<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12629" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12629?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-02T13:04:58+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43601">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/a357dc3447f2419e024d1ec51da0c863.pdf</src>
      <authentication>770c7a68728682b0db7fe15abb884e3d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39610">
                  <text>. ..

I

•

~·

..

'

Ohio .Lottery.
Grid

•

Daily Number
355
Pick 4
8598

•
prevtews

'
•

Pages 4-5

-

.

\

l --

,j

e

Vtlt.•!J?';•~hi~1'0 1

.

-'

.

.a1

Super Lotto
12-18-19-25-32-38
(

-y.

2 Sect ions 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 1,' 1987 .

Copyri hted 1987

Lo~ tonrght in mid 40~.
Variable cloudiness Friday .
Chance of shower~. llighs
near 70.

A Multimedia Inc.

25 Cents
.

N~wspaper

Commission .receives nine grant applications
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
Nine applications from various groups in the
county have·been submitted to the Meigs County
Commissioners for Ohio Department of Develop__ment Community Development Block Grant
funding. The commissioners reported on the'
applicf!'tons Wednesday.
Applications have been submitted by Middleport Village, requesting $9,200 for handicap
access ramps on sidewalks; Chester Fire
Department; $7,000 'for fire fighting equipment;
Scipio Fire Department, $6,200 for fire fighting
equipment; Sutton Township and Pomeroy
Village combining efforts for $16,959 to pave
Welshtown Hill Road; Racine Village, $4,863 for
park equipment; Syracuse Vlllage, $6,400 for
improvements to London Pool; Pomeroy Village,
$9,800 for sidewalk improvements in the down town area; Rutland EMS, $9,624 for alterations to

• Village, $9,630 to
their EMS building; and.Rutland
resurface Depot St.
Altogether, the county will receive ~92,400 in
CDBG funding. From that total, administration
costs mttst be subtracted, as well as a $20,000
· pledge made earlier• by the commissioners to a
revolving loan fund to be used as match money for
state funding for ,a potential new business. That
will leave $63,000 to be divided among the projects
chosen from the nine. According to CDBG requirements, only eight projects may be funded
by the board.
The commissioners said they still need
clarification from the. state as to whether eight
projects can be funded in addition to the $20,000
pledge, or if that pledge must be included as one of
the eight.
Deadline for .submitting CDBG applications to
the commissioners was Tuesday . F,inal public

hear ing on the CDBG program ~ill be next
Wednesday, 1 p.m., In the commissioners' office,
and final application to the state must be
submitted by the commissioners by Oct. ~0.
Other business conducted during Wednesday's
·meeting included the following.
Discussed with Sidney Edwards, director of
Ga llia-Meigs Commuhtty Action Agency, the
possibility of relocating the. C.A.A ..-.Outreac)l
office on the ground floor of the courthouse to
make room for the plat map of(icewhich is in need
of space. The former Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services building on Union Ave. was suggested as
. a possible office (or C .A.A. Outreach. A decision
on the move must be made as soon as possible.
Granted permission to Southern Ohio · Coal
Company, represented by Buddy Williamson, to ··
build a private access road off County Road 52 in
Salem Township.
Passed a · resolution to vacate. for public

convenience, an a lley running east anad west
between lots 8 and 9 in Tuppers Plains, as
requested by a group of Tuppers Plains property
ow ners. The commissioners viewed the alley
W,edne$day morning. There were no negative
comm~ nt s given during public hearing on the
__
;-'
.
proposal.
.
County Engineer Philip Roberts agreed to meet
next Wednesday with Everett Schultz, Olive
Township trustee, to check on the possible
widening of a one-land bridge on Rice Run Road.
Schultz said he has received reports of several
near accident!- on the bridge.
Roberts told Commissioner Manning Roush
th&lt;Jt he is In the process of working out an
arrangement to purchase used guardrail from the
contractor on the Route 33 improvement project,
to use along some county roads, including County
Road 20 where guardrail is broken.

Meigs to iake part .in sntall
business revolving· loa~ fund
Meigs to participate in sn;tallbusiness revolving loan fund
The potential for creating new
and expanding current small
businesses in Meigs County has
. been increased With the approval
of a sizable grant to Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regional
Development District for establishment of a low -interest revolving loan fund for small
businesses.
Commissioner Richard Jones .
reported WednesdJl,y on a meet·
ing last week in Marietta at
which time Buckeye Hills announced the approval of a
$376,000 grant from the EcoIV'm' r D&lt;&gt;v&lt;&gt;lcprrPn• '1'11'n.'"'"~

tion. Match money from five
entities was used by Buckeye
Hills to obtain the EDA funding.
Of the $376,000 total , $37,500
will go to Meigs County; $90,000
to Monroe County; $60,000 each
to Noble County and the Village
of Crooksville; and $128,500 to
Washington County. These are
the five. participants in the fund
and amounts were· awarded in
accordance with the amount of
match money previously provided by each participant.·
Meigs County's previous commitment was $12,500, which will
! give the county a total of $50,000
to b€' used to assist businesses
·.·/hl,J. i .. c~ crltr-r\a f &lt; p,lr+l'"'i
pation in the revolving loan fund .
h

•

Jones said the fund has been
establised to facilitate creation
and expansion of small businesses and to increase employ-·
ment opportunities for low · and
moderate income individuals.
All loans will be made by the
county through the commissioners, and paybacks wlll be returned to the county to be
earmarked only for further economic development,.
Those groups involved in the
fund will be meeting as soon as
possible with Buckeye Hills representatives to determine application procedures for the low
intetest loans. Jones anticipates
\he program may be &lt;)fi tile
ground in about 30 d'ays .

Officials pleased with re~ults
on low interest loan -prograin
NEW DOCTOR - Dr. Mark 0. Brown, Meigs
County's newest doctor, right, is pictured with his

wife Karen and Scott Lucas, administrator of
Veterans Memorial Ho!!pital. (See story on page
6).

Two Southern s.eriators will
.
oppose Bork on high. ~ourt ·
.

to stir up supp?rt for Bor~ and
has begun makmg phone calls to
undecided senator~, Whi~e House
sp?kesman Marl.m · Fitzwater
said, withou~ nammg them_.
Conservative Democratic senators from the South ·are believed to hold the ke~ to whether
Bork can wm confirmation. A
number of them owe the ir
elections to th~ black vote and
some hav.e e~ressed. con~erns
. that Bork s v1t&gt;ws on .civii nghts
could overt~rn the pr~gress
m a de in racial relatiOns m the
South.
.
An? many senat~rs say Heflin,
who IS under l::onsltlerable pres·
· 1
sure, will mfluence the decis on
·· s h
1
h
of hts out ern col eagues t at
could, In effect, decide the
outcome of the vote.
The New York Times reported
today there are allegapons the
administration is trying to influ ence Heflin by considering Ala·
• bama Chief Justice C.C. "Bo"
Torbert for a seat on thellt h U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals In
By United Press International
' "We're ' moving ahead - nicely Atlanta.
Torbert, a . close friend an~
Octuber came in with a big on the corn harvest," • he said.
chill.
·
·'
"In this county the corn was political ally of Hefli n, apparCincinnati posted the record
planted earlier than normal, so it ently would be the first Democrat
low today - a 34 at the Greater
matured earlier, and by getting chosen for an appeals judgeship
Cincinnati Airport just acros'S the
the corn in early you're able to under Reagan, the Times said. A
Justice Department spokes man
Ohio River into Northern Ken·
get the soybeans ear ly, too."
denied
there was any
tucky. Thill was one degree lower
In Putnam C9unty In northwest
impropriety.
than it was on this date in 1947.
Ohio, the fow was 37 from
And Heflin denied the a llegaBotl Davis' of the HamiltoR National Weather Service obtions,
saying it was " utterly
County Extension Agency said he server Ray Burkholder who's
ridiculotts"
to believe tnat ap·
doubt s conditions were sever"'e- "'b"'een keeping records at his home
pointln'
g
Torbert
to the appeals
enough to damage any crops.
i'n F'11ndora for 34 years. That .
· "The tow temperature was just· temperature was also the coldest court could influence his vote on
Bork.
.
above freezing, so I don' t think of the season.
In another development, Reathere was very much frost,
Cleveland · posted the highest
although there could have been
temperatures this morning when gan had plimned to 'use today's
some in lower areas ·where It gets fhe thermometer hit 51 at 7 a.m. scheduled swearing in ceremony
a little colder," Davis said. "It
The co'ol temperatures , came for FBI Director William Session
might have · hurt some people's
from a shot of chilly Canadian air to trumpet the nomination of
home gardens, th~ugh, in those
that blew into the state late • Bork, 60, a federal appeals,court
lower areas."
Wednesda;y. It produced some judge named July 1 to succeed
Davis said this is about two showers and a few thunder- retired Justice Lewis Powell.
But that ceremony was postweeks earlier than the first f·r ost storms In th~ north.
poned
after Sessions collapsed on
usually arrives, b t an ''excel·
The clouds prevented the
his
way
to Washington and was
lent" fall harvest season will warmth from escaping as It did
hospitalized.
·
Continued Ol'\, page 6
keep damage to a minimum .

WASHINGTON (UPJ) -Two
Southern senators announced
today they will oppose Supreme
Court nominee Robert Bork and
Sen. Howell Heflin, a key undecided vote was summoned to
meet with President Reagan
about th€' nomination.
On the Senate floor. Sens.
David Pryor, D-Ark., and Terry
sanford, D-N.C., ber.ame the
first southern senators to an ·nounce they would not vote to
give the conservative jurist a
lifetime appointment on the
Supreme Court.
A:nd Heflin, the Alabama De·
b r of the
mocra t an d · mem e
·
· mlttne
.
J ud tctary Com
'"' •
Senate
· ·t d t
t ith Reagan
was mv1 e o mee w

at 4 p.m. EDT in the Oval ?ffice, ·
according to the senator s spokesman, Jc;- ry Ray.
The Southern Democrat, .a
member of the Judiciary Commlttee and a former state Supreme Court justice, is considered a crucial vote because M
his position on the panel and his
influence among Southern
senators .
Reagan also invited Senate
Republican leaders Bob Dole and
Alan Simpson, along with Sen.
Strom Thurmond, R-S.C ., ranking GOP member of the Judiciary Committee, to a late
morning strategy session.
Reagan also was meeting with
unnamed corpora l€' executives

October arrives with
temperatures in 30s

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) State development .department
officials . are pleased with the
overall' results of a report on
Ohio's low-interest loan program
for businesses even though it.
shows employment levels are
below projections.
The report, sent to six legislative and administration leaders
Wednesday, indicates most companies, whicli received loans at
least three years ago, fell short of
their job projections or defaulted
on their loans .
Overall, the state has directly
loaned $158 million in tl:le past
e ight. years. Those loans have
created 18,112 jobs and retained
14,28'4 existing jobs, the report
says.
Companies that received their
loans more than three years ago
had projected 16,300 new jobs .
They created 12,234, the report
said.
In loan applications, compan-

ies must estimate the number of
jobs they will create within three
years of receiving a loan .
Mark Barbash, a deputy development director, said he was not
surprised by the number of
companies that failed to reach
projected employment levels.
"That probably reflects the
state's economy," he said. "I'm
happy we have as few defaults as
we do."
He pointed out that companies
not reaching their projections do
employ Ohioans, are repaying
their loans and are pay ing taxes.
"I don't think we can afford the
luxury of saying lliat if they
didn't make the projections , it
was a bad deal," Bar bash said.
"They're still working." ·
He said time is needed for a
company to prepare a plant and
get into production.
·
Many of the companies that
failed to meet projections were in

manufacturing. an industry hard
hit in the past five years,
Barbash said. ,/
•
"One of the thmgs we don't
want to do is to say, 'If you
don't get the number of jobs
you said, we' re going to ca ll .t&gt;ur
loan' ," he said.
The report, detailing employ.
ment levels as of July 31.
shows:
-77 firms do not have as many
employees as projected.
-11 companies have go11e out
of business and defaulted on a
total of $7.7 million In state.loans.
-38 firms e mploy more
workers than projected. ~
-Six companies have the
exact number they · said they
would .
Forty-seven other companies
have not reached job projectlons,
but they received their loans less
than three years ago. Those
companies have crea ted 5,878
jobs.

Senate adopts insurance reform bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - A
controversial civil justice and
insurance reform package debated for more than two years In
the Ohio General Assemblj has
been sent to Gov. Richard F.
Celeste despite warnings it would
leave innocent victims subject to
the dangers of toxic chemicals.
The bill was given final legislative approval by the state Senate
Wednesday on a 19-13 vote after
9o minutes of debate. The House
ratified the proposal last week.
· Celeste has publicly promised
to sign the measure, though he
has sided with-'organized labor,
consumer groups and trial lawyers who claim it will infringe on
individuals' rjghts to seek fair
compensatiol'l'in courts lor damages due to negligence.
Meeting In solo session, the .
Senate also passed bills regula!:
ing agents who .sign athletes at
state universities to professional
contracts, and giving the news
media speedy access to legitimate records when blocked by a
public agency. The House is to
return Oct. 6 to act on tl)ose
measures.
The civil justice and insurance

reform blll received 1he votes of
m yth. He said il "defies belief'' .
all but one Republican; Sen. Paul
that the title of the bill said ii will
E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus , who was
be "reducing the causes of the
absent. All Democrats but two
current insurance crisis a nd
voted against the blll. Favoring It
prevl:'ilting future crises ,' and
were Democratic Sens. Robert
ensuring the availability and
D. Nettle, 0-Barberton, and Alan
affordability of insurance ... " ·
J. Zaleski, D-Elyrla. '
In general, th e bill encburagPS
Opponents immediately urged
pre-trial settlements of lawsuits,
Celeste to veto the bill.
discourages.frivolous suits, c lim·
Sen. -It. Cooper · SnydPr, R!nates mul!iple' recoveries. reHillsboro, one of the chief archi·
qylres •altorney s to explain thPir
tects, said the package was full of
charges and limits lump sum
payment of non-economic dam"good sense" and would help
reduce litigation and therefore
ages for pain and suffering.
·make commercial liability insuIt also gives the state Insu r-ance Department more power
rance available to businesses
to regulate insurance compa nand local governments at reasoies, requires tl)e companies to
nable r,a tes .
"This blli wlli not prevent any
disclose more detailed data of
their urtdetwriting, regulres noInjured party from collecting his
fair share of• damages fr'om
tice of mid-term cancellat-ion of .
anyone· that was In any way
bnslne&amp;s. insuran ce, protects independent insurance agents -and •
respoJ)sible .for the ~nj urles,"
sa)d Snyder.
.
limits lawsuit s against defective
But Sen. Lee I. Fisher, D· ' products.
Shaker Heights, :Called the bnl "a
"This is · a bill without a ·
re-run of a bad movie that
conscience," said Senate Minorprobably never shou ld have been
ity Leader Harry Meshel, Dreleased."
Youngstown, who did not beileve
Fisher said ,• there wa~ no
Snyder's statement i;lbout fair
Insurance crisis and that the
treatment for injured 'parties,
" litigation explosion" was a
;-····

•

�,.

•

.,

.

Ill Court Street

"'

Pomeroy, Ohio

OEVOTED TO THE 11\~ES'Ti\ OF THE ~iEJGS·MASOI\ AilE.~ ·
~~

.

~m~ ~~.-....,... r"'T""E::! d.~
- ~v

.

.. '

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlish~e.._r__
BOB HOEFUCH
General Mana,;e~

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A M EM 8E R of ThP L'n it N l Prl's s l nu.f'nnnnnal. In la nd 0~-i il \' PrC'" ~
dnd l hC' AmC'rJC,In NP\o,: ~paprr Publt&lt;:)'l('l" A"SO&lt;.Jation . .

A~soc-iJtt (m

LF.rtv. RS OF Ori T!"i !O..I\ .ll(' "f'lt o mr'. Th &lt;'~ ~.: hould b1 • lt"'l' 1 h ~1 r1 3110\\ f"ll d "Jnnc. Al l lf'tlrr" :11 fi"U bJt'f'l lfll'lllril'll.! ancl mu q IH'"il:.!nt'&lt;l 1n1h n.•m t•, .Hidu'""'w jl
tl' h'ph onf' numh(•f . No unslg nP(I IPtlf'r~ will bt• publif;!w d LP11 Pr .. ~houl d bf' In
grul{ll .t&lt;: IP

.1 rlclrf'~~~ng l!&gt; ~ U(' !-.,

nm

pPJ so n ~l lilil's

Backstairs at
the White House

·•

..

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
...., Pomeroy-Middleport. dhio
Thursday. October 1. 1987

•

C~verup

at

~he

·vA ~

~

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White JJouse Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPJ)- Former President Richard Nixon has had
it as far as the way reporters remember his quotation when he visited
the Great Wall for the first time in 1972. Since then he has been widely
,quoted as saying, "The Great Wall is a great wall."
But John Taylor, Nixon's top aide, has sent a Jetter to the editor of
The New York Times, with a copy sent to United Press International,
saying that "I his is one of .the more popular anti· Nixon canards."
"It is also one of the most inexplicable in that there were many
reporters with hlin that morning. They and the White House
Communications Agency, which made a recording and a widely
available and published transcript, in fact heard him say:
"'When one stands there and sees the Wall going to the peak of this
mountain and realizes that it runs for hundreds of miles- as a matt,e r
of fact, thousands of miles - over 'the mountains and through the
valleys of this country (and) that it was built over 2,000 years ago, I
think that you would have to conclude that this is a great wall and that
it had to be built by a great people."

.'

Bl~e

Wins were posted by Meigs's
7th and 8th grade football elevens
last week with the 7th graders
downing Nelsonville- York 22 to
14 and theBthgradesquadedging
Belpre 12 to 6.
Shawn Hammons led the 7th
grade in scoring with two six
pointers and Mike Welsh added .
the third. Todd Workman and
John Bentley each picked up a
two point conversion
Hammons also had 53 yards in
nine carries, Welsh gained 43 in
ten tries. Workman picked up 21
in five and Bentley had 9 fn live
auempts. Only one pass was
attempted by Bentley which yvas
incomplete.
Statistically the game was
close in most areas with Meigs
getting fou ~firstdowns toN-Y's
six. The Marauders' picked up 126
yards to the Elucks 116 In the
ground game and Meigs was hit
with six penalties for 65 yards
while Nelsonville-York was be·
lng flagged once for only five
yards
Individually, Mike Cremeans
punted twice for a 56 yard total
and in solo tackles and assists
Matt Pierce had 12, Mike Cre·
.means ll, Hammons 10, Welsh 9,
Workman, Stewart, Jay Cremeans and Paul Van Cooney 3

Politics raises housing costs __B..,.:...y_V_in_ce_nt_C_ar_ro_ll

We,

i~e

When have they tried to streamline
the increasingly burdlmsome prDCess
by which developers obtain permis·
sion to build?
When have they chided communi·
ties for rent control, whi~h strangles
construction, or for requiring ridiculousiy large lots, which bar neighborhood access to all but th~most pros·
perous, or for consigning mobile
home parks to the most unappealing
locales?
Even when a proposed project con·
forms to zoning, the developer is often
encpmbe •d. with a mountain of pa·
perwork, including tric~y environmental reviews. In many cities, he's
forced to contribute up front to a fund
for parks or schools (or even to build a
school), and to provide on-site
recreation.
These de.mands have an understandable purpose: To preserve the
quality of neighborhoods and to en·

sure that growth pays its way. The net
effect, howl!ver, is to drive up land
costs and, inevitably, the price of
housing.
For decades economic growth per·
mitted housing quality to i111prove
even as home ownership spread. (The
portion of families owning their own
dwelling rose from 43 percent in 1940
to 64 percent in 1980.) Unfortunately,
growth iiT1!ulile ownership finally
stalled as mortgage payments began
to require an ever larger share of
household income. Rents have also
risen faster than Income during the
past 15 years. .
&lt;
The predictable political response:
Haul out the bag of substdies. Before
rushing to this solution, though, politi·
cians should consider that the true
causes of unaffordable housing are
their own mounting demands on de·
velopers, zoning and bUilding codes.
The·enemy, in brief, is themselves.

homer a nd hi s founh gamr·
Braves 3, Astros l
lo lift th•• Red; .
winning RBI of the season.
At HouSton, Ozzi e, Virgil hit a
Giants 3, Dod g&lt;• r~&gt; 0
New York is .tryi ng to becom e two- run s ingle In the ninth to cap
AI Los Ang~ les, HarryS[Jilman
the first NL East team to re peat a three-run inning a nd ·rally the seared an unearnPd run 1n the
as division champion since the "Braves.
s0VPnth inni ng when catchri
1977-78 Ph lllles. Philadelphia's
Pirates 5-8, Cubs 3-10
Mike Scioscia dropped the ball a t
Mi ke Schmidt hit ~ hi s
530t h
At Pit ts bur gh, Mike LaVa l·
th~ pla te, g1ving the Giant&gt; a
career hom er and 35th of the liere went .J for 4 a nd wi nning v'lctory over the Dodgers.
season
pitcher Brian F'is he r went 2 fo r'2 .
. In othe r NL games. Atlan ta with-one RBI to lead the Pirates
b~at Housto n 3·1 , Pi tt s b~ rg h a nd 1 to a fi·3 vie lory In the opener. Th e
Chicago split a double· header, Cubs won \he . nightc ap 10-8
Cmcmnati topped San Diego 3-1 -&lt;les pi te three hom e. runs by
and Sar Francisco bla nk ed Los Darne ll &lt;:;oles. Andre Dawson hit
Angele~ 3·0,
his 48th.home r un for the Co bs in
lrd
In the American Leagu e. it the fi rst ga me.
·wa s: Bosto n 7, New York 0:
Reds 3, Padres I
Baltimore 7, Detroit 3; Mllwa u-.__. At San Diego, Benit o Santiago
kee 5, Toronto 2;C.. Chicago 5, ~ta n hi s hitting s treak to :12
California 2; Kansas City 7, st raight gam es in a los ing cause ,
Seattle 3; Texa s 2, Minnesota I: when Tom
J ohn
a nd Oakland 4, Cleveland 3.
F ranco .::omtlin•e tturrirJtniechttn:T~I

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

APPEARING ·

FRI., OCT. 2nd
SAT., OCT.
FRI., OCT 9th
SAT., OCT. 1Oth

&lt;'Wgomin~

each and Gary Adams and
Bentley had 2 apiece.
Behind the signal calling of
Darin Logan , who completed a
scoring strike to Shawn Hawley
and the running of Frank Blake
who scored the other six pointer,
Meigs' s 8th grade unit defeated
Belpre 12 to 6.
Blake garnered.98 yards In 14
carries (7.0 avg) and Terry
McGuire turned in a good perfor·
mance getting 44 yards j n 12
attempts (3.67 avg-). Meigs tom·
pie ted four of seven aerials for 97
yards, and one interception, with
Hawley getting 62 In two recep·
tions, Blake 26 and lylcGuire 9.
McGuire punted twice lor 68
' yards (34.0 avg). The Marauders
outgained Belpre 237 yards to 80
overall and pic~ed up seven first
downs to tbe Little Eagles 4.
Blake led In solo . tagklt?s and
assists with 12'followed by Steve
Caruthers and McGuire with 8
each, Chti'ck Mash with 7, James
Howerton 6, Jeremy Rupe and
DANNY Edminston with 5
apiece, Kevin Musser 3, while
Jeremy Phalin, Shawn Hawley
and Joe McElroy chipped in with
21 each. Blake was credited with 4
sacks. Mash 2 and Caruthers and
Edmlpston had one each.

The Daily Sentinel

S469oo

,Hurry in for Huge Price Cuts!

Publlshf'd ('Very af! Prn oon

Save
.$100

Monday

through Frida y, 111 Court Sl. Po
mProy, Ohlo, by th E' Oh10 Vallev Pub·

1\s hlng Compa ny t Mu\ tlm&lt;'dla Inc..
Pomeroy, Ohio 4 57~9. Ph 9Yl·2156 SE.'rond class postagt' pal rl ut Pomeroy.
Ohio
Member : Unil f'd Press lnlf'rnatJonal.

Tn\and Daily Prt•ss AssociatiOn and th e
Ohio Newspaper Ass ociatiOn, Nat lon,al

Advertising RPpresPn ta livr, B~anham
NPIA.'spaper S~:~les. . 1.'\:l Th1rd Avenur",

13995

• 30 Watts Total Power
• Dolby' Noise Reduction
Cuts Tape Hiss
Low

POSTMASTER Send address ch ang(&gt;S
to Th C:&gt; Dally Sen! mel, llJ Court S1 .

FM/six AM presets, drift-free digital tuning with
time dtsplay, auto-search. #12·1929

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

•TM Dolby LaboratOries Licensing Corp

#25-1023 MS-OOSITM Microsoft Corp

SUBSCRIPTION IIATES

AM/FM Receiver
With Headphones

.. .............. ........ Sl.z;,
..
S.'i 45
.. .... .... , ......... $65.00

OnE&gt; Wl'ek.
Onf&gt; Month
OnE' Year ..

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .. , .

STEREO-MATE® by Realistic

.. .... , .. .....

~5

CC'nls

Substrlbf'rs not dC'!:dJi nM lo p::~v lhC'caJ ·
rler mav rerr\11 1n advancf' dlrr"Ct to
Th(' Dally SenI lnef on a 3. fi m 12 month

Reg.
Pair 99.95
120 Watts Capacity
Per Pair

Wf'E'k

No subst·rlp t ions by m all pNmillC'd In

a n•as whrrr homf' carr'lC'r servlcr
!n ailabl e.

l~

~

Mail Subscriptions
Inside Meigs County
13 w~eks .
.. ...... .. ........ ·

26 \V(;'£'kS ..

... . ..

~l](j

Cut 34%

988

Into BOllms From 20-20,000 Hz
With No Morel 'han 0 OBf,ie THO

DU6FONE-t66 by Rad io Shack

Save 5 50
1~;.~·5

=

.•

Reg. 69.95
Auto-Stop
Record from rad10 or built-in
mikes AC/battery operatiOn.

By Realistic

s~o

LV-1 0 by Realistic

;::;~
.. ~

Cut 3388

25% Off

,/'.I
,,._
.....,.

By Mi(ionta"'

32%

2995

Reg .49.95
Voice-Actuated
For Hands-Fre·e

Reg. 39.95

Op~ration

' ·

795

Reg . 10.95

~

#14-1042 Batte r1es exira

By Archer

•

9r~

"Who'd have thought you'd 'ever be sne{lking
smokes in restaurant restrooms, eh?"
.

•'

'

'

.

VHS &amp; Beta
Video.Tape
SUPERTAPE"' by Realistic

Cut 17% 33%
. Cut
33%

1995

4!!

Reg. 29.95

Reg. S:119
VHS T·120 or
Beta L-750
Deliver brilliant colors.
and Wide-range sound.
#44-40014 75

Buih·ln Noise Filter
Safely turns one outlet
into six I Helps protect
electronic eqUipment
from spikes. #6t-2780

OPEN ·
9-S Daily
9-8 Mon.-Fri . .

FREE DELIVERY
FREE PARKING

-

"'I

Two speeds lor up to three hours
of recording on one MC-90 tape

27%
Off

1967 bt N ~ A Inc

PRICE

SCR-14 by Realistic

8-Range Pocket Power Strip &amp;
Spik~ Protector
Multitester

Un ~our terms, your
Visa or Mosttr"&lt;ard

4995

Speakerphone With
32-NI:JRlber Memory

Super lor Camping
Powered by AC, 12 VOC or bat·
teries! Earphone Jack. #16-1t4

Unit Now $9900

Banery ex11a #43-222

Lightweight
Headphones

--·E&gt;'

'

Pair
Reg. 14.95
With 66-loot cable .

#14-784 Batte118S extra

~­

*Popup Truridle

895

service ava1lable m mosl
Fe e extra

low As $15 Per Mol'llh •

JO Watls Per CIIJnnel , Minimum RMS

6995

Ivory Day Bed

Cut

400/o

29%
7995
4995 c = = = -(') 49
95 '---'--En~d~-o~f.-T~a~p~e

&amp;WTV
With 3-Way Power

S929

Two-Station Intercom

HALF

Cut

Precise digital tuning, SJK FM/s1x
AM memory presets. #,31·2012

Complele
Bed

-

Portable AM/FM
Stereo Cassette

STA·116 by Realistic

Off
•i .\

7995 .

Ba!lery el(tra

With Digital Display

.

'"' - - 1
---

Tandy Pocket

Reg.
14.95

Drift-Free FM

'110

'40

Itor. #43-313 Remote ba ttenes extra

By Realistic

Record from phono, radio or add
m1kes for "live" recordings. With
17"-high speakers. #13-1225

DU6FONE ~

Voice Actuation
9
Saves Tape Space
Remote lets you hear your messages from any phone I Call mon-

Compact AM/FM
Pocket Radio

51)

TAD·212 by

Re . t 19 .95

Batteries extra

! !1\1!1'f~l

.. .. ,....... ·

52 \'V£"£'ks .
,.
Outside 1\tclg.'&gt; County
1J Weeks
26\VC'C'k S .... ...... ..
52 Weeks

I='== II

Reg. Separate
Items 29.90
Hear stereo FM
and AM anywhere! ~12·120 ,
#33-tOOO

Phone Answerer Wit~h
Remote Control

Save

Cut1990

33%

4995

basis. Credit will be- glv£'n carrt or each

'I

_

SIX

Tandy Computers:~~~~~~~

By Carrier or Motor Rllutc

'

~:

PC compatible' With buill·tn 360K disk drive and
Personal DeskMate" software for word processtng ,
worksheet and more . GW-BASIC. #25·1050,

As $15 Per Month ...

Compare! Features auto-reverse cassette,

u

©

Low As $35 Per Month•

Reg. 239.95

Nl•w York, NPW Y01 k 10017.

Mostly demos

• 1 ggoo

POMEROY I OHIO

innings.

tUSPS 145·000)

TWIN/FULL/QUEEN/KING

.Berry's World ___

MilWAY TAVERN

A Divbtlon of Multimedia, Inc.

AND HEADBOARDS.
;.,.._;;~

10 P.M.-2 A.M.
•
$200 Cover Charge

OCTOBERELECTRONICS

OFF

If that's the good news, here's
the b1j.d new s: Burger's comml~ ­
sion did not go out of business on
Sept 17, the 200th anniversary of
the signing of the Constitution.
Its charter extends through Dec .
15, 1991, the bicentennial of the
r~tification of the Bill of Rights.
If the Copstitution and Bill of
Rights can sqrvive four more
years of Burger's Inane promo·
tlbn, they surely are worthy of
their reputat ion as stong, enilurlng documents .

Wolf

Band"

At Detroit, Rookie jose Mesa,
a prospect obtained by Baltimore
!rom Toronto Aug. 31 in the dea l
fo r Mike Flanagan . held the
Tiger's to seven hits in 8 2·3

an /lmerican Lea gue record
to relax ."
when he struck out for the I 86th
The four -game losing streak. is
Toronto's longest since im eight · . time this season. Bobby Bonds of
the 1970 Giants holds the major ·
game skid in late June and ear ly
league record of 189 strikeouts in
July . The three-game sweep
a season.
dropped the Blue Jays' season
record against Milwaukee to 4-9.
"They sw ung at some bad
pitches," said Nieves. "Th ey
shouldn' t have to be pressing like
that because they've got such a
good winning team. "
Nieves, 14·8, struck out 10 a nd
walked three. Dave Stieb, 13-9,
lost his fourth straight.
Sveum's two-ru n homer In the
sixth stre'tched the Brewers' lead
to 5·2. Pinch hitter Rob Deer set

ELEGANT DRESHER
250/0
BRASS BEDS

promoters... _______R_o_b_er_r_w_al_ie_rs
Conservative activist Phylhs
Schlafly, a member , of the
commission, notes that '' one of
our most popular projects Is
'Plant a Living Legacy.' which
tells people how to plant trees
and gardens in honor of the
Constitution."
Struggling to explain the con·
nect ion between horticulture and
govern'ance. Schlafly feebly says
that It's "consciousness-raising"
and "encourages people to think
about a great document " Huh?

from Detroit. Each game was
decided by one run, with Toronto
winning two In the bottom of the
ninth. Detroit won the series
finale in 13 Innings .
Detroit can gain on idle To·
ron to when It completes its series
wi th Baltimore tonight. 'l'he
division leaders finish the season
with a three-game series m
Detroit.
. At Toronto, Juan Nie\·es
pitched a five -hitter and Dale
Sveum drilled a two-run homer to
lead the Brewers.
"We're battling out there ,"
said Blue Jays reliever Mark
Eichhorn. "Maybe we just need

Meigs seventh, eighth grade gridders
post wins over Nelsonville-York, Belpre

'

"If you subdivide," he writes, "a
The next time a national politician
bemoails the Jack of aflordabie hous· 'subdivision fee'. of $5,000 is now im·
ing, direct his· attention to the lowly posed for each lot they give you. Limi·
sprinkler. It offers a clue to the true lations multiply for 'wetlands,'
causes of h1gh housing prices.
'slopes,' 'trees,' 'hilltops,' 'hillsides,'
As
The
Wall
Street
Journal
noted
in
'green areas' More than $300,000 has
When White House chief of staff Howard Baker made some pithy
a recent article on real estate, "About been spent in development costs" ·remarks lflbout his "friend" Sen. ·Allan Cranston of California, the
130 communities either have ap· every penny of which no doubt will be
Democratlc whip who sa id he had counted 49 votes against the proved or have under consideration passed on to buyers in the form of
nominalion ol· federal appeals judge Robert Bork to the Supreme sprinkler. ordinances covering apart· higher housing prices.
Court, television cameramen knew it was for their ben efit.
ment, condominiums and sinile·fam·
One of the silliest of current pohti·
"He' s the worst counter in the United States Senate today," Baker · ily homes, compared with just six cit· cal myths is that government hasn't
'· said, relishing the attention and laughter
ies with ordinances on the books in done enough to support low-cost hous·
The occasion was a speech by President Reagan to special interest
1981."
ing. It is a myth unfortunately shared
The cost per home of this admitteg· by most presidential candidates Mas·
ethnic and religious groups backing the nomination . Ordinarily, the
ly useful equipment: hundreds, and sachusetts Gov. Mtchael Dukakis last
White House does not provide an outlet for sound for remarks by
sometimes
thousands, of dollars.
year proudly launched what he
anyone else on such occasions and does not pipe in anyone else's
Sprinklers,
are
only
the
latest
sym·
termed the "·largest public program
remarks
\
bol
of
our
urge
to
price
housing
be·
ever
initiated in the state to build pri·
But when Baker began to speak against opponenJs of the
yond
the
means
of
young
families.
vale-market
housing." Now he'd ap·
nominal ion. an exception was made and the sound system was turned Consider the lament of one Robert C.
parently like to spearhead similar ini·
on.
Bell, whose letter to The New York llatives at the federal level.
Times described the difficulties of
Yet when has Dukakis, or most oth·
The White Hou se has rarely· put so much effort and time in any sulxliv1ding his property outside New er pohticJans, lamented government·
nomination as it has lor Bork's selection for the high court. It means
imposed costs on construction?
York.
that muc h to the president. A White House leg!slative aide and a hired
'
lobby 1st sat beside Bork' s family throughout his testimony before the
Senate Judiciary Committee and offered guidance.
Reagan ha s touched on the nomination in nearly every speech
where it would fit appropnately, and he is' turning on the heat to win
the necessary majority in the Senate for his ,confirmation.
WASHI NGTON INEA)
financial backing from broker·
The pres1dcnt feels that he will more llrmly le{lve his own stamp on
"Y'know, Ben, if we wanted to be age houses, banks, oil companiPs
the co untry if he has a Supreme Court tha\ agtees with him politically
and other corporations.
remembered as 'truly farsighted
and philosophically.
Founding Fathers, it's not
He made changes m the "liberal" Supreme Court thelouchstone of
enough to just put togethgr a
Burg~r . who heads the federal
h1s presidenual campaign in 1980. and he has been able to select twq_
Constitution with all thos e arh·
government's official blcenten·
new justices a nd to name a chief justice.
cles .and clauses," explained
nial commission, claims he
Alexanderr Hamilton.
wants to popularize the work of
In his remarks at a gathering.of.Bork supporters, the presiden ~r.
"We' ll also have to plan for the
those who crafted the "Cllnstitu·.
recalled that he, has been told '"that Abraham Lincoln said that he
200th anniversary of our docu tion ~but he has cheapened their
could not conduct the duties of this office for 15 minutes if he did not
ment - and I'm convinced
legacy w1th gimmickry such as
believe that he could call upon one who is stronger and wiser than all
commercial ·sponsorship Is the
his now -Infamous ·prammlonal
others, and that he had been driven to his knees man y times because
key to success of t he
trip la st year to Disney World.
th.;re is no place else to go.
becentennial. ··•
A recent press release from
"Well, I subscribe to that," sa1d Reagan. "and the only thing that
"I fully agrcee. AI." replied
Burger's commission b!"gins,
worries me is that sometimes, I wonder If maybe I'm going to call,
Benjamin Franklin. " In fact, I
"Wiiat do Linda Evans and
and he' s going to give me a busy signal. because I do it so often."
was thmking the other day tha t
Magic Johnson have in
Nabisco would make .a prime
com mon? ~'
corporate underw riter . They
For those who can't divme a
could produce Dinah Shore and
connection between the actress
O.J. Simpson a nd Don Meredith· and the basketball sta r, the
- all member s of Team
co mmis sion offers a clue:
By United Press International
Nabisco''
"Think of freedom and justice lor
Today is Thursday, Oct. 1, the 274th day of 1987 with 91 to follow.
- "You' r·e right, Ben, don ' t stop all."
The moon Is wax1ng, moving towardJ.ts full phase.
·
lhcre," added James Madison .
Huh?
The morning stars arc Mars anq.Jupitcr . . •
"We could get McDonald' s to
The,a
nswer is that they "and a
The evening stars are Mercury, V~nus and ·Saturn
print 16 milhon promotional tray
host
of
tithers''
have made public
Those born on this date are under the s1gn of L1bra. They ·include
liners a nd General Foods to put sert'ice announcements to be
naval Capt. James Lawrence. hero of the Warof1812. In 1781; ~oveiJst
constit·Utional vigriMtes on 100 played radio to promote the
Faith Baldwin in 1893; pianist Vladimir Horowitz in 1904 (age 83):
million cereal boxes."
Constitution's 200th anniversary .
Jimmy Carter, :!9th presid ent of the United States, in 1924 (age 63);
"Great idea, Jim," responded
That's typical of the mindless
former batting champion Rod Carew in 1945 (age 42); and actors
George Washington, "but let's
blather
being produced by a
W.alter Matthau in 1920 (age 671, James Whitmore in 1921 (age 66) ,
not forget licensing :arraftge~ . commission that has received
Tom Bosley in 1927 (age 60 ). George Peppard In 1928 (age 59).
ments. There' s big bucks to be
more than $25 mllll~n In federal
Richard Harris in 1933 (age 541 , and Julie Andrew~ in 193~ (age 52) .
made in marketing coffee mugs,
funds during its first two years.
'
.
T·shirts. Frisbees and other stuff
The co.mmlsslon's superficial
On thi s date in history:
.
with the official bicentenn ial programs might be tolerable If
In 331 B.C .. the a rmies of Alexander the Great defeated the fo rces of
logo· ..
they were matched by substan·
Persia 's King darius at Arbela , In what is now northern Iraq .
What's going on here? Wo~ld
tlve attempts to encourage the
In 1903, the flrsl World Series opened In Boston. The Boston . t~e framers of the Constitution
public to thoroughly appreciate
Pilgrims of the American LeagJJC went on. to beat the Pitt sburgh
have had anything to do wi th a
the Constitution and fully exer·
Pirates of the National League Oct. 13, In the eighth game of a
200th anniversary celebration
else th ~ rights It gu1;1rantees.
best-of-nine series. ·
domini}. ted by such commevclal
But they're not. The current
Jn 1908, Henry Ford introd':'_ced the Mode i·T automobile.
tie · ins and promotions?
Issue of the ABA Journal, . the
In' l974. former Attorney General John Mltehell and four other
Th e answer to that question American Bar 'Association's.
Nixon administration officials went on trial on Watergate cover-up
almost ·certainly Is negative _
magazine, notes thai Burger's
charges .
,. but that hasn 't deterred Warren
commission has numerous mar·
In 1986,-Pres ldent Reaga n, at theopeningoftheCarterPresidentlal
Burger, former chief justice,
keting, licensing and fundralslng
Center In Atlanta , praised fOrmer President Jimmy Carter for hi s
from shamelessly gathering be, specialists on Its bloated staff of
"passion and intellect and commitment."
centennial endorsements and 12S - but not a single his torlam .
,

.. The Daily Sentinel-. Page- 3

-Jays, Tigers set for crucial weekend series

By IAN LOVE
.
UPI Sports Writer
After a scintillating weekend
series, the Toronto Blue Jays and
Detroit Tigers are sliding their
way to a season-ending confron·
tation for the American League
East title.
The Blue Jays dropped their
fourth straight game Wednesday
night with a 5· 2 loss to the
Milwaukee Brewers. The Tigers.
trailing first-place Toronto by 1
'h games, dropped a 7-3 decision ·
to Baltimore for their !lith loss in .
seven games.
Last weekend the Blue Jays
rallied to win three offour games

.

a

(

-The day after· the ClnclnnatJ
meeting, a regional VA of!lclalln ·
Chicago wrote a memo recom·
mending that Turnage "m~j,ke
the appropriate contacts at the
Department of Justice to facllltate
' an end to the FBI's lnvestlga·
live actlvltles," It was anoth-er
ofllcial's memo that suggested
that Turnagte could raise the
Issue with his good friend Meese.
- In Senate Testimony, VA
center police officer Harold
Hipple said Wilson had bragged
about being sent In to "clean up"
the Cincinnati hospitaL He said
Wilson claimed that James Fa·
sone, chief of security for the VA,
and the director of he Clnlnnati
hospital were completely behind
him.". F aso'ne did not return our
calls.

CONFIDENTIAL FILE - A
joint study by U.S and Japanese
intelligence analysts had a can·
did - and hair raising estimate of Soviet capabilities In
the event of a conventional war in
the Far East. It would take the
Soviets a mere three months to
take the northern Japanese Is·
land of Hokkaldo. And within six
months, the Kremlin would con·
trol the strategically critical sea
lanes around all of Japan.

Acco~:dJng

Today in ·history

concluded Its investigation of the
allegations against Wilson.
Cathy Brinkman, the assistant
U.S. attorney who worlted on the
.cas·e In Cincinnati, declined com·
ment . .!:l,.ead!ey and Berter have
not been prosecuted.
'

PRODUCTION GENIUS The Iranians may have been
sharp businessmen when they
were conning missiles out of Ollie
North for empty promises of
hOstage releases. But ther-re
pretty hopeless when It comes.to
the automobiles trade. · In a
secret meeting with Iranian
news executives, the head of
fran's heavy industry revealed
that the Saipa car factory, which
makes Renaults, exports them
for ~3,000 apiece - though the
production cost Is $2,900 each.

,

to sources, former White House spokesman Larry
Speakes says that he used to, put "news conference" at the top of hi~
list of subjects each morning when he would attend tne senior staff
meetings.
But Speakes said that the top aides would promptly cross it off the
list. News conferences wer:c not priority item with them.•
The situation may still be true although current spokesman Ma.t"lin
Fitzwater is holding out the possibility o! a news conference this
month.
.
Reagan has been answering scat ter gun questions !rom time to
time durin'g picture takings as he heads lor the door. but he has not
submi1ted to a formal news conlerences'l iiceJune.D, his second of the
year. His first was held March 19.
.
But the president has been giving lnter·views with the Whfte House
issuing his responses to tv.&lt;o Swedish broadcast and newspaper
outlets in)he past several days.
News conferences take. work and time. A president is prepped for
days on p&lt;issible questions and suggested answers. Only a few
presidents have ever enjoyed formal qulzzing, or the homework it
takes to prepare themselves.

By JOE ILLUZZI
at Busch Stadium to force a t1e
Perez, 7-0, becam e the first
UPI Sports Writer
for fl.rst place. Montreal, which Is Expos pitcher in hi story to win
Wisl1ful thinking Is all that
four games behind St. Louis, ·. seven games in a month . .Brooks,
remains for the Expos and the -closes the 'season 'at home with ' who had tnree hits, adf)'litted it
Mets 1n the National League
was 'tough getting up after · a
three games against Chicago.
Ea s t.
"We're In a pretty unusual double-header Joss in wh'fch
Both clubs stayed in till;! position, huh. We 've got to root Montreal wa s shut out twice.
"We were' tired, both p~ysi ·
pennant race Wednesday, but for the Mets to win three In St.
cally
and emotiona,lly. It was
just barel)l'.
Louis to get a three-way tie, "
tough,
but" we did It, " said
MOntreal defeatep St. Louis 6-1 Montreal Manager Buck
at Busch Stadi um to prevent the Rodgers said. "We're going to Brooks. "If it takes rootin g for
Cardinals from clinching the NL play tomorrow night's game like the Mets over the weekend and if
East, while the Mets lost to It's the last game of the season. we can beat St. f.,ouis tomorrow .
Philadelphia 4-3 In 10 Innings .
(Jay ) Tibbs will start but we fine. I'll live with it. "
At Philadelphia. Luis Aguayo
New York's loss assured the might use everyone."
Cardinals of at lea st a tie for the
Pascual Perez and Huble hit a pinch-hit homer In the lOth
division title. St. Louis needs one Brooks kept the NL East race inning, helping the Phillies push
victory to clinch its second title in alive. Perez, 7-0, held St. Louis tQ !he World Series champion Mets
• three years .
lour hits over seven innings and to the brink of elimi nation.
If St. Louis loses tonight to the Brooks had a three-run triple in Aguayo, batting for Steve Jeltz,
Expos, the Mets must sweep the ninth and a )&lt;ey double in a hit a 1·2 pitch off Jesse Orosco, 3·9, for his c;jreer· hi gh 12th
their thr~·game weekend series two-run sixth.

_-_B_y_J.:.._.ac_k_A_n_
·d_~r_so_n_a_nd..,---D_al_e_v:_an_·A_t_ta

Department Is resisting efforts to
police chief, ·Daniel Wilson. In
WASHINGTON -: Veterans
make the report public, although
testimony before Congress, po·
Administration ct.ocuments indJ,
normally such reports are re·
lice officers at the medical center
cate that Administrator Thomas
leased with deletions of the
Turnage .Was ·urged by suhordi~
had accused Wilson of hurling
portions protected by ~ivacy
nated last November to contacl racial epit hets at blacks as he
Jaws.
his friend Attorney General ·beat them blOody for such
The Government Accountabll·
transgressions as begging on the
Edwin Meese about a potentially
Ity .Projec). .a ...pUblic-Interest
premises and parking In unauth·
embarrassing FBI investigation
group, filed suit under ther
of alleged police brutality at the orized places.
Freedom of Information Act to
A spokesman for Turnage said
VA medical center in Cincinnati.
obtain a. copy of the FBI report.
A month later, Turnage wrote he never contacted meese. And,
Even though some of the wiCto Meese's associate attorn@y. we have found no further· com·
general, Stephen Trott, saying munication with the Deparment 4 nesses Interviewed by the FEU
haye signed affida"vlts support·
the VA hoped that the FBI probe
of Justice other than Turnage's
lng the . GAP's access to their
would be wrapped up quickly letter to Trott. Nevertheless. that
testimony, the FBI is stalling
letter
has
!deled
speculation
that
because It was hurting worker
the
case
is
being
cover.
e
d
up.
,
releas·e-or-the repor.t. ·
morale at the hospital.
·We can't say with certainty -VA: officials considered proseTrott's response came two
weeks later: The FBI had turned that a coverup Is afoot; but out cution of two officers who blew up new leads and, once they were assooiate Stewart Harris has dug the whistle on Wilson. According
invesilgated, Justice Depart · up additional evidence that, In to VA records, agency officials
ment attorneys would decide our opirtlon. tends to support the met with the U.S. attorney in
.
quickly whetfier the case would theroy:
cincinnati on Nov. 18, 1986, and
-At a recent hearing, Sen. David asked that Paul Headly and John
go to court.
In March, the Juctlce Depart· Pryor, D-Ark., waved a secret Berter be prosecuted for making
ment announced that it would not FBI report that he said doesnot "false statements". The meeting
seek prosecution of the hospital's exonerate Wilson. The Justice
was held before the FBI had
.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Cards galn at least a share ·of NL East title· despite .loss

-

CQminentary ·
The Daily ·-Sentinel

Thursday. October 1. i 987

.,

' ,.

Off
~lock Up on 3'1•':
5'1• " and 8" Disks
Double-coated with an
advanc~d ferric-oxide
blend for maKtmum re. slstance to wear.

Most Major
Credit Cards
Accepted

3045

_

,.... .

'
''

------\

..

�' .

-·
Page- 4-The Daily s_entinel

.

•

'

RACINE ·- A more con'fident
d"fensive outing.
Southern Tornado teamwill take
Senior Pete Roush brok e the
its l!Ct on the road t his weekend to
plane of the gqalll ne twice iln 35
Sy mmes•Valley where the loca l
a nd 5 ya rd runs, respectively.
gridders hope · to put It all
Roush netted 75 ya rds on 10
together in the season's [ifth
carries to &amp;ost his season total to
game.
•
72-374.
Last . week alter putting 28
Junior Mark Porter had a
poin ts on lhP board in the fir st
perfect kicking gameof4-&lt;lwhi le
half !·21 in the seeond quaF-ter )
also posing I he threat of a
the Tornadoes were banished
possible field goal in any gamefrom the endzone despite produc·
.Porter also.had a good defensive
ing addition midfield yard age in
outing .
.
'
a 38-28 Joss to North Gal!ia.MeanS(luthern Coach Bill Hensler
while, Symmes Valley' tet a 14-6 indicated that keys to this week's
fourth period lead slip through
game would be in " maintaining
their fingers at ,the hands o! a
thl" team's con !ide nee level, keep!Ired-u p Eastern team,20-14 . ·
ing the offense at a point where
One week before, one common
they can stil l put points on the
opponent, Nort h Gallla scored a
board, and tq . improve our
20- 14 come-from-behind win over defense".
·
the Vikes at Symmes Valley.
Hensler continued, "I think the
Putting things in perspective,
boys qave more con,Hdence in the
Symmes has averaged just over
offense since we have made some
two touchdow ns per game,al!owchanges. If our passing game
ing Southern a golden opportunstays in tact, that will be an
ity to c laim a vic tory with a mild
added plus for our o(fense.Ove· .Qf.fensive e,ruption .
rall, our offense Is looking better
Southern 's offense came to life
and .the offensive line is doing a
Friday as il rushed for 167 ya rds
much better job. "
and passed for 203 for a 370 total
Hensler also cited a need to
offense.
·
steady up his defense for a more
Running out of the single wing -eonsistent- effort saying, "Our
Pete Roush lofted a 50-yard
inside linemen and linebackers
aerial to j uniot receiver Chris
are doing a better job on the
Stout far the game's first $COre,
inside run ,but we nned to imthen later in Ule second half the
prove our ends and corners to
duo repeated the feat on a 70yard
stop the outside run wllh consisTD pass connection. Stout
tency .' Our pass defense is
claimed 120 receiving yards, two
improvlng,but still needs more
,TD 's a nd also claimed a good
work."
•
·
"Overalll can see our boys

RIO GRANDE ~ Rio Grande
fi nis hed the first round of
Grea ter Ohio Athletic Conference volleyball play with its
three of fo ur games defeat of
· Ohio Dominican in Columbus
have more confidence and
Tuesday .
. better atli(ude than they had a
The Red women lost the first
couple of weeks ago. We need to game 11-15,' but rallied ba ck with
get a win 'BAD' and if we play a ll
s trong defense to net the remain fo ur quarters Instead of just two, ing games by scores ofl5-10, 15-6
we will come out with a needed
and 15-7.
win."
.
The wln places Rio Grande a l
Hensler had much praise· for 5-0 in the GOAG-and 8- 4,cve~&gt;aH
his entire learn last wee k as he
Coach Patsy Fields fe li the
closed saying,"C hris Stout and
Redwomen were at their best on
Danny Gheen played their best defense, w4th team
ca ptai n
ball of the year! !Gheen had a
La ren Wolfe of Racine and junior
crucial interception and had a
Lisa Schmeltzer', fro)Tl Lancas s uper defensive effort as well l\S
ler , totaling 10: kills each for the
rush for db uble figure yardage in
meet. Shelly Hoop, the 5-8 fresh the fourth.quarter) .All the other · man !rom Coshocton, offered
players played wetLand showed
five kills , and Schmeltzer served
Improvement and enthusiasm.!
up lour serving aces to ce)Tlent
hope we continue to improve."·'
RioGrande'sdefensivestrength.
Southern will have to lock
Fle)ds said offensively the
horns with two agile runners,
Redwon\en suffered, although
seuiors Albert .Bloomfield a nd
Sheila Bra mme r , a 5-a sophoDonny C~aft, who a re qu ick · in
more from Coal Grove, provided
hitting the hole iris ide and are
fo ur key blocks and junior Kris
explosive in the open field .
Cochran of Somerset did a
Quarterback Dallas Tibbs, a
"supe\ job" as setter.
strong-armed senior, poses a
"The team looked really good
serious passing threat, however , · on defense," Fi.elds said. "I
did not complete a pa ss in seven
watched the video afterward' and
tries las I wee k agaiQsl Eastern.
I could see that the team really
Craft had 153 yards and Bloomflowe d, that everyone went
field 31 fn a ddition to several
where the ball was going."
good kick returns. Crafl--seored..,..... The Lady Panthers, coached
on a 79 yard sprint to the e ndzone- by ' Dr. Andy Stuck and led by
and Tibbs ret wed a punt for 59
sen ior Julie Roessner, were
yards and a scCire.
· effective in oft:ensive play bul
If Southern, 1-3, gets Its act
lacked in defense.
together . It could seriously
threaten to bring home a victory
Transactions
on Friday . Game tjme Is 7: 30 at
~
FuuC.bu.ll
" Willow Wood.
KunS!l-"' Cit y- SIKJ~Cd defenlih'e huc k

a

SV:\C standings
SVAC STANDINGS
(All-Games)
TEAM
w L p OP
Oak Hill .... .. , ...... .4 0 100 15
Hannan Trace ..... 3 2 86 60
Sy mmes Valley ... 2 2 116 M
Eastern ............... 2 2 52 91
North Gallla ........ 2 2 64 89
Kyger Creek .... .. .. 2· 2 36 9L.
Southwestern ....... 1 3 46 63
Southern .............. ! 3 61 103
SVAC ONLY
p
TEAM
W L
OP
Oak Hill ... .... .. ..... 2 0 61
0
North Gall ia ... ..... 2 0 58 42
Hanna n Trace .. ... 1 1 38 38
Southwestern .... .. .1 1 26 28
East~rn ...... .. : ... ... 1 1
20 . 37
Kyger Creek ....... .i 1 15 40
Symmes Valley ... 0 2 28 50
Southern .............. O 2 41 52
8 8 287 287
'l'OTALS
Oct. 2 games:
Eastern at Southwestern
Kyger Creek at Oak' Hill , •
Souhlern al Symmes Valley
Oct. 3 game:
Hanna n Trace at North Gallia

and turned in two fourth down
KC score sparked a KC comeconversions.Jo hn so n also
back.Southwestern gained 174
gra bbed 6 passes for 62 yards.
yards rushing and 44 yards in the
. Kyle Davis-complimented that
air behind Rob McCar-t y 's 3-13
e ffort with a 9-for-34 night and
night (a total offense of. 218).
several big passes totaling 6-46 in
KC was limited to 62 yards on
the aiJ:.The senior back also the ground and 65 in the air.
s teadied the Eastern defense
Coach Jack J a mes clubs al which was.at Its best In the clutch ways seem to be well-p repared
with Davis calling the plays .
and will be ready for a good game
All -SVAC nominee Steve
this Friday , beginning al 7:30
Horner, senior· wide receiver for p,m .
the Eagles, caught 4 passes for43
yards including the 14-yard
game -winner with 1 : 16
remaining.
Senior Charles Cleland had a
super defensive game with eight
tackles and a score-saving quarterback sack that took SV out of
scoring po&gt;;ition in the waning
531 JACKSON ptKE-RT. 3~ WEST
Phone 446-4524
moments.
Eastern erupted for 17 first
BACK TO THEAmE DAYS·!
• SPECIAL PRICE ADMISSIONS '
downs to Symmes' 7, limiting the
ADULTS $3.50 ·CHILDREN 1~.50
Vikes to 221 total yards; all on the
SATURDAY ! SUNDAY MATINEES
ground.
.
ALL SEATS $2.50
Mark Griffin showed much
BARGAIN NIGHT
!2.00
poise under pressure in guiding
the Eagles twice down field to
scores in the final minutes. The
lanky signal caller l]ailed 15-of-~0
passes for 140 yards In a near
perfect effort.
Eastern punted only twice In
the contest for a 32 yard average.
Eastern coach Arch Rose and
hls stall of Don Eichinger and
Ron Hill stressed that the Eagles
must not s uffer a let down after
Fridays game, but tnust at least
maintain their level of execution.
Rose indicated that his team
must continue-..·to ....work hard,
improve , m a intain its confidence
level and again get enthused as
Friday ni ght is a whole. new
ballgame.
The Eagles mus t contain se.nior running back Chris Bryant, .
who ran 62 yards for one ·
Southwestern score then added
anoth~r ( 27 ya rds ) ' tater on in
posting the Highlander's only
two scores las t week.
Southwestern ha s dominated
its oppqsilion all year long
sta tist(cally,but is vulnerable to
, the big play an d has suffered Jet
downs in crucia l moments of It s
games.
Las t wee k Southwestern led
12-0 until late in the third frame, ·
when a blocked punt and ensuing

NHRA qualifying
begins Thursday
ENNIS, Texas (UP!) - Joe
Amato and Dick La Hale continue
the ir fi g;ht for the Winston Top
Fuel season championship at the
second a nnual National Hot Rod
Association Chief A'uto Part s
Nationa ls that began tooay at the
Texas Mot orplex .
· · More than 600 cl r l ~ers In 11
differenT NHRA ea t egories will
be qualifyi ng through Saturday:
Eliminations in the $682,850
even t will be Sunday.
Amato, !rom Old Forge, Pa.,
holds a 402-point lead, 11,170 to
10,768, enter ing the 12th event fn
!he 14-racc Nt! RA W ins ton Drag
Racing ser ies .
He has won three times this
season and set a national performance speed record of 280.98
mph last Sa.turday in Reading,
Pa.- He also poste d the sport's
quickest elapsed lime: 5.118
seconds.

•

Thursday, October 1 , 1987

·Redwomen co~plete first half action_

Eastern Eagles journey to
Srnithwestern for SVAC tilt

•

#

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Southern· seeks. first leagUe
w!fi at Symmes Valley Friday

EAST MEIGS- An enthusiastic group of Eastern Eagles took
pride in thumping the Symmes
Valley Vikings .this past week
20-14, thus r!ding the wave of
l)lomenlum into this . week's
importan t SVAC . contest at
· southwestern.
The Eagles now 2-2, meet 1-3
Southwestern, who dropped a
1 ~-12
decision to Kyger
Creek.Tiie teams have no com- .
mom opponent in the regular
season, however,Eas tern dueled
Kyger Creek to a 0-0 tie in the
preview ,possibly setting the
stage for a c lose game.
_
All this had occured,however,
before Easte rn unveiled its ol!ensive weaponlry and position
changes in the offense.Eastern's
struggling offense erupted last
week for 378 total yards,gai ning
238 on the ground and 140 in the
air.
The big story cam e as Jeff
' Dawg' Johnson burst out of
control for 204 ya rds rushing on
27 carries. Johnson broke several
big runs, scored two touchdowns ,

...

I

"Dominican had a couple of
girts who hit the ball well,"
Fields commented. '"Y.hey were_
up for us In the first game, but our
kids ca me back and gave us .a
good game. "
Redwomen offense will be
worked on prior to Fl,lo Grande's .
hosting of a tri-match · with
Heidelberg, Capital and the
University of Cincinnati, starting
tonight at 6 in Lyne Center.
Th e Redwomen will play three
games each with the visitors. Rl&lt;i
Grande will then . travel to
Athens, W.Va ., on Friday for the
Concord College Invitational.
Rio Grande will compete with
teams from Morris. Hill of Nprth
Carolina, Alderson-Broaddus
· and Fairmont. Fields said the
Redwomen must win !woof three
sets of games Friday In order to
advance ' to elimination play on
Saturday. -

Thursday, October 1, 1987

Adversity brings
team together. ·

M~rauders,

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Despite .. .
having practiced . together for
•
little more than a week, the
replacement te~ms taking the
fiE'Jd fo r Sund&lt;ry's NFL games
may be bonding togethe r more
quickly than expe~tt ed.
" Controversy alw~ys pull s
people toge ther," said Adrian
Breen, who .will sta rt as qua rterback for the replace ment Benga ls Sunday when they host San
Diego. "Everybody knew when
we came here that there would be
some verbal abuse . That's acceptable, considering t he
opportunity.
.
" I 'd like to think they. (striking
players) won't hold it against us,
'and I understand .!hey can' t just
let everybody waltz through their
picket line."

-

SPECIAL
FEEDER
CALF
SAlE!

•

..

.C)ctoBER 7·,.. 1987
8:00 P.M.

Greg Attt•fiK'rry and ce nte r K!!Yin
· i\dklns.
·
lh.l&lt;' kf')
NY l'iht.ndt• r~o~ - Relt•ao;ed I{Ualle Ga.r.t•
Kruzkh; Nt!nl Klll~lle Gf'OrKl' /'1111neluk to
Brandon of I h.- Wt&gt;slt'Tn Hockey lA' ainu•:
sent lf'll wing rhKrlil' Mltnu, dt'IC'nse-

"All Breeds Sale"
THIS SALE INCLUDES HOLSTINE

man Allister 8ruwn and Cf'Dif'rs Ttm

Cattle will be accepted all day
Tuesday, up to 1 :00 p.m. Wednes(jay . ·
•HAULING AVAILABLE•

•'rr,;uson and C1u~rley Calluhun to PcOrill
llllho•lntcl'nlllh.lnlllllockey Lragllf'; !-W•nl
In SprinKflcld of tlw Anlt'rkun llru·llt'y
kaguc ('l'niCI' Brucf' Boudr,.llll; rl~~:ht
wh•r Tom Wt&gt;lll~ and Slu Hurnlt'; It'll
wlnJPi Kurt Lllcl;h•n, Dalt Nu~hncr and
Glcnn ,JohiU'Inesen: ~oalie); Roydt•n Gunn
:UJd Ural n Ford: and dPfenl!f'num Gord •
l'ltddoek, .john J\.Joko!!iolt , 8111 lk&gt;ra:,
Dun• •un Mu.cl'hPri'IOn u.nd Mlkt&gt; NI.'IIJ.
Kan.t;en - Tritdl'd delf'n~Wmun
Tt•rF"J Uuk nt&gt;r nnd ILoft wlnsc Jt&gt;ff J1U·kson
to ~ehM; for le lt wine John O~rodnit-11
lind dt&gt;fen~miUJ David Sh;~~· : traded le ll
wing Georgl' MePht'l:' to WlnnlJ)t'~ for a
19H9 I~Jurth· ruund draft c boh•e.

'

'

'

I

.,

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES

m·

U. S. RT. 50 (1 Mi. East of Albany).Qhio)

592-2322 DAY-:.. 698-3531 EVENING

The Ohio Hi gh School Athletic sjve penalties, sometim es c·a n
Association com_p.!Jler r~nkings cause a loss of concentration on
. [dr · Division 3 Region 11 s how
the part of an:,c team," Coach
\_ · Meigs ranked eighth with a total
Ashley sal d.
of 14.5 point s and ..NelsonvilBoston said tha t his squad was
le- York's Buckeyes rated 26th
high for the Belpre encounter last
with a cumulative 5.5 points. Th e week ln wh ich they yielded on 36 ·
gre ~dif!erence in the rankings
yards on the ground but wound up
would lead oite to believe the • on the short end of the score. He
Marau ders sho uld have an easy could not predict what effect this
time of it when th ey ,i ~ade the
would have on the mo rale this
Buck's stadium Friday -night.
week. Coming off a 49-1 3 rout of
This might prove to be true biJJ, rWellston , the Mai;il~ders hope: to
unfortunately, computers do not
keep their momentum aflve.
play foo.tball and there wtll b'e 22
Offensively - for the Bucks,
live bOdies on the !ield with
Dave Kirkendall lind Chad Saveleven
-each side out to prove . age will be at the ends; J.D.
Steinbrink and Shawn Day at
the Great Computer either right
or wrong. So let's contemplate
tackle; Scott McDonald and Sean
what might be in stor'e for· both McLaughlin are the guards and
teams.
,.
Scott Joyce will snap the ball to
· Both coaches, the Buckeye's
Quarterback Hel(es Dean .
Dave Boston and Meigs's Bob
Rounding out the backfield will
Ashley, predict a very physical
be Steve Netter at tailback, Scott
game. Coach Boston's goal is to · Young at wingback and Danny
play possession ball . ." We mu s t
Ca!lter will fill ,the fullback
keep the ball out of Meigs's
position.
hands. The Marauders have ~
De!en ~ive ly you'll see John
well balanced team offensively.
Canter and McLaughlin a t the
With I he running backs. · they
ends; Mike Call and Chad Cumhave, ('Mike) Bartrum' s strong
P'lins at tackle and Day at middle
throwing arm and the ability of
guard. Jason Brooks and Danny
th.e..¢.tensive line tg _get off the' Canter will be the linebackers,
Kirkendall and Savage are at
ball quickly, they will be tough to
halfback and Tim Bookman and
stop," Boston said. "Therefore
Young will be at at the corners.
we must control the balliand that
Meigs will go with Chris Smith
will not be easl:' agjl_inst a good,
at split end and Bill Brothers at
solid defen sive unit such as
Meigs fields., " he stated. Boston " the other side; Scott Hanning and
Matt Peterson will be at the
· went on to say that their passing
tackle spots with Jerry Jacks
game is not what they had hoped
se'Cing some action there; Ed
,Jr would be al this point In the
Baer, Steve Tracy and Dennis
season.
Booth will be working the guard
Meigs head mentor, Bob Ashpositions and Jared Sh eets will
ley, said the Buckeyes are big
be over the ball 11t center. Senior
and have a great running back in
Mike Bartrum ~ill call signals
Danny Canter and a very promiswith Wess ·Howard at tailback,
ing quarterback in Sophomore
"Cheese" McElroy at fullback
Heyes Dean. "Our team rs very
and either Bryan Dvrst or
aggressive and play with a lot of
Freshman Kurtis English filling
spirit which has a tend ency · to
the wingback spot . Durst has
offset some of the weaknes ses we
been suffering from strept throat
might have," Ashley sa id .
I his past week and has been
"We have to maintain thai
unable to practic.e. Brent Bissell,
aggressiveness and not let facusually , a starter on·o!fense, has,
tors beyond ' our control distract 1 been plagued with a foot injury
us . Many things, such as excesand may see limited duty at his

Majors
By. Unllf'd Prt~li Jntf'rnatlonul
i\MEKIC1\N J,Ei\GUE
t~M

Store_witle uter
lJACATION ALE!

Mllwllui!t'f'

90

Ntow l'orlt
BO!ilun

~ · Minllf"'tlla

Kan;.u.&lt;o ftty
OakiiUld

1't•xas

-M:l

Sr alllt•
t 'a lllornlu

~· dindlt'd dhl'ilt~n

li t

.mt

•
,..,

.3110

35 1.,

.!i3(i

-

.566
.~$1

.473

.M:J

K1,1

2il' l

'

-~ ~~~

(jl .l

9~

A15

I,

181 -~

..JG"

If)

AG\!

11 11

till('

~-71,11 : 35p.m.

50°/o &amp; 60°/o

fo' rtduy',; Gamu;
Balllmorl' at Nrv.· Vor ... nla:ht
Tomnlu u.t Dt•troil. nla:ht
. Mllwllu kcf' al HOtillm . nl ~~:ht
Oakland 111 ('hll'a~o, nigh(
~linlll'su4a 111 Knnsas'('lty. night

~acatlon

• Nrw York
'

Phllad,.lphia
Plllshur,t;h Clticll«o

11H 'fO - ~~'f
{'lndnnatt.;
'1-J.- j7 .~m
Hotl!&gt;itun
7~ ~ .-16H
l..ot~ Anl(f'li!!!
70 811 . 1-t:t
Atlanta
611 119 . 1~
!iv.n Dl•·~o
61 fH . 105
x ~llnch('d dlvl.&gt;~lon lilk'
y-cllmcht'd tie for division til It

'f
1-1

Ill
l!f' -1

&lt;H

:1, Chlrago :i, b l
('tlkag()IO, Pltt!ohur~~:h II , 2nd
Phl1Md('lphla3, New Vork2, 10 Inning"
Mll•d"-'ai8. St . lm'"' I
,\llanC~~o :1, Huu"'on I
San Fr~~oncl,.t•u 3, Lus A.r~~~tllit-" 0
\
Cincinnati ;1, SIU1 OIPKO I
PHI!!hu~h

·-~~·-·'- .... ~...........,. .... throt ......11"11 nights
with boautiful auo••odations at tl!t Cltnn S... Oub...DIIIJ
tWrty mlnut.s fr. . the main ...trcnc1 to DAnty worW, Epcot
Center, Sta World and • tht other attraction• that make thit
area the "'Wqrld't fawarlte w.-nd.,land 11 •

*PLUS*
2 ADDinONAl BONUS NIGHTS

A apeclal bomn of two additional niglilts sta~ing rilhl on the
oast in oadting artat·ttich at St. AugUitlnt ... Daytona leach ...
lltw S.rma ltado _ CocN ltadl•dMtaml Btodl •• with fun ,

FREE
Flo,ids

Thursdll,Y's GameH
( 'lnt·inn:tll (Put·lllo ~- 3) :u
IU('ItO !Nollt• HI. -1 : 11:; p.m .

Vscsfion!..
(

,, sun ._ surf - and 1Gn411

!'ian

&lt;'hka,;u (81tndtr son ,ll.til :11l"ilt~hui'Jl"h
( llrahrll llHI!), f : :l!i p . m .
Mont n •W {Tihlloi 4--1 or llt• illr~n I~ Jill al
st. l.oul.&gt;~ (( 'ox 10.9 ). K: :l!i p.m .
Athmta (Pahm&gt;r K-11) Ill [ llo11:o0·
t~11 ( lbrwlu &amp;-1.~ . li: !l!i fl. Pl.

San t'riUlt'IM'O (Rt•u1wlwl J;l-Hi at l.o!i
i\na-ei('S (\\'r lth 11-9), 10:&amp;5 p. m.
Frid"l'' S GLimf'lol
Clllt11~o at Monlrt•tl.l. night
PhlhldCIJllllu 111 Plttsbu rjfh, nl•ht

NO nMl SHARif - NO GIMMICKS!

**limited to'the next 1 OQ'liuslomers only!
9

Nf:'vr.: \ ' ork oat Sl. Loul'l, nl~ht
( 'indnntltl at lloustnn. nl,t;hl
l.u~ Ang,.lt·s 1tt Sa11 Frnnt • l~ot · o, 111 l!; h~

FAMILY PRACTICE
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

1\llunl;t al San Frandloo·o. nljlhl

UPI ratings

882-3l'34'

C'OU ' l\181.,11'\, Ohio '(l ll'1 1 'l'hill
wt•t•k'!li 11nll rd Prt'.!o!lo lnlt•rllllllonal ;
Ohln
~t· hOOI Rnard ol t "oaChf'H

Pulnt.'l •
I. ('J(Iw•lanlllk&gt;nt•dkllne 1131 I 1-fll

"'

2. Tiffin C'olumhlan

m C4·0l

~.folu mhu~DeSalf'S(I)

11!3
Ill
107
91
tiK
tiO

{-I· UJ

I . Urbana(\!) (.&amp;-0)
3. " 'apakollf'la i .J-0)
U. Mlnl'r\'11 (4· U)
, , ( 'olumhusMIIIIIn(-1· 0)
II. Nllt"!l McKinlt ~y (I)
~i
!1. l&lt;ih'lll&gt;envllll' (3· 1)'
-Ill
Ht. LA;&gt;xlna-tu" (4- tl
H
Se~o nd len : 11 . Clnclnrndl Pun:e ll
Murlan JS:
~ ~ColumhuJ! MarlonFnmklln ~0; l:l . ( Ill•) Wlll'l"t'n Hardlnll;,
Kellerln~t 1\lh•r v.nd Ashland, 17 Pach:
16. (tl~) PLlrma l'aduu and Akron
But•htel I ll. 1-1 eau·h: 18. nlel Toledo
l}(•vilhls~.
Kt·nt U o o H (' v t• II and
folumhUs t~rankJin llelr;ht!li. 13 rat·h.
Division Ill

138 MAIN S.TREET, NEW HAVEN, WV.
IN ASSOCIA0 r!ON WITH

P
d ~~~r~~~!.~~L!~r55~~~~~!~4~
~
"The Fam1ly Of Professionals" ,.

1

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

RUTLAND

, · Home of the Grate Boys, Where You Get Great Buys!

.

Ur.'lu linf' (-I)

Brown 34l'rlnc•ton io
Cornell 21 Lafafelle 11
in the SEC: Mississippi will be
Florida State 3 Miami (Fla.) 21
bl
t
h
G
·
Georgia
42 Mississippi
una e . 0 Stop t e
eorg1a
Georgia Tech
3'1 North 14
Carolina St. !!2
Bulldogs a,(tack led by RB Lars
Harvatd 14 Bucknell 13
Tate. We like Georgia by a 42-14
Hawa1138
Yale 8
Holy Cross 35 Colgate '!0
margi n.
.,
Indiana 21 Norlhweotern %5
The Pac-10 features a ttio Of
Iowa 38 Michl••• State 25
'C\0.
•
,
Klinsas 17 Southern llllnols l$
meetillg;i ~twill be Wasshington
Kent Slate IS Cent. Michigan 20
topping Oregon 35-10· Southern
Kentucky 35 Ohto University 7
'
St. t
Lehtgh 17 William .l Mary 14
Ca l ro111 ng pas't Q regan
a e,
Loulslaaa State 30 Florida 27
39-14; and UCLA edging StanL&lt;mTsvllle36SoUthernMiss.l3
ford 38-35
Memphis St. 34 Miss. State sa
'
·
Miami (Ohio) 21 Ball State 14
There are' also four big ones in
Michigan 38 Wl~~&lt;onsln 21
the SWC: Well-regarded ArkanMinnesota 31 Purdue 17
Nebraska 35 South Carolln• 21
sas is our choice to defeat Texas
Ohio Slate i2llllnols 20
Christian, 36·14. Plus it's Baylor
Oklahoma 391owa State t4
. T
Penn Slate 38 Temple 14
H
2110
over ouston, · , exas over
Plllsburgh %!!Boston College II
Rice, 31-18; and Texa s A&amp;M over · Rusge.,.·%8 Duke 14 · •
Texas Tech 24-21
San Jo.. State 3(1 FuliertOtl Slale IO
•
· ·
Southern CAl 38 Oregon State 14
Elsewhere, it's Okla·homa49·14
"Syracuse~! MTs0ourl18
over Iowa State · Pittsburgh 28-21
Tenn..... 42Callfornla 14
'
Tuas 31 Rice 18
over Boston College; Holy Cross
Tex.. A&amp;M :u Texas Tech 2t
35-20 over Colgate · and Ruigers
Toledo 2t1 West. Michigan 13
28-14 over Duke. Har-rumph!
~~ ~~i:~i.r~3'Je 17
SNI'URDAY, OCT. s
Vanderbll&lt; 1!8 Tulane I4 ·
Air Force 35 Utah 28
VIrginia 30 VIrginia Mllitary 20
Alabama 31 Southwestern La. 10
VIrginia Tech !3 Navy 7

QB Tommy Hodson outpltchlng

Ga tor QB K. erwin Bell, 30-27. Also

Colorado 21 CfJlorado State J I

Arb.ona 36 Bowling Green 15
Arl:tona State 33 Texas El Paso 21
Arkansas 36 Texas Christian U

Wake Forest 24 Army 7

Auburn 38 North Carolina 24
Baylo• 21 Hou•ton to

Was~lngton 35 Oregon 10
West VIrginia 19 East Carolina IQ

Wyoming 31 San Diego Stale 24

only

.

1986 FORD

1983 FORD

1985 CHRYSLER

ESCORT

5th AVE.

1982 CADILLAC
SEDAN OeV~LLE

Stock# 11491.4 doors. slllt~n wall)n, 4 Cli .
,air cond., auto. trnns . PS. AM/ FM rado. mdiat
tires. bucket seats.

stocli # 73045. 4 doors. 91dan, V-8. air rond.,
auto. ~an&gt; . PS. PB. iXJwer windows. jX)Wer
seat. jX)Wer door klcks, ti! wl'eei. cru•e
control, AM/FM ri!d~. &amp;eroo tape mdjal tires.
whrte walls, buci&lt;et reats. rear window delog
gauges.
t ~
....
SALE PRICE

Stock H83331 .4 doors, "'dan, V-8, '" oond..
vinyl roo!, auto. trnns.. PS. PB iXJwer wind&lt;Nis,
p6wer sea\ jX)Wer door klcks, ti~ wl'eei, cruise
rontr~. IM/ FM radio, stereo tap~ mdiat tires.
while walls, rear window delo&amp;
SAlE PRICE

Stock H 78841, 4 doors, 4 cyt. , air cond., auto
trans. . PS. PB, AM/FM.radio, whrte wans, ·
l:uckef seals, shOO wheel base, rear step
tumper. gauges.
SALE PRICE ,

$8.190.

$6654.

{ ~·ll)

t .ronton (I) {3-1).
,...
10-1
J. T"ornvlllr ShC'rldan t-1·11 )
79
6. Cincinnati Forrsl Park I'll H -OJ
78
-; , Wurr~~n Krnnedy 1 ~ - ll )
611
11. 1\kronSt . Vlntent (H!
-19
H. Gurlleld ll~~tl s Trlnll.~ I II l -HI)
:Ill
Hl. l .h: klng-\lallc.'' (-1-0)
30
S(oocond tt•n : II. Co11hodon (I) 211: 1~ .
,\kron lluha11 'Zfi; 13. Oo vf:'r 2.\; lt .
Plluhlln.-; 22; l!i . CAPE 21: 16. Brooldil.'ld
:!0: 11. (li~) Manchl'sh•r and Jkollevaw, Ill
t•ut•h : 1!1 . Wit'klllfe l'f: 20. St. ( 'lalnwllll•
16.
Division IV
Tt&gt;iUll
Point!'
I. Gat~ JI111Js Hawkr n IIOIIHU
169
:!. f ol'Umhu!l A•·udrmy !til (-1· 01

Stock No. 8356

--rransportation, state and local •"" end fees •eluded. Dealer
instilled options, if any, at retail.

(3) (3-1)

:l. f'olumllu~ Harllr.f (:I· I)
1. W~ o mln~tf) ' (-'-11 ) ""'
!'i. Lowl&gt;!\'illt• ,\ltulna.oi (I ) (!J.J l

SALE PRICE

$2995.

$9500~

ESCORT .

fl.

"' ht•t.o lt&gt;l'llhU J'K"(~I)

107
99
7Q

71

7. loudonvllll' f .) ) j-1-0)
66
II. Orwt•ll Grund Valll'.t' (-1-01
,i.J
fl. i\ri•hbold (II {4-0)
!19
IU.\' e rsalll~ t3-t)
;JK
~1-ond trn: 11 . Tiltons\•lllt• Hu•• kp~·e
~UIII h ,1{1; 12, Ilk' ) 8altb110f't' l.llll:r1y
L'nlon and fuslullu Mar~tv.rrtta. 2-1 1•uch:
II. t'r!•mont St. .Josl'ph 22: Hi. Wf&gt;HI
,Jt•ffptsBn '41: 16. llurun ( I) 1!1; 17.
,JI'fl;or);no Unln11 15; IH . ,Juo.:IL.. ofJ·!'tllllon
II : 19. (lit•) \\' u,.ynl'!;ville (1), Ham lt&gt;r
Patrl~k llt•nry, 1\ro.:twum :1nU Dayton
Oakwud . 10 t'a(•h.
· · Dl,' bilon \'
'1'1•mn
r
Points
1. ~•·war kfatholh· ti3J {1-01
2tll
2. Delphos .JI'ffr~n ( 101 H -OI
~ 205
;1. Mo .~:u dol't' Ill (1-0 1
dil-l
I. ,\~·f'rsvlllco {~ - 01
119

:t. Mt·Umwld f·Hl
fi. ( !h•] Mln11ler j l) {.$·0)

r.. (lh•)l'tlrht Notr~· OunJf' (•HI)

II. C'ol).ollon VuJI1•y 0 · 0)
9. ,\rlli•ll"nn (-1-fl)

61
!i9
19

ill
!13
-17

HI.Tilfln (' alvt•rt (3-1)
Second tt•n: II . Rrllltant Hut·lle.vt North
;W; 12. Mlddll'town Ft•nwlc k 27: 1:1.
Sldnf'.V l.t&lt;hman ~4ii II . l'r1 o nrocvlllt•
21i; 1$. rostorla St . \hndf'lln il~:
16. (iarUWliY 21: 1"7. {Ill' ) S andusky
~1 . ,\bry~. N('W Hrrnwn and Jo: IL~ I Knn¥ ,
Ill I'Lll'h; 211. (liP) l.oraln f'll'arvlew (I 1
and S~ . ll t•nry, 10 rat•h.
·

·.

1985 MERKUR .
•

XR4TI

Stock H777 41. 2 doors.coupe. 6 cyt.. air rond .
4 speed trans.. PS, Pa tx&gt;Wer wind&lt;NI~· I))wer
door klcks, l it wheel, crui!&lt;l control. IMIFM
radio, ~eroo tape radial liri)S. buc,kef seil!S.
rear window de to~ g&gt;Jges.
&lt;SALE PRICE

$9

1986 MERCURY
SABLE

Stock H 77551. 4 door~ "'dan. ~oot wheel
drive, 6 cyt.. air cond., auto. tran&lt;, PS. PB.
power w1ndow&lt; tx&gt;•er seat, jX)Wer dOor klcks,
li~ wheel. cruise rontr~ciM/FM radi:J, ~eroo
tap~ radial tires. white wal~. bucket seals. ''"
win&lt;tlw ootog.
• SALE PRICE

., S9999e

1986 MERCURY

1985 CHEVROI::ET

COUGAR

s:10 PICKUP

Stocli H78221. 2 doors. 6 cyL, air cond , auto
trans , PS, PB, IM/ FM rad~. bucket .,.t&lt;

Stock H 78751. 4 Cjl., 4 speed Iran&amp; , PS.
Ml/ fM radio,, radial bres, wh1le walls, ·long
lliife tfd. rear ~ep bumper. ·

SALE PRICE

SAtE PRICE

$9943.

526.

AROBIC DANCE AND EXERCISE CLASS ··
STARTING FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2
AT 11:00 A.M.
. $2,50 PER ClASS

NO REGISTRATION NECESSARY. BABYSITTING PROVIDED
INSTRUCTOR, P*TI'Y HENSLER
FOR MORE INFORMATION - 949·2722
Across from Heck's in the Plaza- -Ripley, WV

..

and 4 records .
With Vinton at Belpre a nd
Meigs playing the Buckeyes, the
picture should start to caine into
focus about. 10: OOPM Friday
nig h t so far as the chase fo~ th e
crown is concerned .

Ame/'ica $ Bed-Selling
·Small Pickup ·

I!U

THE OLYMPIAD:

.'

BEND AREA-MEDiCAL CENTER

•

'88
Ford Range·r

J"olnh1

DOCTORS -HOURS

M-TH: 10-1, 2-6 F: 10-12

with a ·good running ' attach,
spells a 31-27 Seminole victory.
Nebraska's Cornhuskers are
·
Off to a great St ar t in 1987 · B Ut
they need to look back to Oct. 4,
1986, when they barely squeezed
by ' South Carolina, 27-24. QB
Todd Ellis of the Gamecocks Is
back to torment Nebraska . But
he lsn(t enough to 0utpoln t QB
Steve Taylor and friends . Make It Nebraska 35-21 over South
rarolina .
"'
Tlie Auburn offense, with QB
Jeff Bruger at the controls, gets
better each week. North Carolina
has great potential , but not
enough consistency. The Hoople
nod goes to Auburn, 38-24.
In the Big Ten showdowns·.
.
Powerful Ohio State has too
many guns for Illinois. The
Buckeyes will win 42-20. Struggllng Indiana will prevail over
struggling Norfhwestern, 27-25;
Iowa will take Michigan Slate,
38 ·35 ; Michigan'- Will dump Wisconsin, 38-21; and Minnesota will
5 t op P ur d ue, 31 - 17 ·
The SEC battle between I:.ouisiana State and visiting Florida
will be a humdinger with LSU's

By' Maj .- Amos B Hoople
. Man In Motion
Egad, friends! The conference
ra ces in college football get
started in earnest this wee!\.
have io share
, However, they
· center s,tage with three major
non-conference pairings.
The top Independents in the
Sunshine State, Miami 's Hurricanes and th~ Florida State
Seminoles, get together (CBSTV) in Tallahassee. Plus ihe
North Carolina Tar Heels will
host the rugged Auburn War
• Eagles. And the Nebraska Cornhuskers will be home to the
s trong Sout h Carolina
Gamecocks.
Miami leads the Seminoles,
17-13, in their series. Amazingly,
the Hurricanes have won eight of
lhe nine contests played In
Florida State's Doak Campbell
Stadium, the site of this week's
meeting.
In an offensive show it will
come down to which QB, Danny
McManus of Florida State or
Steve \Valsh of Miami, ha s the
best game. Experience is on the
side of McManus. That, coupled

will

Vinton Count y owns a 3 ·7 0
record in TVC play: Meigs an d
Belpre both are 3- l, Nelsonvil le- York, Wellston and Alex ander are at 2 -1; Miller isatl3, a nd Federal · Hocking . and
Trimble are at the bottom with 0

m

Wf'dn~uy ·s Rt• 11uil~

\

Dh·tslon II

"'

Wl.'"!&gt;il

Days &amp;

Inside line ba ckers; Ch ris Smlt1l,
Scott William s and perhaps
Durs't- will be at halfback on
de fense; Mike Roush and Howard are at cornerback and
Brothers will go at safety.
HalfW.'!Y through the season

For 'the Seminoles, it's sunny skies

Kaff-kaff!

Ill

I. 1•1•1. f;ft
~~ .3119
i!f .!16!1 :11 1
6!t .lili:l I
,79 .00:1 13' :
82 AK I 17
Ill! Alii J71l

•h"iu"' Fntll .

citing Ftylda vacation tvtr madtavailabtt _a Festival of
Florida .rFun and Sun.
,
·

5
Night~
* * *

Montreal_

.

Tt•an1

~- \'oun~town

night

" '
· 11a
90
K!l
KO
16
1!\

'·

:1. \ ' ounf!:'!lown Muont'y

East
) '•"\t. l.oulo;

~..

roolbull ratinJ:'!'I (wllh Urst plact' volt's
nnd won - l ost rccord11ln par('nlhcst'! ):
DiviSion I
Tcwn
l'olnl.~
I. flnl'innulll'rlni"Pion (24) ( 1· 0)
:!711
:!. f'le~·riMd ~ .•l u!&gt;t' ph ( IJ ( 1· 0)
1'76
:1. fhwinfiUtl ( 'olt:"r.tlu (-1·0) ·
'I tiD
I. Tulf'&lt;lo Whltnwr 11-111
I :ill
~. Zant;"'VIIh• {-1· 0)
13:1
li. t;ahllnnal.inculn r:11 H·!ll
llti
7. 1\kntur !HI
11:1
It fanion Mt•Klnlt)' (:i-ll
liD ,
9. Su.ndus!ly {4-0l
ill
IU.Dt.l)'lon \\'uy nt• H ·IJ)
:il
St'mnd ten: II. Upper A.rllngtnn: 1\! .
\\'1•strrvlllc North %7; 1!1. Clndnnall St .
Xavlf'r 2&amp;: 1~ . K1•1\rrlng Fulrmont 22; 15.
Trul\lioad-Mudi80n 21! 18. Tolcdu('l!nlnll
( ~uthull c 19: 17. ChllliL-oihc Hi: Ill. Eut•lld
11: 19 . 1e1u .o~lllon Wlblhlnl{ton 9; 2(1 Troy

Tf'am
1. Orn·lllt- { UH (4· 01

(' lt•nhr.nd ut CullfonUa, nlji{lll
NATION1\L LE1\GUt:

· Wt ha... lust compltted • adnrtlllng trade out with
Vacation lmorical to offer our customers the most tx•

Vscsfion!

.59~

Kaltbnore (Boddlckf'r J0.-11 I at Del rolf
(PPtry 9-6). 7: 35p.m .
H011ton (S..IIprs 7-tl) ut N1•"'· \'11rk
IFII~on 1· 0), 7: 30p.m .
fall!ornla t•"null•r 10·9) ld C'hi c ujj;u
(MtDowllll t-O), tl p.m .
Sf-llltk&gt; {Mourt• K- 19) ~~~ Tl'1t:l-" (KII.-us

•

COMPLIMENTS OF RUTLAND FURNiiURE ·
WITH THE PURCHASE OF 1399 OF
MERCHANDISE IN OUR STOREWIDE SALE
· A VALUE OF $$QQOO

FREE
Flotids

nn

1'1'1 .

\\'t•clne!&gt;iduy'" Result"
8o11lori 7, St•w \'urk 0
Rallimor1' 7, Dt•lruit :t.
Mllwuuluw ~. Tnnmfo '.!
fhlu,t;o S. California '!
Kunsa"' City i, Seattle 3
Texa.'&lt; 2. Mlnnt.'!oiOla I
Oukland 4, flt•vel~nd 3
Thursda,v's Ganuos
rlf'VI'Iand (Cat.n'dJOUI 7-17) at Oak·
l~d JDuvl"' 1· 1). :l: 15 p.m.

~·att ic 111 T .;"XII.lo,

6.

...

!U ' .IIi)!

I llll'u1:0

~

free florida

7l

.

8alllmun•
Clevt'l:md

HURRY SALE ENDS SATURDAY

SAVE liP TO

"""' ""'
"" ".,"
"'
" 'est "
"'"" ,."'"
""
""' ..,"'

L

Toronto
l)l .. roU

BIGGEST SAVINGS THIS YEAR· ON LIVING
ROOM, DINING ROOM and BEDROOM
SUITES

usual spot but will work on
de fe nse;:,
Dennis 'B.;wth and Wes Young
will handle the defensive end
duties: Hanning and Peterson
. will go at defensive tackles, Jeff
McElroy and Bissell are the

"•

Rutland ·Fu-rniture Co.
•

Buckeyes clash -in· top .TVC co11:test Friday

on

----~-

The Daily Sentinei - Pi!ge- 5

Pomenfy-Middleport, Ohio

I

'.

,.

'

I

�•

•

•

'

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

'

,·•

•

'

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Squ~ds

Thu~day.~obar1,

get 4 calls

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports four
calls Wednesday; Middleport at
2:32 a.m. to Brownell Ave. for
Wayne Williams who was treated
but not transpOrted; Middleport
Fire Departmental 2:40a.m . to a
possible structure fire at the
intersection of Route 124 and
County Road 5: Pomeroy at i 2; 08
p.m . transported Tina Hill from
the scene of an auio accidel\t on
West Main to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Tuppers .Plains at 3
p.m. to Owl . Hollow Road for .
Nanpy Deem to St. Jqseph's ·
Hospital.

..

New doctor begins
• .. p
dU l IeS
ID
OIDeroy
Dr. Mark 0.13rown, a special·ist in internal· medical, will open
his practice Monday in the Meigs
Medical Building , Mulberry
Heights , Pomeroy.
Dr. Brown, a graduate of the
Ohio State University College of
Medicine, recently completed his
•

·.- SEAitS WINNERS 1\'1\MED - Henderson ,
·W. Va. residents. Ralph and Cecilia Johns, at left.
were the winners of a Kenmore two~burner gas
grill gi•·en away by Sears of Middleport during a

.....--Local briefs-......__,
A Langsville woman was injured in an acc ident Tuesday, a\
5:03 p.m. on Ohio 124, less than a m ile east of Rutland, accord ing
to the Ga llia ·Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Rebecca J. Johnso n, 34, was ta ken by the Rutland EMS to ·
Veteran s Memorial Hos pital, ·where she was treated and
released. ·
.
.Jo hnson was driving west .whim she lost control on the wet
pavement. Her vft n went orr toe right side qf the road and hit an
embankm ent before overturning.

Two cars damaged in accident
Three cars were damaged a nd two drivers were cited to court
as the result of a three-veh icle accident on W. Main St. in
Pomeroy at 12:04 p.m. Wednesday .
•
Pomeroy Pollee reported that a car driven by Tina Hill, 21,
Po meroy . st ruck the rear of a car driven by John L. Nelson, 35.
Pomeroy, wh·ich went ·int o the rear of a car driven by Elizabeth
Swisher. 44, Ches hire, The Nelson a nd Swisher cars were
stopped in the lane of traffic near the Super America Station
wailing, for a vehicl.e to turn into th e station.
•
Damages to I he Hill vehicle were heavy and Hill was taken to
\'ctera ns Memorial Hospital by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad. She was tre ated for a head Injury a nd released. Swi&gt;her
drove tlerself to the hospital to be checked out. There were light
damages to her vehicle and moderate to thO' Nelson car. ·
Hill was cited on an ass ured cl ear distance charge and Nelson
on charges of failing to have financial responsibility and
~e r at mg a vehicle under suspension. ·

Six fined in Middleport · court
· Si:o. defendants forfeited bond s and three others were fined in
rhe, cou~t ?f Middlepor t Mayor Fred Hoffma n Wednesday night .
ForfeJimg bonds were P~u l R. Stewart, Cheshire $450
dt·Ivu~g while intoxicated; Eli Ebersbach III, $450,. driving
undr1. the mflue nce, and $!00, possess ion of marijuan a: Ronald
H. f{Ichards, Jr .. New Haven, W. Va., $40; fda M. Clark:·
P~meroy, $42; D:all~s
Sayre, Gallipolis, $40, and Maurice s.
V\ alker, Galhpohs, S4 6, all pos ted on speeding charges.
Fmed ":'ere· Marcia Terry, Middleport, $50 and costs,
operat mg " bar after hours; Ma rgaret B. Young, Clifton, w.
\ a .: $18, speed mg. and Kennel h Wise, Middlepo-rt, S50and costs
expired license.
'

p.

·~

Daily stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided by
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Langsville woman injured

.

N0

A special meeting of the Meigs
High Band Boosters has .b een set .
for 7 p.m. Saturday at the high
school band room . , ,..

east and south. The really cool
air should penetrate Northwest
Ohio sometime Friday afiernoon
and spread over all the state by
late Friday n,lght. More showers
are likely to develop in this colder
air Friday night.
·
This morning's weather map
showed low pressure over Maine,
with a cold front into Virginia an(!
Tennessee. Weak high pressure
covered the western and central
Great ·Lakes. Another deep low
pressure area was over South
Central Canada
·

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs
in the mid 60s. Partly ~lQudy
tonight, with a low In the' mld 40s.
'Variable cloudiness Friday, with
a chance of s howers and highs
near 70.
·
The probability- of preclpita·
lion Is qear zero today and
tonight and 30 percent Friday.
Winds will be from the southw - ·

and tonight.
Ohio Extended F.orecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair through the period, with
highs mainly In the 50s Saturday,
climbing Into the 60s Sunday and
to near 70 Monday . Overnight
lows will ra!Tge from the mid 30s
to the low 40s Saturday and
Sunday mornings, rising Into the

fle;s~t;n;.e;a~r~1~0~m~p~h~t:h:ts=a=ft:e:r~n~oo~n~;4;0~s;e;a~r~ly;;M;o;n;d~a;y;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
786 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
.
992-6491

.....,......

CLEVELAND (UP I) _ There
was no winner of the 't op prize in
Ohio's 'Super Lotto drawing Wednesday night .. meaning the jack~
pot will grow to at least $6milllon
fqr the weekend game. .
A lottery commission spokes man today said no tickets were
sold for the m)d·week drawlng
that lis ted the six . WiJ~n!.ng
num'bers of 12, 18, ·19, 25, 32 dmJ.,...t-

.

However, 118 players picked
five of 1he numbers. to win $1.000
eac h and 5.717 pl'lyers selected
fo ur of the numbers to win $8
3
ap iece.
·
Ticket sales for the drawing
totaled $4,070,575, with a prize
payout totaling$592,511. Wednesday 's uncJajmed jackpot was $J

.

..

~·

..

...
....

...

·

Layette shower conducted in area

.

A ,layett e shower ·was given VanMatre, Vicky Russell, Angle . Shank.
.
recently by Janet Russell and Russell, Robin Southern, Debbie
Sending gifts were Carolyn
· Wanda Shank honoring Cindy Burns, Carolyn Korn, Megan Demosky, Melinda Venoy. Cindy
Hartenbach. Games were played Bartels, ];)lane Caruthers, June Rowe, Sonia Demosky, Evalee
with prizes going to the winners . ' Eichinger, Jane ·Banks , Cindy Wolfe, Judy King, Emmogen e
Corrine Ambrose won the door Baker, Margaret Russell, Do· Congo, Marlene Har rison, Sherpr!ze. .
ro thy .. Hartenba c h, Debbie rle Might, Christopher and Ken·
''"'" Attending were susie Smith Grueser. Viola H a rtenbach, Ro· dra Snouffer. c;barlie a nd Tine
and Patricia, Sarah Snouffer, sanna Manley, Stlaron lV!antJy, , Werry, Marty Struble, Audrc'y
Lillian Demosky, Betty Denny, Polly Legar, Dena Mantdy, . Gaffney, and Herl'tjan Gaffney ,
Ellie Biaettnar, Cathy Johnson, Shawna Manley, Kay and Tera Jr,. Carolyn Thomas, and Debbi e
Julie Sls&gt;on, Jamie. and Jessica Gardn er. J .P . Dav is, and Adam Davidson:
Blaettnar, :Corrine Ambrose, Sis

Eastern Local Sctlools
Menus for . schools in the
Eastern Local School Di stict for
the week of Oct. 5 have been
announced by Grace Stout. The
same luncheon menus are served
in all schools of the district.
Monday: Hot dog with· sauce,
.french fries, fruit and milk.
Tuesday: Chili, peanut butter
sandwich, relish tray, fruit and
milk.
·•· Wednesday: Grilled cheese
sandwich, green beans, fruit and

milk.
Thursday: Corn' dog, peas,
cookie, fruit and milk.
Friday: Cook's choice.
Meigs Local Schools
Luncheon menus for schools In
the Meigs Local Schoo!' District
next week have been announced.
In accordance with the uniform
luncheon progr'am of the district,
the same menu will be served at
all -sc hools.
Monday: Corn dogs. mixed

In service

..

PRE, ·CAIPTION!I

1s

all~·

Appliance ·
S eetaeular

ol

MEDICINE: BEFORE YOU TAKE IT, TALK ABOUT IT

.

~--~~--~C~H~E~'ST~~~~==~----3-0-INC-H~

FREEZER

$309

RANGE

$439-·

HOLDS OVER
200 LBS.

John William Carroll of South
Charlcs iOn, W.Va., formerly o[
Syracuse. died at his home
Monday.
HP v. as the son of the late Joh n
and liara Killingsworth Carroll
of S_\-racus0.

day, rvices
Point willbelp.m
Rock Church.. Satur-·
of the
-Se
Naza rene, of which she \Va S a
member, Rev. Olan Harvey
offi ciating. Buria l fo llows in .

~~!~C:sc~~te~a~~~~~n~~~~~:

Su n·iving are his daughter and
'I son- in -Jaw. Va n and Judy Moore Fun eral Home in Vln to n,
Friday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p . m.
Bickers. a ~ra nddaugh te r, J ulie
The body will be taken to the
Vick ers: a sis ter, Margaret
Rose•. Minersville, Besides hi s c.hurch one hour prior to
pa1 e nt s, he was preceded in serv ices.
de a I h by two sisters. Ma ry ,
Bulcher and Elea nor Bahram;
Jwo brothers, Rollin and Th o·
Rul~ Hendricks
mas. and his w ife, Be.u lah Mae.
Services willl;le held at 11 a.m .
Former Rac ine residen t Ruth
Friday at the Blessed Sacrament
Church in Sout h Charleston . Hendricks, 93, die&lt;,l Wednesday
Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m. morning at Parkview Nursing
Thursday at the Snodgrass Fun· Home in Parkersbu rg, W.Va.
A hom emaker, Mrs. Hend r ic ks
era I Home on McCorkle Avenue.
was bo rn in R acine on· Dec. 24,
Florence Boring ·
1893 to the late John Linsco tt a nd
Bertha Shuler~~~...... ~ .........
Th£&gt; Ewing Funeral Home
She is survived by one daugh ·
reports that a sister, Shirlt•y
ter, Polly Ma rrln 'of Rutland; two
OrPenbcrgcr of Albany, wa s sons, Arthur Hendricks of Com ·
' uninte ntionall y Omitted from the merce City, Colo. and Donald
lurvivors of Florence· L. Boring,
Hendricks of Middleport; 31
74, Route l , Albany, who died
gr a nd ~h ild ren and many great
Tuesda y. The Rev. Dear! Porte r
grandcnildren ~
will officiate over services to bf'
Besides her parents she was
held
at I p.m. Friday at th" preceded In death by her hu s·
funerul home
band, Walter Matthew He n·
dricks Sr:, in 1963; 11 c hildren
Ethel Fostt&gt;r
and one gra nddaughter.
F:lh&lt;•i Paul ine F;oster, 73, of
Royte 1, Langsville, died &lt;Jt
Pomer·oy Health Care Centrr.
Wednes day.
She was ,born Jan. 12, 1914 in
Meigs County, daughter of the
late William A. Weyand and Nora
A. Hu~t on Weyand;
'
ShP was prpceded in death by
her husband Edmu nd M. Foster
in 1966, and two brot hers, one
sister and one .grandchild.
She Is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Ronald (Wanda ) Willi~
ams, Langsvi lle: twogtandch lld·
rrn, Randy Williams Langsville
and Mrs. Michael (Linda ·) Magnotta of Pataskala: four great

$439

• • ~··•..;...,.,...
0

•6.0 cu. ft. Storage Capacity •Stirn 26" Width ..
•Textured Steel lid •Slide Hnd Store Basket

•MEAL TIMER ® clock plus Minute Timer • Top-mounted
infinite-heel controls • Full·width glass console • Chrome \.
reflector bowls.
I

Sta11 dard·Cioaning ovel\ • Automatic MEALTIMER® .clock
with Minute Timer o Chromo reflector bowls • Oven wmdow •
Full-width storage drawer with Uterature Pac • Balanced
Cooking System

•

..........

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
·Opal,Wil lison, Reedsville.
. ~~d.n esday Discha rges - La·
Donna Bennett, Gladys Short,
Freeda McFa nn .
,
-'1

. . . . '•

•·1' .... ..- -

•

FULL SIZE

FALL FESTI'IAL DAYS

MICROWAVE OVEN

, Dull·~C IIe Timer provide• up to 60 min. cook·
in'il or defrottlng time •Verllble Cook Power
control • Solid-Sune Temper•h•e Probe •BI·

.

Level Cooking R1ck •700 wttt• of cooking
power • l•rga 1 .3 c:u. h . oven CIPIC ity • Bel-

NO-FROST

·

tncad Weve !=ooldng Svttem.

$219

REFRIGERATOR

GALLIPOLIS CITY PARK- SEPT. 28 thru OCT. 2

$'799

Reg.
$269.00

19.9 cu. h . GIP•city • Provision for ICE -

MAGIC«~~ Automatic lc1:1 Maket • Ad ·

just1ble Door Storage Bins • lllu· ·
minated Up - ~ront Controls,

• 15 Cycles/Options inCluding 5 Automatic Cycles • HiTemp Washing Option • "Clean" Light •
Exclusive In-The-Door Silverware Basket • HighSide Racks • More .

Undercounter
Dishwastter
with
P'ower Clean

·MONTHS .

Direct-Drive
Washer

Large Load
Capacity

Services wilt be Sa turday , -;
p.m., at Rawli ng-Coa ts·Biower
F'une ral Home. wi1h Pastor P a ul
Tay lor officiating. Burial wll l·be
Jn Snowball Hill Cemeter y in
Syracuse. Friends may call a t
the funeral home from 2·4 a nd 7·9
on Friday.
·.f

Hospital news

30 INCH
GAS
RAN.G"E

ElECTRIC

.,~~~~~~~~~~~
.~ ·Area ·d eaths
Carroll
~~~~~~~~~;~~~t~f ~:~nde;;:
Celebrate With Us Du,ing ,
..

l

school.
ctf work and study that must
The leaflets provide informa· begin Oil' the fir st day of a career·
tion on specific topics for effec· and be never -ending, and that's
tiveteachingtechrriques,mot.iva· why we use the Master Teacher
!ion, di sc ipline , grading and program tor sta ff development,
testing, pr-ofessio nali sm and . he said . · 4 , .
•
ethics, according to Ord.
"It covets the wide spectrum .
He further said that the pro- . of teachers' needs, and It helps
gram
designect to meet. three . teachers refine th e skHls needed ' '
goals. First It helps teacMrs to be successful In t.oday's
maintain and refine their posi~ classroo m and · sc hOol ," .he
tive and profesio nal attitudes · conclude&lt;!. .
, toward teaching and children.
Second, it strives to give each ·Hysell reunion
'·
RUTLAND - The Charles
teacher something new a nd pra~Reed and Hysell anll oscar
tical each week that can be Hysell fam i'ly reunion will l)e
applied immediately in the daily
held Sunday at Forst Acres Park
Monday : Pizza, salad , cookie,
work with students .
vegetables, fruit and milk .
The third goal, tie said, is that
near Rutland l)eginnlng at 12
Tuesday: Fish sandwich, peas; · fruit and milk.
Tuesday: Cheeseburgers , ori·
the program cons tantly helps
noon .
fruit and milk.
remind teachers of the principles
Revival continues
Wepnesday: Spaghetti and ion rings, cookie, Ice cream and
of education which they already ,
RUTLAND...., A revival at the
·sauce, applesauce, hot .rolls and milk.
Wednesday:
Tuna
salad
sand·
know
but
may
forget
to
apply
In
Rutland
Church of God will
butter, and milk.
wich,
noodle
soup,
crac;kers,
fru
it
working
with
students
and
'get·
continue
through Sunday l"tih
Thursday: Pizza, salad, fruit
.
and
milk.
ling
the
work
of
the
schoo
l
Evangelist
Steve Hoskins speak·
and milk.
Thursday:
Turkey
and
dresaccomplished
.
ing.
Homecoming
will be ob·
Friday: Cook';; choice.
lng, thl!nky mixed vegtltabies,
Supt. Ord stressed that wha· served Sunday afternoon with a
fruit and milk.
lever one's life work, constant dinner at 12:30 p.m .. and an
Carleton School
Friday:
Beef
stew.
biscuit,
growth
is necessary for con· afternoon service at 1:30 p.m.
Carlelon Schools-Meigs Indu sslaw,
fruit
and
milk
.
cole
tinued effectiveness and success. with special singing will be by the
tries ·luncheon menu s for next
Professional growth is a process Gospel Lites of Circleville.
week are as follows:
Southern Local Superintepdent
Bobby Ord reported today th at
th e " Master Te acher" . in service
bulletins, are again being fu rnis hed to 't eachers of the South·
ern· Local School District.
He e~plained that the "Ml!ster ,
Teacher" is a planned program ·
of professional training designed
·to help educators maintain hign
pmfesio.n al standards and pract!·
ces in the classroom . and the

·

tion will fail /o produce th e desired results becaure it iJ
ltJed improper/)'· Prcscriptio11 dru~ uu'm.re. called
"Am ericti'J Other DrJtR Problem '', co,rcemJ ali bcalth
profeJiirmals hecp11U it lr estimtJted that from 25% to
90 Cff of patitmts make ermrs ;, lakin~ Jheir medici 'lei.
Thu.r. it if imp oranl that when J OII or a family member
rll , eirf! a·prorcripti(m the joiiowi1lf: stepr are observed '

Page'-7
~ .

bulletins readied

•

@
TAL~OUT .

.

Thursday, Oct&lt;&gt;bar 1. 1987,
~

PHARMAFACTS
By Carol N. Carson, R. Ph.

to infllrl.! proper u.re~ ·
·
Firu. rl'rnenibe.r thai ) '0 /J har·e a rip,ht to information
about j jrmr presuijJtiml i11 a la11f,1141-!,0 you can understand.
Giviu~ patleulf tb~ information they need to ure. their
rnedicincr wire/}' is nol an "extra". Jt i.t a basic pa1't. of P.Qod health care.
. Second. you have a rerpomibilitl tn communicate with yo·ur health p,-o.
fciitrm&lt;Jis. Yottr doctnr and phr-m nacist need to l?now "about other m.edicines
you ure tukinJ!. und ubout any problcmr you may be havi'IR with them. So if
th ey fnrKet to ask )'o u t~bout your medicin es. make it yourbusineu tote!l them.
11Jird.yne ha,•e a ri~hllo ask quertion'r. Many penple haJetohothl!f' their doc·
Jo r nr ph,mnaast with "dJ.tmh" questiom. But if you don"t under-sttmd how or why w
tal&lt;~ ;•our medicine;, cbunces a~e you wili make a mistuke. Therefore. each time),ou '
Kel a PrrJ.rcriptjtm. be sure UJ ask yuur dnaor or phar·macist these querllom:
o What i.r the 'hmu! of the medici11e and ·what is it rupprmtd to do?
cHou· a11d when dO I take it - a11d for hnw long.'·
0
What frwd.r.·drink s. othe-r medidnu.t, or aC1 i1•iJies .rhiruld { at-•old wh;J11 .taking
this medicatio11?
0
II re there aiJY .ride effect.r. a,1d whti do I do 'f th"' occM?
0
Is ehere any wriu en injormati011 at'tlli"ble uholit the medicine?
Fruth PharmaiJ'. in cooperati011 with the Natiorzal Council rm Patient In· ·
form.aiou aud t."dt~c:.Uion, will pro111ote Oc10ber, 1987, aJ "Talk About PreJ-·
cripeionr Mrmtb". Fru&amp;b pharmacists will he on duty to amwerquestiom y ou
may hut•r:. about your ml!dici~1e1. Alro, j,-ee "Get the A11swerr" wallet cards will
be at•ailllbie a~ the prercr;ptifin countf!r. Tbir h t~ndy card allows you lo ke~p
per.wnKI medteai data u·ifh you Ill all t;,nci and has a checkliJI ojq~Jestiom Jo
ask ynur ~octor or pharmucirt abr)ll/ new mcdiclne1J, So be sura to rtop by
Frut h's tim mom h. talk to tbe ph~rmadJIJ aud pick up your wallet card. And
remember u·ith all medicinf! - before you take i&amp;. talk ahot# ie!

lOp JotlO pr;'"..l"o

..

By The Bend

Uuforfmlatclr. chances are fh(• sam(' that the medictl·

A special meeting of the
Southern Local School District
Board of Education has been set
for 6 p.m. Monday ar the high
school.

ODe C aimS

38.

···---------~--------------------

ChanceJ are .that JOt! or a membe1· of your family u•ill receive onu of 1he
more than 1;6 billion prttscriptinm di;pttmed annually i11 the Uuit ed Stales.

Board to meel

'

· J•

(ContlfiUed from page 1)

where-skies were clear.
Dry air across the lower Great
. Lakes and Ohio Valley regions
.should help provide plenty of
sunshine in Ohio today as the
coldest portion of tile Canadian
air moves northeast.
E!ut another cold air mass is
headed toward Ohio, expecting
the hit the northwest corner
tonight and cross the state
Friday.
·
A few sh9wers may precede
this cold front and reach Northw·
e5t Ohio by daybreak and move

Plan special meet

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power .............. 27%
AT&amp;T ..... , .............................. 34
Ashland Oil ...............·......... 66%
· Bob Evans Far ms ................. 19
Charming Shoppes .............. 241-\
Federal Mogul... ................. 44 %
Goodyear T &amp;R ........ ..... ....... .. 72
Heck's Inc .............................. 4
LaRds' End ...... ......... .... ..... .24Y.
Limited Inc ........ .... ........ .... 36¥.
Multimedia Inc ......... ..... ..... 69¥,
Rax Restaurants .................. 41-\
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .10')\
Shoney's Inc ... .. .................. 28')4
Wendy 's Inti. .......... ............. 9%
Wo rthingt on~ Ind .... ............ .. 24%

million.

I.John

residency inHospital,
internal medicine
at
Riverside
Col\lmbus.
He Is now on the staff of Veterans
MeD:Jorial Hospital.
Assisting ·Dr. Brown In his
office will be his wife, Karen. The
physician is on assignment to this
area by the National Health
Service Corps.
The couple reside on Flatwoods Road.

;;fW'

promotion at the Meigs County Fair. Mr. and Mrs.
Johns were prese0 tedi their prize on Monday.
Making the presentation was . Bill Haptonstall,
Scars owner~ manager.

October

The Daily Sentin'el

.•

1987

•
.I

Free
Delivery ·

•

~.

. FINANCING

ifv'

• 5 Automatic Cycles • Water Temp Cont.ol wilh 3
wash/Rinse Options • 2 Water Levels • EasyClean Lint Filter
·
·

.

Free
84:11

~If ••

Plio"• ~~6·1~0S
C.altipolia

1

"

Washing System

$429
Direct-Drive
Washer

Automatic
Dryer

Automatic
Dryer

Super Load

Timed Dry
System

· Super Load ·
Capacity

• DRY·MISER®Control • "Infinite" Temp Control
• Gentle Heat System • 5 Drying Cycles • FINISH
GUARD• Contrql• Extra-Wide Opening Hamper
oor

NOW

Capacity

• 7 Autof118tic Cycles • 3 Water Temp Sittings • 4

• 4 Orylng Cycles • 3 Drying Temperatures • "No·

•

Water Levels • MAGIC CLEAN®Sati·Cieanlng
Unl Fitter • 2 Wash &amp; Spin Speeds

Iron" Cool· Down Care o.1BO' Side·Swing Opar •
Tough OURAWHlTE" Interior • More

I

Delivery
..

··~

.

�•

•

,
• Page 8 · The·Daily Sentinel

1 "Beat of the bend ·

•

.

.

Cvmmunity calendar/area happenings

•

A Hall.·of ·Pamer...
IF
By BOB HOEFLICH

Sentinel Stall Writer
Col)gratulationstoB.oyProff!tt
of Ra~me, long in the oil and gas
dr!lling !luslnJ'.SS. _
.
Roy was'inducted into the Ohw
Oil and Gas Assoc1at!on's Hall of
Fame and was selected for this
tnlt!al event because of his
• valuable contribution to the oil
an&lt;l gas Industry in Ohio.
·
'' The honors dinner was held on
Sept 24 at Salt Fork Lodge witb
over 200 people attending,
----Joyce Sisson, president of the
Syracuse School PTO, is extend·
ing a btg vote of thanks of behalf
of the 'membership for all of the
financial help gtven In the project
to place new tile on t he school's
'
gymnasium floor.
Instead of staging a long sales
campaign - really they becg111e
a burden - the PTO as ked for
donations. A .total of $2.120 came
rolling in with the final cost oft he
project which has been completed running $2,580. So, if you
wa nt to help out with the ,-~inal
amoun t due. just get In lauch
with Joyce\
Contributing to the proj~t
were Mr. and Mrs Bill Young,
Mrs. Elmora Boice, Southern
Local School Board, Mr. and
Mrs. Chuck Alkire, Mr and Mrs
Jackie WilliamS&gt;, Megan and
Aaron Drummer, Rurn Stearns,
Mr and Mrs. Mike Bahr, Mr and
MrS:. Greg Roush, Mr. and Mrs .
Gordon Fisher, Mr and Mrs
George Connolly, Erro'n El·
dridge, Mr . and Mrs. Mark
Morrow, Mrs. Sandra Baer, Mr,
and Mrs . Tom Ball. Mr. a nd Mrs.
Ray Proffitt, Mary E . Wingett m
memory of her late husband,
Lowell Wingett, Mr. and Mrs
James Anderson, Mr and Mrs.
Larry Fields, Chr isty Caldwell,
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Moore, Mr.
and Mrs. John Bentley, Jenny
Manuel, Mr. and Mrs George
Schneider, Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
McKelvey, Mr and Mrs. Carroll
Norris, Mrs. Elma Louks, Mr.
and Mrs Greg Cundiff, Mr. and
Mrs. David Sayre, Syracuse
Dairy Bar, Racine Home Na
twna l Bank, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Struble, Joyce and Ernie S1sson,
Debbie Sayre, Mr and Mrs.
James Lawrence, Mrs. Jani ce .
Curry, Mr and Mrs Roger Allen.
Mr. and Mrs Rick Ash, Mr. •rd
Mrs Bob Sheppard , Kar,l
Grueser and Son. Baer's Market,
State Farm Insurance. Syracuse

Thursday, .October 1, ~ 987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Fire Department and Emer,
gency Squad , Ben.eficlal Fl·
nance, and Mr. and Mrs.-ls:enny
Buckley
----I'll bet you didn't know that
gollers do take time out to dine
and dance.
."
They do and the Jay mar Golf
Course Club members wlll be
holdmg a dinner-dance on Sun·
day, Oct 25, at the new American
Legion Hall, Mill St., Mtddleport.
The affair Is open to the publlc
and reservat!ons must be In by
OC1. 20 To make reservations or
to gel mo~e lnformaHoR call Bob
Freed at 992·2044 . Organist
George Hall. well known across
the county, will provide-music for
dancing.
----Meigs Clerk of Cou rts Larry
Spencer tells me there i~ some
confu sion on those free hunting
a nd fishing licenses So to clarify
the points of confusion, I,arry
says that residents must be 66not 65- for free privileges. Also
veterans receiving the free prlvlleges must be those whom hav.,
permanent disapillties.
----The car show postponed from
, the Middleport Block Party will
be held this Saturday at the same
planned location from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. There are some 14 classes
included in the postponed event.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles w111 be
on hand at Diles Park with their.
refreshment s.ta nd and will fea lure more of those sausage
sandwiches, both hot a nd mild,
that were so popular during the
block party Soft drmks wlll be
available also.
----This just HAS to be correct. So
far I've printed two dates for the
annual Chnstmas bazaar of the...Rutland Emergency Squad · and it tsn't even to be held until
November. Now - emergency
squad members assure me that
the correct dale is Nov. 7 and of
cou rse, the Rutland Civ ic Center
will be the site.
----Does one ever become trnmune
to pmson ivy? Seems like I should
have by this time, but no suc h
luck I have a face only a mother
could love- and what do I get to
enha nce it? You got i t - polson
ivy. Great! I don't recomme nd
you try it, but that It does seem
hke that tlchy feeling coUld he lp
you to keep smlllng.

THURSDAY

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Association for Retarded Cltl·
zens will meet 7 p.m. Thursday at
Carleton School
'
MIDDLEPORT - A four·
family yard sale and rummage
sa le wtll be held Thursday.
F 0laay and Saturday at the
Mfddleport Nazarene Church.
582 Beech St All proceeds will go
to the boy scouts, and to the
church. Some fu r mture, curtains, rugs and other miscellane·
ous items wlll be sold
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Cub Scout Pack 246 will meet 7
p.rri. Thursday at a new locallon
at the Rock Springs Grangt'&gt; Hall
FRIDAY

RUTLAND- Revival services
will begin Friday at the Rutl a ~d
Bible Methodist Church and
continue through ..Sunday, Oct
11 Rev. Paul Miller from Spring
Mills. Pa. will be the e,vangellst
"Good News Singers" from
Portsmouth wtll be featured' the
las t weekend .• ,
SCIPIO- TheScitl\ftownship
Trustees will meet Friday at ,t he
townshpi·butldlng.
SATURDAY

PAGEVILLE- A bean dtnner
wtll be held on State Route 684,
Pageville store building, all day
Satu rday by the Sctplo Township
Senior Citizens. Beans, a ll you
can eat, 'wlll be served for $2 per
person The public Is invited
That same day apple butter will
be made afld orders may be
plact'&gt;d by calling 742·2322 or

698-6021.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
PTO fall carnival will be held
Saturday at tile syracuse Elementary School. Food will be
served from 6 to 9 p.m. with
games to be conducted from 7 to 9
p.m. There will be prize tables, a
country kttchen, and a variety of
games and act! vi ties throughout
the evening.

RACINE - Racine Fire Department gun shoots are resum·
ing for the season, starting
Sat urday at 6:30p.m. The shoot s
will again be held at the aashan
building.
MASON - Mason Volunteer
Fire Department Ladles A:uxil·
iary is sponsoring a chicken
barbeque on Saturday at the
Mason Fire House. Serving will
star t at 11 a.m. Dinners will be
$3.50 for a who le chicken: $2.50
for half. To place orders call
773-5832.
BURLINGHAM- Junior Mod·
ern Woodmen of Bur.Hngham will
hold a bake sale a nil yard sale
Saturday from 9:30 a m to 6p.m.
at the hall ·
LONG . BOTTOM- A square
dane~ wlll be held Saturday

"

King-Miller_.....,.......__ _..:;___ _,__

The ways and means commll ·

tee expressed apprecia tion to the
members who worked ' at the
Meigs County Fair a nd also to
those who assisted with the
Middleport block party. Dona·
lions are being taken on a quilt
now. Janet Peavley had the
cultural program after whic h the
members enjpyed a : card and
gam'e par ty Maurisha Nelson,
president, co ndu c t ed the
meet mg.
Saturda; ni ght members and
their families ga thered at the
Kmghl home for. a po!l~ck pi&lt;!nic.
Next meeting wt ll on Oct. G.

SUNDAY

POMEROY - The homecom·
ing and J40th anniversary of
Pomeroy Trinity Chllrch wtll be
c.elebrated· this ·sunday, begin·
ning with worship service and
communion at 10: 25 a.m. A
potluck dmner will be served in
the dining room. Meat an.d drink
wll! be provided by the church,
bring table service a nd a covered
dish.
·

CARLTPN ClROS,- INC.
CARDS fOR ANY ' OCCASION
· ALSO, WE CARRY A LINE .OF
GIFT WRAP AND ao·ws.
.,

J

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

10°/o Tty.Yout Lu~k/
This Saturday, Oct. 3
Draw Your Discount
10°/o
30°/o
25°/o
50°/o

item of soap, toothpaste, paper
towels or so methmg useful for
the home.
On Oct 15 at 8· 30 p m. there
will a nother orientation, coffee
and dtscu ssion at the Parkt'&gt;rs·
burg Good Shepherd Ep iscopal
Church, LaW !:&gt;e and Charles St.
A rummage sale has been
planned for Oct .17 from 9a.m to3
p mat th e Red Hill StOle, Route
50 East, Par kersburg, with lots of
children's clothmg for sale.
More Informatio n on PWP
activities may be obtai ned from
Manlyn Marenchtu , Marietta ,
614-373-1102, or Ja ne Rader,
304-295·8015 or Wa nda Bucklt'&gt;y,
304-422-0655, flar kersb urg.

z

.

6-8 pm- Drinks SO•

VCR TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. LOTTERY
CARRY-OUT

•Any Special
Occasion

9·18·1 m~

Now Open 7 Days

BASKET WEAVING and
STENCILING CLASSES
!HIIIIY NOU!TON
BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

•

JAHII VlNOY

FlEE WEDDING CONSULTANT

A We~k

YVONNI SCAllY
Bridal Registry and

DAILY I 0 AM-6 PM
Lo,ated at Corner af

Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy

most complete hne of
Wedding Flowers and

Accessories in

this area

LaSALLE GALLERY
Middleporl-992-I . ~

Purchasing all
types of

non-ferrous scrap
GLASS ..... 2¢ lb .
#1 Copper

kEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Current 53¢ lb.
Top Grade

Aluminum Sheets

40¢ lb .

985·3561

Aluminum Cans

All Makes

34¢ lb.

•WaShers •Dishwashers
•Ranges

9·11-1 mo

MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMM!l
•GUN
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

tDrvers •Freezers

PARTS and SE

"VlNYLSlDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RUTLAND

SIDING CO.
PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

Re·Open For Bulneu

No Sunday Calls
3-11-tfn .

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

At Reasonable Priles"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
NO SUNDA Yf CALLS

BING0

•OhiO Souv~ners

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

4-16·86·11•

Authoriulll John Deere,
Holland, lu•h Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equi~ment
Parts &amp; Ser~ice

"'You l'l'omt· II - W4"\.Cot h!''
REASONAitE PlltCES- fRY US!
tr-18· 1 mo.

BODY SHOP

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

SSO PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO.

PAT HILL FORD

GEARY

992-3537g 11-87
Real Estate General

992 -2196

ACCENT ·
FENCE COMPANY

Let Ut f•nee Vou In

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

3 Announcements

HOME
FOR SALE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR
•ALL MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES

CHESHIRE

367-0322
9-23-1 mo
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP. SOIL
FILL DIRT

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO ,
•HOME BUILDING

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING •GEN ERAL
REMODELING &amp;
REPA1RS

REFERENCES
Phone Day or Evenings

985·4141

GINIUI CON!Il(TOIS

9· 28·1 mo pd.

PUBUC NOnCE

OI~E

DAY fACTORY REJECT
&amp; RETURN MA TTREII lAtE
fOR NATIONM
MANUFACTURER

located in long
Bottom near Curtis Hollow entrance to Forked
Run.

QUALITY MATTRE\\E\

Card of Thanks

TWIN S l!f

'19

FULL SILt
OIJrU\

69

KIN G

7~

~ II!

fE)

VA,tl 'l 1&lt;1 ''··l l'

We wish to thank
eyeryone for the
cards, gifts and all
who came to help
make our 50th
Wedding Anniversary a beautiful

BOX SP !liN !jS

Y J , ..1

NEW 4" fOAM \lA B\
TWIN S l!f
FUll SI ZI
ouu_N S ill

79
39
·1 ~J

ONE DAY ONlY
THIS SAT., OCT . 3

'

FOR MORE
INFORMATION CALL

FARMERS BANK
992-2136
11

From Savaniwah, Georgia
" FRESH" SHRIMP SALE
SAT., OCT. 10, 1987
1:00 P.M.
Beh.nd Blue Tartan
M id dleport, Ohto

PH. 304-773-5651

Rti!Hi Y otl! Ttt1 1: k t •r \,,\1,•

Ella and Ronald
Osborne

Dl~ltVI ' t

DON ' T MISS THISII
No Plwrw Calls Plt~d s et

Help Wanted

HAS IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
FOR CERTIFIED-GM TECHNICIAN
"ALSO AN OPENING FOR AN
·EXPERIENCED BODY MAN
~ESUME

TO

Store Hours:
I 0:00-5:30

Full time position for Registered Medical
laboratory Technician on second shift. ~e ­
quires independent worker with capabilities in all areas of Clinical Laboratory:
PLEASE CONTACT:
'·
2-PC. EARLY AM£111CAN

LIVING ROOM SUITE

REG.

1600

$499 95

SAVE
1 100

Carol Disbrow
·. Veterans Memorial Hospital
Laboratory

949-2263
or 949·2168

4-11-87-tfn

ALL.
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
N!w locahon:
168 North Se&lt;ond

Middleport, .~hio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fttl'ung Supplies

Pay Your
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
t614! 992-6S50
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141 992-7754

If you have one or mare years of effective
nursing management experience,. strong
communications skills. please- provide a
statement of your qualifications and · rea sons for interest in this particular position
b 11fore '2 noon Tuesday, Septembl!r ~9.
1987. Excellent benefits, salary negot•a·
ble .-EOE
Reply to: The Daily Sentinel
·, Box 729-A
Ohio 45769

FOUND Young S1amese cat m
downtown Gallipolis area C811
61 4· 388 9780

Lon m Bashan area Wluto and
blonde funy dog Answers to
Buster Reward Call 614- 9492822 or 614 949 2996
lost Female Beagle Bl ack.
wh1te. tan ~;olo r Grandchlldrens
pet . RewarcCcaiiMann1ng Kloes
614 -992 3764 or 614 9926661 ,
Found '"Rutland small ta, and
white female m111od breed dog
Call 614 -992 -61 59

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

R1ck Pe arso n Auctioneer h·
censed 1n Oh10 and We1t V1rg1·
nua Estate, ant1que. ferm , llqUI·
dot10n sales. 304 773 -5785

.9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cast) for 18te model clean
used can
J•m Mtnk Ctlev Olds Inc
8111 Gene Johnson

... · Gallipolis· ..
&amp; Vicinity

2282
WANTED TO BUY Used wood
&amp; coal heflters Swain 's Furnl·
ture. 3rd. &amp; Ol1ve St Gallipolis
Call614-446· 3169 "
Wanted to buy Longl _;o~d Cell
anytime- c &amp; R F~rew ood Call
Bu1ldmg Stte· 1·2 acres wtthin
15 mmutes ot tOWfl Cash or CO
Call by 11-15·87 614- 388·

9769
Complete esta te~ . hou seful. an
bques, colnt · old gun s, gl ass·
were Cell Br~ an lee- 614-3 86
5099 Cas h paid Furntture

Employmenl
Services

(6141 q92-57S1

11

Help Wanted

8-24· 1 mo

Roger Hysell
Garage

EXCE LLENT WAGES f o r spare
time assembly work; elect ron·
1cs, crafts Ot hers I nfo (5 04)
641-009 1 Ext 2987 Open 7
days CALL NOW!

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmlssl.ort.. ..
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

SYSTEMS ANALYST- Fortran
o r Bas1c able (20o/ o program·
~ng) , Fam1hartty wrt h DEC VAX
and MUMPS helpful Mm1mum
2 years Fortran traimng and 2
veers ellperlence Compet1tnie
salary and eKcellent fr1nge benefits Sent resume to th e
Personnel Department, Holzer
Chn u::;, P 0 8011 344, (]all•polls,
Oh10 466 3 1 NO PHONE
CALLS

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Oh1a

6-17-tfc

Baby sitter Nonsmoking Chr•s·
tian in my home for J yr old
M ost ly even.ngs, some days
References Ca11 614 · 4462689

J.R!s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-'843-5248
REASONABLE • RELIABLE

Wanted- Reliable penon U&gt;
babystt weekdays 1n mv home
for 5 yr old m Rto Grande area
Call 614 245-580 1 aher 6·00

PM
-------~- ·
FREE - $40 or more country
w1cker. woodcrafts. porcela m &amp;
brau decor How1 Call 614
379 2428
Ktd Watcher for 2 tchool age
k1d1· m my home m city 6 days a
w eek Cell 614 · 44~-. 2163 and
leave message
, ,\

Wan1ed Handy man for odd
jobs- carpentry end plumbing
Pay by the hour Call614-446·
0422

.,.---------:-:·1

CARPENTER
SE RVI Cfi ·
- Addons and remodelin g
- Roofing and gutter w ork
- Concret e work
-. Plumbing an d electrical
work
(Free Est1mate.s t

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

Pomeroy, Ohio

4- 15 '86-lc

Can do light haul•n,g and roo f1ng
R easo n ab l e rat es . Mari o n
Smder. 614· 949 · 2629

Yard S&amp;Tif"6liim11y Infant baby
women's clothes B11les, m1sc
Ratn/ Shifle. Tara Apartments
At 7 AddiSOn
Rummage Sale T,urs &amp; Fr~ ·
Oct 1 &amp; 2 9 AM tll 1 428
Second Ave
Upper Second p 2101 3 Famtly
Winter coats &amp; clothBs (all stzes),
heavy din ette chairs. dishes,
curtams, bed spreads, record.
tapes, games speakers, electn·
cal i tems Frae 1tems low
pnces nverything mustGol9· 6,
Oct 1 Thurs , Oct. 2-Fr!
Furniture, d1shes , antiques.
mise l 'h m1l es up Lttfle BUUskm
GeorgeMooney ' sRes Wed -Fr1
2 Fl!lmtly Clothes, diShes. tools,
sweepers, other 1tems F1rst
house below Sanders Or Oct
1.2. 3. 9 -4 Neighborhood Ad
Yerd Salp Shoat Ck Rd Crown
Ctty Oct 1, 2, 3 10·3

B1gl Giant! Yard Sale• Whtch was
cancelled because of ram last
week Will be tilts w eek, W ed .
Thurs. Fn. 8t Sat Al!o free
11ems Compl01ebabyhne. tools'
dtshes, tncycles . b1cycles. an d ·
much tno re Centenary area
ngflt off 141 - '!. m1le down
Lmcoln Ptke 9· 6
·
Yard Sale Oct 1. 2. 3 9 6 30
5 miles out Rt 21 B Chtldr en,
women. men c lothmg and m1sc
thmgs

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, ·OHIO
M ost Foreign and
Domestic Ve hi c les
A / C Service

All MaJOr &amp; Minor
Repzms
NIASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DDC" VAUGHN
Cert1fiEtd licensed Shop

9-10- 1 mo. d

4 Fam•ly Yard Sale Centenary
Townhouse Oet 1 -2 9 AM -5
PM Coats baby Item!, sawmg
machtne cross bow. tools gtrls
btke, dishes, cham saw

Garage salo-Behmd Gulf stat1on
1n downtown Mtddleport Rock•
tng chatr , trolling motor roto
ttller, cannmg Jars much more

Yard Sale. 435 Lanat Dr , M1lls
V111Bge. Friday &amp; Saturday, Oct
2 &amp; 3, 9 AM - 5 PM

13 Butternut Pomeroy , Fnd~
Coffee tllbles , tools, canner,
w1nter elothing (alec su pplies),
kttcllcn ware. much more

Large Sale Bulavtll a To\\'n houso Clothing - all Slzos.
d11hes, cannmg l•rs. more •t emsl
Oct 2 9 tl 11 7
Sat - Sept 3rd. &amp; Sun Sept
4th , 9 6 Furntture. beds old
se~::retary w1th m1rror, color tv
glassware. sets of dishes tv·
pewnter, kitchen cab1nets , clo
thing
books. frames and
pictures. silverware. 3 pc liv tng
roo m suite, '77 Dodge Aspen
wagon. sawmg mach1n es tools,
mowers parts Huge amount of
1tems that ca n't be listed Paul
Denney 's co rne r 654 anti
Bldwell· Rodney Road 10 Btd
well, Oh10

Grocery Store manager
in G&amp;lllpohs area. Full· Time
p.osit10n with e~~:celtent benefits.
Respon11ble fO"r mventory ton·
trol, 1Uperv1s1on of employees
and da1ly bookkeeping Send
resume to 8011 Cia 10 6, Gallipolis Oa1IY Tribune, 825 3rd Ave
Galllpolil, Oh10 466-31 .

'3 mi from Rt 1 on Hazel Rtdge
Rd , Oct. 1· 3, 9· 5 Counter top
table, 6 c hatrs, drapes. lamps
etc Pennmgton restdence Follow s•gns on Teens Run Rd
north of Eureka
6 Family Communtty Sale
Ew1ngton legton Hall Exarc1se
b1ke. au com presser atr wren ch.
wmdow shades. ceram•cs , home
l[lterior. Rad1l arm -saw. beby·
boys -women- mens clothi ng all
SIZe'!, bedspread &amp; curtai ns
books, outdoor 11mas l1ghts
me nacs. Sometflmg for every b
o dy. 1·2· 3 10-6
Hams Bap1st Chu rch Oct 1 &amp; 2
9-4 1 m1 west of Rodney , At

35
Fnst t•me ever - Gtgantic yard
sa le Oct 1 2, 3 Numeroua
hand tools , cloth1ng &amp; mts c
household items Old 160 at
Evergreen. Watch for signs
Huge Mo\lmg Sale T'houtands
of ttems furniture, clothes.
dishes. toys &amp; efc Fri &amp; Sat
9·0 0 AM ·6 .00 PM . R.-m or Sine
Ou t ot Galhpohs· 141 to Centenary, tujj1 rtght follow movmg
sale !ngn Off Rt 35 ·Mitchell
Rd follow moving sale signs
Debby Or - Oct 1st. 2nd 3rd
8 30 · 5 ·30 Aa1n or Shme
Dishe s glassware Sa lt &amp;
Peppers misc.
3 Fam tly Yard Sale- Frt Oct 2
9·6 Johnson 's Tratl er Park on
Bob McCorm1ck Rd D1shes.
clothmg. Elvis albums, knickknacks. tools nandmade llems.
some co ll ectible 1tams. A l1ttl'&amp;
blt of everything No seles before

8 30
-t'ard Sale Bulavlllelownhouse
Sept 30, Oct 1, 2 &amp; • 3
Comforts boys· womens mens
coats &amp; clothmg.
Larg e Four Fam1ly AI 141, lett
o.n LeGrande Thurs , Fr1 9-6
Sat 9· 1. Coats. Jeans, sweaters.
spreads. matermty, children&amp;
1068 2,d. Ave , Clot hes· all
Slt&amp;S· summer 81 wmter Kerosane heater. radio &amp; speakers
Thurs &amp; Fri. 9 - 6 .

Part t1me aales clerk nee~ed for
popular Jumor clothing ltore in
Qall•polis Send resume to Boll,. I 'Aid. ••aatof ~
CLA 107 olo Gatlipolis Da•lv &amp; 3
Tribune 826 3rd Ave Gallipolis
B•sement Sale. Friday OC .
Ohio 46631
644 5th Ave. 9· 6 Good clo
Governmant Jobs. $ 16 040· thing, lo la of mttC: patiO grille
$69.230 yr Now hnml) Call
805 -687· 6000 Ed. R-9806 for Bigger thao tile lnt onel 402
Hedgewood Dr
&amp; Sat 9 ·1
curre nt federal hst

fn.

Syracuse Shelter House Rt 124
below !Wtmmmg pool Span·
so rod by ladles M1 st10n11ry
Soctety Oct 2 ,

Big 3 Family Yard Sale Plant2
Subdt\I ISIDn v, mile out Bula
VIlle Fn &amp; Sat

One day onlv· fnday 2 miles
north past fa1rgrounds Rocksp
nngs Ad Ho!char restdence
6 14- 992-7657

--------~­

·· " Pom.erov ·
Middleport·
&amp; Vicinity

5 family yard sale A acme Yellow
Bush Rd Oct 1 and 2 libby
F1shher ' s New mat tr ess.
washer , drver, 2 -14 1n tnesand
nms twm bed, stereo 8 track,
CO and ant enna car redto,
AM -FM cassette 10 !peed
bicycle, atart and gam es. run
nmg boards and mud gar ds for
sma ll truck
A little b1l of
everyth1ng

Garage Sale Thurs Fr1. &amp; Sat
9.0 0 6 00 1069 Second Ave
Commodore Compu t er, clo·
tfltng al'ld m1 sc 1tems

4 tam1ly yard sale Thur and Fn
9 1 m Bradbury bestde WMPO

Garage sale 2 fam1ly on College
Rd 1n Syraeuse, Helen H~ms
Oct 2nd and 3rd

Garag e Sale 010 tf At 1 Bul8\11lle
Pk • 2 miles. 1st road leh. pass
Add av1lle School. 3rd dr1ve
r ight Wh ite house· red • barn
Cra fts, clothes motorcycle,
m1sc Oct 1 st - 3rd

f'r1 &amp; Sat . 9· 5 1st house out
Ltttle Kyger Rd pas~ Kyger
Creek Htgh School

Oct 2nd 9-3 and Oct 3rc.l , 9 - 1
Men, women, chtldren's clo·
tflmg M1sc furnttur e tncluding
stove and refngerator Taka SR
124 thru Rutland to Lasher Ad
(county Rd 13) before M1l es
Cemetery approx 2 · m1les
Brown trailer between intersec·
tion of Lasher and Swick
N1cmsky restdence

3 Family Sat - 3rd 9-? Clothmg,
etc
At , 218 ·
1household,
Merc;erv 1 ne~ 1 3 miles from At 1

3 mtles sou th of Middleport on
Rt 7 4 fam1ly Clothing, m1sc
October 2 nd and 3rd

Ot:t 1. 2. 3 behmd
P 0 Ant•que muror tots
of dishes, housewares, cloth1ng
and m1sc

omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

,. ... _

5 Family yard sal e Frtdey Oct 2
at 648 4th Ave From 8- 5 Lohi
of goodlesl

B•dw~tll

.......p............. . .. .... .

&amp; Vicinity

614 367 0669

KAREN FACEMYER
39S04 Bradburl Rd
M•ddtoport, Oh. 5760

Gallipolis ....
- -- - - ..

614-446 ·3672

lnd Decorat1ng Conu.lltont

1/2 8/ Un

YOUNG'S

18 Wanted to Do

Found Germ&amp;n Shepherd wrth
silver chain around neck CharD·
hat Lake area. Call 614 ·4461656

NMr &amp;oklfPI Home P1Hies

614-992-2104
DIRECTOR OF NURSING

Babysttting lob wanted Chm tlan mother wil l beby s•t E~tp&amp;
rutnced Ref8fences A ny ll ours
304 675-1040

lost and Found

A vtm·Sell Avon for C hr11tmas
Make 40 percent Call614· 446·
3358

Gutters
'Qownspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Have op en ing m my home for
eld&amp;rlv ladv 15 years IIIIPB·
nenC:e. reas~t)le rates , Will
g•ve referencl' 30 4 - 773- 9~ 85

Purebred 2Y2 year male Pttc Bull
and dog house. 304· 773·5969

up~ri~IIC~

•

NEW- R{PAIR

MEDICAL LABORATORY
TECHNICIAN •

MIDDLEPORT .

8. 14-BT-1 mo.

ROOFING

OLDS.-C'AD.-CHEV. INC.

APPLY IN PERSON OR SEND

992-2526

Howard L Writesel

JIM COBB

GALLIPOLIS
HOLIDAY INN

RUSS MOORE

A croeat hc dccorallttg

9/2211 mo

In lobby &amp; Porkmg lot Of

event.

or Appomrmenr

Immediate operung for desJc
clerk; apply 1n penon Holliday
Inn , At Gall1pohs . Oh1o NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE

For nice lady that nt.Jedt a nt ~e
llome instead of wa~es hva tn
w 1t h very httle work 10 do Be
co mpanton for mtddle aged til
lady Call614 · 446 - 9 515

Yellow s1r1p ped blue eyed mal $
k1tten. 304· 676 7646

Wanted to buy, standtng t1mber
Call AI Tromm at 614 742 2328

1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy

BY Chance

CANDLE CONCEPTS
HIRING TODAY •
Ladtas · Don' t m1u th1s rare
opportunity Work pbrt ·tlma till
Oecem~r . Tt.~p pay M ore d&amp;talll 0 1 tnterv1ew Call today ,
Betty Varallo, 304• 744· 0924.

5419

Buymg dally gold. Silver coms,
rtngs, Jewelry sterling ware, old
coms large currency Top pr.
ces Ed Burkett Barb er Shop.
2nd A ve Middl t~port. Oh 614
992 -3476

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL Riverine Antiques
HOURS, Tuo.· Wod.·Ffl.
11 a.m. lo 7 p.m.
Sunclay, ,l p.m.-7 p.m.

A N al)pl1cat1on s now being
aceapted for full ttme poaldon,
Pleasant Valley Nur ~l'll Care
Center, apply perlfOnfl&amp;l off1ce
Pleasant Valley Hosp 304· 675 4340 AA ·E.OE

MadJcel Technologist nee:ded
tmmildia l a openmg Send r&amp;sum,l Terephone 304, 799 7400, 103 Etght Street M1srlm.
ron :·w Va

Garage

FREE [;STIMATES

PH. 742·2027

Situations
.wanted

AVON - All areas Call Maulyn
Weaver 304· 882- 2645 .

Kittens. please call. 304· 675

TOP CAS H pa1d for ' 8 3 model
a nd newer used cnr s Sm1th
Bu1ck Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave. Gallipolis Call 614 446

·RADIATOR __
SERVICE

12

1-3-' 86 tic

THURS , 7 P.M.·EB 6:l5
SUN., 2 P.M.-18 biS

•Pictures
•Pottery
•Cement Products

LAB TECH
Jackson General Hosp R1ply, W
Vats accepttng appl1cat•ons fqt a
full t1me madf~;el Lats Technttian,
qualif1ed appli!:ant, will have a 2
or 4 year degree in Medic111l
Technology and a current ASCP
Reg istry Hosp1tal offers eKcel lent sal a~ and benefits for more
Information call Personnel D•recotr 304·372-2731 or apply at
Hosp11al bun•~· au oHtce

Help Wanted

N~w

EAGLES CLUB · POMEROY ,OHIO

•Music Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden Gifts

''

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
u

Day or ·Night'

SYRACUSE, OHIO

•

CUSTOM BUILT

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

614·7 ........ ..

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BISSELL

OPEN I to 9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Acro51 11om
Happy Holfow Rd.

•Refrigerators

11

1 male dog Gorman Shopl'\erd
and Collie to a good home.
304 -675 ·1269

6
ICUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

Help Wanted

AVON. all areas. call Shirley
Spears, 3.04· 676- 1429

BOGGS

SIGN UP NOW FOR

11

Free Chnstmu display klt Fnendly H,..me Parttes now nea
openmgs for managers and
dealers 10 your aroa All new
Ch r1 stmas lme of quality merchandise at reasor)able pnces-no .
se rvi ca charge-no papet work
f11gh commission and overrtde
Cell1 · 800· 227- 1610

PH. 992-6959

·TRI-COUNTY
RECYCliNG

10 lt1ttens All colors 6 · 7 wks
old Call 614 -388-8276

•Family Reunion

9-18-l mo.

8-13

Giveaway

oP•u••nt&lt;' Anniversary

•Baby Shower

RES IO£NTIAL/ COMMERCI AL

Corner
Collec·
f
ions
129 MILL STREET

Master Card, Visa,
Discover, &amp;layaway

.

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

SME AFORTUNE'
1

Happy Hour

l: licensed .Clinical Audiologist

4 ·

•Child's Birthday
Party

BEER &amp; 'WINE'

Th':! Daily

Announcements

HAVE A VIDEO'
TAPE MADE .•.

CLIFTON, W. VA.

~

Enrichment day
ATH£NS - Atho&gt;ns District
United Methodist Women are
announcing Enrichment Day on
Oct. 10 at the Firs t United
Methodist Chu rch, Junction City.
SILVER RIDGE
South Ohio. Coffee hour and reglstra·
tion wtll start at 9:30 a.m
Bethel New Testament Chu rch,
Sliver Ridge, will have home· Greetings from Frank Rowe,
comtrg on Sunday. Potluck dtstrlct supe rintendent, will be
dinner at 12 noon. Special after- ,, followed by training sessi(lns
noon servtce wm feature the lasting until 2 p.m. with a break
for lunch. Those wishing to
Victory Singers.
attend Ennchment Day are
POMEROY - Pomeroy Trin- advised to c heck ,~lith their local
UMW groups for Be-tails.
tty Church will ce lebrate a
combined homecoming and 140th
a nniversary on Sunday Churc.h
Reunion
service at 10: 25 a.m., followed by
POMEROY - Descendants of
potluck dinner, followed by spe· Wtlliam and Emma Jane Jenkin·
eta! afternoon activities. Eve·
so n Brown who ~et tled In Pomeryone welcome.
roy 1n 1he 18·10' s will meet a t 218
West Main St., Pomeroy In t he
HEMLOCK GROVE - Hem·
former Diamond Savings and
lock Grove Churc h homecoming Loan building from 1 to 6 p.m.
wtll be this Sunday. ·Regular Saturday. Family and friends
worship service at 9:30 a.m . are cordially Invited to attend.
basket dmner at 12:30 at the
gra nge hall , a ft er~oon service at
Revival
2 p.m. with singing py The
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Oldllmers Former mlni~e r Jtm
Bible Methodis t Church will have
Quisenberry will attend.
revival st'&gt;rvices Friday through
Oct. 11 wtth the Rev Paul Miller
MONDAY
of Sprlngmills, Pa as the
POMEROY - The Meigs Lo·
speaker: '!'he Good News Si ngers
cal Ba nd Boosters wlll meet at 7 of Portsmouth wlll be singing on
p.m Monday at the band room .
the final weekend of the serv ices
which will begin each evening at
7 p m.

Parents Wtthout Partners,
Chapter 323, of the Mid-O hi o
Valley will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m at the Washington
County Public Library Anne x,
617 Fifth a nd Washmgton Sts.,
Marrieta
Topic for dtscussion will be
"Time Management for the Busy
Parent "October is m e mbers hip
month and there wil( be a
membership drive Sunday fr om
2:30p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Vtenna
Library, 23rd St. off Gr11nd
Central Ave., behind Nea le
School, Vtenna, W. Va. All single
parents of the Mid-Ohio Valley
are invited to jom Chapter 323.
On Oct. 14 at 7:30 Ch~pte r 323,
a general meeting will be held at
the First Presbyterian Church,
1241 Julian a St .. Parkersburg
with Anna Marcel De Herjma-·
nas, director, and Armelle Edwa_rds, children's program coorditl!ltor of EVE speaking on "The
Peaceful Family." Each person
attending is asked to take one

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

C!J Computerized Hearipg Aid Selection
Z Swim Molds · Interpreting Setvices

.LONG BOTTO)"f - The Ohio
Flame Fellowship Chapter meet·
ing wtll be held Tuesday at 7:30
p.m at the Mount Olive Commun·
lty' Church, Long Bottom.
Speaker fot the evening wlll be
Gilbert Spencer, Living Word
Church of God, Chester. Suzanne
Bush is the president and Invites
the public to the meeting.

NOW IN STOCK

•

.

Parents Without Partners meet

The Women oft he First c;hu rch
A report on me mbers htp was
of God of New Haven. had their given by Membership and At·
regu lar montly met'&gt;ting on Sept
tendance chairperson, Roberta
10, beginning at 7 p.m In the Swisher. Norma Greene gave a
Missionary Building.
report on the flower fund.
Norma Greene and Patricia
Next month 's meeting will be
Russell served as hostesses for potluck, Oct. 8 at 5: 30 p m .
...._
the evening
Orpha Fields, Missionary Edu ..,.
The president. Becky Reed cation coordinator had the proDARLA L . KING
called the meeting to order
gram wtth tht'&gt; theme being,
Prayer was given by Freda "This Is Ba ngladesh". The®jecTurley. The secretary's report tlves were to five an over-a ll view
was read ' a nd approved and the of Banglades h and Islam, and to
Mr. a nd Mr s Jackte L. King, ceremony.
treasurer's report was given.
shed light on the chuch's task in ·
are a nounci ng the
.Pomeroy,
Miss Kmg IS a graduate of
· The pres1dent, Becky Rt'&gt;ed, Bangladesh 'Dl!votlons wert'
t'&gt;ngagement
and
approaching
Meigs
High School a nd will be
reported on who is going to the taken from Psalms 61. Delores
marriage
of
their
da
ughter,
attending
Hocking Techmcal Col·
Sta te Prayer Retrt'&gt;at Oct 2·3, at Tayuior assisted her. Questio·
Darla
Lou
King,
to
Jeffrey
Allen
lege
this
winter where wtll be
Rtpplmg Waters Stewartshlp nalres on Bangladesh were given
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Miller,
son
m accounting She Is
majoring
coordinator Eleanor Davts read to membe rs.
Robert
Lee
Mlller,
Middleport
employed
at Dairy Queen Braz.
a poem concerning Penny-a-Day
Those attending were: Delores
An
open
church
wedding
wlll
ier,
Middleport
Mtlll&gt;r Is also a
"lid collec ted the P-A-D e~ve­ Taylor, Orph~ Fields, Eleanor
Fl,rst
Southern
take
place
at
the
Hi gh School
grad
uate
of
Meigs
lopes Spintual Ltfe coordinator, Davis, Patricia Russell, Norma
Bapllst
Churc
h,
Pomt'&gt;roy
Pike,
and ts employed with the Pome·
Delores Tay lor reported Bible ··Gree, Grace Cu nningham, Ro·
on SaturdaY. Ocl 3. Pastor David roy Police Department
study would begin Sept. 22 at-1 0 berta Swtsher, Freda Turley a nd
Bryant · will perform the
a m Th'- theme this year will be, Becky Reed.
•·Called To Be One."

Plans for starting a pantry of
household items for needy !ami·
hes as a spectal service proJect
were made at the Tuesday night
meetmg of 'Xi Gam ma Mu
Chapter, &amp;&gt;ta Sigma Phi Soror
- ,ty, held at the home of Mrs
Evelyn .Kntght.
Members are bei ng asked to
take an Item to each meefmg and
also to advi se a member of the
servtce committ ee on any partie
ular needs whtch mtg(lt be filled
from th e pantry

'PORTALND - Portland Ele·
mentary School's annual fall
carnival will be held Saturday,
fro\IJ :; to 9 p.m., at the school.
Food, games, giveaways a nd
music for all. Everyone IS invited
to attend.
•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

TUESDAY
POMEROY - TOPS 570 open
\ouse, 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
coonhunters Building on the
fairgrounds. Emphasis will be on
the role of' the support group,
co mpetition, and t~cognltion In'
mollvatlng the overweight to lose
pounds

--~

MIDDLEPORT- A hymn sing
will be held at the Middleport
Church of Clmst in Chrlsttan
Un ion Saturday, 7:30p.m. Sings
willmctuoie Dan Hayman and the
Faith Trio. McDaniel Trio, and
Dennis Weaver and Singers. The
public is mvited . .

Churchwomen meet

Xi Gamma.Mu has meeting

night, 8 p.m ., at the Long Bottom
Community Building. The dance
Is being sponsored by the Community AsscJclation

Thursday, October 1 ,. 1987

fr1 and Sat Oct 2nd and 3rd
9· 4 30 House directly beflmd
Kmg BUilders m Middleport
Ch1ld rens, aduiJ. clothing a\lon
bonles bicycles, small app li ance! mise items. Rain cancels
Mtddleport -668 S 3rd St ,
Sept 30, thru Fn Oct 1 9· 5
Clothes all slzes. lots of other
things Ellerc1se bench, kllchen
table, hand made crafts Ram
cancels
2 miles out Rt 143 Wed Th ur
Frt Tr~p le wall stove p1p e trud le
bed, gas heater, antenna, much
more 6 14 - 992 · 3647

4th and Crook St . Syraeuse
Oct 1 and 2, Inside Ram or
sh1ne New and used 1tems ·
R ~tm orshme 9 6 Oct 2 and 3
210 S- 4th Mtddleport

Fu and Sat 9·5 Forest Run Ad
1/, m1le off Rt 1
Sat , Oct 3 10 00 4.00 StKfh
St . Syracuse, Oh1o Lots of n1ce
c lothing R oben Chapma n
rasidence
A acme- Ram or Shme Fr~day &amp;
Saturday, Oct 2 &amp; 3 9 -5 Ivan
Powell residence- acrcss street
from Bapttst Church CQ.me to
the back Plenty of parkmg
Elect1omc test equipm ent, m1sc
garage &amp; househ old nems
Bebv· adult clothes
Oct 2nd and 3rd Brtdgeman
and Water Streets Syracus e
Jamce lawson and Jean Halt
Btthmd Jeffs Carryout, Poma.
roy . Oct 2n d and 3rd 9 005 00 Gas Warm Mornmg, lots of
clean clothO:S . Oct 3rd. anyth1ng
left goes for $1 a liag Much
m ore
Oct 2nd and 3rd 9 00· 4 00
Cham saw. Maytag wrtnger
washer, bow and arrow, new
clo thmg, furn1ture
Wtll snll
Items before 1f call 614- 985
3839 Henry Hartm~~n res1
dence, Chester Ohm

4 tam1ly yard sale 109 Spr~ng .
Pomeroy. Oct. 1.2,3 9 6 lnstde
tf rammg

Saturday, Oct 3 9 00- 5.00 4
fam ily Second house above
Tuppers Plains Eu,on Rem
cancels

Ga ra ge sale 3 fam1ly Oct 1 2
9 till 4 Fl\le Po1nts, turn on
Flatwood at Stm residents

....... p...... , ........ ..... .
t .- easant
&amp; Vicinity

Large fam1ly yard sa le Fr~day ,
Oct 2 9 00- 2 00 Vtna St .
Racine
Garage Sale October 2nd and
3rd 9 00·5·00 405 Fourth St,
Rpc•ne low pr~ces and tree
1tems
Frtday and Saturday. 3 mtles up
Forest Run Ad ott Rt 7
Ch1ldren's clothes kltchel'lware
Oct 2 and 3. 9 6 On old 33
actQ$5 hom Pom eroy Health
Care Center Boys and g~rl!l
clothln!l 4 -10 good condition
Ad ult clothing 21 1n cabin~
TV mts c
Garage sale-M am St , Rutland
Thur and Fri· 9· 5 4 family,
Center co nsole for Mlft1 Van
Reese h1tch for chevy $H or
blazer. ,bowlin g balls and clfuntry
crafts ,
Frt 2nd, Sat 3rd, Sun 4th from
9-6 Rlim of shine A big 6 femily
yard sale We've got everything
Clothes,. furmture , dt!h85, toys
and lots ot mtsc ttems : Turn nght
at ProH1~s store II\ Portland, go 1/.,
rrlile to the church on the u ght
hand s1de
Fri. and Sat Oct 2 and 3 SR
143 1st ,ouse past Hah+aon·
v1lle Elam
Dresser, 2 bad
frames bike,
Movmg Furmtur•. flou1ehold
1tema, old sewmg ~aeh1nes,
whrdrobe, Incubator, P•ctures,
book.s
magaune s
avon
clotflea . Oc t 2 , 3. 9 a m
Indoors ra1n or stun a! Qerwm,
brick house, SA 681 , 3 mtles
wast of Rt . 33 .
Women. men, gtrls clothing
Househol d, mise ttems. Oct
2.3. 4 One 'mile 1rom Langsville.
Co 10 -0exter Ad 10·5 Phone

614-]42

~668

3 family . Oct 2 &amp; 3 Lynn
Shuler 49768 SR IJ38, Letar1,
hto Quality cloltung all sizes,
tture, round Oftk table 3
chalr't , glasawar&amp;, toy,.,, m11ny
good m11c
•

•

-

4 famtly yard sate Thur.s and
Fndav. 123 Park Dr1ve, lots
small chddrens clothmg pr1ces
25¢. soc $1 00
3 fam1lyyard sale Thun and Fn.
900 till 1. Ram or sh~ntt,
Burdette Addn
,
Sale Oct 1st-2 nd-3 rcJ 604
Holloway, Henderson Books, '
crafts, supphes. flower arrangements, New t oys and G1h n ems
Ant1que d1shes curtams clothes
and many m1sc l1ems Ram or
shme
Yard Sale, Oct 1 and 2. across
from Be11la School, Galhpoh s
Ferry WV
Four family garage sale Oct 1
and 2, 9 00 1111 4 00. 303
Seventh St New Hav en, WV
B1g Garage Sale. mce tablus
bedsprea ds , w•de dr~~per1tis ,
ehe1r out:uda door. roll aws'(j
bed, nil s1:res ntce clothing boys'
and gtrls, Lee jeans, m1sc Sandy
Hetghts 1 mile ou t Sand Htll
Road , follow s1gns Fr1 and Sat
8 30 til\4 00
6 family yard sale 6 miles out
Jt1rry 5 Run Road, Apple Grove.
Naw Items f o r CJmstm as Oct 1
to Oct 1 Ooo ' t llliSS th19 one
Gtgantlc Yard Sale, Oct 1,2, 3.
Powell's Barber Shop, Galhpoll6
Ferry , almost all f1rst t!me lt&amp;ms

f:11Q Yard Sale, 1 1f. mil es out
Jer~ cho Road. Oc t. 2 and 3, Fu

and Sat

•

Yard Sale 310.Sillth s, , Po1n1 •
Pleaunt, Friday Oct 2 9 00 t1ll

'
Gar11ge r Sale, Sat, Oct, 3
8 00 4 00
Follow Signs on
Birch Ava thru Mead owbrook
addition,
5 b rryllv yard sale, first one th 11
ye11r Oct 2 and J Half m1le ou t
.Jericho Road

..

�i

...

..

..
PaQt!- TO- 'The Daily Sentinel

.
•

.'

••
Pomeroy- Middleport,

LAFF-A-OAY

18 Wanted to Do

49

Ro n Evans En1erjjrr1es Jackson.
Ohro Call 614 - 286- 5930

Merchandise

J rm ' s Odd Job Servrc:• pamtrng,
carpenter w qrk. sundeek. srdrng

51 H()usehold Goods

'

Qualit y roofrng Free estimate
$10 a square Co ntact Randy atl
614-446 -6957

~A

••

Financial
Business
Opportuntty

&amp; ......;;10 · 1

I NOTIC E I
TH E OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH IlliG co recommends that you
do bu,non woth pooplo you
know , and NOT to send money
through the mall until vou have
onvestigatod t he oHO&lt;rng

.

BusonHo Fo r Solo Good location. lots of room and does 8
good busmess. W1ll sacr1f1ce. for,
fas t sale lnqutre Bolt Cia 105.
Galhpohs De•ly Tr1bune 825
~~i Ave Gall ipolis. Oh1o

e 1 •' """"~"'" s"* ... ~&lt;~&lt;

Busmoss
drsplavs

all
Call

614-388 -8400 before9 OOAM
Vrllage Cut Rate for sale Call

614 949 2140 before 5 00
p.m 614-949- 2220 eventngs
Beauty Shop for sale 1n
Middlepon-Pomerov area , Call
614-992-6382 after 2 00 p m

Real Estate
31

r 34

mi so of Gallipolis $34 900
Call Oays-614-446 -1615, after

,5 •00 446 1244
Ulce new. mtunten&amp;nce free. 2
br ranch, fully carpeted 1 5 m1n
to Gatltpolts or Mercervtlle

S27,000 Call 614 256 6200
For Sale By Owner- Ntce 3 br
home on 2 acres of land Heat
pump, central atr, rural water
Pr~ce

to sell

Call 614 367

0135

Sal a· Rent Ranch style, large
kttchen . uttllty rm , smgle gar, age Ltke new. Carpet thru out
Call614-446 -1358

Housali~ElsO ChtllicotheRd Very
Cheap:"E811614 446 2404
Hand• Man SpecuJI- 5 room and

bath. alttc, basement 110 State
St Pnca neg Cal! 614-9923725 .
6 rooms. bath

1 Y2 acre Was

$27,500 , reduced to $24 000
New shingled roof, outbuildings,
rllar Call 614 992 7453
r~ bath
Syra c use
$ 287600. Furntture sold 'separately Call 614-992 -3860

4 room house w1th baaement.
laundry room Pomeroy S6600
Call 614-992-2720 or 614·
992 3589 .

'

1% story tur , 3 bedrooms hvmg
room dimng room fsm•ly room,
new kitCh!Vl w•th ranged•sposer
d•shwasher cabinets Schoots,
church. hospttal close by 304675 -5027
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'

44

Commen::•al butldmgs fo~lease
Oowftfown Pt. Pleasant Stores.
off1ces "A One Real Estate
Carol Yeager Broker Call 304675· 5104

35

Lots &amp; - Acreage

Near Eureka Dam 14 acres · 10
acres with tobacco b•e Land
contraC'f Call 614 446-2404

100x110 lot Cherry St, New
Haven, W JJa 304-882-2964

RP.ntals

1976 B~:~y •ew 141170- 2 br ,
front den ,
awmng. ac ,
saooo Call 614 2 9309 "
1974 Community 2 br, and bath
w•th 10~t14 add on Call 614246-9103 or' 446 7716
1981 Nuhua 141164 2 br ,
refflg , stove underpmmng CA
Call 614 286 4833 after 6 00
PM ·
1976 8uddy-141t55 With 12.1132
add1t1on- 3 br , 2 porches,
un derpinmng, woodburner, an
tennae $8500 or best best
offer Cell 614-446 8427 after
5

41

Houses for Rent

N1cely furmshed small ·house
Adults only References required. Oft street parkmg. Ph
614-446-0338
4 BR house for rent 3 m1 so of
Gelhpohs. $~0 a month plus
dep Ref requ1red Call 614
446-1615 Affer 5 00 PM ca ll
446-1244
4 BR . house on 1 acre. Excel
locatton Ref Call A 1 Real
Estate Broker Call 304-6755104 or 675 · 7738
Unfurnlshed'llou•e. 3 br. Rod
nay Village II 8275 Call 614
446-441 6 afjer 7 00 PM
6 rms &amp; bath 128 State St ,
$200 month)y plus uttht1es Ref
&amp; Sec Oep
reqUired Call
614-446· 0254
2 br , houae for rent 2 br tra1ler
tor rent LocBted '" Rio Grande.
bes1de college Call 614 4461323 or 246-9170 ,

.

2 br at Patrtot- approx 3.4 acre
yard S126' amo Catl614 3792628
•
Furnished 3 room couege
Newly redecorated Adults only.
No pets Ref &amp; dep Call
614· 446-2643
2 Bedroom Farm House Located
one mile north of Crown C•tv on
B1g Creek Ad Phone 614 4461232

FurniShed Eff1clency $145 Utilities pa1d. share bath 607
Second Ave , Gallipolis Ph
446-4416 after 7PM
Upstairs unfurnished apartment
Ut11it1es paid Carpet!f~· no chtld
ran or pats Call 614;.146 1637
2 BR apjl 6 closets, kitchen·
appl furlttshed, Washer-Dryer
hook up. ww carpet. newly
patnted, deck
Regency Inc
Apts Call 304· 676-7738 or
6'5·5104
Furmshed }l,pt 1 Bt $225.
Ut•ht1es peud ~01 411'1 Ave
Gall!pohs Call 614-446-4416
aher8 00 PM
Fu-;;;11hed apt ~ nexfl to llbratv
Ont'l profeu•onAI adult only
Parkmg Call614- ~46· 0338
2 Br • carpet. Stove:, ;efri_g
furmsl'led Washer-dryer hook-•
up Water, garbage patd Near
Stiver Brtd e Call 614 4467025
~·

UnfurmthVd apt for rent S275
Call61~ 446, 9244

Houses and apartments for rent
Call 614 !192-2403, 614-992·
3432. or 614 992- 2780
2 bedroom house on Lmcoln Hill
Pomeroy, 'w1th refngerator arid
cook stove S226 per month
Call 614-992-2720 or 614
992-3589

Eff1c1eney apt · K•teh~te '"bath
Utillt1es paid Smgle person
Prtvate entrance &amp; f'arkmg
S176amo Call614 446 7615
Garage apt · N1cely furntshed 3
rooms &amp; bath Waatwlr. dryer ac
Clean No pets Adults only
Dep . &amp; ref Required A11a1tat;le
Oct 1 Ca11614-446 1519

2 bedroom cottage, 2103 Jef
farson Avenue Redecorated and
new carpet 1$225 per month
Ava1lable Jlt once 304· 6754!_00
•

Sofll &amp; love seat Very good
c~nd Call614·388· 9025
Kmg wOod &amp; coal burner w1th
blower Used 1 year S226 Call
614 446 9659
95 IDch Krofhler Sofa w1th
matchmg chaff and ottoman,
S22kCall304 882 3125
Movmg Hotpomt washer and
dryer jst•ll m bdx) $550 Zen1th
Console stereo, $86 (very mce}.
knchen tabl t ... no. cha1rs. S20
K1tchen table w•th 4.cha~rs $80
Coffee tabJe $35 Much more
Call 614-949-3039 befo re 9 00

Grec1ous hvmg 1 and 2 bed ..
room apartments at ~llage
Manor and Riv8rslde ~part
ments 1n M1ddleP.ort From
S21 5 1ni:luding ui111 •es' Call
614·992 ·7787 EOH ,
2 bedroom, upstatrs. newly
remOdeled. Sto.\1.8 and refrigerator 'furnished $200 per month
plus ut1ltttes $100 deposit
requ ired, Call 614 992 3489
evemngs.
I

'\

CA $ H for your home Now
buymg pre-78 models Get o ur
b 1~ before you tradal 800-826075 2 ext 315

APARTMENTS . mobll6" hOnlfS
houses Pt Pleasant .and GalhP'ohs 614 -446-8221
'

14x70 Concord 1974 3 br
total e.lec. all new carpet Extra
mce throughtout large bath
Call 6 14-446 0175
1953 V•ndale 35._9 1 br All
alu m•num aw mng S1000 Call
~1 4- 44 6 1 39 1
1411 70 Wmds or , With 14x30
addltto n, exc cond black top
roa d. approx 3 acres, Ga lhpohi
Fe rry. 304 676 6930
1971 Mobile Home 3 bf!d·
rooms , 1 V~ ba1 hs central a~r ,
half acre . _ W11l sell se parate,
- $10,0 0 0 304-773 5361
1972 W~n dso r mobil e. home
12x70 wt~h 911pendo, windpw
&amp;It co nd
gas stove and ref
304-6 7 5 1 558
Furn l1hed mobile home 304
675 -86 12
•
1 977 Oa~'bro ok 1411 65 a ll
electric ho me tully ca rpeted.
stove an d ref, und erper nmg and
blOcks 1ncluded. ready to 'move
56, 500 00, 304 773 5819 or
614· 992· 692 4
PatriOt l'l't obtle home, well l!lSU•
, lated. und erpennmg. Porches.
air cond. metal bldg washer,
dryer. stove, ref alm03t new
hld&amp;-a· bed 304-675 7321
Tra1ler anclloi, 304 67

33

Farm s for Sale

For Sate 1!1~ Owner 50 acre
farm 10 acres tillable. 16 acres
p&amp;sture, 25 acres t•mber Fa rm
pond Nice 3 br. home central
a~r , rural wat er Call 614~ 3 6 7 0135

House tor rent. Rayburn Road
304-!376-5253
42 Mobile Homes
for !tent

2 bedroom turmsed apt rlt a~
depostt. New Haven. W Va
304 -882 -3267 or ..304· 773·
5024

Furnished 2BR , cable ava1labla,
AC . r~ver view In Kanauga Two bed room apartment 304
Fosters Mobtle Home Park. Call _G7_ 6_ 2_5_4 _8 _ _ _ _ _ __
1
614-:,146-1602
2 br • wall to wall carpet. Pr~vata
lot .n Gallipollj Call 614 446
1409 attar 6 00 PM
N1ce 3 bed~om • tr11ler Large
yard 314 3rd -5t. Kanauga Call
614-446 7473
2 br , unfurnished tra1ler S2008
mo tncludes Water. SW School
D•st $ 100 Dep Call 614 379
2376 Qr 379 -2897
2 br , 1 :?1!.60 Washer &amp; Dryer
hookup 'h mt from HMC on At
35 Oep &amp; Ref requ~red Call
614 44 6- 4369 Of 304-6759760
2 bedroom mobile home, Syracuse S18&amp; month plus utilities
Deposit Call 814-992-5732
after 5 30

45

-Rooms

Furn1shed Roqms

Ktng Wo/rJ and Coal Burnerw1th
blower 1 year old hke new
5375 Call614-992-5086 after
5 00

2 Rotor Tillers be'st offer 14 h
John Boar $100 00 1977 125
uall bike $200 00 304 676
1229
Color Port~:~ble TV $70 00,
phone 304-675: 2816
Used 011 burntng Perfection
heater, In goo cond cell 304·
-882-2584
Electrolux OctobOr spec1a1 89
shampooer only $2,99 00 C111l
304· 675 · 1457

Furnished room. , 75 Ut!hf.os
paid Share beth Single mal e
919 Second GaWpohs Catl

3 pc bedroom su1te, Charcoal
Grey. good cond, S6S 00 2 pc
ltvmg room su 1te $176 00
,3 04 -773 5231

;;'~"~~4 :f~. ' ·

••

·,

\

.

.

d'

... --·.
'

A~
"'

\ ~
(

•

r

55 Building S1Jpplies
Bu1lj:iing Materials
Block , bnck. sewer ptpes windows lintels etc Claude Wtnters, R1o Grande ~ Call 614245-5121
Con"trete blocks 8'11 s1zes yard or
delivery Meson sand Gallipolis
Block Co , 123% Pme 51
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614 446:
2783

Musical

71 Auto's For Sale

Instruments

Kimball piano for sale. Call
614 446-2714 a(ter 6 :00PM
Sf)&amp;re drum for sale l•ke newv
Orig cOst $300 Sell for t1~0
Coli 614 446 9379
Bundy Clarmet and Cono
trumpet Cell 304· 882·3310'
after 4 30 p m
~undy flute and
~oth axe cond.

Bundy cla1rnet
304· 882-2629

or 882· 238l

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

""'\

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1vestock
'

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS lo SONS
U.S 36 Wett. Jacklon, Oh1o
614· 286-8451
Mas~A!~!.tferguson, New Holland.
Bush Hbg Sales &amp; Service Over
40 ~led tractora to choose from
&amp; complete hne of new &amp; used
equ1pment largMt seleC'IIon in
S E Oh10
tractor 1973 Interne·
11onal 666. hve power. 66HP
w1defront. 84760 New Idea
one row corn p1cker. 1895 Call
614·286- 6522
Die~el

Set of tractor chams, fits 8 N
Ford tractor, 185 00 304-n3
5944
Troybudt Rototlller with wrap a
round bumper. tiller. furrower.
row maker attachments Approx
30 hrs on mach1ne Call 304·
576·2508 ..... 6 .00 pm
Farmall Cub Tractor. overhauled . attachments ,
$1,500 OQ f,.m, 304·675·
5253
J0420 Crawler w1th end loader
$3,500 IH CaLib lftli1h cultNator
andmower$1,800 1'htonFord
tlat bed 81 ,800 G,lenridge
~arm , 304 675-6504. ~
Homehte Super )(l, 16 inch bar,
5299 .95 Siders Equipment
~; _ H,.~n derson. W Va. 30.,MF 250 11983} tractor, S0· 60
Bush Hog. Buah Hog grad8f
blade. Mf2M14' plows.MF6ft
d11c. MF 2 row cultiVators.
transplanter MT -122 tobacco
sattar Pnced together or tnd• VIdually Pete. Sommer at 304
67.6 -3280 day, 676·3117
evamnga
62 Wanted to Buy

I

Livestock

_

'

Hay for sale 1$1
614· 992· 5159

2~ per

bale Call

Transportation

s-F=-o-r--=s-a-;,1~--

"7;;;1;--;A-u'7t-o,...·

1982 BUICk Regal, $4 900 00,
clean. 34,000 miles. 304 - 6~5·
4480
1984 Ford Tempo. t3.900 00.
clean, 304-675 ...480
1978 Camara Rally Sport, auto,
AC. tih, AM FM stereo. a1r
s.,ocka, 350 four barrell. 304·
675-1139
'84 Jeua

G~ 304-676-1769

80 Olda 98, &amp;ICC cond. no rust,
360 engtne, all power, new tires
and battery, 22 mpg ,
t2,800 00. 304 895-3864
78 ford Mustang, 61 ,000
mtles, V-8, 4 speed, tmted
windows, lo uvers spoilers, Ttop, 01.200 00. 304-576 2628
1980 Datsun 31 0, good running
cond, new t~ras . &amp;600 00 304675 6730

72

Trucks f6r Sale

1985 Ford Pick up take over
payments Call 614-379-2897
or ~79 · 2346
1976 Chevy pick-up uuck. y,
ton Call 614 446-3243 after
~00

1980 Chevy ahort bed 4-wheel
driVe 1ruck Two toned pa1nt,
good condition Many e~ttras
84000flrm Ph 614-367-0208
after 5 00 PM.
1982 GMC S 16. long bed, 6
cyl , 4 apd 82900 or best offer
Excel! eond C•ll 614-4468750.
1975 Dodge Club Cab 8850
Call614·742-2461

'79 Ford PI~ up, exe cond. no
ruat, small V-8. new t~res
01 .600.00. 304-895· 3864
73

1980 Chevy pickup 4l'l4 l/4 ton.
Ps , pb., 4 spd 69,000 m1
03200. Call 614 - 446·422~
1972 CJ-6 Jeep Dual exhaust.
Good body, 11res &amp; rima Call
614-446 8010

1978 Ford Pmto. 1972 Ford
Pmto New Lincoln Arc welder
Shde-in truck
cemper Call
614· 446 · 1452 or 446· 8462.
• 1982 Camero Super Sharp.
t3960 1981 Malibu Wagonone owner, ntce $1996 Ca~l
614· 286· 6522

Bla.zer 4l'l4, one owner. 30 000
ae1ual miln, Aaron Fowlerd, call
304-675 3435 or 675·38Q9

1968' Camara, 360, auto, ps
Call 614·-"6· 6414

Pb.

1986 Camara- ps,
ac, t-top.
v-8 Excel cond *9996 Call
814 446-1469 after 6 00 PM
1 986 Ford 'Escort GT; e4900
1986 Toyota 4· Runner. 19600
Call 814· 446-8898.
1 97 .. Dodge CherQer SE
70,000 mllea. Good work car
Calll14· 379·2652

ARLO AND JANIS
~
.
..----------,

-

, HE./&gt;.1HI&gt;R LIKE€&gt;VOO!
' ........... .., ·---- . . .... .
' .

WITNW~ A. 00'1'. ~01
@LIKE. A ~ILliOtv OTHE:R

....
' '

50% .

'.
•• •

74

Motorcycles

5'op.Ji!.Y I. WAS' ON
THE? Pf-'ONE 50
LoNe_,. .I:

\

1983 Yellowstone. 23 f1: travel
trailer. sleeps 4, roll up awning
. ReMe httch. brakes and swaycontrol. fold away jacka, exc
cond, phone 304·882 -2324

8:00 CII He11 Town
• D al IBl The Cosby Show

Ju5i cout..PN'T GE'r
H~R To .s'f'OP

Theo comes home late and
makes the fam11y mtss
Vanessa s play open1ng.
(!) SpeedWo~d NHRA Drag
Ractng· Castrol GlX
Keystone Nat1onals from
Read1ng, PA (T)
IIJ 0 (I) Sledge Hemmert
Thrown off the force. Sledge
and Doreau 1urn hardboiled
detectives t:l
I]) Adams Cllronlclea Adams
serves as a delegate to
. Constitutional Congress 1n
Philadelphia.
®l II)@ Tour of Du!y When
Pvt Taylor IS held cap1tve .
Com~ny B must rescue

LISTEN IN&amp;.

Services

" ,.. ,..,MU. n;;
Home
Improvements

OKAY, SKII'!PER,
I'M RIGHT BEH IND

YOU!

BASEME.N.:J
,. WATERPROO'f:ING
Unconditional lifetime guaran
tee Local ref&amp;f&amp;nc81 turmahad.
Free estimates Call collect
1-614--237-0488, day or mght
A 'o g e r 1 8 a s e m e n t
Waterproofmg

h1m.Q

I!D America by Design

SWEEPER end uwmg macht~fl
,repair. parts. and supplles P1ck
up and dehvery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd Call 614·
446-0294

Explore the evolutiOn o1 the
Amencan house, a symbol ol
1dentl1y Q
1!]1 Prlrnenewa Wrap ups o1
the day's world news and tn
dep1h feature reports (1 .00)
f!l CD MOVIE: The Year of
Living Dangerously (PG)
(1•55) •

,_

'

Firewood. tree &amp; stump ramo
val cham link fences, mulct, top
SOli, evergreen shrubs D~n's
Landscapes Call 6-14 ~ 446
9646
-

EEK &amp; MEEK

•

8:05 &lt;D Sanford and Son
8:30 D

(}) tm A Dllteren1 World
(1) II (II The Charmlnga

V1nyl S1dmg, ower hang and
gutters Call 614-446-6634
Free Eat 1mate

Snow's WISh for a suitOr for

Llll1an suddenly matenalizes.

RON'S TeleviSion Servtce
House calls on RCA. Ouazar,
GE Spec•altng m Zen1th Call
304 576- 2398 or 614 446·
2454

1:;1
8:35 ffi Major ~eague Baseball
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
Dill Cheers Sam keeps

!&lt;£ALLY?

Fetty Tree Tt~mminQ, stump
removal. Call 304 675 1331

Rebecca tn tl'te dark when he
ptnch htts for a sportscas1er
(!) Collt~~~e Foo1ball
1IJ fi) (I) MOVIE: 'Proud
Men' ABC Thursday Night
Movie C
(!) I!] li1ys1eryl Harriet goes
on tnal for the murder of her
lover Phthp (1·00) C
®J m@ Wlse~uy Sonny's
demented nephew poses a
threat to S1eelgraves and to \

Rotary or cable tool iJnlling
Most wells completed same day
Pump sales and serv1ce. 304
895-3802
Starks Tree and Lawn Serv1ce,
lawn care, landscapmg. nump
removal, 304-576 -2842 or
576-2903

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
"TODAY 15 A Gi(XJD [)'.Y FOR

WINTERIZAT10N
Saeunty Lights, Storm Win·
dow1. lnsulatton. Roottng, General Repa~ts 304· 675· 6367

Ya.J 1V MAKE A HUND R ED
SWISS CI-IEE5E .5A.NDWICHEB

,

, ""AND PAINT~R .
ROLLER SI&lt;ATES
GREEN. "

I

OI.NrT WAIT

RJR MY

HOROSCOPE SWBSCRIPTTON

. TORUNOI.Jr_

V1nme .
@ Larry King Llve11n depth
1nterv•ews With top
~
newsmakers and cdlebpt1es

.. ...... ...

Cerpet installed, work guaranteed, tree est1mates, 304-6761020 or after 5 00 676·2288

9:30 8 ill I!]) Tonlgh1 Show:
25th Anniversary Carson
celebra1es 25 years as host.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

•

10:00 (}) S1relghl Talk
I]) The ConatHu11on: That
Delicate Balance Explore
controversy about 1nsanify ,..
defense and psych1a1nc
tes11mony &amp;:;1
___. ®l m ll2l Knots ~ending The
pollee launch an tnvestlga110n
tnto the murder of Pe1er
Holhs!Qr I;)
llJ) News
@ Evening News A wrap up
of today s news and a look

BARNEY
1 BET '/O'RE GLAD
YORE YOUNG -UNS HAVE
GONE BACK To SCrtOOL ,
Ml1 LEDBETTER

Electrical

&amp;

Refrigeration
/
--~

Y'RE GO~E
BUT NOT
FERGOTTEN .
LOWEEZY

ahead to tomorrows news
stones (1·00)

f!1 (l) Benny Hill

Res1dent•al or commercial w1r
mg New serv1ce or repalfs
ltcensed electriCian Esttmate
free Atdenour Electncal, 304
676-1786

10:30 (}) Grea1 American Outdoors
(0:30)
I!D Adams Chronicles Adams
serves as a delegala to •
Constttu\1onal Congress 1n
Phtladelphla
®News
- 111 CD Hogan's Heroes

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service Pools,
Ciliterns Well• Deliverv Any
time wCall 614· 446-7404-No
Sunday colts

11:00

.. ~~ ·

Define: Reincarnation

J &amp; J Water Serv1ce Swlmmmg
pools, Cisterns, wells Ph 614
246-9285 .,_

~m

•

Althou h three dtamonds doubled
would h e gone down one, South was
rightful wary Having overcalled on
garba , he wasn't rtsking the chance
that N rth mtght be counting on htm
for a efenstve trick, so he bid three
hear
Desptte the warning.tbat South
d1
t have much, North stdl-carned
to game
,
Declarer took the club ace, pitched
a club on the diamond ace and played
ace and a spade. East went m w1th the
king, played king of clubs and then 10
of clubs South ruffed w1th the heart 10
as West dtscarded the queen of spades_
It was time for South to ptcture the
distribution. East had started with six
clubs The spade queen discard by
West surely meant that East onginaliy held K-9-7-6 of spades. That would
leave htm with three red cards U he
held A-x of hearts and the single"eight
of diamonds, then West would have
held a seven-card diamond suit headed
by the K-Q and surely would have bid
diamonds urunedtately over the one·
heart overcall All thiS enabled declarer to detennine that East had the sin·

.A
•Qs

• K 9 7 6"

+KI08763

.J.-- -

SOUTH
8 43
.QJlOB2

'

+H4

,.

\ ulnerable Neither
Dealer East
Wes1

Norlh

Eul

Pass
H

2+

Pass

Dbl.

Pass

4•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead·

+Q

gleton heart ace. Leading a low spade
would be a disaster since West would
ru(f in with the seven to force dummy's king. Then East would wm the
ace on the subsequent heart lead and
give West a spade ruff. But there wag
a counter to thiS South played a low
heart out of hiS hand and played low
from dummy East took the ace but
was helpless to set the contract

..,,

t!!l~·".af
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Yemen
seaport
3 Unbroken
4 Author

ACROSS

1 Premise
6 Obtain
91dollze

Levin

10 Whirl .

12 Ease up
13 Parcel out
15 Cuckoo
16 Knock
18 Golf score
19 Enwrap
21 Large
truck
22 "Leavmg
-Jet
Plane"
23 Tessera
24 Detonation
27 Lust for
28 Exasperate
29 Duffeh

5

Navtga-

tor's aid
6 Concord
or Muscat
. 1 slippery
customer
8 Israell
city
11 Setting
'14 Basic
precept
17 Brazilian
.• 'tree

20 William
-Benet

Yesterday's Answer
23 Pompey's
garb
24 Tlucket
25 Ancestral
26 Distilling
vessel
27 Saloon
29 Lambkin's
cry

31 Pretend
32 Seeing
red
36 Seaweed
extract
37 Hide
. 39 Bacpelor's
last words
41 - de mer

30 "One"
r

in Tours
31 Hawaiian
veranda
33 Son of Noall
34 Consume
' 36 Comment
about ·
(sl.)

''• 38 Nun's
garb
40 Reflect
42 Venice
beach
43 Braz11ian
seaport
44- brio
45 Vigilant
DOWN
1 Film vamp
lOll

AX.YDLBAAXR

(!)Sign Off

11:10 Ill Better World Society
Annual Banquet The Better
World Socle1y honors groups
and tndiVIduals for
outstanding contrlbu110ns
toward global understanding
and communication Hosted
by Betty ThoiT]as and Robart
Foxworth w ith enterta1nmen1
1rom Roberta Flack and

'

Dump truck dehvery , coal •.
atone. sand. gravel. till and
SaWd ~.f St, 304-676 3190

P,:ANUTS

Marv1n Hamhsch.
11:30 8 (]) 1BJ ~ofa Nlgh1 with
David Letterman
1IJ Cheers
0 (I) Nlghlllne I;)
•®l Magnum, P .I.
[lJ A ~eogue or Thai! Own

DEFACE!:'
M"' REPORT CARD!

SOMEBO!t~

(NR)

I:;J

•

•

,

1!]1 Sporta l'llnlgh1 Action
packed sports highlights with
N1ck Charles and Jim Huber
(0.30)

a .
'

+Q

1!]1 Moneyllne Curren!
reports on world economiCS
and f1nanc1al news w1th Lou
Dobbs. (0.30)
~ova Connection 1

'

By James Jacoby

EAST

DAILY CRYPTOQU(YJ'ES- Here's bow to work It:

IIJ \!2l

f!l CD

.

WEST
.Q5 2
.9 74

1!1) News

R &amp;. A Water Service Home
CII Jers wells, pools f1ll8d For
marly James Boys Weten Call
304· 675· 6370

1982 Honda CX Custom BOO
low mileage heel cond , wind- R &amp; M Custom Coucftes and
shield. luggage tompartments, Reupholstery, St At . 7 Crown
stereo system, cru••• cctnt , 2 City, Oh 614 -266 -1470 Eva
new full f•* helmetl Call 614-446~ 3438 Open dail'v 9 to
614·448-8042 or 3a8-8351
4 30, Sat. 9 30 to 1 30 Old &amp;
new Uphosterfld
440 Kawaaakl Call 114· 4466980.
Mowrey'l Uph'bl.sterlng serving
tn county area 22 years The best
1977 660 Four K Honde Wind- '" furniture upholstenng Call
JBmmer Saddle bags New tirea . 30_4 - 676 4 1 6 4 f o r f rtt
8500 Coli 614. 256· 1661
estimate"
e

cD Remington S1eele

o rn ()] o Ill

+A9 2

•tn09763

7:35 ffi Sanford and Son

a

.. K63
.AJ542

•

Expert
car.d reading
•

10 1-87

NORTH

• A 10

James J~coby

7:05 &lt;D Andy Grofflth
7:30 U (}) Hollywood Squarea
(!) Speedweek (T) Au1o
Ractng .
1IJ Newlywed Game
Olll Judge
®I Wheel of Fortune l:jl"
@ Croa.jlre (0·30)
Ill (!2) IBl Jeoperdyl I;)
® Major ~eague Baseball
f!l CD WKRP In Cincinnati

NK AND ERNEST·

GallipOh~

Upholstery

BRIDGE

Cheers '
M•A'S'H

Heavy Duty Reese hitch Ant•·
sway 1000 lbs tor11on bafl
Cheap . See· 1110 2nd Ave

87

Kidnap - Elope - ColiC - Bushel ,- CUPCAKI;S

iIIlli&gt;

Watterspn ' s Water HaiJiing
'79 Ford.BroncoXLT, wh1ta, 40J reas~nable rstes , Immediate
automatic, can be aeen legg 2,000 gallon dehvery, c 1stems
Assoc;tatea. Old Town Road, pools, well, etc call 304-676
2919
Camp Conley
'79 Jeep CJ7, V·JI, automatic.
304-576·2666 aftor 5 00 PM

I'

My overweight friend Bighed while looking 1nto the bakery
"I'm a thin person strugglfnq to get out, but I can be sedalijd
by lour or live CUPCAKES. '

Dobbs . (0·30)
.'ID (12) I!]) Wheel of Fortune

1968 21 ft. Franklin travel
trailer Sleepa4 Self-contained
81500. Call 614 446- 7106

85

I

A PRI NT NUMBERED
~ LETT ERS

and financial news w1th Lou

&amp;

84

ONPIT

7:00 (]) Remington Steffe
D (}) PM Maga11ne
(!) SportsCenter News (L)
(1) Entertalnmen\ Tonight
0 (II People's Court
(!] [lJ MacNeil/ ~ehrer
, NewaHour (1 .00)
®I News' ' •
@ Moneyllne Current
reports on world econom1cs

79 Motors Homes
Campers

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446·3898 or 614
446-4477

I

6:35 &lt;D Carol Bume1t

Auto Repair

82

SED " TO ~~

6:30 tJ (}) I!]) NBC Nlgh11y News
(!) Winner's Circle (n
IIJ 0 (I) ABC News r;J(!] Nlghly Bu11neaa Report
®J 11J @ .CBS News
llJ) Rockschool
@ ShowBI• Today News of
the enterta1nment world is
anchored hve from New
• York. (0.30)
1H1 WKRP In Clnclnna11
Ill CD Too Close for Comfort

Struts, 8119 95 pa1r, tnstalled
Most modeiB Muffler Man, 9
Stimpson Ave Athens, Oh1o
1 800 843-3757.

81

I

~ 6;,051ll Alice

·~

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1983 Jeep Scrambler. e ' cyl 4
speed, black with soft to~
44.600 IC1Ual miles 85000
Call614- 986-4324

1977 Cutlass Suprema 2 dr ..
auto. trans . v-6 engme. ac. pa.
pb, am -tm radio Call614· 2561924

.. .

1986 Mercury Lyn~t station
wagon, $3,900 00, clean, 304675·44eO

lj4

Hay &amp; Grain

77

•

mo

CIJ OIJl ®J

'

GAME

li!eor ronge le tt e rs of the
. fou r scramb led word$ be·
low to form four s1m p le words

@News
(!) Sporta~ook (T)
(!]Dr. Who
I!D Square One TV I;)
@ Fac1s of Life
Ill CD One Day a1 a Time

WANTED TO BUY junk or
wrecked automob•lel. state
name. address and phone
number, 304-676· 8669

'72 Plymouth Fury, $250 00
good shape, 304-676·2662

1979 Fo•d 9Qll!LCO, PS , AC.
8-92 Detroit enQine 430. 13
speed. 38.000 R's 1973 Ftue .
40ft flat. 304-882-3235

Straw and Hay, 304 675- 6086

_/

1983 Trani Am, T· top, PS, PO
AC, PW, AM-FM caSie1te, auto
o~o~erd1rve . t7 000 . 00. 304 675-3512.

1977 Toyota plck-up Runs
great Call 614 992-6687

1981 Chevene. '986 Chavatte,
1985 Alliance~ 1977 MGB.
1984 Monte Car~. 1983 Nisun
Sentra C•ll 614-446-6980.

..

em

days Cash
and Carry or 1nstal
Cal1614·
379-2220
::---.,.--~--:-:--c-·lcDual oxhauot k\to, 899 95 ;n.
stalled Moat Fords. Chevy
trucks, Vans. 4x4's. MuHier
Men. 9 St1mpson Ave , Ath8nl
Ohio 1 - 800·843~ 3767

Pontiac Bonnev1lle. 4
$1,000 00 304· 675·

Quarter Horse Gelding Very
good with children Call 614949-2682 after 7 PM

M~le

~ 's s nonng didn't b o ther E dwina a s mu c h
as having to clean up the plast e r
e very morning

1977
door,
3536

turbo auto trans Excell cond
Coli 614-245·9185,

MtM&amp;d hay t1 bale on wagon.
Hay for bedding 80c 304-6765579

I

1987 Buick Century AM-FM
caA8Ue, AC, power windows, 4
c:yl. 8000 m1111. t11,000 Call
614-992-6675

1983 Chevy short wheel base 4

Aott weller pups, 8 wka, worm8f
and wuned, call304-675- 2369
ask for Nan cy or call 304 6751970
S1mases cat wanted for
breedmg purpou •n exchange
for p1ck of lltterk1tten. 304-8822741

1980 Butck Skylark 4 door
Good condition. no rust Call
614 949-2514

WO p1ck-up 306 engine. 360

63

WANTED TO BUY Registered
Toy FoM Terrier. female 304675 3638

Sta1nlesa steel eiCh&amp;ult svatems.
Now custom made tor your
truck. motor home or cla111~ car
With life-time warranty Muffler
Man. 9 Stimpson Ave., Athena,
Oh10 1-800 843 3767,

1985 Ford Escort. AM -FM cas·
sett. 304-676-7623

56

Male Dachshund. 1 yr. old Call
614 246 9495

1978 Cou{far Excel cond
$ 1600 . c. 11614 •379 _2860

1976 Chevroletlmpalat600 00
good shape 1978 Oatson
5350 00 Phone 304 -896 3935

Now buymg sheU corn or ear
corn Call forlatestquotea River
City Farm Supply 614-446
2985

Ferret snow wh11e baby Ferret
ne eds home Call Even 614446-2004 Day 614-446-5680

1979 ford Muatang Good
cond. Stereo &amp; &amp;qualizer? No
rust SB75. Cet1614 446-7077.

Ouali1y Fr~its and Vegetables
reta1l and wholesale B &amp; S " 1979 Thunderbird Call 614·
992 · 3436.
Produce across from Pine Hut.
Gallipolis. Oh1o
1980 FOrd Mustang 4 cyl . 4
speed S 1 200 Call 614 : 949 ~
2083

Re ady m11t concrete and all
concrete suppl1as Call us Valley
Brook Cement end Supphes.
304 773 5234
Pets for Sale

6:00 (]) Cra1y Like a Fox

S©

_ _ _ _..,..;._ _ Ed,ttd by

EVENING

Budget Transm111ion1 uaed rebuilt, all types Guarantee 30

57

PUULIR

WORD

0

THURS.: OCT. 1

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Auto Parts
&amp; Accassorie,s

THAT DAILY

-V~ewing
8

11

TheD~

Television

Used and rebuilt transminlons
lnternallv mspected and guaranteed. Installation available We
buy JUnk transmiSsions. Call
614-446· 0966

67 1

46 Space'lor ' Renf

--------~,
, ----- 0

J .

Shotgun 8rowmng Automattc
5 . 30 1nch full chock ventilated
rib, new $400 Call 614-9923547

Beattie

Office Space (or heM t; • ceii8nt .
for Attorneys, Accoun~ant. 8tc·
2 bedroom furmshed tra•ler, Close 1o Coul't House , Cltll
total electric. c entral atr. good VitJeman Real t atate ..Algenc'y
locat lo n must have references "' 614 446 3644
•'
'also small furnished eff!cteticy ::-:-::--~:-:--:---:-7--,­
apartment, 304-773-6944
Off1ce ~ pilee fo t.. rent E f
downtown Galllpbijs loca
·
lnqulfles c'all 614-446-432
44
Apartment
Trailer pads w1th tJ.e flowns
for Rent
Large garden &amp; yar&lt;t.'oO Rt 1.,80
S1Q.O a mo ~ Call &amp;'14'- 388· ~
Priv a te U't!!u rn 11 he d Qar•oe
1
Mobile Home lo1 . 60 tt ou.esS
a pa rtm e nt. good lo c et• o n
920
4th
,
Gallipolis
876
Water·
ult L no ~p ets, 304-675· 1 0 56
pllld C'all614-446-4416af1er7
One bedroo m furniShed apt,
ground flbo r, prtvatQ entraf'!Ce ~P:-:M:-:.-c-::=:-::-:-:-,...:t:.__-::--:- ,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home~r:k
and park1ng. all utiht1e1 Included
Route 3:1: N"ortl'l of Port)eroy'
8260 304-676 -6730
Rental tra1IB1"s Call • 914~~27479
..
3 rooms and -barh. g9a heat.
groiJnd fl oor. washet and dryer S'pace for amall t;a,ler, All
hoo k up, no children,.immed iate hook-ups Cable ,Aiao efJl ciefl cy
occupancy. 'No peu. phona room s, air, a ll.d cable. , M e~.
W Va Call 304 773 5651 •
304-676 4480 axt 53 or 6 0

••

8 crystal pleated sk1rts Different
colors wfth blouses to match
Si:re 12 and 14 Good cond1tion
Call614-992; 7252

'l¢:::::::::::::::::::::.L::::::::::::::::::::~~

4
,. ·~

other hours ~ .

lenno)l natural gas- forced air
furnace Input · 1 37 000 BTU
$250 614· 992-6561 after
4 30 pm

....

1985 Honda CR J 126 Good
cond. Pnced to sell Call 614379-2852 .

75

•

~

446-4416aher7p~

4 Iota In Me1gs Memoual
Gardens for sale 1· fuet oil
furnace and accessories 1 electttc cook stove Call 61 4-843·
5275

BORN LOS

Motorcycles

"

GL 1000 tully dressed BOO
304· 675· 2131 -

Electrolux vacuum cleaner, runs •
hke new, wtth attachm ent s
$68 00 Ca.Jh or terms arranged
GroEJm end Supply Sl'lop Pet
Oct. 7 8 ·00 PM We will be
Phone 304·675 4416
Grooming All breeds All
holdmg a spacial feedercaifsale
styles
JuheWebb
Ph
6JA-446·
All breeds 1nclud1ng Holste1ns
SIGNS Portable lighted s1gns
0231
Cattle will be accepted all day
$299, Nonl1gh1ed S199 Free
Tues and up to 1 00 PM Wed
OeMvmy-Letters WV 1 1800
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
Hauling available Athens Uves
642-2434 . • Ohio 1-800-533
CFA Himalayan. Perstan and · tock.Sale 1 m1le east of Albany
3453
Stamese k1ttens AKC Chow
on St At 50 Call S!.ock Yard·
pupp1es New kittens, Pers1ans
614-692-2322 or 898-3531,
F~tewood fOr sale, dell~o~ered,
614·446-3844
after
7PM
Call
Evenings
S30 00 lood. 304 895· 3446.

for rent day .•-week .
nton-h Gafha Hotel CJitl 614446-9580' Rent as low'M! 51~0
month
,
~

.,
• lcRooms for rent by wM or
1 :11'::;;r,}' t 13

Sears hght wedgewood blue
sofa S250 614-992· 7866

October 1 , 1987

~

1981 Motor Scooter Needs
mechanical work, $140 Call
614·446·4141

75

MISC.

bath garage,
1970 Rnz craft 12 ~t 70 3 bed • Chandler Ortve, Point Pleasant.
room trailer S5500 call 614
5300 00 month, call 1-304·
256-16 13
755-0128 nk for Dave

t

.{,

w~n- ~~~~~;~~;~~~1":;:::::~~=~:;:=:-1

Kmg wood burner Good cond .

washer, $95 Ken·
more washer $95 Maytag
waaher, $150 .J,4aytag -washer
hke new, $175 Kenmore dryer.
ll9S Fng dryer S76 40" elec
range, S75 30 ' alec range.
$75 30" gas range, $96.
Harve&amp;t gold rBfrlg , $95 White
reirlg
$95 Small freezer,
$125 Upright freezer, S95
Skaggs Appliances 579 Upper
R•ver Rd 614-446-7398

5 rooms &amp; betl'l upsteus apt for
rent Call dayt1me 614-4467672 Eve' s 446 1980 ...

Newly remodeled 2 bedroom
house for rent Call 614¥992
5304 or 6,4.. 446· 8898

/

1976 Honda Motorcycle 500 T.
Sell or Trade 1984 Ford EscortStandard Copper· nose Beagle
pup ~ Call 614 387-7230.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Wh~rlpool

'

.

'

.
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
)

Yamaha Enduro XT· 360 1985
Low mileage Call 614· 446·
6753.

P.lutie ~clstern state approved,
plastic 1eptic tanks, plastic
culverts. metal culvertl RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES Jack
aon,. Gh 614· 286-5930

Wosho .. , dry .... IBfng .. oto"
rangei Skaggs Appliances,
Upper Motel
Rwer 614-446-7398
Rd. beSide Stone
Crest

Valley Furniture
New and used furmture and
applicances Call 614 --146
7672 Hours 9 6 .

Furmshed apt · 4 rOOI'JlS and
ba1h Centrally located Ref an~
Sec. dep requtred Call 614446 0444
.

2 Bedroom, stove &amp; refrtg
furntshed, carpeted Easy walk
to downtown Gallipolis .$260 a
mo Phone 614-246 9695 I #II

74

Caii614 - 256~ 62S1

Sota1 and chatrs pr~ced from
$395 to S995 Tables $50 and
up to S125 H1de-a-beds 5390
to $596 Rechners $225 tQ
Houseplants for sale fnd&amp;y
$375 Lamps $28 to $125
Omettes $109 and up to S495• only Call 814-367-7253
Wood table w 6 chairs $286 to
Rofr~gerator washer, table.
S795 Desk S100 up to 5375
Hutches $400 and up Bunk chairs, reclmer, box spnngs,.
beds complete w-mattresses mattress, chest of drawers. tw1n
$296 and up to $395 Baby beds bed, wooden doors Call 614·
$110 Mattresses or bo~e sprmgs 446-3224
full or.tw•n S68 firm S78, and 1 ----'------~--­
$88 Queen sets $225 Ktng Catalyllc converters. only
$350. 4 drawer chest &amp;69 Gun S89 96 Most models Install a·
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electflc t1on also ava1lable Muffler Man,
range &amp;375 B.aby mattresses 9 Stimpson Ave . Athens. Oh10
S35 &amp; $45 Bed frames S20
1-800 843 3767
$30 &amp; Kmg frame $50 Good
select:•on of bedroom suites, M1xed hard wood slabs 512-Rer
metal cabmets, headboards $30 bundle Contamlng approx. 1 'l,l
1on FOB Ohio Pallet Co
and up to $65
Pomeroy Oh1o 614-992· 6461
'
90 Days same as cash with
~roved cred1t
3 Miles Out Floor lamp, 3 light, 510 Exer·
Buleville Ad Open 9am to 5pm c•se bike, $30 Large 3 shelf
Mon thru Sat Ph 614-446 - mcely fm1shed bookcase. Ub 2
white ceram1c Sp11n1sh decor
0322
end table lamps w1th new
Save alot-Check us out for shades $25 each Call 614·
carpet and furntture 9M12 992 -2413 after 5 00 pm
Carpet $50 6 p1ecewood 11v1ng
room !Wit, S399 Mollohan 2 fuel 011 stoves wtth elec
Furntture. Upper River Ad Call blowers ancl thermostat con·
trolled. large one $125, small
614· 446· 7444
one 5100 Fuel 011 tank wrth 18
mches of fuel. CO!lll&amp;r lmes.
PARSONS FURNITURE
filters $100. Breast buggy
New wood 6 pc hvmg wood h'llrness bndle and hnes for
horse {800 to 1 200 lbs ) new,
sUites, $399 95, chest of draw
S 1 75 Flowered swtvel rocker,
ers, 4 drawer $48 5 drawer
$26 . 2 double metal bedframes.
$59 95, matt.:ess &amp; box Spflngs·
,iull SIZe, 312 cotl, $149 96 set, 520 Call614-986-3879
tw1n mattresses, $95
set
Split firewood for s•le Oak,
THE WORKING
Ash. H~ckory. S20 p1ck up load
MAN 'S FRIEND
614 742 2182
Used refngerators. washers
For sale Complete Greenhouse
end dryers Mollohan ApCall 614·742· 3156
pltance Call614-446 1957

One bedroom aptftment , m
Mtddleport $1_§_Q_._ per month
plus utlltt•es ---c &amp;Tr614 992·
5545 days and U4 949 2216
eve!nngs
\. •
.
2 bedroom furnished apt. for'
rent 1n Middleport C.alt,1 2 00
3 00 or after 7 30 p m 614992·5084
'

R EP OS S ESSED 14 w lde s
5500 dow n take over pay
ment!J We have em, we ftmlln·
ce'em FR EE DEliVERY Call
today for best select•on 614772- 1220 or 614 773 3926

"~

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
Basic rent for 1 bdr ,
rent
$183 .00, 2 bdr .. S219 00 Also
requ1red a $200 00 secuutv
depostt CONTACT. Jackson
Estates Dept Ph 446 3997
~qual HouSing Opportunity

Brooks1d¢.. Apartments 446
1932 or 446· 4639 One bed"
room apartfA.ent with large
countrv kttchen, new appliances. utility room. water sewer
and trash serv1ces prov1ded
Owl81: area _,

KIT 'Nr CARLYLI! ®by larry Wright

Callahan's Und Ttre Shop Over
1.000 tires, aizea12, 13, 14, 15.
16 16 5 &amp; miles out R1 218

$100 275 gel fuel 011 tank.
$66 . Call 614-379 21~2 aher
7 00 PM

2 br apartment Adults only
Inquire, Sheppard s- Ftrst &amp;
Olive St Gall1p.,ohs Oh•o

3" bedroom.

-·

Apartment
for Rent

3 b'edroom. $200 per month
Mulberry ~Ave , Pomeroy Call
between 9 00 and 5 00 614
992-5587

2 bedroom hoUse in Pomeroy
Furmlhed or unfurnished Call
614-992 6723 after 5 bOp m

54 Misc . Merchandise

12- w1ndows
, 12- storm
dows,
1- storm
door Call
614· 445·3347
- -- - - - - - -For Sale Large house plants.
Call evemngs 614 245 9372

"

Business

Buildings

446 - 38~0

4 BR • fireplace full basement 3

_•_•__

-;;::::;;~·::~::::::::=1r---;----r-'1

Will help frnance -;,, land con tract 1 0 yr ' old house 3 Br ,
Patriot Vrllage Call 614•446-

1340.

-.;

with "finyone else but me?. "

2 Bu1ld1ng lots· 1 'h acres each
w1th county water Jerrys Run
Rd. Apple Grove, W._ Va Call
304-57§ 2383

Homes for Sale

..VOU

eVef Slt Ufi ef t e app e •tree

31

Gospel~ Mu11c
merchandise &amp;

County Applumce Inc Good
used appliances and TV sets
Open SAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 614-446-1699 , 627 3rd
A
G01 1 0 1
_':._P_ _"_·_o_H_...:.___ _
GOOD USED APPUANCES

W!lllcl "'f'i"_.._

"Te }} fie, M arth a, d1•d
•
d
h
}

OhiC?

•

I

ThlM'Sday, October 1, 1987

Ouality firewood, all hardwood,
IN
AUCTION lo FURN1TUR E 62 for aale S26 a pick-up load Call
614-367-0669 .
Ohve St . Galltpohs
NEW· 6 pc wood group- $399
Firewood for sale- $30. 00,
lh11ng rdbm su1tes- $199· $599
p1ck· up load. deHvered Call
Bunk beds wn:h beddmg- $199
Roger Mtade- 614-..388 901 6
full s•ze mattress &amp; foundat•on or
388-9341
&amp;tJart•ag · $99 Re c l1n e r s
start ing- S99
•
USED - Beds, dressers , bedroom B1g Dakot8 Farm hom«t built on
i'bttes $199 $299 ' Des ks
your lot, $12,996 &amp; up , Call
_-_s_s_6_·7_3_1_1_ _ _ _ _'-wrmger washer, a complete hne _6 _1 4
1
ot used turn•ture
.NEW· Western boots· $30
Brunswick pool table. lA slate
Wmkboots $18 &amp; up jSteel &amp; bed Several Schwmn 10 spd
. soft toe) Call614-446 3169
b1kes Call 614 -446-8168 after
•
5 00 fi'M

Wrll do baby Sitting m my home
Cal l 614 -446 -6273

21

For Lease

Bul ld•ng fo r. Lease. 1 ,800 sq. ft ,
Rl 7 , Chash1re Ohio Call
614-367-0138

Sept rc 't ank pumping rnrdttnt ial
&amp; commerical. teO per fo ad

roo fing Call61,...379-2416

..

'

.

'

r .

Is LONGFELLOW

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

..,

&lt;

~

CJYPTOQUOTE

10.1
RFX

S U U N

I U •Q S G

I 0 S S

JBTTK

.I

M S I M KJ

IXMQ

TXPXQ

KUB

OW

G M Q N

I

J B T y s M J.J X J

'M T u T
Yeeterday'e Cryptoquote: MEN WISH TO BE SAVED

FROM THE MISCHIEFS OF THEffi VIRTUES, BUT NOT
FROM THEIR VICES.- R.W. EMERSO~
'
\ •

.'

�•

_Page-12;..... The Daily Sentint'll

,.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

shower held-

Bridal

•

A surprise bridal shower was mothers of the bride1elect, Pat
\lt'ld rPcently honoring Pam a n.d Susan ,Wolf, Nancy Buckley,
Riebel, bride-elect of J3ryec Zetha McGatn, 11&gt;1arllyn Co~lson, '
Buckle). Hosting the shower held. Marcella Win, Jua nita· Will, Peg·
at the Mount Herman United Buckley, Deloris Holter , Julfa
Methodist Church, Texas Road, Will, Texanna and Amber Well,
Porn~roy, were. Robyn Pitzer,
Jackie an(l Debra Flil'st, LQri
Melissa Scarbrough and Lofi Louks, Juanita Spencer, Diana,
Louks. · .
··
Michelle. and Mira nda Buckley,
The f&lt;&gt;llowship roqn\ was de co
Jean Thomas, Robyn Alton, Avis
rated with pink and whiie strea- a nd AmbPr Watson, Alice Rll -mf'rs and bells. Games were cbie. Carolyn and Sherri Smith,
played with prizes awarded t9 Lillian Napper, Pat and Paula
Marcella Will,. · Avis Watson, Lite, Melissa Scarbreough, and '
Amber WatMn, and ' Robbin Robyn Pitzer. ·,
· · -'
Alton. The door prize was won by
Sending gifts'· were Virginia
Diana Buckley,
aQd Lisa· Pooler, Betty •Gaul,
Thl' rf'freshmen~ table was Betty Toney. Joyce Mills, Dinah
· covered wth a whi te cloth and Watson, Betty Watson, Rut)l .Ann
df&gt;ror,1ted wih •-pink anti white Scarbrough, and Carolyn Rii·
streamers and pink candl es. A chie .. Others presenting gifts
i:·akf' inscribed with " Be·st we re Ed, Barbara a nd Bill
Wishes - Bryce and · Pam' ' Roush, Ni na a nd DeLeah Sandcentere.d the table. Ca ke, chips,. ers, Gladys Wolf ,' Judy Wolf,
mints, and' nuts were served..
, Sandy Nelson, Immogf:'ne DaiAttending were Darlene Buck-· ley, Peg Woodrum, Ron and
Je,v and Henrietta Bailey, mother Shirley Smith, Roger and Susie
and gra ndmother of.the prospec' Karr and daughters, Karen
tive bridegroom, Glenna liiebel, Wheeler, Gary · and Sharon Mimother of the bride-elect, Dortha chael and family and Jean
Riebel and Ruby Watson, grand- . Sexton .
·

Book Reviews
By Ruth I'owers
Librarian ·
'NOT WITHO UT MY DAUGHTER" by Betty Mahmoody
.
This book is a very different
kind of Iran hQstage drama.
. Betty Mahmoody . and her five
y~:ar old daughter, Mahtob, .left
their Michigan home in August,
1984, supposedly to spend a
two-week vac&amp;tion in Iran, the
· homeland of Betty:s husband ,
Dr. Sayjyed Mahnioody.
Instead. Dr. Ma hmoody told
them their fam ily would. stay in
Tr~n for;e'ver. Betty a:nd Mahtob.
found t he mselves prisoners,
-" thC' ir rooms guarded, their pass-·
ports go ne, their rights nonexisten t under Iranian law .
All of Betty's seoret plans to
esca pe were thw'lrted · by the
terrifying sentence she beard
over and over agaih: " We can gel
you outvbut you most leave your
daughter behind."
the
whole · story · of
Mah,
moody's bru ta l

Cas lnOnGur
ials!
Exhaust tem

Church
page
notitks

.

-

;

.

_,

.

'

••

MUFFLER' &amp; TAlL PIPE INSTALLED
ALL DOMESTIC
95 and FOREIGN CARS
ONLY

'

-'

perfect lor fall clean· up ... Snapper's patented HiVac System makes a clean swe8p of grass, leaves and other
lawn debris . . . and lor winter-a Snapper snowthrower will '
mak8 snow removal a breeze. .. It's ALWAYS "a snap with

Snapper".

SELF PROPELLED
. WALK MOWERS

,

,

,

M

"'!

1987 Olds Calais
4 Dr.

.

-' '

1'986 Taurus CL

1986 Tempo 4

Dr~

'·"

Auto. frans., air, AM/FM cassette, cruise control. tilt wheel.
low mileage. Local owner.

V-6, auto. trans .• AM·FM cassette, air' power seats, ' locks,
windows, cast alum. wheels, tilt
wheel. speed control, less than
11,00 miles. Local owner. Silver.

5 sp. trans., air cond., AM/FM
cassette, low mileage. Local
owner.
.~··

$

.\

RIDERS b to 12

HP

1986 Taurus LX

19 86 Escort GT

P~sh

Mowers
l"rom S25e.ll5

Auto . trans., ai.r cond., AM/FM
cassette, speed control, tilt
wheel. 7 · passenger, 24', 000
miles. local owner.

4 speed' transmission, AM/FM
cassette. sport ·interior. Local
owner. ,,

V-6. ·auto. trans., AM/FM cas-·
. sette, air, power seats, windows, locks~ ti lt &amp; speed. Local
owner.

· 1984 Cutlass
Ciera 4 Dr.

1983 ·Grand
Marquis 4 Dr.
\

Catcher included

1984 Mustang GT

TRACTORS 12Y2 to 16 HP

1985 GMC lb. 'Ton
Pickup

1985 Escort
GT
'
Turbo
And More
• Ch oice of tree 33", 41 :· c;ir 48"

5 sp. trans,, AM /FM cassette,
new ttres. Local owner.

~ower attac~ments

.

V-8. auto. trans .• air cond .•
power window &amp; lock&amp;, cruise
control. tilt wheel, AM/FM cassette. Sierr11 Classic trade.

· -1984 Toyota SR5
4X4 Pickup

ON THE SPOT FINANCING · ..

Vtsit 'fh es.e Lfealers Today tor Snapper· Sales &amp; Service
Nj:~ll

Prrt:'"Q ITI•v w•IV Cu • tn 1•••"''" •nd OUitt l)rtp

e t~•rqts

POMEROY
TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE

•

PAT HIL FORD I c~

461 S. 3RD

MIDDLEP'ORT;

992-2196

:

r

'.

•

.

~·
'

•

- '

'

ANGELES (U PI) -The

that shook the city at 7: ~2 a.m.
Thursday .and measured 6.1 on
the Richter scale. The temblor,
centere!l about 7 miles east of
downtown Los Angeles, was the
worst quake since 1971 when 64
people died.
.
· Lupe Exposito, _21, a student at
California State University, ·Los
Ang~s . was crushed to dEath in
an underground parking lot at

'

5 speed trans .. topper. AM/FM
radio. 33,000 miles.

SEE: RICK.aTOLLIVER, J. R•.PIERCE or PAl HILL

.

A Multlmedia Inc: Newspaper

'

.

_..

'

.

'

--

- personnel been off job payrolls because of strikes.
percent while tlie rate for blacks slipped 0.1
" It is true that factory hours weredown over the
percentage point to 12.3 percent.
.
.. ·
mopth,
but the decline merely reflects the unu s~al
The rate for adult women moved up 0.1
occurren
ce of the Labor Day holiday falllng in the
percentage point to 5.4 percent, for teenagers it
reference
week of the survey," she said.,·
'
rose 0.3 percentage point to 16.3 percent, for
Stle
said
construction
jobs
have
lagged
by
30,000
whites it was unchanged at 5.1 percent and •fo~
in September and 60,000 since January, but the
Hispanics it rose 0.2 percentage point to 8.2 •
number of mining jobs -particularly oil and gas
percent.The number of di scouraged workers ~
· mining- have increased by about 40,000 over the
· people who said they want to worli but are not
course of this year.
looking for a job because they believe they could
Among service-producing jobs, retail trade was
not flnd one ~ remained·virtualJ:,: unchanged lor
the only big gainer growing by 70,000 jobs in
the third quarter of the year il¥ifm million, the
September, she said.
government said.- "
.
"The· fire, insurance and real estate industry,
In testimony to the Joint Economic Committee
which has grown ·steadily during the current
of Congress, Bureau of Labor Statistics Commisexpansion failed ·. to post. a nd employment
sioner Janet· Norwood · said the 130,000-job
lncreas11 in non-farm employment that showed up ·· increase, probably reflecting the joint effects of
. rising interest rates ·and construction activity
in the 'e stablis.hment survey would nave been up
slowdown," she said.
'
by 200,000 had- not teac~ers and other )sc~o~L
'

.

' .-.

'

Pitbull registration deadline_)
.
•
IS October 15 in Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman rc ·
minded Middleport residents today that all pitbulls or other
vicious dogs m11st be regl'stered
at vlllage hall by Oct 15.
Registration forms and tags ·
are now available at the mayors
office. A one time fee o! $5.00 is
being charged. Owners or keepers must show proof of having a
$50,000 liability insurance poiicy
at the time of registration .
Failure to register these dogs .
by Oct. 15 could result in a $1000

fine or 6 month s imprisonment or
both.
Other requirements of pilbull
or other viciOus dog own.ers are:
When on the premises of the
owner, tlie dog must be In ari
enclosed locked pen which has a
roof.
'
When off the premises of the
owner, the dogmustbeon a chain
link leash not to exceed six feet
'a nd' the dog.must be muzzled and
under the control of an individual
who Is capable of handling the

dog.
Ownership of the dQg does not
have to be proven as the state law
specifically states that a person
having such a dog on the property
or In their po,sses"ion is evidence
that they are responsible for the
dog.
This ordinance will be strictly
enforced and violation of any of
its provisions c0 ulq re~ult In
$1000 fine,_or 6 months. imprisonment or both , according to Mayor
Hoffman.

•
assistance
The Farmers Home AdminisFmHA emergency loans lor
tration has been advised that · physir~ I property losses may be
Meigs County is the ope Ol)io made to repair or replace essencounty designated as a contigu- tiallarm buildings , livestock and
ous county to the Disaster equipment. Farmers suffering
Designation of West Virgin+a due production losses of 30 percent or
to drought conditions that oc' more may also be eligible lor
curred from May 1 through Aug.
31, this year .
_
As a result farmers in Meigs
County who suffered property
damage from this disaster may ..
be eligible for emergency loan
assistance from the Farmers
Home Administration, the rural
credit service . of the Unit'ed "
States Department of Agriculture, Bernard T. Chupka, Ohio
State-Director of the FmHA. said
today.
-~ FmHA emergency loans to
, eligible farmer s, ranchers and
aquaculture operators are to
enable them to return to normal
operations after having sus- ·
tained losses resulting from
natural
&lt;,
.• di sasters.

I

FmHA emergency loan
assjstanc·e.
Application for emergency
loa ns may be made at the local
county Fml-IA office in Pomeroy
and will be rece ived until May 16,·
1988.

Shawnee teachers
vote to go on strike

.
.
d
.
CJ.DCI~natt · reports recor
low 34; croN not damaged .

302 eng .. 4 speed trans., air
cond., AM/FM cassette .. .

V-6, air, cruise control. tilt
wheel, AM/FM cassette, wire
wheel covers. Local owner.
•

Air, power windows, locks &amp;
seats, tutone paint, speed con·
trol. tilt wheel. local . owner.

2 Sec~ons 1"4 Pages · 25 Cents

the school, university spokesman
Ruth Goldway said. A one-ton
concrete wall collapsed on the
California In 16 years claimed
San Gabriel woman, who was 1
seven lives, including a student
heading&lt;to class with her 22-year.crushed by a concrete wall, a
old
sister, Rosa.
construction worker buried alive
The
microbiology and chem is· and a man who fell out a
By United Press International
try
major,
one of 22,000 students
~econd - story window.
Instructors at Shawnee State
who had just started fall classes
Th~f
~~r remaining fatalities
University
voted to go on str_ike
.
)VIonday, died instantly, parawer . eople ' killed by heart
today while public school• '
RECEIVES AWARJ)- Reid A. Young, right, ofMelgsCountyis
attacks . rought on by the quake
Continued on page 6
teachers in Xenia averted a · presented an award 1\y Manning Roush lor oufstandlng service in
na(ural resourcl\ conservation at the annual hanquet of the
threa tened walkout by ratifying
Buckeye Hills Resource ~onservatlon and Development shth
a new contract.
annual hapquet.
·
Meanwhile, teachers in the
Lima City School system
reached a tentative agreemen t
Thursday but teachers in Young·
sto~J' remained on the picket
line.
Reid A. :l'oung of Meig~ County
Professors at Shawnee State in
order to mak e th e RC&amp;D .proScioto
County
voted
48-8
Thurs:·
was
among
nlne
recipients
of
gram a success," Schafer said.
on
the
corn
haryest,
"
he
sald.
"In
mal"
is
53
inches
of
snow
at
By Un1ted Press International
o'
u
tstanding
service
awards
presday
ni
ght
in
favor
of
striking
He also noted that each person
tills
county
the
corn
was
planted
Cleveland
Hopkins
Aiport,
106
October 1\as ushered in The Blg
ented
during
Bucl\ceye
Hills
Renegotiators
reached·
a
staafter
honored was chosen by ' peers
inches in ' Geagua and Lake
Chill and Willis, the Woolly- earlier than normal, so it rn asource
Conservation
and
Devel·
lerhate
on
the
issue
of
salaries.
counties because that area gets
from . respe~tive county council
worm, says this coming winter is tured earlier, and by gPtting the
Agreements have been met on . opment sixth annual banquet
members.·
.
corn in early you're able to get
the lake effect snowfali.
going to be more like normal.
held recently.
·'
Also a highlight of the 'evening
.The woollyworm forecast isn't other Issues , such as facu)ty
A record low 34 was reported at the soybeans eafly, too."
)'oung was honored for his
wa~ the recognition of 1he 20th
. Sometimes by the middle of · too far off, according t9 Goddard. workload and benefit.s.
.. the Greater Cincinnati Airport
Classes
for
the
un
iversity's
service
and
dedication
in'
the
anni
versary of the Buckeye Hills
October,
northern
Ohio
is
seeing
He
said
last
year
the
woollyworm
Thursday morning, but not cold
area
of
nat
ural
resource
conser-.
3,200
·
stud
ents
were
scheduled
wintar
RC&amp;D
. State Rep : Tom Johnson
snow.
forecast
was
for
a
mild
et~ough to damage crops.
.
.
val
ion
and
was
preseQted
with
a
today,
said
Susan
Warsa
w,
spopres;
en
ted -the co un~i l \\'ith a
This
yeai·'
s
winter
is
likely
to
with
eome
'
Shovel-breaking
·
"The low t~mperalure was just
keswoman
for
the
·
univ""'sity.
wooden
plaque·
carved
.·
in
the
certificate
of recog nition from
be
more
like
normal.
according
weather
toward
the
end.
·
·
above freezing, so I don't think
shape
of
Meigs
warsaw
said
no
substitutes
c;;ounty.
The
the
Ohio
House
of Representa Wlllis,
the
Woollyworm.
AI
.
True
·to
that
forecast,
more
.1o
there was very much frost,
would
be
employed
a
banquet
nd
that
wasJleld
at
the
Ma
sonic
tives
acknowledg
ing
th e 20 years
snow fell the last day of March
although there could have been least that 's what the fuzzy
Park
In
Devola
\Vith
·
80
RC&amp;D
·
were
Scheduled
on
the
classes
of
natura
!.resource
eHorts
by the
some in lower areas wl]ere it gets woollyworm tells Cleveland tele- than bad fallen ·ali willter,
RC&amp;P
.
.
.
.
assumption
that
,
s
ome
striking
·
·
executive
council
members
and
followed by another heavy snow. a little colder,·: sald Hamilton vlslon weather reporter .Dick
professors would cross picket
gu es ts in attendance.
· Past coordinators of the RC&amp; D
fall tht'! following Saturday.
County Extension Agent Bob Goddard, who hosts the annual
lines.
Wa•'saw
said
some
lnstruc·
Wayne
$c
hafer,
RC&amp;D
ban_,
were
recognized with plaque
, ·The cool weather that arrived
Davis. "If might have hurt some Woollyworm Festlvaj. .
tors
had
indicated
they
would
not
.
quet
commit
tee
chairman,
conoutlining the RC&amp;O area . Pres"After per usln'g 200 woolly- Thursday morning is likely to
people's home gardens, though, ·
honor
the
strike.
'
dueled
the
awards
with
an
llnt
coordinator, Robert Fir-st,
worms
this
year,
Wlllis
says
this·
stay
through
the
~eekend
,
In those lower areas."
Officials
of
the
Shawnee
State
executive
counqil
member
Irom
of Mei gs Count y, was
fprmerly
,
winter
would
be
bl!Ck
to
normal,
Another
cold
front
Is
elt~ected
to
.Davis· said ihe cool weatber Is
EducatloqAssociation
rejected
·
each
coun
ty
p~senting res pec!pr.e~ented
with a gift frorp the
,
more
spread
out,"
G\)ddard
says.
move·
through
the
st~te',l!'riday.
about two week earlier than
the unlv~sity's offer of a 7 tive awards. 'M anning Roush
RC&amp;D
CounciL
t
The
woollyworm
forecast
for
Clouds
will
be
ahead
of
that
usu11l Jlm~ of the prst frost, but
percent lllt;rease In the first year
presented
I
he
award
to
Young.
Music
en
ter-tainment
was
,
thls
winter
Is
for,
seasonably
cold
,
Second
cold
front:
Whlc~~ill
hoid
an ''excellent" fall .tlarvest sea- '
percent
Increases
tor
tl1e
"All
of
the
in~ividual
s
receivand
8
·
provided
by
·Jonul
Sound
of
weather and snow,,but no record
the warmth and temmoratures
~o n will keep crop damage to a
·
folluwlng
'two
years,
Warsaw
Ing
this
award
:!lave
contributed
Vienna
,
W
..
Va.u!ild
door
prizes
setter, says Goddard, ,
• won't be as cold as t~'y were
nyntmum.
.
said.
greatly of thclrtime and talent in .. .w ere ~warded.
In the Cleveland llfea, ''nor- Thursday 'm orning.
'
· "We're movlng ahead .nlc.ely
LO~

wors( ,earthquake in Southern

From

• 25" Hi-Vac mower

may, in the alternative, b~ 'tied • ity Insurance in this state provid·
with a leash or tether so that the ing coverage in each occurrence,
dog is adequately restrained.
.subject to a llmit, exclusive of
While the dog Is off the . interest and costs, Of notless than
premises of the owner the dog fifty ttwusand dollars ($50,(100)
must be kept ··on a chain link because of damage 'or bodily
leash or tether that is not more injury to or death of a 'person
than six feet in length and caused by the vicious dog:
addltlonaliy do one of the followPersons must registe'r all · viing: keep that dog In a locked pen Clous dogs &lt;1 t the' mayors office.
which has a top, · loeked ·fenced
Violators will be guilty of a
yard or other locked enclosure mlsdemeanorot the first degree.
hwlch has a top; have the leash or
The ordinance is in conjunctioQ
tether controlled by a preson who )Nith the new State law localizing
is of suitable age and discretion the problem.
or securely attach, tie or affix the
The amendment to the mobile
leash or tether to the ground or a home . ordinance, which was
stationary object or fixture so approved Thurs&lt;ilay night, reads .r.
that the dog is adequately resas follows: No moble home; ·
trajned and station such a person
unless presently existing as a·'·
in ·close enough proximity to that
rental, as of the date of this
dog so as to prevent it from
amendment, · cen be rented
causing injury to any person:
within the village. Also, any
muzzle that dog.
.. .
transer of the forementioned
No owner, keepeeper or har - property. (mobife home rental)
borer of a vicious dog shall fall to
must be to owner-occupant only,
obtain liability inSurance with an
Meeting with councfl wa s
insurer authorized to write liabilContinued on page 6

'

1986 Aeros LX
Wagon

'-

'

Death .toll at seven in worst·
•
L.A. earthquake In 16 years

"'Odll 521351PO

• 21" •elf-propelled
• Free rear eat,cheo

-·

'
does not include all workers but gives a better
. WASHINGTON (UP!) ~The nalion•s'clvili~n
unemployment rate cracked the 6 percent barrier
count of the types of jobs Involved, found that
for the first time this decade, . dropping to 5.9
non-farm employment grew ' by 132,000 jobs
during
the month, all but 27,000 in servlcepercent in September, the Labor Department said
today.
·
·
produclng jobs.
'
· The average number of hours worked per week ·
The number of workers nationwide actually fell
by 309,000 during the month to total a seasonally · in aiL private jobs fell 0.3 hour to 34.6 hours. The
adjusted 112. TI million people, the government · aver;1ge number of manufacturing hours worked
fell 0.6 hour to 40.4 hours a week, but the amount of
said, out the rate.Jmproved because the number of
overtime worked dropped 0.2 hour to 3.6 hours a
. people in thelaborforcefellevenmore, byH1,000.
week.
The nation's civllian jobless .rate represents a
The civilian unemployment rate excludes
drop fr_om August's 6 percent and has not been thls
members of the armed forces living in the United
low slnce November 1979. Tile unemployment
States. Counting them, the unemployment rate
rate has plummeted 1.1 percentage point in a
year.
· ·
·
dropped from 5.9 perc~nt in August to 5.8 percent
in September and also represents the lowest rate
The government's suiv~y of ltouseholds .In
since
November 1979.
September found )19.84) million workers in the .
The
rate for adult rnen and for blacks dro~Jped.
labor force, 7.1 mllllon of whom were looking for a
For
adult
men, it fell 0.2 per~entage point to 5
job, A separate survey of .e stablishments, which

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent .
Syracuse Village Council
Thursd&amp;lf ijight, during a lengthy
session, gave the first reading to
ari ordinance In regard to dangerous and vicious dogs and do~:s
running at large ,r~d added an
amendment to its !'resent mobile
home ordinance.
The ordinance in regard to.
dogs Is in addition to the pit bull
oqlinance. The pit bull ordinance, passed earlier, remains ln
effect and has no connection with
the ordinance in regard to
dangerous and vicious dogs and
dogs running at larg-e.
The ordinance on dogs requires
owners of dangerous and vicious
dogs to do either of the following:
while that dog is on the premises
ofthe owner, keeper of harborer,
securely confined at all times in a
. locked· pen which has a top,
locked fenced , yard or other
locked enclosure which has a top,
except that a dengeroli dog

•

•

Sn~pper ...

..

'

council
--takes st_eps to prevent
•
dogs runn~tng loose

·-

.

2·•tage enowthrowera.

~

Syrac~e

JUST A.FEW. OF OUR FINE SELEC.TIONS Of.
PREVIOU.SL YOW'NED CARS &amp; ·TRUCKS
30 IN STOCK

on snapper olngle ond

•

•

,,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ghio, Friday, October 2, 1987

.

•

Cloudy tonight. -Low ~
tween 35, 40. Sunny Saturday.
Highs in upper 40s.

Nation's-jobless rate drops to 5.9 percent

f'

PRE·SEASON SAVINGS

4881

Vot37, No. 102
Copyrighted .1 987 '

'

"HEAVEN AND HELL " by
John Jakes
'
Jakes' loyal fans, who have
awaited the conclusion' o! his
North and South trilogy, need
wait no more. Here. is the climax
of the opus dealing with two
families, the Mains of South
Caroli na and the Hazards of
Pennsylvania; brought together
and .torn apart by the Civil War.
Interweaving intense, searfng
personal adventure with his toric
events, Jakes conjures a stu nning array of contrasts from the
elegance of an exclusive club to
the squalid frontier bord~lio ,
from the ceremonial impeachment of Presldent Johnson to the
·blood bath of the,Washita Massa' .•
ere, from the tenderness of a love
affair to the terror tactj~s of the
Ku Klux Klan. Heaven and Hell is
. a portra it of individuals in crisis
In the aftermath of war.
·

high performence
•nd rlden.

782 .

'

e

Come IJI or Call Our Exhaust Installer Phil Hood .

t~actora

,~---

Page 5

'

$59

Snapper rriowere,

Daily Number
.....

··-~·

Pick 4

At Pat's MUffler Shop
PAT HILL FORD, INC.
~

•

'

her flight for freedom with
Mahtob ls dramatically re. create~ in he( book.

END OP SEASON SA VINOS o_n

Ohio Lottery

'.

I

Library lines:

_,

Thursday, 6cfobef1 ; 1987 .

'

'

Present Young award

.~

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="201">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2791">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39612">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39611">
              <text>October 1, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="70">
      <name>boring</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="811">
      <name>carroll</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="936">
      <name>foster</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1919">
      <name>hendricks</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1657">
      <name>shuler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6965">
      <name>weyand</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
