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                  <text>Page- 14--:-The Daily Sentinel

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·Vol.311, No.1 01

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 29, 1988

Co_pyrlelhted 1888

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David Koblentz was among
nine recipients of outstanding
service awards during the Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation
and Development (RC&amp;D) Sev·
enth Annual Banquet which was
held recently at tbe Community
Center at the Noble County
Fairgrounds In Caldweil, Ohio.
Approximately 60 RC&amp;D Exec·
utive Council members and gu·
. ests were In attendance.
Koblentz, a current Meigs
County Commissioner and a
. dairy farmer in the Chester area:,
was honored for his service and
dedication In tbe area of natural

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resource conservation with a
wooden plaque carved In the
shape of Meigs County.
Also recognized by the RC&amp;D
Executive Council were Dan
Strlght, Athens County; R.
Wayne Sampson, Belmont
County; Clark Sheets Jr., Hocklng· County; Paul Hlnderlong,
Monroe County; Dean Roberts,
Morgan County; William "Bill"
Shaw, Noble County; Richard
Newlon, Perry County; and Bob
Jones, Washington County.
A special award was presented
lo Melody Flowers, office secre·
tary, for outstanding service to

By Unlted.Press International
' the RC&amp;D Executive Council ' Michael DukaklS. · targeting
during 1988. The plaque was whal he calls the "adminlstra·
carved In the shape of the tion's hall of shame" on ethics,
says pres ldentlal rival George
nine-county RC&amp;D area.
Wayne Schafer, RC&amp;D Ban- Bush "may be satisfied with
quet Committee Chairman, con- Japan making the cars while his
dueled the awards with an former colleagues make the
executive council member from license plates."
The Democratic Massachu·
each county presenting their
setts
governor hardened ·his
respective awards.
Recognltionofthe21stannlver· ethics attack Wednesday on Bush
sary of Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D also and the entire Reagan admlnls·
highlighted the evening's actlvl- tration, At the same time, he
ties. Other activities Included a · pledged suppo,rt !or strict ethical
potluck dinner, musical enter- conduct In a Dukakis
talnrnenl by Jeanne Miller, of admlnlslration.
Dukakls tried to projecl a
Marietta, and door prizes.
presidential appearance Wed·
nesday as he talked In New York
with Soviet Foreign Minister
Eduard Shevardnadze, who met .
earlier with Vice President Bush.
Dukakis met today In New
York with French President
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OVBIT IPJUXEft - Jeu;aea Dtebl, fonaer
Melp BlpleiiDol prlaalpal ud prealdeat or tbe
Melp C.IIIIQt Council on Alllll Board oft'rwtee&amp;,
wu _ _,tile epeakers exllilacllal*h•nb to tbe
volu&amp;een of &amp;he Melp County Retired Senior

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the matter cleared up. "Somebody made a mistake somewhere
along the line," he said. "We're
just glad to be able to correctlt."
In a related matter, the commissioners met with Roger Ml·
chael of the ~ounty plai map
office to discuss the procedurl! by
which house .11umbers are as·
signed. Michael .said that house
num~rs are not assigned until
some form of construction Is
underway on the property. However, the commissioner pointed
out that some local utilities will
not provide electricity or water
to property unless the house
number has been permanently
assigned. The commissioners
Intend to discuss the malter
further with the utilities and the
plat map officials In order to
formulate a policy to eliminate
this problem.
Commissioner David Koblentz
reported on a recent meeting
which Included representatives
from the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources and from
Buckeye Hills Resource Conser·
vatlon and Developmenl
(RC&amp;D). Discussed at the meet·
lng was a proposal to build an

Ohio River access near Forked
Run State Park. Preliminary
designs have· been made but as
yet, the project remains In the
talking stages. Koblentz said a
big help In securing the project
would be for local agencies and
lndlvlduala to write letters of
support to the director of ODNR
for ·a river access near the state
park.
In other business, the commls·
stoners appointed Cathie Wood
as a member to the GalllaJackson-Melgs Mental Health
(648) Board; and passed a
resolution accepting amounts
and rates as determined by the
county budget commission and
au thorlzlng necessary tax levies
and certifying them to the county
auditor. All tax rates· are the
same as last year, with the
exception of the Board of Health
which has Increased from. 75 mUl
to one full mill. All other voted
mUlage remains the same. Total
voted millage for this year
amounts to 6.10 mills.
No bituminous bids for the
month of ·October weN received
so the engineer will go by last
month'~ bids to make purchases.

.Fran~pls t'lltterra~;&gt;d

before go· ·
lng to Rutgers University lo pick
up endorsements from several
environmental groups. Among
those scheduled to hand out the
endorsements was movie star
Robert Redford.
Dukakls and the French leader
appeared briefly before repor·
ters before their half-hour meetIng. Asked what they would
discuss, Dukakis said, "Items of
mutual Interest."
· Bush was campaigning in the
Midwest, where he pressed !arm
Issues and sought to hang former
President Carter's highly unpopular grain embargo around Du·
kakls's neck.
Bush scheduled campaign ap·
pearances today In St. Louis;
Mount Clemens, Mich.; and
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Wednesday, Dukakis said if
elected he would Immediately

order that·no •top ·offlctals who
!'eave hiS l!dmlnlstratlon be allowed to lobby former
colleagues.
Bush toured several small
towns In Illinois Wednesday with
country singers Loretta Lynn
and Crystal Gayle. The group
traveled aboard a bus nick·
named "Asphalt. 1" - a takeoff
on the vice president's official
·plane. Air Force Two.
Decked out In casual khaki
pants and a white Western-style
shirt, Bush traveled to Uny El
Paso, where he sal at the counter
of the Playpln Restaurant, ordered black coffee and chatted
with the locals.
Laler al a rally in Minonk,
Bush said, "What I want Is to
expand our markets abroad, to
have alternate sources of energy
where we rely more on ethanol,
using our corn crop."

Discovery launch delayed by winds
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
IUPI) -The crew of the shuttle
Discovery, told to "hang In
there," strapped In for blaslo!!
on the first post-Challenger flight
today, patiently waiting out a
delay caused by unseasonably
light high-altitude winds.
Optimistic conditions would
Improve before the shuttle's
"launch window" expired at 1:41
p.m. EDT, NASA managers told
shuttle skipper Frederick
Hauck, 47, blastoff would be
about an hour and a half late,
pending confirmation that the
weather was acceptable for
flight.
Earlier, Hauck, 47, slipped on a
pair of gag glasses with "popout" eyes to the amusement of
technicians In the launch pad
"white room" butted up against
Discovery's hatch. Co-pilot Rl·
chard Covey. 4~. followed suit
with the gag, waving at a NASA
television camera before climb-

lng Into the orbiter.
Discovery's other crewmen John "Mike" Lounge, 42, David
Hllmers, 38, and George' 'Pinky''
Nelson, 38 - were delayed
briefly from boarding while
techn'lc)ans fixed a fan system
needed to cobI Covey's 70-pound
emergency ball-out spacesuit.
The repair work delayed the
closing of Discovery's hatch by
about 30 minutes beyond an
hourlong delay ordered by NASA
management because of the
weather problem.
Hoping lor the best, launch
director Robert Sleek let the
countdown run normally to a
T-minus 20-mlnute hold at 10:19
a.m. EDT and then to a final hold
at the T-mlnus nine-minute
mark. That hold, normally 10
minutes long, was extended to
allow weather conditions to
Improve.
'The latest winds data a loll &lt;'lid
show some Improvement," Sleek

told the astronauts by_ radio.
"We're still a little bit out of spec
but It's getting better and that's
encouraging. Weather-wise,
we're still looking pretty good,
enough to hang In there, anyway .
"Well, we don't want Ibis thing
to leave without us," Hauck
quipped.
The weather was the only
major problem In an otherv.1se
smooth countdown.
,
'The only problem which we
are tracking at the present time
has to do with the upper-level
winds, which are spring-like In
their characler and light rather than being from a differ·
ent direction and heavier as yo~
would expecl al this time of
year," NASA spokesman Hugh
Harris said.
NASA Administrator James
Fletcher said, ''We lried to warn
everybody that this could
happen. 1 don'l know whal more
we can do. We're not going lo fly
undl It's safe to do so.

200 on hand for RSVP program

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required reduction expenditure
form which will Indicate to the
State Controlling Board how the
district wlll pay back the amount
of money It Is going to borrow this
year from the Emergency School
Advancement Fund. The board
will not only have to pay back all
monies borrowed but wlll have to
pay Interest on that. borrowed
money.
The resignation of Mrs. Sharon
Stubbe was accepted as of Sept.
27 and the board employed Mrs .
Condnued on page 12

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Bandaid Strips

The winter sports program In basketball teams. Vacancy not!·
the Eastern Local School District ces for the coaching positions
will continue this school year have been posted.
through the efforts of the Eastern
The board set Oct. 5, 7 p.m. for
· Athletic Boosters.
. a special meeting In the high
Meeting In regular session school cafterla to deal with
Tuesday night, the Eastern Local .personnel Items and to again
SchOol District's Board of Educa- meet with residents of the
tion accepted a donation of $8,204 district In regard to questions
from Mrs. Jlll Holler, president and to provide more Information
of the boosters. This means that about the need for passage of the
the money necessary for the upcoming school levy. The board
winter sports program has been Invites all residents to attend that
received and that Eastern will be meeting.
able to field boys and girls
The board approved a state

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Confusion as to lhe correct
name of a Lebanon Township
road was cleared up In Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs
County Commissioners by Engl·
neer Phillp Roberts.
Apparently, a portion of Valley
Bell Road In Lebanon Township
Is mistakenly shown on the state
mUeage Inventory as a continua·
lion of McKenzie Ridge Road.
However, addresses of residents
along the section of road have
always been Valley Bell Road.
When the township trustees
asked the counly for road name
signs, the section of road was
signed McKenzie Ridge, accord·
lng to the mileage Inventory.
This upset residents because of
the problems Involved In having
to change their addresses.
But Roberts said that rather
than havlng'the residents on the
road change addresses to reflect
the mileage Inventory, It would
be easier to change the mUeage
Inventory. To do this, the town·
· ship' trustees will have to make
an official request through the
commissioners, but Roberts anticipates no problem In getting

David Koblentz honored with
Dukakis, Bush exchange jabs
outstanding· service award

-:w,.....,."'~~~-·
-.141,.... ..........

JACK RABBIT

1111d Development (RC&amp;D). Koblentz, a Meigs
County Commissioner and a dairy farmer In tbe
Chester area, .r eceives his award from County
Commissioner M1111nlng Roush, a member of the
RC8r:D Execudve Council.

. OUTSTANDING SERVICE RECOGNIZED , David Koblenb, of Cbester, at rlgbl,ls presented
1111 award for biB aenlce and dedication to natural
resounle co~~~enatlon at tbe Seve.ntb Annual
Baaquet of Buckeye Hills Resource Conservation

3 Soctlona, 28 Pogoo 26 Cents
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Roberts clears up
township road issue

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ASSORTED COLORS
NORTHERN

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Partly cloudy, low near 80.
Ch1111ce of rale 2t 'percent.
Friday, high near ... Chance
of rain 40 perceat.

Volaateer l'rolram at. • dl-r IIIMtln1 at tile
Melp Senior Cltlze11.1 Center WedMiday night
markln1 tbe 15111 1111nlver181'y of &amp;he program
here.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Evelyn Clark, chairman of the
Seodoel News &amp;aU
RSVP Advisory Council, preApproximately 200 residents sided with RSVP Director Susan
.attended the 15tb annual recognl· Oliver giving a welcome. Speak·
tlon observance of the Meigs ers Including Sen. Jan Michael
County Retired SeniOr Volunteer Long, 17th District; Rep. Jolynn
Program held Wednesday night Boster, 94th District; David
at the Meigs Senior Qtlzens Koblentz, president of the Meigs
Center.
County Commissioners; Cindy
The dinner meeting featured Farson, director of the Buckeye
the presentation of gifts for those Hills Area Agency on Aging;
with 10 and 15 years of volunteer , James Diehl, president of tbe
service In the program, a Meigs County Council on Aging
number of short talks, and Board of Trustees, and Eleanor
· Thomas, executive director of
musical entertainment.

the . Meigs County Council on
Aging not only exlended their
appreclallon lo the volunteer
workers In the RSVP but pointed
out tbal only tJa.rouih these
voliiD a s cou 111110'-..,. bene!ical, hllpfel aft'VIfta....,rcrvtded.
There are 40 at.ttou In the
county where RSVP workers
perform anlstln&amp; HI'Yices on a
volunteer basis. Veteraaa Memorial Hospital was tbe ftnt of the
40 statl0111 estalllliiiRI In the
Condnued on pap 12
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�Commentary
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
.

t!&gt;!m19 ............._..,..., ,....,.,.c::~,.,.. .
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press Internatlonal,lnland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPIJ'rliON are welcome. Tbey should be lets than 300 words
Iolli. All letters are subject toedltlng an4 must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters w!U be publts~ed. Letters should be ln.
good taste, addressing Issues, not persmallties.

Profiles in
courage
1988_
BySTEVE'G.t ·•
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In an amazing show of political
craveness, the House of Representatives voted to let every two-bit
criminal who !eels' nude without a handgun - the Saturday Night
Special -stroll into a shop and buy one.
Ever wonder how many people might get murdered because ·
congressmen were too terrified of the gun lobby and the elections to
try and keep them alive?
The issue before the House seemed relatively simple: Should
someone wanting a handgun have to wait seven days so that the
.authorities could check whether the purchaser Is a known criminal, a
'druggle, nuts or otherwise not a good candidate for ownership.
The walling provision was included in the massive anti-drug
measure when It reached the House floor but not when It left. On a
228-182 vote, the House substituted language ordering the Justice
Department develop an alternative way to Identify a felon waiting at
the counter for his gun.
. That might sound good and certainly it provided a safe haven in
perlllous times !or 228 congressmen. But how long will It take the
Justice Department to put together the sophisticated computer
system that would allow a quick c.h eck- and how much would it cost?
, The National Rifle Association, certainly one of the most powerful
' lobbies In captivity, poured$4 million into a campaign to rid the bill of
the walling period. The argument put forth by the NRA was that the
waiting periOd would infringe on an individual's constitutional right
to bear arms.
Under this contorted reasoning, the citizens of 22 states, all of which
have a waiting period. already are deprived of this constitutional
. right. Yet, they are hot fully free of danger from the armed hood who
can slip accross a state line to buy his weapon.
Further, the proposal did notinfringe on any rights. All it called for
was a brief. seven-day delay between application and acquisition for
a law-abiding citizen who felt he or she needed a handgun.
This also was not a liberal-conservative confrontation. Conserva·
lives, such as Rep. Henry Hyde, R-IlL, joined liberals In trying to
preserve the waiting period.
"This Is national problem that really demands national
treatment," Hyde said. I'm not against handguns, but I think a
seven-day walling period Is eminently reasonable. Maybe you'll save
some lives."
Nor can the House argue the state's right issue. In recent years,
Congress has rolled over the rightsofthestates, denying them federal
funds If they did not impose a_ minimum drinking age of 21 or a
federally mandated speed limit on the highways.
And If the House members needed more encouragement,
uniformed pollee, whO strongly back the waiting period, lined the
galleries in a show of support.
"Cops know seven days can save a life," Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J .•
said. "Please don't cop out on cops."
.
Yet the House turned its back on the urging of Hyde, on the appeal of
Rodino, on show of force by the pollee, on the support of President
Reagan and on Sarah Brady, whose husband James Brady was
critically wounded In the 1981 attempted assassination

~TlRICi...

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fully told U.S. authorities that the motorcycle.
narccrgangsters had threatened
to kill all her living predecessors
Now, this aame pattern of
and descendants. ·
corruption and violence Is begin·
Another judge recounted how ntng to develtip against the ·
he had turned down two bribes. United States. The' cartel Is a
Then the cartel thugs laid before prime suspect In the attempt to
him more money than he ever assassinate Secretary of State
expected to see In a lifetime. He George Shultz by planting a
rejected that offer, too. The next bomb on the route of his motormessage from the cartel was a cade In Bolivia on Aug. 8. This
photograph of his 9-year-old brazen assassination attempt
daugi:tter, taken through the amounts to a declaration of war
crosshalrs of a gunstght as she by the Colombian drug lords.
was climbing the steps of her Apparently they now feel power·
school. The judge resigned from ful enough to branch out from
the bench.
their campaign against the Co,
Colombian justice minister Ro- · lomblan government and strlkt:
drlgo Bontlla fought back with back at the United States felr
uncommon courage; He was Interfering With their operations:
gunned down by a hlt·and-run
The cartel, since It pays no
assassin who sped away on a taxes, can afford to spend mU·
lions on bribes. Already, dazzling
amounts have been offered to
American law enforcement
officials.

.. Jto11Hl~

Fall Festival huge success·

One otflcer told us about a
typical Incident. A drug traf·
flcker was stopped on the high·
way; a cache of cocaine and a
briefcase containing $100,000 In
cash were found In .lhe car'.s
trunk. The trafficker told the cop,
"That Isn't my briefcase. It must
belong to you."
Gerald Arenberg, executive
director of the National Assocla·
lion of Chiefs of Pollee, estimates
that less than 10 percent of the
nation's pollee can be bought.
But It takes only a few cornipt
lawmen and judges to corrode
the system.
The cocaine cartel Is passing
out bribes today at the local level. ·
Some U.S. neighborhoods are
already under Its control. It's
just a matter of time before the
cocaine kingpins - applying the
methods that have forced Colombia and Panama to bend undermine law enforcement and
break down the goverrunent
across the United States, unless
they are checked. ·· '

Hedging and pledging_ _ _ _vl_·nce_nt_;_Ca_rr_oll

Suppose George Bush, rather
than beating a drum for the
Pledge of Allegiance during the
past few weeks, had Instead
·proposed a mandatory course In
"global education" for every
high school student.
Would those critics now fretting about political Indoctrination and a return to "McCarthyIsm" have unleashed a slmllar
hue and cry? Would they have
bellowed about theovertpolltlcal
message typical of global studies
and sympathized with teachers
forced to push such propaganda?
Of course not. Scores Of school
districts have adopted courses
promoting the most transpar·
ently partisan message - and
not a peep of protest has sounded
!rom the legion of critics now
bashing Bush. It Is bald hypocrisy at this late date for them to
make a principled case against
forcing political curriculum

down the craw of teachers.
·Perhaps you're unfamiliar
with global education. In theory.
It lntr&lt;iduces students to cultural,
political and economic distinctions among societies -nota bad
thing, obviously, In our Interdependent world.
In practice, alas, most globalstudies textbooks (and I have
reviewed several) downplay the
moral differences between free
and unfree societies, retuse to
suggest which economic system
Is best at spreading prosperity,
and blame the most successful
countries for many of the world's
woes.
When these books takes sides,
they Invariably endorse the posi·
tlon that other nations must be
understood on their own terms,
that there are no rights or wrongs
but mainly mtsunderstandliuzs.
Just one example: ·A text
entitled "Teaching about Con-

Dear Editor:
Miners Jamboree.
Thanks to the combined effort
In addition som behind the
of many people, the Racine Fall scenes people who contributed to
Harvest Festival as a huge signing up the various acts
success, despite the damp Included these Individuals and
weather.
businesses: Racine Home NaAs organizers of the various tional Bank, Eber's Gulf, Star
entertainment, we would like to Supply and True Value, Cross
CAPE HATTERAS, N.C. tal geologists Issued an extraorthank all the performers for Store, Wagner Hardware, Bill
(NEA} ·- In Ocracoke, south of dinary proclamation that said
contributing to the festival's Maynard Logging, Hilton Wolfe here, excessive demands placed "new approaches to the managesuccess. Some of those per· Jr., Sheriff Howard Frank, Bill . to public uttlltles by summer ment of the American shoreline
formers we would like to thank Cozart, and the Southern Local
vacationers have led to repeated are urgently needed to preserve
Include: Racine Baptist Church· School District.
. power outages and water system our recreational beaches for
Choir, Country Blend , Tall
Also we would like to thank all
failures.
future generations."
Grass, The Bend River Boys; parade participants and anyone
In Manteo, north · of here,
Dan, Faith and Tamara Hay- else Involved In the festival.
But that warning appears to
municipal waste that has been
man, the Shady River Shutners,
Sincerely,
only partially treated Is being have gone unheeded. The Census
Midnight Cloggers, the Hart
Larry Wolfe &amp; Bill Arnott discharged Into estuaries that Bureau predicts that thelnexora·
Brothers, and acts from the Coal
Racine, Ohio
once supported. rich shellfish ble migration to the shore will
beds. Plans to build a new leave three-fourths of the coun·
sewage disposal plant have beEm try's population living within 50
stymied by bureaucratic miles of a coast by the end of this
decade.
bickering.
"The greatest pressure on
All across North Carolina's
famed Outer Banks and In costal resources Is their converadjacentAlbemarleandPamllco sion to othet uses," says Oliver
sounds, which separate those A. Houck, a professor at the
By United Press International
barrier beaches from the main· Tulane University Law School In
Today is Thursday, Sept 29, the 273rd day of 1988 with 93 to follow .
land, people are placing Intolera- New Orleans.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
ble pressure an a fragile coast.
"We h11ve literally filled In and
The morning stars are \ienus and Jupiter.
Municipal waste, Industrial eliminated the wetlands of San
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
effluent and agricultural runoff Francisco Bay," he adds. "Cape
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include
have contaminated the area's Cod Is all but unrecognizable to
Spanish poet-novelist Miguel de Cervantes ("Don Quixote") In 1547,
streams and rivers, Inlets and those who were born there as
British naval commander Horatio Nelson In 1758, English novelist
bays. That pollution, In turn, has recently as 20 year&amp; ago. You can
Elizabeth Gaskell In 1810, architect H. H. Richardson in 1838, pioneer
taken Its tollononeofthenatlon's drive for hours dawn the coa&amp;t of
nuclear physicist Enrico Fermi In 1901, singing cowboy Gene Autry In
most productive fisheries.
Florida, from Jackoonvtlle to
1907 (age 81). actress Greer Garson In 1~ (age 80), film directors
A mysterious fungal disease Miami Beach, In search of a
Michelangelo Anton toni In 1912 and Stanley Kramer in 1913 (age 75),
has left fish with open sores and place to access the beach."
actress Anita Ekberg In 1931 (age 57), rock 'n' roll pioneer Jerry Lee
crabs with holes etched In their
In North Carolina, the pressure
Lewis In 1935 (age 53), singer-actress Madeline Kahn in 1942 (age46),
shells. A toxic brown tide last to develop the .wind-swept, 130and singer Marilyn McCoo In 1943 (age 45).
year decimated the area's oyster mUe stretch to barrier beaches
and scallop beds. Algal blooms for recreational purpo~e~ has
On this date in history:
fed by sewage discharges suck driven up the prices of land and
In 1789, the U.S. War Department organized America's first
the oxygen from the water, summer home•.
standing army - a total of 700 troops who would serve for three years.
suffocating all other marine life.
Oceanfront lots In the faahlo!UI·
In 1923, Britain began to govern Palestine under a League of
Those problems are not con- ble communities of ))uck and
Nations mandate.
·
fined to North Carolina's coast, Corolla at the northern edge of
In 1936, In the presidential race between Franklin D. Roosevelt and
however. From Monmouth the Outer Bankl command priAJf Landon, both parties used radio for the first time.
Beach on the north to Miami ces ranglna from ~.ooo to
In 1984, Italian pollee launched the country's largest anll·Mafla
lieach on the south, from Myrtle $365,000 - three times as much
campaign, arresting scores of c~lme figures in Rome and Palermo.
Beach In the east to the Malibu . as they sold for only four years
Further arrests began In the United States.
Beach In the west, the nation's ago.
In 1986, the Soviet Union freed American journalist Nicholas ·shoreline Is under alege.
Neither the region's delicate
Daniloff, whom Moscow accused of spying.
At the beginning of this decade, eco-system nor Its relatively
tw«rthlrds of the country's coas- primitive Infrastructure can han-

filet, Nuclear War ,and the
Fllture" presents the Soviet
Union and the United States as
the equivalents of global gang
leaders vying for raw power, No
doubt this view Is shared by
many people In the Jesse Jack·
son wing of the Democratic
Party. To the res tofus, though, It
should be no less obnoxious than
Kurt Waldhelm' s attempt to
equate Nazi savagery with the
Yugoslav resistance.
Has Michael Du.kakls ever
spoken out against the spread of
similar curriculum In his state's
schools? Yet this Is the man who
objects to requiring teachers to
lead the Pledge.
Yes, his apologists reply, but
only for legal reasons -by which
the mean thecourtshavedeemed
a mandatory Pledge
unconstitutional.
Nat quite. The U.S. Supreme
Court has quite properly decreed

that students .who object to the
Pledge, on religious grounds
cannot be forced to aay II. But the
court has yet to rule on whether
teachers can be directed to lead
the Pledge. In fact, the court
refused to review a 1979 decision
by the Seventh Circuit Court of
Appeals upholding a law requlr·
lng teachers to do precisely that.
If a teacher objects, he or she
can move on, just as editorial
writers who find themselves at
odds with a publisher can take a
hike. There's no constitutional
right to teach whatever one likes
at public expense.
It's· (rue that the 'Repul:lllcan
Party's obsession with the
Pledge has grown tiresome. At
times, Indeed, It's self·
righteously Irritating. But no less
Irritating Is the bleating of critics
who for yelp's have Indulged
every effort of the left to
polltlc.ize public education.

(joastaJ 8SS8Ult ___________________R_o_be_r_tW,_a_lt_er_s

Today in history

BEREA, Ohio ( UPI) - The
Cleveland Browns expect the
Pittsburgh Steelers to be especially determined Sunday when
the two teams meet at Three
Rivers Stadium.
Pittsburgh, 1-3, has lost three
straight games by a total of 14
points while Cleveland Is 2-2 after
four games for the fourth
straight season.
"(The Steelers) have lost two
games that have to be very
frustrating for them," said
Browns Coach Marty Scholtenheimer. "We're not deceived at
all by they're being 1·3. They
could easily be 3-1. Chuck Noll
teams always play with tremend·
ous Intensity, and that's what we
expect.
"I grew up (in Canonsburg and
McDonald, Pa.) watching the
Browns-Steelers rivalry. It Is
s~cia)."
.
Noll, Pittsburgh's coach,
shrugged off remarks that his
team could easily have · three
victories Instead of three defeats.
wcould have been' are sad
words," he said Wednesday.

fe)(_A_n_de_rs_on--'-a_nd...--Va_n_A_tta_

I.--------------H--------------------...1

Letters to the editor

Browns expect tough battle Sunday

Thursday, Septanbllr 29, 1988

approached authorities with
offers that are hard to refuse "ploma o plato, "lead or stlver, a
bullet or a bribe.
Many of those who dared to
stand up to the cartel have been
murdered In cold blood. In some
cases, hit squads have wiped out
entire families, even dumping
out their fish bowls and stomping
on their pet goldfish.
With dramatic violence, the
varnlng has been driven home of
Colombian otflclals and journalIsts. From cabinet ministers to
cops on the street, some have
buckled under to the drug cartel.
Hundreds of judges and pollee
officers are now taking orders
from the criminals they are
supposed to prosecute.
One Colombian judge, tear-

die the accelerated development.
Although traffic has almost
doubled during the past decade
on some of the area's two-lane
roads, therearenoplanstowlden
them .
'Commercial fishermen won a
celebrated struggle against
plans to buUd a 382- unit condoml·
ntum near valuable shellfish
beds, but the area's marshlands
and other estuaries remain

threatened by additional sources
of contamination not as easy to
·
·
Identify.
"Last year was absolutely
horrible. The fish and era b kills
were the worst in history," says
Douglas Rader, the first director
of the Albermarle-Pamllco Es·
tuarlne Study. "It is very clear
that we have ~en degradation In

our estuaries."

Berry's World

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio

Pomeroy Middaport, Ohio

WASHINGTON - In past
columns, we have turned the
spotUght on the murky world of
the Medellin drug cartel, which
bas put the goverrunent of
Colombia under a state of siege.
Colombia has had more than Its
share of heroes who have tried to
defy the cocaine kingpins and
have pal~ with their lives. At this
writing, 57 judges and 250 jour·
nallsts have been murdered
because they got In the cartel's
way.
The lucrative cocaine trade
has flooded Colombia with so
much money that It has overwhelmed the economy. With fists
full of dollars, the drug barons
have conducted a campaign of
bribery and Intimidation, of
payoffs and violence. They have

111 Coari Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio
~~~

Page 2-The ·Deily Sentinel

Drug Cartel influence

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Septanblr 29, 1988

are front row-1-r, Sarala Dahl, Mica olonet1, Andrea

SOUTHERN RESERVES - The &amp;a~em
Tornadoetles' voDeyball program baa this fine
group on 'Reserve', someday hopblg to dominate
the varsity ranks In winning fashloa. Tbe re~erves
are now 5-0 In the league and 7·1 overall. Pictured

Thelaa, Cberyl Pape, ud Ju Wllllama. Back
row-Coach Sazanaed Wolfe.Tonya Ingels, Renee
Ruuell, Tanunl Buckley, Chris Harmon,olunle
Beelfe, ud Marcy Hill.

Brewers close in ·on Bosox
By LEN HOCHBERG
UPJ Spores Writer
Four days remain In the
regular season and four teams
r~maln In the chase for the
American League East title.
Of course, that chase could end
tonight for two teams, but those
familiar with the 1988 AL East
likely wouldn't bet on tt.
. "We just want to get it done,"
said Mike Greenwell of firstplace Boston. "Whether we back
Jn_or not, we just want to get it

done."
The Red Sox just may back In,
11nd backed a little closer Wednesday night. Boston was
blanked on a two-hitter by
Jimmy Key ,losing to the Toronto
Blue Jays l-0.
But New York's 2-0 defeat at
the hands of Baltimore and
·rookie Boh Milackl, who threw a
three-hitter for his first major
teague shutout, lowered the Red
Sox • magic number for the
clinching the dlvl$1on IItle to two. ·
. ;th~n ,, \h~re' s Mllwauk~f·
-which topped California 4-3 to
.gain second place and move
within 2 1·2 games of the top spot.
Milwaukee Is Idle tonight, so will
remain alive at least untll
Friday.
The Yankees are 3 1·2 back, as
are the Detroit Tigers, who can
do no better than de for East titlE'
after fall1ng to Cleveland 4-2.
"It looks like (Boston's
Dwight) Evans and I were
right." said Red Sox Man!iger

Attendance up in
MAC this fall
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Mid·
American Conference teams are
reporting an Increase In attendance by more than 1,000 fans a
game as compared with last
year. the conference announced.
· MAC officials said 12 home
· games have drawn an average of
16,783 people a game this season,
while last year attendance aver- ,
aged 15,622 during the first
month of play.
. Three of the MAC's five largest
crowds of the season were
recorded last weekend; Miami's
lOOth anniversary game against
Cincinnati drew 26,039, Central
Michigan's home opener drew
18,516, and the 53rd renewal of
the Toledo- Bowling Green rivalry in the Glass Bowl drew
22,627.
.
Other games exceeding 20,000
spectators Included the KentAkron game (23,500) on Sept 10
and the Western MichiganIllinois State contest Sept. 17
(22.207).

Joe Morgan. "We both agreed
that It'd go down to the final two
days I~ Cl~veland."
The Red Sox are in Cleveland
tonight for the start of a fourgame set with the Indians. The
Brewers travel to Oakland today
and play three games with the
Athletics over the weekend.
Milwaukee is 2-9 vs. the AL West
champions this season.
Should the Red Sox win tonight
and the Yankees lose, New "I:ork
would he eliminated. Either a
Boston victory or a Detroit toss
would finish the Tigers.
The Yankees, after tonight
facing the Orioles, meet the
Tigers in a three-game set at
Detroit, where the two may
knock each other off.

The Blue Jays Wednesday
handed the Red Sox their third
straight setback, reminding Key
of last season's collapse by
Toronto, which dropped its last
seven to lose the division title on
the final day.
''They haven't done what we
did yet," Key said. "We folded all
together, and !hey haven't done
that yet.''
Boston has los I three in a row,
and with four In Cleveland, that
equals seven ...
Which brings us to Milwaukee,
"We know we have an outside
chance," said Brewer Jim
Gantner, whose RBI single Wednesday capped a four-run seventh Inning.
,

DR. JAMES P.CONDE
IS ANNOUNCING THE CLOSING
OF HIS MEDICAL .PRACTICE I'N
MIDDLEPORT, ,OHIO, EFFECTIVE
OCTOBER 14, 1988.

"We're at the stage where we're
pretly well beat up. We have lots
of Injuries.
"People are hurt all over the
place. Our offensive line Is
depleted and we have injuries in
·the (defensive) secondary."
Steeler free safeties Thomas
Everett and Larry Griffin (quadriceps) and cornerback Delton
Hall (groin) are quesionable for
Sunday as is linebacker Hardy
Nickerson (shoulder).
Pittsburgh's offensive line.
which already has lost tackle
Buddy Aydelette for the season
with a knee injury. may be forced

to limit the play of guard Craig
Wolfley (groin). Rookie guard
Dermonttl Dawson also hurt his
knee last Sunday at Buffalo.
The Injuries, says Noll, will
hurt Pittsburgh's chances of
capitalizing on Cleveland's leaky
run defense, which has allowed
an average ofl38.8 yards a ganie
and is ranked 22nd In the NFL.
"We're gong to have to limit .
things and keep it simple," says
NolL
Nevertheless, the Browns expect to see much of Steeler
running Earnest Jackson, who
has 47 carries for 175 yards.and
two touchdowns.

LAYAWAY MOW
FOR
CHRISTMAS!

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�PIPIM11111g1&amp;B-44-TheI Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Thursday, September 29, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S .

Meigs to battle Buckeyes in annual homecoming contest

Ickey WiMKis gives Bengals strong punch

By JIM SOULSBY'"
Sentinel Staff Writer
Friday night's homecoming
crowd at Meigs stadium will see
the Buckeyes of NelsonvilleYork and the Marauders lock
horns with each striving for a wln
that will keep them among the
top TVC elevens. Should the
Bucks lose, they would virtually
he -eliminated from contention
for the crown as It would drop
them to .500 (2-2).
Meigs and Belpre are cur- ·
rently at the top with 4-0 slates
a!ld are followed by Vinton
CtJUnty at 3-0. N- y was a 14-6
loier to Belpre last week.
Both the Marauders and Buckeyes are run-oriented on offense ·
and both are fairly equal in size
on the Interior line. The middle
ft!eforN-Ywelghlnatl94onthe

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Jumping from college football to the
NFL is a move to the "fastlane"
tor many players. For Elbert
"lckey" Woods, it's heen a
pleasant shift to a country lane.
In coUege, Woods played In Las
Vegas. In the NFL, he's with
Cincinnati.
•'The quality of people Is much,
much better in Clnclnnatl.," says
Woods. ''They don't bother you
as much as In Vegas. It's kind of
conservative. I'm really enjoying myself."
The Bengals are enjoying
Woods' company, too.

average and Meigs' middle men
tip the scales at an average 211
per person.
Wes Young, Decker CUilums,
Jerry Jacks, Matt Peterson and
Doug Stewart have opened gaplng holes In enemy lines to spring
.t heir speedy, shifty hacks for
lo~ gains lh!s season and will
have no easy task against the
Bucks' defensive front. Kevin
Oller and Kelly Ogdln, at split
and light end, will he the targets
for Ed Crookf aerials should the
ground attack falter. Sharing the
duties in the ball toling departmen! wlll be the ''dynamic duo''
ot Jeff "Cheez" McElroy and
Wess Howard. McElroy . has
scored seven times and Is aver·
aglng7.4yardspercarrylhrougb
four games.
Howard bas a pair of six

pointers to hlscredltand has a 6.8
average. Rounding out the offenslve set will he flanker Scott
Nelgler who has also heen a
"bear" on defense for the Marauders. Dennis Boothe will he
an added weapon with his a blllty
to boot the field goal and PAT.
The _Meigs offensive unit Is
ranked second, behind Logan, in
area scoring with a 26.3 average
per game (thru Sept. 17).
When the Buckeyes have possession, they will face the area's
third ranked defensive unit that
has yellded seven points per
game (again thru 9·17). Heading
up the first line o! defense wlll he
the persons of Terry Fields,
Stewart, Peterson and Young.
Backing them up are Terry
McGuire, who has returned
punts for touchdowns, McElroy,

Howard and Neigler with Vince team traveled to Federal HockVanaman, Randy Hawley arid
tng recently for a meet with
Kurtis English exepected to do Ttlmble,- Waterford and the
most of the coverage on quarterLancers. When the action had
back Heyes Dean's receivers.
ended, the Marauder lads finThe Bucks' big offensive weapon
lshed first overall with Chris
is Tom Campbell, along with
Stewart gaining a second place
Ryan Mitchell, who has ac- · finish with a time of 19:14. Scott
counted for most of the scoring. , Edmonds was fourth with 20: 01.
Although yelldlng huge chunks of
Keith Matton eighth at 20:35.
yardage between the 20 yard
John Haggy lOth with a time of
lines, this defensive unit has
21:00, Joe McElroy eleventh at
managed to come up with the
21:12. Jeremy Heck seventeenth
score-stopper on several occaslons thus far this year.
Last season's contest at Nelsonvllle ended In a hard-fought
14·8 win for Meigs. Friday night's
game stacks up to be one o!
similar caliber.

in 22:22, Chris Sloan 21st with
23: 11 and Ryan Lemley was 24th
with a time of 23:25.
Finishing third overall, the
Marauderettess Missy Nelson
was top runner for Meigs with a
time of 25: 36 for a third place
finish. Other runners and their
times were: April Hudson-5th in
29: 14; Tara Gerlach-9th In 31: 13;
Resa Harris-14th In 34:15 and
Mary Stein-16th with a time of
38:50.

ANO'DIEB RECORD- Amerleall Jaclde Joyner·Kenee Jwnps
to ber llecond iOid medal In &amp;be women' along Jwnp final, aeiUD!!: a
new Olympic record Tbursday with a Jwnp ol :U feel 3% Inches.

Runners Win Meet
The Marauder cross country

(REUTER)

By United Pre88 International
UPI Sports Writer
Having mastered the oppositiOn for six weeks, OreI Hershiser
balked when on the threshold of
eras lng one of baseball's most
revered records.
"Out or respect for Don Drysdale I wanted to end the streak at
. 58 and two-thirds innings, but
h~her source.s convinced me I
shouldn't come out," said Her·
sli).ser. "So I realized I'd better
get the guy (Keith Moreland)

out."
The 30-year-old right-hander
did just that, inducing Moreland
to fly out with runners on second
and third to break Drysdale's
20-year-old record o! 58 2-3
scoreless innings by pitching 10
shutout innings In theDodgers2-1
loss to San Diego In 16 innings.
Hersh lser, the expected Cy
Young Award winner who wlll
likely open the National League
playoffs against New York Oct. 4,
received some coaxing from ·

Scoreboard ...
.-~ep

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SuUie • Ku . . Cll y,caDCellect. tala

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O.lcap J. Ta.u 1:
Mliwukee 4, Callonda S
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Oaldud ( Youc JN) al MI&amp;IIIIHII&amp;a
(Tollwr 'J.I), 1:11 p.m.
IIMkHI (W.ikter lt-11) a1 Clew._d
(Nie..._ 1-4), 7: II ~m.
New Yon. (Dill- 11·1) aa. Baldm.re
(WIIBama• 5-1'), 1: II p.m.

llt
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55 ·

"tolambua WhelaiOM t:r, 13. CJUnpbell
"MeDMrial ( l) !!;: 14. Buckeye Soullwal
"•; 15. P&amp;lnenll~ Harve)' II; II. (lie)
Wlc:lllffe and Akron MacbMIIer (1), 18
· e~~Ch; 18. BIDCIIII-Carroll II; II. (tie)
KeUerbal Aller, Onnp!, Pomero7
,Melp, Pemberville
Eaatwood,
P•klal ud Uelll-c Y.. ley. I each.
Dhlaton IV
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'!:. Wett.JeHrHOn(f.tl)
151
'3.. Belpre (4-1)
185
1. ColwnbaallartlrJ (2·1)
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S. Wlleelenbllrt (J.I)
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SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) In the worst clash since the

139!

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Tau (KaiMII IN) al
(I.Mploa 16·11J,Ie:l5 p.m.

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II. Nllea MciUnler (S.I)
34
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Wq•11: II. (tie) Urna SMiGrudMt.
Be.at117, n ucb; 11. (Uel lhlclld ud
WortldqloD, 14 eaeb; • · aada•tt St.
Te~~~n

.,...

AMERICAN LEAGUE

MllwaukH

U; 14. Dadalail Eltkr II; II. O.,&amp;ea

"•"tel' 13.

pd

Drysdale.
"I kicked him In the buns and
told him to get back out there (for
the lOth inning)", said Drysdale,
a Hall of Farner and former
Dodger who embraced Hershlser
in the dugout after the lOth
inning. ''At least we kept It In the
family."
Hershlser, who entered the
contest with (lve straight shutouts and ·has notallowed a run
since Aug. 30, says he wanted to
share the record with Drysdale.
"He's a Hall o! Farner, and
probably one of the finest Individuals I've ever met," said the
30-year-old Hershlser. "I thought
it would he a lot better If we were
both sitting on top."
The Dodgers have provided
llltie o((enslve support for Her·
shlser, scoring only six runs In
his last four outings.
"Close games have really
helped me. You have to pitch to
wln, you can't allow a run," said
Hershlser.
The Dodgers lack of scoring .
prevented Hershlser, 23-8, from
picking up a major leagueleading 24th victory. The game
remained scoreless untll Los
Angeles scored an unearned run
In the top of the 16th on Blp
Roberts' throwing error.
San Diego won in the.bottom of
the Inning when pinch hitter
Mark Parent cracked a two-c.;_t,
two run homer off Ricky Horton,
1-1.
Dave Leiper, 3-0, was the
winner. ·
·
At the completion of the ninth
inning, 'when Hershlser tied

r;;3

..

Games opened, about 500 radical
students attacked pollee with
hundreds of firebombs today,
chanting "Yankee glS'home" and
threatening to disrupt the Olympics If their jailed leader is not
freed.
Opposition leaders and Influential newspapers moved to calm
growing anti-U.S. sentiment
· sparked by a series o! embarrassing gaffes by U.S. athletes
and charges that NBC-TV was
biased In Its coverage of South
Korea.
Early today, the.International
Olympic Committee stripped a
silver medal !rom a Hungarian
welghtlifter because traces of an
anabolic steroid surfaced In his
. drug test. Eight athletes, four of
them medal winners, have ·been
banned from the Games·because
of drug use, including Canadian
sprinter Ben Johnson.
Undisturbed by the ruffling of
U.S.·Korean relations, the Isolated student turmoil or the drug
scandals that have rocked the
Games, U.S. female athletes
strutted their stuff to win three
gold medals in one afternoon.
Jackie Joyner- Kersee, who set
a world rec6rd last week to take
the heptathlon gold, won the long
jump over East German vlval
Helke Drechsler. and her sisterIn-law, Florence Griftith Joyner,
set a world record of 21.56 in the
200-meter semifinals. She broke
ti 90 minuteS later with a 21.34'·"
, and won the gold.
The American women's basketball team, making up In part
for the failure of their male
counterparts the day before
against the Soviet Union. defeated Yugoslavia 77-70 to bring
home the gold.
The National Pollee said securIty was being tightened in Seoul
to ensure a smooth finish to the
Games. Authorities -mindful of
the 1972 terrorist attack at the
Munich Olympics· in which 11
Israelis were kllled five days
before the Games ended - .
tntenslfled checking of cars and
visitors entering sporting events,
a spokesman for the "Seoul
Olympic Organlzlng Committee
sal d.
"The order was issued to keep
security from becoming lax," a
National Pollee spokesman said.
"Of course, we are aware that In
the past, terrorist attacks at
Olympic sites took place when
the Games were coming close to
the end."
Student radicals demanded
pollee release their leader, Oh
Yong-shlk. They threatened to
attack pollee substations in
Seoul, cultural performances
tied to the Games and, in the
most serious threat, said they
might target the Men's Olympic
Marathon on the final day of the
Games Sunday.
The worst clash since the
Games opened Sept. 17 broke out
at Korea University, where a
core or about 1,000 radical
students rallied as pollee failed to
release Oh, the most powerful
student leader in South Korea . .
Oh was charged Wednesday with
violating the harsh National
Security Law.
About half of the students
broke away from the rally and
rained hundreds of Molotov cocktails down on riot pollee outside
the campus. The pollee coun·
tered by throwing rocks and
unexploded firebombs. Wit·
nes!lell said one student was set
on fire by an exploding firebomb.
Today's protest denounced
Americans, charging the United
Slates with preventing North
Korea from co-hosting the
games. The IOC rejected the idea
and tbe communist nation
reacted by boycotting the games.
Wednesday, Yo Taek·so, student vice president at Korea
Untverllty, said tbe studenll
would attack pollee •lltlona
Friday ud try to dl1rupt the
IIIIJ'Ithon Sunday II Oh W8l not
~- "Tbe main tlrget Ia the
IIIIJ'athon," Yo Nld.
Alltl·U.S. ND!ImeDt was fueled
by . . . . . Ill blwtden fr1111 u.s.
atbletea and controvei'IY sur-

Cle\'elan• -

........

Sl . . d Mua&amp;er Die

Edwarda for IIIII••OfL
HO&lt;!key

Students threaten to
disrupt Olympic games

Hershiser breaks Drysdale's shutout record

Trllll8adions
N1' R&amp;al"'l - Stpe• ri.W wlaJI!r
Ouf Laneur lo 1-,e• coutracS; •pHI
forward Ktll)' KlaiD; obtained. 41efeaae· ·
maa Mlehael loJCe lram PhlladelpNa
lor rip&amp; wlna c.rla Jee~n.
st.
OpUoaed pUtender Pat
daliolllld to feorla. m. otlaterllltii.IIIN
HoekerLe..-.

1.o• -

NY llluulen -

1\utped io lhe

Spr•lfltltllntlan• of Amerk:ao Hackey
Leape: paitendera lelf Haell.eU and

rounding NBC television coverage. NBC apologized for a T-shlrt
concocted by network employees
that parodied a melee that
foUowed a South Korean boxing
match. AI a Wednesday night
.boxing match, Koreans drowned
out chants of "USA" with boos
when an U.S. boxer won.
Worried by the very public rift
.developing between Korea and
the United States. key opposition
leaders expressed hope Koreans
would stop crlticlzlng the United
States during the games, with
one calling for "a more coolheaded stance."

Gtollt Hanel-"; defeD&amp;emea lUI~.
Du•.aMaePII ...... Vera8mltb,Sllaw•
Evaaaud Raak Larnmeu.: ce~~cer.Tem
P1t11erald, •.ceBo.. re•, Rob IMMalo
aadMik•W.W.; rlahlwlnpllw•nl•,
Kerr')" Oark. Peter fltc:Geo•llaad Doll&amp;'
W.a.&amp;; left wlap Dale ILwnh•r, SlMnra

B,-nun aad Mille St..-e•ao

delca~tmaa

ltmlpr.nl!r wu u•pe41a .. claa&amp;po1.. aiiHL; def@llaemu Mille NeiU wu
~~e~~t Ito• beeln• oll.,.l')'; palleader
Da11117Lorent1, left plnp Be •Eweu11d
Sea LeBrua, aed deff!llleman Ke\lln
Cheftldayoff were rftumed to WHL.
Football
.t.tlaa.. - Slped rwlniDI hack Rick
a.d..,tek; releMed ool'lltrb aell Leider '
Knlpt.
DaJiu- Wlllved center Geol'l(e lJijll.
PbU.delpllla - Slped kleker Lull!
Zendl!ju to 8-ye• tonl.,.ct.
.
Collep
.t.rtlo• - Delea~Ave back Dum!ll
done. left team.

When quarterback Boom.e r
Eslason had a bad day last
Sunday against Cleveland, the
Bengals relied heavily on Woods
to help out in a three-man
i"unnlng attack t)\at made the
dlHerence In Cincinnati's 24-17
wln over the Browns.
Woods scored two touchdowns
and rushed 13 times for 62 yards
as he arid James Brooks and
Stanley Wilson combined for 213
running yards.
Before that, Woods had carried
the ball only six times in
Cincinnati's first three games.
'1 finally got a chance to prove
what I can do," said Woods.
"Our plan was to get · Ickey
some playing time," says head
coach Sam Wyche. "I dldn' twant
a situation to arise where he
needed to get Into a game without
playing time."
.
Woods was the nation's top
coUeglate runner last year at
Nevada-Las Vegas with 1,658
yards.
·
The 4-0 Bengals, one of only
three undefeated clubs In the
28-team NFL, play the Raiders In

Los Angeles on Sunday. It's practicing with the team.
"We will see the kind of shape
possible that a couple of Cincinnati players suspended since the that they're In," said Bengals'
start of the season because or assistant general manager Mike
drug use could be back in Brown. "We may , choose to ·
uniform lor the Raiders' game. activate one or both of them.
Linebacker Emanuel King and They 're both good playerrs and . ·
cornerback Daryl Smith were they should help us If they are ·
reinstated this week and are physically !it ."

~---------------

.

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�Page 6-The Daily Sentinel

•
thursday, September 29, 1988··

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO I AM EDT •30 88

Heavy rainfall ,pelts Plains states today
By \Jailed Preu lateraalloaal
Anecy thunderstorms rumbled
across the Plains states early
today, dumping heavy rain and
hall that was stirred up by high
winds. Rain also pelted the
southern states and the central
Rockies .
Much oft he rest of the country.
meanwhile, enjoyed mild
temperatures.
Thunderstorms over northern
Texas dropped golf ball-sized
hall In' VIew and l -Inch ball at
Burkburnett, the National
Weather Service said today.
Powerful winds pulled down a
carport and destroyed a boa!
dOCk near Graham, Texas, the

NWS said, and power lines also
were reported downed. Winds
gusting up to 60 mph at Olney
toppled some trees. Some com·
munltles reported receiving
more than 1 Inch of rain.
A thick line of thunderstorms
brought high winds and hall to
Missouri, and drenched many
areas wltl! heavy rain.
Four Inches of rain was reported at downtown Kansas City,
the NWS said. A few peQple were .
trapped ln. • their cars after
attempting to drive through
flooded streets. Water was repOrted to be 5 to 6 feet deep at
!Qwlying areas near the down·
town airport.

Residents in Maple City. Kan ..
sought shelter from golf ball·
sized hall.
Scattered ralnshowers also
were reported over parts of
Georgia, Iowa, Mississippi and
Alabama.·
More rain was falling on parts
of Colorado, Nebraska and South
Dakota, the NWS said.

Shiver-inducing air was movIng In behind the cold front over
the Plains states, triggering a
fr0$1 advisory early today lor 50·-/::"t...
parts of Wyoming, forecasters
said. Temperatures In Wyoming
early today dipped Into the
mid-30s.

WEATHER MAP - A cold front curved fram a low over
southwest Iowa acrou weatera Ml81011rl, eutern Oklahoma, north
central Texas aud Jato southwest New Mexico. A stailo11&amp;1'7 froal
reached acrou soulllern Iowa, central Dltaola, cnlral IDdlana,
southern Ohio, central Weat VIJ'Ilnla and beeame a cold front aud
continued throuJh northern Vb-Jinla Into the Atlsntlc Oceaa.

FALL

·The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

thursday, September 29, 1988
Page 7

Wolf Pen community happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Columbus were weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy Sr.
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy,
Jeff, Joey and Jessica.
Mr. Jed Russell of Powers,
Oregan Is spending a few days
with Mr. andMrs.RobertRussell
and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield, Crystill, and Wendy of
Medina spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
family, also Rod Bennett.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew, Texas Road
were ·T hursday evening visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning
and Ronald.
A family reunion was held at
the home of the host and hostess
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell
celebrating birthdays of the
month and out of town relatives
on Sept. 11, 1988. The following
were present during the day;
Robert ancj Allee Russell, Porn~
roy; Jed Russell, Powers ;
Oregon; Bill and Mary Russell,
Pomeroy; Marguerite Boyce of
Columbus; Carl Russell and a
friend Margu Bacus, Columbus;
Tom, Carolyn, Wendy and Crystal Summerfield of Medina;
Brian· and Candl Reeder, R~
venna; Rod Bennett, Medina;
Don and Carol of Harrisonville;
Ron, Nancy, Mandy and Michael

t::mSNOW · -RAIN
~SHOWERS
.
FRONTS: 11 Warm "Cold . . Static 9W Occluded _
Map 111C1W1 m11imum IIIIII*IUII. At IHII 50% ollllf'llhaded IIMilloiiCIII
to rec:eNe prwcipltatlon lndicaled
UPI

BLAST!
SALE

MEN'S
NECKTIES
Save now on our new selection of
four-in-hand and ready tied ties. ·
Solid• and patterns.
Reg. S8~50 to $9,00 Ties .......... S6.38

NEW PLEDG~ - New pledges of Ohio Eta
PlliChaplier, Beta Slpna PhlSororlty,aiTuesday

nlghl'a costumed l'USh party were front, Ann Van

Reg. Si),SO and SlO.OO Ties ..... ·$7,50
Reg. 512.00 to 513,00 Ties ..... $9.38

Sorority meets for rush party .
Ohio Eta Phf Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority. staged a
costumed rush party Tuesday
night In the social room of
Pomeroy United Methodist
. Church.
·
•, The theme, "When You Wish
· Upon a Star", was carried out
,.with members and pledges In
costume of a favorite storybook
' character or admired celebrity.
. Costumes were judged In three

SPECIAL SALEI

MEN'S
WINTER
JACKETS
Plenty of excellent styles for young and old alike -pick
.'

your favorite style and color.
s. M. Land XL plus bigs and tall11 . .Great Savings now!

S29.95
S39.95
$49.95
S69.95

JACKETS ••••••••••••••~................. S22.45
JACKETS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S29.95
JACIETS................................. S37 .45
JACKETS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S52.45

BOYS' SHIRTS
OUR ENTIRI SELECTION
SALE PRICED
Sizes 8 to 20 in a big
selection of knits. sport
shirts and novelty styles.
Stock up now.
Reg. Prices '8.96 to '29.96

~:~ES

STAU AT

·

DESKS

building on the Rock Springs giving the secretary's report.
Teresa Wood, weight recorder,
Fairgrounds.
In the honored group were Ola noted that VIrginia Dean IO$t the
St. Clair, nine years; Virginia most weight for the week and
Smith, nine years; Emogene that Frances Haggy was runnerDean. 12 years; Lennie Belle up. Losing the most weight for
, i\J!lshlte,. years, J),llia Hysell, . the month were Ma'ida Long and
eight and Pearl Knapp four Pearl Knapp. Mrs. De1in won the
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Michael
·
Years. Also honored was Mary fruit basket.
hosled a wiener roast for the
KlW
(KOPS
in
A
new
contest
was
started
with
Martin,
a
new
senior citizens Saturday at their
the team captains being Mrs.
waiting)
for
having
reached
her
home In Portland.
weight goal. Each was given a Long, Peggy Vining, Mrs. Dean,
Attending were Malinda
and Gertrude Casto. Meetings
gift and flower.
'Christy, Manley ChriSty, Carl
Mrs. Aleshire presided at the are held every Tuesday evening
Hysel~ Mrs. Gllllanwater, Josemeeting with Mrs. St. Clair at the Coonhunters building.
phine Ritchie, Octa Ward, Lillian
Randolph, Gerald Wildermuth.
Fay Wildermuth, Don Betzlng,
Ruth Betzlng, Nancy Blosser,
Lawrence Bloaaer, Charles RQII·
era, Pauline McClain, Albert
Schultz, Eva RobsOn, Clarence
Story, Carol ' Taylor, Darrell
Taylor, Marie Chapman, Jill
Chapman, Jewell Chapman,
Grace Welsh, Helen Fisher. Alto
Dll~ sam Michael, and Cora
Michael.

.· .

s16 700

SUPER SAVINGS

$715

Closeout
Sale on
Armstrong
Carpets

DRESS SALE

DAYBED
SALE
$189.00 White Enamel".............. Only $149.00
f219 White Enamel w/brass trlmu.Only 5179.00
f429.00 Genuine Brass ................ Only S329.00
S99.00 Pop-up Units ...................... Only 579.00

STEP OUT IN STYLE OR ACCENT
THE ,HOME DURING OUR SUPER
FAI.I. SAI~S BLAST .....

•

ALL LADIES
AND JUNIORS

Coats, Jackets
AND Ruanas

20°/o

BAAD has filmr
available to groupr

TOM
3rd ANNIVERSARY

'

Fred Goegleln underwent
surgery Wednesday at the Holzer
Medical Center. This Is a first
holpltallzallon for the 89year old
Meigs County native. Cards may
be sent to lilm at the hospital.

OCT. 7th MARKS TOM PEDEN'S 3rd ANNIVERSARY

&amp; WE'RE CELEBRATING WITH HUGE SAVINGS TO YOU!

UNDER THE BIG TOPI

tO DAYS ONLY, SALE ENDS SATURDAY, OCT. 8thl

OVER 200 NEW VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM!

Event canceOed
'A reception
Martha
Porter,
deputy honoring
grand matron
of
District 25, Order of the Eastern
star, scheduled for Saturday at ·
McConnelsville, has been
cancelled.

BAHR CLOTHIERS

NEW 1988
CHEVROLET SPRINT

.£) !)."\.

~
.,~ll«*-'
3 YrJSO;ooo

ON ALL
NEW

YOU'LL SAVE BIG
WITH THESE SAVINGS

t989

MODELS!

WHIRLPOOL

•Haevy Duty l:rotDr

ELECTRIC DRYER
oPerm.PNH
•Large CIPICity

$3 9900
$299°0

1988 CHEVROLET CORSICA

MIDDUPOO

NEW

A~~~!~~ WASHER

OFF

THUI., Fll. &amp; SAT.
SEPT. 29 &amp; 30 &amp; OCT. 1

Bend Area Against Drugs
(B.A.A.D.) has available for
public use two cassette tapes
dealing with teen alcohol and
drug abuse and the family. One
tape Is entitled "Recognizing
Teenage Alcohol and Drug
Abuse;" the other, "Adolescent
Chemical Abuse: A Teenager
and His FamUy Discuss Their
Experience with Drugs."
It you or your club, school or
organization would like to bor. row ~ the tapes, contact Diana
Johnson, B.A.A.D. project coor·
dlnator, at the Mason County
Prosecuting Attorney's Office,
675-5734.

VEHICLE
UMITED
WARRANTY

LAUNDRY SPECIALS

I THE

you've gotit ...

'

Stop in and see
how you can save
on quality
~rmstrong Carpet! '

Cute fall dreues for your little girl.
Cotton· prints and poly/~otton
blends. Beautiful fall colors in
sizes 9 mos. to 18 mos., 2 to 6X
and 7 to 14.

you want it ...

Horpitalized
I

LlnLE GIRLS'

Reg. S18.00 Dreues... s15.29
Reg. S22.00 Dresses...S18.69
· Reg. 528.00 Dresses... S23.79

CARPET
CLOSEOUT

Venoy, Pomeroy; Steve, Brenda,
Stephanie .and Brad Haggy,
Pomeroy, Ted, Marsha, Michael
and Renee Russell, Minersville;
Marcy Hill, Racine; Iva Johnson, Naomi Smith, Pomeroy;
Harley and Kathym Johnson,
Poineroy, Ida and Peggy
Murphy, Pomeroy, Marty Red·
mond, Columbus; Debra Hobbs,
Columbus; Ronnie and Denna
Eblin, Tod, Shawn and Scott
Mitch, Johnny, Sargent, all of
Pomeroy; Jim and Nina Zaayer,
Pleasantville.

'4

,-· Roast held

Do_uble pedestal desks, toll-top desks and secretar•es. Assorted finishes.
·

AS LOW AS

Vanessa ' Sidwell, and Kathy
Haley. Other pledges unable to
attend were Kim Blower, Tina
Nelgler, and Lori Powell.
Selected ValenUne Queen by
popular vote was Susa11 Clark.
Others attending the party were
Linda Jones, Debbie Werry,
Tammy Bachner, Cathy Johnson, Pam Vaughan, Judy Cowan, ·
Teresa Kennedy, Becky Triplett,
and Charlene Hoe!llch, sponsor.

· Six KOPS (keeping off pounds
: sensibly) were honored at the
: Tuesday night meeting of TOPS
· 570 held at the Coonhunters

Sharp new styln and
colors for the fall season.
You'l love the new look!
S6 Handbags""'"" Sale S4.99
sa Handbags......... Sale S6.79
12 Handbags .... Sale Sl 0.19
$'16 Handbags .... Sale S13.S9

NEW SHIPMENT

categories with Betsy Jones, Ann
Van Maire, and Mrs. Clark
winning the prize flowers.
Emcee for the evening was
Mrs. Clark who divided the girls
Into teams lor a scavenger hunt
around the business section of
Pomeroy. The IO$Ing team was
assigned·cleanup from the party.
Pledges Introduced and presented gifts were Julie Dillon, Ann
Van Maire, Jamie Blaettnar,

.TOPS meets, honors KOPS

PURSE SALE

SALE I

Maire, and hack, left to right, Kathy lf4ley,
Vanessa Sidwell, Julie Dillon and J·amle
Blaettnar.

Russell, Racine; Harry and
Doris Johnson, Columbus;
Roger, Brenda, Jeff, Roger and
Stacy Lewis, Pleasantville;
Carol and Jenni Lockard, Plea·
santvllle; Lynn, Joe, T.J., Na·
than Menefee, Pleasantville;
Kevin and Brenda Venoy, Pomeroy;
Craig, Brenda and Megan
Venoy, Ed and Janet Venoy, Bob,
Loraine and Robyn Venoy,
Pomeroy; Tony, Lisa, Jacob and
Joshua Venoy, Hartford, W.Va.;
Mark, Melinda, and Brooke

TAKE YOUR PICKI
1988 PONTIAC
1988 OLDSMOBILE
BONNEVIUE LE or
DELTA 88

{)0 tti

"Loaded''

1

NEW 5-tO BLAZERS
t988 &amp; 1989 MODELS
• 15 TO CHOOSE FROM •

$1
15TO alOOSE FIIOII

Cook With A
Mkrowave Ov~

D.IMINATE ntE HOT lOT

TWO CARS TO BE GIVEN AWAY
SATIJRDAY, OCT. 8th AT 6:00 P.M.

N1

MU11bo 11 ,...CIIdtollgllllr.

Ellv let rm.rv oomrote Iii·
tli tlm.- •Delrootlettlngo ...looiil
vorloble cook ~ •Solid-ST..,......,,. Control •l~lwel

•hi•Caoldn1 Sy-.

CooJdnt ,....,

No purchut AI U II f· Nllcl nol bi ,....W 10 win.

roo-!==

w-

;

.,,

~"
.- .
..,.,

~

'.

SALE

MONDA!'·F"RIDAY I:JD A.M. TO 9:00P.M.

HOURS:

SATtiRDAYI:lOA.M. TOt:IOP.M.
CWSED SUNDAY

:.::..o. ...

'

N

iljj

•

~- '
· '

\

TOM
PEDEN
..... as a •. _ • .....,..._

--·----.......
=
---·-···
.........
·--·-

....... GMII.....

'

Minutes VS. VJelks when you rent

-.

If a rental phone breaks, briilg it in
Cor immediate repair or replacement. You never wait loJig when you rent.lt'a smart to rent.

01111''*&amp; . . . . .

I

•.

--~

•

--------------

�Page 8-Tha Daily Sentinel
The Daily Santinei-Page-9

Beat of the bend

t--------r-------1 ------·Gallipolis ..........

Pioneer meeting...
the Idea, and found that several
By BOB HOEFLICH
other
friends of Bruce wan ted to
The Meigs County Pioneer and
help
with
the tribute. It snowHis tDrlcal Society will be holding
and
so
Is now being opened
balled
Its annual meetto all of Bruce's friends .
Ing Sunday at
The marker has been selected
the Meigs Muand engravings will reflect asseum, 144 Butpects of Bruce's life. Cost Is
ternut Ave., In
$1,000.
Pomeroy .
Friends who wish to particiA potluck
pate shOuld_ send the amount they
dinner at 1 p.m .
will open the afternoon's activi- wish to glv~ to The Farmers
ties with the program and Bank and Savings Co. or to the
business session to begin at 2. Rutland Branch o!Bank!. Or you
The annual election of trustees can drop you check by either
and officers will be held. Sun- location, noting, of course, the
day's meeting Is open to purpose.
Bruce was a regular pUiar In
members and to the publiC.
the Rutland community. He
1 know - It's not really serve on council, was marshal of
beginning to look a lot like the town and was a past mainteChristmas, but be that as It may, nance supervisor.
Friends say there was nothing
motorcycle riders of the area are
thinking Christmas and will hold that Bruce would not do to try to
their annual Christmas ride for make the life style of Rutland
better or to help his fellowman.
tots on Saturday, Oct. 22.
And so the tribute from those
Those taklqg part will meet at
the southbound roadside park on who would say to Bruce:
"Thank you for being a
Route 33, north of Pomeroy,
friend!"
beginning at 11 a.m. and the •
riders will leave there at noon.
Jeffery T. Caldwell, a spring
They will travel to the Riverboat
graduate
of Southern High
Inn, Middleport, where a party
Is
one
of 350 new freshSchool,
will be held. The party will
men
at
Marietta
College and
Include a band and door pr(?es .
Admission to the party Is one thus, Is part of the largest
good toy and non-riders are freshmen class at the college In
six years. Jeffery Is the son of
encouraged to join ln.
Toys collected, of course, will Jimmy and Sally Caldwell of
Racine. Last year's freshmen
go to .underprlvlleged children.
class
totaled 256 stucents.
If you have any questions
whatsoever. call Jo Frye's Cycle
Gerald Shuster marked
Shop, 742-2081, or Kathy Meaanother
birthday anniversary at
dows at 843-5125.
his Lincoln Heights residence on
An act of love and respect.. ... Tuesday. Which one? I didn't
Friends of the late Bruce say.
Davis. well-known Rutland resillove to enlighten you. I'll bet If
dent who died unexpectedly on
Sept.10, have been given permis- J hadn't told you , you wouldn't
sion by Bruce's widow, Marjorie, have known that October Is
to provide the headstone for the National Popcorn Poppln'
Davis grave at Nelson Cemetery. Month. I know--! like It too. Do
One close friend picked up on lleep smtllng.

fO PW:l ill At CAll tt1-tU&amp;
..,..,, Hw• r•AY IAJL te S P.M.
I UL UldiiiiOOII Y.TUIDAY

___

&lt;l_,l. SUNDAY
.... _......,_
..
.... _
.z::...,oo_ ... __ ,._
~·

;::..•:::=.~=--·-- -

Who's
. I

-~

coo••'-

paytng. .

•

Weekend rocking for charity. The sorority rocked
lor 100 hourtl to raise funds for the Plae Mountain
School In Kentucky.

ROCKING - Laura McCullough, Pomeroy,
right, and Lorle Plckerlag, Laocuter, left; were
two members of Alpb Sigma Tau Sorority at Rio .
Grande Colle~res wlio spent most of Parents

·community calendar
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - OliveOrange Memorial Post Auxll·
lary, Veterans of Foreign Wars
Chapter 9053, 7 p.m. Thursday at
VFW Hall.

port American Legion Annex, 8
p.m. with the True Country Band
providing music for dancing.

hour of music at the Keno Church
of Christ on Saturday, starting at
7 p.m. Everyone welcome.

SYRACUSE - A pig roast·,
SATURDAY
JOPPA -Joppa United Metho- sponsored by the Meigs Associadist Church will be In revival tion for Retartded Citizens will
CHESTER - David Canfield through Saturday ai 7: 30 each be held Saturday, from 5 to 7
will be speaker for revival evening. The revival will end p.m ., at Carleton School In
services which start Thursday at - with the annual church home- Syracuse. $3 per serving. EveChester Church of the Nazarene coming on Sunday, starting with ryone welcome.
Sunday School at 9:30 a .m .. .
and continuing through Oct. 2.
dinner at 12 p.m., ending with
LONG BOTTOM - Long Bot- gospel singing at 2 p.m. EveRUTLAND Round and
tom United Methodist Church ryone welcome.
square dancing will be featured
will be In revival Thursday
at the Ell Denison Post of the
SALEM CENTER - Star Arrierlcan Legion on Saturday
through Saturday at 7: 30 each
evening with Bud Hatfield, evan· Grange 778 and Star Junior from 8 to 12 p.m.
Grange 878 will meet at 8 p.m.
gel!st. Everyone welcome.
Saturday at the grange hall,
PORTLAND - Portland Elecounty road 1, north of Salem mentary School Is having Its
FRIDAY
CHESTER- Revival services Center, and will be presenting 55 annual fall carnival on Saturday,
at the Chester Nazarene Church and 60 year seals to members;
from 5 to 9 p.m ., with something
continuing through Sunday at 7 Installation of officers and offic- for everyone.
p.m. David Canfield, evangelist. ers conference will be held as
well as degree work.
Public Invited.
WILKESVILLE - A smorgasbord supper will be held SaturTUPPERS PLAINS
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
day at the Pythlan Hall In
Tuppers
Plains Elementary Wilkesville. Serving starts at
Church of Christ In Christian
School will be holding the annual 4: 30 p.m. Proceeds to the PyUnion Is sponsoring a benefit
fall
carnival this Saturday, 2 -7 thlan Hall building fund. Evehymn sing on Friday starting at 7
p.m., with a cakewalk, prize ryone welcome.
p.m. Narrow Way, Reflections
drawings, sweet shop, country
Trio, the Clark Family, Kim
store, bazaar, games of all kinds
Herdman and the Charity Singers will be featured. Everyone and refreshments. Admission 25
cenls.
welcome.

IJe&amp;f ADD Lila den: Our 27 •
year·old daughter Is getting
married. When she became en·
gaged, the groom's mother let ·
me know that the weddlq was
our responsibility. She said we
could do whatever we wanted
and they wopldn't Interfere. This
was her way of telling us, "Don't
look to us for any financial help.''
We realize traditionally It Is
our responsibility, but With today's prices, It really b too
expensive for one family to
handle. Many parents are sharIng the cost. My husband and I
both work and make a good
living, but we are far from rich.
We also have two sons,lll and 17,
with .college ahead of them.
The groom's parents both
work. This Is their last child at
home, their house Is paid for and
they take a vacation every year.
My husband and I feel that we
are being taken advantage of. We
have agreed to cover all the
expenses except the band, the
church, the attendants' flowers
and the photographer. The brl4e
and groom are picking up those
expenses. As It Is we are putting
out $8,000 for this wedding. We
are paying for the dinner and
.reception. So far nothing has
been said about a rehearsal
dinner, which the groom's par·
ents should hast.
After all, It's their son's wed·
ding too, and we feel they should
offer to help. - Not Happy In ·

HARRISONVILLE - A yard
sale to raise proceeds for missionary work among the Navaho
Indians will be held Friday and
Saturday , starting 9 a.m. both
days,
on Vance Road near
Harrisonville.

LONG BOTTOM - A hymn
sing will be held Saturday at
Hazel Community Church, near
Long Bottom, starting at 7:30
p.m. The Gospel Messengers of
Ripley, W.Va. will be the featured singers.

MIDDLEPORT Public
square dance Friday at Middle-

KENO - Eddie Jones of
Pennsylvania will present an

_

·•---o--•---••
.
.
.
"""•
....
.,____
...........
-..,_,__
. .: :.........
===. __
t:o.::::.._
=-.=..,.:'::
,__ ...... _

The family of
Jack Ward
wishes to thank
our relatives,
friends. and
neighbors for
.. their kindness
during our
recant
bereavement.
JoAnn Ward
Thank You for
your kindness
and consideration
in acting as
. pallbearer for my
husband. Being
one of Jack's
closest friends
made this very
meaningful to us.
Mrs. Jack Ward

you get together with a profeJ;slonal wedding planner and have
a joint conference. Let tlie
authority explain what the rl!·
sponslbllltles are for each ·Side.
They need to hear from an
outsider that the groom's faml)y
pays for the rehearsal dinner.
I believe It would be prudent to
scale down everthlng. In my
opinion $8,000 Is a lot of money for
working people to spend on a
wedding, especially when they
have two more kids to send
college.

Tho Formero Blnk end SoviJlgo Cornjllny .....,.. tho
right to l'lject any or ali biclo

jireued

Ory Cleaning .Special
SWEATERS

·.

Golf winnerJ
are announced
Winners In play of the Jaymar's Ladles TUesday Golf
League were Sue Burnett, low
gross; Nellie Wright, low net;
Norman Custer, chip-In-hole,
and Sue Burnett, low putts. ·
It was announced that a mixed
scramble and potluck will be held
at the club on Sunday, Oct. 2, and
also that a party for the Tuesday
Ladles League will be held on
Oct. 4 with tee-oft'tlme at 9 a.m.

·..•

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(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
:z. 417 Secand Avenue. Box 1213
- Gallipc;llis. Ohio 45631
·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
_Mulberry Hcts, Pomeroy,

4 FamHI•· lamp•. b•linette.
blth •ble, curuuna. stareD, lott
~f clothel-half price s.t . .tiernoon. 288 LeGr~~nde. off 141.
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SALES &amp; SERVICE

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
ANOREW MEYERS.
DECEASED, CASE
NUMBER 2118&amp;1,
DOCKET N. PAGE 48
PUBLICATION av NOTICE
The name of Andrew My-·

ere· wu erroneouaty added
to tho Public Notice on the
eototo of Gton 0. Oootor.
Tho name ot oofd Andrew
ohoutd- not hovo

l ~~~:;~~i~n=d=uded

In any
pert
Cooo
Number
the nt.te of

~~~::~:.'·ProiNto Judge
Court

i'1111ri&gt;ont of Gl.. o.

o.-.

Oo-.1.
Iota of Molgo
County. Olllo, ..In Court. ..d ., IPilbtlon t o - tho ..... to proboll ... tho ..... ""
moc1o In tho Court. Tho oppllcalon
oet far .._lng
beloN thio Court on Thuradoy, October 27. 198B, ot

Wo Corry Fiohing Su1&gt;plio~
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
. IUSINDS PHONE
16141 992-6550

IISIDINa PHOI/1 '
41 992·

AND

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Guns • Amnto • Slugs •
22 Amnto
124 East of Rutland
AUGII

R~ason.le Pric11"

PH•.949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

NO .EXP.E.RJENC.E N.EC.ISSAJlY

Authorizeol Servin

Jacot.en

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

Howard L. WriteHI

ROOFING

4th

(614) 446-9800
Between The Hours Of
10 a.m.· 12 noon
Be 4 p.m. - 8 p.m.

Gutters
Down1poutB
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

RACINE

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OliO

•

992-6461

9-23·'88-1 mo.

VHS TAPE .

1-28-'88-tln

WANTED

DEAD OR AUVE
•Washers •D ryan
•Ranges •Freezers
.oRefrigerators

44~- 7390

nnr • -llc

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanlcs •

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service AU Makes
1/2V88/tln
a,...---_;;;.,;;;;.,;;;;.,;;... I

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

1-13-tfc

MAIN nREET PIZZA
Back To School Special

MON.-TUES.-WID.

/-~~ .'!'~~pl_l .~P~~;•
:

15" PEPPEitd"' • •
(HEESE PIZZA
:
: $6.50
4 FlEE :
: SUPEI LAIGE DIIIIIS :
: Pi• " or lot In Only

:

992-2228 or 992-9922

Sorry, no tfolinry or olhor
cou,... cambintd with this
off•.
f/6111/1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES .&amp; SERVICE
U. S. liT..., SO lAST
GUYSVlLE, OHIO
614-662 ~3821
Authorized John
Deere, New Hofland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Oeal~r

Fer•
E••IP••••
Putt &amp; Ser•le•

EAGLE IIDGE
SMAll ENGINE
PH. t•t-2969
haler for

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Ueotnu&lt;l.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer Ia Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With

Oump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Bu1inM1

num

-fRH ESIIMATISfor

lilY

of lhtso

,.,Ius coli

614-7.t2-2617
lotw•n • a.rn.-6 p.m.
ar lton Mos-

2· 1S:·P.tfl'l

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomorey Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Alto Tr••••l~tl••

PH. 992-5682

or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

Located Helfway
bel\waen Rt. 7 a B•han.

~f

NEW I USm MOWERS '
8.7 Fin•dng on Y•dmen
Service on Atf Mokeo

We H-r MC/DIH/VIsa

1-1-t-

3 female guinae pigs to give

IWay to good home. Call 614388-9342.
Famele Pekinu-e. Appro11 . 3
yrs. old. C.ll614-2&amp;e-t343.

St1ey

..TwocuM gray and blttek kittens
MIN a good ho,.. 304-6755165.
Tw-o 8 week old puppi•. Britt.ny Spanitf mixed. 304-4681904 · - 4:30.

6 Lost and Found
losl : Female Beegle. White flee
collar. Sept 20th, Tann•• Run
and SA 124 ~rea . 814-9492798.

Lost tn Sumner Rd. area. 2 year
old. male Beegte. Not hunter,
just femltv pet. Scar over eye,
somali,. limpa. AnsMrs to
litcUit. Reward. no questions
614-992-3233, d.,.s;
114-985-3877 after 6:00.

"'*'·

Yard Sale

7

.......Giilliporis ··----·-··
&amp; Vicinity

992-3410

Service

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
· TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

FIBISI.lTES

Drywal

...... u .....

Garage Sel&amp;-614 Flrtt Ave .
Thura., Fri.. Sllt.-Sept. 29-0at.
1. 9 -&amp;. No-early birds. Otk table.
Cllh regl•ter, couch, braided
ruga, bike,, clothet. ~oes . Buck
nove. kitchen 1ppl., lott of mi..:.
~

......

8 F1mlll .... &amp; mH01 down At. 7.
Sept. 28 thruOct. &amp;. New home
Int. S. Bl.,..ko glatt.

Tbun . a Fri. 10n Second.
WMher. rug, aJCerdler, console
...reo. rototiller. clothing, h.,.d
tools. ehMt drtwMs.

Goroo•ll Nul Avo .. · F~d...
· - - 30. 9-8 . lolly clothfla/ltems. furniture. am.tl
o l _ . , __

..~ - --·-····· ·

Yard Sale Sit , Mon. Tuet, Oc:t.
1. 3,4. Time : 8 :00 AM till 1.
Where 614 Third St, New
Haven, W. va. Some new
merchandite, aomething for
everyone.

8

Mlohlgon Solo-In!_,. thru

3~

eire olathel·'tl: prfct.. crib,
ttuffld anlmala, Chrlstmll
--IONool.
I'Oinllll

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pell!ll'son Auctioneer. II·
censad Ohio and Walt Virginia.
Ell'lllte, antique, f.wm, liquidation ...... 304-773-6785.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pey cash tor lite model clean
uMd ears.
Jim Mink Chev .-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
814-448-3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 modet

end ne-Ner u111d ear&amp;. Smtth
Buielc-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ava. , Gallipoii• . C.ll 114-44&amp;.
2282.
Complete t1ousehoJdl of furniture &amp; antlquet. Also wood &amp;
coal tM,etara. Swain's Furniture
&amp; Auction. Third &amp;. Olive.
614-448-3159.

Junk Can wllh or without
motort . Cell larry Uvety.&amp;14-38e-9303.
Furniture and lppli8MCII by the
plec• or entire hou•hold. F1ir
prlcos being pelcl C.ll81 4-4463158.

QUILTS
Cash ~d for quifla. Pre
1950's. Pitced. a.ppliqued,
unu-1-any condflion. Ctll
114-992-8857.
We buy 811'* Walnuta. Fund
r1i1lng opportunity . George
Shlobock 814-992-3891. Far
delivery lnetructlona e1U 1-800118-0727.

I 'iilllpyJIJI'"i
'11!; v ll.l' :,

Frl""" onlY. 8 l.,.lly.Rood belido
old · - · lchool. Kldo
ol...,_,monyothorltoiM.

pum@,_.._ orolto, yont

Mle llema. 2 milia WMt of

56 STl11 51.

Oetllpollt on Rt.141 . Fri. • ht.

GAWPOUS, OH.

V... Bolo-Frido\&gt; • tlotUrdi\'Twoml• on At. 211, aff At . 7.
Lot• of clo.._. woodburner.
miec .

····3417

· · ·· ·····----- -~--~~

Want 1(1 buy: Uted furniture and
antlqu•. Will buy antlre houtehold furnithing. Marlin Wed&amp;mever, 614-245-6152.

992-6857

Ca~~~plafl

&amp;Vicinity

.4 Family Yard Sale. Oct . 1,
three mll1111 out Crab Creek
Road, eookstove and
dishwasher.

Yord Sole- Fri . • Sot. 9·4. 1I 11
Ch.,nut St.

TRI·STATE
DRYWAU CO.

--·---·pt ·Pleasant------

Mother cet woth four kittens ,
three tigM, one l»&gt;.ek. sht wkt .
old. 614-992· 621 6.

Sot.-Oct . 111. 10 till 4. 331
Debbta Dr. Metal tithe, color tv.
305 Chevy engine, 91mes,
IMna, • more clo1h11.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

30th, Oet. 111. 4.a30 Pomeroy

Yard Sale. 70 Burdette Addn,
Frl and Sat, Sept. 30 and Oct . 1.
Babv items end mise.

ew•v.

2 Unco1n Tttrrace
Po1111roy, Ohio
1·1·11·1 ....

3 family yard tale. Thurs..
Frldav. Salurdav. Sept. :Z9thand

Call

6 kittens to give
814-446-8161 .

'TWo reelln•s. need• some repairs. 304-876-2408.

YAIDMAN I ICHO
Serwkl (IIIII• for ltyon
Products

Giveaway

4

Hemloc:k Grove Rd . Baby
c:lothea . baby •wing and
ch~nger, materntty clothes, ten~
nia reeket. Avon, erafta and
misc. Saturdav. October 1at.
9 :06-1 :00.

September 29th, 30th, Oct. 1 at.
9:00-5:00. 1'11 mile out Baii~~Pt
Run Rd. lots of clothing and
furnithre. Jenkins residence.

Most Foreign and
Donieatic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Mojor S. Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

+

-~~!~!'!I..'I~P. ~:.~~.!

Fri .• Sat .. Sun.• Sept. 30. Oct.
1tt and 2nd. North of Sandy's
Auto, R1. 33. 5 house• up on

Pike. 9:00 -5 :00. Adl tize
clothing.

Annuu 111;emenls

"Must It Repairable"

SERf ICE

Mt, glan,.re. misc . 614-992·
7110.

rigflt . 9 :06-6:00.

t/15111/Un

\

S-er. thooo. lketes. weight

Lat usconnrt lhostotdMowiel
&amp; sticfot over to oasy VHS.
CALL AMT CARTER
or BOB'S ll!CTRONICS .

i-3-'86-lk

NEW- REPAIR
..

Monday &amp; Tuesday

October 3rc1 &amp;:

&amp; Ports

"t.

October 1sland 3rd. 9 :Do- 5:00.
7. 1 miletouth
Rein or ahlne.
· of · flutung lightl. Turn left:
County Rd. 3 , Shon Cut Roed.
Follow sign1 . Olildren, adult
clothu, toya. Electrolu;l{

POMEROYI OHIO

NO SUNDAY

JUN,K cills 01

Briggo 6 Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelito

Frid1Pf Sept. 30 and Sat. Oct. 1.
104 Spring Ave .. Pomeroy.

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

WAN! TO IUT WIICKIO 01

REPAIR

FridiV andSiturdey. Sept. 301h
and Oct. 1 . Louks residence
be1ow Eanern High School.

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

t/10/tt. I,.. pt

"AI

Radne. Ohio . Rain
canoN. Given by Southern High
Scho~ Cheerlead••·

lmm MOVES &amp; SUDIS lo

Ph. Ut-742·2355

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Fun~ruoll,

DRIYERED TO

Maw 1-s lult
"Free Estimates"

Carport ale. Sill:. 0¢. 1, 9 -7.
Mother of Twins. Rt. 7 underpall. Ne• Big Wheel. Watch for
ligna. Aain or shine.

Yard ule and c.- wash Slltur-

992-6282

Happy Hollow Rd.

.BISSELL
BUILDERS

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp;·HEATING

HILLSIDE MUIZLE ·
LOADING

NO SUNDAY CAlLS

Call Mr. Gilmore

7-13-'88- lin

8-12 1 mo.

AUTOMOTIVE
SALES

Complete training program
HoepHallzatlon Plan
Vecatlon Plan
Life lneuranca
Fanlletlc New end U11d Car Inventory
Chanca for Advancement to Management Lew I
Demonstrator

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Sept. 30 - Oct. 4th. 9a.m. till
&amp;p.m. 4015 PJ~ge St. Mldcleport.
Rrtt one thia yew. Clothel and
miec.

dtl'f, October 1at. 9-4 at lheSun

$14 PER TON

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Hours 10-4

h•-.

Help Wlntad

8·8-1 mo. pd.

(FREE ESTIMATES!

. Gently used
consignment
clothing tor
children.

992-5083

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

985-4487

electrical

hou•.

CHIPWOOD
POLES

SAND-GRAVEL
LIMESTONE
FILL DIRT

WO&lt;k

Saturday. 9 -&amp;. Corner of
Broedwly ~ Main, Racine, RockIng chlir, doll
bat:Jv hlml,
elothet, misc.

ante

"LET GEORGE
DO IT"
HAULING

- Concrete work
and

8-22-1 mo.

SaturdtY, Oct. 111. TyrH Btvd.,
Raeine. J1ne Fry.

- Addont and remodeting
- Roofing end gUtter WOf~

SECOND nME
AROUND SHOP

Evenings by Appointment
2 miles toward Albany on
SR 681.

References

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Plumbing

3 family yard Ale..Sept. 29- Oct .
1. 9a.m. - dutk. 181 W, Darwin.
Ohio. 1 mile off Rt. ·33. Se . .
open he.rth comfo,..; queen
size 1heet1, bebv fu rntture.
blankllta. b• stool ftute , Chriatm• iterrw. wood burner.

985-4141

YOUNG'S

PWMBING &amp; HEAnNG

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

992-6173

Cell 992-2772

·--·-·-pa·marov...... -----

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

Joe or Pauley lltwllltd
209 South 4th St.
Middl1port, Oh.
"LOW INCOIIIIIOIII"

Free Eatlmates

Cheap clothing, furniture,
crafts. AI. 1588 nur Rodney .
Fridl¥ It Setunl... 10 ·6.

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUI.LDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

INSULADON

Mastic &amp; Certalnteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofine .
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

141 bol&lt;&gt;rt Dobbie Dr.-PI"'pon.
high chair, curtaln.a. dlat.•.
children'• clothing. Thur .• Fri .•
Set.

. MARCUM CONTRACTING.

J&amp;L

Sot. -Oct. I . 9 AM till l . 133 It
131 Stat• St. MM1y unful
item1 . Rain Clncellac:l.

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

WE OFFER:

WI havt eluN lint Ill gll1llic druga enlllllll lor you. I'Rlen you want
the same ~lty u nlll18 brands. .. lor nu:hlesa aist, ask for generics.
We'l be happy to consul )IIIII daaor raganllng generic drugs for )'OU.

SHAVE CREAM

WITH COUPO_!4_....._ __\!!!!l.cal.IJ,tQN. -_;j...-.!l'i[[JU;ia,~

Sl 00 OFF I ssoo OFF

1

,

We are Iooldn&amp; for ezceptlonal people
who want a career ln automotive salea. We
are one of Oblo'a moat proareaalve and
·. hlpeet payln&amp; new car dealershls- and
wlU teach you how to 1ell new and 111ed ve·
hlclea. We currently have aucceaafullales
repreaentatlves from varloua backaroundl
lncluclln&amp; construction, mlnlna. buslneas
and profeaalonal occupatlona, and recent
coueae araduates. eamlna from $20,000
• $40,000 durin&amp; the flrst year.

COUPONS EXPIRE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8. 1988

CRAFT PAINT

!la~

ftf .•

Day or Night

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

11

•.

prepares students for registered
nursing.

FUZZY BEARS
2°FREE,

Ill ..

Witn•o mV hond ond the
sell of the Court, at Pom·
eroy. Ohio. September 12,
t888.
Robert E. Buck, J udgo
(II 1&amp;, 22. 29:
(101 tl, 13, 20, Btc

•.

FABRIC
SHOP
11 0 W. Main, Pomeroy, OH.

I
1

,..

....

"

1:30 o'docll P.M .

OCTOBER 1 THRU OCTOBER 15

I

ex~

Implied warran-

191 28, 29, 30, 3tc

(Or one-third off on 2 or more)

992-3481

or

tMia given-.

·3 FOR THE PRICE.OF 2

A second year student In the
school, Russell will use the
scholarship to continue her
education.
The Elva Fulks Memorial
Scholarship Is awarded annually
to a second year nursing student
who Is a resident of Gallla,
Jackson, or Meigs Counties In
Ohio or Mason County, W. Va.
The student's clinical ablllty Is
the primary consideration for the
award.
The Hazier School of Nursing
offers a two year program that

:-.:~

·-~,.·....
1'1'11

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF GLEN 0.
DEETER. DECEASED.
Public Notice
CASE NUMBER 21914,
DOCKET N, PAGE 48
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLICATION OF NOTICE
NOTICE io hereby given
TO JOHN ANDERSON
that on Saturd.y. October 1, DEETER, AODR ES&amp; UN1988, ot 10:00o.m.opubfic KNOWN, BEING A PERoofo will be hold ol 10&amp; SON HAVING AN INTERUnion Avenue,
Pomeroy, EST IN THE ESTATE
Ohio. to uti forcuhthefol- OF GLEN 0. DEETER, DElowing coHateral:
CEASED. LATE OF STATE
1982 Chovrolot Chovotte
ROUTE 248, LONG BOT
1G1AB08C7GA142287
TOM, 0110, MEIGS COUNThe Firmer• Bank .,d TY PROBATE CASE NUM·
Sovingo Company, Pom• BER 25814. DOCKET N,
roy, Ohio, Nl&amp;rv• the right PAGE4B. Vou.-ohonll¥notito bid at thio ute. and to tlod tha on~~~ 22. 191JS,
'\vithdraw the above colleIn WJttlna. purtorof prior to Mlo. Further, ..
parting to be tho~ VWI ond

dition It Ia in with no

Nursing scholarship awarded

IDA."

MW

,.8-88-tfn

~ Further, the above colla~
toret will be oold in tho con-

SCHOlARSHIP AWARDED- Brenda Russell, right, Reedavllle, receives the Elva Fulks Memorial Scholarship from Janet M.
Byers, RN, MS, left, dean of the Holzer School of Nursing at Rio
Grande Colleges.

....

IIIlA. .

Business Ser\ ices

•ubmttted.

i

- ... .. ..
... ..---......
--____
... --,.,..... ....

Lisleninc Devices
Dependable Heariac Aid Sales &amp; Servic4
CJ · Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Ages

--

We would like to
. thank the VFW
post and also the
ladies' auxiliary
of the post at
Mason, W.Va.
for their sarvicaB
and kindness
during our time
of sorrow.
JoAnn Ward

Dllnols
Dear Not Ia Dl.: I suggest that

&amp; Vicinity

RATII

Card of Thanks

. ·1

--- I

Brenda Russell, Reedsville,
has been awarded the Elva Fulks
Memorial Scholarship In the
Holzer School of Nursing at Rio
Grand e Colleges.

Yard Sale

7

Business Services

11

Help Wlnted

AVON-No«! 8 lodl• 1&lt;1 Soli
Avon. Coll814-"6-3351.

FEDERAL. STATE AND CIVIL
SERVICE .1081
Now hiring. Yourer... •13.610

to •ee.uo.

1mnw11 . .

e»en-

lngo. Coli 1-(3 1111733-1082,
Ext. F 2758.
Foreatry workert needed
Oec.,...,.,· AI)rll in aU Plrtl of
South E11t. ,,.,... whlda ,...
qulred. V.y physic.. job. Great
..,. Bonus ad\oenture. Call
919-798-8096. Coollol Relorettatlon, P.O . BoK 34.3. Hol~­
ridge, North CaroUn11 28448.
E•ceptlng epplicetlona for c:ertlfied Aerobi-c's lnatructort. Contl'tletUII b•lt. For further lnfor·
m11lon please call
814-445-4812, e.:t. 2158.
Wont«! Lody to llwl-in. tlgflt
housework. Mostly for eomptny. 1 amall child ll.,...loome.
Coli 814-446-3419.

JOURNEYMEN 101 CLASS

Sou1h Centrlll Power Compeny
i1 tMklngJOUI'ftiiV"'tn 1at Cl111
Unamen- Aequlr....,ts for this
job .,e; 7 ye•sexperi.,.celn line
work with 3 of theM 11 a
JourneymM 1tt ctMI: Wortdng
e11perienoa on diltrita.ltk:ln •n•
(7200 voh.t wfth knowl.tga af
tr11nsmiasion and aub1111tian
wortt; lbRtty to run flir lh.,. af
trouble 1fter nornW worldng
hours. Utility ex perlence II a
plus. W.. hiMI ~ axcell_.
bonollt program. II q .. llfiod.
pl1110 coli by Oct- I . 1 ·800-

282-5064 or 114-153-4422

1nd ask for Direetor Personn..
Servlceo. An Eq . .l Oppctrtunlty
Employer.

You must be available for
imrnedlete employment. We ere
hiring for full time potltlons.
Stoning poy 11200 per mo. For
more info on interviMV call
814-446-8148.
Government Jo bt:. e 1 8,040t59,230 ¥~•· Now hiring. Your
•••· 80&amp;-887-1000 E111. f'·
9806 for current Fed~llilt.
Job hunting? Need e skill? We
tnln people for joba u Auto
Medwnice, Carpen*•· Cosme·
tologiets. Diveulfled Mlldlcal
Worklrs, Electriden•. Food Service Workers. Electrc:WCI Technlciens, lndulll'lll MaintMence
Worker., NurslngA•••ntund
Ordarli•. M1c~'-ts. OffiCII
Work... 1n d Weldin:. Aegil•
now for d .... beginning 01tober 3rd. CltiTri-CountyVocationll Adult Canter •• 713-3151 1
ut. 14. A varhrty of funding
1ourcea to PlY for training are
avellllble tor thott "lgible.
Are you 1 tingle PlrMt?' H vou
single:&amp;r.m W your
spou• is total . . . . . . end
rou-llod
order to be gelnf\tlly amplofed.
you miY be ..glble for monev to
pey for training In one of our
ful-rime JYDgNms •• 1h• Adutl
Educ:ation Center··Tri~County
Voc:•ionll Sc:hool. Call 71533511 at. 14 for intomwtion.
Folr _ . . , boglno Oet- 3rd.
are •

''toba!I!Jijn

McCLURE'S RESTAURANT
HIAINO. Cooks: ind Wllitres••
nefKIId. R•umes betng liken
1:0~ : 00 p.m . TutldiiVI end
Thurtdayt at 479 JaeQon Pike,
Gallipolis, white hou• behind
McCiurn .-taurant.
Government Jobll •18.037. to
t89.405. Immediate Hiring!
Your ar•. C.ll (A•fundable)
1-&amp;18-459-3111 Eat. Fll22
for Ftderlll Uat 24 Hrt.
Federal, StMe end CtvH Service
Jobl. Now hiring. Your 1rea.
t13.&amp;60 1o t159,48D. lmmadiote openin91. C.lll-318-7336062 Et&lt;l. F 27118.

Need axperieneed feed mill man
end driver. Wrtle Applicant, Box
408. Po......., . Ohio 48789.
Give f\.111 detall1 on experl.. ce,
tfllning, etc:. lnlerviiMI'I will be
anangad Immediately. All repty 1
conftdential.
Government Jubs t18,040 .
169.230 yr. Now hiring . Coli

1-806-887-6000 Et&lt;t. R-9806

for eurren1 ted. .l Hit.

Profe11lon1l atlff posttlon. Boy
Soouta of America. S.ehelol'l
degree r...,Wed. \Nil live In
Melga. Gltlie. Meson Co"nty
••• to provtde support •rvlc:es
tocommunfty org8Millltionsand
IKlltt Scoudng vdu ,....,.. TriState Area Coun:il, I .S .A. 733
7th Ave . Hunting1on. W.V .
25701 . Phono 304-623-3408
for inrerviw/ eppotnlment.

Op enlng for School Age lnttructor. Must have current M.S .P .A.
Certificate .. d .... id Ohio Department of EduuUon C.rtlicate. Masters Degree preferred.
Salary begins at •1&amp;,400.00.
Benefhs include m•tical. dental
inauranoe; PEAS; siek 1811'11e;
pertonel day.: life lnlu,.,ce; tu
deferrent program, tuition
waiver. HourS: 8 :30 e.m.-3 :30
p.m. (school Y'J•) . Poetlng dMe:
September 28, 1a 88 through
October 6. 1988. Applv to
Meiga: County BoardofMA-00.
P.O . 9oJI 307, 1310 Carillon
Str'llll't, Sv•cu•. Ohio 45779,
Attention Btrtte Hoffrn~~n. Pro-

gram Director.
AVON · All ~rea . Call Marilyn

w....... 304-e82-2845.

P•t time MLT. 20 hn par waek,
2· 3 years: hospital htbol'lltory
e11perience preferred. Muat be
tble to work all shifts. Contact
Plauant Valllll'f Hospftel Person·
nol. 304-e75-4340. A.A.E .O .E .

tun time a part time
applications are blin~ accepted
for Pleaunt Valley Hospital
Nursing C.re CaniBf'. O,nt&amp;et
Per s onrtel 304 - 67!5- 4340 .
AAEOE.
LPN-PH.

Areas newest long term c•e
offering posftio11 for
certified diee.ry man-a• or
o perienced equtvll entaccepmbte, eompetittve benaflt plckilge
offared. Send te~umetoAdmln­
lstn~torC.ah~Wn ~Pt . Pl . At . 1,
l;lio11 321. Pt. Pl. WV. E.O.E.
f~elllty now

AVON all trees !I Shirl-v Spean,
304-676-1429 .

CR IIIII
Progreslive 1 28 -bed ICUte Cll'e
hotpltal in hlttortc Ohio River
cltyh11 immedl. . opening fora
CRNA (Certified Regiaterlld
Nur• An .. ,.tn). ..b. .ntlll
litn· On bonus •d !Wior.atlon
allo..wnot. excalllnt .,.., end
coli pay iclll tilton !Tom ho. .l

""pl-.

"''
... right
"''"~~"
benlftta
Include mediCit.clenMI

lnturance pt•n . non-

oontrllartory ponolon ....... tlo-

11

Help Wanted

Co•-o~ot~o• with

w.v•. In-

~..... In II Wlllo'l Holr
Dollgn. 1010 Vlond St .. ""'"'
PIIIIIM. W.Va.
Aolopoctoblolodv to liYo In with

lfderlr'woman, •lary, room and
ttoont. coli 304-176-37•7 or
876-1170.

tbilltv 11\d Nf• tnaUI8ne&amp; four~tk veuUon,liak time. ennual
OOntinulnglducMMJneiiOWinOI,

-AANA tMo pold ond muoh
m-. 1111• lo proboltly ftoplak~ge tn 1he . -••
mora
lntormttton. oil •
Glot!Ny M. Polon et P I - Volly
Hoopltol, Vollll' Orlw,

w,....a,

,.,lnt

Pleaunt, W .Va . 21110.
(30411711-4340. PI-IVolll¥
Hotpttllla ... lfftrnttve lctlaneq•l opportunity •mptoyer.
'V

�-----------------~-----------------------------

Page 1G-The Daily Sa 1li1el
11 Help

.. .,

Pomaloy-Mickleport. Ohio
46

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted

.. P I - t Vollov -pltol cu~
-lyoc_...oppll..,lonofatoffice m~negw, mutt

t..._bu...,_.

46 Space for

ottloe rtl. .d

h.,.

lod. WDr._ In , _

f.-,.

'"Iuriine~~.

304-182-2145. Alao: ata.

home, lif&amp; t.ellth.

Schools
lnstru ction

RE-TRAIN NoW! ·
SOUTHEASTERN SUSINESS
COUEOE, 129 Jod&amp;oon Plko.
Cal14411-4317.
Ro~ No. 811-1 1·
10181

.

,t;
,_.,.. . r~~
"Father, if I don't receive an
increase in my allowance
there's a good chance I'll
grow up to be a Democrat."
31

Homea

for

Sale

42

Do

Bockhoo Wor""IIO
doNr.......bl . . . . ..

~... Coli 1114-2111-1718.

crem....

Would Hko to do bolll&lt;-g In
my homo. Dov o&lt;~lighl. n.oo •
hour. Coli 814-3811-1815.
'-intlng • rDDfing • c.,._try
wort; tit' the hour or job. Clll

llt4-379-2418.

N.ad • Job Done? lnt./bt.
pointing. light h.,Hng. yord

c• c••· ..Odd

Jobo" . Coli 814-4411-7448.

Will do bolll&lt;oittltlg In my homo.

..,.,ege. Callanvttm•814-44&amp;1801.

I wll pravld. child c . . In my
honw. Planned actlvl•tnd hot
1'('1&amp;• Alloci . . degree in chHd

.,.•. 15 .......

It 4-4411-01111.

..,,.,ce.

Call

c••· brulh cuttina. light
h•tktg. IOI'I'Wtt.-tr+mmlngend

YW

iOmiMI. 1111 Slock It 4-9922219ovon-

mt

\WI provlct. etald c . . In

hom.. Lot1oflow~nd.n.ntlon,
ltot luneha Ref..,ce prcMcM.

114-992-7132.
Will do boiJiooittlna In my homo.
HIVt ref...,. a., lnflr'lt or pr•
ocbool child. 1114-992·5771 or
It 4-992·11105.

F1nonc1ol
21 .

61

32

Mobile Hom•
for Sale

Mobile Homos
for Rent

Busin88S
Opportunity

Exmulll.evtl Dlllributert• If
your 1'111 h.,. tht ct.n to
baconw IUCC811fUI Cllll e144411-2141.
Own your GWn .pparel or lhoe

1tore, choo.. from : J••n lportawe•. ledi-. mens. chlld-

Land cont•al. large ttving room
w / ekpendo room, 2 BR .,
w / watl c.pet. air concltion.
w / orwtl:hout'h.lrntture. N•. a•
furnace on prlwrt.lot. M-v l'lllt
lo1. Coli I 10 8 PM. 114-44.
1401.

197911h70NIIhua. Ex. cond.
CA. 2 BR. I.e· bolh. - o r
cerpet. VInyl underpinning.
Dedt &amp; bulclng. "*tat ... to
l_,preclate at Quail CrHk
!O.mbor II. Colll14-2411-9184
or 114-4411-9747.
1180 Boy&gt;!.... 141l70, 71&lt;21
apondo. 3 IR .• 2 bolho, fiNPliCa 10 ICI'•. 1h20 2

tite, d .. C8IIflle •• ••obic. brid...
Hngerie or acceasori• atore.
Add color enety••· Brtnd

i-::Bo. U5.ooo. cal1114-4411-

1970. 12ofl0 - l y Monor
hou•t.ell•for•le. 2bedloom.
• 3IOG. Coli 114-992-3849.
1871 Folrpolnl 12o60. 2 bodroom. p-h. UIOO. 114-992·
7139oltorl:30.
1184 14dl Sclvllz. 2 br. 1'-'1
b•h. Ill Mec. new 1-c untt.
....... rofrlo.
bod •
covered porch Included.
t12.IOO. S.louolnqu•leood:t.
304-1711-3117 oft• 7 p.m.

wo...

Fanns for Sale

PleMint, At. e2 South. stte for

honw, t..ntlfta and ln\lltltmenl,
~. 04-1711-51911.

18 let. . on t..o n &amp;.d.-. Road. 9
~h. 3 aut
buldtn~ cky w.r.. eta• to
btiCk top ro.d. cell eveninga

Luxurious Tare Townhou•

30 4-45. t 8 23.

SR., ful b•h uDIUirs. powd•
room downatelrt, CA., dlt·
hwulw. dlo-'· polwto on-

•ho•

Rentat ttMion wabble for sty·
U11: In Point F't...,t are1.
~quire 304-67~27518nytime.

_,,_,, E l -

-

35

Lots

Ill

Acreage

Ashton. l•ge bu Mdtng lata.
mobile horNS permitted. pubU c
water, also rW lots. ctyde
Bowon. Jr. 304-17.2331.
Bo.,tllulrlwrlotoonoocnpln
public Wit.-, Oyde Bowen. Jr.
304-1711-2331.

21acr• 8r01d Run Ro.:l. New
Hawn. OwiW financing lVIII•
blo. 304-812-3394.
I.Dts. one 1a1. IINBI, wooded,.
city Mt.r, Jtrk:ho Road. owner

*"''·

fi....n~ng. good
304372-8405 or 372-2571.

Real Eslale

Rentals

V•v attract lw brick 4 bedroom,
2 bMh, femlly room wtth ftr•
place. form1l dining. l•ge ltvlng
room. 30ft. cuttom Olk 16tc:hen
ubinetl. o.tc woodwork. flnilh
b. .m.,.., 2 Clf g•-ae. lwei
l•utecep.t lot. 4 mil• from
Holzer Hospital aft At. 3&amp;Porttrbrook Subdivision. Call
114-U.4189.
3 IR .. Insulated. good cond. 1

IG"t, n. . RioGr111de. Good buy

.. $23,000. Coiii14-24S.9571
O&lt;U&amp;-871142 1tory ltalilnllt brick houtl.
Appro~~: . 122yl"'. old • BRt .-fuM
blth up•lrl. parlor- LR· DRkttehen- 'hill bath-l..,ndrydown.-

stain. 4 room eervant quarters

on b1ck ot kitchen, • fireplec•.
Nice''" roome 'Nithapprox. e . 9
ICI'H. l.Dc.ild on Rt. 7-Eu!Wkl
behind Cl.,- Elenl. School. C1ll
for 1ppolntment, 814· 258t878
Brick and cad• rand1 houtl. 1.4
•crll in Br•dbury behind
WMPO. Large 2 c• g ...ge. 3
bedrooms, INing room, cent.al
elr-hllt, woodbu .,.., wat•IOf·
ten•. newtr remodeled ..,ge
ldtchen with Jen Air Rang~,
glfblgt dilpo•l. dlstM.her.
utltty room. larnt.cllp8d nicely.
loon by opooimmont od:t. Coli
114-912-5751 . • 81 ,1100.
For • • bv owner. 3 bedroom
houll, Pelri St. Wrlle P.O. lox
30 Mlddl~ Undlr •20.000.
Homt In country with 111'1 d.
tlood d - liumtng. 11 nlil•

41

Homos for Rent

NicelY furnished ·smell taou•.
Adultt only. Ref. required. No
poto. Coli •14-4411-0338.
3 BA houll In RutiMd. •3215.
Wet•. a.-baa• • hMt. Plus

1200•,..rltyd-•rot....,.
c•. Call 114-387-72e7 evenIng~ .

Mo•n 3 Br hou• for rent or
•Ia Lotwted In Pltriot. Stoo. &amp;
refrlgerat«fumilhed. t250mo.
1100 dOjioolt. Coli 114-44113870 or 114-4411-1340.
4 BR . ho,., 7 mH•fromtown.
Coli 814-44&amp;-8348.
Two bedrooms, living, f.mty
room, lg. khch.,, one &amp; hatf
bath. No peta. A1f. required. c.ll
814-4411-1734.
Pomeroy, 2 bedroom, ..,plilnc ... , . .g .. biHm.-rt. Ne•
IChool. Aef~Nnee~ required.
Coli 814-742-2972- 7:00
p.m. or ....,time week-endl:,

For rent : Uke new 3 bedroom

an.ch«&lt;
gorovo. t271 . . month. Do!&gt;rMeh ho,.., With

••~

IOCIUirod. 814-742-3171.

3 bedraom houee, 2 c• g . . .e.
fulbBHm.rtt

W.l . . . ollldclryw

ho«*· up, Referen01 r-.utr.L
114-992-1723.

For rent. 1 bedroom country
home. Clo• to town. E•el.-.t
for couple. DlpOIIt and ,....,
onco .oqulrod. Oov coli 514992-1841, oltor lcolll14-9922127.

from Athans. 12 mil• . from

" " -· 114-992·1841.
Main. fi'H
3 br •ncfl
f.,-nllf 100m w-b IPapaeae.
cent•l •c•
llledc. woodln
ot-o bldg. Prlcod mid UO' &amp;
Ownw mull .U. Make an off•.
304-1711-7431 eft• II p.m.

n.,.

,., . . . by - · . . . nM. 3

~. ._- ..1
- """"
2
c•
Tovlor
Nood'IO'd.
Comp
conrov. 304-8711-1313.

•

Klng-OJie wood burning ..ove,
c• 304-182-3387 oft• 1:00.

11 cMh wfth

7172. Houro 1·5.

J I S FURNITURE
1411 Elttwn
4 dr-.vtr ch!Mt. t48. 6 drawer
chest. t54. 8&amp;. I pc. wooden
dlnnette set.. t199.81.

A•.

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Complete houMhold furnishIngs. VI mile out Jerrlcho.
304-175-1410.
For low pricoo on Ouol~y Cor pot
• Furnitunt co,.. to Mollohan
Furnttu,.Upper River Rd., 8144411-7444.
VIRa•s Furniture

prlvoto ondoood potlo,

Op . . 7 diYt e week

Mondll'f·Soturdoy, 9 AM-8 PM
Sund.,, 12 noon-6 PM
Uvlng room IUit• 2 pc.-1269,
l...,pe ltlrting • • 11. 91. wood
dlnettt sets· t149 • up.
hutch•·f219 • up, blktn
racb-119.95, TVnandl. enter· .
•inment
d•b-t49. 95
• up, 11t111 front gun cabinll•
btdroom eult... 'hill

Furnilhld IPt. N..w. Ne•HMC.

1 8R . •275. Utll~loo pold. Coli
4411-441111t• 7 PM.

cen-..

Ap.-tmtntl and hou. .. C.ll
304-0711-8104.

•m.
•b:•
I'Nttre:tMI ttartlng at 149.91;

Modlrn 1 BR . opt. Coli 8144411-0390.

bunk bodl with boddlng. t229.
boby bodl.

Fur,.hed IIPt.- 18R. 12401mo.
Utllttl• ~ld. 243JacklonPike. ,
Golllpollo. Coll4411-4418oltor7
PM.

Excell ... used tppN.-.cte wtth
30 days gwlr801N. Wllherl·
*99 &amp; up, dryers , freezers.
..trig-.... - 1.8pwiYI 1re weloome. Flnenclng avellllble with approved

Furnished aplf'tmentl-1 be~
room. 1150&amp;up. Utlltl• peld
Coli 4411-4411oltor 7 PM.

end~ .

At. 141 in Centenary-14 mUe on
Uncoln Pike. 114-446-3158.

Furnlohod olllcioncl•· 0145 •
up. UtM~Ioo poldoColl4411-4411

2 .,d •bl•. 1 coflH table
living room lamp1,
round ldtch~n dinette, w / 2
owlvol cholro . Coli 814-44116594.

(l..n1), 2

Privati, quilt. 3 roomt a 1 BR.
Ul:llltiel l)ald. In aty. C1D
114-4411-,515.
Q111clous living. 1 and 2 be~
room ..,anments at Village
Manor and Atv•slde Apartmllf'lts In Middleport. From
t182. Coli 114-992· 7787.
EOH.

Good u.ed color tv'• for •le.
Colll14-4411-114t onytlmo.

2 bedroom Apta. for rent.
Corpotod. Nlco -mg. L.. ndry
fditlel av-'llble. C.ll 814992-3711 . EOH .

B•droom furntture, 3 pieces,
(cheat. nlghl •nd. dr....,).
O.rk WllnUI. New. C.ll 814992·1812.

Ap.-tment for rent. t2215 a
month. Deposit Nqutred. 814992-5724. Alter Gpm or 992·
5119.

.. Naw blue oouch end chelr
t100.00orboltolfor, 304-17&amp;2808.

New tv redecorated apartment •

52 Sporting

Walt..' a. dryer. Good shape.
Uke n.w. 1210 for .... Call
114-4411-1197. -

walllble. UtHJtt. pelcl *225.
per monttt,depo.ttNqulred. &amp;Ill

114-992-8724 after e:OO or

992·8119.
1 -oorn
In Mlckloport.
t150
monthopt.
pluodopoolt.
114912·5148 or 114-1411-2218.

350 Cooo 8 blode.
'v.-ygdodahlpe.IO•I•Oitch
Witch. 304-213-31SI.

Ntw end u.ad furniture and
applican~l . Clll 114-448-

oool. pl-ound. UtH~Ioo not
Included. Starting et •299 p.mo. Colll14-317-7860.

Goods

Remington870, 20g 8 , lhotgun.
tun ehoko. Mlntcond. I250. Coli
1
4

.. Antique oak buff•. 5 IIQ oak
•bte, 3 piece .olid maple
Mdroom 1t1fte. 304-175-..179.
.. 4x8 utlity trail• with title,
*250.000&lt;b.. toffor, 304-17112808.
.. Uted g• unit huter1 two
160.000 btu •2oo.oo tach.
OnoiO.OOO btu t130.00. One
naw v• 1.000 btu Infra red
rw~dlent ceiling h ....r • 120.00.
New electric unit 210.000 wt1
218 throo phMO e8oo.ooooch.
One 7,100 wtt 480 V lhr•
phooc tiiO.OO. One7,500wtt
208 •olt throo photo t1 10.00.
One •.ooo wrt 277 V lingle
ph- ttOO.OO. Ono 5.000 wtt
277 V olnglo p - t100.00.
One 4 KW receued cebinet
h - 208, 2_,, 277 v tlnQie
p - 1325.00. One 3.000 wtt
ceiling
heater t100.00.
304-8711-2385.

,..._.t

S0111phono 1175.00 ond Huteh
uoo.oo .. 304-895-3021. .
Wedding gown, chapel tl'llin,
~eqoin and simulated pearl trim,
olze 7. 1125.00. tlowno oll&lt;l
14,18, 150.00 eocli. olzo 18.
._,.00. PPJHS band )ocitot.
modlum. 110.00. Coll304-17112752.

55

Building Supplies

lndlvi!fuO! guHor 1 - b..

glnnere. Mrloua gu..,ltt. Bru!.

. - . Muolc. 814-4411-0117•
Joll Womoloy lnotnlctor, 8144411-8077. u.- _ .....

_,.,kill

Stogellght oyooom
of
14 oolor Mghto, 2 wltlte-.
2 oolor Wl&gt;llllo w~h
console Md ell In road c. . ..
304-1711-5370 ott• 4:30 PM.

68

Fruit

S.

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Cheftntt Auttlc
and Beveled Lep Siding
• Deck MM.-Ielt
Guar•nteed Ouall1y
CETIOE. INC .. Atheno-814194-3571
AKC Boooot Hound puppl•. I
wka. old. Wormed and ready to
go. t125. 814-992-2991.
2 AKC Bo11er puppl•. 304-17~
8043 oftor 8:00.

..AKC registered puppl• mlnature Sehn•uzer, Cocbr Spa·
niel1, Chow Chow; thote,
wormed arid heAlth guarantee.
304-875-2193.

Melroae - red • golden ~
Jonothon-Mclntooh-Ori- .,.
pies, elder. pears, honey ,
oorghum • nlioc. food ltomo.
DuiWCIIIin Fn~~ "-m-181 IE of
Alliony. Houro 9-1 . C1oood Mondoyo. 814-1911-1281. ·

L.o-

Beant lor •lt. 11.00

Hill runn• belftl. You Pick. or
oli'Oody plckod. 114-247-2013.
~.. -boo!, corn lid. 304-17114182.

I

61

Farm

IH"-mAHwNh • .,.chmonto.
Vory 10•-blo. Coli 114-44117025,
801 Ford Work MMtw nctor.
nlco .,~h 1101 - • mochlno.
198._ New Holland beler,
•3898. 9 N Fordw/-plowo
I di'!C. • t 491: Ow- will
llnonce. Cllllt4-2111-1122.
Lito Modoi
Ford loeder.
dl•ol
troctwtth 4000
Freernen'
~

.18110. 1010JOw~h.,_llt.
buth hog. •2110. Ownor will
finonce. Colll14-2811-fl522.
1-11 loot hill -on. 1-Grovlty
oorn wt~gon. 3 -wood burning
ot-. Colll14-4-1•1442.

bill•.

63

' Uveatock

4&amp;

Uvt, m•ure Ou.l. Call 114-

3811-8779.
SPI!CIAI. FEEDER CALF SALEWI!ONI!SOAY·OCTOIER I. 8
PM. AI -.ring Hof.
otoino. Cottlowl1 bo oc-d ol
diiY T~Mtdrf-Oct- 4 •d up
to 2 PM. Wodnoodor-Octob•l.
HoulmJI_ ovoilllllo. ATHENS UVEITOCK SAJ:E-1 mlo- of
Alliony on St. Rt. 10. Coli
St....,ord 114-112-2322 or
ltll-3131 wonlngo.
Stlndlirdb,_.,- 3morM,
1 '""'· 2 coho. 114-742-2481.
Hay &amp; Grain
- - - ----

64

.

HIY for •I e. t..ga round bll•.
114-141-2081.

I r ,IIISptllldilllll

-·

l1l Body Ellc1rlc
(!) NlghtiJ lullnen Report

8

18 ([J) WKRP In Cincinnati
1!J tnlkll Politico '18

'€)

8 ft over Cllb truok a.,..,,
stove, retri..,.tor ll'ld link.
aooct oond. '760.00. 114-44111977 or 114-388-8708.

p.,_r wlndawa.

cruloo. tilt. Colll14-387-0411.
1171 Ford Folrmont 8trolaht • •
ntM' *-· RuM. Ooodwarl:car.
·-·Coli 114-2411-1122.

1173 otdl CuMom c - - g o n. AC. AM-FM ro.... Coll814-992-1812.
1982 Pontloc J 2000, outo. olr.
od oondtlon. 114-992-1110
oytlme. 114· 912-1081
evenings.
71 MOn• Cerlo Y·8 eutometlc,
ood cond. t1;000. 304-1711378.
.
'Two 1941 Ford Coupe ,
•z.ooo.oo. 304-17.3134.

von'"""""""

1171 AM IIDirlt •100.00. 3041711-1043 efi•I:OO.

.

81

1100 S.l• ft-d, 1918 Int'ol. Good cond. naoo. Coli.
114-379-2331.
1913 Ford Pickup truck. R•·
torod. t1500. Coli 814-44110818.
Flborgl- t - . lito ToyoiO
~ e210. Coiii14-4411~4_:3.:.:.__ _ _ _ _ ___
1960 4 whooi drlvo truck.
F·160. Coli fl14-379-2409oftor
1 :30PM.
1981 GMC pldi· up. PS. PB, I
orl. Stonda'd liWio. Vory good
condition. 112.000 mit-. 814941-2141.
Galng-.
•-~ to DOII .... Mu II • II.
1918 Cllovy a._.no Aulo.
VB. AM•FM c _ . . PIIY off
0 100 81•H2 3884. 9-1
., •
·
~
•
·

flod

1877 Pont F100. I ':1 ..
bo31·'~
•efo"'o!'L 14- 12·
' • . m.
'81 ond "S4 Ford F1 fiOplcil upo.
304-8111-3111.
:.:..:..:::~..:.:::;__ _ __
flfck up bedt, Chwrollt. long Of
ohort no....._ 304-1711-1288.

-lol•

.. 77 atevrolot
plcll up.
70.000
mP•.
t1,300.00.
304-17~·
2 2 23.

==:;:;:=:;:;::;:;:~::;:=
73 Vans Ill 4 W.O.

_,,000 orglnlal nliloo t:IIOO.
Elitro cl-. Colll14-4411-5918
oltorl PM.
8111&gt; Von-11820\ov.. 454.11•
elum., new pelnt-aener•tor.
bu- - m . llr. t14,000.
Colll14-4-lll-1021.
.1117 Ford Aor- ~LT Von.
Excel. cond. Cuttom fUMing
bo-. loodod. Coli 114-44118771.
1988 8·11 GMC 4 wliool dr.
Jimmy with V-8. 2 .8 l~r.
loodod. 11,000mll•. Muot•ll.
··14.100. Col181~2411-l1 zz.
'71 GMC Van, '10 ford P•lr·
mont NUon wagon. phone
304-1711-11412- 4 :00PM.

74

Motorcvcl•

71 luruld OS IIIOE, 7800
mil-. New clutch aMie. aood
• bl!ttOrv. .860. Coli
30&lt;1-1711-1433.

1188 block Hondo 1100 co.
V-81. Mogno. 110-n.
Vory - Iiiii• Coli 81~441141M
.

I PM.

lil Ente!UIInmtnt Tonight
8(1) USA Today

llll • 0 Jeopardy! I:;!

e ([J) M*A*I'H

, ..s"f:AN

IIJ Cloatinl
QJII-1

Grand Prt• of Portugal from
Estorll, Portugal (T)
lil G (J) Growing Paine
When a hlp Maggie fills In as
OJ a1 the dance, Jeson gets
jealous. (R) IJ
11) Conodo: frue North
Several writers share their
observations ot various
Canadian loc:oles. (NR) IJ
(I) VIctory 11 S.. The F'ate
of Europa
1111 •a u 11our1
18 ([J) MOVIE: Homel'l Nest

tea. LDCIII ret.-.nc=- tur,.hed.

FNe ettlm-.. c.tl Oolleat

1-114-237-0481. dov or night.
Rogers8aatment
W""'prooflng.

SWEEPER .,d ..WinJ.~Mihine
r.,.ir, parts. _,d IUpPii. . ptdl;
up and delivery. Devil Vac:u..n
Cletnef, one helf mile up
Goora• Crook Rd. Coli 1144411-0294.

INR)(t :50)

IIJI PrfmlliiWI
i1J Tale• of Che Ookl
Monkey

Ill Nallhvllle Now
8:30 lil 8 (J) Hnd of the Cla11
Charlie's bitterness about
dlvonl41 caune l~ctlon In his
class. (R) 1:;1
(!) VIctory at Sea Target
Surlbachl
1:00 lil
(J) The Comedy Club
Bpectet Host Dudley Moore
Introduces a riotous lineup of
new talent and famed alumni
from eight ot North
Amerlel's most fertile laugh

EEK&amp;}fEEK

e

Interior IIi E -lor.
oot-oo. Coli 114-4411-

Poln~nQ:

-

.:.•.:.344_.- - - - - - SMt Money. Keep warm In
wlnwr. Cool In samm•. lnaulate. FrH lltlmatH. John
Gor-. Colll14-4411-0731 .

cenlers.

11) (!) Mylilryl The

RON'S Television Strvlce.
Hou• ells on RCA, O.•r.
GE. 8pociollnQ In Zonlth. CoM
304-1711-2398 or 814-44112414.

i

Ill @ MOVIE: 'Agnn ol
Oocl' CBS Tllul'lday Movie
(PG13) (1:38) Q

Trl~ng. ftwnp
ro.,.,.l, Coll304-178-1331 .

1!J Lllrry King Llvtl
iiJ Tlluredly Night Flghla

Rotary or cable tool drlllng.
Most Mlltcompl. .d ••m• "-'·
Pump Alee .and ..W:.. 304-

6UT DON1T TEL.L.
CHIPe I e.AID

8111-3802

1:30 (!) IHAA Drag Racing U.S.

Open Nationals from
Rockingham. NC (T)
111 Johnny Cltll Rldln' tlla

THAT. ·

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
coli Mrlllclng GE. Hot
Point, wuhers, dry11r1 •n d
.. _ . 304-1711-2388

Alia

10:00 Ill 700 Club

G ()) Olympics continue
(l)NIIWt
(!) Oloblt Alvoll Arms

All . . TrHTrimming andStLmp
Removal. Free Httnwt.. Cell
304-8711-7121 .

accords and political
agr~ements musl go hand In

A • 8 Remodeling, matenence
and accet~orl•• .,. do fine work
far fine people, u• •Hv far filii.
304-1711-2.71.

h&amp;nd. INR) 1:;1

18 ([J) Iemay Miller
I!J Evening N.,..
10:20 (I) MOVIE: Ont MoN Troln

•-:;;~~;;:::::;:;:===
Plumbing
82
Heating

a.

l'M •otN' FISHIN'
SOON AS TH' BELL
RINGS, MISS
PRUNELLY !!

CARTER'S I'I.UMBING
liND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
O.lllpoHs, Ohio

fF YOU BEHAVE
YORESELF TH'
REST OF TH'
DAY

!!

to Rob (PG) (1 :48)
10:30 (!) Truck and Tractor. Puling

IF 1 DON'T HAVE
TO ICttP YDU IN
AFTER SCHOOL
FER ACTIN' UP !!

Championships from Denver.
co (T)
.
(l)laatlndar~

18 ([J) Synchronal Research
(IJ)NIIW&amp;

Ill VklloCountry
11:00 Ill RemingtOn Staeee
lil ·8 (J) 91 e Gl Ntlwa
l1l (!) BIH Moyera' World of

Phono 114-4411-3881 or 1144411-4477

84

Ill

Electrical

ldne Moyers talks wllh a
wide variety Of people aboul
America's ·cholce:c=
([J) Love Conn
1!J Moneytlne
(IJ) Twllght Zone Back There

Refrigeration

e

Raldemlal or comrntrcill wirIng. New ..Vice or Nlpltrs.
Ucented electrid11'4. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electric ... 304875.1781.

85

0

THE GRIZZWELLS®

11:30 Cll 8portaCenter (L)

!IlCh..,.

l1l Ont .on One

..

~~~W ~:;~
llll

Any~

J &amp; J War S•vlce. Swimming
pools. clttlt'nl. wells. Ph. 8142411-9285.

An unusual ·
.holdup

'.
'·

One commonly used bridge tech·
nique is the holdup. Most holdups tend
to be obvious and are u•ually handled
correctly. Some holdups are a little
more subtle.
When one heart was passed to South,
be reopened with one n()-trump and
North railed to game.
West's heart lead was covered by
dummy's queen and East's king, and
declarer grabbed the trick with his
ace.

M~g~zlne

a()) Ill NIWI

•8 :l'B'.rroclly

J.IOW CAH 1 ASK J.IIM IF f.IE
MISSES ME IF 11M A5KtH6
J.IIM IF J.IE Mt SSES 't'OU "!

•e

t9753

.AK7

42

SOUTH
.10&amp;4

.A7 6

.:

tKQJ
.QJ95

I.

·.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

Welt

Norlll

Eut

Sootll

Pass

Pw

!NT

....,, .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,,

• . .. 1.

ACROSS
2 "Victory"
• I
1 Sh;ule
heroine
of gray
3 Sporting
'• ..
6 Lacuna
site
9 nlttern
4 Apex
10 llenuine
5 Beseech
...
12 Unskilled
6 Ml\.iestic
13 Diamond
7 Chalice
..
misplay
veil
1G Sylvan
8 Sun shield
. ·. .Yesterday's Anawer
deity
ll Having
16 Brown kiwi
ear parts
18 Arab cloak 14 Actor
19 Warn
Novarro
against
17 Hockey 26 Native 32 Precept
21 Actor
immortal 27 Without 36Smooth
,
Waterston 20 Fearing
a day
consonant
22 Attention
that
(Latin) 37 Nasty
23 Hernando 23 Likewise 29 Russian
glance
de 24 Family
river
39 Harem room
24 French
2G Stern
31 Earth
41 Anglo-Saxon
blade
worker
seaport
-·
coin
' .'•
27 Oregon
city
.....-~
28 Litter's
..
tiniest
29 Obscure
'
· 30 'Unusual
31 French
.. '
painter
33 Poem
"
34 AngloSaxon
king
3G Draper's
' '
measure
38 Evil spirit
40 Gift getter
42 Tease
43 Actress
Papas
44 Auto
411 Gourmand

...

·'·

.

..

DOWN

1 Carrack,
e.g.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUQTE
9-29

Mlgnum, P.l.

... G W F

12:1SIJ) lflai'IICe-lxtnl (L)

NP BT F

ou,...,....,.
• Nllhilllil Haw

12:30~~:;; Olyn pic
aJJeffeiWill

..

.K

t AID 2

CROSSWORD

• ® TWIIghl z-

(J) Auto
Rodngllerlea
Like, WI (T)

MoWNy'1 UphDII•I~Ing

EAST
.98782

p ...
3NT
Paaa
Declarer went after clubs, West Pass
Pass
wiDnlng the first round. West continued the nine of hearts to dummy's
Opening lead: • 4
jack. Declarer ssw what was happen·
ln1 now, but It was too late. West won · but It dldn't help the fact !bat ·be
the second club and returned the elpt · should have made three n()-trump. :
of hearts. Because of the curious dis-'
On the bidding. West was known to•
position of the heart spots, West now have five hearts plus all the remainiag,
had two good hearts. Sooner or Iacer high cards. Winning the heart at triCk'
South had to lead a diamond. When he one would predictably result in down
dld, West won. and cashed two more one. U South had recoplized the potea..',
hearts for down one.
tial of holding up in hearts, be -til'
'Unlucky,• said South. "U dummy have succeeded. Eut would have wotl:
bad bad my 8IJ: of hearts, I'd have trick one, but declarer's three heart
made four ao-trump. Or If West had stoppers would be safe for the ~
led the nina of hearts.•
. ment since East could not attackDeclarer wu rigllt on both counts, them.

~ i&lt;lighiiCne 1:;1

·
Upholstery

WEST
.J3
.98S43

lsLONGFELLOW

12:001]) Piper ChaN

.,
·.

tau

.1083

unexpected lily 11 sOCIIIng a

iiJ Alptlde
Ill Alneltoon

I·U· H

.QJ102

AXYDLBAAXR

Mend run.

PEANUTS

NORTH

.AKQ

IIJ llpor1a Tonight
e Gl 'Night Hut' CIS Lllte

QJ Trapper John, M.O.
Mlallionery's Down Fall

Wotor dotlvory . 1000 golono
Re•oneble prtc.. Immediate
dtiiYerV. Coli 614-912-8271.

trl countylru 21,..._ ebalt
1f711
liZ 710. Good In fllmltu,. u - l n g. C.ll
304 · 171-4114 lor lroo
oolttlftlon. IIIOO~rm . 814-992. . . lmotoo.
1771., 114-H2-1601.

BRIDGE

Night Father O'Malley Is an

R &amp; R WMer S~n~lce. Pools,
cistern•. wells. lmmedlate1. 000 or 2.000gollonodollvory.
Coli 304-11711-1370. .

87

UJA Today

e® Nl~ o.me

time. Coli 114-448-7404-No
Iunday c .. ,•.

Wlltlrton' t Wttlr Hauling,
reuonable rata. Immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, clswrns.
podt, well, etc. celll 304-1712919.

HitchCock Pre-

Ill You Clln 14 1 Star

General Hauling

Cisterns. Walls. Delivery

MaKie

family atays tlgh111pped , but
Adam's suspec111st grows.

F8tty Tr•

'-trk*'s W•er H., Ina. 2, 000
lUI doiNory . 304-5711-'2311 or
114-4411-4061.

.__I

·

Hk

(!)

THE AAII'I EVeNT W6't..L HAVE MO~TON
• l&gt;OWNEY vR. INTf~VtEWING

Dillard Water Servtce : Pools.

1887 Chooy Co¥1111.-, 11,000
mll•·l4110. 11H Ponlioo
oo.-lblo. . , . olwp. tf760.
Muotbo- toop,.-ol-. Clll

1178 01111.. .... ln. ......
t-.
400 - .. ......
UOO. Colllt ..S78-2124oftor

Gamel

BASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFlNG
Unconditkmal Uflllmt pran-

crultt. R••onlble. C.ll 814-4411-7021.
1171i Joop J 10 plcilup 4•4.

JEfO~E

UNSCRAMBLE LEITER S TO
GET ANSWER

By James Jacolly

7:30iD())a:· mmer Oiy.mple

Improvements

72

- - -- - -

FRANK AND ERNEST

5

PRINT NUMBE RED LE TT ERS IN
THES E SQUARES

7:05 (I). to 5

(!) Auto RIICing Formula One

RON EVANS ENTERPIIISES·
Septic t1n k pumping. flO por
lood. Coli 1·800.137-8528,

for Sale

i1J A I - Crossover
Ill CIOOk end ChaM

Home

Concoeto Sopdc T.,kl • 1000
gol., 1500gol.ondJotAorotlon
•-m. Foctooy trolnod ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PIIISES. Joclilon. Ohio. 1·800.
537-9128.

Trucks

!Rihnoon

Ill VldeoCountry

1187 EXP Ford Eocon. AC.
AM-FM cM-. 21,000 pluo
ml•. $8,100.00 or •k• over
poymonto. 114-4411-0038 or
4411-4711.

1178 atowyMo-- Qaodoond.
UIO. Coii11 .. 2411-IHZ.

,,

on

1183
Robblt
MOOOmll•.••klnge3,200.00
groot ollopo. phono 304-17114010.

I!JM-yilnl

7:31 (I) . . . . .
8:00 Ill MOVIE: 11le Llldy Wlntt
Mlntc (NR) (1 :32)

r.

GOV!IINMENT IEIZEO Vohld• from •100. Fo&lt;lfl. -car-. CIIWy~. lurpluo . l~yofl Gui.ro. 11)
1011-887-111100 lat. 1·1011t.

"No, son. Ted Turner Isn't reaponslble for
colorizing the view ... "

air.

Auto'• For Sale

11~DII-1122.

Fortune !:;I

ANJ)

.l.---1.

, __

Ill MICNe!l/ LllhNr

. . ([J) Th-·· Compeny
18 ft. com.,.. Sleopo I . CornDe•
11u-. SDociiil. ••oo oao.
extra nf~. Alto 2- hoi'BI, hone
-··
•1oo oao. Coli 11144411-3118.

.L._J.__J..-

Author - Broad- Happy- Formal - MOTHER
First gent "My ~ousemother In collage had your last name,
but we just called here Mom." Second gent " She must be
a relative of mine, tliat's_._what I called my MOTHER.'

a (J) CufNIII Allelr

lllwaHour (1 :00)
1111 a a !IS Wheel ot

pi MOly. iiOH contlilriod.

pie. Think you can handle tham?"
" Sure, " said the guard, "any trouble from them and - lhey -1"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Cll~(L)

lil

11)

1171 Uncoln Town Car. Power

1187 Ho"* XR 210·11. tlood
oond. Coli 44a.1 018.

71

Fumilhed Rooms

~.

hev for

•Ia. 11 .10 blla
1181 Ford EIDOrt Station
W11110n t711. Soon S t - •81.
114-141-2179.

rant. w.dae
· 304-171-

flaomt lor . n· MIII c. montll.
-..:lng • 1120 a mo. Ollila
Hotol-114-44&amp;-9860.

UghW- of 8porto (R)
(J) AIC Ntlwe 1:;1

U ()) PM liliepzlne

Motora Homes
8t Campers

· 1988SunStroomMotorHomo.
27 ft., AC. Gon . .tor. 2100
mn •. l'hono 114-992-7329 .

Complete the chuckle q Vo ted
by Idli ng in the missing word s
you develop from srep No. 3 below.

6:35 (I) Andy Ollfftth
7:00 Ill A1mlnaton Steele

1913 Oldlmobllo 98. Motor., d
-•mllolon. 304-775-5151.

1177 Dodgo Polio. Von, AC.

Ml•ed

30~178-1972.

-

Equipmant

SNAFU. by' Bru&lt;e Beattie

2 bedroom ap.nn.nta. fully
carpeted, eppN.,c.. '"*and
trooh plcllupo prool- Molntonance fret living alo. to lhop.
ping. ll.,b tnd aahooll. For
moromlormotlon •• 304-812- ·
3711. E.O.H.

AportmMt

II II Slll!lllli~S

C. L&lt;HSIII,,k

..t•.,-·

ApertrMntt for

bushel.

pick own.
ot C.W.
Protfttt Farm. niKt to ttlrrll
ar-hou •. Portltndl14-8431112.
.

- -

Beech Stre«. MldcltpOf'l. Ohio,

Now acc.ptlng •pllcMiont lor

Vegetables

Troctor for •Ia Cub CodM. 11
HP. 10 Inch mower deck.
114-992-5411.

ardeltvery. M•m•nd. Gallipolis' Block Co .• 123"At Pine Sl ..
Gollloollo. Ohio. Coli 814-44112783.

-dtroon. coli ott• 1:00 PM

ollllt. 87. 304-1111-JSIII.

Bundy Cloir..,. Etcot. cond.
1200. Colllt4-379-2191.

GarantHCI

79

1L-.L._

"'

T0 p FRI
I
~-,.,:.....;;.l~":..,l:.....;:;l....:.,l's-1 O

1R1 Jefletaone
iiJ Cllloon Elp&lt;eQ
Ill You Clln a. •lltar

Automatic Rabullt
TransrMtknw
614-44Ml961

11854dr. Coltl&gt;ilty. wrygood
cond. For il'lfonNillon c• 1144411-1312 or 441·1387.
INti.

Concrete blocks· 111 eizet· yard

2411-1121.

·One bed room ap_.ment In
HDu•. wllh t.l:h. chy w.ter,
Mlhoof Md miM route, one mile

Musical

Instruments

1070Coootroclor,Supor8h•P.
.S960. 1000 fo&lt;d ..... with
1'8111.. mowing machine•3815, OWnorwllllrtonoo Coli
114-2811-1522.

APAAlMENT8. mobllo h -.
hou- Pt. Pl-.,dGolllpollo. 114-441-8221.
2 bedroom fu"*hed epMment,
uUIUea paid.
Phoi18
304-182· 2111.

57

Building Mlteriala
Block, bride. IIWet' pip•, windows. llntel1. etc . Claude Win•••· R,o Grandi. 0 . Call 814-

~.:'::""'::~11-:_,::4I:.:::::::::J.:=========-1

Furnlohod. 1 -oom .,..,.
mont. dopoolt l'lqulrod. No pot'
utiMI• pold. 114-H2· 29:J7.

2072.
--lolot
fiOiatorry
.... ··
Y1oton.
Ohio. .8.000.00.
304-182-2360.

•m•
approved credit.
Dar•

Vlllev Furniture

2 Woon. 2

t,.,.

moototo. 304-875-2722.

0322.

aft•7 PM.

Homos for Sale

Buebolrd elec. hHtef'l •

•""-· metll c•blnMs. htad-

3 MH• out
lui••
Rd. Open hm to lpm
Mon. thrv Sot. Pli. 114-44&amp;-

8EAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 Jockoon
Pike from t183 1 mo. Wllk to
thop and movt•. 114-4462518. E.O.H.

room hou• and

ARMY SURPWS jAdvortlolng
Speclah'-. B~ln•a. Political,
Atllte~l . Fri. S.a:. Sun. Noon to
1 :00 PM. S.m SQmervlll•••
since 198-4. Regular army
• -· denim. ,.,... dothlng.
Jr. camoutllfile blk and white.
Ford 1971 •le or trldt. June·
tlon IndePendence Road, At. 21 .
304-275-5585.

boardl t30 and up to ees.

New completely furnl1hed
liP ln••t il mobile homt" in
city. Adult• Only. Pwldng. can
1114-4411-0331.

Furnished- 3 rooms &amp; bM:h.
a .... No pet:1, Ref. &amp; dapoth
requktd.' Utlltlel: furntstMd.
Aduijo only. Coli 114-441·
1519.

14x54 Mobile ·h ome
•sooo. 198• Ford E•cort
t2300. 1987 c.m.. uooo.
114-992·3890 or 114-992·
1017.

1711. Oook t100 up to •371.
Hutch• t400 ~nd up. Bunk
beds complete w·rNttret•
U95ond up to •315. Bobybodl
1110. Malti
DrblnLIPfiiHII
ful or twin eea. firm t71. and
•88. Ou- ooto t250 • up,
King 13&amp;0. 4 d...,., chllt 1e1.
Gun cabiMtt I gun. Bah¥
math
n •35 • 141. Bed
frem• 120. 130 • King fnmt
•eo. Qood oaloc:tlon of boctoom

90

AKC Cocll• Sponlol pupo. t1 flO 1113 Clllilf\'.. lm!IOIO. 100% of
oocli. UKC Reg. Amorl- E• orglnlll. IAOO. 1887 C.m•o
kl.., SDitl IIUJIL e100 oocli. convtrtlble, aac•l . cond ..
Colll14-38a.l890.
17,000 ml•.. tt800. Coli
304-1711-1310 oltor 8 PM.

Brick pod oioolndudod. •30o.
114-742-2717.
1984.

Auto's For Sele

1971 Chwrolot loiJino. Eaool.
Groom and Suppa, Shop-Pet m-lcol cond. t1200. Coli
Grooming. All ' brMdt .. . AII 114-4411-0819.
otyl•. - • P., food Ooolor.
Julie - b Pli. 114-4411-0231. 1974 Dotoun 1·210. t_,O.
1974 L'It) Wogori, t300. Coli
4 Full llaod Bolllio pupo. 14 1114-388-11142.
"""· old. uo ooch. Coli- 4
PM. 614-4411-7192.
1171 Ford Thu-d. Ela:ol.
cond. I.Dtl of nt••· Low
mHoogo. e1SOO. Coli 1114-2111Orogonwyrid Conwt lllnnol. 1704CFA
ondpuOPI•.
· -NM
lilt·
tono. -AKC Chow
1111 Dido. C,..ll 8-vfoom,
4 .... body • l. .rlor In good
Hlmoloyon
··
·Coil
1144411-3844 oft• 7 PM.
cond. Collll14-4411-1810.

se ... belt Wood and eoalstove.

•bl• w-1 c"*• t285 to

Wood

2 BR . IPit. I cla.ta. kttch . .
oppl. fllrnlohod. W•hlr·Oryer
ho-..up, VtW c . _ ntw"ly
palntod, docli. From n n Now
•cceptlng HUD. Reg.,.av, Inc.
Aoto. can 304-8711-1104. or
17&amp;-5386or 1711-7738.

20.8 ac:r•. 7 mlltt from Point

..,1-oro.

Sof11 and chlirt priced from
1395 to ttH. Ttbl• tso and
.,. "' •121. Hldo-o·bodl •uo
to ttsll5. Recltn.. 1221 to
•3711. Lompo •28 to t128.
Din.- 1109and up to ••15.

44-

Up. . lrs "nfurnlahld apt. Car·
p•d. utfUt• paid. Na chiiG-en.
No-· Colll14-4411-1137.

3 wood and 00,1 stoves for •I e.
Sldo by lido ..,_tor, Myero
doop woll pump. boom
11o311t. long. 114-941· 21.91.

LAYNE'S fURNITURE

coo 10qulrod, coli-1:00PM,
304-1711-1082.

MlnlfMm tor ••• Rutt.nd•u.
Coli 114-992-2143 or 814992·1373. Aok far Mlchllll.

Wi-.

71

IL.==·I==·I==·l=:·:::_....,
J

r

1111 a@CBIIII..

Sale

i

The warden warned the new
prison guard, "These are tough poo-

l

ll a

Pats for

1
•

MU R 0 T

1:05 (I) 1.11..,. end Shirley
1:30 a()) IIJ) NIC Nightly Newt

Uppor RhiOI' Rd. bolldo 11c - M-1. 114-4411-7398

2 Hm-oom, fumhlhed, In Syraeu•. 1221 per month, wast.
ond hooli-up, air, wot•
palci 814-992-7180 or 114192-1238.

I I I, I

1!J ShowBiz Todily
IDI Gaod Tlmeo
iiJ Fit Albeit
Ill Fondllnga

range•. Skagp Appli Moet.

2 or 3 lA., fu~t.d ar
unfllmlohod. •110 o mo. wpoid. Colll14-4.11-3890.

HU RG0

4
18 ([J) Heppy Dlyo

01uo
Oolllpollo.
NEW- St
II..pc.
wood 11'1JUP' .399. ·- d - wood oltbo. U Z por
Living room oulf•· ttas-nn bundle. Contlilnlna oppro•. 1'-'1
eunk bodl wit~ b - g . U49. ton. Ohio Polloi CO .. Pomeroy,
Full tin mMI,... &amp; found•lon Ohio. 114-992-8461 .
atartlng- ••• · Recllnen
El-c fumoc.. 11.380 .BTU.
otortlng. t99. .
USEO. Bedl, dr•lll'1. bedroom t200 W•m -nlng - ·
autiH. Delkl. wrlnttrWMhtt. • _,,000 BTU *400. Bothuotd on
CA11114-H2·2148.
co ........ llno of uotd fllrnlllft.
NEW·
booto- .31. Hotpcrint undercablntt dlt·
- o t • etsa. up. ~- •
-olw. u - Almond
10ft"'"'· Colll14-4411-311t. oolor.
UOO. 114-H2-IIII.
County ~- Inc. Good
Ulld •DN~nc=- tnd TV MtL Upright • - · lko now. 21.2
Opon IIAM to IPM. Mon thnl culilc ft .• poidi furniture. olr
other mise IMms.
s• . 114-4411-1811. 127 3rd. conditioner,
lt4-H2-1743.
Aw. Galllpollo, OH.
dlyoro,

• (I) 111 al!2l

(!) Dr. Wlto The Interne, Part

AUCTION .SWFIIUINRNITURE 12

w.-.

I I I' I

m voreae of Che Mimi

Household Goods

.-

DULA V E

(l)llpor1aLook

lil

GAM I

lo:-"' ro form four simple words

1:00 I]) e-nu: 11le Loot
l!pllodel

• w aJ

GOOD USED .\P PLUINCES

II ft. Alum Hou• Trollw lor I:::,;::,;,;~,;:;;=====
Apartment
Colll14-949-2118.
for Rent

Mlo.2--u~.080 .

I\IM• : U1 Ctliiborne. Hellthtex.

Ch*'t. Lee. StMich .... FoNnJ:a.
Bugle Boy. Uvt Comp a-1y
Hllft. Org~nlcally Grawrr. Lud ..
_ . 2000 othen. Or t13.91
one price d•lun•. mufti ti•
prldng discount or tamly lhoe
ltDM. R••ll .,tcee unbiU4Miblt
for top qualhy
normally
priCICI from 119 to 110. Over
260 brandt 2e00 1tyl11.
117,100to 129,900.Inwentory,
tl'lining. fiJIItulft, airfare. gr1nd
opening. etc. Cln open 115 d.,-s.
Mr Morplijs _,7·38.$108.

Br. Cl..n.
11211 mo. Ret. • d • . AdultL
F\irnlohod. Coli 114-4411-7714
"'845-2144.

Ne• W••loo-2

c• 2 bedroom mobAe hom~ ""'
mh out Jericho Road. ,....,_

mfttf'nity, llrge 1izH, pe-

••tor:
._ga

Bollt8 and
Motora for Sale

!IS News

-n

2 8R.. fllrnlohod. e1 flO o mo.
ptus
dep. • ret. Aduttsontv.
Sond roplloo to Bo• Clo 118.
c/ aClolllpollo O.llyTrlliuno, 821
Tlllnl Aw.. Golllpctlo. Ohio
41131.

•c.

141l70 mobh homo. 2 bod
room, 304-1711-7988.

I NOTICE'!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommen• 1t1llt vou
do liuain. . wtth people you
know, and NOT to 11nd mont¥
ttvough tf• rrw~ll untl you h.,.
-ig!Ood tho oll•lng.

31

75

11 WOlD

word~

THURS.. SEPT. 29 •

Merchandise

trs

~~~~:~:~y S© tt~n~\- ~ £
ldita,. lly CLAY I . ,OUAN
0 four
Reorrange len ers of tfle
scrambled
be·

EVENING

66

•l-Ie. Soc. dOji. IOqulrod. Coli
114-446-8118.
.

33

Nn,

,.,.O!V

•

Mt~r ciJ.ill!ll se

~~~~~~=~~~r;;:;:~:::;~=;.===:::-1
r

0... •

i'nlinteMnc:e;

~ . BUT"M&gt;\E
~eJ: IAUCOV_. /

304-1711-3811.

...._... lllualltloo pold-t

.,.n.nc. opeNtor.

·----

T........C. 3 mil• 8out1 Of
Pt. P I - t ot Y off Rt. 2 1 12.

- l y do-tod, 2 BR .• fully

•

~1H~~~&amp;!QI

GaJCydoP.,.ondllenlloolor
Ill Jopon- Iiiii• ond ATV.
- o d toohnldon. Gory
Klnntinl, 304-1711-11111.

Rent

~~

Spldour mobtlt homt lots tor
rent. Ftmily Pridt Mobile Home
P•k. CWIIooilo Forry, W. Vo.
304-1711-3073.

CMI us for your mobile holM

Wanted to

IAieAA,

~

The Daily Sentinel- Page 1-1·

Television
Viewing

Middleport bu•-· dlotilct .
Coli 114-H2-1141 or 114t-.2211.

lnsurMCB

18

.

!!!

Offic. or .,... bu•MI IJIHtl

zsno.

15

11711 _....,... Ho"*
ond 2 h - noo.
114-742-2282.

for-· Lo-N. 2nd. Aw.ln

ulll"f •d bentftls. E.O.E. MaU
reeume to Admiillali&amp;IW C.a
H.,.n of ,._lnt Pl--.t. Rt. 1
lo• 321, Point Pl.-..t. W. Ya.

lnturance: Miller

·74 Motorc:yclel

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Pork,
Rou• 33. NDrth af filam.-ay.
1..11 ... Coli 814-192·
7471.

long ........
E!&lt;....
rionoopoof-.CO-

13

.

JUT ' N' CARLYI.Ee ., Larry Wrtpt

Buy or Boil, Rlvorino Ani~
1124E. Molna-, P o -.
Houro : M,T,W 10o.m. to lp.m ..
lundoy 1 to lp.m. 114-112·
2521.

54 Misc.

•c-rilftCII •d . . d.... "'
b u -. If --.~ .......
pertannel offfce. 304-171. 4340. EOE·AA.
.. Ucenlld

63

Fumilhed Rooms

F u r - ._,_119 looond
A.... CWIIpolo. t135 o mo.
UtltU• _.d.llnal•mllle. Sh . .
bMh. Coi14411-4...11-7PM.

-·-~-moody
momlnga.
M.on ar• nl
1:00. 304-775-1817.

Thlnday. September 29. 1988

.

-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

AmeriCan
Ekhart

e (I) I~ Tonight
• ® Twltlgl1t z-

R X W

P P

RXW

XU Y B
XU

I U

UBMBV

A I M B

-.

SNPI .UH

G B

DWSfB ..

-.

FAB
NICB.-VIYABP
OSBPII
Yeaterde.y'1 Cryptoquote: A STRAW VOTE ONLY
'3110WS WHICH WAY THE HOT AIR BLOWS. IENRY
\

'

0.

�Pega 12-The Deily Sentinel

lmnday, September 29, 1988

--Local news

than ...
briefs~ More
. Continued from page 1

EMS has four rolls Wednesday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday: Tuppers Plaln8 at 2:56a.m. to Reedsville for Fred
Blse to Camden·Oark Memorial Hospital; Racine at 12:06 p.m.
to Long Run Road for Max Folmer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 12: 15 p.m. to Seventh St. for .Francis
Adkins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:31p.m. to
Kingsbury Road for Terri Furnla to Veterans Memorial '
Hospital.

~--Area
William Corbin
William H. (Bill) Corbin, Jr.,
69, 812 Elm St., &amp;llpre, died
Wednesday at Camden·Clark
Hospital In Parkersburg, W. Va. ,
following a short Illness.
Mr. Corbin was born at Mineral Wells, W. Va. , a son of the
late William and Amanda Drain
Corbin. He hadlivedlnBelprefor
the past 29 years and was a
frequent visitor to the Racine
area of Meigs County. He was a
member of the Marietta Bible
Center and served In the U. S.
Navy during World. War 11. He
had been employed by American
VIscose In Parkersburg for 18
years, the Kemper Insurance
Co., the Electrolux Corp., and
retired from Union Carbide Plas·
tics at Marietta after 26 years. He
was a former member of the
Belpre Civltan Club and the
Parkersburg 'Lions Club. ·
Surviving are his wife of 47
years, Mary Alene Buckley Cor·
bin; a son, Dr. Larry G. Corbin,
Oreenville, S.C.; a daughter,
Shirley Mulligan, Parkersburg,
four grandchlklren, three great·
grandchildren; two sisters,
Mildred Duckworth, Parkers·
burg, and Mary Jackson, Min·
era! Wells.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by two sons,
Gerry Lee and Terry Dean, two
sisters and a brother.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Saturday at the Spencer Funeral
Home, 220 Main St., Belpre with
the Rev. Myron Guiler and Dr.
Larry Corbin officiating. Burial
will be In Evergreen Cemetery,

deaths-Parkersburg. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7: 30 to 9
this evening; 2 to 9 p.m. Friday
and untu time ·of services on
Saturday .

Mary Damell
Mary Elizabeth Darnell, 74, of
Route 1, Cheshire, died Wednes·
day at her home after an
extended Illness.
·
Born Nov. 13, 1913 In Cheshire,
she was a daughter of the late
Charles A. and Freda I. Jacobs
Thomas. She was a retired
cafeteria worker for the Kyger
Creek School District and a
member of the Old Kyger Freewill Bap tis I Church and the
Cheshire Wayside Garden Club.
Survivors Include a son and
daughter·ln·law, Thomas L. and
Peggy G. Darnell, or Trinity,
N.C.; a grandson, Eric T. Dar·
nell, Trinity, N.C.; a sister. Vera
TI\Omas, Cheshire; and a niece,
VIckie Hill, Marengo, Ohio,
In addition to her parents, she
was preceded In death by her
husband, Marlon P . who died in
1980.
Services will be . Saturday, 2
p.m ., at the Old Kyger Freewill
Baptlst Church wlth Rev. Miles
Trout offlcatlng. Burial will be In
Cheshire Gravel Hill Cemetery .
Friends may call at Rawling· .
Coats·mower Funeral Home on
Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9, and
on Saturday at the church, for
one hour prior to funeral. Memor·
Ia! contrlbu lions In Mrs. Dar·
nell's name may be made to the
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
Church.

Farson read a proclama· .
Uon signed by Gov. Richard
Celeste extending congratula·
lions. to the local group on the
anniversary.
The Rev .. Sonny Zuniga, Jr.,
pastor of Heath United Methodist
Church In Middleport, accom·
panled by Donna Jenkins, pres·
ented several vocal selections
lnej,udlng "Bea~tlfu! Ohio" ; a
Ptilllppine love song; "The Lord
Is )l&lt;ly · Light and Salvation"
closing With " Let There Be
Peace on Earth".
Susan Oliver, Jeanne Braun,
Allee Wolfe and Doyle Hudson,
the RSvP staff, presented gifts
to !0 and 15 ye11-r honorees. Ten
ye~r honorees In the program are
Florence Adams, Esther Bukey,
Anna Rose Filch, Delmas
Kearns, Lee McComas, Ulllan
Napper znd Charles Rogers.
Flftee)l year service honorees
are Trody Andrews, Loretta
Beegle, C. E. Blakeslee, Nellie
Borgan, Marjorie Brewer,
Teresa Byer, Ora· Carsey, Edna
Clark, Thelma Dill, Garnet Er·
vine, Bessie Graham, Lula
Hampton, Mildred Harris, Nettle
Hayes, Dayton McElroy, Kermit
McElroy, Gertrude Mitchell,
Jestle Moklen, Nan Moore, Mar·
garet Parsons, Evelyn Summer·
field, Carol Taylor, Daren Tay·
lor, Henry Turner, Ada Warner
and Mae Weber.
Numerous door prizes were
awarded to round out the obser·
vance. Opening prayer was by
the Rev. William Mlddloswarth.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharge&amp; Sept. 28: Brandon
Allensworth, Cynthia Diehl, Ja·
son Durham, Margaret Geer,
Mabel Harbour, Mrs. Timothy
Lambert and son, Catherine
Law, Jack Miller, Debra Mills,
Joseph Mulhern, Hazel Rice,
Lucinda Roush, Michael Skaggs ,
John Tilley, Jayne Walsh.
Births Sept. 28: Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Dennison, daughter, Gal·
llpolls Ferry. Mr. and Mrs.
Richard GIIIUand, daughter ,
Wellston. Mr . . and Mrs. Robert
McCarty, daughter, Oak Hill.

disq~alified

. South Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low near 60. Southeast winds less
than 10 mph. Chance of rain Is 20
percent.
·
Friday: Variable cloudiness,
with a chance of showers. Highs
will be near 80. Chance of rain Is
40 percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
A chance of rain Saturday and
fair Sunday and Monday. Highs
will be mostly In the 70s Saturday
and ranging from the middle 60s
to the middle 70s Sunday and
Monday. Early morning lows
will range from the mid 50s to the
lower 60s Saturday and from the
mid 40s to the mid 50s Sunday and
Monday.

son, Pomeroy, $425 and costs,
three days In jail, driving while
intoxicated; Larry Martln, Galli·
polls, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner; $25 ·and costs, jail
disorderly; $100 and costs, three
days In jail, resisting arrest:
Robert Martin, Galllplls, $25 and
costs. disorderly manner; $25
and costs, jail disorderly; $100
and costs and three days In jail,
resisting arrest; $100 and costs
and three days In jail, menacing
threats.

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions -Max
Folmer Sr., Long Bolto!D;
Theresa Marcinko, Tuppers
Plains; Jessie Palmer, Racine.
Wednesday Discharges- Har·
ley McDonald Jr.

VOLUNTEERS HONORED - Pictured are
some ol the U year voluateer workers of the Melp
County Retired Senior Vohmteer Program
honored at a dillner Wednellday night markiDg the
Uth aanlverllll')' of the program loeally. The
volunteers received cUts aa did 11 year service
volunteers. In tbe front row are Gertrude
Mlklbell, Kermit McElroy, Jestle Molden, Trudy

Eastern ...

Continued

Dixie Circle Sayre as a half·llme
teacher for the new school year,
as a half·tlme learning dlsablll·
ties tutor pending certlflcatlon
and as a Chapter I reading
teacher for grades 7 and 8. Kim
Batey and William Robinette
were added to the substitute
teacher list for this school year.
Frona Riffle was hired as a

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

I

.

You have reached a milestone in your lives in
this final year of high school.
·
Let us help you appropriately note the accom·plishment with full color senior portraits taken in
warm and friendly surroundings.
We will show you from 10 to 12 previews from
which to make your final selection, and your portraits do have a lifetime guarantee. You'll like our
reasonable price structure.
For an appointment or more information, give
us a call. after 5 p.m. weekdays, anytime weakends.

Andrewa, Nan Moore, Teresa Byet, Carol TQior,
Daren TQlor; In the back row are, DaytGD
McElroy, Evelyn Summerfield, Mildred Harrta,
Marjorie Brewer, Edna Clark, Mae Weber,
GarliM Ervine, Ora Caraey, C. E. Blakellee,
Beary Tumer, Bessie Graham aad· . Lilla
Hampton.

substitute library aide, kinder·
garten aide, and secretary, and
Diana Nelson as a substitute
secretary, cook, library and
kindergarten aide to be used on
an as needed basis. At the
request of Linda Spencer, the
board reduced her position as
assistant to the treasurer from
full time to half time and hired
Dorothy Calaway to fill the half
time assistant to the treasurer's
position. Glen EasterUng was
hired as a regular substitute bus
driver.
The board entered Into a
service agreement wlih COG ·
SEOVEC for service on an as
needed basis on the district's
computer hardware and
equipment.
The board entered Into a contract
with Ohio University Therapy

is pCeasei to announce fit. wif{ 6e locating
fiis neui office in tflt. !Mu{ica{ Offtu 'lJuilaing
at
Pleasant 'liaf{ey !J{ospitaC.
Office fiours .are from 8:30a.m. ta.S p.m.
·'Montfay tfirougfi :Jriaay.
Jlppointments are now 6eing ta~n.

AnENTION
'

Village Pharmacy
Customers
VILLAGE PHARMACY
WILL BEGIN
.CLOSING AI

Pom1roy, Ohio

when yoU I ant. Repairs don't cost you a penny. Your low monthly rate includes

..

--

0

0

..._____ ..

~

~t

·

immediate repair or replacement. No more expensive repair bills. It's smart to rent.

0

''.

(304) 675-3.400

992-6669

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF

LADIES COATS
AND JACKETS
CONTAINERS AVAILABLE -Middleport businessman Edpr
Abbott stands beside one ol· the new heavy duty trash containers
wblch were placed In the North Second Ave~. business section In
lYllddlepo~t this week. The llix containers were purchi&amp;Sed by
Middleport VIllage through a state IIIIer control grant.

Hoeflich

liji#J

~R

Bush,
Dukakis
· clash on
taxes

Bob and Charlene

109 High St.

was purchased witb a Sl,OOG donation iiven to
Middleport VIllage by area motorcycle riders aad
S'7to which was provided by lbe vUiage.

•

LADIES· SWEATERS

October is recycling
month in Buckeye state

•COAT SWEATERS
·•PULLOVERS
•CARDIGANS
•SLEEVELESS VEST

'

LONG AND SIOIT
SUI VI

KNIT SUITS

BLOUSES

DRESSES

AND

·oPEN
'MQNDAY THRU
SATURDAY

•

~ ~ - ·~· -~ - •''''

PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT INSTAUEDTbis playground equipment pictured, a swfniJ set,
sUde aad a sprlnr; hobby horse, has been Installed
at the Diles Park In Middleport: Tbe equipment

''

By London Fog and Shtr'!'ood of Ohio

·The Photo Place

9:30 TO 5:00

BARR MIDDLEPORT
CLOTHIE
•·

who worried that a 0.6 percent
July decrease signaled the begin·
nlng of an economic downturn.
''This might help to dispel
some of the recent speculation
that the economy was losing Its
upward momentum," said Robert Dederick, chief economist
for the Northern Trust Co. In
Chicago.
" I don't mean by that the
growth rate may not be slowing
but certainly II was a comforta·
ble Increase," Dederick said.
The deparlment's Bureau of
Economic Analysis said five of
the nine indicators available Cor
August contributed to overall
economic performance In Au·

gust, a forecast of how the
economy may be doing three to
six months down the road.
These Included lower new
claims for unemployment, Increased manulacturers' orders
for both consumer goods and
plant equipment, higher applica·
tlons for building permits and
hll!her prices for raw materials.
A faster pace of deliveries to
vendors, Indicating suppliers did
not have much business, a
shorter average work week,
falling stock prices and a tighter
money supply all subtracted
from economic performance,
holding the Index to 193.4, the
bureau said.

Man suffers bums in early
morning fire; hom,e destroyed

#

LEVI SPORTSWEAR

O

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Lower unemployment and brisk
manufacturers' orders for goods
and plant equipment pushed the
government's Index of Leading
Economic Indicators up 0.4 per·
cent In August. the Commerce
Department said today .
·Despite a 0.9 percent Increase
In economic performance from
August 1987 to August 1988, it Is
still the slowest s lnce the reces·
slon year of 1982, when the Index
dropped 4.4 percent from August ·
1981 to August 1982, the bureau
said.
·
Tl\e modest August Increase
was In line with analysts' expec·
!allons and should relieve some

•

ON SATURDAYS
TILL FURTHER
NOTICE.

26 Cents

A Multimedlo Inc. Nowst&gt;opor

Index figure increases

,.

Benjamin J.Sol,M.D.
Obstetrics and Gynecology ·

2 Sections, 14 Pogn

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September, 30. 1988

Associates to provide req ulred .
physical therapy services for one
student with special needs and •
entered Into a contract with ·
Llfetouch National School Stu· :
dios, Inc., for student pictures :.
this school year.
A budget modification for the ·
cheerleader fund was app~oved ·
along with several appropriation
modifications. A new budget for
the school newspaper activity ·
fund was approved. Ari e'lecutlve ·
session on personnel matters and
matters on the UPI;Omlng levy
wa·s held . ·
The next regular meeting was
set for 7 p.m., Oct. 24, In the high
school cafeteria. Members prei- .
ent were President Jim Smith;
VIce President Kathy Manlcke
and members, Susie Heines, Ray
Karr and I. 0. MCCoy.

A GOOD SELECTION OF

j

Vol.39, No.102
Copyrighted 1888

-.

f~om page 1

1:00 P.M.

Cong,•tul•tlonl High s~hool g.,;,,/

ParUy cloudy tonight, low In
mid 888. Saturday, cloudy,
high near 80, chance of rain 30
percent.

•

Am Electric Power ............. 27¥.,
AT&amp;T ....... ............. ..... ........ 25'Va
Ashland Oil .... ..... ...............33%
Bob Evans ........................... 16
Charming Shoppes ......... ... .. 13¥.,
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul .................... 48%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... ~7~
Heck's ......... ......... .. ............. %
Key Centurion ........... ......... 16¥.,
Lands' End .. ....... ..... ........... 30~
Limited Inc ......................... 23
Multimedia Inc .. ...... .... ........ 73
Rax Restaurants ...·............... 3¥.
Robbins &amp; Myers :............... lOY,
Revtval slated
. Shoney's Inc ..... ................... 7%
A weekend revival will be held
We11dy's Intl. .. .. ... .... ..............7
at LongBottom United Methodist Worthington lnd .......... .. ... .. 21 Yo
Church this Friday, Saturday
and Sunday at 7: 30 each evening.
The evangelist will be Bud
Hatfield. Everyone Is welcome.

Hospital.news

Daily Number
654
Pick 4
3442

Page 3

.'

- - - MI"ddleport COUrt-·- - - - Announcements
Four defendants forfeited
bonds and six were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting were Jeffrey L.
Moore, Cheshire, $41, speeding;
Dale Clonch, Middleport, $450,
driving while Intoxicated: Eddie
Patrick, Middleport, $50, no
driver's license; Susie Abbott,
Route 33, Shade area, $100.
disorderly manner.
Fined were Sandy K. Evans,
Portland, $50 and costs, allowing
an unlicensed driver to operate a
motor vehicle; Charlie Brown,
Middleport, $25 and costs. dlsor·
derly manner; Jerry Armstrong,
Middleport, $25 and cost. dlsor·
derly manner; Richard L. Rob·

Ohio Lottery

USA team

~ounty.

The Meigs County Office of
Litter Control will be promotlng
a recycling drive In Meigs
County as part of the October
Recycle Month all across Ohio.
Last year saw the opening of a
local recycling center, making
available a conven lent location
to market Items locally. Many
Meigs Countlans have already
started recycling and Ken Wig·
gins, director of the county litter
control agency, hopes many
more will join ln. "It doesn't
cost," says Wiggins, "It pays."
Improper waste disposal
creates many problems lnclud·
lng littered highways, polluted
streams, and careless handilng
of toxic and hazardous wastes
causing many health problems.
Wlth the closing this year of the
Meigs County Landfill, Wiggins
says, It becomes even more
Important to find solutions to

By Bt.JD NEWMAN
United Press International
Presidential rivals George
Bush and Michael Dukakls, up·
staged by the space shuttle, tried
to bask In the glory of a
successful liftoff but still traded
barbs over Dukakls's plan to use
more agents to collect dellquent
taxes.
Bush. traveling In Michigan
Thursday· before heading to
Connectlcul and New Jersey
today, also accused his Democratic opponent of "demeaning"
attacks on GOP vice presidential
candidate Dan Quayle, who next
week debates Democratic vice
presklentlal nominee Lloyd Bent·
sen in Omaha. Neb.
The vice president said Duka·
kls's repeated claims that
Quayle Is unqualified to step into
the ·, Oval Office If something
happened to Bush - a view
shared by a majority of the
public, according to the polls ,showed "Insecurity , a certain
weakness" on Dukakls's part.
In Mount Clemens, Mich.,
Bush said Quayle " has my full
confidence, and I made a good
choice and he's going CNer very
well out there around the coun·
try. He'll do just fine (In his
debate) against Lloyd Bentsen."
Dukakls, campaigning In New
Jersey Thursday, picked up four
endorsements from environmen·
tal groups and from actor Robert
Redford, an environmental actl·
vlst whose good looks have
occasionally been compared to
Quayle's. In his 1980 race for th.e
Senate, Quayle himself made the
comparison In campaign ads that
pictured the two side by side ads that angered Redford, who
asked that they be halted.

these problems, and recycling is
a viable alternative.
Recycling Is easy- takes very
little time - and Is an activity
everyone can be proud to take
part In, In addition to the
financial benefits gained from
recycltng. Items used every day
and usually thrown away, II
recycled, can be used to make
new products, thereby helping to
conserve valuable natural re·
soures and energy, and greatly
reducing the amount of solid
Campaigning In St. Charles,
waste to be disposed of.
Wiggins Is encouraging all Mo., Bush criticized what he said
Meigs Countlans (community was a Dukakls plan to reduce the
ballooning federal budget deficit
and civic groups, churches,
by Increasing the number tbe
.scouts, 4·H clubs, schools,
·
Iniernal
Revenue Service audl·
garden clubs) to participate In
tors
to
crack down on tax
October Recycle Month. "It's an
cheaters.
excellent opportunity to raise
"Michael Dukakls wants to
funds for your organization," he
double the number of IRS agents
says.
and set them loose on the
Contlnued on page 6
American people," Bush said.
"And I just don't agree with his
vision Of America where the
government has a hand In every
pocket and a tax agent In every
home.
''Too often the IRS treats
Henry Wells, of the Pomeroy area, has been nominated by the
American
taxpayers as If they
Melp County Republican Executlve Committee as a member
.
were
guilty
until proven Innoof the Melp County BOard of Elections, replacing the late
cent.
And
In
a
Bulb admlnlstra·
Donald Collins. Mr. Wells' appointment will become effective
lion, Injustice In the tax office
as soon as he has been certified by Secretary of State Sherrod
will not be tolerated by the
Brown.
Continued on page 6
Continued on paae 6

Rick Hatfield, 34, Kingsbury
Road, awoke early this morning
to find his house on fire.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
Zirkle reported that the !Ire
department was called around 4
a.m. to the two·story frame
house on Kingsbury Road. The
house was engulfed In flames
wheil firemen arrived and was a
toialloss .
Owner of the house was Leta
Hall, although Hatfield may have
been In the process of buying the
·
house, Zirkle said.
Hatfield was asleep when the
fire started and suatalned ·burns
to the back, and possibly arms
and legs, as he escaped the

house, Zirkle said. He was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by EMS where he was admitted
with first and second degree
burns. He was lis ted Friday
morning In stable condition.
Although Zirkle Is not sure of
the .orlgln of the fire, he said It
appeared to have started In the
living room area.
Pomeroy Fire Departme111 re·
sponded to two fire calls, one a
house and the other a truck,
around 12: 30 p.m. Thursday.
The frame house on Smith
Road was In the process of bel!lg
torn down, Zirkle said. Although
\he man In charge of leaclng
down the structure did not know

how the !Ire might have started,
he asked firemen to let the
structure burn since It was being
dismantled anyway . Firemen
contacted the power company to
turn off electricity to the house
and then let It burn. The house
was owned by a Charleston,
W.Va. woman by the name or
Horton, Zirkle said.
The 1988 Ford truck which
burned near the gun club, just
past Meigs High School, was
owned by Rutland Furniture and
driven by Herb ·Grate, Zirkle
reported. Cau:w of the fire Is
unknown. The truck was com·
pletely destroyed.

AEP. head says last-minute Senate
proposal would raise electric bills
- Prohibit utilities from choos·
A new last·mlnute acid rain
lng
the lowest cost method of .
control proposal that may be
reducing
sulfur emissions by
debated on the floor of the u.s.
50·100 percent more
requiring
Senate In a few days would raise
costly
scrubber
retrofits at 61
electric bills In Olilo as much as
generating
units.
30·50 percent for business and 23
•This late attempt In Congress
percent for residential custo·
undoubtedly Is the most lnflexl·
me~s. W.S. White Jr., AEP
ble, expensive manner of reduc·
Chairman, said today.
White said the proposal, being lng power plant emissions yet
quietly pushed by Senator proposed. Like many such
George Mitchell of Maine, eleventh·hour proposals, It Is
lll·advlsed and deserves to be
would :
·
- Unfairly require expensive, . defeated, " Mr. White said.
Citizens and businessmen con·
outdated scrubbers on specific
cerned
about higher electric bills
power plants while Ignoring
call or write their Sena·
should
others nearby .
tors
and
U.S. Representatives
- Cause a dramatic downturn
and
voice
their concern this
In the Midwest economy, includ·
lng plant closings and thousands week.
The largest federally funded
of job layoffs.
- Effectively kill the nation's study of acid rain, a $400 million
Clean Coal Technology effort, said In Its interim assess·
ment last year that acidic levels
Program.
- Assess a kllowatthour tax of the natlon'slakes and streams
and sulfur emissions fee on have reached a steady state and
utllltles whose customers also Immediate new legislation Is not
would have to pay for adding required.
' The electric utilities In this
scrubbers.
country
are addressing concerns
- Promote the sale of Cana·
rain," the AEP Chair·
over
acid
dian power by exempllngg from
the kllowatthour tax Imported man said.
White pointed out, while utility
Canadian electrlclly.

coal use has Increased 76 per·
cent, utilities have reduced sui·
fur emissions by 18 percent since
1973 and will continue reductions
by developing and building new,
more efficient power plants with
lower emissions as older ones
need replacing.
' 'The answer for the future Is
clean coal technology ," Mr.
Write said.
"But lll·tlmed acid ralnleglsla·
lion as now proposed by mls·
guided sponsors In the last days
of this Congress will preclude a ·
gradual cutback In emissions
and replace It with an economic
shock we will feel until well Into
the next century," Mr . White
said.
That would be true because the
new acid rain proposal would
require the specific power plants
named to reduce sulfur emls·
slons 90 percent before the end of
1994. If utllltles raised their
electric rates enough to Install
scrubbers by that deadline,
neither the utilities nor their
customers could aCCord to spend
more money to build new , more
efficient power plants with lower
emissions.

-Local news briefs__,
Appointed to election board

VJ'

LOOK MIAT WE DID I - U reqellqmtlft I&amp;
p-lble lor IIIIa II'HP ol Syracu• fifth ;rradenlo
ra11e en0111h money to buy thll borbau&amp;alladder

for the ecbool pla)'lrotmcl, then think~ )'OD eu
do by reqcllac. Laat' rear, when lb- aludeats
were Ia the fourth grade, wllb help from lbelr
teacber, Sandra Baer, the)' woa Slllor helq the
ouC.Ialldiq reeyclen In Southern School Dlatrlct,
o(

•tor be1J1r lbe bat Ia the county; aud 1110 from
Tft.Oouuty Beeycllq Ceater lor brillpq !• the
mDIIt poanda o l - to tile eenter. Tbey eoattuued
lllelr reeyeltq eflorta lbrouellout the echool rear,
raliiDIMGO which wu appUed to the purchllllf! of
tile Nil hortaou&amp;al JadMr. Srracuae PTO kicked
In the remalnlac Pl. Great Job klda!

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