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                  <text>Pas 10-The Daily Sentinel

Property .
·transfers
VIllage of Middleport, Ohio.
parcels to John T. Williams and
Robert Wtngett, Middleport
VIllage.
Arthur T. Warner and Janet
Waraer, .4007 A. to Michael E .
Waruer ·and T. Darlene Warner,

Tuesday. September 6, 1988

. Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio .

Lebanon.
GQrdon L. Holter and Jill
Holter, 1.163 A. to Lee T. Swain,
Orange.
Douglas W. Johnson and Linda
L. Johnson, 10.34 A. to Harold
Preston Jones and Mary E.
Uewellyn, Columbia.
Ellen B. Wilson dec 'd, Cert. of
trans. to Kathryn v. Hayes.

Pomeroy VIllage.
Norma Jean Stivers dec'd,
afflil .for trans. to Donald L.
Stivers, Middleport VIllage.
Andrew Myers, dec'd, affld to
Nellie Myers, Salem.
David L. Huddleston and Mary
Ann Huddleston, .25 A. to Arnold
Johnson and Alma R. Johnson,
Salem.

Randy Lee Sycks, 16.736 A. to L. Adkins, parcel to Insllco
Corporation, Sutton.
Jonna Jay Burton, Bedford.
Miles Homes Dlv of Insllco
Thorp Consumer Discount Co.,
57.754 A. to Charles Thomas . Corporation, parcel to Lendon H.
Chapman and Tammr K. Chap- Adkins and Sharon L. Adkins,
man, Salem.
Sutton.
Edward Lemaster, Katherine
Helen M. Day, tracts to Ml·
chael D. Deskins and Sherry A. Lemaster, Carroll M. Fisher,
Joan C. Fisher, right of way to
Deskins, Olive.
Lendon H. Adkins and Sharon Buckeye Rural Elect. Corp. Inc.,
I-,

Columbia.
John Craig Runyon and Helen
Runyon, Parcel to Joseph G.
Runyon, Olive.
DoriS Deeter. Glen 0. Deeter,
dec'd, affld. , Olive.
Jay E . Stiles, dec'd by Executor, tracts to Byron L. Arbaugh
and Patricia A. Arbaugh,
Rutland.

Major
Hoople's
forecast

Daily Number
837
Pick 4
1767

Page 6

Bunker Hill
residents
hold reimion
A reunion was held Sunday at
the home of VIrgil and Deloris
King for the 19&amp;1 to 1940 Bunker
Hlll residents. Neva King was
also surprised with a cake, gifts
and cards In observance of her
90th birthday.
~ l\ttendlng besides VIrgil, Deloris and Neva King were David
.and Cyndl King, Alan, Marta,
Nathan, Gabrielle Blackwood,
Zlba and Sylvia Midkiff, Roy and
· Lou Smith, Char lev and Naomi
Smith, Mildred ziegler, Hazel
Oliver, Bob and Golda Reed,
Cecil and VIrginia Hellman, Pat
Thoma, Ivan Carman, Norman
·and Jean Wood, Glen Thoma,
Eugene Smith, Eva Schkrelber,
Hartwell and Marte Curd, Rowland Dais, Jan, Ann Knapp,
George Genhetmer, Mildred
Ihle, May Holter. Esther
Frecker, all of Meigs County.
Those coming from out of the
county were Leo and Pauline
King, Clltford and Gladys Car' man, ' Adrian Jones. ·Gladene,
·' Laura, Galen, Cheb, and Jed
Johnson, Judv Amanda and
·Aniber Hughes, James Cummins, Mike and Margie King and
Tina. John, Debbie, Johnny, and
Jamie Rucker, Ruby Rucker,
Robert and Clss Wllltams, Howard and ·Betty Gilkey. and Ruth
Carman, all of the Columbus
area; Courtney and Marte Williams, Portsmouth; Grace King.
Mansfield; Dale and Nan Mae
Smith, Logan; Paul Carr, Kent;
Ralph Carr; VIrginia Beach, Va.;
·and Helen King, Athens, Ga.

Vol. 39' No.I&amp;

at y
.

Copyrighted 1888

Pomeroy-Middiep"

Clear, ~ool tonl«hl. Lows In
low 50s. Thursday, sunny,
mUd. Highs In mid 80s.

•

enttne

ort. Ohio. 'wednesday, Septem.. ber 7, 1988

2 Section&amp;, 16 Pages 25 Canll
A Multimedia Inc. Now"""por

--~~----------------~--------------------~------~----~~--~--~--~--------~~--~~----~~------------~----------~~~~~~--~=:~~'.

Counties must decide trash issue this year
VINYL
FLOOR
COVERING

WOOD

EUREKA
UPRIGHT
I

\

FLOOR LAMPS

•TOP FILL BAG
•12" BRusH ROLL

Assorted Styles
Oak Finish

Your Cholee

Low PrIee

YOUI CHOICE OF
._SI 2 GlUT mliS

ONLY

$ 49 00

BEATER BAR
•DIAL-A-NAP

$399

SQ. YD.

$6995 t - - - - - - - - " - - . - - - - - - - 1

...........
~s;r::::==~=
._,,.._,
am,...._
..... ___ .....,
_.., ___•.,. .. ,...._____
..,, , .........

........_..,

0

c_,__ _

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

IOWOILY '$ 34900

---- ------.;;

BERKLINE RECLINER SALE
Wall-Away Recliners and
Racker /Recliners
Many Styles and Fabrics

25°/o OFF

· MOSCOW (UPI} - A cool; headed Soviet cosmonaut who
· requested music and a nap
before he and his Afghan com. rade made a make-or-break
attempt to guide their malfunctioning spacecraft back to Earth
got a hero's welcome today after
. landiiiiJ. safely lu Central Asia.
~ .• Vetermt cosmonaut" Vladmlr
Lyakhov and Abdol Aha Moha·
mand, the first Afghan 111 space,
brought their Soyuz TM-5 capsule down 96 miles from the
Soviet city of Dzheszkagan, enndlng a daylong drama In which
they twice failed to break out of
orbit, the olflclal Tass news
agency repOrted.
"Cosmonauts Vladmlr Lyak·
hov and Abdol Ahad Mohamand
are feeling well after landing," It

90 DAYS
SAME AS
CASH•

Will not touch wall in any posllon. A
great space saver!

SALE
GUN CABINETS

"'

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Pat Hysell lost the most weight
and Judy Eblin was runner-up at
the Tuesday morning Five Points
class of S!tnderella. At the Mason
class, Brenda Roush was the top
loser with Dorothy Russell and
Bertha Kinzel being runners-up.
The fall class of the Five Pomts
group will be held at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday nights. •

S459.00
S499.00
S629.00
S859.00

management plan for each
district.
A county which does not meet
the population requirement Independently, must join with other
counties or must obtain a waiver
from the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency of the population requirement. Waivers. may
be oblalued only If a county can
meet strict guidelines for solid
waste disposal over a 10-year
period .
And even If a county obtains
permission to be an Independent
district, there Is no guarantee
that EPA will not assign another
county to the Independent
county, thus creating a multi·
county district anyway.
Any county planning to submit
a proposal to EPA as an
Independent district must submit
the proposal by Dec. 24 of this
year.
For counties planning to submIt proposals for multi-county
solid waste districts, the submls-

slon deadline Is March 24, 1989.
If districts are not formed by
the March 24 deadline; EPA will
take matters Into their own
hands and form the districts
themselves .
By June 24, 1989, each district
must have formed a . policy
committee made up of a prescribed number of Individuals
from each county In the district.
Deadlines for submitting district managment plans to EPA
are In 1990.
"Today's meeting Is to look at
possibilities," explained Groff,
and she suggested that other
counties at the meeting consider
passing a "resolution ollntent to
join a solid waste dlstrlct"wlthin
the next &amp;I days.
According to Athens Commls·
sl&lt;iner Karen Harvey, the new
law requires that three "tiers" of
fees be charged, over and above
a regular dumping fee.
The first tier ol fees Is for
"In-district" dumpers, the se-

6-Gun Oak ............... Sale
8-Gun Oak ............... Sale
8-Gun Oak ............... Sale
I 0-Gun Oak ............ Sale
12-Gun OaL.......... Sale

SJ79
S344
S374
S471
S644

Soviet Central Asia to begin what
sa ld .
After tht;' safe soft-Earth landwas to have been an eight-day
ing was announced, the Prest.
mission. They docked the next
dlum of the Supreme Soviet day with the space station Mlr.
awarded the two cosmonauts
After climbing Into the TM-5
medals for the "courage and
spacecraft for their departure
heroism they displayed during Tuesday and j ettisonlng the
systems that would allow.them to
the flight," Tass said.
_
. .
. .. ,
return to the Mlr station, LyakMoharitan(i'~the flrif~n In ··· hdv and his Afghan partriei' were
space, was declarj!d a "Hero of stymied by computer problems.
the Soviet Union" and will
Those problems twice forced
receive the Order of Lenin and a
them to abort their descent to
gold star, while Lyakhov will be. Earth, leaving the pair In orbit
given the Order of the October with only emergency rations and
Revolution.
dwindling air supplies.
LyakhOv, 47, who logged more . But the unflappable Lyakhov
time tn· space than any U.S. joked with controllers during the
astronaut during his three pre- drama that h·e W&lt;!S more convious missions, blasted off with cerned about the cramped capMohamand, 29, on Aug. 29 from sule's sewage disposal system
the Balkonur Cosmoorome In than the lack of supplies.

Kermit Walton, well-known
Pomeroy resident, 62, dies

CURIOS GALORE!
HALF HEX CURIOS
CORNER CURIOS
SQUARES and ROUNDED GLASS
STYLES
Assorted Finishes

personals
Angela Dawri Carleton of Racine spent Saturday night with
Sheryl Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayman Barnltz
of Pomeroy visited Sunday evenIng at hte home of Eunie Brinker.

As Low As

Kermit L. Walton. 62, 525
Mulberry "Heights, Pomeroy,
widely known Meigs County
resident and a former Pomeroy
businessman, died Wednesday at
the Holzer Medical Center foUowlng an extended Illness.
For many years, Mr. Walton
operated the New York Clothing
House In Pomeroy. After a fire
destroyed the Hotel Martin build·
tng In which the clothing store
was housed, he became a sanitarIan with the Meigs County
Department of Health.
·Mr. Walton was active In civic
and school-related programs, .
·· belonging to a number of support
organizations. He was an active
member of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. Through the

$1 88

Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Neil of
Columbus spent severaL days at
the home of Robert Lee and
attended the Meigs County Fair.
Mrs. Mary Roush .and David
Young visited with Mrs. Ada
Warnerof Pomeory recently .
William Carleton , daughter,
Jennifer, of Racine were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
.
Johnson.
Mrs. Ethe!Orrof Chester spenl
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lee: :
Flftv-four . atended Sunday
Schooi at the Carmel Church
· Sunday.

,.

DINETTE·SALE

Stop in and took over our large selection of quality dlnettee. Low

181e price• on every set in etock.

,

HERE'S HOW YOU SAVE:
.
h
1 1
Reg. S229 Dropleaf Table, 2 chatn.............VM.tl.!!t.t.f.W...... 5188
Reg. S339 Glass Top Table, 4 upholstered chairs .............. 5271
Reg. S429 Oval Pidestal table, 1 leaf, 4 chain ................ 5349
Reg. SS29 Dropltaf Table/2 chalrs/1-2-seat bench ....... 5429 ·

,_.Local news briefs-.....,

Practical and .
comfortable,
these rockers will
compliment every
decor.

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman announced that there will
be no parking on North Second Avenue and the east end of Mill
Street In Middleport on Thursday from 5:30p.m. to 11 p.m. The
Middleport Fire Department will be washing the streets In
preparation for Saturday's Block Party.

No parking areas established

Group endorses Judge Radcliff

Special

Judge Gerald E. Radcliff, a candidate for the newly created
judgeship for the Fourth District Court of Appeals, of which
Meigs County Is a part, received word that his candidacy has
been endorsed by the Ohio AFL-CIO. The endorsement recited
that It was made alter recommendations were submitted by
central bodies.

•

'

1

... ... .......-- ·I'

years, he served as a speaker not
only at the church but at other
community events across the
county. Ouigolng and friendly,
Mr. Walton was highly regarded
in the community. He was a
sports enthusiast and was a
member of the Wellston Free and
Accepted Masonic Lodge. He
was a Shriner and a member of
the Masonic Council and Commandery In Pomeroy.
Born Jul~ 10, 1926 at Harnden,
Mr. Walton was a son of the late
Earl and Bessie Tolbert Walton.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by a brother.
Surviving are his wife, Emma
Jane PoetkerWalton who serves
at Pomeroy VIllage ClerkContinued on page 8 .

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

$188
SHOP OUR HOME FURNISHINGS
SALE•A•B~ATION •••TODAYII
'

•Minimum ·
Purchaoe and
Approved
Credit
Required.

could be Incurred because even questions were answered. Area
landfills constructed after 1980 government officials admitted
will require restructuring to · they do not understand the new
meet new EPA demands. Public law completely and urged all
hearings and publishing of sche- counties to become familiar with
dules will be required before fee the law and begin to decide how
schedules can go Into effect.
they will form their districts.
However, fees may be ex- Possible county combinations to
pected to Increase considerably form districts were mentioned,
throughout Ohio In order for but no concrete decisions were
dis trlcts to fund their own pro- made by anyone.
Meigs Commissioner Richard
grams. Counties within a district
will have equal responsibility for Jones said he already knows that
the debt of the program, and the Meigs County will have to join
"district will collect the fees," wlth someone else. "It just
not the county that has the depends on proximity and who
wants to work with us." Meigs
landfill, Harvey explained.
Once the fee schedules are Commissioners Manning Roush
established, a Board of Trustees, and David Koblentz, also at the
comprised of countv commis- meeting, agreed with Jones. ·
The majority of Meigs Counsioners from the whole dtsirtct,
ty's
solid waste Is now going to
will be responsible for the solid
the
Gallla
County Landfill, which
waste district. The Board of
Trustees can either a bollsh the Is operated by Sanitary Commerpolicy committee or keep them cial Services, Jackson, Ohio.
Sanitary Commercial Services
on as a monitoring committee.
Although many questions were was represented · at Tuesday's
asked at the meeting, not all
Continued on page 8

'

•

Middleport barber still in ICU
Eddie Burkett, Middleport barber, remains In the Intensive
care unit at Grant Hospital in Columbus, u the result of Injuries
received Tburlday afternoon when he fell from the roof of the
Burkett home on North Third Avenue In Middleport.
Burkett !ell between his home and the next door property of
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Brown. Suffering head lnjurJes, he wu
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Middleport
Emergency Squad was later flown by Llfefllght to Grant
Hospital.
Continued on page 8

...•'

COSMONAUTS RETURN SAFELY - Soviet
CommBDder Vladimir Lyakhov, right front, BDd
Afghan researcb cosmonaut Abdul Ahad Moh·
mand, left, are welcomed on their arrival at

Cosmodrome Balkonur loday. The two cosmonaut&amp; had earlier returned from a jo!Dt space
mission. (REUTER}

Law authorities target drug

'

Carmel

cond tier, which will be considerably higher, Is for "In-state but
out-of-district'' dumpers, and the ·
third tier, the hlghestfee of all, is
for "out-of-state" dumoers.
If a county does not join a
district before next year's dead·
line and watts to be assigned by
EPA to a district, then that
county will be considered "outof-district" when It comes to
paying the tier fees, Harvey said.
For this reason, It would not be
wise for counties to put off a
decision about forming a district.
Once a district Is formed and
landfill sites within a district are
approved by EPA,It will be up to
the policy committee to establiSh
dumping fee schedules.
Since land acquisition and site
preparation will be -equlred In
many Instances, It can be expected that some solid waste
districts will have to borrow
money to meet EPA requirements. And even If a landfill
already exists, great expense

.

'

Lounging T.V. VIewing Full recline
Easy room arranging since chair may
be placed just 1 '12'' from the wall.

Slinderellas meet

By NAN&lt;;Y YOACHAM
Sentinel News staff
All counties In Ohio must
decl(le "this y~ar" what they're
going to do with their trash for
"the next 10 years," according to
provisions In House Bill 592,
Ohio's new solid waste bill which
was signed Into law In June.
An understanding of the serious nature of this new law, and
the limited time In which to make
decisions mandated by the law,
• prompted the Athens County
, Commissioners to call a meeting
of area counties. The meeting
was l)eld Tuesday In Athens and
Meigs and Gallla were among the
~ounties Invited to the meeting.
Before getting into a discussion
of specific aspects of H.B. 592,
Athens Commissioner Ro511nne
, Groff briefly outlined the new
law.
The law mandates the forma• tlon of solid waste districts with a
, population . of not less than
100,000, and the development of a

·_ Cosmonauts honored· after
'
:returning spacecraft safely

l&amp;lb-1~

: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldnlg
of Racine repo~t that It Is. their
granddaughter, not their daughter, Crystal Renee Barnett, wtw
has been selected for the 1989
America's Modern Miss National
Competition to take place in
April aboard the cruise ship, S. S.
Emerald Seas . The original
press release stated she was
their daughter.

t

•

e

Correction

'

Ohio Lottery

Hak- kaff/

users around Dayton area
DAYTON, Ohio (UPI} - A
campaign to curb the neighborhood harassment and danger
from "street users" of cocaine
has paid off with 425 felony drug
Indictments, 88 percent of which
led to convictions, Montgomery
County Prosecutor Lee Falke
said.
"Pollee have made an ex tensive effort to rid these neighbor·
hoods of these big crack gangs,"
Falke said Tuesday.
The Montgomery County
grand jury has returned a total of
425 felony drug Indictments so

far this year, compared with a
total of 331 drug Indictments In
1987. At the current rate, the total
for 1988 may reach 570 drug
Indictments, '·an astounding 71
percent Increase,'' Falke said.
Almost none of the cases were
plea bargained. andnine-outoflO
of the drug offenders were
convicted on the most serious
charge they faced, he said.
The Increase In cases was
handled by periodically conven·
ing a second grand jury and by
assigning a trial lawyer, former
Centerville Pollee Chief William

Randolph, to oversee the grand
jury operations. The grand jury
action helped cle'ar a backlog of
drug cases, Falke said .
Most of the offenders were
cha~ged
with possession of
crack, an Inexpensive form of
cocaine that Is usually smoked.
Falke acknowledged the arrests may have done little to stop
the activity of traffickers and the
flow of drugs Into the communIty. "These are the street users,
so they're down there at the
lowest level of the distribution
primarily, " lie said.

Meigs board takes several actions in executive session
Following an executive session
during a special meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of Education
Monday night several actions
were taken when the board
returned to open session. .
The board voted unanimously
to prohibit the use of tobacco by
supplemental contract personnel
at practice sessions or
performances.

The board also voted unanimously to pay Bob Ashley, faculty
member, $15,000. In return, he
will resign from two supplemental contracts, football coach and
football field care. Ashley was
also granted a voluntary leave of
absence as a teacher In the
district unlll his disability status
Is determined by the State
Teachers Retirement Board.

Going down to defeat at a 3-2
vote , was a motion to provide
special attlre·for members of the
basketball coaching staff. The
motion was made by Board
Member Jeff Werry with Robert
Bar ton offering a second to the
motion. However, Barton with·
drew his second stating that he
was not aware that thecostofthe
clothing was to be pa ld for out of

the general fund ra ther than the
athletic fund . Board President
Robert Snowden then offered the
second to the motion. Snowden
and Werry cast affirmative votes
and Barton. Richard Vaughan
and Larry W. Rupe voted against
the motion.
Others attending the meeting
were Interim Supt. James Carpenter and Treasurer Jane Fry .

Rupe issues statement on why he changed his vote
Larry W. Rupe, a member of controversial vote and I feel that
the Meigs Local School District the public deserves a complete
Board of Education, on July 27 explanation.
"As your representative on the
voted In favor ot the Meigs Local
District rejoining the Southeast- Meigs Local School Board. I
ern Ohio Athletic League thereby should always consider the men· ~·
tal and physical welfare of our 1
leaving the Tri-County League.
students
above all other Issues.
At a special meeting ot the
Is also a strong
Public
opinion
board of education Monday
consideration.
Unfortunately,
night, Rupe voted along with
hearing
from
the
silent majority
board members, Richard
Is
extremely
difficult.
Vaughan and Robert Barton, to
"To vote one way on an Issue.
rescind the earller action to
and
then turn around and vote the
become affiliated with the Sou·
·
other
requires you to be catagotheastern Ohio Athletic League,
rlzed
either as wishy washy or
making the three necessary
votes lor rescinding the earlier willing to recognize a mistake
and correct it. Each of you will
action.
Rupe has Issued the following make your Individual opinion ol
me on that.
statement In regard to his vote:
"I voted to leave the TVC and
"Once again I must casta very

enter the SEOAL. I must now
reverse that vote and here,
briefly Is why:
"1. Our participating student
body Is now lar.ger In each sport
than It has ever been and they
want to stay In the TVC.
"2. Our staff, who must coach
these athletes, want to stay in the
TVC. The Meigs Board has
released a lot of qualified
coaches In the past for not
creating winners In the SEOAL.
''3. The Marauder pride anti
student morale Is at an all time
high. This began Improving when
we became members of the TVC.
. "4. Crowd attendance foUowlng the teams has never been
larger than It Is now.
"5. CoUeges
will look at

.

players who earn special league
recognition. If no league recognition Is received by a Meigs
student, the colleges will no\ even
travel to our area. We have
received more league awards in
our..few TVC years than ever
received during our long participation with the SEOAL.
"6. When comparing numbers
In each school, many things must
be considered . For example,
Meigs High School Is appro~l­
mately &amp;I percent smaller now
than It was In 1968. The other
areas are Increasing steadily .
"To give you a better Idea.
Look at the male population and
compare Meigs High School
against the other teams In the
Continued on page 8

(

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(/

)

�Wednesday, September 7, 1988

:C omment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, September 7. 1988

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTEil TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~j:b

ts: m~ n-t...a'-""T"• ,..,._=.,.
'q!v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHJTEHEAD
Aaallltaal Publisher/Controller
. A MEMBER of The United

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are s ubject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsl.gned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities. ·

Bentsen: A man
of many roles
By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, running for the
vice presidency and the Senate at the same time, may even have a
third role to play after all the votes are counted in the 1988 election.
The 67-year-old veteran Is a sure shot to win re-election for a fourth
term, providing hlm with a personal safety net, and has, as of now,
what seems to be a 50-50 shot of becoming the next vice president of
the United States.
If Bentsen succeeds In the first endeavor, beating Republican Beau
Boulter for the Senate, but loses his bid for the vice presidency ,
Bentsen will have to settle for the familiar comforts of Capitol Hill.
If, however, the Dukakls-Bentsen tandem beats the Bush-Quayle
combine Nov. 8, the Texas senator wlll take Ills lanky frame down
Pennsyivanla Avenue and set up new quarters In the White House or
the nearby Old Executive Office Building.
It Is the second scenario - the one in which he wins the exacta that could push Bentsen Into a third role.
There are two time warps, one between Election Day and Jan. 3
when the lOlst Congress convenes for the first time, and the second
between Jan. 3 and Jan. 20, the day of inauguration.
The outlook, as of now, is that the Democrats will easily retain
control of the Sena!e. giving Bentsen no more to do on Capitol Hlll
·than to clear out Ills office.
But what If events turn out not to be as rosv for the Democrats as
they now look? What if It takes Bentsen's voie for the Democrats to
form a majority? What If George Bush, in hls dying days as vice
president, casts a tie-breaking vote and turns the Senate over to the
GOP?
The p~sslbllitles are not unlimited, but there are quite a few lf.tlle
Senate winds up in a 50-50 deadlock after the elections.
If the Democrats hold their majority, Bentsen can resign anytime
after Nov. 8 and before Jan. 3, allowing Texas Gov. Blll Clement, a
Republican, to name a successor to sit until a special election Is held,
Naturally, Clements will pick a Republican and the names are
already floating around the Lone Star state . .
Hall of Fame quarterback Roger Staubach Is one frequently
mentioned. Others are Secretary of State Jack Rains, Houston
businessman Rob Mossbacher, a GOP activist and filndraiser,
former Reps. Kent Ha nee an Tom Loeffler and- yes- George Bush,
Jr.
1n the event of a 50-50 tie, Bentsen could hang on to hls Senate post
until after Jan. 3 to help Democrats get conirol but that would last
only until Jan. 20 when·he would have to step up to thevlce presidency
. and give way to a Republican successor:
Sources close to Bentsen do not believe the Texas senator would
engage In that kind of flim-flam, pointing out that the public would not
"stand still" and allow the Democrats to keep control ofthe Senate on
the basis of what would be a very interim position.
With Staubach-Ralns-Mossbacher-Hance-Loeffler-Bush, Jr. castIng the vote, the GOP would have a 51-49 majority in the Senate to
confront Dukakls and Bentsen when they take the office on the west
front of the CapitoL
But that might not last long enough for Senate Republican and
Democratic leaders to exchange limousines .
Texas law Is silent on the point and Rains says that Clements could
take up to a year to call a special election. The governor's office says,
however, that Clement will do the honorable thing, although the
earliest date would be the first Saturday In May of next year.

Restore without

WASHINGTON - The drug- when a populist ex-president
running Meilellln Cartel of Co- favored by the rebels lost an
lombla has bought the services of allegedly fraudulent election. At
that country's most Infamous Its greatest strength, M-19 num;:uerrUla group to do the cartel's bered approximately 8,000 guerdirty work. The revolutionary rUias, but today It may have less
group, called the "AprU 19 . than 1,000.
Movement," or M-19, has acted
In 1974, M-19 stole the sword of
as hired gun for the multi-billion- Simon Bolivar, the 19th-century
dollar c~rtel, according to highly South American liberator. The
classified U. s. Intelligence group stUI has the sword. In 1979,
reports.
M-19 tunneled Into an army
The most notorious l!aison arsenal In Bogota and made off
betweenthedrugrunnersandthe with 5,000 guns. In 1980, M-19
terrorists happened In 1985 when stormed the embassy of the
M-19 stormed a Colombian court- Dominican Republic In Bogota
house. One hundred people were during a .cocktail party and took
kllled In the resulting shoo tout 52 hostages, Including 15 am baswith pollee, Including 12 Colom- sadors. The American ambassablan supreme court justices.
dor, Diego C.Asenclo, was OJ)eof
M-19 wanted the world to believe those held for 61 (lays, after
the siege was an Ideological which the hostages were freed as
statement. Intelligence sources
the guerrillas escaped to Cuba.
now tell us that the drug cartel
M-19 took over the embassy to
paid M-19 $5 mUllan to take over
call attention to human rights
the courthouse. The terrorists'
violations In Colombia and to
mission was to Intimidate judges
guarantee fair treatment of
and destroy court files on cartel
guerrUlas who were lnjall!n that
members.
country. They were reportedly
The takeover fit Into an Inpaid a ransom of $2.5 mUllan to
creaslngly violent program by
let their hostages go.
the cartel to bully the Impotent
M-19s normal method of operaColumbian government and
tlon was to pay Its way by
stymie the U.S. war on drugs.
l&lt;ldnapplng members of wealthy
M-19 and the lVIedellln Cartel
families and collecting ransoms.
have not always been so tight.
In late 1981, however, M-19
M-19 was formed In 1970and was
kidnapped the wrong person named· after the date that year
the daughter of Colombia's al-

Today in history

leged first family of cocaine, the
Fabio Ochoa famlly of Medellin.
The Ochoas reasoned that
neither they, nor anyone who was
prospering In the drug trade,
would be safe from kldnapp!ngs.
So they used the case to send a
message to M-19.
The Ochoas banded with 200
other narcotics traftlckers to
form the Medellin CarteL Its
orlglnalpurposewastowagewar
against M-19.
M-19 released the Ochoa's
daughter after the cartel murder.ed dozens of guerrillas. It was
the beginning of a strange
friendship. M-19 began a handsoff policy toward the cartel, and
the cartel putM-19ontbepayroll.
On Nov. 6, 1985, M-19 took over
the five-story marble Columbian
Palace of Justice In downtown
Bogota. It Is one block from the
Colombian congress and two
blocks from the presidential
mansion. Colombian soldiers besieged the building for 27 hours,
then stormed It with grenades
and gunfire. AI) 35 rebels died,
along w'ith 12 of the 24 supreme
court justices. The government's
actions surprised M-19. The
terrorists had expected the government to negotiate, meet a
few political demands and let the

!'D LIKE To HELP.
HAVE YoUR PAC GIVE MY
CAMPAIGN ofFICE

A CALL.
..

-·

Smart shopper? Not
By Sarah Overstreet
Ah, so that's why all the
Medicare cuts! Pentagon audltors just found that 95 of their
·
suppliers overcharged them several hundred million dollars and
Uncle Sam found his pants
pockets a little lean. The sick old
people wlll just have to pay a
little more until he catches up.
The results of the four-year
Defense Department audit of
suppliers came out last month,

and they were stunning. Auditors
found:
Excessive charges by military
contractors are commonplace;
47.2 percent of the prices audited
were overcharged - to the tune
of.$788:9 million.
In other words that means
almost half of those suppliers
charged their own countrymen
too much for materials they need
to defend themselves. Real

gentrifying_~_R_ob_er_t_W_alt_er_s
and another 4,000 left In the 1970s.
Many of the houses In the
racially Integrated but poor
community are dilapidated and
abandoned. Some buildings, admists Operation Comeback Program Director Beverly Bryant,
are little more than "stacks of
leaning lumber."
The Preservation Resource
Center of New Orleans launched
Bryant's program earlier this
year. Of the 460 properties In the
community. It has Identified 60
vacant, blighted homes as candidates for rehabilitation over a
tHree-year period.
The houses are 950 square feet
to 4,000 square feet In size and the
purchase prices range from
$15,000 to $25,000. Rehabilitation
costs can be as low as $40,000 or
as high as $80,000.
Operation Comeback helps
prospective buyers with modest
Incomes to secure low-cost fl.
nanctng. It also brings purchasers together with"lawyers, architects, skUled craftsmen and
others whose services are needed
by new homeowners.
Finally, It Is organizing a
"Christmas In October" program that will bring hundreds of
volunteers Into the community
this autumn to paint and repair
the deteriorated homes occupied
by the neighborhood's poorest
residents.

terrorists go, as It did with the
embassy takeover.
.we have now learned from the
Central Intelligence Agency and
other Intelligence sources that
the crime was motivated more
by greedy drug lords than
Ideological fanatics. The Medellin Cartel wanted to harass the
supreme court and des troy government flies on cartel
members who faced extradition
to the United States on drug
charges. A siege by a terroriSt
group would provide just the
right cover.
The sum paid to M-19 Jor Its
services, $5 million, was pocket
change for the cartel which
makes as much as $7 billion a
year supplying the United States
and Europe with cocaine. About
80 percent of the cocaine
smuggled Into the United States
comes from the Medellin Cartel.
M-19 has been paid by the
cartel for other assassinations of
government officials, judges,
pollee officers and journalists.
Some "slcarlos," as the hit men
are known, wlll kill for as little as
$50.
The cartel may be cozylng up
to one leftist group, but evidence
Indicates It also has been killing
other leftists by the hundreds particularly supporters of Colombian Revolutionary Armed
Forces or FARC.
FARC was the oldest and
largest leftist guerrUla group In
Colombia until It struck a deal
with the government In 1984 and
became a legitimate political
party, the Patriotic Union. Since
then, It has become the most
successful leftist party In Colom·
blan history, winning a doze.n
seats In the congress.
, Our sources say the Medellin
. Cartel leaders, who have used
their drug profits to become the
largest landholders In Colombia,
lear that the growing pawer of
the leftist party will lead to land
reform. They don't want to see
their valuable land holdings
divided up among the peasants.
Patriotic Union has lost about
550 members to assassins In the
last three years. After party
president Jaime Pardo Leal was
kUied last October, the Colombia
government charged that one of
the drug cartel's leaders, Jose
Rodrlguez-Gacha, was behind
the hit.

2013 Eadn A11.

Gollpollt, ,Ohio
614·446-0IU
Alii for lthn Swain

'

By Unite•Pret~s .. ter•tlo..a
NA.TIONA.L LEAGUE

""''

W L Pet. GB
81 $$ .IN 1t 64 .121 •
10

n .m

u~,o~

tu .toe

25~

1'1 7t .f89 J.l+l
IS 73 .f11 17

. 111

Loa An~t~H

l\'ftll

78 '8 .574 -

Hou•on

'

thoughtful guys.
What th¢&amp;e contractors need Is '
But the response to·the Invest!to be fined, and fined big.. They
gatlon from other Pentagon need to be penalized where It
officials Is just as stunning,,. First, hurts -In the profit margin. And
th
ld th tatlstlc did t II the company personnel dl·
ey sa
e s
s
no
rectly responsible for deliberate
reveal any fundamental flaws In overcharges can be Isolated, , :
the purchasing s.ys(em." No
fundamental flaws . I wonder If they need to be punished lndlvldtlley'dfeelthesamewaylfthey'd ually. Dock their salaries: no ,
just learned they paid too much new side-by-side, wall-to-wall, or
for their new Grand Am or ·Ice water In the door. And they
Whirlpool side-by-side with Ice need to be prevented from
making us absorb the "loss" In
water In the door?
Next, \he Pentagon honchos higher prices later.
opposed one of the report's main
The government prevents phyrecommedatlons: that more aud- slclans from even meeting their
ltors be added to Increase en- costs for treating Medicare and
forcement of laws designed to Medicaid patients, yet they let
prevent overcharging. They defense contractors shoot to kill.
nixed the suggestion lmme- The sad thing Is, It wouldn't even
dlately, despite the audit agen- . be work to make contractors tow
cy' s claim It recovers abqu t $19ln the mark. What are they going to
overcharges ·for every dollar do, find another largest nation on ,
spent In audits. If I thought I earth and sell to them? If ever a ,
could get a 19/1 return on my free market should work, this Is
money. I'd sure do some looking II.
for it.
Because It didn't, heads should
And last, Pentagon senior roll.
·
But I hear we paid so much for
financial manager Robert w.
Helm and other Pentagon off!- our gulllotlnes, we couldn't afclals suggested an alternate ford blades.
plan: "Help contractors devise
more accurate methods of estimating costs during negotia••
tions." I think that means. In
'
plain English, that the contractors aren't smart enough to know
lart A. I.W.r ., CPA
how much their own products
618
SliD I
cost, and they need "help" to
POIIIOI,OIIO
figure It out.
I guess that also means that If I
•ACCOIIinNG
take to making up people and
etOOIIIIPIIIG
events In my articles, that I don't
lfiiWKIAL nABMIIm
. need to be booted out of journalIsm; I just need ''help'' In telling
fact from fiction. If a policeman
starts arresting people wlllynllly because he doesn't know
what Is and Is not against the law,
he just needs "help" In learning
the law. Nothing wrong In a little
Ignorance, or laziness, or outright lying, after all.

un ...

•TAm

..,oou.

, .. '" .531

Clncln..U.I
SuDiep

72 II .$211

Atlanta

s

~~

1\eetJd 1,)''8 Ree.8

Phladtlpilla3, Ollcato2:

81. a.o•sl, Mentreal 0
Clncln.UI It, Ho•Mon S
san Dlep4, San Francisco 3
WrdDHdl,f'l Gam""
, Mb.arul (Smllh IHl at. Plltabtlrlh
(Drabek 11-1), 7: 35p.m.
New York 4Darli•JIMl at Chlearo
(Picof.l),8:t8 p.m.
Phliadelphhl {CatiDUIIHtl at St. Lolli11

tMa,;raaeS·I) ,I: Jl p.m.
anclnndl iBr.wliaa; U-51 at San
Dlep (HawiiiMI3-16), 10:05 p.m.
Houllun (SCott 15-S) llt Los Angt!lefJ
(Lewy IIHU. lt:Sli p.m.
Atlalla (GIA"Ine 5-15) Iii San Franci&amp;CO
(Robln10a S-4 •• lt:31 p.m.

Tharad.r 's Game&amp;
NN York ai Chlcaa:o

Houllllon .a Lo• ADjelea, ulpt
. !\tlan~ Jll Su Francbii:O, niJIII
GB

nss .MS 2
74 17 .52J 41;1,
11 15 .5!1 5
71 18 .5 11 11;1,
67 71 ..tKI II
.18 89 .35t U%

tle\'eland
Baltimore
" 'ell

Oakland

tn s2 .sas 77 81 .5511

Mlane•ota

,.....

flfl

73 &amp;IIi .529 13\4

Kan• City

camorala

71 88 .511 16
61 16 .44S 25

Chlcap
suttk-

5I 711 ,431 27

HS3.48331

Tuetula,y'" ne.•11
Clt\'@land I, New Verk 0
Bo!lton I, . .ltlmore I
Torlllllo1, DelroH a
Suttlt II, MlluiHGU a
Ku• CMrS, C.llfornla 2
Texu I, Oakland I
( Nlcltolt

Y'ork (Jo .. 1-l), '3:11

........., b.wtbaiJ CGIICh.
New l'orll: Marllmt - Named Jo._

Dwtaell b•llelball coach.
Foocball
Cle\lelanct- Slped wide rec:el..,er·klck
rMu,mer Glen Y011q.
Grea BIQ' - Slped IIJb&amp; end Cllat
Didier.
. . . aaapolll - Slpd ufety .Jim
Perrrmaa; ..-ced Mhty Cra61 S.weope
on a.turell reaene.
New I!:Datand- Placed defeal!llin end
Ken n!th Slmaoalajllftll rnerw, wal...ed
raaN•sbackiUety C.IIIDun.
Phlienlx - Named jlrector ef pro
per-1 Larr, Wllaoa 1...-al man·
aJft': named u•taat dlrectGI ol pro
periiOIIIIt'l Erkl Wlltnark pro pertOnM!I

director
PtU.•• 1Jh - Slpe41 defeniln lineman
Bollia Putder; placed noee tackle
Lort:~ruo Freeman on ln,)ulll.'ld reaer...e;
-t¥ed tl1ttt end Dauell Lee.
Wuhln,;t.oa - Rele~~ed eenlrr Mike

Hockey
Tftded deh... .-maa P1111l

c:olllrad.

College ratings
NEW l'ORKIUPII-TheUnlte41PreJI

lnterraltlen~l

Board of Coaches Top 28

colh!le football ratlnp, wlh record and
flnl:·place "016 In parentbMe&amp;, lo&amp;al
polnt1! hMl'd oalll points for lr!l plaoe,
14 t.r a.econd, et c. ), .... prse•on
r•nk&amp;n~

Tum

Points

.1.Cieman ( 1-1)

"' 3

4.0klahoma !Hl

New

Baltimore

(SchUIIIIJH), 1::$1 p.m.
TanM {8Ueb lt·B) at Dfot rolt (Tanana
14-1), 1; 15 p.m.

'SultW tMOolf! 1-U) at Minrl!lota
{.Uder... 11-8), 3t05 p.m.
.

Chlcaro !Reu• 1HI M Mllwau~e

(llrllbeek IU), 11131 p.m.
CAllier•• (P'Inl!)' I-12Jat Kan•11Cit)·
( Ban.-er t-Jt),ll: U p.m.
Odllantl (Voancll-111 at Texas (Gua·
rnM 11·11),8:Hp.m.

TUESDAY TRJOII
Mu• Bewllllc Center
111!:EK OF IULY 11. 1188
.
Woa LoA T.Pias
Pools Plus ................... ... 63 25 16,'159

Johnsm's Barber Shop .. . 50
Mid' port Pollee Dept. ..... 31

Railroad Junction ..... .... ... 29

38
49

59

16 672

14:668

,,

J(al Daniels hot;
lleds romp, l0-3

.., .

II.MI&lt;Illpo (. . )

18!: 10

1 t.Notre Dame {Hl

... '

17112

tt.F1ort•asiaae (t-Il
tS.Wa.t Vlrat• O.fl

151 I

1%4 15

14.MfchiJ111 Stale (HI
n.sou• C•roll• t 1·01
li.Aia._.tt.al
ll.Pennll&amp;ate (I.. I

11118

........

1111

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18.1owa 1"1)

11.8rraeu~ (1-1)

•.PIUMI'Ib{l·l)
I • MNIIIif.

Olhers l'l!cehln&amp; votea: A.riu-. Ar-

k .....a. Florid&amp;, H•all, IIHII•a. Ohio
IMal:e, Olt .. boma a&amp;te. Tau, Teut
UM, WMid.pon. ' W-"lnaton State,
WJomlq.

16,316

lOGB lND. SERII!S' Brenda Snllth46~

Joanne Bank1432: Llta Johnsm US.
BlOB TEAll GAMB: ·PI&gt;ols Plus 44~
Pool&gt; Ptual38; Pools Plus 413.

BlOB TEAM SEBID: Pools Plus 1,684;
Rallrc.d Junction 1,526; Johnlm's
Barber Shop 1,!!03,

Little will change with
Danielson, coaches say
By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Sports Writer ·
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - The
Cleveland Browns' coaching
staff maintains there will be little
change In offensive strategy
while quarterback Bernie Kosar
Is sidelined with an elbow lQjury,
but the latter's replacement
mUdly disagrees.
"! don't have the arm that
Bernie does," says U-year veteran Gary Danielson, who will fill
In at quarterback while Kosar
recovers from sprained and
stretched ligaments In his right
elbow. The Injury, which occurred In last Sunday's seasonopening victory at Kansas City.
wlll cause Kosar to miss at least
two and as many as eight games.
"I suppose I'm known for short
passes, uslngslants. My arm's as
strong as It's ever been, but
throwing deep Is only an occasional thing. sun. we'll continue .
to use a blend of running and
passing, just as we do with
Bernie In there. I'm ready to
help."
Danielson, who turns 37 Saturday. has played In 101 games
during his career and has 59
starts with Detroit and Cleveland. He started last Oct. 14 at
Cincinnati and threw four touchdown passes to pace a 34-0 romp
In the final week of the players'
strike.
Wide receiver Brian Brennan
caught a career-high 10 passes
for 139 yards and one touchdown
In that game. Tight ends Ozzle
Newsome and Derek Tennell also
played Important roles In the
Danielson-led offense.
"Gary's got a lot of experience,
and that will help us wln even
though Bernie's not In there,"
says Newsome. ''A lot of people
have ppt pressure on us to win
this year, and I still think we will.
"In Gary, we've got a quarterback who can move the ball up
the field. We have faith In him.
He's as much a part of this team
as Bernie because we know how

BIQR IND. 0-UIE: DebblePhelpsl91;

Brenda Short, 190; Rhoda Stewart and
Jeaale Rot:ie 16&amp;.
JOOR IND. SERIE8: B....,da Short 146;

I

Lisa Johnson 426: Rhoda Stewart 424.

IDOR TIIAM GAME: Pools Plus 439:

:&amp;dclleport ~lice Dept. 419; Pools Plus

,,

Ferrellgas

1t88

1.- T.l'lu
~

40
55

67

18.143

ll,m

11,115

17,8G

Tile Baltimore Blast of the
MISL signed free-agent midfielder Mike Sweeney toone-year
contract. Sweeney played last
season with the now-defunct
Ml nnesota Strikers.

01 YOU MAY REGISTER AT FIRST CLASS

...,, s

.., 1
341114

Local bowling

Sports briefs

Far Rtgistration (aU-.
· , JOY liNG, l•trudor - 992-3794
JEANNIE OWEN, A... lnlfrudor - 992·6193

Ill t

I.Geol'llatl-t)
I .Loullba• 81. (1-6) (I)

BIGR IND. GAME: Brenda Smith and

CLASSU 110• SIPtrz?ll II, 1911

......,,
liZ 5

I.Miaml (1-0) (tlh
I!:.Nelruka (U) (19)

1 . .4ouhurn(I·IJ

Joanne BankJ 166: Joanne Bank1164; Lisa
Johnsm 161

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

Jolin

Collqe
Name• Gary Cal••

Callhrnla -

I.Sou&amp;h«IIC..I (1-0)

•·n at
p.m.

BH&amp;on (Harwt 16-51 at

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S.UCLA 11·1) (I)

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New ,Jeraey - !!limed

s•....-

17 II .5511 -

,.......

1110 _.,....,

..IIHball

Baltlmore (MISL} -SipedfreHKMI
mlcllelder Mike SWeeney to l·pear

AMERIC&amp;N LEAGUE

Detrob
Milwaukee
New York

tbrot~~h

Relllllart IUHI left wln1 !Me"e Boaek to
Vancouwr for future collllderalklhl.

Clncln.-&amp;lat. San Dleao, nl-"l

W L P et.

ttoa ~AAAI

Calpry -

PhUadelphla ai St. LoW, al,lbt

lto8loa

wM h lndla.poBI of Apull"'c• A.aeocla·

""'"'·

Montreal• PIUaburrh. nlllll

....

&amp;Me ball
Monh'ul- EJdeDdedworkaJreement

Batle)l to muM._)IIl., conlrlld.

69 87 .H7 '
10 ag .lt'l' •
4'7 81 .348 31

San l"taadeco

Dept. llll.
111!:EK OFIULY II,
Wan
Pool&gt; Plus .............. ........ 71
Johnsm's Barber Shop ... :16
Mld'port Pollee Dept. ..... 33
RallrCid Junction ........... 29

10 WEEK FALL SESSION 20 ClASSEs ..J42

'

SWINDELL STOPS Y"NKEES - Cleveland's Greg Swindell is
congratulated by teammates after pitching a three-hiller to beat
the New York Yankees, 1-0 In Yankee Stadiwn Tuesday night.
(UPI)
·

Transadions

IIIGH TIIAM SERIES: Pools Plusl16~
RaUrClld Junction lll2: Middleport Pollee

DANCE FOR JOY

Wes Gardner notched hls first
"We haven't had fun all year," Tuesaday. ''This thing can turn
major league complete game, said Toronto's Jimmy Key,10-4, around at any time."
Elsewhere In the American
limiting the Orioles to five hits.
Tuesday's Winner. · 'This is the
League, Texas stopped Oakland
"It might have been the most fun we've had ."
blggestgameof my career," said
The Blue Jays, winners or slx 3-1, Kansas City shaded Cal !for- :
Gardner. 7-4. "The complete straight and eight oflO, had spent nla 3-2 and Seattle blasted
game was bound to come sooner much of the season under .500 Minnesota 8-3.
Rangers 3, Athletics 1
or later. but I wanted the win to and Manager Jlmy Wllllams has
At Arlington, Texas, Charlie
keep us In first place. I felt good heard the "you-won't-be-back"
Hough, 12-15, yielded seven hits
In the ninth Inning.
talk.
over
8 2-3 Innings and Ceclllo
Milwaukee dldn' t play TUes"We can tllste It now. We can
Guante
earned hls 12th save,
control our own destiny."
day, b\Jt moved ahead .or New
helping
Texas
end a six-game .
Greenwell and Gardner cer- York, which lost despite recelvskid.
Pete
O'Brien
hlt a sacrifice
tainly sound like members of a .1ng a second consecu live strong
fly
and
an
RBI
single
off Todd
confident bunch.
pitching effort.
Burns,
6-2.
Rookie AI Leiter, 4-4 making
On the other band, there's
Royals 3, Angels 2
Tigers Manager Sparky hls first appearance In the
At
Kansas
City, Frank \Yhlte
Anderson.
majors In two months, yielded a
stroked
a
two-run
single off Greg
home run to Ron Kltlle In the
"If we don't start winning
some games, we won't be In this fourth Inning for the game's only Minton, 3-4, with one out In the
thing long," said Anderson fol- run. He allowed three hits In five ninth to .ald Steve Farr, 5-2. who
lowing Detroit's sixth straight Innings. Cleveland's Greg Swin- registered one out. Mark Gusetback, 7-3 to Toronto, leaving dell, 15-13, also permitted- three blcza had a three-hitter until
his club two games behind hits, though he went the distance California scored twice .In the
lllnth.
for h.ls fourth shutout.
Boston.
Mariners 8, Twins 3
The fifth-place Bh,Ie Jays
New York recently returned
At
Minneapolis,
Harold Reyslayed 6 1·2 back; the Idle froma 2-8 rood trip and likely
nolds
paced
Seattle's
16-lllt atBrewers lost a half game but would have been out of the race
tack
with
a
two-run
double
and an
moved Into lhird place 4 1-2 off h4d It not been for Detroit's ·
RBI
single
off
Bert
Blyleven,
the pace; and. the Yankees are horrible streak.
five IK!hlnd after a 1-0 loss to the
"Losing Is contagious like 9-14. Mike Campbell, 6-8, threw 6
winning Is," said Tiger Doyle 2-3 Innings and Mike Schooler 1
Indians.
Alexander, who fell to 11-11 1-3 to earn hls 11th save.

,,

1'1111nd11r'a Gam•
Deut* • New York, 11IP1
Oakland.tKu . . CIJ,allfll
Callllr•• al Tu.u, alP'.

Majors

Sa_ra_h_Ov_e_rst_re_et

BUSINESS SEIYICE

By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sporlll Writer
The five-team chase for the
a 5-7 season and has a lot of American League East title may
question marks," Bruins Coach come down to which club plays
Terry Donahue said. " We don't the most games against the
know about this UCLA team until Baltimore Orioles. Then agaln,lt
next week."
may come down to which plays
At No. 6 was Souuiern Callfor-· the most against the Detroit
nla followed by No.7 Auburn, No. Tigers.
8. Georgia, No. 9 Louisiana State
None will admit It, though each
(one first -place vote) and No. 10 of the contenders likely Is lookjng
Michigan. The Trojans beat at the schedule to see when It
Boston College 34-7 Thursday. plays Baltimore. dead last In the
The Bulldogs defeated Tennes- East and owner of the league's
see 28-17 and LSU blanked Texas worst record.
A&amp;M 27-0. Auburn and Michigan
Untll three weeks ago, Detroit
dld not play.
was In first In the East and,
Completing the ranklngs were perhaps, the team to be avoided.
No. 11 Notre Dame (Idle) , No. 12 Now, the Tigers have skidded
Florida State, No. 13 West Into second. dropping 13 of 15.
The Boston Red Sox slt atop the
VIrginia, No. 14 Michigan State
division. taking sole possesion of
·(Idle), No. 15 South Caronna, No.
16 Alabama (Idle). No. 17 Penn the lead against, you guessed It,
State (Idle). No. 18 Iowa, No. 19 the Orioles.
"You have to be strong In
Syracuse and No. 20 Pittsburgh.
The Mountaineers routed Bo- September. We are the team to
beat, because we are the ones In
wling Green 62-14; the Gamecocks downed North Carolina . first place," said Boston's Mike
31-10; the Hawkeyes were upset Greenwell TUesday night afler
27-24 at Hawaii; the Orangemen driving In three runs In a 6-1
beat Temple 31-21; and the beating ol Baltimore:
Panthers blitzed Northern Iowa
59-10.
West Vlrglnlli, Syracuse and
Pittsburgh entered the Top 20
while dropping out were Texas
A&amp;M, Tennessee and Texas.
Georgia made the biggest gain
in the ratings, jumping from No.
14 to No. 8. LSU joined Miami as
teams leaping four spots.
Eight Independents placed In
the ratings, along with four
teams from the Southeastern
Conference, three from the Big
Ten, two each from the B&gt;g Eight
and Pac-IO and one from the •
Atlantic Coast Conference.
The 1988 national champion
will receive a $32,000 non-athletic
scholarship from the Gerrits
Foundation and UPI. Voting was
based on 15 points for first place,
14 for second, etc.

Scoreboard ...

,
-

u. s._·_____:·__

lEILEI

Indians blank Yanks, 'I-O;.Bosox up lead

·

At1ar11a t, Loa An~t&gt;let~l
Plthbtuth :t., New York 2

CliLETON SCHOOL, SYIACUSE, OHIO
WANTED
DOCKMASTER FOR
GALUPOLIS BOAT CLUB
Pnflr man and will ••• SO
yas ef • · $1,000.00 -tHy.
Inquire Tri.C:e. llolilo " -

NEW YORK (UPI) - The
challenge Florida State failed to
meet now rests with Miami.
The defending national champion Hurricanes , 31-0 winners
over the Seminoles Saturdav,
earned the top spot Monday In uie
UPI Board of Coaches' college
football ratings.
·
Miami, fifth In preseason,
received 712 of a possible 750
points and 29 of 50 first-place
votes. Nebraska followed at No.2
with 695 points and 19 first-place
votes. The Cornhuskers thrashed
Utah State 63-!3.
The Seminoles, the preseason
No. 1, fell to No. 12. " Obviously,"
Florida State Coach Bobby
Bowden said, "we didn't know
how to handle being No. L"
t Miami, which defeated Florida
State 26-25 en route to a 12-0mark
last season, has now won 33
straight regular-season games.
With Michigan, Notre Dame,
Louisiana State and Arkansas
among this year's opponents,
Coach Jimmy Johnson Insists the
final ratings are the ones to shoot
for.
"I'm proud of how we approached this game In a
business-like manner and then
the players went out and took
care of business," Johnson said.
"All this talk about rankings,
(and the game) a year ago is
history. All we've done Is won one
game - · nothing more .and
nothing less."
Rounding out the top five were
No. 3 Clemson, No. 4 Oklahoma
(Idle) and No. 5 UCLA. The
Tigers belted VIrginia Tech 40-7
and the Bruins, who received one
first-place vote, blasted San
Diego State 59-6. UCLA plays
Nebraska this Saturday at Los
Angeles.
"I don't want to be derogatory,
but ~an Diego State Is coming off

By Jack Anderson and Da.le VanAtta

~~~~

of the long-term residents rather mlngham community.
than to suit late-arriving, highIn. both cases, long-term resiIncome professionals.
dents of the communities retain
In Cincinnati, a leader of the control of the projects. "This Is
successful effort to revive the not a gentrification program to
Mount Auburn neighborhood move the poor out and move the
says, "People tend to view rich In," stresses an organizer of
preservation as an elitist activity the ambitious effort.
geared to historic monuments,
In Savannah, Ga., the 45not as a tool to revitalize square-block VIctorian District
Inner-city low- to moderate- was sliding toward decay until
Income neighborhoods." ·
the mld-1970s,. when the SavanIn Pittsburgh, two decades of nah Neighborhood Action Prowhat one preservation expert . ject began restoring hundreds of
describes as "restoration within dilapidated frame and row
dislocation" have brought new houses .
life to the predominantly black
In Shreveport, La., the city's
Manchester neighborhood and to oldest and most historic section
the white, working-class Blr- Is the blighted Ledbetter Heights
neighborhood of GOO modest
homes. As In other clUes, Shreveport Landmark Inc. has used a
comblnallon of publlc and private funding to support Its
rehabilitation program.
Almost one-third of those
houses have been restored durBy United Press International
Ing the past five years. "It's hard
Today Is Wednesday, Sept. 7, the 251st day of1988 with 115tofollow. to get money," says Executive
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
Director Donnls Arnold. "But
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
anything worthwhile Is tough."
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
The National Trust for Historic
Those born on this date are under the sign of VIrgo. They include Preservation In Washington, D.
England's Queen Elizabeth I In 1533, American primitive painter C., estimates that there are
Anria "Grandma" Moses In 1860, financier J. PlerpontMorganJr.ln thousands of low- to middle1867, heart surgeon Michael DeBakey In 1908 (age 80) .'!11m director Income homes among tile 700,000
Ella Kazan In 1909 (age 79), physicist and rocket developer James structures designated as historic
Van Allen In 1914 (age 74), actor Peter Lawford In 1923, and rock 'n' around the country.
roll pioneer Buddy Holly In 1936.
Here In New Orleans, the
current rehabilitation effort foOn this date In history:
cuses on the Lower Garden
In 1822, Brazil declared Independence from Portugal.
District, a collection of "creole
In 1892, James Corbett knocked out John L. Sullivan In the 21st cottages,.. "sbotgun singles,"
round of a prize fight at New Orleans, the first major fight under the·· and "camelback" homes whose
Marquess of Queensberry Rules.
Greek Revival and Itallanate
In 1901, the Boxer Rebellion in China ended with the Peace of architecture dates back to the
Peking.
early and mld-1800s.
In 1940, Nazi Germany launched the London blitz, a bombing that
More than 10,000people lived In
;&gt;.dolf Hitler believed would soften Britain for an Invasion that never
this 24-square-block neighbor'
materialized.
hood adjacent to the central
In 19'19, President Jimmy Carter announced that the MX missile
business district In the 1950s system would be deployed In the United States .
but 2,000 moved away In the 1960s

, By Robert walters
NEW ORLEANS (NEA)
Historic preservation often Is
viewed as a cause primarily
popular among those of wealth
and privilege dedicated to the
restoration of grand old mansions, museums and other bulldlngs most people will never vlslt.
But here In New Orleans -and
In other cities across the nationhistoric preservation has become a means of reclaiming the
homes and stores of once-proud
low- and middle-Income neighborhoods that have fallen victim
to urban blight.
Moreover, the housing stock In
those communities Is being rehabilitated primarily lor the benefit

Miami jumps into top
spot in UPI ratings

Terrorists act as hired guns for -c artel

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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much he has helped develop the
offense, In practice and from the
sidelines."
Coach Marty Schottenhelnier
said Danielson would get a
tuneup In practices this week at
Baldwin-Wallace College.
Backup quarterback Mike Pagel
and emergency reserve Brennan
also will handle a number of
snaps as the Browns prepare for
Sunday's home opener against
the New York Jets.
As the Browns' offensive coordlnator ·last year, Lindy Infante
Installed an offense tailored
more to Kosar's strong arm.
Although Infante has lett to
coach Green Bay. the Browns'
offense has not changed significantly In 1988.
Schottenhelmer believes that
fact makes It easier for Danielson or Pagel to perform
smoothly.
"We pretty much have the
same system, and both Gary and
Mike know It," said the coach.
"That's why I'm not overly
concerned. We need to have good
practices this week, and I think
we will."
Kosar has been lltted with a
hard cast and a sling, bu tis likely
to switch to a soft cast later this
week once swelllng subsides In
the elbow. The four-year quarterback could be placed on Injured
reserve If the Injury appears to
'be healing slowly.
Starting wide receiver Webster Slaughter, a third-year
player, pulled a left hamstring In
the Chiefs game and Is lis ted as
doubtful on the Injury report.
"! don't think I'll be able to
play," said Slaughter. "I'm
really sore. Bill (trainer Blll
Tessendorf) told me I probably
would have to sit this one out."

By United Press International
On a night the Houston Astros
retired their exploding scoreboard, Cincinnati's Kal Daanlels
supplied th~ fireworks.
Daniels blasted a pair of home
runs and scored five times to
back the elght-hlt pitching of
Tom Browning TUesday, leading
the Reds to a 10-3 victory over the
Houston Astros.
"We knew coming In here that
wei couldn't be swept," said
Daniels, who has hlt five of his 16
homers off the Astr.os.
·iwe had to wln two or at least
spilt. I didn't know I had scored
all ' five trips. I know I haven't
done that In the big leagues
before. ''

Browning, 15-5, pltch.ed an
elght-hltter. walked two and
struck out four In posting his
fourth complete game of the
season.
Jim Deshaies, 9-12; lost hls
third ·. decision this season to
Browning, hls college teammate
at LeMoyne College In Syracuse,
N.Y.
"I felt good tonight and had
good command of all my
pi\ches ," Browning sal d.
"Jimmy had It a little rough
early tonight, and I -guess they
felt they couldn't get too far back.
I'm sorry he took the loss. He's
had some tough luck thls ,year."
Houston Manager Hal Lanier,
w~ose team allowed 13 hits,
committed three errors and gave
up nine walks, wanted to forget
Tuesday's game and look ahead
to the two-game series beginning
Wednesday at NL West-leading
Los Angeles.
"We try to go out there and win
every ball game," said Lanier.
"We just have to put this game
behind usandgoout to LA and try
to wln every ball game."
Dan leis, who drove In four
runs, hlt a three-run homer in the
ninth and a solo shot In the third.
The decision· left Houston five
games behind Los Angeles In the
National League West. The Reds
trail the Dodgers by 61-2 games.
Dave Colllns led off the first
with a triple and scored on Chris
Sabo's sacrifice fly. Daniels and
Nick Esasky walked and Daniels
moved to third on a fly ball. Herm
Winningham singled to drive in

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 141H88)
A Dl"'t.kln of MuiUmedl-, Inc.

Published every atrernoon, Mondity
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PJ.lb·
Ushlng Company!Multlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4!769, Ph. 992-21§1!. Second class posta1e paid at Pomeroy,
Member: Untied Press Internallonal,
1nland Dally Pre:u Assocla.tlon and the

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
AdverttsiDg Representatlve,.Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
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10 'Jbe llll\11 Sentinel, Ul &lt;:nun St.,

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Dan leis to give the Reds a 2-0 ·
lead.
The Astros scored three runs In
the ninth. Glenn Davis broke up
the shutout with hls 27th homer.
Ramirez and Trevino added RBI
doubles .
Elsewhere, St. Louis slipped
past Montreal 1-0, Pittsburgh
edged New York 3-2, Philadelphia defeated Chicago 3-2, San
Diego held off San Francisco 4-3,
and Atlanta stopped Los Angeles
2-1.
Cardinals 1, Expos 0
At St. Louis, Jose DeLeon
pitched a three-hitter, had two
hits and scored the game's 9nly
run In leading the Cardinals.
DeLeon, 10-8, struck out 12 and
walked one In winning his third
consecutive decision. Loser Dennis Martinez, 15-11, allowed just .
three lilts striking out four and
walking two.
Pirates 3, Mets 2
At Pittsburgh, Glenn Wilson hlt,
a two-run double and John
Smiley pitched a five -hitter over
8 2-3 Innings to lead the Pirates.
Wilson's double to right came off
loser Bob Ojeda, 9-13. Smiley,
11-9, earned the victory. Jim Galt
preserve the triumph with hls
26th save.
Phlllles 3, Cubs 2
At Chicago, Marvin Freeman
held the Cubs to four hits through .
seven Innings and Juan Samuel
drove in two runs with a single.
Freeman, 1-2, struck out three
and walked four batters, one In
each of the first four Innings.
Steve Bedrosian earned hls 25th
save. Jamie Moyer, 7-14, was the
loser.
Braves 2, Dodgers 1
At Atlanta, Jeff Blauser hlt hls
first big league homer, a tiebreaking drive with two outln the
eighth, to lift the Braves. Blauser
drllled a 1-2 pitch to left off losing
reliever Jesse Orosco, 2-2, to
make a winner of Paul Assenmacher, 7-6. Bruce Sutter pitched
·the ninth to earn hls 13th save.

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�Page 4- The Daily Sentinel

•BINGO
*DRAWING EVERY HOUR
*ARTS &amp;CRAFTS
*OHIO PAPER AIRPLANE
FLYING CONlEST
*HORSE SHOE PITCHING
CONTEST

1o The FollowlnR
Me,~hsntt. . ., ''Thsnktl''
Clark's Jewelry
Chateau Beauty Salon
·Ace Hardware
Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry
Powell's Super Valu
Heritage House of Shoes
Bohr Clothiers
Video Touch
Smith-Nelson Motors
Pat Hill Ford
Marquerite Shoes
Johnson Variety Store
Middleport Dept. Store
King Builders &amp; Supply
Added Touch
Cooper Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
Simon's Pic-A-Pair
Crow' s Steak House
Hartley Shoes
Top-of-the-Stairs Beauty Salon
Middleport Trophies
Middleport Motor Parts Inc.
Western Auto .
Middleport Sundry Store
Pomeroy Sundry Store
Valley lumber Co.
Fruth's Pharmacy
O'Dell lumber ..Co.
Brown &amp; Snouffer
Fire &amp; Safety
Francis Florist
Jim Cobb Motors
Fisher Big Wheel

I

LaSALLE GALLERY

BLOCK BUSTER SALE
.

FRIDAY ·SATURDAY-SUNDAY
SEPTEMBER 9-1 0-11
STOREWIDE
OJ
YOU'II SAVE................
/0 OFF
ALL RIBBONS &amp;
SQOI
SILK FLOWERS.............
/0 OFF
SIDEWALK
50/
SPECIALS •••••••••••••••••••'..
10· OFF

25

I

137 NORTH SECOND .

WednMday. September 7, 1988

Pom•oy- Middleport, Ohio

7

992-7521

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Kirsch
Mini-blinds ·

SO% OFFI

Bright huae or eon pastelt. OWr 75 dellgner
lnaplrad colora. Excluelve clean-line Mono-Rail
headraii-411Y to Install I Tempered aluminum
slats resist benda and kinking.

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY CO.

405 N. 21111
Middleport
992-3741 or 992·5020
Convenient Off Street Pirking

SIDEWALK SALE

RACKS OF KIDS

R CLOTHES

$2, $3, $4,

ss

SUMMER DEVON
SUMMER PANTS,
1/
SKIRTS, JACKETS ..,__2_PR_IC_E---I
RACK OF LADIES'

Values to $18.99

SALE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVED

saoo

t------+-----~
QUEEN SIZE

FOAM PILLOWS
s,R;~c;, .Sl

o••

FIBERFILL PILLOWS
~;~;

MEN'S

JOG SUITS

s••

PANTS/ZIP JACKETS

Sl
SALE

Reg. S19.9S

:ember 10th
'

$611
LlnLE GIRLS

BOYS'

BICYCLE
SHORTS

Sllll

SALE

I

BLOCK

•

PARTY
CAR SHOW

Downtown Middleport
Registration 11 a.m.-12 Noon
Judging 12 Noon - 2 p.m.

. CHICKEN.

.

BAR·B·Q·

$1S.;0W

CLOGGERS
0

.

Shady River Shufflers
0
Midnight Cloggers

~

· MIDDLEPORT
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
.

Don't Miss All The Fun &amp;
Exeitementl Shop With
These Ml••leport
Merehants.

~ot-._ '

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RAWLINGS-COATS
BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

t

\\"t
0

lf2 PRICE

.

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20°/o OFF

..
.
.

STOREWIDE .

(heritage house only!

htrita,gt htu$t

.

~

SHOE PLACE
Middleport, Ohio
992-5627

•

•

..

.

EXCLUDING CLEARANCE ITEMS

'

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NOW OPEN
OM..ifl 5tro£.E,t a3ooks

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

I

Bl•~~

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(614) 992-&amp;&amp;st ·
(99 BOOKS)

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93 Mill Strum
Middloport, Ohio 45760

r---------------------------• I

1

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Remember
Grandparents' Day
Sept. 11!!!

Psttg Ssrln11 . !

COME IN AND CHECK OUT OUR
NEW MERCHANDISE ARRIVING
DAILY.

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OPEN 9 A.M.-5 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.

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STOREWIDE

Johnsons Variety Store

\\\ ·

1/2 PRICE

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SPONSORED BY THE

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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1988

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Layaway

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Sweet Mountain Sound

GROUP SHOES

20°/o OFF·

•heritage house
•Corner Collections
•locker 2.19
•Mill Street Books
•Johnson's Variety
•Ingels
•Middleport Dept. Store
•King Builders ·
•LaSalle Gallery
•Dan's
Thankl To.... ·

...•

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QUILTED NYLON HOODED JACKETS
21, 3T, 4T- Reg.

SHOP THESE .MERCHANTS
FOR SUPER
.SAVINGS
•

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Awards: Around 3: 30 -.m.

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SECOND ANNUAL

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12, 18, 24 Months - Reg. S14.99

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MIDDLEPOilT, OliO

WEEKLY

BRIEFS .s~19 ·

Cablevision of Point Pleasant

550 PAGE STIRT

Sius S, M,L, XL
Values to $14.99

BOYS' FUNPAl

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GEARY'S
BODY SHOP
8:30 AM·6:00 PM

~=---=-----1

To The Following Sponsors
''Thanks !''
Farmers Bank
Kroger's of Pomeroy
Colu~bus Southern .Power Co.
· Downing, Chi'lds, Mullen,
Musser lns~rance Agency
Central .Trust ·Co~
Bill Childs
Fisher Big Wheel

SatU'rday,

'

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

off ..

HENLEY SHIRTS

$ 88

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IDDL
SIXTH

Block Psttg .Specis/g/I
RACK OF

Wednesday, September 7, 1988

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MIODLEPOIIT, OHIO

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EACH PAIR OF LEVI'S
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•

MIDDLEPORT

992-3614
290 North Second, Middleport, Ohio

::.;

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�Page 6

The Daily Sentinel

KaJJ~kaff!

Falcons blank Bobcats 24-0
,,

By Gary Clark

·

Wednaa clay, September 7, 1988

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

'

)ed with Wahama lwung over on
downs.
The White Falcons wasted liule
time in putting six more points on
' ' controI as
the board after regammg
Jewell bolted through a huge hole
off right tackle and cut to the outside for a 79 yard touchdown run
on the Falcons first play to make it
12-0 in the early minutes of the
second period. The point after at·tempt failed.'
.
Wahama increased its lead to 180 just before intermission when
West Bumgarner recovered a Bobcat fumble on the Kyger Creek 19yard-line. Five plays later, Jewell
was met behind the line of scrimmage but spun away from the
would-be tackler for a two-yard
touchdown burst The two-point
conversion attempt failed when
Gibbs' pass fell incomplete.
Following a ' scoreless third
quarter. the Bend Area team tallied
its finaltouchdown of the night on
its initial 'possessiop of the final
stanza. A!Ccr talang over on tne
Bobcat 45-yard-line, WHS needed
just live plays to go the distance
with Rick Kearns capping the drive
with a 24-yard-touchdown run to
make it24-0. Once again the White
Falcons attempt for the two point
conversion carne up short.
Substitutes flooded the drenched
field for the final 5:28 of the game
for Wahama with a final 11-play
drive stalling at the Bobcatl4 yard
line. Kyger Creek managed just
two plays after the five minute passession by the White Falcons
before time ran out with WHS
recording the 24-0 shutout win.
Wahama totaled lllirst downs in
the contest with 225 rushing yards ·

tOial yards. Kyger Creek managed
15 yards rushing and 50 yards
through the air for 65 total yards
while accumulating six first downs.
Individually, Chris Jewell topped
the 100-yard rushing plateau with
103 yards in nine carries to lead all
ball carriers with Rick Kearns adding 69 yards with Bob Kincaid
leading the WHS receivers with
two receptions for 24 ylU'dS. Ky$er
Creek was led in rushmg by Bnan
Vinson with 22 yards in four carries
while Chad Johnson completed live
of 15 passes for 50 yards. Vmson
caught two Bobcat passes for 28
yards while John Sipple ~as on the
receiving end of three aerials for 22
yards.
Defensively for Wahama inside
linebackers Chris Noble and Chris
Jewell shared game high honors
with seven tackles each with Bill
Zuspan and Dave Sigman collecting four apiece.
Wahama returns home on Friday
night to host the visiting Eastern
Eagles in a 7:30 p.m. encounter.
EaStern is currently 0-1 on the year
after dropping a 34-13 decision
Hannan in its season opener last
week.
STATISTICS

•

'Huskers are Drum a redll!hot start

Senior running back Chris Jewell
By Maj. Amos B Hoople
(ABC-TV) In Los Angeles should TKUR8DAY, sept. s
ran for two touchdowns while Sean
Peer•-s Pro-osu--•or
be an aerial shootout. Helsman
""'
.,,_
Gibbs and Rick Kearns added one
candidates T roy Alk man o1 Texas~ Brigham Young 28
each Saturday night as the Wahama
Egad, friends! Seldom have we UCLA and Steve Taylor of the SATURDAY, Sept.10
White Falcons posted a '24,0
ever had so many big games tlijs Cornhuskers are excellent Ahobarnal5Temple 10
shutout win over the host Kyger
early In the college football passers. Aikman pitched lor 17 ArtzonaiiTexosTech18
Creek Bobcats. The contest was
season. l98Sisgettlngolftoalast TDs.last year; Taylor had 13 TD !=W~~~!~·~ 27
played in a steady rain throughout
start.
throws In a more run-oriented Army 2!Holy cross II
and was actually won in the
Consider, 11 you will, this offense.
Aubum:ll Kentucky 20
trenches with the Bend Area teams
week's top matchups: UCLA vs.
The two head coaches, Nebras~If;:; gnctnnat121
inte.rior line controlling the line of
Nebraska, Notre Dame vs. Mlch- ka's Tom Osborne (147-34·2, .809) BowllDcGreen 24 Ball state 17
scrimn\a~e.
lgan and Southern Cal vs. stan- and 1..1CLA's Terry Donahue ~..!:~'1227~~!::'i~
The v1ctory was the White Fa!lord. Also: Oklahoma vs. North (98-36-7, .720) have great re- Colpte28NewHams\:shlre21
cons second in a ·row while Kyger
Carolina, Syracuse vs. Ohio Stale cords. Osborne and Donahue ~~':jJ:\ frRt'~m~ 17
Creek fell to 1-1 on the 1988 camand Florida State vs. Southern stand second and seventh, re· Eaatern Mldtlaan 33 Youngstown st. 31
paign. Wahama opened the season
MissiSsippi.
spectlvely, In the ranklngs of p.~::J:l:~MJaJta:.\\r.J.::n Mtsstsstppt Ill
with a 14-6 triumph over Liberry
Jove! There'll be a number of wlnnlngesl active coaches.
Geo!llia Texas Christian 13
Raleigh while the Bobcats defeated
coaches spending sleepless
Offense Is the name of the Geo!llia 311Tedl 11 Tenn.-Cbattanoq!a 11
Federal Hocking 13-12 in its
nights.
game at both schools, and this ~~:'~~~~ ~C:.~:t~~e:u
season opener.
The Nebraska-UCLA tray week wUI be no exception. Iac!Janal!22 Rice 11
The game was played mostly in
Nebraska will win a wUd one,
~J:;rk~'.::~i
.
Kyger Creek territory as the BobMAC names top
38-31. Har-rumph!
LDullvtlle28Wyanlng24
.
Notre Dame and Michigan Me~ilO state 111 Arkansas State 15
cats offense never seemed to get
untracked. Of the nine possessions
football players
(CBS-TV), two of football's sto- :mn~a,;.~tw:!!~~~:!'sl!te 2 ~
on the evening by Waharna six
rled elevens, have met only 19 MJaawrt:lll1tahState17
were begun on the Kyger · Creek
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) _Kent
times -from their first encoun- ~!b1'.!t.DeJ~~L':,~
1
side of midfield which resulted in
State quarterback Patrick
ter In 1887throughl987. Michigan N""" Mexloo State 21 New Mexico 18
three White Falcon touchdowns. In
Young and Western Michigan
holds a 13-6 series lead. Since ~~!t,o:'i3Jo":f~f~r:0
contrast the Bobcats totaled 10 poslinebacker Eric Hoffman have 1978, however, they've split, 4·4. Oklahoma State 33 Mhunl (Ohio) 13
sessions with only one beginning in
veen selected the season's first
Going Into their opening game, OretlOniiLDnll,}'••ch siate 21
Wahama territory.
Mid-American Conference play- Michigan Is a slight favorite. Bo =~:t:. ~ 0~~~5,:,., 20
WHS opened the scoring on its
Wlhama Kyg..-Cr. ers of the week.
Schembechler's Wolverines SouthernCat37 Stanford Ill
second possession after a short
FintDowns
II
6
Young, a sophomore from have a tested QB, Demetrius ~~~~l.oll6'~o3J '::,esit"'" Carottna 18
Kyger Creek punt by going 39
Yds Rushing
40-225
28-15
Miami, Fla., rushed just 9 times Brown, and a covey of talented 'tennes,.. 36 Duke 14
yards in eight plays. A tO-yard run
Yarn. Passing
for 172 yards and two touchdowns receivers. Their usual rock- ~·t ?d~~~·sl'.:~:~J7
2
65
by Jewell and a 16-yard pass play
~:!~do
J.~
onrunsof 70andSlyardslna34-3 ribbed defense Is led by All· UTEP!IWeberStatet 3
10
from Gibbs
Bob Kincaid were
lnte=ptionsThrown
S-l~
win ovec Youngstown State. He America tackle Mark Messner, ~l':'..i."l!'utT~J;'Is~st~~~ta~~llna
0
16
the big plays in the series for the
Fumble•·l.ost
3-Q
12-1
also completed 4 of 9 passes or 62 one of the best 'In the business.
watie Forelt 4211llno~ State 1
White Falcons with Gibbs cuiPenalties-Yds
4-60
5-55
yards and another TD.
The Thursday night Texas- Washln~oo27 Purdue17
minating the drive by sneaking in
Pun•-A•i
1-33.0
2-45.5
Hoffman, a senior from Te- ' Brigham Young (ESPN-TV) bat- · ~:;:~~r~:l:g:E~('l!~t~·~un..-tm 21
'from a yard out. The PAT kick
Off Play•
50
46 cumseh, Mich., had 22 tackles, 11 lie should be a beaut. The William &amp; Mary 19 VIrginia Military 11
sailed wide right end Wahama led
of them solos, and broke up a resurgent Texas Longhorns get
by a 6-0 margin.
Score by Quarters:
pass In Western Michigan's 24-1 4 the Hoople nod to win, 34·28. SUNDAY, Sept. II
Following the ensuing kickoff
Wahama
6 12 0 6 24
wtn over Wisconsin.
Har-rumph!
Air Force40SanD!egoState23
the Bobcats mounted what would ,.:_and_34_.:_yar:_ds_p:_as:_sin_g:._fo_r_a_net_25_9_K_r_ger_c_ree~t
_____o_o_o_o__
o ______________________________
become their most serious threat of
the · contest. Aided by a roughing
the kicker penalty, Kyger Creek
moved from its own 35-yard-line to
the WHS 21 behind the passing
combination of Chad Johnson to
Brian Vinson before the drive stal-

Jl::i/:

Friday's games

The Big Ten's embarrassing
0·4 showing on the first week

shows that no game Is a lock, the
conference coaches said
Tuesday.
Iowa, ranked 11th In the nation
last week, lost at Hawaii while
Wisconsin, Illinois and Northwestern were losers In less surprls-

lng contests Saturday. The other
six Big Ten teams get started this
weekend.
"You don't like to see that,"
Michigan coach 8o Schembechlersalddurlngtheconference's weekly teleconference with
the coaches. "All of us are a little
disappointed, but It Indicates to
everyone the strength of college
football.''

"It shows you better line up
and play," Michigan State assistant coach Morris Watts said.
Iowa Coach Hayden Fry made
no excuses for the loss In
Honolulu.
"They did a super job and took
advantage of every break," said
Fry. ··we made several critical
mistakes on defense that allowed
Hawaii to move the football. But

we played better tha n r
anticipated.''
Iowa and Illinois get lmmedlate opportunities to redeem
themselves this weekend against
Kansas State and Arizona State,
respectively. Wisconsin and
Northwestern are the only Big
Ten teams with the weekend off.
"Our bali club has got to
Improve ,every game before our

fl~t BIT J~n ga~et ~~~~n ~~r~
w 0~ c u roppe 0 1 tin s
weeks college football ra g ·
The Hawkeyes lost t~o ~ 1ayer~
to Injury on Satur~ay, ef g~ar k
Jim Poynton an corner ac
Greg Brotn· t
hi h h
A coupe 0 1 earns w c ave
yet to play a game have player~
missing beca.use oflnjury ·:en~\
ranked Michigan, which plays

backer Scott Smykowskl to a
knee Injury and cornerback Sean
LaFountaine because of a
cracked vertebrae In the neck.
Both are out lor the season.
Ohio Sta le opens at home
against Syracuse with new coach
John Cooper startlng his reign.
Cooper, who moved to Columbus
from Arizona State, Is looking
forward to the fi!:s~ ¥!1rn,.::e::·---

17

SO

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MIDDLEPORT

'I

c

I

Use ~our SERVISTA.R Credit tard at

participating srores.

Pt. Pleasant at Gallipolis
Waverly .at Athens ·
Circleville at Jackson
Logan at Miami Trace
Parkersburg at Marietta
Warren at Fort Fry
Meigs at Trimble
Wellston at Belpre
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Huntington High - Open
Eastern at Wahama
Green at Hannan Trace
Waterford at Kyger Creek
Southeastern at North Gallla
Oak Hill at Rock Hill
Huntington Ross at Southern
Southwestern at Alexander
Vinson at Symmes Valley

,,

By KENT McDILL
UPI Sport&amp; Writer

Saturday, lost line-

·; u.s. Gov't

Rio baseball team
revises schedule
A revised schedule of fall
practice games for the baseball
team at Rio Grande College/ Community College has been
released by Coach Dave Oglesby.
The schedule Is as follows:
Saturday, Sept. 17 - Wllmlng- .
ton, home, 1 p.m.; Sunday, Sept.
18 - West Virginia Wesleyan,
away, 1 p.m.; Saturday, Oct.lWIImlngton, away. l p.m.; Tues'
day, Oct. 4 - Marshall, home,' 2
p.m.
Oglesby sa ld · another game
may also be sc heduled, possibly
for Parents Weekend (Sept.
23·25 I. Selection of players lor
the 1989 baseball season will be
based on performances In the
practice games, the coach
added.

Big'Ten's. 0-4 showing is embarrassing, coac~e~ SN~~ame

=:.

MSU names four
co-captains for '88
LANSING, Mich. IUPI) -For
the second year In a row, Big Ten
football cham pion Michigan
State has chose n four players as
co-captains.
The Spartans, perhaps yielding to last year's formula in
hopes of tak ing back-to-back
Rose Bowl victories, tapped
offensive tackle Tony Mandarich, strong safety John Miller.
outside linebacker Kurt Larson
and quarterback Bobby McAllister to lead the tea m.
Manda rich, will miss the first
three games of the season under
NCAA rules for applying for the
National Football League draft
earlier this year. The 6-foot-6,
319-pound native of Oakville.
Ontario, is expected to be near
the top in nex t year's NFL draft.
Miller. who Is 6-loot·l and
weighs 194 pounds, is one of a pair
of fourth-yea r seniors on the
team. He Is from Farmington
Hills.
Larsen, 6-foot-4, · 240 pounds,
curren tly Is recovering from
Achilles tendon surgery last
'Pring but is ex pected to be ready
for the season. He has 146 career
tackles, more than any other
active Spartan.
McAllister. who was the No. 2
passer in the Big Ten last year.
hopes to become the first Midwestern quarterback to win two
Rose Bowls in a row.
It is only the third lime in
Spartan history that the team has
picked four co-captains, The
other two times were last year
and 1980.

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

10

34

Wednesday, September 7, 1988

.

.

•

.,

'

Go Krogering
J

J

I

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs---continued from page 1
when he went left of center and hit Goodman's 1965 Chevrolet
Malibu. Goodman and Barker, who was Gocxlman's passenger
did not have seat belts available In the car.
'
Cross was cited !or driving left of center.

Three injured in two-car wreck
Three area persons were Injured In a two-car accident
Tuesday.at..9: 05 a.m. In Rutland.Township on New Uma Road,
about a mile north or S.R. 124, according to the Gallla-Melgs
Past of the State Highway Patrol.
Injured were Valerie L. Goodman, 39, of 36350K!ngsburyRd.,
Pomeroy; Ernest L. Cross, 23, of Langsville; and Jack ·R.
Barker, 34, of Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy.
.
Gocxlman was transported from the scene by L!feF!!ght to
Grant Medical Center In Columbus, where she was at last report
listed In fair condition In the trauma unit. Crass and Barker
were transported by an EMS unit to Veterans' Memorial
Hospital, where both were later treated ana released.
Cross, driving a 1986 Chevrolet Cavalier, was driving north

Jllt/)~···---------c_o_n_un~u~e~d~~~o~m~p~a~g~e~1__________
SEOAL: Meigs, 297; Warren,
349; Gallipolis, 375; Jackson,
376; Athens, 383; Marietta , 494;
Logan, 514.
''In comparison the TVC enrollment is: Meigs, 297; Vlnton.297;
Federal Hocking, 161; Wellston,
255; Alexander, 219; Nelsonville,
209; Belpre, 207; Miller, 144;
Trimble, 133.
' 'Obviously, the TVC has better
size equality than the SEGAL.
Our students enjoy arrlvlng at a
school and being considered King
of the Hill. No one wants to be the
runt of the league.
"It's time we stop trying to
relive our youth through our

.

Wedn81day, September 7, 1988

children and allow them to create
their own memorles. "

Weather

Soulb Central Ohio
Clear and cool tonight, with
lows around 50 and light southeast winds. Thursday, sunny
and mild with highs of 80 to 85.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A sllght chance of showers
Friday and Saturday, but otherwise fair through the period.
Highs w!ll be 75 to 85 Friday and
Saturday, and 70 to 80 Sunday.
Lows w!ll be 50 to 60 Friday and
Saturday, and In the upper 40s to
mid-50s Sunday.

--Middleport court--

..

By The Bend

Intoxicated; Millard Herdman,
West Columbia, W. Va .. $450,
driving while Intoxicated, and
$50, no tall lights; Arnold E.
Priddy, Rutland, $52, speeding;
Randall E. Harrlson, Gallipolis.
$44, speeding; Mark Haley, Middleport, $225. assault, and $150,
trespassing. ·
Others fl ned In the court were
Chester R. Green, Albany, $425
and costs and three days In jail,
driving while Intoxicated; $50
and costs, no operator's license,
and Juanita Thomas, Middleport, $425 and costs and three
days In jail, driving while
Intoxicated.

Three striking workers of the
Department ol Human Services
In Middleport were fined In tbe
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined $50 and costs each on
disorderly conduct charges were
Susan R. Dodson, Pomeroy;
-Candy B. Smith, Cheshire, and
Neale G. Knight, Long Bottom.
In other court actions Tuesday
night, six defendants forfeited
bonds. They are Michael A.
Thomas, Columbus, $450, driving
while Intoxicated, and $50, weav·
lng course; Mark Bailey, Point
Pleasant, $450, driving while

.

Gilmores take recent trip
Elza and Evelyn Gilmore accompanied by their son and
daughter-in-law, Roger al!d
Mary Gllmore, have returned
from Dayton where they attended the 43rd reunion of the
21st Air Depot Group of the U.S.
8th Air Force which was stat!~ned at Burtonwood, England,
942-45.
'I:here was a memorial ded!catlon ceremony held at the U. S.
Air Force Museum where a tree
had been planted and the unveil-

EMS has.B calls Tuesday

Your

Dealer

1988 FORD ESCORTS
I

AS LOW AS

3.9°/o

OR CASH BACK

APR
FINANCING

guidelines In the law regarding.
tr~nsfer stations.
Another aspect of the new law
Is waste reduction. Athens
County already has a successful
recycling program funded by a
grant from the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, and Meigs
County Is considering applying
this year to ODNR for a grant to
develop a recycling program In
Meigs County.
Tuesday's meeting ended with
a promise of another meeting lri
the near futUre to further discuss
the stepx necessary to meet the
demands of the new solid waste
law.
1

1988 FORD BRONCO XLT
1988 FORD CONVERSION VAN
(DEMO)

$19 98800
I

Lodge to meet
Shade River Lodge 453 will
hold a regular meeting an Thursday at 8 p.m: at the Chester
Lodge HaiL Plans for the family
picnic and district meeting will
be discussed. Refreshments will
be served. All master masons are
Invited to attend.
Song fesl slated
An old-fashioned outdoor gospel song fest w!!l be held
Saturday, starting at 6 p.m ., at
the Berlin Wesleyan Church at
Roads , Ohio. The Gospel Outreachers Quartet, the Dalton
Family and others will sing.
Bring lawn chairs. In case of rain
the sing w!!l be held Indoors.
Here Friday
There will be a representative

Continued from page 1
Trea~ urer; a san and daughterIn-law, Scott and Gerl Walton,
Pomeroy; a grandson, Sean L.
Walton, Pomeroy; two brothers,
Robert and Donald Walton, both
of Wellston, and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at · the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Don Meadows officiating. Burial w!!l be in

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Pauline Derenberger, Pomeroy;
Garth Smith, Reedsville; Donald
Collins, Pomeroy; Dwight
Spencer, Pomeroy; Ernest Hawley, Racine; Rosie Searles,
Middleport.
Tuesday Discharges - Glada
Davis.

NOW

s17 900
I

.

LOADED
INCLUDES TV

Wednesday, September 7, 1988 ·
Paga 9

Hines anniversary· is planned
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hines of
50E Guysville will observe their
50th wedding anniversary Sunday with an open house from 2
p.m. to 4 p.m. at the Ohio
University Inn.
Mrs. and Mrs. Hines were
married an Sept. 9. 1938 at
Greenup, Ky. by the Rev. A. s.
Cooper. They have three sons
and daughters-in-law, Larry and
Diane, Richard and Lana, Guysv!l!e, and Gene and Roseanna of

Work session
The Racine Shrine Club Park
Committee has planned a work
session at the park on Thursday .
evening. Volunteers are asked to
came to the park about 6 p.m.
Free enlerlahanent
Another night of free entertain·
ment will be featured Saturdav
night, beginning at 7 p.m., at the
Racine Shrine Club Park. The
Mountain Top gospel group w!!l
perform, along with regulars, the
Bend River Bays and the Countrv
Blend Band. Bring lawn chairs.
Refreshments will be available.

Arriving

'

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BACK

· USED CARS AND ·TRUCKS
Air, auto trans., tilt
wheel, 15,000 miles.

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Beech Grove Cemetery. friends
may call at the funeral home '
after 1 p.m. Thursday .

Edna Schaefer
Mrs. Edna Schaefer died Wednesday morning at her home on
the Laurel CUff Road, Pomeroy.
Arrangements are being completed at the Ewing Funeral
Home.

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PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

The heat wave has broken--the
weather's great and you have a
chance to get out the next couple
of weekends. This Saturday, the
annual Middleport Black ·Party
will be staged and ,an the
following Saturday the Harvest
· Festival will be held In Racine.
Have fun--and do keep sm!l!Qg.

CHICKEN BAR-8-Q
SATUIDAY, SEPT. 10
MIDDLEPORT FilE DEPAITMENT
l/2 . CHICKEN S400
DINNER S4so
Unclud•s 1h Chick..., labd lh!ln•, and lol)

The Apostolic Church of Jesus
Christ, New Lima (Loop) Road,
Rutland, . w!ll be In revival
Thursday through Saturday. The
evangelist w!ll be Wll!!am Carter. Robert Richards, pastor,
Invites the public.

Pic;:rlic slated
The Modern Woodmen of
America Camp 7230 will have a
potluck picnic this Saturday,
starting at 6:30 p.m., at the
southbound park on Route 33 at
Darwin. The camp will furnish
meat, salads and drinks.
Members are asked to bring a
potluck dish, table service and
lawn chairs. Friends and guests
are welcome.

SUMMER BLOUSES &amp; SLACKS ......... 1/3

•.

OFF

WEDDING GOWNS, FORMALS, DRESS
MAKING, ALTERATIONS
PHONE 949-2308

"OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE"

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE ··

31D .SYIDT '

UCINE, OHIO

MASTIRCARD - VISA - GOlDEN IUCilYE

• Ooaps!
· · · Omitted from the list ot November election candidates for
Meigs County posts. In Sunday's
Time Sentinel was Republican
~rty Spencer, incumbent clerk
of courts. Larry will be running
for reelection In the November ·

•

'

$7 50 CASH

1988 TEMPO GL 4 DRS.

The Chester Bawhunter and
Archery Club staged a very
successful first annual bow shot
museu !ar dystrophy Sundav.
· There were aver 60 partie!- _
-pants In the event which raised
$500 tor Jerry··~ Kids--the national program as you know
_beaded by entertainer Jerry
,Lewis.
' Club members are extending a
big vote of thanks to air of the
businesses and Individuals who
contributed door prizes and sup.p ort to make the endeavor to
JiUCh a worthy cause sa
. successful.
• Lanny Tyree is president of the
bowhunter group and Terry
Brown Is vice president.

The Bowers fam!ly reunion
will be held Sunday , Sept. 11, at
the southbound roadside park an
Route 33. If you plan to attend,
planners would like you to roll
into the park a bout 10 a.m.

Return Jonathan Meigs Chap- an national defense and the
ter, Daughters of the American . Constitution. Hostesses will be
Revolution, w!l! meet ·at 1 p.m. Mrs. Paul E!ch, Miss, Lucille
Sept. 9 at Grace Episcopal Smith, Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs~
Church parish house. Mrs. Ron Joseph Cook and Miss Eleanor
Reynolds, national defense Smith.
chairman; w!l! have the
m

Amesville, and seven
grandch!ldren.
Mr. Hines is a retired farmer
and employe of the Athens
Mental Health Center Maintenance Dept. Mrs. Hines is the
former Helen Gaul. They request
that gifts be omitted.
·

UMWmeeting
conliuaed .
recently

1989 Models
Now ".

--Area deaths--Kennit Wallon...

. .

WAS $20,611

WAS S25,900

-----Announcements----of the Golden Buckeye Program
at the Racine Department Stare
an Friday from 10: 30 a.m. to 2
p.m. Persons may also register
to vote at the same time and
place.

.

Former Meigs County resident, Terry Stalnaker, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harley Stalnaker, now
an entertainer residing at Fort
Myers Beach, Fla., will be
returning to the county on
Saturday, Sept.17.
Terry, who does rock, country,
and the top 40's, w!ll be at the
Royal Oak Resort Club from 8 to
midnight. The presentation Is
open to club members and their
. guests. Many, many years ago
you saw Terry perform tnnumer·
musicals of the Big Bend
.Minstrel Association here.
·

Continued from page 1

meeting by Greg Fields, pres!·
· dent of the company.
Janes noted that In Meigs
County, a private Individual has
submitted a. plan to EPA to
develop a prlvate landf!!l. Such a
facll!ty would Impact greatly an
Meigs County's decisions regard·
ing a solid waste district.
However, Fields said It was his
understanding that an EPA moratorium on such app!!cat!ons
exists, until a solid waste district
ls farmed for the area from which
the application comes.
Meigs County Is also considerIng the posslbllty of a solid waste
transfer station, but there does
not appear to be any specific

!ng of a memorial and plaque
Group pictures were taken along
with videos which were shown
later In the evening. A dinner was
held at the Radisson Inn with
each couple receiving a replica In
miniature of themuseumplaque.
Thl!re was group singing with
music by Denver Rice, M!ddleport, on the concertina which he
purchased wh!le stationed In
England. Mrs. Rice accampanled him to the reunion.

Daily Sentinel

-----DAR to meet----- Revival planned

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services .reports eight
calls Tuesday.
·
Rutland at 5:07 a .m. was called to Meigs Mine No. 2 for
Sandra Sines who was transported to O'Blenness Memorial
Hospital.
Pomeroy at 7:20a .m. went to Seneca Drive for Donald Call!ns
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 9: 10 a.m .. Rutland Fire Department was called to a
twa-car accident on New Uma Road. Rutland EMS units
transported Dana parlene Lyons, Tim Lyons, Ernie Crass and
Jack Barker from the accident scene to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The twa Lyons were taken on to Holzer Medical
Center. Llfefl!ght made an an-scene landing for Valerie
Goodman who was flown to Grant Hospital In Columbus.
Rutland was assisted at the accident by Middleport EMS and
Rescue units.
Pomeroy at 9: 16 a.m. went tothe Pomeroy Health Care Center
for Dwight Spencer. who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 12:53 p.m. was called to Callaway Ridge for
George Cremeans who was taken to St. Joseph's HosptlaL
Murlel Spires 813:07 p.m. was transported bv Muriel Spires to
Holzer Medical Center.
•
Racine at 7:36 p.m. took Ernest Hawley to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Middleport at 9:30p.m. was called to Broadway St. far Rosie
Searles who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Cottnti~S...

Th~

' The Athens District United
Methodist Women will hold their
annual meeting at Logan Trinity
United Meethcxl!st Church, 105
W. Hunter St., Logan, Oct. l.
: Betty Geiger, West Ohio Canterence Mission secretary, wlll
be the featured speaker. Keith '
Wasserman will give a message ·
Qn Good Works, Inc., Athens.
Registration and coffee hour will
start at 9:30 a.m. with the
(!lornlng program to be from 10
a.m. to noon, and the afternoon
program from 1.to 3 p.m.

Homecoming set
Homecamlngw!llbeheldat the
South Bethel New Testament
Church, S!!ver Ridge, Sunday
Sept. 18, with a potluck dinner at
noon. The afternoon services will
feature the Gabrielle Quartet.

.

-

Wolfe Pen notes
Sunday evening visitors of Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Holley, Calv!n!ee
and Jason, were Mr. and Mrs.
LesUe Frank, Sarah and Mat·
thew of Texas Road. The Frank
family visited Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
and Jan Knapp attended a
reunion held at the home of Mr.
arid Mrs. Virgil King for the
Bunker Hill boys and girls and
their lamll!es.

Your eompltte Exhaust
•
Service Center

627 3rd A,.., Gallp.lls
PH. 446-1699

CALL TODAY AND ASIC FOR
.,., PHIL HOOD

HOUIS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

.,

~·

\NOW OPEN"

2-2·-·

MOIIMY I WBriBIAY

VIDEO TAPES

WOlfF aDS

2 fOI$300

20
· •• S3000
1 . . . . dill ...........

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SA-Y'S VIDEO &amp; TANAIAMA II

····2371

Pat Hill Ford Inc.
•

461 S. 3rd
i

UCIII, . . .
,\

.

'

992-2196

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Ouining Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health:

Middleport, OH.
., _____ "'!&lt;--·--- - ... --

•••

'-

~

_... -

-

•
,\

I

,,

�Pega 10-The Daily Seminal

Wednesday, September 7, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 7, 1988

EASTMAN'$.. Vour Independently Owned

Community Calendar

Low·Priced Supermarket

WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern AI·
hletlc Boosters, 7: 30 p.m. this
evening at the Eastern High
School.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - 8 and 40, Salon
710, meeting at 1 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mary Martin.
POMEROY The Rock
Springs Grange will meet at 6: 30
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Barbara and Jim Fry for a
cookout.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine,
White Shrine of Jerusalem, wll
meet Friday at 7: 30 p.m : at the
Rock Springs Grange hall. Practice for Inspection will be held.
Potluck refreshments will be
served following tl)e meeting.

REV. JAMES KEESEE ·

Church sets
dedication

.

/'

..,,'/

)

•

'

. ·;

i I , ',

)

Dedication of the new Vlctorv
Baptist Church, North Second
St., Middleport, wm take 'place
Sunday at 2 p.m. The Rev. Gerald
McCabe, Mansfield, will gl ve the
dedication sermon and there will
be special music.
The · Rev . James Keesee Is
founder and pastor of the church.
For the past eight years the
congregation has been meeting
In the old North Second St.

FOOD LAND
KING-SIZE

MAXWELL HOUSE

Blend.
·coffee

White
Bread

'

39

oZ:

FRESH LEAN

Bucket Steak

Ground Beef

$199

LB.

3 LBS .
OR MORE

9LBC

TWO VARIETIES
~EVEN VARIETIES

40¢ -tiFF LABEL
FOR DISHES

Luck's

Joy

Liquid

Beans

tO BE DEDICATED- The new hulldlng of the VIctory Baptist

Church will be dedicated In special serviceo at 2 p.m, Sunday.
building which for many years ·
was used a feed store and later by
Mrs. Ruth Gosney for an art
center.
The new 40 x 100 foot structure
was built behind the old church
building which has no"" been

BUY1
CET 1

I
I
I

C..•-(lll&lt;c itlllc:o;

FREE

Lisa J. Riggs , a junior at Ohio
University this fall, has been
selected as a member of Outstanding College Students of
America and will be Included In
the 1988 directory of the organ!za·
tion.
· As a new Inductee, Riggs will
be listed among the top college
students across the country In the
1988 directory which is distributed to the nation's colleges,
ulwersltles and corporations to

:i:
m

Good ••k thru Sept. 17.
Only at E-'1 foodcllcl.
$'--_ _ __.IJf,~L

..,I

ltfTHE CHECK OUT!
From Quaker· Oats

8UY1 t&gt;ny ONE (I) lnstanl Quaker' Oatmeal
PllEIINT: Ttlla coupon to the cashier along with purctlase
o RICEIYEI Any ONE (1 1lnllanl Quaker' Oatmeal
:!:
Fllllll (up·lo $2.39 value)

.______

US

Appreciation
picnic planned

White
Potatoes
20 Ll.

$199

FOODLAND

TROPICANA CHILLED

Cottage
Cheese

Orange

Juice
84

oz.

CTNS.

i

•

24

oz.

CTN.

·The Great Bend Bethlehem
Church will have a picniC and
appreciation service honoring
Earl and Mildred Shuler· on
Sullday at the Racine Shrine
Park. ·
·
The church will furnish the
meat and beverage and those
attending are to take their
favorite covered dish or dessert
for the dinner which will be
served at 1:30 p.m. An Informal
apprcelatlon service will be held
at 2:30 by Charles Norris.
. In announcing the appreciation
se~vlce, It was noted that Mr. and
Mrs. Shuler have been devoted
,, servants of the Lord In this area
: for the past22 years. For the past
·15 years they ,h ave been minister·
lng the gospel at the Bethleh~m
Church.

·--.

...

Haning birthday

Erica Nicole Haning celebrated her second birthday recently with a party at her home,
Attending were her mother,
Cathy Haning, maternal grand;
parents, Mr. and Mrs . Raymond
I'
Manley,
Joe and Kevin. Sending
Homeciomlngs
Mlnersvitle United Methodist gifts were her maternal great
ChUJ'llb will have their annual ~andparents, Mr. and Mrs·,
•
homec1&gt;mlng this Sunday. The . Thomas McKinney.
public Is Invited.
·
The ~nnual homecoming of the
Unlte~lFalth Church, will be tbls
a
Sunda~ . A basket dinner will be
held af 12 noon, followed by a
of
gospel sing at 2 p.m. featuring
Just call or visit us today
Jan ahd Kathy, the Johnson
famllyl and the United Faith
to send the FTD8

Send grand
basket flowers. :

Four.

t

'•' '

Grandparents' Day Bouquet
Grandparents' Day is
September II. FTD RowersThe feeling never ends.

REVIVAL·

Sept. 11-16, 1988

T SALAD.·•••••••••••••• ••J!•••••• 89C

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

~ACKAGED

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST

WIENERS ••••••~.!!••• 5212
HAM LUNCH MEAT •••••••••~.!!••• 5199
sWin
A. BRAND HAM •••••••••••u.~••• s219

~k

NEW YBLOW

ONIONS •••••••!.~~... 79&lt;
i

ensure. members of the national
recognition Involved. Riggs Is
now a candidate for several
scho!arshl~ Including 10 $2,000
scholarships available to Out·
standing College Students of
America members only.
Riggs Is the daughter of David
Riggs, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Gloria
Kloes, Syracuse and Is the
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Riggs, Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Stella Adkins of Rutland.

HlliENDAU-3 DOZEN

sMALL EGGS ......s1a9

.(HICKEN PA
SANDWICH

~E IONNET QUARTEIS

MARGARIN'E.l.~~... 79&lt;

CARROTS ...lt.~l; .•. 39&lt;
GOLDEN D£UCIOUS

APPLES ••!MI••• 2I 69&lt;

185. PAUL'S (liSP &amp; CRUNCHY

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

FISH FILLETS •••••••••••••••••• ,.P.z.... S198
.
GRAPEFRUIT JUICE •••••••• JJ.A~·. S179

•NME~D

KRAFT

MAYONNAISE •••••••••• J.~P.~·....... S197
LUU'S 14112 OZ. CAN
CHICKEN/DUMPLINGS •••••••••• S1 o9

ATTENTION
•HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS•
YOU'LL RECEIVE A "FREE GIFT" WHEN YOU HAVE
YOUR PORTRAIT TAKEN AT
PRECIOUS MEMORIES ART &amp; PHOTOGRAPHY STUDIOS
WE MAT AND FRAME YOUR FAVORITE PRINTS, PLUS
NEEDLEPOINT. WE ARE NOW OFFERING ALL KINDS
OF ART CLASSES ... PHONE 949-3080.

Precious Memories Art &amp; Photography Studios
t•t-3060

~

CEUO PACK

$11•

· Flu vaccine will be admln- ·seniors and disabled ; Tuesday,
stered later this year In accor- Nov. 1 from 9 to noon and I to 4
dance with the Ohio Department p.m. for the general public.
Thursday, Nov.· 3 from 9 to 11
of Health recommendations.
The charge will be 50 cen Is for a .m. and 1 to3 p.m. and Tuesday,
senior cltlzens and the disabled, Nov. 8, 9 to 11 a .m are makeup
date•.
alld $1 to the general public,
The dates are Monday, Oct. 31
from 9 to noon and 1 to 4 p .m. for

I

r.t

Rutland American Legion Post
4671s sponsoring a fish fry, using
Lillie's' recipe, this Saturday at
the legion hall on Beech Grove
Road. Serving will be from 11
a.m. tc:i 6 p.m.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Flu vaccine to be given

uce•ee•~YNCil""AIIDGUIKIRUTRA"" ·
~~~~~

U

Flsh

ERICA N. HANING

Eula E. Jeffers to Leading
,James R. Hill, Della D. Hill,
Jon was held recently at Forest Worthington; Keith, Bryan, Amy
Creek Consv. Dlst.. right of way, Richard L. Hill, Earley W. Hill to
Acres Park, Rutland.
and Kendra Cleland, Middleport.
Salisbury.
Harold F. Hill, parcels, Scipio.
Four members of the first
Wen!lell and Anna Cleland,
John A. Casto, Bonnie &lt;;leland
Sherwood L. Meredith,
generation Charter Members of Columbus; Charles and Juanita
to Leading Creek Consv. Dlst., Mildred L. Meredith, James
the Cleland Reunion were ho- Beckie, Doylestown; Linda, Matright of way, Rutland.
Meredith to Farm Credit Ban·
nored and presented with charter thew, Michael and Amy ·Bohner,
Kaye A. Walker by P.O.A., /Louisville, parcels, Bedford.
member cerilflcates. They were Columbus; Merle and Freda
Larry R. Walker by P.O.A. to
Mary M. Bush, Guy V. Bush to . Freda .cleland Davis, Sylvan Davis, Bruce and Marjorie DaJeffrey D. Howell, Denise K. Edith Jane Hysell, parcvel,
Cleland, Golden Cleland Stans- vis, Shawna Davis, Pam Davis,
Howell,l.OO acre, Salisbury.
Salisbury.
~
bury and Neva Cleland Taylor. Rutland; Charlotte Grant, Ra· Ronald G. Vance to David
Joanne E. Jones to Stanton I. The four honorees are the child- cine; Wanda Oxley,_Pomeroy.
Vance, Annette Vance, '!4 acre, Jones, parcels, Bedford.
ren of Daniel Elsworth Cleland
Jean and Louis Parsons, DunLebanon.
Diamond Savings &amp;Loan Co. to and Annie Carpenter Cleland and bar, V(. Va.; Joseph and June
· Kathleen Tillis to Mark Tillis, Southern Ohio Coal Co.; parcels,
the grandchildren of the late Redman, Charleston, W. Va.;
992-6454/992·2039
CandaceTIIIls, .88acre,Rutland. Salem.
William Henry Cleland, Racine. Delbert Redman, Pomeroy;
106 aun•UY AYE.
. Ralph D. Lavender, Mary J.
Warren L. Perrbte, Kathy
Plans were made for the 1989 Golden Stansbury, Pomeroy;
POIIEIOY, OHIO
Lavenc)er to Michael J. Panglo, Morris fka Perrine, Ricky Joe . reunion to be held on the third Louise Stansbury, Paul and Neva
JoAnn Panglo, 0. 7397 acre, Mor.ris to Diamond Savings &amp;: Sunday In August at the Amerl- Taylor, ' Barberton; Ronald,
Syracuse.
Loan Co., partial, Middleport.
can Legion hall in Rutland.
Sharon, Wesley and Jennifer
VIrgil K. Windon, Kathryn
Charles Ellis, et al, aka Chas.
Attending the reunion were Watkins, Nitro, W. Va.; Harlan
Helen Windon to Brian Windon, D. Ellis, Laura Ellis to Citizens Sylvan and Dolly Cleland, Mid- and Aundene Wheeler, Dexter;
Wendolyn Windon, 0.740 acre, Federal Savings and Loan As· dleport; Wayne, Joyce, Lora and Kenny, Cindy, Jessica, Shannon,
Chester.
soc., sheriff's deed, Pomeroy.
Alonna Cleland, Rutland; Cba- and Kenda Whf&gt;E'ler. D&lt;&gt;xter.
Debra S. Halley to William J.
Louis A. McMurray, dec. to rles and Nellie Cleland, Lancas- .------------__~,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,_
Halley, pt. lots, Syracuse.
Susan Cavote, Lorraine McMur- Iter; Floyd D., Chris, John and
WilliamS. Henderson. Roberta ray, cert. of trans., Lebanon.
Floyd Jr., Cleland, Rutland;
J. Montie Henderson to William
, ,
Jerry Martin CotterUI, Colum-,
S. Henderson, Roberta J. Montie r;;;;;;~~----~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;::;-1
Henderson, 5 acres, Orange.
Mannbtg D. Webster, dec. to
Sherinan W. Mills, parcel &amp;:
Tracts by Trustee, Pomeroy.
Clarence D. Haning, dec. to
Clara E. Haning, certificate,
Scipio.
James M. Warfield,
James K. Haning, Mary Sue
~
Evangelist
Haning, Betty P. Wyant, Wayne
IAIIN'S
D. Haning, Erna Haning, Bonnie
10:30 A.M. Sunday &amp;
C. Whittbtgton, Clifford Wblttlngton, Jr., Russell L. Haning, Sarah
7:30 P.M. Each Evening
Haning, Barbara Cotterill,
IAIIED MAl'l£ LOAF
Steven Cotterill, Lyle Bruce
Following evening ..vices will be en AFTERGLOW of
Haning, Sharon Arlx to Clara E.
ahowing film slides of Jerusalem end its hhltory from
Haning, parcels, Scipio.
ECKRICH
·
.
our enngellllt's tourB of the Holy t..nd.
Genevieve hill, dec. to Harold
F. Hill, certlftcate, Scipio.
Harold F. Hill toJamesR. Hill,
Richard L. Hill, Early W. Hill, .
State Route 143, 6'12 miles north of Route 7 Bv·P••
parcels, Scipio.
Iebert E.
Minlater

Riggs named to
l 1!!0 COUPO" I

razed with the area to be used for
parking. The building has sanctuary seating for 115, several
classrooms, an office and study,
as well as a fellowship room.
The pastor Invites the public to
attend the dedication servlce.d

SUNDAY
POMEROY - A series of
gospel meetings will be held at
the Red Brush Church of Christ
beginning Sunday and continuing
for a week, 7:30 each evening.
Guy Malory of Winter Garden,
Fla. will be the speaker each
evening. The public Is Invited to
attend.

Reuolou
The Bowers reunion will be
held Sunday at the southbound
park o~ Route 33. The reunion .
will begin at 11 a.m.
The \,Vood family reunion will
be held l)unday at the V lrgll King
Farm, 38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy. f'l~n!c lunch at 12 noon.
The 52nd annual Buckley reunIon will be held Sunday at the
Bellevllle Dam Park In Reedsville, l),eglnnlng with a potluck
dinner at 1 p.m.

Meigs County property transfers C;l~(!!'!!fllan~:f!'!f?a'f!d F~:'f!rm.

CompUed by
.
ED!MI!Jene Holstein Congao
·
~unty Recorder
•
Melp County, Ohio
Joe 'N. Sayre, Rosalie Sayre to
Michael 'l'odd Byrd, Kristina
Lynn Byrd, 8 acres, Scipio.
Wilda I. Brogan to John W.
Brogan, Sr., ~ fnt. 2.94 Ac.,
. Rutland.
Ishtnael Jeff Smith, Donna
; Kay Smith to Ishmael Smith,
Shlrley'Smlth, 0.9911Acre,Salen.
Glenn E. Enslen, Constance R.
' Enslen to Ohio Power Co., right
of way, Sutton.
Marvin T. Hill, Jennifer J. Hill
to Columbus Southern Power
Co., right of way, Sutton.
Charles J. Alkire, Nada Alkire
to Columbus Southern Power
C9 .• right of way, Sutton.
JerryW. Well, Susan w. Well to
Columbus Southern Power Co.,
right of way, Bedford.
Herbert Eugene Whaley,
Sheila Whaley to Columbus
Southern Power Co., right of
way, Bedford.
Manning Mohler, Elizabeth A.
Mohler to Columbus Southern
Power Co., right of way, Bedford.
ALbert L. Dettwlller, Kimberly K. Dettwlller to Columbus
Southern Power Co.. right of
way, Bedford.
Rex Vance to Columbus Southern Power Co., right of way.,
Scipio.
Eunlce Bradford by guardian
to Columbus Southern Power
Co., right of way, Scipio.
· Thorp Consumer Disc. Co. dba
. ):IT Financial ·Services to Ish·mae! Smith, Shirley Smith, pareels, Salem.
BeverlyL. MurdochtoLea.ding
Creek Consv. District, right of
way, Rutland.

200Z.
LOAVES

CAN
TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE
COUNTRY STYLE

The Daily Sentinai-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DOIO'IIIY

•m, A.A.I.F.

UCINI, OliO

PIKE SAVEl

TEA BAGS •••••••••••••••••1•0.0..c!•••••••• 99&lt;
OSAGE PEACHES •••••• 1.9.&amp;z..........99c

SHillFINE

''NO SALT'' PEARS •••••••••• 2/S119
CAMI'IEU'S 101ft OZ. CAN
· TURKEY NOODLE SOUP •• ~ 2/Sl19
IIEUOGG'S
FROSTED MINI WHEATS..~t-~1.5229
HUNT'S
TOMATO JUICE ........e4.'.~.t ...... S119
PIKE sam
PAGHEnl ••••••••••••••• 1.1!.......... atc
GU H-STYII
; PAGHEnl
SAUCE ...11.!~....... 5169
bwlllt
:BATHROOM TISSUE ••e4.!~JU •••••• 5139
-- ~ '------- ·-----·---'- - --- ----"r ------·-.· - ·~-·--~·'-

�_....-

--

·-Wednesday, September 7, 1988

The Daily

The Daily Sentinel

Fortune &amp; -..
Food
Bonanza -

Business Services

l·;::=================il

PHONE
992~2156
Or Wtitl
SeatiNI
D.,t.
Daily

CtluiliM

Ill Court St.. PMtrtY. OIWo C57i!

APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVES

i 'IW.Jl:f,

We Reserve
Right lo
Limit Quantities

•12 Years Experience
. Public Notice

STORE HOURS

WIN YOUR
SHARE OF OYER
$200,000 IN
CASH &amp;
GROCERIES

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-lO ~PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,
OH.
·'·

EFFECTIVE SUN., SEPT. 4 THRU SAT., _SEPT. 10

IN THE
John .ley Oavis. wll be per·
COMMON PLEAS COURT manently divosted of all po-·
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO rental rights ond prlvllcant. Further informmiorl
CORNER OF MULBERRY
with re8pect: to said child.
may ba obtained by contact·
J_ohn Paul Oavll.
&amp; EAST SECOND
lng the Public Utltitleo Com·
pOMEROY
John Jay Davis io required
mission of Ohio. 180
t
to answer the Petttion for
PROBATE DIVISION,
Broad , Street, Columbus,
AdoptiOn wijhln twenty·
COURTHOUSE
Ohio 43~88·0673.
IN THE MATTER OF THE
olght t28) days ohor tho lilt
t9) 7. ltc
ADOPTION OF JOHN
publication of thlo notlc:e.
PAUL GARDNER
which
will be publlohed on co
Public Notice
each week for U (6).aucce~~
No. 25889.
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
live weeki. 1nd the l•t puNOTICE OF
TO: JOHN JAY DAVIS,
bllcetlon will be on Octformerly of 4821 Refugu
APPOINTMENT OF
5, 1988.
FIDUCIARY
Rd .. Columbu_o. Ohio
In c•• of your failure to
On August 29. 1988, in 43216, ADDRESS
epphr on November 4,
the Mei·ga County Probate · UNKNOWN
1988. to answer or to otherCoun, Cue No. 25980.
JoM Jay Davitl. addre11 will ....pond before NoRuth A. Smhh, 318 Lasley unknown and who cannot vem- 4, 1988, John Joy
Street. Pomeroy, Meigs be found or hlo addrHo ooDavio wll be permanently
County, Ohio, 45789. was certeined, and who ilthepa- dlvHtecl of hlo porontol
appointed Adminietratrix of rent of John Paul· Davll. a
righ1• and prtvil~• wh:h
the ntete of Homer B. child. whose date of birth lo · r•pect to Aid child. John
Smith, Sr:, deceMed.lata of Jenuooy 11, 19711. will take
Poul Davio, ond the child,
318 Lasley Stroot, Pomeroy. notice that o Potlllon for John Paul Dovil, will then be
Meigs
County.
Ohlo, Adoption hos been flied In
adopted.
.
415789.
the Probeto Court of Molgo
WITNESS my hend end
Roben E. Bucl&lt;, County, Pomeroy, Ohio, by
tho oeal of this Coun this
P•obete Judge Lorroine Kay Gordner ond
29th day of August. 1988.
lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
Terry Ray Gordner, Plolnt·
Roben E. Buck. Judge
(8) 31; t9) 7.14. 3tc
iffo. n~quoltlng on order that
and Ex·Officlo of the
seid child bo adoptOcl. The
Probate Court
5
Happy Ads
By Lena K. Neuelrood
uld John Jay Davia io her·
.
abv notified !hot if tho de- ~hi of Deputy Clerk
mand in tho Petition for (81 31; 1917, 14, 21, 28;
Adoption il granted thlt he.
11015. Btc

'
• -·

e..

Sweepstakes
Drawing for three
(3)1988 FORD
ESCORTS
(1) MAGNAVOX VCR

Awarded At Each
Participating Store

$1:
l9
Chuck Roast ••••••••
·.
•
_
~- - · S-149
1/4 Pork Lo1n •••• ~...
·
HILLSHIRE FARMS
Smoked .Sausage .!~ $19~
' • LB.

MUST SELL
OWNERS MOVING
GREENHOUSE &amp;
GIFT SHOP FOR
SALE

•••

Greenhouse building &amp;Stock must be
movec_! ~~~~ nd.
DUCKETT PLANTS

DRUMSTICKS

BUCKET

· -.

.

Business
Servic,e s

54 Misc. Merchandise

$ 99 Turkey ···········~······· 49(
1

Cube Steak ••• ~~ •••••
'

INSULAftON

Mastic &amp;Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofi
.

14••1 w. l•, y,.J

8,..,., J,

F~ORITE

MAIN SRHT PIJ.Zl
Baok To Sohool Sp.. lal
MON~TUIS.-WBI.

{·~s·~=,:."t~~
:
C..ESE PIZZA
:
: $6.50 + 4 ••• :
•

'''

•

Lunch

'"'.,1 ...

.WILL HAUL .
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

'

"

Cheese Shces ••••~.~z.

9
11
. .

...'

--·-- ----------

•

Coffee •••.••••••• ;:~~••. $ 599 Ice Cream ••••••••••••••
Spaghetti •••..• ~!~!.

I

$1.

.1

•'
"•

MIDDLEPORT- PRICE REDUCED- Very nice neighbor·
hood' 2 story home with 3 bedrooms, family room, 2car gar· ·
ag~ full basement, 2 baths. Much More! ONLY $33,900.00.

••

LAND CONTRACT - Nice house in Pomeroy. $1.000.00
down, 12% interest 12 year term on a balance of
$15,500.00. $203.59 mo. payment incl. P&amp;l. CALL TODAY!

TONY'S SAUSAGE OR PEPPERONI

.~

MIDDLEPORT- OWNER WANTS OfFER on Ibis very nice
home in town. Great street! 3 bedrms., 2 bths,large walk·m
closets, 1car garage, large lot and much more! MAKE OFFER
$45,000.00.
NEW LISTING- HARRISONVI.LLE- 1floor plan home with
3 bedrooms, nice lot and much more! FMHA qualified. Call
for details.
MIDDLEPORT- MAKE OFFER on lhis I~story home sitting
on a nice street in Middleport! Close to park &amp; pool &amp; shop·
ping. New kitchen. new patio, 2·3 bedrooms, n1ce bath.
$32,000.00

liz GAL• .

I

•
•

DAIRY LANE

MUELLER'S ELBO ~ACARONI OR 2·

'

NEW LISTING - FLATWOODS - 10.73 acres of va·
can! ground. Would make a nic~ home srte. Call for more in·
formation . $21.500.00.

,.

$

$ .

.
oz. _ 1
·59
Pl.zza ...................

•

15.3

'

'

H-•d.L Wrltesel

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR
Gutters

'

949-2168

1·18-1 mo. pd.

SER~ICE

We can repair at1d recore radiators and
heater ·cores. We can
also acid boil . and rod
out radia'tors; We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT lUlL FORD
992·2196
Middleport,

986 ·4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

8·22-1 mo. ·

References

"DOC" VAUGHN

Cen~iod

Licensed Shop

5-25-lln

Roger Hysell
. Garage
Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Alto lr••••l~tlo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17·tfC

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE .

SYRACUSE- Nice 1floor plan home.wrth 3 bed~ooms, 1car
garage, nice lot &amp; pat1o. Rustic Hills SubdiV$10n. ONLY
$35,900.00.
'

•W••hers •Dryert
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Musl ............ ..

CARPENTER- Nice do~ble wide sitting on 1.86 acres in 1
nice country setting. 4 yrs. old with a 111 car garage, deck,
equipped ki\Chen, fenced yard and many other mce features. BARGAIN $32,500.00.
.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SElVICE
985-3561

HEIIRY·£. CLEIAN D... :...................................992-6191

Wo Service All Maku

1122118/tfft

Authorized Sonic•

Homtllte
Jacobian

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Mldtlleport, Ohio

992·6611

Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servid
CJ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

:!!: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

I&amp;J (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104 .I: 417 Second Avenue. Boll1213
! Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or
Veterans Memorial Hos,pital
: Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,

LOTSA POP
•
:
•
•

24

z·$329

120
CANS
Limit 1 Case Per Customer. •
Good at Powell's SuperValu Only.
Good Sun, Sept. 4, thru Sat.. Sept.10

.
-

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL

PAK

99&lt;

PURESWEET SUGAR
4 Ll.

BAG

99&lt;

Limit 1 Per Customer•.
Good Only At Powell's $u~r Valu.
Good Sun.. Sept. 4 thru Set., Sept. 10

CHEER

DETERGENT
720Z.
BOX

$279

Limit 1 Ptr Cu.tom•.
• , Good Only At Powtll's SuD« Vtlu.
• "Good Sun., Sept. 4 thru Set., Sept.10 . .

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons end remodefing
-Roofing and gutter work
-Conaete work
- Plumbing •nd electriC:el

SAND-GRAVEL

LIMESTON-E
Fl LL DIRT
985·4487

wook
iFf\EE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-731.4
Pomeroy, Ohio

' 8-1·1 mo. pd.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969
haler fM'

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8.7 Financing on Y•dmen
Service on All Malcoo
Wo H - MC/Ditc/VIsa
9-1·11-lln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"A I Rtasonoltle Prkes"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949·2860
bay or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Ho1101 Budt
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO .SUNDAY CAW

7-13-'88· tin

To t good home- 2 mo. old
pu...,, 'h tmell Beagle II 1h

ch.-.. Call

~14-448·3413.

PuppiBI to give away to good
home. 2 mile, 2 female. 8 wkl.

old. 814· 985-4140.

BOGGS

Billett Hound end Collie Dog,

304-e75-1853.

Blacll hlllf Cock• Sp.nial, 6
months old, mtlt. phone 3.04-

875-8087.

S3S

PER LOAO
OELIYERIO

BILL SLACK
992-2269

......tift

LOST: In Cldmua-Weterloo

Authorized John
0 - e,' New Holland,
Buoh Hog Form
Equ lpmont Doalor

Lost. O.lldaJohnDeereTrtctor.
Dullly St. on way to Po1t Oflloe
T'*. morning. 814-992-5175.

Fir• E••IP•••t

LOST, 2 VII• old female ell, At.
2 Ftatrock 1r1a. Mondll¥' Aug.

22. bl.ck whti white feet.
itorNctl and •pl•shed on face, if
found ell 114-441-1&amp;30 Or
448-5180, REWARD.

ACOUmCAL CE1UNGS
mEE ESTIMATES
ReM onoble Rateo

56 SIAIE ST • .
GALUPOUS, OH.
446-3487 .
11111a

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction
I

Rick Pe-.on Auctio,._., II·
~IJIN OhJo and Welt Vlr~nl1 .
Estatt. Jntlqut, f•m. liquidation . . . . 304-n3-5786.

9

Wanted To Buy

We PlY c•h for late model d8lltl
llled ....
Jim Mink Ch.... ot•lnc.
IHI Gent JohniOI'I

et 4-44&amp;-3e72

TOP CASH pold for '83 modot

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

OW18'/operlt0f', fleet OWnetll
weloomel Long / short _ha~l
mowem..,ts, AequirH 23 yre.
old. 2yfl. OTRexparience. Have
good MVR. poiiOd DOT phyoi·
cal. Termhwl peyl You buy
permits flr11 Y'•· we replac11

second ve•l E~ellent beneftt1.
1 - 800-999- 5150 USIWV
Wert ft.

AVON-Need 5 ladi• to Setl
Avon. Call 814-448-3368.
OiriiCior of Phylical Therapy.
VBterens M11morlal Hospital.

.,_

5857.

Get

peid for reading books!
f100.00 per title. Wr·tla! Pu•
F1538. 111 S . Uncol.,..-yo, Ni
AurOra, II. 80542.

AVON • All trllll, Call Marilyn

Wa-r 304-882·28 46.
AVON , 111 anasll Shirley
Spll8fs.

304-875-1429 .

CHARGE NURSE

C••

f~lky loeat~ inPoint~e-nt.

wva il .aeking • regiatered
nurae to ... wn11 the ~tl• ol
ful-time ch.-ge nul'l8. This
position it open Immediately,
call Kathy Thornton at :l04-l!i755236. Pl..unt V•llev Nllrtlng
Cere C...ter it en eqwt OPI)Or·
tunlty employe;r 1nd affirmH:ive
action employer.

12

...

Situations
Wanted

Will cere lor elderly ma1 or
woman in our hoi'IW. 614-992·

8515.

Govarnment Jobs. $16,040·
619,230 ¥1•· Now hiring. Your
•n. 805-187-l!iOOO Ext. R·
9805forcurrent FedaNIIist.

Will c.e lor etd•tv man or
women In my homu. 19 yrs.
eJt:perl..,ce. Tupper~ ptelnsarea.
CAll 614-687-3402 lr1Y 11me.

Job hunting? Need • 111111 We
train people lor , )obi •• Auto
Mechanics. Carpenters. Co•rnetologlsto, Diverolfiod Modicol
Work1r1. Btcf;rid~~tl. Food S•·
wice Workers, Electronics Tech·
nlci-. lndu•trilll Milin•nanca
Worken, Nurslrig A•istllnllln d
Orderll•. Machinilts. Office
Worker• and Wltlders. Regl1t11tr
now for eta~ ... beginning October 3rd. Call Trt-CountyVoca·
tlonll Adu tt Center at 7&amp;3-3611
ut. 14. A variety of fU nlllng
•oun:a to ~ for training are
evailabl11 for thollt ttllglbl11.

13

Homemak. . earn over f10 per
hour part time. Ettrn frMt He"

.;

Prudential Rnendal SaMe.
career oppartunltr for qualified
lndtviUI With bulinetl •I• or
teaching experience. SalifY n•
gotieble. Send rftuml to P.O .
Box 2201. Huntington, WVa.
26722.
nllngul

FlriWood on 1h.,. balls. Lind
timbered . .ty ..,mg. Cell 814246-5491 or 241-&amp;849.

45 Olhlo St. GIMipclo. Oh.
Reg«dhlg Overbrook Center.

_,.

Pleastnt Vallev Hurting
Center, 1QO bed tkilled nurting

Coli 814-992·21 04 ask l&lt;!r
Den itt.

Insurance

--------~

Cell us lor your mobile hame
Insurance~ Miller lnturenee,
304-882-2145. Also: auto,
ho,., lift. h8ahh.

16

Schools
lnstru ction
RE·TRAIN NOW!

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEGE. 529 Jackson Pike.
Ohio lnl1ru:tlontl Grant Deadline Aug. 19. Call 446-4367.
Rag. No. 88·1 1·1065B.

.
,•

1 B Wantad to Do
Painting Ia roofing II c•pentry
work by th11 hour or job. Call

814-379-2416.

·~

Dorer a Backhoe Work·850
C.••
dorw. Ae•on.ble ratea.
Experl'"ce
Crem..,.
o~tor.

Coni!. Clll e14-268-1718.

Will do babv littlng in my home .
Cltv Hn:th•. Have ref..ncet. Call

e14-44&amp;- 13e2.

Y•d cere, brulh. rutting, light
ha~ling,tometreetrimmlngand

remo'lll. Bill Slack 814-9922 289 evenings.
Wll do env odd 1jobt clll Rick or

Allly, 304-882·3672 •• 304-'
773-5046 oftor 5:00 PM.

delivering or collecting.. no han·

&lt;ling or Mtvlce charge. Over
IOODyn~~~mlchems. To_ys. Gifts.
Home decor and Ouiatmas
Decor. Far frH catelog call
Frlendty Home Partl• 1-800.

Wll do houllt and office cl•n·
ing, lau1dry, per1onll e•e.
304--875-3964 Ilk for Barb.

·......Galli polis......... ·

VerylargeSale-Bunk"di.IOfe. ·
chest &amp; other hou• hold item..
bicycles, p. u.topper, Iota of nice
clothing. &amp; misc. Items. B.
Wooldrldge-4 rhl. N. of Holnr on
Hwy . 180. Thuns. &amp; Fri. 9-5.

..

Retiable moth• will b•bv lit In

· ~my:;:h:o:.,.:·:30=4-:8:75-:3:6:0:7.=:.
I·l:22:7:·1:5:10=·=====~

&amp; Vicinity
lull., Wed., &amp; Thurs. 2Vt mil•
east of Porter-At. 654. Kids
Clothel-2·12, clothel, coats, a
mlac.
·
8 Famity-Tuel. thru Fri. 9 to 15.
123 Fourth Ave. Bicycle,
clothet, home Int. &amp; meny ather
ttemt.

and ,...,. u..t c... Sr'nllh

luldl·""""
... 1911
-·
.......
Ootlipotlo,
c.n e14·44&amp;.

Oarllge Sale- 1!141 Fourth Ave . '
9-4. Thurs. Frt.

Sept. !t-9. 2 miln oH Tr . 7.
Flatwoods Rd. Sovs clothes,
je•ns, houtehold ltema. maternity clothes.

mM81·MIII CI'Hk Rd. lota toys,
clothing! etc . .Rain / Shine.

F'IVe family gareg11 •le. 7. 8. 9 .

wim.r clothing in ~riout t1111,
tcws. houtehold and menr more

ttemsl
4 FlmDI•·Sapt. 8 &amp; 9. 459
Larlet Or., acroa from Fair·
grOtJnds. 9-4. If rein on beck
porch.

Church Y.n:l Sal•'4 mi. out St.
Rt. 211. Thur1 .. Fri. II s.t. 9 to
II. Rein or Shine.
Carport Sal• 43 C.ntral Ave.
Tllu11. • Fri.-Sept. 8 • 9. 9 tc 4.

flon:l\. Y•d Soi•S.,t. 8. 9 .
Women-men-children coats .
1hi:MI. Lae jeanl; pota .. pans.

rug~. NelgflborhOod f;'d.

.

Yord 811•1038 Soconct Avo.·
801&gt;1. 8. 9. I 0.

Comptm houiOholdl of "'""'

wlndDWI, furntlu ... tclndlawood
woodttaw. 4 mil• aut Bulwll11
Rd. Thu11•• F~.

e t 4-4411-31111.

Wont to buy: UoodlumttuN Mid
antlljuH. Will buy ontn hou•
hold fumtohlng.
Wolfoo
.._. 114-2411-8182.

_1.,

Sept:. 8 -9 . Allen Jacks rH . New
Hope Rd. ~ester. 0 . Chlldrens.

2Femilv·Sept . 8. 9,10. 8·4. 2'h

2 mil• from 141 on Neighbor·
hood Rd. Thurs .. Fri., II Sat.-

Yard S•l• for ~ttlfont-AIIprox.
20 lomlltto. Clrltonllrf Townho-. Frl.·9 til 5. Sot. · 9 till ?

..

,

womens . mant clothing. Bicycles. heating atove. Clarinet,
Trumpet. cam per.

a

'

Sept. 6·1 0 . Behind Cro11· stor11
Racine. Tupptfwere. 11ble aw,
TV ltand, avon bottiH, utility

Wed., Thurs., Fri., Georges
CtHk • Buttvltle Rd., 3rd house
on left aboVe Baptl11 church.
Clo1'"ng. tool I . ...

TWo i'omilv·boys&amp; glrllclothoo.

• -ion.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
..... ........ " ' .............. ..

c••·

2282.

tura a antiiiUII. AIIO wood •
oolll '-tel's. lwaJn•• Fumttu,.
1lllrd • 01....

···--"Pomero'i ........ ..

Moving S.I•Uncoln Pike. first
hou•·right after croa1 bridge at
Northup. S11pt. 7,8,9. 9-7

SI1&gt;t. B. 9. 10. Good fait and

c-pl•to Drywal
S.wlce

Oewlin11 Fletbed Div. laail'!g

Hard of he•lng very gentle mtlll
blackCock•Sp.,lal, pure breed
not ... loto&lt;od. 304-882-3t04.

clothm&amp; for

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

Ambitious 1811 s1arterS needed
to dumon.U,tll Hou1111 of lloyd
tor• &amp; candl•. Work own hour1.
Free • 300 kit. No ln\MIJitment
al1o Booking Pertill. Calll14448-8697.
.

QUILTERS
,
Earn 1100.·t160. a quitt,
working at your ho,.. at your
own speed. We supply f\e top
ai.n11dy pieced and 8VIIf'Y1hing
else except the needle. Call
Holly Hill Inn for mate
Information. Call 014-992·

Old hou... to ••• down for
.,mber, 304-87!;.5578.

Lost: Rt. 33. Roclc1prings ar8a.
Oolden RetiMr whh choW
chain collw. 114:-992-7612.

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

d•lls.

. . .gy. 814-992·2802.

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821

1-3-'16- Itt

Hair Stytitlt. Aero~ The Street
styling Nlon is •tkino o"'
•dditklnal •tvlitt who il looldng
for more lh.. just anothM' job.
Call Terri at 8f4-448-9510 for

Nine month old Beegle. Sm.-t.

. U. S. RT. 50 EAST

P1rt1 &amp; Serwl..

4 t07 or 448-8847.

good watctl dog. pteyful. Lots of

arta. Mala Red Chow . Rewtrd.
Clll 114-379·2730 or 3792212.

FIREWOOD

.

million up to 25 per cnt.
Highatt Hotllll ewardt. No

SALES &amp; SERVICE

1·121 ·~

Mlddlepon._ Call Sc.o" •• The
Sentinel Office et 614-992·

wail an trip. Free tNinlng. Com-

SECOND Tl.
AROUND SHOP
children .

paper CM"ri•, Rou:tet open in

To give OWIY·8 wb. old full

6 Lost and Found

Hours 10-4
heninp by Appointment
2 miiH toward Albany on
SR 681.
992-5083

11 Help Wanted

Peklngea:e, mahogany color l!l
1oft haired. c.a 81._448-2045.
blooded 881gle pup. 2 reclinll'

Babfshtltr NBdHior2 chilchfl .
Aft•noon ahllt. Call 814-448-

&amp;t4-949-2 toe or 814-9492819.

Serv1cr:s

A

814-448-4982.

Help Wanted

Someon11 to Uw with elderly
p ... on. V-vlghthouoakooplng.

Emwluyment

Go theWIV oft he hl·•d'l future.
The Eleclronics S.-vtcing pro11 nou 11 ce 111 e111s
gram at thll Adu It Education
Canter·-Tri-County Vocatlo1111l
School will tl"'ln you lor jobs In
3 Announcemanta
servldng and malnwnance of
electronic equipment. We haw
monies anllahle to pay lor
No need for a horne p•man.nt· trelning lor ellalble appllceotl.
·... coma to th11 pral••nll• at , Cell 753-3&amp;11 ext . 14 to
FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS . reglater for ct•.n beginning
Parrr11 ere priced from •19.99to October ·3rd .
t39.99 complete! You nwer
An outrtanclng ni!IW 100 bed
need an appointment. 322 $•
cond A~.• tcrottfrom the park. long twm c•• facfflry soon to
open in Mlddfeport. Ohio offen
814-448-9162.
the folowlng mM&amp;gement o~
porturWtiel. Director of admit·
skins. dlriCior af ac:tlviti11. book
4
Giveaway
keeper. hou• keeping •n d
lauMiry a~pervisor. Bring a com·
pletad rtt1001a and apply at
Free puppt•-Raccoon Ad. Call Burea~ af Employment Senrice.

3-ll·lln

JEAN TRUSS£LL ............................................949-2&amp;60

OOniE TUINER ............................................992-5692
lRACY RIFFLE ..... :.........................................949-2107
JO HILL ........................................................ 91~
OFFICE .........................................................992-2259

YOUNG'S

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

3-30.'17 tin

Gently used
conSiJnment

614-982·58~7.

OWNER/OPERATOR

White lerneie cat. Blue eyes.
CAI814-742·2328.

REPAIIl

QUILTS
C.sh a-Id 1m' ~ltt1 . Pre
19150'•· Pleeod. apptiquod.
unutUII-anr condition. Call

Part·llm11 Registered X- ray
.T eehnldan. V•led hou,_ No
w.ek.-.ds, eell. ~r holldaye.
API&gt;IV ., tho Medical Plazo 20 3
Jeck1on Pike. Gallipolis bet'Ni!ten 8 ;30-15 PM.

H6·86-tm

Briggs&amp; •'"'"
Stratton
Tacumaeh
Weed Eater

CALL 992-6756
•

Lt.ND 0' LAKES IN~IVIDUAL

1115/~n

SYRACUSE. OHIO

Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

•

2°/o Milk ............:~•.·$149

Call 992-2772

SMALL ENCINE

All Major~ Minor

•

BROUGHTON'S

' Free Estimates

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicle~
A/C Service

White Potatoes •••••

Blown Insulation
Storm Qoo!'S &amp;
Windows

10·8·1fc

•

•

Windows

·

2166.

. PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

992-2221 .. 992-9922

DfNNY CONGO

69(

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

Service Coot• lor lpn
Products

••.

U.S. NO. 1-'10.LB. BAG

MARCUM CONTRACTING

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

CM. . . cendiRid with this

-

Re~lacement

3158

EARN "EXTRA MONEY during
the Summet". Get out oi the
hou•. become a Dally Sentinel

: SUPEI IAIIE DUllS :

Sorry, •• ..ltwy • othr

.

'lfutter

..,... bolngpold. Clll e14-448-

698~6121

Located Holfwl't
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bahen.

~ or lot ..,

$

.

CARPENID, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

·:!~~~
l'i• ..~~!»:.~~~-=
Only •

•

.
19
Meats •••• ~~•• . 1

.

2 Linc_
o1n 1orrace

1·3·11·1 ,... pd

LB

~......

TAnoos &amp;¥ st~ey
P-oroy, Ohio

:CHICKEN

CHICKEN

Seamless

992-6857'

.

VHS TAPE
Ltt u~ COIMI't thosaoldMowieJ
&amp; !li. . ov., to easy VHS •
CAll AMY CAIITBt
or IOI'S IJICTRONICS
44&amp;·7,390

J&amp;L

992-6513 or 992-7509

Drumsticks •••• ~~ •••••• 89(
Thighs ............ ·69(

MOVIES &amp; SUDIS to

1112tJHfc

. LB.

_

l"'m

pi.ce
or •nth,
houtehokl,
Furnitunt
•nd eppHJncet
by 'F•lr
the

·. Wes1, Bruneo, A&amp;hley
WE TRADE

LOWEST PRICES

11'

Wanted To Buy

Featuring.: Con1olidated, Duleh

~

Win one of the 16
popular Supermarket
Product• on the
Instant Winner Ga'me
Piece*
*Winners receive $1, $6 o•
one of sixteen products aa
indicated on winning game
piece.

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

c-

Win $1 or $5 in the
Instant Winner Game
Win up to $100 in the
Bingo Game · ·

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Public Notice
information contained in thl
epplicltion and the affida~
vits submitted by the appll.

'I

9

3

Nllt:e Wise

11111 ••

RUtland.

Porth tala Sept. 8 . 241 Lincoln
St., Middleport . 2 matching
beigecr,alrl, 1 brown chair. mise
items. Anna Ellis.
Gar11ge •le. Corner of Lauref
an dArt lewis (ptum) St. Middleport. Thur. Sept. 8 onty.
4 family yard ..... Elm St. In
Racln11. Sept. 7 ,8,9. 9 till 4p.m .
Home Int. Knlc*·Knack,, curtains, 1pnttd1, adu It In d Infant
clothing. ·

.. .....Pt'PTeiisiii:it ......
&amp; Vicinity
···-·······-······················

wtndlo•.

t970
12xe&amp; whh :
10x12 add on. Woodburner,
west.randdryw,alroond.mult _,
be moved. 304-89~3102.

Garage s•J-. Sept. 8 and 9. 303
Seventh Strllt. N.w ~en
9•00 till 4:00.
.

Yard S.le, Thura lnd Frldl'f
S~~pt. 8 •nd 9. Ptvmlle ftoact'

Gallipolis l'e"y.

·

·

Yard Sale, 1 01 Jon• St., Thun,
F~. Bot. S11&gt;t. 8.9. 10. H roinln9 .
ctne~lltd. hawe , . , .......

a

Ga.... ate. Sopt. a . 9. to.
2123 M•ple Ave . Bicycle
dr••· bedllftldl, good milO
ltemo.

�Page-14-.The Daily Sentinel
Fmonc1ol
21

Wednesday, ·September 7. 1988

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio
44

LAFF-A-DAY

___ ,..

Busin11111
Opportunity

Apartment
for Rent

54 Misc.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by r...n,- Wrlpt

Merchandise

74

34811.

304-882-28118,

lNG

co. recomm~t~dl1hlt

19M VZ •90. exc cond, 304-

Furnllhod effiMCy, utll-let pol4
downtown Point PleHant,

you

do busin.. with people you

• 250.00. 304-S98-3410.

know. and NOT to aand mo.-.y
through the m.il und you h • •
inYestigllted 1M otferlng.

5 rnll• Dllt Jfwry Aun Roed, 3
bodroom 11&gt;1. 304-578-2380.

&amp;tllbliShed businnl for •••·

Furnished room. 919 · SeCCM'ld

A,. .. Golllpoll. o125 • mo.
Utll11'- polcJ. Slnglomllo. Sh . .
bllh. Col1448-441hflor 7 Pill.

Real Estale

Room~

31

for M1t·wa .. or month.
St:lning at •120 a mo. Glllla

Homes for Sale

1985 Marlette Modullr Horne.
60~~;28 . All eltc1rk:. Cl. 3 BR •• Z
blll:hs. grtrllt room. dining room .
To manv extr. . to list. Must • •

to appraci••·

•fler 5 PM.
Bea.~tiful

Holmrrb Hilt. addl-

tioral lot. 3 BR .. Ca. C.ll
614-448-0338 .

ll•a• lot In
Mercerville.
Pool.
neN
e•pat. Call 814-256-67!52
or
Mo&lt;Lior homo on

AC,

614-245-9020.

•••

"I WIS
' h We COUld h ave JUS
' t

one vacation where he

Pool.

AC ,

n

1000
Ex., extra &amp;lie drtw 310-K.

Attractlw offh::e sutt.. Ve(y
prlwte. Located In downtown

Gollioollo. n5o oor man1h. ea11
61 44 3432
.
4- 8COUNTRY IIIDBILE llomeP.-11.

~~=· ~~.:"'C.r,' ~~3I:

would sit down and relax!"

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

fiN

c .. pet. Call 114-2!UI-B752 or

614-245-9020.

'88 Fll eming, 2 bedroom, 1 bath.
IMJd In 8 months, must sell
Myrtle Drive-3 bedroom. 4 yew 810,000 .00. 30•-876-58•1
old home. garage. fenced level evenings.
stmge builcfing. can
.,erd,
614-446-1988.

2 BR . furnished mobile home.
*1 80a mo. ptutl8e. dep. Ia ref.
Adults only. Send tnqulr5as to:
lox Cia 1 88. c / oo.lllpolia Deity
Trlburw, 82&amp; ThJrd Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 411831 .

1;;:;;:=::;;;:::::=::;:=;::;:::=
Farms
1- - - - - - - 33

for Sale

I- - - - - - - - - -

Ofllco or .... , buoin•• Illite
for '""'· Locoted et N. Second
Ave . In Middlflt)ort busfft••
dlo1riCI . Call 114-949-88411 or
114-149·2216.

1::--:---:-::-::--------

Spacious mobile homa lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
P•k. G.. llpolla Ferry, W. Va.
304-875-3073.

Wlndi-Ron . . 12go...to.. 67
rtbwtthwlnc:hok•llkenew.
U3s Calll14-448-8983.

vent

c-.
achoolyr. 114-742-27110.

304-878-3818.

J"

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

utility room. landllceped nicely . woloh 11 614-698-8001 .

614-992-5761 . 881.500.

Home in country with land for
sale. Call 614-992-!5848.
For sale or tradt for houee In
country with 1 acre (lr more.
Price reduced bv SfSOOO. Nioa. 2
story. 3 bedroom, on pratty
stret. 1 1h bath, full balernent, 2
car garage. near xhools and
shopping. Central heat and air.

862 ~atl St .• Middlaport. 614992-6031 .

2 storyhouSt. 7rooms, 1'1,. bath,
full basement. nBW' wood fur·
naee. mwirod, remodeled. 4. 75
acrfi. Recently surwverl. Mov·
ing. l\1ust sell. 517,500. 614-

for Rent

For •lebyownerapproximltely
39 •ere ~•m locsted 3 milas
from PointPINHm on Sand Hill
Road. 304-875-8787.
74acrelarm, no bull4nga, good
Pllftlft and rural water avail•
ble, price negQtlabla, 304-676·

6365.
74 acre farm. no buildings. good
pasture and rural water avail•
ble, price negotiable, 304-676-

6365.

34

Business
Buildings

Property in Cottagaville W.VA .
with 55~~:79 11 buih:lng. can

304-372-4550. 372-3910.
372-9154.

25 acres Broad Ru~ Road. New
Haven. Ownar financing avail•
ble. 304-882-3394.
.

1.,-----------

Grand ViiiM' Hgts..3 bedroom
home with family room. wood· 4 acres Sand Hill Road, 304burner, 2 acres of land. 458-1041 .
S55,000.00. Shownbyappoint· 1::-:----:-----ment. 304-675-1176.
63 acres. 5 miles to Point
Pleasant, phone 304- 875·
3 bedroom, 2 blflhs, full finished 5018.
basBment .• new furnace &amp;. central air, .garage. fenced yard.
2414 Mt. V&amp;rnon Aw . pt,
Rentals
Pleasant. Priced on lntpeetion.
304-675-1774.

3 bedroom, 2 c• g•aga 3 yrs "4"1,--;H-;-=-:-o-fo-o;R;-:-;told, 9KC co nd, beige with brown
orn&amp;S
r en
trim. T.,lorRoadCampConlftV,
Nicety furni1had small houllt.
call 304-675-6353.
Adu tu only. Ref. required. No
Horse Iovan. beautiful 80 ft pets . Call 614-4.46·0338.
ranch home, 2 b!llhs, 2 s1:one
firep laces, 2 car gllt'aga, barn 3 BR .. 1 bath. 1 c• garage. Nice
and pond. located 51Cffll, hugh yard. Gallipolis area. S276 a mo.
ff!'JOI yard, must see. reduced to Call 814-446-0475 before 5

sell. ssa.ooo.oo. 304-458·

1542.

Pl\o1.

2 BR , unfurnished.. g•age. 1

mile-218. S200 rent. $160dep.
Ref. One child. Call 814-44&amp;-

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

96~6.

19BO Bayview, 14.-78 with
7x21 eJ~Cp.ndo, 2 ful baths. 3
brs. and fireplace. 19J~C20-2 c•

g orage.. setting on 10 acres.

S2S,OOO. Call614-446-8750.

Land contn.ct, large living room
w / expa ndo room , 2 BR ..
w / waU carpel,. air eondidon,
w/ orwithoutfurniture. Nat. gas
furnace on privet&amp; lot. May rtnt
lot. Call 5 to 8 PM, 814- 4461 409.

1 BR . home. 28R . mobilehorM.
Both furnished. t200a mo. C.ll
614-448-4109 or 379-2740.
3 or 4 8R . houte-Eutalca. 1 h
blllhs. S275 a mo. Oep. required. Cell 614· 446-4222 b•
t~Mten 9·6.
1

2 BR cot11g•6 miles out·of Pt.
Pleesant. *200/ month. Call
614-448-4602

NEED•EXTRA ROOM! Big ..v.

Must •II 1 acre land with 12x65

tl'llil er, 1 2 x24edditlon.c.- port.
air. woodburnet'. •tillite dllh.
large front po«:h. 0111614-7422 239 aftar 15:30 p.m.
1 4x 70 Pactt'. 3 btdrf)Om.

1'h
and

bMhl, appliance~. deck
underpennmg. S9,600.00. 304676-2829 elll after 7:00PM.

1981 Nashul 14x70.•,.~,do
7x_21 , 3 bedrooms. 1Y' bsths, 2
porchet . underpennlng. out
buildings. 304-812·2581.

ttorr-.

Furnis'*f apt. 11150. Utlitiet
Pl!id. Share b .. h. SlnQie male.
919 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Call 448-4415 after 7 PM.
Luxurious Tara Townhou•
apartmentt. Elegant 2 ftoon. 2
8A .. full b.. h uJ)Stalra, powd•

room downstairs, CA .. dis·
hwasher, dispo•l. prMite entrance, pri\llte encloted patio.
poot pta,ground. UtUiti• not
incfuded. Starting lit *299 pllf
mo. Call 1114-387-7880.
Furnished ept. New. NearHMC.

1 BR. $286.

U11l~IOII!IIid.

446-4411after 7 PM.

Call

ApanmMU and hou••· Call

304-675-5104.

Furnished apartmiJnt. S226 a
mo. 1 BA . Utillti111 paid. 920

Foruth

Ave., Galllpolia. Call
446-4416 after 7 PM.

3 room ap•rtment. 8100a mo.

c.n 304-87&amp;-5104.

Modern 1 BR . apt.

446·0390.

call

614-

Furntshed 1 BA . ap•rtmantAaeirMt. Utilities. Garage space
included. S 276 a mo. Call
614--992· 7104 after 8 PM.
Nice 2 BR.. 4'1.z miiBI from
Gallipolis. Stow, r8frlg. • wa"hlr
fumshed. 1225 a mo. No pets.

Call 614-448-8038.

Bachelor apartrMnt·Rrat clan.
New furNtun~ , large fireplace.
Must have good ref. &amp;*100dep.
Choice locltlon. Cell 614-446-

1615 or 448-1243.
Small furnished apartment. CentraUylocetad. Suttablefor1 Of2
am..hs. No pets. R_., &amp; .. c. dep.

Call 614-446-0444.
mom

apenments lit Vllage

Manor and Riverside Apart-

Olive St. . Oalllooll.
NEW· 8 pc. wood group-- 1388.
l.Ning room .ultea- 1199-11599.
Bunk bedl with beddln~ 1249.
Full sin matt,... Ia founch•llon
starting99 . Recliners
n.ning- *99.
USED- ledl, dr•aers. bedroom
aultea. Desks, wringer ~tWa her, a
complcrta line of used furniture.
NEW- Wntern boots· • 35.
Worltboot1 $18 Ia up. CSteel &amp;.
1011 tool. Call 114·448-3169 . .

*

County Ar,pllence. Inc. Good
used ,applaneet and TV Mts.
Optn BAM to 8PM. Mon thru

W•het•. drvert. mtJgtretors,
ranges. Skaggs Appllen .:11,
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Creet Motet 814-446·7398.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofaa and ch.eira priced from

1395 to 1995. Tablas *50 and
up to 11215. Hld•a-Mds 1390
to *1595. Recllnert *225 to

Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk

beds eompl... w·mett,.. ...
*29Sand up to 138&amp;. BetJvbeda
*110. Matt,... . orbo•IPI'Inga
ful or twin *18. firm $78, and
*88. Ou•n • • 1250 &amp; up,
King U80. 4 draw• ch•t *89.
OUn cabinet• 8 gun. Blttv
mattresse1 $35 S. 145. Bed
tram.. t20, 130 Ia King fnlme
•so.Good selection of bedroom
sultes, m1111 cabinets. headbollrds no end up to $16.
80 Days Hme u cnh wtth
•pproved credit. 3 Milet out
Buhwlle Ad. Open Bam to &amp;pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 814-4480322.
Valley Furniture
New and uaed furniture end
appllcanees. Cell 814-448·
7672. Hours 9-5.
;J l!o S FURNITURE
1415 Eastern Ave.
4 drawer cheat, $48. 5 draw•
ch•t. t64.86. 6 pc. wooden

dinnetta •ets. • 199.95.

PICKENS USEO RJRNITURE
Complete houeehold furnith ·
lnga, Y, mile out Jarricho.

304-675-1410.

30" elee. rangt-harvtht gold*95. 30" elec. range-evacado
green-8915. 30'' g•r~~ngetop&amp;
bottom own-white- *1&amp;0. G.E.
\IUII!Ist.-t915. \\'hlrlpool dryer195:. Rtfrlg.-hii'Wtt gold frost
free-*9&amp;. Refrlg.-..,lte frost
tree-$96. Refrlg. 2 doOJ-whlte176. Hot water he..•r-30 g.t..
8115. Skaggt Appllartcee. Upper

River Ad , 814-448-7398.

Se•oned oell firewood c•
304-175-~787 aftor

Apenment for rent . 12215 a
month. Oepotlt required. 114992-6724. After 6pm or 992-

5119.

New ty redeaarated ~ertments
available. Utllftl• paid. $2215.
.
. month,dopDiitooqulred.
614-992-8724
Iller 8:00Call
or
.:.
9::.92::.·::.81.:_1_:9_
. -----New 1 bedroom fumished or
unfurnished apanmenu. One In
Porillllroy. one In Middleport.

Call 614-992-5304.

1 bedroom ap. .ment in Middleport. *180. per mortth plus

53

pa••·

Appl•.
grape~, m-.:.1t.neous food tt11m1. DurwOYin
Fruit F•rn-At. 881 southeMt of
Albony. ap., 9-e. C1- Ilion-

RNWood, lruck toed 1plit,

Con-

lll'f. 304-nl-&amp;721 or 773111100.
oppla ,...,. •
plumbo -llile ,_ ..........

I

del~

!II II

Plaetic litters for portable algn
•42.60 box tree ahipping. Off•
ext*es Sept. 10. wva 1-Boo-

ea:plrea

O.rton trail

ma~ter

5923.

CROSS&amp; SONS

MMIIY Ferguaon, New Holl..d.

Buah Hog Ill• • S.'tllca. Over
40 ~Mad tNctort 10 ehoa.e from
• compl• line of new &amp; uaed
equlpnatJ. LM'gMt •lectlon In
S.E. Olllo.

ex:traa. 304-57&amp;-44811.

controts. On 1 NH 3 point 707
chopper .1 row hHd: one NH
model 215 blower; one JCa•n
forage box; one Cobey to,.g1
bo•. Keefn Ser,..ce Center. St.
Rt. 87, '--on, W.Va. Phone

304-895-3874.
for

•Ia. 304-

1

• Deck Mat:erllfs
GuM-anteed OueUty
CETIDE.· INC., Athens-81469 .. 31578

56

Pets for Sale

5808 C.eend loed.-baek hoe

oood cond, 2

buck.._

814-448-3929.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Conn trombo,. wilh c.-. ueed
vory IHtle. VfffY good concltlon.

2

ve•

old Stallion. Call 814-

388-8272

2 Reg. Alpine Blly Golts. 4

Nubln NMnv Goeta. 2 Re .

Alpine Nlnnv GoMa. Call 81

f

Registertd Ch•rolait Bull$1200. Rt,...,ed lll bloodtld

Chi' lui~ I 800. Coll814-38774118.

Hay

814-2151-8230.

Conn Trumpet for ele. *100.

nmothy

1-Wt- Cell 814-379-

rr.msport oiiiHl

Call 814-992-5545 or
514-949-2218.

RED HOT b•gelnal Drug dee!·
••' c . ., boat" • • .-po'd .
Surplus. Your •rea. SuY'Jrt

Guido. (11 806-887-1000. oxt.
8-4882.

28R . MolileHomefor..nt. Call

ping.

•aoo. Call

On.• owner 1981 O.•rolet

118tion Wagon. Good running
concitlonendgood body. &amp;cel-lern work ca-. &amp;1.ootr mil•.

UBIIO. BabHaollldl, 814-9921292.

For • ur• deal on • new or .-d
c•.1ruck or..n. •eKennyBu•

at

Jim Mink Chevrolet·

1985 AV, 28ft. cl ....e Chevy

Sf:rv r:r:s

··

1

B1

72

Truckl

for Sale

1981 Ch.,y Tr..,.. Aloo 1181
Oldl four door. Call 514-985--

3839·

AogersBasem•nt

W-proafing.

·

S\NEEPER end sewing mechine
repalr, pane. and •uiJC)Ii•. Pi ell
· up and delivery, O.VII V•cu""
Cleaner, one half mile up
Oeorgas Creak Rd. C.ll 11444&amp;-0294
;

Concme Sop1k: TMika · 10oQ
gal.. 1500gal. and .Jet Aeration
system. Fectory train_. _..1r

ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·PRISES, Jades on. Ohio. 1· 8QO.

.

L~RLJED

8288.

to crack transatlantic case.

13LJT ,26MEMBERS
RcSiqNI:D.

Plumbing
Heating

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Gtlllpollo. Ohio

Phone 814-448-3888 or 814448-4477

U,300.00, 304-888-!189.

1978 01taun pld&lt;up t800.00.
good cond. 304-875-2032.
Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

B4

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

.,

BARNEY
CAN YOU EAT
SUPPER OVER
AT MY HOUSE
TONIGHT,
JUGHAID? /

NAW·- l GOT TO

STAY HOME AN' DO

HOMEWORK!!

MAW'S BAKIN'

A BODACIOUS
APPLE PIE !!

__

Dodge ,_,, Van, AC, cruise.
Reaeonable. Calli 114-448-'

7025.

1984 ll&lt;onoo II XLT 4x4. V·6.

bcol. aand. Cllll 114-387-0531
or 448-1092.

General Hauling

e w w m a w ~m

m1121 liS News

Oil(ard Water Service : P.oolt.
Cisttrna. Wells. O.IMwv •nytlme. Call 814-448-7404-No

()) Monater Truck Challenge
Serlaa From Stafford. CT (T)
(!)Sign Off
Glllll Love Connaction
II)) Moneyllno
ilJl Twilight Zona Nightmare
as a Child
1!J Hitchcock Prwnnta
13 You Can Be a Star
11:30 D (2) 11!1 Tonight Show
()) SportaCenter (L)

Su ndav calls.

J &amp; J W. .r Slt'vlce. Swimming
pooiL cisterna. ..,..Is. Ph. 614-

245-9285.

A &amp; A Water Service. Poal1,

cisterns , wells . Immediate·
1,000 or 2.000gallonade1Mtry .

Call 304-875-1370.

1978 Plym- win- von.
• uoo.oo. 304-878-8421.
1871 Jeep CJI, lot1 of atms,

*1.800.00. 304-878-1703.
74

Motor c:vcles

Water delivery. 1000 gallo~s.

Water Hauling
reuoneblt ratet, lmmedlat~
2, 000 gallon deUvery , claterna.
pools, well. ate. ell 304-576-

dallwry. 304-578-2311 or
l al14-448-40IMI.

2919.

Plltrick's Wlttr H-..Rng. 2 OOQ

Patrick's WMer HM111ng.

87

:z 000

Upholstery

•vln~
., The•t

MoWNy's Uphotaterlng

trloountyarea23.,_ •
In furniture uiJholsterlng Call
304·171 - 4154 for · .,. .

•ltltnltH.

.• [)) NewlfW"1O.me

aJ Spona ' f OllllJ~l
e1121 CIS Spoi'liliSpactet

PEANUTS

U.S. Open Tannls highlights

.COULO '(OU 6E
MORE PACIFIC?

!HI Tflllllllr John, M.ll. Pilot
I!J lllpllde

8 AIHI'ICIO Mapzlnll
12:00CD ....... CliMe
(j) lpllcMIJ Amerlcll

'

I

:

J" 1

-

I

RHEE NT
was-?"
r-r~-'r~&lt;6::.,1..=,....:.;-1-'-rl-l G) Comp lete ti-le cn~.~ckle

I

. .....J.
L.-.1..-.1..--.I..-..L.-L.

quoted

by fill ing in the missing words
you de... elop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Eighty - Inapt - Frown - Versus - SHIFTS
The new reporter saw dozens of pollee officers milling out·
side an old building. " What is going on here?" he bfurted.
"Not much," said an officer, "we're changing SHIFTS."

BRIDGE

t-~U

NOKI'JI
.105

•to
.KQH883
.AKQ

James Jacoby

Signal takes.on
new meaning

EAST
.K18U

. WEST

+AJ6
. .766

•ueu

tto t

H
.64

2
· ·J1098

By James Jacoby

SOUTH
How would you bid the East hand?
.Q?S
U you were playing slandard methods,
.AQJZ
you would overcall North's one diamond with one spade and hope that
.7 531
you would have an opportunity at a ·
Vulnerable: Neither
convenient level to mention hearts latDealer: North
er. U you and your partner were play·
lng a convention called the Michaels W.ot
Nortli Eul
·cue-bid, you could bid two diamonds
It
Dbl.
over one dlamood, not to Ioree to Pass
3NT Paa
game but to show 5-5 In the majors Pass
without too much in the way of high
~niB. In the 194Z ...tting of "Murder ·
Opening lead: J ·
at the Bridge Table." East made a
takeout double and South arrived in 1:----::-:---:~----:-:----...1
three no-trump.
long suit to give coant (low from 111
The opening lead was won in dum- odd number of canis, hiCb from -~
my and the king of diamonds was led. the situatloo cbangea wben It II ob¥1·
Of course East won and proceeded to ous that partner cannot make of
lead hearts for no reason except that such information. West b8d tile oppardummy bad only the single heart 10 tunlty to II)Bke a dramatic "11111-pl'lfbut had tile 10-5 of spades. Was there erence• play by playiag the dJ•DMWI
any way for him to koow which suit to 10 when East won tlle«ee. Eut -'d
lead? Yes indeed. Although it's stan- then play a spade llld the defeaden
derd practice for a defender with an would take five quiet trlcb Ia that
inconsequential holding in dummy's suit to beat the coatnct two trtcU.

.75

+

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

2

-1

Brolin

1 Specter
TV show
6 Newsman 3 City in
Donaldson
24 Down
9 Assembly 4 Dolores
of witches
-Rio
10 Acclaim
5 Beseech
12 Slanting
6 Food fish
13 Parcel out 7 Indian
15 Brooks
mulbeny
of comedy 8 Famous
16 Carmine
soprano
18Combat
11 Find
pilot ·
14 Basic
25 Individual 33 Sidetrack
19 Gary ·
belief
26 Extraction 34 Means
of golf
17 Go wrong 27 Eat away 36 Rebuff
21 "Brandy 20 Lunar, e.g. 29 New
39 Tokyo's
•
23 Nomadize
Guinea
old name
22 Attention 24 NATO
town
41 Voice
23 Surf noise
country 32 Stupefy
(Lat)
24 Nursery
·
rhyme
name
27 Envy
28Gaze
29Mauna 30 Branch
31 Fleet of
1588
35 Equal
(pref.)

36 Sun. talk
37 British
princess
38 Original
40 Egg-shaped
42 Nothing,
in 24 Down
43 Baker's44 Slice off
45 Put out

DOWN

1 Rapscallion
DAU.Y CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work it:

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lengtb and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE
9·7
QKZWZ
Q K I Q

ELQ

YU

I

UKIBZU
N Z

-H Y F Y S Y Q M
Z SHU

VLW

KZXB

T IS

EM

Berltl From Gardena, CA (T)

al=~t;l

e (J) lntert8inment Tonight
el!ll Twilight z-

OiNeweNIIIht
-~~~ Clllete Movie

•NellwlleNow .
12::10e a&gt; as ~.me Night with
IIIWI~n

II

t

Mom to young son: "Your friend
had an operation tor appendichis and
.
.
.
.
it wasn ' t even his appendix." Wid•
.----------------, eyed, the son gasped, "Then -

e

w..terson's

1113 Hondo 10 3 whollor•JOG. Ge-o.t· 1 mo. ald. niiW·

1078.

(i)ChHI'I
11) E11tenllerw
(J) Nighlllne 1;1
Ill! Mlgnum, P.l.

ReMonabte prices. Immediate
dol .... ry . Col1814-992-5275"

gal dollwry. 304-178-2311 or
8 14-44&amp;-4oae.
,

1880 Honda l n - o. One

marketeers after mortar
must rescue Susan Profitt '

175-1766.
85

Firing Line Special
Debate Are right wing
diplomats better equipped to
deal with the Soviets? (NA)
1m til 1121 The Equalizer The
Equallzar is called when a
parote·e wages a campaign or
terra•. (R)
•
II)) Larry King Llvel
9:30 (j) Bowling Speclel Team
USA Bowldown lrom
Melbourne, FL (T)
CiJ CJ (J) Step Maxwell
Story Judy lalls for a lighter
pilot: Annie points large
pistol at Slap. (R) Q
13 New Country
10:00 CD 700 Club
ri1 CJ (J) China Beach KC
and Cherry confront black

from kidnappers. (AI
4811ll Bemey Miller
II)) Evening Newa
13 Crook and Chaae
10:30 (I) Major League Baseball
•!Ill Odd Couple
ilJ!Newa
13 VldeoCountry
11 :00 CD Remington Steele

114-36 7·0814.
1971 Dodge W1 eo Po-r
Waooo. 4 WD .. 4 opd. 1977

TELL HER
TO BAKE IT
OVER HERE !!

W~

attack. (A) C
IIIJ 1111121 Wlaeguy Vinnie

Reeidentill or COI'T"m8rcial wirIng. New service or repaln.
Ucen•d electrieiM. Ettlmete
fr:ee. Ridenour Electricat, 304-

ow.-. UlteMI!IIt. Cell814-••e.

J-lloa'o.AI-1*~. eu

I DON'T THINK I CAN AFFORD
TO HOL.DANY MCPE
MEMBERSHIP DRIVES .

&amp;

•

a

'60s. Dennis stages a

houM call ....-vicing GE, Hot
Point,· wash••· drver• and
stove.. 304-57$.2398.
;,

CARTER'S PWIIIBING
ANDHEIITING

CiJ CJ()) ABC Newat;J
11) Body Electric
(!) Nlghtiy Bualnaaa Rapott
1m ~ CBS Nowa
Ill !Ill WKRP In Cincinnati
II)) lnakle Polillca '88
IBI Jefleraona
13 You Can Be a Star
6:35 (I) Andy Gllltltll
7:00 CD Remington Steele
II CD PM Magazine ·
()) SpomCenter (L)
()) II (J) Curnnt Aflelr
l1l (!) MocNell/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
IIIJ Cll ~ 1111 Wheal of
Fortuna 1;1
ID !Ill Three'e Company
II)) Moneyline
181 Benton
IIJ Chock It Outi
13 Crook end Chaaa
7:05 (I) 110 5
7:30 II (2) Hollywood Square•
()) Scholaallc Spotta
Amerlcl Special Summer in
Germany: Season Premiere
(1) Entenalnmenl Tonight
(J) Judge
IIIJ 1111121 1111 Jeopardy! 1;1
.!Ill M'A'S'H
II)) Croa•llre
® Beaebeli
I!J P"'teaalonal Tennis

demoostration.(R) 1;1
9:00 CD The Blue and tho Grey,
Pan 6 (NAI(1:00) '
II (2) 11!1 MOVIE: 'I Married
a Centerfold' NBC Movie of
tho WHk(NAI
CiJ CJ (J) Hoopennan Harry
and pint-sized English P .l. lry

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,

long or lhort. no rult. 304-175-

~II

•!Ill Happy Daya

Ill

LIKE. VWSUF

Rotary or cable tool drfltln9.
Most 'NIItacomplated same day".
Pump aal• •d .-vice. 304-

Pick up bedl. Ford Chevrolet.

I

--.FS_A:.;-:B;....,;:O;_::Si.--11
5

Pan2

6:30 IJ) Billiards women's World
Open 9-Bali Championship
from Lis Vegas: Final (TJ
CiJ CJ (J) Held of the Claeo
Alter lesson on the rebellious

Ftttv Tree Tri,.,lng.. IJtump
ramOWII. Call 304-875-133"1 ..

187e-COr1o. P&amp; Pl.11t,
powwr wlnclllwe. AM·FM-Caee.
Coll814-448-401&amp;

l o - A..... Ollllpoilo. 1144441-1172.

1D

304-878-2398 or 614-446.
2464.
'

1-:----------..:...

Mot,.._NI• Mldio1~ of
1rMII I rnlldlum o.. from
c.wll. . 16 • • Cerlos to

.,,,

AON'S Televitlon Service:
Hou• caNs on RCA, Ouazar,
CJE. Speci~ng in Zenll:h. cat•

Clll 814-4411-4031 •21e firm.

3718. E.O.H.

...

I~RtJALLY

Exterior.

oaln
(for-~~- -•alfor.
Coli 814-448-3811 .......

bMkl Md oohoall. For

...

&amp; MEEK.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES&gt;
Soptk: 1onk pumplnlt 110 P'l!
lood. Coli 1-I00-537-9528. .
Painting: 1 Interior •

TAWIA

I

(!)Dr. Who The Silurians ,

7:36 (I) Sanford and Son
8:00 CD The Blue and tho Gray,
Pan 5(NAI (1 :00)
II (2) 11!1 Geotge Schlaller'e
Funny People
(j) Golden Link: Great
Olymplena Bruce Jenner and
Bob Malhlas
CiJ CJ (J) Growing Paine AI
Mike 's graduation, the family
reminisces about his
esCaj)lldes. (R) C
11) (!) The lnllnRe Voyoge
Leam how our ancient
Siberian forebears came to
North America. (NAI 1;1
1m Billy Graham
m [)) MOVIE: American
Jillilco (AI(1 :37)
II)) PrlmeNewa
1111121 Billy Graham Cruaade
13 NllhYllle Now
8:05 (I) Cleoh ollhe Champions

...THEY WILL NO
... BUT INSTE"''&gt; OF
I'IICING THE ROIIOTS,
MY PEOPLE W1l~
DISIISSEMBLE THEM!

1-814-237-0418. dll'f or night.

537-9828.

I I I II I

2 .;...::.I,;.....:1
3 ~I ;
1--,;.-:1

()) Sponol.ook
11) Degr111i Junior High
Themes: Bullying, peer
pressure, faCing mistakeS
and responsibilliv. 1;1

~lcleoCounlry

87118.

-· ••s. -·

efter 2 PM, 814-448-0127.
1978 Ao .. mont mobile
Downlown modern 1 bedroom
14x70, 3bedroorne. Mlt.M" and
dryer. 1ir cand, liM .. d ret. 2 BR . mobHehome. t300amo. fP1. furnltllod. air oond. Carte.ooo.oo negotllble. 304- Ref. I dop. roqulrocl. Col o•d. Callllftor 4:00. 304-87881 4-44&amp;-7282.
3788.
895-3427 or 304-87&amp;-eeoe.

~ · -..-:~-""!!--

Free eat hneln. Call co llact

82

1988 818 OIIIC 4 WD Jimmy.
v-e. 2.1 - · loodod. 1e.ooo
mil• 114,100. Call 814-2411122.

mo•informnloncllf 304-812·

ev~s oFF
iHt Gl/&lt;l.$.

tH. Locll .efennces furnlaht~

18121lotaun ~Ina Cab. 51.000
mRes. ltuo. Pl. PI, re• window
defogg•. nice truck. 304-875-

MY

,

302 ..., dlrd. Call 814- 742~

2791.

~--.. X COULPN'i TAjc;f

Unconditional Ufellme gueranJ

Ale . . Tree Trimming and StumP.
Aerl't()WI. free Htirnal81. C.JI
30 4-17&amp;--7121 .

7
11~1~3~F~or-.~,-1-e-o.-u.--~--T-r~--k.

CECAU.&gt;E

ALLEY OOP

BASEIIIENT
WATERPROOFING

Tree &amp; ltllnp temowl, stone;
muk:tt. topaotl. thede • 1hnb1.
Dump truck for .We. Don'•
t.ndacapea, t14-448-9848. ··

198401wroletCh.ette CS,air
eond. good oond. 11.800.00.
1978 Colt wagon 13&amp;0.00.
304--458--,1542.

ALG~~~A

MAiH· '&lt;-,~.~\...a!

.Horne
Improvements

1919 Cor.ette, II»CCIKI, blue,

17.000.00. 304-878-7193.

:t /(NOW/ :I FLUNft=EP

INfLUENcE
AgiLI,.Y IN

Fr• •timatn. Cell 114-4488344. ·

1985 Thunderbird, Loaded It

IT SAY&gt; HERE
'(our&lt; HoRMoNe.5 '

eh•fl. loaded wh:h ans. roed

Oldom.,..e. 814-448-3872 or
773-5134

1918 Buld&lt; lllcylork. 4 door. o1x
aylndlr. AC. crullo. tilt. Pl.
Good OOnd. t4400. Coli 114446-0&amp;n.

Furntlhed 2 BR . ca. cable. wt~ter
MW•ae t*d. Fost«'s f'ttobile Wah plc:kupa prowkiMI. MalnteHorne P'1rk. Call 814-441- _,anc• he PYing al011 to lhop..

1102.

1878 Dodge Colt.

814-992-8!119oflar 3:30.

.. to.. CI'Uiel, air, tilt. AM-FM.

4*-

Now accep~lng appladcnw far
2 bedroom epaJ'tfMnta. fuftv
ca-peted. •pi•~. Will• and

1978Buidc.Limlted. PS. PB, AC.
cruiee, elta:rle • • •· Cell814-

ODvernm.rt Seized Vehld•
from 1100. Fonts. Merced•.
Corvette~. Chevy 1, Surplus.
Buyws Guide. (1) 8015-187-

1978 lulalt Wegon. 1177 Urt-

2 bedroom furnWiad epartmMt.
utltt• paid, ..-1.-.c•. Phorw
304-182-25118.

118501111 Cllf:l... Cruller slationw~~gon. tmmecufne condf.
tlan. Fully equipped, VI. ••596.

wheels &amp; size Q tires. Call

'iW

str.... Middleport. Ohio,

•h••· 01595. Cllll 614-9928719.

19118 1MIIy Joop. Now point.
Good top with white tpokl

1181 N•- 200 sx. 4 ctv .. e
oocl .. PW, ,.. - ... AM·F!IIC.tt w I power booater. llleotronio warr*tg dwioe. aun roof,
fuollnj.. -lwooci.U.
kMI. oond.
mlet.
U498. Coli 8141181 of.
t• SPM.

fit

1981 Ford Escort Stationwagon. Fully equipped, Super

'73

~===:::::::::::::::=:_lC;;II;;I~8:1;;4-:9:8:8-:3:5:0:4·===;.J6000Eot.-1018B.
SNAFU® hy Bruce Beattie

1978 Motor horne 22ft. 0. Air

Chevys. Surplus.

'IM F-1&amp;0 Ford 302 engine.
overdrtvl, 1Uionw1fc trMamfs..t
lion. wtthorwll:houttopper, ntd,

&amp; Grain

Artley Flute. Goo'd cond. Call

Lowery Piano. Good cond. Cal

'""""· 304-878-4881.

Seized Vehid•

304-178-11870.

895-3802

71 Auto's For Sale

Coll614-448-7421 .

Oovernmem

175-3641 .

01 5o.oo. 114-88&amp;-5085 or _2_1_28_
....;""..:'"..:"::::.·- - - - 304-736-3023.
.

Buy or Sill. Aiverlna Antique•
1 124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy~
Houra: M.T.W 10a.m. to ISp.m..
Sunday 1 to ep.m. 614-9922628.

Gen .• acetfent cond. low m~ :
..... 304-878-2116.
.

Uvestock

Germen Shepherd puppies,

Musical
Instruments

1983 Ohio. Cutlon Su8-gllnwn. V-8. au1o.. PS. PB.
""·
...... 111t. 70.000 ""'··
E~ecel. thape. Cell 814--245-8095.

IIIUST SELL· 1918 VolklwagM

64

.,.,.,_.,..,t,

FRANK AND ERNEST

;'l'U'"''

golf, am-fm c•l81te, air condition. a speed. Good car. 304--

63

'

7 4 Htri4Pf Sp onter moto.-cycle. ·
'77 M ITA motor home. Phone

o.Wng o8,IOO.OO. 814-992&amp;53S .. 304-175-5332.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
*150. Coli 814-448CFA Persian and Sitm. . ktt· .30211:
e - ten1. AkC Chow puppl-. N•
Himel.,., kltllna. C.ll 814- 7 '¥8• Stanclllrd ._. Mare,
446-3844 aft• 7PM,
Quarter horn Rroodm.-e, Sll¥tr
Covered P•IMie Siddle with
Happy Jack Skin Balm: For acc.sorl•.
Kratching ind gnawing doga 418-1817. eJCc cond. 304and cats. Sooth• lnltatttd slllrt
Contain• no synthetic pyni·
calf Orand Champion
throidsl Bid.veii.Calh Feed J .D. Feed•
Muon County Fair would make
Nonh Produce.
good Bob,- Boof ""'"' prajact.
304-882·2389.
New arrival AKC Bo•er puppl 111•
AeMiy to go ill 15 WHk1. Call

AKC, blk and tan, •ble. good
pedigree, excell~r~t

1ot·17th). Auto tlroa. UI.IIO'

pair. Uaht truck tirel. $115. eeCh:·
New "&amp;oo AMP b•tterie•. :
t25.915. L and l Tire •rn..
33861 Pine Grove Road. A•·

1978 Ford Fairmont. Stroigh16.
$600.. Coli 114-245-

Rooi
canopy, 18.100.00. 304-45111542.

4441-4861.
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breedi ... AII
ttvfet. lams Pet Food De...,,
Julie Webb Ph. 814-441-0231 .

Tlr• lnd banllfiM lltlle IS..,t. l

1.000. C.ll 114-245-

992-5871l

For~ge Equipment
One AC 782 chopper 2 row
huct twoNHII-717choppers 1
row hiNd; two NH718ehopper
1 row heed; OM wh:h electric

=-----'------I Sil-er• w.gone
Concnne biOI;k•· ell . . . . v- d 875-2588.
WESTERN RED CEOAR
• Channel Runic
Md llevolocllop Siding

1122.

DtDON/1-.Y~
VACATION ...

19830idemobile 98 . Motor end

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

tl'8nl.

~-...__,;~~. .MIIilo_..,..,... .

PRIPEZ

111 ~

e

f OOlOOT SAY WH.lJ 1

·

1189 Z 28 Cam.-o. ponlllty
rftt.,.4 3110-194hood. 510 11ft

Call 114-992-1719.

USED NEW HOUAND

278~.

814·448-0988. Robulldlng

u.s. 35 Wett. Jeck.on. Ohio. 842-1081 U1. 5465. ·

lDcul't A:lna. c.tl •nv .. me
e 14-2&amp;11-1739.
·

ordelivtfy. M•on•nd. Gallipolis Block ·co. , 12:Jih Pfne St.,
Goll"'ol~. Ohio. Call 814-448-

nelly lnaJ*:I;ed. l0d8'flgutlrlfft·
tee. We buy transmllalone. Call

,114-288-6461 .

wtih attechmentt 1250.00.

Ruildng Meterials
Block. brick, ..,..., pip•. windows. Un181s ...c. Cl.,da 'Mn·
terL Rio Grande. 0. Call 814245-6121.

Used Transmlulona. All Inter~

cine. Ohio lnw Ptve "PoinU)
814-992-8344.

luy Government leized end
eurplua vahld• from I 100.
Ford1, Chevy~~t Coi'VIttea. etc .,
In your ••a For Info cell 11021

••on.Call814-25&amp;-8011.

I'
upp 188

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

1172 Vol-n. Rail good

cern. 780 Hofl-r. DP Muncy

lAIII

I . POUAN

~ Action Cycle Spon Series

transi'YIInkm. 304-773-15851 . ,

condition. Call 114--448-8799.

WOlD

(R)

1 Ill.. Trana-.lm. V·B.croufire
injiiiiOn, auto.. ,.~ krtarlor,

•-- . loodod. 25.000 mn-.
aa.a?e ftrrn. Call 814-4464031
1187 Dodgo .. _
_ ... ~ ...
1110 Dodao OliO 4WD. Coli
814-3911-1301.

~m

6:05 (I) Llvema and Shirley
6:30 II (2) 1111 NBC Nlghtiy News

Parts
&amp; Auto
Accessoriltll

au..,, guldo. 1-108-887-11000
l!&lt;t. s 81105.

Kenmore electric dryer ea:e cond

hit pi
24
3 ft
11
Ampli'fl e 30 :~&amp; 1484· 10 ·
er.
•
·

I

I!J Certoan Exproaa
Clll Fandango

avall1ble.

Cort~etiH,

New tobacco l'lJc:b.._d one

1180.00. 10" RAO-ARIII oow-

•

IBI Good Tlmea

1977Z 28Cam ...... PS. PI, AC.
....... o1500. eon 614-44&amp;7078.
.

from t100. Fordl. llllorcocl10.

61 Fann Equipment

842-2434 or Ohio 1·800-5333453Mydmo.

Porte~elighted sign wfth letters

Slllil•lll' :,

"' Li'JI:,IIId

304-773-8185.

57

Whaelchalrt-niw or uHd. 3
whaalad electric ecooters. Call
Aogeq Mobllty llact 1
co
• · 114870. 9681 _

U.S. No. 1 l.-ge Y'lllow FrHI·
tone canning peach now well•
ble. Bobs MerkM. M•on.. wv.
Freeh from the Sh.-ctoah Val-

vered ..d stacked, t35.00 load.

Antiques

utH~Iet.

Beect.

Red Aaspberrl•· Plok your own ,

4:30 Pill.

614-388-8801 .

For low prioet on OuaUty Carpet
• Furnhure come to Mollohan
FurnituM·Upper River Ad., 8144.8-7444.

Nice 3 Hdroom house. -fu II
b. .ment, quiet Joea11or,, e
mil• out of town. phone 304- llo. &amp;14-448-8221 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

304-273-1.81.

$376. Limps $28 to 0126DinettOI 0109ondupto 1495. ' 55 B lid'
S
Wood table w-8 chalre *28ft to
u tng
1791. O..k 1100 up to *375.

APARlMENTS. mobile homes,
houtn. Pt. Pl-ntandGalllpo-

675-1076.

since 1984. Regular army
isaun, denim. rental dothlng.
Jr. eamouflege blk end white.
Ford 1975 ule or tilde. June·
tlon lndep•dence Ro.t. Rt. 21.

1985 Rlnkor 1.() 1 20 hp. loll of

ments in Middleport. From

2 bedroom Apts. for rent.·
Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
3 Badroom hou• between hcllhiee available. Call 814-.
Gallipolis &amp; Holzer Hospital, full 992·3711 . EOH.

304-171-5278.

SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE 82

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-

Coli 614-448-6320.

2 bedroom unturntshed house,
50'7'h Second St. New HINM'I,

51 Househ9ld Goods

........ Coli 814-448-1837.

1619.

Vege1ables

AU I.. I"RRt. Fri. Set. Sun. Noonta
8:00 PM. Sam SomM'VHie's d.., • . 814-898-1298.

bow eomphna. verygoodcond.304--773-

large fenced In yard. 8300a mo.

3090.

AAIIIY SURPLUS 1Adv011lllng
SpedaltiN, 8uth1eu. Polltlclll.

SON ESTATES , 631 Jackson
Plkft from t 183 II mo. W.k to ·GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Furniahed- 3 rooma 6 bath.
Clean. No peta. Raf. • depa.it
required. UtHitlea furnished.
Adults only. Call &amp;14-448·

&amp;

Hwwet gold. E~~:ellent
;g~o:l!· Call Ch•hire 114-

Sll. 114-448-1699. 827 3nl.
Ave. Qallipolia, OH.

Upsteira unfurnished apt. Carpeted, utilities paid. No children.

~;:=~;::,_;::===
Fruit

. , _ pld&lt;. Tll'flo~ollorryPotdl .
shepe. Coli 114-248-5064 or 4468892.

I 299.00. Free defllowv. Off•
Sept. 10. Wv.- 1·800.
642·2434 or Ohio 1·800-1333453 anytime.

&amp;14-448-0338.

na2. Call 614-992·7767.
2 BR . hou• . air conditioned, -EO H.

1971 Schultz 12x86. 2 BR .,
completely furnished. Good
cond. Must •II this WfiEik. WUI
mllkevoua dea\youcan'tmfusa. bMement, IWo car g.-age. 9111
fur..-.ce. central air, city ~ehoots .
Call 614-446-2981 .
Call614-448-1288afler5PM .
3 BR Good con&lt;!- S6,000. Call
614-386-9844.
Hou• for rent. 2 bedroom. Nice.
cl•n. natural ga. 614-9921972 Forest Park. 1 2•60. 2 BR .. 6868.
appliances, CA. deck,lwning,&amp;
undurpi nning. Cell 614-4 46- 3 bedroom brick. 2 story in
0 500,
Mid(leport. 1225. per month
Pu• depOih . Cell Faye Wallace
REOUCE0 -28 x 56 ... Log at 814--992-3880.
House'' , Bi9 liVing• on our log 1 c:---:---~-:-:--:-:=-::­
Hou• dis play. Stop tnd _.ee at 2 bedroom! linlurnished. Fulty
FrenchCityMobileHomes-446- c.- peted. Nice and clqn. Dep9 340.
as it required , Call 61 4 -992·
ings on ourVEMC01 2x24 room
addition dis~..,.fron1 porch &amp;
petlo door. French City Mobile
Homes. Inc.. 446-93-'0.

New completely furni•hed
apartment &amp;. mobile horne in
city. Aduhs only. P.-king. Cell

lhop and mo't'iN. 814-4482668. E.O.H .

3 bedrooms, 1 'h bath, basement 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
and garage. Central air. In
Middleport. Call 614-~92- 7862
or 614-992-5257.
1'/:r 111ere with g . .ge. Cement
1982 Clayton Double wide in floor. $5000. Call 8 "1 4-992·
Syracuse . 3 Bedroom. 2 b8th, 6313.
total elec., centflll air, woalk
around deck. out bu~ding. many Ashton, large building Iota.
ex tra 's. $34,000. 1114-9 92· mobile ho~Ns permitted. public
water, 1110 river lots, Ctyde
2909.
Bowen, Jr. 304-576-2336.
105 private acresw / eMyacc-ell
Gallipolis Ferry, ng,y home als o Bea~tiful river lots one-acre plut.
2 lots wiUt wells. $70.000. Call public water, Clyde Bowen. Jr.
304-578-2336.
304-675-4631 .
3 bedroom homeon4Jots. Greet
Road. HlllvilPo.'V. 304-67S.40 18.

675-7738.

BEAUnFUL APARlMENTS AT
IUOGET PRICES AT JACK·

992-6506.

3 bedroom, 2 story. central air.
fenced beck yard, finhh&amp;d bau·
ment. PricEid to sell Quickly
304-675-6633.

2 BR . ept1. e cia••· kitchenappl. furnished. W•her-Oryer
hook· up. ww carl)lt. ntMtly
pain-.d. deck.
From •176.
Regency . • Inc. Apts. Call 304875-5104, or 1175-&amp;388 or

Mer~hon!l 1se

Kohl• Contole pt.no.uo cond.
304-878-2141.

s-Ing moclllno. o78. C111 , 6B
&amp;14-949-2834.
·

Kenmore waeh• and dryer.

1----- - - - - -

71 Auto's For Sale
•

Riding lawn moWI8r. Oynem.,ll
1031. 13150. Call 814-448- Bn•edrumwtth.-nd,c.-rylnf
1793:
etlcks. $100. u..d

Trellar space. 3 mil• Sou"th "of

Pt. PIHIInt at V off Rt. 2 &amp; 82.

Mu•""•l
-Instruments

w

(!.A Y

the
be·
low to form four simp le words.

II)) ShowBiz Today

76

Nice 2 BA . approx. 1/t acre lot.
2 bedroom. 1 child. No peu,
Green School 0111. Cell 614- 7_2,-7_9_. .....,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ drur*s, ordope. 3Y.imU•Sau1h
1
448-3112.
Midcleport, Rou• 7 . Call 81430 acre farm on Raccoon Creek 367-0811.
1 BR . home-Madison St. &amp; 2-2 or 1811 hou• and one acre. Call
Mable Hom• for "'nt. Evelyn's
BR . mobile homes-o!nten•!V· 814-245-9676, or 448-8784.
.
·
Moble Home Park. Kanauga,
Call 614-446-4109 or 37954 acres. 19"70 Holly Park with Ohio. Call 014-...,8-0508.
2740.
m.-.uf•ctuMd addition. Oil well. 1.:_...:__::::.,:,;_;_,;_;_::..:;=:::._free g81, pond. fruFI:trea's, 20 2 bedroom mobile hon. half
Brick and cedar ranch hou•.
acres in Bradbury behind mi nuteJ 1rom Pomeroy or mHe out Jericho Road, raf•enWMPO. Large 2 c• g~nge. 3 Athena. • 37,500 negotiable. c• required, caU aft• 8 :00PM.
bedrooms. living room. cen11111 Tractor with implerntntt. 814- 304-875-1082:.
air-heat, woodburtlef, Wlttr aof·
tener, newtv remodeled large 949-2243.
Apart
t
kitchen with Jan Air Range, 136eere~wlth4bedroomf•rm 144
men
g•bllg&amp; dispo!llll, dlttfMS,_, hou•. Barn, crib. Call Kenneth

814-448-3697 or 245-6223.

WHAT DO 'IOU THIN!«
HS WENT CRA1.V fROM,
EA!SY~ AN 0VERD05&amp;
OF OATS~

uooo. Call 814-248-9122.

Klngoool•woodbur-. t100.~~;;;i~~;;;~~~~~~~~~~~

Rd. Rt. 1. 304-878-1078.

Seen by appointment ol'lty. Call

1817 27ft. Crltcrtfl C.Vall•
Cabin Cru._,, Partially . .tor.c:~.
327 motor. Sleep• 4. Slntc;
stcwe. bMhroom wlh trail•.

Call 814-248-8288.

•soo. ~

1111 Newa

n

. Call 814-448-8890.

• 1 w.m f'ttorring. Cell 1143&amp;7-0182 ........

lkllcMin organ for • •

11 w w a

..

1971 Bas Boat. 60 HP motor.
troiUng motrr, 111M well. 11200.

2 Wood Burnert for . . . 1 Earth

1 1 HP, 38" cut riding mQwet.
uted two MMons. Uke new.
0800. Calll14-387·0149.

0 four
llteorronge letters of
scrombled words

6:00 CD Bonanza: The Loot
Epl-a

··........ .

1987 lnwd• bollt 17 tt, lhow
room co nd. 1 20 hp lnbo.-cl
OU1board ~rut..-. lees then
100hrt. g.-ge kept, mull •IL
t8,400.00. 304-488-1542.

Side-by - aide re1rigentor
frii!JeZ8f . • , 4-982-7048.

40 ac:ret Raccoon Rd.· Mobile
home. S38,000. Cel/304-522-

Boats and
Motors for Sale

, •,'

· p1.,._ 1-'rv. 6 muoh
more. Saind In drug • crlm~

Spac 81 for 1811 t , nil• ~p~c•.
water &amp; 1 ewer furnlahed. Lowst

2653.

75

ConfiecltN cillfe, truek1.... n••

2 8R ., on prMte lot In Ever·
green. Cable TV hook-up. Call

Patrtot· 3 BR .• 2 bMhl, small
bamt. on PA lot. Call614-379--

'i •

Coli 114-448-00U

Gravely Hctor. electric ltert, 8
apd. , with rOIIfry mower &amp; plow.

Space for Rent

Edl1td bv

EVENING

'

Girts dothlng-11111 8-14, I t,.ck
tap• pl.,_, 21emp~, Af*riwlthl
gemee, girts ICDOtllr. Alf tent.

46

WED., SEPT. 7

875-4229 .... 1:00.

lhoe. Cntouer •~oon...- . w11
oofl "" t1100. Coli 814-4483815anytlme.

relda. lJD to 90 perctnt off. Cell
1-304-42!1-4178. lk1. J8.

•

ve••

r::~:~;~y 'O(ffRJllA-~t.trss

Yamah• TrumpM, 2
old. •II
allver. 132&amp;.00. Phone 304-

CM11 . d... Lots of prDgMm••

Hotel-814-448-9580.

t:;.;;::;;;,;:;;:::;:::;:::::-r,;;:;,~;;;:::::;~::::::=:-17479.
=----------

32 Mobile Homes
for. Sale
Mod.llar homt on large lot In
Mercarville.

812·3397.

eo......,

Call 814-448-4149.

•u.ooo. ow...

financing. Call 814-.W&amp;-1408

Aodlo Sh.C.

printer Or.tP 130. monftor-

45

Call614-446-3131 .

Telev.ision
Viewing

19811 ~aOikl 125 KX. _ ,
good cond. noo:oo. 304-895-

Beech Strett. MtdclllpGI"I, Ohio,
1 room eftld~Mcy apt, utlft'peid, ref..nc• ,..ulred. 1·

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PI/BLISH·

The Daily Sentinel- Page 16

Motorcvcles

l '

•

XYUQZSYSA

yQ u

D V W

:FVYTZ . - PJQKXZZS

SVWWYU

Yetterd&amp;y's Cryptoquote: ONE OF THE BEST
THINGS PEOPLE CAN HAVE UP THEIR SLEEVE IS A
. FUNNY BON~. -- RICHARD WEAVER

...

�Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 7. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

THURS. I FRI. -LUCKY 8 DAYS

TUEDAY·- SR. CITIZENS' DAY

RECEIVE DOUBLE THE COUPON VALUE
ON UP TO 8 MANUFACTURERS' COUPONS

RECEIVE &amp;% DISCOUNT ON
MOST PURCHASES.

·

•

·

See Store For Det•lle

Qhio Lottery

High school
grid previews

Daily Number
126

Pick 4
5901

Pages 3-4

Super Lotto
7-20-21-27-38-442

... Store For Det8118

•

•

e

MIDDLEPORT, OH. •GEN~ HARTINGER PKWY. &amp;· PEARL ST. •992·3471

ACA8DtNAL

• •• BUTNO
lDTHE
FOR YOU AND YOUR FAMILY! WE
!~WrEEQUALIT~ SELECTION AID
SioRE. IN EVEnY AISLE OF OUR .

RIJ;;E
RON I

. Fruit Cocktail (30 oz.) or ·
Halves or Sliced• Yellow Cling

Assorted Varieties
Super Moist

BETTY CROCKER
CAKE MIX

THOROFARE -~-

29 oz.
• can

Rea.•MEKI. 48 ct, Lg. 33 ct. or Extra Lg;28
48 ct., Lg. 32 ct. or Newborn 66 ct. •
Supertrim Disposable

Sold in 5 lb. bags•Limit 2
U.S. Gov't. Inspected

Ripe

FRYER LEG
QUARTERS

GOLDEN
BANANAS

t;

H
DIAPERS

t;

Y3 Less Calories
Than Margarine

SHEDD'S SPREAD
CROCK

$

lb.

$1.00 Off Label
Reg. or Unscented•Laundry

TIDE POWDERED
DETERGENT

2 LITER

Assorted Varieties

Assorted Varieties•Paper

PEPSI

KELLOGG'S
POP TARTS

_BOUNTY
TOWELS .

t;

$

t;

10'12 oz.

147 oz.

box

jumbo
roll

pkg.

Thank

YoU!' 'coupon

each '5 purchase (two
s1o . etc.) .our way ol
say ing Thank You for
shopp1ng with us.

You! Coupons ('200 in purchases) on each Saver
Certificate. When filled,
each Saver Certificate is

Certiflcales at our store tor
Sunbeam appliance dis·
count. Saver Certificates
are available now at all

worth •7 .ofl the purch2se

checkSiands. Pick one up

price at the Sunbeam item
of your choice. You may
redeem up to two Saver
Certificates
item • a

for all the details and .
cOmplete description of
Items altered.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 8, 1988

BY NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Meigs Industries' officials and
the Meigs County Commission·
ers have high hopes that a $95,000
grant application to the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour·
ces for a Meigs Counly Recycling
Program will be approved.
Lee Wedemeyer and Keith
Black. of Carleton School· Meigs
Industries, discussed the appU·
cation at Wednesday's meeting
of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
According to Black, Sept 23 Is
·the deadline to submit the grant
application to the State. A public
hearing must be held before the
application Is submitted and the

hearing Is scheduled forWednes·
day, Sept 14, 11 a.m., at Carleton
School in Syracuse. Black said he
expects to hear by the end of
October if the grant Is approved,
and if it Is, the funds should be
released to Meigs Industries by
Jan. 1. Feasibly, a recycling
program could be In operation by
Feb. 1. 1989, Black said.
A recycling program under the
supervision of Meigs Industries
would 1101 only help Meigs county
with the problem of . waste
reduction, but would also ~upply
employment situations for hand I·
capped citizens of the county,
Wedemeyer said.
A , full·tlme center manager
and a part-time bookkeeper

OLD FAITHFUL, Wyo. (-UP!)
- Wlnd·driven wildfires roared
through the Old Faithful attrac·
tlon at Yellowstone National
Park, gulling . buildings on a
rampage to the famed g!!yser
itself and belching smoke across
much of the Great Plains.
In Washington, D.C., Sen.
Malcolm Wallop, R·Wyo., called
for the resignation of the head of
the National Park Service, who
he. blamed for falling to control
wildfires that have destroyed
about' a third of the nation's
.oldest national park this
summer.
Powder-dry lodgepole pines ·
and propane tanks exploded and
flames turned the sky a reddish
yellow as 50· mph winds drove the
142,()()().acre North Fork wildfire
the last quarter mile Into the Old
Faithful complex Wednesday.
"I've never seen a wall of
roaring !lames come down !Jke
this," said veteran firefighter
Rickey Curry from the Talladega
National Forest In Alabama.
''Once It gets ·going It creates Its
·own wind somehow!' .
By midnight, fire spokesmen
said the Old Faithful geyser was
in the midst of a horseshoe of
name. Telephone service to Old
Faithful was knocked out, but
fire officials said the hundreds of
firelighters still had an escape
route If the situation worsened.
Racing along the tops of the

parched trees, the fire
"crmi&gt;ned" Into the evacuated
Old Faithful complex, damaging
14 unused cabins, some utility
buildings, donnJtorles and an
apartment complex. A coaling of
fire retardant foam spared most
of the buildings from heavy
damage.
Only the rustle wooden Old
Faithful Inn, located In the
middle of an open area and
Inundated by its sprinkling sys·
tern, appeared to be unscathed.
The newer .Old Faithful Lodge
across the gey~r from the Inn
also was spared.
The scene resembled a battlefield as at leal! three propane
tanks blew up in succession with
the booming sound of artillery
fire, helicopters carrying water
buckets hovered overhead and
fire trucks raced to hotspots with
sirens blaring.
Less than two hours after the
flames struck, the wildfire re·
treated a half mile from the
complex,leavlng smoking debris .
. in every direction.
The flames moved lhrough the
-scenic meadows and towering
pines, forcing park ofrlclals to
order the evacuallon of 800
guests, who lugged baggage out
of the inn and neighboring log
cabins and headed out of the
2.22·mllllon·acre park- nearly a
third of which has been charred
by more than 50 wildfires since
, the slart of summer.

Local news briefs...--.
Closes at noon Friday
The Meigs County Department of Health will close at noon
Fridav so thai employees may attend funeral services for
Kermit Walton who served as a sanitarian with the department.

A free blood pressure clinic will beheld Tuesday, from lOa.rn.
to 12 noon, at the Harrisonville Town Hall. The cllnlc Is
sponsored by the Harrisonville SeniOr Citizens.

Middleport bloek party Saturday

Because ~e truly appreciate you as our customer,
we are proud to team up with Sunbeam to bring
you this exciting appliance offer, just for shopping
at our store. Seven popular 1988 Sunbeam
Appliance models can be yours for a fraction of
their value.

'•

•

i

SUNBEAM OFFER

ENDS

DEC. 31 1188
I

would be needed to operate such
a fa~llity, In addition to materials
handlers who would prepare
materials for the recycling
process.
If the recycling program is
funded by the State, Black
estimates that 50,000 pounds of
disposable waste, such as glass,
aluminum cans and scrap,
copper and newspapers, could be
processed each month.
Possible buildings to house the
program are under consider&amp;·
tlon. It must be a large enough
building that all materials can by
kept inside, said Black. since
maintaining an acceptable out·
side appearance of the operation
will be a major consideration of

the program.
Satellite collection sites will
also be operated throughout the
county, Black said. This means
key locations throughout the
county will be arranged as drop
off points and a. truck will make
scheduled trips to the satellite
sites to pick up the materials to
be recycled.
Since plck·up routes will be
established, the program plans ·
to pay 80 percent of the market
rate for recyclable materials.
The program may pay 1he entire
market rate If Individuals bring
the materials to the recycling
center themselves, Black
explained.
After the materials are pro-

cessed, they are to be marketed
through the recycling finn which
already exists in the county.
Black said the existing firm Is in
agreement with this
arrangement.
The purchase of equipment.
such as crushers, a baler, a
forklift and a truck, will be the
major consideration of the grant
the first year, Black said, For
this reason, the program wants
to lease a building for at leas.t the
·nrst year. rather than buy.
Black projects the recycling
program could profit $10,000 to
$20,000 the first year. The profit
would be reinvested in the
program and would possibly
create another partttme employ-

Wind-driven fires roar
through Old ·faithful

Two drivers were cited as the result of two accidents
Wednesday, the Pomer,oy Pollee Department reports.
Police said that a carllriven by Kalle Miller, Pomeroy, pulled
from a drivef.ay at'520W. MalnSt.,lntothe path of an eastbound
car driven i;Di Velma Burris, Mason, W.Va., at 3:40p.m. Miller,
who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad tor treatment of Injuries, was cited on a
failure to yield charge.
.
There were light dam~ges to the Burris .vehicle and mOderate
·
to the Miller car.
At 4:23p.m. on East Second St.,a truck driven by Dottle Will,
Pomeroy, attempting to pull from a parking space struck a car.
owned by Nancy Burns, Pomeroy. parked behind it. There were
light damages to the Burns car and no damages to the truck.
Will was cited on an improper backing charge.

START SAVING
YOUR "THANK
YOU!" COUPONS
TODAY!

2 8ectlons, 12 Pages • 2&amp; Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.Public heat·ing for grant application .Sept. 14

Plan free blood pressure clinic
with required
number of
filled Saver
Certificates

en tine
..

Vol.39, No.ae
.. Cop rl hted 1988

Police cite drivers after wreck

HOW YOU
SAVE IN 3 EASY STEPS!
2.) Collect 40 Free Thank 3.) Redeem Hlled Saver

1.) Shop our store each
week and receive one Free

at

Clear tonight. Low In mid
50s. Friday, Increasing ·
clouds, Mild. High In low 80s.

The annual Middleport Block Party will beheld this Saturday.
Besides crafts, concessions and music throughout the day, an
antique car show, horseshoe pitching contests and the official
"Ohio State Airplane Flying Contest" will be held. Everyone
welcome.

EMS luJs six calls Wednesday
Melp County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Wednesday; Pomeroy al 9: 42 a.m. to Welsh town Hill for
Eleanor Redman to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 11: JO
a.m. to the Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Brian
Hartman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:14p.m.
to an auto fire on Brick St.; Racine Fire Department at 3:24
p.m. to Nease Hollow for a minor bruah fire; Pomeroy at 3: 40
p.m. transported Kate Miller from an auto accident on West
Mein St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·

'

ment position.
If the first year funding is
obtained, then the program is
eligible for $70,000 In grant
monies for the next two years.
Beyond the third year, no one is
sure It State grant money for
recycling programs will even be.
available.
The commissioners pa~sed a
resolution authorizing Black and
Wedemeyer to proceed wit!! the
public hearing and· submit the
grant application to the State.
The two men were commended
by the commissioners for their
efforts on behalf of Meigs Indus·
tries andl the county.
In other matters, a1 the recomConllnued on page 12

Chicago
•
proJec' .
will help
Ohioans
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) Building the Superconducting
Super Collider at the Fermi
NaUonaJ Accelerator Labora·
tory near Chicago would benefit
Ohio's economy, save the federal
government $3.2 billion and ena·
ble scientists to begin their work
sooner.
That was the message delivered Wednesday to Columbusarea business and academic
leaders by a delegation of llllnois
officials trying to gain support
for that state's bid lobe win the
super c@lder. the world's largest parGP!e accelerator.
Illinois Is compeUng with Ariz·
ona, Colorado, Michigan, North
Carolina, Tennessee and Texas
for the project, and a recom·
mended site Is expected to be
announced In November.
Kristin Dean, executive dlrec·
tor of supercollider at Fermilab,
Inc .. said putting the project at
Fermllab not only makes sound
economic sense, bu I Is also a
matter of tax justice to the
Midwest
FIREFIGHTERS STRUGGLE - Pulling a
hose, firefighters struggle with high winds and
dense smoke as they attempt to reach the ranger
siatlon Inside of the Old Faithful Complex In

Yellowstone National Park Wednesday. The
North Fork fire, fed by high winds, jumped a ridge
and en~t~~lfed the area late In the afternoon. (UPI)

Moyer proposes alternative
mechanisms to settle disputes
WORTHINGTON, Ohio (UPI)
- Chief Justice Thomas Moyer
or the Ohio Supreme Court today
proposed consideration of alter·
native methods of resolving legal
disputes In order to cut down on
expenses and clear court
backlogs.
· Moyer delivered his annual
"State of the Judiciary" speech
to the Ohio Judicial Conference.
About 270 of Ohio's local judges
were present.
"I think it's time to give serious
consideration to alternative dis·
pule resolution In Ohio(' said the
chief justice.
Moyer said other states, In·
. eluding Pennsylvania and Ha·
wail, have rules that certain
types of legal cases are resolved
under a different system than
through trial. He said examples
Include chlld·cuslody cases and
contract disputes where dam·
ages are small.
Moyer said some states have
facUlties such as neighborhood
justice centers, muitl·door court·
houses and mini· trials to take the
place of full· bloWn court proceed·
lngs, allowing judges to devote
their attention ·to more appropriate cases.
Moyer praised the state's
judges lor' 'doing a better job this
year than we did last year." He
said new case filings In Ohio
Increased In 1987, but more cases
were disposed of than were filed.
Moyer said the number or

personal Injury cases Increased case try to get together and
by 32 percent but filings of resolve It without trial. He said
drunken drlvlng cases have such procedures have worked In
declined by 10 percent in the last 30 percent of targeted cases in
three years.
Franklin, Stark and Summit
Moyer said complaints against counties.
lawyers and judges increased by
Moyer said a survey of judges
34 percent during lhe nine-month has shown they are most Inter·
period ended Aug. 31. Thirty ested In advice on computerizing
percent of those com plaints were their courts, technical asslslance
against judges, and Moyer said a on security system for the court
majority of them concerned a room and recommendations for
"unreasonable Pl'riOd of time" caseload management
for deciding the case.
Moyer said the Ohio Supreme
"Let us work harder to Courl plans to hold oral argu· .
promptly dispose of cases," ments and deliberations in Lima
Moyer told the judges.
this month and In Youngstown In
The chief justice recom· October as part of a continuing
mended so-called settlement visitation program.
weeks In which parties to a legal

Conditions from drought
improving throughout OhiO
By United Press International
Signlncant rain over much of
Ohio In the past week brought
some relleffrom lhe drought and
lmllcatlons are that the nor·
theastern quarter of the state Is
beginning to emerse from
drought conditions, the NatiOnal
Weather Service said
Wednesday.
Long·term drought conditions
show Improvement In all but
wesll!rn and south·central Ohio.
The Palmer drought Index,

which measures long·term
drought severity, remains In the
extreme category.for northwest·
ern and south·central Ohio.
Extreme drought Indicates the
worst conditions as measured by
the Palmer Index.
West·central and southwestern
Ohio remain In the severe
drought category, but the north·
central, central and southeastern portions of the state Improved to the moderate drought
category.

"Big Ten states all rank among
the 10 ~ tales with the worst
return on the tax dollars they pay
with a $66 billion outflow over a
three-year period," Dean said.
''We should work together to see
that federa l money Is spent In the
Midwest. "
Citing a Federal Reserve
Board report, Dean said that
Ohio had a net federal dollar
outflow of $8.3 billion over the
three· year period.
Recognizing Its Importance to
the Midwest. Ohio Gov . Richard
F. Celeste has said he would do
his best to get the collider to the
Midwest.
"There are proposals from
Illinois and Michigan and 1 would
like one of them to be the final
choice," Celeste said. " Frankly,
the bias against us In federal
(research and development) dollars Is strong and they owe us
one.' '
Dean said that 42 percent of
domestic Fermilab users work at
Midwest colleges and universi·
ties, Including 13 from Ohio State
University. These physicists are
the most likely to use the sse.
"Building the sse elsewhere
will add to the federal budget
deficit and we will see an exodus
of renowned physics facilities In
the Mtdwes1 to colleges and
universities near where the sse
Is built, " Dean said. "Fermllab
would no longer be the nation 's
premier accelerator and could
possibly be closed."
Fermllab currently spends
more than $500,000 a year to
purchase goods and services
from Ohio companies.
In flscal1988, 259 Ohlocompan.
les received $505,2772 In con·
·tracts from Fermllab. In the first
nine months of this fiscal year.
contracls totaled $286,000 with
189 organizations participating.

'

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