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... . ,,_..

.·

,

Farm

Giants
get slice
of title

Page- D-B

.

September 27. 1987
'

Ohio fanners facing grain storage problem
·
By United Press International
Ohio farmers are expecting a plentifu l grain
harvest this year, but they still are contend ing
.
with last year 's glut.
· About 80 perce nt of t he state' s storage facilities
are filled with last year's crop, said Don Marsh, a
• spokesman for the Ohio Depa r tme nt of Agricul·
ture' s grain warehouse division.
" There definitely will be a problem In certain
areas," Marsh told the Akron Beacon J ournal in a
Friday story.

T he problem will be especially evident in
wester n Ohio, where grain production Is high, a nd
in Wayne County, which las t year was a m ong
Oh io' s top 20 counties in corn prod uction.
Marsh said some of the surplus grain .will be
shipped to New York, a s it was las t year.
Clinton Missler, general ma nager ilf Woos ter
E quity Inc .. sa id his compa ny still is storing
200,000 bushels of government grai n from last
year .
·
Missler said it is profita ble to s tore the grai n,

but he risks losing local customers that he must
turn away.
"Once you ta ke it !gover nme nt g rain!, the only
way to get r id of It is, you buy It, or the government
Issues a loa d order on tt ."
The government grain, If sold, would fl ood the ·
m ar ket and decrease the price tor all far mers,
Marsh sa id.
"The orily real solu tion is 10 export It," Marsh .
said: " Right now the prospects of that are n' t rea l
grea t. ·•

cash · prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Le ave your name, address and telephone numher
with your card or letter . No telephone calls will be
accepted. All contest e ntries shoul!l be turned in to
the newspa per office hy 4 p.m. ea ch Wednesday.
In case of a tie, lhe winner will i)e chose n by
lottery. Nex t week, a Ga llla County farm will be
fe atured by the Gallla Soil and Waler Conser va·
tion Distri ct.

Ventilating buildings prime concern

.
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP !) With the cold weather approach·
lng - in some cases already here
- farmers need to thin ~ abou t
ventilating their barns and other
farm buildings.
Michael Brugger, agricultu ral
engineer at Ohio State Univer"
slty, says to re member what th e
buildings are lor and a djust th e
air flow accordingly. Doing th e
, job right saves on lives toc k a nd
veterinary bills·.
"Going Into winter you have to
remember that we' re ventila ting
the building !irs t a nd foremos t
for the animals that live there,
not for the farmer's comfor t."
Brugger says.
Farm buildings are ventilated
lor many of the reasons homes

ar e.
Tem pera lu re cont rol is a big
reason. Mov in g a ir a lso red uces
mois tu re that ca n ca use respira·
tory p roblems a nd blows out
harmful dust a nd fumes.
The nu mber of a nima ls won' t
cha nge y ou r method , bu t the kind
does dictate how you ve ntil a te.
Ba by pigs, for insta nce, m us t
be ke pt warm . . This mea ns
coordi na ting ve nt il at ion wit h a
heati ng system . Don't cu t off a ir
movem ent to redu ce your hea t·
ing cos ts .
Brugge r says it 's 'c heape r to
bu y hea t t han nurse s ick
anima ls.
Ca ttle and other large a nimals
wo n' t need hea l but do need
movi ng air .

Don't sea l up thP ba r n becau se.

you fee l a breeze on your neck.
Large a nima ls will be hea lthi er
in a n open shed than one tha t is
closed up,. Brugger says res plra ·
tory problems a bound whe re
mois lu re is not pushed out by
moving air.
"The key Is a lway s a ir dlst rlbu·
tion a l\ll good ai r excha nge,
whether you're heat ing the build·
ing or no I," Brugger says. "'That
mea ns construction is criti ca l.
Vent ila te your livestock build·
ings right, e ither na lura lly or
mecha nica lly. a nd you'll have
fewer problems in the long run ."
De tails a nd pla ns fo r des igning
proper ly venti lated buildings for
all kinds of a nima ls a re ava ila ble
fro m th e Ohio Coopera tive Ex·
·tens ion Ser vic e.

•

Will honor volunteers next month
COLUMBUS. Ohio tUP I) More than 18.400 Ohioa ns he lping
today's youngsters In the 4-H
programs are volunteers who
will be honored during Nat ional

4-H Wee k Oct. 4·10.
" Volun teers a re lhc backbone
or the 4·H progra m. " sa:y s AI
Ulric h, 4"H spec ia list a t Oh io
St al e Univers ily.

Farm flashes

It's harvest time
By Edward M. Vollborn
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; ONRD
GALLIPOLIS - Th e fall har·
vest Is mov ing rapidl y In mos t
a rea s. As of Monda y aftern oo n.
Ohio corn harvest wa s ra ted at 14
percent complete compa red to
the most recent five-year aver·
age of only 3 percent comple te
for the sa me point In time. Sta te"
wide, some 70 pe rcent of the cor n
was r ated a s e ither good or excellent. At the loca l level ma ny re·
ports are of c orn yields In the 50·
60 bushel per acre leve l. A br ight
spot Is tha t much of the corn just
has s hort ears and the grai n qual ·
lty is s till pretty good .
Pians a re being completed to
charte r a bus for a one -day trip to
the North America n Lives tock
Exposition In Louisville , Ky. , on
Wednesday,. Nov. 18. The cost
will be $24 per person to cover
bus and admission. E ac h person
will need to cover me al cos t on
their own. We will pla n to leave
Gallipolis around 6 a. m . a nd re"
turn about midnight. This ma ke s
for a very long day but keeps the
cost down . Most of the beef
breeds will be on ex hibit th a t
da:y. November 181s a lso the date
of the Feeder Calf Show a nd Sale
at the Expo.
Fall wealher ofte n brings on
respiratory disease problems for
both dairy and beef calves. Ke nt
Hoblet, D.V.M., and E xtension
Veterinarians at the Ohio Sta te
Unlver.ity re cently prepared a
leaflet discussing Disease Pre·
ventlon In Dairy Replacement
heifers. Must of the information
also applies to bee! ca lves.
Dr. Hoblet says that respiratory .
diSease problems are frequently
obllerved In calves from 8 weeks
through 8 IIIQnths of age. During

this time poriod. levels of colas·
!ra lly acquired anti bod ies natu r·
ally decline. This decline is com p"
llca ted by the facl that. although
antibody levels tha i remain in I he
bloods I rea m may not be protec·
tive aga inst na tura l disease exposure they may iqt erfere wit h at·
tem pts to induce a ct ive immunity
by vaccination. Currently, it is
thou!(ht that viru ses (P13. IBR. or
BRSU ) may da mage tissues a nd
reduce delesce mechanisms, thereby opening I he way for bacterial
Invas ion !Pasteurella , Haemophi·
Ius Som m us, etc.). Interactions by
viruses and bacteri a are thought
to be comp!icated by a variety of
stress .
According to Dr. Hoblet, early in
thP cour se of the disease a ve1cr i·

naria n should be consultl'd rega rd"
lng diagnosis a nd trea tment. Too
frequently, use of ineffective ant i·
bacteria Is or improper dosage
sched ules. res ults in anim als with
residua I lung da mage. Animals
trea led improperly, even II they
survive may be expecled to exhibit
poor growt h and reduced performa nce. Ca ll he Extension Office
lor a photo·copy of Dairy Guide
Lea fl et 406.
The best time lor planting wha t
Is a 14·day period starting 7 days
after the fly-sa fe da te. The. fly -safe
date for Galli a County ls0ctober 4.
Performance tests conducted by
O.S.U. Agronomist a t three locallons In Ohio showed an average
yield of 74.1 bushel per acre on 2li
varieties tes ted. Those certified
varieties testing above average in
yield were: Dyna sty, Becker,
Tyler, Ca rdinal, Hillsdal e, a nd
Adena. Industry varieties yielding
above average . were: Agrlpro,
Twain; Pioneer, 2550; AGRO,
GR876; Wellma n, GR856; AGRA,
GRB63: a nd AGRA , GR855.

Recogniz in g thl"ir con i rlbu"
lio ns to 4· H is one of the ma jor ·
purposes of Na tiona l 4"H Week.
Vo lunt eers lea d, orga nize a nd
ass is t 4·H youth program s, Ul·
ric h says. They offer the ir Hme.
knowledge a nd resources to help
lhe 140,000 Ohio youngs ters in
4"H.
Ma ny vol unteers teac h you th
" learn·by·doing" projacls s uc h
as · co mputer programmin g or
creat ive writing . Ohio 4-H'ers
cam choose fro m more than 180
pro jects.
Other vo lunt eer s work in Ohio
4· H as "' m idd le managers." They
deve lop progra ms, serve on
advisory committees , coo rd in ate
county activities, or he lp recruit
new vo lunteers . Theseoppor tuni·
ties oft en appea l to vo lunteer s
wi th little time to give.
"It does n' t m a tter how much
tim e you give. as long as you
share a willin gness . to he lp
youn gsters with li fe's c hoices
and opt ions," Ulrich says.
4-H volunteer s ca n improve
the ir skills through education al
progr a ms taught by Ohio Sta te
faculty. subject ma \ter spec ia l·
is ts a nd other volunteer s.

Farm costs are
still declining
COL UMBUS, Ohio (UPi i
Costs of va rious components of
ag ricultural p roduction are con·
ttnulng to fall, one ray of good
news for fa rmer s.
De nni s R. He nde rson, agricul"
tural economist at Ohio Sta te
Univers ity, reports tha t cos ts for
every major input declined In
1986 and a re e xpec led to fall
more th is year, alleviating the
flnancla l pressure many farm ers
a re experiencing.
He says tot a l farm production
expenses dropped $11 billion In
1986 to $122 billion. down from
$133.7 billion In 1985 .and .15
perce nt below the peak of $142.7
.billion In 1984.
Outlays for feed, seed and
livestock wer e $28.8 billion, the
lowest since 1978 and down 5
p~rc ent from 1985.
\

162
Pick 4

•

at y

Vol. 37, No. 98
Copyrighted 1987

le~~~~~~wlde

: ''''''·ur
'

pa rt lcipa led in a phys ic al fitn ess
com petition based on I he Mar in e
Physical Fit ness Progr am . Pl u ~.
a counl y he alth promotion tea m
Is sponsor ing actovtties for h~
mem be rs of the county sc;,o
syslem s taff IO. lea rn a ut
ca n c~r p reve n u o n tho oug h
nut r itoon.
-A bicy cle project m ember In
Ohio or gim lzed a un icyc le club.
He's helped . younger 4- H'c rs
learn lo r ide a nd do tr icks on
their unlcvc t ~s. Th !' group ha s
pa o·tlcipatcd in parades at the
Kentuc ky Dl' rby. Or a nge Bowl
a nd lh&lt;&gt; World 's F a ir . Lasl year.
the cl ulJ won a communll y
scrvlco award lor pe rfoi·mlng a t
Ohio nurs ing homrs .

Feeder cal£. sales
• 0 ctober I
to begm

New LEAD

classes begin
at Ohio State

.
Better vc nt lla llon mea ns h~J· J .
thic r a nlmnl s ..:.. Ven tilaHo n Is a
r old ·w ell the r ronrc rn a round th&lt;'
ba rn a nd oth&lt;'r farm bulldln~ts.
M!c•h "'
MI B•·uogcr.
aorl~ultural
~
... '
r ngl nf'f' r a t Ohio Sta te Unlvc r·
sliy sa l'S to .~cmcm ber ,.;hat the
·
bu .l ldin ~ s arn for and adjust the
,.
'
lair now a ccording ly . Do ing t he
job r ight savps on llvcs lock a nd
veterinary b il ls.
Goi ng Int o wi nter you have to
reme mbN tha t we're v ntllatl n!!
lh&lt;· bu ilding ll rs l a nd loremosl
for the unim als thai live •he re .
noo for the farmer's comlor t.
F a rm buildin gs arc vc ntll at&lt;'d
for many of the reaso ns homes
,•oo·n. 1"c mpcrat ur&lt;' co nt o·oll• • bin
•
• ~
reaso n. Mov ing air a lso rl'd uccs
mois ture tha t ca n ca usr rcsplra·
lory, P• .ob te ms and bl ows oul
harm ful dust an&lt;1 fu mes.
The number of a nimal s won ' t
cha nge your met hod. bul the
ki nd d (l{•s d ic tate how you ventl.
late
.
B~ by pi gs . for Instance. musl
be ke pt wa rm . Th is m('a ns coor·
dina tln g v~ nt ltallo n w ith a heat ·
in" s·yslr m . Don'l c ut orr •lr mo"
~
,.
VC mCnl 10 redU CC YOUr hcQ tinfl;
costs . It's chea per to buy helil
th a n nurs e s ick a nim a ls ,
Cat tle and other large animals
won"l nt'ed he at bul d o need mov ln g air. Don'l sea l up the ba rn be·
ca use you fePI a brPeze on your
nec k. L a r ~e a nimals will be heal·
th ier In a n open sh ed I han one
I hat Is c iOS&lt;? dup. Res pira tory
problems a bound where mols"
turc is not push ·d out by mov ing
ai r.
The key is always a ir dlstri bu·
tlonand good air ('xcha nge, whether you're heat in~ the bu ildin g or
nol. Thai mea ns cons u·uctlon Is
critica l. Ventil ate your livestock
bui ldings right -ei ther nalur" lly
or mechanicall y- a nd you'll have
fewer proble ms in the i o n~ run .
De ta ils and pla ns for des ign ing
prope rly vt•nti lal ed buildings fo r
a ll kinds or anima ls arc avail a b le
fro m our office.

MAK ES F INAl. ROUNDS - As has been the
&lt;:ustom down through the years, &amp;h Evans chats
lriends and ro•l all ve~ :l! lht• origina l Steak Huu•e

By I. EE ANN " 'E I.Cif
At 10 p.m., Sunda;. I he Bob
Eva ns S t ~ak House on Eas t·
rr n A\'cnu closed just ll kl'
every olher nlg hl. But there
wa s a differe nce. It will not
rt'QI)&lt;;'n .
For those wtih o pass ton for
Rob Eva n foods. lhel'c wi ll be
a . new rest a urant opening
a cross from the Sli ver B rld ~~
Pl al a In a W&lt;'&lt;'k. And until
then. th rc Is the Bob Eva ns
Sa usa ge Shop in Rio Gra nde.
Ca lls ol' " Sec you In a week."
a nd " Scr you a1 th e new
r ~s t a u ra n t ." ' were h(lard from
s tea k house man ager J es s~
J ohnson as cu stomers lcfl lor
the fina l ti me. J ohnson wi lt
a l so 'm a nage th e ne w
r es ta ura nt. .
Bob !;: v a n ~ a nd his wife
Jl'wc l. . a l o n ~ with Her b und
P a uline Bush had dinner ·a l
the SleR k housr for the las l
lime , unda y night. Eva ns a nd

Bush a ut ograp he d menu s for
employees a nd pat rons an d
re min isce d about the eatery . ·
Wear in g his trade mar k
western hat a nd s tring tie.
Eva ns went from Ia bl e to
ta bl(.&gt;, vis iting. s igning a uto"
graphs a nd ha vi ng his pic ture
taken a o the place that' s been
called the corne rs tone o! the
res ta u rant cha in bear ing his
name.

Some slopped by lhe four"
some ' s ta bl e. jus t lo say
" I ha nks," or " I wish this
place was n' t c los ing."
So me pa trons we re 1ruckers
who s topped in while it was
stil l the Term inal Stea k
House. some for for mer e m·
ployees a nd s til l others we re
t h~r e as custom e rs when it
firs! opened as Bob Ev a ns
Stea k House, opera ted by
Evans a nd Bush .
" Ju s t yesterd ay (Sat urd ay 1
f was In Michiga n a nd heard a

com mercia l for the res lau"
r a nts that sa id it s tar ted as a
12-s too l dine r. " Eva ns said.
a dd ing his co mment. "and
now it 's closi ng."
Over 400 people s igned a
poster In the s tea k house
lobby , to be taken to the new
r esta ura nt whe n II opens Oct .
5. with a ribbon cutting
ce re mony.
Mrs. Eva ns said the stea k
house had bee n a specia l place
to them throug h the yea rs . She
r ec al led t he begi nnin gs,
whe n. If the ba ker was sick.
she'd ma ke pies at home and
Eva ns would bring them to the
s tea k house. All of the couple' s
ch ildren worked at the s tea k
house , a nd Mrs. Eva ns said It
has good me mor ies for them .
Bob a nd J e wel Eva ns a nd
Herb a nd Pa uline Bush left
a bou t 9: 45 p.m ., not wa nting to
see the doors locked for the
l ina l time.

At least 22 die on Ohio roads in
traffic accidents over past weekend
lnl ~rnatlon al

At leas t 22 people d ied In tmfllc
acc idenls In Ohi o lhls pas t
wee kend. the third tim e I his year
lhat ma n.v peop le diM during a
non·holld ay wee kend. the State
Hi ghwa y Patrol sa id today.
The pa ti'OI s urvey showed two
dea ths Frtd")' night, nine Sa lur"
da y a nd 11 Sunday. One triple"
fata lity accide nt and two double·
fat a lity cras heS were recorded.
This cou nt wa s also th e highes t
s ince 1he speed limi t wa s rai sed
to 6ei on int e rs ta tes in rura l Ohio,
sa id Patro l Dis pa tch Crys ta l
Fle tc her .
She a lso sa id thai 22 peo ple
died in 16 accl denl s Ihe weekend
of J un e 19"21 a nd 22 died In 19
acc ide nt s the weekend of Ma y
8·10.
T h ree motorcyc lis ts were
killed, a nd two of the m were
wea r ing hel mets. a ccide nt inves·
tiga tors reported.
ViCtims Included:
Friday night
Youngs tow n: Earl A. Nichols .
17. Niles, killed when the car he
was r iding on s lopped on a
Ma honlng County road a nd threw
him off.
Greenville : Timothy L. Weh·
rley, 21. Greenville, killed in a
one·car a ccident on a Darke
County roa d.
Saturday
F remont : Jeff C. Schoen. 24,
Bellevue , killed In a one-vehicle
accident on a Sandu sky County
road.
Medina : Teara M. Weldrlck,
19, and Cy nthia A. Has h, 2I, both
of . Spencer, killed in a one-car
accident on a Medina County
roa d.

. l

on Eastern Ave. At 10 p.m., Sunday , It closed for
the final tim e.

Quietly, Steak House is history

By United Press

•

enttne

1 Sect ion. 1 0 Pagos

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 28, 1987

Count y Agent ~s . Corner

. .there •.re more
than 4.5 m llh on 4-H ers and
620.000 volunt eer leaders .
Oh io 4·H 'ers choose fro m 180
lea rn·bY·dol ng projects ranging
.
By John C. Rice
from comp~ters to c real lve writ ·
ing. Elliott says. Projerls are
County E xtens ion ,\ gent,
designed so young people c an
A·
1
acq uire kn9wledgc, develop li fe
POMERO~rtcu 6~r~ Valley Li ·
skill s a nd for m a ttitudes that wi
e lfll
v&lt;·stock - Oct. 3, Nov ,._ 14 a nd
ena bl e them to become 5 "
Dec . 12. Sales start at 1 p.m. Brdirectin g. productive a nd co~ trl"
11
lng ca lves in on Frid ay oo· by
f
be
0
buti ng mern
rs. hsoc
1
k e y.ord to
noon Saturda y.
Dcve opment IS t e ey w
At hPns Ll veslock Sa tes- Oc t.
describe Oh io 4-H. E ll io tI nows. . i a nd Oct. 28. Sa les s ta rt a t 8 p.m .
The program ' s ma jor foc us Is the
I a lso have dat es for Union
development of you ~n . volun· . Stockya rd s al Hills boro and for
teers. curriculum. awareness
lhr sa les a t Ma r iet ta. a nd Za nes
a nd s ta ff . Th e approach he lps
vill e.
young people explore new sub·
Jr cts a nd lea rn va lu able s kolls. he
Rempmber. I here arc sPvcra l
wa ys you ca n ma rker y6ur ca lvPS.
s ays.
.
.
Th
h th
11
Current ly, t h~re a re over 7 ·~
(11 roug
e regu 1ar auc on
loca l 4"H cl u. bs on Ohio. One· hal f sa les: (2) Special Feeder Ca ll
H
11 1
ba or Sales conduct'ed by the Aucti on
of Ohio 4· ers ve . n ur n
sa les; and (Jl Sellin!:( on thr farm :
s ubu rban ar eas .
t ~ J Selling prr ·cond ltlonro ca lvi'S;
Elliott offers theseexamptr s of and 15) Feeding your calves .to
Ohio 4· H projects.
-A t a teen camp, more th a n. sla ughler we ights yours II. If you
h
d d 11 ol nt(&gt;Crs are sell ing a t home, be sure you
know the goin g market prices a nd
100 you t a n a u v u
receoved trai n ing on s tress ma n"
age me nt , coping with peer pres" lh&lt;' approxima te weight of your
sures , a nd understa nd ing the cal ves . For thOse who are atwmpl ·
problems and concer ns of hand •· lng to IPed oul your own . be sure
capped Indi v idua ls. The teen you know wha t you arc doing.
leaders took the Information a nd
F all brln!(s picking of corn a nd
lhe use or onE' of the more dang·
CI'OUS pieces Of fa rm ('QUimC'nt the picker or pic ker ·shcltcr. Know
your equipment and have It In
good o·epalr. Keep all shields In
place and good shape. Be sure only
competent persons operate your
equipment . Get plenty of rest and
COLUMBUS. Oh io (UP il -A
takP breaks.
spec ia l program to develop lead·
Fatigue is one of lhr . bigge st
ers In the agr icultura l indu stry causes of Injur ies. Stop lhc power"
r ece ntly began Its second year at
ta ke"olf (PTOJ before dismount·
Ohio State Un ivers ity .
in ~ . Wear proper fltt lnll clothhig.
Frederick E . Hutchinson. Oh io Loose clolhing around moving
State' s vice pres ident fo r agr lcul· pa rt s Is a No·No. Have your equiprura l administration. s aid the ment ready a nd your day orga n·
group in ·this year ' s Leaders hip lzed. Don' t hurry. Don't act in
Educa tion a nd Development la- ha ste a nd rec upera te in lelsur('. As
ces as big a challenge as the class the saying goes _ Your fa m ily
that graudated last winter .
li kes you as you are _ or somclh·
" This is a n e lit e gr oup, to be lng like I ha l.
sure," Hutc hinson sa ys, " but
If the ground Is not too hard ,
t hey need lo be If they ' re the folks ta ke soil res ts now and a pply
who will be leading agr iculture in lime, 11 needed, th is fa ll. P lan
. the fut ure. Agriculture is cha ng· your fertilize r need s in Novem·
ing. It 's more global than ever , ber or Decem ber lor 1.988.
a nd we need people who unders ta nd that to he lp keep th e
indu stry strong."
By June 20,1989, LE ADpar tiCI·
pants will have had 10 weeke nd
Ins titutes, a national study tour
a nd an International study tour.
Ohio State agricultural econo·
mis ts Richard Duvlck and Jo.
seph Donnermeyer • coordina te·
LEAD and say the format gives a
bala nced perspective of agrlcu 1·
ture's role In the world today .
The we ekend institutes cover
everything from leadership a nd
communication to urban life and
economics. The two tours locus
on the interaction between c ui·
ture , politics and the agricultural
Industry .
" We want to expose these
people to worlds they may not
normally be a part of and show
them hOw their industry Is a part
of the total picture," H.u tchlnson
says. "That's howwecanencour·
age the excellence In leadership
that the times demand."
·
LEA D Is open to Ohio residents
between the ages of 25 and 42 who
have jobs related to agriculture.
The current class Includes
farmers , media people, attorneys and people from agrlbusl·
ness. Each person pays one-third
of the $12,000 cost of the cla.s s.
The other $8,000 Is split by Ohio
State and private funding.

Cloudy tonight. Low near 60.
Showers, thunde rstorm s
likely Tuesday.

Super Lotto
5-6-12-17-20-33

Page4

Will observe National 4-H
Week October 4 through 12

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Me igs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewh er e in
Melp County. Individuals wis hing to participate
In tlie weekly contest may do s o by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your guess to
tbe the Daily Sentinel, Ill Court St. , Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769 or the Gallipolis Trii)une , 825 Third
Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio. 456l1 , and you may win a $5

Daily Number
5288

Foreign co un tries are importing less grain a s
they Improve the ir own farmi ng tec hniques. Also.
·rhe Soviet Union ha s not kept Its agreement to
'purchase a t leas t 9 million metric tons of
soybeans, corn or whea t each year .
Norm Tr oyer, sales ma nager for Rutt and
Amst utz In Wayne County, said he closely fo llows
U.S. grain negotiations with the Sov ie t Unio n.
" It trickles clear dow n to Wooste r , Ohio,"
Troyer sai d. "One decision up there could mea n "
good dea l to our customer.

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPII _
ideas for group act lvtrles back lo
Nat!m\al 4·H week will be celeloca l 4· H clubs.
- 4·H'ers In Leba non involv&lt;&gt;d
bra ted Oct 4-10 when mem bers
a nd v ol~nt ee~ s na t ionwld e
eig ht me nt al ly ha ndic a p ped
spread the word on how 4-H youngsters in horseba ck ridin g
be n efi t s p a rti c ipant s a nd
progra ms. T hlrty·lwo youth a nd
communities.
adult leaders coordi nated the
Na tiona l 4·H Wee k he lps peo" program lo secure a spec!a lly
trained instrucl or. hc lmet s. lns u·
pie understa nd I he or ganiza tion
ra nee. hor ses and fa cilities .
and take adva ntage of its projects a nd activ ities, says De nnis
Horsebac k r idi ng Is phys ica lly
E lli ott , Extens ion 4"H specialist
thera peutic a nd builds sell· es·
a t Ohio St a te Univers it y . Ohioa ns
teem In ha nd ocapped persons.
Th
h 'd
r
e eig t r! ?r s were part o a
will be hearing and seei ng 4· H In
. window dis plays, news pa per ar·
specia l ex hob otlon at I he co unl y
tlcles , a nd . radi o a nd TV · fair.
a nn ouncement s.
- A hea lth bowl sponsored by
4·H is Ame rica 's larges1. out·
4"H'ers in George town gave
ol·cl assroom. educa tiona l pro·
more than l oO s tudent s a n
gram . Young people in ev ery
opportunit y to de monstralc th lr
Ohio count y pa rticipa te In 4.H . know ledge In hca tlh . The)' alsQ
O ~ io has mor e than 145.000 4· Meig.~
H e rs a nd 19.000 4·H volunteers

Ohio Lottery

La nca s ter : La rry A. Bethe l,
24. Bex ley. and Ha rlec L. J ones.
20, Pi ckerington. killed In a
two·Car acc ident o n Ohio 204 In
F ai rfie ld County.
Rave nna : Ad am Ca mpbell . 14.
Beloit , killed In a two·ve hicle
a ccident on Ohio 14 In Por tage
Count y.
Lisbo n: J oseph R. BuF ke. 45.
Wetlsv ltlc, killed w he n his motor·
cy cle collided with a ca r on Ohio
39 In Columbiana Count y.
Mt. Gilead : J a mes T. Bu r ke.
52. Spr ingfi eld, killed In a two-car
acc ident on Ohio 314 ·In Mor row
Count y. ·
Ha milton : Kevin Daught ery ,
29, Middletown, .killed In ' a
one·car a ccide nt on Ohio 4 in
Butler 'County.
Sunday
New Philadelph ia : J ack A.
Relfens chnelde r , 40, Strasburg,
killed In a one-ca r accident In
Intersta te 77 In Tuscarawas
County.
Akron: Eoun K . Glavasis , 20,
North Canton , kllled when he fell
oul of a Jeep on In tersta te 76 in
Akron and was hit by two other
vehicles .
Lebanon: James ·Holman , 16,

W ay n~s ville ,

kllled In a one-ca r
acclde nl on Ohio 73 in War ren
County.
Tiffin : Mi c helle Hoover, 21.
Fos toria, killed In a one"car
acc ide nt on Ohio 53 in Seneca
Coun ty .
Pauld !ng: Glen Go urley , 39,
P a ulding. killed In a une"car
accident on Ohio 114 in P a uld ing
County .
Ashla nd: Rodney Swineford ,
28, Ashl'iii\d, killed whe n his
motorcyc le coiHded with a car on
an As hland County road.
Por t Clinton: VIola Kl ecan , 82,
Marblehead , Douglas Sachs, 13,
Port Clinton, a nd Rlkka Balke,
86. Marbl ehe ad. killed in a
ca r · truc k ac cident on Oh io 53 in
Otta wa County.
Brook P ark: Patrick G . J ohn·
son, 33. Olms ted TownshlR In
Cuya hoga County, killed whe n
his motorcycle was Involved in
an apparent hit-skip accident In
the Cleveland suburb of Brook
P ark.
Youngstown: Richwa rd W.
Bosley J r ., 29, Struthers , killed In
a car-truck accide nt on U.S. 224
near Youngs town In Mahonlng
County.

One dead in accident
A route2 Letart, W.Va., woman died from Injuries sunered In
a two· vehicle head on cras h on Route 33 near Graham Station,
above New Ha v en, Sunday, accordln to a Mason County
Sheriff s report.
The vlcltlm was Identified as Eileen M . McDaniel, 60, driver
of one of the ve hicles. The driver of the other was Icy Miller, o!
Syracuse, who was a lso Injured according to the report.
Both were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the
New Haven Rescue Squad. McDaniel was pronounced dead on
arrival , according to the Sheriff's Department.
Furthtei' cteatlls of the accident. which re~alns under
, lnvestlgatJon, were not available.

2&amp; Cento

A Multtmedle Inc. Newspep.er

Discover more mines
in Persian Gulf area
MANAMft,, Bahrain · (UP!) Th e U.S. Navy has detected a
number of mines In a busy sea
lane in the souther n Persia n
Gull. s hipping sources said
·toda y.
A shipping executive in Dubai,
Unit ed Arab E m ir a tes, said the
Navy ·· round abou t fi ve mines ·
and have pulled three out of the
water.'"
The mines were found In the
gulf about 20 miles off Dubal, the·
sources said. No other details
were Immediately availa ble.
The area had been relatively
fr ee of mines for several days .
De fense Secret a r y Cas par
Weinberger , me
, anwhile, winds
up a fi ve-day gutf tour toda y, on e
week a ft er a successful U.S.
a ttack aga ins t the Ira nian minela ying s hip Ir an Aj r . On Sunday ,
Wei nber ger met with Bahrain's
emir , She ikh lsa Bin Sulma n al
Kh"llfa .
In an Inter view from the tiny
gull Is la nd sta te on ABC 's ·'This
Week with David Brinkley, "
We inberger de fend ed Amer ican
policy in the gu lf as ··some thing
essenti a l. "
" You get quite a diffe rent
perspec tive fr om the rea l
world. " We inbergc r ·said of his
inspect ion of m ines ca ptured
fr om the Ira n Ajr. ··u you ha d
seen the ship, you'd think wha t
we·re doing Is pretty Importa nt. "
The defense secreta ry sa id he
hoped lor early action on a
proposed U.N .. Secu r lty Counc il
resolution that would Impose a
tough arm s embargo on the
" lrra lional , fa nat ica l gover n-

m ent" of Iran tha t would '' re·
duce the level of their activity."
But Te hra n, hardening its
posit ion on a cease·fire, warned
the 7-year ·old Ir'a n"lraq war may
dr ag on " for a long time" as
fightin g in the Persian Gulf
intensi!led.
Iraq cla imed Sund ay It at·
tacked three oil tanker s, ra ising
to six the number of claimed
strike s on tanker s ln . Iranian
service since Friday. Shipping
sources co n!lrmed Iraqi at tacks
on four vessels. Ira n cla imed It
shot down two atta cking jets.
In the Iranian capital, a crowd
chanting , " The Per sian Gulf will
be Reagan' s own grave," turned
out to greet sailors from the Iran
Ajr on ·their arri val home from
Oman , six days after U.S. army
helicopter s a u ac ked the mine·
laying vessel abou t 50 miles off
Bahra in, Radio Te hran said. The
ship, which U.S. officials s aid
was pla nting mines, was cap·
tured and scuttled .
A military brass band played
funeral music to ma rk the deaths
of three sea men killed In the
attack on the 180"!oot !ran Ajr,
who se capta in. Farsh Chlan, was
quoted by th e Iranian news
agency as sayi ng U.S. forces
bomba rded the s hip for three
hour s.
"In the wake of the a tta ck,
crew m embers jumped onto
lifeboats a nd sailed clear of the
ship while th!! · AmerJc~n
choppers conllnued to fly over:
head," the cap tain told the
state" run Islamic Republic New s

Agency. He sa id the ship was on a
r outine voyage carrying '' non"
military supplies when It was
attacked ."
The news agency quoted a
crew member saying their "cap"
tors" had mistr eated them , behaving like "victor ious war time
soldiers" a nd "savagely lmprisoning" the m aboard a U.S.
warship. with their ha nds bound
with wire.
U.S. Na vy sources said asylum
was offered to the sailors, bu t
none acc epted the offe,r .
The sources said the Ir ania ns
wer e given many opportunities
to accept asylum during private
inlerviews between Tuesday and
Saturday, but declined. Seve r&amp;!
said they would have accepted:
bu t lor tht&gt; fact that they had
families in Iran.
"All th e avenues were open' "
for them to accept, one source
said. No one was refused the
r ight to asylum , he said.
•
Senior Irania n offic ials S~nda y
strongly condemned the U.S.
attack on the Iran' Ajr, repeated
warnings of r etaliation and for
the fir st time in rece nt weeks'
Indicated Iran 's position on a
cease· fire had been lortlfled,:
ra ther than softe ned.
During the visit earlier this
month of U.N. Secreta ry- Gen:
era l J av ier Perez de Cuellar.
Iran publicly dropped Its de mand
that Iraqi pres ident Saddam~
Hussein be removed in exchange
" fqt pe'!,ce, lnslstl.ng only )haUraq
· · be named a s th e aggressor and
punished .

Ohio senators vote on civil
justice and insurance reform
COLUMB US, Ohio tUPl i More tha n two years of legls la "
t ive haggling over the terms of
civil jus tice and ins urance re'
form will come to a n end this
week when the sta te Senate votes
on a House·a pproved conference
committee repor t.
The vote is schedul ed for
Wednesday a t 1: .1Q p.m ., w he n
· sena tors retu r n from s ummer·
recess for a s hort session.
The House adopted the com"
promise package las t week.
7~ 16, a nd a ft er the Senat e acts, it
will go to Gov. Richa rd · F .
Celes te , who has promised to
sign It des pite ·objections fr om
o rg ani ze d labor , c onsumer
groups a nd trial a ttorneys.
Though minority Senate Demo·
crats a re a lso opposed to the
compromise. worked ou\ over
the summer to a t leas t the pa r ti a l
satisfaction of a bu s iness coali·
lion, il is ex pec led to receive the
17 votes necessa ry to pass.
Sen. Paul E . Pfeifer, RBucy rus , is the only one of the 18
Senat e Republicans to oppose the
bill, which is aimed a t stabilizin g
the comme rcial lia bility lns u·
ranee ma rket for bu s inesses and
local gover nments.
"This Is the mlost compre hen"
slve civil jus tic e and Insurance
reform pa ckage In the nation, "
said Sen. H. Cooper Snyder,
R·Hillsboro, an ally of the bus!·
ness allian ce, who conceded he
did not get all he wa nted In the
bill.
"I don't think the bill is fair , but
It 's bette r than wha t we had
before, " said Sen . Lee I. Fishe r ,
D·Shaker Heights, referring to a
version vetoed by Celeste last
December.
The proposal Institutes strong
state regulation of Insurance
companies, Including new flnan·
clal data disclosures. It also
limits lawsuits against defective
products, discourages frivolous
lawsuits a nd alters the payment
system In negligence awards to
reduce costs.
Opponents have consistently
maintained no changes In the
civil justice system are neces·
sary to help Insurance compan·
les and businesses, and that the
blll make It 'more dl!flcult for an
Innocent victim to recover just

compensation.
The Sena te also pla ns a vote on .
a pair of bills ma king public
records · more a ccessible to the
news media, and settin!( up a
licensing procedure for agent s
for profess iona l a thletes .
Th e Ohio Supreme Court re"
cently held that the news media
or anyone else from the genera l
public must file a n ord ina ry
lawsuit if access to public re"

cords is blocked , r ather than
being able to obtain an extraordi·
nary court order called a writ of
mandamus.
A bill correcting a 1985 Ia w
which was the basis for the
Supreme Court ruling will be
heard Monday evening and Tues"
day morning in the Senate
Finance Committee in prepara·
tion for floor action .

President Reagan
takes stand on issues
WASHINGTON iUPl i -Pres·
ident Reagan agreed to s ign an
extension of the national debt
ceiling this week, possibly today.
but he has thrown down the
gauntlet' to Congress against
rais ing ta xes or cutting P en lagon
spending.
·with a busy week a head that
inc ludes a n address to the World
Bank Tuesday, .the president' s
focus on economics Is not the
vis ion he would prefer to see as
fis cal 1987 comes to a close
We dnesday. He dislikes the debt
ce iling · measure Intensely because of a provis ion reforming
the 1985 balanced budget law .
Yet he announced In his weekimd radio a ddress that he would
s ign the $2.8 million extension
because he wa s faced with the
choice of letting the nation
default on its debt or accepting
higher ta xes and lower defense

spending.
The blll Is at the White Hou se
•a nd the pres ident "can sign It
a nytime" this wee k, preslden ti'a l'
spokes ma n Ben Jarratt s aid
Sunday.
Treasury Secreta ry James
Bake r, a ppearing on CBS's
''Face the Na lion" Sunday , said
he recognized " full we ll" that the
bill presented a bitter choice for
the preside nt. But Ba ker said , " If
we don't get an jncre ase in the
debt limit , we would be in the
extremely unfortun a te position
of possibly dcfa ul,tlng on .our
obligations fo r the fir s t time in
(our) 200.year history."
,With Reaga n's grudging signa "
ture on the mea s ure, the Hou se
Ways and Me ans Commit tee
intends to meet Thursday to start
drafting a bill ra isl!lg taxes by
$12 billion. The Washington P ost
reported Sunday .

Coolville youth cited
A Coolville youth was cited in an accide nt Sunday . a t I : 20p.m .
in Orange Township on Ohio 7, at t.he Intersection of Township
Road 388, according to the Gallla-Me lgs P ost of · the State
Highway Patrol.
·
Kenneth Cremeans, 17, was cited for asS\Ire d c lear distance
when his car hit the back of a car driven by F"loyd McKitrick. 62,
of Marietta . McKitrick was trying to make a left turn whe n
Cre means made bumper contact. Both cars wer e northbound
when the accident occurred.
A Pomeroy youth was cited in an acc ident Sunday, at 1: 18
p .m ., In Rutland Township on Ohio 124, In Jividen Hollow .
J e rry Cleland, 16, was cited for assured clear distance when
his car struck the rear bumper of a pickup iruck driven by .
David Smith, 17, of Middleport. Bumper contact was made
when Smith slowed to turn left. Both vehicles were traveling
west at the lime of the accident.
---·-----·- ·- . ,_lt.____ -- _.,._
~

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
L

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishe r
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

l'A.T WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER ofThP Unlll'&lt;l P 1I"~" I nti'! na ti ona l ln l.lml 0.111' Pr&lt;'""'
As~m wtlnn a n&lt;l th£' Amrnu n Nf' V. sp.lpf' l Publ! o;, hprs Assocw11on

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday, September 28, 1987

Prisoners own congressmen
WASHINGTON - There will
be sighs of relief and sighs of
sad ness when former Rep
George Hansen is released from
prison next month. E lat ed will be
the prison officials he has been
censuring for over a year;
dejected will be his fellow Inmates , for whom he has acted as
an ardent ombudsman .
The Idaho Republican is llnishing up his second stint at the
Petersburg (Va.) federal prison
camp . After his 1984 conviction
for filing false financial disc lo-

sure statement s, he served six

months last year. When he
ventured too far from Washington and refused to disclose
de tails about his personal (inances, he was cited for parole
violations and tossed m the can
again m April of t his year .
Always the maverick, the
6-foot-6 arch -conservatlve has
bombarded the press and his
former colleagues on Capitol Hill
with complaints about prison
food , safety and sanitation proble ms , waste of government property, and thcarbitrarytreatment
of innmates

Anderson and Spear

The Petersburg prison camp is
a minimum-security facility that
holds about 200 mmates, including former public officials, businessmen , brokers, Ia wyers, and
judges Hansen 's impassioned
and fearless defense of the
interests of these new and
otherwise voiceless friends has
earned him their heartfeld gratitud e As one example, take the
case of Tom Williams, an inmate
from Mechanicsville, Va.
A management consultant,
Williams is serving a five-year
sentence for tax evasion. He is

l F:TTERS OF' OPJ!\ 101'\ o r• " ~ IU1mr&gt; 1 hl'\ !-ihOu ld hf' If'"" 1h,1 n liiO \tmd"
h Of" All le&gt;ll f' l .. u ~ "u b i ' '' 1 lfl Pr\11 1n~ , net mu "' hf' " lg nl '&lt; l 11 11 h nHmf' .uldr f'&lt;; s &lt;.~ n&lt; l
1tl ip hm1 P numh1•r N11 un ~u:: nPd 11 1 1 1 ' 1 ~ "'II br puhl t" hr 1l
Ccl (,f11

I 'il l

l.l'tlf'J" ~ hclUi rl

bl' 1n

l fl l lr ( S'i ln g ll.S UI ~ Ofll pi I SOOHJ illr•s

Why do politicians
self-destruct?
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON iUPI}- Why do they do these thmgs?
Both Gary Hart and Joe Biden are experienced public figures who
knew very well that people who run for president are going to have
their private hves exammed under a media microscope.
It happe ned to Hart himself and to Geraldine Ferraro m 1984; it has 1
happened to Ted Ke nnedy every time since 1972 that he even hmted he
was interes ted In seeking the White House.
When 1t happened to Ha rt and Bid en this year. they should not have
been surprised
Hart, confronted with the long-s tandmg Washmgton whispers
at;x&gt;ut his private life. lltenilly invited the press lo invest igat e him
Eiden basked in his high-profile position as chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee and In his reputation as a forc e ful , charismatic
speaker That the media and nval candidates would pay more than
passing attention to his legal education and to the content of his
speeches should have been expected.
Yet both men crawled boldly out on limbs that simply begged to be
sawed off
Why? There was considerable amount of amateur psychoanalysis
about Hart, including the theory he was unconsciously begging lor
help by invitmg exposure.
Here 1s another suggestion, based more on observatiOn tha n
scientific Inquiry, that might help explam why pohhcmns, not
restricted to Hart and Blden, seem to walk open-eyed into pits of their
own diggmg
Politicians , you ng or old, Democrat or Republican. seem to share
one characteristic massive, armor-plated egos that make it possible
for them to stand up before perfect strangers, announce they have
solutions to everyone' s proble m s and confidently expect not only to be
believed but to be rewarded by election to public office.
In this unquenchable thirst for appro'v al and app lause, politicians
resemble actors But most people who make a living m the
professional theater can separate the make-believe of their jobs from
the reality of their lives. Politicians, especially those who have had an
early run of success, often cannot discern the line.
Teri Calabrese came to a congressman·s staff some years back
after working for a Hollywood producer. After a few months of
watchmg the political spec1es at wnrk and play, she observed, " 1n
Hollywood, when they're fmished work , actors relax and beha ve hke
the mselves. Here, everybody is on stage every moment "
The politica l ego often Is accentuated by feelings of omnipotence
and ayatollah-class self-nghteousness While many profess iOnal
politicians pride themselves on the ability to "disagree w1thout bei ng
disagreeable." some of our bes t known officeholders are so
convmced that they alone possess thE' revealed truth that they see all
opponents in the role of Dev11's agents.
This makes for a 'them and us " mentalit y that, like the
role-playing noted above, can distort reality . People in that fr a me of
mind tend to really believe that, bei ng on the side of the angels, t hey
can do no wrong
Strong self-esteem and firm value beliefs a re personalit y assets
But in excess, as they can be seen in politics, those characteristics can
destroy the most promising Individuals. They have done that before
and probabl y will agam

"Well, we've stopped the flames by logging every tree in California."

Would you be so kmd as to give
your readers the opportumty to
add more meaning to their lives
by printmg this letter m your
news paper?
Volunteers are always needed
and welcome at our nursmg
center Volunteermg IS good, not
only for the mdiv!duals who
sha re the ir time and love, 1t 's a
rare opportunity to feel rea lly
good about yourself. but also the
residen ts of our home who enjoy
meeting new people A friendl y
visll Will show those resident s

that the community still cares.
No experience 1s needed by our
volunteers. All you need 1s love
We are looking for people who
can share at least one hour of
their time to be with our
resident s.
For opportunities available to
you, contact Jan Buskirk, Director of Activities at AmencarePomeroy, 1Ph. 992 6606 l
Smcerely
Roger Covert
Administrator

Today in history
By Upited Press International
Today 1s Monday, Sept. 28, the 271st day of 1987 with 94 to follow
The moon IS waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The mornmg stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They include
German social philosopher Fre1drlch Engels, collaborator of Karl
Marx, in 1820, Frances Willard, founder of the Women's Christian
Temperance Unwn, in 1839; French statesman Georges Clemenceau
in 1841; CBS Chairman William Paley in I901 (age 86), television
ll~lety show host Ed Sullivan In 1902, cartoonist AI Capp ( "LI'l
"bner" ) in 1909, actors William Windom in 1923 (age 64} and
t.farcello Mastroianni in 1924 tage 63), and actress and animal rights
advocate Brigitte Bardotln 1934 (age 53).
~ On this date in history:

: In 490 B.C., In one of history's great battles, the Greeks defeated the
Persians at Marathon. A Greek soldier was dispatched to notify
;\tl!ens of the victory, running the entire 26 miles and providing a
Q'!Odel for the modern " marathon" race.
' In 1920, in baseball's biggest scandal, a grand jury indicted eight
players of the Chicago White Sox for throwing the 1919 World Series
with the Cincinnati Reds
~ In 1978, Pope John Pauli died of a heart attack at theageof65, after
reign of only 33 days.
• In 1982, the first reports appeared of deaths In the Chicago area
f~om cyanide- laced capsules of Extra- strength Tylenol. In all, seven
people died and the still· mysterious incident resulted in
"~iamper- proof" packaging of consumer products everywhere.

a

'••.

---

~·A thought for the day: Georges Clemenceau said, "There is nothing
hirder for the human spirit to bear than being cold-shouldered. "

•

Tom Williams ' stitches were
removed on Monday, July 6. He
reported to the prison the same
day and learned that the previous
c amp director had left. There
was no written record of approva l for his stay at home, and he
was therefore absent withOut
permiss ion. He wa s given an
' "I nc ide nt report " ta "shot" In
pr ison parlance) a nd placed In
solita ry confinement
it wa s well over 100 degrees in
" the hole" 10 July, Williams told
us The si nk was full of fecal
matter The thin foam mattress
was soaked through with the
sweat of the previous occupant
And Tom Williams had a recently
healed wound in his si!e, but that
apparently mattered little to the
priso n authorities. He remained
in the hole for 13 days. He was
examined by hi s do&lt;'tor nine days
after he got out a nd learned that
he had so m e how avoided
infection .

The IDl;lch-stained high court
The battl e In the Senate over
Pres ident Reagan's nominatiOn
of Judge Robert Bark for a seat
o n the Supreme Court 1s si mpl y
the la tes t In a senes of bl ows th at·
has recentl y dama ged, per ha ps
irrepa ra bly, the prestige of the
a U!(USI InStituti On.
Amenca ns a re taugh t, from a n
early age. to look up to the Su
preme Court as a collection of
unassa ila bly upnght. scrupu lously unbiased md!V!dua ls Poll s
mdicate that Congress, collec
tively speakmg . 1s held m strikIngly tow regard by the American
people; a nd recently, thanks to
Waltergate, J 1mmy Carter' s va11
ous failings. a nd the Iran/ co ntra
affair, the presidency has almost
lost much of It s high polish Butt he
Supreme Court has- until nowbeen held aloof from political controve rsy. a nd has therefore been
spared the brUises a nd co ntusions

In the fir t place. major swings
ol opinion. suc h as the decline of
liberalism In the past 10 yrars,
ca nnot permane nliy be thwarted
01 their legitimat e effect on the
co urt by frantica lly smearing
able a nd h o n orab l~ judges
But even more Important , the
way in which Justices Brennan
and Marshall have recently soiled
lheir judicial robes by a bargtng
Into the political a rena and denouncing Attorney General Met'S('
and President Reagan, respectively, coupled with te savafte II
beral onslaught on Bark. Is chea peni ng the Surpeme Court.
Perhaps the court was never
quit e so s potless as thE' America n
people im a gined, but neither has
filling a vacancy on It ever
tu r ned Into quite s uc h a barnyard brou)lala . VotE&gt;rs are not
likely to forget - or forgive thOse respons ible for that ugly
perfo1 mance. That is why , even
if the liberals man age to s top
Bark. they may very well be the
rea l losers In the long run. They
will have only their own despera
lion to blame

na n took public Issue wit h Attorney
General Edwin Meese on the hQI
queslon of "original intent " as a
means of interpreting the ConstitutiOn More recently, J ust ice Thurgood Marshall uS&lt;.'d a radio lntervieli• as a plat form from which to
de nounce President Reagan· s civil
n g hts record
Fmally, when Presidcnl Reagan
nomina ted for the Supreme CoUI1
one of the ablest and most6rilliant
md!VIdua is m the entire fede ral JU·
dlciary. Ame11can hbera ls prepa red for a battle to the death Bork
has been denounced as a fana tical
nght winger far from the ··mainlegal
suea m · of Amencan
thought. a lthough when he was confirmed scvE&gt;ral years ago for his
present seat on the U S. Court of
Appea ls. Sen Joseph Bid en t now
one of his bitte rest foes) praised
him to the skies and pledged his
support 1! Bark was ever nomnated
to lhe Supreme Court That pledge,
appa!'('ntiy, is now inoperative
Wha t has produced his rema rkable c ha nge In liberal be ha
v1or on a nd towa rd I he Surpemr

Co urt? There is no mys ter y
about it Re publica ns have won
four of the last fi vP presidentiJI
e lectlons. three of them by wid&lt;'
margins , and 11 seem s e ntire ly
possible t hat they will do so aga in
m 1988 Cong ress is currentl y
unde r Democra ti c control. but
not for reasons tha t give muc h
comfort to liberal Ideologue .
!Gerrymandering. for exa mple,
has resulted In a su bsta nti al De
m ocrati c ma r gin In the House,
a lthough !he tot a l numbers of
votes cast for ca ndidates of the
two pa rti es In co ntrsted Ho use
races a re Io ughl y equal 1
Mea nwhil e the once-solid li be r a l maj orit y on the Supreme
Co ur t ha s hePn e bbing a way , a nd
it is widely believr·d that Bork' s
accession would lip the bal a nce
Libera l. who ca n' t be expected to
e njoy their systematica lly remo
val fro m the re maining levers of
governmental powe r. are th e r efore det ermined to block him lilt
1s humanly possible to do so. But
their str ategy is m istak en in a t
leas t 1wo Jm11ortant respects

f

Nebraska hard-pressed

By United Prt•!l!l International
Arizona State Coach John
Cooper emerged a loser and with
a bett e r team than he thought
following No 2 Nebraska' s victory over the Sun Devils.
Cooper e ntered the game say

That wide-ranging support for a
mutual halt to the nuclear arms
race manifested Itself most
clearly in the House of Representatives, whose members must
face the voters every two years
Sparked by the Kennedy-Hal field Resolution sponsored by the
Massachusetts senator and Oregon Republican Sen. Mark Hatfield, the freeze effort had strong
bipartisan backing In the Senate,
but It never had the momentum

a c hieved by le grass-root s pres s ure that pl ayed so effectively in
the House.
Why did th e freeze movement
not prev ail despit e its popula r
appea l?
Pres ide nt Reagan a nd his ad
v1sers orches trated the politics
of a1 ms con trol to defuse, If not
confuse, the nuclear freeze movement After pushing ahead on
an even bigger nuclear arms pi leup during his flfst year and a
half In office, Reagan bega n til l
feel the heat coming from Con- '
g ress and the country in s upport
of arm s contr-ol
A strategy was developed to
give the appearance of an arms
contro l policy Nuclear freeze
advocates were suddenly confronted by a president calling for
deep cuts in strategic nuclear
weapons The evidence is overwhelmmg that the administra tion was not especially interes ted In arms control, but In the
a ppeara nce of arms control.
That the president largely succeeded In diverting public support
for a true halt to the nuclear arms
bmldup demonstrates, first , the
immense political force of a president determined to use his power
skillfully and, second, the lack of
knowledge about arms control
that handicaps much of the American public.
Reagan's landslide win over
Walter Mondale, a supporter of
the freeze, leaves little doubt
that much of the public does not
appreciate the importance of the
nuclear Issue.
Waller underscores the proba-

•

biUt y that the sta tu re of Sen Ke nnedy gave the freeze movement
national attention a nd force It
might not ot herwlse have enjoyed.
The other side of the coin is that the
movement greatly strengthened
Kennedy's and Hatfield's na tiona l
stature as leade rs committed to
peace.
Indeed, the nuc le ar freeze mo

vement of t he 1980s and the endthe- war movement of the late
1960s and ea rly 1970s represent
American democracy at its best.
I commend Douglas Waller's
book to all those who would understand both the promise and
the problems of citizenship In our
troubled American democracy.

TMm .. "-! ld 0.'4r•Mf I p m

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'The Closing of the American Mind,' tf they
make It Into 11 movie, "

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mg that the Nebraska program Is
""about 18 yea r s" a head of
Arizona Stat e Bu't the 12th
ranked Sun Devils played the
Cornhu skers to a tie through 56
minutes Sa turday before los ing

Scoreboard ...

Why nuclear freeze failed ____;;_G_eor_ge_M_cG_ov_er_n
One of the mos t fa scinating
movements m recent politics
wa s the n"uclear freeze effort of
1982 8.1 It tapped into the underlying peace and surviva l se nti ment of the na tion, a nd though It
d!d not halt t he arms race . It
helped s low the mindless esc a la tiOn of the Reagan adm inistration
The story IS well told by
Douglas Waller In "Congress
and the Nuclear Freeze · An In s ide Look at the Politics of a
Mass Movement" (University of
Massachusetts Press)
In a foreword to the book, Sen
Edward Kennedy observes:
"The rise of the nuclear freeze
movement displays a fundamen ta l strength of representative democracy at Its best- the power
of individual citizens to influen ce
their government, and even to
c hange the course of history "
Waller makes clear that the
overwhelming majority of Americans - not just radicals or peace
activists - Indicated in poll after
poll its support for a mutual, verifla ble halt to further nuclear arms
production or testing.

Sharon Baller, mgr. Amber Short, Lisa Driggs,
Trish Spencer, Edna Driggs, and Coach Pam
Douthhltt.
"

EASTERN VOLLEYBALL The 1987
version of the EAstern Eaglettes Volleyball team
are front, Ito r, Toby Hill, Melanie Mankin, Amy
Berkheimer, Lori Burke, AmyHacer. Back: I tor,

Ho i

By William Ru.sher

Now, however, the court's most
ou tspokenly hbera l members have
cast caul!on as1de and waded into
the polit ical a1 ea wit h the a rms flal ing Rece ntly J ust ice Wilham Bl'!'·

Seeking volunteer..;

husky, healthy and during the
!lrst two years of his Incarceration, never missed a day of work
in the compound.
This past spring his 18-year-otd
son, Joseph, suffered severe
kidney failure, and Williams
offered to donate one of his to his
son. He obtained permission
from the camp dlrctor, he told us,
to take an unsupervised leave of
about a month for medical tests
and the operation.
The transplant was performed
by Dr. Vernon Smith of the
Medical College of Vltglnla In
Richmond on June 24 When Tom
Williams was allowed to leave
the hospital, he went home-live
minutes away - for a short
period of recuperation. This was
done - with t~e verbal concurrence of the camp director ,
according to Williams - to
facilitate post -operative hospital
visits and to avoid the physical
exertlons he would have had to
endure at the camp.

•

inseparable from it

Letters to the editor

The Deify Sentinai-Page-3

Ruen~~ \'M11

l:t.

~lmfll")n

10

&amp;utkor IS, Duylon 18
( apllal tl, Ditto Nordtf'rn 0
fa11r "'"'WOrn -1'!, ltfonyon ~
ft•nlral ~. 25, Gra•d V.-Jk'y Sl . ~:1
1 In• lnn~~ll :n. MhuniiOhkl) ~6
( tN'

ri, Ripon"

(Oil! onllll t,l, l't&gt;ru Sl I
0\•nl"un tl, OlivPI U
Dt&gt;puw ID, Alhlon 7
Duhu• Ill, ft•nlnd II
EllHIHn MltiL t:S, Kc•nl St '!I
f .lmhuf'llt Jl. Norlh Pull 'J
1Emporl11 st. It, Baltt"r 17
l':tiN"klll~ . M~uMurny

t

Flt1rld11 liM. :tt, Mltoldpn MI. 3
Dl Bf'nHilil• 11, l'arlhillllf' Ul
lndl•• 18, Ml11110url 11

Iowa :Ill I.IIDMM MI. IS
·lohn C11rnll It, ftlt!lll

Knox :il, lltloll It

l.allP t'~"'IC 311, Grlnntll II

•

10
35 28.

•
VICtory

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL VARSITY VOLLEYBALLTEA.M - .Backing a 1-5overallseason,
members of Ibis year's Southern Varsity
Volleyball Squad are front, left to right, Patrece

I

"' If the; 'rP the No 2 tea m m the
nat1on , and th ev probably arc.
then we have a c ha nce to go on
and improve a nd be a pretty good
football tea m "Cooper sa id aft er
the game
Th e Sun Devils had I led the
scor e 28-28 a fter 5teve Tav l01 s
second fumb le wa s ca ught bv
freshm a n defe ns ive back Nathan
LaDuke at the Ne bras ka 13 yard
lin e. Fi ve plavs la ter, Da rryl
Harns w en t over fr om 1 yard out
to sco re
But on the fo ll ow mg possession. Nebraska !-back Kc11h
Jones gamed 12 vards on his l1rst
ca rry thpn ran for fi2 on th e
foiiOI.IIng pl ay to take th e Co1 n
hu skers to the Arizona State
S-ya rd li_nc Two plays la te r .
Tay lo r sca mpered across from 3
\ard s out fOJ the gamC"- wmncr
" I a m glad to get out of here
al iv e. " 1a1d Ne braska Coac h
Tom Os borne " I d1dn' t thmk 11
would be qUJt e so high -scor ing
Bot h teams have good defe nses ·
T ay lor ha d torn up the Ar izona
State defe ns&lt;' 1ushmg 101 122
\ ards. sev&lt;' ra i on long gm ns
made whe n he was fOI'Ce d from
the poc k~ t On the Cor nhusk oiS
fir s t !'COr lng drt vC', hC' r u s hcd for
(;"1 of tho 80 var.ds. a nd 1ushed for
96 ~ ards tot a l In the firs t ha lt
Th o Sun Dev il s a~Justcd to stop
Ta y l01 m th e soro nd hal f, bu l
Nebraska the n ~ave the ball to
Jones. "ho ga me d JUSt 18 ya 1·ds
In an oa 11icr v i c t o r ~ ove r UCLA
SaiUJday J ones tmi s hed w1t h 14:i
yards rushm g on 17 ca 1 nes
·· 1n l!g ht sltuaiions, we need to
make a big run and I m a de th e
big run " J ones sa1d " I like to
Ihrive In those si tuations "
Ta ylo1 also compl ted 6 of 16
passes for t\9 }31 ds a nd a
toucMown
!-Ia! ris iNI th ~ Sun Devils 1n
'u s hin g with llO yards on 26
caJI"Il'S a nd two touc hdowns.
Daniel Ford completed l'i of 22
passes for 200 yar ds a nd one
score , but thr e w thr ee
Int e l cepuons
El sewhCI"c on Sa tu rdav. No l
Oklahoma thras hed Tulsa 65-0,
No .1 Auburn fled No. 11 Te nnesse 20 20, No 4 LS U lied No 5
OhiO Stat e 1:1-J:l. No li Not 1e
Dame down ed Purdue 44 - 20, No
7 Miami 1ompr d over No 10
Ackansas 'il 7. No 8 Florida
Stat e routed Miehlgan Sta te31 3.
No 9 Clemson defeated Georgia
Tech :13 12 , No 14 Penn State beat
Boston College 27 17, No . 15
Florida de fea ted Mississippi
State 38-3, No . 16 Michigan
walloped Long Beach State 49 0,
No 17 Texas A&amp;M beat Southern
Mississippi 27-14. No. 18 Syrac use downed Virginia Tech 35-21.
No 19 Georgia tripped South
Caroli na J:l-6and No. 20Washlngton defeat ed defeated Pacific
31-3
At Knoxville Tenn . Freshman
Reggie Cobb raced 7 yards for his
second touchdown with 1:20 to
play and Auburn had time expire
on its final drive forcing the No 3
Tigers to settle for a 20-20 tie with
the lith-ranked Volunteers.
At Baton Rouge, La , Kar l
Dunba r blocked a las t-second
field-goal attempt to salvage a
13-13 tie for No 4 LSU, 3-0-1,
against No. 5 Ohio State, 2-0 1.
At Little Rock, Ark., Warren
Williams rushed for 108 yards
and two touchdowns and the
Hurricanes scored on eight consecutive possessions . Miami, 3-0,
extended Its regular' season winning streak to 23 games while
handing Arkansas Its worst defeat since a 61-0 blanking by
Tulsa in 1943
In other games, it was Army
48, the Citadel 6, Holy Cross 63,
Lehigh 6; Lafayette 38, Columbia
7, North Carolina 45, Navy 14;
Florida State 31, Michigan State
3; Wyoming 34, Iowa State 17;
Baylor 36, Texas Tech 22; Air
Force 27, Colorado State 19; and
Colorado 26, Washington State
17.

Circle, Tammy Holter, Angie Grueser, Dawn ·
Johnson. Back row, Ito r, Coach Suzanne Wolle,
Tracy Beegle, ,Jennifer Arnold, Becky Wine-,
hrenner, Crystal Hill and Becky Evans.

Baseball replaces football Sunday
CHICAG O I UP ll -Bl ue Jays,
Ca rdinal s, Vulca ns a nd 9- monthold football replaced th e NFL on
telev tsion thts weekend

NBC a nd CBS Sun&lt;)ay devoted
one-hour specia ls to the playe rs·
str ike. NBC also pa id a n extra
s tipend to major- league baseball
to tel eviSe the Toronto Blue
J ays Detroit Ti ge r s ' game
(som ~ pa r ts of the countrv sa w
the Chic &lt;I go Cubs-St. Loui s Card!
nal s ga m e) wh! IP CBS repla yed
Supe r Bowl XXl between the
New Yor k Gia nt s and Denver
Broncos
Monda y mg ht, ABC will re
pl ace th e Dc nve1 a t Clevela nd
ga me w!lh ··star Trek Ill. the
S~arc h for Spock .
rBS and NBr provided unu s

ual mslght to the strike. D1ck
Ve rmei l, a coach turn ep analyst,
gave an early line on what teams
will be strong with non-union
players.
·'The 49ers, Raiders a nd even
Green Bay report edly are very
stn ong," he said "The teams
that were slow in getting the
non union players were the Vik·
mgs. Card inals. Rams. Giants ,
Bears, Chi efs and Dolphins '
CBS also ex plored telev!Sion" s
role in the stn kea nd sa1d 1t would
cover next weekend's non-union

games.
"II the games occur we will be
th ere," the ne twork said "It is a
news C'vent "

NBC and ABC say they Will

America loses trophy
at home first time
DUBL IN. OhiO 1UP I I- Am erlctt's bPs t

golfer s were t he ones

mak mg the c hm ge Sunda1
,Th ou· Eui'Opca n co un te1 parts .
hoi.IC\CI \\ei c the o nes m a kmg
h!S IOI}
For the lu st tim e m the 60
' ca rs of Rvdc1 (' up competition,
Amcnca los t t!"e lro phy on 1ts
own sOil - t a illn g 1ust short oft he
E ur opc&lt;.~ ns on a wa1 m . sunnJ
a ft e rn oon at the Muu field Vii
t,,ge Go lf rl ub
T h£' 12 man Un1t edStatcs tea m
did not go dow n without a
tre me ndou s ligh t, but ove r the
l!rst two days of the e1·cnt the
Amen ca ns simp ly dug the mseh&lt;'s 1n1 o too b1 g a hole
Go1ng 1nto the final da1 of the
co mpet!I!O n. the European tea m.
C,l pt ained h&gt; To nv .J acklin ,
needed JU St fO Ul o ut of12 poss ible
point s to wm th e cu p for the
second st raight lim e. Th e E uropei..l ns ear ned 4 1 ~ -

wmnmg

lh1 cc ma tc hes a nd ha lv mg th rc&gt;e

mo1e
Eu1ope thu s won , 15 l.l, and the
hund r&lt;'ds oi Eu1 opeans who
ca me to !he m a tc hes celebi"ated
int o the ni g ht around the Mu 1r
!Jrld Village c lubhou se
· I was WOII"!Cd ail da y," ' sa1d
Jacklin ·· 1 know wh at can
happe n 10 1he ga m e of go lf
Belie\ r me , the1e was a tot of
luck Involved this week But
there wasn't a playe1 who ca me
here who didn ' t lhmk we could
w1n As I vc sa\d hef01 e , the
biggest d1ffeJe nc&lt;' between now
and da ys gone by 1s that we are
not fright ened a nymore."
If t he1 P was no fl 1g ht . at least
there was co ncern Sunday as one
~ Unit e d
Sta tes pl a~er a ft er
another finally pla yed up to the
form expected oi them when the
mat ches bega n.
Three of 1he m, however, had
cos ti~ lctdov.ns at the fma l hole
a nd those fa ilu res wound up
costing Am en ca the cuo.
Dan Pohl, Larry Ml ze a nd Ben
Crenshaw all lost the fin al hole of
their matches with Howard
Clark, Sam Torrance and Ea
monn Darcy to bring about a
swmg of th ree points. Pa1 sat the
!mal hole by Pohl, Mize a nd

agamst non-union players once

Crenshaw would have made the
Umt ed Staff'S a \\lOner. 14 '1:! -13

'!:!

'"The matches were basically
decided at the 18th hole," ' said
Ame11Ca n captam Jack Nickla us 'That IS whe re f thought
our guys would have excelled
But we left a little too much to do
todav i t was a little more than
we co uld handle '
The Unit ed Stat es needed nme
pomts when lh&lt;' day began and
got off to an exce llent start when
Andv Bean got ahead of European money leader I an Woosnam
a nd beat h1m 1 up
That was followed up bv
Amenca n victories from Mark
Calcavccch!a (over Nick Faldo.
1-up]. Pa y ne
Stewart
Jose
Olazabal.
1-up
J. ScottlOVe!
Simpson
1over .Jose Rivero. 2 and ll. Tom
K1te (over Sand:, Lyle, .1 and 2}
a nd Lanny Wadkins 1over Ken
Brown, :l and 21
Three matches 1.1 ere halved Mlze vs Torrance. Bernha1 d
Langer vs . Larry Nelson and
Gordon Brand vs. Hal Sutton
The only three rna tches won by
the Europea ns were claimed by
Seve Ba lies teros 12 and I over
r urt1s Strange !. Clark 11- up
ow1 Pohl) and Darcy (1 -up ovPr
Cr e nshaw)
Ballesteros' victory in the lOth
of the 12 singles matches produced the c linching point fmally ending the concern in the
European camp.
The night marc , however . was
expenenced by Crenshaw - one
of the mos t popul ar American
golfing ligures In hi story .
Crenshaw was the only Amenca n not to score a point m the
. matches, experiencing a series
of disasters on Saturda:r that cost
his team a win. Then, on Sunday,
Cr e ns haw broke his putter at the
sixth hole when he slammed it to
the ground in disgust

Only ONDULINE can cover
your roof with a lifetime
warranty

announce their plans later in the
week.
A CBS spokesman said If
advertisers ask for a rebate
because of lower ratings , the
networks hav e the right to ask
the NFL for an a djustment in
nghts fees
Network analysts disagree on:
how much TV lost from this
week's games being called off
CBS projected each game to be·
worth $2.5 million to the owners
(the NFL paid the networks $476
million this yearl but CBS cited
the lower salaries paid to nonunion players as a cushion "
toward loss of TV revenues thiS
week .
Bob Costas, host of NBC's
"NFL Live" show, probably
came up w1th the toughest
questwns of the day. He asked If
striking players would retailate '
the walkout is over, asking two
players if they would try to "hurt ·
them ."
Both networks offered roundtable discussions of how they will
approach next week's games and
how long the strike would last
"The strike will be done ·
Tuesday or Wednesday ," predicted NBC analyst Paul Ma- ·
gu1re "'They (the players) Will '
miss the checks. The players wlil
break this strike."
NBC's Jimmy Cefalo, a former
union officer, conceded the·
strength of the rank and file may "
erode m the next few weeks but
sa id the umon will not be broken .
NBC's Merlin Ol son, also a
former player rep, said the'·
non-umon games could helpumte
the players but added, "the'
players won"t stay out too long." ·

r-;::============~
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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday. September ·28, 1987'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

--Local briefs--

Twins gef at least share of
AL W estem Division crown

SCHU SLIDES - Expos' shortstop Hubie
Brooks goes high to avoid the dusty slide of the
Ph lilies' Rick Schu, who was forced at second In

the third Inning of Sunday's game In PhUadelphla's Veterans Stadium. (UPI)
'·

Giants clinch at least tie·for
NL Western Division crown
By David E. Nathan
UPI Sports Writer
On a day to remember the past ,
the San Francisco Giants as·
sured themselves of a future
beyond Oct. 4.
The Giants haltered 48-yearold Phil Nlekro In his farewell
appearance in Atlanta Sunday,
clinching at least a tie for the
National League West title with a
15-6 triumph over the Braves.
·I f the Giants win one of their
last seven games and second·
place Cincinnati loses one of its
remaining severi. the Gia nts will
advance to the NL Championship
series for the first time since
1971.
'At the least, the Giants and
Reds will meet in a one-game
playoff Oct . 5, the day after the
regular -seaso n closes.
The Giants could have won the
division outright Sunday but the
Reds rallied with four runs in the
eighth for a 4-2 triumph over the
Houston Astros.
." How can I be disappointed? "
San Francisco Manager Roger
Craig said, "We'll get the job
done. We're happy to have
clinched at least a tie."
Candy Maldonado drove in six
runs , four with a pinch· hit grand
slam. to spark the Giants, who
begin a series with the Padres in
San Diego Monday.
Joe Price, 2-2, earned the
victory and Chuck Cary, who

surre ndered Maldonado's grand
slam. tell toO·l. Jose Uribe went 4
for 5 with two RBI and four runs
scored for the Giant s, who had 19
hits off six Atlanta pitchers.
Niekrd was reached lor five
runs· on six hits and six walks in
three inni ngs. The Braves invited
the 318-game winner with the
tantalizing knuckleball back lor
a final appearance after he was
cut last month by Toronto. The
right-hander played 20 years lor
the Braves, 18 in Atlanta and two
in Milwaukee.
After the game, the 24-year
veteran announced he would not
pitch again.
"The best thing for me to say
now is that I'm ofllcially retir·
ing, " Niekro said. "It's nor
something I just thought of
because of what happened today.
I've been considering it all along
and this seems like the right time
to make the announcement."
Elsewhere. Chicago stopped
St. Louis 7-3, New York ripped
Pit..,burgh 12·3, Montreal beat
Philadelphia 5·3, Cincinnati
downed Hou ston 4-2 and Los
Angeles edged San Diego 4·3.
In the American League it
was: Minnesota8, KansasCity1 ;
Detroit 3,.Toronto 2 in 131nnlngs;
Ca lifornia 11. Cleveland 8: Balli·
more 9, New York 5: Milwaukee
9. Boston 6; Chicago 5, Oakland
0: and Seattle 5. Texas 3.

Cubs 7, Cardinals 3
At Chicago, Keith Moreland
drove in three runs and Chicago
ripped four homers, helping the
Cubs stall the Cardinals' drive to
the NL East ti tle. The loss
reduced the St. Louis lead to 21·2
games over the New York Mets.
Montreal is three games back .
Les Lancaster, 8·2. was the
winner and Lee Smith earned his
35th save. Danny Cox, 10-9, took
the loss.
Mets 12, 'PI rates 3
At New York, Bob Ojeda. In his
first start since elbow -surgery ,
scattered six hits over six in·
nlngs. Ojeda, 3·5, last started
May 9. Jesse Orosco picked up
his 16th save. Mike Dunne . 12-6,
lost for just the seco nd time In his
last 11 decisions . Kevin McRey·
nolds drove in four runs as the
Mets drew 48,588 fans to go over
the three-million mark.
Expos 5, Phlllies 3
At Phlladelpbia, Huble Brooks
knocked In four runs and Milch
Webster had three hits. The
Expos snapped a 3·3 tie with two
runs in the eighth. the ' first
scoring on a wild pitch by
reliever Kent Tekulve.
Reds 4, Astros 2
At Ci ncinnati, Buddy Bell
keyed a four -run eighth inning
with a two-run triple to rally
Cincinnati.
Dodgers 4, Padres 3
At Los Angeles, John Shelby
delivered a three- run double with
two out In the eighth Inning.

-----------""11

IsvAC standings I
r

SVAC STANDINGs
(All-Games)
W L P OP
TEAM
Oak Hill ............. .4 0 100 1:;
Hannan Trace .... 13 2 86 60
Symmes Valley ... 2 2 116 54
Ea stern ........... .... 2 2 52 91
North Galiia ........ 2 2 64 89
Kyger Creek ........ 2 2 36 91
Soutljwestern ....... 1 :1 46 63
South ern ... .... ... .. .. ) . 3 61 10,1
Sept. 1R results
Hannan Trace 38 Kyger Creek 0
North Gallla 20 Symmes Valley
14
Oak Hlli23 Eastern 0
Southwestern 14 Southern 13

THANKS FOR THE MEMORIES- After pitching three Innings
In Sunday's game against the Giants In Atlanta, Braves' pitcher
Phil Nlekro puts both arms up, acknowledging the standing
ovation he receives as he walks off the field. Nlekro was released
by the Braves alter the 1983 se8$on but wanted to end his pitching
career before a hometown crowd. (UPI)

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
WLPOP
Qak Hill .. ......... .. .2 0 61
0
North Gallla .... .. .. 2 0 58 42
Hannan Trace ..... 1 I 38 28
Southwestern ...... .1 I 26 28
Eastern .............. .'I I 20 37
Kyger Creek ........ 1 1 15 50
Symmes Valley ... 0 2 28 40
Southern ... ...... ..... 0 2 41 · 52
TOTALS
8 8 287 287
Sept. 25 results:
North Gallla 38 Southern 28
Oak Hill 38 Hannan Trace 0
Kyger Creek 15 Southwestern 12
Eastern 20 Symmes Valley 14
Oct. 2 games:
Eastern at Southwestern
Kyger Creek at Oak Hill
. Souhtern at Symmes Valley
Oct. 3 game:
Hannan Trace at North Gallla

By CoiJIDs Yearwood
UPI Sports Writer
Bert Blyleven, who helped
Minnesota to Its last post- season
appearance In 1970, won the
regular-season finale at !he Met·
rodome and gave the Twins at
least a tie for the· American
League West crown.
Kirby Puckett, Gary Gaettt
and Kent Hrbek all homered In a
five-run first Inning Sunday ,
carrying Minnesota to an 8-1
triumph over the Kansas City
Royals.
If the Twins win any ofthelrslx
remaining games or Kansas City
loses any of )ts six, Minnesota
will win Its first AL West title
since 1970. The Twins concluded
their home schedule with a 56-25
record.
Blyleven pitched two Innings of
rellel In the final game of the 1970
American League championship, when the TWins were swept
by the Baltimore Orioles. That
year, his first In the majors, he
went 10·9 with a 3.18 ERA.
Sunday, Blyleven, 15·11 ,
yielded just lour hits while
striking out seven and walking
two In his eighth complete game
of the year. Charlie Lelbrandt,
15·11, tailed to survive the first
Inning.
"The six runs early and the
great defense behind me really
made the difference, " said Bly·
Ieven. "The guys all played
outstanding."
A total of 52;924 were at the
game, a single-game record at
the Metrodome. The Twins also
set a season attendance mark or
2.081. 794.
"The fans got us going early."
said Gaettl. ·•rr was pretty
magical In the first Inning. We
were realty determined to do It
toda y. And Bert was
outstanding."
With one out In the llrst, AI
Newman doubled and Puckett
followed wtt h his 28Jh hOmer of
the year. The next batter, Gaetti,
smacked his 31st homer. Aft er
Don Baylor singled with two out.
Hrbek hit his 34th homer.
"Today was just one of those
special days," said Puckett . "We
just wanted to win. The last home

game meant a lot to all of us.
Right now we're playing super
ball and hopefully It'll carry over
to Texas (starling tonight) and
we can clinch it."
"We clinched a tie today," said
Twins Manager.Tom Kelly. "But
a tie's not good enough. We're
gonna go out and win one more

game.'·

!'lsewhere, Detroit nipped To·
ron to 3-2 In 13 Innings, California
belted Cleveland 11·8, Baltimore
decked New York 9· 5, Mliwau·
kee bounced Boston 9- 6, Chicago
blanked Oakland 5-0 and the
Seattle tipped Texas 5· 3.
In the National Lague It was :
New York · 12, Pittsburgh 3;
Montreal 5, Philadelphia J; San
Francisco 15. Atlanta 6; Clncln·
nat-1 4, Houston 2; Chicago 7, St.
Louis 3; and Los Angeles 4, San
Diego 3.
Tigers 3, Blue Jays 2
At Toronto, Jim Walewander
scored from second on Kirk
Gibson's one-out . single In the
13th Inning, lifting Tigers and
averting a sweep. The triumph
reduced Toronto's AL East lead
over Detroit to 21·2 games. Mike
Henneman Improved to 10-3 with
the triumph .while Jose Nunez
dropped to 5-2.
Angels 11, Indians 8
At Cleveland, Don Sutton
earned his 320th career victory In
his first relief appear a nee In
seven years and Mark McLe.
more drove In lour runs, pacing
the Angels , Sutton, 10·11 . last
relieved Oct . 5. 1980. Ken
Schrom, 6-12, absorbed the loss
as Cleveland ended a three·
game winning streak.
·
Orioles 9, V ankees !i
At Baltimore. Ray Knigh t
stroked a two -run si ngle to
climax a five-run seventh and
Jack O'Connor earned hi first
major-league victory In lour
years. carrying the Orioles .
O'Conno r, 1-1. won lor the first
time since Sept. 9. 1983. Tom
Nledenluer earned his lith save.
Pat Clements fell to .1-3.
Brewers 9, Red Sox 6
At Milwaukee, Robin Yount 's
two· run single capped a fou r· run
sixt h Inning, sparking the Brew ers . Ray Rurrls, 2·2. pitched two

Squads have 4 weekend calls

scoreless · Inning to get the
victory. Chuck Crlm pitched the
final three innings for his 11th
save. Stanley, 4·15. took the loss .
While Sox 5, Athletics 0
At Oakland, Calif., Dave La·
Point fired a two-hitter for his
first shutout In two years and
Ivan Calderon homered twjce to
power the Whlt.e Sox and ellml·
nate the Athletics !rom the AL
West race. LaPoint, 5-3, retired
14 of the final 15 A's and faced
just 30 batters . Rick Honeycutt
fell to 1-3.
Mariners 5, Ran1ers 3
At Seattle, pinch hitter Dave
Hengel ripped a three-run homer
In the eighth Inning, l!ltlng the
Mariners and extending the
Rangers' losing streak to six
games. Mitch Williams. 8-5,
surrendered Hengel's homer.
Mike Trujillo, 4-4, who walkect tn
the go-ahead run In the eighth,
picked up the victory.

scores

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College. but !ailed to overcome
an onslaught by the Pioneers that
resulted In a 6-2 win by Malo neon

Redwomen defeat Walsh
Laren
R10 GRANDE
Wolfe's 13 kilts powered the Rio
Grande volleyball tea m to a
victory over previously unbeaten
Walsh Saturday In league action
at Lyne Center .
The win puts the Redwomen at
4-0 In · Greater Ohio Athletic
Conference play .
Wolfe provided ellectlve
backup in both the offensive and
defensive department s ol the
meet . which saw Rio Grande
defeat the Lady Cavaliers In
three of five games . A senior and
the team's captain, Wolfe's two '
kills In the last minutes of the
fifth game led the hosts to the
win.
The Redwomen won the llrst
game 15-6, and then dropped the
second set to Walsh 10-15. Rio
. Grande came back In the third
game and handily defeated the
visitors 15·8, and then lost the
following encou nt er 8-15, orily to
rally again In the last game for a
score of 15:7, ,
Coach Patsy Fields hailed the
win as the result ol "good team
effort," f.lsa Schmeltzer, who
shined In last Tuesday's defeat of
Mount Vernon Nazarene, com·
piled 12 kills and provided six
blocks in defense.
Sheila Brammer entered the
game to provide key blocking,
while Chris Williams and Shelly
Hoop were used effectively
throughout the meet. Setter Krls
Cochran " did real well," Fields
said, noting that Williams recorded three serving aces and
Cochran two. Sharon Headings
also contributed heavily to offensive play with some key hits.
Fields said that Walsh's big·
gest strength In the past had been
In hitting, ac!dlng that Walsh
players considered Rio Grande
to be the toughest competition

the Lady Cavaliers have had thi s
season .
"Th t'y (Walsh! are known for
their hitting, and they play gOod
defense." she added .
The Rcdwomcn will lace
another key GOAC opponent
Tuesday when they play Ohio
Domini ca n on OD 's co urt.
"They 're always Iough," Fields
commented .
Malone Falls to RGC
The Walsh win ca ml' on the
heels on last Thursday's d ecision
over Malone College, which saw
the Redwomen win three of four
games against the Lady Pioneers
at Canton.
Rio Grande won t~e firs t game
15·11 , but dropped the next
decision to the hOst s 10-15. The
Redwomen were down 7·1 In the
third game, but pulled a comefrom-behind ra lly to de teat the
hosts 15· ~. going on to net the final
game 15'11 .
Offensive problems plagued
Rio Grande throughout the game
a nd Fields utilized the bench to
good effect. Freshman Jennifer
Couch. a standout In girls athlet ·
lcs at Meigs High School, subsfl.
luted for Kris Cochran as setter
for part ol the game. while
veteran Sheila Brammer was
brought In to provide key block·
lng. particularly In the fourth
game.
.
"The bench came up and really
saved us," Fields said
afterward .
Schmeltzer led the Redwomen
In kills with Jl, and Wolfe left her
mark In scoring with 10 kill~ .
Malone, 16-24 ovE;&gt;ralllast year,
boasted a competitive team In
terms of height.
"Malone played great defense
and hustled real well, " Fields
commented: "They had some
girls who are real quick." ·

n.

•:. o.-,._....

Stanl ey L. Evans Memon ••
Field.
The Redmon post('(! rht'&gt;lr first
score In the !lrst lew minutes o(
the ga me. but Maione tied with
the hosts 2·2 at the half and built a
co ntinuous lead. holding Rio
Gra nde to two goals .
Those goals wer e scored by
Tony Daniels. who also pos ted an
assist. and by Ronnie Goodson.
Goalkeeper Chris Krueg,;r pro·
vided 15 saves !or the Redmen.
For Malone, Mark Blss scored
two goa,ls, whit e one goal apiece
was provld('(! by teammates Jon
Oa u me ye r. Ch rls Re lsdorf,
Dwa yne Young and Bruce Asp.
Assists were made by Dave
Graybeal. Kev in Santee and
Mike Hostetter. Pioneer goal·
keeper Kurt Spielvogel netted 14
saves.
"We're looking a little better
than last year, .. Redmen Coach
Phil Anderson commented after ward, adding humorously, " Last
year, Malone beat us 11·1. so this
year we doubled our score and
cur theirs In hall,"
Anderson Iell that th e Redmen
arc working to Improve their
short passi ng game, and refine·
ments made by this year's squad
did not go unnoticed ,
"We received comments from
several ol the Malone players
who couldn 't believe what an
Improvement there was over last
year," Anderson said.
The Redmen face Cedarville
Tuesday and Mat·ietta Thursday .
Anderson said he expects Cedarville to be competition for Rio
Grande.
"Cedarville's got a pretty
tough team, so they 'll give us a
good game, there's no doubt of
that," Anderson said.

FOR JUST

Served with whippeapot1toes, chicken 1r1vy, cote
slaw, hot roll, buller 1nd cofltt. Sorry, no substilules mept beverqe with lddlllonll price.

S3.25

IDiniti!J Room Onlr I

----

lACK 10 THEATlE o.\'18 I
• SPECIAl PRICE AC»tlSSIONS 11

Nellie E . Winston. 93, of South
Second Ave .. Middleport, died
Sunday ar Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A daughter of the late Charles
T. and Flor('nce V. Mayo Guth·
rle. Mrs. Winston was born In
Ga l ita Co. on July4,1894 . She was
a former res taurant owner. do·
mestic worker and homemaker ,
and was a member of the Mt .
Moriah Baptist Church, Middleport. and the American Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post .
Survivors Include one daugh·
ter and son-I n-law, Vjrglnia and
Pellls Stallworth, Corona, New
York; one Rranddaughter, Edna
Carter, Washington D.C.; one
great grandda ught er, Marla Car·
rer. Washington D.C .: a nephew ,
Miles Manley, Colu mbus; a
cousin. William Guthrie, Middle·
port: and several ot her nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded In death by
her husband. William W. Win·
sto n, four brothers and four
sisters.
Services will be I p.m . Wednesday at the Mt. Mortal Baptist
Ch urch with Rev . Henry Key
officiating. Burial will be In
Middleport Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call at Rawling·
Coats-Blower Funeral Home on
Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m. and at
the church for one hou r prior to
the funeral.

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power ..... ........ 27%
AT&amp;T ........... ..... .. ..... .......... 34~
Ashland 011 ................ ,....... 66%
Bob Evans Farms ........ .. ....... 19
Charming Shoppes .......... .... 24 '4
Federal Mogul. ... ................ 45~
Goodyear T&amp; R ...................... 72
Heck's Inc.... .......... .............. .. 4
Lands'· End ... ............ ............ .26
Limited Inc... ..................... 36%
Multimedia Inc................... 69~
Rax Restaurants ... ............... 4 ~
Robbins &amp; Myers ................10*
Shoney's Inc...... ................. 29%
Wendy's Inti. ..... ....... ..... ...... 9')1
Worthington Ind.......... .... .. ..24%

L ..-r
.. tllru OCT.!J
FRJOA't' thru iHURSM.Y!

CROW'$ FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEIIOY, OH.
fried Chkken
v

Nellie Winslon

(As of 10:341 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis .A Loewl

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

PH. 992·5432

Mrs. Carrie Purtell, 86, of th e
Oakland Nursing C('nter. Hills·
boro. d led September 26. She Is
su rvt.ved by two sons, Robert
Purtell, minister o( the Zion
Church of Christ . and Philip
Purtell of Leesburg, 11 grand·
children and 1.1 great grandchild·
ren. Services will be 2 p,m .
Tuesday at the Prater Funeral
Home In Leesburg.

Daily stock prices

ADULrS 13.50 - CHILDREN $2 .50
SATUIIllAY I SUitDAY MATINEES
Al l SEATS $2.50
LIRGAIN NtGiiT TUESDAY 12 ,00

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

Ohio since the last time the
semiweekly drawing produced a
winner Sept. 9.
Offictals said there also were
474 tickets sold with flveoftheslx
winning numbers . Those players
can cash In their rickets for
$1,000. Another 19.758 tickets
have four of the numbers and are
worth $66. Wednesday's jackpot
Is sei at $3 rT)IIIIon.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Announcements
Golf tounameilt
Jaymar Golf . Club's Men's
Championship and Flight Tour·
nament wtll be held Saturday and
Sunday. Players will be flighted
according to their club or leaguf
handicaps or past performance.
A three dollar entry fee for the 36
hold tourney will be charged.
Those wishing to enter may sign
up by calling the clubhouse at
992·6312 or Bob Freed at 992·2044.

Chureh homecomlnp
The public Is Invited" to attend
, Hemlock Grove Church ·hOmecoming this Sunday. Morning
worship will begin at 9:30 a.m.
followed by a basket dinner at
12: 30 In the grange hill. After·
noon service will be at2 p.m. with
singing by the "Oidtlmers" from
the Rutland area.
· PI&amp;~~

homecoming
South Bethel New Testament
Church on Silver Ridge will have
homecoming this Sunday. A
·potluck dinner will be served at
noon and singing by the ''VIctory
Singers" will be ·featured In the .
afternoon. The public Is welcome
to attend.
School carnival
The public Is Invited to attend
the Chester Elementary School
Fal: Carnival this Saturday from
6-9 p.m . at the school. Games
galore. Dinner will be served
starting at 5:30.
Bible school .
Bible School at South Bethel
New Tesiament Church. Sliver
Ridge, will be held at 6 p.m . on
Sunday evenings throughout the
month of October.

Casey's
widow
calls
Woodward
a liar

WASHiNGTON (UP!)- Jour nallst Bob Woodward stands by
his account or a sickbed Interview with the late CIA Director
William Casey, despite accusa Edith Oakland
' tions by the spy chief's widow
that he lied In writing Casey
Funeral servlct's for Edith
admitted full knowledge of the
Iran-Contra diversion. ·
Mona Oakland, 97, who died
Woodward, an editor for The
Friday at the Pomeroy Health
Care Cent('r, will be held 11 a.m. · · Washington Post who made his
Wednesday at Rawling·Coats· name 15 years ago by unear th'lng
Blower Funeral Home, and not 1 the Watergate scandal with fel·
p.m . at Grace Episcopal Church. low repor ter Carl Bernstein,
Burial will be In Oak Grove appeared on CBS's "60 Minutes"
Sunday night to a nswer the
Cemetery In Logan. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 1 to allegations by Sophia Casey.
5 p.m . on Tu~day .
The journalist reiterated
firmly the account provided In
his new book. "Veil: The Secret
Wars of the CIA," from which
excerpts are being published this
Mostly sunny today with a high
week by the Post . In today's
In the mid 80s. Partly cloudy
Installment, Woodward shed new
tonight with a low near 60.
light on President Reagan's
Showers and thunderstorms
delicate physical condition after
likely Tuesday, mainly In the
being shot March 30, 1981.
afternoon. Highs will be near 80.
Mrs . Casey told several news
The probability of precipita organizations
Sunday Woodward
tion Is near zero today a nd
to
her husband alter
never
spo
ke
tonight and 70 percent Tuesday.
he
was
hospitalized
with the
Winds will be from the south at
cancer that killed him May 6.
10 to 15 miles an hour today,
"It's a lie because Bob Wood·
diminishing to five to 10 miles an
ward never interviewed my
hour tonight.
husband." she said !rom the
' Extended Forecast
family
home in Roslyn Harbor,
Wednesday lhrouch Friday
N.Y.
"
Hehad round-t he-clock
Chance of showers In the
my daughter and
security
...
and
northeast Wednesday, fair
I
stayed
with
him
every day 24
Thursday and Friday. Highs will
hours
.
Every
day.
every
minute.
be In the low 60s In the north to tht'
He
was
never
alone
....
No way
upper 60s In the south Wednes·
(Woodward)
have
got
ln."
could
day, and In the 60s statewide
Mrs. Casey acknowledged ·
Thursday and Friday. Lows will
range between 45 and 55 Wednes- Woodward "did come Into the
hospital on Jan . 22, 1987, but he
day and In the upper 30s to upper
was
stopped by security and was
40s Thursday and Friday .
asked to leave."
Woodward, Whose failure to
Seeks divorce
reach
Casey that day was reJ
ported
at the time, told CBS a
Debbora Borah, In care of
source
helped him reach the
Russell Monzingo, Rutland, has
ailing
spymas
ter several days
filed for a divorce In Meigs
later for a four-minute Interview
C,ounty Common Pleas Court
at his Georgetown University
!rom David P. Borah, Breman.
Hospital room.
Janet Kay Carnahan, Reec;Is"He was dying," Woodward
ville, and David Lee Carnahan,
recounted. "It was not the Casey
Reedsville, have filed for a
I knew. physically . So I got one
dissolution of marriage.
question."
Granted a dissolution of mar·
rlage were Mary E. Pullins and
That question, according to the
Frederick E. Pullins.
book scheduled. to be published
Oct. 9, was whether the CIA
Issued licenses
director knew from the start
about the diversion of U.S. arms
A marriage llcense has been
sales profits from Iran to the
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
Court lo James Lee Reed, 21,
Casey nodded yes, Woodward
Reedsville, and Juanita Yvonne
wrote, and when asked why,
Reed. 18, Reedsvtlle.
replied: "I believed. " Wooilward
asked, "What?" Casey repeated,
"I believed," then fell asleep.
Asked what Casey "believed,"
Woodward 'told CBS, "That we
Veterans Memorial
can change the world. That we
Saturday Admissions - Wil- can reshape it. That we can
support the Contras and we can
liam Elam, Pomeroy; Charles
Payne, Middleport.
do what&lt;' (Casey) used to call
'these thing~· - covert action."
Saturday Discharges - Reva
Vaughan, Kenneth Cundiff.
Mrs. Casey also dlsputec;l that
Sunday Admissions - La·
assessment
or the Reagan-Casey
panna Bennett, Clifton, W.Va.;
relationship.
Icy Miller, Syracuse; Clero
"He loved his country and his
Baker, Middleport: Freeda
president
and he wouldn't conMcFann, Pomeroy; Florence
demn
either
one of them," she
Boring, Albany.
said
of
her
husband
Sunday Discharges - None.

GETTING READY - The Gallipolis Fall
Festival got underway Monday at noon, but
before the rides and games can open, everything
must be put up. Here, . two workers from Bates

Amusement Company prepare the SuperLoop
ride on festival's site on First Avenue. The festival
Is open through Saturday~ beginning at noon each
day.

ICarrie PurtellArea deaths

( f'lll "•"·
\6hllwwth 1:1
« olun• 11. M *"lll•ll:l•ll St . 14
tJ, ._....,....._a. flarl. t
t::&amp;.~ll"tn ....IIIIICIIMl :tl. M01Ufll ,'i4 , .

!!131 MCICSON PIKf ·Rt.M MST

TUESDAY NIOHT SPECIAL

A "Wheels for Life" blke-a -thon to raise money for the St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital will be held Saturday, from 2
to 5 p.m., on the race track at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Rain date for the event will be Oct. 10. Prizes, Including a $50
savings bbnd, wll) be awarded the top riders turning In
sponse.rshlp money, Children planning torlde In the blke-a-thon
should bring their sponsorship forms with them to the
fairgrounds. For more Information, call coordinators Brenda
Smith. at 992· 7749.
Roush, at 992·7357, or- Marjorie
__ ,. ....

r.. f'ol•radrt St . I t

Malone defeats Rio Redmen
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande's
soccer team scored early In Its
Sat urday game against Malone

Bike-a-thon set Saturday

CLEVELAND (UPl)- Out of
morn~ than 11 million cha nces
sold lor Saturday's Superlotto
si nce Wednesday emerges six
tickets worth a share In the $20
million jackpot, lottery olflclals
said,
Ofllcia Is reported early Sunda y that six tickets exist with the
numbers 5, 6. 12. 17, 20 and 33.
drawn Saturday night to chill the
lotto lever that had spread over

M1.n•l•i J.l. loo~~r• "' · ll
~

Pomeroy VIllage Council will meet tonight, 7:30 p.m., In
special session at the village hall.

Six have tickets for lotto numbers

" 'li,YfM' ~ . It, _MI,._.,ri """...'" II
M'. lllh•o..... ~M Ml"-rl Sl . It

M o~rr

Pomeroy Council to meet tonight

Thlrty·slx year old James Dwight Logan was arrested
Saturday by the Meigs Cou nty Sheriff's Department on a
'Franklin County warrant for aggravated vehicular homicide.
carrying a concealed weapon and having a weapon under a
disability. The arrest was made by Deputy Kenneth Klein about
10 a.m. on the Pomeroy parking lot .
Logan is a multlstate offender the sheriff's department
reported. At the time of his arrest , he was carrying a loaded
concealed wea pon.
Charges· will be flied In Meigs County and Logan was to have
appeared In court this morning for an extradition ·hearing.

NnMh CelitNI II , " 'hnloll ff' Mnl I
N. Mldlill.. n. NE

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Saturday and eight Sunday.
Saturday at 2:03a.m., Pomeroy to Peacock Ave. for David
Neutzllng to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 9:16a .m . to Dye
Road for Lucille Lambert to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 2: 37 p.m. to Maples Apts. for Freda McFann to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Chester and Olive Township Fire
Departments 3: 35 p.m. to a brush fire on Bigley Ridge;
Pomeroy at 3:36p.m. to Lincoln Heights for Dawn Johnson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Orange Township Fire Depart·
men! at 4:17p.m. to a brush flreonOwiHollowRoad; Rutland at
8:07 p.m. to School Lot Road for Ed Brady to O'Sieness
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 9:17 p.m. to Fifth St. for Erlene·
'
Stobart to Holzer Medical Center.

Man arrested on charge

F.vat~KII'III
4wn•~tt•r 1

!t.

l'tuliklnrvm 'll, " 'UW&gt;,.t.or.:n
Noritl
11. Wbulo" t

Monday, September 28, 1987

'

Weather ·

Hospital news

We Always Knew·People
From eigs County Were
Above Average!
Survey data shows 71%
of Ohioans read a daily
newspaper in the past
week.*

·Our survey shows more
than 83% of the people in
Meigs County read The
Daily Sentinel**

The Daily ·Sentinel
We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Information

Call

992~2156

"Market Opinion Reaearch
••relephona survey of 2,000 Maig1 County ra1idants taken
November 1988. - January 1987

'

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

~----------~----------~~~~
9

Busl·ness Servt·ces

Monday, September 28. 1987

Page-6

wantedToBuy

We PlY cuh tor tat• model &lt;:IHn

Jim M1nk Chev -Oid1 tnt
1~-------------------,~-------------------r--------------------, us~c••
8111 Gene Johnaon

IT

Alfred UMW has recent meeting ____

.-

·.·.

Alfred UMW voted to give two
blankets for the ~ood, Land, and
Justice Program at the Athens
District UMW Annual, Marietta
Chrlt UMC, on Sept. 24.
Nine members answered roll
call and reported seven sick calls
when the society met at the
church on Sept. 15. Martha Elliot
opened the meellngwllh prayer.
President Nellie Parker read
thanks from Shine-Cera for a donation . She also announced the
~esllval of Sharing at Spring-

~--Stiversville
By Freda Carpenter
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cll)se, Wa terford; Mrs. Inez Pooler, Middleport; Mrs. Marilyn Weimer, Fl.
Myers, Fla.; Mrs. Lena Pullins,
"Chester; Mr. and Mrs Kenneth
• Brewer and Mrs. Marilyn Beall,
Columbus; Harold Brewer, Long
Bottom; Mrs. Helen Smith, Portland and Francis Bentz, East LIverpool, visited at the home of
Mrs. Audrey Brewer and David,
recently.
M~. and Mrs. J C Marlin,
Yvonne, Mallhew and Jimmy,
Orlando, Fla .; Mr. and Mrs.
_ • Gene Corns a nd Misty, Huntington. W. Va .. and Mr. and Mrs
Eric Cooper and Chis, Cottagevilie, visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Cooper
Mr and Mrs . Tom Durst, Col-

field on Nov. 21, and asked
members to be thinking about
contribution to it. The nominatIng commillee - Gertrude Robinson, Florence Ann Spencer,
and Martha Elliott- reported on
orficers for 1988. The society
elected these officers.
Thelma Henderson selected
Joce lyn Roper, who is in ministry to Church In the World of
Springfield, for the September
prayer calendar.
Mrs . Henderson gave a mls-

umbus and Mr. a nd Mrs VIc
Durst and Kelly, The Plains.
ca lled on Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Durst Saturday
Mrs Lucille Taylor and Leota
Birch were business visitors In
Columbus one day last week
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Phillips
and c hildren have moved from
this community to North Car·
ollna
Mrs. Dons Ruppenthal, B1lly,
Frank, Sue a nd Emily, Pennsylvania. spent several days last
week with Mrs. Mae Van Meter
and Ruby
Mr a nd Ms. Robert Wllson and
sons. Irondale, were weekend
guests of Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence Gluesencamp
Mr and Mrs Samuel Michaels
have returned from a n extended

"Reflections of the Pa s t" is the
them e for the year's work Nancy
Morris had devot1o ns and for roll
call members gave a favonre
memory from the1r scnool days
Sus1e Abbott had the treasurer' s
report. Refres hment s were
served by Mrs Morris a nd Ann
Colburn. Hele n Blackston won
the travelin g prize. Me mbers
s1gned a get-well card for
Th elma Si nes
Others attendmg were Peggy
Harns, Cia nee Ke nnedy, Linda
Brodenck, a nd Becky Brodcnck.

Harrisonville happenings
Mr. and Mrs . John William s terly blrhda:ys at the Jackson
attended the wedding of the ir Bonanza recently
·· nephew In Winchester, Ky '
Recent guests of Mr and Mrs
recently
J ohn Wi lliams were her Sister
Mrs. Bessie Graham had as and hu sband. their daughter and
recent guests her daughter and a fr iend from Allen Park. Mich
son-In -law, June and Ke nne th They la ter e ntertained John's
Newhouse of South Carolin a. and two s1ssters from Esther. Mo
a granddaughter. Janice, and Decatur. Ill
Georgia
Mrs V1rgm.a Gibson and Mrs
Esther Brandau of Jackson Gladys Cummings spent the
recently visited Ora Carse\
weekend visiti ng the1r sis ter.
Members of the Harrisonville Jaumta Richards in Dayton .
senior citizens observed quar

Slinderella class meeting held
Diana Herdman lost the mos t
weight and Melissa Foster was
runner-up at the Monday night
meeting of Shnderella held at
Five Points. At the Tuesday night
Mason class, Melissa Hoffman
lost the most weight and m the
kid's c lass, Tiffany Davis was the
top loser

New members a re still being
accepted m th&lt;' Tu &lt;'sday morning
Five Points class. New classes
are startmg Wednesday morning
and evenmg In Point Pleasant at
the Fort Randolph Terrace, Jo
Ann Newsome, lecturer.
announced

Church of Christ plans dinner
Plans were made fo r a bean
dinner to be he ld on the opening
day of deer season when the
Adult Class of the Rutland
Church of Christ met recently at
the home ol J1m and Kathy
Stewart. The dmner w11l be held

Carrne~

on Nov. 30 with serving to begin
at 4. 30 p m
Also discussed at the meeting
was the church's homecoming to
be observed on Oct 11 Devotions
a nd prayer by B1ll Carter closed
the meeting.

community events

Mrs Pam Foreman of Portland, Ralph Harden, Joan a nd
children of Carmel were dinner
guests of Mrs. Lula C1rcle a nd
Dixie Circle on Sunday.
Mrs. Richard Young of Sidnev
spent the weekend w1th Mr and
Mrs. Edson Roush .
Mrs . Arrhur Johnson and
daughter, Sheryl. a nd Mrs Eu
nle Brinker visited Mr and Mrs.

Hay man Barnitz, Pomeroy,
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs . Fred Gainer of
Uniontown and Mrs
Zana
Gainer, who resides at The
Maples, Pomeroy, were guests of
Eunle Brinker recently
There were 50 persons at
Sunday School on Sept. 20 at the
Carme l Church.

Valentine Queen chosen by group
Kay Walker was selected as
valentine quee n of XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, at a recent meeting.
Money making proj ects were
discussed and it was noted that
· the chapter Is still taking orders
for necklaces It was announced

that the couple' s Christmas
part v for members of all four
chapters wll be held on Saturday,
Dec. 5.
Dar la Staats, Mrs. Walker,
Rhonda Conde, and Carol Crow
were hostesses. Next meeting
will be held on Sept. 29

Fire association has meeting
A training film on safety was
shown at the recent meeting of
the Meigs County fireman's Area
Assocallon held at the fire house
In Harrisonville.
The Scipio Township Volunteer
Fire Deparlment hosted the
meeting attended by members of
Middleport, Pomeroy, Rutla nd ,

nurse.
Gertrude Robinson led the
Tree of Life Pledge Service with
all taking part in reading the
UMW mission fields . After each
member read, she placed a card

Tuppers Plains, Orange Township, Columbia, Salem Center,
and Syracuse Fire Departments
Kenny Byer, president, conducted the meeting. Next area
meeting wlll be held on Nov. 3ln
Middleport. Refreshments were
served

tour of the west and northwest
Mr and Mrs . Ron Conrad, Col umbus. visited recently with Mr.
and Mrs Charles Congo
Mrs. Phyllis Whaley, Shade,
visited her mother, Mrs Olive
Lawson, during last week.
Sally Smith, Reedsville, and
Michael Dailey, local, were unitj'&lt;l
in marriage by Rev. BUI MurPhY

on the pledge tree
Osie Mae Follrod and Mrs
Henderson served refreshments
of sloppy joes, chips and cookies
during the social hour to those
mentioned and to Clara Foil rod ,
Nina Robinson and Charlotte
Van Meter.
Next meeting wlll be at the
home of Martha Poole and Nl'llie
Parker Oct. 20. Mrs. Parker wtll
lead the program on the Book of
Acts and on Russia

By WILLIAM C. TRO'I'T
United Press International
SELLING OF DONNA RICE: Donna Rice is moving out of
Miami and had a quiet rummage sa le during the weekend to
dispose or many of her belongings.
Rice, the sometime actress, sometlmr model and sometime
pharmaceutical sa leswoma n whose dates with Gary Hart
scuttled his presidential campa1gn, sold off a white leather
couch with a $788 price tag, a color televi sion, a bicycle, a
wicker dining room set , bedroom furnilure and a slew or
women's clothing, size 5 to 7.
Among the closet cast ofts was an orange leat her dress priced
at $150 "I tried to give 11 to my sister. but her hips are slightly
wider ," Rice said. Fans ol Irony will appreciate the fac t that
Rice advertised I he sale anonymou sly In the classified section
of the The Miami Herald, the newspaper thai firs t linked her
publicly with Hart Rice, 29, wouldn't say rowheres heiS moving
but Hollywood might be a good guess
THE BOSS STANDS BY BONO: Bono, the lea d si nger fo1 U2,
cou ldn ' t play the guitar at the bands Philade lphia concerl
Friday night but he brought out a s pecial guest to make up for It
Bono, who dislocated his shoulder during a show in Was hington.
DC , last week, told the crowd at John F Ke nned y Stadi um I hat
he had "someone special" o n hand to help "~than encorl'
Out popped Bruce Springsteen cl ad In a blue denim jacket and
toting a guitar He joined the band In Ben E. King's classic
" Stand Bv Me" and then split aftc1 that one song
NO WONDER MILES SMILES: At this stage In hi s caree1·.
trumpeter Miles Davis, 61, says performmg with h1s funk band
is what he lives for "W hen you get with mu s1clans you lik e, It s
like a whole dillerenr thing," Davis sa 1d
Davis also keeps busy with the paint brush An exhlbillo n of
his paintings W!'nt on displa y Sunday ,11 New York's Tunne l
nightc lub
FAWN HALL WITH THE NEWS: Fawn Ha ll a ppm cntly was
seriou s when she said she wa nted to get int o tM journalis m
dodge Hall's re prese ntatives at th e William Morris agency
conta ct I'd the news director at WAVY -TV m Portsmouth. Va , to
sep if the station would be In teres ted in tralnmg thl&gt;srcrclary to
be a reporter
News director Hal L1•venson said he was mt erested because
'it would be a uniquP e xperience for m.\sclf and the station to
work with someo ne !Ike that ' He su1 &lt; th rc "'''"' no
discussions going on and I hat he told 1he il)lents he would nred to

at the Stiversvllle Community
Church on Saturday afternoon.
Many friends and relatives a ttended the ceremony a nd the reception that followed
Mrs. Neva Curtis, Racine,
called on Mr. a nd Mrs Gene Carpenter recenrly on a Sunday af
ternoon

Calendar/ happenings
MONDAY
PLEASANT - Clogging
class for beginners, with donations given to "Meals on
Wheels," Monday, Pt. Pleasant
Senior Citizen Center
PT

GALLIPOLIS- OH KAN Coin
Club members wlll meet at 6 p m
Monday at Dale's Smorgasbord.
Gallipolis, for a dinner in the
banquet room Following the
dmner, the club's 300th monthly
meeting and com auc\lon w11l be
held
TUESDAY
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Local School District Board of

Baton group
competes
The Sugar a nd Sp1ce Porn Porn
Baton Corps won the regional
champions m thr juvemle dance
twirl. tiny tot dance twirl. tmy tot
pompom, a nd juvemle novelty
groups at the recent competlton
held in Leba non
The contest sponored by Twi ·
rhng Unhmlled att1 acted baton
groups from several states and
was 1he ld a t the Countrys ide
YMCA
In s truc tors of the winning
group are Mary Smith, director.
and Kenda and Kelly R1zer.
Instructors
·
The corps also traveled to the
West Virgmla State Cha mpion s hip competition where Sugar
and Spice won D.M.A. state tifle
evenrs 1n tmy tot porn porn and
juvenile dance twirl. a nd will be
gomg to Florida m Ma' for the
national competition
Me mbers of the rg10nal title
groups are Andrea Hilbe rt, An gie Engle, Alicia K('rsey, Kelll
Bail ey , Jull Bailey Tasha John
son, Angie Wolfe, and Sarah
Marie Smith, tiny tot dance twirl
team, Sarah Mane Smith, An·
drea Hilbert , Angie! Wolfe,
Devm Galllgher , Tashsa Johnson. Alcle Kersey, Angie Engle.
Julio Bailey, a nd Kelli Bailey,
tiny tot porn porn tea m .
Nikki Kersey, Jess1ca Hat field, Tatum Roush , Sarah Mar1e
Smith, Mapd! Van Maire. Erin
Kll'then, Paige Watts, Andrea
Frye, Kelll Bailey, Carrie Johnson, Angle Engle, Sarah Roush ,
a nd' ~nge la Llbratorle. juvenile
dance twirl team; and Sarah
Marie Sm1th , Sarah Roush,
Mandl Van Matre, Carrie John '
son, Kelll Ba1ley, and Angle
Engle, novelty group
Each participant In their respective divisions received a
medallion for the regional titles .

·.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAl COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO 2
P 0 Box 490
Athono. Oh1o 46701

Pursut~nt

to Ohio Coal

Mining end Roclometion
Rule 1601 13-3-04, South"'" Ohio Cool Compony,
Moigo Mmo No. 2. P. 0. Box
490, Athono, Ohio 46701,
doeo hereby • vor11nce
to pennH the lnotolotlon of o
ventlotlon ollofl within I 00
feet of the

out~tde

right-ot-

woy of Mel111 County Rood
62, beginning ot o point oppro~dmltety

1700' H•t from

the lnt-Cilon of Solem
Townlhip Rood 83 end
Mlilll County Rood 62 The
propolld lhlfl lilt will hove
no effect on the road Dllturbe.,.,. of tho oreo will be conducted to lhe edge of the
otone rood ourl- Inter-

Education wlll meet In regular
session at 7 p m Tuesday.
In revival
PLATFORM - Revival at
Guyan Valley Missionary Baptist Church. Platform, begins
Sunday, continuing through Oct
4; serv1ces 7 p.m., pastor Dav1d
Saunders . speaker.
special
si nging

i nt er v1rw Hall to s~e If she ha s n N'ess~u ~~ ''sf'riousnf'ss and l evel

of commllment . ·
·
Levenson also sa 1d Hall would not be on lh l" ail until fully
ll'alned bv a se nior repo r ter In writing. editing a nd shooting
stories and says she ·seemed trainabl e" II sdo ubtfulHall. who
a nn ou nced her m1eres1m Journalls'm during_a,Barbar,l Wall er
mter vlew. would be a llow en ro covcr 1he 1r a n Con 11 u Sl'U nd a 1
PISTOL PACKERS· You npvcr know who's packing a gun
The New York Dall y l'ews did some Chi'C klng a nd dlscovl'rl'd
that rea l es tato:&gt; mogul Donald Trump. co lumnis t Willi am F
Buckle\ a nd New York T1mcs P ubli s her A1thur 0 Su! zber~l!l'
also have permit s to Cdrry pistols
A spok('sman for the Times explamed Sulzbcr gcr' s per m II b~'
sal' ing: "I think Mr Su!zbcr)ler obtained u pl~rol p&lt;&gt;rmil at a
tim&lt;·" hen tc1 rorist activities WNC - a nd r~ls goes back a !(Ood
man y vcars - sudden!\ assuming alarmml( proporrl ons."
Harri s said ' In am event he obtained a pistol permit atrhat
time. on advice, and he maintains the permit He Is a skitll'd
marksman , having been a Marine In Wo1·Id War II and the
Korean co nflict "

Re• lval
LETART FALLS- Th!' RPv .
Pearl A Casto. formrr pastor of
the Letart Falls United M('lho
d1st Church, will conduc t l'vang e
list1c sE"rvices al the churc h, Oct
7 11. i p m Special si ngmg
mghtly
Chamber moved
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Cha mber of Comm&lt;'rce Is now
located in the former Diamond
Bank buildin g, West Main St ,
Pomerov Office hours are Mun
day, Tuesday and Frida~' . 9:30
a. m to 4 p m The c ha mber
phone number remai ns 992 5005

\

Free clolhlng day
CHESHIRE - Thr Gallla·
Me1gs Communt y Action Agency
will hold lis tree clothing day for
low Income persons from 9 a m ·
to 12 noon Tuesday The agrncv' s
c lothing bank is now located In
the old high school building at
Ches hire

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HA~E HEARING AIOS"

Practice slated
MIDDLEPORT - Members of
Job's Daughters will hold a
practice session at 2 p m lod ay
, at th£' Middleport Masonic Tem ple Initiation lor the International Order of Job's Daughters
will be held at 7· 30 p.m. Monday,
also at the Middleport temple

CALi. (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

_ Public Notice

Public Notice

ORDINANCE 1186 87

killed

Be tt ordained by the

InJUry

Court Houte in Pomeroy,

or

CIUMd

aeriou1

to any person or that

(1) While thot dog loon tho

preml'"

of

the

owner

Public Notice

._

..

,Hi~

..

;-:.:+.:';..;"!:':...""'"'' ~ - ,........ - ·

.................

~·~=-

COI"t I)UOuNI ~

-o••••""
fiW•DnrUil

. .........

""DNIJ()AY '"'"~
f&gt;II/UOA~

....... .

""0
.....,....... .

D..... 0001

violotlon ofouboecr1on lbl or

(I) That th11 ordinance oholl
take effect on the earllnt
date prov1ded by law
Paued th11 14th 'day of

(cl hereof. the coun may

141 A. "VIclouo dog" keeper or horboror, oocurotY

order tho offender to peraoneHy aupervlae the dog
thet he owna. keeps or

ouboectlon 1•1141 B. hereof,
rneeto ony of tho following:
8 "Vicloua dog" doea not
Include tither of tho
lottowing:
1. A pollee dog thor hu

locked fenced yord or other
locked oncloiiUro which hu

horboro, to couoe thot dog to
complete dog obedience

1 top, except thet 1 denger-

training, or to do both

OUI dog moy, 1n tho oltornotlvo, be tied with o teooh or
tether oo that the dog io

(glflo vloletlon ohuboecti0f1 (d) hereof lnvotvn 0
dongorouo dog, whoovor

September, 1987

Dewey Horton.
Council Pr,lldent
Jon P Buck ,
Clerk-Treeaurer

191 2t , 28 , 2tc
•

614 441 3172

···-.... ... ... .......
..,.
........ .... .... .. .
-.......--..... -.................
IIATII

'""'"
'""'"

...
...

...
til.

•u•

•o.o.lll

~

--- ·--

:::::::::... ..:.

~~--~

'""'"

Ill•
Ill.•

..,.

...
::=:.::.c....

.. ..

-···-··"·

follo..un~

~IUCATION

'lliO
' oo••
•••uoDu
O. ootiTODU
IDG•to l UflbU

• l Dl 'to • £D• non
tot • • IH&lt;INIDU
lot • • &gt;~ID••

---.._

the Meigs County Probate

Court, Cooe No 26677, Horolrf H. Bleckaton, 36160
Rt~eN.tprings
Road, Pom·
eroy, Oh1o 45769. was appointed Executor of the estate of Jeu1e l Saundefl.
deceased. late of 36282
Rocksprings Road. Pom-

,u chon~ot•

-----~

Public Notice
43266 -0149, Ph 16141
4Bt -2116 Conou~ ORC
Chap 3746 ond OAC
Chopo 3746-47 end 37465 tor requtrements
iuuance of renewal

19!14, 2t . 28 . 3te

Public
tewater

Public Notice

Treatment

Plant.

E11t of SR 7, Sohobury Twp

EHectrve Date Sept 22,
1987
Race1ving waters.
Ohio Rtver, Facility descnp-

of NPOES permit.

,..____ ,.~ '

;J:

11

C~op .

Vtllage of Mtddleport Was-

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
COUNTY MEIGS

The follOWing were ru
ctnved / prepared by the
Ohio Envtronm..,t•l Protechon Agency (OEPA) last
week EffeCtive diiH of
fmal IC1iont and 11.uance
d•tn of proposed actlona
are ltlted Fin.e ac11ona may
be ._,pu~..s, 1n wrrt1ng,

wh...., 30 cloy a of the dote of
this notk::e. 10 The Envtronmant~ Board of Aevtew

Rm 300, 236 E Town St .
Columb&lt;lo. OH 43215. Notice ol or&gt;Y oppul shell be
tiled w1th the director wtthin
~ daya Propottd acttons
w ilt become f1n11 unle11 1
written adjudication hearing
requMt is aubmitted within
30 dtya of1he 11auance date:
or the director reviaM I
wtthdraws the propoaed ec·
tton Any penon may 1ubm1t
commenu and/ or requett a
mMtlnG regarding any non·
fin• .chon within 30 day a of
the date indicettd " Ac·
tton' ', 11 uled above don
not mclude receipt of a
110rlfled comptolnt If slgn1fl
cant pubUc mternt e•istl a
pubUc meeting may be held
AI to any action. Including
rece1pt of ver1f1ed com ·
plaint1. any penon mar
obtlln notiCIII of further
actlona, end lddinonat in for ·
malton, Unl•• olherw11e
provided in not tees of partte ·
ular acttons all commur:\1 ·
Ut10n1 1hall be tent to

HOME
FOR SALE
located in long
Bottom near Cur·
tis Hollow entrance to Forked
Run.
FOR MORE
INFORMA noN CALL

FARMERS BANK
992-2136
11

•Baby Shower
•Any Special

PH. 992-6959

POMEROY,O.
992 -2259
PRICE REDUCED on th 1s
Hand1cap access1hle home
Ramp ways, special floor
cover~ng, spwal hath hx
lures, etc All design!l! w1th
the handicapped In m1nd
Really n.ce 3 bedroom home
w1th lueplace basement &amp;
porch area Large modern
k1tchen NOW $34 !1(10 00

home w1th central

a1r 1s 1n

MIDDLEPORT - Here IS a
two slory colon1al 1n town that
has many greal features
Great hv~ng room. Great wood
burner l11eplace Great work
shop, plus a Great apartment
lor rental income WANTS
$34 900 00

Help Wanted

CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES
1

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

(304) 675-4340

JANET VENOT

EE MDIIING CONSULTANT

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CNr!m, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS

•KITCHENS . BATH S
•ROOFING •GENERAL
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

REFERENCES
Day or honin1s

Phot~e

614-742·2355

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons and ramDdelmg
Rooltng and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electncal
work
{Free Est1mates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215 or 992-73t4
Pomeroy, Oh1o
4 15 86 lc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt . 124, Pomeroy Oh1o

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tt.. tlllttlo•

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-1 7-t!c

'VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULATION

let Ut Fenee 'lou In

ROOFING

FENCE COMPANY

NEW- REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES
R ES IOENTIAL. / CO MMERCIAL

PH. 742-2027

:}(iflR·~ B~

1 m74 ·:-.
~,

1

•

'

51 1/tln

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

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

CHESHIRE

367-0322
9-23·1 mo

N.., WJif H1111t Pm1tt

6-1 pm-Drinks SO&lt;
V(R TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. LOnERY
CARRY-OUT

PM 304-876 1038

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Howard L. Writesel

~ CRill II diCOflllltg 'lll~rl~~

MI!Witport, Oh.
(614) 992-5

41686tfn

ACCENT

CLIFTON, W. YA.
BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour

In~-39~04
~:~~:;;~~~;~

SUNDAY CAlLS

or 949-2801

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

IIAIEN FACEMYER

NO

No Sunday Calls
3· 11-ltn

9-24 I mo

I&gt;
, " r1 J II

Rabb1t, 1deat for 4-H Protect or

Authomool John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Serviee

1-3- 86 lfc

'

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

4-22-87-lfn

ALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Locohon:

168 North St&lt;ond
Middleporl, Oh1o 41760

DENNY CONGO

TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

Sundoy . I p.m.-7 p.m
By (han'e or Appointment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

IUSINESS PHON!
IESIIINCI PHON!

16141 992-7754
1128/ l!n

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

Sal•m•n Wanted I Must · have
knowledge of conatruct1on.
Must be aggresstve Call '614·
448 7241 after 6 ·00 PM

'

SYSTEMS ANALYST· Fortran
or Ba11c able (20o/ oprogram·
mgl F•miliamy with DECI:t\1'AX
and MUMPS helpful Min mum
2 vears Fortran tratnmg and 2
years expenence Complititrve
salary and excellent frmge benefits Sent resume to the
PeraonntH Oepanment Holter
Cltnlc. P 0 8o.11 344 , Gallipolis
Oh1o 45631 NO PHONE
CALLS
Baby 11tter mTeachers homeB-4
tn downtown Gall1pohs
Prefer
somoone who ltvesln town C•ll
614-446·4294
Government Jobs ti6.040S59 230 yr Now hmng Call
806 687 6000 Etet R-9805 for
current federal list
Free Chmtmas d11play kit
Frtandly Home Part1es now has
openings for managlfs and
dealers 1n your area All new
Chrtstmas hne of quality merchandiSe at re•onable prices no
llrVIte &lt;:harg•no PIIP• workhigh comm1111on .nd onrnde.
Call 1·800-227-1510

Large m1le -::olhe brown and
wh1te dog Answers to Lince
large reward Lost Sept 5 Call
614 985 4227

R N applications now betng
accepted for full t1me pos1t1on.
Ple..ant Valley Nurs1ng Care
Center, apply personnel oft1ce
Pleal8nt Valley Hosp 304 675·
4340 AA EOE

LOST - Brown Dachshund m
Mossman Ctrcle area Child 's
pet Reward! 304-675-1707

.. HIRING I Government JObs
your area 815 ,000 • S68,000
Call (602) B3B · B886 EXT

Found Small Bea{lle pup tn
Vl t lnlty ol Pamsh Ave 304·
6 75 3895 after 5 p m
lost Tuesday Tractor seat be
tween Mt Alto and Gun Club
304 895·3534

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis......... .
&amp; Vicinity
G1gant1c yard Sale 2 m1les out
Rt 218 Thurs. Fn , Sat Oct
1,2,3 900 - 500
Mov1ng Sale Tues · Wed ·Thun
Circle Or Ptantt Sub Washerdryer bunkbeds 1976 Nova

------P-omeroy-- -----Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Yard sale Oct 1 4 Bald Knob
Rd Steve F1tches 9 6 Clo
thtng, houseware, etc
Bland res.dence !the old F1sher
property} above Southern H1gh
School. St Rt 124 October
1-5 9 00 8 00 Call 814· 949·

1203.

Ohto Valley Tire now hu Hunter
0 -100 Computemad alignment
machme Now taktng applications for wl'leel ahgnmentSJ Call
304-676-5332 Galhpohs Ferry

wv

Med1cal receptioniSt, exp .preferred. 18nd resume Bend Area
Medrcal Center, Box 779 New
Haven, W Va
I WANT YOU
1
lfyouare16to21 FreeTrammg,
Food. Housmg Pay and Placement Help Sept 30 Only J1m
Wdltams 304 676 2770 Potnl
Pleaunt Job Serv1ce or anytime
collect. 304-344 -8068 or out of
wv 800 624·9191

CANDlE CONCEPTS
HIRING TOOAV
Ladntt · Don t m1u th11 rare
opportumty Work pert tlma till
December Top pay More detatll or mter:v1ew Call today
Betty Varatto 304-744-0924

12

Situations
Wanted

For mce lady that needs a n1ce
home mstead of wages \1ve in
w•th very httle work to dd Be
eompanron for m1ddle aged 111
lady Call 614 446 ·9515
Babys1ttmg JOb wanted Ctms
han mother Will babySit Exp~
nenced Reforences Any Hours
304-675-1040

3014

8-24-87·1 mo
8

SALES &amp; SERVICE

16141 992-6!50

Make40 percent Caii814·.U6
3358

AVON - All areas Call Marttyn
Weaver 304·882-2646

We Carry fishing Suppt111

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here

Avon Sell AvDn far ChriStmas

Lost and Found

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques
HOURS: Tue -Wed ·frt
11amto7pm

Help Wanted

6

6 family yard sale 8 m1les down
At 7 Mon 28 -Sat 3

1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy

11

Very Fr1endly - Small motad
brHd part Be~gle, goad with
children spayed had all shats,
304-675·3252

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND

Service&gt;

SYSTEMS ANALYST Fortran
or Ba..-:: able 120 per cent
programm1ng) Famlhlrtly with
DEC VAX and MUMPS helpful
Mtnimum 2 years exper1en-::e
Compet1t1vesalary and excellent
frtnge beneflt1 Send resume to
the Personnel Dep1rtmen1 ,
Holter Chmc, P 0 Box 344
Gallipol11 Oh 45631 Nophone
cella

4 Pet Mite Call after 4 30 p m ,
304-675 3081

PH. 949-2860

Happy Hollow Rd.

GINIIAI COitTUC10H

4888

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Rl. 124 Atran fram

Three 7-week old pupp•es. part
Beagle. 304 675 1086 or 676

" At Reasonable Pmes"

SIDING CO.

•MUZZlElOAOING
SUPPliES
OPEN I lo 9 P.M.

8 mDnth old black female 'h
Samayed 1ft Elk Hound Good
w1th ch1ldren. Good watch dog
Had all shots Free to good
country home 614·992-7086
mornmgs

Fruit tars, adds and ends C.ll
304· 773·5906

BISSELL

•GUN

Giveaway

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Day or Night

•SlUGS
•AMMO

RUTLAND

YOUNG'S

4

or 949-2860

HILLSIDE
MUliLELOADING
GUN SHOP

985·4141
9· 21-1 mo pd.

Announcement s

PH. 949-2801

FllliiiOyllll!ill

SYRACUSE, OliO

9·11· 1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Call by 11 ·15·87, 814-388·
9769

Wanted· Beaut1t1ans wrth Man•uera L1cenae and without for
New Beauty Shop Call 614
388·9093

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

THURS,7PM EB645
SUN., 2 P.11.-EB I 45

Butld•ng Stte 1 2 •erM within
16 minute• of town Cath or CO

Re-Opu F11 Bualnm

REASONABLE PRIC£S-TRY US!

!HIRLIT HOU!IOH

EAGLES CLUB- PCUEROT, OHIO

9-18-l mo.

'

STENCILING CLASSES

Business Services

t CULAND, Ill 997 61 ~ I
JEAN r•usmt ..
9.ttJ·-166o
DOniE TUINfl
9U-S691
lRaCT lllffl( . .. . . ••• 10&amp;0
Olfl((
992-2259

R£1lTOR

USKET WEAVING and

APPLY IN PERSON OR SEND RESUME TO
EAST
POMEROY

tfNRY

A(B
~

SIGN UP NOW FOR

BING0

Female n1inature Oach1hund .
1 2 yrs old wtth or without

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
t1me assembly work; electronICS, crafta Others Info (604)
641-0091 Ext 2987 Open 1
days CALL NOWI
~

eOh1o Souvmers
•Mus1c Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden G1fts
•Picturea
•PoHery
•Cement Products
""You Namt· h - '\\'"'',.,
Gol It'..

Middleport-992·

Call

Excellent mcome taktng shon
phone orders at home Call for
mformat1on 604-649 7922.
Eltt H· 14

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

LaSALLE GALLERY

F~rewood

992-3537

9·18·87

"DOC" VAUGHN

HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
FOR CERTIFIED GM TECHNICIAN
ALSO AN OPENING FOR AN
EXPERIENCED BODY MAN

ApproXImat ely.

SYRACUSE - If you like
spacious room and m to
neatness ol tastefu l decor,
make an appointment to see
lhts lovely 4-5 bedroom
home w1th 2 baths. kit chen
w1th cozy breaklast nook
lormal dm1ng room, ut1l1ty
room . lull basemen! large
neal acre lot 2 car gmge
Many other
leaturesl
$62.900 00

550 PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OIHO

Certlfood Lic:_onsec

OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV. INC.

3',; acres ol land w1th a 3 4
bedroom home Also 1n
etudes a sm all mobile home
lor rental In come ASKING
$24 000 00

GEARY
BODY SHOP

YVONHE !UIIi
Bndal Reg11try and
moat complete hne of
Wedding Flowers and
Accessories In th11 area

anyttm• C &amp; R

61. · 367-0689

Wanted e lady to INe-ln L1ght
hDuae work Mostty fo~ ' COm·
pany Call614 448 3419 :

CALL 992-67 56

JIM COBB

MIDD!EPORT - Th1s older
home Is close to stores and
schools Two to three bed
rooms level lot. carpetmg
and other n1ce features
N1ce front 11 tt~ng porch
MAKE Offf_R $19.000 00

2¢ lb.

8-20-'86 lfn

DIRECTOR OF NURSING

excetlenl cond1t1on and olf·
ers 2 bedroom s, a lamlly
room w1lh sliding door to
vtew a rear pat1o and satel
lite d1sh . I ~ baths, I car
garage, fenced yard young
orchard $60,000 00

RACINE -

REASONABLE - RELIABlE

SYRACUSE, OHIO

If you have one or more years of effect1ve
nursing management experience. strong
communications skills, please provide a
statement of your qualif1cat1ons and rea·
sons for interest in th1s particular position
before 12 noon Tuesday, September 29.
1987. Excellent benef1ts. salary negotia·
ble .-E OE
Reply to: The Daily Sentinel
· Box '729-A
Oh4o 45769

LEADING CREEK ROAD A beaut1lut bnck ranch
home Situated on appx 3
acres ol land Th1s newer

papers Call 614·367·0487

Current 53¢ lb .
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheets
40¢ lb
Aluminum Cans
34¢ lb.
1-1 mo

Most Foreign and
Domestic Veh1cles
A/ C Serv1ce
All MaJor &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certit1ed Mechantc

614-992-2104

Call 1514-446-3119

PurchBsing all
types of
non-fBrrous scrap

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Carol Disbrow
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Laboratory

WANTED TO BUY UHd wood
&amp; coal h•aters Sw11n's Furnl
tur•. 3rd &amp; Ol.ve St G1111pahs
Wanted to buy Long wood Call

Help Wanted

Full time position for Registered Med1cal
Laboratory Technician on second shift. Requiree independent worker with capabih·
ties in all areas of Clinical laboratory
PLEASE CONTACT:

2282

#1 Copper

Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
614-843-52

Occas•on

TOP CASH p.. d for '83 model
end ntw., uttd cars Smith
Buu~tt- PontiiC , 1911
Eastern
Ave , Gallipolis Cell 61" 448

LO&lt;ated at Corner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy

GLASS .....

TYsr Antennas

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

•Family Reunton

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN

w11 appointed Admm11trt·

19121 . 28 (1 0)6, 3tc

RESUlTS

6t 11

381. Rutlond, OhiO 46775,

Robert E Buck.
Probtte Judge
len• K Neuelroad, Clerk

•Parents' Anniversary

J.R.'s REPAIRS

9-18-1 mo

btelo EBR

26830,

Ohio 4&amp;780

GET

poNd action and 11 apeala-

HyMII, Bo•

tor of the ntatl of Nellie
HyMU Copeland. decuaed.
late of Route 1, M1ddlepon.

HAVE AVIDEO
TAPE MADE...
•Child' o Birthday
Party
•Weddmg

liKE
, . DIAMONDS

in the Meigs County Probate

llwrence E

blo to EBR
191 28, 1tc

~-~.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Soptombet- 15, t987,
Court, COlt No

tion· Sewage Thia final
act1on not preceded by pro posed 1c:t10n and 1s appeala

\'1M~ TADS

Vtllaga of Middleport Wastewater Treatment Plant. East
of SR 7, Sohob&lt;lry, Twp
Effective date Sept 21.
1987 Rect1v1ng water•
Otuo R1ver, Fac1lity Description Sewege; Permit NO.

Final iaauance of ftndtngs
and orders. under ORC

Public NotiCe

DAILY 10 AM-6 PM

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

oroy, Oh1o 46789.
OPB00026-BD . ThiO fino!
Robort E Buck, action not preceded by proProbate Judge
Lena K Nea•lroad , Clerk

:r:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist ·

Now Open 7 Days
A Week

~==.­

·~

F~nal

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

3!: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

te;:
..,_

==t=:'
,.._

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Soptombor8, 1987. m

t6epho-

Computerized Hearing Aid Selectron
~ Swim Molds - lnterpretrng Setvrces

a:
13LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

ClaUijled JHIPI ccnoer •he

~'!C::

Public Notice

adequately restratned.
(21 Whtle I hat dog 11 oH the
premttel of the owne~.
keeper or harborer, keep it
on a chein~ llnk lea~h or
tether that 11 not more then
sue feet tn length and addittonalty do at ~ast One of the

means a dog thet, without conflne It 11 all tlrnea tn 1
provocetlon and eubj8C1 to loclced pen wtuch has a top.

..
•

__-_"' -··__

.......... .
........
. _,=: ~:.:.."7 ~
!:".::..".:: ;::::

• , _ , . .. ........ _ , _ _ _ , , _

Bo• I 049, Columbus OH

VlOIIIeS thlt IUblection II
guilty of a mltdemeanor of
Counctl of the VIllage of
heacauted tnjury, other than
the fourth dtgrH on a f1r11
Middleport that the followkilling or serious mJury. to
offense and of a misdemea ·
ing Chapter 605 it hereby
any per.on while the poliCe
nor of the third degree on
adopted
doo 11 being uNd to 111i1t
each aubaequent offense
505 DANGEROUS AND
one or more lew enforceAdd1t1onelly, the court m•y
VICIOUS DOGS DOGS
ment officers '" the perfororder tM offender to peraon
RUNNING AT lARGE
monee of tho" officio! tollow1ng
ally superv111 the dangerou•
(1) A "Dangerous dog"
dut1H,
A Keep that dog in a dog that he owns. keepa or
meant a dog that, whhout
2 A dog that h.. killed or
locked pen whtch has a top, harbors. to cauH that dog to
provocetion. and subject to
cau•d HriOUI injury to any
locked fenced yard or other complete dog obedience
aubtect1on (1) 111 B. hereof.
per10n white a peraon was
locked encloaure which hat trammg, or to do both, lf'rt
has ch11ed or approached In
committing or attempting to
a top,
the court may order the
either 1 menacing faaheon or
commtt a trespau or other
B Have the leash or tat her offender to obtain hablhty
an apparent attttude of atcrimtnal offen~a on the
controlled by 1 person who 1nsurence pursuant . to aubtack, or hat attempted to
property of the owner,
11 of su1table age and dllcre- uction (el hereof The coun,
bite or oth1rw11e endanger keeper or harborer of the
tton or aecurely attach, tie or 1n the elternatrve, may order
any person, while that dog it dog.
afful the leash or tether to the dangerous dog to be
off the prtmtaea of 111
15) "Without provocathe ground or a stattOnary humanely deatroyed by a
owner, keeper, harborer and tion" means that a dog was ob,iect or ftxture 10 that the hcenaed veterlnauan , the
not under the rellonablt not teeaed, tormented. or dog ''adequately reatrainlld Dog Warden or the humane
control of ita owner, keeper. abused by 1 Pllrton. or that
and statton such 1 person in SOCiety
harborer or some other the dog was not coming to
cloae enough proxim 1ty to
(h) If a VIOIItiOO Of IUbleC
rHponalblt pereon. or not the aid or the dtfen1e of a that dog 10 11 to prevent 1~ tton (d~ hereof Involves a
ph'fltCally ratra•ned or con- person who waa not enfrom causing Injury to any VICIOUS dog, WhOever VIO·
fined In 1 tacked pen wh1ch gaged in 1lleg.e or cnmmal
person,
lates that subaecfton 11
has 1 top, locked fenced yard activity and who wea not
C Muule that dog
guilty of one of the
or other loclled enclosure uatng the dog •• e means of
(e) No owner, keeper or follow1ng
which h.. 1 top.
carrying out such actwrty.
harborer of 1 vicious dog
(1) A m11demeanor of the
B "Dongorouodo•"don
(ORC 9n.111
•
""'
shell fail to obt11n ltab11ity flrt degree on a ftrlt offen1e
not Include• pollee dog that
lbt No owner. keeper or 1nsurance With an 1naurer Add1t1onalloy , the court mey
hal chlltd or approached 1n harborer of any female dog 1 authorllad to write liability order the v1cioua dog to be
e1ther 1 meneclng fashion or shall permit 1t to go beyond r · inaurance in this State pro- humanely deatroyed by a
an apparent aU1tude of et· the premlaes of the ownlll', vidlng coverage in each licensed veterinarian, the
tack, or h11 attempted to keeper or harbor• at any bccurrance, subject to 1 Dog Warden, or the humane
bite or othttrwlat endanger time tM dog Ia in heat, limit, exclustve of tnternt ooclotv
any per1011 while the police unfeaa the dog Ia property In and coats, of not leu than
121 A m11demeanor of the
dog Ia being ueed to lllllt le11h
fifty thousand dollera f1rst degree 11 the dog cauaea
one or more law INlforce(c) No owner. keeper or (tl50,000) becaun of dam- InJury other than killing or
mant offk:era in the perfor- harborer of eny dog shall fall
age or bodily Injury to or serious ~niul'¥ , to eny person
mence of their offlclel It any time to keep it etther deeth of a peraon cau~ed by
(I) Whoever VIOI1t11 IUb·
duhea.
phy11caUy confined or resthe vicioua dog IORC aect10n (e) hereof 11 gu1lty of
121 "Monoclng loohlon" trolnod upon the promion of 966.221
a misdemeanor of the first
mnna 'hat a dog would the owner. keeper or har(f) (1) Whoever violates
degree (ORC 955 991
cauu any person being borer by 1 Ieath, tether, · subsection lbt or fcl hereof Ia
ljj That Ill VICIOUI dogs
ch11ed or approached to adequt~te fence. aupervialon guilty of 1 minor m•adem 81 . ahall ~e reg11tere~ at the
reaaonabty belleve that the 1 . ~r MCure encloaure to prenor 1or a flr8t offen11 and 1
mayor s office on forma
dog will cau• phy•cal vent etcepe or under reaaomledeme1nor of the fourth provided and that a t 6 00
Injury to thet peraon.
nable control o1 aome degree for each subsequent fee •hall be charged for th11
(3) "Pollee dog" moono • poroon.
olfonoe.
reglatrat1on
dog thot hoo been trolnod,
ldl No owner, keeper or
121 In addition to tho
lkl Whoever violates suband mey be uMd, to
herborer of 1 dangerous or penahlta prescribed 1n subsection (JJ hereof it gu1lty of
one or moro r- enforce- vlclouo dog ohotr loll ro do -tlon 111 111 hereof, if rhe 1 m11demaanor of the f1rat
ment offtcera in the perfor~ etihtr of the follow1ng
offender 11 guilty o1 1
degree

monee of their ofllclot

Ohio.
191 28, Ire

_.....,_ ..
=...... •• _ ... __ .. _

Real Estate General

duties.

ot e public meeting of the
Mligo County Commlooionero on September 30. 1987
111:30p.m. toboholdattho

•

H..,ng Clerk, OEPA, P 0

••t

ested pilrtiea m1y comment

- --\

'

People in the news

community happenings

.CCL conducts recent meeting
Plans for serving the ca nteen
at the Red Cross Bloodmobile
,visit on Oct 21 were made at a
.. Tecent meeting of the Middleport
Child Conservation League
The annual state convention of
the Ohio CCL was announced tor
Oct. ~ and 3 with the Grove C1ty
League as host . New progtam
books were reviewed and as
sembled and scrapbooks wen&gt;
updated.
It was decided to continue
dona tlng baby It e m s to the
Prenatal Clinic at the Me1gs
•· County Helath Departme nt

slons report on Steve and Deborah Wolford, missionaries in
Zaire. Africa. Missions overseas
now send out their own missionaries. People with deep Christian
commitment and technica l skllls
are needed. Steve Is an airplane
pilot and mechanic; Deborah Is a

___.....

TO PUQ AN AI CAll fft.f116

IIOMIAY tllr11 fiiiAT I A.M. le 5 , M.
I A.M. U..tll NOON IAfUICIAY
.....
~·
C\OSO SUNDAY

Savannah, Georgra
"FRESH" SHRIMP SALE

From

SAT .. OCT&gt;10, 1987
1:00 P.M

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auct1on•er It
cenHd In Ohio and West Vtrgl·
nta . Estate •ntlque farm. hqu1·
d1t10n sales 304-773 5786

Beh1nd Blue Tanen,

Middleport , 0~10

91221

I&lt;UT OUT FOR FUTURE USE!

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All M....

PAT HILL FORD

•Washers •Dithwashera
•Ranges

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1 -13-tfc

PARTS and SERVICE

•Refrigerator~

aOryera •Freezera

4 I lie

9

Wanted To Buy

Wanted to buy A ttat10narv
e1terc11er b1ke Call 614-448-

15

Schools
Instruction

•

YOGA lntere...ted 1n learnrng
about and exper1encmg 1 the
benefits of voga? Call614 iS6·
1454
P1ano lessons, begmning and
1ntermed1ate ttudents -.Call
Tereu Davis at 614-667 6361

18 Wanted to Do

1t83

''

.14m's Odd Job Serv1ee pa1nt1ng,

Buymg daily gold. Stiver coint.
ringt, Jtwetry. tterling w.,e, old
eo1n1. large currency Top prl·
ces Ed Burkett Blfbet Shop,
2nd Ave Middleport, Oh 614

carpenter work sundeclc, s1d111g
roolmg Cell614 379 2418

-

Ouahty roofing Free ettiff'ate
S10 a tquare Contact Ralliiv at

982-3478

6t44466967

Wanttd to buy, at1ndmg timber
Call AI Tromm at 61 4 · 742·
2328

Can do light hauling and roofing
Reuanable rat•• Ma,.on
Snrder 6t4-949-2129

Old h.trnltura, toy• quilts, dil·
hwarre, etc One piece or whole
houlehold c11h paid, 304 876

Grovert Lawn Mower R¥alr
Will p1ck up and dtU"If Good
used mower~ for Hie Call
114 742 2393 or 814 ·742-

72tl ., 875 8899

309t

•

�Monday, Sept~ber 28. 1987

Page-B-.The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

f 111&lt;111Cidl
21

-

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you

do busineu with peOple you
know ; and NOT to send

~One)'

through the mail until vou h..,e
investigated the offering.
Village Cut Rate for sale. Call

Professionl!l
Services

•

1488.

Real

31

Estote

Homes for Sale

Will . help tiliance or 18nd contract. 10 yr; old house. 3 Br.,
Patriot Village. Call 814-4461340, 446 -3870.

eR .. tireplace. tuu basement. 3

m i: so. of Gallipolis. $34,900.
Call Davs -6 1 4 · 446· 1615. aftM
6 :00- 446-1244 .

like new,· mhintenance free, 2
br;. ranch. fully carpeted . 15 min.
to Gallipolis or Mercervitte.
$27.000. Call 614-256-6200

For Sale By Owner- Nice 3 br.
tlome on 2 •cres of l•nd. Heat
pump, central air, rural water.
Price to s.etl . Call 614-3670135 .
SaJ•Rent : Ranch style, large
kitchen. U1ility rm ., single garage. Like new. C•rpBt thru•out.
· Caii614-446· 135B.
4 br., home. 2 aCfes &amp; bldg ..
S400 a mo. Log home, 2 br. off
Sr. 36, 5250 a mo. Virginia l.
Smith Real Eatate 614-3888826 .
Handi Man Special· 5 room and
bath, anie, basement. 110 State
St. Price neg . Call 614- 992·
3725 .
Moctular home. Carter French
residence. Corner of S . Fourth
and Hooker Sts.. Middlepon.
Muat see to appreciate. Call

61 4·992·3293.

Ranch-style houa&amp;. with breath
taking view of river. 3 bedroo~s.
1 \12 batha. full besemer~t . ettached garage. 'Shown by appointment only. 614-992-3850.
6 room house, two baths, new
roof. Nusash windows. garage.
246 N. Founh Ave., Middleport.
Make offer. 614-247-4672' or
614-247-2632 .
7 room house. lol. land contract
or rent with deposit. See Worthy
Bright. Langs\lille, Ohio, Rt . 1
(Danville) .
6 rooms . bath, 1'h acre. Was
527 ,500., reduc'ad to 824.000.
New shingled roof. outbuildin9s,
cellar. Call 614-992 -7453 .
2 o r 3 bedrooms, double lot,
c lose to schools and stores.
518.000 .00. 304-675-7833.
2 bedroom house with basement, garag e. one mile hom Y
on 62 South. 304-675-6638 or
675 -1406.
3 bedroom, family room , large
eat-in kitchen, woodburner, fuel
o il furnace . New Haven .
$20 ,000. 304· 773 -5696 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 970 E1 cone 120Jt65, 2 br., alec.

heat, gas 1tove. refrig . Must
rnove. Financi ng potsible, 10
per c ent down , with approved
credit. S-4500. Call ·6 14-4469955.
1976 Bayview 140Jt70- 2 br ..
front den, po rch&amp;. awning, ac .,
$8000. Call 614-266 -9309.
1971 1211.66 Hallmark. Under pinnin g, partia llv furnished .
S4000 or beat ofier. Call 614388-9759 .
1974 Community 2 br. end bath
with 10x14 add on. Call 614245 -91 03 or 446-7716 .
1981 Nashua 14x64 2 br .,
ref rig .. ttove, underpinning. CA .
Call 614-286-4833 after -6:00

PM .
1976 Buddy 14x55 with 12x32
addition - 3 br .. 2 porches,
u ndeJpinninA. woodburner, antennae. sosbo or best best
offer . Call 614 -446-8427 aher

5.
1 2 x65 . fully carpeted. stove and
d ryer included. Price reduced to
$6800. Call 614-742-2795 or
61 4-742-2777 .

,,

1977 Skyline 141170, all new
carpet and vinyl in hitch en, stove
and ref rig .. 2 BR , 1 1h baths, very
nice. ready to move . $8200.

~IG;) &lt;=&gt; y;;.
~-J:~""'""'.t...:Ja· A .. (?')~

44

41

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnished small house.
Adults only. References required. Off . street parking. Ph.
611' · 4·6 - 033~ -

4 BA'. hou.e for rent. 3 mi. ao. of
Gallipolis. -S 300 a month plus
dep. Ref. required. Cell 614446-1615. After 6 :00PM .. call
446-1244.
4 BR . hous• on 1 acra. Excel
location. Rei. Call A· 1 Raal'
E1t8te Broker. Call 304-6766104 or 676-7738 .

34

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For sale: 9 0.~~:1 1 0 lot in Tw in
Ced ar addition, New Haven,
W.Va. 84600. firm . 304-882 -

3206.

2 Building lot• · 11f.r acres eactt
with cou nt y wat&amp;r. Call 304-

576·2383.

&lt;

Furnished Efficiency $145 . Utili·
ties paid, share bath. 607
Second A\le., Gallipolis Ph.

446-4416 oft• 7PM.

Upstairs unfurnished apanment.
Utilities peid. Carpeted. no child·
ran or pets. Call 814-446·1637

Furni•hed apt , neltt to library.
One profHiionel adult only.
Parking. Call614-446-0338.

46 Spruce St.· Nice 3 br. house
large equipped kitchen. central
air. washer 6 dryer. ND pet1.
Ref. &amp;. Dep . required. $300 a
month. Call614 -•4&amp;-2168.

2 Dr., carpet. Stove, refrig.
furnithed. Washer-dryer hookup . Water. garbage paid. Ne.Silver Bridge. Call 614-446·
7026.

3 br. with g..-age. Rodney II.
$300 e month. Dep. &amp; Ref.
required. Call aher 4 :00 PM

Modern 2 br. unfurnished apt.
No pets. Aef. required. Call
614-446-1873, 8 -6.

614-388-8624.

2 Bedroom hou•e. city, fenced
yd. screened porch. rec. room in
buement. C.all 614-446-2665 .
2 Br. house-full size basement.
fu111l oil furnace in Eureka. $200
per mo. plus utiliti... Call
614-266-6547.

Restored house in country- 2
BR . large living room, good
location. Call614-446-9442.
6 rms . l o. bath. 128 State St.,

*200 mont"ty plusutilitiea. Ret.
Sec. Dep. required. Call
6i 4 -446-0254 .
S.

174 Coal St. or 247 N. Third.
Middlepon. Each with 2 bed·
rooms . W-0 hook-ups. Redecorated. adults. senior prefMred or
1 child. No pets. Reference
required. $165 each plus deposit . Available immediately ,
owner on premises or call
1-2 -1 6· 835-3952 .
3 bedroom . $200. per month.
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Call
between 9 :00 and 5:00 . 614992 -5587 ,
Small 2 bedroom house with
buement and garage unfur nished. n ice yard. Will accept
one child. S235. reference and
deposit. 304-615-2651 .

2 bedroom cottage. 2103 Jefferson Avenue. Redecorated and
new carpet . $225 per month.
Available at once. 304 -675-

4100.

42 Mobile Homes
' for Rent

Plastic cl1t~rn state approved.
ptastic ..ptlc: tanka. plaltic
culverts. met11 cutverts. RON

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Ou11ity firewood. all hardwMd,
for sale. e25 I pick-up toad . Call

111

cash with

Coll614·446-9244.

Furnished apt.- 4 rooms and
bath. Centrally located. Ref. end
Sec. dep. required. Call 614-

446·0444.

2 br., 6 rm. apartment. 661 Third
Ava. Gallipolis. t260 a month
plus deposit. Call 614-245 ·

9596.

Gracious li\ling. 1 and 2 badroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Aplft·
rT.enu in Middleport From
$21 S. including utilities. Call
6,4-992-7787. EOH .

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 814·
446-9680. Rent a&amp; low as $120
month.
Furnished room . $76 . Utilities
paid. Share bath . Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
448-4416 after 7pm.

2 br .. wall to wall carpet. Private
lot in Gallipoli1 . Call 614-4461409 after 5:00PM .

other hourt.

2390.

6 m i. from Gallipolis. Adults
only . No pets. D&amp;p . required.
Call614-448-1642 .
Nice 3 bedroom trailer. large
yard. 314 Jrd. St . Kanauga. Call

614·446·7473.

Tra iler for rent in Tuppers Plains.
3 bedroom. $200 . month plus
depos it and utilities. 614-6673487.

Apartment
for Rent

One bedroom apartment in
Middleport. S1 50. per month
plus utilities. ' Call 6,4· 9925646 days and 614-949-2216
evenings.

Rooms for rent by week or
monttt . Call 614-992 -7521 .

9,30 ·4,30 . 614 -992 ·2353

~ bedroom furnised apt , ref and
deposit , New Haven. W. Va,
30•· 882· 3267 or 304-7735024 .

3 rooms 8nd bath, gas hut,
ground floor, washet' and dryer
hook up , no children. immediate
occupancy. No pets, phone
304-675 -4480 e11t 53 or 60.
Two bed room apartment, 304·

676·2548.

Furnished upper half of duplex,
small. Prefer lingle working
adult. C~rpetfl!d end air condltl·
oned. No pats. Available Oc·
tober 1 . 304·176-2661 .

Save alot-Check us out for
cerpet end furniture. 9x 12
Carpet, 8150 . 6 piece wood living
room suit, 8399 . Mollohan
Furniture. Upper River Rd . Call

614-446·7444.

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. living wood
suites. t399 .95; cheat of draw··
ers. -4 tirawer· t48 , li drawer169.95; met~ress &amp; boA springs·
fullti:r:e: 312 coil. S149 .95 set;
twin mattresses. e95
set.
THE WORKING

MAN 'S FAIENO
Used refrigerators. washBf'l
end dryers, Mollohan Ap·
pliance. Gall61•·4•6 -1967.
Valley Furniture
New and Used furnitUr1 an4
applicancas. Call 614 -44t·
7672 . Hours 9 · 15.
Warm Morning heater . Completely automatic with blower,
natual gu 86.000 btu . See: 87
Vine Gallipolis.
Whirlpool washer. 1915. Kan·
more washer, t96 . Maytag
washer, 1160. Maytag washer
like new. *175. Kenmore dryer,
*95. Frig. dryer, •7&amp;. 40" elec.
range. $75. 30" alec. rangs,
S75 . 30" g11 range. S95.
Harvest gold refrig .. e96 . Wtlhe
refrig ., S95. Small freezer.
*126, Upright freezer, $95.
Skaggs Appliances 579 Upper
River Rd . 614-446-7398.

SURPLS ARMY. DENIM. REN ·

46 Space for Rent

Office Space for rent . Elccel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 614-446-4222 .

Couch end chair, good condition. S400. 304· 876-6713 .

·1 6 hp Vanmar tractor with
mower. Electric cook stove. Call
&amp;14-446-0476 Day. 317,728B
after 5 :00. .
Brunswick pool table, ~ slate
bed. Several Schwinn 10 apd.
bikes. Call 614-441· 8168 after
E).:QOPM.
1 978 J1yco travel trailer , 24 ft .
Good cond ., *3600. S••• XU
Serie1 Camc:orditr, e1000 . 1 yr.
old. Call 814'- 379-217? or
379-28~7 .

1971 Honda Motorcycle 500 T.
Sell or Trtde. 1984 Ford Ea&lt;:ortStendard. Copp•· noM ikagll
pup1. Ca11&amp;1•-317-7230 .
Catalvlic converters , only
$89 .96 . Mo•• mod4tl1 . .lnatalla·
don alto available. Muffl.- Man.
t Stimpson A'le .• Athens. Ohio.
1 · 800-843 -3787.
Mi~ted

h•d wood slabs . e12 per
bundle. Containing appro11 . 1 111
ton. FOB . Ottio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 814-992-1411 .
Floor lamp, 3 light. 810. Exer cise bike. UO. Large 3 stttH
nicely finished bookca1e. t20 . 2
white ceramic Spanish dtcor
e~d 1ab'a lamps
with new
shades. t26 . aach. Call 114992-2413 after 6 :00pm.
Ona third HP furn•e• blower
with new motor for sale. Good
condition. 145 . 'Call 814-992 7288.

Building Supplies

47 Wanted to Rent

Compound Croll Bow Barnett
Thunderbolt with Bushnell
Scope. *ZOO. 304-675-8486.

1i12
Salmer SlgnM 100 Clarlnat.
Plavltd 1 y-ear. Exctl. cond.
U60. Call e1 4 -U8-1 1 155 .

Merchandise

SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE

62

Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group· f399 .
Living room suites- 1199-$599 .
Bunk _beds with bedding- 8199.
Full stze mattress &amp;: foUndation
starting - fJ99 . Re&lt;:linera
ttanlng- *99.
USED - Beds, dresMra, bed~oom
suites, $199 - •299 . Desks
wringer washer, a Complete lin~
of used furniture.
NEW- Wtatern boots- $30.
Workboott e1s 1r up. (Steel 6
soft toe) . Call814-446-3159.

11n Mercury Monereh. Runs
good . Good work c•, t400 . Cell

;

19715 Datsun 710, ·4 dr. Good
c::ond . Auna OO(&gt;d. • n.w tlras.

Struts, t1 tl.ll pair. lnltlled.
Mast mod ..s. Muffler Men. I
Btl,-.paon . Av. . Athtnt. OhkJ.

Qualhy Fruitl and Vegeta~•
retail enct whol ....e. • &amp; S
Produc• aero.. from Pizza Hut.
Gallipolis. Ohia.
Now open all fruits and veweta·
bl... hours 9:00 till 8 :00. JacU
Fruit Mkl. Routali!S , H•nd..-.on.

s...

Or_ Trade: King Stave
People, m.cte tn Gallipolis. pot
b•Uy. Coal burner·cast iton. Call

114·261-1711 .

f 1r11• Supplll ''
/', liVI'Silli.k

Coli 114· 441 ·02&amp;0 . Soli
reason1b...

Ready mill concrMe and all
concrete tuppli81. Call Ul Vall-v
Brook Cement and $upPii81,
304-773-S23 • .

e3160. 1911 Malibu waoon.
one own.-. nlca. t1195 . Call

114·2H·U22.

1916 Oldl Cutll" Supreme.
Fulty IHd.ci. T-top, V-1 . bcel.
cond. 11,000 mil... Cell 114446-1532 . Att• 8:oo- 38&amp;9710

Ferret · 1now white baby ftrrM
n•eds home. C11l Ewein. 814·
446-2004 , Day 814-446 -!UI80,
AKC Reg . German Shepherd
pups. eso. Call &amp;14-448 -0373.

57

Now cu1tbm mtde tar your

B1r1. chains, •nd 1prodteta to tit
almost any uw . SIDERS
EQUIPMENT CO ., Hend•son,

Setmer Bundy Tenor Sax . Used,
good condition, 304-876-1 202.
Kimball Console Piano, UOO.
304-676-8937 after 6 p.m .
Bundy Cluinat and Conn
trumpet. Call 304-882· 3310
after 4 :30 p.m.

r'-----------...:.-----------~

SNAFU® by Bruce. Beattie

Stainlte1 ....... haull syat.,n1.

1810 Bulek Skylatk. 4 door.
Good conditkJn. na rust . Call
1514·MI· 21U 4 .

Gahl 15 Grind• Mber. Flotation
tlr... 2 1ertens. •uotre•ttnaton.
axe. con d. t21500 . 304· 273-

1970 Iuick SkyLark. 2 docN'. VI
Ntometlc. •II n.r•
~tt transmluton, lett mo4"
englna. .new paint. t700 . Call

24&amp;1 .

br8k.•.

78

Now buying shell com or ••
corn. Call far latlll quotas. River
City Ferm Supply, 614-441-

1975 Chwroltt Ceprlu . 4 door,
1ir cond.. n.w tires. e400.

304·11&amp;·4394.

Trucks for Sale

1183 Chevy shon whHI b••4

'

Hay &amp; Grain

Mixed hay 11 . bale on wagon.
Hay for bedding IOc. 304-171-

Awnue.

turbo, auto. trans. Excelt. cond.
Call 114·2•6 -9185 .
1985 F-160 Ford piclcup 4•4.
t6600 . Clll81•-44&amp;-8891 .

71 Auto's For Sale

73

Vans &amp; 4 W .O .

1980 Chevy picltup 4•~ .J;oti ton.
P• .. pb., 4 apd. 59,000 mi.
$3200. Call., 4 -.41-42211

1987 Now-6 cyl ., auto. 1918

Coli 114·915·4324.

Nova, standard.
So..,p.
1110 1871
OMC Plymouth
pick-up.
1981 Olds Cutlaas Supreme, 2

1972 Chevy half ton, 4 wheel
drive, 1uto, good cond. d..,. a ull
304-1715· 4230 evening• 176·

814-441· t 412 ar 441-1462.

· 1985 Cavalier wa11on. Auto, pa,
pb, ac. Cell 114:388-8240 ..

Co11114-371-2721.

1910 Olda. Super 88. lo~
mH•. runs good. Calll14-441-

8306.
1886 8-10 Bluer. 10.000
mil•. Loaded, aMrp. Call 114448-8216. After 5,00 446·
8127.

1983 Jaap Scrambler. 8 cyl . •
black whh .aft tap.
44.1500 Ktual mil•. t&amp;OOO.

4e63.

Coli 814·3B8-8t71.

19i9 Lincoln Mark V. ' E~~:cel.
c:ond. 41,000 mu ... Call 114·

246·9460.

Major League Baseball

CIJ N-lywed Oama

0(1) Judge

iiJl Wheel of Fonune 1;1

Croaatlro (0:30)
Ill ll2l iiJl Jeopardy! 1;1
® Bamay Miller
fl) (!) WKAP In Cincinnati
8:00 ffi Fother Murphy Matthew
and Elizabeth
U (l) iiJl ALF ALF gets a
l!))

special visit tram some cast
member s of Gilligan 's lsland .
Up Denver Broncos at

Cleveland Browns
CIJ ct Cll MacGyver
MacGyver Is coerced into

OI&lt;A.Y! NOW I

YANK lH LEFT
10 RELeASE

stealing

lH lORPEPQ ...

~I'[ VI I l '

1980 Ford Van E150 "cultom
p.~klt; chrome w ..on whHis.
new WSW 1lraa. Cl, e4,100.00.

304-176-1731 '
74

Motorcycles

.vamah• Enduro XT·350 1986 .
Low mlleqe. Call. 814-441-

87a3.

1911 Motor Scooter. Needs
mechanical wotiri, •140. C.ll

614·448·414t .

1112 Honda CX Cultom iOO.
low mil..... boel oond .. wlnd·
ahleld, luggage comp•rtmentL
stereo syostem. c::ruiM cont., 2
MW lui ,.,.. helrMta. . Can

1979 Honda Trllll 90.

tow ma., .

llh now, 0480.00. 30"·678·
t731.
t 881 Hondo Robel 210, fiBO.
304·175·5888.

1--r-K.:,.0..:..:R.,;F,-C,__.,I
1

a priceless Chinese

artifact t;1
(!) America by Dealgn

~.

. I I r I _:
i

_,;.CI' _I;:,..;G~N;..;;lr--11
I 1. I ..""'.~·

~

Pharmacist to new customer:
"This is a time-release medicine.
'-·--'.-.L.-J,..-'-·--'
' It doesn't go off until your .--'--------.,clears: ·

I

T,OKCLE
~-~,.;..:..:,~~~:;-5.:;-1-=-.-1--l 0
\. . _ . . _ _
'----'--'--"--'---'-...1

Comp le:e 1he ' chuckle quo. led

b y fill ing in the mi»ing wo rds
you .d.ev elop lrom step No . 3 below.

' &amp;PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUA RES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETT ERS
TO GET ANSWER

.

'

'

. --- --

-)

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·lETS ANSWEIS
Lunacy - Neway- Ideal.,- Quaint- STAND
Critic In his review of. a newly released film : "The only
snickers were .at the refreshment STAND." ·

BRIDGE

NORTH

1-18-87

+A J 9 4

'7
tJ943

James Jacoby

+AJ 7 2

How can bridge be exciting and
EAST
frustrating at the same time? Florida WEST
+ K 10 6 2
expert Bernie Chazen will likely give +Q83
'AJ32
you today's deal as an example. After 'K!098 S 4
tiO
North-South had reached five dia- t76
+Ql
+
9 8 54
monds, West led the 10 of hearts. Cha·
zen, silting East, won the ace and plotSOUTH
ted his next defensive move.
+7 5
If declarer did not have solid dia- ·
'Q6
tAKQ852
moods, he might also be missing the
+K tO 6
queen of spades. Even with solid dia·
monds, declarer might just have a
Vulnerable : Both
hole in the club suit. And if declarer
Dealer: North
was going to misguess the location of
West
North Easl
Soulb
the club queen, it was necessary that
Pass Pass
the defenders have a spade trick esPass
It
Pass
2t
tablished by that time. ~with no as4t
Pass
st
surance that it was right, Bernie Cha· Pass
Pass PaSs
Pass
zen dared to lead a spade right into the
teeth of dummy's A-J-9-4 at trick two.
Opening lead: • 10
That was the excitement - his partner had the spade queen. Now just let
declarer play a club to the 10, .and
West would grab the queen and lead club queen, he was certain that East
ba~k a spade to set the contract. But bad led away lrom the spade king. After ruffinl a heart and drawing
then came the frustration.
Since South had not fallen asleep, he trumps, he played a spade to tlieiUne.
had no trouble figuring out what had East could win the 10, but any return
been going through Bernie's head. AI· he now made would give declarer his
contract.
though he did not know who. held the

1.

Explore the evolution of the

81

American house, a symbol of
iden1i1)1. 1;1
®I • 1!2) Kala lo Allla Kate

Home
h'l'lprovementl

meets a cab drlver and is
e nvious ot his unstructured

IAIEMENT

lifestyle. E;1

WATE~""OO"NO

!Ill The Grell Space Race

Uncondttfotlal ltfeUme ...,. .
.tM. locll rtf••oes fu............
Fr.. eniMM• - Cell ..._

1·114-237-&lt;Mn. d., .. -

Look at outer space
technology and its impact on
life on our planet.

·

l!))

EEK &amp; MEEK

dep1h feature reports. (t :00)
® MOVIE: The Main Evelll
IPGI (1 :49)
fl) (!) MOVIE: New York,
New York (PG) (2:t 7)
8:30 8
iiJl Veloria's .Fomlly
David lots his date 's
reputation suffer to further

LEAP

m

Firewood. tf" • ltumO ,.......
lf'al, chain Unit tencea. ionulotto•._
soil.
ehruba. O.n ' a
landlcapes .
114-441·

w.,.-..,.

c.n

H41.

his own .
I]) NFL Monday Night

Magazine

AON ' I

Talevi1lan lerwla•.
HouM c.l1 on fiCA. o-ar.
GE . Srl~lj\ In Z-h . eo•

30··· 8-231
2414.

iiJl 1111!21 Everything••
Rela11ve A divorced

consumer behavioral expert

Of , , ._,..._

begins dating his ex-wife .
9:00 m 700 Club
U (l) iiJl MOVIE' 'Assault
and Ma1rlmony' NBC
Monday Night at the Movlea

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HI::'Y, KE;VI N ..

198-3102

YOU R:::Rt:&lt;OT
'ltJUR ('300:6 .

Starke TrM tnd UWft ~
lawn c•t. 1aru'ao.,1,.._ atum,
removal. · 304-171 -2142 or

! WONT BE E;CING

I HAVE ID GOAND
HAVE MY 1DN51L6

10 5CHGOL FOR
A WH ILE .

OJT.

SOME PEOPLE
HAVE AL.l.. THE:
WCI&lt; .

fl Speedworld IMSA GTP
Series from San Antonio,

Texas (R). Auto Racing .

ill Ill Cll .r.ec Monday Night
Foo1ban
(!) II] Amerlcan Maall,.
Group of legendary wits kept

176·2903. .•

WINTERIZAnON
Security Llghu, ltonn Wtndowl. lnsulallon . .-ooftne. Geft.
aral Repairs. 304-1715-1»7.

82

Prlmenewi Wrap ups of

the _day ·s world news and in

,LO'JERS

.... .... . ..

standing lunch date

at

Algonquin HOle!. IJ
iiJl • 1!2) Na\Oharf A fun
loving couple buys a
neighboring house and
makes It into an inn. E;1
l!))l.erry King Uvel In dep1h

~ .

Plumbing
. &amp; H"tlng

interviews with top
CARTER·S PLUMIINO
AND HEATINO

BARNEY

Cor. Fourth and ""-

O.N-•. Ohio

SAIRV WAS AIMIN' TO Fl)(
AN ELDERBERRY PIE FER

441-4477

84

1H SOCIABLE TONIGtiT
BUT Ttl' PORE TtiiNG

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

·-AN' WE WAS
WONOERIN' IF
'IOU ·- Uti ··

1 GOT MV HANDS
FULL RIGHT NOW

15 AlLIN'

Ar-J' ·- Uti··

A.. tctentlal ot comm•ciel wirIng. New service or r...,L
Uctnled elec:triclen. Eltim••
frM. flidtnour Eleotrieel. :J04.

176-1716.

.'

85

newsmak8rs and celebrities .
9:30 ®I CD 1!2) Oeelgnlng Women
Anlhony gets ·his
come·uppance when he
resorts to little white lies.

10:00 I]) Straight Talk
(!) Health Century Look at
heart disease, diablltes end
brain disorders.
®I Cl) 1!2) Cagney and Lacey
A racial killing threatens to
divide the 14th Precinct. 1;1
II] ®News
l!)) Evening Newa A wrap up
of today's news and a IDOl&lt;
stories. (t :OO)
MOVIE: Cannery Row (PG)
(2:00)
t0:30 I]) TBA
I]) Speedw!llkl Oft Road
Racing: Riverside World
Championships from
Riverside, CaiWornla (T)
II] Thla Old Houae
fll IIl Hogan•• H - •
11:00 I]) Remington Steele

General Hauling

ACROSS

5 Backbone

6Wine
1 Caterwaul
barrel
5 Weasel
7 Russian
10 Slain by
city
Artemis
8
African
12 Hand~?ag
beast
13 De.c eitful
9 Trial run
practice
11 Nature's
15 Corrlda
garb
cheer
Mediocre
16Adams or
18
Cadence;
Johnson
rhythm
17 Consent to
19 All set
18 Cheeseparer
· 20 - ·laude
20 Regained
21 Chemistry
conscioussuffix
ness
22 With (Ger.)
23 Esau's land 2( Excavate
27 Oneness
25 Dollar bill
28 "Alfie"
26 Debussy's
star
"La-"
· 29 Boundary
30Account
book
31 Pluvious
33 Rearward
36 Final
37 ·-Clear

a

Dillard Wet.- Service; PD011.
Ciat..-ns. Welts. Delivlfy Anytime. Call 114-441- 7404-No
Sundrt cells.

'

\.()()1{

pools,

clit~~tns.

246·1211.

REFRIGERATOR
PERRY..

w.llt. Ph . 114--

R &amp; II Wat• Service. Home
clsttrs, welll, ~ flllld: For·
marty Jem" loya w.. art.C.H

•(!)Sign
Cil iiJlOff• 0 iiJl - ·

304·876-6370.

"

Paul Rupe. Jr. Water Sli'Wtoe.
Call8,4-441-3171 . Poola,cllt·
w•us.

.•

•rna.

.
'

Watterson's Water tt'•ullnQ,
renonable rat•. lmmMIIMe
2,000 gallon deUvety. clttwna.
paola, 'well, etc. allll 304-17t·

..
PEANUTS

2119,
87

II '

•

3 Extensive
(Tennis
stroke

DAILY CRYPTOQUOO'ES- Here's bow to work It:

NO, MAAM, I WASN'T

Upholaterv

6NIN6 T~E ANSWERS ...

R &amp; M Custom Couot.. eNI
Aaupholl1.,.,., lt. At. 7, Crown

Cky. Oh. 114-211·1470, · -

114·4411·343S, 0 - d... Ito
4'30, 811 . • ,30 to 1,30, 0111 •

n.wUphut-.

Mowrey's Upholet.lne IIMnl
trlcounty.,.a22yean, TtteHa
IJ1 fumltuN up~ 1 Call
304·871-4154 for tr••
eallmatn.
II

,.
,~­

."
i
~

....

1 WAS JUST
LEAKING INFORMATION ..

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

IGDEQG

reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
®Hontymoont..

H L

CD SporteCantlr New1 (L)
1111 M1gnum, P.t.
till Sporte Tonight 'ACtiOn
packed sports highlights with
Nick Cha~es and Jim Huber.
(0:30) .
- --• 1121 •Hunte~ cas Late
Night A Hawaiian drug
kingpin hires a hit man to kill
narcotics dealers.
IIJ) Magnum, P.l. Deja Vu,
Part 1

9128 .

AXVDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

brain disorders.

iiJl Tonight Show

•z
...............................

2 Said

l!1l MoneyHne Current

(l)

mountain

38 Carol
39"Christie"
41 Auto
Trouble

DOWN
1 Tramp

9-28

e

35 British
farewell
37 Greek

40When
business '
is bad
43 Aggregate
44 Ascended
45 Conscious
46 Musical
notes

t!]l Health Cantury Look at
heart disease. diabetes and

e!Il Love Connection

11:30

28 Focal point
30 "Little
White-"
32 Shocking
Victorian
sight
33 Movie
dog
34 Cascade

Day"

10:15 (IJ

·J &amp; J Water 8.-vt~ . Swimming

lt4·441·8042 .. 311-836t,
1 In Plymouth Vol.,a. Good
cond. UOO. Cell 614-143- 440 Kowoukl. Call lto&amp;-441·
eeeo.
0t01 .
19815 Ford Eecort. Good conci.

Memories
(J)

ahead 10 tomorrow's news
spead,

1878 Ford Pinto. 1972 FDrd
Pinto. New Uncoln Arc welder.
Slid•ln truck
camper. Call

THAVE.S

icheers
fl)(!) M"A•s•H
7:051l) AndY Griffith
7:3Q U (l) Hollywood Squares
I]) NFL Moodiy Night

l!l NFL Monday Night Match

._... oeoo. 304-111·211).

Phon• 814-.W8·3111 or 114-

1983 Cadillac Stden Otvllle.
Excel. cond. Loaded. Call anytime 114-388-9718.

dr .. hardtop, nice. 1978 21 ft .
camp.-. 1111 Olda. 442. hardtop. 1 9CI7 Che¥y pick· up. Cell
after 8 :00 PM or eerty AM

Cl •• ., ...... ~-

22 ft . Sttrc:raft, 11100; fNOII

1 Honda Hatc::hup Accord .
LNCMd. Red, 115000. Call 814-1984 Mol:de pickup, 8 -2000
Sundowner. Toppar, air cond .•
a~o .. AM -FM 1tereo c••ett..
34.000 mil•. 14,1500. Phone

''No Flx~P APPR~Sr:

Home•
&amp; Campar1

OOP

1985 Ford Plc::lt-up, take Over
peyments. Call 814-379-2897
ar 378 -2378.

992·6840.

CU~Lycuc:.,.r

oN ''LAIP OFF" ANP

..

Motor~

79

304-p&amp;-6122

Tril 11 spn r I,11111 n

Llfcf: THE

Motor Home - 1173 2• ft.
WinnebagO, 2e.ooo mites. 304676-4164, •• 2114 Jolf..-

Ro..,._, or t*e tool ......
Most well• compleiled Nme4artPurnp eel• and nrvlae. 304-

WO pick-up . 3015 engtne, 350

Quarter Horn Gelding. Vary
good wtth children. Call 8149•9-2682 after7 P .M.

I

1987 Cavali.- R.I ., good c::ondl·
tion. 3CM-1571-2881 .

72

Ouroc 80IIfl . Bred ju.-t like the
boars we IHt.ci at lhl Ohio
Testation that gained over 2.1
lb•. per day. Roger Bentley,
S1bina, OH . 613-1584- 2398.

NOTICE" THE PAINSTA~ING
ATTENiloN Tb DErAIL.
oN TH/: ~E$UJ\1E . .

Camping
Equipment

Fetty T(M Trifni'Nnt ramoval. Call 304-17 · 13131 .

2985.

Livestock

-.

PERSONNEL

614-112·11112. 114·112·7121
or 114-tt2 -&amp;311.

62 Wanted to Buy

t'R,.\NK AND ERNEST·

1971 Otda Delta 81. Auto ,
CI'\.IIMcontrol. e200. Qoodwor\
Cllf . CaH e14·t•t -277t.

Home&amp;lte and Jon' terl!d S~lca
• Suppli•.'
SIDERS EQUIPMENT CO .
Henderson. WV , 304· 875 ·
7421 .

64

; ;:::::;:::;::;;::::;::==
77 Auto Repair

Ohio. 1-800·143·3717.

w, Vo. 304·17&amp;·7421 .

4215.

Cl) 1!2)

.R o t • r • l • • • m a f ' l t
trwc:k. motOr home Of cleuic c:• , WatttprODfintWith llf•tlmt warranty . Muffl•
Man. 9 SUmps.on Ave. , Athena, IWEEPEA end MW"'ti m.ec:M:e

1111 Oldl Omeoa. 4 6oof,
loadtd. e11150. Call 614-742·

&amp;679.

Musical
Instruments

1911 Volkawagon Jen• · GL .
Oood cond. C•ll 114- 441·
0061 .

S .E,

Di8MI - tractor 1973 lntarne1tonal 1151. liva power. IIHP
widefront, t4750 . Ne-w Idea ·
one row corn pidt..-, *I9!S. CaN
11.· 281-11522 .

Dobbs. (0:30)
iiJl Wheel of Fortune

·176-1731

i"

1916 Mercuryl ynx . Excellent
condition. 17. 000 rnll• . AM FM radio. Clt.n .• Bh..-p.
13100. C1ll 814-371 · 2137 af·
t..- 4 : ~0 pm.

1111 Chftette. 1116 Chevat1e,
1e11 Alllence, 1tn MGI,
1 ••• M011te C.,.o, 1113 Niaun
S•ntra. Call114 -441-1110.

63

028.00. -

1912 Cemaro Su'* Sharp,

U.S . 31 W•t. Jac:bon. Ohio.
61-4-211 ·14151 ,
Ma•aey Ferguson. New HoMand.
lush Hog S.t• • S.Vk:a. Ov..40 usN tra~Ofsto c::hooM from
• comJ)I .. e lint of ni'W &amp; uMd
equlpmen1. La;g ... Mlaction In

Ohio.

ahd financial news with Lou

Tlr•, aN MMOMI. 4 tMf'\. rNIII
P231iA7&amp; -11 lneh . all for

1·800·843·3717.

1978 AMC Concord. low _ml·
1-.•. UOO. 1173 Toyota Cel·
ica. nMCb baltery, 1300. can
114·379-21518 .

llllOOGHT I'D ~OW
IJHAT I 1'1(00\ICW AL~

stalled . llloat Forda, Ctlwy
trucks. v.-. 4~~:4'e, Mum.
Man. I Stlmpeon Aw .. AtMna,

1e11 ChlrVY C1price CJ·u tic.
V· l , auto.. ac. tlh, crutse.
11.000 tnilee. but cand .
t211&amp; or 1Ma1 offer. Call 11•·

61 Farm Equipment

fROM M'{ OfFICf.'

York. (0:30)
® WKRP In ClnclnnaU
fl) IIl Too Close for Comfort
6:35 cil Carol Bumen
7:00 ffi Remington Steele
U ~ PM Magulne
I]) SportoCallter New• (L)
I]) Entertainment Tonight
0 Cll People's Court
(!) II] MacNeil/ Lehrer
New1Hour (t :00)
·I!Jl Newe
l!)) Moneyllne Current
reports on world econom ics

Olds ., Pontiac. luk:k. ~ Ford
~a. Calll14-241-1017.

1811 Ch.. y S-10 Ble.., , 4 opd.
32.ooo mlloo. v.,., looct con d.

Canning tomatoh. You pick!
John Hills Farm. letan Falls,
Ohio. Bring cantllners. •4 . per
t.ulhel.

111E&lt; WA'ZiTt !M5KET

Coli 614·379·2.220.
·
360 ChO¥. ongln•· 231 V·l ,

58

1710(). ·call814 -44 -4897 .

1!2)

the entertainment world is
anchored live from New

BudgM Trantmlulons : uHd,..
buih, all typa.. OutnntM 30
deya. Ceah. ancl C.rrv Of iMUI.

1973 Jaguar XJV12 . Fully
equipped Incl. alec. .un roof.
NMR . Call 114-446-4897.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

low to fo rm four simple wo rds I

Beach, Florida·(R)
I]) ct (I) ABC Newtr.!;J
(!) Nightly Bualnesi Report
iiJl ., 0 CBS Newa
II] Colorso... do
l!)) ShowBiz Today News of

buy lunk tranamlaeloN. C.N
.:.l-.:_
...:_;ln.:....
_.:.:II_;01_;1on-:-":_l_olol_o.-;W-o
&amp;14 -441-0111
. . ._...

'f em1ha trunlfMit, good condition , phone304·675· 51151 after
I p.m.

the

•

SportaLook (T)
(!)Dr. Who
t!]l Squa,. One TV_ E;l
® FICII of Lilt
e!Il One Dey It • Time
1:051lJ Allee
8:30 8 (l) iiJl NBC Nightly Newa
I]) Flahlng Fifth Annual
Arthur Smilh KDW

Used and rebuih t,...,..eiont.
lnt.-nalty inspected tnd ...,.,._

Ohio: 1·100·143·3717.

of

word~

Dead

Auto Part1
&amp; Acci!SIOrlll

Bundy .CI•rinet ..-.d c .. Good
condition. 11114·7•2-2187 .

e.

Rearrange letters
0 four
scra mbled

Tournament from Palm

1978 VDIIltwllgM fl•bbh -2 dr.
wi1h 4 speed, Good cond. tBOO.
Call 814 ·U6: 4887.

1986 Plymouth Horizon. Auto.
ac., 4 'dr. 21;000 mH•. U&amp;OO.

51 Household Goods

614-379-2&amp;07.

GAM I

,(!)

114-24&amp;-12a4.

514-448-2588.

For Lease

Buick lk,.lar'k.· New tnt.
8~dy In good shape. •4&amp;0 or
best affll'. Call aft.- 4 :00 PM.

WORD

I:OG I]) c ..zy Lllca a Fo• Duke ia

• Cil I]) 01]) iiJl •
iiJl Newa

-=-------·lc0\lal .. h..- ktts. ' "·" 1ft.

Bundy Clarinet and mu1ic lt•nd.
*225. Excel. cond. Call 114·
.46-1080.

CROSS. SONS

Building Meterial•
Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dow&amp; . lintels. etc . Cl•ude Wln tera, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614 245-6121 .

WANTED TO BUY : Regirtered
Toy Terrier. female . 304-8753638 .

1 2 cubic upright Whirlpool
freezer . A1king &amp;160. Call 304·
675-6701 or come to 2604
lincoln Ave.

71 Auto's For Sale

388·1731.

Utility trailer. aluminum uterior
with top. Ideal for hunting and
camping 1uppliet . S200. 304-

Space for small trail..-s . All
hook-upt . Cabte. Also efficiency
rooms . air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call 304 ~ 773·6661 .

Musical
Instruments

Baautiful4 pc. post..- Quean•ize
Bassett bedroom suitt. lika
new. 304-175-4108 .

8 h . fiberglas• Eagle topper.
S360. 304 -675-6490.

675-5831 .

57

Seaaoned oek firewood, call
304 -675-27!S7 after • :30.

Regittered Chow Chow puppiet, one red and ona black,
1175 .00. call aher 6 :00 J0•675-6799 .

7479.

49

after 6 :00PM.

Two quih tops, three rolls
batting. $56 all by Se1urday.
Pttone 304 -675· 6396.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers . .Call 614-992-

6828.

2 .... Coll614·246·5617

Full blooded. female Chow
puppy, 10 wks., $150. Male
Doberman, 3 yrs., 1100 . Good
watch dog. Call &amp;14-379-2681.

SIGNS : Por1able lighted signs
&amp;299 .; Nonlighted S199. Fre8
Deliverv-Lenel'l. WV 1-1800·
642· 2434; Ohio 1-900·15333463.

Trailer IPICe on Prtval• country
lot in beck of New Haven or
Mason Counties. Ca11304-773-

ti~;~i.~~~;;;r:~==-~;~~~~~

9

EVENING

2383.

7·"

MON., SEPT. 28

U81!Y Sentinel. Page-

Lt4101W IT''5o

Boats end
Motor~ for Sale

76

1 ne

Television
Viewing
•

17 tt. U·HuU 71 HP !venrude
Outbo..-d with trailer. 304·171•

-;:;;:;=:::;;:::=::;::=;;::;:::=

$175.00. 304-67&amp;-1731 '

P:.lfJC:&gt;, ~'LL

11 ft. boat. motor, aftd traH•
and all 1uppll•- e100 or Met
oH..-. Call 114·381·1171.

TAL ClOTHING , (Carhart&amp; 10
per cent over cost) . Original Army Camouflage. H. 0 . " Sam
-;
Somerville' s, Old Rt . 21 . East·
56
Pets for Sale
Aa\lenswood. Fr i. Sat, Sun.
Noon -B:OO ·pm other day1 ap- .
pointments . cell 304 · 273 ·
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
5655 . (KidsCamoutlage) Green Gr o om ing . All breed1 ... AII
Metro.
styles . Julie Webb Ph . 61 • · •460231 .
lntertherm gas furnace, 1 year
old, 52 .000 btu, 1200 .00. Used
Oregonw~tnd Cattery Kennel .
Tappan gas cook stove, good ·CFA Himalayan, Pert;ian and
cond, 575.00. Phone 304. 882·
Si.-man khtens . AKC· Chow
2688.
puppies. New kiHens; Persians.
Call 614 -448-3844 afte.- 7PM .
Elecnolult vacuum cleaner, runs
like new, with attachments.
AKC registered P•kingese ·pupS58 .00 cash or terms arranged.
pies. t76 each. Adult Peking"•·
Phone 304-675-4416
S100. Call814· 446-7920 .

2989.

Office Space for Rent. Excellent
for Anorneys, AcCountant, etc.
Close to Court House. Call
Wiseman Reel Estete Agency.
614-446-36.4 .

76

W•rd wood burner. 12 g'a uge
32" full c.hoke shotgl.ln. Browninq patent. Ca11114-448-3341.

7 mo. old female miniature
Schnauzer, AKC regittered. Cell
614-446-8024 1fter 6 :00 .

F'HO~Ii&gt; ~t-l'T

~'301J , ltl

441·8308.

For Sale: Firewood. Now taking
ordert . Hardwood. Large pickup
loed. Calll14-446: 1-t37.

GE ept size portable wa1h.er end
dryer S225.00 . RCA Whlrpool
trash compactor, like new.

AA Wf!EfJ l!H~

I~

1911 Handa Rabel 210. filled,
1200 mil•. e760. Cell 114-

Big Dakota Farrt} home buih on
your lot, t12.9915 &amp; up . Call
614-886-7311 .

-~5

.Af'CC.OGIZ:6

'lei!'( W€LL 1.6LAO'f'S,

1117 Hill "'I 113. 400 roM•.
lilca new. Must Mil. t320P. Cttl
114·26a· IOO~.

Firewood for sale- &amp;30.00.
pick-up loed. delivered. Call
Roger Mead• 614· 388· 90115
Or 388-9341 .

used

Wfl~~ 'OJ~
f!l3AO{ "P

Coli 614·4d-1711

01600.

614-317.-0689.

614-446-2520.add on tui-nat:e.
Woodburnlng

•

Day, ask for Clif;

·

C,metlry lot for 2 plwsons at
Memorial Gardens. •soo. C•ll

BOJlN LOSER

18&amp;3 Honda V-41. Eni«Ctptor.

EVANS ENTERPRISES. J•c~ ­

son, Oh. 114-281-&amp;930.

M~torcvcl•

74

KIT 'N' CARLYLII ®lly Larry Wright

Conaete block I aU 1iz:•s Yard or
95 inch Kroehler Sofa with · delivery. Mason und. Gallipolis
matching chair and ottoman. _Bioct. Co .. 1231!) Pine St .,
8226 . Call 304-882 ·3125.
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 814· 4412783 .

Acre land , well and sept ~c tank
on land. Amerll;)an eskimo puppial. registered. camper 'railer.
tully equipped. Call 304·576·

Building for Lean: 1.800 sq. h .
2 bedroom furnished apt. for - Rt . ' 7 . Cheshire, Ohio. Call
ront in Middleport. Call 12:00- 614·367-01 3e.
3:00 or after 7 :30 p.m. 814I

Ph. 614·446.

54 Mise , Merchandise

Nice 2 br. apt. Sto\le. rafrig.,
water furnished . • 112 mit .. hom
~ellipolia . 8210 a mo. No pets.
Call &amp;14-446-8038.

_ _ _ _ _..:___ _ ·lc-

Furnished 2 br. Mobile Home.
located in Centenary area. *200
a mo. plus Dep. Call 614· 446-

Sat.

Ouplex-646 Second. 3 br.,living · Tunles- Wevel ..t waterbed enroom-dining room. full elrpet, ' sem~e including heavy duty
new kitchen &amp; bath. Great frame . Like new. 1350 or be11
loccation. $285 plu• utilities. ptfttr . Call614-446· 4220.
Call 614 ~ ••6 - 0690 , 9 ·5. After
A\llcado sofa bed, gold rockBf'
5 :00 614-446-2467.
recliner, orange swivel rocker.
Br.ookside Apartments: 446 - All Early American nyle. Cell
1932 or •46 · 4639. One bed· 814-448-0711 .
room apartment with large
country kitchen , new applian - King Si:r:a Bookcase Wat~bed,
ces, utility room, weter. sewer complete. $239 . Manresa. Wa·
and 1r11t1 ltrvices provided. terbed and Furniture Ware·
house . 98 . Columbus Ad ..
Quiet ern.
Athens, Ohio 45701 . 614 -693Unfurnished apt. for rent, 1275 . 7191 .

Furnished 2BR .. cable availabte,
AC .. river view in Kanauga.
Fosters Mobile Home Park. Call
614-446· 1602 .

APARTMENTS . mobile homes.
houses. Pt. Plee11nt and Gallipo·
lis. 61•· 446-8221 .

Commerci,..l buildings for lease.
Downtown Pt . Pleaunt. Stores.
off ices. A-One Real Ettate.
Caro l Yeager, Broker. Call 304676-5104.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent . Basic rent for 1 bdr.,
S183 .00; 2bdr .• S219 .00. Also
raquired a *200.00 security
dopo1it. CONTACT: Jeck1on
Ea~ates o..,t. Ph 446-3997
Equel Hout-ing OppOI'\Unity.

Unfurnished house, 3 br. Rod·
ney Village II . &amp;275 . Call 614448-4418 after7:00 PM .

992·6084 .
Business
Buildings

GOOD USED APPliANCES
Washers. dryers. refrig•atort.
rang•• · ~. kagg1 Appliances,
Upper River Rd . b81kle Stont
Crest Motel. 61•-448-7398 .

0322 .

Furnished Apt .- 1 Br. 1226.
Utilitin paid. 701 4th Ava.
Ga!lipolit. Call 614 -446-4416
after 8 :00PM .

2 bedroom, upstairt. newly
remodeled. Stove and refrige.-etor furnished. 1200. per month
plus uiUities . $100 . deposit
required. Call 614 · 992-3489
evenings.

0136

Callahan's u•ec1 Tira Shop. Ov..1,000 tlrea. s.lzts12, 13. 14, 1 I ,
18. 11.6. 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .1
Call 614· 2515-82&amp;1 .

Mon. thru

Houn-938 1st Av111. par11y fur nished. S200 per month. Call
614-446-4038 or 4•6·1615 or
446-1243.

1971 Mobile Home, 3 bedrooms, 1 'h bath&amp;. central air,
half acre . Will sel( separate,

Fo r S ale By Own er" 50 acre
farm: 10 acres tillable, 15 acres
pasture. 2 5 acres timber. Farm
pond. Nice 3 br home: central
air, rural water. Call 614 -367-

Apartm"nt
for R e'"nt

Very nice, 3. br. houSe. Nice
neighborhood. ac.. ga1 heat,
dishwasher. 1tove. refrig ..
Wllsher furnished. Call 614446-7025 . LEASE AVAILABLE .

44

Farms for Sale

County APpliance, Inc. Good
uHd appliances and TV ..ta.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat . 814-441-1699. 827 3rd.
Aw. Gallipolis. OH .

90 Days same

2 BR. aPts. 6 closet~. kitchan appl. fu'rnished. Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apts. Call 304· 6715-n38 or
676-610 • .

14•70 Windsor with 14x30
addition. eKC cond, black top
road , epprox 3 acres. Gallipolis
Ferry, 304-675-6930

S10.000. 304·773·6361.

54 Mi1c. Merchandise

credit.
Miles
out
1~::::::::::::r~;;::::;:::::::::::::::-•lapproved
Bula\lille Rd.
Open 39am
to 6pm

614·667·3968.

33

"' v

"Oomlac's new invention
will do the work of · three
women."

- ------.,.-- -

4

-

""""

Hunts Sewing Machine &amp;, Vac·
cuum Sweeper Repair. Parts in
11tock. AU work guaranteed. At
reasonally prices. If you . hi!Ye
tried everywhere else and failed;
give me a try . Call 614-446 -

51 Household Goods.

Sofn and chaira prlcH from
e395 to 1995. Tabl• *&amp;0 and
up to *125. Hide-a -beds t390
to $696 . . Recliners 1225 to
*375. lamps •2a to *125.
Dinettes •109 and up to ••95.
Wood table w -8 chaiu t 286 to
1795. Desk 8100 up to t375.
Hutch.. SotoO end up. Bunk
beds complete w -mattreues
$296 end up to $39&amp; . Baby beds
S110. Mattresses or box springi
full or twin S68, firm 178, and
•as.. Queen sets 12215, King
S360. 4 drawer &lt;:h•t *69. Gun
· cabinets 6 gun. Gas or electric
range •376 . Baby mattres181
*36 &amp; •46. Bed frl!!mei t20,
S30 &amp; King frame f&amp;O . Good
&amp;&amp;lection of bedroom suites.
metal cabinet1. heMiboarda t 30
end up to S65 .

614. 949 - 2140 before 5 :00
p.m. 614, 949 -2220 evenings.

23

Monday, September 28. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·s

R

HL

T

I D D

QDDA
LIXTOQR

SRBHRFRA
I D D

G T F R

'·

A R T B

I IJ

ODIGHOQ

LIXTOQR

I D

GTNNRORA .

IGDCTL
GTXAK
Yeeterday's Cryptoqaote: WHEN YOU HAVE A

NUMBER OF [)ISAGREEABLE DUTIES, ALWAYS DO
THE MOST f)[SAGREEAHLE FIRST. ·-· JOSIAH QUINCY

�,.

Monday, September 28, 1987

Pomeroy...:..Middleport, Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Twins,
Giants are
in playoffs

Quirks in .the news_____
Weddlqg bells
can rtn, ·ln a
hospital, too
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPIJ- An
emergency app&lt;&gt;ndectomy could
not keep Danny Rogue from
getting married, but it kept him
from showing up at therecepflon .
"I feel really bad Danny won't
be at his own reception." said the
19·year-old bride, Kathy VIlle·
gas, "but we couldn 't let all that
food go to waste ....
Rogue was admitted to High·
land Hospital last Monday with a
ruptured app&lt;&gt;ndix. The op&lt;&gt;ra·
lion was termed a success and
doctors told the 18-year·old bridegroom he could check out In time
for his Saturday wedding.
But while he was putting on his
black tuxedo, Rogue developed a
slight fever. He was then advised
to remain at the hospital.
"We couldn't postpone · our
wedding." VIllegas said. "Our
families sp&lt;&gt;nt too· much money
already."
So they simply moved the
event to the hospital's small
chapel. The reception. however,
was another matter. It was too
big to be moved to the hospital , so
while Kathy celebrated, Danny

Sun almosl
ruins fog salute
PACIFICA, Calif. I UP I I
When Pacifica lrled to celebrate
Its reputation as one of the
nation's foggiest cities, the sun
came out and darn nl'ar ruined
the whole event.
The sun, rarely seen In this
coastal city just south of San
Francisco, was out In full force
Saturday , Organizers had • ex·
peeled their ~sual chllly blanket
of fog when they selected the
weekend of Sept. 26-27 for the
fair.
" It looks like a disaster for us,"
groaned Mayor Jon Ga!ehouse.
•·sun. Who would think!!?"
Fog Festival organi ze r s
cranked up fog machines to
create a few pathetic puffs of
mist so that at least a partial
cloud hung over the festival' s
feature event, a parade down the
city's main street .
Thf,' festival , which attracted
several hundred p&lt;&gt;ople to visit
bOoths and exhibits and watch
belly dancers, was the cr ea tion of
newspapl'r publisher Blil Drake.
who noted that other towns In

PENN YAN, N.Y. (UP II Th&lt;' world 's largest pancake was
coo ked before an estimated 5,000
p&lt;&gt;opte, and many of them helped
eat the 28-foot buckwheat hot cake slathered In butter and
maple syrup .
Th" Birkett Mltls claimed the
world record for the mons trous
pancake Sunday, des pit e a few
rather large holes. beca use it
was edible and it flipped over on a
griddle containing 15 gallons of
·
cooking oil .
The batter some 2.000
pounds or buckwheat and 2.000
ga llons of water - was poured
out a new cement mixer, a nd the
jumbO flapjack wa s flipped over

The closing of lhe Bob
Evans Steak House on East·
ern Avenue In Gallipolis was
done queltly and with no
scheduled ceremony. Above,
Bob Evans, left, Herb Bush,
formerly cOo-owners and operalors of the steak house tend
the grill, while Bush's wife
Pauline talked to customers.
Mrs. Bush was formerly a
waitress there when It was a
12-stool diner. At left, steak
house manager Jesse Johnson
prepares to lock lhe door as
the last two cuslomers who
entered the establishment,
leave. They were Steve Wal·
lis, center and Mike Fulks,
both of Gallipolis. Below, lhe
clock above llie grill reads 10
p.m., while a worker cooks
and a customer has a final
dinner al the counter . The
steak house was a 12·stool
diner back In the 1940's and
50's, and has expanded lo 184
restaurants In II stales. ( OVP
photos by Lee Ann Welch)

By Cindy Oliveri
County Extension A1ent
Home Economics and 4·H
Is your family In the market
for a new major appliance or
have you recently purchased
done? This week's In The Spot ·
li ght takes a look a t numbers on
appliances and t.he pros and cons
of service cont r ac ts.
Numbers , numbers. numbe rs
- there ar&lt;' so man y to keep
track of in our fast-paced world
today . As we a ll know , thenumbers do serve a purpose -they are .
a key to making things happe n,
. a nd getting things done . And as a
!zed you can keep th&lt;' numbers In
your life. the mor£' control you
ca n have .

Record and save two sets of
numbers from all the major ap·
pllances In your home- the rna·
del number and serial number .
Saving these numbers ca n help
make your world a little easier .
Every a ppliance ha s both a
model number a nd a serial num·
ber. With them. the manufac·
turer of the product can det er·
mine all the pertinent informa ·
lion abo ut your appliance.
The model number designates
the s p&lt;&gt;clfic features and styling
of the appliance , and the serial
number tells the manufacturer
exactly when and where th e unit
was produced.
When the manufactu rer knows
beth numbers. It makes any effort s to satisfy your applianc&lt;'
needs much easier, whether your
appliance requires se rvice , or i(
you have questions about how It
operates, or If you just want add!·
Ilona! product literature. And be·
sides helping the manufacturer,
the model number and serial
number are invaluable to the
dealer who sold you the appli ance, or the technician calling on
you to service the unit .
Where do you find the model
number and serial number? The
location varies. dep&lt;&gt;ndlng on the
typ&lt;&gt; of product and the manufac·
turer. Most manufacturers make
It easy to find- lor example, in the
fr.ont of every use and care guide
for some products Is a product
sketch showing the location of lm·
portant features, and also the loca·
tlons of the model number and serial number.
Find the numbers, !dally on the
same day your appliance Is In·
stalled. Write them down, either

•

at y
Vol. 37. No.99
Copyrighled 1987

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 29, 1987

In a spe&lt;-lal book designated for
that purpose. or on the use and
card guide.
Keep the numbers with the
sales receipt and a copy of the
product warranty' In a safe, but
handy place. (Don' t forget whrre
you put them! )
it's true numbe rs are poppln !(
u·p every w~ e re. a nd mean more
and more to every consume r .
But s mart consumers will know
how to use lmpo'rtant numbe rs
when th ey' re needed . so that
they ca n do the work they are
meant to do.
Along with the purcha se of a
new a ppliance you may be offered a service contract. A ser·
vice contract lor your new appli ·
a nce is an insurance policy
against the future cost of malnte·
nance a nd repairs. But , Is a ser·
vice contract a good Invest ment ?
The answer dep&lt;&gt;nds on the contract cost and f!'atures. typical re·
pair and mainte na nco' cost.s for the
appliance. and the expected frequency of servicing.
Evaluate the service contrac t
carefully. Compare what the
contract covers with what the

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Slaff
Meeting In spec ial session
Monday even ing, the Meigs La·
ca l School District Board of
Education a dopted a perm anent
appropriations resolution total Ing $9,.352,493.35 fo r the 1987·88
fisca l year.
Treasurer Jane Fry in ex plai ning aspects of the resolution to
board members reported that the
appropriations Include no fund s
lor salary increases for the fiscal
year a nd no money for the
purc hase of school buses . Approria !ions for ullllt v cos ts were
sli ghtly Increased 'over lh!' pa s t
yea r 's reso lution as were fund s
for tex tbOoks, the treas urer sa id .
Brea kdow n of the r e ol u lion

passed Monday night includes : beard member, Robert Snowden,
gen!'ral fund , $6,938,433. 71; sp&lt;&gt;· · casting the dissenting vote.
cial revenue funds, $740,289.87;
Mann' s father, David fV!ann, was
debt service funds, $966,514.64:
present f(lr the meeting.
capital project funds, $281.66;
The Manns' recently were
e nterprise funds , $555,906.26, and
determined to be residing In lh&lt;'
fiduciary funds, $151,067.21.
Meigs Local Sch6ol District on
The board accepted the resig·
the Flatwoods Road but their two
nation of Angela Baker as a
c hild ren have been attending
subs titute teacher , but went Into
Eastern Local Schools. Recently.
!'xecutlve session to consider
it was ruled th at the Mann
employing Nora S. McGuire as a
children must attend Meigs Lo·
t!'acher in the high school bus!·
cal Schools or they were subj ect
ness and office education depart·
to becoming tuition students in
me nt as of Oct. 5. ln open session
the Eastern Distric t if they
the board approved the employco ntinue to attend there. Accord·
ment of McGu ire.
lng to last ni g ht' s decision, the
· Th!' board at a 3·1 vote
board rel!'ased the e ldes t Mann
a pproved r eleas ing Mark Mann, · c hild, Mark. for transportation.
a senior a t Easter n High Sc,hool but did not releas e the Mann's
for tr·a ns porta tion purposes with
dau gh ter who is" sophomore at

Eastern High School. Accorcling
to the decision , if (he Mann' s
daughter continues to attend
Eastern Hig h School. s he. would
not only do so as a tuition studen t
but her parents will have to be
responsible for her transporta·
lion to and from school. Th e
Manns have resided in their
current home for five years, but
it was only recentl y de te rmined
that the home Is in the Meigs
Local Di strict rather th a n the
Eastern Local District. Board
member, Bob Barton commented that he was in fa vor of
releasing all of the students
involved fo r transportation purposes . Two other children of
a nother fa m ily and in lower
grades in thE' Eas tern District

If you're like most people, tl;le equity in your home is
your largest asset. With a Home Equity Loan. you can
turn that equity into cash. The money you borrow
may be tax-free and the interest is fully deductiblethe only con1umer loan that retains this advantage
under the new tax law.
·
To tap your "hidden resources". call Judy Northt,~pat
875-1121, Helen Fields at 773-6514, or Jim Layne
at. 882-2135 .

PEOPLES

OCTOBER 1, 2 &amp; 3
6:30P.M.
'

·- .

--~

---- -

M£MilR F.D.I.C.

BANK i

"The letter lanlr"
~

•

Sleond Stl!llt
"lltlll, W. VI.

773-5514

Jackson Annut
Point l'lll...t W. VI.

675-1121

Slh Annut
N111 Hl*l, W. ¥1.

882·2136 '

..

~1&lt;;r1 t

,:·
ASSIST IN RESCUE OI'ERATIONS - Volunteer firemen,
paramedics and a s heriff's deputy are on the scene trying to repair.
some of the d:Lmage done to Gallipolis Fire Truck No. 65 In an
accident Monday :LitPrnoon, at the residence of Clovis and Phyllis

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

are involved in the problem of
lion were hoiding a meeting at
having attended th&lt;' Eastern
the Meigs ,Junio r High School,
District while they reside in the
near the Central Office where'the
Meigs District. Under the pres'
board or education wa s in session
ent situation the Eastern Distric t
Monday evening. It wits reported
will receive not only state funds
th at the teachers will co ntinue in
lor the Mann children but also the
their prese nt sta tus with their
tuition which they will now have
negotiating team handling the
to pay If they continue classes in
details.
the Eastern District.
Teachers, whose co ntra ct ex·
The board then moved into
pired on Aug. 31, 1987, r!'ached an
another executive session to
impasse on negotiations and are
discuss negotiations, personnel
now into federa l mediation . The
and finances . Attending the
federal mediator is requesting
meeting were Supt. Dan E .
another session between the
Morris, Treasurer Fry , and
negotiating teams of the teachers
board m em bers·, Snowden, Bar- and the board sometime within
ton. Larry Rup&lt;&gt; and Dick · the next week
Vaughan.
Non-certified l'mp loyees.
· Meantime, members of the
who se 'two year cont ract a lso
Meigs Local Teachers Associa·
. Continued on Page ~

.

~~

Doerfer on Ohio 588, less than a quarter of a mile west of the
Gallipolis city limits. Bob Donnally, the fireman driving I he truck ,
was laken by the EMS to Holzer Medical Center, wh er e he was
treated and rel eased for cuts to his scalp. (See page 6 for news
hrie()

Middleport Village has filed its
application with the Meigs
County Commissioners for a
community block grant totaling
· $9200 for 23 handicapped curbing
ramps in the business section of
the town .
Mayor F red Hoffman reported
that the application was filed
with the commissioners when
members of Middl eport Council
met in regular session Monday
evening. The mayor read a
supportiv.e letter from Meigs .
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans, commending oflicials
on their request for such a grant
and that- letter . was flied along
with the application.
Council gave third readi ngs
and approved ordinances increas ing the water and "ewage
rates in the town and informally
agreed not to hold trick or treat
night again this year with the
hope tha t t he Middl e port
Chamber of Commerce will
stage ,, ~ Halloween part y for
young people to replace the t rick
or treast activity.
Mayor Hoffman announced the
official groundbreaking for the
tow n' s new h!'alth care center for

3:30p.m. on Oct. 8 at the site on
Pa.;e St.
.
Announcement was made of
the renewal or the town 's p&lt;&gt;rmit
to continue Its sewag&lt;' disposal
system since the village has
complied in preparing plans for .
improvements recommended by
the Environm ental Protection
Agency . Mayor Hoffman read a
second communication from the
EPA indicating that a pretreatment program once suggested is no lon ger requ ired.
Mayor Hoffman and council
members commented favorably
on the recent block party staged
· by the Middleport Cfrai'rlber ·of
Commernce and Councllman
Jack Satterfield issued a sp&lt;&gt;cial
commendation to Bill burst and
his crew no t only for their work
with the block party bu t for tree
trimming of ornamental trees in
the business section . The fire
department hosed the streets
prior to the part y a nd was
commended by of.ficials foi' the
work.
Councilman Bob Gilmore reported that the car show, postponed during th&lt;' block party due
Continued on pa ge 6

Pomeroy waste treatment plant project referred to state
By Ni\N('\' l ' OACHMI
Sentinel Staff Writer
Thr Ohio Attor·ncy G&lt;' neral' s
off ice may be plac ing Pomeroy
on a flxf'd date . com pliance
sc- hedule to ensure th a t improvement s wi ll .be mad e 1 the
pla nt.
Po meroy Village Council met
Monda y night In s pc ial sess ion
to discuss a letlcr fr om Richa rd
L. Shank, direc tor of the Ohio
Env ir o nm e nt a l Protect io n
Agency. a dvisi ng the m tha t he
ha ' made ' the decision to refer
Pomeroy to the atlorney g&lt;Cneral

THERE MAY BE A FORTUNE
HIDDEN IN YOUR HOUSE!

OLD FASHION TENT REVIVAL
INTERSECDON OF ST. R~. 681 &amp; 124
IN IEEDSVIW.
. SPECIAL SINGING EACH NIGHT
SPONSORED BY GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH
TORCH OHIO

'

v ill age 's wast ewa ter t J'eat m ent

OUR MASON LOCATION

2 Sections 12 Pages

·Middleport _seeks
grant for project

warranty provld~s . SlncP wai,
ranty coveragP Is part of the
purchase price. It Is essentially
" free" protection.
Docs the cont rart cover pre·
ventlve maint enance. c leaning.
adjustments or similar serviC·
,lng? Is the buyer paying lor
Pxtras. such as a news letter. that
may or may not be wanted?
What are the llmltatl(lns of the
service contract?
Ask about the lim&lt;' p&lt;&gt;rlod of
th!&gt; contract , maximum number
of repairs or service calls , de·
du c tlbles , charges for ln·homc
e rvlce. or se rvices tha t are not
covered . What mu st the bu yer
do, s uch as malnt e n~nce , to keep
the c ontract valid? Where Is servici ng available under the con ·
tract?
Investiga te who Is providing·
th e ~e rvlce con tra ct. The service
contra ct ca n be provided by the
ma nufacture r . the dealer or an
Jndep&lt;&gt;ndent company sp&lt;&gt;clallz·
lng In servt ce co ntracts . The ·
company should be a ble to pro·
vld&lt;' reliable sNvlce for the life
of th e contract.

Chance of rain tonight. Low
near 60. Cloudy, windy Wed·
nesday. Chance of showers .

Meigs board adopts 1987-88 .appropriations

ga llons of maple syrup was
poure d on it. It was divided into
7,200 servings and they were so ld
by a lbca l church for Sl each.
Th e huge hotc a ke co nt ained L 7
"We've had a lot of fun with
million
calories. wit hout the
this . Wh o knows, ·if someone
er
a
nd
syrup.
.
butt
breaks this rec ord we would
The
lates
t
edition
of
the
Guln·
consider trying it again," said
ness Book of Wo rld Record s lists
Wayne Wagner . pt'esldent of the
J im Hilton o( St. Albans, Vt. , as
buckwheat mill. who flipp&lt;&gt;d the
holding the hon or for the largE's I
bill for the big hotca ke.
State Police said about 5.000 pancake lo r his August 1984
creation mea suring 20 feet In
p&lt;&gt;ople watched the ~igantlc
diameter.
pancake being made at second
But that record was ec lipsed In
a nnual Buckwheat Harves t Fe&amp;·
Marc
h when three men In Engtlval In Penn Yan on the Yates
land
cooked a 25·foot pan ca ke,
County fairgrounds.
sa
ld
Clifford
Orr, vice president
A 2- foot-by-3-root pat or butter
·
of
Birkett
Mills
.
was spread on the flapja ck a nd 15

Hindu text

An individual taxpayer may deduct
capital losses up to $3,000 against his
ordinary income. However, It takes U
of net long-term capital loss to get $1
offset agai~st other income.

7409

.Page 3-4

about an hour later by a 75· ton
construction crane, which lifted
it off the griddle.

Looking for the right appliance(

busy consum er , the more orga n·

Capltalloue•

429

ln the spodigl::tr

•

The sacred text of HinduiSm Is the
Veda, including the Upanishads, a collection of rituals and mythological
and philosophical commentaries; a
vast number of epic stories; and a
great variety of other literature.

Daily Number
Pick 4

Buckwheat mill cooks largest pancake

Closing night
at steak house

Hunter course
iilated Monday
.
POMEROY - A hunt er sa fety
course Is being offered Se pt . 28-29
and Oct. 1-3 on the second floor of
the Pomeroy Munic ipal Build·
lng. Classes will be held 6 to 9
p.m. on, Sept. 28·29 a nd Oct. 1·2.
The Oct. 3 class will be from 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 cal ling
John Costanzo at 843-5405 or
992·3883 during the day .

California find reasons 10 ccl&lt;'·
brate everything from poison oak
to prunes.
.
.
" I do not wish for other kmds ot
weather," said Harriet Talan ot
San Francisco, who founded a
group called Fog Worship&lt;&gt;l's
Consortium. "It's not depreS$·
ing. I've met a Jot of depressed
people in sunny climates .
•
"There's something abOut t h&lt;·
fog that is magical. that Is
conducive to meditativ e
thinking."
Added Morris Fisher. mayor or
Pacific Grove, the Monterey
Peninsula city that recently beat
out Pacifica for the title Foggiest
City in California :
" It's the best : I can't Imagine
what It would be like to wake up
every day, look out and say, 'Oh~·
another nice day ." '
•·
In addition, the fog iS key to the
economies of beth the Pacifica
and Pacific Grove areas. ArU·
chokes are grown in both areas
and the farmers who grow the
exotic thistles wur tell y ou that·
artichokes thrive in the fog and
shr·ivel when there Is too much
sun - sort of like I he local·
reside nt s.

recuperated.

Ohio Lottery

in response to the inability of th&lt;&gt;
Iced surprise that th e ques tio·
vi llage to complete the necessary
naire had not been completed ,
improve ment s to the treatment
since they had di sc ussed the
plant bdore the .July 1, 1988
mato er In past meetings and
compliance deadline. Shank said
ord ered then that th e necessary
tha t becau se th e villa ge will not
informatio n be provided by the
meet the deadline . " a fixed date appropr iat e entitles a nd submit co mpli ance schedule mu st b£'
ted to EPA .
established In a judicial order."
Mayor Richard Seyler said he
Seyler sa id the questlonaire
i~ s ur~ th a t E PA Is Involving the
had been comple ted once but that
atlorney ge neral because the EPA was not satisfied with
village did not complete and es timated answers regard ing the
re turn on tim e an EPA requested flow rat e of mat erial presently
questionalre.
being processed through the
Councilman John Ander son village's treatme nt plant, and
and other council members vo· · regarding the dis posal or waste

produc t (sludge ) from the pres·
syst&lt;'m . S!'yler sa id the
lnformaJion should ha ve been
provided by the beard of public
affairs and Reed Will , head oft he
water departme nt. However, he
pointed out, accurate lnforma·
l ion in regard to flow rate is not .
available, b!'cause th e flow meter on the pres&lt;'nt system has not
worked for many yl'ars. In
regard to di sposal of sludge,
Seyler said It is s till being
discharged into th e river, which,
just a few years ago, was the
approved method of disposal.
Seyler said he has been trying

ent

to co mplete the ques tiona ire
himself, but that it is only in draft
form a nd still needs to be typed.
If the villa~e is placed on a
fixed dat e compliance sch!'dule
in a judicial order, Seyler said it
is his understanding the village
could be fined if compliance
dates are not met. Seyler also
anticipates that state auditors
. may be sent to review village
books and determine where
spending cutbacks and revenue
increases could be made, in
- order to provide money which
could be applied to treatm ent
pla nt improvemenls .

Although no clear cut plan of
action was appar e nt from
Shank's lett er in regard to lh&lt;'
fixed date complia nce sc hedule ,
council decide d that the mayor
s hould immediately contact the
Attorney General's E nvironmenta l Enforceme nt Section to nego·
tia.te the term s of the schedule.
Councilman John Anderson
further suggested that efforts be
made, and given the highest
priority , to repair the existing
flow m eter so tha t accurat!'
measurements may be ta ken and
the data submitled to EPA .

Henry Ford II, 70, succumbs Ohio lawmaker calls for talks
to·continue until strike settled
DETROIT tUPl ) - Henry Ford 1!, ~randsonof
the man who helped put lh&lt;' world on wheel s and a
legend in hi ~ own rig ht , died tod ay at Henry Ford
Hos p!laL He wa s 70.
A hospital s pokes man said Ford died at 7: 21
a. m .. 17 days a ft er he was transferred to the
hospital named lor his gra ndfa ther. He had been
listed in "very seriou s" condition with pneumonia
a nd rela ted complications .
Ford, who took cont rol of th e Ford Motor Co.
from his gra ndfather In 1945, had been hospital·
!zed since Sept. 9 when he was admitted to Cottage
Hospital In Grosse Pointe Farms' after becoming·
Ill In Europe. He was transferred to Henry Ford
Hospital in De troit on Sept. 12 .
' He was suffer ing from " ,o rganizing pneuma·
nia ," In which fibrous tissues form In the lungs
and Inhibit o~yg&lt;'n from entering the blood·
stream , Last week his kidneys began to fail, so he
was placed on dialysis to clean wastes from his
blood . He also was on a respirator to assist
breathing.
Ford Is survived by his third wife, the form!'f
Kathleen DuRos s; one son, Edsel B . Ford 11; two
daughters, Charlotte Downe and Ann Scarbo·
rough; six grandchildren; on&lt;' brother, William
Clay Ford, a principal owner of the Detroit Lions;
and a sister; Josephine Buhl Ford. Another
brother, Benson, died several years ago.
A statement released from Ford Motor Co.
headquarters in suburban Dearborn said a

private funeral for family members is being
planned . A memorial service In Detroit for friends
a nd associates will be he ld In about two weeks .
Ford was one of the last gr&lt;'al dynastic barons of
American Industry. His three decades atop Ford
made him th&lt;' longest reigning absolute ruler of a
major U.S. corporation and he wielded awesome
power inside and outside the industry .
He resigned as Ford chairman In March 1980.
making way for a new management tea m with an
International orientation , and completing his
gradual retreat from the absolute power he
wielded over the company for 34 years.
· Ford stepp&lt;&gt;d down as chief executive off!c!'r of
the company ln1979. He continued as a member of
its board of directors and as chairman of the
finance committee unHi he reached age 651n 1982.
In his final years, Ford spent much ofhls time at
his home In Henley on Thames, England . He also
owned homes In the exclusive Detroit suburb of
Grosse Pointe and Palm Beach, Fla.
Like his grandfi!ther, automotive pioneer and
Ford Motor Co. founder Henry Ford, his name
was recognized the world over for the millions of
cars and trucks that rolled each year from
manufacturing plants on six continents.
Ford was a third-generation mi!Uonalre, a
high-pressure business tycoon and sometimes
jetsetter who was dogged by controversey .and
conflict both in public and private life.

,.

'I
)

By BRANT NEWMAN
tJnlted Press International
Rep. James Traflcant, D-Ohlo,
Is suggesting that striking
teachers and public school offi·
cials In Youngs town begin continuous negotiations In an attempt
to end their three-week Iaber
dispute.
Traficant said Monday tha t
Intermittent talks with a federal
mediator have not gone far
enough toward resolving the
contract Issues that have kept the
city's 15,000 public school students out of their ci assrooms
since Sept. 9.
"I think It's time for the
principals to get In a room and
not come out until It's settled,"
Traflcant said. " This situation
has gone on way too long."
Mediator David Thorley
showed no signs of optimism
Sunday after the most recent
meeting with schOol district
bargainers and representatives
of the 1,043-member Youngstown

·,

Education ASsociation.
Thorley presented his own
set tl!'ment proposal, calling for a
pair of 2.5 percent pay raises in
the first year of a thre!'-y&lt;'ar
pact , followed by two annual
salary hikes of 5 percent each.
However, school o!!icials said .
negotiations broke down when
the teachers asked the board to
Include an early retirement
buyout plan. The YEA also
proposed the hiring of new
elemen iary education specialists
this year.
Walter Pyle, school district
treasurer, satd the city schools
would have a difficult time
finding 'the money to finance the
suggested pay raises, let alone
fund the teachers ' · other
proposals.
"As far as I'm concerned,
things went backward," Thorley
said after the session. "We've
regressed."
Meanwhile, public school
teachers In Xl'nla and Lima are

preparing for Oct . 5 walkout s.
Contract talks are scheduled
for Wednesday in Xenia , where
310 union teachers are seeking
improvements In sa lar y, m edical Insurance and ex tra- dut y
pay. The · d istrl ct h~s 6, 325
students.
School officials a nd represe ntatives of the 450- member
teachers union in Lima also are
scheduled to resume bargaining
Wedn!'sday. The teac hers. who
want a one- year contract instead
of a two-year pact proposed by
the school board, have been
without
labor agreement for
several months.
.If the teac hers strike, Lima
school officials Intend to hire
substitutes to teach the di strict's
6, 989 students .
At Shawnee State University in
Scioto County , 65 faculty
members plan to strike Friday
unless continuing talks with a
federal mediator yield a contract

a

~ettlement.

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