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                  <text>Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

Boih. •• Continued from page 1
Local news briefs----. enough
to make a major change peeled
Continued from page 1

HEAP forms available
The Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency now has
registration. fonns available for those Interested In being fuel
vendors with the Emergency HEAP this wi'n ter.
Individuals must complete vendor registration forms In order
to be placed on the vendor list. Fonns are available at the
Gallla-Melgs CAA Central Office In Cheshire. For more
lontonnallon, contact the Cheshire o!tlce at 367-7341 or 992-6629.

ln the race. While it may
demonstrate he has stopped the
tailspin his campaign has endured, It should not be enough to
restore liis once-large lead.
Ironically, of ali the points
touched upon Sunday night, the
most Important may be a matter
th,;~t will not be decided by either
rminee:s rhetori;;;X·

EMS has seven
weekend calls
•
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls over the weekend; three on Saturday and four on Sunday.
Saturday at 12: 29 a.m., Tuppers Plains to Locust Grove Road
for Lyle Swain to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 8: 18
a.m. to Reedsville for Alberta Edwards to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 8:42 a.m. to Beech St. for Helen
Kennedy to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 3:24p.m., Tuppers Plains at the Arbaugh Addition
for Bertha Wolfe to Veterans Memorial Hospital· Tuppers
Plains at 12:46 p.m. \o Scout Camp Road for Nelll~ Perry to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 1: 28 p.m. to Village
Manor Apartments for Josephine Shanabrook who was treated ·
but not transported; Racine at 2:39 p .m. to Third St. for Pat .
Snider to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Pearson wins state contest
MASON, W. Va. - Rick Pearson of Mason won the West
Virginia Auctioneers Assoicatlon bid calling contest at the West
Virginia State Fair.
This 29-year-old auctioneer now holds the title of Grand
Champion Auctioneer for West Virginia tor the year of 1988.
Pearson Is a veteran of bid calllng competitions having
competed In six contests. He won the state competition in 1982
and 1984 and again in 1988.
He Is a second generation auctioneer who has been licensed In
Wes\ Virginia and Ohio for 11 years. His father, Gilbert
Pearson, Jr., was an auctioneer in Mqson and surrounding
counties for many years. Pearson is one of the founders of the
West Virginia Auctioneers Association which began In 1961.
The father of two chilldren, Michelle Dawn and Ricky, Jr., he
is married to the fonner Becky Roush.
· The Rick Pearson Auction Service conducts many estate and
antique auctions each year In West Virginia and Ohio. Placing
second in this year's competition was LonNeal of Bidwell, Ohio,
and third place winner was Ed Winters of Cottageville, W.Va.
Dana Franklin of Huntington and Dan Smith of Racine were In
the top five competitors In this years competition.

Debate highlights...
Continued from page 1
governors. The governor added that Bush's long experience in
, Washington did not prevent him from falling to protest the sale
of arms to Iran to try to gain the release of U.S. hostages In
Lebanon or praising ousted Phiilppine President Ferdinand
Marcos.
.Bush crlticl~ed Dukakls for jhavlng supported the proposed
nuci'ear freeze. which he said would have locked in 1,000 Soviet
nuclear missiles In Eastern Europe and the Sovl,~:t Union,
without any comparable weapons based In NATO h~tt6ns. That
is not the way to deal with the Soviets, he said, adding that the
Reagan administration had successfully negotiated the recent
intermediate range nuclear missile treaty with the USSR.
DEFENSE SPENDING: When asked whether he would he
willing to eliminate or cut any weapons systems, Bush said he
did not think it was a question Of eliminating systems but added
there are many weapons systems he opposes. Dukakis
responded that the next president will have to make some
choices about cutting defense spending to solve the country's
"serious financial problems. "he said. ·
SOVIET UNION:" Bush said he would not make unilateral cuts
in the United States· strategic weapons systems when the
Soviets have demonstrated superiority. But the vice president
said there is •'an enormous opportunity for trade'· with Eastern
bloc nations and promised "not to use food as a political tool,"
referring to President Carter's grain embargo against the
Soviet Union in protest of that country's· occupation of
Afghanistan.
Dukakls said the United States has serious differences with
the Soviet Union but he has plans for the 1990s and beyond and
Bush does not. In an effort to build a more stable and peaceful
world, Dukakis said national security and the nation's economy
must go hand in hand.
STAR WARS: Dukakls said he favored continuing to spend
about $1 billion a year on research for the Strategic Defense
Initiative, while beefing up conventional forces strained by
Reagan administration cuts. The governor added that he knew
of no scientists who believe the theoretical space-based
defensive missile system "could possibly work- this notion of
some kind of Astrodome over ourselves."
Bush said he would deploy a Star Wars system when it is
deployable and charged that Dukakls wants wanted to
. eliminate two carrier battle groups. America's convention11l
forces "have never been more ready,'' he added. The
. "Democratic-controlled Congress cut $70 million from the
Coast Guard," he responded to a Dukakls charge that Coast
Guard vessels were sitting in harbors for lack of fuel.

Ohio ...

Continued from page 1

along a Parma city street.
Sunday
Cleveland: Pedestrian An·
thony Lazar. 61, Cleveland, died
when he was struck by a car
while crossing a Cleveland city
street.
Sandusky: Hilimar F. Wiese,
80, North Olmsted, killed when
the car in which he was riding
failed to stop at a stop sign and
crashed Into another car on Ohio
60 in Erie County.
Fulton: Melvin R. Looney Jr.,

Appointed deputy
The appointment of Jack L.
Lyons Sr. as a Meigs County
Deputy Sherif! for a term ending
on the first Monday In January,
' 1989, has been filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.

Licenses issued
' Marriage licenses have been
,• issued in Meigs County Probate
1\court to Trent Alan Nash, 19,
'Racine. and Laura Lynn Mi·
chael, 22, Racine; Jack Eugene
Follrod, 48, Pomeroy, and Shlr·
ey Allee Smith, 43, Pomeroy;
lex Scott Haggy, 19, Pomeroy,
md RhOnda Yvonne Gomez, 17.
tutland; Richard David Ko, \Ientz, 41, Pomeroy, and Cindy
1lue Warner, 31, Pomerov.
- .......__,..__ __

33, Marengo, killed when he
failed to stop his motorcycle at a
stop sign and struck a car along
Ohio 61 and a Morrow County
road.
Findlay: Ed gal Fugitt Jr., 46,
Fostoria, killed when his pick-up
truck was struck by a train at a
crossing along a Hancock County
road.
Ashtabula: Harvey D. Frase
Jr., 31, Conneaut, killed when his
car struck a tree along Ohio 84 in
Ashtabula County.
New Philadelphia: Glen A.
Sinkovich. 29, New Philadelphia,
dled when the motorcycle he was
riding struck a culvert and
overturned along Ohio 516 In
Tuscarawas County.

-----Announcements----

selection or Sen. Dan
Quayle of Indiana as his running
mate.
·
Dukakts, armed with polling
data that shows many Amerl·
cans are squeamish over the
choice of the 41-year-old junior
senator, tried to capitalize on
that fact by injecting the vice
presidential choice Into the

d;:ths

Josephine Shanabrook
Josephine Kay Smlth Anderson Sbanahrook, 82, died unex·
pectedly . Sunday at her res!·
dence, apartment 10, Village.
Manor, Middleport.
Mrs. Shanabrook was horn
Nov. 16, 1900 at Pomeroy, a
daughter or the late Jack and
Jane Scott Smith. She was a
retired secretary from RepubliC
Steel, Massllon. She was a
member of the First United
Methodist Church in Massllon, a
member of the National Secretaries Assn., and the Meigs
Senior Citizens Organization. ·
Surviving are a brother, Irving
Smith, Columbus, several nieces
and nephews and several great
nieces and nephews.
Graveside rites will be held at 1
p.m..,.Thursday at Green Lawn
Cemetery In Columbus with the
Rev. Mr. Thomas officiating.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Wednesday. Friends may
make contributions In her me·
mory to the Meigs Senior Cit!·
zens, Pomeroy.

'

eral Home, Welherholt Chapel,
Gallipolis, with the Rev. Joe
Hefner o!tlclatlng. Burial will be
at the Mount Tabor Cemetery,
VInton.
Friends may call Tuesday, 3 to
5 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
funeral home.

Speaker named
David Canfield will be evangelis !for nJihtly revival services to
be held at the Chester Church of
the Nazarene Thursday through
Oct. 2. Services will begin at 7
each evening.
lury trials canceled
Jury trials In Mlgs County
Common Pleas Court which were
scheduled for Tuesday . Sept. 27.
and Wednesday. Sept. 28. have
been settled. Jurors need not
appear.
Smorgasbord Saturday
A smorgasbord supper wi 11 be

held Saturday. starting at 4:3Q
p.m., at the Wilkesville Pythian
Hail. Proceeds will go to the
Pythlan Hall bulldlng fund. Eve·
ryone welcome.
PTO to meet
The Portland PTO Fall Carnival will be held this Saturday
from 5 to 9 p.m. at the school.
There will be something tor
everyone. PI ease come.

Am Electric Power ............. 27\h
AT&amp;T ................................. 26%
Ashland Oil ........................32%
Bob Evans .. ..... ... ....... .......... 16
Channing Shoppes .............. 13%
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul....: .............. .46~
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ .. .. .. .57i4
Heck's ....... ................ ... , ...... '){,
Key Centurion ............ ....... .16\h
Lands' End ... ..... ................. 29')f,
Limited Inc ........ .. ......... ..... 21 ~
Multimedia Inc ..... .. ..... ....... 72\h
Rax Restaurants .................. 31){,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ ny,
Shoney's Inc ............... ....... .. 7*
Wendy's Inti ........... ...... ....... 61){,
Worthington Ind ....... .. ........ 21~

Hosnital news

~eterans Memorial

Saturday Admissions - Helen
Kennedy, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Basil
Haines, Dorothy Higgins, Sarah
McCarty.
Sunday Admissions - Harley
McDaniel Jr., Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges -None.

ONE DAY
EVENT

0505

...

f'OMFHOY

TUES.SFI'I

.•

•
..:~\,~-.
•..

IOUOTO',IJ!r

By BOB HOEFLICH
SentlnelstaffWVrtter
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman today announced that the
Vlllage of Middleport, In conjunc·
lion with the Meigs County
Commissioners and the Meigs
County Regional Planning ·eom-

Choose From Over 1000 Mou,ntings
•RINGS •COCKTAIL RING •EARRINGS
•CLUSTERS •PENDANTS •BRAICLETS

Most Setting Work Done While Yo~ . W11tl
Jtllai~d

Out

Two men
charged in
drug raids

It's m11gic. When yesterday's

gone-by jewelry look blcomes
tomorrow's ra..-winner. We
can rt·Ht graNima's dia- "'""'"'-"·
~s-adil tht ritJht stane to
an 1acompltte hlirlaam•• up·
date any heritage treasure. .
Wily •t loalc into it.

.
.
SEARCH WARRANT EXECUTED - The
Galllpolla City Pollee Department and the Galla
County Sheriffs Department executed tbe tlllrd of
a ~erles of search warrantll a&amp; 46% MID Creek,
Galllpolla, Tuesday momlag. Two otller search
warrantll, executed a&amp; 7 Spruce st., Galllpolla, ud
'191 Pine st., Rio Graude, were executed Mollllay
nl«bt and Tuetlday momlar In which ofllcliala

SAVE- SAVE- SAVE
25% ON ALL DIAMONDS IN STOCK
25% ON .ALL DIAMOND EARRINGS
250fo ON ALL LOOSE DIAMONDS
CLARK'S JEWELRY

coaflacaied aa exceea of toO unl&amp;a of LSD, with a
street vat• of appnxlmately $2,100. Other Ulegal
••bltaucea, pllla aad paraphernalia were found.
Coordlna&amp;ed lhrOUJh tile l'rollecuUns Attorney's ·
office, tbe ~earch warranlll were the result of a
concerned clllzea contactlaJ tile city poUce. Two
Gallla Coaiaty men were arrested on charges of ·
poiiii!Sslon of LSD.

;Fornter Rutland educator and
~o~ch .honored. wiih banquet

113COURT
~
POMEROY. OH.
..-.
~t'&amp;~ 992-2064
-

I

,.

By JIM SOULSBY
Sentinel Staff Writer
RUTLAND - Carl Dennison,
long time Rutland resident and a
former educator and coach at
Rutland High School, was ho·
nored at a Saturday night banquet sponsored by members of
the Rutland Fire Department.
The event, staged at Rutland's
Elementary School, was attended " by many weli wishers,
Including associates In the field
of education, athletes he had
coached In sports. neighbors and .
members of Mr. Dennison's
famlly.
Foliowing opening ·remarks by
Charles Barrett, Jr and master
of ceremonies Jlm Soulsby. Jim
Vennari, weli known local sports
figure, spoke of his years of
association with Mr. Dennison
and of his contribution to the
success of Red Devil football
teams as a scout.

If you're tired of the uncom,
fortable hot blasts and cold
drafts you get with your old
furnace, switch to a moclem

electric heat pump.
In the winter, it fills
your hoine with steady,
even, comfortable heat.
And in the summer, the
heat pump keeps you cool
because it air conditions your
entire home.
If comfort is important to you
and your family, it makes sense
to look at the energy-efficient,
flameless electric heat pump.
Get the full story by contacting
us at 992-3786. today.

Vennari had succeeded Mr.
Dennison as coach of the high
school squad In the early 1940's.
Following his presentation, each
person In attendance spoke of the
influence Mr. Dennison had
exerted on their lives and of their .
hlgh esteem for the entire Dennl·
son family. The program ended
with a skit presented by Herb
Grate.
In an earlier Interview, Mr.
. Dennison told of his life in the
Rutland community ·a nd rem!·
nisced, with much nostalgia, of
his years as a player,teacherand
coach.
Entering Rutland High as a
sophomore In 1921, after attend·
ing Wllkesvllle schools, Mr.
Dennison participated as a
player on the first Red Devil
squad that was formed in 1923.
Rutland football, under the
coaching of C. 0. Chapman who
later became county superln·

to investigate cases of wrongdo·
ing within the administration.
Members complained that the
inspector general wili report only
to the governor, who might
choose to cover up incidents
refiecllng badly on his
administratlon.
Celeste Issued a new execu live
order directing the Inspector
general to report four times a
year to legislative leaders, and
Davld Sturtz, the inspector gen·
era!, assured the board he would
"lnltlate investigations on my
owb.''

-Local news briefsPatrol probes 3 Meigs accidents
The driver escaped Injury"in a one vehicle accident at 6: 22
p.m. Monday in Meigs County on CR. 4, 3.9 miles north of SR.
124. In Rutland Township.
The State Highway Patrol said Robert W. Lambert, 18,
Langsville, lost control and hls vehicle went off the road, struck
· an embankment and overturned. The patrol cited Lambert tor
failure to maintain control.
Another Meigs County accident occurred at 3:09p.m. Monday
on Success Road, 0.5 miles east of SR. 7. Troopers said a pickup
truck driven by MikeS. Henry, 22, Portland, went Into a ditch.
Damage was heavy. No one wu Injured. There was no cltat lon.
The patrol also Investigated an accident at 2:46p.m. Monday
on Beech Grove Road, just west o!TR. 46, In Rutland Township,
Meigs County.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Edna M. Nance, 44,
Rutland, and a van driven by Terry R. Cullums, 45, Hemlock
Grove, collided head-on, on a curve. Damage was moderate. No
one was injured. There was no citation.
(Contlmled on pal!!! 10\

C&gt; t9111-lcilllllocutc I'll-.

'1

'

·---~-~

--

....

--

tendent, became the county's
first team (Middleport came
along In 1924, Pomeroy In 1925.
Thattlrst squad started with 14
players and was soon reduced to
13 when one player informed
Chapman that ,he did not want to
get his unifonn dirty. Chapman,
who Mr. Dennison described as
one of the greatest persons he has
ever known, dismisSed the young
man.
Speaking of Mr. Chapman, Mr.
Dennison stated that through his
teaching of chemistry, his (Dennison's) future was definitely
decided. Of that first team, that
won hail of their games. only one
other person, Russell Musser of
Springfield, Is still living. The
worst defeat that season came at
the hands of Gallipolis by a 40-0
score.
. Recalling his senior season.
Mr. Dennison said they avenged
Continued on page 3

Control Board to fund IG's office
COLUMBUS. Ohio &lt;UPI) The state Controlling Board has
voted to lund the new state
Inspector general's office to the
tune of $300,000.
At its hi-weekly meeting Mon·
day, the hoard also approved a
$160.000 grant t.o assist a new
aerospace museum in the Cleveland area, and sent $19 million to
seven Edison centers tor scientific research.
Two weeks a·go, the hoard had
rejected the money for the
inspector general, a position
created by Gov. Richard Celeste

_.,.

,,

..I''

I

26 Conto

A Muhimedi1 Inc. Newtpeper

Study approved for
motel .development

::111

No NHd to Have Your Diamonds

1 Section. 10 Pavoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. September 27, 1988

\

BOB VI 1 ~::7---­
HOME IMPROVEMENT EXPERT

......- -·,..-~ ··-· ....-------...-----·-· ·-" .-.

Mostly clear tonl«hl, low in
mid l!Os. Wedaetday, mostly
sunny, hlrhs between 75 and
80.

•

Diamond Remount
Show a·nd Sale I

A divorce action has been !Ued
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Dewayne Riggs, Ru·
tland, against Edith PauUne
Rlggs, Sandyville, W.Va.
'
Vickie L. Metheney, Vinton,
and Ricky A. Metheney, Ewington, have filed for a dlssolu lion of
their marriage.
A dissolution was granted to
Arlene Collinll and Jerry Collins.
Arlene Collins wu restored by
the court to her former name,
Scarberry.
· ·
·~--,--

Page4

Vol.39. No.99
Copyrighted 1988

Seeks divorces

-------..-·- -·-----

Daily Number
338
Pick 4

Missionary project
A yard sale to raiSI! missionary
funds for the Navajo Indians will
be held Friday and Saturday.
starting at 9 a.m. each day, on
Vance Road near Harrisonville.

"Switch to year round
heat pump comfort."

Dally stook prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Ohio Lottery

Raiders edge
Broncos, 30-27

POMEIOY

Rev, Roy D. Brown

The .R ev. Roy Denver Brown,
92, fonnerly of Middleport, died
Sunday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Rev. Brown received his
BA and DD !rom the University
of Indiana.
Ordained a minister In the
Pilgrim Holiness Church In 1922,
he served ln many churches In
the United States and Canada. He
retired from the Danville Wesleyan Holiness Church after
serving 63 years In the ministry.
He was a World War I Army
veteran and a member of the
DA V hi Pomeroy.
Born Oct. 3, 1895 at Kyger,
Ohio, he was the son of the late
William Milton and Luella Maye
(Arnold) Brown.
Also preceding him in death
Beulah E. Spurlock
are his first wile, Sylva (Jones)
Brown, one son, Herbert Alvln,
Beulah Elizabeth Spurlock. 75, one sister, Neva Sowers, and one
520 Spring Valley Drive, Gaillpo· infant sister, Mary.
lis, died unexpectedly Saturday
He is survived by his wife
morning at Holzer Medical Mabel (Miller) Brown; tour
Center.
sons, Paul Brown or Ewington.
She was a physical therapy David Brown of Tecumseh,
aide having retired !rom Holzer Mich., Wendell Brown of Wilkes·
Medical Center following 25 vllle, Ohio, and Cleon Brown of
years of service. For the past Flint. Mich.; two daughters,
nine years she was employed Arlene Choate or Conyers, Ga .•
part-time at the Medical Shoppe, and Mrs. Ross (Laura Mae)
Jackson Pike.
Steele of Logan, Ohio; 12 grandBorn July 17, 1913 in Louisa children;
20 greatCounty, Va., she was the daugh· grandchildren; 3 great-greatter of the late James and Minnie grandchildren; one sister, Isabel
(Harper) Holcomb.
Snyder. of Albany, Ohio; and one
She was preceded In death by brother, Robert Brown of Venice,
her husband, Clyde E. Spurlock. Fla.
She Is survived by five sons,
Services will be Wednesday, 3
Chuck Spurlock or LaGunla Nl· p.m. at the McCoy-Moore Funguel, Calif, James Spurlock of eral Home In Vinton, with the
Concord. Calif., Jack Spurlock of Rev. Wllllam Wlsemandle offiChillicothe, Robert Spurlock of ciating. Burial will be at the
Raleigh, N.C .• and Michael Spur- Vinton Memorial Park.
lock of Taylor, Texas; three
Friends may call Tuesday. 2 to
daughters. Linda Ratliff of 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Crown City, Nora Blrkley of.San funeral home.
Jose, Calif. , and Donna Hall of
Parkersburg, W.Va.; 12 grand·
children; five greatgrandchildren; and special
friends, the Herman Dillion
family and many others.
Services will be Wednesday, 11
a.m. at the McCoy-Moore Fun-

Stocks

I

Monday•. Septanber 28. 1988

"He (the governor) ~oes not
Instruct me as to what to
Investigate or what not to invest!·
gate,'' said Sturtz.
The budget money was approved. 6·1, with Rep. Robert
Netzley. R-Laura, opposed. "I
stlll would prefer that the court
or somebody else He the appoint·
ing authority," he said.
In another reversal, the board
voted 4-3 to spend $160,000 on a
new aerospace museum and
visitor center at NASA Lewis
-Research Center In suburban
Cleveland.

mission, has entered into a
contract with Kenneth Danter
and Co. to perform a market
feasibility study for motel devel·
opment In Meigs County.
The mayor states that much
Interest has been expressed In
the establishment of a motel in
· tM county and that a market
study will provide a tool which
can be used in promoting the
area to a motel group.
Danter and Co. has had ex ten·
sive experience in identifying
market feasibility for motel
development and has completed
market feasibility studies for
projects in more than 40 states
and Is well respected in·the field
of endeavnor.
The market feasibility study
will include:
1. Establishment of an effec·
tive market area for the proposed facility.
2. ldentifcatlon of factors in·
fluencing motel operations and
their success, as well as components of motel support.
3. Determination of the site's
ability to function as a motel
location.
4. An analysis of the compel!·
lion in the motel Industry within
the effective market area, in·
eluding room rates, qccupancy
levels and customer profiles.
5. Determination of the demand for addli!Qilal motel rooms
·in the area.
6. Identification of new and
proposed developments affecting the project, such as roads,

As the result of concerned
citizens coming forward, ·area
law enforcement offlclals executed three search warrants and
arrested two Gallla County men
with possession or lllegal drugs
on Monday ·night and Tuesday
morning.
Coordinated through theGallla
County Prosecutor's office, the
investigation neUed In excess of
400 unit doses of LSD, as well as
quantities of marijuana, hashish,
cocaine, a variety of pUis, and
drug paraphernalia. The estimated street value totaled approximately $3,500, with approxi·
mately $2,500 street value of LSD
confiscated.
Eric R. Cappel. 24. of Rio
Grande, and Richard 0. Newell,
20, of Gallipolis, were each
charged with possession of three
times the bulk of LSD, a second
degree felony that carries a
maximum penaltyof5to15years
wlth an actual incarceration of at
least three years.
The investlgatlon ls continuing
and criminal charges are being
filed th"ough the prosecutor's
office. More arrests are
WASHINGTON &lt;UPI) -Sen.
expe&lt;\ted.
Edward
Kennedy, D-Mass., Is
In the joi)lt operatlon Gallipolis
calling
voters
to respond at their
Ponce offlcers and Gal !Ia County
ballot
booths
to a Repul!llcan
Sheriff's Deputies searched res!·
filibuster
that
killed
an electiondences at 7 Spruce St.. Gallipolis.
year
effort
to
raise
the
minimum
46* Mlli Creek, Gallipolis, and a
wage.
trailer at 719 Pine St.. Rio
But Sen. Phil Gramm, RGrande.
Texas, thinks those voters who
Present at the scenes were
currently
make $3.35 an hour
Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
should
be
grateful to his party
Saunders and his sta!f, Sheriff
because
In
his view, they might
James M. Montgomery and
have
been
unemployed
had the
Capt. Carl Langford from the
proposed·teglslation
become
law.
Sheriff's department, Del. Mike
''I
was
against
this
bill
because
Tucker, Sgt. Roger Brandeberry, and several other city it was a rotten bill... Gramm said
with characteristic bluntness as
pollee officers.
The Rio Grande Village Pollee the GOP filibuster succeeded
Department and the Rio Grande Monday. "It was anti-poor, anti·
College Security assisted with growth, anti-jobs and anti·
the search In Rio Grande and America.''
Kennedy, his voice r(sing wlth
were very cooperative. Saunders
the trustraUon of failing to crack
said.
The search warrants were the flve-day stalling tactic,
results · of a concerned citizen argued that the defeat means 16
giving clty police otflcers infor- million American workers have
matlon alter theconclusionofthe been without an increase In the
recent case of the State of Ohio minimum wage since 1981.
With the election six weeks
verses John Rees, convicted of
.
away,
Kennedy said voters
four counts of possession and use
should understand "who have
of illegal drugs.
"People have seen the results been those to stall this whole
when a concerned citizen comes measure and who have been the
forward," Saunders said. "I am ones who have asked us to restore
very pleased the community Is a simple sense or eq ulty and
helping In cleaning up this justice for them."
The bill would have raised the
problem."
minimum
wage to $4.55 an hour
. Officials continue to encourage
40-cent
increments
during the
ln
persons wlth lnfonnation about
years.
Senate
Demonext
three
drug trafficking to bring It to
cratic leader Robert Byrd of
their attention.
West Virginia said those on the

buildings, shopping centers, and
any other economic
development.
7. Recommendations as to
facility size and rate structure,
as · well as an estimate of
occupancy.
Cost of the study will be $3,000
with the Meigs County Commis·
stoners paying $1.500 or the cost,
the Melgs County Regional Planning Commission paying $1,000
and the Village of Middleport
paying $500 in addition to provld·
ing administrative support for
the study.
The mayor states the study will
be completed within five weeks
and should be a valuable tool to
be used In attracting a motel to
thls area.
,
The mayor expresses appreclatlon to the county commissioners, the planning commission
and Middleport VIllage Council
for both their financial assistance and tor their support to this
project which should be beneficial to all or Meigs County. '
Middleport Council met in
regular session last night and
heard a report from Mayor
Hoffman that handicapped
ramps at corners in the business
sectlon are nearing completion
and he requested a council
committee inspect those ramps
to see that they 'meet speclflca·
·u9ns. Mayor Hoffman also repbrted that playground equip·
ment - a hobby horse, swings
and a slide purchased with $1,000
Continued on page 10

Minimum wage hike
defeated by filibuster
"bottom rung of the economic
ladder'' need and deserve the
pay raise.
But Byrd did not have the
necessary 60 votes to end the
fllibuster stalling action on other
important bills in the closing
weeks of the session. He had
senators vote twice last week on
a Democratlc motion to limit
debate bu I fell short both times
and saw no prospects for a
reversal.
"I can read the handwriting on
the wall." he said Monday.
"There is no point in us continuing to pound on their door.
Apparently they wanted to klil
the bill. and they have
succeeded."
Gramm. a university econom
ics professor before entering
politics, argued along with other
conservatives that increasing
the minimum wage would hurt
small businesses and would
prompt some employers to cut
out certain Jobs.

"If this bill stays where it
belongs, which is ln oblivion.
there will be hundreds thousands
of Americans. many of whom
may think the passage of this bill
would have accrued to their
benefit, most of them young
people, many of them minorities.
who do get jobs, acquire skills.
and who will end up doing quite
well In American society.':
Gramm told colleagues.

Staats .found guilty by Mason County jurors
By CHARLES A, MASON
OVPStatr

Staats will not be eligible for parole
for three years from the West Vtrginia State Penitentiary if the 46POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - year-old is sent there and is not
Herman Leo Staata of New Haven eligible for probation as a reB'.alt: of
was found JUilty of voluntary the unanimous verdict returned In
mansJau&amp;hr« Monday ovenlng In the single-shot. 12-gaugo shotgun
the shooting death May 23, 1987 of
jury c:oold have convicted
Michie! Donlld Boyd at a Now
SIIIIS Of first degree murckz, first
Hawn~
A six-woman, six-man jury in degree murckz with a recommendaMason Coun!r Cileuit Court tion of mezcy, second-degree murdeliberated a littlo less than two ~. vohmtary manslaughter or lnhom a half before retuming the . voluntary manslaughter. It also had
verdic:t bef0111 Judge Cllrenco L. the option of finding Staats not
Wall. The jury had six verdicts to guilty.

sia.ti:'

considrl;

'

gmiB
Penitentiary.
Voluntary
manslaughter is considered commission of a felony that is not
deliberate, but one which the person is moved to commit the act under the excitement or the moment,
according to the lengthy insuuctions to the jill}'.
watt set OcL 7, 9:30 a.m., for
further motions on the case and
possible sentencing of Staats.
Staats. dressed in a F.Y suit with a
~~--~irt and stripea .tie. listened to
County CU"Cuit Clerk Milos
Epling read the jtii}''S verdicL The
defendant displayed no emotion

A IX!IIviction or volmtary
ai w.ast read.
on bond until
manslauJ!htor
brin~s' a penalty of when thc~l
The ~~~Ill}' also returned •
te
objection from
fircanas
· cation which means one to fve yean m the Wc81 VII"- 0c

/'-·l

Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan Jr.
The jury began its delibemtions .
shortly before 5 p.m. Monday and
then asked for a copy its instructions.to take back to the jury room
about one hour later. The jury
deliberated until 7 p.m., broke for
dinner one hour. then continued
deliberations until 8:22 p.m. Monday. It returned the firearms specification a about 8:30 p.m. and then
was dilmissccl by Wan.
Morpn, in his closing SlaiMient
to the jury, disputed Slllll' claim
that Boyd pulled the gun toward
himself, thus resulting in an accidental shooting of the New

or

Continued on page 10
- ___.,.._

.\ r

�•

Commentary
WASHINGTON- In the strlctest secrecy, the United States
has been sending out feelers to
Iran again. The direct links,
established by the White House In
1986 but disrupted by the Iran·
contra scandal, have not been
reslimed. But communications
have been exchanged through
diplomatic back channels.
These latest White House slg·
nals have been directed again at

in Covn m..,e&amp;
Pomeroy, Olllo

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
A~

,

S!mlli:l .........._.,__.,..., ,..,.,.,doo=o
"qlv
ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publllber
\.
PAT WHITEHEAD
.U.Iut Pablllller/ControUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General illanarer

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Sp~r

the Iranian speaker of the
Parliament, Hashemi Ratsan·
janl, who Is seen as the most have gained the upper hand In the
moderate leader with any chance succession struggle. He is also
thougbt to be behind Iran's
tC) succeed Ayatollah KhomelnL
The first cautious with Rafsan· recent moves toward a cease-fire
jan I was made two yeiU's ago. He . wltb Iraq and a more moderate
responded by sending a trusted rule at home.
This Ia what President Reagan
nephew, All Hashem~ to Wa·
shington to open dlscunlons with had hoped would develop from
the first Initiative. Burned by the
the White House.
Now, Ratsanjanl appears to backfire, he has been more wary

I HAVE 'THIS PERSISTENT FEELING
Of ALTRUISM, I'M AFRAIP I'VE

A MEMBER of 'The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Alsoclatlon aDd the American New!lpllper Publishers Association.

SEEN EXPoSEP "1t) L.I8EAALISM

-

LETTERS OF OPINION are welmme. They should be lell than 300 wordt
l q. All letters are subject to e-dt Una and must be sWD.~ wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unalpal letters wUI be pUblllhed; Letters thould be 1n
JOOCIIaste, ..,dressing IIIUOI, not penmalllles.

~

I

~·-

What's in a name for
the new State Office Tower
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Statehouse observers were more than
a Utde amused last week when Gov. Richard Celeste saw to It that the
new $130 million State Office Tower was named after House Speaker
Vern Riffe.
State O!tlce Tower 2 was just completed on Capitol Square this past ·
summer, and much of It Is still vacant.
But Celeste, in a three-page memorandum to Ohio Building
Authority Chairman Harvey Oppmann, whom he mistakenly
addressed as "Harry" Oppmann, putln a strong plug for Riffe as the
honoree. Oppmann and the Building Authority quickly complied.
There Is precedent for naming state buildings after living
politicians, still in office.
Gov. James Rhodes, when he controlled the Building Authority,
quietly had the first State Office Tower named after himself. The
workers put the sign up while Rhodes was in China so It wouldn't look
like he had anything to do with lt.
Riffe, though a power In state capital circles, has labored In relative
obscurity as a House member tor 29 years and as speaker for 14 -a
record for Ohio. While he has several buildings and Institutions
named after hlm In his southern Ohio district, he has long hungered
tor statewide recognition.
Rhodes offered that recpgnltlon shortly before he left office In 1982.
Rlfte had helped Rhodes get a statue of himself erected on the
Statehouse lawn with private money; now It came time for the return
favor.
Rhodes proposed naming State Office Tower 2 after Riffe and
Senate President Paul Giltmor.
But the tower, then In the design stage, became mired in
controversy over the selection of a construction manager and the
awarding of contracts for architects and engineers by the
Rhodes-controlled OBA without competitive bidding. Sound
tamlllar?
Riffe wanted no part of that noise, so he asked that his name be
dropped from the project. So dld Gllbnor.
Construction proceeded and, with a few bugs to be Ironed out, the
building Is ready for occupancy.
Riffe says he had no Idea Celeste was going to propose naming the
tower after htm, but he' shonored. "!think It's an honor to have a state
building named after you," he said last week.
For the record, Riffe also Insists he never sal&lt;! he didn't want the
building named alter him. "I just said to take my name off that sign
that was sitting In the middle of that vacant lot," he said.
Riffe said he "never had a thing to do" with Celeste's letter to
Oppmann, a letter which goes Into more detail than a governor would
ever know about Riffe's political career.
"We are taking a historical perspective of what this man's
contribution has been," said Debra Phillips, the governor's press
secretary. "He's carved out hls niche."
To be·sure, Riffe has carved out his niche, and is still carving. When
Celeste tries to get hls final programs through the General Assembly
next session, having named the Office Tower after Mr. Speaker Isn't
going to hurt hls chances.
·
And when Riffe 11ttempts to run far governor In 1990, It's no lla blllty
to be a living legend, marked in stone, In Columbus.
It might not be a bad Idea to let our leaders put down their carving
knives before we start lionizing them with monuments.

o£1

0

~~"5o_
~

.----...

By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 27, the 271st day ot 1988 with 95 to follow .
The moon is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
patriot Samuel Adams In 1722, political cartoonist Thomas Nasi In
1840, composers Joseph McCarthy ("You Made Me Love You") In
1885 and VIncent Youmans ("Tea tor Two") In 1898, actor William
Conrad in 1920 (age 68), stage and fltm director Arthur Penn In 1922
(age 68) , actress Jayne Meadows ln 19:16 (age 62), and actor Shaun
Cassidy In 1958 (age 30) .
On this date In history:
1n 1825, In England, George Stephenson operated the first
locomotive to pull a passenger train.
In 1939, after 19 days of heavy alr raids and artillery bombardment,
the PoUsh defenders of Warsaw surrendered to Nazi Gennany.
In 1954, "The Tonight Show" made Its televisiOn debut, boated by
Steve Allen.
In 1961, Syrian army officers ended their nation's 3-year-old union
with Egypt as the United Arab Republic.
In 1986, the Senate gave final congressional approval to the blgest
U.S. tax overhaul since World War IL
In 1987, mud slides In slum areas of Medellin, Colombia, killed up to
!100 people.

I

t

A thought tor the day: Revolutionary Samuel Adams said In 1776,
"We have no other alternative than Independence, or the most
Ignominious and appalling servitude."
IJ

•

·Dodgers clinch NL West title

..
•

•

this ttme. Word has been sent
that the United States would·
welcome a resumption of the
discussions, but will not deal with
a government that reviles AmerIca and supports the terrorists
who hold American hostages.
· The responses from Tehran
had been equally cautious, hold·
lng out hope, but demanding the
return o(Irantan assets that the
United States has Impounded.
Before productive discussions •
can be resumed, both governments must overcome the distrust that followed the disruption. •
of the 1986 talks. The tint '
approoch was arran~ by the
Israelis, who used an International rascal, Manucber Ghorba·
nlfar, as the middleman. He
estribllshed contact with a hilh
official, Mousen Kangarlu, In the ,
Iranian prime mlnllter' s office. •
But GhorbanUar tried to p~
mote a weapons-for-hostages ex·
change. As the middleman, he
expected to cub In on the arms
sales. Secret papers, still under .·
court seal, show that he misled
both sides. This caused high
expectations - and, therefore; "
great dlsappoinlment -tor both
governments.

CHAMPIONSHIP TEAM - Pictured are
members of the championship Glen Lyn team.
Front (1-r): Larry Bowera, Kevin Cotde, Randy

Nlcewantler, Mike Ferrell. Back row: Wayne
· Peck, Jeff Long, Freddie Terry, Mark Perkllas,
Nonnan Home, Mike Davldsoo, Ronnie DeHart.

F:~ha~~n=n;.:o r~~~d

recruited by the White House, ;.
helped ace-out GhorbanUar from :
of the discussions. He became the ~
new quarterback, opening a
separate channel to Iran and
bringing Rafsanjanl's nephew to
the White House.

The medicaid deficit _____s_en_._Ja_nM_._L_on_g
The Ohio Medicaid budget
faces an estimated $150 million
shortfall In fiscal year 1989,
which started July 1 ot this year.
The Ohio Department of Human
Services (ODHS) contributes the
deficit to a number of factors,
Including Increased provider bll·
lings, the Increased use of
Medicaid services, and higher
health costs.
Medicaid Is approximately
half paid by the. federal govern·
ment, halt by the state. In order
to deal with the deficit, then, the
state must either make $150
million worth of cuts or find close
to $75 mllllon to make up the gap
(and thus receive federal match·
lng money) . While ODHS propoSed a number of cuts to the
Medicaid budget last spring,
there Is much resistance to
reducing the budget. The House
Health and Retirement Commit·
tee has been studying tbe Issue
all summer. The committee is
expec!ted to Issue recommenda·
tlons on revising the state's
eight-year old Medicaid law In
November.
Medicaid provides for many
more than the economically
disadvantaged. One of the prevailing myths Is that Medicaid
helps only the poor. About halt of
the Medicaid budget Is devoted to

Continued from page 1

-

rency values.
trllllon last year.
Wachtel has documented the t
That development disturbs
Many of the less developed phenomenon, first In a 1986 book
Wachtel - · and It ought to countries have, In effect, de- entitled "The Money Mandarins:
concern others, especially the ·faulted on survlclng their loans, The Making of a Supranational
presidential candidates whose thus devastating the balance Economic Order" and more ;t
c:oncept of leadership seems to sheets of the banks that sought recently In a series ot newspaper • ·
begin and end with waving the quick profits.
columns and magazine articles.
flag and reciting the pledge ot
Next, Eurodollars were used to
But the two men who want to
ali!!glance.
finance many of the more than lead this country Into the 1990s ~
At a 1944 U.N. conference In 18,000 corporate mergers and display no Interest In the threa· ·
Bretton Woods, N.H., the world's acquisitions of the past decade. tened loss of the nation's policymajor Industrial nations agreed They cost approximately $600 making sovereignty In monetary
that national governments would billion but did little to Improve atfalrs - a development that
regulate the world's money production.
could have catastrophic results.
•
supply, principally by stabilizing
currency exchange rates. By the
early 1970s, however, deregula·
tlon was underway. Today, the
world's currencies - under
constant pressure from stateless
,,
money and International greedchange value dally and even
. "'
hourly.
For many years, Eurodollars,
which are ti.S. dollars that
circulate outside of this country
and are used tor world trade,
.have been part ot the world
economy. They are exempt from
'.
the authority ot federal regula·
tory agencies.
Beginning In 1973, however, the
Eurodollar supply grew at a
phenomenal pace because the
Organization ot"Petroleum Ex·
portbig Countries accumulated
'',\of
more than $400 billion while
ratchetlng up the price of crude
on.
' "A substantial portion of those
"
funds was then deposited In the
branches of major New York
"·
' .
bankl located In the Bahamas,
Cayman Islands and other off·
shore sanctuaries.
Desperate to lind Investment
opportunities for their wealthy
clients, those banks recycled the
STATE BUDGET SHELL GAME
funda Into loans to Third World
countries, whose debt burden
rose from $100 billion In 1973 to $1

~~

,,

..

..,

.
....

t

.

I

previous losses to Gallipolis
(12·6) and defeated the Middle·
port Yellow Jackets 18-0 in a
game in whl~h the Middleport
coach played.

•

Roughly 55,000 Medicaid· should Include ways to keep f
care tor the elderly, blind, and
disabled. One group that would sponsored patients are cared for people from becoming lmpover·
be greatly affected by cuts to In nursing homes, which receive !shed In old age so that they have ·
Medicaid Is the elderly. Many 63% of their revenue from Medl· to go on Medicaid. Federal and
·people who have always been · cald. Nursing home representa- state Initiatives are needed to
able to provide tor themselves lives have told the committee address the prohibitive costs ot ·
are forced to go on Medicaid once that cuts In their reimburse- comprehensive long-term care. ·,
The chalnnan of the House
they enter a nursing home. Over ments would hurl the quality of
half of all elderly couples are care for the elderly. Nursing committee studying the Medl·
reduced to poverty when a homes dld take a cut of$1. 75 per cald budget has announced that .
spouse spends only slx months In patient per day last October and he Is leaning away trom making
a nursing home.
are Involved In lawsuits with cuts. Part ot the deficit has been •
Seventy-five . percent of all ODHS to have that cut restored. 1 caused by tbe rising number of
Medicaid spending goes to nurs·
Nursing homes face rising caseloads. This Is no reason to
lng homes and hospitals. Out of a coats for ·Items like staff and cut the Medicaid budget. U there
$2.2 bllllon Medicaid budget for utilities, which are beyond their are mostMedlcaldcases, butless
fiscal year 1989, $1.2 bllllon will control. Staftlng Is a partlcularl;v Medicaid money, the quality of
go to reimbursements to nursing costly problem, as turnover .ls care would surely suffer. Both • ,.
homes. With these kinds of very high and there is a shortage the human services department •
statistics, ODHS has argued that of registered nurses.
and the nursing home represen· ~
any cuts to Medicaid would have
Other costs Imposed on nursing tatlves have raised viable con·
to Include cuts In payments to homes Include the recent 17 cerns In the House committee. I nursing homes; because nursing percent Increase In workers' will continue to follow the pro- · .:
homes take up such a large compensation premiums and ceedlngs of the panel and I look •
portion of the Medicaid budget, money tor federal mandates, forward to Its recommendations.
they will have to absorb a large such as Increased training re- All legislators must thoroughly
portion of any Medicaid cuts. qulrements. Another problem Is review and discuss the Issue
ODHS has also said that Ohio's that nursing homes otten pay for before any action, especially
Medicaid distribution system Is the care of Individuals whose cu ttlng the budget, Is taken.
one of· the most complicated In Medicaid funding approval Is
U you have any comments on ·•
the country, which Invites cheat· pending. If those patients are . this or any other Issue of Interest
lng by providers. The chairman eventually found Ineligible tor to you, please cont&lt;~ct me by r :
ot the House committee, how- Medicaid, the nursing home Is writing State Senator Jan Mlever, has said that the admlnls· never reimbursed.
chael Long, Ohio Senate, State- •
!ration has yet to prove these
Any long·term solution to the house, Columbus, Ohio, 43266allegations.
Medlcald funding · problems 0406, or call (614) 466-8156.

Berry's World

J'y JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Los Angeles Dodgers. a
proud franchise coming off the
embarrassment of two straight
losing seasons, turned back the
doomsayers In 1988.
The Dodgers clinched their
fourth NL West title in eight
years Monday night with a 3-2
victory over the San Diego
Padres, capping a turnaround
that had seen them win just 73
games In . each of the past two
years and turn into one of the
laughingstocks of the National
League.
'1'here were a lot of opinions
(before the season started) and
not many oftheoplnlon that we'd
be here." said Kirk Gibson, one
of several key players acquired
by the Dodgers during the
offseason. "It's not what everyb·
ody else says about you. It's what
you believe In yourself. "
The Dodgers will face the New
York Mets In the NL championship series, with Game 1 set for
Oct. 4 at Dodger Stadium.
·
Mickey Hatcher's one-out sin·
gle to left In the eighth Inning
scored Alfredo Griffin with the
winning run, capping a Dodger
comeback from a 2·0 deficit.
Griffin opened the eighth with
a grounder to shortstop Dickie
Thon, who threw wildly to first
for a two-base error. Steve Sax
sacrificed Griffin to third, and
Hatcher followed with a single to
left.
"I've seen a lot of my friends go
to the playoffs and World Ser·
ies," Hatcher said. "Now · l'm
glad I'll get a chance to do it."
Los Angeles had tied the score

•

.•• ·

on solo homers by John Shelby In "He did a great job getting
the fourth, his lOth of the year, players Into the right positions.
and Tracy Woodson In the fifth.
He found something that worked
his third.
for him and he stuck with it."
Dennis Rasmussen. 15-10, took
Jn other games. Cincinnati
the loss despite pitching his sixth defeated San Francisco 5-2. New
complete game.
York rolled over Philadelphia
104,
St. Louts thrashed PittsAlejandro Pena, 6·7, the fifth of
six Los Angeles pitchers, went burgh 7-1 and Montreal edged
three Innings for the victory. Jay Chicago 3·2.
In the American League, It
Howell pitched the ninth Inning
for his 21st save. The save was was: Toronto 11, Boston 1;
the Dodgers' 47th, setting a new Del roll 6, Cleveland 3; New York
5, Baltimore 4; .Texas 5, Seattle
Los Angeles record.
After pinch hitter Marvell 3; and Kansas City 5, Seattle 0.
Reds 5, Giants 2
Wynne fouled off three straight
At San Francisco, Tom Brown·
3-2 pitches, Howell retired him on
a pop fly to Steve Sax for the final lng scattered four hits over
out, and the jubilant Dodgers eight-plus Innings to improve to
raced out of the dugout to mob 18·5 and win for the 16th time
since June 6. John Franco
Howell behind th e mound.
pitched
the ninth tor his league"It's very gratifying to see
leadi
ng
38th save, breaking the
these players enjoy this," said
old
Cincinnati
mark of 37.bY Clay
Dodger Manager Tom La sorda.
Carroll
In
1972.
Rick Reuschel.
"They 've worked awfully hard
19-10, failed In his second stralgllt
all year."
The Dodgers did It with a attempt to secure his 20th
revamped lineup at many post· vict.ory.
Mets 10, Phlllles 4
lions, the result of several
At Philadelphia, Sid Fernanoffseason deals by Fred Claire,
the team's executive vice dez won his fifth stralghtdeclslon
as the Mets won for the 11th ttme
president.
In
their last 12 games. FernanClaire obtained shortstop Aldez,ll-10,
gave up six hits, struck
fredo Griffin and reljevers How·
out
three
and
walked two in seven
ell and Jesse Orosco in trades,
·
innings.
Greg
Harris fell to 4-6.
· then went out and signed freeCardinals
7, Plrales 1
agent ou !fielders Mike Davis and
At
Pittsburgh,
Jose DeLeon
Gibson.
fired
a
three-hitter
and Willie
The Dodgers also overcame
McGee
and
Pedro
Guerrero
each
several Injuries, most notably a
broken finger by GriHin and arm knocked In two runs. DeLeon, ·"
troubles by longtime pitching ace 13-9, won for the seventh time In
his last eight decisions, allowing
Fernando Valenzuela.
'1'ommy did a helluva job just three singles, two by Ken
managing this club with all the Oberkfell and one by Bobby
Injuries he's had," said San Bonilla. Dave LaPoint, 4-2, took '
'Diego Manager Jack McKeon. the loss. ·

Former Rutland educator, coach...

Currency without a country ___R_ob_er_t_~_al_te_rs
WASHINGTON (NEAl - lm·
agine almost $2 trillion In Eurod·
ollars rapidly circling the globe,
24 hours a day, 365 days a year,
ceaselessly probing for new
Investment opportunities likely
to produce quick profits tor their
owners.
The hit-and-run moves those
funds make seldom ltre prln·
clpled but they are plentiful. The
money provides large loans to
unstable but desperate Third
World nations, financing for
corporate mergers that are luc·
ratlve tor a few Insiders but
otherwise make no sense, and
short-term plays In everything
from stock index futures to
currency exchange rate spreads.
Howard M. Wachtel, an economlcs professor at American
University In Washington, quotes
some of the young traders
employed by a leading New York
bank to sell German ntarks
against French francs, buy Japa·
nese yen against British pounds
and otherwise make a tast buck
tor their clients ·- even If It
destabilizes world currency
markets.
"It Isn't un·Amerlcan" to sell
dollars when they are weak, thus
profiting from the declining
value of his native country's
currency, says one trader.
Another charaCterizes himself
and his colleagues as "soldiers ot
fortune" with neither "alllan·
·ces" (only a commitment to
"work tor the bank") nor concern that their actions could
undermine the u.s. position In
the world economy.
The transnational now of ex·
patr!ate dollars Is only one
aspect ot the ulttmate act of
global deregulation - the aban·
donment of government -control
over monetary }lOlley and cur·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Porna'oy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuuclay. September 27. 1988

Peg a 2-The Daily Saalilel
Pomeloy-Middlaport, Ohio
Tunclay, September 27, 1988

U. S. dealings with Iran continue

The Daily Sentinel

-

FINISH SECONP- APCO tourney runners-up
on the Pulaski 'team are: Front (l·r): Doug
Atkins, Fran DeBell~. Vernon Crouch, JlmAlouf,

Jon Fitzwater. Back row: Clyde Turner, Barry
1Phillips, David Jackson, Rob Ir.lrby; Larry
Anderson, Keith Wiley.

Third annual APCO tournament ·
held with 12 weekend .contests
By JlM SOULSBY
MASON, W. Va - On Satur·
day, despite a steady drizzle, the
third annual APCO softball tournament kicked off action at
General Hartinger ·Park in
.. ·' .
Middleport. ., ,
On a field that would have been
. more suited for mud wrestllng,lO
entries ope11ed play . . Twelve
games tur11~ · t)le diamond Into
an ankle deep quagmire which
did nothing to dampen the
enthuslam a! lite players. On that
first day, •four •teams were

Johnson·
'
-stripped
of gold
SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) Sprinter Ben Johnson left Seoul
in disgrace today after losing
Canada's only gold medal of the
Summer Olympics and likely
mllllons of dollars In endorsements because of his use of a
banned body-building drug.
Johnson's tall from grace as
the 100-meter king - the worst
doping scandal in Olympics
history - sent shock waves
across Canada and prompted
· calls tor stronger drug·
eradication efforts .
International OlympiC Com·
mlttefl . spokeswoman Michele
Verdier said the IOC had re··
jected appeals from Canadian
officials who ar~d that someone might have tampered with
either Johnson's urine sample or
hls on-field beverage container.
'1'he gold medal has been·
withdrawn," Verdier said.
The 27 -year-old Johnson
boarded a flight tor New York
atter he was stripped ot the right
to claim the title as the "world's
fastest man," which he had
earned Saturday with a spel·
lblndlng victory In world-record
time over American Carl Lewis
In a heralded 100-meter dash
showdown that lived up to Its
advance bllllng.
The IOC's decision virtually
Continued on page 4

,,

knocked from contention as they,
Huntington Division, Mountai·
neer 2, Sporn 2 and CPM,
suffered defeat .in the double
elbnination event.
Moving to Maso11 on Sunday for
better playing facilities. action
resumed with teams from Pulaski (Va), Mountaineer 1, Amos
Plant, Beckley Division, Sporn 1
and Glen Lyn (Va) vying for first
place which had gone to Sporn 1
in the first two tournaments.
Pulaski, emerging from the
losers bracket, came on like
gang-busters eltmlnatlng Moun·
talneer 1 (8-4), Beckley (6·3) and

Atter attending Ohio \)nlver·
slty where he majored in chemis·
try and his football career ended
because of an injury, he was
employed by Armco of Middletown. The ensuing qepresslon
years forced a layoff of employees and through the efforts of
hls former coach and teacher,
Mr . Chapman, Mr. Dennison
returned to Rutland as a teacher
and eventual football coach.
He· assumed the head coaching
position In 1937 and after drop·
ping the first game of the year

went to the library and obtained
Jock Sutherland's book on the
single wing offense. He memo·
rlzed the contents of the book and
thus was born teh Red Devll's
vaunted single wing attack. This
decision was Influenced by his
attendance at the OSU-Pltt foot·
ball game which resulted in an
OSU loss 7-6. Former area greats
"Tippy" Dye and Fred Crow
were part of that OSU team that
pitted the "T" against the single
wing offense.
His Red Devil' s won the
Southeastern Buckeye League
title In hls second season as coach
and was runner up in the third
year with one loss. Reminiscing
on players during his final season
(1941) he, with much emotion.
recalled hearing of the death of

Lawrence Barber and Hobart
Nelson who lost their lives
fighting for their country In •
France during World War Two.
''That was a devastating blow to
me'·. Mr. Dennison stated. "One :;
of the most gratifying expe(!ences of my life was the opportunity to teach and coach those yourig
men as well as other young men
and women during those years".
Retiring in 1973 after being
employed In other areas In the
Tri-State Area , Mr. Denulson,
and his wife Marcia , returned to
their home In the Rutland
community.
Judging from the glowing
praise from friends and neighbors. one must conclude that the
community gained fr0111 their
return.

. . . ---------------t··
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Sporn 1 (13-6). In the Sporn
contest it was "home run or out"
as the Virginia contingent hammered six round -trippers, three
of them off the bat of Wiley
(given name not known) .
·
In what proved to be the tille
game, Glen Lyn tallled four runs
in the first frame and added one
each In the third, fourth and sixth
Innings for the 7·4 win over their
fellow Virginians and the crown.
Members of the championship
squad were awarded jackets and
trophies and the runners-up
received trophies as well as
shirts. Scott Harrison, hard hit·
tlng Sporn 1 batsman, received a
bat for garnering the most hits
during the event.
Skipper Johnson and Charles
Miller were the tournament
directors. The tournament will
take place in Virginia nextyear
with Glen Lyn as the host team.

..

•

fJ UST CAIJ. US ••• THE
.

-

..

The Daily Sentinel
(U8PSIU·IIO)
A Dlvlllen of Multimedia. lac.
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throogh. Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
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IIUIIIK1li!PI'ION RATJ!S

MOST Hrt'S - Pictured Is
Scott Harrison of Spom 1 who
wu awarded bat for most hits
In lhe APCO tournament .

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�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Tutllday, Sept.nber 27, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily

Tuesday. September 27. 1988

ROll

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Tau (Houa:h 15-15) at Chl&lt;:a&amp;o
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Oakland (Welclro 18-K) at Mlnnesoll

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Sl . Loui.!l 1, Pltt!lbu..-h 1
Mo,.l'f'ai 3, Chlcqo t
New 'fork 10, Phlladt!lphla -1
Los An gtle!i 3, San Dte1o 2
ClnclnnU.I5, SW1 Franci~~eo 'l
'l'uesd~ 's Gamel!!

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(SmiiP)' J:l-101, i:l~ p.m •

Chicago (Schln.l dl K·13) Mt Montl'f'W

I Holman J. 7), i : 85 p.m.
New York (DarUn1 lf-9) tu Philadelphia (Carman 10-lllJ, 7:35p.m .
Holl!ilon (Kn~pper 1-1·5) 11t Atlanta
!P.Smlth 7-15), i:~O p.m.
Los !\ngt'les (IA&gt; III'y 17-9 ) at San DIPkO
(S how U -1·11, 10:05 p.m.
C'lncln.-.tl (.4.rmlllronr 4-41 ) a l San
Frnncl!!t.'U tRobln!iOn t-51 , 10 :35 p.m.
WedrM&gt;sdiQ''!I Gam.,_

S&amp;.Louls at PltL'lhllrw:h. nlsbt
Nf'W York at Phlhldt!lphia, nl~~;bl
Chlca~:o Ill Montreal, nlpt
Houston at Atlanca, alli[!Jt
Cl nl'iniiAtl at San Francl!iCo , nlghl

Los l\llceles at San Die~. nlx:ht

jr()JlflS()fl ••• __c_o_n_un_u_e_d_tr_o_m_p~a~g_e_3_____________
assured Lewis of receiving the
gold medaL The International
Amateur Athletic Federation
was expected to award the
1()()-meter top prize to the
American.
Lewis declined to comment on
the startling turn of events,
which revived his hope that he
could repeat his 1984 performance in the Los Angeles Olympics, where he won four gold
medals.
; The scandal overshadowed
American Greg Louganis's triumph in platform diving, which
made him the first male diver
ever to win gold medals ·in both
springboard and plat(orm competition at consecutive Olympics. The American women's
yachting team also delivered a
gold medal.
Under rules of ihe IOC and the
International Amateur Athletic
Federation, any athlete who tests
positive for drugs is au tomatica lly banned from co mpetition
for two years and loses any titles ,
medals or records.
The scandal also is expected to
cost Johnson dearly on Madison
Avenue, where the sprinter

stands to lose an estimated $2
million he might have earned in
this year alone in endor~ements
and fees.
"He had his hands on the big
time and he blew it ," said Jean
Claude Schubb, a spokesman for
Adidas SPOrtswear.
The scandal virtually eclipsed
Louganls's comeback victory
over Chinese rival XIong Nl.
Louganls, who burst Into tears
as he climbed from the pool to
embrace his coaches, won hi s
second gold medal in platform
diving.
·'I'm speechless," Louganis
said. ''I knew I had to have a big
last dive, and I got it ."
Louganls won the springboard
go ld medal last week after
banging his head on the board
during· preliminaries.
The American women's basketball team defeated the Soviets
102-88 and will play for the gold
medal Thursday against
Yugoslavia. ·
Final rounds of competition
were scheduled today In diving.
yachting. cycling, equestrian.
judo. fencing and weight lifting.

DENVER tUP!) -Chris Bahr
kicked a 35-yard field goal In
overtime to push the Los Angeles
Raiders to a 30·27 victory over
the Denver Broncos Monday
night.
Raider quarterback Jay
Schroeder, making his first start
since being obtained from the
Washington Redsklns three
weeks ago, Jed the Raiders back
from a 24-0 halftime deficit to set
up Bahr's winning kick.
"Jay was really relaxed at
halftime, there was no panic,"
said Raiders Coach Mike Shanaha1J, the former Broncos offensive coordinator making his first
return to Mile High Stadium. "He
just wanted totakelt one step at a
time. He's been there before and
that experience Is so very Important for an NFL quarterback."
The winning score came after
John Elway threw an Ill-advised
pass up for grabs and Zeph Lee
picked it off at midfield and
returned it to the Broncos'
31-yard line. It was Elway's
fourth Interception of the night.
Los Angeles ran ·four running
plays to the Broncos'17-yard line
before Bahr nailed his third field
goal of the night .
"I was In shock at halftime, not
scoring any points In the first
half, even against a great defense . like Denver's," said
Schroeder, who passed for 216
yards in the second half after a
miserable opening 30 minutes.
"But we had nothing to lose. We
came back In the second half and
said, 'hey , we don't want to look
this bad all game."'
Earlier in . the overtime, the
· Raiders' Tim Brown had a
76-yard punt return for a touch down wiped out by a clipping
penalty on Stefan Adams.
Schroeder, who completed just
2 of 8 passes for 26 yards In the
first half, threw third-quarter
touchdown passes ol 40 and 42
yards to fullback Steve Smith to
start the comeback.
Bahr kicked a 28-yard field
goal with 12:24 to go and Marcus
Allen tied the score at 24-24 with a ·
4-yard touchdown run with 9:26
to play.
"

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FOOTBALL CONTEST.

Rio Grande runner Mary
Dowler took first place In the
women's d.lvlslon competition of
the Morehead State Cross Coul1try ln.vitatlonal Saturday.
Dowler finished the cGurse In
19:24, while the second place
runner from Morehead came In
at 2o: 54.
"Mary, along with the rest of
our girls, ran the best race of het
career," Coach Bob Willey commented. The women took second
place overall.
Tim Warnock finished first for
the Rio Grande men with a time
of 27:40. The Redmen team took
second place.
The teams will next compete In
the 18th Rio Grande Invitational,
set to begin Saturday, Oct. 1 at·
9:30a.m.

••

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.!'l•llloln.W.Va.
112-21ll .

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AnENTION
DRIGGS VOLLEYS- Eastern's Edna Driggs, right, delivers a
voUey across the net In Monday's match against Southern as
Tornado Tracy Beegle comes up to meet the challenge. Eagle Lisa
Driggs watches the action as she anticipates a return of the volley.

461 S. 3rd

B~AN~~--~~~~~~1~988

Rio runners place
2nd in MSU race

SINGER* SEMINAR

11 :00 A.M.-8:00 P.M.
MIDDLEPORT and
POMEROY LOCATIONS

Sy11111111 ~alley VI. E11tern

bids for a 2-1 score. Sister Aimee
Lee Gillilan, Toby Hill, and
Hill added 2 to the count and SHS Edna Driggs each had two for
Jed 4-1.
Ea~tern, Flnlaw one, and Lisa
Lisa Driggs hammered across Driggs one.
.
an untouced serve for a 4-2 score,
Alternating In and out, playing
but that's as close as Eastern good defense, and exhibiting
came.
good front line play, Southern's
Tracy Beegle put the game teamwork proved to be excellent.
away with 9 straight blazing Besides those scoring points,
serves, some of which caught the Jane Ann Williams, Becky WlneEHS gals completely offstrlde.
brenner,and Becky Evans all
Not to be denied Eastern contributed.
fought back behind sophomore
Eastern's Trlsh Spencer, Amy
Edna Driggs. Driggs was backed Hager, Mandl Harris, and Lori
by several good volleys,but Baker all had good lloor games.
nailed down just one point
Southern claimed the reserve
despite a good effort.
arid Jr. High contests, the reDawn Johnson added another, serve tilt going two sets 15-10 and
then alter Eastern's Heather 15-4.
Finlaw dropped In a serve,
Cheryl Pape had 12 overall
veteran Crystal Hili finished off points, six In each game, Junle
the game. 15-4.
Beegle 8, and Marcy Hlll6 to lead
In overall scoring Tracy Bee- •the winners.
In the second contest freshman gle had 16, Aimee Hlll 5, C. Hlll 3,
Eastern's Ay Mora had 5,
Lee Gillilan put Eastern on top Tracy Norris, 3,Dawn Johnson 1, Tabby Phillips 4, and AI vena Van
1-0, but senior Crystal Hill turned • and Trlcia Wolfe 2, Including the Meter 2.
It around with two successful game-winners In game one.
Southern plays at Eastern
tonight.

·•·· tHI*

OPEN SUNDAYS

992-2556

RACINE - In just two sets the
high-flying Southern Torna ·
doettes of Coach Suzanne Wolfe
defeated cross-county rival
Eastern,15-4 and 15-4, to claim an
Important SVAC volleyball
match here Monday evening In
Charles . w. Hayman
gymnasium .
Southern Is now 8-2 overall and
5-1 In the SVAC, while Eastern
drops to 1-8 and 1-5.The two
schools face In a rematch tonight
at Eastern.
Despite the seemingly onesided score, both games were
well-played with several long
and exci tlng volleys across the
net. Southern,however, dominated when the chips were down
and capitalized on tis many
scoring opportunities.

.

VIDEO
TOUCH
DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES

AT THE END

$"'''''"

"W•klg
OF THE POMEROY-MASON

VI.

PAT HILL FORD

SOFT DRINKS • FRIES • SlNDWKHES
r

Raiders
Southern volleyball team tops EHS
rally to
win, 30-27 .

Scoreboard ...
Majors

CHESTER, OHIO
985-3301

Pictured are, lronl, Toby Hill, Lorrie Baker,Amy
Hager, Heather Flnlaw and Edna Driggs.
Back·Trlsh Spencer,Lisa Dtlggs,Mandl Harris,
and Lee GIIIUan and Coach Pam Douthllf.

Middleport, Ohio

Boston Collet•

Pe.. Stele ••· Te111ple

BAUM LUMBER
EASTERN EAGLETTES -The 1988 version of
the Eastern VoUeyball team Is combining youth
and experience, this year showing much Improvement and development throughout the season.

992-3481

VALLEY LUMBER

111 East Second
Pomeroy, OH.
992-2342
.

winning team are (L-R) Dawn Johnson, Jany Ann
· Wllllams,Tracy· Beegle, Crystal Hill, Becky
Winebrenner, Aimee Hill, Becky Evans, Tracy
Norris, Trlcla Wolfe, and Coach Suzanne Wolfe.

CRAFT SUPPLIES - BULK CANDY - TOYS
MUCH MORE

W.~.U. ••· ~•• Tee~

INSURANCE

SVAC CONTENDERS- The Southern Tomadoelle VJ!rslty voUeyball team Is In lhe thick ofthe
· SVAC voUeyball race with an &amp;-2 overall and 5-I
SVAC record as of Monday, Members of this

JOHNSONS
VARIETY STORE

..uron,OH.

I

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•••

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I

•••••••••••••

I

••••••••••••••

"Ooo• Luck"
SUPPORT THESE
FINE AREA
BUSINESSES!

�.•

September 27, 1988

By The Bend
'

Page 6

Fun with foo:ls

Beat of the bend

A little help from you
Alan Ransom Griffin of New
York would really appreciate
some llelp from
y.
0
u
genealogists.
Griffin was
Pomeroy Mon·
day looking tor
help In getting
Information on
some of hts ancestors who many
years ago were In the Pomeroy
area.
His great.grandfather, Cha·
rles L. Griffin, was born In
Pomeroy In 1861 and had a
brother, William Griffin. Alan
would like Information not only
on his gret·grandtather but also
his great 'great·grandfather,
Charles Ransom Griffin who
served In the Civil War probably
at a very young age and served
under a Gen. Schenck.
It you have any Information
wblch might be helpful please
contact Griffin at P .0. Box 216,
Taberg, NY., 13471.
•"J'he barn" Is making Its exit
from Vale St.
'lbe barn Is a structure which
was used to bouse the horses and
wagons of the Kaylor family and
Is located on Vale St ., property
now owned by Guido Glrolaml.
The barn Is believed to be about
100 years old.
'lbe late Henry Koehler many
years ago used to bottle soft
drinks In the building across the
street and also bottled and

distributed beere from there up
until about 1921.
Build of while poplar .. and
much of the lumber Is stllllngood
shape-·the barn's roof feel Into
disrepair and has given away
making It necessary to tear down
the structure. Anyone wishing to
purchase the materials In the
building can contact Glrolaml.
Active Middleport American
Legion members says this Is an
"odd week" ..whatever that
means ..and as a result a public
square dance will be staged
beglnnllng at 8 p.m. Friday at the
Feeney· Bennett Post 128 Amerl·
can Legion Annex on Mill St.
Providing music for the dance
will be the True
,. Country Band.

___

You'll be pleased to know that
Rosaltha (that's Rose as we
know her) Ginther Is doing well.
She Is still residing at 9109
Oregonia Road, Waynesville,
Ohio, 45068. rose Is still active In
church affairs, her garden club
and the Senior Citizens Oragniza·
lion there. Rose will mark her
87th birthday at her home on Oct .
16. Know she would be pleased to
hear from you.
You can never speak a good
word too soon, since you never
know how soon will be too late.
How about that for some heavy
Blue Monday phllosphy? Do keep
smiling.

Slinderella class meeting held
Pat Hysell was the top loser at
the Tuesday morning Fl ve Points
class of Sl btderella.
At the Tuesday night Mason
class, Charlotte Smith lost the
most weight and In the kids class,
Crystal Smith lost the most
weight and Amy Smith was
runner·up. In the Wednesday

night Flve·Pobtts class, there
was a tie for the most weight lost
between Brenda Roush and Do·
rothy Russell, and Mildred Hud·
son was the runner·up.
New members are being ac·
cepted for fall classes and
anyone Interested should contact
JoAnn Newsome, lecturer.

KEITH WISE

Wise speaks
•
1n
serviCes
Keith Wise, minister of the
Church of Christ In Jamestown,
and a former pas tor In Meigs
County, will be speaker at
revival services Oct. 2·6, at the
Rutland Church of Christ.
Wise, a native of Steubenville
and a graduate of Kentucky
Christian College, holds a mas·
ter's degree In archaelogy and
history f, .m Youngstown State
University. He was formerly
pastor of the Rutland Church of
Chlrst.
Wise, 34, has held revivals In 10
states and has been publlcshed In
several publications. In May,
this year, he was admitted to the
National Assoclaton of Pastors
and Scholars.
This year's homecoming at the
Rutland Churcxh Of Christ has
been · set for Oct. 9 with the
Branchges Quartet presenting
. the afternoon program at 2 p.m.
Roy W. Carter, minister of the
Rutland church and· members,
Invite the public to any or all of
the services.

Homebuilders Club meeting held
Plans were made for the
annual fall banquet at the annual
Homebuilders Class meetbtg
held at the Middleport Church of
Christ. '
.
Committees named Included
Flo Grueser, Thelma Boyer,
Clarice Erwin, tickets: Dorothy
Roach, program; Kathryn
Evans and Coleen Van Meter,
decorations.
'S everal dOnations were made
with $100 being given as a love
offering to a family, $50 for toys
for the nursery, and $50 on the
cost of a new refrigerator for the
church kitchen.

It was reported that Bud
Wilson Is recuperating at home
following a time In the hospital.
Frank Ihle and Clay Tuttle haad
'prayer during the meeting. Gen·
eva Tuttle gave a reading on
wisdom, and Mrs. Roach had a
Bible quiz.
Mrs. Grueser, Mr. and Mrs.
Tuttle served refreshments to
those named and Joe Bishop,
Dorothy Baker, Dulcie Forth.
Frank lhle, Glen Evans, Doris
Carter, Hazel Wilson, Nettle and
Willard Boyer, and Thelma
Boyer.

Reunion conduaed recently
A reunion of the Joe Grueser
family was held at the Forest
Acres Park near Ru !land
recently .
·. Members gathered for a dinner
and then spent the afternoon
rembtlsclng since many had not
seen each other lor years.
Charles R. Grueser gave thE'
blessing for the food. Barbara
Van Meter furnished decorations
lor the tables and Millie Gureser
decorated a cake.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Nick Grueser, Patrick and Mar·

tha Grueser, and Joseph G.
Grueser, Richard and Jessie
Grueser and son, Charles, Bar·
bara and Purl Van Meter, Greg
Van Meter, Randy and Teresa
Houdashelt, all of Rutland; Allen
and Mary Grueser and daughter ,
Martha, Athens.
Wade and Irene Tom, Athens:
Michael and Millie Grueser,
daughter Meron, Pomeroy: Bes·
sle Grueser, Cave Springs, Ark. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flantgln,
Ponco City, Ohio: and David and
Eileen Grueser.

Birthday supper conducted
A birthday supper was held
recen lly at the home ol Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Grueser honoring
Randy Houdashelt. Attending
were his wife, Teresa, Mr. and
Mrs. Purl Van Meter, Greg Van
Meter, Charles Grueser, and his
parents, Gene and Peggy
Houdashelt.
. Mrs. Bessie Grueser of Cave
Springs. Ark. visited several
days here with Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Grueser. She also vi·

sited Laoma Cremeans of Mid·
dleport one evening, and spent
time with Wade and Irene Tom,
Aihens, where she was joined by
Allen and Mary Grueser, also of
Athens, and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Flanlgln, Po·nco City.
Other recent visitors at the
Richard Grueser home were Mr.
and Mrs. James Grueser and
famlly of West VIrginia, Nick and
Margie Grueser, and the Purl
Van Meter family.

· Better Health Club meets
. Plans for sponsorbtg three
young people of the community
In the St. Jude's Hospital bike·&amp;·
thon were made when the Rock
Springs Better Health Club met
recently at the home of Nancy
Morris.
Lenora Leifheit presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge and the Lord's Prayer.
Mra. Morris gave devotions.
Reports of severallll members of
tbe coll'lrilunlty were noted and
cardl were sent. Ann Mash had
tbe program which consls ted of

Visiting

By John C, Rice
County Ext. Arent,
Agriculture

Tuesday. September 27. 1988

....

articles on AIDS. The contest
conducted by Mrs. Leifheit was
won by Helen Blackston and Mrs.
Mash. Others attending were
VIolet Hysell, Louise Bearhs,
Phyllis Skinner, Beuna Grueser,
Francis Goegleln, and Dorothy
Jeffers who will host the next
meeting.

Community
calendar
TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire OES
will meet Tuesday, 8 p.m .
SYRACUSE - M~igs Chapter
of American Association of Unl·
verslty Women meeting at 7:30
p.m . Tuesday at the Syracuse
Elementary School; members
are to take a friend to the session.

Pickle this...

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Combine salt and one gallon Process In bontng water bath,,
Barbara Loftis, daughter of
water. Bring to a boll and pour (212 degrees F) five minutes.
Pauline Kennedy and the late over cucumbers. Cover with a Makes 12·14 pints.
Walter
plate; weight down. Brine must
Barbara had some other re·
Kennedy, Jr. of
. cover cucumbers. Let stand 8
Pomeroy, was
days, but stir the cucumbers clpes, also favorites of her
the subject of a
every day to discourage forma· family, to share.
. Scalloped Com and BroccoU
recent feature
lion of rum .
2 packages broccoll·cooked
story titled
On the 8th day, empty cu·
"Pickle Per·
cumbers Into large container and partially
. feet" In the St.
1 can of cream corn In bo I tom
wash thoroughly with cold water.
Peters, Mo. Messenger·Trlbune.
Cut them lengthwise or Into of casserole
Barbara, a registered nurse, is chunks and return to containers.
V.. cup cracker crumbs
devoting her time to homemak· In the meantime bring one gallon
1 egg beaten
!ng and child rearing now .. she of fresh water with 1 tbsp.
2 Tbsp. melted butter
and her husband, Ivan, have powdered alum added, to a boll.
1 Tbsp. onion
three youngsters·· so she has the Pour boDing hot water over
~ tsp. salt
. ·
Combine last tlve Ingredients
. time to do some of the things cucumbers. Weight down.
career mothers , usually can't
On the 9th day, pour off the In corn. Place partially cooked ..:
work Into their schedules.
alum solution, drain cucumbers. broccoli on top of corn mixture. ·'
In the story Barbara says she Bring 1 gallon fresh water with 1 Top with 2 Tbsp. melted butter •
started cooking at a young age, tbsp. alum added, to a boll. Pour plus 4 Tbsp: of bread crumbs.
what with "one set of grandpar· over cucumbers; weight down.
Bake at 350 · degrees for 45 •
•
ents owning a dairy farm, so
On the lOth day,' repeat proce· mbtutes.
fresh dairy products were plentl· dure for 8th and 9th days.
ful and the other grandma baking
On the 11th day, pur off alum
Beef·Pota&amp;oes Augralln
great pies and bread" and went solution. Drain cucumbers tho·
V.. lb. dried beet
on to mention that both her roughly. Put pickles back Into
4 Tbsp. shortenbtg
mother and dad were great container.
3 Tbsp. flour
cooks ..
Combine sugar, vinegar, oUs
1 medium sized onion, chopped
Of course, every cook has a and cinnamon and cloves, mea·
2 cups milk
specially and for Barbara, her's sured with a medicine dropper,
~ tp. salt
Is sweet pickles. - - and celery seeds. Brbtg to a boll
dash pepper
Sweet Pickles
and pour over the cucumbers.
1 cup chopped celery
75 ·(3 to 3~ Inch) cucumbers Weight down.
4 medium potatoes. sliced
(about a peck)
On the 12th day. drain syrup
4 oz. pkg. cheese
2 cups coar.s e pickling salt
from cucumbers. Bring syrup to
Shred beef and brown with
bolllng water
a boll and pour over cucumbers. onion In the shortenbtg. Blend In
10 cups sugar
Weight down.
,
the flour and add milk. Boll until
5 cups vinegar
On the 13th day, drain off It thickens. Add celery, potatoes,
alum. powdered
syrup, brlhg to a boll and pour and the cheese.
18 drops oil of cinnamon
over cucumbers. Weight down.
Place In baking dish and bake
18 drops oil olf cloves
· On the 14th day, pack cu· In 350 degree oven for 45 minutes
2 tbsp. celery seeds
cumbers In hot, sterilized glass or until done.
Place cucumbers In a stone jars. Bring syrup to a boll; pour
jar, glass or enameled container. over cucumbers to cover. Seal.
Pineapple Mallow Pie
9 Inch baked pie shell or
grapham cracker crust
24 large marshmallows
I cup crushed pineapple,
undrained
The5thAnnual4·H Alumni and etc . The lastfouryearsatAlumnl
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
Advisors Camp will be held on Camp have been a lot of fun and a
1~
cup whipping cream,
Saturday and Sunday, October 8 very enjoyable experience for
and 9, at the Elizabeth L. Evans many past 4·H members and whipped
Heal marshmallows, plneap·
their spouses. Many marriages
Outdoor Education Center/Canpie,
and lemon juice over me·
and
friendships
sprouted
from
ter's Cave 4·H Camp, located just
dlum
heat. Stir constantly until
4·H roots and this Is one place we
outside of Jackson, Ohio.
marshmallows
are melted. Chill
Anyone Interested In the 4·H can rekindle those memories
until
partially
set. Fold In
program, Including 4·H advisors, from our youth.
whipped
cream.
Pile
Into baked
Registration starts at 2 p.m. on
former 4·H members, campers,
chopped
toasted
shell.
Top
with
and their spouses are Invited to Saturday, October 8th and the
almonds
or
wa1nuts
II
desired.
attend. Cost Is $16 per person camp will finish up around noon
. which Includes two meals, lodg· on Sunday, October 9th. Reserva- Chill until set (2·3 hours).
lng, and snacks. All you need to tions are needed by September
bring Is. comfortable clothes, 30th. To make reservations,
'state d()w.. DeJ*1"'ttH ot hW•anQI, Cerblic:• o1 CM!Jll~r~Ct-Tilt ~nshoes for games and hiking, old please call the Meigs ·County 081t0pd.
S....•......... oii"""~~~Uoll!w s.. ol Oflil_hi!IIIJ.-.. tflll
Alt!RICAN
•INIT'f UR INIINIICl cc.un 11 GIMII RlpiiL fillltO!
Extension
Office
at
992·6696.
•
4-H photos, old records, camera,
Mot~flll.llu rompl,..,.,.., lllol .... of !~'it .... apr:klblt b . . . illlllfiOfllto:lduringtlll Cllf•• .... IOtr....Oilltil . . . illljiiiiiOII!l• tlillllltiiOI

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local Board of Education Is
Issuing a special Invitation to all
residents of Eastern Local
School Dis trlct desiring lnforma·
tion, having questions, or who
just want to learn more about the
need for passage of the upcoming
November school levy, to attend
the next board meeting. It wlll be
held at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept.
27, In the high school cafeteria.
RACINE - An Introductory
Chapter I meeting for parents
and interested citizens wlll be
held Tuesday, 7 p.m ., In the
cafeteria at Southern High
School. This meeting wlll be a
time to ask questions and find out
the exact nature of the Chapter I
program.
Examples of the new tests,
which are given In October, wUI
be available for examination by
the publiC. The Chapter I staff
wlll be present to answ!'r ques·
tlons and demonstrate a few
techniques which are used In the
classroom.
Refreshments will be served.

4-H alumni camp slated.

•~llrcll IU~iiii;Oil!II&gt;Oiittllooofl ~ ~~~~~tlliiM_ btt!l

Rock Springs UMW meets
Donations were made to Sine·
Cera and Bethany Mountain
Mission when the Rock Springs
United Methodist Women met at
the church.
Officers' reports were given
and the two comforters made by
the women were on display . It
was decided to send one to the
Festival of Sharing In Springfield
and sell the other one.
There was group singing of
"Surely Goodness and Mercy"
and "Are You Washed in the
Blood" with prayer l&gt;y Sharon
Folmer. Virginia Wears led

devotions using readings and
scripture from 1st Peter. All
members read or recited favor·
lie Bible verses. Sharon Folmer
had a reading, "Nothing on
Earth" and Mary Showalter reild
"If God Should Go On Strike."
The closing prayer was led by
Virginia Wears with refresh·
ments being served by Dorothy
Jeffers and Violet Hysell to those
named and Dawn and Aubrle
Kopec, Betty Dill, Fernk Morris,
and Betty Wills. Next meeting
will be held on Oct. 11 with Fern
Morris and Mary Showalter as
hostesses.

THVRSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Olive·
Orange Memorial Post Auxll·
lary, Veterans of Foreign Wars
Chapter 9053, 7 p.m. Thursday at
VFW Hall.
POMEROY - Free clothing
day at Salvation Army, Pomeroy,10 a.m. to 12 noon Thursday;
open to all area reslden Is In need
of clothing.

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t

l&amp;'l',S7I ,W400, Strplu&amp;. S1l2,1~00 illeol'le, .,.A.H$00; E•l*'d•·
I..... ~,Mt3100. 1MtalN!Il1U.150.W00 C..W. U.OOO.OOOOO IN

WITNESS WHERE~ I,.,..,_....~.,.,_~ c;auMO..,-MII
IOblltlilldtl~wllli)UI Oll101hllllt'/IIIICid*.Golor9ffD S.,~ ollrl1~•·
anu o1 OhiD.IflMI
Stall al Ollio. Dll*'!ftlflll et!IM...anc:l, Clllilltlft ol CoPipl IIICt-Tilll i.lf"o
cllllqltlll, ~ ot lns.lrant:lllflhl SUitol (llo).l'ltc, cl'1ifftlm..
ll[lfttUc:l;f i.o.IIIT\II.L Uf( M CO OllOIMII'I., S\Mf oll(etloclj h. .
Cflllllhld Will IIIII- 01 11'11 5\aiiiPCli.Cr.IIIIIO 11anll11 Ml'tOII!to dU '"'!l lhl
tlllfa'll fill 101ri/Mt1 '" lhll Slit~ lti~P"Uli'llle bUIIIIIU ol lr1I~!IIICtcn lht
lnllllllpllrllti!Nnclll COM•!iOliiiii'IOwn~ itlll'llllllllllll!rwiiiOh•"'-

•Allow• you to ttond
1moothly without lt181n
•The Ideo! choir for 1 per·
ton with orthrltll
•Hand hold control to oit
otowly ond ufety
of'Mturfng the
quollty
cnoft.,.llllhlp end e~~m·
fort of la·Z·IIoye
•Parformo • 1 ful recliner
wtoen In regullr 11tting
pooitlon

•IDIIMIIIftlllcl!!!lltl31 !981oi41M11dlllfii.I-M1J.401t00 L111&gt;l~·ts
132m41Gil. Sii,P~. SII.JJUJClOO: 'Nolnt. 11$21.311011 IN WITNESS
WltEfiEOf: I liM l'llfiU!IIe SIIOSCIIIIICI my 111!1111 Mel Uiltal lily H•l IO Itt
II~ OM, IIIII ~~~~ 1M CMI, GIOf9l i'M:It, S.,. Ol l"tU'I'I&lt;:t
I

!

....

dUO

011.11

..o...
.....

..1.11

. ...

. ... .

.,_,.,_,..

r Mary Lou Miller, Columbus,
wawiD NewbUI'I, Ind. last week
toYialtMr.IUid Mrs. John Miller.
He II recupel'atq fr~ recent
bypuiiUJ'Iet'Y·

·!!-·--: ==--

r,

_
. -#to_._.

---

-~::· .-

9-19-1 lfn

SMALl ENGii£1
REPAIR - I
Au!horizool Service
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp;. Stratton
Tecumteh
Weed Eater

Pay Your Phona
_ and Cable Billa Here
IUSINn! PHONE
1614) 992·6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992·7754
•

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

10·8·tfc

Homelite

"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. '9 49-2801
or Res. 949·2860

loeaw &amp; lo•d Far
Senior Citi1- and
Good Roteo
T.L .C.
2! Yrt. Exp.
Referenca

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

Public Notice

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Tho SUJto of Ohio. Meloo
County Court of Common
Pl.... Probate DiviekJn

To tloe Eqcutor of Admin·

iatretor of the •tete. to 1uch
of the following •
ere
reoldenta of tho Stete of
Ohio. 'viz:-the aun~lving
spou•. the n•t of kin, the
bonellclorleo under tloe wHI:

and to the attorney or

ettorneya repreuntlng any

of the aforementioned
pertont:
Name of Decedent. Edith
L. Forrest; Rnldence. Route
# 1, Middleport, Ohio
411760.

You are hereby notified
NOTICE OF
that the tnv.,tory ond Ap·
APPOINTMENT OF
praioament of the 0118te ol
FIDUCIARY
tho aforementioned. deOn
September
19. 1988.
ce•ecl. r.t:e of uid County.
filed in thlo Court. Sold in tloe Meloo County Probate
Inventory end Approiument Court, Cue No. 25890,
wHt be for huring before John T. Wolfe. R. 0. 2, Re·
this Court on tho 14th day of • cine. Ohio 46771. w• op·
October. 1988. et 2:00 pointed Executor of the ••·
UJtl of Gertrude Hotl. de·
o'clock P.M.
Any peroon d• iring to file ceuecl. late of R. D .. lie·
uceptlona thereto mUll file cine, Ohio 45771,
Roan E. Buck.
them ot leal five dey1 prior
Probote Judge
to the date 1.t for hearing. .
Llina K. Ne11elrDa1d, Clerk
Given under my hend end
...t of Hid Coun. thll 20th (9127; (1014, 11, 3!c
day of September 1888.
Robert E. Buck. Judge
By La~o K. N0101lr01d
Deputy
(91 26. 27 2tc

Reel Estate General

E.Moift

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Tho foUowlng ducrR&gt;ecl
~om will be offered for public
ulo to the highMt bidder ot
231 E11t Moln Street, Pom·
erav. Ohio on the 7th dey ot
Oct-. 198B. ot 10:30
o'clock A.M.
1973 Schultz
14xf8 Mobile Homo
Terma of Sale: Cuh
Seller,...,... the right to
bid ond the right to reject
any and ell bl•. Prior to the
dote of 1111. arrangorn.,ll
mey be made to inopeat thia
merchoncloe by ceiling 992·
2171 - - the hourt of
9:00A.M. end 5:00P.M.
(91 27. ltc

2

DANVILLE- like new modular home in the country. 2
car garage w~h sheds and
on a nice lot. Plus a 9'K47'
add·on room. PRICED TO
SEll $31.900.00.

L£TART- DEER COUNTRY
- 29 acres of mostly
wooded land, building s~e
for home or hunting cabin.
Minerals. Only $14,000.00.
MAKE OFFER.
HE,_Y E. ClElAND
992·6191
Joan Tnmtll .... 949-2660
Dottle , ,...r ... 992 ·569%
Tr•y lllfftt ...... 949-2107
Jo Hill.............. 915·4466
OHict .............. 992 •22

"LOW INCOME HOME"

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Oomootic Vehicles .
A/C Service
All Major Ill Minor
. Repairt
NtASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
S.25·tfn

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L

INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
RoofinJ

Seamless. Gutter
Replacement Windows
. Blown Insulation

Storm Doors &amp;

t/611111 . .

992-2196

Middleport,

CARTER'S
PLUMBJNG
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

Free Eotim818S

Middleport, Ohio

III5/Hn

TRI·STATE
DRYWALL CO.
COMplete Drywall

Service
· - ISTIIIATU
56

GAWPOUS, 01.
446-3417

t/15/11/lln

...

HILLSIDE MUIILE
LOADING

MODliN GUN

ies

SUPI'IaS

Mulllttoall..
Madun a..
Gt1111 • " - .
22a.-

I

•

124 flit of htllt!~
Acrou ..., llalow ~.

Ph. 'u.rc:t-1111
tf!l/tltl-.

l-28·'88·tfn

.FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCUST,
CHERRY

s

................
STATE ST.

IACINE, OliO f,

ott..

319 So. 2nd Ave.

·

otnctudll 3 Yllr Wlnlnty
on motor

coupca romlined with this

Windows

Call 992-2772

Lost end Found

Eat In Only •

PAT HILL FOlD

Pomeroy, Ohio
7-13-'88· !In

y,,

0&lt;

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-1&gt;215 or9,92-7314

Wr "'"',., 111116111:
Ali "" "' k•• rig.
VH ••, ,,,,, 52;
N• , . , fH ,,,

: Pick "

~:!!'!P ...01~P. ,P:.~~~.!

(FREE ESTIMATES)

WO&lt;k

Happy Ad1

+

: SUPII LAIGI DIIIIIS :

We can repair and recon radiatars and
heattr cores. ·we can
also acid boil and rod
aut radiatars. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

- Addona and remodBiing
- Roofing and guuer work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing end electrical

who passed
away 4 years
ago today.
His memory ia ••
dear today •• in
the hour he
passed away.
Daughter,
Juanita

:
:

. SER~ICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

DON EBLIN

:

CHEESE PIZZA
$6.50
8 FlEE

992-2221 or 992-9922

Certilied Ucenoecl Shop

In Memoriam

15" I'IPPtiic!AI •

;
:

Sorry, •• ololiwory or otlw

"DOC" VAUGHN
·

•

$ 3 ~lf.Jf:E~
BILL SLACK
992-2269

·1-U.tfn

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSYILE, OHIO

614·662 ·3121
Authorlaed John
D-e, N- Holl.,d,
Buah Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer

Fer• E.. lt•••t
Perh&amp; lanlu

i·J.'I~trt

PH. 949·2101
or Ras. 949~2860
NO SUNDAY EALLS

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING
·SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
Fill DIRT

985-4487
8·8-1 mo. pd.

••••
•
CHIPWOOD

.SECOND TIME
AROUND SHOP

· 'MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
.LARGEST END

Gently used
consi,nment
· clothmg for
children.
Hours 10-4
Evenings by Appointment
2 miles toward Albany on
SR 681.

992-5083

1·12 1 mo.

$14 PEl TON
Howard L. Wrltesel

DELIVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

POMEIOY, OHIO

992-6461

9·23·'88-1 mo.

DEAD 01 AUYE
•Washers •D ryars
•Ranges •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Must Bo R8p0irablo"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985·3561
We Service All Makes

1/22188/tfn

TAnoos ~, S•••r
2 Lincoln Terrace
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6157

1·3·11·1 mo. d

Roger Hysell
Garage
II. ·1141 P-oy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Al~t ,Tre•..l••l••

PH. 992·5612
or 992·7121
6·17·ttc

2 kltten1. 1 yellow stripe and 1
grey stripe. 6'1!1: wks .. old. 614742·3188.

Cute, long haired kitten. 6 wks .
old. at 4·992· 7382.
Mother Cit woth four kittens,

thr• tiglfl. one black. li• wkl.
old. 814·992·8215.
,.,,. bred Dobermlln. 4 ve••
old, genttt. houM trained. cell
noon rill 7:00, 304-675-4831 .

Free ldttena, long hair, 8 wMk•

old, Utter t,.ined, used . to
children. CJII 30~67~4439.

949-2168

LOST: Keys on key ring-has flvt
Ford k.,• ~d others. Downtown 1rt1. A8WIIrd. Call 814UII-9235 or 379· 2292.
FOUND: heutifu I Wire Haired
0Jchshund puppy. Fairfield-.
Centenary Rd: auta. Call to
ldon11Jy· 814-4411-7904.
Found: Gold hoop e.-ring. Pick
up et G&amp;J auto parts .
L.ott: Red female Beelge dog. 1 0
'monthl ald. Willow CNek Rd.
Pomeroy. C.ll814-992·6521or
614-992·7810.

7

Yard Sale

.......Gallipolis..........
&amp; Vicinity

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969
Dialer far
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Locotod Helfwoy

a.

Buh•n.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
StrYic1 Cont• far Ryan
Products
8. 7 Fin811cing on Y•dm•l"!
Service on All Mek•
Wt Honor MC/Disc/Viso
,...... f1n

p

EXCAVATING

oDozer • lockhoe Worll
•Witt Do Hauling Wl!h
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Y1rd 8ueine11

WANT TO IUY WIICIED 01
JUNI CAliS 01 TIIKIS
-FIR ESTIIIATISFor ..,, of !h•nwvicos coli

614-742-2617
ltlw•• ' o.m.-6 p.m.

AVON-Need 5 ladles to S_etl
Avon. Call 61•-••6·3358.

to •59.480. lmmediMe Open.' '

ings. COli .1·13151733·60e2,,
&amp;&lt;1. F 2758.

MAIL CIRCULARS in your spa~r
time. Sand aelf addressed
ttamped enyelope to E.- Moyer,
90800 Jswett-Germano Rd.,
Jew-ett, Ohio 43981'S.
POSTION AVAILII.BLE

TECHNICAL TYptST forlypinQ..
Pool. E•ceUent typing and spell·
lng akilla n~quirad. Mu1t type 80
WPM. Knowtedge of medical '
and pl.,ehl .. ricterminology pre, ,
ferred; word proeeta« skill•
preferred . Contact Sandfa
Mcfarland. Peraonnel Offioa'f,
Woocfllnd Centlfl, Inc .• 41.Z ~
Vintori Pike. ~ Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 . WoodiMdCentenlsen
Equal Employment Opportuni·
tv I Affirmetlvt~ Action Em-.
ployer. Woodland Centert, Inc.·
do• not discriminate on rhe
bull of age. color. creed,
national origin. Ilea. eex or type
of dltlbllity.
. ;-

'·

LOST Juty 15. Red Mud Ridge
Henderson areil. female mixed
dog whh grey end a little beige.
name Brldgtrt. cell collect 114387· 7116.

Painting
FREE E~TIMATES

EARN EJCTRA MONEY during
the Summer. Get out of the
hou•. become 8 Oaity Sentinel....
PIP• carrier. Routes open in
Middleport. Cell Scott at Th&amp; l
Sentln~ Office at 814-992..., :
21155.
.,..,

Beagle

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

NEW- REPAIR

or lean

Employment
Servtces

LoC81JunlorApperel Shop needs
• part-lime Pleaperaon to •be .
snd Plrt Beagle puppiea. 304- . aveillbl• tt all tim• . Send .f
resume to: Box Cia 173. c/oGal676·8799.
llpolit Deity Tribune. 821!1 Third
Four year old German Police Ave .. GallipoU1. Ohio 45031 . .•
fenwla dog with sill: pups,
Government Jobt. $16.040-304-e82·2518.
*59,230 .,. ... Now hiring. Your-·
. .811. 805-187-6000 EKt. R-.,
6 Lost and Found
98::01i::.,:fo:;'_:""::::"•::::.:.•t~Fo::d::
.::l~l;,:lst~
.
. .J
:.

Free 2 year old female

ROOFING

between Rt. 7

••

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
•• ,
SERVICE JOBS
Now hiring. Your area. 813,560

Lost: Fam .. e Beegle. White flee
collar. Sept. 20th, Tanner• Run
and SR 124 area. 614-9492798.

8·11-1

WANTED

Giveaway

oithwaat\er : Need• repairs.
814-742·3073.

3·ll·lfn

POLES

Ann's gift lhop opM for buain -. 324 E811t Mani St. Pom•
.... . 814·992·7204.

away to good home. Cell 614388·9342.

8·22-1 mo.

"Free Estimates"

.·'

•• &gt;

3 female guinea pigs to ghte

986·4141

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

We buy Black Walnuts. Fund :
re,laing opportunity . George ·
Shlsbeck 814-992-3891 . For
delivery Instructions call 1-800- .
999·0727.

lll2fU·tft

Free to good home. 1 female
Calico kltten-6 wka. old. Yellow
Mele Kittent· 3 mos. old. Call
814-379·2435.

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Now H - lullt,

MON.·TUES •• wm.
~~ !!'!!!~'.'.,s_.pt"!~~r.:.

VIIS TAPE
IAt us convert thou oldMIIYim
&amp; Slides o•or to eosy VHS •
CAll AMY CARTEl
or 108'5 ElECTIONICS
446·7390

4

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

References

•

C...h psid for quilts. Pre
195C)'t. Pieced. applfqued, •
unu ... l-any condttlon. Call
e14-992.&amp;657.
••

lmm MOVIES &amp; SLIDES to

3 Announcements

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

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ba&lt;k To S.hool Special

Most Foreign and

IM•t•·
Witt l lith

8

tote ol 36266 Hilltop Road,
Dexter. Ohio 46728.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne18elroad. Clerk
(9)27: (10)4, 11, 3tc

MAIN StilET PIZ'lA

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

In Memory of

5

miniat ..trix of the estate of
Clair E'. SW•n. d~teeued,

Business Services

Public Notice

eoa

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 21, 1988.
in tho Molgo County Probete
Court, Call No. 26993,
Lindo K. &amp;won, 36266 Hilltop Road, De~~:ter, Ohio
46728. woo oppoin!td Ad·

•'

Announcements

. MARCUM CONTRACTING-

Public Notice

Public Notice

Furr,h:ure and applienon by th8
piece or entire houl&amp;ho!d. fair ,
pri0111 being paid. Call 814--4483158.
.,,

11 Help Wanted

=~- ·

Public Notice

Want to buv : UMd furniture end
antiques. Will buy entire hou•·
hold furniahlng. Marlin Wed• .
mever. 814-24&amp;-tl1fi2.
· •

~~~~~~~--~ ·

or at
Veterans Memorial
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

-~-• - - 1:"1'::"T'

Complere hou..,oldl of turn~
ture II 1ntjquea. Also wood &amp;:
ooal heatera. Swein'l Furnitu,.
&amp; AucUon. Third &amp; Olive.
614-448· 3159.

QUILTS

209 South 4th S!.
Middl8p0rl, Oh.

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Oltio 45631

-

==-------'-

-

Joe or Pouloy lowland

NO SUNDAY CAllS

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and ne~Ner uMd cars . Smith
Buidl· Pontlae. 1911 Eastern
fl.ve .. Gollir&gt;&lt;&gt;tis. C.ll 614· 4-411-2282.

Want to Buv·Used Mobile. ·.
..
H~om~n~
. C.~II~8~1:;4-~4:;48~·~0~17~5~.-

992·6873

Day or Night

Jim ~ink Chev .-Oids Inc,
1111 Gene Johnson
114-44e. 3e72

Junk Clrt wit~ Of WithOUf' ~­
moton. Call Larry Uvely-.814-- ;
388·9303.

EUM HOME

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

992-3410

\128/l!o

Jocoboon

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

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
,,

We&lt;:arry Fishing Suppli

RACINE, OHIO

z

n::t::=:-

OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE

VISA

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FACTORY CHOKE
.12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

~

:t::=.~-:

~~::~~~s".......................... ~ow Sl 091

MASTERCARD -

&amp;

Middleport, Ohio 45760

RACINE
GUN CLUB

a:

?'1--···

11

949·2100

DENNY CONGO
WILL ,HAUL
JUST CALL!

1118 North Second

1:00 P.M.

CJ
~

~--...~

SEPTEMBER SA~II.IS

31D STIDT

....-

·--~

FAIJ. DEVON NOW ARRIVING

Mrs. Albert Roush, Pomeroy,
Mft. Mildred Mead, and Mrs .

EVERY SUNDAY

HUDNALL
PlUMBING HEATING

-·- , Television listening Devi~es
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Cltwi/ied pep• c:ower 1M
jollowin• telepM.- adl.npt ...

CO. RD.10- 130acrefarm
just out ot langsville. Free gas
to house. Barn, cellar garage,
2 water wells. Older 4 bedroom hmte in goocl conOtion.
ASKING $57,500.00.

,.,.,,... .. ,.,...in.,... ......

. ....

.. --·----

I ltOIITH

Stllto!OIIa.~otl!w-.~al~fht...,..

..,.CMIIJI.,..

_
·-·
____. .__.

......._. IlAna
....... .... "··
,.__
""'" ... ..... .., ,._...
,(Y..
1111\..

MIDDLEPORT- lAND CONTRACT -Very nice &amp; nea 3
.bedroom home on a big
corner lei Nice k~chen, F.A.N.
G. heat, and much more! Call
for more details! PRICED TO
SELl AT $32.900.00.

,.!Ifni

OT 0111!1 J•iltl

- _- -

I'IIU~IU

ranch home w~h 3 bed·
rooms, equipped kitchen
and a nice lot. can for your
showin~ ONLY $33,900.00.

I

10 1raMIIICI111IIIt11Nh---INIIIItllolirlttflfiCI.III
ton "tiiOWn IIY ~ ~fllil!llltpi!IIPI! II liM • a ~~~!ow~ 011 Dlctrftbtr 31,
l5e1· M'flitttll IIMII. 130.145.1$2-JO: ~..... 123.7WJa.00: $urplljl,

fQitC.wl

. ,.___ . . _
···--fllolto-.
-·""............. _,_
i!E:
--------··-..
CLGIIOSUNOAY

PRICE REDUCED- SYRACUSE - One floor plan

'*rrct.

GUN SHOOT

J.l0-'17 !In

YO PUU AM AD (All 992·2156
.._AY tl.. f.AY I A.&amp; te 5 P.M.
I A.a. u.til tONI 5AfUIDAY

Wanted To Buv

uMd can.

992·6611

located on a good street. 3
bedrooms, nice large rooms,
many nice features. ASKING
$27,900.00.

""'*"-

9

We pey cnh for lllte rnodet clean

Middleport, Ohio

992·2269
NEW LISTING - IIIDDLE·
PORT - 2 story home

C11!19*. ~11!1--.ai'-S...III 01M1.
IIM1fOM IIBII1Ml LR M eo a1 Frnb'l. SC.. ciKMuc'tf, 1111 contDiotCIIIittlll"'-of.m.S...-.. ilnltlllflo!IIIIIIM~nghclll'·
~
--al""-'a.l!lllnftllj

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - American
Legion and Auxiliary, Feeney.
Bennett Post 128,. Middleport,
will meet Wednesday night at the
annex. Dinner will be served at
6: 30 following by meetings of
both groups at 7:30p.m.

ta!11 rn.lns olttli1SiaiiiiiiJIIUbitll~ IIICI• ~~lilt ~lltrll
.,...10 trllftlld irl fill- •
ol tiWIIICt _Ill fi!Woe,.
ellnllimll rs illlllwlltyill MIMI
MWo •
DtctiiiOII'
31. 1911' Ntmlllll...., 11!.1'11'.317110: UIN!ti~t. -.,1!IC.ti'NIO:
12ll48.41SOII, 111C0111t. IIIUeJIUO: bptr'orl.,., taNI.M2.00:,... •
Mil. 12i411.41l00: Clpilll. ll150.00l01l- '" WITMUS WHEAEOf, llll'l't
!'oii'IMIIO
P1'1Y 1111'11111'10 CUIO niV Nil liM llfrMIII • Colloii!'IOUI.
O!ltO, ltrillll\' II'MIM. Gtoftl f - S. cllfiWIIICI Ill ()No Ifill}
Slllt 01 Orloo. DtHmMnt o!
Ctn,liea al Cof1'411illa-Thl ~·
otfliOMa, ~cltrwrii'ICt GIN lillltcl 0ND. Milby C*liMirlll
'OI!ElltOIIG!tt UFIIIII COciBIMsYillt.S. o! t~ . lllt~itcllllllll
1ne IIWUI 1111 6lllt tiiCIIICMII II ~ II'MI It IW!IIor1IICI Cllli"ll tnt c~rrtnt ~

Business Services

lor the remainder of the program
and refreshments,
Fertilize Now ... Lawns can be
Pvt. David S. Milburn, son of
fertilized now . Remember that
Robert E. Milburn of 2642 Bar·
fall fertilization Is the most rell, Columbus, Ohio, and
practical care a lawn can reMildred I. Milburn of Mlddlport,
ceive. ll's the best way to send
has arrlvedfordutywith the 87th
the lawn Into winter with a Infantry at Fort Drum, N.Y.
deeper, healthl~r root s:tstem.
This will create a more vigorous
COHORT was designed to
sprbtg lawn that will have fewer
enhance
mission effectiveness
disease and weed problems later
and
strengthen
unit cohesion and
In the year.
esprit
de
corps
by providing
It's best for . most Ohio ho.
soldiers
the
opportunity
for long·
meowners to make two fall
term
Identification
with
their
applications of fertilizer. Make
units.
the first one In September. The
second should come In mid·
November In Southeast Ohio.
Milburn Is an antl·armor weaCorn Storage... Be sure to clean pons Infantryman. .
all corn cribs and bins thoroughly
He Is a 1984 graduate of Meigs
before putting In new corn. If you
have Insect damage to the old - HlghSchooi,Pomeroy,Ohlo.The
corn, apply a spray to the bin or private received an associate
crib. Call our office at 992·6696 If degree In 1986 from Southern
you need assistance In knowing Ohio College, Columbus.
what to spray.

Belli Outlook Meeting Se·
t ... Royal Oak Farms will be the
setlbti for a .Beef Outlook meet·
lng. Horace Karr has graciously
consented to serve as host for an
early fall beef producers get·
together. The program, which
will feature state and district
specialists, will be conducted on
Thur!lday evening, September
29, starting at 7 p.m. and anyone
Interested Is Invited to attend.
The farm Is located between Old
Route 33 (now County Road 20)
and Flatwoods Road on Town·
ship Road 81 which Is also known
as Lover's Lane,
Outlook will just be a part of the
program. Winter feeding and
maximizing profits will also be
featured. After viewing facilities
and cattle, we will go the cottage

POMEROY. OH.

ulolloon 011 O.C...tllr 31 . tW Ad~ -.M.DCMJta.oD· LIIIIMtl.
1'8"'.10700. Surpl~o~~, Plll ..WOII; lnl;oml, DUIIJ31.DD, ~ .
S2tt6oitt2CXI, Mil MMtt. I1,SII .oii1.QII: Cipilli . I1J~tDDih7J. IN WITNESS
WHEA!OF. I 11M httt&lt;ot'IIO ..-,ibed "'J fllllltiM Clill!lll""" 111110 0t
ttll11d II ~troM. 0\oo. !!lot 0., and Mt. CJiorll filii. S.. of IIWWI
ol 01'110 lftSI
Sll!t of Otic. ~al l--. CtrtitlCIII ol ~TIM 11ft
olnp(l. Suplrrilnilnl olltlloda aiiiiiiiiMI oiOfle..IMO'f--11111
CAPilOl .tM111CA1 LR • CO oiC!fttllnd. a. ol Ol!io, 1111 CCIIIIMG

...,.,_IM!rllt&amp;
_,..,JIM '*"Oil

Milburn
begins duty

Beef outlook meeting set

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Poma'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

Giant Yard Sai•446Spruce St ..
Ext. Sept. 28-29. Guns, knives,
toot., nttque glau &amp; mite.

O.rage Se1•814 First Ave.
Thura .. Fri .. s.....Sept. 29-0ct.
1. 9·6. No ...lybirds. Oekt•bte,
cash register, couch, brelded
rug1, blk•. clothes, .. o... Buck
nove. kitchen eppl. . lotaufmlac.
items.
6 Familia&amp;- I mil• down Rt. 7.
Sept, 28 thru Oct. II. New home
Int. • Sienko gl'-•·
Thun. &amp;. Fri. 1072 Second .
Wea'-, rug, exercialltf', conaole
stereo. rototiH•. clothing. hand
tools. ch _. dntwen.
Alf'lnel lhlna. hou• plants,
records, chlldren-ladln-men
clotNng. dlahM. shoel. Neigh·
bo•hood Rd: 9·&amp;. Wtd.·Sot.

.......Pomeroy.......... .
Middleport
&amp;.Vicinity
3f.mlly .,erd11le. Sept. 29· Oct.
1. h.m.• dusk. &amp;8 1 W. Darwfn,
Ohio. 1 mle off Rt. 33. Soois
0f*1 h..,.h comfort•, ....,...,
liD "'"''- bebot furnku,.,
bl.,kl!a. bw o!ool. tluto, Chris!·
ma hetnl, wood burner.

8

Public Sela
8t Auction

Job hunring? Need a skill? We
train people far fob&amp; •• Auf.o
MecheniCI, Carpent•s. Coame.;·
tologiats, DMirslfled Medicah
Wor"-t. Bectricians, fDod Service Workert, Eltclronlcs Tech·"
nicl1n1. lndtlatrial Maintenanae~
Work ... Nur~lngAatist:lntlan dOrdtrli•. Machinists. Office ·
Workers end Welden. Regitter. u
now for
beginning OC.~
tober 3rd. Call Tri· CountyVoca{
tiona! AduH Center at 753-3511
ext. 14. A variety of funding
soure .. to pey for Mining are
available for tho111 eligible.
,

cl•••

Lack the •kills? We tMin peopl4'
for jobl as machinists In our
machinet,.d• program. Neatly
avery product of industry. from
comflak• to turbin•. i1 made
either uting macfline tools or
using machines made with machine tools. In the machine
trtd• program you wm ~e~rn
how to uM various type1 of
machinery such as: lathe, drill~
preu. milling machine. grinding,
mechlne end punch preu. We
h111e a variety of funding sourceS '
avei18ble for eligible appllcentt.
Call the Aduh Education Center-Tri-County JVS at 753-31!511
ext . 14. Fall quarter begms
October 3rd .
McCLURE ' S RESTII.URANT

HIRING. Cooka end waitresMa'
needed. R"umes being taken
1:0().4:00 p.rn . TutediVS end
ThurM.,• 11 479 Jaclcson Pike.
Gallipolis. white" houm behind
McCiu,... rwtaurent.
"
Easy Work! EJC&amp;IIent Pay! As·
semble product! at home. Call.,

for information. 504--641 · 8003 _
Ettt. A-5010.
Governn'WW't Jobal 119, 037. to
t89.405 . Immediate Hiring! :
Your area. Call IRefundablth
1-518·459·3811 E•t. F1622
for Federal lltt 24 Hrs.

..

Federal, State end Civil Service
Jobl. Now htring. Your area. ·
•13,550 to 859.480. lmme- '
dim openings. C. II 1-315-7336062 Ext. F 2768.
, ~

..

Go\lernrneru Joba 116,040 ~·
859,230 yr. Now hiring. Call
1·805-887· 6000 bt, R·9805
for c:ur*'t federal list .

Professioral ttaff po1h:ion. Boo(
Scout• of America. Blchators •
degree required. Will lhre ht ..,
Meigs. Gell,la. Mason Co'!nh' _
•ea to proVIde support •rv•cea
to c:ommunlty organization• and ..
eG.IIt Scouting volunteera. TrtS1ate Area Council. B.S .A. 733
7th Ava . Huntington. W.V.
26701 . PlloM 304-823.3408
for interviiW appointment.
AVON - All ar.... C.ll Marilyn •
wo- 304-882·26411 .
P•t rime MLT, 20 hfsperweek.
2·3 years hotphll leborttorv
axaeri'"ce pNf•Nd. Mutt be
able to work all lhtfta. Contaot ,
Pt.-nt Vall., Holpitat Pwr1on!

nel. 304-87~340. A .A .E.O.E.

LPN-PH. full time &amp; pan time
•plie~tfon1 ar• being ecceptld
for Pf._nt VIlli¥ Hotpftal ;
Nurslnf~ Clre Center. Contact
Penonnel 304 · 175- •340. •
Afi.EOE.

..

•

.....

GOLDEN BUCKEYE

"

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

44

LAFF·A·DAY

51

Apartment
for Rent

2 lA . ..,,,_ I cloteta, kitchen-

II&gt;PI. furnithod. lllflohor·Orier

hook-up, ww c•~»t- nW~Iy
IMtintM. d•ck.
From t175.
Regency, Inc. Aph. c.tl 304175-15104, or 175-1388 or

oft...t, Sand ...um.toAdmln-

lstrt torCarehewn of Pt .PI. Rt. 1.
Box 326, Pt. Pl. WV. E.O.E.

ns.n38.

R•pectableledV to live in with

.. darlywoman, ••rv- room end

New complttaly furnlahed
IPirtment 6 mobile home in
chy. Adults only . P•ldng. C.ll

board, call .)04-175-3747 or

675-1570.

114-448-0338.

Shirl~trSPWI.

BEAUTIFULAPARli\IIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 1531 Jackson
Pike from f183 • mo, Walk to
shop and rriovlee. 814-448-

Coemetoloo'f;t wh:h W.Va. Inquire in ~rton at Willie'• Hair
Ollsign. 1010 Vl ..d St. , Point
Pteaunt. W.Va.

2568. E.O.H.
Up••lra unfurnt.hed apt. CarpiiMd, utllttiel .-ld. No children.

12

No

Situations
Wanted

Can live in or by the day 11
campanian or hou•keepar to
el d&amp;rly pMton. C. II 614-446-

3024.

pelt. Coli 814-446-1637.

Furnished- 3 room• •

blth.

Clean. No pets, Ref. 6 deposit
required. Ulllllln furnished.
Adults only . Call 814-448-

Gentlemlfl needs room • bo1rd
In Gallipolis. Will p1y for laundry
dona. Ple•a raply to: Earnelt
McKinney, 78 Co~tr1 St. , Gllll-·
poUt, Ohio 45631 .

1619.

Good luck in your retirement, Hemsley, and try to
take up a hobby so you won't
be hanging around here."

11

1 bod&lt;oom apt In Mhldii!)O&lt;t.
t180montht)lusdepoitit. 61._
992-6545 Of 814-949-2218 .

Furnished, 1 bedroom 1 partmant. dl!)oah ..,ulrod. No pets.
uti"'• pold. 814-992 2937
'"
•
·

~~:;:~;:;;;:::;:~:'1";;::::::;:::::::~::::;;::::::~ 45 Fumished Rooms
13
Insurance
- - - - - - - - 31 HQmes for Sale
41 Homee for Rent
Furnished room-919 Second
Call us for your mobile home

Insurance: Miller Insurance,
304· 882·2145 . Also: auto,
home. life. health,

15

Schools
Instruction

Hou•. corner tot at 809 Cherry
St .• Vinton, Ohio. $8,000.00.
304-882·2300.

32

Mobile Homee
for Sale

For tent : Uke new 3 bedroom
raru:b home. With attlched
a•aua t27&amp; P• month. Deposit required. 814-742-3171 .

3 bedroom houM. 2 c• gartge.

tul b•em.,t. WISher 1nd dryer

ho all· up.

R•f•enca required .

814-992-8723.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOU'TII EASTERN BUSINESS

COLLEGE. 529 Ja ckson Pike.
Cli11446-4367. Reg. No. 88-11 10558.

18

Wanted to Do

Lllnd contract, large living room
w / expando room, 2 BR .•
w / wall carpet, 1ir conditton.
w / or without furniture. N... a•
fur,.ce on ,_;v.te lot M.,. 11tnl
lot. C.ll !5 to 8 PM. 114-448-

1409.
USCO HOME SALEI $600
down, payments to fit your
budgllll: . Elsea Home -Center.

Houll for .-nl. tu• b. .ment.
11h story, quiet locat;lon. 8 mil•
north of Point Pl....,t. 304078-1078.

2 bedroom unfurntlhed houte.
507'/J Second St. , New Haven,
81.,0.00. t1t:JO.OO deposit.
304-878-6278.

Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work-850
E~~;perience

operator. Cremetn•
Const. Call 614-258-1718.
y./puld like to do babysitting tn

mv home. Dav or night. t1 .00a
hour. Call 614-388-8885.

Mother of two provide loving
care. Crafts &amp; singing. References. Central Che~hire. Large
hOme. Anytime. Call 614-367-

7;&gt;88.
Will do babf!itting in my home,
diiV shift Onty. Uve jutt outside
Gfllipolis City Umits. Call 614446-4961 .

Free Deliverv.

Naad a Job Done7- ln1. / Ext.
p&amp;inting, light h a~ling, yard
meintenM ce, c f!l care. " Odd

Jobs" . Call 614-446-7448.
'Ntll do babVsitting in mv home.
any age. Callanytim&amp;-814-448-

1805.
Yard care, bnuh cuning, light
h&amp;~ling, some tree trimming and
tamoval. Sill Slack 614-992.2 269 evenin gs.

McDaniel Custom Butchering.
. open 5 dirt'S a week. call
304-882-3224.

Fmancial

For •Ia by owner: 12x83mobile
hom~ and 'h acre l.nd m / 1.
Property borders .... highway
~d county ro.d. 4 rnil• from

GtlllpoUt In Green School Dis-trict. 2 Bedroom and bllth with
eddh:kn\81 bedroom and bath
bult on. Central Atr with window air conclttloner in bult on

ld"'lon. Underpinned- front
and bact!; porch-. ltortge build-ing. Furnished Including washer
&amp; ~r . PropiJI'ty vacem. Buy
todav- mow in tomorrow. Price
$27.000. Shown bv ~pdnt­
ment. Call614-446-3293.

Business

0 pportu nity

Rental station available for stylist in Point Ple85llnt aroa.
~quire 304-675·2751 anydme.

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

BeaJtiful Holcomb Hill, addi•ionai lot. 3 BR., Ca. Call

614-446-0338 .
Very attract hie brick 4bedroom.
2 bath, family room with fire·
place, formal dining, large living
room. 30ft. custom oak kitchen
cabinets. oak woodwork, finish
basement. 2 car g.-age. level
fantHcaped lot. 4 miles from
Holzer Hospital off Rt. 3!Ptlrterbrook Subdivision. Call
614-446-4189.

Vinton -co mpletly remodeled
nice 2 bedroom. 1 acre. Washer,
dryer, stow. refrig .. now rurtains lncludt:td. $23,000. Will
tell iandeontract. C811614-388-8482 till10 :00.

2 8R ., full basement, central
air / heat. low maintenance. 2
miles down Rt. 7 . Nice rlwr
vlew. Call 614-&lt;446-2300.

65 ft . Alum Hou11 Trailer for
Ill e. 2 bedroomt. e2400. 080 .
Call 814-949-2188.
1970, 12x80 levertv Menor
houlltl'llilerfor •Ia 2 bedroom.

03500, Call614-992-3949.

1984 14x85 Schultz, 2 br, 1 111
bMh , all etec. new a-c unit,
range, refrig, wlter ·bed a.
covered porch Inc luded .
$12,600. Seriout inquirl• only.
304-875-3117 after 7 p.m.
14x70 mobile home, 2 bed
room, 30~875-7988.

Farms for Sale

Mini F~rm for •le. Autlanderea.

Call 614-992-2143 or 614-

20.8 acres. 7 rnlles from Point
PleMant, At. 82 South. Site for
home, hun11ng 1nd inveatment,
304-675-6899.

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

O.J . White Rd. ·2 Wooded buildIng loti. 2 acret each. Cell
614-246-9685.
Trail• lot with hook-up, water
well. Acrou from Portland Post
Office. S70 per month . 814843-&amp;186.

Ashton. l•ge bu Hding lot1,
mobile home1 permitted, public
water, also rhfer lott, Clyde
Bowen, Jr. 304-676-2336 . .

BeMJtiful river lots oneacntplu1,
public water, Clyde Bowen, Jr.

304-678-2338.
26 acl'lll Broad Run Ro.t. New
Heven. Owner flunclnq availa-

ble, 304-882-3394.
I.Dts. one acre, level. wooded,
city Wllter, Jericho Road, owner
financing, good terms, 304-

372-8405 Of 372-2578,

992-7897.

.

For •le by owner. 3 bedroom
houtt, Peart St. Write P.O . Box
30 Middleport Under e20.000.

2 bedroom. tun lin b•ement.

abc:Ne ground. c.ment patio.
Qiatsltd in porch, 2
g.-agu.

c•

u.rgolot. 814-992-n91
Main. Free u.,lor; 3 bf ,.nch
family .oom w-b flrepiKa new
centJII a·c, ilrOII deck woodet•
ston~ge bldg. Priced rrald •IO't.
Ownermulf 11111. Mike an offtr.
304-875-7438after 8 p.m .

46

Renl als

2 bedroom mobile home helf
mile out Jerimo Road. ntf•ertce~ required,. cal after 5:00PM.

304-675-1082,

44

Apartment
for Rent

lu~~;urlous

Tara Townhouse
apartments. Elegarn 2 ftoon. 2
BR .. fu I bllth upstllrs, po'llld•
room downttlln, CA .. dis·
hwat..-. dlspaiiM, prNato entrance, privata endo•d patio,
pool, l)ti¥Qround. Utilities not
included, Stlrtlng at 1299 per
mo. Call 814-387-7850.

Office or .,all busin~~ts sp1ca
for rant. locllted N. 2nd. Ave. in
Mldd1eport bu atne11 di1trle1 .

Call 814-992-5645
949-2216,

Nicely furnithed small house.
Aduhs only. Ref. ' n~qulred . No
pets. Call $14-446--0338.

on

1 OR furnished houae
Madison Street. Large yard. •

ings.

Modern 3 Br hou111 for ..m or
sale.locetad in Patriot. Stow &amp;
refr lg..-.tor fu rnilhed. $ 260 mo.

$100 dl!)otl1. Coli 814-4483870or 814-448-1340.

4 BR . home. 7 milee from town.

Call 614-448-8346.
Two bedrooms. living. family
room, lg. kttchen, one &amp;. half
bath. No pet1. Ref. required. Cell

814-44&amp;-1734.
__. ,
Tw o b• droom houae for ...... tn
Racine arae. Cell 814· 949-

2849.
Pam~.

2 bedroom, eppbn-

c•.
v•av• b..emtnt. Nl•
echool. AefiNnl* required.
Call 114-742-2.72 after 7 :00
p.m . ot:_ enytfmew.ek-~~ndt..
Hou• for t'lftt 8012&amp;th Street.

lmrnodiMal\l 0275.00 pluo dOIIoolt pllono 304-878-7714.
Hou•. with b.th, city .,._.,,
achool ~nd m-" routt. one mRt
ofl At. 87. 304-895-3885.

614-

304-875-3073.
Trailer s~ce. 3 mil• South of
Pt. Pleasant at Yoff Rt. 2 &amp; 62.

304-675-3818.

51

ValloV Furnhuro
New and uted .furniture and
applicances. Call 814-448·
7672. Hours9·6.
&amp;s 'rFURNITURE
-.--J ------14115~attern .A.w.
• drawer-· 048, 5 drowor
cheat. $54.96. 6 pc. wooden
dinnette ••••· 1198.915.

Household Goods

Olive St., Galllpolit.
NEW- 8 pc. wood group- 1399.
Uvlng room tuka· 1199-tS99.
Bunk bed• with bedclng- t249.
Full tize mattretl • foundation
starting- 199 . Recliners
flllrting- 199.
USED-- Beds, drtllllti'S, badroom
suites. Desks, wringer Wither, a
complete line of uted furniture.
NEW· Wettern boots- I 36.
Workbootl $18 &amp; up . (Steel &amp;
""'toe). Coli 814-448-3109.

County Applance. Inc. Good
used IPPiilnCft and TV sets.
()pen 8AM to 6PM. Mon thru
Sat. 814-446-1899, 827 3rd .
Ave. QaiHpolil. 0 H.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Wuhera. dryers, refrig. .tors,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper River Ad. beside Stone
Crest Motel . 614-448-7398.
Refrig.,.tor frost-free, whitet96. Refrigerator white, 2 dr.t96. Refrigeretor coppertone,
frost -frlt8- t150. Refrigerator.
almond, frost-free. like newe2&amp;0. Ga1 r1nge, 30 ln .• whltat96. Electric range, whlta- $95.
Elecrtric r1nga, harves-t gold·
8150. Electric range, av1cado
green-81215. Electric rM~ge eye
level oven. Cop pertone· t 1 60.
Kenmore w.•h•· f76. YVhlrl po~ wast.-t11SO. G .E. dry~~r ­

Call 304-675-61.04,
Modern 1 · BR. apt. Call 614-

Gallipolis. Coli 448-4416aftor 7
PM.

Furnished apanments-1 bed·
room. S150&amp;up. Utilltl• paid.
Call 448-4411!J after 7 PM.

•9!,

FUrnished effidancl•- $145 &amp;
up. Utilfti• paid. Call 446-4416

614-448-7398

SkiQgs Appliances. 569 Upper
Rtver Rd.

afltw 7 PM.

For Sale good uted color TV. Call
814-446-1 149 anytime.

3 BR . Apt . t200 a mo. Oep.
required. Ch•hire. Ohio. Call
aftltf 8 PM. 614-387-0181 .

a windows ..,d 8 storm windows. Make offer. Overhead
light flxtunta, $8.00 each. CIU

G,.ciou1 living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmantt at VIllage
Manor and Riveflide Apart•,
menta In Middlepo,.. From
t182 . Ca,ll 814-992-7787.

814-448-2896.
Couch in good condition. $86.

Call814-268-1439.

EOH,

Kitchen ranQe 1!1.. refrigerator
with lce-mak•. Both in good
condition. t12&amp;each. Call614-258-1439.

2 bedroom A pta. for rent.
Carpeted. Nice setting. Laundry
facillttes I!Nailllbla Call 8149 92-3711 , EOH.

Bedroom furnlturr.' 3 pieces,
(chest. nlgflt atand. drnser) .
Dark walnut. New . Call 814992-8812.
Used rlfrlgntorsan d ttovtt for

redecoreted aplrtmentt
IMiilllble, Utilttl• paid. f226.
per month, d-,otlt .equired. Clll
814-992-5724 after 8:00 or

Ale. Call 614-992·7787. If no
a~s..,.,. • • manager,.at Village
MMiorapta.

992-5119.

Nice -~ dretMr wl1h mirror
S30. Combination bookcau
~ith drop leaf dsk •16. 614-

1 bedroom IPt. In Mlddlepon.
To1al elactric, water Included.
Kitchen furnithed. Cell 814-

992-3079.

992-3887 or 814-992-5170

Norge washer and dryer. 20.
pound capt~City. Uke new. Extra
nice. $260 firm. Call 614-3870322.

evening~ .

For low prices on Ou.Jttv Car.,.t
&amp; Furnhure coma to Mollohan
Furntture-Upper Afver Rd., 11 ~
ViRa"s Furniture
Optn 7d1Ytl WMk
MondQ·Saturdey. 9 AM-8 PM
Sunday. 12 noon-S PM
Living room a~ltea 2 pc.- 1289,
lampsst.-ing It •19.98, wood
dinette Bett - $149 &amp; up.
hutchn·f219 &amp; up, blk11r1
raoks-$19: 96. TV 11anc1t. enter1ainment centers, d•ke -149. 9B
&amp; up, glaft front gun cablnata$279. bedroom tultes, full . .
mattrfltet starttng at f41.18.
bunk beds with bedc:Ung-t229.
baby beds.

EKeellent used appliance~ with
30 days guarantee. Walherl$99 6 up, dryers. freezers.
refrigerators, mngn.
layaways are welcome. Fln~nc­
lng aW!Hibfe wtth approved
credit. 1
Rt. 141 1n Cenlenlry- '14 mile on
Uncoln Pike. 114-448·3158.

52 Spj&gt;rting

Goods

53

1

a

•--~NEA.Int:.

e540Q. C.ll814-387-04elor '.

64

64

s .... -1 .... 71,0oo BTU g•

h -. U25. 814-949-2031 .

Wood burning atOwe spect.r tor
moble homes. Ol.t• Olliff•.

1973 Ford VM 0375, U h Fender flit top guitlr with c•e

Hotpolnt underceblnet dit hwashlr,' n....,., uted. Almond

....... uoo. 814-992·5885.

ARMY SUAPW·s fAdv.-t:.lng
So.:t•tl•. IUBinna, Political.
AU ftemtl - Ffl. Set. Sun. Noon to

B:OO PM. Som Sonwv!He'o
1lnce 1914. Regular 1rmr

79

18.000. Call 814·448-8898
aft• S PM.

304-273-5855.

65

Building Supplies

Block, brick. .-wer pipes, windows. lintlts, etc. Cl.. de Wlnt.-1, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 814-

245-5121 .

WESTERN REO CEDAR
.. Ch.-.nel Rultlc

197101•y Mona . Qoodcond.

1888 1~c1t ws.1n. Loaded.
. , _ _ Muot 0111 1&gt;1' w dov. 18800080. Call 814-4458127 or M&amp;-8281.
1978 Olcll .. 456 cu. In, onQine
turbo. 400 u.na. Excel. eond.
0 200. Call 014-379-2824I PM.

Groom end sUpply ShopoPM
Oroo.,lng. All breeds ... AII
1tyl11. ta:ma Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 814-448-0231 .
FILE ERROR
4 Full Blood Beagle pupo, n
wka. old. e40etM:h. Clllafter 4

PM. 814-448· 7992.

Cal1814-448-8827.

2 Boogie dogo. Will 1111 both for
075. Coli 114-992-2208 altar
5:00.

Good Oeai-Olmputar- I.B.M.
PC Junior plus printer. A•orted

AKC Ella... Hound puppi•. 8
will. old. Worn-eel •d ntlldy"

Firewood for •le. •25 1 load.

soft\Mire. Call 614-446·7313.
Phantom 600watt Un118r ampiiWn , S?:50, programmable
.scanner, new antenna rotor,
frequency counter, large enter·
tainmant center, noo each.
Call 814-448-3340.
1-8rownlng Golden Elgie Mlrk
jU. 1-Brownlng Golden Eagle
N!ark Ill 598 , 1- Browning
Golden Eagle Power Mike, 10104- G Stand Mike. 1Phantom Triple Stlge 500 Witt
llener, 2-CDE 1witch bo1tH.
1-Mark IIA watt m.,.er. 80 foot
of tower, 1 -Su.w: AI in one
washer &amp; dryer. Call 814-2566801 for more Information.
A.O. Smith 5Q gal. natural gas
flol water helltflr. 1 year old.
876. Well pump &amp;. tank. Cell

614-388-9688.

go. 0125. 614-992-2996,

2 AKC Bo,.... puppl-. 304-8758043 att.r 1:00.
·

57

Bundy Trumpet. Excel. cond.

0275, Call 114-448-3044.

Bundy Ctlirnet. Excel. cond.

0200. Calll14-379·2191.
Individual guitar l•tona. b•
gin._.., 18f'5ous gulllrltt. Brut-

cardlo Muolc. 114-448-0IIB?.
Jeff W1ma1.,- lnltructor. 114446-8077. limited openings.

58

2 Sean riding mo'Mirs. 10 puth
mo.,.ts. 1 tiller. t400. Flat bed

tilt trailer. 8400. Call814-3889888.
King wood • ooal burner-ueed 1
IBason, asking t225. Murfty 11
HP riding mo~NM . $400. Cell

614-448-8958 altar 5 PM.

Musical
lrlstrumente

Fl\lit

&amp; Vegetables

MalrOI8 · red &amp;.

golden -

sorghum • mile. food tt.ms.
0\lnrovln Frutl F.-m-881 IE of
AIHny . Hour11S.I. Cloeld Man-

doyo. 814-198-8218.

20,000 BTU fuel oil furnace. If
interested eel 814-245-5238.

'*

bundle. Contllning IPPfOX . 1'/t
ton. Ohio P.elet Co., Pomeroy,
Ohio. 814-992-1481 .
Baseboard elec. heaters &amp; ltMH'moltats. 304-675-2722.

a..,. tor _... eaoo buthel.
pfck own. lDc:Med 8t C.W.
~ ftlrm,

n ..t to Herria

G.-hou•. Partland814-B435112.
Freezer beet. corn fed. 304-1754182.

f &lt;Hill

Stl)l)llil'::

(, LiVI'\1111:&lt;,

350 Case doter 6 Yt/1111 blade,

very good shape, eo . i .. Ohch
Witch. 304-273-3186.

Farm Equipment

IH Fwm All wtlh 111-attmtnt:a.
Vrr ••onebla c.ll 114-4417028.

801 Ford - k M - ,......
ni.- w•h 101 mowingmechiM.

1988 New Holl1nd blltr~
83111. 9 N Ford w ;,.., plows

• d._, e1411. o.,. wHt
flnanco. Coli 814-218-1522.

l&lt;lle Model 4000 Ford ciOHI
trlalar Wtth ,,..,...,. toed•,
fiiiO. 1010JDwfth.naw 8ft.
buoh hoi&gt; 12160. Ow- will

flnonco, Cal1114-288-l522.

63

1179 Oldsmobile Cutlat Su·
p ....... 0800. 304-773-1492.

304-178-1972.

H-, far .... lMte raund bll•.

114-841-201111.

(llleUbll

•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

VIda aCot nbt

7:35(J)8e. . .l
8:00 IJl MOVIE: Anallllnd the
. lliHimln (NRJ (f:&lt;IO)

,

Mllpllnl
Ill Growing , _
Uttle Ben hoa run up
enormoue bll caHI!!!j 11xual

RogersB•aement !

w...prQOflng.

fantasies llna. (R) !il
(l) I!) Novo II loof&lt; II
contamporary ethical
quellllons lacing eurgeon1.
(NR)a

rep,eW. PM'ta. and auppll•. Pick •

f
Concrete Septic T1nkl - 1000 •
gal.• 1500u•- and Jet Aenltlon

,..,.1r :

Pllntfng: lnt•lor &amp; Exterior. '
F- . .1....... Coli 014-448- '

Ford

Coupe ,

0 2.000.00. 304-875-3834,
1113 Ch., Otlebrtty, PL PB,
new tires. n.wexhalet, e3,000.

call 304-178-2040.

8344.

4090.

Mankey

llllllllwllll -

Holly
Dunn, and Glenn Campbell
1:30 (I) • (J) HllCI of the Clul

S1111e Money. Keep Wllrm In ,

dlltlng Hrvlca. (R)

RON'S Television B1rvlce.
Hou• cetts on RCA. OJ•ar,

for Sale

1978 Dodge 4 WD V. ton, long
wheal-· •1000. 1188 ATV
Hondl4wheel•. Call814-4463289.
1984 lladt Ford F15Q. 4 tpd. ,
3oo. 8 ort . 110p old• bod. Coli

014-448-8827.

1971 Chwy If.! ton pickup, 350
IUto., 18.000 mil•. Red&amp; g111y
with nM pelnt. Runt good. C.ll
814-317-7891 .

spd., IB.OOOmll•. Needs minor
work . • 800. Cell 814-387·

r:
'

sto-..a. 304-1576-2398.

Bh•r· •3soo.
814-742-283 or 114911hdard

tr~n.-nll•kln.

Call
742-2785.

1970 ~eep, 1971 Dlevv Luv
truck. cell after 15:00 PM 304-

ON "YYUR ~YM6Nre ...

'

----~~-------- 1
Ak••TreeTrlmming.ndStump •
Remo.l. Free estimMes. C.ll
304-875-7121.

t '()

Llny

Time Wre1tt1ng

RE:.ME'.MeeR 6UYING A

WINNEBAGiO.

1:30a New COUIIIIJ
10:00&lt;11700 Club

.

(!) Tile

..N

I , ''- I,'

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

j

304-875-2578,

VEHICLE!

AJNNY. .. 'IOLI'D 1l-11i':'IK

811J PltmeKing Llvll
&lt;Zl-

A • B Remodlling, matenence
MdiC~IOI'i•. we do flnework :

forilnepeople,getreadyfcrflll,

Mlcllm' C8l TUlldlJ McMe

'A REFOS6ESSICIN NOriCE
WILL Be 156US0a.JTHE

' Be ADVISED THAT IF YOU
CONTINUE' "lO OS FAULT

A ON'S APPUANCE SEAVK:E, r

•.

.

........ ~. ..........

Ill EVllllna Newt
11J IIIIWDif'The Forlllne Teller

'

82

',,.

Plumbing .
&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

a

'·

Cor. Fourth end Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446·3888 or 614-

'·

10:30 ill1!6etendaro

a® Odd Couple

(11-

1 BROUGHT BACK

• VIda cCquntry
11:oow R-c •ti1Hil
(J) IJtl*r ..... of 8polta

YORE PINKIN'
SHEARS

(I) . ( J ) .

kiln Moyere tsllcl wl1ll •

------------------- ..•

85

wide vorilty of people about

Ill=•

A1111!1Cl'S ~

•®LOYI

•.
:·
•'

Unu11111 Camara

tiJIIlUIIIttl PNIIIda
aYouCan&amp;eelt8r
11 :30 (I) lpoftiClnl8r (L}

THE GRIZZWELLSe

ma-e

871-1158.
'11.,d'HFoniF150pldtups.
304-898-3189.
Pldl up beds,

a....roa • •long or

....... ....... 304-878-UB8.

·73

Vena 8t 4

lin

W.O.

Dodgo I'IIIL Van, AC,

c:rutte. RUIOMbla Call 114448-7021.

1179 Joap J 10 picl&lt;up 4x4.
40.000 orQinlal mil-. U800.
Extrod-. Caii114-448-8BII
alhlr 5 PM.

Nlgllt 0'

11aao... ~-crwfteo....,-

-

v...

r_.., oondhlon.

mont ltMion WIOOn. phone

304-875-141hftoi 4 :00PM.

II Mrloualy
Injured and lilt Ulllllllld

during I drug dill. (R)
(II TlilfiPW Jolin, M.D. Boom

IIJ Rlplldl

IIIA_.,.nMe;"IN
12:00(1)...,., ChUe

Water dellverv . 1000 glllona.·~--~
Aa•oneble pricH. lmmedilttl" ,....,

dalloouy. Cal1814-992·&amp;275.
•

:•••I

eiJl . , - .
(I) NW•••I;I

1· ~

(l)ltjiiOtl

al dalh&lt;ory. 304-178-2311 or
14-448-40118.

87

'' SUANE!
'' SHANE!"
1
'COME BACK.!"

..
,,

Uphol•terv

e (J) IIIII TodeJ
:::=:~

PEANUTS

P1trlck'1 Water H.,lng_. 2.000

l

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Sludge - Ubel- Madam - CowbOy - WOULD CALL
After waking an hour lor a couple to show up lor an a(&gt;poinlment, the man said to his partner, "II people are going
to forget their appointmen1s, I wish lhey WOULD CALL."

...........

I'vE WATCHED THIS MOVIE
TWENT't' TIMES, AN&amp;' 514ANE
NEVER COMES BACK ...

111 llnh 1111 HoiiJ
Ounn, IIICI Qllnn ~
12:11(J)IpD IICI-Ibn(L) ·
12:11&amp;!r!lue1•1111 Olt• .~~
(I)
Ill PCIA Tow (R)
elliMilltlillllil Tonight

'''·
'·

_...,., Up-lng ....., ~'
triCIDUntylrN23'f!IW&amp; The belt ' -t
In fllrniiUM uoho-g. Call :
304-178 -4114 for !ru · ,

Htlmatel.

BRIDGE

Wben Soulll opened ouue heart, be

was very pleased to bear North offer a
foretoc nile to tbree hearts. South,
who wasn't' settiiDg for lea than six
EAST
hearts, ltarted a cue-bidding eequence •WEST
•ttJI2
ln-rehofi8Yllll.
. IOU71t
•ou
North'• rOw--club bid was encourag- · : j0~ 6 2
•Qu
lng, but when North algnecl off In four .
81
.052
hearta, Soulll judpd lix was enough. It
was a wile dec1alouu as It turned out.
SOUTH
.A3
Normal plaL!~11~dt oae would be
.A QJ6 2
to eo up with
y'upade q.- on
.A 73
the theory that It's iiiiW or aeoer.
•ttJ
7
Soulll looked a Uttle deeper. Even
tbou&amp;b the q.- was the beat play to
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East
avoid a lpa4e lc.r, it unJcbt aot be the
beat play here. South uked blmaelf
Norlll l!:ul
what the cbaDca were that West bad _.
P111
led away from the klnC Of spades.
Pill
P111
Would you, for IDitluuce, nusb to lead
Pua
Pill
away from the apade klnC when de- P111
Pill
,clarer bad ahown atl'e!lgth?
Pus
Pill
. South decided the openlilg leader
.would not make such an agreulve
Opening lead: • 10
1lead, ao be P!-"yed low from dummy ·.ead would aol\&lt;e declarer's problem Ia
and won Eut 1 jack with the ace. Next :bat suit, and a spade lead would profollowed three rounds of trump and • Ylde a llluff and a ruff.
three rounds Of Clulll.
Note that South'l play wu Now South led bla spade to the Ary.Ubeplayathequeeaattrlckoae,
queen and waited to 11M if bla play at EUt coven. Tben when South leadl
trick ouue waa correct It wu. Eut bla BII:OIId 1pac1e, Welt can w1n and the
the kln8 u declarer bad hoped. ·
awtteb from his aide wtU be
Tbla left Eut eodplayecl A dlamoad

••o s

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Night prior
1 Stormed
4 Golf club
II Omelet
5 Midriff
I 0 TIU'OW
6 Price paid
. II Step In
7 "How was
12 Battle- know?"
ready
8 Indian
13 Tale
weight
unit
14 Depot '
(abbr.)
9 Have at it
15 Entrance 10 Possesses
Yesterdey'a Answer
17 Attica
16 Drs. group
township 17 Costly
18 Anonymous 18 Actress
Jane
Wynter
25 Wee bit 38 Dynamite
21' More
19 German
27 Humiliate 39 Leo the
or less
river
30 Golf
Lion's
24 Naval
20 Bridge
gadget
studio
position
34 Show a 40 Nigerian
power
28 Mountain 21 Comfy seat response 41 Opera's
nymph
22 Russian
311 Shade
Merriman
28 Dressed
city
38 Tennis 43 Do
to the -- 23 Mother
term
garden
29 Hunt for
(Fr.)
37 Utah city
work
31 Pungent
32 Beverage
33 "Goodbar"

IlouW•
.,.-..... ,.
Cll 1.111 McMe (IIRI

•

•'

~.

\

~

'·

'

~~1111Qul
(Nil)\= II '

..

'

IIJ .... of

'

star

35Shoe38 Movie
loca~lon

39 Craze
42 "Young Man
With-"
(1960 film)

44TheOle Opry

45 Envy
48- Carlo
470verflow
witlt
DOWN

1 Emcee
Parks
2 Teshu or
Panchen
DAILY CRVPI'OQUOU!8- Here'a how to work It:

9127

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

::!,~~ cu 1.811

"'!

·"

ANSWER

1111 iiJA T-,

A • A Wllter Service. Pools.
cl1terns. wells . Immediate · . 1
1.000 or 2,000gallone deltvery. 1 ~ 1
Call
304-8715--1370.
_____
__:___:_.:..:_____ ..,
't.

-

~ UNSCRAM8lE FOR

•®Nl"?,•odtlllftl

IJ

2919.

e14-141-2202.

"!:"•1;1

~ IJL

.J &amp; J Weter Servk:e. Swimming_ 1
poots, ciuerns. •Nell•. Ph. 814- -. :

Wetteuon's Water H•u ling, '"""'
,...onable r•tea, lmmedlrtt
2. 000 gill on del !¥try, citter,._ "
poelt. well. etc. elll 304-171-

1171 Volb - · vw. 7
P.lllftllf nn. Ae•oneble.

&lt;Zl All Anwtcan Jllz

Dillard W•er Service; Pool•.
Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Anylima. Cell 814-441-7404-No A·
ILindll'f call•.
"
248-9285.

z- 11 Moat

IDI

\"

General Hauling .

•a-

&lt;Zl l!l .. ..,,... WOIId of

,.'.

•_87~5-;:17:8;5.~==:;~~~= :-••

Crooll and CMH

10:20 (J) MOVIE: 100 Rltlle (RJ
(1:50)

BARNEY
LDWEEZ'Y!!

448-4477

R•identill or commercial wir-ing. N!wt eervice or rRpalrs.
Ucensed lleclrici.,. Estimate
h-ee. Rld~mour Electrlcll, 304-

lrllh R.M. PoliCe

must flnd who ltOifl barrell
of rum lost !rom ·a grounded
11111p.
eilll .."'"' MUilr

I'

*·:1.4 ton pickup
truck. Snowplow• c.mper top.
1800 S.l• lllltbed. 1911lnt'el. Good oond. 81500. C.ll

TY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

hou• call terVIdng GE. Hot ;
Point. weshert, dryers end ,

77Chevy4wh.

01200. Coli 814-318-9881.

o..r ....ril deCide. Ia
presented. a
1111 • a MOVII!: 'Marnu-

'

898-3B02

4- picl&lt;-up trucka. 1- 4 wheel
drhlo. Call 014-445-9428,

••s.

!t; ~

Coll304-875-1331 . ,'

. tool drilling. '
Rotary or cable
Most Mils completed pme dl't' .
Pllrnp Ill• It'd tervlce. 30~

0608.

1984 Mazda B-2000. 45,000
mH-. cond. c-. ,..,.,_
buck•
console. Clll before noon. 114-218-822B.

e

24114.
reMO\AII.

a

1:00(1) Tap Rink 80ldntt
(I)
(J) MOVII!: 'llllnd bJ
. Ml' ABC MGYil 8~ IIIII (R)
29
&lt;i&gt;
Vllllfllln China
Thl history 01 1.on11 Bow

1

Fettv Tree Trimming. rt-..np '

1979 AM Spirit 0900.00. 304875-1043 aftar 0:00.

Charlie SIIQIIISIS thlt hll
aludenta UH I COII)!IUI8I'

Qor-. Coli 814-448-0731 .

871-3213.

Stercr.aft pop-up c1mper
•400.00. Or beat off•. 30~

F1150.

a:JPitlr~~eNiwa

•

1983 Grand Prix 02,100.00.

1183 Ford

..

EEK&amp; MEEK

11J Tllel of Ill Oolcl

OE . Spoclallng In Zonhh. Call '
304-578-2398 Of 814-448- ·,

TIUcks

Spi~a 1 1eama 1 lluon from
hill onet, blllenwaet
encounter w1111 • real, live
woman.=RJ
MOYll!:
Ioiii
oalaMr
1t1 :52)

winter. Cool in tt.mm.-. ln•u- ••
1111. Free ettim1tea. John

1983 Volbe~g_, A1bbH: GTL
34.000mll•.•tldng f3,200.00
gre .. •hepe. phone 304--175-

72

Snoopy'e dlllrt~ng.
enimltlld boOUIW,

1ys1em. F1ctory nln•
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER- ,
PRIIEI, Jlckton, Ohio. 1·800..
&amp;37-8528.

Two 1941

73111.

Ill • lalll'l ... 0111 111111
Riel T-. Ch.-llown

1

RON EV"NS ENTERPRISES:
Saptlc !Mk ''""111"11' 190 por
load. C1H 1-80Q-&amp;37·81528.
•

w_.

"This
a real tourist trap. Our lireescape r:oute goes through the gil.....
shop downstairs ."

l•

-------------- .
Improvements

'78 Mon• Clrlo V·l •.nomltlc;
good ''""'· 01.000. 304-175-

l&lt;&gt;odod ..... 41,000
m... 111.000. 114-1111-3341
17111. lon-oo eaa. •114-111-1481.
81+-2171.
'79 OMC Von. '10 ford FalrMlxed hay for •Ia. e1 .10 bile.
1981 Ford E1oort ltlltlon

=--==-:---···•'..
81
Home

Cteaner, one helf mile up J
Creek Ad. Cell 814448-0294.
r

Uve, m•ure Qud. Clll 814-

---------I

I •

'Georg~~

Llv81todc

Hay 8t Grein

e!llUIAT-,
a Jnpo drtl;l
liD ...,.••"11
D Cit &amp;l'lle

••

up end dflliwtry. Oevtt V.c:uam .t-

388-1779.

64

(1).-..IIMIIlT...._..

•

Services

CJ) Milar Lea.,. Ill IIIII
Mol)lfllnl

--~~~--------·
S'MEPER 1nd sewing miChtne

1

living room, furnished stcMI .nd
NfrigeNtor wfth n8W' kfteh.,
cebineta. Dining area with
e•pet. 1.-ge cellng wnt fen, 2
porch-. ,., nclry en d. stONee
are1. Off stn• perldng. ne•
.,hoalo .,d oho-g. By oppolntniWnt, 304-«'11-1387.

·

uon. uoo.oo. 304-87&amp;-4335. ;

1973 Olcll Cullom Cruiser
S1a11on'IA!gon. AC, AM-FM rl·
dfo. Clll 114-992-012.

lely furni •-•

2208Jo_A,., 2-oom
IPt. c•Pif•, new bath, l•ge

1

(I) •

814-379-2331 .

King-Cole wood burning stove,
call 304·882·3387 after 1 :00.

7:30!~~...,_, 01)'111~··

1f

8 ftCimpertop, ttunf¥COMb'UC· _,.

I)) Amlltcln MuiCII

1878 O.ttun INCk. 4 cyl.. 4
Jonllthan·Mck1toeh-Grlm• applu, elder. P81rt, honev.

7:01 IJl Ito I

tee. LoCII ref..,cea furnlthecl
Free ettimatft, Clll collect
1 - 81~237-0488. dt¥ or night. •

1971 OI'M'Id Pril.. 400 .nalne.
.,..II •le far .,.,.,_ 11~112-

Pets for Sale

a Cn!ok •nd Ch••

UncondltbMI ltfatlma guaran-

2411 .

56

Ill MantJib•
liJI Blnlan

Buy Oo ... rnmem t$1ed and
turplut whld• from a1 00.
Ford•. Olwys. eor...ttet. etc.,
In your area. For info caU (802)
842-10151 Pt. 114815.

.,d llovolod Lap Slclng
I Dedi Nllt•IIIS
594-357B

Ne....._(1 :00)
,~,- WhMI of
.liD TlwH'I Comjiii1J

'

mil•- Pho,.114-992-7329.

Needl nothing. e2100. Call

13&amp;0. Clll814-245-5882. .

""*
&lt;ZJ mMlcHlll/ LlhiW

1988 SunStretm Motor Home.
27 ft ., AC. Oli.n818tor. 2800 ~

1971 C.m•o. V·l. auto .. ttereo, air. No rust. c;.rage kept.

_•_14-_3_17_-_oiO_s.________

(J) lpa I C - (L)
(I) • (J) CurNnt

.

cash

1
A PRINT NUMBERED
~ LETTERS IN SQUARES

a You c... a. alllr
1:35 (J) ,.,.,., Gllttllll

- - - -- - - --·••.1

•r'eo.

Ou•entaed Oullfty
CETIDE. INC., Atheni·I14-

Radio Shack Computer 1000
Ex. extns diac drlw 380-K.
printer OMP 130, monltorCM11 , desk. lots of programs•
dite~. Cost over t2000 new. will
sell for f900. Call 814-4413816 1111ytlme.

beckoom.
all 30•
tn.u, c
....

'

Jr. camouflege blk Mid white.
Ford 1971 . . . or nde. Junction lndep•dence Road, At. 21 .

Qaiiii&gt;OIIo. Ohio. Call 814-448-

870.9881 .

3716. E.O.H.

4031 nocallaaftor 7:00PM.

I
:.--1 e

an honest face, buill won'l filln the

Complete the Chllckle quoted
. .....I
by t.limg in the missing words
1 _--L.__.l.-.J.-..J.L--....1.
you deve!op from step No . 3 below .

oc.-~xpNM

~

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Volli·

BOII-887·6000 Ext. S-101B9.

.If--rl.

(11......._

1

Motors Homes

~

1was new In town so when I asked

I I 1• . the S10re owenr for cred~ It didn'lsur1
":~-=~-=~-~~-=~.., prise me when he said , "You have

e® WICRI' Ill Clnelnn8ll
Ill ln1kle PoiHicl 'II

ewPMllea •.,.

d• from 1100. Ford•. Mer·
cedel. Carwt1ft. Ch811YI· Surplut. B~yere Guide . f 1•

i

--,..,.55...,.L_A-r-T--rA-:--11 ~

7:00(1)118minalal&gt; . . .

1

I' I I .I1

l

411 eacuNewt

198301dtmobile98. Motorlnd '
lninsmltllion. 304-773-5e51. ~
Wanted to buy topper for Ford
long bedpidluptruck. 304-17~

1981FordE-.rtOT.IIIr.

(!) llghtlr • 11"111 Report

buy nnsml11ion1. Ctll-

' &amp; Campers

(J) AIC -.~;~

·

&lt;Zl 11041V llaalrlc

114-448· 0988. Aebulldlng 1
aveHibl•
~·
_3_60_•--,-•o-o--.ma-:11:-bl:-:-ock-:--:C::h-.,-. !
rolet engin-. elso pertlng oLrt :
.,t.nltlonal cllmp truck. C.ll 1
814-245-5087.

114-21f.l522.

it.-, denim. r.,tll dothing.

lis Block Co.. 123'h Pine St.,

Wheelchairs-new or Ul8d. 3
wheeled eleetlic ICOOtert. Call
Rogers Mobllty collect, 1 · 614-

• ;,

Mytlme.

conwrtibl&amp; utNstwp. 12710.
~ltbenento•PP'Wd• - C.ll

'

Beattie

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

1187 Chwy Oweu.-. 18.000
mllll--.48150. 1188 Pontile

0110. Coli 814-742-3073 ~.
hwen 3-lp.m.

t.-e- We

1 971 •I«* Stlltion, W1g0n.
1400 or belt offer. Cll! 81~
446-3111 Mytkne.
_1_8_77__
U-nool_n..;..4_dr_._
1300. C•ll 814-•48-3811

SlhMr AldlleAd. Reedvll' Ohio.
814-BBI-3182.

8175, PeeYee T-10 gubr wl:h
twcllheU ICM8 e121. H .,d H
Oubr ImP 2·12 ~dt tpllk. .

(I) •

II

:.--TI-'-';,1.;;;._-ilr--::,1

ifi lnllcle 1M PCIA Tow

~-;~-r-;~~~---1
:·
71 Auto's For Sale
Uood Tranomlulons. All Into~ .·
nllty lntPICtecl. 30 d•s Q.Uirln- • '

NERT Gy

R I KE L L

1:01 (I) . . . _ - titey
1:30. &lt;II 1111 NIC lllglltlr - .

.:·

I

r

Good TlmM
IIJI'M• ,.,dingo

---------- •

Misc. Merchandise

Mfxed herd wood slabe. 112

&amp;

low to form four ,simple words

REMYE

(II

1-:'

_
Accessories

1111 • Gl

e® HePPr a.,.
111 lbo aiL&lt; T-,

top. drhlo on Etc0r1 mlltr.

Misc. Merchandise

(I)

2

'"1:

Parte

Rearrange letters of the - ( -.............
four scrambled words

(l)IIMiolla Ramona and,
Beezue lind lhemaelvea
r88ponslble for the family's
dinner. (NR)
(!) Dr. Who Tile lnt.mo, Part

cover. AM·FM·CIII tter.,, lh

447
Auto
·

(I) •

~~~~l))lpolta~

111 t-c;; \NH1,..F I.A'1

Concrete blockt· Ill . . . . .,..rd

2528. 1

304-B82-2581,

One bed room ~artment In
Hendlnan, call efter 15:00 PM

• &lt;II

Boats and

76
~~~~~~~~=-~~r.=========d 387·0

~LLAN

8:00 (l)llonlnu: Tile Loet
lpludu

1986BovllnarCopri, 1811.. 85 ,
HP U.S. Marl.. Fo .... Mooring '•

"''"Avt&lt;l /'AfA'""
nu
-"'EoP4fi f!,05fi'!&gt; CAT

WOlD

EVENING

---------:-::-:-:-: '•
jjiiK"

GAM I
':!~~;~' S©\\Jl~-"ttfS"
ldloed by CLAY R,
:"':~~fl!''"':'­
0
be- r

TUES., SEPT. 27 •

HlrriiPontoonBoM, 24ft. deck,
31 HP MerOJry motor. E.:el.
cond. U250. Coli 814-3870447 or 317-0415-'

1-J./

8uy or, Sell. ,Riverine Antklues.
1124 E. Main Street. Pomeroy.
Hours: M.T.W 10e.m. to &amp;p.m ..
Sunday 1 to &amp;p.m. 814-992-

utlitt. Pllld. ..t..nc•. Phone

;~59 11 .

•

Motors .,r Sale

BuHclng Moterialo

Antiquee

Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio.

rent,

75

wl-.

2 bedroom fu rnil heel "*"ment.

for

....... 304-182-2098.

3180.

.Electric furneca. 11,380 IT U
a200. w..m Morning Star,
Complete houtehold furnlah- 40,000 BTU •400.1othu•don
ings. '1.1 JYMie out .....-rk:lto.
CAll 814-992-2848.

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
hoUBIII. Pt. PleuantendGelllpo-llt. 814-448-8221.

Apt.

111&gt; ........,

1981 Hand• 2150 X. tour
wMeler. exc conct. 30C-182· ·

61
r::::::::::::::::::Jl::::::======:.J
SNAFU\11 by Bru&lt;e

I

~

G 6 J CycleP•ts.ndl.-vice for
lit JIIPI"- blk• tnd ATV.
F•ctory .-lin.:!! technld.,, Gary
Kln.,...d. 304-175-1805.

PICKENS USCO FURNITURE

814-446-4045 . .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

3 room apartment. $100 a me.

Now accepting IPplicatlons for
2 bedroom apart,.,.ntt, fully·
carpeted. apphnce~ . water and
tr11sh picku~ provided. Maintan..oe free living clolll to llhopplng, b.-tea and tchools. &lt;For
more infoi'TMtlon cllll 304-882·

-

27B~.

Apartments and houses. Cell
30 .. B75-fi1 04.

aduh
udl~loo, paid.
.160 mala.
momh.AllPoiTIIIroy
814992·2545.

tton•

ot deltvwy. Muon .and. Gallipo-

Furnlthed apt. New . NaarHMC .
1 BR . 0275. Utll~leo pold. Call
448-4418 aft• 7 PM.

8atement 8pt. for rnet. One

90 O.V• •me as c•h with
approved credit. 3 Mllaa out
BullVille Rd. Open 9em to 15pm
Mon. thru Sit . Ph. 814·448-0322.

Reminfrton 870, 20 ga. lhotgu n,
full choke. Mintcond. t250. Call

Merchandise

5119.

Homes for Rent

0&lt;

Specious mobile home loti for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Hom a
P•k. O.llipolla Ferry, W. Va.

~tv

41

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Par k.
Rou• 31 North of PomMoy.

Apartment for rent. t225 a
month. Oepoeit required. 614992-&amp;724. After 8pm or 992·

3 BA hou• In Rutland •325.
Wster, garbage S. heat. Plus
S200 teeurlty depolit S. referenc•. C.ll 814-387-7287 wen-

3 bedroom houl8. large b•e·
ment, aluminum 1iding, tunv
c•peted, in FlomeroY. Clll 814-

private entrance.

HAVE 1:&gt; t;TA'( IN

1 Ill
4 uax 210 Fl . Two
••..._ toomenvutreatollst.

The Daily

Television
Viewing

~ $!'~, 't)J .,.,.\IT

boards 830 and up to 185.

448-7444,

gl•••d

•eo ~nd

ful or 1Win 888, firm 871. lftd
$88. OuHn lift • 250 • up,
King t360. 4 drewer chett til.
Gun cMJ!net1 I gun. leby
msttrBSII)U *315 &amp; 845. Bed
tram• 820. •'30 1!1.. King fnlme
$50. Good •eltcflon af bedroom
tul1et, metll Clbinett, hetdo

Roomt for rent-wetk Of' month.
St.lrttng at S 120 a mo. Glllia
Hotel - 814-448-9680.

frigerator. microweve.
In back doo,._ off stre• J)lrking.

Furnished apt. ·1 BR . t240•mo.
Utllftls p~id. 243JackaonPike..

3 8R .. insulated. good cond. 1
a'CTe. near Rio Gran de . Good buy
at S23,000. Cali 614-24!-9B78
or 446-6764.

$81 ,500.

2 IR .. furnished. U80 a mo.
plus Me. dep. &amp; urf. Adults only.
Send replltt~ to Box Cia 168.
c l oGalllpolla Dally Tribuna. 825
Third Ave., Olll(polit, Ohio

839&amp; to t99&amp;. T•bl•

Pcimarov-Mid1haort. Ohio

Motoreycl•

78 Suz'*i GS 51101!. 7800
mi-. Nlw ctuch cebl' good
-304-175-1433.
&amp; · UIO. Coli

up to 8125. Hld••·bedt f390
to •&amp;915. RacHnen f221 to
8375. t..m~ t28 to 11211.
Dlnena 8109 .nd up to f481.
Wood table w-8 chlirt ezae to
$795. Oosk tiOO up 10 0371,
Hutchaa t400 .. d up, Bunk
tJ.ds complete w-mlllt.....
t2915and up to 13911. llllbrbaldl
t110. M•Ui
I orbo•IPrinSII

,304-178-1 t&amp;O.

Ausoneble. 3 tleeplng roomt.
Conttnctlon men. ShoW»', re-

448-0390.

1 BR. furnished haute on
Madison Street. large yard.
8200a mo. Call614-448-4109
or 379-2740.

~14-992-5751 .

Furnithed 2 BR . Adults only . No
pets. 322 Third Aw. Cell 61~
446-3748 or 268-1903.

Ne.- Waterloo-2 Br. Cl...,.
8125• mo. Ref. S. dep. Adults.
Furniohod. Coli 614-448-7754
.. 843-2144.

VMy nice 3-4 BR ., in Centenary,
1 ACffJ. new !liding. rural water, 1
car g'arege. Call after 5 PM,
614-379-2703 br 387-0498.

·Brick and cedar mnch hou•.%
Keres in Bradbury bahind
WMPO. large 2 car garag" 3
bedrdOms, Uving room, cent,.t
air·h eat, woodbu rner, water aoftenM. · n8'Ntv remodeled large
kitchen with J en Air Range.
garbage disposal. dishwasher,
utilrty. room. landscaped nicely.
Seet;~ by ap polf'tment only. Call

814-448-8558,

cerplt. Vinyl underpinning.
Oeclc &amp; building. ~·• • • to
ap preclete at Quell Creek
Number 98. Call814-245-91194
ai 814--448--9747.

E~&lt;multilevel

Distributan· If
your still have the desire to
become s.u ecessful call 814446--21 41 .

Nawlv deCOI'IIted, 2 BR ., fully
c•l)lted. ell utilftiM paid aKcept
electric. Sec. dep. ~equired. Cell

45831.

992-6373. Ask tor Michael.
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommendl that you
do business with paopkl vou
know, and NOT to !!IBnd money
throug h the mail until you hiiVt't
investtgated the offering.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

CA. 2 SR. l,g. both. , ~or

33
21

42

1979 14x70 Nest... Ex. cond.

Painting S. roofing &amp; carpentry
wl)rk by the hour or job. Call
614-379-2416.

74

KIT 'N' C-'RLYLEII by Lmry Wrilht

SofH. and chlirt priced from

A ..... O.lllpoUt. t136 a mo.
Utilttles paid. Singlemala. Share
bath. Clll448-4418after7 PM.

Rental trallert. Call 614-9927479.

Ohio WATTS 800-828-0762.
Cue dozer. Re•onable rates.

Househdl d Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Ar- mwwest long .,m c••
f.cilttv now off•ing .,._;tion for
c•tifled di•rv man-e~• or
ex plrienced eq...,_.entaccep•ble. cornpettthlre bentlfit PlctliiJ•

AVONalllrteltl
304-175-1429.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single l!!tters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPI'OQUOTE

9-27

M Z

RQM

G Z 0 Z N

T G' Y Z N E K B G y

XHKKXZ

HG

KRHE

MZ

VGQM

MZ

MQNXY
K R Z

GZZY
TGKHX

XQEE

QW

HK
-LBPZE
IBNNHZ
Yetttenlay'e Cryptoquote: NO DISGUISE CAN LONG
. CONCEAL LOVE WHERE IT EXISTS OR LONG FEIGN It
WHERE IT IS LACKING. -- LA ROCHEFOUCAULD

...

'

'

•

�Page-1 0-The Daily S otioel

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

Tuesday. September 27, 1988

--Local news briefs-- Cold grips New England and The Plains
(Continued fran page 1)

EMS has 10 caUs Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
Monday; Rutland at 1:15 a.m. to State Route 681 tor Linda Kerr
to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 3:50a.m. to State
Route 681 for James Kelly to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 7:15a.m . .to East Main In Pomeroy for JoAnn Fry to
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 10:27 a .m . to
Letart for Mary Pickens to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12:46 p.m. to Brownell Ave. tor Carrie Rousli to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 3: 22 p.m.
treated Mike Henry. Randolph Cottman and John Cottman at
the·scene of an auto accident on Success Road; Syracuse at 3: 35
p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for Mary Kerns to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 6: 34 p.m. to an auto acclde!lt on McCumber
Road for Bob Lambert who was uninjured and not transported;
Middleport at 8:30 p.m. to Beech St. ior James Milhoan to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:57p.m. to Lincoln
Hill for Evelyn Knight to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

By United Preu laternatlonal
Cool air swept across the
central Plains early today, while
steadY rain drenched the Paclflc
Northwest. The remainder oflhe
country enjoyed pleasant
weather.
The cold air sent temperatures
plunging Into the :lis and 40s over
portions of the northern Plains,
the National Weather Service
said. The cold front, which did
not contain much moisture, nevertheless created cloudiness
over South Dakota and parts of
Wyoming and Nebraska.

Bundle-up temperatures also
cloaked New England and the
northern Appalachians, with
readings In the 40s recorded
early today. Some temperatures
dipped Into the 30s in Maine.
The NWS said the low temperatures in New England were
caused by a bla,st of cold
Canadian air that parked over
New York state.
Rain was scattered over the
Pacific Northwest because of an
approaching cold front. The NWS
described the rain as steadY but
light, and said It was expected to

--Area deaths--

officiating.
HIUT)' Hazelton
Mr. Chase, born In Pomeroy,
moved
to Leesburg from Silver
Meigs County native Harry E.
Continued from page 1
Hazelton, 71, died Mqnday at his Springs, Md., in 1962. He died
June18, this year. Mr. Chase was
residence In Columbus.
a retired Internal Revenue Serdonated to the town by motorcy- !age for work to be done on town
Born Dec. 6, 1916 In Pomeroy,
vice agent, a graduate ot Ohio
cle riders of the area - has been sewage processes will now have he was a son of the late James A.
University, a member of Delta
installed at Diles Park.
to be allowed through a consent and Minnie Mae Hazelton. Mr.
Sigma PI Fraternity, a member
Mayor Hoffman reported that order Issued by the Ohio Attorney Hazelton was retired from his
of the Washington, D. C. Chapter
Councilmen Bob Gilmore, Jack General. Before the consent 37-year position as a car InspecSatterfield and Paul Gerard order Is Issued the village will tor for Conrail. A veteran of of the Sons •of the American
attended a meeting last week have to submit to the Attorney World War II, he was a lifetime Revolution, a member or the
with representatives of the U. S. General a plan showing the member of Westway VFW Post Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society. He was a Ken·
Corps of Engineers and the Ohio compliance schedule for their 3441.
tucky Colonel and was a United
Deparlment of Natural Resour- improvements. The town's engiSurvivors include his wife,
States
Naval officer during
ces to review the posslblllties of neering firm is working on that Flornell Martin Hazelton; a son,
World
War
II. He was a member
the area around DUe Park for plan, the mayor stated. Council- James A. Hazelton; a daughter
ot the First United Methodist
becoming one of 17 river access man Gerard reported that he has and son-in-law. Jeannl and MiChurch, Huntington, W.Va.
recreation areas in a plan being been working on material to be chael Fife; a grandson, Andy, all
Survivors Include his sister,
developed by the Corps and the complied for a brochure on of Columbus: a brother, James
Deparlmen t along the Oh lo Middleport and he Invited all A. Hazelton, Hemlock Grove; . Mrs. Phyllis Chase Russell of
Leesburg.
River. It will be sometime before council members to submit ideas three sisters, Ruth Young, of
the town receives word if the on what they feel should be Rutland, Thelma Gibbs, of Cirlocal area Is to be Included In the included.
cleville, Marie Lei filet, of Tiffin; · James Partlow·
plan, the mayor said.
Others attending the meeting and many nieces, nephews and
James Edward (Jake) ParA Jetter was also read from the were Clerk Jon Buck and Coun- close friends.
tlow,
58, 1755 Chester Road,
Ohio EPA Indicating that an cilmen Dewey Horton, James
Services will be Thursday.
Pomeroy,
died Monday at the
extension requested by the vll- Oatworthy and William Walters. 11:30 a.m., at the Schoedinger
Pinecrest
Care Center In
Hilltop Chapel, 3030 West Broad
Continued from_:_:.
page 1
St., Columbus. Burial will be In GaiUpolls.
Mr. Partlow was born Sept. 9,
Sunset Cemetery, Columbus.
Haven man who had sought to win while Boyd was driving his truck Rev. James Reed will officiate. A 1930 In Pomeroy, a son of the late
over Cindy Lee Rutan of New high speed down the road and VFW service wlll be held 7: 30 Adam and Susie Lee PartlOw.
Haven. He said Boyd might have spurned by Rutan for Boyd the p.m. Wednesday and Friends Besides his parents, he was
pushed Lhe shotgun away, but not night of the murder.
may call at the funeral home preceded In death by seven
brothers and two sisters.
pulled it towards him.
from 7 to 9 Tuesday and 2 to 4 and
Surviving are a sister, Mary
7 to 9 Wednesday. If desired,
"An~er. balled, revenge - that's
Cheatham.
Pomeroy; a brother.
friends may contribute to HosMorgan said there was no blood malice, Morgan said.
Levi
Partlow,
Pomeroy, and
Morgan asked the jury if the pice of Mt. Carmel Hospital, in
on Rutan's eight-foot wide concrem
several
nieces
and
nephews.
wliich Mr. Hazelton's memory.
porch, just in the living room and mysterious derringer Mr. Partlow was a member of
the kitclllln of lhe house, so the Rulan had not teStified to in front of
the Fellow Faith Church.
James Chase
physical evidence showed Boyd the Mason County Grand J wy Graveside services will be held
· was shot in the doorway of the was even used in the murder. "Was
at 10 a .m. Thursday at the
A memorial service for James
house, not on the porch as Staats that gun there?"
Bradford
Cemetery. The Ewing
Morgan said Staats "got all Allen Chase, 83, 400 Rogers Road,
claimed during his lengthy teSFuneral
Home
Is in charge of
beered up" at The Hut tavern just Leesburg, Fla., formerly of
timony.
arrangements.
There
will be no
yards from the Rutan residence, Pomeroy, will be held at 1 p.m.
calling
hours.
"got a lot of false courage," and Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Morgan, in attempling to have was going to settle with Rutan and Home with the Rev. Don Meathe jwy decide a fir.&gt;t-degree mur- Boyd the question of the lengthy dows, pas tor of the Pomeroy
der charge - which carries with it love triangle "once and for all."
United Methodist Church,
life imprisonment in the West Vrrginia Penitential)' - said that
Staats had deliberately and
..
premeditatedly decided to kill Boyd School carnival
lng at 7:30 p.m. The Gospel
m the early morning hours of May
Tuppers Plains Elementary Messengers of Ripley, W.Va. will
1987 while he sat in his !railer after School will be holding the annual be the featured singers.
having been unsuccessful in con- fall carnival this Saturday. The Special music
tacting Rutan on a public tele- activities will begin at 2 p.m . and
Eddie Jones of Pennsylvania
phone.
run until 7 p.m. at which time will present an hour of music at
To plant that seed in the jurors' prize drawings and an auction the Keno Church of Chrtst on
minds, Morgan read aloud from a will be held for anything left from Saturday, starting at 7 p.m.
love letter Staats sent to Rutan
Everyone welcome. ·
the carnival'.
which was admitted into evidence
Some actlvltes that will be
in the trial. "Yes I love you, Cindy" happening w!ll h!! a cakewalk, Smorgasbord
the prosecutor read, "but I don't games, prize drawings every 15
The Friendly Neighbors Senior
live lhat kind of life. The women is
minutes. a sweet shop, country Citizens Club Is having an all·
all mine or none ..."
store, bazaar, games of all kinds you-can-eat smorgasbord on
"His claim of self-defense or ac- and refreshments.
Thursday at the Pageville store
cident doesn't make any sense,"
Admission price Is 25 cents.
building on State Route 684.
Morgan told the jwy.
Serving will be from 4 to 7 p.m.
Two-week revival
Defense attorney Ron Stein
Rutland Freewill Baptist Adults, $3.50. Children under 12.
countered by saying that the police
Church w!ll be in revival Oct . 3·8 $1,75.
never did any tests on reloaded
with Rick Weaver and Oct. 10-15
ammunition, the kind Staats said with James Stewart . Pastor Trustees to meet
was in the gun when it was used.
Paul Taylor invites the public.
Sutton Township Trustees will
Stein said it was "impossible" that
meet Monday, Oct. 3, 7:30p.m.,
Revival
the shot could have been fired betJoppa United Methodist at the Syracuse Municipal
ween five to seven feet away, as the
Church will be in revival Wednes- Building.
police had testified in the trial.
day through Saturday at 7:30
Stein said Staats had been wareach evening. The revival will Pig roast
ned that Boyd was a man to stay end with the annual church
A pig roast, sponsored by the
away from and that StaatS really
homecoming on Sunday, starting Meigs Association for Retartded
was in fear of Boyd. He said the
with Sunday School at 9:30a.m. , Citizens wlll be held Saturday,
gun Staats and Rutan teStified that
dinner at 12 p.m., ending with from 5 to 7 p.m., at Carleton
Boyd had in his hand - a derringer
gospel singing at 2 p.m. Eve· School in Syracuse. $3 per
with four, .22 magnum shells serving. Everyone welcome.
ryone welcome.
was enough to fuel that fear.
Meeting tonight
,
Hymn sing
The Meigs Athletic Boosiers
A hymn sing w!ll be held
Saturday at Hazel Community will meet In regular· session
"Make · no mistake, ladies and
Church. near Long Bottom, start- tonight (Tuesday), at 7:30p.m.
gentlemen, that gun can kill," Stein
said in his summation of the case
before the jury.
Stein in his final argument, as he
had through the entire proceedings,
tried to emphasize that Boyd was
under !he influence of drugs when
he opened the front door and confronted an anned Staats, finger on
the trigger of the shotgun.
''The state has not )lroduced any
evidence that Lee did not act in
self-defense."
Stein asked the jwy to return a
verdict of not guilty.
is puasetf tlie announce lie wi[( 6e focating liis

Study approved...

Staats...

___ _____

continue through the day.
The most ralnshowers were
forecast over the northwest part
of Montana, the NWS said.

Thunderstorms over the F1or•tda Keys early today produced
heavy rainfall In some places.·
Thunderstorms also were scat·
tered over northern F1orlda.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce aad Mark Smllh
of Blunt, Ell II II Loewl
Am Electric Power ... .... ... .. .27%
AT&amp;T ..... .. .. ... ..... .. .. ..... .. .. .. .. 26
AShland 011 ..... ........ ............ 33
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes ......... .... .13~
City Holding Co ................. .. 34
Federal Mogul.. ..... .... ...... .. .47%
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ .. .. ... ... .571-8
Heck's ..... ... .... .. ..... .. .. .... .... .. %
Key Centurion .... ......... ... .... 16~
Lands' End ........... ...... ........ 29~
Limited Inc ............... ......... 22¥.
Multimedia Inc .............. ...... 73
Rax Res-taurants ...... .....•.. .... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ....... .... .11¥.
Shoney's Inc ...... ...... .. ... ... .. .. 1Y.
Wendy's Inti. ..... .. ....... .. .. .. .. . 6Ys
Worthington lnd 1 . ••.• . •• . •.. .•.. 21 :Y.

Daily Number
304
Pick 4
1174

Page4

Zanesville ·best bet
for first Ohio frost
By United Press International
Summer ended officially only
last week. but for Zanesville
residents, this week Is generally
when the mercury drops to the
freezing point for the first time.

Ohio Lottery

U.S. cagers
lose 82-76

at
Voi.39. No.100
Copyrlphted 1988

••

project

Those with the latest average
freeze dates .:... Put-in-Bay, Pal·
nesville (Nov. 4), Sandusky and
Cleveland (both Oct. 29)- are all
along Lake Erie.
The late freeze dates are due to
the warming effect of Lake
Erie's water.

NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- The
Reagan administration has auth·
orized a $579 mUIIon outlay for a
clean coal venture In Mason
·county, W.Va., the largest such
grant ever approved under the
program.
Approved by the Department
of Energy was a proposal by
American Electric Power to
buUd a 330-megawatt fluidized

bed combustion power plant at
Its Phtllp Sporn plant on the &lt;lhlo
River near New Haven.
·
AEP Is to finance more than
two-thirds of the project cost,
with $184.8 million to be put up by
.the federal government.
''This Is great news for West
Virginia, ·for all the coalproducing states and for our
nation In general," Sen. Robert

C. Byrd, D-W.Va., said Tuesday.
"The project proposed for
Mason County promises to lead
the way In developing an economIcal, clean and efficient use of
coal as our nation's power

source."
Byrd, the sponsor of a bill that
created the clean coal technology
research program In 1984, has
gained approval of more than

Morgan, in his final appearance
before the jwy, said that lhe fact
that Boyd had trace amowtts of
cocaine and THC, the active in~ent in marijuana, in his blood
means nothing m this trial."
Morgan said Staats had all the
reasons to want to kill Boyd - he
bad been cheated out of $2,400,
chased on his motorcycle by Boyd

Hospital news

lnstrudor: Milcki Casto
Information or Enrollment Call:
Gerald Fr....n 614-367-0662
' Bo~ Gilmore 614-992-6128
Joan Bcird 304-67~-3306
Milcki Cosio 304-675-3811
fun! E111yl GriCit Ex..-ciool

we also feel a certain unease. We
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Vice President George Bush said need a greater cohesion In our
TUesday that money isn't every· • society, and more generosity
thing; that Americans need to toward each other."
Bush said government prohelp each other and recapture
some of the values that made the grams to help children and the
poor have been tried, at massive
country great.
Bush told aboul2,500 people at cost, and have been found want(he Republican State Oonventlon Ing. "The answer Is up to us," he
that "wealth Is not the measure said. "The answer Is In each
ot Ute well lived,'' adding that he Individual act of kindness multlp·
b!lpes as president to be a "gentle · lied by thousands and tens of
persuader" In seeing that child- thOusands. The answer is in a
ren· and the less fortunate are · new· engagem.ent in the pain of
helped.
·
others." ·
Bush pledged to Increase fund·
"We love our prosperity." said
the vice president. "Some of us tng for Head Start, a pre-school
even remenber to thank God for program, and to lnsdtute a
'tt. But for all our wealth, I think chlld-ca~e plan for low Income

Meet New Peeplel

"Teen Class"

!Slow and fast Dancingll

c.,,., fTu•.l

MEIGS HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATES- The Melp IDJib 8cboollll88 HomecomIDI!' Queen will be crOWIIed Friday evenlnl at
Marauder Stadium when homecomlar; actlvltiel
are held al 7:05 p.m. preceding lhe )JelpNeliiOIIVIIIe York game. Caadldales, all seniors,
lhil year are front, Ito r, Melodl Carl, daur;hter of

Two Gallla County men were
arraigned as a result of the series
of drug raids executed Monday
night and Tuesday morning.
Eric- R. Cappel, 24, of Rio
Grande, and Richard D. Newell,
20, of' Galllpolls were arraigned
In the GaiUpolls Municipal Court
Tuesday. Each man, charged
with possession of three times the
bulk of LSD, received a $100,000
from Judge Joseph L. Cain.
The preliminary hearing for
Cappel, charged with possession
of 217 unlldoses of LSD, has been
set tor Oct. 5 at 11 a.m. The
preliminary hearing for Newell,

VIrgil aad Jud7 Carl, Pomeroy; Lesley Carr,
daughter of Donna Carr, Pomeroy, and Ronald
Carr, Pomeroy; Jody Taylor, daur;bler of Fenton
aad Jeannie Taylor, Pomeroy; Cathy Bobtlletler,
daur;hler of Jim aad Mary Hobsletler, Rutland,
and Nikki Whlllatcb, daughter of Max and Debbie
Whltlaieh, Middleport.

Defense compromise almost ready

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
revamped· version of a oncevetoed $299.6 billion defense
authorization bill was nearly
ready to be unveiled today
following resolution of a "Star
Wars" dispute between Capitol
Hill and the White House.
Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sam Nunn,
D-Ga., acknowledged that the
product of renewed negotiations
from opposite ends of Pennsylvania Avenue might be finalized by
this evening, though he would not
offer details Tuesday.
Nunn's panel and leaders of the
counterpart House Armed Services Committee were · working
with a special House and Senate
defense appropriations conference to Iron out legislative
technlcalltles.
A source familiar with the
negotiations on "Star Wars," the
· Strategic Defense Initiative. said
the congressional leaders had
agreed to drop restrictions on a
space-based rocket to knock
down enemy missiles. The previously vetoed bill had declared

that the disputed Weapon get just
$85 million of the $330 million
President Reagan wanted to
devote to the broad area of
space-based defenses.
Overall, the SDI program still
will get about$4.1 billion In fiscal
1989, down from the $4.9 billion
Reagan sought in his budget
proposal this year.
The precise nature of another
compromise, between the 10warhead MX missile the Air
Force wants to put on railroad
cars and the single-warhead
Mldgetman that already would
be mobile, was not known
Immediately.
The original defense authorlza·
tlon btU, vetoed by Reagan Aug.
3, called for $250 million for each ·
missile program with another
$250 million held In escrow for ihe
next president to allocate.
•L -·
The negotiations were said to
leave Intact a provision requiring
a quicker retirement for .two
aging Poseidon balllstic mtssile
submarines to keep the United
States closer to the launcher
limits of the unratified 1979 SALT

2 agreement with the Soviet
Union. Also retained was language holding the SDI program
only to those experiments that
can be conducted under a traditional Interpretation of the 1972
Anti·Ba!Ustlc Missile Treaty.
While the work progressed on
the revamped authorll:atlon bill,
negotiators of the companion
$283 biUton appropriations measure sought to finish that up as
well. The $299.6 billlon authorization sets spending limits for the
fiscal year that begins Oct. 1
while the appropriations package provides the needed money.
Because of multi-year programs,
authorization figures are larger.
Reagan's veto, which Demo·
crats said carne despite the
advice of Defense Secretary
Frank Carlucci and national
security adviser Colin Powell,
was denounced by many in
Congress as a purely political
"get-tough" action to boost the
White House campaign of Vice
President George Bush.

Sprinkel denies Democrat charges
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
country has "not mortgaged the
future" to pay for Us 70-month
economic expansion, the chairman of the president's Councll of
Economic Advisers said today,
countering Democratic political
charges.

(304) 675~3400
OriDd Buffet 11 ponidJl&amp;tinc locodoN

'f

v

families.
"But beyond that," he said, "I
will work as a genile persuader,
to rally our people to help our
children. A great and striving
people In a kind and gentle
nation. That is my dream. Thatls
the America I Imagine," he sal d .The partisan audience, which
earlier had cheered lustily at his
calls for American military ·
might, prayer in the schools and
no new taxes, fellsllent•t Bush's
sugg~tlons of indlvidual contri1butions toward helping the poor.
"This Is something new In this
campaign," said Robert A. Taft
IL a Hamilton County commts·
Continued on page 7

Two men arraigned in Gallia County

at
Pfeasant 'llalky 9{ospitaL
Offict liours are from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
!Morufay tnrougn ~riday.
.91.ppointments are now 6eing t~n.

Veteraas Memorial
Monday AdmiSsions - James
Kelly, Coolville; Carrie Roush,
Middleport; Ollie Milton,
Middleport.
Monday Discharges - Ethel
Reeves, John Baumgardner.

by 50 percent, raise the plant's
generating capacity and extend
the plant's life by about 25 years,
Byrd said.
Coal with a range of sulfur
content will be used, with mosto(
the coal coming from West
Virginia.
AEP Is working on a smaller
clean coal project, a pressurized
fluidized bed combustion unit at
the Tidd plant in Brlll!ant, Ohio.

Bush tells Ohio Republicans
values must be recaptured

THURSDAYS l"ltglnnersl"l
•Cio1glng Ia• 4-Adultl
6:00 P·•·
•lalroom and Country
7:00 p.lll.

A fabulous spread of 80 delicious items,
soups, hot appetizers, salads, salad fixins
desserts. And because you serve youtrselt
it's as fast as you want it to be.

ntw offiCI. in tlie !Metftca! Offtct 'Buiftfing

$1.5 billion In appropriations to conversion of two conventional
finance the federal government's boilers at the AEP plant to
share of proposed clean coal fluidized bed technology. Work
could start in early 1993, with
demonstration projecis.
"I am a firm believer that operation of the new plant to
commercial development of begin in late 1995. Byrd said as
clean coal technology Is the many as 500 jobs are possible.
AEP expects the new process
answer to environmental con·
cerns over the burning of coal," to scrub away more than 90
.he said. ·
· percent of the sulfur emissions,
Byrd said the project involves reduce nitrogen oxide emissions

IIIDDW'OIT, OH •

AMIIICAN lEGION

MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 11 AM-4 PM

Obstetrics and Gynecology

• Ion·
•
m1
•

ason receives

-----Announcements _ _ __

Benjamin J.Sol,M.D.

2 Secllonl, 14 Pageo
A Multimedia Inc. NewaPaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Saptamber 28. 1988

•

"LEARN TO DANCE"

Pt. Ploasant Youth

highs in mid 708.

•

•

On the other hand, Put-In-Bay
residents don't generally see a
freezing temperature until about
Election Day.
An analysis of National
Weather Service records In Ohio
shows Zanesville has the earliest
average onset of freezing
weather - Sept. 29 - while
Put-In-Bay has the latest, Nov.6.
The cities with the earliest
average freeze dates are all
clustered In the state's Southeast
region: Cambridge (Oct. 2),
Athens (Oct. 3) and Lancas~r
(Oct . 4).
Following those are Warren
(Oct. 5) and several in the
Northwest: Defiance (Oct. 5)
and Findlay, Lima and Montpe·
ller (all Oct. 6).

Partly cloudy tonlgbt, low In
$08. Thursday, partly cloudy,

Beryl Sprinkel, tbe chairman
of the advisory III'OIIP, predicted
a coolillg economy would atablllze Inflation andbltenllt rates for
the rest of this year. If present
policies are coJttlnued.

In a briefing for reporters at
the White House, Sprinkel denied
any political motive tor his rosy
report on the economy and
refused to comment on the
economic proposals of the two
candidates for president. He
went on, however, to tout the
Reagan expansion, which Is now
· In Its 70th month aad alreadY one
year "IOJIIer than any other
peacetime expansion in U.S.
history, as "real, substantial and
sustained. "
"We have not mortgaged the

future ... so long" as the basic
thrust of present poliCy remains
Intact,·: Sprinkel said. "Expan·
slons do not die ot old age; they
die of Inept poUclea."
Previewing a speech he was to
give later in Plttsbu111b, whiCh he
called his aecond annual update.
on the state of the economy,
Sprlnkel·allo balled aclmlalltratlon mowa to keep lntlatlon
under control. "We're not mak·
ing the mlltakeofputUng the foot
Continued o.n page 6

· ~·

charged with possession of 176
unit doses otLSD.Is set for Oct. 5
at 11:30 a.m.
The men were arrested follow·
tng the execution of the search
warrants, which were the result
of a concerned citizen contacting
the Gallipolis Pollee Department. A series of search warrants were executed at 7 Spruce
St.. Galllpolls, 791 Pine St., Rio
Grande, and 46\2 Mill Creek,
Gallipolis.
The searches resulted In offl·
clals recovering more than 400
unit doses of LSD, with a street

value of approximately . $2,500.
Also found at the residences were
quantities of marijuana, hashish, _
cocaine, a variety of pills, ~nd
drug paraphernalia.
Present at the scenes were
Prosecuting Attorney Brent A.
Saunders and his staff, Sherlft
James M. Montgomery and
Capt. Carl Langford from the
Sheriff's deparlment, Del. Mike
Tucker, Sgt. Roger Brandeberry, and several other city
pollee officers.
Also assisting in the searches
were Rio Grande Village Police
and Rio Grande College Security.

Discovery blastoff set Thursd~y
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) - NASA managers re·
viewed test data today to make
sure a satellite booster aboard
the shuttle Discovery will work
properly but officials were "rea·
sonably confident" the ship
would be cleared for bias toff
Thursday.
NASA managers met for five
hours Tuesday to review the
shuttle's flight readiness, and
astronaut Robert Crippen. chair:
man of the panel, said overall,
Discovery was on track for Ufio!f
at 9:59 a.m. EDT Thursday on
the first American manned space
flight since Challenger blew up
exactly 32 months ago_today.
Results of overnight tests to
resolve the booster 0-rlng issue
were not yet in, but a review. of
photographs taken dur'"g the
rocket's assembly Indicates no
problems tliat would threaten Its
performance, sources said.
Crippen held another management meeting early today to
review the test results. No
immediate word on the progress
of the deliberatiOns was avalla·
ble, but earlier, he said he was
"reasonably confident they'll be
able to come in and say we're In a
go condition."
•'The weather looks reasons·
ble," ,be said In an interview. "As
F1orlda forecasts go down here,
(It's) probably about as good as
we could reasonably expect. The
mood of the team Ia upbeat.
Everybody Is looking fbrward to
tanking It up and lighting it ott.''
Kennedy Space Center director Forrest McCartney, asked

--

what he thought the odds were for
a launch Thursday, said simply:
"Very good, very good. I'm
looking forward to lt."
At a morning countdown briefIng. NASA test director Frank
Merlino said Discovery's launch
processing was·on track and that
"basically, we're on schedule."
If all goes as planned, Discovery's crew - commander Frederick Hauck, 47, co-pilot Richard
Covey, 42, John "Mike"' Lounge, ·
42, David Hllmers, 38, and
George "Pinky"' Nelson, 3l! - ·
plan to spend four days In orbit
before landing on a lakebed
runway at Edwards Air Force

~Local

Base, Calif., at 7: 55 a.m. PDT
Monday.'
·
''They're the luckiest Amerl·
cans In the country because out of
all of us ... they very soon will ·be
on orbit,"' Rear Adm. Richard
Truly . chief of the shuttle program, said In an Interview.
""They're a lucky bunch of guys
and they're ready to gp."' .
The only apparent clouds on
Discovery's horizon were the
hard-to-predict weather and the
status of the overnlght"lt&gt;Sis ~o
prove a two-stage, solid-fuel
booster needed by the satellite
the shuttle Is carrying will work
as advPrUsed .

news briefs_____,

Water system being repaired
Some 700 customers of the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
Dis trlct in the Chester area and the high areas of Route 33 were
affected by a problem in the district which developed about 2
a.m. Wednesday.
The customers at 10:55 a.m. were receiving low pressure or
were without water as workers labored to make repairs to the
system. The repairs were expected to becompleledabout3 p.m .
today.
The problem started Tuesday afternoon whPn a valve stem on
an eight Inch line broke off In a closed position . A templ)rary
patch failed to hold giving way about 2 a.m. this morning.

Girl Scout leaders needed
Girl Scouting is open to all girls ages five through 17 '!"tb
programs set up on five age levels, e~~Ch with actMtlel dealgDed
to meet the needs and interests of girls that age.
Although there are many active Girl Scout troops throughout
Continued on page 7

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