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                  <text>. Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
,,

..

--Local briefs----Man hurt in accident
A!l.Athens man was Injured in an accident involving a s talled
van occurred Saturday, at 11: 40 a .m., in Columbia Township on
County Road 1, about eight miles north of Ohio 124, according to
the Gallia-Me igs Pos t of the State Highway Patrol. ·
Barry D. Hudson, 27, of Athens, was ta ken by the Meigs EMS
to O'Bieness Hospital, wher e he was treated and released for
fac ial and shoulder abrasions .
Lar ry W. Birchfield, 36, of Albany, was driving south when his
van stalled in ine road. The car behind the van, driven by
Hudson, did not ·stop in tim e to avoid hitting the van.
Huds on was .cited for assured clear distance.

EMS has 249 runs in August
The Me igs County Emer gency Medical Services made 249
runs in August , Administrator Bob Byer reports.
There were 216 emergency calls answered plus 33 transfer s to
round out the totaL Eyer report s that 66.86 percent of the
pa tients involved in the runs were taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: 18.02 to Holzer Me dica l Ce nter, and 15.12 to other
ins titutions. ·
Runs made by each uni t included Pomeroy, 65: Racine, 39:
Syracu se, 11; Rutla nd , 27: Tuppers Plains, 29; Middleport. 45,
and 33 transfers. Ve hicles were driven 9,211.6 miles during the
month, average of 36.99 miles a call. In addition, there were
several Lifeflight and Healthnet calls during the mont h.

'' '

Squad has four calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday: Syra cuse at 9:28a .m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center
for Florence Windon to Veterans Memorial Hospital :
Middleport at 4: 53p.m. to Dr. Conde's office for Arlene Justice
to HoLZer Medical Center: Rutland at 6:54p.m , to Meigs Mine
No. 2 for Mark Richmond to Holzer Medical Center: Tuppers
Plains at 7 p.m. to Route 7 for Ja son Riggs to St. Joseph's
Hos pital.

Meigs has 2 patrol graduates
Two Me igs Countians we re among the 48 trainees to gradua te
with the 116th Academy Class of the Ohio StateHighway Patrol
in Columbus on Friday .
They are Michae l Go re, son of Mr. and Mrs .. Drewy (Cq )
Gore, Route 1, Rutland , and Bradley W. Alexander, son of Mr .
a nd Mrs. Jim my Al exande r. Rutland.
The 48 newly -tra ined troopers comp lete d 20 weeks of
intensive law enforcement tra ining.
William M. Den ihan, director of the Oh io Department of
Highway Safety, greeted the aud ience of graduates , their
families and frie nds. The commencement speaker was Judge
Thomas Moyer, chief justice of the Ohio Surpeme Court and ·
Judge Homer E. Abele of the Fourth Appellate Dis trict.
adm ini stc rerd the oa th of office to the new trooper s.
Gore began
act ive dut y . Monday in Portsmouth and
Ale xa nder began work in his assignmen t at Marietta . ·

State Issue 3 certified Monday
CO LUMBUS
(UP!) - State
,.
Issue 3, a proposal to c ha nge how
judges are selected in Oh io, was
certified fo r the Nov . 3 ballot
Monday by Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown.
Election· officials determined
tha t Citizens for the Merit
Selection of Judges gathered
347,093 valjd signatures of regis·
tered voters on pet itlons to get
rhe issue placed on the ballot.
'The group needed 306,661 sig·
na tures, or 10 percent of the
number who voted in the last
gu berna torial election.
The i s ~ue is a proposed amend·
ment to the Ohio Constit ution
t ha t would abo lis h the direc t

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

election of state Supreme Court
and appella te court judge ~ a nd
create a n appointment process.
Vacancies on t he high cour t
and the state's 12 appeals courts
would be filled by the gover nor,
who wou ld choose from a llst of
three names sent to him by a
n onpart i sa n nominating
committee.
The judge selected would go on
the ballot, without an opponent,
at least two years later and would
need 55 percent of the vote to
retai n the seat.
If elected, the judge would face
retention electio ns ever y six
year s.

appli~ations

HEAP

Applications for the Home
Energy Assistance Program are
now available according to the
Gallla·Melgs Community Action
Agency. HEAP is a federally funded program designed to help
eligible Ohioans meet the rising
costs of home heating this winter.
Eligibility for the program is
determined by income and need.
To be eligible, a household must
have total household income for
the last 12 months equal to or less
than 150 percent of the federal
poverty guidelines . Income ls
based on the 12 months prior to
application. The annual Income
for a one person household
cannot exceed $8,250; and $2,850
is added for each additional
member; for example, two peo·
pte, $11,100.
Eligible applicants will receive
credits on their natural gas bill
while others will receive
vouchers which can be used to
purchase fue l from local partie!·
paling Healers,
Applications are available at
Community Action offices in
Cheshire. Gallipolis and Pome·
rdy: the Department of Human
Services, Senior Citizens Center,
Ohio Bureau of Employ me nt
Services, Soc ial Security Office,
utility company offices, bulk fu el
dealer s, area post offices and
ot her public places . Those who
participated last year should

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 9·23-87

available

•

Pomeroy...

FRONTS:

11 Warm

G

Bj RAIN
"

· .
SHOWERS
Cold · " ' Static
Occluded

ft

Continued from page 1

Map shows minimum temperatures . At least 50 % ot anv shaded area Is forecast
to recei\le precipitation indicated
UPI

should not be issued a llcense for
a Salisbury Township establlsh·
ment 4He noted that Pomeroy's
a llotment of llquor licenses have
been Issued, and that other
Pomeroy parties are on a license
waiting llst.

WEATHER MAP - Showers and thunderstorms will be
scattered from the lower Great Lakes region through the upper
Ohio Valley a nd the middle .\tlantlc Coast states, over the Florida
peninsula, and from the so uthwestern third of Texas throug" the
mountains of Southern California. Ralnshowcrs. will conti nue over
northern New England, the upper Great Lakes and the lower Ohio
Valley, Most ofthe nation will have high temperatures in thr 70s or
80s.

In other matters, Councilwoman Betty Baronick reported she
has heard complaints of excessive t lcketing for speeding wit hin
certain areas of the village, while
other areas where speeding al so
takes place are neglected by
me mbers of the police. Mayor.
Seyler said he would check in to
the matter .

Conlinued fr om page
Pymatun ";ng···--~----

Issac Wallis
Isaac Frank Wal lis, 86, 409
Henderson St ., Henderson, died
Mo nday in t&gt;leasan l Val ley Hos·
pita l after a long Illness.
Born May 29 , 1901 , a t Apple
Grove, he was th e son of the late
J .W. Wa llis and El vira Susa n
Conrad Wa llis .
He was a Wes t Virginia funera l
direc tor, with a business at
Seven-Mil e Ridge Apple Grove
for several year s, was retired

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Elli' &amp; Loewi
Firm
Price
Am Elec t ric Power .... .. ....... 26%
AT &amp;T . . ... .. .. . .. .. . .. .. .. ........ .. 32 :Y,.
As hland Oil .... .... .. .... .... .... ..... 66
Bob Evans F a r ms ... .. .. .. ... ... .. 19
Charmin g Shoppes ........ .... .. 2:3%
Feder al Mogu 1... .... .. ... .. .. .. ..... 46
Goodyea r T&amp;R ... : .. ............. 67 ¥.,
Heck' s Inc: ..... ..... .... ,...... .. .. ... .4
Lands· End .... .. .. ... ... ... .. ..... .25%
Limited In c... .. .. .. .. .... ... .. .... 35 \6
· Mu II imed Ia Jnc . ................. . 69'h
Rax Rest a ura n Is ... ...... .. .. .. .. .4 )',
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .. .. ...... .... 10Y.
Shoney 's Inc ... .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ...... ... 29
Wend y's !ni L ...... ............ .. ... 9%
Worthington .1nd .... .... .. .. ...... 23\4

from the International Nickel
Pla nt a t Huntington with 21 years
service a nd worked for the West
Virg inia Department of High·
ways in ,Mason Count y.
Surviving are a special friend ,
Margaret Blaine, Gallipolis
Ferry; four sisters , Mrs. Frances Henry, Apple Grove, Mrs.
Be lva P la nts, Trov. Ohio, Mrs .
Alma Stewart, ·Chesapeake,
Ohio, a nd Mrs. Rilla Edmonds ,
West Milton, Ohio; two brolhers,
William Earl Wallis, Gallipolis,
a nd Orla nd o W&lt;\)lis. Henderson:
a nd several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by
two brothers, Freeman and
Millard.
Fune ral services will be at 1: 30
p.m . Thursday at the Wilcoxen
Fu neral Home wit h the. Rev .
Eddie Kinnard officiating. Bur·
ial will follow in Beale Chapel
Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Fr ie nds may call a t the fu ne ra l
home from 5 to 9 p.m .
Wednesday.

lEW LE.I
FRESH

.

mem bers of the Lakela nd Fa c ult y Associa tion. It also rai ses
the pa y for pa rt · time fac ult y
members and restructures a n
ea rly reli r e mcnt In centive plan .
In Youn gs tow n, a s pokes ma n
for the teac hers uni on sa id fou r
hours of d iscussions Sunday
produced some movement on
minor poi nt s, but he sai d the
ad min istra tion showed no sig ns
of com pro m is ing on the key Iss ue
of teac he r salar ies.

WASHINGTON (UP)) ~Sup·
porters of Supreme Court nom!·
nee Robert Bork are sta nding
firm In their efforts to portray
him as a mainstream jurist, with
one key ally saying she belleves
he would uphold a woman's right
to abortion .
"'I would predict from his
statements that he would respect
the precedent" of the landmark
1973 ,Roe vs. Wade abortion
decision, declared attorney
Carla Hills in the second day or
outside testimony In Bark's con·
flrmalion process .
Hills told the Senate Judiciary
Committee she had not talked to
Bork about how he would vote as
a Supreme Court justice on a
future abortion case but was
"'speculating" based on his live
days of testimony to the commit ·
tee last week.
·
The committee, today entering
•

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Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - E lmer
Hysell , Rutland.
Monda y Discharges - Laura
Luellen, Ivo: y Bush, Dreama
Owens, Donald Dorst.

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A recent decision handed down
by the Fourth District Court of
Appeals In the case brought by
Citizens Organized Against
Longwalllng (COAL\ against the
Division of Reclamation, Ohio
Depar tment of Natural Resources, is viewed as a victory by
COAL.
COAL had s ued the Depart ·
ment of Nat ural Resources Rec·
lamation Board ol Review , saying that the Southern Oh{o Coal
Company's coa l mining permit
application was inadequate In
several areas, noktably Its provl·
slon for water prot.ectlon and
replacement.
COAL alleged that the longwal·
ling me thod of mining damaged
and estroyed area water rersour·

OUR REG.
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.

.

August:s 0.5 percent CPI increase.
. Gasoline cost 3.1 percent more and fuel oil rose
1.4 per~ent In price. In the tran.sportatlon
category, air fares leaped 1.5 percent.
August's Increase was the biggest since prices
shot up o. 7 percent In January. Then as now,
energy was the reason. Food and beverages cost
only 0.1 percent more in August, after seasonal
adjustment, than they did in July, the Labor
Department said.
Apparel and upkeepr costs were unchanged.
Entertainment qJSt 0.1 percent more and other

g6ods and services, including .educatio11al ex~
penses a nd tobacco products, rose 0. 7 percent.
Gasoline's ~.1 percent Increase was partly
offset by a ~-4 percent drop In auto finance
charges. Used cars co~t just 0.3 percent more
after hav ing·gone up a percentage point or mor,e
every month since February.
August's 0.1 percent drop in food and beverage
prices followed a 0.2 percent decline in July. Fruit
and vegetables cost 2.3 percent less while meats,
poultry, fish, eggs and dairy products cost 0.4
percent more.

.

Prices at restaurants and fast food stores grew
by o.:l percent. Medical care cosis grew only 0.4
percent in August, marking the first time since
March the category did not rise more than the
inflation rate as a whole. Drugs and med!CIII
supplies led the way with a 0.5 percent increase.
The 0.6 percent rise in housing was triple July's
incre ase and came mainly because natu ral gas
cost 2.6 percent more and fuel oil rose 2 percent .
Renter's costs grew 0.3 percent while the tab for
maintenance and repair declined 0.3 percent.

Its ninth day of hearings,' also
heard Tuesday from writer Wll·
llam Styron and artist Robert
Rauschenberg , who warned
Bork could pose a threat to First
Amendment protections for liter·
a ture and art.
Hills, secretary of Housing and
Ur ban Development under Pres!·
dent Ford and a lormer Justice
Department colleague of Bork,
has played a prominent role in
the confirmation fight for· the
conserva tive fed era l appea ls
judge.'
She assembled a group of legal
scholars to write essays rebut·
ling oppone nt s who argue Bork Is
a far· right Ideologue ready to
overturn major high court rul·
ings on civil rights, women's
right s a nd free speech : The
essays have been touted by the
White House as evidence of
Bork's moderate views, and four

of the scholars Hills recruited
joined her in testifying Tuesday.
In his own testimony, Bork,
who has criticized the Roe vs.
Wade decision in past writings,
would not discuss how he might
vote on a future abortion case,
but he did say, Hills noted, that
there are precede nts not easlly
set aside.
"
"! would not expect that the
first case Judge Bork would set
out to fix would be 'Roe vs.
Wade,"' Hllls said .
Her prediction drew skeptl·
cfsm from Sen. Howard Metzen·
baum, D·Ohlo, who said the
hearings have been marked by
"'a-deliberate effort on.the part of
the White House and Judge
Bork" to portray him as more
moderate on Individual rights
a nd c ivil liberties Issues than ls
shown by his writings and
Speeches of 25 years.

'

Co mmunications Inc,, of Brook
Park Is partly owned by devel·
oper Carl Milstein whose son·ln·
law , Jeffrey Friedman, contrfbuted $50,000 to the campaign of
Gov , Richard Celeste during the
t lme the con tra ct s were
awarded, records s how.
The newspaper also reported
that the contracts were steered
by an OBES paid co nsultant who·
was also a lobbyist for Te le·
Communications.
"Neither the governor's office
nor I have directed that any
vendors be shown preference in
awarding s tate contracts at
OBES," Roberta Steinbacher,

administrator of OBES, said in a,
prepared statement Monday .
"This allegation is absolutely
of the century. So lar, a buDding !ouadatlon of
HARD AT WORK - For the put two weeks,
false."
hewn stone baA been uncovered. The foundation
Pomeroy Vlllace worker Robert Curry, assisted
Former OBES managers said
wlll probably be left as Is, and the site beautified
by Joey Reltmlre, wearing hal, has been dlggfnc
the prices Tete-Communications
with benches and Dowers. Curry wasn't sure how
out a secllon of the riverbank across from Francis
charged for the phones were two
much longer It would take to complete the pr&lt;!ject.
Florist. According to old rallroad maps, a shed of
to three times higher than retail.
some
sort
was
located
at
this
site
around
the
tum
Records show Steinbacher and
her top deputies ignored propos·
als from two other companies ,
that were three to six times lower
than OBES paid Milstein's com ..
pany, and ignored warnings !tom
By RICH EXNER
board approval, Will be retroac· Monday and Tuesday, the first
senior OBES managers that TCI
two days of the strike.
'
United Press International
Uve to Sept , 1.
systems were outrageously .
Teacher
pay
would
be
raised
On
the
Pyma
tuning
Valley
Teachers In Ashtabula Coun·
expensive.
picket lines Tuesday, elementy's Pymatuning Valley school 5.5 percent across the board,
Continued on page 7
tary
school teacher John Shae(er
system ended their walkout increasing base salary from
today, but more than 1,000 $15,100 to $15,930, she said.
was hit by a car dr iving through
instructors In another northeast·
During the second semester of picketing teachers, the unnion
ern Ohio district re mained on the current academic year, pay said. Shaefer was trea ted · at
strike and at leas t two more would be ra!S&lt;d an additional Warren General Emergency
Attorney for COAL, Jonathan
ces in viola tion of the 1977
walkouts are threatend across $200, said Cha\ ez, and negotla· Medical Ce nter in Andover for
Sowash,
characterized the vic·
Surface Mining, Reclama'tion
the state.
tions would te reopened on bumps, cuts and scrapes, . a
Pymatuning Valley teachers salary and fringe benefits during hospital official said.
a nd Control Act. COAL says that tory as "David prevailing over
The Ashtabula County She·
this Is a particular problem Goliath". He noted that the Court
returned to the classroom after the second year of the contract.
because the legislation predated placed the burden of proof and
ratifying a tentative two-year
The agreement also calls for a riff's Department said no one
knowledge of the longwalllng responsibility squarely on the
"longevity step" that would give was cited and the incident was
contract negotiated in a court·
assure
affected
coal
operators
to
ordered bargaining session with extra pay to teachers with 24 under Investigation .
methods,a nd the Impact that
their
access
to
landowners
that
In You~gstown, meanwhile,
s ubsidence would have on the
their school board' s negotiating · years experience, starting next
there have been no classes since
water supplies and surface land. water would be ma intained.
year , she said.
team Tuesday night.
'
Betty Wells, COAL organizer,
The members of COAL look
The proposed contract was
The board originally offered a Sept. 10, one day after the strike
applauded
the Court's decision.
upOn the decision of the Court of
approved by all78of thedistrict's
three-year contract ca lling for a by 1,043 teachers bega n iii the
15,()()(J.student school district.
Appeals as a victory because the commenting:
striking teachers but has yet to 5.5 percent pay hike.
"They recognized that the cost
Negotiations are to resume
Court upheld the absolute res~n·
be signed by the board.
Substitutes had been replacing
slbllity of the coal operator to ol water replacement is a part of
Ohio Educ11Uon Association the strikers, but only about 200 of Friday between Lima's public
the cost of doing business.
provide an adequate water renegotiator Peggy Chavez said the system's 1.400 students re· school system and the union
placement immediately and Further, the Court pointed out
the agreement, pending school portedly showed up for classes
Continued on page 7
that the Reclamation Board of
without cost to landowners.
A copy of the complete opinion Review is required to do a
ca n be obtained by writing to · balancing or economic and envfr."
COAL. P.O. Box 107, Wllkesvllle, onmental interests. That 's what
we were asking for."
pressure at the sound of the s hots told United Press International
MANAMA , Bahrain ' tUPI)
Ohio 45695.
U.S. forces caught the Iranians ·
and
came down onto the water.
U.S. forces on heightened aleri in
laying mines, but that th e quality
"It
was
one
way
for
them
to
the Persian Gulf fired warning
were
no
bad
of
photographic evidence of Ihe
show
that
there
shots across the bow of a
Intentions," one source said, activity was poor,
speeding Iranian hovercraft a
"Possibly they were looking for
" This was the first time that·we
day after U.S. helicopter gun·
caught them red-hande d,"' sow·
ships attacked an Iranian vessel survivors . Nothing happened ."
caught "red-handed" planting
Iranian President All Khame- lng mines, a Pentagon official
nei, speaking before the U.N. said.
mines .
Crowe said naval forces were
Three Iranian crewmen were General Assembly in New York
kllled and 26 captured in the Tuesday, called the u:s. account engaged in "'prude nt" precaustrike Monday on the vessel Iran of Monday's attack a "pack of tions that he s uggested were
Ajr , which was spotted planting lies" and threatened retaliation. aimed at thwarting any Iranian
" ! unambiguously announce reprisals for the gunship attack.
mines in international waters off
U.S. officia ls sa id thec apturejl
that Washington wlll receive the
the coast of Bahrain.
Iran has denied the vessel was appropriate response to Its mi· Iranian seamen would be re·
schfevious act," warned turned to Iran through the Re d
armed and vowed to retaliate,
Crescent, the Is lamic versipn of
The U.S. frigate Jarrett, tow· Khamenel.
He also rejected President the Red Cross. No decision had
lng the disabled Iran Ajr, fired
warning shots ove r the bow of the Reagan 's call for an immediate been made on the disposition of
Iranian hovercraft as It ap· cease-fire In the gulf and blamed ' the ship.
The Iran Ajr will be a nchored
proached at a high rate ol speed the United States, which he
at 10:30 a .m. EDT Tuesday, called "the arch· Satan," for in international waters off Bah·
rain until officials determine Its
Ignoring a request to stop, ihe tensions in the region .
Pentagon said. "The hovercraft
Pentagon sources said naV'al tate, Pentagon o(flclals said.
Aboard the LaSalle, 11 capthen turned away and stopped," forces in the gulf were put on
alert In anticipation of attempted tured Iranians were guarded by
officials said.
,
The Jarrett fired the warning Iranian terrorist attacks against eight U.S. sailors armed with
when the hovercraft - which U.S. ships in reprisal for the M·14s and 12-gauge shotguns in
rides over the water on a cushion . strike by two AH·6 commando an upper vehicle storage room .;
hellcopters against ' the Iranian
The remaining 15 prisoners
· of air at speeds up to 40 mph ship.
were
being held aboard the
was
a
nautical
mile
away
from
are llllpeded b, a boardiDI pal1y from lbe USS
the
frigate,
the
Pentagon
said.
Crowe,
chair·
amphibious
assault ship tJS~
Adm.
William
Lualle: Tbe' USS .Jarrett 18 In the
The craft tu•ned off the air man of
Joint Chiefs ol Staff, Guadal~tnal.
~
b.cllcround. (VPI)
.. .

Pymatuning· teachers return

Group claims victory after decision

WHITE•ASSf. COlORS

12
IGETZE CUIIEL

2 Sections 14 Pegn
A

OBES official calls.- for
audit
COLUMBUS.. Ohio tUPII The head of the Ohio Bureau of
Em ployme nt Services wants a n
audit of her af(ency"s purchasing
practices and has denied published reports ol possible wrong
d o I n g or mismanagement.
In a series of stories this week,
The Cleveland Plain Dealer
reported tha t the unemployment
bureau awarded $5.2 million
worth of no-bid co ntracts be·
tween . 1985 and 1987 to a
Cl evel~ nd - area telephone equip·
inent dealer to put new phone
systems In 54 unemployment
offices.
The
firm , Tele ·

DISHWASHIIG
LIQUID

•

Bork supporters stand firtn

BIG 32 DUNCE

DASH
LIUIIIY'DETEIIEIT

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 23. 1987

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Sharp price rises for
fuel a nd air fares sent the Inflation rate up 0.5
percent In August. the biggest increase In seven
months, the Labor Department said today.
The jump in the Consumer Price Index was
about twice as high as many analysts expected
and works out to an annual rate of 5.8 percent.
Through the first eight months of this year, the
United States was on track to end 1987 with a 5.1
percent increase In prices.
The government said higher energy a nd shelter
costs caused a_l)out two--thirds of the rise In

in the

147·00

enti ne

Clear tonfcbt. Low in tb
50s. Tllursclay, variable cloud
lness. Chance of
rain
percent.

August inflation rate biggest in seven months.

1

sa id the two sides tent a lively
a greed Saturday on a 5 ~ perce nt
ra ise in the firs t year of a new
pact. Howeve r, she said the
district would not accept the
te acher s' proposals on .longcv lt y
pa y and creation or a new s tep 9n
the sa lary schedule.
Pyma tunlng Va ll ey schoo ls
were open Mond ay, but Chavez
es timated that only 200 of the
di strict's 1.400 s tud ents were in
attendance.
A school dist r ict empl oyee sai d
only that ther e was a s ufficient
number of subs titute teachers to
supervise the stud ents whO ap·
peared for c lass&lt;&gt;s . ,
At Lakeland Communit y Col·
lege. facult y member s a nd ad·
minlstra tors reac hed a co ntract
agree me nt atJ :.&gt;Oa .m . Mo nday,
a llowin g classes for th E' instltll·
lion's 9,000 st ud e nt s to bc!(in as
sc heduled.
,.
The tw o-year pact wi ll provide
annual pa y ra ises of 6\6 percent
and 4\6 perce nt lor the 110

at y

Vot.37. No.9&amp;
Copyrightlld 1987

Area deaths

\

Daily Number
944
Pick 4
3613

PageS

~SNOW

Baronick also brought up complaint s about liming of the tra ffi c
light a t the Pomeroy.Mason
bridge. Sey le r said he has bet'n
try ing to reach the r ight poplc at
ODOT to see if the timing could
be altered. He said he hopes the
reopening of th e one-way road
under the bridge will help elimi·
nate traffic tie ups.
Council also discussed outi ln·
1ng in yellow t he handicap ramp s
at . the cor ners of th e vill a ge's
sid e walks to he lp oid er people
weari ng bifocals adjust to the
inclines, a nd approved a request
from Pomeroy Chamber or Com me rce to schedule the community Halloween party on Thurs·
day , Oct. 29, from 6 to 7 p.m.

Ohio Lottery

Hoople's
forecast

receive their application in tt(e
mail. Application deadline is
Jan. 31. 1988.
CAA staff Is available to assist
individuals needing help with
their applications at the central
office In Cheshire, the Gallia
County outreach office at 220
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, and the
Meigs County outreach office in
the Pomeroy courthouse.
Further Information is availa·
ble by calling Community Action
at 367·7341 or 446-0611 In Gallla
County; 992· 6629 or 992-5605 in
Meigs County; the senior citizens
centers at 992·2161 or 446-7000; or
the State HEAP hotllne at
1-ffi0-282-®10.

Weather ·
South Central Ohio
Today, considerable c loudiness with a chance of showe rs or
thunderstorm s. · High 65 to 70,
Winds becoming northw es t
around 10 mph. Chance of rain 40
percent.
Tonight , becoming clear. Low
near 50. Winds mostly northwest
less than 10 mph . Chance of rai n
20 percent.
Wednesday, sunny. High close
to 70.
Ext•nded Foreca.•t
Thursday thr()ugh Sat urday
Chance of showers Thu r sday
and Friday 'with fair wea ther
Sa turday . . Highs throughout the
period will range from the upper
60s to mid 70s with a low in the
high 40s or lower 50s.

Tuesday. September 22. 1987

"

U.S. forces on alert after incident

'll.f

�·"

Ill Court Str&lt;'t&gt;t
PomPrO)'. Ohio

~

OEVOTED TO THE IXTERE~TS OF THE ~IEJGS.)USOS ARE,\

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Puhll~h&lt;'r/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
GPneral l\1ana~:er

.4 M F. ~RER ' ' ' Tht· l ·n tk f l P t f'!-- .. Im• •rn :ll iu n:tl. In bnrl D:lih Pn ·....
A .. ~nd;llir. n and ! h4~ Am('! ic·:•n ;\:~&gt;\\" !' p;t pC&gt;! Publi!·hr r-.. A'-sOd al,io n.
~t&lt; li,• rrtf · Tht' \ ~hnulcl h1 I ""~ th:t n ~1(1 11 out-.
lu, l!. A II h·l h ·r .. :n P .. u hi ' " 1 ''ll 'f i H ~ nt.' :•rHI m u-.r hr· .. ,~ Mt1'\ 1\ !! h n:• m•• :lfldl'f' ... ~ ,t nfl
ll 'l t •Jlh' '"" numhf 1. :\·1, ll n '- l~ nt 'fl ' ""' ,... " ill h• puhllo. tlf'&lt;l l.l•ll f·f'" "hnul d tH · _i n
('loHCII:t&lt;.. lf :Hhl n·""lnC .~ .. u·, ... _ "' '' P• ·• ~ " n : • lili l '"-

LFITF:RS OF O PJ:'\ 10:'\

.11 1

~Bork Battle:
.

,•

•

' "Letter
to the editor
.
'

•

Women thank support~rs

To all of Tony Riffle's friends :
The Racine United Methodist ·
Women would like firstly to apol·
oglze to all the people who came
to our benerit dinner and were
turn&lt;'d away. We had no idea
there would be so many In at ten ·
dance.
Secondly we want to tharik all
the people who gavp so gen·
erous ly to the donation bowl.

Another thank you goes to th&lt;'
people of the church and com·
munity who gave so generously
of food donations a nd worked so
hard . This includes the owners of
Kountry Kitchen who closed
their doors so th&lt;'re would be no
comp&lt;'tition. Last, but not le-ast,
thanks to Bob Hoeflich for supporting us In his daily column.
Marlene Fisher, President

Today in· history
By United Press lnl&lt;'rnatlonal
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 23, the 266th day of 1987 with 99to follow.
Today is the first day of fall. (Autumnal equinox at 9:45a.m. EDT I
, Rosh Has hanah, the two-day celebration of th&lt;' Jewish New Year,
···!Jeglns at sundown tonight. ·
The moon is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Th e evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
· Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra . They include
'Roman Emperor Augustus in 63 B.C.; educator William McGuffey,
-author of the McGuffey ,"Eclectic Readers" for school children. In
' 1800; feminist and presidential candidate Victoria Woodhull ln 1838;
pioneering surgeon William Halsted. who developed original
operations for hernia and breast cancer, ln 1852; .poet and novelist
· -~dgar Lee Masters in 1869; journalist Walter Lippman In 1889; actors
:- Walter Pidgeon in 1897 and Mickey Rooney In 1920 (age 67); jazz
: -saxophonist John Coltranp in 1926; slnger·planlst Ray Charles In 1930
··(age 57), and rock s tar Bruce Springsteen In 1949 (age 38) .

On this date In history:
· In 1779, the USS Bonhomme Richard. commanded by American
naval hero John Paul Jones, def&lt;'ated the British frigate Serapls In a
battle off the coast of Scotland.
· In 1950, Congress adopted the U.S. Internal Security Act, providing
l!'r. registration o! communists. The Supreme Court lat&lt;'r ruled the
law unconslltutional.
In 1973, Juan Peron was again elected president of Argentina alter
18 years of exile; his second wl!e, Isabel. became vice president and
succeeded her husband as president when he died 10 months later.
In 1985, nine days of street fighting In Tripoli, Lebanon, had left 183
people dead.
A thought for the day: Waller Lippmann wrote, "The fh\al test of a
leader Is that he leaves behind him In other men tile conviction and the
wlU to carry on."

. .,, ....

. ., .

.

\

......

:·

.- - -

•

I V

'

•

The Daily Sentinel-

Cards hike lead; Giants lose
third straight; lteds triumph

Campaign promise kept ___A_n_de_rs_Qn_an_d_S-=-p_ea-:-r
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan has kept one campaign
promise that has golll' largely
unh&lt;'ralded. He correctly sus·
peeled that the federal budget
was loaded down with wast&lt;', and
he plt&gt;dged to S&lt;'ek out and
elimat&lt;' mtssPllJlding.
•
He created a task force . of
business leaders and asked th&lt;'m
to apply th&lt;'lr managerial know·
how and common sense to the
problem. Its official title was the
President's Private Sector Sur·
vey on Cost Control. But such a
moniker couldn't last. and II
quickly became known as the
Grace Commission - after the
drive and determination of Its
chairman, J. Peter Grac&lt;'.
With a powerful push from the
pr&lt;'sldent, the comnilsslon has
made extraordinary progress at.
cutting government waster against the stiff opposition of th&lt;'
special Interests. For the fiscal

years 1986 and 1987. this effort
bas savt&gt;d close to $70 bllllon.
This amazing achievement has .
been document('(! out of govern·
ment ledg&lt;'rs by lh&lt;' Offlc&lt;' of
Management an&lt;! Budget.
Thus the ft&gt;deral growth rate
has be&lt;'n cut signlilcantly with·
out damaging or depriving a
single federal program; the fai
has mer&lt;'IY be\'n sl)ced off. The
blgg&lt;'st saving! bas come !rom
modifying government procedun•s. In th&lt;' words of the
president. th&lt;' Grace Commls·
sian "set down a long-term
strat&lt;'gy for streamlining our
government." which has become
"the basis for on-going reforms."
M&lt;'anwhlle, Congress Is also
turning to the · Grace Commls·
slon:s proposals for slashing
government expenditures. One
out of &lt;'Vety three m&lt;'mbers has
already joined Grace Ca uscuses,
which have pledged to cut· th&lt;'

By M\NOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor

: WASHINGTON (UP I) - Franklin D. Roosevelt occupied the White
;: House for mxe than 12 years, longer than any president, and
,• appointed eight members of the Supremp Court. All but onP of them
; : remained on th!' bench long after FOR died.
·; .·FOR's high court appointees served an average of more than 18
.; y&lt;'ars, and two of them, Hugo Black and William Douglas, lasted
• more than 30 years.
' : Nowadays, presidents can' t servp longer than eight years, but most
. : • SupremP Court justices now rPm a in on the job for decades.
·: And that is why liberals are pulling out all stops trying to keep
: conservative Robert Bark of! the Supreme Court.
.
They know Ronald Reagan will be gone at the end ofl988 and be live
;: that with enough votes in Congress and a friendly president, they can
-: undo the conservative "revolution" Reagan brought to Washington in
•• 1981.
-: But they feel if Bark gets the lifetimp appointment that goes wlth
.; federal judgeships, Reagan will have lef1 an ideological roadblock
;. that probably will stand in their way well into the 21st century.
•• Bork is 60 years old. but·there Is no reason io believe he can't sprve
:; 15 or 20 years on the high court. There are spveral justices now who
; 1 are 75 or older, and with medicine's constant life.Jength&lt;'ning
;: advances, it is entire ly posSible that Bark would serve through three
· or four two term presidencies.
:
With only two &lt;'Xceptions, all the justices appointed by Presidents
Kennedy , Johnson, Nixon and Ford still arp on the bench - an
average tenure Qf more than 20 years. Justice William Brennan has
passed the 30-year mark and Justic&lt;'s Byron White and Thurgood
Marshall have each served more than 20 years. Arthur Goldberg and
' Abe Farias, th&lt;' only two short timers appointed sincP1961, resigned.
Resignations also created all three high court vacancies during the
RP;lgan presidPncy. Potter Stewart. Warren Burger and Lewis
Powell all served more than 15 years before leaving the court.
President Reagan· s first two appointees, Sandra Day O'Connor and
Antonio Scalia , .both are younger than Bork and also figure to be on
the bench past the end of the century. Chief Justice William
Rehnqulst is 61, which meifns there probably will be ' a strong
conservative bloc on the- court lor many years If Bork Is confirmed.
Even without further erosion of the court's aging liberal bloc,
Rehnquist, O'Connor, Scalia and Bork would need only one more vote
-While is often cited as a probable ally- to accelerate what liberals
see as an alarming and accelerating movem&lt;'nt toward the right In
Supreme Court decisions.
:';Reagan has called the opposition to Bork " political. " If he Is using
tre word in the sense of a Republican-Democratic conflict , the
president probably is off the mark, bu I if he means it in the ideological
sense- conservative vs. liberal- he Is on the target.

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

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
, Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednndey, September 23, 1987·

irThe. ideological stakes
••
.•

.~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

;,

YaYtfi ~. 'fJIJ r~w
ANOT~R QYEl oF T'HQSE? .
MCEW~s...

~(I'LL ~ FAC@Ow!THAN

ALiPWANC'@ ~ALTY, ~.

By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writer
For St. Louis Cardinals ace
reliever Todd Worrell, the out·
fleld felt a little dlffereqt In th&lt;'
game than lq batting practice,
and the mound looked a little
better after a trip to the ou.tfteld.
Worrell yielded a leadoff home
run to Mike Schmidt In the ninth
lnnlngTuesday night, was sent to
right field for one batter and
returned to secure th&lt;' !lnal two
outs oftheSt. Louis Cardinals' 3-2
triumph over· the Philadelphia
Phllltes.
"I'm a little uncomfortable out
· there," Worrell said ofhls stlntln
the outfield. "It's different from
shagging flys In batting practice
because there's a lot of ground to
cover. But I shag every day and I
take It sericiusly."
The NL East·leadjng Card!·
nals, who have won four straight,
movt&gt;d 3 1-2 games In front of the
New York Mets, who lost to
Chicago. )';lontreal remained
four garhes back with a victory
over Pittsburgh.

renewed lnter&lt;'st to streamlining
waste out of the federal budg&lt;'l .
federal
operations and to assume
The antl ·waste drive Is led In the
that
you,
the American. people,
Senate by Dennis DeConclnl,
are
getting
all the government
0-Arlz ., and Gordon Humphrey ,
you are paying for. "
R·N .H., ·and In the House by
The Taxpayers Co'mmission .Is
Buddy Raemer, 0 -La., and Beau
recruiting commissioners from
Boulter, R·Texas.
th&lt;' grass roots. It will S&lt;'ek a
Because of the Grace Commls ·
political balance of Democrats
sian's Stunning success, It has
and
Republicans, liberals and
been enlarged and revitalized as
conservatiV&lt;'S,
who will seek riew
the United States Taxpayers
ways
to
fight
waste, Improve
Comml~slon. Th&lt;' president met
efficiency
and
cut
spending. It
on July 7 with J . Peter Grace.
to
lh&lt;'
taxpayers
will
report
back
who set up th&lt;' new commission,
on
a
regular
basis
on the
which will s&lt;'rve as the laxpay·
ml
ssp&lt;'n
dlng
ol
gov&lt;'rnm&lt;'nt
&lt;'rs' &lt;'yes and ears ln Washington.
funds .
It will keep a perman&lt;'nt wat ch
on how the taxpayers' money Is
How to' pay for yesterday 's
spent. As Reagan later explained
&lt;'xpendltures with tomorrow' s
on his weekly radio broadcast :
revenues, mea nwhll&lt;', Is a trou ·
"J. Peter Grace ;1nd a group of bllng problem . For the spending
dedicated business leaders are . rate Is still too hi!lh and growing
now forming the U.S, Taxpayers
too fast. Pe-opl&lt;' cannot remain
Commission to keep the focus on
free and productlv&lt;' II a con·
. reducing costs rather than rats· s tantly Increasing s hare of their
ing taxes. I expect they will bring .earnings Is taken by government
and spent on Its purposes rath&lt;'r
than theirs.
Footnote: Jack Anderson has
been co-chairman with J . PetE'
Grace .of the national effort to
r&lt;'duce waste In government.
They will now co·e halr the new
Taxpayers Commission.
DANGEROUS CARGO -Bills
are expected In Congress this fall
to t'equlre proper mon!lorlng of
the ha lf·mllllon loads of hazard·
ous substances thai ar&lt;' trans·
ported through more than 39.000
(argely uns uspecting communi·
ties each day .
·
The existing system of alerting
loca l authorities Ito shipments of
nuclear wastes. toxic chemicals
and explosives Is prlmltlvt&gt; at
best. The problem lscompllcairo
by lh&lt;' Involvement of mobsters
In soml' waste·dlsposal com pan·
lcs. which subert s the makes hill
warning sys tem by l als e
rPportlng .
Federal law ha s long required
those who generate the deadly
s ubsta nces to-provide authorities
with manifests givi ng details on
the dangprous s hipment s .

I

New

~e

has don&lt;' to the fed&lt;'ral govern m ent's &lt;'nlire veh!CI&lt;' safety
program during the Reagan
administration.
When Reagan moved Into the
Whitt' House. the auto lndustrv
was disturbed about. regulations
mandating Improved emission
controls, fuel economy and rna·
tor vehicle saft&lt;'y . In Aprlll981less than thr&lt;'&lt;' months after ·
Reagan 's inauguration - Vic&lt;'
President George Bush an ·
nounced that a " regulatory r&lt;'·
form" task force he h&lt;'aded had
ldE-ntllled 34 drall r&lt;'gulatlons
dealing with motor vehicles that
would be rescinded or revised .
In the ensuing yea rs , NHTSA
has voluntarily promulgated
only one significant new safpty
requirement- a rule mandating
that new cars be equipped with a
high. rear-&lt;'nd, center-mounted
brakP light.
At the same time. NHTSA has
terminated proceedings to craft
rules that would have Increased
braking requlremPnts for heavy
trucks, enhanced side-Impact
P!OI&lt;'ctlon for passenger cars

...,
r··-------. arid , requi"~ tamper-resista nt
odo"l_eters.
When Reaga n entf'red th&lt;'
Whit&lt;' House, a· NHTSA rule
rE"qulred that autora~~kers equip
new cars with btampers th a t
would prevPnt damage rrxcrpt
for minor Mntsllt the autos were
traveling 5 mph or less prior to a
crash.
But that rule has bet&gt;n Wl'a ·
k&lt;'ned to allow flimsier bum)X'rs
that would protcct cars from
damage at only 2 ~ mph . That
means the automakers can equip
their cars with cheaper bumpers
- and cot.sumprs mu st p~y
higher repair bills If they ' re
Involved In an accident.
During the Reagl;ln ailminls·
tratlon , NHTSA has not one&lt;'
exercised Its pow&lt;'r to declare a
car defective and ordPr a manu facturer's recall to ensure its
safett y.
Under froerallaw , NHTSAcan
requlrP a manufacturer to recall
a v&lt;'hlcle .,and repair it at no cost
to th&lt;' bwncr at any time during
the first eight years of its life .
But defect Investigations havl'

could tell from her haranggue,
these Aquarlans are supposed to
scar&lt;' up some ghosts of' dead
Mayans and lead a panty raid on
Su nday Schools all over the
na:ion.
Then there were the New Agers
thems&lt;'lves, offering themselves
as "channels" for psychic messages from the ancients. Now.
don't get mp wrong. If on&lt;' of
th&lt;'m eomes up with a message
that says som&lt;'lhlng of relevance
tom&lt;' personally, I'll b&lt;'lhe first
one to &lt;'at crow. Perhaps this
bespeaks nothing more than
Inferior lntelllg&lt;'n~e on my part,
but I just can't get much meal out
of obscure prophecies and refer·
&lt;'nces to even more obscure
prophecies mad&lt;' thousands of
years ago
As I said, I'm waiting to take a
look before I buy.
My favorlterharmonlc conv&lt;'r·
gence story was In the St. Louts
Post-Dispaich the Monday after
the Saturday kickoff celebration.
The Writer said believers were
convinced that th&lt;' Mexican god
of death and destruction would
rise up that very day In the state
of Oaxaca, Mexico: and reveal
his true Identity - that of his
opposer, the Mexican fiery serpent god.
''Soine anthropologists In MexIco City were skeptl.cal," the
writer continued.
(I've be&lt;'n scouring th&lt;' papers
ever since. No mention of the
rtstng up of the Death and
Des !ruction Duo.)
But on one Issue I can't fault
the New Agers: They believe that

•

I! the-y all (ocus lht'lr thoughts on
harmony arid caring for one
another. it will tip th&lt;' scales of
th&lt;' world toward harmony and
peace. So what can if hurt to try?
There are lots worse ways to
spend a Saturday. At the lake,
drunk behind the wh&lt;'&lt;'l of a

1
4
4

VIH&lt;lge Pizza Inn ....................... ... .10
I&gt;onelll 'Pizza .................................. 9

6
7

Mills Forage Equip ....................... .4 12
Turnpike of Galllpolls .. ....... .... ... ., ... 2 H
INDIVIDUAL : Citizens, 174·t83 Frona
Call : P£&gt;oplPS, 192-504, J o Greathouse;
DodKon. 177 Mary Jo Dodson , ~37 Wilma
Swisher: VIllage Pizza, 159 Shirley Shobe .
449 Haze! Marcum; Donelll's, 188 Hazel
Lewis, 467 Ruby Hall ; R.T. Sign, 162-411
Barbara Brown : Thompson! , 167·461
Edna Thompson: Carl's. 144·396 Judy
Li nd er; Mills Forage. 157-415 Bonnie Bais den; Turnplkf'. 133 Velm a Pa tterson . 361
Cathy Linch. ·
SPLITS CONVERTED: B. Brown, B.
Baisden . H. Ca nada y 2-7: B. Brown 5-G;
Pai!Nson 6-7·10: M. St iff l -10: P . Ferguson 5-7,
MONDAY NIGHT MlxliD
. SEPT. 7, 1887

STEALS SECOND - Reds' ohorL~Iop Bary Larkin lands on ihe
San Diego P"dn&gt;$' Garry Templeton after Templeton steals
second base In the third frame of Tuesday night's contest . lp
Cincinnati. Larkin had to leap for a high throw from first basem11n
Nick E"'""ky. (UPI)

hi~lights

Weekend

so long In NHTSA
fil es during the Reagan admlnls·
!ration that the recall dPadllne
has come and ~one In the cas&lt;' of
4.5 million. allegl'&lt;jly defective
vehicles. Within the next year.
th at deadline will pa s for
a not her 1.5 million to 2.0 million

By Unlled Press International
Joe . DIMaggiO, Floyp Patterson, Ahmad Rashad , Oscar Ro·
bertson and celebrities Tony
Rundall .' Robert Merrill. PhyiJ,.
cia Ras had. Carrie&gt; Fisher a nd
Malcom -Jamal Warner highlight
the Fl'anclscan Games Sept .
25·26 at New York's Felt Forum .
The Games benefit the- Francis·
ca n Sisters of the Poor.

'-

Finally, there arc countless
safety measures NHTSA migh t·
hav&lt;' co nsldcrt&gt;d but ha s Ignored .'
Atop that lis t Is the a~ency's
r!.'fusnl to PXI!.'nd numerous auto
saf&lt;' ly standards to light trucks ,
minivans and simila r vehlcl&lt;.•s.
In months fo llowln~ Reagan 's
Inaugural ton , NHTSA revoked
the requlremcni that air bags be
Installed In cars to provide cras.h
prot~ction - but a unal mous U.S.
Supreme Co urt rcverst&gt;d that
"arbitrary and capricious •·
d&lt;'cl slon.
Even In that cas&lt;'- presunia·
bl y resolved by a court order
from the nation' s highest trl.bu·
nal - NHTSA has persisted In
foot -dra ggl ng as part or Its
shameless effort to undermine
the&gt; concept or · motor vehicle
sa fPt y.

HIGH SERIES FOR MEN - Ron Smith
51 1. Rod Walker 480. Mike Nease 466.
HI GH dAME FOR MEN...;.. Larry Tuc ker
186. Rod Walker 182. Ron Smith 176.
HI GH SER IE S FOR WOM EN - O..bble
Tillis 466. Te rri WhiTm a n 431. Ellen Hat ·

"Small Town

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10 P.M.-2 A.M.
52.00 COYER CHARGE

MilWAY
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S14,46400,
Factory Rebate S1,00000
Jim Cobb Rebate Sl,OOOOO
Your Choice

R.T. Sign Company ..... _................... 6 10

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00
$12,464.

JIM COBB

"

Chevrolet*Oldsmobile*Cadillac
•

614. . 992-6614
Pomeroy, Ohio

308 E. Main

field 380.

HIGH . GA ME FOR WOMEN - Debbl•
Til lis 193, Bt&gt;ll y McKin ley 113, Ttrrt Whit ·
ma n 167 .

A Free Seminar

Mark

September 2 4

·on your calendar.

The Daily Sentinel
I USI'S 14:&gt;-11111
A DlwMlon uf Mulllmedla. Inc.

Publi s h{'(! CV('ry a fl&lt;'rn oon. Mo nday
lhrouj!h F'rtday . 111 Cour t S1. . Po·
mrroy . O hliJ. by thr Ohio Vall£&gt;y_Publlshlna Compon.v Multlmt&gt;dt a . .lnl' ..

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Cordially Invite You Th
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Ohi o Nt•\4•spupt:•r Assoctutlon. Not! lonal
Ad vert bi n ~ R••prt&gt;Sr•nlat lVf', Branham
N{·l•:spa twr S.af('S. 73.1 Third Avenul'.
Nr~· Yo rk , N l· ~· York 10017

ways 1o

economy
• cut. t.axes
• reduce the riak ol investing
• get your hand! on money you

didn't realize you had
· Thia seminar also looks at the
relationship between the

SIJIISCRIPTIO N RATE.~
By Carrier or Motor liGule

Onr Wt't•k ............................... ..
On(' Me~nth .......... ., .................. ..
One Y('ar ... ,, ...................... .

economy, inveat'menta, fil'!ancial

planning aod diiiCWIIIe8 the
advantages of managed versus

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

D:111_y ...

KEVIN E. SMITH
Personal Financial Planner

THURSDAY, SEPT. 24
7:30P.M.
OLD AMERICAN
LEGION HALL
Middleport, Ohio

direct investing.

... : .... .. .. .. ,.... ....... 25 Cr nts

Come 1b

Tht~

Seminar.

Ditcovtr Why You Don't Havt 1b
Give Up Th&lt; Good Life 'lbday 7b
Have Tht Good Life 1bmom&gt;w

Subsf'ri b(or" not dcslrtn~ 10 pny th{lcnrr i{lr mav f {linit In advam•(' dlrPC'I to
Tht• Daii~' &amp;•n!lncl on a 3. 6or 12mont h

basts . CrNit

help you:

• build wealth in the current

Se-nd addrl"l:is c hani!Ni
!o 'J'h(&gt; Da\1~· Senllnrl , 111 Cour! Sl.,
Ptlm~. Otito &lt;15769.

S)X'edboat . for lnst:~nce . Or shopping for RPeboks .
If a group of people want to
work on thinking good thouRhls ·
about each other and the planet
they live on, then God bless'em.
When they're dotng that , th&lt;'y ' re
not going to b&lt;' going around
shooting ••ach other on lreeways.

this seminar

if you are interested in learning

POSl'MA~TER:

skeptic ---------=S::::..ar::::..ah:....:Ov::..:..:::.:er~st::..:re:::::.el

Harmonic convprgence W&lt;'&lt;'·
kend- the dawning of a new age&gt;
- has come and gan&lt;'. and I
enjoyed it.
No, I wasn't one of the network
of believers who gath&lt;'red at
various "sacred" locals around
lh&lt;' world to usher In the "New
Ag&lt;'". I don't evenknowwhatlh&lt;'
"New Age" Is. a; though I like themagazine. It may be the same
new age the Fifth Dimension
sang about what seems like a
llfetlm&lt;' ago, bu\. I'm .not sure. I
sold the a lbum In a yard sale in
1979.
I don't know much more about
It now . With all due respect to the
tens of thousands of people who
believe one week&lt;'nd In Augtist
signaled the beginning of a
25-year "transition period" that
will culminate In a bunch of us
talking to folks from outer space,
I just don't believe- it. Or rather,
I'll believe II when I see it. It's the
sam&lt;' quality that made me the
scourge of my Methodist Youth
Fellowship Bible study class.
But I did enjoy the C&lt;'lebratlon
and the hoopla . The festivities
started for me about a month ago
with a diatribe on a right-wing
radio program (my co•worker's
choice on a trip loan assignment
In a news car) delivered In a
monotone by a woman who
sounded like she'd spent the last
16 years In the "occult" section of
the library hoping to meet up
with Beelzebub and stare him
down. She had written a txiok
called "The Danger of th&lt;'
Rainbow" (with a subtitle that
said som'e thlng disparaging
about the New Agers). The best I

Clllzens NattQnal Bank ..................15
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AND
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l ang ul sh~d

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Local bowling I
SEPT. t5, t887

Cubs 6, Mets Z
At Chicago, Dave Martinez
broke- a seventh-Inning tie with
an RBI single to help Rick
Sutcliffe b ecome the NL's first
18-game winner and drop Ne-w
York 3 1-2 games hehlnd St.
Louis.
. Expos 4, Pirates 3
At, Montreal, AP:dre.s Galar·
raga capped a two-run rally In
the eighth With an RBI groundout
to help Pascual Perez remain
unbeate-n.
Dodgers 4, Giants 3
At San Francisco, Steve Sax
homered and singled to extend
his hitting streak to 17 games,
pacing Los Angeles.
Braves 6, Astros 2
At Atlanta, rookie Kevin Cot!man e-arned his first major·
league victory and rookie Jeff

r~5~-3~·==::...::::.21==-=~==~~B~l~a~u~se:r~d~r~o~v:e-~in~~fo~u~r;_r~u~n~sJ============-

TIJESDAY MORNING STANDINGS

Auto safety on the skids ______:;_:Ro::...:.b~er::.....:.lW.:...: a:.:.:.:lte:.:..:rs
WASHINGTON !NEA)
"The Care Book" should have
been a delight to conservaliv&lt;'s
who embrace "free market "
economic theories because II
allowed every model of new car
. to compete on the basts of ability
and performance.
·
The- paperback book , published
and distributed free by the
federal government, was a bo·
nanza to consumers becaus&lt;' II
showed how autos ranked In
everything from horsepower to
crashworthlness,
Thus, It's not surprising that
the publication was V&lt;'ry popular·. In 1980. the Initial printing of
500.000 copie-s was quickly E'X·
hausted and an additional 1.25
million copies had to be printed .
But In 1981. s hortly after
President Reagan assumed of·
fiC&lt;', "The Car Book' ' was term!·
nated . It never again has been
printed by the federal
government.
That action is embl&lt;'matlc of
what the Department of Trans·
portatton's national Highway
Traffic Safety Administration

Winner Danny Cox, 10-8,
worked 7 . 2·3 Innings, allowing
five hils and four walks. Shane
Rawley, 17-IO. failed tn his fifth
attempt to win his 18th game.
·" We had a couple of chances
but we haven't hit the ball tn a
month," Philadelphia Manager
Lee Ella said. "Cox was vulnera·
ble but we couldn't do anything.
All he has to do Is get to 'the
seventh with that bull ~&gt;'ln."
.VInce Coleman.. celebrating
his 26th birthday, tripled ,
singled, stole his I03rd base and
scored twice to lead the St. Louts
attack.
Elsewhere. Chicago dumpt&gt;d
New York 6-2, Montreal rallied
past Pittsburgh 4-3, Los An·geles
nipped San Francisco 4-3,
Atlanta ripped Houston 6-2 and
Cincinnati upended San Diego

against Houston, fueling the
Braves.
Reds 5, Padres 3
At Cincinnati, Terry McGriff's
twoout, two-run single broke a
tie in the fifth to spark the Reds
'past San Diego .

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26 Weeks .. . , .............................. 135.10
52 Weeks ......... .... ...... ............... $67.60

'87 Cadillacs
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JIM COBB
"You want to marry mt? Let me get 11 piiJCfl of
psper and Sflfl/f we can work SOf71Bihlng out. "

308 E. Main
~

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I.

Superior

[TJ[QrtiOJ[t IIAI

Chevrolet*Oldsmobile*Cadillac
''

614-992-6614

3101 • 7th St.
Ohio

Parlceraburg, WV26101
Phone- 304-424-5122
,.,
'

�•.

Wednaaday. September 23. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

J

~Fans

upset as NFL strike continues

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Football fans took out the ir
wrat h on owners and players
• Tuesday and began making
alternate plans for the long
autumn weekends.
For the second time in five
years, fans were being asked to
do without their NFL games
while management and players
attempted to settle their labor
grievances. Whichever side they
took - and much of the public
• was critical of everyone involved
the fans were decidedly
unhappy .
"I just think the whole thing is
so ridiculous, " Rob Davis , 52, of
Rockaway Beach, N.Y., said
• Monday night when he attended
the Jets·Patriots g~J.me at East
Rutherford, N.J., t~e last game
. before the start of the strike.
"They all make enough money.
. The big issue is 'free agency.
Well. how much money do the
players want to make anyway?"

Added Jerry Maniscalco, a
53-year-old court ~!Ide . from
Brooklyn, N.Y.: "It 's so sad. I
feel bad about it. I lookforward to
coming out all year to the ball
games. Then the season Is over
before it begins."
Near Bus&lt;;h Stadium In St.
Louis, where members of the
C;~rdlnals were picketing, fans
expressed mixed feelings .
" They go through this every
year, so I think most players
have enough money." said Robert Palmer, 19, who was handing out mimeographed restau·
rant menus. "Why get greedy?
They're going to be out a few
games, and both of them are
going to lose."
James Moore, 38, a maintenance worker in St. Louis, said:
" I've got some sympathy. Everybody needs more money, hieluding me."
In Buffalo and Denver, fans set
up picket lines ol their own.
" Only a certain amount of

people can afford to go to the
games," complained Frank
Schultz, 33, a Buffalo accountant ,
as be and Bill Thompson, 33, of
Hamburg, N.Y., walked in front
of Rich Stadium ,carrying picket
signs which-read: "Ticket Prices
up 45 Rercent Since '82 Strike.
l'lme 4 Fan Unity."
"This Is a picket against both
sides." said Schultz, who had his
remaining Bills season tickets
taped to his picket sign. "We (the
fans) are not on their minds.
We' re not taking any sides, but
we can only take so much crying
and bickering."
Schultz said fans driving by the
stadium bad been honking car
horns In approval of their action.
"A lot or people are stopping
and telling us they agree with
us," Schultz said: "We just cart'!
have this in one city, It 's got to
spread around the country to be
effective."
A half-dozen Broncos fans set
up a picket line across the street
from team headquarter s north of
Denver.
"All we want Is our football
back," Tom Montoya of Denver
said.

Scoreboard ...
n .. ,..., .• Gamn~

Majors

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CI'Ht"'"'

Transactions
Mltw~~owllet"

Royals 4, Mariners 3
At Seattle, Kevin _SeltzPr
doubied .home Willie Wilson from
firs t base with two out in the lOth
Inning to leave Kansas City 6\6
games behind Minnesot a In the
American League West.
Yankees I0-2, Bre wers 8-1
At Milwaukee, Willie Ra ndo lph
weht 3 lor 5 with four RBI to key
New York' s 20- blt at tack as the '
teams spilt a doubl e· hea der.

Defenders remain unbeaten, top HTHS
SOUTH WEBSTER - The
Ohio Valley Christian School's
varsltS' volleyball team retained
its undefeated season with a
match Win ovl!l' the South Webs·
ter Jeeps Monday night.
The Defenders took the first
game 15-7 but !ell behind 7·10 to
the Jeeps In the secilnd game
before comln&amp; from behind to
post a 15-10 victory.
OVCS went 19 lor 21 from the
spiking line, Its best perlot ·
mance from that line to dat.e. The
vlaitors picked up nine kills In the
process and 16servtn&amp; aces . Beth
Wood had 11 points, including six
aces. Tract Sisson had li ve
points, while Nancy Lanier and
Connie Pearson had four eac h.
Rac hel Danner and Edina Van·
Matre followed with three points
each.
Sisson had live kills while
pick ing up 12 hits in 13 attempts .
Wood went 5 lor 6 while getting
lour kills . OVCS also recorded a
pair ol · blocks, courtesy ol
Dann~r and Pearson.
The victory, which saw Pear·

son come off the bench to !Ill In
for a mis sing starter. puts the
Defenders at 8·0.

Redwomen top Mt. Vemon
A...,.,._, Cflalk tHII1Mt, ICM

IUbr eaylir; rw.tl k;w •ao.pcJOntll
htding lnd tuy IMI~
E.,y .:NIP and .,,_. c&amp;N!"W
au.c.. and ...,. to appty No 1)11'1*
OOCftM~

when u-.d as

d ~td

10:'-' kif alumll'tUm i ld•no

PICKENS HARDWARE
IUSOII, WY..

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
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:•

·~

CARTER'S

:•

(FOIMIILY OF POMIIOYI

•

Plumbing &amp; Heating ~

•

•••

••

: Has Now Moved ·to :
•
•
:• 319 South Second Ava. :•
:
Middleport, Ohio
:
•
•
:•
992-6282
:•
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C•lleF

a.)' lor- l!hlllpPiu•f'lllhwbMkf'l' Gary

ENROLL IN THE
·FALL CLASSES
Admissions Office 446-4367

.Jo.. IIDIIP ler tw• WHiul.
MM"IMi - Tom AlbriPt ,....,...... u
mf'll'sutiWomH'II..., ... naH.
MIII')'IMd -

Na~~~ed

Gn..d O.,....J

•"••••u•t MIW«k a.tcler ..
.Ut.iflf'11' IM:a.deollt·

prep-am-.

ca.~

of

R IO GRANDE - A• Sl'fles of
kill s by Hi o Gr!!.nde's Li sa
Schme lt?.er boo ted the Re dwo·
m n volleyba ll tea m to a coml'from· behlnd v troorv ovc·r Moun I
V&lt;:&gt;rnon In I he fina l· ~amr of Hlo
Gra nd e's home opc ncr 'T ur sduy
at Lyne Ce nt e r .
Th e Redwome n los t th e fl rs l of
four games a~ains t thr . lOP·
r·ank cd La dy Cougar s. ~ - 1 &gt;, but
battled bac k to win the rcm&lt;Oin lng s&lt;:&gt;ts by sco res of t5· 10, 15·!i
a'nd 15·10.
"This was a big ga mP for us.··
Hlo Gra nde Coac h Pa ts1• F ields
comme nted &lt;irt erwunl . " All
around, we p l ~•yrd !-!rC'a!
defense .':
Mounr VPr'non' s s lzl' advan ·
tagc - led by 6·0 jun ior Ch(•rle
Har_b and !;. 10 ju nior Ja ncl i
Ferre ll · - fai led to Sl op th"
Redwomr n fr om ma kln ~ point s
against the visit ors .
Mount Vernon's pe ncha nt for
lobbing t he bail d()ep Into the
Redwomen 's 70ne coar ly In thr
first ga me promplf'd Fields to
change her defensive ta cti cs .
The flo· t ga m saw Hlo C:ra nde
t ak f:\ an

Parl~1

lead liP twi cf' und

eventua lly fall b&lt;:hlnd the Lady
Cougars' assa ult.
In the seco nd game. Rio agai n
came on stro ng In the opener,
pos ting a 2-0 lead. Mount VN ·
non's offense soon Noded thr!
adva nt age, but thP Redwome n's
de fensllte skill. re fln&lt;'cl from las I
weekend 's ga m cs wi th Geo rge·
Iown !K y. l College a nd Wilming ton Coll ege. ht'i pcd the hos tf on to
!he win.
.·.
T he RedwomPn rcma lnr d aggressive In the opcnln~ minut es
or the third gamr . scoring four
points over the visitors. Mount
Vernon tied at 4-4, but a
Sc hmeilzcr klll broke the knot
and the Rcdwomen neve r loo ked
' back. posllng a nine-point IC'a d
before the fina l win .
Mount Vrr non lOOk the offe n·

s t,·e a nd led m os t of the way In
the four th se t. beating back the
Redwomc n·s push until the
reams lied at 10· 10. Th e Hedw o·
men the n pos ted a one·poin t lead
an d built upo n it unl it Sc hm e ltzer
almo' t effortlessly boos ted the
ba ll for thi'CP CO nSCCU ilV(' killS.
Schme lt zer posted a total of 17
kil ls for the meet . and F ie lds fel t
the combination or he r scor ing

Florlb SIC Mlooloolppl Slate II

Florida State 18 Mldal1u state 21
Georrta II Soutll Carolina U
Hawaii 18 Texu-EI .PUG 11

Hanard tt No,.ht...ern 8
Holy c .... 21 .... ~t~~ .14

Houston U Sam Houston State 10

Iowa UK..... !Mate U
Indiana·Sl Mlo.._rl %1
Kentucky fl a.&amp;1en 14
LouiSiana Tech II kulaaa '7
Loui1lana late U Oblo S&amp;ate t2

l.ouli\IWe U M•rnr State If

(Ohio) If Clolclao&amp;lf 11
Mtaml (Florida) It ArloaMu tl
Mlchlru 4! LH1 Beach State 21
Mlnnnota 21 Ceatral Mlc:bl1u 18
Mlululppl lll Tulue :14
Nehruka It Art&amp;ou. Slate •
Miami

Both teams were 4·4 l\t the end
of regulation play . During the
first quarter ol overtime, neither
teqm scored. But in the first four

saves.
Player of the game for Rio was
Chad Rickey, according to Coach
Phil Alidersoli.

I

Ron Elsmann led the 1\'ay for
Thomas More with three goals .
Joe Vonlehman added one goal
and Rebel goalkeeper Mark
Patrick recorded l4 saves, In·
e luding one goat ln Rio Grande's
net that was credited to the
Rebels. ·
Anderson said the game was
one of 1he best-attended of Rio
Gra nde's soccer program.
The Redmim return to action
Thursday when they host Frank·
lin College of Columbu s at 4 p.m .
Rio wjll also play host to Malone
College Saturday a t 2 p.m .

North car•laa II Nnr 14
Norlh Canltu Slllle It Marytud II
Nonrtlnrnten SS Nertlten Utlaoll Z3
Notre Dame Jl Pu.rdllt 11
Okl-4tTuloa7
Okt....... Slate II SW J.JuloW.a 21
l'eUiyiY- 17 -koell It

END OF THE

l'eaa - • Boiloe conece 11
l'llllburp • W• VlrKtola ttl
Aa.n Qle1o 8&amp;ate J.t Orecoa If
Soulhem l;al II Caltlorata 14

ONTH SALE

Stanford M San oll..e SMe It
Syracaaae •7 Vlfllala Tech 14

THE DRESS SHOE $ALE YOU HAVE BEEN
WAITING FOR
.

'texu n Orepll Saae ••
T~xa1

AAM tl S.u.tllfftl Mlullllppl 21
Tenne.ee t8 Aubum 14
UCLA 41 Alrl&amp;oola Zl
VlrJinla 18 D•ke 14
Vlr,tnla MIUtary Sl Wolford II

THURSDAY AND FRIDAY ONLY

Wake Fofttlt 21 Appalachian State I!
Wublnlt0114! PacUic 10
WIICOB.. Sl BaD state %%

W)'oml•ats Iowa Stale 8
Yale 11 Connect leu til

Friday's games
SVAC
Nor th Gallla at Southern
Oak Hill at Hannan Trace
So uthwes tern at Kyger Cree k
Symmes Valley at Eastern
SEOAL !Non-League)
Gallipolis at Portsmouth West
Jackson at Ironton
Marietta at Zanes ville
OTHERS
Ravenswood at Wahama
Rock Hill at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Ceredo· Kenova
Hurricane at Point Pleasant
TVC
Meigs at Wellston
(Sal"rday)
Logan at DeSales
Magnolia at Warren
Akron Coventry at Athens

HARTLEY SHOES

z

[il

MAR C. VAN YRANKEN, OWNER

210 EAST MAIN

POMEROY.

· 992-5272

andKr~~h~n
·s ~~~as
the settC'r "made thr
difference ri~~~~~~~~~~~=~~====~=~==~~=~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::;;~
hPhvPen win and los s.
" K r is is a treme ndous setter ."

Fie lds added. "She ha ~ suc h
gr&lt;'at kn ow ledge of the ga me.
Sh&lt;' a nd Lisa worked toge ther
!I uper g:ood ."

Sha ron Headin gs pos tt'd two
ser ving a ces for th e Redwom&lt;'n
a nd La re n Wolfe provided s trong
ba c kup on ~ff'n S&lt;' a nd defe nsP.
Field s sa id .
1-'reshme n Sh'e ll y Hoo p a nd
(: hrl s Willia ms also pla yed
·•grcal" gam es for Rio, Ihe coac h
sai d. Hoop ha s paced Sc hm &lt;' ltzer
in kills so far this seaso n. whil e
Williams - placE"d for the first
tim e in an all-around role due to a
pr·acticc Injury t ha t side lined
tea mmate Amy Dixon - " dld a
good job ... Fi elds said.
.
Th e Hcdwomen
will ' travel to
Ca nton Thursda y to face Ma lone
C'o ll egc in a 7 p. m . game.

D

List honorees
By Un ited Press Int ernational
Footba ll 's Don .Ma ynard . ba se·
ball's Billy Williams, baske t·
ba ll 's Wa lt Fra zie r. hockey's
John Zi~glPr. tennis ' Sta n Smit h
a nd golf's Robert Tre nt Jones
ll'ltl be am ong more than a dozen
Induc tees a t the Ail Spor tsHa il of
Fame Dinner Oct. 28 to benefit
Th e Boys' Cl ub of New York.

or

An affordable single-wide, double-wide.
modular home can be yours with a little help
from Peoples Bank.

Prepare for your fvt!Uifl

TRAIN IN

·•

ft

FIE~DS

Today, lower natural gas costs can mean real savings in
your energy bills. So gas heat and appliances are an
even better value. Count on natural gas for comfort,
convenience-and much more for your energy dollar.

...WilEN 'fOIJ CAll OWN A HOME OF 'fOUR OWN/

I .

..

C.IIIM~ N.,,., ., Mtti 'Htfl ,, 675·1121, HIII/I Flltlt
If 1?3·5514, "/l•ltr~e 11 882·2135 Fot mm d1tellt '"

THAT PAY WELL•••

e8usiness Administration

•Executive Secretary
eComputer Science ·

, .,.,,.. .... IIH

,H,,,•.

eAccounting

)

eMqdicll Office Secretary
•Ditl Entry

Financial Aid Still Available

1111101-F.D.I.C.

•

'

Southeastern lusin.ess College
•,

...... .. 11-1055.

529 JACISON PilE

COLUMBIA.GAS

BANK~

"The letter ••nlc"

JOI PLACEMENT F.OR GRADUATES
.!

!

PEOPLES

. fALL QUAITEI
aGIIS SEPIIMIEI 21, 1917

&lt;Jo+

'
•'

Browa Jl Rhode lllaad 21
Clernsoa U Georala Tedll1
Colrate tt ConeD 11
Cotorade :14 WulljJI!Ii• !llllle 15.
Delaware !8 Rl cbm011d %1

~

minutes of the second quarter,
Rio Grande goaled and again led
the visitors until the final live
minutes, when the Rebels su nk a
goal to again tle up' the score.
For Rio Grande, Tony Daniels
recorded one goal a nd two
assists. Brian Alto added two
goa ts , Ronnie Goodson, one goal
and an assist , Kevin Barnett. a
goa l, and Barry Saunders, one
as .s lst. Goa lk eeper Ch ris
Krueger WM credited · with 24

There is stil time to

KuiMierla.

S1.14
FliES ...... S1.69

· .POM£10Y, 011.

{'.

~~

Bowlin&amp; oreea Itt Western Mlchlran 24
Brl&amp;ham Youa1 S4 New Mexico 11 .

RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande's
soccer team battled to a 5-5
overtime decision last weekend
with Thomas More College on
Stanley · L. Evans Memorial
Field.
The Redmen team, consisting
of primarily "hew members, led
the way 3-0 throughout most of
the game until the Rebels , based
in .Crestview Hills, Ky., rallied
and soon le d the hosts 4·3,

YES

Burt.ll

- ..W.-d o•tnf'l_. Brad
Kornmlr.k lo I'Oiik'r; III!AICMI&amp;flelderll'll~
Kllptllel• ta Cllld•natl • piQ•r t11 1W
name4 I• .tua;. 7 deaE fer plkher MIA

CHUCKWAGON

"At

••

· At Cleveland, Rick Honeycutt
won for the first · time In 14
!lecisions a nd Carney Lansford
bit a three-run homer to lift
Oakland.
Angels ~. While SoJ&lt; 3
At Anaheim, Calif.. Pinch
hitter Bill Buckner delivered a
two· run triple with two out in the
eighth 'inning to help the Angels
snap a five-game losing streak
and mathematically eliminate
Chicago.

by Maj. Amos B Hoople
chored by All-America end DaPigskin Prophet
niel Stubbs. We give It to Miami
Egad, friends! Get ready for by a 24-2f count.
some great college football bat ·
In another game between topties.
.
ra nked contenders, Au burn goes
Here are some of the major con- to Knoxville to meet the Tenfrontations on Saturday (Sept. 26):
nessee. Vols : this will be one for
Nebraska at Arizona State (on " Jeff" -' both War Eagles QB
ABC-TV ); Miami of Florida a t Ar· Je ff Burger and Vols QB Jeff
kansas IESPN·TV); Auburn a t Franc is wil l have gooct days. The
Tennessee (WTBS-TV): Georgia. Hoopl e nod goes , to the " Jeff"
Tech a t Clemson and South Car- from Tenm~ ssee, 28·14.
olina at Georgia.
Clemson's Tigers will wi n one
· And don ' t forget these: Ohio In the ACC with a 33-17 victory
State at Lo~l sla n a Sta te (CBS- over Georgia Tech. Georg ia will
TV); Florida State at Michigan · lake Its clash with South CarState, and Notre Dame at Pu r· olina. 29-24.
due.
Down in Baton Rouge , the SEC
That's a pla teful of treats .
favor it e Louisiana State Fight·
Arizona State and Nebras ka 's ing Tigers and Big Ten power
Cornhuskers are both high ly Ohio State will get It on lor the
ranked. They havpo nly met once firs t time . In a real cliffha nger
before, with the Sun Devil taking look for QB Tommy Hodson to
a 17-14 dec ision in the 1975 Fiesta
pass LSU to a 28·22 triumph.
bowl.
Bobby Bowden' s F lorida State
The Pac-10 S~n Devils a re a Seminoles will Improve their Imfine foot ball team . but they a re
pressive road record with a 28-21
going up agai ns t a gre at Big
VictorY over host Michigan State.
E ight Nebr as ka c lub with a
The resurgent Notre Dame Ir Steve Taylor-ma de offen s~ . In
Ish go up agains t old nemesis
his first two games a lone. QB
Purdue for the 59t h time. N.D.
Ta ylr rus hed lor 184 . vanls and
lea ds the ser ies. 35-21-2, but few
completed fi ve TD passes. Mar k of their win s have been easy .
this one for Nebraska. 31-20.
Give It to the Iris h, 31·17.
Miami 's Hurr icanes look ev·
Here are a few more predlc·
ery bit as good as their lJ.l te;•m
lions: Pitt , 30-20. over West VIrof .las t yea r. Th &lt;'y wil l be going
ginia. In their 80t h eng agement;
back up aga inst th e Arkansas
Penn State , 36·28, over Bosto n
Razorbacks for the first tim e.
Coll ege tESPN ·TV i . a nd might y
Arkansas will have a hard time
Oklahoma, 49·7, overTu l&gt;;a . Ha r·
containing the vNsa t llc Hurr irum ph!
SATURDA\', Sf:PT. U
ca ne s offense, whic h featu res QB
1\ lr fo' or1~ 1~ Z6 Colnrado Stu.h• 20
St eve Watsh, And It will havc ·a n
t\labam a .f'l Va nd f•rhiU 14
even ha rder tIm e mov in g lh(' ba II Mmy 17 CUa dt"l 14
on Mia mi's s upe r clcfcnsc. a n- B aylor ~ T~· xnM Tt'ch H

Rio Grande soccer team .battles to 5-5 tie

17, Po11 Loramt. II.

Specral of 'he Week

t

Tigers 8, Red Sox 5
At Boston, Kirk Gibson
sinrled, tripled and doubled In
his first three at-bats, and
Darrell Evans drove in three
runs to spark oetrolt.
Twins I, Ran&amp;en t
At Minneapolis, Joe Nlekro,
7·12, earned his first victory in six
weeks and Tom Brunansky. Greg
Game and Kirby Puckett ho·
mered against Texas to help the
Twins maintain a four· game
lead over Oakland in t he Amer ican League West. .
Athletics 10, Indians 2

-'&lt;•.

'Huskers will exorcise Sun Devils

The Daily Sentinei-Paga- 5

! 1,

..,_....+~+o·o .

\

Texas 6-4, Oakland rou led Cleveland 10.2, Calitomla ousted Chi·
ca110 !&gt;-3, Kansas City edged
Seattle 4-3 in 10 innings, and
Milwaukee and New York split a
double header with the Brewers
winning the first game7-2 and the
Yankees taking the nightcap
10.8.

... .·.'

•

In Junior. High football action
Mike Cremeans and Matt Pierce
this past week. the Meigs Sev - had two e ach .
enth Grade squad played Ga lllpo·
Eighth Grade
)is's seventh graders to a 32-32
Racking lip a 38 to 6 victory,
stando(f and the Eighth Grade
their second of the llt'ason,
team downed the Nelsonvil · Meigs's Eightp grade team com·
le-York eleven 38 to 6.
pletely dominated Nelsonvll·
At the end of regulation play,
le-York 's Little Buckeyes as
the Maraude r seventh graders
they rolled up 297 yards on the
and Gallipolis were deadlocked ground and 100 via the airways
14 to 14. Three overtime periods for a total of 397 to just 59 yards
later, both squads bad scored
total for the Bucks.
eighteen points each ending the
Played at the N-Y field, both
cont!"St In a tie.
t.eams committed many infrac·
Statistically the game was as
tlons with Meigs being zapped 8
even as the score with the
times for 100 yards and the Bucks
Mar auders outgaining the Gailia
hit 9 times for 105. The Maraud·
Countians by eleven yards over· er s picked up 12 first downs to
Nelsonville-York 's three.
alll. 233 to 222. Meigs picked up 14
first downs to their opponents
Terry McGuire was the leading
eleven. lost four of seven fumbles
scorer for Meigs with three
and recovered two of three
t.ouchdowns in twelve carries
bobbles committed by Gallipolis. which netted hlm87yards. Frank
Blake racked up a total of 178
Shawn Hammons was the
workhorse in the Meigs backfield · yards in 14 attempts and ac·
picking up 154 yards in 37 carries
counted for two six pointers and a
two point conversion. Shawn
and scoring four of the Marauder
touchdowns . Mike We lsh, who
Hawley had three receptions lor
carried 11 times for 54 yards, ha d
100 yards and one touchdown
the other Meigs six pointer. while Jeremy Pballn gained 29
Hammons also had the two point
yards in 4 tries .
conversion . Todd Workma n netBlake led the team In solo stops
ted 54 yards In 4 tries .
with four, Terry McGuire foi·
lowed with two and Charles
Mash, Steve Caruthers, Jeremy
Hammons led the team In
individual tackles with six a nd
Rupe, Shawn Hawley, Kevin
bad one sack to his credit. Musser and Dennis Edmiston
Richard Stewart bad lour solo had one each. Darin Logan Is the
stops anll two sacks, Welsh was signal caller for the eighth grade
credited with three stops and
squad.

Volleyball
ratings

T..m

" Other than that ," MosebY
said, " he pitched a sharp game."
Mark Williamson relieved and
Tony Fernandez singled MosebY
to third. Bell delivered his 16th
game-winning hlt ol the season.
making a winner of reliever
Dayld Wells, 4·3, who struck out
six In 3 1-3 Innings .
Reliever Jack O' Co nnor
fanned Willie Upshaw for the
first out but with Mike Griffin
pitching, Jesse Barfield singled
home ·Fernandez and Beniquez
doubled In Bell. After Kelly
Gruber walked. Tom Nledenluer
entered and a !lowed a two- run
double to Ernie Whitt .
Elsewhere in the American
League, Detroit defeated the
Boston 8-5, Minnesota dumped

Junior high results

•••t.t

N ,\TIONA.L LEAG UE

Lils

Jays, Tigers continue
ton·id pace ·to AL East title

By MUll. COHEN
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
Uoyd Moseby and George Bell
combined for the second straight
night to put the Toronto Blue
Jays closer to the Eastern
Division title.
Bell singled home Moseby with
the lie-breaking run to trigger a
five-run eigllth Tu\!5day night
apd give Toronto an 8-4 victory
over the Orioles that allowed the
Blue Jays to hold their half-game
lead In the American League
East. Moseby bad walked to lead
off the decisive lnJJing.
" All I do is get on," Moseby
said. " That's my game. "
The previo~s night , Moseby
had sparked a ninth· inning rally
with a double and scored on
Bell's single to propel the Blue
Jays into first place as they
overtook the Detroit Tigers, who
rebounded Tuesday lor an 8-5
triumph over Boston.
" Moseby' s walk was the big
play," Toronto Manager Jlmy
Williams said. "Then we got
something going."
Bell blooped a single into right
field , scoring Moseby and earning the game-winning RBI for the
second consecutive game. Bell
leads the majors with 130 RBI.
Juan Benlquez added four RBI
for Toronto, which has won seven
of its las t nine games.
Moseby's walk came off Jeff
Ballard. 2· 7. the first of five
Baltimore pitchers In the inning.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Um-kumph!

Blu~

centerllelder Brett Butler durblg filth-Inning
action Tuesday nlpt In Cleveland: The .A's beat
the lndt.ans 1~2. (UPI)

TAGGED ()UT AT SECQND - The Tribe's
· Junlqr Noboa Is tagged out at second by Oakland
A's shortstop Tony Phillips on a bunt from

Wedneaday. September 23. 1987

·

.

111:111111 SINtl

..... •• Yl.

m-5514

-PIIIIWII.
- Awnut
Point
W. Ve.
675-1121

5111Aqwue
NMHMI,W. VI.
812-2136
•

~------------------------------------------------~------~... t

.

�Pa9'-6-The

Ohio

Sentinel

•.. . •.

.

'

::: ~y.

• • I

,

SePtember 23, 1987

:~:r·· -Lpcal
. We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

....·:,

Two forfelled bonds and four others were fined In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Ttmothy Brlnager, Racine, forfeited bonds on three charges .
$450 on DWI, $100 ort possession ol marijuana and $50 on
weaving course, H . J , Grimm, Middleport forlelted a $450 bond
on DWI and a $100 bond lor driving under suspension
Flned were Paul Miller. Rutland. $50 and costs. dlsorderlv
manner; Cllllord Icenhower, Pomeroy, $50 and costS,
illsorderly manner and $100 and costs. resisting arrest; Orville
Hogue, Rutland, $10 with no costs, passing In a no passing zone.
and Terry. Michaels. Middleport. SlOO and ·costs, resisting
arrest.

'

Monday thru Sunday

OFFER GOOD
ALL WEEI{

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
.. POMEROY, OH.

!

LIMIT 20 COUPONS

--- -·-

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., SEPT. 26, 1987

r

Sixteen forfeit

Whole Chickens •••• 49&lt;
Dart ·Bacon ••••••••••• 99&lt;
LB.

•

SUPERIOR

CORN KING BONELESS

99
Whole Ham .•... ~~... $1

r'

Ul

12-14 LB. AVG.

~

&gt;

=
r'

0.ft.

LB

1"l
("')

~

I"'

2

•'

•
•

Ground Chuck ••••• $139
BE~t~RSteak •..•••.•':·•• $1 49 ·

QBES...
'

~

&lt;
&gt;

...
&gt;
;:
...
=
r'
1"l

-•

l-LB. ROLL or 12 OZ. LINK

.Sausage ••...••••..•p:~·.

r'

~

0
0

0

."'c

("')

z

0

Ct

~

"'

~

0
2

•The total value ot the double
coupon may not tKCMd $1 .00

U.S. NO. 1-10 LB. BAG

White Potatoes •..• 99
. &lt;

manufacturer's coupon cannot
exceed 1he purchase price of the

item. Money will not be r•'

funded .

•This offer does not apply to Powell '• S.u per Vatu Coupona, free
coupons. or any competilor·,

FLAVORITE

coupon,.

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GAL.

•This offer excludes ci~arettea, :
or any other items prohibited by1
,.~ .

~

•Offer is good only for product
on hand. No Rainchecks.

Glada Smiah

Margarine ....... !~ ... . 39&lt;
I

BORDEN'S

Muffin Mix .....••• 6 f$1 Ice Cream •.••••• :~:~L.
HUNT'S
BANQUET
s·
Spagh. Sauce .!~!2!·•• 99&lt; Family Entrees!'.~~ 139

WIN UP TO S1,000 .
'
PLAY OUR
"MONEY BACK" GAM~
DETAILS AT STORE

REAL HAVILAND CHINA
AT MORE THAN
40% SAVINGS .'
DETAILS AT STORE .,

Last Week'• Wln"er•'

BEnY WHinATCH -

,_roy

110.00

SAUY PIIICE- 110.00
PoNoroy

S$,00 WINNIIS
llecky ...... , • . , . ,
'
lAona Pulllfla, Loo!t lett- ;
Dl- Alelhlre,
• • Spaua,

s,_.
,._oy

loao thornton. IAnpYllle

'

.•

Ediah

Sauer

Edith Sauer, formerly of Mid·
Glada Irene Smith, 79, Cool·
ville, died Tuesday at the dleport, died Wednesday morn·
Camden·Clark Memorial Hopsl· lng In Westerville. Funeral a.r ·
rangements wlll be announced
tal In Parkersburg.
· Born on Sept. 8, 1908,ln Gay, W. · by Rawllngs·Coats·Blower Fun·
Va., she was the daughter of the era I Home.
late Dexter and Della Bradley
Riddle. She was a homemaker Margarel Van Cooney
and a member of the Gospel
Margaret M. Van Cooney, 70,
Mission In Parkersburg, W. Va.
Middleport. died Tuesday at the
Slle Is survived by her bUS· Holzer Medical Center alter an
band, the Rev. Ralph Smith, live extended lllness.
She was born on Feb. 4, 1917,
sons, the Rev. Ralph E. Smith,
the
daughter of the late Ira and
Jr., Mansfield; the Rev. Wallace
Jessie
McCumtx&gt;r Morris. She
Smith, Princeton. W. Va.; Ha·
worked
as a cook at the Senior
rold Smith, Parkersburg, W.
Va.; Theodore and Richard Citizens Ctn ter.
Survivors are two sons. Ralph
Smith, Coolville; lhrre daugh·
ters, Kathryn Casto, Ripley, W. Van Cooney, Pomeroy, and Do·
Va.; Shirley Barr and Marian nald Van Cooney, Middleport, a
Somervllle. both of Parkersburg. daugl!ler, Mrs. Clifford (Sharon)
. Also surviving Is one brother, Saltz, McArthur; two sisters;
E. M. Riddle, 27 grandchildren, Irene Thomas, Wellston, and
slid 17 great·grandchldren, sev· Mary Hysell, Pomeroy, and a
eral nieces" and nephews. Besides brother, Eldon Morrls. Pomeroy.
her parents, she was preceded In Besides her parents, she was ,
death by her parents, a brother, precedoo In death by her hus·
band. Roy Van Cooney, a daugh·
and several sisters.
Funeral services wtl be held ter, Shirley; and one sister.
Funeral services will be held at
Friday at 11 a.m. at the Whlte
Funeral Home In Coolville. The the Ewing Funeral Home at 1
Rev. Wlllard Dutcher and Pastor p.m. on Friday with the Rev.
Danny Jetlrey will officiate. Melvin Franklin officiating. Bur·
Graveside .rJies will be lteld at 2 lal will be In Middleport Hill
· •·
p.m. at Parsons Cemetery, Gay, Cemetel')'.
Friend&amp;
may
call
at
the
funeral
W. Va.; ·Friends may call at the
furil!ralhome2to4 and7to9p.m home Thursday, lrom 2 to 4 and 7
to9p.m.
on Thursday.
·

I

NATIQNAL WEATHER SERVICE FOR~CAST TO 8 AM EDT 9-24-87

Pymatuning...
Continued from page 1
represe nting more than 400
teachers. Th e teachers In th·e
Allen Count y dis trict have been
working without a contrac~slnce
th e spring and are threatening to .
s trike Oct . 5.
,
And In Erie Co~nt.y , a federal
mediator Is to meet Friday with
teachers and administrators In
the Huron Local School District.
The teachers plan to strike
Monday , If an agreement is not
reached.

'
Allsha Re nee Dyncan. tiy her
mother and bt&gt;st friend. Martha
Gilkey. Shade. has filed lor
divorce In Meigs County Com.
mon Pleas Court from James
Albt&gt;rt Duncan. Middleport. ·
A !llssolu lion of marriage has
been granted Mary Lou Hoover
and Hertx&gt;rt Olen Hoover.
A divorce has been granted
Barbara Ann Hendricks from
Keith Allen Hendricks.
In a rela.ted matter, a restrain·
lng order has been Issued against
Marvin Dale Randolph pending
finalization of a divorce action
against him by Brenda Kay
Randolph .

0
FRONTS:

D

SNOW
Warm

ft

..-

-RAIN
SHOWERS
.
"Cold
.. . S:a•ic . . Occl~:jed
:a ~ :::e ·a: ·.. ~es . A: i'9as: 5C% o~ a~'/ S:'iacec area 1S t::ra-:as:

~.!a~ s ~-=·ns :':'1 . ~, ~
t::;; ~e:e· ' '= ::.re-:: ~~ :a: . :;.:-. ,'",C:-:a:sc

UPI

WEATHER MAP - During early Thursday morning, rain Is '
forecast for parts of the north Atlantic Coast states. Showers and
thunderstorms are possible In parts of the southern Pacific Coast,
the southern lnlermountaln region and the south Atlantic Coast.
Rain and showers are possible In parts oftheGreat Lakes, the Ohio
Valley and lhe aorth Atlantic Coast statet1. (UPI)

ALL
FULL SIZE TRUCKS
IN STOCK

'87 Full Si1e Truck, V-8, 4 speed
.Sale

Price:

$.9I 495
·OO
.
e -

JIM COBB
308 E. MAIN

Stock #132 .

Chevrolet*Oldsmobile*Cadillac
POMEROY, OHIO

614-992-6614

Funds di'slrihuted
August di s tribution of license
tax revenues In Ohio amount to
$17.4427,203.47, Stat'e Motor Vehl·
cle Registrar Michael J . McCul·
lion · reports. • Meigs County's
portion will be $53.764.19.

'r-------------------------.
.·
Area deaths
I

'

South Central Ohio
Today . mostly sunny. High In
the low 70s. Winds west 10 to 20
mph.
Tonight , mos ly clear with the
low in the low 50s. Winds west
less than 10 mph.
· ThursdaY. variable cloudiness
with a slight chance of showers .
High in the mid 70s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Chance of showers Friday with
fair weather Saturday and Sun·
day. Highs will be In the 60s
Friday and Saturday and range
from the upper 60s to mid 70s
Sunday. The low throughout the
period will be from tnemlddle40s
to lower 50s .

To end marriages

Daily stock prices

•There is a limit of 20 coupons
you may redeem.

IMPERIAL

JIFFY CORN

•Any manufacturer·, · coupora
greater than 51C wilt be re..
deemed at face value onty.
#Only one manufacturer' • cou ·
pon per item.
#The total value . ol the doubJe

Weather

day of summer, wildlife officials
said.
The olllclal start of autumn
was at 8: 46a.m. CDT today , but
the first migrating Caoada geese.
made a noisy arrival Tuesday
morning In " family groups of .,
five to 20 ," said biologist George ·
Stapleton of the Crab Orchard ,
National Wildlife Refuge near
Carterville In So)lthern Illinois.
Miami set a filth consecunve
record high with a reading of 92 In
Florida, where te mpera tures '
mostly were In the 90s.

the Tennessee Valley, with lows
dipping Into the 30s and 40s.
Temperatures over most of the
western half of the nation were
expected to warm Into the 80s,
with 9(J.degree readings forecast
in parts of Oregon, Nevada,
Arizona and California. Read·
ings above 80 were expected for
the central Gulf Coast through
Florida and Georgia.
Canada geese Tuesday has·
tened their autumn migration
south, landing on the sunny last

Sl ,ooooo ·Discount

Continued from page I

The consultant whostrered the
reau to pay almost $70.000 to rent
a phone system .
•. contracts to TCI. Robert
Records show that the bureau
McEaneney of Columbus. was
being paid $60 an hour by OBES,
Ignored bid offers from another
company ,__, would have saved
but the only thing OBES has to
It $50,000.
:: show lor the $34.300 It paid
McEaneney Is a two· sentence
Records· also show that nine
memo McEaneney wrote In 1984.
months tx&gt;lore he secured the
contract. Keane had sworn In
McEaneney 's consulting con·
court that he was financially
tract expired July 1985. The nrst
broke.
·
TCI telephone system was signed
the next month .
Former OBES managers qut&gt;S·
tloned the legality ol the con·
tracts, the need fort he new phone
(i\s ol 18:30 a.m.)
system and whether the state
Provided by .
was belng overcharged.
Bl')'ce and Mar~. Smlth
Th~ deflcit·rldden unemploy ·
of Bluat EIIIII It Loewl
ment bureau agreed to pay
nearly ~.000 to put n~ phones F1rm
Prlee
Into olllces II has since d«lded to Am Electric Power ...... .... .,.27%
close to save money, but the AT&amp;T .. .. .. ..... ....... .... .. ..... .... ... 34
phOn~ systems cannot be
Aohland 011 ,...... .. ....... ... ......66\-4
returned.
Bob Evans Farms ... .. ...... ... ... 19
Th~ newspaper also reported
Charming Shoppes ... .. ........ .23Y.
that a special aasistant to Stelnb- Federal Mogul. ....... ... .... .. ... 45'4
acher steered a profitable state · Goodyear T&amp;R .... .. ... .... ...... 70\-4
lease loa close friend and former Heck's Inc.. ... .. ............. .. ... ..... 4
business partner In a deal that
Lands' End .. .. ... .. ...... ... ....... 24'A
was partially financed by a bank Limited Inc . ..... ..... ... .. ..... .. .36~
with close ties to lhe Ohio Multimedia Inc... ... .... ... ,..... 69¥.,
Democratic Party.
Rax Restaurants . .. .... ..... .... .. 4"ilo
OBES official Larry Brown Robbins &amp; Myers .... ... ... ... ... 10'4
.: negotiated a no·bld lease with Shoney's Inc . .... ... ..... .. ..... .. .29%
Thomas Keane, 40. of Marlon. Wendy's Inti. .. :.. ...... ... .. .. .. .. . 9%
•. requiring the unemployment bu · wort hi ngton 1nd. · ··· ···· · ... .... .... 24

Weather Service said.
The mercury was not expected
to hit 70 from the northern
Atlantic Coast through the upper
Ohio Valley and Into the upper '
Great Lakes states. Pre· dawn
terripNatures · Tuesday were
chilly from the central Plains to

Mlc h. . has flied act lo n a ga Ins t r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~
P&amp;S Buildings and Dale R. II
Proffitt. Racine. lor a judgment
of $19,501.58. .
The actions of Olive Township
against Chester Wells , et al. a nd
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
et al. have been dismissed./

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Tuesday; Rutland at 2:32a .m . to Salem St .lor Rodney Wright to
Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy at 11 : 10 a .m . ·to Collins Road
lor Brandl Grueser who was treated but not transported;
Racine at 5: 38p.m. to Southern High School lor Bry&amp;n Weaver
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at· 5: 43 p.m. to
North Third Ave. for David Hardwick to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Middleport at 6: 13 p.m . to Meigs Junior High lor
Jeremy Sheets to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

0

LB.

BALLARD'S

Michael Richard Hayman and
Elmer Parsons, through the ir
respective attorneys both en·
tered pleas of .Innocent during
their arraignments In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on
.charges · of trafficking In drugs
(cultivation of marijuana) . Both
men have been released on
$10,000 personal recognizance
bonds.
· Charles W. Barley entered a
plea of Innocent to the court
during his arraignment on an
Indictment ol felonious assault
with a firearms speclflcallon. A
$20,000 personal recognizance
·bond for Barley was continued
and he was released by the court.
The court has.· ordered Carl
Buckley to undergo tre atment at
Athens Mental Health Center lor
the purpose of restoring Buckley
to competency to stand trial.
Buckley has been transported to
the Athens facllllty by the Me igs
County Sheriff's Department.
An order for deed and distrlbu·
lion of proceeds was filed In the
c ase of Home National Bank,
Racine. versus Dale Teaford, et
al.
First Michigan Bank. Ze eland,

Squads receive five calls

~

•

Cubed Steak ••••••••

C1

•
I

0

LB.

•

I Meigs court j

Mediation with a federal mediator Is continuing between the
negollatlng teams of the Meigs Local Teachers Association and
the Meigs Local School District . according to Dan Morris.
superintendent.
Morris reported that the first session with the mediator took
place Monday night after lmpasM' had been declared, and
additional seoslons are laking place.
Morris also reported that tonight a negotiations session will
1x&gt; held tx&gt;tween the non-certified employes, OAPSE. and the
board's negotiating teams.

&lt;
&gt;

..
k
Tur ey ................... 69&lt;

BUCKET

in court

Teams continue to negotiate

12 OZ; PKG.

FLAVORITE -

bo~ds

Sixteen delendanls forfeited boncls In the Tuesday night court
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler on charges of speeding.
Forfeiting on the charge were Gloria Kloes , PomerQy, $47;
Philip Moxley, Pomeroy, $47; Thomas Gang. Canton. $47;
James Stewart. Pomeroy. $48; Brian Grlnstdaff. Racine, $46;
Prlcllla Herdman, $46; Judith Buckley, Pomeroy, $45; Philip
Adams/ Dun!lar, W. Va. $47; John Henry Woodall. Parkers·
burg. W. Va., $46; Ruth Ellen Lee, Letart, W. Va., $55; Kenneth
Varian, Columbus, $47; Fr@derlck Rider; pomeroy, $44; Julie
Davis. Columbus. $47; Lisa Rucker, Reedsville, $44; Jimmy
Evans, Pomeroy. $45.
·
··
·
.
Others forfeltlng bonds .were Mary K. Moore, Sunbury , $63,
driving under suspension; John Landacre,. Pomeroy. $43.
Improper bac.klng; and Vernon · Weed meyer, Norihup, S!il.
expired licenses.
Fined were Mavis McClain, Cheshire, $63 and costs, no
operator's license; Steve Hanning, Middleport, $313 and costs.
destruction of 11roperty; Tammy Johnson, Gallipolis, $63 and
costs, expired plates; and Thomas Richardson. Pomeroy, $43
and costs, slop sign violation.

•

GRADE A

By United Press International
The first day of autumn
brought ·a hint of cooler things to
come from Minnesota to upper
New York s tate today. as sunny
skies were forecast for most of
the nation.
Showers a nd thunderstorms .
were foreca st only across the
Florida Peninsula, Arizona , New
Mexico and New England . Elsewhere, skies ""ere expected to
remain cle ar , the National

.

•'

.STORE HOURS

briefs-__,., First day of fall brings cooler.temperatures.

Four fined in mayors court

~

The Deily Sintina-Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Gallia midget

REGULAR
$369.00

RCA 20" rli"!Jonal
XL·l 00 Color TV

football
travels to Meigs

• Chenneloci&lt; digitel
keybo1rd control
•

Hi-Con..

square-

comer COTY picture tuba

The Gall Ia County Midget
Football League will travel to
Meigs Thursday night a·t 6 p m
• field· In·
at · the Meigs junior high
Middleport
The Pom.e roy Eagles will take
on the Bob Evans Cowboys at 6

• 147-channel cablecompatible tuning•

• Automatic contraat/ color tracking

NOW ONLY

p.m ., follow!'&lt;!
by the
the game
between
Whaley's
Auto
Parts
and the Raiders at 7 p.m.

$319

·SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE OF 1988
RCA COLOR TELEVISIONS .AND VCR'S
IN THE NEW 1ST FLOOR TV DEPT•

Hospital news
Veterans ~emorlal
Tuesday Admissions - Ken·
neth Cundiff, Syracuse; Craig
Foley , Reedsville; Edward Tern·
pleton, Middleport; John
Kennedy. Pomeroy; David Hard·
wick. Middleport.
Tuesday Discharges - Judith
Laudermilt

IF ADEATH OCCURS ~WAY FROM HOME HOW DO I HANDlE THE ARRANGEMENTS?
1

Should the death of a loved one occur
while traveling in this country or ov·
eraeas. we can handle 118\'erlll of the aildi·
tiqnal and nac-rv procadurea incurred .
when death happens away from home.
Our membership or experience with na·
· tiona! and international funeral service or·
'ganizationa will help a tot. We have acceu .
' to the services of funeral homea almolt
anywhere and we can make the arrange·
menta with 1811 confusion and llxpenae.

I

I

'(
~ ~'

.

--··-·

We'll confar with you by phone and fo.l·
low your wlsh81 as we always do. Our ;.~~~;;~~;:?..?.-- '·
aarvic;as can Include making arrange· ,-;: ·
menta for burial at home, at the location'
of dalith or alaewhere.

fl.~

T-tYf. .-

...

11141992·5141
MIDDLEPORT •.OHIO
\

:Your wiah11 will receive the same con·
earn and care away from homa which wa
give here at home.
5TH STREET

t8141 887·3110
COOLVILL£. OHIO
i

�'......

;

• v...

•

'

.'•'
The Daily Sentinel• ~

Wednuday. September 23, :1987

•

•

By The Bend
·•

•

Wednesday, September 23, 1987:

Page-a:• :•

!I

Beat of the bend

Cremeans family gathers for reunion

It'll still happen...
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A car show had been slated
MlddlePQrt's an·
nual Block
Party Saturday
but was not held
due to the
weather and
r a I n y
conditions.
However, the show will come
off as planned--only a little later.
There are some 14 classes to be
Included In the event which has
been rescheduled for the same
location on Oct. 3. If you have any
questions or want to see about
taking part just give Duane
Weber a ring, either at his work
at the Quality Print Shop or at
home--or you can contact Craig
Venoy.

The Cremeans family reunion
was held recently at Forest
Acres Park, Rutland.

received an American flag for
use at their headquarters on
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy and
are delighted.
The flag, according to the
certification which accompanjed
It, flew over the capitol on Aug. 4
for thE' chapter and was secured
fo·r the local group by Congressman Clarence Miller. Present
commapder of the chapter Is
Steve Eblin.

A!tending were Ewing and
Judy Hutton, Carroll Smith, Lisa
Zuspan, Arthur and Glennls
Musser, Judy, Mindy , Angie and
Danny, Jr., McDonald, Teressa,
Arlc and Alyson Patterson;
Theodore Cremeans, June, Iva
and Gary Cremeans, Shiri~&gt;Y
Simmons, Brian Smith, Phyllis,
Marty, Angle and David
Spangler, Danny, Barbara and
Derek Cremeans, Paul and
Kevin Musser, Adeline Snowden.
Philip Smith, Bob and Eloise

The Morning Star United Meth·
odist Churcli· . Is planning a
,seasonal activity for Sunday ..a
hayride, a wiener · roast and
devotions. Everyone should be at
the church by 4:30 p.m.
·
A former Pomeroy business
woman, SadiE' Thuener, will be
marking her birthday annlver·
sary on Oct. 2. Cards can be s~&gt;nt ,
to her at Box 57, Syracuse. What,
39 again, Sadie?!

Racine merchants are getting
their annual fall festival together
and final plans will be tacked
down at a meeting to be held at 7
p.m . Thursday at the VIllage Cut
Rate Store.
Merchants would like represelltatlves from schools ,
ch11rches and civic groups also to
~ttend the planning session and
lel(rn about activities being
planned and what they can do to
help make the festival even more
successful. According to plans
being made, store owners and
employees will be wearing old·
tashioned costuming during the
festival. ·
I:.t you have an suggestions or
questions do call 949·2241, 949·
2140. or 949·2800. By the way, the
annual festival ls scheduled for
Oct. 10 and will tie In with the
~th anniversary of the signing
of the Constitution.

Lest we forget.
In January, 1973, Pomeroy
VIllage Council passed leglsla·
lion requiring that all persons
posting signs and posters In
Pomeroy must pay a $25 deposit
at village hall .
The deposit is then refunded if
the signs are taken down within
10 days after they are posted.
Mayor Richard Seyler advises
that this ordinance Is still In
effect and reports that offenpers
can be prosecuted. Incidentally,
this would also Include posting of
yard sale signs. Sorry 'bout that.
!lome doctors are now coming
up with the theory that laughter
Is good medicine for what ails
you. So you see I haven't been so
far off all these years when I
urged you to keep smiling. And
you didn't even have to pay for an
office visit. SQ..keep smilin' .

Members of Chapter 53, Dis·
abled American Veterans, have

McCloud family has reunion
A reunion of the Hazel McCloud
family was held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Barber
in Pataskala.
Atending were Hazel McCloud,
Pomeroy; Ethel Bentz, Racine;
Helen and Jack Armes, Robert
and Buddy Hutson, Crestline;
Betty Maurer, Pomeroy; Edna
and Joe Pamore, Columbus;
Charles and Jean McQoud and
daughter, Becky P, Pataskala:
Pamela Sue and Peter Wargo
and John, Pataskala; Oris and
Diane McCloud, Millersport: 0.
J ., Karrie, and Shannon
McCloud, Amy Carter, Adam
Jason, Sarah and Aaron Morris,
Millersport.
John Bentz. Racine; Bruce and

Anita Keller and daughter,
Kriste, Columbus: Sharon Slone,
Mlsse and Sharon Lee Slone,
Michelle Hutson, Crestline; Judy
and Ken Samples and sons, Todd
and Tim. Columbus; Debbie and
Mindy Ulery, Columbus; Donnie
Ulery, Columbus; Floyd Clark,
Portland, Oregon; Mrs . VIola
Thacker. Pikeville. Ky.; Dorothy
Smith, Pataskala; Suzann
Weaver and son, Joshua, Ra·
cine; Bill Bowen, Crestline; and
Lori Samples, Columbus.

Church picnic held
SPEAKER - Steve Hos·
klns, Ohio Evangelist for the
Church of God, will be speaker
lor a revival which starts
Sunday at the Church of God,
Route 124, Rutland. He has
been In the ministry for
several years and has minis·
tered in Ohio, Michigan, Mls·
sour!, VIrginia, West VIrginia
and Tennessee. He has also
ministered In Germany. The
revival wlll be held at 7 p.m.
each evening througlt Oct. 4.

Retired Teachers
have meeting
Albert Devose, president-elect
of the Ohio State Teachers
Ret lrement System, was speaker
for the recent luncheon meeting
at the Meigs County Retired
Teachers Association held at the
Masonic Temple, MlddlePQrt.
Devose outlined his goals and
objectives for his 1988 presld·
ency . He wa~ presented with a
gift by Mary V. Reibel, vice
president .

About 50 attended a picnic held
by the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church on the tennis courts
adjacent to the church Sunday.
Th~&gt; picnic was held for the
members of the Sunday school
· classes of the smaller children of
the church members. Hot dogs,
macaroni salad, cole slaw and
cookies and pop were served .

SlindereUa meets

Auxilary meets

Groveport; Richard and Glenna
Fetty, Chris, Sheila and Kristen
Napper, Langsville.
Woodrow and Virginia Hill,
Donna Ford. Victor Cremeans,
Bucyrus; Delores Rodgers,
Charlotte Gosney, Angela and
Jamie, Charles Schappert, Jr.,
Middletown; Claude and Phyllis
Cremeans, WheE'lersburg; Ro·
bert Smith, Jr., Shelleyvllle,
Ky.; Micky, Joyce, Nicole, and
Amy Coomer, Maineville:
Elaine Musser, South Lebanon;
Beverly Napper, Harrlsonvllle; .
and Char les and Vera Cremeans,
Trenton .

WMFI meets
for officer
installation

New officers were Installed at
the recf;'nt meeting of the Laurel
Cliff Women's Missionary Fel·
lowship held at the home of Jean
Wright.
Installed were Bonnie Friend,
president; JanHaggy, vlcepresi·
dent; Kay Clark, secretary;
Wanda Eblin, treasurer; Jean
Wright, director of out-reach;
VIcki Bell, director of CYM, Iva
Powell, director of missions
education; and Donnla Gilmore,
director of stewards.
Evelyn Young was elected

Racine PTO
has meeting

GOOD USED

-~ ·-

....

....

~

-

'; '1 '!""". · ·· -- --- -- --· ,..~ · - · ·

·- -·· .. -:-· -----.-

earlier as the pE'nny-a·day dlrec·
tor. Kathy Pullllns had the
installation prayer.
Mrs. Gilmore had the opening
prayer with Shirley Friend giv·
lng devotions. A thank you letter
was read from missionaries,
Phillip and Carmena Capp, who
were at the family camp this
summer.
A workday was set for each
week during which time mission
boxes will be prepared and
mailed. Plans were discussed for

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP

UYAWAl

PREVIEWS - FlEE

IIIOW ONIII

10-12 DIFFERENT POSES
3 DIFFERENT OUTFITS

Mon., Yves., Wed. &amp; Frj.

LIFETIME GUARANTEE WITH BURRELL COLOR PRINTS

FABRIC &amp;.CRAnS

I all flln night. Karen Stanley took
pictures of the members to be
used on a poster which will
represent Laurel Cliff at the
Women's Retreat in Mansfield •
The October 13 meeting at the
church will be a fellowship tea
with members to take guests.
It was noted that Mrs. Wright,
Iva Powell, Genevieve Ward,
Bonnie Friend, and Kay Qark
attended the Women's Retreat in
Mansfield. Refreshments were
served by Iva Powell and Marge
Fetty.

Spaghetti dinner
slated by OES

Dance Friday
in Chester

Evangeline Chapter 172. Order
of the Eastern Star, will have a
spaghetti dinner Friday with
serving from 1i a.m to 6 p.m. at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.

The Dance Club will have a
dance at the Senior Citizens
Center Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. wtth
music by True CQ.untry . Those
attending are to take snacks.

:

--------------------------------------------~
MAKE DAD FEEL LIKE A KING
SHOP FOR HIM IN THE CLASSIFIEDS.

10 A.M.·S P.M.
Sot. 10 A.M.·2 P.M.

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•

IIIDILIPOIT ·

·-,.

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS

FOOTBALL SEASON
IS HEREI
.CORNER
COLLECTIONS
1:19 MILL ST.

-· -- ·~ ·

The Daily Sentinel- Page 9

PH. 4 .. ·1699
HOUIS: I A.M.·6 P.M.

Sweatshirts

. ... -.--:---·-

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

thechoice I
isyours I

COUNTY
APPLIANCES
627 3rd An., Gallipolis

!].----·-- - .. ·· - ·-

ATTENTION

fl~==========:;1

Decisions.

WASHERS, DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TVs
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

..

I

Plans for pkartlcipation in the
town carnival to be held on Oct.
10 were discussed at the recent
meeting of the Racine PTO held
at the school.
The PTO will have a booth for .------------------------1
the carnival, selling chili and
pop. It was announced that the ·
membership drive Is underway
this week. A sales representative
was on hand to discuss things
which can be sold by thE'
students. Donna Norris, prlncl·
pal, Introduced thE' staff. Parents
are encouraged to attend the
UCII TO.,._ IMnt
• SPECIAL PRlCE ADMISSIONS •
meE'tings.
ADULTS 13 .50 · CHILD!EN 12 .50
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATI NEES
ALL SEATS 12.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 12.00

•

~

Denny in service
Ronald B. Denny, son of Earl
and Betty Denny, 738 South
Fourth St., Middleport, has been
promoted In the U . S. Air Force to
the rank of Airman First Class.
Denny Is an antenna technician
with the 6912th Electronics Se
curity Group in West Berlin. He
is a 1984 graduate oil Meigs
HKtgh School,
His wife, Bonnie, foster daugh·
ter of Arthur and Myrl Gibbs of
Hartford, W. Va. and their
daughter, Brittany Nicole, are
also in Germany.

'l

Plans for participating In the
vlllage fall les tlv al on Oct . 10
were made when the Racine
Firemen' s Auxi liary met re·
cently at the firehouse.
Ann Lane presided at the
meeting during which time the
group decided to sell Ice cream,
have their cotton candy machine
In operation, and use a double
barrel shotgu n In a special fund
raiser.
The group will also assist the
firemen In selling c hicken and
hot sa usages durin g the day.
Six new members were we i·
corned and another reinstated at
the meE'ting

Kay Morris was thl' top los~&gt;r
when the night class of Sllnder·
ella met last week at Five Points.
New members are still be ac·
cepted lor a Tuesday morning
class. At the Mason class. Con ni e
Goodnlte lost the most weekly
weight , and JanE' Johnson was
runner-up. In the kid' s class.
Tiffany Davis lost the most
weight . Jo Ann Newsome Is
lecturer.

'

Helen Smith presided at the
business meeling. Named to the
nominating committee were Nel·
lie Parker, Margaret Parsons,
and Lei' McComas . Cards were
signed for several members who
are Ill. Next meeting will be held
Nov . 21 at thE' Masonic Temple.

Smith, Basil and Kate Cremeans ,
Wesley Young, Homer; Jr .. and
Rita Smith, Tewie May, Maude
Smith, Lynn Black, all of the
Rutland area.
Luther and Mary Smith. Cha·
rles a nd Linda Boyles, Heather
and Bethany Boyles, Jason,
David and Brandon Smith, and
Bonnie Miller , Middleport: Pat
Neutzllng, Ruth and Christopher
Smith, John Haggy, Raymond
and Becky Ward, Ron F'reE'man,
Richard Rathburn, Pomeroy:
Gladys Blosser and Hazel ~oore ,

!ipll"

LIMIT QUANTITIES ..

*I''

,•

..

-..•
•
'••
,;

••
••
•
•

•-•

.

••
"••
•

�Page-1 0-The Daily Saatiuel

..

Wednesday. September 23. 1987.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

DAR pfogram focus on United States Constitution
A program in observance of
Constitution Week was presented
by Mrs. Maye Mora at ihe recent
meeting of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution held
at the home of Mrs. George
Morris.
Mrs . Mora used as her topic.
" The Framing of. the Constitu tion". and talked to the group on
the five W's of the document ..
when, where•. who, why, and
what. She lead the group Into an
imaginary journey back to Philadelphia that summer of 1787 to
observe and listen to the delega tes as they answered the five
w·s. She said that none or the
delegates suggested that the
docume)lt was perfeci. and that

they, like Washington, who there Nov. 13-15. Any articles for
called It "achlldoffortune" were the bazaar should be delivered to
not to know the durability of their Mrs. Ingels prior to that time.
ideas or the strength of their
Mrs. Milhoan, regent, led In the
words.
opening ritual with Mrs. Gary
A tree planted on the lawn of Moore. acting chaplain In the
city hall by Mrs. Dwight Mllhaon absence of Mrs. Joseph Cook.
earring oul the National Socie- The flag salute and preamble to
ty's program of planting trees in the Constitution were given in
observance of the bll:entennlal of unison.
the constitution , was dedicated In
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds, na·
a fitting ceremony. following the tiona! defense chairman, spoke
meeting. The tree was dedicated on the activity of groups seet&lt;lng
in honor oi Mrs. Maye Mora, a to get support for calling a
longtime member of the chapter Constitution Convention as conand a graduate of Pomeroy High tained in Article 5. The leglsla·
School, now village hall.
lure of two-thirds of the states
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, trustee of .. must agree to such action . She
Walschrnidt House, announced noted that a convention to change
the Christmas bazaar to be held the constitution 'is opposed by

many who urge careful attention book.
Donald Mora wen• guests at ·the
to the matter.
On display was a certificate of
meeting.
It was noted that a float recognition for the late Frances
Adessertcoursewasservedby
prepared by Mrs. Milhoan and Brewington for service to her
Mrs. Morris assisted by Mrs.
Mrs. John Rose and committee CO!Intry as a nurse during W. W.
Clinton Fisher, Mrs. Harold
had appeared In the bicentennial II.
Sargent , Mrs. James O'Brien,
parades at Athens and Marietta r-M-rs_._R_o:_y_H_o_u_e_r_an_d__,M,-rs_.__a_n_d_M_rs_._G_e_r""a""ld=W::I::ld::e::rm=u::th::.=
this summer. Theme was "We
the People Cannot Let the Constl·
tutlon Die" was enthusiastically
received. It was noted.
· Mrs. Gene Yost read the
secretary's report · and Mrs.
George Skinner gave the financial report. New program books
were reviewed by Mrs. Rose. Pen
sketches with each program
PI!IClS HltC IIVI: !HfllJ SAl. Sll'l ('t, IIJH,
being .outlined added to the
SUPEIIOI lULl
overall des lgn of the book.
Special thanks were extended to
:Quality Print for println-~t the

RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
ship Trustees will meet In regu lar session Thursday, 6: 30p.m.,
at the Rutland Fire Station.
POMEROY - Free dothlng
day will be held Thursday. from
10 a .m. to 12 noon. at the
Salvation Army In Pomeroy. All
area residents in need of clothing
welcome.
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter or Beta Sigma Ph I
Sorority wlll meet Thursday.
7:30 p.m., at Grace Episcopal
&lt;;burch.
MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Church of Christ
Womens' Fellowship wlll meet at
Bradford Church on Thrusday at
7:30 p.m. Speaker will be Ruth
Seevers on womens' work in the
church.
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club Will meet Thursday
evening, 7:30p.m.,atthehomeof
Mrs. Lyle Balderson. Members
are asked to bring cookies lor an
exchange.
FRIDAY

POMEROY - The Fraternal

Order of Eagles Ladles Auxiliary
will have a special meeting on
Friday at 7 p.m. at the hall.
STIVERSVILLE - Sliversville Community Word of Faith
Church will have weekend rev!·
val services Friday through
Sunday at 7 p.m . each evening.
The speaker wlll be George
Black from Portland,' and special ·
singing will be featured Including
Linda · Damewood on Friday,
Darlene Newell and Mary Dailey
on Saturday, and the VIctory
Quartet on Sunday . Everyone
welcome.

style square dance on Saturday, 8
to 11 p.m., at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center. Caller
wlll be Chad Johnson.
SUNDAY

EAGLE RIDGE - The homecoming of Eagle RidgeCommun·
tty Church will be this Sunday
with morning services at 10 a .m .•
carry-in dinner at 12: 30 and
afternoon service at 1:30. The
Orr Singers, and Jerry and Diane
Frederick will be featured In the
afternoon. Rev. Carl Hicks, pastor. Invites the public to attend.

Prayer meeting chanced
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
POMEROY - The weekly
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern prayer meeting of Calvary PilStar. wlll have a spaghetti dinner grim Chapel, Route 143. Pome·
Friday with serving from 11 a .m roy, will be held Thursday at the
to 6 p.m. at the Middleport regular time Instead ol WednesMasonic Temple.
day. Mr. and Mrs. Phebus,
representing their son, Don Phe·
POMEROY -The Dance Club bus, and hls mission work In New
will have a dance at the Senior Mexico, will be guests on
Citizens Center Friday. 8 to 11 Thursday . .
p.m. with music by True Country. Those attending are to take Re\'lval
snacks .
LETART FALLS - The Rev .
Pearl A. Casto, former pastor of
SATURDAY
the Letart Falls United Metho·
POMEROY - The Belles and dlst Church, will conducl evangeBeaus Western Square Dance listic services at the church. Oct.
Club Is sponsoring a western 7-11. 7 p.m. Special singing

renee River. through the Gulf of
St. Lawrence and down the
Atlantic, said Jim McGranahan.
a Coast Guard spokesman.
"He lies down on the paddle
board. " said McGranahan . "He
uses his 'feet to s teer. He just lies
there and paddles with his

nightly .
Chamber mo\'ed
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce Is now
located In the former Diamond
Bank building, West Main St .,
Pomeroy. Office hours are Mon·
day, Tuesday and Friday. 9:30
a.m. to 4 p.m. The chamber
phone number remal.ns 992-5005.
.,

Hunter course
POMEROY - A hunter safety
course Is being offered Sept . 28-29
and Oct. 1-3 on the second floor of
the Pomeroy Municipal Build·
Ing. Classes will be held 6 to 9
p.m . on Sept. 28-29 and Oct. 1-2.
The Oct. 3 class will be !rom 9
a.m. to 12 noon. Chief Instructor
will be Dana Aldridge and class
size is limited. All students must
pre-register by Sept. 25 by calling
John Costanzo at 843·5405 or
992·3883 during the day.

arms.''

Although the paddle board is
"so small"- 18 feet wide and 18
feet long - compared to the
vessels that often pass near him.
there have been no major Incidents reported during his journey, McGranahan said .
Capune has averaged 15 to 45
miles a day. depending on the
weather.
The rest of his "paddle against
drugs" will take him down the
Atlantic to the Chesapeake Bay
and up the Potomac River to the
nation's capital.
"He' s still got a good way to
go, " said McGranahan.

BLUE BONNET QUARTERS

MARGARINE ......... I.U... 79&lt;
XRAn 16 SliCE PIIIEN10 PROCESSED ·

CHEESE .............. U.Ql. SJ.87
PEARL VALLEY BULK

HOT PEPPER
CHEESE .............. J.U •. SJ. 9 7 .

lAKING
POTATOES ........ JJI.IJ, S1.19
NEW YELLOW
3
O"IONS ..................~~;•• 19&lt;
MARSH RED

~

A

-edyou.
A mHIIon .times we 've
cried .

If love could h•ve aeved

you.
You never would have

died.

dearly

24 01.

Hash Brown Potatoes ..•••• S1.39

piece
No one Cln ever fill .

TASTE OF SEA

It broke our hNMI to

IOMyou.

Ocean Perch Fillets ••••.•• r~ S2.99

RA CINE - The Sept. 28
meeting ol Alpha Omicron Chaptel' of the Delta Kappa Ganirria
Society will be held at the Racine
United Methodist Church. Please
note that this Is a change ol
location . The meeting wltl begin
at 6:30p.m ..

But you

Ph. : 992-2121

Member t-Q,elhOU«f't Lroupv.t

diCI not go

Buotd yOUJ home or cabJO on
thos lovely land tust one m1l e
11om Oh1o R1ver. Wood$. seclusion. and cleated land. 2
acres up. A rea l b&lt;irgain.

Two 1 acre bu1ldong so les on
WrJghl St Water aAd sewer.
$4 ,000 each

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REALTY
1-61 4· 385 -8740

Collect Calls Acctptea

Sandwich Bags ...........~UI·. S1.49

some body 's pet and that the slate
would hold the animal for several
days before decidin g lis Pvenlual
fate.
Woman uses teeth
lo .foil break-In
CHICAGO i UPll - Gloria
Shelton didn 't lose her head when
a man with a nickel· plated
handgun forced his way Into-her
luxury brownstone and tied up
the 64·year-old woman and her
maid.
Shelton used her teeth to free
herself Monday, then called
pollee from a bedroom telephone
whil!! 'the man ransacked the
apartment on the floor below .
A paroled ex-convict with a
series or lheft and weapons
convictions was arresled minutes later hiding In a nearby
toolshed.
'

Reel Estate General

ZEL BiAUTY BAR

.TEAFORom

oz.

: Reol

Cream of Celery Soup •.••• 2/89&lt;

Estate~
IIALIOl

218 E. 2nd St .

VAN CAMP

Phone
1-111, 41· 992-332 5

Pork-N-Beans •••..•.•...••••••• 2/99&lt;

NEW liSTIIIG - l bt'droom
: home. batt&gt; \.0 "' lur
nace.- b&gt;1.S
·" ·~ lot on
Racine lo. ~. 500
SYIIACUSE - Modern 7rm
ranc h. 3 BR. basemen! w1! h
lam1ly rm., gas and woQO
he•t. niCe k1lchen. range.
carpetm g. coppet plu mbmt
2 parches. Insulated and
noce lol. Adk mg $35,000
POIIEROY - 2 tg. tots, lg.
nrce 3 BR Mme w ~h 3
blths. modern k1l chen. cook
and bake u n1t~ panlty,
d101ng. lam1iy rm , lull
basement, Gas and wooO
heat
TRAILEA - IMD loberty.
2 bedrms.. centr al '" · all
· eiec.. ra nRe and relrJg.
· Asking 17,000.
66 ACRES - In S&lt;!c. 25
Rutland Township. Young
bees and all mmerals_
100 ACRES - SaliSbu ry
Township. 2 water taps. 2
gas·OII wells, minera ls on
good road.
COUNTRY- 6 yr. old brJck.
2 baths, full basemen!.
range, patro. dnlled well.
IOSUidted piUS 589 aCifS.
Just oil Rt. 33. $64.000.
SYIIACUSE - 3 BR ran ch,
nice kitchen, ca r~elin ~ dJO·
ing area. 3 bedrooms,lg.
sundeck and lg.lol. $32.900.
REEDSVILLE - Medium
size 4 BR, 2 lots. one setup
lor trailer. TP wat er and
drilled well.

o"

HOIMEL CANNED

Spam Lunch Meat ....•• J1.Pk. $2.19
16NUS PACK

Coffee-Mate •.•••••...••••~tJ.PA·· $2.99

MOlTON HOUSE SUCED 12.5 oz.

Beef or Turkey w/gravy ...........S1.29

JUMBO

Bounty Towels ••....•••••..••••••.•. 99&lt;

INSTANT

.Sanko Coffee ••••..•••••.. MJ... S3.79

SEARS Catalog

BUY AT TEAFORD
AND SAVE

992-3325

HoustnrJ
Hl•adq u,ul e rs

POMEROY,O .
992-2259
NEW LISTING - IIIOOLE ·
PORl - ThiS oloer 3 bed·

8

100m home features a nver
~ ~ew

&amp; a low pnce You can
move 11ght mor use as a ren·

Ia!. small lot and a home
wtth potent1al. PRICED 10
SELL AI $1 5.900 00.
L01 NEAR 5 POINTS Here •s wtlal you.have been

wanling. level buJidmg lol
w1th waler &amp; electric ava1la·

ble near 5 Po1nts Oesuable
locat1on &amp; one acre lor
$5.900 00
NEW LISTING - MINERS.
VIllE - BuoiOong lot w~ h
wor ~

doter

already com·

pleted ElectriC available &amp; 2
water taps. 1.69 acre can be
vouts lor only $2.800.00.
SYRACUSE - Bnck and
lra me ranch type home w~ h
basement. One car garage, 3
bedrooms on level lat ge lot.
Large tenced rear plaj area.
Home 1s 10 excellent cond~ ~n
on a good loe&gt;t1on. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT' $J9,500 00.
RUTlAND - A I'? story
home w1th 3 bedrooms. en·
closed lront potch. equipped
~!chen , stor age buildmg an d
part basemenl $21.000 00.

lf:..Y f. CUlAND, M..... 'l92-b191
IUN JRU!ISUl ...... ..... . 49 · 2660

DOOlE TURNfl ........... 997-Sb92
J'IIAC'f RifflE .............. 94q. JOIO
Offl(l ......................... 99 ~ 2119

AW,

. Behind Blue

992-3537

------~-----------~T----------------- . J

INti .....

to\.....,,,.. ,,.\IOit

IOo Do&lt;' "" '"...... •"'•Uo•

71111. Ill

MIIILIPOIT

,,,o.n

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 174, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trans1111111oa
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tfc

. MARCUM
CONTRACnNG
CHDTD, OHIO

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimetel" '

PH. 949·2860
or 949·2801

"'
.,.,•

W1WS C. aOWEI - A.lllililtnltor
JIM CAINAIIAN - Auctialtlr
..... Ollie - 614·94t-t701
Ter1111i: cis• or chcl wHh PfOtll' I.D.
llot tupo~~liblt 101 Accidtnls.or lass of l'roptrty

367-0322
9-23· 1 mo .

No Su'"'ay Calls
3·11-tln

COHSUIID MOIIIOII SYSliMS

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE ...
•Child' 1 BiMhday

Per1y
•Wedding

. '

•Parents' Anniversary
•Baby Shower

•Family Reunion
•Any Special
Occasion

PH. 992-6959

9-18-1 mo.

•

Ut looch 11.
Mitldlo~on. Oh. 45160

FREE ESTIMATES
RfSIOENTIAL I COMMERC I,A l

nu
.
~·Dr, ,rp-rr.J.;,
PH. 742-202.1_

' .:. F:,
ri'J
~~..~

BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour
11-1 pm-Drinks 50'
VCR TAPE RENTAl
W. VA. lOTT£RY
CARRY-OUT

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Mtnufacture and Sales of

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

39504 lro6u7 U.
Middloplft, Oh. s760
16141 9U-5751

1· 24· 1 mo.

SYIACUSI,

OHIO

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major S. Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992·6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

•Pictures
•Pottery
•Cement Products

.. Vou Nam .. ll - Wr," "
(;01

It!"

REASONAIU I'IICIS--.IIY

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antique.•
1124 East Main St.

P-oy
HOUIS: Tue.~Wed.~Fri.

11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundor• 1 p.... -7 p.m.

ly Chonco or Appointmonl

RUSS MOORE
992·2526

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Howard L Wrlte11l

core radtators . and
heater ~ores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

NEW- IEPA.

repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Call !114)992-7204
Wholesale ,• Reteil

8· 10· t .... pd.

9-10.1 mo. d.

1-24-17-1 mo.

We can repair and re-

Appointl'l'ent

ROOFING

Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
P1intlng
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-21

BISSELL
IUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
,.At IHsonablt PricH"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO S.UNDA Y CAllS

4-16·8&amp;-tfn

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE
CENTER
PUTS • SIIVICE

Repelr1 on AU Makes

. Trentexle Repelro-

"',lotw-

'-otool .....

,l t.7 ... .......

HRS: 12:00-8:00
Mondey-Seturday
Cj.OSED SUNDAY

Ph. 949-2969

BUY -SELL-TRADE

a-7·1 mo.

721&amp; Of 676·8899.

PARTS and SERVICE

4-S·IIr

BOGGS

4

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Farm Equipment

Fum E•ultment
Parta &amp; Serwlee

1·3-'86 tfc

N.ew location:

161 North Second
Middleport. Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Sup pli ""

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here
iUSINISS PHON!

ll

t6141

tIll ill 0y!Ill' Ill
Servtct:s

Announcem ents
Giveaway

Help Wanted
3 mal&amp;lliuens. 10- 12wellttold. 11
Litter trained. Tame. Call 614- 1-----~~-246-9672.

2 adorable gray &amp; white kinena.
Call 614 -446-8016 or 4463731 .
Free Clothing· Elizebettt Chapel
Church· off St. Rt. 218. Thurs.
morning 9· 12 . Will be cancell.t
if rein .

AKC Regiatered Gordon Satter.
Well trained. Not recommended
for home with imall children.
Call614· 446-4476.

16141 992-77!4

117~ 1 11 1 1

LONG'S
CONSTRUCTION

Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of All Types
Worked in Horl1f Areo

25 Yeors
FREE EITIMATES

CALL

1·614.843·5425

1123/ 2mo. d.

Sublttlut• Cook· Able to pr•
part tchool lunch ec:cording to
menu and reQuirements bf th•
Division of School food '
Stt''oJiic•· •6.06 I*' hour. Cell or
wrtte: Gellla County B011rd of

lost : bleelt arid brown Fox
Hounq in letan Falls area. If
s een. eall614-247- 2641 .

Ohio 45820 . 614· 367-0102.

7

Cell

Yard Sale

....... Gallfi:iolls··· .......
Anliques, Hoosier cupboard,
bookcale, tables , 1toneware,
kitchen collectibles, glauware,
tools , lots more. Cenlentry
Townhou10. Sept. 24.

Electronic Organs

Yard Sale: Higley' s Barber Shop,
Upper RT . 7 , 9 :00AM, Fri. &amp;
Sat .• Sept . 26 &amp; 26.

In Porter- left oH 160 on 554 . 6
Family· boat, dinette. Every·
thing cheep . Call 388-9879 .
9 ·24 tft 10-3.

Full-lime federally qualifi.cf &amp; •
stale cenlfl.t QMAP for ICF- ·
MR ftcllity lor teriMric population . Exp•lence In htbllltltion
service~ a mutt . Sal•v nllgOtiable. EIIC.tlent bendu. Contllet
Ohio Job S•viee, 614- MO·

IAHIT VINOY

WEDDING COHSilTANT

Weddinq flower~

and

LaSALLE GALLERY
· claport-992-

Thur1 . and Fri ., Sepl. 24 , 25 . 5
femily . Furniture, drtpet. toy•
and more. Next to State High·
way Garage.
Leonard Basti, At. 124. Syra·
cuse. Thursday, 24th and Fridev
25th . 614· 992 · 6006 . Rain
c:ancela.

.......Pf"Piea·sa·nf ·· ...

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Now Open
DAllY tO AM-6 PM
MONDAY lhru SATURDAY
· Located at Corner of
Rl. 143 and·RI. 7,

P-roy

Purchasing all
types of
non-ferrous scrap
#1 Copper
Current 63C lb.
Top Gr1de
Aluminum Sheet•
40C tb.
Aluminum Cans
34C t.b.
9-11-1 nu&gt;-

Commiuion . Qualifications ar•
High School Grad, Yeteren with
Honorable Ditch~•· Applic.
tion may be plck.cl up et v..•r.n
Office G•lll• Countv Cour1
Ho.u M. 00-214 Copv number 4
mull •ceompay lpplicatlons.
Oe.ctline Oct . 16.
Wanted· Beautlcillfls with Men·

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Accessorte• in this area

Application• for Veteran S.,viee

•gers UcenM and without, for ,

SillilY IIOUifON

of

&amp; Vicinity

New a.. uty Shop. Call 614·
388-9093.

1883.

Go'oJiernment Joba. S16, 040·
1&amp;9.230 yr. Now hiring. Call ·
805-887-8000 Ext. R-9806 kJr .
current federtl lltt.
E~rn a•cellent money in home
••embly worlt . Jewelrv. toyt
end othert . "snd PT Avail. Cell
todavl 1- &amp;18 . .a&amp;9-3546 ttoll· :
refundable) DEPTB1622 24 hrs. ..

Immediate OP.;Mlng for exp•
rienced cook. 9 :00-3 :00, Mon .•
Fri. Pay commentureut with
axpet"lenca. Send resume to
Dallv Sentinel, Bo• 729P ,
Pomeroy, Ohio .

,
·

·
·

La Salle Gallery, Middlepon .
Yard Sale, ·3 tamiii~S, 1 mil•
beyond Un ion Camp Ground
back New Haven, Tuudav thru
Saturday 9:00-7.
3 femily vtrd ule, Fri,S•t.Sun;
Sept 25,28 ,27; 9 :00 1m till
dark; 7"11 mil" out Sand.Hill Rd
to Oak Grove Rolad, first treil«
on left. Watch for algn1. Lot•
mite things.

Garege $tie, Sat, Sept. 28, 142
Enalllh Ao~ . Point Plea.. nt,
rain or shine.

needs stlet P••on experienced
in handicrafts and wHiing to
accept retpontlbUhy. Appty in
pMSon Mon .- Sat .• 9 :30· 4 :30.

·
·
·
'

Arcadia N~ralng Center, Coolwilla, it currently accepting appli· .
cation• for evailable R .N.·
positions.

OrNer mechan ic to make loeal ·
deliveries in Metf County. :
Wrft&amp; e•peri.,ce
qualific• .
tk)ns 10 The Dally Sentinel, Bo• .
729 S. Pomeroy. OH 46769 . .

Part

time

r"ident

man-a• · ..

eoupl•. Needed for tmell IPIII't· ·

m.,t community In Athen•. :
Hutb..,d hendlee rNintenence. ;
WHt handl• r811t .. co1111C16ons. ;
1huwtna end renting epan- ,
menta. etC. SmaH ..a.y, •pert· ·
me~~t end utilll• .,pphd, lrilf '
latter or raume to The Deily ·
Rick Pea,.on Auction"' H·
·centtd in Ohio end Wnt VirgiSentinel, Boa 728 A. PonMrQY.:
nia. e...te, antique. f•m. Uqui- · Ohio 4117&amp;1 .
dation,"'"· 304-773-1781.
- -- - - - -- - ,
Free Chrletma illtpl-v lilt· .
Friendly Home , . , . . now hM •
9 Wanted To Buy
openinp tor man..•• end '
deal. . In your .,.._ AI ...w·
We p.eo; c••h for late modtf eiMn Chrlttmta lne of ~
~
Chlr'ldlte M ,....,..ableprlce.·no .
uted cert.
Jim Mink Chw.·Okl• Inc.
MMce ctt-a•no Pill* WOf1t. .
Bin Gene Johnton
hlth commio- ond ovwrido. ·
Clll1 -800-227-1110 .
•
814-~l-3e72

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

"*·

r
_! -....:-..~:-·-- ..~- ·-,............ ~ ~ ... .

.

Bus Driver· Must
pall phylical examinatton and
.hold current but driver lieenee
for school but operator or willing
10 obtain- 16.06/hour. C.ll or
write: Galli• Countv Board ot
MR -00 P.O .Bo• 1.a Ch•hir ..
Ohio •5820. 6U.J67-0I02.

Yard Sate: Friday 25 . 9 -6 .
Celit&amp;nary Townhouse. Boy1
and Girls clothBI, toy•. sheetl .

·· · p·oilierov ···...... ·

line

MR-00 P .O .Box 14, Cheehtre,

Officer ar• being accept~ by
Gallia County Sokliers Aellef

IASIIU WU vtNG and

most complete

Htir stylilt n-.cted to 1tart wortc
the fir11 of Ot;tober. Would like
to hiVe 11yli1t with theW own

LOST : Big Dog- pen German
Shepherd &amp; pen Collie. Male.
Anr.vers to "Rex " . Child'l pet .
Vicinily or Rio Grande-Thurman
area . Cell 614 -245-6125 or
245-5644,3

•rea.

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

RIASONABLE - RELIABlE
8-20-' 86 tfn

60640.

FOUND: Cremecolored c tt· 3rd.
&amp; Grape. Call 614-446-1532
before 5 :00 PM or 388-9780
after 5 :00PM .

ladder. At. 160
614·446-3131 .

e;~~tansion

&amp; Vicinity

614·843·5248

GET PAID for ruding boob!
t100.00 per title. Write; ACE ·
338 . 2 Pime, Naperville, Ill.

Subttitute lnltNCtOf'·lachakJn .
degr... t40.00 / day. Hold at
1. .1 one valid teechmf certlfl- ·
e.. • issued bv the Ohio Oep.rt:mtnt of Education . Aveil.a.lefor
1987-88 progrem v••· ·cell or
write: Gellia County Botrd of
MA-00 P .Q. Box 14 Chllhire.
Ohk) 46620 . 114·307·0102.

LOST : Aluminum

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Mobile service

"Hiring! Go"'emment jobl· your ·
•••· t16,000-t88,000. Call
&amp;02· 838·8886. Ext. 608".
·

dlentele. If interetted ceU for
lntervtew- linda Gartett e 14·
446-3624 .
2 female kinens .to giveaway. 1 -~------­
Call 614 ·256-9364.
All!)ft-Stlll Avon for Christm...
Smell mixed breed female Bee- ~;~:. ' 0 percent . Call 614 "4.46 •
gle, friendly, spayed, hed all 1- - - - - -- - shots , 304-676·3262 .
Wanted 1 lady to live-in. light
house WOt'k. Mostly' for com.
Pert Maltese kittent, c1n see p1ny . Call 814-441-3419 .
1306 Viand St ., Pt. Pit., 304·
675-6720 .
Salesmen w..,ted l Must h8Ve
knoWledge of construction.
Mus' be qgrnlive. Call &amp;1.a6 Lost and Found
446· 7241 . after 8:00PM .

992-~110

IESIIINCI PHON!

YVONNE SCAllY
Bridal Registry and

Mon . thru Fri. or by

Old furniture, toy1, quills, dlt·
hware. ·etc. One piece or whole
hou ..hold , cath p•id, 304-67.1·

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

Action Toys, Musical

·

Wanted 10 buy, a.. ndlngtlinber.
Call AI Tromm at l'.t-742-

•Ranges

lOW &amp; WtEATH MAKING

A.M. to 4 P.M.

SUN., 2 P.II.-E9 1:45

All Makes

Collectors Items.
Costume Jewelry.
10

THURS., 7P.M.·EB 6:46

•Washers •Dishwashers

ANN'S

Open

Buylna dtilv gold. silver coins.
rina•. jewelry, atertiftg were, old
coln1, larae currency. Top pr~
cas. Ed lurlten B•rber Shop.
2nd. Ave . MiddiiPOM. Oh. 614·
992 -3478 .

EAGLD CLUII· POIIEROY, OHIO

2329.

STENCILING CLASSIS

Toys &amp; Trinkel Boxes

Price depends uPon condition.
Cell 81.a-.t4&amp;·1602 etk for Dan.

985-3561

SIGN UP NOW FOR

Gift Shop &amp; Toy Store

Old outboerd moto,. , any
condilion · terviceble or not.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

OPEN FOR BUSINESS
324 E. Main St.
Pomoroy
Bthind City Hotl

Most Foreign and

Certified licen1ed Shop

•Wooden Gifta

10-8-tfc

~

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE

lntt. hcoratint (.,.uh.,l

, ,

DENNY CONGO

• . 19.1 .....

lARlN FACIMYIR

~

l•0

CUFTON, W. VA.

MiOdlep•t· AIMns -hrh!MIIth

N•IWliiH-,..

d,n!~.

r

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

16!41992-Jttl •• '"·Stla

-A crutlu dttl!rll\q ol:l(htfltll«.

:.J
( [

BuildinG ~ Site· 1 -2 tcret wtlhin
15 mlnutHoftown. C ..hOt"CD.
Call by 11 -11 -87. 61"· 3889789 .

'

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
lit Us F.. u You In

.,.'*'·

ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

Deal or

,C

Recording 111nd ConHol In ·
s«ruments lor Home and
Commercial use. Monitors
to display Furnace and Air
Cond . Hours or Min . of oper ~
ating lime. Valu1ble Oat•
thlt allOW I Daily Goals lobe
set. Completely eliminates
the end of the month Bil1surprise
(. f . Kou , Mqr .; I . (r•mtont Fitld
Salts Mgr ., rlws Auoc:taltl
lnf.,mation CWMIIrodiUrt

c.·u

Female minatt.~re D•chthund.
1-2 vrt: old Wit~ or wfthout
C•ll e1•-3e7-o.ta7.

8·13·1 mo.- pd.

REFERENCES
Pilon• Day or- I•Min11

9-18-1 mo.

•M•
s

anytlm• C • A FirftVood.
114-387-oeu .

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

Authoriud John Deere,
Ntw Holland. Bush Hog

5/l llln

· CHESHIRE

Want.ct to t;.~o~y: Long wood. Call

·,,ow

REMODEliNG &amp;
REPAIRS

•ROOFING •GENERAl

I

•All MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES

WMted to buy: lt•ndlna llmMr.
Calll1 4-371-2718.

Wanted to buy fl•hing
sign . C•ll 114-24&amp;·5582.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS

Ohio

"221

•VtNYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•t10WN IN
INSUUnON

•Candln

tDIIee..,.

Name

f'hOtre Number

Pomeroy, Ohio ·
4·15-'86-tc

Tertan ,

Middleport.

9-11-17

•Ohio Souvinera
•Music Bo•es

The "tetl of Ruby Rutttll, C.H 112111811,
will ba sold et the retldence; 5119 So.ulh
second St .. Middleport. Ohio
HOUSEHOLD
Coppert,;,. Fnprre refriJ/Irefzel. ())ppertone Fnpre
wash!. &amp; dryer. Coj)j)lrtcN! Sumy ps ranae, walnut dntttlal d'
nl!llf wrth 4 thatrs.Zenm c:otor TV. 2-4 pc:. bedroom suas, ~
1J1e AdmniTV. 6 bind radro. psicl bench. Whae .,.., mac.
wilh tibolllt end tabltls. round and SQUill
tldiner.
dlneQt ~ wlh 4 chain. !llider and lawn thlir. ~ 17 ~
pressure montiDr HDiMf uQIC $Mel*. Sllreo, silverpilte ·
- · "'rrt ly~. Sunbelm elet llw..-r. 41n, hedl)!
mttier. m~. blender........ tll1otJ11181. e~
rmxer. cooltlrllr,er. crock pal, Slllll mlltlr. elet
JliOS disheS. and misc.
.
JEWELRY
Watches. RiniiS and Costume

Fll. f tiO·J
t1tU1. I Ut;

992-6215 or 992 -7314

SAT.; OCT. 10. 1987
1:00 P.ll.

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

Public Sale
1!. Auction

Thursday, Sept. 24-12:00 Noon

lltLliiA"OIIITALl

V. (,. YOUNG Ill

"mSH" SHRIMP WE

SSO PAGI STIIIT
MIDDUPOI1, OHIO

TUPPERS PlAINS - 8rJck
ranch that has everylh ong'
fu ll basement wrth lon JShed
rec. room. l'h baths. beau tJ·
lui k1!chen, lotmal dimn g. 3
bedr ooms, oak tr im, qua lity
work. Spacoous lot. 2 car
garage. pat10. E. cellent con·
d1tJon. $68,000.00

PUBLIC SALE

~~J

tFree Eatlmateal

Pleasant Valley Hospital
and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center are seeking highly
motivated registered nurses
for full and part-time employment. Current benefits include: medical and dental insurance, retirement plan. life
insurance. shift premium pay.
malpractice insurance. tuition
reimbursement and more.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Point Pleasant.
West Virginia, for more -infor·
mation.

SYUCUSE, OHIO

lfOIIIIOIIS
110M., JUl., WID..

- Plumbing •nd electrical
work

From savannah. Georaia

a

C•lll14-441-3119.

PARTS

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing 1nd gutter work

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES

lh-Op.. For

SEARS AIJTNORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT

CARPENJER
SERVICE
- Concrete work

GEARY
BODY SHOP

-W ANTED TO BUY : UMd wood
• COlli hut. .. Swein't Furniture. lrd. Olive St. GllllpoNt.

v.w.

YOUNG'S

Sadly missed by
family and
friends.

Business Services

motort. C111 61•· 318· 9303.

W1nl.cl to buy· ltlltlon..-y nerciaabike. CaH 814-441- 1183.

985-4141

Otughtir Patricia:

Evaporated Milk ....••..•.. 2/S1.29

Wanted To Buy

J&amp;mk Auto' • wtth or without

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

G-Al COII1UCTOIS
8· 20-1 110 . pd.

v.,., sadly miued
by hueband. Roland:

,

Zip

!

(304) 675-4340

N..., .-,_

State

In loving
memory of
Georgia Thoma,
departed one
year ago today.

horne.

12 01. CAN

10114

Computerized Heartnc Aid Selection
i Swim
Molds - Interpreting Services
ii:
m
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
:z: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

In Memoriam

Help Wanted

you
The dey God took you

Call or write for details today
... while you're thinking about 1t · _

City

11

tlono:

ZIP LOCI

CAMPBELL'S

101 M:ulbe1T7 .&amp;.tmue

4~769

w•

In deeth
love you
Iiiii:
In our Marta vou hold •

'.]uru.u:J. cJ.Ionu
0,{4

.

In Ufe we loved you

I thought planning our funerals together would be a terribly sad thing. But,
actually, it brought us both a great sense of relief. Now we know neither one of
us has all those decisions facing us in the future. and we won't have to secondguess whether we did the right thing ... did what the other one would have wanted.
It's all planned and even paid for with the Forethought life insurance policy designed and approved specifically for Forethought funeral planning. And, because
we're both between 40 and 90 years old, we can't be turned down for any reason.
There's a real peace of mind that comes with having it taken care of ahead of time
with Forethought.

f:Po,.~y,

million timea we've

LOTS &amp; LAND
FOR SALE

992-2156

for pen of us wenl wrth

Location chanced

.Forethought is funeral planning ...
before the need arises

Ew~

who pa11.cl away
one v••r lgo
Sept. 23. 1881.

In loving Memory
Of
JACK KING
One long .m onth has
passed · since you
went away, August
23 . You' re gone. but
your memory will
live forever in my
heart .
Your Wife,
Joen Kin
Real Estate General

out of your mind. And I guess that's what I was doing. But, once he started asking
me questions about how I wanted my funeral to be, I realized how important it
is for the people we leave behind to know these things. He had no idea that I
wanted a simple eulogy, and just that discussion alone started us on all sorts of
other tOpics. I found out he doesn't like organ music. We even had a few laughs.

Pt.nni...J Arisrs
..

TRESSIE R .
STETHEM

HOMEMADE

We chose ForethoughtsM
funeral planning It's one of those things that's so easy to put off, put

fcner.ol
~ftn the

tn Loving Memory Of

Cooked Ham ••••••••••••• WSII."- 1.99

"At first I didn't want to talk about our
funerals. But, now I'm glad we did."

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

In Memoriam

2

In Memoriam

$

Toilet Soap .....••.mv.w11. 2Is 1. 79&lt;

Capune is no novice at paddle
board trips. His total mileage
from previous trips Is 78,000
miles. Including a 4,255-mlle trip
from Portland . Maine. to Corpus
Chrjstl, Texas, that took 319 days
In 1975 and 1976.
One cat a dog
should not chase
STOCKTON, Calif. (UPli
When Dan Sellars saw his dog
barking at the foot ol a tree in his
East Stockton front yard . he
figured the pooch had treed a cat.
He was right. He saw that a
200-pound cougar was reclining
on a branch.
· The young cat Ignored the dog
and stayed In the tree lor about
three hours Tuesday before It
was captured and sedated by San
Joaquin County animal control
experts. who sent It orr to the
state Fish and Game facilities In
Sacramento.
A county spokesman said that
the cougar may have been

2

Ham Lunch Meat •.•••••••..114. S1.3 9 ·

Quirks in the news
Paddle a~ralnsl drugs
NEW YORK (UPI) - An
anti-drug crusader hopes to
paddle his way to the White
.House with Ihe message lhat the
" will to try can gel you larther
than you might ever have
dreamed."'
Larry Ca!)une, 44. of Newport
Bea ch, Calif., rode his paddle
board into New York Bay Tuesday, more than lour months after
beginning his journey in Chicago.
He hopes to finish his 4.000-mlle
trip In Washington, D.C., by the
end of October.
The purpose of the trip Is to
s how " the youth of our nation
that a stick-to-ll attitude, selfdiscipline and the will to try can
gel you farther !han you might
ever have dreamed," he said.
Since tossing his paddle board
into Lake Michigan at Chicagoan
May 11. he has splashed his way
across Lake Huron, Lake Erie.
La ke Ontario. up the St. Law-

2

SWin· ECICIICH CHOPPED
SHREDEED S2.29 Ll.

9

Ill Co....t St., PollltttY. OIMo un•

Footlong Hot Dogs ••••••••~~w. $1.89

SMITHFIELD .

Business Servi-c es

PHONE
992-2156
Or Vh ite Oa ii!J ScRtillel Clauititll Dttt.

DEPARTMENT STORE

Communtiy calendarI area happenings
THlJRSDAY

The Daily Sentinel

RUTLAND

Phone 742-21 00

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-·

.

-

-~

..,.._ ·-'

�• ;- '

jf"

..... '

12-The o.ily Sentinel

...._,

_.4

LAFF·A·DAY
AVON • AI -

,

II

74

ViiiOr " -· 304-171·

- .........all,ut...._
.........o....IPct''dld,
UIO. 304-17i-1730.

4340.AA·IOI.

Two bed room ep.-tment. 304·
171-2141.

AVON· AI.,_ Collhlrill'
lp.... 304-171-1121.
Roome for ,.,.... 41y. WHII..

month. OoMio Hetol. Coil I 14441·1110.. Rent • kM • t120
month.

no:r·

Ohio VolloV TIN hoo Huoilor
0 ·100 CCN'ftPUWiald lllpun..n

ta-.

........,,. Now
...UufloM fof wheel allg~wnaoaa. c.li
104-171-1332. O.lllpoUoferry.

Mocilool . _ ......... ·..,. r.
' ..
,..,..._ .... ,.....,... lend ....
-H81teft.W.Va.
c:-t.r.... 771. -

Sit.,atlona
Wanted

Oldormon_,tolarnovolnwMh
_,, .....who_.h.c.efor

-·-g.

::::;.;
.~:0 ,~ ....
:-:--__;
________
11

Hlft a wldDO tape ....... of
- ·0 pooont' o onnlvoroory, boby
. -. '-ity nounlon OllltfY

........ oco•k»n. ,C alll1•· tl2·
lilt.

15

School•
lnltnlction

, . _ 1 - o . boglnning ond
lntMmecll•t• atud•nu. Call
Tor- O..lo ott14-H7·13411 .

18

Wented to Do

c..,••
-

·oOckiJob&amp;..-._.ing.
woR. eundedl.lidlng.
......... Col114-371-2411. .

ftr-.

49

21

I 'I 1111.1 'II

Bueinese

0 pportunlty
I NOTICE I

New~

THI OHIO VALL.IY PUILIIH·
lNG CO. esco '""•• Itt• you
6o b4 lin Ill wtlh IMOPfe you
llnow, Mel NOT to tend lftOMit
throu... tM mill$ unll you hae

-oi&gt;IOI24houro.

- · - .... ottorlng.

2 bad oom hova• witt. .....,.

Owftyour-_.eOI-

ment. u•eoe. one nVte from Y
on 112 Iouth. 304-171-H3104'

ItDrD, ahoo .. from : j•an·
epon . .eer. lediM •P.P"''·
m•'t.
Wge
tlut, petite, d•ncewear.-ol:lkl. bricW.
or ......
1 - : U. Cloibonoo. _ . _
L..L Loo. eo'""
_.,Hila. II Ml-o. ChouL
OutMck. flied. GeMiNI, For•

,....••·meWftitr,

·-----·
1n,.•

171-1-.

32

Ho-.

.... Orwi•CIIltr Grown,

CNW

2000 llllhera. Or 113.81 one
prioo .......... muhltlor priolng
or fernlty lhOD store.
R.... pricell
for

•oount

u,...,..,..

-HOG-·
.,ollty
nt.

"' ........,
•ao. O.or-

210
.,4,100
to
•aa.eoo: lnwntory. Mintno.
_fllltu..., • " " ' ap••'f. lirf•a.
etc. Cen 01*' 11 da¥L Mr.
LCM Chlin ct12·- 4221.
"IUIINEII MAN" . Own your
.... - a - . Doolorohlp.
Mlrjor menuftiGturer -.cting
owollol&gt;le - Tlmo
· HIQh
01
,,. Tltno. 1303171.. 3200 EXT.
2407.

-In
_... ,._.p_,

nPA
HIGH SCHOOL DROPOUTS
bm WhMe Y011 U.m

Hyouoro...,w-othoogoool18
• 21 ¥111'1 old and woukl lib to
recetwe yeur OED, com:.a the
Job Offico ot 221 lth
ltNet in Point Pl....nt or call
3Q4..17e· 2770 ·batuuaen Sept.
21 - ...... 30 "" dotollo on ta apply. An EEO Emptoy.r.

. .. It ONE PRICE SHOE
ITOAEI
elth• a lhot or
non-f,.nchiuH l'ton
wttt. the Uberty Faehionlaclven..,._ Over 1.300 bnnd ntm•.
On•time fM. inventory. fla.

p• cem. duwn. with -.,:peow:M
CfodH. 14100. Coil I 4 .......

1111.
porch

-

.........

trip.............

- time.
-lrofl
- Hunter
- - · 40•·
Call
.,.,
lhirlev
132-IHI.

P.triot mobUe hOme. Well ineu·
181:..:t underp..,n6na.
•ir cond. 3CM· I71-'n:.t1 .

DOrCh•··

14x70 Windtor with 14"30

addition, PC cond, black ~op
ro.ct, tpprox 3 ~. o.uwa,

Fony, 304-171-8830.

1t72 Mlngton 12x50 mobile
hom•. 1lr cond. 111 turNCe;
ttove and referiptor, .ome
Mnhure tnGiudecf. Mu.. be
moved from priMftt locMkm.
13,100.00 . 304·112-3711.

34 ·

Profeaalonal
Service•

Bu1ina11
Building•

Lou

&amp;

Acreage

'1 'h ac lot on Jenys Run

Ad.

Apple Grove. wtth rurel wat•r.
304-171· 2313.

Huntl IewinG M•chlna • Vaocuum 1...,_ ,.....,, Pent in
ltOGII- AI work tu•erttetd. At

- ..

,_gnely ptiCM. If you htvl

..-yw~o-- ond lolod.
• • me • try. C.ll 114-441-

1411.

C•l•l,lic convinhra. only
eii.H . Mott models. ln ...H•
tktn elao aveHMia. Mutft• M.n:
8 I " " ' - Avo., • -. Ololo.
t ·1011-143-3717.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 Mil 2 bedeoom epertmentl tor
rent. . . . r..t for . 1 Wr .•
11 13.00; 2 b*., U1 1.00. Aloo

F~~mlollod

. -..... Ill.
UIEO· .... dr 11 PI, bedroom
•ult••· t111· t211. D•elll.

.....,
"'"'"· • complete Hn•
of-lumlturo.

w_,,,.,..latool•
tool.
NEW·

oofl

Elfldonoy., 41. Ullll-

-pold.c...ootno-

Co11&amp;14-441-1137

OlpotO.

-

nowly

LAYNE'S

Fumilhld ept. ,..t to illnrt.
Ono profoo-ol ..,., only.
.... Coll14-441-0331.
01k Wood; 1 br. opt •• ..O.o.

tu•

rolriQ.dop.
locotod
to ·
Soc.
6 rof.- Coli 114-4412011·E........

Oaluu 1 •ldroom, unfwm..hed.
All new ·~- in ldtchen, c.,..w:
.......... ProtoooiOnold -. CoU14--·4107or
&lt;Me-2102.

qu t..t:. lingte wOfllll'l peraon
only . Coli 114-441-4107 01
441·2102.

w_.. .,., -'·

2 lr.. CllrJHII. ltG¥11. refria.
lumlohod.
Up. Wilt•. glfbage paid. Ne•
Sllvor lrldtlo- Coli 114-4417021.

lltility

room.

wltee', ....,

Qultit .,..,

UnfurnleMd tpt.

Home tor l ..e by Own•:
Gr...a.n.- En .. JIJI .. bi-levtl
on 2 .4eall, AC. W.I .F.P., wet

c., ........

Mr. 2
Ph. Iefort
4:ooPM 114·441-4001 Allor
· Ph. 304-171·3111.
Wli help flunoe or lend contreat. tO
aid hou•· 3 lr. ,
Yl .... Coli 114·441·
1340. 441·3170.

r.·

4 Ill., - - 11111 booornont. 3
mi. oo. of O.Miooollo . • 34.100.
Coli Ooyo-114-441·1111. oflor
1:00- 441-1244.
Ukt MW,
br . .......

m......,..,... ,.fr........2.

~u~~y...,-.

•ltlpoN• or Meuow•itle.
127.000. Colf14-2H-IZOO

to

Own•' ..... "'··

- ·-..--oly
for .... ..,

tor nnt:. •211.

Call 11•-Ut-12...

3

4000
ft.,21--- -oq.
·
U73,000. H11 wllh only I
lor 0111.000. Coli ....
_ . . ...... 114-441-3388.

c-.

J a.r, .._.W.wldeonOGn*'lotln
TIHmnon.
polloo •
..
Ill Fuel bMt. rurll w...,,
w.. ~.... - • ...... eo•
114-241--3 0Ht¥11me.
.....oervNI•SO •••· 3 br.

-born.oulbu-.to-

Naoobooo.-. 141.100.
Colllt4-211·tJIO.

41

Hou1e1 for Rant

Nicety turNahed ameli house.
Aduh• onty. Aefer*"cee
qulred. Oft ltrNt parttlng. Ph.
114-441-0331.

r•

4 BR. hou• for rent. 3 mi. to . of

Oollipollt. 0300 o month ,..,.
dop. Rot. r-od. Coli 114441-1111. Aftori'OO PM ., aol
441-1244.
4 8A. houM on 1 1cre. Excel
tocation. Allf. Cell A· 1 A•ll
Ettate 8~k•. C.H 304-1711104"' 171·7731.
Vert nioe. 3 br. houll. Nloe

nehlhborhood, ec., o• hat,

dithwtther, uowe, rDfrlg .,
weohor lu...,od. Coil 814441· 7021. LEAII AYAIL.AIL!.

Houoo-131 I 01 A... portly 111~
nlthod. UOO por month. CoN
114-441-4031 or 44.. tl11 or
441-1243.

Ao-

for lion!' 2 "'·· One•M•out
--houMwttt..-....
211 ott Rt. 7.
ono ohlld.
noo • month ..... dop .• rot.
Colll14·-·llll.

Uotumlthod houlo. 3 br. Rodney V-11. U71. Col ft4-·44tl oil• 7,00 PM . ,

·a...-

living. I 2 bodrooew
IP•""'*•ta at VIllage
M1n0r end IIIMrllcle ~·
menla in Mtd611111ort. from
Uti. tnoh
eon
114·t92·7717.
EOH.

•h• -·

Floor lomp, 3 light, 010. E-·

blkL t30 . ....... 3 ohoH
nlc~ flnlohod - - uo. 2
whtte cerem4c a,...w. ~

'*""'

end ,.... lMftpe with
lhedel. 121. I.e~\. Clll 614tl2·24t3 oflori'OO pm.

Suuned oak firewood. call
304-171-2717 ..... 4 :30.
FirewOOd. ~ e3e.oo lold. 304·
171-1807.
heutlful4 pc. ,.terGueen eiza
Bauett tlldeoom sutt•. Lile

now. 304-171-4101.

Now Toncly EXIOOO oomputor.
- · - o r. dool&lt; tiQO.
304·111·3147.

84

Hay

&amp;

(!)Dr. Who
!IJ) ...... One TV
IIIOOocl~

E;1

I

• C2l One Dey Ill • Time
1:011.(11 Aile.

".

OCBINewl
DIOriHI Junior High
S1epltante runs for IChoo!

!IJ)

omc. on 1111 plltform One

114·441·1024 - 1:00.

AICC Bo••, m•lf. Calll1 • -2151·

1313 •her 4:00pm.

t~mlle .

AICC S.egl•. 2 male. 2

a wb.

old. 110. 2 mtAa 1 vur
old Aunnm'l. I 71. It 4· 981·
4143 •ttar P·t:'l·

71

Auto' 1 For Sala

118• ford Tempo· pt. pb,
tc;. t3111, 1tll3 Ford
Fairmont, one OW'\er, 12350.
Coli IU-211-1522 ,

. ,.fm.

Slam- and Hlmll.ytn Ktnena. · 1 Ill 4 df, Sedan Perk Awnu•
I ....U old. s ... Oflllec Point. ·auict. Calll14·oMI-0112.
Col1114-112·7201 .
1 Ill Mercury Montclair, cl . .ic
Mua1 -1 AICC Samoyed puppy mo4h4. Good c:ond. new paint.
ttl. Aloo AKC Sholtlo 1121. f1&amp;00 or beet offer. Cal.l 114317-0424 ..
304·171· 2721 ... 171· 1117.
One blaalt N•bian fill• •nd
d...... - · 304-171·7717.

Baeutiful AKC O•rm~n Sh•
phord pupo. 2 blocll m -·
0210.00 ooeh. 2 Soddlo mol•
1110.00 - h. 114· 111·5011.

67

Mu1ic1l
lnatrument1

1 IM M ...cu,., TOpN· Pl. pb. ec.
wn·fm, 41,000 mil•. MltO .
11100. Cal 11,· 441· 1112 Of'
441-0212.
1113 . C.dittae SNIR Savile.
beet cond. LoHad . C•ll any·
tlmo 114·311· 1711.
---------1117 Novo·l cyl .. outo. 1111
N!)Ya. ltlndarcl. 1171 Ptymovlh

lcemp. 1110 OMC pic:k-vp.
1111 Old• CUtlatl luprem•. Z
.clr .• h•cttot&gt;. nk:e. 1871 21 ft .
tIll Okla. «2. h•d·
top. 1117 Chovy ......... Coli
oflor 1 ;00 PM "' -'Y AM
IU· 44t· ZIIII .

c....-.

100 Cl~rinet .
Ptayed 1 yoear. bell. cond.
0210. Colll14 · 441· 1111.

Setrft• lien•

luncty Clarinet •nd I'IWtie ttlnd.
e221. b;el . cond. C.ll 114·
441·1010.

u..c~ end ,..,.,. u....,..e6onl.. ·
............. _ o d ond_...
· 1Md. ln.......6on .,... ......_ W't
buy junk transmiteloM. CIH
114· 441·0911.
•

Du" uhw1t kH1. •••·" '""
etsii.CS. Most Ford•. Chewy
trudlt. Vllftt, •••·•· Mufft~
M1n, 9 Stknpaan Aw .. Athent.

Dobbo. ~0:30)

Mot..,..,.
repor18 on world economics

~·

Ill W'-1 o f F - £;1

I r..:

101 CIOI8tn (0:30)

&amp; C•mper•

Jeopudyl

~:;~

.C!l WKRP In Clnellnlllll

7:31 (I) Mljor Le11111e JI:IMbllft

24 tt. Coachmen cemP.,, .Iiiia
1 ;00 114 .. . ..

1:00 (I) lacand Houermaon

.

.Ill G Hlgltw., to

I I - Young orph1111 end

c........

Pinto. N.- Uncoln Arc welder .
Slid•ln tNctl
C.ll

wulthy family are brought
ICglther by 1111r 1raaedv. C

Cll PlolealoMI Katite WI&lt;A

ALLEY OOP

~rate from Tulaa. Okl~

.-.

Sl' fVIII"

114-oMII-1412 .. 441-1412.

81

..

IJ) • Cll Perfect lllrlngen
AI Larry'e new job ot the
newspeptr. he ge1a hla fl1'11

•••lgnmam. g

Home
Improvement•

Fruit

a. Vegetabl11

(!) Gll a.njo'a Auatnollll ·

Follow 1111 1118 ol Andrew
Barton Pa1erlon, Aua1ralla's .
fOI'emotlt poallnd bell-.
who 11 beat known by hla

.·

mil•. Loeded, sh•p . C. . 114·
C1nnlng tomMoe., You pickl
John Hill Ftrm. Let:itrt ~Ill&amp;,

Ohio. 8rlftv conteln••· t4. p•

bu-.

Owilfty Fruiu Md

Two lllclc• 1peakert tOr Dick up
t171.00 . Phone 304 -871 2021.

66

Building Supplie1

luildi"'Motortolo
Bloall. brick. eew• pl~~e~. win·
dowws. lintetl. etc. Cltud• Win·
tert, R6o Orand4, 0 . Cah 114·
241-1121 .

Reedy mbt COficret• .,.d aH
concr•eeuppliM. Cell u1 Vellev

lrook Cemenl and SuppU•.
304· 77~·1234 .

68

Peta for Sale

Qiroom and Supp.Y, Shop-Pit
OrDomlng. All bre•dt ... All
otytoo. JulloWobb Ph. 114·441·

0231 .
DragDJYWrncl Cenery K... nel.
CFA HlrMIII¥en. Plftien end
Slam.. llhtana. AKC Chow
pupplet;. New lllttent; PertiMI.
Colf114·441· H44 ohor7PM.

v.......

rotoll """ wholooolo. I • · S

Produce acroea from Piaa Hut.

Oollpollt. Ohio.

vee••·

Now open all fruita and
bl... houri 1 :00 til I ;OO. Jack•
Fruit Mitt. Route 31, H"ct.ton.

69

For Sal•

or Trade

1973 Old1, 1150 or triMI• for
riding lewn mo.-• ot ..,..
nlue. C811t14-446-171t.

I ,,,

'11

Sll!l!lll:':

.\IIVI\IIIk

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS. SONS
U.S . 31 Weet. Jacbon. Ohio .
114-211·1411 .
Matte¥ ferguiOf\, New Hollend,
Buah Hog lal• • S.Vica. O"•
40 Uaed trac:tora lo chooH from
a cornplett line of f'law • used
equ6pment. lerg.t Ml.ction in
I .E. Ohio.
180 Oovld lnrwn. 14 hp dloool
tr•ctor. low hours. Loully
owned wl1h I ft. bulh hog.
03110. Coll114-211·1122.

325 NewldM2 row narrow com
Field readf. C. II 304273-3447.

pick•.

Troy lulh till.,.. I hp. niiW lirH.
,..., furrow merker. •700. c.n
114-311-1111.

a.n. che6ns. and aprocll•• to ftt

almDst •ny t•w . 81DERI
EQUIPMENT CO ., Hend•son.
W. Yo. 304-171-7421 .

••u-.

.

Hornellte tnd Jon'..,ed lervic.

IIOIRI EQUIPMENT CO.
Henderton. WV, 304· 171 ·
7421.

1111 Oravejy tnow plow,
mawo. docll, r-ry plow cuhlvetor. 304-773-101 1.., ·
O.hl 81 Grind• Miller. Flotation
l o304-273r•-··
o•c. oond. 12100.
4211.

-.z.cr-•....

Perta for 4110 John Oaeredor:•r.
•II Ilk• new. one front crou ber

fiOO .OO. one ,.... CfOII b•
0110.00, two - · ohlt100.00, 72tnclleho•11inch
t400.00. Will tell all or pert.
304-1171-1078.

82

Wanted

to

Buy

Now buying ahell com or ••
com. C.H for latMt QUOtn. Rlw•

City Fonn Supply, 114·-·
2181.

2 bedroom fum6MII epe. ,., lf'd
Hovon, W. Yo .•
304-·2·1217 ... J04· 773·
5024.

83

3-ond-··-- ·

. Livestock

Ouooclooro. lrod Juttllko tho
boen wa INted • me Ohio
T-lon thot votnod o - 2.11
llro. .... dory. lloeor ........
loblno. OH. 113·114· 2111.

........

fioollc.oau;,;o'",.~·~no .....,.,, ....,.......
phone

304-171-4410 oot 13 0110.

-In,___

On• bldroom fumllllld IPM1·
r....

be heaven ... my mother-In-law
lah*e."

PiOO for Nlo. I Gld, mole
o n d - c-od. wonnod.
131.00. 304-171-4111.

«1·1211. Attor
1127.

s,oo

lRMoYII

1en Ptymouth Vol...-• . Good
cond. e300 . Cell lt4· 6•3·
0101 .

(2:11)
1:30 (I) LUI FIOII!Ier Camounage

1111 Ford hcort. Good cond.

and~lanM

c.u 114· 318-8111.

Staklleu ltHI u~lt aynema.
Now cwslom mtlde for your
truck. motor homeorctaaaic c.,.
With llf•IWn• wanamy, Mufti•
Man. I lllmpaon Ave .• Athant.

Ohio. 1·100·143·3717.
Ia it t,.,. you ctn buy

.J••• for

eu. through the U.S . pwmmentl Get lha fKia lod.,-1 C.ll
1-312 ·742 · 1142 ht. 4011.

Two 11M Dodge corwwtabl•.
Need reaor•don. UIO. for
bath. Coli 114-112·1122 ottor
4 :00pm.
1178 Chevy Monza . flun• good.

tott of new ,.-ta.,ExcllentWOt'k
oor . tloo. CoM lt4-14t-2410.
1878 Okla o.tta · 11. Auto,
cruiM oontrol. •zoo.Ooodwork
. .. Colll14-141· 2771.
1971 Ponll•c lcnnevllle
''"""'""'·
310 Eacel
........
wtth ... optlona.
..t ioodod
condl·
tion. Caii11•·H2·1717.
1981 Dodgo Ooytono, Turbo Z.
red· ettv.l. bleck IHth•. sun·
roof, loaded. New ·t ires. 304·
171·130IIflat I p.m.

1177 Camero. runs • looM
· 304· 773·1244.
1881 Cougoo. 3.1 Y· l . dlg~ol
tpndametw. take owr pay·
menta. C•n ' " 2212 M•dilon
Ave. Point Ple..ant.
1872 ~kylork s,.;dt.
Flom. 304-171· 2331.

0200.

1182 "'MC lpir~. 4 cyl .. 4
ap.MCI. OWft Owner, ••c. cond .•
wll Hll Of trade for 1177
through 1 810 lour whHI driote
lnlck. Phono 304-882· 3388 .
1 11!10 Dataun 31 0. good running

cond. nOWiiroo. 304-171· 1730.

' 715 Ch.wrol.. Ctprlce, 4 door,
air cond. new tlra, t400.00.
304-171-4384 oflor 1 :00 pm.
1 t7t El C•mino Sl. eir, tilt

wheel, cruiH, PS, PB, 3015 V·8,

304-171-1112.
1182 'Volk•w•gon Rabbit,
pric..:t to tall. t2.21&amp;.oo. 304171-4030 01 171-4211 .....
1;00 pm.

1877 cihw NoVt, good tlree,
body, runs I'NI. ''71.00. Cell
oflor 4,00. 304-411-1128 01
411·1721.

73

•Vanl

&amp; 4 W.O.

1871V'P'I ::z:onvan. C.tl.tt•
l,oo• • ,....
·1113 .
1872 Chevy hllf tc~n. 4 whHI
drhte. tt,~to. good oond. dtiYt call
304-171·4230 ......... 171·
4853. '

74

Motorcycles

1113 Hondo Y·41. Entorcoptor.
•1 100. Coli 114· 441·8711
Doy,
CIH.
'

u1t""

(l) MOVIE: Chlntotown IR)

•

!e

GUZZU. ·IkJ

,.ON ' I Ttlevi•Eon lar"loa .
HauM c ...a on ,.CA. Quaur,

OE . 1~81ini in Zenith. Cal
304 ·&amp;71-2181 or 114· 441·
2414.

.

•

A,.., 1n the Ul8
Soclll preuure to h8Ye ..,

.,
at"""' .•
•"'
...~ ,

wtlah• helvlly on SuiVIy.
&lt;Il A. WA ClllomplonllltP

w--.(T)
.
.
IJl
Cll Hooplnnlll1 Using
an obnoxloua dog,
· Hooplmlln bllndt the
to CljJ1Ure • killer.
(!) liD lion! Aglln: Ul8 In I

e

...: ·

Ao1.,-, Ot cable t~ •~tine. ;
Most wetl•compl•• awnedew . . ""..
~ ,.;. end

,...,toe.

304- :.- :
. • .

StarU Tr• Mil lawn I.W.,
lawn
landlcaping. ttump.
r•mo&gt;~al . 304 •&amp;71 · fi4Z or
578· 2803.

c••·

WINTERIZATION
Security Ughle. ltorm Win·
~ .. l~latkN'I , Roofing. O.n·
ertl Aepaire. 304--171·1317.

-,
•

i

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I HAlE BRI ~NG f'CME
l1-lE6E NOTE5 ~

r---------------~
'l'OiJ

OON'T HAVE 10.. .

Dl DN'T 'rt)Ll WA.lt:H THE
IRAN-Cl::lNTii'A H&amp;'\.R INGS'&lt;

&amp;\VE UP -a.IR Au..CJWI.NCE
AND BUY ~UR561..F A

9-lREDDER .

Plumbing
l!t Ha•tlng

&amp;

RHidendal . or commercial wlr·1 , • •
ing. New ....vtce or repelrs.
.
Licented alectrlcian. Ettlm... ' •
frM. Ridenour Electricel, 304· · ·
171-1781.

..

86

BARNEY.
TAlER I&lt;ISSED
HIS SWEETIE IN
I&lt;IDDVGARDEN
TODA¥, PFIW

Q

·
- · · (1 ,00)
lRNawa

St\E KISSED HIM
RIGHT BACK

10:15 CIIIIOYIE: Slcyjllcked IPGI
(1:40) 1
10:301))- Snlpt"ot.

C!l Wllcllll8 ~
Wol...... layer Follow
documan1tlry producer
Wolfgang Bayer as he
llhOOia a Nature opeclal on
the Sagulro cactus of

Ganaral Hauling

Arizona. Howle Mo1h&lt;wlll

narrates.

w..... Sentica. Swimmin.g

Gll ......
HOgln'l ,.._,
11:01! ()) AltlllllfiOI18teele

eoo

pools, eittetnl. wellt. Ph. 114-

241-1281.

·(1)---

i1J lArry King Llftl In dtlplh
lnteMIWI with top
newtmek11s end celebrities.

IDII!ftfllng"Nen A wrap up
ol today• a news and • tool&lt;
ahlld 1o tomorrow's news

Ollllfd Wat• Ser"ic;e; Poots.
Cisternt. wen.. O.lht.ry Anr·
time. Ctlt 8t'-4o41 ·740,· No
SundtiY calls.
J • J

terTOI'tlm.

g-Mihlm.£;1
(I) • (II Dylllilty

-·
J

Thll!quall&amp;or

Stary Hlr&lt;kh8'lllng.
rO'!Uintic opor1swr1111 has a
o1ror1gly opinlonll11d otyfl. .
10:00 ()) ltnolgltt Tillie
.
elll IIIIII.I!IMwhMI Dr.
Wntphln fumes when the
hospital' I new head second

' '

Elactrical
Refrigeration

e0

MeCall I• lorced to leom wilh
1 former larrorlat to comba1

...301))

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourttl and ~tin•
G o -. Ohio
Phone 114· 441-HII or 114441-4477

84

rule&amp;

Fund1men18lleptltt Chuteh

"Tl-1E TEACHER.

82

HNcl ol1111 CIMa

ew o

.

Fetty TrH Trirnmtng.
removal. c~n304 - 175· 1331 .

····3102

(II

1:00 (]) 700 Club
·~

.
. ... .

.......

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

A • A Water Ser~ice. Home
clttera, -wilt, poo1a lillld. For-, , ,
merty Jamea Boys Watefi.Cell
304·171·1370.
·'.
• •
Paul Rupa, Jr. w..... &amp;*'lice. ~ ·
C.lll14-4-&amp;1-3171 . Pools, clst· · ,
erna. well1.
.. •-~

• (J) (I) •

Cll at

·=

'
Dump trwck dall"•ry; coal. ... · ·~
stone. nndt I'"'"· flU ancl • :' ·:
uwduat. 304·171· 3110.
,·
·.

..

87

Upholltary

C!lllfnOII
J

Gll ..... Atie Tllo: An
In*
louftd

1.1.

repom on world economics
and ftnancllll , . . . with Loo•
Dollbt. (0:311)

S Hot..,.aanen
• &lt;II Loft CGr•'lltOflon

.

I

u~~~:~~:E

r I' I' I' II r I

LUTER$

I I I I I· I I

BRIDGE

NOitl1l

•JS2

,

../': .

•

I·D-1'1

•u·

Survival
course

.4

+AKJ8765

EAST
.Q986
.K13

WEST

.A1074

••

u

+Q 109

•u

..

..

.w
Cll

=c•-

(L) ·
In Cltlollolll

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

.-

['

lly THOMAS JOSEPH

.. ..

DOWN

ACROSS
1 Engrossed
6 Boxer's
memento
9·Canyon
mouth
IOApparent
12 French
city
13 Tourist's
neckwear
15 Road
curve
18 Roscoe
17' Remo,
Italy
18 Legacy
20 Misdeed
21 Compul
sion
22 Melody
23 Kiwi
24 Favoring
26 Lean-to
27 Fruit
28Table
support
29 Muscle·
nexer's
pride
31 Swiss
river
32Garfunkel
33 Painting
36 Complain
37 Sour fruit
38Garment
39 Presently
40Covenant
41 Sicilian
· volcano

1 Speedy
meet
2 Demean
3 Lawmaker's
headache
4 Healthy
look
5 Find
Yesterday'• Anoiwt!r
6 Grape
preserve 16 Silly
29 Funda7 Hebrew
19 Walked
mental
letter
22 Carry
30 Neil
8 Sensitive 24 Actuality
or Carly
spot on
25 Dross
34 Russian
the skin 28 Word with
river
11 Get into
ache and 36 - Merkel
shape
throb
37New
14 Mrs.
27 To the
Guinea
Lindbergh

~Chitin

Iii
.

Jim Hubllr.

~ ·(

..

....

·

..
•

-'

..
'

,.

.,

·'

DAD.YCRYPTOQUvtES- Here's how to work It:

9113

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGF.ELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTE
XG LW

Tl

0 0 C Z

HSSGOVT, HCTLU

·"

c zo

I'TUVOGO

L R C ;

....-·'

., .

9·23
XYHCCOGA

••

...•"

One letter stands for another, In this sample A is used
for the three L'ar X for the two ors, etc. Single letters;·
apOtBtrophes, the length and fonnation of lhe words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

~C

.•'

=~~~~town

(II lllgll. . .

iiJ-~Action
-;j,on.
llghll with

~

...

11:30. (J) IS TonlgMIIIow

R • M Cuatam COUCh" end
Raupholstery, 'lt. Rt. 7 , Crown .
City, Oh . 114·211·1470. e .... .• ·
114-441-34341. 0 - dolly 1 to " ·
4,30, lot. 1:30 ta , ,30. Old • • • ·
MowN¥'• Uphot.terlng HrVIne
trloountylrt1122VMft. The.._. '
In furniture u.,hotsw-Hig. Cttt
304·171 · 4114 for free
MtlmatM,

•

VIrginia (T)

I llla..._P.LE;l

-• · :

PR!i:.~s':~~~sIEllERS IN

latlea From FIII'IIIY!IIe;

-----. ,
newUphos..,..,

•

&lt;Il All Amalloan Puling

iiJ Jhnayti11e Current

:::-----____;_·

•

:;r:n~ Rooltle

the dey' I world news and In
dlpthiMture repona. (t:OO)

448·

1171 Uncoln M•ll V. EK ...
cond. 41 ,000 .,11• . C•ll 11•·
241·9410.

•

What'othe belt nne of play? Oeclar· +101152
+KQ873
er can afford 10 1- the heart king and
,,
SOIJTH
two spade trlclat. U the defenders also
get a diamond ruff, then the contract
.AQJI0985
II set. Certainly the right play at the
.•.. .
+u
' .
outaet 1110 win Eut's clab queen with
+AJ
the ace and ruff the club jack In dum·
Vulnerable: East-West
my. What nen?
Dealer:
East
..
Sttppose you take the heart II~
and it loses. West might now return a West
Nortk Eul
dlamood. You would wiD and lead a
Pill
spade back toward your king. U that Pill
P111
lost 10 West's ace and East sot a dla· P111
Paa
mond ruff, then the·spade queen would P111
be the tetlinI trick. Therefore cash the· ,
dlamood ace before leadlns trumps.
Opening lead: + 10
Then, lnltead of takbig the heart fl.·
·
neae, simply play the ace and 10 of
hearts. U West wins !be king of hearts.
there will be no da~t~er. But with the the club king. East has just won the
actual ~I there Is a risk. East wins heart king. Can he also bold the spade ·_
the kinl and still bas a heartlefl And ace? Although possible, ita's very uaJ
he returns a spade. Now what? ·
likely (moot of us would open the bldl ·•.
It's time 10 recall the blddllll and ding with A. K and K-Q). So declare&lt; .. •
the
East wu the dealer and should play East for the spade qaee.i played the queen of clubs by playing low on the spade return : ..
trick one. When Sttuth trumped the West can win the I!C8 and give his part•
club jack In dummy, West did not COY· ner a diamond ruff. but South will sill' ..
er and 110 presumably East also holds have 10 triclat.

(I)NIWifWidO....
.(JJ . . . .

·.

171 Stlf Cra" fold down
ClmpW. 304-811· 3682 ....
1 :00.

•

Complete lho. chuckle quoted
by fill ing In the missing wor~s
you develop from step No. 3 below .

•

ie.n-'
• C2l M•A•t•H
AmloiCII (T)

•.

t

5

laeYI your t1lap.'1ona - -."

you

By James Jaeoby

Cl)lchDIIIIIC &amp;poria

Motora Homea

•ft•

8nawerlng

.1121 D - o l Fortune
7:011 (I) AllllJ Glllflll1
7:30•(Jl lioiJ•aad lqUitee

Auto Rapair

'lfW• Clll
111:1.

Curren!

end flnlnCial news wllh Lou

Ohio. 1·100· 143· !717.

1871 For&lt;! Pinto. 1172 Ford

Bul\dl;' II Aha Su aftd c••· ell!
.... 4 :30. 304·171·1410.

New-.~1:00)

d.,..

79

their

Cl)ljl D1&amp;CI- ~L)

91 ......
11J

Strula. t11t .n Nir, "'-UIICI,
Most MOdell. Mutfter Man. •
Stimpeon Ava. AtMna. Ohio.
1-100-143-1717.

on

~YiniiDAY'S Klall'is.ANSWIIS
SWeaty- Rln - Track - · Renown - LET t'OU KNOW
"!'low doal h feel to 111185?" uked the~· "When
11181 85," llld the birthday gant, "I"ll LET yOU- KNOW."

Cll !1118r1811- Tonight
• (JJ , , . . .•• Cour1
(!) Gll MacNeil/ Lalnr

ludgM Trtn1mt11ktn1: uaed r•
bulh. eM t'IPft. Ouar•niM )0
Calh end C.rrv or iM~al.
Call 11•· 378·
2220.
_....:___:
__
_ _ _ ·lc-

77

leavl

.

.

• C2l Too ClaM for Comloll
1:31 (I) CaiOI 7:00 ()) Remington.lteele
.Ill PM Mlgulne

•

•

ME T C E N

Cll =AIIC
Newl!;)
(f)
lullnllt
Report

....

I

·My frienCJI81'a very ci'IMIYIIn
the recorded m11a1gaa lhey

•

..----.;....--__, neither lli8ep nor llumbar unl-.

Cl)lftllde 1M PGA Tciur ~R)

Kltt, One Vote. £;1
101 Sllowllll TDCIQ New&amp; ol
111111111eltalnment WOfld Ia
anchored live lrom New

~-

t

I". 1
1
t . rnachlntl8. My fi'IOriW: ''Wtlhlll
.
.
-

RE NH 0 .

I
I 1 I' I I I . .•

1:30 •Ill G NIC N1a1tt1r ...... ·

Grain

1r " m 1111 r Lt I 111 II

mo. old ..,.... mlnletura
lchneuUI', AKC r. . .t., ... CIH

7

pump, bedsltle pot~y chair,
walk.,. Post• Mel. ch•t of
dr.-t. 2 cdinets. 30-'-6713111 . .

by Bruce Beattie

"This can't

r
.1111'.·
-r-:-M~U;...:..L,:..P...:Be--~1 :

CI)~(T)

0""'-

~. -

ond nloo. Adullo. no potL
phono 304-171-11•.
·

•=

1111

Vorl&lt; . ~0:30)

Ho&amp;IM'-1 bed, air mllltreaa com·
plete with eir pump. avctton

APARTMINTa • .-to ........
hou-. Pl. - " " " Oolltpo.
llo. 114·oMII·IU1 .

.....

w ew

@ Jlrinlenewl Wrlp upa Of

•1•-•••·

"'"'""'

No

•Ill

, • • 1 ·10 llozoo. 10.000

U21.

One bodroorn . , . . . _ 1ft
l!lldcltpart. •110. , . month
..... lllllltloo. Col 114-HZ·
. . . . dl\'0 ond 114-1411-Utl

~IUUplftGy,

.......

Ill the R-.

i

2 bod....... _ . ... ·nowty
,.n,odlled. ltD'N end ;ah..,._
tor 1 1 1 -. uoo. p o r ...,. utlllloo. noo.- -· Coli 814-112-.

--·
---.---

8 UNN

I:GO ()) Cruy Llll 1 l'ox A Fox

1110 Oldo. ..... II. · mil... rvne good. Call 1514· 441·
1301.
.

l,;;===:::::::;;:::;;;l=========:J
t
AFU~&gt;

..

58

New wood ~c. ilwing wood

J u.,...._. vtcuum cleanlf'l. A-1
oondlt~. 2· tanll .,.._, Uncondltlonllfy guamt..cl. 3 HWing
. . . -. Colll14·-·1418 .

. .,.,

,...
1111

.'

t!VI!NING

Portable Keroeene H•at.,;
Toyottov•. 22.700 ITU. Lib
n.w.
C1ll
2011 .

Oolllpollo, Ohio Coli 114-4412713.

V•lley Furniture
New· Md UMd fumlture and
IPPiillllilncas. Cell 114~&amp;41 ·
71,.2, Houra I· I ,

low to lorm lour Jimplo -dt.

WED.. SEPT. 23 •

171· 4124 .

..... ..,... lhowc••· Cell

PARION'I FURNITURE

UHCie.,elg. .tore, walhers
end dryen. Mollohan Ap.
p i - Colll14-441-1117.

•

114-112-1111.

ConorMD blocks all llu1 yard or
delivery. Maton lend. OIIUpolit
Bloclc Co., 123Y.a Pine Sl.,

1111 olu; 312 ooll, "41.11 Mt
tWin matte
•· •aa
Ht.
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND

.....

11H ptyi'IMM.Ith Horii:Dn. Auto.
ec., 4 dr. 21~000 mil•. 13600.
Call 11.· 178· 2721.

to:::

........ u11. ; cto•otd&lt;ow·
... 4 dmww- t41, I • ...,.

Oupl•· . . . looond. 3 br .. llving

cea.

10 Day1 UrN •• caah with
11ppeowed credit. 3 MM• out
luliMIIe Rd. Open lam
Mon. thN let. Ph. 114·
0322.

.

WANT TO IU't' fOOduaactapM\et
piano INIGnably priced, 30•·

C o - - roglotoo. vory
DOOd concttt-.. Ra.-onebfe.

. .. ,-.boo-·

MOdom 2 llf. lrOiumlohod opt.
No - · Rot. -lrod. CoM
114-441-1173.8-1 .
"

8rooUide Apertm•ts: 441·
1932 or 441-4131. Ono bodroom ap1rtment wtttl teree
ceuntry kitchen. new eppllan-

Hobar11712 Meat INe~r . New.
oold "" 12100 .. will .... for
1110. 010 . Coil 114· 112·
9122- 4 ,00 ,...

FURNITU~E

lofa and ch8irl Driced from
Ull lo e111. Toll4oo 010 ond
up 10 1121. Hkle-a-bMa 1390
ta till. R. . . . . U21 ta
U'la. Lo'"I'O 021 to 1121.
D - 1101 tnd 1111 to '411.
Wood tabla •·I chan uea 10
0711. Doolo 1100 up to 0371.
Hutohea MOO end up. Bunll
Mdl con PI•• w-mettrw. .
UllondupiOUII. lob¥t11 0 . Mara nor boa lllrinol
or IWtn tH. firm t?t, Hd
e11. a - IZZI. King
t310. • dr....., ctillt 111. Gun
col&gt;lnou l,un. Gla or llac;tric
nft10 U7 . l o b ¥ 031 6 MI. fromoo UO,
•30 6 King hftiO . .0 . Good
ulu11on of t d oom ........
--hood-do•30
end up to MI.

Fumlohod Apt.· t lr. UZI.
Utllilloo pold. 701 4th Avo.
Oolllpollo. Col 114-441-4411
oflorl,oo PM.

On• •cr• loU on Maeon 80 It
Athton. public Wltlll', mobl ..
homH permitted, tiOO down.
t110 per ........... . 304·171·
2331.

Collt14·441'3\lt.

w-. ..,....

......... ...... " - · lno.
Aplo. Col 304-171· 77341 0&lt;
17&amp;-1104.

room·dinlng room. full Cerpet.
MW C.,.., ftiiW Ill..... I belh.
G.... looootlon. Ull phio
utNitloo. Collt4-441·0180.

-130.

APPUANCES
rotrlgorotoro.
rtnl•• · . •••••• Appliance•.
u - ~tvor Rd. booldo ltono
c - Motol.lt4·441·73tl.

· I -· - . . , .

-

boots-

GOOO USED

oppl. Mnl- W--Oryor
-..,.

W..IW'n

County_ ApplllftOt. Inc. Good
UMd appllaietoel Md TV Hta.
Open lAM to IPM . Mon thn.l
lot. 114-441-IIH, 127 3rd.
A... Golllpollo. OH .

tioo - -Aw..
ohoreOolllpollo
· 107
S
Ph.
.ut-U11 aft• 7PM.

PIUCEO RIGHT - Ono e .buildKlg lots on Rt. 2 • Alhton.
Public wtt• end mable ham•
pormittod, 304-171-2331.

Hom•• for Sale

MIQCitwdwood ...... e12p•
bunch. con..wno .,.,.. 1 v,

FOI. Ohio P1ll.t Co.
Pomoroy, Ohio. 114-112· . . . 1.

full .,_ m.nr- • tound•km
shrtine · ttl . Recllnen

and trash IIMCII JMOWited.,

31

Household Goode

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Oho St .. Oolllpallo.
NEW· Ipe. wood-p-0311.
Living room ........ " H -e111 .
lun~ bodo with boddlng- 01 81 .

Furnillt\M etlldentlf, private and

Comm•cill buldlnp tar 1-e.
Downtown Pl . ..._.nt. ltor.a,
office&amp;, A·One Reel E.a.te.
Carol YNgtt, Broker. Cal 304·
171-5104.

For Solo: F k -. Now tolling

Ofden. Mllrdwood. Large piokup
loocl. Colll14·oMII· 1437.

IVn.

2 IR . -

1171 12.e1 HoM-. Undw·
pinning. partiiiiY furni•hed .
•4000 or bMt oH•. 0\1 11._
388,,718.

36
23

tc.. t8000.

Call 114-211-1301.

o,_

f.......,

z br.. front don.

a ""awning.

Coiii14·&lt;Me·ZH3 .

114-441-2321 ... 441-4421.

U p t t o l r 0 . . - - 1.

1t71 Boyvlow

•too.

271 pMon fuel DltMit wtl:h I •
ond . .. Good ohopo. Ul.

c-

61

0 l01rr
Roarranoo Jott.ra of 11oo
ocramblod -dt be-

·•

..\

Collohon'oUoodnl08hop. O•or
76
Boats end
1,000tlreL arlut12, 13. 14, 1B, 1.!:::;::;;:::::::::~=::::::;=========~
Motors
for Sale
11. 11.1.1mlloo0111Rt. 211. ~
Cdl14·21t·l251.
----------

ltritlltle lot OffiCM 01' rtailng.
of 2nd. 6 l'lno. CoH

Equel Hou1lng OpportUftlty.

1870 Elcono 12dll. 211f .. oloohNI, a• ttow. rafrig. Mu•
mave. Financing pauibl.. 10

1

. . . ·•

. '\ .
~

1111

1400 eq. f1: comrn•dll..,ace.

.......... • . t200.00 - f"h)
d-M. CONTACT: J o E-oo Oopt. l'tl 441--7

Mobile Home•
for Sale

oh~~m"'e

remadiled

br..
Oolllpollo.
ti71-U21 por -·Dot!6 Rot. r..,.lrod. Col 114·44t·
231504'441-4421.

AN oleo- 2 br. holno""
HouH. 3.11 ec. 2 br\ total elec. rent. Adutta only. No ~Mitt Cal
c_,M lhroutlh. 1 mMe ~ 114-317-7431.
Fogl- Rd. MUon, WV.
12xl0~ 2 btdfoommolthhome
304· 773·101 I.
for ront. Coil 114-112-IIM.
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM
0t IU-Ropoh; Aloo Ta Dolin- 2 bod,_, lu-od. quent·a f01 I 1 tr• llrDpetiw. dMfi condition. One chlkf. no
A - Now. F01 Uoting. Coli - · •110. por month. 1-311-733-1012, •t. GL 173. Hovon. 304-IIZ·24H.
GOVERNMENT HOMEI lor
• 1.00 IU "-iiUY DIR,CTI
R.,o.. T• SEIZED prDp I Riel.
Coli tod.. "" ...... , •• , 1·4113141, ext . H2214 (toll·

For Leaae

rote. '!Me RRI ~INI!III"'HHiRUJ

1tll Hondl Rabel 210. Red,
1200 mM•. t710. CaiJ 114441-1301.

Mlac. Merchandise

c - - ·· ''lotion.
Coli 114· 441· 211 .

---.In

...,.L

pjcll up ond doltvor. Good

I

64

Space for Rent

-

F-

I room houae, twa
n.w.
roof, NuHih wlftdo 1. .-.oe.
241 N. F........ A.... Mlddl_..
Molto · 114-247-4173 04'
114-247· 2132.

_,,

48

,...... ...,..., ..... - - ·
plootlo tonloo. pl•tc
downtown G1lllpalfe ktcedon. cutverta. m... l cutwertt. RON
1-lrloo col 114-441·4222.
EVANI ENTERPRIIES. Jodo31 Homel for Sale
41 Hou . . . for Rent •COUNTRYMOIILEH0100Pore.; · _
oon,_
Oh.
_114-211-113p.
_ _ _......,:_ _
Route 33. North of Pomeroy. Ou~ity tirlwOod, •II hl!'dWood,
Hlindl Man lpeciM- I room •nd q Spruce lt.• Nlc. 3 br. hoMM. Rental trlll•t. C.l 114·H2·
for . .... t21a plcll· up loMI. C.M
btlth. attic. biiMfftent. 110 Stllta Large equipped ldtoMn, c.ntrll 1471.
114·317·0111.
81. Price neg. Call 114-n2· Mr........ • . , _, No , ...
3721.
Rot . • Dott. . _...... 1300 o I , _ "" omoll lnlloro. AM F i - lor 030.00,
month. Coll114-441-2111.
-upo. Colrlo. Alooolflcloncy _ _,. - · dollvorod. Co"
roomt. M and c:Mie. Milton.
Aoger Me.,.. 114-311·1011
Government Hom• from t 1.
01311·1341 .
IU· RopolrJ. Aloo tu ........... 2 ..... OGiii. houae.....,. ........ W.Yo. Co11304-773·HI1 .
and toreclo•ure proEirtl... New bath, new idlofttn, for"'"
A•ii.W• now. For ht
ell .. ol Oct. 1 . 1 month rem. 1 SPACES FOR RENT - Toollor • • DlkDia Ferm home bulh on
1·311-733--2 EXT. G 021 . enanth MCUrttv ,....Ired. .Call ~-. Rt. 1, Locust Road. bide of your lot. 012.111 6 up. Coli
114-111·7311 .
114-H2·1117 - - 1:00 K 6 K. 304-171·1078.
ondi,OO.
Modulor hotno, eo..
,.., ....,., Com• of 1 . Founll
fiNWOOCI. ·~ up tor wmer.
47 Wanted to Rent
UO o pl..·up. dollowod. Coli Ed
ond Hoobo Ito.. Mlddi-'oti14-441· H71.
MuM ... to epprec~-.e. Clll 42 Mobil• Home•
114-182-32t3.
for Rent
Trail• ..,._ on private coumry .41 caliber Ohio 171Sth Comm•ntorattve -"11tol. tiOO. Call
Aench--ltY._ houN with brNtll
lot In t.ck of New Hliven or
114·441·M1f ohor 1'00 PM
Uldngview ofrt.ter. 3 bid OCWitl.
Me ton Countiel. Call 304~ 773·
1 .. . . _ .... _ . . . _ ....
-doyo.
H21.

C.n liD ....t h•Mnt end roofing.
IIJe.. ontble retea. Marion
-.114-MI-2121. 1

..... mowere tor ..... CIM
114-742-2313 01 114-742-

oth•houn.

Television
Viewing

1112 YornohaiiO. 4 cyf O..Od
cond. tiOO. Clll ,.14-2111!13.
.

............. •n1. - - · w..
t•bed •nd fumltur• W•r•

Roon11 lor ..., b¥ or
manth. Ctll 114·112·7&amp;21,
1 ' 30-4 :30. 11 4 -ttZ -2353

TheDaifyS

BORN LOSER
SfJ(( M', t!Uf:HS, I'M 601116

~

18H Honda 200 4 wtoaetar.
tl200. Coli 814-311-BHI.

King SIN -~- Wot-

~...;;_

oehod · - 114-112·3880.
· - .., .,.
-tmontonly.

-

t'-

Good uood corpot, I
11a11 ton. 1 ~12o2 "'"''
Collll4-441· 1111.

,,..... tlble, eo Inch• piiJa two
whh ·bonclo ...,. four
choln, v«y oturdr. coli 304112· 2112.

___,.,._

1987

'

1171 Honda 410 . loaded,
0210. 1184 Thomoo mopod.
0250. Wrodood 1173 lui..
Opel. 171. Coli114· 311· 1773.

.

hDUII, II ColumbUt Rd .,
A -. Ohio 41701. 114· 1137111.

"What we need to do is build
an atOmiC energy plant that OltlooSpooolorRent. locolont
' JUS
• t as POWerful as the · C
fot ~nom.,., Accountant. etc.
lS
- to Court"""""· CoN
WIMman "•II En.11 Agency.
114 44 3144
public
reaction
against
it."
' ..
·
________,r-"...;;;;.,______-1 Olllco
• - "" - · heel.

Houl- 1 •30 o
- · Coli Ed it 114-&lt;Me-H71.

Grown Lawn Mo..,. ,...,..,,

M""""' - · c--

Fumlohod room. t71. UIHhloo
pMI. lh.,• beth. lingle mela.
lit l o -. Golllpoll1. Coli
&lt;Me-4411 oflor 7pm.
;.._

_____

WY.

1187 Hlrle¥" 113• .00 miiM,
uu new. Muat ..... t3200. c.n
114· 211·110011.

w...
p~o~o~y M· ......
blowor,
nltMI
· 11.000
btu . lea:
87
Ylno Ooll,ollo.

''HIJI. tNGI Ga e ewe..,. ~ •
- - tla.ooo ..... 000.
Coli 1.021 IU-1111. EXT

12

...

"•nc~eraon.

.

Motorcycles

1111 Hondo Cll 400 otrOOI • , •
blko. rnlloogo. oloc. ......
-·
..10: 1171 Hondo XR 210 dill • ,
blko. 1421. loth • .., ...... • •
oood. CoM 814-211· 1124.
·:.

One bedroom fumllhed 1pM~
mwn. tfOUnd floor. prtv•te

: IUd far full ..._ pa ' dcwl,
MEIIMI V..., N. . . C•r•
IIDIJir l*iiOCOftll office

1987

-----....:·....

Apartment
for Rent

Col M.ilyn

- - . U · 2 M e.

c.e.r.,

Wednu~y. September 23,

Pomeroy-Mld1..pcxt, Ohio

T I

XllL.W

"

·-.
......

...
\

, I.

'A I' tlj' eel &amp;..MOna hllg'llll •

~..,...,In

wl1lch

' ...... Adcllrly'l parllllr.

Ill , . _ .lillln, M.D.

emu.. ...

--= =~

c z

z- o

(I

N H Y 0

H .G

c

L R C

V 'H 0 U U E T U

YesterdQ'a Cfrptoquote: TO BE A MAN'S OWN
FOOL IS ri).J) ENOUGH; AuT THE VAfN MAN IS
EVERYAODY'S. .....,. WIWAM PENN

'

•••

�Pega-14-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·EASTMAN'S. · Your.Independ-e ntly Owned

Grid
•
previews

Low-Priced Supermarket

Daily Numht'r

910
Pick4
:!399 .
Super Lotto
5-14-16-27-29-34

Sports

Bath Tissue

$

COUPONS

•WE RESEI!VE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
OUANTIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE
WED .• SEPT. 23 THROUGH SAT
SEPT. 28. 1987. • USDA FOOci'
STAMPS _ACCEPTED . • NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
· OR PICTD.RIAL ERRORS .

11 O;OO or More

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall
Come Dec, 1 when It's time
comes to purcha se new dog
licenses. Meigs County dog
owners wilt be pa ying more than
. in the pas I.
The county commissioners
raised dog licenses from $2 to $4
for a single license. a nd from $JO
to $20. for a kennel license. whe n
they met Wednesday In regular
session. ·
In I'Xplalni ng lhe ral sl' in fees,
Commissioner Ri chard .Jones
said t hal the commissioners
.were told by the slate audilors
that the fees would have to be
raised In order 10 make up for the
loss of approxlmalely $7,000 10
$8.000 In reve nue sharin g fund s

AtlolitioMIP..done

pi(. G.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, .Thursday, September 24, 1987

2 Sections 1 4 Pages

25 Cents

A 'Mullimedia lf'!c. News'paper

Commission to increase dog license fees

limit 4 Pir Visit With s10.00 or
More Additional Purchase.
Set Store for Dttails.

limit Ono With
4 ROLL

Yol.37. No.96

ALL WEEK

enttne

aty

Copyrighted 1987

60s.

•

•

DOUBLE

Clear lunig!ti. Low 45 to 50.
Friday, su nny. Hlg!t In mid

which we re used in the past 10
supplement the dog and kennel
budge1. Because Ills unlawful to
use general fund mon eys for the
dog and kennel fund, according
to the s tale audllors. Ihe commis s ioners had no choice but to raise
Ihe fees, Jones said.
Operation or the coun ty dog
sh ~lter cos Is aboul $18,000 a nnu ally, J ones said. Inc luding wages
lor the dog warden. s upplies.
operallo n and m ai ntenance of
lhe do g warde n's truck . and
animal clai ms. Lasl year, lhc
dog a nd ke nnel fund look in a bout
$9,200. just half of whal il coSIS tb
operate I he facilit y.
Although the Bureau ol Suppori will be moved In the near
futu re from the jurisdictio n of the

Meigs County Common Pleas
Courl 10 the Department of
Hum an Services, pla ns to imple·
ment . the move have not been
fina lized. Co mmi ss ioner Ri c hard Jones said tha t Mic hael
Swisher. human services director , has attended meetings where
informal ion regarding the ru les
of implem ent at ion of the new
child support law , whic h necess ita ted lhe move, have been
disc ussed. A meeti ng is &gt;chedul~d fo r Ocl. 7 in Columbus at
which tim e ' the rules of implemenl a tion s hould be completed.
The commissioners pla n to meet
as soon as possibl e after the Oct .
7 meeti ng to begin finalizing the
local Bureau of Supporl move.
Meigs Counly Engineer Philip

Rober ts anticipates that berm·
ing and s triping of three recently
paved roads - Success Roa d.
New Lim a Road and Forest Run
-will la ke place some tim e next
week.
Alt ogether, Rober ts repor ted,
23 miles of county roa dw ays were
paved with hot mix, in cluding Ihe
13 mi les on the above na med
roads. On those three roads, e dge
lines a nd center lin es will be
Pa in ted, while on Ihe re maining
roa ds. only cemer lines will be
pai nted .
The co mmissioners au tho rized

Roben s to advertis e for bids for
two dump tru cks a nd a six
passenger automobile for the
highway depa rtment, wilh the
st ipulation that the vehi cles

would be paid for a ft e r the first of
the year.
Ted Warner, county highway
superint endent, re ported th ai
allhough the highwa y department has a good supply of cinders
s tockpiled for wint er snow and
Ice remova l. the cinders may
have to be mixed wi'th salt to be
usable, since they are too fine to
be used alone.
Commiss ioner David Koblent z
repor ted that the co unty's Office
of Utter Control is planning a
count Y·wide recyc ling drive dur-

ing October.
The drive is to be conducted
mainly thr ough lhe e lementary
sc hool s in th e count y, on the five
weekends in Oclober, with th e
purpose of teaching s ludent s th e

value of a cleaner, healthier
environment through recycling,
and also to aii!Jw schools to raise
money for school projects. In
addition, awards will be made by
the litter office to the schools
recycling the mos l materials.
Tri·Co unt y · Recycling ha s
opened a collection center at the
intersection of Route 143 and the
Route 7 bypass near Pomeroy In
the Meigs Local School District .
Arrangement s have been made
to' have collection places also in
Eastern and Southern Districts
on one Saturday, (probably Oct .
241, so that all county students
would have fair opportunity to
recycle.
·
The following business matters
Continued on page 10

t

Southern board, boosters install
new aluminum stands for grid tilts
Pr ior to this new in stalla tion
sea tin g was provided by an aging
sel of wooden bleac hers mount ed
on 11\e old gymnasium bleachers
fr a me. Numerous repairs over
pu rc ha se and cons truc tion of an
lhe past several years have
all new a lum inum grand stand
for th ~ Southern Hi gh Sc hoo l proven cost ly and Ihe old fixtures
were bec.oming qui ck l y
footba ll stadium.
irrepa ra ble.
The new gra ndsta nd measures
J8x90 feet and is W rows high
This prompted th e Soulhern
excrpt for havi ng just six rows in" Local Board of Educatio n to seek
fronl of Ihe press box. Th e fra me anot hPr form of seating, not only
and support of tho s tru ct ure a rc 10 avo id costs of repair, but to
made of we lded alu minum wilh
prov ide the utmos l in safety lo its
annod ized. c orr u ~a t e d a lumi - ath letic s upporte rs . With innum seats.
cr eased li a bility a nd availability
ThP g'rand sta nd exceeds alii and cos ts of insurance this has
r\1(1uirPm&lt;ent s of the Ohio Swte proyen to be a wise move.
bulldinJ&lt; code and is gua ra nteed
A section of the new bleachers
for lwent y years with a life having a capacity of 100 is
expPclaflCY exceeding 3;, .YC'ars .
por table and ma y be used a l ihe
ThC' new S&lt;'al ing was pur- foolball and baseball field s, in
chasf'd fro m lhe Dant Corpora- the gymnasium for basketball.
, lion Loui svittc. Ke nlucky. Con- · band co ncer ts, plays. gradua st ruclion wa s supervi sed b~
lion, or a ny oth er evenl where
co mpan.v representa ti ve and cer ·
they ma y be needed.
tifi ed supervisor Danny Da vis.
Th e in itia l cos t of th e
RACINE- A co mbined eflor l of
lhe Soulh ern Loca l Board, of
Education and Soulher n Ath letic
Boos ter s reci"ntly resull ed In the

SUCED '

Orang~

Meat Wieners

Quarter Pork Loins

$188

MINUTE MAID

TENDER BEST

,

LB.
9-11
CHOPS

12

oz.

98tr=

120Z.

ALL SIZES SUPERTRI

Juice

Huggles Diapers

$ 08

BOXsgaa

ii~~mfti

-

'nle!ie new bleachers

purchMed by the Souther• Local Board ol
Eduullon have certainly dressed up the much-

Improved Southern lootballstadlum. The athletic
boosters made the right preparation and did all
the construction work.

Compromise sought on War Act
WASHINGTON iUPli - Th e
White House. led by a chie f or
stall with years of Senate ex pi'rlence , Is looking for a compromIse with disgrunlll'd sena10rs 10
resolve the question over use or
the War Powers Acl for lhe
Persian Gu lf.
With lawmakers eyeing a vole
lhls evening upon · resumlns:
debate on the Issue today , chie f of
staff Howard Baker. the form er
Senate Republi ca n lea der fr om
Tennessee. said he was working
to reach an agreemenl amenable
to both sides.
" It oughl to be worked oul and I
think It wlit be," Baker told
reporters at a Whit e House picnic
Wednesday nlghl. He would not
provide details but sa id he had
been on lhe telephone all day
seeking to defus&lt;&gt; the Issue.
President Rea ga n. who opposes the War Powers Acl as a
matler of course, said Wednesday It would be a '-' grt&gt;al

liTnE DEIIIl

OAT MUL
COOKIES

CHEESE

89&lt;

$198

101

lb.

HOLLY FARMS GRADE "A"

Pick of the · Chix

~·

98 «(:

.ECKRICH CHEESE, BEEF or

s

Meat Franks ••;.':: 178

ECKRICH BEEF '2.38 lb .

Smoked
$
Sausage ••••••• ~.~tt. 2 28

SUNSHINE CHUNK

Dog Food
20 lB.
BAG

$288

THANK

_

Cherry Pie Filling ~
'

2~2J·98•

'mis take " 10 trigger th e Jaw th a t bill a lrea dy fa ci ng a Reag an
would rcqujre him to give Con- veto .
gress a say In whet her 'u.s.
As lea ders Sla lled for iim c
mtlltary forces re ma in In lhe
Wedn esday lo perfec l the la ngulf.
guage. Sen. John Warner. R- Va .,
Gr umbling la wmak ers from
sa id, "Both Ihe executi ve branch
both parties. however. renewed
and lhe Congress wa nl to work
lhet r lnsistf' nce for the ac l
wil hin the splr il oi-l he law .. . not
foll ow lnJ&lt; Monday nig hl' s fata l
the lc tler, bul cet·la inl y the
U.S. he llropler a ll ark on a n spi rit."
Irania n vessel Iha t offi c ia ls sa id
Th e Vi et nam-e ra Wa r Powers
wa s ca ught lay ln l( mines in 1hc
Act was adopted in 1973 to curb
strat egic waterwav.
preside ntial powe r to co mmit
Sena1e leaders worked Wed- troops 10 undecla red ivars. It
nes day on a n a lt ernati ve to
requi res a re port 10 Congress 48
provide Ihe cha mber. one tha i in
ho\lrs aft er forces are in an area
broad form would a llow U.S. • of aclual or imminent ho's tllities.
forces lo remal'n In the war- tor n and II Congress neither decla res
~rea for a given per iod, perh aps
war nor vott-:S a specif ic exten six months , and pa st that if the sion withi n 60 day s, th e forces
presld enl reported II was neces - mu St be removed within a month.
sary and Congress did not pass a
Whit e Hou se spokesman Marresolution of disa pproval.
lin Flt zwaler asser ted WednesBu t tempering th&lt;&gt; Ioree of the day the adminlst ration a lre ady is
proposal was the fact th at it " meeting Ihe spirit of the resoluwould be offered as an amend- tio n through extensive briefings
ment 10 lhe fi sca l 1988 "defense
Continued on page 10

6iden's speech recalls "Grapes of Wrath'
WASHINGTON tUPl) -Sen .
Joseph Blden. D-Del .. ending his
presidential bid amid c ha rges of
plagiarism, recalled even In his
withdrawal address the the mes
of another Writer
John
Steinbeck.
In his statement delivered
Wednesday to a Capitol Hill news
fOnference , Blden sa id :
"There will be other pres ide ntial ~ampalgns . And f'll be th ere
out front. I'll be there. There'll be

LOW

other opponunitles. There' ll be
other battles , other places , o1he r
tim es, and I'll be there. And I'll
be there ... "
In Steinbeck's Depression-era
classic, " The Grapes of Wrat h, "
character Tom Joad said In a
speech of defeat :
"Then It don 't matter . Then t 'II
be all around in the dark. I'll be
everywhere, wherever you look.
Wherever there 's a fight . so
hungry people can eat, 1'11 be

there. Wherever ·th ere's a cop
bea ting up a guy, I'll be there."
Aclor Henry Fonda made th e
speech famous in the movi e
version of Ihe nove l.
Biden was driven . from th e
presid e ntial ra ce amid char ges
he lilted passages of his speeches
from those of polttlcians British
Labor Party leader Neil Kinneck. Robert Kennedy and Hu·
bert Humphrey. and exaggerated his academic record .

bleac hers , which have a total
capacity of 900, was $23,000, but
are very cost-efficient in the
long run and are maintenance
free.

- ,.

The Southern athletic boosters
made site prepa rations , leveled
the area, and poured concrete
footer and slab the length and
width of the bleacher foundation,
forming a walkway in front of the
bleachers .
This labor was a ll donated and
took considerable time.
The bleachers are elevated four
feet above ground level. making
every seat a good one.
THe. boosters also conslructed
the !bleachers wilh the help of
school volunteers and em·
ployees. The project was supervised by Davis.
The bleachers. looking somewhat majestic, aga ins t the background of Southern High School,
have complimented a finc press
Continued on page 10

Consortium of four firms apparent
low bidder for locks, dam project
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . tU P ll
-A consortium of four companies is the a ppa renl low bidder lor
· a mutti -million-dollar project
a imed at e limina ting a bottleneck on the Ohio River, the U.S.
Arm y Corps of Engi neers sa id
Wednesday.
Th e corps opened bids Wedn esday for a co ntract to replace the
Ga llipolis Locks , which ha s
slowed regional navigation on

N.A. of Sa n Francisco and and
Ha rber t lnl ernational Inc. of
Shelby Cou ntv. Ala.
Other fi r ms s ubmitting bids
were Morrison-Knudson Co ..
$238.6 mtllion; Newberg Venture, $236. million; Bechtel
Corp .. $225.6 million: a nd J.A.
Jones , $2f&gt;0.6 million.
The corps will review GLR 's
bid to determ ine if the company's
figures are accurate and its

bonding is adequate. The contract
is expecled to be awarded in
spokes man Conrad Rlplev said.
two
to
four weeks, Ripley said.
' The a pparent low bidder wa s
"If
every
lhing works well, we
GLR Co nstructors , which ·£ubshould
have
construction begin
mitt ed a proposal of $217.6
million for the projecl. Th e by Ihe time we have the ground co nsoriium represe nts S.J. breaking ceremony at the loc k
Groves a nd Sons of Minn ea polis, site on Nov. 6," he said.
Re placement of the locks,
Guy F . Atkinson of Sa n Fran to ta ke about four
expected
eisco, Billingham Co nstruction
the

ri ver

for

~evenH

yC'a r s,

years , is the first phase of a
two-part plan to Improve commerc ial navigation on the Ohlo
River. The seco nd phase upgrading the Gallipolis Dam will begin when the locks project
Is completed: Ripley said.
"About 40 million tons of
com mod ities pass through those
locks every year," he . said.
"We're .eliminating a bottleneck.
It' s like e liminating a two-lane
brid!(e on an Interstate."
The corps also plans to· add a
third lock on th e Kanawha River
at Winfield Locks and Dam and
upgrade Locks 7 and 8 on the
Monongahela River. Those projects are "do)'Jn the road a bit ,"
Ripley said.
"They're at least two years
away," he said.

Observe school
bus safety week

FAT
•I MILK
I

MEDIUM

1112 DOZEN
EGGS
llct.cto.

88&lt;

~EN

JOSEPH RIDEN

This week, Sept. 20-26, Is
Nat ional School Bus Safety
Week, with the theme "Be
Smart, Be Seen. " ·
• In Ohio, approximately 1.3
million stu.d ents are transported
dally to and from schools on
14,900 buses. This week throughout the state, students are being
shown videos, sponsored by the
.State Department of Education.
which emphasize the importance
of school bus safe(y.
Locally, fifty school buses
travel Metgs County everyday
taking students to and from
school. Of that fifty, 26 are Meigs.

Local buses, 13 are Eastern
Local and the remaining 11 are
Southern Local.
Meigs Local's buses travel
approximately 2,350 miles a day
transporting 2,200 to 2,400
students.
Eastern transports the major·
lty of their 939 student.s by buses,
but could not report Thursday
morning exactly how many mile s
their buses ·travel on a dally
basis .
Southern transports approxl·
mately 800 students by buses
which travel routes totaling 829
tnlles each day.

HOW IT IS TODAY- Today, In Melp County, . off students, just like these Meigs Local buses
the big yellow school buses travel most every · stopped Wednesday morning at Pomeroy Ele·
mentary. (Note old photos on page 10 today of how
county and township road picking and droppln'
It used to be) .

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