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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Falcons

down KC

Daily Number·
844

Pick 4

Page 4

3300

Thunderstorms likely tonight. Low t1,1nlght near 641.
Cloudy Wed1:1esday .
Chance of rain. Highs In the
70s .

•

•

at y

Vol. 37, No.84
Copyrighted 1987

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, tuesday, September 8. 1987

2 Sections 12 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Nevvspaper

Vessels take advantage of lull in gulf war
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates . (UPI) Merchant vessels are taking advantage of a lull in
the Iran-Iraq war to make safe passages through
. the troubled Persian Gulf and a flurry of new
diplomatic activity has renewed hopes or a
U.N .-negotiated peace settlement.
Among those stepping up diplomatic involve·
ment in the gulf was the Soviet Union, which
Monday welcomed an Iranian representative and ·
prepared to receive an . Arab delegation that
includes the Iraqi foreign minister.
Kuwait also started a diplomatic campaign
Monday to increase Arab and Soviet pressure on
Iran to accept a U.N.- brokered cease-fire.
sending Foreign Minister Sheikh Sa bah a I-Ahmad
al-Jabir to Jordan and Moscow.
There have been no Iranian attacks reported on
merchant shipping in the gulf since Thursday .
Shipping Industry sources said the lull appeared

to be In response to the pending visit to Tehran of
U.N. Secretary General Javier Perj!Z de Cuellar.
De Cuellar, hoping to secure Iran's acceptance
or a U.N . Security Council resolution for a
ceas~;&gt;- flre In the 7-year-old war with Iraq, Is
scheduled to visit Iran and Iraq later this week.
Gulf shipping sour. es said Monday that despite
last week's wave of Iraqi and Iranian attacks In
the gulf, a steep rise in war-risk insurance
premiums and nervousness among crews, ship·
ping had remained largely uninterrupted In the
vital oil waterway.
"Shipping is 95 percent normal," said one
shipping company source. "Our shipping is going
out according to schedule. The vessels are
bringing in their cargo and we're still servicing
tankers."
"Everybody 's just hoping that we can get an
easing of tensions," one shipper said. "We hope de

foreign minister, was expected in Mos~ow today,
two Arab sources said. It was not announced in
advance by the Soviet media.
The Iranian embassy said Larijani's visit would
last two days, meaning it would bP ending as talks
begin with the seven-nation delegation from the
Arab League, including Iraqi Foreign Minister
·
Tariq Aziz.
Analysts said the two sides in the gulf war were
clearly In Moscow for consultations on the conflict
in advance of Perez de Cuellar's visit to their
capitals .
The arrival of the two delegations demonstrates
the Soviet Union's uniquE' position as the
superpower maintaining good relations with both
sides in the conflict.
"Moscow is in an ex tremely good position." an
. Arab diplomat said . "The Soviets are playing
their cards very well."

Cuellar can talk some sense into both the rulers."
"Prospects are fairly good," an industry
official said of de Cuellar's visit. "The countries
involved, particularly Iran, are really suffering
now . So many people, young people, have been
lost."
Iranian President Ali Khamenei said Monday
Iran would not Initiate a conflict In the guiJ but
warned that "nobody can escape ... unscatheq" if
" fire breaks out" in the region, Iran's Islamic
Republic News Agency reported.
Khamenei's comments coincided with the
arrival in Moscow of Iranian Deputy Foreign
Ministrr Muhammad Larijani for talks expected
to focus on the gulf war.
"The Soviets are mediating," an Arab diplomat
said Monday in Moscow.
An Arab delegation. headed by the Kuwaiti

Jackson plans to enter race
NEW YORK 1UP I) - Jesse.
Jackson, in the wake of announcing his plans to seek the Demo·
cratlc nomination for president.
told supporteys their "joy mu st
be translated into voter registra·
tlon and p· olitical
empowerment."
Winding up a three-city tour
Monday with an appearance at a
Wes t Indian festival in Brooklyn.
the Baptist minister and civ il
rights activist told a crowd of
several thoosand c heering people that he has been weighing a
run for the nomination.
"In the last few weeks and
months I 've been testing the
waters, trying to m ake a deter·
minatlon about 1988." said Jack·
. son, whq spoke at the West
Indian-American Day Parade
following visits to Pittsburgh and

JACKSON WILL RUN - Jesse Jackson kl'lses
Jamala Johns, 3, of New York City as he leaves
the 21st Con~etls District Caucus picnic Monday

In Cleveland. Jackson wuln town to announce he
will formally seek the Democratic nomination for
president on Thursday. (UPI)

·Nine year-old hit by vehicle
Nin~year - old Charles McKin·
ney. son of Mr. and Mrs . J&lt;&gt;ffrey
R. McKinney, Horsecave Road.
Racine, was Injured early Mon·
day afternoon In Syracuse when
he was struck by a motor vehicle
driven by David Wollard, 33, of
Texas Road, Pomeroy.
According to Syracuse Marshall Jl m Connolly, lnvestlgat ing
officer at the scene. McKinney at·
about 12:12 p.m. was riding a

bicycle east on Third St. !Route
124 l In Syracuse. in the vicinity of
the Bridgeman St. Intersection,
when he swerved to the left In
front or Wollard's vehicle, also
trave ling east on Third. The
Woolard vehicle struck the
youngster. causing head injuries
to the boy. Syracust&gt; EMS trans ported McKinney to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
flown at 1:03 p.m. by the Health

Net helicopter to Cabell·
Huntington Hospital In Huntington, W.Va.
At 10 a.m. this mornin'g, the
child was listed as critical but
stable In the. pediatric intensive
care unit, according to a hospital
spokesman.
McKinney was reported to
have been In Syracuse visiting
friends .
No citations were issued
against Woolard.

Issue flash flood watches
along coast as ra~n ·continues
By PETER ROWE
United Press International
A tropical depression moving
ashore from the Atlantic today
threatened to dump up to4 inches
of rain In six hours on Virginia
and · North Carolina. where
streams and lakes were already
full from earlier storms.
Flash flood . watches were
issued early today for parts of
Virginia, where flooding washed
out as many as 50 roads Monday.
The depression formed Mon·
day afternoon off South Carolina
just south of Myrtle Beach. It was
expected to move Into North
Carolina and Virginia later today, bringing heavy downpours
to the already lnnundated area,
said National Weather Service
Forecaster Dan McCarthy.
The forecast "calls for 2-to-4
Inches (Of rain) within six hours
... mainly from North Carolina to
New Jersey," McCarthy said.
The heaviest rain·was expected
to move ou't of the region within
24 hours, he said.
Showers and thunderstorms
were also expected today from
southern New England and the
upper Great Lakes through the
Ohio aild Tennessee Valleys,
with rain most likely thoughout
the Appalachians.

,

Rain was also forecast from
Oklahoma throug!J Texas and
Into Louisiana and Florida.
Meanwhile, firefighters in the
West got little help from the
weather as they battled the worst
series of wildfires in recent
memory.
MorP than 13,000 firefighters
struggled In an ocean of trapped
smoke that blackened the sun
and grounded aircraft Monday to
keep an upper hand on huge
lightning-sparked blazes that
wiped out more than a half
million acres of forestland in
California.
"There Isn't any daylight out

there." Jim Geiger oftheCalifor·
nla Department of Forestry said
of four major blazes still burning
In the northern end of the state.
"The crews are using flash·
lights to read maps In the middle
of the day," he said of the newly
windless fire areas. "The smoke
also Is keeping aircraft on the
ground."
"No rain, " said weather ser·
vice forecaster Lyle Alexander.
"It won't be quite as hot as It has
been out there, with temperatures In the 90s."
In Texas, a thunderstorm
slammed San Antonio Monday
with near hurrlcalne force winds.

Cleveland.
" I've looked at the prospect of
expanding our !Rainbow) Coali·
lion. and ... it makes sense to
run " for prE'sident. said Jackson
as the audience roared its
approval.
"The joy you feel must be
translated into voter registration
and political empowerment ...
into economic empowerment ,"
he said.
Jackson's themes of jobs,
pea&lt;:e and juslice were well
received by the mostly black
crowd who gathered beneath
overcast skies to hear him after
t.he parade and festival, which
police estimated attracted
nearly 1 million celebrants.
Jackson spoke later at a rally
for striking NBC workers in

Manhattan and told them their
labor dispute with the network
was a battle for jobs and justice.
Earlier Monday in Pittsburgh,
Jackson announced his plans to
forQ')ally seek the Democratic.
nomination, saying he choose a
traditional blue· collar stronghold to reach out to American
workers to help him win the 1988
race.
After leaving Pittsburgh, he
stopped briefly in Cleveland,
where he gave a rousing speech
calling for jobs, justice and
worker solidarity.
The civil rights leader said his ..
candidacy will help to in«:!rease
the number of black registered
voters and the number of blac~s
holding public office.

President Reagan returns to
work today; faces full slate
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Pres·
ident Reagan working to dispel
any hint of a lame duck adminis·
!ration, faces a full schedule this
week, including a visit with Pope
John Paul II and a push for his
appointment of Robert Bork to
the Supreme Court.
The president spent Labor Day
wo'rklng privately and planned to
meet with top White House aides
today to ou lline his agenda 'for his
remaining months in office.
Reagan returned Sunday from
a 25-day vacation at his Califor·
nia mountain ranch, looking
relaxed and ready to take on a
high-profile schedule designed to
put the Iran-Contra scandal
behind him .
He has his first state visit of the
fall Wednesday, with Swedish
Prime Minister Ingvar Carlsson.
The two are expected to discuss
mending what has been a long
and often strained relationship
due to Sweden's opposition to the
Vietnam War and othE'r U.S.
foreign policy. positions.

On Thursday. Reagan will fly
Bork, whose nomination has
to Miami to welcome Pope John polarized political activists, already has been conferring with
Paul. The two leaders have met
at least threE' times previously, White House chief counsel A.B.
the last at the Vatican in June Culvahouse and others, preparwhen Reagan attended the eco- ing for the Senate Judiciary
nomic summit meeting in Italy.
Committee confirmation hearThe pope begins a 10-day tour ings that begin Sept. 15.
of the United States but WashingThat same day , Secretary of
State George Shultz and Soviet
ton is nor on his itinerary .
On the domestic scene, Rea· Foreign Minister Eduard Sh~
gan's No.1. priority, one he hopes vardnadze will begin two days of
will reassE'rl his· authority and talks on strategy for wrapping up
influence on Congress. is the a superpower medium-range
major lobbying effort he will missile agreement.
undertake to win Senate confir·
Observers say the result of
mat ion of Bork, a federal appeals their talks will be an announcecourt judge.
ment of a summit meeting
White House chief of staff between Reagan and Soviet
Howard Baker, former Senate leader. Mikhail Gorbachev to be
Republican leader, plans to mus- held in late November In
ter all his political forces to sway Washington.
uncommitted meq~bers of ConI
Despite pressure from conser·
gress to vote for Bork, and
Reagan plans to be personally vatlve groups, Reagan was expected to postpone until Sept. 30 a
involved.
While House aides said the vote decision on whether to seek
will be close, possibly with one or additional military aid for thE'
two votes making the difference. . Contra rebels in Nicaragua.

Testing ordered for .Robert L. Riffle
Testing by Shawnee Forensic
Center, Portsmouth, has been
ordered for Robert L. Riffle, to
determine Riffle's competency
to stand trial In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Maxine 0 . Griffith, Pomeroy,
has filed suit against Carl W.
Moodlspaugh, Pomeroy, asking
for $30,000 for damages stem·
. mlng from a motor vehicle
accident on Sept. 4, 1985, and a
trial by jury. Plaintiff was
operating a motor vehicle In a
southerly dt\-ection on County
(

Road 20 on that date, preparing
to turn onto County Road 26.
Moodlspaugh was also traveling
south on 20. when he drove his
veclcle in to the vehicl-e of the
plaintiff. ~laintlff alleges that
damages she l'ncurred were the
result of the defendant's
negligence.
A notice of appeal has been
filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court In the case of
Mervllle Todd, Lucasville,
against ACE Termite Inc., Scl.o·
toville. et al.

STORM DAMAGE - A 400-loot communications tower blew down In San Antonio, Texas
, Monday afternoon In high winds, lightning and
rains. The tower leU Into an apartment complex,

•

Injuring several people and rupturing a gas llnl'.
The tower Is owned by Metro Media, Inc., near
San Antonio. (UPI)

�Tuasday, September 8,, 1987
'

'

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 8, 1987

japanese yen _·__..:__.;____B_:._y_J,_ac_k_A_n_d_e_rs_o_n_a_nd_D_a_le_V:_a_n_A_t_ta

Bili .Ptoxmire's farewell

blaze took four mnths to extinguish. and lt.ws not many years before Br unei was selling the sa me
crude a ll to postwar Japan .
Today , half of Brunei's c rude oil
Is sold to Tokyo, while the J apa nese have the exclusive contract
for, Brunei's natural gas . The oil
r iches have made Srunel' s subjecs, including the lbaps, quite
comforta ble . Village longhouses of
the inter ior are festooned wltl'! t.,.
levlslons a nd other modern conv.,.
nlences. Bar.,.breasted beauties
no longer wander unsha medly
a bout ; Ma laysian style or Wes tern
dress prevails.
.
Though the older I bans contltiue
to farm a nd hunt, t)le young men
prefer working for the national a ll
company In the a ll town ofSe rla. or
for t he government, which Is pr im arily, fund ed through Japanese
contr acts . Few or the m seem to
grasp the historical Irony that the
mode rn-d ay Tokyo has had such a
direct hand In civilizing a nd s ubduIng a once-fierce trlb, which the
m ight y ImJX'rial Ja pa n had so
fea red.
DRUG REPORT - Classified
Drug E nfo r cPme nt Administration doc ume nt s a nd oth e r Int e l! I·
ge nce r e ports a llege that coca ine
a nd m arijua na fro m Colombia
are dom in ati ng the Illicit drug
m arke t in th e U nit ed Sta tes .
The Colombia n trade begins li s
r a pid growth arou nd 1977. when U.
S. a nd Mexica n officials launched
a crackdown a nd bega n dosing
growers' fi elds wth the herbicide
Paraquat . The quality of Mex ican
dojl(' began to fall , ylelds decreas.,.
da nd "Colombi an Gold " becam
the " s moke" of c hoice a round the
world. Users say II has a higher
con tent of re active lngrrolent ,
THC. a nd Is " beller m a nk ured."
mea ning It has trss ste ms a nd
seeds.
A cla ss ifi ed n ~ rcott c s inl el llgence es timJ te. whic h includes
reports from the CIA. predicts
tha t Colombia n dealers wll con·
ltnu to outproduce a nd out se ll
their Me xica n counte rp arts .
MI NI EDITORLAL - An obser ·
vant reader from South Carolina
suggests thai the way conscrva·
five are parting their hair hns becOme a " kind or ta ttoo, brand. secret s ign." Our cor respondent
notes tha t President Reagan parts
hi s hair on th&lt;: r ll!ht , as d ld many of
the pa rt icipa nts In the !·ran/ contra
hea rings (Ed M ~rsc, Col. Ollvh
North, sever al Republica n congri'Ssm&lt;:n!.

Is conservatism cracking up ?_8 Y_w_ i_llia_n_tR_us_h_er

HoW

PARE YoU PRY INTo

NY PRIVATE LIFE --WITHoUT

'BUVrNG THE RIGHT€l

Ially fail to realize is how hard it is,
and how long ' lt takes, to cleanse the
Augean stables. Hercules managed it
all alone, but let's face it. "e're not
Hercules.
The job of setting America on the
right path is, however. in the hands of
a movement that understands the assignment and has !lei out to perform
it It has already made contact with
the nation 's strong heart and produced a leader who has performed
prodigies. But of course almoot every thing, especially when It comes to institutions, remains to be done.
A whole generation of frightened
and furious liberals is clinging to its
positions of authority in every nook
and cranny of tbe national culture.
These people · are too numerous and
too entrenched to be ousted one by
one. They will die in their foxholes and be replaced by younger and very
different people.
But that is the work of two or three
decades, Cheer up, cooservatives. The
best is yet to be.

Should Hart run again ?___B_y_G_eo~rg_e_M_cG_ov_e_rn
When I first heard that Gary Hart but he has confessed these errors and budget. He should run a no-nonsense, then, if he Is elected, run the White
was thinking about re-entering the has paid a heavy penalty for them. lean. tough , honest campaign and House the same way.
Democratic presidential competition·, The Bible warns the rest of us to be
I thought the idea was ridiculous and careful about casting the first stone in
I
.
potentially damaging to Gary and his these circumstances.
- He is now one of the best known
family . But as I pander the passibilinames
and faces in American politics.
ties of a renewed campaign by my
He
has a reputation lor serious
former colleague, the idea - while
fraught with risks and heartaches - and thoughtful preparation on public
makes more sense.
issues. He can contribute much that is
. To begin with, it should be recog- valuable to the country.
nized that anyone who has ever seri- He needs to re-enter the race to
ously pursued the presidency never qualify for federal matching funds
fully gets ·over the temptation to try and pay off his campaign debts.
-again ""7 especially ifthe first effort is . Because of the obvious dangers inpartially successful.
lvolved, I would not urge Gary Hart to
I must confess that alter winning enter the race again. I do not think he
the Democratic presidential nomina- • can win if he seeks the nomination.
tion in 1972 and losing to President But I 'did not think he could win the
Nixon in the fall, I have been tempted nomination in 1984, and he came
to try again every four years since within a hair of proving me wrong . .
then. I even yielded to that temptation
More to the paint, If be decides to
briefly .in 1984 after rejeding it in try again, he might possibly pull it oil
1976 and 1980. It should also be kept with dignity and benefit to himself
in mind that a losing presidential con- and the country if be can keep the foltender firmly believes that he Is wiser lowing considerations In mind:
- He must be willing to elidurP. two
today than yesterday. He probably is.
So it is not difficult on reflection lor or three weeks of ridicule, h rllla·
lion and ~ensatlonal revelation&gt;. ~ith­
me to understand that Gary Hart who managed my campaign In 1972, oul displays of anger or martyr&lt; om.
- He has to talk sellle on the U.•ues
was himself the runner' up in 1984 to
Walter Mondale and has been the with complete candor.
- He must not think primarily
Democratic front-runner in the polls
this year - Is at least thinking about about winning the nomination; rather
·~
his aim should be to educate the pub1ettlng back into the competition.
~
tl ,:;; b&gt;1 NEA, Inc
i?- A
Des~ite ·tts obvious huards, that lic and the other candidates.
"Hey,
it.
could
be
worse.
1
could
be
tryin'
to
- He must avoid the usual paraco~:.:::!~ht~=~~~~- '
. , phernalia of a big campaign organizamanag,e
the
Yankees
for . George
- Gary Hart has made some very tion, media advisers, pollsters, techniSteinbrenner. "
damaging mistakes in his private life, cians and a multimillion dollar

Berry s World

:Today in history
By United Press International
·
Today is Tuesday , Sept. 8, the 25lst day of 1987 with 114 to fo llow.
The moon is waning, just leaving Its full-phase.
·
The morning s tars are Mars and Jupiter. /
The evening s tars are Mercury , Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign ol VIrgo. They Include
England' s King Ric hard I , "Richard the Lion Hearted," in 1157;
composer Antonln Dvorak In 1841; stage and film director Max
Reinhardt in 1873; country music pioneer Jimmie Rodgers, "The
Singing Brakeman, " In 1897; Florida Sen. Claude Pepper in 1900 (age
87); comedian Sid Caesar In 1922 (age 65) ; actor Peter Sellers In 1925,
and country music singer Patsy Cline In 1932.
On this date In hisl&lt;lr}':
, In 1522, Spanish 1navigator Juan de Elcano returned to Spain,
completing the !lrsl circumnavigation of the globe with an expl'dltlon
that began underFerdlnand Magellan .
In 1~. the first permanent European settlement In what Is now the
Continental United States was founded at what Is now St . Augustine,
F'la.
.
.
,
In 1900, more than 6,000 people were killed when a hurricane and
tidal wave struck Galveston, Texas.
'
·
In i935, an .assassin shot autocratic Lou slana Sen. Huey P. Long at
' the Capitol building lrr Baton Rouge, La, Long died two days later.
In 1951, Ttie United States and Japan signed·a formal peace treaty
In San Francisco, six years after the end of Wo~ld War II.
'l

·t

Astros stop Giants; Reds nip
•
Dodge~ m 13 innings, 3-2

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON - The head - the Indigenous lrlbes of the Is- lain's "white ra jahs " beginning
hunting tribes of the Island of . lands.
In 1841. The firs t , Jam es Brooke ,
.
Ill Court Street
Bor neo ha ve fin a lly bt&gt;en s ubwa s a British adventu rer who
In the process, It became appaPomeroy , Ohio
dued . It Is a unique Irony of t hi s rent that the lbans began a grisly
e n11E&gt;d Iba n pir acy a nd then ruled
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEWS-Mi\SON ,\REi\
century th a i their indirect con- practice of collecting heads based
the a r ea wi th wisdom a nd br ute
qu er or s are t he Japa nese .
force.
Whe n necessary, Brooke
on their belief that the Immortal
whose
heads
they
las
t
hunted
a
spirit of the enemy resided In the didn't hesit ate to unleash the
rs~lb
m~ r""T"'"\..,.. ........- . - . r"T"'E!! c.~=~
head-huritlng Tba ns to enforce
little
over
four
decades
ago
.
head. To own skulls was to possess
~v
.
his r ule. But he a nd hi s descend Young lban trlbs m en, weaned great pow£&gt;r - for the Individual
ROBERT L. WINGE'f'l'
on he r oic tales of yesterye ar, warrior or the village.
a nt s m a naged to s ub stllut e cock
Publisher
now go off to work on offshore
The ritual became a rite of pas- fi ghtin g as a primary m ea.ns of
r igs, drilling oil that goes mo stly s age. Eac h young Iban male was
settling disput es.
to ,Japan. They ·buy Japanes e required to acquire an enem y
But when the Japa nese successPAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
c a r s, televl s ios a nd stereos fully Invaded In D ecember 1941,
Assistant Publisher/ Contr.oller
Ge neral Manager
s kull to prove •h is manhood . The
the British once aga in encouragd
e ve!) as the bl ackened, smoked more he acquired, the more he
skulls
of
lhe !ba ns to become head hunters.
the
Invading
Japan
ese
became
the
envy
of
his
compaA M F.M'BER ti l. T hC' U n i fN I P i'('l' S l nt f' r n:.~t ion a\. ln _l:1nd D :dl _
, . P r Pss
Hund reds of J a pa nese, possibly
of
world
War
ll
still
hang
In
rat
.
nions
and
a
virile
hero
to
the
A ~soei :J ti on and thC' A m£'r iran NPw spap('r P ub1ishf' r s Assoc iation.
thousa nds. fe ll to Iban parings,
tan nets In the ir tribal villages, young girls of the village .
I. F TT F:n~ OF OPI N IOI'\ u r!' wdr'f1 m f', Th f' ~ shnu lcl hc• h -s!' _llw n ,1(10 11·onb
swaying In the breeze .
s
harp jungle knives . Several dozen
II dege nera ted over the ceninnc . A II !PIIc ' r~ ;t rl" ~ u hj(Yl 10 c'&lt;lll intt ;~nd mu :-1 hf' "'i gnNl " ·it h n:1me•. : !d t l n• s~ :\nll
s
ma ll s kulls Va n Alia viewed In a
The
story
of
the
evolution
of
th
e
turies
to
e
ven
uglier
deaths
.
Inh•lcph on c• numhcr . No un signl'(l J(I!Tf'rs wi ll bt · puhli.,hf'CL l.r Tli'l'!&lt; ~ h n u l c l he • in
rabbll
·h\llch-llke enclosure far up
'fierce 1ba ns unfold ed as Dal e s tead of taking heads In battle .
cnnd ta~l l •, : • d i l l"f·~ -~ in g i ss u e-.~. not. pf'rsnnul lliPs .
the Belall Rive r we r e all J a paVa n Att a recently took a trip lban men soon consid er ed a ny
nese, according to his river guide,
back in time, traveling up the pate fair game . Childre n who
brown , jungled Belall River of s trayed too far from their vil - Benny F oo. F oo &lt;"Xpla ined that the
holes a t the top of each skull were
the tiny nation bf Brunei to the lages ra n a great risk as did
!ban villa ges of tod ay - a nd a elderly wpm en ga the rin g ber- punc tured by the ! bans, who-then
sucked out the bra ins of their vic,
house of skulls hidde n along the ries.·
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
tims.
edge
of
the
river.
If
live
head
s
proved
lao
diffl
tiPI Senior Editor
Naturally, a ll this made the
The
Ibans
,
also
known
as
the
Sea
c
u
II
to
collect,
I
bans
we
r
e·
not
WASHINGTON (UPI) - When William Proxmlre came to
Tbans
the most fea r ed guerrill as
are
a
brown-skinned
peogra
v
e
r
obbery
,
One
BritDayaks,
a
bove
Washington in 1957 as Wisconsin's first Democratic se nator since the
the
J
a
pa
nese faced In the regionIs
h
ple
of
medium
build
who
were
r.,.
gove
rnor
of
a
nea
rby
Is
la
nd
waning days of the New Deal, he got a conque ring hero' s welcome.
so
they
stayed
along th&lt;:&gt; coast, lev lative.
latecomers
to
the
Moslem
wa
s
forced
to
secretly
bury
hi
s
No less a personage than Lyndon B. Johnson, then at the peak of his
the
interior
to the 1ba ns. When
log
·
sultante
of
·Brunei,
following
the
wife
for
fea
r
her
cor
pse
would
b
e
power as Senate Democratic leader, led a delegation of party bigwigs
the
J
apanese
fin
a lly flro I he lsi a nd
• to National Airport to greet the new senator, whose special electi on . likes of Slnbad ·the Sailor and be headed by a plund erin g Iba n .
before
Amer
ica
n forces , they set
Ma
rco
Polo,
_and
did
what
Kubla
The practi ce slowly faded du r • victory gav e the Democrats a _50 percent Increase in the 49-47
Khan could not: They va nquished in ga century-long r eign of Br i- fire to Brunei's 38 oil wells. The
: majority they had at the start of the 85th Congress .
: Most of Washington expected the freshman senator tokeep his eyes
· open, his mouth shut and his vote in Johnson' s pocket. It didn' t take
long to find out that Proxmlre wa s not going to be a potted plant in
Johnson ' s garden .
.
For one thing, he was completing the term of the late Joseph R.
McCarthy. which ended in 1958, and had to make his mark quickly.
Secondly, he was from a state famous for such mavericks as R,obert
LaFollette (senior and junior ) and McCarthy. Just about the las t
t hing he wanted was to be regarded as one of Lyndon Johnson' s
lackeys.
Withip.a fe"V months, Proxmire had established himself as a loner
who c.Ved little for the sensitivities the Senate " club" or the
: traditions of party loyalty thai supposedly gave the majority party
control of the legislative program .
·
Proxmlre never really m ad e much of his party affilia tion , either in
· Wisconsin or Washington. He relied far more on hard-won and
carefully nurtured personal !Inks to the voter s rathe r than on any
.party organization to keep hi s job.
Proxmire was not the first maver ick to give Sena te leade rs
Excedrln headaches, 'but he was the forerunner of a wa ve of senators
and r epresentatives who declined to fall in line in Washington and
voted as they thought right or as their constituents wanted them to .
In 1958, Proxmlre was elected to a full Senate term and another 13
freshman Democrats, many of them from the West, joined him for the
start of the 86th Congress. The pundits predicted Johnson , with 64 ·
votes, and Speaker Sam Rayburn, -with a 130-vote House majority.
: would be running Washington.
• 11 dldn' t happen . Th e new members , especially the Westerne rs ,
·were anythiQg but Democratic rubber stamps . · The Democratic
· leaders passed some of their program , but even when they won close
contests on controversial partisan Issues , they frequ ently were
stymied by President Eisenhowe r 's vetoes.
The trend away from party unity In the Senate predated Proxmire' s
arrival- some might say It began 20 years earlier when Democrats
deserted Franklin D. Roosevelt on his Supreme Court packing planbut It seems to have reached a peak in the late 1950s.
. The North-South Democratic s plit over civil rights In the 1960s
masked the more basic change, but it became clear in the followin g
decades that there were precious few domestic or foreign issues on
Kevin Phillips, the author of that around them " and "have not even culture. At the level that counts, they
which the party leade rs, especially the Democrats, could expect to
1969 masterpiece "The Emerging Re- thought of rna intaining enduring insti- own it. The nation is latently conserdeliver bloc votes .
,
·
publican Majority," decided he could tutions comparable to those of the lib- valive .... Though momentarily dispirsell more of his subsequent books if he erals. ' Tom Bethell concentrates on ited, the conservative movement is
When Bill Proxmire reetires next year, the freshman senator who
bailed them with titles that liberals what he regards as conservatism's S!Jiid and it's here to stay, Ail it needs
arrived in Washington three decades ago as a party hero will de part
would find more agreeable. So in the too-me4dlesome notions of foreign _ is a little leadership. The president
as a respected senior legislator who also was a Democrat. That
1970s he entitled one of his tomes policy: The United States should has muffed the job. Let someone else
probably will suit hi!11 just fine.
·
"Post-Conservative America/' and "(withdraw) its hardware and its de- be Reagan .' Ernest van den Haag
the liberals all rushed I'! buy it like structive dollars from around the ends the sympasium on a moderately
the Gadarene swine, though they soon globe," and "all covert operations optimistic note: "It is too early to give
discovered that the America Phillips should cease forthwith.'
up hope, and not too late to work for
envisioned wasn't to their liking at all.
Richard Brookhiser fears conser- the insitutionalization of conservative
I suspect my good friend Bob Tyr- vatives may have "lost sight of the ideas".
rell, editor of The American Specta- goal - which should be, not to mainMy , my, aren't we discouraged eastor, of similar duplicity in calling the tain a permanent set of parallel insti- ily. Just think - Ronald Reagan has
FrR~T!
principal article in his magazine's tulions, but to march through the in- been president for 6'1&gt; years, yet there
September issue "The Coming Con- stitutions which exist." Victor Gold are still liberals around in positions of
servative Crack-Up.' Not that Tyrrell worries that "conservatives may win influence! Worse yet, we conserva·
and most ol the heavy thinkers he in- political battles but liberals are still tives haven't really created "enduring
vites to comment on that subject winning the cultural war, in the end institutions' of our own, let alone takaren't genuinely worried about con- dictating the true national agenda." en over the pre-existing ones. Why,
servatism's present and future; they Lew tehnnan thinks conservatives the liberals are even still "dictating
are. But what they are all arguing should "begin by elevating to prima- the true national agenda ."
about is how best to up-end the cy ... the inalienable right-to-life."
1 have a hunch that last assertion
liberals.
Joe Sobran blames, not conserva- would be news to most liberals but let
Tyrrell himself thinks conserva- !ism's lack of ~ultural clout, bu.t the it pass. What the quoted co~serva­
tives lack initiative: They "simply do madequacy of 1ls cb1el leader: Con, lives - good men one and all - t&lt;&gt;not take much interest in the world servatives don 't have to penetrate the
'

'H

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SAFE AT FIRST - Cincinnati's Kal Daniels
heads back to first base as Dodger catoher Mike
Scloscla's throw on an attempted pickoff play

went sailing past Pedro Guerrero In lOth Inning
action at Riverfront Monday , The Reds won the
Labor Day battle, 3-2, In 13 Innings. (UPI)

• •
SIX In

row
Jays make it
with 5-3 win over Brewers
By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writer
Milwaukee r elief ace Dan
P lesac le t the Toront o Blue J ays
s tay In control of the Am erica n
League East by los ing control
over his pltch.cs.
P lesac wlld ·plt c hed home the
go-a head run In lhe elghth Innin g,
a llo wing the Blur J ays to win
the ir ~ lxt h st r a ig ht ga me Ma n·
d a y wtth a o-3 dec is ion over the
Br ewe rs . The tri um ph allowed
the Blue .Jays to m a lnt pi n th ei r
ha lf-ga m e lead over De troit.
w hic h bea t Ba ltimo re 12·4.
'' I t's proba bl)• th e wor s t ( o~l ·
ln g ) l' \'c ever had In th{' bi g
leag ues ," said P lcsac . who leads
the Brewers with 23 sa ves . " It
was 1he !lr51 d ay in a long tim e
wnl'r e I was out the re a nd t'cal ly
had no co mma nd or th&lt;:&gt; str ike
zo ne . really ha d no id&lt;:&gt;a whe re
the ball was go ing."
Pl csac, 5-6, wa lked Nel son
L! r ia no to ope n the th ree· ru n
Toro nt o e ig ht h. Pi nc h·h llt e r
G a rt h l org followed wll h a do uble
that moved Ll riano to third . Lo u
T hornton ra n for l org a nd To n ~
Ferna nde z blooped a single to
, rll{hl . scor ing Lirlano to liP t he
score J .. J. T hornton he ld a t thi rd.
With a 1-0 cou nt on p inch hill er
J ua n Be ntquPz , P lesa c's pitc h
e luded ca tc her Bil l Sc hroeder ,
allowi ng T hor nton to score a nd
putt ing Toront o a h&lt;:&gt;ad 4-3. f'N nandez went to thir d o n a not he r
wild pit ch by Pl esac a nd scored
o n a sacrif ice fly by Bcnt quez.
" We 've never see n P l&lt;:&gt;s ac be
a ny thing les s tha n successfu l
agai ns t us," To ront o Ma nager
.J imv Will ia m s said. " He', hu·
m a n jus t like the res t of us . He' sa
ve r y good pitc her. his num ber s
Ind ica te that. bu ! h&lt;' ca n ha ve a
bad da y too ."
Dua ne Ward. 1-0. pit ched one
scoreless Inn ing of re lief to get
hi s firs t ma jor·league \dctory .
To m H&lt;•nk&lt;:&gt; pitched two Inn ings
for his :!2nd sa ve . tops In th e

Americ an League .
The B rewer s thre a te ned in th e
nin th but were una ble to score.
He nke walked Sc hroede r a nd
sur re nd ered a double to Ernes t
Riles . The r ight -ha nde r th e n
r&lt;:&gt;tired B.J . Stirhoff. P aul Ma li·
tor a nd Robin Yo un t to e nd the
ga m e .
E lsewh er e in thE&gt; AL , Oa kla nd
nipJX'd Tex as :?-1. Minneso ta
hamm Pred , Chicago 8-1, Ne w
Yo rk dum jl('d Bos ton 9-5. Sea tt le
c llpJX'(I Cleve la nd 6-4 a nd Ka nsas
City s topjl('d Califo rn ia 5-2.
A's 2, Range rs I
At Oa kla nd . Alfredo Gr iffin
sing led with two ou ts In the nin t h
to scarP To ny Ph ill ips from
econd a nd help Da v&lt;:&gt; Stewa rt
tn. prove to 19·9.

NE W YORK t UP ]) - Louis ia na Sta te's climb from lOth to
sixt h in the college football
ra tings has made Coa c h Mike
Arche r wa r y of cont e ntm e nt.
A&amp;M in the ope ner. the n

we lost

to Mi ami of Ohio." sa id Arc her ,·
wh.os e Tigers s mot he r ed t he
Aggies 17-3 Saturday. " We can ' t
hav e a le tdow n. I' ve got to stayon
m y pl ayers butt s. "
Arche r. a t 34 th e youngest
Div is ion I·A coach, was eleva ted
fro m defensive coordina tor to
repl ace Bill A rnspa r ger in Decem ber . He s a id Mond ay LSU
was "ver y honored to m ove up in
the poll , .. bu t added there's more
Ia accompli s h.
"Ou r fi rs t goal is to defe nd the
Southeas t Con fer ence title. No
one has ilone I hal sin ce Georgia
in 1981 a nd 'R2." Arc he r said . " By
doing that a nd playin g in the
Sugar Bow l, we ha ve a c ha nce a t
the nallonal titl e. "
Wh il&lt;:&gt; LSU clim bed in t he
rat in gs by United P ress ln terna ·
tlonal' s Boa r d of Coaches, Okl a hOm a m aintained it s hold on No.
I by securing 744 or a poss ible 750
point s and 44 of 50 first-pl ace
vol es .

C1\UGHT IN RUNDOWN - Seattle's Ml~e Kingery Is caught in a
run down during Monday 's game at Cle veland. Indians third
baseman Eddie Williams mak es the lag ·to first Inning action
(UP I)

!back Tim Ma noa . cor ner bac k
Stephe n Braggs , place· kic ke r
J eff Jaeger a nd Ju nki n.
" There' s no que s tio n we' ll be a
bett er football team (tha n last
year) ," said Sc hottenh elm e r
Monda y at Baldwin-Wa llace Co llege. "Like any team . we' re
goin g to ha ve our ups a nd down s.
But this Is a football team that
ca n be very compe l it ive. I ree l
ver y good a bout the co mpos ition
of this tea m ."
Ben gals Cut 11
CINC IN NATI I UP I) - The
Cin cinn a ti Be ngal s rea ched the
45-player r oster limit Monday by
cutting 11 pl ayer s - e ight - yea r
veteran line ba c ke r Ron Simpkins and ..lO fir sl·yea r pl aye rs .
F'lrst-year players cut were
defe ns ive backs R.L . Ha rris ,
Sonny G ordon and Da ry l Smith,
wide receivers Greg Meehan and
Tom Brown, punter Scott Fulhage, running backs David
McCluskey and Marc Logan,
quarterback Tom Ehrhard! and
tackle Jim Warne.
The Bengals , who finished 2-2
In pr.,.season play, open I he
regular season Sunday a t the
Indianapolis Colts.

several occasions .
." I'm used to it by now," Scott
s aid. "I'm s ure they did fi nd a
scr a pe on t he ba ll. I th rew it in
th e di r t a couple of tim es a nd
s pllm a n fouled one of! a nd h il a
groundball."
Sco ll allowed three stra ig ht
hil s with one out In the firs t
inning, · bu t did no t a llow a
baserunner the r est of the game.
He wal ked none struc k out seve n
to ta ke the NL s trik eout lead with
214 .
.
LaCoss fe ll to 11-10.
With the score tie d 2·2 In the
seventh, Glenn Da vis belled his
23rd homer of the season to giv e
I he Ast ros a 3·2 lea d . Jose Cruz
increased the lead to 4·2 in th e
eight h with hi s 11th hom er .
Th e Gia nts scored twice in th e
fir st. Ke vin Mit c he ll belted his
18t h home r un over the left - fie ld
fe nce with o'ne ou t a nd Mike
Ald rete scored on a n RBI doubl e
by Ca ndy Maldonado.
Th e Astros trimmed the lead to
2·1 in the thi rd whe n Davis scored
on a n e r ror by Maldo nado .

Houston tied t he score In the
sixth whe n Kevi n Bass drove
hom e Ala n As hby wit h a si ngle.
Elsewhe re , Mont real s topped
Si. Louis 9·2, Sa n Diego bea t
Atla nta 11-4, Cincinnati s haded
Los Angeles 3·2, in 13 inn ings,
Pitts bur gh edged Chicago 3-2.
and P hiladelph ia -downe d New
York 5-3.
Phlllies 5, Mets 3
AI New York," Juan Sa muE-l
singled ho me two r uns In the
seve nlll i nn in g t o ca r ry
Phil ade lph ia. ·
Expos 9, Cardinals 2
AI Montrea l, Pascual P e rez
won his second s tra ight s ta rt and
And res Ga lar raga drove In three
runs. lea dfng the E xpos.
Padres II, Braves 4
At Atlant a, Gar ry Te mpleton
s tr oked a two- run sing le to
highli gh t a fi ve-run fir st innin g to
lead San Diego.
Reds 3, Dodgers 2, 13 Innings
· At Cincinnati,' Buddy Bell hit .!'
hom e run off B ria n Holton in the
13th inning to lift th~ Re ds.
· Pirates 3, Cubs 2
At Chi cago, Bobby Bonilla
s troked a two-out, two-run double
in t he e ig hth inning to push
Pitt sbu rgh past Ch icago.
,-------------

F'oilowing LSU w as No. 7
Mia mi !Fla . ), No. 8 Mi chigan .
No . 9 P e nn Stale and No. 10
Cle m son. Rounding out the Top
20 we re No . 11 F'lorida State, No .
12 Arkansas, No. 13 Washingt on,
No. J4 Arizona State, No. 15
Te nnessee, No. 16 Notre Dame.
No. 17 Alabama ,. No. lR Pitts·
burg h , No. 19 Nort h Ca rolina and
No. 20 Sout hern Cal.
The final three teams were all
new to the Top 20. Texas A&amp;M ,
Iow a and Florida dropped from
the rankings . Other teams receiving fir st- pla ce votes were
LSU, UCLA, Miami, P enn Stale
a nd Oh io Sta te.
The Aggies , wh o s hared t he
preseaso n No. 10 r a nking with
. LSU , ent ered Sa tu r day's game
with a 14-game home , winning
s t r ea k- the longest s uch stretc h ·
in P ivision 1-A.

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Ne br aska . t he Soone rs ' Big
Eight fo e. s tayed a t No. 2 wlt h64 6
points ~ nd one fir st-place vot P.
No. 3 UCLA a nd No. 4 Auburn
both adva nced a s pot w hil e Ohio
Sta te fell two pos ilions to No. 5.

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NOW

sub -pa r pilcher un til receiving a
cou rse fr om Craig a ft er Ihe 1984
season. Si nce th e n Scott, 15- 10
this year, has go ne 51-28. but bas
been accused of c heating on

LSU jumps to 6th in
latest·UPI ·grid poll
" Las! yea r. we beat Te xas

Browns, Bengals cut
rosters to 45 players
B E REA . Ohio i UP I) - There
are ver y fpw sur pr ises on the
Clevela nd Brow ns' final ros te r .
Browns h&lt;:&gt;a d coac h Marty
Sc hott e nhelmcr cut his rost e r
down to 45 player s Monda y by
w.alvln g eig ht pl ayers : light e nd
Ger a ld Bay less , defe ns ive lineman J ackie Clin e, w ide r eceiver
Te rry G reer, offe ns ive ta c kl e
Bob G ruber . gua rd Geor ge Lil ja,
linebac ke r Scali Nicolas, qullrterbac k Mike Norseth and r un-'
nlng back But ch Woolfolk .
In addit ion. the team pl aced
seve n players on Injured r .,.
serve: runnin g back Tony Bake r
twrls t ), lineba cker St eve Bullllt
(groin). cornerba c k D.D .. Hog- ·
ga rd (ankl e], ti ght end Vy to Kab
(back), runnin g back La r ry
Mason 1ham s tring) , line back er
Nic k Miller (hand, arm) and
punt e r George Wins low t back l .
In the tina! analysis fror;n
t raining camp. there a re two new
starters for the Browns: free
safety AI Gros s and left defe nsive
end Sam Clancy . Also, Ant bony
Griggs will start at left outside
linebacker. beating out fir stround draft pick Mike Junkin.
"Mike Is making progress,"
said Scholten helmer. "He hasn ' t
caughi up yet (from hi s long
contract holdou t). There Is one
thing we know for sure, he can
rush the passer. Anthony has
played very· well, though ."
Six rookies made the 1987
roltlon of the Cleveland Browns:
offensive lineman Gregg Ra alld Frank Winters, ful-

Tige rs 12, Orioles 4
At Ba ltimore , Ala n Tr a mme ll
rlp jl('d a three-r un homer a nd
Tom Brool\e ns drove In three
run s to power Det roi t.
Twins 8, White Sox I
AI Minnea polis , J e ff Bltliger
scattered s ix hit s over seven
Innings to win his fir st maj orleague d ecis io n a nd Tom Br una ns ky ripped a two-run hom e r ,
ca r rying Minnesota.
Yankees 9, Red Sox 5
At Ros ton. Will ie Ra ndolph
bell ed a two-run hom er a nd Dave
Win field went 4 for :; to s par k
New Yor k' s 17-hlt a tt ac k.
Marin ers 6, Indians 4
At Clpve ia nd , P hi l BradlPy,
Alvi n Davis a nd Ji m Pres ley
co ll &lt;:&gt;cted RBI sing les fo r Sea ttle .

By JOHN A. TORRES
UPI Sports Writer
Sa n F ra ncisco Ma nager Roger
Craig, who la ught Hqustan ·r tgh thander Mi ke Scott the s plit fi ngered fastba ll , says the secr e t
of hi s pu pil 's s uccess · Monday
could be found in his s hirt.
Scott retir ed the fi na l 26
batters he fa ced and G lenn Davis
broke a seven th-Inning tie with a
home run to lift the As tros to a 4- 2
victory over the Gi ant s. The Joss
reduced the Gia nts' lea d to 4 1·2
gam es over the Astros In the NL
West.
Craig and pi tc he r Mike LaCoss
wer e e jected for arguing tha t
Scott was defacing the b all.
''He was ca ught' red -ha nd ed ,"
Cr aig said. "He put some thin g
down his shirt . Two o f t he umps
(Bruce F roemming a nd J im
Quic k ) sa w il but ,sa id they d idn' t
have the rig ht to searc h him."
Cr ew chie f John Kibl er said a
"scra ped' ' ba ll had been confisca ted in the eighth inning.
"Roger cam e out a nd asked us
to c heck the ba ll ," Kibler sa id.
" We found a lit tle scra pe . We
war ned him that if we found
a noth e r ba ll w ith a s cra pe, he ' s
done.' '
Scot t, the 1986 Natio nal League
Cy Young a wa rd winner. was a

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we hold the drawing! (You must be present to
win; no purchiue or wager necessary. Drawing· open to licensed drivers, f 8 years
of age and older.)
.
.
"'
Register as often as you like, then come on out to Tri•State for our September
•
Special Edition!

when

Poll Timfl: 7:30.Eveflings, Mon.-Sat I 1:30 Matinee. Wed .. Sat. • Resetvlfiolls: 776-5000

lNG HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Don't get
$hop the rln&lt;&lt;ifil&gt;rl

PH. 9IJ2·5432

POMROY, OH.

Fried Chicken

Cross limes, WV

. '

Ex~

1-64

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Tueiday, September 8. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wahama opens with 35-0 win over KC
Majors

Trr"' (OrM r . da fl.'lll'oiVt llnt'm Wl .Joac kl••
(lint' und tl~~;ll&gt;t t•nd lot rilld Bayk'!&gt;.!&gt;
plu.u•d on lnju"•d rt'tOt"rH' ru nnln~ hu~k.o

NATION'o\L LEAGUE
By 17ttk f'd Pre!O.. IIIlfl'lllllktnal

"'''

St l.ouJ ..
N~ l '11rll

TtiB)' Bllkf'r and Lurn ~l ll.'IO ft lln&lt;."h* k1"f/OI Sh'\'t' Bu\1111 a nd Shk ~lill~r
tl~t;lll t•nd \)' to K;t h. curnt&gt;rhad~ !'ta•q•
Rullltland punh r lot'urr,::t " ' " ~low
(lntl nlllltl - (ut llnrhat'-:l'r Ron
Sim pkin"'. d i'fl'n:&lt;;l\' 1' h,u II." R 1. Ha rr l~.
~ nn.t Got;'dun and D:.r~l Smith 11.ld;•
rf't:Ml l!rs Grt•J1111N•ha n a nd Tom Bro11.n
IM'nlt r Sc.:ult F ulhlll!;t&gt; runnlnl!; btu k~
D:t.\ ld Mt fluskl')' atni Man l.. tll:llB
quart rrha.c II Tom F..hrhardl ttnd tat kh•
lim ~ 11.rnt
Uu lla." - \\ ll.hl'd qu.trtf'rhMt k Kt 'I n
!ol ll.t l' nl'~ , klt:k••r Roll Kt nlrst ltlw, run
nln~~; tuu ks i\hln U\ount und (arl~11111'r
11.ldt• rt•~.;t•lvt r ( ornt'll 8urh11""· IIKht ~·nd
SleH· t' olsom , drlt•n:.h r taddr ~Ilk~
M ~ kln~ Uu.:klt"' Rt•~~; l!;lt Smith a nd St rH
( l ~o\\ skJ , dt•ft•ns lvf' t• nd R a.y l't•rkl ns
,f;Uilrd &amp;h" hltr Lind t:u rrwrhat k.~ Rotwrt
\\illlllllll' :tnd luhnny Hullow.t)' phu a•d
on lnjurt d t't-st rv• delm~l\t' tat k ll· Dun
sm, r• k dt frn~lu• Pnd Hoh(ort Smith 1Utll

\\ L Pit (,ft
Il l ~l

7K ll

!\IOnlN'u.l

"' -

HI!

!•..,

77585lillll

Phll.1
fblu.p

PIU..,.r«"ll

" ~'

!oiun Fran

71 G6

5111 ID' t

" &amp;II
Gl i~

Iiiii 13
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Hou~lon

Ia liS

Cl ndrmut

6t il

1\Uant u

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n

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San Ull'II:U

KO
3C Kl

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-116 lft't
1(1!1

i\lrmday',. ite!IUII:!II

17 h

~

\1onlr••uJ 9, St Loul'i

:-ian hlt•JtO II Allunta 4
t lnd nnali I. Lo.. An~~;dt'!i ;!, 13 tnnln~r;S
Pltlshurah 3. fh ln~ '!
Phlladt•lphla a 1'.iflw \ork :J
Huustuo4 lolan Friintl"t~l '!
Tuesdll.y 11 Gam• s
J'ltl .. hurj~:h (Paladu,. G-0) at fhlc».Ko

ofh• n ~h t• lineman GlenTIIPnsor. wul\l'd

wldl' rf't t•ht-r ,Jo hnny 'Lu m ' . June~ ofl
lnjul'l•d r••s•"~''-"'
Df'n\f'r - Kt·h a.'ird deff'nsl\l' llnr mt•n
Ky k&gt; t\mhr&lt;)!o;( " all Row yrr ~tn d Ka 1
" uudard , llnt'ha~k ~ r ~ Dalla!! Cameron
and llarrt•n C omraull dt'fens h r h w:ks
F..ar l Juhn~&gt;on aud Ko.' In (' lark, olfe ll!'oiH•
lhwmrn Mikt• Fru·mun llnd Boh Old!• r
m an tl~!;ht o•nd )o{')' Tf•Hkf'tl whll'
rt•t rh r r Gary Ro llt•, runnln~: h.\1 bi J or
llud••l! and K••n Rt•ll nnfl quurtrrha• k lc H
V11n Haaplton;t plact&gt;d olft•n;;;hr llnf'
man Kt 1111 Kilrll on ln ju r r d rt 'Sf' f\'f'd
Dtof.rult - i\tqulr tod t tlf fl(&gt;fhad Hnr
Vl'Y ( ht,Hon lr•wn Plllshu ra:h fnr an
undl!l( tosrd drdl •tloh:f' " al\!c&gt;d tight
t&gt;nd Dmld IA•v.ls lln!!h:atkr r s Janws
ll11rrrll and ,\n l{l'lo Kin~~; runnln~~; h!tt ks
Ahln Muor• • and Stun Ed•art.l ~ puntt•r
Jim ,\rnold wldr retchf'r Eric Truvll
lion off•·n~IH• llnt•m un .Jut k Ollu r ,
t orltl rhatk Tit lly !&gt;imllh and drft nsl\1•
ha.t k Gar land Klvt r" plai c&gt;d on lnjurf'd
N'l'it•ru ..ahoty Dto~un Mill he ll ~o~ldt•
~u·hf'r ('uri Blllnd olfen~lvc- lint mlln
Boh fr)dl't nu...- hu kl.- Da n Salt'lltunua
~d t or~rhat k DQn nh• Eldl'r
lorf't"n Rtt.) - \\ah l'd qtuarhrhat k
O uu k fu 10lna , ~o~hk- r cttl\l'r:&lt;; lb \ld
Rl·r~r and I.A•t• ~to rris. U,;ht f'n d Harry
Holt runnln~~; hat k l it Vail' Thom as
dt•lt nsh f' uu kll' Je ff Oro~ I und dt•f f'n~l\!ll
halb F..d B1•rry John !'illialn a nd O.•nnis
~oodlwrr y, plattJ d on lnJun&gt;d ft'M rw
run nln~~; hut k (, Rr y Elh rso n tack \I' Dll \ c
('ruston Knd dtlt n~lu• tat kh Lon RIO

(Sutdlff{' I:J.it.Z 20pm
Sl Lnul:. (Jo~or!it' h 10-4) ul ~t on l rt- al
!Smith !t-tl),, Jl pm
I.Aii'i An fl'l'l f'!; I HPrl&gt;lll!icr 1 ~ 13) at
f'ltldnnatl (Roh/n,.,on ~:t), "1 35 p,m
Phllad ('!phl;a ! Rutfln 16--11) a l N .. "
\ u rk {fr•rnlUld t'"i: 11).11), 7 3$ p m
!otan IJit•Jrl' C"hlt~n 11).101 a t Atlllnla
Walmrr; 10) l 10 p m
Slln F rarll bru ( lhlmm~~oktr 9 !I) at
Huust u n tR.r•n 8-l.e) K 3~ p m
"'Gam~

" " dnesdu,

rJU!iiJurl{h at ( hh MJiC;O
Sun Dll'ji~O ul Atlunla
St Lou I" at Munln'atl night
w~ An~PieK a t ( lnt·lnnatl niR:hl
Pblludrlphia at N- \ork, nl~l
&lt;:!.an FrwHIMo at HDU!iiO n, nlji!t\t
\MER If AN LEAGUE

....

.,"' " ...,., - .,
..",. ., ..."" '
" " "' ""
" ~' " "

1oronto
Dt,. rotl
Nf'\lo York
Mlhuulu
Hoston
Balllmor
Cit"\ Clod

..

w

l

72

5

tKa 1

til

3111

7-1 13

16 Iii
Kan.o~ (I)'

.. 70
67 71

f ullfornl

~

St altlt
Tt&gt;ll al'
l'hit Uji;D

'1:1

64 73

" "'

"'
~II

I

191

~ ·.

'''
I
9

~H6

167
~67

trt•tman
Uouston- \\ ll.hf' d dt•ff'nsnt t•nd h S"l'
Rakt'f !'&gt;aft'~)' Kt nn)' luhn ~ nn, fu llhu• k
llutwr~ 011\f'f' llfld Oflf'IISIH• lilll'nliJII

'

It;\ IS

Re~ull~&lt;

Mund"Y'"

(111\~land 1
Mlnnt~ot a K, ('hltuxo

Srlllllrl.
Toronto

GH

Pol

I

'Ilk" Kt•tlt•Y
•
lndlanupo lll'o - \hiH•d lhll•hadHr:oo
l.11Monlt lt unl~ and Bnh Onllu1 'Aid••
rt't'i'l ' •'r Jam(&gt;s Nuhlt . runnlnx h ac k"
Oav td t\daml'o and Patrltll t rlln ki ln nul'ol
tu k h'!O Bill t: lko a nd Mu rk Studa¥ta~
ddt•nslu h;.atks l&gt;&lt;'mrtrlus Johnso n nnd
Tldf' Ka udlt and tat kl1• l.ar3 \\:dku
plat t•d o n i niun•d rl"!'oo' n "t' M. \d• r•a I'IH r
Ko)' Rank&lt;; 1.11• kk• { hrls Ga m bol df'f r n
-.~, , b utk(hri!.C·oodt dt•lc-n ..l\ •l ltw mlln
lohn Hatn"" a nd d1· l• · n~l'l" but k Ch ua kit
\llllt't"
Kansa~ Cit ' - \\ a.hrd tn rrMrl l:u l! ..
&lt;1uuh" Komi'S and farlton Thuma~
do.ft·n~IH 1 nd Kit l .tlhro t' do fa n.. l\1
tatk lt' R 1tnd) "ail s Qtlitrlt&gt;rhutk IHJ u~:;
llulbon Umh ut k1r Slott H ,tdt••it and
11.ld1 r f't rhf'r ( h a.~ t 'nro:
plat Pd un
Injun d rt~ t r\1 J{ uards nr.td Kudd•• .mtl
Rrroo h•Kr.mt lim ltut ker fltarlt.., ~h r
rtu und ¥tidt rN e h rr Kltri• It Ta.\lur
pi1U1 d quat1rrhao k Frank~ . uHr un lht
nun lumhall lnjur' tt~t . phu ed lint•
haa k•• r ~ (,ar) Span I and Kt•n 1\11 i\ IIIMt r
un lht ph_v ~l • ath un :.thl~.. lu-jll r lurm 11 ..1

5. Mllwauki&gt;i• i

Kuni'IIL.. I \ly I (alllornla 2
Nr'l' \'ork! Ro!itnn 3
Del roll t: Bu.lllmorc ~
Oakland '!. T e lla.. I
l)ae-;day 's Gllml's
S. Lillie ( Mor~~;aa IB-J:i } .at Ch•uland

(\f&gt;tt;H ),7 ISpm
Dllroll (T• rrell 12- HI I at Ro~~.ltlm.on •
( Dbum ~ K) . i 3 ~ p m
Nt'W \ ' ork t Gulllc k.'iOn '! 0) a t Ro:ool11n
( Nippu "- 10 ), '7 :Up m
( hlc at;o tBannlstt•r II Hit at Mlnnt s ot.t
( Riylt•H n 1~10 ) H {J;lp m
Toro nto (SII••h H·7) a t Mllwu. ukl'l'
I Ro:. lo~H ) K 15pm
Kan!lk!i City (Guhh.-.w 9 16 ) a t ( al lfu rnlll titi.'UI('I 1 2 1. 10 1$ p m
TtXa,. tlloul!; h U· ll1 at Oakland
(Na•lson 6-1 ) 10 :IS p PI
\\t'dn1•s.d~'s f o o~~.m..s

T••'m" 11 0 11M iand

l'ieuulr at&lt; h vel and ntl!;ht
lh t ruit .at Ball imor.- nir;ht
Nrw Ynrk a t HO!il&lt;MI , niJ(ht
( hh:a,(U at MlniW':ooula ni ~t hl
Turuotu at !'l'lll"auke1 ni~~;hl

1, \

College scores
Saturdays
Ottlo fu llt-rr Football Kfol'ouiht

Pt•nnStlll to -115

Ro•lln~~;GrNn

I!

Ml;w1l U , Cto ntr.ll Mll'l1 6
Ev.NIN n Mit h
nun~t .. to•n Sl 00
" '""' Vlr.-lnla 23,0hio Unl1 I
T&lt;'mpl(' 13 Tol{'do 12
\\ l'!lh•rn Mlth 21. ,\kron I!J
Kuii{Hs 10, flndnn:Ul;
\\ .-.;h&amp; lf'll ( I'll ) IO, Ohlo" rN it&gt;yan 16
Ct••lr,d ~~ t l Kt nllM: ky St 0
Findlay Ul' Rullaiu II
loltn( a r roll '!i Duqutl'ollO !fl
\\limington 341 \\lnds1,r IOnt ) 11

». \

h ll

...

t•JI.il tHJints ( hwwd o n I 'I pulnt:. fnr flr .ot
phut• 11 fnr o;otond oh ) and lw.t
"' • k "rankin~:;
Tt•.1m
Polo is
• ~~ I
1 Okl oihOm 1 i~ 1! 0
~ Nr U1 • ~ ku ! 111 )111
li~ li 1
I lj f I ,\ ' 1 1 1 ( 1\ 1
~~ 1 ~
c,l ~
•l
I Aubu• n 1 111
' Ohlo~l,ltr' 111 111 111
h LSU 111 11111
7 M1 tml •l• •1 th
~ Mt('h l.c,tn l fl Ill

_,I

I

~. ~HI

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'll'('nn s r.rr.t l ll lll

!)!~

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11~

j

I l r m~ u n •I fh

2!H I I

F lnr ldu Slat e' I I II I

!ii u

,\ tk •o ._... .. 1 l~f1 1
'.\ ,tsht n~on 11 fh
,\,lnn.o St.tlf' •lllh

21111 1l
J~to

~

11!:1 17

,, '

'' '

S\ I .Jl'U~

d~r.- n .. ht

l'nd
furtl 'l J\ol1 Griff, llnf'huc kt•rs Chu t k
F a u t"rtlf' a nd Ron Jladll'\' ,.. Ide r tlf"l\ 1 r
:oo lomo n 1\lllh r, tl~~;ht 1 nd Rod l uJM'
,auard IJa \ 1d lord lUI 1 o rnt rhat k Pc-rr}
M "' lll hun~ and quarlc-rlla' k lint
frtM Itt hi~ . plllcf'd on lnjul't"d rPM"nt•
turnrrhut k., P r rr) I
"'lll am:. nnd
" !1,\' nr Hilddh;, ltWirtrrha ~ll lf'fl ll o~
tr llf"r a nd 1o1o 1df' rM, tur Odi'Ssa TUrm r
N 1 lt•ls - ,\ t qulr~• d llii:OOI lao kll Oo11
:-iinllh fr om B11ff!ilu for 11 .:ondltlonul191&lt;1\
dr11ft pit k, pi:U I'd dt-lf'RSI\ I j It kh
ll'romt t "oslt•r on inJun d "'"''n1·

llo Nn111• Dl1mf' rl._tl ,
l'i Al.1 bam"c1 /11
I ~ Plll!&gt;.hUr,eh d m
'lfl 7
1'1 i'/or lh f &lt;~•o lhw 11/l
.!!\ ~OU1h l' l n f,l\ 10 lh
um.t nk• d
n r IH1~ H'( PI\ tng ' ott&gt;s Ros to n 101
lr•,e_r
I Olnl .tdo ( ,,,,l ,gl.• lo" 1 Mil h iJ;&lt;&lt;IO S t .llf'
Sidlo

" aJ"l'd

N1 Glanl s -

1i.! ) •,

\"1 'II'RIII'sS4'(' 1.! Ill

Ok l,lhOrtlol
,\,';M

i\n dy ll rndrl and HU I(h G r l"rn un

Mtnnr-:.ota - "ah l'd runnln~: hu.•ll 'I rd
Hru~o~on ~ft&gt;Cif'!'&lt; Hufu., Bf&gt;""" a nd !;il\ t
r;rt•r•man, .:orntt•r Curtis R ousr, to rnrr
h II II IIU \ ld f \ U fl~ , do ft fl"l\ot j I t kif' lot
Phillips au urd~ Gar y St hlpp:m a and
\\ u.,nr f o nt ~. drl.-n:.hr l'n rl :-it :.tii•U'd
'lf .IJ~ and llno.•luuka•r"' I• II Sc huh and
P••tf'r NajariLUt phu f' d runnln a hilt k
1un) T r urhl\t' on Injun d """' f\('
S1•w Orll'ans - " ahl'd llnrha~ krr
l'ltutl Ll•ut h. offrnsl\1' llllf'ma n I' "'
1\tllh•r U~t:hl ; nd!&gt;o Mlkt \\ al.t·r~ und
''" hur \\t lis !ltlllrll'rhat k Krn Ku r. hf'r
futlh.u k John \\I Ill am~ guilrd It Uph
"11\ltms dt frn"'l\'f' llnr mun Joh n Dum
h tukl and wid• Tltt• h •n• llon Rrm~ n
Ka h in F.dM a rd~ and i\1\" II • 1111 ~ " 1h 1 d
!rum lnj11n •d ri'St'r\1 o lfr nsl\1 lint m un
l11fW• • n!~·l nll,.f'lack lt Sh.-llkln l\ndnt '
und wldc&gt;rt•t•tlvrrsLo nnlr Whn t&gt; llmml••
Tl al and Eu ~t;t n• Goudlo,. , p lan d un
lnju"'d rf'!lf'r\t' untl'r!!i Turn f'\&gt;1 ( an\fll n
a nd Sit'VI' Knrlf', dr•f f'nsi'l • hao: k (,1m
1\tklns 11.nd wldt• re.. 1'1\'er Ht•rlwrt ll arrl~

Nlm \ ORI\ {t: P)) - Th1 ( IUt•d
l' r•"'~ lnt1 rnatl11nal Bu.~~ord nf t ""' h•""
Top '!ft to lh I:;I' loo4 h:d l ro~llnKl'o , ¥1 Ith first
pl.ul' Hill"' and l't'I'Ord In parPn

I~

k rr~

lnju • ~ d rr,...n~·

College
ratings

lll
11
12
II

lanu ~

r,,.,. .

( umtwrhmd ( liv 1 IK, TJtfl n 17

ltv ~,

Kaldrr ~ - ~ ahtd ~all'l\'

Ua ~ 1:-: llndlat kl'r .. Patr\[ k Mlll••r and
Ron " w;hlnrt on d l'fc n .. ht• 1 nd h•fl
Rl•lnllf' runnln~~; hacb I hrt.. ~ld..A'rtWrl'
!Uld Ethan Hurt on and offt•n .. hf' llnMth n
Dl an Mlraldl DM l ~~;ht \\h••rlt•r a nd Sl••\ •
\\rl~ ht
pluo t'd un tnJUrf' d n:oolfll
t'll rl'll rhat k I.A"S tl'r Ha yt..,, quar1l'rhut k
" l l'l f' lk•u f'r lr ln
wldf" rf'lf"hl'r kltk
noturnr r C hrl!i \\oods, tlr;tll rnd t. rnr
Rr-o~nt on a nd ~~;t~ard John
k pl at rd
do•f• n~lv• "" d Mlkt' \\I M· on tht non
foot h all Urnes~ 11s1
Mlanu - \\ah e d ~o~idt• rorc••IH•r-- Na t
1\loort' and !'it ilftii'Y Sh akes!J("arf' runnln ~:
lUll k Tnny Nathan
guard.. \ ' r rnl u
!; milh, Do u~~: 1\obrrurll' and Dan Rosado
!lOst t iU'kll Mlkf' l..a mhr11ht
llnt'h 11 k1 r~ 1'1111 l'tdi!;POD a nd Da ' n.l M &gt;~r
:.hall ~ ll••ti~ lllrr\ (. r tlfln .Donu, an
ltnst• an d Uflnrt lluhlt&gt;J' a nd dl'lo·n~h i
1 nd 1horn.t~ Sl r.autht•rs, plated ltnt'-

11"Xil~

und \\ \ nm1 nc

Saturda~·'s

Transa('tions
If , l u•l• /t,,,/u
&amp;~•·hal l

lhH• Iand

rt·~Jgno

-

Olnu lfl ~t h S; hu n\ f' •110lh tl llt• .. l;lh
\kr lltt1 hil l !9 I nr.1111 Kln~o: 11,
,\I; '\.untlo r Ill to•d• r 11 ll •u king li

n"'" '"''

ntr•ttur nl

(!ntl nn:.l l l.arr) Un ltl: hil

" lnutln ~:

n.al .ld.tll ( lllltnn ~· ..... (1 fl
tlfurd ! I , ~ hal t r Ht "' I I

fl

\ ttna t•·d

n,

r~•llt•\ t' r

i'illl4urt
~1 11"a n k•• • - ,\o ilvat••d inflt•ldt.•r .Jim
IOuntn. r frnm tht t •.-dill !ll:.,lhh d li:&lt;;t
foll)lilull
•
\tlant.t - "ah r•d ~ h"~ ~rnd t• ll
" I a ..nn wldl' r1-. 1'1\~ r, ,\nt honv J\lli•n and
Milton Ra rntJ. runnlnl( hadr !'ilt•\r
(orllfln tll rAI rhat k.&gt;; Tt rrant 1 ,\nthnn,.
nnd llmm) Turn1•r, lln••h ,u kt&gt;rl' 1\arnn
Brown and Kl•nrM lh ltirdan dt•h n ~ l\'1
l.u kl•• 1lu1 I Ut lll't llu liu k1• fol1 n ll11~ f' ,
li~t:lll t• ud UIIUII: ~11tr ~ ll and ofh ns h t•
lln1 man fom p,,,,n tradf"d runfliflJt
I!Ltt k { IIff ,\u ~tln tu Tampn 8 1y fur a \IJKII
rlrafl pi• k truili•d dt•ft n10il't t•n!l Mlk;
~ I' IU .. In l't•llndt•lphl u f11r d;•l••nslvt• a•nd
"t Grt•• 8rv11.n pl.u ;•d tlji~htt nd nan ~hiU'p
110 lnjur. d r Nt'n•·
: t hl l a~~:o- \\ un t•rl dt•h n~lvt' t•nds !\Ilk(
H.artt nslint a n11 Sir\ 1 Hr)~•n puola•r
Muu r v Rulnrd df'lt n~l\ t' I 11 kit• ltt•nn
\\ .ttt ht tr tnrmrh,uk f. r ll .Jrf lrh•l'o
runnlrt l; hut k 11m ,JI's!ol&lt;• ~ ldt• ru rlv••r
-f•l• •n Ku1 lo" ,.kl , lim hat kt•r Ia\ Nnrtlr ll
llx ht t•ud t.):l T IIRII;a t1 und xu trd .Jt~lm
\\ujt\l•t•hn~sld
p l:~oll' d 1111 lnjund rt'"
• No'l'\l'll nart l rh ttt k Tim Mt Mahan t e uto•r
'" l ..urr:¥ Ruhon~ u nd ti~~;hl t•nd Tim
\\ri tlllman.
' ( It·~ 1 ltand
\\ .tlw•d Q\.url ... rhat k Mlkt•
Nnr!it'lh, runnlnr; h ;uk "UI(h \\oulfolk
lin! hilt k1•r ~'~tlllt :"Iii• nla' I{Ull.rd (ot•Orjl;l
Uljt, h tokh Ruh C:ruiM l' told• rtlf'i\o'r

Hi .~ •

i'i lllllll\

•
•

;;rort·s

)t,..,,, r :.!Ill

Kin ~ ~IUJ.,

fi

11r• ~ •"-"ld• •

!9 ( I• l . nth• •r 111 \\ I
Hr1u1kll•ld !II, K1 • 1 h~ '""' I ~
llr llrll'ollii ok :!-* l' 11r n~o~ ~r 1
( un )fcl\lnh'\ Mi H11tntd\ fi
Chi ~1 1 :"'ih hnl1~ t; for&lt; • nfu Ill ";
f 11illn~ \\ Kt•,. !It f niumhla to
( unullnn \ ' ,d :!ll i'ltant nn l ~u ! li
{o,lrfloldHtl'o 1'rhut\ I I,Sttu h t ( ij
(olhnuu r I ~ !'inuth \nth• r ..l ti
lot ttiUI \ 11 '!II " ltldlo fu ld ( .1rtll n tl

'"

By GARY CLARK
OVP Staff Writer
• Sean Gibbs and Brad Bum
garner led Wahama to a 3!\-0 win
ovet' the visiting Kyger Creek
Bobcats Saturday mghl before a
parents mght crowd at the bend
area school
Gibbs, a 58, 168 pound junior
quanerback, completed s ix of
nine passes on the evenm g fotl77
ya •ds and two touchdowns while
Bumgarner, a 6 2 senior wtd e

receive!, had four receptions fo t·
140 yards mcludmg touchdown
ca tches of 54 a nd 23 yards
The Whole Falcons fo und th e
end zo ne tw1ce in eac h of the first
two quarters to take a commandIn g 28-0 half11me lead before
takmg on another seven polnls in
lhe t hird penod to notch the
season opening lrlumph and
avenge the 1r lone regu lar season
loss in last yem 's hts lory mak ing
cam patgn Kyger Creek stunned
lhe Falcons in 1986 by a 15-12
margm a! Cbeshtre
Wahama dominaled lhe co n
test from the opening ktckoff
· The Whue Falco ns amas sed
.194 lola I ya1 ds •n Ihe conies I
while limlling KC to 55 yards

A lhrce p lay 66 yard
following lh e opening kickoff
s la ked the Falcons to an early 7-0
advantage when Gibbs found
Bumgarn~rdown the far sideline
for a 54 yard scor ing s trl~ e . Dave
Sigma n spill the upr ights on the
point afler, the first o! five
co nsecullve PAT's for the junior
placekicker, Io give WHS a 7-0
lead with j0 03 remamlng in the
first quarl er
Wahama struck again with
4 26 lefl in the lm!ial period With
another three play drive that
covered 59 yards A 29 yard Gibbs
10 Chris Jewell screen pass set
lhe stage for a 29 yard Rob)lle
Grimm scoring run Sigma n
booted !he exira pom l lo make II
14-0 as the ope nm g s1anza came
loa close
Chri s Jewell capped a five play
50 yard dnve on the firsl play o!
lho second quar ter wtth a four
yard burst , up the middle fo1 lh €'
Falcons lhi rd sco 1e A 29 yard
pass play fl om Gibbs to Bu m ga •·ner sel up I he sox pomler wllh
Sigma n mcrt·asmg lhe locals
adva nlage to 21-0 w•lh ll 57
oemammg in the half
On lhc Wh•le Falcons next

posesslo n on a 39 yard run )ly
Gibbs and a 17 yard pass pla y
from Gibbs to Rick Kearns led to
a five yard touchdown run by
){earns with 7. 03 to plav in Ihe
half. The TD run culminated a 70
yard e ight play drive wilh
Sigman's kick giving WHS a 28-0
lead as the first half came lo a
close
Wahama scored Its flnal touchdown of lhe night on the first
posesslon o! the second half when
a bad s nap from center on fourth
down gave the bend area team
the ball at lhe Bobcat 25.
Following a two yard run by
Grimms and a n incomplete pass
Gibbs found Bumgarner a t the 10
wilh lhe senior wid e receiver
cut ting ba ck across the fi eld to
paydlrt al the 9 00 mark of the
lh lrd quarter Sigman compl e ted
Ihe nlghl's scor in g with the P AT
boo I for a 35-0 WHS lead
Kyger Creek sustained Its
longest dtlvc of lhe nigh! a nd
only pc nelra tlon lnlo Wahama
territory following lhe ensuin g
kiCk
Wtlh the Bobcats holding on lo
lhe fo otba ll for lhe next eight
minutes a nd ,17 seconds. KCHS

North Gallia, Hannan Trace
lose non-league tilts Saturday
"We played abso lut e ly tembly
m the flrsl half In lhe seco nd
half. we killed ourselves wtlh
pe nall les,' satd Larry Cre
meens. oeft eel mg on Hannan
Trace's 8 6 loss a ! Hunlmglon
rw Va 1 Vinso n Salu• day mghl
VInson go t a lilt needed for th e
wm w1 th a seco nd q uarter touchdown from Rick F'1 y, who seared
from s tx yards oul , a nd a
lwo-pomt convers1on bv Bryce
Mavo
The Wildcats go t on the board
. In th e th ird quaii er when quar
lerback Grady John son lossed an
e og hl ya1d pass to Scott Rankon
for a louchdown l'hc two polnl
converston fa oied
·Our defense kepi us m th e
ga me m !he for st half · satd
Cremee ns , who added lhal on
spite of such slrong play from 1he
defense, · we weren ' t prepared
for th em They ' re new to our
sc hedule Three of lhe1r coach~s
were at our game wtlh It on ton Sl
J oe's lasl Monday ntght. so theY
knew what Ia look for out of us '
Brad Cremeens p1ckec1 up 5J of
the Wildcais" 105 rushin g ya ods
Johnson co mplel ed two passes In
nme lnes for 41 ya rds He threw
one interceplton
In splle of theu offensive
efforls. the Wtldcals could not
keep pa ce w1 1h !he 1ash of
pe nalttes they were commttlmg.
Though Cremeens d1d not have
penally slatfs tics avaoiable, he

sa td ·wchadmotepenallles lha n
lo la! yardage ,"
Hannan Trace, wh1ch IS now
1 I, woll go downnver Fnday
nigh! to Fran kim Furnace to play
the Gt cen Bobcat s
Gro•en 26 Nort h Gallla 6
The No1th Gal lIa Pn alessaolcd
rlow nnve 1 10 Franklm F urnace

Sat urdav ntg hl 10 face 1he Green
Bobcals, w110 sc01ed a touch
down on a punt re tu• n In !he firs!
quai ter to hand !he Pu ales a 26-6
loss
11 was the kind of game I hat In
the words ol Pnalc head co&lt;~ch
Dave Angles, sa w "b1g pass
pla ys !hat co uld have put us m
&lt;co nng pos ition d1oppro. me nial
rn1sc ues ,ond penalttes All lhcse
lhmg&lt; cost us dearly"
There was mu ch Irony In t hai
affau· because Gree n rushed for
on ly 7J va1 ds Ia N011h Ga llla ' s
202 Semor fullback Dav od Roush
was given lhP ball2j limes for 110
ya 1ds However in sp,ite of such

s la lis tlcal supeo 10rllv, Ihe PI
!'ales we t e kept away from the
treas ured end zone u ntil 1he
fourlh quartet, when Rou sh
powered hi s way m from the

one ya rd Ime
The Bobcats added a touch·
down run, a fom -yard s print by
Boo Sa lve• s. m the second
quar10r 10 send 1he hosls lnlo the
locker room with a halflime lea d
of 1.1 0, In the third qua rl er , lhe

Spartans \romp, 27-13
EAST LA NSING, Mo ch iUPI)
- Fi r sl year Soulhern Ca l Coach
Laro y Smtih Mond ay found 11 ad ilion a poor subsl!tule fo1 ofte n

Bobcats broke !he gamt' wide
opf'n wi lh a 65-vard touc hdown
pass from Jeremy Hughes 10
Mall Young The Bollcal s added
anothe r touchdown ru n In thl'
fourlh quarter to finali ze the
scor ing t lf 26 6
·We moved l hc ball well , wP
had good perform a nces from
GrC'g Glassburn ilhc Pirates '
quar1e1 back had :l8 yards rus h
mg In add ilion 10 las 3 Qf 12 for .!6
yards and one In terceptiOn ) and
from ,Ja,on Ma rcum and Keith
Vanover , bul penallles and
ml cues kepi us flom winning ,"
Angles sa id
Plralc defenders Don Mavs
and Rick Hammel eac h ln! crc pl ed a pass from Hughes
Mavs rC'turned h1s theft for abo ul
211 yards 1n lhC' seco nd quariN,
a nd Hammel Improved hi,
team 's posl! lo n about flvP yards
from lhepoinl ofhlsplckofflnt he
third quarter .
Th e Plra les now 0-l, travel
Frid ay night lo Rlcltmondale, in
Ross Count y, lo play lhc Sou thcas!Pr n Panlhers

K•ulnuiUdJ:"t t'l 'llt r }~\lllt •h
I A•il~t • umnt I!C ~l tttlh (, nt li
11nu1 Sl !II '111l ~~ t'r ut• t" II ~ful l
\lhhlht o ~o~n '11 ,t dis t•n Ill H11 l rH '' '
!.1

IIA!GAIN NIGHT

12, 50

TU£1~1

12.00

MIS Wen y was a mem ll('r of
the Souther n Baplist hurrh .
5&lt;-rvlces will be h('ICI a 1 I p m
Thursday al the Ewmg Funrral
HomC' wllh the Rev Davtd llunt
off! lat lng flu ri a l will be In Rock
Springs Cem tC'ry . P·lc nds ma y
ca II at the funeral home ft om 7 ro
9 this evening and from 2 to4 a nd
7 10 9 p m Wedn esday

Nt'lli.- f..opt&gt; land
Nelllr Hys II Copeland, 66
Rolland. died Su nd ay al Vetc
run s Memorial Hos pital
Mrs Copo:la nd wa s born MMch
2U 1921 In Rulland , a daug ht er of
the l,otr Au stin nnd 1\laudO'
Pierre Besides her parenls, she
was preceded In death by two
husbands, Lawrence' ll vsell and
James Cope la nd and a brot her
Arc hlr PI rce
Survlv mg a1 c ch ildre n, Ida
SnC'CIIPy Middleport Lavncnec
HysC'II, Jr , Rulla nd, F ra ncis
Ha ggy Mtddlepoo t. William Hysr ll LaPorte, lnd, Robar! Hysell Mc H&gt;•nty , Ill , Rl c ha od
Hy sell. Langsvi lle. Shh·ley Did
die, Middleport , 1\1(0 bo OlhCI'S
Elmer Pierce, Lela• t, Ohio, ancl
EI'NCII Pletce, Middl eport; four
sisters , F'losslc Hysell. rome
ooy , No rena Mash Mlddleporl
Nettle Goble', ClrvC'Iand. ~· 101
ence Barker. Col umbus: two
s lepc hlldt en Car l Col&gt;('land a nd
Ver nie Copeland , both of Car pen
1e1svlliC', Ill 21 gtandc hlld• e n,
a nd II goeat -grandc hildre n
Se• v1co&gt;s wi ll be held al ll a m
Th ursdaY a t th e F!(•ew lll Bap tist
Chu•·ch In Rut land wll h Ihe Rev
Lela nd Ha ley offi cia ting . Burial
will be 1n MllesCemlery Friends
may call at lhe Hunl er P unNal
Hom e in Rutla nd fro m 2to4 a nd 7
Ia ~ p m Wednesda y

Cora

Haskin~&lt;

CO! a Ka oher me Haskms, 68,
for merly of Bidwe ll. d1ed al
Galll a Manor Sunday mo• nln g.
She was bot n April jO j9J9 In
Ga llla Count y, daughl e r or lhe
lat e Wade and Verda Brow n
Witha ms
She was preceded on dealh by
he1 husband Raymo nd Has kins:
one daughter, one brother a nd
two gra ndchild• en

Benefit
The third a nd final bene!! I sing
for Old Bethel Church, two miles
north of the Ches hire railroad
!rac ks, w•ll be held Friday ,
starting at 7:30 p.m., a t the
c hurch P roceeds wtll be used for
church restoration purposes
G roups s inging Friday will be the
Glory land Believers a nd Heaven.
bound Fou r Pas tor Bob Grubb
expresses a ppreciation for suppori a lready given the c hurc h
and ex le nds thanks to the slngmg
g roups which have donated their
ume and lalents.

'

Shade River to meet
Shade River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM ,
will meet at 8 p m . Thu rsday al
the temple.

Weather

Surviv ing are one son, Hers he l
George, Ba llimor e, Ohto: two
daughters, Mrs. Lawre nce ~Ca
rolyn) Yeauger , Patriot Star
Route a nd Mr s
Warre n
( ~'ltl d red) Farmer of Pomeroy;
mne grandchtdren, two great
gra ndchlldre n, t wo brot hers,
Ralph a nd Ca1 roll Williams of
Ga ll•pohs, one half-brol her, Hollis Brow n of Ga llipolis; two
sis ters, Ed na Kingery of Ga lllpo
lis a nd Garnel Nelson of
Evergreeen
Services were conducted I
p.m. Tuesday a l McCoy Moore
Funera l Home m Vl nl on, Rev
Leland Allman officia ting Burial fol lowed In VIn ton Memorial
Park.

Dance
Pomeroy Senior Citize ns are
having a round and square da nce
F rid ay, 8 to 11 p m .,at the center.
Music by Larry Hubbar d and
True Cou nlry Band Admission
$1.50. Those atte nding are asked
to bnng snacks.
Lodge tonight
The regular mee!lng of Rac me
Lodge 461 F&amp;AM will be held
lonighl (Tuesday ), 7 30 p m

1

Hospital news

South Cent ral Ohio
Showers a nd thunderstorms
likely toda y and tonight Htgh s
today will be nea r 80, with a low
tonight near 60 Mostly cloudy
Wednesday , with a chance of rain
and high s m the upper 70s.
Th e proba bility of preclplta
lion Is 60 percent today and
lo night a nd 30 p e r ce n t
WPdnesday
Wmds will be hght a nd va na ble today and tonight
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair Thu rs day, with a chan ce
of ram Fnday a nd Sa tu r day
Highs m ainl y will be in the 70s
each day, with overmg hl low s In
the 50s.

Scott Folmer

Velerans Memor1al

Scali Folmer. 92, Rock Spr mgs
Road, Pomeroy, di ed Tuesday al
1111' Americare Pomeroy Nur sIng Cenler.
Mr Fol mer was born Nov . 12,
1894 m Pomeroy , a son of the laic
John a nd Ella Reyno lds Fo lmer
He was a retired coa l miner. a
veteran of t he U S Army In
Wo•ld War I a nd belonged lo
Dt ew Webster Post39, American
Leg ion. Pomeroy ,
Surviving are a son, William L
Fo lmer Pomeroy, lhree gra ndc hlldrrn, Jefft ey Folm er. PomeI'OY: Judith Durh am, Pitt sburgh,
Pa . Jenneth FrPeman, Fore
&lt;!vil le, Md , and sevC'ra l ni eces
a nd nep hews
Oesldes his parent s. he was
preci'Cied on death by his wife,
Pra nces F ol mer , seven brolhers
and three sts le rs
Services will be al 3. 30 p m ,
'l hursday at I he Ewing Funeral
Home with lhc Rev Melvin
Fra nklin offlcta llng Burial will
be In the Rock Springs Cem e tery .
Friends mav ca ll al !he fun eral
home from 2 10 4 and 7 to 9 p.m
Wedn esda)

Saturd ay Admissions - Beatnce Donohew, Pomeroy; Ne lhc
Copela nd , Rutland
Sal urd ay Discharges - Will •e
Morrison
Sund ay Admtsslons - Glada
Davis, Dexler; Katheri ne
Gngsby, Racine. J a m es Russell,
Pomeroy, Tammy Land ers ,
M1dd leporl.
Sunday Disc harges - George
Greene, Kermit Buzzard
Monday Admtsslons - Gladwin Werner, PomerQy, Vlrgmla
Michael, Pomeroy, Sa rah Sm1 th,
Pomeroy, Mur l Harris , Ew in gton, Etotlla Cassell , Pomeroy
Monday D• schai ges - Mao
garel Bowles, Judy Puckelt,
Billie HyselL

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

If you expect to owe $500 or more In tax over whal you are
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E lza McCall, 98, of Rou te 2
Albany, dted Sunday mornmg at
his hom .
Rm n In Columbi a Town ship to
Amos a nd Na ncy Jane Jewell
McCall he was a retired farmer
a nd worked for 36 years at lhl'
Slate Expenmenla l Farm, Carpenler He served In lhe Ohi o
Nal lona l G uar d a nd wa s a
member of thP forme! Albany
Odd Fe llows Lodge.
Survivors Include a son, Ro
bel'! McCall . and a so n and
daught er In -law, Car los an d
Helen McCa ll. a ll of Albanv. four
gra nd children a nd several gu'a l
gra nd childre n
Besides his parenls he was
preceded In dea lh by hi s first
wife , Lorena VanTre McCall, ht s
seco nd wife, J ess ie Reeves
McCall, one daughler, Thelma
Stel nmelz; tw o grandchi ldren,
two brothers and lw o s1sters
Se• vices wtll be Wednesday , I
p m . al Blgony -Jordan Funera l
Home, Albany Burial wi ll be in
Alexande• Ce m ete ry Friends .
may call at lhe funeral hom e
from 2 to 4 a nd 7 10 9 today

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Atl1rm !ua
1111 tlr~ $10tU

Monday at 12 11 a.m, Ractne
to Swan Road lor Ruth Stetham
to St. Joseph's Hospilal. Pomeroy at 1. 11 a.m, Pomeroy to
Pomeroy Health Care Center lor
Gladwin Werner lo Veterans
Memonal Hospital, Rutla nd at
1 13 p m treated Louise Eads
New Lima Road: Syracuow a;
12 12 p.m toTh trd St for Charles
McKinney to Veleran s Memorial
Host&gt;ital. All 03p m McKinney
was taken by the Heal th Net
Sunday at 8 24 a m , Rutland to helicopter lo Ca beii -Hu nt mgton
Woodyard Road for Elza McCa ll Hospttal, Huntingt on, W Va;
who was dead on arrival: Racme Mtddleporl at 3 20 p m lo 573
at 9. 57 a.m. was called to but did North Second Ave for John
not treat anyone a t th e scene of Bryan to Holzer Medtcal Center;
an auto acctdenl on Route 338;
Middleport at 4. 30 p m to Old
Rutland at 10· 51 a. m to Dexter Route 7 for Arn old Curtis to
for Glada Davis to Veterans Veterans Memonal Hospital:
Memonal Hospital , Syracuse at Pomeroy a l 5:45 p m. to Pome5 01 p.m to the trailer park for roy Ptke Roa d for Sarah Sml!h to
J ess Dowe ll to Holzer Medtcal Veterans Memonal Hospital ,
Center: Pomeroy at 5 38 p.m to Pomeroy at 6 19 p m to the
Royal Oak Resort for Gail Maples Apls for E totlla Cassell
Thoma to Ve terans Memorial to Vetera ns Me morial Hospital;
Hospital , Racine at 7. 27 p m
Pomeroy a t 10 33 p.m. 10 Pome
treated Gene Johnson at I he fir e roy Hea lth Care Center for
statwn: Pomeroy at 8 05 p m to Pauline Foster lo Holzer Medical
Kerr's Road for Jane t Werry to Center

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Meigs Coun ty Emergency
Medical Servtces reports 21 calls
over the Labor Day weekend
Saturday at 4:03 a m , Rutland
to Me igs Mme No 2 for Dana
Eynon to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Rutland at 6:59a.m . to
Loop Road for Carl Kennedy to
Ho lzer Medtcal Center; Pomeroy at 7:13 p.m to Route 7 for
Chris Lee to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Syracuse at 9:42 p.m.
to Route 124 for Joan Hoffman to
Veterans Memorial Ho spitaL

Daily stock prices

ZZICHIT
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\\ tU'ft n \\ H1 '! II I lo { n llluM nntl fi
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ALL StAtS

701 SECOND AYE.
GAlLIPOLIS

Stookey attends game
CINCINNATI !UP!) - Just as
Nero fi ddled w htle Rome burned,
Smokey lhe Bear went to a
baseba ll ga m e Monda y whtle the
A:inerlcan wesl burned
· In an ironic bll of scheduling,
Monday was "Smokey the Be ar
Day" all he Clnclnna ll Reds Los
Angeles Dodgers game. While
the mascot of the U.S. Forest
Serv1ce and symbol of fire
prevention wandered around the
ballpark, lhousa nds of acres of
forest In the weslern United
States burned .

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·W
·Entree
·SundaeBtlr

Jaret Werry

To meet Thursday
Preceptor Beta Chapter of
Bet a Sigma Pht Sorority wtll
meel at 7· 30p m Thursday at the
Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy

I

Area deaths

• SP[CIAL PRICE ADMI SS IONS •

STOVES- INSERTS- FURNACES

O\e o th(• Ptoc 10," M1Ch 1gan Sta le
defens •vc back Todd Krumm
said

Patrol cites Pomeroy driver

I

Lodge Wednesday
The regula r meetings of Pomeroy Chapter 80 RAM a nd Boo
worth Counct l 46 R&amp;SM will be
held 7 30 p m Wednesday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.

Boosters
Southern Band Boosters will
meet Thursday, Sept 10, 7.30
p.m ., In lhe high school band
room Parents of all band slu
dents- elementary, junior high
and high school - are urged to
at lend

A representative from the office of Congressma n Clarence
Miller wtll conduct a n open door sesston from 11 a m to 1 p m
Wednesday a t the courthouse In Pomeroy,

A Pomeroy man was charged and cited In an acctde nt ·
Sund ay, at 2:20a.m .. in Salisbury Township o n County Road 25,
about a quarter of a mile east of Ohio 7, according lo lhe
Gallia Meigs Posl of the Slale Hig hway Patrol.
Ha ro ld S Ho lmes, 49, was charged with OWl and cited for
fat lure to control after his c~r wenllntoa ditch. According to Ihe ,
Patrol, he was driving west when he lost control a nd went off the
left side of the road before goi ng Into th e ditc h.

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

-----Announcements----- Squads receive 21 calls over weekend

Representative to vi..'&gt;it

Jaret Werry, 61, 2 Fisher Sl ,
Pomeroy, di ed Sunday al Vete
rans Memonal Hospital
A homemaker, Mrs Wer ry
was born Oct. 26, 1925 at The
P lains, a dau g hter of the la te
Edward ·and Pra nces Bla nke nShip Marlm .
Surv tvlng are her hu sband,
Henry J Werry, two sons,
Poysler William s, Ashville, a nd
John C William s, Arlemu s. Ky ..
lwo daughters, Zelia .J Sm11h
Corbin. Ky. , a nd Mary E Wa r'
field, Arl~mus, th1ee brolh ers,
Alber! L Mat lin , Chester, Edward R Martin , Rulla nd nne!
Osby A Martin , Katy, Tex,
three sis ters Lou1se Milrhell.
Ca nal Spring, F la : Sylvia
G~orgc, Columbus, Ed na MaC'
See, Middleport, a half brother.
Rober! Martin, &amp;aver; three
half slsle~s. Connie DeVore,
Ga lli polis: Caro lyn Rummel l,
Omaha , Neb, and Janl cr
T hompson. Hunltngton, W Va
Also survlvmg arc 10 grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
&amp;s•dcs her J)o1r nl s, s he was
prect'dcd m deat h bv her fir s!
a daughie• , three
hu sband

PRE-SEASON SALE

s1ve executiOn

"I'm a little upllght, a little
angry.' Smith sa td a ft er losmg
27 13 lo Mtch ogan Stale in hi s
maugural game as the Trojan s
coac h ' !1 was nol a lack of
effort 11 was not a lack of
al lllude II was not a lack of
preparatiOn !I was a lack of
execu tlon on offense "
Sou thern Cal threw three tntercepllo ns a nd fumbled lo ur limes
as Mi ch iga n S late snapped th e
Trojans' 17-gamc winning slreak
agamst Btg Ten teams
" If we make mislakes like thai
the rest of lhe year, we'll be
0-11 ,' ' Smtih smd.
Michigan Sta te quar terback
Bobby McAllister and la ilback
Lorenzo White combmed for 277
of the Sparta ns' 31 1 tota l yards
"Som e guys were lhm kmg lhts
was an ea1 ly Rose Bowl, s howing
Ihal the Big Ten can be domlna nl

quarterback Mike Bradbury and
running back Mike Tucker carried the Bobcat offensive efforts
with Kyger Creek converting
three fourth down plays In the
drive The series stalled at the
Wahama 37 with the Falcons
taking over on downs.
WHS mounted one more serious threat before substitutes
flooded the fie ld from both sides.
The White Falcons moved the
ball Inside the Bobcat five yard
lin e only to have a multitude of
penalties thwart the Falcons
scoring hopes .
The game stallstics show Wahama wllh 12 first downs on 164
yards rushing and 230 passing for
a tota l of 394 offensive yards
Kyger Creek totaled_ live first
downs with 47 tough yards on the
ground and e lghl more t hrough
lhe airways for 55 Iota! yards.
Individually, Robbie Grimm
wa s the game's leading ground
gai ner wll h 86 lards m 12 carries
wllh Sean Gibbs adding 54 for the
winning Falcons Gibbs compteled six of nine passes for 177
yards a nd lwo touchdow ns with
Brad Bum garner owning four
recepllons for 140 yards . Leading
'u sher for Kyger Cree kw~ s Mike
Tucker wllh 40 yards in 11
allempts with Mike Bradbury
completing lhree of 14 aerials for
1o yards
Wahama re i urns Io acl lon on
Friday when the Falcons visit
Eastern
Kyger Cteek, now 0-2 on lhe
year, l r&lt;~vets to Wat e rford In
sea rc h of Its fi rs t wi n of t he young
foot ball season.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Local briefs-_____,

I

.
dtlve

',

Tuesday, September 8. 1987

SALE PIICE
LESS

$1

IEIATE

01 PIVIIT

1 390UR
$1st

1.00

c

..
J

�8,1987

Ohio

RIUI
COLOR TELEVISION
HEADQUARTERS

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
For Quality Drug1, ·sundriel, Etc.

VIDEO CITY

SENIOR CITIZENS DISCOUNTS

OPEN TILL 8; SAT. TILL 9

ELBEIFELDS

IPOMERII)Y

992-3671

POMEROY

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER
INSURANCE

992-3830

Pomeroy, Ohio

698 W. Moin St.

271 N. Second Ave.

'Pomeroy

Sellers gets
scholarship

982-2121

Racine, Ohio
JIMMY DEEM
1614) 949-2381

Syracuse. Ohio 46779
Phone 614-992 -8333

Racine. Ohio 46771
Phone 614-949-2210

Cltcl•••tl ,

BAUM LUMBER
CHESTER
985-3301

VALLEY
LUMBER
55 Park St;
Middleport

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY _· VALLEY

- ~-- FLORIST

992-6611

SOFT DRINKS • FRIES • SANDWICHES

992-2556

The descendants of Henry and
Allee Balser and Dana and Nellie
Abies held a reunion recntly In
Letarl Falls at I he home of Mr.
and Mrs , Jack Abies. Mrs . Ables
Is lhe daughler of Henry and
Allee Balser.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Carroll Balser; Mr. and Mrs .
Tom Balser and Jessica. Mr. and ·
Mrs _Lawrence Balser and Jason

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-992-2644

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason lridge"

POMEROY

Mm../1 , 0•1• U11lrmltg

White
-Fune,sl
Home
'

Coolville

5th Street

(614) 667-3110
P•lwt Pluffll 11. Ctln,.llt

1987
FOOTBALL CONTEST

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

--

,.........

S200 IN CASH PRIZES

A polluck dinner was served In
honor of lhe blrlhday of Mrs.
· Leah Nease, whowas92yearsold
on Thursday. Sept. J when the
Foresl Run Qulllers meL
Allendlng besides lhe honored
guesl were Carrie Grueser. Mar·
sha Arnold. Jane Harris . Kal hleen Scolt, Mary K. Roush,

992-3307

NOTHING TO BUY- ANYONE MAY ENTER!
$20.00 EVERY WEEK TO THE WINNER

FOOD SHOP A.ND CAR WASH
992-5552
820 EAST MAIN .

POMEROY

GROCERIES - GAS - SNACKS

PEOPLESr.t
BANKe
''The Ieifer lrs111lr"

...........
-~._

-nr-.1

........ v..

..-rue.

.

Ml~•lt• ,

Corey Daniel Darsl celebraled
his nlnlh blrlhda y with a parly
held al his home recenily.
Refreshmenls" were served lo
his parenls. Dan-ny and Sherr!
Darsl, his brolher. Chrlslopher.
Bud and Wanda VIning, Bonnie
Darsr. Goldie Gra ham. Terrie
Smith, Shannon and Mallhew.
Bob and Karen Grimm. and
Jeremy, Israel and Timmy
Grimm. and Travis Abboll .
Sending gifts were Gertrude
Slivers. Stanford. Delilah. Dawn
and Adam Cox, Junior and Rita
Smith, and Charles 'lmith .
Cup&lt;"akes and sol. drinks were
served to Corey's ballleam. the .
Pomeroy Pirates .

PAT
HILL
FORD
461 S. 3rd
Middleport

drawn from all correct entiJeS.
All entrants mult ute the entry blank below.
Gam_e l for this week will be found in the advertisements on this page. Ust the name of the1eam you think will
win opposite the name of the advertiser.
Decision of the judges will be final and entries become the property of The Daily Sentinel.
This contnt will continue tor ten weeki from the date of first insertion.
If mailed, blanka mutt be poltmerked not later than Friday.
Clip the coupon below .... fill it out and send to
,
THE DAILY SENTINEL

992-2196

B•ft•l• , Ntw Y•n Jttr

- - --I

111 Coun Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789

htrita_gt ~~

520 TO WINNER

SHOE PLACE

1lz

·1·1······1--······--······--·-----------

WINNER

Mrs . Mary Anl)rews, Long
Boltom. vlsiled recently wllh her
children and grandchildren In
Columbu s. While lhere s he at ·
lended the bapllsm or her new

LOCUST &amp;
PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 992-3471

VAUGHAN'S
MEIGS AUTO SALES

:U2 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2691

EWING FUNERAL HOME

Plans for partlclpallng In Mid·
dlepon 's a nnuul bloek pany
Sepl. 19 were made when Ihe XI
Gam ma Mu Chapt er of Bela
Sigma Phi Sot·orill -mCI for a
dinner pa r ly at lhe DownUnder,
Ga llipolis .
_
The membt&gt;rs will partlclpale
In a fund raising projecl and will
also do volunleer work· a1 lhe
Cent er of Sc lence and Induslry
eXhl bll which Is being broug ht In

FOOD SHOP
VIDEO CITY

MEIGS AUTO SALES, INC.

EMPtRE FURNITURE

CROW'S
l FAMILY · RESTAURANT
PH. 992-5432'
228 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

tow• u Al,lzm

"Fin~

Line of Late Model Used
Cars &amp; Trucks"
605 General Hartinger Parkway
I-QQ7.3011
Middleport, Oh.

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
BANK
RIDENOUR SUPPLY

A cookoul and covered dish
-dinner was planned for Sepl. 12
when Ihe Martha Bible Class met
al Ihe Bradbury Church of Christ
recenlly .
The oullng will be held al lhe
home or Bob and- Bessie King .
Dan Meadows presided al lhe
meellng wllh Bill King giving Ihe ,

ELBERFELDS

HARTLEY SHOES
21 0 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

992-5272

TOPS holds

RIDENOUR SUPPLY-

PLEASERS

VILLAGE PHARMACY
HERITAGE HOUSE
Indl•~• , Rlct

HOME NATIONAL BANK

------------~--~------------·
RACINE MOTORS
Member FDIC

Wt'" Havt Helped Othen To Grow

Member Federal Reserve

BANK.={ONE~

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Junior
and Senior High Band Boosters
will meet Tuesday, 7 p.m., In the
high school band room.

Fifleen lhou,randpeople who aJffl.' ·.

PORTLAND - Porlland PTO
will meet Tu~sday, 7 p.m., to
finalize plans for I he fall carnival
to be held Oct. J. Everyone
welcome.

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
Athens, Ohio M•mber FDIC

CLARK'S JEWELERS
BANK ONE

-

PAT HILL FORD

EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band
Boosters will meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m.,ln the band room at the high
school.

NAME~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• ••••
ADDRESS•••••••••••••··~····••••••••••••••••········••••••••••••••••

---

-- ----

. PHONE,, .••••••••••••~•••••••••••••••••••••~•••••••••••••••• ••••··~···
••

I'

Ubi

fUCTRICITY._~-~

FLAMELESS ,EFFICIENT, D~

gathering

Calendar/happenings

FRANCIS FLORIST
8t&gt;('UU8t'

Rain or -shine, day or night, whatever the problem, the people
who bring electricity to your home are always there.
In the coal mines, generating plants, on poles and in offices,
we're working to make sure you· have electricity when you need it.
And, our job d~sn't stop with reliable service. We can provide
you with valuable free information on choosing efficient electric
heating and cooling systems, electric safety, and the equal parment plan. Call us. We're happy to be of semce.
Electricity .. . making sure you can get the
most out of life.

Ohio Power

Part of American Electric Power

-WHAT
. CAM PRE-PLANNED DO FOR ME?
'

CROW'S RESTAURANT

We'"" Grown

He's not up there alone.

Slinderella

r~cent

Terri Smith, Linda Bailey, and
Sherle Darst ha ve been the
weekly bes l losers of TOPs over
Ihe pasllhreeweeks. Runners-up
were Nancy Vance,_ VIcki Fer. rrell, and Sandy Sergent.
Winners of the weekly fruit

CHESTER

VALLEY LUMBER

By KATE CALLEN
United Press Inlernatlonal
BAD ... OR JUST WEIRD?:
With all -the fanfare over hi s new
album, "Bad," Michael Jackson
is back In the news In a big way
and his m'a nagerspokesman
wants 10 dispel some of lhe
rumors ·about Ihe singer's
eccentricities.
f;rma Roush, Ma r y Belle
· Frank -Dileo Iold this week's
Warner, Mildred Arnold, Mary
People magazine lhat Jackson
Nease, VIrginia Davis. Mildred
has never had hormone shots.
Arnold. Mary Nease, Virginia
undergone cosmellc eye surgery,
Davis, Carolyn Salser, and gu - had his skin chemically llghlened
es ls. Margarel Davis , Alhens:
or proposed to Ellzabelh Taylor.
Berlha Arnold, Slewarl; Rev . although "they are very good
Kandy Burch and Mary Wise,
friends ... land ) dine together
Middleport.
occasionally," he said.
Dileo admltled Ihal the super·
slar "did have his nose done. as
every person In Hollywood has,"
he did have a clefl pul In his chin
a year ago and he does have a
hyper~arlc oxygen chamber. Dl·
leo also disclosed thai Jackson
atlended lhe Caplaln Eo premiere al Disneyland incognito,
"bul I 'm not sure which disguise
he had on. "
As for Ihose ghoulish Elephant
·Man stories. Dileo confirmed
Jackson " really wa nled lhe
skeleton" and added , "I know he
would have put 11- In lhe room
whjle I was having a meeting."
BLOWIN' IN THE . WIND:
While rock phenom Madonna
wowed her fans In Europe, rock
legend Bob Dylan dlsappolnled
COREY D. D.4-RST
his audience at his first-ever
concert In Israel.
Dylan. a Jew who has nJrted
wilh ullra - Orlhodox Judaism ,
played lew of his '60 hits during a
granddaugher, Kelsey Marie.
low-key 90-mlnute set that Israel
Kelsey Is thedaul(hter of Mr . and
Radio described as "boring."
Mrs. Michael Andrews. They The 46-year-old singer also ca nalso ha ve lwosons . Tlmolhy , age celed a one-hour prlvale meeting
six , and Shawn , age lhree.
wllh Foreign Mlnls1er Shimon
Peres and scrapped a lour of the
Western Wall, Judaism' s holiest '
sfle, which was lo be personally
led by Jerusalem Mayor Teddy '
for th e day .
Kollek.
Ga ll Roush was a guesl al the
Dylan responded to Ihe ensuing
meeting. Maurlsh Nelson pre- brouhaha by going Into seclusion
sided noting lhal the 0 hloE1a Phi al lhe exclusive Daniel Hotel,
Chapler is suggesllng a com- whE're his enlourage llncludlng
bined Christmas parl y aga in Ihis opening ac l Tom Pelly and the
year .
Hearl breakers ) look over · 39
Susan Baer wa s elccled Valen- rooms and lhree presidential
tine Girl. Nex1 meeting wil l be a_ suiles.
card and pzlza par1y lobe held on
LOW MARKS
FOR
S..pl . 22.
BROOKE?: An Ivy League education Is usually prized bul
critics of Princeton University
have devalued the diploma
opening prayer . H was an - award~ to 1987 graduale Brooke
nounced Ihal Ihe " Rim of I he Shields, claiming Ihe ac lress was
World'' gospel singers will be at shortchanged In lhe math and
the chu rc h on Oct. 25 for a lOa . m. science areas.
musical program .
After Life magazine prlnled
Larry Haynes had devotio ns
and lhe closing prayer with
P au Ia Hayne s servIng
refres hmenls .
Barbara Hudson was the top
loser at the Monday night meellng of I he Sllnderella Five Points
Class. AI the Tuesday nlghl
baskels were Terri Smith, Sherr! Mason meeting, Jane Johnson
Darst, ~ nd Shirley Turner. Eva losl the mosl weight with Mona
Mckinney was welcomed as a Legg being the runner-up.
new member. lnformaton on
TOPS may be obtained by calling
992-2612.

Church groups plans outing

W•llrtD~ rr "''"

HARTLEY SHOES

People in the news

Sorority conducts meeting

RMERS BANK

Notn D•••

I

pay an average $11,312 (or Ihe wi th the guarantee that each unit Boar d president , said, "The new
1987-88 school ye!J.r, a one- year at maturity will pay for al least Indexes will help families set
Increase of 7.39 percent from the lhe average cost of one year al a better dollar targets and longer
previous year, according to the four-year private · college, ·as time frames for saving. and
board's Index.
measured by Ihe IC 500 ln&lt;!ex .
reduce their use of borrowing for
The board said cost indexes for
Peler Roberls. chairman oft he college."
other types of colleges, such as College Savings Bank, said the
The College Savings Bank
public four-year or lwo-year minimum inilia l deposit Is $1,000. provided an example of how the
schools, will be Issued in coming Subsequent deposits of $250 or family of a 5-year-old might use
monlhs, said Haskell Rhett, more may be made at any time. CollegeSure COs to build a nest
College Board vice president for The bank sa id Ihe price of a unit egg for college.
Student Assistance Services.
will vary according to maturity
The family could buy four
CollegeSure CD units keyed to
The board said il licensed the date and ' market condillons.
College Savings aank of Prin- , Robert s said if a college-age the JC 500, one to mature In each
ceton, N.J ., to Issue insured child decides against going to of the four years the child attends
cerliflcates of deposlt - called college or is not accepted by one, college. A unit bought today to
CollegeSure COs- linked to th e the principal and tnteresl on the cover the 2000-2001 school year
Index.
CD would be returned .
would cosl $14,570.39 and one for
Janice Ga ms, a board spokes - 2001-2002 would be $14,845.31. The
The College Savings Bank
expecls to sell lhe COs In units man, declined lo say how much cosl for four units would be
the bank. set up to Issue COs tied $59,951.90 . .
to the index , paid for its exclusive
The bank said that if the 10
licens&lt;&gt;. She salrt there is no percent annual college cost lnflaoverlapplng board memlx-rshlp - lion of the 1980s continues. the
belween the bank and the College total expenses for the class of
Board.
2004, the hypolhetlcal class of
Shields' college lranscripl , showRhelt
added,
"While
we
entoday 's 5-year-old , could exceed
ing slrong language marks bul
few math courses, Ihe unlversily courage families lo starl plan- $181,000.
The student's family would
was panned by former New York ning as early as possible, the
Times s ports wrller Leonard College Board does . not recom- therefore save more Ihan
mend any particular plan, or $121,000 by buying CollegeSure
Koppetl in a Times op-ed arlicle.
Koppetl insisted lhai Shields even any particular generic COs now. lhe bank sald .H costs
should 'have bePn required to approach to sav ing or rise fastPr, lhe student would be
covered, since the raie of return
lake rnore math and science investment."
But Donald Stewart; College is tied to the index , lhe bank said. courses.

Woman visits with distant family

MIDDLEPORT

BAUM LUMBER

•
r@lJ;~
992-2054

The -conteJt it open to anyone except employee~ of ~he Daily Sentinel and their immediate femilie1.
·.An award of $20:00 will be given to the person picking the most winners. In case of a ti• one winner will be

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

Oklo Stm , W. V.U.

113 Court St
Pomtroy, Obi~

Darst birthday

CONTEST RULES

ADVERTISER

Point P111sMt. W. Y1.
&amp;75-1121

• m -5514

.

Miller, Mrs. Allee Balser. Mr .
and Mrs. Jack Ables. Mr. and
Mrs, Paul Abies, Ron Ables and
Amanda, Larry, Donna -and
Alissa Abies, Vickie Ables and
Michael. Mrs. Edith Gilkey, Mr .
and Mrs. Thomas Scoll, Mr. and
Mrs. Bud Balser, Mall Swarlz,
Duffle Gales and Angella and
Andria , and Holly Salztgabers.

By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UPI) - Thf'
College Board released 1he first
In a series of college cost Indexes
today and said It had licensed a
bank to issue certificates of
deposit wllh lnlerest rates tied lo
lhf' new measure of college
expenses .
The board, a -non-profit educa·
lional assoclallon, said its first
Index, the annual Independenl
College 500 Index, will measure
average expenses for full-time
freshmen. al 500 four-year Independent colleges and universities
with the highest fixed charges lor IUitlon, fees·. room and board.
Freshmen at such colleges will

Birthday celebration is given

OF POMEROY
108 W. Main St.

KRISTA L. SELLERS

Reunion held by area family

Meigs Counly'.• Oldeol Florist

"Weekly Speelalt"

College board releases college cost index

Krista Lynn Sellers. a 1987
graduate of Southern High .
School, has been award~ the
Racine Home National Bank '
Scholarship. She will recelve$400
toward her cOllege education al ·
Rio Grande College anp Community College. As a high school
student, Krlsla participated In
the choir and the Ohio Office
Education Asso~latlon . The
daughter of James and Ruth Ann
Sellers, Grimm Road, Portland,
Sellers plans lo major In elementary education.

RACINE
MOTORS

992-2551
FOSTER MAYS
(304)273-9494

Tuesday. September 8, 1987
Page 7

Middleport

Ntinlkt-rr UClA

. EWING
FUNERAL
HOME
Mulberry Ave.

The .Daily Sentinel

- 992-6669

,,,.. C.ll•t• , 1,,,,

111 East Second
Pomeroy, OH.
992-2342

By The .Bend

PRESCRIPTION SPECIAUSTS

AND

••

'

'

I ,

HARRISONVILLE'
Harrisonville Senior Clllzens&gt;will hold
their monthly blood pressur~
clinic on Tuesday, from 10a.l1J. to
12 noon, al lhe town house.
Everyone welcome.

· flontyl We think prt-plalllling far funeral smim is
_one of !Itt smartest mons you can make. Hero's why:
Your personal wishn will Ill rtca,.d ..d stor..&amp;,

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees will meel Tuesday,
7:30p.m., al the town hall.
RACINE - Racine VIllage
Council will meet Tuesday, 7
p.m., at Racine Shrine Park.
KYGER -Cheshire Township
Trustees meet Tuesday, 5: 30
p.m . at the township bulidlng in
Kyger.
Revival
CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Church, two miles south of
Carpenter on Coun1y Road 10,
will be In revival through Sept. 13
with services at 7_p.m. nightly.
Evangelist will be Rev. N.L.
Russel[

10

\

you're

-...

esswod thol lhty will bo foHowtd folthluUy .
Your lamily will bo spared !Itt chart of making douns

J

-of Ncisions about strvictl, IMcauso ytHI havo dottttho
hard work for thtm, 11Mty won't bo unnectssarlly
troulllod by theso decisions In thoir hour of griof.
1bl ''"' of our prof111ional fonral Mnices wiD bo dttormitttd by your choices. You arrango !Itt dtiirH of il:5a'...
MI'Vicos r,ou wont. You'll feel bettor knowisl~ t~o,. fi- _:_.c ..AIIIo
nol dttatls aro taken care of, and your famtly won't
' han to worry allotlt paytlllnt.
'

r:

1

1o sure you doltavo . - actiwitits •""-:,~~~js ::~f::2~~S~~~~""

JOUr ltwed ants 10 they won't fttl "loft oul
Somt action willloo tlotrapeutk far lhtm in thoir

......

-

lllforlllltivo Ntoraturo ...t personal consultation an
t_.t sorwicos ora ,_, for tlot asking. Just call •
ar stop by with your quost'-s. Thora's no obllgatien,
of COWSI. lut we thWt you'll be glatl you took the
111111 to Inquire.
·

6TH STREET

(6141667-31 10

. ..

COOLVILLE, OHIO

--·

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. September 8. 1987

Prosecutor notifying· families of
LONDON, Ky. (UP!\ - The
families of 12 patients who died at
a small southern Kentucky hospi·
tal nearly 17 years ago are being
· notifiPd this week that their
rei a lives were victims of serial
killer Dortald Harvey.
Harvey has admitted killing
the patients at Marymount Hospital, where he worked as an
orderly in 1970 and 1971, and has
turned over to authorities a list
containing the names of eight
victims and details about the
others.
Tom Handy , commonwealth 's
attorney for Knox and La urel
counties, said Monday he has
already notified soine of the
- families of the alleged victims.
He said that beCause Harvey' did

not remember the names of all
those he said he klllled. the
notification was going slowly and
might not be completed until
later this week.

After Handy and Whalen found by pollee stuck behind a
signed a plea bargain agreement picture in his apartment. Whalen
on Sunday dealing with Harvey's said a list of Kentucky y!ctlms
a lleged Kentucky victims, the . was kept in a journal, but Harvey
commonwealth's a ttorney was
t)lrew It away after lt was
given a list of those Harvey said damaged by water.
he killed .
Ha rvey, 35, was sentenced to
. Handy said he will not release
Handy ·said the information · the names of Harvey' s Kentucky
four life te rms in Ohio las t month
after pleading guilty to 25 Includes the patients' sex, medi- victims until a grand jury hears
murders In Cincinnati, most of cal condition and other details . the case. That jury Is scheduled
Harvey also provided a hand - to meet Sept. 21, but could meet
them in a hospital where he
drawn floor plan of IV!arymount sooner · if the Investigation is
worked as an orderly.
Harvey's lawyer, Cincinnati with an indication of the rooms . completed, Handy said_.
public defender William Whalen. _ the victims were in, he said. ·
Hanqy was given two lists of
"We've got pretty good infor- names Sunday, one provided by
said Sunday that Harvey killed 10
of the Kentucky victims by. mation to work with," Handy
Whalen from talks with Harvey
hooking them up to nearly-empty said. "I'm confident we can do
and one written by Harvey.
oxygen tanks and smothered the pretty well with It ."
H&amp;ndy said the list provided ·by
·Harvey kept a list of some of
other two with pillows. He
Harvey indicates there were 13
his Cincinnati victims that was
poisoned all but one of his
Kentucky victims.
Cincinnati victims.

~KRON.

Ohio (UP!) -Finally, someo ne has found a job for
the lonely May tag repairman. 'even though it may be for just a
few moments.
· Jesse White (nee Jess Weidenfeldi broke into radio il) the
1930s as an amateur sliow coming on a radio stat ion in Akron
now known as WSLR. But White is known today as the lonely
rep&lt;tirman in the May tag commercials on television.
White and 19 other people who excelled in radio in the Rubber
Citv have been chosen to be Inducted in the Akron Radio Hall of
Fame Oct. 7. Four will be honored posthumously .
, Another honoree Is Eddie Elias, founder of the Professional
Bowlers Association in Akron. He began his radio career in 19o~
as a sports announcer and went into sports promotion before
founding the PEA. .
Also being honored are:
-Helen Jepson Dellera of Bradenton, Fla. , a former
Metropolitan Opera singer who started as a vocalist in the 1920s
on what is now WSLR .
-Mort Greene (Greenberger) of Palm Desert, Calif .. who
started on what is now WSLR , and rose to a lyricist and writer of
the Red Skelton specials.
-Mary Helen Bowers, an educator who broadcast music
lessons for: children from 1956 to 1976.
-Glenn Brooks Colerider of Brecksville, a former WHKK
announcer who does radio and TV commercials.
:....Cene (Eugene Edwards) 'Davis of Jefferson City, Mo .. the
first sportscaster for WCUE and manager of WJMO in
Jefferson City_
.
-Alvin L . Gravesmuehl of Akron, a 20-year commentator for
what is now WSLR.
-Frank Jay (Yukman) of Brunswick, an announcer for
various stations for 22 years.
-Robert Lose, a studio trumpeter for several stations.
-Richard Lumenello, who began in Sacramento, Calif., and
became president of WSLR and WKDD .
-John Powell. radio manager at Kent State University In
1941 and a radio consultant since 1985.
-William Reed Shaw of Medina, a WAKR engineer from 1941
to 1951 who worked in tele vision before his retirement.
-Chick Watkins of Los . Angeles, the 1952 master of
ceremonies for WCUE 's teen salute. later manager of that
station, program director at WGAR In Cleveland -and currently
program director of Trans tar Network in Los Angeles.
-Donna Mae Edick Yates of Weirton, W.Va., who debuted at
the age of? on what is now WSLR and who had a 15-minute radio
program at the age qf 11.
-Meg Zahrt of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., who conducted
programs on WAKR and WGAR and n~w records for the blind in
Fort Lauderdale.

COSHOCTON, Ohio rUPii Eleven people were arrested and
a curfew was ordered Monday
night after sheriff's deputies
fired tear ~(aS into a crowd of
demonstrators at a strike-bound
paper plant .
The demonstra tors marched
toward tpe Stone Container Corp.
plant , hurled rocks at deputies
and failed to heed an order to
disperse, said Coshocton County
Sheriff David Corbett.
Following the disturbance,
Mayor Don Moody issued a
curfew, effective from 10 p.m.
Monday to8a.m. today, ordering
everyo!le except law e nforcement personnel off the streets.

The march followed a rally of
"several hundred" people who
came to the east-central Ohio
community from other areas of
the s tate to show their support for
the strikers.
About 180 me mbers of the
International Union of Operating
Engineers Loca l 544 went on
strike at the plant on Aug. 17ln a
contract dispute.
About 80 deputies from Coshocton County and s urrou nding
counties had been called to the
city ptior to the rally in anticipa·
tlon of possible problems, said
Co rbett .
After the 6 p.m . rally, a gro up

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
new na•tional survey finds that
the Perry nuclear power plant
had more sudden or emergency
planl shutdowns and more reported "events" or mis haps than,
any ot her nuclear facility In the
nation las ! year .
The survey released by Public
Citizen, a group founded by
co nsum er advocate Ralph
Nader, states tha t the Lake
County operation had 22 plant
shutdowns last year, well above
the national average of seven.
The survey also found that
J(erry operators flied 94 " li cen·
see event reports" with the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
in 1986. In general. those reports
re lat e to failures or breakdown s
of plant system s or procedures.
Cleveland Electric Illumlnat ·
ing Co.. which owns Perry,
contends the Public Citizen fig.
ures are not entirely accurate.
CEI claims the plant actually
had only five emergency shut
downs last year, even though it 's
possible a reactor warning sys-

percent of this year's senior class
plans to go to college, the district
is beginning an adviser program
that will help students find
financial aid. help them prepare
applications to be accepted Into
college.
'T he Cleveland Public Schools
will set aside $40 for each 'A', $20
for each 'B ' and $10 for each ·c·,
with the money being put Into the
student's escrow account. The
program is designed for students
In grades 7 through 12. The
student can earn the mamixum
of $4,800 and has eight years to
use that money, either for college
of job training.

"I've got to get these kids Into
college," Cleveland superintend'ent' Alfred Tutela said of the
incen t lve program.
Tutela said a scholarship program that rewarded only seniors
was not working. He also said
many students thought education
was ou t of reach .
The Greater Cieveland Roundtable has raised $5 million for the
incentive program.
The program In Clnclnnat! Partners In Education - will be
expanding next week, said Lee
Etta Powell, superintendent of
the Cincinnati C!tySChools.
Powell would not identify the
company that will join with the

Two rankings list Ohio spots highly
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Ohio's director of travel says
state tourism ranks high In
surveys conducted by two travel·
related businesses.

Marilyn J . Tomasi said results
of the surveys compiled by
Holiday Inn Hotels Inc. and
HarleY Davidson Inc., put Sandusky fifth In a list of the 25 top

Pay attention to unemployed
BARBERTON , Ohio (UP!) a trade blll that would have
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, Dcompanies give a 60-day notice
Ohio, says that Labor Day Is a
when they plan to close a plant,
time to honor the working men . ._:r.:a.::th::.:e::.r...;t::.:h::a.:.:n..:j.:.:us:.t_s;.;e_v"':'e_n_d_a.:.y_s_.
and women, but also a time to ,..
-pay attention to those wlthou t a
job.
Metzenbaum spoke at a Labor
. Day rally In Barberton, near
Akron Monday.
He called Labor Day the day to
pay tribute to the working men
and women who built this nation
'and to the dedicated and sktlled
workers.

destln.allons for summer
vacations.
Ohio ranked third as the United
States' most popular tourist
state, behind only Florida a~d
California. a survey of Holiday
Inn agents showed. Sandusky
ranked fifth In a list of 25 top
destinations In the nation for
summer vacations. Cincinnati
ranked 11th and Cleveland was
12th.

----------..,---,,_..-t

"But In 1987, we should pay
special attention to a different
.kind of worker- those who lack
·a job," he said. "They have the
skllls and Jqyalty, but lack a job."
Metzenbaum said In the last
five years, 220,000 Ohioans were
laid off, mainly because . of
closing factories. The latest
came last month when the ·
General Motors Corp. closed an
assembly plant In the Cincinnati
suburb of Norwood, putting some
4,000 workers out of jobs.
He said Congress Js working on

'

Meigs High Sch_o
Band Boosters Wish
to Thank All Business
and Workers for Their
Patronage'.and ·,Donations to the
Band during the
1987-1988 Season.
I

(

I

.

.

"There's an ambiguity on
that, " Handy said. "Maybe they
have made a dupllca lion, but it's
not clear."
He said he will interview
Harvey this week, perhaps as
soon as Wednesday, In an attempt to clear up the details.
The plea bargain agree!Jjent
calls for Harvey to plead guilty to
the killings and to cooperate ln
the Investigation. In return,
Handy pledged to ask that any
Kentucky sentence run concur·
rently with the Ohio sent ences.
Whalen said Harvey claims to
have killed 10 of the victims, all
elderly , to "put them out af their
misery," but killed two people he
did not like. Whalen said one of

plan~

of demonstrators marc hed toward the plant and hurled rocks
at deputies, Corbell said. A
Coshocton Cou nty deputy, who
was struck in the groin by a rock,
required trea tment at a hospit al,
the sheriff sa id.
As the crowd nea red the plant
gate, deputies ordered tht&gt;m to
disperse and fired tear gas after
most of them fai led to heed the
order. he sa Id.
Five pf.'Qple. in cluding a pr egnant woman a nd a sm all c hild .
were treated at · a hospit a l a fter
bein g exposed to the tear gas.
Af ter the curfew orde r wa s
issued. deputies e ntered a house•
near thE' plant l'eportedly r ntcd

the patients was abused by
Harvey before he killed him .
In a related matter. Harvey
has refused to cooperate In a civil
suit filed In connection with one
of his Cincinnati murders.
"Donald said he does not want
to be "a defendant In the civil
litigation,'' Whalen said . " He
w!ll be glad to c 00 perate as a
witness , but as l&lt;mg as he is a
defendant, he said he won't
hel p."
Whalen said he warned Harvey
a refusal to cooperate could lead
to cpntempt of court char~:es and
jail terms.
"He told me, 'I'm not exactly
going to be out pn the street," '
Whalen said .

rally
by the union a nd removed ~nlon
officials and supporters .
Corbett sa id some of !he people
arres ted were Inside the house,
but he was unable to provide an
exact number .
C!iarges-agalnst those arrested
included inciting to riot, resisting
arrest and disorderly conduct.
They were all released on bond
early today after bei ng processed a t the county jail. Corbett
said .
. The Stone Contai ner plant,
which ma nufactures corrugated
paper board used for makln!!
cardboa rd boxes, has been oper ated by m a nagement persoMel
s ince th e strike began.

Mishap record at Perry cited by group
tern was activa ted 22 times .
How ever. the author of the
safety report, Joshua Gordon.
sa id the 22-shutdown figure came
directly from NRC documents.
According to the group's re·
port. 'nearly 3,000 mishaps oc·
curred a t U.S. nu clear reactors
las t . year . a nd 11 " abnormal
occurrences" were co nsidered
serious e nou gh to rt&gt;port to
Congress .
The Perry plant was not
responsible for any or those
eleven, but it was named twice in
a seco ndary abnor mal occur·
renee list because of a n earthquake that occurred in t he area
of the plant and a c harcoa l fire
tha t. burned for three days In the
system u-sed to process radioactive and non- radioactive gasses.
CE! spokesman Lee Bailey
sai d nejrlher Incident posed a
threat to Perry's nuclear reactor
or to public safet y. .
Bailey also not ed that th&lt;'
number of shutdowns a nd the
number of events report ed to the
NRC may have been higher than

·G ood grades pay in Cinti, not Columbus
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Students in Cincinna-ti and Cleveland wlll get paid for their good
grades, but students in Columbus
won't.
Robert J . Weller, president of
the Columbus Board of Education, says there Is no need for the
financial incentive program for
students. He says the dropout
rate Isn't as high in Columbus·as
it Is in other cities and more
students are planning to attend
college.
"Columbus' dropout rate Is
about two percent," he said,
adding that Cleveland's dropout
rate is about 49 percent.
Weller said that since 58
'

VICtimS

Eleven arrested at paper

A short "job for the
lonely Maytag Man

•

•

.

Kroger Co. to reward elemen tary!
st ude nts at certain inner· ctty .
schools mu ch the way the Cleveland program works

normal beca use Perry Is a new
plant t hat is .unde rgoing testing.
Bailey sa id the vast majority of
the 94 reported events were
minor .
"
The Perry facility is cu•·rcntly
!X'Ing tested at 90 percent power
a nd Is·scheduled for full com mer'
cia! operatio n later this y&lt;&gt;ar.

Gordon agreed that new plants
tend to have a hig her number of
mis haps than es ta blished faclll tle~. but he said Perry's numbers
were the high es t he has seen.
He added , " Whether a plant Is
a dav old or 10 yea rs old, a n
acc ident is an accident. Is an
acc ident. "

Tuesday. September 8. 1987

BONN, West Germany (UP!)
Chancellor Helmut Kohl
Issued a blunt call to visiting East
German leader Erich Honecker
to lift shoot-to-kill orders aimed
at East Germans t rylng to flee to
the West and declared that Bonn
wUI never reno un~e Its goal of a
reunified nation.
Honecker, who arrived In Bonn
Monday morning on a n unprecedented five-day "working visit,"
was to · meet today with West
German political leaders of all
major parlles, the n Issue with
Kohl a seven- page statement
summing up their historiC East West German summit.
Kohl registered his blunt pro·
test during a speech at a formal
welcomin g ban9uet Monday
evening.
" We want peace in Germa ny,
and t hat means the weapons on
the border must eventually be
silenced. " Kohl said of 1he
continued shootings by East
· German bQrder guards. "VIo lence against the defenseless
damages peace."
For at least the duration of his
visit , Honecker Is believed to
have su s pended s hoo t-to-kill
orders aimed at East Germans
trying unauthorized c rossings of
the 856-mlle border between the
two Germanys.
In a pitch ror reunification.
Kohl reminded Honeck,er that
"consciousness of the unity of the
nation is as awake as ever , and

TO ftA(( AN AI CIU .. 2. 21,.
MONDAT *• f . ..n I AM. '' S ' ·M.
I A.a. U..tll MOON SA fUIOAY

-·. - -· --- _

...... ..·--- .....
-___
........
·.,·... --~··-·.......
--.......,..-·~~~~--·-·............ _.. ....
,___
. ,__
.. ..,_, .. -· .........
··--. ..-........ _..,_,..
... . . _... _"'--·
....
ClOSIO \UNDl'l'

·-

..... . . . _ ................ -

~

is

current thaw In superpower
relations made the visit possible.
In his dinner remarks, the 75· ·
year -old Honecker said: "We
hope a nd expect that our talks
advance the l)Ormalizatlon of
relations" between East and
West Germany .
He devoted his dinner remarks
mainly to a plea for peace and the
success of the Geneva superpower arms talks , saying: "Both
German states are responsible
for accelerating thel)'l to a
conclusion and not delaying
them ."
In their (irs! one-hour conversatio n Monday, Honecker
praised Kohl for pledging to
scrap West Germany's Pershing.
1-A missiles to pave. the way for a
superpower accord, East · German spokesman Wolfgang
Meyer told reporters.

•"'0"100

._. . . . .

...
•u•

,

....

,

.......

_
___

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIOS

Junk Auto•a with or without '
motors, Call 614-388· 9303.

::c
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work

I-

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V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Licensed Clinical Aud'ologist ...,..,

Writesel

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Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

• 949-2263
949-2168

or

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BUY OR SELL

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1124

E~st

Main St.

Pomeroy
HOURS, lue. -Wed.·fri.

.,

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NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS .
CALL 742-2315

OH . 45771
JNo&lt;;m).

until 12,00

FREE ESTIMATES
RES tOENTtAl t CO MMERCIAL

HOURS: 8:30-S Monday, Thursday, Friday
8:30-6 Tuesday

current financiel statement

NE, P. 0 .' Box 390 New

Philadelphia.

Oh10 44863.
Drawirtgl and Speciflca·

for information pur·
poses. are on 1ile at the
Office· of the Board of
tiOn1

441 -Crochet an easy
tank top· to wea1 over
blouses 01 on •ts own
'Use 3 colors ot hght ·
we•g ht yam . D11ect•ons,
S•zes I0-16 Jncl.
Each pa«ern $3.25 plus
75e postage/handling .
(NI. rt!Sidenls ail sales tal.)
Selld to:
ANder lid

The Daily Sentinel
~~~ ~

Blvd., Woodtlidl,
NY ttm. Print lllmtl, Addrlu,
lf, Sla, Plfllm ltilrtber.
FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books lvalue $8.85)
•-' one 0llhe
when you Ofutr
$2.95 books ltsted below.
119-Art ol FlowerOffCrochet
f2t-Pilow S'- s
t27-Aigharls and Doilies
12&amp;-{)uick/Easy Transfers
Add 1! .051of pootogelhondlng. ()

A!1orney for the hand!ing -

neC4111N'V for the construetion of a pole type atorage

Marr Knapp Crawfil, A11o·
ciates. Inc. 104 Fair Ave.

SERVICES IN GALLIPOLIS REMAIN AT
414 Second Avt~nue
Phone 446-0166

all add alternattvea,
tupported by a power of

agent, a Certificate from the
Department of Insurance
authori-zing the Surety Com·
pany to do turety busineu in

local School District. Ra ·
cine. ' OH. in conform ltv to
the Drawings and SpeCification1 p,..pared by the office

the State ot Ohio. and a
of the Surety Company . The
Bondl..'ahall be on the form
providod which bq,nd •h•ll

be forthwith returned to the
Bidder in 0118 the conuact is
award~ to another bidder.
A proposal ·•hall be invalid
and not considered unless a
bond in the form approved,
with 1uffici.ent sureties, 1n e
sum eQual to the total sum of
ttte proposal. is filed with·
such prOPQS&amp;I, nor unless

bond are
one sealed envelope .
Education, Southern local IAttero1oti'ves to ouch bond.
School Oittriet, Racine. OH .
oermit:ted by tt'!e g~neral
COpies of Specifications
Ohio will be
and Proposal Forms to ·
gather with any further
of bidders is
information desired. may be
i
called to the
obtained by the Bidders requirement$ as to condi from the OHice of the · tiona of employment to be
Architects Marr Knapp lnt, ..., •.rl , safety require ·
Crawfis. Associates, Inc. ,
104 Fair Ave. NE . New ments and prevlliling wage ,
Phil•delphia , Ohio. All prop·
rates to be paid under the
osals shall be mad~ in
conformity with the General
Code of Ohio, thall be in a
sealed envelope addresaed
to the Board of Education,
Southern Local School Dietrict, Box 176, Roclno. OH
45 77t : and en do rood

~~:=~~~n f~~o ::~id~~j

t•o envelope.
'' No Bidder shall

withdraw

his bid for a period of si.ltty

Pu

J.R.'s REPAIRS

PUBLIC NOTICE
Offers w111 be received at
the office of Bernard V
Fultz. 111 1/2 West Second

Street, Pomeroy. Ohto, until
September t1 . 1987 at
11 .00 A. M . t·or the purchase
of the former Lee and Bessie
Rudisill residence realaslate
situated at 108 Legion Tar·
race: Pomeroy. Ohio. There· ·
sldence consists of two bedrOoms ; one bath and a one
car garage.
The right is reserved tore·
JBCt any or all bids.
Alice Struble, Executrix of
the Estate of Bessie
1

Rudisill

1911. 2. 3. 4 . 6 . 8 . 9, i 0 3tc
Public Notice

such proposal and

contract .

The Board of Education,
Southern Local School Dis·
trict, Racine. OH . reserves

h
t 8

· h

·

ng t 10 wa•ve any
informalities and to reject

any or all bids.

BOARO OF EDUCATION
OF THE SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
.
RACINE, OHIO
Joseph E· Tho re n' Preso'dent
Dennie E. Hill, Treasurer

The Tuppers .PlainsChester Water . Dittrict is

asking for bids to paint their
Reedsville Tank. a 50,000

gallon elevat8d storage tank
located 2 miles west of

Reedsville on St. Rt. 681 .

.f. t '

b
e
picked up at the District
Office. 38561 Bar 30 Road.
3 miles south of Tuppers
Plains on St . Rt. 7 . Bids wili
be opened on September 14
pect •ca IOns

BUSineSS
•

can

Pomeroy
Behmd City Halt

324 E. M01n St.

Reduce safe &amp; fast with GoBese
capsules &amp; E· Vap "water pills",
Fru~h Pharmacy.

% Beagle pups· 1 male, 1 female
left
Call 614· 367-0186 Or

367-7750.

•

ervtces

~ erullwv

411"or11l•y Vllfhlrllllll:lll.

and Performance Bond in an
amount ll!iqual to the total

N• Will H""' .P,I'fltl

Real Estate General

Md. OI1G«&lt;ting Consult.,.,

KAREN FACEMYER

struments for .Home and
Commerci.al use. Monitors
to diapl•v Furnace and A1r
Cond. Hours or Min. of operating time. Valuable Data
that allow a Daily Goals to be

Completely eliminatu
of the month Bill sur-

, R. Cremtont Fteld.

mo.

AIIOUCIIH

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t~

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

PAT HILL FORD

kitten

P.RTS - SERVICE
Repairs on All Makes
TransaKie Repairs,
Located Halfway Between
Rt. 7 and Bash an

HRS: 12:00-6:00
Monday-Saturday
CLOSED' SUNDAY

Ph. 949-2969

CONSTRUCTION
Vinyl 8o Alum. Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Typeo
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PH. 992-5682
or 992.:1121
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i

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FilE ESTIMAT£S
CALL
1-614
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POSITION · Coordinator·
S1..1pervitor of a 1en Southern
Ohio county In-Home Care
Coordination system for frail
elderly.
RESPONSIBILITIES . The oOfdi·
ne1or manages the OP"r,tion of
the developing carecoordinttion
svatsm and related clie-nt trackmg system (computerized) Wtll
supervise case managers and
«;arry e partial caseload .
QUALIFICATIONS : B1chelor's.
Degree in Social Work or related
field, M .S W. preferred. The
candidate should have expe·
rience working with frail elderly
at risk of nursing home plat•
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nursing homeintakeprocedui.es

Fema18 kit1en. black. 304-6752167
'one 7ft. couch. good condition,

304·895-3420 .
Bathroom lava1ory with faucets,

304-675-13t6.
Pme wood for kmdhng, 304895-3900 before noon

.

Send resume to. AreeAgency on
Agtng District 7, Inc .. P.O Bo)(
978 RGC. Rio Grande. Oh
45674 . Deadline . Sept. 14,

1987

An

Equal

Employment

OpPortun!ty· Aff•rmallve Action
EmpiQyer
POSITION: Care Manager to
assitt frail eldet'IV in acceas!ng
necessary serv1caa to prevent
premature institutionalization.
RESPONSIBILITIES: The care
manager maintains knowledge
of community ·reaources and
services. assesses client need, ·
develops care plen. and assists
client in accessmg those . servi·
cas.
QUALIFICATIONS: Bachelor's
Degree In Social Work or.related
. f ield. or comparable work experience. The cendidate should
have knowledge of needs of frail
elderly

SALARY' St6,000
Send resume to: AleaAgency on
, Aging District 7. Inc., P.O.Box
978 RGC. RID Grande. Oh
45674. Deadline. September

14, 1987.
An

6 Lost and Found

Equal

Employment

Opportunitv · Aff~tmative Act1on

Employer.
REWARD: For 1he return of a
boy's BMX bike with training
wheels Blue with gold stripes
Taken from Bob McCormick Rd

Brown donkft\' lost tn Oe)(ter
area. Call 614·742·2339.

BINGO
EAGLES CLUB. POMEROY, OHIO

THURS., 7 P M.·EB 6:45
SUN., 2 P.M.·E8 US

Found· Part Pit Bull part Shepherd. Tan . 61 4·992·3129.

7

·

Baby sitter needed in Rodney
area. Shift work. Call614· 246·

942t .
Person for general farm work &amp;
milking assistant. Must have
sound family life &amp; no drinking.
Benef11:a, depend on expert&amp;nce
&amp; anitude. Reply with 3 references to Box T -905. care of the
Gallipolis Daily Tribuna. 825
Third Ave ., Gallipolis. OH

4563t .

Yard Sale

Government Jobs '816.040 .
$59,230- year. Now hiring. Call

1-805-687-8000 EMt R-9806

·····--GaJHi:iolis-·---· -··
&amp; Vicinity
Giganttc Yard Sale: Sept 8 ·
19·3), Sept 9 - !9·21 Corner of
Third &amp; Sycamore. Lots of
glassware, clothes, fumiture.
moat items vnder S 1 00.

Wholesale &amp; Retail
8-10·1 mo. od.

LONG'S

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

gtve away.

Appointment

10-8-tfc

.Roger Hysell
_ Garage

to

992 -2196

·Middleport, Ohio
· 1·13-tfc

Call (6t4) 992 -7204

FILL DIRT

992-ltlO

In Memoriam.

Call 304-675 -

6t4· 992-5700.

Mon . thru Fri . or by

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEl - SAND
TOP SOIL

Manufacture and Sates of
Recording and Control In-

puppy, 4 or 5

Great Dane, male: Has been
neutered . 614-992 -3129.

Open 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.

8 ·1·1 mo

c
•M•
s

are returned within fifteen
1151 days after receipt of

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Repossessed Mobile Homes. We
have'em. we finance' em. Exam·
pie: 1984 Clayton 14ll.70. three
bedroom, 1'IIJ bath. Total elect·
ric, very good condition. $500
down. payment• at. $210 per
month. 800 - 826 -0752.

SALARY. St9,500.

3 ktttens - 1 black &amp; white 2 gray
&amp; white. Call 61 4 -446·8015 .

696· 1 290 .

51 titln

CollectoTs Items.
Costume Jewelry,
Action Toys, Musical
Toys &amp; Trinket Boxes

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
CENTER

" Hiring! Government JObS· your
area 816,000· 868.000. Call
602-838-8886 . Ext. 606"

l.P.N .. part-time Call Ohio Job
Service 614-448- 1683.

Cell 6t4-446-0565.

OPEN FOR BUS INESS

Help Wanted

3358.

Small black female dog . 614·

at 11 :00A .M . atthe0istrict

office and work mcst be
d . h'
starte wat m 10 days of
approval of, the bids.
Inspection tour of ihe tonk
wilt , leave from the office
September 9, I 0 and 11 at
tOT:OO A.M.
·righthe toDistrict
· the
re1·ect reserves
any and
all
bids.
191 4 . &amp;, 8 . Jtc

.CONS!MR MONITOR
441 Stech St.
Middleport, Oh. 4!760

8-2~-1

In loving memory of
Joseph E. Bissell
who passed away
Sept. 8, 1982.
Joseph A. Bissell
Oct. 23, 1981. Violet
Smith Dec:. ll. 1985
and Leona Hensley
Aug. 7, 1986.
Gone but not
forgotten.
Ada Bissell &amp; Family

614-843"5248

REASONABlE . RELIABLE
tin

BUY- SELL- TRADE

turned to the respective
patty after receipt of their
bid. and eher the documents

lratlburl Rd.
Mi&lt;ldlopart, 011. 5760
16141992-5751

2

Electronic Organs
Mobile service
•

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store

PUBLIC NOTICE

S

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Soles
Installation
Service

ANN'S ·

in

39504

.ONLY $48.7 S

Notice

1601 doyo aUer tho date of f8 l 28 ' 19 i' 1· 8 · 15 · 4tc
receipt of bods.
f-...----------...1.-~----------1
A deposit of Thirty
IUO.OOi oou.,. is r!!&lt;luiroct
to obtain one 1·1) . se~ of

bids. shipping ctrargee
prepaid .
Each bid ehall be accompanied bv a Combination Bid

3-11-lfn

t433

8-24-87· 1 mo.

dreWiflQI and speclflcataone
which depoait will be re-

CRAFTS
PATTERNS

No Sundoy Calls

Mixed breed
months old

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

sum of the propo"'!l indud-

immediately thereafter will
be opened and read aloud for
the furnishing of all ma••·
ria II and performing all labor

building located at the existing alte of the Southern

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

Old barn. Must be torn down and
all taken . Call614·446 · 3413.

By Chane!! or Appointment

f:'ublic Notice ·

11

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
let Us Fence You In

5undoy' I p.m.- 7 p.m.

E.D S.T. (Eeltern . ing

Daylight S•vings Time) on
September 24, 1987 and

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Calico

the Southern Loco! School

Serme'

. SIDING CO.

8-13-1 mo.- pd.

11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Usms lhr Cln ssifird;
I; n&gt;-Ens y ns . . .

the Board of Education of

Empluymenl

BISSELL

3 Announcements

Sealed Proposal• will be
received by the Treasurer of
District . Box 176 . Racine.

•VINYL SIDING. .
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Book· " Aioqg the Highway"
with W T Sibley. Wrhe- Grace
Ellis, 1479 Millerdall Rd. Co·
lumbua, Ohjo 43209 or Call
6t4-23t-t908.

AVON - Sell Avon for Chril1mU.
Make 40 percent. Cell614 -446·

YeW.
PARTS

4-22-87-Un

.

WANTED TO BUY ; Used wood
&amp; cOBI heaters. Swain's Fumi·
ture, 3rd . &amp; Olive $t . Gallipolis.
Call 614 -44693159.

4

"---r.

••'-'·~

2758.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

New Location:
168 North Second
Middltf1C111, Ohio 45760

2282 .

Standing Timber. Call814- 379-

~

4-15-'86-fc

Howard 1.

J··t--Y---·
_--·_ ·
n
-=--c-·=--·-

· -···---

11 •CII•.,.,.
0

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Announcements

~­

Public Notice

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical

RESIDENCI ·PHONE

,.,. r_ ... _
,. .,_ ... ,_

!,_,_.,._
: :=:."":::.:.

llll- .. _

~::::::.•­
::~-

- ROofing and gutter work

:..._:;j'-'1 ., 6141

·-··-

... _
__........_. .
u-•-•'"""'

____
_
··--"·5.':.11-b--··...--·....
....
___ _

TOP CASH peid for '83 model
end newer u1ed C~rs . Smith
Buick-Ponti.c. 1911 Eeetern
Ave., Gallipolit. C!lll 614-446·

I'

- Addona and remodeling

" ..... ...,
::::::.-:-.....

...
:::.::.r....

,.,,_._
,.
,_.,.

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swill) Molds • Interpreting Servi~s

'''"'""16141 9n-6SSO

____
_..._

·-·-·-·------·-

Uf- -

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE

· Don't Miss These
Excellent .Benefits.

• •••
••••

·-

SALES &amp; SERVICE

THE AMERICAN FAMILY
.LIFE SUPPLEMENTAL
CANCER &amp; ICU BENEFIT
·ENROLLMENT PERIOD
WILL STOP ON
WEDNESDAY NIGHT.

... .

~

YOUNG'S

6t4-446·3672

Wa Carry Fishing Supplies

.._
_., ....

Claulft~d P•l~• couer 1lt.~
jflllqwi"l l l!:leplum~ «u"-•"1"'··•

Bill Gene John1on

MEIGS MINE #2

II~·'="·

·...

Jim Mink Chaw.-Oida Inc.

J

If·
.
'
:
"
""
.....
.... ...• ___
... ._
__. _____
... _.... ____
'""''" •••..,-:M

,IOUI
.. ,.

===
::::.tt_
..··........__
_._
...... -

•

..WE DELIVER"

it

Is

,.
_
, _

For appt. call 992.·5912

DAILY SENTI.NEL

achieve

But the subject of German
reunlficat ion, a goal enshrined In
the West German constitution,
has not been directly addressed
during the sumrnlt, officials said.
Neither German state has any
control over the matter, and East
Germany, which seeks. full diplo·
mafic recognition from Wes t
Germany as a separat e and
equal state, opposes the Idea .'
Kohl and Honecker today also
were scheduled to witness the
s igning or bilateral accords on
e nvironmental, nuclear energy
and scientific cooperation.
On Monday, Honecker lnvltPd
West Cerman President Richard
von Welzsaecker to visit East
Germany and
expected to
extend a si mil ar offer today to
Kohl.
Although Bonn does not offlc ia lly recognize his government,
the East German pres ident and
Communist Party general secrc·
tary has been accorded full
honors by West Germany. DurIng arrival ceremonies Monday,
a band played the East German
a nthem as the black, red a nd gold
East German flag- identical to
West Germany's except for a
compass and hamme.r In the
center- fluttered above.
Honecker was Invited by
former C hanc e llor · Helmut
Schmidt in 1981 but only the ·

... .tOJ;p&lt;•

(Above City loan Bank)

THE

the w111 to
unbroken."

_.,_.~

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO
NEW location in downtown POMEROY!
236 E. MAIN STREET, 2nd Floor

FOR 9 MONTHS·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Kohl seeks ends to border shootings.___B.:.:.....:.;u~sr:in:.:..e:...;s:...:s_S_e_rv-r-i_c_e_s_....;.J__, ;,::~;;:::.~.::.:::.••"

WE'VE MOVED!

DON1 LET YOUR
SON OR DAUGHTER
GO BACK TO SCHOOL
WITHOUT TAKING
THE NEWS FROM
HOME WITH THEM.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

(CUI OUT FOR FUTURE US£)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Maku

•Washers

•Dishwashers

3 Fam1ly Yard Sale: lues. Wed ,
9·00·3 :30 . Rt. 141, Centenary,
7th house past J umbo. S1ove.
dresser, clothes. jewelry. Don't
miaa it. -

1 mile west of Centenary on
141 Wednesday &amp; Thursday.
Treadle sewing machine wtth
attachments. baby clothes.
diShes. lot!ll of other items.

--·----P-om-iiro·v·-·-- -··Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

•Ranges

•R efrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO
Authorize4 John Deere,
New Holland. Bush ·Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Far• Equipment
Parts &amp; Ser11lee

1-3-'86 lfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtosonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949~2860
Day or Night .
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Sept

10.1 1.12. Halfway be·

tween Coolville and Tuppen

Plains . Several wagon loads.
The Schuls. Phone 614·667·
3336 Of 6t4-667- 3203

Ave . Mlddlepon.

677

Sept . 8.9. 0 . 10 - 4

Rain

cancels.

8

We. need a career minded people
oriented peraon to work in I high
quality dental office. The perfect
job for the right person. Plea,se
send complete resume to Daily
Sent1nel Box 729· K. Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Government Jobs. $1 &amp;.o•o-

$59.230 yr . Now h1ring. Call
805 -687-6000 Ext R·9B05 for
current federal list.
·
Friendly Home Parties has openings for managers and dealer• in
your .11trea. Largest line in party
plan-free kit-brand new Christ·
mas catalog·toy, gift, and home
decor catalog. Over 800 1tems
Top commission and hostess
gifts·call for free catalog 1-800-

.

Ladies! Telephone survey. 5 QQ .
9:00 even1ngs. 5 days, Monday ·
Friday. S3 50 p81' hour plus
bonus Call 614 -992· 7440 for
appointment .

Mature end responsible baby
sitter wanted to sit in my home.
3-6 days per week . Alternating
shifts. 6 AM · 3PM, 2 PM -12

AM . Call 6t4 · 992-3056 .
AN position available at Arc1dia
Nursing Center, Coolville. Oh.
Apply in person Monday through
Friday. 9 :00 -4 :00.

Public Sale 8o. Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioneer II·
cenaed in Ohio and West Virgi·
nia. Estate. antique. farm, liquidation ules, 304· 773-6786 .

9

Needed: Dental Hvgantist for a
paople oriented high quality
dental office. Send completereaume to Daily Sentinel Box
729-K Pomeroy. Ohio

227-t5t0.·

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5 "'

for current federal list.

Wanted To Buy

Buving dally gold, silver coma.
ring•. jewelrv. sterling ware. old
coins. large currency Top pri·
ces. Ed Burkett B•rber Shop.
2nd. Ava. Middleport, Oh. 814· '

992-3476.
Wanted to buy. standing timber

Call AI Tromm at 61 4· 742·
2328

buy: aorap steal and
metals. Rider• Satvage 814-

Wanted 1p

Wanted · Pebple interested in
good jobs, benefits Call 304-

420-GOta .

Station

manager for local company. Write resume of e)(pe·
rience and qualification• to Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Box 7295, Pome·
roy, Ohio 45769.

AVON · All 11reas. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882·2645
R.N . applications now be-Ing
aecepted for full time position.
Pleasant Valley NurSing Care
Center, apply personnet office
Pta .. ant Vallay Ho1p, 304-675·

43.0. AA-EOE .
AVON · All are11. Call Shirley
Spears. 30•·875· 1t29
'

992·5•&amp;8.

"HIRING! Government jobl ·
your area . . , &amp;.000 ·

Andqu...

Call 16021 83a -8a85 . EXT
t203"

ellver

coin•.

SJold

•ea.ooo.

rirtgl, furniture, old guns; Com-

plate

houMhold. Ettatft. C11h

paid Call Brio(l Lee, 814- 386-

5099.

Babyslner. prefer CloH to Add a·,
'lille School. Phone 614 -38 7-

1757.

�Page....:.1 0-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

Merchandise

REPS NEEDED

for bu1ine11 accounu. Full-

nma, •eo.ooo.eeo.ooo.•'art-

51

Time. e12.000-e1e.ooo No
Setting, rapa.t bualnftl Set

Household Goods
SWAIN

M· F. Bam to 5pm fCentrai

AUCTION tit FURNITURE 62
·ohva St. , Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- S399 .
Uvmg room suttas· $199· $599
Bunk beds with bedding· $199 .
Full size mat1reas 8t foundation
starting · egg Re cli ners
starting· $99
USED· Beds. dresMrs, bedroom
aultea. $199 - $299 . Desks
wnnger washer , a complete hno
of used furniture.
NEW- Westem boots· $30
Workboots $18 8o up {Steel~
sof1 toe) Call 614-446- 3169

Standard Time) .

Dental Hva•en•st and Dental
Aub;tant , e11.periancad pre ferred. part-time. approximately
18 hour1 weak. Sand resume to

P 0 Box 0029, Point Pleaaant
w Vo. 21560.
.

Situations
Wanted

We provide care for elderty and

County Appliance, Inc Good
used appliances and TV set~
Open BAM to 6PM . Mon thn.t
Sat 614·446- 1699, 627 3rd
Ave Gallipolis, OH .

disabled. Nur"' aides are cartlfiCMI. bonded, mtured and covered with Workers Comp Ambu .. torv or confined. 24 hour
care. ovamight and hve-tn . p M.
Home Health Agency, 614 ~ 992 2667, 814· 992-2326 or 814-

992 -7044.

Have room and board forelderlv .

Raaaoil1bla. Cell 814-992 7204

54

Misc. Merchandise

Callahan 's Used1'treShop Over
1 ,000tlrea. alzes12. 13, 14. 16,
16, 16 6 8 mil•• out Rt. 218.

"Now
Herbert
retired, he's finally tinding
time to do the things he's
always wanted to do."

Valley Furniture. naw 8t uaod
Large sectton of quality furni·
ture 1216 Eastern Ave .
Galhpol•s

Judy Sandereat 614-4415 -8621
or 266·6783

Buildings
Commerctal buildtngs tor lease
Downtown Pt Pleasant Storea.
offfces. A-One Real Estete
Carol Ye61Jer. Broker. Call 304-

675-5104

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent
Baste rent for 1 bdr,

0183 00: 2 bdr .. 0219.00 Also

reqUired a $200 00 security
depoait CONTACT: Jackson
Est1tes Oepl. Ph 446- 3997
Equal Housmg Oppor1unlty
Can do ltght hauling and rooting
Reasonable nttllll. Marton
Snider 614·949·2829.
Give plan "' and organ lessons tn
my l'lome to beginners, advanced students and adults Al1o
teach chording and transposing.
If Interested, call 614-992-

5403.
Will do balrfaining tf' my home
Have excellent references 614
992-7038 anyt1me
Piano Lauons . Begtnnars·
Advanced chtldren and adults
Nancy Schul614-167-3338
NEED A JOB? If you are 18 · 21
years old and unemployed we
can help you Earn 81 .00-hr
While you anend our job seeking
$ktlls workshop in M .. on
County. Muat meet JTPA re·
quirem.,ts Call collect Support Servtcas Network

1304)344-3113.
Patnttng houses, roofs. barns,
motiile home roofs Free Estt·
mates Reasonable Rates 304-

676-2281 . '

FinanGial
21
0

Business
ppDrt\Jn ity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
" lNG CO recommends that you
do busina11 with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have
investigated the offering

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

For Sale by Owner: 4 · 5 BR , 3
bath• Apprmumately 4000 sq
ft . 25 acres with tennts court ,
S173.000 Wtll ,sell With onty 6
acres for $15!,000. Call for
appointment 61 4·446 - 3386.
2 SR . rental house. $8600. 3
BR , mce. 825,000, Mam St
CrownCtty Call614 -446 -1511
or 446-1622

Fumtshed Ef1ic1ency 8145 Utah·
tiet paid, share bath 607
Second Ave .. Gallipolis Ph.
446-4416 After 7PM
11h ac lot on Jerrya Run Rd .
Apple Grove, ~flth rural water
304-676-2383
PRICED RIGHT - One acre
building lots on Rt 2 at Ashton .
Pubhc water and mobtle homes
permitted, 304-676- 2336 .
One acre Iota on Muon 80 at
Ashton, publi.c water. mobtle
hornas permitted, 1500 down
$150 per month, 304-15766 .68 acr.. wrth well. Je.rrys Run
Road. S7,000 00 Call atter

6 00 pm 304-676 2006.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Ntcely furn1shed small house.
Adults only. References re·
quned Oft s1raet parking Ph

614-446-0336
4 BR house tor rent 3 m1 so of
Gellipolis S300 a month plus
dep Ref reqmred . Call 614446-1615 After 6:00PM . call
446-1244

Go11ernment Homes from 81. {U
repair ) Delinquent au property
Repossesstons Call 806 -687 6000 ht GH 9805 for current
repo ltst
8 room house, two baths, new
roof Nusash w1ndQWS, garage.
246 N Fourth A11e , Middleport.
Make offer 614-247 -4672 or
614- 247-2632
4 bedroom, 1 1h. baths, basement, cental atr, 2 car garage
Lynn St. New Haven . 304· 882·

2956

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
For Sale or Ren,t : 1984 141165,
fenced yard. 3 lots Rt. 160
Evergreen Phone 614 - 446 1339 or 446-1528.
1974 Total electric, 1 4x70 , 3
BR . set-up for wood burner, new
carpet, apphance.. 28.000 BTU
air ec:mdition~r included. S7500.
Call 614- 246- 6163.
1978

Buddy Mobile Home
14~t66 wtth 10~t32 addttion
•ncluding woodburner Ow11ers
moiled· must ~ell. Beat offer. Call
614-446-8427 after 6·30 PM
1986 Clayton Newport mobile
home 2 BR, bay wtndow 1n
kitchen. Dishwasher. underpin·
nlng . Call 614-388 · 9013 .
•16.000 Negotiable
1972 Darwin, 2 bedroom .
12.x66 trailer 82800 . 614· 992-

Farms for Sale

20 acr• ferm with 3 BR. house.
Hannan Trace Roa'd. Glenwood.
W. Va . for morelnformalion call
304-773·8118 or 773-6188
after 6 ·00

Fum11hed.downatatrs. 3 rms .
and bath . Clean, No pet• Adults
only Depos•t and Ref Requtred
Call614 -446- 11519.

3 BR , unfurnished, no garage.
87 Spruce St. $250 Call
614-446-2158,
3 Br , tully equipped kttchen,
CA., Nice. 45 SpruceSt $300
Ca11614 ·446· 2158
House for rent or sale. 3 Br.
kttchen, garage Located at
Rodney V1llegell Call614-446-

1368.
3-BR house near PatriOt. Call

Gracaous llvmg. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments a1 Village
Manor and Rive•s•de Apart·
ments in Middlepor1 Ftom
S216 includtng utilities Call
614 -992 -7787 EOH

Mobtle Home furmshed Patio.
Located 1n Gallipolis C&amp;ll 614-

Unfurntshed apartment s f or
rent. Houses for rent Call
614-992 -2403 614·992· 3432
or ~14 - 992 - 2780 .
APARTME~TS . mobtle homes
houses. P1 Pleasant end Gallipolis 614-446 -8221

5024.

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent dey week
month . Galha Motel Call 614 446 -9580 Rent aslow as S1 20
month
Furmshed room S75 Uhht•es
paid Shere bath Smgle male
919 Second. Galhpohll Call
446 -4416 after 7pm

- - - - - - - - -·IC-

Rooms for rent by wuek or
month Call 614 -992 - 7521 ,

Furn•shed 2BR , cable avatlable.
AC .. river view m Kanauga .
Fosters Mobile Home Park Call
614-446 -1602

9 · 30 -4 30

614 -992 -2363

other hours

46

Space for Rent

2 BR tratler for rent Atr cond
Call 614- 379 2409 or 4462 br. , fully furntshed Eutern
Ave . Water 6 sewer paid 11i225.
Adults only References. deposit
required . Ca11614-446 -3671
Trailer for rent 12x65 No
children. Call 614-992-2367
after 5 00, anytime weekends
Located on Mormng Star Ad
Ractne, 1 4Jt'70, 2 bedroom.
fam1ly room with fireplace. living
room wtth shding doors, fully
equtppecl kttchan, front end back
porches, storage bldg. set up end
ready to move in. Two acre lot
for rent . Call after 6 •00 p m

61 4-354-4084.

Olftce Space for Rent Excellent
tor AHorney1 , Accountent, etc
Close to Court House Call
W11eman Real Estate Agency ,
614-446 -3644
Otftce Space for rent . E:~tcul
downtown Galllpohs locatton
lnqulnes call 614-446 -4222

'3 room office - Oowntown
Gallipolis - Newly remodeled
Rent mcludes all ut1hties Atr
conditioned. lnqutre at Paul
Davies Jewelers- 614 -446
1647.

2 bedroom mobile home, Vt mile
out Jericho Road. call after 5
p m , 304 -676-6483

SPACES FOR RENT - Tratler
lots. Rt. 1.Locust Road . back of
K IIi K 304·675 ·1076

44

01

675-2989

2 Earl-., Amert can style love .!Aat
solast orsate $60 for both Call
61 4· 992 2413 after 5 00 p m

53

Antiques

Antique chma cabm et wtth
rou nd glass on stdes. claw feet .
Also enttq~,ta glassware Ca ll

614-949-3007

1- - - - - - - - - -54

Misc . Merchandise

49

Tenor 81njo , 'Kay' . Guitar 'Merlor' Both good condition Call

Beautiful blue long gown ,
tttmmed In lace Size 9 -10
Assorted petite women
clothm\1- st:r:fl 8,9,1 0 Call 614446.2914 after 5 00 rM .

58
&amp;

Kenwood stereo, AMP , super
deck, Aket turn table. 4
150 watt speakers. All mcased
48 •n big screen TV Mitzbu!liht
full cabmet rem~ta . sleep alarm.
full stereo One year old. Trger
Untversl!l Gym Wtth Rowman
bench All Wt.s adj Cell M on Frf Sam - 11am 6146923031 &amp;Itt 326 or 614 -992·

5516
TONY ' S GUN REPAJI-IS, hot
rebluemg, now taking order
orders for custom Mausers call
304-675 -4631
Portable ltghted Stgn, Letters#
299 Free delivery and letters
West Virgmia 800-642 -2434 or
Oh10 800 -633-3453
Electrolux Cleaners, complete
anachmen1s e7'8 caah or terms
arranged, 304 -676 4416

~

3 room• and bath, gas heat,
ground floOr, wa•her 1nd dryer
hook up, no children, immediate
occupancy. No peta. phone
304-8715-4480 ext 53 or 60
One bedroom fumilhed apart·
ment in Poult Plea1ant. Extra
claan and nice Adults, no pett,
phone 304·675-1388.
,1

Ftuit
Vegetables

Ktng · wood and ~oa l burner
2200 tobacco sticks Ca ll 614 256 1166

Grapes for ca nmng, for 11le. You
p•ck 15.00 bushel 81-6- 985-

114·251-6251 '

Locust hmce pQtt, $1 .25 aach,
or spec tal offer to one who takes
pile Call 614 256 9387

Peppers, you pick for 14 00 P•t
bus.tlel. Call 614- 247 -205&amp;

3 · wheel bicycle for sa le Call
614 -256 -6090 .
Catalyti c converters. only
889 95 M oat models. InstallatiOn also avatlabllll MuHier Man,
9 Stimpson Avv , Athens, Ohio
, -800 -84.3 -3767

3353

Quality Fruits and Vegetables
re1.tl and whol•..l•· B 6 S
Produce across from Pina Hut,
Galhpolls. Ohio .

Used

Yellow Freestone Canning
Peaches Now A¥allable Call to•
varllltiu and prie..
BOB'S MARKET
Muon 773 - 5721
Op•n 7 Days

614-694-7842

Graptl for salt~, 12,00 pat peeil,

A - 40 Ditch W it~:ti
Tr~neher Call419-683 -1469or

304·176 1871.

Mixed hard wood slabs 12 per
bundle. Contamtng aPpro• 1 \If
ton
FOB
O~fo Pallet Co
Pomer oy, Ohm 6 14- 992 6461
86 Grl!vetv walk bohind , sulky 8
H P with lnoN blade Chllnnel
Master 10 ft aa t al1te dith
614 - 992 6895 or &amp;14 · 992 6710
1981 Chevett1:1 $500 Damaged
:ront end on lett 11de Rainbow
sweaper t600 Like new loti of
attachments 614 -843 · 5116af·
ter 4·30
Whtdpool h eat pump Used 1
year. Complete with pipe and
1hermo1tat. $1375 Call 614 ·
247 3896 after 6 00 pm

Building Supplies

Bulldmg Mat&amp;JIIIIs
Block, brick, sewer pipes. wm
dow s ltntels e:l c Claude Win·
ters, Rto Grand e. 0 . Call 814 2 46· 512 1
Concrtlte blo cks aU sizes yard or
dAIIvery Meson sand Qallipotis
Stock Co .. 1 23 'h Ptne St .
Gallipolis. Oh io Call 614 -446 2783
Ready m•• conc tole and 11l
co ncrete supplies Ce ll us Van..,.
B• ook Cement Hnd Supphes
30 4 773 -5234

F,I rill SupJiiii~S
&amp; LlVUSIUI:k
61

Farm Equipme!'t

CROSS 6 SONS
U S. 35 W•t, Jaclt:son, Oh to
614-286-8461
Ma1"" Ferguson. New Holland .
Ruth Hog Sal" &amp; Sarvtta Ovet
40 used tra c-tors to chooaairom
II complete line of new 6 uMd
equipment L•ro"t selfldiOn l,
S.E Ohto,
BOO Ford traC10f' , plowa, dlte, 6
h Ford bush hog. U450, 200
gel spray link. 1295 Call

614 268-6622
Corn picktr. New 1(111. NO 10.
t360 Ford Hay balltl'. 1350
C•ll614 -742- 2127

•us.

Qrevlly t ...ctor ror oertl.
Rotary mower, 176, Aot•rv
plow 1121 Set of brush tire1 .
S30 Call 61 • • 446· 4149,

Repusu ..d l Mu1t ••II 2
quonset-style stall buildings
Brand new , nev•r eract1d, One is
40 tt x40 ft. W1ll sell tor balance
ow&amp;d C•ll Carl 1- 800 -627 -

c,...._.V

1973 Ford lTD 2 dr , goad
cond . 1350 . Call 814 388 ·

98&amp;9
1983 CamaroZ- 28, tu,o , T-1op.
ac , •m -fm •t•tao -cus.. pw,
power door locks E~ttra 1harp.
Call 614 · 245· 6040
1986 Oodg• Coh , 2 dr., auto ..
23,000 rnll" , 13460 Ca116U -

379 2726
1982 AMC Splrn Ol. Crulae, air
cond .• tilt 11250 Call 614·
388 -9022 after 6 ·00 pm
Statnlen tteel e.11.htult •vst.ms
Now cuttom made for your
1r\.lck, n-.otor homt or&lt;:l111i1: ~ar ,
With life-time wtrrtnty, Muffl.,
M•n . 8 Stimpaon Ave •• Athens.
Ohio. 1 ·800·843- 3717
1974 CadiO~e Convert i ble.
Good condition, Call 814-992·
5154. Price negotiablt.
1979 Pontile Fireblrd Auto, PS,
PB . AC . S1erto 814 -949 2091
th., 8

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supplv Shop Pet
Gro n n1ing A ll bree ds All
styles. Julie W eb b Ph 614 -446 023 1

H-Farmall Tractor for ..11'1. Call
614·949 -ZSe-8 .
Bars. chains and sprockeu to fl1
almost any saw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO . Handet"IOn
W Va 304- 875· 7421

o, agonwvnd Ca ttury Kennel.
CF A H1melayan , Perstan and
S1amesR kiuens AKC Chow
pupp•es New kitt unt : Persian1.
Csll 6 14 ·446 36 44 after 7PM .

Homallte and Jort' sered Slrvica
&amp; Suppli•.
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO.
Hendaraon WV 304 - 675 -

Fu ll Bloodt'Jd Cocker Spanl&amp;l.
mal a 2 vr• old S7 6 Call

62 Wanted to Buy

7421 .

Toy male Poodle red. I 160 Toy
maht Poodl e-red for • tud llt fvice
CBII614 -446 -8926
Full blood.m Germ en Shepherd
pups for sa le Call 6 14-742·

2632
Pure-bred white German She·
phmd female pups 6 weeks old
S75 C!!ll 614· 992 -2682

1970 Chl'lteUa, r&lt;ed black strip••·
new tire• . brak.. exhauat Qre.n
ahap•. 11 ,600.00 304-tl75&amp;781 aft•r 4 ,30

72

Trucks for Sale

Work Horse for aale. Approx
1.000 1 .200 lbs 1300 Call

AKC regutAr ll d Sheltte
puppies.304 - 875 -1324
D og for sale, brown named
Andy, good watch dog. $50.00
304-675 -2931

57

Musical
Instruments

614 367-7118
6 year old Appaloosa geldtng,
8325 ftrm. Evenings 614· 992·

::::::::::=:::::::::=:.E::::::::::::::::::=J

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

Sat Calls
1879 Ch.vy Spon. '4 1on. 4a4
.pick-up, V· S, au1o , extra clean
4 Inch lifl kit , new tire11 Call
814-4415-4171
F{eightlinar. conventional with
46 ft. flatbed ballet Call 814379 -2243

6799
Rogistared Ouartor Horse mare
w1th 18 month old colt 304·
2 large matched Walsh poniat,
harnau and saddle broken One
persd• horae wagon, Ono Apal ·
louaa
show 304
harness,
saddle Gelding
and brlddle,
-675 2669 or 675 -6289 after 4.30

Hay

8o

Grain

600 buthefs- lalt vears ear corn,
S2.26 per bushel. Butleu Here·
ferd Farm Lower Rtver Ad After
8.00 PM. call 614-218-8518
Mixed hay 11 bale on w•gon .
Hay for bedding 60c. 304-675-

5679

Transpor!alion

388 · 9074
1979 Dodge 4x4 Auto Ra·
done, or part trade on newer
smaller 4Jt4 truck 814-742 -

Rotary or cOla tool driMng
Mos1 w.llscompf.. ect aeme.,_.,,
Pump uln arw:t 1trvlce. lO•·
895 3802
Starks Tree artd Lawrt Service,
lawn cera. landscap6RQ, 11urn,
removll , 304 - IHI -2142 or

576·2903

Fridoy.

1975 Dat.an wagon, rebuilt
motor, new parts. th'M, need
palnl, runs ••eel. 1100. Call

1881 Honda 126 4 whHier,
good condition.
Jim
Baughman . Cell 614-266-

•eoo.

6536.

Creb/e - Major - Ultra - Sticky - COLOR
"What is the major difference between scientific research
done In the fie(d versus the laboratory?" qu1zzed tile profeS90r
A student replied, "The COLOR of the mice?"

BRIDGE

'

NORTH
+to 7

.A5

James Jacoby

One way
or another

9·8·81

+A K Q 3
+At0913

WEST

EAST

• 432

• 95

.QJ!O
'. +9542

.164 32
• J 10 6

+as 5

+K 4 2

SOUTH
+A KQJ86

+

1 JU6T MET 1HE NEW
PI&lt; INCi f=lA.L WHEN I HAD
H 15

OFFICE.

pr8sented. 0

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

GOCOY T'#O·SHCES

I 'VE NEVER. IN MY WHOLE
LIFt= 8EE'NCALLED10THE

STRIKE5A6AIN.

PRINCIPAL6 C'FRC&amp; .

AND HEATING
Cor . Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-«&amp;· 3888 or 114·

8o

Electrical
Refrigeration

Residential or comm•c1al wit·
lng. New aarvle• or repairs
Licensed •lectrlcten. Eattmate
frH Rldenou!_ Electncal, 304-

85

BARNEY
110WD'r'1,SHERIFF TAIT..
I JuST TOOK UP
BOHLIN' SPRING
WATER

Valley at m1ddle age. Q
@I Lllaquesl: Agelen

PROUD
To SEE MV
VOTERS.
ALWAYS

WORKIN'

Dump truck delivery, co•!.
1tone. aand, gr...,el, fill and
uwdust . Phone 304 -171 -

Mowrey'• Upholsterlni MrVIng
trfcountyar••22ye ... The belt·
in tumiture upt,oltterlng. Call
30,. - 876-41154 tor free
estimates.

PEANUTS
'f'Ou LOOK VER'f

,_.

TflERE'5 NOTHING LIKE
A D·MiNU5 TO MAKE
'(OUR 80W5 DROOP..

NICE, SIR

-·

•

Town Introduces the p8ople
of Silicon Valley. Q
cr2J Moneyllne Current
reports on world aoonomlcs
and financial news w~h Lou
Dobbs (0:30)
® Talea from the Darkelde
eD CZl Love ConniCIIon
11:15(1) MOYIE: Death ScNim
(NR){1:40)
11:30 C%J 1111 tonight Show
!I) SportoCenter (LI
(I) WKRP In Clnclnnsfl
811l Nlghfllnl Q
ll)) f'Npper John, M.D. .
!IJl 8porll Tonlght Action
packed sports hlghl!ghll with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
•
Ill (12) U.S. Open Hlghllghll
® Trapper JOhn, M.D. 'Here
Today, Gena Tomorrow
Late Show

e

am

George
32 Overused
36 Nasal
sensation
37 Departed
39 Alexander,
to
Blondie

41

~

34 Decay
35 Quarrel
38 Nervous
40 In reserve
42 Eng.
racetrack
43 Board,
as a train
44 Camping'
need
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it:

crz

Ill Sign 011
liD Silicon Valley Company

1::2_9_19_._~----~-

•·30, Sat. 9:30 to 1 .30. Old l
new Uphoster.cl.

ahead to tomorrow's news

918

AXYDLBAAXR

C%J (I)
IDl 111
1!)1 Newo
@ lnolde the PGA Tour (T)

Watteuon's Water Hauhng,
raaaon•ble ntas. lmmedi1te
2,000 gallon deUvery, claterna, ..
poole, well, •tc. call 304 -178·

Baseball's

airport

31 Attack
33 One - time ~+-+--+-

a oo

31

Israeli

1!11 ®News
1!11 Evening News A wrap up

a

Paul Rupe, Jr Water Service
Call 614-446 -3171 . Paola. cltt·
arns. well•

29

30 Gypsy

stories. (1 :00)
Ill cr2l Night ~eel A singer in
need of a break Is
blackmailed by the mob
II) CD Benny Hill
10:15 C5) Billy Graham Crusade
10:30 CIJ Celsbrlty Chefs Willard
Scott and L1!1ane Montevecch
liD Human Face ollhe
Pacific The natives of Now
Caledonia light an uphill
battle tor independ8nce. 0
ll)(l) Hogan'o Heroaa
11:001]) Remington Steele

304-671 -1370.

l Brazilian
DOWN
port
1 Whack
6 Hornet
2 Lamb's
10 Ritzy
pen name
1l Watching 3 Black
out
and blue
13 Body organ 4 Summer (Fr.)
14 Cut
5 Planet
15 Chinese
closest
lake
to the sun
16 Extra hed 6 Squander 20- Runner
of comtcs
18 Hehrew
7 Foamy
drink
23 Yield
for "Lord"
24 Layers
19 Type
8 Diverse
of fruit
9 Mons1gnor, 25 Object
26 Type
21 Granary
e.g.
of novel
menace 12 Marine
22 Mining
gastroped 27 Captive
dtscovery 17 Unshutter 29 Director
McCarey
23 Roman
~.....-":o:-..,-,.,;.;.
statesman
24 Floral
arrangement
27 Pres
Taft's wife
28 Trampled

Ame~ca

of today 's news and 8 look

..-

A &amp; R Wator Service. Home
cisten, wells, pools filled. Formerly Jamas Boys Waters Call

Chy, Dh. 614-258-1470, Eve.
114·448·3431. o.., dolly 810

Volatile Mexican cop •s
Illegally searching lor a p1mp
In Houston. (Ri
1!11 Larry King Livel In depth
Interviews wilh top
newsmakers and celebnt1es.
10:00 Cil Straight Talk
@ Billiards Th&lt;rd Annual
Resorts lnternaiional 9-Ball
Championship from AtlantiC
C1tjl. New Jersey: Nick
Varner vs Jose Garcia (T)
(I)
(I) Tho Conotltutlon:
We Live It Every Day With
David Hartman Q ,
Ill Silicon Valley Hom8town
presents a portrait of Stlicon

Dillard WatM Service· PD&lt;H1,
Cl1tern1. Weill Delivery Any·
time Call 614· 441•7404 -No
Sunday calls

Upholstery

IDl Ill cr2l Houston Knighll

a

General Hauling

R • M Custom Couch• •nd
Aeupholatery. St. R1. 7, Crown

446·2300.

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETs . ANSWERS

rn

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

CARTER'S PLUMaiNG

1982 Ford Van. 50.000 miln.
$3810. 1984 Ford Tempo, auto.
PS ., PB. AC., AM·FM 1terao,

8:00 end 2:00, Mond.., thru

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETtERS
TO GEl ANSWER

,.2.

over several decades is

Plumbing
8&lt; Heating

l(awapkl 200. 3 wHeeler, ••c
cond,
or best offer.
814-2415·1•01 avenlnga.
18815 Honda, Big Rad. thr"

ill'!&gt; PRINl NUMBERED LEllERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

a

that twa 's company and

3190.

whHI. 304· 671· 2818 bot-on

.

Agamst seven no·trump, you would
.K 98
hke to hold a lew lace cards so that
.87
you have a chance to take a trick. But
+QJ
it's a lot better lor your s1de 1f your
(!) Beat of Bill Dance
Vulnerable: Neither
Outdoors (R)
partner has some of that strength.
Dealer:
North
Ill (I) Judge
Today 's deal was bid clumsily by i
IDl Wheel of Fortune 1;1
South. After North had made the West
North Easl
Soutb
1!11 Croaallre (0·30)
strong reverse b1d of two diamonds,
t+
Pass
t+
Ill (12) 1!)1 Jeopardy! 1;1
South s1mply asked lor aces and kmgs. ' Pass
Pass
4 NT
®Soap
Then. even though he knew h1s s1de
Pass
Pass
5 NT
fl) CD WKRP in Cinclnnall
'
was misSing a king, he b1d seven no. I ·Pass
6+
Pass
7 NT
7:35 (]) Major League Baseball
Pass
Pass
Pass
trump He hoped that his partner
8:00 (]) Croaabow The Pnsoner
would have the club king, which would
1J Ma11ock Woman's
Opemng lead: 4 o
bnng the total to 13 tricks, and he optihouse flaming, husband
mistically
thought
he
might
make
a.
dead, and she s charged w1th
grand even Without the club king.
murder (Ri
West too felt that :he club kmg
@ Suparbouts 1976: Ali vs
might be crucial to declarer's chances,
Norton Ill from New York
had made a daring lead, that he had
and he knew t~at the club finesse was
(I) 0 (I) Who's 1ho Boas?
too many suits to guard. In fact, al·
Angola asks th e Wildest guy
gomg to work. So he ma~e a gutsy de·
though he didn't know 1t, he coulll If·
fr.om her old h 1gh school out
ceptive opening lead of the club four
lord
only one sale discard, a secGrJd
un a date (R) Q
South could count only 12 top tricks,
Ill (!]) Nova Carl Sagan 1alks and it looked as if a club finesse was club. Alter that, 11 he threw a IJ9art,
declarer 's mne of hearts would
the
w1th George Klsttakowsky
the easy way to score the 13th, but he
about hiS lour lives 1;1
13th trick; if he threw a diamond,
was taken m by West's casual club
IDl Ill cr2l 1!)1 Billy Graham
dummy's diamond three would be·
lead . So he went another route. He
I!]) Primenews Wrap ups of
come a wmner, and obviously he had
rose with dummy's club ace and ran
the day 's world news and in
to keep the club kmg
a II his spades. It was sad lor West. who
depth·toa1Ure reports (1 :00)
® MOVIE: The Charge ol
lhe Llghl Brigade iPGI (2·08)
Ell (l) MOVIE: Until
September lAI (1 .35)
8:31f (]) Butterfly Island Falhers
by THOMAS JOSEPH
and Sons
(i) 0 (I) Growing Paino
ACROSS
45 Put forth
Ben' s persistent research on

three's a crowd. (R) 1;1
Ill (!]) One Village In China
The history of Long Bow

ID 60 Ttl

82

245·9286

eaoo.

.

7:05 (ll Andy Griffith
7:30 C%J (I) Nelllywod Game

a

pools. clatlrns, wells Ph 6tot-

Motorcycles

.

By James Jacoby

genealogy reveals a
·
shock1ng sk8le1on (R) 0
9:00 rn 100 Club
C%J 0]) MOVIE: 'Beyond
lhe LlmH' NBC Movie of the
Week (A) (1 ·431 0
@ Truck and tractor Pulling
From Indianapolis, lnd1ana
(Ti
(I) 0 (I) Moonlighting
· Maddie learns ths hard way

hnw Tt" Trimming. ttump
remowl C•ll 304-876- 1331

1976 ford Ranger half ton, V-8
auto, PS, PB, sliding gliaa.
61 . 000 mllea, clean ,
11,400.00 . 304·468 · 1916.

03.600 304-676-4243.

.

.~w.VctJttl'

2454.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming

1979 Power W-uon. AC. PS,
short bed, 10,000 miles, also
1978 Super Cab F-210, 4 1paed,
long bed, Reece hitch. 1178
CherokH, Auto, PS, air, loaded
Taka your pick or'treclalor 4 or I
cylinder truck 304-175·1428 .
-:-:=-:---::c-::--.,.--.,.---,-: h
1978 Jeep CJ -7. red and white
ftbargla" top, 67,000 mH...

.

'--------------l

RON 'S Tllewislort l•r..,jo.
HouM calli on RCA. OllaUir,
GE, Speci..ing in Z.nlth . Cell
304· 1578· 2318 Ot 114-441 ·

87

614-446· 3340.

.s

cSooP NP..Me •1

!•

tu_.._.

Auto's For Sale

198• Rell•nt SW Very good
cond . LoedM. f3885. C.lll14-

'EiNP OF TilE L.tNE ~
~E'P f?UN our Of

SWEEPER and MWing IY\ACtHne
,...air. P4Wta. and
Plck
up and dttliYary. 01vla V.cuum
Cleener , one hilt mil• vp
Gtorg" CrMII Rd Call 114·
448 -021 • .

1180 500 SA Yamaha. Runs
good. good condition. 1310.
Cal161•-e•S· 2186.

t3196. Coli 614·288·8822.

"'~
:t jOLP you IF
we !J~Ef?~ AT THE ~

Home

2372.

74

I

Improvements

W . O.

1977 Chevy Sport Van Yerv
good cond . •1200. Call 114·

STOP' HERIE
Ge'T '(O~ Nf'\IIVII
A$SlGNE:P

&lt;()

'

your--."

pe

84

8o 4

.. PLATYPUS''?! ...

Si!l VII.!'\

'79 Ch~n~y C10, ' 80 Dodua
Diplomat. call 304 8915 -3530
before 3 .00 pm

Vans

PESt:

4340

446 -44n

73

NAM~

~ Ben1on

'

I
6"'1'-i 0

S R E ARE

Ell (l) M'A'S'H

1978 Tropic.ana lr.....at traittt.
31 h . tlpout. AC . good cond i·
tKin Asking 1&amp;000 81• ·M15·

1983 Toyotal. 4 wheel driVe.
t3750 Call 814-742 -2461

1987 Ni11on herd body pickup,
AM · FM cauau•. slotted
whHis , 5 speed, like new low
miles. ...800 .00 or a11ume
loan. 304- 875 -6446

--

.

Comp lete the chuckle quoted
by ftl hng m the m1ssmg word-s
1-...I...;....!._.J.._.L.......JL-....J you develop l rom step No 3 below

.

a rn

Dobbs (0·301
Ill cr2l 1111 Wheel of Fortune

.

Granny was 11lways reacty 10

give advice to newlyweds. Her
favorite words of wisdom were,
" Let your love be stronger than

~-.,~,;;5:..;:T-I.-=~~,C:....:;.I,.=

anchored live from New
York (0·30)
® Jetteraons
Ql (l) Too Close lor Comfort
6:35 (I) Carol Burnett
7:00 Cil Remington Steele
PM Magazine
@ SportsContar (L)
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (I) People' s Court
Ill (!]) MacNeil/ Lehter
NewaHour (1 ·OO)
®I Newa
cr2) Moneyline Curren!
report~ on worl~ econom1cs

I .I

.

I

Tom talks with young

motor h6mt.
beet. lih•P'I· UOOO . C.M 11438:8· 17&amp;5.

676-1786.

16 Hand Bl•ck AQHA Gelding,
Pinto Mare bred to Quarter
Horta Call after 6, 304- 676 -

64

· "The tour provides everything ... the flight,
hotel, car rental , even tips on
how to be obnox•ous."

$1600. Colll14 211-6038 No

6865

676 ·6660.
Ftve Guitar Collecton - $350- or
just buy one. Also Peevey
pra cttce Amp . $7 5 , Call 614
446 -055 6

, 976 Chev . ptck up, "" ton , long
bad. AC. AM -FM rad~ . manual
'rans . new fenders front and
reat , heavy,.., spring a, 4 new 15
ply radtal tlfll Good eond

63

Smmeu kittens 1'7 weeki old,
$60 00 each, 304 -676 1319

Chow-Chow pup
after 5· 30 p m ,

1985 Ford 'h tttn heal cand .
Call 114- 379 -2371 aher I 00
PM

.

mothers about teen
pregnancy and hie With baby.
cr2) ShoWBiz Today News of
the entertainment world is

Cl•~• · •

1 972

IAIEMENT
WATERI'IIOOFING
UnconcNt'onal NfetMie f'M'r.,..
••• Local retartnc• tumNhed
frH ntitnatH. C•ll cruhcri
1· &amp;14-237-0411. d-. or ni&lt;Qht
A ooer••••aman1
Waterproafinv.

1978 Oatson plck·up runs
good. 8ody rough . UOO or bes1
offer. No Sunday calls. Call
614 -379- 2502

304 675-6799

Rey1stared
ptes Call

Motora Homea
8o Campers

1814 Dodge Sport. "'"s good.
some rust. cell 3~ ·•7&amp;· 7&amp;41.

1974 Ford Ranget nud engine,
8ft. bad . Call 814 -379 -2289.

Duroc Boar1. Bred just hke the
boars we tested at 1he Ohio
Teltatlon rhal gained over 2.8
lbs per day Roger B•ntlay.
Sabina OH 613· 584· 2398

79

81

Now buying shell corn or •••
corn Call tor latest quottt River
Ctty Farm Supply. 614 -441 2986
~

Livestock

1?5 1280

II

a

Camping
Equipment

1979 " Nomtd " eunkhot.tN
camp., , 28' A c. twnifto. roll
down s-.bllinr. Jt~'• Jle. .
Hitch ln&lt;:ludN. . ..000. lOot.

'
1

1-.._,,:.;A~R..;A~T~OT---11
; I ..--.!

e

and finanCial news w1th Lou

78

H MP Y N

®Good Times
eDIZl Ono Day at a Tlmo
6:Q5 (l) Allee
6:30 C%J 1111 NBC Nightly News
@ Pro Bodyboard
Championship From Oahu ,
Hawaii (R)
Ci)
(J) ABC Newsi;J
llJ NlghUy 8USIMII Report
IDl Ill (12) CBS News
liD Soapbox with Tom Cotue·

Struts. 1119 9&amp; pejr, lnstaNtd.
Motl models. Muffler Man. I
Stimpeon A..,., Ath.,.l, Ohkl
1-800· 843 -3787

81 Plymouth Horb:on a·c , werythlng 1&amp;,600 , 12 LTO Ford
tl .OOO. Everything. Bolh fOOd
cond . 304 -676 ·43"11,

1974 Chf¥v Bel Air, four door,
1400 phone 30•· 89&amp;- 3815

crz

3

Auto Repair

1973 truell cempar. 1 0 \o\ ft. t..-y
contal"ed , tiOO.OO. 304· 111·
443&amp;.

'"&lt;*.

IDl Ill

liD Owl TV Q

-:--:---~-=:-::- 1•­
Dual exheuft kltl. tll .tl In·
nailed Most Forde, Chtvy
trucks, Vane, 4~~:•·•· MuHI•
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave , AtMns.
Ohio 1 · 800· 8•3 -3787'

77

Rearrange letter• of the
four Krombled words below to form fQur stmp!e words

ill Dr. Who The Dal8kS , Part

Uud and rebuilt trenaml•alons .
lnternalty ln.,.ctlld and guar~~n­
tted lnatatlation hallable W•
buy junk transmls..one. CaH

1187 Pontltc Or•nd AM SE
Spona Ctndy tpplt !§ sp. .d .
•r. AM FM 1t•r110 ca11.. cruise.
hH , aluminum wh-'•• tug
4.400 mHH A ..oeatlng. SaMine
fOf bank Ptvoff. C1ll Mon . Fri.
8a m · 1 1a m Mon .-114·692·
3031 E.. . 326 or 114- 992 551&amp;,

4044

FOR LEASE . one - bedroom
apartment overlooking city park.
t176. per month Call614·4462326 or 446-4425.

4425

1986

'

1!)1 New•
@ SportsLook (T)

61 4 -446-0SU.

For Lease

FOR LEASe: Apartment wtth
completely remodeled kitchan
bat~. bedroom and livingroom:
Available o middle af August
Sacond floor, corner Second and
Pine Parking are• provided.
*226 per month. or t260 with
kttchen appliancea furni1hed
Call 8 14-448·2326 or 448 -

01600 . Coli 61 4· 446 -1597

1985 Ford Elcort SW, 4 spd .
AM -FM·Tape, . '3999. John' t
Auto Sal"· Movtd 10 K•nauoa
b!Jiow Molldav ·lnn. Call 814 448·4782

61 4-388 ·8890.
Archery N ice used com pound
bows Several brands. your
chm ce S49 Also heve cr oss·
bows at close ouJ. Guns-The
enttre collectton of Le,o Simms
on constgnment flit Ftfes. Sou1h
Ttl•rd St . Mtddlepon, Very nice
handguns, shotguns, ht pow er
nfles Pttced to sell. S. B Sh o t guns low as 930 Call614 - 992 7494

, 979 Chrysler Cordoba. Good
cond . An, AM -FM - 8tra ek

Chevt"•· 6 spd.,
~~m- fm r1dlo , d.,uxe wheel covert, nat. mirrort. Exc .. cond.
Only 1 1,000 mll•s I 3260 Call

56

Tip

a CIJ oo m(J)

Parta
8o Auto
Acceaaori11

Autos for Sale

Red raspberries. Pick your own
or we pick Call Taylor ' 1 Barry
Patch 151•· 246 -15064 or 4468692

71
Apartment
for Rent

71

614 -949-2910.
$30 00,
d&amp;ltvl!!tr~
Call
sale-

7479
Space for $mall traiiBfl. All
hook-up• Cable, Also eft1ciency
rooms. atr and cabla. Meson,
W.Va. Call 304 -773 - 6861 .

3143

Ktng S•ze Bookcase Wsterbed .
comp lete. $239 Mattreu, Wa terbed and furniture Were
house 98 Columbus Rd ,
Athena , Ohto 45701 614 - 693·
7,91

.

0

6:00 Cil C1'11zy Like 1 Fox Bum

Boau and
Motors for Sale

r~·~·"~"~··~~~~~f;;;;l~~=~~~~~~ 76

ldl,.d bl CLAY I . rDLI.A!I

EVENING

Pontoon loat· 50HP. JohnsoR,
traillf'. *2750. Call 11•· 4414043 aft1r 1:00 PM .

614-38e· 9016

55

,----1~~~

197&amp; Harl4f¥' Oavld1on Sportt·
tar t2400. 114 -192·34&amp;1 .

75

S© ~&lt;i{llA- 2t £irS"

TUES., SEPT. 8 •

Instruments

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33 , North o f Pomeroy
Rental tratlerl Call 614 -992

2 ~edroom , washer, dryer. $175
mo Deposit and reference requtrld ' 40614 Kingsb'-'ry Ad
Pomeroy, Ohto 614- 992 -2448
between 8-Sp.m

Two bedroom mobile home,
HUD accepted Call 30•-676-

Used rafrig , wa~her &amp; dryflr .
Mollohan Furniture Call 614 446·7444

2 bedrQOm furnised apt, ref and
depos11. ~ew Haven, W Va ,
304 882 -3267 or 304 -773

446-1232

9727

614 446-7398,

Apartment for rent in Pt Plea·
sent Very ntce Call 614 99 2

2606

.

Kenmor e wuher. &amp;75 Speed
Queen washer, $76 Dryer
S96 Magtag wringer washer ,
S95 30 " electric range S75
36" electric r•nge, '75 . 20 "
gas range 675 . 30 " gas range,
S95 Small washer &amp; dryer
S95 each Upught freezer,
8150 Harvost gold Hth19
$125 Skaggs AppUan ces 569
Upper Rtver Rd Galhpohs, Oh.

2 bedroom apts and house tn
Middleport and Pomeroy Pay
own utillttes. Call 614 99 2 ·
2381 or 614 ·992 - 2720

1 Bedroom unfurmshed apt in
M•ddleport $150 month plus
utllltttes 614-992 -5546 dl'Jys,
614 -949 -2216 evemngs.

for Rent

MAN'S FRIEND

446-1467.

Very nice. 3 br house Nice
neighborhood. ac , gas heat.
duhwasher. s1ova. refrtg •
washer furnished . Call 614446 ·7025 .•

42 Mobile Homes

New wood 6 pc hving wood
!luttas, 6399 96 ch&amp;st af drawers, 4 drawer - t48, 5 drawer
&amp;59 95; mattress 3i bo" sprin gsfull size : 312 cotl , 8149 95 set.
twtn mattresses, $96
set.
THE WORKIN G

Ntce' 2 BR Apt Cl!lll614·446·

5858 .

Houses for rent Alto have some
unfurnished opartments for rent
Call 614- 992 - 2403. 614 -992·
3432 or 614-992 -2780

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

1024

614-379-2678

3 bedroom in Mtddleport Dep OSit required Call 614· 992·

Save alot Check ua ou1 for
carpet and furniture 9~12
Carpet. 560 6 ptecewood livtng
room suit, S399 Mollol'lan
Furniture, Upper R1ve, Rd . Call
614- 446 -7444

FurniShed Ap1 · 1 Br 5225.
Utlltttes paad 701 4th Ave
Gallipolis. Call 614 -446-4416
after B 00 PM

Gre111t locatton Upstatrs, unfurnished, 2 ' br.. uhhtun paid.
Adults only Calllllftlltr 3 30· 614·

614-446-0254

446 6199.

2 BR apts 6 closets, kttchenappl furnished, Wether-Dryer
hook-up. ww carpet newly
painted. deck. Regency , Inc.
Apts . Call 304 -675 -7738 or
675 -5104

128 State St .- 1/ 2 of double .
Adults Wtth 1 chdd acceptable
Ref and Sec dep requ1red Call

7367

33

New Hot Point 16 oU f1 refng .
fr olt free. ice maker, almond ,
$450 Standard Hot Potnt elec.
range, almond, $275, or both for
S700 Call 614 · 266· 1739 or

614 -446·0390

Ntcety furntshed 2 rooms , out·
1ide entrance. utllittes paid.
$125 per month Marri&amp;d couple
or women Share telephone. Call
614 -448 · 1414 or 446 -1764

3 br, range. refrig .. dishwasher,
garbage disposal. dpuble car
garage CJ1y school dtst S350 a
month. Dep &amp; Ref Call 614446·1134

7671 .

8pm

4 BR house on 1 acre EKcel
locatton Ref Call A -1 Real
Eatate Broker Call 304- 675·
6104 or 675-n38 .

By owner Small 2 Br home
From St At 218, takeKrlnerRd.
~~ mile-tint house on nght
S12 ,000-wtll help finance Call
614-448-2917

3 BR home 2 acres. Cantralty
located near Albany, Athans ,
Meigs Mines. House in good
con d1t1on Only 10 yrs old
Ateundar school
$37,500
Agent owned. Hockmg Vally
Realtor 614-692-5252 . Evantogs 614 698 5491, 614 -992 -

90 Days same as cash wtth
approved credit
3 Miles out
Bulavtlla Rd Open 9sm 10 6pm
Mon thru Sat Ph (i14 - 446 0322

Furntshed apartment, 6210
utilities patd 1 bdr 920 Fourth.
Gallipolis. Call 446 -441 6 after
Modern 1 BR apar1ment Call

1 340 446 3870.

Ntce starter-ret~rament or m comu property. 2 br, lull basement. large lot 508 Rtdge Ave
Rto Grande, Ohio. Shown by
appom1ment Call 614·682 ·
7424

Fumlshed apt. nex1 door to
Library One professional Adult
only Parking. Ph 446-0338

2336.

House-936 1st Ave . partly furniShed $200 per month Call
614 -446·4038 or 448 1616 or
446-1243

Wdl help finance. or land contract. 10 yr old house 3 Br,
Patriot Vtllage. Call 614-446·

Upstans unfurntshed apartment
Utttittes paid Carpeted no child·
ren or pets Call614 -446-1637

•

'

rnx:,~::,"?;

1988 VT - IOO · C Honda
Shlidow . 1100 mil ... E~tctl .
t ond Call61 .. ·251-&amp;015.

fire placa, compl~e .
cond , Call 814 -446·
for
load

-._ A

'::~:~~'

Viewing

1987 KX -500. 12400. Coli
• 1 4-388-9938.

5.00 387-7289 .

Firewood

BY 1J.I f

rtfuoed. Ct11114·441 ·M7! .

Heatile~or

Sofas and chant prtced from
$396 to 1995 Tables &amp;60 and
up to 8126. Hide-a-beds t390
to $695 Recllners S226 to
$376 . lamps $28 to t126
DmetJes S109 and up to $495
Wood table w -6 chairs $285 to
$795 . Oesk $100 up to $375 .
Hutches S400 and up Bunk
beds complete w manrenes
8296 and up to t396 . Baby beds
6110. MattrMaes ot bolt springs
lull or twm 868. f~rm $78. and
S88 Queen set!t 6226, Kmg
$350 4 drawer chest $69 Gun
cabtnets 6 gun Gu or alee1ric
ranqe $3?6 Baby mattreues
S35 8t $45. Bed frames $20,
S30 &amp; K111g frame $60 Good
select1on of bedroom suttes.
metal cabinets. headbo.rda $30
&amp;nd up to 865

~lbi-IT, M

BLI~O I~ ~ f'(f I ro~ 1\1f L.IFf
OOTlH!'iMA~
Me I CAN'T
AllD WN7 R.O~ 0/ee.

fie• • 500 below book. lu,y now
•nd M¥11. No ,.aecmabla oft•

Queen sil:e quilt tops- Maple
leaf, Shamrock , andTreeo f~ite .
Call 614 -446-0476 or 1fter

Good
1340

P'l\lf 01.1£ THAT Wli/lT

Goldwlng 1QOO. Hondo. s..,.;..

M · 12 Wtnches1e r 20 gauge. lull
chQke Warm morntng wood
stove . Call614 441- 3413

Wood dining u1am tabla with 4
chatrs end buffet, S-200 Call

J Television

BORN LOSER

ucrifee. C•ll 814 -441-1311.

HALF PRICE I Flashing arrow
signs $2991 Ughted. non-arrow
S289 1 Unlighted $2491 Frae
lottarsl See locally Call 1odayl
fa ctory. 1 1800) 423· 0163.
anyttme

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Hondo 1971 Modo! Cl ZOOT.
bcel. cond , low milee, wtll

614-367-0669.

7230

'

614-241·11401· Evon.

Quality fnewood for sale t26 a
pi.ck-up load Bidwell , Ohio Call

1984 Escort, standard trans
1976 Honda 500· T Rednose
Baagle pups Call 614 -367-

Moton:yclea

'

Tuesday, September 8, 1987

Ktw11•kl 200, 3 wh....,, ttoo
or Mit oHIII'. E•c•l. cond. Call

Plas1ic cistern state approved,
plastic septic tank,t , plastic
culverts, metal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, J8ckson, Oh. 614-286 · 5930.

6l4 -446 -8926 .
Want to baby11t in my home
Have good references Contalct

74

KIT 'N' CARl, YLI! &lt;ilby Larry Wright

Cell614 - 2~6- 6251.

your own hours Training pro'lnded. Call 1-812 -938 ·8870

12

Tuesday, September 8, 1987

'Ohio

Is LONGFELLOW

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

9-8
KFX

P· X

GC

SQWG

CXJ..V

YXV

P XG C

Q y

Y XV

u 'x

L

CXNG

XVFGLC ,

S Q W G

'N I T F

UXL
FQNCGSU.-NXYVRQMYG
Yeetenla)''s Cryptoqaote: I IJKE THE DREAMS OF
THE rtmJRE BE'ITER THAN THE HISTORY OF THE
PAST. -PATRICK HENRY
I

�Paga 12-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. September 8. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

•

Ohio Lottery

Reds lose

5-3 to

Daily Number
045
Pick 4

Dodgers
Page4

7342

•

at y
Vot. 37. No.85
Copyrighted 1987

Cloudy tonight. Low In
upper 50s. Cloudy Thul'llday. Highs near 80. Chance
Of rain near zero.

•

•

enttne

Pomeroy_
- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, Septe.mber 9, 1987

2 Sections 12 Pages

25 Cants

. A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Mason residents question riew plant's location
By JUDY MORGAN
OVP News Staff
•.
Tempers llared as hot as PyrOChem's inclnera·
tors Tuesday night ~~ the Mason Fire Station.
where over 100 concerned citizens got their first
chance to question company olflcials about their
plans to build a $140 million chemical waste
treatment p[ant In Mason County .
ln the day s since PyroChem, Jnc .. announced
last Friday that It has selected a 1,00acre site In
the Potter's Creek area north of Point Pleasant on
which to build Its newest plant. area residents
have begun to wonder atlout the effects the facilit y
w!ll have on thf&gt; people who live here and the
{\flVironment.

Chief among the concf&gt;rns expressed last night
were. whether emissions from the plant are sale.
and whether trucks hauling hazardous wastes to
th e plant for treatmf&gt;nt pose a significant risk to
.the community . But many of the People attending
last night's meeting appeared to ha ve already
made up their minds about the plant before the

Introducing the -·
first ultra lght designed
especiafly for women.

presentation of a slide show, prepared by
PyroChem In cooperation with the Envlronmen·
tal Protectlon.Agency.
·
·
When Jimmy Joe Wedge of Point Pleasant,
community liason for PyroChem. began hi s
presentation, many of the people seated and ·
standing in the Ure department bay appeared
more Interes ted In · lashing out at company
representatives than viewing the slides. "You
going to tell us the truth, or just what you want us
to know?" asked Harry Layne. "There's no
environmental people here; they won't show up
here." another man shouted after the applause to
Layne's comment died down.
"The company's doing this (meeting with the
publici to answer questions." Wedge said.
Imploring the crowd to watch the slide show and
hear PyroChem's position before beginning their
·
,
attack.
"How many stat es has this guy been run out
of 7 " a woman shouted from the back of the room.

In the ·s lide presentation, an I!:PA otnclal says
the incineration and treatment process proposed
by PyroChem Is the safest , most economical way
of disposing of hazardous waste.
·
While a majority of those attending the meeting
. were against the plant. at least one Point Pleasant
res ident there said he feels Mason County needs
the jobs PyroChem will bring.
"My mind was almost made up before (the
meeting;,'' said Don Thompson. "I'm 100percent
for it. Mason County ne~ds a plant.
"Mason County is not a rich county," Thompson
continued. "We've got to take what we can get."
The company has said it will invest $17 million
in the first phase of construction, and w1llemploy
100 people. 90 pecent of them from Mason County.
at start•up.
When all phases of the project are completed, iri
about six to seven years, the comany's investment
will total $140 m1llion, and about 370 people will be
employed at the facility , Ballard said.

Chamber-:-delays endorsement
of ·PyroChem Inc., facility . ·

'

.

•f

VIRGINIA

suMS

LIJM L(fl15 .
ORIGINAL STEAK HOUSE - The original close on Sept. 27, ending 41 years service to the
Steak House, on Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, will · public In that location.

Only6mgtar

. Several members of the Mason
County Area Chamber of Com·
merce board of directors ex·
pressed their personal support of
PyroChem, In c.'s proposal to
build a chemica l waste trea t·
ment plant north of Point Plea·
sanl at a Tuesday luncheon
meeting. The group as a whole
. tlelayed an official endorsement
of the facility. however, pending
a meeting Thursday with Pyro·
Chern President Jim Nee!.
"We have to have a little faith
in the EPA (E nvironmental
Protect io n Age ncy i, · · said
Kenny Boyles. one of the pro·
ponets. "I just can't see the
federal government letting these'
people come in and ki!t·off people
downwind.''
construction of the $140.000
million plant , announced at a
press conference last Friday
morning at the Point Pleasant
Moose Lodge. is subject to the
issuance of permits from the
West Virginia Department ' of
Na tural Resources and the Air
Pollution Co ntrol Commission.
and the facilit y must operate in
compliance with federal EPA
sta ndards.
·
Neel said Friday he hopes
construction can begin in early
1988. The com·pan y l)as optioned
a 1,000-acre site in the Potter's
Creek area on which to build the
plant.
" lf the EPA says it OK to put it
in , lt 'sOK with me," Boyles said.
"I may be missing something,
.but I think this is what we've been
waiting on. and I think this is
what we're looking for Ieco·
nOmic development -wise) in
Polilt Pleasant.''
BOyles concluded, " l say,
·Glad to have you.' Period. "

Discussion on the proposed for treatment plants even more
chemical waste treatment facil- urgent, Lewis pointed out .
ity, which could be the first
"At this point , I'm elated,''
commercial facility license'd Lewis said. · "I don't have any
under the National Resource problems with it. I think It's a
Conservation and Recovery Act good project at this point.''
·
( RCRA i , came following the
Bill Brady : plant manager at
presentation of a slide show by Stauffer Chemical Company in
Jimmy Joe Wedge, former Point Gallipolis Ferry. said he is not
Pleasant mayor who is now against the plant. but urged the
serving as community Iiason for Chamber to delay an endorsePyroChem. The slide presenta· ment until its directors have the
tlon, developed with the coopera· opportunity to hear concerns
tion of the EPA. outlines Pyro- expressed from the public and
Chem's plans and addresses , meet with PyroChem officials.
concerns that may be raised by Brady , who said earlier that a
chemical waste treatment facll·
the public.
"The majority of the public js lty nearby could save hls com·
· for this . T~ere's no doub1 in my pany thousands. of dol!ilrs. told
mind ," Wedge.said following trie the Chamber that, "Before I can
presentation. He asked for a use this firm, I have to make an
formal endorsement of Pyro· entire audit of thai facility.It has
Chern's proposal, however, be· to meet my standards."
Steve Carpenter. Chamber
cause, he said, the (llinority
president,
added his support of
against the facility will be "vocal
the
facility
, but conceded to
and visible. "
Brady's
wishes
to postpone an
"Jf community leaders don't
speak out, thaI sma II group of endorsement until the Chamber
people Is going to wave those can obtain additional
banners in front of the T.V. information.
Frank· Lee, executive director
cameras,'' Wedge said. "If
you're for it, tell somebody; if of ·the Mason County Deyeiopyou're against it , tell us,'' he ment Authority, expressed his ·
implored the Chamber directors. belief'! hat "What the facts are on
.Jim Lewis , president of the the table. the community leaderMason County Development Au· ship will welcome this plant."
Bernie Riddle said, "This is a
thority, said · he support s the
development by private industry big step for this county ... We have
of facilities such as the one to make sure we're going in the
PyroChem proposes for Mason right direction.' '
Tuesday's meeting with the
County. "J'd a whole lot rather
see this company put it in and let Chamber was the first In a series
Uncle Sam monitor it all the way of such educational meetings,
(than for the feder al government Wedge said. PyroChem officials
to build the plan !I,'' Lewis said. met Tuesday evening with a
Under new federal regulations. group of concerned Bend Area
the tandfilling of chemical residents at the Mason Volunteer
wastes will be banned, effective Fire Department and with Point
November 1988. making the need Pleasant City Council at Its
regular monthly meeting.

Rains 'threaten New England

The ightest stye

By United Press International
The remains of a t roplca I
depression that flood ed at least
1!0 roads and forced the evacuation of more than 500 people in
Virginia and Pennsylvania
sloshed north today, threatening
New England ..
AI least eight Inches of rain
soaked south central Pcnnsylva·
nia overnight. pushing the

'

NEW STEAK HOUSE - The newest steak
house In the Bob Evans chain, located off Rt. 71n

6 mg "tar:' 0.5 mg nicotine av. per cigareue by FTC method.

SURGEON GENERAl'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes lung Cancer, Heart Disease,
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pregnancy.
C Phili~ Morris Inc. 19117

I·

"Zero." sta ted Frank Ballard, PyroChem's vice
president and chief engineer.
Ballard explained that PyroChem had selected
the Mason County site from among 11111 reviewed
.in West Virginia . The original site list was
narrowed to 10. then three, before the company
made Its final selection based on a recommenda ·
lion from Gov. Arch Moore. company President
Jim Neel has said.
.
"We're in Mason County because we want to be
in Wes t VIrginia," Ballard said later In th e
meet ing. "tWe Jelti we could best serve West
Virginia, ourselves and the community by coming
into Mason County,'' he added.
Ballard pointed out that West Virginia is the
larges t genera tor of chemical waste -in the
cou ntry. "I ndu stry in West Virginia has to hav-e
someplace to Pill I its waste;, or they're going to
go out of business," Ballard said, referring to a
federal ban on landfilllng haza rdous wastes,
slated to tak e effect In November 1988.

\

Gallipolis, at the foot of the Silver Memorial
Bridge, will open on Monday, Oct. 5.

New Bob Evans Steak·House to
open Oct. 5; original facility will
close in .GallipOlis on September 27
COLUMBUS- Construction Is
nearly complete on the new Bob
Evans Restaurant at the foot of
the Silver Memorial Bridge In
Galllpolls. according to a com·
pany spokesman.
The new restaurant, which will.
facilitate 148 people, Is scheduled
to open on Mol[day, Oct. 5. There
will be a rtbbbn cutting cerem·
ony, and details have not been

completed.
The original Steak House's last
day ofoperationonEasternAve.,
Gallipolis, will be Sunday, Sept.
27, he added. Several promotions
are being planned In connection
with the closing' of the first steak
house, opened after World War II
in 1946, a!ld opening ol the new
restaurant.

The "Last Chance" at the
Steak House will be the week of
Sept. 21. Details are not complete
at this time, the spokesman said.
Construction on the approxi·
mately 5,000 square foot building
near the by-pass began last
March, and has rapidly pro·
gressed throughout the summer
mQnths.

Schuylkill River over it s banks
and flooding low-lying areas,
authorities said.
·
"I think we are going to wake
up ... with a real mess," said Bill
Johnson of the Lancas ter Countv
Emergency Managemen't
Agency.
Floodwaters from the Schuyi·
kill forced the evacuation Tues·
day of an undetermined number

of people in the small community
of Birdsboro and the town's
sewer and water pumping station
was knocked out. pollee dis·
patcher Peggy Fleagle said.
In Pottstown, Pa .. Fire Chl~f
Harold Moyer sa id the town's
main street and industrial high·
way were closed by flooding from
the river.

Youngstown teachers go out;
2 strikes continue.elsewhere
By BRANT NEWMAN
contract, but Youngstown
United Press International
schools were asking ror a pay
.Teachers In .the Youngstown freeze for the next three years,
City School District went on with the possibility of a raise if
strike today In a dispute over · the district's financial status
wages, leaving some 15,000 stu· Improved .
dents without their regular
Superintendent Emanuel Cat·
teachers.
soules said Tuesday night that
· Strikes continued today In two the school board offered 1 an
other Ohio school districts affect· amended proposal calling lor a
ing about 6,000 students.
wage freeze for the first yea( and
Negotiations broke off Tues- wage reopeners for the second
day night after a federal media- and third years.
tor was unable to forge an
However, Thomas Krlspll,
agreement between the 1,043- president of the YEA, denied that
member Youngstown Education the board made a formal con·
Association and the school tract proposal and called the
school district's announcement a
dis trlct.
The union Is seeking a raise of · media ploy to discredit the
about 5 percent in a two-year teachers union .
,.

''There was no formal proposal
given to the association;" Krispli
said. "The federal mediator will
verify it. Ttie superintendent and
the school board are In a power
struggle, and the teachers in
Youngstown are caught In the
crossfire ·between the two.' • he
said.
District spokesman Chuck
Zilla said today. however , that it
was a formal proposal, even
though all members of the two
negotiating team s were not present, and he criticized the union
leaders for failing to present It to
the membership Tuesqay night.
Students have been attending
classes since Sept. 1 and the
schools were open today.

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