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Paga

10-The Daily Sentinel

r . - -.

· Tu.day, Novanber 1, 1988 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
•

Local news ·briefs...

--Y

Continued from page 1

New contract gets tentative OK
The negotiating committees of the Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Company's Point Pleasant Polyster Plant and the United
Rubber Workers Local 644 reached a tentative agreement late
Monday night on a new contract.
No detallk were released on the tentative new a~ment
which will replac.e the current agreement, due to expire Nov, 6.
The tentative agreement will be presented to the Union's
Executive Board on Wednesday Nov. 2. The general
membership will conduct a ratification vote on Thursday Nov. 3
at the Point Pleasant Moose Club In meetings at 9, a.m. and 7
p.m.
. ,
All Goodyear-URW bargaining unit members are urged to
attend the ratification meetings.
Additional Information will be released pending the
ratification vote.

.~.

Patrol reports two-car colll&amp;ion
The Gallia·Melgs Post, State Highway' Patrol Investigated a
{wo car collision at 10:25 a.m. Ill Meigs County on SR. 7, at
Tuppers Plains. One driver complained of an Injury but was not
treated.
..•Troopers said Danny L. Cremeans, 34, Coolville, Ohio stopped
his pickup truck to make a left turn. James F. Crouse, 39, PSR,
Gallipolis, driving a truck, was unable to stop and his vehicle
struck the back of the pickup. There was moderate damage to
.
'
both vehicles.
Cremeans complained of a minor Injury but was not treated.
The patrol cited Crouse for !allure to stop within the assured
clear distance.

Meigs jobless figUre 7.5 percent
The unemployment rate from Augost to September 1988 fell In
four southeastern Ohio counties, and remained the same for
Meigs and Gallla Counties, according to the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
OBES said the September jobless rate In Ohio ranged from a
low 4.0 percent In Delaware and Shelby counties to a high of 12.1
percent In Guernsey County.
.
The comparable unemployment rate for Ohio was 5. 7 percent,
up from 5.6ln Augost. The comparable U.S. rate·ln September
was 5.2 percent (after seasonal adjustment, Ohio's September
rate was 5.8 percent and the U.S. rate was 5.4 percent.)
Gallla and Meigs counties' unemployment rate for September
remained at 7.5 percent, same as August.
Jackson County's jobless rate had the largest decline In the
six counties, from 10.6 to 8.2 percent In September, a drop of 2.4
percent.
Lawrence County's unemployment rate fell from 7.3 to 6.7
percent, a drop of 0.6 percent.
Vinton County had a drop o!0.5 percent as the jobless rate fell
from 9.5 to 9.0 percent In September.
Athens County's une,lllployment rate fell from 6.5 to 6.1
· percent In September, a drop of 0.4 percent.
The workforce In the six Southeastern Ohio counties for
September totaled 79,000 with 73,400 of them at Jobs, leaving
5,600, or 7.08 percent, unemployed.

Chris SabO
named rookie
of the year

.,•

Upper Michigan gets four inches of snow

By United Preu Jnteraatl!lnal
roads were reported slushy and were cloudy west of the Rockies temperatures would rise to ,
A storm centered along the slippery.
and partly cloudy In the northern above 70from California through .
Carolina coast got the month of
the high Plains to the wes)ern :
The storm system off the Plains.
November ott to a rainy start Carolinas was expected to bring
Temperatures dipped below Gulf Coast and across much of •
today In much of the eastern · a few Inches of snow to the freezing · early tooay In the F1orlda, with south Florida, :
United States:
Pennsylvania mountains later In northern Atlantic Coast region,
western Texas, southwestern ;
Showers reached from coastal the day. Flood watches were In the'Rocky Mountains and from New Mexico, southern Nevada ·
New England through central posted for tonight In the Catskill Nebraska and the Dakotas to the and southern California reaching •
and eastern Virginia to coastal Mountains of eastern· New York · upper Mississippi Valley.
. the 80s.
•
South Carolina, forecasters at state.
Temperatures stayed In the 60s
Highs were expected to stay .
the National Weather Service
Rocky Mount, N.C .. received and 70s overnight across Florida
below 50 degrees from the upper :
said.
1. 74 Inches of rain by 7 a:m. EST and the southwestern deserts,
Mississippi Valley to New Eng·,·
Forecasters said 4 Inches of today, while Richmond, Va., got the 50s In south·central Texas,
land and across Washlnirton :
snow fell during the night at 1.26 Inches and Raleigh, N.C., the central Gulf Coast region, state. Highs In the 30s were.;
Marquette, Mich., and a snow had 1.22 Inches.
much of California and southern predicted across upper Michl·.·
advisory was In effect for northpry weather prevailed across Arizona.
gan. Temperatures elsewller,e ·:
central upper Michigan: where the rest of the nation, but skies
Forecasters said afternoon will be In the 50s and 60s.

FarTJl prices level off
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Farm Price Index, which surged
upward through the summer and
early fall due to the drought,
leveled off this month but Is 13
percent higher than one year
ago, the Agriculture Department
• said Monday.
The Index measures the price
paid to farmers and ranchers for
the livestock, vegeta!Jles, fruits,
crops and eggs. In July, the Index
reached Its highest level since
August 1984 - and It went up In
Augost and September.
The OctOber reading or 144 was
unchanged from September.
"Higher prices for oranges,
milk, lettuce and corn were offset
by lower prices for tomatoes,
apples, eggs and soybeans," t.he

department said.
crop portion of the. Index
stood was up 27 percent from
OctOber 1987. Corn was up 11
cents a bushel to an average
price or $2. 71. Bar ley was down 24
cents to $2.64 a bushel ·and oats
dropped 12-cents to $2.44 a bushel.
Wheat was up 14 cents a bushel
to $3.89.
· However, soybeans were down
23 cents to average $7.71 a bushel.
The poultry and egg part of the
Index was down 5 percent from
September but still was 35
percent above last October. Egg
prices are down 5.4 cents a dozen
from September to 51 cents a
dozen. Prices for broiler
chickens and turkeys were down
slightly.

Rain continues to hamper
hanrest in Northem Ohio

Metze nbaum has been In the
Senate for the last 12 years,
enjoys enormous name recognl·
lion across the state and casts
himself as the ''working man's" .
representative In Congress .
Voinovlch for the last nine
years has been mayor of Cleveland, a city where there are six
Democrats for ·every Republican. For Volnovlch's party, he
seemed like the perfect choice, a
And then one candidate says Republican who le'ans toward the
the public has heard enough and center In a year when It looks like
Republl~an George Bush will
he refuses to debate.
It sounds like 't he presidential · carry Ohio.
However, Voinovlch struggled
elecllon, but It Is also the race In
to
obtain name recognition out·
Ohlb between Democratic Sen.
side
northeast. Ohio. Even the
Howard Metzenbaum and Reparty's
No. 1 man, Ronald
publican challenger George
Reagan,
stumbled when proVolnovlch.

Sialic
Occluded ~ .,
Map shews mitimum temp~ratures. At least 50'Yo of arry shaded area Is forecast •
to receive precipitation Indicated
- UPI :

Squads

lwve four calls Monday

Stocks

RECEIVJ!l RECOGNmON - Motorcyclists of the area
Tuesday presented plaques to 10 persons In recognition of
continued aupport for the motorcyclists' annual, toys for tot run
staged each year to provide Christmas .toys for underprivileged
children. Pictured during presentation ceremonies Tuesday are
from the left, Arnold Priddy, Kathy Mitchell, Mel Swisher and
Kathy Meadows, representing the presenting motorcycllsts, and

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By JOSEPH MIANOWAN\'
UPJ Political Writer
George Bush and Michael
Dukakls pushed Tuesday Into the
final week of the presidential
campaign with a blitz of America's Industrial heartland where
the Republican, talking like a
winner, promised an aggressive
agenda for his term In office
while the Democrat appealed to
common workers to salvage his
hopes.
.
The vice president. In a speech
at the University of Notre Dame
In South Bend, Ind., continued to
swipe at Dukakls and, striking a
serious tone, started to paint a
picture of an "activist" Bush
presidency he promised would
not raise .taxes, would keep
defense strong and would toward
progress with the Soviet Union,
Including an early meeting with
Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev.
In another shot at the Massa·

PEOPLES

BANK
"The BeHer Baa'"

J~ebon Av~t~uel

,.
• • . ·-~

•

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~-- ,j .....

,_;; _ _

other orders dropped 0.5 percent
after rlslng0.9percentlnAugust,
the bureau said.
Orders for defense capital
goods took an especially hard hit
In September, down 12.5 percent,
the bureau said.
Excluding the volatile defense
sector, orders were down 1.5
percent, the largest drop In that
series since a 2.9 percent plunge
In January 1987.
The reP.ort coincides with other
government Indicators showing
the economy may be slowing
from Its earlier hectic growth
pace. Last week the Commerce
Department reported that total'
economic growth had slowed to
an annual 2.2 percent rate In the
third quarter, down from 3
percent In the second quarter and
3.4 percent In the first.
Shipments ·of manufactured
goods dipped 0.1 percent In
September to $221.4 billion after

Post endorses
Voinovich for
state Senate

slstance to local needy people,
the Association has seen an
Increase In requests for assist·
ance since the strike began on
Aug. 1. Pangle feels the Increase
In requests for assistance may be
because working DHSemployees
are unable to handle all cases as
quickly as might be deemed
necessary by the Individuals who
have made the requests.
Approximately half of DHS
employees have remained on the
job since the strike began,
working many hours of overtime
to continue to provide normal
services to clients.
Few negotiating session:; have
taken place during the thirteen·
week long strike. And on Oct.l3,
Ohio Council 8, American Feder·
at !On of State, County and Munlc·
Ipal Employees (AFSCME) ,
which represents the striking
DHS employees, filed an unfair
Ia bor practice charge with the
State Employment Relations
Board . (SERB), Columbus,
agalnst'the Meigs County Commissioners and the Department
of Human Services, charging
that management has not been
bargaining In good faith . Management Is represented In negotiations by Ken Edsall, of the labor
consulting firm of Clemans,
Nelson and Associates, Inc.,
Columbus.
.,
Whether or not the fetter from
the ministerial assolcatlon was
responsible or not, a negotiating
session has been scheduled for 10
a.m. Friday at the Holiday Inn,
Ga!Upolis. The session was
called by SERB Mediator Ron
Auteri.

I

Bush, Dukakis head into final
days of presid~ntial campaign

•

(

.

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Orders for factory goods fell1.9
. percentlnSeptember,asseesa.w·
log orders for aircraft ·and ,
defense goods ,contlnued to unset·
tie , heavy Industry, the Commerce Department said
Wednesday.
Orders for all manufactured
goods fell to $222.6 billion In
September, down 1.9 percent•
from Augost, the department's
Census Bureau reported. Orders
were up a revised 3.2 percent
from July to Augost after dropping 3.6 percent from June to
July, the bureau said.
Most of the decline In new
orders for big-ticket factory
Items was In transportation
equipment, especially aircraft,
down 11.5 percent, and ships and
tanks, down 104.2 percent, the
bureau said.
When orders for transportation
equipment were taken out, all

122 'DAY-S CERTIFICATE
OF DEPOSIT

I

NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Although the Meigs County
Ministerial Association Is not
taking sides In the dispute
between striking Meigs County
Department of Human Services
employees and the Meigs County
Commissioners, the Association
has sent a letter urging the
commiSsioners to resume talks
with the union In hopes that once
talking resumes, a settlement
will follow.
Rev. Michael Panglo, secrefront, I tor, Hlzllee Riebel, PizZa Hui; Pomeroy PoUce Chief Jerry
tary for the Ministerial Assocla·
Rought; Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Uttle; back, I to r, Bill
lion, reports that the letter was
Bariey, Mlzway Tavern; Charlie Lilly, band leader; Lennie
mailed to the commissioners two
Tennant, Riverboat Inn, and Bllb HoeOich of.The Dally Sentinel.
weeks ago today." The letter Receiving plaques but not present were Frank Musser, The
states that the AssocJatlon Is not
Watering Hole; John Kerr, WMPO, and James Hill, l'leasers
taking a position In the strike
Restaurant.
situation, but encourages negotl·
allons to resume and, If neces·
sary, the Association would provide a neutral meeting place for
negotlat Ions.
adjustment for seasonal
Copies of the letter were sent to
variatiOns.
Gov. Richard Celeste, · State
Shipments of long-lasting ex·
Senator Jan Michael Long and
pensive goods, such as appllan·
State Representative Jolynn
ces and aircraft, were about the
Boster.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
same as In Augusl but shipments
Boster and Long had earlier
of more quickly consumed goods, Cincinnati P.ost Tuesday e n· Issued a joint statement urging
, such as food and clothing, dorsed George Voinovlch for negotiations to resume.
dropped 0.3 percent, the bureau Senate and said 71-year-old In·
Approximately 12 churches In
cumbent Howard Metzenbaum · Meigs County be)ong to the
said.
•'should make way for a younger Ministerial Association and Pan·
Unfilled orders Increased 0.3
but wiser man. "
percent to $453 billion in Sep·
glo says It Is the belief of
Volnovich's "conservative ministers In the Association that
tember, with nearly all that
principles, his long and remarka- needy people In Meigs County
Increase coming In heavy equip·
bly successful experience In local will be the ones Jo suffer most If
ment such as aircraft still being
and state governmenl, and his the strike Is allowed to continue.
built, the bureau said.
constructive Instincts will make
Stockpiles also 'Increased In
Panglo says the Ministerial
him an outstanding representa· ' Asssoclatlon became Involved
September, up 0.6 percent to
live of Ohio In the post-Reagan because, as a helping agency ·
$347.9 billion. The bureau said
that while Inventories have
Continued on page 5
which provides emergency as·
edged up since April 1987, the
ratio between Inventories and
shipments has dropped from 1.67
months' supply In AprU 1987 to
1.57 months In September.

Facto_ry orders down 1.9%

'SUPER C.D.

........----·
.......

Metzenbaum Is consldred the
king of filibustering In Congress,
using the tactic most often when
he wants to kill bills he believes
are geared toward special Inter·
est groups such as big business.
He gained national at~ntlon
during tax reform debate when
he publicized several elements of
the bill that were Included solely
for special projects or groups.
Many of them were ·eventually
dropped.
Metzenbaum, 71, who began
his political career as a state
representative In 1942, has said
that.lf elected to a third term In
Senate this year, he will not seek
re-election In 1994.
Volnovlch has received endorsements from 'fhe Columbus
Dispatch · and The Cincinnati
Enquirer, and Metzenbaum has
received endorsements from The
Cleveland Plain Dealer, the
Akron Beacon Journal and the
Dayton Dally News.

Group urges county
• •
to resume negotzattons

,/J

,or

Voinovlch, 52, says Metzenjobs since he became mayor In
baum has failed to get a fair
1979.
Both campaigns claim their return of federal tax dollars for
coirimerlcials are accurate and · Ohio and lacks new Ideas In
Volnovlch proposed establish- dealing with the trade deficit. He
ment of a "truth" panel fo Is also critical of Metzenbaum on
examine commercials to be trade Issues.
.
aired by both campaigns, but
"He (Metzenbaum) Is the only
Metzen baum refused.
senator I know who Is always
Then Metzenbaum, sitting on a there when they close a plant.
15-polnt lead In statewide polls, He' s the past. George Voinovlch
refused to debate. Metzenbaum Is the future;" Volnovlch said
claimed the reason was because during the campaign. ''He
Voinovlch has run a "negative doesn't recognize that the world
and mean-spirited campaign of has changed.
smears," but most political ob·
Volnovlch has not campaigned
servers agree that the real for statewide office since sucreason Is that Metzenbaum could cessfully running for lieutenant
only lose ground by debating governor with Gov. James
·
Volnovlch.
Rhodes In 1978.
The two candidates from
Metzenbaum brags about tak·
Cleveland have their differences. tng the lead on the plant-closing
bill that requires businesses to
Issue notices ahead of when they
plan to close large plants. He has
also been a leader on child .care
Issues.

Weather------.

Actor John Houseman
succumbs at age 86

Hospit&amp;t news

nounclng Voinovlch' s name durIng an October rally In Bowling
Green.
Votnovlch has pounded away •
at Metzenbaum's "100 percent
liberal" votlng record, sayl11g
Metzenbaum does not accurately
represent the political views of
Ohioans.
Metzenbaum claims that Volnovlch's commercials, depicting
the senator as "weak" on child
pornography · Issues, were
misleading.
Voinovlch countered by saying
Metzenbaum' s commercials
. stating that Cleveland has lost
70,000 jobs while he has been
mayor are false, saying Internal
Revenue ' Service returns show
Cleveland actually gained 80,000

•

Darmers

• l ... _
PresidentUl

2 Sections, It Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

'

Ohio, Wednesday. November 2. 1988

WEATHER MAP- During early Wednesday·mornlng, rain and :
showers are forecast for parts of the Pacific Northwest and the :
norlh Atlantic Coast states, with thunderstonns along the coastal ;
area&amp;. Showers and tbunclentorms are pOIISible In parts of the ·
central intermoutaln region aad the central Plains. Saow :
showers are polllllble In parts of the Great Lakes, wUh showers :
JIOIIIIIble In parts of the Ohio Valley. Showers and thunderstonna •
are possible In parts of the extreme liOUih Atlantic Coast (UPI) '

There were 4.4 days suitable
for fieldwork. Soil moisture rated
22 percent short, 70 percent
adequate and 8 percent surplus,
with most of the surplus areas In
the northern third of Ohio.
'·
Most shortages were In south·
ern parts of Ohio, notably South
Central and Southeast.
Fair Thursday and a chance o~
Soulh·Central Ohio
The corn harvest pace quick·
rain Friday and Saturday. Highs:
Ton_
l
ght,
partly
cloudy
with
a
ened as farmers switched from
low 30 to 35. Northwest winds 10 will range from the low 50s to low.
harvesting soybeans; progress
to 15 mph. Wednesday, partly 60s and lows will be In the 30s or.
stood at 42 percent complete,
cloudy with a high In the lower low40s.
•
compared with 90 percent In 1987
50s.
and a 58 percent average for the
Extended Forecast
years 1983-87.
Thursday
through Saturday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
The moisture of harvested corn
Monday; Tuppers Plains at 10: 33 a.m. treated Danny Cremeans
averaged 23 percent. Lodging
at the sc_ene of an auto accident on Route 7; Middleport at 2:33
was a probl!!m In some areas-and ·
a.m. to Mill St. for Paula Mayes to Holzer Medical Center;
could bec&amp;me more prevalent as
Scipio Fire Department at 12: 15 p.m. to a brush fire on the
harvest continues.
Dally stock prices
Howard property on Howard Road; Racine at 4:15p.m. to Pine
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
continued
from page 1 _ _ __
Grove Road for Goldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
r 1
••• _
_--=.:....:::.::....::..:::.:....:...
Bryce and MBI'k Smith
of Bluat, Ellis &amp; Loewi
reported· similar !!gores to the during 1988 has had a serious ,
chairmen of the House and effect on certain segments of Am Electric Power ............. 28'4
Senate Agriculture committees. agriculture and It may prolong AT&amp;T ................................. 28%
GAO aUditors also looked at financial stress for many Ashland 011 ............ ............35%
Make certain au your
trends for this year.
farmers," the GAO said.
Bob Evans .......................... 16~ _
Homeowners
insurance needs
''The overall Improvement In
The GAO report said 1987 Charming Shoppes ............. . 15~
are
properly
covered.
Calf us
1987 must be tempered some- recorded the first Increase - 2.5 Cl ty Holding Co ................... 33
for a no-obligation audit
what because the severe drought percent - In farm assets since Federal Mogol. ................... 54%
MALIBU, Calif. (UP!) - John
those of us In the theater
Houseman, who nurtured young
Houseman was a great, great
1981.
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 52
actors for decades before becom·
teacher who kicked ass and made
Heck's ............................... .. %
Contlnu~
from page 1
____:.:.__::......:.__
lng an Oscar·winner himself in
you feel you were committed to
Key Centurion .................... 16%
his 70s for his .portrayal of a
acllng because of him," said
Lands' End ......................... 24%
Countering Dukakls's blitz of
"I had no role that you are Limited Inc ....................... .26% condescending law school profes·
Gerald Gutierrez, an original
national
television Interviews, aware of or not aware of," Bush Multimedia Inc ..... .............. 71'%'
sor In "The Paper Chase," was
member of The Acting Company,
214 EAST MAIN
Bush appeared on the "NBC said. "So I don't know what that Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
remembered as a gentleman and
and now Its artistic director.
POMEROY
a professional.
"I'm too upset to say anything Nightly News" Monday and refers to."
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 13
Anderson, chief Middle East Shoney's Inc ........................ 7\-2
992-8687
Houseman, whose career In except he was the man who gave dented he had a role In hostage
negotiations
with
terrorists
as
correspondent
for
The
Asso·
radio, theater, film and televl·
me my career on a silver
Wendy's Inti ..................... '... 6%
slon spanned six decades, died
platter," said Patti LuPone, an claimed Monday by American elated Press, said he was "not Worthlngion Ind ................. 21~
Monday at his home after a long
Acting Company product and _ captive Terry Anderson !n a asking President Reagan to deal
State £uto
battle against_ spinal cancer. He
lnaur...oe
protege of Houseman, now star· videotape released by . his with terrorists, although both h~
To
perfonn
Nov.
5
and Mr. Bush did so In the
was 86.
ring In "Anything Goes" In New captors.
Compenlea
Dan Hayman and the Faith
Iran·contra affair and the TWA
Lindsay Wagner, who played
York.
Trio
will perform Saturday, Nov.
hijacking" .In June 1985. ,
Houseman's daughter In "The
Houseman's death came a day
5,
7:
30
p.m., at the town hall.
Bush also said he Is" a little bit
Paper Chase," called him "a
after the 50th anniversary of the Plan homecoming
optimistic" that the Western
total professional and a joy to legendary radio broadcast of
Homecoming
at
the
SutiDn
hostages may be freed because
work with. But what I enjoyed
H.G. Wells's "The War of the
United
Methodist
Church
will
be
Iran may want to make a positive
most was his tremendous wit."
Worlds," which he co-produced
held
this
Sunday.
The
day's
gesture
to a hew president.
Houseman spent decades bewilh Orson Welles.
schedule
Includes
Sun(jay
School
·~r think with Iran, Iraq having
hind the cameras, producing,
James Bridges, who wrote and
directing and teaching at The directed "The Paper Chase" In at 9:30 a.m .. worship at 10:45, a ceaseflre, I think It's In Iran's
Acting Company, which he 1973, said It was an uphill battle and a basket dinner at 12: 30. The · Interest,' though they don't hold
founded.
persuading execu 11ves at 20th Harvest Trio will be appearing In the hostages, ID do what they can
Although he once decried Century Fox to cast Houseman the afternoon beginning around to encourage their release.
American business, politics and as the haughty but respected 1: 30 p.m. Everyone Is welcome to
entertainment as being In "an
Professor Klnpfleld over the attend. The church Is located on Plan bake sale
unbelievable slump of medloc·
more famous James Mason, County Road 28, five miles north
Parents of Eastern High Varrlty, timidity and greed," his Paul Scofield and James Cagney. of Racine and two miles south of
Bas
han.
sity
and Junior Varsity basket·
greatest fame and widest expo"I said to the producers, 'Lei
ball teams are having a bake sale
sure came from a series of me show you what the real
.on Saturday at Gaul's Market In
television commercials for the Klngsfleld Is like,'" Bridges said. Plan Friday meet
Chester. The sale will start at 9
Investment firm of Smith
"We went back to JuUilard,
Meigs County R.E .A.C.T. will a.m .
Barney .
where (Houseman) was teaching
Appearing and sounding the classes. We had It In mind to cast hold a monthly meeting on
Grange to meet
very essence of a solid, trust- some of his students as law Friday, at 7:30p.m., at Pleaser's
worthy uncle, Houseman ended students In the film, but as we Restaurant. AIJ. members are
urged to attend.
Meigs County Pomona Grange
each commercial with the line:
went In a11d talked to John, I
will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Friday at the
"They make money the old
thought, 'Oh my God, yes, here
Rock Springs Grange Hall. State
Service meet slated
fashioned way. They EAAARNN he Is.'
Deputy Arthur Crabtree ..ylll
it."
Most moviegoers who saw him
A ~rvlce unit meeting for Big Install officers. Star Grange will
Actor Kirk Douglas, who In "The Paper Chase" probably
Bend East Girl Scout leaders wtll serve refreshments.
worked with Housemap In "The were unaware of his enormous
be
held Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Bad and the Beautiful," "Two success as . a producer and
$10,000 MINIMUM DEPOSIT
Syracuse
United Methodist
Weeks In Another Town," "Lust director of plays, movies and
Church.
for Life," said his friend was an radio and television programs.
original.
··
The role of the Harvard law
I
professor won him an Oscar for
''They don't make his kind
best supporting actor and rein·
anymore," Douglas said. "John carnation In a long-running TV
531
PIKE • RT.3! WEST
Veterans Memorial
Houseman was an Old World
series that has been aired In 52
, Monday Admissions - None.
gentleman, a patrician In a bow
foreign countries. "I 'II be 'the
MI. .........
Monday Discharges - Wood·
tie. John was a wonderful man, .professor• Into eternity," he once
row Zwtlllng, Derrick Bolin,
AJI.IIDII·I~~~~ail!:a~.~
an extraordinary man. He·wlll be
said.
Shauna Tackett.
mjssed."
Saturday Admissions - Edna
Houseman's cancer was dlag·
Meet on Nov. 9
Leach, ·Middleport.
nosed several months ago, and he
Saturday Discharges had been bedridden'
several
Chester Township Trustees Thelma Collins, Minnie
week5. Ills wife, Joaa1 _ . at his will meet Wednesday, Nov. 9,
SICond StrHt
ifll'lock.
.
2212
5th Street
side, t•lly spok-CifiiiM Judi 7: 30 P·"!-, at the town hall.
......
W.Va.
·Point Pluunt, W. V1:
Nt01
HIYIII, W. Ya.
·'
.
lldnday
Admk&amp;IJ•.-••mona
David* £Bid.
m-sst4
675-1121
812·2135
Smith, Middleport; .•
Smith,
No fulll!ral will be held, but a
Shade; Derrick Bolin, R!!tland.
memorial service was being Rummage 1ale !let
Sunday Discharges - Ellen
planned.
Simple Interest • Substantial Penalty For Early Withdrawal
Gibbs,
Harvey Erlewine, Ml·
A
rummage
sale
will
be
ileld
"Maybe most Americans will ·
chaeta Kuczma, Clara Gilmore,
remember him because of Jhat Friday and Saturday at Grace
MEMBER FDIC
Wllllam Williams:
Episcopal
Chun:h
lo
Pomeroy.
stupid Smith Barney ad, but to
By UnUed Presslnterna&amp;klnal
Last week's rains didn't
amount to much, but they came
often enough to further delay
harvesting, the Ohio Agricultu·
rat Statistics Service reported
Monday.
In Northern Ohio, soils remained too wet to support
machinery and the agency said
some farmers were expecting to
wall for a hardfreezetocomplete
the harvest.
In the week ended at 8 a.m.
Monday, rainfall ranged from
about a quarter-Inch over the
Northeast and North Central
regions, to one-tenth of an Inch In
the Northwest to barely a trace In
the South.
·

Pomeroy~Middleport,

(Editor's note - Third In a
series of six Ohlu'1 pre-election
8l'tlcles. )
·
By RICH EXNER
United Press International
.First one candidate paints the
other as a "liberal," saying he Is
of the mainstream.
Then botl\ candidates start
¢llklntg about so-called negative
nd false campaign

:

ft

Low In 30s tonight. Thursday, partly cloudy, warmer.
High In mid 60s.

Senate race mil'rors top of natioital ticket

.
..'

w'

399

Vol.39. No. 126
Copyrighted 1988

•

~SHOWERS

Daily Number

•

•
•

C.!,··JsNOW
-RAIN
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold

Ohio Lottery
Pick 4
2941

NATIONAL
WEATHER
SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST f1·HI
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The

----~-·--

.

..

·r

chusetts governor, Bush con·
tended his opponent was golded
more by abstract theories than
''old-fashioned cominon sense.''
Dukakls, meanwhile, stressed
his "on your side'' theme In Ohio,
Wisconsin and Detroit, promls·
lng his administration would not
forget average workers and
arguing that Bush would be more
concerned with helping the rich.
But even as Dukakls Insisted
his populist strategy was cutting
Into Bush's lead - "you can feel
It, you can taste It, you can sense
It," he said at one rally - there
was fresh evidence Bush Is
holding a strong edge.
A CBS News survey showed
that from Friday to Monday,
while the Democrat has been
claiming he Is catching Bush, the
vice president held a 12-point
lead of 53 percent to 41 percent.
The poll of more than 1,000
voters had an error margin of 3
percentage points and the lead

for Bush was virtually un·
changed from a CBS-New York
Times poll last week, which
showed Bush with a bulge of 51
percent to 38 percent.
If there was good news for
Dukakls, It was that the survey
showed 22 percent of voters said
they had not yet firmly decided
on either candidate.
An ABC News-Washington
Post poll, however, found Bush
with a similar 13-point lead of 55
percent to 42 percent ainongl,099
voters surveyed Wednesday
through Monday. The error mar·
gin, like the CBS poll, was 3
points.
Meanwhile, an ABC poll
showed Bush holding a 52
perce_pt-45 percent lead In Texas
- a s'tate crucial to Dukakls's
chances. The survey, whJch had
a margin of error of 5 points, also
found that the Republican's lead
would be 5 percent greater If
Continued on page 5

TOURS INDIANA- Republican vice presidential candldlde Dan Quayle spelks at a minority·
owned steel plant In JeffenonvUle Tuesday. He
told the partisan crowd that be bas the chance to

become the first Hoosier VIce l'relldent In 75
years, aa John Mutz, Indiana'• lieutenant
governor, standi behind htm. Mutz ~ rrmnin1 for
the Indiana roverrronhlp. (UPI)

'

�.-

-~·

--~.

•

,

Answer to comments
Meigs County, which Is what we
were hired to do.
Sincerely,
VIckie Rood

Expresses thanks
Dear Editor:
I would like to ex tend thanks to
everyone who helped the band
during the football season: those
who worked in the booths,
Fisher's Big Wheel lor donating
the television, and everyone who
donated to the drawing. It sure Is
great to have so many helpful
people. My sincerest thanks.
John Tillis
President of the Meigs
Local Band Boosters

Responds to artiCle
Dear Editor:
This letter Is In response to the
October 24 letter from Crestlyn
Hicks (Human Services striking
employee). We, theemployeesof
the various offices of the Meigs
County Courthouse, resent the
Implications set forth by Mrs.
Hill.
-, The Courthouse employees are
very familiar with the County's
financial condition and have a
great deal of confidence in our
commissiOners and Budget CommiSsion. We know that If there
were money available we would
get raises and be treated fairly.
What Mrs. Hill implies about the
difference' in qualifications Is in
our opinion "ridiculous". What
special qualifications does she
possess?
What she neglects to say Is that
Human Services,employees have
always been paid more than
Courthouse employees because
the State set their wages. Now,
the State no longer sets Human
Services employees wages and

c~llege Sen. Jan M. Long

has left It to the Counties to
establish and fund Increases.
Sure, the State does provide
funding for their salaries, but
there are ceilings on the amount,
On November 8, voters will argue for abolishing the electoral abolish the electoral college. The
which fluctuates from year to
Indirectly elect a president. college. They argue that small measure passed the House, but
year. If the State does notsupply
Though they will choose from a states are over-represented be- did not succeed In the Senate.
sut!lclent money In a given year,
list of presidential candidates, in cause they are allowed three P,ubllc oph1lon at the time.
then the County General Fund
reality they will be voting for a votes, regardless of population. showed that four out of five
must make up the difference or
slate of electors that will In turn In larger states where public Americans oppose the electorill
cut services to recipients In order
vote for president on December opinion If fairly evenly divided, college. A constitutional amendto pay Human Services employee
19. These electors make up the · special Interest groups can have ment would be ·required to
salaries.
undue influence, enough to swing change the system to direct
electoral college.
Mrs. Hill evidently does not
The electoral College was the vote one way to give a certain election by popular vote,
believe the taxpayers of Meigs
If you have any questions or
candidate all the state's electoral
County are capable of under- created during the Constitutional
comments
on this or any other
votes.
standing how County govern- · Convention over two hundred
· Others contend that the elec- Issue, please contact me by
ment works. We know they years ago. The delegates re- toral college Is a stabilizing writing State Senator Jan Ml- ·
jected both allowing the legislaunderstand very well. We deal
ture
to elect the president and factor that protects lhe two-party chael Long, Olilo Senate, Statewith them every day and they are
system by obstru~ting fringe house, Columbus, Ohio, 43266, or
.not calling the Commissioners direct election by the public. candidates.
· call (614) 466-Jl156.
and pressuring the Board to Thus, the electoral college was
· There was an attempt in 1969 to
initiated.
settle In favor of the stlkers.
Each
state
has
a
number
of
As far as the work getting done
since the strike, we know that It electors equal to the number of
Is. The working Human Services representatives It has In Con·
gress. Each state Is thus guaranemployees are doing a tremendous job In providing services to teed a minimum of three elecBy United Press International
. ·
recipients and should he com- toral votes because each has two
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 2, the 307th day o!1988 with 59 to follow·
and
at
least
one
House
Senators
mended considering the harassmember. Ohio has 23 electoral
The moon Is in Its last quarter.
ment they have received from
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupter.
votes.
Originally,
state
leglsla·
the strikers.
lures selected the electors, .but
The evening stars are Mars and Saturn.
It seems that the whole basiS to
Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
they are now chosen at the party
the Human Services stlke cen·
frontiersman
Daniel Boone In 1734, Marie Antoinette, queen of
ters on greed. They have always conventions. There are 515 elecFrance
In
1755
President James Polk in 1795, President Warren
received higher wages and benef- tors nation-wide, with 270 votes
Harding
In
1865:-astronomer
Hariow Shapley, a pioneer in studies of
needed to win the presidency. If
Its and now they want even more.
In
1885,
actor
Burt Lancaster In 1913 (age 75). and
the
Milky
Way,
They should be gratefi.tl they the electoral college would ev~r
Australian tennis player Ken Rosewallln 1934 (age 54).
have jobs. There are plenty of become deadlocked, with no
candidate
able
to
obtain
a
majorpeople who would gladly replace
Ity, Congress would elect the
them. I! they are dissatisfied
president.
with public service, they should ·
The electors who ultimately
look for work In the private
vote
for president are those on
sector, as most reasonable peothe
slate
for the candidate who
ple would do.
won
the
popular
vote in the state.
Sincerely,
Thus,
the
candidate
who wins the
Meigs County
popular
vote
In
a
state.
Thus, the
Courthouse Employees:
SALE ENDS: NOV~ 12
Kay Hlll, Tina (Hill) Rees, Jane candidate who wins the popular
Banks, Mary Hobstetter, Ca- vote in Ohio by even just one vote
rolyn Korn, June Eichinger, will receive .all 23 of our state's
Judith A. King, Joan Hoffman, electoral votes . This means that
: Coty Curtis, Nancy Russell, It Is possible for a candidate to
Carolyn Whaley, Gloria Michael, win the popular vote nationwide,
WOOD/COAL
Roger Michael, Anna Norman, but lose the electoral vote, which
HEARTHGLOW
Cindy Harten bach, Linda Bentz, did happen in 1824, 1876, and 1888.
STOVE
Although the electoral college
99
Jennifer Jewell, Judith R.
Werry, Lena K. Nesselroad, Is generally a rubber-stamping
Heats approK. 2,000 sq. ft.
Gayann Clay, Janice Young, body that confirms the result of
fire
vie'!' double glass doors,
BrlanJ. Reed, Homer Smith, Jr., the popular vote, those three
large
ash pen, heavy duty
elections are cited by those who
•'
John Stahl.
shaker grate.
Heats approK. 1,500 sq.

.T he electoral

·Letters to the editor
To the Editor:
As a working employee of the
Meigs County Department of
Human Services, I would like to
·answer the comments of Candy
Smith In Wednescjays letter to the
editor.
- · First of all, her statement that
we were all for " a raise and/or a
union" Is only piiJ'tly true. No one
is adverse to a raise but not all ·
were In favor of bringing in a
union. Yes, I did attend some
union meetings, I also signed an
Intent Card, but only because I
was told by the pro-union employees that I would have to pay
union dues whether I joined the
-union or not.
ThiS is the first lie I can count
'from the union. When I went to
the Director with this question,
'which I should have done before!
signed anything, I was told that
"fair-share" would have to 'be
negotiated. I was also told by
yro-unlon employees that there
had never been a Department of
'Human Services to go out on
strike. This I count as the second
lie, since the consultant from
Clemons &amp; Nelson has stated he
has worked on DHS strikes.
. In answer to Mrs. Smith's
·comment about "the day of
decision", I was told lie number
.two, when I made the statement
·that I would be working if ·they
-went on strike. Also, all other
non-union working employees
made their Intention to remain on
-the job known several months In
,advance of the strike voted by
,ASFME.
Mrs. Smith's charge that em·
ployees were told things to scare
them Into remaining on the job is
.ridiculous. If anything ,
Mrs.Smlth should count the people on the outside who were too
· frightened of the peer pressure to
stand up for what they really felt.
As to her comments on the
working conditions. I don't know
If she has had employment
.elsewhere or not, but I have and I
appreciate the benefits offered
under Civil Service and Meigs
:county (the most of which have
'been lost to use through the
negotiations by ASFME).
I would like to aske Mrs. Smith,
how many other employers
would have the consideration to
.let her return to the job, she
·walked off of for seven days
.: without any prior approval and
:without cont,.cting the office at
·anytime during her absence.
: I thought the working condl:uons In the office were pretty
·lenient. What other employer
:would make allowances for work'lng mothers and let their children
·come Into the office after school,
:as ours did lor some of the
;striking employees, including
Mrs. Smith. This ended with the
:••rumbling of union
·organization".
· As far as her comment of
;promises made to us to keep us on
•the job, none were made to me or
:anyone else that I know of. Nor,
,did I expect any awards other
-than to keep my job.
; Mrs. Smith's statement that
·"When it's all over you will by
:just an employee like us - no
;better, or worse" Is wrong. We
will still have our dignity and
know that we served the people of

Wednesday. November 2;1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 2 The Daily Sentinel

'DELLS

WINTER
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We han a lwge nloctlon of stove
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JUDGE
MEIGS COUNTY
COURT
(left to right) are
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9 A.M.-5 P.M.
.CALL AHEAD FOR APPOINTMENT

Cavs have ·m omentum after
perfect exhibition campaign
round draft pick, brings a wiry
6-foot-7 frame and perimeter
shooting to the small forward
spQt. Darnell Valentine, an eightyear player, backs up Mark
Price at point guard .
"You look at what we've
added, and . you think 'Great!"'
s'lid Ron Harper, the startlhg
shooting guard who missed 24
games with a foollnjury last year
but has fully recovered. "Thinking 50 (victories) Isn't farfetched. We have a very good
team."
Cleveland, however, faces
strong competition within the
NBA Central Division from
Atlanta and Detroit, and the
Cavaliers believe Chicago also Is
a contender despite the loss of
Charles Oakley in a trade.
"This is a tough division, but
By GENE CADDES
we've
learned a lot by being In
65-yard scoring pass from Erin
UPI Sports Writer
It,"
said
Daugherty. "I think we
' Statzer.
COLUMBUS Ohio high
match
up well with any
Mike Gau t rushed for 206 yards
school football notes from around
oppqnen
t.
"
and~.touchdowns Friday night to
the state:
.
Here
is
a position-by-position
lead Navarre Fairless to a 34-8
Every five years. on Oct. 28,
win over Canal Fulton Northw· review of the Cavaliers:
Delphos Jefferson loses a regular
Forwards
est. His TDs came on run of 40, 31,
season football game to PauldLarry Nance (averages of 16.2
13, 4 and 13 yards.
ing. It happened again last
Unbeaten Mingo rallied from a points and 7.9 rebounds a game) .
Friday, with the unbeaten Panth- · 20-8 deficit at the end of three and Mike Sanders (6.8, 2.0), the
ers ending Jefferson's 49-game
quarters for a 22-20 victory over two players obtained in a Feb. 25
winning streak, 17-0.
Weirton (W. Va.) Madonna Fri- trade with Phoenix, are the
The last previous Jefferson
day night . Senior quarterback starting power and small forloss, besides a pair In the state
Bill Seach, a 6-foot,2, 220- wards, respectively. Nance!s
playoffs, was on Oct. 28, 1983, to
pounder, led the Indian come- forte is rebounding and scoring
Paulding, 13-0.
back. He .tossed a 15-yard TD inside while Sanders played
Paulding's Max Elfrld rushed
pass to John Gooch with 3; 53 left · consistently well the last month
for 108 yards and scored on a
in the game and 92 seconds later, of the 1987-88 season.
3-yard run In the second quarter.
ran 15-yards for the winning . John "Hot Rod" Wllllams
The Panthers added 10 fourth - score ..
(10.9, 6.6). will back up Nance and
quarter points on a 24-yard field'
Unbeaten and No. I ran ked no1:&gt;es to rebound from a camgoal by Rob Kesler and a 24-yard
na1gge!d by Injuries.
(Division II) Steubenville neededrun by quarterback Tony Vogel.
a 27-yard field goal by Mike
Another streakalsocametoan
Jones with 11 seconds to play to
end Friday night when Ridgebeat Youngstown Chaney, 17-14,
mont snapped a string of 35 Friday night. Chaney now Is 2-7,
consecutive losses with a 3-0 win
but it was the Cowboys' fifth loss
' over DeGraff Riverside. A 24by l!. touchdown or less.
yard, third-quarter lleld goal by
Buckeye Trail won for the first
Rick Oglesbee turned out to be
time this season and handed
the only score of the game.
Zanesville Rosecrans Its nlntii .
Ridgemont) last win, In · 1984,
cons~cutlve loss with a 35-18
also was over Riverside.
decision over the Bishops Friday .
Pemberville Eastwood ran its
night.
record to 9-0 Friday night with a
Liberty Center and Archbold,
35-34 overtime victory over Tonboth 9-0, will decide the Northwtogany Otsego. Eastwood tied the est Ohio Athletic League title
score with less than a minute )n
Friday night at Archbold. Archregulation on a 12~yard pass and ' bold beat Wauseon 21-6 last
run from Kralg Rahe to Don
Friday night, whlleLCjustgotby
Schmeltz. That came three plays
Bryant, 12-10, to set up the
alter the Eagles tecovered an
showdown.
Otsego fumble on !he 12.
Mansfield Malabar, playing
In the overtime, Eastwood
the next to last game In Its
scored first on a 1-yard run by
history, belted Ashland 34-7 FriEHS PLAYER FO THE
Rahe and Schmeltz klcke&lt;l what
day night behind the passing of
WEEK - For the third time
turned out to be the deciding
quarterback Tom Fletcher and
thi&amp; season, senior Chris
point to make It 35-28. Otsego . the running of Alonzo Gilmore, a
Lance has been chosen as the
scored on Its first overtime play
133-pound sophomore. Fletcher
E~rn Wgh School "Player
on a 20-yard pass frm Jon Rife to
completed 10 of passes for 215 · of the Week" for his usually
Shaun Downey. After some delibyards·and two touchdowns, while
consistent effort against Han·
eration, Otsego coach Dan Cocke
the diminutive Gilmore rushed
nan Trace. Lance, a back on
decided to go for two points and
for 163 yards and had a 51-yard
both sides of the ball, will play
the win. Downey tried to hit Rife
TO run. Malabar will close Its
his last home game Friday
in the right corner of lhe end .doors nextsprlngln a reorganizan[Kht when the Eagles host
zone, but Eastwood's Scott Graftion of the Mansfield schools.
Walerford.
'
llce picked off the pass.
Unbeaten Buckeye Southwest
NOW
led Lisbon Beaver 25-0 at halftime Friday night when a trans·
DINNER FOR FOUR
DOMINO'S '
former blew and the lights went
LARGE 11 " 5-ITIM PIZZA
\', Wtl:h Pepparani, s.,_,., MuahroDrM, •
out. Not to worry , said the
PIZZA
OnioN •nd Or•en Pepper•
Buckeyes. They made the 60DEUYERS ·
PWS 4 · 16 oz. Softdrinks
mlle trip again on Saturday and
FREE.
P-oy, OH.
completed a 46-8 victory.
.
Weat Main St.
Umited Doll"''
Production was the name of the
~OiriDY
-~~~~
1
'
992-2124
STOif OIIILY
game Friday nightforColumbus
Wehrle's Derrick Sowards, a
Lunch Special '
DINNER FOR TWO
senior wingback . Sowards
ANY
12
'
2
ITEM
PIZZA
• 1Z" 1 ITEM PIZZA
scored four touchdowns to lead
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Softdrinks
PLUS 2 - 16 oz. Softclrlnks
the Wolverines to a 30-12win over
Portsmouth East. He rushed Just
3 times for 120 yards, including
Lu.-:h 0~ · 11 i\M· t PM
TO runs of 27' and 87 yards. He
POMEROY
.Utlo
, f.
POMIIOY
II ...1 • ~. •••,..
also returned an interception 47
IT.. Dill
StOll OllllY
II 11114 ,. fri.-Sel .
'
va~ds for a score anrl cau~rht a
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UP!) An unbeaten eight-game exhibition season has only served to
give ' the Cleveland Cavaliers
some early momentum heading
into Friday's sea~ofi .opener at
Charlotte.
Nevertheless, Coach Lenny
Wilkens, entering his third season with Cleveland, cautions that
his team still Is learning to play
as a unit.
"We do have some new faces \
and whenever you do you have to
realize they need time to learn '
both the system and their team- ·
mates," said Wilkens, who
guided the Cavaliers to a 42-40
record last year and only their

second playoff berth in 10
seasons.
"i\m I optimistic? Yes, I
suppose I am to a certain extent
because I'm very impressed with
the way everybody has performed. There's a lot of en thus!·
asm coupled with a great work
ethic."
Cleveland's weak spots last
year were rebounding, partieularly from the bench, as well -as
ou tslde shooting and backup
capabilities at point guard.
Veteran cenier Tree Rollins
was signed as a free agent, and
will boost starter Brad Daugherty. Randolph Keys of Southern
Mississippi, the Cavaliers' first-

....

HOLLY HILL INN

114 Butternut Ave., Po•roy, Ohio

Mellanby, who falls lo the Ice seconds before the
end of the game, which the host Devils won 3-2.
(UPI)

~--

rd and FRIDAY, N
•

-

GRABS P.UCK - New Jersey's David Maley
grabs the puck away from Philadelphia's Scotl

High school grid notes...

lOll~·

AND

REPAIR

-Experienced: 11 years as attorney in Meigs County; 8 years as your
County Court Judge.
-Family man: Married 14 years to Mary Bradbury O'Brien. 2 children,
Joy and Sean.
-Committed to make Meigs County a drug free county for not only our
children. but for all citizens of Meigs County.
-Committed to making Meigs County a batter place to live and raise our
families.
-Member of the Meigs Co. Jaycees, Pomeroy Gun Club, National Rifle
Association, Grace Episcopal Church, Fraternal Order of Eagles. Fund
Raiser Co-Chairman of the American Cancer Society, 648 Mental
Health Board.

-

Jets hand Islanders worst
home defeat of season, 8-1

Today in history

HEARTHGlOW .INSERT

daughter, Joy; Pat;

The Daily Santinei-Page- 3

1-800-2'23-33.41

$9.99

$4.99

By JEFF SHAIN
was. These things are sometimes
UPI Sports Writer
hard to understand.:'
The Winnipeg Jets, with some
Smith was pulled In favor of
players still mourning the firing Kelly Hrudey after allowing the
of former general manager John fourth Winnipeg goal just 2:04
Ferguson, took out their frustra- Into the second period . However,
tions In their first game under · Islanders Coach Terry Simpson
Ferguson's replacement.
did not place all the blame on
Dale Hawerchuk and Pat Ely- Smith.
nulk. scored two goals each and
"You couldn't really blame
Thomas Steen added a goal and Billy on any of the four goals,"
three assists Tuesday night as Simpson said. "They all wer!"
the Jets handed the New York breakdowns of some sort."
Islanders their worst home deThe loss was the Islanders '
feat ivlth an 8-1 rout.
fourth straight. Previously, the
The game was the first for the club's worst home defeat was
Jets under new General Manager against Philadelphia on Oct. 13,
Mike Smith, who took the job 1973 when the Islanders , In lhelr
Monday. Ferguson, who had second season, lost 6-0 to the
been general manager since the Flyers.
,
club's days In the Workl Hockey
"There was nothing good that
Association, was fired Sunday by you could find out there," Simpthe Jets·.
son said. '"They did what they
"This room Is still mourning wanted with us. There was no
John Ferguson," Hawerchuk Intensity, no skating, just nosal d. "Almost everyone in Ills his thing. We have a lot of work to
product and this Is like a family. do.''
"We did play very well tonight.
Pat 'LaFontaine scored a
Sometimes these things happen. power-play goal to spoil lhe
The division is pretty even, so II shutout attempt of Winnipeg
we can win three or four In a row, goaltender Pokey Reddick,
we can move right up."
"Maybe we're putting presWinnipeg scored on their first sure on ourselves, bu I this has to
two shots of the game. Dave be turned around," LaFontaine
Ellett beat New York goaltender said. '.'We were awful In all
Bllly Smith on hls glove side just dep~rtments."
52 seconds into the game. HawerIn other NHL games, Montreal
chuk lh!"n beat Smith with a clubbed Hartford 5-3, Los An55-foot shot 48 seconds later to geles topped Quebec 3-1, Pittsgive winnipeg a 2-0 lead.
burgh beat Vancouver 5-3, New
"There's no question we had Jersey edged Philadelphia: 3-2
the jump on them," said Jets and Washington and Detroit
defenseman Randy Carlyle. "I skated to a 3-3 tie.
wonder If Fergy was watching
·canadlens 5, Whalers 3
At Hartford, Conn., . Mike
. back In Winnipeg. I'm sure he

McPhee and Ryan Walter each
had ·a goal and an assiSt to lead
MontreaL The Cana):!lens scored
on four of their first seven shots
of the game against Hartford
r o o kie goaltender Peter
Sldorklewlcz.
King!! 3, Nordlques 1
At Quebec, Wayne Gretzky
~cored at 15:58 of the second
period to snap a 1-1 tie. and Luc,
Robltallle scored an empty-net
goal with 44 seconds left. Qu·
ebec's Joe Saklc was held pointless for the firs t.time in 13 games
thiS season as the Nordlques lost
their slxt!l game In their last
seven outings.
Penguins 5, Canucks 3
At Pittsburgh, Marlo Lemieux
scored two third-period goals and
added an assist to lead the
Penguins. Lemieux, who leads
the league with 41 points, scored
one goal unassisted and one
shorthanded into an empty net.
DevOs 3, F1yers 2
At East Rutherford, N.J.,
Claude Loiselle scored on a
strong single-handed rush at
13: 46 of the third period to lift the
Devils . Philadelphia, playing Its
first game without suspended
forward Rick Tocchet, has lost
five of its last six contests.
Red Wings 3, Capllals 3
At Detroit , Washington's Mike
Ganner scored a power-play .
goal with 58 seconds remaining to
forge the tie. Detroit's Steve
Chiasson was penalized for holdIng Geoff Courtnall at 18: 43,
leading to Gartner's goal on an
assist from Dave ChriStian .

Wyche says Bengals best in division
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals, ·despite losIng two of their last three games,
are still the best team in probably
the best division In the NFL,
maintains coach Sam Wyche.
The Bengals, who started 6·0,
lost to New England on Oct. 16
and to Cleveland on Oct. 30 to slip
to 7-2. However, that's still good
enough for a one-game lead In the
AFC C~ntral division over Houston and the Browns, both 6-3.
In spite of the recent slump,
Wyche Isn't overly troubled.
"We're In probably the best
division In the NFL and we're the
best team right now, the one with
the best record," he says.
"That's the source of a lot of
pride lor us."
Wyche also Isn't Issuing any
apologies for the 23-16 loss to
Cleveland.
"We played a well-played,
hard-fought game," he says. "No
fumbles, no Interceptions, just a
couple of mental penalties where
a' guy moved early, and those
were mostly aggressive
mistakes.

"Take away two big special
teams mistakes (a blocked punt
recovered for a Cleveland touchdown and an 84-yard kickoff
return that set up another
Browns' TD) and we're the
winners. The Browns have a good
team, we have a good team and
we're on top, stilL"
'
Wyche says the four AFC
Central teams are strong because of defense .
"You won't lind another divIsion with lour defenses as good
as ours," he says. "Los Angeles,
San Francisco and New Orleans
ali have good ones in the NFC
West, but' you might say Atlanta
doesn't stack up. And Pittsburgh
(the AFC Ce\ltral cellar-dweller)
stU! has an excellent defense."
The Bengals entertain the 2-7
Steelers Sunday.
Cincinnati's Boomer Eslason
conntlnues to be rated as the
American Conference 's top
passer .• He's led the ratings' all
season.
''I can't remember anyone
leading the ratings every week

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IU-810)
A Di\lialon ol MuUlmedla, Inc.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Frlday, 111 Court St., Po-·
meroy, Ohio, by the ObJo Valley Publishing Company / Mull!medla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 43769, Ph. 992-2156. Se-

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Member: United Press International,
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Purdue player is named
Big 10 defensive honoree
' WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UPI) - An improved defense
has kept Purdue in contention for
Its first whining season since
1980, with linebacker Darrln
Trleb a major force In the
Boilermakers strong showing.
Trleb, a 6-foot-2, 232-pound
junior fr~m hicago, was named
defensive player of
the BIJ:..i
the we~ lor hls efforts In
Purdue's 9-6 victory over winless
Wisconsin.
The Big Ten tackles leader
made 18 stops against the
Badgers. Eleven of them were
unassisted and two of them were
quarterback sacks, as Wisconsin
gained only 204 yards In total
offense.
The victory was not sealed
until Purdue held Wisconsin on
downs at the Badger 49-yardllne
with 21 seconds remaining. Trleb
screamed throughout the series
to fire up his teammates.
"I was yelling at everybody,"
Trleb said. "There was no way
we were going to let them tie us.
We knew we could slOp them."
Purdue coach Fred Akers
considers Trleb one of the main
factors in his team's success, and
a key contrlbulor to a pass
defen~e ranked 10lh In the nation

this long Into a season," says
American Conference Information director Pete Abltante.
Second to Eslason Is Buffalo's
Jim Kelly. In the NFL, Eslasonls
third to a couple of National
Conference quarterbacks Mark Ryplen of the Washington
Redsklns and Jim Everett of the
Los Angeles Rams.

SINGLE COPl'

PRICE
Dally ................................... 25 Cents

by allowing only 136 yards a
game.
"Darrln Trleb Is young, but he
Is outstanding," Akers said.
Trleb was a starter at Iowa
State before transferlng !O
Purdue and sitting out last
season. He was the Cyclones
newcomer of the year two
seasons ago, when current
Purdue assistant Phil Bennett
was also at Iowa Slate. Trleb
made 80 tackles as a late-season
starter for Iowa State In 1986.

Subscribers not desiring to pay thecar·
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No subscriptions by mall permitted In
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available.
Mall SubscrlpUons
ln111de Melp County
13 Weeks ........................ : ........ . $19.24
26 Weeks ...................... ,.......... . $37.96 .
52 Weeks ......... ·... . .. .. ................ . S74.36·
Outside Melp Cuunt)•
13 Weeks ....... .. .. .. .. .. ............ ..... $20.80
26 Weeks ........... ........ :......... .. ... $40.30
52 Week s.. ............ .. ................. $75.40

,

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•

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~.

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••
•
•
••

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SWEETLIX

•

-:

DEER BLOCKS ·•

.•
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Minerals/Vitamins/Molasses

.

plus Apple Flavor

'

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,
•

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•
Feed Sweetlix Deer Blocks year-round to supplement :
the natural forage of deer.
'•
•
Sweetlix Deer Blocks provide essential minerals,
•
•
vitamins and energy for maximum ~rowth, bone and •
•
antler development, and reproduction of deer.
•

SWEETLIX DEER BLOCKS
are available in 40 lb.
_Qiocks from:

MGM FARM CRY INC.
P.O.IOI 426
540 E. MAIN 51101
PO.IOY, OliO 45769 .
PH1 614·992·2111

'•

•

••

'

�--

--~-----~

Wlldnasday, Novembar 2. 1988

Wednasday, Novembar 2, 1988

Computw
ratings

Wala C.nferenat

S t
4 t

I
I

ll
t

WMhiDIIOD

3

1

!

8

'7
5

2:

s

n

I

!

12

47
4&amp;

11
N

I
S

I I
8 (I

II
tl

14
U

44
It

4

4

4

It

I

I

I

II

Ollcap

I

I

1

1

G.-.teport-lla.... lh.tt: I. WMII!rdle

Mlnanota

Nortllltl.lt; 4. Vp,er Arllapoa JU.II; 5.
ClliUk:MIIe lh.lt: I. Mu.UioaW•IIInr-

loaltL•: 1. A...tla&amp;own f1lclll0t.SI; 8. .
Z.tsvllle 11.11.

~l'o·•

I. a.d••U l"rlacfton 11%.»:

I.
a.cta.-tiElcler IH.M: S. l&gt;ayi011W~ ae
118.•: 4. Onciii•U · Moell• 117.11; I.
O.da-.&amp;1 Wllbrow 111.18; Ill. TrotwoodIMiadboll IILit; 'J. Chtda•U Huchee
117.•: I. Daftoa Meadowdale lUI.
Dtvllkln II
lleJion 5 ·
I. Cle\ll"IMd St. IO~ePb 111.00; :e.

a.

Breck.ntlle 10!.110;

Ourdon 88.$0; 4.

(Uel Soloa aad Wat ae_,a. U.M: I .
WNUU:e 7?.11; 1. Lake Cat ltollc 1Uf; I.
You . . . owa Soudl1t.IQ.

·Bellon I

1, "kr•

Bu~Mel

IOI.IIS; t

FOfJtorla

18.01; S. Nordonla 8'2.00; 4. Amherst
Sieele 81.50; S. AIIU1t1Q' W117.ne 7UII; I .

Hudna 1'LU; 7. (tie~ TUfiD Columbian
aa4 lktw I• I Greet~, • · • ucb.

Repon1

1. SCeubennlle lZUS: %. Columbua
Beecbi7rd IIUII; S. Uniontown lAke
~ tt$.•j

.f. Cambrldle 111.11; I. North
CUt• Hoowr 111.11; I. Col11mbuS
~ ladep~e t&amp;.•: 1. Delaware 11Qe1
I'J.M; I. Cohambu1 Wauer11011IUII.
BeP,a8
• I. Harrill on lU.II'J'; t. Fraa kiJn tlli.lll; !1.
Porc.nGU.-. 8111; 4. Let.non 7Ut; S.
EII.IB.SI; I. D.dn•tl Pureell-Marlarl
18.11; 7. Nor~ lll.U; I. Ondnrall
An den6ll ss.•.

DlvWoalll
ReJklnt

,

t.AkronSI. VIKeni-St. MuyUI.GI; 2.
Youaptown Maoaey ltl,ot; S. Campbell
Memorial 1'7.12; 4. Youaplown UrSIIIIM
St.1S; I. Palaet~t1lle Harvey 'li.ot: I.
Draa Hoban 1Ul; 7. Girard 7UD; 8.
&amp;.ekeye

S.t~U.WHI

•. 12.

Keaton 11
1. 0rrwllko,R1.111: 2. (tkl!) Orull! aadSt.

M.-ys Mem...tal. "11.11 elll!h: 4. u..._
IW117t.•: I. Bucynu1'!.H; I.PemberowUie EutWOOIII1.1t; 1. Wll~ tUt; 8.
(lie) Su..alo' PerWM .. clll.jrla West,
U.Meach.
Repon 11
l.lro._ 11!.14; t. ftllo SUO; 3.
W111t Ult: 4. Colwnbu11
Wllehl. . 11.•: 5. TIMrrwUie Sheridan
'JUI; &amp;: Uddnl Valli!)' 11.110; 1. (Ue)
W.verb' . . . &amp;110111-Carnll,
e.cla.

Port_,....

ae .... u

a.•

1. um... IUM; 2. CAPE 1'7.61: 3.
Sprlnlflel• Nortbu&amp;ern 111.00; 4. Brook·
\tile &amp;ut; 5. HamDtoa Badlo: I, Car llle
W.M; 'J. UIUe Miami tUt; 8. Tre~~ton
I"Alpreodi'UI.
DMalq•IV
Keato•l3
I. C•ton Centrlll C&amp;&amp; hOIIc 1-l.lll; 2.
Leldlirille Aqu_lnu 81.50; S. Wuren

&amp;ea . . . .It; U. Gar..ti•.UieGarletd
u.tt; t. Eul Paladne 48.M; 1. Columbl- ·
ua CI'Mt""' tt.lt; 1. \'len• Mliltewa
U.GI; 11. TororJ.o -10.81
KelktaH
1. •llvllle Clur Fork 71.11: %.
Loudonllle lUI; 3. Bucyn~~ W,Yiiord
ili.M; 4. Ollllarlo H.•: 1. (tie) Smllbvlle
and WeiU.IIon, M.lll each; '1. Huran
U.DD; 8. WaaWQIIU.OI.

RePoa 15
1. Jlelp~ 1UI; t:. Columhu11 -'eadem)'
7UI; I. Mar1D11 !lJin SUI; 4. Oak Hill
U.M; S• .le....._a Neorlhrki&amp;:e 11:..50; I.

Co...._• Hartlry •.10; 7.

Nel110aW"III~

York st.•; I. 'h~arawu Yallq U.to.
Rellfoa II

1. Wheel.-..rw; 81.11; t .. Wyomtnr

II.M; S. Wat.leller. . . ...IO; 4. ~&amp;on
.ldfft'MII •.11; 5. M ariemonl SO.t3; 1.
Ver .. lhle 118.10: 7. Rlt:ltmoDd Dale

Southe•ternU.5t; 8.

"' ~rft.villefUO.

DMsklnV

Reo lion 17

' ·•

1. Lorain Cle .. \'lew IUO; !. Mlnp
18.M; J. Mopdo~ lUI; t . (lie)

Beallll"'lle and McDe_.d. noo each; 1.
lndt!pMIIRnce 4t.5G; 7. Wood!lleld4UQ;
II. Dai1Gf14J,DI.

.
Repon 18
1: (lie) Mo.run"llle Md Archbold,M.III
• e~eh; 3. Ll bei"I,YCenler 55.81; 4. Fremont
" S&amp;, do•plt 51.8'1; 5. SIUI.duAky St. M&amp;ry'll
41.11; I. Y 111 laren 41.50; 1. A.yers\'Uk
SS.M; 8. Jackntlle SUI.

114!aton 11

1. Newark Catholic 1S.SS; 2. Canal
Wlacheater 1150; S. Ea1t Knox :"iS. Ill; 4..
Columbu• Wehrle 41.!18; 5. Porumoalh
Nocre Dame tt.13; 11. Morl'lll Rhtpdalc
11.11; 7. Plymou1h 31.11; II. Norlh Galli&amp;

lUI.
114!P.n •

1. Middletown Fenwick 112.50; 2. New
•

,er.,.

NYI•.... Ikn

New

D«roll
8t Lout•"

I. W.,.ft!ll WMIIHa ft.Hft'w Jti'.DI; 'l.

Bremen Q,(IO; S. Sprlnr;fleld

Catholl~

4UI; 4. St. Henry 45.51; 5. Delpholl
olelltnon tUG; I. Wllllam&amp;bu II 42.41; 1.
Bllaow Ia 41.M; 8, MJniAer 41.11,

... ....
..... ...."

Patrk:k DM1tln
WLTPta. GF GA.
NY llaaFn
8 . 2 I 1'7
ntllburafl
8 4 t II
Pblladelpllla
I I t It
II U

DhWoal
Berton I
1. Cln&lt;eland &amp;. lfU.IIus lat.•; ~­
MIIklebllra: . , ... , Mldpl,riiiiUt; 3.
Allr011 GarDeld lf41.ta; t . Bere.a ltUI: 1.
- E.clld H.M; I. stow M.l!; 7. Lakewo.od
81.11; ' · awelaul Colllawood 81.11.
BePQ•'I
I. saa-..., IIS.U; I, Uma Seftktr
Ilt.a: I. T.IHD Wllltlne~ lf'J.IIj 4.
~·- 81. Fraadt ....; '· Toledo &amp; .
.....'all.•: I . Sprllla:l'leldNerthi-Ut; 7.
Spriallleld 8oalh 8!.M; 8. Bra•wlck
7UI,
Rertoa ll

Mama [M,Ialon

Boston

IJIIIfalo

S 1 1 11

Mol&amp;real

Hartford

Quebec

41

d

C•m pbl!ll Corafennoe

Norril Dlowlilkln
W L T ~L GF GA
,. n
• 8 4 1 l1

'1\Jr.-o

.... ....
.. ..
II

! 8 I
5
Sm)'W DM•IOn
Calpry
I 3 I IS
L.AIIpl•
7 5 e If
ll!'.dmo.-on
I 4 ! It
Y •011uwr
5 I t I!
Wlnlllper
t 4 t 11

II

Sl
IS
43

38
17
47
J'2

41
•

41

Tut!M"''• .......
Mollll&amp;ftall, Haril'ord 1
Loe Anpl• J. Quebee I
Pkt~Darab t, V..cou.er s
W•IU&amp;JOd, Dell roll (Ue)
New
l, Pldllwlelpllld
Wlhl~ S. NY a.J...teul

'•l'lleJ

·

'l'llu_..,.• o.....

Hartford at. Boatolt; nllfli,
· Quebec at" PUtiiMII'fb, nlpt;
Van011uwr at PhiWelpWa. nlpe
WIAnlpel a1 New oleney, •IPI:
Mla_.uil a1 Qlcqe, nlpt
st.IAullal Calp!'J, al,lht

VoUeyball poD
NEW &amp;NOX:VILLE, Oblo (V.PI) -The
fl-.1 1188 Ohio hlp Khoel volleyball

nllnp, com ..ed bJ Oluck Braden. paat

plftldeat of tlw Olllo R11h School
. Volle,ball Co&amp;cht!ll AMod•toa. and
dliltrtbu&amp;ed 117 UPI. (FirM place v*"
and at! am reoord•ln parentbeHs):
CMIIAAA

Point.
S5t
..
Itt
17t
161
131
111

'· Orepn Cl&amp;)' (!) (11-0)

I. st- (IH)
7. Mulllleld Ma.a.oa (24-1)

tJ

A.DiyOunlnadHulletllaeCfMI
t, •ecUYGie {I) (II..J)
IO.Cin Mere)' (ZO.II)

II
1'7

Seeo.t ten: It. W••• River VIew
4t; U. Cll)'&amp;hop Falls II; II. Da1ton
llebbla (I) II; 14. Atultlall""•
d; u. EMt Uverpoollf; 11. J]retaware
H&amp;)'M •: 11. 8udll110' It: II. Toledll

nc•

Nohoe Dame 18; lt. P•ma Normatuly

li; H. C&amp;Jial Fullon Nortltwnt 11.

ClauAA
Tum
I. Fairview Park (Zf) (!M)

Point•
IU

2. Spritlf N'Wfteft"D C8 ) (IS-I)
S. Uma Wit (I) (U-1)
4, Belle¥"• (II (II-!)

..

tiS

no

t. Buek.,e Trail (%) (IS.%)
&amp;.SbelbJ (I) (U.S)

14!
1!8

7. n • .,..... en•&gt;
8. Pe•bJCut.- (!N ~
t, MronHob1111 (t) (lH)

111

M

81
II .He b Lalu!woed (-.c)
It
Sem ... &amp;en: II. Oak Harbor 41: 12.
MIUoa Unlo• Sl; IJ. Orep• CatciDal
Strleb 18; 14. EM&amp; Paltalll!le t7; 11.
In elM Valley •: 11. Wo-.r Trlway Sf;
11. TeQ•Valley (I•U: 18.Wellln(Jtontll;
Ill. Bexle)' 11; M. COIIIu We~tern
Beaeroe 11.

a ... •

Tum
I.IU. Henry (ti} (1:1-:1)
'· Berln Hiland (7) (tf-0)
3. Rocldonl P•llwa~ (:zt.l)
1.81. Ber•rd (I) (U.1)
S. Mi. II~ 111\'erdlle {If.!)

Polai•
SSO
117

liS
IW
III
111

e. Ne" IUo•"'Ue {liM)
1. 11'•1111•.. (I) {UI)
•
I. Gl'll)'nllleSk)vue (11-Z)
81
1. Ropenii·Lo•a (11-J)
II
II.Coaottoa Valier (IH)
•
Seoo• w.: 11. Afthbold st: tt.
NewarlllCMhlllc48; IS. FertLoi'M'IIe(l)
SO; 14. Mil.. Clly ( l) M; II. C&amp;nal
Wlnebeller (I) 14; 18. a.cke;,e Cenlral
II; 1'1. Yf!l'allles (I) 1'1; 1!1. HemiiiC.k
Miller II; 11. New Bremea 15; ID.
WUiiunebufJ 14.

Calendar
Bowllns
De!ioto, Texaa- t4D,OOOLPIIT Colum·
blol8o a ....,
Bosinl
WB • ..,,., F, • ..,.,,.,. "'"
London - Brian Mtl~hell u Jim

M~Donnell

SABO NL ROOKIE OF THE·
YEAR- Reds' third baseman
Chris Sabo won the Jacllle
Robinson National Lea.-,.e
Rookie of the Year award
Tuesday by the Baseball Writers Assoclaton of America.
Sabo, who batted .271 In 137
, games, Is the sixth ~ds
player to be so honored and .
the fint to win the award since
· 1976. (UPI)

""'"'

NV Raa~r• a1 Buffalo, 1:s~ p.m.
eo.a .. at T•r11ato, 7: St p.m .

theft of
necklaces'

LEXINGTON, l&lt;y. (UPI) The University of Kentucky
launched Its own Investigation
Tuesday Into the theft of two gold
necklaces stolen from Kentucky
guard Sean Sutton and sold to a
pawn shop by Kentuck)i fresh- ._
man Shawn Kemp.
Lexington pollee closed Its
Investigation of the theft and the
sale of the necklaces after Sutton
declined to prosecute ~emp, a
Kentucky signee from Elkart,
Ind., who was forced to sit out
this season because he ' did not
meet minimum NCAA academic
requirements tor freshmen.
The Incident Is the latest In a
long series of problem~ for the
Kentucky basketball program,
which Is facing 18 allega lions of
NCAA rule violations · that the
NCAA has termed "major."
Kemp Is named In an additional
potential allegation facing the
university for possible recruiting
violations by Kentucky, accordIng to sources familiar with the
Investigation.
The probe by Dean of Students
Doug Wilson will look Into
whether there was any violation
of the university student code In
connection with the Sept. 22 theft
of the necklaces worth $700 from
the Wildcat Lodge dormitory
room of Sutton, who Is the son of
head coach Eddie Sutton.
''The possible violations would
focus on.the theft, which Is under
our jurisdiction because It happend on the university,'' Wilson
said. "The pawning of any Items
oft the university Is not under our
JUfIS dl CtiOO. ''
Lexington pollee Sgt. Dan
G
lbbons said there was sufficient
evidence to charge Kemp wlth
receiving stolen property for
selling the necklaces to John-

.... ........ M""•"·''Isp.m.
"'· "''"" Edm.,.,.,
''"p.m.
Ten!U
·

son's Pawn Shop In Lexington.
But he said the pollee decided to
wo~esller, Mus. - UDt.OOt vtrslnta
clear the case because the
SllrMofNewEn&amp;~&amp;n•
yoUnger SU tt00 d ec t•med t0
Sllocklltlm, Swedelt _ IM!,MCI stock·
MlmOpen
prosecute.
Gibbons said Kentucky Jaw
r_e qulres any pawning of precious
metals require the seller to
produce a photo ID, be fingerprinted and have the!r picture
~ taRen,wlllchKempdldwhenhe
pawned the necklaces for $180 on
.•
Oct. 20.
scholarship Is named for a
Gibbons said both the younger
vetera~ educator and Quiz Bowl
Sutton and· his mother, Patsy,
adviser at Bloom Local.
positively Identified the necklaFlip and Twist, a gymnastics ces as the ones stolen, but then
group from Wheelersburg, will later said the necklaces could not
provide halftime entertainment. be positively Identified.
Chances on the game basketball
"In between the two ldentfficawill be sold by the South Webster lions, coach Sutton was made
Lions Club.
aware of the fact that they had
Organizers of the game are been recovered, been Identified
extending an invitation to all by Sean, and had been sold by a
area basketball coaches on the player that was part of the
high school, junior high and basketball program,'' Gibbons
elementary level to attend.
said.
The Redwomen, under the
"Then It was also determined
stewardship of third-year Coach In between the two ldentlflcaCheryl Flelltz, enter the game !ions that no signed pollee report
with a 19-9 record from 1987-88. · had ever been filed by Sean
Their first season game will be Sutton. Then wewentbacktohlm
Tuesday, Nov. 15 af West Vlrgl- to see If he wanted to actually file
nia Tech.
a complaint, and we were notlSmith, a former player tor the fled by Mr. (Sutton family
Redwomen who is··e ntering her attorney Terry) McBrayer that
sixth season as coach of the Lady he did not. "

•
•
•d
aame
to
at
Exhih
ltlon e·
.·
h
.· . •
.p,.
1
mernona
1
Sc
arsh
0
.
,
.
J S
,

.
' .The Rio Grande Redwomen
b;!Sketball team will meet Shawnee State University's women's
team in an exhibition game to
bene f I t two me m or I a I
scholarships.
.
·
· The game will be played
~esday, Nov. 8 at 7 p.m. at the
new Bloom Local High School on
State Route 140 at South Webster.
Al!mlsslon is $2 for adults and $1
lor students.
_All proceeds will l;le divided
equally between the Janice Hag~n Memorial Scholarship, of· ft:ted through Rio Grande ColJese/Community College, and
tHe Dean Gampp Memorial
Scllolarshlp.
'tM Hagen scholarship Is
named for the mother of Shawnee women's basketball Coach
R!lbln Hagen Smith, a 1983 Rio
Grande graduate. The Gampp

_G.,n'd payer
I
d'Je8
•

.
.ASHTABULA, Ohio (UP!)

Cbroner's officials say It will be
several days before they can
determined what caused the
death of an Ashtabula High
SC)Iool football player who col·
lapsed durtng a team practice.
llenjamln Ramirez, 17, apparently suffered from cardiac
arrest Monday, otticlals said.
•The 6-foot-3, 225-pound senior
collapsed durtng a routine drUI
about 5 p.m., said head football
Cdllch James Orr.
.''We'd been practicing about40
minuteS and he just collapsed,"
..,d Orr. "Within 30 seconds I
wu over to him. He couldn't get
his breath.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Clnclnna&gt;l Reds third baseman Chris
Sabo Tuesday won the Jackie
Robinson National League Rookie of the Year Award, the
Baseball Writers Association of
America announced.
Sabo, who batted .271 In 137
games, becomes the sixth Reds ·
player to be so honored and the
first since 1976, when pitcher Pat
Zachry tied with Butch Metzger.
of San Diego.
In 538 at-bats, Sabo had 146
hits, Including 40 doubles (third
tn the league), two triples, 11
homers and 44 RBI with 74 runs
scored.
"I'll probably think about the
award more in the future, but
obviously It's a once In a lifetime
opportunity,'' Sabo said. "It's a

Bears (formerly
the record
Rangerettes),
complied a 20-8
last year, the last season Shaw'
nee played as a two-year Institution. Shawriee opens Its season
Nov: 11 In the School of the
Ozarks Tournament.

LAWRENCE, Kan. (UP!) The Kansas basketball program,
stll) basking in the glow of a .
national tournament title, was
handed a three-year probation by
the NCAA ruesday, depriVIng It
of the opportunity to defend Its
championship.
The NCAA Committee o~ Infractions barred the Jayhawks
from partlcipattng In the 1989
NCAA tournament, marking the
first time a champion team will
not be allowed to defend Its
crown. Kansas was also limited
to a maximum of 12 schotarshlps
for next season and cannot pay
for recruits to visit the campus
during 1989.
The violations were termed
"major" and, paired with the
probation of the Kansas football
program five years ago, could
have led the committee.to order
the Jayhawks off the court for
two years. An NCAA spokesman
said the com!Jll!tee deliberated a
great deal ori that aspect of the
sanctions.
The ~•serious'' infractions including giving a recruit money
for airplane fare and money for
work at a summer job never done
-occurred In a 10-day period In
June 1986 when Larry Brown was
the coach at Kansas. Brown left
Kansas afte~ leading the Jayhawks to the national title to
become coach of the San Antonio
Spurs, taking his entire coaching
staff with him.
A former ' Kansas assistant
coach said the violations Involved the recruitment of Vln- '
cent Askew . . who considered

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.I

James E. Lucas, Pomeroy, has been recognzled by the
American Polled Hereford Association as the owner of a Polled
Hereford· cow which has received the Gold Benchmark Dam
award.
The cow Is among 113 Polled Hereford females nationwide to
achieve Gold Benchmark status this year. This Gold
Benchmark Dam was among 1044 Polled Hereford COWS to earn
the Benchmark Dam award.and then achieved the gold-ranking
by rafstng a minimum o'f seven calves.

Police probe Pomeroy mishap
Two cars received moderate damages In an accident on the
road under the bridge In lower Pomeroy Tuesday afternoon.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven by Shari Cogar,
Minersville was stopped at the stop sign before moving onto W.
Main St., when It was struck from the rear by a car driven by
Edwtn Ash, near Racine. Cogar was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy. Emergency Squad to
receive treatment for Injuries. Ash was cited on an assured
clear distance charge.
Light damages were Incurred to two vehicles Tuesday on the
Foodland parking lot when a car driven by Bruce Caldwell, Jr.,
Albany backed Into a car moving across the Jot and driven by
Helen G. Lyons, j..etart, W.Va. No charges were filed and there
were no Injuries.

A Pomeroy woman was bound and gagged In a breaking and
entering at her Mulberry Avenue home on Tuesday morning.
Pomeroy Pollee Chief Jerry Rought reported that Mrs. Marie
Robinson awoke early Tuesday morning to lind a man standing
over her bed. He tore up a pair of pajamas close by and used the
material to tie her hands and gag her. He then asked the location
of her money. When he received this Information he took the
.
money and left the house.
Chief Rought said that Incident occurred about 1:30 a.m. and
the robber entered the house by breaking out a small pane of
glass In a side door. After the robbery, Mrs. Robinson attempted
to yell to neighbors for help, Chief Rought said, since the
telephone wires to the house had been cut She eventually went
to the nearby Brlckles home and pollee were called.
One person has be'i'n questioned about the Incident, Chief
Rought said.

Bu,sh.•• ---~~-----;;-:;::::::-;:::=-;::As the two candidates began to
Continued from page 1

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At 1:47 a.m., Rutland took
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Middleport at 4:36 a.m. took
Celia Rite to Veterans Memorial
from Ash St.; Pomeroy at 9:23
a.m .. took Conrad Ohlinger, W.
Locust St., to Holzer Medical
Center; Middleport at 9:56 a.m.
took Darla Hawley from Beech
St. to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 11:13 a.m. took Hal
Harmon from Mudford Road to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 1:39 p.m. took Bud Darst
from Cheshire to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy took Shari Cogar
from an auto accident on West
Main St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 4:47p.m.; Racine at
5:02 p.m. took Mila Ramsey to
Veterans Memorial froip State
Route 338; Middleport answered
a call to a brush fire on Africa
Road at 5:56p.m. and returned to
the scene at 9: 11 p.m. when the
fire rekindled; Middleport at
9:24 p.m. took Susan Swan,
Sycamore St., to Holzer Medical
Cen ter; Middleport at 10:55 p.m.

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From s2o &amp; Up

POMEIOY, OH.

lfospital .news

•

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Twelve calls were answered by
local units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.

Dukakls did not have Sen. Lloyd
wrap up their long and often
Bentsen of Texas as his running
tortuous campaign, President
mate.
Reagan wound down a campaign
After his earlier stops, Dukakls
swing that began last week.
planned to head Tuesday to
Stumping In critical CaliforA marriage license has been
Minnesota, where he was to visit
nia Reagan jabbed at Dukakls's
In Meigs County Probate
issued
his wife, Kitty, who decided to
ne~ strategy of embracing liberto
Mark Edward Proffitt,
Court
spend a second night In a
alism In the tradition of Franklin
25,
Shade,
and Cynthia Marie
Minneapolis hospital for treatRoosevelt, Harry Truman and
Kauff, 19, Shade.
ment of a viral Infection.
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Area deaths

A dlssolu lion of marriage has
been granted in Meigs Co un ty
Common Pleas Court to Steven
Veterans Memorial
Call and Charlotte Call. CharVeterans
Memorial Hospital
lotte Call's maiden name; Marl·
Admitted
- Judy Puckett,
cinko, has been restored .
Reedsville;
Cella
Rite, MiddleA dissolution has also been
port;
Emma
Hayman,
Pomegranted Leonard Dailey Jr. and
roy;
George
Moden,
Pomeroy;
•
Crystal Dailey.
Divorces have been granted to · Bud Darst, Cheshire; Mila RamEdith Spencer,
Elizabeth S. McKnight from sey, Racine;
Middleport.
·
Nicholas J . McKnight, and to
Discharged
Allen
Lowery,
Herbert L. Inscoe from Bonnie L.
Ramona Smith, Delcle Forth.
Inscoe.

Squads have 12 calls past 24 hours

Woman bound, gagged in B &amp; E

against Pittsburgh and Dec. 4
against Dallas) are sold out.
"I hope the fans realize we
really do feed on their enthusi-·
asm and excitement that comes
out of not only the 'Dawg Pound'
(the bleachers ), but the entire
stadium. It's just tremendous,"
he said.

by rain today and late Tuesday,
while thunderstorms In the
Cache Valley of Utah brought t
winds gusting to 74 mph to ·
Trenton.
Temperatures dipped to below
freezing across the upper Mississippi Valley early today and In • ·
the30s In the Great Lakes region.

Post ... - - - - - - - - - -

Also surviving are two brothers, Roamle Douglas Mays Jr. of
Donna Colleen Arney, 24, Rt. 2, North Carolina. and Ronald
Vinton, died Tuesday at Holzer · Dean Mays of Gallipolis; two
sisters, Carmen Deckard and
Medical Center.
A 1982 graduate of North Gallla Chrystal Paulette Blars, both of
·High School, she was a member Gallipolis; paternal grand·
of the Independenth Baptist father, Claude Mays of Vinton;
and maternal grandfather, Hoi·
· Church In Vinton.
Born Aug. 3, 1964 in Po tnt lis Queen of Gallipolis.
Services will be Friday, 1 p.m.
Pleasant, W.Va., she was the
daughter of Roamle Douglas at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Mays Sr. of Pomeroy, and Joan Home In Vinton, with the Rev.
J.C. Johnston. Burial will be In
Blars of Gallipolis.
She married Chris Amey on VInton Memorial Park.
Friends may call Thursday, 2
March 13, 1981 In VInton, who
to
4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
survives with her son, Elisha
Luke.

Luoos recognized by group

It

Portland, Maine, and Portsmouth, N.H.. and lesser amounts
at Brunswick, Maine, Platts·
burg, N.Y., and in Boston.
Newark, N.J., received nearly
1.46 Inches of rain Tuesday,
breaking t)Je 1951 record of 1.40
Inches for one day .
The West was also dampened

Rain a~companled by gale
force winds swept across much of
the northern Atlantic Coast, and
a hli:h wind warntng was posted
along the coasts of Massachusetts and Rhode Island,
Easterly winds whooshing at 30
Con tinued from page 1
to 55 mph continued through the
morning In New England, causIng some da.mage to trees and years," the .Post said of the leading."
"A crusader for mandated
power ltnes , and a heavy pound- Republican mayor of Cleveland.
As for Metzenbaum, a Demo- benefits, heavy handed regulaillg surf was expected to cause
some erqslon along the beaches - crat seeking a third straight tion of business, federal funding
of Massachusetts and Rhode six-year term, the Post said, " We of elective abortion and McGovdon't want to go where he's ernlte accommodation In foreign
Island, Crowther said.
affairs, Metzenbaum seems
The weather service measured
stuck
In the them-against-us,
more than 2 Inches of ratn· at
Meets ·tonight
labor vs. management attitudes
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, of what was the formative era In
will meet at the Middleport his thinking, the 1930s.
"AI 71," said the Post, "he
Extended Forecast
temple at 7:30 this evening with
should
make way for a younger
Friday through Sunday
past masters night to be ob,
A chance of rain each day. served. Work will be In the but wiser man. '' ·
The newspaper praised VoinoHighs from the mid-50s to · the master mason degree and re·
vich for solving Cleveland's
mid-60s Friday and Saturday and freshments will be served.
money problems.
from the mld-40s to the mid-50s
Sunday. Lows mainly In the 40s. · End marriages

South Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly clear with a
low ar0 ijnd 30. Light and variable
winds. Thursday, becoming
partly cloudy and warmer witli a
high in the mid 60s.

Meigs County's three local school districts received
$576,715.26 as their share of the October State School Foundation
subsidy payments.
Amounts received by each district include Eastern Local,
$125,889; Meigs Local, $321,733.90, · and Southern Local,
$129,092.36. In addition, the Meigs County Board of Education
received· a direct allotment of $31,088.42.

That Is another of Brown's
legacies. Williams only had 13
players on scholarship this season~ down two from the NCAA
maximum. The wording of the
infractions report, howewer , limIts the Jayhawks to 12 scholarships next season.
A&lt;;_cordlng to the NCAA, Kansas Is the first school to be barred.
from repeating as the tournamen,t champion. The Jayhawks
will be eligible for the Big Eight
Conference regular-season title.
The league's athletic directors
and faculty representatives will
determine next month how Kansas will figure In the post-season
tournament that decides the Big
Eight's automatic qualifier to the
NGAA tournament.
The NCAA c hatged that a
representative of the universlty's athletic interests paid for an
airline ticket for a prospect to
reporttoLawrenceforasummer
job. The NCAA also found that a
41
l'm elated it's over, said, Kansas booster loaned a prosRoy Williams, who replaced pect's family $350, which has not
Brown as the Kansas coach. "I'm been repaid. That money was
disappotnted for this year's team allegedly to help pay an electric
and especially fo·r this year's bill for the recruit's
seniors, but I'm glad for grandmother.
Kansas also was charged with
•
recruiting.
"We've been fighting the Inspending $231 to buy a prospecnuendoes and rumors. Now I can tive player clothing and paying a •
tell a player that he can come to , recruit $300 for summer work
Kansas anij, If his dream Is to
that was n~ver done.
play In the NCAA tournament, he
Brown allegedly gave $366 In
·
cash
to the young man to buy an
can do that. If hb;dream Is to play
airplane ticket to return home.
on TV, he can do that."
The NCAA also said the coaching
Williams also said that bestaff arranged for a transfer
cause of the scholarship limitations "a player who comes here
student-athlete to stay In a
will know he won't have to
privately owned dormitory for
eight days. ·
compete much' tor a spot." ·
·

windy weather in the northeastern United States this morning,''
Crowther said.

------Weather-----

Foundation payments received

·-------------------------·

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGEUTORS, TYs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

627 3rd

Ten cases were processed In the court of Pomeroy · Mayor ·
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
.
Fined were Errol! Manns, Columbus, $48 and costs, speeding·
William Ohltnger, West Columbia, W. Va., $Be and costs, .and
David Bland, West Columbia, $88 and costs, both on open flask
charges; Paul Steinmetz, Jr., Louisa. Ky., $52 and costs,
~
speeding.
Forfeittng bonds were Thomas E. Fablk, Columbus, $48,
speeding; Donald Guinther, Pomeroy, $375, driving while
Intoxicated; Grace Thompson, Syracuse, $43, left of center;
Debora Carl, Parkersburg, $45, speeding; VIrgil Watkins, New
Philadelphia, $51, speeding, and $63, driving under suspension;
Paul Will, Jr., Pomeroy, $43, assured clear distance.

transferring from Memphis
State to Kansas, but never played
tor the Jayhawks.
"None of the prtnclpals involved In thr violations are
employed by the university today, ... said Kansas Athletic Dlrector Bob Frederick. "As Is
frequently the case In NCAA
penalties, the people who suffer
the consequences of the violations were not Involved In the
lnfl:actlons."
Frederick said he felt that at
one time the school would not
even have to report to the
Infractions committee, handling
the case Instead through the
NCAA's enforcement department. But when the NCAA called
Jayhawks officials be.fore the
committee, it said that the
violations were major In nature
and Instead of a private reprlmand, the "death penalty" be•
came an option.

"The arm's OK, but It was
very, well, upseitlng to miss the
playoffs,'' said .Gollc, 31, a
nine-year veteran out of Notre
Dame and a native of Cleveland.
" I was qulteannoyed.lwanted to
play,eventhoughltwasoutofthe
question.
After Cleveland defeated AFC
Central-leading Cincinnati 23-16
Sunday to pull wlthlnonegameof
the Bengals, Gollc slumped In his
locker, a happy mixture of
fatigue and joy.
·
"It was one of those trench
wars where you go out ana slug It
out. It was a battle. I'm glad we
won JX.cause I'd hate to feel this
bad and lose," said Gollc.
''This was an opportunity to
take our destiny Into our own
hands and make things happen.
We played 0ur hearts out, and It's
gratifying when you can do that
and be successfuL"
Gollc credited fan support,
noting the next two home games
at Cleveland ·stadium (Nov. 20

By United Press International
Rain and snow socked the
wind-whipped Northeast early
today where a heavy pounding
surf threatened to erode beaches.
New Jersey faced another wet
one following a record rainy day
Tuesday .
Mount Washington, N.H .. was
walloped by 2 inches of snow
early today, and 3 to 5 Inches was
predicted for Vermont and upto4
Inches for the Catskill Mountains
In eastern New York. Central
Pennsylvania residents were expected to get 2 inches of snow,
said National Weather Service
forecaster Hugh Crowther.
"Low pressure centered In
southeastern New England
(also) was producing wet and

Ten cases processed in court

Bob Golic dedicated football player
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) :... Five
seasons have passed · stnce Bob
Gollc of · the Cleveland Browns
began what he calls his "deevolution" from linebacker to
nose tackle.
.
Since that time, the nine-year
veteran has developed Into a hero
where his teammates are
concerned.
"Bob Gollc may be relaxed off
the field , bu't his dedication and
work habits are a model for
everybody,'' said quarterback
Bernie Kosar. "You have to
admire an)'body who gives so
much to his job."
Gollc appliars in the 'middle of
the pack 'of players on the
· defensive statiStics Jlsttngs com·
piled by the Browns' coaching
starr, but Coach Marty Schottenhelmer says the numbers fall to
Indicate the player's worth.
"The great attribute that Bob
brings to the Cleveland Browns is
his great desire to succeed," said
Schottenhelmer of Gollc, a Pro
Bowler the last three seasons.
"And that's contagious. He's a
guy whp works hard during the
week, and that certainly pays orr
on Sunday."
Gollc, a second-round pick of
New 'England's In 1979, joined
Cleveland •off waivers Sept. 2,
1982, two days after being released by the Patriots. He played
In 12 games last season before a
broken arm resulted In surgery
to Implant a five Inch-long steel
plate.

Local news briefs___, Northeast section of nation has rain, snow

Frank Varian, Cheshire, was fined $425 and costs and was
given a three day jail sentence when he appeared in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night on a charge of·
driving while Intoxicated. Varian was also fined $10 and costs on
a failure to control charge and $10 and costs on an expired
operator's license' charge.

great thrill.
the team's MVP.
"I think It's great for me and
Sabo drew 79 points In the
great for the entire Cincinnati
rookie voting with 11 of the 24
Reds organization -it's neat."
first-place votes to outdistance
The 26-year-old Detroit native, Chicago first baseman Mark
drafted In 1983, was an All- Grace with 61 points and seven ·
America at Michigan his junior first-place votes. Los Angeles
year, helping the Wolverines to pitcher Thn Belcher received 35
third place In the College World potnts and three first-place votes
Series. He turned later that year for third piace.
with Cedar Rapids of the Class A
Five points were awarded for
Midwest League, where he was first, three for second and one for
MVP.
third. Two writers from each ·
Sabo spent tlie next two sea- National League city voted.
.
sons at Vermontln the Double-A
Other Reds winning the award
Eastern League, leading all third since It was Initiated In 1947 were
basemen In fielding. In 1986 at Frank Robinson In i956, Pete .
Denver of the Triple-A American Rose In 1963, Tommy Helms In
Association, Sabo again Jed his 19£6, Johnny Bench In 1968 and
position In fielding with a .969 . Zachry.
percentage. He spent 1987 at
Sabo Is 6-foot and 185. pounds,
Nashville, batting .292 and was bats and throws right-handed.

The Daily Sentinal-· P'age-5

Pomeroy-Middlaport. Ohio

Hoffman fines Cheshire man,.

Kansas basketball p~gram
UK probes put on probation three years ·.

•edleldaw'•Garna

NY B•pn at 811flllo, 'I:JI p.m,
Boston •t Torolllto. 1:31 p.m.
Ia .Uif!lt!llal Molltreal, 7:Sip.m.
St. l.o•ll &amp;&amp; Lim~ 1: II p.m.

Team
L ReyaDidlburr (31) (11-1)
t Sdo. (JJ (IS.!)
S. m.u•• (I) (1).2)
4. C..tGn MeiUnley (f2.S)

/ .....--

-Chris Sabo named 1988 NL
Rookie .of-Year by writers

NATIONAL ROCKE\' LEAGVE

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - '1111¥
week'• OhloHish!khMI t\thlm~ AM.clalio• eomJ*Wrlled football ratbap (tile
iop fe111r le~YMI• e._h reP, a q-.111) r.r
lheplayolta):

--.- -·- ·--·-

•

Treas. William H. Harsha, Brookwood Dr., Portsmouth, Ohio

•
(

........ ,

�•
--~-

Wedne1day, November 2. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Page-6 The Daily Sentinel

U. S. Supreme.. Court takes on two drug testing cases
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Supreme Court, in two ca~es that
could lead to an expansion of
drug testing in the workplace,
mus I decide the constitutionality
of two government programs
affecting railway and Customs
Service workers.
Oral arguments in both cases
scheduled today marked the
start of public review by Ute
court. which never has ruled on
whether mandatory tests for

narcotics are legal under Ute
Constitution.
In the railway case, the justices must decide if the government may require drug tests of
workers Involved in train acci·
dents. The Customs case poses
the question of whether Ute
government may te~t new em·
ployees and those seeking promolions to jobs that involve the
carrying of a weapon, fighting
drugs or dealing with classified
material.

Dukakis campaigns .
·in Ohio again Tuesday

A,t Issue is whether the tests

violate the Fourth Amendment
barring the government from
conducting unreasonable and
warrantless searches. Nationwide, workplace drug testing Is
becoming more common - and
while the Constitution's Bill of
Rights does not apply to private
action, the court's decision could
go a long way In deciding the
future of such programs. boUt
public and private.
If the court s'hould find the
testing constitutional, legal scholars believe the programs will

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) concerns of average working
- Michael Dukakis, tiring at Americans.
Republican ~orge Bush from
"The vice president loves to
the rustiest part of the Rust Belt, talk about labels," he said. "Yo11
t~ld workers Tuesday Ute Demoknow the only label I'm lntercrats are more Interested In ested in- made In America."
MatnStreet'smachineoperators
Mergers, he said, pours bllthan in Wall Street's "sharp lions of dollars Into big buyouts
operators."
that create "vast concentrations
With a week ieit in his uphill of power" but do nothing to
fight against the vice president, create jobs or bolster
Dukakis pressed his populist productivity.
message with a traditional De·
"I'm not Interested In Ute
mocratic attack on big business sharp operators," he said. "I'm
and blamed a disinterested Re- Interested in the lathe operators
publican administration for the and the machine operators."
merger-and-acquisition "epiCoatless and with shirtsleeves
demic" of the 1980s.
rolied up, Dukakis noted that
At a town meeting in Young· Bush "has never been" to ecostown ·- beamed by S!ltellite all · nomically depressed . eastern
over Ohio as well as to Charlotte, Ohio _ hit hard tn the last 10
N.C., Newark, beL, and College years by Ute flight overseas of
Park, Md. - Dukakis answered steel and other manufacturing
more than a dozen 9.uestlons that Industries.
allowed him to expound on his
Bush's absence, said the Maspro-labor stands and restate his sachusetts governor, ts a "clear
contention that Democrats are Indication" of the differences
better equipped to deal with between the candidates

suspected ot contributing to an Court of Appeals declared them
accident or who have 'commttted unconstitutional In February,
a rule violation, such as speeding prompting the government's
or passing through a stop signal. appeal.
For such tests to be constitu·
Those who fall can be dismissed
ttonal,
the appeals court said,
r
suspended
and
refusal
to
take
0
there
must
first be a "particular·
a test is subject to a nine-month
!zed
suspicion''
o! drug use by an
suspension. ·
Individual
employee,
· Soon after they took ef!ect In
1986, the regulations were cbal· . The Customs Service progr.l!.m
lenged in court by the Railway was upheld tn1987by the5Ut U.S.
Labor Exer•Jtives Association, a Circuit Court o! Appeals. That
coalition of various unions, on program requires urine tests be
grou.nds such tests area violation taken by applicants for jobs that
involve drug Interdiction or acof the Fourth Amendment.
cess
to classified Information or
A district court upheld the
require
the carrying of firearms.
tes Is, but the 9th U.S. Circuit

expand greatly in both sectors. If
the courtflnds testing unconstitutional or limits such application,
a general contraction Is Ukely.
The rail case, which Attorney
General Richard Thornburgh
decided to argue personallY
today, involves rules adopted by
the Federal Railway Al)ministra·
Uon that require blood and urine
testing of all train crew members
involved In accidents that cause
death, major Injury, property
damage or release of a hazard·
ous substance.
·'fhe rules allow tests, but do not
require them, of workers who are

Supplement to the- Sund1y Time• Sentinel

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Corner of General Hartinger Parkway and
Pearl Street
TELEPHONE: 992·3471

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8A.M.-10P.M.
We Accept Food St11mp1 &amp; W.I.C. Coupons

Duncan
Hines
18'1• ounce package

Both Friedman and Judy
Schub, legislative representative
for the American Association of
Retired Persons, were cautious
In assessing the Impact of the
Internal Revenue Service's an·
nouncement that no "termination letters" will be Issued
between now and May 1, 1989.
Those letters aren't manda·
tory, so companies could sun
terminate their pension plans
and buy enough of an annuity to .
pay off benefits accumulated to
date, they said.
Schub, noting that90 members
of Congress co-sponsored pen·
slon moratorium legislation In
the House, said she thinks the
AARP has enough grassroots
support to push the plan further
along·in 191!9. -Joe Piacentini, a research
analyst with the Employee Be·
neflt Research Institute, said It's
difficult to gauge whether the
union-seniors lobby or the bust·
ness lobby will have an edge
when Congress returns to work in
January.
Since 1980, 1, 752 pension plans
have been terminated, returning
to employers $18.79 billion In
assets, the statistics showed.

...-- EOOT1HRILLS.._
I--

That P~per Your Feet

By BOB HOEFLICH
The Chester Elementary
School Student Advisory Council
wants you, you
and you.
The council
will be staging a
community tal·
ent show on the
evening of Dec.
10 and Invites all
talented persons- young and old
- to take part. There are
applications available at Ute
school so if you sing, dance, twirl,
play an Instrument or whatever,
the council Invites you to pick up
an entry form.
. .
Proceeds from the show will be
used to help reach the goals of the
council which are to Improve the
learning - environment of the
school.
The application deadline Is
Nov. 22 and Brandi Reeves, a
fifth grader, is in charge of all
appUcations.

Debt Buck and her Mother,
Mrs. Marge Keebaugh, will be
doing England for Ute next few
days. Deb Is again taking an
active role ln the Fall Follies of
the Big Bend Minstrel Association so took her song lyrics along
so she could brush up on them

compensation.
But Karen Friedman, education director of the Washingtonbased· Pension Rights Center,
maintains there's no such thing .
as a pension fund surplus.
Instead, she said, the pension
funds grow so that companies
can afford to say "yes" when
retires ask for cost-of-living
Increases.
"They're funded to be on·
going," she said. "The companIes get tax breaks because
they're on-going."

Kraft

And some good news.
After being off work for several
months due to a serious health
problem, Mrs. Maxine Griffith
returne!) to her employment at
Bank I In Athens Tuesday . So far,
Maxine Is doing well after
undergoing surgery and treat ment for her Ulness.
-~------

Did you happen to catch the
WOUB television program Monday night dealing with issues in
the area and the upcoming
election? Scott Justice, son o!
Mrs. Darlene Newell,
was
associate produc.e r of 'the two ·
. hour' special program. Scott is
wrapping up his studies at Ohio
University.
Dr. Mllisa K. Rizer was one of
some 4,000 family physicians
attending the annual scientific
assembly of the American
Academy of Family Phystc•ans
held In New Orleans in October.
Dr. Rizer, who Is a member of
the academy, heard renowned
speakers discuss up to the minute
health care topics and also had
the opportunity to attend 30 clinic
seminars and visit more than 59
scientific and ,209 technical
exhibits.
Subjects covered during the
four day session Included AIDS,
osteoporosis, diabetes, smoking
cessation and neonatal infections
to name only a part of the
pertinent presentations.
Have you noticed that the
people you love the least are
probably the people who need It
the most? Do keep smUing.

Quartets

I pound package

SPEAKER ON SAFETY- Tips on halloween safely were given
by Athens County Sheriff Robert Allen, speaker.at the recent party
of Modern Woodmen of America, ·camp lOIJOIJ, held allhe Hocking
River Park at CoolvUie.

Woodmen topic safety
at Halloween party

\l"hhllJie Cou on

-·=~10J

...

ReguiM or Light

Kraft .

__

Miracle
Whip

Miracle
Whip

s t9
32 01
jcu

\Jo\luable Cou on

Enriched

••••••

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Vollu"hlt• Cou

Hm

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105

Assorted Varieties:
-

Cardinal

I

Charmln:
Bath i
Tissue :
I

White

I

Bread

I
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I
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I
I

I

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I &lt; ~''' •""~ ""h o t•UI'"" - . I'J 00 I'U" ~ ~ .... I" ' '"'"'~ ,,., ' ""'" ""''
~~~ ,.., •" f ,.,,t,.,.ol ~ ..,,..,.., ... ~• · • -c~

, "·"''""' '\ow,,,.,,,..,,..,., t ~n •l.
.... l ' , , .. ....

I!

I
I

'""~

SALE
Fresh

2°/o
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Lowfat

Milk

Robert Allen, Athens County
sheriff, was speaker on safety
habits at the annual Halloween
masquerade party of Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp
10900, held at the Hocking River
Park at Coolviile.
Allen spoke on precautions to
be taken during trick and treat
season.

The Woodmen's creed service
was given by Ida Livingston and
Ralph Henderson, Coolville, and
Mayor Robert Daugherty,
Athens. Marjorie Malone, Coolvilie, led In group singing.
The children received goblin
treats from the camp. New
members welcomed to the camp
were Loretta Ashley Cunnlgham,
Belpre: George Gilbert, Stacy
Fulkerson, Danny, Beverly, Tina
and Janet Brookover, and Jason
and Amanda Criswell.
Ribbons were awarded for best
costumes to Carol Beha, David
and Masrk Rood, Bobby
McBrayer, Rena and Jeremy
Null, Shannon Breedlove, , and
Amber Gillespie, Coolville, and
Amanda Breedlove, Belpre.

Purpose and projects of UN!·
CEF were outlined by Frances
Henderson, Coolviile, and a
sUver offering was. taken lor the
organization. Door prizes went to
Roy Breedlove, Belpre; Kay
Sheridan, Tuppers Plains, adn
Ida Livingston, Coolville.
Equipped with fly swatters and
marshmallows, the senior men
and women teams competed in
marshmailow go If races. The
winners were Jim Moore, Danny
Brookover and Janice Null, Cool·
vilie; Martha Elliott, Alfred;
Linda Breedlove and Mike Lorenz, Belpre. Winners of the
pumpkin drawing contest were
Linda Daugherty, Athens;
Wendy Swartz, Anthony Sargent!
and Robert Henry, Amesvilie;
George GUbert and Patty Rood ,
Coolvilie.
· Paul McPherson, Coolville,
reminded all members to vote in
Ute election. Cheer plates were
sent to shutln members. The
annual Christmas party was
announced for Dec. 10 a~6 p.m. at
the Coolville Elemelltary School.

Appreciation dinner scheduled
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion, and Its Auxil·
lary will host an appreciation
' dinner and dance for .Ute Middleport Fire Department, the Emer·
· gency Squad, the Police Depart-

men! and their wives, post and
auxiliary members on Nov. 10 at
7 p.m. at the Legion Annex, Mill
St. The band will begin playing at
8 p.m. Reservations are to be
made before Saturday .

Tag Day set

Plans have also been made for
a Veterans Day dance to be held
at Ute annex on Friday, Nov. 11
with Don Sedwick of Chester to
provide the music. Admission is
$3 for singles and $5 lor couples.
On Saturday, Nov.12, Ute Eight
District round-up train will be
in Middleport with a dinner to be
served at noon to the personnel
on Ute train, along with post and
auxiliary members.

• The Meigs High School band
wili have tag day Saturday from
9 a.m. to noon Saturday.
Members of the band will be
going door to door in the
communities of Middleport,
Pomeroy, and Rutland, as well
as being on the streets of the
villages and contacting bust•
nesses for contributions.

Missions were studied at the
recent meeting of the Racine
First Church of the Nazarene
held at the church.
Ora Bass had prayer and the
group sang Give of Your Be,5t to
the Master. Scriptu"e was taken
from Mark 10.
Sandra Justis gave prayer for
the offering and Mia Bass sang
Give Unto The Lord. II was
noted that 27 members are
needed in the membership drive
and It was reported that there are
76 book readers.
The world mission queen was
named in the subscription contest. Trudy Justis was queen with
Nancy Hunt being second r un·
ner-up and Christie Cooper first

since she will be missing several
rehearsals. Aren't the people on'
the plane gonna love that?

Parkay
Margarine

••••••

Nazarenes
study mission

They want you...

So If for some reason you can't
get to the polls on Tuesday, do
stop by the board office.

Officials put temporary
stop on withdrawal of funds
WASHINGTON- After years
of pressure from organized labor
and Congress, the Treasury
Department has temporarily
blockeP the path more than 1, 700
companies have used to pull$18. 7
billion out of pension plans they
created tor employees.
For the next six months, they
government won't act on requests from companies that want
to close their pension funds and .
use the money some other way.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaurri, DOhlo, said the move gives Con·
gress needed time to work on a
permanent way to stop corporations from using pension plans as
a "revolving bank account.''
Metzenbaum got the Treasury
Department to Impose the freeze
by holding hostage legislation the
Reagan administration sought In
the final hours of the recently
ended two-year session.
"This moratorium will give
Congress time to come up with
legislation that wUl make certain
that workers and retirees get a
fair share of , those funds,"
Metzenbaum said.
Metzenbaum, labor unions and
senior citizens groups view the
Issue as a conntct between the
long-term needs of retirees and
the short-term needs of corpora·
lions tempted to use money not
needed for pension payouts.
Business lobbyists say the
issue bolls down to the right of a
company to11se Its own money.
Since employers have to make
up the difference when a pension
plan runs short, they ought to be
able to tap the surplus when a
pension plan's Investments produce dividends, said Edwin Gil·
roy, the National Association of
Manufacturer's associate director of employee_ benefits and

Beat of the bend

--------

Assorted Varieties
Cake Mix

Wednesday, November 2, 1988
Page-7

•

Saturday Is your last chance to
vote the absentee route for the
upcoming Nov. 8 election.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections office on Mechanic St. ,
will maintain special hours !rom
9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday to
process your absentee appllca·
Uons.

··············----------~
101

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

runner-up.

To close the meeting the
children's chorus sang Jesus
Loves Me and there was a
prayer.

ANNIVERSARY WINNERS - Winners in
Vaughan's Cardinal anniversary promo lion
where customers signed up for a refrigerator and
a microwave oven were announced Tuesday and

presented their prizes. Millie Duncan of Bradbury
won the'l'efrlgerator and Ruth Tuttle of Pomeroy
received the microwave oven. Here Richard
(Grandpa) Vaughan makes the presentations.
.

Feeney-Ben~ett

post
Auxiliary has meeting
Donations totaling nearly
$1,000 were made by the American Legion Auxiliary, Feeney·
-Bennett Post 128. at the meeting held Wednesday night at the
hall in Middleport.
The unit voted to give $100 each
to the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment
and the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce. Dona·
lions of $10each were made to the
Past Presidents Parley, Past
Presidents' Scholarship Fund,
Americanism and Government
Contest, the Legion Emergency
Fund, Ute Legion Special Olympics Fund, Reyes Syndrome,
Freedom -Foundation, Foreign
Relations; Chlid Welfare Foundations, Children's Heart Fund,
Radio Free Europe, POW-MlA
and Four Chaplains.
Other rontribu lions Included
$20 each to"the Xenia Home for
Orphans, · and the Chillicothe
Veterans Hospital for candy;
$162 lor Ute Marte Moore Memorial Fund represe_ntlung one dollar a member; $50 to the USO;
$25 to tlieGiftsforthe Yanks, $200
to the Legion for ·Chrtsirnas
candy; $20 to Veda Davis for her
work as community service ·
chairman at the Athens Mental
Healih Center; $10 to the Salvation Army and the American
Lung Association :
The unit also voted to give $50
to the Meigs Cheerleaders uniform lund, $50 for Ute Chiliicothe
Veterans Hospital birthday
party; and $10 for postage
expenses to Mary Moose, district
11 pres !dent
Pauline Greathouse, president, conducted the meeting with
Katheryn Metzger, chaplain,
having the prayer. Velsie Roush
gave a report on the fall conference held at Galiipolis recently.

Mrs. Greathouse, Mrs . Roush,
Jean Gilmore, Becky Tyree,
Carol Baker, Lenora Davis, and
Clnda Clifford, a junior member,
represented the unit.
Several awards were won by
the ull]t with both the seniors and
juniors receiving certificates for
the adopt a grandparents program. The unit has four grandmothers, ali confined to nursing
homes, and four World War I
veterans, which they remember
on occasions.
Both the junior and senior units
were goal in membership and
received certificates, and Mrs.
Roush was presented a wall
hanging for excellence In field
service from Ardith Cooper,
department officer.
Certificates for narrative report in field service· were pres·
en ted Ia Mrs. Roush, a 7,000 h'o ur
bar, Gerri Parsons, 6,000 hour
bar, with Callie RiChmond and
Krist! Richmond, Jason and
Justin Roush, and Charles Tyree
receiving 50 hour pins.
Rhonda Hoover and Shaula
Laudermilt were welcomed into
the juniors along with Ashley
Cooper, a junior. Reported ill
were Thelma Collins, Mary Mad·.
den, and Charles Edwards. It ·
was noted that Jim and Barbara
Hudson have a new son.
Plans were discussed for an
appreciation &lt;linner lor the Mid·
dleport Firemen, emergency
squadmen, pollee and their
wives, and auxiliary and post
member onNov.10, the Veterans
Day dance on Nov. 11, and the
round-up train luncheon on
Nov. 12.
A dinner was served prior to
the meeting. Carol Baker
brought the door prize won by
Grace Welsh .

Holiday party planning seminar
quick and nutritious entertaining
Ideas for the holiday sseason,
al'ong with uinique ways to
present a special gift. Reglstra·
lion fee will be $2 and pre-regis·
!ration Is requested by Monday.

A program, Head Siart for
HoBday Parties will be held at
the Meigs Museum, 1:30 to 3:30
p.m . on Nov. 9.
The program will be presented
by Cindy Oliveri and will include

Racine Grange
meeting slated

NOVEMBER 5, 1918
9 AM-5 PM
REEDSVILLE FIRE HOUSE
Sponsored ly Reedsville
United Methodist Women

1111111

e on

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5TH
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION
7:00P.M.
DAN SMITH-Auctionnr
CHRISTMAS GIFT IT.EMS- REFRESHMENTS
Volunteer Fire

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ALL . . . . 11.10

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sro·p
the
PAIN

sbould be allowed to attend
neighborhood schools.

BAZAAR &amp;
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Phcftll 446·4524
UIIOUIMAI
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ALL . . . . I ••IO

J&gt;lans for the annual Thanks·
giving dinner to be held at 6 p.m
on Nov. 18 at the Racine Grange
Hall, Oak Grove Road, were
made at a recent meeting of
Racine Grange. The ham and
turkey will be furnished. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish and their own table service.
There will be a pig in a poke
auction following the dinner. The
publiC is invited to attend.

End to busing sought by board
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Two
. Cleveland Board of Education
members who are seeking an end
to court-ordered busing have
appealed to the State Board of
Education lor help.
Joseph Costanzo and James
Carney have asked the state
board to join them In litigation
that would release lhe Cleveland
district from control by U.S.
District Court Judge Frank
Battisti.
The Cleveland board members
plan to appear before the state
board Nov. 14 In Columbus and
argue that their district Is now
desegregated and that pupils

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,_,~-:::~....,.-.,,

-.-~, ~-.

Wednesday, November 2, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants Association wlll
meet Wednesday. 8 a.m., at Bank
One. The.. regular meeting date
has been changed to accomodate
more members. Please attend.

FOOD STORES
HONEYSUCKLE WHITE,

YOUNG

MACARONI
and
CHEESE

TURKEYS

ALL IN THE FAMO..Y: Madonna's little brother Is making
her husband. Sean Penn, look like a pussycat. Mario Ciccone,
19, is In trouble with the law for the fourth time this year- this
time for biting the nose of a 16-~ar-old boy for fllrlng with his
date at a party In August. Clccone pleaded Innocent Monday In
Romeo, Mich.• and waa release&lt;!' on $100 bond.
The victim claimed that Ciccone and a friend held him down
while Ciccone bit his nose, which later became Infected. Ciccone
still faces charges from a January fight with a motorist and an
alleged assault on a woman In June. Last month hewas cleared
of slamming a door In a policeman's face. ·
UP FROM THE FALL: Ceear Chavez Is recovering from a
broken wrist and bruises to his head, chest and back suffered In
an 8-foot fall. Chavez, 62 was Injured Sunday when a porch rail
at his home at the United Farm Workers headquarters broke.
''He's real bang~d up," Chavez's son, Panl, said. "He was kept
overnight (Monday at the Kern County Medical Center) In the
neurological unit for observation." Chavez was expected to be
released late Tuesday. ·
LOVE AMONG THE RUINS: The mistress of Greek Prime
Minister Andreas Papandreou has filed for divorce from her
husband. A single lawyer representing former Olympic Airlines
stewardess Dlmllra ~ani and her husband, architect Alexis
Kapopoulos, filed the papers ln Athens Monday to end their
five- year marriage.
The final arrangements apparently Were made soon after
Liani returned to Athens Oct. 22 after two months with
Panadreou while he w,as In London for heart surgery. Days
before his heart surgery, Papandreou announced he would
begin proceedings to divorce his wife of 37 years, Margaret, and
sources close to him said he planned to marry Uani.
THE REAL MRS. LYMON: A New York judge ruled
Elizabeth Wa&amp;el'll Is the genuine widow of one- time teen crooner
Frankie Lymon and thus entitled to some $750,000 in royalties
from his big hit with the Teenagers, "Why Do Fools Fallin

7.25 oz.

box

Fruit Valley gallon jug

APPLE
CIDER
Ranch House ?4 oz. con

~LOW

mw

Quick Time

Price!

TOMATO

WHEATIES
CEREAL

Price!

Ralston Unsalted or Regular

SALTINE

~Low

c

a....

,..
1

ae5J8(

Emydoy j Quick Time 15 oz. can

33•
I ~ ------------Hillshire Farms per lb .
I
'~o'• ' Hot Unks .
...1..39
Chi&amp;

low
Price!

E

~

do

~--,-------,-------herydoy Pet Ritz 14 oz. box
low
C..11 Pie
\ Prtte!
1 8ancma
.
Price !

Emydoy

1

Swift PYemium 12 07. pkg.

P~?,~, Tater Puffs

I

1

E•r::v I Turkey rn...
Price!

~LOW

•

Price!
ll

594

~LOW

•

American Heritage

IMITATION

pkg.

box

box

SHREDDED

8-oz.

21b.

7 oz.

Price!

89

$

•

1-lb.
pkg.

_ _ _.:.____ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

TURKEY
ROAST

'
'

•.

•
••
••

.
•

•.

,

WE WELCOME

100%

•W. Va. WIC
•Food Stamps
·~ersonal Checks
•Manufacturer's
Coupons
Prices guaranteed through November 9, 1988

We reserve the right to limit all quantities.

Waters married Lymon, who died of a heroin overdose in 1968,
in 1964, incorrectly thinking she was officially divorced from
another man. The Judge ruled she acted with good intentions
and ruled in Waters's favor over Zola Mae Taylor, who claimed
to have married Lyman In Mexico, and Emlra Earle, who said
she had wed him in Georgia the year before he died.
THE DELl REPORT: The fabled Carnegie Deli Is moving
West. Marvin Davis, former owner of 20th Century-Fox, is
planning with the Carnegie's Millen Parker to start one of the ·
eateries In Beverly Hills. There's no opening date yet but, when
the occasion comes, Davis will mark it by lowering a giant
matzoh ball Into a big bowl of chicken soup in a parody of the
lowering of the apple in Times Square on New Year' s Eve ...
Comedian .Jackie Mason, star of the Broadway show •'The
World According to Me," once was a regular at the Carnegie but
he ·Jumped ship for the nearby Golden's Dell, which Is now
selling his autobiography, "Jackie, Oy" ... In other deli news,
the National Livestock and Meat Board did a sandwich survey
on Capitol Hill and found that roast beef on wheat is the
congressman's favorite sandwich. Perhaps the most unusual
preference belongs to Sen. Rl'chard Lugar, R-Ind., who said his
favorite was bologna on raisin bread with cream cheese and
walnuts.

Prescription drugs
could quell craving .

Ton 12 oz. bog

I p~~~~ Cheese Curls

Westpac 2-lb. bag ·

Price!

Bon

Jennie-0

•••

·

1

E&lt;ervdoy

~Low

I

Low
Price!

Price!

Pine Kleen 28 oz. bottle

E•ervdav

I

'

box

box

SAUSAGE

Love?"

1 lb.

CRACKERS

18 oz.

PO.RK
1 LB.
PKG.

10 oz.
can

SOUP

General Mills

r

•

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press lnlernallonal

lb.

box

~Low

ROYALTY - Jessica Codner and Steve Triplett were crowned
queen and klnr at the recent Portland fall carnival held at the
school. Other candidates were Toni Sellers and Erika Meadows,
. and the other king candidates were Aaron Hoback and Gable
Smith.

People in the news

Z7 oz.

BEEF

MONH-BACI
GUARANTEE

Rt. 62 North

(304) 675-1155

•

Point Pleasant, WV

SAN DIEGO (UPI) - Re- ine, which Is linked to feelings of
search on drugs that reduce a reward or pleasure; and GABA,
person's craving · for alcohol a chemical that inhibits various
could provide a "therapeutic brain activities.
window" through which doctors
Alcohol consumption raised
can help alcoholics kick their the level of all three chemicals in
habit, scientists say.
the rats' brains. The animals
Studies in animals and humans continued to drink heavily until
· have shown that chronic alcohol they were given drugs that
consumption can increase the reduced the level of the brain
brain's supply of chemicals that chemicals, at which point they
reduce anxiety or increase feel· seemed to lose Interest In alco· lngs of pleasure. Dr. James hol, said Murphy . .
Murphy reported Tuesday at the
"Compounds like these might
second Natlonal Conference on provide a 'therapeutic window'
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
where animals or humans conDrugs that regulate the supply suming an excessive amount of
of these chemicals have proven alcohol might beg!n to reduce
effective In curbing the desire for their Intake," he said.
alcohol and show promise in
Early trials in humans have .
alcoholism treatment, said Indicated that the most promisMurphy, a scientist with the Ing therapeutic agents are those
Indiana University School of which effect the brain's seroMedicine.
tonin, or anti·amdety, system,
"Should such drugs become · said Murphy.
available, their principal useful·
ness would be during thatcrltical
period when a person .who has
Mason Library Bake, ·
been through an alcoholism
treatment program would be at
Book Sale Planned
high risk of relapse," said Dr.
Kenneth Warren of the Na tiona!
The Friends of the Mason City
Institute of Alcohol Abuse and
Library bake and book sale will be
Alcoholism.
Friday, Nov. 4 from noon to 4 p.m.
Murphy and his research team
and Saturday from 10 am. to 2
at Indiana have conducted stu·
p.m . at the Mason Volunteer Fire
dies on rats bred with a genetic
Deparbllent.
predisposition for alcohol cravBooks for the sale are priced at
Ing. At birth, the rats showed a
10 to 50 cents. Baked donations
depletion of three key brain
will be appreciated. Library memchemicals: serotonin, which
benhip cards will be sold for a $2
helps re~Ulate 'anxiety; dopamdunalilm per year.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Olive-Orange VFW Post 9053 La·
dies Auxiliary will meet Thurs-.
day, 7:30 p.m. All officers and
members urged to attend.

RACINE -:- Morse Chapel
Church, County Road 35, Racine-Portland Road, will be in
revival through Friday night at 7
p.m. each evening. Rev. Ralph
Wor1&lt;n1an, of Gallipolis, . will
preach. ~veryone welcome.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
R.E.A.C.T. will hold a monthly
meeting on Friday, at 7:30 p.m.,
at Pleaser's Restaurant. All
members are urged to attend.

.,

POMEROY - United Pentecostal Church in Middleport will
be In revival Wednesday through
Sunday, Nov. 6. Service times
will be 7: 30 p.m.. Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday, and 6 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. Rev. and
Mrs. Lewis Dunnells will be the
evangelists. Pastor Clark Baker
invites the public to attend.
POMEROY -Pomeroy Lodge
164 will meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.• at the Middleport Temple.
Past masters night. Refresh• ments to follow. All master
masons urged to attend. ·
THURSDAY
POMEROY -SalisburyTown·
ship Trustess will meet Thurs·
day. 7 p.m., at the township
building. The pubilc is invited.
MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
Star. Middleport, will meet
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Officers to
wear chapter dresses.
REEDSVILLE- A Christmas
bazaar and bake sale Saturday
at the fire house in Reedsville
under the sponsorship of the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church Women.
APPLE GROVE - A hymn
sing at 7 p.m. Saturday at. the
Apple Grove United Methodist

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Pomona Grange will
meet 7: 30 p.m. Friday at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall. State
Deputy Arthur Crabtree will
install officers. Star Grange will
serve refreslunents.

Eleclion day dinner
ROCK SPRINGS , Rock
Springs United Method ist
Women will be serving electl&lt;m
d ay dinner In the church base·
ment starting at 11 a.m.
The menu wlll include vegeta·
ble soup and chili, ham sandwiches, sloppy joes, hot dogs,
homemade pies a nd cake.
Bring your own contai ners for
takeout.

POMEROY - Election day
luncheon wlll be served at Grace
Episcopal Church, Pomeroy .
RACINE - An election day
dinner will be held at the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints at Old
Town Flats, near Racine. Veget ·
a ble soup, chlli , bean soup, corn
bread, sandwiches, pie and cake
wlll be served all day . Theopubllc .
ls welcome.
Christmas auction
SYRACUSE - A Christmas
auction wlll be held Saturday,
Nov. 5, 7 p.m ., at the Syracuse
Fire Station, with auctioneer
Dan Smith. Everyone welcome.

--.......:

Christmas bazaar
MASON - The annual Christ·
mas Bazaar of the Mason Volunter ·Fire Department Ladies'
CHESTER - Election day Auxiliary wlll be held Saturday,
dinner and a bazaar will be held Nov. 12, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
at the Chester United Methodist · Anyone wishing to rent a table at
Church. Serving wlll s tart at 11 $5 per table may do so by phonfng
a .m. On the menu will be ham 304-773-5437 or 773-5414. Also
on that day, the Auxiliary·wlll be
loaf dinners, vegetable soup and
selling
vegetable soup, chill, hot
chll, hot dogs, sloppy joes and
dogs
,
pop
and coffee. Everyone Is
pie. The dinner Is sponsredW the
welcome
to
attend.
· United Methodist Women.

PORTLAND - Olive Township Trustees wlll meet Friday,
6:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Station.

Pre-Holiday Sale!

POMEROY - A rummage
sale to benefit Carleton Church
wlll be held Friday, 9'to 4, at 104
Union Ave. in Pomeroy.
POMEROY - A rummage
sale will be held Friday and
Saturday at Grace Episcopal
Church in Pomeroy.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH AND
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5TH!
WE WILL BE (CLOSED THURSDAY) IN OlDER
TO PREPARE FOR THIS SAU.
YOU'U FIND
STOREWIDE
SAYINGS OF

· SATURDAY
LAUREL CLIFF - A hymn
sing will be held Saturday, 7
p.m., at the Laurel Clift Free
Methodls t Church. Dan Hayman
and the Faith Trio will perform.
Free Methodist Church. Paster
Bill Williams welcomes
everyone.

20°/o OFF

• SELECT GROUP

75°/o OFF •

EAST MEIGS - Parents of
Eastern High Varsity and Junior
Varsity basketball teams are
having a bake sale on Saturday at
Gaul's Market in Chester. The
sale will start at 9 a.m.

Rock Springs UMW meets
Plans tor serving an Election
Day dinner at the Rock Springs
Church were ,made when United
Methodis·t Women met recently
at the home of Fern Morris and
Mary Showalter.
Serving will begin atll a.m.
and continue throughout the day.
The group also scheduled a
Thanksgiving potluck dinner at
noon on Nov. 15 at th~ church.
The group also approved dona·
lions to the Bethany Mountain
Mission, Sine Cera, the church
building fund. and Stephanie
Kopec.
.Prior to the meeting the group
enjoyed a luncheon of bar beque,
potato ,chips, pie, mints, coffee
and·pop.
There was group singing of
Till The Storm Passes By ,

Because He Lives , and It Took
a Miracle.
Several prayer requests were
taken and Sharon Folmer led In
prayer. Virginia Wears had
devotions reading Psalm 24 and
Did You Ever Notice, Why
Don't We and Hints On How To
Worry. Other readings for devotions were Who Is to Blame by
Dorothy Jeffers; God's Man by
Mary Showalter; I Question Not
by Violet Hysell, and Ours For
Free by Sharon Folmer.
Officers • reports were given
and approved along with Mrs.
Folmer reporting on the recent
bake and craft sale. Mrs. Morris
reported on the Festival of
Sharing held In Springfield last
month.

..

Meigs Cnunty honor rolls
The first nine weeks grading
period honor roll at the Eastern
High School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or a hove in
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Seniors: Amy Hager, Krls
Heines, Mike Martin, David
Rice, Trlsha Spencer, Heather
Fin law. Tammy Kennedy, Howle
Lawrence. Tammy Leachman,
Lisa Pooler, Bobbi Price, Jayne
Aim Ritchie, Matt Sisson, Chris
Spencer, Mike Weber.
Juniors: Janenne Wilson,
Sherr! Bissell, Jay Blackwood.
Elizabeth Bryant, Shawn Bush,
Kim Mcintrye, Melissa Miller,
Amy Murphy, Greta Riffle, Dan

Tripp, Susan Wolf.
- Sophomores: Andrea Cleland,
Suzanne Clay, Billy Johnson,
Mary Ann Kibble , Angie
Murphy, Mark Murphy, Leigh
Ann Redovian, Aaron Wilson.
Freshmen: Steve Barnett, Til·
fany Gardner, Jenny Masters,
Toney Maxey, Lorre Osborne,
Danny Short, Keith Spencer,
Amy Well, Sherry Wolf.
Eighth Grade: Jeremy Buck·
ley, Nicole Kanawalskl, Karen
Morris, Carrie Morrisey, Sherrie
Smith.
. ,,
Seventh Grade: Tysbn Rose,
Charlene Dailey, Adria Frecker.
Robert Reed, Amber Well, Jaime
Wilson.

Holiday
.Craft Bazaar
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4th
. 11:00 A.M. • 7:00 P.M.

Country Crafts • Cer~mics
Wreaths • Specialty Items
Quilts and Pillows
~~come

Buy" or "Ju.s t Browse"

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
POMEROY, OliO

992·2161
•

'·

SYRACUSE - A service unit
meeting for Big Bend East Girl
Scout leaders will be held Thursday, 7 p.m .• at the Syracuse
United Methodist Church.

CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship Trustees will meet Wednes·
day, Nov. 9, 7:30p.m.,at the town
hall.

BASTED

Golden Wheat

INSTANT
POTATOES

SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming at
the Sutton United Methodist
Church will be held this Sunday.
Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m. The
Harvest Trio wlll be appearing in
the afternoon beginning around
1: 30 p.m. Everyone ls welcome to
attend. The church Is located on
County Road 28, five mlles north
of Racine and two miles south o(
Bas han .

HARRISONVILLE - Sand ar·
tlst Rev. Bob Everly will be at a
special missionary service on
RACINE - Racine American
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m ., at the
Legion Post 602 will meet 7 p.m.
Harrisonville Holiness Chapel on
Thursday. A chicken dinner will
Route 684. Eyeryone welcome. • . be served following the meeting.

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE!
PILLSBURY .
HUNGRY JACK

Church featuring the Harvest
Trio.

l

•

CRISP &amp; SERVE VACUUM PACK

Sliced Bacon ...•••••.••••••. !~!•••••• $119
SMITHFIELD_................................................. SHREDDED ••• $2 .19 lb.

Cooked Sliced Ham .••.. ~-. ••.• S1.8 7
SWfT'S ECKRICH LUNCH MEAT

Chopped Ham ••.•••••••••••••••• s1.39
HOMEMADE

Meat Salad ··················•••········
AMER. PROC.
CHEESE .......J.t.9.1, ..... S1.87

HEAD LmUCE ...~1.9.·..... 59&lt;

MARGARINE !1,.............. 79'

"NEW" YRLOW
ONIONS ........~.~!-..•fSi...... 89&lt;

HILANDALE GRAD£ A

3 LB. BAG

COUNrltY CROCK QUART IllS

3 DOZEN
EGGU¥-J,q!!., .. S1.98
MRS.

WINESAP APPLES ..:.. s1.19

~TH' 5 FROZEN

·
• 2 Plc• 99( ,
P1·e Shells ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MORTON or BANQUET
Pot Pies ••••••••••••••••••\~z... 2/S1.29
iNCM

PENNSYLVANIA DUTCHMAN

Mushrooms .................!.!l!••••••• S9(
CARNATION EVAPORATED

Canned Milk •••••••••••••••• !~~!•..•••69&lt;
NESTLE'S
Butterscotch Morsels .. l~~!•. S1.89
ARMOUR
Hot Chili ••••••••••••••••••••• l~~: •...•.99c
DEL MONTE
Wax Beans ••••••••..•••.. lt.'l.fw 2 /S1.09
IIEEII.ER CRACKERS
Zesta Saltines •••••••••••••!!!••••••• 99&lt;
TURKEY NOODLE

Campbell's Soup ··~·~\~~.0.1•• 2/51.19
libby's Pumpkin .........~t~!.: S1.19
D£l MONTE

.

-

·

Sliced Peaches •.••••••••~ •• !~~!•. S1.39
CHEF lOY ·AR -DEE
. Pepperoni Pizza •••••••••• l~~.o:~ Sl.99
TWII PACII

Towels •••••••••••••••••• S1.46

�- -·

-----·--

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeeoy-Middleport,

..

.

~~-1-·-~

.. . I

Wednesday, Novanber

Wednesday. Novanber 2, 1988

Ohio

Low Prices.

1988

Classified
' oullide

pel d.

0 1'5 WORDS

1 D-Y

3 0-"'S
I DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

Melt~.

Ut 317 :J88 U&amp; -

121 00
t5l 00

•

O•IliJ&gt;&lt;JI••
Ch• hlre
Vinl0fl
ft lo o.. n.t.

8.,

··Mioldl..port

IH5 - PI. Pl-1111
4SI ~ Leon

POII'I .. OY

511 - Apple Or &lt;;~voi:

911- Ch•llr
fi·U - Poulanol
24 7 ~

let••• hill
949 - Recine

l7, ... Welnlll

1 1 2- Autland

1:17 - lulltlo

1915 - lelarl

807- Coohl"'

Oet Ruults fall

·- 2:00 , ,M THURSDAY

...; 2 :00P.M FRIDAY

DUNCAN HINES

90 SHEETS PEA ROLL 2-PL Y.

Cake Mix

NON E

OLD FASHIONED
HAND DIPPIN KIND

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614·662-3821
Authorized John
Deere, New Holland, .
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Dealer
Full Eq•IPMIII
Pull &amp; Servlai .

§.Quart

Single
Roll

DUNCAN HINES READY TO SPREAD
FROSTING ... 16-0Z.

Business Services
~~~~~
r-------~
BOGGS
. J!AUTIFUL
HAINES GIFT

Ice Cream

Viva .Towels

.18.2518.5-oz.

I

PaH

..

U.S. Gov't Graded Choice
Grain Fed Beef
''Untrimmed Wholesale
Cut" 10-14-lb. Avg.

'·~~':' ·. •HAIR
! ~.~
·~ .;&lt;"-~: :•CLOTHES
~...- !-~ ".,~

·

•TANS
TOP OF ATHNDE STAIRS
DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 Wost Soc. P-oy

992·6720

1-3-'86- tfc

·whole

2

I

Sirloin Tip

1-

you:

M•y tlmeo we cried.
Pop, if love alone could
•

You never would have

Cottage Cheese

c

11

IN MEMORY OF
WILLIAM F. CLARK
WHO OlEO NOV. 2, 1987
M•y tlmeo we needed
IIVB you,

KROGER

died.

In 1if11- loved you dearly,
In de.th we love you stll;
In our heerta you hold 1

•

ploce

No one elM can fill,

It broke our h.-toto loot
you, Pop;
But you didn't go olr:ine.

24-oz.

lb.

In Memoriam

.,...,

A big part of

Ul -

with

The day Gad took you
homel
Lave. Wlf• Ide Mee;
granddeu(llrter. April;

Md aon .,.d
1ow,

10-21-'88· 1

c1~~~tht.,..ln-

·a... - c..-r...
8

mo.

Help Wanted

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
SECRETARY
proficient in
medical
terminology,
shorthand and
typing. Excellent
workingconditions nad
fringe benefits.

Send Resume to:
Personnel Department
PO Box 344
Gallipolis. OH. 45631

SHOP OPEN

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain
OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M .-4 P.M.
992-7204
324 East Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio
(Behind City Halll
10-21-1mo.

BISSELL
BUILD£RS
CUSTOM BUlL T
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"
PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4· 16-86-tln

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons end remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

I '

Round White Potatoes

Butterball Turkeys

5-lb.

Bag ................. For

.

ggc

10-lb. Bag ...... ~ .. .. .. . .. For $}5

Bag.. .. . .. .. .. .. .. • For $299

50-lb.

Bag ....... , .,,,,~·., For

$5

40, 60, 75 OR 100 WATT

Diet Coke or Coke

G.E. Soft White Bulbs

9

20-lb.

NONRETURNABLE BOITLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
COCA COLA CLASSIC,

88

99

SMALL
REPAIR
· Authorized Service
&amp; Parh

9
9
....~~~~$

sox· .

Sliced Bacon .............. 8-lb.
WHOLE OR HALF

NOVEMBERS
10:00A.M.

Avondale.
Beans .......................... 15-oz.

6

Cost Cutter
Apple Sauce ............. :.1.6-oz.

10

COST CUTTER

Treet
12-oz.
Luncheon Meat......... can . .
'

Macaroni
Cheese Dinner ......... 7.25-oz

seal electric molars, sheet metal, electric switch box, wood
s~s. nails, hinges, storm door, carpet tacks, screens,

electric wire, window jams. sliding dose! doors, Tops gas
furnace, molding, 2 wood exl. ladders, electric Bareland
heater, old doors, gas cook stove, gas line hose, sleel
'basement post, angle Iron, Hoor tile, 2 112" pipe vise, melal
door. ~ames, 6 heavy duty electric boxes, hanging lighled
sign, oommercial door closers, gas tanks, antique gale, 2
pols, truck tires, Homelile chain saw, Della Rockwell saw
and Joiners combination, and mucll more-partial hst1ng.
AUTOMOBILE &amp; BOAT SELL AT 12;00 NOON wilh Re1181118. t9n Ford Pinto, aulo .. complete overhaul, 86,000
act. mies, new paint job, ready to go, 15 h. fiberglass bass
boal, 20 HP Mercury motor &amp; elec. sian trolling molor, trailer
camplele,

·Cost Cutter
.Saltines ............ :........ ~ 16-oz.

Chicken
Noodle Soup:........... 10. 75-oz

1,.

r

42.,

-

~=S. ~l

platform scales, antique toledo scales, glass cvtter, van

KROGER

Cost Cutter
.
•
64-oz.
Apple -Ju1ce ................ Btl.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehides

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

NIASE Certified Mecllanic
CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified licensed Shop
5-25-tln

CARTER'S

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

Middleport, Ohio

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio
992-U

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INiERIOR - EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
pai~ing. Let mt do
rt for you.
Very Reasonable.
Have Referentts.

614·'70;J··

AUCTIONEER: Rick Pearson 773·5785
OWNERS: Wedge Lumber&amp;: Apartment Co.
TERMS: Cash or Check with 10

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
OWNEII: GRIG I. ROU!ti

::•
"'

.

·

GENERAl
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS A BATHS'

eEXTENIIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIDING A ROOFING
•METAl BUILDINGS
HOUSING &amp; APT. PFIOJECTS

Howard L. Writestl

LYNCH'S

ROOFING

GENERAL

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
•
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Piinting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
10·11·'88-1

mo. pd.

WANTED
DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
.•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must le Repairable "

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

985·3561
We !Jirvice Alll\lla,ke•
1/

MORIIS
EQUIPMENT
Ker Heaters

Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace '110.00
Blem Batteries
130.00

&amp; Up

Selem St.Rutlend, Ohio

Not AHpon•lble fer 1ccldente or LoiS ot·Propertw
UconHd. Bonded In Ohio &amp; WV 08-ll9

I

446-3487

We•~ Brun..,, Aohley
LOWEST PRICES
.
WE TRADE
CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

9/1 5/ 88/ tln

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
.licensed Clinical Audiologist

3 Announcements

V•d SIMe. Thurs and Fri. Nov 3
and 4. 2829 Mt. Vernon Ave.
Truck topper bng bed. Mavt89
wvrings w11her, Fleet1 dlshel ,
lo•amlsc. 10:00AMto5:00PM .

Public Sale
8o Auction

8

Rick Pe•1on Aucttonw. U·
cen1ed Ohio and W•t VIrginia.
Eatate, antique, f•in. liquid ..
tlon sal•. 304-173-5785.

Ph•miCY'·

We wil haul coal for em• get~ Of
HEAP, M~g• County Dept. of
Human Servtces, and HEAP
vouch.,... We can give you
prompt deliver!•. EM:etefor Selt
Workl,. Inc. Pomeroy, Qhlb,

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
_Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

. MARCUM CONTRACTING'
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS- BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;. REPAIRS ·
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS
985-4141
GENERAL CONTRACTORS
References
'10·4-1 mo

JEWELRY
"SELL our•
80-75% oft. Just In time for
Chritt:JNa. eome ' " 11 tlcen8e
bur.., inPOmercJ¥ on November
ht lhrou~ November 4th.

10:00 om-4:00pm.

JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

c••·

2282.
Compl•• houMholcts of t.lrn~
ture &amp; entiquea. Alto wood &amp;
co1l heater1. Swain's F .. ntture
&amp;

•VINYL SIOIN!3
•ALUMINUM SIOING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New HoiMI Built
.. Frf!e Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

The
Is
. Back I I I
Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Grace, D-a. Angie
and Gwen Folmer
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992"2725
MIDDlPEPORT OHIO
"Walk·lno W••l•••m••"

Want to buy: Used furniture end
anttquea. Will buy entire hou....
hold furNihlng. Merlin Wed•

mov•. 814-245-5152.
Junk Clrs Whh

742-24&amp;5

10/ 21/ 1 mo.

'•

~~g:
REPAIR~
Speclalblng In Chain

Unk and Wood Fencing
•CEILING FANS INSTAllED'

•REMODELING •PAINTING
•PLUMBING
•DRYWALL

•AOOFINO
e'TtlE WOIUC

•DECKS

•PORCHES

FREE ESTIMATES
Buckeye Card Weloome

IBTH LTNCI 992-3723
. 10·31-'IJ·I ~•-

MAIN S-TREET
PIZZA
Your Hometown Place
Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA ,
At The lEST PRICES.
If any local
competitor offers
you a better deal,
tell us and we'll
match it!
AlSO" ..
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
0
UNDER
MAIN mm PIZZA
Our Delivery Staff
Knowo Where You
Live.
Call 992·2228
or 992·9922

S3°

, 10·12· 18·1 IWO•

localed H1tfwey
between Rt. 7 • Beahan,

NEW &amp; US£D MOWERS
Serviu Centor for Ryan
Pro duds
8 .7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Makn

3 part lhae1 Apao pupplee.
2· part Ret Tenlers. Cell •14-FNe
good hofM" 7 w 1c. old
ktnana. Call 814-379-2435.

Free to good hom•1 yr. old
Bon)l dog to odu~• only. Good
.... ell dog. Clll614-379-2436.

frMto good home-1 yr. old Ret
T•rler. Good watch dog. Cell
814-379-2435.

Fl6nitutelnd lppllan&lt;* by the
piece or entire houeehokL Feir
prlc.beingpaid. Clll 814-4463168.

Hom•. Cell

MEIGS

FURNITURE

seng. Georgi~ lucid.,. 814-1844781 . Houre 2:00-9:00. C5oted
on Montt.y.

E1111110 v1111:111

3rd St.

Racine .. Ohio

GET ACQIJAINTEO
SPECIAL
3

PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

$44995

IO· Z5-l mo. pd.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY

CHO~i

12 GAUGE ':.llOTGUNS
ON~.Y

6:30 , .. :~
Fa&lt;lcH'• Choitt

12

Only

Ga~~g~

Strictly

lov. 104-875-8204.

HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME
Lott: Female German Shepherd.
Muon County dump. Any infor·

mlltlon cell collect 814· 992·
7813.
loft: kay ring contlinlnq•ev•el
kiVa and red 1n1p k.,. nng with
k!JVt.
Reedhille .,d
Uttlo Hooking Rt. 124 or Little
Hocking tnd P•kef'lburg Rl. 7
or in Betpr.P•rkeraburg aree, ·
-•rd. 814-378-8252.

Beh,..,

LOST. black m.,e Cit vicinity ~
Crab Creek ar ... 304-875-

Rt. 124, P-roy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR
Al1o TtllllllliiiiOI
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
6-17·tiC .

office or cell 304-468·1 eee.

7

Yard Sale

... --"Gallipo'fis ----··---&amp;Vicinity

e F1mily Yerd Sei~Centen.-y
TownhouH. Thurs .• Frf.• Nov.
3-4. 9 AM-e PM. CloiNn!&gt;
albums, c.sartll, home tnt•
rior, depr... ion . . . ,..,.,.. mo1t
pric. under 11.
Y•dSal•831 Third Ave. Nov. 3
&amp;. 4 . 8-3 . Boys lf..l.tl• wint•
clothfng. mile. items.
Wed .. Thurs .. • Fri. 83 Loc:u8t
St. Fumltt.tre, 81erao. jMtlry,
antiques-gla•...wr•tnrnk &amp; mirror, chil*tn• cloU;ng.
Otr~~gt~

Sai~S.Veral

femlll•
pllftO, babV bad. Nov. 4 , 15 . 9 till

VIAl Furniture and AppllanCII
P•~lng

Lot Solo

PUiMBING &amp; HEATING
161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S76D
SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We·C:arry Fishing

3158.

161fl 992-USO
IISIDfNCf PHONE
l61f) 992-77 .Sf

Roger Hysell
Garage

LOST, brown plaid wool Mule . . bl1nktrt. Fridl¥' t1Yening Pt.
Ptt. foOtbell game. If found
pluse IIIIN'e Pl . High School

Starts Wed. Ends Set. Overstock
of used tu rnlture. Must sell
trucklolld of nM' furniture.
Chr'-tml8 toy8 hiiVe jufterrhl'ed.
Prlcad vwv low to move. Sofe
bedl. cherts.
much to
mention. At. 141· CenUn.-y, 1/.a
mile on Lincoln Pike. 814-44&amp;-

' IUSINESS PHONf

•oo

Wed., Thun., Fri., l1o Sat. JOlt off
141 It Cenler'llfY on Uncoln
Pike. 4th troHor on loll. HIM
Brown 1tonew1re, jWNelry,
p1111, dlroheo, btbv through oduM

ChiiiP wint• clothing, tole more
mlac.

GAI.UPOUS FLEA MAR~ET ­
Rto. 31 l1o 180. Opon ovory Sot.
l1o Sun. 9 AM-I PM .

FIREWOOD
OAK. LOCI..!ST
CHERRY

S3S llMftfo
BILL SLACK
992-2269
·8-18-tfn

3 Fomlly·CI., Twp. Community
l . .clng. AoorOIC. 2tA! mil•

lOUth on Rt_- 7. Now crrolto, Ilk
flower .,_.gementa. wtnter
oo•s. wtnt• dot,_, mile. 1·5.
Thu10 . • Fri.- 3rd l1o 4th.
to.fedlemp
Y•d 8olo-F~d..·Nov. 4th. 8;00
to 1:00. Lo•ect M N TownhouH )lot off Rt. 7 In A-on.
Vlf'loua tteme ..om AM·FM
ltweo to lnf.,t A todcl• clolt..

•tovJ.

Y•d

•

A•emble pro&lt;k.tct8 st home.
P. .·tlm.. Expwlene&amp; unnece1~
eery. Dltoh. Call 813-327·
0898, Ext. D-1149.

•soo weektv pouible. A • .,.,.
btlng proGicts. SASE to : Homa

c -. P.o. ao. sooe-oor.
Huntington. W.Va . 21704-

9001.
EARN EXCELLENT MONEY o1
hom• Aaembfy work. Jewelry,
tayo, othorl. Call 1· 819-IU1867. ut. T 84tOH, 24 In

Up to 116 HOUR PROCESSING

Chonnut 8rGWn ond

EltltM.

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billa Here

Help Wanted

6 Lo81 and Found

7. 478 Kothv St., Pl-ontVIIIov

HUDNALL

•

!iervlcf;s

p.-t Chlhuah.t1 .,d
Beagle, tm1l doge. Camp Con-

or leav•

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

·.

TriPping suooll•. Buying gin-

Pup~•

-FIEf ISIIMATES-

GUN SHOOT

81~448-0,7&amp;.

Used llrntture by tha place or
entire hou11hold. 114·7422466.
.

Uoed coroet. 304-176·2408.

Far any of theseservictu~ll

Bttw•n 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

~ -·

Brownie end Junk&gt;r Girt Scout
untforrN. ~nd · othlr Qlrl Scaut
memorebllllli. C.ll 614·949·
2093. Evenlnga ontv,

3 dogs. One plrt Poodte. one
Collie end one pitt Pug. CeH
814-378-8380.

AEWARO, coli 304-875-2225.

We Honor MC/Ditc/Visa
!-l-IB-lin

wtlhout

mot.... Call '--"" Llvtlv-814388-9303.

afl:er7p.m.

whMo Englllh Sprlngor Sp111fol.

614-742-2617

Df

.

Wlntedtobuy: Stancln.gpk'leor
log tlmbor. Call 614-314.5182

5702.

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Businen
WANT TO IUT WlfCIED 01
JUNI CAliS 01 .TIIICll

Oltv ..

Ktttens to give ~1/f . Lin•
..al.od. Coli 614-448-9319.

LOST.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949·2969
Dtaltr far
YAIDMAN- &amp; ECHO

Third &amp;

Auction,

814-446-3159.

Wll'lted to Buy·Used Mobile

•o

WILL HAUL

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer und
Smtt h
Bulck·Pontitc, 1911 East.,n
Ave., G•11ipolls. Cell 814-448-

Giveaway

4

245-9523.

DENNY CONGO

used cart.
.)lm Mink Chewo.-Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

814-448· 3872
loll weight flit wh:h Max Imum
Str.,th GoBeee end E.Vep
·•water Pills " et Fruth
Ph• miley ,
Reduce your Weight· Take "New
ShiPe Diet Plan" .,d Water
Pills . Available at Fruth

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

HILLSIDE MU!J.LE
LOADING
AND
MODERN GUN
SUPPLIES
Muuleloading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Guns - Ammo - Slugs •
22 Ammo
12 4 last of R_utland
Across Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph.

~Vicinity

We pii)'C&amp;Ih for !Me model de¥'

Television listening Devices
' Dependable Hearing Aid _Sales &amp;Se~1ic•
~ Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~
I:
2
-

MUtti·hmitv .,.rd sale and bike ·
ule. Nov. 3f'd~nd4th. 8:001.m.
to 7 Horton St. in Maaon. turn M
Rower SMp. 304-882-3737.

Announcements

698-6121

3-11-tfn

ID-6-88-1 mo.

Loc•ted at the Old Wedge Lumber Co. In the
Bellemead Addition In Point Pleasant, WV.
Watch for signs.
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC,; 2 pc.living room suile, coffee table
and end lables, anlique table. corner Birch china cabinel,
dinene set, 2 bedroom suites, modern desk and cllair, large
antique flat top desk, 2 corner whal-not shelves, bathroom
cabinot, file oave combination, file cablnel, lamps, gas
healer, oval rug, 40,000 BTU gas circulaling healer. electric
healer, 2 old typewriters.
BUILPING SUPPLIES; 2 alum. windows, s1orm doors, ga·
rage door parts, paints, cabinet hardware, barn hinges, odd
gunering, ftoor finish, lhresholds, brass hardware, bolls,

79c

7 ~:~rters . . . . . . :. . ' · 39c ~:te8~!!~~~' ., sr,c; ~. ' • '"
&amp;
37c ~~~i~;_"'~ .......... ~· 65c
35C ~!~::o Soup......... ,~, 29C
$J 09
37c ~~i~~i'x. ....... .·~·· 25C
ggc ~:!~u~u:.:er. ··········'""$1 19 ~~~~:j~r. .. . 51°9
"·'· "SP&lt;CTED

SOLO IN PKGS. OF lO·LBS.

Hom elite
Jacobsen

12-PAK 12-0Z . CANS ... $3.49

SATURDAY

Complete Drywall
Service
FREE ESTIMATES
leasonalllt latn
56 STATE ST.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

814-992-3891 .

992-7611

Low Warehouse Prices Everyday!
Beef Patties .. .... ........

Briggs • ·Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater

2-Ltr.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

TRI-STATE
DRYWALL CO.

Fealuring: Consolidaled,. Dutch

~

H'/t.U Re~ldtnce .

--·--··pr Pleasant ......

STOVES, ~NSERTS AND
FURNACES

1- 13-tlc

SINCE' 1969

4-Pak

44b-7390

•12 Years Experience
45 DIFFERENT WOOD

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cares. We can
also acid boil and rod
aut radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
992·2196
Middleport , Ohio

3· 7 tllm. toys. boob. JMeby,
misc. 32280 Mln..vll• Hill.

or BOI'S EliCTRONI(S

WOOD STOVES

SE~~ICE

lHISII'I ST., STUCU!I

Trust Kroger For
Sausage Patties._
...... 3-lb.

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seam less Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
Free Estimates
Call 992-2772
8111/ttn

O.rage ,.,.. 11t, 2nd. 3rd.
Clcn~-•ll•lz••· Bovs ~tl •in

11

N SALE

HOUSEHOLD, COUECTAILE &amp; ANTIQUE
WEDNESDAY NOV. 2, 1988-6:00 P.M.
DUE TO CONTINUOUS SELLING FOR 7 HOURS AND
NOT COMPLETING THE SALE OF MISS KNECHT OF
MORRIS AVE .. ATHENS, OHIO. WE WILL BE HAVING
ANOTHER SALE THIS WEDNESDAY EVENING. MANY
FINE ITEMS WERE NOT OFFERED FOR SALE.
Maytag wringer washer, li~ing room suite. treadle sewing
machine, A. B. Dick· fluid duplicator with supplies and cabinet,
many throw rugs, carpet ll'x18', cleaning supplies, 3 pc. bed·
room suite, dressers, swivel rocker, square oak table, round oak
table. old rocker, des ~ tefrigerator wilh lreezer on bottom, metal
shelving, books, Christmas decorations, lawn chairs, bedding, 4
drawer file cabinet, hand tools, linens, doilies, glassware, old BIble, lots of costume jewelry, stone quart jugs, churn, smoker
stand, phone stand with seat. Also loads of misc. and boxes.
MUST ST AJf AT 6:00 TO COMPlETE
Refreshments Awailablt
TERMS: Cash or .(hesk "'/Positive I.D.
AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY
594-3780 Dr 698-7231
B. VANITY JR.

&amp; SUDES to

POMEROY ·EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST .
992-9976
THURS . E.B . 6:46P .M .
SUN . E.B. 1:46 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE
2 H.D. FfiEE with coupon and purchase of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon par customer per
bingo n11lon.
WE PAY '50.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE
PER GAME

INSULATION

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

VHS !API
ltt Ul convert thost oldMov its
&amp; SlidH over to easy VMS.
CAll AMT CARTIR

10·24· 1 mo.

7-13-'88- llo

Public' Sale
8o Auction

BINGO

J&amp;l

A•u Colle 304

Zfit ~ GUYIII

DAY fiiEFORf Pt.JflliCAttON .
- 11 ·00 A.M SAJUA OAY
- 2' 00 P.M . MOND AY
- 2:()0 ...M TUUDAV

992-2156

MetonCo W'tl

M1i9" County
AreeCodet14

D ill.
843 - AIIbitOitt

1988 IN GAUii'OliS AID I'OIEIOY STOI£S.

NORTHERN, KIDNEY OR PINTO

1

773 ~ M11 &lt;1n
8U - N- H.,.en

- 2.00 P.M WEDNUDAY

t~~~h~~~ .

tlOOO
t1500
125.00
180.00

tn.oo

tll .OO
133.00

Oelll• County
A,.eCodeiiU

111 Memcuiem

CO P&lt;RIGHT 1968 THE KROGER CO . ITE MS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDA&lt; . OCT 30 . THROUGH SATURDAY , NOV . 5.

lb.

noo

fullnwin p; tel•t&gt;llfJilf' exclianp;es ...

"A41 !hilt rnttlt b• ~~~ tn •ct."enc.e ""'
Clld o l Th1nk1

U.S. GRADE A FROZEN YOUNG
12· 14-LB. AVG.

21·11 WOAOS

Clqs•ified t&gt;ap;es cm•er

ct• efl ... lltlblle•M ro m*u:oo•orc:IMm

Edct1 of these ad..,ert•sed •tems •s requ.red 1o be read•ly ava.•lable
tor sale .n eact'll&lt;roger Store, eJCcepl as spec•f•caNy noted in 1h1s
ac1 If we do run out of an advert•sed 11em, we wdl offer vou your
t' ho 1ce of a comparable ttem, when a\lailable, reflecting the same
!&gt;avongs or a ra1ncheck whtCh Will ent111e you to purchase the
act vert1sed 11em at the adver11sed pnce ·~111hin 30 days. Onlr' one
~~nc l or coupon w1ll be accepted per 1tem purchased.

1500
18 00

........... d . .

' Prle. el .cl too ell C:lll~l~ ·lflltf l It do11blt price'' 1d cpll
'7 point Mne lwpe enlo, .,.d
'lt~ttlnlfl fll n.et fftPOrlliblt lot euon •"" f1111 d"W (Ch111dl
fof .,""' tlln ct.,. ect runt In PIIP4tl'l . Cll~ llftlnre 2 OOlt m

ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY

11·21 WORDS

uoo
t5 00
n .oo

fill'l•llftlor

o.lll• .. Me1on co:mml• I"WI1 be 1111
ltt-'111&lt;;11

RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
SOLD TO DEALERS

AIW PUNCH!

.. .....Pomerov.. ______ ...

Business Services

PACK

RAT~S

' "eeMoe t !0 ~eou"" too • • p~tld lr~
'Ft••....,
- GN•-•f' end Fot~nd ..n. u...t... 15wl'fM wilt be
IUft 3 d•• II riO Ch•ge,

WE

WANT ADS .

• The Area's Number .1 Marketplace
TO PLAC£ AN AD CAll "2-2156
MONDAY thru fRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SA~IiRI),U

-

SMALL

11

The

Ohio

lolo-J-Ion Of 180 •
11114 o1 Part•. Clothk\g of oil
* "· Wad.-Bot.

MAIL WEEKLY CHECK OUA·
RANTEEO. FREE OETAILS.
Wrlo: SD, 1057 W. Ptlllodolphll, Sufte 239-GO. Ont.,lo,

-Colli. 91762.
Someone to hbvatt In mv home

nights. Must be r.Uabl• Refer., .... required. Ctll 814-38a.
9342.

clll on Mlnlnolncl.lttriel eccou nts In Sou·
thrNrtem Ohio 1nd nalghborlng
Welt Virginia ..-. Ptlf• expariencd. aggreuive, eelf·
mot..,ated lndhrldulli. Company
furrMihn tr1118portltion. A• r•
will be. oonsld•ed. Send
to: lloK Cl1 177, c/ o01IIipoll•
Dolly Tllbuno, 825 Thlld A..,.,
Oolllpolll, Ohio 45831.
SIIMJ*80n to

""'*

..
'

ATTENTION TRUCKERS
Wanted owner/ ~or Tan·
dem or u•ll• to ha~l stone from
WlltwlooColl Co. toCrownCtty
Mine property. Call office 11425.85t2 b o t - 8 AM-4:30
PM.

Bebt titter needed in RM&gt;Gnmde
eraa. Call 814-245- 5970.
Pan-tfme l•m help wemed. Call

8t4-446-2412.

Govarnnw1t Jola •18.040 •
$59,230 yr. Now hirlhg. C.ll

1-805-887-8000 Ext. R-9805
for oment t.dtl'lllliet.
AVON· All ar- . C1ll Mtrllyn
Wewer 304-882·2645.
R N'S &amp; LPN'S· PH, full time &amp;
psrt tlmeappiiCM~ne •re being
accepted fof PleMiflt Vlllllt;'
Hospital Nursing Care Center.

Contact Penonnet 304-17&amp;.
4340. AAEOE
AVON ell are.. II Shirl., Spe•s..
304-875-1429 .
.Licensed Soci• Worker In new
long term care fldlhy. E~~;p•
rienoeprBf•red. Commensurate
uiii'Y and benlllftts, E .O.E. Mail
,..ume lo Admln~Nter Cere
HIVIfl of Point Pl. .ll'lt. R t. 1
lox 328, Point Ple•ll'lt, W. Va,
255110.
Wanted tonwone to )oln toc.l
Gotpet group, pret• eorneone
with verutlle singing ablltty end
ct.hto pr~e Ooaoel Mull c.
Send reeume P. 0 . lte»l 791,
M•on, W,VJ, 28210.

Fedlr1l. State • d CivU Servlct
Jot.. Now
your • •·
t13.110.00 to ••&amp;.4110.00.
lmmldllte opening~. (:all 1·
315-733-6082 ht. F 2938 A .

'*ln•

MEDICAL TECHNOlOGIST
MEDICAL LAS TECHNICIAN
Bruton County Memor... Ho•
pltliliiCCIPtinO •Piiolltlons far
MT or MLT. Pon-fllllt'- Coli

304-384-5151. E-1 OppoJI-

tuNty Atflrmtnlve Action Em·
PIO'/Or MPH.

'

'

�..

--- .-

~---~

•

. ....

•

•

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
11 Help

-.
Wednesday, November 2. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
44

· LAFF-A·DAY

Wantad

,.

•

51

Apartment
for Rent

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Household Goods

73

Muot moot

Pomeroy. 2 be_droom ept. Part tv
furni• hed in Naylor~ Run. Seru,..
lty deposit. Call after 6p.m.

o.,_,,_,. of Lobe"

Income guktlt lin•. 304-175-

2170.

8t4-992-1881.

Wom .. towor~day .,dnight to

1 bedooom apt. In M i dd~por1 .
t150. p• month plu s utlllti• .
Coli 8t4-992"6545 oo 6t4949· 22t7.

c•etDr.....-tv a.cty, 2d~¥tand
one nitht off P• wMk. Phone

304-1711-3711 on~ botwtloil
1:00 .,. 10:00 AM .,. 7,00
.,d loOOPM .

2 unful'nilh&amp;d It 127 Mulberry
Aw., Pom•ov·• rooms &amp; bath
Adutt1 only. No plfts. Dep, &amp;ref.

--·· •• Of.,...........

• ona1 ta to tor •lnlng. must
, _ tM guide line for Senio&lt;
Com................ 20 ... ...
WMit • rinlmum w.ge. call
304-1711-2318..

...

12

Wll - · 1or .._mill or
wo"*' in our hom• C.ll
114-992· 1111.

SChools
Instruction
AE·TRAIN NOW'!

On l•ge lot, 2 bed-oom. in

SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COUEOE. 1529 Jaeldon Pika.
Cll144f.4387. Rog. No. 88-1 1·
tO-.

Mldct..,ort. Alto 1973 Ckw·
rolet. E .:ell~ condition. Cal
e_ t_4-_99_2_·_•_s _t5_._ _ _ __

1

.M obile Homes
for Sale

be&lt;*-oom 12x50.

2

11900.

304-1711-2722.
Wanted to Oo

1979 Beyvi!fN mobile -home,
1.tx70 wtth 7x21 I!K.-.do.
phone 304-87&amp;1141.

Backhoe Work-860

CaN doztr. Re•on.tlle rltM.
~•lence op..ror. Cremeans
Conll. Cal 8t4-2158-17t8.

ahoe dore.

Lid lea. Men' 1. ehildren -

m.t•nlly, l•ge aizfl, patite,
d.,..,..,. ..,obfc. bridal. lln--

o•Je or ecceqori• llore. Add
«)loranlly•. lrwtd nam•: liz
CllliborM, Htettht•. Ola~s.
Ln. St Mlchtle. For1111a, Bugle
Boy. lovL Camp Bev~ Hilt,
Ort•'llellv Grown, Luci• over
2000 ott.s. or •13.99 one

1985 Mansion mobile home,
total elec::tric with fireplace.
304-773-5233 aft• 8,00.

33

Two bedroom tr•il•. nicely
furnished. clean. $260 .00
monthty plus utllitetend dep01lt
in HendlrJon, 304--175-1926.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Farm for sale lly owner. 56 ecra1
on County Rd. ZB·AppieOrove,
Dorcaa Rd. ou1aide Racine. Ohio

8t4-742-2300.

106 prhfete aa• with e•v
acc•s. Gallipotil Ferry. New
home also 2 tots with wells.

870.000. 304-676-4831 .

35

l!t Acreage

Lots

lotL moble homes permitted
pubUc weter, atso rlv• lot.:

2338.

Bawon. Jr. 304-678-

Renlals

..

41

Homes for Rent

appl. furnished, W•her·Dryer
ww c.-pet ntrWiv
ptlntad, deck.
From e175.
S.. ior Citizens Welcome. Re·
gency, lne. Apra. Call 304--676-

6104, or 875·6388 or 8757738.

New completely furniahed
ap ... rnent &amp; mobile home in
city. Adults onlv . P•rking. Cell
6, 4- 448-0338.
BEAUTIFUL f&lt;PARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, &amp;38 Joekson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to

45

Upatelrs unfurnished IIPt. Car·
P•ed. UlllltiM peld No chllcl'en.
No ..... Call6t4-448-1837.
Fll'nilhed- 3 rooma &amp; bel:h.
CINn. No pet1. Ref. It diiiPosft
required. Utilities furnished.
Adutts only . Cell 614-446·

Nlcellj furni1hed 1m11t hou ...

Homes for Sale

Vl!fY lttrad:He bride 4 beci'oom.
2 ~ t\, fll'l'lly room wtth ftr&amp;
pl--. formel dining. l•ge lilting
room. 30 fl. cullom oak kitchen
ctlblnG. oa wooMortc. finilh
b•..,•· 2
g•ega. l.,el
l111diCIPed ~. 4 ml• from
Holzlf Hotphol off Rt. 35Port•hrook SubdJvilton. CaH

c•

8t4-4411-4t89.
4 BA ., full b•ement 6: g•aga.
d 1
1
lUI ..
,.., . c~pete
tome n• ·

Prlcod to toll. Call 614-4480278 oft• 8 PM, -ondt
onytlme.
3 bectoom Raneh. 1Yz bllhs.
f..,IV rDOrl\ dining room. .t e•
/ wooden deck. Sprin~ Vell"f

g•-oa. ltorege building. pool.14-•••79 3
woo. Call 0
~~
•

ap.tments. Eleg.,t 2 ftoon, 2

3 BR .. AC, c•pet. pool. g•ega.
2 firepl.c11. fence. Good location. Call A·1 Reel Eltate
Broker. 304-675-6104.

hwesh•. dispOPI, prNate entrance. private endosed patio,
pool, pletground. Utllhlll not

Unfurnished houM, 2 8R .
Neighborhood Rd. t2215. References &amp; depotlt required. CaH
4411-44t8aflw 7 PM .
3 BR . home ne• SINer Bridge
Shopping C~mt•. t2715.,.. mo.
Sec. dep. &amp; ref. Call 614--4468 t 89 or 44 • 88 ••.
~

oo

log Cabin. $250. 2 BR . Cal
aft• S PM, 814-245-9097.
3 bedroom hou•Rutlll'ld •ea.
S325 lncludel water, g•blge.
hur. e20o ~eGJrttyandrflf• .....

c•. Cell 614-387· 7287.

Mockrn 3 BR . home. Vinton.
kitchen.

House. 1'h blll:hl. all elec. et

1torage building. large lot.

e.....,green. Sec. dep. Call 814--

*39.000. Coll6t4-3811-9042.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from

•t

(U-Repairl Alto
Ta OeUnqUMt a. Fondoture
Prop.tl•. Awillbfe NOW. For

I :4-:4::11-:-275_6_5_•ft~•74.,-P_M-:-._ _

3 BR . hquoo. 1V. bothl. g•ago.

fireplace.

Walk to GallipoUt

tchoolt. Seen I&lt;: viiM'. E.::ehnt
neighborhOod. t326 per mo.
Call after 6 PM It weekunct..

llllln~ CALlt · 3t&amp;-733-8064

814-448-t4t0.

Ext. G 2758.

Houte wtth batt\ Ne.. Ractne.
Nice yard. ,g•den space. Call

• ·~

lull

3 8R " LR · DR · ·~on.
b•ema-rt. 2 c• urmtached
v•~e. sul.,lle Rd . U9. 900.
Coli lt4-448-4&amp;36.

4 Bedroom home. Auume loan.

c .. lt4-4411-0t48.
Home In country with l.,d wm
con11&amp;r land oontrael with

down p-vment. Cell 614-992·

5848.

8t4-992-5858.

Houae for rent. 504 e..t Main.
Ptunerov. Ohio. Call 114-992·

8t44.

be"'oom•.

2 fUll baths. large
living room. dining room end
kitchen. Alto lalndry room, 2
c• u•au• central air, hatern
Schoot DiltriCI. Referencea required. Cel 614-247-4261 .
3

For slle or r.U . 3 bectoom
lnauiMed. g• tUrnace.
Nolet'· Atf•ence .,d depo1it.
81 992-5479. Lowem•uge.
hoUII,

For 1111 or rent. 5 room on 1.. oe
lot . Depot Str.... Autlen d.
•20.000. or •250. momh rllnt.
lt4-992-5690.

32 Mobile

Homes
for Sale

11M Nflw.Moon 121:50, 2 BR .
• noo. c.11 et4-44&amp;-o39o.

Moble Home for Slife. 1b:50.
c .. 8t4-4411-2003.
2 lA . moW'• home. Totll tlec.
,., ......onabl.. Call 8t4-

...... 0722.
11M tonoord mobile home,
1 21&lt;118. 2 Ill .. AC. owringo. eon
8t4-241J.I222.

3· bedroom home with fud
b•emMt locM:ed New Hwen,

304-882-3394.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

In ElWeka. 2 HR . Adults only . No
pels. *225 • mo. Dep. required.
C1H 81 ... 24fr&amp;883.

2 bodroom unlurnitkod. 12•80.

w / d hookup. Yl ml. pe .. H.M.C .
on At. 315. Adults onty. Call

304-17&amp;-9780 or 8t4·448·
43119.

Furnished apt. Ne• HMC. 1 BR .
t 235. Utilhi• pllid. C.ll 448.4418 after 7 PM .
A8:j
. ments and hou••· Call
3 4-876-6104.
Apartments for the Elderly.
Galli a Menor Apanmems. 656
BuhiMortonRold. Designed for
tho Sonior Ckbon !82 &amp; oldarl
endHandlcepped penons. Equal
h_ousing opportu~ty . Appllc•
teonsmaybeplckedupetSprlng
Vell8f Piau, 529 J.ckson Pike

54

Wheelthaln-- new or used. 3
wheeled electric acooten. Cell
Rogers Mobllty collect. 1·61+

B70.SI81 .

W.tern Boats. Red Wing work
sho•, Hush Puppydr•s sho•.

Furnished roorn-919 Second
Ave .. Gallipolis. t1 35 a mo.
Utilitiet paid. Single male. Sh•e

Quality. selection. grNI prices.
Wed1111 work a w•t.-n, State
Rt. 141. ·~th of Waterloo,

bath. Call448·#t8aflor7PM .

8t4-643-2t58.

Rooms for ,-.,t.week or month.
Starting et $120 a mo. Gillie

Delco• Farm Home. Built on
your lot. •1 2,995 &amp; up. See our

Hotel· 6t4-446· 9580.

Modal. Callt -6t4-8B6-731t .

Rent

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORSCheck tor epeci• on ALL
Models. Big dlloount-l81t ysar's

COUNTRY MOBILE Ho.l.ePork.

llocked modelt. Ron Allison.

Route 33, North of PomEroy.

t2t0 9aoond Ave .. Galllpollt.
Ohio. 614-446-4338.
•

Rental trailers. C.ll 614· 992·

7479.

Se•• eablnftt model stereo and
8 track tepa, AM -FM stereo end
record pll'fer. Good condition.
Coli 304-468-t9?7.

Office or si'J\III bualnesa space
for rent. Locatld at N . Second
Ave. in Middleport Bualn•s
district . Call 614-992-5546 or

6, 4-949·22t7.

FirfiWood-Herd wood. Large
pickup told, $35 delivered. Call

Specious mobile home lots for
rant. Femity Pride Mobile Home
P1rk. Gellipoli1 Ferry. W. Ve.

8t4-448-1437.
IS,endalw ood fireplece ins . ..
•soo. Firm. Cell 614· 448·

304-676-3073.

Ot48.

38 Cal. Colt Offlcw piatoL
$100. Also 1976 . VW D11her,
good for plrts only. 8100. water
cooHng. goodc:ond .. trltl1s.-good
cond. Cell 614-38S.9992.

For Lease

Commarclal Building for le•e.
Pt. Pfe•ant. Cell 304-675-

4042 or 448-7827.

Merchandise

Shop Craft tO .. b;.,d • -· $65.
Call 614· 448-3485.
16 volumes - New Standard
Encvc.l opeedi .. t100. Indoor/ outdoor c•pM-11'· 0"x13'.

51 Ho S h ld G _d_
l----u~e_o_ _ _oo
s

0" . Call 614-448-t4BO botwean 4 PM &amp; 8 PM .

SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82

Flr~ood

for ..1.. t36 • pickup
lood. Call6t4-44t· 0809.

Olive St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 8399.
Living room aui1"'· $199-$599.

Naw 18ft. Tandem olenaHer
reinforced tongue. 7.000 1h

Bunk beds with bedding- t249.
FlAI size mattreA &amp; foundstlon
sur~ing ·, 899 . Re,cliners
suitn. Desks, wringer w11her, •
complete line of used furnrture.
NEW· W..tern boots· $35.
Workboots S18 &amp; up. {Steel &amp;
soft tool. Call 6t4· 446-3159.

0139tvAninga. aft• 6.
2,38 Flrlt AYII. 1 BR ., kltehen
fUrnlthed, carpeted. No chil·
dren/ Peta. t17!5 plus utllttiM.
Dep. &amp; ref. Call814-4.t&amp;-4928.

ranges . Skaggs Appliances.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 814-448-7398.

GOOO

USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrlg•atora.

11 HP landmark Riding Lawn
Mower. Snow btade~ .,d chelns.
Runs good. 1460. 080. 814992· 61t\3 eft• 6 :00p.m.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

90 Days same u Cllh with
approved credit. 3 Mllw out
Buhwille Ad. Op., 9am to 6pm
Mon. lhru Sat. Ph . 814-"46·

0322.

Unt.rniehed 2 Br.• 2 Mthl.

Ten used jalousie wjndowt and
one door eH with screens. cell

304-8B2-3t30.

55

Building Supplies

Building Materllil'

Blodt. brick. eewer pip•. win-dows, int811, etc. ClaJde Win·
lera, Rio Gra-tde. 0 . Call 614245-5t21 .

Concrete blodts- all sir&amp;l· y~rd
or delivery. Mason aan d Oellipolit 81of:::k Co.. 123V! Plna St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio. Cell 61 • ·"46-

2783.

WESTERN RED CEDAR

• Channel Rustic
and Beveled l.ep Siding
• Deck Materials
~uarantelld Qu81ily
CETIOE, INC., Athens-614·

&amp;94-357B

56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet

Grooming. All breadl . .. All
sty .... lams Pet Food Oealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 8t4-448·0231.
Dregonwynd C1tterv Kennel.
CFA Perelan Md Si.n•e kit·
tens. AKC Chow puppi ... New
Hlmelayen kittens. Call 614-

446·3B44 after 7 PM .

304-273-5856.

W1rm Morning wood burninn
......e goodoond. *250 00 c 1
'"' ·
· ·
after 4:00PM. 304-875--8870.
Bennn; VideoW'IdGrandOpen-

ing 147 60 FIMhln e•
·
na'lge•
blo Iotter' window
o1 0 *99
00
gn len:· . .·
Sidewalk curt. with
$149.00. Free shipping. WVa
1 ·800.142·2434. Ohio 1·800.
533-34"3 1 tim
ny e.
Si
lgns . portable hlghted
1299.00. Free letter•deiWI!It'y.
Plastic leiters lhelf price)
147 60 Off • 1r N
5
WV 't so
' ~8.,42 ·24°3•4 0°hvlo. '
· ~
·
·
t·

AKC registered Siberian Huskey
puppi81. 2 mala. 3 female~,
8 200.00 eech. Phone 304-6762483 •sk for Jenntfer.

&amp;

Su~~lies

L1ve 's lilck

61

Farm Equipment

For sai•R•condittoned 15 ft.
fold-up bush hog. Cell814·288--

482t .

1979 Merwry Iobeii. Auto.,

PS. AC. AM -FM tt•eo--C.t~ .
Runs good. Good cond. •760.

Call8t4-268-12&amp;t.

t986 27 ft. Rockwood

rubber, nic. with scriP• bllde.
•2995 . MF Dvne· bounce

Holl.,d 288 bel•. *995.

Livestock .

Newly radtCOf'lted ep .-tments

64

HayS. Grain

a..rgeround b•• of h-v for lila.
•20 aoch. Call8t4-441l-t052.

II,/

Beuet~l

'

~

~

,

TO '(ou RIGHi iEFO~E !

:r.

I..EAVE 7

!

4411-6050. Ko.., trylnl&gt;

1986blueZ-28, 306MJto. 1988
Ni11an Stenza . 4 cyl., fuel
injected. 5 aplllld. Both a~cellent
condition. Call 814· 742· 2876.
1980 Mezde RX7.

814-992~

.,d full security system. eo, 000

IIJl

EEK&amp; MEEK

......, 304-1178-2398.

Akers TrM Trimming .. d Stump
Removal. Free estlmat•. Call

304-875-7t2t.

Services

mho. •aooo. Call 5t4. 992·
3710 after 5 :00p.m .

1981 BUck le Sabra. one
llllC cond. $3.500.00.
304-676-3030 .. 876-4232.
1980 Ch.,ette. looks •h•p.
runs greet , gea sever ;

• 1, 800.ll0. 304-876-1584.

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

304-876-7858.
1978 Mustang 8660.00. 304875-2467.

t ·I14-237-0488. dCJf or nlgllt.

ON MY ACCOUNT.

THE NECKTIE ~

SWE~PI!R

.,. towing machine
rapelr, parts. end suppll•. Pidc
up .. d delivery, Devil VINJJum
Cleen•. one h81f mile up
Goo&lt; . . Crolk Rd. CoK lt4448-0294.
E k'terlor.
8t4-448-

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh end Pine

FER ONE THIN,··
HE'S KEPT A ROOF
OVER MY HEAD
ALL THESE
YEARS

·.•,

'

Electrical
l!t Refrigeration

Realdentllll or oomm•cial wir-Ing. New aarvioe or repelrs. •
Ucensed elec:trld~W1. e.. lmate •
free. Ridenour Electricll 304-

.

CittflrM. Wells. Delivery Any·

Dill•d

•

.

72

Bernice Bede Osol

General Hauling

w...

Cell 614--446-7404-No

1978JaepCJ5. New top, othw Pltrldc's Wet• HeullnQ. 2. 000
extra's. Low miiMge. VflfV good •- delivery. 304-178-23tt or

- · *2800. 814-992·28&amp;9 114o441J.4088.
or lt4-992•&amp;B88.
Watlar•on's W•ter Heullng.
r•onllble rlttl, volume ds~
73 Vans S. 4 W.O.
C:OUntL 2.000 to 4,000 CIPICItv. dtt•no. pools, wollt, lie.
84 Ford F·2&amp;0 koiVY duty. 480 304-5711-29t9.
4 opd. Noedt wor1c. e430o. 81
Ford AMg• 4x4, 8 Cyt 5 apd.
..,.,drive. Sk•p. Cllllt4-448- 87 . Upholstery
t6t2 or 8t4-448-0tlt3.

MDwr"¥''s Upholstlrfng .-vlng
1987 Bronco. Auto .. 0 .0 . Ill aountyaraa 23ve•L nt8 bNt
Bench tHta. sftver· blue. l•t In llrnkure , upholetering. Cel
th., 7800 mil1111, like new. 304·17&amp;·41&amp;4 lor free
8t4- 992-7329.
eltlmM•.
·

e

1111 • d2l WIMDUY
•!Ill Iamay Milar

0

·

Evanlng Newa
IIJINewa
Crook Inti ChaM
1:30 (lJ El!a1Endltfa A continuing
chronicle ol the lives ol
residents In London's Eest
End. (0:30)
• Gll Odd Couple

'lOur
'Birthday

Service: PooiL

78 Ford 7000 dl11al. C.t motor. Sun"-f calls.
24 ft. bo•. Strllaht tNck.
U500. Coll814-44&amp;-2t07bo- J • J Water Service. Swlmmln g
pools. cisterna. wen.. Ph. 614fore &amp;pm.
245-9285.
1982 Ford ton truck. Rune.
R A R Wet• Servic». Pools.
$350. Coll8t4-317- 0t49.
cisterns, wells. lmmedietet987DodgeD..otopldcup. 3.9 1, 000 or 2,000gallonade1Nery.
l , V-1 an~ . AM -FM, PS, Pl. Call 304-676-8~70.
auto., topper, rumlng bo•cJs.
19, 000 mi. E•c•U.,t cOnd. Wet• delivery. 1000 g,.lona.
UIISO. Cell lt4-4411-43tl of. Rt•onllble prl'*. lmmedl•'•
delivery. Call 6t4-992·6275.
ter 8 PM.

victory over Thomas Dewey
Is recaptured with newsreels
and ea~y television film,
along with lnlervleWs.
1111
d2l TlMi EquaiiHr
0 4rry King Uvel
·
II) MOVII!: An American
Werewolf In London (RI
(t :37)
t:30eW lllllaby Boom Torn
by guilt, J.C. soaks parenting
tips from TV's June Cleaver.
(])LP8Tiowllna
(II' e ()) TlMi W'andar Yure
Kevin recalls an
unforgenable vleltto his
dad's business office. (A) 1;1
Ill New Cowt1ry
10:00 CD 700 Club
e (I) llll Totllngan Hillary
tries to slOP a mentally
unbalanced dealer from
killing Nick.
(II
~ Murphy'a Law
Preview C
(J) The Hero's .IOUmay 1;1

e

Gonlpolit, Ohio
Phone 114-446-3888 or 614448-4477

875-t786.
.

e

'41 Harry Truman's stunning

8344.

85

Sa Ia

DON'T FEEL THAT 'IOU
HAVE 1'0 BE. AMUSING;

DO YOU KNON WHAT
THE! HAT eAID TO

RogersBasemant
W.tspr,ooflng.
·

actual mllltl. local owner
•1,896.00. Phone 304-87~
3830 after 4 :00.

Trucks for

e

MORTY MEEKLE

Uncondtlonll lifltlme gowentee. Local rBf•.,ca llrrHihed.
Free a.tlm••· c.ll ooltd

84

smoking cold turkey leads to
a hot misunderstanding. 1;1
• Gll Amlflcan Expoaa:
Who Munllred J.F .It? Jack
Anderson presents a
compelling array of lestlmony
confirming an lnlarnatlonal
murder conspiracy Involving
the underworld and a
government agency.
0 PllmeNaw•
11J1 MOVIE: Hallowaen IIIRI
(1:32)
II) Mu-, She Wrote I;)
Naaltvllle Now
8:05 CD MOVIE: Doctor Zhlvago
IGI (3:17)
1:30 (]) IIHIIIrde 9 Ball
ChampiOnship from Atlantic
Cify,N.J. : Mike Sigel vs Jose
Garcia (R)
(II
~ Haad of lha Cla11
Charlie prepares his students
for Russia as well as the
debele. C
1111
d2l" Annla McGuire
Annie comes to her mother's
aid when Emma Is
threatened wllh eviction.
V:OO 8 W tiS Night Court Dan
lumes when a courlhousa
fire closes the door on hie
camJ)81gnlng. 1;1
(lJ (f) The OrHt UpHI Of

a

Home
Improvements

_,,mat •. con

e

The Van Dylte
Show An6mpt to quit ·

Point, w•hws, dryers end

Painting: lnt•lor &amp;

7:35 CD Sanfold and Son
1:00 CD MOVII!: Mother Ia 1

ense.

stump

Rot.y or ceble · tool driUng.
Most wale oomplced same dar;'.
frump HI• end service. 304-

Froe

1111 Night Court
Ill VltleoCountry

e

wtite Cedlllae. Low

1987 Chrysl• Lebaron Coupe
Turbo. 14, 000 mMI!II. Excell.,t
condition. All options. Cell 81_..

B~UIATodaJ

IIJl • d2l tiS JeopardJII;I
.!Ill M•A•I•H
IIJI Croaan,.

Myot-1
(]) Blt-rdlng 1987
Skateboard Championship
from f&lt;nahalm, CA (R)
(II
~ Growing Plilnt
Mike pushes freedom aa a .
college man to the limit,
forcing a showdown. I;!
(lJ (!) The Mind Examine
how adictlons to tobacco,
drugs.~mbllng and food

,..oval. Coll304-8711-t33t.

mileeoe. Excet. cond. CeQ 11 ~
258-t43t .

7:30 iiiii Family Feud
(]) 8chola1111c SpofUi
America
(II Enterlalnmllnl Tonight

B W llll Unsolved

GE. Specioling in Zonhh. Call
304-578-2398 or 6t4-4462454.

B1

~1 1 1

-,..;.E:....;;R;-R~~~-=.1 -ll

!

;

Music majors seem to relale only
. ,"
•
in musicalterrn8. ltook one bowling,
.
.
and he wu1elllng his friends he had
. - - - - - -- --.,gonen a spare in every ..

I

I

SPREEV
1-.-...,\:...:,.,,,.:.:..,,:....:;..1,..:...,1-1
Q
.

.

~

•

•

.

•

Complete the chvckle q,c;tod
by t.l l1ng in the m1ssing words

L.....JL-~-.1.....1--L.....J you d~velop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NI.IMSERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

6 ':ef!~'s:EER LETTERS TO .I

I I I I I·.I 'I
.

SCRAM-La'S ANSWERS'
Fellow - Pluck - Imply - Jalifld - WILL DO
While doing my moming exercises, I had my arms
outstretched and t\aad bowed to the IIQor . My son came In
and said, "A simple 'Good Morning' WILL DO."

BRIDGE

NORTH
U·l-11
+KQJB?

a.

c....

I :""can~~

.

+2

,Duck now,

-

-

•

+KIOH3
EAST
+A S2
.KI073
+A 86

WEST
+10 9'
.QH2

tJIO 73

+t42

+J7

Dick Pavlicek suffered the irony of
SOUTH
making a great defensive play in a los·
•• 3
.... J.
ill£ cause when his team lost the semi·
+KQ854
final match in the summer Spingold
+AQ8
Teams to the eventual winners. The
actual biddin1 has been slightly alVulnerable: Both
tered, since North and South were
Dealer: South
playin&amp; a complicated system involv9atalil
Ing some artificial respomes to the
West
forcinl one-club bid. Suffice it to say
I NT
Pus
that one club showed 18 or more hip·
3NT
Pus
card poiats, alter which the final
Pus
three-no-trump contract was reached.
After the openil)llead of the three
Opening lead: • 3
of diamonds (fourth best), Pavlicek,
sltlill£ East, knew that declarer held L - - - - - - - - - - - . . J
live diamonds, since he could see the
deuce in dummy. He obviously had to cordingly. And that Is just what haP'
-, switch · to a heart, . but which one? pened. When Pavlicek led the king of
· When declarer bas A·J·9, his correct hearts, declarer ducked smu1ly and on
play wben a low heart is led is to put in the heart continuation confidently put
the 9, which proves effective whenev· ,in the jack. But West won the queen
er his rlgbt'band opponent bol~ K·lO . and cleared the suit. When East won
or Q-10, twice as likely as K·Q. But. i the spade ace, be cashed another heart
what would declarer do if East led the •to set tbree no-trump. Bravo, Pavll·
king of hear\a? No doubt he would be- ·cek, and of course. condolences on the
lieve that East held K·Q and .Play ac· match.

I+

·CROSSWORD
. by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

3 Actress

I Elate
Burstyn
6 Explosion 4 Midlanite
8 Cut In
king
twain
&amp; Recant
10 Soviet
6 Fonner
inland sea
life
12 Without
7 Pay
light
dirt
13 Ice tower 8 Military
, I &amp; Deer
fortlftcation
11 Furrow
18.:...
11 Donnant
standstill 14 Spiterul
19 Ancestral 17 Mexican
21 Cosaet
tree
22 Expert
20 Dude
territory
. 23 Explorer's
23 Mountain
shelter
24 Wave's top
lake
27 Shabby
24 Church
28 Howard
singers
or H.L.
291ndian
weight
unit
30 "The -c
Couple"
31 Summer hat
35 Fish
36-Mineo
.. 37 Colloidal
substance
38Send back
40 Sultan's
decree
42 American
playwright
43 Just great
44 Glengarry,
e.g.
41 Handle
DOWN
1 Surly one·
2 City on
the Red
River

25 Steering
device
26 Native
27 Pragmatic
pen10n
29 Health
resort
32 Wide open

33 Cherubini
opera
34 Watching
out
36 Footprint
39 Peruvian
city
41 Capek play

DAILYCRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'IIIOW to work It:

a

at tn•• .....l;f. "llo•"'· - · :. .10 and what· . are a key player on a team.
...,. you do tthould receive favorable QI!. .NI (M8y 21-.IUM 20) SuCCBit Is .
attention .
,highly probable today If you are bold •
CAPRICORN (Ilea. 22-Jan. 1t) You well 88 lmaglnallwl. Utilize your mind
have a kNICk for handling others today and courage In a winning combiMtlon . .
Ill VlclaaCountry
!hat
will benelllthem and be gral!fylng CANCER ~~- 21-.IU!r 221 Be a good
· Nov. 1 •
11:00CD R-tg10tt Staala
lor you. Your IICIIona will reinforce ex· · • 1111-loday. Whll1 you lelrn lrom oth• ~ ill • (J) all .1121
Fresh lntereats wiU be developed In the lallnQ rttlatlonshlpa.
era can be applied In wayolhll1 will ad·
IIIINawa
year llhead that wlll take you on on AQUARIUS (.lan. . , . 11) This . .vance your lntereata. You have the ablll· ; ·
&lt;D 8cuiNi World
palha you've never explored. Your ac· · shOUld be a profitable time lor you when . ty 10 Improve upon their l d - or 1
(lJ (f) 111M ..,...., World of
tlvltles will have good chancea for auc- . you ahara a vetted lnterMt wllh another · · auggeallona.
Ideal Moyert talks wtth a
oesa and you could a'-0 gel Involved . or
when
you
work
lhrough LEO lolulr IJ.AI,IIJ. 22) Stay on lop o1
wide va~e1y of people about
with new people.
Intermediaries.
developments today and tomorrow
America's choice~
ICQIIPIO lOci. :14-Nov. 221 Today and PIICI!I (Fab. 2'Hia..., Ill) You should - · y o u could materially gain. II anye!IIl
Love eon
tomorrow 111ould be a very hopeful peri- be lucky In matters-· you are work- · one huthe potential lor turning a prol11)1 MoMJIIne
od lor you. Opporlunltlea ol great worth lng In cloM con)uncllon wllh a partner 1 It, It's you.
1111
are likely to come lhrough both social or a butln- uaoclate when each hu VIRGO (A,.. ZJ.Iepl. 22) Your popuand bualneN contiiCia. Trying lo patch en ualgned role.
larlty It - d i n g 111 p,_t, ao be preStar
up a broken rornence? The Al1ro- . ARIEl (Marolt 21·Aprll 111 You're In a • . pared for more IIC1Mty-. your oo11:30e~ llll Tonight Show
Graph Malchrnak• can ltolp you lo un· cycle - . you have 1111 excellent ' clal l~e Ja concerned. Friend a wtll want ·
· (J)~
derlland whal to do 10 make lhe rela· cttance ol earning more than uaual for : 10 Include you In lhelr plana.
(I) cttaara
llonlltlp work. Mall S2 10 Motchmaker, your talents. Do not und•prlce your , · U8RA llfPI. ZJ-OcL 211 You'll be Vfl!'l
(I) Amlflcan Art FOMn
P.O. Box 9t428, Clewlland, OH 4410t- ·,work.
.
, ambHioua today In ways thai won'! be •
3428.
TAURUS (o\priiZO..Marllll You should too obvious to peraona wllh whom you'D ,
~~~181;1
IAQITTAIIUIINov. ~ 211 Con- . be rather lortunala a11hlatlrne In com- ·. be claallng. Your chancM for lulflllng ·
ill UIA Today
diiiOM tho! retlec1 upon your preatlge petltlwl altuatlona. Thla could be eape- , your claalree look very good.
e!IIl Newlywed Oarna
and repulatlon
. are exlremely promlalng ..cla!ly 1rue In arrangernenla whafe you ·
'
.

I.
..

1112

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

. One letter slands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single lettera,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
.hints. Each day the code lettera are different.
.
CRYPTOQVOTE

11-21
TK

ORL

CUH

GiNWIEL,

GFITS .

ou

UK K L Z

UK

v us.

0 R I.

NIZZC
0

NUA

BLTERO

ZHDDTIS
GZUMLZY
Yeet.enlaJ'a CrrPtAMaaote:" N0111ING MAKES SOME
' PEOPLE GO INTO DEBT UKE TRYING TO KEEP UP
• WJ'I1f PEOPLE WHO ALREADY ARE. - O.A. BArnSTA

C&gt; 1. •.. .King FHIUrll
Inc.
.
.,.Svndlcata.
'
'

.,
I

•

•ss

By James Jacoby

F"ratltman (NRI (1 :21)

RON'S Tehvialon Servloe .
Houee cella on RCA•. Ouazlt,

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE .
house cell SIIYiclng OE, Hot

19738uidc laoabro. 360. V·l. 4
bbl .. nM radiMor. Fair oond.
$500. Call 8t4-189-633t or
4•&amp;-7215 eft• 6 PM .

N

.

S 5800. See at 541 Fourth Aw.

1984 Cavalier, PS. PB, tltl,
stereo, IUto. , AC. 1985Mercury
Top_., stand•d. AC , stereo. 4
dr. Cell after 5 PM , 814-38884411.

j&lt;NOW I CAN'T
iAtc:f l'i WITH ME 1
&amp;u'i (out...r:&gt; .I:
WAIT AND GIVE IT

Ford ArrWt motor home. 11ft:
long. good cond. t2.99&amp;.00.

8911-3802

1974CcwvwtteStrmgr-v. Ec.l.
oond. AC., t-top, stereo. '7150.
Call 8t4-4411-942t or 448744t .

·.

~

*

t988 Bulek Somono• 2 dr.

coupe. Many extres. Vflf'( nice,

n.,..•, Company

7:05 ()) • to 5

Hom&amp; H•• Chwy diMeie. gan·
concltlon on
erltor, awning.
motor end rool, 12.000 ml•.
A·1 thapa lol:s of extr•. price
negotiable. Calllt4,992·&amp;320.

Fetty Tree Trimming.

. I II I _

Monayllne

II) Miami Vice C
1211 Crook and ChoM

Min~

304-875-6888.

.,1-....;..U..::,L.,.:I_.;Q!...:A-=r--!1
:'
1

pay later

IIIIC,_,.

... g•. 34,000
mil•. Excel . cond.

time.

31 MF tractor, good point good

Coll8t4-317-0832.

2 Ill . tnllw. Wllorl!o trwok paid
Ref. &amp; dop. roqul&lt;ad. Coli
8t4-448-0BO&amp;.

ml•.

19 79 Pont lee: Sun bird. 58,000

r;J

2·2 BR . moblohort111. •aci per

evolablo. Udlkl• paid. U2&amp;.
P• montll.d..,osit roqulrad. Call
114-"2·1724 alter 1:00 or
99Z.5tt9.

1984 Merr::ury Topar OS . PS,
PB. eir, AM·FM. 55.000
02700 Cell 6t4-448-02t2 or
4411-927B. •

air, 1982 Dodge Omnl auto:

Farm

IRS

orglniel
*8800, Firm. Cal 8 14-448942t or 448- 744t.

1978 Datsun truck atenc*d 4
tpeed. 1980FordGran.cte &amp;~to

t bo•. 2 fOWl {already bradl, fi
plgo. CaH 6t4-379-2t&amp;8.

mo. 1100 dep. Rltf. r«1ulred.

beAow HoUcllft'· lnn, KeneJge.

owner.

lndNi&lt;tJal "-'Iter leBIOMS. be·
ginners. serious guitarist. Bruf..
carc:Ns Muaic. 61,..44fr0887,
Jeff Wemall'f lnttruC1or, 614446--80?7. limited openings .

0

sleeps 6, roof •r. elec.

57

Musical
lnstrumants

• Gll

hook- up, -

extra rolling frame. 814· 247·
4861 wenlngs, 814· 949· 2888
clava.

AK Cregiatered Siberian Mus kay.
shots end wormed. health gue-

Fortuna I;)

1978 Dodge Motor Home. 22

rantood. 304-87&amp;·2t93.

Stud Poodle, regiatered whtte
toy , phone 304--876· 6298.

aJ • d2l tiS Wheal of

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

fl ..

UNHAME

e

- · · oe&amp;.OO,goodoond. 36417t-t7t4.

do .... bl-ln~ · 1976 Corvette l.82. 4 speed. . Will
pelntlng, interior It .:tertor
numbers milch. AC. PS, PB, decorating. 25 yra. •P•ience.
PW, T and T, new tlr1111. bladt on Colllt4-245-9097.
tan. 614·247·4881 evenings,
8 14- 949-2B B6 dCJf.
.
B2 . Plumbing
t9&amp;8CorvotteProj-. 14. 327.
S. HHting
385. automatic.. h.,d top with

63

Call lt4-9B2-7787.

t986 Dodge 800.... o.. eli.
AM -FM ,
tir•. Cl8h price,
e4899. John's Auto Sal•·

1986 Nissan Mufme GL. Many
a~~tras indudlng electric•un roof

19"n M·Oiean• oombin'- 4
row corn head. 13ft grtlln tebl_.,
MC cond, kiep In dry, 1 150--C
dozer, winch, good eond
30.000. 304-937-20t8.
.

1 •d 2 bed-

GOVERNMENT SEI2ED Vek~
cles from I 100. Fords. Mer·
cedea, Corvettes, Ch811Y•· Sur.
phu . Buyers Guide. (1)
B05-887-8000. EAt. S ·t0189.

304-876-li800.

F8rmEqulpment. ZetorTractora.
Howerd Rotevaton. Blades,
Feeder Rings. Buytng old batter·
111. Morrill Equipment. Autlt~td.
Ohio 8t4-742·2485.
.

month. Depo.tt required. e14-

6t4-448-2342. Mov bo , _ . ,

The Gallipolis Deity TribJne. 8 ·1
weakd-vs.

7048.

2811-8522.

Apertrnent for rant. 1226 •

1984 Chll'lly Chwette. Automatic. AM radio. elmost naw

pu,.,...,

2 bedroom Apta. for rent.
Corp ..od. Nice totting. l.oundry
fl&lt;lhl• ........... Call 8t4-'
992·371t. EOH.

Jmmedilleoccupency. c.ll 814-

448-2784.

II) Cartoon E1preu
1211 You Can Be a SUir
8:35 ()) Andy Orlllllh
7:00 CD Our Houaa WMMrspoon
War
e W PM Magazine
(]) lpcHtCanlet (L)
(J)
~ c ....nt AHalr
(lJ (!) MacNeill Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)

FRANK AND ERNEST

Faur P20675R1 5 Unlroy.l Tiger

79

I

1111 WKIIP In Cincinnati

Smol blade Ckovv C nrlta 2Jc4•
Wliend Tunnel Rem ttalll wtl:h
Holler;o C.rburltorL Wei end we
-40 4x2 with c.rburltOI'a. Elderbrock .treel nwter Intake (for :
quadl. Vot otoelnhlfl•. 2 H....,- .
thtften. M -22 rock crulher. 220
Munev. tl88 Corv- lub
caps, 19e&amp;-70 stock Corvette
talb cep1. Country Corvettn.
Racine. Ollio. 8t4-949-2BB8.

Auto's For Sale

n•

Own• wll finMce. C•ll 614--

245-91595.

:~t2.

8 '00PM.

-

BR .• c•peeed, rtrfrlg. l ltOYe
furnletwd. Vflf'( ciHn. c.n 814-

room •Pa1menta et Vlllaga
M.,or end Atv ...kle A-'·
menls In Mlddteport, From

Remington automatic Model
7400, 30.06 with 4x12 soope.
Phone 304· 676- 5431 after

mower. $69!5. MF reka. 1196.

181 Third Aw.. Galllpoll· 2

GI'IICiOUI lving.

Surplu1 army cemoufta~ge, denim. r.Uel. Carhart dothlng.
Smell ermv ecces•ori•. Frl.
Set, Sun, noon til 8:00 PM.
(Nov. Dea open 7 d.,s) . Sam
Somerville' s, East-Ravenswood
junctton lndep-.dence Road,
old Rt. 21 . (New Ere( insulated
camouflage coverall• t27.80.

rl.:::::::~:::~:::::::::..t:8:0:0·:•:3:J.:3:4:5·:3.::;;:;;:;;:::;,.

cluded. •too dop. No patL Call
814-448-38t7.

t..rge living room wh:h •,-ulo
room. 2 BR ., niW c•pet. CA.

Mlnn Kota 35 motor.

Ewm ings 614-992·6860.

.f37S. lamps tZI to t12&amp;.
Dinettes 1109 and up to 1496.
. 2 BR .. ell utlllti• plid 81: Rio Wood table w-8 chairs t288 to
· Grande. Allo 11R .. total elec. at *79!i. Desk $100 up to 1376.
Rio Grande. Call 614-24S. Hutch• 8400 and up. Bunk
comp1•e w -mllttr•••
5223.
1296enduptol395. 8et.ubedl
Furnished effldency . t1 ISO. Utif.
....,
rti• paid. 7 Nell. O•lllpolft. Csll t~,1 ~ ~~r~':' : : : :7':,'1:,0:
448-4416eft•7PM .
t88. Queen lett t260 a up,
KJng *360, 4 drMer ch•t S69.
Furnilhad op~r~--.
.,_., t BR . G un cebln8ts 8 gun. Bet...
• 225. Util~let
920Fourt•,
....,
11
" -ld.
rtettr"'" $36 &amp; $46. Bed
G.. ll poNa. Cell448--4418efter7 fr.-n~ 120, $30 &amp; King frame
PM.
t 50. Good select ton of bedroom
suhn. mate! cebinets, heed·
Unlnniohod opt.. 2 BR .. air bo•da t30 and up to t65.
oondltioned. t200 a mo. 8200
......... ...

Nice-2 8A . apt: . 4'h mil• from
Gallipolis. Stove, rcolri!&gt;l!o water
furnished. 1226 • mo. No p111,
c ... 814-4411-8038.

•t.6&amp;0.00. Call Aqua Tech.
304-523- 82B8.

AKC registered Siberian Hu1kay
4 weeks old. both
parents can be seen, 1200.00.

wh:h

71

tir•. 80,000 mil•. Ae• seal
Buy direct from manufacturer needs replaced. t1000. For
end save eu . Spe'• starling • · more informatlon cell P8ul M

Mbted h•d wood IIebi. $12 per
buncle. Containing eppro~~t . 1"h:
ton. Ohio Pallet Co.. Pomeroy.
Ohio. 81•·992·6•81 .

Ave. GeiUpoUs. OH.

deposh. 8 moa. 1.,..• Cell
814-367· 0438.

Y1tnity . 304-878-52e9 oftar
4 '00PM.

West Highland white Terriers
AKC pupplea. 1mall and smart.
Cell 614-387·0824.

Sat. 6t4-4411-1899, 627 3rd
:

indl wood batfwoom

Firewood-all h•dwood. Split &amp;
loaded. Good pickup. $25. CaM

8t4-268-1768.

County Ar.pli.,ce, Inc. Good
und appt .. ces end TV 18c1.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thru

to S596. Redinera S226 t o

•2

Reg. Oech•hund. Has peper1.
t75. Caii614-448-0924.

ltllrt109:' $99.

Nov. 1tt. t225 plus dep. Cal
614-446-0803 or 44&amp;-2168.

Used

8t4-448- 9684

•t.396. Call
aft• 6 PM .

USED· Beds. dressars. bedroo'm

B21Y, See E.::et cond., 2 BR..

23 cu ft choot typo ...., 1r.... a.

Mha Copy Star 900 copy
machine. t350. Cell 614-446·

5t04.

Sofas end ehelrs prieed from
t396 to *996. Tablaa $60 end
up to t126. Hlde-a ·beds $390

Transporlt~lion

Misc . Merchandise

orc.l8t4-448-4839.
Modern 1 BA . downtown. compl~a kMchon. ajr, earpot. Oopotit, no pets. Call 814· 448-

equipped krtchen, air. A\otlllable

5 332. 8,00 til 9,00 AM .

.

3 yr. old Mevteg portable
diahwast..· 1 Z ft. John boat

992·5724. After 8prn or 9925119.

,.12 t4oc70 Llborty-3 Bodo

tl88 ,.. .wood. t21c64, boltlo
~.- .,d hoi w-. UOOO.
Coli 814-64J.P10 or 8t4I.P.I401 onv•lm&amp; Alk 1or
o.tny.

included. Starting ot *299 per
mo. C.U 814-367· 7850.

2 bedroom unfurnished. 12x80
In Ch•klro. Call 304-8711-9780
or lt4-448-43B9.

"'ivote lot. Call I t4-448-t40'9,
4-IPM .

7748.

Antique be• cans•. make ..

1 Br. apt. unfurnished n_.
HMC. *118 1 mo. wet• In-

tl7f'I!IODno. 2BR .. --n~
t:llcll........ out. 03000. Cal
114-317·7t11.tlw&amp;PM.
nNNM. 2 bii:M, n.v c.pa
... up. 0,_ Torr- •tt,OOO.
c.. tt+2&amp;8-80t0 ., 448-

BR .. full botk upotolrs. powder
room downotairo, CA., dio·

Will had corn. lnc;lJ~EFAP
QOrn. Alto, will su
end
dellv er 11wdust. 3 4· 773·

off•. 304-876-8822.

Luxurtou 1 Tera Townhou 11

Adutu onfv. Ref. requi'ed. No
pets. CaN 614-44&amp;.0338.

g.,•,

2&amp;28.

FLWnished Rooms

49

acr•

corn for silega Mor·
WoodlarNn Farm. Rt. 36,
Pliny. WVo. 304-t37-20tB.
24

1124E. M.Jn Street. Pom•oy.
Hours: M,T,W 10e.m. to 8p.m..
Sunday' 1 to 8p.m. 81.-.992·

shop and mcwiee. 614-448--

288B. E.O.H.

Antiques

Buy or S•U. Riverine Antiques.

Small ~t. Jackson AlA rear,
rent S135.00 month sea..rfty
deposit · required. call 304-8754480 ext. eo Of' &amp;3.

46 · Space for
· hOok- ~.

IIJl ed21 Cll-•
• Gll WKRP In Clnclnn1111
0 lnalcle Pollllca 'II

I'D ~TimR ~TAM.

53

lette rs of the
fou r scromb le~ words be·
low to form four simple words

•

(!) Nightly lluttlneoa llapart

Fwnished one bedroom apt,
ecliHs only. no pets. call after

t519.

••-in

Auto Parts
A CC4!110ries

e ~ ABC Nawsl;)
(l)lodyEieclrlc

2 BR . apts. 8 closet., kftd1en-

C~do

Reol tslale

2 be~oom mobile homa fur·
nis had, • 100.00 deposit
1200.00 month plus g• end
electric. Phone 304-876--6512
eft• 2:00PM.

Farms for Sale

quollt,11t.
·from
to normollr
•eo. ·overl"lcod
280

Femll¥' room.

a.

EVER'&lt;THIN6 ON TloiE
DOCTORS'.. WloiO
TloiE
DOCTORS .,, ~.M,.

00Premiere
II8A Today seasom

37t6. E.O .H.

304-8?5-t3B8.

Ashton, beeutlfulllrge building

bnndt 2800 otyloo. 117.900 to
e29.900: Inventory. training.
fbl:tul'll. Uf•e. grand opening.
ltc. Cln open 15 dirt. Mr.
..,._.,.. 18t218as.•228.

3 .... ooms. fullv c.peted,
CMtralalr. all electric. Vrwy rice.
In Middleport. Call 61 • ·992·
5868.

DearltUI Junior High L.D.

Is terrilied when her dad
aoes lnlo lhe hospital. 1;1
(!) Dr. Who The Daemons,
Part t
.•!Ill Happy Doyo
0 Showtllz Todoy
1111 F - o1 LHo
II) Fat Albert
Ill Fandltngo
6:05 CD La...,. and Shirley
6:30 .III tiS NBC Nlgh11y Newa

LAW't'ERS BLAME

76

O Recitrange

•1121

(J)

tr.. h pickups provided. Meintenanoe free living close to shopping. bMkl and tchoola. For
morelnformetion call 30~882·

2_bedroom 1211;66 mobile home.
loatted Routh Len-. Ch•hire,
Ohio. 304- n:t-&amp;828.

price dellgn•. mutti tier pricing
dllaounl: or family •hoe rtar•.
Alit• pr~ unMM••blefor top

31

Compl.te hou11hold furnlsft.
ings. lh mile out Jefrlcho.

Now eccflptlng •pplicatlons for

All electric 14x70, 2 bedroom.
1 "h blths, p.tlllty fUrnilhed.

unlunilhed. must be moved.
loc•ted in Bufhlo. W. Va .
•e.ooo. oo or belt off•- 304773-5028 aft• 5 '00 PM.

from: Je.,· SPort""•·

2 •bedroom ~pwtments, fully
c•peted. appliance~ , 'Nit• and

One bedroom apt In Point
"••ant, ~rv Clean end good
cond, will rflflt furnished or
unfurnished, no pets, phone

19 74 mobile home, 14x 70,

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. ,_mm.,dl that you
do busin. . wtlh people you
know, tndNOTto aendmon-v
ttwouGh the mal untl you h~r~e
irwettlglled tt. off•lng.

Nice bright Mobile Home in the
Country. Yldnlty of Five Points
.. d a. .hen. AduHs only. 1186
month. 8t4-948·2918.

IIJl

(I)Bporq~

304- BB2·2566.

3 bect-oom ell electric, 12x8&amp;,
$200.00 month plus utlttillll.
phone 304--876-4088.

F111311CI31

Business
Opportunity

Bteeh Street. Middleport. Ot'tlo.
2 bedroom furnished apartment.
utlh:i• paid, referances. Phon.a

1988 Brittany 14x70, ell elaclrio. lot 78•t7311. Ot5.000.00.
Hen·t ord n.. teerda courts.
304-882'2844 aft• 5,oo PM .

Community, Z bect-oom, fur·
nit ked. t2Jcl0, 304-8711-30 19.

Of'

etiS CDNawa&lt;ll e !ll
(lJ

448-7444.

WOlD
GAMI

Epllodea

Motorcycles

IF IT~n.&gt;T/11,,

Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

•

8:00 CD Bonanza: TlMi LoOI

9a.m . •

6,oo. 304-875-3788.

actras, good cond. t9.000. 00.
Call 304-8715-1966 before2:00
PM or .-.vtime Saturdays.

c;hoDM

74

. WED., NOV. 2'
EVENING

PICKENS USED RJR'IITURE -

For tow prices onQuanty Clrpel
le Furniture come to Mollohln
Furnltu,.Upper River Rd .• 814-

Moble homes, % mile out Send
Hill Rd. 304-876-3834.

TrH work wan1ed· topplng,
pruning, removals, buahea
trimmed. F,.. attlmate. ~II
8t4-4411-8078 or 304-875·
4883.

Own your ipparel

•

houees.
Pt. PI ell! ant. andGII)IIipo11..-----------r----------~ lit.
614-4411-822t
.

32

21

""D '10 L~ ~·

"Well, honey, the kids have 'f..::.~."';.~;.':!,~ l2~o~.::!~
all grown up and haven't left ~O:.,";,s~~~!':.!"!: ~~.. ~t
2276
6
home. Now what?"
•fl• • ·m.
APARTMENTS. mobile hornet,

:;:n-..,.~fo~~::~~-~

Dozer •

I

8t4-992-3065.

8 - -11 -.,_.,,...,,nl

18

J l!o S FIIRMTURE
1•11SEatt•nAw.
.
4 driWir chen S41. 5 driW•
ch11111, • &amp;4. 915. 5 pc. wooden
dlnnette seta. t199. 915.

Now accepting appllc.tlons for
1 bedroom ep.tment. Onty
elderty, · mobftity imp .. red or
handicap need apply. Financed
bv Farmers Home Administl'll·
tio n, Equal hou ..ng opportunity.
Applications are .,ell.,e Mon.
Frl~.,. .

,uzuu S©\\JUM-~t~S®
_ __ _..;___: Eolitool by ClAY I. ,OILAN
THAT DAILY

'71 Et&amp;O· Eoonolln .. •soo.oo.
304-17&amp;-22t8,.. - r · 1:00
PM.
'

7572. Hours 9 -6.

Cell 614-992·22715 atrer .6 PM .

tlwough

WE~l , 116Q::, FII'ST

W.O.

3 · p.rn . only', at the office at
StoM~Noods apts. 205-1100
Powell St., Mid(!epon, Ohio.

Situations
Wanted

15

Furniture
"'•Ppllcan
ew andYelllrf
uud furniture atd
ces . C.ll 114 -448·

304-6711-t4&amp;0.

dey

4

t98t Chevy VIII, 32.000octuol
mil•. 01.500.00. 304-875·
1280.

OhMr wcwktrs IV• 1515 ...,dover.
l'tllidMt Gf W.1 VW;inla. pllrt
time. 20 hn Weelt ·~- 38 hour.

Vans S.

•

'

�•

Paga

----~-~-~

Receive
Up To
We Reserve The Right To
limit Quant1t1es

$1200

STORE HW:JRS
Monday 'thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

1',4 .por k

LB

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;
lB.

Fryer .Parts •••••.l!·•••• 49&lt;

HOMEMADE PORK

Turkeys •.••.••.•.••·:•••. 99&lt;

i ~~==:;

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$
Head Lettuce .•••• 2/ 1
HANGING ROCK GRADE A

..,•

Large Eggs ••••••••••••
FLAVORITE

2°/o Milk ••••••~A~

.......

$1'49

MOUNTAIN TOP

.......
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Stuffing •••••••••••~~~ •. 79&lt;
.
. DE!ERGENT
$ 99 FLAVORITE WHIPPED .·
Topping ••••••••~~~••• 3/Sl
Tide ••••••••••••••••••••••oz. 5

.

2 :
~

TURKEY OR CHICKEN

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Bacon

~.

••• •
••
•••
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•······················
••
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SAVORY

Hill bid is
accepted for
•
new cruiser
•

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STOKElY

••
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CANS
. . -

-

Limit 24 c- hr Customtr
Goo4 O!lly At Pow ..'s !up" Volu
-IeoNI Suit., Oct. 30 thru Sot. Nov. S, 1988

39

oz.

0

TOMATO JUICE

COFFEE

,l:z. $299

0
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$599

limit 1 Por C111tamer
Good Only At Pow••• Sup. Valu
Good Sun., Oct. 30thru Sat., Nov. S, 1911

•••

46

oz.

69&lt;

•

Limit 1 Per Customer
•
Good Only AI Pawoll's !up" Valu
•
Good Sun., Oct. 30 thru Sot., Nov. S, 1988·, •
•

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2

2 Soctiono, 18 Pog• 26 Conta •
A Multlmodlo Inc. Nawapopor

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 3, 1988 .

•

:.

Chuck Roast •••.l:.••• Sl 79
BONELESS
Stew Meat •••••••~.... $2'19

.

Vol.39. No.128
Copyrightod 1988

Showers likely tonight. Low
In low 508. Chance of rain 60
percent. Friday, high In mid
60s. Chance of rain 80 percent.

•

•

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0
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: ;;J Ill
Ill
""
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Ill • 0
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U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

15-16-25-26-30..32

•

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••
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~
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t"\.111
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: Sl "' :I: ~ -

Sausage ••••••••.••':·••• $119

012
Pick4

HERE IS HOW
IT WORKS.
BRING THE
ATTACHED
COUPONS AND

Lo1n
• ......... $119

MIXED

Daily Number

Page 3

On The
Purchase of
Your
Thanksgiving
Turkey

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 30, THRU SAT., NOV. 5, 1988

Ohio Lottery

3470

OFF

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH . ·

SWIFT'S BUTTERBALL-6 to 22 LB. AVG.

Walt Weiss
AL Rookie
of the Year

•

•••
••

••••••••••••••• •••••••

sealed behind the speaker and cbattln&amp; with Melp County
Treasurer George Collins. Also pictured, seated left to right, are
Melp Couaty Comrntssloner Rlcbard Jon~• . Mrs. George
Volnovlcb, Miller and Collins, steve Story, unopposed candidate
for Melp Couaty Pr011ecut1ng A.tlorney, Melp County Court
Judge Palrlcl&lt; O'Brien and Melp County Sberlff Howard Frank.

POLfflCA.L RALLY - Clevelaud Mayor Georce Volnovich,
Republican candldale for U.S. Senate, was well·recelved
Wedaeaday In Melp County. Area residents, lncludln1 a number
of students from Melp and Eastern Local School Dlslrlcls, braved
cbUiy wlads off the Ohio River and gathered on tbe upper parlda1
lot Ia Pomeroy tO bear remarks from tbe seaatorlal candidate,
showa here at lbe podium, and U.S. Congressman Clarence Miller,

Voinovich
and Miller
•
campargn
in Meigs
Cii.veiand Mayor a~d U.S.
Senatorial candidate George Vol• novich joined U.S. Congressman
Clarence Miller at the Pomeroy
parking lot Wednesday to meet
with fellow Republicans and talk
to Meigs Countlans on the campaign trail for both candidates.
Arriving In Pomeroy around
10:20 a.m., with his wife, Janet,
Volnovich, mayor of Cleveland,
made his promise to southern
Ohio to take note and work for the
area. He told the more than 60
people on the airport landing how
he wants to make Ohio the
number one state In federal
funding, the way he did for
Cleveland.
"I led the nation In bringing
back federal money In Cleveland," Volnovich said. "I want to
do the same for Ohio."
Volnovlch said he wants to
work with local, state and federal
officials so there wUl be a senator
working for southeastern Ohio.
He said he would lobby for coal
miners and do all he could for
farmers.
"I want to be a lobbyist for
miners," Volnovlch . said. "No
senator has paid attention to the
needs of the miners In southeastern Ohio."
Volnovlcb said he would help
farmers and promote a write oft
for health Insurance program.
"Metzenbaum hasn't bad
farmers on his lips In 12 years."
The polls show that Metzen·
baum Is ahead of Volnovlcb, but
Volnovlch said the only polls that
matter are the voting polls.
· "All polls are ridiculous. The
only polls that matter are the
ones voters go to," Volnovlch
said. "I hope that Ohio realizes
Continued on page 12

Petition .asks ·Meigs
Commissioners to OK
contract, end strike
Approximately 75 pages of a effort by strikers to obtain a fair
·---petition containing· about 1,ll00 - contract comparable to Departsignatures of Meigs County resl- ment of Human Services condents who support the Meigs tracts of surrounding counties, Is
County Department of Human a reasonable effort, and urged
Services' strike, were presented the commissioners to accept the
Wednesday to the Meigs County union contract proposal and
Commissioners by Barry Bolin bring an end to the strike.
and Brad Miller, rerpresentlng
In presenting the petitions,
Ohio Council 8, American Feder- Bolin said he felt that citizens, by
at ton of State, County and Munic· signing the petitions, were saylpal Employees .
lng that "It's time "to be adults
The petitions stated that the
Continued on page 12

Two seats are up
for grabs in Ohio
Supre~e Court races
DisPLAYS PETITIONS - Brad Miller, staff
represenlstlve for Oblo Council 8, American
Federallon of State, County and Municipal
Employe~. spreads out a petition ·of about 73
pages and containing approximately 1,1100 signa·

tures of people wbo support the Melp County
Department of Human Services' strike. Miller,
and Barry Bolin, atso of A.FSCME, presented the
petitions Wednesday to lbe Melp County
Commissioners.

. .

Eastern seeks
yes
vote
on
.
12.4 mill tax levy Tuesday
.

.

Without a yes vote on the 12.4
mUl school tax levy at Tuesday's
election, the quality of the
educational program offered to
Eastern Local students will continue to suffer and will deterlorlate even more.
This Is the message from
members of the district's board
of education In a statement ·
Issued today .

r--Local news briefs-Sheriff probes B &amp; E
Sheriff Howard Frank reports his department received a call
Wednesday evening at 7:17p.m. of a breaking and entering at
an unoccupled ·house on Sum11er Road. The house Is owned by
Linda Fitch.
According to the slierlff's report, Fitch observed a red tru~k
leaving the house about 7:15p.m. Upon Investigation, she found
·
some furniture missing from the bouse.
The Incident Is under Investigation by the sheriffs
department and anyone who may have observed a red plck;-uP
truck In the Sumner Road area anytime Wednesday evening, Is
asked to call the sheriff's department with the lnformatlon 11

Police continue investigation
Pomeroy Pollee are continuing tbelr Investigation of a
robbery at the home of Mrs. Marie Robinson, Mulberry Ave.
Mrs. Robinson awoke early Tuesday morning to find a man
standing over her bed. He gagged her and tied her hands and
demanded money. Mrs. Robinson revealed the_l?Catlon of her

.

•

A bid of $13,150 from Pat Hill · tiy the commissioners no later
Fotd to provide a 1989 Ford LTO than Noll. 16. The transfer
Crown VIctoria as a new sheriff's request must be submitted to the
cruiser was accepted Wednesday Ohio Department of Litter Con·
by the Meigs County trol by Nov. 20.
A $900 Interdepartmental
corllrn!~s_ioners .
The bid was accepted subject transfer within the SoU Conser·
to final approval by Meigs vatto'n Service budget was
County Sheriff Howard Frank. approved.
No delivery date on the new
cruiser was given In the bid,
At the request of Meigs County
reported Mary Hobstetter, clerk- Prosecuting·Attorney Fred Crow
treasurer.
III, the commissioners adopted a
A request for a D·l liquor resolution naming Teresa Tyson
license transfer from Karen S. Drummer as administrator of
Werry, doing business as Sum· . the Meigs County Community
merfleld's Restaurant, Chester, Corrections Program.
In other matters, the commls·
to James Raymond Stewart,
doing business under the same stoners discussed briefly the ·
name at the same address, has proposed Ohio River boat launch
been .received by the commls· . faclllty near Forked Run State
stoners. Any objections to the Park at Long Bottom, and
license transfer must be received landfill regulations.

Continued on page 12

-.

"Just as Importantly, the qualment Fund In order to get
Ity of life. In our community will through this school year. No_t
suffer, and our kids will be hurt," only are we going to have to pay
the board states.
this loan back, we'll have to pay It
The statement continues:
back with Interest. Obviously,
"Over the last three years the this Is not an answer.
district, because of the need to
"Clearly, what we have to do Is
try to be as fiscally responsible pass the levy. Locally, we need to
as , possible and because of the do more for ourselves, more for
defeat of the renewal levy In our kids and more for our
November, 1987 followed by the cOmmunity. The 12.4 mills being
defeat of that levy attempt In requested Is what the district
. May, 1988, bas seen the district's needs In order tobeabletooffer a
educational program virtually minimally adequate educational
gutted. Nine teaching, adminiS- program. And, this would still
trative and support staff posl- · put our local effort at approxlm·
lions have been abolished. Addi- nl!ately the average of our
tionally, kindergarten has been neighbors.
changed back to full day. alter·
"The average voted tax rate
nate days and the board has bad for school districts In Gallia,
to eliminate Its support for Athens and Washington Counties
athletics and extra currdclular Is 3U mllls. Eastern's voted
actfvltles. No textbooks, no II· mlllage Is 20.5 mUls, the lowest of
brary books and no replacement any, and the lowest allowed by
school buses have been pur· law. In fact, If It were to go any
chased, repair_of eq ulpment anp lower tbe district would lose Its
facilities bas not been able to be state foundation payment.
done, no replacement eq)llpment
"Currently, the state provides
has been purchased.
77 percent of the total support for
"Needless to say, these defi- our schools. In fact, on the basis
ciencies have had a very nega- of the amount of state support as
tive effect on the overall educa- a percentage of total revenues,
tional •program of tbe district.
Eastern Is receiving a greater
And, If the Nov. 8 levy doesn't precentage than 92 percent of all
pass, things will get much worse. school districts In Ohio. In other
Our kids will be burt even more.
words, we receive a higher
"We are already projected to percentage. of our total revenues
have to borrow $38,000 from the from the state than 566 out of a
Emergency SChool Advancetotal of nl6dlstrlcts In the state."
' \~

EDITOR'S NOTE: This 18 the
fourlb In a series of articles
prepared by United Press International's Ohio bureaus about
the candldales and Issues Involved In next Tuesday's election. To day's arllcle summarizes
the contests for lwo seats on the
Ohio Supreme Court.
~--

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - In one race for

the Ohio Supreme Court this
year, experience on the bench Is
a major campaign issue. In the
other one, both jurists have the
same experience and are trying
hard to raise other Issues.
Justice A. William Sweeney. a ·
Democrat who has served on the
high court since 1977, Is being
challenged by Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court Judge Paul
Malia, a Republican.
Continued on page 16

Wal-Mart to locate
new facility in Gallia
The 68,907 square-foot store Is
BENTONVILLE. ARK. ~peeled
to open In the spring of
David D. Glass. president and
1989.
Landmark
Capital Corp. of
chief executive officer of WalNasvllle,
Tenn
..
Is the developer
Mart Stores, Inc., announced
of
the
project.
plans to open a Wal-Martstore In
Gallipolis expected to hire ap- .
"We are very excited about
proximately 125 people.
opening
the new store In GallipoConstruction of the new store,
lis,"
said
Glass. "Wai-Martplans
which will be located off Eastern
to
be
an
active member of the
Avenue at Airport Road, Is
community,
working with other
scheduled to begin later this
local
merchants
to Increase
year.
retail busineSs In and around the
Gallipolis area. We also .look
forward to contributing to local
charitable causes and projects
through our ongoing community
.Involvement programs," he
added.
The new store, designed as a
one-stop family shopping center,
will carry name-brand mercban'
dlse In 36 departments. In addition, the Gallipolis store will
Include a gatden center, a
pharmacy, a snack bar and a
ttre, battery and auto service
center for customer shopping
convenience.
The new store will be one of the
first Wal-Mart stores to open In
Ohio and one of1,2051n the United
States. The 26-year-old chain,
which operates In 25 states, will
open · approximately 145 stores
DAVID D. GLASS
this year.
••
l

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