<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12274" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12274?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T13:20:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43246">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/428d15757f1c21fd58e57bc7bfa179f6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e616492d64cd28a92bd1155eb416f568</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38545">
                  <text>•

Local c~~!p~~iefs...-HiJil pelts parts of Midwest early today .

Jets bounced
by Bills, 37-14

western Lake Erie and northw· southwestern New Mexico.
Rain also was scattered early
estern Ohio and Into central
today
over Idaho, North Dakota,
lndtana.
South
Dakota. DlinoiS and Into
The dlme-stzed hall reported
the
T!!nnessee
Valley and the
near Wolcottville, Ind., late Sun·
day all bu 1 disappeared early lower Great Lakes region . .
High winds swept through
today, the NWS said.
Colorado
Sunday, · reaching 63
In the Southwest, thunder·
mph
at
Rollinsvilte,
Colo., the
storms over Arizona also were
~~~S •••._________G_~~.n_tl_n_ued--~tr~mn~pa~g~e~1~---------- losing
'
NWS
said.
A
high
wind
advisory
their punch early today ,
was
In
place
lor
the
area
today.
after dumping ~eavy rain over
Services. On Wednesday, the guest speaker thiS week to
It
was
cloudy
over
the
Pacific
the region Sunday. Bisbee, Ariz.,
junior high students will meet In discuss the effects of drugs nad
Northwest, the upper Mississippi
Nine calls for assistance were ,a nswered by the Meigs County
a general assembly to hear Jeff alchol on the body and how these received linch of hall overnight, Valley
to the Carolinas and the
Emergency Medical. Service over the weekend.
·
and high winds downed trees and
Montglomery from the Kansas things affect the ability to drive.
Mid-Atlantic
coast. Dense fog
At 2:16 p.m the Racine unit went to Main and TYree for
power lines In the area ..
City Royals speak on "Just Say
Art II classes and members of
blanketed
parts
of Rhode Island
Rebecca Ward who was transported to Veterans Memorial
The Arizona rainstorms also
No". Students will also be mak· T.I. will be making signs promoI·
and
coastal
Southern
California.
Hospital; at 2:25p.m. the Middleport unit went to South Third
caused local flooding that was
lng posters dealing with drugs lng, "Be Smart, Don't Start".
Most
or
the
rest
of
the nation,
Street for Marla Ault who was taken to Holzer Medical center;
reported In thesoutheastetnpart
during their art classes. Students
The climax of the week's
meanwhile,
woke
up
today to
at 4: 36 p.m. the Rutland unit took Anna Searles to Holzer; at
wlll also view a video from the activities will take place at the · ofthe state, the NWS said. But as
clear
skies
with
temperatures
6: 32 p.m. the Middleport squad transported Floyd McClellan
the storms weakened, only a: few
NBAstarringMr. Thomas speak· Meigs-Belpre game Friday even·
from Race St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
showers
lingered early today headed for ihe 60s and 70s.
lng on Just Say No.
ing. For all elemj!ntary students
Temperatures around the na·
At 6:42 p.m the Racine squad transported Joyce Manuel of
over southeastern Arizona and
At Me(is High School a banner attending the game, during the
lion
early today ranged from 35
Front Street to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 6:03p.m the
contest wlll be held.for all ~tubs, pre-game festivities, a giant
degrees
at Hibbing, Maine, to 78
Syracuse squad took Anna Hllldore to Veterans and at 7:27p.m. '
organizations and teams. The balloon launch will take place.
degrees at Phoenix.
the Middleport unit took Donnie Van Cooney to Veterans.
ban.n ers wlll be placed on the Students will be at the scoreThe Tuppers Plains squad and a fire truck were called to the'
fence on the south end of the- boar!! end of the field to get their
Rice Run Road for a car wreck. Denzil McKay was taken to
Veterans Memorial
stadium on Oct. 21. Prizes will be balloons. They will circle the ·
Lottery numbers.
Camden Clark, and the Pomeroy unit was summoned to assist
Saturday admissions - Delawarded and announced during a field and let the.balloons go as the
at 8: 09 and transported Betty Stephens from the scene also to
Whaley, Middleport, and
ballon launch.
football team comes onto the
CLEVELAND ( UPI) .,.. Satur·
Camden Clark.
'
.
Joyce Manuel, Racine.
·High school students will also field. The balloons have been
day's winning Ohio Lottery num·
Another wreck occurred at 8: 49 p.m. on Ball Run Road and
Saturday discharges - Ethel bers: Dally Number
have a· t-shlrt day on Friday. All ·labled, Me~ · Local Schools,
the Pomeroy unit responded but there was no one there when the
Reeves and Joseph .Reiser . .
students who wear an antl·drug Drug Free Week, Be Smart
196.
squad arrived.
Sunday admissions - James
t·shlrt will be given a ticket by Don't Start. Sponsors thankTwl~
PICK-4
At 4:50p.m the Rutland fire department went to Romine Road
Kelly, Coolville, and Anna Hll·
the homeroom teacher. A draw· City Motors for a reduced rate on
3145.
for a camping trailer abd brush fire. The Salem department was
ldore, Syracuse.
ing wlll be held during the pep helium for baloons and Francis
Super Lotto
called to assiSt. While on the scene Mark Richmond, a Rutland
Sunday discharges _;_ Randall
rally with a prize awarded the Florist for help In getting the
31, 16,3, 29, 18, 1.
firemen. Injured his knee and was taken by the Rutland squad to
HarriSon. Bernard Rairden, and
winning ticket.
ballons for 'Meigs Local at a
Kicker
Holzer for treatment.
Delmar Whaley.
Members of H.U.G.S. will be reduced price. Special thanks
08()!34.
At 6:03p.m the 'Syracuse squad responded to a call for Anna
selling chemiCal free popcorn In are also ·extended to Janet
Hllldore, Seventh St., Syracuse, and she was transported to
whiskey bottles to make the point Williamson for helping prepare
NATIONAL ·WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.1NI
Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 7:27 p.m. the Middleport
that the only corn that anyone packets lor use In the elementary
unit t?Ok Donnie Van Coney from North Seventh to Veterans
heeds from a bottle Is popcorn. schoolS.
Memorial.
The drug free sehools currlcu·
. Members wlll also help Inflate
balloons and help with the lum comm lttee reponslble for
elementary students preparing planning the week's activities
for a balloon taunch ..
Include Karen Walker, Saundra
.H.U.G.S. members who at· TilliS, Sharon Birch, John Redo·
. tend the advanced skills training vlan, Dale Harrison, Mlck
Two Meigs Countlans have been given determinate sentences
In Dayton early this week will Childs, Jeannie Taylor and coor·
of six months each at the Orient Correctional Reception Center,
conduct a panel discussion and dlnator, Wendy Halar. The com·
according to entries filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas
presentatlon for the T.I. meeting mlttee extends special thanks to
Court.
on Wednesday. H .U.G.S . Walker and Taylor for "extra
Both Jerry R. Moore on a charge of grand theft and Johnnie K.
members will assiSt Carl Hysell efforts" In planning and to John
HarriSon on a charge of recelving stolen property entered pleas
at the elementary schools during Arnott for arranging speakers at
of qullty when they appear~d before Judge Charles Knight.
the week.
the junior high.
Meigs High also plans to nave a

. Patrol also reported a Langsville man was Injured Saturday
at 2:30a.m. In Salem Township on C.R. 1, about three miles
north of S.R. 124.
Darrin K. Johnston, 23, was taken to Holzer Medical Center by
a family member. He was treated and released for facial cuts.
Johnston, driving a 1981 Ford ·Mustang, was heading north
when he swerved to avoid deer crossing the road. Hewentoffthe
right side of the road and hit a telephone pole.

The National Weather Service
said the thunderstorms that
produced heavy,rain In Michigan
and hall in parts of Indiana were
weakening an!l breaking up.
Only scattered showers were
reported early today · across

By Unlled Pre.s International
Thunderstorms that dumped
rain and hall overnight on
Michigan and Indiana began to
weaken early today, as did the
rainstorms over Arizona and ·
N~w Mexico.
·

,Daily Number
975
Pick 4

Page3

7238

at

Sta(e board approves
14 more school loans

Hospital news

mar

.

A

Two Meigs men sentenced

By United Press lnlernatlonal
At least 13 people died during
the weekend In traffic accidents
occurring across the Quckeye
State, Ohio Highway Patrol offl·
clals said today.
·
One viet~· Kelly Gambler, 23,
Bryan, was killed Saturday In a
one-car accident on Ohio Route
66 In Defiance County. Patrol
officials said she was attempting
to miss a deer and drove off the
road.
Also killed this weekend were:
Friday
New Philadelphia: Patricia
~nnlngton,
59, Newcomer·
stown. In a two-car accident on
Tuscarawas County road.
Batavia: Kyle Banks. 18, Cln:
clnnatl, In a car·truck accident
on a Clermont County road.
Cincinnati: Michael Vlegler,
40, Cincinnati, in a two-car
accident on Ohio Route 264 in
Hamilton County. ·
Canfield: George A. Campbell,
17, · Salem, In a orie·vehlcle
accident on a Mahoning County
road.
Saturday
Ravenna: Darla Edenfield, 25,

--Area
•

Charles Robinson

Vugil Lee Lewis, 64, West
Columbia, died Saturday, Ocl 15,
1988, at Vetetan 's Memorial
Hospital, Pomeroy.
Born May 31, 1924 in Wesl
Columbia, he was a son of the late
Harry B. and Lola Mary Fisher
Lewis.
He was an operatOr of the Vista
Station in Mason. He was a World
War II veteran, serving in the U.S.
Army, a member of the American
Legion Smith·Capehart Post 140,
and the VFW Stewan-Johnson Post
9926 of Mason. He was a member
of the Peniel Uniled Methodist
Chwch.
, Swviving are his wife, Margie
M. Lewis, West Columbia; one
daughter, J())'ce L. Keams, Clifton;
one son, Terry L. Lewis, West
Columbia: one sister, Sheila J.
Henry, Gallipolis Ferry; two
brothm, John N. Lewis, Mason.
and Richard L. Lewis, Letart; two

Graveside

a

deaths-~-

Virgil lewis

grandchil!lron.

Berlln Center, In a one-car
accident on Ohio Route 14 In
Portage County.
Findlay: Motorcyclist Jimmie
R. Copus, 40, Findlay, when
struck by an automobile along
U.S. Route 224 In Findlay.
Terrace Park: John W. Woo.lum. 39. Blanchester, when he
lost control of his car, which
struck utility pole.
Sundq
Bellefontaine: Terry Kreglow,
30, De Graff. when h.l s speeding
piCkup truck crashed along Ohio
Route 47 In Logan Countv.
Hebron: Lonna Sunkel, 22,
Columbus, in two-vehicle accl·
dent on lnterstate·70 In Ucklng
County.
Warren: Scott A. Marlett,
Southington, along Ohio Route
305ln Trumbull County, when his
car overturned at an apparent
high rate of speed . .
Canton: Herbert Brown, 67,
Louisville, killed In two-vehicle
crash along Stark County road.
Canfield: Duane Nemitz. 29,
Alliance. kllled when be was
struck by a car while crossing
U.S Route 62 In Mahoning
County.

service

.

will

be

Tuesday 81 11 a.m. 81 the Kilkland
Memorial Gardens, with the Rev.
James Lewis officiating.
Friends may call Monday from 7
to 9 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home.·

Word has been received of the
death of Charles K. Robinson, 54.•
Hawaii, formerly of Mason County,
who died Sunday, Oct. 16, 1988, in
Hawaii.
Born in New Haven Feb. 12,
1934, he was a son of Clara Staats,
New Haven, and the late Harrison
Robinson Sr.
Besides his mother, he is survived by his wife, Maggie; one
daughter, Rosemary, Hawaii; two
sons, A11en Brian, Charles Kevin,
both of Hawaii; two brothers, Harrison Robinson Jr., Clifton, Earl
Robinson, Gallipolis, Ohio; two sisters, Emma Boswell, Point
Pleasant, Clara Gordon, New
Haven; three grandchildren.
Milileni Mortuary Home of
Hawaii is in charge of arrangements.

U. S.

only tia percent of those
rE:ductlo.ns.
Vice President George Bush,
the Republican nominee for the
White House. bas continued to
look to private voluntarism In·
stead of government
commitment.
The executives surveyed said
they expect future corporate
contrlbu tlons to be more
communlty·based with educa·
tlon getting the ·mbst attention;
three ot four CEOs of Fortune
1000 companies Identified educa·
tlon as a top priority.
Joseph suggested, "Corporate
America can help engender a
new spirit of charitable entrepreneurism by accepting the chal·
lenge to help solve emerging
problems despite new limits,
both publiC and private, on the
resources needed to address
those problems."

CLEVELAND (UP I) -No one
The correct numbers are 1, 3,
was able to match all six 16, 18, 29, and 31. ·
numbers In Saturday's Ohio .
Kicker sales totaled $573,366,
Super Lotto drawing, which will without a single ticket having the
make Wednesday's jackpot numbers In the correct order.
worth $6 million, the lottery Five tickets bad five of the six
numbers correct for $5,000; 47
commiSsion said.
Lotto sales totaled $3,617,993.
with four numbers for $1,000; 519
There were 116 tickets with five with three correct tor $100, and
of the six correct numbers worth 5,049 had two of six numbers
$1,000 apiece, and 5,511 with four . correct for $10. ·
of six for $75.
~·····

-- ....,

.

'

•

•

,,'

• &lt;l
TOPS IN ORIENTI\TION - Middleport Boy
Scout Troop 245 look first place In the orientation
course compellllon held at Camp Cornstock Park
In Point Pleasant over the weekend. Scouts In the
winning group were front, Jell to right, Alan

.
Durst,

•

Jeremy Hartson, Dodger Vaughan,
displaying the plaque, Willie Johnson, and Ryan
Rowe, second row, Matthew Craddock, Bobby
Jokllson, Denis Little and Sam Cowan, along with
scoutmaster, Don Vaughan and assistant, AI
Hartaon.

G2:1SHOw .
FRONTS:

II Warm

-RAIN
"

Cold

.a

fZ'EJ SHOWERS
Static 9W Occluded

By CHARLES A. Mi\SON
OVPStaff

WEATHER MAP ..:. During earty Tuesday morning, rala uc1
showers are forecast for pari&amp; of the Great Lakes, tile upper Oblo
Valley and parts of the north Allanllc Coast states. Sbowera and ·
thunderstonns are poi!Sible In most of the Ohio Valley. (UPI)

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Norma Jean Perry told jurors Monday afternoon that Ft'elll Facemire, a
man 13 years ol\lbr lbal1 h~r that
police say she killed last year, was
a heavy drinker who beat his
children and her.
"I loved him," Perry said. "I still

IT'S

do."

Around 200•.
(Continued frcm page 1)
would be prepared to be
arrested.
Asked how long thedemonstra·
lion would go on, Perry said,
"For as long as It takes to get
arrested.''
She said Daniel Ellsberg,
David Dellinger and Daniel
Berrigan, veterans of the
Vietnam-era October march on
the Pentagon two decades ago,
were among •those engaged In a
sltdown blockade or the south
parking entrance.
A few Pentagon workers tried
to run the blockade, with pollee
running Interference. One Navy
officer was slapped on the back Of
the head. according to a pollee ·
officer. who declined to give hls
name.

Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T ................ .. ... .. .......... 26¥.,
Ashland Oil ........................ 33¥.,
Bob Evans .......................... 16~
Charming Shoppes ....... ....... 14'&gt;fl
City Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul... ................ .48¥.,
Goodyear T&amp;R ....": ..............52%
Heck's ................ :................ y,
Key Centurion ..................... 17
Lands' End .......................... 29
Limited Inc ......... ... ............ 24~
Multimedia lnc ................... 72Y,
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. 1¥.,%
Shoney's Inc ............. ........... 7~
Wendy 's Inti ..........................7
Worthington Ind .. ........ ....... 22~

meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday at
the hall.
Festival Saturday
The Syraucse PTO fall festival
will, be held Saturday at the
school. Dinner will be served
from 5: 30 to 7 p.m. wltb games to
be conducted trom 7 to 8: 30 p.m.

riYiew the 1• colt ,...

-L

Be A Donor
• lED ClOSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOUI 19
PoiHI'oy Senior Cltlun Center

1:00 ·5:30P.M.

•n•• AIII\OCtdlaiHI
~what you get! P.. 100% beef hamburger that lOoks.
"""""""""""' and~ homemade. A small order of crisp
fries. YOur favorite soft drink. And to
. '
off. a cool and creamy 5 oz.
QUEEN- SOtl Serve Sundae.
Head for '{ClUr partlc1Da1tng
DAIRY QUEEN- BRAZIER• s1ore for the
Homes1yte Burger Full Meal Deal!"

Local new

"Dukes of Dayton" bowling
shirts with a caricature of
Dukakls's nose and eyebrows.
Jim Strusbagh, a model
builder at a General Motors
plant, asked Dukakls about his
plans for helping old people,
saying, "!.don't want to see my
parents eat cat Iood and things
like that. I want to see the elderly
taken care of and with dignity."
'With Mike Dukakls as pres I·
dent of the United States (Social
Security Is) going to be very
safe," the candidate said.
"Mr. Bush flew clear across
the country In 1985 from West
Coast to East Coast to break a tie
so that there would not be a
cost-of·llvlng Increase tor Social
Security recipients," he said .
Ray Back, pres ldent of a
5,000·member steel union in
Middletown, asked Du'kakls what
he would have done about the air
tralflc controllers who were fired
when they struck, saying "Mr.
Reagan, In my opinion, dld a
terrible job."
"As you know, they did not
have the right to strike and they
understood that," DukakiS said.
"But I always had the feeling at
the time that somebody In the
administration was trying to
teach somebody a lesson."
After the session, camera
crews lined up along an alley and
Dukakls rolled a seven and a
gutter ball.
_
At the North Coast Brass and
Copper Co. In Euclid, Dukakls

North Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio ·
Dairy Queen• lt0f81 ore proud IPOOIOf1 Of tno Clllkjren't Mlrocle Nelwork
T...ll&gt;on which benefits local holpllals for children.
.
\
Cl NID.Q.COrpJIIII

TM.,...-m.rtr:AM 0.0 . Corp.

eA111111

1

ec1'1t-*•llltk11MO.O. ~

..

briefs-~

Pomeray Council session brief

WI11U1'10U..W•

......

.

~

......

.

where. no school tax levy has
passed in 10 years.
Van Keuren told the board the
district has lost$62 million worth
of assessed property valuation
since 1985 because of the closing
of a utility power plant.
Van Keuren said the district,
which borrowed $850,513 fNm
the state In 1981 and paid It back,
is operating below state min·
lmum levels In the number of
classroom teachers and
teachers' salaries. A five·mlll
operating levy is on the ballot
next month.
Shawnee Local School District,
Allen County, was approved for a
$1.3 million loan. Van Keuren
said voters In that district
approved an emergency levy last
year but a loss . of industrial
property taxes since "knocked
the socks of! them."
Eighty·four percent of Shawnee's school funds are raised

locally, the department said. The
district 's tecacher·pupll ratio
and average teachers ' salaries
are below state minimum levels.
These otber loans we re
approved:
Bridgeport Exempted Village,
Belmont County, $213,000; Cres t·
view Local. Van Wert County,
$321,000; Fairport Harbor Ex·
empted VIllage, Lake County,
$117,000; James A. Garfield
LOcal, Portage County, $157,000;
Mathews Local. Trumbull
County, $443,000; and Milford
Exempted VIllage, Clermont
County, $474,000.
Also, Nelsonville· York, Alhens
County, $113,000; New Miami
Local, Butler County , $154,000;
North College Hill, "Hamilton
County, $683,000; Northeastern
Local, Clark County, $287,000:
Northmor Local , Morrow
County, $326,000; and Ravenna ,
Portage County, $958,000.

'

I'

Perry testified that she snuck out
a bedroom window with a basket of
clothes to go with Facemire to Lancaster, Ohio, and eventually live
together. She told the jury she
sep!lfllted from Facemire, going to
live other places, including a sheltcr in Parkersbutg, When Facemire
would become violent ·
She said Facemire mistreated her
son, Brian, but once their daughter,
Hope, was born, he would favor the
girl over the boy.
It was, as she described it to the
jury, a love-hate relationship. She
went back to living with Facemire
several times after initially•Ieaving
him. Facemire, she testified, indicated that he would change his
ways.
"(There was) the usual line of
bull - and I fell for it, more than I
would like to admit," she testified.
Perzy testified that she was slapped around by Facemire, although
he was about the same size or
smaller than her, and testified that
Facemire one time picked up the
older boy, Brian, by the hair and
slung hi~ llCfOSS a room, and then
slapped h1s ·own daughter, Hope, in
the fW:C hard enough to leave a
handpnnt.
After that incident, Peny tes·
tified, she made plans to leave.
'When ,I left. I had $15 to my

..

name, (but) I didn't care."
That time she went to the shelter
. at Parkersburg, but was forced to
come back to Point ?k.asant to live
in order to keep he' re.sidence, she
testified.
In earlier testimony Monday, Dr.
Kshirsagar testified that he found a
slug inside Facemire's sinuses from
the gunshot wound to the head, He
also testified, with Morgan
demonsD'ating by slumping down ·
in the two-cushion blue loveseat in
front of the jury, that Facemire had
to be in a slumped position when
he was shot in the chest, otherwise ""
the bullet which traveled through
his body and the love seat to finally .
hit the back wall, could not have
made that path.
The doctor testified that the butlet would have been stuck inside
the body had it been positioned
another way, such as Facemire
· leaning foward in the love seat in a
struggle as the defense auomeys .
have asserted.
Later in cross examination
defense
auomey
Raymond
Musgrave did get the assistant state
medical examiner to admit he had
tolp the auorl)ey that the \(un could
have been fired at about s1x 10 nine
inches away from Facemire, a fact
that would suppon Perry's claim of
Continued on page 5

Dukakis talks .jobs, drugs during. Ohio visit

Bush plans media
blitz next 3 weeks

covery rot• of Columblo

'VI NEED BLOOD

Perry, 30, is charg¢ with the
first-degree murder of Facemire in
a shooting police say occurred
March 8, 1987 in the living room of
a residence at 2411 Lincoln Ave.,
Point Pleasant. A 10-woman, two·
man jury and Judge Clarence L.
Wau are bearing the case in Mason
County Circuit Coun.
Monday's testimony was highlighled by Perry taking the stand af.
ter Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan
Jr. rested the state's case after call·
ing a dozen wiinesses.
Previous to resting his case,
Morgan called Assistant Slate
Medicial Examiner Dr. V. H. Kshirsagar to the stand. The doctor testified that he believed 11 38-caliber
revolvet confiscated by police in
the investigation was fired from
about 21 inches from Facemire's
chest, causing one of Facemire's
two wounds. He was not asked his

opinion on how far away the gun
had to be fired to create a second
wound to Facemire - a gunshot to
the top of the head.
The doctor said Facemire - a 53, 116-pound individual - died
from the two $11nsbot wounds.
The assistant state medical examiner said he could not say, based
upon his findings of an autopsy just
after the murder, which shot was
fired·first.
Perry told the jury that she met
Facemire through writing to him
while he was in Vietnam with the
service. She was 12.
"He's 13 years older than I am,"
Perry, dressed in a blue sweater and
a blue and lightly striped dress, tes·
tified. . .
. Perry described their relationship
has one that grew. "It just didn't
happen overnight," she testified.
Perry testified that Facemire had
his own way of doing things that
was hard to explain to t)Jc jury. "He
could be sweet, kind, and loving
and sometimes he playild games
with the kids - sometimes he was
the best person to be around."
She added, however, that
Facemire also had a dark side, a
habitual drinking problem that
would change his mood. "He'd get
mad at TV shows and take it out on
the kids," she testified.

By ALISON GRANT
United Press Inlernatlonal
A shlrt·sleeved Michael Duka·
kls sat on a scoring table at a
Dayton bowling alley Monday
and talked to 30 adults and
children about drug problems,
loan ptograms for college stu·
dents
and keeping Social Secur·
WASHINGTON (UP!) -VIce between now and the Nov. 8
tty
strong.
President George Bush plans to election.
'We ought to start with the No.
Sources told the Post that the
spend more than half of his $30
1
one
concern that I heard and
mUlion fall advertising budget to document is a stale·by·state
drugs," the Democratic
that
Is
bl liz the.alrwaves during the next operating plan for purchases or
presidential
candidate said bethree weeks, with special empha· television and radio time and
fore
hearing
from southwestern
sis on Ohio, California, and New reflects major elements of the
Jersey. The Washll)gton Post Republican campaign strategy Ohio residents about peer pres·
as It was being formulated last sure and the financial incentives
reported Tuesday .
of selling drugs.
The newspaper , citing an Inter· week.
Ear Uer In the day, at an
campaign
sources
told
Bush
nal campaign document It ob·
employee·owned
factory In subthe
Post
that
although
the
docu·
tal ned, said more than one third
urban
Cleveland,
Duk1lkls acment
indicates
that
no
further
of the Bush campaign's $15.2
cused
the
Reagan
administration
television
dollars
are
to
be
spent
million local television budget or $5.3 million - has been In Texas- where Bush Is leading of abandoning the blue·collar
earmarked for California, with Democratic candidate Michael factory worker.
At Dayton's Varsity Lanes,
Continued on page 5
43 percent of that to be spent
Dukakls talked about his plail to
allow college students who don't
qualify for existlng loan and
grant programs to get govern.'
men!' money that can be paid off
once the students graduate and
begin work.
A large bill from Pomeroy VIllage's trustee bank was a
"One of the things I hope we
matter of concern when VIllage Council met Monday night In a
can do Is stop this annual attack
brief regular session.
-on PELL grants and loans,"
The trustee bank. Bank One, of Columbus, submitted a $7,300
Dukakls said.
bill to Cierk·Treasurer Jane Walton. Normally, these bills run
The 35-mlnute discussion was
about $3,000, Walton said. However, the village has not been
held against a backdrop of a
billed for the advertising of trustee bonds for the sewer system
bowling score card showing
since 1985. The new bill reflects the advertising costs since 1985.
Dukakts with a perfect 300 and
In another financial matter, Bank One requested Council
Vice President George Bush with
·
Continued on page_L
zero. Lane employees wore

Tho Public Utlltloo Comminion of Ohio hM HI
.for public hoarlng C.o
No. 88·24·GA·GCR, to

0173.

,.

BUSH CAMPAIGNS IN ILLINOIS- An aide holds an umbrella
as Vice President George Bush campaigned In Skokie at the
Holocaust Memorial In a heavy rainstorm late Monday afternoon.
Bush spoke of the tragedy as ''here is sadness. Here too Is hope."
(UP I)

UGAL NOTICE

011 otOhlo,lnc., thooporotlon of Ito PurciiMed
Goo Adjuolmtnt Clau•
ond roloted
Thlo ·
ho•lng lo och....locl to
begin ot 10:00 o.m. on
T-diiY, Novern.,_ 1 B.
1888, et the oftl- of·
the Commlollon. 1880
Eoot
8rood
8tnol,
ColumbuL Ohla 43281-

·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS -The state Con·
trolling Soard has approved
another $8.2 mill ton worth of
state loans to 14 school districts,
bringing to 45 the number of
school loans approved In 1988.
James VanKeuren, director of
the Division of School Finance In
the Ohio Department of Educa·
lion, told the board Monday that
about 10 percent of all Ohio
school districts are tapping the '
state for funds to remain open.
Under Ohio law, schools are
forbidden to close for financial
reasons. The districts taking
loans to remain open for the rest
of this year must be certified by
the Ohio Department of Educa·
tlon and the state auditor as
unable to operate without the
money.
The largest loan of $2.5 million
will go to Ohio Valley Local
School District In Adams County,

.

Defendant testifies as Nonna Perry
murder trial resumes in Pt. Pleasant

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis ' Loewl

0

Ohio Super wtlo goes unclaimed

&lt;

Stocks

Announcements
To Meet Tuesday
XI Gamma Epsnon Chapter,
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, will meet
at 7 p.m Tuesday at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
AuxUiary To Mee&amp; .
The Women's Auxiliary of the
Rutland Fire Department will

'

~conomy.. ..__;;.;co;.;:n.::tin.::u..:..:ed:..:':..:rom.:.:.:..::p.:..:ag:.e_1_ _

month to month about your
profitability anymore," com·
plalned one unidentified execu·
live . ."And If profits sl!p, you
have to be ready to move. It's not
a time for long·range commit·
mentstocauses,nomatterhow
good."
Efforts by many businesses to
achieve a "lean and mean"
standing, so that a minimum
number of workers are on staff.
also have an Impact, according
to a CEO from a medlum·sl2ed
company.
''It's hard to justify (giving) If
you're laying off left and right,"
the executive told the poUsters.
Four of every 10 CEOs said
they expect both cash and
non·cash donations and match·
ing gifts programs to Increase In
the near future. But Joseph said
such a level of charity activity
"by no means would be able to
address the dramatic Increases
In need that have been generated
by cutbacks In government .
funding."
Since the start of President
Reagan's adminiStration, · go·
vernment support tor charity has
been cut by $30bllllon, the survey
found, with corporate and prl·
vate lll?~ey able to make up for

· 1 Section, 10 Paget 26 Cents
A Multtmedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy--Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. October 18, 1988

Vol.39, No.114
Copyrighted 1988

Partly cloudy, low In mid
30s tonight. Wednesday, variable cloudiness, highs In mid
50s, Chance of rain 20 percent.

•

•

Squads receive 9 weekend calls

Ohio records 13 highway
fatalities over weekend

~ttery

Ohio

I

said the Republicans are already
celebrating a victory, bu I vowed
he will rally with a message lor
the nation ' s "I ndustrial
heartland."
"I'm here today In America's
Industrial heartland because I
want to be the president who
stands up and fights for you,"
Dukakls told factory workers in
the Cleveland suburb of Euclid.
· Most studies show that Vice

President George Bush has a
clear lead In probable electoral
votes, with Ohio being one of the
states leaning toward the Republican. Ohio, however, with Its 23
electoral votes, Is considered a
key state for Dukakls.
' 'The Republicans wan I to put
you to sleep. They're already
celebrating; they're popping the
champagne corks In their pent·
Continued on page 5

DUKAKI!l GREETS SUPPORTERS- Democratic presldenllal
candidate Michael Dukaklll p-eets supporters In Columbus
Monday 1111 he launches bll campaign lor the final 21 days before
the election. GGvernor Richard Celeste, left, and MarUn Luther
King Ill Introduced Dukakl8. (UPI)
I

l'

�•
•

Tutllday, October 18. Ht88

Commentary
Th~

Daily Sentinel .

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
A~
~m~ r"T"'\.....o....._...,....,I""T""E::!!d'~

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publl&amp;ber/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. All letters are subJect toed.ltlng and must be stgned with naiJle, address and
telephone nUmber. No unstgnOO. letters will be published. Letters should be In
goal tasle, addressing Issues, not persmallties.

The certa~ty
of broken promises
ByARNOLDSAWISLAK
UPI !iolqlor Editor
WASHINGTON- When I moved to Washington I had a neighbor
who worked for the National Bureau of Standards who said he became
a Republican in the 1930s when 'Franklin D. Roosevelt tried to cut
spending by laying off federal workers, one of whom was my
neighbor.
FDR cut the budget? Everythlilg I ever heard out in the Midwest
was that Roosevelt and his New Dealers Invented "tax and tax, spend ·
and spend."
But it didn 'I take much research to find this In the 1932 Demcratic
platlorm: "We advocate an immediate and drastic reduction in
governmental expenditure~ by abolishing useless commissions and
offices, consolidating departments and bureaus and eliminating
extravagance to accompnsh a saving of notless than 25 percent in the
cost of the federal government."
Roosevelt did make an effort to redeem that explicit pledge by
purging the federal payroll, but it quickly became clear to him that
what was needed in the depths of t.h e Depression. was more
government activity. not less.
"
.
My neighbor got hls job back and was joined by many thousands of
new federal workers. who along with millions in private business
jobs, were convinced that FDR did much to save the country by
"priming the pump" with federal dollars .
The purpose of this ls to introduce the subject of campaign
promises, of which we are now getting a full dose.
Item: Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis says
$110 billion of' federal taxes go uncollected every year and he·wili go
after it to help pay the $150 blllion deficit. Tax Increases, he says, are
the "last resort."
Item: Republican presidential candidate George Bush says, "Read
my lips. No new taxes." The deficit, he says, wlli be licked by a
"flexible freeze" on govenment spending.
The last thing the• country needs is more cynicism about politics,
but it stretches credulity that both of these intelligent and
experienced public officials truly beli!'ve. that they have fully ·
answered the absolutely vital question of how to reduce the deficit.
Dukakis says no. responsible politician can make a flat no-tax
pledge, and the history or campaign promises certainly supports his
argument. Anyone who votes for Bush solely on the basis of the tax
issue is like a pllot who buys an airplane with a money-back
guarantee lf it crashes.
Dukakis's promise to crack down on tax evasion comes with a plan
to double the number of Internal Revenue Service agents. A lot of
people agree that tax cheaters ought to be caught and made to cough
up what they owe, but completely aside from the question of whether
a million IRS agents could do the job, it might be hard to convince
honest citizens that the newly htred tax collectors wlll not simply
concentrate on easy marks like themselves who make nlckle and
dime mistakes on their returns.
What this boils down to is the conclusion that no matter who wins
this election, there are going to be some broken promises when the
winner races up to the problem of the deficit.

Ab8ndoning the
Great Plains Robert Walters
Directly affected would be
YANKTON, · S.D. iNEA) "It's probably a harder life," central and western North Daacknowledges the manager or kota, South Dakota, Nebraska,
Steupnagel's egg processing Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas;
plant when asked about living in central and eastern Montana and
the vast expanse of the Great Wyoming; and eastern Colorado
Plains that stretches west from and New Mexico.
The Poppers' portrayal of the
here to the Rocky Mountains·.
"You don't get the blg wages region is throughly depressing:
"The Plains are endlessly
out there but the prices are low.
Food Is cheaper," he adds while windswept and nearly treeless ....
.dismissing as absurd the notion A dusty town with a single gas
that most of Inhabitants of the station, store and house is
Great Plains should abandon the sometimes 50 unpaved miles
from its nearest neighbor.
region.
The manager of Yaggie' sgraln another three-building settleelevator says, "There's people ment amid the sagebrush ....
• 'The Great Plains are Amerimaking a good llvlng out there."
But the manager of a fertilizer ca's steppes. They hav.e the
store says, "There's a lot of land nation's hottest summers and
e0ut there that should never have coldest winters, greatest temperature swings, worst hall and
'been broken up."
locusts
and range fires, fiercest
• The place referred to as "out
there" has became the subject of droughts and blizzards, and
considerable debate since two therefore its shortest growing
academics at Rutgers University season ....
''The region's farm, ranch,
in New Jersey advanced a
drastic solution for the chronic energy and mineral economies
problems faced by the Inhabit· are in deep depression. Many
small towns are emptying and
:Snis of the Great Plains.
• The husband·wife team of aging at an aU-time high rate and
Frank J. Popper, a political some are dying."
The Poppers' article ln Planscientist, and Deborah Epstein
Popper, a graduate student in ning inspired more mail than any
geography, suggest that the vast other story in the magazine's
region be "deprtvatized" - a history. "The authors have comeuphemism for a federal govern- pletely underestimated the vitalment buyout of virtually ali ity, Ingenuity and prosperity of
residents - and ·returned .to the the Plains people," said one
state in which lt exist before the letter writer.
Another said the Poppers'
first white settlers arrived.
In an article published late last analysis probably was appllca·
year in Planning magazine, the . ble to "certain isolated pockets of
Poppers even offered • a new the Great Plains ... but it
name, the "Buffalo Commons," certainly should not apply to he
would encompass most of the region as a whole."
Although the Poppers have
land west of the 98th' meridian
and east of the Rockies - a provided a thoughtful analysts of
region that Includes about 20 the bleak prospects faced by the
percent of the nation's land area residents of a troubled region ,
but whose 5.5 mUiion Inhabitants their proposed solution ls pollli·
constitute less than 2.25-percent cally unrealistic.
of the country's population .

4

Page-2-The Daily Senti~el
Pomeroy-Middleport. Oh10
Tuesday. October 18. 1988

New York Jets no match for Buffalo
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UPI) - The oni)f people who
could have been worse off than
than the New York Jets after
their 37-14 thrashing by -the
Buffalo Bills Monday night were
those In charge of stadium
security.
With the game out of con.trol by
the second quarter, the crowd
turned to amusing itself. Fights
too numerous to count ·broke out
around the stadium, chairs were
~ton fire and the loudest noise of
the night came when they
pleaded for the return of a Jack
O'Lantern balloon they had been
batting around.
In order to divert attention
from the rout on the field the
balloon was returned to the
delight of those who·were left .
This became the case because
the Bills scored on th~lrflrst five

U. S., Soviet Russia fight bureaucracy
'WASHINGTON- In Moscow mined· to revamp the bureau·
and Washington allke, the top cracy before lt suffocates the
leaders have become small dogs Soviet system.
Now an American leader has neuver It before it smothers hlm
wagged by a huge bureaucratic
stepped forth to challenge the in Its embrace. He Intends to lop
tall.
The cumbersome Soviet bu· U.S. bureaucracy. He is the off some arms and untangle
reaucracy has grown beyond bllllonaire entrepreneur H. Ross others to keep them from med·
control or comprehension. It has . Perot who would like to begin hy dUng in the management of the
become so all-encompassing that reforming the U.S. Postal Ser· economy.
it now consumes most of the vice. Perot also believes he
He wants to privatize Soviet
Soviet gross national product. would be ready to restructure the agriculture and Industry, putting
This has resulted in stagnation, Pentagon procurement system !hem on the Incentive system. He
which could end In putrlficalion. and the Internal Revenue Sys· has called for radical reforms of
The bureaucracy is also the tern. In time, he thinks he could the communist party, designed
gorilla ln the U.S. closet, and the bring efficiency to the govern· . to clear out the deadwood. If he
American people are obliged to ment at large.'
gets his way, party bureaucrats
Bu I In both the Soviet Union will face competitive, multiple
live with ll. The polltical manag~
ers have demonstrated in lnabil· and the United States, the bu· candidate elections.
tty to manage the beast, let alone reaucracy lurks like an octopus,
Of course, the bureaucrats
curb Its growth or diminish it slippery and unreachable ln Its won't accept these sweeping
murky environment, with tenta- democratic reforms without bitdomain.
cles
able to reach out and shutoff ter opposition. It's dangerous to
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba·
its
adversary
's oxygen.
chev has concluded that to save
try to take privileges away from
Gorbachev is engaged ln a an octopus. What is the likely
his country, he must rescue it
first from the clutches of the fight-to-the-death with the Soviet outcome? The bureaucracy- has
bureaucracy. He appears deter· octopus, struggling to ouima· gained such a powerful lock on

Soviet society that it is doubtful
Gorbachev can loosen it much.
In America, Perot has encountered the obstinate,.lf less grim,
obstruction of the postal bureauc
cracy. The postal unions stirred
up their friends in the Senate,
who began raising obstacles to
Perot's reforms. Then, the Board
of Contract Appeals, and appendage of the federal bureaucracy,
canceled Perot's consulting contra!. This alarmed the Postal.
Service which confessed to the
Senate that the Perot contract
had been "loosely drawn" with·
out competitive b!J;jdlng.
What Perot wants to do is pick
up where the Grace Commission
left off. The co'mmlsslon, headed
by industrialist J. Peter Grace,
found massive waste ·tn the
federal government. Perotw9uld
like to take off from the Grace
proposals and Increase the eftl·
ciency and performance of go··
vernment operations .
•
· Both reformers, Gorbachev
and Perot, understand that the
stakes are high. There has been a.
shift in the world's undercurrents from mllltary to economic
competition. They recognize that
national power ultimately must
be bullt on a solid foundation of
e~onomic strength. Yet, Japan
has pulled ahead of the United
States in the economic race, and
Western Europe is rapidly catch·
lng up.
Gorbachev and Perot want to
remove the bureaucratic encum·
brances that hobble production.
Both countries swarm with bu·
reaucrats - . mlillons of anonymous men and women -who have
ensnarled the producers ln petty
procedures and regulattons.
These commissars and clerks,
examiners and regulators demand the rigid observance of set
rules and procedures, the Inter·
minable seeking of permission
for any divergence, whlle the
resourceful Japanese grab the
world markets.
·

OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) John Tudor has pitched just once
in the last 24 days; but to hear
Oakland's Dave Henderson ialk,
you'd think the Los Angeles lefty
was the hottest pitcher In all
baseball.
.
·
Tudor. who was 1·1 ln last
RIDDICK SCORES - ·Buffi!Jo Bills running back Rob ~iddick
dives over New York Jets linebacker Brad Benson and other Jet
defenders for a third-quarter touchdown in Monday night's game
in East Rutherford, N.J. The Bills crushed the Jets 37·14. (UPI)

Scoreboard ...

Dukakls-style Democrats have
not been wiling to pay thepriceor
hear the burden ln Nicaragua or
Angola, on Star Wars, on suffl·
ciently high defense budgets, on
missile deployments, or on new
weapons systems. In part because hard-liners tend to equate
toughness on foreign policy with
toughne• on other issues, they
say _ that Democratic·Dukakis
types are just as loose and llberai
as theY've been ln the recent
past. That, of course, is symbol·
ized by the attack buzz words: ·
"prison furloughs," "ACLU,"

etc.
Some Democratic leaders say
that the GOP's characterization
of Democratic foreign and defense policy is not fair. They
maintain that there is a good deal
more bipartisanship than there
appears to be. Democrats, they
say, have usually disagreed only
with those few aspects of pollcy
that have gone too far.
I asked, "Old that tightness
with cause movements translate
ln the public mind as too
liberal?"
Dukakls answered: "I don' t
know that it translated as too
liberal. I think what lt said to a lot
of average Americans ls,
'They're kind of forgetting me.
I'm out here, and I have hopes
and dreams and aspirations for
myself, for my kids, for my
community. I may or may not be
part of an organized movement,
but I want my political leaders
· and I want the Democratic Party
to speak for me." (We expect to)
have a winning campaign which
speaks to those basic main·

W L T

lluflalo

6

Pct . PF

I II

.

Clnclnr.tll
Houllton
Clevel.,.d
PIII!!IJU rzh

I

··u

''
a

0

.143 130

Ill~

Wr.st
131 129
HI 101
I~ IR&amp;
ID:t 1.5:1
H IU

\II'

-1

W~Nnston

Dallas

stream issues that all Americans'
care about and that they look to
their president to do something

fhlca«&lt;

.......

&amp;y

about!'

Who's .right about who's
Kennedy? And why is it so
important?
•
The basic GOP charge against
Dukakis is just the charge Sen.
Bentsen leveled at Quayle:
"Governor, you're I)O John
Kennedy." Dukakis says, yes, he
is. It's important because
Kennedy was a Democrat Y{ho
was seen as both tough and
progressive, a mantle that has
eluded recent Democratic nominees . If Dukakis can credibly:
reclaim it, he can wln.lfhecan't, ·
if the Republlcans convince:
voters he's just another liberal, :
he won't. As Is proper, it's up to
the voters.
·

Ntl'll

Orlean11

' 0
6 I

.%11(1 115 H2
.K5'2 1·1'2

.2116 131 161
.286 liS 139
.IU U 1-1'2

"''""'I IID

li
S

'].1

.51 I 1313 IlK

-"51 !flO
.71-1 199
San Fran.
5 2 D .7H llfi
Atlanta
I 6 0 .IU Ui
Molllll,)' '~t resllll
Bulflllo 31, NY let!! 14
Sunday, Oct. 23
NY OIIUIIII a1 A.Uanta, I p.m .
D~t.IIU at Philadelphia, I p.m .
Oen-..r at Pltblbul'lfh, I p.m.
Delrlllt at Ran- Clly.l p.m.
Houl&amp;onM&amp; Clnclnr-.U, I p,m .
W.u hl•ton n. Gret• n Ba}'
LA Ram"

P,\

.$71 171 151
.571 1M U\!
.11"1 1111 1$4
..Jt! 155 131

.

I 0
3 0

' '
'
I

GrPen&amp;y

Pt'l. PF

3 0
:l 0
3 D
-1 0

-1
3
'l 5 0
Central
6
4

Mia~

Tun~~t

L T
"

~

Ill
1311
1-11
117

Ill
:: J 1

Ct&gt;ntrBI
i\shland

''
''I

Day &amp;on
Bluffton
Wllmlnl{l:on

um.,.

2
2

Clnt!lnnaU

'I I0

I
I
2
·3

I
0
I
I

4'0

' ''

YOURKftltnm !olt

'"""'

I 'I 00
I
0 ' 0
' 0

Flnllll,)'

'11flln

DcfiiiiiCf'

Calendar
Wor1d Series
at Oakkutd, R:3D p.m.
Boldnr
Ot\'1"1and - Sandrrlnl' Williams vs.
Ron &amp;sett, 12 round bolll for vac•l
NABF mlddl..welpt champlon!lhlp;
Jerry Pap vs. Joe " 'llllru , II round

welterwei Pt hout.

Hockey
PhU.dt"lp¥a a1 Plltlhtuw;h. 1:3 5 p.m .
Chlcq:o • Del roM, '2 : 3:1 p.m.
Vant'V•~r at NV lalander!i,li:05 ,p.m .

Transactions
BuebAII

Dec roll - WaJvedreJiever Don Heinkel
for the purpo!lt' or rtvtnc him hill

Ud!Ordltto•lrele•.
Milwaukee - FlredcoachDave Hilton;
named Duffy Dyer fllrd·base roach,
ILIIowlngTolt)' Mulll'!r lobeCGm e tull· lme
llittlnrlnstruclor.

at

Mllw.u~e

LA Rldder.u l N&lt;ew Ork!an1, I p.m.
Mla~ruta !d Tampa Ra)' , I p.m.
New EnP,nd at Bllffalo, I p.m.
ln llanapollsal S IUI Dlep, 4 p.m .
Cllo'Veliuulat Phuenb. , 4 p.m .
Nl' Jt&gt;lul Mlwnl, -1 p.m .
· Sf'allle al LA Ram11, -1 p.m .

Monl-,y , Od . 2-1

San Frand!ICO at

• 30

II

~~~ o\llple~~

E~t.~tl

PhoP.nlx
Nl' Giant'"

OTHERS

PA

II

2 ..

Ohio Stale
Whtcenlln

.11117 143 119

St&gt;•Uk&gt;
-1 3 0 .5'71
. Dtnver
4 3 0 .$11
LA. Rllldefll
3 -1 0 .421
San IMe«&lt;
2 S D .%86
KanNM CM)'
I S 1 .ZH
Nado•d ronff'r~nce

Cltlca110, 9 p.m .

College
standings

TDs . His interception was returned 40 yards for a touchdown
by rookie safety Erik McMillan
In the thlfil quar Ief.
" We're 6-1 and that Is what
counts," Kelly said. "Except for
the Jets every team in th e
division won , which shows you
have to win to stay even."
Two of Kelly's touchdown
passes went to Andre Reed,
covering 65 and .16 yards. Reed,
tied with Jets tight end Mickey
Shuler after six weeks for the
AFC lead · with '35 receptions,
caught seven passes for 132
yards. Shuler was injured and
did not play.
' 'Most of the players here have
never played on Monday night, "
said Reed, "including me. It was
a big motivating factor for us."
"We really had to rise tonight ," Kelly said. "To prove not

Ba!!keCbaU
Bo~ton Elil:lended forw&gt;ll'd Larry
Bini's contract thro111h 11191-92 !leiason.
Golden Stale.:.... W.. ved JW&amp;rd Jo~~eph
HuU.
LA l.aken- Waived forwards KKnttard Jo1tn110n an d Scott Meents.
Nt&lt;w Vtark - Wahfld ION'll.rd·cenler
,Jelf Cook.
Fuotb,U
Houll)o!l - Waived de fen!lh't' batk
DomlftJI) Bryant ; ~tctlva.led defens!Yc
b¥k Qu lntln Jo ne&lt;~ .
Nr:w Ell.lllldd - Wal\'ed quarterback
Tom Ram!'ley .
•

year's Series while playing for
St. Louis, ls scheduled to start
t onight for the Los Angeles
Dodgers in Game Three of the
World Series. He will be opposed
by Oakland's Bob Welch.
The Athiellcs · who trail 0-2 in
the Series · are struggling at the

MHS ·volleyball .team
showing improvement

real."
Kelly also connected with Flip
Johnson on a 66-yard TO pass.
which came oil a ball tipped· by a
Jet defensive back.
New York entered with th e
second-best offense statistically
In the AFC, but quarterback Ken
O'Brien was never able to get hi s
team 's attack going. He was
sacked lour times in the first
half, 2 1-2 by All Pro defensive
end Bruce Smith working again st
rookie tackle Jeff Criswell, who
was playing for injured starlet
Dave Cadigan .
O' Brien finished 18 of 30 for 191
yards with one in terception and
was sacked five times.
" We got beat by a good football
team,'' said New York Coach Joe ·
Walton. " But we got beat by New
England and bounced ba·c k. You
can' t get angry with a young
team, when they get behind they

can' t come back."

New York lost at home on a
Monday night for the first time in
eight games. The Blils last
appeared on a Monday night
plat!!~ hitting a collective .156
Sept. 17, 1984, and lost to Miami
through the first two games.
21-17. .
Henderson, who is hitting .222,
" We had a feeling of helplessknows the trouble a junkball ness," said New York's Jim
pitcher can give a power-hitting Sweeney. "We knew they were
lineup like Oakland's.
blltzlng, but they seemed to
"If I had my druthers, I'd outnumber us in · the blocking
rather face Roger Clemens !Bos- schemes."
ton's two-time Cy Young
The Bills' other points came on
winner)," Henderson sa(d. " He a 1-yard TD dive by· Robb
makes good pitches and has good Riddick and Scott Norwood field
control. That makes hlm really goals of 30, 34 and 28 yar.ds. Th e
tough."
· Jets' flrst touchdown was a
Tudor himself seems to be a 1-yard dive by Johnny Hector. ·
reluctant starter, unhappy with
the role Los Angeles Dodgers
Manager Tommy Lasorda has
cast him ln.
"I'm not ·used to It," Tudor said
The Daily Sentinel
of his long layoff. " I was off 15
days before my last start and 9
days this time. But I don't draw
(USPS
A. Dlvlllon of MuiUmedla. Inc.
up the lineup. I go out there when
they give me t·he ball."
Published every afternoon, Monday
t hrough Friday, 111 Court St., PoLasorda defended his use of the
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubveteran, saying he expected a
lishing Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph . 992-2156. Sepitcher of Tudor's experience to
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
be able to come off the bench and
Ohio.
pitch well.

By DAVE HARRIS
unavalla ble.
ROCK SPRINGS- The Meigs
The Lady Marauders defeated
Marauder Volleyball team, after
Alexander 15-4, 16-14. Leading
getting off to a slow start, has
the scoring was Meier with 11
shown improvement as of late to
points, 2 aces. Ewing and Dou·
raise Its record to 5-13. The glas 6 points each, Hovatter 4
~Marauders under !lrst year head
points 1 ace, Leslie Carr 2 points
coach Rick Ash have placed wins
and 1 ace and Renee Young 2
over Eastern (twice), Alexpoints.
ander, Athens and Belpre.
Meigs picked up its fourth win
In the first contest against against Belpre 15-8, 15-7, Meier
Eastern, Meigs won by scores of once again led the way with 8
15-10 and 16-14, Elise Meier led
points and 4 aces, Taylor, Douthe Marauders with ' 12 points
glas and Hovatter with 4 points
including 2 aces, Beth ·Ewing · each, with Hovatter also scoring
scored 5, Jody Taylor and
an ace. Young and Ewing scored Name OAC honorees
Chrissy Richmond 4. while Kelly
1 point each.
'
Douglas and Heather Hovatter
In an exciting 3 set match
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
chipped In with 3. .
agalnsi Athens.Melgs came out Baldwin-Wallace quarterback
In the second contest against
on top 15·10, 2-15. 15-1l.lt was Erik Young and Capital tackle
the Eagles, the Marauders made
Meter again leading the way with Mike Kauffeld have been seIt a clean sweep with a 15-12, 15-10
8 points. Taylor 7, .Richmond and lected the Ohio Athletic Confervictory. Meier paced the MaEwing with 6 and 1 ace each, ence offensive and defensive
rauders with 1Q points and 2 aces,
Butcher 3 and Douglas·2 to round players of the week.
Douglas 5 points, Mary Butcher 4
out the scoring.
Young, a senior from New
Tllf Marauders play at Vinton Phlladeiphia, completed 17 of 23
points and 3 aces, Hovatter 4
Wednseday and hit the tourna- passes for 287 yards and one
points and 1 ace, Taylor 3 points.
ment trail Thursday night at touchdown ln B-W's 31-23 win
2 aces, Richmond 3 points and 1
Athens High School against Nel- owir Muskingum Saturday. He
ace and Renee Young 1 point.
sonville York at 8 o'clock.
Eastern scoring was
also rushed 17 Urnes for 38 yards.
Young' s 73-yard touchdown
pass to JeffLiodsay broke a 17-17
deadlock late in the third
quarter.
Kauffeid, a senior from Orient,
Ohio, had 15 tackles. 10 of them
solos, and caused a fumble in
Capital's 14-7 win at Waynesburg, Pa. He had three quarter·
back sacks and fOII,I;othertackles
were behind fbe line of
scrimmage.

Meigs cross country
team has good season

to us. but to the whole na tional
media that Andre Reed Is lot

'"'"•&gt;

Member: United Press Internat ional,
Inland Daily Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertlslng Representative, Bra nham
Newspaper Sates, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
POSThtASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, lll Court St ..

Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;3.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

One Week .. .. ... ........ .............. ... ... $1.40
One Month .. ............................... $6.10
One Year ............... ···~· ............. $72.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ........ ...... ..................... 25 Cents
Subscribers not deslringtopay rhecarrter may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, ti or 12 month
basis. Credit wlll be given ca rri er each
week.

No subscriptions by mall permitted lp.

areas where home carrier service ls
available.

Mall S.l:iacrtptlons
Inside Melp County
13 Weeks ..... .... .... ..................... $19.24

26 \\l'eeks ......... .. .............. , ..... ... S37.96
52 Weeks ... ............................ .. . $74.3&amp;
Outside Meigs County

ta Wel'ks ......... .... ...... .... ,.... ...... $20.80
26 Weeks ........... .. ..... ........... .... . S40.30
52 Weeks .................. .. ........... ,.• $75.40

San Franchtco - Slped quarterback
Totld Sanl08; placed delen§lu end Jeff
stover "" Injured N'!len~ .
Hockey
LM An!ftt'!'i - Waive d delen!lt'man
Jim Holford t OAfHdJn him lo New Haven
of Amn-k-an Hockey League.

T•am
Ct'nlral Mldt
Ball ~tat!•

\\'t!ft...,.rn Mlch
Euk&gt;rn Mlch
Ohln Unl\

Kent Stall'

To...,.

Bowlin.- Orern
Miami

OU back is MAC
honoree of week

S3995 FRONT S3775

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio
University running back Andrew
Greer and.Kent State cornerback
Jamie Howell have been selected
the Mid-American Conference
offensive and defensive players
of the week.

OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
S1500
TUNE-UPS

Greer, a junior from Alto
Lorna, Calif., rushed 32 times for
204 yards In Ohio U's 38·21 win
over Miami Saturday, scoring
once on an 11-yard run. Greer's
204 yards rushing was the most
for an OU back since 1973.

$3895 6 CY. $3495 4 CYL. S27'
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

LICENSED SHOP

Ml•.r"G&amp;a

. ....

'
'' "" "
'"St6
I

st

Northwes~n

4 :t II .51 1 1!1 lt4
3 31 .MIIJMI#-1 ,
3 -1 0 .IZ9 105 11!1
'l s 0 .~88 134 156
t..enlnal
6 I 0 .S$7 112 134
.11-1 153
' , 0 .$71 Ill 115

Miami
NYJd s
New &amp;!Jiand
lndiMMpolb

BRAKES

8 CYL.

Michl~

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
i\merk:1111 Conlerrnce
Ea&gt;l

FALL SPECIALS
lSLOW AS

.......

NFL results

PhU~~ptj1

you use our military power, and
wheh your use other means,
obviously Is a judgement that has
to be made. II was John Kennedy
who negollated our withdrawal
from Laos, and some think that,
had he been re-elected, we would
not have plunged into the war ln
Vietnam ....
"But there are many, many
ways for the United States to be
the nation in this world that
inspires other nattons to freedom
and human rights and democracy and creates an environment ln which those kinds of
values are Important, and are
extended to people all over the
world. Sometimes that may
require military force. Other
times it will require example.
Other times lt will require
economic assistance. Other
times ll wtil require new relation·
ships with the nations of Latin
America, or for lhatrnatter other
parts of the world (of the sort)
that John Kennedy created and
was involved ln, and I hope I can
be Involved ln."
Thatls pretty tough language,
indeeds Kennedyesque. But Republlcans and most hard·llners
say this sort of thing is a put-on.
Th~y say the Dukakis and

possessions and completely dominated the Jets. Buffalo went
ahead 24·0 anjl was up 31-7 at
halftlme.
''The firs( five Urnes we got the
bali we scored and you don't
expect that," said Buffalo Coach
Marv Levy. "An early score, a
successful bomb, and a Upped
pass would demoralize anyone."
Buffalo outgalned New York
427-199 and had 24 first downs to
10 for the Jets. The Bills held the
ball nearly twice as long as New
York, 39: M to 20: 06.
The Bllls, 6-1, are off to their
best start since going 7-1ln 1974.
Buffalo opened a two-game lead
over second-place Mlaml in the
AFC East and dropped the~ets to
third at 3-3-1.
Jlm Kelly completed 16 of 27
passes for 302 yards with one
Interception. and three first-half

Tudor faces Welch tonight
in Game 3 of World Series

What Mike Dukakis told me.__Be_n_~_att_en_be---=-rg
The big issue is not whether
Sen. Dan Quayle is comparable
to Pres. John Kennedy. More
l(llportant by far is whether Gov.
Michael Dukakls is llke
Kennedy. That, after all, is a
central theme of his campaign.
A recent exclusive Interview I
have with Dukakis sheds some
light. The lnterylew was aired as
part of a one-hour PBS special on
Oct. 17.
I · asked Dukakis about the
Kennedy comparisons. I noted
that he had been quoting the
powerful passage of Kennedy's
inaugural address, that America
"shall pay any price, hear any
burden ... support any friend,
oppose any foe, to assure the
survival and the success of
Uberty."
Even most hawks don't talk
that way these days. II Is said
that such open-ended and pie·
nary thinking led us right into
Vietnam. I asked Dukakis: "Are
you comfortable with that Ian·
guage? Is It America' smission Iii
the world to defend and extend
liberty? Is that your
philosophy?"
Dukakls responded: "Sure.
Now, how you do it and when you
use milltary force, when you use
our milltary power, and when

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
0

lack Anderson and Joseph Spear

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~v

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

NIASE CI'R1n~11onl

Ashland..

Prepare For The Wl•ter Season ....
HEATING OIL, KEROSENE and #2 FUEL OIL
AVAILABLE AT
POMEROY, OHIO

&amp;DIESEL ,
Howell, a senior from Massillon, Intercepted three passes,
broke up two others and had nine
tackles in Xent State's 45-28 win
at Western Michigan.

s,.' ••,, u."
..

\".

•'

[\

.I

...

�•

The

October 18, 1988

Sentinel

nnn
COLOR TELEVISION
HEADQUARTERS

992-3671

ELBERFELD$

EWING
FUNERAL HOME

-'

Mulberry AYI,
Po-oy, Ohio
. 982-2121
.

H2·l47f

•

992·3481

Middleport, Ohio

•

POMEIOY, OHIO

••

Cleveland ~·· Phoe•lx
11

555 Park St.

111 East Second
Pomeroy, OH.
992·2342

LOCATION 2

94~-2551

992-6160
POIIIII'Oy, Ohio

UIPU:a

CHEIYL
" - 949-2710

CHESTER, OHIO

985-3301

s,,,,,,

461 S. 3rd

II

AT THE ENO OF THE POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE

992-2556

Steond St,.,t

nBSI4

New

Middleport, Ohio

~

,,
;
J

·------------:1

992-5552
820 East Main

·Pomeroy, Ohio

GROCERIES- GAS - SNACKS
BEER AND WINE CARRVOUT

·

...._s._a_tt_l•-~_s••L
.....A...R-.•......•___.,. 1

CROW'S
FAMILY REST AU RANT
PH. 992·5432
228 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

ADVERTISER

------~---

WINNER

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
BAUM LUMBER

--.

See Us For _That New or Used Ythicle Todayl

992-6421
446-3995
399 s. Third
State Rt. 7
Middleport, Ohio Gallipolis,
VNU ~~. Bolton Coli

~•·

Gallipolis ve. Log11

I

I FARMERS BAN~

I

EMPIRE FURNITURE
I RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
_P_E.:,O,;. Pl; .; E;.;,S. .;B; ,;,A; ,;,N;,; K;. . . ______--1-----~;,;;-_____,___1
I RIDENOUR SUPPLY

. TUPPERS PLAINS
'
915-3315
667-3161
Member federal Reserve

Point Pleasant ~•· Ripley

MEIGS
AUTO SALES, INC.

Dukak ;~ .. _ _ Continued from pa~e 1

"FINE LINE OF LATE MODEL
USED CARS AND TRUCKS"

~

992-3011
605 Gen. Hartinger Parkway
.
MiddltpQrt, Ohio

•

JOHNSON'S VARIETY STORE

I

~C~OO~P~ER~C~H~RY-.-~PL-Y.--D-0-DG-E-------r-----------------------

Syrocuoo. Ohio

HOME NATIONAL BANK
CLARK'S JEWELERS
I BANK ONE

I

1

Racine. Ohio

46771

BANKSON£.

,
:
.

Eighteen Thousand People Who C.1ro.
.BANK ONE, ATHENS, OHIO, NMONE PART OF THE cARING TEAM

I

PAT HILL FORD

I

46779

' II-•P•hO~n~;~k~1H~-;~;~~2~~6~~3~~3S!!!~Ph~o!ne!6J~~~~94~9l·2•2•10-J

_RA_C_IN_E~MO~TO~R~S--------~-----------------·

·•n••la Teeh
~~----------~~

~

•

-

........-

992·9907

Football '88
Catch All The.
E"cltementlll·

Bank

'

NAME······ · • · ·- · • · · ·- ·: · • • · · · • • • • · - • • · • · • • • • • · • • • · •
ADDREss················ • · • • · · ·- • · • · • • · · • · • ·- · ·- • · • · ·
PHoNE ······ • • •· • • • • • • · • • • • • • • • · • • · • • • • · • • • •·• • •·• • • • • • • ·

:

MEMBER FDIC
·

North Iaiita u. South•••ttrn

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

houses," Dukakls said. :•Buti've
got news for those Republicans.
We're going to be the ones
celebrating on election night."
Dukakls also criticized Bush
for not supporting an,lncrease In
the minimum wage, for supportIng the nomination of Robert
Bark to the Supreme Court and
cqooslng Dan Quayle as his
running mate.
North Coast Brass nearly
closed 18 months ago, but the
workers purchased the facility
and saved their 450 jobs.
"We're going to give , these
kinds of plants and these kinds of
jobs the help they need," Duka-.
kls said after a tour of the plant.
"Here In Ohio, you've lost
thousands of manufacturing
jobs. And just last week, we
learned that we had more Imports coming lnio thee United
States In August than in any
month In history," theMassachusetts governor said. "I'm not
going to sit by while we ship our
best jobs overseas. and you can't
buy an American-made televlslon, VCR or compact disc."
Employee Richard Marks of
Richmond Heights said most of
tile workers at North Coast Brass

'p robably favor Dukakls, but he
didn't make his final decision to
vote for Dukakis until after
hearing the speech.
"I really like him," Marks
said. "He really had a big
Impression on me."

devastation but no serious
By United Press International
lnjurtes.
The Midwest braced for
another round of rain today while
A tornado touched down near
Clinton, Ind., Monday, flattening
Indiana and nunols residents
picked ·up alter a day of fierce,
a barn and overturning a trailer.
tree -snap ping, barn-toppling
Thunderstorm winds topped out
at 63 mph In Fort Wayne, Ind.,
storms that delayed Air Force II
with VIce President George Bush
and 67 mph In Fort Knox, Ky.
A thunderstorm In central
aboard.
Indiana Monday blew down trees
Autumn temperatures reached
at Beech Grove, and, In Ohio,
the 60s in parts of the Midwest
trees and. power lines were
Monday, but the warm weather
In northwestern Ohio was - downed In Henry County and lrl
Greenville, the weather service
marred by 3· to 4-lnch rains that
fell durtng a slx·hour stretch
reported.
ending al 1 a.rri. today. Lesser
Golf·ball sized hall pummeled
the Illinois towns of Colfax and
amounts fell on Michigan. Indi·
I.e Roy while Three Oaks, Mich.,
ana. llllnois and Kentucky dur·
was slapped .with 70 mph winds.
lng the same period, said Na·
tiona! Weather Service
California, Mo., was swept by 77
forecaster Hugh Crowther.
. More rafn was predicted for
the region today, he Sa.ld.
Ori Monday, storms backed by
Council to meet
powerful winds plowed through
Chester Councll323, Daughters
the states, leaving a trail of
of America, will meet at 7: 30
p.rn. tonight (Tuesday) at the
hall. Inspection will be held and
members are to wear white.
Continued from page 1
There will be potluck
a a sllllggle and then a shooting of refreshments.
Facemire in self-defense after
having been initially threatened Dinner slated
The men's group of the Racine
with the gun.
United
Methodist Church Is sponHowever, Kshirsagar said he
a pancake, sausage and
soring
would defer his initial dcterminaegg
dinner
this Thursday at the
lion of a close-Jlll1'e shooting to
,
church.
The
dlll!ler Is open to the
lhat of West Virgirua State Police
and
serving
will be from 4
publiC
Lt. Clarence Lane, a firearms exto
7
p.m.
All
proceeds
from the
pert, who detennined the gunshot
dinner
will
go
to
the
church
wound to the chest came from 21
building
fund.
inches away, according to leSt
fi ·
r the
d
d
nngs 0
suppose mur er Auxiliary to meet
.weapon.
Rutland Fire Department
Kshirsagar also testified that the
Women's
Auxiliary will meet
blood-alcohol content of Facemire
Wednesay
at
7:30p.m.
at the time of his death was .24
I
percent, a concentration gteat
Meets Wednesday
enou~h to impair his movements
The Middleport Literary Club
and his ability to reason.
will meet on Wednesday at the
At .I percent a person is con- home of Mrs. Eileen BUck. Mrs .
sidered legally intoxicated in the Wendall Hover will review
state of West Vuginia and at .30 a
"Thumbs Up" by Nellie Dicken· uall 1
·
person us
y oses consciousness, son. Members will meet at the
the doctor testified.
home of Mrs. Ronald Reynolds in
The asSistant
·
state medica1 ex- Minersville at 1:30 p .m. to drive
·
h
ammer
tesu'lied 1hat 1'f ·~~"' s ot to
together to ·Mrs. Buck's home.
the chest were fired firs~ Facemire Plan Rally Day
would have stayed ali ve •aor about
Rally Day at Carleton Church
10 minutes before dying. If the shot
on
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy,
·~- head
fi
F
·
to u"'
was rst, acem1re will be Sunday starting at 9: 30.
would have died instantly, he ob- ·The New Life Singers, with
served.
Denise Bonecutter, from Gospel
In other testimonAn Monday,
Lighthouse,
Point Pleasant,
Facem1re
· •s daughter,
ge1a W:atW.Va., will sing. Minister Clyde
kins, testified that Perry told her Henderson Invites the publiC .
that she (Perry) shot her father.
Shelby Sanders, Facemire's older Meet. Wednesday
sister, testified thlu Perry told her
The Middleport Literary Club
that she'd had her fill of Facemire's wt'll meet at 2p.m. Wednesday at
drinking.
th.e hQm~t of Mrs. _;,;;llj!en Buck. _·
· "She said; '!'in no! putting up
Members of the club will meet at
with it .. he's leaving tonigh~ one 1:30p.m. Wednesday at the home
way or another." Sanders told 1he of Mrs. Ron Reynolds before
jury Perry said to her just one day going to the Buck home. Mrs.
before the murder occUlTed.
Wendell Hobver will present the
book review.

Announcements

Defendant...

· Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Louise
. Eshelman, l'omeroy; Carrie
· Roush, Racine; Lovercla Evans,
· Middleport; Margaret Elias, Racine; Titus Pickens, Syracuse.
Monday Discharges - Joyce
Manuel.

r .•

I'

Weather

· Soudl Central Ohio
Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
mph wind gusts.
low In the mid 30s. Northwest
Also, Monday , high winds winds near 10 mph.
damaged roofs at two elemenWednesday: Variable cloud!·
tary schools and a high school in ness, with highs between 55 and
the Peoria area ln central Illi- 60 . Chance of rain Is 20 percent.
nois, officials said.
Extended Forecast
Thul'8day throush Saturljay
..!'he schools were evacuated
Fair Thursday. with a chance
and the kids were dismissed," .
said Capt. Peter Gerontes of the of showers Friday and Saturday .
Peoria County sheriff's depart- Highs will be between 55 and 65,
ment. ''There were no Injuries, with overnight lows between 35
just a lot of scared people." ·
and 45.
The storms in llllnols struck
without warning just before 9
a.m. Monday because a truck .
smashed Into a power pole,
knocking out emergency sirens Daily $lock prices
ln northern Peoria County just (As of 10:30 a.m.)
before the weather service Bryce and Mark SmHh
Issued Its tornado watch, .pollee of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
said.
''There are a lot of uprooted , Am Electric Power .............. 27%
trees, damage to buildings, but P,UT ..................... ....... .. ... 26')1
no Injuries," Pollee Sgt. Russ . Ashland Oil ........................ 33%
Hawks said. He said some homes Bob Evans ......... .. .. ...... : ...... 16%
on Peoria 's north side and some Charming Shoppes ............. .13%
.silos in rural areas were dam- City Holding Co ... ........ ........ 34
aged by ,falling trees and utlilt y Federal Mogul.. ................... 49
GoodyearT&amp;R ..... ....... ....... 51\ii
· wires.
In the Chicago area, lightning Heck 's .................... , ............ ')I
slightly injured two mim in Key Centurion ...... ...... ......... 17
separate lnc)dents around ! ::lO Lands' End ......................... 26%
p.m. Monday. One was In good· . Limited Inc ....... ........ .. ..... .. 243;\
condition at a hospital and the Multimedia Illc ................... 72'A
Rax Restaurants .................. 3')1
other was treated and released .
At O'Hare Airport, the storm Robblll!l &amp; Myers ................ 11%
dumped an Inch of rain in one Shoney's Inc ........................ 7% ·
hour and caused major delays Wendy's Inti ........................ 6%
and a score of canceled flights . Worthington Ind ................. 22\1i
All but a few arrtvals and
departures were halted at the Residents asked to
world's busiest airport during a Keep brush separale
45-mlnute period beginning at
1:30 p.m.
Middleport residents are being
Air Force Two, with Vice asked to separate brush from
President George Bush aboard, leaves. The the machine which
had its landing delayed,by about picks up the leaves In Middleport
20 minutes.
VIllage will not pick up the brush.

Stocks

5t~u,t !Books
93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

(614) 992-6657 (99-BOOKS)

Place Your Order For Winter
Quarter Sunday School
curriculum with us by
fridgy, Oct. 21.
DAVID C. COOK
STANDARD PUBLISHING CO.
UNION GOSPEL PRESS

Lottery numbel'8
CLEVELAND tUPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
975.
Ticket sales totaled $1,18~.825,
with a payoff due off $370,798.
PICK-4

Are yoli hungry for
a great

7238.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$207,495, with a payoff due of
$94,354.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,688. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$237.

Our School
Needs Your Help.
So Please Vote
YES for the
Eastern Levy.
Paid Pol. Ad. by Midlllo Garfield,
Rt. 3, Pom•oy, OH. 45769.

WE NEED BLOOD
Be A Donor
lED ClOSS BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19

Try rCiub.

Pomeroy Senior Citizen Center
1:00 • 5:30 p.M.

..

Start with a convenient checking and pour on a generous sauce of
, account Then toss in a big hunk of discoun}s on travel, entertainment,
protection with up to $t00,000 in dining and lodging. Garnish with a
accidental death insurance. Add a free registered key ring , and you
layer of free credit card protection and have it The most delicious checking
a slice of emergency cash advance account in town. The Club. Stop by
anytime you need it (available With any ol our convenient offices !oday
your MasterCard or Visa). Put In a and order it -...!!
healthy portion of financial newsletters -for yourself. ~

Congratulations
Donna Skaggs

'

I "Good Luck"
1 SUPPORT THESE
FINE AREA
I BUSINESSES!

~--------------------------·
•

N Ha
da ht
ford R., ew
ven; one ug er,
Mrs. Larry (Brenda Kay Kirby)
Gilland, New Haven; two brothers,
Do nald Lewis, Vienna, Harold
Lewis, Oak Harbor, Ohio; one
granddaughter.
Services will be Thursday
era! atH1:30
p.m. at FogleSong Fun
orne
with the Rev. Bennie Steve~s
officiatin~ Burial will be at the

· • Ohio, formerly of New
en, died Monday, Oct. 17,
1988, .in the Reid ·Memorial
Hosp ital, Richmond, Ind.
Born April 17, 1898, she was a
daughter Of the late Millard and
Emma Roush Bumgarner.
Also preceding her in death was
her husband, Roy P. Hoffman, who Graham metery.
Friends may call on Wednesday
died in Maroh, 1988.
from
2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. at
Surviving are one SO!!, M.ax
Harold Hoffman, New Pans, Oh1o; the funeral home.
f()Ur grandchildren; · 10 great01 Pi
d h 'ldrc
~e~i~s ~ill be Thursday at
ga eroth
-· 10: 30 a.m. at th e New Ha~en
Olga R. Pierotti, Pomeroy,
United Methodist Church, or wh1ch died Monday at Veterans Mem·
she was a member. Rev. Clifford ortal Hospital.
Miss Pierotti had worked as a
West will conduct the service.
'II
be
th
H
ff
Burial WJ
at e o man teller at The Farmers Bank and
Cemeiery.
· Savings Co. In Pomeroy.
Friends may call Wednesday
She was bOrn at Springfield,
('rom 5 to 8 p.m. at t!le funeral Mass., a daughter of the late
home, and one hour pnor to ser- Columbo and Odetta Barsotti
Pierotti.
vices at the church.
In lieu of flowers, the family reSurviving are a sister and.
quests contributio~ be made to t~e brother-In-law, Llcla and Robert
· New Haven Umted Methd01st Ebersbach of Reynoldsburg.
Church of New Haven Emergency · Besides her parents, she was
Squad.
preceded In death by two broth·
ers, Ceno and Bruno.
Miss Pierotti was a member of
Anna Kirby
. Anna Mae Kirby, 68, New the Sacred Heart Catholic
Haven, died Monday, Oct. 17, Church. ·
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
1988, at Pleasant Valley Hospi181.
Thursday
at the Sacred Heart
Born Feb. 17, 1920 in DeKalb,
Church
with
Msgr. Michael
Ill., she was a daughter of the late
Hellmer
officiating.
Rosary ser·
' Francis Clayton and Myrlle A.
vices
will
be
at
7:30 p.m.
Bumgarner Lewis .
Also preceding her in death was Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call
a sister, Helen Castner,
She attended the Clifton Thber- from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesday. Burial will be In the
- nacle Church.
Surviving are her husband, Len- Sacred Heart Cemtery.

Wahama VI. Speaoer

~

OWNER: DAN SIDWELL
North Carolina 111.

.·

Grown Bet'ause We Han Helped Ulher111 To Grow

Member FDIC

•

~~~.....- - - - - - 1 1 CROW'$ RESTAURANT

· Pomeroy

992~2137
We'~e

LITTLE DAN'S EXXON

Self Serve Gas - Ohio lootery Tickets
VCR Remala- Milk- Breed
Hunting licenses

l:!J
992-2136 - POMERoY

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Alabama

' East Main S!.

The Community Owned Bank

~armers

I MEIGS AUTO SALES

342 Second Atrt. ·
· Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2691

LlnLE DAN'S
~
EXXON
AND FOOD STORE

308 East Main, Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6614

VAUGHAN'S

f/;loftib~ l
Penn St.

CHEVROLET-OLDS-CADILUC

w•NG-CHILDs

•• •

113 Court St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-2054

.l deaths
·.. Mary Hoffmanftrea

Jim Cobb

1

""

FOOD SHOP

1

....

$2.7 mUllon total for television
time In New Jersey. which also
reaches New York and Pennsylvanta; and $1.4 million for Ohio.
In descending order, the documen! lists Illinois, $1.17 million;
Michigan, $843,100; and Missourl, $728,500 as states where
Bush has bought or plans to buy
significant amounts of television
time.
The document also lists $1.3
mUllon for ~able television and
$265,500 for HispaniC-oriented
television and radio. The docu·
ment Indicates that Bush's top '
radio state Is Texas, foUowe db Y
California, $217,000; New Jersey •
$160,100; Ohio, $102,600; and
Michigan, $96,600.

r~----------------------.1

E11tern ••· Hannan Traoe

~--(~O-O--PE-R-----~-@~~I_JIM__
co_BB_________________,~--------------

•

Dukakls in the polls
the
campaign now plans to make
purchases beyond the $692,000
worth It has bought so far. II also
.. Intends to spend $246,900 on
Texas radio In the next three
weeks.
The document indicates that
more than .55 percent of the
campaign's $10.1 million budget
for network time will be deployed
'. during the next three weeks,
Including $1.-2 million on Nov. 7
alone, for a half-hour program on
all three networks. The docu·
·ment also llsts ·$1.8 million as
"contingency" money. to be used
as needed In the final days before
the election.
The campaign has budgeted

Soathern VI •. ICraer Creek

~·=WU==N~~:~:=SE:R______~-------+--------------~--------

Dallac vs. Philadelphia
CRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
DODGE

•.

-

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 46 789

FOOD
AND
CAR WASH

,r
,..•
,.

..,.. .

992-3307
108 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

THE.DAILY SENTINEL

r

,
,..

"COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS"

be drown from oil cor...:t ontrilo.
All entl'tlnta muot uae the entry blank billow.
Gam• for thil wllk will be found in the advortilemanto on thio pego. Llot the nome of tho teem you
think wll win oppooito tho nome of tho odvertioer.
Docioion of tho judg• will be flnol ond ontri• become the property of The Daily Sentinel.
Thia cont"t will continue for ten weeh from the date of flrat lnaertlon.
If mailed. blonk• mu1t be poltmarked not later than Friday.
Clip the coupon below .......fill it out and send to ....

•

-

EMPIRE FURNITURE
OF POMEROY

The cont•t It open to onyono except employe• of The Doily Sentinel ind their lmmedillt ftmlll•.
An oword of '20.00 wHI be given tothoporoon picldngthe rnollwlnnoro. In cooe of il tie one winner will

Home
,,

Continued from page 1

.·

Meigs n. Belpre

OklahoMa State ••· Mleeourl

Bush· · · - - - - - -

Mary Gladys Hoffman, 90, New

Blowe~
Fune~1l
614-992-5141

OH.

992-3322

Middleport,
Ohio
.'
992-2196

NOTHING TO .UY- ANYONE MAY ENTEII
S20.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNER

Co1t1

.-•.

I

S200. IN CASH PRIZES

'

•;

••

FOOTBALL CONTEST

5ttt Annat
}IIIII ibwl, •• Ya.
112-2131

'•

Ohio Ualvertltf n. l(.,t State

St.

1988

"The Beller Bank"
MEMBER FDIC
...... w. 1'1 .

"""'" 949-2311

POMEROY, OHIO

Ohio State vs. Mlate1ota

PLES
BANK ~

''•

PAT HILL FORD

SOFT DRINKS - FRIES • SANDWICHES

"WIIilg

•

'

NORTH SECOND
AVENUE

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Monday; Pomeroy at8: 59 a.m. to Wright St. for ~on Diles
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport atll: 25 a.m. to the
Holzer .Clinic for Patricia Hill to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 1:23 p.m. transported Mary Gibson to the Holzer
CliniC in Gallipolis; Pomeroy at 3: 24p.m. to Second St for Olga
Pierotti to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains Fire
Department at 8:06p.m. to a brush fire at the Bedford-Orange
Township line; Middleport at 11:02 p.m. to the Blue Tartan for
Larry Roach who refu~ treatment.

•

•r

_.,DEEM

llllnls "· M

BAUM ·LUMBER ·

EMS makes 7 calls Monday

915-3301

CHESTER, OHIO

LOCATION
~ Ohi

vs. Plttsbureh

RIDENOUR SUPPY

RACINE
MOTORS

Middleport

INSURANCE

Dea~er

.

VALLEY LUMBER

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN. MUSSER

Continued from page 1
decide whether to keep village money 'in a money portfolio,
where it can be invested at the highest Interest rate, or place
funds in direct government obligation where it can be used to
purchase treasury bills and government bonds. As In the past,
Council chose to keep the money portfolio.
Plans were also made to have Attorney Pat O'Brien attend a
regular Council meeting as soon as possible to discuss Items to
be Included in a zoning ordinance for the village.
·
. The next regular meeting of Council will be Monday, Nov. 7,
7:30p.m.
.

CRAFT SUPPLIES - BULK CANDY- TOYS
MUCH MORE

NOW OPEN
24 HOUIS

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

roo--Local news briefs...___,~idwest slapped by storms

JOHNSON$
VARIOY STORE.
•

llaiiPOIT, OIL

Tuesday, October 18, 1988

FREE CASHIFR CHFcKS TRAVflfRS CHECKS &amp; MONEY ORDERS ALSO AVAILABLE V."ITH 'HE CLUB MEMBERSHIP

DONNA SKAGGS IS OUR
WINNER IN THIS WEEK'S
DAILY SENTINEL
CO-SPONSORED
FOOTBALL CONTEST.

PEOPLES BANK
MEMIEit
P.DJ.C.
I

NEW HAVEN
882-2135

POINT PLEASANT
675-1121

MASON
773-5514

'.

�1988

By The

The Daily Sentinel

~end

Classifie

Tuesday, October 18, 198~ .
Page-6·

.,

;Beat of the bend

Public Notice ·

they can. ·bE' sent to her at the
By BOB HOEFUCJl
. More old photos of Pomeroy . Pomeroy Health Care Center,
· are needed particularly those Room, 125. Rock Springs Road,
Pomeroy.
: dealing with the
· Kerrs Run area.
The current Ohio Power Re• '11u; Preserva·
view as J menlloned earlier has a
- tlon Comm lttee
photo of Meigs area employees
at the Meigs Mu·
who have accumulated a great
seum would like
safety record. A photo in the
to borrow such
company magazine listed the
.' photos· tn copy.
: If you hav e any wn1ch you thmk names of those present when the
picture was taken but failed to
~ might servE' thE' purpose, wolild
. you please leavE' them at the mention Rog!'r Abbott, Chuck
Meigs Museum, the Pomeroy Hannahs , John S!'idenabel,
Chambl'r of Commerce Office or Roger Hoffman and MikE' Fry as
at Chapmap Shres You are bl'ing absent but a part of the
asked to haVe your name on the group with the excellent safety
·
· back of the photo so thalli can Ill' record.
7 returned.
If you're all thumbs, you may
Lester Richmond of Long Bot· get some hl'lp wrapping those
tom Is a patient in the cardiac ChriStmas presents this year.
Kathy Wood of Meigs I Indus·
care unit of University Hospital.
Lester was a patient at the tries met wlth the Pomeroy
·Holzer Medlca·l Center for two Chambl'r of Commerce Board to
days last week before bl'lng sent discuss the posslbliltles of setting
to Columbus. He's had a block· up a wrapping shop for the
age and is expected to be. upcoming Christmas season.
confined there for seven or l'lght
TherE' were no objections to
more days.
that so you can probably look for
Richmond had collected his some much nl'l'ded assistance.
. final paycheck at his pia.ce of
." employment when the attack
Keep In m lnd the Delta Quel'n
· occurred so a fund dr ive has been is schl'duled to pass our way
'- ~tar.t.ed for him--especially so sometime this evening.
that Mrs. Richmond can stay in
: Columbus and Ill' near him at this
Dorothy Ollvl'r..you may re· time. Your donation may be sent membl'r her as a favorite Meigs
. to the Racine Home National High School teacher--dropped by
Bank, noted, of course, that It Is on!' of hl'r small' 'jili·o·lanterns ..
, lor Lester.
.not jack-lanterns, mind you ..
with the notation,' 'My conscious·
ness raising effort for today."
Ada G. Morris wlll be observ· Those of you who know Dorothy
lng her 95th birthday on Friday . will und!'rs tand and enjoy that
: ShE' loves getting cards and bit of humor. Do kl'ep smiling.

School honor rolls

Morrls, Matthl'w Marcinko .
Fourth Grade: Angl'la Bissell .
Fifth Grade: Rebecca Evans,
Connie Pooler.
Sixth Grade: Brandy Barber.

The first . six weeks grading
. period honor roil at the Chestl'r
_ Elementary School has been
announcl'd. Making a grade of B
or aboVE' In ali their subjects to Ill'
naml'd to the r oll were: ·
Third Grade: Kelll Bailey, · The first six weeks grading
Blllee Pooler, Stefani Bearhs, period honor roll at the Tuppers.
Plains Elementary School has
Brandon Buckley, John Miller.
Fourth Grade: Meredith been announced. Making a grade
: Crolw, Eric ·Dillard, Marla of B or above in all their subjects
Frecker, Tracl Heinl's, Lisa to be named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Blllena Bucha·
Stethem, Anna WaH.
· Fifth Grade: Jessica Karr. nan, WI'Sli'Y Buckll'y, Michelle
. Brandi Reev&lt;:'s, Jennifer Mora , Caldwell, Steven Durst, Joanna
; Lauren Young, Chad Barkl'r, Gumpf, Jeremy Kehl, Lamar
Melissa Dempsey, Heather WeB, Lyons, Kl'lll Norris, Betsy
Sheets; Joey Weeks.
Robl'rt Murphy.
Fourth Grade: Katy Mantcke,
Sixth Grade: Cha;·ies Bissell,
Laura
Buckley, Sherry BurkE',
Ryan Buckley. Dayld Fetty,
Angela
Chaney, Laura Eastman,
Rebl'kka Mcintyre, Jamie Ord,
Ambl'r
Fortney, Erin S!'xton,
, Jessica Radford, Stacy Woolard.
Chance
Watson,
Bllly Francis.
The first six weeks grading
Fifth Grade: Jonathan Avis,
period honor roll at the Rlvervii'W Elementary School has Brian Bowen, Brian Hoffman,
_been announced. Making a grade Noelle Pickens, Ginger Nutter.
, of B or above In all their subjects
' to be named to the roil were:
. Third Grade: Brian Criss, Kim
Dr. Ron Dlllon wil be pvangl'·
Mayle, Robl'rt Harrls, Brenda
list for revival serviCE's at the
Williams, Michael Pooler. Sonny
Racine First Baptist Chureh,
Rucker, Abraham Rach, TraciP
Oct. 23-27.
Born in Bluefield, W.Va., Dr.
Dlllon attended Bluefletd·College
and graduatl'd in 1973 from thE'
New Orleans S!'minary, New
Orleans, La. with a master's
d!'gree and recieved his doctor of
ministry degree in 1975.
Married with three sons, he
was pastor of the Fellowship
Baptist Church in Princl'ton, W.
Va. and pastored churches in
Louisiana while In the seminary
there. In 1974, he was called to the
Grace Baptist Church in Par·
kersburg, W. Va. where he spent
12 years. He moved to Charles·
ton, S.C. in 1986and is now pastor
of the Highland Park Baptist
Church in Hanahan, S. C.
REVIVAL - The Rev.
ThE' Rev. StevE' DE' aver, pastor,
Steven Manley, general superinvil.es
the public to attend the.
Intendent of the Wesleyan
services
which will begin at 7:30
HoUness Association, wlll be
each
evening.
Special music wlll
: guest speaker at revival servi·
Ill'
featured
nightly.
·A nursery ·
ces to be held at the Harrison·
will
Ill'
provldl'd.
BiblE'
study wlll
ville Holiness Chapel, State
Ill' held each morning at 10 a.m.
Route 684, Harrisonville, Oct.
with teaching on · spiritual
21-31, with servtc.. each even,warfare.
Ing at 7: 30 p.m.
·

Service set

I

'

.

., ' f ,.

'

..'

CIRCUS - Mike Rice and Rajah, the Indian male elephant, wlll
be featured as one of the numerous acts to be presented when the
James Hetzer Intercontinental Circus plays at the Rutland Civic
Center at 2: 30 and 7: 30 p.m. Saturday. There will also be other

WEDNESDAY

POMEROY - A gospel ml'eting will Ill' held at the Westside
Church of Christ off Route 7,
through Oct. 21. 7:30 each evening. Landon Hope of Henderson,
w.va. wlli be the speaker.
REEDSVlLLE - Rl'vlval services wlll be held at the Eden
United Brethern Church, Rel'ds·
vllle, through Oct. 23, 7 p.m.
Charles Norris will be the
evangelist.
POME~OY

- BloodmobilE'
Wednesdily, 1 to 5:30 p.m. at
Meigs Senior Citizens Cl'nter,
Mulbery Hl'lghts,. Pomeroy; Xi
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will serVE' canteen.m
THURSDAY

POMEROY -Yard sale and
bake sale Thursday and Friday
at 104 Union AvE'., Pomeroy, with
proceeds going to thE' Carleton
Church.
SATURDAY

SYRACUSE - Fall Carnival
Saturday, 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at
Syracuse Eleml'ntary School,
Chicken noodle dinners, games,
haunted hpuse.

The newly organized Vetl'rans
of Foreign Wards Post 6881
located In Meigs County will hold
its first organizational meeting
on Oct. 26, 7 to 9 p.m. at the
Municipal building locatl'd in
Pomeroy . The charter is open for
all vl'terans having a combat

I

Chatter Club
meeting held

Group to sing
Eddie Wayne will be singing at
the Flatwood United Methodist
Church Sunday at 2 p.m. The
vocalist has a regular program
on WEMM on Fridays at 8 p.m.
The public is invited by the Rev .
Mel Franklin. The church Is
located on Flatwoods Road west
of Route 7 at Five Points.

occupation or expeditionary me·
dal for 90 days .
The VFW works with youth.
community and sick and needy
veterans. Further information
may be obtained by contacting
District 12 commander ,Edward
Bishop, Jr. , 797-2520.
'

Chester PTO meeting conduaed
Each grade, first through , a later time. Anna McCoy led in
sixth, was given $50.00 for the pll'dge to the. ll,a g which
classroom supplli'S, with the followed an open house.
learning and disabled classes
bl'lng given $20 each, by the
Stilt ol ~og, DIPI.,.,."! gil'*"'""' · Ct1rliCIIe cl Colllpl~ano:t-fllt 11'1&lt;
Chester PTO at a recpnt meeting
dtiSIOMO. ~ ci iiii&amp;JIIt!Ce ol !lit $\tit! d Oluo, '-t¥ etrti'ifll~-'
at the school.
.IOitN tWICOCI fiiUT\Ml LfE 11M COol lhr»!. Sti ll ol M ~»Kf!IIH'll
,.... ~ Ollitll tt-. "'"' rJ 11'101 ~ llj'lJIIit.lllllll la ~ tAd ll l illtJO&lt;ad IWll'lt
A rl'port was given on the fall
lht c"'renl .,....10 lr.....:t In lfll ~- ilt IPfi'I)PI'ilhl bulifllll al k\turlf'l(l
Oil lilt 111\11.-1 plan, l!l
it
by b
fll
carnival and a vote of apprecia·
JIM Dlti1Mblowl011o.etlwDif)l, 00; fd&lt;llinlll- tnJ.S&lt;.....OO,
Lllll
H,
hn,
I
LOI0.13U
UOO,
lntO'III,
lion extende(l to those who
$7,201.'1l1,3!01XI. INYIUNESS WIIEfiEOf, IliM 1111""*1~ "'Y 11a111t
11'11 CluNd ..., Milia De 11111ltd • Colllo...,., Ohoo. ,,... dl' .wiC _., O.Or91
helped. Recycling project was
Fllbt. SliP! oll...,.no;t rJ Oh., IUMI
Sllll D1 Ollie. Oti*!II'IM of IMl!III'ICI. C~Mc•t ot COIT'IIII,.no;t-TIIt undiscussed and wlll be taken on at
1~

• ~noli llllltmlln!

5 111 ~1111.

Linda Hubbard and Doris Wilt
were hostesses for the recent
ml'!'tlng of thE' Chatter Club held
at the Hubbard home .
Dues and !lower fund ·werE'
collected and officers reports
were given. There was a food sale
auction. Ruth Young recieved a
birthday gift and Susan Cleland
and Linda Hubbard received
anniversary gills. GamE'S were
played with prizes going to
Elaine Quillen , Mary Starcher,
Linda Hubbard and Dorothy
Roach . Refreshments were
served and the door prizes was
Won by Ruth Young who will host
next month 's meeting.

PAT'S
GREENHOUSE
IS NOW OPEN?

Now /t1 P1o~'"'"
992-5590

Co. ld. 19, Peach Fork Rd.
rOMEROY OHIO

OUR PRICE - MOST REASONABLE

.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
949·2100

RACINE, OliO

MASTERCARD - VISA - GOLDEN BUCKEYE

Autol'~for
a.dults with safe
driving records.

Featuring a broa.d
package of coverages ... competitive rates ... no
Sl.ll'Cha.rge for the
first accident.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

r

BUSIDeSS
•

rtlfJ

Insurance

SPeCIAL lfiiSUAANCE PAOOVCTS
FOR SPECIAL PeOPLE

!Formerly

VIUat~t

rharmacyl

r New ManageMent

•

•

''ALL YOUR HEALTH CARE NEEDS"
FREE DELIVERY - IN STORE CHARGES

·.

STORE HOURS: Mon.-Fri, 9 A.M.-6 P.M .
Saturday 9 A.M.-1 P.M.

'·

'·

992-6669
271 North Second

Public Notice
'
Notice of Election On
Tax Levy In
Excesaof the
Ten Mill Limitation
. NOTICE ia · hereby given
that in pursuance of a Reaolution of the Board of
Township Truateee of the
Township of Scipio, Meiga
County. Ohio, panad on the
6th day of Auguot, 1988,
thM'8 wUI be submitted to a
vote of the people of said
Scipio Township at a GENERAL ELECTION to be
held in the Townahip of Scipio. Ohio. at the ragul~r
placet of voting the,ein, on
Tueeday, the eight day of
·Novombor. 1988, the quootion of levytng, in e•cast of
the ten mill limitation. for
the benefit of Scipio Townthip for lhe purpose of providing and maintaining tire
opporatuo. eppllances. buHd·
ingl. or sit• ther.. e_ for. or
, aouro• of water supply and
• ~·m ..erials 'therefor. or the es. ; ' tabUshment and maintan;. ance of linea of fire al•m
~: telegraph, or the payment of
~· 98rmanent, part-time, or v~
, lun- firemen or fire fight·
\, ,Jog companlea to operate the
, ...m .. including the payment
1
0f firemen en1ployar' • con, tribution required under MC·
'" tion 742.34 of tho revised
~ code. or to purch.Bie ambu·
lance equipment, or to pro- :
vide ambulance 01' emor·
. gency
medical services
• operated bv a fire departmont or fire
fighting
company. .
Said tox being: • renewal
ohn exiating 1.6 mlllslovyto
• run for ftve (6] years at a rete
not ex.ceedlng 1.6 mills for
each one dollar of valuation.
which omounts to fihaon
cents (10.16) for each one
hundred dallors of value·
tion. tor ffve 15) yeart.
The Polls for aaid Election
will be open at 6 :30 o'clock
A.M . and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the
Board of Elections.
of Molgs Coumy, Ohio
, Evelyn Clerk, l;hoirrrlan
Jane M. Frymyer. Director
· Doted Sept. 1 , 1 988
1101 11, 18, 26; 11111. 4tc

Midclliport; Ohlo ..

•Washers •Dryers

•Ranges •Freezers

992-3410

•Refrigerators

ll MEST ONE
GRAVEL _ SAN 0
TOP SOIL
fiLL DIRT

"Must Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

We Service

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
I-28·'8B·tfn

10-8-tfc
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

SERVICE

Now Homos Built
"Free Estimates"

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PH. 949-2801

PAT HILL FORD

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

992-2196

or Res. 949-2860

1·13-tlc

Middleport, Ohio

NO SUNDAY CAllS
3-11-tfn

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Masiic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm ·Door.; &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
8/ 15/ ~n

1•00 P.M
'

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

RACINE
GUN CLUB

~ Concrete

- Plumbing
work

RACINE OHIO

949-2168
10·11·'11·1 mo. pd.

work
and

electrical

RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

EVERY
SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory (hokt
12 Ga"l[[ Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforced
10·7-tfn

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

$3 s

PER lOAD
DEliVERED

[FREE ESTIMATES!

•
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
9 g 8

:=;::;;:;::;;;·1~·~1~1=fo~
ENGINE
REPAIR

r119ul~od un~

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Basham Building

CARPENTER
SERVICE

'

NEW- REPAIR

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

YOUNG'S

EVERY SUNDAY

ROOFING

GUN SHOOT

6-17-lfc

GUN SHOOT

Howard L. Writ""

Roger Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trau1111111on
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Call 992-2772

Notice of Election On
TaxLevyln
Exceu
of the
Tan Mill Limitation
NOTICE io horoby given
· • that in purouonce of a Ro·
1olutlon of the Board of
Townohip Truatoao of tho
Townohlp of Cheotor, Ohio,
pMsed on the 9th day of Au~ gust, 1988, there will be
\ aubmltted to 1 vot• of the
\ people of aaid Cheater
~ TownaHp ot a Gonnl Election
• to be hold in the Townohip of
• Chaottr of Molgl County.
; Ohio, ottho regular placoo of
t voting therein. on Tuuday,
~ the 8th diV of November,
( 198B, the quntlon of tovy·
: 1ngatox,lnaxcooaofthoton
' mHI limitation, tor tho bone, fit of Chester Townthip fo~
, the purpose of Providing and
• Molntolnlng fire opparatuo,
: oppllon-. building•. or
• aites therefor. or tourcN of
or water auppty and materials
j itler~for, or the eatablish·
,. ment 1nd malnttnence of
\ lin• of fire elerm telegraph.
~ or the payment of parma·
" nent, part-time. or volunteer
flromon or tiro fighting com·
•, paniel to operata the aame.
Including the payment of fi·
nm011 employer' o contribu·
tlo:

DEAD OR ALIVE

CARTER'S

V. C. YOIJNG Ill

BILL SLACK

992·621 S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
7· I3-' 88· lin

992-2269

EUM HOME

HILLSIDE MUIZLE
LOADING

&amp; Board For
Senior Cltiz- and
Room

Authorized Service
&amp; Ports
Briggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobson

992-6873
Jot or Pauloy, Bowl101d
209 South 4th St.
Midcllopart, Oh.

Middleport, ·o hio

"LOW INCOME HOME"

992-6611

AND

MODERN GUN
SUPPUES

Good Rates
T.L.C.
26 Yro. Exp.
Referencea

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

·ll-88·tfn

Murzltloading Supplies
Modtrn Gun Supplies
Guns - Ammo - Slugs 22 Ammo
124 East of Rutland
Across Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. t. 14-742·2355
9/20/tfn I -. pd.

HUDNAlL

EAGLE RIDGE .
SMALl ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

·

·
PlOMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Second

h

Middleport, 0 ia

Dealer far

YARDMAN. &amp; ECHO

45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
· Smico (ont« for Ryan
Products
8.7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Mekn
We Hon0&lt; MC/Disc/Viso

We Carry Fishing Suppli
Pay Your Phone
... and Cable Bills Hare
BUSINESS PHON I
(6141 992·6550
RISIDINCE PHONE
16141 992-7754

9·1·11-lfn

t/28/ ttn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

BISSELL

BUILDER$
CUSTOM BUILT

SYRA(USI, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
~lASE Certified Mechanic

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reosorfoble Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2160
Day « Night

CALL 992 6756

•
''DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Licen1ed Shop
,
5-ZS·tfn

NO SUNDAY CAllS

4·16- 86-tfn
\

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 1431
698-6.121

S14 PEl T~N

ALSO ...

HOME COOKED

LUNCHES

DELIVERED

EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER $300

CONTRA

TO

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

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY

MAIN STREET PillA
Our D~li•ery Staff
Knows Where You

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

POMEROY, OHIO

Live.

Call 992-2228
or

985 -4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
.
'10·4-1 mo .

992-6461
9·2

BOGGS

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Heullng With
Dump Truck 1
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Buliness
WANT TO IUY WRICKID OR
JUNK CARS OR TIUCKS ·

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. Rt. SO .EAST
614-662-3821

For •Y of thiSosorvlcascoll

614-742-2617

F11111 Equl••••t

Botwoen 9 a.m.·6 p.m.

Part•

or Leave Messaqe

2-1f!' 88 -ffn

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

::1: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
3 417 Second Avenue, Bod213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Velerans Memorial Hospit:al
_Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

&amp; Serrlu
·

~

~ .Lice~sed Clinical Audiologist

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John
Deere, New Holland.
Bush HOg Farm
Equipment Dealer

CJ

Listening
Dependable Heariltg Aid Sales &amp; Servic•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

1·3-'80-ttc

COLUMBIA GAS OF OHIO. INC. '
APPLICATION TO ESTABLISH A UNIFORM RATE
FOR NATURAL GAB SEVICE WITHIN THE
SOUTHEASTERN REGION OF ITS SERVICE AREA
ENCOMPASSING THE COUNTIES OF
ATHENS, GALLIA, HOCKING, JACKSON, .
LAWRENCE, MEIGS, MORGAN. PEARY, ROSS,
SCIOTO. VINTON AI'!ID WASHINGTON
PUCO Coao NO. 88-720-GA·AIR
NOTICE
Notice ia hereby given that Columbia G• of Ohio, Inc. (Columb'a). 200 CtvlcCenter Drive, P.O . Box 117, Columbu•. Ohio 43216, h• filed an Application with the
Public Utilities Commia8ion of Ohio (Commluk»n of PUCOI in which it requeata thlt
the Commiaalon eltllblilh a uniform rate to be charged and collected for all gu Hrvice
within the Southeutern Region, except for aervicewheretht existing rates have been
established by certain municipal ordinance contrecta or by special ratit contracts. The
Southeastern Region will be compoMCI of the count..• of Athena. Gtllla, Hocking,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Morgan, Perry; Ron. Scioto. Vinton and Waahington.
~~

.

.

The .,tisting r..et In thne areas ere unjuat, unfair and are intuftlclent to yield reasonable compenution for sarvice rendered by Columbia. The ratM preaantly being
collected from approx imatety 62.000 cuatomers that will be aHected by thl1 Application are thoae preacrlbed in 47 diHerent PUCO Rate Schedul81, ·purauent to varlou1
order• iasued by the Cornmt.,slon. varloua municipal ordinance contrectathat have expired or will expire by September 30. 1988, end exiating municipal ordinance contractl will not expire by September 30, 1988, but that are cum~ntty being billed the
Southe•tem Region n~te pursuant to the Joint Stipulation and Recommendation
filed In Cno No. 87·881-GA·CSS.
Columbia further requests that the Commltsion fix. and determir\e u,nlform, just
and reMonable r11tee to be cllarged and collected by Columbia for theaervice rand.,.ad
to the generalaervk:e cuatomer•ln the Southe•tern Region and aubttituta auch rat•
for those retea currently being charged.
Tha munlclpalftl• affKted by thia Applicat'ion are:
Rio Grande
Middleport
Adelphi
ChillicOthe
Ironton
Ro-llo
Albany
Coal Grove .
JackaonvHie
Murray City
Shawnee
Ameavilla
· Coelton
Junction City
Nelsonville
Someraet
New Boston
Athen1
Cootvllle
Kingaton
Corning
Laurelville
New StraifiVilla South Point
Beverly
South Weblter
Buchtel
Gloulter
Lowell
Oak Hill
Stockport
Chauncey
Hamdan
Lower Salem
Ponamouth
Trimble
Chasapeake
Hanging Rock McArthur
Proctorville
Wellaton
Cheshire
Hemlock
McConnelsville Rendvilla
Chaotorhill
.
The Application will also affect the rates of Columbia's cultomera In the unincorporated areu of the coun ..11 of Athe"'· Gallla, Hocking. Jackaon. Lawrence. Melga.
Morgan, Perry, Ro1s, Scioto, Vinton and Wuhlngton, Ohio. Becau• the propoaed
Southeastern Region rate will be uniform. it essantiaiiY, reprNenttan :·average" rata
for the region. Thua. tome of the exiating rat11 within the new reg1on may be lncreoed. while other ax.iltlng ratea-within the region may be decreaed.
Columbia presently hu 8 a'datlng municipal ordinance contract• within the proposed Southeatarn Region that ere ex.cluded from thi1 filing. Thaae contr1ct1 are
with the municipalitiea of:
·
1 Jackson
Malta
PQI'fleroy
· Crooksville
GallipoliS
, Logan
New Lex.ington
Thornville
Because the Comml111qn do• not exerciae jurisdiction over auch rltH. the costs of
providing eervice to ~818 munh:ipalftlea will not be included in the APplication toestablish thit uniform rate's tor the SbuthHitern Region. However. at the axpirlltion of
any such ordinance, if tHe municipallty prefert to be subsequently Included In the
Southeastern Region for r11emaklng purpo181, it mey do 10 by not renewing .ita o~i·
nance contract with Columbia. If • new contrllct is not establilhed, the mun1DpeUty
will thereafter be Included in the Southeaatern Region for retemeking purpo....
PRE~ENT RATE
.
·
he preeent ratea vary by rate schedule, dep.ending on location within the area affoctod by tho Application.
·
PR9P%!jED RAJES
j
•
n 1 cue Columbia is proposing a rate da&amp;ign under which Columbia will bill ita
customers a "Custom• Charge'' of *6.03 par meter per month during the month• of
November through March, and $9.19 per meter per month during the montha of April
through October, regerdlaas of get consumed. The rlt81 for allges consumed In NCh
billing month are 64.811 e per 100 cubic feet for the first 600,000 cubicfaet delivered
end 62.363¢ P« 1 DO cubic foot lor oil del !vorl• ox-ding 600.000 cubic loot. Thaoo
ret II will generate an lncre•• of $1.7615. 9441n operating 'ravenuee. However, to the
extent that operating conditione or expenMI change during tht petlding of the cue.
Columbll may reviaa ita propoaed ratea accordingty.
·
·
·
. .
_
•
COST OF ~RCHASED QAS ESCALAT[ON
Both-t prnant and 1~ propM&amp;d rataa ara subject to decruae or 111creaseln accord•nce with the ''Gu Cost Recovery'' provision• of Columbia'• Rul• and Regulationa on fila with the Commiuion aa required by Commiuion Orders deted Octobllr
11, 197B and October 18, 1979. in c .. o No. 76·1 U·GA·ORD.
OHI~ EXCISE TAX
·
'
he propoeed ratea ara also aubject to an ''Ohio Excise Tax" claute. pursuant to
which all billa rendered a hall be adjuatad to include tha effect• of Ohio Exclae Tax on
groas recelpta impoead by Ohio Rev. Code Section 6727.38, excepting thoM IC· ,
couirts ex.empted for auch tax..
Bll~!f;.~DJU9.IMENTS
I renered ahltll be adjusted to include the Interim. Emergency and Tempo·

lmm MOVIES &amp; SUDIS to
VHS TlPI
lft UUOIW•t thos1 oldMnils
&amp; Slidos over to ocsr VHS.

UIL AMY ClltTII
or lOB'S llECTROti(S
446-7390

ll/2fll·llc

Annn unr.c 111 ents
3 Announcements
AH m•ket WtiY Tu•diV end
Thurtday, HtndenonTownHall.

dell.,welcom•.

4

Giveaway

Kittens. Utter box trained. Cllll
81 4-44&amp;-931 9.
Moth• clrt &amp; &amp; kittens. C.ll

81 4-258· 1184.
Male dog. 1

yeer old. lllonde.
Long hair. Lovn ohlldr.,, To
goad home. 814-992-31577.

Wheelberraw laed of lrit bu'bt to
gfn .way. C.ll 814-992·239&amp;.

Gas cook dOW, 304-175-1730.

6 Lost and Found
LOST: Gray Miniature
Schn•zer. mtlte wtth red DDII•.
,_.rlot·Oage ••· Cell e14379-2932.

LOST: Llldles dng..Ruby • dlamonda. REWARD. C.ll 814-

44&amp;-2828.

7

Yard Sale

.......Gallipolis ........ ··
&amp; Vicinity
Centenary Townhouse. Tu11. &amp;

Wed. 14 ln. tire rima. 15 lri. rims
a tires, st«eo. tv. ruga. ttbl•
hand too.., dot hAng &amp; mllc.

.......p........................ .
omeroy
·Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

·····~·········-···· · · · ····· ·· · ·

..

Oct. 21 from 9:0!1-3:00. loby
bed endmlltreiS, clot'- U.,t.
etc. Roma Cremuna ,...dence.
Beech Grove Ro8d, Rutll1nd.
FoUow •ens. l~lde.

8

Public Sale
8o. Auction

Rick Pa•aon Auctioneer, li·

cented Ohio and West VIrginia.
Ettate, antique, f•m. llquida·
tlon MfM, 304-773-15786.

rarv PIP Plan Tariff Schedule Ridat: tilt forth in the Columbia's Rul81 •nd Regulation•
fllo with the

'

TRI-STATE

DRYWALl CO.
Complete

Featuring: ContOlidaled, Dutch
·wes t, Brunco, Ashley
LOWEST PRICES ·
.
WE TRADE

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

local .
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match itl
any

-Fill IST!MATIS-,-

o

w·ANTED

DENNY cONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Public Notice

~Sr.toAuto

serVICeS

t;::=======::;ff;========~;t~=======::::;~

will ba open at 6;30 o'clock
A.M . ond remain open until
7 :30 o'clock P.M.
.
By order of the
Board of Elections.
of Moigs County, Ohio
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. F·rvmver. Director
Doted Sept. 1, 19BB
110111, 18 .. 26; 11111. 4tc

992-6687

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

(tw)

.IF WE DON't HAVE lHE SIZE YOU NEED WE WILL
ORDER n FOR YOU.

It's the Med•ttwt

We're Open!

pllll llllhtlarJbli ~lor111 111C11imby iii iMIIII~ IQ "'!"Dwn•

~ Ofl o.c-. 31, 1!181 Admlllld MMII. &amp;S&lt;I,S22.!l1UXI. L.laclili!itl,
$el ,ruJMOO, Surplllt, W,llllmOO, 1. 55-1,1'17,1t1IXI IN WITflESS
WHEAEOf, I ~lYe lltltlllllll lllbtt.:riM!j lily •amtllld DM 4d rill ""I to bl
~ • CO!ullilllul. Oruo. mil GJ'I w Hit. ~Alb.. S..,.. ~ 1ntu11~1
~01110

State Auto
offers
something
special

"Gttnd Op1t1ln~

dftiW*I, ~ rJ lnlilfM!ll a/ 11'11 Slllt 01 Ollio.!WID'I' etrtm..!NI
P'f!Efliiii(D ll.mJoi,L lilt COol JW. lltlt•n. SI .. U I tift 'lbt~ . hM ~·ld
orllh 1M - rJ flit b t -ltlblt 10 ~ IIIII II tlltlmnd do,rillll lhe t;&lt;J_,.
yt~~r 10111111~ 1ft rrH ... 1'1 ~ Millin of "'' "''nc' on !hi II'OJI~.S

YOU'LL FIND SAVINGS ON DEVON,
.LADY DEVON, PETITE CONCEPT •••

3D tnln

WIC pickup
announced

Erma Cleland and Opal Hollon Dec . 14.
were hostesses for thE' recent
Readings werE' given by Erma
ml'l'tlng of the Past Councilors Cleland, ''If Jpsus Came To Your
Club of Chester Council 323, House", Mary K. Holler, "School
The Meigs County Department
Daughters of America, hl'ld at Day's Years Ago"; Ethel Orr, of Health has announced daies
the hall.
"Cellar Tragedy"; and Lora
for the November pickup of \\'rC
Mae McPeek presided at· the Damewood, 'Autumn Time" .
Cl'rtlflcates. The dates are Oct .
ml'!'ting which she opened by • Rl'freshments were servl'd by , 24, 27 and 28 and Nov. 3, from 9 to
reading the 150th Psalm. The the hostesses. Elizabeth Hayes 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. on all
Lord's Prayer and pll'dge to the and Opal Hollon conducted
dates. Makeup dates will be Nov .
American !lag werE' given in games with prizes being donated
7, 14, and 21, from 9 toll a.m. and
unison.
by Mary Showaller and Fern
from 1 to 3 p.m.
Reports were given by Char- Morris.
lotte Grant, secretary, and Erma . Door prizes were won by Cora
Immunization dates are Nov .
Cleland, treasurer. It was re- Beegle and Marcia Keller. Oth·
15 and Nov. 29, from 9 to 11 a.m.
ported that Leda Mae Kraeuter lers attending were )3etty Roush ,
and 1 to 3 p.m .
had surgery at Unlverstly Hospi· Ada Bissell, Thelma White. Jean
tal, Columbus. Members relall'd Frederick, Laura Mae Nice, Jnzy
Halloween I'Xperlences. It was Newell, Sadie Trussell , and a
voted to havE' the convl'ntion guest, Sandra White.
committe!' serve the club
membl'rs Christmas ·supper,

VFW post forms in Meigs

992-2156

animals acts including dogs, monkeys and ponies. The civic center
organization will receive the proceeds from the show. Rajah also,
will be offering rides to children before lhe circus opens and at
Intermission at a minimal charge.

Past ·Councilors lneet

Community
calendar

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

.I

or

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES

CHIPWOOD
POLES

THE BEST PIZZA
At The BEST PRICES.

If

7

•12 Years Experience

Has always offered

Public Notice

Sentinel

Business Services
WOOD STOVES
ante

Your Hometown Place

742.34 o1the revised code. cation of the Meigs local Jane M. Frymyer. Diracto,
or to purchase. ambulance School District, Middleport, Datad Sept. 1, 1988
equipment, or to provide Ohio. passed on the 16th (10) 11.18. 25: (11~ 1. 4tc
ambulance or emergency day of Augu.t; 1988. there
medical aervica1 operated will be submitted to a vote of
Public Not!ce
by a fire department or 'firi the people of aald Meigs L!l·
fighting company.
cal School District at aGE·
ELECTION
Said tax baing: an odi· NERAL ELECTION to bo
LEGAL NOTICE
tional tax of 1.0 mills to run h81d In the Meig• Local DisThe Ohio Soil and Water
for five (61 yean at a rate not trlct of Meigs County, Ohio, Conservation Commission
ex.ceeding 1 .0 mills for each at the regular places of vot· will cau•fan election of suone dollar of valuation, ing therein, on Tuesday. tho pervisora of the Meigs Soil
which amounts to ten cenu 8th day of November. 1988, and Water Conservation
($0. 1
for each
one the queation of levying a tax. District to be held in achundred dollars of valuation. in excets of tha·ten milllimi- cordance
with Chapter
·for five 1&amp;1 yean.
tation. tor the benefit of 161 &amp;.01 -14 of the Revised
The Polls for uid Election Meigs Local School District Coda of Ohio at Eastern·
will be open at 6;30 o'clock for the purpoae of curran"' High School on November
A.M. and remain open until expanan.
· 15, 1988 at 7 :18p.m. No7 :30 o'clock P.M.
Said tax baing: an addi· minees are Janet Bolin.
By order of the tional tax. of 6 .0 mills to run Rodney Chevalier, Alan Hoi·
Board of Elections, for a continuing ···period of tar and Larciy Welsh.
of Meigs County. Ohio time at a rate no' exceeding
Nominations will be acEvelyn Clark. Chairman
6 .0 mills tor •ach one dollar cepted from the floor at the ·
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
of valuation, which amount• time of election. Two super·
Dated Sept. 1. 1988
to fifty cents ($0.50) for visors are to be elected. You
(1 ·0) 11, 18, 215; (11) 1, 4tc each one hundred dollars of may cast your ballot at the
;..:....:.:.p;~k'~;ti.~.:....;,;c: yaluation. for a continuing annual meeting or on the day
I
Notice
period of time.
.
of election at the Meigs
1-----,...--"7'-The Polls tor said Election SWCO Office. 221 West Sa· Notice of Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock cond Street. Pomeroy. saTax. levy In
A.M. and remain open until cond floor of the Farmers
Excess of the
7:30 o'clock P.M.
Bank building between 8 a.
Ten Mill Limhalion
By order of the m. and 2 p.m. Absentee belNOTICE it hereby given
Board of Elections, lots may be secured at the
pur1uance of a Re·
of Meigs .County, Ohio local district office.
l:!!!:::!!o!,ft!:h::e.:;B:::o:::,or::;d~o::,tE~d~u::,·-~Ev:_:o~ly~n~C;!I!!or~k:.,C~h~o~lr:_::m~a~n~_..!,!.!!!,.:,18~:~1.:,1.:,11!_1!;·.,:2~t;c_ __

fivTh~~~~:r:~JOoid Election

1211.3H. I30.31 ~.00.

SINGERS - Jan and Kathy wlll be providlnr special vocal
mule for revival aervlces at the Rutland Church of lhe Nazarene.
~Ct!8 will be at 7 p.m. tonlfhl through Oct. 23 With services at
18:3e •• m. and 6:31p.m. on Sunday.

Notice of Election On
Taa. Levy In
Exca11oftha
Ta" Mill limitation
NOTICE Ia hereby given
that in pursUince of a Reaolution oftheVillagaCounell of the Village of Middleport, Ohio, ' pal8ed on the
8th day of August, 1988,
there will be submitted to a
voteofthepeopleofuidMiddl..,rt Vllage at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held In the
Village of Middlepon, Ohio,
at the regular placee of votlng th•eln. on TueedaY. the
8th dey of November. 1988.
thequeatkmoflevyingatax.,
inex.ceuofthetenmilllimitation. tor the benefit of
Middleport Village for the
purpou of Providing and
Maintaining tire apparatu-.
appliances, buildings, or
site• therefor. or sourcel of
water supply and materials
therefor, or the eatabllahment and maint8nance of
linea of fire alarm telegraph,
or th•' payment of parmanent, part-time, or volunteer
firemen orfii'aflghting compilniea to Operate the same.
including the payment of fi·
reman employer's contribution required under aaction
. 742.34 of tho revloed coda.
or to purcha1e ambulance
equipment. or to provide
medical servic11
operated
ambulance
or emergency
by a tire department or fire
fighting company.
Said tax being: a renewal
ofanoxisting1.0m111Javyto
run for ffve (5) yearaat a rete
not axcooding 1.0 mills lor
each one dollar of valuation,
which amountoto ton conto
(t0.10) for each one hundred dollon of valuation, for

~nii!C!ell;llfldition

•

PIZ.ZA

• The Area's Number . 1 Marketplace

Trip down memory lane

The

Ohio

Drywall

Service
FREE ESTIMATES
lea.Onallle 'latn

56 STAlE ST.

GALLIPOUS, OH.
446-3487

9115/18/Hn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWN!I. GIIG I, IOUSH
~'
GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
• •
RIS!DlNTlAL
COIIIIERC!AL
•CUITOM
KITCH lENS. BATHS
•U:l'ENIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL IIDtNO. ROORNQ
•M OAL SU ILC)INGI
HOUSING. APT. PROJECTS

SINCF: l91S9

11111111' ST. SfiACUll

' 141-6·18·1

992-7611

We pay cash for lnemodel clean
achedulela diacontinued It the requeat of any cuttomer,
uted c»rt.
not be under obligation to resumeaervicetothatcuttom• on theuma
Jim Mink Che¥.-Oidt Inc.
premises until that cuatom• hea made payment of an amount equal to'the ''Cultomer
:~~t':s~~:.;z•on
Charge'' for uch month of the intervening per loci but not to ex.ceed awen (7) montha.
ANY PERSON. FIRM. CORPORATiON, OR ASSO~IATIDN MAY FILE PUR·
TOP CASH pold for '83 modal
SUANT TO SECTION 4909.19 OF THE REVISED COOE, AN OBJECTION TO SUCH
ond nowt• uood c.,., Smkh
Bulck-Ponlloc, 1111 Eoot•n
PROPOSED INCREASED RATES BY ALLEGING THAT SUCH PROPOSALS ARE
Ave., GolllpQIJo. Con 814-44&amp;UNJUST AND DISCRIMINATORY OR UNREASONABLE.
Rocommondotlono which dllfor from tho Application moy bo mado by tho Staff'o f 11 _228
_ _2._ _ _ _ _ __
the Comminton. by Columbia, or by int8I'YIInlng part• end may be adopted by the
Complete hou.ehohk af llrntCommlalion.
··
ture &amp; entlquea. Atso wood •
Further Information regarding the Appllcetion mey be obt•lned from Columbia
ooll
Sw•ln't Furntture
Gao of Ohio, Inc., 200 Civic Center Orlvo. P.O. Box 117, Colu""'"o, Ohio 43218·
&amp; Auctlon, Thll'd &amp; Ol1vo
0117, (8141 480-4803. or from tho Public UtMHioo Commloolon of Ohio, 180 Eoot
114-44&amp;-3159.
·
Brood Street, Columbuo, Ohio 43211.
PERCENTAGE CHANGES FROM PRESENT RATE
Wont to buy: Uood fvrnltu,.ond
Becau• thl• Application propo ... 10 Mtabltah ·a uniform rat• for g11 eervice
=~~·~~:-v,::,t: ~.d.
which II cunently provided under 47 different r•teachedul•. the changes from pre-·
meyo•. 814-24&amp;-1112.
aent retH wll Vllry depending on the rat•echeduteuncler which a customer llcurrentty
Junk Car• wtth or without
receiving gas ~ervice. Tht rate chan gee propoMd by this filing range from (0.8)% to
moton. eon ......, Llvtiv· 8147.8% lor conoumptioi10f 17 Mel por month during the winter montha ond 19.6% to
20.4%for consumption of 5 Mof par month duringtheaummer montht. Thall percen~
381-1303..
tage ch•rgea are detailed beiQW.
Furniture .,d ..,pii8IOII bv the
pt..,. or entWe houNholcl. Fatr
prJ- baing ooid. Collt14-446-WINTER (NOVEMBER-MARCHI- - SUMMER iAPRIL·OCTOBERI3t58.
8tLL
BILL
AMT
%
BILL
BILL AMT
%
AT OLD AT NEW INC INC. AT OLD AT NEW INC INC.
U01d Mobile Hl'm•. Coil 814ABEA
RATE RATE (OEC.iiOEC.[ RATE
RATE iDEC.IIDEC.I
'
44..0175.

hut••·

. .." . .."

MlDOLEPORT CORP 99.28
MEIGS COUNTY·
98.70
UNICORP
(10)11, 18. 26. 3tc

BB.88
0.62 0.8 31.54
18.88 -0.82 .- O.B 33.03

mo.
I

3Ui0
36.80

4.96
3.47

16.7
10.6

W. ..,, llack Walnutt. Fund

r•ltlng opponunlty. O.Orge
lllltoboctc et4-892·:1811 . For
dellftry 6nttntc:lton• olll 1·800te•0727.

·

�-·
Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f llll,li''/ili'lil

LAFF·A·DAY

~111/IL:r::,

11

44

42 Mobile Homes
for Ran~ ·

Help Wanted

3 SA ., 2 fu I bat hi. r-ew c•pllt.
Fo.ter's Moble Home Park. Clll
8t4-44e-1&amp;02. :
.

AVON-Noodo 5 lodl• to Sell
A•on. Cell &amp;14-44e-3318.

3 BA ., 2 b•tw at Porter. C.ll

e 1 4-3Be-t504.

UPto U5HOURPR0CESSINO
MAll WEEKlY CHECK OUA·
AANTEED. FREE DETAilS;
WRITE' SO. t057 W. Phllphla, Suite 23g...eo, Ont~rlo,

2 bedroom on Happy Hollow Rd.
• 200. P• month plu1 utilltl•·

Cell 814-742·2781.

Cell f. 91782.

.

SYfaaut. 2 bedroom mobile
hctme. •160 month plu 1 urilh let.
lt4-992-5732.

Experienced Bert11ndar for
downtown llaltlpol! enabll•h-

rf!ent. Fl•ible hours. a.n d ,..
. sumetoloxCie 171. c/ oGeltpolil Oely Tribune. 821 Thlrd
Ave.. Olilllpotlo. Ohio 4513t .

2 btt*oom mol;iHe home hlllf
ml e out Jerldto Road, refer en·
CIINqulred, call after 6:00PM.

HOME ASSEMBlY INCOME
Assemble product~ .. home.
P.-t- dme. EICPtri.,ce unntcMNry. DeteRt. Clll $13-327D898, Ext. D-tt49.

2 btcroom mobile home, quiet
neighbofhood, P_.hone 304-6761082.
j

304-l7e-1082.

2 btchom unfurnllhld trtller.

w•ter tnd ,ewe, Included. 30457e-tD78.

Wtnta:ivocallst, maleorfltmale.
le•d or bD up. Call 81 .. 448-

l:!! ~.:e~C:O.::.:potm"*'t~; "~::;~."':.:"'e~o~=.

~unt~;.;;,~: ~v.~'&amp;~gr

"The captain requests you
remain in your seats until
we're through this turbulence."

Two btdroornHollyPark mobile
home with htlf tcre lot. 304&amp;7'-3030 .. 8711-3431.

44 ·

Apartment
for Rent

Tuesday, October 18, 1988

.

73

KIT 'N' CARLYLErt by Larry Wri&amp;ht

Apartment
for Rent

BORN LOSER

Vans• 4W.D.

a..

18117 Ford Aoro
v.,.
lll:tenclld wt!Tinly, loMied. Call

Furnilhecf one btdroom apt,
-..eu ontv. no pets, elll afler
6,0D, 3D4-87e-3788.

1178 -

.,ufopod for flehlng.

hunting. camptng. NIM' br*a
plint job. 318 motor. held••·

t beltoom apt In Han dllraon.

~ATTI8 OH/lfA'
Wl-l'(,'{!;S,A
DeLibHTFVI.-

•

.700. 814-892-888t.

304-87&amp;-1972 aft• &amp;:00.

Television
Viewing

~i.Jiq!:O.NC&lt;­

814-44e-1778-

•

74

treler opoco.

B~ovll•

61.t.~6-4285.

=

IOCik•.

c....

In••

p••·

r.

e...,

83

he••·

dr•..

••o

"•ch. ·

A••

poe••

.W·he•.

I;2;:;:;;:bi;,I;;H;=:~~==

v•••

r•t.

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

•fl•

••ch-

.I

Lltemodai2. 2Chryllerenglne.
Coli 814-742·2411.

whoolo. noD. t974 Oldo end
1971MonteC.rlo for .-rts. Call
8t4-912·349D.
.

..

FRANKANDERNE,~ST~---.---=------------------. ··-·r

!.'VE OECIP~ll ib S'rA~r
AN ~Mp/..OYfE' fi'T"N f))

2088 .. 8711-48t8.

p~oGRAM, MI.$".) f:V~RL-Y-­

:t WANT'

~Vf~ygopy

it&gt;
CHME CAt&lt;&gt; DUF:IN'-'
::J,O.;l;j'-',--'

Home
lmprovemants

L.uNCH HOUR.

BA8EMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un ooncttlonal Iff• I"" guar.,...
tee. Local ref•tncet tJr'*.htd~ -IIMIII. c.ll coltc:t
t-514-237-0488. dov., night.
Aogeralatement

Jeopardy!
IDI!ll M'A'S'H

Q

@Crossfire

® Night Court
® VidooCounlry
7:35 (]) Sanford and Son
8:00 (ll MOVIE: Tho Lillie
Princota (NAJ (1 :31)
U (l) ~ Malor League

(UISIIJ£

Television D
m (!) The American
Experience Angie Oebo
jeopardized her academic
career to champion Indian
rights . C
@1 II)I!}J MOVIE: ' Falal .

ttump

Aotary or cabl• tool drlnlng.
Moat w.llt compa.edstmedl¥.
Pump •I• end HNice. ~489'-3802

Judgmenl' CBS Tuesday
Movle 0
@ Larry King Llvel

MORTY MEEK.LE AND WINTHROP
00 '!tJL.l WON c:&gt;e:;R

[f) Prime Time Wrestling

THAT 16PEND
ti/\CIPT OF MY

..

9:30 ® Celab•ldes Ollatage
Marie Osmond, Tammy
Wynette, and Oakridge Boys ·
Joe Bonsall and Duane Allen
inv1te Lorianne Crook into
their homes .

TIME WATQ-IINGTEL.EVISION'&lt;l

A•l A8modlllng. Fln•worllfor
ftne people. c.n•t be• than
prli*. Don't tel the fall ae•on
.......... 304-17e-~178.

10:00 aJ 700 Club
ill l!ll News
(!)The lriah R.M. Mrs . Knox
wants to rent out the castle

'•

where Flurry and ·sally live . .
llll!ll Bamey Miller
[1) Evening News

BARNEY
TO GIT A BOX
OF 5EE,~R5,

GUESS WHAT!

OL' BULLET!.

1 RECKON

YO'RE A
Electrical
Refrigeration

BRAND~

(!) Lighler Side of Sports

ill III Bill Moyers' World of
ldeaa Moyers talks ·with a
wide variety or people about
America's choices . (NA)
tD [!),Love Connection

1m Moneyllna

Bernice Bede Osol

a. J Wat• S.-vloe. Swimming

poolt, ciatema, wellt. Ph . 814-

2819.

Pttrlclc's Wat• Hauling. 2.000
gel doii•"'V· 304-17e-2311 or "
814-44e-40B8.
Mobile home mav.-s. IHted
with Morgan Drlv• Away,
Owner OP•Itor Jim McGuire,
111peri.,ced and inlurad. 81444'-2139: •

Upholstery

Mowr.,·s Uphot.t.lng awvlng
trl oountyaru23ve . .. The belt
In furnttul9 upho...ertng. c.n
304-875-4114 for free
elllmMel.

Ill o:21

~News

DRI.-d Wat• Service: Pools,
Cltterns, Wall•. Delivery Any.
tirrie. C.ll 814-448-7404-No
!k.lnd-v clllt.

Watterton' 1 Water H1ullng,
rHionable rat11, hnmediMe
2.000 gallon deltvery, cltt•n•.
poots, well, etc. call 304-876-

® VldeoCountry

a rn CIJ o &lt;ll ®J

General Hauling

W•• delivery. 1000 alllona. •
Ae•onlbee prloet. Immediate
dollv"'V. Cell Bt4-892·6275.

End . (0:30) ·

ml!ll Odd Couple

on the Air

Anld.rtlal or comm.-dal wlr·
lng. New nrvica or repllrs.
Llcented alectrlolan. Eltlmate
fr• Ridenour Electrical, 30487e-t788.

A • R w.;.,. 8.-vloe. Poola,
cluern•. wellt . Immediate·
1,000 or 2, 000Qtllontdelfvtry.
Call 304-87e-8370.

10:30 ill EasiEnders A continu ing
chronicle of the lives of
residents in London 's East

10:35@ MOVIE: The Rounders
iNA) (1 :25)
tt :00 aJ Remington Steele Steele

NEW

~PPY!!

24e-9285.

0

9,00 (!)Top· Ran_k Boxing
CIJ D Cll 'North and South,
Book I' ABC Novel lor

romCMI. Cell 304-1711-1331-

Oolllpollo, Ohio
Phone 814-44'-3818 or 81444e-4477

car

Roseann confronts Dan
about sharing domestic
respon sib.ilities. t;1

ETHNIC

'Your
'Birthday

•

Motor - Agony -

ln1ecl -

FORGOITEN

NORTH
+Q9 3

By James Jacoby

• 632

When South went beyond three no·
trump with four clubs, North wanted
to do more than just bid five clubs . He
had no diamond ace or heart king to
cue-bid, but he had an honor in the suit
in which partner had made a jump
shift, so he bid four spades. Since
South was anxious to bid a slam,
North's spade bid gave him an excuse
to bid six clubs. Bidding it was easier
than making it, however.

+A9 '3

10-18-88

+K J 8 3
EAST
+10862
.KJ7
• Q6 s
+JS?.

WEST

• s4

"Q!084
+AID 9712

+7

SOUTH
+A KJ 7
• A 95

. :..

+KQI0861

Chances seemed reasonable, even

Vulnerable: East-West
though. the heart lead was best for the
Dealer: South
defense. If clubs were to divide, de·
clarer could play four rounds of
Nortb East
West
spades and shed a heart from dummy.
Later, ruffing a losing heart in dummy
Pass
1
Pass
would be the 12th trick. So declarer
Pass
3+
Pass
won his heart ace and played _two
Pass
3 NT
Pass
rounds of trumps. Unfortunately East
Pass
4+
Pass
held three clubs to the jack. Undaunt·
Pass
Pass
Pass
ed, South left one trump outstanding
Opening lead: • 4
and played off four rounds of spades.
Since East had to follow, declarer was
able to discard one heart from dummy. Declarer then led a heart, hoping that th~ defenders can't'play that third
that West would have to win the trick. . round of trumps at him, and he will
But East won the heart jack and ruff his heart loser to make the slam.
played back his jack of clubs. That
killed the potential ruff in dun:~my and
James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on
declarer had to go set.
Bridge' and "Jacoby on Card Games•

'+

® Naahville Now
8:05 CI1 MOVIE: Operation
PeHicoot iNA) (2:04)
8:1SIIrn I!]) World Series
Baseball '
8:30 (l) D (I) Ros.eanne

RON'S Televlaion lervloe .
Houet calla on ACA. Quam,
OE. Spoclollng In z.n•r. Con
3D4-17e-2398 or &amp;14-44e2464.

87

~

@ MOVIE: Eyewitness LA)
(1 :42)
[ ! Murder, She Wrote £;I

8344.

J

(I) USA Today

®J Ill@

•

Ql) PrimeNews

Painting: lnt.-lor &amp; Ellf:erlor.
Fr• •lmatet. ean 114-441-

85

'

C1l Entertainment Tonight

0

by tdl ,ng in the nN$1n9 ·words

can blaine someone else il somerhlng is FORGOTIEN ."

Ill@ High Risk
1D I!]) MOVIE: Iceman iPGJ
(1:39)

8t4-892-3189.

&amp;

Neatly -

~

3 be*oom houet In Nlln. .vtla
centrall u . o•-oe. •225 plul
depottt. Aef•ence. No p«1.

84

Magazine

Comp lcrc rhc ,hu:kle quared

_

Granny to te en: ''It 's always best to travel in pairs, so you

NewaHour ( 1:00)
®J Ill @ ~ Wheel of
Fortune 0
ID I!]) Three's Company
I!]) Moneyline
®Cheers
[!I Miami Vice C
® Crook and Chase
7:05 CIJ 9 1o 5
7:30 II rn Family Feud
(!) Major League Baseball

clunker.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISEB·
Septic tonk pumalng- •eo p•
lood. Collt-1100-137-11121.

Cor. Fourth 1r1d Pine

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

(1) (!) Nova Look at
scientific hypothesis that the
Earth is one livi ng organism.

Concnw Septic Ttnkl • 1000
gol .. 1800gol. MdJII Aorotlon
,..,__ Foc:torv ~rolned r ..olr
ohop. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRIBES. Joc:lcoOil. Ohio. 1·1100137·9829.

CARTER'S PWMBINQ
ANDHEAnNG

.

BRIDGE

Tony gives Sam her first
-· a gigantic, glaring old

SWEEP EA •d tM'flng m-=tline
r•*· plrtt. and auppll•. Pldt
up .,d deMvery, Devil V1a.um
Clelft.,, one half mile up
Gooraoo c- Rd- eon 81444e-0294.

Plumbing
• Haating

~·E ~~ N I' -1·0

.

LETTERS

Cil D Cll Who's !he Boss7

All•• TrteTrimmlngand Stump
Remavel. p,.. ... lrnlt•. C.ll
304-57e-7t2t.

K

.

ERS

Baseball: An Inside Look
@ Muscle Magazine

Wal•pr~ng.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
hou• call IIWVkJfng OE, Hot
Point, w•h ... dryere snd
..... 304-57e-2388.

.

l - - l - - ' - - 1 - - L - ' - - ' you develo~ hom step No. 3 below

C1l D Cll Curren! Altair
ffi III MacNeil/ Lehrer

79 Mot!)rs Homes
&amp;Campars

82

.

View
U (l) PM Magazine
@ SportsContor (L)

Four 18 ln. tlre1. Spoke GM .

Fetty Tr• Trimming.

I I~ I

1D I!]) WKRP In Cincinnall
I!]) lnalde Polilico '88
IHJ WKRP In Cincinnati
tHl Cartoon Express
® You Ca~ Be a Star
6:35 ® Andy GriiiHh
7:00 (ll Our House A Point of

GOD'&amp; A~?

We •le uMd arto Plrt• for all
of c••· Cell 8t4-38e9082 Of 44e-188D.
..,~

81

th~

of loW"tleeled shoes?"
beauty
·
.
.
·
cooed to the salesman. "I need
~----------, something to go with a short, very-

®J Ill@ CBS News "

011-UUH ... DID il£:. GIV~

118tlon WIQOn ~- towing
ptldcege, •lr condition, •m·fm
redlo, II'MI oondltlon. t1 ,500.
Both .4.000. Cell 304-87e-

"Would you help me setec1 a parr

5

(!) Body Eloclric
(!) Nightly Buslnooa Report

. Auto Parts
• ,ll,cce180riell

t971121' s . .crelt cornp•~nv
left contlln«&lt;, air condhion.
new tlr•. grPt condition.
t3.000.; t978 Coprlce E-e

'lf--,rC_W,_I=--;.H,:..-;.Hr.--i\
_"-':~
I · · 1· lit I

C1l D Cll ABC News 1:;1'

~:;~~~~-"'~-~~~~~~;~~~~~~~1~~~~~~8~4.~;r.;~~~;===
68
78

'

~ Inside tho PGA Tour

1111 Hande 5110. 4 cvL motor-

(1~foroo~l:.•·3~:.e;;:

Pets for Sale
9o08.
PART-TIME OR FUllTIME
,
COUNSELOR. Mlll... sl)egrll t - - - - - - - - - - - " ' T - - - - - - - - - - - 1 2 BR . tptl. I ctoaett, ldtch ...
l!ooutllul 9 mo. old Cocker
pref•ral. Strong btdl.ground In
appl. furnlahed. WMher·Drver
Sp.,lol. RO',IIo-. Coli 8t4adclctlon .,.. , •• ond odol•·
32 Mobile Homes
boor. up. ww c•oot. nowly
44e-220D"' 44e-3131 .
cent progrlmming. Highly chillpllinted. de~ From •17&amp;. Now
r.,alngondr._lblepaolllon
for Sale
eccoptlng HUD. Rogonor. Inc.
welltble in • edol•ctnt ffti.
Aptt. Clll 304-875-6104, or
57
Musical •
. Instruments
dontlol - - "" · - · ... 21
57e-6388 .. 57e-773a
oponolblolnllili!lJoi.Comoc:tOr.
B . .inees
.19711 a...rw. moblo ho,.._
Joe Gay, Ph .D., 8111ettHouae,
Opportunity
14K7Q wtch 7k21 apando. Ntw compltttly furnished
P.O. Box 724, Athens. Ohio
phone 304-1715-1141,
lfUWtmenl • ·moble holM In
Mu1lcal lnltrumtnt·Bundy
4170t (114-884-8t011t whh
city. Aduh• only. Perkin~ Cell
trumpet wtth
'115. C.ll
1..-teroftntant tnd3r... .,OII
11B4Schull, 14x70wlth7lc21 814-448-0338.
Refrigerator. IIIRtrlc range.
King wood burner, lfiCtriowood 114-44&amp;-3481.
For Lease
b\1 November t . 1989. E.O.E.
I NOTICE I
· · - · · o11 oiiCiric 2 bod- ---~-------, 49
THE OHIO VAllEY PU8li8H. roo.._ 2 b•ho. .c.,.rol olr, BEAUTIFUl APARTMENTS AT
........ Cell 814-3711-2248.
PNml•
DNm, with ••Prof••lo'* office n..-clla staff lNG CO . recomrnendr that you undlr_p~lng. .47 ICI't lot BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
peraon who it energetic, do butln. . with People yau •33,1100.00 flrm. 304-.75- ION ESTATES. &amp;38 Jlckton Commareial BlAidin9 for 1t11e. Se•r• Kentnore Aucometlc tne. llncfV Trump.-~. Both IIJI·
cellant DDncltlon. 0111114-112·
friendly, dependebla • m•ket· knOW', •d NOT to lind money
1343 cill.-ound 11:00 PM. ·
Pika from ·•183 a mo. Wllk to Pl. Ple. .nt. C.ll 304-676- w...... •too. 814-91z.eoae
lngminded. StndretUmetoBox ttrnugh ,._ miM untl you h1we
thop and movlll. 114-441- 6t04.
evening•, 61-t-992·1650 · 8988.
CII 178 c•• of the Gllllpolll lnvntig••lt.. offerlng.
'81 Aidman moble horN. ac 25M. E.O.H.
devtlrne.
Individual . . .r ••10M. btCMity Triblne, 82! Third A\le.,
cond. 2 btci'oot 1. . goad lot - - - - - - , - , - , - - - gtnn... eeriout gutllrtlt. BN.IGtlllpolil. Ohio .t5831 .
loeMion. OIIUpolil, pertllll¥' fur·
~1telrt .unfurnished apt. Clr·
Uted Tappan s.s. built-In oven
Merci1~1Hlise
nlohod. 304-117e-3779.
P•od. utlltloo ,.ld. No children.
tnd ttove lop. will ael ,. tNde c•cle Muolc. 814-448·0817,
Jeff Wemalw lnttruc1or, 81~
Govtll'n"-" Jobe t11,040
No p•t.· Cell 814-44~1837.
10&lt;. _ ....... 304-17e-2508.
446-1017. llmhed OP:"'Ingt.
•59. 230 yr. Now hiring. C.l
1818 Allison moble home.
1 ·80~88?-11000 Ext. R-98015
14x70, •paolout khehen w•h
Fur,.htd- 3 roome It b.a:h.
53
Antiquee
for rurr811 fed.ll llsl.
double ov• .,d blv window, 2
Clean. No
Ref. &amp; daposll 51 Household GOods
58
Fruit
31 Homes for Sale
bedroom•. e•c cond.
raqulred. Utllhl• furnished.
Go_n.,.,. Jobel t1B.037. to
tte.ooo.oo. 304-17e-5929 or Aduko anly. Coli 814-445•
Vagatables
Buy or Soli. Alverine Antlqu..,
•e9.40,. lmmedl.at Hiring! :--:-------:---:-:-:-,.,..,----, 175-3171
1&amp;11.
SWAIN
1124 E. Nllin StrNI. Pom•ov.
Your lf'tl. C.tl {AefunUblet Very attrectNe bride. 4 bedroom.·
• FURNITURE 82 Hour~: M.T.W 101.m. to lp.m..
1-511-489-3811 EXT. F1822 2 blth. t.nlly ""'"'with tlr•
Luxurious T-.r• Townhoull AUCTION
Red &amp; yelowdtllclout, Malroae,
!kinder t to 8p.m. 814-912·
for Fed. .l Utt 2-t hl'l.
place. farm~l dining. l•ge .,lng 33
ap.-trnenta. Eleg1nt 2 fto011. 2 Olive St .. Gallipotlt.
Fanns for Sala
Jonathan, ld.-ed, Wlnnap.
room. 30 fl. ault"om-* ldtah•
BR .• full b•h uPttalra. powdw NEW· 8 pc. wood group- •399. 2128.
Orlmtt. Romeapplel.lorgtum.
E11y Work! E.:ellent p-vl At- cabin . ., 01111: wOIIHMr ..... ~6th
room downatalra, CA., dlt· Uvingroomtult• '19••111.
hoftt¥ • "*CIIIINDUI food
tembfe pr,..ctt M home. Cell b•trMnt. Z c• 1•1111• ,.,..
hMI...,, dllpolll. private en- Bunk btdt with btddlng- 1249. 54 Mille . Merchandise
lternt. Dunrovln Frutt F•m-111
for lnforl'lllllon. 504-84t-8003 ltn.mped lot. 4 ,..-. ...om 120ec:nf.-m. 32c:rop lonll 36 trw. oe. prfvete en doted pttlo. Full lila· mattrea • foundation
ttlrtlng· •ee. Recliners
Sou- al Alberty. Houro 9·8.
tlob:er Hotpllll off At. 31- P.WN. b•rw .nd outbuldln11.
Ext. A-50t0.
ool. pl~r~pound. Utllltloo not ltlrtlng.99.
Cl01ed Monday. 114·81B·
Port•brook Subdlvllkll\ c.n ••m hou• rtrea a•f Jutt 15
ncluda4- 11.,-tlng at •299 per
Yftttelchalri-MIN
or
ulld.
3
USED· Bedt, dre~sere. bedroom
1281.
rnl• from town. C:.tllom...,lle mo. Cl\1 814-317· 7850.
Have.., A von party or _. A von 814-44e-4189.
oloei~C ... Cell
tult•. Oetld. wrlngerwather, 1 -eel
Reoltv 304-57e-3030 or 87ewith •s.oo lnvMiment. More
Ro...-o Mobllty coli.,., 1-lt4complete
line
of
uted
t.untture.
3431 .
informMion call 114-992-7180. 4 BR .. full boo- • g•ogo.
Fw-n6tt.d tpt. NI'W'. Ne•HMC.
.
I ,,r :11 Suppltr::,
NEW- W..tem boota- •3&amp;. 870-988t .
fulty c~rptted (tome ntwl .
1 BR. ,271. Utllltloo pold. Cell Workboo11
•18
&amp;
up.
tSteel
a.
101
prMite
.a-•
wflh
AVON - All .,. .. C.ll Marilyn Priced to ooll. Cell &amp;t4-44e448-4411 eft• 7 PM.
21 cu. ft. .trig. Ore• cond. let
&amp; LtV~Siill.k
toft toe). Cell 614·.U6-3119.
w..... 304-882-2845. '
0278 8ft• e PM. week•dl acceu. (JIIIipollt: Ferry, new
m*• • ott. tptelel tutur•.
home
..
,o
2
Iota
with
wellt,
Aoortllllflte ., d hou.... Cell County ~oolflftce. Inc. Good UOO. Coli 814-44'-8718.
onvttm•
.70.000.00. 304-&amp;7e-413t.
AN'S • LPN'S .pH. full time •
304-87e-5104.
Livestock
Uled appllliflDH lAd 1V lltl,
'part time IIPPiiCitionl ere being 3 be«oom. t.rnllhed. 1 aCre or
Almo1t ' new tlectrlc water
Open SAM to &amp;PM. Mon thru
eccepted for Plel&amp;lnt VIII_, more land. tti,OOO.OO. 1~
Furnltihld apertmtntt·1 bid- Sot. 614-44'-1699. 827 3rd. h ..... Cell 814-2811-1431.
Hotplgl Nutting C•e Center. mil• from 41tne~ndCentervlle 35 Lots &amp; Acraage
room. ,t240 &amp; up. UtiUtiel peld. .Ave.
Gtllipolll, OH.
Confect Plfsonnel 304-875- on Countv Ad. 8. 814-245Coll4. .4418 elt• 7 PM.
au..-. etze ftolllatlon bed wnh 1 ve• appaloott m•t. Good
9279.
4340. AAEOE.
troll horN- •400. Cell &amp;.14-379e~~cel. oond., •110 or
GOOD
USED
APPUANCES
2413.
Athton.
a.ge
buldlng lotL Furnhhod ef!ldondoe· $145 &amp; W•hlf'l, dJVert, refrlg«ltOrt, best otfw. 1 lwm mower. • 30.
AVON all - I f Shirl liP( Spe••· 3 BR •• 1 bllth hom&amp; Cent nil* a mobh home~ permftt.:l. pUblic up. Utllhl• ~Mid. Sh•e bath. r~nges. Skaggs Applltncet, Cell 514-44&amp;-2297.
304-8711-1429.
h... Gereo••worlcah:»p. Rl¥.,..
Ouerntev Helf.,, Wllghlng apwat•. alto rfv• kJtt. Ctyde Call 4'8-4411 efttr 7 PM.
Upper Rtver Rd. betide Stone
view. CaH 814-317~0487 eftw
proo.
750 lbl. t350. Cell
Mixed
herd
wood
IIebe.
t12
per
·
J
r
.
304-57e-233&amp;.
.. llcBnsed Sodll \Norker in new 8 PM.
Aport-• tar the Elderly . Crest Motel. 81 .. 448-7398.
bun&lt;le. Cont:atnlng approx. 1% 8t4-44e-4053.
long ,...., c.e f.:iltty . e..,..
0.1118 Menor Apartmentt. 856
tOn. Ohio Plflll Co., Pom•ov.
a..atlfulrivwlotlone~epltt.
lAYNE'S FURNITURE
rlencepraf•r ... Comm.,sume 1 Bedroom home wtth 1Y.I tota. pulailc WltW, Clyde Iowen, Jr.
Buhl Morton Road. Designed for
Ohio. 8t4-892·8481 .
lil Slmment.. - BuN for •I e. I
ullrV and btn.rlt1. E.O.E. Mall NICIImiH home. Wlll1llwlth or 304-17e-2338.
th• Senior Chtnn (12 &amp; oldarl Sofas tnd chat,.. priced fram
montho old. eon 814-948r•u,.. to Admlnlltmer Care without furniture. Call 814-44&amp;1r1 dHandlcipp.t pwaont. Equ~
2822.
t39&amp; to •986. Tabl• eao and Quilt . .nd tor •lt. •21 firm.
HtV4ft of Point Pl. . . .t. At. '1
4t09 .. 379-2740.
AntJque
for tale. CtH
21 acr• Broed Run Road. New houllng opportunfty. Appllca- up to t12&amp;. Hlde-a-bedl
BOK 328. Point PIUNnt. W . Va .
Haven. Owner flnNng awll• t5ontm8¥ be pldcedupat Spring to •&amp;96. Atcun.. •221 to 814-992-3840elter 3,30 p.m.
2otorv, 3BR . hov... baoomont, blo. 304-182-3394
VIII.; Pl111, 129 Jtcktan Pike t37&amp;. Lampa t28 to 1128.
2565084 Hay &amp; Grain
c•~ Located .1 mil from
or call 814-446-4139.
Warm Mornfng Wood Burn•.
Dlnettn
1101and
up
to
149&amp;.
Wtnt_. diiPtndlble peson to Oolllpollo. Coli 8t4-44e-34t3.
Lott, one acre. ....... wooded.
teble w·6 chairl •28&amp; to lric:k-lned, c_. iron fire box.
Shelled corn. pr~m A.HIIHa.
c."etor ehildrtn tl8nd 8 yrt old,
Modern 2 BR .. apartment for Wood
dly Wilt•. Jerlc:hb Ro.S. owner
•?9&amp;.
Dltk 1100 up to e3?&amp;. Good condition. Cllll 114- 192· • - end r.v. Mor,.,o WoodIn my home pan time. 30 ....17&amp;. 3 be&lt;hom
1Y. batt.,
fin1ndng. good termt. 304- rent. Oep. Ill: rflf. Call 81,..44&amp;- Hutchtl 1400 and up. Bunk &amp;998lown Form, ~~~ 35. Pliny. 8:DOfam" room. dining room 1 c• 372·8406 Of 372·2178.
t0711.
7349.
bedl · complete W·mtttr..... 1 e. 8 FO'OII proof Frigldolre deep rll 12:00 Mon., thru Sltur·
g•ag&amp; ltor-a• buldWig. poo._.
2915 tndupto•39&amp;. Bebv bldl fr .... Ukt nfiiiN. 2 typewrtt...,
dlv. 304-937·2018.
RN , Director rJ Nunlng. needed / wooart dlidl. Spring Vlll-r lD11 lnd ..,--.ge on At!Yburn
1 BA . aptrtrnent. total elec. •t110.
Mettr..... orbox IPf'lngt
for lnt.-rnedl•• tlelllh:h c.• ..... Call ., ......... 7901
•118 • mo. In R~ Grande. Call full
pollouc.-ner.
814-89Z.
7881.
Aold. c.11 John D. Gerlach.
or twtn .. 8, ftrm •?&amp;. •d
facllky. Exp.t.,.-din lang term
8141245-5223.
304-57e-1253.
t 88. Queen MtS t 250 • up,
c•e requlra:t. a.. _, end ben.t· 3 bect'oom hou• IMge b••
Nice roll.-y btd wtth Inn•
T1 dllS~url~ltrlll
King 8350. 4 dr....,.. Chell ..9 . spring
Efll-=l.,~•putm~mt. Flrstfloor,
menr.,, •21. Uphot.
ttt oom"*•lt• wtth •pe· ment. eluminum Jlidlng. fulfv
Gun
cablntltl
II
gun.
•bv
rlenoe. Send reaume to BOK P c•.,.C:ed. In Pom«CJV. Clll 614Itaim -... Centrally loCated, all - mattreaaa t31 &amp;: •4&amp;. Bed . tar; m.t•l•. Antique pro!eotor.
Rt!lllals
1&amp;. c• e of Point Ple•lnt 992-7887.
utlttl• paid. •126 a mo. •36 fram1111 •20. UO &amp;: King fram• IMge mlrrw. 11 .. tl2-3079.
Register. 200 Meln St.. Point
d ..l Coll814-44e-0&amp;44.
• 60. Good a election of ._droom
For Ilia or Jlnt. 2 ~oom
Ple-.rt. W.Ve. 25&amp;50.
Spo Solo. bo.,""' quollty bunt. 71 Auto's For Sale
mldll cabinett. heed·
nMer home 'A mile out Beul•
Modern 1 BA . downtown, com- IUitll,
buy from W.Va. rn~nut.c:turer
bowdt $30 and up to f8&amp;.
Homes for Rent
Wtnted leed SJ.~ttMitt drummer ·viltePikelnGeMipoNII. Oh. 'llacra 41
pi~'• kitchen, air. c•pet. Dep·
and MY e. For lnfonnltkH1 and GOVERNMENT SEIZED Voh&gt;
tnd kev bo•d plever. mile or fen Old-In yard, ttorege bulhlng. - - - - - - - - - - Ollt no Pell. C.ll 614-448- 90 Dave eeme as c•h wtt-h pr.,_ coli t-304-823-8288. d• from 1100. Fordl. Mer·
femtle for Rode: Band now Cioae to h01pllal 1nd thoppfnG
Nlcaly furnithed tmaH hou•. 0139 evtninga, after 5.
Corvett•. Ch.....,t. Sur·
approved credit. 3 Ml• out Moncloy thru F~d"' 2'00 PM till cedes.
foJI'WMng. 304-875-5370 after Ctty tchooll •2715 P• mo..
plu1 , B~yers Guldt. 11)
8'0DPM.
Adultt on~. Ref. ~u ..ed. No
Bull'lille
Ad
,
Open
91m
to
6pm
5,00PM.
Ap.-tment for rent. S22&amp; a Man, thru Sat . Ph. 614-446ApprQIIt, •1SOOdownWtlhFHA p•o ~-H t4-44•0 38
8oe-187·8000 Ext. S·1D189.
loon . Cell St4·U8·8877
·~
~
·
mOnth. [)epollft required . 614- 0322.
Surplu• .,my camoufl.,ge, d•
fN.,ingl.
.
nim, rental, Clrhert dQthing. 1988 Chevy Cavalltr AS
3 BA ., AC. c•pet, pool, g•aga 992-5724. Aft• 6pm or 992·
Small lr"'V ICCIIIaoritl. Frt, Wagon. 37,000 mM-. euto.,
15
Schools
2 firepiiC•. fene~~. Good loca· 61~9.
Vaiii!Jf
Furniture
, 6 roo"W ., d blth In Hemtodi- tion. Call A-1
Sit, Sun, noon dll 8:00 PM. AC, cruloo, tilt. AM·FM. Cell
Estate
New
and
uted
furniture
and
-Instruction
Grove. Vinyl tl~ng. n..,. wft.
Gracious lving. 1 and 2 'beef., appllcances. C.ll 814-448- (Nov, Dec op., 1 dltft). S1m 814-38e-8240.
....... 304-57e-6t04.
dDVIIs and c•pal:a:i. Allldng
room ap.-tmenlt at Village
Somervlll..s. Ealt·RIIV-wood
t21,000. C.ll81~992-7207or Unfurnished houee. 2 SR . Menor and AlvBrtlde Apart· 7!72. Hours 9-1.
juncrion · hulap.,c..u:. Aolld, t98t Oldo. Cutl•o Cololl. Ex8t4-992-2338.
old Rt. 2t . (NIW Era( lnoulotod tra. liM rnleega Eme nice.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
Neighborhood Rd. t225. Ref•· m•tt In Middleport. From
J &amp; S FURNITURE
.
•182. Cell 8t4-992·7787.
camouflage IDCIWnllls e21.10. Cell 814-44e-94t8.
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
.,r.
•
dlp011t required. Clll
1418
Ee
..
ernAw
.
EOH.
304-273-1858.
COLLEGE. 629 Jackson Pike. In country with I.-d. Good._. 44e-44tllfi•7PM.
4 drawer chelt, e48. ! drawver
Coll44&amp;-4367. Reg. No. se-tt · hunting. 11 ml• from Athent.
t981 CUll•• c•••· 38.000
• &amp;4. 96. &amp; pc. wooden
12 mil• from Pom•ov· Call One be*'oom hou• loCited 2 bedroom Apta. fof' rent. eh•t.
latft bed tnd mllltra.. ~d mll•, ,4dr, Sh•p-•83115.1980
1D668.
dlnnette eett. e191. 9&amp;.
CaJpliltld.
Nice
utting.
Laundry
614-912-5848.
cond; U5.00. 304-B82·224i.
Buick Rlveri•UIOD. tiBII
1701 Chlltnut, llovelftdrlft'ig.
M•o,ry LyM W-aon-.30'75.
. .tor furMhed. tU50.00 with f abllttl• avail abla 0.11 814PICKENS
USED
F\1
RNITURE
4 bectoom hou11. 1 'h bill h.
19 cu ft Se1r1 upright freezw. 1112 pfymouth Ch.np- •1700.
t71. 00 dopoolt. 8t4-446· 99~- 3711. EOH.
18 Wanted to Do
Complete houaehold furnishg•ogo. lot 70lo1DO. Q'"'ol HMI,
good oond. t250.00. 304-87e- 1181 Oattun 210 W•gon·
3870.
ing~. 'h mile out Jerrlcho.
Mldclapof't, Ohio. Quldc
4831.
New tv •deoontted IPII'Imentt 304-B76-145D.
•1000. 11B1 Meraury L'fl'l•·
tion. C1ll 11~192-11714.
.1400. 11114 Ford Ring• II.
3 Bedroom furnflhed home for ~Wellbla UtHtti• ptlld. 1226.
Slamete kltttn1 t3&amp;.00 tteh. Y·6, auto.. 17.000 mll•PI" month. d.. oolt requlo-0&lt;1. Cell For low prlc:et on Qu .. ttv,Cirpll
rent with ....,..mming pool. Nice
Dozer &amp;. Backhoe Work-8&amp;0
Fltck up lollll flrtwOod *3&amp;.00. t4196. Cell 814-3111-8116.
Case dozer. Re•onab(e ratn. Houae • F1rm for ule, . nolghborhood. Coli Bt4-44e- 814-892·6724 ell• 8 '00 or &amp; Furntture come to Pifollohlft
3D4-87e-t3t9.
992-1118.
4t01 .. 379-2740.
Experience op.-.tor. Cremeens •e. OOO.OOdownaaurn~bleiM
Furniture-Upper River Rd., 81._
P• cent IGan to qualified buyer.
t878 Pontloc Grond Sel•l
Conl1 . Cell 6t4-256-t7t8.
vwv low dosing mm. I I •cr• Nloely furMhed ,,.,.1 hou11, 1 Fornllhed, 1 bedroom apart· 4411-7444.
Pllr of Bott 901 •PMk•t. call SletlonW1g0n. PS. Pl. AC. One
Painting &amp; roofing &amp; carpentry with 7 ve• old Cld• aonternbe*oom. One or twu ehllrlv ment. depotft required. No Pelt. Kenmore wt~•h• •11. 00. Speed otter I 'DOPM. 304-882·2427. own•. beet cond. C.ll 614utlhl• pold. 8t4-892·2937.
44'-34&amp;1.
work by the hour or )ob. Call porooy homo. priced ,..,..d to peopla No pet1. Ref. raqulr.f.
Queen dryer •75.00. 2 door
•ea. ooo. 00. Phone 304-57e- Cell 81~44~2&amp;43.
sa. . cabinet mocW ,.,.., wfth l· -;;:-;::c;:-;:::-::----:--:--:614-379-24t8.
refrigerator
•7&amp;."00,
IIJIII'Iment
19&amp;6 Oolllpollo Ferry. w.v•.
8 t,.ok -,., AM·FM ••.,ollndi 1181Z-28. T-top,auto.,loeded.
New 1 bedroom furnished or tlze r1nge •9&amp;.00, ga• range 30
record pltiyw. Good cordtlon. 48,000ml•. •asooFirm. Clll
3 BR . home. city r;hoots. noo untmithld In Middleport. Call In 1\ttocedo se&amp;.oo. v• apece
Would like to do babtstttlng In
ho
0
r ht t1 00 23o•a7"43a•
be6-oom hou11. Extra lot. 1 mo. Sec. dep. &amp;. ref. l'lqulred. 114-892-8304.
Gell 304-418· · t997.
814-44e-2078 elter I PM.
hut• · •es.oo. elec:lrk:: rtnge
my
me. •v Of nlg · · ·
No pets. Cell Stutet Real Eltltt
avoctdo 196. 00. Hoover
P• hour. C.I161~388-8H&amp;.
--·--~-.,.~--.,.,-:-:--:-1878 Novo Umltod. Bod\1 gr. .
814-44e-4208.
Syrsaute. 1 be*oom ap.n- W8lh• t7&amp;.00. Hoover · ctryer
TrH work wtinted: topping. 3 beci'oom hom&amp; 1~ blthl.
ohopa Ruow good. •DOD 090.
55 Building Supplies
m.,t. 1131 month plus utilitiet. • 7 15. 00. gu rMga 20 tn •115.00.
ptuning, ramovala. bushe.a c.peted, Clfttrll
lo2 BA. houllctoMtoGalllpollt. 114-992·5732.
Skegg~ Applllftcet, Upp• Rlv•
co11 304-87e-1370.
ltlmmed. Free 11tlm1ta. Cell c.aed In Point Pl...lnt, call
Double gwage &amp; luH Naemtnt.
APARTMENTS.
mobile
homet.
Ra-,:1.
814-448-7398.
1112 Fhblrd. ElCel. oond. Call
814-44e-BD78 or 3D4-875· 304-57e-27D2 Of 304-17e• 300 per mo. Dep. &amp;. r.t. Ctll
Bull..,a Motorlolo
814-37_9-2282.
4853.
2147.
8t4-4411'3648.
hou111. Pt. Ple&amp;itantando.tllp~
VIR a's Fll'nlture
Btoek. brick. IIWW pip•. wlnlie. 614-4411-8221 .
Open dollv. Mon.-Set.
dowa. lint• etc. Claudl Win- 1983 Trono•AM . Auto-. V·8,
Experienced Plano Teach• d•
4 be*oom hou•. 4 mil• from
9AM - 8PM
•••· Rio Grande. 0 . Cell 114- crou·flre Injection. Loaded.
,;,., otudonll In tho Add.,;rr• 3
Mo e omes
hotDttal on 1eo. t350. Clll Bee~ Street Middleport. Ohio,
Sun., 12 noon - 8 PM
2411-lt2t .
2 bedroom furnlthed ~.-tment
25,00D mro. •eooo. Cell 814..... 44.2586
Kyger C10ol&lt; ..... Cell Kotle
for Sala
44'-4031.
Sprow. 114-446-1838.
utlltl• peld. rwltrencet. Phone Com t' 1et e ho u 1 e ·ho 1d
Concrete blocU- all alltl- yard
4 bedroom~. lnSyrecu~e. •150. 304-882-2&amp;88.
furnith1np- AH bedding. rultlc
:-:--or deltvlfV. Muon und. Galllp~ 1988 Marda RX 7. E .:el. cond.
lnt •ior cl.,ing of homes and
per month plua utifit:l•. Em·
bunk beds with rultic ch•t.
Us Block Co .. 12!'h Pine Bt., UtOO. CoH 8t4-387·0348.
ployed p. .o,. only. Call .,._
officea. 6
a.w;perience in Lind contraet, llrge lwlng room
Now accepting appUcatlont for verletl of aof• Ia chaiJI-111 on
Gollloolll. Ohio. Coli 814-44ew / ex.rn do room, 2 lA ., 84:J.5t88.
proleet~rMII cl...,lng. Ref•en·
2 btdroom epwtrnents. fulfy aale. .:ellent u.ed applltna..
2783.
w
/
wa
c•p-.
air
oondtiof\
1188 Pontiac Bonnwlle LE.
eel. Fr" 11timat11. Call 114c•peted. applltncet, water end Chrittm81 toys now In ltock.
w
t
orw•hout
..
rnlture.
Nat.
g•
PW. POL, crulte. tit, AM·FM .
246-6565.
Hou11
with
bath.
Ne•
Racina
treth
plekupt
provided.
Malnt...
Chrittme
1...,away
now
~lng
1
1
WESTERN RED CEDAR
furnace on prht•elat. M-v ,.,. Nice yard. a•dal lpiCa Call nanet free living clote to ahop- tltcen. Plut fln•clng_IY •• Ibl.
E.... Con d. Priced r~ht. C8U
• Ctlannel Ruttlc
&amp;14-44e-&amp;117 otter 5 I'M.
MJn• Aideworlc In their home. lot. C .. IS to 8 PM. 114-446- 814- 992·15818.
ping, blftkl and schoolt. For with tpproved c:redtt. Rt. 1411n
end Bwolod Lop Slclng
t409.
Coli 8t4-44'-2427..
morelnformat:Jon cell 304-882· Centenary-'.4 mile on Uncoln
• Dtck NIM•IIIt
1973 Corvett...conv•rtlbl•.
3 bedroom, 2 b.ah. full bel•
3711. E.O.H. •
Pike. 814-448-316B.
· OLUirtnteed Clutltty
McO.niel Cuttom Buthwlng, 1118 New Moon 12x&amp;O. 2 BA .
Numblra metC:h . AI or~nel.
CETIDE,
INC..
Athono-814open 5 d~r~o • week. coli U300. Coli 814-44e-03DO.
ment.
room. 8 1
31.000 ac:tiMI ml&amp; Ooa.~man­
rooma. 24x27
3 ICI"IIfamlty
plua. AwHablt
!-:=========:.J.::::::::::::::::::::~
894-3178
tation. hpenatwe. 114-247304-882-3224.
moble
homllinCent.,_.y
on
November
1o&lt;
Coli
814-892·
SNAFUrt
by
Bn~ce
Beattie
2
4811 or 114-949-auto.
2744.
Will do b.tly ltttlng In VOUI Rt. 141 w/JA lcrtlat. Wll aetl
moble hom•~ndlot to..-: her or 2 llory, 4 bodroontll, 2 bltho.
198~ PontiiC J 2000. Mo. air,
t'torne. ..., ..... would
56
Pets for Sala
IIOOd oondtlon. 514-912-5850
d••· h•• rtler.,OII. cal 304- •ep•ete. Cllll 81 .. 446-410901' famly 100m, loCIIId P8rk01We.
379-2740.
aor~rmo. &amp;t4-892-I0811 .....
8711-1481.
I 310.00,... month. depoalt 1nd
lngaand weelc ..dt.
ref•encer-wulra:l,
c.llworil:d'¥
Moble HDm• tor Sale. 12lil150.
Groom and Suppty Shop-Ptt
304-1711-4340 atlr. for MJ.
Cell 814-44e-20D3.
Groomln g. All breedt . . , All '77 ,..,_. ..._ nlco c1- cor.
f rn.~nr:rol
Gooch.
lomo Pet Foo~ Oeol•. one own., .uto In toor, buck•
otyloo.
2Br.,1172Eioono12x115tNII.Jutle Webb Ph. &amp;t4-44e-0231. •e•. t178. oo. 304-17e-2467.
for •Ia I HOO. Call I 14-441- Mt. Y•non Aw, tmlll 2 btd
21
BUiinesa
room, Mttmlnt, u•aae. untur83315.
nllhtd, v• fuffwce. nice ytfd.
o . . .nwyr&gt;d Con-v Konno!. 1811 Monte C.~o. 18,000
Opportunity
CFA .,.._lan lftd Sam. . kft~ adutl mil•. goad cond. phone
one
child.
•210.00
month.
1973 Skvllnt moble home. 2 rHence~nddepottt. 304-1715tens. AKC Chow puppl-. NM 304-ate-348D.
Own yaur lpptrel or lhoeltortl, I. btdrooma. 12xl0, o• furn~~e-.
2861.
Himel- khtono. Cell St4choat* from: Je.,·SportiVII'8ar. 1 ron'lo • •olrl~ t3500. Cell
44e-3844 ell.- 7 PM.
73
Vans. 4 W.O,
ladles. Men' a. chlldren"- 51 44e-7285or44e-3e38.
m•.-nfty, l•ge liltl, •tte.
42
Mobile
Homee
AKC
riOitttred
buH
oookw
For a.le or rwtt-121118 mobb
dtn~---a«obl~ bridal, Hn-IPIIftlal pu_ppv. 20 wb. ald. tl 1984 Ford Eoonollne110 Con-fOJ Rent
g•le or ecctttorill llore. Add home. St. At. ?-1 mi. 1. of
_ ,_ U25. Cell 1·21e-t311 vorolon. Von. 351 HP, PS. Pe.
l!ur••
dam.
Cell
81
..
218aolor en81y• 8Nnd ntm•: Liz
8:30 p.m.
AC. , ... roof. c.n. chain.
1088
.
.
Cl.. borne. Htlllhtb. OtMo!-e.
bod. E... ol. DDnd. Coli 814-44eLee. St Michele. Forenze. Bugle
_N _Iy dooi&gt;roted. 2 lA ., fuily
AKC .... inflle7wltl. old, 1 male 3461 .
19~ F~eetwaod. 12x 14. bottle
Boy, IAIIL Comp Boverty Hl~o.
c•.,..ed. all utllftill Plld •ciPt
1' femllle. WOrmed end 111.
Orv-tlcaffv Grown. luda ovw I a a n...... d hot wet•. I 3000. electrfc. lac. dap. .-qulred. C.ll
•hote. ttBD
514-982- t983F-18041t4. IOI!ulltonlllno.
j?.lj
11
!U310
or
8142000 othtra. or •13.99 pne
I t4- 44&amp;- 11151.
8791.
PS. PI, tool box. bed An•.
843-8408
"'"'time.
Alk
·
l
or
price Mjgner, mutti tier prtdng
rumlng bo•dt. M300. C.lt
Otnny.
dlloount or faml¥ thoe 11ore.
Ne• Wet..too-2 Br. . Cl..,.
Pom.,.,.ltn pupt. 2 mel&amp; 1 11._44.. 0212.
Rei II prl011 uniMII.,ablefortoP
•1211 mo. Ret. • diD, Adutta.
ftm~e. Firwt thott lndwormed.
2 bedroom '12x50. neoo. Furnlehod. Cell 114-.We-7714
qu.Nty lhD.. rtOrmltf¥ priCid
t1DQ. 814-742·3tt0.
1978 Chevy Von. •18DO, Firm.
from en. to •eo. over 2&amp;0 304-87e-2722.
or 843-2844.
Coli 814-.We-8772.
brondo 2500 etvr.. t17. DOD to
AKC regilt- Slwlon Huokov
• 29. 900, ,........... trolnlng. 1170 Wlndoor. 12111115. Two bt*oom unlurnlshed •1
pupplee, bile ond wNt• blue 1888 Toy . . 41&lt;• pld&lt;up. Good
bur,_.,
Wilt.
lftd
dryer,
W
fil:turwe. Ht•e. grtnd opening,
14ectrtc with waod burner.....
evu. 2 mel• • females. cond. Roll .,.., tk.m. whtelt.
"It 's thai nightmare where I fail the exam.
etc. C.n open 1G davt. Mr., DDnd..mu•bemCWOCI. 304-89e588 prfvllte lot. adufts only,
•27&amp;.00 •tch. 30~57f.24B3
ttc. 84,&amp;00 mlltt . Aslllng
3502.
Forget
the
sleeping
pills
...
where's
my
Loughlin 1112)8811-4228.
81~44e-4107 .. . 4411-28D2.
Ilk torJtnnlftr.
eeooo. Call 114--387-0348.
algebra book?"

l

1D I!]) Happy Days
I!]) ShowBiz Today
IHJ Facts of Lile
tHl Fat Albert
®Fandango
6:05 ® Laverne and Shirley
6:30 U rn ~ NBC Nighlly News

... Spoo1- 50 per . ....
comploto ........... t500.00
.... 304-882-2888.

Route 33, North af Pom•tJ·
COUNTR')'MOBILEHomeP•k.
~""-/; 1 ITIIIIero. Cell 81 "" 911 • 51 Household Goods
·
Spaciou• mobile home lot1 for · Vlctorflft antique .,lng room
rent. Femltv "Prlde Mobile Home
It, 2 ~....
• lo\rt .....
""" .
Por k. G• Illo ol .. Ferrv. W- V•· ...
neD Cell 814-44e-34e1.
304-876-3073.
a..ga Chin• Tub on ltgt. Ecet.
leMe commerdtl high traffic cand. t100 ar belt off«. Call
rMtll location. plenty parldng. 814-441-4708.
foot of Sh.ne Bridge corntr
Second Md Vl~nd Stre.ta, 304- Cheat freAir for 18la C.ll
522-4128 or 3D4-123-7277.
814-38e-IS~5.

4

I

MARLt

1----rl--r-1,_,....,...!.,..,......,
!'
. \

C!l Dr. Who Mind of E.,l, Par1
6

Hltnda XMOS dirt bll• •a
canol •100.00. 304-17e-2tU

""'i

Ill a»

@ SportsLook
(!) Ramona When rain spoils
a family outing. Ramona gets
bored and frustrated . (NA)·

1988 Hondo 4 whlel• Model
300. En. oond. Coll814-38997t8.

Hotel--81 ~446-9580.

on. Call

~News

1818Honde2008X4whlel.-.
Excel. cond. Clll 814-448244L ltk tor p., L

RoorN for Nnt-week of month.
Starting It •uo • mo. Gallie

Ad

DALRRE

Episodes Five Candles

u rn CIJ o CIJ ®J

1188 Yemtha 210 c1rt blkewlth
p...- bond- •t20D. Col 81444'-1831 oek lor Chrle.

Furnilhed room-919 Second
AYI., Gllllpolil. • 136 1 mo.
Utlltli.fll Daid. $1nAiemll• Sh•e
b!fr. Col144e-44't•ott•7PM .

lo•,t

I

WORD
GAM I

S:OO CD Bonanza: The Losl

Rooms

48 Space for Rent

•

OCT. 18

Motorcyclee

'*'·

Furniahed

TUES.,

S©\\4\lN\-&lt;Zt~~~
_....:._ _ __;..
· - Edited br CLAY R. POlLAN
THAT DAILY
PUZILIR

EVENING

Fllnilhedu.,.,.,.hllfofcllpl&amp; 1
bedroom. c•pet M'ld lir oond.
praf• lingle working 1&lt;*.111. no
11• 1ft d wtt• furnished.
I 20,0.00 '"omh, reference tnd
d.. oolt. 304-&amp;75-2861 .

45

The Daily Sentinei- Pa e-9

Pomeroy-_Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 18, 1988

l!ll Talu 11om lhe Oarkside
0 Miami Vice 0
® You Can Be a Star
11:30 8 aJ I!]) Best ol Carson
(!) SportoCenter (L)
1IJ Cheero
C!J Roads Home
Q (I) Nlghtline 0
III Sign OH
1!11 USA Today
Ill@ Newlywed Game
!!}) Sports Tonlghl
Ill Q2l 'Night Heat' CBS La1e
Night Kirkwood and O'Brien

operate indeE'endently of others. II you· thing
tod ay that
could
create
get tOo involved, there' s a chance you complications.
will not finish that which you start.
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20) Be guarded
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 2t) Usu· tod ay so that you don't appear too ma..
ally you're an optimistic person, but to- terialistic around associates. Keep In
day your projections could be too nega ~ mind that a ~ person wit~out warmth Is
tlve for your own good . Don't anticipate similar to a house without windows .
defeat where you should be courting GEMINI (May 21.June 20) Your qu.all·
have a chance to meet one
success.
Oct. t9, t988
ties of leadership will be evident today,
ol their idols. (R)
CAPRICORN (DOle. 22-Jon. 19) Today and you could be rather commanding.
l!lJ Hill Slreet Blues I Never
Your financ ia l projection looks promis- you may be a little too stingy with pea· However, you must not be too harsh
Promised You a Rose.
Ing In the year ahead. By the same to- pie who usually treat you generously . with those who don't immediately snapMarvin
ken. you could also be a bit more ex·- Ironica lly, you might be too open-har'!d- lo .
9 American Magazine
travagant than usual . Don't let these . ed with those less deserving of your CANCER (Juno 21.July 22) Where your
12:00 Ill Paper Chase Suppressed
indinations offset your gains.
• largesse ~
work is concerned today, don't make ·
Desires
LIBRA IBopt. 23-0ct. 23) Today, guard AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-Feb. 19) You're change just for Its own sake. Try to keep
(!) Inside the PGA Tour (A)
against tendencies to put too much em- not apt to have difficulty making quick In mind the old adage, "lilt ain't broke,
IIJ Nlghtllne
phasis on the wrong Interest. Focus decisions early In the day. However , as don't fix II."
ClJ
Sign Oft
your attention on thing s that are pro- time ticks on, you might find yourself . LEO I July 23-Aug. 22) There are indica·
D (I) En1ertainment Tonight
ductive and not on your pleasurable
beset with doubts.
tions you might be a bit out of sync with
1!11 Magnum, P.l. ·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If it's your your contemporaries today. It so. it will
pastimes . Libra. treat yourself to a
Oll!ll Twilight Zone
duty to purvey Important information to prove wise to dissent in silence rather
birthday gift. Send for your Astra1m NawoNight
others today, make sure y()u do It accu- than causing a .row.
Graph predlct\Ons for the year ahead by
0 Dragnet
mailing $1 to Astra-Graph , c/o this
rately . To be on the sate side It might be VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) Pursu il ol
120 N~thvllla Now
newspaper, P.O. Box 91428 , Cleveland, - best to work from notes.
goals could occupy you so totally today
ARIES IMo•ch 21-April 19) It's been that you may be unaware ot the needs 12:20({1 MOVIE: HeroeliPGI (1 :53)
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your
12:308(1) ~Late Nigh! with
noted we earn our enemies, but often ol others. You may operate In a manner
zodiac sign.
.
David Letterman
don't deserve our friends. A well -mean- co-workers will find offensive.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Much can
Ing pal might unintentionally do somebe achieved today, provided you can

Was there a countermove? Sure all declarer had to do was duck the
opening heart lead. He could then win
the second trick and go about his busi·
ness as before . The only difference is

"·

(written with his lather, the late Oswald Jacoby) are now available at
bookstores. Both are published by
Pharos Books.
@ 1111. NEWSPAPER ENTERPRW: ASSN.

CROSSWORD
by 1HOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Speedy
5 Triunp
9 Roman
emperor
10 Fonner
German
state
11 Source
-12 Form a
concept
14 Numero

41 Assuage
42 Raison d'
43 Pitcher

DOWN

I Tribunal

2 Expiate
3 Overspend
{sl.)

4 Tyke

· 5 Assailed
Yesterday's Answer
6Poem
21 Checker
28 Tree
7 Out.•hoot
pieces
30 "The
8 In lltl ·
15 Moslem
22 Military
Third
galion
title
landing
Man
• 16 Malayan 10 Hate·
•
craft
coin
monger
(abbr.)
3211oist
17 Opera site 13 "Jack
23 Not bound 33 Join
18 Parking Sprat
24 Urge
in
19 - for tat
could 27 Indica38 Moslem
20 Exclude
faL."
tive and
saint
22 One kind 15 Fatima's
subjunc39 Bide
aofshark
r:~~~~~ tive
23 One's work
25WWII
battle
site
26Augur
27 Legend
29 Saturn's
wife
30 Bath tester
31 Refore
34 U-hoat
35 "- Hi~h
the Moon"
36 Football's
Marino
37 Saved
wedding
costs
3911oly40 Pickins
and
Summerville
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTESHere's
.
. how to work It:

'

One letter slands 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 letter$ are different.

CUPTOQUOTE
lo-18
HEUUEQH

ATW

QEUHA

S PN W

GUW

G K I

V P H NE UA YK W H

PAH

..

.

.,

lsLONGfELLOW

KEA

•'

IU/ 18

AXYDLBAAXR

0

..

P K

SEHHWH

RYA

PAH
NWGUH . - G .
RWKHEK
·Yeeterday's Cryptoquote: NO FOLLY IS MORE
. COSTLY THAN THE FOLLY OF INTOLERANT IDEAL-' ISM. - WINSTON C~IURCHILL

'

.'

..

�Page 10-The· Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuaaday, October 18. 1988

Ohio Lottery

Athletics
edge Dodgers
'

..
1888-1988

Page 3

.

•

Daily Number
719
Pick 4

Mostly clear, lonlght,low In
mid 30s .

6330

•
Vol.39, No. 115
Copyrighted 1988

2.Sectlons, 14 Pages . 26 Cents.
A Multimedia
Inc. Newspaper
.
.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday. October 19, 1988

Earlier action ·
for new Meigs
superintendent
is rescinded

•

MORE mAN 50 YEARS MEMBERSHIP - Lon« time Meigs
County Farm Bureau members were honored at Tuesday night's
annual dinner-meeting of the Farm Bureau Federation. The
meetiD« was held at Eas~rn IUgh School. Individuals and famUies
recelvin« pins and glftl! for their many years In the Farm Bureau
were, from left to right, front row, Bill Nease, and his grandfather,
Vernon Nease, both of Racine, wlth a 70-year membership; Ada
Holter, Pomeroy, 58 years; W.S. Michael, Portland, 53 years;

•

By BOB HOEFLICH
candidate at this time. Ru!JE:
SenUnerNews Staff
responded with a comment that a
The Meigs Local School Dis- "word game" was being played.
Vaughan commented that he
trict Board of EducatiOn meeting
In regular sesslol); Tuesday night does not feel that the board has to
voted 3·2 to rescind an· earlier pay two employes at this Inaction to advertise for a superln· ferring that the district as a
money saving measure might
tendent In the district.
Dan E. Morris who had been functioR with just one admlnis·
serving as superintendent has trator In the central office.
Nellie Parker, Pomeroy, 52 years; Mary Easterday, Racine, 52
been unable to work for several
Barton sugge~ ted that Carpen·
years; Pauline Aikins, Rutland, a 711-year membership; May
months due to Illness and since ter be given an opportunity to run
Holter, and her son, George Holler, both of Racine, with a$3-year
then assistant superintendent the district with the salary to be
James Carpenter has been serv- considered If he Is elevated to the
membership. In back, left to ri«ht. are Jake and Mildred Gaul,
Ing as Interim superintendent. superintendent's post.
Chesler, 51 years; Don and Maida Mora, Chester, 52 years; and
Morris Is not expected to return
Harry and Grace Holler, son and dau«hter·ln-law of May Holter,
Vaughan •. Barton · and Rupe
also.part of the 53-year Holter family membership.
to his post and on Sept. 20, the voted to rescind the advertiboard voted unanimously to semet motion to fill the superinadvertise the pest.
tendent's pest with Snowden and
However, last night the board Jeff Werry voting against the
voted 3-2 to rescind plans for action to rescind that motion.
The board approved a new
ad\tertlslng to fill the position.
had me choked," Perry testified.
ked. "Yes," she rej&gt;lied.
Board member . Richard after school suspension policy
Holdiqg _Perry by the blue
"I didn't want 11 (the gun) tD go Va1,1ghan made the motion to which as described by Carpenter
housecoat w1th one hand and hold· off" she testified. "I dcn't remem· rescind the earlier action with Is an alternative to suspension
ing a gun to her race with the other, bei it going off. I did not heat it go member , Larry Rupe, providing from regular school classes. The
Facemire told her, "Breathe. Make otT. I don't remember."
, . the second. Board President alternative school will operate
·my day." '
Perry told the jury she's not quiie
Robert Snowden questioned why from 3:30 to 6:30 p.m. each
"He was serious. I never saw that sure what happened nexL She S&amp;ld after a unanimous vote to adver- Tuesday and Thursday with Carl
tfacial e)(presSion) .'before • tllat -· •sh&amp;. belieYe~she headed_!Oward ~er . tlse the post early why some Hysell and Otis Knopp managing •
nighL"
.
'
' .
I
bedroom, gOing through - the board members had decided they the night school and Hysell ·
Muspve attempted tO hand the kitchen.
were wrong. Board membver monitoring the program. Stu.38 cal1ber revolver to Perry to ask
''I heard a noise and turned and Robert Barton said he voted for dents Involved wlll also Include
her to demonstrate how close the fired," she testified. Asked by the earlier motion as an act of those suspended from Eastern
gun was to her face, but she quickly Musgrave to describe lhe noise, ~he unity for the board. Rupe said he and Southern- Districts. Under
shied away from the weapon. "I said, "I don't know how to descnbe had since reconsidered, feeling the plan a student suspended lor
can't get that gun close to me," she it I remember when I wmed, I hoi- the vote to advertise the superln· three days would still attend
sobbed.
Jared stop." Perry testilied that she tendent's job was not fair· to the regular classes and would ·make
Musgrave then held the gun tD did not p~ll the trigller on the gun current candidate. Snowden re- up the suspension time by attendhis face and asked Perry to tell !he the first ume and did not mean to marked that there Is no current
Continued on page 5 '
jury how close it was to her face. "I pull the ,tngger on the gun the
could barely see the en.d of it," she second time. .
.
testified.
After shooung the second ume,
Perry told the jury tluit once she Perry recalled sitting on the kitchen
saw the gun, she grabbed the barrel floor in· a daze. She remembered
Three working employees of Hopkins' and Chapmans' tires
of it. She insisted there was not a putting a blanket over Facemrre,- the Meigs County Department of had been, Swisher said.
fight between her and Facemire for who was now slumped on the Human Services had their cars
A car belonging to working
control of the weapon. "Were you couch, his head titled tnward one vandalized early .this week. Ac- employee Jenny Leach, Pome·
in fear of your life?" Musgrave as·
Continued on page 5
cording to the Meigs County roy, was vandalized several
Sheriff's Department, the lncl· weeks ago while It was parked
dents remain under Investigation ""during the day at the Middleport
along with an Incident from home of another working
several weeks ago of vandalism employee.
to another DHS employee's car.
Also this week, employee,
Michael Swisher, Meigs DHS Yvonne Sisson. Chester, found
director, said he received a call sharp metal objects In her
about 10:30 p.m. Sunday night driveway.
from employee Greg Hopkins,
And tacks have been found In
Athens, that Hopkins' car had the drive areas of the two DHS
been spray painted, egged and buildings In Middleport since a
two tires punctured.
strike by approximately hal! of
About7 a.m. Monday, Barbara Meigs DHS employees began on
Chapman, Syracuse, called Aug. 1, Swisher said.
Swisher to report she h!ld three
Who the vandals are remains
punctured tires and her car had unknown.
been egged. A third employee,
However, since the acts of
VIcki Rood, Tuppers Plains, had vandalism are happening only to
a flat tlreonMondaymornlngbut working DHS employees; first
did not know until Monday Impressions are that the Incievening that the tire had been dents are related to the on-going
punctured from the · side, as strike, authorities said.

Perry says
she
didn't
mean
to
shoot
Facemire
. .
.

By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStafr

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Norma Jean Perry testified Thesday
afternoon that she didn't mean to
shoot Fred Facemire last year and
that she doesn't ·even remember
hearing the g)lll go ofT.
"I told Fred, 'Why don't you get
up and tell me what to ljo?'" she
testified she said to Facemire's· in·
en, bleeding body shortly aflzr !he
shooting. "I was scared so bad, I
didn't know what to do."
She said events that happened
during the shooting and just after
the shooting are all a blur now. She
'also feared for her family and herself at the time of the shooting, ac. cording to testimony.
"I felt he was going to kill me
3lld tum on the kids," she testified.
Perry,-30, charged by police with
first-degree murder in !he shooting
of Facemire twice on March 8,
1987, was on-the suind the entire

day, breaking down several times
into tears under questioning by
bol.h defense attorney Raymond
Musgrave and Prosecutor Damon
B. Morgan Jr. She left the witness
st.and and !he courtroom to regain
her composure more than once.
Police say the shooting occurred
in the early morning hours at' the
reside~e Perry and Facemire
shared at 2A II Lincoln Ave., Point
Pleasant. 1\vo children in a bed:
room in ' the house were not
awakened by the shooting, Perry
testified. Facemire was shot once in
the chest and once in the tnp of the
head.
Mason County Circuit Court
Judge Clarence L. Watt told the JQ.
woman, two-man jury Tuesday that
court proceedings today will
probably last until about6 p.m.
Perry told the jury Facemire
scared her with a "serious' look af.
tcr grabbing her housecoat by the
neck and twisting it as he sat on the
living room's blue lovcseat "He

..

Our Second
tOO Years
Were celebrating our Centennial Year in 1988.
That's a century of producing fine papers for
quality printing. paperboard and kraft papers
for packaging. For more than 30 years, we've
also been developing specialty chemicals,
including activated carbon, the key ingredient
~ in cleaning automobile emissions and purify:

..

'

HEADQUARTERS OPENS - Republican Party headquarters
In Meigs County opened Tuesday In the East Maln,Sireet building
between Swisher Lohse Drugs and Gallery Hair Arts. Headquar·
ters wlll be open from 11 a.m to 5 P·~· Monday through Saturday
and residents are Invited to stop by for lllerature orlnlormat1o11, or
to telephone there, 1192-2288. Gathering for the official opening
were, left to right, candidates, front, Larry Spencer, clerk of
courts, Incumbent; Emmogene Holstein Congo, recorder,

ing air, vapor and water. Along with the
management of our 1.5 million acres of
timberlands, these products are manulac·
tured, delivered and serviced by a worldwide
team ·of some 15,000 dedicated Westvaco
people who salute you and invite you to join
us in noting the start of our second 100 years.

Bids on the renovation of
Anniversary Hall at Rio Grande
Colleges have been accepted by
the Rio Grande Community
College Board of Trusf!!es.
The bids totaled $&amp;'!5,442, said
Dr. Herman L. Koby, secretary/treasurer of the board. The
project estlmate Is $875,700.
Apparent low bidders Include
Porlco, Portsmouth, general
contract; A.J. Stockmelster,
Jackson, ' plumbing; BB &amp; E,
Portsmouth, heating and air
conditioning; and Roy Heffner,

w.atvico

A PLEDGE OF
EXCELLENCE
Our Second IOO'!tars

f,

(

Incumbent; Steve Story, prosecutor; with Henry Well, headquar·
ters coordinator; and Evelyn Clark; chairman of the Republican
Central Committee; and back row, George CoWDS, treasurer,
Incumbent; David Koblentz, Richard Jones, commissioners,
Incumbent, with Jones also execuUve committee chairman;
Howard Frank, sheriff, Incumbent; Phll Roberts, engineer,
Incumbent; Pat O'Brien, County Court judge, Incumbent; and
Fred W. Crow.ID, Common Pleas Court judge.

CommunitY. College board ·accepts· bids

•

Copynglltt988

Three cars vandalized

w..-c Ca&lt;porotton

/

,Chesapeake, electric .
The renovation means an over·
haul of the building, opened
around 1927 and one of the oldest
exlstlng structures on campus.
New heating and air systems will
be Installed, along with elevators
and other Internal Improvements. On the outside, windows
will be replaced. Stone and brick
will be cleaned and repaired.
Contracts call for the renova·
tlon to be completed In 270
calendar days, Koby said.
In a related matter, the board's

'

·•

Building Committee recommended that the Columbus architectural firm of McDonald, Cassell &amp; Basset !Inc. be employed to
design the addition to Davis
Library.
The finn has worked on numerous campus and public structures, Including jobs at Ohio
University, Ohio State Unlver·
slty, Columbus State Community
College, DeVry Institute and an
addition to the Mount Vernon and · ·
Knox County PubliC Library.
Upon the board's approval,
·i

~

McDonald, Cassell &amp; Bassett will
draw up alternative designs to
meet specifications defined by
the stall. The design process will
Involve a series of meetings and
reviews to determine the design
that best meets staff-designed
needs and that Is within the
building budget.
The proposed addition, Included ln.. the state's capital
budget for 1989-90, · allows for
expanded storage of resource
materials and Improved library
materials.

DANGER TO TIRES - Th- sharp meW objects, approxl·
mately tw!Hncbea loq, were found early this week tn the
driveway of a workln« employee of the Melp County Deparbnent
of Human Servlcea. Taelul have al10 beea found from time to tbne
In the drive areas of the two DRS bulldlap In Mlddlepon, &amp;iDee a
strike by approximately half of Melia DHS employees be«an Aug.
1.

.
I .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="202">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2792">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38547">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38546">
              <text>October 18, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1771">
      <name>bumgarner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1991">
      <name>kirby</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5776">
      <name>pierotti</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
