneae

'Mrdr~.

3 M*oomhorMon41ota. Grw
Aood. HHivt.N. 304-17 ... 4018.

..,.,a,oopm.

In N_, Hlven 3 beaoooms. 2
b•N . ..rgellwlngroom. fir place.
g - - 030,000.00. 304-2732471 . .
•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

JVinL

llov"'-·

1980
141170 w•h
7a21 ..... do. 2 lui bll"- 3
br1. and flreplllca 19JL20.2 c•
g-o.
on 10 .......
$215.000.-ing
c.II814-U8-1750.
..,,... Pork.12•10. 2 SR .. .CA.
-18,000..
· .u Call
1n flOod """"· Aoklng
114-448-0IOOor
.t46- 788&amp;.
Land contflct, terge living room
w / up1ndo room. 2 BR .•
w / WIIft c.plt, •lr condtion.
w / orwithoutfurnku•. Nil. g•
furMce on privttte lot. MIY .ant
lot. Call 5 to 8 PM. 814-4461409.

Cl..,ton-Newpart, 14x80. 2
111 .. """"' furmhed. Coll1144e3o41 .
1971 Schultz 1 2x8&amp;, Z BR ..
completely furnished. Good
cond. Mull 1111 this V~Melc. Will

mMev~• dllfyouc~~n't refuM.

Coli 114-44&amp;-2981.
Mult •111ac:relendwith 12dlfi

treil•. 12 x24adc1Uon. car 1)011.

•

.

IWO

•mer. •tiHite dish.

•

l _ ..........h. Colll14-742·
2239 efter 5:30p.m.
·1174 c.tle Moble Home,
1 bl5. 02000. Coli 114-992·
110&amp;
14xl0 Scht.llb two bedrooma.
pden tW. 50 ft. . , ning.
otr!f•l air. draperi•. othw
ttems. MIIY be 1-'t on renltd lot.

Tral•andlllnd. 304-675-7869.
14•70 aU 81ectric Extt'll. Price
reduced. 304-875-1985 for
further lnformetlon.
1989 Treil• re-decorMed. n-..v
hot wll'ler and new electric
furnace. fuel oil stove .
· I 4.800.00. Phone 394-87&amp;
7549.
14x70 Pac•. 3 bedroom. w,.
b•hl. .., ..ancas. dedt and
undwpenntng, 19,500.00. 30457&amp;-2129 coli oft Of 7 :00PM .
1981 Nat~hul 14w;70. e;~~.-ndo
7x21. 3 be*oonw. 1'h baths, 2
pOfchn. underpanning, out
bulclngo. 304-882-2691 .

Farms for Sale

33

40 ac:r• R•ceoon Ad.- Mobila
home. 038.000. Coli 304-522·
7279.
30 acre f•m on Raccoon Creek
Of 1111 ~ull and one acre. call
11 4-24 ... 9678.

Business
Buildings

34

C1 • ~'"''n~~ott's''**

v.:

d
.,
,.,~ UtC"""'

Wolle!•..,,......,

homes. 11 rooms each. One or
two children, no pets. taf•ence.
One. $210. plus depolh. one.
S 18&amp;. plua deposit. Call 114992-1024.

Nawty redecor•ted apartments
"'•liable. Utllh:iel ~id 1225.
per month. dapotit ,.quire d. Call

2 bedroom. unfurrished. Fully
c•petect Ni ee and cleen. O.p.
osit required. Call 814-992·
3090.

Naw 1 bedroom furnished or
untur. .hed apartments. One In
Pomeroy, one in Middleport.

3bedroomhome, fulbasemant.
304-882-3394.
3 large room1 and bath, nice
location Jelf••on A.e. , adults
ontv. referenca ·and dl!lposit
required. 304-175-3052 .

.

2 bedroom unfurnisiMd hoUM.
307'h Second St, New Hwen,
304-67 ... 5278.
3 bedroom hou• New Haven.
t 27&amp;.00 month plus deposit.

304-273-24 71 .
Hou• in country, 1fter 5 :00call
304-675-1500.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furllislled 2BR . Ca. cable, water
..wage peid ~ter ' s Mobile
Home Park. Call 814-446·
1802.
., Eureka. 2 BA . Adults only . No
p81s. S200 a mo. Deposit
required. References prefenet:l.
Call 814· 245-5883.

Ni ce 3 BR , penielly fur"'thed.
I g . yard. Kanauge. 614-446-

7473.
Nice 2 BA . mobile home. upPer
Rt. 7 , furnished. $200 e mo.
wotor poid eoll614-245-5818.
2 &amp;A's. Adults only. No pels.
322 Third Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
814-441-3748 ... 25 ...1903.
2 BFi . MobileHomeforrent. Clll
after 2 PM, 814-446-0627.

2 bedrooms. Nice ~rd on river,
Middleport. Utilitlel induded.
Coli 614-992· 5949 "' 614992-9903.

2 bedroom. 1 chHd.

drunks. or dope . 3 'h l'fliiM South
Middleport. Rou• 7. Cell 61.._
387-0111 .
Mobile Homes for mnt. Evelyn's
Mobil e Home Ptwk, Kana.tga,
Ohio. "Call 814-446-0508.
Trailer for rent 2 br 1211.50
accepting eppllclltlon. will accept HUD. OepMII &amp; ref.
requires. 30~882 - 2849 .

O.J . White Ad.·New listing. 2
wooded builcing lots for •leby
owner. Call 114-24&amp;9585.
1'12 em ground with g.-age.
concrete floor. Ne• Synteuse.
.5000. Coll614-992-6313.
l•ge building lots,

A1h1on.

mobile homes permh'tlld, public

weter, elso rftler lou. Ctyde
Bowen. Jr. 304-576-2336.
h&amp;~tlful

riwer lots on a acre plus.
w1ter,. Clyde Bowan, Jr.
304-571-2336.

p~lc

loti, one acre. LAniel wooded.
cttvw.ter, Jericho Road. Owner
finendng. Good terms. 304372·8405 ... 312-2578.

2 BA .

814-992-5724 after 6:00 or
992-5119.

Coli 814-992· 5304.

.,
... ,915.
Retr5g.h...,-30
2 door-white·
t711i.
Hot water
gill.·
t85. Skogp Appllon .... llppoo
Rl- Rd .. 814-4.4&amp;-739&amp;
New 'h.ll sofe bed couch. A

Efficiency, furnished, b-ment
apertmem. 1160. per month.
Utilities Ptl!ld. Single male,
Pomeroy. ·1114-992· 2545.

Apartment
for Rent ·

New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile llo,. in
city. Aduhs only. Parking. Call
614-448-0338.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES J&gt;.T JACK,
SON ESTATES. 538 J•ckson
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
!hoP. lind movi.,.. 814-4462588. E.O.H.
Ups•irs unfurnished apt. C.r·
peted, U1ft~i• peid. No children.
No pets, Call814-448-11137.
Furnished- 3 room1 &amp; bath.
Clean . No pets. Ref. &amp; dep05it
required. Utilitih furnished.
Adults only. C•ll 814-446·
1519.
Furnished apt. 1150. Utlftt.

peid. ShaN bath. Single m1le. ·
919 Second AVII ., Glllipollt.
Call 448-4416 after 7 PM.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop.Pet
G
1
•11 b
room ng. "'
reeds ... AII
etvt•.
lema
Pet Food Delller.
Julie w.bb Ph. 814-441-0231 .

a. M

M•nufactured. Rust color. call
114-317-7101 .

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.

w~h

1\Nin bed
-Ching night
o1ond. $&amp;0. Coii814•24 ... 925Z
after 3 PM.

terti
AKC Ch:ow
... Nt'N
CFA. P.slan
•dpuppi
Sl.-n••
kh·

HI rnalevan ldnens. Call 111444&amp;-3844 olt•7PM.

buffet,
5
2 ex«: c:ond $800.00. 30476- 829 cell tfter 7 ;00 PM.

Sofa . .thtona colors good cond
t100.00. Singer " Stylist" .ewingmachh'lein frultwoodc1blnet
axe cond 1200.00. Curtlins
120x84 for sliding g . . door
with decorator bresa rod
140.00. Phone 304-882· 233.t.

c•prted. appll•c., water and
h'lllh ph:tw~ provided. Maintenance free living clo• to llhopping. benkl and tchoolt. For
more information call l04-882371e. E.O.H.
Oowntovm modern 1 bedroom
apt. tumshed. air cood. C.r·
peted. Call afler 4:00. 304-8763788.

53

puppiee, ASCA double regis·
t...-lld. Btue m•le .,d blectt
tri--colored. Call 814-742· 2385
anytime.

AKC Blls1ett HouNI pups. 8
wk1. old. Mother and Father can
be Men. CeQ 614.-1187· 6758.

Antiques

Buv or ~811. Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Stre8t. Pom•ov.
Hours: M.T.W 10a.m. to llp.m .•
Sundav 1 to &amp;p.m. 81 4-992·
2528.

m•uge.
For SaleorTradaAKCregistered
Beaglees, 8 months old, 1t1rted,
t 50.00 or •ke gun on nde.
304-87 ...3982.

Individual guitar l••ont beginn!M'•· Hriout guilariat. 'Brui-

COUNT"V MOBILE Home Park.

Rou., 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 1114-9927479.

SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE 82
onve St., G•lllpoll•.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- $399.
living room tuitft• 1199·•&amp;99.
Bunk beds Wfth beddlnct t249.
Full .sin maHreu 6 fou~Citlon
st•rtlng · t99 . Recliners
lllrting. t99.

KDhl• Con sale pl.no, uc cond

304-17... 2848.

County Appli..oa, Inc. Good
Op., BAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 814-448-1199. 127 3rd.
Ave. Golllpollo. OH.

luxuriouJ Tara Townhousa
apartment s. Elegant 2 floors, 2
BR .. fuH b81:11 upstairs, po"""'er
room downstaira. CA.. dis·
Acrage w itll 11ice buitclng site1, hwa a her, disposal, private an·
15 mile~ off At. 87, 304-458- trance. prP.!ate andosad p•tio,
pool, ptavground. Utilities not
18111.
included. Starting at S299 per
River ft'ont lots, letart, 304- mo. Call 814-367-7850.
773-5982.
Furrislled 11pt. NfMI' . NearH MC.
1 BR . 129!5. Utllhlee ..ld Call
448-4418 •fter 7 PM.
Rentals

58

2 riding hor.._ mares, phone
304-4&amp;&amp;-1687.

64

1-!av &amp; Gtain

Ground shell corn 18.00 per
1 00. Premium alfalfa h..,., •raw.
Morgan• a Woodlew-n Farm, At.
35. Pliny. 304-937· 2018.

••tv

Olkalab-Seed corn. Teking
ordera to assure uuppty ot your
fiiVorite hybrhl1. Seed suppty
could be thort to lock in 11n a.ty
tuppJy. Henry Ernest Key, 304175-1&amp;0ioftor 8 pm.

Tr anspurt at10n

.

71 Auto's For Sale
AED HOT biM'gtinsl Drug dNJ.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Red RaspbMTia~- lltdl: vour own
pldc. TerJor"t Berry Patch,
c.. 114-245-1054 or 44118692.

34 inch Schwinn Meta Runner
1 D·tpeed Mountain Bike. In·
ch.td• air-pump, water bottle.
back rack. • • •tchel, Allenwrenchs. lock end c•bla 1114985· 3637 after lp.m.

U.S. No. 1 l•ga yellow Freet·
tone c~nning peaell now .vall able. Bobs Markel:, Mason. WV.
freth
the Sht111dollh Vel·
lev. 304-773-5721 "' 77J.
59oo. ~nnlng apple~, pears Ia
plu.mbs eveiiebleiiM August.

•qm

He&amp;Yy dutv g.,eretor. 1 10 v .
230 V. alectric start, 18 HP
motOf. 1450. like nfM', Call
814-247·4122.

I arm Supplies
&lt;'i L1veolock
61 Fann Equipment

For Sale Santllgra Super Pelm
Beach tanning bed. call 304675-3067.

CROSS"' SONS

U.S. 35 W•t Jacbon, Ohio.
814-281-8451 .
MaeseyFerguton,. New Holland
Bu1h Hog Sllet • Service. Over
40 used tractors to choo11111 from
&amp; complete line of n...v &amp; uted
equipment. Largest _.ectlon In
S .E. Ohio.

Stove and refrlgt~retor 8345.00.
Ornter 140.00. MBtal cabinet
t15.00. 2311 Uncoln AVII,
Point PluAnt.

460 die1et International tnctor,
wide front. PS, 3 pt .. wtth hi\'
eondtloner baler, plowt. corn
pi~Wtter &amp; bush hog. '3950.
Owner will finlince. Call 11428&amp;-8522.

12155 Oliver diiHI tl'llctor. 4
wheel drive, IMe model. Sh•p.
14850. Post drNer wtth cylndlw
a. ho.... I 19&amp;.' ONner will
flnonco. Coli 11 .. 28&amp;-8522.

Seasoned oek firewood cell
304-17S-27&amp;7oltor 4:30 PM.
~pie lie comput", dual d~lve,

pnntar. Cannon TBO cemera

New Holllndcornchopper. New
ldtll corn pick•. 730 Case
di_.. tractor for Pll'ft. C.ll
814-388-8478.

White Weatinghousa electric
ranr., good cond. 304-875- New tobacco atickl- u•d one
34 .t.
. liMon. Call814-215~1011 .

Surplus. Your area. Buyers
Guide. C11 805-887-8000, ext.
8-4512.
.
1987 Ottvy Cavell•. bl.ck
exwior. grey interior, 1B, 000
mil•. t4950. 1 9119 Pontiac
Conwrtlble Bonneville. Sh•p.
Runt good. lookl good. $2750.
Coli 614-28&amp;-152:L
1981 Dodg• Aries 4 dr. Sedan,
PS. PB. AM-FM-Cooo.. high
mlleagt. Well maintained.
01400 010. Coli 814-44&amp;9700.

1982 Sulek Regal, accessories,
la.ded. 8Xcel. cond. 83800.
1918 Ford LTD II . 01500. Coli
114-44&amp;-1358.
Oovornmont Seized · Vohlcioo
from t100. Fords. Merceclet.
Corvettel. Cllevys. Surplus.
Bw,wt Guide. 111 805-617·
1000 EJCt. ·10189.
.1 988 Ford Etcan Gl. Reg.
Miniature. fltl.odle. female. Call
614-388-9770.
1979 Unooln Town Car. Make
off... Coli 114-379-2681.

1985 Sulci&lt; Skylark. 4 do ... ""'
cylinder, AC, cruillt, tilt, PS.

-

.... -

....~. No .....

Hoi......

Trucks for Sale

1977Chwyhalf-ton, new*n.
n., nt• end. runs good. IIGdy
needl waftl . Call 81 4 -8e9·
399&amp;.

1979 Arrow pickup, 4 cyl., 4
1pd . 1900. Good Cond. Call

e 14-3&amp;7-0507.
1978 Dodge Colt. 9800. Call
814-992·&amp;1119 after 3: 30.
1982 Dlltun King Cab, 51 ,000
m••· ltuo.-PS. PI, ,.. window
defogg•. nice truck. 304-87587&amp;8.
Pick up Hds, Ford Chltol'rolet.
long or ahort. no rult. 304-675-

8286.

"17 F«d pldwp 302

ADan·

C..-

2 be*oom Apts. for Nnt.
Nice -lng. t...,.,ry
fdlt._ avaHIIble. Clll 11.4892·371 1. EOH.
AfNirtment for rent, 1226 a
monttt. Deposit tequiNd. 11~
992-1724. Ah lpm "' 992·

on~ne.

Phone 304-87 ... 7621.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1----------

1974 Dodg• Window Van, ~
Oood cond. nooo. Call
11 4-44&amp;-8834.

ton.

1980 Ford F 250. 4•4. V•6, 4
opd .. PS. PB. Good cond. eon
8 14-38&amp;-8178.
1958 Wlltv Jsiep. New paint.
Good top whh whfte lpoke
wh . . &amp; tire Q tires. Call

814-317-0&amp;94.

1184 Mon• Carlo. low mll•ga
Take oVIM' payments. Call 30417&amp;-4150or 175-8350.

1 978 Dodg• W150 Power
Wagon. 4 WD .• 4 1pd. 1917
Ootlge Plot. Von. AC. cMe.

1988 Comwo Z 21l HopL
lold•d. Good cond. Prlcad to
•II. Call 114.-319·2741efter 5
PM.
... ,'"'

R..aon•ble. C•ll 114-441·

1978 Jeep 4x4 pickup_ :-vlflM
bod. 8 ..... 3 '"" · oB&amp;O. eon
814-317·0107.

7025.

1984 3A ton OodgeR~~mCuaom
Von. PS. P8. tiM. AC. AM·FM·
T.V .. Pwvr. door lOcks, pwr.
wlndowa On e owner. n.w tlret,
low miiHge. Book price
011 .000.. Mil 010.000. ftrml
Coli 114-192·2419.
19730otlgo1001ong-. 1'1~
fWw blltlry.
Coli 514-247-4122.

t,_,s~lan .

•:zoo.

1918 GMC

eo.....olon TIOVol

Von. - · br-"• "•
Hitch. Vorr condition. Coli 114-742-2491.

'
~iurn,

·,IIIIi Yamah• 700
theft drfve, candyappllred, low
mHa 01700. eon 814-3192424-

·-d.

117I" Ooldwlng. ful
Like nM. EJrt,. chrome. C1U

1973 HlriOJ FLCH. cond.
• 1100. Coli l,. . . . . . .l

Vlllw Furnllu..

New and utld furniture tnd
tpDifcenoee. Call 114-448·
711"72. Hourt • •• .

1183 Mon c.to wtthT-Tops-.
tit. .,,.. JIOo VI
. . ..... Coli 11 .. 9111-4301.

w-

*· .......

J a S I'URNITURE
1411-nA...
4 draver ell. .. t41. I dNw•
ch. .. 11411. I pc.
dlnnettesett. 1111.11.

1171Titu-d. Qoodohopo.

Colfl14-148-2280_1_

"'Miners' hate... travel broehuree•.. llhoukl
have known the Inmate&amp; were up lo
something."'

Auto Parts'

71146.

I

I

be ·

CD Dr. Who Splamead from

r

IIJ~IllpNU

15

Wise old saying my elderly uncle
I. " was
always quoting: "'We love lhose
who know at our worst and don't

I

Ie

KADASM
l---ri~:;..I_::_,I!!....:T.I,.:.:,Ir:;7-1

I:OI(J)AIIce

(J) G NIC Nightly -

Cll

I. I••

.
us
.----.------,turn their - on - ."'

.........
I

l

_;..A:...:;C~O_,L;:..:L;-~1 ~

~.Pir12

.IIJ) " - a.,.

1:311

ROCCSH

.

.

.

•

•

L-....L-J..,...J-...1--L--'

=-~- 1;1 .

CD Nlfll!llr ..IIMII RtpCMt

ON

s •ocll-

tee. We buy nntmlst5ont. Call
114-441· 0111. Robullding
avllllsble.
1982 Thunderbird motor &amp;
tl'llntmluion. Cell 1114-258-

•llll
11J

ARLO AND JANI;:..S_ _ _ __,

Used Transmllsklns. All k'tler·
nally lnspeet.ct. 30d.,tguaran·

Nopn'a " - '

'

IMida Polltlca '81

1111 ,.,.,..,.

.

SCitAM-Lm ANSWERS

18 You c.n Be • Stllr
1:311Il Clnl4 Burnett
7:00 (J) R.....lltM-

,.

Winker - Viper - Quota - Onward -

;1412.

19830idamobil•ll. MotDJand
-omloolon. 304-773-5151 .

Cll CD Mactlell/~
Na•lllaur (1 :00)

BRIDGE

• (J) People'• Coull

James Jacoby

Cll c - t Allllr

1966 • 395 motor • 310 HP.
Crene C.m, HV oil pump. many
•tii'L Ch..,., 1 mlle •a.t on
R1. 241. • 1 4-911-441&amp;

f.: •111

or

ill) -

.~..s'rm .

7:011Il Andy Orlflltll I

7:30.(2) HoiiJ.ODd lquli-

Cdaga FDOibllll
Cll !nteftlll- Tonlghl

(1)

• a ...s .~eop~!dyl 1;1
I Cral
.(I) .ludge

77 MBTR motor home . Phone

~~-•an
11J Profllt'DMI Tenn&amp;l
• VldaOCOI nb I'
7:311Il Andy Orlflltll
1:00 (J) CniiiY Lllta • Fox
• (J)
Tile

304-171-1870.

ServiLI:s

as

~

.(J) Hlltlftlllllll Two
br01h8rs 1one willie, one
black) meet aiMr lhlir
dies IIIII they joln11y

BASEMENT
WATEAPIIDORNG
Uncondttlonel ttf«ime guerantee. local tefiNf'tCII fumithed
Free estlmatll. Call colec:t
1-814-237-041&amp; d., .. night.
Roger. t l a • e m e n t
Watsrproofing.

Inherit 1

u.•·· ..

SWEEPER .. d IIWing machine
up and deltv.rv, O.VIt VatA.Im~
Cltsner. one half mile up
0eorgoo creo1&lt; Rd. eon 114441-0294.

Renaissance

.llll•a49-

ill
MO'Il!: 1M YNI of
Uvfng DlngiiOUIIJ (PGl

eo"""'"
S&lt;lptlc Tonlio • 1000
ga1.,1100gal. endJet .A erltion
oy.,.m. Footory trelned '""""
shop. RON EVANS ENlfR·
PRISES. J.cbDR, Ohio. 1·100.
&amp;37-9528.

(1 :56)

11J PPrl~.mlllleaiNIIIIi1Wqa

11J MOYIE: Tile AmbiiiNdor

EEK &amp; MEEK

(R)'(1 :30)

I:OIIIl MOYI!: CopotMiiR) 11 :41)

1:30. (J) G A D l - Wa!ld
DeniM" a vllk&gt;n of a happy

Painting: fn!lrtor &amp; E!CWrtot.
Free estimet•. C.ll 81~440..

reuniOn when MOiher viiHs

evaporalls. (FI)
CD YioiOIY li ... D-Oay
1:00 (J) 700 Club

8344.

RON ' S Televl•lon Service.
Hou• cllllt on RCA. OuiNIIr,
G E. Spllcl .. lng In ZenMh. Coli

•(J) ill) CM.I Woody

Sam bel on who t11n klaa

304-67&amp;--2398 or 114-441·
2464.

RebeCCa before 1he bar

Fetty Tree Trlmmlnt stump
Call 304-87"1(331.

, . . . TrM TrimmlngMdStump
Aemowl. Free nllm..... Call
304-17 ... 7121 .

· ~ ill Myat.tyl A lady

becOrlleo a key wltneal after

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

discovering

I TI-\ INK IT!3TRYING- TDTEL.L

" HERE" IS YQ..IR DAILY

ME "THAT THANKSG;IVIN&amp;
iANDCHRIISTAM&lt;;:; A~:E COMING-.

HOROSCO~ : Gd6BLE

GiOBBLE" 60BBI...E GOBBLE ...

CARTER"&amp; PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh 1nd fltne
Gollloollo,Ohlo
Phone 114-448-3811 or 114448-4477

1:30 • (J) G Night Coull eoun
stall Ia under 1he gun wllen
1hey anend a lllerapy
session. (R)
1D:OO (J) ltrlllght Till&lt;
• (J) illl LA. Low Backer's
devloua maneuvers ruffle 1he
robes o• a sexy female
)udga.(RJ
(!) fHINiwa
CD lalllars In Hiding

.llll_,_
lvenlnl-

BARNEY
DID YOU GIT
TH' WEATHER

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

REPORT YET,

IIJ
• ~ 11111 CIIIIH

IT'S COMIN' ON
RIGHT AFTER
TH' NEWS

10:05 (I) MOYIE: BoltCII - I R )

(1 :37)
10".30(J)~­

SNUFFY?

f!)

Andy wHI in. .n jtdul and
wiring. Co.,.ct Andv Batey 11
R.O. 1. Mlddloport.

=~

. 1t:OO(J) llllltlngtlln ......
• (J)
Cll

'*""'ete

w•

~~-

1111 Twlllgtll ZOM ExiCUIIon

D Hltcllc aole Pn 11

/ THE GRIZZWELLS®

(I)CM.I

-~-1.

==~-=
u.s.

....

~'5 TI-lE WORLD WAR I
FL'I'I~ ACE ZOOMING TltROU~
TI-lE AIR IN 1-115 SOPWITH CAMEL ..

1 !lATE CLOUDS ..

-~
Pass
Pass
Pus
Pus

Eut

,.
I NT
38
Pus

pP-

pPau

Opening lead: • 2
had to give up a club trick, and back
came another trump. Now South could
ruff only one club ill dummy and had
to lose an exi.rl club trick to go with
·bis two diamond 1-.a for !Iowa one.
U the defenoe fails to lead trumps,
South will be able to rull cluls twice
with the seven and el&amp;bt of spades in
dummy to make 10 trieb.

.

1 Assail
44 Buddy
6 Chemin
45 Tennis great
deDOWN
9 Existing
1 Good time
10 Legal
2 Lamb's
claim
pen name
12.Passenger 3 Tendon
4 Twilight
ship
13 Join up
5 Earthly
15 New
6 Armada
Yesterday's Answer
Guinea
7 One (Ger.)
town
8Give
16 Deer
ground
18 Caddoan 11 Goad
Indian
14 Eases off 25 Downright 36 Sunday
19 Widely
17 Cereal
26 Not weaken
punch
used grain
plant
27 Handcuff 37 Ridge
21 Asner and 20 Abhor
29 Become a 39 Last
namesakes 23 Shanks' Benedict
Spanish
22 Carpenter, 24 ·Age of
31 Of currents
queen
e.g.
Reason"
32 Treasure
41 Step up
23 Treated
author
the motor
grain
24 Adhesive
27 Companions
28 "Vissi

1::-++-+-f-

d'-.
29 Word in
a Tolstoi
novel
30 Irish ·
rebel
group
31 Basic
precept
33 Opera's
Merriman
34 Crete
mountain
35 Brawl
38 All done
40Hag
42 Casserole
staple

911

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

ltrr-r.".:t.'l

lVWAXLN;

• • ~ ..... CII
1I:GI (J) IIICMI: ""' llllvtl ..,
Nlgllll!lllll1 :33)
, ..... Ill • Llllllllglal will
Dlvlll Lc:Mt(1) a- 011111111 n

R

NEWBA

CRJA

RXL

SARV

R XL

CRJA
N Z D S B

R

SVWXYBAN

TADVT~

ABWDF
Y•tel'dq.. Ca 1 ptG4i&amp;Ote: HELP YOUR BROTHER'S

BOAT ACROSS, AND 1.01 YOUR OWN HAS REACHED

THE SHORE. - HINDU PROVERB
C) t. . l(llg , _ . . s,ndtclll. Inc.

IIJidgloiNitllll

l

.,

N•r~

SARV

ii£t:1!~!;!:w.,
IWtt

worll • •· Coli 11 .. 912-

Vulnerable: East-West

Dealer: South

0111=11111

• IIICMI: ... C111 I DUptM

742-3011

tl&amp;

.A 86 3 2

9·1

...

.()),..
eo'l\r*rtZOM

PEANUTS

.4

Cll 111111.... Q

.AMtriDf"MIII''M

12:00 (J) ......, CUM

ratn. vlmmediMt

SOUTH
8AKQ8S

(!)1181011

Elutl¥e Butlllfly

IIJ lliptlde

2.000 gollon dollwiY. ....
pooiL - · 01c. c&lt;lf 30..17e;

tAKJ32

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

1
Open Tennis highlights

Wetterson'a Weter Heullng,

•Qs

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACR.OSS
43 Equal

·

1111 Tfllll* .kiM, M.b.

''""*"'"

.K 10 9 4

CROSSWORD

·~tldca-

Wotor clellvory. 1000 golons.
Re•on~bl•
prictt1
dollwory.
Coiii14-H2·1271.

Upholltery

There are different opinions as to
the correct opening bid when you hold
five apodes and live clubs. Some players bid the ltroager suit; others bid one
spode with a stron1 band and one club
with mlalmum values. I prefer one
club, since that always seems to leave
the opeaer positioned to bid apadeo
laler. It's also true that when you open
With one club, you frequently have the
opportunity to leU partner that you
have a five-card spade suit without
getlinB too hip in the bidding.
That's the way it happened with today's deal. South opened one club, rebid one spade and then bid spades
asain afler North bid one no-trump.
North optimistically invited game
with his three-card spade support, and
Sou~ accepted. Nice scientllic biddiDg, and the result would have been
pleasant agai111t normal defense. But
Weet had something hetler to do than
lead the kina of hearts. He felt that de·
clarer would try to rull clubs in dum·
my, so he led a low trump. Declarer

~~~ ~;~

A 6 R W•• lorvlco. Pools.
citttrns. welle . lmmediat• ·

87

.

•1ens

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

(!)OM on OM

pooll. ciawna. Mill. Ph. 814241-1281.

Dump wuclt dollvory Oftd .....
hoa .. llltono 304-17&amp;3190

111

iii)YouConlel..,
11:311•(2) G Ttlllftlllllltow

J • J WMer Service. Swimming

2811.

!Ill~ c:on-tiDn

IIJ llcne,-

General Hauling

rweson~ble

a •c

(!) ,....,_, All , _

•

OHIII'd War..- SwYict: Pools.
Cltttrns. Weill. DtUvery Anytime. Call 114-448-7404-No
Sundtr c81l1.

CCIIII faolbllll

II&gt; 11111 edara

A•identill or co""'*"cial wiring. NIMr _,Ice etr repaln.
Ueen•d elec:trid.,.
free. Ridenour Elaartcal. 30417&amp;-1188.

86

a dead body. Q

a MOYIE: 'Tinlc'
~~r:y=(PG)

ill) •

·-Countr\'

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
""' ',. J'('

84

and

clol81. (FI)
(I) • (J) MOYIE: 'Deldllne'
AIC T11utadly Night Movill

rernow~t.

RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE.
ttouta cllll •ervidng G E. Hot
Poi nt washer1, dr,.-rs and
....... 304-87&amp;-2398.

6

........... No11

RON EVANS ENlfRPIIISES ·
S"'"ic tonk pumpln11- 090 P"
food. Coli 1-800.137-9128,

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Mostwtllacompleted ..med..,..
Pump AI• end llllfYtc:e. 304891-3602

-paper.

Suaplcioua clrcumltlncea
surround her delltt (NR)
(!) Tile !My ...
Clllnged Exlmlnt lhe
discovery thl1 cNngad lhe
view of science. t;!
CD Ylctafy II ... Roman

,..,.,..., parts. ll'ld supplle1. Ph:ll

82

eogy .......

DeniM comas home lrom
Hlllrnan lor the wllk&amp;nd. (FI)

Home
Improvements

8J 10 2
.KQJS

• 7s

By Jameo Jaeoby

.

Hll

EAST
883

WEST

the best lead

ill)~niChiH

'74H•I., Spomtf mo1orcyete.

NORTH
8174
.AI82
tQ1U4
8J7

Finding

IIJ MoMrllne
lllllllnllyMIIIel'
iiJ Clleck It Dull

1973Uf•Pr-.ni• 23ft. CIHIA
motor home. Glnll'ltor. air.
-ring. S f - I. t?IOO. Coli ·•
I 14-379-2430.

WORKED

"'I went to get an upirln and when I came back the bou
wei gone," eKplained the aeeratary. Her co-worker grinned,
"'Gueu the uplrln WORKED."' . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

.(J) .... _
.....
(I) lpoltiC.- (L)

81

Complele the ch,ckle q uoted
by l1!1ing in the missing words
you d.e\l elop fr om step No . 3 below.

(!lllady!-

I

\

, - -..... ~,...-

ti'l e

Oil

IIIIGood-

&amp; Acceasoriee

1971 Chovy tmpolo for oolo.
Good mot:• end t,...tmfNion.
-

lo~o~ r

(!) Yopge o1 ... Mimi

·•
·•

'

1181 . .oultiLT: 230GE. Quod
Runn«. 01700. Coli 11 ..37•
2797-IPM.
1111 Yo-• 1100 -lol.
-00 ntlltlol\
ond blnory.
01378.
Coli Goad
11 ..

nge lttrt rs of
0 Rearr ascrom
b1td word s

o•.ocot~&amp;T-.y

1.000 ... 2.000,-dol~vory .
Call 304-87&amp;-1310.

74

11 .. 441-7102.

m.nta In Mlddl.,.ort. ~om
o112 . Coli 814-892-7787.
EOH.

8119.

72

1978 Ford Thu r.t.nird. po..wr
windows. moon ruof, AC, dual
eahust. Very good c:ond. t 2400.
Cell 814-28&amp;-1704.

44&amp;-1079.

No oiiU. .n. 1117 Uncoln
Coli 11 .. 02-2304
oftw 1:00 p.m.

1983 Otevy M•flbu Billion
Wagon, 83. 900.00. 304-1754480.

0541 .

2 BA .. 2 b81:11
VII.
Depoli1 • rlrf..ence. Call 814--

,
A....: -1¥ - o d .
"""'-~ . . . . . . .DOni

1987 Plymouth Horizon,
*4.500.00.' Phono 304-6754480.

1977 Cllwy. Van for Sals or
Tredofor pld&lt;· up. Coli 814-367·

- - - --apt. on First A
•rtment•
Man.,. 1n d RiYtnlde

1987 CavaRer Z 24. A.T .. AC.
tilt. crulee, AM-FMcMeettt. ll.ln
roof. Cl in18rior. 28.000 mi.,
09.300.00. 304-67... 2925.

Oood ...... 04400. Coli 81444&amp;-0517.

Modtwn one BR . furnished •pt.
Oepostt • refenmce. Call 81444&amp;-1079.

Cl&lt;IICIOUI living. 1 on d 2 bedroom
at VHf~ge

Gllo\MI! THAT NEeP~I'·
n~ !IRING THE III!A!&gt;T
DOWN.

17• ·ea.too.oo
m, 30 ,..
.rv 8'"'
flrJ.O,v.y
•9077~'!'

' 74 Cougar, V·8. auto, PS. PB,
air. 1400.00. 304-176-6011.

"84 F-150 Ford 302 on~no.
O'llerdrive. M~tom8tlc trwumllsion, with or without topper, 11d,.
$1.300.00. 304-891-3589.

"'lltv·

IR. hou• loo.t:ed 1701
Otettnut. t110amo.• $71!1idep.
Colll1 .. 44&amp;-3170.

1988 Ford Escort. AM·FM
ca..atte, cr.uise 13,&amp;00.00.
304-882-20 30. '

1985 Dodge Ch-o•. 31.000
mil". Good cond .. PS, PB, AC.
Coli 614-261-1457.

Homes for Rent

1

•7e Ford LTD hir cond .
1700.00. UKC blk and tsn
Coonhound pups t75.00 eiCh.
304-69 ... 3395.

1981 S10 4•4 olcloup. V-8.
AM-FM radio, 42.000 mltlll,
Wll liking 18,700.00 now
t1.2oo.oo. 304-171-414C.

Furnhhed apartment. t225 •
mo. 1 BA . Utilities ~d. 920
Nlcoly fumohtd _., houoe. Foruth Aw.. Glllipolls. Cell
Adub onlr. Ref. required. No 44e-44 1II after 7 PM.
C.ll 1114-441-0338.
3 room apartment. t100• mo.
3 8ft..
lt•ched g. .ge, Call 304-1175-5104.
••• kltctttft. 111 llect. 1 ye•
1. . .. Rrst mo. rent &amp; depoltt. Modern 1 BR . apt. Call 814441· 0390.
Colll14-44&amp;-13&amp;1.

P••·

(1) 1111'11'

304-87... 3895.

·e&amp; Pon•ic Tempett.

UMI

a •a

(I) •(J)

1980 Splrh, Air Co~d...n roof,

1972 Monte Carlo. Looks good.
Nteda wOfk. For Sale or Trade.
Call 814-44&amp;.8919.

Aptrt:menu end hou•s. Call
304-171&lt;-5104.

41

y...,
•w
~~-

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile. 814·
44&amp;-36720&lt;173-6134.

66 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

or~

jauto focutl 315 mm. 304-6755805.

25acrn lro1d RunRoed. Naw
Haven. Ow,., finencing avail•
"'"· 304-882-3394.

Livestock

lfl' CWI, boats. ptanes repo'd .

ARMY SURPLUS (Advertiling
Specflllt181, Business. Polttk:ll.
Atllteml) . Fri. S11, Sun. Noon 10
8_:00 PM. Sam Somerv•le' s
USE[). Btdl,dretllll'a. bedroom ·since 1984. Regular army
tutlft. O..ka, wringer With.-. a is1uea, denim, rental clothing.
complete lintl of usad furnhure . Jr. camouftege blk and white.
NEW· We•tern boots· $ 38. Ford 1975 •le or trtde. June·
Wo,.booto 018 &amp; ...,. !Steel &amp; lion Independence Road. At . 2 1.
ooft too) . Colll14-448-3159.
304-273-&amp;855.
UMd appllaniCBII •nd TV sets.

Musical'
Instruments

Bundy trumpet, •me a's ni!MI
304-173·5923.
•

Radio Shack Computer 1000
Ex_. , extrl disc drive 380-K.
prmter DMP 130, monitorCM1 1. desk. l.otsofprograrn1&amp;
discs . Co1tover t2000new.will
ooll for $1100. Coli 614-44138151ftylime.

Merchandise

van. •• Kenny BMI at Jim Mink

Ve•llng Simmentel Bull. Tenn..... Wlllk• horst with sacf.
die. C.ll614-24&amp;-9143.

Jeff Wamslay Instructor &amp;144411-8077. limited Openings.

crib, changing tabla,
swmg, b-.slnena, toy boK.
rocker swivel, ·cofiM table. end
1able, carpet-1 7w;18 , heed
bolrd, standing ash t,.y S. grand
father clock. Call 814-4411·
B241 .

Bechtel Thrift Shop
New Haven open Thursd..,. end
Frldlrf thru September 18th. All
merch.,dise haft price.

on • n...v or ullld c.-, tnd: or

63

Cerdll Music. 814-448-01187.

Ba~y

Utility Trail..- for •I e. 304-458·
1541.

51 Household Goods

57

275 gallon oil tank &amp; copper
tubing. Call 814·245-5274.

Spaces for 111nt. trailer s~CBII ,
wat• &amp; sewer furnithed. locust
Rd. Rt. 1. 304-675-1076.

Autos for Sal a: For • gre.t dtlll

Coli 114-112-4781.
Pure bred Slameu ldttens. 8
weeki. Seal or Lilac Point. Call
114-992 · 7201 and leave

54 Misc. Merchandise

on-..gon. lmmM:Uiate condi·
tion. Fultvequlooed. ve. $45915.
Coli 814-992-8"719.

1978 Mod Cwlo. V·8 MltO,
good c:ond. high rnlleage,
01 ,000.00. 304-171-737hf·
•.. 5:00.

Satellite for Sale. 8600. Call
614-44&amp;-7697.

Trailer sp~ce for ,.,t on GarnerFord Rd. Coli 614-245-6492.

304-895-3874.

1916 OldiCutlna Cru-.,lhltf..

For -'e. Poll ad Hereiord H•d
Bull. Gentle, good di•_positkJn. 4
.,.,.. _ ~d . Phone 81 ... 992·7458.

pi•. 3 fernel•. Arst shots and
'NOrmed. 8 WINib old. $160.

Trumpet like new. tlOO. Call
614-742-2128.

514-4411-3432.

row hod: two NH718 choppM"
1 row head; OM wll:h .,ectrlc
control•. One NH 3 point 707
chopper 1 row head; on• NH
model 25 blower; one Kasten
fol'llge bo"; one Cobey forage
box . Keefen Service Center, St.
Rt. 87, Leon, W.Va. Phone

1981 Ford Escort Stlltion wegon. Fully equipped. SuJ*
oh•p. 01195. C.H 114-992·
6719.

AKC Reailtered SChnauzer pup-

Speed Clween wringer washer.
like RIMI . 1250. Call 114-3189821.

AnntctiVII office tulle. Very
privet&amp;. located in downtown
O.llipolil. 1350 per month. Call

Forage Equipment
One AC 782 chopper 2 row

1987 Subaru GL 5 1peed, 3
door, air, AM-FM radio . 11,000
mil•. 814-992·8928.

Bofrr pigs. 8 wlcs. old. Coli
814-44&amp;-3025.

Al11ey Flute. Good cond Cell
814-441-3929.
.

46 Space for Rent

USED NEW HOLLAND

wou

~r

THURS., SEPT. 1 •

I!VENING
1:00 (J) 1110

1985 BllyHner 18 1\ ft. 128 hp, '·

71 Auto' a For Sale

4 door, 8
cyl auto. RIM 1irea, lhow room
condhkJn. 304-195-3441 .

Large houee plants, tal l tabla
lamp, han~ bed. glass shelf, st11p
ladder, &amp; misc. Call 614-4488398.

Rooms for M~t ·we .. or month.
Stenlng at 8120 a mo. Gallia
Hotel· 61 4-446·9580.

8

1

76

Slami!IM Kittens. Call 814-949·
2290 httnlngs.

One bedroom furnished apt,
eonv. locatton, 304-675-2441 .
Furniahed llfflency, ulilhiel peid.
downtown Point Pleasant,
1260.00. 304-895-3450.

Furnished room-919 SttCOnd
Ave.. Gallipolis. $1215 a mo.
Utllhiea •ld. Single male. Share
both. Coli 448·44 .1 8oltor 7 PM.

~~====··:"':·====:;::========dJ

AKC Coc ker Suniel pups .
Blonde &amp; bun. Shots 118rted &amp;
wol;mld. Vet . ..,IUid. 11 !50
ei!IICh. Call 114-381-8890.

WheelctutifJ·new or ul8d. 3
whaelad electric acoote'rs. Call
Rogers Mabilty collect , 1-814870.9681 .

Furnished Rooms

-:AI'I' •· ·- •

h•act twoNH6-717choppera 1

Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,
1 room effldeney IPt. utAiti•
pafd. refarencee required. 1·
304-882·2586.

45

~

11.1
1

61 Fann Equipment

a wraetc old Aust,.u .. Shepherd

52 CB.TV, Radio
Equipment

25" color consoletel8'1ilions for
sala. 8100 &amp; up. Cell614·446Be~ch street. 1\lllddl~rt. Ohio . . 2713. ,
2 bedroom furnished llpMtment,
utlltiel paid, nlferences. Phon&amp;
304-882-2566.
Now accepting appticlt.iOnt for
2 bedroom apartnwnts. fulty

\

1988 .V.I .P. 22'h ft. Cudd\r
c.bin, 41-4 Mercru...,. lhvo.
out driYt. I•• ttt .. 20 hrt on
boal. lots of extral,
t11,500.00. 304-871-81&amp;9of.
tw 8:00PM. •ytlmeweelc•ula.

, . , -.....

Happy Jack Skin Balm: For
scratching end gnawing dogt
1nd Clls. Soothel Irritated skin.
Contains no synthetic pyrelhroidal lidwvell Cash Feed . J .
D. North Produce.

4BushBoy llllgl•. l8d •white
wfth copper nou. Full blooded.

'

apu. 6 closets, kitchen·

hop k-up, ww c:ar,.t. n..-vly
pamted. deck.
From $175.
Ragency, Inc. Apts. Call 304175-5104, or 875-6388 or
875-173B.

198.tllomWComnwnder 18~
1/ 0 170 ttP. V8fV fow lloura.
w / CIIItlct,.l•tom.rch: New
114.CIOO-SaiCflfice etoo~ S•
rious inquirw ontv. (:all 304875-11813.

Boatsend
Motors for Sale

1971 aa.. Bod, 50 HPmotor.
1rotling motor. live well. 11200.
Calll14-44&amp;-8890.

houtes. Pt. Ph~BIIH1tandGalli po·

Spaeiolll mobUe horne lots for
rent. Fan,lly Pride Mobile Home
P.-k. Gallipolis Ferry. W. Va.
304-675-3013.

appl. furnl1hed. W•hlll'· [)ryer

WEStERN RED CEDAR
• 01 .. ne1 Austlc
and a.,veled .... Si(fng
• Oedc Mll•ills
Guaranteed Quality
C ETIDE. INC .. Athens· ll14·

66

~::~~;~' S@\\~lA-~t.~s·
_ .....;_;___;.;_.: 14••4
CLAY I . POLLAN
low to form four simple words

75

&amp;94-3571

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,

lit. 814-44&amp;-8221.

1911&amp; ~o-1 125 KX. v«y
good cond. noo.oo. 304-B9"'
3418.

Concr• blockt· all . . .. .,.,d
or dellvrery. M•on IHd Gel lip ali• llock Co,, 1 23"h Pine St.,
Gollloollo. Ohio. Coli 814-4412783.

Call814-2&amp;&amp;-827&amp;.

No pets,

lhoP for •le. C.ll 614-992·
8513 or 814-992-7509.

2- 1 acre lots. Rt. 180. Call
514-44&amp;-8373.

30" eltc. range.harwst gold'95. 30" tl.c. i-lnge-evac.OO
green-196. 30" a• range top&amp;
bottom Q\llln.'Nhite- t 150. G .E.
wesher-t9S. W\irlpaol drver·
195. Refrig.·harvest gold frost
fr ... $96. Refrlg.·wtrite frost

r;;;:::;~~;::::;;:::;::r-:;;;::::;;::::;:::::::::::::~ Queen
-------~~size ..wter bed com41 Hom fo R t
44 A rt
Pl81elv padded t150.00. exc:
es
r en
pa ment
cond. 304-675· 3087.
for Rent
Middleport, newty red11KXJ11!tled
Oak antique table, 4 ch.rs.

44

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

?

"Someday, Son, all this will
be therr'S ,"

Greanhoue business and gift

Properly in Conagltol'lle W.VA .
wtth 55x79 ft building. Call
304-372-4&amp;50. 372-3910,
372-91&amp;4.

JL

-~
" . · . -~
:.-. -,.,- .-.·.- ·

flhone 814-992-7350.

1174 Chtmplon 14di5 total
electriC. underpenning. Furni•t.d or unft.irnilhed. Relldy to
mo._. . 18, 500.00. 304-5762383.

,I

w.ys excepted plus flnMdng Is
avalllbl• whh 11Jproved crMtt.
Rt. 141-Centen•rv·'l• mile on
Uncoln Pike. Optn I AM ·S PM,
Mon.-Set. SUNDAY· 12·1 PM.
814-44&amp;-315&amp;

Hou•for . .IChMP. 7toon'll. 1
bllh. on hoi! lot , 304-17... 3114

1919 Mobllo,. Homo. 12&gt;&lt;10. 2
-_, ., 1•98
room. d..-.
remodel.t intide out. 13&amp;00.
Coli l1 .. 2&amp;1-1111olt.,&amp;PM .

)

bookltMIIwt,

Mt:s. hutchtl,
Walhert. dryef'1. dMP .........
rlfrklemor.. r~n.- . AI furNt.,... I. at low cost priC* bacau•
ww h.,. no hlddln colt. Lavt·

3 be*aom home. 1'1.1 b•hl.
e•pilttld. cem•t lir·helt. 1o-CIIed In Point Pl.....,t, ealt
304-17 ... 2702 .. 304-57&amp;2147.

Television
Viewing

1 8lt 2SOR Honda for •le
o 1,DOG. Allolo. . de"""'ldlfler
079. 304-17 ... 1182.

10t~.cr•w le..,accell

o.ti~PoMfFetrv. new home•o
2 tots wtlttwefls. •70. 000. C.ll

The Daily Sentinei- Paga- 13

Pqmeroy-llllteldlaport. Ohio

74 MotOfcvcles

'

.

.

�. .

--

-

Page-1 4- 'The

Peace Corps searches for lost volunteers
Dear Ann Landers: As a
freshma n at Notre Dame, I went
to a lecture you ·gave. You
touched this undergraduate's
hear t. It wlll be our secret just
how long ago that was. You
struck me as ~ caring person,
a nd now I need your help.
The Peace Corps was founded
In 1961. Since that time, 121,000
Americans have gone offtoserve
their country In 94 nations around
the globe. That's the good news.
Here Is the bad news: More than
70,000 · files of Peace Corps
volunteers have been lost or
mislaid.
It Is essential that we fi nd our
missing co lleagues. We are especially Interested in those volu nteers of the '60s who helped
es tablish the standard of excel·
lence that we are striving to
maintain today.
The add ress is : Returned
Peace Corps, 1319 F Street N.w. ,
Suite 900, Was hington, D.C.

20004.
Thanks . Ann. - E . Timothy
Carroll, E l&lt;ecutlve Director.

Dear Tim: Here's your letter.
Now get ready for a load of ma ll.
You're going to be swamped. T he
Peace Corps does a great job a nd
Notre Da me Is a magic na m e to
me. Glad to help.
Dear Ann Lander s: Th is letter
need no advice. It's qu ite a ppare nt that I was taken In a nd the
da mage Is done. But maybe I can
spare others.
I married a con man. Afte r the
shame and gu ilt subsided, I
began to think a lit tle m ore
rationally. I wonder how m a ny
others have had this exper ience.
I'm sure there are many. but
they are too e mbarrassed to
admit it.
I am a well-respected professiona l woman with a bea utiful
home, fl ne fa mily and good
fr lends. I had been a s ingle
parent for 10 years, whi ch made
me the ideal target.
Women, beware: A tall , goodlooking, retired military man
ma y be looking for you. He's a
fabulous dancer , smooth ta lker
a nd will ma ke you feel like a

Winners announced from social
Winners of the prizes at the
Long Bottom Com munity Assoc.
at Its recent Ice cream social

were:
First Prize. $100, Mary An drews, Long Bottom .
Second P rize, $25 value cro·
cheted bed do ll, Don Taylor,
Long Bottom .
Third Prize, $1Q va lue " Win-

1, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Sentinel

dow Watcher Cat", Ernes tine
Hayman, Long Bottom.
Fourth Prize: haircut or s ham·
poo and set a t Phyllis' Snip &amp;
Curl, Jim Wells , Long Bottom .
Fifth Prize, hair cut or shampoo and set at Hair by Lila,
Wilma Wr ight.
Sixth Pr ize, Nex xus Hair Produ cts, VIctor Bahr. Long Bottom .

million. His line Is Irresistible
a nd his ultimate goal Is to " move
ln.''

You may be a little lonely and
env ision lite as " more complete"
with a partner. He will tell you
tha t you are the perfect mate.
Don' t fall lor it.
After a while you'll wonder
why he doesn't IntrOduce you to
his fr iends. The reason Is, he
doesn't have any . His hours are
er r atic. You · will never know
where he Is or what he's up to. His
excuses are Incredible. He Is the
wor ld's best llar.
I was lucky. I !ound out about
this scoundrel's other wives and
had my marriage annulled belore he got everything.
I hear that he's on the prowl
again. Ladles, beware! - Slow
Learner In El Paso.
Dear El Paso: Thanks tor the
bulletin. If any of you run Into th is
creep, shut the door so fast that
he will catch pneumonia from the

Carmel residents visit friends, family

Ann
landers
breeze.
Dear Ann Landers: What
should I do about my son's
girlfriend? He Invites her to
come for dinner every night and I
am sick of it.
I wor k downtown a nd my
husband works nights. Some
evenings I'd like to come home
and snack out of the fridge . I
can' t do this because I always
have a " guest." My son knows
how to cook a nd I've t old him to
prepare a meal now and then, but
he r efuses- says he's tired after
work. Well. so am I. Any
answers, Ann? -San Antonio.
Dear S.A.: When you stop
being a doormat, people wills top

r--------------------------1

DANCE FOR JOY

CARLUON SCHOOL, SYRACUSE, OHIO

10 WEEK FALL SESSION 20 CLASSES ....$42
CLASSES BEGIN SEnEMIEI 12, 1911

MONDAY and WEDNESDAY-7:00 P.M.-8 :00P .M.
TUESDAY and THURSDAY-5 :30 P .M. -6 :30P.M.

far Registration Call....
JOY KING, IMtrudor - 992-3794
JEANNIE OWEN, Asst. IMtrudor - 992-11893
OR YOU MAY REGISTER AT FIRST CLASS

Mr. a nd Mrs. Walter Watson of
Ke nt. Ohio and daughter Br!g!d
and Bee Moorhead an d son from
Austin, Te xas. Mrs. Mar ylin
Young, daughter Elisa and son
Eric k, and David a nd Erick
Young of Sidney, Ohio spent the
weekend with Mrs. Mary Rou sh.
Ther e were 51 present for
Sunday school on August the
14th.

Lula Circle and Dixie and Joe
Sayre wenttoSpr!ngfleld, Oh!oto
visit Mr. and Mrs. Lee Norr is on
Thursday.
Wllllam Carelton of Racine
called a t the hom e of Arthu r
Johnson on Monday evening.

Ohio Lottery

Chureh
notices

Daily Number
407
Pick 4
7275

Page 5

wiping their feet on you. Prepare
meals for yourself (when you fee l
like it) a nd let your son fix
whatever he wa nts for himse lf
and hi s gir lfriend. E nd .of .
problem .

fir
lllllhill,
llring,
caring
and
Sharing.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 88--101-EL-EFC, to
review the luel procurement practices and
poHcies of the Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Component, and related matters. This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m. on September
6, 1988 at City Council
Chambers, 218 Cleveland
Avenue, S.W.. Canton,
Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further information may be obtained •
by contactmg the Commission .

•

e

•

•

at

Vof.39. No. 13
Copyrighc.d 1888

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September

ZSections, 14 Pages
25 Cenu
A Multbnedla Inc. Newspaper

2. 1988

Jobless rate jumps to 5.6. perCent in August
WASHINGtoN !UP!) - The
has many weak s pots, and hurt
nation's unemployment rate ln- the Republican candidate,
. creased sharply to 5.6 percent In
George Bush, who has ~rgued
August, an Increase oftwo-tenths
there Is Impressive strength In
of a percentage point, and adult
the economy.
men ·were hit particularly hard , · The figures showed a payroll
the government reported today.
gain In August of 219,000 jobs In more bad news. the factory
less than expected by most
work week dropped, average
financial analysts. The August
overtime also declined, and
payroll gain - a key gauge of
225,000 more Americans were
future economic actlvltv - was
standing In unemployment lines
markedly down from the solid
In August, the Labor Department
Increase of 283,000 non-farm
. said.
payroll jobs In July .
The news could boost the
The unemployment rate In
presidential campaign of DemoJune was 5.3 percent and It edged
crat Michael Dukak!s, who has
up In July to5.4 percent. With the
.s aid that the American economy
August figure of 5.6 percent ,

SUJISHER LOHSE
Phnrma&lt;y

Cl 1988Cartton CarO&amp; . Inc

American unemployment has
risen three-tenths ol a percentage point since June.
Adult men were particularly
hurt In August, the · ligures
showed. Their unemployment
rate leaped a full four-tenths of a
percentage point - from 4.5
percent In· July to 4.9 percent In
August.
"I think the employment report seems to suggest that the
economy Is starting to·cool down
a little," said Norman Robertson, the chief economist for
Mellon Bank In Pittsburgh.
"It's still to early to say the
economy Is weakening or that

in their work••. - - - - - - - - . . . ,

It's Our••••••

,____S_a tamhar Savin s Spraal
Special Frl.ay &amp; Satur.ay
REG. S21.95

DENIM JEANS

Sizes 29 to 42 waist.
Pre-wa$hed. 1 00% cotton .
Made by Wrangler.

.''&lt;I

we're heading Into a recessionI don't think that's the case at
all," Robertson 'added. "I do
think in!latlon Is still a threat ."
Robertson cautioned against
drawing overly broad conclusions, saying that economic
statistics are "volatile," particularly In summer months when
"there are often unusual
distortions."
The latest unemployment figures will be studied particularly ·
closely by Dukakls and Bush
because jobs - along with
ln!latlon and Interest rates- are
always a major concern among
voters trying to predict their

Joblessness among whites rose
financial futures.
The figures also will be scrutin- s lightly to 4.9 percen t.
Ized by the Federal Reserve
Unemployment for blacks was
Board and the financial markets. little changed at 11.3 percent , a nd
A companion Index ol unem- also remained relatively stable
ployment that counts members for teenagers, 15.8 percent, and
of the armed forces stationed in Hispanics, 8.4 percent.
Joblessness for biac k teenagthe United States also rose In
August, by one-tenth of a percen· ers rose !rom 31.1 percent In July
tage point, from 5.4 percent to 5.5 to a staggering !eve.! of 32.4
percent.
percent in Augus t.
Overall, the Labor Depart·
Meanwhile, the average work
ment figures mean 6.9 million week dropped to 34.6 hours · down by 0.3 hours, seasonally
Americans are unemployed.
While joblessness for adult adjusted.
The factory wor k we,e k also
men rose sharply, adult women
fared better. Their unemploy- declined to 41 hours, down 0.2
ment rate edged down to 4.8 hours.
percent.

Work to start inunediately on
Syracuse boat; dock facilities
Include a boat launch and
By KATIE CROW
courtesy dock.
· Sentinel Correspondent
Long awaited boat launching
Syracuse VIllage Is also fortu and dock facilities ln the village
nate in another avenue as was
of Syracuse wtll soon become ·a
announced at las t night 's
reality.
meeting.
Hobert Wingett, grants admin·
The village will for the first
time In several vears have a
lstrator for the village and
contract with a gas company that
project engineer for the marina
told council last night that the will mean lower gas rates for
village residents .
contract with Roses' Excavat·
The name of the new company
lng, Inc., Racine, has been
signed.
Is the National Gas &amp; 011
Cor poration. The company serviWork on the first pl!jjse of the
proposed $83,000 protect will get ces Newark, Zanesville, Buckeye
underway Immediately and must Lake to name a few.
Meeting with council from the
be eompleted within 60 days.
or the $83,000 '75 percent will · gas company were Pat McGona·
come from grants. Wingett has gle, vice president and general
worked on the project for over 10 counsel and Malcolm Parks.
McGonagle explained that
. years. The first phase will

they are "bootstrapping" Syra·
cuse with the larger cities whlch
will enable the company to offer
lower rates.
McGonagle also explained .
"consistently we are the lowes t
gas utility in the State ofOhlodue
to locally 'produced gas. We're
taking the cost of your operation
and putting it In with Zanesville
and Newark." Plans al so call for
the company to service Racine
and Rutland.
He went on to explain that they
will first find leaks and " button
up" for winter. There will be no
big construction this fall McGonagle explained.
They do pian to rna ke extensive
Improvements and upg rade the
Continued on page 10

Gallipolis union workers
reject contract; strike set

New Fall

SPORTSWEAR

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

Popular Donnkenny
polyester I cotton
·s portswear. Great new looks

BOYS' SHIRTS
Reg. ss.9s to 17.95
SALE .................................. s2
Reg. sus to 111.9S

Reg. Ill to 112
SALE .................................. S2
,eg. S14 to 116
SALE ••••••:........................... S4
leg. s 17 to S20
SALE .................................. S6

for fall .
PANTS , TOPS, SKI RTS and
SWEATERS
In Sizes· s . M, L
Reg. 122.00 Sportsweor .... Sale '18.69
Reg. 126.00 Sportsweor .... Sale 122.09
Reg. 129.00 Sportswear .... Sale 124.69

$ALE .................................. S4

Reg. 112.95 to 517,95

SALE.................................. ss

MEN'S SHORTs·
Reg. S11.9S to S14.9S
SHORTS ................. Sale S4
Reg. S1S.9S to S16.9S
SHORTS ................. Sale S6
Reg. S18.9S to 522.95
SHORTS ................. Sale sa

WOMEN'S
BLOUSES
Reg. S14 to S2Q
SALE ............................. ss
Reg. S21 ta S30
SALE ••• ,. ..............
S7
u

.........

•

GIRLS' OUTFITS

Little Girls'

Reg. IS to 17

FALL DRESSES

SAL£.................................. s2
Reg. 18 to sII

Cute new styles and colors fOT
fall. Sizes 9 mos. to 18 mos .• 2 to

SALE .................................. s4

6x, 7 to 14.
Reg . ' 18.00

Reg. S12 to S2Q .
SALE.................................. S6

BOYS'·

GIRLS DRESSES

SWIM TRUNKS

Reg. '16 to '23
SALE-................................ ss

. Reg. S7.95 to 59,95
SALE .....................:..... S3
Reg. S10.95 ta S12.95
SALE ........................... S4

R.g. 124 to '31

SALE .................................. s7
Rog. 132 to 144

SAlE .................................. S9
Rog. 149 to 170

SALE .............................. liS

•

WOMEN'S
PANTS
Reg. SJ2 to S16

SALE ............................ ss
Reg. Sl7 to S40
SALE ............................ S7
•

Dresses .. ... ...... .. .. Now Only '15 .29
Reg. •22.00
Dresses .. .. ...... Now Of'!IY '18.69
Reg. ~28 . 00
Dress~f .. .... .... Now Only '23 .79

Three archaeologlsls of the
Ohio IUslorlcal Society has
been at tbe Our House Museum In GaiUpoHa Thursday
and Friday, excavating In the
courtyard. The work Is belnA'
done In preparation lor construction of a patio and other
renovaUons to the courtyard.
Above, Greg Sheldon scrapes
away layers ol earth, looking
for artifacts to (aiD IDIIIJhts as
to the lives of lh011e llvin1 In
area since tbe Our House was
bunt In tbe early 1810's. At
right, Don Bier Is deep In a pit.
There, he discovered a
number of animal bones.
According to lohD Na11, tbls
area Ia unique, In that It Is
virtually undisturbed 1111d the
HlslDrlcal Society can gain
real Insight aa to the lifestyle
of tile residents In the 1800's.
( OVP photoo by Lee Ann
Welch)

I '

New Full

/

SLEEPWEAR

Reg. $9.00
Sleepwear .. ... .. ... ... .. .'.... Sale
Reg. •11.00
Sleepwear .. ...... ...... ...... Sale

•7.66
•9.36

' 12.76
'15.26

,..

Frl••v •d Satur••v O•ly

Save on our new fall line of women's short
gowns and robes. Warm flannels. nylons.
cotton and quilted styles . Sizes Small to
XXL . Stop in and save this weekend .

Reg. '18.00
Sleepwear .. ...... ..... ..... S~J,Ie

Cloudy tonight, chance of rain
40 percent. Saturday, blgh In
upper 'lOs. Chance of rain 90
percent.

-" · -.....,._

SHOP ELBERFEL

Reg. •15 .00
Sleepwear .. ...... . ......... Sale

r

MEN'S AND BOYS'
1

TUBE SOCKS

Men's sizes 9 to 16, Boys 9
to 11 . White with color tops.
· Made by Hanes.

Reg. '2.60
Tube Socks ............... •2.00
Reg. •2.26
Tube Socks ............. .. •1.80
Reg. •1.76
Tube Socka ............... •1.

MEN'S AND BOYS'

HANES UNDERWEAR
Incudes entire ..lection. Man'a and boys t·
shirts and briefs. man's boxer shorts, A-sh·
irts. big and tall aizaa. plus pocket T'a.

Sale Prices

'

NO NONSENSE
SALE

Two
Day
Sale
•

•COMFORT STRIDE
•CO~TROL TOP
•SHEER TO WAIST
•ULTRA SENSE
•KNEE HIGHS
Reg. '1 .69 to •4.32 In Petite,
Medium, Tall 8o Queen

SALE PRICED

'·

•

$135 TO $345

t'
I

•'

,1
••
•

•
•

~~~~-~~~~~!!~~~~! ~!'~~~!-~.

Meigs county has already been
submitted to the State, and a
Communltv Development Block
Grant application !or funds to
construct an elevator ln the
Meigs Countv Courthouse will be

·ruture:
The county has submitted a
$76,000 litter grant application to
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources to fund the county's
litter control program In 1989.

• 18 filed
Forec1.08ure acliOD
0

A foreclosure action has been
flied lli Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Diamond Savings
and Loan Company. Findlay,
against Nancy J. Jaspers, Mil·
lord, and David A. Carsey and
Terri Lee Carsey, Racine, et al.
Bank One, Alben&amp;, baa been
dismissed by tbe court from the
act ton·or Central Trust Company
of Soutbeaatern Ohio versus
Scipio EneriY Alloclatloa, et al.
An entrt conftrmllll sale and
ordering dlltrlbutlon of proceeds
from the sale baa been flied In a
forecl01ure action by SoUthern
Ohla Productlaa Credit Associa tion 11alut Sherman Ray Marcum, et al.

ll

In other court matters, Daniel'
P . ·Talbott Jr., who was sent·
enced to prison In connection
wltb a shooting Incident at a local
nightclub, ls to be released
Sunday on shock probation !rom
the Orient Correctional Institute.
Talbott Is to report to a probation
o!ftcer within live workltig days
of his release .
And In the case of Chris tine
Green versus William Green, a
restraining order has been Issued
against the. defendant.
Finally, a Melp County Grand
Jury session has been scheduled
for Thursday, Sept; 8, at 9: 30
a.m.

wereunsurewhethertosubmlta
grant .a pplication this year since
State guidelines have changed to
require. local matching funds of
~12,000. The commissiOners are·
hoping th~ $12,000 match will be
available when It's needed since
the mter control program has
proven extremely successful ln
the county.
The possibility o! obtaining a
separate grant for recycling is
also being reviewed by county
officials.
The commtsstoners have re·
celved approval from the Ohio
Department ol Development to
apply Melp County's entire
allotment of 1988 Community
Development Block Grant funds
to an elevator In the courlho~~~e
for use by the elderly and
handicapped.
Tbe county will recleve
$106,1100 In CDBG funding this
year. The cost estimate lor the
elevator Is $130,000.
Continued on page.lO

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP News Stall
GALLlPOLIS - Members of
Local 1316 of the American
Federation of State, County and
Mu,nlclpal Employees
(AFSCME) rejected the proposed two-year contract offered
by the city of Gallipolis
Thursday.
Thursday was are-vote bv the
24 members ol t.he locai union on
the contract. They originally
voted Tuesday, rejecting the
proposal, but decided tore-vote
the Issue afler rece!vl ng a
further explanation of Its
benefits.
The current contract expires at
midnight Sunday.
According to local President
Joe Woodall, the union filed a
10-day Intent to strike notice with
the city and State Employee
Relations Board !SERB) on Aug.
26. The notice Informed each of
the strike date of Sept. 5.
· The city and union have
olllclally been at the bargaining
tables since July 6, and the l~st
two have been with a SERBappo!nted mediator. The final
session was Monday. .
·
Affected by the proposed strike
are water and sewer maintenance, the street department,
cemetery , parks. meter readers.
waste water treatment plant and
water treatment plant erri. ployees and a c~stodlan. .
Not alfected are pollee and fire
departments, professional em· ,
ployees, supervisors and clerical
workers.
•'We want to work," said Local
1316 vice president Floyd Wright.
Wright was the union's -first
president when It organized ln
1984.
"This Isn't a strike against the
city," he added. "It's a matter or
economics.''
At !88ue are Insurance and
wages. On Monday, a tentative
agreement between the bargain." IJii units was reached, and
Woodall and Wrtaht took It back
to the union members.
In the proposal, a lesser Blue
Crou and Blue Sbleld coverage
package would be paid for by the
city with a supplemental rider'
for eye, dental and prescription
coverage.
Curren tty, the city pays 100

-

percent of the premium lor
employees' coverage. In an effort to Improve the budget, the
city wanted to place a ceiling on
the arnount of premium paid.
This was not acceptable to the
members of AFSCME, and Its
rank and file rejected the prop·
osal. According to Woodall, premiums Increase annually and the
amount above the ceillngf would
be deducted from workers'
paychecks.
"Even with a wage Increase,
you can't evaluate how that (pay
deduction) would affect your
Income," Woodall said .
The union president said he 's
readv to meet with city officials
"anYtime" between now and

Sunday's deadline.
Attempts Friday by the Galli·
polls Dally Tribune to reach City
Manager Dale lman to commen t
on the looming strike were
unsuccessful. !man wa s working
on grant proposals and unavaila ble for comment, according to a

secretary .
A strike, should no agreement
be rea c hed , would begi n
Monday.
Operations a t the was te water
treatment and wate r treatment
plants, the city streeet, water
and sewer departments, ceme·
terles, parks, and meter rea ding
would have to be done bv
supervi sory personnel.
·

,--Local news briefs.-REACT will have safetybreak
The Meigs County R .E.A.C.T. (Radio Emergency Assoc iated
Citizens Team) will be having the annual Labor Day Weekend
Safety Break at the southbound roods ide park on Route 33. The
break will begin at 6 p.m. Friday evening and continue a r ound
the clock until 6 p.m . Monday . Free coffee . pop, doughnu ts .
cookies, etc. , will be served to motorists throughout the
weekend. The safety break has the approval of both the State of
Ohio and the Meigs County Sherlff'sDepartment.

Break-in still under investigation
•

A breaking and entering which occurred sometime la st
Sunday at Eastern High School Is still under Inves tiga ti on by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department. The break-In wa s
discovered later In the day by !ootballcoachA rchle Rose. Item s
were taken In the break-ln. Entry Into the building was ga ined
through a· back door. A pane of glass from the door was broke n
out to gain access to the lock.

No paper Monday
The Dally Sentinel will not be published on Monday ,
September 5, In order to permit employees to observe the Labor
Day Holiday. Normal o!!lceoperatlonsw!ll resume on Tuesday.

Gallia woman hurt in accident
A Gallla County woman was slightly Injured In a one-car
accident at 3:02p.m. Thursday on Kingsbury Road , 0.3 miles
west at US 33, In Bedford Township of Meigs County .
Troopers of theGallla -Melp Post, State Highway Patrol said
brakes failed on a car driven by Debra L. Rose. 24, Rt. 2,
(Continued on page 10)

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