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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 7. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

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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

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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
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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.

'

�•

&lt;

·'

Thursday, Septanber 8, 1988

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

·Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
·Pornlwoy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, Septanber 8, 1988

!Both claim other juggles funds

WASHINGTON - A political Bush hasmadeanumberoftrlps
guerrilla war is being waled during the past few montbs that
. 111 Coun Street
behind the scenes between pres!- may have Involved the expendl· senate money. The ads would vice president went fishing dur·
Pomeroy, Oblo
.
dentlal nominees George Bush ture of appropriated funds, even promote Bentsen's senate cam- lng the Democratic Convention.
DEVOTED TO THE INTEKI!STS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
and Michael Dulcakls, and the though they were In whole or In paign, but the message would be Dukaltts had spent $20.7 million
weapon
Is money. Each side has part for political purposes. •• to sell Bentsen as Bentsen. by June 30 with only two ~eeks to
~j:b
raiSed
damning
questions about Appropriated funds are those Meanwhile, Bush will have to go until his convention.
ts:m~ '"'"'"" ..................... c::::l.....
Is juggling dlstrlbuled by Congress for the
whether
the
other
~v
spend several million dollars
(After nomination, each candicampaign funds to get more bang operation of government. In this from his presidential war chest date was given $46.1 million In
ROBERT L. WINGETT
for the buck, and In Bush's case, case, the funds In question are on Texas alone.
federal campaign funds to spend
Publisher
the buck may belong to the those given to Bush to run the
Not to be oulmjlneuvered, the for the general election.)
. taxpayers.
• -office of vice president.
Democrats are scrutinizing
Roybal cited as two examples
PAT WHITEHEAD
BOBHOEFUCH
The latest salvo was an official
· By raising the Issue, the Bush's books, and, If Roybal's of questionable trips Bush's June
Aulstant Publisher/Controller
request made Aug. 8 to the White Democrats are trying to rattle committee has Its facts straight, 22 trip to speak to the National
General Manager
House. A congressional subcom- the Bush campaign. One top they may have found a weak · Sherlfr
s Association In Loulsmittee asked a White House Bush official called It "a damned spot. Roybal's letter to the White vme, Ky., and his June 26 trip to
A ME MilER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
official to provide Information partisan fishing expedition." He House points out that In early
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
about every trtp Bush has made added that It was nothing more August, Bush's campaign had the Fraternal Order of Pollee
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be less than 300 words
since April, and the Implication than a "diversionary tactic'~ to spent nearly all of the money convention In Columbus, Olilo.
loni. Alllet~rs are subject to editing and must be signed with name. iddress and
But Bush 'campaign officials say
Is that Bush may have dipped get the Republicans off Sen.
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pubiJsbed. Letters should be In
allowed
under
the
law
for
a
those
are poor examples, begood taste, a~resslng Issues, not personalities.
. Into his White House budget to Lloyd Bentsen's back.
candidate who did not yet have cause both trips were paid for by
, pay the bills.
I
Several weeks ago, Republithe nomlnailon. So Roybal noted the Bush for President
'
The White House could be cans complained to the Federal that "questions arise" about Committee.
tempted to Ignore this request, ~lectlon Commission (FEC) that
whether Bush used his vice
Roybal also asked for records
except that It comes officially Bentsen, who Is running both a
presidential budget.
of
all trips made by Bush from
from the chairman of the House senat.e and vice presidential
Each candidate was allowed to April through Aug. 8, Including
Subcommittee on Treasury, Pos- campaign, could easily get away spend just over $23 million before
an accounting of whether cam·
tal Service and General Govern- , with mingling the funds for both
his convention. According to the palgn money or the vice presl·
ment, Rep. Edward R . Roybal, campaigns.
latest reports of the FEC, Bush
DAYTON (UP!) -An educator studying problems encountered by
D-Callf. That subcommittee
Bentsen has raised more than had spent $22.1 million by June dential budget picked up the tab.
"summer children'· who enter kindergarten at the youngest possible
oversees the vice presidential $6 million for his senate cam- . 30, six weeks before his nominal· Roybal set a deadline oi today.
age said early schooling can have a lifetime negative effect, and may
budgets.
palgn In Texas this year - and ing night, which explains why the Aug. 29, for the Wblte Houllt' to
lead to a higher rate of suicide among young adults.
deliver the lntocmation.
The letter was Intended to be . Texas Is a key electoral state.
The suicide theory Is perhaps the most controversial advanced by
kept quiet, but we have seen a The Republicans believe DemoJames Uphoff, a Wright State University education professor whose
copy. It begins: "It has come to crats will buy expensiVe televlresearch has been tapped by the National Education Association Is Its
the attention of this subcommit- sian ads and mount other actlvleffort to establish a uniform cutoff date for school entrv.
tee that Vice President George ties In Texas using Bentsen's
The NEA Is lobbying to have all states adopt a Sept. I cutoff date for
flve-year-olds entering kindergarten and six-year-olds entering first
,
grade.
Uphoff, who has spent eight years researching the Issue was
named by the NEA as one of a handful of expert witnesses for Its
WASHINGTON (NEA) -An
-' campaign. ·
Increasingly
bitter behind-theUphoff said he would go a s tepfurther than the NEAand have every
scenes battle Is raging over how time Democratic operative and
child under 5 12 years old wait another year to start kindergarten.
many presidential campaign de- higblevel Dukakls advlsl!r - Is
Missouri currently has a June 30 cutoff date, while Connecticut and
bates there will be between also vice chairman of .the
Maryland have a Dec. 31 cutoff. In reality, cutoff dates can be waived
George Bush and Michael Duka· Commission.
for children who are even younger.
Jim Baker, Bush's campaign
kls, where and when they ·will be
The various standards can lead to differences of more than a year
chairman,
Is on record as ·favorheld - and even who will be the
for classmates, as well as problems for children transferring to
Ing
the
nonpartisan
spansorshlp
· sponsor.
another state.
of
the
League.
But
he has
Since 1976, the presidential a·nd
"Being bright and being ready for school are not the s~me thing,"
scheduled
and
then
broken
sevvice presidential debates. 'have
according to Uphoff, who opposes the emphasis on teaching children
eral
meetings
with
them.
been sponsored and controlled by
more and earlier.
Both the League and the
the nonpartisan League of
"Kindergarten children are required to sit still for extended
Commission
are lobbying hard to
Women Voters. In Consultation
periods of time. Many youngsters, both physically and emotionally,
be
the
sole
sponsor of the
with the candidates, the League
are simply not ready to do this," he said.
debates.
The
current
situation, at
has set the locations, formats and
Experiencing success or failure in kindergarten c"an have a lasting
best,
Is
a
mess.
chosen mod era tors and
effect on a person, he said.
A suggestion that has been
ques !loners.
Regardless of their intellectual abilities, children under age 5 12
made
Is that the League join with
Generally, this has not pleased
often fall behind because of their developmental level, he said.
the
Commission
In some kind of ·
the Democratic and Republican
Among the resulting problems may be a higher failure rate in
joint
sponsorship.
Neither side
national committees. The parties
school, discipline problems, diminished leadership skills and more
sees
this
as
a
posslblity.
have been rankled by "having to
learning disabilities, Uphoff said.
·"I can't see any circumstances
dance
to the League's ~une," as
His most startling finding came from a pilot 18-month study In
under
which we would bring
one hlgh·level Democratic Na·
Montgomery County, In which he found that 45 percent of the male
In,"
said Ed Fouhy for the
them
tiona! COmmittee operatl'!e put
suicides and 83 percent of the female suicides under the age of 25 were
Commission.
II.
·
summer children.
"I agree," said VIckie HarAlso, the debates have become
"Starting school before children are developmentally ready denies
rlan,
the League's debate mana money-maker for the League.
them their vital need to play," Uphoff said. "Play for four- and
ager.
"But beyond that, we
The two parties decided It was
flve-year-okls Is their work, and without It later problems may
haven't
ruled anything out."
time to cash ln. So, In February
develop."
·
There have been suggestions
1987, Republicans and Demothat
some combination of decrats formed an organization bates
under separate sponsorthe Commission on Presidential
ship
Is
possible. It would appear
Debates - to sponsor future
the
League
would be satisfied
debates and to effectively shut
·
with
the
solution.
But the Comthe League out of the proc.ess.
mission
seems
to
want the
The Commission Is co•chalred
League
out
of
the
picture
To the Editor:
participation in extra-curricular by the two parties' national
completely.
Several weeks ago the Meigs
activities and a serious decline In chairmen: Frank Fahrenkopf
The television networks have
Local Board of Education voted
school spirit and morale which for the GOP andPau!Kirkforthe
no position In the matter.
taken
to leave the Tri Valley Conferwould have affected all parts of Democrats. They have put toence and return to the Southeast·
the extra-currrlcular and aca- gether an executive board They simply say they want to see
ern Ohio Athletic League.
demic life at Meigs High School. equally divided between Demo- everyone get their acts together,
Many people felt that this
By staying In the TVC, Meigs cratic and Republican politicians and quickly.
decision was hastily made and students and boosters have the and operatives. With widewas not in thebestlnterestsofthe chance to work In a " winning" ranging corporate sponsorship,
Meigs Local students, and efforts atmosphere which will keep they have hired a staff Including
were made by students, their school spirt high and help assure former CBS and NBC news
parents and other Interested good attendance at athletic executive Ed Fouhy to serve as
persons to encourage the board events. This will help provide the executive producer.
members to reconsider this necessary funds to contlunue
The party leaders say the
decision.
making needed Improvements Commission was formed to "In··
As a result, a special meeting and expansions of the boys' and stltutlonallze; ' the debates and to
of the Board of Education was girls' athletic programs so that end what they term "the quadheld Monday, Sept. 5, to discuss more students can be Involved In rennial debate over the de·
this issue. After accepting dis- these important extra-curricular bates ." But, In actuality, the'
cussion from the numerous peo- activities.
formation of the Commission has
ple in attendance at the meeting,
It Is not right for me or any only Intensified that debate.
NEW1988
•
the board voted to rescind the other SEGAL participant from
NEW 1988
The Commission has sche•
previous motion to join the years ago to foist this league on duled three presidential debates
S.10 PICKUP
CHEVROLET
SEGAL. Therefore, Meigs Local today's students when today's and one vice presidential debate.
• BEDUNER INCLUDED!
students can look forward to conditions are not the same and The presidential match-ups have
SPRINT
•
continued participation In the Meigs is not able to successfully been set for Annapolis, Md.
FACTORY AIR CONI)fTIONINGI
TVC.
compete In the SEGAL. No such (Sept.l4),0maha, Neb. (Oct.ll)
l personally feel that this was a Important decision should ever and Pittsburgh (Oct. 27) . The
well-considered decision which be made on the basis of nostalgia vice presidential debate Is prowill work to the benefit of all or a personal quest for glory. jected for Winston-Salem, N.C.,
Meigs students. There Is more to Instead, the choice of a league on Sept. 25.
consider than the football team In must be made by considering the
The Democratic National Com! .
deciding which league Is best for best Interests of all (If our mittee says that It Is committed
NO MONEY DOWN!
Meigs.
students, boys and girls alike, so . to the debates under the sponsorONLY
A return to the SEGAL would that they can build memortes of ship of the Comml,sslon. The
Oti.Y
have made Meigs the smallest their own as they participate and GOP, however, has not ruled out
school In the league by a wide compete at athletes, band
also working with the League.
margin and would have slgnlfi· members and cheerleaders.
The problem with all this Is
7Toa-Fnn
cantly decreased our ability to
Monday's decision by the that the final decision as to how
1010 Clloola Fnlm
compete In a wide variety of board of education to stay In the many debates, and under whose
SALB
PRICII:
S6,111°, 35 daJI 1&gt; paymen~ 60 NEW
18118
boys' and girls' sports. The TVC is a decision based on the sponsorship, rests with the Bush
PON11AC
••
f
i
u
..
APR.. lUll •
long-term result would have been best Interests of all Meigs stu- and Dukakls campaigns. Right
n..-. s:z,ltl .-40- - - cflorJe.
SU99.&gt;40 - ot
GRAND
PRIX
paymenii.SIJI99AO-....-.
a return to the defeatist attitude dents. and I commend the board now they are far apart on what
BUICK REGAL
of several years ago before for taking this positive action.
they want.
Meigs left the SEGAL, decreased
Jennifer L. Sheets, Pomeroy.
Bush wants fewer debates- no
more than two and preferably
only one - anct he wants them
NO DEALER PREP CHARGE!
held between Sept. 20 and Oct. 20.
Thlss would mean that no matter
how they are scheduled they
By Unlled Press lnlernatlonal
would be In direct competition
Today is Thursday, Sept. 8, the 252nd day of ]988 with 1.14 to follow.
DEALER "ADD-ON'' STICKERS!
with either the Olympics or the
r
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
World Series and would attract
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
far fewer viewers. Dukakls
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
NQ HIDDEN COSTS OF ANY KINDI
Those born on this date are uoder the sign of Virgo. They include wants at least three debates with one coming Immediately,
England's King Richard I, "Richard the Lion· Hearted," In 1157;
• API1IR RIBA'm.
before the start of the Olymptca,
composer Antonin Dvorak In 1841; stage and film director Max
TAXIIS, TAOS, 1TIUIFI!EIIIX11IA.
and one after the World Series.
Reinhardt In 1873; country music pioneer Jimmie Rodgers In 1897;
S11san Estrtch, Dukakls' camFlorida Sen. Claude Pepper In 1900 (age 88); comedian Sid Caesar In
paign
manager, says she 11
1m (age 66); actor Peter Sellers In 1925, and country music singer
willing
to talk with the League
Patsy Cline In 1932.
about Its proposed debate schedule. But so far no one from the
IU1 ..... ·Rilllr
A thought for the day: President Ford said after his August 1974 Dukakls camp baa done 10, even·
41181111Ciudll.
Inauguration. "Truth is the glue that holds our government together." though Rlcl!ard Moe - a long-

By Jack Anderso,.n and Dale VanAtta

Study shows head start in
kindergarten may be harmful

Why they are debating

Robert Wagman

Letters to the editor

Agrees with board's decision

THE taa9 MQDELS
.ARE ARRIVING DAILY!

OVER 150.1988 MOD~LS MUST GO!

$6,988*

1Today

in history

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..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- Page 3

Marauders to· test To!llcats defense in TVC tilt Friday
By JIM SOULSBY
Send net Staff Writer
It has been said that a good
offense is the best defense but
this may not be the case Friday
night when Meigs travels to
Giouster to take on the Trimble
Tomcats.
Preseason sta tements from
Coac hes Greg Holbert and Charles Chancey touted their defenslve units as the strongest point
In their program . Thusfar,ln this
early stage of the season, this

I

would seem to be the case.
In their opener against Unloto,
theCatscameoutwltha 6-0wln.
Then Saturday, on a rain soaked
field, Wellston fell by a 9-7 score
with Hurston Richmond providing the winning field goal In the
last quarter of play. This win
ca me In spite of the fact that
Wellston doubled the first down
output of Trimble (10-5) and
doubled the total yardage gained
by the Cats.
The Marauders, on the other

Ohio fishing report

hand, did not have It all their way
against the Alexander Spartans
though the 26·8 score tends to
ln'dlcate otherwise.
Like Trimble, the Marauders
were on the short side of the first
down total !24-18) and were
slightly outgalned by the Spartans. The contest, for all intents
and purposes, was finally "ic~"
In the final quarter.
Commenting on Friday's conIes t, Coach Holbertexpresso;d his

UPI Spot1s Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio State football coach John
Cooper said he planned to "keep
It simple" and " play a lot of
people'' when the Buckeyes take
on Syracuse Saturday In their
opener In Ohio Stadium.
"We'll play a lot of Jli!Qple
because we expect great effort
for the entire game," Cooper told
his firSt weekly press luncheon of
the season Monday. "! don't
think you can go wide open all the
time."
In particular, said Cooper,
named to replace Earle Bruce as
Buckeye coach last Dec. 31, he
would substitute liberally at the
defensive down lineman position
and at the running back spot,
using both senior Vince Work-

Snow.
"CarlOs will probably play as
much as Vince will, " said
Cooper, "and we'll also play a lot
of people on our spe,c lal teams."
The new Buckeye coach said he
was concerned about his corps of
Inexperienced wide receivers,
which will be going against a
veteran set of Syracuse defenslve backs.
"Our wide receivers haven't
played much at all,". he said,
referrtng to starting flanker
Bobby Olive, split end Wes
Siegenthaler and their backups,
Jeff Graham. Bernard Edwards
and Marc Hicks.
Hicks, the highly touted
transfer from California, was
switched from running back to

Scott Nelgler. 6·1, 170-pound
senior flanker and defensive
back, was named Meigs' 'Player·
of-the Week" by the Meigs
County Jaycees for his performance In the Marauders' Sept. 2
victory over Alexander.
Pressed into service as a
running back, he responded with
·85 yards In 13 carries.

locker room.
In the third stanza. the Marauders lit up the board when
Quarterback Jeremy Phalin
zipped a 30 yard scoring strike to
Kevin Musser. That was to be the
last hurrah for the Meigs eleven.
however. as Belpre came back to
score again on a kickoff return
and put the game away.
In spite of the two big plays, the
Marauders played the hosts op a
fairly even basis a&amp; they held the
E~gles to five first downs while
getting three of their own. Frank

Because ol the drought we're
overslocked on Snapper mowers!
We ... must reduce our Inventory!

Now' Ia your chance to get a
great deal on a Snapper. Prices
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Choose a push or self-propelled
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and we'llfhrow In a lree catcher

has been slowed somewhat by a
hamstring pull.
"Marc Hicks has really got to
have a good week of .practlce,"
said cooper.
Cooper said he was pleased
with the placekicking of junior
Pat O'Morrow. whom Cooper
feels has regained both the
strength In his leg and the
confidence needed to be an
outstanding kicker.
"Pat has h~d a good fall for
us," said Cooper, who had earlier
expressed concern over the
team's kicking game.
He said sophomore walkon Jeff
Bohlman had won the punting
assignment for the Syracuse
opener, while Workman will
handle the Buckeyes' punt re·

career.
"That's the one single most
difficult thing In football to do,"
Cooper said of returning punts. ..·
He said he would use .Workman, Snow and probably Hicks
as the deep men on kickoff
returns.
,·, rm cautiously optimistic,"
Cooper said of his Buckeyes'
chances against the Orangemen.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 1411·1111)
A Dlvlalon ol Multimedia. lne.

Published every aft~rnoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/Multimedia, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 157&amp;9, Ph. 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Member: United Press International,
Inland DaUy Press Assodatlon and the

Ohio Newspaper Associ alton. NatloDal

Advert1slng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733, Third Avenue,
New York, New Yorkl0017.

HEATING OIL CUTOMEIS
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Rimington
set to start
against old
teammates

The Eagles' offensive line, hit
bv Injuries to guard Ron Baker
and center Gerry Feeherydurtng
training 'Camp, seems to have
been settled by the arrtval of
Rlmlngton and tackle Ron
Heller, obtained In a trade from
Seattle.
In Sunday's 41-14 victory over
the Tampa Bay Bucaneers, the
Eagles did not surrender a sack
for the first time since Oct. 6,
1985, a span of 41 games.
Rlmlngton said, however. the
adjustment to a new offensive
attllck, using a numbering
scheme the opposlle of the one
used In Cincinnati, has not been
easy .
"I have to think about every
play as soon as the huddle
breaks," he said. "I .have to
think, 'This play goes to the left.'
As time goes on, hopefully 1'11
know · these things rattier than
think about them."

Coach Chancey tagged the
Tomcats as a typically aggres sive defensive unit. "Our key for
the win Is execution, something
we did not do well against the
Spartans". said Chancey. "We
are healthy with the exception of
Jared Sheets who will once again

WANTED

.

.

job. I I

crown."

be watching from the sidelines."
The Cats will depend heavily
on Paul ·Roberts and Todd Fouts,
their leading tacklers. to anchor
the defensive unit . Meigs will
counter with a few heavies
themselves In the persons of
Doug Stewart, Matt Peterson,
Jerry Jacks and Dennis Boothe.
The starting lineup, both on
offense and defense, will not vary
greatly from that which started
against the Spartans.

Ohio.

Neigler named
Player-()£-Week

Belpre defeats MUS resenres, 20-6

PHILADELPHIA &lt;UPI)
Dave Rlmlngton insists he's been
too busy learning a new offense
and settling into a new city to be
bitter about the way he left the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Rimington, a first-round draft
choice and five-year starter at
center for the Bengals, was
Involved in a bitter contract
dispute during training camp.
After an agreement was finally
reached, he failed Cincinnati's
physical and was released.
The Philadelphia Eagles
wasted no time in grabbing
Rlmington, and just as quickly
named him their star ling center
with just one week left until the
start of the season.
' 'I'm so engrossed In what I
have to do. I have so much to
learn and I've got so many little
things to worry a bout outside of
football, like finding a place to
live, that I haven' I had time to
think of any vengeance factor or
anything like that," Rlmington
said Wednesday as he began
preparing for the Eagles· home
opener against Cincinnati on
Suoday.
"1 just want to play. We've got
a good enough club to go
somewhere. l just have to do my

season progresses ," he stated.
"It's a big game early In the
season and could have a definite
bearing on the race for the

IB'!~~!..,rep~!~!~~~~~~~~~, .~~~~'!,s~. '"" .....

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) good channel catfish fishing.
Anglers drift -f ishing nightThe weekly fis.hlng report provided by the state Division of crawlers are catching good
Wildlife:
numbe.rs of walleye. Yellow
perch can be caught In both
CENTRAL OHIO
reservoirs using larval baits or
Rush Creek; Largemouth bass
red worms. Reservoir No. lis a
and bluegill fishing good this
time of year. Fish around the good place to fish for crappies.
Use live minnows for bait.
weedbeds using buzzbalts for the
NORTHEAST OHIO
bass and insect larve for the
Pyma
tuning Lake: Anglers
bluegills. The largemouth bass
trolling
large minnow Iures are
are reported to be up to 18.5
reporting good muskle fishing.
inches .
Delaware Reservoir: Crappie Troll near the weedbeds for the
most success. Crappie fishing
fishing very good at Delaware
now . Fish around brushy areas also Is good. Fish the deeper
shoreline cover using minnows
using j lgs and minnows. Many
anglers reporting good fishing for bait.
Clendening Lake: Crappies,
with chartreuse colored jigs.
bluegills and largemouth bass
NORTHWEST OHIO
Sandusky Bay: Fish in the fishing · should Improve with
outer bay area for largemouth . cooler weather. Crappies can be
and smallmouth bass. Use crank· caught using minnows, bluegllls
baits and jigs fishing along the . using red worms and bass on
shoreline. Anglers can catch nice spinnerbalts and crawfish cosized crappies fishing around the lored crankbalts.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
marinas and shoreline cover.
TYcoon Lake: This Gallla
Use minnows for bait. Fish
throughout the bay for channel County lake Is . producing good
catfish using nlghtcrawlers or numbers of largemouth bass.
cutbalt fished near the bottom. Use 4- to 6-lnch weedless plastic
Yellow perch fishing also is good worms for bait. Fish around
of! Bav Point, Cedar Point, structures In the north end of the
Battery Park and Dempsey lake. fish near the dam for
channel catfish using nightAccess Pier.
crawlers
and ·chicken livers for
Flndlav Reservoir No. 1 and
Continued
on page 4
No. 2: Reservoir No.2 offers very

BELPRE - Big plays by the
Belpre Golden Eagle reserve
team special units spelled the
margin of victory as the young
Marauders dropped a 20-6 tilt to
the host Eagles on Tuesday.
On the first play from scrimmage , the Golden Eagle signal
caller lofted a pa$s to put the
Belpre squad up be a touchdown
as the extra point attemptfalled.
The Eagles scored again In the
second period on an interception
and added the two point conversion to take a 14-0 lead to the

high respect for the Meigs eleven
saying that they (the Marauders) have an extremely good line.
"We are cognizant of the running
threat posed by the duo of Jeff
McElroy and Wess Howard and
will have to concentrate our
defenses to stop them. We
cannot. however, go to sleep and
overlOok the passing a bllltyofEd
Crooks. He throws the ball 'well
and has some fine, young recelv·
ers who will Improve as the

tor you. That'a up to a $150.00
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Thursday, September 8, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

Thunday, September 8. 1988

humbled Southern 32-6 In last
Friday's
season opener for both
Tribune SlaJI Writer
teams.
"Cat Wars" is coming toGallla
The Bobcats, seeking their
County at two locations for one
second win of the year, will have
night only!
their work cut out for them, with
No, this is not one of HollyInjuries to sophomore tailback
wood's latest offerings, but there
Joey Edwards and junior tackle
are two Friday night football
games featuring Gallla County's . Jerry Darst making both questionable starters for Frldav
cat powers pla-ying host to two
night's game. Without E:dwards'
area cat teams, one from Waterford and one from Franklin quickness to complement fullback John Sipple's power runFurnace.
ning and Darst to keep the
Waterlord-KCHS
Waterford's Wildcats, led by Wildcat defensive front away
new · head coach Jay Long, Is from quarterback Chad Johnson.
likely to show the host Bobcats a Johnson may have to ruri for his
defense that will present prob- life.
The Wildcats will have southlems to Coach Mel Coen's running game, as Long has said that paw quarterback Scott Teters to
he likes to build the defense first . direct the offense, while on
Case In point: the Wildcats

defense senior Chris Huck and
junior VInce Tolson will Inspire
the defense from their linebacker
positions.
In last year's meeting, the
Bobcats won 21-0
, Green-Hannan Trace
These Wildcats, coming off a
23-0 loss last Saturday ntght to
Huntington Vinson, will try to
win their second game In three
tries against Green Local's Bobcats. who fell 14-12 to North
Gallla last Friday night .
The Wildcats will have to cut
down on mistakes. as two
miscues were responsible for the
same number of VInson touchdowns. Long offensive drives
with fullback Brad Cremeens
carrying the hall should keep the

ball out of Green's hands and
keep quarterback Jeremy
Hughes and his pass-happy Bobcats from having enough time to
burn a Wildcat secondary that
may not see senior Scott Caldwell
return to action for that game.
In last year's meeting In
Franklln Furnace, Hannan
Trace prevailed 22-7.
Ross SE-Norlh GaiDa
By now North Gallia has
probably forgotten that they beat
Green 14-12, because the Bucs
remember that they will face a
Ross Southeastern team that has
the same quarterback from last
year's team (junior Mike
Adams), the team that beat the
Pirates 21-0 In Rlchmondale.
This year the site Is Pirate

Field near VInton, and the
Panthers will need to have a
similar memory lapse concernIng last week's 33-0 victory over
Southwestern, as the Bucs will be
a considerably tougher
opponent.
The Pirates' best weapon
seems to be the running game,
which must' put forth Its best
effort to keep the ball out of
Adams' hands and silence his
arm, which led the Panthers to

OVCS volleyball
team tops Fairland
Ohio Valley Christian School's
volleyball team defeated visiting

J;laltimore derails Red Sox express, 4-3
liy United Press International
Boston Manager Joe Morgan
was confident his team would
convert a double play to escape a
Baltimore rally. Boosting Morgan's confidence was the fact
that the Red Sox had not lost a
game In 70 tries when leading
entering the ninth Inning.
After .Wednesday night's Ori·
ole 4-3 triumph, Morgan was still
reassuring.
. "I thought we had that one
locked up," said Morgan, who
Inserted left fielder Mike Green·
well behind second base, hoping
a fifth infielder would help gain a
double play .
.
''I have gotten !lve double
plays on that in my career,"
Morgan said. "! don't think you

Jody Reed, who threw to second ·
to force Billy Ripken . Marty
Barrett's throw to first was too
anvwav ."
high for Todd Benzinger, allowBoston saw its tead over Ing Sheets to score the winner.
second-place Detroit trimmed to
"It was a difficult play to make
one game in the American but I didn't," said Benzinger,
League East. The Tigers de- who tried to tag Rlpken while
feated the Toronto Blue Jays.
lunging for the ball. "My downWith one out In the ninth and fall was trying to do everything
the Red Sox ahead 3-2, Jim at the same time."
Traber singled off Lee Smith,
Neither Barrett nor Benzinger
who then left with a sore neck. was charged with an error.
Rick Schu pinch ran and Bob · Mark Thurmond, 1-6, earned
Stanley, 6-3, walked pinch-hitter his first victory since Aug. 26,
Sheets and Pete Stanlcek to fill 1986 by pitching a scoreless ninth
ilinlng.
the bases.
·
Baltimore took a 1-0 lead In the
Billy Rlpken blooped an RBI
single down the right-field line. · Second Inning. Mickey Tettleton
Cal Rlpken grounded to shortstop walked, reached third on · Butch
got anything to lose. ·Chances are
a fly to the out11eld Is going to be
deep enough to score the run

Cards blank
By RICHARD ROTI'KOV

UPI Sports Writer
Joe Magrane had three postseason starts last year and
finished third in the rookie of the
year voting. This year. the

~billies;

Cardinal lefthander has a lofty
2.04 ERA that leaos the National
League. But Magrane Isn't
satisfied.
"It's been kind offrustratlng,"
said Magrane, who took over the
NL earned-run average lead with

Ohio jishing... __...;;C:.::;on::.:tl:::n.::ue:::d..::fr:.::om::.:.!:p::!ag':.::e...:.3_ _
bait.

SOUTHWEST OHIO
Paint Creek Lake: Largemouth bass are biting on rubber
worms and j lgs in 3 to 5 feet of
water. Fish for 8- to 9-inch
crappies in 3 to 7 feet of water
using wax worms, jigs and
minnows. Nighttime fishing for
channel catfish also is good. Use
cutbalt or nightcrawiers as bait.
Rocky Fork Lake: Fish
throughout fhe day for largemouth bass. Fish in 1 to 6 feet of
water using buzzbalts and
worms. Bluegill and crappie
fishing also is good. Fish for
bluegill in 1 to 8 feet of water
using wax worms, red worms
and jigs. Fish for crappies in 1 to
12 feet of water using minnows
and jigs. Fish the brushy area
near the restaurant.
LAKE ERIE
Yellow perch fishing is very
good in the Western Basin. Good
areas to fish are near the Toledo
Water Intake, Rattlesnake Island, the Bass Islands, the south
side of Kelleys Island. CatawbaMarblehead Peninsula and off
Cedar Point. Use emerald shiners with spreaders or crappie
rigs. Fish near the bottom in 18 to
30 feet of water. Smallmouth
bass fishing also Is good In the
Western Basin. Fish the Bass
Islands area In 10 to 15 feet of
water near drop-offs . Fish near
the bottom using live bait such as
emerald shiners, spot-tall shiners and crayfish. Anglers are still
catching good numbers of walleye in the Central Basin, especially off Ashtabula and Conneaut. Fish 30 to 32 miles out in 70
to 75 feet of water with the fish
bl tlng 50 to 65 feet down. Use
trolling lures off downriggers.
Walleye also can be caught in all
harbors off the breakwalis. Yellow perch fishing Is very good 8

miles off Ashtabula and Con. neaut. Fish just off the bottom in
60 feet of water. Another area for
yellow perch is a quarter mileto5
miles off Rocky River. Fish off
the bottom in 20 to 50 feet of water
using shiners with spreaders.
Salmon fishing Is starting to pick
up. Fish offFalrportHarbor4 to6
miles out. Fish with down riggers
using spoons In 50 to 60 feet of
water. Som!' steelhead trout also
can be caught In the same area.
OHIO RIVER
The Ohio River in Scioto
County offers good channel cat. fish fishing after dark. Use cut
shad or chicken livers. Some
white bass and sauger can be
caught using worms and twister
tails. Chartreuse with gold flecks
is a good color. The Gallipolis
pool in Gallia County offers very
good crappie fishing. Fish
around brush piles and drop-offs
using white jigs tipped with
minnows. Backwater and some
main river locations are good for
largemouth bass and spotted
bass. Fish near fallen trees and
brush using buzzbalts and
crankbalts.

DOWNING CHILDS

his third shutout of the season, a
5·0 victory over the Phlllies
Wednesday night.
Magrane, who scattered se~en
hits, Is just 4-8. He has been the
victim of anemic offensive support all season. The · Cardinals
have scored just 11 runs In his
eight losses. He says he's benefitted from the drought.
Cubs 9, Mets 8
At Chicago, Damon Berryhill
singled home Rafael Palmelro
with one out in the ninth Inning to
lift Chicago over New York,
which had scored five runs In the
top of the Inning. Palmelro
- tripled· leading off the ninth off
Roger McDowell, 5-4. Darrvl
Strawberry's 32nd homer, ·a
bases-empty shot, tied it 8-8.
Pirates 5, E•pos 4
· At Pittsburgh, Doug Drabek
won for the ninth time In 10
decisions and dellvere&lt;' a runscoring single for Pittsburgh.
Drabek, 14-6, Is 9-1 in his last 13
starts since a 9-0 loss to the New
York Mets June 21. Jim Gott
notched his 27th save. Bryn
. Smith, 10-9, lasted four Innings,
yielding five runs . .
Dodgers 4, Houston 1
At Los Angeles, John Shelby
drove In four runs, three with a
tie-breaking home run In the
eighth Inning, enabling Los Angeles to Increases In NL West
lead to slx games over Houston.
Tim Leary, 16-9, was locked in a
duel with Houston's Mike Scott,
13-6, when Shelby stroked his

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That's right, )oor parking, admission and
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One coupon per penon, please.
Good tlvough 10/15/88.

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(8abertlapD IJ.ll), 8:15p.m.
Caldorlla (WIU 11·12) al Texas
CRu....U If.'I), I:U p.m.
Fr...,'lliGamei'
Detnlt 81 New York, alpt
a.-liM ,.a ......., nllfll
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Chlcaco lit St. Loull, niJbf
Atlanta at San Dleao, allht
Clnclanatl at Lo1 A.nretes. nlp;bl:
Houlton M San Franelsco, nl&amp;td

Transactions
Baa kletball
tlllcaro - Slp!ed tlerr, Kuuae, vice
pte~ldellt ol optratklta, ttl muUI·)'Ilar

Activated pitcher
dllabiHI ll!Jt.
SeMite - Named Fi'ed stale)' lleld
coordhater of mlrtar leap lrllltrUdlnn.
Collep
Mar ill - Women's Awlmmt•r enach
Dour Backlund reslped to take slmlblr

Rick Aplera

from~

mu Darl')'l Haley.

IJIJa

. . 731 .• ,, 18
5I 81 .•
ts~

Loa All piM

'71 18 .1'7'2 -

llo..toa
Cincinnati
S.. Dlt!IO
Saa Frand.c.

,.
1Z
'II
,..

II .Ill

BMeball .
New York 1NL) -

Mluourl - Named Dick Tamburo
athletic director.
Football
qevelud - Releued offensive. line·

Pet. GB
.Ill .533 II
..lt1 11'1.

.m

Mlami -Slped C8terRoii)'Sellcal)' ._,
mdi-)'l!arcontraet.
Utah- Waived eenler Mel Turpin.

pOIIIUDn at Anw-,rlcafl c.Jiece.

,...,

W
Ill
,,
"10

New Yerk tGHdea IU) a1 Clllltaro
(Mad*u: Jf.7., %:• p.m.
MGIU'e .. (Per.z Ut at PltlthUrth
(Wall.ll·ll), ,:11 p.m.
· Phtlad!!lpWa (GrON 11·11) at Sl. (.oajs
(M~:WUUam• f-1), 8:35p.m.
Cllldoaatl (Rijo 11·8) at SIUI IMeao
CWIIII ..•II-8~, ll :ts p.m.
Houll•n (ltya• lt·ll) at Lu Anrele.
(Tudor 8-1), ID:JI p.m.
Atwata (Smolb: 2·4) at Su FranciiCO
{Robluo• 1-4), 11:15 p.m .
Ft-lda;y'l Gam•
Pbllldelpblaal PltQho 1111. niJhl

8

81 .mtl 711.
17 .1 11 9
II .SM tO
Allaata
M 8f .310 Sl
WetbltdQ'I Bel ..ta
rttbbltrtb I. Me•real4
Cblcap I, New Yorlr. 8
S&amp;. J..olllll, Ph~tllflla 0
•
San Dlepl, andn•tlt
1M AlipiM f,( Houllon 1 .
Atlanta 4, 8• Prandsco I

LA Halder."- "aced free safetyVMnn
McEirey 01 l•jured reserve: waived
lineback« Norwood Vann; slped dden·
atve back Rallell Carlll!r and Iackie Steve
WrJiht.
,
Mhml - Slpe:d receiver Rope
Mape; waived nose \ackle Mike

SAN DIEGO (UPI) -Stars &amp;
Stripes skipper Dennis Conner.
knew as soon as hesteppedoffhis
boat what the press would be
asking after his catamaran easily defeated New zealand's giant
monohull by 18 minutes In what
most experts have called an
America's Cup mismatch.
"Guess I better go face the
music," Conner chuckled as he
stepped ashore following Wednesday's victory that placed him
within one race of his third
America's Cup.
The first ques Uon put to Conner
at the post-race news conference
echoed New Zealand's daily
lnslstance that Conner' would
sandbag the races, sailing slowly
to make It appear as though the
Amer.lcan catamaran and Kiwi
monohull were actually an even
match.
Conner admitted that he sailed
a conservative race and could
have gone faster had he been able
to better read San Diego's shifty
winds, which sometimes left the
cat bobbing up and down rather
than going forward ,
New Zealand skipper David
Barnes from the start complained that Conner had toyed
with his majestic 132-foot yacht.

New Ea!Pnd - Slped defensive
ll•man Edmund Nelson.
NFl. - Suspellded Chicago defeDBive

meeting of boats of similar
conception," Lester said. "Then
we go out on the water and are
treated like fools. The boat In
front of us made a mockery of the
race." Conner's face darkened
when he was then asked If he had
"dogged" the race.
"I'm sailing a 'cat,"' he said
with more than a hint of acid
directed at his 30-year -o id counterpart. "Someone else Is salllng
a dog,"
said that New Zealand

end Rlcllard Deat, fullback Calvin
Thomaa. aad lA Rams runnlnr back .
Ch •lei White lCI d .,-s each lor dr..-·tett
vlolltllna.

NY Gl•t. -

Pl~~eed

pu ...er Sean

Lddeta aad defen.llve back W~Qne
llad•K on lnju~d ~1ene; •pedpurier
Mauy Buford and Wety Grec Lallier.
PIUI!bu11h - Slped wtde receiver
Troy .rotwtson; placed runnlna b~~ek

Frank Pollard on Injured reserve.
W•W•Jlon - Slped center Dave

Harbour.

had performed as well as possible on the 40-mile race course,
but It was obvious earlv that
Stars &amp; Stripes was not· to be
caught.
New Zealand started with a
10-second lead In 6-to-9 knot
southerly breezes, buttheAmerlca n boat with Its ·solid, airplanewing sail quickly overtook her
and was ahead by 9:04 after
turning past the only marker on
the course.

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OFFER EXPIRES 9/30/88
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614-446-0175
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Bob Roush, Owner
~ason,

210 S2nd Street

"We fell they paced around the
course the whole way," Barnes
said.
"It
was dlsapppolntlng,"
Barnes said. "We would have
had more respect tor our position
if they had sailed to their full
potential."
A frustrated Peter Lester,
Barnes · tactician, was also bitter
about his first America's Cup
race.
·
"I thought this would be a

t..mt..echl.

We futu,. colllelon N!lllr on the

wv

Navratilova
•
•
IS
upset In
U.S. Open

•

'
"

•

ASI fOI IIIAI 01 DAVE
•

DEADUNE SEPTEMIEI20, 1988

----

'l'llu..SQ'a Gamet
(Power. H) at New rork
{OIII*fl-11, '7:• p.m.
·

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'Tt H Jt1 17

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IN THE -DAILY SENTINEL
SE
29~ 1988
"Reserve Your Ad Space Now"
A~

Calllor .. a

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Odeqe 1. llllwull!e t
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POST liMES: Mon.-Sat. Evening 7:30p.m.
111.«1., Sat. &amp; Holiday Matinee 1:30p.m.
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Information: (304) 776-1000
Dinner Reservations: (304) 776-5000
or 1-800.333-DOGS

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seventh homer.
Padres 1, Reds 0
At San Diego, Andy Hawkins
scattered four hits over 8 1-3
Innings and a fourth-Inning error
by right fielder Dave Colllns
yielded the game's only run, to
lift San Diego to its sixth-straight
victory. Hawkins, 14-10, gave up I
four singles and Mark Davis got
his 27th save. Ron Robinson, 3-7, i
was the loser.
Braves 4, Giants 1
At San Francisco, Tom Ciavine scattered three hits In his
first major league complete
game and drove In two runs for
Atlanta. The game attracted just
4,910 fans to Candlestick Park,
the second straight night the
Giants have set a season-low in
attendance. San Francisco has
not homered In 115 Innings and
has lost sixth straight.

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Davis' double and scored on Ken
Gerhart's sacrifice fly.
. Boston tied it 1-lln the fourth
on Ellis Burk's 16th homer.
The Red Sox gained a 3-1 lead
In the fifth off starter Curt
Schilling, who was making his
major league debut.
"He had a good forkball,
decent sllder and didn't get
rattled," Orioles Manager Frank
Robinson said of his rookie
hurler.
Elsewhere, Cleveland held off
New York 5-4, Detroit slipped
past Toronto 4-3, Seattle edged
Minnesota 2-1, Chicago stopped
Milwaukee 7-2, Kansas City
defeated California 4-2, and Oakland walked past Texas 6-3.

U. S. boat wins first leg of America's Cup

Scoreboard ...

the Division Ill playoffs last
year. Should Adams get his
chance to show what he can do,
the Pirates will have to break
through and putpressure on him.
SWIIS-Aiexander
The Highlanders will need a
shot In the arm after starting the
season last week with a 33-0 loss
to Ross Southeastern, but they
must overcome the memory of
last year's 21-20 heartbreaking
loss to Alexander If they want to
beat the Spartans In Albany
Friday night.
Other games featuring SVAC
teams Include Eastern at Wahama, Huntington Ross at Southern, Huntington VInson at
Symmes Valley, and Oak Hill at

Fairland In two straight games r-;:::H:I:l:l·=======:;
Tuesday night to claim · the
match.
The Defenders were 15 of 17 at
the line, with eight kllls. Marla
Roach led the Defenders with a
9-for-10 effort from the line and
six kllls, while teammate Connie
Pearson · led In serving points
111 Second St., Pomeroy
(eight) and recorded two aces.
Other point totals were regisYOUR INDEPENDENT
tered by Jenny Hughes (seven),
AGENTS SEIYING
Cindy Sheets and Beth Blevins
(five each), Roach (four) and
MEIGS COUNTY
Pam Holley (one).
SINCE 1868
The Defenders will play at
Rock Hill today at 5: 30 p.m.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

r=======~~~--------~------~~~~~~~~------------~~~~~~~ .

Two catfights are among SVAC's eight non-league games
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---------,,

NEW YORK I UP!) -The year
that Martina Navratllova wants
to forget will be one that Zlna
Garrison always remembers.
The loser of all 21 previous
matches against Navratllova,
Garrison overcame the U.S.
Open defending champion 6-4, 6-7
(3-7), 7-5 Wednesday and advanced to the semifinals despite
squandering a 5-0 lead In the
second set.
For the first year since 1980,
Navratllova will not win a major
singles title.
"If this year were a fish, I
would throw It back In," she said.
Garrison, seeded 11th, will
play No. 5 Gabriela Sabatini on
Friday. In the other semifinal,
No. 3 Chris Evert faces No. 1
Steff! Graf, who Is seeking to
complete the first Grand Slam
since 1970.
The 19-year-old West German
was the only singles player on
Wednesday never to be threatened, as she disposed of No. 14
Kater Ina Maleeva 6-3, 6-0 for her
33rd consecutive match victory.
Evert and Sabatini both rallied
from first-set losses and second·
set deficits. In the men's draw.
No. 2 Mats Wllander also
dropped the first set to Emilio
Sanchez, but won a second-set
tiebreaker and took 12 of the last
16 games, winning 3-6, 7-6 (8-6),
6-0, 6-4.
The Swede will meet AustralIan Darren Cahlll, who downed
American Aaron Krlcksteln In
'five sets and became the first
unseeded player to reach the ·
semlflpals since Johan Krlek In
19tal.
I feel I belong there, I've
earned It," said Cahill, whose6-2,
5-7. 7-6 (7-2), 5-7, 6-3 victory
marked the first time KrlckSteln
had lost In seven five-set matches
at the Open.
In the other half of the men's
draw, No. 1 Ivan Lendl will play
unseeded Derrick Rostagno and
No. 4 Andre Aaassl meets No. 6
Jlmn\y Co11n0rs In today's quarterfinal matches.
Garrlloa needed six match
polntJ to put away Navratllova, ·
the wtnaer of four u.s. Opens.
Garr!IOn failed on four mate h
polntJ In the ltCOnd set and !opt a
fifth match point In the tlllrd
before hiUiq an ace and a
toreballd volley wlnaer fD end the
2-bour, U.mlnu1e IIUitch.
"I kept thlnklq, 'thllla 101ng
to sUp away. It's 81)1ng to slip I
away,'" rteallt!d Garrison.

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A WEEK

houro 1:00 a.m. to 8:00p.m. MondiJ tiH'Oufl Friday.
9:00a.m. to8:00 p.m. Saturdey. anci1D:DOo.m. to5:00 p.m .

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(614) 446 4103 .

Sunday.

Sale

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In eftoct September 8 through September 14, 1988

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�Page-6-The Daily Seotinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday. September 8, 1988

By The Bend

Wahama to ·host Eastern Eagles in non-conference contest
has made a few changes in ,the offense and they looked very unpressive to me. I was also impressed
with the Wildcat team; they didn't
quit. It was a very exciting game
and (Roy) DaltQn is as ~ood an opuon quarterback as you U find. The
Eagles' defensive line .will outweigh our offense so we'll need the
same type of effort against Eastern
as Hannan received if we are to enjoy the same type of success as our
Mason County neighbors."
The Eagles are currently 0-1 on
the year after losing their season
opener at home last week to Han-

Among the Eagle returnees are
6-0, 210 senior Tun Neutzling, 6-0,
165 senior Jay Reynolds, 6-2. 188
senior Howie Lawrence, S-11.
senior Chad Sinclair, 5-10, 180
senior Mike Weber, 5-10, 200
junior Derek Yonker, 6-0, 210
senior Jr. Smith and 6-0, 185 junior
Dan Tripp.
Wahama will take a 17-game
home winning streak into the
gridiron encounter with Eastein
with the White Falcons' last setback at Bachtel Field being a 14-12
loss to Buffalo Pumam on October
26 1984.

~ nonnal bangs and bruises"
commented VanMeter. ''Our younger people played much better in
the win over Kyger Creek. Mitch
and Mike HaJbour, Tom Knapp,
Sc&lt;J!t ·Miller and seven! other underclassmen all graded out at 75 or
higher after revieWing the · fi.lms
which was a vast improvement
over what was recorded in the
locals' 14-6 season-opening win
aver Liberty Raleigh.
"Our backs also ran harder and
our linebacker play has greatly improved from the Liberty game,
which is what we need," added

Eastern might be a pushover be- nan by a 34-13 .score. Eastern is
cause they lost to the Wildcats but definitely "in a rebuilding year" acI'm here to tell you that Hannan~cording
tQ coach Arch Rose. The
s lost 11 seniors from last
has a good team. It's not that
team and have seven
Eastern is that bad, Hannan is that years
good!" added the WHS grid men- returning lettennen of which only
tor.
three are returning starters. Rose
VanMeter didn't stop there in must replace almost all of lhe skill
heaping praise on the Wildcats and positions with the Meigs Countians
!heir personnel. "Coach Johnson main asset being a big interior line.

:.I reaUy don't know what to at·
tribute lhe home winning streak
to," said VanMeter. "If I did, we
would apply it when we play on the
road." WHS also has won six
straight decisions over their Mejgs
County neighbors since the senes
resumed back in 1982 after a
several year absence.
"We're healthy so far except for

VanMeter.
Wahama has received ouiStanding play from its inside linebackers,
Cluis Noble and Chris Jewell
defensively while getting stellar
leadership on offense from quarterback Sean Gibbs, and running
backs Chris Jewell and Rick
Keams.

By Gary Clark
Although coach Donnie VanMett-r's Wahama White Falcon grid
squad wiU be overwhelming
favorites come Friday night when
the Bend Area team welcomes the
visiting Eastern Eagles, the thirdyear head coach will not be taking
the SVAC opponent lightly.
"l'm expecting a much closer
ball game than most people think,"
said VanMeter. "Eastern made a
number of little mistakes against
Hannan last week that killed !heir
offense. People might think that

Browns coach upset with Cleveland scribe
BEREA, Ohio !UP I) - Marty
Schottenheimer. the Cleveland
Browns' coach, displayed rare
emotion Wed nesday when he
angrily criticized a Cleveland
Plain Dea ler colum nist regard·
lng his blaming running back
Earnest Byner for quarterback
Bernie Kosar' s elbow injury.
In Wednesday 's editions of the
Plain Dealer, co lumnist Bill
Livingston discussed the
Browns' victory at Kansas City
last Sunday In which Chiefs'
safety Lloyd Burruss blitzed
Kosar. The quarterback suffered
ligament damage in his throwing
elbow on the play, a nd will miss
two to eight ga mes.
Liv ihg3ton wrote that Bynet
missed a block on Burruss,
prompting Schottenheimer's remarks during a news conference
at the Browns' complex at

Baldwin-Wallace College.
"Blll Livingston · doesn't know
what he's talking about," said
Schottenheimer. "It's absolutely
and unequivocally wrong (to
blame Byner) . It doesn' t serve
any purpose. It 's a cheap shot.
(Kosar's injury) was an accident. II just happened.
"If (Livingston) had asked me
for speclllc information, the
rea,d erslilp would've gotten the
right Information. If you think
I'm upset, you bet your butt I'm
upset. "
Replays of the injury, how·
ever, appeared to indicate that
Burruss eluded Byner and the
right side of the Browns' offensive line. Schottenhelmer, as he
did Monday. declined to identify
which player had the responsibility of blocking Burruss.
The coach also touched on a

Schottenhelmer announced the
rep 0rt that Tim Manoa would
release
of offensive lineman
start al running back for Kevin
·Darryl
Haley
to make room for
Mack, who has a sore neck.
wide
receiver-kick
retUrner Glen
"There's a lot of mislnforma·
Young
on
the
roster.
lion around," said Schottenhel·
Haley, 27, joined the Browns
mer. " Kevin has made progress
during the strike last season and
and I expect him to play. "
Byner was not available for played in nine games . He precomment. Kosar said his injury viously played the 1982-84 and the ·
"was just part of the risks 1986 seasons with New England,
having missed the 1985 campaign
lnh~rent in football. It's unfortu·
nate and I'm disappointed, but , due to injury .
Young, 27, is entering his third
this is the way matters can
stint with Cleveland. Scholten·
happen."
Schottenhetmer said Kosar has helmer said Young and Herman
been measured for a moveable Fontenot would return kicks
splint that will allow exercise ·s unday when the Browns open
during the recuperative period. their home schedule by hostlng
He added there are no immediate the New York Jets.
Garv Danielson wlll assume
plans to place Kosar on injured
reserve, "but 1 wouldn't preclude Kosar;s starting role, and said
looking for a quarterback (to the Jets are a strong team
back up Danielson and Mike despite their loss at New
England.
Pagel) ."

The White Falcons 8le expected
10 retain their starting lineup from
last week with Tom Knapp and
Sam Thompson pushing hard for
starting benhs in the interior line.
"IT' these two kids don't start they
will see an awful lot of action."
VanMeter said. ''They have been ·
working real hard in practice and
ille..'~ a great deal of playing

athletic training and will be administering her expertise 10 the
Wahama foolball program.
Friday night's contest will be the
final game before the home fans in
over a month as the Bend Area
team embarks on a three-game road
swing after an open date next week.
WHS travels to Ravenswood, Vinson and Federal Hocking on successive Friday nights before returning 10 the friendly confines of
Bachtel Stadium on October 14
when it hosts visiting Buffalo Putnam. Kickoff time on Friday is
scheduled for 7:30pm.

wtllll
.

On the sideline Friday night will
be a new trainer for the White Falcons with Charlotte Oshel taking
over the duties formerly handled by
LaiTy Wright Oshel has a degree in

By BOB HOEFLICH
I pass along ' · to you lhe
toUowing announcement. Per·
haps, you can
help.
· Those inter·
es ted in the eco·
nomic development or Meigs
County should
take note or an
opportunity for the creation of
additional jobs.
This newspaper has been ap·
proached by contacts of an
individual who wants to start a
manufacturing facility in the
county for home building as it is
now practiced in Sweden and
Japan, and it is only a question of
time until the same methods will
be used in the u.s .. according to
the statement. The manutactur·
log process,it is reported, gives a
lower cost, better engineered,
lower maintenance home which
~Ill be built to the new EPA
standard for drinking water
purity.
The lndlvldual, it is reported,
does not need any financing,
loans, grants ot the like. He has
$250,000 worth of equipment to
move Into Meigs County as soon
as a building can be located.
Initially, he would require a
building of about 2,000 square
feet with a truck dock, concrete
floor. wired for three phase
power ~ufflcient to run a 40
horsepower motor and a supply
of industrial water.
He has stated that be can begin
hiring within 30 days ot locating·a
· building. Personnel required in·
elude sales people, office help,
machine operators, assemblers.
packers, malnte11ance, mechan;
tcs and truck drivers.
It ls ' reported that his need is
urgent for the building. If you
know or such a structure any·
where in Meigs County, you are
asked to contact Tom Reed at
992·5667.

TIFFAHY

95

Each ring
exquisitely designed
in 14K Yellow Gold.

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY R. JOHNS, LTD.
Offer expires November 30, 1988.

--Did some of you Southern"High

School football fans forget to go
to the high school in Racine
Tuesday night and
secure

•

1985 OLDS
DELTA88
1111721,2 doors, sedat1, V·B, air cond.1
roof, auto. trans., PS, PB, power win-

,' power seat, power door locks, tilt wl1eel,
control, AMIFM radio, stereo tape1 ra·
i tires, white walls.
WAS
i

1986 OLDS
DELTA88

Stock # 78226. 2 dOOft, coupe, front wheel
drive, 4 ey!., air cond ., PS, PB. AM'FM radio,
bucket seats.

WAS

NOW

1982 AMC SPIRIT

szooo
1987 HONDA .
ACCORD .
87201 , 2 doors, hard top, front wheel
, 4 cyl., air oond., auto. trans., PS 1
radio, stereo tape, radial tires, bucket

NOW

5

$10,495

1986 FORD
MUSTANG G.T.
Stock t88581 , 2 doors, sedarl, V-8, air oond.,
PS, PB. J)OWer windows, power door locks, lilt
wheel, cruise control, AM'FM radio, stereo
tape, bucket seats.

1983 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL
89631 , 4 doors, sedan, V-8, air cond.
1 rool, auto. tranl., PS, P~. power win'power seat. powerdOOf lodl:s, tilt wheel,
con trol, AM'FM radio. stereo iap8 , ra·
i I rires, bucket seats.
NOW
WAS

WAS

NOW

StockU0031, 4doora, frontwheeldrlve,4cy1.,
air coM., auto. trans., PS, PB, pow81'winclows,
AMIFM radio, radial tires, buc:kel seats.
WAS

$

s1

1985 FORD
BRONCO II
Stock • 88012. 2 doors, station wagon, 4 wheel
drive, 6 cyl., airtond., auto. trans., PS, PB,
AMIFM radio, stereo tape, bucket seats.
WAS
NOW

58995

5

7995

1985 BUICK
LIMITED CENTURY

1985 DODGE
D-150 4X4

Stock II 88782,4 doors, sedan, 4 cyl., air oond.,
auto. trans., AM'FM radio, PS, PB, power windows. dlr wheet rad ial tires, white walt.

Stock•1179t, 2doora, 4wl1eeldrive,6cyl .. 4
speed, atand. trans., PS, PB, AfNFM radio,
radial tires. 11210n plckup,long- bed.
WAS
NOW

$

5000

NOW

979S

1984 FORD
RANGER

1986 MERCURY
COUGAR

Stock# 89412, 2doorl, Scyl., auiO. trana., PS,
Pll, AtMM radio. long wide bed, gauges.
WAS

'4995

NOW

$4495

Srock • 8n41, 2 doors, 4 wheel driw, V-8,

bumper, sliding rear glass.
WAS

Stock I 89382, 2 doors, 4 Wheal drive, V..S,air
oond., aulD. trans., PS, PB, tilt wheel, cruise
control, AMIFM radio,atereo tape, radial tires,
112 ron pickup, short wide bed, rear step
bum pel', gauges, sliding rear glass.
WAS

1986 CHEVY
Z-281ROC

NOW

$3995

5tocH87672,2doora,ll8dan, V·8,alrcond .,
..10. trans., PS, PB, power wlnclowl, power
oea~ AMFM radio, sraroo tape, till wheel,
cruiaa c:on1ro1, radial tires, white walla.

WM

camper top.
WAS

56995

I

cond., auto. trant., AMJFM radio, cruile

coolrol,

PB, bucket seats.

NOW

*7995

1988 FORD
ESCORT LX

1987 CHEVY
CAMARO

Stock 1 87411, 4 doors, aedan, front wheel
drive, 4 cyl., air cond., auto. trans., PS, PB,
radial tires, APNFM radio, bucket seats.
WAS
NOW

Stock • 811551, 2 dooro, 6 eyl., air cond., PS,

*8495

19351

1987 DODGE D-150

s~k.n83t
&lt;door
. I, I ra~4 Of,,
1
"""'
1
IIUII W&amp;QOn,

NOW

•6699

17999

19861/2
NISSAN TRUCK
Stock I 86572, 2 door&amp;, 4 cyl., 5 ip8td hns.,
AMIFM radio, atareo tap&amp;, aholt wheel base,
rear step b.Jmper, gauges, sliding relll' glaas,

,

1987 MERCURY
LYNX

1983 CHEVY Z-28

PB, AMIFMrlldlo,stereotape, liltwheel,crulle
(l)nlfOI, radial tires, bucket 181.tl .

NOW

WAS

.7995

'8995

1985 MERCURY

Stock•8931 1, 2doo~. Gcyl.,auttt. •ans., PS,
PB, t/2ton pickup, ahortwheel ba&amp;e,rtarstep
bumper.
WAS
NOW

$8295
I

..,

. . . . au&amp;,,l ...

..,..v..,..,,...

~.N.

1111,

1980 Buick Century t:;;,.h~.m;;:;t;;~.;:.~.;. $700 1980 Ford T Bird ift""::·.:::::-::::::-::::::::•700

1988 CHEVY
CAVALIER

llocUI11h.211r...wd ... V-lllf,MD.

s7995 1976 Mercury MarqUIS
. ·-..........................
rn.7: ..·~.~...,.~:.m....• $600

yourselves reserved seats on the
50 yard line tot the entire season.
If so, there . are still some
available and you can arrange
yours at the high school office.
They will also be sold at Friday
night's game. The Southern
Athletic Boosters are carrying
out the project .
And, up Racine way, the free
entertainment will be staged
Saturday night at the Shrine
Park with a new group to be
appearing.
The group, known at the
Mou'n taln Top Gospel Group, has
been singing in church but are
now going public and will be at
the Saturday night event.
Members of the group are Jerry
Powell, Mildred Williams, Betty
Spaun, Diane Simpson and Todd
Bissell. Also appearing Saturd·ay
night will be Wilbur Donahue,
mandolin player.
The action starts at 7 p.m. and
you are to take your own lawn
chair.
By the way, sJnce the Shrine
Park is the center of many , many
evenings of free outdoor entertalrunent action is underway on a
fund drive- by the.park boardto secure adequate outdoor sound
equipment for the use of enter·
talners appearing at the free
programs.

---...-

The voters have cast their
ballots - there wlll be no
recount.
Ninety-five Rutland residents
have voted in favor of staging a
Halloween party this year while
56 voted to hold the traditional
trick or treat night. Four other
residents voted they would be
cooperative with either.
So the 11arty is DJ\ and wlll be
held at the Civic Center !rom 6 to
8 p.ni. on· Oct. 31'. All those who
want to hell/ - and remember,
there's much to be done- shauld
call Kim Wilford at 742·2103. ·
We have trouble getting 'em up
-and Russia has troubl~ getting
'.em down. Do keep smlllng.

' ----·-

GO-CART

was

Pepsi uo-·U&amp;Ir&lt;
winner In a drawlag at the
store recently. She's
plctuJ:!!d here with Don Perry, manager of the Pomeroy store. Mrs.
M~Kinney says lhal the gasoline powered j!O-carlls l~r her son,
Char De.

Loaq program utilization sought
The Farmers Home Admlnis·
!ration (FmHA) is preparing to
activate a loan program designed to help members of
socially disadvantaged groups
Including minorities, acquire
land for farming, Davis Urwin,
Meigs FmHA County Supervisor.
said today .
Under the new program.
FmHA will try to llnd persons in
these categories who. are Inter·
es ted in farming and can qualify
for an FmHA farm ownership
loan. The agency would also be
prepared to sell or lease to them a
farm held In its inventory if any
are available, Urwin said.
FmHA can also provide other
loan and technical assistance, If
needed, to help the borrower get
started.
·
The new program was included
in the agricultural credit act

signed earlier this year. Urwin
said, aod funds have been re·
served for farm purchases based
on the population of socially
disadvantaged persons.
The population of such persons
ranges from as low as one
percent in some New England
and midwestern states to highs of
68 percent in Hawal!, 57 percent
in New Mexico, and somewhat
lower percentages in southeast·
ern states. Population groups
involved are Hispanics, Native
Americans, macks, Asians, and
Pacific Islanders.
· ·
Persons who think they might
be eligible and who are In
farming or woud like tok become
farmers are urged to contact the
Farmers Home Administration
county office, 105 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Urwin said.

A seminar, "How to Start and
Operate Your Own Bed and
Breakfast" has been planned by
the Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service and the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce.
The seminar will be held on
Sept. 27 from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m . at the Grace Episcopal
Church, 326 Main St., Pomeroy .
For anyone with an extra
bedroom in their home,ln need of
extra money. the seminar could
provide ideas toward an add!·
tiona! source of income.
The program will include information on how to s lart a bed and
breakfast, marketing, sources of
assistance, food service, and how
to prepare a business plan.
Presenters will include Ed
Smith, East District Specialist,
Ann Smith, Muskingum County

· FREE SHOW
SAT., SEPT. 10:--7 P.M.
RACINE SHRINE PARK
. Mountain Top
Gospel Group
Country Blend Band
And Others
Sponoarad by
Racine Village Park Board
Brln Your Own Lawn Chair

Extentlon Agent, Home Ei:onom·
ics, and Kathy Chenowith, Wa·
shlngton County Extension
Agent, Home Economics.
The registration fee is $12 per
person or $16 per couple. The lee
includes lunch, snacks, and han·
dotit materials. Pre-registration
by Sept. 20 is requested.
For additional information or
to register for the class, residents
are asked to contact the Meigs
County Cooperative Extension
Service, 992-6696. The program is
open to the general public.

r;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;=t'

LEARN TO DANCE!

FOI IEGINNERSI AU AGES!
Coup!•- Slnglea ·Teams
IAU.IOOM DAIICE CLASSES
lnstrudor: Milrki Caito
Closs11 Htld Thurs., 7 to 9 p.m.
MIDDilPORT, OHIO
AMEIICAN llGION ILDG.
Thio Woek, Fri., Sept. 9
1 to 9 p.m. FREE CLASSES
Ta All New Menlll
COli EAil Yl 6: I 5 P.M. Iring Friends!
'II Hr. Ctog;ng Show Ages 5-10
· Clogging Mlfoilmtftt aft• show.
sm. 15-6 to 7 p.m.
lnformatton on enrollment
Call Mikkl Casto 304·875·3888
Joann Bolrd 304·875·3306
Gerold Freemon 814-387-0182
Bob Gilmore 814-992-8128

fliNt EASY! GREAT EIIRCISEI
MEET NEW PEOPLE!

.

'

. Annual flower show of the
Wildwood Garden Club was
staged recently at the ForestRun
Church.
Dorothy Morris bf the MlililJe.
,port Garden Club was a gues tand
~omrnented on the arrangements
displayed by the ·members. Heidi
'Elberfeld used mums, statlce;
spider plant and pfltzer on a rock
'tor her exhibit in "Knowing the
'warmth of Friendship", while
:Evelyn Hollon in the class
"Being Half of a Pair" used two
,containers on a base filled with
red zinnias, twisted willow, daf·
·fodll foUage and diettenbachla
leaves.
Janet Theiss' .arrangement
showing motion featured sun·
flower, spagnurn moss and b~tdal
wreath in "Rocking a New
Baby", Hilda Yeallger displayed
a tall blue pitcher filled with
canna flowers and leaves and a
sunflower in the interpretive
category. "Belonging' to a
LGarden Club."
• For "Relaxing In the Even·
ing", Peggy Moore used cosmos
~nd wlld baby's breath, while
Doris Grueser. for "Keeping
Busy" showed a mass arrangement or zinnias, marigolds, as·
tera, and geranium. "County
Your Blessings" was the class
tilled by Mary Nease who used

. - - -----t------''1---- ____. _ . .

-- --'~

Seminar set on tourism

Wildwood Garden Club meets

Descendants ol Neva Grimm
held their annual reunion at
Forked Run Park Sunday.
Attending were Franklin, Lora
Mae, and Robin Imboden. Tl·
mothy, Zachary and T . K.
Imboden, Debbie and Jessica
Hill, · Kimberly, Charles and
Tamltha Lawson, Jason lm·
boden, Teresa Simpson, Tamtka

.~-

mas and Bonnie, Circleville;
Dale Jr. and Angle Welsh,
Parkersburg, W.Va.; Howard E.
Frank, Clarence, Louise, Joey
and Jessica Dillon, Racine;
Hermas and Margie Howland,
Harrison; Mildred Bissell, Dale
and Marjorie Welsh, Tuppers
Plains; Pat, Penny, Junctnda
and Jason Mullen, David Price,
Middleport; Robert, Linda and
Jennifer Bigley, Coolville; Billy
Price, Claudia Turner, Indianapolls; Bill and Mary Price,
Bloomington, Ind.; Randy and
Lesa Price, Indiana; Debra, J.
W. and Joseph Howard, 'H arri·
sonville; and the hosts.

of all Ohio llcspltals, which will least two physician panelists.
be receiving OMEN classes.
The last half hour consists of a
The weekly. nooh-hour confer- discussion period, heard by all
ences, first Initiated at Ohio State ·hospitals participating, in which
University In 1962, originate live panelists respond to questions
tram the OSU camti11s In Colum· and comments phoned In by
bus. Through these teleconteren·
physlcalns viewing the program.
ces, doctors at Veterans Memor"We are pleased to offer the
Ial ln1eract with guest lecturers OMEN Series to our Medical
from four medical institutions:
Stall again this ye"!"." stated w.
The Onto State University In S. Lucas, Hospital AdministraColumbus; The University of tor. "The classes cover a wide
Cincinnati; case Western Re· range of topics detatllng the most
serve University in Cleveland; , up-to-date treatment available in
and· till&lt;.Medical College or Ohio medicine today and assiSt the
at Toledo. The first 30 minutes of Pl'Yslctans In maintaining qualeach program is devoted to a ity medical care to their
sllde/lectare presentation by at patients."

zinnias, wild's baby breath. and
fruit and vegetables at the base.
A madonna with chiid was
featured in the 'Going to Church
at Chrtstmastlme " design by
Bettv Milhoan who used lltchen
and money plant. Do'r othy Smith
had three arrangements "Having Been on a Vacation" using a
sea shell, hydrangias, and
Easter wood in a black bowl,
"Bird Watch.l ng", with figurines
and Easter wood along with
colored Queen Anne's lace, and
'"Preserving Some of the
Summer" an all-dried arangement of flowers on a piece of
weathered wood.
Kathryn Miller's arrangement
"Still Ce· Stand Tall" was of
troplcana roses in a tall blue
vase, while Marcia Arnold depleted "Having a Grandchild"
with a miniatUre arrnagement
using snapdragons and baby's
breath.
Evelyn Holltm showed a pop
art arrangement using paper
.p iates,loam cups, plastic spoons
with glads, snakeplant, wheat
and hardy dahlias in "Enjoying a
Picnic." In the class "Enjoying
·All the Greens of Nature' 1, Mrs.
Hollon displayed an all -green
.design of corkscrew Willow and
azalea.
Other untitled arrangements
were by. Held! Elberfeld, marl·

Grimm's family reunion held

•I

The annual Price family reun·
ion was held Labor Day at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Char les
Price, Long Bottom.
Attending were Robert, Penny.
Brett and Bobbl Price. Jimmy
and Jeanie Starcher, Paul, Ca·
rolyn and Kenny Whaley, Ruth
and Roger Dlllon, Long Bottom; .
Chestder, Teddy and Lori
Mundry, Joe ·and Eloise Con·
nolly, Brian and Tanya Connolly.
Reedsville.
Sharon and Sammie Bradford,
Mary and Chris Greenlee. Mary
Pownell, Randy Tufts, Manchester; Dorothy Pence, Ethel Car·
son, Belpre; Rev . Richard Tho·

Doctors' ·OMEN series planned
The Ohio Medical Education
Network (OMEN) series of con·
tlnulng medical education teleconferences from the Ohio State
University wU! again be provided
to physicians at Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital in Pomeroy, beginning Wednesday, September 21st
and continuing through May 2,
1989. The 30-program series )s
one way that physicians may
, keep abreast or ' the newest
advances in medicine. Physl·
clans at VMH have been taking
part In the OMEn programs for
the past 13 years .a nd this season
join 120 hospitals In 12 states and
Canada, Including over one-third

auto. trani., PS, PB, AMIFM radio,srereo tape,
112• ton pickup, long wide bed, rtar step

1986 CHEVROLET
C-10 4X4

1985 CHEVY
CAVALIER

WAS

WAS

Stock•B6341, 6cyl ., auiO.trana., PS, PB,
AWFM radio, 112 tDn piclwp, short wide bed,
rear step bumper.

56995

Stock II 89621,2 doors, 4 cyl .. alr cond .• vinyl
roo!, au10 . trana., AM'FM radio, PS, PB , cruise
control, bucket seats .
WAS
NOW

WAS

1986 FORD
F-150 4X4

1985 FORD F-150

Thursday: September 8, 1988

Price reunion conducted

Helping in Meigs ...

SALE

S~ntinel
Page-7

Beat of the Bend

SPECIAL•GIRLS•FALL

Hearts(§
Flowers

·

-- ..

r:=======================::;
Ti({~y_

The Daily

~

and Dallas Ward, Scott Hubbard,
Joy Spaun, Minnie &amp;!Jd Paul
Johnson, Desiree, Butch, and
Jason Taylor, Gene and Wanda
Imboden, Pam Imboden, Joe
Roush, Roger, Veronica, Chad
and Ryan Imboden, Christopher
Imboden, Dotis and BU! Ford,
John David, Su Jong and Danny
Ford.
';

golds, mums, and cattails in an
antique copper pitcher; Mrs.
Miller, marigolds, Mrs. Milhoan,
a Madonna and baby made out of
cornhusks flowing out of a
cornicopla; Peggy Moore. an
arrangement of cattails, corn
foliage, and Italian sunflowers
with a large stone for · the
container.
Mrs. Arnold gave devotions
using 1'Brighten the Corner
Where You Are" and " Dark
Shadows Fall .ln the Lives of Us
All" by Helen Steiner Rice.
Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting. Members were re·
minded to take down their
burning bird feeders so that the
birds will know it's time to leave.
It was noted that Evelyn Hollon
made seven entires in the Meigs
County Fair flower shows. re·
cleving two ribbons.
Mrs. Milhoan, Mrs. Doris
Grueser, and Mrs. Yeauger,
were appointed to the 50th
anniversary committee. Mrs.
Grueser and Mrs. Hollon attended an open meeting of the
Rutland Garden Club where
Betty Dean. Reglo,n 11 director,
was the demonstrator.
Officers served refreshments
at the dose ot the meeting .

35 new items in a
delicious spread of
( ·over 80, to keep you
, busy before, during and after
your favorite Ponderosa entree.
Hot appetizers,
soups, salads,
snacks and
salad fixin's.
Even .desserts. ~

rp;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:tJ

PIECES OF OLD
ANYIQUES AND
COLLEOAILES
OPEN
SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 10, 1911

Upper River Rd.
Rl. 7-Golllpollo, Ohio
(Acrooe from lhe Airport)

C 1988 lborle,_, Inc.
,... Orond Bull'&lt;t "

·
only.
Certain ittcn• tv~ilablc on ~clet(ed days.

190 Nom SKONI AYE.

._.., ~'-"''""t•oqto~-

MIDiliPotT, •

-~ .-

-- ..,_..___,' __

• --- -

·~-

"

�PagB

8-The Daily Sentiloel

Community Calendar
THURSDAY
POMEROY - ~ and 40, Salon
710, meeting at lp.m. Thursday
ai the home of Mary Martin.
The Rock
POMEROY
Springs Grange will meet at 6:30
p.m. Thursday a t the home of
Barbara and Ji m Fry for a
cookout.

l

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 wtll be
served following the meeting.

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
even lng. The public Is Invited to
attend.
Reunions
The Bowers reunion will be
held Sunday at the southbound
park on Route 33. The reunion
will begin at 11 a .m.
The Wood family reunion will
be held Sunday at the Virgil King
Farm. 38858 Smith Road, Pomeroy . Picnic lunch at 12 noon.
The 52nd annual Buckley reunIon will be held Sunday at the
Belleville Dam Pari\ In Reedsville, beginning wl!h a potluck
dinner at 1 p.m.
Fish fry
Rutland American Legion Post
467 Is sponsoring a fish fry, using
Little's recipe, this Saturday at
the legion hall on Beech Grove
Road. Serving wtll be from 11
a.m. tc 6 p.m.

Hysell birth
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Hysell
announce the blrih of their first
child, a son, Cody Joseph, born
July 29 at the Holzer Medical
Center. He weighed nine pounds,
one ounce, and was 21 Inches
long.
Maternal gra~dparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Grover,
Pomeroy, and paternal grandparents are Mrs. Charlotte Hysell, Rutland, and the late Nathan Hysell, Rutland. Mrytle
'Grover, Pomeroy Is a greatgrandmother.

Carl family reunion conducted ·

Slinderella meets
Judy Eblin lost the most weight
and Pat Hysell was runner-up at
the Tuesday morning class of .
Five Points Slinderella.
Mlckev Yonker and Audrey
Clark tied for the most weight
lost at the Mason class Tuesday
night with Susan Howard being
the runner-up. At the Wednesday
night Five Points class, Diana
Bachtel los t th e most weight and
Cathv Hudson was runner-up. Jo
Ann Newsome Is the lecturer.

Mt. Moriah
auxiliary meets
Plans for the homecoming to
be held at the Mount Moriah
Church of God on Sept. 18 were
made when the Ladies Auxiliary
met recently at the parsonsage.
At the homecoming the Rev.
Hollon will be giving the sermon
and there will be special singing
by Darron Smith. Prayer reques ts opened th e meeting with
Harriet Laudermllt giving scripture. Anna Wolfe had the secretary's report. It was decided to
make and sell fr led pies a I the
Harvest Moon Festival in Racine
on Sept. 17.

and Trevor Harrison, Stacey
Tryee, Ralph and Sadie Carl,
Jodi Harrls.on, Ron Riffle. Connie
Shaver, Lloyd and Eva King, and
Jason Frecker, Pomeroy.
Stephanie and David Banks,
Carolyn Darst of Rutland ; Rodney, Andy, and Stephanie Carl,
Belpre; Patti Barnhart, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Coleen, Terry and
Joshua Ohlinger, Zanesville;
Bob, Sheila and Keyln Eastman,
Susan Milan, Gallipolis; Ronda,
Jodi and Dale Gibson, Athens.

Buyers banquet held

Square danclnp;

Round and square dancing will
be offered Friday, from 8 to 11
The annual buyers banquet Meats, Swisher and Lohse Drug
p .m ., at the senior citizens center
In Pomeroy. Music by Larry was held recently at Eastern Store, Prescription Shop of
Hubbard and True Country High School with Nick Leonard, Athens, Whaley's Auto Parts,
Band. Bring snacks for snack · president of the sale committee Whaley's Grocery, Green-up
as emcee for the evening.
Reclamation, Veterans Memortable. The public Is Invited .
The banquet Is held each year Ial Hospital, PhD Roberts, county
tc honor those who purchase engineer; J.arry Spencer, clerk
Baud boO&amp;Iers
animals
at the sale which takes of courts, Ron Scott Insurance,
Southern Band Boosters will
meet Thursday, 7:30p.m. , In the place at the Meigs County Fair. Ken's Appliance, Judge Pat
Photos and certlcates were dis- · O'Brien. George Collins, county
band room. Parents of all band
students In the district are urged tributed. More than 250 attended treasurer, Oakley Collins, D and
the banquet with the Rev. Don J Trading Post, Riggs Used Cars,
to attend.
I'(Ieadows giving the Invocation. Dr. Douglas Hunter, M. D .•
American Breeders Association,
Picnic
Represented at the banquet Rldenours T.V., Marietta LivesThe Modetn Woodmen of
were Farmers Bank and Savings tock, Watson Logging, Spencer
America Camp 7230 will have a
Co.
Vaughan's Cardinal Market, Maple Lawn and Holter's Beef
potluck picnic this Saturday.
Big
Bend Foodland, Racine . Cattle, G. and W. · Plastics_.
starting at 6:30 p.m., at the
Home
National Bank, Bank One, Ervin's Farm and Aulmlller
southbound park on Rou.t e 33 at
Central
Trust Bank, Tri-County Creel\ Dairy, and Collins Farm.
Darwin. The camp will furnish
meat, salads and drinks .
Members are asked to bring a
potluck dish, table service and
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hollen,
lawn chairs. Friends and guests
Cincinnati,
announce the birth of
are welcome.
their first child, a daughter, born
Aug. 19, at the Bethesda Hospl- .
Revival
tal, Cincinnati.
The Apostolic Church of Jesus
The Infant weighed six pounds,
Christ, New Lima (Loop) Road,
se,ven
ounces and was 20 Inches
Rutland, will be In revival
long.
She
has been named Laura
Thursday through Saturday. The
Alexandra
.
evangelist will be William CarMaternal grandparents are
ter. Rober.t Richards, pastor,
Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Swiger,
Invites the public.
Syracuse. Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Sara Allenbaugh,
Cincinnati, and Larry Hollen,
Minnesota. Great-grandparents
are Mrs. Eva Leach, Wellston;
Mr. aild Mrs. Harold Swiger,
Core, W. Va. and Mrs. Dorothy
Myers, Washington, Ind.
LAURA A. HOLLEN

Hollen birth

Pythian Sister£ty"fe~!!

pasl grand
chief Seven Mile; Mr. and Mrs.
0 1 Storts Groveport· Kenneth
B~~tholom~w . grand' prelate,
and wife, Columbus; Beverly
Hammond , grand manager of
Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Mason, Pataskala; Jennie
Maddy, deputy of District 11;
Milo Wise, past grand chancellor, and wife of Circleville; Jean
Alkere, Circleville, and Mr. and
Mrs. H a ro I d MIller.
Wheelersburg.
A cake decorated with the
emblem In the lodge colors was
served with punch by the hos·
tesses, Anna Miller, Melody
Roberts, and Betty Young.

Open house was held at the new
meeting place of the Rockland
Temple 615, Pythlan . Sisters,
recently. Thegroupnowmeetsln
the lormeT Hensley store buDdlng located on Route 124, Long
Bottom.
orncersextendedappreclatton
and thanks to those who donated
time and money for the
renovation.
MaeMcPeekwas~onored with
the " sister of the year" award
presented by her niece, Judy
Holter.
Attending from out of county
were Floyd Cusick, past grand
chancellor of Mingo Junction;
.

An auction of dried and fresh
plant materials and arranging
accessories highlighted the re-cent picnic meeting of the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts held
at -the home of Betty Dean.
Melanie Stethem was hostess
for the meeting and also served
as auctioneer.
The members shared recipes
for tne food they brought for the
picnic. Jennifer Krawsczyn
made table favors from gum tree
balls.
Plans were announced for the
open garden club meeting to be
held Wednesday at 7:30p.m. ·at
th&lt;&gt; Chester United Methodist

Church. Members are to take
!Inger foods, a bulb with an
Identification Ia belfor exchange,
and a door prize. Chester Garden
Club will ·co-host the meeting
which Is open to all garden club
members and friends. Pat Parsons , owner of Pat's Posies of
VInton, will be the speaker.
New officers are Bobbl Karr,
president; Jennifer Krawsczyn,
vice president, Carol Erwin,
second vice president; Melanie
Stethem. third vice president;
Debbie Weber, secretary; Betty
Dean, treasurer; Sheila Taylor
and Janet Koblentz. publicity.

•

, TO NU AH &amp;0 UU Ht.fU6
IIONOAT ttwu
I Ult• 5 P.M.
I A.M. Until HOOH S&amp;TUIDAY
CLCIO
SUNDAr
..........
... ~oc;tt·_ _ (!_., _ _ ...,........

CODY J. HYSELL

Brenda Roush, Virginia Dean.
Alpha Bailey, Polly Hysell,
Daren Burns, Ola St. Clair, Sadie
Carl, Helen King, Yvonne Young,
Ruby Burnside, Margaret Henderson, Judy Carl, LouiSe Harrison. Marjorie Smith, Delores
King, Janeth Beal, Mary Houdashelt, Mlllsa Ramsburg, Elizabeth Murray, Audra Houdashelt,
Cindy King, Michelle Taylor,
Chris Roush, Ryan Ramsburg,
Carol Ramsburg, Sherr! Ramsburg, Tanya Thornton, Eva King,
Stephen Thornton, Daniel Thornton, Mabel Brlckles, Michael
Ramsburg.

Harris, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reid, David Reid, Mrs.
VIrginia Smith, Josha and Mica
Dawn, Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Smalley, Wierton, W.Va.;
Mr. aild Mrs. John Walter, Dean,
Jeremy, james and Sarah Beth,
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Spaun, Julia
Ann and Shannon, and J . R.
Young, Racine.

Famlly members gathered at
the home of M~. and Mrs. Pete
Sayre Sunday for a surprise
celebration honoring Mrs. Leah
Nease on her 93rd birthday.
Following prayer by Dan
Nease, a potluck dinner was
enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Davis, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Risch and Amy, Tlpp City,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nease,
Matthew, KriSten and Aaron,
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Elliott,
Laura and Melissa, Mr. and Mrs.
James Nease, Hayley and Alana,
Mr. and Mrs. Chris Winter and ·

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

-~

·-- - ~004~-

.....1~
........ ..... --~--·
..
. ........ ...

'1 _ _ _ _ _

-

-

Ferrell,
Betty Pullins.
Young and
tal !zed, Cathy
The hosplmeetIng opened In the ritualistic form.
Officers' reports were given and
Thelma White, councilor, presided. Bob and Esther Harden,
Guiding Star Council, were
es Is. Other members

.TO THOSE 60 AND OVER
ON ALL PRESCRIPTIONS

Beverly Bishop was honored
recently with a bridal shower at
the Masonic Temple, Harrisonville, hosted by Terri Fife,
ChriStl Lynch, Julie Hubbard,
and Debbie Lowery.
A pink, aqua and blue color
scheme was carried out. Games
were played with prizes going to
Monica Miller, Norma Lee, Charlayne Crisp, and Terri Bishop.
Cake, punch, mints and nuts
were served. 1
Attending besides those named
were Tanya Stobart, Brenda,
Courtney and Kristina Kennedy,

Sue Owens, Betty Bishop,
Francis Young, Lola Clark, Bernice Hoffman, Avanell George,
Violet Jarrell, Evelyn Davis,
Mae Gilliam, Lois Wyant, Joy
Clarke, Betty Lowery, Jayme
Miller, Denise Miller, Helen
Miller, Nina Miller.
Others presenting gifts to her
were Maxine Medley, Nan Davis,
Goldie Gilmore, Pauline Gorby,
Sandy Napper, Jean Norris,
Carol Goff, Jane Hess, Bonnie
Johnson, Linda Smith, and AI·
berta Hubbard.

'

I '

lll•nn.Ch Mcetlllougtl. " "'·

)

l

·-~

.,..

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

u-r==.,_
. ............

·---=-==-

Cl.u'fi•d pf18e• COVftr rite
followin« lef.plaon• Pch•npt ...

Public Notice

Public Notice
ing, purportlngtobethllaot
Will and Tntllmem of An·
drew N. My••· O.ce•ed,
late of Meigo County, Ohio.
WM produced in open
Court. and en application to
admit the .. me to probate
wu onthtumedlymadeln

1ho Court. The epptlcetlon
hu been 1et for hearing bt·
wood B. Napper, deceesad' lore thlo Court on Frldoy,
late of 3161411od HHI Rood' Oct- 7, 19e8. at 1:30
Langoville, Ohio 46_74 1. •
P.M.
Robert E. Buck.
Witn•• my hand and the
Probata Judge 1881 of the Court, at Po-

o·ct-.

Lena K. NesMiroad, Clerk
(9) 1, 8.1&amp;.3tc

Public Notice

614-662-3121

~ -·­

1~---c&amp;:

.

:• ;; 'ii! .:
Public Notice

Public Notice

meroy. Ohio. Auguot 22.
1988.
Robert E. Buck,

Court. ' C111 No. 269111,
Choot• o. Rov••· 37320
Route 2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789, Wll O~polnted be-.
cutor of the ootote of Loloh
V. Wlnobnnn•. doc-eel.
late of 3201-2 South Third
Avenue, Midclleport, Ohio

Probate Judge
(8) 2&amp;:
(9) 1. 8. 16. 22. 29. 8tc

Public Notice

46780.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augult 19. 1988. in
the Melgo County Probete

2

In Memoriam

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2101 .

Back To School Special
IN MEMORY OF
JACK KING SR.
ON Hl9 43rd
BIRTHDAY SEPT. 8
Although the years
may come and go;
The green gran be·
comes a pure anow;
The memoriee you loft
s1ill linger on,
As freoh u each new
morning's down.
Still deeply milled
by Wife, J oen King

MON.·TUES.-Wm.
IGood tllrt\'1!1 ~JI.I~bor;

~···is·,;

!

·m,;a·• ., ··-·:

CHEESE PIZZA

!

: $6.50 + 4 Fill :
: SUPII LAIGE DltNIS :
: ""' , ., lot In Only :

~ ~!~~- .o}~ ,!'!.~'!'~. :
992-2221 or 992·9922

Sorry, .. datl..ry .. ott.,.. _
coooliiiOII whb thia

off•.

IN LOVING MEMORY
OF
DAVID MARK
TALBOTT
Born Sept. 8. 1966

Diad Aug. 10, 19BB

"At Roasonalolo Pricos"

liomotlte

FREE
'

FOR A QUAUFYING DEPOSIT OR INVESTMENT

PEOPLES

·T · H

E

:OHIO
'SfAlE
L;NIVERS;:-,
'..___ _

pNce anymore.
Happy Blrthdoy, Dovel
We will alway• love

· We can repair and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and tod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Very osdly mined by
Mom, Mel, Donfltte,
Kevin. Denny. Terooa,
Denile, Sid, Joey and

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

BANK

Dealer for
YARDMAN I ECHO

Locoted Hottwoy
betwoon Rt. 7. IMhln.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sorvlo

(IIIIW

for lpn

Products

8.7 Financing on Y.-dmon
SlfVk:e on All MlkM

FILL DIRT
985-4487

8-8-1 mo. pd.

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP
Gently used
consi,nment
clothmg for

children.

CALL 992·6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

Certified Ucennd Shop

s- 25-tm

J&amp;L
INSULAnON

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vi'/fo Siding
Seami:?Uiter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Door.~ &amp;
Windows
Frea

Es1imates

ean se2-2n2
1/ 15/ Hn

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ROOFING

- Plumbing

and

a4ectrical

w"'k
(FREE ESTIMATES)

992·6215 or 992·7314

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

Pomeroy, Ohio

7-13·'88- lin

8-11-1 '""· pd.

APPAUCHIAN WOOD ROVES
e12 Years ExpBriBnca .

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES
FeoturlnB• Conoolidlled, Dulch
Weot, Bruneo, Aohley
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

CARPINTEI, OHIO (Off St. lt. 1431

698-6121

Evenings by Appointment

2 miles toward Albany on
SR 681.

992-5083

Help Wanted

SE. IESUMI TO lOX 729M
POmOY, OHIO 45769
;)

NIASE Celtllied Mechanic

Howard L Wrltts1l

Hours 10-4

BEGINNING
OOOBEI 3, 1988
FOI MEDICAL OFFICE
MEMBER FDIC

Repairs

YOUNG'S

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE

EMPLOYMENT

Lender

SYIACUSE, OtllO
Molt Foreign and
Oomeotlc Vehicles
A/C Service
All Major a. Minor

9-1-11-lln

V. C. YOUNG Ill

FOI TEMPOUY PAIT TIME

Equal Housing

SERVICE

Wo H- MC/Disc/Vi10

CHI~STiER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE OAY OR EVENINGS

'

986-4141

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Ref1ranc••

LPNoiCMA

Mon. thru l•t. IJUI A.M. tot P.M.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL

PH. 949·2969

- Addont end remodeling
- Rooting 1nd gutter work
- Concrtrte work

WANTED

"The Better Bank"

!-JO.'I7tfn

10-8-tfc

1-12 1 mo.

11

992-6611

992-3410

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

you.
•

Mlddlopnrt, Ohio

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

do.
We don't undarotand
why
You had to leave ue.
But we know you are in
God's
H1nda now and you
won't hiVe to
Search for that opeclel

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL IIIIGINE

1-13-lfc

You've only been gone
for awhile.
But we miss you eo;
Each dey • little mora.
Wethinkofyou in all we

J1coblen

4-16-i&amp;-tfn

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

We Appreciate Your Business!
To Prove This We Have A

WHd Eater

t/6/U/1-.

PAT HILL FORD

..-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~:::::::::::::::~==~~====

Authorizod Slr•ic•
I Partt

Brigae a. Stratton
Tecumelh

or Its, 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

1-22-1 mo.

Dtvlces
llelrlq Aid Sties &amp; Strvicf

ClJ Htlrlq Evalultlons For All A&amp;es

I

•
-

Sp10lol,
8
monthaholt
old. Coclcw
milL phon•
304178-1017.

Slfwr Poodle to
304-875-4038.

1

good ho11'1e,

F1536, 101 S. Uncoln'Mv. N.
Aurore . 11. 80542.

6 Lost and Found.

Lo1t. OtlldiJohn o.ereTrtctor.
Dusky St. on way to PottOffice
Tuts. morning, 814-882-151715.

Srull white dc)_g In Five Pointa
1rea. Call 814-992·33158.

TRI·STATE
DRYWALL CO.

8

c-pletelrywal
Service
ACOUSTICAL «lUNGS

Rick Pearson Auct~neer. 11cenlld Ohio end Welt Wgini1.
Eltlte, antique, . f•m. llqulda.
tlon •IIlii, 304-773-!785.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

mEE ESTIMATES

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

licensed Clinical Audiologist
1614) 446-7519 II (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avntt, Box 1213
Glllipolls, Olllo 45631
or 11
Vete11111 llemorial Hospital
llulbeny Hats. Ponoeroy.

Rt. 124, P-ror Ohio

AUTO &amp;.TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tr••••lttlo•
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

McCLURE 'S RESTAURANT
HIRING. Cooka ~end wlitrtllll
nMded. R•LITIM being tlken
1:00-4:00 p.m. Tua.d.,, Md
ThJndll¥'1 1t 4 79 Jeckson Pike,
Glllipollt. white hou• behind
MCCiura rllltiLuent.

We pay c•h for lite modll dean
ulld cart.
Jim Mink Chev .-Oida Inc.
Bill GanaJohnton
814-448-3872
1nd n.,.er uted c.,.. Smtth
Buldc-Pontiac, t 911 E..tarn
AYO., Golllt&gt;ollt. Call 814-4482282.
Compl... houllholdl of furnl·
ture • 1nUqun. Alto wood &amp;

co•l heaters. Sw1in's Furnttu ..
Aqctlort. Third &amp; Olive,
014-440-3159.
&amp;

Want to buy: UMd furnltuf8 W"'d
entkiUII. Will buy entire houet;hold fumilhing. M1rUn Wed•
meyer. 814-245-&amp;1 52.
Junk Clrs wllh or without
molon . C.ll Larry Uvalf· l14381i-9301
Fumtture •nd eppli.ncea by the

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling Wilh
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Y1rd Buiinets

WANT TO IUY WIECIIID OR
JUNK CUI 01 TIUCKS
-FIR EST•ATESFtr any of th•ts•vkts 'all

614-742-2617

lltw•n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Lea" ~.','7-'aa-ttn

School District. Re•Oftllble.
Call '014-4411-8297 wolkdoya
efter 4:30. 1nytime weebndl.
QUILTS
c..h paid for cp.Hitl. Pre
1950'a. ptec:ed. •ppliqued.
LinuiUII·Iny condttkm. C..ll
014-892-1857.

161 North S.Cand
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cerry Fiohing
Pay Your Phone
ond Cobia Billa Hare
"IUIINISS PIIONE
"14) Hl-6150
IESIIINCE PttONE
"14)

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

CHARGE NURSE
AeMMt Vell-v ~rling Care
Centtr. 100 bed sldll.t nursing
facility IOQted In PointPie-nt,
INking • regiltered
nurll to 1e11.1T111 thl dutkM of
ful-'dma ch-oe nur•. Tltls
position It open lmmedilltely,
cell KlthyThorntonet304-8756238. PINIInt V1llay Nursing
C•• Center it ., -.usl OPPOrtunity •mpioyer and afflrmklw
action employer.

wv. ,,

Prudantlll RnM~cial Servic•
c.:eer opportunky tor q.-llfl.t
lnchicllll wtthbulin•• •I• Of
te.ahlng lxplrhr!CII. Salwy n•
gotlable. Send resume to P.O.
Box 2208. Huntington, WV..
26722.
ntln.-1

12

Situations
Wanted

S35 ClMftfo
BILL SLACK
992-2269 •

Will c•a for elderty men or
wonwn in our home. 014-992·
8!16.
Will c.e for elct.ty m 1n or
~ in my home. 19 yrs .
ex parlence. Tu ppars Plains •rea.
CAll 814-887-3402 any 'lime.

Insurance

Call u1 for your mobil a home
insur•nce: Miller Insurance,
304-882·2145. Also: auto,
home. Hfe. hellth.

16

Help Wanted

Schools
Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOW!

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
lARN EXTRA MONEY ck.lrlng
the Summer. Get out of the

hou•. c•rier.
becomeRouwt
e Dally Sentinel
P'P•
open In

Mldcleport. C.ll Scon at The

B•W aitdng in my home in
Centenlf'V trel. C.ll 814-4463181 .
H1"e 1 c.-. freevacMion. Houea
Situw. bclftent raftrlnces. Clll
814-248-!527 • .

Fmanc1al

·21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
n&lt;E OHIO VALLEY PUIILISHING CO.
IIIII you
do busln.. with P*Jple you
know. end NOT to 18nd money
through the mal until you h•e
irwettlgMIId tM otf•lng.

,.........,do

Eatabllshed bulin•a for . •le.

c.n e14-441i-313t.

Real Eslate
31

Homes for Sale

---------

19• Mlrlltte Moct..llr Homa.
8o.28. AI electric. C., 3 BR ., 2
b•ht. ••• room, din ina room.
To many extr11 to litt. MU1t . .
to app•cH-... t4&amp;.000, owr.r
flrwncing. Cell 11 ...... &amp;-1408
aftlrl5 PM .
Mockltllr home on t.rge lot In
Mercerville. Pbol. AC. new
c.-pet. Coli 814-2&amp;8-8752 or
814-2415-9020.

tot In
Merc«villa. Pool. AC. new
C•Pit· Cell 814-261-8752 or
Mockller home on •r9e

landlc~n.:l

Reg. No. 88-11-10568 .

114-448-4189.

Nne Aug, 19. Call 441-4387.

cal. T•r'nh•l peyl You buy
permits first .,.... Wit replllce
MCOnd Y'llrl ExceHent beneftts.
1-800- 989-51&amp;0 US/ WV
W1tt1 .

&amp;Vicinity
6 F1mlty-Tu•. thru Fri. 9 to 6.
123 Fourth Ave . Bicycle.
clothes, home Int. &amp; many Dthll"

items.

Wed.. Thurs.. Fri., Georgea
CrMk &amp; lul..,lleRd .. 3rd houll
on 11ft abo,_ Baptitt church.
Cothlng, IOOia.. ..

Porurbrook Subdjvitkm. C.ll

Moving S•ht·MirV•g )NIIher •
dryer, bed fnlm•. au.t omobile
bike riCk. "Country Comftm••
wood bur..- with atone bolrd·
u11d 1 winter, ! ft. b . . bolrd
helter, sofe, corner desk. n.w
rear Ford truck .. clng window
8:~t145e•••nt. menymlsc. end
ho.u •hold hems. On a d'f only'Sat.-Sept. 10. One mile off Rt. 7
out George's Creek Rd. 10
McCulty Ad .. firethou• on right
on McCully Ad.

Garage Sal• 641 Fourth Ave.
9-4. Thurs. It Fri.

3Famlty-Frl. It Sat. 9to8i. At. ? .
ChHhirl. Ctilldren'a clottm\g,
baby hems, home interior,
hou.-wares &amp; much mon~l

2 Femlty-Sept. a. 9 , 10. 8 ·4 . 2'h
mil--Mill Creek Rd. LDts toy ..
clothing, ..c . A1ln / Shlne.

···--··pc;·mero•(·--------

Veter•n• Memorial Hospitll.
Call 114--992-210• ••k for
Olnllt.

2 mil• from 141 on Neighborhood Ad . Thun .. Fri., &amp; Sat.Sap!. 8, 9, 10. Good loll IOd
winter clothing In verlou1 sizes,
toys, hou•hokt and many more
ltarml
·

a.tr,litter naeded for 2 children.
Afternoon lhift. Cell 814-4484107., 4411-8847.

4 Famlies-Sept . 8 • 9 . 4&amp;9
l.ari81: Dr .• •eroa from Fairgrounds. 9-4. tf ~n on back

Medical 'Billing Clerk-Job included compl•ing ln1urance
forms and other medical relmd
forms. · Eap.-ienee hllpful but
not .equlred. Hours 9-&amp;. Sand
rHume to: Bowman' 1 Hom•
c... 13 Pin• St.. Gllllpolle.
Cltlio 45831 .

lot, 4 mil• from

r==::::::§:r=~:;;;:;:~;;;;;;:_

------·Gallipolis----------

good MVR. pmed DOT Ph¥11-

V«y •tt•ctiYe brick 4b•droom,
2 bllh. 1emlly roam wtth fireptece. fo,.,..l dining, l•ga living
room, 30ft. custom oek kltch.,
ublnlftl, olk wooct.York. flnW,
b-ment, 2 CM' o••ge. lwei

Holzer Ho1pitlll off Rt. 35-

'I'arcl Sales

OWNER / OPERATOR
DewMne Flltbed Dtv. l. .lng
owner / opet'ltor. fleM ownera
wetoomel Long / ehort ha~l
movements. Required 2:1 yra.
old. 2 yrt. OT R•PI"Ience. Hwe

1 BR . homa·Ma6on St. It 2-2
SR . mobile ho,...Otn'llitwy.
Coli 814-4411-4109 or 3792740.

Cltlio lnstru:tlonal Grant Deatf.

Ptrt-tlma Ae11i1t1red X-rly
Tec:hnidan. V•led hours- No
weekends. clll, or holidiYt.
Apply 10 the Medical PIIU 203
Jecklon Pike. O.llipolls bet\¥11., 8:30·&amp; PM.
Ambhious lllf atlrters needed
to demon.tnte Hou• of Lloyd
tOVt &amp; C:Mdl•. Workowrt hou~ .
Free • 300 kh. No irMittrnent
1lso Booldng Partlel. Calll14441i-8897.

Mv11le Orive· 3 bedroom. 4 ve•
old homa. g . .ge. lanced II!JV'III
\'lrd, 1t0111ge buldlng. Cd
814-448-1988.

COLLEGE. 529 Jackson Ptke,

Sentinel Office at 1114-9922155.

OlriC'tor of Physical Thnpy.

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

Chy lmM1. HIYerlferenctL Clll
814-. . 1-1312.

AVON, 111 lreltll Shirley

f lliplllylllent

AVON-Need 6 lldi• 10 Sell
Avon. C•ll 814-446-3368.

FIREWOOD

WHido bib¥ ~lngln(nfhome .

s. ..... 3oo~-e7ti-1429 .

13

Hou• trill• tlr•. with or
wfthOut whM11. Re•oneble.
Coli 814-982-1594. -

11

Con.t. C.ll 614-251·1718.

814-245-8020.

S1:1 V!Ges

HUDNALL
PlUMIING &amp; IlEA nNG

Experience opemor. CNtnlll"'l

Need 1omeone lo .-pllir ch.lira.
c.ll 814-992-2021 .

3158.
ecre~-Bidwell

•t...

Dozer &amp; lllckt.o. Worll-8!50
C.11 dozer, Ae•oneW•

Cent•.

P'ce or entire hou...,old. Felr

Appro.. 10·20

Paint"'g &amp; roofing &amp; .c .rpentry
work bv 1twl hour ur job. C.ll
B14-37B-241e.

c••·

,..1. . being paid. C.fl814-4411-

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

18 Wanted to Do

Y•d e we. brulh cutting. light
halting, 10metreetrimmlngend ·
DIRECTOR OF NURSING, 4 75
remCMI. Ml Sl.::k l1ol-992bed 1killld nuning facllty ll · 2 289 evenings. ~
teelcing In RNfor1heDiractorof
Nunlng position. Applicant
WHI do hou• 1nd offioe dllllnmu.t po. . .1 strong IMdlflhlp,
ina, lau-dry. p.wonal
communiCition 1nd patient c~re
304-878-3954 aak for Borb.
skill. In return. ..w offer 1 very
compeUtMt Vllltl• and benllllt
Rell..,.• mother will b1~ lit in
..ck-ae. For lrNnedl• con ..d- my
homo, 304-8711-3507.
. .tion, ..., d '""""' tn co nfidence to Kevin Ruffing. Arcadia
Nursh'lg
Bo• A, Cootvllte. Ohio •15?23.

AVON · AH .,.... C.ll Marltyn
Waaver 304-882-284&amp;.

Re•onable Roteo

Roger Hysell
Garage

QUIL1£RS
Earn *100.-f1&amp;0. a qui~ .
WOtldng at your h0rn111t VOUI
own IP"Cf. W• suppfy ftetop
olroedvolecediOdovorything
eltt tltCept f11 AMCIII. Call
Holly HHIInn lor mote
lnfornw~tlon , CeU 814-9925857.
1100.00 per tide. Write: Pue·

Fir• E••lt•••t
P1rt1 &amp; ler~· la1

56 StATE 51.
GALUPOUS, OH.
446-3487

Help Wanted

Get peid for rMdlng bookll

TOP CASH ptid for '83 model

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

PH. 949·2101

••"-•lult

Kltwn• to gtvw 8WifV to good
homo. Cotl814-992·7382ahO&lt;
8:00.

FOUND : SIMneee Tom Cit.
VIcinity of GDC. Coli 014-4487578.

1111181

SMALL ENGIWE
REPAIR

BISSELL
BUILDERS

MAIN mnT PIZZA

West Virginia University or
Ohio State University Blanket

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
lane K. Nouotrood. Clork
181 26: 19) 1. 8, 3tc.

CAll AMY CUTER
or lOB'S EIECTIONICS

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

11

Giveaway

Authorized John
Deere, New H ollond,
Buoh Hog Form
Equipment Deeler

Business Services

NO SUNDAY CAW
- _ _ _ _3-11-lfn
:;.:.:.;.::::..&amp;

were Opal Hollon, Lora Damewood, Mae McPeek, Sandy
White. Esther Smith, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ruth Smith, Ethel Orr,
Jean Frederick, Erma Cleland,
Betty Roush, Faye Kirkhart,
Zeda Ritchie, Dorothy Ritchie,
Iva Powell, Genevieve Ward,
Eva Robson. Alta Ballard, Jo
Ann Baum, Sadie Trussell, Marcia Keller, Beulah Maxey, VIrginia Lee, Charlotte Grant, Ada
Bissell, Laura Mae Nice, Betty
Denny, and Lillian Demoskey.

•·

SALES &amp; SEIYICE

...

s==.NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
. On Auguot 28 , 1988, in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Cue No. 25969
Mary G.Nappor, 31641 Red
Hill Rood, longovillo, Ohio
46741. was appointed Exe·
cutrix of the Ht1te of Dar-

BOGGS

ttt-•

- -•

~--

a. .... fltfft•. III .Ph.

• , •. _ ~~ Nlthhl till I

"'' •

- c .. w

Roneld NM'!ing. _. "'-

frlendlya.r..loe

11...

· - -... ~- ... - -..ilo..........

.,..._.._,..,.
_,
_·~1-oJOIIo
.~
·
- .. - ..
....... ....

(

lundlv 10:00 A.M . to 4:00P.M .
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 112-2911

...

ou•

or Res. 949·2160

Sl'W1HER l OHSE
'

IDA...

,. OAn

4

~========:111oek
~

-'•

SER~ICE

THE BILLING FOR THE FOLlOWING:

10°/o DISCOUNT

--·-·
....

&amp; Sli- onr te . ., VHS.

Brad, Bellefontaine; C. E. Hiller,
Youngstown; Brad Smith,
Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. David Nease and
Roger, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nease,
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Nease, Jacob
and Caitlin, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Sayre, Kim and Katie, Mary K.
Roush, and Helen Baer, Racine
area.
The afternoon was spent visitIng, swimming In the backyard
pool, and playing games. Mrs.
Nease received numerous gifts
and cards In observance of theoccasion.

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO
OHIO WELFARE ·
COMPENSATION
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED ·MINE WORKERS
BOILERMARKERS
PAID
P.C.S.
MEDIMET
ADVACARE _ _ _ _ ......
----...:..:.::.:..::::.::.::::::::=-.

IIATia

···-~~~~

Bishop given bridal shower

Chester council meets
A district meeting was announced for 1 p.m . on Sept. 24 at
the Chester hall when the Chester
Council 323, Daught~rs of AmerIca, met there Tuesday night.
Plans were made to observe
quarterly birthdays at the next
meeting. Erma Cleland reported
on state session noting the
Evelyn Ramsey will be state ·
councilor for another year , The
1989 session will be held In
Marion.
Reported Ill at home were
Mary Holter, Mary Hayes, Leota ·

...." ...
.... ,,.._._
...·
........
·-

_
_
·-. . .. -·
.
.
-·
,
.
;
.
.
.
_
.
---"____ - .. -··--·
•ar

VIIS TAPE
Let us ,o...,t tt..e ohiMew ill

ProJ)erty transfers
Kathryn V. Hayes by atty. In
Fact to Buddy McAngus, Bonnie
Me Angus, lot, Pomeroy.
William L. Knittel, Edith Knittel tO Kathleen Rosllnsk~ lot,
Middleport.
Randy Lee Sycks to Janna Joy
Burton, re-record 16.736 acres,
Bedford.
James S. Hannah, Tammy R.
Hannah to Marty G. Wyant,
Carron H. Wyant, tracts, Scipio.

Business
Services

I

Shade Valley Council meets

The Daily

Ohio

Nease birthday is observed

Family gathers in Wolfe Pen
John and V irglnla !Jean entertained with a family dinner party
Sundav at their Wolf Pen home.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Marklns, Mrs. Helen

OescendantsofJohnandLydla
Carl held their annual reunion In
the Coonhunters building on the
Rock Springs fa lrgrounds
recently.
A basketdlnnerwasenjoyedat
noon by lana Brlckles, Roy and
Mabel Brickles, Oscar Scholl,
Scott Harrison, Louise· and Olen
HarriSon, Hazel Wilson, Charles
and Bernice Riffle, Marlene and
Dale Harrison, Renee.- Justin and
Ashley Hoschar, DeniSe and
Mlck Howell, Phil, Paula, Rodd

Homecomlnp
Minersville Unlled Methodist
Church will have their annual
homecoming this Sunday. The
public Is invited.
The annual homecoming ot the
Unlled Faith Church, will be this
Sunday. A basket dinner will be
held at 12 noon, followed by a
gospel sing at 2 p .m. featuring
Jan and Kathy. the Johnson
family. and the United Faith
Four. ·

Layette shower conducted
Christie Ramsburg was honored at .a layette shower held .
recently In the social room at the
·Carleton Church.
The tables were decorated In
blue, white and pink with a stork
and play pen being the centerpieces. Games were played with
prizes being awarded to Elaine
Thornton, Mabel Ramsburg, Marine Dillon, and Belinda Dean.
The door prize went to Betsy
Houdashel t.
A decorated cake, punch, nuts,
and mints were served.
others presenting gifts to the
honored guest were Neva King,

Thursday, Sept.,ber 8, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--

C.rport S•l• 43 Central Awe.
Thurs. &amp; Fri. ·Sept. 8 • 9. 9 to 4.

V•d S.l•1038 Second Ave.Sapt. 8, 9. 10.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
--.·--·- -··- --·----·· ··-- ---.
---~ -

Sept. 8-9. 2 miles off Tr. 7.
Aatwoodt Rd. Boys cloth•.
Jean•. houllhold Items, maternity clothH.
Rva f1mily g . . g1 •le. 7,8.9 .
Nate \MM. res., .Rutllnd.
Sept 9th, 10th, 11th. 9:00.
! :00. Trllller behind Jlff"1 Clrl'l'OU1· hpt. 11th, $1 ,00a ba~
lots of nice. clean clothes.

Twof•mlr-boys&amp; girls clothes.
Virindowa. furntture, Klndlewood
woodstove. 4 mil• out Buhwllla
Rd. Thura. I Fri.

Pomeroy vlclntty. Sept. tth end
10th at Smtth't, 1891 Uncoln
H1lr Stytisu. Acrott The Street
Heights. Pomeroy. C8c1r ,.dto.
1·8-11-tfn styling laton It •eking one
Snapper Lawn Mower. puz:des.
1ddltionlll styfhl1 W'ho il looldng
V•d Slle for Milsions-Approx. 2 new ATV tires. pepertllack1
ior mofW thin lutt •no.,• job.
lhundredll. smell eppNanon,
20 flln'MII•. C.nten•rv Town- doors.
Cell Ttrri 11: 814-•48·91510 for
2 you~ appllen011men' 1
hou• . Frl.-9 till&amp;, Set .- 9 till7
dM:Iill.
a3 piece suits nike new), e:~tceltant
O.rtge S.I•MVrtle Or. {below women's clothfng Including like
Oov~rnment Jot.. •18,040·
Konouga
Driv-ln) Sapt. 8· 10. new dress pent a I 12. 14, , 8]
158.230 lll•· Now hiring. Your
8 :30-a-:30. Glut door cabinet. bedding. gl-Wire, much more.
••· BOI-187·1000 Ext. R•Washer• •Dtyers
trunk, quits. miscellaneouS.
9801 far cum~nt Federal lilt.
RIYmond Rowe 's. 1 mile off St.
•Ranges •Freezera
Rt. 338 above Racine. M•nuel
Very
..
rga
Sel•
Bunk
blda,
tOfa.
Job• tKm11ng7 Need .• 11dll1 We
Road. Watch for signs, Sept.
chllt
•
off•
hou•
hold
Items,
•Refrigerator~
train p•ple for Jobl: •• Alllo
8th. 9th, 101:h. Boy's clothes
p.u.
topper,l_
o
tl
of
nl01
e,cycttl,
Mechenlca. Clrpem.... eo•.,..
18-14}. •ntklua tQOia, sk1te1. ·
"MUit II hpair.. lt"
toloalllo. Dlwro111ed Mellcol clo=, • mile, lt*'ll. a. games. 814-247-4292.
ctg.4 mi. N . of Holzer on
Worr.r., Bectrlol.,._ Food Ill'- , Wo
Hwy. 100. Thura. 11o Fri. 9-8.
v5GI War..,., Electronics Teet..
nld-. ln ... llriol MolntonWor-.. Nuni"'A ..... ntltnd 4 Femltr' Y•d Slla-Thurs.. Fri .•
.... raasBnt
• 911:. on Roueh L.Mie. Ch•hire.
Ordlrll-. M•chlnilh. Offi.Qood tte,.. Priced Cheap.
WorQn .nd Wei ..... Atgiltw
&amp;
Vicinity
We Service All Makeo
now for ciUIII beginning C)o.
Frl .- 8-15 , Blt,·S-1. Sexton's
... -·
tober 3rd. Cell Tri-CountyVoc•
1/22118/lfn
Mount Hill Cemeterv off
tionll Adult Center et 753-3111
u:t. 14. A VlriiiY of funding Rt. 141. Rein cancel•.
1970 Windtor, 12d5 with
ICM.tf'l* to pay for nlnlng ere
10x12 1dd on. woodta.rner.
V.-d SII•OrHn T•rece ln washer end~. lircond. muet
avelllble fur thote •tgfble.
Allllllllll cl: 1111:1i b
Olnten.-y, StiPt. 9 . Nice do- be moved, 304!195-3802.
thing, bed1pesdll, curt1ina,
l&gt;on'tbe loll behind bV lhorapld
lamps. home Int .• mlac, A1ln Ga111ge Sale. Sept. a •d 9. 303
ch.nge In manuf~teturtng tech4
Giveewey
d ... Sapt 10.
nology . Receive epeolallaed
Seventh ·It,.., N8w Haven.
9:00 till 4:00.
Mining In "'• mach.,ICII, hy.
Fri. llo Sat.-Sopl. 9 llo 10. 9·8.
$a!Nc 1nd electl'tclt co~
Home Interior. tv, belrl cloth-. Ylf'd Sill. 101Jon• lt., Thurp.
Frw '"'""'·Aacooon Rd. CIN nents of factory equipment In mlsa.
413 Railroad St.- Frl, 811 . Sept. 8 ,9,10. Hr.. ntng
814-448-4182.
""' - I t ln6111riol Maln10 ·
'
c•nceHed. h~MM '*1:1: IIIWik.
n•• Prognlm It Th• Adutt Ken.,gl.
Educltion
Clntlf'--Trf.Countv
To • good ho,.,.. 2 rno. old
I!"WI· 1-1 omotl leoglo 1 1-1 Vo•lonll Settool. w. hwe e Old 110 toro• from Bidwell Garage Slle. Sept. 1 ,9, 10.
l!lem. . .bv alodt-. •~ 2823 M~t~~le Aw, Blcycl•.
mlho~ aolor • verlety'af tunllnt..,..,. 1¥111- .......
Fri. l 181. 1-4.
df'IIP-. bedii"ICII. OOOd mlec
lor oflll!lllo opptlcomo.
oolt-CIIfl14-441-2048.
h.....
a
begin Oar- 3rd. ••
Milo. hou-ld Homo. childTo give owoy-1 wko. old lui 711-3111 .... 14 to ..........
, _ olothlng. toy-., booka,. etc. Yard S.le. FriUy, King Town
bloodod ..... pup. 2 - ·
8-S. Ffi.-Bapt. 8 . 2 flllmont Dr. Rood.
Homlfftllk. .
owr •10 per
ohotn.CIItl14-4411-141~
hour lorn ff• Ho·
1 1171eDDnd A•.-Fri.-S.t. R• ~:-:-:-::-:-:-:-:-:--­
Willen trfp. ,._ t.-lnlftg. ComV•dlalo.1809.lofferaonlhrd ..
,....,
... ,_,., pool wlllo. 2 Ffl .,d Sot. 1 :00 t118:00.
"""""'
10
live
10
IOod
-zmoro.a-.. e - .,.... up to 21 Pit' oent. a. .....
ltall¥
IM4ng.
lnfentold. 114-. .1-4140.
Ho- -rdo. No
d.....,ne or oollectlng. no llln· edult ~ fish ..,k .wth llgO-elola.Mo-Drtve,chlirl,co.u att.lllhel. hie.
or oh-. 0... .-nd. ••• etc.
Wllllo
!emote ... - - cling
_D,..mlc-. Toy~ Gilt~
CAll 114-741-1121.
loll olothlng. otc. l'rl..., lltll .. d
Home d100r end OuiltftU 412 JoCibon l'llla on At. 31, 101h.
from McCiu101
Nine,_., oltl
lmWI,
good -ah dol- PI
I. Loto of
Homo - - 'f-100- fiiHteurlnt . Ofrts.e. • up. Y.-d Silo. IIIUrdl\0 flop!. 10
227-1110.
174N. f'orkOrM, I:OO~n ?. '
•arvv- 114-812-2 2.

WANTED

·DEAD 01 AUYE

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIYICE
985·3561

-------..,; ·p.----------. --... ---

hou•-

""lnOIM·

.............. ·- ·-·--

•111•

=

H-

••n

Frf-

a.-. ,.,. .......... ...

"

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

,,

---- ·--.

�Pega 10-The Dai Sentinal
31

Homee for Sale

Bea~ttrul

Holoomb Hilt

Pomeroy M"

LAFF·A·DAY

addi-

County=pl~na.. Inc. Good
used liP lftOII Md TV .....

tio.., lot. 3 IIR.. Co. Colt
814-. . &amp;-0338.

0,.0..
M to IPM. Mon lhru
Sot. 814-. .8-1619. 827 3rd .
Avo. Golllpoilt, 0 H.

Two bedroom hou•. lot end

h.tf. chlin link fenc:.d .,.rd.
2119 Ch•tnut St. c.ll 814245-15278.

w......

GOOD USEO APPliANCES

hou•.c•l* throughout.
•sooo doWJt. At•~• 1o.n.

Kw- Clhk dlotioct. Coli 81444e.7757att« 4 PM.

lAYNE'S FURNITURE

hou•. JA.

Safes and ch.n priced from
$395 to .915. Tebl• UO •nd
Up to .12&amp;. HiH-•·beds I 390
to 11595. Aedlners t225 to
1375. Llmpt 128 to 11215.
Dln«Me •109and up to 14111.
Wood tlblew·l cheW. U815 to•
'795. link 0100 up 10 03711.
Hutch• '400 and up. Bunk
bedt compl. . w-mm......
1295.nduptot395. Beb¥bedl
•110. Mitt,..... or boa: IPflniJI
ful Of twin
firm 171. Md
188. OJeen • • 1210 Ia up,
King 1350. 4-drawerchllt 119.
Gun Clbln•s I gun. Babr
m i t t - 035 • 045. &amp;od
fram• 120, •30 a King frame

•cret in Bradbur~ behind
WMPO. Large 2 c• o.-.o• 3
bedrooma, ltvlng room. centrt:l
air-he... woodbur,..., Wit• aof1.,.. n_,ty ramcMt ...t large
ldtch• ~~~ Jen Air Renge.
g•bq• dilpo•l . . dltfMtlthlr,
. utltty room. landlc•td nicefv.
s... by., .......... ooly. Coli

814-992-5751 . 081 ,500.

.

Home In country with tand for
Nlo. Call 814-992·5848.

•ee.

For ... e or hde for- hou• in

count'Y with 1 •ere 01 more-.
Prlcorldu&lt;:odby$5000. N;eo,2
st:cwy, 3 bedroom. on pretty
stret. 1!1z b.th, fulbMement2
c•
. . .g ..Central
••• ""hool•
·~pplng.
heat and ond
air.
U2 Pewl .St .. Mlddl"!!ort· 614992·8031
3 bedroom. 2 story, central air.
fenced Mck yard, finiahed • •.
ment. Priced to tell quiddy.
30 4- 67 5- 8833 .

"Now, here's a little book
• h
a}
d d" "
Wlt a re sa en mg.

35 Lots

&amp;

Acreage

63
PI acres, IS mil• to Point
eaunt , phone 304·076·
· 5018.

and g.-age.

Centrll air. In
Middi~~Jort . Call 814-992-7812
or 814-992-5257,

Homes for Rent

1982 Ctwton Double wide in
Sy• 111 • . 3 Sedroom. 2 beth,
total alec. . centr1l air, welk
•ound deck. outbuilding. m•y
extra't. $34,000. 114-992-

41

Sp~ou• 3 bedroom. 2 story
,home on St. Rt. 33. Lots of

2 B~ . unturr.hed. g.-.ge. 1
mii•218. 1200ntnt. $150dep.
Rlf. Ono child. Coli 814-. .&amp;9181.

.do.,.tl)lee. cent,.l air, clo•to
MeigsSchoots. 81 .. 992-8383.
1 05 private acr•w i iiiYICCMI

Galllpollt r=.rry. ner..v home alao
2 lots with wetls. 170.000. call
304-875-4831
3 bedroomhomeon41olt. Greer
Road. HillviiiW. 304-875-4018.
GrMd View Hgts. -3 bedroom

:home w•h f.,.,.ifv room. wood-

.burner. 2 acres of lend,
•1 515,000.00. Shownby-..point·

•ment, 30'·175-1175.
3 bedroom. 2 bMhl. ful finished
b.-menl. new 1u rn1ce &amp; central .;,, g . .ge. fenced yard.
2414 Mt. V•non Ave. Pt.
Pl.-nt. Priced on Inspection.

304-875-1774.
3 bedroom. 2 c• gnge. 3 yrt

old. e~c cond, beigewltb brown
trim; T.,.lor Roadc.'mp Conlev.
coli 304-875-8353.

Niclfv furnished sm ..l houll.
Adults onfv. Ref. NquW«&lt;. No
pets. C111814-44e-0338.

1 BR . home. 2BR . ~obilehome.
Both furnlshect •2001 mo. Call
61 4-44&amp;-4109 or 379-2740.
3 or 4 BA. hou•·Eureka. 1111
batht. 82715 • mo. Dep. re-quired Coli 614-44&amp;-4222 b•
tVII8en 9·5.
2 BR cottllg•B miM out of Pt.

PluSIInt. •200/ month. Call
814-44&amp;-4802
2 BR . hou•. air conditioned.
large fenced in yerd. •30oe mo.
Call 814-441--1320.

3

house b•YAen
Golllpollo a Holzor Hospitol, full
beeement, two c• ~. .g&amp; g•
-•r• c Y ~fu r noce. ......1"'
_ .. ,
·
Call 814-448-1288 after 15 PM.
Bedroom

3 BFI. hou•lncountryne•Rio
On~nde. No pets. Sec. dep. •240

11 mo. C111114-24&amp;-&amp;439.

Hor• lo&gt;An. beattifl.t I 80 ft
,.nch home, 2 bathl. 2 1tone Hou• forrent. 2bedroom. Nice,
'992•
fireplac-. 2
g.ag&amp; b•n c 1•n. natut'l I ga. 81 .,..
•nd pond, loclted 5 •a-n. hugh 5858.
level'/ll'd. must •e. •ducedto
sell. 058,000.00. 304-468- 2 bedroom, unfurnished. Fulfv
1542.
earpehld. Nlce,11nd el.,.. Depoth required. C.ll 814-992·
Arbuckle, 2 .tory hou• with 3090.
b ... ment on 1. 8eCf'M. HigtMIIy
and rivet' froragewith outbull~ 2 bedroom unfurnished houM,
in~ . 304-675-4489.
!i07'h Second St. New Haven,
304-875-5278.

c•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Nice 3 bedroom hou•. full
b•ernent, quiet location. 8
miles out of town, phone 304875-1078.
..

land co nt.act, larg~tliving room
w / expando room . 2 BR ., Hou• for sale or rent. 3
w /wt~n car.,..., air condition. bedroom houH, 304·875w / Ofwh:houtfurnfr:uN. Net. u• 7281 .
furnace on privlte lot. Mev rent
lot. Call 15 to 8 PM, 614-4461409.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1971 Schultz 12&gt;&lt;85, 2 BR ..
completely turnithed. Good
cond. Must aell this week. Will
makeyoua d..-lyouc . .'trefu•. Furnished 2BR . Ca.cabte. water
Call 614-446-2981 .
sewage paid. Foster's Moble
Home Park. C•ll 614-446·
3 SR . Good cond. $6,000. Call 1802.
614-388-9644.
2 BA . Mobile Home torrent. C.ll
1972ForettPark. 12x60, 2BR ., after 2 PM, 814-448-0527.
appliances. CA. deck, awning. &amp;
under pinr.ing. C1ll 61 4-446· 2 BR . mobile home. t300•mo.
0500.
Ref. &amp; dep: required. Cali
81 4-448· 7292.
REDUCED-28 x 56 "log
Hou•··. Big •wings on our Log 2 BR . furnished mobile flome.
Hou• display. Stop Wid tte at
$1801 mo. plu• ..c. dep. &amp; rtf.
French City Mobile Homn-44~ Adults onty. Send inqUiries 10:
Bo:~~: Cia 18B.c/ oGallipolls Dally
9340.
Tribune, B2!!J Third Aw .. GalliNEED EXTRA ROOM? Big sav· polis. Oflio 456,31 .
in91' on ourVEMCO 1 2x24 room
•ddt:ion displ.,--front porch &amp; 2 BR .. on privllte lot in Everpatio door. Frendl City Mobile green. C.ble TV hook -up. Call
814-446-3897 Of 245-6223.
Homet, Inc., 44&amp;-9340.
1982 Liberty 14x70, 3 bedroom. 2blllhs . newc•pet. many
p tras. Already sel up. Call
614-2!56-1010, 448-7749.

Newly deooreltld, 2 BR., fully
c•peted, Ill utilities piidMCept
electric. Sec. dep. eequired. Call
814-446-8688.

14N:70 P1cer. 3 bedroom, 1V1
bait., appli.,ces. deck and
und•penning. 89.600.00. 3046 76-2829 call after 7 :01? PM.

2 bedroom: 1 child. No petl,
drunks, or dope . 3% miletSouth
Middleport. Routl 7 . C•ll 814387-0811.

1981 ·Nathue 14x70. ex pan do
71l21 , 3 bedroomt. 1'h bollhs. 2
porches, underpenning . out
buildings. 304-882-2691 .

Mobile Homes tor tent. &amp;efvn't
Mobile Home Plrk.. Kanauge.
Ohio. C.ll·614-446-0&amp;08.

1978 Rotemont mobile home,
14x70, 3 bedrooms. WISher 111d
dryer. sir cond. stove and ref,
•e.ooo.oo negotieble. 304895-3427 or 304-875-81108.
'86 Fll eming, 2 bedroom. 1 bat fl.
lived in 8 montt.. mutt sell
$10. 000.00. 304-676· 5841
evening~ .

33

Farms for Sala

40 acres Raccoon Rd.· Mobile
""""'· 038.000. Coli 304-5227279.
For •leby ownerapproxima1etv
39 •er• f•m located 3 mil•
from PoimPI .... nt on SandHill
Road. 304-676-8787.

2 bedroom mobile home halt
mile out Jericho Road. Nf.,.._
cee .-qulrtd. c•ll lifter 5:00PM,
304-675-1082.
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . apt1. 8 cloMtl:, kftchen-appl. futnllhed, Wash•· Oryer
hook-up, ww c,•pet. ni!IW'ty
p1inted, deck.
From •n&amp;.
Regency, Inc. Apts. Call 3048 715-5104. or 876-&amp;388 or
67S-n38.

New completely furnltfled
apartment &amp; motNie horne in
city. Adults ontv. P•king. C.ll
814-44&amp;-0338.
8EAUnFULAPAR~ENTSAT

74•cret.m. no builclnga, good
p•l1ure end rul'lll water av•U•
~&amp; price negotiable, 304-8768365.

BUOGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES: 536 Joc:l&lt;lon
Pike from 1183 a mo. Walk to
thop 1nd movies. 814-44~
2&amp;88. E.O.H.

34

Up. .lra unfurnlthed apt, Car·
P eted. utHh:fll Plfd. l'llo children.
No polo. Ctii814-44S.1837.

Busineis
Buildings

Properly In Cottagevlle W.VA.
with &amp;5x79 ft building, Call
304-372-4550, 3?2-3910,
372-9154.
36 Lots

&amp;

Acreege

1'h •cr• with g..aga C.mtnt
ftoor. •5ooo. eatr 814-192·
8313.
AlMon. I•• bulclng loti.
moble ...,.,.. ~llted• .,..mile
--'•· •o rW loti. Clyde
- · Jr. 304-87&amp;-2338.
. . .111UI- ---plu~
pullllc - .. Ctydelowen. Jr.
304-17.2331.
21ecr•-llunRoocl...,_, Ow,_ fln.nalng awll•
bla ll04-nZ.33e.t.

•&amp;a. Goodlllectionf:lf~oom

t~~:;;;~~~~~~::"r;::=:;===:;:==:1

3bedrooms. 1"'h bCh.besement

2909.

d,.,;:, refriQntOf't.

r•nges . Sk,gt Appllen~s.
Up.., R,_ d. botlcll Slone
CNn Motel. 114-441-7318.

3 BA .

llrit;:lland c.&lt;t.r *!ch

54 Misc.

51 Hou~ehold Goods

Furniahed- 3 roomt &amp; bMh.
Clean. No pets. Ret. 6 depOth
requlrtd, · UtilhiM furnlthed.
Adulu only. Cell 114-4411519.
Fur,.hed apt. n&amp;O. Utlltl11
Sfl . . b1th. Slnale tMit.
919 Second A..... GeiUpollll.
Call 44t-4411•fter 7 PM.

44

Apartment

for Rent
furnilhed tpltr1m.,t. •250 8
mo. 1 BA . Utllitl• paid. 920
Fourth Ave .. Gallipolis. Calf
4-41-4411 aft• 7 PM. ·
3 room apartment. 1100• mo.
Clll304-875-5104.

lpplieances . Call 114-448·
71572. Hourt 9-5.
·

B•chllor apartment•First cl~t~s. 30" elec. ,.,a--h.,..t goldNew furnhure. l1rge fireplltCe.
$915. 30" tla:. r~~nge-•vacldo
Mullhovegoodntl.a•1ood 011 .. go-·098. 30" o• rMgotop&amp;
Choice locltion. Call814-448- bottom oven-~lt• •110. G.E.
1 815 or 44&amp;- 1243.
weohlr-•95. Whirlpool drver·
096. Rofrlg,-h...., gold !root
SmallfurnlthedllfJIIrtment. Cen- tr... t95. A.trlg. -whlte frost
tl'llly located. Sutllbletor 1 or 2 free-195. Refrlg. 2 door-'Nhlt•
adults. No pets. Rei. &amp; aec. dep. •n. Hot - ' • hut•·30 gil.~
Cell 114-448-0444.
$81. Slc81101 ~::1nces. Upp.AtverRd .• 11
..7398.
Furnished opt.-1 BR. U40omo.
Utltlll1t1 Plld. ~3JecklonPike.. For low pric. on au•ttv CarP«
O.lllpolia. Calf44~441111fter7 &amp; Furnltun~ come to MoUohln
PM.
Furnftu•Upper Riv•r Rd., 114446-7444.
Furnl1hed effldency-• 1 60• mo.
Utilitiltl plld. 701 Fourth Aw..
VIRa"s Furntture
llllllpotit. Clll448-4 418 aft., 7
PM.
Open 7d.,sa weell
I - -- - - - - - - - Mondov·Soturdoy. 9 AM-8 PM
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedSund.y, 12 noon-IS PM
•oom oport-ts
Vill-e
Uvlng
room eult• 2 pc.-•2"9,
11
9
,_.,
Minor' and Riverside Apart· lamP~~ lt. . ing et •19.915. wood
m..,t, in Middleport. From dln•tte 1111· 11·49 • up ,
$182. C.ll 814-992-7787. hutch•·$219 • up, bllken
EOH
racke·l19.95. TV stllndl. enter.
t&amp;dnmentcent ... deskl-*49.95
2 bedroOm Apts. tor rent. &amp; up. glau from guncebinet"
C~red. Nlcetettin~L.atndry 1279, bedroom suh•. full size
f
"I • INalltbl e.
11 •1•
mlti.... H lllrllng • 1 048 .86,
"
u 992-3711 . EOH.
bunk bedo wllh beddlno-0229,
boby bedt.
Aplrlment for rent. U21 •
month. Depo-.: required. 114- Excellent u..ct appManCII with
992-15724. After lpm or 992· 30 days QUirentee. Washers·
5119.
099 a up, c~ryers, "-•rs.
mrig. .ton, •nges.
New Jv redecorated ap•rtments ...,..WIIfl •reweloome. Finanewlilabee. Utilities paid. 1226. lng ovolloble wfth .,proved
credh .
par month. depostt raqulrad. Call
814-992-5724 oflor 8,oo ,. Rt. 141 in Centenery-V.. mlleon
Uncoln Pike. 114-44&amp;-3158.
992-5119.
New 1 bedroom furnished or
u nfumillhed 1pertments. One in'
Pomeroy, one In Middleport.
Coll614-992-5304.

2 crib bedl, 1 1of1. 2 relciners.
White sewing mlchlne. 3 kit·
cflen chaira. Cell 114-388·
9983.

1 bedroom IPirtm..t In Mldcleport. t150. p.- month . plus
utiUtl•. Call 114-992-15545 or
814-949-2218.

Glblon Shfo.Bv-Side Relrlgore·
tor Fr-or. 0100. Coli 614992-5362.

APAATMEI'liTS. mobile homea.
houlltl . Pt. Pl...,.tandGallipolit. 614-44&amp;-8221 .

30~882· 3827.

Beech Streat, Middleport. Ohio,

304-882-2588.

Furnished efflency, utilltl• paid.
downtown Po I nt Pleesen 1.
$260.00. 304-895-3450.
6 mil• out Jerry Run Road, 3
bedroom apt, 304-578-2350.

53

e:~~:c cond ,

call

Antiques

Buy or Sell. Riverine AnUquee.
1124 E. M1ln Street. Pomlfoy.
Houn: M.T.W 10a.m. to8p.m.,
Sunday 1 to · 8p.m, 614-9922528.

'
54 Misc. Merchandise
Wheelchelrt-new or uaed. 3
wheeled electric tcDoterl. Call
Rogers Mobilty collect, 1-814870-9881 .
Radio Shack Computer 1000
E~:. , extra dlle drive 380-1(
printer OMP 130, monitor:
CM11 , detk. l.ott of programs&amp;
ditcs. Cost OVItt' •2000new. will
sell "" $1100. Coli 814-446·
31115 anythne.
Confisc•ed cars, trucks, wn1,
boat:s, plan.,., Jewelry, &amp; much
more. Sltlted in drug &amp; crime
raldt:. Up to 90 pert:ent off. Call
1-304-429·4878..... J8.

Roomt for .ent-week or month.
Stsrtlng at 1120 • mo. Gallia
Hotel-1514-448-9580.

Winchester R•ger 12 g•. MJto.,
vent rib with wlncho Ice-like n IIW.
023&amp;. Coli 814-44&amp;-6983.

46 Space for Rent

Aiding lawn mower, Dynam•k
1036. $350. Coli 814-44&amp;6793.

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Famltv Pride Mobile Home
P•~ Golllpojls Forry, W. Vo.
304-675-3073.

ARMY SURPLUS (Advertlllnl
lp-=!lllt:IM, Bu.ln-. Pollt:iCMI,
Allltem1) . Fr~ S.t, Sun. Noonto
8:00 PM. S.m Sornerwlle's
1ince 1114. Reguler ermy
luun. denim. rwntll dothl11g.
Jr. camouftllliJe blk and wNte.
Ford 1971 •le Dl' tllide. June-llonlnd.,..d-.coRold, Rt. 21 .
304-273-5185.

hw......

:r·

•

Coli 814-44&amp;-4 149.

58

Fruit

8t Veget·"'l
CIU

KlngWoodorColllburr*tgttow
with blo..,r, 304-675-1232.
9x11 ft. red c•pet wfth pad,
almost new, 1100.00. 103
McNeil Aw. Pt. Pit.

Builclng Mat:erlllll
br

Block, lek. -.ver pip ... windowt. llntllt. ete. Claude Wlnt8rt. Rio Or.,de. 0 . Clll 114245-5121 .
Concrete blocks- •II tfHI· ,.,d
ordelivefV.
M•on•nd. a.lllpoIll Block Co.. 123'/a Pine St..
~-Ill oil Ohl ~-II

Aed Respb"''-" Pick your own
OI'WIIplci:. T.,Ior'•lerryPIII:ch.
C.ll 114---2415-1014 or 44611192.
Applw, .,....._ ...,• • m~
l.neous food Item.. Dunrovin
Fruit F•m-Fit. 1811C1Uthu.t of
Alberty. Op• ~~- Cla.d Man-

61 Fann Equipment
· CROSS 6 SONS
U.S . Je W•t. Jackson. Ohio.
114-28.1411.

TERN REO CEDAR
• Ch1nnel Rustle
•nd Baveled t..p Siding
• Deck M•erlslt
Gu.-.nteed
Oulltty
CETIOE, INC·.. Alhont·014584-3578
Pets for Sale

Groom and Supptv Shop--Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
stylea. tamt Pet Food De•ler.
Julie Webb,... 814-448-0231.

24.127 mHa A11urne pey·
mentl. c.ll O•ry WIIIIM~~. 3041175-1473.

Wtnlod-Goocl u..d smoll plono.
C•II304-488-1997.
Wenied To Buy-Good used
pl.-.o. Pl_.ble condttton. Clll
614-25&amp;-1423.
Bundy Aho S~~~:11phone . Good
plavlng condh:lon. $150. CIU
814-985-4288.

Brand• new-McCulloch Pro-Made 810 cheln •w· taw h 81
been mrted but h111 niN'IH' cut
1ny wood. Re•ari for seiUnrt
injury . New cost 138&amp;. wHI sell
for 1280 or belt off•. Call

U.S . No. 1 l•g• ~low t=r.•·
tone e.. nlng pe~~eh now .....n.
bte. lobi MMIIItt, M•on. WV.
fNth from the Sh-dolh Vallev. 304-n3-1721 ar n3-

l.ocutt Postl. Call My11ma.
814-2158-1739.
·
IHFwmARwithell-chmMts.
oneble. Cell 814-44870 I .

V&amp;'lt ....

Slag• \Wgone for ~t~le. 304171-21!SBI.
5808C.eMdl01d•b•ckhoe,
good cond, 2 buckets, AoPI
Canopy, 11.1500.00. 304-4581142.
7 ton 111191 Wlgon
Gehl,
1800 0 0 . 304· 1 .71-1 487
onyti,;.

11.01d1Cut... Cru...,St.r:lo~gon. tmmaG.~IIte ca..:li·
lion. FullvoquiDood. 118. t4695.
c.tl814-992~1?19.

One owner 1981 O.•rotet
llatk»n w.gon. Godll rumlng
condH:Ionendgooclbody. Ellcel1_, war k c•·· •1
000 m II •·
u •
:28 50,, lob Hoollldl, 814-9,2292
19780wyti•LaBaron. 4door,
n_, JMint,11r•. bMtllrY,brllk•.
f995. Cllll14-892-7214.

Uv-ock

1112 Pontiac J -2000. 2 door,
.,,o, good oo-lon. 02100.
Call 814-812-IJO•ett• 8:00.

63

v.~o

·
2 'Ill• old Slal,ion. Call •143&amp;8- 827 2.
'

For•gr•t:dellonlntiW'orUIIId

car,truckorven, •eKennyS..

•t Jim Mink Chevrolet·
Oldemobh. 114-441-3072 or
773-5134.
1979 ...--....
~- 1o1•~
....... bfue,
•lllng 01,500.00. 614-992·
88311 or 304-875-5332.

1·1'1::-:clt-u-p -:bo-dt, ~For-d-C""h_fN_rol_lt._
to~ Of shon. no Nit.. 304-175-

t

e.

1878 Dotoun plcltup 0800.00.
good cond, 304-17&amp;-2032.

71 Auto's For Sale

J

1979 luk:k Wagon. 11

Un-

,......,eoo,

1174 Jeep. •otlll. cond.. meny
nM
IOC&amp;O, IXC ...
oond.-•eoo. 280 i!h,_, _.,
, . , mony- ..,..,1100, Coli
114-992-8183.
1113 T,.,.•.tm. Y·8,or01. . .
ln)eat6on, .. to. . Na.o Interior.
•·lolldlld. 28.000 mila
08.178 firm. Coli 114-4484031

Oo=

1187
11811 Do
114-38&amp;-1

•octow, IOided.

D8CI 4WD. Coli
1,

,.... -

1172 ~~a~-n.
- - Cll1 814-..a.t781.
21
H0-1U-.110ift
oorn. 110 Hollor, OP Muooy

,... z

SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
Olivo St.. Golllpollo .
NEW· I pc, wood group- 1381.
Uvlngroorn - 0119-,199.
...., wllh -~~- 0249.
FuR .._ mMt..- • found•ton
starting- 181 . Reclineu
lllrllng. •••.
USED--· dr•-•· bodroom

c.- ,....,.,..,

1978 1'1\'rnouth " ' " - von,
• 1,800.00. 304-87&amp;-8429.
1871 Jeep C... lots of Utrlt,
01 ,800.00. 304-17&amp;-1703.
'79 IIIIONCO RANOER XLT:
nlfW radlllt. t1,BOO.OO. 3048711-4831 .
74

Motorcyclee

oui of you~ Prcru~E
BUT Wt: HAVE-N'T IEEN

3638 doyo 304-875-1989.

S~:rv1ceo

/

1183 Hondo 10 3 .........
1300. Oo-c1Ft·1 mo. old. newwn 1•1. Asking 127&amp; fJrm .
Coli 11 4-. .r 10 31
1111 Hondo XII 201111. -ox.
400 orialllll mHoo. 114:94•
2414 or ")0~1711-1•1
Ill. 31 c ............ -

..d IICOI)II..._ av..abte for
Honda. W. ...ld. lu1_.. end
Y-&amp; 304-117... 1:10.

~ ~•

1122.

11113 Oldl. 011- .. ,.._

-a..

llrougft,_, V·l,
~1. N,
.... - · · ... 70.000 mil•
...... "'"""· Coli 114-24&amp;1011.

"Kidnap a writer from one Of those
supermarket newspapers so nobody wfff
believe we're here."

\

.

-.

., -., ... \HAVE!$ I} ~g

Omc,..... Septic Tanks . 1000

tyllem. Flctory Mined rtlplir .
ohop. RON EVAN.9 ENTER·· 1
PRIIES, J11cklon, Ohio. 1-800.
137-9828.

1HE. API$T IS GOIJG

~LLY1

a

RON'S Television Service. 1'•
Hou• ellis on ACA. Ouaar.. ·
GE. Spocltllng In Zonfth. Col~ '
304-675-2398 or 814-44&amp;-•
2414.
'1-g

TY MEEKLE AND WINTHRO,P_~--------.:--,
HAVE 'tOW .SSEN
MY CAT.
E€&gt;NIEAAL-D.6. ~

I 'THINK CHIPS MA.Y HAVE
SEEN HER ... He;$1JPCN

NO,!

HAVE:N 1T.

YOUR. PORCH ROOF.

M

Remowl. Free estlmete1. C.ll ·
304,876-7121 .

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Galllpollo. Ohio
PhoM 814-44&amp;-3888 00 81444&amp;-4477

THAR AIN'T

NO CARD GAME
TONIGHT

1!\ tBl News
Ill f&lt;llnowhll County on the
Line

C~~gney end Locey
IDllD Major L11gue
BeMbllll
f!J evening New•

fill

Electrical
Refrigeration

1;1

II Crook lncl Cllate ·

Residential or commercial wiring. New ..rvlce or repairs.
Uctnlld electrlcl.,. Eltlrnate

10:05 Cll Slnford end Son
10:30 (I) Ma(or Loague Beaeball
C!l Eatten$rs

free. Ridenour Electric•. 3048715-1788.
86

where a detective was
alreadr.killed in quest for
killer. Q
fill lilly Graham Cruaade
1121 Ulrry King Live!
'
1D 1121 MOVIE' 'Open
AclmiUiont' CBS Thursday
Molfll (NRI
8:30 Ill (2) llll Cht8ra Sam and
R-cca hi-jack Evon
Drake's limo; she professes
har love. (R)
New Country
10:00 ill 700 Club
Ill C2l llll L.A. Law Kelsey
represents a slippery crime
fighter called The
Salamander. (R)
~~~ Ill (II ABC Newo Special

a

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

&amp;

Willi tilt Moon' ABC
Thuredlly Night Movie (PGI
(1 :48) I;!
C!l Tho Dey the Universe
Chafl9ed The series closes
with a reviow of the many
systems of belief. C
Ill Vfclory 11 Sea Killers and
the Killed
fill 48 lloun Follow the
1
growing crusade ogainst
smoking as nonsmo.kers
speak out.
1D till MOVIE: The Best of
Thnea (PG131 (1 :44)
lUI PrtmeNews
a211fffy Graham Crusade
flJ) WON·TV' a 40th
Annlvorsory Recaps Last 40
Years at WGN· TV
Nllhvffft Now
1:05 Cll MDVIE: Tho Bridges at
TOko·Rf fNRI (1 :43)
8:30
C2l llll Hope Nowa
-orf&lt; Broadcasting mogul .
Ted Turner stars as himself
In comadian Bob Hope's
spoof of TV news shows ond
celebrity onchormen as Hope
forms his own channel .
(!) VIctory et Sea The
Turkey Shoot
9,00 ill The Blue end tho Gray,
Pert 8 (NRI (1 '00)
C!l (!) Myoletyl Adam treads

a

tar~

10&amp;rA

Pllntlng: Interior • Exterior. •'·
Frll . .~m.... Coli 814-44&amp;- '
8344.

84

Ill Cll MOVIE: 'Racing

e

RON EVANS ENTERPRISESSiptlc link pumplno- •&amp;o por •
;
lood. Coli 1·8D0-837-9128.

82

Pro111ofonef Tennis

~ 811ege FG~&gt;Ibofl

gal., 1500gal. 1ndJet Aer•tlon

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE , ·
hou• call ..-vlclng G E. Hot ·
Point, Withers, dryera and
itoves. 304-578-2398.

0

11!1 VfdeoCountry

(I)

SWEEPER and tiWing mechlne
repair, parta, •n d suppll•. Pick
up •d dell\lery, Ileitis Vllmlln
Cleaner. one h1lf mile up
Goorg• Crook Rd. Call 814- ,
44&amp;-0294.

Rotery or asble tool drilling.
Mot:twslltcompllledllmecfiV.
PUmp ul• lnd MrYICe. 304815-3102

!HI Benton

a

'

Fatty Tree Trimming. stump "
remo... l. Cell 304-1711-1331 .

IHIBonoon
0 Double Trouble
11!1 Crook end Cheat
7:05 Cll 9 to 5
7:30 G C2lllollywood Squares
(JJ SpeedWeek
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (I) Judge
1111 ID1121 fill Jeopardy! 1;1
IDllDMWS"H
1121 Cro•oflra

7:35 Cll Slnford end Son
8:00 (J) The Blue end the Gray,
Pert 7 (NR) (1 :00)
C2l fill The Cosby Show
Cliff claims nobody can ever
p~n the wool over his eyes .

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING
Uncondltlonll IHotlme ,..,,.,.,••· Locll .eftrtnc• furnllhed
Fret ntimlles. C•ll collect
1~114-237-0488. dllf or night.
RogersBasement
Wtlterproofing.

a

YldooCountry

11:00ill Remington Steele
e C2l CiJ 111 1111 m 1121

General Hauling

l!IINewt

THE GRIZZWELLS®

Dillerd W•• Swvlce: Poolt,
Cilternt. Willis. Delivery Anytime. Call 014-448-7404-No
Sunday c.ns.

History of the AFL (R)
C!l Alntrlcan Art Forum

tli5HITV..I ~1m
NAICH ~ •• :r.

poult. cistwnl, \Neill. Ph. 814245-9285.

Ill Sign Off

MA5 'lDOMUal ~
iCESf "',..

A &amp; R Weter S•vlce. Poolt. '
cistern•. wells . lmmedlate1,000or 2.000glllons detlvery.
Coli 304-875-8370.
.

w

(JJ NFL'o Gffttett Momenta

I. \WE '1DO MUCH

Wettr dlltivery. 1000 gellona.
Re•on~ble prlc.. Immediate
dllhMry. Call814-992·5275.

IUIM=fne
fHI Twf I Zone Stop at
WIIIOugh
0 HltchcOcll Praoento
till You C.n Be 1 Star
11:30 G (2) fill Tonight Show
(JJ SportoConter (L)
(I)Chllra
!IlOna on One
• (I) Nlghttfne 1;1

1111 Magnum, P.1.

fiJ 8poota Tonight

WltMnon's Water Hauling,
renon1ble rates, immediete '
2.000 g..lon dellvwy, Ciltllfnt,
Poolt. w,ll, etc. c..r 304-157~
2819.

eU.S.d2lOpen
Cll 8porlo Special
Tennfa highlights

PEANUTS

1181 yz 4110, •o oond, :104112·3317.

•

M.b. love
Ia 1 Thfft Way Straat

ORiplfde

Club of Arnertc.l Elc:ort

MoYingOIIIol _ _ _ ooll
. ,, 100.00 bin t79S.OO. , . . ,
HD- 100 Cl CUlt,.., •tro
111.:104-11-·.

87

Upholstery

I

NEMED

••

-------- .

Mowrev'• UphoiiWino ~ln..~
triDDUnlylr.. 23~•s. Theb.. t "'
In lurnil- uoho-lng, Call '
304 -8715·41114 for trea ..:
nt'"-s.
-I,..J

.

.

.'

CIS Ultt

......... Now

.

" I want to share my apartment, "
s a id the c ut ie . " But I'm very
particular. A mala or female is

"

.

.

.

.

;omplele lhe chuckle quoted
by f1 lling in the missing words

•

'--'---'--''--'--'--' you develop· from step No. 3 below.

•.-r.l'-,1

· ~~~~~~~~~
~~~~u~M~BE~R~Eo~~,,~·"l'.-r.I,-,IT'~Isr-1~'-,1~'~1

e ~~~~~MBLE FORI

I III I

I I

I

I

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Zipper - Aweil - Bosso - Nether - WHOSE was IT
Mom to young son : " Your friend had an operation lor appendicitis and it wasn't even his appendix ." Wide-eyed , the
son gasped, " Then WHOSE was IT?"

~~----~=---~

BRIDGE

NORTH
tQJ75
.AJ$4
tKU

Cue-bidding
'into trouble

......

tKS

WFSJ'
t3
.QI097

By James Jacoby

EABT
tJOV

•au

tJ76

tQ 10
tQ88712

tAJIOH

No doubt many of you fell asleep
while trying to follow the bidding of
today's deal. The auction, which appears in "Murder at the Bridge Ta·
ble," represents author Matt Grano. vetter's toogue-in-cheek lampooning
· of super-scientific bidding methods
that call for indiscriminate cue-bid·
ding of first- or second-round controls
once a suit fit and a game force have
been established. He believes, as I do,
that tint-round controls come first,
and that first-round controls in sec·
ondary suits should be bid before a
void suit or singleton ace is mentioned.
Best bidding on today's deal would
spotllght the diamond suit, and even~ually North would realize that there
was a strong possibility of a diamond
loser and would stay out of seven. Of
course South made his grand slam, but
not without travail
He won tbe openipg trump lead and
immediately rattled off sil&lt; rounds Of
spades, discarding a diamond and a
club from dummy. As you can see,
· West bad five discards to make and
could throw four clubs, but what then?
In fact be threw a heart. Declarer now
cashed the heart ldog, played a heart
to dummy's jack and cashed the heart

SOUTH
tAK81U

...
•Kz

tA98S3

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

,.. ,.4.
s•
a•
7.

West

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pui

st

Plllis

Pass

p.,.

6t

Pasa
Pasa

Pass

Paa
Paa
Paa
Paa
Pass

Opening lead:

Sol..
It
4•

5t

7t

+3

· ace. The last heart, now a wilmer, wu
: played and West was b e ' - a ~
. "!'d a bard place one more ~- He
p1tcbed a diamond (It juat wam tIll Ilia
· nature to throw the club ace awaJ},
·and the klog ~nd ace of d!~~
· made declarer • last ll~tle --- ..,...,
the 13th trick. Now that 1 Murder at
the Bridge Table,

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Derby
horse,
Seattle5 Station
9 Hiding
place
11 Car
12 Egg-shaped
13 Get going
15 Espouse
16 8elfry
denizen

44 City of
Manasseh

DOWN
1 Clumsy
boat
2 Paramour
3 Shun
4 Moisten
!)Thwack
6Ump's cry
Yesterday's Answer
7 8lemished
8 Agonize 24 "The Six 31 Mortise
18 "Who am 10 Upbraid-Dollar
Htting
- argue?" 14 ResoMan"
32 Point
19 Summarinance
25 Calumniate
of view
zation
17 Wooden 26 Ortega foe 36 Pudu, e.g.
21 Pigeon
core
27 Foray
38 Started
22 Turkish
20 Unique 28 Also
(poet.)
weight
23 Israeli 30 Cubic
40 One
unit
dance
meter
- time
23 Present
24 Masculine
26 Secret
language
27 8oost
28 Peak
29 Mountain
30 Musical
compo-

sition
33 Island

(Fr.)
34Tyke

35 Scope
37 Lament

39 Grazing
ground
41 Glacial
ridge .
42 Spanish
porridge
43 English
river

DAD..Y

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

9-8

'
M 'F L

Q C G

MIMI (Ill( I :30)

I

(

rtl=~l;l

I'"-111111.,.

1

·lf--+IP-T.RI7,.=E,IH~Q~-;;-8G;::_lr.9-ll O

TV

!llli*'lllnmtnl Tonight
N•wtNillht
D MOVII: 'Tho
.

be·

I.s 1.6 .I .I .

Trana-Am Championship

from Ulllfngil!rl, DH (T)

I
I"

I I I

fHI Traptllfi.Jalln,

•-Magtzlnl
12:00 ill ,..,.. Cllut
Cll Aulelllaclng Sl&gt;orts Car

- · · · - Clll 114-24.
1122.
1878 FoRI Fllr-. ltrolthl 1,
.... ..... uoo. Cof1814'245-

TO GET THf

iOUNCe ouj Of
'(OU~ CHECk.

J &amp; J W•er Servl«. Swimming-

1980 HDndll lnMmlle. One
owMr. Ub MIA'. C.tl114-44&amp;1078.

'
A&amp;~e

Home
Improvements

du~
~·d.

19a1 Nltoon 200 IX. 4 ely., I
tpd., PW, dofrolt. AM-FMC::.u w/ptfNIW" boOtter, electronic w.nlng d•lce. tun roof.
full kl) .. meg. wii. ./Wddlalt.
exc.t. oond. 72.000 ml•
12481. c.ll 114-448-11&amp;1 ilf·
t• 1 fiM.

CiOi THt=' STATIC

WE

Eul""'
H1na c••tter 5 :00304- 95-

REO HOT ,_galnsl 0'119

... c ••• boatt. .,..,.

tD llD Thfft'l Company
1121 Moneyffne

Ak ... Trlllt Trimming .nd Stt~mp

M lFRIN

a

Moton Homes
&amp; Campers

tfle

· t_,.::C__;,;R;,..:.Y..,::.E..;M-T--11,..:.!

e

~

I
3

(I) Ill Cll ABC Newo 1;1
C!lllody Electrrc
Ill NlghUy au.rneos Report
fill
f!J CIIS News
1D llD WKRP In Cincinnati
!UIIntlde Politico '88
IHI Jefferoono
11!1 You Can Be 1 Star ·
6:35 Cll Andy Griffith
7:00 (J) Remington Stoate
C2J PM Magazine
(JJ &amp;portae- (L)
(I) Ill Cll Current Affair
C!l (!) MacNeil/ Leftrer
NewoHout (1 :00)
,..:""!\fill Wheel of

1984 T•rv Ta~rut 24ft tnwel

81

W

WOU
lAM I

low to form four simple words.

~Lighter Side of Sports (R)

trell•. bunk badl. lilt contained. sir cond, .wnk'lg. microVIMVe own, 18,910.00.

19188uldcUmhed.PS. PB, AC,
c:r&amp;n•. lleatrlc sNts. C.ll 114892-II!S71.

TobeccGI'lfcllttor•l.. 20eents
eiCh. Morg1n WoociiiW'n firm,
Ill. 35, Pliny, w.v•. 304-9372018.

1178 Morrll Corio. PS. PB, 1111.
PDMr wlndow1. AM·FM~C.11.
Coli 114-441-4011.

61 Household Goods

M113HT EHHANCe

1814 ,.,nt'-: Orwtd Prll .LE,
V·l, AC. PS. PB.11h:. CC. Avw:&gt;,
atto .. bucket .... 1. 27 MPG.
Oood condhion. Nlgotlabl•
trtiler King camper.
naoo. Call 814-21&amp;-11217. . 1988
Sleepe 6 or mQe • nice wagon.
noo. Coli &amp;14-25&amp;-5010, or
Government Seiad Vehid• 44&amp;-7749.
from 0100. Fordo. - -...
Corvettes. ChiiVya. Surplus.
Buy~r~ guide. 1· 80&amp;-187-1000
811. 8 1808.

1981 Ford Escort StetlonWllgon. Fully ~t~~ulppad. Sup......p. 11591. Call 114-992I 719.

....-

u.,.. ••

79

••d

vv
40Widt•cuntochooeefrom
•

8:1:4-:3:6:7·:0:27:4:.====:.J~5~19~00.;C..~n~ln~g~p~ploo.~~·~·on~&amp;J
coln4dr.
flor ,..,.,, Mokloll•.
plumbe aveHiblel ... Augult.
c.tii14-44-•Je1•anydma
SNAFU~ by BJ'II(e Beattie

HOUR.~ THI1R!;',; A
PO~IBILITY TH&amp;Y

l+

81 4·446·0966. Rebuilding
av•IIIDia
-:-:-:-:-:--:-:--:--:--...,.-,
191301dlmoblle88. Mot«snd
-.m~tlon. 304-77~ 15•11.
9

1981 Elgie. 11200. Clll 6144*4141 after I PM.

----------1

&amp;

IF YOU 61VE 'EM FOR

PERFORMANCE- ·

.8704.

1978 Ford Thul"'hrbfrd. cruise.
moon root. duaiMhault t2100
or belt off.-. Call 114-.218-

73
Vane &amp; 4 W.O.
Surplus. Your •ru. Buyert
Outdo. 111 805-887-8000, ut. 1 - - - - - - - - - Kohl• Conaale pi•o, e•e cond, 8-4512.
1977 Dodge Pies. Van. AC.
304-875-284-8.
erulll. Fle•onllbf&amp; Clll 814Gowtnment Seized V•hld• 446-702B.
lndMdu.. gul&amp;ar l•sons. b• from 1100. ford•. Mercedes. 1-:::=-::-=----::-:::-::--:-:-:~
ginners. serious gultlrl ... Brul- Corvettes. Chevya. Surplus. 1984 lronco II XLT 4x:4., V-8,
coodlo Music. 814-44&amp;-0687, auyoro Qolde. 111 805-887· .. to., crultl, llr, Ill, AM·FM.
Jell Womoloy lnltNCior, 814- 6000 Eot. -10118.
Eloc:ol cond. Coll814-317-0531
or 448-1012.
4'48-8077. Umiled openings.
19a5 Bulclt 81lyllo~ 4 door,
Pl.-.o. exc cpnd. call :104-875- cylinder, AC, cru .... tttt. PS. 1981 818 G..C 4 WD Jimmy.
4874eftor 1,00 PM.
Good cond. •4400. Coli 814- V-1, 2.8 1-. looded. n.ooo
44&amp;-0577
mK-. '14.500. Call 814-248Fruit
Vegetables

WITH t:!RU&amp;!P
1.11&lt;&amp; Tlll!5&amp;·

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Tiret 1r1d bldlrl• ale (Sept.
1tt-171hl. Auto tim, 028.80
pair. Ughl truck dNs, *1 &amp;. e1ch.
N•w 500 AMP batteries,
t21. as. L end L Tlf:e Blrn.
331151 fltne GrOYt Ro..t, R•
elne, Ohio (n- Five Pointt)
814-192·5344.

72

304-67&amp;-3818.

Ap8rtmenls •n d hou.... C.ll
304-175-8104,

r .... e

Reglst•red Cherol1i1 Bull01200. ,R~loIIIII bloodod
Chr
8111 • 0 800· ,._.
-1814-38774 &amp;6.
H.,py Jsck Trlvermlcde: Reeog..
·
nlzed Sale a EffocthM by U.S. ;oU""· 01 50. Coli 814-44&amp;- ,MUST SELL· 1881Valkl_g.,
Bw-e., of Veteri'*Y Mldldne
gotf. am-fm c•_...., 11r condl •a-'nst hook. round. • t.p• AtgllttredHolsteiinBulfDr.re. t8':. 3a. 4s,..d. Good c•. 304worms In dog~ &amp; c••· BIMell INIICHnn .. ._ CaU 814-992·
,_ u 1.
C...h Feed J .0. North ~oduce . 7
·••
·
281.
1981 Thunderbird, l.Dadedll
NewlrrtviiAKCBoxerpuppi•. 7 VI• ltlndln:l bred M•e. 17.000.00. 304-1715-7193.
Ready to go in &amp; weeks. Call ""'·-- h
814-388-8801.
•.....uer oneBro *•••.Sihter 1984-ChwrofetChMttleCS.•Ir
Coverlld Perade Bedcte wtth
nd
od
•1 ·100·00·
axe cond. 304- co
· go
cond.
Germ1n Shepherd puppiea. •cc.IOrl•.
_
.
1978
Cott
w-eon
13&amp;0.00.
4158 1817
AKC. blk end ten. •bfe. good
304-41511-1142.
pedlgNe, excellent •mpernw~t,
$160 .00. 814-888-150815 or Feed.- c..f Or.nd Chemplon
Mat on County Fllr would mike
Trucks for .S ale
304-73~3023.
•
good llllrv &amp;oof for lolr projoct
304-882·2359.
1981 Chwy Truck. Also 1181
57
Musical
Pigs for -'a 125.00 e•ch. Oldl four door. Cell 814-985Instruments
3839.
304-67&amp;-1150.
-:,.::-83::-For::-d-:-::S.-:1-:1-:o-:
. ~..-~,-=-=T=-r--=-uck.
302
lllndlnl. Coli 814-74264
Hay
&amp;
Grain
Conn trombone with c .... used
2798.
wry lttle. Vwy good condhlon.
Caii814-44S.7421 .
1982 Dotoun King Cob. &amp;1.000
nmothy Hw( . Cell 114-379- mll•atuo.PS.PS. ..•wlndow
lo.....ery Pi.-.o. Good cond. Call 2128eveninge.
defo:r,•· nlr. truck. 304-&amp;711614-28&amp;-8230.
----~--..:...._ _
87 '

•.-c&amp; 3 mH• South of
Pt. Pl-'t •t V off At. 2 &amp;. 82.

NI!W- - · boo• 1311.
Wor- . , . a up. f8twel a
oolltOI), Coii814-44S.3159.

Fo "'·I

9122.

noo. C.H814-3&amp;7-0149.

~

•
uto I

Buy Gowrnrnent llb:•d 1nd
eurpfu1 -..hlcl• from 1100.
Fordt. Ot•ys. Corwttn, etc.,
In yourlrl&amp; For nfoeall (8021
142-1061 .., . 5415.

::..-.ro~~~ =~~~.,d.

0 · ._ 814-.448- .

3.
WES

A

. -1987- N-..
Sentrl. MenUII,
row, r-111, AC• I . ,eo, IUnroo1•

• co"""• 1tne of,_ a
equipment. lallllf _.ec:tlon In
S.E. Ohio.

56 8uilding Supplies

Tn~ll•

· 1111111. _,..,_,.,_.
complltO llno of uood fllrnl1ura.

es

24 INhh:e J:Mn•. 3 ft. 1111.
Amplilfl.-. 304-875-1484.

Spac• for .-nt, ...u. spac•.
water &amp; tewer furnlthed. locust
Rd. Rt. 1, 304-875-1078.

Pur. .hecl
N.w. Ne• HMC.
1 1111 . 029 . Ullllllll ... d. Coli
44S.441hfl• 7 PM,

71

Kenmoreelectricdrytruecond
$150.00. 10" AAD·ARM ..w·
wtih ett•chmants 1250.00.
1985Rinkwl-0120hp, lotsof
extra, 304-875-44&amp;8.

58

CAPTAIN

UaM Transmtnlone. All ~r-

*

11 HP, 38" cut riding mower.
UMd two seatont. Uke nt~~~~~.

1

~~.,~,...
~.,~-;~""~·~:::::::;:;~~~~~~~~~ tM.
"...,,Wt....buy.,.oct.
30doyoguoronl'lnsmlulons.
Clll

d.,•- 1:14-198-8288.

56

1817
Tn~~• Tournment
T'X17, 415 hp motot', 3 b_..rlltl,
lilt llldl«o. LCR 200 Grlph
troiUng motor. 41 lb thrult.
$1 .000.00 and tlke over pey·
m...._, owa t3.400.00. 304'
57&amp;-2833.
76

f •f

Darton trail mllter bow compiece, wry good oond. 304-773&amp;923.

~d.

Lu•w-laus T1r11 Townttou•
2 fl.,.,..
2
M ..ful ··
bahEl .....
uDitelra.
powdw
room downatllrs. CA., dlt·
dft~l. ,......• .,..
.... , . prlwte en.._. pMio,
DOOI. ol-ound. Ulllillot not
Included. Stortlng 1t U99 ptr
mo. Coli 114-387-7150.

I

..

Gravely tractor, electric start, 8
spd., wlthr018rymo...., &amp;plow.

Office or amaH butinltls •pace
for •nt. located at N. Second
A.w. In Middleport business
dlttrict. Cell 814-949-6546 01'
814-149-2218.

Ia••

-..,.n

Furnished room-919 Second
Ava. , Gellipolis. 11215 e mo.
Utilltl• ~ld. Slnqlemale. Shll'l!l
beth. Cell448-4418 after 7 PM.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P•k.
Aouw 33, North of Pom.-oy.
Aenlll tnlil .. s. Cell 614-992~
7479.

011.400.00. 304-458-1142.

D.-agonwynd Clttary twnnel.
CFA Pertl.w end Sl.,... kit·
tens. AKC Chowpu~• l'llew
Hl .._,__ lduens.
II 11444S.3844aflor ?PM.

2 door refrialtl'ltor 185.00. Call
Flea:dllete couch.
304-876-1238.

outbo1rd Mercruller. le11 th ..

:;.::;_:=:_______

lh!lorro nge lette rs of
0 four
scrambled words

8:00 (J) Bonanza: The Lost
1
EpiiOdet
·
• C2l (I) 111 rn ®J m 1121
1]1) Newa •
(JJ SporttLook
C!l Voyage of the Mimi
Ill Dr. Who The Silurians,
Part 3
ID llD Happy Doya
1121 ShowBiz Today
IHI Oood Timet
0 C.r1oon Expreoo
II F1ndongo
8:05 Cll Ulveme end Shfrtey
8:30 G C2l fill NBC Nightly News

1OOhrs. a.. g, kept, must 1111. ''

we•._.

THURS.. SEPT. 8

~~:~:t:~' S@\\~~-"t.tfS"
- - - - - - fd htd by CLAY I , POLLAN

EVENING

1987 lnvod• bo• 17 fl. thow

Kenmore
uct dr,-r.
H•rvaet gold. E.:.. ent IMpe.
12~1 firm. c.ll Ch•hlr• 114317·0322.

2:j 81P. s.

8

room oo nd, 1 20 hp lnbo•d

mlldng s•u:L n• box... lncub•or. brooda-. Coli 814-24&amp;9157.

Poruble lighted 191 with letters
$299.00. Fre• deltwery. Off•
upW• Sept. 10. WV• 1· 1100.
142-2434 or Ohio 1-800-153334-53 envdrne.

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Complete hou~t~hold furnlsfllngs. 1.4 mile out Jerrlcho.
304-875-1450.

1 room afflc:i .. ey apt, utiUtiltl
Plid. rwt.-.ncet required. 1·

conool•

ucel. cond.~ •110. LoWit"( org., 11n-1 wllh Moille Oonfo.
t300. r11bblt hutah•, go•

"*

Television
Viewing

1!1117 27 ft, Crilc:rlfl Covolltr
Clbln Cruiler. P.-tlllly '"tored.
327 motor. Sl_,. 4. Sink.
stove. bllhroom wtth t ..n.,..
05000. Coli 814-24&amp;-9122.

Coil 814-448-3224.

Valliv Fumiture

Nice 2 BR .. 41f.l ml• from
Glllipollt. St0\.4. refrlg. &amp;wat.furnllhed. 1225amo. Nopets.
CaU 814-4-48--8038.

Downtown modern 1 bedroom
IPt. furnithed. elr eond. CarP810d. Coli ofler 4,00. 304-8753788.

Nl .. rtlfriglmor. 2 (lnlfte tetl.
'"'"
bo•oak
........
- ..r.trill. bod.
couch.
desk • dl

RCA color TV 28'

Boats •nd
Moton for Sale

1871 IMs Boat. ISO HP motor.
trallng motor, he well •1200.
Call 614-. .&amp;-8890.

aft• 4 PM.

ptettlc lettlrl for pol1able •lon
$42.50 bo• fr••hlppln,. Off•
explr• Sept, 10. WV. 1-1100..
842-2434 or Ohio 1 -80~ "3~
v-u ~
34153 enyttme.

Modern 1 BR . 1 pt. Call 81444-8-0390.

Now accepting appMcatlons for
2 bedroom •partmlntt. futty
carpeted. appHenta, Wiler and
traah JMckups provided. Maintlln.nce free IMng elo• to aho~
ping. bankl •nd tehoolt. For
more lnforrnlltion c:lll304-8823711. E.O.H.

Nfr...,.,..•

90 Den "me 11 c•h with
opprowd .. - . 3 Mlloo out
Buiiiii'IHe: Rd. Open Bam to ISpm
Mon. thru Sst. Ph. 814-44-e.- ·
0322
. ·
New and uaed furniture end

715

Har_,.st gold stowe-t221.
1oo. MD • .,. h ·
eel. cond. Cll 114-4.6-1211

s.........t
ft,_.;..,
••
304-175-27157.
• fter
4:30PM.

···· · · ···

liT 'N' CAJILYI.Ee lly LarrJ Wr!pt

Merchandl•e

ou;w, m...,
cowup
....to hoodboards
•30 and
115.

J &amp; S FURNITURE
141&amp; Eut.-nAve.
4 dr.w•r aheft, 148. 8 drawer
ch•t. 154.95. IS pc. wooden
dlnnette Htt. •199.95.

Beech Street. Middleport. Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished epertm.,t,
utilities r-id. ref..,Oitl. Phone
304-882-2588.

Thunday, Septamber 8. 1988

• Ohio

IV

TLLR

I H S L

KHSOYRL
T L L R

THGGLZ
OQ C R

THGG .LZ

MO
TV

IL . -EHQR
N .
BMNNLOO
Yeeterda)''s Ceyptoquote: THERE IS A DMNITY
·THAT SHAPES OUR ENDS - BUT WE CAN HELP BY
· · LISTENING FOR ITS VOICE. - KATHLEEN NORRIS

'

�Page-12-The Daily Setltlnal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Public. hearing...._co_·nt_tn_ued_tro_m_pa_g_e_1- - - - - - - - -

~omeroy Mayor's Court
Fifteen cases were processed vehicle, and $375 and costs,
Wednesday night In the court of driving under the Influence;
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. Jerry Litchfield, Point Pleasant,
They include: Greg Hicks, $63 and costs, expired plates;
Pomeroy, $213 and costs, petty · Brian Bowling, Reedsville, $63
theft, and $313 and costs, break· operating a motor vehicle with·
ing and entering with Hicks also out reasonable responsib!llty,
being placed on probation for six and $63 and costs, operating
months on (he breaking and under suspension; LaDonna.
entering charge and 90 days on Large, Pomeroy, $63 bond, tral·
the petty theft charge; Aaron Lee fie light violation, and $63 bond,
Morris, Rutland. $113 and costs, ·no operator's license; Mike Car·
possession of a controlled sub· sey, Albany, $63 bond forfeiture,
stance! Jackie McDaniel, Pome· . speeding; Elizabeth Nichols,
roy, $50 and costs, no fina ncia l Middleport, $43 bond, failure to
responsibility; Christopher Cole, yield, and $50 bond, no financial
New Ha ven, W. Va., $375 bond responsibility; Todd Tripp,
forfeiture. driving under the Pomeroy Route, $63 bond, sque·
influence; Jerry Van Kirk, Dex· aling tires; Dennis Persons,
ter, $63 and costs, squealing Syracuse, $49 bond, speeding,
tires; William Whlllock, Syra·
and Jack Hannon, Vinton, $63
cuse, $63 and costs. open con· and cos.ts. driving while under
talner; Jackie Smith. Langsville,
suspension.
$63 and costs, failure to control

mendallon o~ County Engineer
Philip Roberts, the commission·
ers accepted a bid o!$57,835 from
Gibson, Inc., Athens, for a 1989
International Tandem truck,
with a spreader. The truck Is to
be delivered to the county high·
In January,

with payment due within 30 days
alter delivery.
The commissioners also reported they received a call from
a Sutton Township Trustees that
the Shelly Co. Is to start. the
paving project on Minersville's
Welsh town Hill on
This Is

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ............. 27)'8
AT&amp;T ........... ... ................... 25~
Ashland Oil ......................... 36
Bob Evans .......................... 1534
Charm ing Shoppes .............. 12%
City Holding Co .................. 31 \!,
Federal Mogul. .................... 46
Goodyear T &amp;R ................... 60~
Heck's ................................ . '%
Key Centurion .................... 16\i.
Lands' End ............. .. ........... 27
Limited Inc ........................ 22%
Multimedia lnc ................... (O\!,
Rax Restaurants .................. 3*
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11\-1
Shoney·s Inc ........................ 7\-1
Wendy's Inti ...................... .. 6\!,
Wortlli ngton Ind ................. 21\-1

House Bill 592, the State's new
solid waste bill which became
law in June, Includes a require·
men! that solid waste disposal
districts wm serve at least
120,000 residents, not 100.000, as
was reported In Wednesday's
Dallly Sentinel.
However, some officials feel
that if a good solid waste district
can be established to meet the
10-year space requirement for
dumping, but would only serve
105,000 people, then the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency might approve that dis·
trlct even though It Is under the
population requirement.

Area deaths
Edna Schaefer
Edna Stahl Sc haefer. 88. 40575
Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy.
long-time Meigs County resident.
died Wednesday at her home
following a lengthy illness.
A homemaker. Mrs. Schaefer
was born July 11, 1900 in Meigs
County, a daughter of the late
Bert and Luella Bradshaw Stahl.
She was an active member of the
Meigs County Retired Senior
Volunteer Program for JO years,
· a member of the Meigs County
Council on Aging and was a life
member of the Meigs County
' Pioneer and Historical Society.
Mrs. Schaefer was a member of
the Westside Church of Christ.
Surviving are two daughters
and sons-in-law, Ferndora and
Vern E. Storv, Pomeroy, and

Announcements
Webers reunion
The an nual Weber family reunion will be held Sunday at the
Rodnev Keller farm on Route 248
east o't Chester with a basket
dinner to be served at 12:30 p.m .
Those attending are to ta ke their
ow n table service.
Bowers r eunion
· The annual Bowers family
reu nion will be held beginning at
10 a.m. Su nda y at the southbound
roadside park on Rou te 33.
Dance Friday
A round and sq uare dance will
be held from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday
at the Meigs · County Senior
Citizens Cen ter. The True Countrv Band of Larrv Hubbard will
provide m'usic. Those attending
should take snacks for the snack
table. Admission Is $1.50 and the
public is invited.
Auxiliary to meet
The Ladles Auxiliary of Chapter 53, Disabled American Vete·
rans, will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at the ~orne. 124 Butternut Ave. ,
Pomeroy.
Representative to vl~ll
A representative of the Buckeye Program will be at the
Tuppers Plains United MethodiSt
Church from 12: 30 to 2: 30 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednes·
day. Residents may also register
to vote at the same time and
place.
'

j. - ·

•

SEE US TODAY
*CARDS
*GIFT WRAP
*CANDY
*SUNDRIES
* PRESCRIPTIONS

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

notices -

..

DaiJy Number
536
.
Pick.4

Vo1.39, No.87
Copyrighted 1988

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Hoping to entice more young
people to continue their educa·
tlon, the the Ohio Board ol
Regents has proposed reducing
the siudent's share of the cost of
education at state universities
from 40 to 30 percent.
"The notion that a high school
education Is enough Is simply not
so," Chancellor William Coulter
said Thursday In unveiling !he
five-year master plan, which
calls for efforts to Improve
access to colleges for everyone,
with special emphasis on minor!·
ties and rural residents.
To make sure "all Ohioans are
prepared for a lifetime ol chang.
lng careers," the board pledged

SKIRT
SALE

Denims. poly/cotton blends
and polyester. Full length
and mini-skirts. Sizes 5/6 to
15/16.
'

Reg. S20.00 Skirts .•• S15.99
Reg. S25.00 Skirts ••• S19.99
Reg. S28.00 Skirts ••• S22.39

to seek ways of Increasing the tern of higher education at all
state's financial aid offerings for state universities, as opposed to
higher education, and pmposed a
the current "selective" excel·
1Q-year drive to greatly expand lence at certain colleges;
enrollments, notwithstanding
-providing leadership for ecothe cost to the state.
nomic and social change by
Coulter said the master plan coordinating various segments
would require a ...substantial of society In problem solving;
increase" In state financial sup-fostering strong and conportbutoffered no recommenda·
sian! financial support for tile
lions for raising the money. He
state college system.
said the regents will release their
The m•ster plan Is nonspecific spending recommenda·
binding, but Coulter said . It has
lions for 1990.9~ next week.
been closely followed In !he past
The three oiher major goals In as a policy guide for the regents.
the master plan, the fifth one
"ThiS Is an innovative and far
since the higher education COOf· reaching plan to guide · the
dlnatlng board was established . development of higher education
in 1963:
for the balance of this century,"
-Developing a first-class sys- said Coulter. "This Is the most

PAJ
SALE
-fkl•llls, nylons and palyhottan_blends
Pajamas ...... S8.79
Pajamas .... S11.99
Pajamas .... S18.39
Pajamas ....$21.59

MEN'S .TURTLENECK

SHIRTS
Sizes S (14-14%). M (16-15%).
L(16-16Y2), XL(17-17Yz). Solid
colors. long sleeves.

legular Price S12.95

SALE

Sl Q35

FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON:
*Gun Cabinets
*Recliners
*Curios
"
*·Wood lockers
*Dinette Sets
*Swivel Rockers
*Metal Cabinets
*Serta Mattresses &amp;
Box Springs
*RCA Color Televisions
*Eureka Sweepers

CONSTRUCTION UNDERWAY ramps lor the handicapped are under construe·
lion In Middleport. Contractor~~ Ken Hartley, In
the hal, and Gary Slaven, were working al the
comer of Mill St. and North F'ourlh Ave. on
Thursday afternoon. Altogether, Z3 ramps are to

~USTER BROWN

By United Press International
Teachers in the Mad RiverGreen Local School District In
Clark County were poised to go
on strike today after negotiations
failed to resolve a dispute over
salaries.
Schools In the 2,300·student
district were to be open today,
with substitutes handling classroom duties, II the teachers

play outfits In little boys' and girla'
sizea 2Tto 4T, 4 to 7. Buster Brown
quality you can trust.

SPORT SHIRTS

New fall selection in sizes S. M, L
and XL You'lllike 'the new colors
and patterns - long sleeves.

Reg. sa.oo ............... Sale S6.79
Reg. Sll.OO .......~ •.• Sale S9.39
Reg. 516,00 ........... Sale S13.59
Reg. S20.00 ........... Sale S16.99

Racine man cited .by patrol
A Racine man was cited In a one-car accident Thursday at 2
a.m. In Lebanon Township on TR 132, one mile south of SR 124,
according to the Gall!a- Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Mark A. Compson, 27, w~s cited for failure to control and
driving without a license after his 1984 Mercury Topaz went off
the right side of the road and Into a ditch. He was driving east
when the accident occurred.

SALEI

MEN'S
NECKTIES
New selection of .olld colors

Reg: sa.so Ties .... 15.95
Reg. 19.00 Tits .... 16.30
Reg. 19,50 Tits .... S6,65
Reg. 110.00 Tits .. 17.00
Reg. 112.50 Tits .. sa.u

followed through with their
threat to strike, said Robert
Bardnell, board president.
The strike was scheduled to
begin at 7:30 a.m., said Debbie
Tully, president of the Mad
River-Green Local Education
Association.
Representatives oftheassocla·
lion, and the board of education
met for several hours Thursday

•
f:
LocaI news b ne 8

Our S18.95 Shi1 Is ---Salt *15.19
Our 119.95 Shirts ••••• Sale 115,99
Our 124.95 Shii 11 ..... Sale 119.99

and ne~t patterna - readytied ties and four-in-hands.

be constructed
are 12 lo go after
and North Fourth.
Funds for the access rampe were provided by a
59,201' Community Development Block Grant
through the Melp County CommiSsioners.
lh~e.

Teachers in Clark County go
on,strike over salary dispute

CHILDREN'S
·CLOTHING
Cute ·naw tops, penta, dreues and

MEN'S J.J. COCHRAN

thoughtful vision' of the ·higher
education system that we've had.
It Is a vision of higher education
for the 21st century."
Coulter said many small Improvements can be made at-little
cost. "It Is clear that we cannot
achieve everything In this plan
without a substantial iflcrea~e In
state support," he said, adding
that ·state, budget officials will
have to figure out how to raise the
money. ·
A regents' financial expert
said It would cost the state $200
million a year to reduce the
student's share of the cost of
education from 40 to30 percent as
planned.
A student's share was 36

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
UPI Polhlcal Writer
Republican George Bush
shows no signs of letting up on
charges that Michael Dukakls Is
weak on defense and the Democrat, searching for a way to stem
the attacks, shows signs of
~ hanging his rhetoric against the
''Star Wars" project .
On a day when their presidential campaigns tentatively
agreet:1 to the flrstoftwodebates,
Bush, who has stumped · strl·
den\IY for months against the
defense views of his opponent,
took hts assault to th~ battle·
ground of Texas, where he
watched a pair ·of missiles be
destroved under the U.S.·Sovlet
It.'F agreement.
The vice president used a
subsequent rally to rip the
Massachusetts governor for once
having wanted to "restrain us,
not the Soviet Union," through
support for the nuclear freeze
movement.

'

Reg. Sll.OO
Reg. SlS.OO
Reg. 523.00
Reg. S27 .00

A Mu!lbnedlaloc. Newspaper

percent In !lscall987, but it has Income.
He also said the regents plan to
gone up since then. It was down to
33 percent In 1980, but ballooned work closely with high schools to
improve the teaching of mathe·
to almost 50 percent In 1982.
Coulter said only 45 percent of matics, science, wrlti!lg and
young Ohioans go to college after vocational education. He said 60
high school, compared with 66 percent of Ohio's high school
percent nationwide. He said Ohio. graduates are not adequately
ranks 35th In the nation In this prepared for post-secondary
category.
. education.
Coulter said Ohio's higher
He said reducing the cost by 10
percent "Is obviously a major educatiOn system Is ·" good" but
change and one thai will be not excellent, as he described the
difficult to achieve quickly. But systems In Massachusetts and
California.
we think It's essential."
"This state Is not a highCoulter said the regents want
to Increase theOhlolnstructional spending state 1for higher educaGrants- scholarships which are tion)," said the chancellor .
available to students with less "There is no way you can make
than $25,000 ' annual family that case. It's a high fee state."

Bush, Dukakis agree on two
debates; defense. ·key issue

WOMEN'S

-Sizes 32 to 41

! Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 9, 1988

Regents propose student's eosts be reduced

LORD ISAAC

-Long and short sleeve styles

Clear tonlr;ht. Lows In mid
50s. Saturday, sunny, highs In
mid 80s.
·

6136

•

Parking changes annoll(nced
,.

Middleport village ' officials announced several changes In
parking and traffic now In response to Saturday's Block Party
activities.
The North Second Avenue business district and the east end of
Mill Street will be cloaed to traffic and parking, as most of this
area will be used for activities.
South Second Avenue, from Mill Street to Main Street, will be
closed to traffic and parking, as this area will be used for the car
show.
Two-way traffic will be maintained on South Third Avenue
from Mill Street to Matn Street, but tllere wlll be no parking In
tillS area. The same will be true for North Third Avenue.

992-6669
271 NOITH SECOND
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO .

Ohio Lottery

Page6

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

\

Mildred A. andWIIUamT.Perry,
Sr., Athens; a son and daughterIn-law, Norman "Dutch" and
Leora Wyatt Schaefer, Mount
Vernon; two grandchildren, Norman David Schaefer, Mansfield ,
and John V. Story, Pomeroy; a
brother, John Stahl, Pomeroy; a
sister and brother-in-law, Clara
and Pearl Gilkey , Pomeroy; a
sister-In-law. Helen Schaefer
Dunkle, Chancey; cousins, Hugh
Leifheit, .Pomeroy, and Cathe·
r!ne Ryan Quinlin, Huntington,
W. Va., several nieces and
nephews and live stepgrandchildren. Ruth Bolin, Guysville; Thomas Perry, Jr.,
Athens; John Perry, Cinda Polly,
and Judy Jack, all of Nelsonville.
Preceding her in death, besides I
her parents, were her husband, '
Norman E . Schaefer In January,
1985; four brothers, Harry, Fritz,
Mark and Wallace Stahl, three
sisters, Ruth Geary, Bertie
Shawver and Cecil Harrison.
Services will be held at 10:30
a.m. Friday at the Ewing Fun·
eral Home with burial to be in
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursdav.
Mr. Landon Hope will officiate.

•

ELBERFELDSI
YOU'LL FIND SAVINGS ·

Nichols family
to perform in area

Correction

Church

Veter811.8 Memorial
Wednesday AdmiSsions Rhonda Hoover, Pomeroy; Gertha Hemsley, Northup; Carrie
Roush, Middleport.
Wednesdav Discharges Kelly O'Brien, Sarah McCarty,
Terry Carpenter, James MeaPauline Derenberger.

'

education In pollee training at
Ohio University on a part-time
basis.
Gardner, his wile Kay and
their two children, J.P. and Tara
will be making their home at
East VIew Estates In Jackson.

The Nichols Family, of Elk·
view, W.Va., featuring Dave and
Rhonda Nichols, will be making
two appearances In the area this
Saturday . From 2 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, the group will perform
at the town celebration In New
Haven, W.Va., infrontoftheflre
station. Later in the day, they
will be featured at the Bend Area
Gospel Sing which will start at
7:30 p.m. at Father's House
Church In Hartford. W.Va. Oth·
ers singing with the Nichols
Family at both locations will be
Narrow Way, the Reflections
Trio, and Tabalba.

a Community Development
Block Grant funded project to
Sutton Township through the
commissioners' office. Pomeroy
Village Is paying Independently
to have a portion of the hill which
lies In Pomeroy corporation
limits repaved at the same time.

Hospital news

. SHOP NOW
AND SAVE AT

Meigs native joins Jackson City Police
JACKSON - Terry Gardner a
Meigs County native and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gardner has
accepted employment with the
Jackson City Pollee Department.
He was sworn In as a lull time
patrolman at a ceremony held at
Jackson City Hall.
Gardner is a 1979 graduate of
Meigs High School and a graduate of Hocking Technical College
with a degree in pollee training.
His past work record Includes .a
brief time with the Meigs County
Sheriff Department under James
Proffitt as a special deputy, full
time assistant Juvenile Officer
with the Meigs County Juvenile
Court. When he accepted this
position, he was working as a
partlme patrolman with the
Pomeroy Pollee Department and
a full :;me position with Mike
Young Carpentery.
Gardner plans to continue his

Thursday, Sept.-nber 8, 1988

Grand Jury indicts four
Four Indictments were returned ThurSday by a Meigs County
Grand Jury.
Indicted by the grand jury ·on two counts of rape was Gary
ConUnued on page 10

f
- - --·~ ____.,______,.. '--~ ,fl

but were unable to reach an
agreement on salaries, said
Robert Bardnell, board
president.
"Nothing's settled," Bardnell
said following Thursday night's
negotiating session.
Tully said the board late
Thursday presented an new
salary offer, which was canting·
ent upon approval by members of
the association by 10 p.m.

Th~~~~~.

she said It was
"Impossible'' .to assemble the
teachers In time to consider the
offer before It expired.
"It was impossible for us to get
our people together In that short
of time," TuUy said. "We attempted to make a counter proposal
but by the time we put the
proposal together the board
negotiators had left."
TuUy said the teachers planned
to meet at 6 a.m. to set up
picketing schedules.
Teachers were asking parents
In the dis trlct to keep their
children out of school today In the
eve11t of a. walkout. They also
asked substitute teachers to
honor any picket lines and turn
down the board's offer of $100 a
day in wages.
The association, which representll125 teachers In the district,
said Its teachers are the lowest
paid In the county, wiih an
average starUng salary of
$15,880.
The union also Biked tile board
to cancel Greenan High School's
football game tonJiht.
"What we think Ia the best .
thing ta to remove all school
activities because thinl* are not
nonnal and should not be treated
Continued on page 10

· DUkakls tried meanwhile' to kis said he would "modernlze·the
bolster his national security land-based leg of the triad If it's
credentials In a tough speech to essential" - but quickly added
the American Legion convention that he still opposes the MX and
In Louisville, Ky. His remarks Mldgetman. On "Star Wars," he
were received well Thursday, said he would not support an SDI
but at a news conference follow- deployment because .It would
lng the address he surprised violate the 1972 Anti·BalUstlc
some observers by appearing to Missile Treaty .
,
alter his stanc~ against "Star
Nonetheless, he said he might
Wars."
proceed with a more Intense
For months, Dukakls has de- examination of the system, ex·
nounced the Strategic Defense plainlng: "If 1 made the
Initiative as a pet project "fan· ment and the Congress m~lde
tasy" of President ~eagan, ques- judgment that It was essential •~\...'"""':..._
tlonlng whether research ever national security, well obviously
could result In a space-based we'd proceed with lt. .. . We don 't
defense rsystem agall)st enemy know that at this point."
missiles. He also has opposed
Dukakls ·· said, "Obviously,
development of any new mobile we'renotgoingtotestanddeploy
MX or Mldgetman nuclear If it's a violation of the (ABM)
treaty." But he also said, "We' ve
missiles.
At the news conference In got to keep our options open.
Louisville, however, the gover· Obviously, as we proceed with
nor said he was "not opposed" to the development of a strong
SDI nor to a modernization of national defense. doing research
U.S. strategic nuclear missiles.
does not violate the treaty. It's
Pressed on the matter, Duka· perfectly apt)roprlate and I'm for
tllat at this point."

River traveling ministers visit
Pomeroy to promote project
Attracting attention Is the
name of the game for Rev .
William Zeyer, of Beverly, Ohio,
and Rev. Bill Lawson, of Hanni·
bal, Ohio. But they don't want the
attention for themselves. They
want it for an organization called
lnternatlonal Child Care, head·
quartered In Toledo, and for
donations to provide health care
for the children of Haiti.
To seek attention for these
causes, and to enjoy an unusual
spiritual retreat, the two minis·
ters are rowing their way down
the length of the Ohio River from
Pittsburg, Pa. to Cairo, m..
stopping at towns along the way
and speaking at
churches,
community facilities, and to
anyone else who wishes to hear
their message.

.The two river-traveling minis· the children of Haiti have ·been
ters were In Pomeroy on Sunday inoculated against the disease,
to spread the word of their Meadows said.
mission through a slide presenta·
This mission in Halt! Is also a
tlon to members of the Pomeroy "mission emphasis" of the UniUnited Methodist Church. ted Methodist Church, explains
Members of the Pomeroy Trlnliy Rev. Meadows. The Athens Dis·
Church and Middleport's Heath trlct of the West Ohio Conference
United Methodist Church congre- of the Methodist Church has
gations also participated In Sun· pledg~ $2,000 to International
day evening's meeting.
Child Care's Haiti program,
Sunday's Pomeroy meeting
As explained by Rev. Don
Meadows, minister of the Pome- with Zeyer and Lawson was an
roy United M~tllodist Church, the evening of fellowship as well as
goal of International Child Care, an evening of education, Mea·
which sponsors Grace Children's dows said.
Next Saturday, VIrginia SnavHospital In Haiti, Is to Inoculate
100 percent of Haiti's population ley, wife of the late James B.
again,st tuberculosis. Grace Snavley who founded InternaChildren's Hospital primarily tional Child Care In 1965, will be
treats children with TB and . so at the Pomeroy UnltedMethodist
far, approximately 90. percent of ·church.

1'08 A MOON- ltev. Wlllun

Z87v ud Re¥. Bill Law-are rowiDJtlae lenph
of the: Ollio Blwr &amp;a attract altenllon to aa
orJUIIatton ealled laierutlollll Clltld Care. Tbe

,,

two mea atapped thafr craft In Pomeroy on
Sulldl!¥. Tba, IPOke Sandi!¥ evening a1 the
PomerGy United Methodllt Church.

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