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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, September 14, 1988

Marauders
to batde
Falcons
Page.6

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Corner ot General Hartinger Parkway and
Pearl Street

Ohio Lottery

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TELEPHONE: 1112·3471

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

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24 HOURS

Daily Number
604
Pick 4
5691 .
Super Lotto
9-16-23-26-39-:f-3 .

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We Accept Food Stamps &amp; W.I.C. Coupons

vout. No.e1 ·. ·.
Copyrlghted
·1818 .
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Clear, low In mid 50s tool,hl. Friday, mostly cloudy,
ch1111ce of rain 50 percent.

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2 Secttono, 28 Pageo 25 Cenu .
A Mulllm~a Inc; N,ewspaper

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with
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televiSion cOrrimeFcial·
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CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
woman featured In a television
commercial for Senate candidate George Volnovlch says she
was not familiar with Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum's record
on child pornography until being
told what to sav.
Joan Sims of Euclid Is featured
In a television commercial as a
person upset about Metzenbaum's record on child pornography Issues, but said she went
to the filming of the commercial
expecting only to be In the
background.
She was told the person who
was going to be featured In the ad
· failed· . to · appear. ·. sims. said

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,
· . VOLUNTEERs .:.. On Wednesl&amp;r ,-a a umber of ·
sorted'
and. packed
food llenu which ' •
'··• v~lwlleer•
f
•
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were given away today (Tbunday) at lbe office ol
the Melp County Cooperative ·Parish of Metho- .
·· dl&amp;t Churehes;

-Food to
be given
to needy
· Me'lgs County residents who
might be In need of .iln occasional
helping hand •Will be receiving
that helping hand In the form of
supplemental food giveaways.
FrOIJl their of(lce at 311 Condor
St., Pomeroy, the Meigs County
Cooperative Parish of Methodist
Churches will In the future be
dlsttlbutlng food supplies to
supplement the needs of local
residents.

ROUND UP A 20o/o BEEF SAVINGS

Although food supplies were
purchased through the Methodist
Parish, many other church denominations In the county also
provided funds to buy the food
Items, explained Roger Grace,
minister of the Racine United
Methodist Church.

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Firm

Fresh

Russet
Potatoes
pound bag

2% l.owfat
Milk
gallon carton

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FOOD SUPPLIES - FamUies wtth school children should
benefit thll month ftom the supplemental food giveaway
sponsored by several churches In the county. It Is hoped the
giveaways
can be scheduled on a monthly basi&amp;.
.supplemental
.
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V &lt;tlu.d.&gt;le Coupon
202

.Ass 't.

Var. •Bath

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.Northern
Tissue
4 roll package

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·Local. .·llews ·briefs.· . . . . .,;,. ,
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Nine du;es 'set for disttict ·~ourt
Judge Lawrence Grey, Athens, P':t'Sidlrig Judge·or the Fourth
District Court of Appeals , announces · t~at. nine .cases are
scheduled to be heard on Wednesday when the court convenes In
Meigs County.
The cases Include Brinker vs. Brown; Labonte vs. La bone;
C.O.A.L. vs. Division of Reclamation; Matter of Estste of
Fugate; First Michigan Bank vs. P. &amp; S. Building and Proffitt;
Ramsburg vs. Ramsburg; and Hensley vs. Grlnl.
· The Court of Appeals directly reviews all cases heard or tried
In lower courts In which a decision Is being appealed. Other
members of the court of Judge Homer E. Abele of McArthur and
Judge Earl Stephenson_qf Pormmouth.

Case settled out of court
I

Quarters

Pepsi-Cola
16 Oz. Returnable Bottles

$

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. PIUB Deposit

WITH •10.00 PURCHASE

Regular or Hot'n Spicy

Kraft Parkay

~~~~~!k~~e

Banquet
FriedounceChicken
package
28

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KRAFT

Catalina
Dressing
16 Oz. Bottle

An out bf court settlement has been reached In the Meigs
County Common Pleas jury trial of Michael Doughty, Route 1,
1\thens, against the Fraterqal Order of E.agles, . Pomeroy.
-Doughty requested damages for pel'sortallnjurles sustained In
' an accident at the . Eagles Club, and also charged some
Individuals associated with the club with racial discrimination.
. The trial began on. Monday and the plalnUffs case was
conciuded on 'ruesday aflernoon.
·
The ,defense had presented tesUmony from one Individual
· before the trial recessed late Tuesday afternoon.
The trial had been scheduled to reconvene- 9:30 a.m.
. Wednesday, but Instead, efforts lvere Initiated by the defense
counsel to settle the matter. The amount of settlement Is not to
be dlscloM!d.
Counsellor lhe plaintiff was Susan L. Gwinn, Athens. Counsel
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· for the defell$! was William L. Burton, Martetts. .
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EMS .has .4 rolls WedneSday

· · . Mel ... County Enie~ric~ Medical Ser~ces repo~ts-tourc~lls .

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R
f
Wednesday: Mlddlellort ·a t t.~ a.m. to Ball un Road or ·
L'-· ~
· ....·- ·- ·-· .;.·_.·.;,:_.-. .. :.·_, ..'.Co-n..lln..,·ued""!-"'~""n'"pa"'g-·e.,.·2_!&gt;.;..;.~~..;...;..;._.;.._._
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Tuesday.
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"No Idldn'tdoanvresearch '.'
said Sims of' :suburban ·Euclid,
"They tok) m~ the.se · -Were· .the
facts :"
·' . ·
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Metzenbaum offlcl!lls·. criticIzed the Voinovtch campaign 'for
using Sims, since Sims Is 'the
sister-In-law of AI Bartucci, a
paid Voinovich stsfter:
Sims, however, said she
agreed with the Issue being
discussed In the · television
commercial.
"I care about stopping child
pornography," Sims said.
Joseph Wagner, a spokesman
for 'the Volpovich campaign, said
he saw no problem with ~lms
being: :used .In th~ ·commerci~l

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.and added that Sims was" not
Pllld. .Eiai-tucct also,. saw no .
problem. :· ·
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· ·:she.suppor.ts the' (Cleveland.) · .
mayor,"· Bartuecl '&amp;aid. "It's not.
l!lce we·· tWisted tier .arm. · If
· .were gotng:tc; hire someone, then .
· we would -lose credibility." · .
:Peter Harris, ·campaign' man-.
ager for Metzenbaum, said Met. zenbaum's policy is against
using relatives or paid actors in
campaign spots unless the person's relationship to the campaign Is revealed to the viewer."
Metzenbaum, a Democrat; Is
seeking re-election to a third
six-year tenn, Votnovlch, a· Republican.' ·. h~s .l!eE:n mayor of
Clevelahd
since ,1979.
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County commission transfers
funds to highway department
.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Senllael News ~all
M the request of Meigs County
Engineer Philip Roberts, the
Meigs County Commissioners
approved on · -Wednesday,
transfers of funds In excess of
. $100,000 for the county hlghwa~
department. About halt ot that
total was put Into sajlicy and
Insurance accounts.
Approximately $36,162 was
transferred from various accounts to road labor salaries;
$&lt;124 to administrative; and
$19,788 to Insurance; for a total of
$56,374 to salaries and Insurance.
The commissioners Indicated
surprise at the large amounts
being requested for salaries, but
said they had no choice but to

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approve. the transfers as re- the Department ·of Human
quested by Roberts. Roberts was Services.
Other matters conducted by
not present at the meeting at the
time the tlarisfers · were the commissioners Included the
reading and a.cceptsnce of the
discussed:
A union contract which was ·resignation of Meigs . County'
·agreed upon In early March·gave Coroner James Conde from ·his
considerable wage and· ~neflt . current term; the reappolni!Dent · ·
Increases to employees at the of Jennifer Sheets to a three-Y"ar
p.osltlon ori the Prtvate Industry
.hlghway·'qipartment. · , • .
Other iltgliway d'e partment Council; the renewal .of the
transfers Included $17,954 to road cooperative. agreement for the
supplies;· $25,000 to bituminous county's soil survey ~hich Is to
materials; $3,294 to aggregate be completed ln 1989. · · ·
The commissioners then met In
materials; $777 to other exexecutive session with Michael
penses; and $712 to utilities.
Transfers approved by the Swisher, director of the Meigs
commissioners for other county County Department of Human
offices Included $1,000 In the dog Services, to discuss personnel
and kennel fund; $2,000 for the matters at that agency.
sheriff's department; $10,000 for

Official says auto owners
may have been avercharged .
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -An calculate the risks Involved In millions of .ilollars in ' ex~esslve
~~~ i~of~ f':a~~~tf~~t~~:~ Insurance consultant says lnsurancepollclesanddetermlne ,auto Insurance -premium$." ..
Ohioans may have been over- what rate of premium~ m'tgM be. · .i&gt;etrelU told the Plain Dealer
brought from Nelsonville and on charged "tens of millions" of appropriate to compensate 'for 'he had been ppset that unless th'e
Wedndesdayd, thekedltebms hwerhe· dollars In automoble Insurance that risk.
. . :. ,, · ·, · . ISO Information was challenged,
sorte an pac
Y c urc
premiums because the state
Depjlr.timint D)rectar ·GeOrge ' · tnsurarice companies could use It
volunteers. The foods were given Ignored Ills advice.
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Fa be'' . · last :'month . ordered .ap to support' unjustified requests J' ..
away todar (Tilu,rsday)·:-.
• . . Joseph·I,. PetrelU said h\! was ' lnvesUgat·lo.n Into automobile tn- : for rate hikes.
n .ts h(iped, ~~ld·Grace:· ihat the. · . ttl~ Ol)lo Department of lnsunfi-'·. sura nee rate hikes that have ·
The ISO had submitted figures
silj)plemenial food · giveaway's . ce. s actuary t~om -1983 until the -· Increased premiums tiy about 40 to the state contending that a 2.8
can be'schedulei:l' once-a · mo.nth.. . tan ofl986. He was &lt;;harged wit~ percent across the ·state since percent statewide Increase tn
However food supplies will also reviewing Insurance companies
1983. In Cleveland, insurance auto Insurance was justified.
. be a'valu;ble on an emergency requests for . rate hikes and rates Increased 54 percent during However, Petrelli said his analy· · recdmmendlng wh!!ther the re- that time, with Clevelanders sis of tllsoe figures Indicated that
b Is
a~his month families with . quesm be accepted. .
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paying nearlydoubletheamount Instead of a rate Increase,
sclloolchlldren'weretargetedfor
Petrelli told the Cleveland charged car owners In consumers deserved an eight
the supplements! giveaway.
Plain ·Dealer the department Columbus.
percent to 12 percent decrease In
Ignored his advice that a slgnlfl,
their premiums.
However, on May 30, 1986,
He said the ISO had made
A list of families who might cant decreasse In auto Insurance
"convenient assumptions and
need the supplemental help was rates was warranted. He said the Petrelli sent Fa be a memo
compiled through the various . department, Instead, accepted complaining that Petrelli's anal- v 1r t u a II y fa b r 1c a ted an
church pastors who are partie!- figures from an Insurance Indus- ysls of figures provided by an
Increase ...
paling In the program, and the try trade group, the Insurance Insurance Industry trade organ!Petrelli said he never received
GaiUa-Melgs Community Action Services Office, and allowed rate zatlon were being Ignored.
· a reply from Fa be and the
Agency. The families were then Increases to take effect.
Petrelli wrote Fa be the result department subsequently acActuaries use statistics to would be that "Ohioans will pay cpeted the ISO report.
lnvited to pick up the foods.
The foO(!s were purchased

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Auto weakness pulls retail sales down
·ay LYDI\ PHILLIPS
WEFA Group of economic foreUl!l BuaiDe~~a Writer
casters In Bala Cynwyd, Pa.
· WASHINGTON- The weakest "Retailing ~as been sluggish for
auto!Doblle sales In 10 tnonths most of the )/ear, particularly for
dragged total August retail sales clothing and some big-ticket
down 0.2 percent, the first drop Items."
. since Aprll, the Colflmerce DeRetail sales were also not as
partment reported ThUrsday.
strong In July as the department
Retail sales were $133.5 b!Uion previously reported. Totsl sales
In August after adjustments for In July were up only 0.1 percent,
seasonal variations but not for rather than thestrong0.5percent
price changes, the department's estimated last month.
Census Bureau said.
tar sales plummeted 1.8 perThe 0.2 percent dip, which cent, the sharpest drop In that
matched a 0.2 percent drop In large segment of retail sales
AprU, was actually a little better since a 2.8 percent plunlfe In
than m0$t analysts had expected, October 1987, the · department
·
· ·
said.

bought more gasoline for vaca- Indicates domes tic demand mav
tion trips.
··
be easing In the face of rising
Sales at drugstores and food Interest rates and stsgnant In·
sales were also up In August, come gz:owtll.
though these ' Increases could
. The Federal Reserve raised its
reflect higher prices rather than benchmark discount Interest
Increased volume.
rate In early August and comPeople went out less In August: mercial Interest rates followed
Receipts at eating and drinking suit, Increasing the cost of using
places were down 0.6 percent In bank and store credit cards.
August.
"On the basts of some of our
Sales of long-lasUng expensive talks with retailers, September
Items such as home appliances has not started off all that wei~
were down a sharp 0.1 percentln either," Clllmerlne said. "The
August, following a 0.5 percent relatively llat level of retail
_decline In July .
spending seems to be
: While relatively weak on 11 continuing."
month-to-month " "-···· sales for · Chlmerlne said this reflects a
the tltst eight months · of 1988 buildup of "debt ; slc;lw growth In
month of August.
. . Excludlng'thehugea!!tOmoblle
. '"l'hls . W!ISn't a great , sur- se&lt;;tor, re11111 sales were actually · were stUI -6 percent above the . real wages, .a nd low savings
same period of 1987. .
· prise,,'' said Lawrence Chlme-rates. These a~il ·the things that
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P.
0..2 percent u people shoPP.ed
o
wn
In
retail
sales
..
are
holdln~ spending down."
The
slowd.
_rine, · chief . eco110tn.tst for the for back-to-scho~l· clothes and ·

~=:en~a;:r::~f:s~n~=~

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�Comment
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~'h ,....,__.._-.-. ,.,.._c:::~.....
ISlffiilS!

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlsber
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER or The United Press Internatlonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with naiT).e, address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

President Reagan signs Fair
Housing extension into law

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. Thursday. September 16, 1988

FDIC head gets tough
WASHINGTON - William economic adviser to President
Seidman, the chairman of the Ford.
Federal DepQsit Insurance
He Is in the headlines currently
Corp., spends his vacations at his for throwing the noose around the
New Mexico ranch, hangs Indian necks of speculators who might
art on his office walls, wears · have profited from the recent
cowboy boots and bicycles to collapse of the largest Insolvent
work. He once suggested, only banking organization in Texas,
half In jest, that Ivan Boesky First RepublicBank Corp.
should get the death penally for
"It's a rare day when the
Insider trading. William Seld· money men on Wall Street earn a
man has a very low tolerance for well-deserved Jesson from gogreed.
vernment bureaucrats," one
II took this cowboy to put a stop FDIC oHlclal told to our assoto the shameless profiteering by ciate, Michael Blnstein. U noWall Street speculators circling thing else, he added, the well·
like buzzards over falling banks. heeled speculators, who hold out
Seidman Is the former business their hands when Uncle Sam
school' dean at Arizona State protects the depositors at failing
University, where he Instituted banks, have learned a lesson an ethics curriculum long before "not to play chicken with the
Harvard knew there was an FDIC."
ethics crisis. He buUt one of the
Seidman has dealt with
largest public accounting pracll· hundreds of bank !allures during
ces in the country and was a key his three years as head of the

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Honse Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Reagan signed an extension of federal
fair housing law this past Tuesday that covers the handicapped and
families with children and gives victims of bias easier· to· use legal
tools to fight discrimination.
Reagan hailed the measure, which plugs gaps in the 1968 Fair
Housing Act, as the "most important civil rights legislation In 20

THEY SffoULDN 'T
BE ALLoWED To SHoW
SOMETflrNG TtfAt ofFENDS
So MANY REL16roUS P£oPLE.

'{oli'RE RIGHT.

I'LL TURN oFF
\JERRY FALWELL.

'Letters to the editor
Letters on issues, candidates

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Asked by American Heritage
magazine to list the most over·
rated and underrated figures In
U.S. history, a professor at
George Washington University
wasted no time with names.
"Most overrated: whoever
happens to have just been inaug·
urated as president.
"Most underrated: Whoever
has just ceased to be president.''
Keep those words in mind
during the next few months .
Tltey're a healthy antidote to the
fever of an election year and the
hopeless search for salvation
within a voting booth.
Our national folklore describes
Americans as a headstrong,
Independent people who go our
own way and disdain Old World
deference to authority. What
twaddle. Many of us Invest
Impossible hopes In a new
president. As a result, virtually
every misfire during a president's term, whether within his

Historians should know better,
but even they fall under the spell
of political power. American
Heritage asked dozens of scho·
Iars to cite the most overrated
and underrated public figures,
but most dutifully stuck with the
tried and true. They chose
government figures - and frequently presidents -to fill each
category.
Qf all the historians surveyed,
Yale's Robin Winks broke most
crisply ·trom this claustrophobic
worship of political leadership.
His answer:
"Most overrated: nearly any
of the presidents ... . Even to
discuss Chester Arthur or Millard Fillmore is to overrate
them.
"Most underrated: the Inventors of machines that truly

changed the way we live, lnven·
This Is not to deny the lmpor· '
tors who nonetheless ofteri are tance of politics. Although go- '
missing from any standard (hls- vernment isn't good at creating ...
toryj text .... "
,
prosperity, it encourages dr .. '
Winks noted the inventors of limits the conditions under which
the transistor and the computet, prosperity can thr1ve. Govern- •
but he could have mentioned meilt can also wage war, or " '
hundreds of others, too. Not course, and thus put the lives of :
every creator Invented a ma- entire nations at risk.
'
chine, either.
Nonetheless, those tempted to ' '
To whom do we owe more: genuflect at the altar of poUcltal "
Jonas Salk·or Woodrow Wilson? power, to rate the exercise of .:
The agronomists who fashioned public authority as a force for
the Green Revolution, or William good or a dispenser of happiness, •
Howard Taft? Corporate trallb· above the work of scientific,
lazers such as Wllllam Paley of commercial and artistic gent• ·.J
CBS 11nd David Packard of uses, should recall the gentle ' '
Hewlett-Packard, or Gerald wisdom of Samuel Johnson:
'"
Ford? William Faulkner or , 'How small, of all that human (
Jimmy Carter?
hearts endure,/That pari which
And to whom do you think we'll lows or king.s can cau.te or cure.~ -..·
owe more in the future: the _ · What Johnson understood In '
scientists now racing to perfect the 18th century remains true ' '
superconductivity and the engi- today. By all means, vote. Just '
neers who'll put it to commercial don't bet your future on the
use, or the winner of the Bush- outcome.
.'
'/Dukakls battle?
I

The future ·o f biotechnology
Ironton's gone; Meigs has good shot
Dear Editor:
Long time nemesis Ironton is
gon so I think Meigs has as good a
shot as anyone in both boys and
girls athletic competition In the
SEOAL. Come on fans and
parents, Jet's have a little confl·
dence In our children's abilities
to compete with the best because
to be the bes I you must compete
with thebes t. Meigs Is two times
the size of some schools In the
TVC so I ask you, is this really
"competition" and does It really
buUd morale and community
support when we prevail over
teams which we are expected to
defeat and usually do so quite

handily. I am sure that competitive matches with the likes of
Athens, GalJlpolis and Logan
would better prepare all Meigs
athletes for tournament play and
would generate more Interest
and recognition than ones with
some schools that would be hard
pressed to be competitive (with
all due respect) In the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference. By
the way, what happened to the
SEOAL petition that had over 500
signature?
Chuck Allensworth Jr.
350 South Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Was never out of a job
Dear Editor.
1 read that bu sty little letter in
the paper last night over the
name of Jimmy Hems ley .
Never was out of a job. In the
hard times of the Great Depression, we dug ma )•appie, hunted
possum and worked a big garden.
One time pa butchered a fat
heifer. We put her on lee and
peddled the beef.
No, I was never out of a job.
One day a man on a big bay horse
came riding in the road In the
rain. Ma said. "Look out there.
That is the trustee for the
township." There was a big hole
In the road at the end of our lane.
So I goes out and looked like I was
from a big voting family and
'said "Do vou see that big hole?"
H~ said: "Lad, would you like

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to f!lllt up?"
So that ws hint enough. I got a
shovel and plied In the dirt. One
dav here comes a check from the
township for a dollar. Clint Smith
Jet' me stack' hay for him one
summer. Never was out of a job.
Over the njl.llle of Jimmy
Hemsley appeared this
statement.
"After all, it 's State money you
are handling and not County."
Not so. That is TAXPAYERS'
monev and since some of it Is
mine: I am well pleased that the
commissioners and the director
are .looklng after the taxpayers'
Interests. If they don't who will?
No, I never was out of a job. I
might have a job hunting for a
job.
Gayle PriCe.
(

their attempts to profit from ;.•
misfortune by grabbing a chunk
of the FDIC's financial assist- •
ance are costly to the agency's
depositor insurance fund.
These profiteers were also.• •
imperlllng Seidman's efforts to •: •
maintain stab!Utyl in a financial •
system that has experienced Its •
darkest period since the 1930s.
What one official called the·· •
"final straw" occurred earlier '
this summer. The FDIC was
working with a group o!lnvestors _
wUJing to finance the rehabllltatlon of First City Bancorporallon
of Houston. With nearly $11
bUJion In deposits to protect, the FDIC buUt a life-support systenl.· · •
Involving billions of dollars In
government aid and additional
cash from the new Investors.
:;,
Seidman's aim was to protect the depositors by saving the •
bank, buthedldn'twant to do any
favors for the bank's owners who
falled to keep It solvent. His view
was that the owners should
contrlbu te to the rescue. not
benefit from II.
The new Investors had to cut a
deal with the profiteering bond :
holders. An FDIC official told us ;;:
the bond holders "let the FDIC
know they would hold the deal
hostage unless they were paid a '
hefty profit on their lnvestmen~.' ;
They were gambling on history;
which suggested the FDIC would
never Jet such a large bank fall . .,,.
They were right, but maybe for ;
the last time.
•~
But, Seidman had a surprtse·for • everyone. Regulators de- _ .
clared the 40 banks of First· ~
Republic Insolvent, shutting out
the shareholders and eliminating
the chance for legal extortion.
Then First Republic was trans~ .
!erred to a federally chartered · •
bridge bank that wm receive $4 '
billion in federal assistance.
By treating the bond holders . '
like stock holders who have no .:
guarantees for their investment, ,
Seidman closed the trough whe~e .
wan Street hogs had been · ~
feeding.
· "

Politicians are only human ___V:_in_ce_nt_C_ar_ro__,ll
control or not, dogs his reputation far into the future.
•

As the und.lsputed leader In the
budding field of biotechnology,
the United States Is facing a
broad array of Issues which are
being raised by this futuristic ·
science. In Congress, many
members want to keep the U.S.
ahead of the foreign competition.
Nevertheless, this desire to
maintain our lead In biotechnology is tempered by ethical and
political concerns.
The Senate has passed a bill
that Is aimed at coordinating the
nation's biotech efforts. Approval by the House this year,
.however, Is In doubt. The bill (S
1966) would create an executive
branch advisory board on biotechnology, including efforts to
draw a complete map of man's
genetic code. The Biotechnology
Competitive Technology Act
would also establish a clearinghouse for biotech research data.
Biotech advocates on Capitol Hill
believe Congress must do something to help the federal government sort through the Issues in a
coordinated fashion. At the moment, a dozen federal agencies
fund biotechnology research and
regulate Its byproducts. To date,
many regulatory proposals have
been debated, but neyer enacted.
The potential benefits of biotech research are almost Immeasurable. Researchers are
developing more productive
plants and animals which are
also more resUient against diseases and pests. Dwarfism may
soon be treated by a manufactured growth hormone. Insulin,
once taken from cows and pigs to
treat diabetics, Is now being
produced In labs. New drugs
aimed at preventing heart at·

tacks and strokes are also being
developed. Furthermore, important biomedical advances are
bringing us closer to finding
cures for everything from the
common cold to AIDS and
cancer. Among drug and vaccine
developers, cancer Is the target
of half of the 81 treatments now
under development. The eco- ·
nomic potential Is staggering as
well. Over the past decade the
biotech Industry has been booming. At least 403 American
companies are decldated to biotech research and development.
Another 70 corporations have
made significant investments in
the field. These companies are
now spending nearly $2 blllion a
year on biotech research and
employ nearly 36,000 people. It Is
estimated by the Department of
Commerce that this will be a $40
blllion industry by the year 2000.
Despite our dominance In this
field, Congress is concerned
about the emphasis that Japan
&lt;ind other nations are giving to
biotechnology. Given the beating·
the U.S. has taken In a number of
competition should be taken
seriously. Biotech proponents do
not want yet another Industry
born In this country to Jle
captured and exploited by other
nations. Ethical considerations
pose yet another challenge to
America's blotechnolOKY effort.
At some point, important ethics
issues wlll have to be addressed.
How far should scientists be
allowed to go In creating and
patenting new animal hybrids?
Should a person's genetic makeup be kept confidential or
made available for the greater
societal good? Should expectant

yan·stops.
By RICHARD R01TKOV
UPI Sports Writer
Having recently announced
he's considering retirement a Iter
this season, the venerable Nolan
Ryan continues to prove why he
shouldn't.
The 41·year·old righthander
continued his masterv over the
opposition Wednesday night.
striking out a National League
season·high 13 batters in leading
the Houston Astros to a 7·1
victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
''He was awesome, '' said Reds
Manager Pete Rose. "He's probably pitching as well as any
pitcher in the league in his last
four or five starts."
Ryan, 12·11, limited the Reds to
just four hits and allowed no
walks, while keeping the Astros
within 6 1·2 games of division·
leading Los Angeles .
Ryan, in striking outlO or more
for the seventh time this season
and 181st time In his major
league career, hiked his all-time
record strikeout total to 4,771 in
fanning every Reds starter but
leadoff hitter Barry L~rkin.
' 'He's a Hall of Farner, that's
the best way to describe him,"
said Rose. "It's a credit to the
way he (Ryan) works. I don' t
want to talk about my team. We
didn't do much . I just wantto talk
about Nolan Ryan, because he
was great. "
Ryan's masterpiece spelled
trouble for opposing pitcher
Danny Jackson, a strong Cy
Young Award candidate and
winner of 11 of his previous 12
decisions . Jackson, 21·7, lasted
just 51·3 Innings .
"The key has been that my

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta :

FDIC. All the while, he has been a
model of calm, rarely showing
irritation. But the one burr under
his saddle, as he has attempted to
save banks and their depositors,
has been the slick Wall Streeters
who were finding ways to cash In
on the crisis.
Their tactic Is to gamble on
bonds. Banks issue bonds to raise
equity, and when a bank looks
like a loosing proposition, the
bond holders start selllng at
bargain prices. The Wall Streeters step In and by the bonds,
gambling that the FDIC w!ll pull
the bank from the jaws of death
and make their Investment profItable again. In addition, I( the
bank Is reorganized instead of
allowed to fall, the bond holders
must agree to the arrangements.
· According to FDIC officials,
these speculators don't care
about the bank's depositors. And

Mille~ .:

Cong. Clarence

•
parents be allowed to decide
whether or not to have a chlld
based upon its genetic makeup?
Should people be allowed to use
biotechnology to alter their phys·
leal appearance? Should children be steered toward certain
occupations for which their
genes show they would be best
suited?
The ethical, regulatory, and

'

foreign competition Issues are
the types of concerns with which . ·
the propose4 executive branch "'
advisory board would wrestle. •
Biotechnological advances wUI "
undoubtedly continue and become an Increasingly Important
factor In our lives. In my opinion, ''
responsible research and devel' :.,
opment In this area can help lead
this nation into the next century. "

,,"

. .,

Berry's World

,,
..

'

THIS JUST IN~
THE COMBINATlOfi OF
AlR POLLUTION AfllO

.,

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Goop FORYOU

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ACCOP.tlli'oi.Gr TO ~ IIIEW STilt&gt;'( 81(
THE. "II'(TERNAl COMSUSTIOt&gt;l
E.MGINE AND SMOKEST~C.I&lt;
I~DcJSTRY ASSOCI.-.TIO~ ", ..

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-·

:--~-----=~....:The
.:.:: Daily Sentinlji-Page-3

Ohio

•

vears:• •
· The Jaw, called the Fair Housing Act Amendments of 1988 and
signed in a Rose Garden ceremony, enjoyed broad support in
Congress -It passed the Senate 94-3 and the House 376·23- and was
backed by the real estate industry.
Reagan told the gathering he had "vowed we would work to
strengthen fair housing laws for all Americans. Now, we have
achieved that goal."
While stressing the bipartisan nature of the legislation, Reagan
threw in a plug for his vice president's White House campaign, saying
that "a young congressman, George Bush, had the courage to vote
for" the original 1968 version, adopted in the turbulent aftermath of
the assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.
· A key provision of the law creates a new process for dealing with
hOusing bias, allowing people who believe they have been
discriminated against by a rental or sales agent to file a complaint
with the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
If HUD officials are unable to resolve the dispute, they can issue a
charge of discrimination. Then, either party can take the matter
dlrectlv into federal court or. through a new procedure. before an
administrative law judge ..
If the sales or rental agent is found guilty, fines as high as $100,000
can he imposed, depending on whether the agent has committed
previous violations.
Until now, surh attempts at legal relief had to be pursued by the
Justice Department In a lengthy and cumbersome process that
frequently Jed to extended litigation and rarely yielded legal victories
for the complainants.
Also new is protection for handicapped people, and it requires
landlords allow handicapped tenants to make reasonable modlflca ·
lions to dwellings to allow fuller use of the home, with the tenant
paving for the alterations.
Opening the umbrella of protection even further, similar
guarantees for fair treatment now apply to pregnant women, families
with children under age 18 or people '8eklng custody of a minor child.
It exempts senior citizen communities that meet certain standards
from the child bias provisions, but affects other "adults only"
complexes. which no longer will be able to reject families with
voungsters.
- The original law made it illegal to discriminate In housing on the
basis of race, color. religion or national origin. It was amended in 1974
to ban also discrimination because of sex. Nonetheless, supporters of
the new legislation said widespread discrimination continued under
the 20·vear·old law.
J;IUii officials estimated that as many as 2 million cases of racial
housing discrimination occur each year. A recent study found blacks
stood a 72 percent chance of encountering bias when trying to rent a
house and a 48 percent chance of suffering dlscrim!n'atlon when
trying to buy one.

-......
•

DODGERS WIN AGAIN - Tbe Dodprs' Mike Marsball is
congratulated by teammate Orel Hersblser after Marsball's
1ame-wlnning hit, scoring Kirk Gibson in the bottom of tbe ninth .
Inning of Wednesday night's game to beat tbe visiting Braves 1-0.
The hit 11ave Hersbiser, tbe Dodger hurler, his 21st win of the
season. (Uri&gt;
'

•

nips

•

'

control has been better in mv las t
five o1· six starts," said Ryan. " I
don ' t have the stuff I had. And I
can feel the difference, but I
know I just have to work harder.
"This has been the most
consistent I've been all year," he
added, "because I had command
of all my pitches. I feel real good
right now."
Houston Manager Hal Lanier
called Ryan's performance a
"masterpiece."
"Ryan pitched a masterpiece
tonight. and he had great control
again, with a good fast bait and
change. He's pitched well since
the AII·Star game and now we've
started to score some runs for
hl,m."
Jackson has been beaten by
Houston three times this season.
"Houston seems to be one of
those teams he just can't get
out," saiq Rose.
Jackson gave up homers to
Glenn Davis, his 28th, and Rafael
Ramirez (who knocked In four
runs), his fifth, as Houston
scored once in the second and
three times In the fourth and
sixth innings. 'The Reds only run
came on a solo homer by Kal
Daniels, his 17th, in the seventh
inning.
In other National League
games. New York nipped Chicago 3·2, Pittsburgh topped
Montreal 4·1 In 12 Innings,
Philadelphia dumped St. Louis
9·2, San Francisco edged San
Diego 6·5, and Los Angeles
blanked Atlanta 1-0.
In the AL, it was Boston 4,
Baltimore 3; New York 7, Cleveland 5; Toronto 3, Detroit 2:
Milwaukee 4, Chicago 2; Kansas

City 4 California 2; Seattle 2,
Minnesota 0 and Texas 9, Oakland 1.
Mets 3, Cubs 2
AI New York, Sid Fernandez
and Roger McDowell combined
on a four-hitter for New York.
Fernandez, 9-10, allowed three
hits over seven innings, struck
out eight and walked three.
McDowell threw two innings for
his 16th save. New York reduced
to nine Its magic number for
clinching the National League
East.
·
Pirates 4, Expos I,
,
12 lnnlnp
At Montreal, Bobby Bonilla hit
a three-run home run with two
out In the 12th inning for
Pittsburgh. Jose Lind, who tied a
career-high with four hits,
doubled with two out off Tim
Burke, H. Andy VanSlyke was
walked intentionally to get to
Bonllla, who hit his first homer
since Aug. 14.
Ph Diles 9, Cardinals 2
At Philadelphia, Phil Bradley
and LanceParrlsheach homered
for Philadelphia. Ricky Jordan,
Jackie Gutierrez and Chris
James knocked in two runs
apiece to support Bob Sebra, 1·2,
who gave up two runs and four ,
hils in five Innings. Bradley hit
his lith homer and Parrish his
15th.
Glanls 6, Padres 5
At San Diego, Will Clark hit a
sacrifice fly to help San Fran·
cisco tie a National League
record with four,,and Don Robin·
son, 7·4, scattered eight hits over
seven Innings for a three·game
sweep. Craig Lefferts got his
ninth save.San Diego starter

Jimmy Jones, 9·13, allowed four
runs on seven hits .
Dodgers 1, Braves 0
At Los Angeles, Mike Marshall
doubled home Kirk Gibson with
none out in the bottom oft he ninth
inning for the game's only run.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14$-90111)
A Dlvlllon of Multimedia. Inc.

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through Friday, Ill Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by t h.e Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
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Browns need
more than QB
By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Don't
bu.rn your Browns tickets just
ye(,
True, there are problems.
Losing to the New York Jets, one
ot' the worst teams In the NFL,
indicates just how much the
Cleveland Browns are strug·
gliJ!g. They are the only l'oTL
team without a touchdown this.
season.

Yet matters are far from
terminal, despite losing Bernie
Kosar and Gary Danielson to
injuries. The absence of Kosar
certainly hampers ' the passing
game while Danlelson'.s second
broken ankle In three seasons
means those players most familiar with the offense are sidelined.
Mike Pagel really Is an unknown commodity because he
has ~ne little but carry a
clipbOnd (sorry, Mike, but it's
true) and serve as a reluctant
player representative during the
ili·advised players' strike last
year.
Pagel has had stardng assignments in ·the NFL and has
acquitted himself adequately If
unspectacularly. He needs the
chance to show what he can do
before judgment is passed.
But coach Marty Schottenhel·
mer's offensive pJay.calllng has
been ineffective, to say the least.
E~en he admits as much. The
running game managed just 27
net yards against the Jets, and
the Browns must be able to run
more successfully to win.
Part of the reason for the
ground game's Impotency has
been the suddenly Ineffective
offensive line. Second-year center Gregg Rakoczy, whose preseason play sparked the trad~ of
veteran Mike Baab to New
E~gland, clearly has faltered . In
this writer's opinion, it seems
that other members of the line
also have struggled In Rakoczy's
wake, notably Cody Rlslen, while
the steady play of Paul Farren
has bolstered the left side of the

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~nolher side effect has been a
weakness against tl\e blitz, and
you can wager the money under
the mattress than opponents are
going to send their pass-rushing
goons until It is obvious the
Browns' offensive line Is playing
with more cohesiveness.
Cleveland quarterbacks have
been sacked seven limes to date,
and a I least two of those certainly
contributed to Danielson's Injury. Clearlv. the line must
provide better blocking, and this
advice also is extended to Mack
and Byner. especially the latter.
Finally, those penalties: 21 In
two games. Some of them have
been the result of poor official·
lng, but others arc strictly the
result of mental mistakes. Off·
hand, I'd say six of the infractions are rooted in sheer careless·
ness and dangerous bravado.
This Is an area in which Scholtenheimer needs to make a more
forceful point at team meetings.
P.S. - Think a punter just
might be a Browns' priority In
the 1989 draft?

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Stupidity by Cleveland's City
Council regarding the Browns'
lease of Clevelan~ Stadium,
which currently runs to 1999, has
rightfully annoyed team owner
Art Modell.

I

'

I'

�..
Page 4-The Dally Sentinel

Ironto~. Portsmouth, Sheridan
•

rated '

also had an 1S.2 bulge over the
Akron St. Vlncent·St. Mary,
Bulldogs In first place votes.
Brookvile, Urbana, Youngstown
Sandusky finished close behind Ursuline and Akron Hoban
McKinley In third place with 127 rounded out the Divlslon III top
points, followed by two more ten liSt.
Columbus Academy's clilsest
familiar names In fourth and
filth - Cincinnati Moeller and challenge came from Central
Ohio neighbor West Je!!erson,
Massillon Washington.
Rounding out the Dlylslon I Jlst with the Vikings - the third
· were Cleveland St. Ignatius In bunch ot Vikings to be voted No. 1
sl)(th, followed by Boardman. - held a 190·212 matgln over the
Fairfield, Wrtlngton and Austin- RoUgh Riders.
Elyria Catholic was a distant
town Fitch.
St. Joseph, which dropped ln.to ·lblrd With 90 PQints, followed In
Division llfor the first time this !)rd.e r · by Crestline·; , Wh.eel~rs:
year, held a slim ·147-143 lead · l)urg., Gates ·Mills Hawken, ·Co·
over Buchtel, which picked up lumbus Hartley, Steubenville
one more first place votes than Catholic, Versallles and Bucyrus
Wynford.
did the \likings.
Newark Cathoitc, which won
Steubenville followed In third
Its
25th consecutive game last
with 117 points. ten came North
weekend,
held a 265·191 margin
Canton Hoover, Chardon. Harriover
runner
up Delphos Jefferson
son, Solon, Cincinnati Purcell·
In
Division
V, with Mogadore
Marian and Minerva In a tie tor
eighth and Niles McKinley In third with 172ln the identical way
tenth.
_
last year's voting.woupd up.
Ayersville was fourth with
Mooney led runnerup Cincinnati AcademyoiPhyslcal Educa- Middletown Fenwick, St. Henry,
tion (CAPE) 156-130 In Division Monroeville, . Minster. Ports·
Ill. followed by Ironton with 116, mouth Notre Dame and Archbold
Cincinnati Fares t Park with 103 rounding out the list.
and Orrville with 88.

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

to The
Cleveland
. was droppe~ by different
"I'm just
trying
getnumthe . .
shotgun
things
down,to the
the Browns because Kosar Is a
bering system, the protection
P.ocket quartE"rback and does not
schemes," said Strock, 37. "If eel
like to roam the backfield. PageL
great . I've been running and
throwing In the all-season. When
liowever, used the forma lion
&lt;turing his Colts tenure and says somebody my age misses tralnt(e is comfortable with it.
lng camp, it can only help."
Strock said he and agent Jerry
, " It's certainly something we
qan consider using," said Pagel. , Kapsteln contacted several
· t) have experience with ther teams.
"We got a call (from the
shotgun. Obviously, It can give
Call 614-742-2421
Rutland, Ohio
· Browns) and worked It out," he
vou more time to throw."
· : Browns coach MartySchotten· said. "I prepared myself physl2112 Mile1 out of Rutland - Off Ntw Uma Road
tielmer Indicated his team might
cally and mentally to play I this
HOIJRS: Monday thru Friday- 12 Noon to 8 p.m.
E')&lt;perlment with the shotgun, but year). I told Mr. Modell anything
Saturday- 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
s1ressed the most important goal I can do in any role, I was more
or Call for Appointment
i!' practice this week.was to give than happy to do. Except punt.
?agel the bulk of the work.
" We had a lew disagreements
:
(with the Dolphins), but I'd
: AllhoughStrockdlldnotpartlc· rather not comment. That was
!pate in tral!llng camp this Miami, this is Cleveland. I'm just •

Stewart's.
.
Gun &amp; Supplies
&amp; Gift Shop

•
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- Trlmlll Haywood. a former
Mld·Amerlcan. Conference bas·
ketball Freshman ot the Year at
Miami ct Ohio, has transferred to
the UniVersity .of Charleston.
The 6-foot·6 Haywood aver·
aged 17 PQints and 7 ~bounds In
1986·87 for Miami. In 19 games
last season when a foot Injury
limited his playing time, the
gl'aduate ot Martin Luther King
High School In Chl(ago, averaged 6 points and 3 rebounds. He
Will become eligible for Charles·
ton at the second semester.
: Todd Landrum. the Charleston
cbach and a former Ohio State
assistant, said three players
have 1en his NAJA team- guard
Rav Hubbard, who transferred to
Ahibama State; guard Derek
~Iunden. who chose not to play
tills season; and forward Mike
Nembhard, who lett school.

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Not Avtlilabla In Dept. Storu

SVAC standings

DRYER

WASHER

. Of.Kaanan Trace .......................... H
. Qti.Metp ....................................... H

New
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boycott of the 1984 Los Angeles
Summer Olympics.
Llllehammer was fourth In the
s!x-clty .battle lor the 1992
Games. Its bid this time was
•
SVAC STANTINGS
opened by Prime Minister Gro
(All Games)
Harlem Brundtland. LilleTEAM
..
..
........
... W L P OP
hammer chairman Ole Sjetne
North
Gall!a
...........
2 0 26 . 23
said the presence of the prlm.e
.
Hannan
Trace
........
2 1 . 37 43 .
minister and the sports mln!st&lt;:r
Oak
Hlll
.................
1 1 26 22
underlined the nation's widesSouthwestern
..........
1 1 14 39 . ·
pread support.
Kyger
Creek
...........
l 2 20 45
"We have the possibility of
Eastern
..
....
............
O
2 ·· 19 95
arranging all the Olympic events
Symmes Valley ...... 0 2 12 41
In a very limited distance in the
Southern .. ...............0 2 6 81
city," Llllehammer managing
Friday's Games:
director Sigmund Thue said.
Hannan
Trace at Southern
"There Is no other place in
Eastern
at -Kyger Creek
Scandinavia where you can do
North
Gall!a
at Oak Hill
this."
·
Southwestern at Symmes Valley ,

~

,•

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said Samaranch. "Whatever the
result, you are all winners.
"You have demonstrated our
confidence and are most proud to
count you among our Olympic
family. However, there was a
choice to make, a very difficult
choice."
After the announcement was
made. red-coated members of
the Norwegian committee rejo·
Iced, waving the Norwegian flag
and jumping up and down .
Political Intrigue surrounded
the vote with the three challengers having feared the JOC
would choose Sofia as repayment
lor the East Bloc's decision not to
boycott the Seoul Olympics.
Bulgaria was one of 58 nations
to join the Soviet Union In the

,.

l · Fall schedules _

870 REMINGTON

I

was made to hold the Summer
and Winter Games In dlfferentt
years. Albertville, France, will
stage the 1992 Winter Games.
Norway last hosted the Winter
Games In Oslo hi 1952.
·
The vote highlighted the IOC's
94th session. IOC President Juan
Antonio Samaranch. who made
the ·a nnouncement · at a news
conference, dld not vote."'-11. ..
majority 44 votes were needed to
win.
·
"Before announcing to the
world the name of the city given
the honor and responsibility to
host the 17th OlympiC Winter
Games In 1994, I would like to
thank personally the citizens In
the competing committees,"

. In returning the Games- to one
of the traditional homelands of
winter sports. the IOC surprised
many In the Olympic tamlly who
expected Sofia to become the
flrst East Bloc nation to hold the
Winter Olympics.
Llllehammer became the first
winter host since the decision

I

$399

M•rnl•: 14.MI•U)11: it.ubert,.

I

·:
MI11CellaneoU8
BostonGard'e nturns60Nov.l7
.aod a year ot spectai sports and
entertainment events Is planned,
inCluding a week·long birthday
pArty Nov. 15·21. The Garden Is
slated to be torn down and
replaced by a SPQrts arena
cQlllplex.
Televilllon
•:E:Sl'N hired Bob Carpenter to
dO play·by·play on college loot·
bjlll an~ basketball telecasts .
Car~nter, who had been with the
U:;A . Network since 1980, wlll
dl!but Oct. 8 when he calls the
W,y&amp;mlng-San Diego State foot·
b4ll giuite.

SEOUL, South Korea (UP!i Llllehammer, Norway, was
awarded the right to host the 1994
Winter. Olympics In a vote
Thursday by the Jnlernatlonal
OlympiC Committee.
Llllehammer, a city of 25,000
and the smallest of the candldates, bi!at out Sofia. Buigarta;
Anchorage, Alaska;an~ tile twin
!;:_&lt;~tsh bid of Oestersund and

the VIkings, will need to score
points quickly and take the home
crowd out of the game before :
halftime - the formula that
worked last week- If they want
to start a streak of a different
kind.
Hannan Trace-Southern
Speaking of streaks, Han1111n
Trace Is the odds-on favorite to
extend Southern's losing streak
to 11 games It they can execute
their tried-and -true winning tormula of ball control, with fullback Brad Cremeens and tall-.
back Todd Saunders slipping
through holes led by a line
averaging 195 pounds a man.
If the Wildcats' defense. led by
ends Dean Flanery (four sacks
and a tumble recovery last week
vs. Green Local) and Jack Swain
(six tackles, five assists and a
blocked kick vs. Green) · and
linebacker Todd Saunders (nine .
tackles, three assists). can main·
taln pressure on Tornado quar- ·
terback Chris Stout, they wlj be .
able to win two In a row for the
first time since North Gallla and
Southwestern fell victim to the
Wildcats on Oct. 3 and 9, 1987.
In las t year's game. the Wild·
cats prevailed 56-12. ·

..

Ctwltr

II.

.
1

'

DEER BARREL
12 GA.

coach Jack James.
TheJamesgang, riding back to
Patriot on the heels of last week's
14-6 victory over Alexander, will
have to strap on their guns and
prepare to shoot straight when
they travel south to face a
Symmes Valley team that Is 0.2
after non-league encounters w!t.h
river powers such as Rock Hill
and Huntington Vinson.
The Highlanders ended their ·.
slx·game losing streak last week
with defensive play that James
knows he will need against a
physical and strong Viking
squad. They wlll need a posse on
defense. led by ends Brent
Davies (he scored a touchdown
on one of his two fumble recoverIes against Alexander) and Glen
Arrowood I he Intercepted a pass
In the Alexander game) to take
charge at the ilne of scrimmage
and stop tile running of VIking
fullback Kenny Daniels and
tailback Paul Hayes .
The Highlanders, remembering last year's 14-0 loss at home to

••

Haywood transfers

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.. .

f"'lwttlbl - Npr• r-nl

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., ( Sperts briels ·

, 11M VOLLKYIIALL 8CIIBOOU:

CROSSBOWS WITH QUIVER

claim Its third win In as manv early .
line. Though Johnson Is a con·
games, Pirate defenders such as
In last year's meeting, the verted fullback and can hold his
nose guard Chris Skidmore. ends Oaks beat North 52·15.
own against potential Eagle pass
Mike Lemley and Billy Wllllam·
Eaalern-KCHS
rushers, he will need all the
son and linebacker Don Mays
Arch Rose's Eagles and Mel protection he can get from his
must find a way to overcome the . Coen' s Bobcats are hungry !or a
mates up front so he can have
size of the Oaks' o!tensive win, something neither team has time· to pass to slotback Brian
linemen to stop Ward and hound seen In their last tew games.
Vinson, his favorite downf!eld
the quarterback when he Is
The Bobcats started off the target.
forced to throw.
season with a win against FedEastern will need all the bee! It
On offense, the Bucs are likely eral Hocking before falling on
has on Its defensive front to
to go to their running game, their faces against Wahama and declaw the Bobcat running
starring fullback Felipe Beach Waterford, while Eastern began game, as 210·pound fullback
and tailback Steve George, to the year with severe losses to John Sipple and 177-pound tall·
establish momentum, but the Hannan and Wahama.
back Phil Bradbury will be tough
Oaks shouldn't count out the
Rose plans to start an offensive to brbtg down coming out of the
pass, as It has provided touch- line· averaging 208 PQundS per Hormatton. Sipple has scored
downs In both of the Pirates' man against a Bobcat defensive touchdowns In two of the Bobwins. George can serve as the front averaging 202'h pounds per cats' three games this year.
second arm In the backfleld If the man. Coen Is likely to send an
Eagle halfback Jay Reynolds
Oaks can stop Pirate quarter· offensive front averaging 184 · Is a questionable starter for
back Greg Glassburn.
pounds per man against an Eagle Friday's game, as he Is nursing
The Pirates need only look to flve-inan front averaging 219.2 broken ribs injured In last week's
the Oaks' recent past, as the pounds per man (see Eastern· game against Wa ham a.
Oaks were beaten by Minford 2-0 KtHS lineup) .
In last year's en~unter, the
on Sept. 3 and had to fight for
In llist week's game against Bobcats edged the Eagles 14-13.
thelr'llves to beat Rock H11126-20 Waterford, .KC quarterback
SWJIS.Symmes Valley
"It's going to be war In the
last week, to see that the Oaks
Chad Johnson received plenty of
can't always put the game away
protection from his offensive Valley," said Southwestern head

:

••

FOR THE NIGHT HUNTER .......

· l'n .
··· U

II: II . . . . .,.... h; 11. EMI
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collntd fll forward Cal ..t• NaU.

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qn!l'd

Colt Faam.
Adjustable Sill Fltt AU

15. (tie) Ullboa ......... 0), t'hlllri•
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Grand Yalley II) :!f; Jt, (tiel a..111o ..
¥tilt&gt;. w........ O.tariD, n eac ..
Dlfliiii•V

t' rll.lay·~

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~an Dh·.- - M-Jft' .JJu•k McKen

5. Wheftenh.IJ'(l)(:l-1)
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7. Coh...lnullattley(l·l)
8. StNbuvUteeal•llc(l)ll·l )
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118
.a . Clllf'oreMPuki,Z.I)
113
s. Orntltet!Ht-e)
111
C. Akr~ .VIN:efll(l){!· fl)
'73
7. BrooiMI-.nllt·&amp;l
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8. Urb-(ll)("l
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18. Akr0fl Hohan(l){t-1)
311
Steond te,.: II. Thornville Shl!rldan 3!;
12. Cam ...ell Memertll.l 31; II. Wickliffe
!t: I.a. Culeld M: 15. Cothltcton 17; 11.
Pollnd II; 17. Kdlll!rlnl Aletr 14; 18.
Muchs&amp;er {I) 12; lt. Pahi~M~Ue
Har\f!f II : !t. Clle) H•mlllon ftadiR.
Me•M HI!IMancl and UIN. Bath, Jt

Mlll"a•kt&gt;e at Sultle, nl,~~:hl
Kani'W' Clly at Oakland. night
Tt&gt;xu at fallfornla. nll!"hl

GRAPHITE RODS ·

IIGH POWER

COWMBUS. 0•1o (UPJ)- TblltM
ltM Untt.ed Pr8ll lnter. . IOnal Ohio
IBth Setto.l &amp;ard ef Coe.ehs foo&amp;ball
r'Uliip t wllh llrll plaee volta aad
won-loN rtroldl a parMihfflftl:
IMvlskln I
Teiun
Pollitt~
I. OndiiMIIPrlacl!lon(lllo){Z-0)
'!23
!. C11nton Mc1Un~{!)(2-&amp;)
131
J. Sanduo1Q'(1)1W)
1!7
-1. CIIICinl'llll Moelli!!rll )(t-1)
IIIIi
5. Mullllon Wullln«ftlft4l)t2-0)
tl
C. Onf SC.IIMtlu-tl)(t-0)
7ft
7. lloardmM(%-11
n
A. !fatrtleld(I)(Z-0) ·
61
I. \\'ol'ltlllll'&amp;n (U)
lA
IO.AutdiiiiM'nf"M:ch(l-0)
Sl
~ldtu: lt. Gaha•u•Uneolf!SI; If.
Tel~ WIIHnwr «; 13. Mlddldowll U;
J.l. Zanell\lllle 32; 11. Growpcn-Ma.._.
38; II. (til!) Troy ancl Clftdn111d IEhll!r, tl
elll!h: lA. LallNOtld SC . Edward •: II.
Fremont Ro8t11; 20. O.,.IDn W_,-ne II.
Dlvlda•ll
Team
Polnh
1. Den St.JoKph(S)(Z-8)
14'2
t. Akr•n Buc:h&amp;ei(I){:Z...I)
IU
3. steub••\ille(.1)1!-l)
111
t . NorihCan,onRoowr(I)(2·D)
91
5. Oulftlon(IH!-01
5I
i. HIU'ritiOII(I)(:I-0)
42
'7. 8ol011(2-l)
-IG
I . CUe)CIII'uRlelj.Mar'-n(l·l l
31
It (lie!MIMrvalt-11)
31
II.NIItl' McKinle-y( 'toOl
31
Stoonlte~~: II. Portllmoutll (I) %1; l:l.
~nt ftG.e"ett U; IS. West Ge...:a II;
14. FOIIIIOI'Ia 17: IS. (tit") f'fanldln .nd
Wlllochby Soulh, IS eaell; 17. WIMer It'
\iilte IS; 111. VermUlon U: lt. Coltmbua
~Salt!~~ II ; U. ColumbuJWMtft'IIOn II. ·
Dlvllllo11 Ill

By Un ltfod Prwut lntenatlenaJ
1\.MERK'AN U:A.GUE

O~tklilnd

SHOTGUN SHELLS

Prep ratings

Majors

SPIRAl

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6 •

~:hr'i:~~~~~Jf~:d~~~ Norway will host 1. 9_.94 Winter Olvmp.ics
.J • • '"':

Cleveland considers using 'shotgun'
. '·

By G. 8PENCEB OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
'thebatllecryamongtheSVAC
gridiron teams is, In the words of
Motown legend Marvin Gaye,
"Let's get It on! ''
1\fter two weeks of non·
conference play In which the
league's eight teams have bad
time to work out the bugs In their
respective game plans, they are
more than ready to tight each
o)her and decide who, It anyone,
will succeed Oak Hill as conferehce champion.
'
North Galb·Oak Hill
It seems that Oak Hill isn't as
lilvinclble as many have predieted them to be. A pre-season
.t~~orlte to win the league for
mo_s.t · ot the conference's
C!lliChes, It seems that the mystique has already worn thin.
1 With the passing game, In the
f9rm of graduated receivers
Mike Hale, Brian Howell and
'rodd Copas and quarterback
Brie Faye, no longer a potent
part of the Oaks' offense, they

move the ball. Available to play
quarterback for the Oaks are
sophomore Shane Maynard, Junlor Josh Ruff and senior Tonv
Simpson. Maynard and Simpson
gi;lt lhtle time to play last year,
and Ruff took the reins lor the
Highlanders halfway through the
1'87 campaign.
...: In . ~rder . for North (ialija to

Factory Rebates Up To

CLEVELAND I UP II - The
summer, the Browns believe he trying to learn the system as fast
Cleveland Browns , looking to
is in shape.
as I can. You better know the
stop opposing defenses from
·. "We -feel very comf9r!able . sy~tem If you go·. out- under t)le
·.. · ·
blitzing, are considering 'r eturn· . ' willl him;." said Scbohenheliner. . gun·.;:.. ' · · · · ·
ing to the shotgun formation· "He's prepared ·to · play. fie's.. · Starting cornerbacks Hanford
abandoned when Bernie Kosar . done some classroom work··wtth ·. btxon (ankle) ·and Frank Minnlbecame the starting quarterback
us and wlll get some practice field (groin) skipped practice
three years ago.
·
time but M!~e has to get the bulk Wednesdav. BOth are considered
questl'o nable for the Colts game
With Kosar and Garv Daniel- of.the 'reps' ·(repetitions)." '
son out with injuries, seven-j.oear
Strock h'ad some classroom as Is wideout Webster Slaughter
veteranMikePagel wlllmakehis
work Tuesday , normally the
(hamstring). Fullback Kevin
first start since December 1985,
players' day off, and said It would Mack (thigh) and nose tackle
against Indianapolis Monday
take some time to adjust to Bob Galle I abdomen) are
night, the team that traded him
Cleveland's offensive system.
questionable.

Pomeroy-Micklepolt, Ohio

Conference play begins Friday night for SVAC teams

TOM PEDEN

rank high in initial UPI polls
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Wrller
COLUMBUS Familiar
names dominate the first week of
the United Press International
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches football rallngs, headed
by tour of last year's playoff
champions .
Cincinnati Princeton In Dlv·
lslon I, Youngstown Cardinal
Mooney In Division Ill, Columbus Academy In Division IV and
Newark Catholic In Division V
won titles last December on the
field and begin this season:
No. 1.
The other 1987 playoff champ
- Akron Buchtel in Division IIhad to settle !or second In this
year's Initial ratings behind
Cleveland St. Joseph, last season's No. 1 ranked Division I
school at the end of the regular
season.
..
Princeton, a 35-14 winner over
Upper Arlington last Friday
night, held a comfortabie223-131
margin over runnerup Canton
McKinley in the first of nine
weeks of balloting. The Vikings

nu.cs.v. Sept.-nber 16. 1988

Thursday, September 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Micldepon. Ohio

.•.• ALSO CHECKING STATION
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STORE HOURS
MON. THRU SAT. 9 TO 7
FRI. 9 TO 8; SUN. 1 TO 5

•

�15,1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Marauders ·to.face Falcons
ROCKS ?RINGS - The Fal·
cons of Miller High swoop into
Marauder stadium Friday night
seeking their first victory of the
1988 season. Sometimes cons!·
dered to be a "breather" In past
vears, the Falcons have shown
improvement In their three
games thus far, all squeakers
despite being losses. In their
opener, the Miller eleven lost to
Berne-Union 3·0, then to Vinton
County 6·0 and last week took the
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes to
the wire before dropping a 16-13
decision.
Coach Charles Chancey antic!·
pates the Falcon ·quarterback,
Sean Bartley, will put the pigskin

- .

Randolph back
to defend crown

YANKl:ES SCORE- New York Yankees' lhlrd
baeman Mike Pagliarulo sUdes safely home on a
bual back to the mound by teammate Joel Skinner

in the fourth Inning of Wednesday night's game
against the Indians in Cleveland. The Yanks won
7-5 .. (UP I)

Red Sox, Yankees tune up
for crucial weekend series
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Boston Red Sox and the
New York Yankees successfully
tuned up for their key AL East
series against each other this
weekend. although both teams
had a difficult time concentrar :
ing on their current opponents.
The Red Sox spotted last-place
Baltimore a 2-0 lead before
taking a 4-3 victory over the
Orioles, while the Yankees held
on for a 7-5 decision over the
Cleveland Indians.
The victories left Boston 4 1·2
games in front oJ the Yankees
heading Into this weekend 's
four-game series at Fenway
Park.
At Boston, Mike Greenwell hit
for the cycle to end a 3-for-16
slump and scored three runs to
lead the Red Sox, who swept their
three-game series from the
Orioles.
"It's been tough all week for us
to keep concentrallng because
everyone's talking about the
Yankees coming in," Greenwell
said. "Now they're coming in .
We've played them well 'al! year
and we're going to have to play
th"em well here .·"
Boston has won four of six
meetings against the Yankees
ttiis Season. ·
Mike Boddicker.12·]5, allowed
s ix hits over seven Innings In his

first outing against his former
teammates since being tra ded
from Baltimore on Julv 29. He
stru.c k out five and walked two in
winning his sixth game in nine
decisions since the trade.
Dennis Lamp pitched the
eighth inning and Lee Smith
worked the ninth to pick up his
26th save.
At New York, Dave Winfield
hit a three-run homer in the first
inning and Rich Dotson won fo r
the first time in six decisions as
the Yankees kept pace with the
Red Sox.
Dotson, 10·9, who was winless
since Aug. 7. gave up four runs on
four hits and four walks in 5 1·3
innings. Dale Mohorcic went the
final 3 2-3 innings to earn his sixth
save and his first since being
traded to New York fmm Texas.
"We had a good team effort
tonight ," Mohorclc sa id . "Everybody contributed and that's
what we' re going to have to do In
Boston."
The Yankees built a 7·3 lead
after 51·2 innings. bu 1 the Indians
closed with a run in the sixth
inning and another in the eighth
when Mohorcic wild· pitched two
runners into scoring position and
gave up a sacrifice fly to
pinch-hitter Willie Upshaw.
Yankee Manager Lou PI niella
sa id he needed to see better effort

Redmen runners finish 2nd
The Rio Grande men's cross
countrv team finished seco nd in
the Wlitenberg Invitational Sept.
9.
The Redmen scored 53 points.
First place was taken by Cedar·
ville. with 30 points. Wittenberg
was third with 90, followed by
Ohio Northern. 119. and De·
fiance. 136.
Tim Warnock, a junior from

Heath, Ohio , finished fi rs t for Rio
Grande for what Coach Bob
Willey ca lled -the best perfor·
mance of his collegiate career.
Warnock came in fourth overall
at 27 :52 .
Bob Fritz was eighth overall,
28:46: Trov Cochran. 12th, 29: 15;
James Peck. 14th, 29:41; Doug
Horne. 15th. 29:45: Tony Fatica,
18th. 30:02: and Vince Fatica,
26th. 30:52.

In the women's race, senior
Marv Dowler from Jackson was
firs t' overall finishing at 20:41 .
First place team was Cedarville
with 30 points. while Defiance
was second with 55 and Wittenberg third with 69.
Also finishing for the Re dwo·
men were Li bbv Bes I. 14th,
23: 44: Atsuko Yamazaki. 16th,
24 : 14; and Gina Klichenman .
22nd. 27 :35.
" Overall team impro ve ment is
continuing. " Willey commented.
"Again. we ' re very proud of
Mary and her accomplishments.
But as for the team, they ran on a
level more cons istent with our
size and they did very well."
The teams are sc heduled to
remain idle un til Sept. 24, when
they participate in the invita·
tiona! in Morehead State.

out of his team over the next four
days.
"In Boston. I want to see some
intensity and some good base·
ball." Piniella said . "That's all
you can ask. Nothing more,
nothing less."
In other ga mes , Toronto
nipped Detroit 3-2, Milwaukee
downed Chicago 4·2. Kansas City
topped California 4-2. Seattle
blanked Minnesota 2-0 and Texas
routed Oakland 9-1.
.
In the National League, It was:
Los Angeles 1, Atlanta 0; San
F ra ncisco 6. San ,Diego 5; · Phlla·
delphia 9, St. Louis 2: New York
3, Chicago 1: Houston 7. Cincl.n·
nati 1: and Pittsburgh 4, Montreal 1 in 12 innings.
Blue Jays 3, Tigers 2
At Toronto. George Bell
singled home the tie -breaking
run in the eighth as Detroit
continued its slide and fell into a
tie for third in the AL East, 51·2
games behind the Red Sox. The
Tigers have lost eight of their last
10 games. Duane Ward, 9·2,
earned the victory in relief
despit~ allowing Fred Lynn 's
22nd home run. Walt Terrell,
7-14, took the loss.
Brewers 4, White Sox 2
At Chicago, Robin Yount and
Rob Deer each drove In two runs
as Milwaukee, winners of 11 oflts
last 14 games. remained 5 1·2
games behind Boston In the AL
East. Bill Wegman, 12-11, al·
lowed seven hits and two runs In 5
2·3 innings. Paul Mirabella fih·
!shed for hi s second save. Bill
Long d ropped to 7·11.
Royal s •1, Angels 2
AI Anaheim. Ca lif., Pat Tabler
ex tended hi s hitting streak to 10
ga mes with two hits and two RBI.
Tabler has hit .400 tl6 for 40)
during th&lt;' strea k. Floyd Bannls·
ter , 11 -12. and two relievers
combined on a six· hitter, with
Steve Farrearning hi s 20th save.
Loser Mike Witt. 13-13, pitched
his 11th complete game.
Mariners 2, Twins' 0
At Seattle. Mark Langston,
12·11 . lim ited Minnesota to three
hits over eight innings. allowing
one runner to get as far as.
second. Mike Sc hooler worked
the ninth for his 13th save. Steve
Balboni hit his 20th homer off
Fred Toli ver. 7-4, and Seattle
also scored in the eighth on an
RBI s ingle by Rey Quinones.

SUTTON, Mass. (UP!)- Sam
Randolph returns Thursday to
defend the title he won In a
washout last yPar on a course
that required sod shipped from
Alabama.
Randolph was the third-round
leader . In last year's Bank of
Boston Classic when rain elimi·
nated the final round, giving him
his firstPGA victory. He posted a
7-under-par 64 for a tournament·
record 14-under 199 through 54
holes and was leading Wayne
Grady by four shots whpn the
rains came.
The rolling, hilly course along
tree-lined fairways was said to be
In fine condition by the·piayers
who practiced this week. even
the 16th hole which fell victim
this summer to pythium blight, a
fungus that attacks grass.
Tournament c hal rman Ted
Mlngolla said efforts were made
to repair the 16th with plugs.
topsoil and chemicals, but nothing worked. .
With the tournament approaching. Mingolla said, "We
couldn't walt and sep If it would
come back."
Mingolla bought new sod in
Alabama that had to be trans·
ported to Pleasant Valley by
refrigerated truck. Three specialists placed the sod down and
"It looked like heart surgery that's how careful they were
when they Installed, It," said
Mingolla. H,e said the whole
project cost $16,000.

In the air against the Marauders
In v!~w of the measure of success
the Trimble Tomcats gained last
week against Meigs.
Bartley, according to the
Meigs coach, has two top recelv·
ers In tight end Tim Van Blbber
and flanker Albert Selmer, his
primary targets. Against the
Buckeyes, Bartley passed for
more than 150 vards totaL
Chancev also credits the Miller
team as being very aggressive
and strong on defense.
Meigs, on a two game winning
streak, has allowed the Falcons
only' fourteen points In five
prevdlous encounters while com·

Thursday, September 15, 1988

piling 17~ of their own. The
Marauders will again rely heav·
!ly on their running game with
Jeff "Cheez" McElroy and Wess
Howard leading the attack.
Not to be overlooked, however
is the Marauder defensive unll
that seems to yeild a lot of
yardage to the opponent but .
manages to stiffen when the
chips are down to prevent the
score, The · defe nsive unit has
allowed but six points per game
thus far and will be headed by the
likes of Matt Peterson, Jerry
Jacks, Dennis Boothe, Wes
Young and Doug Stewart. among
others, · to contain the Falcon
attack.

Language biggest
problem thus far
for Olympic police
SEOUL. South Korea (U P!)Two days before the opening
ceremony, the Seoul Olympic
Organizing Committee Is work!ng to solve last-minute logistical
problems caused by language
difficulties and tight security, the
president of the committee said
Thursday.
"Th~re will be problems along
thewa'y. but when the games are
over, I am sure we will look back
on an enormous overall success," Park Seh-Jik. president of
SLOOC, said at his final news
conference before the Games
begin on Saturday.
"We are facing logistical chal·
lenges which have not been faced
by other Olympic committees,"
Park said. "When we try out new
shoes. no matter how good they
are. they might be uncomforta·
bleat first. but these problems
w!li be Ironed out as time goes
by ."
Korean reporters complained
that tight security caused long

..-------------,
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By Charles A. Mason
The second-largest youth soccer
tournament in West Virginia will be
hosled by Point Pleasant Sept. 2425, said Dennis Brumfield, vice
president of the West Virginia Soccer Association.
Brumfield, a Point Pleasant accountan\ said the largest yputh
soccer ournament, during the
Charleston Stcmwheel Regatta, had
86 teams. The Point Pleasant
tournament, held at the fields in
front of !he Mason County Vocational School, will have between 40
to 50 learns.
·
This is the fourth year for the
Battle Days Soccer Thunnamenl.
This year's will he the largest, or·
ganizers said.
About 3,000 people, among thein
720 or more youth soccer participants, will come to Point
Pleasant for the two days. Roonis
have been reserved as far away as
Ripley.
·
"It brings a lot of people into
Point Pleasant who haven~t been
here before," said or~izer Dr.
Steve Lovell. "It's !he b•ggest event
in Point Pleasant - nothing else
brings in 3,000 people. It's good for
soccer. The kids get to compele
with other kids from other areas."
Last year, Kanawha Valley
United won the under 16 class, the
Sabres of the Kanawha Valley Soccer League won the under 14 class,
the Spirit of '76 of Cabell County
won the under 12 class and Wood
County won the under 10 class.
This year, learns are anending
from as far away as Cleveland;
Dayton; Columbus; Cincinnati; and
Lexington, Ky. Closer to home
teams will hail from Marieua.
Ohio; Parkersliurg; Cross Lanes;
Huntington; Beckley, St. Albans
and BridgeporL
There has been a recreational
soccer program in Point Pleasant
for nine years and the high school
program has been in exislence for
three years. The high school varsicy
soccer team is cunently undefeated.
The teams in the Battle Days
Tournament will cam points to
eventually face off in championships on Sepl. 25, a Sunday.
The tournament is sanctioned by
FIFA
(Federal
International
Football Association) and was advenised
in
Soccer America
magazine. ''That's how we were
able to get so many out-of-state
teams," Lovell said.
It takes 20 volunteers and a
countless number of referees to
stage the tournament, Brumfield
said. Lovell and Brumfield said Village Insurance and the Point
Pleasant Rola1)' are !he main sponsors. Other sponsors include Village' Pizza Restaurant, Olympl&amp;
Restaurant, Pleasers, Point Pleasapt
Moose Lodge, Shoneys, Kentucky
Fried Chicken, McDonald's Restaurants and Subway Shop Res·
taurant. This the first year the
tournament has had commercial
sponsors.

'

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Each team, if they had registered
by Aug. 10, paid a $75 fee. After
Aug. 10 registration was increased
to $85. Each player will receive a
specially designed iron-on paleh
and ttophies will be awarded 10 first
and second place winners. There
will be a picnic for Jhc winners at
Moose for the youngsters.
Those who volunteer to referee
wiD be treated to dinner at Oscar's
Restaurant and Bar in Gallipolis on
the Saturday night before the
championship games, also a new
wrinkle in the format, organizers
said:

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delays at the entranc~ to the
. main Olympic stadium before a
dress rehearsal of the opening
ceremonies on Wednesday. Foreign reporters were . waved
lhrough quickly .
Park said that SLOOC had
provided cars for some visitors,
but had shelved plans to arrange
car pools because of language
difficulties .
He defended the strict security
measures becauseofthecontinu· .
ing possibility of a terrorist
attack. In recent days, reports
have circulated •Of a number of
groups making threats against
the Olympics.
. ' "Though we are doing our .
utmost, there are things we can't
predict, so unexpected events
might occur," Park said.
The final count of Olympic
participants from !60countrlesis
7,627 athletes and 3,999 officials.
Park said. Men outnumber
women by more than three to
one.

I

.. ___________ _
Coutalner ~0\lel)'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Ohio

Pt. Pleasant to host soccer
tournament September 24-25

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Middl~ort.

Pomeroy

opposing Jearn nine points. The
teams gaining the most points will
face ofT in the championship games
the second day.
Games will begin at 8 a.m. and
end at 6:30 u.m., Brumfield said.

'

TIGIIT SECURITY - A South Korean security guard leads his
sniffer dog through the media seating area In the Olympic Sladlwn

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�Ohio

15. 1988

Thursday,

President Reagan.campaigns in Midwest

.

BUSH CAMPAIGNS IN CALIFORNIA- Vice President George
Bush waves as he takes a ride on aCallforniaStreetcablecar to the
Chinatown section of San Francisco during a campaign slop
Wednesday. AI left are California Governor George Deukmejlan
.and Barbara Bush. (UPI)

:W right testifies at
:government hearings
WASHINGTON I UPil
House Speaker Jim Wright,
pledging to "tell them anything
they want to know." testified
Wednesday to the House ethics
committee as part of its invest!·
gat ion into some of his financial
affairs and dt'allngs with govern·
ment officials.
:. "I'm very , very happy about
"lhis. I've looked forward to this
day for more than ·three
,months,'' Wright said as the
.committee, meeting in closed .
~ession, broke for lunch.
Also present for the session
•was Chicago Iawver Richard
;Phelan, hired by the ethics panel
:to conduct the politically sensi·
" t!V&lt;' probe. Phelan and panel
&gt;-members declined anv comment
about the investigation.
· Wright spent about five hours
:with the committee. It was
~u;ncertaln if ht' wou ld rt'turn for
•additional questioning at another
:t!me.
•
~ Formally known as th e Com, mittee on Standards ol Official
Conduct. the panel of six Democrats and six Republicans voted
· ~une 9 to lnves tlgate allegations
.against Wright. However, the
:probe did not get under way until
·recently because the panel had to
:hire an outside attornev to
conduct it - as demandect bv
tJouse Republicans as well as
citizens lobbv Common. Cause.
: The investigation concerns six
allegations against Wright, in·
eluding the 55 percent royalties
for his book, " Reflect ions of a
Public Man," the use of a staff
-a ide to assist with the book and
Wright's contacts with federal
qfficials on behalf of Texas
associates and businesses.

As he entered the committee
room Wednesday, Wright said he
was "going to tell them anything
they want to know; answer every
question."
At the lunch break. Wright
declined to discuss his testi mony
in detail but said he covered all
six points in questioning by the
committee members.
"I told those fellows I would
love it for them to ask any
question they have and ask it
today If they can. and I believe I
can answer," he said. "I knowlfl
have the Information I can
answer to their complete satisfaction, and if I don't I'll find It
for them."
Wright said the panel appar·
ently does not have a deadline for
the probe but sa id he hopes It will
be finished by adjournment early
next month because "! do not
want it left dangling. I want it
resolved. because I'm certain
that the committee will find that I
have not violated any ·rule of the
House."
Wright indicated the commit·
tee alreadv had interviewed
other figures In the probe.
including Carlos Moore, publisher of Wright's book.
As Wright entered the ethics
committee meeting room. he was
accompanied by an aide who
pushed a hand truck loaded with
dozens of books. Wright later
explained that many of the
volumes "are books that were
published at 50 percent royalties
by local publishing compa nies,
and there are lot of letters from
local publishing com pan les and
authors pointing out tha t there Is
nothing unusual about a 50
percent royalty."

By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
UPI Political Writer
ST. LOUIS (UPil -President
Reagan charged Into the Midwest on behalf of George Bush
Wednesday, blistering the Democratic ticket as the "masked
marvels of American politics"
and warning that future generations would pay the price if the
voters "in a moment of sudden
folly" threw away Republican
potlcles.
The president, pitching in to
help his second-In-command In
his campaign against Democrat
Michael Dukakls, described the
presidential election as a battle
between two opposing visions an out-of-step liberalism that the
Democrats were trying to hide
versus the political mainstream
views of the Republicans.
Reagan never mentioned Du·
kakls, the Massachusetts gover·
nor, by name, but turned his
rhetorical fire on the "liberals"
and pointedly reminded people of
the Democratic administration
of Jimmy Carter.
Reagan also did not stress
Bush, preferring to spend most of
his two stops In Missouri boasting
of administration accomplishments and launching generic
barbs against the Democrats.
At his first appearance before a wildly cheering crowd of
about 9,000 packed Into the
"Show Me" Center at Southeast
Missouri State University In the·
community of Cape GirardeauReagan argued that "America

"Long live Cardenas!" and
"People voted and Cardenas
won!'' the crowd chanted during
the peaceful gathering. "Who Is
the president of Mexico?" it
roared, answering "Cuauh·
temoc!" "Who Is president of
free Mexicans? Cardenas!''
Cardenas said Mexicans have
to create appropriate conditions
to fight electoral fraud and he
called on all political parties and
civic groups to back his fight to
remove the PRJ, which has
dominated national politics since
· 1929, from power.

office.'"
"The truth Is that when you
take a walk down our opposl·
t.lon's memory lane, It starts to
look !Ike a 'Nightmare on Elm
Street,"' Reagan added, referring to a popular horror moVIe·.
"We have proved what works
In foreign policy," Reagan said.
"We have demonstrated !line
and again that candid rhetoric, a
strong defense and tough diplo·
macy bring peace.
"What a great moment we
have before us and, oh, how
future generations will dishonor
us if now In a moment of sudden
folly we throw It all away," the
president added. "And this Is
what is now at stake. We must
hold to this moment of hope, and
we must be allowed to complete
that which we nave begun."
Reagan, promoting Republicans for offices In addition to the
presidency, argued that only by
voting for the GOP could the
nation be guaranteed the government "can never again spend
and tax the American people Into
another economic nightmare.''
The residents of Cape Girardeau lined the roadways between
the airport and lite unlversltv to
wave to Reagan. There were onlv
a handful of protest signs. . •

Missouri was designed to blunt
Dukakls's charges that the economy Is shaky and a change is
needed, and also tocountera new
effort by Dukakls to portray
himself as tough and knowledgeable In International and military
affairs.
"Only In the past fe"' days,
we've heard how the opposition Is
really In favor or a strong
defense," Reagan said. "We
haven't seen such a radical
transformation since Dustin Hof·
fman played 'Tootsie. "'
Bush has been able to erase a
'large Dukakls lead In public .
opinion polls by, among Qther
things, painting the Democr)Jt as .
too weak and Inexperienced to
lead the United States In the
world arena.
The president also sought ·
Wednesday to appeal .to voters
who are seeking a new direction,
stressing a Republican theme
that Democrats are clinging to
the policies of the past and the
GOP represented the future.
:'Yes, some say that It Is time
for a change," Reagan said.
"Ladles and gentlemen, we are
the change. It started eight years

ago.''
In addition to the speeches,
Reagan- who was accompanied
by Republican Sens. John Danforth and Christopher Bond of
Missouri, Gov. John Ashcroft :
and Rep. Bill Emerson - at- '
tended receptions with GOP ·
donors and promoted Republi- ·
cans running for Congress.

MASERU, Lesotho IUPI) recovery to the wounded," said
Pope John Paul II celebrated the pope, whose difficult jo•1rney
mass Thursday before some to Lesotho also was confoUnded
8,000 people as thunderstorms by having to land In South Africa
rolled across the mountain king- Wednesday when his plane dl·
dom and expressed sadness over verted there because of bad
the hijacking of a bus filled with weather.
pilgrims that ended In bloodshed.
The diversion left the pontiff
The pontiff, making his first dependent on a government
comment about the shootout whose apartheid policies he
Wednesday night between the · abhors and forced hllh to make a
hijackers of the bus and Souih five-hour road journey across
African commandos that left South Africa to Lesotho in a
'tour dead and lllnjured, said the bulletproof limousine escorted
tragedy had "caused such by South African security personanguish."
nel. Land-locked Lesotho Is sur"I have come to southern rounded by South Africa.
Africa as a pilgrim of peace.
During Thursday's mass, John
carryl ng with me a message of Paul also declared Father Jo·
reconclllat.lon," the pope told the seph Gerard, a 19th century
sparse crQWd huddled beneath French Jesuit missionary who
umbrellas and wrapped In Introduced Roman Cathotlcism
blankets at Maseru's soggy to Lesotho, "blessed." Gerard
racecouse.
became the first priest In south"I am saddened to learn that ern Africa to be .beatlfied, which
others on their way to join me in Is one step below sainthood.
this pilgrimage have been vic·
An Invitation by Lesotho's
tln•s of a hijack that caused such bishops to the pontiff to beatify
anguish and ended In Gerard led to the planning of the
bloodshed," he said, adding his 10-day tour that began In Zimcomments at the end of mass.
babwe on Sept.10olllveso-called
"! pray that God may take to front-line states bordering South
himself those who have died, that Africa. The pope leaves Lesotho
he may console the members of Friday .for Swaziland, and ends
their families and grant a speedy his journey with a visit to

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773·5024
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traditional blessing he gives Afrlcamarked the first time ln39 paled meeting with South Afrl·
Mozambique.
The crowd of less than 8.000 countries when he visits them for foreign trips he has been forced can Foreign Minister Roelof
was a fraction of the 500,000 the first time.
to travel to an unscheduled
" Pik" Botha.
The pontiff's diversion to South country and led to an unantlcl·
church officials predicted during
earlier for John Pauul'sflrst visit
to Lesot.IJ?, but Vatican spokes·
man Joaqulm Navarro Valls said
: ... .- .
the pope never paid attention to
the size of the crowd.
:
"The pope never asks how
many people are there. It js not
important to him," he said.
The spokesman said the pope
learned o! the shootout between
the hijackers - holding some 71
hostages, Including schoolchild·
ren and nuns -and thecomman·
dos after celebrating a late-night
mass and received an official
government briefing on the
Incident.
''I think the pope was tired like ·
everyone else but when the news
arrived It made him feel bad,"
Navarro said.
Asked whether the pope kissed
the ground on his arrival Wednes'·
day night, Navarro said he had
not. Quipped the spokesman: "It
wouldn't be to kiss the ground of
Lesotho, but the water,"
John Paul, on his unscheduled
arrival at Johannesburg's Jan
GREETED - Pope John Paul II greets
Lesotho's military governrnent'on arrival from
Smuts Airport Wednesday, did
Major-General Justine Lekhanya, head of the
America on Wednesday. REUTER
South
not kneel to kiss the tarmac In the

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At a later address at a
fund raising dl nner In St. Louis,
Reagan scored the Democrats
for trying to hide liberal colors.
1
' Yes, we have come a
long
way, and yet, my friends, I must
tell you that everything we have
done these last eight years,
everything, could be lost faster
than. you can say the Pledge of
Allegiance,.'' Reagap said, referring to the recent controversy
over the pledge between Bush
and Dukakls.
"Our opponents this year are
the masked marvels of Am!)rlcan
politics,'' Reagan said. "Their
every word covers the extreme
liberal face of their agenda."
He charged that the Democrats had "fielded candidates
that don't know left from center," were weak on defense and
would likely raise taxes . .~~&gt;He
contended the opposition also
had granted "virtual veto power
over Supreme Court appoint·
ments" to liberal groups such as
the American Civil Liberties
Union.
Reagan contended that "where
they want to take America,
America doesn't want to go'' and
asked: "Will we re-elect peace
and prosperity, or will we play
'Truth or Consequences with
trenchcoat liberals?"
Reagan went Into the day
armed with the latest improved
trade figures, which he used to
bolster his argumen't that his
economic policies were .solid. .
The slngle·day political trip to

REPS ON HAND ALL DAY
•ARCHERY SHOOTING DEMONSTRATIONS
•DOOR PRIZES
,
•ONE DAf ONLY CUNIC SPECIALS

Cardenas urrges Salinas to resign
; MEXI CO CITY !UP!) e uauhtemoc Cardenas, Mexico's
newly-emerged leader of the
opposition, urged fraud-tainted
president-elect Carlos Salinas de
Gortar i to resign and vowed to
achieve democracy by peaceful
mea ns.
; At a downtown rally Wednes·
day of abo ut 150,000 supporters,
Cardenas said he would lead a
national ca mpaign to legally
wrest power from the long-ruling
Institut ional Revolutionary
Party. known as the PRI.

has traveled such a remarkable
distance In the last eight years
that the memory has faded or the
economic and foreign policy
crises that we faced when VIce
President Bush and I took

Thursday, September 15. 1988

(

'

-~

\

.

.I

�.·

POITI8Ioy-Middleport Ohio

••

-

.

. .. D~IS UOI.,DS
CO!III"ERENCE - Mas!I&amp;Chuaetts
' . · ..Governot ~cbai.l D!aka.lds; oeniocratlc pftlllldentlal nominee, .
·'· .' " au~uuces-. tla!U Mas8achusetts etlded a tumultuous fiscal I 1988
with a $JI7· mWion surplus daring a statehouse news conference
· . Weilnellday In Bostoa. Dllkalds calls the sUI')iJus a stgD that the
·state may· b~
roundlnr
tbe comer oaltsflnaadal headaches. (UPI)
.
.

_Dukakis: 'Coilling on ·
like .gangbusters'
...

.

·IIY ROBERT MACKAY .
!!.a ch deba.ier will get one minute··.
Unlt!!d-press ltilernatloiial
· to .r ebut his oppol)ent's answers.
Demoqat · Michael Dukakis .. Each tnan will give a closing
.s miled when _ told .of _the poll -statement but no opening
published todl!Y showing ·him . statement.
·
. ahead of Republican George
In other campaign action
.. Bush.Jn -their race for ·the White Wednesdav:
House. "We're coming on·. Uke
' -President Reagan was acgangbusters," he said softlv.
· tlve on the stump, traveling to ·
.. ·Hardly. With the Nov. s'elec- Missouri to warn voters awav
lion less th;m eight weeks away, from Dukakis by comparing the
national public opinion suryeys . ·last Democratic administration
show the strUggle to, ·succeed . to "A Nightmare on Elm Street "
President Reagan still a tossup · t~e title of a popul.ar horr~r
~tween the Massachusetts gov-· movie.
.
ernor anp the vice president.
· -Bu~h s_p ent the· day _seekihg
. · But Dukakls. took comfort 'in . votes among special interest
the .ABC · News-Washington P(ist groups in the electoral gold mine
. !J?ll first reported Wednesday kn!lwn as California : Hispanic
mght that found him puUing -leaders In Los Angeles, farmers
ahead of Bush 48 percent to 45 in . Fresno and Chinese·
I)ercentamong 1,o!l21ikelyvoters · Americans in San Francisco.
.'ll!estioned Sept. · 7. through
-Pollster Mervin Field reTuesday.
.
leased his latest California Poll,
Despite the error margin of 3.5 ·showing Bush and Dukakls run·
percentage points, which trans- ning even in the Golden State, 46
_lates to a dead heat In the race, percent to 45 percent among 674
the Democrat was seeing himself voters questioned Sept. 6 through
outfront in thefirstmajorsurvey · Monday. The error margin was
since the Labor Day start of the 3.9 points.
fall campaign.
To launch his latest California
Dukakis has worked hard in swing, Bush announced formarecent, days to regain the upper lion Wednesday of a : 'Hispanics
hand he enjoyed unttl last for Bush" advisorv panel led bv
month 's Republican National former U.S. Treasurer Kath.;.
Convention. He has come out rine Ortega and including his
swinging against Bush's critl- own daughter-In-taw, Colomba
clsms and has fought the GOP Garnica Bush . He asked for
attempt to portray-him as weak ethnic support by citing recent
on defense and too Inexperienced positive economic signs for
in global affairs to lead the Hispanics.
nation.
Later, the vice president apWednesday, both candidates .- pealed to farmers at the expense
turned their attention to " guns of Hispanic field workers, how_and butter" issues that allowed ever, when he told a rally at a Sun
some ver bal shots at each other. Maid raisin factorv In · Fresno
Bush was in California, where he that he firmly opposes the United
plans to stay through Friday, and Farm Workers boycott of grapes . .
Dukakis was in the Washington,
In San Francisco, Bush went
D.C .. area, preparing fora trip to through Chinatown with the
Yellowstone Park today to re- similar approach of citing ecoview wildfire damage.
nomic statistics encouraging to
On his way back to Boston for one ethnic group, but he found
the night. Dukakls stopped In less enthusiasm and a pocket of
Annapolis, Md .. where he would opponents who protested admin·
have debated his rival under a lstration policies.
schedule set by the bipartisan
At a million-dollar fund-raiser
Co mmission on Presidential De- to cap the day in the Bay Area,
bates. Bush r ejected the date, about 1,000 angry demonstrators
however.
protested in a rallv that turned
To · the chants of. "Where Is violent outside the posh hotel
George•" - the question made . where wealthy patrons had ga·
popular during the Democratic thered. Riot-equipped police hit
National Convention - a feisty protesters over the head with
Dukakis told a partisan crowd, · billy clubs, though no arrests
' 'This was to be a historic day In were reported.
Dukakls began his dav with a ·
th is campaign. Here I am.
Where's George?"
major speech at Geo'rgetown
Cheered enthusiastically, the University in the nation's caplgovernor continued by turning tal, following a strategy of a week
around a recent Bush wisecrack dedicated to ' fighting GOP
with a reference to the recent charges that he Is soft on defense.
res ignations of Bush campaign
The three-term governor, cria ppqintees amid allegations of tlclzed by Bush for opposing the
anti -Semitism .
rall-moblie MX as well as the
" Maybe the reason · George road-mobile Midgetman nuclear
Bush didn't want to come to missiles, ·said, ·" It's time for an
Annapolis," he said, "Is because end to Republican smoke and
h1s idea of a naval exercise Is mirrors on thesubjectofnatlonal
throwing campaign advisers defense." He pledged to "work
overboard!
. with CongresS" to find a third
" He se_ems to be doing It every alternative.
day, " Dukakls deadpanned.
He also said, " I support and I
''And have you noticed? They all intend to go forward as planned ·
seem to be going over the far with the trident 2 sea-based
right side of the ship ."
missile, to offset the Soviet'
On a more constructive note· Union's highly accurate mlsa bout debates, the rival cam· sUes, and with the Stealth
palgns announced in Washington bomber and the advanced cruise
that they had reached agreement missile to counter improvements ·
on the daleandlocatlonoftheone in Soviet air defense."
vice presidential forum that will
·
be held between Sen. Lloyd .
Bentsen, D·Texas, and Sen. Dan
Quayle, R-Ind. It will air Oct. 5 In
·Omaha, Neb.
The c.a mpalgns also agreed on
details for the two 90-minute
Bush-Dukak~ debates to be held
. Sept. 25 In Wi11$ton-Salem, N.&lt;;.,
and In Los Angeles either Oct. 13
1 I I S.Cond St., POIIIII'o;
or 14, 4ePendfng on the ljmgth of ·
YOUI INDEPI-IIft'
the majqr leaa-ue b,sebaJI
AGIITS SIIVIIIG ·
playoffS. •
.
:
candidates will stand at .a
EGSCGUm ~
'lectern rather than sit; questiOns.
SINCE 1161
will ~ posed by a panel; and

DOWNING CHILDS .
UWNMUSSEI

INSURANCE

·The

I•

S .d U .

. .

The Daily Sentine~

ByThe .Bend

" This is terrific news," said
''Tbe trade Improvement is so imported about$2.5 billion less In
LawrenceChimerine, chlefecon- significant It Is bound to be manufactured goods, $1 billion of
omist for the WEFA Group of helpful to VIce President Bush, " that automobl~ alone, espeeconomic forecasters In BaJa agreed Allen Sinai, chief econo- cially from Canada, the report
cynwyd,Pa. " Thetradedeflcttls mist for The Boston Co.
said- •
coming dol!lll, and that will
,The admlnistratjon lost no
'Thel)ugedecline In Imports is
rel~e some of the fears about · time in praising the hinting that Americans D:laY
InfLation."
. performance.
.
finally be starting to buy A,meri· The July improvement should . President Reagan, campaign- can," Sinal said.
be good news to the adminlstra- lng for Bush In Missouri, called
While the July report was rosy,
lion and the presidential hopes of the report ''very good news. "
the bureau revised the June gap
Vl.~e President George Bush.
"I _ ~;~m happy _to say that ·by · to $13.2 b!lllon, w.o rse than the
~rom an Incumbent polltl- resisting protectionism, we have previously reported $12.5 billion.
clan ·s point of view this ts a kept .our economy ·growing at a
•'Obviously that takes a little of
dream fulfilled," said Robert strong rate, created millions of the glitter off of it," Chlmerfne
Dederick, chief economist tor new jobs and keptlnfiatlon low " said.
·
The .' Northern Trust Co. In Reagan said.
· .
'
The deficit Is running at an
Chicago.
"When America goes 'into the annual $137.5 billion for the first
market to compete, we play to , severi months of 1988, an. im·
. • • 0 &amp;F Opens mtX
ID urope .
win. Others may talk, we ·de:- provement over 1987's $170.3
·
·
liver, " Reagan said .
billion trade deficit. ·
LONDON IUPI) - The dollar
In Brussels, the dollar .began
In ll.os'ton, Democratic pres!.'
oJ)eoed . mixed today · against trading higher at 39.825 Belgian dentlal nominee Michael Duka·
·major European . currenCies-.- ·francs against 39.39, and It was kls reacted coaly to the !~res;
GOld was unchanged, .
.al.s o up In Milan at 1,398.50 lire "I don't view a '$9 billion or $10
The doll~r stinted .trading in ' against 1;384.55.
.
billion monthly trade deficit as
. Frankfurt at ~.8745 mark$,'down
The dalllir was lower Wednes· being particularly .good .news," .
• - cosng
1 1
day againsi
the Canadian dollar · he.sa' ld . ·. · .
·against · Wedri
.
esd_ays
,
4
1.8770.· In Zurlc)l it lowered ·to at $1.2'2 0; down ·from $~ .2280 .
Exports rose , 0.7 .' percent in .
1.5790 '. Swiss ·francs 'against TuesdaY·
.
.·
· July to a seasonally ,a djusted
1.5810, and In Paris it also fell to
'Gold opened · unchanged in $26.5 . billion· and Imports were · .
. 6.3785 fr~ncs aga.lnst 6.3840;
Zurich at $421.50 per ounce, and ·down a sharp 8.9 percent to$35.99
In London, the pound open&lt;id_at . was also unchanged In London at billlo~. the lowest since Sep·
$421.75, Silver was dowri in tember 1987, the·bureau said.
I $1 6~63
$1 6780
.ag{l nst · ' ··
Zurich at$6.50 per. ounce against
M
f ·h 1 ·
Tokyo markets were closed for : $6.525, but up· ·in London 11
~st o t at mprovement in
imports was because Americans
a Public. holiday ·
.. climbed to $6.52-agatnst $6.48.

·u

.

lhunday. September 16, 1988

U. S. trade deficit down to four -year low . ·
WASHINGTON IUPI) Plummeting Imports pushed the
July U.S. merchandise trade
detfclt dow11 to a four-year tow of
_$9.5 billion, the Commerce Department -said Wednesday, sur-prising analysts and_glvtng_the
_administration a bOost.
.
Tbe lr!!de.deflcit driiPped from
$13.2 blll!onin June to a seasonally adjusted $9.5 blllfon in July,
the lowest since Decem~r 1984,
. when the gap sh,rank to $8 bluton,
the department s Census Bureau
saJ:. 1
h d
na ysts a . 1orecast a much
larger July trade gap of $11.5
b!Uion.

.

Thursday, September 15, 1988
_Page-11

·· Seminar registration deadline upcoming
Residents are reminded that -residentS are asked to contact · provided.
· pre-registration tor the .bed and Cindy Oliveri, Meigs County · A bed and breakfast consists of
providing the three "B's" to the .
tireakfas I business seminar-to be Extension Office, 992-6696.
traveling public--bed, breakfast
po!\ducted on Sept. 27 is to be
Mrs . Oliveri de$Crlbes a bed
and
bath. Generally one. price Is
and breakfast as a lodging
made by Tuesday .
charged
for providing the room
. The seminar entitled "How to alternative which is provided In
and
meartn
the home.
Start and Operate Your Own Bed private residences. She says that
The
seminar
is being co·
and Breakfast" will be held at they can be personally and
sponsored
by
the
Ohio
CooperaGrace Church, 326 East Main St., financiany rewarding in that the
tive
Extension
Service
and the
Pomeroy, from 8:30 a .m. to 3 host gets to meet different people
Pomeroy
Area
Chamber
of
p.m. For additional information In all walks of life, and an
Commerce.
or to register for the seminar, additional source of income is

· • ed • E · · ·

Eight .and Forty .Salon meets

FI;ASHJi~cK - ·A Oashback to '"e !IO's theme . pounds of . french fries. Counting adults 1{8
was carried out Sunday evening In the annual fall . persons attended: Youth rroups will meet every
·youth group program kickoff ·at the _Mlddlepqrt · . Sunday evening · at 6 p.m. at the church with
Church of Christ. Young I!OOPie, lOS In all ranging
classes for all &amp;gel!· Richard DuBose Is the youth
from Ulree years throqh senior high age, dressed
minIsler. Anyone needing Information should call
tn IIO's clothing, tried their hand with boola hciops
the church office, 89l-2114. Pictured with the
and paddle ball and enjoyed a Jil,ke box repU.a · "giant" shake are, I lo r, Chris Stewart, Alison
Gerl&amp;ch, .Jill But:eh, Melissa Wilson, Bridget
aJoag with a gi&amp;Rt mllksllake and french ftles. Ten
gallonsotmllkshakewereconsumed~onlfwlth~
Davis and Lee Hende~son.
.

.

'88MODELC

CE IN PROGRESS!

Pomona Grange conducts .meet

Certificates In recognition of Brinker leading In the pledge.
. work over the past years were Mrs . . Hysen announced that
presented at the Monday night medication had been paid for by
meelng of the · Meigs County the salon for one cystic fibrosis
· Salon 710, Eight and Forty, held and one asthmatic child in the_
.
at the home of Mary Marlin, county.
It was decided to sell pecans
chapeau.
Receiving certificates were and cashews again this year as a
Julia Hysen, children and youth fund raising program. Both will
chairman; Pearl Knapp, nurses be !rom the new fall harvest, it
scholarship chairan; Lula was pointed out. The bulletin .
Hampton, scrapbook chairman, from Patricia Oldaker, Chnlland Iva Powell, book of prayer cothe, was read. Her theme this
chairman. It was noted that the year will be "Blue Birds of
book of prayers was presented to Happiness Fly High for Children
Betty Friend , grandmother of with Respiratory Diseases." She
announced t)le pouvior to be held
Jennifer Friend.
Veda Davis gave the prayer to · Oct. 22 at 10 a.m. at the Holiday
open the meeting with Eunle Inn, ChUllcothe. A reception will
be held that evening for the new
departemental chapeau.

Singing group

Dues are payable now and
should be mailed to Florence
Richards. A sympathy card was
sent to Robert Wal'tbn, Eighth
District Commander, American
Legion, on the death of his
brother, Kermit .
Mrs . Hampton asked for cUppings of salon meetings for the
scrapbook. Loretta Tiemeyer
was appointed parody chairman.
Mrs. Martin thanked the salon
partners for expressions of sympathy at the death of her
sister-in-law, Wanda Reapp In
Florida .
Refreshmetns including a
birthdav cake !or Eunle Brinker
and ice· creaJ!\ were served.
Mrs . Hampton will host the
next meeting, Oct. 10.

The Heaven Bound Singers
from Calvin, Ky ., will be ministering In music at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Reedsvine United
Methodist Church, Route 124, in
Reedsville. Public invited.

.
.· .·
.
. .
. . dent!~! electi~~-.. .
.
rlson~Ill\': stutied toys;· Patty
The fifth degree was exempli·
Sm.lth ,· Hemlock, adult. ,)lllnner;
. .
the ·annual · Jovce Ritchie, Diane Rice, and
fled In full form for
.
Three
Meigs
. Countlans were
·
·
·
Bridget Vaughan, Sta_r Grange, .
. .· .
. . named to the summer quarter
inspection by Mendal Jordan al Janice C'~rry. judged the.contests junlor winner. . .
the recent meeting of the Porn· with the first pl&lt;!c~ winners being . Other first place winners were, . dean's list or Hocking Technic ill ·
ona Grange held at the Rock . as follows: baking, young adults, needlework, Rose Barrows of
College in Nelsonville. Making
cream caramels, Pattv. Dv
. er,
Springs Grange hall ·. ·
the grade point average of. at
Columbia· Grange, oval tablecpaullne Atkins ' master ' Pre· . soft sugar cookies, Opal Dv.er, loth, afghan, sweater, and em·· least 3.3 to be nall)ed were Susan
sided at the session with Eldon both members of Star Grange; broidered tablecloth: Bunny
Bauer, Long Bottom, and Karla
Barrows, -legislative agent, re· carmel bars, Stella Atkins, Har- Kuhl, Rock Springs. pillow
and Wilma Smith, Portland.
cases; Ruth Frances, Hemlock,
porting on the upcoming pres!pillows: Maxine Dyer, Star, baby
blanket; Bernice Midkiff, Star,
nightgown .
Sarah Cullums, Hemlock, and
District fall activities were lected along with p~nnles for Kathrvn Mlller, quilts; Sara
announced at the recent meeting ' CARE, a foreigl'i relations pro- . cuuums, Hemlock, wall hang:
of the Lewis Manley 263, Ameri- ject of the auxiliary. Round-robin ing; Patty Dyer. Star, pillow top;
can Legion Auxiliary, held at the cheer cards were signed for Ruth Geraldine Fauber, Columbia, oil
home of Florence Richards, Brown, Gallipolis, and Charles painting.
Middleport.
Payne, patient at Veterans MemIn color photography, the
Margar~t Bowles presided at
orial Hospital.
winners were Patty Dyer,
the meeting. The bulletin frOIJ'l
Mrs. Dorothy Casey was acting scenes. and closeups; {.lnda
the Eighth District president chaplain at the meeting in the Montgomery. Star, animals and
announced the school of Instruc- absence of Annette Johnson. The peopiEt. In black and white
tion to be held on Oct. 7 and 8 at group sang "My Country 'Tis of photography. PattY. Dyer toqk ,·
the Departr11ent headquarters In Thee"', Mrs . Bowles had com- . first iii scenes and animals, and
Zanesville,. and the fall confer- mentsand·therewas a praver(ot . fn slides took all three firsts,
ence to. be held In .Galllpous·· on peace . to-- 'close tlie. meeting. . scenes. animals, and ciilseups: .
Oct. 20,
..
, Refreshments were .. s~rved by
Ill' the jurior grange contest, the·· ·
'Membership· dues were ·coi· · Mrs. Ricl)ards . ·
·nrsi · place winners were Eric :
Montgomery, in animal and
people; &lt;;rystal . Vaughan·,
scenes; Danlelle Midkiff, anlm·
als, Denise Shenefield, people;
Those attending this ·year's Bridget Vaughan, drawing;
The annual Patrick and Eva
Riley reunion was held recently reunion were Ted and Mildred Patty Dyer, banner project. Jane
at the Mason Park. A covered R!ley, Sr., John, Judy , Jason and Llewellyn, Columbia. doiiie.
Refreshments were served by_
dish dinner was enjoyed at 1:30 Jamln Riley, Vernon and Patty
the
Rock Springs Grange.
Roush,
Sr
.,
Ted
and
Clara
Bene
under the large shade trees in the
Riley,
Jr.
,
Lucy
Chipps,
Gladys
park.
Ted Riley, Sr., 83, Middleport and Patrick Riley, Kay and Jeff
was recognized as the oldest Riley, Sally and Katie Roush,
attending; James Thomas Guyla Roush, Jeff Walburn,
Parker II, six week old son of Jim Mabel Johnson, Roger, Deloris,
Stattlng I 0:00 A.M.
and Jan Parker of Huntington, and Lucy Winebrenner.
Mlnday, Sept• .26
Ilena, Tablth and Shawn MossW.Va. as the youngest, and Rita
Hreha, Nashport, Ohio as the one man, Patricia Mossman, Helen
Sign Up Now!
traveling the longest distance tok Powen ani;! Kayhla Cutlip, Scott
Registration Deadline
Cutlip, Kenny, Sharon, Ann.
be there.
Is Sept. 22
Mrs. Deloris Winebrenner of Aaron and Shari VIckers, Sally
Instructor:
Bunny Kuhl
Rutland was elected president and Gene Bland, Monica
for the 1989 reunion which will be Zurcher, Rita, Joe and Mike
S WEEK (LASS
held at the Letart Communlty Hreha, Jack and Joyce Wen, Sue
CAU 992·2281
Center, Aug. 20 at 1 p.m. !twill be Zurcher, Nancy and Stacie Han,
a covered dish dinner with table Jan, Jenna, Jodi and J. T.
Parker, Vernon, Gayle, Matthew
service to be furnished.
110 W, Mal• St• .
and Molly Roush, Linda and
Emma _zuspan.

Dean's list ·

. i

.
.

'

Legion auxiliary meets

Reunion held recently

Your Choice

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QUILT CLASS

•Denotes Manual Tranomlulon Modele Onty

1988 RANGER "S"

1988 BRONCO n

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Mdmosh visit

.

.

I

Stock I 8983 ·

SALE PRICE '7,225
11.75 APR Fixed Rata For eo Montha.

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$15317
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,_.,,..,,Ohio

•'·

""•

•

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Reg. 1589
(A.) "The Avenger" Reclino-Rocker• Recliner
Contemporary comfort In a deep-cushioned
, triple -tiered back with plush pillow arms.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh of Floral City, Fla. and Mr.
and Mrs. Deibert Smith of
Sebring, Fla . were recen I visItors of Mrs. Carl Moore.
Edward Mcintosh Is a former
Meigs County resident. Mr. and
Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Moore are
cousins. He Is a son of the late
Floyd Smith, former Pomeroy
resident, and the couple has
visited here many times through
the years.

Homecoming set
Annual homecoming of the Mt.
Herman Church, Texas Road,
Pomerov, wlll be held Suoday at
the church. Sunday school Is at
9:30 a.m. , worship servi.ce at
10:30 a.m., diMer at noon, and
afternoon services at 1:30 p.m.
featuring the Way Marks
Quartet, Huntington, W.Va. The
, Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor,
invites the public.

The Allaire Award Ia pven to the
belt dancer of the Broadway thealer

-'

5 PC. Wood Dll•tte Set ·
'2~':.9s $) 95

19
SAYE S70

7 PC. Wood Oillne Set

$27995

REG. S360
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headrest, thick cushion and pillowed arms.

Deep seating comton and traditional good
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PIICIS STAn AT $199.00
OPEN DAILY

9·5

Mon. &amp; Fri. 9-1
Fr11 Dtll•ery
Fr11 Parking

·---"'"-'--·--·

...,

U.. our tetm1,
~,

�ThursdaY. Septanbar 16, 1988
Thursday. September 16, 1988

Paga 12-The Daily Sentinel

•

Yes, we're happy
with our new baby
Dear Ann LaDders: I have a
message for famlly and friends,
casual acquaintances and others
who may not fit Into any of the
abcve . I hope you will pr int my
letter because there must be
thousands of women who feel
exactly as I do.
Dear You·Know ·Wbo-YouAre: ·
Yes, we just had a baby girl.
Yes, I know we already have
two girls.
No, we are not disappointed
that It wasn' t a bey .
·
No, we are not going to try
again for a male child.
No, my husband Isn't Inter·
ested In borrowing your son to
take hunting and fishing. Girls
like to do those things, too.
Only a fool would be unhappy
about having a healthy child
simply because It wasn' t one sex
or another. We feel blessed. Sign
us - Tickled Pink In Pa.
Dear Tickled: Thteecheersfor
the pink or the blue. My own dear
parents had four daughters, arid
there was never any Indication
that we weren't exactly what
they had hoped for. Parents who
speclty that they prefer a boy (or
a girl) are one brick short of a full
load. And friends who ask It they
are disappointed are
numbskulls.
Dear Ann LaDders: Can you
stand one more letter about
flying pets across the country? It
Illustrates the trauma that we
seldom see or hear about, butlt's
there, nevertheless.
I recently picked up a friend at
the airport In Colorado Springs.
While waiting for her baggage to
come around the turnstlle I
spotted a beautiful golden retriever In a crate so small that
the retriever could neither turn
around nor lie down.
t I walled to see who came to
claim the animal, but after the
poor thing went round and round
about 15 times I began to wonder
It anyone was going to show up.
Finally I asked an attendant If he
could remove the crate from the
turnstile so at least the dog would
be on solid ground. He said,
" Sorry, that's not my job."
I left the airport with a heavy
heart, wondering how a human
would like to \&gt;!! placed In a cage
so small that he could neither lie
down nor turn around, then put In
a baggage compartment (no
pressurized) and flown for sev·

ANN UNDt:R!Ie

...988., ..........
Tlmm SyndiHI!! -d

(rulan S,.ndltMe

eral hours at an altitude of 30,000
feet and arrive at an airport and
nobody Is there to pick him up.
Any comment, Ann? - Je•
aUer B., CoL Spp.
Dear .JeanUer: What a pathetic
story! Where are the Friends of
Animals, the ASPCA and all
those folks who claim they love
animals? Here' s a project lor
you.
Dear Readers: I hope you will
not feel that printing the follow·
lng letter Is too sel!·servlng. It
made me feel good and I decided,
after much deliberation, to share
It with you.
Dear Ana LaDders: I read with
pleasure your column In praise of
Maryland's handgun control
laws. The passage of these
regulations that bim the sale or
manufacture of cheap Saturday
night specials, In addition to
plastic handguns, Is an act of
which I am extremely proud. For
the first time, a state has acted to
get these dangerous weapons off
the streets. I hope our example
will be emulated throughout the
nation.
I was particularly happy to
learn of your support because I
know the Influence you have In
this country. With help from
concerned and thoughtful public
figures like you, we will surely
succeed In making safe gun laws
a national trend.
Thank you again for your help.
We are lucky to have such a great
advocate In our corner. William Donald Schaefer, Gover·
nor of Maryland

Land~,.·

Ann

Wa/king the miles
with the camels

,I

••
•

•
,'

•

lenge Grant from Stanley and
Doris Harrison, the people of the
area responded, and over
$300,000 was raised to enable the
camp corporation to begin con·
structlon on the ·first phase of
camp Improvements.
The first project undertaken
was the sewage system which Is
about 95% complete and cost
$112,000. This system Is designed
to meet EPA requirements !or
over 400 resident campers.
Just underway Is the construction of the first sleeping lodge,
which will be named the Powell
Lodge In honor of Mrs. Harrison's family . This year· round
lodge wlll feature 12 sleeping
rooms which will- house eight
Individuals each (total 96
campers) . two restrooms and

shooting sports area. Although
this bridge was not planned In
Phase I, the Legge Construction
Company made an offer to
donate and build this bridge for
camp, opening up a whole new
area for camp development.

shower facilities, a lobby area
which will serve as an excellent
site for small meetings, and a
large covered porch for Informal
gatherings.
The sleeping and restroom
areas are designed so that there
will be two separate areas which
will provide a great deal of
flexibility. This way In tlie Fall,
Winter, and Spring when smaller
groups are using the facilities,
the lodge could be used to house
girls In one wing and boys In the
other. This lodge should be
completed during the winter
months.
The water system has been a
major problem, but plans are
being finalized to begin construe·
tlon on the system during the fall
months.
Another Improvement made
this summer was the construe·
tion of a swinging bridge across
the Little Salt Creek which
meanders through the camp.
This bridge opens up the area of
camp which will be used lor the

•,
:
:
•
:
:

1

~---------------. •I;

AnENTION

Village Pharmacy :
Customers
VILLAGE PHARMACY
WILL BEGIN
CLOSING AT
1:30 P.M.

ON SATURDAYS
TILL FURTHER
NOTICE.

992-6669
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

••

INGELS FURNITURE

newly revit ed boo-

Cecillo Rodriguez found the
money In an old brown shoe that
was among the trash taken from
the home of AI and Eleanore
Bolton Tuesday morning. He also
found a box filled with silver
coins from the 19th and earlv20th
centuries.
·
The event marked another
bizarre twist In the storv of the
Boltons, who dress In old. clothes
and collect trash, but who own
SYDNEY , Australia (UP!) - · stock In major Ohio corpora·
Three American adventurers. !Ions; the Cleveland Plain Dealer
one suffering from leukemia, sal d.
The Boltons, In their 70s. were
wrote their way into Australia' s
evicted
Monday because junk,
blcentenlal history by walking
papers,
and
clothes they stored In
th ei r camel s a cros s th e
their
home
posed a health and
continen t.
fire
hazard.
The Americans. one woman
Rodriguez said the money was
and two men, arrived at Cape
from
the 1930s, except for two
Byron on Au stralia 's east coast
sliver
certificates from 1929. He
Wednesday afternoon, complet·
said
the
bills were In mint
lng their 2,900 mile, 6 'h -month
condition.
trek.
Rodriguez said he returned the
To celebrate their achieve·
ment , they emptied a l/Ottle of money because he felt sorry for
the couple . .He said Eleanore
salt water drawn from the Indian
Bolton cried when he picked up
Ocean off Western Australia Into
the trash and ' 'that bothered me
the Pacific Ocean.
a whole lot. "
The whole town of Byron Bay,
The Boltons, described by their
350 miles north of Sydney, turned
neighbors
as very friendly , have
out to welcome them and their
been
evicted
several Urnes durcamel train , which wa s billed as
ing
the
past
eight years. How the Great Australian Camei
ever.
officials
of the Ohio Div·
Drive.
lslon
of
Unclaimed
funds said
The party, comprising 16 cam·
els and their walkers. was
c heered down the ma in street of
the town. which was blocked off
by police.
Only four. the three Am eric ans
a nd one Australian, completed
thP whole journey. however,
which crossed Australia a t Its
wides t points, fr om Steep Point,
In Wes tern Aust ralia, to Cape
Byron.
Th e three Am ericans are Mrs.
Patricia Dysar t. aged 41. an
expatriate who now lives In
Tokyo but halls origina lly from
Pittsburgh : Petpr Ni chola s
Boonlsar, 42. of San Luis Obispo,
Call!.. and Dal'id Ce bulla . 26, of
Pismo Beach. Cal if.
Intervi ewed lly telephone from
Byron Bay , Boonl~ar said he was
shattered to learn that he was
suffering !rom a rare form of
leukemia when he undertook the
medical tests required by the
organizers of the expedition.
"But I decided to goaheadwlth
the trip," he said. "Mv wife
Harriet and my friends thought I
was crazy .... I wouldn't have
in lssed It for the world. Knowing
everything I know now , I would
do It again tomorrow."

..

The summer of 1988 has seen
many Improvements at the Ell·
zabeth L. Evans Outdoors Edu·
cation Center and Canter's Cave
4·H Camp.
During 1987 a major permanment Improvement plan was
made which was designed to
meet the needs of youth lor many
years.
The first phase of this plan
called for the construction of a
new sewage system, two new
sleeping lodges, and an Improved
water system. The second phase
Included projects such as a
shooting sports area, shelter
houses, an aquatic center, a
livestock - ·e ducation complex,
and other Improvements.
To make the first phase possl·
ble, a fundralsing campaign was
conducted. Thanks to a Chal·

klet. "The Lowdown on Dope."
Send 13 pl~t~ n ••lJ"'ddreued,
&amp;tamped btuinet,.•ize env elope (45
cents poatage) to Ann Landerl, P.O.
Boz 11.562, Chicago, Ill. 6061 J.0562.

CLEVELAND IUP!) - A cltv
waste collector earning $9.69 an
hour has returned more than
$11 ,500 in cash he found In trash
discarded by an elderly couple
who had been evicted from their
home.

;

TREATMENT PLANT - Pictured Is the sewage lrea&amp;ment
plant coDSiructed at !he Elizabeth L. Evans Otltdoor Educa&amp;loa
Center as part of lhe Phase I Improvements. The cost of the plant
was $112,000.

Improvements made at 4-H camping facility j

How much do you know about
pot, cocaine. LSD, PCP, crock,
1peed and downer6? Think you can
hondle them? For up-to--the minute
informal ion on drUg~. write for

Man returns $11,500
to evicted elderly couple

•

BRIDGE CONSTRUCTED - Pictured Is lhe swinging bridge
cooslrucled across the Little Salt Creek at Canter's Cave 4-H
Camp. The bridge was donated and buUt by the Legge Construction
Company.

•

FREE·O'·FROST,.

SELENA M. SPENCER
SAMANTHA A. MAYNARD

Who's Who
listing added
Samantha Ann Maynard of
Mason has been accepted Into
"Who's Who Among American
High School Students" in recog·
nltion of outstanding academic
achievements.
Samantha is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James R. Mavnard
of Mason and the grandda~ghter
of Mrs. Roberta Swisher of New
Haven and the late Jes se Mav·
nard, and Mr. and Mrs . Dennie
Staats of Ocoee, Fla .. former
residents of New Haven.
She Is a junior at Wahama High
School where she is a member of
the White Falcon Band, HI· Y. the
FBLA , and Wahama Drama
Club. Her biography will appear
in the 1987-88 edition of " Who's
Who."
they were holding a substantial
amount of money that belongs to
the couple, but which they
haven 't claimed. The monev
reportedly Is from dividend
checks and savings account
Interes t dating back to the 1970s.
Officials refused to divulge
how much money Is involved, but
said the Boltons ' 'could buy their
own home outright. "

Spencer birth .
being announced
David apd Linda Spencer,
Racine, are announcing the birth'
of a daughter, Selena Marie
Aug. 21. at O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital. She was 19'h Inches
long and weighed six pounds,
four ounces.
Paternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Elson Spencer, Racine.
Paternal great-grandmother Is
Clara M. Powell, Racine.
Maternal . grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weaver,
New Haven, W. \Ia .

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WASHI NGTON rUP I) - So· Union's larges t women's maga·
viet women soon wi ll have their zlne, Kres tya nka, with a c!rcula·
chance to speak our about lio n o! 15 million.
A letter released Wednesday
"glas tnost. "
said
100,000 Soviet women al Soviet and American women's
readv hav e returned completed
maga~ines wil l publish the first
joint survey in whic h women of quesitonaires with res ults ex·
both s uperpowers will discuss pected to be ready by ear~y
November . Levine said Women s
their views of love, sex , money
Day reaches an estimated 22
and other family problems.
million 'People.
Woman's Day Ed itor E llen Le·
American women have been
vine sai d.
\
surveved
for years, said Levine.
Highly personal ques lions "
We
'n
nd
it essentia l to know
who is res ponsible lor th e success
what
is
on
women's
minds .... We
of a marriage, what makes a
believe
tha
t
these
surveys are
good hu sband and how impor ta nt
critical
and
very
Importa
nt sois sex in a ma rriage- a re being
cia
l
documents
(because)
what
as ked in identi·ca l survevs pub·
women's
personal
happens
is
llshed In Woma n' s Da&gt;; Oct . 4
priorities become their political
magazine and in th e Soviet
issues."

$188

PAIR

S6

ALL ITEMS IN STOCK

••'

"
'.'

-~··-

__ ,...

___

_..__

____

,._,--~_,;,..,;.__

,,l

J ohn F . Colwell, Ca therine
Colwell to Carl Albert Cummins,
Edith June Cummins, Walter H.
Bar rett, Sr.. Ter ry M. Barrett, %
acre ( 'h Int.), Salem.
Bruce Fleming, Debra Flem·
lng to Kenneth B. Lawson,
sheriff's deed, Lebanon.
Clarence Shuler to Lynn E.
Shuler, Ernest M. Shuler, parcel,
Letar t.

The
. Racine Merchants Association along with
the American Legion invite you to spend the
· day with us.
Featuring a PARADE with Southern High
School Band at 10:00 A.M. (lineup at 9:30
at the high school.)
.

CROWNING OF THE QUEEN BEFORE THE PARADE
There will be plenty of food, games, crafts,
raffles, bi~go, antique outboard motor show,
arrowhead display.

CAR SHOW -

$5.00 Entry Fee

Registration 9:00 a.m. 12:00 noon.-Judging 3:00 p.m.

LIVE MUSIC 12 NOON TILL ???
Featuring .
'

those (tourists) look ve ry we ird.
By ALLEN GREENBERG
· BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. They scare my busines s ·~ w a y . "
Even more Infuriating, she ·
(~PI) - There are some store
owners who would be delighted to said , Is the small sign tucked in to
hilve a Rolls·RQyce parked In a side window on the car
ftpnt of their businesses . But not public l z ing Sp e ll e rb e r g • s
gallery . And, becau se the ca r sits
Of! Rodeo Drive.
• That kind of car attracts the so high, It blocks her own shop
\l(:r.:,ng kind of people, merchants window. ·
"It 's like adver tising and you
slily. the kind with cameras slung
atound their necks , the kind who just can't do that " without
clearance from the city, s he said.
look "weird."
Spellerb e r g Is n ot
~So David ·spellerberg, who
says his orHy intention In parking sympathetic.
The sleek sedan and chauffe'ur
h!Js 1954 Rolls ' wlth chauffeur In
f•ont of his art gallery was to put .Roberto Pachel, hired to stand
af " touch of class" back In the near the car, are there to " make
neighborhood, now faces Irate people happy, " he said .
Pachel also feeds qua r ters into
sbopowners and a legal tangle
the parking meter at a rate of $10
t~at could land him In jail.
to $15 a day. and that 's th e
~The trouble, says Spellerberg,
o!ilner of the National Heritage problem .
Qallery of Fine Art, began when
he decided !hat "Beverly Hills Is
Pollee started ti cketing the
n~t really what It used to be."
vehicle for staying too long in a
Parking the $200,000 black one·hour metered space. Speller·
aiJ.,tomotlve classic on one of the berg figures that , so fa r. he's
pj)r;hest streets In the world gotten a bout 800 citations at $13 a
•'!lliowed us to recapture the pop.
glltler and glamour, the touch of
"It's worth It to me," he says of
clli~s that made Beverly Hills
the fines. "It 's not that 1 feel that
~at people picture It as being,·'
I'm above the law . I've never
hF,; sald.
asked the city not to give me
~Indeed. the car has attracted, tickets. I'm here to make money,
qiijte a bit of attentlon In the past noquestionofthat. But thlscaris
sOl 'months.
· outtheresothatpeoplewhocome
?&lt; chauffeur In high boots , from Iowa can catch a bltofwhat
they hope to find here.
fl~red pants and leather gloves
''They expect to see movie
st,arlds by the sleek vehicle and
stars shopping on Rodeo. But
peses in front of It for tourists .
;And that , according to mer· / there 's no ·m ore of that. Putting
the car there glv~s them a chance
c ~ants In near by shops , Is the
to fantasl~e. It gives them the
pPOblem .
to feel they 're part of
opportunity
~hose drows of gawking tour·
something
exciting."
ts'is are driving away the kind of
The city doesn 't agree.
ct)'..;romers with the cash to buy
Spellerberg
says he has been
t~- hlgh·prlced baubles and
notified
that
It
Is Illegal to feed a
ftshlons so prominently
meter
to
tie
up
a parking space
displayed .
that
the
matter
has been
and
:Winnie Schweitzer, owner of
to
the
Beverly
Hills
turned
over
Upgaro, a women's haute cou·
life boutique, Is one of those city attorney.
"I can't believe they want to
rtj,erchants hoping Spellerberg
take a positive thing and proseremoves the car.
cute me for It, " he says. "I've
~ 'The car Is not really that
sl)eclal," she sal d. "And I hate to been told I could 11et six months In
In a bad way ... btU some of jail and a $1,000 fine."

·-··"'--""--·"""

Elliott to Fred Denny, tracts,
Columbia.
Robert L. Wingett to Homer
Mills, Jr., Diana Mills, 1 acre,
Sutton . .
Ne llie Borgan 10 Roger S.
Clark, Penny M. Clark, lot,
Scipio .
Cla re nce Shuler, Lynn E.
Shuler, Johna nna Shuler. E rnest
M. Shuler, Mary L. Shuler to
Frank W. Porter Ill, Patricia
Ann Porter , parcel, Letar t.

Saturday, September 17,· 1988

*HART BROTHERS *TALL GRASS *BEND RIVER BOYS
*COUNTRY BLEND BAND *DAN, FAITH, TAMARA
HAYMAN TRIO *MIDNI.GHT CLOGGERS *RACINE BAPTIST
CHOIR *PRAISE TEAM FROM BELPRE WORD OF FAITH
*SHADY RIVER SHUFFLER$ *BANDS FROM THE COAL
MINERS JAMBOREE

...

•Free Delivery
•Credit Terms
•Full Service Dept.
•Two Locations
•Honest Advertising

Paul Si nclair, Caroly n Si nclair
to Columbus &amp; Southern Power
Co., c..tsement, Bedford .
Lyle R. Sinclair, Joyce Fisher
to Columbus Southern Power
Co., easement, Bedford.
Evely n B. Thomas to Colum·
bus Southern Power Co., ease·
ment, Salisbu ry.
Joseph W. Davis, Laura M.
Davis to Columbus Southern
Power Co., easement, Salisbury .
E arold Dean to Columbus
Souther n Power Co. , easement,
Scipio.
Elmer Althouse to Columbus
Southern Power CQ,. , easement .
Scipio.
J oseph J . Stanley, Ida M.
Stanley to Cots. Sou. Power Co.,
easement , Bedford.
Kenneth E. Chaney, Dorothy
A. Chaney to Columbus Southern
Power Co. , easement, Bedford.
Richard M. Elliot, Theresa A

Racine
Fall Harvest Festival··

•

~

opening anytime.

AMANA MOD&amp;!. SDt·22F

have their say

.

SAT., SEPT. ·17

949·2373
308 Third, Racine, Ohio

By FRANK T. CSONGOS
Utilled Press International
• SLOWDOWN, YOUMOVETOOFAST: SlngerArtGarfunkel
was ticketed earlier this month for dr iving 69 mph in a 55 m ph
zone in s uburban Columbus, Ohio.
• He paid a 559 fine Tuesda y by sending a courier wi th a money
.order ·to the Franklin County Municipal Co urt's office.
~Gar funkel spokes man Alan Upson said sta te t rooper R.W.
.J~seph may not have Issued the citation had he recognized the
smger. Built wouldn't have made any difference to the trooper,
who said, " I didn' t ask him his occupation. "
STONE PARTY: Keltb Rlcbards Invited some friends to
celebrate the release of his first solo album, " Talk Is Cheap."
The·gues t list at New York's downtown -bistro, Acme Bar and
Grill, lncl)lded lgiiY Pop, Phoebe Snow , Fran Liebowitz, Mats
Wllander . Lenny Kaye, co· producer Steve Jorda11, Mike
Tyson 's lawyer Peler Parcher, Sarah Dash, Bernie Worrell,
and Joey Spamplnalo.
· The Rolling Stones guitarist and his friends partied Tuesda y
night as the album played over and over . Richards said he
thought it sounded better each time around. "That's the way it's
supposed to work ," he sal d.
LIKE TO BE LIKED- Mayor Edward Koch of New York
revealed Wednesday he Is a fan of Patrick Swayze, star of the hit
motion picture ' 'Dirty Dancing." ·
The mayor quoted Swayze when asked about his reaction to a
report the union representing city firefighter s may not endorse
him in his bid next year for a fourth term.
"Personally It would be very devastating," Koch said. Why'!
"I like to be liked," the mavor said. Swavze said the same to
ABC.TV's Barbara Walters during a 'program broadcast
.Tuesday , when asked why he cared whether people enjoyed his
pertormances.
'
' GOOD GUY BOWARD: Cartoonist Greg Howard has
recleved a "Good Guy" award from the National Women's
Political Caucus for his Sally Forth strip, a comic that depicts
the perils of a two-career couple trying to raise a child. Yet
feminism Is nothing new to Howard, a former Iawver who has
· been married to a working woman for 22 years. ·
"I don't make an conscious effort tQ take a feminist point of ,
: view - It's just my point of view," Howard told UPI
Wedne~ay . "My mother went back to college when I went to
college and became a deaconess of the Methodist church. My
wife worked first as a nurse and Is now the coordinator for bone
' marrow transplant at the Universit y of Minnesota hospital.
; This Is a woman who wouldn't permit me to be anything e lse but
sensitive to women 's issues."
'
', JANE. REMEMBERED UN·FONDLY:
Members of
• Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1618 In Lawrenceburg, Tenn ..
r haven 't forgiven actress Jane Fonda for opposing U.S.
• involvement In the Vietnam War. The 630-member post has put
up a large sign on the frontlawn that reads. " Hanoi Jane Fonda
. apologizes . We do not accept ."
• Said Korean veteran Bill Odom. "We just don't like what she
• done. The troops were over there losing their lives and she was
· bad· mouthing them. That ain't right." Fonda said recently she
is sorry if she offended people with her .statements or actions
·' during the War.
MORE JANE: Tom Hayden, the 1960s radical and husband of
actress Jane Fonda, says he Is surprised that Republican Pete
Dawkins Is making his wife an issue In the New Jersey Senate
:· campaign. Dawkins said this· week that his DemocratJc
• opponent. Sen. Frank Lautenberg, D·N.J .,·should be ashamed
~ for accepting money from a Hollywood political action
t· commlttee,.to which Fonda contributes.
.:• Hayden, ·a Democratic California assemblyman , says he has
~· known Dawkins for years and It " just doesn't seem very
·· honorable" for Dawkins to mention his wife in this contex t.
~
MORE TRUMP: lva11a Trwnp, fresh from dressing New
; · York's Trump Plaza In pink marble and waterfalls. is
&lt;: decorating again thanks to her billionaire husband 's purchase
r · of the Plaza Hotel. This time she Is going back to her childhOod.
~
A room at the red·carpeted Fifth Avenue hotel will be named
:' the Eloise Room after that !lctltlous little hero of Kay
:; Thqmpson's children' s book. A spokesman says the reason Is
;• that "Ivana just loves_children and wants to make children who
.. are guests at the hotel comfoctable."
:
PAULSENS TO SPLIT :The wife of comedian Pat Paulsen
has hired lamed divorce attorney Marvin Mllchelson to
. represent her against her husband.
~
Paulsen, 61, and Linda Chaney, 35, of Lakewood , Colo., were
• married secretly two months ago in Atlanta. Chaney had been
; Paulsen' s Colorado manager. as well as director of the
:· Lakewood-based Pat Paulsen Enterprises. Chaney has hired
• Mitchelson to represent her against Paulsen' s suit s seeking to
~ end the marriage and her contract as his agent .

{)nly
,in Los ·Angeles ...
.

ICE &amp; WATER

SANDY'S VIDEO

Meigs County property transfers

People in the news----- Soviet women to

t

ordinary pans.

D

The Daily Sentinei- Page-13

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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~·"' +P

..
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.,,~..o:.,..~

~\~

~

~-~~...~

Bring rhe family and Enjoy the Entire Day!!
TEEN
"Kelly Counts &amp; The Midnight Ro(k-Aways"
7:00 p.m. • 11:30 p.m.
DANCE •••••
'

· --

I

.,I iii',.. GAllS. ·II ;;. 'lANDS
Support Your Racine
Merchants Association
Saturday, Sept. 17th!!
CUllS

Bring Your Lawn Chairs.
Make A Day Of It In Racine, Ohio
IN CASE OF RAIN ••••WE WILL MOVE
TO SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL?
FESTIJIAL PARKING AT THE BAPTIST CHURCH, RACINE, OHIO

- - - """+-

'

••

I

•

�Page 14-The Daily Seminal

Thundlly. September 16, 1988

Pomeioy-Midclaport, Ohio

Graying parents are trendy, but what about the children?
By IRIS KRASNOW
UPI Felltlll't! Writer
Neal Duncan's first clear memory that his mother was different was when his junior high
friends told him she looked more
like a grandmother. He was 13,
and she was the 54-year-old
secretary of his school.
" She was the sameageasa lot
of their grandmothers," says
Duncan. 30. who grew up in a coal
mining. town In West Virginia .
•'My mother had gray hair my
whole life; she had gray hair
when I was born.
Unlike some children of older
parents who feel Isolation and
anger about coping with aging
mothers and fathers when they
themselves are still young, Duncan "enjoyed the freedom" the
two-generation gap created.
His three much older brothers
- the nearest is 13 years his
senior- bore the brunt instead.
"My brothers told me what a
difficult man dad was when they
were growing up, he was very ·
strict. And I never experienced
that. By thetimeicamealong, he
had mellowed out a lot. They had
already been through the traumas three times, so with me they
were really relaxed as parents."
Washington artist Duncan
calls hlmsell "an accident," the
fourth child born to a 42-)'ear-old
mother (who died four years
ago) and a 45-year-old father
whOse other three sons were in
high school. Both parents
worked, and he was cared for by
a babysitter.
Thirty years later, belated
pregnancy is no accident and
dealing with day care is no
rarity. These are common
themes for increasing numbers
of couples who put domesticity on
hold while careers soar ahead.
Older parenthood is now glamorized in films such as "A New
Lite" where Alan Aida becomes
a papa after 50. Pick up People
and see Sally Field and Farrah
Fawcett with their 40th birthdays
behind them and cooing at pudgy
babies.
H

According to the U.s . Bureau
of Census, 9.25 percent of births
In 1975 to women ages 35·39 was to
first-tim~ mothers. The latest
statistic available Is for 1985
when first-time mothers represented 18.4 percent of total births
to women in that age bracket.
"Based on the trends we've
been seeing tor the last five
years, I would say that the figure
has gone up one or two points
since 1985," says Martin O'Connell, chief of fertility statistics
for the U.S. Bureau of Census.
Whereas first-time mothers
accounted tor 6.3 percent ot total
births to women 40 and over in
1975, by 1985 that ttgure held at
13.2 percent. A statistical average on lathers' ages at thetlmeo!
their first born Is difficult to
determine because approxi mately 14 percent of birth certificates do not list paternity
Information.
"Everyone I know has had
children In their 30s or early 40s,
and they are all career types who
just didn't have time before,"
says poet Susan Polis Schultz,
who Jives In the mountains
outside Boulder, Colo. Schultz,
44, and her artist husband had
their third child lour years ago.
"When we had our children, we
were well Into our careers, and
most of the hectic pace climbing
up the ladder was behind us. We
are now able to spend enormous
amounts of time with our kids,'·
sbe adds.
Schultz and her husband are in
professions that can be carried
on from home, but most people
operate out of otflces and can't
give children • 'enormous
amounts of time," 1,mless one
working parent eases up. While a
hard-fought for. last-paced job Is
difficult to slow down, mid·
career parents are realizing that
along with having children must
come sacrifice In the work place.
"You only get that time with
the kids once, and as trying as it
Is sometimes, it's a good choice."
says Tom Weinberg, 44, an

deal of time with them were tile
ones who felt the happiest," says
Morris. "It was the parents who
made an effort to go to sporting
events, to play board games,
even though they worked. When I
raise . this Issue with people
contemplating late parenting
they get very defensive.
''There Is a tendency to say ,
'We will make wonderful par·
ents. We're settled, We have
money.' No one can deny thllt
materially these children are
very well off. But unless you are
prepared to give a child something of yourself then It does
seem rather indulgent to have a
baby."
There are clearly great rewards for giving up other parts of
your life to rear a child, but there
also comes a dramatic adjustment period. In one year, Patri2.
cia
Jacobs, 38, of Oak Park, nt.,
It may pinch freedom and
got
married, bad a baby and
professional ascent, but time is
relinquished
her fast-track posl·
the most essential gift you can
tlonas
vice
presldentolsalesa_
nd
give to a child who comes late In
marketing
for
Ken
Blanchard,
Ute, .saYs Monica Morris, author
ot "Last Chance Children" (Co- the "One Minute Manager."
As she puts It, "It felt like
lumbia University Press). She's
somebody
put me In a Culsinart,
not talking about quality time;
sllook
It
up,
and threw all the
she means "quantities of lime."
pieces
on
the
ground." The
When sociologist Morris wrote
pieces
are
beginning
to .c ome
an article on the subject for the
together
for
Jacobs,
who
has
Los Angeles Times, she received
taken
on
part-time
consulting
a barrage of letters from child·
work and whose daughter, Em·
ren of older parents' that ultiily, Is now 11 months old.
mately led to extensive inter·
•'The last 11 months have been
views and the compiling ot her
wonderful
and they have been.
book.
awful.
I
love
the baby and !love
"I was overwhelmed by the
"
being
her
mother
- the chal·
passion of the people who wrote
lenge
has
been
integrating
everyto me, and II fell fairly evenly,"
thing,"
says
Jacobs,
who
Is
says Morris, who married early
married
to
a
doctor.
and is the mother of three grown
•'The rewards are great but
children. "Half of tllem were
there
Is a price to pay. I've had to
very strongly opposed to having
adjust
to not having a place to go
older parents. Tile other hall
everyday
and accomplishing and
didn't feel particularly negaachieving.
And It's been hard to
tively at all."
A key question Morris sought find a support group. Most ot my
friends are getting tllelr children
to answer was what distinready lor Bar Mitzvahs (which
guished between the environments of those who were llappy comes at age 13.).
"Although I am someone who
with their growing up years, and
has
kept myself In good physical
those who were dissatisfied.
sllape,
I'm 38, not 28, and I am
"Mainly the children who felt
their parents had spent a great
Independent television producer
in Chicago. Weinberg's second
child, Anna, was born when he
was 40 and his wife was 42.
"I wlll say that it requires a
cPrtain tightness of the tether.
You can't stray very far tor very
long If you want to have the kind
ot clooe relationship we've got at
home," says Weinberg. "You
can't go and make a television
show tor six weekS In Europe. I
can't even thinlk about doing
certain kinds of work anymore.
Does that mean l'm giving
something up? Well, maybe. But
I wouldn't trade it."
Adds 45-year-old arcllltect
David Jones, co-partner In a
Washington. D.C. firm: "I never
realized tllere was going to be so
much time Involved with having
children." His two boys are 8 and

tired a lot. I haven't slept througll
the night tor months. A child
needs constant surveillance and
Involvement and care. It the
Iabrie ol our love as a couple
hadn't been genuine there would
have been no way we could have
gotten through this.''
Yet, Jacobs thinks about bav·
lng another cllild so that Emily
will have. family members near
her age. "My concern Is down tbe
road when Em lly has to write
down next of kin, she literally
won't have anyone."
Washington architect David
Jones. echoes Neal Duncan's
observation that older parents
tend to be "more relaxed" with
their children. Yet Jones also has
concerns about life down the road
tor his two sons.
"I'm 45 now, and I have an
8-year-old who I play ball with
· and a 2-year-old," says Jones.
"They keep me in good shape.
But I'm a different man at45tllan
I was at 35. I thlnlk about the
ttnanctalcommltment. Wilen my
second child is in college, I'll be
65, a tlmewhenimlghtwant to be
slowing down at work."
Another disadvantage, as
Jones sees it: "We will die earlier
in our children's lives." But when
the inevitable occurs someday,
his boys will have each other tor
support.
During sociologist Morris' research for "Last Chance Chlldren." only chlldren expressed the
most unhappiness.
"They are not likely to have
grandparents tor very long, and
with no siblings to tum to, they
must alone face aging, possibly
alling parents, at a time when
they themselves are still young,".
says Morris.
Carol Wolkow, 31, Is confrontIng some of these issues alone
today. Her father had a stroke,
from which he has recovered,
and her mother Is starting to
have memory lapses.
Wolkow grew up In Garland,

Once 'dragon lady,' Yoko accepted by public
By IRIS KRASNOW
UPI Feature Writer
WASHINGTON IUPI)- When
Yoko Ono married John Lennon
nearly two decades ago she was
flung Into a vortex where pain
has outmuscled the peace they
once preached in the nude during
~bed- ln.

•· Beatie fans considered her the
aragon lady who broke up the
band . Her strange music banshee rock that prophetically
harkened to punk- got trashed.
Her hold on her husband was
portrayed as a headlock.
• After Lennon was murdered on
Dec. 8, 1980, at the entrance of
lbelr home, the century-old Dakota on Central Park, the world
sent Yoko Ono Its first. collective
outpouring of love. She was
revere&lt;! as "the keeper of the
wishing well," the messenger of
.!heir dream for a tranquil plane:t.
For some critics, that too was
5hort-llved .
• She has been accused of
. cashing in on Lennon 's name
while touring the country promotlng his prints, sculptures and
.•lgned lithographs, a focus of her
recent years. And now a new
book, "The Lives of John Leniion" by Albert Goldman (Wilfjam Morrow, 700 pp. $22.95)
depicts their marriage as drugfilled, sordid and twls ted.
Yet this small and strong
Japanese woman, wearing a
heart-shaped diamond from Lennon at her throat, has always

survived. Her broad face Is
remarkably unlined, given that It
belongs to a 55-year-old who
chain-smokes long brown Sberman cigarettes.
The shrieking balladeer appears sedate and collegiate In a
navv blue V-neck sweater and
matching wool skirt Her thick
black ponytail is secured by a
brown elastic band with 'plastic
ball closures, the kind little girls
wear.
Yoko, who prefers a first name
reference to a last. talkf'd about
her resilience during a trip to
Washington where Lennon's art
works were ·presented at a
gallery as they have been In
major cities across the country.
These events at tract rock
concert-sized crowds.
"I knew the first thing people
would say Is 'are you making any
money outofthisandlfsowhy?".'
she says about her business
arrangement with Marigold En·
terprlses Ltd ., the firm that
' llcenses the art. " But It's wrong
for John to be a charity case. It's
wrong to say 'this lsforcharltyso
please buy.' John Is an artist. .. .
"So I'm not about to announce
that I'm going to give everything
to charity, and go to the mountains. I mean, there's life going
on with us. We are living In the
city, and we are going to su.rvlve
there.
"I do feel that I'm assaulted,
but of course there's the other
side. There are so many smiling
faces, they are so emotional,

some of them are crying because
they are so happy to touch these
objects and to own them. So I'm
doing II for them, not tor the
cynics," she shrugs,. lighting a
fresh cigarette from a glowing
butt.
"I was at an L.A. gallery, and
as usual I was thanking people
whocameandsaylng'lloveyou.'
And some cynic said 'wily do you
say I Jove you?' Well, why am I
going all tile way out to these
cities and sticking myself in a
crowd if I'm not going there to
say 'I love you?'
.
"John's spirit Is reflected In
these drawings, and by being
exposed tQJhe warmth, the sense
of humor. the famllness ... ,"she
trails off, looking at a postcard of
Lennon's "Famllv" sketch of
Yoko, John and Sean. "That Is
good. because It reminds people
of the side of life which Is the
basis of llumanlty, that we're just
family, having tun.''
By choice, the powerful legacy
of Lennon continues to dominate
Yokoeight years after his death.
She plans to return to Los
Angeles at the end of September
to be present when Lennon's star
Is added totheHollywoodWalkol
Fame. The following week she
will attend the West Coast
premiere of the documentary
film "Imagine."
Her own art is "very backseat"
right now.
"You know, Jfeellike 1 have all
the time In the world for my own
work. So I've set that aside to

promote John's work. It's the
first time (since his death) that I
!eel so good aboutlt. The fact that
John's work Is again being
discovered and people are loving
It.
''Tills was a very talented guy.
He was an art student before he
became a rocker. Even as a
young boy, John was always
drawing things. I have some of
the drawings be did when he was
9 and It's just Incredible stuff.
And by the way, Sean has the
same ability," Yoko says of their
son who turns 13 In October.
"Jo)mgot a lot of flak from the
art world, just like I got a lot of
flak from tile music world.
Despite all that, I really think it's
the art world that needs John
more than John needs the art
world. 'You see, each of his
drawings has a real power or
truth. and that's real power.
"He didn't think of It as an
Intellectual way. Just like his
s9ngs, you know. it just came to
him and be had to draw it. It was
an overflowing of his creativity."
Yoko views her spontaneous
nature-"Idon'tthlnkahead"- ·
as a shield that has protected and
propelled her In a life surroundP.d
by barbs and stretches of quicksand. But there Is one plan In the
works, her·account of the muchtold story of John and Yoko.
"I'm trying to put some book
together, but It's taking a long
time just to sort of straighten my
head out about It," she says. "But
once I decide, I know it's going to
be quick. I'm starting to have a
clear mind, It's coming to me.
There Is a kind of crystal Uzation
about what the book should be
and It's a good one."

Keeping your fan blowing in the wind
By Reader's Digest
Written for UPI
Electric fans can provide subs tantial relief from summer heat
when air conditioning Is not
available. Even when a fan
doesn't reduce a room's temperature, It helps cool you off by
speeding the evaporation of
moisture from your skin. A fan
can also help spread the cool air
from an air conditioner.
Maintenance
-Always unplug a fan before
cleaning or fixing it.
-Fans should be vacuumed
every two '\'eeks of use with a
crevice cleaning attachment.
--At least twice during the
sun•mer. sponge dirt from the
blaies. grille and other external
'pa, Is using a mild detergent
soiLlion ..
--If the owner's manual advises 11. put two or three drops of
light machine ollln the oil hole of
the motor. Don't overfilL
-If a fan rattles, tighten the
screws or nuts around the blade
guard. In a window fan, tighten
the screws lloldlng the grille.
-A whirring sound may indi·
cate a bent metal blade:
InsPr l a pencil through the
grille and hold it so that th~
leading edge of one blade just
,touches the pencil.
Rolate the blades by hand; tile
other blades should also just

touch the pencil or come within a
quarter Inch either way. Bend
them so that they do.
If you can't straighten a bent
blade with your fingers, install a
set of replacement blades.
-It an oscillating fan won't
move back and forth, tighten the
oscillation nut.
If this falls. unplug the fan and

osctuate by hand. II the fan
swings freely. the gears are
stripped and the fan sllould be
fixed by a professional or
replaced.
-It a fan continually blows Its ·
fuse or trips Its circuit breaker or
gives a shock when touched, it
should be tlxed by a professional
or discarded.

Sli!ISHER lOHSE
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Texas, went to college at nearby
Southern Methodist University,
and always lived near home so
she could be near her parents.
Seven months ago Wolkow, a
successful real estate appraiser;
made the "traumatic" decision
to accept an appealing job offer
and move to Los Angeles.
"Here I was 30 and single. ~­
have been near Garland all my
Ute. I llad older parents who
might live another year or.
another 20 years, and what was I
doing witll my life?" says Wol·
kow, her voice catching. "Was I
going to revolve It around them
or revolve it around me? I just
dldn' t reel thati was emotionally
equipped to become a caretaker.
''Tiley are my parents, but at
tile same time they are adults
wllo are toward the end of their
lives and I'm an adult wh9 Is at
the beginning of hers.· And I
couldn't stay there Just because
I'm the only one. That's the
pressure ot being an only child."
Slle gets back to Garland about
once a month and telephones
home once a week. Wolkow bas
no regrets about separating from
her parents -it's an emancipation she relishes.
"I was tooclosetothem. In my
own mind, there was an emo- ~
tiona I chokehold there, an expectation I couldn't tul!ill.''
In lieu of brothers and sisters,
Wolkow draws on her cousins for
kinship. Given how ller !He has
unfolded she still would consider
having a child if she marries late
in life.
''There Is no reason why you
shouldn't have children up unUl
the time you can't as far as I'm
concerned," says Wolkow. "I did
not feel cheated In anyway while
I was growing up. 1· mean,
parents in their 40s and 50s are
not old. We went on picnics. We
went on vacations. And now I say
to them, 'I love you, love me and
let me live the way I want to
live."'

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0tv\iff

By STEWART SlAVIN
I dip to Skippy peanut butter and
TOKYO (UPI) - Trudge up potato chlpo with ruffles.
three flights of stairs to Klyotaka
The couch potato fad - the
Yamana's oftlce In downtown American trend toward staying
Tokyo's jostled, workaday may. horne, watching TV and doing
hem and there, seeming as out or nothing - finally has sprouted In
place as polar bears in the Japan.
Sahara, you see them - the
But Its 28-year·old, self·
couches.
proclaimed auplne leader admits
Big, sinfully soft, Inviting that It's going to be an uphill
couches, tooled ol luxuriant battle selling the idea to a nation
black leather and placed just so of workaholics who are not very
in front of a large-screen televl· good at doing nothing.
sian set.
"Japan Is now an affluent
One sola is shaped like a giant society and as a result wP have
boxing glove lor the sports fan to more leisure time on our hands,''
collapse Into, complete with a explains Yamana, whose normal
drink holder to minimize physl· occupation is editing a magazine
cal exertion.
which examines food trends In
Then there are ihe snacks, a the United States tor his · Japaline-up that would do a U.S. nese audience.
supermarket proud - from Im"But the problem Is people just
ported Dorltos and guacamole don't know what to do with tree

WEST PALM ' BEACH, Fla.
(UPI) - Florida woodsmen are
readying themselves lor the
slate's first legal alligator hunt In
25 years, a September series of
ntihttlme forays Into the soggy
marshlands and the Everglades
canals.
The eager hunters are stocking .
up on powerful chemical wea·
pons to shield themselves !rom
the vicious creatures that lurk In
ih_e darkened swamps, waiting to
bite Into their flesll and gorge on
their blood. But those are just the
mosquitoes.
To get ready for the alligators,
they are heading straight for the
classroom.
The Florida Game and Fresh·
water Fish Commission Is hold·
tng a series of six-hour alligator
safety courses around the state.
The commission awarded hunt
licenses to 238 applicants In a
:statewide lottery and each Is
allowed to hire one "agent" to
~ssist him. All mu~t graduate
:trom gator school before they
•can pursue their quarry.
Mos ~ are experienced woods' men and hunters. But alligator
hunting has been outlawed In
0 Florlda since 1962, so the major'IIY have no experience with the
:species, explained Dennis David,
~ gator . biologist with the
·commission.
;. "We're not trying to tell you
:t&lt;llks It l~n·t dangerous. It Is,"
&lt;:apt. Eddie Wheeler told gator
:SCholars at a Saturday class in
West Palm Beach.
·
:; "What we're telling you is that
'-,
.
.
•,

:·
By RICH EXNER
• CLEVELAND (UPI) - In
~orlda people go to bars with a
:VIew ot the ocean, in Toronto IIley
party on a set of man-made
!~lands In Lake Ontario and in
;Qeveland they go to a narrow
fiver still active with Industrial
lluslness.
:: A typical view from nightclubs
.!tong the Cuyahoga River in 1
,11:leveland Is of pleasure boats
&lt;locking at the bars, a 600-foot
)ron ore carrier making Its way
,up the river, drawbridges In
action and giant piles of llmes'tone in the background.
Thousands ~f people every
weekend battle tllrough traffic
Jams to find a parking space In
&gt;the area known as the Flats, then
'walk across a broken up sidewalk
'and Into turn-of-tthe-century
·buildings now converted into
:Otghtclubs to llave a beer, listen
1o live music or just be close to
·4he water.
: "Waterfronts are always an
'attraction to people. but what
:you've got here Is a working river
:with a human scale (only200feet
·across)," says Genevieve Ray,
'executive director ot the Flats
,l:&gt;xbow Assoclaiton.
• "You have a sense of the
:history of the place, what Cleve)and Is about with an Industrial
·base," Ray says. "In any of these
:bars - I don't care how sophist!·
:cated they are - wllen a
•freighter goes by, heads tum.
:The !relallters make this different from other riverfronts be·~ause of the size of the river."
; Jim Unger of the National
·ouncil lor Urban Economic
:DI&gt;,f'lopment In Washington says

If you do thts the correct way, It
Isn't neccessarUy that you're
courting death," said Lt. Jim
Hu!fstodt.
Dennis calms the class by
observing that alligators are no
more dangerous than sharks,
then biologist Tom Stice goes
over the rules:
Each hunter will have five or
six nights In September to take
up to 15 alligators and each must
be at least4 feet long. Hunt days
will vary according to which ol28
conservation zones the hunter is
assigned to. Hunt hours are from
a half hour before sunset to a half
hour before sunrise.

explains.
"This is probably the weapon
of choice," said veteran trapper
Ross Hooks, displaying a 6-foot
steel a~d fiberglass harpoon with
a 1 \7-inch polnto!case-hlirdened
steel and a long, sturdy line
attached.
Hooks has been one of tile
state's licensed "nuslance hun·
ters" for 10 years. His job Is to
capture alligators that wander
Into human habitats. He has
removed some 1.500o! them from
canals, parking lots, backyards
and Jacuzzis.
The commission has recruited
Hooks to share Ills techniques
and has supplied a frozen 8-foot,
Alligators are nocturnal, but 250-pound alligator as a visual
·
finding tllem In the dark Is easy. ald.
You shine a flashlight along the
"AIm In the the jaw area.
banks and the alUgators' eyes You're going to go In from
will reflect a red glare. When you behind," HookS explains, jabsee two glowing red spots, you bing the freezer specimen be bind
can assume that the rest of the the jaw.
gator is right behind them. But
You can· also use a bow and
you may not shoot the alligators arrow with a line attached to the
witll firearms.
arrow, or a snatch hook - a
"I knew the~e had to be a fiberglass pole with a rope
catch," said gator student Mark through It and a large tourGrove of Davie, an avid duck 'pronged hook on tile end. With the
hunter. "They're just llke sitting latter, you want to hook the gator
ducks laying on the banks. At In the soft skin behind his front
night all you see Is red eyes out legs or In front ot his hind legs.
there."
When you hook him, the
Guns are never permitted In alligator will become annoyed
the conservation zones. And If and start thrashing around,
you did shoot an alUgator, It Hooks said. Keep the line taught
would sink to the bottom or the and play plm out as thougll he
lake or swim away and die were a large fish, he advises. In
somewhere where you could not., two or three hours, he will be
retrieve the carcass,, defeating tired enough that you can slip a
the whole pointol the hunt, Stk!e

snare around his mouth to hold It
shut.
"What you're trying to do Is
wear him out. It's quite a thrUlto
get a big gator on a snatch line
and work him,'' Hooks says.

Page

16·

takes modest Japanese accomo- has urged employees to use more
of thl"lr vacation Instead of
datlons Into consideration.
"However small the apart- passing It up for fear of falling
ment may be, we will think this behind at tlteir jobs.
''Leisure time Is Increasing but
room to be the place of ultima te
Japanese don' t know of many
comfort, " the credo says.
The couch potato fad also has ways to relax ," says Hldeo
caught the attention of Japanese Okamoto, a sociologist at Sofia
television, newspapers and mag- University in Tokyo.
' 'The ooncept of leisure Is
azines. Sedentary couch potato
dolls can he found at department something that should be taught
from youth," be says. "The Idea ,
Stores.
But even If the couch potato ot the couch potato can be a good
joins so many other Imported alternative if it means spending
fads Into quick flight, . the fact . leisure tlmewlth friends. Butltit
remains that the hard -working means staying cooped up in a
Japanese are going to be getting room all the time, that 's not
more leisure In the future as a healthy."
•
.
Chief couch potato Yamana reward - for their booming
economy .
concedes that even he has trouble .
Currently theJapaneseworker finding time to vegetate.
puts In more hours than counter"I often work until 11 p.m. ,"
parts In any major Western Yamana says sheepishly. Heal so
democracy- 2,150 hours a year, admits that on Sundays a favor,
compared with 1,924 hours In the lte pasttime for he and his couch .
United States. •·
tomato (girlfriend) Is not
The Labor Ministry has set a plunked down In front of the TV,
target lor ann~al working hours but out riding bicycles. in the .
to be reduced to 1,800 by 1992and park.

You may want to tie the end of
the line to the boat but It's not a
good Idea to tie It to yourself,
Hooks tells the class.
"If tbe gator jerks, you go in
after him. It's better to be a live,
person than to beoutthere trying·
to ski behind that gator," he says.
Once the snare is In place, you
can hold the alligator's head
underwater and shoot him with a
bang stick, firing a bullet Into his
brain to kill him. 1
A bang stick Is a weapon used
by shark hunters to fire bullets at
point blank range. It should be
used only under water.
The commission has held a
series of experimental alligator
hunts, wherein some ·350 woods men logged more than 3,00(J'trap
nights over the las I seven years.
and the lone Injury occurred
when a bunter Imprudently fired
a .357-callber bang stick at -an
alligator whose bead was peepIng up above the water.
IIUNTING SAFETY - Florida Stale licensed aiUI{alar trappet
Ross Hooks uses the skuU of a I~loot a!Ugalor during oae of oeveral
six hour alligator. huntlag safety courses being being glvea around
the state. Ucenses have been awarded to 238 people, chosen by
lottery, for Florida's first legal alUgator hunts since 1862. (UPI)

A flying chunk of gator skull hit
the hunter in the lace and cut his
forehead open.
•'The problem was.n't the gator, it was stupidity," David
notes.

waterfront developments are
logical lor a number of reasons.
"ClUes by and large are
turning to developing their waterfront properties these days.
Water is a theme and a strong
attraction thell)e, especially
when doing redevelopment work.
And cities often find tllat tile only
available vacant land is along the
waterfront," Unger says.
Unger cites Pittsburgh. Norfolk, Va., Jacksonville, Fla., and
San Antonio, Texas. as a few of
the successful cities In waterfront development, but Toledo,
Ohio, as a city where It didn't
work as well as anticipated.
"It's a concept that has l;leen
hot for the last tlve years. but
there are downsides," Unger
says. "It depends on the city. It
depends on the local economy."
Bars now line both sides qf the
Cuyahoga RIVer near Its end at
Lake Erie In downtown Cleveland and more nightclubs open
every year. Just lour or five
years ago, only a few nightclubs
were in business.
Frank Samsel, who has worked
In the Flats lor 30 years at his
commercial marine supply business, obtained a 130-year-old
waterfront building in the mid
1970s for a bargain price with
plans lor a parlttng lot. But he
decided to renovate lhe building
and Its now home to The
Watermark, one of city's bestknown restaurants.
''They were giving property
away then," Samsel says. ·
"Things started about 20 years
ago, but nobody acknowledged it.
Just a couple places opened up.
There was such a negative

attitude. Everybody had the Idea
that It was a bad Idea, that It
wouldn'tlast.
In the late '50s ;md early '60s,
the only bars In the area were the
Flat Iron, Harbor Inn and
Kindler's, places frequented
mostly by railroad, dock and
postal workers, Samsel says.
Later came Fagan's and Pickle
Bills, where "their Idea of
first-class service was removing
the cap from the bottle lor you,"
he says.
''That continued well into the
'70s and even into the early '80s.
We had a meeting back here six
or seven years ago with some
really companies . After the
meeting, a·couple of fellows !rom
the largest real estate company
in town asked me, 'What's sp
great about the river?'"
The value of land has since
skyrocketed as a variety of
businesses ranging from exclusive restaurants and dance clubs
to rock bars and corner pubs now
line the area.
Some old-lime Flats goers will
tell you the changes have been
for the worse, but the tact Is that
more people each year go to the
Flats, some traveling 100 miles
or more just for an evening visit.
Sllooters On the Water bar·
res trauan Is were once found only
along the lntracostal waterway
In Fort Lauderdale and North
Miami Beach, Fla., unUl one
opened In the Flats last year and
It already might be the busiest
restaurant in Ohio.
Shooters otficlals won't release
sales tigures but they say business, even with the Cleveland
winter, Is about tile same as In

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"We're doing the same lype of
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that business Is growing and
growing. This is the time tor the
Flats. this is really, really
getting tile reputation as the
place to be in Cleveland."

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The latest major change in the
Flats was the development of the
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added glitz to the area with the
addition of Shooters, complete
with a swimming pool, the Club
Coconuts upscale dance bar, a
boardwalk, a 4,000-seat outdoor
concert theater and sandcovered volleyball courts.

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cboas, " be says. "We need better
movies to c boose from. Home
delivery Q! pizza has only just
begun. And Japan Is in the dark
ages when It comes to home
Interior designing."
Couclles, tor example, are
considered luxury Items and
frequently sell lor thousands of
dollars In leading department
stores. Large sofas would be
bard to squeeze through the·
narrow doorways and tiny rooms
found In most Japanese homes. ·
Yamana says couches aren't '
strictly necessary.
"I ran out of couches at my
first party during the winier," he
says. "But many of the guests
enjoyed sitting around the kotatsu"- an electric heater under
a traditional low table.
The declaration of the Japa nese Couch Potato Club also

.\:Flats growing as Cleveland's night spot

93 Mill St.

1911

time. The couch potato Is a new
option."
Add to that the fact that most
Japanese have never sat on a
couch, preferring to kneel on
traditional matted floors with
perhaps a pUlow providing the
only cushioning.
But Yamana says Japanese
yuppies are tired of "going out
nlghtclubblng In their Mercedes
Benz every night. They're looking tor alternatives.
•'They like the Idea of spending
time at home. Instead of spend·
ing money on discos, they can be
creative and spend It on nice
turnishings lor their homes, TVs,
videos and good snacks."
He admits that Japan has.a Jot
ot catching up to do when II
comes to couch potato amenities.
"The video rental business Is In

Gator school grads ·prepare for the hunt

OFFICE SUPPLIES • CHURCH SUPPLIES
GREETING CARDS
CASSETTES Ill
ACCOMPANIMENT TAPES

5tvE.E-f

The Daily Sentinel

Can Japan's workaholics. sit and vegetate?

I DOOR PRIUS TO IE GIVEN AWAY- STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WINI

OFFER GOOD
THIOIGH
MONDAY,
SEPT. 19,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Septemt. 15. 1988

I

liji#l

• • .. - - - il
GIE I ental phone, If it break_s, we fix or replace it ~n the spot.Younever

.-

A

have to go without a phone llg3lll. Even if you own a phone, tt s smart to rent.

•••••port, Ohio

'.

'

•

�)

Page 1&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- MiddlePort. Ohio

Thursday, September 15. 1988

I

Hur·ricane watch now warning
as Gilbert heads to Texas
CORPUS CHRISTI. Texas
(UP I) -Hurricane Gil ben how led across the Gulf of Mexico
today wlrh 120-mph winds toward
an anticipated weekend assau lt
on Texas, and coastal communi·
ties boarded up and fled en masse

as

the

" monster'' storm

approached.
· · Helicopter s ferried 10.000
workers from offshore oil rigs,
schools closed all along the Texas
coas t and authontles urged the
evacuation of 800,000 residents in
advance of the storm that
claimed• at least 20 lives a nd
caused billion-dollar damage in a
four-day rampage through th e
Caribbean.
"If we get a direct hit , we're
looking at a catastrophe.'' said
Richard Hawkins, director of
emergency management In
Houston. "I think the death toll is
going to be very, very high."
Blood banks issued pleas for
donors, and officials told restdents benton riding out the storm
to be fingerprinted by police.
"We want to be able to identify
their bodies later." said Judge
John Damon in Surfside 50 miles
south of Houston.
At 9 a.m. EDT, Gilbert was
centered near latitude 22.1 north ,
longitude 92.0 west, 430 miles
southeast of Brownsville. Texas,
and moving west-northwest at 15
mph. The National Hurricane
Center In Miami predicted the
storm gradually would turn more
northwest and make landfall
Friday night or early Saturday
on the south Texas coast between
Brownsville and Corpus Christi if
It takes that course.
Forecasters issued a hurricane
warning at 9 a.m. for the Texas
coast from Port O'Connor to
Brownsville. The Mexican government issued hurricane
warnings for the area from
Tampico to the Texas border.
A hurricane watch was in
effect from Port O'Connor north ward to Port Arthur, forecasters
said.
Forecasters warned residents
in the entire area to " be ready for
quick action" today as Gilbert's
path became more certain.
Hurricane warnings were dis·
continued at 6 a.m. for Mexi co's
Yucatan Peninsula .
Gilbert thundered Into the gulf
Wednesday night alter pounding
the posh beach resorts of the
Yucatan for nine hours. The
hurricane crashed ashore with
200-m.ph wind gusts and 15-foot
waves. Homes were wrec ked and
streets turned into rivers.
Army troops and Red Cross
workers went to the disaster zo ne
with food and dr inking water. but
communications to the peninsula
were cu 1 and no word had been
received on whether the s torm

caused casualties there. the homes of 800,000 Jamaicans Defense Ministry said In Mexico about one-third of the Island
City.
nation's population.
Four transport planes flew
"W" are only making contact
With authorities in the region via from the U.S. Howard Air Force
the radio and at times, this Is Base in Panama to Kingston with
impossible. " Defense Mlnistrv tents, chain saws, plastic sheetspokesman Salvador Macias Ca· ing, 74,000 gallons of water and
brera said. "What we do know is cotton blankets.
that the sltuatlon is grave."
"It's the worst disaster In
01)ce the strongest Atlantic ·modern Jamaican history, " said
huorlcane on record. Gilbert Earl Carl, the deputy chief of the
weakened over Mexico and Its Jama.i can Embassy In Washingwinds had dropped from 175 mph ton. He put damage to housing
to 120 mph by th e time it plunged alone "in the billions of dollars ."
On the Texas coast , businesses
into the gull. Hurricane center
director Bob Sheets said Gilbert boarded up and shut down andd
likely would Intensify in the officials recommended the eva- ·
warm gull with winds rising up to cuation of the 800,000 residents of
155 mph, a storm still ca pable of Aransas. Cameron and Nueces
ca using extreme damage.
counties. Storm refugees filled
"We still have a potentially motels as far as 250 miles Inland.
much more powerful storm," he
"This is the most awesome
said. ''It is a very large storm. It storm tha t's entered the gulf In
has everything go l.ng lor It, so it's the last 20 years. It 's a monster,"
not going to go away."
Galveston Cit y Manager Doug
Born Saturday night in the Matthews sa id .
southeastern Caribbean Sea, Gil·
NASA managers delayed anbert cut an 1,800-mile swath of nouncing a firm date for the ·
devastation on ils relentless expected late September launch
march to the Gull of Mexico. At of the shuttle Discovery ,In Cape
least 20 people were killed -nine Canav eral, Fla., In part because
in Jamaica. six in the Dominican
of fears tha t Gilbert would
Republic and five In Venezuela.
disrupt missio n control at the
The hurricane caused the .Jo hnson Space Center in
worst destruction in Jamaica, Houston.
where an ·estimated 500,000 peoEven In Louisiana. officials
ple were left homeless and the
were taking no chances with
government imposed a dusk· tO· Gilbert. For !tie second time in a
dawn curfew Wednesday In the
week,. Grand Isle Mayor Andy
capital of Kingston to guard
Valence ordered the evacuation
against looting.
of the ba r rier is land's visitors
A report by an ll·member
and 2,000 residents. The island
disa ster relief team from the
cleared out .F riday in advance of
Un ited States said Gilbert des- Hurricane Florence.
troye d or hea vily damaged the
Archbishop Phillip Hannan of

• •••

• ••

"Y"ll
""'

r

:~ '

•
•

·
·_
·
·
-·
··
·
-·'
·-··-·-:1-···-·---. --... __ _________ fi'!.:.......
.....
_
·--_.........
.........
TO PU(( AN AD tlU tfl· l1 U
MONO.U thrv fiiDAY I A.M. to S , A
I A.M. Uwlil NOON SATUIDAY

-~

If interested contact
The Daily Sentinel'at 992-2156

T~TTOOS •w Stecw
2 Lincoln Terrace

JCIIIO . . . . DU.qAY

- UOO&lt;tl TNYOICIU
IGGO ... '01114Y

992-6857

Scho~

cu1rix of the .. 1ate of Dar-

wood S. Napper. dtco•od.
toto of 31&amp;14 Red HlttRood.
Longovitte, Ohio 411741 .
Robart E. Buck,
Probata Judge
lana K. Nnoelroiod. Clerk
(911.
16, 3tc

s.

ClWIFID
~ard Sa\es
••
I

SURVEYS DAMAGES - Althea Alexander
homeless on · the Island nation and officials
surveys the dlillJage surrounding her home In
esdmate several hundred mllllon dollars In
Kingston, Jamaica, caused by the devlstatlng
damage. (UP() ·
effects of Hurricane Gilbert. Over 500,000 are
the Catholic Archdiocese of New
mass " to pray for safety. and
Orleans scheduled a special protection from the storm."
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilltlee Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public toearlng Ca.ee
No. 66· 102-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment
pra.cttces
&amp;nd
pollole!i 9f Columbus
Southern Power Com·
pany, the operation of
its Electric Fuel Component, and related mat·
ters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
10:00 a.m. on September
19, 1966 at the offices of
the Public Utilities Com·
mission, 160 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43266-0573.

992-2156

Business Services
lmm MOVIH &amp; $liD£S to
VHS TAPE
let us convert those old Mow ill
&amp; Slidrs ower to tiBy VHS.
CALL AMT URTIR
or lOB'S ELECTRONICS

56 STATE ST.
GALUPOUS, OH.

•
LITTLE GIRLS QUILTED NYLON

DEAD 01 AUVE .
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homeli1e
Jacobean

•Refrigerators
"Must

12, 18,, 24. Months ....: Reg. 514.99

Middleport, Ohio

2T, 3T, 4T - Reg. $15.99

992·6611

.

3-30-'87tln

We

Service All Makes
1/22/11/tln

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

FIREWOOD

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

It Repairable"

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT
985-4487

$3S~t~v10:fo.
BILL SLACK
992-2269

1·8-1 ma. pd.

8·8-88-tfn

••

lntrod"(fion To Singer's
Knitting and Serger Ma(hines

)

•

DATE: SEPT. 29th - TIME: 7 to 8 p.m.
AT THE FABRIC SHOP, 110 West Main St.

YOUNG'S

CARTER'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

- Addona end rtrnodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

- Concrete work
- Ptumbing
work

and

electrical

'

992-6282

••

319 So. 2nd Ave.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Middleport, Ohio

992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
1·13-'88· tin

(FREE ESTIMATES)

1·28·'88-lfn

11

Help Wanted

REGISTERED
TECHNOLOGIST

•

m

•"

FUlL. PAll
TECIIOLOGISTS
EXCELLIIn' FMNIE IINUIU

THE
FABRIC
SHOP
11 0 WEST MAIN
POMEROY

SendA8MimeTo:
Kim Shamblin.
Aedlology Supervleor

992-2284
...._

.

'

___ _

Vltlrllll Memorlll Hoapltll

111 Ent Memorlll Drive
Pomeroy. Ohio 41718
114-882·2104, Ext. 237
I.O.E .

''

II

Call614-388-9312.

Prices"
QUILTS
Cnh paid tor quilts. Pre
1950's. Pieced. apptlqued.
u,-.,sual-an, condition. call
814-992-&amp;857.

4-16·86·tfn

Howard L. Writesel
11

NEW- REPAIR
Downspouts

hou•. become a Daily Sentinal
papar carrier. Ro11te1 open in
Mldcloport. c.tt Scott at The
Sentinel Office It 614-992·

GuttBr Cleaning

____

Painting

2155.
__:_

949 _2168
8-18-1

mo.

''

pd.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr•••tnlulon
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

CALL 992-6756
VAUGHN

6·1J.tfc

3 Announcements
Paving 10c ormoreforeverybox
top, label orcouponvou .. nil to
us 1ccordlng to one simple
lnttructiont . Detallt lllf-

New llotnts lullt
''Free Es1imatas''

•ddr"'ed dlmpad en\'llope to
Evt Dune~~.,. Box 2154, US Rt.
368, Southtldll, WV 25117.

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

I woukf like to thMk each end
everyone who helped me lat
month when I reeiJy" needed it.
LeRoy Poore.

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-ll·tln

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. 5. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

614-662 ·3121
Authorized John
Deere. Now Holland,
Bush Hog Farm ·

Equipment Deal ar

Ftr111 Equlptlltftt

Parte &amp; Sar•lt•
1·3-'1&amp;-tft

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

Dealer for
YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

Located Hollwoy
between At. 7 &amp; Bahan.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS

c.,,.,

for Ry..,
Products
8. 7 Financing on Yardmen
Sorvlct

Giveaway

4

To give away-Frlendtv white cat.
Colt 814-245-9389.

•Dozer 1 Backhoe Work
•WHI Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

2 dog~~ '-• than 1 yr. old • 1
mother dog-will shllke paw.
M...,.be part Lab. C.ll .tier 6 PM,

WANT TO IUY WIECKIO OR
IUNK CARS PR TRUCKS
-FREE !SJIMATD-

4 part Oobern.n puppl•. Clll
814-258· 1348.

for ony of thouurvices coil

614-742-2617
Betw oen 9 a.m.·6 p.m.
or Leave MtssaQt

2· 1S":' 88•tln

814-388·8896.

3 mo. old kl....,. block, g•ay &amp;
white stripe. Male. c.tl 614448-4438.
8 mos. old Elkhound, male to

good home in country . Call
6, 4 -379-2435.
Cats &amp; kittens need good home,
all colors. Call 814-379-2435.

SER'IICE

•

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
l-13·tfc

HUDNALL

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
I 1&gt;8 North Set:ontl
Middleport, Ohio 4571&gt;0

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wo Corry Fishing Suj&gt;pll·.,j
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hero

Wo Honor MC/Dis&lt;/Yisa

. IUSINISS PHONE
t~UI

992·6550

RIS111ENCI PHONE

9-t-18-ttn

White German Shepherd. Mile,
4 yi81'S old. Would be good
guard dog. Excellent disposition.
814-949-2082.

6

t~UI

MARCUM CONTRACTING.
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS

Found: bl.ck .,d white long·
haired Cit. Been decl..ed front
and back. We•lng fiN collar.
Very toving. C.n be picked up
1122 E. Main CM' clll 814-992·

2828.
LOST:Ledles cream colored
clutch pune •ound Powell'a
SuJMrmarket , Sunday.-Sept .
11. Reward. Cltl 814-992·

5219.
lDat large white English Btl!
dog, wt . 8Sib .
Aewl!rd for
~um &amp; lnf. 304-875-4832.

•so.

Red Pom...,lan dog !oat In Rt.
8 2 and Potter a Creel!: erM,
anaWIIrs to Juliet, 304-875-

5393.
LOST black mala c.. wtth 4
white feet, Staff Hou• Road
area, 304-875-1275 .
lOST, 2 Coon Hounda, 1 male
W•lk.-. 1 fernrM Aid Bone.
Ollef Cornstock Public Hunting
Area, REWARD . 304-1583-

8

Public Sale
S. Auction

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

9B5-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS

8·22·1 mo.

Listeninl Devices
Oeptndable HeariPI Aid Seles &amp;Serviic.
Hearin1 Evaluations For All Aces

~

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
·12 417 Second Avenua, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
· . MulbetTY Hets. Pomeroy,

s lactl01

"Hiring! Government jobs· your
area. *16.000 • $68.000. Call

18021838·8885 •••. 1203.

Attention: Excellent lnoom11 for
home as•mbly work. Info call
504-846-1700dept. P2303.

Area newest long term c•e
f.:itlty now offering position for
c.-tifled dietary manag• or
exP'erenced equivala1taccepta ·
bl" compatltlvia benaflt pl!llckage
offered. Send resume to Admin·
lstrator Carehave of Point Pleasant, Rt. 1 Box 326. Point
Plaallnt. W. Va, E.O .E.

Modern skilled nursing facility
seeking enthusiaatic fl~~tibleper·
son for a1111•nt Dir8Ctor of
Nur11ing poahion. hparienca In
long term care &amp; nu,.angadmlnlatl'lltion helpful. Excellent elary
6

Ple11111nt Vall.,- Hospital It .aeklng fuM time cook. 3 to 6 years
pperience nec.•rv. hospital
Mptrience praf•red. Applicatior~~ may be fillad out in
pet"aonnel office. AAEOE.

12

Situations

Wanted

benefit package.

Ohio

Hou• of Uoyd h• IKplnded to
Gillie Co. and il hiring demon·
atratort. •No Investment-all
aupplla provided. •No c:ollec1·
lng ordeUverlng. ~ •perlenoe
n~esaary-We train, "Weekly
paycheck-alus win prizea It
trip•. "Excellent hosteu
program-$40 free plua bonus
gifts-now booking parties! For
appticltlon QJ ,.rty information

call :· 614·379-2587. Susan
·stantav. Supervlaor.

Looking tor local owner / operators b. .d in Gallipolis. Pt.
Pleasant lllsu1To1.mdlng areas to
pull own flatbed or our trailer.
Oewlinerep1'81Mtattve will beat
HOUOAY INN. U.S. 36 S.
ST.RT. 7, QALLIPOLIS. OHIO,
SEPT. 17, 9AM ·NOON. Come
by, let us gtve you details an
operations. answsr quettlons,
tokeopptlcatlons. tlgn on aquip.
man1. Coflee/ danilt. furnished.
Terminal pay, permit package!
304-562-9097 'o r 1-800-999·

6t50.

WIC Health

International Matal Building Ma nufacturer Selecting builder/ dealer In some open areas. High·
polential profit in our growth
in~stry . 1303) 759-3200. e11t.

2403.

Deli wtlh 05 liquor licen111.
Downtown area. t1B.OOO. Call
614-448-8657 aft• 6 PM.

m•

International metal budding
nufacturer telaeting builder·
deal« in some open areas. high
potential profit in our growttl
indu•try. 1303)769 - 3200
ext.2403.
Own your own epp1rel or shOe
store. chooae from ; Jean·

Sportswear, ladies. men's,
children-maternity, large sizes,
polite, dancewe•-aerobic, bridal, lingerie or acceuori~ store,
1dd ooloranalysis, Brand names :
Liz Claiborne, Heahhtex, ChiiUS,
Lee. S1 Michele. Forenu. Bugle
Boy. Levi, Camp Beverly Hills,
Organicallv Grown. Lucia over
2, 000 others. Or 813.99 one
price dtlignar, multi tier pricing
discount or family shoe store.
Retail prices Uf'lbtltiwablefor top
quality shoes normally pricad
from $19. to $60. Over 250
brands 2600 rtv181. 817,900 to
829,900. Inventory, training,
ftxtur81, alrflt'e. grtnd opening.
etc . Can open 16 davs. Mr.
McComb (4041859-0229.

\/Viii care for elderly man or
woman In my home. 19 yra.
ex l)lt'ience. Tuppers Plains area .
CAII814-667-3402 anv time.

13

Insurance

Appty before

Sept. 20 or Send !Wume to:
Pinecrest ClreCenter &amp;&amp;&amp;Jack.
son Pike, Gallipolis.
45831. 814-4411-7112.

f NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALlEY PUBLISH ING CO. recommends lhat you
do busln . . with people you
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mail until you have
investigllled the oflet'ing.

•.
"
~,

s.n

to

Awn. Call 814-446-3358

Prot.sion~l :

Re·

quired Lice..ad DiMiclan or

Call u1 for your mobiht home
lnauran ce : Miller lnsuran ce ,
304·882-2146. Also: auto,
hornt, life. healttl .

Schools

15

Instruction
RE -TAAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 529 Jackson Pike.
0hio Instructional Grant Oet9-

Homas for Sale

Beautftul Holoomb Hill. additional lot 3 BR ., Ca. Call

614-448-0338.
Very attractive brick 4bedroom .
2 bel: h. family room with flreplaca. for1111l dining, large living
room, 30ft. custom oall lcitchM
eabinl'\t, oak woodNorlc, finish '
balllmtnl. 2 car g•age, level
l.,deceped lot. 4 miles from
Holzer Hoapttal off Rt. 3 6Portert.ook SubdN-ision. Call 1

614-448-4189.

1----------,-

.'

6pm.

Areal newest long term c•e
f.:::ilkyi1 nowofferingapoaitlon
tor certlfled Oiet•ry Manag• or
811parience eqt.ality accepted.
Competlve benefit package offered. Send ruume to :

8ab'(sitling in my home acroaa:
from Addaville School. Call

TAKE THIS JOB AND LOVE IT
Nat:ionel Company h• lmmedi ate openlnga for ten sharp man
&amp; women a.er 18. Free to travel
New York City, Rorlda, California, E1sternS. Western coastline
end re1um· •t ftndom 111ntf'lry.
C.aual wDfking conditions witt!
congenial voung group. E•ceptional e•nlnga plu1 bonua. If
hired must be tree to ltlrt
immediatety, We lrlif'l, For paraonel interview con•ct Ms.
flllbeck at 814 -448-0090.
ThundiV &amp; Frldav only, from
10.4 PM. Ptrent• ¥118tcome at
interviM withrtturntrlnspotU·
tion guaranteed.

31

Rick Pe•son Auctio,_.. ll·
Cll'llld Ohio ., d W•t VIrginia.
Eatate1 antique, f•m. liquid•
tlon aelea, 304-773-1788 .

9

Wanted To Buy

W. PI¥' c•h for late model d..,
ullld ..-a.
Jim Mink Ch• . ..OI.Inc.
8111 Gin a Johnaon
814-4411-3872

3 bedroom homoan41ots. Greer
Road, Hillview. 304-875-4018.
Grand View Hgts. -3 bedroom
tlome with family room, woodburner, 2 acres of land,
t 55,000.00. Shown by appoint ment. 304-675-1175.

814-387-0194.

Ba_,sitting in afternoon &amp; evenIng 1fter 2:30. Full or Plrttlme.
Good reff!renoos. Call 614 -258·

1322.
Yard care, brush cuttln!)J. light
h.,.ling, aometreetrimmmg and
ramo .... l. Bill Slack 814 -9922269 evenings.

Will do odd jobs. Lawrence
Cundiff. 614-949 -2314 after
5p.m .

a•.,

sitting in my home, anytime. tltN"e references. 304-88 2·

2947.

Hou• deaning In Point Pleasant
and Gallipolis are•. experienced
with references , 614·446·
2139.

Must •II nice 2 bedroom home,
118, 900.00, good location,
shown by appointment. 304675-6839 or 875-1553.

3 bedroom. ex.c cotld. fenced
back ,ard, total electric. very
nice, TBVIorRoad, Camp Conley,
304-675-6353.

In New Haven. 3 bedrooms. 2

ba1:tls, large living room, fire-

place. garage, 830. 000.00.

304-27 3-24 71 .
Tri levtl brick •nd wood frame
hou•. 4 bedrooms. 2Yz baths,
family mom with wood burning
stow. double lot, 1 mile fTorn
Point Plelllnt, priced re•ona·
ble. 394-675-797J .
3 bedroom newly radaoorated,
new c.-pet, large corner lot,
fenced, abo~ ground pool. ..
reduced. 304-875-2570.
..

46831 .

2 Yellow Page Sal• people
needed. Will trein. Only flo ..
with minimum one year Nl•
-~lance .need apply. Sand
resume to: Box Cia 172, c/ oOallipolis Oalty Tribune. 825 Third
A.,.., G1tllpolit. Ohio •5831 .

Y'•·

859,230
Now hiring. Your
•e1. 805-887-8000 Ext. R·
9 805 tor current Fedellll lilt.
.,k)b hunting? Need a sklll1 We
train p.,pla for joba u Auto
Mechanics. Carpant.a, Cosmetologlats, Diversified MediCI!
Workers, Electrlci.-.. Food Ser·
vioe VVorkers, Electronics Technician•. ln«ltltrill Meintln1nca

Workert, Nur..ngAIIIs•ntund
Orderliaa, MacNnilts. Office
Worker~ lf'ld Weldlrs. Regilllr
now for a .... beginnirlg Oc·
tober 3rd. Call Tri-CountyVoca·

tiona! AduttCent•at 75~3&amp;1 1
ext. 14. A varltrtv of funding
sources to PIV for •lnlng er•
availlble tor lho., eligible.
Do you hiiVI thll1 plrit of c•lng7
There are many job opportunlt ill
for health care workers. Baooma
1 veluabtemember of the health
c•e teem In juat 18 'Nitkt.
Enrol now In the Nur.. ng
Anl. .ni-Or.,.,. program It
Trt-Countv VaCIII~nal Sohool··
Adu n Education Cen•r. N..d
money tor trtlnlng7 WI hav• 1
Vlrlety of funclng aourc.avlll·
able far lho. ellgtbl&amp; Aegitter
now for the ct.- beginning
October 3rd, clll 753-3111 •t.
14. Catch the Sc&gt;lohl

McCLURE'S RESTAURANT
HIRING. Cooks Mid wear~s­
neaded. R•um• being takan
1 :0().4:00 p.m . Tueldavs end

Complet1 hou ..hol• of furni-

Earn axtnt Income. Mott.rs &amp;
Subltltd tiiChWI
axtnt

&amp;.

AucUon,

Third

114-4411-31!9.

•

Olive.

~

~'

••
.
•
&gt;

Hou.neepers needed- Gallipolit. Rio Gran de a rae. Send
resumes to: Box Cia 171, c/ o
Qellipolil Ortllv Tribune. 825
Third Ave. Gallipolis. Ohio

ThundiV• 11 .479 Jackton Pike,
Cloltloolle. wiiMe h... bthlnd
MoC,urea 1'11118Urant.

0011 heltwa. Swain' a Furnltu..

~

•

TOP CAl H peld fDI '83 model
and nerw• ..-d c... Smith
Buiak·Pontloo. 1911 Eoatern
Ave.. Oltltpolo. C.tl 114-4482282.

tUre &amp; antiques. Alto wood &amp;

'

'

.

Will do babl(titting in nw hemeWeekdava. Call 614-446-8199.

Adminiltl'lltor-Cire HtNen of Pt.
Pfltllllnt, Rt. 1 Sox 326. Pt.
PIBIIsant, W. Va .. 2&amp;5&amp;0. E.O.E .

Real Estale

Sri~ 1nd cedar ranch house. lA
line Aug. 19. call 446-4367. acres in Bradbury behind
Reg. No. BS-11 -10568 .
WMPO. lar~ 2 car garage. 3
1
bedrooms. INing room , central
air-heat, woodbu rner, water sof·
18 Wanted to Do
tenet, nMiy remodeled large ,.
kitchen with Jan Air Range.
g•b~~ge dispose!. dithwaaher,
utility room, l.,ds::apad nic.efy.
Doz.- &amp; Backhoe Work-850 Seen by appointment only. Call
Case dozer. Re111onable rates . 814-992-5751 . $81,500.
• '
Experience operator. Cremeens
Const. Call 814-256-1718.
Homeand3acres, lh mileoutSA -.
143 off Rt. 7 . Call 814-882Typing Servlce-lettan. term 2904.
papers. ruumes . etc. Accurate
&amp; confidentll. Call 8,4·446· Home in country with land tor
0786.
aale. 614-992-5848.
To take care of an elderty fl8rson 3 bedroom house. large basein the elderly person's own ment. aluminum Jldlng, fully
home. Have 22 yell's expe- cwpeted, in Pomeroy. Call 614'riance. Call 614-448-2690after 992·7887.

eligible for licensure. Apply at
the Gellia County Health Department. Courthaut8. 12 locust
Street, Glllipolla. Ohio 46631 .
Phone 'number 614-448-4812.
ellt. 292. Equal Opportunity
Employllr.

Government Jobs. t18,040·

2734.

i!§ Licensed
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
CNnical Audiologist

CHARGE NURSE
Plellllnt Vallay Nursing Care
C•nter. 100 bed skilled nurtlng
fdlty IOCMed In PointPieM8nt,
WV1 Ia ...king a registered
nur.e to uauma the duties of
tun-tim!! chMge nurse. Thi!l
position is open immedhrtely,
call Kathy Thornton at 304-67.55236. Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center Is an equal oppor·
tunit, employer and ·alflrmhNe
action empiO'fl'r.

Lost and Found

Lost: out of carln Holzer Ho1pital
P~Jrklng lot. .,.now tom c.t. 1 eye
missing. Childs pet. C.ll collect
814-742-21107.

REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

References

Speart, 30~675-1429 .

Business
Opportunity

•

PAT HILL FORD

Service on All M .. es

to good home. Would
make good stud do g. Call
614-992-3681 .

Chlha~h.,

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
healer cores. Wt can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

AVON·Neact

21

AVON , ell areatll Shirley

-:-

OWNER / OPERATORS
DEWUNE.INC.

Annou nee 111 en ts

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Help Wanted

EARN EXTRA MONEY c~Hing
the Summer. Get out of the

Gutters

FREE ESTIMATES

AVON • All ar811. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2845.

Con•r.

ROOFING

FinanC!dl

Help Wanted

Earn extN Income. Mothers &amp;
Substkum teachers earn &amp;lttrl
lnoome In Education Sales. Sat
your hours. World Book Inc. Call
collect 814- 678 -2813. Su e

~ mp lov 111 en I

Servtct;s

Most Foreign and
Domntlc Vehicles
A/C Sttrvice
All Major 8t Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

DIPAII.-T IIIIlS

992-2284

Buy -Standing
nmber. Ref«encet avallablf.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

SYRACUSr, OHIO

GIO-G UDICKOGY·

•

Wanted To

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

oROO~ING

PLEASE CALi
FOR REGISTRATION
·~

WANTED

Authorized Stnitt
&amp; Ports

HOODED JACKETS

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
RoofinJ
Seamless Gutter
Re~lacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
· Windows

Reasonablti

"At

an inltNmft in writing. pur:
porting to be the t..t Wit and
T•toment of Glt11 0. 0....,
De- !ott of Mtigl
County, Ohio, P'oducod
in Court, .,den _..,.
1ion to admil the tame to ~
on the ...,. dll'f
modo In the Court. The oppl&gt;
eolian h • - 1101"" hewing
before thi1 Court on Thursday. October 27, 19SS, •I
1:30 o'clock P.M.
Wltne.. my hand end the
Hal of the Court, 1t Pomeroy, Ohio, September 12,
19SS.
Robart E. Buck. Judge
!91 16, 22. 29;
(101 6, 13, 20, 6tc

BOGGS

Briggs &amp; Stratton

SIGN UPNOWI

'
Limited Stating

1.12 l mo.

SMALL ENG1ii"1
REPAIR - I

versatile
machines.

SEE IT TO BEUEVE

992·5083

9/15118/tfn

exciting and

SINGER QUALITY

H.ours 10-4
Eveninp by Appointr~ent
2 miles tow1rd Albany on
SR 681.

446-3487

,SINGER~ SEMINAR
Stop by and see
the many
practical and
creative uses
for these

SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP
Gently used
consignment
clothing for
children.

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.
IICIIOnablt latu

THE PUBLIC UTILITms
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Na.noy L. Wolpe,
Secretary

SON HAVING AN INTER·
EST IN THE ESTATE
OF GLEN 0. DEETER, DE·
CEASED. LATE OF STATE
ROUTE 24S. LONG BOT
TOM, OHIO, MEIGS COUNTY PROBATE CASE NUMBER 26964, DOCKET ,N.
PAGE 48. You ooohonby noli;
fied thot on AutJ11122. 19S8:

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Wanted To Buy-Uaad Mobile
Hom•. Call 814-448-0175.

I/15/Hn

Complete DrywaH
Service
FREE ESTIMATES

•

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF
ANDREW MEYERS.
DECEASED, CASE
NUMBER 251!11.
DOCKET N, PAGE 4S
PUBLICATION BY NOTICE
The name of Andrew Meyer• wu erroneousty added
to the Ppbtlc Notlct on tho
11tate of Gten D . Detter.
The name of Nid Andrew
Meyers ahoutd not have
been Included in ""Y port
of Probete Ceoo Number
218&amp;4 bting the 11tato of
Glen Q. Deeter.
Robert E. Buell, Judge
Probttt Court
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF OLEN 0.
OEETE,R. DECEASED,
CASE NUMBER 211914.
DOCKET N, PAGE 48
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
TO JOHN ANDERSON
DEETER. ADDRESS UN·
KNOWN. BEING A PER·

Free Eetimates ,

•

•

Public Notice

Call 992·2772

446·7390
1112/'11-tlc

•

Wanted to Buy-Standing timber.
Coli 6t4-379·2758.

CUSTOM BUll T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Public Notice

Juntc C.rs with or without
motort. CaU larry Uvelv-814-388-9303.

Approx . 10·20 ICfM·Bidwall
Dlttrlct . Re•onable.
C11l 814-448-8297 weekdays
after 4 :30. af'lytime weekends.

1·3-11· 1 mo. pd

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Public Notice

mayer, 814-246·6162.

Furniture 1nd applianCH by the
piece or entin1 hou•hold. fair
price~ being paid. Call 614-4463158.

P0111eroy, Ohia

---====

- IDOO .. MD ......
I «10 .. "''"lOAY

I

Space Center prepares for worst

Taking Applications From Middleport Area.

-·

hold furnishing. M•lln Wede-

=s::::

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Augutt 28. 19SS. in
the Meiga County Probllte
Court. Cooe No. 25959,
Mary G. Nopper, 31641 Rod
Hill Ro.id, Lengovillo, Ohio
46741. wu appointod Ex•

Yucatan portion of Mexico. (UP I)

.

"''·II

-·
·-·-...
..i ...:..."Tt..

~M

Clu.i/ied pop• co"e' 1h1
fol,.wtng te4ephoM e.tc#lanpt ...

~

Public Notice

'.
'·
day after the storm had passed by to threaten the

Become
a Daily Sentinel carrier.
.

" '··
• .•

Want to buy : Used furnit~o~re and

anttquea. Will buy entire hou"·

1-----------f

~

''D0" '" •uYonn

flllo••
IUHO AY'"'""
UHO

Elizabeth R. Jordan, dec. to
Mendal W. Jordan, M. Walter
Jordan, DuaineA. Jordan, Melva
Faye Crabtree, cert. of trans.,
Columbia.·

Earn Extra Cash!

,.,-~

n.-v ot..,.. ,...,.,.,,....

WIO ... UOAO~Piill
TMIIIIICAV Ml'fO

Meigs Cnunty
property
transfers

Wednesda)' and given the John·
son Space Center's location near
Galveston Bay, NASA managers
were not taking any chances and
offici als said the center could be
evac uated as early as Thursday.
In the meantime, managers
ordl'l'ed 21 sleek T-38 jets. used
by KASA astronauts and statl·
oned at nearby Ellington Field,
to be flown to Air Force bases
farther Inland Wednesday and
Thursday.

f:~~""::"

•uno•• , .....

Betty J. Nor ton to Betty J.
Norton, Carla J . . King lot,
Pomeroy.

SPACE CENTER. Hou ston
people a brea k."
(UP!) - Johnson Space Ce nter
NASA hopes to launch Discovworkers. "expecting the worse,"
ery the week of Sept. 26 and th~
braced for hurrica ne Gilbe r t ·space agency could Ill-a fford
Wednesday with a special team
major wind or water damage to
s tanding by to safeguard NASA 's
its m ission contro l complex,
crucial mission control center If which is where s huttle flights are
necessary .
planned and executed, or to a
At the Kenned y Space Center
nea r by antenna facility where
In Flor1da, Rear Adm . Richard· teleme try from shuttles Is re·
Trulv, chief oi the shuttle pro- celved fo r analys is .
gram . .said he decided to delay
But the Texas coast was
set tlng a firm dat e for the shuttle clea r ly threatened by Gilbert
Discovery's launch later thi s
month on the fir st post·
Challenger flight because of the
threat of the hurr.ica ne.
"Even if the hurricane does n' t
hit Houston, it is threatening
Houston and we ' ve got a lot of our
people there who have to turn
their attention to their family and
their homes as people are doing
over the Gulf Coast," he said.
all
..;:'
"We justleltllkeltwasgotngto
put additional pressure on those
people and It wasn't necessary.
We just decided to give our

t1W
1\tll

...
OIIW
Al . ll

11

Wanted To Buy

9

=~· ·

Celestine Cordero, dec., to
Monserrate Cordero, cert. of
trans., Rutland.

Georgetown harbour Is still feeling the backlash
of winds from Hurricane Gilbert Wednesday, a

..,_ _,

puo""''
· .,
_,.o
.. .,_

Donald L. Stivers, Noell Beth
Stivers to Donald L. Stivers,
Noell Beth Stivers, parcel,
Middleport.

WINDS STILL 'fHREATENING- This ship In

. ...
. ...
" '-·
t.U _. ,

-~--------·

CO&lt;'~

the Island was spared from devlstatlng damage,
but some flooding was reported. (UPI).

•

...

...

..... ; ....

,.

...,.

....
1-N

-...-·---·~

,...

AU · Interested parties
will be given an oppor·
tunity to be hea.rd. Fur·
thor lnforma.tion may be
obta.!ned by contaotln'g
the CommissiOn.

··~~!f~ iii~~~~

,..,. .,. ....w• ... ...

JINoft
......
MMll

--··---.._........
..... -.................. .
·....................
----·--·
...-_
..
_
---·-·-

I

"

AATI!J

CldSil SIMIA1'

l'IIUCOll

"'

BACKLASH - Heavy surf sdll pounds along a
sea wall in downtown Georgetown as the backlash
elfect is felt from Hurricane Gilbert Wednesday.

Business
Services

• •

1. .. :'

17

The

Ohio

••n

Income In Educltlon SliM. Set
your hourt-World Book Inc. Call
coll..,t 814· 178-2813. Su•

Con"".

·'--·--Galliiiolis ..........
8t. Vicinity

Garage Sale- Moat items % price.
9-6 Thurs. &amp; Fri. B. Wooldridget+N, 160-4 mi. n. of Holzllf.

.......P&lt;Imerov--·········
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Moving Sale-At. 141 12.2 mi.
peat Village Quick shop) on left.

TV, stereo. tlbte.
sutts-•z S, misc. Sepl . 14-17. 9
AM·7PM.

(:ablnets,

7 Differentl!l· Clean t Adu Its,
t.and nMne ctlildren, Misc. 15 &amp;
18 . 3 miles out 160 at
Evergreen.
1083 Second Ave. Wad. -Sept.
14 thru Sat . Sept. 17. Good
clean clothes&amp;: ooats. 26 cents
each.
Two Femity-Lots ot stuff. 9
o'clock Friday. First houte on
right paat Senders Drive, Neigh·
borhood Ad.
3 mi.-775. 14x22 grean carpet
A pad, new &amp;. u aed ev~rythin g.
15th, 111h. 17th. 9-5 ONLY.

6 Family-Sept. 17. 8-1 Furntture, fishing needt, home lnte·
rior. clothes. Rt. 141. Centenary
Townhouse .

.. ............... ... ···-·· ....... .
Big yard sale. na Oliver St.
Middl eport. Wed 14, Thur. 15,
Fri. 1 6. Antique drm~ser. ta..,p
shades , clolhing, knick knacks.
giltSI\Mire, oil haMer, lots lots
more.
4 femily . Wed. - Slit. Noon.
Adult end children clotNng.
misc . itams. 3 m iles out ForeSt ...,
Run Rd. look for signs. 614- ~ '
949-2693.
,..

6 family. Thur. In d Fri. Sept . 15
and 16. 9-4. Arba~gh Addition.
Tuppers Plains Clott.inq tor an
tamllv mernbers, hunting

clothes, Ja•ns. sports jackets,
victrola. po t bellied st[MI, Avon ,
bottle.. ceramics, shoes, new
curtains, cushions, furniture,
other Items too numerous to
mention.

....

'"·

Sept . 13th · Sept . 17th. 685 •

Two Famitv Y•d Sal a. Sept. 16
and 18, 9 :00 until duak. 424
Fourth Ave., Kanauga, Ohio.

Genet'al Hart. Pkw. Hom e inte- '
rior , clothln!;!, linens, bods· ~
preads, blanketa, good winter
coats, dlthes and much more.

Sat.. Sun .. &amp; Mon. 20181h r••
E.•t•n Ave. New "wing ma·
chine, bed tremea. console tv,
two chelrs. bean bag chair, nii!IW
winter clothes &amp; oo111s, llroU•.
bl.,keu, dres•. chest, .....

Furniture. clothing, baby
clot,_, knlck· kacb. KeUy Dr.
oft Oeorg~'s Ck . Ad. 'n'lurt. &amp;
Fri.
Community Y•d Slle-From one
at Shc:i.-trlng Ridge to th1
othtr ond. 11m to 17tt.. 9:00 to
1 :00. Clothll of all tlHI,
turnhu,., aquarium whh fish &amp;
stand, home interior. hou.ehold
gooda. handmade woodw-ork
.
and tots more.

.. .....PfPTeiisiinC ... "; ·
&amp; Vicinity
:·.
·················-·················
Yard Sele. 2515 Mt . Vernora .. •
Aw. ThursandFridty, 9:00rill7.~ ..~
Sofl'll .antkluea, women, men , ~
and ch1id~,.., clottling, electric

moMr.

MIIC

itemt.

Yll'd Sale, 1It hou• on Rigtlt on
Broed Ru" Road from New
Haven Sat. Sept. 17.

•

·•

�Page-18-The Daily
32

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

51 Household Goods

LAFF-A-DAY

Mobile Homes
for Sale

w / Willi

room . 2

c•~ ·

54 Misc. Merchandise

amber 16, 1988

•

KIT 'N' CARLYLEII by Larry Wrtpt

••ood

SWAIN
Se..oned Olk
tor ....
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12 tl&amp;lood. 814-742·21U.
Olivo St., Oolllpolls.
NEW· 8 pc. wood group- 0399. Whlflpool .... l&lt;ld .......
Uvlng room auitt4:- 1189-•1599. 810.00 •• il. I hp motor blk•

U.ndcontract, large tjying room
w /e~tplndo

Th

llR ..

air condition,

w l orwh:houtfurnitu,.. NM. g•
furn1ce on prNate lol, Mev rent
lot. Cell 5 to B PM. 614-4481409.

*'

, lunla beda with beddtng- 12C9.
Full
man..- • foul')dedon
•t•rtlng · e99. Rtcliners
ldartin~t 119.
USED-a.•. dr•.-s.bedroom
Oltkl. Wflng«Withtr. 1
compl. . Une of uted furnltul't,
NEW- W.•n boots-- 1315.
Wortl:boots e11 8&amp; up. (StMI •
oolt 100). Coli 814-448-3159.

9594.

20150.

Pr....-wd wedding gown with
TV. lon~h· t!OO. Coll814-388- mttching veil. garttr •d slk
8820.
•
bouqtM, lize B. 8210.00. 304-

1969 Aleh.,dlon 12lc70, 3
bedroorl'll and eMpindo livin·
groom. $4500. 1968 King

12x70, 2 bedrooms end ~ ­
pando lvingroom. $4600. See
at 314 Third St.. t(aneuga.
B 14-446-7473.

Used full aize Hlct.l-btd. Corbin
II SnyderFurnltuN, 951Second

...

Avo .. Oolllpoh.

8a/IJO
~

75 . Boats and

•«11"-Daya
t!J 8llowlll.t Today

55 Building Supplies

24ft. HerriiPontoonboM. 35hp
Mercury mot«. Excel. cond .

BuHdlng Material•
Block, brick. sewer pipes, wlndowt, lln•lt. etc. Cla.cle Winters. Rio Or~nde. 0. 0111 814-

76

11J Cai10oll EljiNN
tiD Fondengo

LA- and Slllflly

8:01 (J)

8:30 a

(J)

i

Auto Parts

Ownoo ""'"'"' lo sell-1970

COloring book!"

King olnd b&lt;od. Thiele podded Coner,-e blockl· •II llizes. 'fllrd

Ill
caaIn ·
e II))ec
WKIIP
crncrnnau

Ololo. Coli 814-44&amp;~~~o;.•o•loo 8175. 814-949- GollloOiio,
2783,
luxalre electric 220V 8 t 000
WESTERN RED CEOAA

IIJI-Po111co'IIJ

Few n 12x70 on rented lot. Call
or 245-5539

61~245-9519
oftor 6 PM.

~~~~~~~~~~:j~~~~~~~~~~
l42 Mobile Homes
Apartment
44

for Rent

1986 Ntwport, 2 BR ., 14x60.
ONner moving-highllt teuonable offer a cCf!Pt&amp;d. Must be

seen. Call before 1 PM 814-4463041 . weekends anYtime.
Must •111acrelandwith 12x86

trailer. 12K24 room edded on.
Call 814-742-22·3 9 afttr 5 :30
p.m.

1986 14K70. Exc. Cond. 304-675-7988.
2 bedroom. needs repair 8750, 2
bedroom • ready to u• and
alr1111dv hooked up. 81900.

304-675-2722.

1986 Broadmore by Fleetwood.
14x52, 2 bedroom, all electric.
elCC cond. eall304-676-2852 or

' 676-2004.

.

: 1975 Windsor
rooms. extms,
•ton air concl.
miiV be rented,

;~
25~9~1~--------------­
; 1974 mobile home 121.86, lot
50x1 30 , Henderson.

014.000.00. 304-676-8725.

1970 mobile horne 12x85, 2
• bedrooms, furnished, elt tra
, • room, 86,000.00. James Jaf: teres 304-576-2814.

33

Farms for Sale

30 acre fllfm on Raccoon Creek

or 1111 houtt and one acre. Call
614-245-9576 Of' 446-.6764.

4'8

acre f•m . Price r~cad
$2,000 for quick sale. No
buildings. Excellent building
;hes. 1 200ft. frontage on black
tOp road . 3 miles from Rio
Grll'lde. Rt. 554. Price$34,900.
Call 30._523-8658
Mini f•m for sale. 6 acres.
Rutland area. Call Michael at
614-992-2143 or 614-992-

8373.

34

2 BR . mobilehomeatEvergreen. Beech Street. MiddiiPOft. Ohio.
No Sundav Calla Please. c.n 2bedroom lurnlthed.partrra1t,
614-379-21178.
utlttlet ~hi. ntferences. Phonlt

304-882-2586.

2 bedroom mobile home. Electric. furnished. Deposit and referenoe. Adutt1 onty. Ntt pets.
614-742-2014.

2 bedroom. fu rnlshed. In Racine.

Coli 614-992-5039.

2 bedroom motMia home half

mile out Jericho Road. references required. call after 5:00PM,
304-675-1082.

Mobila ttomu-furnished $185.
&amp; S200plusutilitl•. 304-8756 512.

14x70, 3 bed- Two 3 bedroom trailers. all
GalliPQiia.,Ferrv. phone
woodburMJr, 3 electric,
distwo.esher, lol 304-675-4088,
304-675-5067.

Take over payments 1981 Na shu!IB mobile home. 1 4x70.
: 7x21 exp~ndo. 3 beWooms. 2
, baths, 2 porches. und•penning,
' outbuilding, fir place, 304-882-

.

Business
Buildings

2 bedroom apartment. carpet separate utiitias. 2208 Jefferson. 30~675· 6357 .

for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rent

1-----:_:___________
Now accepting applicetlont ftw

2 bedroom apartments. fully

carpeted. eppNenctt. water and
trash pidtu.- prOYided. M•inten•nce frM living clo111 to shopping. benkl and tchools. For
mo .. inforrnltlon call 304-882·
3718. E.O.H.
Dowmown modern 1 bedroom
apt. tum•hed. air cond. C.rp.,.d. Call after 4:00. 304-11763788.

1-----------Furnished upper half

45

Furnished Rooms

=;·=:;::=

14
__6_S
__p_ac
__
e_f_o_r__
R_e_n~t--­
Mobil a Home sptc&amp; 889 a mo.

Weter &amp;i tewer peid. Call 1514-

Lots

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT ,4_4_6-_3_8_1_7_
. ------------

Astlton, largo building

mobile homes pefmltntd, publi c
water, also rfvet; lots. Clyde
BOwen. Jr. 304--578,-2336.
8ea~tiful river lots one acre plus,
public water, Clyde Bowen. Jr.

304-576-2336.

25 a crt!' Broad Run Road. New

HBV en. Owner financing available. 304-802-3394.

Camp sit&amp; Bbove Coast Guard
Station 11nd He nderson Rt. 35,
has elac. &amp; septic syste m, .6 of
acra. call anavtime. 304-675-

Furnished· 3 roomt &amp; bath.
Clean . No pets. Ref. 6 deposit
required. UtiUtiea furnished.
Adults only . Call 614--446-

1519.

304-675-3073.

Spaces for rent. trailer spec~~:~ ,
waterS.. 1ewer furnlshed. Locust

Rd. Rl. 1. 304-676-1078.

luxurious Tara TownhouM Trailer space. 3 miles Sputh of
apartments. Elegant 2 floofli, 2 Pt. Ple. .nt at V oft Rt. 2 S.. 62.
·BR .. full bath upstairs, powd• ,3_0_4-_6_7_&amp;-_3_8_1_8_
. --------room downateirs, CA .. dis· • hwasher, disposal, private en- Modern office suite, 2924Jaclltranee. prMtte encla.ed patio, son Aw, Point PIHUI'It, 814poof. plavground. UtllitiiJS not 446-B221.
included. Starting at 8299 per
mo. Call 614-367·7850.
Commerclalofficeorconwnlent
c•ry out location. 1112 Viand
Furnished apt. New. NearHMC . St. for lease, phone 304-1751 BR . S275. Utilities .-id. C•ll 4035 d~s.
446-4416 after 7 PM.

Bachelor apartment-First class.
New furnitum , large fireplace.
Must have ~oodref. &amp; S100dep .
Choice location. Call 614--4481615 or 446·1243.
Small furnisMd aptrtm8nt. Cen·
trally located. Su'ltablefor 1 or 2
adults. No pats. Ref. &amp; sec. dep.
Call 614-446-0444.
Furnis hed apt.-1 BR . 1240a mo
Utilities paid. 243Jackson Pike.,
Gallipolis. Call446-4416after 7

PM.

Sal e • rent trailer, 4 lots.
city -wu/1 water, a-c. building
site. Nancy. 304-675-5540.

Furnished efflclencv ept. -3
rooms &amp; bllllh. Carpt11hroughout. Single working person only.
Call 614-448-4607 or 446-

304-675-7589.

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

Ni cety furnished small house.
Adutts only. Ref. requ ired. No
pets. Call 614-446-0338.
3 Of" 4 SR . house-Eureka. 1'h
baths . t275 a mo. Oep. required. Call 614-446-4222 betwe en 9-5.
3 BA . house in country near Rio
Grande. No pets. See. dep. $ 240
a mo. Call 614-245· 5439.
3 BA . house on First A\1$. S250a
mo. plu a depoait. One child
ac cophld. No J)ets. Call 614-

446-2300
In Pomeroy. two bedrooms,
garage. basement, applienCH.
washer, dryer. Write The Daily
Sentinel. Boll 729 l , Pom8f01i.
Ohio. Referen ces ~equired .
Smatl hou•. 1 bedroom. Suite. ble for 1 or2 people. Completely
fu rni s hed. Call 8'14-992-7751 .
Small house. 2 bedrooms, refet'e:nCft and deposit, 304·675-

1365.
3 bedroom hou!ll! New Haven,
8275.00 month pjus deposit,
304-273-2471 .

42

Mer c handi se

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished 2BR . Ca. Clble. water
tew•g• p11id Foster's Mobile
Home Parle. Call 1114-4461802.

2602.

Furnished apartmants-1 bedroom. 8150 &amp; up. Utilities s:-id.
Call 446-4416 after 7 PM.
Furnished ~:~fficlencies - $145 &amp;
up. Utilities paid. Cell 446-4416
,ftar 7 PM.
3 BR . unfurnished apt. Uptown
Pt. Pleasant . Call between 8-5,
614-446-5186.
Vin tOI'I- completly cemodelad
nice 2 bedroom. 1 acre. Waher.
dryer. stove, refrig., naw c.utains included. 823,000. Will
selllandeontract. C811114-3888 482 till 10:00.

Sat. 614-448-1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Galllpolt., OH.

GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Washers, dryert, rafrlg. .tort.
ranget . .Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Rd. bea1de Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu and chalrt priced from
t395 to $996. Tebt• t50 and
up to t126. Hld•t-beds eJ90
to 815915. Redlnen 8226 to
$376. Lamps 828 to e126.
Dinettu e 109 and up to t496.
Wood .. ble w -8 chalr1 1285 to
87915. Desk t100 up 10 t376.
Hutches e400 111d up. Bunk
bed1 complete w -m..-tre~sea
82915and up to 8395. Blby beds
• 110. MeHre~•s or box apringa
ful or twin t68, firm t78, and
SB8. Queen ..ts t250 S.. up
King i350. 4 drawer chest $69:
Gull cabinets 6 gun. B1by
mattrea•• t3&amp; a.. t45. Bed
fr11mes t20. 830 &amp; King frame
t 50. Good I election r:lf bedroom
suit•. metal cabinets. head·
bo.-d1 t30 and up to t8S.
90 O.V• time as cash whh
epproved credit. 3 Mllea out
Bulevllle Rd. Open 9em to 8pm
Mon. thru Sit . Ph. 814-446-

0322.

Valley Furntture
New lnd u ..d furniture and
applic•ncet . Call 614-448 7672 Ho
g 5
.
urs . ,

2 bftdroom Aptt. for rent.
Carpeted. Niet~ setting. laudry
facilitln available. Call 614992-3711 . EOH.

J II S FURNITURE
1411 Eastern Ave.
4 drawer chest, t48. IS drewer
Chllt, .54.915. 5 pc. wooden
dillnettetata. e19'9. 9&amp;.

EOH.

Apanment for rent. t225 a
month. Oepotit required. 614992 -5724. After 6pm or 992-

5119.

Newly redecorated apartments
avall!lble. Utilities p~~id . 82215.
per month. deposit required. Call
614-992-5724 -after 6 :00 or
992·15119.
Apt. for rent. $150rnonth. $100
deposit. No be• or drugs.
8 1 4-882·2904 .
Ba chelOr apt. PriWite entrance
with IJitio. wateJ Pilei. t130
month plut deposit. 1114-992-

7680or 814-992-8238.

2 bedroom. furnished. in 'syflcu •
t225 per month pluJ
dopooll. Woohor.....,. hook· up,
air. water DIMd. 814-992-7880
or 1114-992:-8238.

014-«&amp;-8658.

2 IR . mobile home. ul1furl'llshed. 817! a mo. $100 dep.
Call 614-44&amp;-3817.

APARTMENTS. mobile hornet.
hou. .. Pt. Pl.....,tlnd~llpo.
lit. 1114-448-8221.

c•peted. all utilities paid Mcept
electric. Sec. dep. requited. Call

County Appliance. Inc. Good
uaed sppllancee and lV sets.
Opan BAM to IPM . Mon thru

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Vllltge
Man or alld Riverside Apartm e nts in Middleport. From
818 2. Call 81 4 -992-7787.

One. two, or thr• bedroom
apertn.nta for rent. can 814992-2403, 1114-992-2181 . or
814-992·2780. Alk for Jactt or
Debbie.
·

Newly decontted,. 2 BR ., fully

51 Household Goods

Modern 1 BR . apt. Call 614446-0390.

6372 .

30 acn farm small tlouse.
private, back of Henderson.

WDOd kilchtn ClbiMtl, w.ll to
w•ll c•pR. 1•11 wtep eround
dedi, 2 c.- c•pon, CDncfMe

and -lod Lap Blcln9

Twin roiiMay bed with ln11trap- CETIOE. INC .. Athons-814·
rlng mattrell. UO. 114-992694-3e7a

3079.

56

304-875·3130.

53

PICKENS USED
FURNITURE
Complete
houSihold
furnllhlngs. VI mle out Jerrlcho.
304-175·14150.
For kJw prtces on au•ttv C.rpet
II Furntture oome to Mollohan
Furnttu,.-Upper River Ad .. 614-

OraVQnwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Persian and Slim_. kH·
ten1. AKC Chow puppiM. New
HitNiayan kitten1. Call 11144411~38 44 after 7PM,

.

New arrival AKC Boxer pupptes.

Reactv to go ., 6 w.eka. Cell
1514-388-8801 .

Buy or Sell. RiYerln• Antiques,
1 1241:. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hou~: M,T,W 10e.m. to tlp. m.,
Sunday 1 t&lt;~ 6p.m. 614-992-

English Settert·puppl• from

2528.

proven Orou• doga, F.D.S .8 .

Jelly cupboard. kitchen cupbo•d. fltt well cupboard. Call

bl-- ~oo... 3 - - hon-

drlvewa\f, beautifully lan~­
copodlot. COntider ot:hlr pra;
or • R\odel v.f'llde • pen
tl'lld&amp; Alto CDnaiHr L8nd COnITICI. Locaod In ..dolopolt.
Priced for. quldl .... App•lsed

:1'

for t.a.ooo. Asking t34.000.
814-742-2728.
.

r ,JIIII

Wheelchelrt-n8W' or u..d. 3
wheeled electric scooters. Call
Roger• Mobllty collect, 1 ~ 614-

61 Fenn Equipment
IH FermAMwithallltWchmMlts.
· V.-y ••DMble. C.llll14-4.8-

70211.

bal•.

175 MF W/No. 12
MF
0yn• Boun:e mowing rn.chlne
w/8 fl. buth hog. tiiiiO.
()Nner Wllh
Call 114-

n,..,ca.

::---::--c-::--c---

•

801 Ford WOrk M - ,;..,.,,

Registered male Beegle. 1 yr.
old. Hils all shots. C811814-4481847.

870.9661 .

AKC Boston T•rier, 3
Cell 614-25&amp;-9354.

fem~~les.

t3895. 9 N Ford

dlae. t1411.

fl ......

w/,_Ow,. wltl

Coli 814-2511-1122.

New Holllnd 31&amp;grktdar-mlxer.
310 Klllrot'*'gi'8VItybed on
10 ton rumlng gon. 350
au- Mckuny
bod ..,
10 ton running,.. .. N.w 1111181
2 row com ptcHr. John o...

gr-

170 Slcid ,.., looder. Doi-

Chtll.-.ge fMCier with tr11n•
ponders. Z•o800gal. mlllc•nk.

Coli 814-248-5815. v ...,..

32in.full, Model12- 30in. NS
full. New 10" Craftsman •ble

f4ll blooded Pekin... for •le.
Three month old female. Call

T1¥lor.

814-992-7259.

saw. """"' portable dllhwasher.

St. BernllrdmeleAKCregistered
dog. Born July 20th. Bea~tlful

One 12 ft. lime IP"ttd•. Box
with . .ln-. IIMI chlin. One
corn gr11v1ty bed. Calll14-7•2•

Modol12- 30 ln. fulL Model 1 2·

Call 814-44&amp;-3346.

Dog. 8250. 614-797-4893.

Baby clothes· 0-18 mos. boy~
new twing Mt, portable crib &amp;
other miiC. Hems. CaliB14-446-

AKC rttgiat•red Schneu1ar,
thota, WOf'rned, heahh gueran-

3808.

lee, 304-876-2193.

Three wheeled Scooter, new,
Nttery po¥118red, Indoor/outdoor. fitt In trunk. Ideal for older
person. Call 814-44&amp;8478.

57

c••

Call 814-446-2216.

PIANO FOR SALE
Wanted: Retpon1ible p..-ty to
tlke on small monthly payments
on plano. See localty, Cell
Manager at 618 -234-1308
anytime.

Maylag mini washtw tmd dryer

rinte tl.AJ . 614-742-3194
or 81&lt;4-742-2075.

with

300bal•ofhlP(forsale. $1 ,76
each. Seers eble model stereo,
record pltytr. 8 trick. noo.

61 4-949·2179.

Whirlpool electric dryer. Uke
new. 8125. Call 614· 985-

3848.

Gravely Tractor vvith mowing
deck and sulky. Good runn ing
condition. Callll14-992-2526.

ARM_Y SUAPWS {Advertlalng
Speaaltla. BuainRts, Political.
Allltams) . Fri. Sat, Sun. Noon to
8 :00 PM. Sam Somerville's
Iince · 1964. Regular · army
ISIUH, denim, rental clothing.
Jr. camouftage blk tnd whitl!l.
Ford 1976 •le or trada. JunctionlndependtnceRo.t At . 21 .

304-273-6666.

.

.ae.

To~ tlckl for
20c.nla
each. Mor_.. Woocbwn F.-m.

AI. 35, Pliny, W.Yo. 304-937·
2018.

•':J·

-n..
44&amp;-0181 ....

.

1984 Alumh.,.. ...., Van, runo
good, rencnbl•eiOO. 1880
GMc;: 11.... new U..t, nuw

Injection, .,to.. ,._.o intertor.
t · topS, loeded. 21.000 mil•.

Coli 814-4-48-4031.

.

Seaonad oak firewood call
304-8715-2757 after 4:30 PM.
Honda 50 Mini bike, Stihl chain
N:w; 1978 Starcreft camper; 10
ft . Mesh aeteUfta clth. 304-675-

King Margault tuaphone &amp;. ael
roto-tong,:. Call814-2415-l5691.
Attention Churches
Lowerv Encu re organ with
Magic Genie. EKCet. cond . 1300.
Call 814-245-9145.
Wanted : Respolllible party to
take on small monthly JBYments
on phmo. See locally. Call
Manager at 61B-234-1308.
anytime.
Individual gu liar l•tons. beginners. Mrious gultarltt. Bruicardla Music. 1114-'448·0887,
Jeff Wam•lev lnttructor. 614448-BOn. Limited openings .
Bundy TroniJone, good cond.
8100., 304-676·5141 or 8752068.
t
Yameha trumpet, 2 yrs old. Ml
silver, 832&amp;.00 . phone 304-

675-4229.

Signet 100 Salmoer cllrirnet.
eJCtrat end •tend. phoM 304882-3678 after 4:00.

58

63

Buy Oovllrnnwnt Miled •nd
aurplus whlct. from e100.

a. ..

Fordo,
yo. eo.-. tic ..
In your • • For hfo cell (102)

Reg. Pure BNd Umousfn B!Jis
for •le. Gefl~ie. Ohio. Call

814-256-1 187.
Si
mmon.,1 lulL 18 moo. old.
1.1 00 pounds &amp; 8 feeder celw1.
Coli 114-379-2798.

FALL FEEDER CALl' SAlEWEONESOAY-SEPTEMIER
21. ot 8 PM. AI -Including

Holtt81ns. c.ttle wfll .,. eccepted all day TueedaySep_._ 20 • up 10 2 PM,
Wtdnetday-September 21 .
Hauling_ .vlllilllble. ATHENS Ll·
VESTOCK SALE-1 milo- of
Albany on St AI. 50. Cellllock
Y~~rd 814-192-2322 or 1983 531 ennlngs.
Plgt for •Ia I -.s. old. c.tl

6f4-37S.2118.

ord Colto. Coli 814-742-2451.

&amp; Grein

BIIeboard elec. hHters &amp; ther·
most11t1. 304-675-2722,
12ga. AemlngtonModel11 -48
30 in full, MJtomatlc. 5 shot:
1280.00. 304-882-2742 after
4:00PM.
Sean~ best/ Kenmore 4.6 hp

vacuum IMeper. all artlleh·
rnents. induding electric po....,.r
head , 2 montht olct, wet
f429.00 will •II for f2&amp;0 .00.
304--875-6884.

8692 .

Bob' a Market •nd Clreenhou....
Mlton, w. va. now has Juicy
canning peach•. •rl.ne~8111's.
Stanley r,rune plums,
lspy
n&amp;W Me ntoth appltl. lMge
crop hardy fell gard., mumt.
Now ready, phone 304-7735721 or 'n3-&amp;900open 7dws.
Home grownwn•rmelons,Oloncord grepes, 304-878-1911 after S:OO PM.

'*'

condition. 79,000 miles.

01700. 114-ft2-3S04.

·- -.IOl&gt;...

ooclo. 304-418·1542.

Sale

Govet-nment lelnd Yehld•
from 1100. Fords. Meroedee.
Corv~~ttes . Chwya. Surp4us.
Buyert Guidi. (1) '801-117ISOOO Ext. -10188.
191158ulc*l.... le""' 4do-, ~"' ....
.... ....
cylinder, AC, cruiM, PS. Good
conct. Recb::W tCOOO. Cell
814-44e.OI71.

::-::::-:-:~:..:.;7:--------1184 Dodg• Colt 2 dr. &lt;41,000

mil... , " IPd. t2110. Clfl
814-379-2728.

27:Zfl.

::.:::::-:-:::-------1188 FordM·---~ohl.351

0 1 - e . 814-44&amp;-3872 or
773-5134.

1182 PDnttee Ffreblrd.air. •·t.
tires. be. Condition. Ch •~
-~ gooy. u,8oo. 304-87&amp;2748.
•
1980 ftlrmont Ford ...tlon
w.1en. ••- rumlng concl. &amp;

B1

EVE~YiHI NG

Of

::t A,-E'

THIS WE'E)c, IWT
NOW J:..'VE GOi
WRIT!R 1S C~AMp.

Home
Improvements

MW

- · · t1,1100. 304-878-20118
.. 8715·5141.

Cvl.

1179 Felrmont, I

auto,

AM-FM ,.dlo, lrol t480.00.
304-87&amp;-8159- 8,oo PM.

1980 luide Rlvo&lt;io. low mil•.
good cond, 304-1175-7141
evenings.

Trucks for Sale

1988 Alplno _.p compor,
t310. Cal1114-211-1115after

7PM.

Ford pickup truak tor •le.
83,000 mlloo. Call 614-.469 •• 8
- ·

=:-:::---:----:--1172 Chwi'OIIt pickup, exc ...

cond. 1970 a.ov.- plc:lwp. 4
opd. Coli 814-258-8&amp;74.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANO

...-an-

Unaordtlonlll Nfetlm.
local ret..,c:ee furnl1hlid.
free lltlmlt... c•1 COllect 1
1·11~237-0418, d., or night.
Aog•rsB-_sement
Waterproofing.
tee.

Cleaner, one helf mile up .·
Gooogoo Crook Rd. Coli 614- ·'

448-0294.

Concre~~e . .tic T. .lcs • 1000
gal .• 1100gal.end.JetAer.tlon
o-m. Foctory ""lnod ropolr
ohop. RON EYANI ENlER·
PAISE&amp;. Jacbon. Ohio. 1-800837-91128.

Roury or clbta tool drilling.
Molt well I co mplet..:t .. me day .
F\lmp •las and aervfce. 304-

73

v.,, AC.

.....70211.

1 979 Ford •wo F-210. PB. Pa.
Coll814-21&amp;-11(111.

5 PM.

1187- 2 .... point. 305

Mllnjec:llon, overdrive, 14,000
ml•. Wded. e.:et. oond. c.ll

1914 lronoo 2XLT ••4. Y-8,
.,to.. crulsll, air, tit. AM-FM.
hcol. concl. Coli 814-387-0531
or 441-1012.
1871 Otwy Van. V·8. 1uto..

AC. crultl. lilt. AM-FM. fullY
lnsut.ted &amp; c•petN. 1un roof.
• 1888. Coli 814-248-1040.
1171 a...,y luburben. 8 , . .
aenger. Elcellent condtion. A•

8:06 (J) MOVIE: llellle Hymn (NRI
(1 :48)
1:30 (J) 1111 A Dlfterant World
Dwayne finally ge1S a date
wlth Denise, but Whllley lago
along. (R)
(J) . (J) MOYIE: 'Tho Spy
Who l.o¥ld Me' ABC
ThUI'IdeJ Night Movie (PG)

,,

a

e

(2:05)

AHA!

YQ..JR FORCH U6HT5 AAE
RSAL-L-Y FL-IO&lt;ERIN6:,
YOLJ KNOW THAT~

eO MOVIE: 'Ratum of
Shortock HaiiiHII' C88
Thuroclly Movie Q.
11J1 Larry King UVIil
11J Thuraclly Night Flghla

hou• cell tervicing GE. Hot
Point. Wllthtfl, dryers and
ltouu. 304-1578-2398.

82

YOU HAD TO
STAY IN AFTER
SCHOOL--

CARtER'S PLUMaiNO
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

AC. AM-I'IIIItiOroo. Pl. PI, ,..,
d - 1S,IOO ..... Coli
814-311-11240.

1117 !IMIIIIII KXIO. 17110.
11118 IIMollltl KXIO. niiO.
Cllll14-317-7121.

1111 -Coli 814-311-1'770.
5 opd.
tiiiOO.

1111 --~~~~~ 440. 1.000
.,... Uko-oond. 1100. Coli

., .....1-40...

CIO-tlort 1 mo. old. n - 1318. Aoldna 12110 firm. Coli

., .....1-4011.

11118 Hooodo Xll20111 . A!Otwoa.
ml• S14-NI2414 or"304-171-1S83.

"I.HCyololol•--.,d
.. _
· · end
""
Handa.
Ks _
1 'I ......

, _.. 304-178-4110.

1 TOLD YOU
A HUIJIJERT TIMES
ABOUT PI!I!KIN' I!

KEEP YORE
EYE ON
TH' SCHOOL
I-IARI&gt;I !!

WHAT?

gE_Ing_o

tiD CIOOk ond ChaH

10:01 (J) SIIIJ Qllhlm CruNdl

10:30(!) ~~a--.

e101 0c1c1 Couple
• VldeoCoun1rJ

84

&amp;

•

Electrical
Refrigeration

Residential or C:Ommlf'&lt;:lal wirlr:'g. New •rvlce or repairs.
Ucenlld electiicl... Estimate
he&amp; Rid•our Electrieal~ 304-

$711-1788.

'IWE1tE'1 A f\.Y ,....----.
IH MY10LIF!.

General Hauling

(J) (J) • (I}

(DO.. on One

II.!!~· !;I

ill iiJA Today
ellll Nlwf)wed Qame
t!J lpofl8 Tanlgh1

·

Palrldt't

w• .,. HIU lng. 2 000

lor14-4•1dtllvory. 304-57&amp;-2311 or
4081 ·
.
87

Upholatery

Mow,.y's Upholnertng serving
trl oountyar• 23.,..... The beet
In furnttu• ullt.o....r~. Call
304-171 -4114 for frte
eetlfnlllel .

()) NFL'I
Mamanll
1977 AFC Champion Denver
Broncos (R)
(!J (I) Bf(l Mo,en' World of
ldello Moyers lalks with a
wide variety of people about
America's cholce.:CW.:'l
• «D Love Con
n
IIJI Monlyllne
® Twilight Zona world of
His OWn
·
101 Hltchcack .........

:Il=:.c-(L)

" &amp; A Wiler Service. Pools.
cisterna. wetls. lmmadiate ·
1.000ot 2.000gelon•dtllvery,

2118.

t

BRIDGE

PEANUTS

=CliMe
~lub
C

12:00(1)

of A =
car
Trana-Am Chlmplonlfl~
from Elkhart Lake, WI (T)

~ Nlglllll• Q

a ;,11[1:'Today

. . . . . . . . PJ.

e101 Twflllllt zIIIN•. . . .

.KQ
•At07632
tAK!OU

-..

WEST
.AS.

By Jamea Jacoby

.JI

EAST

u

.QBI

tQ7S53
This unusual deal occurred in the &lt; : :08947 4
+AK .Q62
trials , to determine the United States
SOUTH
team for the forthcoming World Team
.JI098732
Olympiad ln Venice next month. The
•Ks
trials were held .last June, and tile
members of our team - Bob Ham+J ass
man, Seymon Deutscb, Bobby Wolff,
Vulnerable: North-South
Eric Rodwell, Jeff Meckstroth and I
Dealer: East
- are glad that our bad result did not
spoil our successful effort. I certainly
Nortk Eu1
hope we don't have results ln Venice
Weat
It
like this.
p. .
PUB
Wben I was North, Bob Hamman
Pass
jumped to three spades after the one- Pass
diam~ opening. I played tile role of
Opening lead: 4
scientist and simply cue-bid four dia·
monds. Tben, when Hamman bid four r
spades, I timidly passed. Wllb a diamond lead, Hamman easily took 1.2

.

-..

u

+

L------------...1

tri~~the

oilier table, North jumped to
six spades. He thought tbat if South
ldj
t th
d
1
bl
cou ump o ree spa es vu nera e,
bow could six spades not be tbere?
Once again, with the diamood lead, the
slam was made. So our team lost on
this hand, and maybe I'm tile scapegoat. But ask me wbat I thought West
was going to lead if I bad bid six
spades, and my answer would be a
trump. And the opening lead ol ace
aod trump will in fact hold declarer to

only 10 tilcks.
1 dare say if any one of ua fails to
lead lrumiJII wben tbls situation arises
in Venice, that player wlllimmedio'~

______ ..,.
1Y take a gondola ride wilhoat
tbe
·gondola.

1stne.! IMCfl'y'• booU "JIICOby

by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

DOWN

I Coal
scuttle
4 Pierce
8 Solit:uy
9 Jewel
weight
11 Freshly
12 Tex
or Thelma
14 One of the
Trinity
15 Spree
16 Thr.eefold
(pref.)
17 Catch; trap
19 MGM"s lion
20 Sen. Albert

1 Integrity
2 Orchestra
gig
3 Moisture
4 Abrasion
5 Australian
marsupial
6 Skill
7 Gl's
concern
8 Hold out
10 Mother
22 Chessman
23 Dirty
13 Uproar
24 Plant
15 -- gun
fragment
18 Nonsense! 25 Darkened
21 11y nature 28 Worship

29 Clothes
31 Father
(Fr.)
34 Writer
Bradbury
35 Game point

-, .Jr.

21 Outdo
22 Min'c e
23 Couch
24 Strip
of wood

25 Rail bird
26 Written
letter
· 27 Suggest
30 Lawyer
(abbr.)

31 Buddy
32 Bridal
response
33 Flashed
35 Astonished
36 Finnish
lake
37 Mongrels
38 Steeped
in color
39 Shoe width

DAitY CRYPTOQUOTES _;_Here's how to work it:

9115

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

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

G Z

cuv

EQIPCZ

WILZVQTVZ

G ,P

UWPVM

cuv

&lt;111

Bridge ODd 'Ja~y m C.rd ( ' - ·
(wr1tten ll'ith bis lather, tbe lat. OJ..
wsld Jacoby) are DOw available at
bookstores. Botll are pub/J8be4 by
Pbal'OII Books.

CROSSWORD

···Night _.

Lillo
Batllng on a C88
high level
hockey game rasulte
th. (A)
® TNpper olalm, M.D.
S1antred lmoga
0 IUptlcle
tiD Amlltnn Mlpllne

.

1-11-11

NOJ\TB

Friendly lead
creates a swing

11:06&lt;1! MOVIE: Thii!!Prflncf
!"xprall (PG) (1:49)
11:30e(ll !Ill Tonight Show

.I • J Water Servfc•. Swimming
poale. cll•rnL wella. Ph. 814246-9288.

Wattlnan' 1 W•ter Hauling,
NMonebl• retu, Immediate
2. 000 gallon d......, . cls..rn 1
P oolo. -1. 'otc. coli 304-57S:

Ill .1121

a You can IIIIa 818r

Sunct-v Calls .

dollvory. Coli 814-892-5275.

-It

11:00()) hnllnglon 81Hia

Ol-

W..., de!K4ry . 1000 g.. ons.
ReMontble prlct~~. lmmedlece

TV. lullaoao .. _,..

FI!R

1 WAS PEEKIIJ'
AT SAMAIJTHY'S
TEST PAPER

448-4477

Dill..-cl Wiler Service: Pools.
C..._ns, Wells. Det lwry Anytime. Call 814-448-7404-No

2170.

Influences on conlelnporary
African lifestyles is explored .

O.lllpoUa, Ohio
Phone 814-,.48-3881 or 614-

18711 Food Yon, t2150.00. 3041711-5211.
71 a. ..y 4•4, 310 on~ 3"'

(!J 181 NIWI
(I) Tho Afllclno The

BARNEY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

85

lift. P&lt;loo ..... Oocl 304-.78-

eounuy
1:30 a 10:00 ()) 700 Club

Ak. . Trh Trimtmng and Stump
RemOOAI. Frfll e1tlmatea. Cell

304-876-7121.

(!) VIctory 111 Sea The Battle
fo1 Leyt8 Gu~
.
9:00 • (J) 1111 SUmmer Olympic
O.meo Preview Show,
hosted by Bryant Gumbel
and Dick Enberg.
(!J (!) MJolloryl Selly faces
prolonged queallonlng from
~lice, bu1 she has an ally.

i

8911-3802

3110onglno. Coli 814-9927781.

bul~

-

Mankey

RON'S APPLIANCE SERVICE . .

Vane &amp;4W.D.

e ())

tiD Naohvrll Now

Landocopeo, 114-44&amp;-9148.

'78 Ford truck 12.900.00. 78

•aooo.oo.

1:00 (J) MOVIE: Tho Hao1y Hean
(NR)(1 :39)
,
Ol Tho Coaby Show
Thee and his friends plan lhe
perfect prom nlghl for their
dates. (R) C ·
())Collegll'-H
(J)
(J) Flln111one Kldo'
Jullt Say No Special Young
Wllma and the rest of the
Flln1Stones cartoon kids learn
lhe velua of saying no lo
drugs as they sel out lo win
Uckels lo lhe Michael
Jackstone concan In the
Stone-Ago city of Bedrock.

~~~•• of 1lle Ookl .

Tree S.. tt~.mp Nmowl. tretl &amp;
shn.bs. ttone. mulch. griiVel,
firewood delivered . Don ' e

Fetty Trte Trimming. stll'l1p
remcnel. Caii304-171-1J31.

304-8711-1721.

EEK&amp; MEEK

8344.

1912 Otd:tun King Cab. 11 ,000
mil II, atuo. PS. PB. ,.. window
dlfoaatr. nloe tRICk, 304-17115-

8758:

® llenlon •
Ql VldiOCountry
7:36(1) Sanford llld Son

ec

Painting: Interior &amp;. EKterlor.
Free estlmertes. Cell 814-441-

$14-982· 3403.

dal. Du• ...,Jq. tltol box, &lt;400
Cu. ln. motor, cle~n truck.

IIIIMb.lll

0 Croaoflra

look a1 the hlslory of
Canada'a ralallonahlp wllh .
the United Slaleo. (NR) C
(!)VIctory a1S.a Two lfBy
See
11m
41 Houra
IIJI PrlmeNewo ·
181 MOYIE: Tholn•LIWI !PO)

RON EYAN8 ENTER PRIBESSeptlo tonk pumping- t90 l..d. Coli 1-800-537-9528.

RON'S Television Service;
Hou• calla on RCA, Ou•zer,
GE. Spocloling In lenhh . C.ll
304-576-2398 or 614-&lt;4&lt;46241U.

1979 Ford F250. Compor Sp•

•o

• «11 Major LMgue

~ Cenade: True Nor1h A

SWEEPER .,d .wlngmechiM ..
....-. peril. and suppll•. Pick
up and deeiwry, Devil Veaum

. . - 121100: l:oill 814-18111118.

1188 =a....... 2.2 Wl ~• I ood .. Pl. Pl.
AM·FM o-:Prloo Nog. Coli
814-311-1108.
.

LOG

()) 8paadWHI&lt;
(J) E-lniMftt Tonight
.&lt;I! USA Today
1111
1111 Jeopanlyll;l

e

Coli 304-1711-8370.

1188 aowrAollfltlort,..OOo.
38.400 m . 1Uio.. AC, till.
,.ultl, AM-PM - · Col
114-311-1240.

l&lt;fPT' A

Serviees

I M-IMI Trl._ Craig• riiN a
ttr. ., AM-FM· C.I, C.p181n

euto.•

.J:.

long, good cond, f3,999.00.
304-8711-8aea.

74 Motorcycles

211&amp;-1117.

·~·-

18ft. A,.,..on camper, _. up at
the Ohio River, •If contained. •

:::::::--::-----:-:-::::---,.1983 ComitO. 31.000 mil•.
loodocl. , _ pelnt • Cnolg•
,.dlolo. bool. oond .
111000 0110. Coli 814-2511855.

cwaH•.

7:30 ew Hollywood Squarao

DIET COUNSELOR

Wln.-w, •to.
lharpl
t3100. Call 114-lll-hl3,
Proctorvll&amp;

,..,_ -w-. Good
oondltlon. t1000. Coli 114-

........

18 ft. Terry self-contained.
Sleep• 11. Good cond . All
acceuorles- 81800. 10 ft.
Alum. John Boat. new trolling
motor. Ucan11. t20Q. Call814-

For• graetdtal ana nM or ueed
1rUCk or *'• •• Kenny Bills
11 Jim Mink Chevrolet·

lng 12800. Coli 814-248-5829.

[I dllspur I ,JIIIJII

1117 Dlwy.

CIOOk and c.....
7:06(1) 110 6

Clf',

1171 Ford Van. Vwyclt!M. Newv
tlrM • CtwOINI .......... New
1715 round bal• '-'· t18.00 'CII..,.. ~r II b-ry. Alk-

wh- •

Op., 1 days • wHk
Mandav·S.tunl.,, I AM· B PM
lund.,, 12 noon-S P'-1
LJvlng room ..H" 2 pc.- t219.
lwn~ ftlfting It t19.91, wood
dinette aets - t141 &amp; up,
hutch. . t219 • up, bile.,.
.-.ckt-f11 .111. TVIWidl.enter·
1ttinmem cent. ., d•kl-8&lt;48.••
S.. up, Qlau front gun c•bln..•• Z79, loodroom oulloo, lui ,...
rllilfttcl... IWtlng at 148.11,
bunk beds with beddlng-1229.

a

1174 Oldo. Coli 814-992-3490.

2018.

71 Auto's For

18 Banaon
II! Arrwolf San11nl's MIHions

&amp;Camp. .

ford AnfYW motor horns. 1 a ft

1977 Dodgo Pt...

1::84::-:Pio::-mo--Uih::-:Ho::-rlo:-..,--.:-d-:-r.. -:.
I·1-==========l======~==:.J ~1apd
. e2100. ·Cell 814-371·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beanie

IH ESE SQUA RES

The old woman crooned a lullaby In a foreign language.
I asked wha1 it mean1 in English . Puzzled she answered,
"Why it means 'the SAME THING I"

(J) PM Magulne

0 Monaytlne

79 Motors Homes

1971 Chrvolw Cordobo. Oood

114-24&amp;-1815.

Coli 814-246-15064 "' 4411-

P ~ INT NUM8E~EO LElTERS IN

Pagoda - Brash - Onion - Mentor ~ SAME THING

eo

Workm... 304-876-3972.

1988 Sun8tre~mMotor Home.
27 fL AC. O.n•tor. 2800
ml•. Pho,. 814-882-7329.

etuile. Re..an.bl&amp; Call 1114

Ground 1hel corn ea.oo
100, fdmlum etflllfe h.,, ltnw,
Morgan' 1 Woodl..-vn F•m. At.
35. Pliny, W. Yo. 304-137-

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

R8d Raspberrl•- Pit* your own
or we plck. Taylor's Bsrry Patch.

_

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

()) Spori8Centar (()
(I) • (J) ~ AHIIIr
(!J l!l MacNeil/ Llllrw
-•Hour (1 :00)
111
1111 Wheel of
l'or1unal;j
•«D TllrW'a Company

Ttudl topper with aamJMng
,,._..., 82110.00. Call ChMtar

1tl001awetll. Goadooncltion.

814-ft2-2201 .

Uncoln COntentilll

3 St1n dard Breed 'M er• 1
Stlnderd Breed Stud. 2 Stend-

Hay

a

198301dsmablle98. Motor and
tranamiaalon. 304-773-18111 .

842-1051 .... s•5s.

1971 DodGe "h ton PU. e?Oo.

64

uoo. Coil 814-24&amp;-

ohopo.

5&amp;9hflor 8 PM.

I _....;_....:_.:..._________

t1200. CAll 814-887-4389.

72

Uvlllto~

7988.

Aellllll trailer hitch. eomplete.
304-675-837 2.

_

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
10 GET ANSWER

7:00 ()) Rlllllngtan 81Hie

25&amp;-1912.

1973 AMX Javelin, 304 automatic. PS, good aond,
11.100.00 or btist off•. 304-

Bundy alto •xophone. Ukenew.

White riding lli'Nn mower. Con-

Mixed hllrd wood •labs. t 12 per
bundle. Containing appro• . 1 lf:z
ton. Ohio Pallet Co., Pomeroy,
Ohio. 814-992·6461 .

2455.

Musical
Instruments

Glblon Mat~r Tone Banjo
RBL2&amp;0. ElCCel. cond. f1000
firm. Call 814·268-18&amp;5.

8194.

814-446-4113.

:JI.OOOaab* mila Well Cllred
for. Runs I_Dod. 2 1oc.1 0 ~
Clll E.-1 Topo 814--.~
0 2 Fri.• or

4118-1897oflw 8'00 PM .

Trombon•good co'nd. Premier
anilre drum with ttlnd,
end
p,.C1ice ptd· wed ona year.
Te•length white '-:e for~NI ·
siz813. HomeliteX1.2chalntiW.
Call 814-388-8440 or 388-

ttet Credit Thrift of America-

*·· 3 .8.,g., P&amp; PI, AC.crulee,

~do
ol eo. w.n
,.,. •doaf1. AM·FM.

1983 Trant AM. Y·l. crollfl,.

nlcewHhl01 rnowlngmHhine.
1918 New Holl•nd baler.

614-317-0520 .

Ina t7110. Coli 814-4-411-8820.
1 as1 Cloowy Cop•oo Clo•lo. •

Oldl. ••
oood.·
uoo. Coli 814-44&amp;-7372.

(, [IVI'·,II•l'

AKC Reg. Golden R8triiMirt. 2
mel•- First shots. Call 614-

Pu"' Bred Beagles- 6 wkl. old.
Wormtd once. t60 each. Call

_

8:31 (I) Andy QrHfllh

Pontiac 301 engine . Good

- · duol . . kt-111100. 1979

2S&amp;-8522.

54 Misc. Merchandise 44&amp;-8263.

117•C.m.-o. lllun~good. A.k-

ell..... ,..

Sri!Jjlll·''

Ro-od, tli(). Coli 61··28&amp;-

24?0, JacksOn. Ohio

814-949-2914.

VIR•'• FurnHure

Unooln Pike. 814-44&amp;-3158 .

AKC Reg. Britiany Spaniels.
1100each. Call 114-4•8·8714.

_

®JefleraoM
tiD You C.. lie • Star

Julie Webb Ph. 114-448-0231.

Antiques

446-7444.

bc:eiiMt uNd appian'* with
30 days guar.,t•. WMhertegg • up, drv-rt. freaen.
r.trigtoMtort• ..ngee.
Uy•waya ere w.lcorna. Finenclna .vellable with apprcwed
crldft.
At. 141 inCentMI•ry·V4mlleon

Pets for Sale

o ·room •nd Suppty Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... All
styles'. lama Pet Food Dealer.

B•droom 1u1te Cherry wood,
Queen Ann ltyle, bed full or
queen tlze , triple dr".- with
mtrrow. double cheat, nita
ltln_d. exc cor.t. 81 800.00.

Spacious rTtoblle home lots for
rent. famitv Pride Mobile Home
P•k. Gallipolis Farry. w. Va.

Upstlin unfurrished ept. Carpeted, utilities paid No children.
No pets. Call 614-446-1837.

3 room apartment. 8100a mo.
Call 304-675-5104.
lots.

• Dick M.t•lals
GuaranteH ~allty

Arewood for Sllle: ft,ll•ed se•
soned hii'Mood. 836 for JA
cord . Call 814-379-21502. No
Sunda!Y Calli, Please!

30 4-676-5104.

&amp; Acreage

Beartlful 2 yr. old tCIIIIIIIIIIICirk

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK- • ·
SON ESTATES, 536 Jackson COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Pike from $183 a mo. Wtlk to Roua 33, North of PDmeroy.
shop and movl•. 614-4411- Rentll 1111il•1- Clll 614-992·
21568. E.O.H.
7479.

Ap artrmnts and houses. Call

35

• Channel Auadc

2661 .

1;;':~;·=~=::;:·

apartment &amp; mobile home in
city. Adults only. P•ldng. Call
614-446-0338.

BTU updraft furnace. Exetll81lt
worldng ord1r f125. 614-948-

'd upl-..

small. perfer single working
a~ h. e«peted and alreond. No
peb. 8200 a mo. plu1 electric.
Ref. &amp; dep. required. 304-875-

Furnlthed room-919 Sec:ond
A-... Glllipolie. 8135 a mo.
Utllitl• Jllld. Single male. Sh••
2 BR . apf!l. 8 clo18ts, lcitchen- bBth. Call448-44"11after7PM.
appl, furnished, W•her-Oryer
hook-up. ww c•pet newly Rooms for .ent-week or month.
painted. deck.
From t175. Starting at e120 a mo. Gallla
Regency, lk1c. Apts. Call 304- H0 -• 61•448 9580
675-5104, or 675-5386 or
676-7738.

Now complotoly furnlohod

or dalr,.ry. M11on ~end. OlllllpoUt lloc* Co. , 1231~ Pine St ..

Maytag washer and dryer, Se••
washer 1nd refrigerator, all need
work. make an off.-, 304-7736283.
.

e

(!J llody

_

Compleoe ohe &lt;huckle quoled

by l1lling in .fhe missing words
'--I.--.!......JC-...L.-._-1 you de velop from sfep No. 3 below.

(!l NlghUJ lulllneN Rapon

relit. 8 dra~ pedlttal. New
coiled air matt.... Md other

2989.

I

e (J)Electrtc
ABC Newa Q

800..826-0752 Ohio WATTS.

I

cRusoe
1--r,-rl-rl-"'1'-"1'-i
G)

1111 NIC Nightly Newo

Llglar 8ldl of SpOito (R)

(J)

8t Accessories

. . 246-6121.

My brother-in-law spends all evening bragging aboul how well he's doing , but when he's ready 10 leave he·
r----------'iwan1s 10 money.

sa-nm.o

304-876-14150.

Cell

rC-r'U-'BT---11

Deatll. Part 1

"I got caught cheating in my

Ohio Ananci&amp;t Service.

~-T-II _,Cr I I . ·~
i
K R I F S I~
•
I 1 I 1 I :;.

Voye1141 of llo Mimi
·
Dr. Who Ambassadors of

mi-. 1875.00 or beat 0H11r.
Phone 304-87&amp;-8918.

Motors for Sale

ec

()) 8porbLook

t32110. Coli 114-387-0447.

2 M'tl bunk bedl, 1 twin white
canopy bed cornpl•e. ch•t.
drelsera 840 &amp; up, more IPI·
cilia. P4cktn'l Used FurnHure

(J) • (J) ~~m

1111 News

'

(!J
(I)

878-8125 or 814-4-411-4808.

"Spoclel"

REPOSSESSED 14x70. Three
bedr:oom . Only S500down. taka

E.--a

• &lt;2l

ex &amp;DO Hondo 80modol. 11248

Se•s Ktnt110N alec. •n94J- e75
for 1h. pslr . 2&amp;" color consote

614-742-2984 Of 388-9739.

1:00 (J) llonenu: The Loot

1981 H•I.,Low Rid•. 17,000'
mP•. n• ttres. 13.100.00 '
firm . Call FrtU,. Seturd-v Of';

......... 304-4.8-10111.

I

II t DII j/ I I

EVENING

cond. noo.oo.304-875-3931.

c..

s... Ktnmo.. frolt-free rtrfrlg.

Schuh: 1 2x&amp;O w l'tip-out. Extra
good colld. Bett offer. C.ll

1981 Hondl .aDO CM cuttom
ltrMt bHit. one ow.., good

Cllt Iron b.th t~. clM feet. 20
gel atonelar wfth btuoll.nering.
,..., Ben FrenkHn type ..,.
gtas. . In wood
100 vn
old. Quitting tram•. lrot,_
Hood ...,..ina nwchine console.
Frenkln WGOd burner terten.
holf o,.lo. ond mloc. 304-8711-

•uh•.

1979 14 ~~:70 N•hua . Exc el.
cond . CA. 2 BR .. large bath.
~ar cerpat, underpinning,
dec* &amp; building. Call 814-245-

over loan. Free delivery. Mid

8315.(10. 304-87S.3842 efter

5,00 304-878-5181 .

cu8 c

IPOGPFPVZZ

GP

BPWCUVL. -- QBPFWL
Ye~~terday's Cryptoquote: WHEN WE HAVE DONE
OUR BEST, WE SHOULD WAIT TilE RESULT IN PEACE.
-J.LUBBOCK
C) 1988 King FoOIUf.. Syndlclta, Inc.

I

�'.

•'

r---

Thurad~y. September 16. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport•. Ohio

Page-2() The Daily Sentin!tl

Local news briefs....- - -

contlnued from page 1
William Gibbs to Hojzer Medical Center; Middleport at 12:59
p.m. to Front St. for Charles Gasket to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 5:22 p.m. to Carpenter Road for Sandy Evans to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6:53p.m. to Oak Grove
Road for Gretti Carnahan toVeterans Memorial Hospital.

Rain spreads ·~orthward to .eentral states·.
By United Preu lnternatloul
Plains states.
..
Whlle residents of Texas and
Much or the rest of the CQ·untJ"Y
Louisiana fled coastal areas tQ enjoyed pleasant, sunny
avoid ihe approaching furY · of weather.
Hurricane Gilbert, rain showers
In southeast Amarillo, Texas,
wrapped parts of. the central a pos_$1ble tornado touched down
United States In a wet embrace briefly late Wednesday night,
today.
.
destroying at least one mobile
In the Great' Lakes region and ·home and damaging several
northern New England, mean· houses, authorities ·said. No
while, residents were pulling on . Injuries were reported.
.
.
. .
overcoats today as temperatures
promised to reach no higher than · Wayne Belghle, a spokesman .
the 50s the · National Weather for the Texas Department of
.
· Public safety, s.atd early today
servlce'sald.
In Marquette, Mich., the mer-· that area ·rl!sldents · reported
curv plunged to a frigid 36 extremely high winds at aboutlO
degrees ear~y today.
p.m. WedQesday. .
Showers were soaking down
Belghle said there were no
the upper halt of the Mississippi reported lnj'urles, "an'd we were
Valley, the northern and central real fortunate because one rna-

One person
has
Super Lotto
ticket
..
.
.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
Ticket sales for the midweek
itcket worth ·$3 million· was sold drawing totaled $3,545,185, while
for Ohio's Super Lotto drawing · the total 'prlte payout was
WednesdaY n·ight, a lottery com- $3,502,812 . Saturday's jackpot
mission spokesman said today .
again will be Worth S3 million. ·
The ticket holder picked . the
There was no winner of the
winning numbers - 9; 16, 23, 26, $100,000 · grand prize in the
39 and 43- to become eligible to accompanying Kicker game
claim the S3 million jackpot, Wednesday night. The winning
which will 'be paid In 20 annual number was 400478.
pre-tax installments of $150,000.
The name of the winner will be
However, seven players had
announced after the winning the first five numbers in order to
ticket is validated at a regional win $5,000 each; 43 had the first
lottery office.
four, which pays $1,000; 505 had
In addition to · the top prize the first three, ~lllch pays $100:
wlnne.r , 96 tiCkets had five of the and 5,027 had the first two, which
numbers. making tbem worth pays $10.
1,000 ea·ch., while 843 tickets had
Kicker ticket sales totaled
four numbers, making them' $562,672, while the prize payout
worth $84 apiece.
totaled $178,770.

Firefighters mop up;
damage is $10 million

Including many who had hetln on·
the lines from the start, would be
sent home Thursday - "If
everything remains at status
quo," added planning chief Steve
Iverson.
Progress also was reported by
Local School District. She was a
Ernest Hawley
firefighters
trying to stop the
teacher at the Rutland Elemen·
spread
·
of
flames
that have
·Ernest !Nin) Hawley , 79, Ra· tary School when she retired In
blackened
1.4
million
acres .or
cine, died Wednesdav at Vete· 1970 at the age of 70.
Yellowstone
National
Park In
After her retirement, she Ita·
rans Memorial Hospital follow·
northwest
,Wyoming.
Park
spoveled extensively taking many
lng a brlef.illness.
keswomap
.
Sandi
Robinson
said
.
Mr. Haw lev , a retired worker trips abroad. In April, this year,
all
areas
·
of
Yellowstone
got
!tom th~ Parkersburg Rig and she enjoyed a Caribbean cruise
precipitation Tuesday. and Wed·
Reel Co. In Pomerov, was born with her two daughters on the
nesdav dawned cold with high
March 22, 19091n Pomerov, a son S.S. Norway.
humidity·and no winds.
of. the late James Hubert and · Mrs. Ogdin was a charter
The Boise, Idaho. Interagency
member of the Pythian Sisters
Elizabeth Bentz Hawley.
Fire
Center reported there were
Surviving are his wife, Clara B. Lodge 591 and was an active
curre1Jtly
21 major tires burning
Taylor Hawley; ·a daughter and member in the Past Chiefs Club
out
of
control
In the West. They
son·in-law, Ellen E . and Earle E. of the Pylhian Sisters. the Ladies
1.91
million acres of
covered
Showalter, Chester; a grandson, Circle, the Friendly Neighbors
forest,
brush
and
grassland.
Timothy E. Showalter; Chester: Club, Star Garden Club. Star
BIFC
officials
gave
this state
a sister, Kathryn Glenn. Colum- Grange, Home Demonstration
rundown:
lc)aho.
four
fires.
bus; two sisters-ln·law, Mrs. Club; the Meigs County Retired
195,433
acres;
Montana,
five
Thelma Hawley, Syracuse, and Teachers Association and the
fires, 393,719 acres; WyOming.
Mrs. Zelma Hawley, Minersville, Ohio Retired Teachers Assocla· .
six fires,1,224,500acres; Ca!lfor·
,..
and several nieces .and nephews: tion. She was a member of lthe ·
nla, four fires, 45,000 acres:
tsla
Besides-his parents. Mr. Haw· Old.Dexter Church but attel)ded .
Washington, · one fire, 53,120
the
Wilkesvllle
Presbyterian
881
OU
0
ley was preceded in death tiy nine
· acres; Oregon, one fire, 2,200
Church.
bro't hers and two sisters.
Many regular · attenders o.t acres.
She was a talented artist in oils, Meigs Marauder football games
Services will be held at·2 . p.m.
pen
and inks, and charcoals and are singing the praises Of the
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
California officials down·
her
works
were displayed locally Meigs Marching Band. Although graded structural loss to 92
Home with the Rev. William
Hoback officiating. Burial will be many times. Flowers were the size of this year's band Is homes and 57 outbuildings des·
In Chester Cemetery. Friends another of her Interests, partlcu· smaller than In years past, the troyed, with total damages est!·
may call at the funeral home larly African violets. She was an sound Is said to be great, mated at over $10 million. There
from 2 to4 and 7 to9 p.m . Friday. expert on violets and spoke to warranting standing ovations were some 500 minor Injuries,
many area garden clubs concern· from the spectators.
mostly to firefighters.
lng
their culture.
Cam~lia Bunch
Suppression costs were $1
Just this past Saturday, the
Born March 20, 1900. Mrs. band successfully participated in .million a day, officials said, since
Carnelia Bunch, 70, 107 Kerr Ogdln was the daughter of the their first competition of the the blaze began In the scenic
St., Pomeroy, died Wednesday at late John and Emmaline Nelson 1988-89 school. year, bringing foothills where California's ur·
Folden. In 1921, she was married home five ·trophies from · the ban sprawl meets nature's
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
to Kearney E. Ogdln, a former.
lowing a short Illness.
competition which was held In forests and wildlife.
who
died on June 10, 1967. She
Mrs. Bunch was born July 4,
Hurricane. W.Va.
19181n West Virginia. a daughter was also preceded In death by
The band competed In (Class C
of the late Henry and Pearlie three brothers, Elmer Folden. · for 50 or less playing members.
Clayton Folden and Finley
Johns.
and received a fourth place
Survlvlng are seven daugh· Folden and a sister, Bertha trophy for flags. fourth lor field
Dally stock prices
ters, Mrs. Aaron !Carla) Buffing· Me Lead.
commander, third tor r,lfiecorps,
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Survlving
are
two
daughters
ton, Detroit, Mich.; Jacqueline
fourth for drum line, and .a first Bryce and Mark Smith
and
sons·in·law,
Maxine
and
Bunch, Pomeroy; Mrs. Howard
place twirler.
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
(Barbara) English, Jr .. Middle· Charles Griffith. Pomerov;
Director of the Meigs Band Is
Janet and Herbert Jones. Dub· Toney Dingess.
port; Joyce Bunch. Pomeroy:
.
,Am Electric Power .............·27%
lin;
three grandchildren. Karen
Janice Bunch. Columbus; Mrs.
Of course, the band boosters AT&amp;T .:, .............................. 25\2
Martin , !Effie) Allfriend John· Lynn Griffith, Pomeroy; Connie organization at the school is hard
Ashland Oil ....................... .. 35%
son, Middleport, and Mrs. Dan Jones Doss, Plain City, and Keith at work to promote the band.
Bob Evans ................. :........ :16
(Donna ) Buffington, Middle- A. Jones of Dublin; three great·
John Anderson, secretarv· . Charming Shoppes ............. .13¥.
port; .two sisters. Vlolena Mel· grandchildren, Elizabeth Ann treasurer of the group, says tiie
ton, Cleveland, and Gertrude Doss. Christy Marie Doss and boosters have Initiated a new City Holding Co ............ ...... 31\2
Johns, Gallipolis, 10 grandchild· Jeremy Doss. all of Plain City; a program to reward band Federal Mogul... ................ .45\2
ren, one great-grandchild and sister, Clara Folden Shenefield. members by sending them on Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 59%
Heck's ................................. %
Wilkesville. and several nieces.
several nieces and nephews.
periodic, well-chaperoned, "fun Key Centurion .................... 1614
nephews
and
cousins.
Besides her parents. she was
trips.-" If a band member partici- Lands' End .. .... .. ... .............. 28'V,
Services will be conducted at
preceded In dea th by her hu spates in the band fo~ three years.
band, Orvile, a son. Edward the Wilkesville Presbvterlan then sometime either !heir so- Limited Inc ........................ 21'.4
Church at 2 p.m. Saturday with phomore, junior or senior year. Multimedia Inc . ................ ... 72
Bunch, two sisters and a brother.
Mrs. Bunch was a member of the Rev . Kathryn Puckett off!· they can look forward to a trip. Rax Restaurants .................. 3¥.
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 11'4
elating. Burial will be In the
the Forest Run Baptist Church.
perhaps to Dlsneyworld In Flor· Shoney's Inc ........................ 712
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Standish Cemetery. Friends may Ida, or perhaps In conjunction
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral call at the Hughes Funeral Home with some type of musical event. Wendy's intl ........................ 6%
Home with the Rev Nyle Borden in Athens from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Anderson said $2,()90 has already Worthington lnd ................. 21¥.,
(Rax Re!llaurants announced
officiating. Burial will be In p.m. on Friday and at the church been earmarked for the new
that
fourth-quarter earnings
one
hour
prior
to
the
service
on
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
program.
were
U2/share
vs. $.15/llhare)
Saturday.
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to4 and 7 to9p.m. Friday.

r------------------------.

I'

Area death. s .

f

GRASS VALLEY, Calif. (tiP)
- Firefighters doused smolder·
lng tree stumps and hot spots
Wednesday to mop up a $10.
million wildfire that ravaged 52
square miles Qf Gold Rush
country In the Sierra foothills.
The blaze that began Sunday
from an Illegal trash bum was
declared 90 percent contained as
crews checked In at the Nevada
County Fairgrounds to begin
12-hour shifts on the lines.
Bill Holmes, an operations
chief for the California Depart·
men! of Forestry, told the· fire·
fighters: "I think you're gclng to
have a good time today. The way
It laid down last night, you should
be able to mop·it up today."
They needed only to carve
firebreaks along 4 miles to
complete the 90-mlle encirclement, the workers were told.
Some of the 2, 788. firelighters,

Mar&lt;&gt;uder .ba·n·d .
'd
d'tng

Church
•
notices

the

bile home was co!Yipletely
storm.
destroyed."
At6p.m. EDT Wednesday, .the
The roofs were lifted off at
NWS Issued a hurricane watch
least three houses and several
fm the coasts of Texas and
nortlleast Mexico and warned
other homes were damaged In a
live-block area •.he said. Belghle
residents to be ready for ~·quick
said many power ·lines were . action;' todav. Thousands or
blown down In the area and there
people· were· evacuated from oil
.·were least a few gas leaks. . . rigs ln . the Gulf of Mexico and ·
The NWS said Its radar spotted
aiastal areas of Texas and
possible tOrnado 10 miles sou til
I:..oulslana .
of Bu$hlarld·ln southwest Potter
In . Louisiana, Grand Isle
County abOut 8 p.m., but it was ·. MayorAndyValenceorcleredthe
not Clear ·tf that storm -was the . evacuatlonofthe;barrlerisland's
one that hit Amarlll6.
visitors and 2,000 r~sldents. The
Damage es !!mates were not
island was cleared las! Friday In
available because of street flood·
advance of the approach of
lng Cl!Used by · heavy rain,
Hurricane Florence, much
. Belghle said.
weaker than Gilbert.
· TheNatlonaiHurrlcaneCenter
The NWS said between 3 and 5
in Miami predicted the storm
Inches of rain fell In Amarillo
Wednesday night ..
gradually would turn more
. The )Veather servlce had
nor!hwes t and make landfall
Issued~ flash-flood warning until .
Friday night or early SaturaaY
3:30a.m. today for Randall and
on the -south Texas coast between
Potter- counties. Golf ball-sized
Iirownsvllle and Corpus Christ! If
hali _also.was reported a)ongwlth
u takes that course.:

Daily Number

826
Pick 4

a

•
Vot.39, No.92
Copyrighted 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh.io. Friday, September 16, 1988

riiJRAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold . . Sialic
Occluded
·Map shows minimum temperatures. At least'SO% ol any shadll&lt;l area_is la&lt;ecast
to roceive preciJl!i.ation indicated
. . . ·· ·
UPI

ft

Moore tums Issue over to Mason authorities
build hazardous waste incinerators
must start "everything from
scratch."
''The moratorium means they
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. cannot
move, cannot be construcWest Vuginia Gov. Arch A. Moore
ted,
cannot
be built." Moore said
Jr. on Thursday issued an executive
The
order,
according to the
ordec radically challging the rules
governor,
puts
the
regulation of the
under which hazardous wasle inhazardous
waste
incinerators'
percineraton may be approved and
placed a moratorium on the is- mit process under the state's
suance of all commercial hazardous recently stteng~ solid waste
section, taking it out of a realm of
waste incinen~tors.
"Without . question, this takes law governing hazardous waste
care of the iss1,1e," Moore told the which Moore belieVed was not as
Point Pleasant Register in an ex- · strong.
A bill in the West Virginia Legiselusive
telephone
interview.
lature
seeking to place the siting of
Thursday afternoon from Charleshazardous
waste incinerators under
ton. ''This leaves the decision
a
local-option
election died !his
process in the hands of the local
session.
past
authorities," he explained.
Reaction from representatives of
Mcxn further said !hat he interpreted the order to mean all pend- the two companies seeking to site
mg work toward the siting of hazardous waste incinerators in
mixed
hazardous waste incinerators in Mason County was
Mason County is "shut down com- Thursday.
Andy Datlco, of Aptos, a
pletely," and all companies in the
Lakeville,
Minnesota, company
of applying for permits to

WEATHER MAP - HutTtcane Gilbert was In the Gulf of Mexico.

AstatiOnary froat extended from tbe Atlandc Ocean W~'Siward to a

low In aouth·central North Caronna, then trailed aci'O!I&amp; central
Georgia Into west-central Alabama. A warm front curved from
west-central Ontario into north-central Saskalchewall. A cold
front curved to a low In west-central Alberta and a cold front
trailed across western Washington slate Into the Pacific Ocean.

currently in !he process of preparing a permit for an incinerator
south of the Point Pleasant
Goodyear Polyester Plant. said the
company's attorneys would have to
study the order to measure its impact on that pro)ecl
"At this pomt we don't know
what it means," Datko said, having
just received a copy of the order
that afternoon. "We have to sit
down with our legal advisers and

with it."
The siting agreement gives to the
county one-half of I percent of the
gross revenue from the venture.
The agreement was approved on a
2-1 vote by the cornmtssion, thenpresident Paul Watkins and Commissioner R.l&lt;enton Sheline voting
yes while Commissioner Thomas
D. "Tuclcer" Mayes voted no.
That siting agreement was taken
to court and the issues surrounding
meet.,
it remain to be resolved, despite an
Jimmy Joe Wedge, local liason order by Mason County Circuit
for PyroChem, Inc., · a Louisville, Court Judge Clarence L. Watt !hat
Ky., COmpal!Y which plans to site a some officials interpret as an inseries of tncinerators on the Donald junction against its implementation.
While Aptus officials have been
Kingery tract in northern Mason
County, said the order simply working to prepare fonnal applicalegitimizes the siting agreement tion to the West Virginia Departthat company signed with the ment of Natural Resources and the
Mason County Commission a year West Virginia Air Pollution Control
Commission for permits for their
ago.
"PyroChem made an effort to incinerator, the company did not
deal with local county government expecl to file those applications unwith the siting agreement," Wedge til November, Datko said.
PyroChem has already filed its
said. "We don't have any problem
application with those agencies f~r
permitting and has been working
with state officials over various
aspects of the application.
Datko said he was surprised at
Moore's order. "We didn't have any

Extended Foreeast
Saturday through Monday
A chance of showers each day.
Hlghss will range from the mid
70s to the mid 80s, with overnight
lows ranging from the mid 50s to
the lower 60s.

Stocks

Anna Ogdin

Open Tonight 'Till
J.O p.tn·.

SHOWING THE JURY EVIDENCE- GaiUpo118 Pollee Sgt. Roger Brandeberry (C), the
Investigating officer, shows cocaine packaged In
magazine pages. Brandeberry testified tbal the
cocaine wu packaged In consecudve pages !rom

.

19n FORD T BIRD
SlocU89783, 2doori.COil&gt;O, V-8.~rcond., ¥1ny111101,
•dio. wtr. woh.

ldo. nro., PS,I'B, .IMifM

WAS

NOW

1983 JEEP EAGLE
Sl&gt;dtt82.. ,, ·-··-driio.lcyl., alrcond.,
ai.CO. IIIII., PS, PB, cruio cootrol. AIM'M - · ,..

-~
WAS

Two hurt in Meigs mishaps

1981 VW RABBIT

......--.

SO&gt;ckt.11383,2 doors,-~""' whooldrivo, 4eyl,
~Jpttdtrn., lllnd. tra,..,AWFM radio, rldllltirn,

An Athens man was Injured In a one-car accident Friday at
3:10a.m. In Salisbury Township on U.S. 33, accordtng ·to the
Gallja-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Richard Gilliland. 26, was taken by theMelgs County EMS to
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he was admitted lor
observation. At last report he was listed In stable condition.
Gilliland, driving a 1979 Chevrolet Camara, was traveling
west wlten he fell asleep and went off the right side of the road .
His car hit a sign post and went Into a ditch.
He was cited tor failure to control.
A Canadian truck driver was Injured In a tractor-trailer
accident Thursday at 2:48p.m. In Sutton Township on S.R. 124.
Albert W. O'Hara, 37, of Clearwater, Ont., was taken .by the
Racine EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where he was
treated and released.
O'Hara, driving a 1984 GMC Astra semi-tractor trailer owned ·
bv Trans Canada Truck Lines of Mlsslssauga, Ont., was driving
west when he lost control and went off the right side of the road,
hitting a guardrail and traffic· signs before overturning.
He was cit red for !allure to control.

w.u

1984 FORD MUSTANG

-w.u

1987 FORD F-150 4X4

~

Winners for the day when the
·J aymar's Ladles Tuesday
League met at the course were
Sue Burnett, low gross; Nancy
Reed, low net; Joan Childs, low
putts and chip-In-hole. It was
announced that !he last party or
the season for the league will be
on Tuesday, Oct. 4. Food will be
catered, prizes will be awarded
and a scramble will be held.

•

1981 DODGE OMNI
- 111132t,. doorl, .... 4cyl., 4II&gt;Otlf - ·
PS,N.Iflllldo,-IN,b--.
• WAS
NOW

1986 FORD RANGER
So:U81441, 2-. Icy!.. SII&gt;Otlfra..., ~~aro~.
Wlll., PS, PI!, AM.fM - · rldol 1111, 11i 100

oldill
~llllglooo.
~WM

bod, -

... """"'· -

ABE program unden.vay

NOW

Anyone In the county ,18 or over, who Is Interested In obtaining
basic educallon, shOuld consider the Adull Basic Education
Program sponsored by the Meigs County Board of Education.
The first sessions of the program began just this past Tuesday.
The aesllons are being held at !he JTPA office In Pomeroy on
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday from 10: 15 a.m. to 2:15p.m.,
and eveniJt&amp;s from 5 to 9.
In Middleport, sessiOns are at the library on Monday and
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Anyone with questions about · the Adult Basic Education
classes should stop at the JTPA office or the library during the
program hours, or call the Meigs County Board of Education.
The Adult Basic Education coordinator· Is Linda Stanley.
Continued on page 5

Big Money Saving Values Storewide!

MASON FURNITU~CO.
'

2nd Street

(304} 773-5592

nesses early Friday morning in
the Gal !Ia County Common Pleas
Court.
Thursday, Gallipolis Pollee
Sgt. Roger Brandeberry, the
Investigating officer, occupied
the witness stand for most of the

.Local news briefs--

NOW

'5995

Name golf winners

'

By MARGARET CALDWELL
OVP Staff Writer
Testlmonv continued Thursday as the prosecution's final
witnesses took tlie stand In the
John Rees drug trial. The defense began questioning wit·

Slocll tl4151,2doorl, ""'· e cyl., oJrcood. 1110.

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions- Hoi·
lie Green, ·Pomeroy: Charles
Neece, Middleport: Virgil Carl,
Pomeroy.
Wednesday Discharges - Ro·
sev Searls, Marllvn Oiler, Wil·
wim Barnhart. Vicki Lish.

a January edition of Better Homes and Gardens.
Also shown (L lo R) are David Evans, defense
attorney, Brent Saunders, Gallla County prosecutor, and Judge Donald A. Cox.

Testimony continues in drug trial

-.. PS.PB. N.lfM fldio, •dlalliNI.- •II.

Hospital news

lines and one which has been
fraught with emotion, questioning
and hard-hitting attacks by both
sides a battle that has in recent
months galvanized officials in Ohio
to make the issue a priority item.
The Gallipolis Ctty Commission
has been mulling an ordinance
regarding hazardous waste incinerators and the Gallia County
Medical Society has come out in
opposi~ to hazardous wasle incmerauon.
It is an Issue which spawned _!he
Mason Association for a Clean Environment, a citizens' group which
now has power bases in northern
Mason County, southern Mason
County and Gallia County, Ohio.
Ironically, it comes just before
MACE is ready to hold a picnic
this weekend to celebrate its one
year of existence.
Moore believes the order puts
the responsibility of !he issue
squarely with the county and city
governments.
State Sen Mike Shaw, R-Mason,
said legalities surrounding how to
deal with hazardous wasle incinerators have changed since
PyroChem's announcement last
Continued on page ·5

In addition to "teaching the teachers and administrators
By NANCY l'OACHAM
. three R' s," Carpenter said · working together to bring a bout
Sentinel News Staff
curriculum changes, and that
A brief overvlew ofthe1ns-and- sllliools are now required to teach
teachers and administrators ln
outs ani! dos-and·don'ts of oper- drug, alcohol, tobacco, sex,
the
Meigs District should strive
ating a school district was given driver and career education.
lo
do
all they can to improve the
"Allin all," said Carpenter, "I
this week to Pomeroy Chamber
quality
of education
in the
of Commerce members bv think we do a pretty good job."
district.
He also touched on
James Carpenter, Interim super·
"We as a school district must
competency-based
education. AI·
lntendent of the Meigs Local
get
our own house In order,"
though all of Meigs County's
School District.
Carpenter
said. and after last
Carpenter compared the oper· school districts are already in·
year's
lengthy
teachers' strike,
ation of a school district to the valved to a degree incompetency
he
feels
that
overall,
"there Is
operation of several businesses, based testing, by 1990, the State
good attitude and strong support
including the transportatiQn, res· of Ohio will also require compel·
for the fact that we're looking to
taurant and maintenance ency based tesllng In the areas ,of educate kids."
citizenship, reading, math and
businesses.
· Meigs Local's school buses writing. The Implementation of
Meigs Local has ''150 teachers,
travel2,500 miles a day, which, in state competency based testing 90 non-certified personnel, eight
a year's time, would account for will mean significant changes in or nine admlnlstators and five
several trips around the world, the awarding of diplomas to high board members, all here for2,600
school seniors, he added.
Carpenter said.
reasons - the students or the
A new addition to the Meigs' district. Without them, there's no
Also In a year's time, the school
district's lunch program serves curriculum Is Chapter I math, need for the res tofus," he stated.
200,000 plus lunches, not lnclud· which provides supplemental "And we need to focus on that
lng ala carte lunches at the high math Instruction to elementary fact."
school, or breakfasts which must aged students who may need
He concluded that "from time
some catching up.
be served.
to time, some or us may disagree
Another Improvement In the on how we're going to do the
Maintenance of buildings Is
also a big part of the operation of dlstrlclls the recent passage of a educating, but we sshould never
"stay-at-home bond issue" disagree that that's what we
a school district, Carpenter said,
which
will provide a substantial should be doing."
pointing out that some of Meigs'
to the district's annual
Increase
buildings date back to the 1920's.
In a brief question-answer
budget,
according
to Carpenter.
Related to maintenance, In a
session with members · of
A major goal of the district in chamber, Carpenter discussed
year's time the school district
will purchase 6,000 rolls of toilet the next couple years is to get out the problem of overcrowding In
paper and 1,600 tlourescent light of the State loan fund, he said.
some of. the elementary schools.
The district was In a deficit
tubes, he said.
Other chamber matters
In addition to the time and spending situation and last year brought up by President Paul
paperwork Involved In meeting had to borrow from the loan lund Gerard were the walking tour
the day·to-day needs of a school to continue operations. Carpen· tapes of Pomeroy, which are now
district, administrators must be ter said the district hopes this available at the chamber office;
prepared for yearly Inspections year to pay back a substantial the upcoming chamberfrom agencies such as the Ohio amount of the state-borrowed sponsored Halloween party, yet
Health Department, the State funds.
to be scheduled; the ordering of
A personal hope of Carpenter's Christmas decorations; and th~
auditor's o(flce, and others. The
Ohio Environmental Protection Is that a computer lab will be upcoming Big Bend Varieties'
Agency and various departments installed at the high school in the show scheduled for Nov. 26.
within the State Department of near . future. He feels that all
Unless someone can come up
Education also make reqular students need "hands on expe- with an affordable band,
Inspections. Inspection by the rience'" with computers. and he chamber will not be sponsoring a
North Central Accrediting shares the opinion of some New Years' Eve party at Royal
Agency comes every five years. educators that computers also Oak Park. as had been
Numerous reports must be help students improve their anticipated.
writing capabilities.
flied periodically by school dis·
The current chamber bank
A computer lab would be just balance Is $1,855, Gerard
trlcts, Including reports of ha·
zardous materials (such as as· one way of Improving the currie· repro ted.
bes tos) and fire and tornado ulum In !he dIs trlct.
Also mentioned by Gl:rard was
Carpenter said It takes a Sept. 27 bed and breakfast
drills, just to name a lew.
seminar on how to start and
operate such a business. The
seminar. Is sponsored ))y the
Meigs County Extension Servlce
car show and an arrowhead ara Hayman Trio; the Racine and will be held at Grace
display will be featured.
Baptist Church Choir; !he Praise Episcopal Church. Pomeroy.
The en try fee for the car show Team from Belpre Word of Faith Brochures on ·the seminar are
is $5 and registration will be from Church: and hands from the Coal available at the Chamber office
on East Main St.
9 a.m. to 12 noon at the junior Miners' Jamboree.
Other brochures are also avail· ·
high. The car show will be on the
Fast movlng, knee slapping
able
at the chamber. Gerard
junior high grounds and judging dancing will be featured during
said,
Including
a new chamber·
will be at 3 p.m.
·
the day by !he Midnight Cloggers
sponsored
brochure.
Those In charge of the musical and the Shady River Shutners.
Next month's chamber
enterlalmnent are pleased with
So load up the family and the
speaker
will be from the Innovathe line up of enterlalmnent. The lawn chairs and plan to spend the
tion Center, O~lo University,
live mus.lc will start at 12 noon whole day In Racine.
'
Athens, to discuss what small
and continue throughout the day
A,nd even If It ralns, come
with performances by the Hart anyiyay, because the whole cele· businesses can do to ImproveBrothers; Tall Grass; the Bend hratlon will be moved Indoors al operations.
Meetings are held at the
River Boys; the Country Blend one of the area schools.
Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.
Band; the Dan, Faith and Tam·

a

'1299

Anna M. Ogdin, 88, well-known
Wilkesville area resident and a
· retired Meigs Local
school
teacher, died Wednesday morn·
ing at Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va. , following a
brief illness.
Mrs . Ogdln was a graduate of
Ohio University, Class of 1952.
with a bachelor of science degree
in education. Her first teaching
position was at the Buckwheat
School, a one-room sc hool near
Wilkesville, In 1918. Most of her
teaching career was In the Meigs

forewarning the administration w.S
considering something like this,"
he said. Datko said Aptus has
worked through the local process in
Minnesota in the siting of hazardous waste incinerators and has no
problem with doing that as long as
the rules of that process are under·
stood. He wondered how the order .
takes into consideration that the
rules governing the regulation of
hazardous waste are part of federal
law. The Department of Natural
Resources of the state of West Vir·
ginia' only enters into the picture
through its primacie agreement
with the federal Environmental
Proll:Ction Agency for jurisdiction
and review.
Datko said it would be premature
to say whether or not Aptus will
appeal the order. 1
Neither one of the companies
planning to build the incinerators
has purchased the land on which
those plants are to be constructed,
according to officials.
The executive action comes
ahoul one year after Mason County
became a battleground over first
one, and then r:wo proposals for
hazardous waste incinemtors. It is a
battle that has crossed politiclil

Pomeroy Chamber briefed
_9n Meigs school operations

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low
between 55 and 60. Southeast
wi~ds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday: Mostly cloudy, with a
chance of showers, Highs will be
near 80. Chance of rain is 50
percent.

2 Sectk&gt;ns, 1 6 Pages
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Naw.paper

•

By CHARLES A. MASON
Of the OVP Starr

~SNOW

Chance ol rain 70 percent.
Saturday, mosUy cloudy, hlch
In 80s. Chance of ratn 50
percenl.

0208

Page 7

at

·NATIONAL WEATHER SERViCE FORECAST TO 8 A"' EDT 9-16-88

Ohio Lottery

Mason, WV
;II

day , Identifyi-ng the more than
100 items of evidence.
Brandeberry testified that on
March 13 he began survalling the
house at 1155 Second Ave., where
officers executed a search warrant and arrested Rees on March
27. After March 20, Brandeberry
said he stepped up the investigation. but that he could not see the
back (side) door of the house.
On the night of March 25,
Brandeberry testified under
cross-examination that he did not
observe activities of a party
taking place. Healsotestlfed that
he observed the house a gal n the
following night before the raid.
No fingerprints were taken the
night of !he raid, Brandeberry
said, because he had decided thai
fingerprints could not be success·
fully lifted due to the glass bottles
feeling "sticky" or filmy and
white powder residue throughOut
the house.
Brandeberry testified that he
was not an expert on fingerprint·
lng but that he did contact an
Continued on page 5

Racine to host Harvest Fall Festival
Racine merchants and
members of the Racine Amerl·
can Legion are hoping that
Saturday's weather will be warm
and sunny for !he annual Harvest
Fall Fes !Ivai.
Saturday's day-long celebra·
tlon will start with a parade at 10
a.m., foUowed by the selection of
a fall festival queen. The para,de
will line up._ at 9: 30 a.m. at
Southern Junior High School.
Plenty of food, games, crafts
and prize giveaways Will be
featured. Also, an aniiQue out·
board motor show, an an tlq ue

"·

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