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                  <text>Ohio

October 1' 1 ·

One of the
World~s

Hoopl~'s

Most

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.
298 SECOND ST.
.

Daily Number

forecast

Respected
Names In

STORE HOURS

Ohio Lottery
594
Pick 4
. 6245 ~
Superlouo
2-8-20-25-30-43

Page ll

Fine·- China
.

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--..~

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 10, 1987

at y

e

SAVE OVER: 40 %
FROM DEPARTMENT
· AND JEWELRY STORE
PRICES WITH OUR
CONVENIENT
PURCHASE PLAN

Vot.37, 11io. 106
Copyrighted 1987

'

Clear tonight. Low near 40. ·
Cloudy Friday . High In 60s .
Chance of rain near · zero
througlo Friday.

•

enttne

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio. Thursday, October B. 1987

•
2 Sections 14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Hearing on grant funding resumes T:g_esday
GRADE. A .

· •

Whole Ch1cken ••!'o•• 39

(
THIS WEEK'S
FEATURED

CHICKEN

ACCESSORY ITEMS

Leg_Qtrs ••••_•••••••• :~ ••
.. SUPE.RIOR FRANKIE

_

Wieners ••••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

•

Nine . applications were reBy NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
ce ived hy the commissioners for
The Meigs County Co mmis- · the Ohio Department of Developsioners continued Wednesday's ment CDBG funding of $92,400.
. henring on Community Develop·
Those submitting applications
· ment Block Grant funding until include Chester Fire Departll a.m. Tuesday. Commission ment, Scipio Fire Department,
President Manning Roush an- Sutton Township and Pomeroy
nounced at yesterday's regular Village in a combi!led project.
ineetlng that the continuation Racine, Syracuse, Pomeroy,
was necessary in otder for the Middleport and Rutland Vilboard to obtain answers !rom the lages. a nd Rutland EMS.
state regardin g a co·uple of the
The' commissio ners have also
proposed CDBG projects.
promised $"20,000 of this year 's
' Present Jlesterda y for the block grant allocation to be used
. CDBG hearing were representaas match money for a potential
tives from the Scipio Township
new business in the county.
Volunteer Fire Department and
After subtracting the $20,000
Kim Shields, Ihe ·county's direc- pledge, and the cosls to administor of development.
ter the block grant pr&lt;rgram,

Crystal Set

$ 09
1

Save $3.00 from our
Regular Discount 'Price
With This Coupon

there remains $63,000 to be
divided amo ng the projects
chosen !rom the nine. Under
CDBG guidelines. only e!gh t
projec.ts may be funded.
County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that he met this
week with Everett Schultz. 01 ive
Township Ti-ustee, to check on
the possible widening of a onelaM bridge on Rice Run Road
where Schultz says lhal several
near accidents have occurred.
Roberts ·i aid the bridge is in good
condition and made recommendations whi ch might a lleviate
some of th e problems"at the site.
Roberts also reported he is
giving the final review to the
county's new map. ·

Bork returns ~orne to family

FORREST BROOK

WASHINGTON iUPI) - With favor of the politically charged
his defeaf in the Senate now all nomination.
The round of announcements
but certain, Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork went home to Wednesday raised the number of
talk with his family before what Bark's declared Senate oppoWhlte House officials said would nents to 47. with 31 publicly
be another meeting today with supporting him and, 22 undePresident Reagan.
clared. But Assistan·t Demo- ·
Bark and the pres iden t had cratlc leade r Alan Cranston of
maintained their pub)lc determi- Ca lifornia claimed 52 solid votes
nation to press on folltJWing talks against Bark and four leaning
t he mornin g after his crushing toward opposition - a total of
defeat in the Senate Judiciary five m or~ than the simple 51
Commiltee. but as eight more majority needed to deal Reagan
senators then declared their a historic political blow.
opposition, Ihe conservative fed·
White House aides said Bark
era! judge went home Wednes- would meel with the president
day night to mull over his fu ture. yet agai n today, one week before
"No one except the lightning the· full Senate:s scheduled d·atl'
st!'lke-mentality .guys think -w~..up the nomination .
can pull it out,'" concede&lt;! a grim
After meeting with the presiTom Korologos, th e White House dent Wednesday , Bark went to
aide , who led the apparently .,. ,Capitol Hill to talk with 15
unsuccessful lobbying effort In supportive Republican senators.

Sliced Bacon ••.••• ~••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

$159
Chu.ck Roast ••••••••
LB.

LOUIS RICH

Ground Turkey.~~ •• 89(

(.Pepperoni •..••.. ;.~z••• 99
HORMAL SLICED

I
I
I
I
I
I

3

1«3

ECKRICH

~.

f3

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

Smoked Sausage •• ~·· $199

HARVEST - One of these girls will he crowned
queen of the annual Racine community harvest
festival Saturday. The festival will be a day-long
event with numerous activities and is staged by

Candle Set

'
'

Save $3.00 from our
Regular Discount Price
With This Coupon

Racine business operators. The harvest queen
candidates, I tor, are Alisa Wilford, Tracy Beegle,
Junie Beegle and Donette Talbott.
..

Money still in escrow six weeks
after reopening of Mason Bridge
•

Approximately six weeks after
the reopening of lhe PomeroyMason Bridge, th e release of

YELLOW

Onions ••••••••••••••••
3 LB. BAG

FLAVORITE

69&lt;

GRADE A

·Instant Coffee •• ~~!·$299

"
9(
Ex. Lg. Eg.gs ••••••~•• ~ 5
TV Dinners ••••••••••••• 89&lt;

HUNT'S

FRESH BAKERY

'

BANQUET

MAXWELL HOUSE

$21,600 held in escrow in a Point
Pleasant bank to repair possible
damages to Pomeroy St. in

•

HO~OGENIZED

Milk .••••••••.•••-.• ~!L•···· $159

•,

.
I
I
I

I
I
I

lw

w

&lt;

•

--------------.~

L

10-12

oz.

s oz.
79.&lt; G.lazed Donuts •• ~~z. $1 ·49
Manwich ••••••••••••••••
1

•
•

• ••• •.
.•• ~ •.•. •.cou·PON •. •......
•
'

SWI

MISS

SOFT &amp; GENTLE

HOT CHOC. MIX

BATH TISSUE

Reg. or Marshmallow

12 ENV.

PAK

4 ROLL
PKG.

79&lt;

Umit 1 .Per (uJtomer

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Good Thru bct.

•

HUNT'S

•

TOMATO SAUCE

69(·

limit I P,r Customer
Good Only At Poytell's Super Valu
Offer Good Thru Ocr. 10, I 987

•••••• COUPON •••••
•
·····~

.t·~··

•

1S
•

•••••••• •••••••••••••

oz.

3f $1

limit 3 Per Customer
1lood Only At Powell's Super Vulu
Offer Good Thru Oct. 10, 1987

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

FLAVORITE SUGAR
S LB.
BAG

, •

~.

$149
·

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
Offer Good Thru Oct. 10, 1987

An animal claim for the loss of jurisd iction over lownship roads county re.cords from National
two pigs has been received by the and suggested they speak with ·Underground Storage in Pennsylv'1nla at a cost of $50 per.
commissioners from Irene Mar- the township trustees.
The commissio ners also con· year .
tin of Albany, however, Wayne
Reviewed with John Fosfer,
Roseberry, co unty dog warden, ducted the following ma tters in
work-study
coordinator for the
recommends the claim be disal- yesterday's meeting.
county
board
of . education, a
lowed because Martin has three • Named Kim Shields as the
wh ich was pregran!
proposal
unlicensed dogs . The com mis- county's representative to the
pared
by
Foster
and Everett
sioners would be unable to Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Holcomb,
Meigs
High
vacational
process the claim because state Developmen t District's Regional
instructor,
for
funding
to provide
law prohibits them from paying Loan Review.Committee.
.food
-service
tra
ining
for JTPA
Discussed with Jane Frymyer
claims to ow ners of unlicense.cl
eligible
'
s
tudenls
in
the
vocaof the Board of Elections, the
dogs.
tional
field
at
the
schooL
. Evelyn and Floyd .Wicinsky, posslblilty of having to replace
Approved a request from Bob
Corning, met with the board to the county's ballot tabulator with
.-- director of the Meigs
Byer
request some road maintenance a computer at some point ill the
Emergency
Medical Service, for
on Parkinson Road in Rutland future.
EMS
personnel
to attend various
Township where they own propGave approva I to Larry
training
sessions
throughout the
erty. The commissioners told the Spencer, clerk of co urts, to lease
Wicins!ty's that they have no microfilm storage space for coming months..

ROBERTS SURPRISED - Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts Is surprised thai the escrow money for possible repairs to
Pomeroy St. in Masoq has still nol been. released. Roberts said
several weeks ago that he was In agreement with Fred Frandose
of the West VIrginia Department ol ~ghways tloat the street was
nOt damaged during the period of time that the Pomeroy-Mason
ferry was In operation. Jl.oberts went back to Mason yesterday for
a second look at the street, and says again that an oil spill on the
road Is "a superficial discoloration" only.
f

t_/

Mason, is still up in the air.
Of the $21.600 total. $15,000
belongs to ferry operator Darrell
Rodger Who returned to his
Clinton, Iowa home shortly a ft er
the ferry di scontinued operation.
The remainin g $6,600 is to be
returned on a percentage basis to
the Meigs and Mason County
businesses which donated to the
escrow account.
It was reported by Mason
Village officials over a month
ago that they were waiting lo r
official word from Fred Franciose of the West VIrginia Department of Highways that Pomeroy
St. was not dam aged during the
tim e the ferry was in operation
between Pomeroy a nd Mason.
However, councllmembers were
going to check the road I hemselves to ascertal n damages
themselves and to compare their
findings with those of the department of highw ays.
Meigs Cou nty Engineer Pbilip
Roberts sa id that he spoke with
Franoiose in Pomeroy on the day
of the bridge reopening, and that
Franclose had already examined
the street• and found no pavement
damage. Roberts sa id that Fran·
close's only concern at the time
was on oil spill which bad
di sco lored th e street's surface.
Roberts then examined the
slreet himself and co ncurred
with Franclose tllal the only
possible problem could be the
spill. However, Roberts felt that
any damage · from the spill
appea'r ed to be "only superficial
discoloration ."
Although Robco·ts expected the
money to be released right away
since he agreed with Franciese
lh!!t Ihere were no real damages
to the road, the money still' has
not bfen releas1•d.
Roberts was surprised when he
learned yesterd ay tha t the money Is still being held a nd went
back lo Mason to view the road
again. After checki ng again, he
still believes the di scoloration,
which is about 100ft. long, Is only
superficial. He guesses that it
was caused by !)yld draining
Continued on page 6

Presidential aides said the judge
left the White House vowing to
press ahead, bu I he wou ld no I
co mment to reporters.
The Republican senators, who
escorted Bark and his wife to
their car after their meeting ,
applauded and gestured enthusiastically but told reporters he
had not yet made up his mind ·
aboul whether to withdraw his
nomination .
"Obv iously, Judge Bark has to
look at this for himself and his
fanilly," said Sen. Phil Gramm,
R·Texas . "We as!(~d him to come
becau se we want him to fight it
out .... He said he wanted to think
about it ."
.."]f I had a bet lo make, l'd.bet
he'd stay," said Sen , Malcolm
. Wa llop, R-Wyo.
Several sources said Bork was

Iran forces fire on Japanese
chemical tanker in gulf today
vesse l's captain. Salvage tugs Sea port of Jeddah.
MANAMA, Bahrain iU PI) Baghdad radio said Iraqi war.
Iranian forces fired a missile into were en route to the scene and
a Japanese-owned chemical one source said a U.S. Navy planes tod~y attacked a "very
ta nker off the Saudi Arabian helicopter was seen flying over large naval target," which gen·
coast today, setting the engjne the area shor tly after the attack. erally refers' to an oil tanker, off
"They were .questloned by the the Iranian oil loading terminal
room on !Ire and injuring three
Ira
nian s about the nationality of at Kh arg Island In the northern
crew membert shipping sources
said. ·Iraq also claimed it hit a the vessel, their las t port of call . .gulf. It said warplanes scored
ship nea r an Iranian oil termina L and l'lte nat ure of cargo," said "a n effective and accurate hit"
The attacks came a day after one shippin g source. The vessel before returning safely to base.
The assault was carried out, ·
I ra nian. Parliament Speaker Ali was on it s way to Saudi Arabia
the
radio said, in order to cut
Akbar Ha shemi Rafsanjani empty at the time of the attack
Iranian
oil revenues used to "to
warned th at the growingWestertJ. alter unloadi ng its cargo in
continue
the war and a nd aggresnaval presence in th e Persian Dubai at the south er n end of the
sion''
agai
nst Iraq a nd destabllgu
lf.
!
.
Gulf Is " pus hin g the world
fze
regional
security .
Japan had so ught assurances
towa rd the edge of catas trophe."
On
Wednesday,
Ira n's official
Today's assault on the from Iran that J.apanese vessels
Islamic
Republic
News
Agency
Panamanian-flagged. 9.431-lon would not come under attack.
sa
id
Rafsanjani
accused
WestTo moe 8 was the second Ira nian Two· recent ambushes of
ern
nations
of
backing
Iraq
in the
attack in 24 hours on a vessel Japanese-crewed ships brought
doing bu si ness with Saudi Ara - . a temporary halt to Japanes~ Persian Gulf ~onfllct a nd warned
that Tehran's patience was wearbia, Iraq 's ally in its 7·year-old shipping in the gulf.
ing thiri.
·
The attack was the second in 2~
war with Iran.
Rafsanjanl
also
·Charged
that
hours
by
Iran
on
a
vessel
Shipping sources sa id . ·th e
the United States has exaggerJapanese-owned Tomoe 8 came connected with Saudi Arabia. On
a
ted the exten t of mine laying in
Wednesday
,
Iranian
Revolutionunder attack about 9:45 a.m .
t
he
Persian Gu lf region and had
some 50 miles of! t)le Sa udl port ary Guards fired rocket ·
itself
planted e;wlosives in the
of AI Juoail, with at least one propelled grenades at a Saudi
waterway.
m issile hitting the engine room tanker a nd sprayed it with
Rafsanjan l. who made the
and setting it on fire. Another machine-gun fire some 20 miles
comments
during a meeting with
souurce said two missiles were off the United Ara b Emlrales
the
Belgian
amba ssador to iran.
·
fired.
pori of Ajman.
warned
lhat
if iran really deDamage was· minor and the
Three of the 23 Burmese crew
clcted
to
sow
mines in the gulf,
members aboard the vessel were tanker co ntinued its voyage from
"all the world 's mine sweepers
injured, . according to shipping the main Saudi oil terminal at the
(Continued on page 6\
sources in radio contact with .tne port of Ras Tanurah to the Red

feet. The section formerly occupied by Ace
Hardware, now moved to the end of the complex,
Is a partolthe section being ex panded . According
to Don Vaughan the expansion gives the store not
only an expanded area lor existing departments
but the capability of adding new departments.

UNDERGOES EXPANSION - Vaughan's
Cardinal Food of 1\fiddleport is undergoing a
11)ajor ex pansion which Is expected to be
completed in early 1988. About 10,500 feet Is being
added to the grocery store display and work area,
, making the total facility more than 20,500 square
\

�•

•

•

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'Pomeroy...:. Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, October 8, 1987

Commentary
111 rourl Strel'l
Pom~ro:v, Ohio
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!IIEIGS·!IIi\SO~

\RE·\

.

........._.._.,..,r-r-e.=lo=

, .R OBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlish1•r
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslsl,\nt Puhlisher/ Controlier

BOB HOEFLICH
Managt•r

C~neral

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IJtlslt's r()le______________B~y_J_~_c_k_A_n_d_e_~_o_n_a_n_d_D~a_le__~~an__A_t_ta_

The Daily .Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE 1:-:TF.RESTS OF THE

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday. October Br 1987

odd! ('" " ·'"il
I t •llt ' " .. nou lli h1 • 111

.

WASHINGTON - Recently his schedule."
released memos and depositions
Now the memo has been
by the staff of VIce President released, confirming our re·
George Bush raise more ques· ports. The memo, dated Aprll30,
lions than they answer about his 1986, was released by the Iran·
:role In the lran/,contra scandal. /contra committees along with a
And there is still more evtdence April 16 "Schedule Proposal "
that 11,asn't been released yet by Both describe the purpose of a
the Sen~te- House committees Bush appointment o/lth CIA
that mvestigated the affair.
agent Felix Rodriguez as being to
As we reported previously, brief the vice president "gn the
there was more to Bush's role status of the war In El Salvador
than Ihe public hearings brought and resupply of Ihe contras."
out. On June 8 we wrote that a
Rodriguez and Gregg have
"still-secret Internal memo lm· been buddies since they both
pllcates (Bush's national secur- worked In Ihe CIA. AI the time he
tty adviser Donald Gregg) -and was meeting with Bush, Gregg·
by extrapolation Bush -; to a and other aides, Rodriguez was
much greater degree In the · making frequent visits to El
secret contra aid program." On Salvador as a "counterinsurJune 21 we described the docu- gency expert." He was also
ment as "a revealing memo that working with National Security
was placed in Bush's briefing Council aide Oliver North on the
book before a crucia l meeting on

Reservations tenned
'havens for criminals'

clandes(lne While House effort to former associates of Edwin Wll·
resupply the N lcaraguan son, the renegade CIA agent now
in prison for arms smuggling.
contras.
Gregg's
handwritten notes of one
Bush has steadfastly main conversation with Rodrgu ~z
tained that, In three different
stale that the CIA agent told hjm
meetings , he and Rodriguez
North was "using Ed Wilson
never discussed the contra
group for supplies."
supply efforts. As for Bush ' s
aides , they have had to amend
Gregg said he had no tdea that
money for the contras had come
their recolleotlons of meetings
with Rodriguez as more Informa - from arms sales to Iran. He said
he thought it came from l'{orth's
tion has come to light that
supplying the contras was dis·
"Informal private network."
cussed far earlier than any of
Gregg also sworf' that he had
them acknow Iedged when the
never discussed any of that with
Bush. "I spend a'great deal of my
scandal first broke.
In an 83·page deposit ton Gregg
time trying to send things to the
made last May, he admitted 'vice pr,esldent that I think are
knowing by August 1986 that
really vice presidential." he
Rodriguez was working wtth · explained In his deposition. "I try
North on the secret contra aid
to keep him focused, help him
operation. Gregg also says he
keep focused on arms control or
knew that North and Rodnguez
Mideast peace or things of that
had fallen out over North's use of
nature. We had never dlcussed
1 .•
the contras We had no responlbilily for it. We had no expertise

AMAZING! MY CoMPUTER
"fRA.DIN6 PRoGRAM T0 LD
ME To JUMP EXAcTLY .
WHEN YoVR5 DtDr

When a major crime is commllted on one of the nation's Indian
reservations, chances are sl!m that anyone ever will be prosecuted
The Arizona Republic reported today .
'
In stories prepared for today's publication, the newspaper said it
f?und d~ring a six-month investigation that American Indian
reserv~ttons have become havens for crimmals. The stories are part
of an eight-day senes the Republic is publishing on federal agencies
dealing with Indian affairs.

tn

The Republic found I hal there ar£' scores of unsolved killings on the
reserv~tlons Recent congressiOnal testimony showed that 17 people
were killed on the Blackfeet ReservatiOn since 1982 but convictions
were obtamed in only three cases.
From 1984 through the middle of 1987, therewere974 serious crimes
reported on six Montana reservations but only 87 convictions, Bureau
of Indian Affairs records show Similar low conviction rates were
reported for reservations m Anzona, Nevada and Utah.
"Law enforcement on Indian reservatiOns doesn't work very well
right now," said Col Bill Kellog. head of the pollee force on the
Navajo Reservation. the hat ion's largest.

-

The newspaper found instances m Arizona. Montana and South
Dakota where lribf's hired people with criminal records as
policemen. It also said the BIA pollee force was so political thai many
officers simply run errands instead of investigating crimes.
There often are conflicts over junsdiction in crimes on Indian
reservations, t he newspaper said Coming into play, at limes, are the
local tribal police, BIA pollee, the FBI and state authorittes.

The cill in.Manila_--"-_____B_y_Vt_'nc_e_nt_C--,-ar_ro~ll

MANILA , Philippines - The
scariest surprise upon visiting
the Phtlipplnes is to learn how
many people here seem close to
giving up in themselves Just 19
months after all thmgs appeared
"Flying drugs onto remol&lt;&gt; areas of the reservation IS a golden
possible with the ascent of Cory
opportunity," satd Cocomno County Attorney John Verkamp, whose
Aquino to the presidency. this
Arizona county borders on the gtanl Navajo Reservation.
· capital is dusted in gloom.
Some crimmal cases fall through the cracks and are never
Where else but tn the Philipprosecuted because of the great distances police and the victim must
pines would three senators spontravel to meet Wllh prosecutors, the newspaper said.
sor a resolution directing a
I
•
commi ttee "to immediately conAn assault case on the NavaJO Reservatton was not pursued
duct a JOint Inquiry Into the
because a woman, who was beaten by her ex-husband, would have
weaknesses of the cha racter" of
had to go nearl;v 200 miles to a federal magistrate in Flagstaff Trials
their countrymen "with a view of
sometimes are held 300 miles away from the scene of the crime.
finding solutions to the Ills
plaguing our society .. "~
Even those who are prosecuted and convicted face prison sentenc~s
Where else would a Ileal
mueh shorter than those for cnmes that occur·o!f a reservation. the
newspaper columnist describe
newspaper sat~.
the general mood as a "winding
The newspaper satd rape was a growing problem on reservattons
down.
the ungluing of events.
but was a low priority among law e nforcement agencies.
'
de-escalatiOn of a national psy·
Th&lt;&gt; latE's! statistics on rapp on Indian reservations were 12;eatrs
chic fatigue"?
old. but at thalltme rape 11/as reported four limes as oltE'n on Indtan
A taxi driver sugges ts. hope·
reservallons as m the general P9PUiation.
fully but With lill ie apparent
convictton, that the vwlencc
On most reservatiOns. rapes are considered too serious to be
undermining the Philippines
investigated b1 the tribal pollee but not serious e nough lor the FBI As
a result , the cases arP turned over 10 BIA pollee, which classiftes rape might ease with elections next
as a "non · emer~en c \. ··
year. Maybe so, but a doctor
One town where the cnme problem has become extreme, the
Republic said , is Browning, Mont.. on the Blackf&lt;'et Reservation .
"Around het e, pmp le get drunk, rape , shoot and murder," said
Kenneth Morselle. an mvestigator for the BJA pollee
Cnmina ls often use these conflicts to t heir benefit, the Republic
said. For mstance, drug smugglers are using reservations as a
pipe-line because federal officia ls have no authorllv to seize their
assets, such as motor veh icles or airplanes, if the~ are caught on a
reserva t Jon.

grind of Manila, many tourists
fly to unspoiled beaches or seed
the cool of Ihe highlands. I chos&lt;&gt;
to vlvt the tsland of Corregidor. a
monument to the last struggle
against tolalit.onans who threa tened this coun try.
- Here several thou sand Amen·
ca ns and • Filipinos held out
agatnsl the Japan~se until
hunger, fattgue and sheer !Jrepower forced their surrender on
May 6, 1942 One month earlier,
across a narrow strait on Bala&lt;m
peninsula, 75.000 Americans and
Filipinos had a lso succl.\mbed to
the Japanes~. a t once to begin the
Death March that liquidated
prisoners by the thousands.
From Corrlgldor a visitor can
peer across the waters to Bataan.
but the placid JUngle greenery is
deceptive. As casually as if she
werE' calling attention to an
mscrlpt10n, our guiiie mentions
that NPA guernllas now roam
the hills there.
II ts a not her era, and the new
barbanans have arrived
"

reports his friends consider him
These radicals flail the llberal
stupid not to try to emigrate to
Phtlippine Catholic c hurch for Its
the Umted States while he still
"pro l a ndlord " sta n ce The¥
can.
spea\ of Aquino's "fascism" 01
Every day a legion of newspapof the "U.S. ·Aquino regime."
ers reviews the chilling event s:
They scorM democracy, hin ting
an ambush of government troops
in sinister but familiar terms of
by communists in the New
what lies ahead hor I he religious
People's Army; the assassina- and official eltt e.
·
tion of a left -wing leader; · an
Ills n'ot hard to understand this
admtsslon by a mtlllary official
urge of some to repeat th e
that he can' t crack down on
revolutionary mtstakes of olh&lt;'r
southern warlords; reports of
nations . The Philippines are poor
troops practicing to repulse even by the general sta nd ard of
restive coHeagues from the prestlh(' undeveloped world. ThC'Signs
denllal palace on the assumption
are everywhere: people washing
that a n aborted coup on Aug. 28 themselves and their c hildre n In
by Col. Gregorio Honasan was no the streets. rubbish and dllapefluke.
dation; beggars, itin&lt;&gt;ranl VE'ndHonasan remains at large, by ors selling any lhmg to raise a
the way, a touchstone In the lillie change.
r,a glng debate over Aquino's •
The Philippine econpmy may
policies. Most of the participants.
be growing again, but mtllion s of
whether for or against Aquino,
people probably don't nottce. 1f
worry about the surviva l of some Filipinos doubt their prOs·
democracy. Yet few days pass peels under capitalism, 11 is at
wllhout a letler writer revealing least understandable. if depress·
lhC' nation's unde rcurrent of ingly shortsighted
extremism.
For rcllPI from the clatter and

How Hammer kept out of·jaii_R_ob_er_tW:_a_lte_
.rs

Sen. John Melcher . D Mont . recently read a report into the
Congressional Record that satd there were 99 major cnmes on the
Blackfeet Reservation with onlv. three convtcltons in the penod from
June 30. 19R:l. to i\ug 1. 19R:i
Desplle the poor n•cord. the Blackfeet tribe dtsbanded 1ls poltee
force In 1981 because of a shortage of money. The reservatton. about
the s ize of Connecticut , now is patroled bv j2 BIA officers

.

'

Today in .history
By United Press International
Todav ts Thursda y , Oct. 8, the 281st day of 1987 with 84 to ·rollow.
Th(' moon ts waning, movtng toward its last quartet
The morning stars are Mars and Jupit e r
The evening stars are Mercu r&gt; , Venus and Saturn
Those. born on this dat e are unde r the stgn of Libra The&gt;· Include
automobtle mventor ~ames Duryea in 1869, World War 1 flying ace
Eddte Rt~kenbacker m 1890. Argentine dictator Juan Peron tn 1895,
travel gutde author Temple Hornaday Ftelding in 1913, pioneering
South Afrtcan heart-transplant surgeon Dr. Chrishaan Barnard in
1922 (age 651, actor David Carradine ih 19:16 rage 511. civil rights
leader and Democrat presidential candidate Jesse Jackson m 1941
(age 46). and comic actor Chevy Chas e in 1J43 (age 441
On this date in history :
In 1871 , the Great Chicago Fire started . It destroyed more than
17,000 bu ildlngs, ktlled more tha~ 300 people and left 90,000 homeless.
That, sam~ day, a forest fire began at Pes htigo, Wis., eventually
burmng some 850 square miles and killing about 1,100 people.
In 1918, Sgt . Alvin York of Tennessee became a World War! hero by
slngle·handedly capturing a hill m France's Argonne Forest, kiiUng
20 enemy soldiers, and capturing 132.
•
In 1919, Congress passed the Volstead Act, prohibiting the sale or
consumption of alcoholic beverages .
0
In 1942, the first contingent of World War II Waves - Women .
Appointed for Vountary Emergency Service- began naval training
at Smith College In Massachusetts.
In 1986, State Department s pokesman Bernard Kalb resigned over
the Reagan admintstration's "reported dlsinformation program "
against Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafl.

,

A thought for the day : Aviator Eddie Ri ckenbacker said, "Aviation
Is . proof that given th e will , we ha ve the capacity to achieve the
Impossible. "
•

WASHINGTON (NEAl- Bur- came from Hammer.
ted deep inside industrial ArWhen the Senate select command Hammer's newly pub- mitt&lt;&gt;&lt;' Investigating the Water
I i s hed au t obI o graph y , gate Scandal asked Hammer
"Hammer," Is an intriguing how much he had contributed to
acco un t of how he ctrcumvented
the Nixon campaign, he perpetu the federal law govermng cam·
al&lt;'d lhE'fraud hyclaiminghehad
paign financing .
given only $46.000.
Hammer's self-servi ng desThe special prosecutor probing
crtpti on of the events that oc·
lh&lt;' Wat&lt;&gt;rgal&lt;&gt; sca nd a l later
curred more than a decade ago forma lly charged both Hammer
occupies only f;ve pages of the and Babcock wtth violating the
544-page book, but it provides
campaign finance Jaw Babcock
prevtously unavailable lnforma- pleaded gui lt y, was smlenced to
lion about an unusual criminal
four months in prison and fined
ca se
$1,000.
Hammer. Board chatrman and
Hammer also pleaded guiltychief executive officer of Los
but the legal proceedings thai
Angeles·based Occidental Petro- p10bably would have led lo a.
leum. was asked in early 1972 to
prison term for htm were side·
contribute $100.000 to President
tracked because of hts · clalmed
Nixon 's re-e lection campaign .
health problems
He rel uctantly agreed to make
"At Ihe moment oft he greatest
the dQnatwn b'!,l tnsisled upon
personal cnsis In my hfe. my.
anonymity- which was allowed
health dislntegted," Hammer
under the loop-hole-ridd led low.in
writes in hts autobiography . "I
effect at the time, the Federal
have never felt closer to dedi h."
Corrupt Practices Act.
Others facing federal prison
But only $46,000 of Hammer's
sentences argue that they should
funds were transferred to the
not be Incarcerated because that
Nixon campaign prior to April 7.
experience. combined wtlh their
1972, when a new law, the
falling health or chronic medical
Federa l Election Campaign Act,
difficulties, cou ld produce more
became effective. II required · severe problems - and possibly
that every ~ontobutor be . fully · death.
l~entlfled .
But those pleas Invariably are
Hammer fulfilled his financial
rejected. Indeed, the Justice
commitment by giving the reDepartment's Bureau of Prisons
malnlng $54,000 to Tim Babcock,
maintains a special Institution In
an Occidental officer and former
Springfield, Mo. , for prisoners
governor of Mon!ana. for dellv·
with serious medical problems.
ery to the Nixon campaign
Hammer's lawyers and doc·
oraganizallon ,
.
tors nevertheless insisted thai
To comply with lhB' fiew law's
his precarious medical condition
requirement that donors beldenrequn-ed not only that the legal
ltf.led, Babcock listed himself
proceedings be moved from
·. and four other Montanans as the
Washlngtom to Los Angeles but
source of the funds that actually
also that he be spared from

..

serving any pnson SE'n lenc£'.
relalivPiy short period of time, he
During one crucial court ap·
had fully recovered fwm what
peara.nce, Hammer was in a
had been charactenzed mrliE'r
wheelchair. accompanied by sev
as a serious heart disease .
eral doctors a nd linked by
"As ' my health Improved,"
radio-telemetry to heart moni.
Hammer seys m ht s book, "I
loring devtces in another room. bC'ga n to shuttl~ back and !OI Ih
while he told the JUdge of from Moscow agatn. " Indeed. in
suffering from shortness of the 11 Y, ymrs smc(' lh&lt;' cnmi nal
breath, dtZ&lt;incss and patns.
proceedmgs ~nded. the 89 YC'ar·
The case wa s coneluded m
old Hammer has been a world
1976, when he wa s fined $3,000 but •travE'Icr.
spared from prison. Within a

I

Eagles to hit r9ad; unbeaten Oak Hill .Oaks visit Sot~thern
By SCOTT WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - For th e
second week in a row the Eas te rn
Eagles of Coach Arch Rose will
take to the r oad for an SVAC
match with North Galha, be gin·
ning at 7: 30 p .m .
Eastern drb pped a 6- 0 heart ·
breaker to the Southwes tern
___Highlanders la s t week, not so
much because of lack of offense,
but because of lack of offen se
within the ftve yard line. Ea s tern
penetrated to within the five yard
line on three different occasions
. without a score. spending much
_of the game m Southwestern
· territory
• North Gallia fell to defeat at
the hands of a speedy Hannan
· Trace squad of Coach Lar r y
Cremeans , 33-13
North Gallia has experi enced
defenstve inabtltlies niost of the
season and is susceptible to the
pass,cspecially the long pass.
Eastern Coach Arch Rose says
his lroups must play a mistake·
.free offense and cut down on
, p~nalties, especially those which
are a result of mental mistakes.

.

II."

Gregg further swore he had no
idea how the reference to Rodriguez discussing "resupply of Ihe
contras" got into Bush's briefing
book, and said that the subject
did not come up allhcmeetingon
May 1, 1986.
In two depositions. Gregg's
secretary, Phyllis Byrne , said
Ihat she remembered typing the
phrase onto both the bnefing
memo and the schedule· proposal
from Information given to her by
Bush atde Col. Samuel Watson.
But Watson swore that he g~ve
her no such lnfor~atlon, though
he acknowledged that s he Is an
efftclent secretary who types
only what is provided by others.
This led Watson'~interrogalor,
Senate counsel Mark Belnlck, to
observe sarcastically: "If you
didn't provtde it·and !!Mr. Gregg
didn't provide It, and If she didn't
come up with it on her own, and if
Felix Rodnguez i:lidn't provide It,
then thi s was ghost·wntten liter·
ally. b~cause there's nobody who
provided it "

.

Berry s World

_,,
"

Rose s tated: "We must ta ke a

dete rmin ed approac h • to Ihe
game a nd l otheo!fense thi s week
in pra c ttce. We muis l play a
game s imilia r to the Sy mmes
Vall ey game."
Rose continued, " Las l week WC'
were di ssappolnl ed in our loss.
We moved the ball all over the
fie ld be twee n the 10 yard li nes·
,did not score. We are go in g to br
extre mel y sure tha t our offense
ts re ady."
·.
Last week we s hould not have
lost , so we must make up for 11
thts week with a concert ed tot al
team effort.North Gallla is big
a nd s trong with good ta len t a t the
s killed positiOns,a fact we' ll have
toov&lt;&gt;rcome.We ' ll have to tsolate
and stop Rou sh tSr. ta ilbac k
David Rou s h) on lhC' r un I look
forward to a hard-fou ght batt!&lt;&gt;
thts week and the team with the
fewest mistakes will win.
EastE'rn's Mark Griffin, senior
quart&lt;&gt;rback and stgnal caller·
,had his second good passing
night as he was lllor 22 passing
for 122 yards .The week before
Griffin was 15 for 20 and 14Q ya rds
passing
Senior ~Jeff Johnson gained his
second stratght 100·plus ntght
rushing wllh 103 of Eas tern ' s
total 126
Overall Ea s te rn mu s tered
enough offense, but Jack&lt;&gt;d
timely execution and taking
advantage of several gold en
opportunities
Eastern' s , passing abtllty
should pose quite a problem for
the NG defense with the likes of
sure-handed Steve Horner and
Kyle Davis stowed away in their

season.

~~
I)

1118 1 by NEA Inc

1 If

"How can you up and LEAVE ME like this ·and after I've given YO\' the best years. of my
l1fe. :· :-

No rth G a llla
Sou the rn has also added the
power T for m a tion . havtng
li mited s ucces s tw o weeks ago,
but lite rally none las t wee k a l
Sy mme s Valley
Defe nse has been So u ther n·s
wm·st e ne my a s th e Tor 11a does
have a ll owed 13R pom ts in ftve
ga mes, a n average of nea r ly fo ur
touc hd o wn s per ga m e, Thi s
seem s to the rna m a r ea the
Torna does have had pr oblems
wi th , bu t Hens l&lt;&gt;r notes t hat
several big broke n pla ys have
overs ha dowed a n tmprovtng
effo rt
Southe rn will ha ve ti s ha nds
lull with the powe rful Oa k Htll
team, wh tch is loaded . with
talen t. La st wee k Bobby Ward
scored a pat r of Toucd owns a nd
passed for a noth e r tn OH 's wui.
The snea ky Eric F aye is a not her
Oak to wa tch offcm;ivdy, as is
Bn a n How ell a nd Mtke Ha le.
Howell grabbed a 34 ya r d pas s
fr omFayeandH&lt;ti C'a 24 yar dTD
score.
Oak H tll had {28 yards r ushmg
artd 235 (12 22 1 in th e air lor 363

bE'Irlg a well coa r-h ~d . w(•ll
exec ulmg tea m . .b VI f~e l s i! hi;
squad ca n concen trat £' its ~!fo rts
th at a win is not out of rra ch
The defe ndmg SVAC cha m
pto ns ha ve not produ ced as muc h
offense as m a ny ha d ex pected tn
the p rr season a nd hav e vistbl y
weaken ed d efe nsively . givin g up
nearly two TO 's pe r gam e.
'Homecomin g' may j ust provide tha t needed s par k to give
Sou thern the m a_gtc 11 needs to
pu ll off a lo ng awaited 'ups&lt;&gt;t ·
·O nly lime will tell, bu t the
Da vtd-vs-Goltath battle ts all set
fo r Frid ay a t 7: 30 m Racine.

1 ards.
· Mea n whtle, Southern eeked
out 220 to tal yards at 'Symm es
Valley . ga tmn g 210 on t he
ground: a benefit of 136 ya rd s
ru shin g ftom P ete R ous h i36
carries\ Th e 100 yard m g hl wa s
RP ~ sh ' s t hi rd of the sea son
Tr jd Li sle, Ch r is Srou t. Dan ny
GheE'n , and Mike Amos have llso
prove n to be m aj15t off ens ive
sta rs ,along with frch s rna n R ic hard Deave r who ga med 31
vards.
· Kev m Gru eser had a n out
s ta nding defensi ve ga m e.
Coach Hensle r Ites Oak Hill as

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2~0 No.rth Second. Middleport, Ohio

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SVAC STANDINGS
(All-Games)
TEAM
W L. P
Oak Hill .... ... . ... .5 0 135
Hannan Trace .. .4 2 119
Symmes Valley .. 3 2 }35
Eastern .... .. . .... 2 3 !\2
North Gallta .. .... 2 3 77
Kyger Creek ..... 2 3 47
Southwestern
2 3 52
Southern . ... .... . l 4 75

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EASTERN HONOREE
Easi.ern's Mark Griflln, a 5-10
_ senior quarterback, enjoyed
his second consecutive out·
standing game as he passed
for 122 yards in a 11-for-22
night last week against
Southwestern. Grijfin, a repeat Player of the Week
hoporee was 11·15 one week' •
ago for 140 yards.

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•

·Offens ive arse nal.
Eas t er n ' s d e fe nse bowed
somewhat , but s howed s tgns of
being improv mg ty tough a s it
was credited with a · ltne JOb m
keep ing Southw es te rn a way
from the e ndzon e . It also put the
E agles in good .fie ld pos itio n
much of the game .
Easter!\ was a lso pl agu€ d wllh
tnjur ies and 'o the r Josses ,ihat pu t
a m en tal stra m on the s ta rting
line· up.
AI a.ny rate Friday's ga me
s hould be anoth e rgood game, bu t
hopefully fr om the Ea gles' ~om I·
of-view there will be a dtfferen t
out come
League Opposites Clash
RA CINE - The Southern Tor·
nad oes hope tha t the homefleld
advantage and homecommg
hoopla combine in sparking the
'eve r· so-close' Tornadoes to a
win over highl y tout ed leagu e
lead er Oak Hill.
Southernsufferedadtsappotnl ·
ing 19-141oss at Symmes Valley
las t week while the Oaks claimed
a 3o-ll wm over Kyger Creek.
Southern Coach Bill Hensle r
fee ls hi s Torn a does have th e
ability to pu t tog ether a winnmg
effort, stressmg thai recent
loss es have taken a little &lt;&gt;dgeout
ol the Tornadoes, but they still
hav e conftden ce to put il all
togethe r.
Sou thern ha S r e lied mos tly on
tts mam s tay, the smgle wmg
offense, and has had , some
success between the goal posts on
the ground, but lacked in the
scoring department. That has
held true much of the season
except when the SHS offense
exploded for 28 points agamst

~ard , a ggresstve,conslstenl , and

.
SOUTHERN HONOREE For the second time this year,
Southern senior running back
Pete Roush has earned
'Player of the Week' honors
lor his outstanding cflort
against Symmes Valley last
week.Roush ran for 136 yards
on 23 carries for his third
100-yard game. The senior
fuUback has totaled 95 carries
lor 500 yards In five games,well on his way to another tine

SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L
P OP
Oak Hill ..... .. .... 3 • U 61
0
Hannan Trace ... 2 l
71 51
North Gallla . . 2 1 71
75
Southwestern ... 2 1 .12 28
Eas tern .. .. ...... . 1 2 20 43
Kyger Creek .
1 2 26 85
Symmes Valley . 1 2 47 54
Southern .. .. .. .... ._.0 3 55 71
TOTALS
12 12 418 418
Oct. 9 games:
Southwest&lt;&gt;rn at Hannan TracC'
•Oak Htll at Southern
Eastern at North Gallia
Symmes Valley at Kyger Creek

•

The Daily Sentinei- Page - 3

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MINERAL WELLS ,W.VA .The World Dirt Track Race of
Champions scheduled for this
past weekend at West VIrginia
Motor Speedway has been posJponed to Friday and Saturday
nights, October 16 and 17 at the
new % mile clay oval.

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•

-·
•
·Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. October 8, 1987

Giants even series; Twins defeat. Tigers
..

Calendar

6. PorlliRIOulh Nul no Damti' IH (l· l )

51L'&gt;t·ball

K. )flmott•r I IJ (ft.DJ
9. Ml ddh:-l•own Ft'nwi•·k

,\mrrleWl Lru(UI" Pill) on...
GamP '1-~-croM

Golf
U!"G t\ Mlcl-t\matt'tlr

Pt•n~o~~('o la ,

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P•·n~t·o la

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•
Ko"" ~ tl. Ga. - 12MI,OOO PE'psl St-nklr
( baHf&gt; flll:l"

Hud ..y
Pltt'!lhu~h

at N\'

R ~tn~: e r~&gt;, -,1 : 15

Iii
(~· I )

~I

11 Mh:t nPMilll, ll: 35 p. m .

ll\ll~ -

!t~

7. Md)orntld (J.Ol

10. Munr~Y UII' U-0) ~
n
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Brilliant .Budtt&gt;) 't' North U: 13. TIH!n
r~~~. h. • r' '! 1: 11. fl nl'lnMII rountr~'
Day Ill: \5. flk•J lk'Wis\·ille ~o~.nd
Llhert)' t '••nlt'r, 15 t · ~ r tl: 17. (tt..•)
Loweii\'Ulf'. Lorain Our lind Nl'w
Brl'.mt'A. 12 f'ac h: 2il. llle) East Kno~
~l'ld Gllrllway , 10 eat•h.

p.,u.

\\'w.hlnRfon at RO!Iton, 1: 35 p . m .
Qu ebt&lt;t• alllartford , i :3S IJ. m ..
Mln,ne!lul.l at 8ullaJO, 1 :35 p. m .
Montreala~t

Phllndelphia, 7: 95 p.m.

Toronlo at Chiclli(O. K: 35 p . m .
Delroll at fiLI K.II.I')·, !1: !15 p . JU.
NY lsilandPr!l at I.O!i AnKt'lb , 10:3!1
p. n1.
St. Louis ul \o'an&lt;.'O u\'rr , 11 :!13 p. m .

NHL results
~

NATIONA.L HOCKEr l.EA.GliE
·" '»..eo fonfer en'-'t'
Patrl('k DJ\1.-. kln
L T Pis. Glo'
N\' bl ~ndfon.
0
00
Nf'W ,)f'I'Sf')'
0 0
00
Nl' R&amp;nlf'l'!l
0 0
00
00
Phlladr lphlu
110
Plllsbu~h
00
WUt&gt;hlngton
D
0 00
00

.

Te ~~nlo;

~U.anla

- l6t0.000 AT.Ii:T (' hlll.llrnl{r
.&amp;.w.el. Swlh:e rtand - S250,000 Swto~
lnCU»r fhaihlonslllps

S8H;;dal r. Arl:l. -

saoe.uoo men':-

Grand PrU

Prep ratings

r\darn"

Clnt'ln~a~~tl

Qtlt-l~ l'

:J. C" lrw tnnaU foler.lln (3- 0)
133
I. ZaneHvUi e (0-0 1
S. Mt&gt;ntor (5-0)
6. Gahlll!na Unt'Uin t2) i,_ Ul
· 7. C"antonMcKlnley ( l-l )
,._ Daj'ton WII,YIM' ( 3-0)
!t. ( ' lnt:lnrautl St. XaYI!!r (S- Ol
10. 1\t•ttt&gt;rinlt Falrmon4 ·(3- 0)

~:n

I:!K
l'U

t9
'73
Ml

"

'"

:: .Tiffin f 111umhlan tlil 13-U l
a. Urhunn ( I) 16-01
I.MI11UVII(IJ(5-!I)
s. Cohamhu s ~·Salt'!- (-S- 01
11 . Lexlnll(on tl-01
7. C'ollfmiJus Mlrrlln (5-0)
K. \\'arr-t•nHurdlnlt'!-1-11
!t. C'olumblls Franklin Hl.'llthls (5-0)

l.U
1'l5
115
105
71
16

Toronto lll Chicago, II: 35 p.m .
Dli'troll at Ca ll{llry, &amp;: ~ 5 p.m.
NY ltolandpn; ·at , Los 1\n ~tc l cs . Ill : J5
p.m .
St. Lou~al V~ancouwr. 111:35 p,m ,
Friday's GamPS
~l tt)lln•r""h at Ne"' -lcrJK&gt;y, nljfhl
Iktrolt ut Edmonton, nl~ht
Suturda,v'-"~ Garil es
N\' R».n~r" 1111 Hurtlord, nl,;ht
&amp;ito• at Qul!be-L', nl,~~:ht

'"...

('!)

il-l )

-t. lrnnlon (I· I )

3. Wht-el...-..bur~ (I- I)

113

6. ( 'olumiJuM H11rlley ( -1-1)

'1~
A~

"

fl. Bultlmort&gt; lJ!Jo•rt y U n \on ( 5-flj

•·

"

10. Vf'r!Nllllt'M (4- 1)
~2
St•L'(lnd lf'n : II . Huron ( I J -tl ; 12.
\lo'J mnlnK :u!; 13. f)ayton Oa~wood 35; 1-t.
' (l h'l fa.,Cil lla Mar~tarrlta 11.nd Fnmont st . •lnlll'ph, 2.1 f"a( ·h; lfi. f'nlll""
~I'Mif'rn Rl'!iene 20; 17. lll'llf.h 15; 1)!.
Lo-ual!!o''illr Aquina.o;
li:
19. t ile)
Pc mhc&gt;rvlllr F..aslwood, 1\tarlr rnont and
Nt&gt;w London. IIi ral"h.
Dh·l'".ion \ '
1. N•' w !uk f'lltholll- 1101 t5-0I
no
2. Dl&gt;lphol. .lrllr rson t iiH {5- ll)
tOj
3. Mo~adorr ( I) t:t- 0)
llili
I . A yt&gt;rS \'Illt' {5- 0)
Ill
;\, Arlln.-ion I I) (5--01
9H

at

'VDS CA R

~~~SM~~~~~~.: ::::::.:. :··········· ········· ·'· ······'··· ·::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i3~

Bre nt Bissell ... , .. , .... ..................... -., .,,,, .... ..... .. , ..... .. ............... 202

Mi k~ Bartrum ....... . ,.................... ,,., .•. .... .. ,.. ,..... ... . ~·····--------······- -47
Kevin Oller ..... .-.... , ......... ,............ ,...
................. :................. 12

Chris Smit h:.............................. .

Randy Hawley .....................
Tim \\'ells ............... 1.. ,...... ... ........
Eddle Crooks ................................ . ,....

TOTALS

fMI,~~:ury, nl~thl

1

1

0

1

. ........ .. ..................... -8 .
~

Bart rum
.................
.. ........... 66
E ddie Crooks ................................... ...... .............. 11

17

TOTALS

4

1

33

3

Bryan Durst ..... .. ,............................... ......................................... 10
Chris Smith ........................................ .................. .. ...............
. .. 8
Br(lnt Bissell ......... :............................ ,.................
. .... 8
Wess Howard .............................. , .... ;.... ..............
...... .3

Bill Brother s..................
KurtisE nglish.............

119

5.4

0

•

TOT~LS

"

(USPS 145:-960)
A Divlslnn of Multimedia, Inc.

67

2
2
0

48
18 . · o
2 0

No

4

Vds Tlls
152
l

52

37

to

241

0
0
I

No l'ds TO.
41 0
0
33
12
0
to

96

20

21

4

4
0
2

TOTALS

23

2 Sareu~

683

3%.3

•H

47

l 1g14
3

Mlk£' Ban r um
JC'ff McElroy
Wcss Howard
Denni s Booth
Chris Smit h

33.3

18.0

NO. VDS. TDS .
. ..... 3
5
o

OPPONENT TOTALS
TD
7
6

0

665

IS

... 1

N('nt Bissell ............................ ....
.. .......'............
.. ........ 1
John S!ss·on .. ~........ ....... . ......
.......................................... 1
K~l~T~~n .... .............
.... .
.... . . ... .

SCORING
Rren t BiSSPII

0

VDS. AVG .

NO.

INTERCEPTION RETURNS
Ch ri s Smlh .... ..... ... .......... .... ... ..........................

Plu~

0

150

············
········· ............. .4
..... .. ..... ..................... ..
......... .4
······································ ············ ................ :....... 2

H

f)Jlflil-'1 - M.'lll\lr.d center.. Tr'"'Y Rnllurd und Nam Hill, ~tt~lllrt\.; ,Jerry E!o't'rf'tl
und fhuunt.'f')' Rohin!lbla ;tnd lorw!ird
Quinlun Gnll.,. ,
Utah - Rclr a...t.&gt;d swlnlt'llllln . AitK&gt;rl
Spri!l~. forwarl! .John famptwll, N•nh•rfor"ll rd Tim Ca rr und (or"''».rd Kutwn
Holmt"'Foothllll
,\llanla - Slped runnlnK hack Ric k
RadlUljt· ~ and punlt'r l..ouls flt"rry.
Mi ami- Sl~tf!f'd U,t;!il t•nd Duld Lt•wl"
and wid•• n •n•I\'Cr St ·uU Ft"ldman; plan•d
dl'h•n!&gt;Oh'•' had• .John Swllln un huu·ll\t•
mslt•r.
N\' Glanb- SJ~cd lln l'hat · ~t • r .IN r.~·
Klmmt'I.I{U.IIrd DanMorKanandfuUbul•li
Knu lllnl Purk: cut ntl!+f" lackh• l'il-o ll Bini.
NV -h•l .'i - NI~nf'd r,unnin~ hack ll t&gt;nnll'l
RIJ,r.·n •nd u.-llt r nd Erk Hilt •,. ,
'ian Frunt•lsro - 'l'l'lldr d llnl' hac·ktr
Kc•llh Bruwn~· r to L.'\ R11idcrs und
running hlK'k Andr• • Hu rd)' to St•allif' IM
drult •·onsldl.'rallon".
Ww.:hlnJrton - NIKnl'd runnlnt hac k
\\'a)'nf' Wilson li nd ddf'nslvc t•nd Kit
l.ollthrt~p;
rJ&gt;It•ased runnlnl: bac·b Th•tma.~ Dt•ndy and RIL· ~y -lamh..o n, widt·
rl •t• rlvrrs Rlc bard -luhn:-ui n nnd Carl
Klllhuns lind qua.MI'rbat!li Knln ~lsk .
· H ot' ~t·y
1\p~ -ll•rse)' At·qulrf'd h'h win~:
C.t•ora:l' 111"Ptwt• from "lnni(K'« fur u
fourt h-round t911S draft dttJit •t•.
Nllhlanck•r!!- i\s)ll(nf'd lt•ft wints i\rl
H:l llll(lllll and D.ttt&gt; Ht'nry In Sprinltfh•td
ol Amerk' lln H&lt;H·kt&gt;y IA&gt;aJ:UC'.

361f
43%

86

.·...... 3
..:1
33 371

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

1 Tea m Pun t ..................... ....... ........................ ..
TOTALS
'

Ras~t'thllll

0.0

- 1.0

No. l'ds TDs

Br'(&gt;llf Blss('\1

d l'\'f'lupmrnl ennlrllcl plu.-. option~ wl•h
('hw- IMion of Snulh ,\thml It· Lt•ap~· (A) .

7.0

1.0

B

311
311 ,

RECEIVING

PUNTING

R~··hall

2.4

Alt. Co m . Int . Vd• TDs Pet
29
2 341 4
447.

Mlk~

PUNT RETURNS

( 'hh: a~o (NI.t - Sl,~~:nt•d ~ 'l-Jt•u.rpluyN'

7.9
5.9
2.3

~

Ch ris Smith .
.. .............. .... ....................................... 6
Wt:&gt;Ss Howa rd ......... ............. .,.......................................
. .. .... A
J!'ff McElro_v ...................................................... ._. ...
... ........... 2
Bryan Durs t .. ............................................
. ...... ........ 2
TOTALS
14

Transactions

5.7

38
34
22

.............. ,.... ,................. 1
.. ..... .- .. ~~......... , ................

~VG

69

.. ..... 7

PASSING

TOTALS

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cincinnati Reds owner M ar ge Schott,
who has ·made yearly boasts qf a
pennant, says the club needs a
quality starting pitcher and she
!swilling to pay for suc h a player .
"When I bought the club, I sa id
J wa nted to bring a world
championship to Cincinnati, and
I'm as committed to that as
ever," she said.

" Well, they (Rose and genera l
manager Bill Bergesch) said this
other guy (John Denny ) was
worth a million, and .ihat didn't
exactly work out, did . it? But
yeah, I'll listen. I 'm not rulii)$ OUI
anybody.
'' We've finished second three
years. in a· row : It seem s like our
sloga n every · season Is 'Next
year.' 1 want to put an end tot haL
We had chances to make t rades
and didn' t get it done."

• (5 Game Totals) :

RUs HING

Wess HOWflrd

The Daily Sentinel

out?

MEIGS MARAUDER FOOTBALL STATISTICS

Chris Smilh

Marge rehires Pete

The Reds' ol)vio us need is a
starting pitcher. ln ·the final days
of the season, mana ger Pete
Rose said the team needs the
likes of a Fernando VValenzuela,
Dwight Gooden or Mike Scott - a
true stopper.
Would Schott pay the $1 million
or so that would be needed to lure
a player of thai caliber to the
Reds if a trade could be worked

allowed· t wo runs to scor~.
Jeffrey Leonard also homered,
and the Giants pounded loser
John Tudor for 10 hits to support
Dravecky, who threw a twohitter.
"Naturally, I wou ld have. liked·
to leave here up 2-0," said St.
"f'andlestlck will only work to
Loujs Manager Whi tey Herzog.
our adva ntage," sa id Will Cl ark,
''Now we have to win a game or
"!hose two-run homer Wednesday led t he Giants to a 5·0 victory • two there to make sure.we come
back."
over the St. L ouis Cardi nals in
The Glan1 s are excited about
Game 2 of the National L eague
the· prospects of ·returning to
playoffs and deadlocked the
Ca ndlest ick fpr the next three
best-of-seven series, 1-L
" The on ly t hi ng standing in our gam es, where the Cardinals will
Jose some of their speed on the
way is ou r sel ves," he said.
The Giant s turned two doubl e nat ural grass and the Giants will
plays on 1he art i(icial turf of have a shorter fence to hi t over.
"It means a great deal to us to
Busch St adium and threw out St.
go
back to our park, 1 -1, " San
Louis' only attempted steal to
Francisco
Manager Roger Craig
counter four lead-off walks by
sa
id.
"We
play
mucn better there
Dave Dravecky. Sa n Fraccisco
I
do
think
we have the
and,
yes,
sea led the victory on a rare error

KICKOFF RETURNS

Phlla.dl.'lphlaal MlnnesoW.. niKhl
Sl . Loul.'i al Los An~tel~ . nl ,~~:ht

II~

lt Clncln1111.!1 Forest P11rk (2) (5-6 )
101
6. Thornvlii&lt;'Silt'rldan (5-0)
· ,~
7. Gu.rflf'ld H~ )l Trlnlly ( I I 15- 0)
711
It Akron HohiUt (i)-Ul
~%
9. Hit') C'O!ihudnn (~!J)
~6
! . Hie ! Wu-rtn Kn ~ed)- H - 1I
~6
!Sc&lt;-oad l&lt;'n: II. Lltkln~ V aii&lt;'J' :~: 12.
Dovf'r ill :N: 1:1. Pauldin~t ·n: It
HannitlW River Ill;
IS. Uk'l St.
ChUI'SYIIIt' and Olm.'itPd Fall:., l i &lt;'IM:h:
n. Brookfield II: Ill Poland II : 19. !lit•)
Struthers )lnd Elyria (atholh •, 10 &lt;'ach.
Dl\llslon IV
1. Gat es Mills Hawken {131 t UO)
~ 16
~ . {'olumhus Acad~my (ti) (5-0)
171
l . .\rchbold (2) t5-0)
Ill
-t. LoudonvUic (t ) iS.O)
I!J9
1. Orwt"ll Gru nd \-'lllky (!1-fl~
it Hii·hmond J••ffcuon Union ( .j.fll

\\-'lnnlpe~

by shonstop Ozzle Smith thaf

Jeff Mc Elroy ............ ..

C'hlcal{olll Wao;blnK(o•. nl~thl
N\ ' J"'la.nd'-"r'"at Vancouwr, ni,~~:ht
N" w .rer!&lt;ll'y •I Toronto, nl~thl
Buffalo at Monlf'f'al, nl,;hl

-:n

:t. l'ounrtmm Moo!'ll'y

..
'"
. .
. "'

Ww;hlnrton at 80!&lt;;ton, 7: 35 p.m.
Qul.'l:ltc ILl Hurtford, 7: 35p.m.
MlniM'SOIIl at Buf,alo, 7: :15 p. rn.
MontreW ILl Philadelphia. 7: 35 p.m .

14

lll.Slt'UbPnvUIP(f.lt
:16
Second IPn : II. Harrbwn t~ :
12. fl nt'lnattl rureell Marian !!; J:t.
.bhJand tD; u. Ketterln,~~: /\Ite r li; n.
fo1umhus Murlon-Franldln J:t; II. (lit' )
Solon and Wapakotleta, I I ellch: 1 ~.
Ouu·don 10; \9. Sprlllf{fh•ld Shaw net• 9;
2G. (lko) Akrun Ba t: ht~l and Kt'nt
Rootlt!vt•lt, Mt•ach.
0\Yl!ilon Ill
I. Orrvl\11• ( II ) (5-B)
JM,i
2. l'u\ln~t(lwn u,..llllllf' (5 ) ($- 0)

"'"

00
00 00
0 ,110
110 00
00 . 00 00
00 00

""

~'1

St•t:ond tn : n. \\'t•.olt&gt;fYillt&gt; North ~!I;
12. Toi..OO fcntr.1l fatiJOik· 30; 13. (IWJ
Upprr ArUnl(lon, C'hlllh.- othe and E11dld.
'l3 e ach; Ill. Tol('do •WhJtm.-r II; It
T'l'otwood-Ma.dlson li; IR. Sandu ..ky
1:.; 19. Ma.~~lon Waoihln~on U:
'!0. Bow-dman I:J.
Dhl:o;lo n II
I. Clt&gt;vt'llllld Brntdl&lt;•liJit' I II) 13-01

110

00
00
00

0
rampbt.'ll Conferl'HI't'
Nurrls Dl,·lslon
f'hlciiKO
0
00
Oelrult
0 0
00
. . n nl'!«!ta
0
00
00 00
~ - l.oUi!&gt;i
0 0
00
00 00
Toronto
fl
0 0 00
00 . 00
Srnytht' Dh•b,Jun
fa l!ary
0
00
Edrnonlnn
II 0
00
110 DO .
l.o.~ An~riP.'i
0
00
\-' iUU'f}UVI'r
0
WlnniJH",;
D D
00
00
Thur.oid~''" Gamf'!i
Plllshui'Kh ul !\'\' Ran~trrl', 1::1.\ p.m .

!00
!. C' leveland st. ·IO!iepn t6l t.i-0 1

0
0

Montrelll

(~· Ul

Princeton \.19 )

01\· ~km

II

ILutturd

Point ~

, Te wn
1·.

' " • "'
•
'' ' • t' •
•
• ,.
' '• '' "'
•
' '' "
• ' uo
' ''' "
• •' "
'' •• oo ·
•

BltSion
Huffu.lo

COLU MBUS, ' Ohio (U PI I This
Wf't•k' !&gt; Unlttd Press lnle rnattoMI
Ohio lllkh School Board ol Cooch!!!i
foothall ralln«s tWith fir~ plll('f' voh·~
and wo n-lost N't.'Urdi'! In pnrenthestfi) l
Dlv.,lon I

. ..
GA

ST. LOUIS (UP[) - The San
Francisco Giants expec t the
power and de fE'nse that Mlped
t hem Split two games in a
ballpark ho stile to th eir
st'rengths to lead them to t he
World Series at Ca ndles ti ck Park

1 Pt. Cv

2 Pt. Cv

0
1
0
0
17
0
IS

0

1

FG
0

TP

0

0

0

0
0

0

I

OPPONENTS .... ....

l

2

. ................... 61

.... ............. .. .. .................... 0

32
13

1~8

4

SAVE
~

3.0°/o
40°/o
50°/o

Ad vertising Representati ve, Branham
N('ws pa per Sales, 733 Third Avenue .
Nf'w York. New York 10011.
POSTMASTER: ~nd address changc,s
to The Dally Senllnel, Ill Court SL,
Pomt'roy, Ohio 45769.

OR

FREE-STANDING STOVE
Also Receive
BURNS WOOD or COAl
·'

FOR ONLY

Mall Sub!lcrlptlollS
111!4lde Me igs County
WC'('ks ............ ........... .... ...... $17.29
Wt'l'ks ............
. .. $34.06
WPeks ......................... ....... $66.56
Outside Me igs County
Wt•('ks .....·............................. ·$18.20

WHILE
THEY
LAST

26 Weeks ........... .. ...... ..... ........ $35.10.
52 Weeks .................... ,..
.. $67.60

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mfr 's rebate
. when you buy t2

10W40 &amp; 5W30 Motor
Oil

39
Champion Non-Resistor
Spark Plugs

Fram Oil Filters

_.....

Reg. 99e,llmlt16.

Reg. 3.49.

701 2nd AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

CJNCINNA'fl (UP!\ -A dull
Cincinna ti Bengals replacement
team has succeeded in m ak ing
one sharp point - i,l's very
dUficult to repla ce quarterback
Boomer Es lason.
With Esiason on the picket I ine
i nstead of th e scrimmage line
Sunday, the B engals had no one
to i ip passes or put zip into the
team in a 10-9 loss to the San
Diqg&gt;o Chargers.

NO MONEY DOWN
90 DAYS SAME AS \, '
CASH
•
1)
l

1

Spark Plugs

Reg. 1.24, limit 16.

Yourself._~

1---Tip
Change your oil litter
at least every 6000
miles for better gas
mileage and prolonged
enalne life.

·· d: ~l

Q ..
-

Q

3. 99 gat. sale price '---~~mfr's rebate
1•00 gat.
when you buy 2 gals:

AC· Dck: O

9~1.
2

Motorcraft
Distributor
Caps .

Duplicolor
Touch-up·Paint

your cost
after rebate

6oz.
For most Ford. Chrvs;terl
and GM models
3 .29

Prestone Antifreeze

limit 2.

Motorcraft &amp;AC
Delco lllne-Up Kits
AC Delco
Distributor Caps
from 5.95 .

¢

Reg. 1.39, HHP676 .

LeOra
Tonneau
Covers

Your Choice From

Reg . from 4.95.

Bags
Glad Sheer
Ta II Kitchen
Trash Bags

Glad
Lawn and
Leaf Bags
Reg . t ,5 9,
# HP634 .

II HP697 .

Westinghouse
Soft White
light Bulbs
Bo• ot 4 bulbs, 60 or tOO watt.
2.39 , H60TSW, 100TSW.

.... • •

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'·

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offense with some good backs of ers squ ea ked by with a. 12 to II\
their own in .l&lt;'ff M cE iro~. Wess win to maintain tlwlr unbeaten
'
Howard. Brent Bissell and Quar. streak.
tcrback MikC' Bartrum. On the , - - - - - - -- - - - - offC'nsive line, look tor Bryan
Durst and Chris Smith at tlw
'end s, Matt Pf't('rson and Scott
Hanning at ta ck le. Ed Tlaer,SIC'\'e Tracy and Dennis flooth
will share guard dutie s and JarPd
Sheets will ancho •· the center ol
the line.
, ·
Although roach Ash ley .could
not be contacted for comme nt on
Friday's game, 1 am crr tain he
fer!$ tho Marauders wil l dPiinitely have to contain tht&gt; hard-running Booth£' to win. Look
for th e t~·pe of game that was

I=RAilA

safety

WASHI NGTON iUPII - The
players' union and league managem ent, unable to agree On the
prospec1s for resolution and
hesitant to confront the critical
issue of free agency , mC'et again
today in an effort to settle t he
NFL strike.
Jack Donlan, executive director of the NFL M anagement
Council, and Gene Upshaw, executive director of th e NFL Players
Association , Wednesday co nferred for six hours at the union
)eadPr's home i n Great Fa lls, Va.
However, representatives for
both sides sa id the cri t ica l Issue
of free·agency was not discussed
and a settlemen t does not seem
imminent.
"I think !here is re11 son to be
encouraged and it' s still possi ble
for something t.o com e before this
wee ked," said Doug Allen, the
union's ass istant executi ve director. "But it's 1oo early to t ell.
On ce the process start s 1hings
happen fai r ly quickly , but,'l here
is no way to predict how long it
will take."
NFL Management Council spokes man ,John Jones. however,
was Jess op timistic, sayi ng it will
be "considerable time" before a
resolution can be r eac hed. As for
Wednesda y ' s m eetin g, he add ed:
" The fact that free agency, the
major issue, hasn't co me up, I
think th at speaks for it self.''
However. Allen sa id Upshaw
and Donlan ha ve discu ssed m ore
than a third (13 of 38 ar ticl es! of
the collective bargain ing agreemen t tha t expired Aug. 31 during
the two da ys o( priva te t alk s. B e
sa id management is tryin g to
minim ize progress in ~ n att empt
to lure more players across the
picket line.
· M eanwhile, 12 members ot t h&lt;'
San Francisco 49ers returned to
camp in the latest wave of
defec tions by strik ing players.
The Man a~;em e nt Council said 40
players c'ame back Wednesday,
bringing the total number of
defection s to 145 - less than 10
percent of the league's players.

BUY ANY"
KINDLEWOOD
FIREPLACE INSERT

YOU WILL NOT FIND AN
EQUAL QUALITY SlOVE AT
THESE SAVINGS ANYWHERE

•

ers will cmmtPrs t he Viking ,JXlay&lt;'d last \'&lt;'Hr as the•!VIarauu

"
Talks continue;
more NFL players
cross over line

Inla nd Daily Press Assoclallon and th E'
Ohi o Ncwspa prr Association. Na t tonal

T-SHIRTS JUST ARRIVED!

his

TVC standings
TEAI\1
W L P OP
Meigs .. .. ........ ... .. .. 4 1 148 45
Belpre .. ... .... ........ :&lt;! 1 77 06
94 33
Vinton ............ .. .... 3 I
&amp;1 85
Wellston ....... ....... . 3 I
Nels-York ...... .. ... 2 2 78 56
Alex ander ... ... .. ,... 2 2 82 . 69
Miller. ...... .. ... ... ... I :l . 56 113
Trim bl e.............. l 4 35 113
Federal Hock .... , ... 0 :-, 30 )14
O~t. 9 Games:
Vinton Count~· at M eigs
A lexander at BE&gt;lpre
Nelsonvi lle- York at Wellston
Miller at Trimble
Federal Hocking at Wahama .

12

MPmber : United Press lnJernational.

IN AVARIETY OF COLORS AND SCHOOL
IMPRINTS TO HELP SHOW YOUR SCHOOL
SPIRIT.
ALSO: NFL JERSEYS and-

iackles from
P•tsition.

TVC standings

ON
NATIONALLY
FAMOUS

Nq subsc riptions by mall pcrmitt('d In
ar&lt;'as whC'rf- home t: ar r\(lr S&lt;'rvlcc Is
availa ble-.

running back .in th£' league.
Boothe, is four TVC games to
date, has gained 630 ya rds and
scored eight or the Viking' s
touchdowns. The offensive unit,
as a who le, has averaged around
200 ya rds per game.
Rounqing out th e backfield for
Vinton will be Shawn Ray at
w ingback, J . R . Trainer -at
fullback and Brian Tolley wiil
handl e the slgnal C!illlng duties·.
In a.'lsessing hi S ow n s uad ._ Up fro.nt t he Vikes will start
Blakeley was very modes t st at- Brian Wfseman and M att Saund ing thai they lacked an all around ers at end ,. Bob Mullins and Scott
tal en ted team . One wou ld have to Kazee · at th e tackles, Earl
lake this with tounge in cheek, Spurling and \ huck Harder wiil
however, as the Vikes bring to be at the guard spots and Luke
town Jason Boothe, who has to be Moun tjoy wi ll be ovPr cen ler.
co nsid ered as
the premier
Coach Bob Ashley's M ara ud-

down and was in on numerous

24
17

Ohio.

13

BACK TO THEATRE DAYli I
• SPECIAL PRICE A~ISSIONS •
ADULTS $3.50 • CHILDREN $2 .50
SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
ALL SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 12.00

3 ~ Ttl Avg
41 28 162 . 32.4
12 12 3i 7.4

SUBSCRIPTION R~TF.S
By Carrier or Motor Route
OnC' We('k... ............... ........... ..... .. $1 .25
One Month ................................ .$~.45
OnC' Yf'ar
.... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ... ........ ...................... 25 C&lt;' nts

.

Meigs has a very weli .balan eed
offr nsivC unit and hnve three
outstan ding r unning backs.
"They are quick ou1 slde and
have proven they ca n move the
ba ll up the middle. I feel Mike
Bart rum ·is the TVC's outstanding quarter back. His sizcena bl es
·him to look over the field and he
has a great arm. Our defense will
be ha rdprcsscd to stop the
Marauder.", he said.

JAYCEE HONOREE
Bryan Durst, 170-pound senior
end-safety was nam ed Meigs
,Jaycee Player-of-the-Week
for his effort s in the Marauders win over -Nels(mville·
York. He caught two passe;
lor J4 yards and one touch· ·

To lal Point 162

SCORE BV QUARTERS
MEIGS ......... ................... ....... ,.

unbeaten ran ks in league play
las t week at Belpre, com es to
Marauder St ad iu"m Friday night
for a game th at poses a must win .
for bo th the Vikes and the
Marauders i f they arc to kcf&gt;p
ihelr tit le hopes alive.
A w in for the Vik in gs wou ld
Ya uit ' them back i nto a tie with
Belprt:&gt; at this lime. .On the other
hand, should the Marauders
emerge th e winner . It would take
a m ajor upset at the hands of the
AlPxander Spartans or Federal
Hocking to keep them from a
sha r&lt;'·Of the crown or an outright
champsionship.
Scott Bl akeley , Vin1on's coach .
very graciously had high prai se,
tor the Marauders sayi ng that

FINAL WEEK

42
39
24

Published ev ery afternoon. Monda y
throug-h Friday, 111 Cou rl St.. Pomeroy, Ohi o, by the Ohio Valley Publis hln ~ Compa ny/ Multimedia. Inc ..
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769: Ph .' 992-2156'. second class postage paid at Pomeroy ,

13
26
52

By JIM SOULSBY
Vinton County's Vikin gs, the
l as t TVC team to fall from the

5J I JACKSON PIKE -RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446- 4524

~

SubscribC'rs not desiring to·pay the carrier ma y remit In advance direct to
The Daily SenT inel on a 3. fior 12 m onth
bas is. Credit will be given C"arrier each
W&lt;'ek.

1\Jeigs to host .Vinton ~ county _ Friday·; Vikings need _yictory

hete for 1he flnal two games of
t he series."
The Twin s end ed Detroit Man·
ager Sparky Anderson's nine·
game winning streak in the .·
playoffs.
" Well, they ca me ba ck and
beat us," Anderson said. "Let's
give them a little credit. I don't
know how mu ch the fan support
m eant ... the bott om line Is t he
scor e. Th ey beat. us."
After the Tigers sco red t wtcc in"
th e eighth to l ake their firstleatl,
5-4, Dan Gladden led off t he
bottem of the inning with a·
si ngle. First baseman DarreW
Evans caught Greg Gagne' s bunt
in foul territory , but Kirby
Puckett doubled to left-center
anti Gladden beat the relay throw
to the plate to score the tying run .
Rookie Jim Henneman replaced starter and loser Doyle
Alexander . He walked Kent ,
Hrbek lntentlo~ally before
GaeH I walked on . five pitches..
Will ie Hernandez, relegated to
mop-up du ty in rec ent mo!lths, ,
replaced Henneman. Baylor, .
batting for designated hitter
Randy Bush, lined a single to left
for a 6-5 l ead.

0
~
0

0
0

AL Playoffs
MINNEAPOLIS (UP! ) -The
Minnesota'· Twins, novices j n the
art of winning postseason games,
Wednesday njght followed t he
lead of one of baseball's establill hed citizens .
Don Bay lor, a 38-year -old acquired late In the year, drove In
the game-winning run to hi ghlight a four-run eighth inning,
carrying the Twins to an 8- 5
vetor-y over the Detroit Tigers Jn
Game 1 of the American League
playoffs.
"This hit was very special, it
was the top hit for me in a Twins'
uniform, " said Baylor, who
Joined Minnesota Aug . 31 in a
trade with Boston. "We'll hold
our own in this series - no doubt
about it. Now the pressure 's on
them tomorrow."
The Twins will start Ber4
· Blyleven, 15-12, in Game 2
Thursday night of the best-ofseven series. Detroit will go ~with
·Jack Morris , 18-11, who · Is unbeaten in eight career decisions
at the Metrodome.· Minnesota
· was 56-25 at the MetrodomP this
year, the best home record in the
majors.
The triumph was the first in
postseason for the Twins since
divisional began in 1969. Minnesota was swept 3-0 by Baltimore
i n 1969 and 1970.
Cary .Gaettl hit two solo
homers for Minnesota and Tom
Brunansky drove in three runs,
including a two-run double in .the
eighth. The Twins blew a 4-1lead
before rallying.
"We never gave in, " Brunansky sa id . ' 'The only thing I
was thinking before the game
was that we needed to come b&lt;\Ck

'

1

!14

0
0

advantage. Our park takes some
of the Cardinals' advantages
away from them." '
·It Is not yet clear who will start
against San Francisco' s Atlee
Hammaker in Friday's Gam e 3.
Danny Cox, scratched in Game l ,
is still bothered by stiffness In his
neck and wUJ start if he's r eady .
If not , the Cardinals will start
rookie Joe Magrane.

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 5

Pomeroy- Middlepo.;t. Ohio

Thursday, October 8, 1987 .

EZ Ride
Heavy Duty
Shock Absocbers

EZ Ride
Van &amp; Truck
Shock ~bsorbers

Reg . 9.95.

Reg. t6 .95.

Presto lite' •,. ··•
Batteries

OPEN
.
7
DAYS
A
WEEK
209 UPPER RIVER RD.
Store hours: 8:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday
'

MasterCard

· through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Saturduy
and 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 P·ll!• Sunday.
·
Sale prices in effect tt]rough October'I4, 1987.

.GALLIPOLIS

�.
'

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Stop
on Gallia ~t. 7
. painting
.

Stre&gt;et pa,lnting on IH'e newly-paved Eastern Avenue was
halted Monday . by the Ohio Department of Transportation,
according to Mtchael Lang, construction engineer for ODOT
Dis trlct 10.
Lang said that the painting, done by lJlrich Contracting Co. of
Lebanon, was stopped because Ulrich was psing an unapproved
hydrocarbon thermoplastic paint. CurrenfODOTspecl!!catlons
call for an alkyd paint to be used on that road.
.
Dan Helton, general mar!ager for Ulrich, said that it would
take anywhere from 1'0' days•to two weeks to get and use the
approved paint.
·
Helton said that Pave Mart, a paint supplier, sent Vlrlch the ·
hydrocarbon paint. He also said In a telephone conversation
Wednesday morning that he used the paint In accordance with
1986 state spec;ificatlons.
·
"The state allowed this material to be used for a year and nl~e
months before deciding that it would no longer be used " he
· added.
.
'
The temporary delay In the painting project Is expected to be
a short allowance of free-flowing traffic, without the one-lane,
10- to 15- minute backups that have marked the construction
experience on Eastern Avenue for the past,few months.

Pomeroy wonian cited
A Pomeroy woman was cited in an accident Wednesday, at
6:15 p.m., in Bedford Township on County Road 39, about a
quarter of a mUe north of County Road 20, according to the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Mary A. Partlow, 21, was cited for not having valid
registration after her car, which was northbound on County
Road 39, experienced control problems when the left front wheel
came off, causing her car to go off the right side of the road Into
a ditch.
· ' ·
Partlow was not injured in the accident.

Emergency loans available
. Meigs County farmers who suffeted property ~amage or
severe production loss from drought conditions !rom May 1,
1987 through August 31, 1987 may be eligible for emergency loan
assistance as a contiguous county under the Emergency
Declaration. from the Farmers Home Administration
(FmHA). the rural credit service of the United States
Department of Agriculture, Archie R. Stegall, county
supervisor for FmHA for Meigs County said today.
FmHA emergency loans to eligible farmers, ranchers, and
aquaculture operators are to enable them to return to their
normal operations after having sustained losses resulting from
natural disasters.
Applications lor emergency loans may be made Immediately
at the local FmHA office. Applications for physical and
production losses will be received until May 16, 1988.
· Benefits of FmHA programs are available without regard to
race, color, creed, sex or marital status. · .
Further. Information can be obtained from the Pomeroy
FmHA Office located at 105 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.

,•

The annual Meigs County Farm Bureau meeting will be held
· Tuesday, October 2Q. at Eastern High School from 7 p.m. to 11
p.m. beginning with a steak dinner.
Tickets may be purchased from any board member or at the
office, P. 0 .Box 426, Pomeroy, or call992-2181. Tickets are$4for
adults and $1.50 for children.
All Farm Bureau members, their family and friends and
anyone interested In the farm organization are welcome.

Bork ...

(Continuro from page 1)

wavering, sometimes in recent
days inclined to stay in and at
other times inclined to withdraw.
They said Reagan spoke with tlie
judge late . Tuesday just hours
after the Judiciary Committee

voted 9:5 to recommend the full
Senate reject the nomination,
and based on that discussion it
was 'thought Bork would ask to
withdraw his nomination Wednesday morning.

Area deaths
George Hester
George 0. Hester, 87, Ports·
mouth, Va.. formerly of New
Haven. died Wednesday in
Virginia .
Born Ma rch 13, 1900, in Ducktown. Tenn., he was the son of the
late A.E. and Zillie Prince
Hester. · ·
His wife, Lillie Hes ter , preceded him in death in 1980.
He was a retired chief electrician at the Youngstown Sheet
and Tube Company in De hue . .
· Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. Lucille Beckett.- Pompano
Beach, Fla., Christine Porter;
Cocomo, Ind., Mrs . lreneMynes.
HuntlngtDn. and Mrs. Margaret
Albright, Portsmouth ; five sons,
Eugene Hester, New Haven.
Charles Hester, Columbu s. the
Rev. Dr. Melvin Hester and
George Hester J r., both of
Portsmouth. and Da vid Hester.Lawrenceyille, Ga.; two sisters,
Lillie Chiera and Virgie Briggs,
both of Norfolk, Va.; 21 grandchildren , 21 great-granehildren
and twb great-great
grandchildren.
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m. at Foglesong Funeral Home
with the Rev. John Campbell
officiating. Burial will follow In
Kirkland Memorial Gardens,
Point Pleasant .
·
Friends may call from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. Saturday at the funeral
hOme.

Lewis Lee

;

Lewis Edwin '( Pappy ) Lee, 74,
of 550 Burnette Road, d led
Wednesday at his ·residence
following a lengthy illness .
Born Feb. 2, 1913 at Gallipolis,
he was the son of Emma Jane
Cox Lee Sp,encer, who survives,
and the late John Wilson Lee.
Also surviving are his wife.
Essie Russell Lee. whom he
married July 13, t9a5 at Eureka;
one son, Larry E. Lee o!
Kanauga; ·a daughter, Sandy
Kay Milliron of Gallipolis; five
grandchildren; three brothers,
John Lee o! Pt. Pleooant, w,va.,

Thursday.

~.~:t,~~?~ ?,~~:::~~"~~t ~~~:E~~~'~"-1.

october s. 19s7

dipped to 29 early this morning, Iowa with 27 degrees; 'Evans·
setting a new record for Oct. 8. ville, Ind. with 33 degrees; and
The old record, 30 degrees, was Sprlng!ield, Mo. with 35 degrees.
But In Tucson, Ariz., the
set In 1952.
In Rockford, Ill., Wednesday, mercury hit 101 Wednes.day, · , .
the teinperatur_e dropped to a breaking a record for the date
and tying the October record
record 28.
Milwaukee , experienced Its high, which had been set just the
first freezing temperature of day before. It was also the 71st ·
autumn when the temj]erature time the temperature had hit the ·
dropped to 31 degrees this 100-degree level tl!ls year in the
· morning. In Madison, the city.
Temperatures climbeil,into the
temperature dipped to a chilly 22
80s
over much of the plateau and
degrees, breaking a low record ot
the
90s In centrar California
23 degrees, set in 1976.
II"Cllle••----------------~cc_o_h_tm_u_ro__rr_om~pa~ge_1_)____ Other cold spots In the Midwest Wednesday.
Rainshowers were forecast Under current plans, the Uni- this morning. Include Waterloo, tod,ay for New England and New
could do nothing," the !RNA
ted States would be "the primary
report said.
York state.
enforcing
agent" for any global
The !RNA report made no
mention ·ot an · Iranian naval arms embargo approved by the
vessel, the Iran 4jr.U.S. forces U~lted Nations against Iran, and
-.
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Wedcaught the ship laying mines In one o! several administration
South Central Ohio
the g\llf Sept. 21 and scuttled it. · officials interviewed said such an nesday 's winning Ohio Lottery
Becoming mostly sunny this
Rafsanjanl said Tehran was embargo Is expected to be passed numbers:
Dally Number
afternoon, with highs near 55.
doing its best to avoid a wider by the · U.N. Security Council
594.
Mostly clear tonight, with a 'low
conflict, but pressure from the "within a matter of weeks"
Ticket sales totaled $1,315,669 .. near 40. Increasing cloudiness
Iranian people and from events unless Iran relents and agrees to
with a payoff due of $325,727.
Friday, with highs between 65 '
In the gull "would ' exhaust Its a U.N.-ordered cease-fire.
and 70.
'
Iraqi jets Wednesday carried PICK-4
patience,"' the !RNA report said.
6245.
The pobabillty of precipitation
. . He accused West European out successful -attacks on a
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled is near zero this ·afternoon
nations of "lacking an lndepend- ' communications center at the
ent character" In their relations Iranian city of Ilam.. 120 miles $208,067, with a payoff due of through Friday.
Winds will be !rom lhe northw- ,
with the United States. The east of Baghdad, a military $93,945.
PICK-4
$1
straight
bet
pays
est
at 10 to 15 mph today and from
spokesman
at
the
Iraqi
capital
United States, France. Britain
$4,344.
PICK-4
$1
box
bet
pays
the
southwest near 10 mph
told
the
official
Iraqi
News
and Italy all have naval forces In
$181.
..
Agency.
tonight.
, the Persian Gull region to protect .
Super Lotto
Ohio Extended Forecast
The spokesman said all the
merchant shipping. Belgium and
2,
8,
20,
25,
30,
43.
Saturday
through Monday
the Netherlands are sending planes returned safely •to 'base In
Super
Lotto
ticket
sales
totaied
A
chance
o!
showers Saturday
the attack, which marked the
vessels to the area.
·
$6,560,993.
and Monday, with fair weather
·In Washington, administration first Iraqi retaliation for Iran's
on Sunday. Highs will be between
sources told United Press Inter- firing of two Soviet -made Scud-B
55 and 60 Saturday, ranging from
national that the United States long-range missiles Into Bagh60 "to 70 Sunday and 65 to 75
could succeed within weeks In dad Monday night .
Monday. Overnight lows will be
The missile attacks sparked Homecoming
getting a U .N.-sponsored naval
blockade of the Persian Gulf to fears of a new outbreak of the
The annual homecoming of the between 40 and 45 Saturday and
stem the flow of arms to Iran If Iran-Iraq "war of thecitles" with St. Paul United Methodist Monday mornings and in the 30s
Tehran keeps spurning a cease- heavy civilian casualties In Church at Tuppers Plains will be early Sunday.
strikes on population centers.
fire with Iraq.
held Sunday with Sunday school
at 9 a.m. and morning worship at
10 followed by a carry-in dinner
in the church basement at 12:30.
Veterans Memorial.
There will be an afternoon song
Twelve calls were answered by went to the Salser Road where service at 2 p.m. with the Gabriel
Admitted Paul - Snyder,
local units Wednesday, the Meigs fire caused heavy damage to a
Tuppers Plains; Vernon French,·
Quartet of Middleport providing
County Emergency Medical Ser- car belonging to Mike Brown.
Gallipolis; Robert White, Ramusic. The pastor, Rev. Don
vices reports.
. Tuppers Plains at 4:24 p.m., Archer, Invites the public.
cine; Harry Shain, Pomeroy;
At 2:02a.m., the Rutland Unit went to Route 124 in the ReedsMary Snyder,. Pomeroy; Joyce • ,
took Roy Sorrell !rom Meigs ville area for Alvin Reed who was
Leonard·, Vinton; Amanda'&lt;·
Meet tonight
Mine 2 to Holzer Medical Center; dead upon the unit's arrival;
Grogg, Shade.
. ·
Southern Band Boosters will
Racine at 11:32 a.m., took Racine at 4:57 p.m., took Robert meet ai 7:30 tonight at the high
Discharged - Vera Stewart, . :
Vernon French from Rouie 124 to White from Elm St., to Veterans school band room. All parents of
Christopher Yeauger, K11tle '
Veterans Memorial .Hospital; Memorial;. at 5: 36 p.m. the band students In the district are
Weber. Dorothy nemosky.
Rutland at -12:05 p.m., took Pomeroy unit took Harry Shain urged to attend.
Brenda Kincaid to Holzer Medi- from the Pomeroy Health Care
cal Center from the Southern Center to Veterans Memorial;
.
Ohio Coal Co.; Rutland at 1:22 the Middleport Fire Department Revival
A weekend revival will be held
p.m., took Ted Hatfield from went to South Third Ave. at 5:37 at the Old Dexter Bible Christian
College Avenue to Veterans p.m. to extinguish an auto· fire;
In Dexter b~ginning
Memorial Hospital; at 3:04p.m., Racine at 9:36 p.m., took Billy Church
Friday a_nll running through
the Syracuse Fire Department Joe Brewer from Stlversville to Sunday with services at 7 each
Veterans· Memorial Hospital; evening.
.
Tuppers Plains at 10:12 p.m ..
took Rex Summerfield from the Carnival Saturday
East Shade Road to St. Joseph
A fall carnivalwill be staged at
(As of 10: 34l'a.m.)
Hospital in Parkersburg; Mid~ the Tuppers Plains Grade School
.
Provided by
dleport at 10:55 p.n,o., took Saturday. There will be a ham
Bryce and Mark Smith
Jonathan Roberts from North dinner with serving to start ·at
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Third Ave. , to Veterans 4:30 p.m., with carnlvii-1 activiMemorial. ·
ties to start at 6.
Firm·
Price
Am Electric Power ............. 27%
AT&amp;T .. .. ....... ...... .. ..... ......... 33%'
Ashland Oil .... .................... 66\{,
Bob Evans Farms ........ : ..... 20%
Charming Shoppes ........... ~ .... 22
City Holding Co ....... ...... .. ...... 32
Federal Mogui ................... .43-}l
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. .. .......... .. 70
HERE'S TWO OF THE LATEST TRADE-INS
'' .
Heck's. Inc:;, ........................ 3')&lt;1
•• •
TO OUR ALREADY SHARP USED C~R INVENTORY.
Key Centurion .. .. ....... ..·....... 38'h
'
Lands' End ......................... 24%
DON'T MISS THESE.
Limited Inc . ... ...... ..... ;...... ... .. 30
Multimedia Inc . ... ............... 69'!4
~Rax Restaurants .................. 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... , ........ 10')&lt;1
.Shoney's Inc ~......... ............. 28%
Wendy 's Inti. ..... :..... ............ 9%
Worthington Ind ..... .. .. ......... 23%
.'
~ Whe&lt;!l drive, V·S eng., tacl air cond., auto.
"It'll mostly be in the 70s and sas
the next cpuple of days but the
desert areas will still be over
100."
'
Temperatures dropped to
below freezing across the Midwest ear.ly this morning. .The
weather service· issued freeze
and frost advisories for most
parts of Indiana. central and .
southeast Mlssol!rl ·and upper
Mlcl)lgan.
·
In Chicago, the temperature

Lottery

Weather

.

dina tor ' !rom Lancaster - tal served 12 counties, Including
Fairfield Cof(lmunlty Hospital's Meigs County. It Is the only such
Black Lung Clinic, will be at the clinic receiving a grant through
Meigs County Senior Citizens the Ohio Department of Health
Center on a regular monthly and U.S. Department o! Health
basis beginning Tuesday.
and Human Services lor the
Hours on Tuesday wlil be fro!Jl treatment of coal miners with
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. After that her · breathing problems.
'
visits wlll be made on the first - For those with inadequate
Tuesday of each month.
·medical insurance wlio are unMrs. Dearing will assist those able to pay for services, treat~avlng medical biiling'proi;&gt;iems, ment will be provided' through ·
provide information and answer funds from the federal grant.
questions about the clinic. The
Over 42,000 Ohio co.al miners
Black Lung Clinic at the Lancas- suffer from breathing problem~ .

Plans - are- being made ' to $2,500 Initial fee and annual dues
change the Jaymar Golfl Club of $550; family $1,oo0 initial fee
into a membership-operated and with $450 annual dues; lndivldincorporated non-profit facility ual, $500 Initial fee with $250
in the near future..
annual dues; social, $100 initial
.The changeover Is In t he
process of being made n.9WWith a .
board o! directors to be elected at
an organizational meeti 0g later
The Rock Springs, Enter(lrise
thls · month. time to be an- and Flatwoods United Methodist
nounced. Numerous changes and Churches will have a harves t
general lmprovemen.ts to the festival celebration .on Oct. 18. .
course, .lounge and club house
A potluck dinner will begin at 6
are being. planned once the club p.m. at the Grange Hall on the
goes Into membership operation. Rock Springs Fairgrounds. PurThe types of memberships .to pose of the harvest f~stival is to
be offered are business with a provide an opportunity to bring

I

~!1-.!,* ~", •1
. . . ;
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OVER 20
1988
r·

GROWN APPLES

Melrose, Golden· Delicious,
'
Red Delicious,
J~nathon, Macintosh

• On_The Spot Financing To Qualified Applicants
• Serv1ce Contracts Available On Most Of Our Autos
1985 Chevrolet
Caprice Classic
Station Wagon
4doors, S.W., V·8 eng ., fact . air cond.. auto.
!rans., P.S., P.B., P.W., P. seat, P. door
locks, cruise control, am/lm radio, stereo
tape,white walls, rea~ window defogger,
lugg. rack, graylsilyer tulone, Stock No .

8342t
. WAS $9495.

'

MUMS

$25~"
OR

•

3/Sl oo

.4/$995

ALL COKE, PEPSI &amp; RC PRODUCTS
2 LITER

959 (49

6 PACK CANS
.
CASE OF CANS

1·

EACH

Plus Tax

Plus Tax

$569
-· Plus Tax

.•••.
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Our New
Model 1988 Cars And Trucks
Arriving Daily .. MUST MAKE
ROOM ... SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICES.

JIM COBB

ONIONS ·
:us.

99&lt;

POTATOES
50 LB.

$4 25

FARM MARKET AND
CONVENIENCE STORE

290 West Main

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H DY

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I '•
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••

At

$

APPLE CIDER

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Prices
Start

,.
FRESH .

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TRUCKS

OHIO

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s~1o

, GRANT PROPOSAL DELIVERED - Gallla County Sheriffs
Deputy Gerald Provens escorted a representative of Serenity
House to the Ohio Department of H11man Services In Columbus, to
deliver a grant proposa&amp;l for the L'tmtinued funding of the shelter for
viL1ilna-of domMtle vlolenctt l.n the trl-county area, In September.
. Shown with Proveias and ·the grant proposal are Myrlam
Rulhchlld, right, Serenity ~ouse nexec~tlve· director, and Sherry
Provens, Serenity House representative.

••

WAS St0,895.
SALE PRICE

JIM COBB

'

Dwight E:' Carl. tracts, to
Robert Blankenship and Stella
Blankenship, Scipio.
Glenn R. Lawson and Eleanor
• R. Lawson, 1.00 A., to Dwight R.·
Bissell and Carolyn D. Bissell,
Olive.

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BODY'S
Kl GTO

Aid to dependent children ·In
Ohio for Octobier totaled
$62,457,301 to 613,968 recipients.
Meigs County's 2,843 recipients
received a total of $278,061.
MEIGS TRANSFERS

I

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
All-day rid~s ;ue offered beans and- cornbread dinner.
United Press International - through the trails in the Great Another Sat urd ay Apple Butter ·
The changing color in the trees Sale Stale Park near Chillicothe, ··festival will be in Deerfield, •
provides Ohioans a colorful op- Ross Cou nt y.
Portage County.
portunlty this week to drive,
Guided two- to three-hour , Saturday' a'nd Sunday Apple
hike, ride and canoe the state. . canoe trips are offered on the .. Butter ·Festivals are at Century
Drive-it-yourself tours are of' Mohican River Saturday, Ieav- Village In Burton, Geauga
fered throu'gh Co lumbiana lng the livery In Mohican State Cou nty; Enon, Clark County;
County Saturday and Sunday Park in Loudonville.
Oak Harb9r', Ottawa County; and · with stops at several !arming
A "Voiksmarsche" 'Saturday Holdren's Market in Belpre,
operations and agrlbusinesses;
goes through the Punderson Washington County.
through the 14 covered bridges in State Park near Newbury .
The Apple Dumphng Festival
Ashtabula County Saturday and Geauga County.
. . will be Saturday and Sunday at
Sunday during the, Covered ·
Octoberfests are scheduled Whispering Hills Campground .·
llridge Festival ; through Hock- Friday and Saturday in Cam- near Shreve , Wayne County.
ing County Saturday and Sunday bridge. Guernsey Countyi and
.Cider pressing ls scheduled for
.with stops at scenic locations and Springfield, Clark COunty; Satur- Sunday, and also0ct.18and25at
craft shops; through Medina day ani! Sunday in Wes t Alexan- the · Carriage Hill Farm near
County Saturday and Sunday;
dria, Preble County.
Dayton, which allows visitors to
through south-central Wayne
The grist mill also figures in help with the pressing.
·
County Saturday and Sunday this fall 's activities. with the · ' The Bob Evans Farm Festival
with stops at farm operations and Algonquin Miil Fall Festival in Friday through Sunday on the .
the AgricUltural Technical Insti- Petersburg, Carroll County, Fri- Bob Evans Farm near Rio ·
tute; and through Washington day through Sunday and the Grande, Galiia County, features
County Sunday.
Harvest Celebration ' Saturday live country music, field exhibits
Fall hikes are plann~d for and Sunday at- Bear 's Mill near and more than 140 craftsmen and Saturday through Findley State Greenville.
craftswomen .
Park south of Wellington, Lorain
Apple butter will be stirred at
Columbus celebrates ColumCounty, and through the Hocking numerous Appl'e Butter festivals. bus Day Friday through Sunday
Hills State Park near Logan, .. . Saturday's festival at Ashley, with participants from all other
Hocking Co unty.
Delaware Count y, inludes a cities named Columbus.

ADC announced·

1985 GMC
..
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...
4X4
m:;;i:;::;:;:::::::'::.:;l.__,-ll Sierra Classic 1500

Roberts ...

Ohio's color highlighted

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tans .. P.S., P.B., P.W., P.l., ti~ steering
wheel, erase control, amflm radio stereo
tape, radial tireS, 1/2 toil pickup, lo~g wide
bed, rear step bumper, auxmary fuel tank.
gauges., sliding rear glass, 6.2. diesel.rad,
Stock No. 76581

together fruits of the harvest to
be shared with the needy . Canned
goods, blankets, an offering and
other Items to be distributed to
the needy are to be brought In for
the celebration. The public Is
invited to attend.
At 7 p.m. that evening Dan
Hayman and The Faith Trio will
sing. Special music will also be
presented by SUM Group and the
Rev. Jeff Adler of Cincinnati will
be the speaker.

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Lester Lee of Kanauga and
Lawrence Lee of'Columbus. One
brother and two sis ters preceded
him In death.
He work~ on the river lor the
Marietta Company lor many
years and was owner of Gallipolis Welding. He \\CBS a welding
supervisor in area welding
schools.
He played and sang for over 30
years on the Gospel Call program
at WJEH, and he attended
several area ·churches.
Continued from page 1
Services will be conducted 2 from a vehicie as It waited, with
p.m. Saturday, at Waugh-Hailey: ' the air conditioning on, for the
Woocl Funeral Home, Rev . Cecil ferry.
Wisi!f Rev. Odell Manley offlciah
When questioned Wednesday,
ing. Burial follows in Pine Street Lois Test, Mason Village re·
Cemetery. Friends may call at corder, reported that It was her
the funeral home 3 to 5 p.m . and 7 understanding that councilto 9 p.m. on Friday .
members had checked the street
over and that It would need some
repair. She said that some
residents along the street had
Alvin Reed
complained to· council and that
•
Alvin S. Reed, 83, died Wednes- " It sounds like at least some of
day while working on his farm at the escrow· money will be used to
repair the street."
Route 1, Reedsville.
Mason Village Council met
Mr. Reed was born Nov. 2, 1903
Wednesday
night and discussed
at Reedsville. He was a retired
farmer, a member of the Eden the street and the escrow money,
United Brethren Church, a but when contacted Thursday
former Ollve Township Trustee morning for council's decisloon
and served as a Republican on the money, Test said any
in!ormatlon on the matter should
Central Committeeman.
Surviving are · seven sons, come from Mason Mayor George
Maurice, Marvin, Dohrman, Ro- Nichols. She said Nichols wanted
bert, Gary and David Reed, ail of to speak first to Bill Nease,
Reedsville, and Dennis of Or- president- of Pomeroy Chamber
lando, Fla.; two dau15hters, Ina of Commerce, who spearheaded
the drive lor funds for the escrow
Jean Weaver, Beaver, and
Maxine Dupre, Fairborn; 23 · account. Or, she said, the mayor
grandchildren, · 12 great - could be contacted personally at
grandchildren, and two sisters, his place of business. However,
Gladys and Alberta .
M,ayor Nichols, when contacted
rrecedl'ng him in death were this morning, refused to answer
his wife, Roxie, In April, 1986; a any questions, stating that he
son, Alvin Reed, Jr.; a daughter, first wanted to speak· to Nease.
. Franclose was out o! town this
Kathleen Reed Smith, -and two
brothers , Dale ·and Dane morning and could not be
reached lor comment.
Coffindaffer .
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the White Funeral
HELP WANTED
Ho'me In Coolville with the Rev.
Certified X-ray
Robert Sanders ofllclatlng. BurIal will be in Eden Cel,lletery ..
Technician
Friends may call at the funeral
For Doctor's Office
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Ip.m.
Call 675-1637 or
on
Friday.
,
r
75-1638

fee with $25 annual dues; juniors.
only $50 annual dues; Inactive, no
initial tee paid, and special, to be
determined by the Board of
Directors.
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H
. arvest festival slared by
church
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Hospital news

Daily s'ibck prices

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Announcements

Squads receive 12 calls Wednesday

-:&gt;ict'lms can be greatly Improved
through pulihonary rehab!lltalion or breathing retraining
programs, Governor Richard S.
Celeste has proclaimed the
month of October as "Black Lung
Awareness Month ."
·
~·or those unable to meet with
Ms. Dearing here, but a retired, .
disabled or working coa,l miner ·
with tbree or more years experlenclng breathing problems. she
may be contacted at the Communfty Hospital, 687-8173 or
687-8170.

·
S. t MUCtU""e to change at g'olf co,ur·re
f ,

The Daily Sentinei- P.age- 7

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

THursday, October 8, '1987

in midwest

--Local briefs

Farm Bureau meeting Oct. 20

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CHEVROLOT-OLDS-CADILLAC
308 E. Main ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992·6614

..

Hours: 8:30-8:00 p.m. Mon., Wed., Fri.
8:30-5:30 p.m. Tues., Thurs.
Saturday 9:00-S:OP p.m.

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Thursday, October 8, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. October 8, 1987

Election··Day Dinner planned by group

~

Ies Fall Festival time
BY KATIE CROW
found, through an Informal sur·
Sentinel Correspondent
vey; that common practice
It has been many moons since I
among large trucking companies
attended a "Fall
Is to prohibit the lise of recapped
Festival'' at
tires.
Syracuse
Elementary.
Congratulations to Ivan Potter
Saturday
ofOakHill.
·
Pot"ter has won a local songw·
niglll was an ex- ,
ceptton. I not • A
riling contest sponsored tiy Ken·
only attended, I
lucky Fried ·Ch!ckeil.
had a ball. Everything was very
Pot fer , who works ·In the
well organized, from purchasing
preparation plant at Southern
of tickets, to food and games. ·
OhtoCoa1Company'sMe!gsNo. 1
mine near Salem Center, wrote
Liketocomnl'end tl)emembers
of' the PTO, headed.by president,
the song, "Coming Home" about
Joyce Sisson, for a job well done.
ftve years ago after his grand·
And of course all teachers and
father died. The song Is about his
parents who assisted.
. .
grandfather wh&lt;l" was a ' coal
Lik~ to add that the jail was a
miner.
work of art and Ramora Young
The country music song about
added to the festivities with · a · · Ervin Tolliver is quickly gaining
clever outfit.
·notoriety in Southeastern Ohio.
To top everything off the prizes
The song won the contest for
were very nice and the goodies at
the WLMJ (Jackson) listening
........ the sweet table were yummy.
last month and Is now
tered In national competition
Ann Hilldore, retired school
Nashv.Uie.
·
teacher, who spends her days in a
wheelchair, enjoyed the evenIf the 33 year-old songwriter
!ng's activities as did Marjorie
wins the national competition, he
Manuel, Genevieve Schneider
w!ll receive $10,000 and a recordand myself playing bingo.
ing contract with country singer
I understand that the " Fall
Eddie Rabbit.
Festival " held at Chester EleIn the meantime, Ivan will be
mentary was well attended and
performing "Coming Home"
ranks at the top as one of the
among other songs, at the second
highlights of the school season. It
annual Coal Miners' Jamboree
too offered many games and fine
scheduled for 7 p.m."Un"t&gt;e'tober
food .
17 at Meigs High School.
If you didn' t attend one of the
Tickets lor the Jamboree are
two event s you missed out on an
$5 for adults and $2 for students,
"evening of tun.
while admission for children age
six and under Is free. Tickets are
on sale now at Meigs No. 1 and 2
Audry Stethem, a resident of
the Pomeroy Health Care Cenand Raccoon · No. 3 mines, the
ter, w111 be celebrating her
Meigs Division office, the VInton
County Bank at Wilkesv!lle and
birthday on Saturday. October
10. She would enjoy hearing from
at Meigs High School. Tickets
her friends of the Long Bottom
w!ll also be available at the door.
and Reedsville area .
Perhaps you will be interested
Make her day - send a card.
In knowing that the 1987Washing·
-For the people who drive trucks,
ton County FaU Foliage Driving
we thought you might like to Tour w!ll be held Sunday, Ocknow that the Public Utilities -tober 11, from 1 to 5 p.m.
This year's tour is In the
Commission of Ohio will propose
a resolution to the Commercial southwestern part of the county.
It begins north of Little Hocking,
Vehicle Safety Alliance that
r.equests the Federal Highway follows scenic· ridge-top and
Administration to amend. their valley, township and county
rules to prohibit the use of roads and ends at Constjtution.
The drive-It-yourself tour is
recapped tires on front steering
wheels of trucks.
free and is sponsored by the Soli
. The resolution. according to and Water Conservation District
Information we received, w111 be and the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service. For more informapresented by the PUCO Transl ion contact the Washington
portation Director to the annual
Codunty Extension Service at
CVSA meeting in Detroit on
373-6623, extension 274.
October 11·15.
According to information reAnd so it goes ..
ceived from the PUCO they have

Plans for an election d,ay
dinner h11ve been ll)ade by
Ele anor Circle of HeaTh United
Methodist Ehurch.
,
Grace Johnson (lnd .!l,ett.¥!f:\!IP
have been named el\a!J:~f
the chicken-noodle dinner arid at
an Initial plimnlng session named
committees. Serving w111 begin
!'t 11 a.m and continue to 7 p.m.

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lea

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PERCUSSION -The Eastern Band percussion
-section has taken a llrsl and a second In two
are front, Ito r,
competitions. Members
Jenny
and Elizabeth
back, I tor,

•

·· Jason Ridenour, Aaron Wilson and Jenny
Cowdery. Other members . not pictured are
Lorena Bissell and Beth Arbaugh.

back, I to r, D~vid Rice, Chris Hall and ChrisSpencer. Not present for tht• photo Is the sixth
member, Theresa Laf11bcrt.
·

- SOLOISTS- These Eastern Band soloists took
first place honors In Chillicothe competition. They
are, front, I tor, Susie Kimes and Susa~ne Clay;

. Quilt, craft
show slated
The Letart Extension Homemakers (of Point Pleasant) are
sponsoring their Fourth Annual
Quilt and Craft Show and Sale,
Su nday, Oct. 11 from 1-4 p.m.
Anyone may entPr the event by
reg is tering Sunday morning
from 9 a.m.-12 noon. All quilt and
crafts will be shown. There will
be nu-judgtng this year - a
" Peoples Choice. Award" will be
given instead. Those in attend·
ance will vote on their choice of
best quilt .
Again this year, a pattern
exchange will be on display for
anyone wishing to copy a pattern
or share some they may have.
•. Door prizes will be given
throughout \he day.
Admission at the door Is 50
cents to cover costs.
For more information cal'l
895-3431 or 895-344 1.

FLAGS - Tina Bissell,
twirler with
the Eastern ban~, . and the hand's flag corps
members are pictured with their tmphies w9n in
recent competition. The group includes Bissell,

CalendarI happenings

front; second, I to r, Greta Riffle and Caralyn
Barton; back, I to r, Amanda Bissell, captain;
Susan Wolf and Joy Swain.

FRIDAY
POMEROY .- Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, w!ll
met Friday at 1 p.m., Grace
Episcopal Parish House. Guest
speaker will be Mrs. Willam F .
Smitll, Columbus, national de·
!ense chairman. Mrs. Paul Eich.
Miss Lucille Smith. Mrs. Dale
Dutton and Miss Eleanor Smith
will be hostesses . Members are

Harrisonville happenings

Pauli ne Atki ns, Nor ma Lee a nd
Mrs. Lou Eshelman and son,
Loulsv!He, Ky . rccnetly.
Stella Atkin s. attended the
B udd y an d F ranc1s
· Alk 1re
' were
Weekend guests of Mrs. Ne lli·e r-~A~th~e~n~s~P~o~
m~o~n~a::_G_ra_n_g_e_v_is_it_a_-J.~~~~~~~~~~~~
recent visitors of Mrs. Minnie
Borgan were her son, Michae l tio n day Sund ay ..
McGra th, The Plains.
Borgan and Karen Kinca id,
Mr. and Mrs. John McKinney,
Pataskala.
·
Middleport have moved their
Mr. and Mrs. J a mes J arv is of
COMMANDER - Maralyn Barton, field commander of the
trallor to a lot purchased In
Sale m Center have purchased
Easter High School band, Is pictured with trophies won by the band
Harrisonville this week.
a nd moved Into the form er Epp le
· ----------~~----------4
In two recent competitions. The band won first place at Belpre and
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop
propert y.
second at Chillicothe for Class C bands.
attended a square dance ra lly in
lV(r. and Mrs. Norman Wil!,
.-----------------------~------------~------------~~

Personollniury Victims--

Band wins
• •
compennon
; The Eastern High Sc hool
Marc hing Band, directed , by
Wlll!am Half, is doing well in
, l'rtarc hlng co mpe titions this fall.
· On Saturday, Sept. 27, the band
took pa rt in competition at
J?elpre and las t Saturday was in
Ghlllicothe to participate in
marching event s. Last Sa turday
in Chillicothe the band compil ed
221 point s only four short of
qua lify ing for s ta tes competition
lor Class C ba nd s.
· The Eastern Band too k firs t
glace at Belpre and seco nd place
at Ch!ll!cothe. The band 's flag
corps took ftrstatBelpreanqwon
third place at the recen t Apple
Festival In Jackson. The Eastern
aand' s percu ssio n sect ion took
first In Belpre and second in
Ch!l!lcothe. In Chil!icothe, Tina
Bissell. feat ured twirler oi the
band, took first place honors, and
six Instrumenta l soloists took
fir s t place honors at Chilli cothe.
. The band w111 compete aga in
on Oct. 17 at Fort ~'rye.

Collins enrolls

WE HAVE
A SPECIAL
l'i

RAT.
E
ON
.
95DAY
CERTIFICATES OF
-·DEPOSIT

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LETART FALLS- Rev. Pearl
A. Casto, former pastor of Letart
Fallscondu~t
United special
.Methodist
Church,
will
services
at
the Letart Falls Church through
Sunday at 7 p.m. each evening.
Special singing will be featured
nightly. Rev. Roger Grace welcomes the public.

•

A youth talent nigh~ was held
Sunday evening at the Pomeroy
Church of 'Christ.
Dano King, Sunday school
superintendent, led the servie
LOIS EBLIN
with Frances Eskew attheptano .
To open the program , thecongregallon sang "He Lives ."
King announced "The tift Up
Lots Eblin, daughter of KenChrist Crusade" for Oct. 11
neth and Donna Eblin, Rutland,
through 16 at the church and the
has graduated !rom the Interna- collection of the penny-a-meal
!tonal Hll;lr Academy at Scott~· . conta~ners. Purchase of a new
dale, Anz . and Is working m ·copymachlnewasdlscussedand
Mesa at Hair Performers.
will be voted on at a later time.
Miss Eblin went to Ar!z~na
"Did You Think to Pray" was
af.ter grad~atlng from Meigs
s ung with Craig Venoy having
High School~ cosmetology class
the prayer. The communion

Eblin graduates

in
May. ch~m
Ha1r Performers
Is a
natiOnal
where operators
are glve,p the oppor_tumty to
advance through a tramlng program of artistic directors, train·
ers, .and platform. artists.
M1ss Eblin res1d~s in .Apache
Jet. , Ariz .

Kennedy shower given

A shower honoring Jennifer
Rae Giles , infant daughter of
Cheri and Frank Giles, was held
at the Scipio Senior Citizens
Center in Pagevilie recently.
. A pink and white decorating
scheme was carried ost and
stuffed animals were featured In
the table decorations. Cake,
punch, coffee nuts , and mints
Attending were Evelyn
Thoma, Violet Dillon. Mary
Stanforth. Ida Murphy , Leah·

r•·-------------------;;~~~~

ISth Street
New Haven, W. Va.
882-21SIS
•

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·Second

Street
M'a&amp;O!i, W, Va.
773-ISIS14

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SAVE '130

4

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DRAWER
CHEST

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REG.

'84.,5

$5895

0&gt;

SAVE '26

-e.

.

c~~r

1

SWIVEL ROCKER

- - : ; ; : ....

·~

Styl1sh swivel roc~er upholsteUKI in

high quality nylon vehret in M1uve,
Brown or Blu·~ Heavy" duty five -prong

$4595 1
SAVE '24 L..__p..,_~

steel bue. 37" HdO''Wk2,7" 0 .

' 71:~ 91

..•

2 FOR 1

~

·~

$17 500

RECUNERS

·~

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64

•
•
•
•M

BUY ONE HCUNEI
GET ONE F.E

oz.

19995

'.

----·

.MYLA.NTA
Special

$2 29

oz.

12

TWIN

FULL
REG. '119.95

$5995

$7985

R£G. '89.95

lA. PC.

J

U . PC .

Dr. Randall Taylor. D.C.

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Put accJdent pa1n ana 1egar womes beh1nd ,you. Ca1l tOCia) ~or you'

INITIAL CONSUt.TAT! ON with the pain relief expMs

••

Buy Carhartl Outdoor Wear and you'll get a knil cap or pair
ot warm thermal socks. absolutely free. This otfer applies to
'
some of our most popular items. including
Carhartt overalls. coveralls. coats and more.
So slop in. Because when it comes lo rugged outdoor wear. we've got you covered
from head to toe.
·

Dr. Randall A. Taylor, D.C.
TAYLOR 'CHIROPRACTIC
CLINIC
.

·. Rugged as the m~tn wl\o wear them~

.•
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"
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k

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...
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CHECK OUT OUR CARHARTT
WINDOW DISPLAY

.

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Oller exPires December Jl. 19B7. SeEI c ·a rhortt display lorcOmplele details.

•

Reg. SS.19

,.,.,

24 Per Pkg.

ACTIFED
DE'CONGESTANT TABLETS
12 .Per Pkg. $2 19 .
24 Per Pkg.

$40Cl

Now$4° 9.

OUHN •

POSTUREPEDIC

REG. ; 115.00

$

FUll
REG. '300.00

95

99"·"- $13895
sm

S£TS ONLY

ACTIFED

ONtY

U. R

--..··--·_.,._
-.............

flt.&amp;So\l DECOtiGE51AIH

... •.............
........
,__.
.... ........
AitjT"UST.I.MII'I(

·--

t]ie&amp;tge

f&gt;lutJt~

715 Main Street,
. ,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550

. 992-6669
271 N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio

Call' Now: [304f ~75·1380
I

$18995

-~

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2212 Jacbon Avenue
Polll.t Pleuant, w. Va.
871J.l121

NEW 2 PC. E.A.
UVING RM. SUITE

4

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Member F.D.I.C.

EVERYTHING

DRAWER ~

DECONGESTANT

And we're wilting to work wnll lawycrs to help pre$ent you· cta,m

'The Better Bank''

30°/o-60°/o Off

FABRIC SOFTENER

~

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Williams, Summer Giies, Peggy
Murphy. Helen Eblin. Eva Mae
Christian, and Thelma Giles.
Others presenting gifts were
Carmel Evans. Jeanette Davis .
Mary Stanley. Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith, Gladys Tuckerman, Viola Haning, Iva Johnson ,
Carrie Wears, T. K. and Mildred
Workman. Grace Wa~ner. Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Davidson and
daughter, Wilovene Bailey, Suzanne Warner, Mr . and Mrs. Ron
Arms, Gee Gee Gracy.

were served.

....

:..

Carry ,~Sale

Baby shower conducted .

BENADRYL

Our morathnn 20 years of e~perlence nent1og pa10 t:o m slip·
and-fall and other personal injury accidents can get yoc
back on yo·ur feet aga1n .. fast 1

i

Cash 'n'

Queep and Babe Shiflet Marlene Barrett, Tammy Searls,
entertained with a brid~l shower Terri Smith, Matthew and Shanhonoring Greta Kennedy, bride- non, Wanda Vining, Ruth Grate,
elect of Scott Pickens, Pomeroy . Irene Kennedy. Lydia Smith,
"Let There be Love" was the Goldie Graham, Donna Grate,
theme of the shower featuring Rose Patteron, Mildred Grate,
Koala bears in wedding attire Debbie Wayland , Penny Hysell,
seated on an umbrella. A heart- Carolyn Biggs, Lisa Hawley, Sue
shaped cake Inscribed ''Best Searles, and Dorothy Davis .
Also presenting gifts were·Iris
wishes, Greta and Scott" was
made by Sharon Barr, a guest at Collins, Wanda Williams, Ja·
the shower. Donna Grate had netta Davis, Birdie Hysell, Leona
charge of the games and and Rosalie Wise, Beulah Grate,
awarded prizes to Sharon Wise · Grace Welch, Shjrley Simmons,
and Sharon Black, Diane Young Ada Kessee, VIckie Kennedy,
Leafy Chasteen, Veva Sel)rles,
won the door prize'
Cathy
Ward;" Marvin and Eva
Others attending were Pam
Jude and Ryan, Angela Griffith, M!lliron, B111, Lit and B. J .
Beverly Baylor and Ashley, Kennedy, and Anna Wolfe.

DOW.NY

...

• Effective for pain In your back, head , neck, arm. teg or
between _your shoulders
• Gonstead &amp; Palmer pain relief techniques
• Motion Palpation helps In sure more accurate dtagnosis

:P EOPLES .BANK

'FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.

Hann~

•''

•substanllal Panany For Early Withdrawal

Dags 0ntg
2

r.----iii;;;;;;;i;;;;;;,;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;b~~~~~~~~~~~~

'

,.

'•

' CALL OUR NEW ACCOUNTS DEPARTMENT
, FOR DETAILS!

hymn
" Near
The Cross."
The was
JAM
!Jesus
And Me)
leader, Pat Thoma read "Born to
Love" and "Love's Prayer ."
Brenda Venoy, Noami Ohlinger,
Sherr! Might and Janet venoy
·
"Faith is the VIctory"
sang
·

69.95

.-

And get help
in presenting
your •claim.

The menu w!ll consist of baked chins, Jpanne Bradbury, and
chicken and homelhade noodles, Scottie Hayes, c hicken and
cole s law, homemade hot rolls, homemade noodles ; B!lly Jo ·
assorted desserts,. c;otl.ll~ , ~n&lt;,l . Krawsczyn. chairman, Grace
c.old drinks. All oMM·wome()'Of' .4\IJo hn son, Mar!lyn Ander~on, sal·
the chu·tch are as ked to doriate "··'ads; Emma K. Clatworthy, hot
homemade pirs and ca kes.
rolls; Twila Chfms , chairman ,
Committees named Include . dining· rd'om, Pauline Jclorton,
Nancy Caie, chairm a!', Mary and Donna Jenkins; Donna Byer
Wise, Betty Fultz, Vicki Ho'l· a nd Margaret Weber , dessert ·
chairmen; Margie Blake, Fran·
ces Thomas and Jeanne Cook,
publicit y; Helen Byer, Emma K.
Clatworthy, c;as h!er. Others
Cl\ris Alkire 'on tne trombone workers will be Emily Sprague,
played the theme from "Ice Mar y Price, Pat Philson, Grace
Castles", and Janet Venoy a nd Johnson, Jennifer Hayes , and
Julia King sang "J es us Loves Julie Byer .
Me", with Julia at the organ to , - - - - - - - - - - - play " The Old Rugged Cross." ·
Debbie Alkire on the corone\
played "I Decided to Follow
Jesus" accompanied at the piano
by Bryan Shuler. The Charles
King family sang 'On the'Je':_icho
Road , also accopanled by ShuJH,
and E!leen Bowers had " Ode to
the Seventies." to concludethe
program ."
Leo Lash, pastor, gave scrip·
ture trom 1 C.or. 9 , and Roger
Alkire had the cl o$ ing prover.

Church of Christ has talent night

v

-

Dale Hoffman Tampa., Fla .
sent -a week recently .her~ wi th
Jean a nd Norman Wood. While.
here he also visited his grandpar.
ents, Mr . a nd Mrs. Weber Wood,
a long with Mr . and Mrs . Vlrg!l
Kin g and fam!lv .
'

•

.

Edwa rd Joseph Co lins, a 1987
graduate of Eastern Local High
School has bePn enrolled as a
f~eshman at Mafietta Co l!ege, a
private college e nro lling 1,300
stud ents In a variety of liberal
a nd professional majors. Collins
ts the son of Char les and lola
Collins, Reedsville, and Is en·
rolled as&gt; a physica I education
ma jor at Marietta .

Personal note

.,

BEAT
PAIN
TODA.Y!

to take crafts for holiday bazaar
at Walderschmldt House.

The Daily Sentinei:...Page- 9

f

••

I

'

'•

SAVE

�'
. ~age-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. October B. 19B7

Thursday, October B. 19B7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Har-rumph!

Chester PTO makes donation
A donation of $200 to tne
Eastern Local leyy promollon
fund was made by the Chester
PTO at Monday night's meeting.
Dan Apiing, superintendent ,
spoke to the group on ~h e levy,
,how much money it would
generate and how it would be
spent. After discussion, the dona·
lion was made to help sell the
levy to the res idents of the
district.
Projects for the year were
reviewed including e ither clean·
lng· or replacing stage curtains
before the operetta which wtn b~
at Ches ter this year , purchas ing
a black light for poster contests

and other purposes, buying a
computer and cart, providing a
new TV cart for a classrom, new
window blinds for three class rooms, and maps for the fifth
grade room, and contracting
with the Tri·Counry Resource .
Center for teacher asistance.
During the mccJing money was.
set aside for the stage curta in s
apd for contracting with the
I Resource Center at $1.90 per
child. The unit vo ted to give $100
to each regular classroom
teac her.
·
A spring book fair was menti· '
oned for Ri ght to Read Week in

..

Wildwood Garden Club holds meeting.

POSTER WINNERS - In observance of Fire
Prevention Week, children of the Middleport
Elementary School . participated in a poster
contest sponsored by the Middleport F ire'
Department. First and second place winning
posters were selected by the lire comm ittee of
Middleport Village County and Tuesday Gary
Ell is presented $10 to each of the fir~t place .
winners and $5 to the second place winners .

Posters have been placed In downtown bust·
uesses. E llis Is pictured with the winners, front,
left to right, ~lichael Little, Zach Batey, Rusty
Stewart, Michelle Cundiff, Cindy Hawkins;
second row, J . R. mackweii, Latira P enhorwood,
Angle Goodnlte, and Raeni Woods. Amber
Priddy, also a winner , was not present lor the
picture.

New officers were Installed at that there arP 250 tame and wild
.. the recent meeting of the Wild· s pecies in North America.
wood Gat de n Club held at the
Cards of thanks were rea d
.home of Betty Milhoan.
from Heidi Elberfeld and Mae
. Peggy Moore was co-hostess Holtec. The cou nty meeting held
and Ada Holter, contribu ting Monday night at Trin ity Church
hostess for the meeting. Hilda and the na ture hike 'at 'Lake
Ycauger installed the officers Catherin e Tuesday were noted.
presenting each one wi th a On Oct. 10 the ·rpgiona l board
carnat ion. Installed were Ka- meeting will be held at Chester
thryn Miller, president; Marc ia with a covered dish dinner at
Arnold. vice president; Debbie noon. On .Oct. 17 the fall regional
Ball, treasurer ; and Mary
Nease, secretary .
Evelyn Hollon gave devotions
using scr ipture from Mat t. 5 and ·
The 16th annual Woild reunion
a meditation from the Upper
was
held recently at the ljome of
Room. Mrs. Moore had the report
Mr
.
a
nd Mrs. Virgil King, Klngson the flower of the month, the
qurg
,
Road, Pomeroy.
aster, which means star, noting
, King had the prayer to open the
fa mily gatherin g. The wedding
anniversaries of Mr . an d Mrs .
Norman Will. 50 year s , and Mr .
and Mr. Johh Kasler, 53 years ,
were celebrated. Prizes were
given for t h e you ngest
grsndmother attending, Della
Jewell, a nd the youngest grand·
father, Dea n Will. Oldest family
members attending was Weber
Wood, 93, while the youngest wa s
Joanna Lockhart. Traveling the
farthest wa s Dale Hoffm an,
Tampa, Fla.
Officers elected were Rosem·
ary Neece, president; Margaret
Fulton, vice pres ident; J ea n
Wood, secretary-treas urer.
Attending were.Mr. and Mrs.
Norma n Wood , Mr. and Mrs .
Virgil King, Mr. and"Mrs , Weber
Wood ,
Ernest Wood , Ear l Wood, Ron·
n.ie Wood, Mr . and Mrs . David
King, Neva King, Mr. a nd Mrs.

'

By Maj . Amos B Hoople
Fearless Forecaster
Egad, fr iends! Several great
traditional riva lr ies top this
week's coll i'ge football schedul e.
. So, let's get rig ht to it.
For Oklahoma and Texas, It
will be the 82nd repeat perfor•
mance as they meet in Dallas (on
EBS-TV) . It 's the centerpiece of
the a nn.ual Texas State Fai.r.
. At Easr Lansing, th e Michiga n
State Spartans will host Mi chi·
gan in the 78th e ngagement in
th e ir in.t e n se . intras tate
co mpetition.
And Notre Dam e vis it s Pitt s·
burgh (ESPN·TVl In th eir 49th

'

Wood family has reunion
K. C. Welsh, Pomeroy; Mr. a nd

., .

Miners' Jamboree will help fund~raise
The Coal Miners' l'hristml\S
Planning Commi tte-e of Sou·

Gallia. Me igs a nd Mason
counties) .
thf'astPr n Ohio hcs ~ all t11e neces -·
Bu t most importantly, the
· sar;• ingredirnts for a coal
committee has acq uired the
miners' jambore ~ - a large taiPnt s of a number of popular
placr to hold it in 1the Meigs High
local performers wh ich will fi ll
SchOol gymnasium! , a Saturday
the gymnasiu m with a mix of
night (October 171 and R good
bluegrass. cou ntry and gospel
cause (the Ca lli a County Child· mu s ic beginning at 7 p.m .
rc•n' s Hom e a nd the Children'' ' The group of miners are
SPrvices of Vinton. Jac kson.
representa tives from Southern
Ohio Coal Company 's Meigs

Division, located in Meigs and
Vinton counties; said Keith Da·
vis, chairman of this yea r's
committee.
The comm ittee was respons ibl e for the coll ection of near ly
$15,000 for the children in 1986.
the bulk of which was used to
provide special gifts at Christmas.timc. The gifts were pres·
ented to the children by Santa
Claus himself at the Me igs No.1
min e near Salem Center in
Decem ber.
The Second Annual Coal Min ers' Jamboree will Include such
artists as The River .Jun ction
Bluegrass Band, The Hart Br·ot h·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Carmichael · ers, The Murphy Famil y, Luke
are a nnouncing the birth of &lt;\SOn, and the Drifters , Iva n Potter a nd
Shawn William, Sept. 15 a t the Robin Kessinger, 19$5 National
PIJ•.as ant Valley Hospital, Point Flat-Picking Champ ion .
Pleasant , W. Va.
''We're happy to announce that
The infant weighed seven this :;ear's emcee is John E. K~rr
pounds. eight ounces . Mr. a nd of ra dio statio n WMPO ," Dav is
Mrs. Carmichael have two other sa id. The Meigs Athletic Boos·
sons, }'ony. 13 and yar l, Jr., tel's wi ll provide a concession
Pighl.
stand, he added. Th~re a fs o will
Maternal grandmo) her is' .
!·shirts and quilts fo r sale . Wanda Glove r , Charles ton, W.
Va. Paternal grandparen ts are
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Pat ern a i grea t •
grandmother is Mrs. Clara
Kauff. Middleport.

proceeds from which -wil l go to
Ch ild ren' s Services.
Ticket pr ices for t he jamboree
are $5 for adu lts and $2 for
stullents while c hildre n age s ix
and under. ar e free. Tickets are
on sale now at .the Meigs No. 1,
Meigs No. 2 and Raccoon No. 3
m ines, the Meigs Division office,
the Vinton Coun ty Bank a t
Wi lkesville and at Meigs High
SchooL They a lso wi ll be availa·
ble at the door.

Carmichael
birth noted

'

\-;

SHAWN W. CARMif'HAEL

Milliron birthd.ay to be noted
~·

KAREN
I

MILLIRO~

. .'

·~

.James and Della Milliron will
entet'tain Saturday wiW a party
in obse rvance of the first birthday oft heir daughter. Karen Sue.
A Raggedy Ann and Andy cake
will be served with ice cream and
s everal games will be played
with pr izes going to the winners.
Among those attending will be
Tomm y and Joann Gra dy a nd
family, Libby Roush , Ca ndy
Milliron, Connie and Gera ld,
D~lla
Mohler. the honoree's
grandmother, Marie Milliron,
her v r&lt;'al g randmother, Gary
Moill (•r a nd famil y , Tony Mohler ,
Wanda and Carl Findl ey, James
a nd Wanda Moh!Pr and Ann
:-;,ariB, Norman Milliron , her
g randfath&lt;'r. and Pau l Millimn
a nd fa mily.
r

•DonKenney ·

•Mulberry Square

•Zena Jeans

•Lady

•Chic
.

l38 MAIN STREET, NEW HAVEN, WV.
IN ASSOCIATION Wlnf

p
d ~.~!r!~~~!.~~.l!~!s~~~~~!!4~
Yl

Penn Stat e 30 Rut,~t crs Ul

Prlnt:eton 21 Columbia K
Purdu(' 22 Illinois 20
Ri chmond Jl Jamt'S Madison 21
San , Jo ~;e~l ate :n New J\1c:dco Stat(&gt; 13
So uthern Cal 31 Ore~ton !4 .
So uth Carolina 17 Virginia Teeh 15
't emple 35 Tulsa 7
T(&gt;x:as A&amp;M 21 Hou ston 6
Texa..~ Chri stian "0 ni ce 14
'f4"xa,o ·EI Pa.•iu ~'San Diego Stille 26
To ledo 33 nothe rn Illinois 2S
Utah 20 Colorado State 15
Washington State 27 Stanlord 11
Yuil' 2J, Willi a m &amp; Mary lH.

10 PUU IN 10 Ull 9'2 · 21S6
MONOAT th'" fltoAY I A.M. t o S ,..M.
I A.M. ~til NOO.N 5AIURDAY

ClOSED St.lffOAY
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Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
FAIR BOARD ELECTION
The annual election of the
Meigs County Agriculture

Society Directors will be
held Monday . November 2,

5

O!Hll

ou...

o-eo......,.

..,.,ouoa""
ouriOto•h'lo

Ol(ICI
""lXI
,1(111

Clau,fied page• cover rht!
following t elephone e;rchonp1.. ,

M. . ., .. ~.

CDh OUDU'It

U(ICI
otto
,. 111111

,,_
,.,.,_.,_
. . ,. . _
.,_,.,.,,
~·-­...

.,_

..._,_
-"-·.....

'

Oon't mess with
my "Toot-Toot"
She's 50 Todav ·

MASTERCARD
DI SCOVER

• 'iour

Lo~e 'lou
Lo~l•g Famllv

We

1-11.... , .

·===:::::r:..•

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•

u-•-.TV • C:l • ''"'" - -

1t- -otllollo

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Lo,otion:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES

&amp; SERVK£

We Carry Fish ing Supplies

Cable Bills Here

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
IN THE MATTER OF
ADOPTION OF:
JOSHUA !VAN DOER FER
Case No. 25646
NOTICE OF
PUBLICATION
To: JERRY ALLEN STONE
You are hereby notified
that you have been named as
putative father of JO$hua
Ivan Kuhn. This action has
been assigned ca·se No .

and the twenty-eight days
will commence on that date ..

5 ·9 p .m .
Qualifications for

direc-

tors are that they must be a
vo1er

of

Meigs

Business
Services
992-2156

CARPENTER
SERVICE

NEW- REPAIR

ROOFING

and remode ling
- Roofing and gutter work
~ Con crete

Gutters
Downspou1s
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

work

~ Plumb ing and

electrical

work

(free Estimates )

· V. C.

Ill

YOUNG

949-2263

992-6215 or 992-7314

my. Ohio 45769 .
The object of the Pet"ition
is to adopt said Joshua Ivan
Kuhn by the Petitioners and
divesting you of all parental
right.
You a-re r equired to
answer the Petition within
twenty-eight days or object
ot the granting of the
adoption within twenty-

eight days after the last
publication of this notice • .
which will be published one
each week for three consecuti~Je weeks . The last publication will be made op the
22nd day of October. 19B7.

BODY SHOP

Roger Hysell ·
Garage ·
Rl . 124,

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

Pomer oy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Transmission
PH. 992 -5682
or 992-7121

Also

*VINYL· SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSULATION

t,.-.:.Completion of college business courses preferred. ·
t-Experience in a medical setting ·
preferred.
~.-Salary commensurate with ex- ..
perience.
.

PLEASE SUBMIT RESUME -NO LATER THAN
'
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13,1987 TO:
Margaret Holm
Assistant Administrator
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ll S East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
EOE

The Fam1ty of Professionals"

LaSALLE GALLERY
iddleport'-992·~. _ ~

1984 -

STREET

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-3537

Chevy Chevette

1G1AJ78C9EY204638
1977 ....... Chevy Blazer -

CKL1 B7F1 2B953 .
The Home National Bank
reserves the right to bid at
the sale and to reject any or
all bids .
(9) 29 , 30; t!OI 7 , 8 . 9

If~

Fun. ll, •ahln &amp; f:noul l-"ur

PH. 992-2300 Or
Po,ner~&gt;v

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT '
6:30 P.M.
Fodory Choke
) 2 Gouge Shotguns Only
10·7-lfn

9· lB·B7

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Now Open

7

Days

A Week
DAILY 10 AM-6 PM
Located at Corner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,
"'

--Pomeroy
Purchasing all
types of
non -ferro.us scrap
GLASS ..... 2¢ lb .
Copper
Current 53¢ lb.
Top Grade
Al u minum Sheets
40¢ lb.
· Aluminum Cans ·
34¢ lb.
I mo.

#1

9/ ~111

•Child 's Birthday

Party
•Wedding
•Parents' Anniversary
•Baby Shower
•Family Reunion

•Any Special
Occasion

PH. 992-6959

HILLSIDE
MUZILELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUN
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

OPEN I to 9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Anon from
Happy Hollow "Rd.

,

RUTiAND

Announcemenls

Due to destruction of

b-8 pm-Drinks 50&lt;
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. tOTTERY
CARRY-OUT

9 -24· 1 mo .

Ra-Opan For Business

JO'S ·
GIFT SHOP

I will not be respon sibl e for nny
debt s other tha n my own,
Gregory L Burdette . Henderson, '
W . Va .
NOTICE no hunt_ing o r tr espa ssing duo to past dest ruction, on
property of Finley Cotton with·
out written perm issio n.

U~

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and re core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas. Tanks.

•HOM E BUILDING
•ROOM ADD ITIO NS
• KIT CHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING • GENERAL
REM ODELIN G &amp;
REPAIR S

REFERENCES
Phone Day or Eveni ~gs

985-4141
GENIAAL CONIRACTOR!

9-28·1 mo. pd .

-BISSELL
BUILDERS

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

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
4· tG·86·tfn

HOUSE FOR RENT

•Washers •Dishwashers
•R anges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

· W£ SEU USED APPLIANCES

-1·5 tlc

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY ·

Let Us Fence 'i ou In
FREE EST IMAT ES
RESIDENTIAl CO MM ERCIAl

PAT HILL FORD

Giveaway

Craft

sale,

202·1

YSalu, 2312 Jefferson · Ave ..
Th urs . Fri. Sat . 9 :,30 till 7.
lawnmower. furniture end Iota
misc.

Public Sale ·
&amp; Auction

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late mQdel clean ·
used cars.
I
Jirh Mink· Chev.·Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
614· 446- 3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used can. Smith
Buick-Pont iac, 1911 EBatern
A.ve ., Gallipolis. Call 614· 446·

511 I!In

614· 36.7 ·0669 .
We buy nanding timber . Call
614· 379 ·275B .

Building Lot in Gallipolis City
Schools District. Call614 -446 3617.
WANTED : Clean 2 bdrm. mobile
home ..1979 or later. Reasonably
priced . Needed soon. Call 614·
. 388-8546.

Buying daily gold, silver c oins,
Fings. jewelry. sterling ware, old
coins, larg e c urren cy. Top pri·
ces. Ed Burkett Barb~r Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614 ·
992· 3476 .
Wanted to buy , standing timbe'r .
Call AI Tromm at 614-742·

Yard Sale leftovers Cloth es and
mis c . FREE . CAll 61 4 · 446·
3386 .

Used set of Childcrah encvc ·

Call61 4 · 446· 9287.

2329.

lopedias . Call 304-676-2927.

Black &amp; white k1ttens to give
away. Call 614 -446· 7075.

Employmenl
Serv;ces

Kittens . 7 ·8 wks old. All colors.
•Cnii614· 38 B-B276
4 month old puppy. Par t Collie
and Re tr iever Call 61 4 · 992 ·
6379.
Mal e Shephe rd dog, a u1 omalic
washer needs repairs. 304 -675 23 47.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: Block &amp; gray female c At .
Lost on Ra ilroad Street in·
Kan auga. Call61 4 -446 -9490 or
446-3047

11

Help Wanted

Avon-Sell Avon tor Christmas.
Mak e 40 percent. Call 614-446 3358 .

EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
time assembly work; electron·
ics, crafts. Others. Info (504)
641 -0 091 Ext , 2987. Open 7 .
days . CAll NOW I
'

Los1: Ladies gl asses In beige
case . 6 14 ·992 ·3393 .

l ead Guitar player needed for
co untry &amp; roc k- n· roll . Pr ater
someo ne who sings but not
ne cessary. At least 21 yn. of
age . Call 614· 245-9316 ilher
·6 :00PM .

Fou nd: white German Shephard
pup , 3·6 months old , Found in
Bowmans Run ·Oak Grove Rd .

LPN Positio~ available· Pan time
Med-S urg Un it. Must have cur.·
rent LPN li cens e w1th NAPNES

a1ea. Cal' 614-992-3176. after
3 :30pm.
FOU ND , 197 5 P.P.H.S. Class
ring , Initials LGD. call 304-675·
5 726 a nd please pay for od .

7

card and pleferabiV 6 m onths
experience Please submit re·
sumes to Shi!fi W. John so n
RN : BS N Oirectair of Nu rs mg:
OHCMC , 350 Charl otte Ave.
Oak Hill . Ohio 45656.
RN Po sition availab le-Full time

Yard Sal e

•

.... ··GanrpoliS" .........
&amp; Vicinity
One mile out 141 . Mirror,
picture, doub"l oknh mat e ria L
d rapes. c lothing, ' mis e 9 ·5 .
Thurs. &amp; Fri .
Multifamily Poi"ch Sale: .. Sat ur·
day, Octo ber 10 , 1 0 :00 AM.
Qualit y mi ant -bab:v ·women 's·
me n 's c loth es, baby cri b ,
playpen, c orsf!Bt, busint~tte ,
st roiiEtJ . T ara Route 7 , Add ison .

Rain . Shil'le.

Eme rgency Room . Mu s I hav e
C\.nrent R N li cense with at least 1
year's hospital ex perience Ex ·
cell ent p11y and pe rsonal gr owth
potenttal • Please submit re·
sume s to Sher. W Johnson,
AN , BSN , Dire ctor of Nur sing·
OH CMC . 350 Charlotte A11e
Oak l:iill . Ohio 4 5656.
WANT ED Ene rgeti c. peopl e Or·
ien1ed te am member / dent al as sistance 10 join our pract ice p tnt
t1n1e Yo u ' ll want to have all the
necessary qualities of a top notch dental assistance ( aA pe·
riance h ll lpful but no' neces ssry) Willing to w o r~ hard? Send
us your resume and salary
history· to Box Cia 108, Galhpo·
lis Daily Tribune B25 3rd . A11e.
Gallipolis , Oh io 45631 .

Yard Sale: Rl. 35- Beh ind Ca ldwell's Truc k Shnp Wed., Thurs .,
&amp; Fri. g. 5. If Rain inside .

Government J obs. $16 .040 ·
$59, 23 0 yr Now hiring. Ca ll
805 ·687· 6000 ht . R-9805 for
current federal list.

Yard Sale: 30 So 32 Ch il licothe
Rd. Thursday, Frldav &amp; S atu r·
doy. Wheels &amp; tires, jeans,
Christmas trm1 , qu1!ts &amp; cra fts,

Free Christmas dis play kit ·
Fr1endly Home Parties nOw has
openings for manager s and
deAl ers 1n you r 11 rea All new
Christmas line of quality mer·
chand1se at reaso nable pr ices -no
senJICe charge-no paper work ·
high co mmissi on and override.
Ca ii1 · B00-227· 1510 .

toys.

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

1 - 13 -tlc

and

Give away · Wh ite 1~ al.-e kittens .

All Makes .

9- 1&amp;- 1 ma.

le nces and

property, all property owned and
leased by us is po sted ond closed
to all huming without wri1ten
permission. Jam es and Frank
Orehtll, lead ing Creek Road,
Middleport, Ohio.

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Wt•\t·

RUIONABll PRtCIS- TRY

CHESTER. OHIO

PO~ROY--985-lSbl

•Cement Products
" You Namt• II -

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

107 LOCUST ST.

SYRACUSE, OHIO
•Ohio Souvin ers
•Music Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden Gifts
•Pictures
•Pottery

&amp;\leryone . New c lothes . Cancel if
· rai n.

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coal heaters. Swetn's Furni·
ture, 3rd . &amp; Olive St Gallipol is.
Call614 · 446· 3159.

9· 18·1 mo .

NO SUNDAY CALLS

614-742-2355

Ya rd Sale, Thu rs and Fri. 2211

Jefferson Ave . Something for

Wanted to buy : Long wood. Call
anyt ime- C &amp; R Firewood. Call

· Doy or Night

.

cause of weather Oct . 6 thru 10,
Gallipolis Ferry, W . Va . Thou·
sand of i1ems.

2282.

4

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE ...

mo

· 1-3-'86 tic

Happy Hour

\ uu ~ ......IJrin._: .\ .h it·nd.

PH. 3D4-773-S6S 1

farm Equi~ment
Parts &amp; Smice

BEER &amp; WINE

" \ nu Tcto Cun l .unk .'t· f"o·••l
H1•11o•r -\t 1'1j:t•r 1-"hm•.;,.. &lt;:luh ~"

1:00 P.M.

Behind B lue Tartan
M•ddleport. Ohio

AuthoriiOil John Deere,
New Hoiland, Bush Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

CLIFTON, W. VA.
FULL BODY TONING
. and Fl RMING

From Savannah, Georgia
"FRESH" SHRIMP SALE
SAT., OCT. 10, 1987

· U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

9·18·1 mo.

GEARY
55D PAGE

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL .
FILL DIRT

l · ll·lln

SALES &amp; SERVICE

,,

Rick Pearson Auctioneer licensed in Ohio and West Virgi~
nia . Estate, antique, farm, liqui·
dation sales. 304-773-6786 .

No Sunday Calls

BOGGS

&amp; Vicinity

8

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

Saturday, October 10th,

-

tic HUts. Syracuse. Mon., Oct.
12 . 9 :30-4 :00 ..

5 family vard sale, Oct. 9 and 10.
2610 Jaekson Ave. King sire
bed. toys, c hi .dren books. boys
clothing , 42 inch gas Tappan
range , uniforms sir e 1 2 -14,
nursemate shoes aize 7 ,

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built

PUBLIC NOTICE

1987 al 10:00 A .M .. the
Hom e National Bank, Racine, Ohio. will offer for sale
at public auction the following :
1981 - Olds Cutlass 1 G3AR47ASBM40B62

Jeanie Connolly resid ence, RUs -

Yard

BINGQ

" Free Estimates "

·10th ~

Jefferson Blvd .. Oct . B. 9. 10.

367-0322
9-23· 1 mo .

SUN., 2 P.M.·EB 1:45

Rt . 124. Fri.

Giant Yard Sale continued be· .,

CHESHIRE

6-17-tfc

~t .

and Sa~ .. Oct. 9th and
9 :00·1 Ra in cancels .

Several Yard ·Sales, lots of new
things. leon Baden Road from
Rt . 87, Oct . 7 to Oct. 10.

•A l l MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES

Wedding Flower s and

11 S W. Second,
•

words per Minute.

1--:rranscription skills.

....

Public Notice

Large yard sale.

.... ·.- PfPieasiiiif .....

or 94-9~2168

Pome(o y,

Accessories in this area

SPECIAl ~A Til FOR IIUDENTI

25646. io the Common
Pleas Court. Probate Division. Meigs County , Pome·

A PERMAN~NT, FULL TIME
ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK
'POSITION IS AVAILABLE.
QUALIFICATIONS TO INCLUDE: .
t--Strong written and v..erbal communication skills.
t--Willing to assume responsibility.

Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(1018 . 1tc

Rt . 124 b!lltwee'n Rutland and
LangsvHte. pest Mills Ce metary .

Howard L. Writesel

THURS., 7 P.M.-EB 6:&lt;5

In case of failure to answer
or Otherwise respond as
~equired by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure, judgment
by default will be rendered
against you and tha Petition

granted for the , relief ·demanded in the Petitipn dated
October 5, 1987.
Robert E. Buck , Judge
Cour1 of Common Pleas

Friday, Oct . 9 ." Saturday, Oct .
10, 234 Mulberry Ave., Po meroy , 1.0 :00-7

YOUNG'S

EAGLES CLUB - P~~OY, OHIO

992-3410

ADMINISTRATIVE
· CLERK

•

~

,.

Services

60

.M.........-""·....__
,,.._
.,_.._,.,"_
a-- ..

Audiologist

4-22·87-tfn

DENNY CONGO
WILl HAI:IL
JUST CALL!

·IMMEDIATE OPENING Business

''

;

·--·
-....._-..
·-·-···-··. ·-··
1.U
-.· .--·-_
-.. --.. .
_,,_
1-·--.

.,

1987, in the Secre1ary's
Office at the Fair Grounds at
Rock Springs, Ohio from

.... , ,_,.,voa

..'

__....._. . .~ ==:..!:'
__
._

1- Cooo . ,...

Public Notice

1987. Only persons 18
years of age and holding a
membership ticket at the
close of the 1 987 Fair or at
least ( 15) calendar days
before the date of election
are qualified to vote. Peti tions can be obtained from
the Fair Secre1ary.
The Meigs County
Agriculture Society
Bv Muriel Bradford , Sec .
(1018. 15, 22 , 3tc

VISA

..
.

Sho

StiRlEY HOU5TON

Public Notice

Secretory no later than 5
p.m . Monday, October 26,

'

••

Certified

BASKET WEAVING and
SUNCIUNG ClASSES

M
-o.n-•-

Ju- • ...,.,,

County and must have a

0

•

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

SIG'N UP NOW FOR

Public Notice

qualified

Happy Ads

,._
c•.-c-lOo
,,._,.

membership tick&amp;t in said
society of 1987.
Candidates ' petitions
must be filed with the

'

Domestic Vehicles
AJ C SerVice
All ""ajor &amp; Minor
Repairs
N lASE Certijiod Me,ch;lnic:J

(6141 ..,,, '!_)&lt;

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

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

(614) 446-761-g--or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

~ Addons

Most Foreign and

BUSINESS PHONE
!6141 992-6SSO
RISIOENCE PHONE

-·

I

. VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DltSEl
SERVICE
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Pay Your Phone

Ore.:on State 20

· .... p·om.ero·.; ...........

1b:00am·5:00 pm. Oct . 8 , 9 , ,
an d 10. Naw end used olothlng.
drap es, sh!lrflo. tAble and cha irs.

and

...-

882-3134
DOCTORS HOURS
M-TH: 10-1, 2-6 F: 10-12
BEND AREA MEDICAL CENTER

Ncb ra.~ka 49 Kan sas 14
· N('vada·Liu Vegll.ll17 Utah Stat6 15
No rth O.l rollna 2fl \\'ake Forest 21
Northern Iow a 30 IO\I.'a State Z8
Notn• Dame 31 Pittsburgh 17
Ohio ·SJate 35 Indiana Z4
Okl uhoma 28 TeXas H
Oklahoma S tate 23 Colorado 18
P e nns)·h·n ina 22 Brown 21 . •

._,

1--Typing :

FAMILY PRACTICE
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

llurVItrd 17 Cornell 14
Holy Cross .f9 D arthmouth 7
Iowa 35 Wisconsin 31
Ke nt Stat" 27 Ra il Stntr Z3
Ke ntu cky 25 Mls!ilsslppl 17
l..ouls \'ill e 27 Marshall 23
Mlan1l (0hio)"21 M'eAt('rn Mi chigan I!J
Miami (Florida) 42 Maryland 1~
1\ollch,lgun 24 Michigan St;tte 21
Minnesota 25 Northwestern 15
Missouri &lt;U: Kansas State 10

Clinical

CONSli.TANT
YVONN! lUll Y
Bridal Re gistry and
most complete line of

JUNIOR, MISSY. HALF and PLUS SIZES
STORE HOURS
10 A.M-5: 30 P. M.

Georgia Tech 28 Indiana state 14

.::y

.

~

F lorida 38 Fl•llerton State ta
Florida St .f2 So uth ern Mlssls!§lppll4
Georgla2 1 Loulsl~na Statt• 18

Licensed

JANET VENOY

lu~o•v

•Nancy Frock ~

~

R•lgham \'oung u Wyoming rs
Olemson 3~ Vlrglnla.!t
~ t;o l ga l e·Z7 Lehigh !G
·

E£ WEDDING

•Ko-Ko Knit

•Michel Sport

-~ LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

20

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

New Fall and Winter Styles
Arriving From...
from
event will be donated to the Galll a CountyChildren's
Hom e and the Childr en's Servic es of Vinton Jackson Gallia
' ·
~
'
" ergs and Mason Counties.

2~

V.~~o nde rhill

8 11ylor 38 SoUt hweHt T uas State }j
Bo~ton,Co ll e g e- z.t Army 21
Bowling Gr{'en t7 Ohi'O University '!4

..
.:.,

MILL STREET, MIDDLEPORT ·

•Panama Jac;k

Akron

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Mold s • Interpreting Services

Arizona 22 Call fornla1.t
Ar izona State 31 \\' ashtnlnon 24
Arkan!a.~ %3 TtJXIl..'i Tech 21

Auburn 35

. &amp; Vicinity

'

Appa lachian State 42 Uberty 13

31-1 7.

row.

CORNER COLLECTIONS

PARTICII'ANTS - The Second Annua l Coal
Mi ners' Jamboree i;, scheduled for Oct. 'n, at·i p.m., in Meigs High
School. Entertainers include local a rtist, like Robin Kessinger,
19R5 National F l at·l'ickin~ Champion, pictured center. Proceeds

~:o a borate to avenge th at
dcfE&gt;at by tripp ing the Panthers,

w,

Alabarlul :!5 Mem phlfi Statr ~~

The ACC has some interesting
matchups: Clemson, at home,
will run it s record to 27·0 over
Vi rginia With a 35·21 victory In
Deat h' Va ll ey.
- McanwhH e. at Chapel Hill ,
N.C., there will be a bit o[
encoun ter.
..
nostalgia as Dick Cr um 's Tar
Looking at these fr om the top,
Heels host Bill Dooley 's Wake
the mi ght y Okl a hom a 'Sooners,
Forest D~mon Deacon~ . Crum's
with QB Jamelle Holi eway and 45-14 victory over Navy curlier
TE Keith ..Jackson lea ding th e
this season was hi s 70th ca reer
cha rge, will be 1'\Cavy favorites to win at North Carolina putting
outpoint the Longhorns.
him a head of Dooley as the
However, Texas leads in the
winingset coach in Ta r Heel
· series 47-:l0-4. In the last 10 tilstory. Dooiey'•s teams won 69
contest s, the . Longhorns · have
games when he coached 'Nort h
won five, lost four and tied the
Carolina from 1967 through 1977.
othe r . ln closer game than .you
In a battle roya l, we 're calling it
might an ti cipate, the Hoople
28·21 for North Ca rolin a.
System calls it 28-14 for
The SEC headliner will fi nd
Oklahoma.
Georgia sli ppin g past powerful
The Michigan Wolverines first
Louisiana Sta te. 21·18; and in the
met the Michi ga n State Spartans . premier Pac-10 a tn'acllon, Ariz·
in 1898, winning 39-0. Now they
on a St ate will surprise Wa shing·
hold a comma nding 52·22-3 lead
ton, 31-~4.
in the .ser ies. The '87 Spartans
Elsewhere. th e awesome Mi·
have no t lived up to their .ami Hurri canes will ro ll 42 ·14
· pre ~sea so n expectations. while
over Ma ryla nd ; in an Eastern
Michigan Is rebuilding successbattle Penn State will p revail
fully. Give It to the Wolves in a
30·20 over Rutgers; a nd high·
c lo se one. 24-21.
scoring Holy Cross will win 49· 7
Lou Holtz's Notre Dame Iris h,
over Da rtm outh.
3- 0. are off to the their best sta rt
SA.TURUA"\' , Od . 10
s i nee 1982 when they won four in a
Air "Force -12 Na\1)' .20

meet lng will be held a t the .
Rocking Valley Motqr Lodge.
Mryna Cordray will be the
afternoon s p ea k er a nd
demonstra to r.
•.
Year booRs mad e by Danny
Will were distributed. Mrs.
Miller gave a'report on the OAGC ·
con vention. Te n . members ex- '
changed house plants at the close
of the meet in g.

Mrs. Joh n Van Meter. Venise
Hysell, The Plains; · Margaret
Fulton, Mr. and· &gt;Mrs. William
Brown, ·David Cook, Chillicothe;
Da le Hoffman, Tam pa, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haliday, Cha·
rleston, W. Va.
Marguerite Frank, Uod Bolin.
Johu Cott er ill, Ronald and Della
Jewe ll, Athens; Mr . and Mrs.
Ralph Coleman , Dea n Will, Bonnl e Bullock, Columbus; Mr. and .
Mrs. John Kasler, Lancaster; .
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hammond,
Greenup, Ky.; Rosemary Neece,
Rogersville, Tenn.; Mr. and Mrs.
John Wood, Radcliffe, Mr. and .
Mrs. John Alan Wood , Ewlngton;
Ann, Alan, and lvati Hallday,
Dexter. '
r Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lockhart
and Joa nna, Donna Davidson,
Wilma Davidson, Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Davidson, Mr. apd Mrs.
Norman Will, Rutla nd; Martha
and E d Felstein, Gail Horton,
and Ruth Bowen, Ellecn Skwingsto n, Granville.

Pitt is a team that hasn't quite
lived up to Its billing. However.
any over·-co nfldcnce by ti le Ir ish
will b~ quickly dispelled by Holtz,
Who well remembPrs. Pitt 's las!
minute fi eld goa l to whip his c lub,
10·9, lasr•,year, at South Bend .
The Irish otrense a nd defense
··
~
Ill
I

...... GaTrfpol1s.. :.......

Business Services

Will the Sooners feast on tradition?

the spring.
Mrs. Linda Shultz, reading
teacher, gave a presentation on
her philosophy of reading. Jenny
Machlr presi ded at the meeting
and thanked everyone who
helped with the fall carnival.
New cafeteria curtains were
s'lmwn and a discussion _on
purchase of. c urtains lor the
kitchen was held.
Next meeti ng will beNov.2 at7
p.m. In th e school cafeteria.
Parents are urged to atte nd to
assist jn making dec isions which
affect education at the Chi!sfer--·
School.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Ohio

Yord Sate: Friday. 2
2 18 Prom dress ,
198 3 Camara.
11 58 .

c-.11

•

'

miles out
lurniture,

614-446.

•

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
11

44

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wented

Help others, make ,,.ends, VO -

Apartment
for Rent

LUNTEER

Two bed room apanm'8nt. 304676· 25,8.

LAB TECH
Jadl.aon General Hosp, Rlply. W .
V 1 is icc:epting apphcat1ont for a

Unfurnllhed one bedroom gar·
ege apt, Hunlington, W. Va.
t176 month plua udlitifll.
t100.00 SK\(rity depotit, 3()4..
&amp;25-1081 .

at Americaut·
Pom...oy Nurs1ng Centlr. Phone
Jen Bualdrk at 614-992-8806.

hill lime medlcaiLIIbTechnh::ian,
qualified applicant. wtll hav e a 2
or 4 .,.., degrH in Medical
Technology and a current ASCP
Registry . Hospital offer~ ••eellent Nl.ry end benef1t1 for more
intormet•on call. Peflonnel Oirecotr 304-372-2731 or apply at
Hotpital buum•• offtce.

46

AVON . all ar..t. call Shirley

Fedenl. State and Civil Service
joba 114, 877 to *63, 148 -year,
now hiring call job line 1-618-

he F2284 for Info 24

Certified X-rey technician for
Doctors oHice Call 304-675·
1U71&gt;r 875-1638

''App}Y 10f
-"
? BU t
a par0}e....
l
I Ve On Y been in here for five
Years."
!

R•dlologicTochnologla!
lmmechate open1ng for rog1s·
tered radiologic technologist.
Eventng -.1ft, 2 30-11 00 pm
Mondaya thru Fridav Send
reaumetoPiaauntValleyHosp 1lol. DorectoroiPeroonnel. Vlllev
Drtve. Point Pleasant. W. Va
26560 . 304-676-4340 ext
307. AA -EOE .
HELP WANTED R.N.
Increasing admi11ion : requ1res
two part time nunes Areas
newut Intermediate care faclljty. W.Va hcense requtred long
1erm t:efe experience a plus. For
apolr,tment call 304-675-3005.
12

Situations
Wanted

t~;:::;:;::::::~::;:;::~~~~~~~~~~~~,
31

Homes for Sale

1 Y, st.ory, air, 3 b8drooms, llvtng
room. dln1ng room, family room.
new kitchen. range. diSposer.
dlshwashet', t::ebinets. School•.
c l"t~rcha. hospital close 304875-5027

Muon County on Rt. 36 Sout~·
side. excel! em 1.650 sq. ft . farm
houte. large garden. pond, 60
acres with ttmber, P.rivate coun·
try lfv1ng, $82.000. 304-6766420.
New Haven 3 bedroom, 2 baths,
one f l rpiace . garage ,
531 ,000.00 304-2,73-2471

For nice lady th at needs a n1ce
home instead of wages, live in
with very lrtde work 10 do. Be
companion for mtddle aged ill 32 Mobile Homes
lody. con 114-446- 95ts:"""~ -~
for Sa-le

Will do babysitting in mv home.
1n Pomeroy Anytime. Call614992-3413.
Will wif'!terize homes. clean
gunars. paint trailer roofs ,
phone 30'·882· 370&amp;

18 Wanted to Do
Septic tenk pumping, residential
6 commer•cal 880 per load.
Ron Evan• Enterprises. Jackson.
Ohio Call614-286-6930
Jim '• OddJobServJc&amp;- pamting,
c•penter work. sundeck, Stdtng,
roofing. Call 814·3?9-2416.
Quality roofing . Free estima1e.
810 e square. Contact Randy at

1970 R1tzcraft 12x70, 3 bed·
room 1ra1ler. $6600. clll 614266-1813.
1984 Schuhz whh expando. If
interested call 61•·448-6726
1969 Kirkwood 12x86. 2 br..
refr1g., s1ove, underpinning, air
condtt1on1ng. Call 614 -4467610 or 266· 6896

Would like to do Fall &amp; Winter
houtecleaning. Please call 614·
367-7633 or 367-7696
Carpenter Work. t6.00 e hr. or
by the job Panelling. p11nting.
drywall. remodeling.• Call 614441-e377
Will do babylltttng

my home.
Have eJiperiences. Call 614·
••&amp;-8693.
1n

Houl8 cleaning or office clean·
ing by day Can give refarence
Immaculate cleaner. Call 614«6·8106
Can do hght hauling and roofing
Reasonable rates Marton
Snider. 614-949-2629.
FIREWOOD! locust, oak ,
cherry. S35. per ptck·up load
delivered. Bill Slack. 614-99222e9

1973 Vlktng. 12k66. 1 Vt acrea.
Juat out of Buhan on Eagle
Ridge Rd. Reduced to $9000

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO re co mmends that you
do business wi1h peopl 8 you
know. and NOT to send money
1hrough the mail until you have
mvestlgeted the offertng

Real Estate
31

Homes fo ~ Sale

1969, 10x60, 2 bedroom Very
good conditiOn . $1800. May
take • wheel driVe part•al trade

Calle14 - 982 · 3~91 .

1979 Governor 14x70, 3 br. 11h
bath. cenualatr, moved or Iefton
rented lot. 304· 773· 9126
Holt;\Park 14~t70, central 11r,
porch , shed. underpenning,
$8500. or best offer. 304-67664,7 after 4 p.m.

34

Business
Buildings

Brick St . Ru11and. 3 bedrOOm, 2
bath. large family room with
Buck Stove, large deck with
pool, aettlite. new carpet, ei'Otra
inlul•tion. Owner moved. must
.. crif1ee only $43.000 . Call
614-742-2766 Of 513-2362753.
2 bedroom home in Pomeroy 2
batha, 2 car garage, landscap ed
pool. Ntilite, close to schools
Call 614-992-3254
Mtddleport Lovely tnter ior,
close to stores end sehool Prlea
reduced 614. 992-6709 ef1er
1:00pm.
HouM •nd1 lot 1n Leon area, At.
62, with vinyl aiding, atone
front, n~w po!ch. priced
115, 600 Owner will fmance
304-686-4374
Firat time home buyers. yOu c:an
awn • home for what you now
..-v in rent. seller will help with
fin.-.c inu 10 minutes from
town 304-876- 4Q08 .

2 br .. 2 very good mobile homes

for rent Oep. end ref. required
Call 614-446-0527 after 2 00
-PM .
2 bedroom , furnished . No pets
&amp; 160 per month plus ut1Ulies
Call 614-949-2946.
Double wide. private lot, nice
area, 3 bedrooms, 2 tull baths,
dining room, family room, air
cond. Gallipolis Ferry, $326 .00.
304· 876· 3087
3 bedrooms, rent plus ut1li1ln.
Gallipolis Ferry, for information
call 304-676-4088 .
Two bedroom mobile homn
furnished. $186 month plus
$76. deposit. 304-676-61512.

3 bedroom mobile home Mason.
W. Va. References and d81)0sit
requtred. 304 -882 -3267 or
304-773· 6024
Apartment
for Rent

I'
1 and 2 bedroom apartments for

Fur,lshed Efficiency 8146 Utili·
t1e1 pa1d, ahara bath. 807
Second Ave., Gallipolis Ph .
446-4416 attar ?PM.
Upstairs unfumtshed apartment.
Ut1htuts paid Carpeted, no child·
ren or pets. Cali 614-446-1637
2 BR apts. 6 cloJets, kitchen·
appl. furnished. Waaher-Oryer
hook-up. ww carpet, newly
painted. deck Regency. Inc.
Apts . Call 304·676· 7738 or
676 5104

Furnished Apt. · 1 Br. $200.
Ut1httes paid 701 4th A11e
Gallipolis Ceil 614-446-4416
after 8 .00 PM.

Commerctal bUildings tor lease.
Downtown Pt Pleasan1. Stores.
off1ces A-One Real Estate.
Cerol Yeager, Broker Call 304676-5104

Furnished apt. neJC1 to library.
One prote.. tonal adult only.
Parking. Call 614-446· 0338 .

E11cellent Busmess Locatton .
good for of1ice or drwe·through
fac11tty Contact 304 -675 4035 , 9 am · 5 p m

2 Br., carpet. Stove, nrfrtg.
furntshed . Washercdryer hookup. Water. garbage paid Near
Silver Bridge Call 614-446¥
7026

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Furnished apt · 4 rooms and
bath . Centrally loceted Ref. and
Sec dep reqUired Call 614446-0444.

Near Eureka Dam : 14 acres · 10
acres with tobacco base. Land
contract Call 614-446 -2404.
2 Buddmg lots· 1 lh acres each
with counw water. Jerrys Run
Rd Apple Grove. W. Va Call
304-576-2383

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

Ntcoly 1urnished small house.
Adui1S only References re·
qutred Off street parking. Ph.
61 4· 446·0338 •

388 · 8~48 .

992 - 372~

2 br trailer &amp; 2 br house next
door to college. C1U 614-446·
1323 or 246-9170 .

rent. Basic rent for 1 bdr ,
s 183 00. 2 bck • $219 00 Also
required a $200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT Jackson
Estates Dept Ph ••&amp;· 3997
Equal Housing Opportunity

• BR hOuse for rent. 3 mi so. of
1984 Triumph II 14x70 All Gallipolia. $300 a month plus
dep Ref requtred Call 614electric- Custorn made Excel- . 446-1616.
Aher 5 00 PM , call
t.nt shape 89000 Phone 614
446-1244.
.
~98 - 4429 .
on 1 acre. E11.cel
All brick, 3 br . 1 'h b'\th, 4 BR house
Ref Call A-1 Raal
-firepleee, laundry room Owner loca1ton
Estate Broker Call 304-675·
ftnancing Call 6"14-446-0722
5104 or 675-7738
Wan1ed Clean 2 bdrm. mobtle Unfurnished house. 3 br. Rodhome. 1979orlater Reasonably ney Village II S275 Call 614priced Needed soon Call &amp;14- '446-4416 after 7 .00 PM .
Hand• Men Special· 5 room and
bath. anic. basement. , 10 State
St. Price negotiable Cell 614-

Furnished 2 br. mobile home
Located in Centenary area. t200
a mo Call 614-4-t&amp;-2390 .

14x70 wi1h expando. Like new.
Stove. rehiMrator, central atr,
utility building. May be had with
washer. dryer and freezer 737
Beech St., Middleport, Oh1o

4 BR .. fireplace. full basemen1 3
mi ao. of Gal hpolls $34.900
Call Days-614· 446·1615 after
5 00- 446-1244

House at 60 Chillicothe Fld. Very
Cheap Call 6, 4·446· 2404

Furntsl"ted 2BR , cable available.
AC.. river view In Kanauge.
Fosters Mobile Home Park Call
614-448-1602.

44

Will help finance or land con- Two lots, 2 acres or more. phone
tract. 10 yr old house. 3 Br , 304 676-4208 .
Patriot Vtllage Call 614-446- - - - - - -- - - -1340. 446-3870.

Uke new. mamtenance· free, 2
br. rancf1 , fully carpeted t 5 m1n
10 Gallipolis or Me rcerville
127,000 Call 614- 266 ~ 620 0

for Rent

1966 12x60 NeW Moon mobtle
home 2 bedroom. verv good
condltton, easy to heat. 83900.
Might take 4 wheel driVe on
part1altrade. 814-992-3596.4

Financial
21

42 Mobile Homes

12x66 mobile home. Coleman
furnance. centralair,..new 30gal · Two bed room mobile home
hot water tank. Will sal11o bn1 Middleport, Ohio. References
offer. Cali after 5 .00, 614-992- end deposit required. 304-8823267 or 394-773-6024
6721

_6_14_-44_6_·6_9_6_7_,.----:- · l -o_a_P_oi_~----,---­
Muaic Leuons on flute. clarinei,
saxophone. oboe. and banoon
Cell lora Snow 6..1•·266-181•

KIT 'N' CARL VLE

Whirlpool Upright Freu:er, $75.
Cabin .. atyle stareo, e60. 1 aat
coffee tables. eeo. Call 8'14·
949-2007.

73

®by Lllrry Wright

OCtober 11. 1987

i'"4 W.O.

BORN LOSER

'

Television
Viewing

1977 Blazer 411.•. one owner. •
30.000 actual mil.,, Aaron -~
Fowler c all 304-6715-343&amp; Of o
175-3819.

WA~ b£;~\Cl&lt;&gt;O~,

6\IT I
faot. I..I1'10 SOCII A
CA~NIP.AI..

N1ce 3 br with garage &amp;275 a
mo.- opuon to buy. Oep req
Call after 4 00 PM 61 ... 388·
8624
3 br. home at 919 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis Call6,4-446-8030
Furnished 1 br. house 936 1st.
Ave $200 a mo Call 614·446·
4038 or 446-16 15.

2 br apartment Adults only.
Inquire. Sheppard's. F1rst &amp;
Olive St Gallipolis, Ohto
2 Bedroom. stove &amp; refng
furnished, carpe1ed. Easy walk
to downtown Gallipolis, 8250 a
mo. Phone 614·246-9596
Efficte;;--CY apt 2 rms &amp; pri11ate
bath . S160 a mo Utiht1es paid.
828 2nd Ave Call 614·446·
2390
Nice 2 br. apt.: Stove, refriderator, water-furnished 4 'h miles
from Gallipolis $210 a mo No
pets Call614-446 -8038.
Furnished apt 2 br. 1136 2nd
Ave. Gallipolis S196. Water
paid. Call 614·446-4416 after
7·00 PM .

•

THURS., OCT. 8

Quality firewood, all hardwood.
for .. le. $26 • pick-up la.d. Call
e14-317-08e9.

Pontoon boat 24 ft . with 2,t •
inch Pontoons. Excellent condi· ~~.
tkm. $3600, 814·992· 7810 ~ ~~.;:.

Offtce Space for ran1 . Excel.
downtown GaiUpollli locatton
lnqutrtea call-614-448-4222.

B1g Dakou F~rm homa built on
your lot, •12,996 &amp; up Call
814-886-7311 .

Moblla Home lot . 80 It or lou.
920 •th .. Galltpolla. t76 Water
poid Coll814-448-4418aftor7
PM .
·

Fini1hed Grsdellumber. 2•1 Ox8
approx. a l.'i andtyat300att&amp;.OO

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental trail••· Call 614-992·
_7 _4 7_ 9_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Space for amall trailers. AU
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooma. air and cable. Mason.
W Va. Call304-773-6861
Camper, trailer, boat. car rer'ltal
apace available. 85. per foot
Mason County Fa~r Grounds.
304-676·5463
Trailer spacea for rent fully
equippiKt in M81on, W. Va
304-n3-5319 after 7 00 pm.
49

For Lease

For Leaae buement under store,.
1506 Jefferson Bl11d., ahop or
storage, 304-676-1436.

• Merchnml1se
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oliva St .. Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 8399.
Uving room suite•- t1 99-1598.
Bunk beda wH:h bedding· 8199.
Full size manresa &amp; foundation
starttng - $99 . Recltnera
starting· .99.
USED - Beds. dressers, bedroom
suttea. $199 -$299 Deaks,
wring• washer. • complete line
of u1ed furmture.
NEW· Weatern boot•· 830.
Workboota $18 &amp; up. (Ste.. &amp;
aoft toe). Call 814-446-3169.
p

County Appliance, Inc. Good
uaed eppliancn and TV seta
Opeo_BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sot. 614-448-1899. 827 3rd
Ave Gelllpolia, OH
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washera, d,.,era, refrigerator•.
rangea . Skaggs Applianc~a.
Upper Ai"'" Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-448-7398
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sotu and chairs priced from
1395 to t99!i Tablet no and
up to 1126,. Hide-1-~da 8390
to 1696. Redlnel'li 1225 to
8375 lamps $28 1o $126
Dinettes 1109 and up to ••915 ~
Wood table w·6 cheirl t286 to
1796. Desk $100 up to U715
Hutchea 8400 and up Bunk
beds complete w· msttfes181
t295 and up to 8396 Baby beds
8110 Manreas•• or box springs
full or twin t68, firm $78, 1nd
•sa Queen sets 8225, King
$360 4 drawer chest .89 . Gun
cabmet• 6 gun. Gas or electric
range $376. Baby mattrnHs
836 &amp; $46 Bed framea 820,
$30 &amp; King frame $60. Good
selection of bedroom auites.
metal cabineta, headboards UO
and up to 865
90 Days same as cash Wtth
approved credtt. 3 M1les out
Buiaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 614-4460322
PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc llvmg wood
suites. 8399 95; chest of drawera, 4 drawer- ••a. 5 drawer·
869.95, mattress &amp; box sprmglfullsize; 312 coil, 8149 96 set;
twm mattressea, 896
tat.
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND
Valley Furniture
New and used furniture and
appl1cancea Call 61' · 446·
7672. Houra 9-6 .

Craftm~ater sofa S. lovesea1
Black wtth prtn1. Less than 1 year
old . SBOO Call 614-446· 7307
after 6pm.
G.E. washer Real nice t126F1rm Call 614-367-0322
7 ptece haavy dark ptne group
Couch, rocket', chair, ottomen.
coffee table and 2 end tebln
Very good condition and good
quality. t3po for all Call 614·
986-3510
Fnglda~re

Whtrlpool Froetffee Re1rigera
1or. $200 Electr.e stove, 1200
8oth excellent condition Call
614· 7•2-3092

Two • Bedroom farm house.
newly restored Adults only No
pets Falrf1ald - Cantenry Rd ..
Green twp, Call614-446-9442 .

3 bedroom.

2 bedroom turnlsed apt, ref and
deposit, New Haven, W. Va ..
304-882-3267 or 30 4-713·
5024

New Haven 3 bedroom. 1276.
month plu~ secu rity ,depos1t.
304-273· 2471

3 rooms and bath, gas heat,
Ground floor . washer and dryer
hook up, no ohildren, immediete
ptscupancy. No pets. phone
304-675-4480 e11t 5:J or 60

----------~· .:
....

~~~~~~~~~~:::::r;;;::~~~~~=~=~ rebuilt,
audgetTranamiasions:
usct~hnd:
-.:
all lYP" Gueran1H
lO ,,,:
Building Materials
Block. brick, aawer piptJ, win·
dow .. lintels, ate Claude Win·
tart. Rlo Grande. o . Call &amp;1•245-5121 .
Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
delivery Mason aand. Gstlipolia
Block Co. 1231h Pine St .,
Gellipolit, Ohto Call 814·4412783.
Ready m1x concrete and all
concrete auppllea. Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplias.
304-773-6234

Like new. K1ng wood • coal
stove With blower Used 1
winter Call 614-261-1636 af·
ter 4:00PM .
· 56
Pets for Sale
Good hunting coat. size XI. $40,
Good cond 2 larnpa. Thread &amp; Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
thimble houae. Call 814·446- Groom ing . All breed• .. All
8361 .
styles. Julie Webb Ph . 814-4460231 .
Firewood for sale. Delivery
available. Cut &amp;: slacked. Call Dr•gonwynd Cattery Kennel.
614-446-0986 Also will haul CFA Himalayan. Persian and
S1ameae kittens. AKC Chow
away scrap metal.
puppift, New kitten•; Per.ians
Clothea· Women•· 112e 1 ·3. C•ll fl 1 4-4•6-38'4 after 7PM
piano. refrliierator, washer·
dryer, wringer waaher, antique English Saner- 7 yr11. okt Well
buffet, tv, curtains. Call 114· trained Call 814-266-6608 af245-8241 .
ter 6:00PM.
Chest- solid walnut. cedar Nned.
Hand made High q_uallty. J200
Ca11814-317-7849.

AKC Rag. German Shepherd
puppies Champion blood lines
tao oach. Co11614-448-D373.

Home made1rail•· 4ft. 4 in. Jl 8
ft. 8 ln. with racks. Good eond.
1160. Call61•·379·2233

2 baby female Ferrets. e wks.
old. $25 each. Call 814-446·
1354.

Mixed hey for sale· round belea
Call614-246-1117.

Regtstered Cocker Spemel pup·
plft, Black, brown, white parts.
Himalayan kittent No check
Coll814-992-2807.

Beeline woodburning stove· c•
be turned Into a furnace Call
814-379-2789
Ntce Wntern saddle- padded
seat. Nice King wood &amp; coal
ltov• brick hned. 1125 each
Colll14-388-9378
Catalylic converters. only
$89 96. Molt models lnatalla1ion also available. Muffler M•n.
9 Stimpson Ave • Athen•. Oh10
1-800-843-3787.
Mixed herd wood tleba. $12 per
bundte. Containing approx 1 Yl
ton FOB Ohto PaHet Co
Pomeroy, Ohro. 114-892-8461
Firewood for 11le. Cherry. Oak,
Suoafru. Hickory. t40. Pickup load Split and delivered. C1ll
814-982-8336.
Kimball cherry conaole piano
with beneh. 17 ft 1973 Fan
travel trailer , self-contained
sleeps 8 . 1 9B• Yamaha 200, 3
wheeler. 814-992-6970.
King Wood and Coal Burnerwtth
blower for uta. Like new. $300
Call 61 4·986·441 8
For ..le Pool tabla Complete
$100. 814-992-7011.
For aale "3 flashing arrow signs,
walk in cooler, 2 door giUI
cooler, counters. glats show
cases. 2 cash registers. George's
Carry Out 3 m1lea south of
Middleport, Ohio.
Firewood for sale. Seasoned
hardwood. Call 614-742-2646
Never used Tappan microwave
Call after 6 p.m , 304·6762369. '
(
Electrolu11. Ia havmg a Fall Sale.
Super discount Call 3D•· 768·
3213 for further information.

57

&amp;

Grain

Mixed hey $1 bel• on wagon
Hay for beddin9 80c. 304-6765679.
Straw 1nd Hey. 30•·676· 6086.

Tra11sportflt1on
1985 Plymouth Horizon Auto,
ac, 4 dr. 28.000 miles $3600
Call61•·379-2726.

1 979 t:ord Mustang. 6 cyl .
am -fm-c . . with eq. Runs fine.
Good cond. Firat 1760. Call
614-441· 7077.

Truck load apples. Ida Red.
Golden Delic1ous, ell fruits end
vegetable•. Jack• Market, At
36, Henderson, W. Va.

F11r111 Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

•ir.

Steinle• ateel eJihauat tyatema
Now cuatom made for your
truck. motor home or clna~c car
With llf•tlme warranty. MuffiM
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave , Athena.
OhiO. 1-800-843-3767
1982 Ch""'y Malibu c'la11ic. 4
dr , a~r, PB, PS. AM -FM radio
H1gh mileage. $996. Call 614·
992-8471 .
'81 DMaun 610 Wagon. 4 sp.
Good mechemcal condition. Call
a1ter &amp;:00 p .m .. 614-992-5041
1981 Pontiac Bonneville
8rough.m. 2 dr , Pwr wtndowa,
dual pwr 60-40 seats with
rec:hn•. Pwr. locks, trunk, an tenna AM-FM cauette Auto
climate control. Tilt. cruise,
delay wipers. wire wheel coverJ
360 V-8 . 22 mpg. Very good
conditiOn 01.900 080 81~ 992·1833.
Two 1867 Chevys. 2 door poat,
4 door hard top Partially rebwlt
Extra pert1. Will sell both for
82000 Call 814-992-3598

61 Farm Equipment

Homeli1e
Xl, 16
tnch bar.
$299 .96 Sup8f
Siders
Equipment
Co .. Henderson. W. Va. 304676-7421
MF 260 {1 983) tractor. SO·SO
Bush Hog. Bush Hog gr•der
blade. MF 2•14" plo~t, MF 6ft
disc, MF 2 row cultivators.
transplanter MT-122 tobacco
seUer. Priced together or indi·
vidually. Pate Sommer at 304e75 -3280 day ; 676-3 117
evenings.
lnternational1 050 grinder miJCer
magnet. Hay feeder. 3 1creens.
good ~::ond 304-273-4215.

1980 Chevette 4 -door. 4 speed,
good work car $800. 304-8822478 or 882· 3682
1979 BonnMnlle Pont1ac 301 .
ac. ps. pb. tilt pw, nice car. high
milt. 81500 304-676-2663

1980 Buick Regal. Reitl sharp
car. H1gh Miles. 82 .195. 304671-25e3.
1916 Cougar. 3 .8 . V-6, take
over payments. can see 22, 'Midison Ave, after 6 00 PM
'78 Camero Z28. PS , AC, PB.
2.1500. Call304-675-4072 after
3:10pm
~-----:--- h

1981 Mercury Lynx. 4 cyl. auto,
new brekea . exhaust,
$1.200.00 runs good 304882-2862 or 882 · 2..654.

'84 Chevy Impala , load ed.
1 16,300.00 304· 676· 2663
1

- - - - - - - - 1, 72

Trucks for Sele

Now buying shell com or ear 1976 lA 1on Ford pickup Fatr
corn. Call forla1est quotes. River oond 8660. Call 614· 379City Farm Supply, IU-·-446· 2884 .
2985.
1 19n Ford truck wi1h bad.
-::
lleplaced motor. Runs very
63
livestock
lood. no ruat . C•ll 614-992- - - - - - - - 1 421
1
R•g. black Morgan mare. 1 o 1
:
yeart old. Well broke to nde and '~---------'drive. C81181•· 698-6298 .
,1986 Toyota 4JC4. Deluxe ektra
6 Holat8in ha1fen to come freth 1 cab Ac. cruise, tilt, am· fm ·ca11.
soon . Call 114· 246· 9170 or 1 E~~:cel. cond . Call 814-•46441-1323.
l -8-73'-8- - - - - - --

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

..

;7;·3;::::V;:;::a:n:s:;;&amp;:::;4~W~.~O;:::.

••
"Here's a mouth-watering reclpe ... run
over a P.Ossum with a '72 pontiaC, let bake
on asphalt two days."

•

..

Serv1ces

fll-L.ING OUi,
~NI~

EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE

1

... LOok AT

:~~e NEWJPAPE~

-ANP TELL Me.
THIS PATl!.

..
..

Home
Improvements •

I

PAT!: THIS J06
APPL.ICATJON I..rM ----

·-

THI$' 1$
(Boop ...

/No

I

IT~

YE.&gt;TfRPAY~
. ,..l"¥115A. ....

&lt;lriffilh

7:30 D (2) l:lollywood Squares
(1) NHL Hockey
(1) Newlywed Oeme
Q(I)Judgo
®l Wheel of Fortune Q
II)) CJOIIIIro (0:30}
1111!21 liJl Jeopardy! Q
® Barney Miller
a1 (l) WKRP In Cinclnnali
7:35 CD Sanford end Son
8;00 (]) Heli Town
I) (2) liJ) The Coaby Show
(1) Cl (I) Sledga HemJllerl
Sledge rejects advances of
psychotic woman who then
threatens Doreau. Q
(!)Adame Cllronlcles John
and his ,on. John au.ncy.

represent American interests
abroad .
Company's !rapped In enemy
territory while evacuating
vlllagecs..Q
I!]) Amortce by D. .lgn See
the changes taking place 1n
the archolecture of the
workplace. Q
I!)) Prlmenewt Wrap ups of
the dey 's world news and 1n
depth feature reports. (1 :00}
® MOVIE: Altered Slateo (RJ

AH KNOW THAT, LAMEBR~N!

'BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfellme guarantH. Local references furnish ... :
Free ettlmatea. Call coHect.,
1·114-237·048B, dey or night .....
R o g e r s 8 a 1 e m e ..n ,t •
Waterproofing.
•
',

.

®l 1111!21 Tour of Duty Bravo

'ALLEY OOP
TURN lHIS THING MOUND AN'
ROW OVLIH 10 HI"::!

SWEEPER and sewing machine •
repair. parts, and suppliH . Pick ...
up and dall11ary. Davia Vacuum "
Cle•ner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Ad Call 614· •
448-0294.
"
.

(1 :42}
Ill (l) MOVIE: Shoot the
Moon (RJ (2.03}

--------------~
'
Vinyl Sldtng. over hang end ;

8:0513) MOVIE: Hlah Plains
ifrlfter (R) (t :45)

GR=L
IO · B

gutters. Call 814-446-863' .

8:30 I) (2) I!}) MajOr League
Baaeball
(1) Cl (I) The Charrningl
Er1c breaks a promise to

Free Eatlmate

&gt;

EEK &amp; MEEK

RON ' S Television Serv1ce :
House calls on RCA. Quanr.
GE . Speciallng •n Zenh:h Call ',.
304-576-2398 ' or 814-448'
2454.

Snow, and the boys create a
monster. Q
9:00 (]) Families Under Fire
(1) Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Star 80'
ABC Thurlday Night Movie
iRI (1 :42} Q
·
(!) I!]) Myeteryl Lord Paler
has 30 days to save Hemet
lrom the rope. (1 .00) Q
IW Ill ll2l WII"'IUJ V1nnle
jeopardizes his life and cover
to pursue a personal
vendetta
I!)) Lorry King Llvel In deplh
1nleJV1ews with top

Fetty TrH Trimming. stump
removal Call 304 - 676 - ~331 ,

t\£ IXl:S.\J'T

Rotary or c•ble too~ drHiing.
Most wells completed ssmeday
Pump ..1.. and aerv1ce 304895-3802

~L

REALLI.f?

Starks Tree and Lawn SeMce,
lawn care, landacaping, ltump
removal. 304-676-2842 or

.-

~78 - 2803

WINTERIZATION .
~ :·
Security lighta, Storm ~in- :
dows, Insulation, Roofing. Gen:. :
eral Repaira 30•· 676· 6367.
82

Plumbing
8c Heating

newsmak~rs

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
IS

..

!HAT ANOTHER

NOTE

ITS A

LETTER I

NON I KNOW WHAT TJ-11?(M&amp;'J.J

CAME OUTlD#AIL.

'CIRCUM5TANTVI.L EV IDENCE!'

Nc:J,

f"'&lt;&lt;\'. 'yQJR

TEAO--lER""

CARTER'S PWM81NG
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614·446 · 3888 or 614448-4477

84

Electrical
:&amp; Refrigeration

BARNEY
•

SINCE YORE ELVINEY
IS FEELIN' PORELV
I FIXED YOU FOLI&lt;S
A GOOD HOT
SUPPER

Re11dentla l or commercial wtr- •
mg. New SMviclll or repatrs. •
l•censed etectric1an . Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304·
675-1786
:
85

D1Uard Wa1er Service: Pools, ·
Cisterns. Walls Dehvery Any- ,.
t1me Call 614· 446-7404-No '
Sun~ay calls
J

WHAR'S TH'
DFIDBURN
DESSERT?

General Hauling
~

pools. Cisterns. wells. Ph. 614246-9286

••

R S. R Water Serv•ce Home
cilters, walls. pools filled For.'
marty James Boys Waters . Ca'l~
304 675-6370
..

•
Watteraon ' s Water Haultng, ' ·: ~
reaaonable rates, immediate • :
2,000 gallon dehvery. etlterns, ~
pools. well , etc call 304-676- ... !
2919
•
Dump truck dellverv. coal. .
stone. san d. gravel, till and '
sawdust 304-676-3190
..
87

Upholstery

R &amp; M Custorp Co~ches and'
Reuph olstery. St At. 7 , Crown
C1ty. Oh. 6'4-,266- 1470. E\le . •
81•·4•6-3438 ' Open dally 9 to
4 :30. Sat . 9 30 to 1 .30 Old &amp;
new Uphostered.
Mowrey's Uphol1terlng serv1ng
tri county ~tea 22 veers The beat
1n furniture upholstering Call
304 - 676 4164 for free
est1matu

and celebnt1es.

1p:DO (!) The Conatltutlon: That
Dellca1e Balance Explore
cruel and unusual
punishment, sentenc1ng and
death penalty. Q
®l Ill 1121 Knoll Landing
Abby and her daughter Oli via
both become prime muder
suspects. Q
IDl IHI News
I!)) Evening News A wrap up
ol todey's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow 's news
StOrieS (1 :001
·- Ill (l) Benny Hill
10:0513) MOVIE: Major Dundee
(NRI (2·04}
10:30 C2l Oleat American Outdooro
(0:30)
(!) 1987 Stanley Cup Flnala
Hlghllghll
I!]) Adamo Chronicles John

and his !Min, John Oumcy,
represent American Interests
abroad
Ill Cll Hogan's Heroes
11 :DO (]) Remington Steele
D (2) (1) fil Ill 1W 1111!21
liJ) NtWI
(!) SpeedWoek (T)
(!)Sign 011
[1) Moneyllna Current
reports on world economics

and financial news wtth Lou

II. J Water Servtce Swtmmmg :'

1984 Ford ll'tunderbird, V· 8. a1r,
61,000 miles, $6,600.00. 304·
812-2442 or 304-676-6454

;.;:=;::;::;:;:::;:::;=

62 Wanted to Buy

::t:. HAve Tb

Camping
Equipment

1978 Camero Rally Sport. auto,
AC. tilt, AM·FM stereo. air APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE
shocll1. 350 four barretl. 304- Wood and coalatovea. 1urnaces, ' '
and interts Brunco, Ashley
876-1139.
Consolidated Dutchweat Buy:
1988 Volkawagon Golf 304- sail, trade 10 yrs. experience
Rt. 143. Carpenter, Ohto 614676·6325.
698·6121

1981 Plymouth Reliant K-Car, •
1978- 1070 Case tractor whh ) cyl, auto. air, ps, front wheel
ac, no till. 4 row eorn planter
drMI Ntca little car 82495
•&amp;960 C•ll 814-281-8622.
304-e75-2563
Ferguaon Tractor. good condi·
tion. 990 Int. hay bind 12 h
dump bed 8f1 dumpbed 1978
Honda 7150 Sat of 18 ft . log
bunk OINer doz'er, 3 way blade
D1vco milk truck whh ref. unit
Call 814-7•2-2,56 .

7:05 CD Andy

..

1973 Starcrafl 23 ft. camper. ·•
304· 876· 3'27.

1977 Monte Carlo and 302 Ford
engine • tflnsmisslon Call
814-448-8278.

I

·. '

I

CISTEP

Q Ill IW Ill 1!21

ichoers
lll(l) M•A•S•H

FRANK AND ERNEST·

-----~

81

•

m

Struta. t.i 19.95 pair, inttalled, t
Moat models Mufflar Man, 9 :
Sttmpaon Ave Athent. Ohto..
1-800-843-3787.

1979 GMC, van. 8 pasaenger
New pa1nt, pb, ps, air 67,000
actual mil• Excel cond. Call
614-44e-4169

Gult•r· Madtd by H~rmony
Mahogany. 876 Call 614·4•8 ·
4999.

Quality Fruns and Vlljgetablea
rated and wholesale 8 • S
Produce across from Pizza Hut.
G•llipohs, Ohto.

DIVORC~D?

•.

78

1983 4 dr. Celebrity Blaek wrth
red int•rlor Auto., ps, pb.
am-fm,
luggage rack Sharp
t3696 . Coli 814- 288-6522

Winesap. Rome. Melrose. Super
Gold. red &amp; yellow Dalietous
Apples. Honey, sorghum. apple
butter, pumpkins &amp; usorted
food ttams. Dunrovin Fruit Farm
681 S of Albany Weekday•
9-8, Weekend• 9-6 Call 114698-8298.

Aut5e:pair

1986 Calavler RS . Auto , ec, ps.
pb. sm-fm radio. tilt, rear
detroit Call 814-448-2323 after 4 00 PM .

1984 Dodge Colt Nice economy c•. No rust. S1ereo cas•
pl1yer. t2600 Call 614-2866522

&amp;

A~DMOM
E.V~R G~T

-

1971 Tr~vel Mete pod-up
camper, •soo 00 or best offer.
304-878 · 8118.

Gutters Electric· Kalam,zoo ,
876 Acoustic-Yamaha 12 llnng, •150 Harmony Archtop.
'75. Kay , 150 Call 614-448·
0558.

Fruit
Vegetables

Woot.DYOU

WANT TO BUY wind1h1eld ..
frame and psrta to ftt 1977 CJ f5 IMP · 304 - 875 - ~09

1972 Buick. Good work car
AM-FM~ Cesa. Can be aeen at
241 rear J1ckson Pike. Apt. 1,
8200

For Sale or Trade: 1980 Chev
MaNbu •w· Air 11 300. Call
614·446-9684

58

'

Dual exhouot klta. •99.88 fn- •
stalled. Most Fords, CheVy ~
trucka. Vans. 4x4's Muffler •·
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave , Ath8n~. ~
Ohio 1-800-843-i767.
"

77

•

Reorronge-· lertflln of
four scrombled words
low tp for~ four simple

7:00 (]) Remington Steele
D (2) PM M1111azlne
(1) SportoCenter (L}
•
(1) Entortalnment Tonight
II (I) People's Court
(!) IDl MacNeil/ Lehrer
NawsHour (1:00}
IW News
II)) Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs (0:30}
ll2l I!}) Wheel of ~une

71 Auto's For Sale

Musical
Instruments

1-row Oliver corn picker. 1200
bu wire corn crib· good con d.
Call614 ·448-8427 oher 5 .

~.:::::::::::::::::::::.l:0::-:::6:·:6:8:0::::::::::~

Hay

1978 Chevy Impala, new paint,
good tlr•. High mileaga but
good cond Must sell-leaving for
Florlda18tofNov. $1050. Firm.
Call 61•-379-2233

GE refrigerator, work condition,
8160.00. CaU aher 6 :00. 304
676 · 1494

Wood burnn)g fireplace tnsert,
electric blower. axe cond .
8500 .00 Phone 30•·6752927.

64

daya. Call 614-379· 2220 of ~
304-175-4230
,
\
Utltd end rebuilt trentmttaiona . • ··
Internally in•"ctad and uuatll'· :·
teed lnatallation available We ·
buy JUnk 1ranamissiont. o.n •~
61•-«&amp;-0966.

-,-------::-:-::· lc~

Yorkshire Terri•. 18 months
old, Blue and Gold, phone
304-773-6438 .

Coal atova $76.00. 410 pump
shot gun, 30-30 788 Reming·
ton, 12 gauge Stevena 36 inch
bsrrell, 304-676· 7419.

10,600 btu portable kersone
heater, 6 gal fuel can. plaatlc
s1phon . 860 .00 30'· 876 3731

For Sale Goats. registered AI·
pine Call 614-388- 8~72 after
6 ;00 pm.

1979 Olda. Diesel, Deha 88
R.unJ good, starts good, looks
good. Col 814-448-7372.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S 36 West. Jackson. Ohio.
614-286· 6461
Mauey Farguton. New HoUand.
Buah Hog Saln &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractors to chooae from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment Largest select1on in
S .E. Oh10.

Monroe copiftf' Modef RL-612 ,
under 16,000 copies, 304-8764067

Livestock

Rouweiler pup , 9 weeka ,
wormed, call 8 ·30 till 4·30 ask
for Nency 304-875-2369 or
876-1870 anytime.

Seasoned 01k firewood. C1ll
304-876-2767 after 4 -•o
Firewood for sale. delivered
130 00 lo1d. 304·895-3446

63

--=------

0

~~ .·

..
PEANUTS
MR.6ROWN. M'l NAME 15
LELAND..WE 'DLIKE TO PLA\'
FOR' 'IOU!&lt; FOOTBALL TEAM

1

I DON T f\AYE A
FOOTBALL

LELAND

THERE'S MORE T~AN ONE
OF US UNDER HERE 1

Dobbs. (0;30}
® Honeymooners
OJ (l) Love Connection
11:30 I) (2) I!}) Tonlgh1 Show
(!) SportsC8nltr (L)
00 Cheera
fi1 (I) Nlghtllno Q
IW Magnum, P .I.
I!]) Slater Adrian: The Mother
Tara•• of Scranton An
1nspirat1onal portrait of 51ster
Adrian Barrett and her work '
10 help olhers 1n her
community of Scranton •
Pennsylvania .
1121 Sporto Tonight Acllon
packed sports hoghhghts with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber .
(0:30)
1111!21 'Nighl Heat' CBS Late
Night Giambone won 't
believe lhal a failing
lndustnai1st committed
suicide.
® Magnum, P.l. Pasl Tense
OJ (l) Lalt Show
'
12:00 (]) llilms and Allen
(1) Weier Skiing 1987
International Tour from
Lansing . Ml (R)
00 NlghUine Q
fi1 (I) Fell Guy
I!]) Sign Off
1121 NewoNighl L1ve news
with PatriCk Emory and

-r.:l~:. . :;j. -.E-r-t
: s _,_xl-lh

, .'

1· - 1

T A N 0 C -,

I

&amp;:30 D C2l I!}) NBC NlghUy Newa
(!) Wl~ner'o Circle (T}
(1) IIJ Ill ABC Newo r:;J
(!) HlghUy Buolnno Report
1W 1111!21 CBS Newo
I!]) Rockochaal
I!)) ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world IS
anchored 11ve from New
York (0:30}
® WKRP In Cincinnati
Ill(!) Too Close lor Comfort
6:35 CD Carol Burnett

.

FIGURE SHAPING TABLES
Open your own Ugura .. lon witn
the original S1auff• Concept
Figure Shapini tabl11. 8uy
factory direct. can 312-23•·
9647.

2 bedroom, up stairs, newly
remodeled Stove and refngerator furnished 1200 per month
plus utilities. &amp;1 00. deposit
requJted Call 614· 992· 3489
evenings

APARTMENTS, mobile homea,
hou ses Pt Pleasant and Gal1ipohs 614-446 -8221

..

Firewood - Hard and miJied.
Hauled end stacked. 130 a load
Coli Ed ot 114-448-3978.

26 in9h Zemth color TV, all wood
console. good cond, 81150.00
3 4 67 2

OVER 5!-IORTL'I. Hc
WM JU5T FINI~HIN&lt;!t
50Me WORK.

;;:::;:;;:;;;;~::~..&lt; ..
~76
Auto Parts
&gt;
&amp; Accessoril!S .' ·-.

56 Bujlding Supplies

CO©~J.llA-~£~S® ~:!:

- - - - - - - Edi!•d b1 CLAY R. POLLAN

(!) SporttLook (T}
(!)Dr. Who
I!]) Square One TV Q
® Fact• ol Lila
· Ill (l) One Day at a Time
6:05 CD Allee

l-IE- S:AII' I-IE-'17 Be

London Fog all weather coal. slz
u . ·•4o . 2 gino. al•o 5 velvet
dresNa-1215 each. Size 6 coat
with hood-$ 10 wool coat whh
scarf, siz• 14, 830 Call 814·
446 _8389 _

Gra ctous hvm g 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor and R1veraide Apart·
ment a in Middluport From
8216 1nclud1ng utilities Call
614-992-7787 EOH

2 br . carport &amp; storage area
&amp;225 a mo. Oep &amp; ref requ ired
Call 614¥446-3888 or 446 ~
4491 .

•

46 Space for Rent

7 :00 can &amp;14·258-6692
•after
board.

D (]) (1)
I!}) Newt

'

Boat• ,41nd
Motors for Sele

3

6:00 (]) Crazy Like a Fox

1985 Honda XR 80. 1982 ,
Suzuki Jr. 60. lo1h good cond.
3o•~&amp;7~-6219 afttrl4:30

C&gt;

75

Large two-bedroom unfumished
apartment with stove, refrigerator, washer and dryer Overtook·
ing City Park 8226 . per month.
Call
aven1ngs. 614-446-4425 or
446 -2325

Nice o11a bedroom apartment
Newly carpeted, upstairs. 402 '1:
28th 81., Potnt Pleasant Call
614-992-5868

.

·.

Furmshect room. $100. Utilitin
paid. Share bath. Single male.
91 9 Second Gallipolis. CaH
446-4416 after 7pm

Newly- redecorated apartmentsfor rent. One-bedroom, unfurnished. second floor From
$175 to 8225 per mooth. Call
.,even ings · 614 448- 4426 or
446 -2325

1 bedroom furmshed in Middl•
port. Call 614-992-6304 or
614-446-8898

00

Callah1n·• u..d Tire Shop . Ovelr
1.000tlr... slzes12, 13, 1,. 16,
16, 16.5 . 8 mil" out Rt 218.
Coli 814-2&amp;1-82&amp;1 .

THAT DAILY
PVIILU

EVENING

Motorcycles

Plastic cistern Nte approv.d,
plastic aeptle tanka. plbtic
culverts, melal culvert• RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jockson. Oh &amp;1•·216-6930

Stack Waaher·Dryer
Mavtag portable washer. 40
tnch GE Range . Automatic
w11hers. Automa1ic dryertjgas
and efectric). Frost free refrigerator Gas ranges . Ftteator~
Store. Middleport

Sale- Rent Ranch style. Large
khchen, utility rm , 11ngle gar·
age. Like new. Carpet thru·ou1.
Call61•·446 ·135 8

8200 par month
Mulberry Ave . Pomeroy. Call
between 9 00 and 6 00 6 14992-5587.

74

nie Daily

•

1983 Je.;., Scrarnbt•- 8 cyl., •
ap . 45,000 miles. ••soo. Call
614-986·4324 .

"\~!&gt; 1.£f'rC&gt;VIiR CATfls~

Drop leaf table with extra bo.,d
and tlx chairs torula $160 Cat II
614-986-3388 .

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, d-v. week.
mon1h Gellla Hotel Call 614·
4•6-9680 Rent as low as t 120
mo?kh.

Spearw. 304-675-1429.

489-3111

51 Household Goods

Vans

54 Misc . Merchandise

AVON - All ,,.., Cell Manlyn
W'e-rer 304·882· 2645
.,.

...

Thursday. October 8, 1987

I_ I_

!

6 \'

ID

.

!l

1_

l
I 19 I I 0 Co~~lete

L A T T Ry

lI

a

"that means you've been paying

l _.J.L_-L.--'-._J..-.J.L_-1.

.:'11. PRINT NUMBERED 11
ogr lETTERS
•
•

C)

AI a seminar to learn the new
tax laws, a gentleman confessed
thall!e was thoroughly contused.
"GOOd," smiled the speaker,

UNSCRAMBlE
ANSWER

FORI
.

the &lt;huck le qooled

by fd l.n g ' " ~ the mtssmg words
you de ... elop fr om slep No 3 below

I, 1 I' I' I' r 1· I' J
I I I I I .I I I I
3

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Grocer - Exert - Knave - Magpie -- EXPECT

.

"Why didn't someone tell me I had already g1ven this lecture?" asked the teecher. One student, ready lor a break In
clasaea, replied, "AI this lime of vea! we EXPECT reruns."

BRIDGE

NORTH
.876 53
.Q96 S2

James Jacoby

+s
.10 9

One IS ·
one too many
By

James

10-B-81

WEST
94
• A K 10 4

••o

EAST
.QJ

• 873

.2

+J8742

Jacoby

t109 U

• 86 4 3

SOUTH
Bridge players are creatures of hab.AK2
it, and it's customary in bridge to hold
.J
on to potential winners and let useless
+AKQ
cards go. Sure enough, in thousands of
.AKQJ75
deals that Is the best approach. But 1
Vul11&lt;1rable· Neither
one still needs to use the old noggin to
Dealer: South
determine which seemingly useless
cards may in fact take tricks.
North Easl
So~th
The unusual bidding was simple Weot
enough. South opened with a strong
Pass
2+
Pass 4 NT
two clubs, jumped to four no-trump. Pass
Pass
askillg for aces, alter his partner's Pass
Pass
Pass
negative two-diamond response, and
then bid six clubs. West led the king of
Ope11ing lead : • K
besrts. East followed with the three~
and it was easy to determine that declarer surely bad no more than the singleton jack. Since 1! was possible that down all of the defenders' cards '" the
declarer had ~me diamond losers, su1t , and the lowly spade deuce was
West smartly sw1tched to a trump. De- the 12th trick
clarer lor~hwith began rattling off all
How could · West know to keep h1s
bts club wcnners. West thought he was 10·9·4 of spades? Very simple. U de-bemg cle_ver wh~n he let a low spade clarer had a small diamond as a posSi·
go early m the d1scardmg process. His ble loser, surely be would have ruffed
plan was to sav~ the jack of diamonds 8 diamond in dummy . Since thai did
and re!y upon his ~artner to save any not happen, West must hold.itght to all
potential spade trLck. Alas, one low of his spades and. hope that th e layout
sp~de diSCard was too many. At the in that suit Is as diagramed .
•
IIDish, declarer's. A·K of spades pulled

2.
s•

s•

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

I

~Ht•"w
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

44 Legal

document
· I Ship's bow
DOWN
5 Nimbus
1 Game9 Bruised
2 Non·
11 English
flexible
river
12 Small size 3 Egg-shaped
4 Farceur
of type
5 Premature

13 Cut
15
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letter
19

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Insect

Cole
of song
18 Greek
Sheriffs

man
21 Dickens
tot
22 Poem
23 MUit.ary
setting
24 Farmer's

Pompey's

gr~ting

Yesterday's Answer

24 Advent
25 Express

7 Caress
8 Former

10 Uncover
14 Acclivity
17 Devoured
20Heavy
wine
23 Nucleus

sympathy
26 Hamburger

31 Task
32 Succinct
36 Tobacco
(sL)

condiment 38 Yellow
27 Saxhorn
· bugle
28 Energy
40 Coal
30 Car
scuttle

holding
26

Hitchcock

film

27 Run along
28 Apiece
29Vase

30 Exclus1ve
33lnvite
34 Spire
ornament
35

Cut down

37 Eschew
39

Seaside

41 Edison's
middle ___:_
name
42Tim Tam
or Swaps
43 "Zhivago"
drrecror

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how lo work it:

10/8

AXYDLBAAXR
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 TeffitfS,

apostrophes, the length and fonnatio~ of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTt:
10-8
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Z 0

A Q G ' V
NDKSGAT

vQ

V R S E

(' Q

P T S

Z G A
WQ

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GTKASD

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Yesterday's CryptoqDoJe: · A CYNIC IS A MAN WHO
LOOKS AT THE WORLD WITH A MONOCL~ IN HIS

MIND'S EYE. - CAROLYN WELLS

.

'

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