<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12293" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12293?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-12T19:49:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43265">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/5898248870eaa20a4ab7d6c804c30af3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d0717b5aa7fadc3300c8d0ac77065914</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38602">
                  <text>-· -.--- ....

--~-

'

~---

' .

Page

10

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

r---Local news briefs ... --~
Continued from page 1
three Individuals were treated at the hospital and released.
Citations are pending in the incident, the sheriff's department
spokesman said.

Squads receive seven calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven
calls Monday; Middleport at 3:09a.m. to Peach Circle Drive for
Thelma Collins to Veterans Memorial Ho~pital; Pomery at
10:50 a.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Ethel Rife to
Veterans Memorial Ho "'L&gt;.J ·-'"" "'ne at 1: 42 p.m. to Route 124
for George Black to Veterans Memo I Hospital; Middleport at
4:15 p.m. to Lincoln Hill for Evely
ight to Veterans
Memorial Hospltaf; Rutland squads at 4:58 . . transproted
Brandon and Amanda Black and Angle Spangler from an au to
accident on Main St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 9: 37 p.RJ. to the corner of Cole and Second Sts. for
Robbie Clonch to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
11:58 p.m. to 200 Lasley St. for David Goodwin to Veterans
Memorial Hos pita!.

Tuesday, November B. 1988

Ohio .weather tut'lts ·out good for voters
By United Press International
Voters in many sect Ions of the
nation's heartland and In the
Pacific Northwest awoke to rain
on Election Day today, whlle
snow made Its seasonal debut In
Boise, Idaho.
Early morning rain fell
throughout Ohio, but the clouds
ga_v e way to bright sunshine
during mid-morning hours as
Buckeye voters began turning
out In droves.
The Great Lakes states piled
up a few Inches of snow before
dawn with more expected
through the day In Wisconsin,

where overnight temperatures
hovered Jn the 20s and 30s, said
Dan McCarthy, National
Weather Service forecaster.
Rain sloshed ahead of a low
pressure system over Illinois
early today, with light rainfall
over the western Ohio and
western Tennessee valleys late
Monday. Later today, McCarthy
predicted showers from New
England to the upper Ohio
Valley, with western New York
state and northern Ohio bearing
the brunt o! the damp weather.
Showers today also wlll be
widely scattered from the upper

Eastern band project underway
Starting today, Nov. 8, the Eastern High School Band will be
· 1;0nducting their annual Cheese and Sausage Sale. The sale will
continue through Nov. 15.
Among the products being sold are varieties of spreadable
cheese, summer sausage, mustards, chocolate fudge and
bakery type cookies and cakes. Th.e band Is also selUng
Christmas wrapping paper and ribbons.
Proceeds from the sale will be used for new music lor the
band, lnstr!lment repair and contributions to the band uniform
fund. The band boosters also must pay for bus trips to away
football games and marching band contests. The band will
receive approximately 40 percent proftt from the sale.
Band members will be contacting residents In the community
during thiS week of the Cheese and Sausage Sale to take orders.
If you are not been contacted and would like to place an order,
please call Band Booster President Ken Fausnaugh, at 667-6485,
or Vice-President Bill Buckley at 992-2996.

Ohio Valley across the southern
Appalachians to portions of Alabama anti Mississippi, and will
make a swipe from the Pacific
Northwest to the . northern and
central Plateau region, with
snow over parts of Montana and
Wyoming.
One to 2 Inches of early

Weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low
between 30 and 35. Light and
variable winds.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
· with highs near 60.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A chance otshowers Thursday,
with fair conditions both Friday
and Saturday. Highs will be
between 50 and 60 Thursday and
between 45 and 55 Friday and
Saturday. Early morning lows
will be In the 30s.

morning snow was reported
across northeast Wisconsin.
Green Bay reported 2 Inches of
snow already on the ground
before daybreak. McCarthy predicted snow accumulatlonsof2 to
4 Inches across the area later
today .

Dance slated
The Senior Citizens are spon. sorlng a round and square dance
on Friday from a to 11 p .m. at the
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry Heights In Pomeroy. Music
wUI be by True Country. The
public is Invited. Those plan·nlng
to attend, bring snacks.

Fall festival set

-·' '

The Rutland PTO is sponsoring
a fall festival at the Rutland
Grade School on Saturday, Nov.
19, from 6 to 9 p.m. Games for
children, food, door prizes, a
variety show, giveaways, a general store, and more, will be
featured. Everyone welcome.

Dinner Nov. 12
The Ladles Auxlllary of the
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department Is having its annual
turkey dinner thIs Saturday,
Nov. 12. at the Tupper Plains
Fire House. Serving will start at
4: 30 p.m. and the menu will
Include turkey, dressing ,
mashed potatoes, gravy, green
beans, homemade noodles, cole
slaw, dlnn~r rolls, pie and
beverage, all lor $4.50. Everyone
welcome.

hazard to operate, that General
Motors and McDorman have
failed and refused to repair the
vehicle, resulting In a breach of
warranty.
Also flied in the court was an
action by Ronald Raymond,
Alpany, against Cooper Chrysler
Dodge, Inc., Middleport. Raymond c h~ges defects in the
vehicle which he purchased, and
asks lor the return of the
purchase price of $8,995, the
trade-In allowance of $5.195',
incidental and consequential
damages of $25,000 and punitive
damages of $50,000.

DAR to meet
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, will meet Friday at 1
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds Mrs. Joseph Colburn,
state vice regent, will be the
gues I speaker on the "Broad
Blue Ribbon History of DAR."
Members are· asked to take
Christmas gilts for veterans.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Reynolds,
Mrs. George Skinner. Mrs. Mark
Grueser, Jr., . Mrs. Wilson Carpenter, and Mrs. Melvin Van
Met'er.

Dinner set Nov. 17
The 'Rutland Fire Department's annual turkey dinner will
be Thursday, Nov.17, beginning
at 5 p.m., at the Rutland Grade
School. Tickets for the dinner
may be purchased through the
fire department lor $5 each.

Board office to close
The Meigs County Board of
Elections office, Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy, will close at. noon
Wednesday.

A square dance wlll be held
Friday, 7:30 to 11:30 p.m., at the
old Chester Courthouse. Caller
will be John Coss, of Parkersburg, W.Va. Donations will be $2
lor adults and $1 lor children
under 12. Alcoholic beverages
will not be permitted.

Meet Thursday
MGM District Cub and Boy
Scout leader round-table will be
held at the Pomeroy Municipal
Building, second floor, Thursday
at 7:30p.m.

Stocks

The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce will sponsor their annual
Christmas Parade Sunday, Nov. 27th at 2 p.m. in Pomeroy. This parade
is in conjunction with the Merchants Annual Open House. The theme of
the Parade will be (The True Spirit of Christmas). Lineup will be behind
the old Pomeroy High School then proceed throulh town and disband
behind the Pomeroy Fire Department.
.
All groups, clubs and organizations as well as individuals are
invited to participate in the parade.
Please complete the form below and return to the Pomeroy Cham·
ber office or phone 992-5005.
Address: 204 E. Main Street, Pomeroy, Ollio 45769.
TRUE SPIRIT OF CHRISTMAS PARADE FORM-POMEROY CHAMBER
IIAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ADDRESS _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~--

...

B. impressive values on a
variety of lremendous
servicesl C. no added feesl
Congratulations! you get
all ol this and more with
The Club checking
account
package.

Hamar scheduled
The First Church of God in

lrracuse is sponsoring a hoUday

. . .ar this Friday at Kroger's In
f'llneroy .

Meet tonight
The Racine Board of Public
Affairs w!ll meet In special
session tonight (Tuesday), 7
p.m., at the home of Clerk Jane
lleecle.

money·

saving coupons

Memorial
Monday Admissions - Ethel
Rile, Pomeroy; George Black,
Portland; Larry Holsinger, Racine; Evelyn Knight, Pomeroy;
Ivory Bush, Middleport.
Monday Discharges - Kenneth Hartley, Buddy Kuhn, Joseph Reiser, Judy Puckett.

Carll
Protection
Service

SACRED HEART
CHURCH BAZAAR
THURS., NOV. 1Oth

Key Ring and
Registration Service
Emetgency Cash
Advance Service

POMEROY, OHIO

"FREE DELIVERY"

PATRICK O'BRIEN

·Governor Richard F. Celeste will ofllclally open the $28.8
mJUlon US 35 -Bypass at 3 p.m. Monday Nov. 14 at the
Intersection of US 35 and SR. 93.
Celeste returns to Jackson to finish what he started two years
ago at the groundbreaklng of the 4.8 mUe project.
Joining Celeste will be Bernard Hurst, Director of the Ohio
Departmnent pi Transportation (ODOT), who will act as
master of ceremonies. Others on the program include: Morris
L. Tipton, ODOT; Carl Dahlberg, Southeastern Ohio Regional
Commission: .Ron Speakman, Jackson City Service Director;
Rep. Mark Malone and Sen. Jan M. Long along with several
other state and local eiected ofllclals.
Celeste will kick off the event by cutting a huge cake spelJlng
out "US 35". The Jackson High School Band wlll play for the
occasion and first grade classes from Parkvlew Elementary
· will lead the pledge of allegiance to the flag.
Highlight of the event will be the olllclal ribbon "breaking" by
Governor Celeste as he drives through the ribbon with a
semi-truck. Celeste and Hurst also will arrive by semi-trucks,
provided by Davis Trucking of Jackson.
The "Operation Jobs-Highways" was divided into two
phases. The $15.4 million first phase was constructed by
Holloway Construction of Wexorn, Michigan. It involved
relocating 2.97 miles of US 35, from .45 miles northwest of
County 59 to SR. 93. Danis Industries, Dayton, constructed the
$13.4 million second phase, which Included 1.82 miles of US 35
from SR. 93 to o.25 miles northwest of SR. 32.
Those wishing to attend are asked to approach from the east
Broadway end (US 35-SR 32) of the project. Flaggers will be
directing parking.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls Tuesday; Syracuse at 5: 25 a.m. to Third ~t. for Douglas
Enoch to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 11:32 a.m.
to Sumner Road for Charles Machlr to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; ' Middleport at 1:01 p.m. to Mechanic St. In Pomeroy
for Faye Ransom to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, IRADIURY,. MINERSVILLE,
RUTlAND, SYRACUSE, MASON. W.VA.
OIDIU .Sill PHOm Ill llfOII J P.M.
15.00
,. PIICIASI 011 PUSCIImONS PLUS

IWIIU. 111m •s.

PEOPLES BANK

PRESCRIPnON
SHOP
IPOIUIIIIY YIIUIIPIII.ACYI
STOlE HOlliS! ..... Fri. 9 1.11.-6 PAI S.lw•r 9 A.M.· I P.M.
271 JICIITII SICOID
992·6669 , ...U.Oir, 0110

bent Meigs County Court Judge,
retained his judge's seat by
defeating D. Michael Mullen,
making his first bid for a county
lev~! otflce, 4,67a to 4,045.
All other candidates for county
offices, all Republicans, were
unopposed In Tuesday's election,
some of them having defeated
other Republicans to win the
nominations to positions In the
May primaries.
Here',s how th~ voters cast
their ballots for the unopposed
candidates:
Steven Story for prosecuting
. attorney, 5,5a4; Larry F.
Spencer, Incumbent, for clerk .of
court of common pleas, 6,586:
Emmogene Holstein Congo, Incumbent, for county recorder,
6,510; George M. Colllns, incumbent, for county treasurer, 6,600;
Phlllp. M. Roberts.~ lncumbent,
for county engineer, 6,052;
James P. Conde, for. county
coroner, 4,688; Fred W. Crow III,
for judge of the court of common
pleas court, 6,021.

Sqoods ans-Wer 3 Tuesday calls

TO THESE AliAS
~·

O'Brien, Soulsby Meigs

No one was injured in two Meigs County accidents on Tuesday
a ccordlng to the State Highway Patrol. Both accidents Involved
·
deers.
An accident occurred at 7 p.m. Tuesday on SR. 7, at mile post
15, near Chester. Troopers said a car driven by Benjamin F.
Upton, 69, Reedsville, struck a deer. The animal was Injured but
left the scene. Damage was moderate.
,
The other accident occurred at 5:45p.m. Tuesday on SR. 124.
0.3 miles east of mile post 49, near Long Bottom. Troopers said a
vehicle driven by Melvin G. Drake, Jl,'., 60, Long Bottom, struck
a deer. The animal was Injured but could not be found at the
scene. Damage was minor.

Acf:idental
Dnth
Insurance

MEMBER

NEW HAVEN

F.O.I.C.

882-2135

,POJNT PLEASANT
675-1121

MASON

•
WJ .....
tltters
~

Patrol reports two mishaps

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE*

Southern Band Boosters will
meet Thursday evening at 7:30
p.m. at the high school band
room. All band parents of the ·
sehool district are urged to
attend.

9,699' go to local polls Tuesday

Jackson bypass to open Nov. 14

$2/&gt;X) in

2 Secllons, 14 Pages
A Multimedia Inc . NewfiP&amp;per ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday. Nov"ember 9, 1988

..-Local news briefs---.

Everyone Welcome
To meet Thursday

Vol.39, No.130
Copyrighted 1988

Member FDIC

Veteo~ans

TYPE OF ENTRY _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

letum form to the Pom•oy Chamber office.

'

You can see why our
Club checking account
package is a great deal.
Sign up today!

National
Discount Program

Low tonight In mid liOs.
Chance of rain 10 percent
tonight and 90 percent Thursday.

•

.J~SOULSBY

Hospital news

DINNER 5 pm-7 pm

389
Pick 4-

Page4

James M. Soulsby, Pomeroy, a
Democrat and retired Pomeroy
Postmaster, defeated Howard
Frank, Reptibllcan Jncumbent,ln
Tuesday's election to win the post
of Meigs County Sheriff.
The win for Soulsby was his
first attempt for a poUUcal office
on the county level. Soulsby last
month suffered a heart attack.
However, after treatment at
University Hosp)tal In Colum·
bus, he returned home a week
later and picked up again on his
campaign for the sheriff's post.
A total ol 9,699 Meigs County
voters' went tothepoUsyesterday
with 5,~ of them supporting
Soulsby to give him a quite
adequate win over Frank who
received 4.285 tallies. Frank over
the years has been a strong
candidate in bids for several
county offices.
' In the only other county level
race, Patrick H. O'Brien, lncum·

J2209

What's your idea of a great
deal in checking? A. all
the personalized checks
you need at no per check
charge!

Am Electric Power ............. 27'h
A'f&amp;T ................. , .. ;............ 28%
Ashland Oil ........................ 35%
Bob Evans .......................... 16¥.,
Charming Shoppes .......... .... 15¥.,
City Holding Co ................... 30
Federal Mogul. ................... 52'h
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................51¥.,
Heck's ................. :............... %
Key Centurion ....................16%
Lands' End ......................... 23%
Limited Inc ...................... ,.26Y,
Multimedia Inc ...... .............. 70
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12%
Shoney's Inc ......... ,.............. 7%
Wendy's Intl ..................... ... 6%
Worthington Ind ...... ........... 21%
(Limited Inc.'s third-quarter
net was $70,426,000, or $.39 per
share vs. $69,254,000, or $.36 per
share. Third-quarter sales were
$1.010.616,000 vs. $891,726,000.
Average shares were$180,127 ,000
vs. Ua9,922,000. Nine months' net
was $124,991,000, or $.69 vs.
$171,872,000, or $.90. Nine
months' sales were $2,714,795,000
vs $2,517,382,000.)

DINNER
GAMES-PRIZES

Daily Number

You'll get a great deal with The Club!

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

PHONE_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Ohio Lottery

7729

.---

CONTEST WINNER - Bulalt G. Casto, 143 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Is lhe wlaner of a contest to correctly ldenllly a mystery
motorcyclist. Casto was tbe only contestant to correctly name the
rider as Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. A $50 contribution to the
toys for tots program of area motorcyclists to provide Christmas
toys for underprivileged children of Meigs County will be ll'lven In
the name of tbe winner, Ms. Casto. Mayor Seyler Is pictured
without the mask worn In the original mystery rider photo.

-

Homets win
firstNBA
encounter

By BOB HOFLICH
Senll11el News Staff

featuring OV9l

. POMEROY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
CHRISTMAS PARADE

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

Square Dance

Action filed in common pleas court
An action for $270,000 has been
filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Brenda and
Kenneth Nelgler, Middleport,
against General Motors Corp.
and Bob McDorman Chevrolet,
Inc., Canal Winchester.
The plaintiffs charge that they
purchased a 1987 Monte Carlo
from the McDorman agency and
that there have been continuous
defects making the car a safety

-'

Offices to be cl.osed Friday
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District offices will be closed
Friday in observance of Veterans Day. In case of an emergency
on Friday, call985-3315. Offices will open Monday as usual.

Conde,whohasbeenservlngas
for a 'two year period by the
Republicans.
Meigs County Coroner, resigned
Here's how Meigs County vorecently from the post having
moved out of the area to undergo
ters cast their ballots on the
additional medical training. Dr.
national level candidates In TuesR. R. Pickens was appointed as
day's'electlon:
his replacement untn the end of - For President: Bush, 5;479;
thlsyear. Condewhowaselected
Dukakls, 3,702; Fulanl, 35; Larouche, 19; Paul, 21; Wlnn, 15.
to another term Tuesday is now
For U. S. Senate: Metzenexpected to resign a second time
with a replacement to be named
baum, 4,725; Volnovlch, 4,489.

For Representative to Congress: Buchanan, 2,334; Miller,
6,H2.

For State Representative, 94th
Dis trlct, Meigs Countlans gave
Incumbent JOiynn Boster 5,974
votes and her opponent Scott
Sigel, 2,967.
In the contests lor judgeships,
Meigs County votes included:
Justice of Supreme Court,

term beginning Jan. 1, 1989: Paul
Malia, 2,1a7: · A. William
Sweeney, 4,111: Justice of tlie
Supreme Court, term beginning
Jan. 2, 19a9: George, 3,674;
Resnick, 2,82a; Judge, Court of
Appeals, term beginning Feb. 10,
1989: Lawrence Grey. 4,477; for
Judge Court of Appeals, teriJI
beginning Feb. 10, 1989, Harsha,
2, 913; Gerald F. Radcllffe, 3,215.
R.

Meigs school levies ~ejected by voters
Two current expense school 740. In the Meigs Local District
levies were soundly defeatedwhere voters were being asked to
almost by a two-to-one vote-by
approve a five, mill continuing
voters In the Meigs Local and . levy lor current expenses, voters
Eastern Local School District turned down the issue 3,007 to
Tuesday.
1,576.
.
Although school levies failed
In the Eastern Local S(:hool
District, voters were being asked ,, badly, voters Wf!re more generto approve a 12.4 mill continuing ous ln oilier directions approving
tax levy for current expenses.
several new and renewal levies
Voters defeated the levy 1,316 to on the ballot In various

subdivisions,
Voters of Middleport approved
669 to 270 the renewal of a one
mill, five year levy for fire
protection and Pomeroy VIllage
voters approved the renewal of a
one mill levy, 558 to304. That levy
IS also lor fire protection.
In Salisbury Township, voters
approved a new one mill, live
year levy for cemeteries, 1,411 to

1.320. Chester Township voters
approved a new one mlll. live
year levy for fire proectlon 643 to
381. In Rutland Township, voters
approved 4a2 to 279, a .3 mill
renewal for five years of a fire
protection levy. Scipio Township.
gave a stamp
voters also
approval to a 1.5 mill, live year
renewal levy, also for fire protecContlnued on page 5

James Diddle named 'Meigs County's
SEORC 'Person .of Year' honoree
James (Jim) Diddle, president
of the J.D. Drilling Co., Racine,
has been selected as Meigs
Cpunt.y's ho!Jl?ree to receive a
'PersonoftheYear' Award at the
.. 20th annual Southeastern Ohio
Regional Council banquet to be
held Thunday ]!v~:_ntng at 01\!o ~
University Inn, Athens.
The honorees come from theJO
counties emcompasslng the
SEORC and were l)omlnated by
local committees for their efforts
In providing jobs and Industrial
development In their respective
communities.
Robert L. Evans, president of
the SEORC, said the honorees
have given of themselves so that
other · citizens of Southeastern
Ohio might enjoy a better stand-

~Meigs

ard of living.
. fore organizing J. D. Drilling in
Individual entrpereneurs,
May ,1975. He now employs about
owners of SIJ!ail companies,
50 people and opt;·ates wells !n
Hocking, Perry, Gallla, Vinton,
executives of large corporations,
educators, 'officials of govern- Meigs, Lawrence and Jackson
ment and economic development Counties.
groups are among the 1988
He Is married to the former
reclpJeQt$.9J the awarq.
.Linda Carpenter and the couple
A hospitality hour- at 5:30p.m.
has one son, Christopher, who ·
Thursday wlll open the annual graduated hi the spring from the
banquet held to honor Persons of Heritage Christian Academy In
the Year with a banquet at 6: 30 Ravenswood.
p.m. Pomeroy Attorney Bernard
Diddle is a member of the on
Fultz wlll serve as master of ani! Gas Assocatlon, the National
ceremonies.
Independent Business Assocla·
Tickets lor Thursday's event tlon, the AmeriCan Legion, Ramay be purchased through Attor- cine Post 602, Ducks UnUmlted,
ney ·Fuliz.
Eagles, Racine Gun Club, the
Diddle worked Jn the oil and National Rlffteman's Associagas business for other family tion, and the Reganlzed Church,
members for several years be- Latter Day Saints.

•

I

.JAMES DIDDLE

IndustrieS services chamber . topi~

Main St. in Pomeroy . . Meigs a video presentation to promote
By NANCY YOACHAM
Industries' workers are cur- Meigs Industries. The lntroducSentinel News Staff
Services available to busirently Involved In gift wrap lion of the video will Include
training and starting the Sunday background material on Meigs
nesses through Meigs Industries
were explained at Tuesday's
alter Thanksgiving, the Wrap County In general and the type of
Pomeroy Area Chamber of ComShop will be open 1 to 4 p.m. on ·working and living environments
Sundays, .11 a.m. to a p.m.
merce meeting by Larry Hofthat exist In the county. Milliken
fm~J.n, MeigS Industries producMondays through Fridays, and said he Is open for suggestions
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.
from local businesses as to the
tion manager .
Shoppers are welcome to bring type of Information which should
Three years ago, Meigs Industheir packages to the Wrap Shop be included In the lnlrodilctlon of
tries expanded their employment horizons by obtaining confor gift wrapping. Craft and the film.
tracts to clean state roadside
miscellaneous Items will also be
Reappoln ted to serve as
~ members of the chamber's boar~
parks. Other contracts for lawn · sold, Wood said.
David MIIUken, Meigs Indusof directors were Ron Ash, Tom
and janitorial services were soon
tries'
director,
announced
that
he
Reed, Dick Warner, Joe Clark
added to the growing concern.
Since then, Meigs Industries'
Is working on a project to develop
and Jennifer Sheets, lor two-year
personnel have continued promoting and looking for new job
opportunities for Meigs Industries' employees, prlmarUy In
the form of janitorial services,
from general clean up and
window cleaning, to specialized
jobs such as !loor care. Meigs
lnduslrles' janitorial workers
have been employed by Dollar
General Stores in Meigs County
and In Mason, WoOd and Kanawha Counties In West VIrginia,
by Ohio Power Company, the
Racine Dental Clinic, Dr.
Kennedy's ofllce In Middleport,
and others.
But although Meigs Industries
Is a successful operation, Hoffman said additional employ·
ment opportunities are needed,
especially In floor care since this
Is a specialized service provided
by Meigs Industries. ·
Meigs Industries has also been
successful In placing several
workers In regular positions with
local quslness operations. Job
coaching services, tax Incentives
and other benellts are available
to employees who hire the
handicapped, Hottman pointed

terms. Other hoard members
whose terms have not expired
are Bill Nease. Mary Powell,
Bruce Reed, Paul Gerard, who Is
currently Chamber president, ·
and Matt Van Vranken.
Jennifer Sheets repQrted
briefly on the Chamber sponsored "Fall Failles" variety
show which is scheduled for the
Saturday after Thanksgiving.
Nov. 26, a: 10 p.m., at Meigs High
School. The show Is directed by
Bob HoefliCh. Additional people
are needed to sell tickets at the
door and possibly to work back' Continued on page 5

• QUI.

A holiday service which wllllle
offered by Meigs Industries Is
"Santa's Wrap Shop," an·
nounced Cathy Wood, Meigs
Industries' work adjustment specialist. Santa's Wrap Shopwlllbe
Joe ated In the·Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce Office on East

A Ciij:NoJiiiQ
front
JHII'Clb wltll plllan II pne u tile
former Diamond baBdlnr on Welt Main St.
underpee reaovatlon 11 a part of tile 1400,000
project which wUl make It Into a madera new

.'

llbrlll')' bulldlnc for Melp County. After the new _
wlnp bave been added to tile pre~eat structure,
botlt at lbe aides and to the front, then lhe porch
with Ill pUlan and the circular brick fronhvlll be
reco•tructed.

'

�- -- -

------

~----

•
Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

Wednnliey. November 9; 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Combatting the drug meD&amp;Ce_____c_on_.C_la_ren_ce_M_il.;__ler_
Over the next few weeks I wUI
attempt to detail the actions of
the Congress on major legislative measures it enacted In the
closing days of the 100th Congress. The Congress passed the
final version of the long awaited
Anti-Drug .Bill tn the final hours
before anti -drug programs,
takes a tough and comprehensive
stand against the growing drug
menace and sends a clear signal
to users and drug dealers alike
that tllegal drug activity wUI be
severely prosecuted.
The law establishes a new
Office of National Drug Control
Polley that will be headed by a
Presidentially appointed director who must be confirmed by the
Senate. This director will be
respcinstble for developing and
submitting to Congress an annual national drug control stra-

tegy and a consolidated drug
control budget. The Idea behind
thiS office Is to better coordinate
the anti-drug efforts of the
federal government which are
currently shared by a number of
federal agencies.
To help reduce the supply of
Illegal drugs the new legislation
Increases funding lor the agencies chl\l'ged with drug Interdiction. Likewise, the law authorizes funding for International
drug control programs and calls.
for the beginning of negotiations
to establish a multinational force
to conduct operations against
drug - smugglers. The new law
cracks down on drug related
homicides. The law w111 also help

1

Letters
to the editor

1(

"'·:

dr c.rl'!Jli)IIHJ r .jf,.,,,.!&gt;~r'n' ,.

v.1r ~~~·;~·~

THURS. &amp; FRI.

LUCKY 8 DAYS

RECEIVE DOUBLE THE VALUE ON
UP TO 8 MANUFACTURERS COUPONS
.

~

A CARDINAL AFFILIATED SUPERMARKET

SH Store For Detlills.

Tw~nty-two

teams
finish prep season
with perfect marks

TUESDAY

STORE COUPON·-------,

I

OFF .

~-

Rental of the

i 'Rut Doc~_:
I

SH Store For Datllll.

-· .

CLEl~~P \IME

r------i $3.00

s·R. CITIZENS' DAY I
RECEIVE 5% DISCOUNT ON
. MOST PURCHASES

ACTOR ANC DIRECTOR WORK
ON THE F1NAI. SCINI

1

.

I

Reds release
Durham

High school grid' notes...

reover, the Jaw seeks to alert
people about the dangers of
alcohol abuse by providing for
warning labels on alcoholic beverages. For those already addicted to drugs, the law authorizes grants to the states for drug
and alcohol abuse treatment
programs.
In summary; the new drug law
accelerates the federal governmel)t's attack on the drug menace by going after both the
demand for Illegal drugs and the
supply of Illegal drugs. By
attacking both sides of this
problem, this b111 should help
considerably In curbing the
growing drug crisis.

OPEN 24 HOURS DAILY!

Carnival big s~,tCCess
Dear Editor:
Once again the Pomeroy Elementary had a successful Halloween Carnival. I feel the credit Is
due to the many people who gave
so freely of their time, energy an
· thetrselves to make this so. In
this day and age It's hard to make
time for the everyday things and
when we add another job, It's
almost Impossible! It seems
when we areworklngonaproject
for the children, the willingness
and cooperation Is overwhelmIng! Thanks to the Middleport
_P. T.O. for judging our costumes.
We'd like to thank the businesses for their donations, with a
special thanks to Tim Custer at
Big Wheel, all the people who
worked In any way the day of the
carnival, Bob Buck for a great
job as emcee and the people that
came to our Carnival for a night
out.... Thanks to all of you for
another wonderful party!
Pomeroy P.T.O. Officers,
·
Susie Abbott, Pres.
Kay McElroy. V. Pres.
Kathy Price, Sec.
Sally Erwin, Treas.

adol/t International banking
practices which would permit
better tracking of laundered
money. The law will also tighten
pp the aircraft registration system to prevent the registration of
aircraft to non-existent persons
or addresses, a common practice
among drug traffickers. II also
Increases record keeping requirements for certain chemicals which can be used In the
production of Illegal drugs.
In addition to getting tough on
drug users, the law wtll work to
prevent future drug abuse by
authorizing grants to state and
local governments for various
drug education programs_. Mo-

purge Illegal drug production
from our na tiona! fotests by
authorizing funds to train add!·
tlonal and exiSting Forest Service personnel in the detection of
drug harvesting operations . .
The new law also attacks many
of the traditional tools of the
International drug trade. Since
the drug trade relies hea vlly
upon money laundering to escape
detection, the law establishes
new restrictions on and permits
new record keeping requirements for certain large flnanlcal
transactions to better detect
money laundering. Similarly, the
bill calls for negotiations with
foreign finance ministers to

Steam carpet and

Upholstery Cleaner
Co~pon E•pnn: 11·tf.U

I

• _;

.

~~

.

I

~ ~.

Sl.,mmg MICI ' 1 C•rt•

co- ,., ,,.,., ""'' ,.,,. ,.,~ n .,,... •II••

1

.0...

1

....... , _ OIO .. I&gt;C-"t'OC .. oo&lt;\11

.

....._

MIDDLEPORT, OH.•GEN. HARTINGER PKWV~&amp;-PEARLST~;992~3471

0

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS Ohio high
· schoolfootball notes from around
the state:
Twenty-two teams finished the
1988 regular high school football
- season unbeaten, but 10 squads
had their perfect records dashed
the final weekend. Including
Newark Catholic, whose 32gaame win streak was ended by
Licking Valley, 28-21.
The NC-Licklng Valley game,
which decided the Licking
County League, was one of two
season-ending contests matching
9-0 teams. In the other, Archbold
beat Liberty Center 23-6 to
capture - the Northwest Ohio
Athletic League title.
Other teams who lost for the
first time were Cincinnati Prln·
celon, Warren Western Reserve
and Dayton Wayne In Division I;
Buckeye Southwest In Division
III; Columbus Academy and
Bel-pre In Division IV; and New
Bremen and Canal Winchester In
Division V.
Cambridge junior Darin Ford
smasned a couple of school
record$ Friday night In the
Bobcats' 3!!-20 victory over Byesvllle Meadowbrook. Ford rushed
for 306 yards and 4 touchdowns on
runs of26, 30,16 and 72yards. The
306 yards broke the single game
mark of 266 set In 1976 by Doug
Donley and his 1,515 yards for the
year also erased the 1,480 yards
by the former Ohio State star.
Creston Norwayne' s season.
already shortened by the school
district's financial problems,
ended 107 seconds early, also. A
bench-clearing brawl result!'d In
Friday night's ,.game against
WoosterTrlway being stopped by
officials with 1: 47toplay. Trlway
won 29·20 to finish 2·8. Norwayne
wound up 2-5.
East Knox completed Its first

perlect regular season In the
25-year history of the school with
a 34-9 will over Jeromesvllle
Hillsdale Friday night. The last
five years, Coach Chet Looney's
Bulldogs are 42-8.
··- Sophomore quarterback Britton Crates passed for (wo touch·
downs and ran 73 yards for
another Friday night In leading
Kenton to a 39-21 victory over
Lima Shawnee. Crates com·
pleted 20 of 36 passes for 207
yards In the rain and had 130
yards rushing on jtfst six attempts. He ended the season with
2,067 passing yards and 20 TDs.
QuarterbaCk Tom Engle
passed tor 377 yards and three
touchdowns In Fairfield Union's
come-from-behind 31-21 win over _·
Canal Winchester Friday night. Engle tossed TO passes of 20, 10
and 20 yards as the Falcons
_rallied from a 21-14 halftime
deficit to hand Winchester Its
llrst loss.
Mansfield Malabar's Tom
Fletcher passed for 270 yards and
five TDs In the Falcons' 42-7 win
over Marton Harding Friday
night. Fletcher completed 19 of22
passes In the fln~J' • game In
Malabar's 26-year hfstory.
Jon Roberts' 19-yard field goal
with 2: 28 remaining lifted Grandview to an upset 18-16 win Friday
night over Columbus Academy,
the defending Division' !V state
champion and ranked No. 1 all
season long. The loss ended
Academy's regular-season winning streak at :rl.- Grandview
linlshed at 6-4.
•
Edison South rallled from 13-0
deficit after three quarters for a
16-13 triple overtime win over
previously unbeaten Buckeye
Southwest Friday night. Bryan·
Blanchard's 28-yard field goal in
the third OT provided the margin
of victory for the Wildcats, who
finished 4-5.

[
'
,~-.!

CINCINNATI CUP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds Tuesday asked
waivers on first baseman Leon
Durham lor the purpose of glvln'g
him his unconditional release.
Durham, 31, a native of Cincinnati, was obtained from the
Chicago Cubs May 19 ln ex c hange for pitcqer Pat Perry and ,
. cash in hopes he would give the Reds some lefthanded hitting
punch.
_
Durtfam, however. hit just .216
in 21 games with the Reds, with
one home run and two RBL
Including his time with the Cubs, ·
Durham hit .218ln 45 games with .
lour homers and eight RBI.
Durham !ailed to show up for a · ·
Riverlront Stadium workout
Wednesday, July 13, the day . .following the All-Star Game In
Cincinnati and also missed the •
Reds' flight to Montreal that
same day.
He arrived in Montreal Friday •
a ft'ernoon , in time for the second ' '
game of that series. but departed Saturday, saying "I'm just not ~
emotionally ready to play
baseball."
On July 18, the Reds placed
Durham on the -disabled list, · •
retroactive to July 11, and he
went through a substance abuse
program.
Our ham was reactlved by the .
Reds Sept. 16, but did not play
again.

•

,r

t ,;}#'['it
•

~\': f

rt-

,

VOLLEYBAlL, GOLF HONOREES - Elise
Meier and Matt Baker were pre8ented voUeyball

and golf awards during Monday's annual fall
sports banquet at Meigs Hl gh School.

'

New cage
rules liSted
for 1988-89
cft:O&amp;; COUNTRY HONOREES- Meigs cross
country Individuals honored during Monday's
annual fall sports banquet at MRS were, left to

right, Amy Rouse, Missy Nelson, Ryan Lemley,
Keith Mattox, Cary Betzing and Chris Stewart.

Basketball has taken some •-'
giant and somewhat dramatic .,
steps from its infant stages, when
peach bask«;&gt;ls with closed bottoms serves as the goals, and
• likewise the rules have changed
dramatically also.
High school basketball and the
rules established by the Ohio
High School Athletic Association
under guidelines of the National
Federation Co! State High School
Associations) are probably the
best suited rules that allows the
game to be played the way It
should be.
..
As a fan , one must realize that ' ·
three dimensions of th!' rules . ·
game exist; 1) high school, 2)
college and 3) prolesslonal. International rules also have some
allcralions.
And all se ts of the above rules
are different, thus confusing , ·;
mos t fans and prompting dis- .,
agreement wtth the officials
calling the game.
Probably, the most nottceable '•
change will be the change in Rule
,,
9: Section 3: Artlci!' 3.
This rule governs provisions ol
governing the throw-ln. In the
past. a player had five' seconds to .
get the balllnbounds and touched ·.
by a player on the court. This ~
interpretation eliminated delays , ,
where at the end of a game one
team might be playing catch up
and in order to savp time would
roll the ball down court tohls own
play!'r. Last year this was not _ •
. possible as a team had only five
seconds to get the ball In and , ~
touched.
., ..
This year a player has five ,
seconds to release the ball . Moreaccuratply the rule states, "The ... _
thrower-In shall not: ART.
J __ .consume five seconds !rom .
the time the throw-In starts until

officials upset

.•

Dear Editor:
In opening we would like to
express our gratitude to the
parents of Southern Local School
District who have donated ttine
from their busy schedules tc help
make our schools a better place.
However, It has come to our
attention that school admlnlstra·
tors of Southern Local School ·
District are endeavoring to recruit volunteers to work tn" the
classrooms, offices, and playground of our schools. The duties
of these volunteers comes directly from the job descriptions
of our school aides, both classroom and clerical.
In view of the recent elimination of four teachers and two
aides due to the financial distress
of our school system It Is
alarming to ·s ay the least to see
the active recruitment of volunteers to take our positions.
Volunteers are currently doing
playground duty, without being
overseen by a teacher, grading
papers, In one Instance the
volunteer Is a parent of the very
student's academic work she Is
grading. They are teaching with·
out the quallficattons or supervision of a teacher.
Are these volunteers made
aware of the liability they face
should a student be Injured or
otherwise come to harm whUe
under their direct and sole
supervision? Are they aware that
If they come In on a regular basis
to preform the dulles normally a
salaried employee performs,
that all they need do Is turn In the
hours worked and request payment from the treasurer to
receive a paycheck?
Are these volunteers aware
they are replacing unlori jobs?
How would they feel If they or
their spouse were laid off and
employers replaced them with
nonpatd workers? Do they real·
ize they are taking away our
jobs?
Volunteers, on a limited basis,
have been In our schools for
years and we have welcomed
them. We have worked side by
side and have been volunteers
ourselves to help our children.
However, the use the adminiStration now expects to make volun·
teers steps DIRECTLY Into
devoted employees positions!
Last of all, do you think we can
work In harmony with these
volunteers when they have taken
away a dear friend and coworker's llvelyhood?
You expect ~oo much.

1-

*
*

•

•

Jdl FI•IQ.

s.

NATIONAL us.-rB.ULAS!:i()(',
Eutern Confert&gt;nc.'f'
1\tlluiUe IM''Ialnn
WLPt.'I.UB
Nt&gt;W Jer~~ey
: 1 .187 Phlladetptia
\! I .167 Boston
I
I .~0
~
Chlll'lotko
I ! .333 I
New t'ork
1 Z .333 1
Mo'll!hiR&amp;10n
0 t .000 I ll,
Cenlral Dlvl.~lon
AU ~lAta
3 0 I.OGO IH.t rolt
:t 0 1.000 Cl@¥e1Md
• 2 • 1.000
.,.,
Mll'"-'aUilre
I I .MO 1•11
Chlcqo
I 2 .3:13 \!
0

In diM&amp;

!I .010

21.111~-

1

I . 5fl0

Yr

1 . ~0

'rot

2 .33.'1
1 .000
2 .000

I
I
l lfr

l
2

0 1.000 0 1.000
.,,

\!

I .fi87

I
I

I .!ItO

lift

t .333
Sac1".1men1o
il 2 .litO
Phcteab:
0 : .0111
'llleod ay 'tJ ~ ulh
Nf'W JPrwy 11!1, Wuhl•~on 101
Detroit 111. Phlllldi!lphlllllt
Ourlo«lt&gt; 117, L-'Oippers lOS

'!
~%

PoHlaad
· Ll\ !.allen;
Goldlf'n Stl\1,...
LACIIppt&gt;u

Sacramnto M Utah, It H p.m.
Dallu at Ph~tenk, 1 ~31 p.m.

Golden St11te llt Se•We, tO p.m.
De•wr at LA Lakerw, lQ:SG p.m.
Philadelphia II. NY R.. pr1, 1:3&amp; p.m.
Cal P.fJ at Buffa!•. 7: :t5 p.m.
Edmonton at New ,Jert~e)', 7:0 p.m.
Mom real at C•lcq:o, 8:35p.m.
Detroll at MlnE!!io&amp;a, K:" p.m .
Soceer
1\io Klllllell «heck~ led
Te~~R•

BuPn 08 Alre11, Ar1eadna -

0p•n
Olh:atto

I

Germu~y - Frank·
,.., Open
·
Lond•• - Benson IUld HtdP"slnOOor

l!ltt

f 'h IU'IlpknNIIpll

VoUeyball
AU-Ohio
NEW KNOX\1LLE,Ohlo{UPI) - Tht&gt;
IBIIH CIMs ,\A,aJl-OIIIoYOIIeyhallleiUnltoll
.eleded by mrmber11 of tllf- Olllo HIIJII
School Volleylloall Coa.cbl'!lo ibtiod 1111 ion:

Chleaco al 8011lonll, 1: 311 p.m .
Nrw \'or kat WMhln_81vn, ': 31p.m.
lA Clipper" at Clevi!IMI'ld, 7: 3t p.m.
A UMiat. ..a lh!trok, 7: :SO p.m.
Phlllldt&gt;lphla a&amp; Mllw:u1kee, 7::Jt p.m.

FIR8TTEAM
Mary Nilt::k. Senior, Falnlew ~Park;
T.l. Felly, Senior, Shel_.i Tvn)a \\'el·
lman, ~nlor, Lakewood: Deb Dunlfon.
Senior, Um11 RI!Jh; Dar I Dl'Voe, St&gt;ator.
Welll•r;tnn: ChwiJohll!lon, Ju nlo,r , ~loll
West Bnwcb.
St.:fO!'oi' D TEAM
Karl.'fl (•odzl!Uikl, Senior, Akroa Hf.)o
hM: V..nl Petrrso11, Senior, Faln1ew
Park: Jcnll)' Gatlner. St&gt;nlor, MQII.tllf';
Kelly " 'elr, senior, lndaa Vallry; Julie
Shoemakf!r, :Wna.r, •uew\t. Clare('e
M•oo, Sen~r. Minford.
THIRD TEAM
MIU'y Fehr,l!len•r. Oak Harbor. Kelt)'
Allt:.on. Sen»r Thorll\'lle Sherldar~;
Tammy F1rlh, Srnlor, .U:r011 Hob11n:
Holly Vaad!!•bers, Senior, Rock)o River:
rhrls Draben..oU, Senior, Wo-'er Tr~
III:'KJ: Beth Sd•ml•. Senior Fairview

Miami at San Antonlo.ll: lfl p.m.
Sar.ram rnlo at Utfth, t. 30 p.m.
DMIIu Ill PhiH.'nlx, I: :tO p.m .
Golden Stall' 1&amp;1 lw.•t~, 10 p. m .
Det! \1!r It L-4. Lllkffll, 10: 30 p.m.
nunidii,)' 'A llilmftri
Ulah Ill H•ulon. nlafll
Portland td Denwr, nllht

Transactions
· Buf'h$11

Clll('lnratl - Waived nut tuwem-.n
J..toon Durham.
Nt&gt;w York (AI,.) - 1\ddf'd to m~ur•
leacue roacer pi&amp;(! hers Darrln Chi~! II and
DanaRldenour,lfllelder Hensley Meu ..

p., ..

HONORABLE MENTION

and

l~rl Allen, Kenton; Trllta McNral,
Rld&amp;ewood; Bet-Icy JOhM.-n, Wet~tern
herve; Pill I)' C.riR, &amp;utwood: MAJID'
O' Leary, JllnnP)'IOWIIi Mllal Suders,
fto!j;llfonl: Deb •mer. Clyde; .1111
GUianl, FortFr)·e; SU•Cower. cardinal ;
Kim Zelms, Beiii!'W.e; .llennUerWhldiUI,
Reiii!'We; Kim N•vaiiiJ, CohunbiMI:
Shelly Duol!')'er1 &amp;uhwood; Llu Bluchal'll, Trlway: DIIMe Gl'eeDWood, C..
dlocton: Kim Bernrr, Ml~oe UnGII; ·
PerJIY Hoopa. Ptllrtck Henrr, MI••Y
L.ehlche, ZIUI«' Trace; Tl• Sebiauo,
Falr\'ll'W Park: Marele Rolldtblllll.

Berril! Wllllam111 •n d lint btUOl'maJJ·
oudlelder ~vln Mulll!l,

ColleM:t
Announced

foothill I bead ooachVIc Kow•n •111 retll'tl

alter I~ Ill,.. ~W'Oa.
.Football
Jndl..,iPollli - \\ •ved qww.rback
8111 Ransdell; 11IJP1ed defenl.tve IIMman
Don Thorp.
N\' ,Jrls- SlpH'd prd·tacldl" K6n

Tllt~~n:

walvE'd

Jlnf'baclu!l'

Stewl"

H!lmmond.

WMNnjClon - R elt&gt;M~~ed pu.-er "cewe

Cox.

Hot'III!J
i.otl An&amp;f'IEII - Recalled JGillfender
•11 .fan«.,-k and win~ CraJa: Dunean·
MOl from New HAven of the AHL

Mlnw.~JoCa - Sut~pended Jftrward SeoH

BJ•ptad, wtw left Kahunu:u'l of lhl'
Wer...tlnrMI Hoelle)' I.e ~ ho play In
SwttaerJMd.
NHL - Su.pondl'd Detrok rl&amp;ht Mn1
Mlrlllllav Jo"rycer 10 1amet1 lor •ellher·
alely lnjur1n« Pbllllddp~a'ii Mur"'Y

HEAD
LETTUCE

~diM

'

Valley.

Coach-el-tu• ,...,._,m Pom..-1, Fat,.
wleW Park.

College score ·
Ohio Collep BAll a.etball Res ul&amp;a
By United Pre. . lnter•llo..:t

'fileldl&amp;' , Nov. 8
t;edarvllle9'1, Wllmlnpon 1S

"SUBTRACf. THOSE THINGS
·GATHERING DUSt
992i\W DOLLARS
mYOUR POCKET , 2156
,.
WITH A
CLASSIFIED-AD

..,,_ '11

I'

t

52111,016 \ 'lr«tnla Sllrm of

•·• Franllfult, Wt'!lt

WedrM&gt;lld 10' '8 G&amp;miM

Saa Fnnclsco /4tJ&amp;tt• -

~

Ar~~ttmtlnl'

O.lc:ap

U. LMkt-11! 114, Gol*n Sla&amp;e 10~
St•aUie t'l', Saeramenlo 7S

.4o'IOC:IU'

at Vanoou~r. 10: lUi p.m .

Harllord

Atlanta liZ. buhnaiO'l'
Nf'W l'ork IZI,Illlclllo 117
Houlton 121, Nan AnfoNo tOt
Dalbu 82. Mhunl All

en1, outflelder.S GAMe•

•

New York at WuldnJio., 7:!10 p.m.
Lt\ Clippers at Cl~el ..... 1:SI p.m.
A.llanta II Delrcl6l, 7:H p.m.
Phlla.deiP..a at Mllwaakee. 7: 31' p.m.
Mlaunl at SMI o\11101160. 1\: H p.M.

Padfll• Division

~eatlle

'

Bulletbalh
Cbl cap at Bo.toa, 1:30 p.m.

GB

[)allaH

0

~·

dertilieinan Rahert,

Calendar

3

fhoawr
S.n Ant~o
HoaMon
Ut11h
Mlllml

I
0

ient

Boeke)'

W L Pet.
I

l

1..o• -

Dirk &amp;o Peorta of the IHL

Wet~tern Conference
Mldw~l DlvWion

Slncerly,,
William S. HOback,
OAPSE President Chapter 453,
Southern Local
Charles W. Baer, President
Southern Local Teachers Assoc.

I

CraYI!III Now. t.
NY laiMttl!ra - Bee .... deft.Mtmlln

results

)

1

1
JAYCEES GRIDDERS OF YEAR - Meigs
Jaycees Players ol th~ Year honored during
Monday's annuallall sports banquet at MHS were

Jell McElroy, left, (offense) and Wes Young,

third from left (defense). They are pictured with
Coach Charles Chancey, second I rom left and
Chuck Hannahs.

Meigs fall athletes hono~ed
ROCK SPRINGS - Some 300
persons attented the annual fall
sports banquet at Meigs High
School honoring members of the
golf, volleyball, cross country
and football teams, cheerleaders
and managers on Monda&gt;'
evening.
Following the invocation by
Rev_ Thomas -McClung, master
ol ceremonies Jim Soutsby Introduced the various coaches who
presented awards to the athletes.
Golf coach John Krawsczyn
presented awards to Tim Peterson, Jamey Lit tie, Phil Hovatter,
Mike VanMeter, Scott Barton
and Matt Baker. Baker was
presented a new award honoring
two former Meigs galling greats,
Parker Long-and Rod Harrison,
as golfer of the year and was also
accorded All TVC llrst team
honors.
Dale Harrison and Rick Ash,
reserve and varsity volleyball
coaches, recognized Trlcla Baer,
Kim Ewing, Nikki Meter : Kristen
Stanley, Chrissy Weaver, Love
Batey, Kim Hanning, Kim Os·
borne, Jennifer Taylor, Kerl
Black, Tara Humphreys, Kelly
Smith and Amy Wagner, reserve
team members, and Mary
Butcher, Beth Ewing, Lee'a
Johnson, Chris Rlchmond,'Renee
Young, Lesley Carr, Sheila Hen·
drlcks, Jody Levingston. Jody
Taylor, Kelly Douglas. Heather
Hovatter, Elise Meier a nd Missy
Woods, varsity team members,
and presented letters and certificates. Mls ty Butcher and Stacey
Duncan were Introduced as managers. Elise Meier was awarded
all conference honors .
Cary Betzlng and Amy Rouse
were named to tbe second team
and t;::l)rls Ste~rt and Missy
Nelson to the first team In the
TVC cross country awards pres·
ented by Jim Oliphant. Ryan
Lemley, Keith Mattox, and Scott
Edmonds were cited for the most
Improvement shown during the
year. others honored were

.Jeremy Heck, Chris Sloan, Joey
McElroy; John Haggy, Seth
Wehrung and P , .1. Chadwell, an
eight grade participant.
In the girl's division' recognition went to Tara Gerlach, Resa
Harris and April Hudson, In
a ddition to those previously
mentioned. Mary Stein was the
statistician.
Judy Crooks and Clnda Harris
introduced cheerleaders Teresa
Deem, Kristen Slawter, Suson
Houchins, Pam Whaley, Tammy
Lambert, Dare! Wolfe, Kim
Chadwell, Amy Epple, Aimee
Rupe, Leah Doidge, Shannon
Halfhill, Amy Warth, Kim Eblin
and Missy Leach. Cheerleader
awards will be presented at the

I

(Editor's Note- At least once ···
each week durlns the next · ·
month, The Dally Sentinel will · "
attempt to Inform area basket- '
ball fans on i'ule changes for the · ,
1988-89 basketball season.)
.,

OAPSE
~A

-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 _

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 9, 1988

--,-----

close ol the basketball season .
Coach Charles Chancey and
John Blake presented awards to
members ol the reserve and
varsity loolb;J-11 squads with
Chancey praising the athletes for
the dedication and hard work
th-ey exhibited during the season.
Team Merpbers present were
Bill Anderson. Dennis Edmlnston, Eric Heck, Danny Lewis,
Joe McElroy, Jeremy Rupe.
Micah Bunch, Shawn Hawley,
James Howerton, Charles Mash,
Kevin Musser, Shannon . Scott,
Chris Davis, Matt Haynes,
Shawn Lambert, Mike Mayer,
Jeremy Phaltn, Robby Wyatt,
Bill Harless and Steve CaruthContlnued on page 4

:;:~e~~~l i~~o r~=~~~rt~~ a

pass :·,'

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS t411-960)
A Division oll\lultlmedla. In c.

Shoe World(/)®

Published

~vf'r~·

afternoon. Monday

'

.

1 •,

lhrough Friday, 111 Court Sl .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·

·J llshlng Comp~ny tMult\m('tUa. l nc..
1 Po meroy, Ohio -15769. Ph. 992 - 21~ . Se-·

wOR\en·a canvas caa1,1al ...

2 pairs for

" ..

co nd class postage paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

·

M(•ffib£'r: Unitt'd Prt&gt;ss Internationa l,
inland Dally Pr·f'Ss Association and t hl'
Ohio Newspapl'l' Association. Natio nal
Advertlslng Reprf'Sf'ntaltve, Branham
Newspaper Sall'!i, 733 Third AvenuE'.

, ,

New York. NPw York 10017.

REG.

POS'IMASTER: Send address c han gC'S
to The Daily S&lt;'nlinel. 111 Coun St ..
Pom eroy, Ohio 41769.

.$5:99'

a pair

~

SUBSCRIPTION KATES

' '
One Week ...... ............ ....... ...... .. .$1.40 ... ..
One Month .. .. ~ .......................... StUO
One Year ................................. $72.80
'I
By Carrier or Mol or Routf'

Save $4.00
Women's di'UI pump...
'

SINGLE COP\'

PKifE
Dally ,..... .... .. ~. .......... .......... . 25 Ce nt s

su oScribers not desiring to pay the car·
rter may remll In advance direct to
The Dally Sen t inel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basls. Credil will be given carrier each

week.

No

s u~rlpt! o l\s

by

mall p&lt;'rmUted In

ar eas where ·homl' carrier servlct' Is
a vailable.

305 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!\tall Subscription• '
lnsldf' Meigs Count)'
13 Weeks .,, ... : ................ .... .. .. ... 119.2~
26 Weeks .... .............................. $.17.%

52 \\'ceks ............ :.................. ... $74.36
OulsldP Meigs County

lJ Weeks .... .-................. .......... $20.80
2ti Weeks . ........... ...... .. ...... .....·. S40.30
52 WPeks ................. ............ .... . $75.40

MasletCord

ISO. Open evenings &amp; open Sun. onernoon-ch8ck tor locot" store hours.

·..
•'

.'
•'

�Page

-~

Wedna11iay, November 9, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

The Rio Grande men's basketball team wlll !ace a competitive
schedule In 1988-89 with a "nice
combination" of veterans and
newcomers, ln·the estimation of
Coach John Lawhorn.
Lawhorn, entering his eighth
year of coaching at Rio Grande
with a 204-69 record, feels his
team, coming off what he called
Its best preseason training In
years, Is up !or the task ahead.
'.'We're looking forward to this
season because It's refreshing to
have young players as enlhustasttc as they areaboutplaylng," he
said. "The veterans are also
looking forward to Kansas Ctiythey want to go back."
. ·
{lio Grande, picked In the
preseason District 22 coaches'
poll to win the 1988-89 district

championship, opens at home
Tuesday, Nov. 15 at 7: 30 p.m.
against Kentucky Christian.
The Redmen surprised many
who felt another trip to the NAIA
Nationals after the 1986-87 championship season would be a tough
goal to achieve. Instead, 1987·88
saw Rio Grande seize cochampionship of the Mid·Ohlo
·eunferel!ce, !!It No-. "1'1n"f)lstrlct
22 entering the playoffs and lose
the district crown by only a
single point to Defiance. The
Redmen finished the season at
27·8 and ll-31n the MOC.
Back this year are guard
Jimmy Kearns (6·1, McGuffey),
a MOC honorable mention, and
forward Marc Gothard (6-4,
Circleville) as co-captains. The
other veterans are Anthony Ray·

more (5-11, Columbus) , Brian
Watkll'!s (5·10, Columbus), John
Lambcke (6-5, Wllmington ), Rob
Jackson (6·6, Sprlng!leldJ, Dave
Shepberd (6-7, Willard ) and Mike
Tidwell (6•3, Cincinnati).
The mix with new teammates
Larry Benning (6-4, Wooster) ,
Mark Erslan (6-2, West Alexandria), Brad Schubert (6-3, Bellevue), Scott Slusser (5-10, Woos·
ter) and Stewart York (6·4,
Logan) blfers experience, youth
and talent, Lawhorn said.
Kearns and other returnees
are proven shooters, with Raymore and Watkins expected to
spearhead the defensive end.
Erslan and Schubert were noted
polnt·makers In high school. The
team wUI also look to Slusser as a
key
in the
slot.

"I think this wlll be a consistent
team," Lawhorn said. "Our
strength wlll be In our depth.
That was the very weakness we
had last year and this year It's
our strong point. From a coachIng standpoint, we can do a lot of
different things with these
players."
Lawhorn said the Redmen will
be a stronger defensive team and
will play with more Intensity.
"A lot of that has to do with the
kids we have coming ln.• probably
the best bunch we've had since
the Jerry Mowery-Dan Curry
era," the coach remarked.
As far as the competition is
concerned, the leveling out of
district and conference teams
over the past few years Is
producing better and stronger

squads, Lawhorn said.
Traditional rivals Defiance,
Findlay and Wllmlngton are
expected to be tough, and the
addition of Shawnee State Unl·
verslty to District 22 promises a
new rival.
Within the conference, La·
whorn sees co-champion Walsh
and Its crosstown rival Malone as
''very strong.'' Cedarville will be
talented and two MOC teams that
made the playoffs, Mount Vernon
Nazarene and Urbana, are ex·
p.ected to be much Improved.
Tiffin, which lost many of Its
games last year by only a few
points, will also be better, Lawhorn said·.
"! dqn't know of any preseason
favorites, but it'll be a heck of a
race," Lawhorn said.

Meigs levies...

Saturday's OSU and
Hawkeyes tilt on TV

Nn . J&amp;-lt-Be"Vo~ucla Clu.te ......... H
Nov, H-llvlll• ................................. A
Nov. u-a-Malkl•pm Tounaam• .... A
Nov . 11-nm. .................................... B
Dec:. J-CIIodolooiiBible ................... ... B
• De c. J--SJt_.~~ee S&amp;a&amp;e ••••• •••• •••••••••••• ..•. B
Dec:. 11-Delluee. ............................... B
Dec:. IJ-Lake Brte.............................. B
Dec. 17--811•- 8Uie ...................... . A
Dec. ti-11-Delloooe Cl•ole ................ A
loa. 1-Mal-.................................... "

to 179.
Salem

Issues. Voters approved 2021o 151
the aale of beer for off premise

Jan. 7-Mou• Ver11011 Naaueae ........... A.

. Faye R8neom

.J-. ....._WIImllllct• ........... ~ ................ A
Ju. 11-llalaae .................................. H
.Ju. Sl-Moulf. Venum Nuare~~e. ........ R

4-Urboaa ................................... B
1..Ciadlloa11Bible ...... ............. ... A
1-Dpe. ...................................... A
11-W......................................... A
14-0lllo Domlol-. .................... A
J8-C,edonlle ............................. H
..._LakeErle.............................. A

missed

.

~··

Hornets record first NBA

~J. . !!ke~,oo~! easy.~~~!!.....;

Xavier tops preseason poll

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

S~u~m~m~in~g1s:;_a_d_d_ed_1_3_a_n_d_R_o_ry_!::::::H:O:U:I:S;:::!J::A:··=··:6:P:.M=,=~

Dr. Randall A. Taylor

.

.. ,.,...,

, ,.,.

.

(

.....

·-

·- y--'

.

Faye Adina Ransom, 81, ~20
Mechanic St., Pomeroy, died
Tuesday at Veterans Metnorlal
Hoapltal following a lengthly
liiDella.
Born In Alderson, W. Va. she
was the dBUihler of Lewis and
Llze Boltlc, and worked as a
aurll8. She was preceded Ia cleath
by her parents, ber husband,
William Ransom, and several
brothers and sisters.
Her survivors Include special
friends, · the Rev. Larry and
Margaret Robinson and famUy of
Pomeroy wblch whom she made
her borne, BrendB Hudson and
Pamela West, atao of Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be held at
11 a.m. on Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home wilb the Rev.
John Evans officiating. Burial
will be In the New Marshfield
Cemetery. Friends may call at
tbe fUneral home from 2 to 4 p.m
and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.

Emma Hoffner
""

Emma L. Hoffner, 88, or 150
Butternut Ave.. Pomeroy, died
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital following an extended
Ulnesa.
A homemaker, Mrs. Hoffner
was born March 11, 1900 In
Pomeroy to the late Phllllp and
Mary Prlotle Duerr. She was a
member of the .P omeroy Feder·
ated, now Trinity, Church.
Survivors Include her husband,
Albert Hoftner, of Pomeroy, and
' several nieces and nephews.

In addition to her parents, she
was preceded in death by a son,
Gerald Hoffner, four sisters and
two brothers.
Services will be Friday, 1 p.m. ,
at Ewing Funeral Home, with
Rev. Richard Freeman olficlat·
lng. Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the fUneral home on Thursday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

Charles Machir
Charles E;. M$11hlr, 74, a
resident of Pomeroy, died Tues·
day In Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born Aug. 21. 1914, In Point
Pleasant to the late Harry and
Cyrena Edwards Machlr, he was
a farmer and a member of the
Graham Baptist Church.
Mr. Machtr Is survived by his
wife, Leona Macbtr; four sons,
Charles E. Nitro; David F ..
Letart; Dale s., Marietta and
Donald R., of Brookfield, Conn.;
one daughter, Chloris L. Gaul,
Pomeroy: three sisters, Francis
Dudding, Leon, W.Va.; Florence
Love, Letart, W. Va., and Ida
Faye Machlr, Point Pleasant; 12
grandchildren and five great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday, 1 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason. with
Rev. Don Archer officiating.
Burial will be In 'Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call this evening
6-9 at the funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, the family
· requests contributions be made
to the Chester United Methodist
Church Building Fund.

Hosp•"tal ne:.Ms

'

Plan revival
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
143, Pomeroy, will be having a
weekend revival this Friday,
Saturday and Sunday. Rev. Toby
Melott from Peanaylvanla will be
the evlllplllt. Servlct!l will start
at 7: 30 each evening and special
•1n81Da will be featured. VIctor
Roulh, paator, Invites everyone.

HOUSTON - George Bush, In
his flnt news conference since
being overwhelmingly elected
president, said Wednesday he
will nominate his campaign
chairman, James A. Baker, to
serve as secretary of state In the
new administration:
Bush said he called Secretary
of State George Shultz and that
he ·"enthusiastically endorsed"
Baker as his successor.
Baker was the first Cabinet
nominee announced by, Bush,
who on Tuesday became
president-elect by decisively defeating Massachusetts Gov. Ml·
chael Dukakls and his running
mate, Sen. lJoyd Bent~en of
Texas.
Bush, appearing relaxed and
subdued In his first formal news
conference since his sweeping
electoral vote victory, said for·
elgn leaders know Baker well
. and respect him from his service
as secretary of the Treasury and
White Hou~e chief of staff under
Pre4ldent Reagan.
"He has proven skUls as a ,
negotiator," Bush said of the ·
man he met year~ ago in Houston
and persuaded to come to Wa·
shlngton to serve under Prest·
dent Gerald Ford.
"He wUI demonstrate the high·
est standards of performance as
the next secretary of slate. He
has big shoes to fill, but he will
get the job done."
Bush, however, said he will not
rush Into a meeting with Soviet
leader Mikhail GOrbachev. · "I
am acquainted with him" and
that a summit must be based on
progress on substantive issues
such as arms control, Bush said.
But he said Baker will prepare
for a summit, sometime, In
routine meetings with his coun·
terpart In the Kremlin, Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze.
"I don't think that all !hat will
start before I become president
of the United States" on Jan. 20,
Bush said.
Shultz told a State Department
news conference, "! am person·
ally just delighted.''
The president-elect was
quickly asked about the most
divisive foreign policy Issue of
the Reagan years - support for
the Contra guerrUias that bave
~ought to topple the Sovietsu~ported Nicaraguan
government.
Bush said that "freedom and
democracy" have a high priority .
In the Wesrern Hemisphere and

..
.
.'

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) He understands what I care
Ohio voters have chosen a about and he's clear on lt."'
eonaervatlve president by more·
"The party line voter doesn't
than 400,000 votes and re-elected exist any more," said Demoone of the nation's most liberal cratlc State Chairman Jam4111
senators by 600,000 votes.
Ruvolo. ''I'm the only person I
Ho\v do you . ·explAin !his 1 know that votes a atralght party
mlllloli·vOte swfrlg in the Buck- ticket. PeOple pick and choose, ·
eye State for President-elect becaull! that's the way camGeorge Bush and Sen. Howard palgns are run. "Howard Met· .
Melzenba~;m, who has no\11 won zenbaum's itnage Is not that he's
. tbJ'ee terms?
a liberal. Howard Metzeabaum's
Ohio's Republican political !mag~: Is that be's a fighter, and
professionals believe Ohio voters that he's on their side. He
basically are satisfied with their presented bls messagedaylnand
living conditions and are willing day out, and It never varied. We
to stick with the leaders they let George Bush define this race
on symbols."
have.
Democrats take·the view that
''On a national level, the key is
Buckeye voters are Independent· defining the Issues and defining
minded: they are unafraid to your opponent," said Robert
.spllt their tickets and they like a Hughes, Republican chairman of
candidate who is willing to define Cuyahoga County.
Issues and take a strong stand"Bush defined Dukakls 4S a
just what Bush and Metzenbaum northern-fried Jimmy Carter did In defeating Massachusetts a liberal eastern governor lackGov. MlchaeiDukaltlsaadQeve- lng an appreciation of values,
land Mayor George Volnovlch.
weak oit national defense and
unable to do busineSs with
"BasiCally, I think the mes· (Soviet president Mikhail) GOrsage for 1988 Is that people are bachev," said Hughes. "People
reluciant lo repose all their trust were afraid of him.
In one political party," said Gov.
''Volnovich could never define
Richard Celeste. ''They are Metzenbaum for what he Is -an
comfortable splitting their tl1tra·llberal In a conservative
tickets."
state. Metzenbaum defined him·
"I think people are satisfied self as a populiSt - a Horatio at
with where they are," said thebrldgefortheworklngperson
Republican State Chairman Ro- · and a bulwark for the little guy."
bert Bennett. ''We have strong
jobs, peace and prosperity. and
people want to continue on that
n
course. That helped Metzen·
Holzer Medical Center
baum as well as Bush. "
lllscblll'IM Nov, 8 - Teresa
''I'm not surprised with Met·
zenbau{ll's victory," said Keith Boggs, Olive Garrett, Allen King,
McNamara, Ohio chairman of Willie Lyons, Marie McDaniel,
Bush's campaign. "People are Opal Metheney, Suzanne Runvery happy with the situation nion, Kenneth Scltes, Margaret
that they have, and that favors Shaffer and Clyde Weaver.
lllriha Nov. 8- Mr. and Mrs.
the re-election of the
DOuglas
Clelland, daughter,
Incumbent."
Pomeroy!
Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Celeste cautioned that Bush's
· win should not beconatruedas "a Cox, son, Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
George Jodon, son, Leon, W.Va.
mandate for conservatism."
"Voters are far more Inde- Mr. and Mrs. Terry Johnson,
pendent than that," he said. daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. --and
"They are saying that a candl· Mrs. Ronald Shields, daughter,
date should 'stand up and be Tuppers Plains.
.
tough on Issues that I care about.

· Ve&amp;erau Memorial
Tuesday Adml.sslons - David
Goodwin, Pomeroy; Kethel Hat·
field, Rutland; Doris Haynes,
Middleport; Kathy Rhodes,
Reedsville.
Tuesday Discharges - Genevieve Meinhart, George Molden.

·'

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
Unlled Preea Interna&amp;loiUII

·Metzenbaum·.triumphs

Hospital news

Page-6

Bush .elected 41st president

consumption. Voters turned
down 203-138 the sale of beer tor
on premise conaumpaon but did
approve 181 to 164 the sale of
mixed beverages by the
package.
A total of 91699. residents voted
Tuesday out of 13,500 regtatered
voters.

Area deaths.

J... 11-Urbua ............................... ... A
lu. 1!-l"'otlar..................... ............. H
J'lft. 14-Wollll .. ......................... , .. ...... H
.Jan, 11--oltlo Domllle~~~~ ..................... R
Ju. n-oedonBte ..................... ;........ A
Jon. 14-nllla ......................... ............ A

Wilkens
happy with
performance

Meigs...

voting

decldlall upon three local option

Iowa win was the first since 1983. ·
Another more meaningfUl hlstor·
leal note - the Hawkeyes have
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI) beaten Ohio State In consecutive
John Williams missed eight of 10
years only twice Ibis century field-goal
attempts Saturday
In 1922-23 and In 1959-60.
night
In
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers'
Even If Iowa loses agalns!Ohlo
victory
at
Indiana.
State, Fry said he tully expects
Yet Coach Lenny Wilkens says
the Hawkeyes will be Invited to
Williams
was a key factor,
their elghth·stralght bowl game.
pointing
to
the forward's 7-of-8
Reports from Iowa City lndl·
shooting from the foul line, eight
cate the Hawkeyes are being
rebounds, two.blocked shots and
heavily courted by the Peach
one.
assist.
Bowl, which wants an Iowa"People
seem to focus on
South Carolina matchup even If
missed
shots,"
WU~cllns· said .as
Iowa loses this weekend. The
prepared
for Wedthe
Cavaliers
Peach Bowl is reportedly licking
nesday's
home
opener
against
Its chops over a ·Hartlieb Todd
''The
the
Los
Angeles
Clippers.
Ellis aerial duel. The trouble is,
thing
we
talk
about
ts
total
Iowa may have to make a chOice
contribution.
this week If It wants to protect
"Hot Rod's contribution was
Itself In a quickly-developing
Thoie rebounds - he
awesome.
bowl situation. The Peach Bowl
went
up
above
everybody to get
will be played Dec. 31 in Atlanta.
the
ball."
The Liberty Bowl Is also In the
On two of those rebounds, both
picture for Its Dec. 28 game In
late
In the fourth quarter with the
Memphis, Tenn., but that bowl
·game
up for grabs, Williams was
will walt until after the weekend
fouled.
He made all four free
to make a choice and could pick
throws.
Dllnois if the llllni lose to
. · "People tliink scoring Is every·
Michigan on Saturday.
thing," Williams said. "I might
Fry was non-committal about
not score a basket, but I'm out
the liowl plctute Tuesday except
there
playing defense and re-- ..
to say Iowa will probably go.
bounding
and blockinll shots."
"I think we'll go to a bowl, we
After a great rookie season, ·
have a top quarterback and great
Wtniams
spent his summer tra·
crowd following, those are the
veling back and forth bet~n
criteria bowls look at," Fry said.
Louisiana and Clevelaad beThe Ohio St~ game also
cause
of severe dental problems.
marks the swan •t!ong of the
When
the season opened, he
Kinnick Stadium artificial turf.
suffered
an ankle lpjury and
After the game the turf will be
the
flnt_tlve warne!!· ' .
torn up and replaced with a
"He
'never
go't bai!k. intb the
special natural grass for next
!low
because
of some of the
season.
physical
problems,"
Wilkens
Asked If he was doing anything
said.
"The
rest
of
the
players
'
·
special to mark the occasion, Fry
were
a
step
ahead."
said he was having "a contingent
There were also mental adjust·
cJf grasshoppers come In and bid
ments.
Williams's trademark as
the grass goodbye."
a
rookie
was an explosive first
Fry again decried his Injury
step to the basket, but the ankle
situation and said his starting
Dennis Rodman watches durlnl the lint qaarter
SNAGS REBOUND - Philadelphia's Ben
Injury prevented hlnn from pushlineup against the Buckeyes will
of Tuesday nlchl's game In Philadelphia's
Coleman crtmaees as he reaches out and snap a
Ing off. Opponents began backing
not be the same as last week.
Spectrum. The Pistons got past the Slxersll&amp;-101.
rebound under Detroit's basket as the Pistons'
off, and Williams had problems
''They're going to give me an
with his outside shot.
honorary degree In medicine this
To further complicate matters,
year," Fry joked.
the Cavs traded for Larry Nance
The Iowa coach also sang the
and Mike Sanders In late Februpraises of tight end Cook and
ary,
meaning Williams was
Hartlieb.
likely
to
become a reserve. ·
"He's got the confidence of the
"I
don't
like to complain,"
quarterback,'' Fry said of Cook.
Williams
said.
"Complaining Is
"If he gets to scrambllngbe goes
for
losers.
I
just
didn't play
to Cook because he knows he wUI
UPI
Sports
Writer
Quinton
Dailey
had
18
points
18
rebounds
for
New
York.
good.''
do the right thing, he's justa big
After starting out with two and Ken Norman 15 rebounds for Michael Jordan led Chicago with
This season, Williams' rcle has
play maker." ,
losses, the expansion Charlotte the Clippers, who fell to 1·2 with 31 points and Bill Cartwright,
been clear from the start of
traded from New York In the
Hornets rebounded In a big way the loss.
training camp. He'll back up
to record the first victory In their
Elsewhere, New Jersey topped off-season, finished with 20.
Nance at power forward and
history.
Washington 109-101, Detroit
RocketslllO, Spun lOll
Sanders at small forward, at
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Gerald Hayward of Loyola, AnA boisterous crowd o! 18,865 dumped Phlladelphlii 116-109,
At Houston, Mike Woodson
least until rookie Randolph Keys
Midwestern Collegiate Confer(hony Corbitt of Dayton, Tyrone gave the homestanding Hornets Atlanta whipped Indiana 112-107, scored 27 points and Otis Thorpe
Is ready.
ence coaches and reporters who
Hill and Stan Kimbrough of a standing ovation after they held New York raced past 'Chicago collected 23 points and 9 to carry
"! know I'm going to get to
cover the league have picked
Xavier and Monroe Douglass of off a tate Los Angeles Clipper 126-117, Houston routedSanAnto- the Rockets. Jo,hnny Dawkins
play," he said. "I don' I care If
xavier as the favorite to win the
St. Louis.
· charge Tuesday for a 117·105 · nlo 120·102, Dallas edged Miami finished with 22 points and 13
I'm the first guy off the bench or
MCC basketball' championship.
The coaches picked Hayward,
triumph. The atmosphere was 92·88, the Los Angeles Lakers assists and Greg Anderson had 16
the last guy off the bench. ·
Hlll, Kimbrough, Darren not unlike that of a playoff game, cruised past Golden State 114·102 points and 13 rebounds for San
In a preseason poll, coaches
and media ranked St. Louis
Fowlkes of ·s utler and Roland with a victory against any · and Seattle blasted Sacramento Antonio. Akeem Olajuwon had 18
GOOD USED
Gray of St. Louis.
second and Loyola third.
established
team
at
this
point
In
97-75.
points
and
11
rebounds
for
WASHERS,
DRYUS,
"Teams are going to be gunGillen, named 1988 conference the franchise's history someNets 109, Bullets 101
Houston.
nlng for us. That's good, though.
coach of the· year, said his
At East Rutherford, N.J., Joe
MaverlcBka 92d,DHeatls88
d
REFRIGERATORS, lYs,
We'd rather have teams after
scoring strategy this year would thing to be savored.
0
Charlotte's
hustle
was
reBarry
Carroll
scored
19
points
At
Dallafsf,
h
rabe
ha~
h
~
~
GAS· &amp; ELEC. RANGES
us," Xavier coach Pete Gillen
be to "spread It around."
17 points 0 1 e nc 0 e P e
fleeted
In
their
55-48
rebounding
and
grabbed
11
rebounds
to
lead
said Monday.
"Tyrone (Hlll) , Derek
Mavericks fight off an upset bid
advantage. In the Hornets' first New Jersey. The victory stopped
"That shows people know who
(Strong) and Stan (Kimbrough)
two games against Cleveland
W h' t
I
by Miami. Rolando Blackman
are great players, but they can' I
you are and have some degree of
a seven-game as mg on w n·
:;cored 20 points to pace the
and Detroit. they were outre- nlng streak over New Jersey.
Mavericks while Mark Aguirre
respect for you. We'd rather be
do It by themselves," he said.
Jeff Malone scored a game-high
Edwar ds scored
627 3ra.. ..• ve., G• I'1pol'11
up there In the high cotten than
The school lost Its all·time bounded badly.
Coach Dick Harter Credited 24 points to lead the Bullets. Buck scored 17. Kevin
f
th H t p t
down there in the Everglades
leading scorer when Byron Larbetter board play and a balanced Williams grabbed 14 rebounds
21 points or
e
ea • a
PH. 446·161J9
kin graduated last year.
,
flghting off the alligators and
Iguanas," said Gillen, who Is In
"For three years Byron was offense that placed- five players for the N e t s . c
In double-figures with getting his
. · . Pistons 116, 76ers 109
:parrow ·
the guy we turned to in the clutch.
his fourth season at Xavier and
first
win
as
an
NBA
head
coach.
At
Philadelphia,
Joe
Dumars
holds a 70·22 record going Into the
Now some of our guys will look
"The rebounding edge really scored 30 points and Adrian
season.
for No. 23, they'll be hltchln' and
surprises
me," Harter said. "We Danlley added 23 to lead Detroit.
According to the media, !he top twltchln' like Don Knotts,"
were really aggressive tonight, James Edwards added 18 points
players in the conference are Gillen said.
which Is something an expansion and VInnie Johnson had 9 of his 17
team has to do."
_points during a 15-4 Detroit spurt
Continued from page 3
Kelly Trlpucka led Charlotte In the second quarter. Charles
I
with 24 points, followed by Rex Barkley had 31 points and Cliff
Is
pJea-ed
to
announce
ers, Reserve members and Belpre Is eliminated from state
Chapman with 18, Kurt Rambis Robinson added 22 for the 76ers.
he now bas st.Jr privileges
Frank Blake, Ed Crooks, Kurtis competition.
Hawks 112, Pacers 107
with 17, Reid with 16 and Tyr6!1e
Representing the Meigs
English, David Hess, Jerry
Bogues with 14. Rambls snared
At Atlanta,'Dominlque Wilkins
for Chiropractic Ser:vlces
Jacks, Jeff McElroy, Scot County Jaycees, Chuck Hannahs
14 rebounds.
scored 32 points and Moses
at
Nelgler, Malt Peterson, Jared presented the Bob Roberts
The Clippers trailed 57·55 at Malone added 18 points and 22
'
Sheets, VIncent Vanaman, Den· Player of the Year awards to Jeff halftime and 90-79 after three rebounds to spark Atlanta. Glenn
nis Boothe, Decker Cullums, McElroy for the best offensive
quarters before making a run Rivers hit a three-'polnt shot with
Terry Fields, WessHoward, Burt player and Wes Young as thebes t late in the fourth quarter, cutting 38 seconds left to seal the
Kennedy, Terry McGuire, Kelly defensive player of the year.
the lead to 106-100 on a Norm triumph. The Hawks gotl4 points
Ogdln, James Sauvage, Doug Wess Howard was named Jaycee Nixon free throw. Charlotte then apiece !rom ·Antoine Carr and
Stewart, . Wes Young, Geoff player of the week for his scored six straight points to Cliff Levingston. Indiana was led
cOgar, Jim Durst, Randy Haw- performance against Gallipolis.
secure the win.
•
by wayman Tisdale with 24
Those present were invited to
ley, Jay Humphreys, Dave Les"It was a great win for the points, Reggie M11ler with 23 and
vis It the new weight room re- 'team and the organization ," said Chuck P Prson IIIIth 22 points and ·
ter, Tony Miller, Kevin Oller,
Taylor Chiropractic Clinic
Aaron Sheets, Scott Whobrey and . cently opened at the high school veteran Robert Reid, who had six l '&gt; re bounds.
1Y
715 Moln R.,l'elllt .. l I &amp;1, W.Va. 25550
Rod Stewart, varsity team and to see the new basketball points In the last two minutes to
Knlcks 126, Bulls 117
by
the
scoreboards
presented
members. Orville Hill and Danny
help seal the win. "This gives a
At New York, Johnny Newman
MOH-wB . . t - .. 6 p.m.
Pepsi Cola Bottling Company.
Folmer were presented as man·
message to the NBA that when scored a career-high 35 points to
·
M f.4 • 'IIIUI9-12
The ceremonies closed with the you come Into our place, we are pace the Knlcks. Mark Jackson
agers and Elise Meier and Missy
ly 'JU I I
Woods as student trainers. All benediction by Reverend going to scrap and hustle and added 20 points and 13 assists.an~
.
TVC awards will be delayed until McClung.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!) Iowa Football Coach F!ayden Fry
Is bracing lor another weird
game against Ohio State this
Saturday.
The 10-year Iowa coach says
something "always happens In
the Ohio State" game whether
It's blz:zare plays, controversial
calls or bad weather.
Last year Iowa won 29·27 when
Iowa quarterback Chuck Har·
tlleb completed a last-second
pass to tight end Marv Cook for
the winning touchdown. Most of
the bounces have gone the
Buckeyes' way, however. Ohio
State has won 19 of the last 21
contests against Iowa.
"The officials don't even do a
good· job officiating In that
particular game," Fry said Tues·
day. "It's just one of those kinds
of things. Year end, year out that
·game goes right down to the wire.
We haven't had too many nice
things happen to us through the
years playing Ohio State."
The 5·3·2 Haw keyes host the 4·5
Buckeyes In a game televised on
the Big Ten network starting at
11:15 a.m. Iowa lime (1:15
Columbus time).
... Ohio State must win against
Iowa and Michigan If 11 hopes to
avoid Its first losing season since
1966. No Ohio State team has ever
lost more than lour conference
games and the Buckeyes must
also win the next two weeks to
avoid that dubious distinction.
Despite Ohio State's off year
this season, Fry Is taking nothing
for granted. The Iowa coach said
unfortunately for him, the Buckeye defense appears to be jelling
In recent weeks with flU-In
players and the return of injured
veterans.
One thing Iowa players won't
have to do Is watch reruns of last
year's Ohio State game and the
exciting finale.
"Frankly, we have' t talked to
them about last year," Fry said.
We haven't shown the film and
we don't plan to. My ballclub Is
completely different, and Ohio ,
State Is different with a· new
coaching staff."
Fry's career record against
Ohio State Is 2-7 Including two
losses while he coached Southern
Methodist. The Buckeyes hOld a
10-5-and-1 record In games
played at Iowa City. Last year's

Township

showed a mixed situation in

The Daily Sentinel

~Of M~.Ohio

Continued frllm page 1

tloa, 247 to 1«1. Oranae ToWnship
voters, however, turned down a
new 1.5 tax which would have
provided dust control fUnds, 271

REDMJ!N I!CHEDUU:

.
' 1181-11
Nov. 15-Ke•tucQ- CllriMiaa ... ........ .... . R

Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

--------•

WI h lltf!y. Notl•iia.r 9, 1988

Rio men's basketball team faces competitive 1988-89 slate
•

-·---

.

"

.

'

...,

.,

'-

their many supporters gathered In Houston
PRESIDENT·ELECf BUSH, WIFE WAVE TO
Tuesday
nigh&amp; after Bush defeated Democrat
SUPPORTERS - Pl'esldent-eled George Bush
Michael
Dukakis
In the presidential race. (UPI)
and bls wife Barbara acknowledge the cheers of
that he will "press to keep the senator and his family Tuesday will try to be worthy of your
trust," Bush sald. "And to those
pressure on the Sandlnistas" to night for "strength under fire."
who did not, I will try to earn It
In
victory,
Bush
had
kind
commit themselves to demoand my hand Is out to you. And I
too
for
the
vanquished.
words
cratic reforms. But he did not say
want
to be your president, too."
directly If he wUl renew the fight Having lost previous elections In
.;.....
Texas,
he
empathized
with
DukaIn Congress to send new arms to
kis and admitted "It hurts."
the guerrUias.
"But we both went Into the
Bush, who atrended a private arena," he said, "and we fought
FURNITURE
church service with his family
long and hard. And the governor
before the news conference,
can take great satisfaction In the
announced routine appointments fact that his valiant family concerning the transition from
Kitty and Kara and Andrea and
the Reagan to · the Bush
John -did him proud ."
presidency.
There also were expressions of
And be recalled his historic
gratitude for campaign chair·
succession - only one other
man James Baker, a prospective
sitting vice president has been
secretary of· state In the new
elected to succeed hi&amp; president . administration, and for Reagan,
''I also want to thank Martin
whom he praised for "•going the ,
Van Buren for paving the way,,"
extra mile" on the campaign
Bush said.
trail.
Bush prepared to return to
WhUe the wltlth and breadth of
Washington and a triumphant
his mandate to govern has yet to
welcom~ at the White House
be gauged, Bush moved swiftly to
from his predecessor - Reagan.
place , the divisiveness of the
Bush was to be greeted by
campaign behind him.
running mate Dan Quayle, whose
In a conclllatory tone that
controversial background relestood in stark contrast to his
gated him to a low profile In the
combative words of just one day
campaign.
earlier, he voiced determination
· Bush, who mentioned Quayle
to unite the country behind him.
only once In the last day of the·
"A campaign Is a disagreecanipalgn, praised the Indiana
ment," he said, "and disagreements divide. But an election Is a
decision and decisions clear the
way for harmony and peace. And
Continued from page 1
I prolnise to be a president of all
the
people."
Also In regard to the holiday
If Tuesday night was an
season, Chamber Is in need of
occasion for reflection, today
donations for new Christmas
was a time for looking forward.
lights for the v11lage, and any
Bush has onlY 73 days to
business or individual wishing to
assemble an administration tha t
donate should contact the
will guide the country Into the
Chamber office. Pomeroy VIl1990s, through a period that will
lage agreed Monday night to
see tough decisions forced by
purchase $500 worth of decorapressures at home and events
tions for the village, reported
abroad.
Chamber member and Pomeroy
He pledged to do his "level bes I
Councilman Bruce Reed.
to reach out and work construe·
Other business matters con·
lively" with Congress, though
dueled' by Chamber Included the
Democrats again will control the
following.
House and Senate for the next
Mary Powell extended an
two years, a time when the
Invitation for any Chamber
budget deficit and other factors
member who is Interested to
will force difficult decisions that
attend Monday night's, 7:30p.m.
106 N. 2ND
435 2ND
hold the potential for political
meeting at the JTPA office on
MIDDLEPORT
GA~IPOLIS
confrontation.
Second St.. of the v11lage' s ·
''To those who supported me, I
Historic Preservation •

' ..
•·

~

,;
•

________ .... ...

,...

INGELS

..

· . ~.
.

'

.. '

.
...

-. ,
'

.,

'

-

~

'.,.

.,

r ~' •

..' .

.

''

.

';

' Vt I

... -

"

I

'

'

.•.

'• ~

'

'•

Meigs Industries ....
stage, Sheets said, and asked
Chamber members to get In
touch with her or Hoe!llch If they
want to volunteer for a job.
The Pomeroy Christmas P arade will take place on Sunday
following Thanksgiving, Nov. 27,
at 2 p.m., In conjunction with the
open house by Pomeroy mer·
chants. Parade entry forms will
be printed In The Dally Sentinel
and entrants from throughout
Meigs County are Invited to
participate, said Paul Gerard.
The parade will line up from
behind the old Pomeroy Junior
High, proceed dowit Main St. to
Butternut Ave, and will disband
at the fire department.

Mary Powell reported the
theme for this year's Christmas Commission.
Bruce Reed announced that
celebration Is "The Spirit of . Chamber _Intends to sponsor a
Christmas ~" and-that merchants
New Year's Eve Dance, limited
are being asked to use tiny white to 100 couples, and said he would
lights In their displays. Trees are have more details later.
also to be attached to some
Chamber members agreed
parking meters In the downtown that letters of support to gain ·
area to be decorated with home- attention for Pomeroy as a
made ornaments made by local possible Inclusion In two historifourth, fifth and sixth grade cal projects now underway, one
students. Groups of caro~rs are project·orlglnating from Indiana
being -scheduled for throughout and the other from Huntington,
the holiday season and any W.Va., should be sent to the
church group, scout group, parties Involved In production of
school group, or other organiza- the projects. Mary Powell is to
tion wishing to sing, should secure the necessary names and
contact Merchants Association addresses where the letters are
President Carmel 'Sisson, at · to be sent.
•
DOllar General Store, or Joan
Wolfe, association secretary, at
Bank One.

'-----------..1

'-• .
.,
'·

.---------------------IIIIIill

' '·.

MOTHE-RS!

'

•'1.,

'

~ ~-

for a dean, safe tomorrow."

~-.•-.
I

."..

' •
. ..

.

CH

• '-..-,
' ''"

.. '

GIFT

~'

...

'I '

5x7 WOOD PLAQUE

.,

·~. "f
&lt;,' f '

SOMETHING YOU WILL HAVE FOR A LIFETIME.

..--

WITH YOUR PACKAGE.

All,. AGES
·AND FAMILIES

' ' ' .,

• •.,

•

2 · 8x10
4 · 5x7 20 Wallets

95~ $16.95
Deposit

•

•-' •,

'·

'

ON DELIVERY

PUBLIC MEETING,

"

PLACE: M1son Volunteer Fire Department
Mason, Welt VIrginia
DATE: Thursday, November 10, 1988

'

-.
"
...•

'·

..

.....'.'
.. .' -..---·
-·
~

I

TIME: 7:00p.m.

•

••

SUBJECT: Legislative Action

r. •'

SPEAKERS: Senator Marlo PalumbO
Grant Barnette
Charlel Damron

PLEASE COME!

•

... '\ , '

Kodak Paper

MACE
"Working together in the Ohio Valley

.

....

.• '
'
.,.....'

c

.

'

�--~--'-

------~----

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

BIG BEND

Wednesday, November 9, 1988

Your Independently Owned
Low·Pric:ed Supermarket

nCIEIS

WASHINGTON (UPI) - De· formidable obstacle.
Democrats appeared assured
mocrats, boosted by the power of
Incumbency, retained control of of retaining at least their 54-46
the 101st Congress to no one's edge in the Senate, and projecsurprise Tuesday and are not tions pointed to the possibility of
likely to grant George Bush a two-seat gain. Of the 33 Senate
much of a honeymoon when he seats at stake, 18 belonged to
Democrats and 15 to Republiassumes the presidency.
Bush pledged to "do my best to cans. Each party left three seats
reach out and work construe· open with retirements.
The House, which closed the
lively'' with ·Congress, but since
100th
Congress at 255-177 for the
retaking the Senate two years
·
Democrats
with three vacancies.
ago, Democrats have been fiexremained
solidly
In Democratic
lng their muscle on Capitol Hill
at
259-173,
wi,
t h three seats
hands
with their own agenda.
leaning
to
the
Democrats.
And the continued presence In
In the Senate races, Dem~
the Senate of Lloyd Bentsen,
crats
had .won 18 seats and
D-Texas, theunsuccessfuiDem~
narrowly
led in two more, while
cratlc vice presidential candiRepublicans
had won 13.
date, may present Bush with a

QUARTERS

GRADE ''A;'

TURKEYS

FOODLAND

MARGARINE

40¢ OFF LABEL

TIDE

'

·.--

BOSTON (UPI) - Gov. MIchael Dukakis, his marathon bid
for the presidency over, · conceded defeat gracefully and
promptly encouraged loyal supporters to venture Into politics,
calling It "a noble profession."
"Tonight my heart 1s filled
with gratitude to everyone who
made this extraordinary experience of ours possible," Dukakls
told a gathering of Democratic
loyalists at the end of Election
Day.
.
His pres'llentlal campaign, he
said, was not about himself and
his running rna te. Texas Sen.

UMit 3 with '1 0.00 or

CHOCOLATE MORSELS
120Z.

!lo

p~~ANS$299

$.169

COTTAGE
• CHEESE

By United Press lnternallonal

$129
FOODLAND

10X OR LIGHT

TENDER BEST
WHOLE

DOMINO LIGHT

PORI LOINS

\

BROWN SUGAR

2°/o
HOMOGENIZED MILK

\

lOW

fAT

MILK

12 GAL

1

$·139
PORK &amp; BEANS
CORN •GREEN Dt:I'U'IIl:IO
SAUERKRAUT • POTATOES
&amp; CARh)TS

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE
DIET OR REG.

TENDER BEST
USDA CHOICE

PEPSI COLA

OODLAND VEGETABLES

T-BONI STEAK

89

16-16
CANS

2 LITER
BTL.

oz.
DElTA

PAPER
TOWELS

LUSH'US

GREEN BEANS

s·~

3 ':.:!· $1
MAXWELL HOUSE
REG. • ADC •EP

TENDERBEST USDA
CHOICE BONE-IN

HEAD

MASTER BLEND
COFFEE

ROUND STEAK

LmUCE
HEAD

SliCED
TENDUIEST

BACON

$119'
12

oz.",...._,
GRADE 'A'
SELF BASTING
TENDERBEST

ALL MEAT

TURKIYS

89C

Ll.

ROUND

BEEF

SLIS.
01 MOlE

Ll.

FOODLAND FROZEN

ALL PURPOSE

ORANGE
JUICE

WHITE
POTATOES

ARMOUR

99C1••

12· oz.
PIG.

99C
' FOODLAND

SALTINE
CRACKERS
I II.

lOX

59'

12 01.·

CAll

99C

~:GLI.

SPRITE, DIET OR REG.

FIG BARS

COCA-C·OLA

$179
.

GROUND CHUCI.J II. 01 MOll s
-we,. • .,.. tho Right to

,

Umlt OuantiiiM •

Pric. Effective Wed, Nov. 9 thru :011.!, Nov. 12. 19.88

$499

DELICIOUS BRAND

211.
PIG.

~ The

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

Daily Sentinei-Page- 7 ,

Among Senate Incumbents,
Nevada Republican Chic Hecht
fell tp former Gov. Richard
Bryan, and appointed Nebras ka
Sen. David Karnes was denied a
term In his own right by popular
former two-term Democratic
Gov. Robert Kerrey, a VIetnam
Medal of Honor winner. And
former farm broadcaster Conrad
Burns toppled Democratic Sen.
John Melcher iri Montana.

Sena te seats in two- Connect icut and Flor id a - wer e undecided in the early morning hours.
Liberal Republ ican Incumbent
Lowell Weicke r , of Connecticut, .
who tra iled conservative Demo-.
cra tic state Attorney General
Joseph Lieberman by about 6, 000
votes, refused to concede and·
said he may seek a recount.
In Florida , Rep. Buddy

Mac Kay he ld a 12,000-vote edge conser vative Repubi lean Sen.
over co nserva tive Re publican Malcolm Wallop, of Wyoming,
bea t sta te Sen. John Vlnic h by
Connie Mac k fo r a n "open"
fewer tha n 1,000 votes.
Democra tic seat.
In Cal ifor nla , first-termer Pete
Former R e publica n Sen. Slade
Gor ton, m a king a comeback bid Wilson won ' his race against
in Washington state after a De moc r atic Lt. Gov. Leo
two·year absence, beat Rep. McCarthy, breaking a j lnx on the
Mike Low ry, DWas h., In a seat and becoming th e first ·
incumben t returned to Washingcliff.hanger.
In a s queak e r . ult r a · .. ton in that seat in 36 vears.

In the House, Rep. Fernand St
Germain, D-R.L, chairman of
the Banking Committee but in
trouble over ethics · questions ,
was ousted. Incumbents were
running in all but 27 of the 435
House districts.

Lloyd Bentsen, but about all the
young families they had
struggled to represent ~
"It's been about all of us and
the values we share. That's what
we've been fighting for and that_
Is what we must continue to work
for every day," he told the
partisans at the World Trade
Center, who erupted several
times in wishful shouts of "1S92!
'92! '92! ''
After a congratulatory telephone call to Republican VIce
President George Bush, during
which Dukakls acknowledged his
failure io win the White House, he

said of his opponent, "He will be
our president and we will work
with him."
·
Even in graciousness, however, Dukakls would not put
as Ide his vision for America, one
he unsuccessfully sought to
spread in the waning days of the
campaign while trying to ignite
the fires of what he called "the
world's oldest and greatest
party."
Citing his father's frequent
admonition that "much has been
given to you and much is
expected of you," Dukakis told
the hundreds of young volunteers

CONCESSION SPEECH - Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis Is applauded
by his wile Kitty as he concedes the election to

Vice President George Bush at the World Trade
Center Tuesday. ( UPI)

State by state look at .the presidential election in 1988

BORDEN'S HI

~J40Z.

----·---

Dukakis accepts defeat with grace

1 LB.
PI(GS.

IN THE BULK
SHELLED WALNUTS

---- -

Democratic Congressional wins boosted by incumbency

FOODLANQ NnE
NOW AVAILABLE
110 Yl
SHAWNEE STATE
IASIETIALL FOR
MONDAY, DEC ••5

GOLDEN
DELIGHT

-·~

8

Ill OZ.
ITU.

.$ 159

•USDA Food sump1 Gladly Accepted •Not Rnpon1ible for Typographical Errora·.

I

Pion D p ult

•

they wanted to repeal the state's
new handgun Jaw- a move that
Here is a state-by-state look at was defeated.
the 1988 presidential election
Sen. Paul Sarbanes, a liberal
between Republican George two-term senator, won reBush and Democrat Michael
election.
Dukakis:
West VIrginia
Massachusetts
With a 2-1 Democratic edge
Dukakis carried his home state among voters in West Virginia,
and its 13 electoral votes.
Dukakis carried the state and its
Democratic Sen. Edward
six electoral votes. But the race
Kennedy defeated Republican tightened, largely because Bush
Jo~eph Malone. With no gubernastressed Dukakis's gun control
torial race, Dukakls will remain position.
in off1ce.
Sen. Robert Byrd defeated
Connecticut
state Sen. Jay Wolfe. Republican
Bush won the state's eight
incumbent Gov. Arch Moore lost
electoral votes, although J:lemo· a bill for a fourth term to
crats had based their hopes on Democrat Gaston Caperton.
the fact that Dukakis, from a
Delaware
neighboring state, was · wellBush won Delaware and Its
known.
three electoral votes, which have
De,m ocrat Joseph Lieberman gone with the winner . In every
was leading liberal Republican presidential election since 1952.
Sen. Lowell Weicker, who had
Republican Sen. •Bill Roth
been looking tor a fourth term de!ea.ted Democratic Lt. Gov.
win.
·
S.B, Woo. Incumbent Gov. MIMaine
chael Castle, a Republican, deWith four electoral votes,
feated Democrat Jake KreshMaine voters picked Bush, who , iool.
has a summer home In
Washglngton DC
Kennebunkport.
Dukakis easily won the DisSen. George .Mitchell, a Demotrict's three electoral votes.
crat, won re-election.
Florida
New Hampshire
Bush won the blgges t prize of
Bush won the state and its four the South, capturing the state's
electoral votes. The state had 21 electoral votes.
been solidly behind Bush since
With 99 percent of the vote in,
the beginning of the Call\paign.
Democratic Rep . Kenneth
Rep. Judd Gregg, a Republi"Buddy" MacKay held a slight
can, . be!lt Democrat Paul lead over GOP Rep. Connie Mack
McEachern. Gov. John Sununu, for the Senate seat being vacated
also a Republican, did not seek a by Democrat Lawton Chiles.
fourth term.
North Carolina
Rhode Island
The state and Its 13 electoral
Dukakls took Rhode Island and votes went to Bush, largely
Its four electoral votes.
because of the conservative
Republican Sen. John Chafee themes he has been pushing.
won re-election against Dem~
Incumbent Republican Gov.
cratic Lt . Gov. Richard Licht. James Martin won a second term
Republican Gov. Edward Di- over Democratic Lt. Gov. Bob
Prete defeated Democrat Bruce Jordan, becomlngthefirstSouth·
Sundlun despite questions about ern Republican governor re·
his administration.
elected since Reconstruction.
Vermont
VIrginia
The state, with three electoral
With its 12 electoral votes,
votes. had been leaning tow,~~rd Bush took VIrginia, a state that
Dukakls, but ended up In the was solidly behind the vice
Bush column. It has gone GOP In . preskfent going in.io the electio'n.
every presidential election In 134
Former Gov. Charles Robb, a
years, except for Lyndon John· Democrat and son-In-law of
son's 1964 landslide.
Lyndon Johnson, defeated black
Republican Sen. Robert Staf·
Republican Maurice Dawkins in
ford Is retiring and GOP Rep. the race to replace GOP Sen.
James Jeffords, a clear favorite.
Paul Trible.
beat former U.S. Attorney WllGeorgia
• llamGrayinthebattletosucceed
Bush steadily solidified his
him. Democratic Gov. Made- lead in the state and took the 12
leine Kunin won a third term .
eiectoral votes . Some local De·
New York
mocrats moved away from DuThe biggest prize ofthe region,
kakis and very few new black
with 3ij electoral votes, went to voters, generally Democrats,
Dukakls.
were registered.
Sen. Daniel Moynihan, a De·
Tennessee
mocrat, won a third term.
Bush won the state's 11 elec·
Pennsylvania
toral votes.
Sen. James Sasser, a Dem~
The race for the Keystone State
crat,
won an easy re--election-bid.
and its 25 electoral votes was
Loullllana
clOse and went- to Bush, but
Louisiana
with 10 electoral
Dukakis had once led there.
votes
went
for
Bush, who is seen
Republican Sen. John Helot
as
more
sympathetic
to the
won his third term .
problems
of
oil
states.
Although
New Jersey
Bush won the state's 16 elec· voter registration Is 8-to-1 In
!oral votes. New Jersey last went favor of Democrats, the state has
Democratic in a presidential turned agalns t th~ Democrats In
election In 1964. Once considered five of the last six national
a tossup state, It moved solidly elections. The exception was
Southerner Jimmy Carter's win
into Bush's corner.
In the Senate race, Incumbent in 1976.
Kentucky
Democrat Frank Lautenberg deThe
state's
nine electoral votes
feated Republican Pete Dawkins, a retired Army general, went to Busn. ,
Alabama
Wall Street executive and college
Bush won the state's nine •
football star.
electoral votes.
'
Maryland
Caronna
South
The generally liberal state and
The eight electoral votes from
its 10 electoral votes was once
the
state went to Bush.
considered a sure Dukakls bet,
Mlsalsslppl
but went to Bush. The vice
Bush
easily
captured this con·
president could have been helped
servatlve
state
and its seven
by a large number of Republielectoral
votes.
cans who re&amp;lstered because

Sen. David Durenberger, . a
In the battle for the Senate seat
being vacated by retiring Dem~ Republican, .won a third term
crat John Stennis, Republican over state Attorney General
Rep. Trent Lot!, the House Hubert H. Humphrey III. the son
minority whip, defeated Demo· of the former vice president .
cratic Rep. Wayne Dowdy.
Nebraska
Bush won Nebraska and its
Arkansas
Arkansas, with six electoral nine electoral votes.
votes, elected Bush, who over·
In the expensive Senate race to
succeed
Edward Zorinsky,
came an early Dukakis lead. His .
campaign was helped by a recent former Democratic Gov. Bob
Kerrey defeated Rep ubi ican Sen.
appearance by the presi&lt;!ent.
David
Karnes, whO was ap·
Dllnols
pointed
to the Senate when
Bush pulled ahead of Dukakls
Zorinsky
died. Spending in the
to win the state's 24 electoral
race
is
nearing
a combined $6
votes.
Ohio
mlilion- a state record.
Bush captured the state's 23
Iowa
electoral votes.
Iowa, which has eight electoral
Liberal Democratic Sen. How- votes, went for Dukakls after
ard Metzenbaum, 71, won a third having not gone with a Democrat'
term over Republican Cleveland since 1964. It was considered
Mayor George Volnovich, who solid Dukakls territory this year,
hammered at Metzenbaum's lib- but the race tightened considera·
eral record. The race has seen bly since the second presidential
one of the most heavy-handed · debate.
Kansas
television ad campaigns In Ohio
history.
· · ... , · With seven electoral votes, the
Michigan
state went for Bush. Except for
Bush won the state's 20 etec- Johnson In 1964, the state has
toral votes, despite a last-minute voted for the Republican presidrlve by Dukakis to woe voters dential candidate in every na ·
with his populist "on your side" tiona! election since 1940. Major
theme.
issues are agriculture, the aviaDemocratic Sen. Donald Rle- lion Industry and oil and gas
gle won a third term.
production.
Indiana
North Dakota
Bush carried the Hoosier State
The state. which has three
and Its 12 electoral votes, a state electoral votes, went to Bush.
solidly in the Republican column
Sen. Quentin Burdick, an 80·
and expected to go to the GOP year-old Democrat who has had
even before Bilsh chose Sen. Dan health problems, defeated Earl
Quayle as his running mate.
Strinden, the state House GOP
The state's senior senator, leader. . Incumbent Democratic
Republican Richard Lugar, Gov. George Sinner held on tohls
claimed a lopsided victory over, position, beating Republican
Democrat Jack Wickes, an India- Leon Maltberg.
napolls lawyer. Democrat Evan
South Dakota
Bayh, son of former Sen. Birch
Bush captured the state's three
Bayh, defeated Republtcari Lt. electoral votes. It had not voted
Gov. John Mu tz for the for a Democratic candidate,
governorship.
Including native George McGov·
Missouri
ern, since 1964 .
'
Bush captured the state's 11
Texas
electoral votes.
Bush won the state's 29 elecSen. John Da(lforth, a Republi· tara! votes, despite the presence
can, won a third term by of Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen on
defeating 32·year-old Demo- _ the Democratic ticket. Bush
cratic state Sen. Jeremiah Nixon claims the state as his home,
in a race that generated Itttle ' although he ha s connections to
interest. Incumbent Republican other states as well.
Gov. John Ashcroft won a second
Bentsen, permitted by a state
term over state Rep. Betty Jaw to run for vice president and
Hearnes, 61, the first woman in the Senate, e aslly retained his
the state's history to run for congressional seat.
governor.
Oklahoma
Wisconsin
Bush took the state's eight
The Badger State, which has 11 electoral votes. The state has
electoral votes, went to Dukakis. strong conservative leanings and
Veteran Democratic Sen. Wll· a record of voting Republican In
!lam Proxmlre Is retiring. Multi- eight of the last nine presidential
millionaire Democrat Herb elections.
'
Arizona
Kohl, owner of t~e Milwaukee
'The state' s seven electoral
Bucks professional basketball
team, defeated 36-year-old Re- votes went to B.ush, mostly
publican state Sen . Susan because of its vollng history and
conservative .leanings . It has not
Engeleiter.
gone Democratic In a (lresldenMinnesota
Dul!akls won the state and its tlal election since 1948.
Democratic Incumbent Sen.
10 electoral votes.

Dennis DeConcini won his bid for bitter · battle. Democrats had
re-election, defeating Republi- been painting Wallop as an . .,
extremist out of touch with the
can Kei th DeGreen.'
state and have 'r eminded voters
New Mexico
of Wallop's promise not to serve
The state, with its five elecmore than two terms. Wallop,.
toral votes, went to Bush. Dem~
crats outnumber Republicans seeking his third term, says'
Vinlch Is too liberal for the state. :
all)lost 2&gt; to-1 and gained in voter
Ca!Uornla
registration, but the state has not
Bush
won
the state, with 47
voted fora Democratic presidenelectoral
votes
~ the blgges t
tial candidate since 1964.
prize
of
the
election
and a tossup
Incumbent Democrat Sen. Jeff
for
weeks.
Bush
wa~
helped by
Bingaman ran away with his
the
organ
lzation
of
Republican
re·electton bid against Republi·· Gov. George Deukmej ian.
: •
can William Valentine.
Conservative
incumbent
Sen.
Colorado
Pete Wilson defeated Demo·
Bush snagged the state's eight
cratic
Lt . Gov. Leo McCarthy;
electoral votes . .
putting
to rest claims the seat Is
Utah
"jinxed"
because no one has
Utah, with five electoral votes,
been
re·elected
to It for 36 years.
went solidly behind Bush .
Washington
Republican incumbent Sen.
With 10 electoral votes, DukaOrrin Hatch easily defeated
kis
won the state narrowly.
Democrat Brian Moss to win a
Sen. Dan Evans
Republican
third term. Democratic gubernawas
not.
seeking
a new term,
torial candidate Ted Wilson, a
sparking
a
heated
battle.
Repub•
former Salt Lake City mayor,
lican
Slade
Gorton,
who
lost
hi s
once held a substantial lead over
Senate
seat
In
1986
to
Brock'
incumbent GOP Gov. Norm
Bangert.er. but he now trails the Adams, defeated Democratic
Rep. Mike Lowry. The campaign
Republican.
was very negative. In the guberIdaho
,
Bu.ush won four elec toral votes natorial contest, Democratic incumbent Gov. Booth Gardner
in this heavily Republican state.
easily
won re-election.
'
Montana
Oregon
·
Montana and its four electoral
Dukakis won the state's seven
votes had ge nerally been consi·
Votes, despite Its pattelectoral
dered safe Republican turf and
ern
of
voting
Republican In nine
went for Bush. However, the race
of
the
last
10
presidential
races.
was very close. with the environNevada
ment and the state's soft econThe state, with Its four elec·
omy topping the list of votef
!oral
votes, went to Bush. Dukaconcerns.
kis
may
have los t his last chance
Republican Conrad Burns
for
the
state when he said he
pulled ahead of incumbent De· '
supported
the congressional democratic Sen. John Melcher .
Incumbent Gov . Ted Sc hwlnden, cision to make Nevada the site of
a Democrat, chose not to run for a nuclear waste dump.
Democratic Gov . Richard
re-election. Democrat Thomas
Bryan
defeated Sen . Chic Hecht.
Judge, who was governor from
The
president
recently appeared .
1972 to 1980, Is seeking to win
inthestateonHecht'sbehalfbut
.
back the seat, but he Is trailing
It
was
not
enough
to
save
the
•
former s tate Senate President
Republican's
Senate
seat.
•
Stan Stephens.
,
Alaska
·
Wyoming
A solid Republican state;·
The state and its three elec·
Alaska
and its three electoral
toral votes went to Bush, who led
votes
went
to Bush, partl,y
there from the start of the
because
of
Dukakis's
support fo·r ~
campaign . Only once since 1952 gun
control
and
opposition
to oil
has the state voted Democratic In
in
the
Arctic
Na- ·••
development
a presidential race - supporting
tiona
I
Wildlife
Refuge.
Neither
• , ~.
Johnson in 1964.
,,
candidate
has
visited
the
state
.
•
~
•
Sen. Malcofm Wallop, a
Hawaii
•
staunch Republican conserva·
Hawaii, a staunchly Demo'
live, defeated Democratic state
cratlc
state. awarded its four
Sen. John Vinich in a sometimes
electoral votes to Dukakls .

s

sEC.AUSE 2
IS SETTER
·THAN 1

.•
•

Christmas Village
ATTENTION
BUSINESS OWNERS, CHURCHES,
PRODUCT SALES REPRESENTATIVES

"We Have Tahle Spaoa Awallahle"
CALL NOW FOR MORE INFORMAnON
MIDDLEPORT no

992-6961 OR 992·7 452

.

·n today and
special. cornle ·ps'" Speidel

. h someon e
ooub eouble-uP W!t into words on a
your
from several

~ut

fe:~~~:

bracelet. C Gift boxed.
·que styles.
un•
.

u'

~~

00'
~nwers
"--------2-t2_E_.•Ma_ln_._P..,oo_m..•ro_v..__..__~-;-o:...-..J ,

�--~-

Alfred
UMW has
•

meeting

Martha Poole led the program,
Do You Know What Your Child
Knows, When Alfred United
Methodist Women met on Oct.ll.
All present took part In reading
and discussion, concluding thai a
sense o! belonging Is the most
ImpOrtant thing !or a child.
Belonging to lamlly. church,
school, and supporting groups
such as church youth groups and
4-H were all emphasized. Each
child must be allowed to develop
at his own rate.
The society
met at the home of
'

Martha Elliott had the prayer the November meeting.
calendar and chose Phyllis Ben·
Sara Caldwell and Gertrude
tley, Evarts United Methodist Robinson displayed pictures
Charge, Kentucky. The society taken during their Ozarks Tour
signed a birthday. card lor her.
where fhey attended the world·
Mrs. Parker gave a report on famous Passion Play.'
Festival o! Sharing and District · The hOStesses served homeUMW Annual. The society voted made lee cream, cookies, and
money to help pay !or bagels strawberries during the social
served by Athens District at the hour.
Festival. Parker announced EnNext meeting will be at the
richment Day and Conference chll'rch November 15 with a
Annual. She alerted the society covered dish supper. Program
that annual report to district will be on Thanksgiving and
president will be completed at Christmas.

Nellie Parker and Martha Poole
with seven members present and
a guest, Marguerite Stearns.
Nine sick call~ were reported.
Osle May Follrod gave the
treasurer's report.
Thelma Henderson gave a
report on Sheila Burton, a white
South African. Burton told of
helping friends, both white and
black, In South Africa. Sadly, she
concludes that mistreatment or
the blacks may lead to terrible
violence In the future.

'

•

Wednesday, November 9, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

t"age-ts-1 he Oatly Senttnel

Count on Kroger for.

•

A bazaar and bake sale will be
held Friday from 10 a.m to 4 p.m .
at the homeofMlldredSpencer In
Antiquity., Route 338, by the
Willlng Hands Ladles of the
Antiquity Baptist Church.

Civitan sells certificates

No more uore
Among recent inventions, an elec· ·
Ironic anti-snoring device was patent·
ed, according to The World ·Almanac.
An audio signal Irritates the sleeper
and stops the snoring.

DARIN M. TEAFORD

Teaford birth
Dale and Linda Teafqrd, Ra·.
cine, announce the birth or their
third son, Darin Michael, .b orn
Oct. 16 at the Holzer Medical
Center. He· weighed seven
pounds, 11 ounces and was 20
Inches long.
'
Maternal grandparents are ·
Mr. and Mrs . Larry O'Brien, .
Racine, and mater~al great·
~grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams, Raclne, and
Mr. and Mrs . Rex O'Brien,
Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
an.d Mrs. Dale Teaford, Portland. Paternal great-grand·
mother Is Mrs. Allah Teaford,
Hebron. Paternal great~great·
-grandmother Is Mrs. Eva
Wells, Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Teaford have
twln
Dale and Derek.

ADVlRTISED ITEM POLICY-Each. of these advertised items is required to be readily
available for sale in each Kroger Store , except as specifically noted in this ad. If
we do run out of an advertised item , we will offer you your choice of a
comparable item. when available, reflecting the same savings or a raincheck
which will entitle you to purchase the advenised item at the advenised price

••

within 30 days. 'Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item purcha,sed.

COPYRIGHT 1988 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, NOV.
6, THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV. 12, 1988, IN GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY.

•

•

•

..
~

•'

'

\

•

KWICK KRISP OR

U.S. GRADE A 11-LBS. AND UP ·

JASON A. PARKER

Parker birthday

Serve 'N' Save
Bacon

Frozen
Young.Turkeys

. Jason Alan Parker, son of Carl
and Arlene Parker, recently
celebrated his lOth birthday with
a partY, at the home of his
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Connolly. The party
was hosted by Mrs. Parker.
A monster truck cake, Ice
cream and punch were served to
guests. Attending were Misty
and . Travis Lyons, Sheila,
Jeremy and Christopher Con·
nolly, Sandy and Christie Mills,
Angela, Justin and Tina DeLa·
Cruz, Erma Jean and Darlene
Connolly, Shaun Long, and Jason's great-grandmothers, Beu·
lah Schultz and Erma Connolly.

1-lb.

Pound

c

U.S. lnspecTe~a

¢

.'

----------------~
FROZEN

FROZEN REGULAR OR HOMESTYLE

300 SHEETS PER ROLL 1-PLY.

40¢ OFF LABEL

Fox De Luxe
Pizzas

Aunt Jemima
Waffles

Charmin
Bath Tissue

Tide Laundry
Detergent

10-oz.

42-oz.

4-Roll

88

c

•

•

•

-

REGULAR OR LITE KROGER PANCAKE
SYRUP 24-0Z .... $1.89

ln
The Produce Dept.
•

GREEN BEANS WITH
POTATOES OR

Hanover
Green Beans
39-50-oz.

49

lame Red

Diet Pepsi
or ·Pepsi Cola

'

24-Pak 12-oz. Cans

$

Pound

88

"

I

(

'Lyons birthday

lAyette shower
held recently

okay
rapes

;

TRAVIS R. LYONS

The seventh birthday of Travis
Ray Lyons, son of Raymond and
Debra Lyons, was observed
recently with a party hosted by
hls mother at the home of his
mateqrnl grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Connolly.
An All cake was served with Ice
cream and punch to Jason
Parker, Sheila, Jeremy and
Christopher Connolly. Sandy and
Christie Mills ,' Erma Jean and
Darlene Connolly, Jeremy Gil·
land, Kurt Bennett, and Shaun
Long. Beulah Schultz and Erma
Connolly, great-grandmothers
of Travis, sent gifts.

For

;P illsbury Microwave $
Popcorn ............. lo.s . oz.

Veterans offered tickets
Marvin Bickers, John Barnes, Brent Rose; back, 1
to r, Aaron Knopp, Chri&amp; Grindley, Shawn Baker
and David Custer. Members not present are
Michelle Brown and Kevin Grueser.

Planning may save
your life in a fire

.•

Judy Bailey and Debbie Way·
land entertained recently with a
layette shower honoring Sandy
Beaver. Games were played with
the door prize being won by
Audra Gaul.
Attending were Opal Biggs,
Nancy Beaver, Sally Beaver,
Lena and Samantha Bailey,
Audra Gaul, Edwina Scott, Janet
Abbott, Teresa Carr, Nola
Swisher and granddaughter,
Meagan Adkins, Betty Sayre,
Kim Laudermllt, Nancy
MuUens, Llnda Wyatt, Carolyn
Biggs, Connie Patterson, Terry
Covert, Darlene Dunn, Teresa
Van Cooney, and Ira VanCooney.
Sending gifts were Juanita
Mlller; Ronald Miller, Jr., Jyl
Warner, Pattl Gaul, Don Bailey,
Velma Rue, Beverly Bailey,
Phyllis Joachim, Ruth and Judy
Arnold, Susan Maxey, and Keith,
Carolyn, Amy and Debby Searls.

o! volunteers, Clv.ttan was the
premier sponsor of the 1987
International Summer Special
Olympic Games In South Bend,
Ind. Big Bend Club members
have supported Special Olym·
pies at Carleton School and have
volunteered at area games and
the 1987 ISSO.
Special Olympics Is an In lerna·
tl6nal organization devoted to
year~round sports training and
athletic competition for children
and adults with mental retarda·
lion, The money raised by
Civltan Clubs wnt help many
Special Olympic athlet.es- expe'
rlence the skill, courage, sharing
and of sports competition.
Big Bend Club President, Sue
Malson, urges area residents to
become Involved In the Winter
Special Olympic Games by purchasing AT/ItT Gift Packs !or
friends, family and work assa.
. elates. For more Information
residents may call Mrs. Malson
at 992-2084, or Yonlece Miller,
992-5656.

Beat of the bend

PARLIAMENTARY- Members of the Racine
Future Farmers of America ParUamentary
Procedure team received a bronze rating In the
District 10 parliamentary procedure contest.
Members of the learn pictured are front, 1 to r,

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS.

For

Blg Bend
Clvltan Club
members are selling AT&amp;T long
distance gilt certificates to help
support the 1989 International
Winter Special Olympic Games
to be held In Renoclake Tahoe In
April .
Ten percent of all certiflate
sales by Clvltans throughout the
United States will go to support
that event.
The long distance gilt certifl·
cates are available In a $25 gift
pack which may be given as one
gift or spilt Into live Individual $5
gilts for stocking stutters or as a
great bonus to give along with
·
other gifts.
The certificates are redeemable at face value for all AT&amp;T
long distance calls. They have no
expiration date, so the purchaser
can use them anytime. However,
to Insure Christmas delivery,
AT&amp;T must receive orders by
·
Dec. 9.
The support of Special Olympics Is an on~golng project of
Civitan International. Providing
1.6 million dollans and hundreds .

• •

•

7-oz.

Wednesday. November 9, 1988

Page-9

•

Perdue Leg
Quarters Ih.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Bazaar set

Dear Ann Landers: More than
65,000peoplearekllledorlnjured
In !Ires each year in this country
because most of us don't kno_.;
what to do.
Did you know that when you
are asleep you lose your sense of
smell and no matter how bad the
smoke Is, you won't wake up
uriless there's noise?
Did you know that a !Ire Is dark
and not light? In a real !Ire, you
won't be able to see your hand In
front of your race.
Please tell your readers what
they can do to plan to get out
alive. _ steven L. Duesbury,
Golan/ Harris Communications,
Chicago
Dear Readers: McDonald's
has joined the United States Fire
Administration and First Alert, a
manufacturer of smoke alarms,
to teach people bow to get out of a

touch lt, do nQt open lt. DO NOT
PANIC. Escape out the window
or use your alternate exit.
If you can' !leave your room or
apartment, seal cracks around
doors and vents as best you can,
using wet towels If possible. Open
a window at both top and bottom.
Stay low by the window, to
breathe fresh air. If there s a
phone, call the fire department
and tell them exactly where you
are In the building.
If your clothes catch on fire,
stop where you are. Drop to the
~ound and roll over and over to
put out the flame. DO NOT RUN.
Running fans the flames .
Teach small children never to
hide under beds or In closets in
case of fire.
Gather at a predetermined
meeting place ou tslde your ·
home, well away from the

Ann
Landers
ANN

LANDERS«~

'~1988, l.ot~

Anjldl'i'
'l'lnu"!! Svndicollt' 11nd
Lr.-al ~ Syndlnlt'

building, and take a head count.
Once outside, STAY OUT.
Once you've sketched your
escape plan and discussed It with
your family and neighbors. practlce. Involve every member of
the household.
By planning ahead and practic·
lng your home fire escape plan,
'you can protect yourself and your
family. Remember the best
protection Is prevention.
Dear Readers: Every now and
then l run across a "sermon" In a
few words. Here'·s a good one:
,
Silence Is learned from the
Congratulations to Donna
talkative,
Lambert, daughter of Clarence
Tolerance !rom the intolerant,
and Sally Lambert , Rock
Generosity from the stingy and . Springs, and a sophomore at Ohio
Kindness from the unkind.
University.
Donna has been selected as one
Ji
of the 30 students to serve on the
university 's eque~trlan team and
and active in other civic and
partlclpatled In competition at
school affairs.
Delaware over the weekend
Mrs . Williams is married to
ato·ng with teams from seven
Jack Williams and the couple
other universities. In Western
have three children, Jane Ann,
horsemanship, Donna took
Tucker; and Ryan. The family
fOurth on Saturday and tlrst In
resides in Syracuse.
the .Sunday competition. The
Ohio University team overall
placed third out of the eight
teams.
Donna Is a veteran equestrian.
She's been rldingslnce she was 11
and was Involved with the Ohio
Valley Horse Show Association
for seven years In addition to her
work with horses In conjunction
with the county 4·H_ program.
Mr. and Mrs. Lambert and
their other daughter, Natalie and
her husband, Ken, were on hand
for the weekend competition In
Delaware.

--------

Woman honolied Lor work

fire
alive. smoke
Here are
some Ups;
Install·
detectors
near
each sleeping area. Most fire
Judith A. Williams, LUTCF, of
deaths occur at night, often while
Brogan-Warner
Insurance Ser·
people are asleep.
vices,
has
been
honored by
Draw a floor plan of your
Westfield
Life
Insurance
Co. lor
home. Show all possible exits
being
a
three-year
consecutive
from each room.
Discuss the escape routes with ·member of Westfield's TOP 60
agents.
your family. Make sure everyone
Mrs. Wllllams is the first
knows the telephone number for
woman to earn this award which
the fire department or the local
represented the top five percent
emergency number.
of agents nationally.
Sleep with your bedroom door
An engraved desk set wa s
closed at night. A closed door will
presented to Mrs. Williams for
help slow the spread of fire,
her accomplishments. Earlier
smoke and heat. When following
this year she wa s hOnored as a
your escape route, be sure to
charter
member of Westfield
close all doors behind you.
Companies
mostpre_stlglous Pre·
The smoke detector will sound
sldential
Award
relating to life,
the alarm to wake up you and
and
casualty.
,
property
your family . When you hear it,
Mrs.
Williams
attended
West
roll out of bed to the floor. Get
Virginia
University
and
gradu·
down on your hands and knees,
ated from Mountain State Col·
crawl to your door and open it.
Don't stop to get clothes, papers . lege. She Is a member of the Ohio
Association of Llfe Underwriters
or jewelry.
and the Athens Chapter of Life
If the door feels cool, open It a
Underwriters.
crack to check for smoke. If there
She is also affiliated with Beta
Is none, leave by your planned
Sigma Phi. Ohio Eta Phi Chapescape route. Remember to
crawl low and keep your head ter, Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, and Is a charter
down. Cleaner air Is nearer to the
member and officer of the Big
ground.
Bend
Midget Football League
If the door !eels hot when you

'JUDITH A. WILLIAMS

Health club meeting conducted
Articles on health were given
at the recent meellng of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club held
at the home of Dorothy Jeffers.
Lenora Leifheit presided at the
meet lng which opened with the
Lord's Prayer and pledge to the
flag in unison. Nancy Morris had
devotions using Autumn's Lea·
vin's, Playful Leaves , and
Oct's Cathedral.
Officers' reports were given

Winners named
Door prize winners at the first
anniversary open house of the
Treasurer Chest Crafts of Louise
and Bill Radford were Margaret
Russell, Pomeroy, a decorated
hat; JaniCe Haynes, Coolvllle, a
handmade basket; Kathleen
Manley, Middleport, a holiday ,
floral piece; Phyllis Baker, Ra,
cine, and Jamie Parsons,
wreathes; and Gennl Hill, Ra·
cine, a photograpl! album.
\

By BOB HOEFLICH
I have an o!fer !or Meigs
County Vietnam Veterans, their
families and
guests.
The Athens
Area VIetnam
Veterans of
America, Chapter 100, and the
Ohio University
Athletic Department will be
offering free tickets to the Ohio
u. ~Ball State University game
Saturday afternoon beginning at
12: 30 p.m. at the west gate of
Peden Stadium. Meigs County
VIetnam veterans, their families
and guestcs are welcome to
receive the game tickets, Following the game a reception will
be held at the West End Tavern at
the corner of Shaefer and Wa·
shlngton Sts., In Athens and
Meigs people at'tending the game
are Invited to that event also.
Lou Horvath who traveled to
Meigs County in conjunction with
his work In social security for
several years, Is president of the
Athens Chapter of VIetnam Veterans and extends the invitation to
both Meigs and Athens County
Vietnam vets.

. and Agnes Dixon and Dorothy
Jeffers reported on ·get~well
cards sent to community
residents.
. Articles on health Included
Healthy Eating by Nancy
Grueser, For Teens and Grow·
lng Kids by Ann Mash, When
Emergencies Happen ' by Agnes
Dixon and Mildred Jacobs,
Food for Thought by Frances

Goegte!n, 'I he At Home Medl·
c ine Ches t by Lenora Leifheit,
Corrective Measures by Trecle ·
Abbott. and On the Road Emer·
gency Kit by Louise Bearhs.
A contest was conducted by
Mrs. Mash and won by Mrs .
Jacobs and Mrs . Bearhs.
Ann Grueser was a guest at the
meeting. PhyUls Skinner will
host the next meeting.
'

OPEN HOUSE
NOV. 11th AND 12th AT

Mdry's Country Craft &amp; Supplies

Plans are rolling for the 25th
anniversary reunion of the Mld·
dleport High School Class o!-1964.
Class representatives have
had one planning session for the
spring reunion and another plan·
nlng session- open, of course, to
all members o! the class who are
stilling Uvlng ln this area and
their spouses -set !or Dec. 11 at
the Pizza Hut.
The group has rented the

Feegey·Bennett Post128, Amerl·
can Legion Hall In Middleport,
!or special get-togethers In the
afternoon and again In the
evening following the reunion
activities of the entire Middleport AlumnlAssoclation. Accord·
lng to plans, members o! the
class and their spouses wlll be at
the hall all night with breakfast
to be served. Bill NetliZUng will
serve as head cook !or the
breakfast and Carol Lyons Hawkins wlll handle the communlca·
tlons to class members advising
them o! all of the special
.activities planned. Another class
member, Roger Roush, Colum·
bus, will prepare a letter to be
sent to the class.
A lund raiser t'n the form of a
50·60's dance wlll be staged by
the local grads to raise some cash
to help with the reunion events.
The class o! '64 had 51 graduates. Fifty of them are llvlng and
18 are still in this area.

•

Tom and Emm'l Hayman,
former · Syracuse residents, will
mark their 60th wedding annlver1
sary Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.
Hayman are both residents of
Pomeroy Amerlcare Center,
Rock Springs Road , Pomeroy,
and cards are more than welcome. You probably remember
Emma !rom her days In the
Elberfeld Department Store
some 22 years.
The Southern High Future
Farmers of America members
are selllng fruit again this year.
To place an order just contact
any FFA member or the chapter
advisor. Aaron Sayre, at 949-; :
2611.
•
Friday Is Veterans Day and all
state liquor stores, agencies and
departmental offices will be
closed In observanceofthe day so
don't walt until Friday to take
care of any business you might
have with state offlces.
•

-------....:..

It wlll be lnter~sUng to know :
just how many mllllon were
spent on the presidential campaigns. I suppose we- wlll be toiil
In time, won't we? Do keep
smiling,

1 - - - - - - - - - t'

SACRED HEUT
CHURCH BAZAAR
THURS., NOV. 10th
DINNER
GAMES-PRIZES
DINNER 5 pm-7 pm

Everyone Welcome

POMEROY, OHIO

~~

N§:

Special of the Weeki
•

FISH SQUARE

89C
WnH FRIES ................

S1.44
•

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

ROUTE 681 i\T DARWIN

10 A.M.·6 P.M. DAILY
REFRESHMENTS AND DOOR PRIZES

f?

.,

�~

·-----------

-·~~--

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio·
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Ohio Coal Meigs .division
honors area teachers

CONGRATULATES TEACHERS - Dave Baker (standing),
personnel manacer for Southern Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division, congratulates wlnnlnl(leaehers at a mini-grant awards
ceremony In Athens.

" Don' t stop now. Keep on
going."
With that, David P. Baker,
personnel manager for Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs
Division, helped honor 11 area
school teacllers who received
funding for innovative projects
tllrough the company's mini·
grant program.
Soutllern Ohio Coal awarded
over $4,000 wortll of mini-grants
for tile 1988·89 school year, withgrants going to seven schools in
the Meigs Local, Alexander
Local and Vinton County scllool
districts.
The · grants, averaging $365
each, were selected for fundlr)g
by an eigllt·member review
committee set up by the Meigs
Division. The awards were pres· ·
en ted to the winnlngteacllers at a
recent banquet in Athens. On
hand to present the awards were
James F . Tompkins, vice pres!·
dent and general manager -of
Southern Ohio Coal's Meigs Dlv·
ision, and James P. Gerkin,manager of personnel and staff
development tor the American
Electric Power Fuel Supply
Department in Lancaster, Ohio.
"I don't envy the judging

committee one bit," said Baker,
"because we had 47 applications
for grants this year, over four
times as many as we've had In
tile past. We opened the program
to all schools in the area, and you
folks really responded with some
excellent Ideas."
The winning proposals In·
eluded Ideas in science, home
economics, newrpaper production and agriculture as well as
projects specifically geared to
special education classes.
"We're going to teach tbe kids
about the creation of a news·
paper and what all goes Into the
production of a newspaper or
similar publication," said Linda
Keller, who teamed up with
Chris Leuhrman and Nedra
Zirkle to win a grant for a
sf.lcth-grade project at Albany
Elementary School. ''Our goal Is
to try to Impress upon the
_children at this age that they
need to relate to things In real
life. With this funding, we can
carry this project the1uil load."
"I'd like to take time to thank
Southern Ohio Coal for making
this possible," added Pat Saltadales, director of services lor the
i\lexander Local School District,

who al$0 served as a member on
this year's review committee.
"Without their help, the funding
just wouldn't be available lor
these types of projects.
In addition to the aforementioned trio from Albany Elementary, teachers receiving grants
were: Martha C. Johnson, Shade
Elementary; Meta Van Nostran,
Alexander High School; Marilyn

Galli a Couflty

former landfills, coal piles, tire
training, areas, chemical burial
sites and fuel spills at WrightPatterson.
The multi-year contract with
Engineering Science calLs for
preparing a detailed work plan
outlining procedures for cleaning
up the sites. An exact dollar

Molden said the kit will be used lor practical
purposes II needed during any of the scout outings
and activities.
-I

Columbus one of top employment cities
CHICAGO (UP!) Five
American cities are particularly
desirable employment targets
for the three In every 10 discllarged manageps changing ·
. siates for a new job, says an
employment consulant.
J ames Challenger, president
of Challenger, Gray and Christmas Inc., lists the five as Atlanta,
St . Louis, Chicago, Dallas, and
Columbus, Ohio, because they
possess special attractions for
workers.
" These cities may not realize
they possess this power, but each
of them for different reasons has
special s talus With job seekers, "
said Challenger, founder of outplacement. " In some cases.
workers do not want to leave once
they are employed there.
" Call It roots. 'Many workers
want to return to stay In one place
where they grew up or remain In
what has become an 'adopted'
locale, " Challenger said. "Those
from other parts of the country
who have heard or know about
the advantages of the particular
city migrate to such a city to find
a job if they can. "
Altanta has a dual attraction,
Challenger said .
"Some who are natives of the
city and working elsewhere wan t
to go back, while many working
there do not want to move, even
for a bet ter·paying job after a
few years."
St. Louis , he said, is strengthened by tile presence of numerous mejor corporations, and
therefore has excellent work
opportunities. Business conditions are considered favorable
and the outlook for Industrial

DOMINO'S ,
PIZZA
DRIVERS
P-rar. OH.
WMt Main St.

F~!~:

Umitew ... ivory

Arto

992 •212 4

growth is also favorable. he said.
The quality of life is an
lmportani consideration for St .
Louis , which has been Identified
among the best urgban areas In
which to live, Including affordable housing places, he said.
In respect to Chicago, ·Chal lenger said the city Is the center
of a strong regional economy as
reflected in tile strength and
diversity of its job market. The
current revival in manufacturIng has further stengthened the
economy of the Industrial midwest, and Chicago ranks as the
favorite city for midwestern
movers, he said .
Dallas, Challenger said. has
underlying strength because It is
the hub of finance and commerce
in the southwest Allhough the
city an&lt;;! the rest of Texas in
general have been severely Impacted by the oil industry decline
and the problems with some
financial Institutions , better oil
prices are helping to start an
economic rebound.
"The job seekers Who work
with our counselors Identify
Dallas as an excellent job
market," he said. "It has qualit y,
institutions and Is favored by
many property investors, especially for it s lon g-te rm
prospects."
Columbus ranks as the AllAmerican city In the eyes of
many, Challenger said .
" Columbus tops the list of
most-preferred cities by tliose
who have been discharged from a
job there and come to us for job
searching counseling, " he said.
"It Is the one city In America that
discharged managers consist-

DINNER FOR FOUR

LARGI! 16" 5·1TEM PIZZA

··· With Peppwoni, SIU•Ie. Mo1hroom1, .
Onlorw •d O•nn Pepper•

PLUS 4 -

16 oz . Sofldrink&gt;

$9
. .99
"""'

1'011£111'

11 .... , •

1!011 OOlY

s....n.....

'II ..., .. . ,_,_,_

------·--··---·-~~~~~--~~~~~~;~
Lunch Special
DINNER FOR TWO

ANY f2' 2 ITIII IIIZZA
PLUS 2 · 16 oz. Soltdrinks

,..uor

11 • -• •

11 -~ •

2 · 16 oz. Sofldrinks

LYnch Onty-11 AM · 1 PM

s.....r.....

FfL-SIII.

I

PLUS

$4.99

$6.17
_.

STOM.OILT

ta•· t ITIII PIZZA

,OMUOY
S10UOIILT

tiOUIIII
11

(

resist moving away from."
Although most Columbus residents cannot put a finger on a
specific reason, Challenger said
the attraction of Columbus may
be partially the result of Its
reputation for "a clean cut,
conservative lifestyle" coupled
with educational and cultural
attractions presented by a major
Big 10 university- Ohio State."
Challenger's conclusions are
based on his surveys of 600
managers a quarter discharged
from companies with sales volume ranging from $30 million to
over $1 billion,
~ntly

BGSU swimmers ·
stUij,ied for virus
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
(UP!) - Wood County health
officials were trying to deter·
mine if a virus was the cause of
hair loss or discoloration among
members of Bowling Green State
University's swimming team,
officials said.
The ·university 's two pools
were closed Thursday after a
number of team members ·complat ned of hair loss. The problem
did not affect recreational
swimmers.
Joshua Kaplan, !\!rector of the
Student Health Center, said
swimmers often lose hair because of their frequent contact
with the water.

EDWARD M. .BROWN
Edward M. Brown, son of
Frances G. Ohlinger of 616 Fifth
St., New Haven, W.Va., has been
promoted in the U.S. Air Force to
the rank of lleut~:nant colonel.
Brown is chief of a wing
scheduling branch In South Korea, with the 51st Tactical
Fighter Wing.
He Is a 1966 graduate of
Wahama High School, Mason,
W.Va. The colonel received a
master's degree In 1972 from
Ohio University, Athens. _
RHONDA L. GARDNER
Army Spec. _ Rhonda L.
Gardner, a medical specialist,
has been assigned to the Armed
Forces Inaugural Committee,
Washington, to support the January 20 , 1989 Presidential
Inauguration.
The service member will serve
as a member of this special
committee, which is formed
every four years to plan and
coordinate communications, security, transportation, parade
control, and special Inaugural
events.
Gardner · is the daughter of
Betty J. Gardner of 2704 Lincoln
A'Ve., Point Pleasant, W. Va,
She Is a 1982 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.
'

OM SALE MOVI
WARM MORNING
HEATERS
35,000
40,000
50,000
65,000
85,000

BTU .... S306.00
BTU .... S502.00
BTU .... S606.00
ITU .... S652.00
BTU .... S730.53

~
Ferrellgas

FOR ALL YOUR
PROPANE NEEDS.
OPEN
8 AM-4:30PM

Call Today -

814-992-5097

In Memoriam

Ar.. Code 814

•

.

•'

Shimko, Albany Elementary;
Don Van Nostran, Alexander
High School; Kurt Nostrant,
Shade Elementary and Junior
High School; VIcki Hughes,
Meigs Junior High School; Saundra Allman, Hamden Elementary; Terri Vance, McArthur
Elementary; Rae Hill, Hamden
Elementary; and Joyce Ward,
Vinton County High School.

446-G•IIipolit
317- Ch•hlre
318- Vinton
245-Rio Gr•nde
25&amp;-ou.,.n Oist.
143 - Ar~bie Olst.
379- WIIInut

•

Meig• County
Ar.. Code 614

M•aon Co .. WV
Area Code 304

992- Middlepart
Pomeroy
985- Chnter
843- Port .. nd
247- Let•rt Fall•
949--Reclne
742- Rutland
e87- Cootvlle

875 - Pl. Pleaunt
4&amp;1 - Leon
&amp;78- Apple Grove

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FUR NA CES

773- Maton

iB2- New Haven

895- Letart
937 - Butfelo

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Fa&lt;lory Cholto
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforced

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Trtmllaslo•
PH. 992·5682
or 9U-7121

•Dozer A: Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business

WANT TO BUT WRECKED OR
JUNK CMS OR TRUCKS
-FIEIIoiTIMATESfor '"'Y of 1hou sorvicH toll '
.

.

HUDNALL
PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
I Ill North Second

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

J

'

''
'

16141 992-6!!0
54

'

•I
'
•

'

'

'
BEAVER VAllEY

CAliFORNIA

CELERY ........... }.t~!•.fP.-... 69&lt;
IDAHO

VELVEETA CHEESE........ S1.39

BAKING
POTATOES .........IPJ!, .s2.29
RADISHES ............. .§.P.t.29&lt;

KRAFT 16 SLICE AMERICAN PROCESS

CHEESE ........................ S1.87

BROUGHTON'S QUART

•

CHOCOLATE MILII ............ 79&lt;

•TANS
lOP OF THE STAllS

"Must Be Repairable"

•CEILING FANS INSTALLED

•REMODELING •PAINTING
•PLUMBING
•DfiYWAI.L
•DECKS

PAT HILL FORD

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

•ROOANO
•TILE WORK
•POflJCHES

FREE ESTJMATDl

Buckeye Card Weloeme
IBrH LIIICH

992·2196
Middleport,

WANT ADS
ARE dUMPIIIi
WITH BARGAINS

985-3561
We Setvica All Makes

I/ 2V88/tfn

BISSELL
.BUILDERS

J&amp;L

INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp; ·
Windows

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pric:es"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

Free Eotimates

Call 992-2772

992-2156

ONION
RINGS
................
!?.~~. S2.89
BANQUn SAUSBUIY
BUFFET STEAK •••••••••••••••• !?.~~. S1.
99
WBCH'$
GRAPE JUICE .................~?.~~. s1.29

Public

Tho lollowing

PINEAPPLE ••••••••••••••••••••• !~.~~•.... 99c

1974

17'
#MNT02418M74E
1974 Mercury 86

TAYLOI

(

\

d11&lt;ribed
_. lot pul!lic

bo _
lllo to tho hlghoot on
tho 18th dev of N""""'bor
1988 11t238 EMtMelnSt.Pomoruv. Ohio 45769.
~em• wl

Moneteo

boot mot01 #4096312

boot

H.P.

Moody boot ttoilor
Tonno of Sole: Cosh
Items wilt bo oold 11 ono

Cellifi-' Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

.

Canified licensed Shop

5-25-tln

Your Hometown Place

of

(11) 911C

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PEl TON
DRIVElED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
POIIUOY, OliO

992-6461
·I '

NI~SE

PIZZA

arr~~ngMnente

992·2156

All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs

Main,
Pomeroy, Ohio

nine a.m. and flu• " ""

'

A/ C Service

992·7204

may be made to inspect tlW
morchonciH by catting 992-

botW- the hou11

Mos1 Foreign and
r Domestic Vehicles

324 East

ony ond oil blclo. Prior to tho

2171

SYRACUSE, OHIO

OPEN
MONDAY-FRIDAY
10 A.M .·4 P.M.

(Behind City Haiti
10. 27-1 mo.

4-16-116-ttn

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Toys, Collectables,
Clowns, Porcelain

unit. Seller reMI'V8I the right
to bid ond 1ho right to rejoct

·date of ule.

0

HAINES GIFT
SHOP OPEN

Notice

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE

DEL MDIIITI

SWEET POTATOES
•••••••••• ~!.~!•.•.. 89&lt;
BETTY CIOCIIEI
·
GINGERBREAD MIX.•••••• ~~~~:.~~~ S1.2 9
ARMOUR
TREET
............
~!.~!••• s1.29
SWIFTIItiG
SHORTENING ••••••••••••••• ~!.~!•.. S1.69
AUiff JEMIMA
_PANCAKE MIX ..............:!.~!•.. S1.49
AUNT JEMIMA
PANCAKE SYRUP ••••••••• ?~.~!••. S2.59
CHA. .III
BATHROOM
TISSUE
••••••
~.~~~.s.. s1. 99
STA PUfF
FABRIC SOFTENER •••••••• !!.~!•...... 79&lt;
SCOTCH IIIGHT
SOFT SCRUB.~ ••••••••••••• ~~~:~!!'!~!~~ ... S9c .
CAIIIIAnON
HOT COCOA MIX .........J!.~!••• S1.79

8/ti/Wn

Has always offered
THE BEST PIZZA
AI The BEST PRICES.
If any Jocol
competitor offers
you a bettll' daol,
tell us ond we'll
match it!
AlSO ...
HOME COOKED
LUNCHES
EVERY DAY FOR
UNDER $300
MAIJI mm PIZZA
Our Delivery Staff
Knows Where You
Live.

Call 992·2221 .

Jack Krautt•. 114-

742·2733.

Lott: White female Bluett
Hound with ,_. lpotl. In Laurel
CMH. Big Wheal • •· Loat
Monday, Nov. 7. Cell814-992·

302e.

LOST: Mile ch•tnu1 brown •
whfte Englilh Springer Sp~niel
•'Nfth bobbed tell . Rew.,d- 304-

-~
.

------Pomerov· ---------Middleport
8r Vicinity

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAl
COIIIIERCIAl .

•CUSTOM kiTCHENS a BATHS
•EXTENSIVE "EMOOELING
•VINYL. SlOt NO a RODRNG

1:00 P.M.
RAClNE
GUN CLUB

992-3410

Thund., .,d Frid ... N..,, 10th
and 11th. 2 ml• H'fllll Run.
Clot:hel. houaehold Items. IDYlRain or shine. 114-992-7513.

a APT. PROJECTS

.'iiNC£ JWi9

GUSIT Sf., SY DCUK

992·7611

.9-IHI lin

10.6-81-1 mo.

CARTER'S

10-8-tfc

MEIGS
FURNITURE

JUST OPENED

CAKES

PLUMBING

by Donna

&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

3rd St.

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdayo, Holidays
Specializing In
chatactet and novel1y
cakes

GET ACQUAINTEO
SPECIAl

lt. 1, lax 136, Vllltan

$449 95

3 PC. LIVING
ROOM SUITE

742-2235

1-28·'88-lln

10-25-1 mo. pd.

11-3-'88-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

to

MORIIS
EQUIPMENT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

YHS TAPE

t.t us (Dnwart tt.le old Mow tis
&amp; SliM • .,., to •my YHS.

Ker Heaters
Wicks
Ker Blowers
Heat Mate Ceramic
Furnace 1ll0.00
Blem Batteries
130.00 &amp; Up

- Addon1 and remodeling
- Roofing and guuer work

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

!FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or~92-7314

·

7-13-'88· tin

The Staff Is
Back!!!

Mary, Noami, Jane,
Grac1, Donna, Angie
and Gw111 Falnllr
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992-2725

MIDDlPEPOIT, OliO
.. Walk-Ins Welcome,.

10..31-88-1 mo.

Salem Street
R utl•nd, Ohio
742-2466
10/ 28/ 1

EAGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH; 949-2969
haler far

YARDMAIU ECHO
Located HolfwtiY

Rt. 7 • Buhen,
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sonic• (.,t., lo• Iran

betWeen

Products
8.7 Finendngon Yotdmen
' 9\1-11-lfn

IILLSIDE MUZZLE

ROOFING

A.

LOADING

MODERN GUN

SUPPUES

Gutters ·
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painti!'lg

Madam Gun
its
G11111 • Ammo • S gs •

FREE ESTIMATES

124 East of lllland
Across Happy Hollow ld.

Munltlaadlng~· 1

22 Ammo

"'· . . . .,.l.:f3~iJ

rlenc:eprtlf•r... Commeneuma
ul.-y and beneflt:l, E.O.E. Mall
riiUma to Admln.. tmer Care
H1ven of Point Plt•lr'IL At. 1
Bo• 328. PolntPI. . ant,

285150.

Rick Pe••on Auct~n_., Ucentld Ohio and W111 Virginia.
Estate, llltlque, f•m. liquid•
tion • •· 304-773-5786.

We

Situetions
Wanted

12

Wvu kt like • live-In femlle
companion. Pl. .e write: Thoma R•e•. At . 2 BUM: 346,
vtnton. Ohio 415181.

WHI c.e tor eldtrtv men or

Wanted To Buy

p.,.

c•h for IMemodlf clean
used cera.
Jim Mink Chw. -Oidllnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

It:~

worNn

Mother afonewiU do a.tJ,alttlng
In h• 'home. M-F. Exp•leno.d.

ref•encet ..,all .Me. 614- 992·

60315,
15

Schools

Instruction
RE-TRAIN NOWI

SOUTHE4STERN eUSINESS
COu.EGE, 529 Jeekoon Plko.
Coi1"'4&amp;-4387. Rog. No. 86-t11081111.
-Wanted to Do

Doaer • Backhoe Work-8110
Cese dot•- A•llonebte ratn.
Exp•l.,oe opllntor. Creme.ns

Conlt, Coll114-2&amp;5-1711.

Will babv 1ft In

do" only.

rnv

home week

C.lll14-44&amp;-8t99.

lnt•ktr/EI«er5or-You n.,e it.
Prof••lon111 p-...lng. 14 yr._
•P. Ra•onabte r1t11 . C.l

114-2&amp;5-1224.

114-441-3172
we Ill do babVtfttlng in my homeentenary art~ . Call 1514-44&amp;.
TOP Ct.SH pllid fol '83 mod~ 3181.
.,d nBWtr used c••· Smith
BI.Hdi:·Pontlac.

4w.. Golllpoilo.
2282.

1911

Col

Eastern

114-44&amp;-

Call

814--44&amp;.4717

oltw 1:30PM 114-2&amp;5-9313.

WMt to bvy: Uaed furniture and
antiqu•. Will buy entire hotle•

H1ve room in Prhl1teCereHome
for elderly men or lady Hir'uticap. Call 814--258-8509.

hold furnllhing. Marlin Wede-

m.,or. I 14-245-5162.

Junk Cart with or without
moton. C.ll lany Lively-It 4-

388·9303.

Ramodelln~J

in1ulatJon: roofing;

'Will do house cla~nlng. 304468-1032 01' 458--1621 .
Painting lnt•Jor. and exterior,
odd .tobl. Nferen0111, fr• lltf.
mat•· 304-773-5402 or 773-

5086.

prices belngpeld. Call 814-.t48-

Will c.efor elderly penon in my

_3_11&amp;_8_.- - - - - - - I home, 304-175-4338.
bv

U11d tJrnttul'll

''

..

the piece ar

entlr• hou•hold. 114· 742·

2455.

Went to buy

~Widing

timber,

l111pl11 '/!Ill' Ill

Card of Thanks

~dd IIY. PwMp1 you were not
there It IN, Jult thought ot Ul
tMt d.,.. Wtt•w• you cld to

console our ...., .. We tfwtk
you 10 much whltww the F*l
We thMk ell thot• who 1t.ed In
our aorrow. -Darotflr Tyo •
lomlly.

3 Announcamentl

11 Help Wanted

1--------HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME

AtHmble product• It home.
~· ..me. ExP•ienoe unnec•
• ...,. llotllh.

Cell 8t3-327·
0818. ht. 0-1149,
•aoo woekly poulbia "..,_
bUng producta. SASE to: Hom a
Cllllto. P.O. Box 9001-QOT,
Huntington, W.Va . 21!1i70•·
9001.
Someone to bab¥tlt In'"" home
nlgtwa. Mutt be r elllbl .. R.t ..
., ... rwqulred.
814-381-

C•"

W. w.lll haul oo·l l for emwgene¥
HEN'. Meigo County OePt. of
- Human &amp;erv-. .. d HEAP
vouch... W. · Cll'l vlv• you
PIO- deilveri•. E -lolllelt
Warko, Inc. Pom-. Ohio.

114-112·3881.

NM Farm.~ Union Toblcoo
, W• ...••· Rlplev. Ohio. ReOifvlna tobecoo 1evtn d.rt.• •

w
..... F"lt ... -- 21. f,..
W• lwfne. ..... toblaoo
·
u,oo ... 100 "'"" h513..~
lng.-304-175-1118
312-4315.

· •

C.ll 114-245-94-4118.

Furniture 1nd .,pUanc. by the
piece or entire ~nhold. Fllr

St:IVILI:S

qul•tv in a
chM. p.,hiP• rou apoke the
Jdndld wordl. As any friend

.

'

Of

vfnyl aiding: painting; eleetriclll,
otc.
w
Conttruetlon.)

a.
814-44&amp;-3159.

~•.

WIU dQI ba~slttlng in Mercerville

.,...

Complll:e houMholdl of furn;.
ture &amp; antiques. Aho wood &amp;
coal helt•t. Sweln'a.Fwnfture
Auction. Third &amp; Olive,

A1111 uu nce 11w nIs

ut

c.n

our hom&amp;

114-992·1&amp;15.

Business

tcwetv &lt;=•d. Or

·

304-175-741 I .

Ruoty.

Opportunity

TYO. LEE-Pott~ot&gt;o you -~ 0

w. Va.

Older worker:• ageiS5 .,dover,
r•idllll of W..t VIrginia, pll't
time. 20 hrs week t135 hour.
muat meet Oepartm-.t of labor
Income guide !ina 30"'175-

CAll AMT CAITIR

Service on All Makes

We Honor MC/Dbc/Visa

llcan1_. Soei .. Worker In n.w
long twm c•e f~llty . E ~

18

&amp; Auction

114-37&amp;-2788,

1

AVON ellar-11 Shlrlll'f' Spe....

304-875-1429.

or BOB'S ELECTRONICS
446-

mo.

-Heword L Writ_,

NEW - IEPAIR .

Racine, Ohio

Public Sale

8

9

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRl

RACINE, OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONlY

•METAL BUILDINGS

949-21

Ate. 315 • 1eo. Op~n .,;,ery s.t.
Bt Sun. 9 AM-15 PM .

:==~~====~I

OWNilt: GI(G I. •ou!H
GENERAL

Pomeroy, Ohio

mo.

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchase of min.
H.C. Package. limit1 coupon per customer pet
bingo saulon.
WE PAY 160.00 PER GAME OVER 110
PEOPLE '66.00 PER GAME
Uc. #005·32
10-24-1 mo.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

HOUSING

Moving s.I•Euerytl..g mult
gol Furnttur•. diahtll. clothing.
etc... 802 Founh Ave. Nov. 10,

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45P.M.
SUN.,E.B. 1:45 P.M.
,
DOOR PRIZE

~

4340. 4AEDE

8r Vicinity

POMERO'f·EAGLES CLUB

11 -71mo.

".,.

-------Gallipolis ________--

BINGO

Spttches.

1ccepted for Ple•lftl VIII.,.
Hotpital Nurting Care Center.
Cont•ct Pertonnel 304-8715-

W~nted : Uveln oompiniGn IOdo
houltlke~Ping. Conditions
nagot~e upon lnt.v..,. Atk

~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~-·-'·
-·_1_2_,~~~~~::t
G4LLIPOUS
FLEA MARKET-

Fr"·Lance Writer

~~.

.

P1rt- time babr'aitter wanted In
mv home. D1y thifl. P•y• vt1'V

fat

GENERAL CONTRACTORS
'10-4-1

References

Leesa M. Murphey

Phone:

114-44&amp;-3353.

light

985·4141

s,,,,,,,

614·992·3643

... ·

2770.

Yard Sale

7

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

,,,,,,,

992-6720

Specializing In Chain
Unk and Wood Fencing

RW~•d.

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

8-1-88-tfn

992·661'1

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

Sm.. gr~ t~ bo• from pick -up
truck on laiiiiTI St., in Autl.-.d.

MARCUM CONTRACTING.

BILL SLACK

Advorlising

DEAD OR AUVE

z

.PER LOAD
Oll!VERED

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

WANTED

Aew•rd- can 114-985-3884 or
t.wallt Pooc..nd.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy. Ohio

-

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

lD-21-'88-1 mo.

::r:

FIREWOOD

AIID

111 Wiltt S.C. P-or

l.olt It Foodttnd. large lmOUnll
of c.h. LottlltursdiVtfternoon
by widow on fixed Income.

175-2225.g

Computer Graphics,
Public RolatioM,

LYNCH'S
GENERAL
IEPAII

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
olso ocid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

MOOIES

-

l&lt;l0-'87 1111

We can repair and re-

'

- ~~~
,.--,:~·•CLOTHES
\ ' .:-, _'

M1naglng CotmetologJ.t. Halr

6 Lost and Found

10-1,_'81-1 mo.

[~

lifting lnvotved. t300 per week.
Profit stwln~ &amp; other benefita,
For J*SOnal•ntervlfJIN c::lll 614446-7461 .
4
q.
HtJppening. Call -.y dll'f but
Thurt. • Sun. 1Q mtkeln appt,,

"

614-985-4180

e

·

Middleport, Ohio

SER~ICE

I

MEAT SALAD ••••••••••••••••• !!e•••••• 89C
SWinFIELD
SHREDDED 12,19
, I ll. SliCED $1 •97
COOKED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••

KRAFT 8 OZ.

Tecumseh

614-662-3821
Authorized John
Doete. Now Holliml.
Bush Hog Fatm

l'

1

Weed Ea1er
HomeHte
Jacoblen

.

HOMEMADE

MEDIUM EGGS ......... 9.%...89&lt;
80NNffi 2 LB.
SPREAD MARGARINE ...... SJ.79

Briggs Bt Stratton

1-3-'16-lk

DUTCH LOAF .................~~... S1.97
SWin ECKRICH
. ll.
$1 •79
JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••••

BLUE

&amp; Ports

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

175-1720.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Take 'the pain out of
pai~ing, Let me do
it for you.
Very Rtosanablt.
Howe References.

BEAUTIFUL
~,';fA,_ .,: .•HAIR

114-992·5952.

uical Co. now hiring for l.llltlme
tmplovmP. No aperience n~
CUIIry. Evening work. Ugtrt

LOST:2 moio Fo• Twrl• dol'!. w~l. 114-742-2386oltw llp.m ,
Pert-dme floor ~on 11 Am•'~~'!'~~-~h!1'::!. ~~:U care.
Pomeroy (Pom•ay H..lth
oltw4,30PM. 114-387-7810. Care Cant., . Mutt be eble to
1nd wax floors. 20 hou,.
LOST:Fem... lleeglo. VIeln~yof ltrlp
P•
wlllk.
C1n Marcie 11t 814Stadcyarda-City llmita. ChHd'1
....OionDovlo,&amp;14-44l-79t2. 992-8808,
AVON • An lrtel . Cell Marilyn
FOUND,Femoio. bled&lt;. whhe w
dog wkh •llkY holr. Friondlv. •.,. 30.... 882-21545.
AN'S a LPN'S-PH. full time •
y'======;:==::========~ 25&amp;-1&amp;58.
Coli• but no name. Call &amp;14- part time appli~iont are being

FREE ESTIMATES

3-11-lfn

Aushoriud Service

To good home, 1 · veer old
Au.tr.ll.n Sheep l;)og. C.ll

- , Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~.n,;,,1
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

992-2269

t'f- '' - -

014 - 258 ~

Formerly Melg1 Excavating
Full Excavating and Construction
Residential 8r Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential&amp;
Farm Work
Rt. 1, Vinton
388·8747
Owner 8r Operator,
Tony Cardillo
11 -9-1 mo.

INiEIIOI - EXTERIOR

S3S

Urgantt, Need Otplr'Ut.tife Perton to work wtlhout IUP'I':"itlon
for T••• Oil Co. In O.. lipolla
area. We train. Wrtt•T.J . Oi~er­
•on, Pr•., SWEPCO , lox
981001. Ft. WO&lt;th. Ta 71111.

UP TO 115 HOUR PROCESS-

Chihuahul . Call
1884.

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION

LINDA'S
PAINTING

NO SUNDAY CAllS

I

SMALL ENGINEl
REPAIR - I

SALU &amp; SERVICE

Fel'tll lq•l~•••l
,.,.. &amp; StrfiU

or Ras. 949-2860

RISIDENCE PHONE
16141

BOGGS

I

.'..

PHONE 742-2100
PlliCrS Eff tCTIVf I HflU SAT. NOV. I 1'. I UBtl
AIIISI OLD FASIION

PH. 949-2801

IUStNISS PHONE

Betw11n 9 a.m.·6 p.m.

Equipment Dealer

Now Ho-. BuNt
"Free Estimates"

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hare

614-742-2617

)

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

We Carry Fishing Sut&gt;Piil~

2·1f:"'88-1fn

_.

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

or Leavt MossiiCIC!

992-2156

10!41m~

6-17-tfc

10-7-lfn

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

For lnfarmotwn

Wanted

1ono hol•od "'""" INQ MAIL WEEKLY CHECK

Kitt- ~t BhJe MahMe, 30.tt

DAY BEFORE PUBliCATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P.M . TUESDAY
- 2 :00P.M . WEDNESDAY
~ 2:00P.M . THURSDAY
- 2:00P.M . FRIDAY

Fnduy' &amp; lulurduy'
Only
ART\ &amp; CRMT)
unri Othrr ltrm'&gt;
FOR SALE
ALLIE liMON
114 We&lt;t Mom
CALL 992-2571

Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

Basham Building

'

old.

Help

GUARANTEED. FREE Detala.
mol• .... c.ll 11 4-44&amp;- 3005 WRIFE:
SO, 1057 W.Phllodei1 INI• PUPPV brown rnilted phl&amp; Suka 239-00. Ont•lo.
"'-'· Port Pug. Coli 114-25&amp;- Calif. 91762.
1148.
HELPWANTEO
5 puPI)i•· Mbted bnecl Part

CARPENTER, OHIO IOff St. Rt. 143)
698-6121

Yard Sal•

NEW MINI MART
SPACES FOR RENT

Roger Hysell
Garage

GUN SHOOT

amount for the contract has not
been determined and depends on
the duration of the study.
Gerald Westerbeck. chief of
tile environmental management
office at Wright-Patterson,
called the contract award "a
major milestone" in the base's
effort to clean up past waste
disposal sites.

THURSD4V PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

a ,_,

Featuring: Consolidat ed , Dut ch
We81, Bruneo, A~thle y
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

•A cl1ssilied edverHnmen( placed in The Daily Sentinellelt ·
e epl - elauitled di•play, BusWI•t Card Rnd l.,gN notjce•l
will alto appe• In the Pt . Ph1•ant Regitler and the Galtipoli• Oaity Tribune, reacbing over 18. 000 homes.
·
COPY OEAOliNE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

To !OJOd t..mo-Whlio Doe Rob~.:....._old Coill14-44&amp;-

•12 Years Experience .

paid.
"R•l=tJiv• 8.50 dlscoum for ads paid in edvance.
"Frn 1d1 - Gi..,eawey and Found 1di under .16 wt~rd! will be
run 3 d~ 1 at no ch •a e.
"Price of ad for all capttaiiMteu 11 double price of ad cost.
•7 point line type only uMd .
"Sent inti it not retpontible for errors after first d!l¥' . ICh eclt
for erron first d-v ad runt in paperl. Call belou1 2 :00p .m.
d.v aher public: .. ion to make correctio n:• Ads thtt must be paid In advlnCle ••
Card of Thanks
Happy Ad•

following telephone exchanges ...

PRESENTED CHECK - .Jim TampkbuJ (far left), vice
president and 1eneral manal(er of Southern Ohio Coal Company'•
Mel p Division, hands a mlnl-l(rant check to Alexander Hil!h
School teacher, Meta Van Nostran. Looking on Is .Jim Gerkin,
manager of personnel and staff development lor the American
Electric Power Fuel Supply Department.
·

In the
•
servtce.
PRESENTS KIT- Scott Lucas, administrator
of Veterans Memorial Hospital, presents a
complete first aid kit to Clarence Molden,
Cubmaster ol Pomery Cub Seoul Pack 249.

WOOD STOVES

I

'

EDWARD L. MITCHELL
Tech. Sgt. Edward L. Mitchell,
son of Delbert F. and Julla K.
Mitchell of 1454 Tres Rlos Drive,
LangsvUie, has re-enlisted in the
U.S. Air Force at Goodfellow Air
Force Base, Texas, tor six years.
Mitchell Is an electronic warfare system technician with the
208lst Communications
Squadron.
He Is a 1974 graduate or Meigs
Local High School, Rock Springs.

Klttena to gtveaway, Uuer

'Ad~ outside Meigs. Qallia or M11on count!• must be pre-

Classified pages cover the

11

'r==:::::===============ii
I
,....... c.11 114-4-41·9319.

• The ·Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
y

11

Giveeway

4

Business Services ·

Classified

Base awards contract t9 study
39 probably hazardous waste sites
WRIGHT-PA'ITERSON AIR
FORCE BASE; Ohio (UP!) Wright-Patterson Air Force
Base has awarded a multimllllon dollar contract to an
Atlanta company to investigate
39 probable hazardous waste
sites at the base.
The Investigation by EngineerIng Science Inc. is being done
under the terms of a consent
order reached between the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency and the Air Force.
The order gives the state
oversight in the cleanup of

The

9342.
EARN EXCELLENT MO NEV Ill
ho- 4....,bly wlllk. J-eiry.
toyo. ....... C.ll 1·119·8851157, •t- T~·10H, 2• hn.
LPN'o- We ••looldng"" ...llty

lot-·--

crlent.. LPN"1 to wM in 1

hlo.., ..._.

tong t.-m c•e

off-

E_.,.

nurolng _...,_

114.0110
20 poldheoith
...,.

Eatn

Tuition

'

'

INOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUOLISH-

ING CO. rBCOmm.nda thM VOU
do buain.. wfth people you
know. and NOT to tend mon...through the mal until you hwe
invettiglted the offering.
Pizza Rnta~rant fDr sate. Be
your own boll. E.:etlent location in a growk'tg Brll- Send
lnqulrBI to:Bax Cia 178, c: / o.
GallipoHt Dilly TriWne. 826
Third Aw., GIRipolls. Ohio

48631.

Own your app•el or , hoe tto.-e•
choose tram: Je~~np Sportswe.-. . .
L1dl .. . Men·a. children·

m••nlty, l•ge tizes. petite.
dWtcM'III'•IMObiC. bridal, llngwie or iceea•orl• ttore. Add
color anelyail. B,.,d n~m• : Uz
ClaU»rne, Healtht•. Ch ....
IJte. St Mlehafa. For-•. Bugle
Boy. LovL C.mp llovorty HIHo,
Orgtnlealtv GrQWn, Lucia over
2000 othera. or •13. 99 ont
price dellgn•. m.dtl •• pricing
ditClOUnt or f~mly 1hoe atme.
Aetait prlcea unbell.,ablefor t~

quollty . , .......... ptlced

from t19. to teo. ovw 2150
Ill., do 2100 otyleo. e17, 900 lo
U9, 900: InventOf'¥, training.
fiUuret. ek-f•&amp; grand op.,lna.
ltc. Cen open 115 d_,,, Mr.

IDughHn

1&amp;12!88&amp;-4228.
Log

Your

·

.,

�·------'---

---

•

-----.--

•

12-The Deily Sentinel
B~lneiS
Opportunity

21

LAFF-A-DAY

48

oornplll:elog honMmlnUfKCur·
Ina cumpln¥' hi• alofAm• l~'•

1189 "'4U-1815.

, . . . . . . .. .......... tte76.

COUNTRY M081LEHomePo•lc.

Gr. . . .ntng pottnt lll. wiU n01
lnt..-e w•h pr_.. .mploy+

Rout• 33, North of Pomwoyo.
Flent1l trlil••· C.ll 114-992:

lnv..tmtnt 100 p.• C*tt

1479.

..0 ,.;_. bV model hOme. Call Mr.
Lamont toll free 1· 800.321·
IUI47. The origin II Old-Tim•

Specious mobile home loti tor
rent. Faonifv Pride Motil• Home
Park. Clelllpolil Ferry, W, V•.

Log Hom• lf'ld Suppto, Inc.. At.
8 -34e Lo.. eAd .. Mt. Juliet, Tn.

37122.

30 .. 8711-3073.

t400. e d• I At hornet Procett
phone orct.s. '*'pie c• you.
Nationwide. Ul. Jt. . up. Call
l•elundablol 1-611-459-8597
E11tl 18228, ·

49

Ploa10t. Coil 304-57115104.

·,,.,
~..

credh.

Contumer Fin.,..dll Service~.

513-291-0791 .

'
Mercholllltse

"I do wish you'd give the
fle~l blale
e~evator shoes another try,
31 Homes for Sale
Emerson."
2VfiY .nracthte
f.-nlv bridl4
room with
flre- r;;::;~;;;;;:;;;;=-r~=~;;,;;;==~
bedroom,
plece.lonneldlnlng,lerge..,lng 41 H
f
R
t
44 Apartment
1'cabin•.
00"' 30 11.ookcustom
ook kllcll.,
ornes or en
w_..._ finloh
for Rent
b•em.n. 2' c• g•ag&amp;. ,.,.
llftdlclped lot, 4 rnl• from
~h.

Hob::• Hotpitel off At.

3~

Pbrt•brook SUbdlvilion. Clll

114-441-4188.

3 BR ., city schooJ.OrMn Elem.
f300• mo. Ref, &amp; Sec. dep. No
pets. Can. Stutn Rellty. 814-

441-42011.

4 BA .. full baum~t &amp; g•aga.
fullr nrpetH ltome newl .
Priced to ull. Call 814-4410278 1ft• 8 PM, ...wekendt
1111Ytime.

3 bec*ttom R1nch, 1% b•hl.
f.-nlv roorl\ clning room, 1 c•
a•age. ttortge buldlng. poot.
/ wooden dHk. Spring v•l.,• •· Call814-44&amp;-7903.
O.rUng 3 BR . l'lnch In coon-bY
on 110. 7 mil• from Halzw
HDtplt•l. fen Old in IHiek yard.
ontv 7 yra. old, rul"81 water,
copper plumbing , deck .
t 38.000. Nllgotlbla Contact
rw.Henr;-·Aoent for Jan Gettl•
Reattv. Jlcktan, Ohio, 114-

2 I r. hou... Clo. . to town.
A-iced •27&amp; plut dep . &amp; ref. C•ll

614-445-3U8.
Hout•&amp; rooms S. ' bath. 1200 a
mo. 160 dap . Alto 2 Br. mobile
home. iuUy c•pet.t. p.tillly
furn;.had, 1200 a mo. t150
dep. Both 3 mil• from IOWf? on
688. HUD epprO'AI. Call Debbie. 614-448-8180.

bedroom ranch, 2 bl'lhl.
family room- •426 per month. 3
bedroom bllevel •crou from
North Gtllie High Schoo .. t425
p.- month. J bedroom rlll"u:h. 2
b .. ht. efficient heat pump. 2 c.g•ag• $460 per month. 3 badroom ranch within w ..king dlt·
281-1370.
.
.... ce of downtown-t350 p.month. PrNeta J bedroom. 2
Gov•n~t Hom• from •1 . 00
lrtOfY brick on 1 ltCf'&amp; Crown
(U R• lir1. For.dotu .... Repot, City- 13715 pll' month. 2 story
T• Delinquent Propartl•. Now homa with 3 bed"oom1, 2%
sllmg rour w11a C•ll 1· 315- bMht. privacy- M50 per month.
731-7375 EIll. 3Nl H·H fo• gat included. J BA .. 2 ltory
currM~ lilt. 24 hours.
hom•. cou nlry atmotphera.
George's Ck. Ad. I 176 ,_mo.
CornpllfeiV remodeled. maint• Ref•ance~ end sec:urilydapotlt
n81'1ce t-ea. 2 .. ory whh patio · required on •II propertl•. Wit•
and b•ement. Nice loCIII:iol\ m.-. Real Estate, 614-446R•&lt;IJced to 40'•· 814-992- 3144.
5107.
Nicely furnished tmaH hou ...
3 be,t i'oom hOme. 1.-ge l~lng one bemoom. re•onabta rent.
roonund kitch·en. 1 beth. utility In town. Adutts. No pets. Ref.
room. 24x3e blodl: g•aga.
required. c.n &amp;14-446-2543.
chllin Ink fenOI, lot 100K119,
phone 304-175-4123 •fttr House for rent in the countrv
5:00PM.
near Darwin. Will redecorate.
Rant nagotlbla Call 114-683-J bedroom home with cer port. 6436.
mllnt.nence fr• •terior.. 1
both. lulfr equipped k~d! ... 3 BR . house. Depotlt required.
centrat .,, .. edric helll, fine 10 OldFort Trail. Call614-448c•pet, flrtPI.::e with Sitek 2&amp;83. 9-5 doily.
.-tove. ••alke en. h. Gelllpoll•
Ferry ere&amp; •ez.ooo.oo finll'l&lt;&gt;
Pl~ntl Sub.- 4 BR .. full b•e-lng .vMiabla 304-175--8033.
ment. cer~at. range, city
tchoott. Adults onty. No pets.
Oep. &amp; Ref. required. f360 per
32 Mobile Homes
mo.· caH 814-44a.0276 eft• S
PM. weekends enytlme.
for Sale
1988 N.w Moon 12x50. 2 BR .
t2300. Coli 614-441-0390.

1971 Elanto. 2 BR ., fWW' wiring.
12xl6, 4x8tip-oot. t3000. Call

614-387-7111 olter6 PM.

3

6 14-4411-9340.

Cet'1tenery. Ya mile from Green
schooL t325 p.- month. ean

614-445-8588.

House wtth bath. Ne• Racine
Nice yard g•dan spaee. Call

141l70. 3 SR ., 1Y! btthl. Good
cond. 19,000. Cal 614-446-

514-992-6858.

5616.

3 ba~oams. 2 t.ll b•hl. atrge
living room. dining room •nd
kitchen. Alto laundry room, 2
c.- g•ag• central elr, Eatt.-n
Schoof District. Refllt'a-t~ ,...
quir.t. Call 81 4-247- 42~ 1.

1988 FIHtwood. 1211154. bottlu
e• h... and hot wal.-. 13000.

Coli 614-8-43-5310 "' 614-

143-6406 anyt..,a.
· Otnny.
bac;.oom

Atk fur

12x60.

11900.

30 4-1711-27 22.

Brit•nv

1 41l70 ,

• 10. 000.00. 304-882-2844•1ter 5:00.
1980 Sherwood Perk 141l70. all
electric with fireplace. isl.,d
r.nge. 2 bemooms. 1 bath.
hou• type windows. pluah
c•pets, m• · intul .. ~n. exc
con$1or\. br.-.d niMI' 18.000.00
btu 'Nhirpool air oond. also
Montgomery W•d dryer inclu ded. •12.600.00firm. Phone

304-8911-3141 .
1983Trt.lmph, 141l80. new add
on halt pump, 1 'lz bllhl: \l'oether
lfl d dryer. und•p•m~ng ., d
deck. an ~~~:c cond. Call 814-

317-7120"' 304-675-2047.

30 4-173-5475.

new roof,

dopod. 614-742-2728.

bedroom home wtth full
beument · loceted New Htven,
3

304-882-3394.
For rent or 11le. nM~ Nmo-deled 2 bemoom houta, greM
location nM' resldantiM com-

muni.y, •fler 6 :00 PM cell

304-67!&gt;2359.

lidl~g.

2

be.-oom. p81'tillty furn11hed.

82.700. 304-468-1636.

42

Mobile H ornes
for Rent

In Euraka, 2 OA. Adu tts only . No
pet•. •226 1 mo. Dep. reijuiriCI.

Lllrga living room with ~p8tldo
room. 2 BR .. nM" c.-pet, CA.
Ptlvata lot. Call &amp;14-448· 1409.

2 mobile homes. boHt2 BR .,
newtv deoor•ted, furnished. One
WI 'Mth.-l dryiM'. % mi. 81111 of
-Ports on 1564. C•ll 814-388-

9963.

35

Lote

&amp;

Acre~ge

121l80, 2 BR . mobile home.
Good oond. Fwnilhed. AC. 1
aore l.,d Storage bldg. A
g•eg• Loc•ed on L•mbert
Buti•Lin•At. 2VInton. 4mllet
from Rid Q,.,de. 614-388-

9125.

•a• f•m. Free 9•· La•t
pl.caon HYiall Run Rd. \Nithor

10

without ...... 114-992-3890
•• 114-992-1067.

U35. Utllhl• paid. Col 44"
44 15eltor 7 PM .
Apsrtmtntt .,d houlft.

304-5711-5104.

ca"

Apartments for th8 ElciM-IV.
Galli a Mmor AJ*tmentt. ltJ5
B !Ill Morton Roed. Detigned for
the SMior Citil:en (82 &amp; older)
.-. dH•ndi..,p.t pnoww. Equ.t

houolng """""unlly. AppHca-

tklnt may be pldced up•t Spring
·va11_,. Pla:a. 521 Jedl;ton Pike
o.-cll1814-448-4139.
Modllt'n 1 BR , downtown, complete kitchen. lir, ' c.-pet Deposit. no pllt. C.ll 114-4410139 evening~. tft• 5.

238 Flnt Aw. 1 8R .. klld!.,
furnithed, c:.rpeted. No chilti'en/Petl. 8176 plu• utlltclel.
Oep.
Col 814-448-4921.

flo'"'·

821'12 Sec. E.::et cond.', 2 BR .•
equipped kitchen, llfr. A.,.lleble
Nov. ht. 1225 plus dep. c.n

81 .. 445-01103 "'441-2158.

Furnished effldii'I'V- 1180. Utilltl• paid. 7 Nett. GalllpoUt. C.tl
445-4415 oft"' 7 PM.
Furnilhed .P.-t.,...., 1 BR .
1226. Utllti• .. id. 920Fourth.

Golllpolt. C.ll441-4411ofter7
PM.
Nice- 2 BR . apt. 41h mil• from
Galllpollt. Slave, rwfrlg. &amp; wlltll'
furn11hed. 1225 1 mo. No pllt.

Cell 614-445-8038.

SHAOY LAWN APTS.· 729 So-

Rent or set. 1 0K40, 1 BR .
Ub«ty trailer 11: Eureka. Call
814-2511-1529.
121150 m Porter. Adult• only.

S1715 11 mo. plus •100 dep.
Ref•ence required. Call 114-

381-9376.

3 BA ., In Green tchool diltrid.
Wfltw &amp; t8Nage included. •300
1 mo. Oep. &amp; ref. Cell 14--281-

e

8010.

• 200• mo. Cell e 14-441-3117.

6 Court:21tvlng.•o.. 3 BA .. 1'1J
bathononasida. 1 BR . &amp; btthon
other. Both kltchent furnilhed.

ldaol b lomlfv wllh .........

Renl ais
Homes for Rent

NlcefV llrnltlhlld 111\el hou11.
Adult• onty. Ref. required. No

poto. Coil 514-445-0338.

fir..,._ ..,.,._

3 IR .• AC. c•piiL pool. g•ege.
2
Good location. Clll A-1 R•al E.t .. e

ln&gt;U., 304-875-1104.

Unfurnlthed hou•. 2 lA .
Nolghbo•hoodRd, U21. Rot.,.
en CM • depoell rwqulr~ - C•M
441-4411 oft or 7 PM .

3 IR . rmch. Clot• to 1own.
t275 por mo. eon 814-4412111 oltor I PM. •• 441-4201.

1 M., ....., . .hod. 1•62 FIIUI'th.
' t1 II .,. mo. Dopoolt. I moo.

lin"•
.._Celll14-441-3tl7.

• - • No ohilct-... Pr.t•

_

1911 ....... 250 Quod Roe ...

2521.

Ellcellent condition . Neve~

5119.

.

Graciout lving. 1 and 2 badroom ap.tm.11t 11 Village
Menor and Riverside Apartments In Middleport. From

8182. Cell 814-992·7787.
EOH.

2 be«OOtil Apts. tor rent.
Carpeted. Nice setting. a....ndry
f8dltr:ial av .. lebla. Call 814-

7739.

New completely furnlthed
•P-'mlnt a mobile home in
cfty. Adutlt onfV. Ptrking. Cal

County AppUmce. Inc. Good
Uled tpplltnCII Md TV •••·
Open 8AM to 8PM. Mon Chru

Sot. 814-445-1199. 821' 3•d.
Ave. Golllp... OH.
GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
W•hert. drytn. refrla-•or..
rengM . Shggt Appliance•.

Upp• Rlv• Rd. .,_Ida Stone

C-Motel. 814-441-7391.
lAYNE'S FURNITURE

1437.

814-211-11-413.

U75. Lomps Ul lo •121.

t715. Onk noo up to • 371.

Hutch• 1400 Md up. Bunk
bedl co,.._• w-m.-.r-•
1215.-.dupco 139&amp;. Bebr beds
*1 10. Maitr..... or boll IPI'Ingt
fuN or IWin til. firm •78. .,d
188. Queen uta 1260 a up.
King •380-• driiiNer ctle1t f89.
Gun cUin. . 8. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Baby rnltlr..... 135 &amp; 145.
Bad ...., .. 120, 130 &amp; King
freme
Good setectkm of
bedroom tutc•. met .. Cllblnlls.
he.tbowdl •30 .n~ up to 185.

•10.

90 Otyt ume • c•h with
8pproved credtt. 3 Ml• out
BuiiVIIe Rd. Open 91m to Spm
Mon. thru Sll. Ph . 814-446-

0322.

Van., Furniture

New .-.d u.- furnhura and
applicencet . C•ll 614·448 ·
7872. Hours 9-5.

J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Ettt•nAw.
4 ca-...., chelt, •41. II draw•
ch•t. 164.95. 5 pc. wooden
dtnM111 ..... 1189. II.

PICKENS USEO RJRNITURE
Complllte hou•hotd furnitfl..
ingt. Vi mile ouc Jerricho.

304-5711- 1450.

For low pricel on Qu .. tty Carpet
A Furnitur• come to Mol~hln
Furntcure-Upp.-RiverRd. , 114-

441-7444.

9AM - I PM

Sun.. 12 noon · 6 PM

Plko, 514·441-3158.

luy, Sell. Trade. C.ll B•rgain-

l.,cl. 114-441-11444.

rangeocoppertone. I 91. 30 inch
gtt rll'lg•cwen top &amp; bonumwhite, 1110. Woodburning
hNtlng stove. 17&amp; ~ Ott space
haat.,.ISO,OOO BTU. •11. Wrln-ga"" washer.
Freerer. up-

•n.

•lg ... 8150. F-et. ch.,type.

Frlgidlire w .. htlr &amp; dryer. Reel
nice. World Ptrfect. t225. Cell

114-992·2776.

Effldancy ..,artment. el c•·
peted. Working ad.Jht ontv.
Oapoti1 and reference. C.l

GE dry..-. Extr• nice. Works

!*feet. 890. Coil 614-3170322.
Nlw Whirlpool window untr:
1.000 BTU tlr condition.-. Cell
814-~87-0182 .

HOO'W• oompect wnhw. OoOd
cond Cal 814-446-3410.
Good uHld oolor TV's for •le.

Coli 514-4411-1149 . .

Brown oventuffed 2 teet Berkllne rldin•. v~ good c:ondtc.-pet_., IIPPiitncel. 'Aliter end tlon. Quaan-tll:ehendmadaqulll
trqh plctcup• provided. M81nte; . (Jeoobt Llldd•J. nw• uted.
ntnce free living c:lo•eto shop
Dark • - ' recllnf'. rode•- B•bt'
ping. banks end •choott. For bed fneedt ntw mllltr••l - Clll
814-941-2611 .
mora lnformMion Cllll 304-882-

Pike from t183 t rno. Wlllk to
lhop end moviat. 1!114-...,_

2518. E.O.H.

s I"
55 Building upp 1es

3 whHf biC'fcle for •le. Call

se. . cornerwoodburner. COm-

CEriDE. INC.. Athen~-114594-3678

114-441-3158.

G~r•tead

Quality

56

Pets for Sale

441-3005.

Rrewood for ttle. $315 1 toad.

Coli 514-285-8301.

Chlnon. Super 8 movie: am••
&amp; project.,, Bell &amp; H-ell INdo
0o1ba · projector. All tn MW
condition. Call 114-446-7928.

C....nonA1 cam.-a, ISOmmlent,
zoom lent. fl•h. 1ri
c•rv·
ing c•e. f400. Cal 114· 246-

rod·

5891 .

Ohio. 814-992-1411.

••h

••Nned

t35. Coil 114-742-'2545.

Alhl8f Wood 111d coli burner for
•le. He• brick lin•. bkwver. Elm
St .• bellde Eber' 1 0 ulf. R•clne.
A~c.da 13 cu. ft. Froetfr•
Gibson Retri.,..ator. E•. ConcL.
•200. Old etemrlctreln, t100. 11
old qultlt. 2 reHro.d lant~m~ . I
tchool m•m btltt. Old stone
lera. Antique drMMr. fl14-949-

2801.
Pretty Cebboge Pot ell Ooll. • 35.
c•h. In h• own boll . Nice
Christ"* gift. Phone 814· 992·

2328.

Surplus army c.mouflauga, denim. rant•l. Ctrh.-t dothlng.
Smll •my IICcet....-• • Fri.
Sat, Sun, noon tiH 8 :00 PM.
(Nov, Dec open 1 dwtt) . Sam
Somerville's. Ent-Rw-wood
)unction lndep.,.._.ce Road.

old Rt. 21. (New E.-( lnouloted
comoufl... --.olo 827.50.
304-273-5655.

Buy clrect from menufltdur..,d ..,a •••- Spa'• •rtlng •

t1,550.oo. eon A- Tecll.
304-523-8288 .

For lllte:Magnu• Electric chord
organ ; Stereo, rldlo ph~h ooMale with ltereo
c•tttetlpe dedi.: Kirbf Upright
\IIIC:Uum tweaper: a.,lcyolup•
8mm mov• c~m . .; MemlyaSekor 31mm SLR cam. . wfth
28mm, SOmm &amp; 200mm
l•ge h•d e•a electronic fiMh &amp; tripod. 304-87&amp;-

len••·

1318.

Two florm doors one wood .nd
one aluminum, 90 n-.v curved

yellow lire !wide. 13 It of 1'/o''

used black pipe. 11 h of 11h"
glltv pipe. Phone 304-1!176·

4409.

Groom .. d Su.pptv Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... All
ttylat. lem• Pet Food Dnl•.

Julio Webb Ph. 814-441-0231 .

o._nwynd c ....,.

Konno!.
CFA P•sl.-. end Sltm•• kft.
w.. AKC Chow IIUPDI•- NltW
Hlmll.,. . kttteni. ·-e.u 114-

441-3144 olter 7 PM .

ml••

Dog houMt. 111J
out At.
141. Weyna Shoemaker. Cell

114-441-0583.
lea~ttful 9 mo. old Cock.Sp.,lel. thot&amp;. wormed. houea·
brolcen. Reg'-tered. 1160. Cell

114-445-2200. 448-3131 or
304-175-7842.

10 ...... 304-461-1071.

Arepl.:e free standing or int.-t,

coli 304-671-2903 olter 8 :00.

2&amp; chimnev blodt1. flue lin ...
Peel entrlnae door. Hydr•llc
pump. tllte roofing. Scok•
Metic coll•tO\M, olcltt•lr raling.

old we .. herod "'"' born olcllng

from tht 1 880 ere. one Inch
PGIJI• bo•dl tome up " 24

lncihee wide. 114-381-H84.

TrMdmRI t60.00 11td g11 f\lr-

noce no.oo. 304-8711-4149.
Gr111111ty trect:or

du.. wheels,
.700.00. 302

eleot•lc .....
FO&lt;d engine UOO.OO. 304-5752180.

For Sale: King Woodburner.

\

2 top Beegl• for •le. 81 4· 949-

614-381-1240.

1984 Chevono. 4 opd .. 33.000
mHM. AM-FM·Citt. Vwv cltlft.
t2300. eon 614-441-2308 or
241-9114.
1984 Chrysl• Ur• XE wlh
turlm. E.-lent cond. Loeded.

Coli 814-317-1767.

1880 Dotoun 310. $400. Cell
814-441-8218.
1982 TO,.ote. 1180 . Chrt~•
..a.on. Coll114-317-0588.
1184 T·Blrd. oil · Like
- · t4500. Cell 514-3818481.
1984 Ford EICOf't. one

owner.

U395. 1985Fo•dEXP. 31,000
mila, t3250. Coli 81..,2118622.
1971 c ... ono L82. 4 opeecl.

Sl.neH

numblwt milch. AC, PI, Pl.
PIN. T and T. new
biiCk on
..,_ 814-247· 4811 evenlngt.

~.

l"h yr. old. Good

for breeding. O.clawed. 814-

tfr•.

a Fandango

58

a.

1980 Chwy Impala 11280.

Coli 814-992-3822.

1 98&amp; Chwette. AC. E•cetl_.
cen•k)n. 49,000
C.ll

114-949-2537.

Fruit
Vegetables

ml•.

-

1977 two door Ooclgo Monlcol.

*•

()p., Tu•dW Nov. 8 for ~11- ~

n-. •• frvfh .-.d vegttlbl•.

Jeckt Market: At. 31, Hendlr- ·

.,.,. w. v•.

I .Hill Sttppl1r,s
&amp; LiVJ:SIIICf.

VI, art a. no rua. n•
on
front. A·1 oo nclltion. 1698. C.M

114-9811-J!!44.

'

FO&lt; .... 1881 Hondo Prelude

* oond. IUn roof.
t2200. 304-571-5354.

auto. ~. pb.

198oluldl Rlvoro.lcrl,...,.

ltldtw. AM-FM. llr oond. all

- · phone 304-1711-7541,
5 :00 ·8:00PM .

For NI•Recondllioned 1&amp; ft .
fold- up oooh ho~ Cell8, 4-2814621 .
1 90AC trec:torwtthroundbll•.
htl'f bind. plowol!o disc. cu~hto ­

•easo. AC WD415 trector
whh olowo, cloc. 5 ft . !!"oh hog,

tors.

• 1,496. Own•wilfln.-.ce. Cell
Leta model 550 Oltv• dl•el.
plows • dlt:e. bu•h hog. t 3150.
808 lntwnlllionel dl•tl triCCor
wtl:h left, buth hag. •42&amp;0.
Ownw wll fin.,c;:e. C•ll 114-

211-0522.

4583.

1981 Bojdl lo Sol&gt;r• one

F~~rmEqulpmMt. ZetorTractDt-1.
Ho...-lrd Rotev.tort, Bled• .

Feeder Alnp. 8uylngofd

-or-

let. MOITII Equlpmant. Rut18"n:l.

Ohio 814-742-2455.

30~7:'~~o:: .~::rz~~-

1980 Chev . . e. tookl thlrp.
runt griNIC, g• uver. 304-171--

1584.

Wlftled to buy: W:lod Splitter.
Coli 814-992-1036.

63

1174 Ford LTD four door, PS,
PI, AT, till, 8596.00. 304-171-

Livestock

72

Trucks for Sale

OAIRY FARMEFIS
Veal Procl.IC8f' Wlftllng "Ferm
Fr•h" Cllv• 90.118 k Hoi-

,g.._

flo Block Co.. 123'/o Pine St.,
Qolllpollo, O!llo. Cell 114-4412783.

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

...... J-7 d-.,s old. Cell 114-

s Whtte Sitlcie Bantams 1s.oo

,.!r. Smell Dldt: Wing B•ntems
14.00 ...... One pH- Frlu:lie
IMiamt 16.00. Four Buff Cochins Rood.. 12.00 aech.

304-461- 1890.

64

Hay

Good oond. Atlllng

t10oo. Coli 114-441-4115 of-

-bed
.,..,0

Will h.,l COrl\ in&lt;i.li\EFAP
A11o. wll IU
Mid
deliver ieWdutt. 3 4· 773-

1181 tour wheel drtv• DltiUn
Dick-up. Ruu good. boct;' rough.

"SYNONYM " TOC!A.Y ...

AND 1 €AID ITS 50METHI NqTHAT TA5Tc:5 GCODON FRENCH
T0,4.5TAND WAFFLES.

'

o.v•

I

.

Painting: lnt_.or

a

Ederior.

Ftee _.lmatee. CoG 814-441-

8344.

•

••

'"""'
82

Plumbing
8i Heating

WHAT ARE
YOU 50

I WALKED ALL TH' WAY
OVER TO ELVINEY'S
TO TELL
HER SOME

MAD

ABOUT?

CMITEA'S PWMBINO
ANOHEATING

60~SIP

"'

DO YOU KNOW
WHAT SHE HAD

SHE ALREADY
HEIIRO ITfl

TH' 6ALL TO
TELL ME?

Oround ahell cor ~ •e.oo per
100, Pram~m Attllef•
00.
Strew •1 .10. Round 1•1•
e2e.oo. Morgen•, WoociMn

1177 Ford pldt-up. EJrtrl good
ooncll~n. Ntw tlr-. many.
many • .,... arto thlft. •1991.

011.-d Wetw hrllce: Pools.
ClltM'nt. Wellt. Dallv.-y Any·

•3.

e 14-992-5719.

GOVERNMENT SEIZEO Voh~
d• from •100. Fordl, Mer4
1111dtt, Corvttt-. Chwys. Sur·

W.t• delht.,-. 1000 gallons.

8011-897-5000, E111. 8.-10189.

Wacterton• 1 Water H•ullng,
rNtonlble r1111. vMJme cl• ·
cxrums. 2.000 to 4.000c~Pac­
lly. Cifttml, poult, weNt. etc.

Re•onlble pric:et. lmmedllla

dollvooy. eon 114-892-527&amp;.

(1)

n•

45 Furnished Rooms

mil•.
,..,...,od.
more inforrrwtlon cell

Furnilhed rool'l't-818 Second ,
Aw.. Gllllipollt. 1138 • mo.
Utlllti•JIId. Slnalemlle. lh•e ,

114-441-2342. ,..., bo · - .
Tile Oofllp ... Oolly Tribune. 8-1

Pall II

73

Vansli 4 W.O.

304-671-2919.

v... t~•­
ctwome w,..._Mrtery.c~~~tne
pl.,-•. Loot. • rur. 1'11111 good.
1875 Ford

- t o opproollla ef800.
Coil 1 -14-241-58211.

:::-:::-=:::-~--- r

19801/WRobbll. F.. l lnj ... ed,
2
Mgin• gooct, n_.,
Wl'edled. Coli 114-441-0271
oft or I PM .

*•·

'llur
'Birthday

tim• Cell 514-441-7404-No

Coli 30 4-1711-1370.

Auto' s For Sale

1984 Chevy Chwona Autom•lc. AM r8dlD, •'matt
tlr•. 10..000
A•• ••I
nnooo. F..

Bernice Bede Osol

SuncWfcalls.

R • R WM• ServIce. Poolt,.
Cilternt, wa111. •mmedi~te·
1.000 cw 2,000g811ont dallvflfY.

plut . Buyert Guide.

e

General Hauling

J &amp; J Wat• Serv loa. Swimming
DOOit. cllt•n•. wellt. Ph . 8142411-9285.

.. 1877Tr•o Am llmlled EdMioo
•1 .800.00. '72 0 . . Cutl•
7' ·
'4

1LO!l..l!tVtW

Upholstery
Mow•lll''• Upholotorinu MVIno
triD:JUntyirH'23ye... The beet
In llrnlturl urhollterin~ c.n
304-171· 4 154 ror tr ..
..tiiMI•.

'I

IJ)Nawc-try
10:00 ~ 700 C1ub
e (J) 1111 Tattlngere The

CAPRICORN (O.C. :ti-Jon. 11) Usually
you take your duties and responslbll·
filet wloualy, but today you might be
Inclined to rallonallze lhem away end
Nov.10,1189
sweep under lhe rug things lhat need
p•ompt attenlloo.
Your earning abiiiiiM will be substan·
,\QUARIU8 (olin. 20-Feb. 11) Friends
11ally enhanced In the year ahead. but·~
will be lnlllelly f"lll[e8sed by you• dywill your extravagant tendenclee. In or· · namic per80,allty 1oday. However, I~
dar to come out In the profh column. or&lt;ler to capllvate them tolally, you
you will have 10 klllllhe latter In check.
must make modesty lhe largest portion
8CORPIO (Oct.-- 22) Your poasl·
of
preoentotlon.
blllltll tor aequllltion are 11rong today.
PIICE8 (Feb. 20-Marcll :10) There may
but nol becauee of your tuck. It will only. be more opportunity around you today
happen In lltuallons whe•• you truly 1han usual - e your career It con·
earn your
Trying to patch up a came&lt;l. However. II you take you• luck
broken romii1C8? The Astra-Graph fo• granttid,ll mlghl not counllor much.
Ma1chmaker can help you 10 under· ARIII ( - 21·Aprl111) You'll make
ll.,d whit 10 do to make tha relation· polnls with your charm and wit today.
lhlp W«k. Mall $2to Mlllchmaker. P.O.
but nol neeesaarlly with your logic. Be-Box 81428. C-and. OH 44101·3428. . fore getting Into a wloua exchange. be
8AQITTARIU8 ( - . ZJ-Oeo, 21)
certain you have all the facts at your
You 're apt to be more o1 a talker than a
dl-1.
d - today, yet you'll 11111 gel resulta.
TAURUI (Aprii20-IIIIJ :10) II won'l hu•l
Thlnga would be bener II you we•e more you to go overboard today for the one
productive and lno voc,tl.

vou•

·-•&lt;Ia.

\'

you love . Even II you overdo It ellghlly,
what the heck. It's tor a good cauH.
GEMINI (Moy 21-JUIHI :10) You'll add
zest to any gathering you attend today.
Enjoy youroell, but gua•d against len·
denclea to overindulge .
CANCER (June 21·July :tl) Detormina·
lion and boldne81 will get you the re-sults you desire today, but wishful
thinking won 't Be a person of action.
not a dreamer of deeds.
LEO'""" 23-Aug. :tl) Your social plana
could mlsfl•e today II they encompua
100 many people. Everyone, Including
yourself, wll have a l&gt;fllter lime II lhe
group Ia amall and controllable.
YIROO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22) Thla could be
a proftlabla dey. yet 11 might not live up
to your expectallooa H uplratlona are
unreasonably high. Think reallallcally.
L - (lepl. 23-0ct. Zl) Let your helrt
rule your hllld loday In deellnga with 1
loved ooe. In lhla Instance, your emo·
llone may MIPply better an•-• than
your logic.

•mey

1J1 Crook •n&lt;l ChaN

10:20 (J) MOYIE: Key Largo (NR)
(1 :41)
10:30(!) l!aatl!nclere A continuing
chronicle of the lives of
ralldente In London's Eaat

End. (0:30)
f!]) Oclcl Couple
11 Vld1 aCountry
•

11:00 ~ lleflllnglon . _

•(}) Cll elll ® e a
1111 Newt
®8cubll
Cll (!) 1111 Moytl'll' World of
ldeee Moyers talks with a
wide
o1 people about
America'&amp; chol~
• f!]) t..ova Con

••rtety

-

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

ACROSS
I Tarzan's
mate ·
5 Condescend
10 Footless
'

DOWN
I Preserve

.'

Z Mil.

address

3 Plunge
4 Bihlical
setting
5 Partici·
pate

animal

l l Cavalry
l'I'V

IZ "Hamblin'

•

6 Thra.&lt;~h
7 Church

calendar
I 4 Penetrate 8 Gaze In
a way
16 Over
9
F.qual
(poet.)
II Lobster
17 Fish
claw. e.g.
19 Pub
1
~
Follow
offerings
21 Shakes- 17 Maize
pearean 18 Potpourri
20 Frances
heroine
Burnett
23 Winglike
heroine
27 Advei'Sal'y
28 Grade
•
of beef

13 Trt&gt;at

Yesterday's Anewer
22 Singer
35 Turkish
Jerry
regiment
24 Make up for 36 Actress
2~ Church
Lee
word
38 Dlrrerent
26 Rockfish
40 German
28 Hang
article
30 Close by
42 Started
32 Cautious
(poet.)
3:4 Tobacco
43 · - Clear
(sl.)
Day"

29 Yule
.30 Blissful
setting

0 Larry King Llvtll

0 MOVII!: liar 10 (AI (1 :421
8-.30. (}) 1111 ..by 10om
® PIA 1ow11ng Treasure

&lt;D fH)Nawl

1711-1788.

85

ordered Jewish synagogues
dettroyad.
·
1111 elll The Equalizer
Onlg dealer with Agency
connac:tlona blackmalla
fighter Into smuggling.

(D A ,_lit of !lie WleMI
Follow the ponrtih ot the
men who brought the term
holocaust out of aellolarly
usaga to common parlanca
and becal118 a witness
against forgetting h.
91 e i1J WllfiiUy Vinnie Is
falsely arrested for killing a
cop In a helat gone bad.
f!])
Miller
IIJ Evening Newe

Reeldentitl Of' co~m•cill wir· .•
ing. New ,...,lea or repairs.
Llcennd electrld...' E.timllta
fta. Ridenour Electrll;el. 304-

t8eo. oao. Coli 114-llf22128 oft or 6:00p.m.

Erlc Sevarald anchors tills 50
year relroapectlva on what is
called the Night of Breaking
Cllaet, when the Gattapo

new chef Nlcl&lt; hired drives
the rest of the staff to tho
brink.

..~

.

Special C
&lt;D m Krlatallnacht The
Joumar 11om 11311D 1 -

Coast Senior Open from Fl
Pierce, FL (T)

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

1332. 8:00 til 9,00 AM .

*··

MRS. HACI&lt;A6ERRY
. A'SKf:D Me 10 DEFINE

1 THINK r/.1 ~IN€, 10 5E'TA
NEW RECORD FOR TRIP510 11-IE=
PR INCI r&lt;\l.S OFF ICC THIS "'"5R'.\ .

Aide. PS, AC. Aloo 1981 FN•

corn.

-···

e ())

MORTY MEEKLE AND ,WINJ'HROP

SWEEPER .,dtawlngm.ahlne
rtplllr, parts. Mid tuppli•. Plc:k
up .nd deli~~'..,.,
Vacuum
Cleener, one helf mile up
Geo•goo c .... Ad. Coil 114-

B4

ollopo o2BOO. ~14-992-2159
•• 114-992-1888.

820 uch. CoU 614-4411-1062.

71

"This little lflllltlc villain 11 $3. 75. We're aut
el tllot ojllift!lfll·lf.,lt·t"·~·tr8cks llawrot8."

UnconclttoMI lf•lme gu•antae. Loctf rlfw ..ett furr•t.d.
Free eltim••· Cell oolled
1-114-237-0418. dill' •• night.
Rogersletement
wot..,oollnt

e iiJ Annie MI:Oulre A

surprise vial! brlnga Nlcl&lt;
anxiety and Annie suspicion.
1:G0 e ~ 1111 Nlaht Court 1:;1
(I)
MOVIE:
'Ladyldllln' :ABC Movie

BASEMENT
WATERPAOOANO

1981 FTL Conv.,.lonol 350

top, Olher

1r;wspurloliun

both. Col 441-44'11oltor7PM .

1111

Oelllp... Ohio
Phone 814-441-3888 or 514441-4477

1 9 71 Joop CJ5. -

................ . 30.000 ""
bOth. Coli 614-742-2410 ell•
5'00.

•us.oo

VIII,.. Hoop. 304-1711-2217.

Home
Improvements

alltra' 1. Low mheg• Vrr good

2018.

Furnithred •t. 3r~.,dbM"
cerpeled. private ..-.trance.
aclJits. no pMI. elotetoPI. . tnt

SAA.a.IICH
SALE

Cor. Fourth ll'ld Pk1•

of hi¥ for Hie.

Smelt apt. Jackson Aw r_.,
rMit
month sacurlly
dap01tt required, clll 304-1764.,80 ext. 80 or &amp;3.

'TI:Mo'

-·
[)S(()IJfii.X£[)

Scrv 1c~ s

411JnkforWin' ...

hoi 1.... 45 It, olclolddc. 100

hnn, Rt. 31. Pliny, W.Vo. 8:00

Apt for ....-rt 807 Mlln St. Rent.

~A(

•955 GMC hoil ton pickup. All
oriainlll.

til 12:00 Man-let, 304-837-

•175. Utl~l• pold. lecu.tty
d.., •equlrod. Col 304-17114480. Elll. eo .. &amp;3.

304-171!,7121.

78 Ford 7000 cMeleL C.t motor.
ft. boll . Slr.tclht truck.
t8500. Clllll14-44.2107bofore5pm.

CumrNns, BiaCem.Jikel,..e.
1&amp; speed 00 h•lmltlion. Air

&amp; Graih

~geround blla1

1:051]) MOYIE: C-blanca (NRJ
(1:42)
1:30 GJ lllllanle 3rd Annual
ResortS lnt'l. 9-Ball
Championship from Atlantic
Cliy. NJ . Nick Vernar vs Mike
Sigel (R)
(I) e ()) Head of tile Clau
As peer counsalors. class
members aa aaolgnad
problem students. C

Ak. . Tr• Trlmm5ng.,dStump
Remov... Free ..-:lmatet. C.tl

24

1979 Chevy 310
4 WD
pl...,p. Rune good. Aoklng
t1950. Cell
514-4411-

Concrlle bloc:b- all
y8rd
or delivery. Moon 111'1 cL OaiUpe&gt;

,..._, - WIOII 1:;1
a0 Nal/lvHie
Now

...... 304-175-2398.

-

.

11Jl&gt;ri1111Nen

'~

house clll ewvldng GE. Hot
POin1, wethers, dry.-a lnd

441-0214.

Reglot- Anguo 8 .. lor ....
Alto Angus heif••· Cell 114981-3191.

lnl•

IHI MOYIE: About Lall NighT
... iR) (1 :53)

' 77 Cllm•o. V-8 ..tomMie.

good oond. nooo.oo. 304571-7375.

8 pc. French Provinclll bedroom
304-1711-1734.

8ullcln9Mot.. ole
Block. brlctc. ..w• pip-. w~
dowt,
ttc. Claude Win'""· Rio O•.,do. 0 . Coil 1142411-5121 .

RON'S .IPPUANCE SEFIVICE,

•ump
....,.,..1, Coli 304-11'75-1331
.

1984 Flr... d. 2 cbM, k&gt;...cl,
304-112-2280.

•• 4PM.

55 BuHding Supplies

Rotay or cable tool c*lling
MonweflecolnPt•tdtamed.,.
P\lmp •I• and servia&amp; 304-

.

Fetty Tree Trlmmfng.

81

+

Myeterlea WWII Wllr baby
looks lor her father before
she dies or cancer.
.Gl - ...... "' Sport
Cll elll Orowlng Patna
Mlka moves out of lila house

into a storage room over the
ll!'raaa. !;I
&lt;D (!) Tlia Mind Raporla link
1111 brain and the mind to tha
Immune system. Q
1111 ea:II The Von Dyke
SIIOw Wl1tn Dick lavishes
gilts on Noah. Matt fears he
Is Of&gt;Oillng him. !;I
• (IJ) MOYIE: The Godf-r
Saga, P•r13

t6
+ AQ32

2.

e (}) 1111 Uneotved

' ·.

SOUTH
+ to 9 a
.Q861 3

clarer when you're left with a trump .
Vulnerable: North-South
smaller than the defenders'. Score it
Dealer: West
by ruffing, and you'll often make a
Nortb East
contract that you thought was failing. West
1•
Pass
Follow today 's play carefully. De- Pass
2
+
I
+
clarer ducked the opening spade lead
3+
4+
Pass
in dummy . East won the queen and
Pass
Pass
Pass
played back the deuce of diamonds.
After taking dummy's ace of diaOpening lead: 7
monds, declarer led a low heart from
dummy, losing his queen to West's '::c=:.::;;;-;;-;-;;:;:;;;;-;:;;;;-;:;;;rT,;;;;,;-=
king. West led back a diamond, ruffed ready lost at tnck one. llut lao what
by declarer. Now a heart was played happened. Declarer played a spade to ·
to dummy's ace. The jack of clubs was dummy's ace and ruffed another diaplayed from dummy, and East's four, mond. Then he ruffed a _spade In dum·
South's two and West's nine completed my a nd led another d:amond. What
the trick. Then came dummy 's 10 of could East do' If he came in with his
clubs, king from East and ace from master trump, South would simply
South with West showing out. That .discard a losing c lub. If he shed a club,
meant declarer had a club loser to go South would make his last little trump
with two heart losers and the spade at- and cash the club queen for 10 tricks.

7:351]) IM!ord and Son
1:00 ~ MOVIE: 011 Umlla (NRI
(1 :28)

Clamp•. nice. 304- 87• 2124.

1988 C...,y Novo, *5,700.00.
304-6711-4480.
1983 Chfv* Vo•k•.
t2.400.00. 304-575-4480.

--

.

tJ92
+Ka n

can also make a similar play as de-

1111 e111 1111 Jeopan~Jt 1:;1

Just In time tor ... •-on.
coc~•. 8 ft ti'Uck

• 7. 200. oo. 304-875-4480.

2411-6588.

"'""
••zoo.
lJilltHI MeiNge.

.'

1987 Pontiec (,hand Am.

Farm E~lpment

61

E-inment Tonight

elll ""' Toctay

~~

-

EA!lT
• Q32
• J 97

Avery
way
on
defense is to use a low trump for ruffing if declarer has not had a chance to ·
take that. trump away from you . You

11)1 Clonftrw

. "

WEST
+KJ 875
. K2
tKQ 7S3
+ 9

e f!]) M"A"I"H

1985 27 ft. Rockwood MiniHom• Hn Chovv cll•ole. gen-

8111-3802

JAMES
JACOBY

GJ
lcholallllc: - Amlrlca
(I)

U-t-88

+A lOBI
+J tO 6 5

e (})

-

NORTH

.,

• • 105

7:05 (I) I ID 5
7:30
F•mlly Feud

""'

•.

1M ITA T/ON

..,

BRIDGE

IIJ Monayttne
lHI Clleen
0 Miami VIce C
1J1 Crook and ChoN

CMON OUT, f~N.Jf, iHE
E:'LEC:,TION IS OVE(?.!

II

Motif- Haunt- Nitwit -

e f!]) TIMM'a Company

.FRANK AND ERNEST

. .•

IN

A lawyer friend says he saw a sign in a patent office that
read : " Copyright Law Is The Statue Of IMITATIO N."

MacNel/ Lelnr
Newlllour (1 :001
~IIJQGW-ol

.7110. Mutt •• to ..,ICile.
Coil 304-1711-5151, ollw 7 PM
171-2013.

Hou• cA on RCA. Quu:er.
GE . Spec:iollng In Zlnlh. Coil
304-571-2398 "' 114-4452414.

Intone -

(I) (!)

rolbptventenna. 21ft. c••fr•
aw"lng. AI tM •tr•. Firm

RON'S Talevitlon Service.

44,000 ...... Coil 114-992·

441-8017. llmMed op.,lngo.

-·'

1985 Fo11 Fire 2~ ft. fby Gulf
ltr.-nl cwnp•. Uttd 3 tim•.
Soldn•-114. 280. 'rWatebedroom (tiP ••• bedl r.trla••or/lr-or. 13.500 ITU olr oond..

3348 tft•I:OOp.m.

lndlvidu.. !jpJ lttr l•toN. baglnnert, tarkru.s gutteritt. B N5C81'dla Mu•ic. 114-448-0h7.
Jell w....,.., lnrnvc:te&lt;. • , 4-

..

oflor. Col 114-441-0208.

c-..

Musical
Instruments

''

•lr.

1984 Buick Century ltMion
Wagon. E•cell•t condition.

57

48151 evenings,. 114-948-2880
dJIVt.

.

SCRAM.J.ETS .ANSWERS

1:351]) Andy Orttltth
7:00 ~ Our HouN Sunday's Hero
e(})PMMageztne
® SporteCeriler
(I) e ()) CurNn1 Affair

'

••or. IWnina air condition on
motor •d roof, 12.000 ml•.
A·1 ...... bte of •trtt. prloa
. _...... Col 114-992-5320.

10 goloot up t14.99.,d 10gel

"

.I

1958 CorvoneProjoct. 14. 327.
315. eutometlc. h•d top wllh
•tre rolinv fnma 814-247·

.

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
G ET AN5WER

Report

0 Cartoon Elqnla
1J1 You C.n • 1 llllr

1971 rr.... el triiH.-. 24 tt .. fu.ll
bed.
new tlr• toR ... c•pet.,
penellng, cuehiont. cunektt,
electric watw hllll:•. •2:800 or

-

.

I H I - In Clnclnnatt

.I

•

••I"•••

e f!]) WKRP In ClnciMatl

I

Filh Tenk. 2413 Jtckton Ave,
Pofnt PleMant. 304-875---2083.

complete t4326.

(!) Nlglltty

I

&amp; Campers

.

(I)IIOcly~

lmel block Chevy Croflz 2114,

Motors Homes

.

8 • PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS
THESE SQUARES

e ()) ABC Newe Q

1111 e111 caa Newa

l~e c~uckle

Co,.,plele
qcoled
bv filitn g tn the mt~s.tng wo1ds
'--'-...L-'--'--'--' you devf;!lop from step No. 3 below.

CJiNIAToday

attalebl•

79

I

!!f (})

""•'""•lonl.ea11
114-441- 0911. Raoolldlng

c••·
Raclna Ohio. 114-949-2188.

ENURNG
f-......,.:1:......;;1_;:_,.:.1:.....:,.ltnlrl

1:011]) L a - and Shirley
1:30
1111 NIC NlghUy Ne-

buy

Wel•d Tunnel Rem ('laiQ wfth
Hnllet C.b.lr•ora. w.l ..d WC
4D 4k: 2 wllh a.ta.r•ors. E Ieierbrodt ..,.... mtlfl• lnt8k• (for
qta'll. Vll ..odl: 1hlftw. 2 H..d
ohlftoro. M-22 •ock cruoher. 220
Munev. 11H Corven:e Mlb
ctpt, 1118-70 nodi: COI'Yerte
hub
Coumry Corv.n ...

" My wife insisted on buying a new
ba1hlng suil," complained the old
" simply beca·use her old suit
had a hole - lhe - ."

I()

r

0 fat Albert

....,.lnopoc:tod. 30dtl'foou•.,·

t•. we

I':~==~·
I I ~=~=~....,gent.
1
5

11)1 lnlkla Pollllce '81
IHIF- of uta

(I)

I I I I'

-;::.S....:U;-0~~-Y,___,,
. ,-.
":
I

rL

1

---

NAHEEP

I K ~RID I
I ll .1' I r

e f!]) Hoppy Daye

~ u..ci t,...rniulona. AI Inter·

114-949-2818 dill'·

304-1711-1386.

HotoU14-445-HIO.

DIDth STliDV AGAIN,
IMl, SIR?

8UOOEr
TRANSMISSION ·
Uttd &amp; rebuilt ell types .
-ontv-30 d.,,, Pn.- •89 &amp;
up. Ueed •
Nbullt .......

949-2355.

t100. 304-112-3317 !ll 17113988.

One bedroom apt · In Point
Ple•lftt, VIII'¥ cleen 1ft d good
oond. will rn furnilhad or
un1urnilhad, no patl, phone

Aoomt tor rent· weell: «month.
lta-tlng at e120 1 mo. Gdl•

YES. MA'AM ..i~E A~SWER
IS OINIOUS ...

1187 Nit.., SentreiE. AC.SR.

PS, P8, 25.000 ml•. EIICel.
cond. Mu• .... CeH 304-1711473.

2453.

114-211-1522.

Gun ·cabin at, .oHd walnut. holck

. 71 Autos

1918 Cutl•• Cl••· Runt Ike
naw. :19.000 mM•. A..ao.• AC.
cruile. lilt. AM-FM .. . . ,. CaM

pi•• outfit. 8100. Coil 114441-7812.
A rtifiC117fl, Chrfttrmstreawllh
.orne decor. 1200. c.n e, 4-

s Ia
or a ·

• F

WESTERN REO CEDAR
• Chen~el Ruttlc
•nd leveled Up SlcNng
• Deck Mat.Ws

114-448-0338.

BE AfJTIRJ L APARTMENTS AT
ILIDOEr PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES, 531 Jockoon

Auto Parts
AcceiSOrles

8ancterd dutch•.
New 11 ft. TMdam axle t...tl•.
prettuN pi•-. a throw out
rtinforoed iOngul, 7,000 lb.
«) !1881)p NfA,Inc
be•lng. w.trlnty·12 moe. CVC
.1 .395. Cell 114-441-91141-~========;::========::..,jolnto-ol .,.... Col 114-379•ft• I PM.
f)220 or 304-171-1758.

Hard
alii. hldlory.
flrewoodfor•le. Bkltruckloed,

•so

614-317-0322.

Now •ccapting ..,pllc.tlont for
2 bedroom ep.tments. fultv

.,..

Din1tt11 •10t1nd up to 1496.
Wood uble w·l ohW. •28&amp; to

•at&amp;.

Alv• Rd .. 614-441-7398.

304-892-2588.

J1
M

Firewood-Herd wood. Large
"''*"l.~od. ne dollY..,., Coil

Mixed hard wooclllebt. I 12 pw
lluncle. Conulnina approll. Ph
ton. Ohio Pllllll C'o .. PorMroy.

Ona beti'oom furnished or unfurnblhad ep.-tment -. Mlddl•
port Alto 2 ba~oom hou .. In
Addison. Ctll 814-992-15304or

Beech Str•. Middleport. Ohio,
2 ba"'oom furnilhad apertment.
utlttl• pekt,. ref•ences. Phone

&amp;

Ohio.. 514-446-4338.

Sof• •d chlirt priced from
e3115 to
T•bl•
•nd
up to t125. 111&lt;»•-t390
to IUS. Aedln.. t 2215 to

•1150. Wether, .75. Dry..-• • 75.
Skeggs -A ppN.,c.t. 571 Upper

Fwnlllwd one bedroom apt.
a!Nit• on!y, no pets. cell aft•

I

USED· Bltdl, dr••••. bedroom
tutc•. O..kl, wringer washer, •
cemplela line of uMd t.un•ure.
NEW- Weetem bool• e35.
Workboott I 18 6 up. (Steel &amp;
oolt toe). Coil 814-445-3159.

614-992·8886.

614-441-3780.

2 8R . epts. 8 clo..tt, ' kttdt.,._
appl. furNthed. W•har-0,...hook-up, ww C«PII. n_..,
pMited, deck.
From •17&amp;.
Senior Chll:ent Wtioome. Re·
.,C¥, Inc. Aptt:. Call 304-~7610•. or 471--5381 or 1!175--

...,.Ins- •99.

... - . •125. 30 1nc11 a•
renpevocado. t71. 30 lnd-1 a•

APARTMENTS, mo~le hornet,
houMtl. Pt. Pt. . ent.-.dGtllipo-lis. 614-441-8221 .

76

I

GNewe
GJ 8porleLoalt
&lt;D lle!P1Inl Junior High
Voula linda out Lucia
shoplifts; Stephanie maeta
her soap opera Idol. Q
(D Dr. Who The Dafaf(s, Part·

304-1711-7841-

the
be-

low lo form four 5imple words

e~~J

•(}) Cll •()) ®

WHITE'S METAL DErEcrOI'\5-

t SAYEt
Buy m.. order Vki..,./ CD'I ll'ld
Mag•ln•. c.II14-448-04S9.

Nawtv mdecorllted IP.trnenlt

614-992· 5942 oft .. 5:00.

.

Honda CR 10 and Handl Mo·
phMICI. loth •oellent GOndftion.

._.y_.,

0 fovr
Q:eorronge lettet5 or
Krombled worQ s

M

1:00 (D Bonlnu: The Loll

- g - 0 1 ... 4whool. .

Ch-.::k for
tpecl.. on ALL
ModMII. 8ig . .CDurw .
..ocked rnodelt. Ron Allison.
1210 Second Ave., G81Upolit.

Olhi• St., Gallipolt.
NEW- e pc. wood group- •399.
Uvlng room ...... t119- 11598.
Bunk beet. wtch beddln9' 1249.
Full tile m,..reu &amp; taundltton
thrllng· e89. Recliner•

Rafrlg•ator frott· free-whfte.
e126. Refrigw.. or frott-fr ...

Pomerov. 2 bect"oom 8pt. Parttv
tlpdhed in NeylortRun. Sean·
lty dapMit. C.ll aft.- &amp;p.m.

Epl-·

wv. Ph. 1-304-171-4130. Now

~ndutlld•whMI••·

WED •• NOV. 9

-'~~~:t;~' S@\tg{\}A-fG£~~! ::::

_ _ _ _...,;,_ _ fd ited by CLAY R. POLLAN - - - - - - -

EYE NINO

At. 31 Cycle 511•. Southside.

Wheefd'llir•IWN or ueed. 3
w ...... "eetric ICOOI . .. C1ll
Ro...,. Mobilly collect, 1·114-

.....,., 7 mo. old I-ring hens. C.ll

992-3711 . EOH.

814-992-5724 eft• 1 :00 "'
992-5119.

M

·
- -RM 121.
varyOood
......·ooncl1988
..:ruW
tlon. E dr•. Cltl114-992· 7291
• ..... 1:00.

54 M ilc. Merchandise

SWAIM
AUCTION &amp; FUANII'UAE 82

Complete houtehald
furnil~ngt· AI bedding. Nstic
bunk beds with rustic ch•t.
v•latv of sol• &amp; ~tlrt--tll on
•-'e. E.:ellent used ll)pllill'lcetChrllt:Mit toyt now In Pock.
Owriltmtt t.viWIY• now being
tlken. Plut fln ..dng avalllble
with tpproved credft. At. 141 in
Cent•arv·'A mile on Unooln

3716. E.O .H.

Apartment
for Rent

Household Goods

Ap.tment for rent. •225 t
month. Deposit ~uired . 614992-5724. After lpm or 992-

Smell mobile home. Upper At. 7 .
Ret. &amp; dep. required. C.ll

44

61

VIRa't Fwnkure
Open dllltt. Mon.· SI!It-

5,00, 304-5711-3788.

41

•eoo. con 114-251-1924.

co~rters.

ent. Ov..ookl pll'kA rht•. W..k
to IChoolt. Downtown. •375•
mo. plus utllh:i•. DepotiC &amp;
..,...,ceo. Cell 514-441-4928.

evahbta Utllltl• paid. 1225.
p..- month. depotlt required. C.H

4 · 8 PM .

For Sale: 1!18-Vifrt~~ge 121155

traits-,

Very niCEI houl8. 2 bedrooms.
b8t em ant . 1832 Lincoln
Heights. 8200. Ref•Mice end

Cell 614-245-5883.

1980 P.triot 14x50, wath.-_&amp;
dryer, IC, front porch Wrlh
•wnln_a. Tllla ov" p.,-mtm&amp;

Fwnllhed apt. Ne• HMC. 1 BR.

oondAve., furnished efflden.ltlrting II 1178 a mo. including
3 bedroom wtth b•ement ·wtt• &amp; ft•beae. Single 8duttt
nltul'lll g•. central llr. clly ontv. C.
l'f4-441-*7 or
w•t•. Convenient location. Ref- 44$.2802.
erenc.end dapotit. Rer'!l 1300
month. No pets. Call 814--448- Redecorated fu rniahed et. 258
1288 olter 8 PM .
State. Adurts onlr- •50 depa.it.

3 bedroom home on Rt. 141 In

198424K52tectlonal. 38Rt., 2
full bM... grllllt room. E IICel.
oond. French City Brokage,

LukuriOIII Tara Townhoul8
.., artmants. Eleg.,t 2 ftoort, 2
BR .. lull both upotall-o. oowd•
room downstairs, CA., dlt·
twuh•. dilpoul. prlv ..e en·
tr.,oe. prlv•te enclot.t Pllio.
poot,. pl.,-ground. UtiUti• not
inctJdad. Starting m t298 P•
mo. can e14-387-1850.

Television
Viewin,;

1911 Honda 200 X 3 wheel.-.

Jarm

Pl.

lOANS UP TOt 10. 000-Resutts

ae

Buv or $ell. AN trine An1kfu-.
1 124 E. MMn ltrMt. Porn•oy.
Houn: M,T.W 101.m. ta lp.rn ••
Sundlw' 1 to lp.m. 114-992·

~~~~N~~bK~9~.~1~9!8!8~----------------------~p~~~m~w~o!y=rM~~~~~~·~O~h~~~=---lr--:;::;:;:;:~i~~:o:ai~ly~~~:;;:~1~3~

Motorcycles

74

O.kote
Home. Built on
your bt. 112.1115 &amp; up. I•• our
Model. CoM 1·114-881-7311 .

For lease

Comm•dll B.. ding far lt•a.

Loen

"'"..teed reu•••• of

19

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Antiques

170-HI1.

22 Money to

2

53

Space for Rent

Hous• Upp• At. 7, 1Uitabte for
offie. speu C.ll $1&amp;-441-

Oell•ship log Hom•. Your

"*"'

Wednndey, November 9,1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

31

Jole

de vlvre

33'l.ast
Spanish
queen
34 One or the
Four
Horsemen
37 Terminated
39 Baffled
1;;--t--t--+41 Company
symbol
44 Hashhouse
4~ One kind
or song
46"Theof Anne
Frank"
47 Sicilian
city

'

•

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

Ill

AXYDLB-AAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apOstrophes, the length and ·ronnalion of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.

....

CRYPTOQUOTE

11-9
TZH

PTZ

GXK

GDNXRN

XDN

QMDnarttne

sa-.
a You Can •

0--YiceQ
11:30e ~

G

1 Star
Tolllghllhow

~=·-

CQKWXRQ
WX T Z
D N

WK

RDBXW

Z K W

T

GKQJ
XKEQN

PKQR

T

MTH

•

•
·'

FDUDSDARM

Cll Alto«lc 1 1 Art I'DtUm

~~rQ

a iiJA Today

~~~=·?'"'"

• ill 'Night Haet' C88 Late
Night Kevin and Frank are

.

..

PTZ.
Q.B
DZBRQNKSS
Yeetenla)''a Cryptoquote: NO MATIER WHETHER
THE CONSTm.JTION FOLLOWS THE .FLAG OR NOT,
·THE SUPREME COURT FOLLOWS TilE ELECTION
. RETURNS. - F.P. DUNNE
.
••

.

C) 1189 King Fut.,eo Syndicole, Inc.

'

�·~-··-·

----

-·--

~·

.,......--•·

......

-----

--

'

~----

Ohio Lottery

Viola AL
CyYo~ng

honoree

Daily Number
282
Pick 4
1723

Page 4

Super Lotto
3-9-11-16-23-32

We Reserve The Right To

Clearing tonight . Low near
30 . Friday, s unny, highs near
45.

•

limit Quantities

STORE HQIJRS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
NEW SALESMAN - Mark
Sell'les, of Danville, new
1alesman at Pomeroy's
, Smltb-Nel- Motors, says he
would like lo conUnue serving
put customers. Searles
comes to Smith-Nelson with
approximately seven years of
experlellce In selling cars In
Melp County. Searles and bls
wile, Judy, are the parents of
twcr"cblklren, Brian and Joy.

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., NOV. 6 THRU SAT., NOV.12

Pomeroy
court news
Eight persons were fined and
six others forfeited bonds In the
rourt of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
Fined were Todd Calllrotte,
Columbus, $43 and costs, driving
Jell of center; Matthew Dillard,
Rutland, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension; Harry L.
Barton, Pomeroy, $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated; Tim
Smith, Guysvtlle, $375 and costs,
driving while Intoxicated, and
$47 and costs. speeding.
Also fined were Douglas
Burns, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
open container; Larry Gilmore,
Middleport, $63 aand costs, ex·
plred plates, and $20 line on a
seat belt violation; Joseph
Tucker, - ~ctne, $375 and costs,
driving whlle Intoxicated, and
$63 and costs, no operator' s
liCense: and Darlene Shane,
Portland, $63 and costs, expired
license plates.
Forfeiting bonds were Wlllam
J. Reltmlre, Pomeroy, $63, explfed license; Charlene Work·
mlm, Rockhill, W. Va., $43,
wrong way on a one-way street;
Douglas Rollins, Pomeroy, $375,
driving while Intoxicated, and
$63, driving without a Itcense;
Donald Maye, Pomeroy, $38 lor
letting his dog run loose alter
repeated warnings; Jackie
McDaniel, Pomeroy. $63, open
container: and Edwin Ash, Ra·
cine, $43, assured clear distance.

$ 2.9
Cube Steak •••••!B•··· 2
.

Tu. rkeys ••••••••••••••••• 79·(
'J

&lt;::..

10-22 LB. AVG.

LB.

MIXED

Fryer Parts ••••• !~ .. ~. 49&lt;

GRADE A

$129
Chuck Roast ••••••••
HOMEMADE PORK
$
19
Sa.usage ••••••• ~ ••!'.... 1

Whole Fryers •• !~ .... 59&lt;

LB.

Bacon •••••••••••••• !~ ....
usage ••• !~ •••

$

119

Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 27'!.

AT&amp;T ...... ............ .... ........... 28¥,
..shland OU ...... ... .. .. ...........34',2
Bob Evans .... .. .. ... .... .. ...... .. .16%
Charming Shoppes .... .. ........ 15'4
City Holding Co .. .. .. .. .... ....... 30
Federal Mogui .. .... .... .. .... ... .51:Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... .. ...... .....50%
Heck's .... ..... ....... ... ,. .••.........

Lettuce •••• ~ ••••••• :~A: 2/$1
'FLAVORITE
'
$
149
2°/o Milk
.

QUARTERS

Lottwy numbel'8
'
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Tuesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number

Shedds Spread.~.
3
/$1
.
.

Ticket sales totaled
$1,220,234.50, with a payoff due of
S508,419.50.
PICK-4

7729.
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$:1J8,858, with a payoff due of

,

PJCK-4 $1 straight bet pays .
$5,364. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$447.
'
'

'

DAIRY LANE

Crackers •••••••••• !~ .... 89(

Ice Cream ••••••••••••

BOUNTY

BIRDSEYE

112 GAlLON

Paper.Towels •••••••• 19 &lt; Cool Whip •••••••:::••• 69&lt;
• •

2 LITER •nnt

389.

~.106.

,GAL.

••••••••••••••

Weather
South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs
between 65 and 70, Becoming
windy tonight, with showers
likely alter midnight and a low
between 50 and 55. Showers
Thursday morning, with highs
between 60 and 65 but tempera·
tures falling to near 50 late In the
day.
The probability of preclpita·
lion Is near.zero today, 70percent
tonight and 90 percent Thursday.
Winds will be from the south at '
10 to 15 mph today and from the
south at 15 to 25 mph tonight.

Pu&amp;IJ has taken a special interest the meeting. Shields said he
By NANCY YOACHAM
In this deal, Shields added , since would release more a bout the
Sentinel News Start
Pugh has been Involved In the workshop as soon as the date Is
Kim Shields, Meigs County's
director of development, and the · project since It began back In confirmed.
Bids were opened by the
Meigs County Commissioners April and was the one who made
are questioning why the Ohio the original .analysts of the comlsstoners for a new EMS
squad for Pomeroy. Bids of
Department of Development Is project.
The total package, which in· $59,614 from the Horton Co.,
taking so long 19 approve the
eludes a low interest loan from a Columbus, and $61,879 from
release $24,000 In Community
local bank and matching money McLain Specialty Vehicles, And·
Development Block Grant fund·
from
the loan applicants, erson, Ind. were received. At the
tng that Is to be part of a . loan
amounts
to approximately request of Bob Byer, the bids
package to a Meigs County
$70,000.
wer e tabled pending r eview by
business.
Shields
anticipates
knowing
the Meigs EMS Board of TrusThe $24,000 had been set aside
something
about
the
release
of
·
tees. The commissioners expect
earlier by the commissioners for
by
the
end
of
the
week.
·
to receive a recommendation
the
funds
a business that ended up locating
In regard to another matter, whether to accept the low bid by
In Mason County, W.Va. Once the
Shields said he hils tentatively their ~ov . 23 meeting. .
other business went to West
A low bid of $9,105 from
scheduled for Dec. 8, an after·
Virginia, the funds were to be
noon economic development Hartley, Inc., on a project to
held until another project quall·
workshop. At this works!lop, widen the garage doors lor
fled lor the money.
representatives f~J!;!m the Ohio Rutland EMS, was accepted by
Shields reported Wednesday to
Department of -nevelopment the commissioners. The bid from
the Meigs Courity Commission~
would present guidelines lor the Hartley was reviewed by Kim
ers that Betsy Gillin. ODOD's
Larry Bank&amp; of Banks Construction. The building
WORK PROGRESSING - This 6,000 square
development
of projects, explain Shields and meets specified
regional
repr!)sentative
for
this
will be leased to Family Dollar which anticipates
fool brick-front building located near the
of
projects that are criteria. A total of$9,6241n CDBG
the
kinds
lind
problems
.
area,
continues
to
opening In early December.
Intersection of Mill and Second St.ln Middleport Is
usually
funded,
and make sug· funds was approved lor the
the
loan
proposal.
with
expected to be completed by Dec. I, according to
Shields said that although he gestlons a bout the kinds of Rutland project.
Information that are needed In
Finally , a $400 tnterdeparthas tried, he has been unsuccesscommls·
mental
transfer was approved
project
proposals.
The
ful In meeting Giffin's requests
stoners
were
enthusiastic
about
for
Meigs
Juvenile Court.
for Information. He has lnstl·
such
a
workshop
and
suggested
Next
week's
meeting of the
gated the help of Professor
that
In
addition
to
local
businesscommissioners
wtll be held 1
Dwight Pugh, of Ohio Untversl·
and
chamber
of
commerce
p.m.
on
Friday,
·Instead of on
men
ty's Innovation Center, to better
members,
prospective
borrowWednesday.
so
the
commissionexplain the loan package. Hope·
ers
and
anyone
else
Interested
In
ers
may
attend
a
meeting
of the
tully, Shields said, Pugh's sum·
mary of the project will suffice the economic development of Southeastern Ohio Association of
and the funds will be released. Meigs County should be Invited to Commissioners and Engineers.
wide underground tunnel. Is rowed to locations In Arizona,
WASHINGTON (UPI) -'-The
expected to be the largest parti· Colorado, llllnols, Michigan,
Ener~ Department today· secle accelerator - or atom- North Carolina, Texas and
lected Te)&lt;as as the preferred site
.Tennessee.
·-for~ tt~· blllton.aupel'e9nd'uet&lt; · sma,~her .._ In the -world. Tile ·
The Texas site Is located In
tunnel will cover an area 17 miles
lng supercollider, ending a lren·
Ellis
County. about 30 miles
long and 15 miles wide and will
zled competition among job·
was the refusal of the Republican
campaigns for Bush and Ohio
COLUMBUS,. Ohio (UPI ) tile Dallas-Fort Worth
south
of
contain 10,000 huge superconhungry states to host what Is
hierarchy to endorse Bush In the
Ohio Republicans, buoyed by Senate and House Republicans
metropolitan area. Waxahachie,
touted as the biggest sclentlltc _ductlng magnets.
primary
season last February
President-elect George Bush's credited togetherness and coopThe device will send beams of Texas, Is currently the major topheavy victory In the Buckeye eration during the campaign for
project In history, Texas officials
when
former
Gov. James Rhodes
protons racing In opposite direc- town tn the area.
said.
and
Cuyahoga
County RepubliCobey Chase, an official with State, talked boldly Wednesday their successes.
Energy Department officials . tions around the underground
can
Chairman
Robert Hughes
Senate and House Republicans
about taking over the Statehouse
track at nearly the speed of light. Texas' Washington office, said
notified Gov. mll Clements In a
were
angling
for an
scored modest gains. Absent
In 1990.
The payoff comes when the the project was expected to
phone call to his Austin office at
endorsement.
"Who are their candidates?" were spokesmen lor the cam·
beams collide, releasing a create 4,500 construction jobs
8:31 a.m. CST, telling him that
"The Bush people had a good
chortled
Democratic State Chair· palgns of Republican Senate
2,000
permanent
jobs
for
the
and
shower of subatomic particles
the department's recommenda·
campaign,"
conceded Ruvolo. "I
man James Ruvolo when M · nominee George Volnovich and
tliat scientists will study to learn Lone Star state. Overall, he said,
tlon was Texas, state officials In
salu
Je
them
for
that. They picked
two GOP Supreme Court candl·
heard about the GOP's plans.
more about the nature of energy the project would pump $20
Washington said.
state to build a
one
mldwes
tern
·'We are serving notice that the dates, all of whom lost.
billion In new economic activity
and matter.
Energy Secretary John Her·
firewall
around
, and th ey
Vice President Bush and his
1990 campaign Is going to begin
The supercoutder will be 20 Into Texas over the next25years.
rlngton called a news conference
In her e. 1
brought
everybody
To win the project. Texas today," Republican State Chai r· running mate, Sen. Dan Quayle
times more powerful than the
today to end more than a year of
wish
we'd
been
able
to do that.
man RotJert Bennett told a of Indiana, scored an Impressive
largest existing particle acceler· lawmakers approved legislation post-election press conference. 10-polnt victory over Massachu· They spent $1.4 million In Ohio
speculation. The site selection
that will provide $1.1 billion In
ator, Fermllab In Illinois.
now goes to President Reagan,
state
funds for the supercollider "We are putting our team setts Gov. Michael Dukakls and and we spent $300,000.
When the competition began
who must make the final decision
Bennett said the Republican
his running mate, Sen. Lloyd
together. "
when Reagan makes the final
on the site lor the $4.4 bllllon last year, 25 states submitted 35
party
will boast good candidates
Bentsen
of
Texas,
carrying
all
"It won't work, " countered
sites to the government for decision on siting.
project.
for
statewide
office In 1990, when
The announcement that Texas Ruvolo, who said his troops will but 11 counties .
The supercollider, an oval- consideration. The list was nar·
crucial
election
lor governor
.the
Bush's 477,000-vote margin ec·
had won the project set off be ready with a "better stable of
shaped, 53-mile-long, 10-foot·
comes
along.
That
list will
celebrations In the state's Wa· candidates." He pointed out that lipsed the one rolled up by
Cleveland
Mayor
George
Include
in statewide contests Tuesday , President Reagan over Jimmy
shlngton office.
Volnovlch,
he
said.
"there was only one with no Carter in 1980.
"We're going nuts over here' "
Voinovlch, who In the mid·
"We had a united Republican
incumbent, and we won."
Cobey said.
1980s
was viewed as the Republl:
Ruvolo said the fact that voters party In this campaign, and
Texas officials scheduled a
cans'
best hope statewide, could
news conference lor 12:30 p.m. in seem to want to stick with that's what made the differ·
collect
only 43 percent of the
Incumbents will benefit Demo- ence," said Keith McNamara,
Washington to detail their site.
popUlar
vote against Incumbent
In recent weeks, governors of crats. In two years. Democrats Ohio ' chairman of Bush's
A minor accident at 5:04p.m. Wednesday on S!t. 124, at the
Democratic
Sen . Howard Met·
campaign.
most of the ttnallst states came to hold every statewide admlnlstra·
intersection of CR 13, near Rutland, was reported to the
zenbaum.
.
He
lost by 602,000
Washington for one more round · tlve office.
Gallla-Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol.
McNamara said a key strategy
Continued on page 8
Bennett and the leaders of the
of lobbying Herrington, underlln·
Troopers said James R. Bowen, 36, Rt. 2, attempted to turn
lng the stakes Involved In snaring
right onto CR. 13, but couldn' t negoUate the turn, so he backed
the estimated $4.4 billion project.
up and his truck-tractor struck the front of a tractor-trailer
State olllclals have salivated
operated by Pearl E . Hutchinson, 59, Wellston.
over the economic bonanza the
Damage was minor to bo th vehicles. No one was Injured.
project would bring, and high·
There was no ct tat ion.
energy physics researchers are
eager for sclentlttc advances it
will make possible once its seven·
to 10-year construction Is
All Mlddle)iort village offices will be closed Friday In
complete.
observance of Veterans Day. Offices will open Monday as usual.
Energy Department officials
had said Herrington was making
his decision on the basis of
numerous factors , Including land
acquisition costs, avallablllty of
The Meigs County Co)lrt House will be closed Friday
skUled.
workers, geological conNovember 11, In observance of Veterans Day .
siderations and transportation,
housing and other "soclallnfras·
tructure'' resources.
Herrington had scheduled his
A bridge one and one--half miles south of Albany on State
news conference for after Elec·
Route 681, which has been closed, Is scheduled to open
lion Day In order to quell
(Thursday), according to a spokesman for the Ohio Department
concerns his decision would be
of Transportation. However, the bridge will be closing again on
polltlcally motivated.
.
Monday so that a culvert can be replaced. ODOT expects the
Rea,gan' s must designate a site
culvert replacement will take three days to complete. During
formally before leaving office
thiS closure, the same detour will be used which Is State Route
Jan. 20. But while Congr'ess
143 to State Route 692 to State Route 32 to U.S. 50, the ODOT
appropriated $100 million this
spokesman said.
year for researeh on the project,
leglslal'ors still must decide
whether the country can afford to
proceed with construction of the
gigantic
project at a time of
The resignation of Janett Call as a speech therapist was
record
federal
budget deficits.
accepted when the Meigs County Board of Education met In
Scientists
contend
the United
regular session.
States
must
go
ahead
with the
MEIGS REACT TEAM RECOGNIZED - The Patrol P011t. It was accepted by Robert Bowles,
The board hired Michele Pratt as a speecl1, therapist for the
risk
being
left
super
colltder
or
Melp
County REACT team was preaented an
pl'ellldent of the REACT team, as several other
remainder of the clirrent school year and Issued bus driver
behind
In
the
technological
race
award
Wednesd~ momlng by lhe Ohio Departmembers looked on, left. to right, front, Mary
certificates to Eric Diddle of Carleton School and Rufus
by other nations now pursuing
meat of IDghway Safety and the Governor's Bowlee, Nathan Btgp, · Carl Nelson, and Ruby
Browni!IS, Meigs Local District. Tile board amended the list of
similar
projects. The Soviet
Safety Cernmltlee. Tbe Melp voup was Hysell; third row, Betty Biggs, Neal White, and
Tratftc
employees
authorized
to
examine
and-or
release
school
1
Unlop Is constructing a particle
one of 15 orgaalzatlons In lhe slate to receive Guy D. Hysell, aad fourth row, Mary Snyder, Earl
records. Bills were approved for payment.
accelerator 1 % times larger
awards of special achievement. Here to pre11ent Snyder, Jim Perkins, and Jed Web8ter.
Continued on page 8
than Fermllab.
the plaque was Lt. Daa Hendenon, Gallla-Melgs

Texas will get $4.4 billion
supercollider scientific project

-Local news briefs-.. . .

~8

Key Centurion . ....... ... ......... 16%
Lands' End ... .. ........ ........ ... . 23 ¥,
Limited Inc .. .. .. .. ...... .. ........ 26%
'Multimedia Inc .................... 70
Rax Restaurants .... ......... .. .. . 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ............ 12',2
Shoney's Inc ........ ..... ......... .. 7'!.
Wendy's Inti .... ..... ...... ......... 6%
Worthington lnd ... .. .... ...... .. 21 Y.
(City Holding Co. raised Its
quarterly dividend lo $.15 from
1.13, payable Dec. 15; lo shareholders of record on Dec. 1. Its
· 50-percent stock dividend Is
payable Dec. 30: to shareholders
of record on Dec. 16.)

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROlL

PKG.

Um~

99&lt;

1 Por (01tom•
Good Only At Pow oil's s..,. Va.,

3/S109
Umit 3 Ptr (..,tom•
Good Daly At Powoll'1 s.,. Valu

"'"''·""

•••
COUPON • ••

PENNINSULAR

LOTSA POP

1911

26 Cents

GOP concentrates on 1990

CRISPY SERVE .

Roll

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

.

GRADE A FLAVORITE

USDA CHOIC

2 SectiQns, 16 Pages

A Multimed i a Inc. New~aper

Officials question late
release of grarit funds
BUCKET PORK

BALLARD'S 10 OZ. LINK OR

Stocks

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November i 0, 1!J88

Vo1.39, No. 131
Copyrighted 1988

GRAN. SUGAR
4.25 LB.
BAG

$119

··:~ . couPON
MAXWELL HOUSE

•MASTER BLEND COFFEE

j34.5 oz.

$4 99

limH 1 Per Customer
Good Daly At Powoll'1 Sup11 Volu
Good lun., Nov. 6 thou lot., Nov. 12, 1911

Patrol investigates minor wreck

Closed on Veterans Day

Court house closed Friday
Bridge to reopen today

Meigs board accepts resignation

'

'

'
••

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="212">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2802">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38604">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38603">
              <text>November 9, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2334">
      <name>bostic</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4059">
      <name>duerr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3189">
      <name>hoffner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1824">
      <name>machir</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3393">
      <name>ransom</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
