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•

-·

Far in

Ohio Lottery

Page-0-8
•

October 11. 1987

'·R acine
;Festival
Page 12

Ohio farmers are. ahead in com and soybean hanrests
pulled s ugar beets. bailed hay. percent aadequate and 6 percent
ture content of beans remain at continued.
The crop continues to dry down
Potato digging was active with
·
plowed fields and picked apples surplus.
the 9 to 13 percent level, which
rapidly with many reports ofl5 to
three- fourths of the crop dug by
and grapes.
Thirty-five percent of the corn 18 percent moisture content.
has caused a serious problem.
the weekend. Fall ~pple harvest
Except for rain Tuesday and crop was harvested by Monday,
Winter
wheat
planting
adSOybean combining reached
advanced
to 57 percent, slightly
Wednesday over most of Ohio, . well al&gt;ove the ' 14 percent at this
vanced
to
the
one-third
mark.
·
the halfway mark, which also is
a nd showers .friday in the time last year and the 13 percen~ more than double the 17 percent
SOme northwest counties are 50 ahead of the percentage picked
nor theast . the service said it was average from 1982 through 1986.
completion reported last year percent planted. Where moisturE! last year at this time. Grape
a good harvest week. At the end
More than half the corn in ' and 24 percent for the five year; is adequate, germination has picking is continuing on .
of the period, soil moisture was western Ohio Is harvested, but
been rapid, but dry soils (n the schedule.
average.
The statistical service also
rated at 41 percent short, 53 less than 10 percent in east
Harvest was one-half to two- · southern halfo!Ohiohaveslowed
reported
that the processing of
central and northeast counties. thirds complete in western co un- germination. Concerns also have
the
tomato
harves t is virtually
ties, but tess than 20 percent been raised about too much
•
complete;
harvests
of radishes,
'
co mplete in eastern Ohio .. Mois- growth befor~ winter.
leafy
crops
and
celery
remained
Pastures rated fair td good in
active
in
muckland
areas;
the
northern cou nties but poor to fair
onion
harvest
is
nearly
comple
te .
in southern Ohio. Hay cutting
COLUMBUS, Ohio (.UP!)
Keeping ponds and la kes free of
nuisa nce vegetation is a class ic
problem for landowners in Ohio.
Herbicide treatment is timeconsuming a nd often costly . But
help is here, in the form of a
· plant-eating fis h.
A bill became law Sep t. 15 that
. make it legal for Ohioans to
import, sell or possess ' trip loid
white amur \grass carp) for
stocking private lakes and ponds .
Thomas M. Siockdale, wildlife
a nd fish eries specialist in the
Ohio State University Sc hoo l of
Natural Resources, says this
. •~--~··')~~~~.........;;
plant'-eating species of fish offers
'· · · !r, l •
.
· ·
.
private la ke a nd pond owners

Daily Number
612 .
Pick 4
2370
Super LOtto

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPll Farmers are running ahead of
last year at harvesting their corn
• and soybeans brops. thanks to
nearly five and one- half days of
good weather the ·week of Sept.
28-0ct. 3
The Ohio Agricultural Statistics Service says farmer s also
planted wheat. dug potatoes.

..

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MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, Is located somew here in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mail , or drop off your guess to
the the Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45169 or the Gallipolis Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 456:H, .and you may win aSS

.

~~~

•_,.w·· 5.:;,.4--:·: ·~ .
..

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•,.. .......

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cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or lette r. No telephone calls will be
accepted. All contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In case of a lie, the winner will be chosen by
lottery. Next week. a Gallia County farm wlll be
featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District.

Patty Dyer
District Conservationist
USDA-Soil Conservation Service
GALL POLIS - Do you have a
· conservation plan yet? [[ you are
growing "tobacco or any other
annua lly planted ·crop you may
need one. If you grew crops this
year on fields which were not
cropped betwfien 1981 and 1985
you need to contact the ASCS and
SCS offices Immedia tely . You
may need a conservation plan
before you recieve you tobacco

marketing card .
If you fall Into the above
category a soil conservationist
will work with you to determine if
you fields are highly erodible. If
they are not highly erodible, this
will be documented and you will
remain eligible fOr participation
In all USDA programs.
When your fields are deter·
mined to be highly erodible, a soil
conservationist will work with
you to devel op a co nservation

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAJ\:D t UPl i - Friday's winning Oh io Lottery
numbers:
Daily Number
787.
Ticket sales totaled $1.437.659.
with a payoff due of 834 8.~16.CJO
PICK-~
•
3395.
PJCK-4 ticket sa les totaled
$211.637, with a pa yoff du e of
$95,247.
PirK-4 $1 stra igh t bet pay.'
$4.752. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
$396.

plan . The plan typically cons ists
of developing a .crop rotation and
any additional pradices needed
to keep the soil loss with tolerable
limits. Man y farmers find that
their existing prac tices meet
these requirementS,
Once the plan is developed a
copy Is given to the farmer and

By
John C. Rice
County Extension Agent ,
Agriculture
POMEROY - The corn harvest is coming along nicely.
Remembl?r, ha rvest a s soon as
possible. DuE&gt; to the drought, corn
stalks arE&gt; weak a nd may not
stand as wPII this ymr.
Don't Get Caught . - Plan
Now ... Aithough April 'l o is
months away , it isn't to ear ly to
be thinking abotii'-yo ur 1987 iax
return.
"Ta~ r&lt;'t'orm changed rna ny
fedeq l, tax provisio ns. and thf'
impact on your tax liaollit y could
be signifi cant ." says Sharon
Burgess, Extension specialist,
family resource management,
Ohio State University. To avoi d
any surprises next April , s h(•
suggests yo u rcviPW yo ur si tua·
lion now .
ThE' reason for a tax chec ku p:
When lower tax rates went in to
('(feet last January, many people
recleved an uncxpe&lt;'t ed raise ·rrtore take- home pay. While tltis
was a n enjoyable way to start the
new year. It could be a cos tly
mista ke . EstimatE's are that
mOrE' lfl(J[J l litll Ul U • ..l. ldA~ctyt:'L..,

,

will face a tax bill for 1987

one copy is filed in the SCSoffice.
As changes are nee ded due to
economic. weather, or other
conditions, they can often be
taken care of over the telephpne.
If you fave quest i9ns or are
ready to start a conservation
plan you ca n reach the Soil
Conservation Service a t 446-8687.

Vo1. 37. No. 108
Copyrighted 1987

COLUMUBUS , Ohio iUPii New federal regulations that
went into effect last month make
work sa fer for grain eleva tor
employees. an Ohio State Un iversity safety expert says .
"The new program est ablishes
a reporting system for hazardous
chemica l substances and requires grain elevator managers
to develop an emp loyee educa·
lion and training progra m," says
Al Pugh, safety leader for the
Ohio Coopera ti ve Extens ion
Service.
The program covers 406 ha·
ljarcto us substances . Including
chemicals and dust from wheat ,
barley and oats.
The reporting system began
Sept. 24 with manufacturers and
distributors of hazardous chemica ls su pplying ,safety in[orma:
1ion with all shipmen ts. The
sheets describe chemical composition. hazards and how to
protect e mployee health if an
acc ide nt occurs.
The new rPqulr._ements were
published Aug. 24 under t.he
rc vised hazard communication

standard or the Occupational

Safety and Hea lth Admin istration . They expa nd the existing
sta ndard that applied to' the
man ufacturi ng indus try.
Grai n elevators use or generate numerous hazardou s sub-

stances, including cleaning compounds, fer til izers. fumigants,
dust, pesticides. lubricants and
solvents.
·
·'Grain eleva tor fires and ex·
plosions are common. dangerous
and deadly," Pugh says . "The
new requirements make it easier
to fig ht a fire or clean a chemical
spill because infor mation on the
hazardous materials in a build·
ing or container will be
available."
Gra in e levator emp loyers
must have the educat ion a nd
training program in place by
May 23, 1988. They must main tain safety data and a list of
hazardous su bstances present in
the wor kplace, as well as es tablish contro ls to reduce hazards.
. ·'Grain · eleva tor managers
must ensure that all c hemical
substances are labeled." Pugh
says. "If labels are not present ,
contact the chemical· manufa cturer or distributor 'at once. ;.

Special purchase of 'quality Buxton leather
products! Group includes clutches, cigarette
cases, card tainers, billfolds, French purses
and 'key tainers. ,
•
.
REG. SlO.OO TO S32.50

$6°0 TO $1950
COLUMBUS

situ ation .
I. Review your with holding.

Deterrni ne how much federa l tax
will be taken out of yo ur pay. and
in vestment income for the year.
If yo ur spouse work s, add in the
withholding from his of her job.
Th ~ sum is your total withhold in g. ThP objective is to have your
wil hhold.i n!( . match your tax
liab ilit y.
2. Determine your !!ross in·
co me. In addition to a ll wage
Inco me. gross income Includes
in tcrPs t, dividends, pens ions , increase the amount of tax
a limony, a nnuities and capi ta l withheld from your pay by
gai ns from the sale of stocks, adjus tiqg your Form W-4. I(
bonds or real esta te.
withholding is not at least 90
.1. Estimate your exemptions percent of your tax liability. you .
a net dedu ctions. Each exemption could be c harged penalty and
is worth $1,900 this year, an Interest.
Increase of $820. The standard
Other tax law changes Burgess
d0duction is $3,760 for married . believes taxpayers need to be
[iling jointly, $!,880 for married aware of:
filing sepaJ'a1cly, and $2,540 for
- Children 4 years old and
s Ingle and head of liousehold above are required to have Social
filers. An additiona l $600 dE&gt;duc- Security numbers in order to be
t ion is a vallable to those over 65 claimed as depe.n dent s.
years'o ld or blind .
- A new Form W.-4 mus t be
If you itemize, remember that filed with your · employer by
tax reform eliminated the sa les 'October 1.

MANAMA, Bahrain iUPii -The U.S. W;l.r ship •
Mount Vernon has sailed into the Persian Gu lf
wlth·a convoy of frigates andre-flagged Kuwaiti
tankers, bringing to 12 the number of American
Jtaval vesse ls in the strategic waterway .
Analysts said Sunday the Mount Vernon's
ar rival in the gulf will bolster the strength of the
American fleet amid esca lat ing te nsion s with
Iran.
The Mount Vernon and three other warships
escort ing four re-fl agged Kuwaiti tan kers entered
the mouth of the gu lf und er the cover of darkness
Sunday in a northbound journey to Kuwait to load
oil, three days after a firefight between Iranian
boats and U.S. helicopte rs in the nor th ern
waterway.
·
"Don't think of it as a permanent expansion (Of
naval strength\. It 's just rou tine ship movement
and it is not connected to recent events. But , yes,
It's one more than we had yesterday," said Lt .
Col. John Head, a spokesma n for the U.S. Central
Command , Sunday.
"Th ey rendezvoused in the Gulf of Oman and
trans·ited the Strait of Hormuz un eventfully and
were proceed ing quietly northbound early to-

'

.

day," Head said of th e convoy.
The Mouni Vernon, which joined the U.S" Navy
frigates Ford. Hawes and. Kiakring in escorting
the tankers, is a 562-fo ot, 8,600- ton amphibious
transport dock' capable of carrying 360 troops,
landing craft and helicopters.
Its e nt ry into the waterway raised the number
of ships in the gulf to 12, with more than 4,000
American servicem en. The number of ships in the
north Arabian Sea Is said to be 29 with more than
11.000 servicem e n. . · ,
In Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Sunday,
U.S. Energy Secretary John Herrington said Arab
states deeply appreciate the U.S. commitment to
prot('Ctlng shipping in th e Persian Gulf a nd give
"substantial" help to American naval forces
there.
.
Herrington a lso told a news conference that
Washington has plans to stay " however long it
takes" to maintain a free flow of oil to the West.
"We are very satisfi ed with the support we
are get ting, which is subs tantial ," said
Herrington, who ar rived in Abu Dhabi Saturday
on the filth leg of an eight-nation tour of the
region. "We're getting what we need. "

.•.•

DA~

ARMSTRONG

CARPET
SUPER
. SPECIAL

SALE!

JEANS

Sizes 30 to 42 - pre-washed
heavy weight denim.

SIMPLICITY
PATTERNS

ONE DA~ ONL~

$1 Q99

OUR REMAINING STOCK

2ND FLOOR

2 Sl 00

ONE OA~ ONL~ SALE!

FOR

MEN'S .

LADIES'

CAMISOLE SALE

S!otk up now for !he cold folf und winter
weather.
Sizes 32 to 42 in nylon or poly /colton.
Colors: White, Beige, Block und Novy.

-SLACKS
A big selection of new fall colors sizes 2 9 to 42 and big sizes 46 to SO.

Dress
Dress
Dress
Dress
'

SHOP
9:30 TO
5:00

.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Herrington said U.S. warships were being
"repaired, refueled and resupplied" at gulf port s.
"There is no difficulty in logistics," H~?rrington
sa id. He declined, however, to say what kind of
support American ships were get ting from each ·
country.
In other developments in the 7-year -old
Iran-Iraq war, Iran said it fi red a long-range
missile into the fi'aqicapital Baghdad fort he third
·time in a week, leav ing an unconfirmed number or
dead and wounded.
Iran said its warplanes twice bombed economic
and military targets in the northern lraqi
province of Arbil Sunday night after heavy
shelling of six lr aq i towns a nd cities during the
day.
.
Shipping sources said three Iraqi raids on
vessels off the Iranian coast In 24 hou rs killed two
cr ewm en, wounded . four others and left an
unexploded Exocet missile lodged m.one of the
tankers. .
,
They Identified the three ships hit as the
239,435- ton Liberian- flagged Rova, the 215,925- ton
Panaman ian- registered Mer len and the 32,000-ton
Liberian· registered tanker Myknos.
Two crew . were killed and lour others were

missing in the atta ck on the flova, the sources
sa id. One source said the vessel was hit by an
Exocet missile , which tore Into the hull but failed
·
to explode.
In Tehran. Iranian Prime Min ister Hussein
Musavi sa id sophisticated U.S. Stinger missiles
had fallen into Iranian hands and that Iran wa s
seriously studying whether to build missiles
patterned after - ones t hey obtai n ed
surre'pt itious ly.
.
"When th e most complicated and powerful U.S.
weapons ca n reach the Is lamic revolution by the
pro~csses open to it , it shows how S\upid .Is the
belief ... that arms embargoes can be set up and
econom ic sanctions Imposed to bring a revolu tion
to,its knees," he s'aid.
·
Parts for the dead ly accurate missiles were
found aboard two of the Iranian gu nboats
attacked Thursday by Amer ica n helicopters.
However. the U.S. ambassador to the Un ited
Nations sa id he doubted the Trani.ms h~ve the
sophisticated anti-aircraft weapon.
"If they had them. they wou ld have used them
agai ns t the Iraqis." Vernon Walters sa id in an
interview with NBC .

Slacks ... S11.96
Slacks ... S16.46
Slacks ... S22.46
Slacks •.. S26.21

REG. 17.00 TO IJS.OO

$55 cj TO $1 19 9
Dav Sale
Columhur

CASSETTE TAPES

Select group of rock, popular and
country tapes.
REG. 15.79 TO 111.79

'

While
Thav Last

ELBERFELDS
POM.EROY

l/' 2 PRICE•

.-

Racine Village Cou ncil has
given fin al approval to a vicious
day ordinance which w ill go into
effect on Oct. 21.
The ordinance provides tha t
owners must register vicious
d9gs with the chief of pollee and
must pay a $5 registration fee;
dogs inusl be kept In a locked
enclosure with a covered top a nd
mu st be kept on a cha in so they
cannot reach the sides of the
enclos ure ; when out of enclo-

sures dogs must be muzzled and
kept on a chain no longer than six
feet a nd co nt rolled and ha ndled
by a suitable person; owners
mu st have liabilitY insura nce in
effect in the amount of $50,000.
Violation of any par t of the
ordinance is a · fi rst degree
misdemeanor which carries of
fine of $1,000 a nd 11 six month jai l
term . .
Frank Cleland reported that he
had fi'led a com munity block

grant a pplication wit h· the county
com m issioners In the amount of
$4,860 for park materials. Coun·
ell discussed illegal parking all of
the villa ge and decreed that
parking regulations will be enforced ·jn the entire town. It was
also decided to post no parking
signs at the in tersection of Route
338 a nd Main St.
·
The police report presented to
coupcil showed six ca lls a nsCo nt inued on page 5

Reagan .favors vote this week
· WASHINGTON tUPI) -The
Columbus Day holida y today
gave President Reagan a chance
to relax and hi s aides a chance to
regroup on the eve of last-ditc h
effort to make the most of a bad
situation : Robert Bark's Su·
preme Court bid.
Reagan returned to the White
House to face the Bark controv ersy after an ex tended weekend

a

IN CHARACTER- Artist Murk .McComas was
'o n hand for Saturday's falllestlval-blcenlennlal
ce lebration In Racine lu draw cartoon characters

Name Meigs

BLUE DENI·M

DRESS

/

-1 00% Continuous Filament Nylon
-Treated w/Teflon Carpet protector
-Armstrong Limited S-Year Carpet Warranty
Choose from 2 great color.s - in stock
Barr· Brown or Mauve.
REG. 117.00 sq. yd,.

MEN'S st9ts

S1S.95
521.95
529.95
S34.95

1 Section. 12 Pages

New Racine dog ordinance
will be effective· October·21

BUXTON
. LEATHER
SPECIAL

MEN'S DEPARTMENT tax deduction and tightened rules
for several others. Individual
Retirement Accoun ts lose their
full d'e ductibility if you're covered by a company pension plan
or if your income exceeds $29,000
lor single filers or $40,000 for joint
filers . .
4. Determine your taxable
income. Subract deductions and
exemptions from .gross Income
tdo determine taxable income.
5. Computer _your tax liability .
Using the 1987 tax rate schedu le,
ca lculate your tax liability. 1!
esti mated total withholding is
lower than your tax . liability,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. October 12, 1987

.;.,.

It's corn harvest time

because of incorrect withho ld·
ing. A few calculations ca n help
yo u avoid ihat unplea sa nt

'

enttne

Another U.S. warship joins conyoy operation

COLUMBUS DAY
WOMEN'S

Federal regulations make grain
elevators safer workplace expert says

Meigs County agent's corner

at y

co n t r o I ll n g u n d e s.i r a b 1e
vegetation.
Wh ' t
b
f lh
1 e amur. a mem er o
e
minnow family that m ay weigh
60 pounds or more, feed on rooted
aq uatic plants such as coontail,
duckweed. a lgae, and cattails.
These fish represent a biological
control that m ay reduce the need
to use aquatic herbicides.
The tri ploid form of whit e
a mur is sterile, reducing the risk
of the fish escaping. from ponds
a nd lakes and becoming es tablished In river syste ms where
their eating could a lter the
.habitat lor other species of fi sh,
waterfowl and furbeare rs .

•
plan. now
You need a conservation
By

•

•

and managers a new tool for

·

. '· ,. :-,· ,_.··~ , .
., ' '"r• .,.• -.. .,,.. .

t

32-40.11-28-19-2

Clear tonight. . Frost. Low
hetween 30 and 35. Sunny
Tuesday. lligh between 55 and
60.

Leigh Leach, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Char les Leach, Pome·
roy, was crow ned Meigs High
Sc hool Hom ecomin g Queen by
, Hi gh ·Sc hool Prin cipal Fenton ·
Tay lor In pre-game ceremonies
held at the Marauder Stadium
F rid ay night.
Apologies are extended to Miss
Leach'and her court by The Daily
Sentinel. Photographs of activities did not tu rn out.
Cand ida tes entered the foot ball field in convertible a utorno
biles and then were presented to
the large crowd on hand as they
moved through a formation pro·
vided by the Meigs High School
Band.
A senior cosmetology studen t,
Miss Leach is treasurer of the
Vl CA Club and is a member of
T.L a nd F .C.A. She was escorted
Friday eveni ng by Cary Betzing,
son of Mrs . Barbara Bctzlng,

.

.

of willing subjects. Here, McComas draws RaCine
resident Brandl Mallory .

0

ho~ecoming_

Pomeroy.
Making up the queen's court
were:
~
Laura Co bb, daught er of
Donna Branham .. Pomeroy. She
is a member of the Middlepor t
Churc h of Chris t and is an active
participant In T .J. and Studen t
Co uncil. She Is enrolled in college
preparatory classes. Her escort
was Shawn Fetty, so n of Mr. and
.Mrs. Richard Fetty of Rutland.
Sherr y Cooper, d aughter of
Tom and Cathy Cooper, Middleport. She Is a · m ember of the
Middleport Church of Christ and
is an active member of the
Nationa l Honor Society, Student
School and T. l . A co llege prepara tory student , she was a delegate
to Buckeye Girls State. She was
escorted by Todd Powell, son of
Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry Powell,
Pomeroy.

queen

J odie Ervin, daughter of Joyce
and Ja ck Ervin of Salem Center.
A sen ior cosmetology student,
Ervin is a varsity cheerleader,
vice president of VICA and a
member of student council. She
has been active in 4-H fo r eight
years. She was escorted by Don
Nicke ls, sonofEiizabethandDon
Nickels.
S!jsa n Sa ndy, daught er of Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Sa ndy, Salem
Cent er. A college preparatory
student, she ha s been In cheerleading fo r four years . She is an
active member of T.I., student
counci l and the French Club. She
serves as an office assistant a nd
.was a delegate to Buckeye Girls
Sta le. Her escort was Decker ·
Cullum s, son o( Day a nd Kay
Cullum s of Hemlock Grove.
The young a ttendan ts for the
queen and her court were Corey
Stewart and Amber Roush.

unlikely.
"No illusions." the phrase
Bork used Friday as he vowed to
push his case to a fu ll vote in the
Senate despite a firm majority
opposing him, was one echoed by
top administration offi cia ls over
the weekend as they braced for
the final round of a knock-down,
drag-out fig ht with profound
Con tinued on page 5

Quake victims pack
relief centers in ·LA

INDIA

IIUAMA

Bay of
Berlf}ill

Moutl1s ot the Irrawaddy

Forty-nine ·die, ·including 1'4 Americans
· in the con tex t of heightened
ancient city of Pagan1 295 miles
RANGOON. Bur'ma \UP II tensio
ns
In
the
Middle
Eas
t
and
north of Rangoon. government
U.S. officia ls "see no connect
he
embassy
reac
ted,"
the
sparadio sa id.
tion" between an ' anti-U .S. terkesman
said
of
a
request
for
The brief radio report sa id the
rorist threat and a Burmese
beefed
up
pollee
protection.
Fokker
Friendship F-27 twin
plane crash that killed ali 49
"But
with
the
Information
we
Jurboprop
plane belonging to the
people aboa rd; Including 14
have
now,
we
see
no
connection
··government-owned
Burma AirAmericans, an embassy spokesbetween the report and the p'lane
ways Corp. "crashed after a
man said.
cras h. There a re no indications • mid-a ir fire near Phanaun.g
Government radio said today
village'· shortly before it was due
the domestic ai rliner caught fi re , there were circumstances of a
bomb."
. to land at 8: 11 a.m.
in a mdnsoon downpour early
Another embassy official said
Sunday and smas hed Into a ridge
" It was learned that there were
Burmese
teams were working
scattered with' a ncient Buddhist
no
survivors among the 49 peop le
to
recover
bodies
from
the
today
pagodas.
a
board,
" It sa ill.
crash
s
it
e.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman in
The
U.S.
spdkestpan said Bur"The
Burmese
told
us
the
Rangoon said officials saw "no
mese
a\lthoritles
reported It was
plane
Is
badly
brok
en
up
and
they
connection" between the crash
raining
at
the
time
of the crash.
expect difficulty In identifying
and a Middle Eas.t terrorist
Bur
m
a
is
currently
In the mon·
the' bodies," the official said.
threat. against ·Americans In
soon
season
of
heavy
rainstorms
Burma that promptcdsteppedup 1 Thirty-six foreign tourists and
and
occasional
high
winds
.
13' Burmese were killed In the
security at the U.S; mission
He
said
14
1\mericans
were
cras h about 20 miles south of ·
Saturday.
listed
as
having
boarded
the
Nyau ng-u ir~p serving the
" It was an unconfirmed report

stay a t Camp David, Md . - a
breat her that followed a chaotic
few day s in which Bork's nomination ran up agai ns t defeat.
Asked whether he would like to
see the Sena te dispose of the
mat ter with a vote this week,
Reagan replied. "Yea, sure."
While Senate leaders said debate
could start In the next few days, a
final vote this week appears

UPI GTaplaK:

CRASH SITE - A Burmese
domesti c airliner flying
through monsoon rains
crashed Sunday Into a ridge
studded with 12th-ce11tury
pagodas, killing all 49 people
on board, Including H Americans, according to govern·
ment radio and Western diplomats. (UPI)
plane in Rangoon. A spokesman
of Diethelm Travel company in
Bangkok said 24 tourists and the
Thai tour leader were booked on
the flight by .Diethelm. He said
the compa ny had telexed. notifl·
e.rion to all nexi r ' kin.

LOS ANGELES (UP I) -Thousand s of victims of the deadly
Oct. 1 ear l hquake endured long
lines. rai n showers and the latest
in a series of aftershocks as they
applied for federal help on
opening day for ·disaster-relief
cent ers.
Among the ·services most frequen tly sought as the centers
opened Sunday were temporary
housing, Small Business -AdminIstration low-interes t loans and
individual family grants. None of
the thousa nds who appeared at
the seven relief cent ers actually
received financial assistance
Su nd ay . .
People mostly left with an
armful of application forms to
complete. ThoSe seeking aid
have up to 60 days to file the
application s. Officials said reim·
bursement from the government
could take from two weeks to
several months.
''They won't walk away wi th
any money ~Iter they've been. here. but hopefully they'll walk
away with a better understandIng of what assistance is available," said Dale Keller, a spokes·
mart for the Federal Emergency
Management Agency .
Some of the applicants arrived
as early as 6 a. m. and many kept
their places even while thundershowers passed . throug h the
area. Lines outside the center.s
cou ld be seen as late as 3: 3~p . m .,
when an aftershock to the Oct . 1
quake struck.
The aftershock, which registered at a magnitude of 3. 0 on the
Richter sca le at Cal tech Seimology Laboratory ln Pasadena,
rattled windows but no damage
or injuries were reported. It -was
the 28th aftershock measuring
3,0 or more s~ce th: Oct. 1 quake,

registering 6.1.
The quake, and the hundreds of
afters hocks th at followed, killed
eight people, displaced as many
as 12,000 others and caused at
least $177 million in damage to
more than 10,000 businesses and
homes.
"We're so co nfused now and
overwhelmed," Kathy MaeDa·
nald, 33, said as she left a center
with a bundle of forms . "We're
really lost."
The mother of .two said the
most severe temblor to strike
·s outhern California in 16. years
left her family 's 77-year-old
dre&lt;:\m hou se in Whittier . a
suburb about lO miles east of
downtown Los Angeles. in
shambles.
.
MacDonald s aid she and her
husband , Jeff. bought their twostory home th ree years ago and
filled it with antiques . " It was
unique , with oak floors, lot s of
wood and a library with French
doors," she said .
But th e quoke. centered along
the Whittier fault line. shift ed the
hou se 5 . inches off its rock
foundation and was so powerful
that it buck led the fireplace. 1\n
aftershock mea suring 5.5 on the
Richter scale th ree .days later
pushed the housE&gt; back another 3
inches, she said.
The MacDonalds are now II\··
ing in a rented house. Their 011·n
home, apprai sed last year a t
$175,000, was condemned by the
city.
· The federal gra nts-are given to
disaster victim' who are unable
to meet their expenses or pay
back a loan. The program is
aimed at those wno were not
insured or do not have sufficient
credit to cover the cost of quake
damage.

'

�_,I

•

The Daily Selltinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, Oeldber 12. 1987

•

•

Commentary

Terrorist state -~---B_..::y_J_a_ck_._A_nd_e_r.~_o_n_an_d_D_al_e_v,_an_A_u_a

!T he Daily S~ntinel
.

llEVOTF,I) TO TIIF. ISTF.RF.STS OF THF. \IEH:S-~IASOS .\lliU

~tb

~

m~

~

·-==- ·
·-·

I"'T"'\o..... ..__
- . . f""T""":E! d

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhlishrr

.

BOB JIOEFLI&lt;'H

PAT WHITEHEAD .
Assblanl Puhlishrr/ fontrollrr

· · Gt•nPral Managt'r

A JViF.Mr&gt;FR 1• fTh1 l ' n il c•t! r l ' '":-lnl• ·rn nrinn ;d. lnl ;•nrl D.•il\ Pn ·... ~
A'-&lt;.:lll ·i :Hill l1 anc\ th r• Aml" r k :• n 1'\c • \\· ~p: qJI ' I Pul)li:o-h!'l"!- A ... ~rwi : lliun .
I.F11Tn~ OF nPI,JO:-.: ;ll t' tu •l •·nm• Tht •\ .;htoUI!I h1 • It ·~-~ lt\:111 ; :~1!1 li Pi d-._
h •n•·· i\l ll •·l ll ' t ".ll • · "Lfh · t ·•llfll'( \ll ir~..:.•tH I mu " l 11/' &lt;. ,g nt ·dl\ itllnn m •· :n l lhl · ~-. ;,nd

lt •·Jt·pln: nl · t1umlll. :l' '\1 1 \l n'-i).2 rwd 11·11 1'1'" " il l Ill ' put11.l-.hl ·r1

i.l'l ll'l ~

the despossessed and disillusl· too, for suicide fighters. After
oned Shiites, then recruited and · four . to six months of intensive
training. the grailuates came out
trained them as ter rorist s.
Sullen young men, who had professional terrorists, fanatical
been nobodies going nowhere, in their faith , sworn to die for the
suddenly were somebOdi es. The Islamic revolution.
One former terrori st, who lost
aya lbliah commissioned them
hi
s
enthusiasm for dying, told
"soldiers or God," told them they
Newman
!hat most terorists will
were Invincible and taught them
carry
out
Khome!ni's orders to
puritanical Islam , with· a fierce
the
dea
th.
"Nothing will stop
hatred for Israel and America .
them,"
he
said.
He had joined the
Their training center was a
dominant
terrorist
group, Hezformer Leba·n ese armey outpost,
bollah,
to
fight
Israel
, he said.
called Sheik Abdullah barrac~s.
Across
the
Bekall
Valley,
lhe
on a hillsid e overlooking
land
sca
pe
is
littered
wiiQ
Baalbek.
Ideological indoc trinalion wa s scrawled slogans and printed
given precedence over the terror- postt:'fs calculated to jnclte
lsi tra'ining. Bul the trainees hatred among the Shiite masses.'
were shown how tu handle Khome!ni's stern, patriarchal
weapons and explosives. They countenance glowers down from
were taught the grim arts of road signs and wallside murals,
·sabotage, kid_napplng and hijaCk- and his crowed-enrapturing oraing. There was a sp~ciai course, tions are broadcast over loudspeakers. This has struck a deep
.
""-.
chord
in the area 's Shiites.
8'~~ fORT WOfiinl.,...--...s~fZTTA
Khomeini
rules the Bekaa
t\UI.Mf
Valley by slogans and sermons,
"""
Intrigues and alliances. He uses
demag0 guery to hold the many
and terrorism to intimidate the
few. Yet he Is not above handing
out cold cash when words faiL He
dtgs into his oil coffE'rs to pay
sala ries to terrorists and to bribe
t-hose whom he can't mesmerize.
Some Shiite women told Newman they are paid lo wear the
black chador, which covers their
faces. This gives the false im·
pression that the Shiite community, which has always been
fragmented by bitter rivalries, is
united behind Khomeini and his
fundamentalist movement. He
also distributes welfare and
provides social services to impoverished Shiite villages.
Khomeinl' s investment in his
Islamic state in the Bekaa Valley
has been minimal. For \he most
part, ihe terrorist s finance their
own operations by refining and
smuggling hashish. Municipal
services are strictly limited.

mto warring factions, the Bekaa
Valley was a playground for lhe
rlch, who were attracted by its
lush gardens and gentle breezes.
The valley also attracted crime
lord s, who operated at the
subterranean level , growing, refining and marketing hashi sh.
But the villages were heavily
populated by Shiite Moslems, the
perennially poor ·and down trod·
den, who did the grunt work and
rese nted the monied classes.
man has just returned from
As Lebanon was plunged into
there, with an e~elusive, eyewit chaos,
Kyomeinl took advantage
ness report on how Kyomelni has
of
Ihe
political, economic and
tra nsformed this corner or Le·
social
disruption
to bring his ·
banon into a te.rr.orist stronghold.
Islamic
revolution
to the Bekaa
She traveled through this dangerValley.
He
dispatched
several
ous land with a trigger-ready
revolullonary
guards
to
hundred
milit ary escort of Lebanese
the
city
of
Baalbek,
where
they
bodyguards and Syrian commandos, arranged by a Lebanese set up headquarters in a dilapi·
dated, downtown building called
warlord .
Before Lebanon was splintered - "HosseiniPh'' They sought out ·

WASHINGTON - Ayatollah
Khomeini has established
another Islamic state, a thco·
cratic re;:ime afler the Iralnian
model, In the Bekaa Valley o[
eastern Lebanon . It is a frighten·
tng ·and forbidding place patrolled by Syrian soldiers, yet
co ntrolled from afar by Khomelni and overrun with hi s
terrorists.
Our associate Barbara New·

Ill Court Stret•t
Ponwroy, Ohio

Upshaw accuses
NFL ·of testing
·play~rs's unity

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Monday. October 12, 1987 .

:-: h'r•&amp;ltl bt · ltl

!' ln •d 1:•'-11 •. : ulllr ' t · , ., lnJ~ '""ll ' '" !1&lt;•1 Jll'l',l-• •n:.l il il•s

Mistakes on Bork

TYSONS CORNER, Va. (UPf) son's replacement football was
-NFL Players Assoctano n chief met by peaceful protests Sunday
Gene Upshaw accused manage- outside stadiums and by crowds
ment of breaking · off contract larger than last week'-s Inside
.
·
talks to test the so lidarjty of stadiums.
In
Green
Bay.
Wis.,
Miami,
striking players. and called a
Dallas
and
Chicago,
striking
meeting of union representatives
to dis cuss strategy as the strike players were. jo!ned on picket
lines by local unions.
entered !Is 21st day toda y.
In Dallas , more than 40,000
NFL chief negotiator Jack
fans
watched the Cowboys defeat
Donlan walked out Sunday after
the
Philadelphia
Eagles. Crowds
six days of contract talks, blam·
of
more
than
30,000
were on hand
ing the union for creating a
in
Green
Bay
and
Indianapolis ,
rbadblock with its newe st freeAttendance was poor in Atlanta
agency plan .
The professional football play- and at East Rutherford, N.J., for
ers are seek ing a contract to the Giants.
Donlan said the union will have
replace the collective bargaining
to
modify its stands on key
agreeme·nt that expired Aug. 31.
issues.
·
Some 1.600 NFL players walked
"I
think
they
hav e ov~r ­
off the job Sept. 22, but more than
committed
or
over-reached
on
100 have returned.
any
number
of
positions:··
non·
"It's no doubt it was orchestrated," !Jpshaw, executive di - -Ian said. "We're at a roadblock.
rector of the NFL Players We're mired down, there isn' t
Association, said of Donlan's any question about that."
Upshaw said Donlan was using
walkout Sunday. "They wan led
the
new free-agency offer as a
to walk out !Saturday). Ob"smoke
screen" to obsc~re other
viously, lliey came here to walk
out, to test the players once issues, including the owners'
again, lo see If we could hold the attempt "to take greater control
over the pension plan and gain a
players together."
. ' Donlan, execu live director nf longer collective bargaining
the . Managem ent Council, the agreement.
Management's proposal on the
league's bargaining arm, dis·
pension
would give owners
missed Upshaw's claim.
greater
control
over the current
"!was hoping by now Wf"WO uid
jointly
administered
pian. Manhave some sort of breakt hrough
agement
would
be
permitted
to
dn the major issues, and that
keep
any
interest
generated
from
would allow somP of the other
things to fall into pla ce," Donlan the $220 million pension fund .
" We dropped (unfettered) free
said. "(But\ ali you're doing is
agency,
but we don't have a
going over and further entrenching yourself in positions you had contract because it was only a
smoke screen on the real issues,
before."
Donlan and Upshaw met for which are pension, guaranteed
about 35 hours during the last six contracts, player rep protection
days of bargaining in the Wa· and the whole list of things,"
shington, D.C.. suburb and Upshaw said.
reached agreement on eight
ancillary issues . But the major
His April 20 opening proposal
issues - Including fr ee agency._ included free agency - the
pension, drug testing a nd gua - ability of a player to sell his
ranteed contracts --' remained services to other clubs once his
unresolved, as the strike entered contract has expired - for ail
its 21st day today.
players . Saturday. Upshaw presBoth sides said no new talks ented Donlan with a new offer
were planned.
that would refaln a club's rlght of
A strategy session was set in first refusal and compensation in
. Chicago for today between Up· the form of draft choices for lost
shaw and the union represen ta· players.
lives from ali 28 NFL clubs. The
The proposal would force clubs
union representatives lasl met
to make an offer of a 20 percent
with Upshaw Oct.
salary Increase and one-year
NFL players have struck the guaranteed contract Ia retaIn the
league five times in the past two
right to keep a free agent.
decades, including for 57 days in
Compensation levels would be
1982 . .
based ori (he player's old salary,
rather than any offer.
The second week of this sea-

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- Generals often are accused of planning to fight
the next war Ihe way they won the last. That's how _the Reagan
administration got into so much trouble with the Supreme Court
nomination or Robert Bork.
,
• The basic strategy to get Bork confirmed was elementary: keep the
46 Republicans in the St'nate in line and split on some Southern
Democrats to provi de a majority for the nomination .
The White House did not expect a solid GOP vote:· men like Lowell · 1
Weicker of Connecticut. Bob Packwood of Oregon and Arlen Specter
of Pennsylvania weren't automatic votes even when President
Reagan was riding high in 1981-82.
But Republicans have been able to beat Democratic congressional
majorities many limes since World War II by forming coalilions with
conservative Democrats, usually from the South or West. to defeat
specific liberal proposals.
The GOP-Southern Democratic coa lition effectively controlled the
House and Senate in the 1950s, lost numbers and power in the 19_60s, . _.
rebuill in the 1970s .and provided Reagan with the votes he needetl to
win in his first tPrm .
Even though the Democrats regained control of the Senate a nd
bolstered -their hold on the Hou se In 1986, White House strategists
apparently felt they could resurrect the GOP-Southern Democratic
coalition to confirm a conservative Supreme Court nominee.
The relative ease with which Reagan got_conservative Justice
Anton in Scalia confirmed la st year may have lulled the White House
.brain trust.
What they didn't count on this time was the ability of the liberals to
There is no running water. no
"Wow! The latest poll shows we'r~ fooling 47 percent of the people 63
lear n from Reagan and his s upporters and to adopt th'eir tactics.
sanitary servic,es, little health
And, just as importan t in making slrate(zy, they didn't examine the
care.
premise that Southerg De mocrat s would welcome a Supreme Court percent of the time."
nomine&lt;&gt; who would arouse the opposition of civil rights . women's and
civi l liberties groups.
· In the case of tac tics. the libera·ls-a bsorbed some bitter defea ts in
the ear ly 1980s as Reagan supporters rallied public support for the
presidenl's programs with m assive and costly publicity campaigns,
a familiar (and annoying! aspect stale of Florida is the first of I he Rush. Every city and state will
R!poffs come in assorted sizes.
us ing artful telev ision appeals. ma ss mailings and deluges of
have It s own idea of how much
and as ripoffs go, the one I have or air travel \0 anyone who has sovereign 50 to lap this handy
telegrams to overwhelm opposition,
source
of
·
revenue.
charging
ought
to be charged, and Its own
flown in other countries. 1'hls
just come across is thus far only
It" s worth noting that liberals denounced these campaigns as
airlines
a
$1.00
"fuel
rax"
for
surcharge,
amounting
to
anyexcuse for charging it. There
medium-sized. But it IS aln,ady a
unfair, superficial .and dangerou s to the health of democratic
thing from two io 10 dollars , is every passenger boarding a
may be some interesting battles
paJn in the neck to travel agents.
government.
imposed at many airports on plane anywhere in the state.
based on prestige (should San
and it has the potential of
But when Scalia sailed through to confirmation and the Bork
But the prize for the biggest Francisco charge more Ihan Los
departure and paid, in cash, by
becoming a serious burden to
nomination threatened to g ive the high court a firm conservative
surcharge (so far. anyway) goes Angeles? 1 and competition for
the passenger himself.
commercial aviation and a rna ·
m ajo rit y. they eagerly ado pted the tactics they had so deplored a few
In this country, so far. the local to Chicago, which imposes a tax tourists (will Mia mi charge less
jar additional expense to every
years earlier.
taxing authorities have pre- of nine bucks for every passenger than Honolulu?).
airline
passenger.
As to lhe SouthPrn s trategy , the pres iden t's men apparently
All this could be avoided If
In a nutshell : Three cllies and · fer red to leave colieclion of the depa rting the Windy City. What' s
ignored evervt hing that has happened si nce enactment or the voting
more,
there
's
no
nonsense
about
surchange
to
the
airlines.
which
Congres
s would only drag itself
one sta te have made the delight ·
rights law and the movement of Norther n-ba sed industry to the Sun
usin
g
this
money
10
pay
for
in
turn
have
rightly
passed
it
away
from
its nPw fascination
ful discovery that they can
Belt ..
alrpcir.t
improvements
or
anywith
foreign
policy long enough
along
to
the
passe
ngers-:
listing
impose an indirect _tax on every
So uthern polfticians now ca mpaign for black votes and repudiate
thing
like
that;
every
nickel
or
it
it
separately.
rather
than
inciud·
lo
"preempt
the field " and
passenger who flie s out of th eir
anyt hing tha t smacks of the race -ba itin g of the pas t. Further, they
goes
straigh.t
into
the
city's
lng
it
in
the
overall
price
of
the
ra
tionalize
the
whole affair.
deal with an increas ingly urbaniz,ed. well-educated, sophisticated · territory a nd require the airlines
general
revenues.
American
Ai
r
·
ticket.
so
the
passengers
will
There may bP no sound reason
to collect it for them. As soon as
electorate tha t docs not pigeo n-hole women as mothers and
linPs battled Chicago ali the way · why states and municipalities
· ttie other 49'states and America' s ' know whom to blame .
hou se\\' ivC's, and does not vearn for the social code a nd economi.r
to the state Supreme Court on shouldn't be allowed to tax
thousands of municipaiitiers and
s tagnation of thP Old South·.
As a res ult, evNy passenger thi s 9ne. but lost.
airline fuel or airport services If
counties with airports find out
The effort to get Sou thern senators io support Bark becausl' he and
Why isn't this kind of "sur- they want to tthough they are
flying out of Logan Airport in
about
this,
they
will
proceed
to
his ideas would be warm ly wel~omed in their region probabln&lt;•as the
impo se similar taxes them- Boston pa ys $1.00 to Ihe . city. charge" imposed by ~II the other barn•d b&gt;· law from directly
O"rings in the White House drsi~n to make the nomination fly.
selves, and the cost of airline ailegelliy as a fupi tax imposed on statPs. co unties. and municipali- tax ing the sa le of air transporta As noted. the plan was elementar)· politics . bu t so was the mistake
tickets will zoom accordingly. th e airlines. People flying out of ties? As far as I can sPe, only l ion) . but there is everv reason to
in it s execu tion. The \\'hit c House undC'restimatcd its oppos ition and
The pape:rwork imposed on the · Las Veg as are hit by lhe city because they haven ' t thought of sim p lify a nd regul-arize th e
misjudged its support.
a irlines - collecting and remi t- fathers for S7.50 a piece to help it yet. But you can bet I hey will : procedurC's. As matters stand ,
ting varying amounts to every defray the expense of the new and when they do , the re sult will we arc heading s traight for a
city and sta te - simply doesn't air port, des igned along the lines be the bigges t and mo st chaotic (!lajor restra int on interstate
of the Taj Mahai and costing diplay of determint:'d hum an commercr.
bear thinking about.
"Ai rport taxes" are. of course. several times as much. And the greed si nce the Oklahoma Land
tag.~?

Picking money out ol the air

By William Rusher

s:

..
Rio soccer team loses to Heidelberg

RIO GRANDE - Injuries and
illness plagued Rio Grande's
soccer team as it entered Saturd'a y's contest with Heidelberg,
ending with a 2-1-Heidelberg win
over the Redrnen .
· The loss puts Rio Grande at 2-5
overalL
"It was close,'' Rio Grande
Coach Phil Anderson com·
mented afterward. "The people
we had played well, bu I it' s not
our team. But considering that it
was a patched- up tea m , they did
ll hell of a job. If we had the other
five (players!, it wouldn't have
been a c9ntest."
The Redmen were minus five
key pla yers in the game, sparking a hard-fought co nt es t with

,

Letters to the editor
Why not ·cat

Dear Sir:
We seen in the paper, that -dog
ta gs wNe going to be raised after
the n rs l of the year. As a dog
owner. I was wondering why

small game and birds . It jus t
doesn't seem fa ir . that people
th at own dogs are having to buy
ta gs, whiir people that own ca ts,
g,., off frer . Us dog owners th ink

people who own cats do not havr

as much of ou r dogs, as cat

to.buy iags for their cats. Proplr
who own dogs has to keep thicr
dogs ·confined. wh il e cats arr
permitted to run free. killing

owners think. of thier cats.
Thank you
Robert L. Richmond

Seeks

a~;-,istance

We ask [or your assista nce:

day morning. October 31. or
individua ls may drop these items
off a t the schooL Please do not
se nd any glass to school with
children. All conta iners should
be in plastic bags, and newjnpers bundled .

Why nuclear freeze

administrafion.

The s tory is well told by
Douglas Waller in "Congress and
the Nuclear Freeze: An lnsid&lt;•
Look at the Politics of a Mass
Movement " (U niversit y of Massachusetts Press).
Any rp.one.v receive(t rrom lhi ~
ln" a for eword to the book , Sen .
projec:t will be · used lo buy
Edward Kennedy observes:
playground equ ipment. Thank
"The ri se of the nu clear freeze
you _Jor yo_~r support in Ihis
movement displays a fundam enproject .
ta l stren gt h of representative
Please save your ;tluminuJil
.-:a rever Conserv ing,
democracy at its best - the
cans, glass containers ~no win·
&lt;..: andra Baer an d Syracuse
power of individual citizens to
dow glass or broken glass I. ami
Fourth Grade
infiu~nce their government. and
newspapers. Stude nts will make
even to change the course of
a hous&lt;:'-io -hou se drive on Sa fur history."
Waller makes clear that tho:
overwhelming majority of Amer·
leans- not just radica ls or peace
activists- indicated in poll after
By United Press intern~Uonal
poll it s support for a mutua I,
Today is Monday, Oct. 12. the 285th day or 1987 with 80 to follow .
verifiable
halt to further nuclear
Today is Columbus Day.
arms
production
or testing.
The moon is waning , moving toward its la st quarter.
That
wide-ranging
support for
The morning stars are Mars a nd Jupiter .
a
mutual
halt
lo
the
nuclea
r arms
The e11enlng stars are Mer~ury, Venus and Saturn.
race
manifested
it
self
most
Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They in clude
c
learly
in
the
House
of
RepresenEimer Sperry, who devised practical uses for the gyroscope, in 1860;
English composer Ralph Va ughn· Williams in 1G72; civil rights tatives, whose members must
activist Dick Gregory and Utah Republican and space shuttle face the voters every two years .
Sparked by the Kennedy·
traveler Sen. Jake Garn in 1932 (age 55), and opera- star Luciano
Hatfield Resolution sponsored by
Pavarotti in 1935 (age ~2 ).
the Massachusetts senato r and
Oregon Republican Sen. Mark
On this date in history:
In 1492, Cnristopher Columbus discovered America, making his · Hatfield, th e freeze effort had
strong bipartisa n ba ckin g In the
first landing in the New World on one of the Bahama islands.
Senate,
but it never had the
Columbus believed he had reached India . ·

Mrs. Barr's Fourth Grade
Class of Syracuse El&lt;•mcntary is
stuaying a unit on litt er con trol.
As a part of th a t st ud y. they are
participating in the _co un ty-wide
recycling program for t)w month
of Qctobcr. They would like to
ask all parents of s tudcnis and
ot her residents of Syra cuse to
assist In thi s drive .

momentum ac hieved by ' the
grass -roots pressure that played
so effectively in the Hous&lt;&gt;.
Why did the frC'ew movement
not prevail des pite its popul ar
appeal?
.
President Reagan and his
advisers orchestrated lhe polit·
irs of arms control to defuse , if
not confuse. the nu clear freez&lt;&gt;
mov ement. After pushing ahead
on t=.~n e-ven bigger nuclear armS
pileup dur ing hi s first yea1· and a
half in office. Reagan began to
feci the heat co ming from Con gress and the country in support

One or the mos t fascinating
movement's in recent politics was
the nuclear freeze effort of
1982-83. It tapped into the underlying peace and survival senti ·
mentor the na tion , and thou gh it
did not ha lt the arms race, it
helped s_low the mindless escalation of the R eaga n

of il rms con1 rol.

J

..

'-1

Heidelberg. The score was 1·1 at
the half, and an Eric Burger goal
late in the second half snapped
the deadlock.
Burger also scored Heidel·
berg's other goal, receiving an
assist from Chad Rhoades.
Ronnie Goodson, a freshman
from Minford, scored Rio
Grande's only goaL
Rio goalkeeper Chris Krueger ,
a sophomore from Grove City.
was spelled during the game by
freshman John Sexton of Lynch·
burg, who had eight saves for the
Red men. Heidelberg's Mike Wall
recorded eight saves.
The Redmen will return to
action Tuesday against Ashland
in a 4 p.m. game at home.

movement of the 1980s and the
end-the -war movement of the
late l9 60s-.and early 1970s represent AmQrican democracy al its
best.
l com mend Douglas Walli'r"s
book to all thos(' who would
unde rstand bot h the promisC'and
the problems of cit izenship in our
troubled Am&lt;'rican democ racy.

By JOEL SJIERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Clear winners and losers have
surfaced among teams during
tht'N FL strike.
Houston and Indianapolis,
teams expected to be also-rans in
the AFC, have emerged as big
winners through the first two
weeks of games between non-.
striking players. Dallas, · San
Francisco, Chicago and Wa·
shington have made strong
moves, particularly away from
the defending Super Bowl champion Giants, the team they were
s upposed to pursue In the NFC.
Joining the Giants as huge .
strike losers are Minnesota, the
Jets and Philadelphia.
Sunday's results on the field.
and news from strike negotia·
lions at Tysons Corner, Va.,
indicated this type of winning
and losing !118Y continue much
longer.
In Virginia, negotiations between Management Council head
"Jack Donlan and Players Association chief Gene Upshaw broke
off with no talks planned. The
players' strike becomes 21 days
old today. The second week of
''replacement" games concludes
ends tonight when the Raiders
play at Denver.
At Cleveland, the Oilers improved to 3-1 for the first time ·
since 1979 by beating the Browns
15-10. Houston has beaten the
teams that ap_peared In the AFC
title game In consecutive weeks.
"We got a confidenceboost in .
beating Denver (40-10) last week,
and it's built up from there,"
flmiston quarterback Brent
Pease said.
At Indianapolis, the Colts, 2-2 . .
climbed into a four-way tie for
first place in the AFC East by
defeating the J~ts 6-0 on two field
goals in th!&gt; Hoosier Dome by
Steve Jordan, a former construction worker who had never before
been inside a domed stadium .
When asked how he felt about
winning his first (wo games and
losing twice with substitute play·
ers, Jets Coach Joe Walton
scowled and said. "Why don't
you look at my face?"
•
At Irving, Texas, a crowd of
40.622 - the largest Sunday cheered loudly for substitute
players and booed Cowboys star
halfback Tony Dorestt during
Dallas' 41·22 thumping of Ph!ia·
delphia, ·0-2 in replacement
games and 1-3 overall. The
Cowboys, 2-0 and 3-1, generated
three touchdowns In its first six
plays.

Mowery wins
senior event
ATLANTA (UPI) - Larry
Mowry said sinking his winning
putt on the 13th hole of the
$250,000 PGA-Pepsi Senior Chal·
ienge shattered his dream or
besting the "lmmort&amp;l" Arnold
Palmer in a head-to-head duel on
the 18th green.
"I had a letdown after birding
13. The dream I had wasn't going
to happen afterall," said Mowry,
playing a threesome with
Palmer and Gary Player in the
final round. "I had to pull myself
together to realize the 18th hole
wasn't going to happen."
Instead, Mowry parred the
18th for a 13-under-par 203.
Arnie's Army, meanwhile, saw
the golf legend put his lee shot
into a stand of pines, plop his
third shot into the water. chip
another into the sand trap, and
finish with a !riRie bogey and a
round of 77 to lie for'fifth place.
Of his disastrous performance
on the 18th, a hole he had eagled
Saturday, Palmer said, "Why it
happened when it happened,
Lord knows."

The Daily Sentinel

'

'·. .

the third quarter of Sunday's contest in Cleveland.
The Browns were penalized five yards lor an
unintenlional face mask. Houston went on to win
l:i-10. (UPI)

GRABS FACE MASK- Browns' salety Brian
Dudley grabs the face mask of Houston Oilers'
running back Herman Hunter after a short gain in

At Atiant'l, quarterback Joe watched New York become the
Montana ·and running backs league's lone 0-4 team.
"It doesn' t look -l ike we have
Roger Craig and Joe Cribbs any
playoff chances today,"
three of the 12 veteran 49ers who
Giants
Coach Bill Parcells said.
crossed the picket line this week
Elsewhere,
it wa s: New E'ng- keyed San Francisco's 22-15
iand
14,
Buffalo
7; Delroit 19,
victory over Atlanta, which enGreen
Bay
16inovertime;
Miami
tered as a 22 ¥,-point underdog
42,
Kansas
City
0;
St.
Louis
24,
and fell to 1-3. The 49ers, 2-0 and
·
New
Orleans
19;
San
Diego
17,
3-1. built a 20-0 lead before Coaeh
Bill Walsh pulled most or his Tampa Bay 13; Cincinnati 17.
St'attle 10; and Ra m s 31, Steelers
veterans.
At Chicago, the Bears' defense 21.
Patriots 14, Bills 7
imitated its predecessor by acAt Foxboro, Mass .. Mike LeBcumulating nine sacks en route to
defeating Minnesota 27-7. The lanc carried 35 . times for 146
Bears are 4-0. The Vikings, yards to pace the P a triots, 2·2.
expected to be the most serious over Euffalo, 1-3, before 11,878
NFC Central challenger to. Chi· spectators, the smallest ~ullivan
cago. fell to 0-2 during the strike Stadium crowd ever.
Lions 19, Packers 16
and 2-2 oyerail.
At Green Bay, Wis., Mike
"It's disappointing that · we Prindle kicked a 31-yard fi eld
were off to a good start, and then goal with 2:34 left in overtime to
lift D'etroit, 1·3. · The Packer s,
I his strike shattered a dream for
1-2-1,
were applauded by 35.779
us," Minnesota Coach Jerry
Burns said. " The season wa s spectators in 57,093-seat Lamcoming together real well and beau Field.
Dolphins 42, Chiefs 0
now it seems everything tills
At
Miami,
the Dolphins. 2-2,
disintegrated."
played
a
penalty-free
second half
At East Rutherford, Washingand
turned
'two
Kansa
s City
ton, 2-0 and 3-1, won at Giants
fumbles
into
touchdowns.
Mia Stadium for the first time after
mi's
repiacement
-team
drew
four straight losses there. A
crowd of 9,123 - fewest for an cheers from an enthusiastic
crowd of 25,867 witnessing the
NFL game at Giants Stadium -

first regular-season game In $102
million {oe Robbie Stadium.
Kansa~ City fe ll to 1-3.
Cardinals'«, Saints. 19
At St. Louis, the Cardinals , 2-2,
won despi te just 11 yards passi ng
before a record-low crowd of
11.795 in Busch Stadium. St.
Louis has the most veteran
st rike -breakers , 18. The Cardinals had 143 total yards to 368 for
the Saints, 2-2.
Chargers 17, Buccaneers 13
At Tampa. Fla., Rick Neuhei·
sel came off the bench to
engineer I 7 second-half points for
San Diego; 3- I. The Bucs dropped
to 2-2.
Bengals 17, Seahawks 10
At Seattle, Marc Logan ru's hed
for 103 yards and a touchdown to
lead Cinclnnatf. 2-2, over Seattle,
2-2. The game was attended by
31,n9 - about 12.000 more than
last week's ga m e at the
Kingdome.
Rams 31, Stcelers 21
At Anaheim, Calif. , Charles
While. usually Eric Dickerson's
backup, ran for 166 yards and one
touchdown and Steve Dils threw
for two scores for the Rams , 1·3.
Dils, a backup to regular quarterback Jim Everett, was one of 11
veteran Rams to cross the picket
line. Pittsburg h dropped to .2-2.

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..,

A strategy was deve loped to
give the appearance of an arms
con trol policy. Nuclear freeze
advocates were s uddenly confronted by a pres ident ca lling for
deep cuts in strategic nuclear
weapons. The evide nce is overwhelming th at the admini str a·
lion was pot especially interes ted
In arms cqntrol, but in the
appearan~e of arms con1 rol.
That the presideAt largely
succeeded in deverting public
support for a true halt to the
nuclea r arms buildup demon strates , firs t, the immense politi·
cal forc e of a president determined to use his power skillfully
and, second. the lack of 'knowl edge about arms control that
handicap s much of the American ·
.
public.
Reagan's la ndslide win over
Walter Mondale, a support er of
the freeze, leaves llttleqoubt that
much of the public does not
appreciate the Importance of the ·
n_u clear is ~ ue .
Waller ~nderscores the rroba ·

Today in history

faile~~-~-By_c_e~orK~e._M_cc_o_ve_r~bility that the stature of Sen .
Kenn edy gave the freeze movemrnt national Jtlention a'nd force
it might nol otherwise ha ve
e njoyed. The other s ide or the
coin is th at the movement
grea tly st rengthened Kenne~y · s
a nd Ha tf!rld' s nationalstatureas
leaders committed to peace.
Indeed. th e nuclear free ze

Houston, Indianapolis big strike winners_

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I

LOGAN LEAPS - Bengal running back Marc Logan leap~ for a
six-yard gain during second-quarter action Sunday afternoon
against the Seattle Seahawks in Seattle. (UPI)

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Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

--Local briefs-___, Cold ·front spreads east into Ohio Valley

Twins. one victory aWay, from AL .fla.,g

-PERPLEXED - Minnesota pitcher Frank Viola, left, seems
perplexed as he waits ·to be relieved in the sixth inning of Sunday
night's i\merican League playoff game against the Tigers in
Detroit. Relief pitcher Jeff Reardon, right, who came in the ninth
frame and finished the game, relishes the last out. Viola was the
winning pitcher in the :I'wins' 5·3 victory. (UPI)

Jarvis' consecutive
streak ends at 964
By COLLINS VEi\R\\1000
UPI Sports Writer
The Jronman simpl y got too
rusty.
Center· boug Jarvis wa s
scratched from the Ha rtford
li neup Sunday night for the
Wha lers' game against the Boston Bruins. ending the longest
co nsecu tive-ga mes strea k in
NHL histo ry. Th,e Bruins defeated the Whalers 5·2.
Jarvis. 32 , who played in 964
games and hadn't missed one
since he was 19 years old,. ca lled
the benching a "positive ex perience ." His ice time is expected
tJJ be curtailed thi s seaso n with
the addition of Brent Peterson to
the Whalers ros ter.
"There's nothing nega tive atrached to it," Jarvis sai d of the
streak' s end. ''I'm gratefu l for
the numbers I put up.
. "Th ercal it yof my si)pationis l
wasn't goi ng. to play 80 games .
(Coach) Ja&lt;'k Evans discussed it
with me in trai ning camp before
the waiver dr aft. He told me he'd
be spelling me now and th en."
Ja rv is set the record In the
Wh alers' :\3 rd ga me last season.
"As a player . on the ice is
where I want to be. " he sa id
before the game. "A lot of guys
would be happy to play a string of
300 or 500 games. Th() game
. di cta tes that they' ll be fewer and
fewe r game s treaks .."
Randy 13urTidge a nd Ca m
Neel y eac h scored two goa ls to
lifr 1he Bruins.
Ray Bou rque . la st season's
Norri s Trophy winner. collected
two assists. Th~ Br uins erupted
for three· third-per iod . goals.
includi ng th~ pair by Burridge.
Doug Kea ns. making his first
sta rt of the S\'3SOn, Stopped 2:i
shots as the Bru in s sent ·t he
Wha lers 10 the ir third loss in as
man y games. Boston· improved

Anderson struck for three goals
and Wayne Gretzky added a goa l
a nd four assists to lead the
Oi lers. Ed m on ton bounced back
from an 0 pen ing-night loss to
sco re five · power-play goals In
seven chances and add a snort ·
handed goa l.

match agai ns t Dana Wo lery. of
Ports mouth . Wolery took the win
Il-l, 6-3 to co me in third in the
si ngles div ision.
According to Meigs At hlPtic
Direct or Gordon Fisher. Miss
Henderso n represen ted her' high
sc hool in an exempla ry fas hion
and wa s very outstanding in her
co urt play.
1\o informat ion w~s . available
on ·the eve ntual winner of th e

s ingles ti tle mat ch.

,

r

Meigs sports calendar
:vleigs Hig h Sport' Calendar
J~

Oetoh rr
Meig...,

thrn,October 16 .
Football

({( 1 ~Prvrs

at

Vinton

Co.- Oct. 12th

.
Seven,th Crade at Oak Hill Oct. l~th
Eighth Grndr vs. Vinton
Co.IHI- Oct. 15th
rres hm cn vs. Vinto nCo. IH IOc t. 15th

Var sit)· a t Rock Hill - Oct.
16th
Volleyball
MciP;s 1·s . Wellston (Hi - Oct.
13th
)Vleigs at Federa l Hocking Oct . 15th
Cross Country
Meigs vs. Trimble&amp; Alexander
a t Alexander -Oc t. 13th.

Horkry
'\Tin'\ \1,

If()( 1\t.'l U .
"o~.lun.l,,'&lt;·· n(' ... \111..

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C!u · ,

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1i H·•..,l·m .), Hf

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!';\' l~l.w tkr~; 'a!lltluw r 'l

'l'nrpnlo J..

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Mlontro•1t1 6. nUIIa.in J
"lunlpfl~ :1. full':ar.Y I
t'hlbdf'lphh• :;, \1innt-.utu I
J,J.&gt;l r\n ~f' ll "• I, "l. l .llpl., 2

"''rtdon ·., lh•., ull.,

•

\Ill 1-

ted three errors, including two by . Gaetti's fifth-inning' sacrifice fly , bobbled a grounder. Laudner
Evans at third base. ·'I'm not a pinch-hit double . by Gene moved to second on reliever Dan
concerned with my defense. ·I'm Larkin in the sixth and an P etry's wild pitch and advanced
losing and 1 never worry about eighth-inning RBI by Steve to third on Dan Gladden's groundout. Lombardozzi' shard-hit sinmy defense when T'm losing. Lombardozzl.
gle just under Evans' glove made
"I
anticipated
a
fastball
on
my
You'd better worry about your
It 5-3.
.
.
·home
run
and
I
got
the
good
part
offense. I cton ' t have to tell my
Berenguer,
who
saved·
Game
2
guys anything at this point. I of the bat on it." Gagne said. " It
2·3
strong
for
Blyleven,
pitched
2
don' t think they have to be told was pretty exciting out there
tonight ; we had some fun, a few Innings . Jeff Reardon, who won
anything.''
The Twins reached the brink of smiles. I thought the pickoff was Game 1 and yielded Pat Sheri· ',
. dan 's game-winning homer In the
their first World Series in 22 the :btg pl~_y of the game."
Detroit closed to 4-3 with one eighth inning Saturday , pltcheq
years. In each of the lasi two AL
Championship Series, though. a run · in the sixth, but Evans ' the final inning fo r the save.
Gagne' s first-Inning error put
team trailing 3·1 (Kansas City Jn shocking baserunnlng gaffe cost
Detroit
ahead 1-0 and Kirk •
1985 and Boston in I986) has the Tigers at least a run. Leadoff
Gibson
added
an RBI single In •
rallied to advance into the World singles by Chet Lemon and
Series. Overall, only seven of 36 Evans knocked out starter and the fifth. Detroit, which won 13
teams behind 3-1 in a postseason winner Frank Viola and placed more games than Minnesota
runners on the corners . Pinch during the regular season in
series have rallied successfully.
"I was just trying to be hHter Dave Bergman's opposite· posting baseball 's best record
aggressive," Evans said. "I field single to left off Keith (98-64). must now win three
wanted to get a good jump on a Atherton scored Lemon and Mike straight games. including two in
groundball or a ball in the dirt Heath's sacrifice advanced both the Metrodome. The Twins are ..
58-25 at home this year, Including ,·.
and have a chance to score. It runners.
2- 0 in th e playoffs.
.
.
•
Juan
Berenguer
replaced
was a big, big mistake Twins
,
who
stranded
nine
The
someth ing you don't ever want to Ather~n and, on the first pitch to
Lou Whitaker, taken for a ball. runners over the first six innings, . ,.
happen to you."
Laudner's throw to Gaettl nailed knocked out starter and loser "
Just five Minnesota players Evans , who was leaning toward Frank Tanana In going ahead~ - 2
entered the playoffs with pre- hom'e and slid belatedly back to in the top of the sixt h.
Gagne led off with a double tnt~··
vious pas tseason experience, but the bag. Berenguer's subsequent
the Twins have dis played more wild pitch, which moved Berg- the Ieft -fiela corner and adpoise than their experienced man to third, would have scored vanced on a wild pitch. Gagne"
counterparts . The Twins entered Evans with the tying run. After held on Laudner's bouncer, but.
Game 4 wjth just nine victories in Whitaker drew hi s third walk of Tanana hit Gladden with a pitch ·
35 road games since the All:Star the game, Jim Morrison !lied out for the second time in the game.' •.
break and they were coming off a · to end the decisive inning as Gene Larkin's pinch-hit double. ·
Evans watched glumly from the past third baseman Tom Brook: •
tough 7·6 loss Saturday. ·
ens put Minnesota ahead ~-2 •.
Tigers
dugout.
Puckett. who had just one hit in
knocking out Tanana. Dan Petry,
The
Twins
added
an
Insurance
14 playoff at-bats, hit a solo
entering
with runners on second ,;
run
in
"
the
eighth
with
the
he
lp
of
homer in the third. Gagne, who
and
third
and one out, retired · '
a
n
error
by
Evans.
Laudner
was 1 for 11, pui the Twins anead
Puckett
and
Gary Gaetti on.
2-1 with a fourth-inning home reached with one out when
grounders.
Petry allowed just · "
ru n. Minnesota also scored on Evans, who shifted from first
base ·to third in the seventh, one hit over 3 l-3 innings .

Giants step away from ·first flag in 25 years

to 2-l.
some of the things from 1Game the way Joe Price pitched
With the score tied 2-2, BurBy WILLIAM D. MURRAY
2). but the bottom line is just today," Giants starter Rick
ridge collected the rebound of
UPI Sports Writer
going
out and establishing a Reuschel said. "He pitched as
Bourque's shot from t!te point
game
plan
right from the start well as any pitcher ha s for us this
and s lipped a shot past goalie
SAN FRANCISCO (UPJ)
and
tryi~g
to
stick to that," he year. He had ·a solid curve and
Mike Liut 47 seco nd s into the The St. Louis Cardinals took a
said• "The bottom line for me Is was spotting his fastball well. "
third period.
plane trip Sunday night on the
The Cardinals tagged Reu·
. to keep it as simple as possible
Liu t had to be helped off the ice edge of despair.
schel for three runs, two of them
and just be aggressive."
a ft er injuring hisback 2:08 Into
Following San F'rancisco's 6-3
The Giants certainly were earned, in hi s four innings. St.
the p~rlod and was replaced by triumph In Game 5, the Giants
aggressive Sunday. San Fran· Louis scored in the first when
Steve Weeks .
are one victory away from
cisco came out running with Rob Tommy Herr hit a sacr ifice fly to
Bourque fired a slap shot that clinching their first National
Thompson and Kevin Mitchell bring home Vince Colema n .
winger Geoff Court nall tipped League pennant in 25 years. The
Mathews' bat control helped
each
stealing a base in the first
past Weeks at 4:56. Bur.ridge Card inals return home to BOsch
St
. Louis score in the third. Tony
inning
to
help
the
Giants
tie
the
scored his second goal at JO: 15 to St adium having to win two
Pena
Jed off with a s ingle,
score
J.J.
make it 5-2.
straight to avert elimination.
bringing
a sncrifice situation:
Then,
trailing
3-2
in
the
,
f
ou
rth'
,
Paul MaeDer mid scored both -- John Tudor, who gave up 10
With
the
infielders charging,
San
Francisco
took
advantage
of
goal s for Hartford.
hits and five earned runs in
Mathews
faked
a bunt a nd
reliever
Bob
Forsch.
who
came
Elsewhere. Buffalo topped Wa- Game 2, will start Tuesday for
slapped
il
single
to cen te r.
on when starter Greg Mathews
shlngton 6-5, Chicago defeated the Cardinals in Game 6. The
Coleman
singled
off
Reuschel' s
was forced to leave the contest ·
Philadelphia 5-"3 and Edmonton veteran Jeft·hander says he Is not
·
g
love.
loading
the
bases.
Smith
with
a
pulled
thigh
muscle.
belted Los Angeles 9-2 .
feeling any added pressure be·
lifted
a
sacrifice
fly
to
center
and
Chili Davis and Will Clark each
Sabres 6, Capitals 5
cause of the situation.
stroked first -pitch singles to put
At Buffalo, N.Y., Clark Gillies
"Pressure is what you put on
runners at first and third. Bob
scored 12 seconds into the thi rd your self," Tudor said. "The only
Brenly walked to load the bases,
period to pace the Sabres . Gillies adva ntage 1 can see is if we were
and Jose Uribe ripped the nex t
took a centering pass from Scott leading the series l could make a
pitch to right fora two-run single.
Arnie] and bea t goalie Pete mistake or two on the mound and
Forsc h was pulled, and Rick
Peeters to put the Sabres up 6-4.
not worry about iL"
Horton
came on to give up a
At 6:30. Paul Cavallini scored an
St. Louis will have to overcome
sacrifice
fl y to Mike Aldrete and
unassisted goal for the Capitals.
its habit of coming back flat from
an
RBI
triple
to Thompson.
Blackhawks 5, Flyers 3
an off-day.
"We
were
jus
t being aggres·
At Chicago. Rick Valve scored
"We've had a tendency to play
s
ive,"
Thompson
said. "That's
two goa ls, including the winner, bad artll~ a day off," Tudor said.
the
way
we
play.
We'll run on
a nd Bob Maso n stopped 33 shot s "Tha t wasn't the case het;e. We
you.
We'
ll
hit
and
run
. We' ll do
to spark the Blackhawks. yaive, came out and played well." •
sent to Chicago in a n offseason
The Giants will cou nt er witt! wh at ever it takes.,''
After that. San Francisco retrade with Toronto, scored his .Ieft -hander Dave Dravecky . In
first goa l of the game at 4: 13 of Game 2, Dravecky throttled the liever ,Joe Price, .who s ta rted the
the third per iod to snap a 2-2 tie. Cardinals, allowing only two hits. 1987 season in the minor leagues.
Ma son earned his first victory as Dravecky said his approa ch wUI limited the Cardinals to one hit
and s truck out six in five inni ngs.
a Blackhawk.
.
remain unchanged.
"Y ou c an '~ say e nou gh about
Edmonton 9, Los i\ngeles 2
"I would hope 1 cou ld take
At In glewood, Calif., Glenn
·

Henderson fourth in tourney
Meigs Hi gh School's Dee Jlcnd·
erson· placed fourth in sectio nal
tennis pia) at Portsmouth on
Th ursda&gt;. OrtobN Rth .
Mi " !lrnc!Nson faced s u,an
Kirk of Port&gt;mouth in thr first
round ol comprt ilion, dcl'ea t ing
her fi-0 and 1$-0 to adva nce to
the nPxt bracket to play against
Kri s tin a E£ham. al so of Ports·
mouth.
Eshalll won th e match post· i n~
scores of 6"- 0 a nd ti-l. dropping
Henderson int o !he co nsola tio n

By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
DETROIT ( UPI) - One of the
biggest baserunnlng blunders in
baseball history leaves the Min·
nesota Twins perched on the •
brink of the World Series.
The Twins, inexperienced in
postseason play and vulnerable
on the road, grabbed a 3-1 lead In
the American League playoffs
S\lnday night with a.5-3 triumph
over the Detroit Tigers. Kirby
Puckett and Greg Gagne each
broke out of slumps with home
runs and 40-year-old Darrell
Evans was victimized by a rookie
mistake on the bases.
"The pickoff play loomed
pretty large," said Minnesota
catcher Tim Laudner, whose
snap throw to third baseman
Gary Gaetti in the si,:th Inning
picked off Evans and subsequently prevented the tying run
from scoring. •·Gary and I have a
predetermined signal and, if he
feels we have a play at third base,
he puts · it on. When I see the
signal, I'll throw it down there."
A season-high crowd of 51.939
braved temperatures in the low
40s as the Twins took command
of the best-of-seven series. In
Monday afternoon's Game 5 at
Tiger Stadium, the Twins will
pitch Game 2 winner Bert BlyIeven, while Detroit counters
with Doyle Alexander, who went
9-0 for Detroit in the regular
season !Jefore losing Game 1.
"1 thought the pickoff play was
the turning point of the game,"
Detroit .Manager Sparky Anderson said after the Tigers commit-

liu..,lon ~. llu rUord "l
Uurfuhl6, \\ a.., hlnRton!l •
( hl(- ugo :5 l' hlladetphlil :1
t...dmunton 9, Lo'i t\n jtelt•ii :l
O\io nd11y's Garnl'"
~~chet· at MomreaJ , 7:~5 p.m.
!Uimtt'"ota al NV ltanlt'l'rii, 7:35 'p.m.

( UIJ111 r3' at WJnntpejC, K :~5 p.m .
l ~·lrott at Vant·ou\'t&gt;r, 111::1.1 p.m
'1\lt~ duy ' s (~lUll ~
P.ltt!:tbur~th, nlaht

UufftlJo at

the Giants escaped trailing just ,".
2·1 by turning Herr 's grounder .:·
Into a double play.
Kevin Mitchell tied the score
2·2 in the bottom of the inning by
hi tting a 2-2 pitch over the
left-center field fence for a hom~
run, the Giants' ninth of the
playoffs.
Despite losing a ba:serunner on ''
a pitchout, St. Louis took a 3-2 ·:·.
lead in the fourth . With one out,
Willie McGee singled. The Giants
pitched out and caught him in a. "
rundown . Pendleton, running full ''
speed on the ankle he sprained ,,.
Thursday, tripled to right center.
John Morris grounded to first
baseman Clark, who fed Reu-:;
schel covering first. Reu sc hel
dropped the ball for an error, ..
allowing Pendleton to score.

areas,"
JohnSon, 21, Is happy that the
co ntract is taken care of and is
anxious do to what he deos best.
"My main contribution will be
to ,push the ball up the floor,
dlstrlbu te the ball and play
effective defense," said John·
son. ·'When the shot Is there, I'm
very co nfident tha t 1 can also
st ick the open s hot."
Johnson , the all-tim e leader at
Ca lifor nia in scoring, assists and
steals, is ecstatic with the opportunity to play under coach Lenny
Wilkens .
"Coach Wilkens' success with
thl! guard Js pretty much unparalleled in teac hing guys like

Dennis Johnson a nd Gu s Williams," Johnson sa id. "I'm just
very glad to be under his
tutelage, to learn from someone
who's been there as a player. It's
the ideal situation for me.
Des pite the youth in the back·
court (Mark Price, Johnson and
E hlo have a total of five years of
NBA· ex perience). Wilkens is
plea sed with the s ituation.
"I don ' t think age has anything
to do with your a bility," said
Wilk ens.
"Cert a in ly I'd ra ther make
mistakes beca use we're tryi ng
too hard than make mis takes
because we're not trying at all."
"We feel that we've added a lot
of versatility to our ball club. It's
just nice to have the kind of talent
we have so we can take advant age of th e fl exibility .
Johnson , the firs t to regist er
J.500 -points and-500 assists in his
college carrer, agrees with
Wilkens' assessment and was In
a similar situation at Californi;L

Only ONDULINE can cover
your roof with a lifetime
warranty

Area deaths

By United Press International
A Canadian cold front that
chilled the Plains with record
20-degree temperatures spread
east today Into the Ohio Valley,
while an eai·ly autumn snow storm that stung the Northeast
blew out to sea.
In the Gulf of Mexico. tropical
storm Floyd streni,thened Sunday night, triggering a hurricane
watch over the Florida Keys and
the southwestern part of the
state. Forecasters said the
storm, c.entered about 200 miles
southwest of Key West at mid•
night EDT, was moving toward
south Florida at 15 mph.
Cold air spilling across the
Canadian border brought a second morning offreezlng temperatures to the Plains today and

spread east, prompting freeze
warnings across the Great Lakes
Into the f)hlo Valley .
"It's a fairly large high pressure system out of Canada th~t
brought a Jot of cold air with-it,"
said Mike July, ' National
Weather Service meteorologis t.
The system spread cool
temperatures Sunday from the
eastern Rockies Into the lower
Mississippi Valley.
"It's moving toward the Southe.ast very slow,ly : : NWS spokesman Dan Mct:i'arthy said. "It
will probably settle in the Ohio
Valley before it pushes into the
East Coast."
The cold front broke 25 low
tempPrature records and tied
seven others Sunday from Idaho

to Michigan.
Records that stood for more
than 100 years were broke n, in
Dubuque, Iowa , whe re it was 23,
and Omaha, Neb .. where it was

28.
Ten of the record lows were In .
Iowa, Including 16 at Waterloo
and 17 at Mason City and
Spencer .
..
"l guess winter's really here
now," said Jeff Blackford, who
farms near Norwalk in ceptral
Iowa. "It was cold as a well·
digger's you -know-what last
night. But it'S"better for.trying to
get crops out. because a good,
hard frost makes crops easier to
run through and helps.linlsh out
the drying-down process."
_·. The New England snowstorm
blew out to sea Sunday after
dropping up to 4 inches of snow on

part s of Vermont, "a nd up to 3
inches over the Adirondacks In
upstate New York.
About 8,500 residents., mostly
in the Alba·ny area , re mained
withOut powe r one week after a
freak storm dumpe d up to 20
inches of snow over upstate New
York. The new round of foul
weather hampered e fforts to
restore the poll'er.
The remnants of Hurricane
Ramon brought mo re rain to the
Southwest.
Another da y of un s~aso nably
warm temper~tures was In store
for the Pacific 'Northwest toda y,
forecasters said.
~
An 81,degree reading in Por-.
Hand. tiroke the city 's record or
74, set In 1964. Records were set
in Seattle with 76 and Astoria
with 78.

Methodist Church, the Jolly
Workers Club and the Rebe:t;Aa
·
}
Sarah P. Atha, 74 , Point Lodge.
Surviving are a son.
Pleasant, died Monday In Plea·
Deeter,
Columbus; two daugh·
sant Valley Hos'pltal.
Heights, . killed when Jana's
By United Press International
ters,
Doris
Bronson, Athens, and
The body is at- Wilcoxen Funmotorcycle collided with a car,
At
least
12
people,
Including
eral Home and funeral arrage- VIrginia Gillilan, Columbus~ a · five motorcyclists, were killed In then burst Into flames on Ohio 1~
brother, Homer Pullins, Pontiac,
mPnts wllJ be announced later.
tra!flc accidents In Ohio this in Bedford In Cuyahoga County.
Mich., slx sisters, Hazel Wedge,
Toledo: Todd J. Campbell, 3,
weekend,
the State Highway
Newport Ritchie, Fla., Gladys
Swanton,
killed In a two-car
Patrol
said
today.
Croy and Ruth Watkins, both of
crash
on
Ohio
Route 2 in Lucas
The
count
showed
one
death
Ray AUison
Columbus; Th"e lma \\1 atkins,
Friday night, six Saturday and County.
Coolville; Florence Wires and
Chillicothe: Carl E. Martin, 55,
five Sunday.
Henry Ray Allison, 86, Amelia, Mildred Brooks, both of Reeds·
Ray,
killed In a three-car acciOne double-fatality accident
Ohio, and formerly of Gallipolis, ville. Also surviving are four
was reported, killing a motorcy- dent on U.S. 35 In Ross Coun ty.
died Sunday morning at the grandchildren, · eight great·
Sunday
cle operator and passenger In
Eas.tgate Health Center , Amelia. grandchildren, several nieces
Marlon: Dale Schneider, 36, of
Bedford.
.
He formerly owned and man- and nephews,
One victim was killed In a Freelawn, Mich., killed when his
aged Allison Electrical Service
Besides her parents, she was
car-train
crash in Marlon car collided with a train at a
in Gallipolis. and was an electrl· preceded In death by hus huscrossing in Marion County.
County.
cal contra,tor on construction. band , John W. Deeter in 1968, a
Woqster: Jane A. Dorffer, 17,
Victims
include:
He attended the Point Pleasant daugh~er, a granddaughter, and
Dalton,
killed in a two-car
Friday
Night
Mission.
three brothers.
accident
on a Wayne County
Stow:
Albert
F.
Kucharski,
66.
Born July 28, 1901, In Ohio, he
Services will be held at .1 p.m.
Kent,
killed
in
a
one-car
accident
road.
was the son of the late Arthur B. Tuesday at the White Funeral
Lebanon: David L. Stamper,
in Stow, Summit County.
and Esta Gallagher Allison.
HOme In Coolville · with Rev.
E2)SNOW
-RAIN
f}_{;i] SHOWERS
30,
Clayton, killed when his
Saturday
He was preceded In death by Randy Lowe officating. Burial
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. , . S!atic
Occluded
his wife, Eva Oliver Allison.
Middletown: Douglas W. motorcycle crashed on a Warren
will be in Coolville Cemetery.
Surviving are two sons, David Friends may call at the funeral
Seals, 22, Miamisburg, killed County road.
Map shows minimu~ temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is Ioree~ I
Columbus:
John
W.
Snider
III,
Allison, Amelia, Arthur Allison, home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
to receive precipitation rndicate&lt;l
PI
when his motorcycle crashed on
Gallipolis; one sister, Blanche today.
a curve on a Warren County road. · 40, Columbus , killed in a two-car
WEi\THER MAP - Showe~s and thunderstorms will extend
Chardon: Charles Gill, 29., accident on a Columbus city
Lutz, Dunedin, Fla.; two broth·
street.
over
much of the Florida peninsula. Ralnshowers will extend from
'Gertrude
Oillmar
Novelty, killed when his motor·
ers. John Allison, Gallipolis,
Columbus:
Alvin
L.
Yinger.
57,
much
of California across western Arizona, southern Nevada to
Foster Allison, Sanford , Fla .:
•
cycle collided with a car on Ohio
Powell,
killed
in
a
five-car
southwest
Utah. Skies will be generally sunny over the remainder
Gertrude Dittmar, 84, a resiRoute 306 in Geauga County.
seven grandchildren and three
Interstate
270
In
accident
on
dent of the Pomeroy Health Care
of the nation.
great· grandchildren.
Bedford: Jeffery R. Jana, 35,
Services will at 11:30 a.m. Center and formerly of Zanes- and Laura Flak, 32, both'ofMaple Franklin County.
Wednesday at Crow-Hussel!Fun- vtlle, died Monday morning at
eral Home, Point Pleasant with Veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
Extended Weather Forecast
the Rev. William Zeller officiat - lowing an extended Illness.
By United Press International
pressure
clinic
from
10
a.m.
to
12
A homemaker, Mrs. Dittmar
Wednesday
through Friday
ing. Burial will follow in Lone
Merchants to meet
South Central Ohio
noon
Tuesday
at
the
town
house.
Fair
Wednesday
. A chance .of
was a member of the Middleport
Oak Cemetery, POint Pleasant .
'l:he Pomeroy Area Merchants
Mostly sunny today with highs
rain
Thursday.
Fair
again Fri·
Friends may call at the funeral Church of Christ where she was
Association will meet at 8 a.m.
near 50. Clear tonight with frost
Chamber
to
meet
day,
except
a
chance
of rain
pianist
for
a
number
of
years.
home Tuesday, from 2 to4 and7-9
Tuesday at Bank One.
and a low between 30 and 35.
The
Pomeroy
Area
Chamber
of
ln
the
northeast.
continuing
She
was
born
Nov.
28,
1902
in
p.m .
Mostly sunny Tuesday with a
Commerce will meet In monthly high between 55 and 60.
Highs in the 60s Wednesday and
FI'iends wishing may donatt&gt; to Gallla Coqnty, a daughter of the
Trustees to meet
at
noon
Tuesday
at
session
Thursday
and from th e mid-50s
late
James
and
Jennie
Fife
the American Cancer Society.
Chester Township Trustees
The probability of precipitaTrinity
Church
in
Pomeroy.
to
mid-60s
Friday. Lows in the
Hans her.
will meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
tion is near zero through
speaker
will
be
.
Meigs
Guest
mid
to
upper
30s Wednesday and
Surviving are two daughters,
the town hall.
Tuesday.
County
Treasurer
George
Collins
Alberta Ball
upper
30s
to
upper
40s Thursday
Mrs. Dorothy French of Addison,
Winds will be from the west
who
will
discuss
real
estate
and
and Mrs. Kathryn McKinney.
and Friday.
Clinic Tuesday
about 10 miles an hour today and
Alberta L. "Birdie" Ruther- Mldciieport: five 'grandchildren,
The Harrisonville Senior Citi- property taxes.
light and variable tonight.
ford Ball. 74, Point Pleasant, died ' Vaughnle French, Columbus;
zens Club will hold a blood
Saturday in Pleasant Valley L&lt;.'wis McKinney, Gallaway:
Hospital after a long Illness .
Peggy Hartman, Chester; CarShe was born June 10, 1913 In lene Crace, Addison, and Jo
Midkiff, W.Va., the daughter of Dunn, Gallipolis, and five greatContinued from page 1
the late George Rutherford and grandchildren.
Nellie Payne Rutherford.
Besides her parents , she was
political implications.
She was also preceded in death preceded in death by her husSuggestions that Reagan, or at
by her first husband, James band, William Dittmar.
least his aides, might have
Services will be held at 2: 30
Tomblin; her second husband.
preferred to see Bork withdraw
James Ball: lour sisters. Hartle, p.m. Wednesday ~t the
to spare the embarrassment oL
Juanita. Maime and Hassle and Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
formal Senate rejection were
five· brothers, Frank, Jesse , Home with Mr. A.l Hartson
brushed aside as the administration's top strategists made plans
Curtis, Wandell and Herbert.
officiating. Burial will be In
to squeeze the most political
She is survived by one sister, Gravel Hill Cemetery at Che·
benefit possible f-rom what looms
Carrie Howell, Conn.; two broth·. shire. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
ers. Thomas Rutherford, Hun·
as a stinging blow .
t lngton, and Lonnie Rutherford,
"The writing may be on the
p.m. Tuesday ·-·
Cleveland, Ohio; one nephew.
waJI." as .far as Bork himself Is
David Rutherford. Apple Grove
l concerned, .. said one top official
a nd one great.. nephew. Adrian
who asked to remain anflnymous.
Continued from page I
Rutherford, Apple Grove.
"but not as far as what this fight
Funeral services wtll be 1:30 wered. 202 mues orlven, two junk
means and what the ramificap.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral cars moved and four persons
tions will be."
Home with the Rev . Marlin cited to mayor's court. The street
The White House harbors only
Caljlpbell officiating. Burial will commissioner report showed 18
the faintest of hopes of a
turnaround victory; the fight
follow in the Barton Chapell loads of trash hauled to the
landfill, installation of a new
over Bork has assumed much
Cemetery. Apple Grove.
Friends may ca ll on Monday pump at th!' Greenwood Ceni·
broader symbolic dimen sions as
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the tery, bulbs replaced at the school
a clash of ideologies and constitu!lasher lights, sidewalks cleaned
tional powers ·as welt as a
funeral home.
and 3,296,2000 gallons of water
measure of how Reagan will
pumpted in September.
serve out the remainder of his
Marion Boston
Trick or treat night was
presidency.
tentatively set for Oct. 30 from 6
Marlon L. Boston, 65, Reeds·
to 7 p.m. with Mayor Charles
ville, died Sunday at St. Joseph
p:_;c ·
Pyles to check with Syracuse on
Hospital in Parkersburg.
plans In that community. Council
He was born at Schlnsten, W.
Veterans Memorial
discuss obtaining new Christmas
Va. -He was a farmer, an army
Saturday Admissions - Daisy
decoration Items each year and · Sayre, Racine:. Flora· Friley,
veteran of World · War 11 and a
will secure a catalog and prices.
member of Labor Union 1085.
Pomeroy ; Chilton Cadle,
A
discussion was held on replacSurviving are his wife, Nina; a
Rutland.
Ing the village dump truck with ·
son, Dale or Reedsville; a son and
Saturday Discharges - None.
members of council to be on the
daughter -In-law, Steve and
Sunday Admissions - Ronald
lookout for used dump trucks ··· Davis, Dexter; Robert ,Wood,
Cathy Boston. Middletown; a
which might b~ purchased.
daughter and son-in-law, Patrl·
Racine; Ronald Hewlett, Long
The next coun~ll meeting will
cia 0. and Harold Eagle, Reeds ·
Bottom; Kl mberly Dent,
be held on Oct. 19.
ville; three grandchildren: ·three
Pomeroy.
sisters. Glady Thomas, Reeds ·
Sunday Discharges - Glildys
~tock
ville: Nora Franklin and Dorothy
Welch, William Grueser, Joyce
Cunningham, both of VIenna,
Leonard, Phyllis Young. ·
(i\s of 10:30 a.m.)
W.Va .,; three brothers , Bernard
Our survey shows more
Survey data shows 71%
Provided by
W. Boston·, VIenna. W. Va .;
One winner in lotto ·•
Bryce and Mark Smith
than 83% of the people in
of Ohioans read a daily
Clarence A. Boston, Wltllam·
of
Blunt
Ellis
&amp;
Loewl
st9wn, W. Va .. and Harold C.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Meigs County read The
newspaper in the past
Iitlston, Reedsville.
Ohio
Lottery
ticket's
six
One
Price
Daily Sentinel**
week.*
..Services will be conducted at 11 F1rm'
numbers match the six drawn In
Am
Electric
Power
.............
27l'•
a.m. Wednesday at the White
the Superlotto Saturday, lottery
AT&amp;T ................... .............. 32%
!'\'neral HOf!!&lt;' with Rev. Roy
officials
report, and that means·
Deeter officiating. Burial will be Ashland 011 ...... ... ...... ......... 64%
the
jackpot
will not roll over as It
Bob Evans Farms .. .. ............. 20
Irt Reedsville Cemtery. Friends
has
after
many
recent drawings.
Charming Shoppes .. ............ 20%
may .call at the funeral home
Lottery
officials
say there was
City Holding Co ............ : ........ 31
aper 3p.m. Tu esday.
one ticket sold with the number ~ '
Federal Mogul... ......... .... .... 433tt,
"•
2, 11, 19, 28, 32 and 40, and the
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. .. .... 68l's
player or players who hold that
Heck 's Inc............................ 3%
Jpt'ia Deeter
ticket
can redeem It for the $3
Key Centurion ..... .................. 39
•
million
jackpot . The ticket was
·~ulia Mary Deeter, 90. Route7,
Lands' Jind ..................... .... 23%
one
of
4,234,865
sold.
Mhens, formerly of Coolville,
Limited Inc .. ............... -...... 28%
There
also
were
I62 tickets sold
dlfd Saturday at O'Blenness
Multimedia Inc ........ .. ...... ... 69'h
naming
five
of
the
six winning
• •Market Opinion Re$earch
Mf'morlal Hospital in Athens.
Rax Restaurants ... .............. . 43,4
numbers.
Each
is
worth
$1,000.
£he was bofn iii Meigs County,
.. Telephone survey of 2,000 Meigs County residents taken
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 10
Another 6,961 tickets have four of
a ~aughter of the late William
Shoney's Inc .......... ............. 27%
November 1986 ·January 1987
the sfX numbers and are worth
afld Mlna Schultz Pulllns. S~e Wendy's Inti ........................ 9%
$70.
~~s a member of the United
Worthington Ind .... : ............. 22%

Sarah Atha

d•
t east 12 . Ie on highways

11

SNi\GS POP FLY- Giants' second baseman Robby Thompson
makes the catch of a pop fly In shallow right field as he collides with
right fielder Candy Maldonado, behind, in the fifth inning of
Sunday afternoon's National League playoff game in San
Francisco. (UP I)

SAVE .ON
ROO·FING'

If your old roof is
rusting away, put up
one that won't rust.

..

-----Announcements--. --

4'•6'7" ...:.26 Square Foot Sheet
Corrugated Asphalt. Roofing and """"g~[!l l

$9 89

Per Sheet
IDEAl FOR RESIDENTIAl, AGRICULIURE
&amp; COMMERCIAl APPLICATIONS

BAUM
LUMBER
CHEST

Daily

-----..;...Weather------

"'\'-""''&amp;..t£;::;::::;:::

insylotes aginst htot
light Wtlghf lhHfs
wont' rust or corrode qYieter ttlon metal
gon up fast likt Metal eny to ins toll
ideal for NEW roofing or reroofing

prices

..

We Always new People
From Meigs County Were
Above Average!

•

The Daily Sentinel

.

Lifetime Roofing

Reg.~~=

•

N

·Hospital news

Th~

Colon In Stork:
·.Vhitl!, R@d. Green,
Brown, Bloc:• and Gray
Appro•imotl!l~ 100
squoru currl!ntlwo in
stock.

•

The annual meeting of the Meigs County Farm Bureau has
been set for Tuesday, Oct. 20, at the Eastern High School.
A steak o:llnner wtll be served at 7:11 p.m. ·to members,
families and guests. Entertainment wtll be provided by the
"Little Kyger Valley Quartet". Resolutions will be presented '
along with a short program on current agriculture use value to
'" explain to .farmers that there is a tax reduction program
available for their land which Is used for agricultural purposes.
Tickets for the annual meeting wlll .be $4 for adults and $1.50
for children and they can be purchased at the Farm Bureau
Office In Pomeroy, 992·2181 or !rom board members, Ralph
Carl, 992-2384; Btll Carr, 985-38821 Donna Davidson, 742-2488:
Harry Holter, 949-2644; Tom Hamm, 949-2419; Rex Shene!!eld,
669-4(131; Pat Holter, 992-7261: Hlber Qulvey, 992-2338; Norman
Will, 742-2791; Alan Holter, 992-5010, and "Pauline ,;\tklps,
742·2634.

New Racine...

endullne·
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Farm BureaU; meet Oct. 20

Reagan~ ..

Cavs have one more to s•"gn

RICHFIELD, Ohio I UP!) The Cleveland Cavaliers have all
their players signed now , with
top draft pick guard Kevin
.Johnson being the last to sign.
The 6-foot-2 scoring leader
from California signed his contract Sa turday as d id veteran
Phil Hubbard. Terms of Johnson's contract were not disclosed. but it 'is believed it is a
four -year deal worth an es ti·
mated $2.15 in ill ion.
Signing Friday were veterans
Craig Ehlo, Mark West and
Tyrone Cor bin.
Jo hnson' s signing came on the
heels or a major transaction
Thursday that saw Cleveland
acq ui re guard Dell Curry ,
center-forward Kent Benson and
forward J ames Bailey in a
three-way trade involving the
Utah Jazz and New .Jcesey Nets.
· Gener al Manager Way ne
Embry feel s these moves arc just
what wa s needed .
"We set out la st -spr in g to
address some of the weaknesses
or our team," ~a id ·Embr y , " and
with these players we feel we've
ta ken steps to improve those

The Daily Sentin'ei-Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, October 12, 1987

We Deliver

For Subscription or Advertising Information

Call

•

99~-21 56

••

I

�•

-

•

.

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

'

Ohio

Pomeroy-

Monday. Octobjtr 12, 1987

October 12, 1

The Daily Sentinei- Page--7

, Ohio

D of A meets

Scoreboard
By United Prt.'S" ln,t'l',.lioftlll
N•\TIONAL FOOT'BAt.L LEAGUE .

.,.,,

Amt&gt;rk'u ( 'olliferenc•

1nd61M1apolls
Miami
Nf'"' En&amp;tand
Nl' Jt't ll

~!DSiltM91

!%0)(MIIIIH
I J 8 .!541 i5 1'!2
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J
t o
t05 •o
t % G .501 lit &amp;.1

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Hou~ on

PUbhu ry; h
Cko"·•l1111d
1Cind•rlllli

LA

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATION_!5.J. ARGUMENTS AND RESOLUTIONS
FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO ~NSTITUTI9N PROPOSED BY THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY.' AND BALLOT L.ANOUAQE, ARGUMENTS AND THE
FULL TEXT OF AN AMENDMENT TO TH~ OHIO CONSTITUTION PRO.
POSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS
AT THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 3, 1987

W L T Pt'f.. Pt" PA
!
t 0 .500
'" )2
t ':! II 500 1116 6'.l

t!05M~i3

! . ! fl

.. .

"'"'I 00 1.1111

Rah~D

J
3

San Diep
SuUS.
lleft"·er
KanRU City

Q

2 0

.7!58
.5111

I

I 1

.511

I

.! 0

.251

t

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
. TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

iK

15

M 24
U "
!4 91
G"f 14
51 U!l

NaUolllll C'$nft'rf'nCf'

Ea"

3

I I
t 8
2 I

.1M 1011
~
•758 12ft
.:MI8 n
'
I 3 0 %a 'N
1110 16
Ce ntral
I 0 3 1.010 116

DaiiM
WMhlnKi:o11
st. Loul!i
Phlladf'lphla

' '

NV Glanls
Chlt:-«0
MlnN&gt;Mota
Tampat. Bay

I

114
'78
M

.

lfl

1

l\.'9
:rl

; t o .auun

w...

San Frln.
New OrleMS

3

'l

I Q .'TH 110
! 0 WI! 101

!ft
K! .

l'l033SI3~

AUanla

I

LAHlUm!

3 II

!!I

73

.%$11

SundM)' ' Ii Ret~Uits
Ne"· Ena:land H. Buftw.lo i
Ddrok 1!, Green &amp;y li

Hou!llon 15; Clevelud II
MJaunl U. KllniiiUJ C ll)' 0

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

lndlanapolbi i, NV .Jets 0
DallM .JI, Philadelphia H
San Dle ro 1~ . TamPM Bay ll
W~hlalf;on l8, NV Giants 1%
San Fra.citlco U, .\tluta 1i
flnctnuall1, Seattle 10
Ll\ Rams 31, PIU~•rch 21

A miiJority yes vote Is necessary for (mSII&amp;e.

GamP

I.

(All M&gt;rle-K het;t-of·!WVI'"II)

If adopted, this amendment shall take immediate effect.

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

11, Detroit :1

3.

All monies for this fund would come directly from the entire net proceeds of the
State lotteries and would be used solely for the support,of education (not including
higher education),

4.

p.m.

5.

X·Wf'" d Oct . 14- Delr!Jil at MlnfJl'!Wiu .

The Ohio Constitution currently requires that the net pnxeeds of state lotteries be
deposited in the General Revenue Fund, the main operating fund of the State, The
General Assembly QOW appropriates an amount in excess of these net proceeds to
education from the General Revenue Fund,
'
This amendment would require that the net proceeds of state lotteries be deposited
in a separate fund for education in the State Treasury.

Sui"'

Sal . Ol"l . 10- Dt&gt;trolt 7. Mln,_11b.l1
~ n. Oct. II - Mln-ota ~. Ot-t roll 3
Mon. Ocl . 12 - Minne!Ootll al Oo.&gt; lrult.

No greater share of the proceeds of state l011eries would be available to education
as a result of this amendment.

p.m.
x·Thur. Out. 15- Detrollat l\linllt"iolit .
~ : l!i p.m.

at St.

Currently, the provisions of the Ohio Constiiution that permit the General Assembly
to authorize an agency of the state to conduct lotteries also requires that the entire net
proceeds of such IO!Iery be paid into the General Revenue Fund, the main operating fund
of the state, Passage of thi~ amendment would amend the Ohio Constitution to require
that net lottery proceeds be paid into a fund of the State Treasury that would consist solely
of net lottery proceeds and would be used exclusively for the support of elementary, secondary, vocational and special education programs as determined by the General Assembly .

Loul'l, K:\!5 p. m .
ll:·" ·f'" d. Ool·t. II - San Fran d~co a t St.
Loulli. H: ~~ p.m.
\\"o rld Sforlf'!&lt;
~lll . Ot·t . l"i - National at Am1 • r i~· u n .
I\: au p.m.
Sun. Oct . IM- Nat tonal at Amuln.m ,

The Ohio Lonery caine into existence in 1974 with all lottery profits going to the General
Revenue Fund with no specific earmarking. Even though the General Assembly earmarked these lottery profits for elementary and secondary use in 1983 , these funds still
went into the General Revenue Fund for distribution.

Frund!loi'O :1
Fnuu~iM'O

~ul~ll

l,

~t.

e.

Fri. Ot·t . !I St. Loub;
San
Frand11Co :i
Sat . 01•1. lfl - S11n 1-' r.tnd!&gt;t"O I. St.
Lmlis \!
Sun. Od . II - S11.n Fnnu·~o G, St.
Loul.'l 3

Tht•. Od . U -

S~o~.n Fr~uu;iM ·o

,

K : ~~m .

1\u•, Ot•t. ~ll - Amt•ril"an al N11lionul.
~ ::Ut

This constitutional change would eliminate lottery profits first going to the General
Revenue Fund and set up a special fund of the State Treasury solely foe net lottery profits
to be Used by elementary, secondary, vocational and special education, Passage of this
amendment would also make the eannarking of funds to education,a permanent feature
of the Ohio Constitution and assure that future General Assemblies cannot use Ohio Lottery profits for uses other than elementary, secondary, vocational and special education.

p.m.

\\t•d. (h•t ,
K: '!:i p.m.

~I

- 1\mt•rk:an at

~atiOrnll ,

111: -Thur. 01'1 . :t~ '- :\mf'rlt•uu :11
f"Jut lollill, It: ~5 p.m .
x~al . ON . :H - National at .&lt;\merh-an,
1 p.m.
x...Sun. 0 l"t . !5- !'Oai!OMI 111 1\nwrkan.
11 : :!5 p.m.
_.-,
~- if.

Committee For the Amendment:

This week's games
R,\ " l 'nlll'd l'ri'!O!O lnlt'rnaUnnul
S al.urda,. , Ot·t. li

Uhlit .'.;hall' at J'urduf'
TtJit&gt;do at Bowlin~~: Grt't'n
\\ l'!&lt;lll'rn Mld1 al Kl'nl Stah•
Ohlu l 'n·l\" al Miami
flndnlllllti al " ·,.,.,, \ 'irKinla
,\ul'llin t"t'll.\' al 1 ' oun.~:,.,town Sl
Dt•lawal'f' Stat Akron
Buld"ln·WII.llut•t• alllt•ltit'llwr.,e;
Wlttt • nhn ~e ut 4'aJl ilal
OUt•rht-ilt lll Murll'"lla
Ohlu ~ortlwrn at 1\luun,t l.Jnlon
1\tu,.,\d n«um ut Wa,VIll'!&gt;hur j,t tl'a l
i\llt'(llt•ny i l"u l al ("alit' Ht'Sl'f\'t"
\\ (JOJOtt•r u.t l);•nlown
Ohio " I'S it ·x~m u. t Kt•nyun
( "r ntn• I K ," ! u.l OhM"Iin
,hhhutd at St . -lo.,t'ph !lnd l
t"la ,\&amp;M "'" l't•ntr.t.l Sl l()ran~t· Ro"·l)

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT WILL DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO
HELP OHIO'S SCHOOLS .
In fact, this amendment will not have any affect on school funding. State funding levels
to local schools will remain the same. The state legislature will simply shuffle the ac·
counts from which funds flow to schools to accomodate the money generated by earmark·
ing lonery profits. The actual amount of moriey going to local schools will not change
regardless of whether it comes from the state's general revenue or from an earmarked
account.

Hu.novl'r tlnd l al lk'llant'f'

In addition , state statute alr_eady dictates that lottery profits must go to education. A
constitutional amendment reiterating this policy does nothing to change school funding
realities.

·lo h n l"arroll at Hiram
l 'rhuna a t Tiffin

Prep S&lt;'ores

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT WILL ONCE AGAIN FALSELY RAISE
VOTER ExPECTATIONS THAT SCHOOL FUNDING PROBLEMS HAVE BEEN
SOLVED.

Ohlu Hl~h l'lt•ho ttl Foothall Kt•:. ult '"
,\J.i.r Rut·hll•l :.'11, ,\kr ft&gt;nt · Hnwl'r "";
BudH&gt;yt• 1'\" "!II, Rrhll' purt II
(ann· : ~ft . na.\' ctnmhlul II
( "In fAI't: Ill, Kt•tl .\IL t•r 1:!
("In \\"ol)dwurd "i, ~It Ht · ~th)' li
( 'In ( 'numr) lla .~· ~. O n ·"'ummll n
( 'It• St - lo ~ tl, f"an !\lt·Kinh•) U
( "I(• l .uiJK•r !UI W :iK, ~ ,\mh••t.,t II
( 11! Dt•!ial;, 1:!. fo l ":» r r~\18 HI
ll:IJ R.•lmum ~1 . Oa.\ ' :\ll•a do~· dalt • I"!
Ut•l pbu-. -11-'flli:t, .\d a II
t "ulitnr la St " t• nd j, t"rt•mo!"ll St ·lot• II
(i:ll f.,., !\flU lla wkl'n ln. Za nt"' Rtt-.t' ~
( ; ilmuur :! I. fit • ln df'pt•ndt•nt•t• 1

When the lottery was first approved in 1975, voters were led to believe schools would
receive large amounts of money . Today, twelve years later, lottery profits constitute only
12 % of state funding to schools - about 6% of total dollars spent on education.
Voters may believe, if this issue is approved , that schools will receive additional funds ,
Should that be the case, school districts will have freat difficulty explaining the facts to
the public and may lose levy elections because o the confusion,

f&gt;irard I t \\ ar rt•n K ••nll(•(b• 11

H:tmllton Rudin :!1. {"I n T ,tfl 6
Hu dson " sn Rt•" ,\; ·:.ul :1:1. t uht•r !'til
\ t • ~~od ll

NO

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. 2 (as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)
I.

This amendment would allow .the General Assembly to use the State's bonding
authority to help cities. villages, counties, townships, and other local gove1'11J11Cnts
pay for roads , bridges, and other capital improvements.

2.

The General ~ssembly could limit the amount of obligations issued in any year in
order to protect the State's credit rating ,

3.

The bonds and other obligations would marure not later than thirty years from the
date of issuance.

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Issue Two enables Ohio communities to end decades of deterioration of their local water
and sewer systems, and roads and bridges, These facilities, which constitute the backbone
of any community, are in desperate need of repair or replacement,
Some 56 percent of the 27,272 miles of county roads in Ohio are substandard, an~ a
similar percentage of the 26,836 county bridges need repam or replacement, accordmg
to The Road Information Program (TRIP) report ,
Many of Ohio's waier and sewer systems, some dating to the Civil War era, have been
patched together in a piecemeal fashion through the decades and need maJOr work.
Issue Two:
•

I

Stands for the safety and health of Ohioans by providing bener road~.t safer bridges,
cleaner water and more efficient waste disposal ~stems ,

I

•

Had overwhelming bi·panisan suppon throughout the legislative process (98-1
in the House and 32·1 in the Senate).
I

•
•

Will enable Ohio communities to qualify for federal improvement monies .

•

Will put thousands of people to work ~ebuilding Ohio's infrastructure,

•

Will make local communities more attractive to new and expanding businesses that
generate economic opponunities.
·

•

Enables Ohio to keep its credit rating, major rating agencies say. And , long·term
bonds are more economical than the' 'pay-as-you-go" system, according to the Na·
tional Council on Public Works.

•

Should not be confused with Ohio's gasoline tax increase. The main purpose of that
is to raise revenue for state roads, ·
,

Will not raise taxes, This is especially imponant to senior citizens on fixed incomes,

•

Guarantees the use of Ohio products, services and labor whenever possible on the
projects.

•

Will save Ohio money in the long run,

A yes vote for Issue Two is a vote for the health, safety and economic growth of a
revitalized Ohio,
·
Committee For the Amendment: Stanley J. Aronoff, Harry Meshel, .W ,.Scott
Oelslager, Ross Boggs, Dean Conley, and Robert
L, Corbin
..,

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT DOES NOT DECREASE THE NECESSITY OF RAISING LOCAL PROPERTY TAXES TO SUPPORT SCHOOLS,

S VAC standings
. ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Oak Hill .,., .•, , .,".6 0 Jfi9 40
Hannan Trace .,.,.~ 2" 140 87
Symmes Valley .,.4 2 14~ 68
Eastern .,,.,.,.,.,.,.,3 3 66 105
North Gallia .,., .. .,3 3 85 146
Ky ger Cree k : ., .,.,.~ 4 47 1.13
Sout hwestern ,.,., .. 2 4 66 84
Southern .,.,,.,,,,.,,] 5 89 156
Oct. 9 result's:
Ha nn an Trace 21 Sou thwestern

State Issue I is the first issue on the biulot at this election, Many school districts have
levies on this same ballot: the need for local funding is no1 changed regardless of passage
or failure of this amendment. We fear that people, after voting for State Issue I, may
not support levies, assuming the lonery solves the problem .

OaK Hill34 Southern l4
Eastern 14 North Galiia 8
Symmes yalley 7 Kyger 'C reek 0
SV.AC ONLY
TF;AM'
W L
P OP
Oak Hill ., .. ., ...... 4 0 130 25
Ha nnan Trace .,. 3 1
92 65
Nor thGallia . ., ... 2 2
79 89
Southwestern ..... 2 2
46 49
Eastern .... .,,., ... 2 2
34 51
Symm es Valle)" 2 2
54
Kyger Creek .. .,., l 3
26 92
So uthern .. .,,.,.,,., O 4 · 69 105
TOTALS
1616 530 530
Oct. 16 games:
' .,
Hannan Trace at Eastern
North Gallla at Southwestern
Oak Hlll at Symmes .Valley
Southern at Kyger Creek ·

s•

•

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
1bc members of the General Assembly who voted against Substitute Senate Joint Resolu,

tion I did not chOQse to prepare or submit arguments _against the proposed amendment .

THIS CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT IS UNNECESSARY, INSIGNIFICANT
AND MISLEADING. FOR THESE REASONS, WE URGE ITS DEFEAT,
Comminee Againsl the Amendment:

C. J. Mclin, Jr., Donald P. Czarcinski, Ronald N,
Amstutz, Joan W, lawrence, Paul pfeifer ,

ISSUE I
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUnONAL AMENDMENT
(House Joint Resolution No. 9)

14

)

Ronald M, Mottl, Sr., Ronald V. Gerberry, Paul
P. Mechling, Michael C. Shoemaker, Gary C.
Suhadolnik, Richard Schafrath, Richard C.
Pfeiffer, Jr,, Robert Burch

ARGUMENT AGAIN!iT TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

l'lfl'rt•yhur:.t ! P IIJ at n-..t.)"hiD

•

SHALL TilE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

I

ARGUMENT FOR mE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

]'l;aliomd IA'altlH'

l(.llant-" lt&gt;lld M'rle'" :1-t)
-.Tt. t-. - 0.-t . G - St . Lu11l:oo :;, San

Sltn

.

If adopted, this ament.'rlenl would talce effect January I, 1988.

:1 : 0~

\\led. fH-t. '7 -

2. LIMIT THE tOtAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF BONDS ANDWOOTIIEULRD
OBLIGATIONS ISSUED TO 1.2 BILLION DOLLARS. lT
LIMIT TilE AMOUNT OF BONDS OR OTHER OBLIGA110NS
ISSVED IN ANY YEAR TO UO MILLION DOLLARS. TIIF.'iE WOULD
BE GENEIIAL OBLIGATION BONDS BACKED BY TilE FULL FAITH
AND CREDIT OF THE STATE OF OIDO.
3. REQUIRE THE USE OF OIDO PRODUCTS, SERVICES, AND LABOR
TO THE EXTENT POSSIBLE.

2.

Amerlcll.D Lea,{Ut'
('fw illli lead !tt'rifS ~ll
Wt"d Od . 7- Mln,_otai, Dt&gt;intltl

:1 : 0~

AND

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I (as prepared b;y the Ohio Ballot Board)

lalichllll Polit-St&gt;ason Scheduk&gt;

Mln~ol.a

I. PERMIT.TilE Sf ATE TO FINANCE OR ASSIST LOCAL GOVEMENTVERNMENI'S IN FINANCING TilE CONSTRUcnON OF IMPRO
,
OF ROADS AND BRIDGES, WASTE WATER TREATMENT t
SY~, WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS, SOLID WASI'E DISPOSAL
·FACILITIFS ANDSTORMWATERANDSANITARYCOLLEC'IlON,
STORAGE,
TREATMENT FACILITIES T.HROUGH THE IsSUANCE OF BONDS AND OTIIER OBLIGATIONS.

A majority yes vote Is necessary for passage.

Playoffs

Thur. ()(·t . M-

.

NO

Mortday , 0.:-1. 19
W•hlngton at Dallali, §p.m.

C'hamplun~~hlp

To adopt Section 2k of Article VID of the Constitution of the State of Ohio,

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

LA Ralden at !Hnver, 9 p.m .
ScllldQ , Oct . HI
Miami a1 N\' Jt-tl). 1 p.m .
CII'\"PIMcl at Clluoln18tl, I p.m .
lndlani&amp;Pollli at Pllt,;hul"lh. I p.m.
L1\ Ram~ at Atluta, 1 p.m .
Nt&gt;W En~Jud 111 Roulitoa, I p.m.
f'liew Orleanli at Chlcqo, 1 p.m.
Seattlt! at Detroit, I p.m.
Mlnnesol11at Tampa Bll,Y . I p.m.
Phlladelpldaat Gref'n Bay, I p.m .
"''V GI!UIIIilll Buffalo, -1 p.m.
St. Louis at San F.-an c~o. -1 p.m .
Denvt'r Ill Xami!Ui City, -1 p. m .
San Dle,;o"at LA Rllider!i, ~ p.m.

,,

To amend Section 6 of Article XV of the Constitution of the State of Ohio.

Jr adopted, this amendment shall take effect on January I, 1988.

ChlcitJO :n, Mlnnuola 7
St. Lc!ub; U, New Orlr.ms 19

Mo,..ay ·~

'
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL
AMENDMENT

THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD REQUIRE 111AT TilE ENTIRE
NET PROCEJi'pS OF TilE SfATE L01TERIES BE USED SOLELY FOR
THE SUPPORT OF ELEMENTARY; SECONDARY, VOCATIONAL, AND
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS AS DETERMJNE0 BY THE OIDO
GENERAl. ASSEMBLY, AND WOULD ESTABUSH A SEPARATE FVND
FOR THESE ENTIRE NET PROCEEDS.

1 2 131556 'N
I 3 0 .2M! 7'l 1011

Detroit

·2

PROPOSED CONSTITVTIONA.L ~MENT

THIS PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOL'LD:

22!J.~7HK5

Gre.en Hay

•

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing to amend Sectioo 6 of Article XV of the
Consbtution of the State of Ohio to rec:p.Jire that the en·
tire net proceeds of the state lottery be earmarked for
¢ucalional purposes.

Be it resolved by the General A~mbly of the Sta~
of Ohio, thn:e ·flftbs of the members elected to each
boose coneurring heRin. !hat dtm: shall be oubmined
to the electors of the atate in the-manner ~ribed by
law at lhe general cl~on to be l'leld on the finl T~~e~ ­
day after the first Monday in November, 1987: a proposal to amend Section 6 o£ Article XV of the Constitution of Ohio to read u follows:

THE General Assembly may authorize

a:n age'ncy of

the awe to concNct loneries, 10 8tll rights 10 participate
therein, and to award prize~ by chance to particiPifltJ,
provided THAT the ...U. liOl
of any IUCh lot,
tery are paid into thl1t111Fiil~ A fuod of tbe
Slllt ...dlo ~URY THAT S.HALL CONSIST

e=

SOLELY OF SUCH PROCEEDS AND SHALL BE
USED SOLELY FOR THE SUPPORT Of ELEMEN,
TARY, SECONDARY, VOCATIONAL, AND
SPECIAL EDUCATION PROGRAMS AS DETER,
MINED BY THE ll.f,NERAL ~EMBL Y.
THE Oeaeral A.,.mbly may aulhorize and lefll~~&lt;
the opendon of bingo ro be oondu&lt;lcd tiy clwilabk:
organizations for charitable purposes.

EFFECTIVE DATE AND RI!PEAL
ARTICLE XV
If ldopted by a majority of electOrS "-xins on this
Sec . 6. Looerios EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE PRO, . amendment, the amendment lhall take effect January
VIDEO IN THIS SECTION, LOTIERIES, and ll1e
t , 1918, and uistina 5c&lt;Uon 6 of Anlcle XV of•the
sale oflotltry tickeu, for any pu!pOSO whaltvor, shall ConatiNtion of Ohio shill be repealed from such · er~
forever be prohibited in this State l llllllfl thM -N,
fective date.

PROPOSED AME~DMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

SYSTEMS, WATER
SYS'IfEMS, SOLID
WASTE .DISPOSAL
/&lt;NO STORM
WATER AND
col-LECTION ,
STORAGE, AND
fAC.n .mES . fN,
CLUDINO REAL PROPIJlfY, INTERESTS IN
REAL PROPERTY , P~c~
· JES, J,ND EQUIP·
MENT RELATED Oi 'lll ENTAIL THERE'IU .
CAPITAL IMPROVEME
$HAA-L INCLUDE
WITHOUTLIMrrATION eCOS"'OFACQUJSI,
TION, CONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION, EXPANSION, IMPRQ · II'!'. PLANNING, AND
EQUIPPING .
•
.

3

IT IS HeREBY DETE !NED 1rHAT SUCH
PUBLIC INFRASTRU ORE ' CAPITAL IM ,
PROVEMENTS ARE NEe /&gt;JI,Y .TO PRESERVE
AND EXPAND THE BLIC CAPITAL IN·
FRASTRUCTURE OF SU H MUNICIPAL COR·
PORATIONS COUNT! TOWNSHIPS, AND
OTHER GOVERNMENT ' ENT,mES, ENSURE
THE PUBLIC HEAL H SAIPETY. AND
WE(FARE, CREATE A PRE!SERVE JOBS,
ENHANCE EMPLOYM
OPI'ORTUNJTIES,
AND IMPROVE THE EC OMIC WELFARE OF
THE PEOPLE OF THIS ATE.

PROPOSED CONSTITU'ilONAL AMENDMENT
To adopt a new ~ion 7 and amend Sections 6 and 13 of Article IV
of the ConstiiUiion of the Stale of Ohio.

PRESENT OIUO LAW PROVIDES FOR TilE DIRECT ELECTION OF TilE
JUSTICES OF TilE SUPREME COURT AND JUDGES OF THE COURTS
OF APPEALS.

TJDS PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:

0

@ (I) NOT MORE

l . CREATE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSIONS 111AT WOULD
NOMINA'IE THREE PERSONS FOR EACH VACANCY ON THE omo
SUPREME COURT OR COURTS OF APPEALS. TilE COMMISSIONS
WOULD BE MADE UP HALF OF LAWYERS AND HALF OF NONLAWYERs. OF TIIESE, NO MORE TIIAN HALF COULD HAVE TilE
SAME POUDCA.L AWILIATION. A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COM·
MISSION SHALL NO~ATE TilE PERSONS WHO IN TilE JUDGMENT OF THE COMMISSION HAVE TilE IDGIIEST .PERSONAL
AND PROFESSIONAL QUALIFICATIONS AMONG THOSE
AVAILABLE. 11IE GOVERNOR MUST APPOINT ONE OF TilE
THREE NOMINEES.
.

(£)THE STATE MAY ARTICIPATE IN ANY
PUBLIC INFRASTRU URE CAPITAL IM·
PROVEMENT UNDER HIS SECTION WITH
MUNICIPAL CORPO nolo'S, COUNTIES, .
TOWNSHIPS, OR OTHER vE;RNMENTAL EN·
TITlES, OR ANY ONE• MORE OF THEM .
SUCH PARTICIPATION' AY !IE BY GRANTS,
LOANS, OR CONTRIB ONS TO THEM FOR
ANY Of SUCH CAPI'I'AI: RO'VEMENTS. THE
ENTIRE PROCEEDS OP EB('JNOS SHALL BE
USED FOR THE PUB INIPRASTRUCTURE
CAPITAL IMPROVE
S QIP MUNICIPAL
CORPORATIONS, Ct!)
• TO•WNSHIPS, AND
OTHER GOVERNMENt EN'TITIES, EXCEPT
TO THE EXTENT T T T'HE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY PROVIDES Y LJ\W THAT THE
STATEMAYBEREASO LY COMPENSATED .,_ .. ;
FROM SUCH MONEYS PLANNING. FINAN,
. CIAL MANAGEMB
OR'. OTHER AD,
MINISTRATIVE SERV
PERFORMED IN ,.
RELATION TO 'lliE' B l.lfiUANCE.

l!,&gt;) (I) EACH ISSU . 01' OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED UNDER THIS S
H SHALL MATURE
IN NOT MORE THAN'
'JY 'YEARS FROM
THE DATE OF ISSUAN . CIR, IF ISSUED TO
RETIRE OR REFUND HE'R OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED UNDER THIS S O'N, WITHIWrHIR·
TY YEARS FROM 'n!B ATE THE DEBT WAS
ORIGINALLY CON:I'RA
. IF OBLIGATIONS
ARE ISSUED AS NOTES NAINTICIPATION OF
THE ISSUANCE OF BON S, PHOVISION SHALL
BE MADE BY LAW FO~ EIOSTABUSHMENT
AND MAINTENANCE,
IN•G THE PERIOD IN
WHICH THE NOTES
Olll'STANDINO, OF A
SPECIAL FUND OR'
INTO WHICH SHALL
BE PAID, FROM TilES (' ES AllTJIORIZED
FOR THE PAYM£1(11 · SUCH BONDS, THE
AMOUNT THAT WOU HoWE BEEN SUPFJ,
CIENT, IF BONDS
TUI:UNG DURING A
PERIOD OF THIRTY Y S!~AD BEEN ISSUED
WITHOUT SUCH PRIOR SSIJ,O.NCE OF NOTES,
TO PAY THE PRINCIPA TtiATWOULD HAVE
BEEN PAYABLE ON SUCH BONDS DURJNO
SUCH PERIOD. SUCH FUND OR FUNDS SHALL
BE USED SOLELY FOR THEMYMENTOFPRfN,
CIPAL OF SUCH NOTBS OR 0'F BONDS IN AN,
TICIPATION OF WH ICH SUCIH NOTES HAVE
BEEN ISSUED.
.
(2) THE OBLIG.O.liONS I!;SUED UNDER THIS
SECTION ARE GENERAL OIBUQ"TIONS Of THE
STATE. THE FULl! FA'ITH AND CREDIT.
REVENUE, AND TAXINtG POWER OF THE
STATE SHALL BE PLEDGEID TO THE PAYMENT
OF THE PRINCIPAL OF .AND INTEREST ON
SUCH OBLIGATIONS AS T'HEY BECOME DUE,
HEREIN,O.FTER CALLED DIEDT SERVICE, AND
BOND RETIREMEN'f\ FWND PROVISIONS SHALL
BE MADE FOR Pi' YM ENT OF DEBT SERVICE.
PROVISION SHAL~ BE MAD EBY LAW fOR THE
SUFFICIENCY ANi5' !o.PPROP RlATION, fPR PUR,
POSES OF PAYJNG DERTSE!RvtCE, OF EXCISES,
TAXES, AND REVENUES SO PLEDGED TO DEBT
SERVICE, AND FOR COY EN,.NTS TO CON·
TINUE THE LEVY, COlLECTION, AND AP·
PLICATION OF SUPFICIEN&gt;T EXCISES, TAXES,
AND REVENUFS TO Till! FXfENT NEEDED FOR
SUCH PURPOSE . NOT•nTI!STANDING SEC,
TION 22 or ARTICLE ll , CIHtO Cl'lNSTITUTION,
NO FURTHER ACT oiiAI'·I'ROPRIATJON SHAU
BE NECESSARY FOR T"HAT PURPOSE, THE
OBLIGATIONS AND THE. PROVISION FOR THE
P" YMENT OF DEBT SER~'l!JE AND THE REPAY·
MENT OF "NY LOA~IS HEREUNDER BY
GOVERNMENTf&lt;L BNTITUES ARE NOT SUBJECT
TO ,§_ECTIONS 5, 6 AND II OF ARTICLE XU,
OHIO CONSTITUTION

(lJ THE MONEYS REFE~:RED TO IN,!ECflON
51 OF ARTICLE XU, OHIO CONSmUTION, MAY
J •
NOT BE PLEDGED To THfl PAYMENT OF DEBT
SERVICE ON OBLIG ...r tONS ISSUED UNDER
"UTHORJTY OF THIS SECTION.
•
ARTICLE VIU
JOINT RESOLUTION
(4) THE OBLIGATIONS ISSUED UNDER
"UTHORITY OF THIS SECTION, TRANSFER
Section 2k . (~ !N ADDITION TO THE
THEREOF, AND THE INTERI'.ST AND OTHER IN,
COME THEREFROM , INCI'. UDINO ANY PROFIT
Propooing ro llllend Article VW of llle Constitution
AllTIIORIZATION OTHERWISE COI'ITAINED IN
MADEONTHESALE THEHEOF, SHALL AT ALL
of the S1a1e of Ohio by adding thereto Section 2k to "RTICLE vm OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION .
lulhorize laws rdl the iuuance of general obtigatioos THE GENERAL ASSEMBLy·MAy ~ROVIOE BY . TIMES BE FREE FROM TA:(ATION WITHIN THE
of the State-of Qhio to finance leal. govemment public ,
W IN ACCORDANCE wrnt BUT SUBJECT TO
STI\TE .
infrutntctu"' capital improvemeniS, and lo provide . ~E i..n.trrATIONS OF TIUS SEi::nON, FOR THE
@TillS SE("fiON SHAI! OTHERWISE BE ·IM·
knns and conditions for lllooe obligations,
ISSUANCE OF BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGA,
PLEMENTF.D IN TH.E MAI;NER AND TO THE
TIONS OF THE STATE FOR THE PURPOSE OF
Be .11 resolved by the O.ncral Aloembty of ll1e Slalt FINANCING OR ASSISTING IN THE fiNANCING
EXTENT PROVIDED BY LA'II' BY THE GENERAL
of Ohio, W...ftfths of the momben elocted to each OF THE COST Of PUBUC INFRASTRUCTURE ' ASSEMBLY .
howe concu.rriJw thereili, that dr::rc shall be submiucd
CAPITf&lt;L JMPROVEMEI'ITS OF MUNICIP"L
to the elecWn of the stlk: in the manner prescribed by
CORPORATIONS, COUNTIES, TOWNSIDPS, AND
law 1111pecW clecti.on to be hdd on the first TUeaday OTHER GOVERNMENTAL ENTITIES AS
after the fint Monday in November, _1987, 1 propml DESIGNATED BY LAW. AS USED IN THIS SEC,
EFFECTfVE DATE '
10 amend Article VIU of the CoMiirution or Ohio by
TION, PUBLIC JNFRASTRUCfURECAPITf&lt;L JM,
addina immcdialely foUowing Stction 2j a new soction PROVEMEI'ITS SHALL BE LIMITED TO ROADS
If adopted by a l!lljority of II'&lt; clocton votlng oolhi•
as follows :
amendmcm,
the amc~nt shall take lmrnecUate effocc.
AND BRJDOEs, WASTE WKfER TREATMENT

i

3. REQUIRE PERSONS APPOINTED AS JUDGES TO RUN WITHOUT
AN OPPONENT IN A GENERAL ELECTION FOR RETENTION IN
OFFICE IN 1WO TO FOUR YEARS. A 55 PERCENT "YES" VOTE
WOULD BE REQUIRED FOR REI'ENTION FOR A FULL SIX-YEAR
TERM; LESS THAN 55 PERCENT WOULD CREATE A VACANCY
IN TilE omcE.
·
,
4. ALWW JUDGES WHO ARE PRESENTLY SERVING EITIIER BY ' '
. ELECTION OR APPOINTMENT TO RUN IN THE GENERAL ELECTION WHEN 'TIIEJR ClJRRENT TERM EXPIRES.

5. ALWW A MAJORITY VOTE OF TilE ELECTORS OF ANY COURT
DISTRICT TO APPLY TIDS PROCEDURE TO TIIEIR TRIAL
~OURTS.

(2) PROVISION SHAL
'MAI~E BY LAW FOR
THE USE TO THE EX
PR ~CfiCABLE OF
OHIO PRODUCfS·, MA
l.S, ~VICES . AND
LABOR IN THE MAI&lt;DtJ OF ANY PROJECT
FINANCED. IN WHOLE R tN PART, UNDER
THIS SECTION .

6. REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO ENACT LAWS TO IMPLEMENT TIUS AMENDMENT NO LATER TIIAN 180 DAYS AFI'ER
ITS EFFECTIVE DATE.
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

YES

·'

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

'

NO

ARGUMENT FOR TilE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Special interest money and politics
are creating a crisis in our courts,
,J

Vote Yes on
Issue 3 to

ln!prove Ohio's
Judicial Syste.n
Endorsed by:

..

League of Woinen Voters • Ohio PTA
Ohio State Bar Association
Farm Bureau • Ohio Chamber of Commerce

INCREASE YOUR VOICE AND ~GIIT TO VOTE IN THE JUDICIAL PROCESS.
Over the last twenty years over 40% or almost half of all Supreme Court and Courts of
Appeals candidates had no opponent in the Novembe,r election- they had a ··rree ride,"
Ohio voters were effecuvely barred from a cho1ce m these races .
Issue 3 lets .i:£!!.. not political bosses, choose our judges, Every Supreme Court and Courts
of Appeals judge would be required to face the voters under a stiffer requirement - each
candi'\"te would have to receive 55% ~f the vote to remain in office.

' POLmCAL I'NAMli: GAME."
ELIMINATE THE
Consider Ohio's bizarre fascination with certain names. In 1978, three of ~judges serv·
ing on the Supreme Court were named Brown, The political bosses, when choosing judicial
candidates, consider someone's name as a critical criteria.
.
.
Issue 3 eliminates the political ''name game'' since candidates for the court would be screen,
ed and nominated on the basis of their personal and professional qualifications by ~ bi·
panisan conunission.
REDUCE TilE NEED FOR VAST SUMS OF SPECIAL INTERESf MONEY.
There is nothing so corrupting and destructive to a system of justice as money, The average
cost of Supreme Court races increased 750% from 1976 to 1984, last year almost
.. $3,000,000 was spent to elect a chief justice.
Issue 3 shifts greater attentimi onio the candidates· judicial record and reduces the need
for special interest money,
Committee For the'Amendment' Diana Winterhalter, William W. Milligan,
Jack R. Alton
ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Present Ohio law provides for the direct election of judges to all courts in our state. If
State Issue 3 is ndopted, direct election of the Ohio Supreme Coun and Appellate Court
judges would be abolished.

The issue would:
I.

Take away your constitutional ri$1Jt to vote for judges on the Ohio Supreme Court
and Appellate Gourts, Never agam would voters have the ability to cast their ballot
to choose between two or more candidates for any Appellate Court position.

2.

trade the ability to vote for judicial candidates for a system where every appellate
level court judge, including the Supreme Coun, would be appointed by a conunission made up of one· half lawyers ahd one-half non·lawyers . There would be no public
accountability by the conunission to the voters.

3.

Not provide any system of review or confirmation for an appointed judge by any
legislative body thereby restricting the vmer's participation,

4..

Make it extremely difficult to remove a sitting judge by instituting "retention elec·
tions" in which a-judge faces ~o oppos!tion on the ball?! as the only means for
removal , Even Even if a "retenbon elect1on" removed a JUdge unacceptable to the
voters, the judge would be replaced by the conunission, not the vote!s·
.
Provide no guara~ of reducing the .cost of judici"!.camp~igns. In. fa~; •. the most
expensive court !'ICC 10 our country •s history was m a retenuon elect1on 10 another
state.

1

ISSUE 2
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution No. 1)

,

'

6.

Lock in all present jUdges to the cour:r on which they sit, subj"7ting them only to
a "retention election" at the conclus1on of their present term m office,
,
.

ISSIJE 3

\

Stale Issue 3 is not In the best intereiiU of the voters 01 Ohio. To retain the constitutional
right to vote for judicial candidates, voters should vote "No" on State Issue 3.
Committee Against the Amendment: Stephanie Tubbs Jones, David 'Lauridsen ,
Deborah Pryce. William Seitz , Joel Teaford
.

·~

•

APPOINTED TP A JUDICIAL NOMINATING
COMMISSION TO FILL A ·vACANCY OCCUR,
RING FOR A REASON OTHER THAN THE EX,
P!RATION OF A TERM SERVES FOR THERE,
MAINDER OF THE .TERM OF THE
PREDECESSOR. A MEMBER OF A DISTRICT
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
ELECTED 1:0 THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL
NOMINAtlNO COMMISSION SERVES ON THE
SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL NOMINATINO
COMMISSION FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE
MEMBER'S TERM ON THE OlSTRICf JUDICIAL
J6(A) EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN 17 OF THIS
NOMINATING COMMISSION .
,O.RTICLE:
· , ·
·
(3) A JUDICIAL NOMINA TINO COMMISSION
(I)~ chtefJulbce 111\d the Justices of !he suprome . "CTS ONLY WITH THE CONCURRENCE OF"
coonshatlbeelcctedbytheelectonolthelllll:lllll(!C, MAJORITY OF ITS FULL MEMBERSHIP.
for tenns of not less than 111 yean.

BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
STATE OF OHIO THAT A NEW SECfiON 7 OF
ARTICLE IV OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION BE
CREATED AND SECTIONS 6 AND 13 OF ARTI,
CLB IV OF THE OHIO CONSlTUTION BE
AMENDED TO PROVIDE A MERIT PLAN FOR
THE.SELECTION AND RETENTIQN,ELECTION
OF JUSTICES AND JUDGES TO READ AS
FOLLOWS:

(2) The jud&amp;es or 111e oour11 of oppeals shall be elected

I. CHANGE THE WAY omo SELECTS ITS SUPREME COURT AND
APP~ COURT JUDGES BY ABOLISHING TilE DIRECT ELECTION METIIOD.

DiNE HUNDRED
TWENTY MILLIO N LLAR.~ PRINCIPAL
AMOUI'IT Of BONDS • D OT111ER OBLIGA·
TIONS AUTHORIZED U DER "CHIS SECTION .
MAY BE ISSUED IN
CAU!I!DAR YEAR,
PROVIDED THAT THE oc•REOATE TOTAL
PRINCIPAL AMOUNT 0 Bot~DS AND OTHER
OBLIGATIONS AUTH ZEIJ AND ISSUED
UNDER TIUS SECTION y·NOT EXCEED ONE
BILLION TWO HUNORE MIL!LION DOLLARS,
FURTHERLIMrrATIONS YIIEPROVIDEDBY
LAW UPON THE )IM
Of BONDS THAT
MAY BE ISSUED UN DEl. SS'Et'I10N IN ANY
YEAR IN ORDER THA 1'!113 TOTAL DEBT
CHARGES OF THE STA SHA.LL NOT EXCEED
A PROPORTION·OFO
IUYENUEFUND
EXPENDITURjlS THAT' oUJ: D ADVERSELY
AFFECTTHECREDIT
NG . O~THESTATE,
IF OBLIGATIONS ARE ' UE D UNDER TIUS
SECTION TO RETIRE
RE!FUND OBUOA,
TIONS PREV!OUSL YIS
U NDER THIS SBC·
TION. THE NEW OBLIG
NS: SHALL NOT BE
COUNTED ,O.OAINST
Ci\LENDAR YEAR
OR TOTAL ISSUANCE
~ TIONS TO THE
EXTENT THAT THE!ft , RINC.IPAL AMOUNT
DOES NOT EXCEED TH RINC'IPAL AMOUNT
OF THE OBLIGATION! TO BE'· RETIRED OR
REFUNDED.

'

TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTI'fUTIONAL AMENDMENT

by the electors of their respective appellate districts,
for terms of not less than six years.
(3) The judges of the courts of convnon ~and
the divisions thereof shall be elected by thee
of
the countiea, districts, or, as llliY be: provided by law,
adler subdivislms, in wttic:h their respective courts are
located. for tmn11 of not leu than slx·years, and CIICh
judae of a court of common pleas or division thereof
Shall Rsidc durin' his term of office in the county:,
district, or .Ru.bd.i-wu.ion in which his court is localcd .

(H) THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL BY
LAW PROVIDE FOR THE PAYMENT OF THE EJ(,
PENSES INCURRED BY COMMISSION
MEMBERS IN THE PERFORMANCE OF THEIR
DUTIES, AND PROVIDE FOR THEPAYMENTOF
THE EXPENSES OP THE COMMISSIONS IN,
CLUDING STAFF ASSISTANCE. A MEMBER OF
A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION IS NOT
ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE COMPENSATION FOR
SERVICE ON THE COMMISSION. THE SUPREME
COURT JUDICIAL NOMINA tlNG COMMISSION
SHALL PRESCRIBE THE PROCEDURES OF ALL
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSIONS .

(4) Terms of offtcc of all judges shall begin on lhe
days fil&lt;ed by law, and laws shall be enacted ro prescribe
the times and mode of their"'tlection .

(I) A CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTIH OR JUDGE AP,
POINTED UNDER THIS SECTION SERVES FROM
THE DATE OF APPOINTMEI'IT UNTIL THE
FEBRUARY FIFTEENTH FOLLOWINO THE
ELECTION AT WHICH THE CHIEF JUSTICE ,
JUSTICE OR JUDGE MUST STAND FOR RETEN,
TION IN OFFICE IN ACCORD,.NCE WITH SBC,
TION J(l) TO SERVE A FULL ELECTIVE TERM .
THE ELECTION AT WHICH A CHIEF JUSTICE,
JUSTICE OR JUDGE MUST STAND FOR RETEN TION IN OFFICE IS:

'
The jud&amp;es of lhe supnt~E coun, courts of appeals, courts of common pleu, and divisions thereof,
and. of aU courts of re4:ord eswbliahcd by law , shall,
at stated times, retei'lle, for their services such com·
pensadon IS may be: provided by law, which shall not
be diminished during their term of office. The com·
pensllion of all judaes of the wpreme court, excep!lhat
of the chief justice, shaH be the same. The compenSI·
(I) THE FIRST GENERAL ELECfiON IN AN
tion of all judges of the courts of appeals shall be the
EVEN
NUMBERED YEAR HELD MORE THAN
same . Cormnon pleas judges and jlldges of divisions TWO YEARS
AFfER THE APPOINTMENT IF, AT
thereof, and jlldges of all coum of record established
TIME THIS SECTION IS MADE APPLICABLE
by law shall receive such compensation as may be 1'1"0:" THE
vided by law. Judges shaD roceive oo feel or perquisnes, TO THE COURT ON WHICH THE CHIEF
nor hold any other office of profit or trust, under the JUSTICE, JUSTICE OR JUDGE SERVES.
authority of this state, or of the Uruled States. All votes MEMBERS OF THAT COURT ARE ELECTED AT
for any judae, for any elective off~ee, exce~ a judicial GENERAL ELECTIONS HELD IN EVEN
office, under the Mlthority of this state, s•ven by the NUMBERED YEARS; OR
general assembly, or the people shall be void .
(2) THE FIRST GENERAL ELBCTION IN AN
ODD NUMBERED YEAR HELD MORE THAN
TWO YEARS AFfER THE APPOINTMENT IF, AT
(C) No person lh&amp;ll be elected or appointed 10 Illy THE TIME THIS SECTION IS MADE APPLICABLE
judicial office if on or before the day when he shall TO THE COURT ON WIUCH THE JUDGE
assume lhe offloe and enter upon the discharge of its SERVES, MEMBERS OP TH"T COURT ARE
duties he shall hive anaiDed the age of seventy years . ELECTED AT GENERAL ELECTIONS HELD IN
Any voluntarily retired judge, or ~udge who is ODD NUMBERED YEARS·.
rcli.rcd under this secrion, may be asai
with his con·
(l)(l) A CHIEF JUSTICE. JUSTICE OR JUDGE
sent, by lhe chief justice or acting c: · f justice of the
supreme coun to active duty IS a judge and while so OF A COURT TO WHICH THIS SECTION IS AP,
serving shall receive the established compensation for PLICABLE IS ELIGIBLE FOR AN ADDITIONAL
such ofllce, comptlted upon 1 per diem blsis, in addi, TERM BY FILING WITH THE SBCRETARY OF
tion to any retireme~.t;e.;erds to which he may 'be en· STATE A DECLARATION 0~ CANDIDACY FOR
tided. Laws may be ·
providing n:lilemenl benefiu AN ADDffiONAL TERM NOT LESS THAN
SEVENTY,FJVEOAYSPRIO TOTHEGENERAL
for judges .
ELECTION NEXT PRECEDING THE EXPIRATION
. OF THE CURRENT TERM OF OFFICE. IF THE
17 (A) THE GOVERNOR SHALL FILL A CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE OR JUDGE TIMELY
VACANCY IN THE OFFICE OF CHIEF JUSTICE FILES THE DECLARATION, THE NAME OF THE
OR JUSTICE OF THE SUPREME COURT, OR CH!EFJUSTICE,JUSTICEORJUDOE!SSUBMIT,
JUDGE OF A COURT OF STATEWIDEJURISDIC· ' TED WJTHOt.rr PARTY DESIGNATION TO THE
TION , COURTOFAPPEALS,OROFANYOTI!ER ELECTORS OF THE TERRITORIAL JURISD!C,
COURTTOWHICHTHISSECTIONISMADEAP· liON OF THE COURT ON A SEPARATE
PLICABLE FROM A LIST OF NOMINEES SUB, JUDICIAL BALLOT TO READ SUBSTANTIALLY
MtTI1!D BY THE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COM, AS FOLLOWS:
•
MISSION FOR THE COURT ON WHICH THE
VACANCY EXISTS. IF THE GOVERNOR FAILS SHALL CHIEF JUSTICE (OR JUSTICE OR JUDGE!
TO APPOINT FROM THE LIST WITHIN 60 DAYS
OF THE DAY THE LIST IS SUBMmED, THE
(NAME OF THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE, OR JUDGE)
~UPREME COURT )j}DJCIAi. NOMINATING
COMMISSION SHALL MAXE THE APPOINT,
MEI'IT FROM THE LIST.
OFTHR---~~~~r,n~n,mo.r.----­
(NAME OF THE COURT)
BE RETAI NED IN OFFICE FOR THE TERM PRO,
(B) THERE IS HEREBY CREATED A SUPREME
VIDEO BY LAW?
COURT JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
WHICH SHALL NOMINATE THREE PERSONS TO
NO--- - - - YES - - - - - - FILL A VACANCY ON THE SUPREME COURT
OR ON A COURT OF STATEWIDE JURISDIC,
(2) IF F!FTY,FJVE PER CENT OR MORE OF
TION . THE SUPREME COURT JUDICIAL THE ELECTORS VOTING ON THE QUESTION
NOMINATING COMMISSION IS COMPOSED OF VOTE " YES "THE CHIEF JUSTICE, IUSTICE OR
ONE NON -LAWYER AND ONE LAWYER JUDGE IS RETAINED IN THE'OFFICE FOR THE
ELECTED BY EACH DISTRICT JUDICIAL NEXT FULL TERM COMMENCING THE DAY
NOMINAtlNG COMMISSION FROM AMONG JTS AFTER THE CURRENT TERM EXPIRES . If NO
MEMBERS. THE MEMBERS ELECTED FROM OBCI.ARATION Of CANDJD,.CY IS TIME!. Y fJL,
EACH DISTRICT CANNOT HAVE THE SAME ED OR IF LESS THAN FJFTY,FJVE PER CENT OF
POLITICf&lt;L AFFILIATION .
THE ELECTORS VOTING ON THE QUESTION
VOTE "YES ,"" VACANCY IN THE OFFICE IS
CRMTED UPON EXPIRATION OF THE TERM .
(C) THERE IS HEREBY CREATED A DISTRICT
JUDICIAL NOMINAtlNG COMMISSION IN EACH
(3) SUBDIVISIONS (J)(I) AND (1) OF THIS SEC,
APPELLATE DISTRICT WHICH SHALL TION ARE APPLICABLE TO A CHIEF JUSTICE,
NOMINATE THREE PERSONS TO FILL A JUSTICE OR JUDGE SERVING EITHER BY ELEC,
VACANCY ON THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR TION OR APPOINTMENT ON A COURT WHEN
THAT DISTRICT .
THIS SECTION IS MADE APPLICABLE TO tHE
COURT. THE GENERAL ELECTION AT WHICH
CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE OR JUDGE MUST
(D) THE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMIS, THE
RUN IS THE GENERAL ELECTION AT WHICH
SION FOR ANY OTI!ER COURT TO W'HJCH THIS THE SUCCESSOR WOULD HAVE BEEN
SECTION IS APPLICABLE SHALL NOMINATE ELECT!!D HAD THIS SECTION NOT BEEN MADE
AT LEAST TWO Bt.rr NOT MORE THAN THREE
PERSONS TO FILL A VACANCY ON THE APPLICABLE TO THAT COURT .
COURT . IF AN APPELLATE OISTRICT CONSISTS
(K) THIS SECTION IS APPLICABLE TO
OF ONLY ONE COUNTY, THE DISTRICT JUDGESHIPS ON A COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
JUDICIAL NOMINAtlNG COMMISSION IS ALSO
AND EACH DMSION THEREOF OR ANY OTHER
THE JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMJSSION
COURT CRE" TED BY THE GENERAL
FOR THAT COUNTY ,
ASSEMBLY BY LAW UPON THE AFFIRMATIVE
VOTE OF A MAJORITY OF THE ELECfORS OF
(E) ,o. JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION THE TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION Of THE
SHALL NOMINATE THE PERSONS WHO IN THE COURT VOTING ON THE ISSUE TO APPLY THIS
JUDGEMEI'IT OF THE COMMISSION HAVE THE SECTION TO THE COURT, THE COMMISSION
FOR THE TERRITORIAL JURISDICITON OF THE
HIGHEST PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL
QUAllFICATIONS AMONG THOSE 'AVAILAIILE. . COURT SH"LL MAKE NOMINATIONS FOR A
VACANCY ON THE COURT IN ACCORDANCE
WITH THIS SECfiON. AN ELECTION MAY BE
HELD IN THE SAME MANNER TO DISCON,
(F) THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY BY LAW
SHALL ESTABLISH AND FIX THE SIZE OF THE TINUE THE PRACTICE OF SELECTING SUCH
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION FOR JUDGES UNDER TIUS SECTION. THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY BY LAW SHALL FIX THE METHOD
E"CH TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION IN WHICH
OF SUBMISSION OF EITHER QUESTION.
THIS SECTION IS APPUCA:BLE TO A COURT AT
A NUMBER OF EIGHT, TWELVE, OR SIXTEEN .
§IJin case the office of judge shaJI become v~ant ,
THE GOVERNOR WITH THE ADVICE AND CON,
before the e-'piration of the regular tenn for whij:h he
SENT OF THE SENATE SHALL APPOINT THE
was electQ(I, the vacancy shall be flllcd by appointment
NON·LAWYER MEMBERS OF EACH JUDICIAL
NOMINATING COMMISSION . A MAJORITY OF by the sovemor, until a successor is elected and has
THE MEMBERS OF THE COURT OF APPEALS OF qualified· and such suc:cessor shall be elected for the
A DISTRICf SHALL APPOINT THE LAWYER unexpired term, at the first general election for the of.
MEMBERS OF THE DISTRICT JUDICIAL fice which is vacant that occun·more \han forty dayi
after the vacancy shall have occurred; provided,
, NOMINATING COMMISSION AND Of EACH
however, that when lhe ~11pirtd term ends within one
OTHER JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION
year immediately rollowing the date 9_f such general
IN THE DISTRICf .
election , an election 10 fill such unexpned tenn shan
not be hc:ld·and the appointlnr:nt shall be for such unex·
(G)(I) HALF OF THE MEMBERS OF EACH pired knn. THIS SECTION DOES NOT APPLY TO
JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION MUST A Vo\CANCY TO WHICH SECTION 7 OF TIUS AR,
BE ELECTORS OF OHIO NOT ADMmED TO TICLE IS APPLICABLE.
THE PRACTICE OF LAW IN THIS STATE , AND
HALF MUST BE ELECTORS OF OHIO ADMIT•
TED TO THE PRACflCE OF LAW IN THIS
NO MORE THAN HALF OF THE
. STATE.
SCHEDULE
MEMBERS Of A JUDICIAL NOMINATINO COM,
MISSION SELECTED BY EACH APPOINTING
The general assembly shall enact laWs to i~plement
AUTIIORrl'Y CAN HAVE THE SAME POUTICAL
AFFIUATION. A MEMBER OF A JUDICIAL this amendment no later lhan 180 days after 1ts effec·
NOMINATING COMMISSION FOR A TER, tive date. The governor and cam districl coun of a.P:
RtTORIAL IURJSJ&gt;ICTION MUST BE A RESIDENT peals shall appoint the members of the judictaJ
nominating commissions no later than I SO days after
· OF THAT TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION .
the enacunent of legislation implementing this
(B)

.

amendment.

(2) A PERSON WHO HOLDS AN ELECfiVE
PUBLIC OFFICE, PUBLIC OFFICE APPOINTED
BY, THE GOVERNOR, OR OFFICE IN "
POLffiCAL PARTY IS NOT ELIGIBLE TO SERVE
ON A JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMISSION.
THE TERM OF A MEMBER OF A DISTRICf OR
COUN'1Y JIJDICIAL NOMINATINO COMMIS,
SION IS FOUR YEARS EXCEPT THAT THE AP·
POINTJNO AUTHORrl'Y FOR A COMMISSION
SHALL FIX THE TERMS OF THB INJTIAL
MEMBERS OF A COMMISSION SO THAT THE
TERMS OF AN EQUAL NUMBER OF MEMBERS
EXPIRE EACH YEAR, A MEMBER IS N(Yf ELIGIBLE TO SERVE SUCCESSIVE FULL TERMS ON
THE SAME JUDICIAL NOMINATING COMMIS,
SION, OR BE ELIGIBLE FOR APPOINTMENT TO
AJUDICIAL OPFICE WHILE A MEMBER OR FOR
" PERIOD OF TWO YEARS FOLLOWING THE
END OF THE MEMBER'S SERVICE . A PERSON

Ins pection was announced for
the Oct. 20 meeting when the
Chester Cou nci l 32:1. D~ughters
of America, met Tuesday night
at th e halL
Margaret Tuttle. councilor,
rem inded members that they are
to wear white for inspection, and
that potluck refreshments will be
served .
·
The pledge, Lord's Prayer, and
national anthem opened the
meeting. It was. noted the Erma
Cleland is a pa tie,nt at Ho l~er
Hospital and a lso that Ada Van
Meter is hospitalized, Scripture
fr om Psalms 96 was ~ead .
It was announced that thE' Pat
Councilors Cl kb will meet Oct , 14,
7:30p.m. at the halL
The good of the qrder commit,
tee serve&lt;!, refreshments, Games
were played,

OFFICE Of THE SECRETARY
OF STATE OF OHIO
1, Sherrod Brown, Secn:tiry of Slalt, do he,.by .cer'
tify that the foreaoin&amp; is a true copy of House Joint
RcsoluHOn No. 9, Amended Substitwe Senate Joint
Resolution·No . I, and the fulllcxt of a constitutional
amendment proposed by initiative petition filed in dte
OffiCe oi the Secn:tory of Slate punuant 10 Article 0
Section I a of the Constitution. of the State of OIUo,
tOICther with lbe ballotl~J~~UBP tnd cxpiiRI.tions cer·
titied to me by the Ohio Ballot Board and uguments
submitted to me by1hc pnjponcnu and opponents of
the iuues. u pracribed by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I hm herounlo
sub&gt;cribed my nome and llfued my offi&lt;ill 1&lt;8111 Cot,
umbus, Ohio !his 4th day of September, 1987.

Sherrod Brown
secretary of S\lte

LEE ANN ROBINSON .

~adem

U1ooamen
present girl
scholarship

Lee Ann Robinson. d aught er()[
Wilbu r and Marilyn Robinson,
Coolville, recipient of a Modern
Woodmen of America 's National
College Scholarship ·a ward, was
honor ~ d at th e recenl Honors
Day Celebration picnic sponsored by Camp 10900, Mod ern
Woodmen &lt;lf Americ a. at the
Carr Oak Grove, Alfred .
Miss Robinson i,s att'? nding
Hocking Technical College, Nelsonville, majoring in tour,lsm ..
Others complimented for th eir
community lea de rs hip and
achivemcn ts during the day were
Kody Johnson, Canaa nv.il le,
champion field comma nder,
F ederal Hoc king High School
Band; John Breedlove, presi,
dent, PTO, Coolville: Todd f.( ,
'liOt. Alfred, gift ed· children ;
Margaret Parker, Pomeroy,
p res ident, Meigs Count y Historical Society, and Charles Carr.
Alfml Livestock 4,H Cl ul'l .
The pled ge service in cluded
prayer led by Martha E ll iot,
Woodmen's Creed by Hoba rt
Swartz and Rose Carr, and God
Bless America by Wilbur Robin,
so n, all of Alfred.
Patrick Hya tt a nd KatieO' Con,
nell were welcomed as new
member. The oldest me mber
present wa s Hoba rl Swartz,
Alfred, the youn gest. Bradley
Keirns, Memorial moments were
observed fo r deceased members.
Lela Dunfee, Littl e Hock in g,
C~a rles Woode , Alf red. and Myr,
tie Sargent Amesville.
Contest winners were Dorothy
Robinson , Marlene Donovan.
a nd Wilbur Robinson , Alfred ;
a nd Shannon Breedlove
and · Jessica Pennin~ton, Coo l,
ville: Sonja and Bradley Kei rns,
Guysville; Derek Winebre nner,
Reedsville: John a nd Theresa
CourtneY :" Amesville: Me lissa
Breedlove, Parkers bu rg; Mik~
and Mindy Guess, Tu ppcrs
Plains.
A halloween parly was planned
for 6 p,m. on Oc t. 31 at th &lt;' Carr
Oak Grove.
,

Evangeline chapter
OES ha.r meeting
Officers were ~ Je (: t ed a t the
recent mel-tin g of the Evangeline
Chapter 172, Orde r of the Eastorn
St ar. held a t ohe l'fliddleport
Masonic Temple.
Elected were Teresa Cant!'r·
•
bury, worthy ma tron: Robert
King, worlh &gt;· pNtron: Sue Starr .
a ssocaite ma tron: Ralph Moore .
associate patron: Li nd a Cramer .
condu ctress: Beatrice Kuhn, as,
sociate condu ctress; Kalhryn
Mitch ell , secretary: Emma Clat ,
worthy , t reasu\'C I'; and James
Clatworthy. t rus tee.
,. ·
The new ol'!icel's will \)(' Insta lled on Dec. 11. Chery l Tho,
mas of th e w;ry:."" and mean s
commil tee noted 1ha.t the spa gh,
ettl dinne r was a success. Plans
were made to 'ervc the Scotish
Rite dinner on OcL 21 and the
members will be asked to assist
in serving a ntll oalso donate pies,
Elizabeth Milam, worth~ rna,
tron , announced thai the degrees
of the order will be exemplified
on Nov . 5,

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

.

•

Monday. October 12, 1987
Page-8

SocSec:
HOMECOMING COURT - Durin g a festive
homecoming ceremony at Southern High Sc hool
Friday, Trlsh Mulherin w as crowned as the 1987 ·
SUS Homecoming queen. Pi ctured are senior
members of the court, from 1-r; Wendy Trlplelt
and escort Nt;ll Sloan e, Dina Watson escorted by

In the Jpotlight:
By Cindy S. Oil ven
County ExtensiOn Agent
Home Economlcs / 4-H
A s the last column noted,
October Is National E ner gy
Awareness month. Thts week,
" In The Spotlight " shares some
tips on helpmg chtl dr en co nserve
energy

Energy conservation

JS

not a

"for adult s only" act ivity
Y ougster s ca n do a lot to save
energy, too. Parent s ca n set the
best examp le for thetr chtl dren
by making some bas te fac ts
available to them and by pract tc·
ing what they preac h, say Extension consumer specta ilst s at the
P ennsylva nia State Untvers tty
Water seem s to hold a fas matwn for children. T)ley tend to
have a heavy hand on the fa ucet
when getting a drink of wa t er ot·
when bru shmg theu tl'et h
Children can be taught to fil l a
glass wttlr only as m uc h as t hey

Jeff Caldwell; Dina
McCoy; 1986 Queen
Harris; 1987 Qu een
Shannon Riffle; and
Baer .

Shuler escorted by Barry
Tammy Theiss an~ Matt
Trlsh Mulherin and escort
Donnctte Talbott and Chris

•

Kids can conserve, too
m tend to drink and to turn the
wa ter off when bt ushing lhetr
teeth . Teac h youngs ter s to turn
f aucets off completely to avotd
dn ps. If height Is t he problem,
ma ke of buy a stoo l so the
ch tldren ca n r each th e fa ucet
adequ ate ly.
When tt co mes to bathmg. a
li ttle wa ter can go a l ong way
w tth ch ildren Small youngsters
ca n take a tub bath together to

save wa ter.
A noth er ener gy wea kness.
chtldren are prone to ts sta ndtn g
m front of an open refngerator
w htle dec iding what to ea t. Thts
wdsles e!ec l ncit y by cau sing the
re frtgera tor to work harder , and
t! you have an old sty le manu al
defr os t refn ger at or wtth the
freezer tnS ide the untt. tl wtll
cause ICe t o butld up ra ptdly
dur ing the summer m onths
Teach children to thmk about
wha t they want before they open

t he doo r If they don't kn ow what
they want. per.haps they ar en' l
rea lly hun9r y
Be ct ea tt ve in thmkin gof ways
to save ener gy m your hom e If
your chtidren hke cool dnnks on
hot summer days and perpetu
ally head to the tee t rays In the
f teezpr , try f illing an i cP chest
wtlh enough cubes to l as t the day
You w tll save energy In your
freezer and wtll be sitting a good
example for your chtldren on how

to conserve.
You ca n cut down on the
number of drinking gl asses used
m a day by m arking each child's
cupwtthhtsm he1 name One cup
per chtld each day can go a long
way toward savmg you or your
dishw asher time and ener gy.
Be patient when try mgt o t each
chtld ren ener gy conser vat ion
and keep in mind that you may
se r ve as thetr most prominent
exa mpl e of how to co nserve.

•

Lynch, Riggs family reunion held
The desce nd an ts of A!v tp b1 boa t along the coas t fr om
P erry Rt ggs and Nanc~ Rol li ns Ma tn e to P hiladel ph ia Pa abo ut
St evens held a reu nton 1ecentl y 18.12 where t he famii1 rem a ined
at the Ltckmg C'ou nt v Park on for scvrral ) ears
Route 37 near Gra n, tile.
Abou t 1R.46, the&gt;' ca me b)
F oll owing the dinner, M t'S
11agon tram m toOhto Wi lliam L
K ar l Sktvington ex tended a wei
Stevens' parent s. Wi lha m Stev·
com e A poem about the t cumo n ons, St and wife. Sarah ! Sail) 1
written bv Ed tt h L) nch Byct lv Wtt ham were pioneers in Metgs
was read by E dwat d Lynch
Count\ arnv tng tn 1818 ,md wer e
E leanor Harrop St urtz shared a am ong the ft rst set til•rs m Ohi o
letter wrt tten to her " hen she You ng Wtlham was about 2'l
w as seve n l ears old fl om her when his fat her le ft Ste1 enstown,
gr andmother. Augusta Riggs Ma ine and settled m Mc tgs
Har rop Arlos Lilite rectted a Coun tv. la1er decldmg ro m tgra te
poem wntten by hts mother
to Oh10 an d JOtn the 1e-s t of hts
Vera Ly nch Lillie McC'laskel fa mtl' Ot het ptoneer ances tor s
a bout a netg-hbor Vet a who "as of th ts famtl\ were J et emtah
96 years old last Ma' d ted thts Rtggs and Rachel Keller Jet e
past ;ear 'On June 2'1 Those mta h Riggs bu tlt th e f u·s t cabm m
at tending gave I hetr I mcs of what ts now Pagevl lle m Ji99
ances tor y
C i ~ d e Rtggs rece ived a gtft for
Clyde c ' Rtggs 100\CJ I s old on t he oldes t male a1.tend mg,
_. Chr iStmas Da) 1986. tccallcrl Ci emma Vale. also bot n m Mc tgs
ston es of hts gt andmothet , rou t 0 • from \a t dtngton, Ohio
Nancy. S!evens Rtggs ~dven
was th e oldest fema le Thr
tu r cs and ex penenccs wh tlc couple mar ned over 50 years was
t ravPhn g with her paren1s. Wll
Edw&lt;~t d .tnd Mon na L1 neh !rom
ilam M Stevens. Jt and C'1 nthta Thurman Thomas W Lynch
Oak s. and brothers and sistet·s.

t raveled th e far thes t f rom Spr tng
Htll Fla and the door prize wa s
gtven to Julie Ly nch of North
Ca nt on.
·
A ttendm g w~re Paul and
Wand a B verl;. Ptketon, E leanor
and Ger ald Stu rtz, Zanesville.
L aw t encl' H.t r rop, Zanesv tlle,
Edward and Manna L ynch, Thu rman. Clemm a Vale. Cardingt on ,
T homas W L 1 nch, Fla , La t n
and J uhe L vnch. No tlh Ca nton,
Cly de and M arv Stoc kd al e of S
W Ca nton Bob and DE'a n and
son Jam es L; nch, Streetsboro,
Wai i N and Loui sP Rtggs of
M arengo, Ohto. Cly de C Ri ggs,
Co lumbus; Ar los and K athleen
Ltllie, El lza b&lt;•t h and E ugene
Shr iever, Sa m and Pa ul a and
Shel lc1 Pt nkstoc k all La nraster, Ra1 m onel an d Ruth L y nch oi
Sl tdcll. L a Cat los Worth Ly nch
of At hens. Fred and L utchte
Rtggs ~ nd Hat ic1 and Mt ekte
Rtggs of Pomerov. K at! and
Et icPn and Kav Sk 11 mgl on,
GJanv tlle K i mber!\ Sk tv mgton.
Fent on

Meigs County property transfers
Compt lcd Bv
E MM OGENE HOL STE!!\
CONGO
Meigs Cou nty Rceorde t'
Pom eroy Ohto 45769
Charles Wtll tam Chapman and
Connie Kay Chapman. pat eels
to L arry M cl\1urray and Nad tn e
McMurray , Sci pio
Noah Chasteen and Leafy
Chast een, pat eel to Thomas
He ndrix and France s Hc·ndnx,
Rutland
Jam es W. Suttle and Gt eta M
Suttle, Ju dgement / entr y, vs
Cl ay Wilso n etal, M eigs
Pearl H. Va n Cooney and Mary
A nn Van Cooney, Lot 155 to
James H . Va n Cooney Robert F
V an Cooney, Diane L y nch and
Michael R Van Coonev. Mtddl eport Vlll age
C harles W. Edwa r d s and
F reda L
E dwards , Lot , to
P at r ick S Edwards and Br c·nda
L y nn Wol d, M tdd iepcrt Vtllage
Jam es C. Pool dec' d. af!ld , to
Sylv ia G Pool dec'd, Sutron
R obert G. Workman. Sherman
Mills, Dee M ills, right of way,
to L ea di ng Cr eek Conservation
District, Ru tl and
Doy le T HudSf'n and Nellte N
Hudson, r(ght of wa y, to Le adtng
Cree k Con servati on Dtslrtcl,
Rutland .
M arth a Jo Ferguson. Lot 311,
to Bruce Dea n Swift and Angela
K ay Van Cooney, Mtddl eport
Village

w.

'

Ma nford R Hu tt on and Peggy
H utto n parce ls, to M ar c . E.
F 1ench and Juanita E. French.
Salisbury
Joe R Profftt t and Ardeth K ay
Proffitt. parce l s, to Mor~e
Chapel Church. Lebanon
Paul R Searls and Jacklyn
Searls, y, A , to Terry D Napper
and Sandy Napper. Salem
Je ff K Snowden and Carolyn S
Snowden, .7Ci A, 10 Paul R Searls
and Jackl y n B Sea rl s, Rutla nd
Village.
Jeffery S Werry and Ruby J
Werry 8 30 A, to Davey Joe
Mtiler and Shirley J Mtil cr,
Rut land
Glenna H Davts, by ally in
fact . Carl Da'ts, dec'd, Syra
cuse Vill age
Glenna H Davis. by atty-mfac t , Pat'! Tract , to Donald 't
Shaffer, Syracuse Vi ll age
John E arl Werry and Margaret
Jean Werry nght or way , to
Ronald W Vance, Bedford
Ron ald W V1rn ce, parc~l . lo
James R Va nce and Barbara
Vance, Bed ford
Garnet R. Joh nston, Lawrence
Johnston. Zana Middl eswart,
James Mlddleswart , Dorothy A
Roseberry, Ceci l Roseberty. par
eel. to Dorothy A Roseberry and
Cecil W Roseberry, Lebanon.
Argyll Detter, 10 0017 A. to
T~rry Cia rk and Tra ct Clark
Lebanon.
Trustees of Jackson Confer·

enc~ of Freewill Baptist DenomiPagevt
ll e F ree
w US!E'es
i ll B aof
pt the
1st
nat ton, parcel.
to Tt
Church ScipiO
TPresa K ay Hoffm an and Ro
ber t L Bi t chfieid , par cel. to
Teresa K Btr chfield and Robert
L. Btrchfte ld , M tddl e p or t
Village.
Willie M aude Coates, cert of
tra ns to Barbara Daune B~tz
tn g, Sa li sbu ry
Monty R · Hart and Ca thy J.
Ha r t. ease m ent . to Oh io Power
Compa ny. r&gt;utton.
Ha rold 0. Dtxon and Minnie
Dtxon , parcel , to Barbara Dixon
BO l en a nd Ltsa R D or st ,
Columbta
Dan ny · Skal n a nd I rene
R hodes, easemenl. to Columbus
&amp; Sou thern Ohi o E lectric Company, Sutton
LiDe of saecesalon
If by reason of death, resignation,
removal from ofhce, or failure to
qualify there ts netther a president or
vice·prestdent to discharge !he powers and duties of the office of presi·
dent, then the speaker of the House of
Representatives shall, upon his reslg·
nation as speaker and representative,
act as president

Vttamm K ts necessary for the lor·
malton of prothrombm, whtch helps
blood to clot

year, wildlife and amliate m em bershtp awards will be presented
throughout the eveni ng.
Election of two supervisor s f or
three year terms will t ake pl ace
Candtda les for super v isor elec
l i on are M arviene Beegle, Ron
E astm an, Jack Erv i n and T ho·
m as Theiss.
1987 AFFILIATE M EMBE RS
who will be r ec ievlng certificates
durin g t h e m eet in g a re; . '
F armer s B ank and Savings Com pany D V Weber Con sl r uction
Company, Central Trust Com pany; People' s B ank, Gibso n
B eauty Shop; Qu a ht y Print

by Lou Horvath
Field Representative
Lei's talk about Medica re
Jji'galn Actually, we 'II dis cu ss
some changes that will t ak e
place m Janua r y 1988. As y ou
know, Medicare is an in surance
program and, like any other
tnsurance, there a deductable
amount to be m et. A deduct able
1s that pa r t of you r covered
expenses you mu st pay before
your insurance retmbursement
begms.
Part A of Medtcare is hospital
insurance tnat helps pay for
Inpatient services. The Part A
deduct able is tied lo the cost of
one day's stay In the hospital and
is adjusted annually to account
for increases In health care costs.
Cu r r ently, that amountls$520for
a stay that lasts from one through
sixt y days In January, lhe
dedu ct able increases to $540 per

benefit per iod.
A Part A benefil period 1s how
your hospital stay Is m easured.
The period begin s upon admit ·
lance and ends wh en you have
bee n released for six ty days. If
you' re readmttted befo re the
Sixty days ar e up, you won't pay
the deductable again.
Although the aver age hospi ta l
sta y for older Am en cans is a
hltll' over eight days, some
tllness requi re lon ger periods of
hospit ahza tton. If you must be
hospit ali zed for more than stxty
day s, Medi care r eimbursem ent
changes Your cost will currently
be $1 30 dail y for the six ty-first
throu gh !he ntnetieth day In
1988. that co-insurance amount
W i ll increase lo $135 a day
P art B M edtcare IS m edica l
Insurance whtch helps pa y for
physlctan's treatment s as well as
oth er hea lth ser v ices and supp-

]TPA advisory ·board
~onducts meeting in area
Katma Karouhs , adult com- adult and student enrollees at
munity servtces coordtnator for Meigs lndu stnes. Inc and Ca the Ohio Depar tment of MR-DD. t teton School Other speak er s
wa s the keynot e speaker at the mcluded K etth Bl ack, K a thy
r ecent luncheon m eet ing of the Luebbert . and Oav id Milliken
JTPL Advi sor y Board held at the
The a dv tsor~ boar d fun cttons
Me ig~ County Boatd of Mental
will be ro monitor and assi st m
Retar\:iation and Developmental the effort to meet the g rant goal s
Disabi lities ofhce
of communi! \ job d evelopment
M s Karoulis gave a bn~f and placement
history of the JTPA rJob Tr am
M ember s attending werP Ri
ing Partner ship Ac t 1 etgh t per
chard Warner . Tom R eed. John
cent pr ogram
,
. , F os ter , Hank Cleland. E dith
The etghl per cent gra nt wa s Atkm s, Bill Nease, R ev St even
awa rded to the adult ser vtce DeavPr. and Mono N el son.
program to asstsl tn the developN ext m eet m g will be held tn
ment of occupational trammg December
and JOb placement ser vices 10

•

1988

lfl

lies P ari B ts an opll onal
cavE'r age and carnes a monthly
prem tum of $17.90 B eginning in
Janu ar y 1988, the ra te i ncreases
to $24 80 mon thly Th at might
seem htgh t o some peor-le but
consid er thts· the P a rt B pre·
mlum y ou pay is actua ll y only a
qu art er of the cost of Jhe
cover age. The ot her seventy- five
per cent Is subsid ized by the
general revenu es of the feder al
government
The deducta ble for P art B is
figured on the cal end a~ year and
rem ains at $75 for 1988 Aft er the
deductable IS m et, Part B pays
ei ght y percent of the appr oved
charges and you a e rPsponsible
for lhe rem amder R emember
that y our bills have to be
submit ted to Medtcar e so the
ch ar ges can be credtt ed towards
the deductable If your doctor i s a
Medicare pa r ticipatin g physt ·
ctan , then your btl Is will be
dtrec tl y submttled by his or her
offi ce. Part A claims are always
dt r~ct l y ha ndled betwee n the
ser v ice prov tder and t he Medi·
care carrier You are never
involved In th e process For a
fl ee M edicare Handbook or other
free MedtcarP pamphlet s, g ive
us a call at 992 6622 Monda y
through Fn day .

ScNsion cancelled
EA ST MEIGS - Speci al session of the Eas tern Local School
District Board of E du catton
whtch wa s sel for Oct 13. dea ling
with tuttion student s, has been
ca nce lled
_ _ _

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT

COMBINATION. DINNER ONLY

(Dining Room Only I
Served wtth whtpped potatoes. chtcken gravy cole
slaw, hot roll butter and coffee Sorry, no subshtutes except beverage wtth addtltonal pnce

$

3 2s
FOR JUST
e

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OH.

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken

r-==~:;;;;~·~~;::===jr==::;;~~~~2~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~;~~~
Public Notice
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
• IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MtLLLIMtTATlON
Nottce IS hereby g1ven that
m pursuant of a Resolutton
of the Membeu of Board of
Educatton of the Eastern lo ·
cal School Board, Chester,
Ohto. passed on the 29th

day of September. 1987,

Public Notice

Public Notice

7.30 o'clock PM
By order of the Board of
Electtons, of Me1gs County,
OhiO
Evelyn Clark, Chatrman
Jane M Frymyer, Otrector
Dated October 7, 1987

{10(6 , t2 19, 26. 4tc
Public Notice

there will be subm rtted to a
vote of the people of aatd NOTICE OF SALE By vtrtue
Eastern Local School Ora- of an brder for Sale 1ssued
t nct at a General Electron to on the 28th day of August,
beheldlntheSchooiDistrtct 1987, by the United States
of Eastern Local,
Metgs D11trtct Court for the SouthCounty , Oh1o. at the regular ern Otstnct of Ohio, Eastern
places of voteng theretn, on Otvlston. at Columbus, Ohio
Tuesday, the third dav of In C1vrl No C2·87·0469,

Novomber. 1987, thoques- UNITED

STATES

OF

tton of levytng a taK, tn AMERICA -VS - WILLIAM
excess of the ten mtllltmita· T FINK, et al • I will offer for
tton, for the benefit of Eaa- sale to the htghest bidder on
tern Local School Dietr~ct November 4. 1987, at 1 30
for the purpose of provldtng P M at the front door of the
for the emer.gency require Meigs County Courthouse,
menta of the sChool distnct Pomeroy, Ohio ••the follow(avordtng an operatmg
ing descrrbed real property:
Situated in the State of
ctt)
Sa1d tax be1ng a rerlo~tat I Ohio. County of Me1gs, and

of S1 13,339 00 and an

V1Uage of Middleport: Tho

d1tional of $38,756 !)0
five (S] years at a rate not
ceeding 6 0 mills
one dollar of
whtch amounts to
f$0 . 50) for each one
dred dollars of valuation,
f1ve 161 years
The Polls for 1a1d
wtll be open at 6 ·30
AM and remain o pen

followmg described real est·
ate, situated in the Village of
Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohto· B81ng 30 feet off the
eouth srde of Lot No . 111 ,
and 30 feet off the north s1de
of Lot No i 10, In Lower
Pomeroy, now Middleport,
Ohio Also, the westerly
one-half of that portion of
thealleywhtchiscontiguous

w1th the 60 foot easterly
boundary of th e abovedescnbed real estate SubJect to water lme easement
to the V1llage of Middleport.

Ohio PROPERTY AD ORESS 244 Sycamore

Street, Middleport , ~ Oh10
46760 Terms of Sale .Cash
on day of sale I reserve the
rtght to reject Any and all
b1ds
Robert W Foster,
Untted St6tes Marshal.
Southern Dtstnct of Ohto
Subject to real estate taKes
penaltieS and assessrhent~
not yet due and payable .

11 01 6, 12, 19, 26

Public Nottce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL llMJTATtON
Nottce is hereby given that
in pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of
the Townahtp of Orange,·
Metgs County, Ohto , passed

on the 20th day of July,

1987, ttiere w•ll be submit ~
ted to a vote of the people of
satd Orange Township, at a
General ElectiOn to be held
tn the Township of Orange,
Ohio at the regular places of
vottng therein, on Tuesday,
the thtrd day of November.
1987, the question of levy~
mg a tax, 1n excess of th e ten

Public Notice
m•ll llmtt.atton, for the beneftt of Orang e Townshtp for
the purpose o f prAventton,
cont rol and abatement of
arr pollution,
Satd tax b etng an addt ·
tton al ta" of 1 0 mtll to run
for ftve years at a rate not
e~e cee dmg 1 0 m•lls for each ·
one dollar of val Uation
whtch amount s to so 10
!ten Cents) for each one
hundred dollar s ofvalu atton,
tor f1 ve (51 years
Th e Polls for sard Elec tton
wrll be open at 6 30 o'clock
A M and remarn open until
7 30 o clock P M
By order of the Board of
Electr ons ot M e1gs County,
Oh10
Evelyn Clark , Cha rrman
Jane M Frymyer
Otrector

Dated July 27 , 1987
110)5 12, t9 , 26 4tc

-

0

"!'!!'.!~.........

Calendar/ happenings

MIDDLEPORT - Hea th. Unt
l ed M ethodtst Wom en will m eet
Monday at the churc h, 7 30 p m .
The progr am will be on " What Do
WI' Believe•" by Emily Spragu e
Devotions by Jen Chesher Hostesses wtll b!' Vicki Houchins,
Twll a Chtlds and E uve tta
Bechtle.

•

The Daily Sentinei- Page - 9

Ohio

Business Services
ClOSIIJ

Shop ; Hom e Nation al Bank;
Jaymar Coa l Co mpany; Ohio
Pal l et Company; Face myer
Lumber Co mpany; 3R Industr ies ; D ai ry Va lley, F errellga•
Incorporated; Greenup Rectamation Company, J. D . Drlliing
Com pany; Southern Ohi o Coal
Company: Ba nk One of Aih!'ns,
N A , M o nt go mery Tr ail er
Sales. and Chester Agn Service.
T ickets must be purc hased by
November 9. 1987, fro m any
SWCD Superv lsm of from the
SWCD Office on the second fl oor
or the Farm er s Bank buildin g tn
Pom eroy .

Medicare changes

...,,'

TO PUC£ AN AO Ull 992 2156
MOHOA'f thru FAIDAY I AM tO S PM.
I AM Unttl NOON 5AJURDJV

Banquet slated by Meigs SWCD
POME ROY R epresent a·
lives f rom Southern Ohio Coa l
Company will be th e featured
speaker s at the M eigs Soli and
Water Conservation Di stric t An·
nual Meeilng and B anquet to be
held on November 17. 1987 at 7: 17
p.m ,at Eastern High- School.
Ttck ets for the annu al meeting
and banquet are $6 00 each. The
m ea l , to be served by E astern
Band Boo sters . will consist of
baked steak , m ashed potatoes,
gr avy, green beans, slaw, rolls,
pie or cake, tce tea and coffee.
Soil judging, ou t's tanding farm
families. goodyea r farm er of the

-

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Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILLLtMtTATION

A M and rem am open unttl
7 30 o'clock P M
By ord er of t he Board of
Electt ons, o f Meigs County,
Ohto
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M Frymyer.
Director

Not•ce ts hereby g•ven that
tn pursuance of a Resolutton
of the Board of Trustees of
the Township of Salisbury,
Meigs County. Ohto, passed
on the 7th day of May,
1987, there wtll be submtt-

Dated AU'911!t2?, 1987.
110)5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc
Public N ottce

ted to a vote of the people of
said Salisbury Townshtp at a
General Electton to be held
'" the Townshtp of S alls-

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
tN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MtllLIMtTATtON

bury, Meigs County, Ohto,
at the regular places of
voting therein. on Tues day.

Not1ce ts hereby grven that
the thtrd day of November, 1n pursuance of a Resolution
1987. the questton of levy- of the VIllage Counc1l of the
rng a tax, 1n excess of the ten V1lla ge of Syracuse, Metgs
mrll hmttatton . for , the be- 'County , Ohto , passed on the
nefl1 of Salisbury Townshtp 13th day of July, 1987,
for the purpose of mamtam- there will be submitted to a
tng and operattng vote of the people of said
cemeteries
Vtllag e of Syracuse. Me1gs
Satd tax berng an addttot~ County , Ohto at a General
nal tax of 1 0 mdls t o run for Elect io n to be held 1n the
fiVe years. at a rat e not Vtllage of Syracuse. Ohto at
e"ceedmg 1 0 mills for each th e regular places of vottng
one dollar of valuatton. th erern, on Tuesday, the
whtch amounts to $0. 1 0 thrrd day of November.
(Ten cents) for each one 1987. the questton of levyhundred dollars of valuatton, tng a tax, 10 excess of the ten
for ftve (S) years
mill hmttat1on, for the beThe Polls for satd Elec tton ' neft t of Syracuse VIllage, for
w111 be open at 6 30 o'clo ck the purpose of current
AM . and rematn open unttl e~e pense
7 30 o'clock PM
Satd ta)( bemg an add1·
By order of the Board of t1onal tu of 1 0 mdl to run
Electtons, of Mergs County
for ftve years at a rate not
Ohto.
e"ceedrng 1 0 mills for each
Evelyn Clark, Chairman one dollar of valuatron,
Jane M Frymyer, which amounts to SO 1 0
Dr re ctor (ten cents! for each one
Dated July 7, t 987
hundred dollars of valuatton.
(tO( 5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc
for ftve (5) years
The Polls for sard Electton
wdl be open at 6 30 o'clock
Public Notice
A M and remarn open until

7 30 o'clock PM
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION

By order of the Board of
Elections of Meigs County,
Ohio
Evelyn Clark Chatrman
Jane M Frymy er.
Dtrector

Notice is hereby grven that
rn pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Trustees of Dated July 27, 1987
{1015. 12 19, 26, 4tc
the Townsh1p of Letart
Metgs County, Ohto. passed
on the 3rd day of August
Public Notice
1987. there w1ll be submtt
ted to a vote of the people of
NOTICE OF ELECTION
sa1d Letart Townshtp at a
ON TAX LEVY
General- Election to be held
m th~ownshtp of
IN EXCESS OF THE
Oh10, at the regular •••·•••;;;,
TEN MI[LLIMITATION
votmg theretn, on
Notice is hereby grventhet
the third day of November. rn puuuance of a Resolution
1987. the quast1on of levy
of the V1llage Council of the
ing a tax. tn e~ecess of the ten Vtllage of Pomeroy, Me1gs
County . Oh1o, passed on the
m•H limitation . for the be
nefit of Letart Town shtp for 20th day of July, 1987,
the purpose of mamtammg ther e w1U be submitted to a
vo te o f the people of sa1d
and operating cem eterr es
Sa1d ta" bemg a renew al Pom er oy Villag e, Metgs
of an extshng ta)( of 1 0 mrlls County, Ohto at a General
to run tor ftve years, at a rat e Elec tton to be held m the
not exceedtng 1 0 mtlls for Vrllage of Pom eroy , Ohto at
ea ch one dollar of valuation
th e regular pla ces of vottng
wh ich amounts to $ 0 10 there1n. on Tu esday , the
(Ten cents) for each on e t htrd day of November,
hundred dollars o f valu at1on. 1987, th e quest ton of levv
for five (5) years
1ng a tax tn B)(Cess of the t en
Th e Polls for satd El ec tion m1ll ltmttatlon f or the be·
w1ll be open at 6 30 o'cl ock nef1t of Pomeroy Vrll age for

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for full time and
part time R.N.'s to work in Special
Care •Emergency Room
•Skilled Nursing Facility
•Medical; Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience .
Excellent fringe benefits.
SEND RESUME TO .
RHONDA DAILEY , R N
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY. OHIO 4 5769
OR CALL
992 -2104, EXT . 2 13
E0 E

CAREE.R
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care Center are seeking highly
motivated registered nurses
for full and part-time employment: Current benefits include: medical and dentat ins.urance. retirement plan, life
insurance. shift premium pay,
malpractice insurance, tuition
reimbursement and mort:'.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Val ley Hospital. Point Pleasant,
West Virginia, for more information.
•

(304) 675-4340
AA / EOE

11- •- • 1•0.

-~-- ~­
1!7- , _

Public Nottce

. . _ ..... llo...

11--..... ...

;:3 LISA M. KOCH, M.S .

......
,._

iX

:I:

-z

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N -e-~- -·
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C!J Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swtm Molds - lnterpretmg Servtces

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h'IMI9§1!!MM

ltcensed Clinical Audiologtsl

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601 -·
41 7 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Galhpohs. Oh1o 45631

u-- • l-

Announcements

8-13 tfn

3 Announcements
Public Nottce
th e

Publ ic Notice

purp ose of c urren t

Drrector

e.~e pense s

Satd ta " bemg a renewal
of an exrstrng tu of 1 9 mrlls
to run for ftv e years at a rat e 1
not exc eedmg 1 9 mills f or
each one dolla'r of valu ation,
which amounts to $0 19
(Nineteen cents) f or each
one hundred dollars of valuatton, for ftve (5) years
The Polls for satd El ec t1on
wtll be open at 6 30 o' cl ock
A M end rematn open unt rl

5

Happy Ads

Happy 17th
Birthday
Jeff

Any one kn owmg ttJe address ilr
phone nu mber o f Benj amm F
Pnce- SS· 282.·40 4434 last
known addren Rt 2 Bo" 278
Vmron Oh1o 46686 contact
PaulE VanH oose PO Box 31 6
Crown City, Ohro 456 23

U. S.

SYRACUSE, OHIO

h ''"

REASONABLE PRICES- TRY US!

Now IS the time for g-r-r-r-eot
buys 1n th~ clasSJ(Jeds

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Oh ro Souvin ers
•Music Boxes
•Candles
•Wooden G tf t s
• P tctures
•Pott ery
•Cem ent Pro du ct s
.. , uu \ unw h - \\ /\f
(oo l

7 30 o'clock PM

,,., th. nuu:r illfr ,.,, ~ .~. n~trf(r
1Hf CU.HIIIFOS

JO'S
GIFT SHOP

Dated July 28. 1987
tt Oj 5, 12, 19. 26. 4tc

r----------..,

Bv Order of the Boa rd of
El ec t1on s of Me1gs Co unty
Oh10
Eve lyn Clark, Ch atrm an
J ane M Fr y mver ,

Re·Open For Buslnm

NOW HULLING
BLACK
WALNUTS

INElNELL'S SUNOCO
RT. 7, CHESTER
IN1l1W THRU NOV. 14th
MON. THRU SAT.
9:00- 4:30

RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authom~ Joh~ Deere ,

Form £qu1pment
Dealer

Rd

4

farm Equi~ment
Parts &amp; Ser~ice

1-3-'86 tf c

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Now Open 7 Days

SYRACUSE, OHIO

DAILY 10 AM-6 PM

A Week

Most Fore1gn and
DomestiC Veh•cl es
A / C S erv1ce
All MaJor &amp; M1nor
Repa1rs
NIASE Certtf1ed Mechanic

CALL 992-67 56

985-3350

Cert1f1ed Lt c ensed Shop

"DOC" VAUGHN

9·10·1mo

10· 12-1

d

Real Estate General

BINGQ

LOTS &amp; LAND
FOR SALE

EAGLES CLUB POMEROY , CrHIO

7 PM -EO 6·45
SlJ N, 2PM ·E B145

T~ UR S,

Buold yoUJ home 01cabm on
lhts lovely land tust one mtle
!tom Ohoo R1ver Woods, se
elu siOn, and cleared land 2
acres up A 1eal bargam
Two 1 acte butldtn g s1tes on
Wrtght St Wale~ and sewer
Make an offer
6 ACRES - SPRING STREET
- Ntce rol~ng land $6,000

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REALTY
1-614-385 -6740
Collect Calls Ac ceptea

or 949-28&amp;0
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4 16 86-lf n

GUN SHOOT

let Us Fence 'lou In

EVERY

RES IOE NT IAl t COM M ERC IAL

SUNDAY

FENCE COMPANY
FREE ESTIMATES

Real Estate General

' NEW LISTING - RUTLAND
- 3 bedtoom newly temo
deled wtlh central a!f elec
tn c heat garage wtfh WOJK·
shop carpoll concrete pa
110 fully onsu lated, level lot
w1th lenc mg Ntce Condo
l10nt $3 2 000 00
NEW LISTING - RUTlAND
- 2 bed10om home on level
lot Rental tnvestment as 11 ts
now tented 01wtll make amce
cozy home Walktng doslance
to shoppmg $13.90000
NEW,LISTING - OUT IN THE
COUNTRY. THE FARM YOU
HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR
- 60 actes ol grou nd wtth a2
story farm house Excel lent
condttton 3 bedrms. I 1?
balhs equtpped ktlhen w/lable &amp; chalfs FA WB w/1
wtnter's supply oi wood already ctlf, 4 outbUJid tngs I
w/ a summer kttchen all mt
nera ls new plumbtng &amp; wtr
tng, 2 water sources, ongmal
oak woodwork tnsulatton also
a flonl potch &amp; bac k cement
patiO MUCH MOREl Al l FOR
YOUR APPOINTMENT All
FOR $52,000 00
ST RT . 143 - A fr ame and
2''' acres of ground close to
town 3' bed too ms. full ba sement. woodbuJnet hookup
Looks good and has a gteal
locatton $29,900 00
'SELL£RS RIDG E ROAD Approx unale ly 150 ams ol
vacant land l7 acres IIIIa·
ble, ba lance pasture and
woods Electnc ava tlable.
drtlled we ll - royally tn·
come and lree gas Wtll spl1t
acreage tnlo sepatole parcels $400 00 an acre A&gt;k
for mfoJmallo~ · .
HENRY £. UELAND JR 99?. 6191
H9 2660
JEAN TAUSS[U
992 SM 1
DOTTil TURN £R n
949 3080
TRACY RifflE
•qqz 2!l9
OFFICE

rn
RlAllOR

RACINE, OHIO
10-9-!fn

51 1/ 1/n

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

40¢

DONELLI'S
PIZZA

CHESHIRE

367-0322
' 9 23 1

mo

PIZZAS $995
Green/ Black Olives,
Pepperom. Cheese.

•SLUGS

Onions, Green

Peppers. Sausage.
Ground Beef
NO SUBSTITUTIONS

•AMMO

•GUN
•MU2 2LELOADING
SUPPLIE S

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M
Rt. 124 Auon from

Happy Hollow Rd.
RUTlAND

6' 4-7 42-2355

9 24 1 mo

168 North le&lt;ond
Middleport, Oh1o 45760

CLIFTON, W. VA.

No Sunday Calls
3 It

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Happy Hour
6·8 pm-Drinks 50'

We Carry Frshm g Suppl tes

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
l6t41 992 6S50
RESIDENCE PHONE
16t41 99J.I77S4
. 1

Jil 11n

We can repatr and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid botl and rod
out radiators. We also
repa1r Gas Tanks.

PAT Hill FORD
9 92-2 196

IG

NOW

BASKET WEAVING ond
SIENCILING ClASSES
!HIRliY HOUS10N
BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING
JANIT YINOY
WEDDING ~\/J1''"w'" 1
YYONNI !CAllY
Bndal Regtft ry and
most complet e lrn e of
Weddtng flowers and
Accessorr es tn tht s area

ALLE GALLERY

Mtddtepo rt , Ohto
1-13-tfc

.GUN SHOOT

BEER &amp; WINE
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. LOTTERY
CARRY-OUT
9 18 I mo

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
-SAT. NIGHT
&amp;:30 P.M.
12

Factory Choke
Gouge Shotguns Only
10 7 ttn

HAVE A VIDEO
TAPE MADE...

• Chil d's B ~rt hd a y
Party
•W edding

• Pa rents' A n niversar y

• Baby Shower
• Fami ly R eunio n
•Any SpecJ al
O c c as 1on .

PH. 992-6959

9·18-1 mo

1124 East Moin St.
Pomeroy
HOURS· Mon.· Tuu -Wod
10 a.m. to 0 p.m
Sunday 1 p m.-b p.m.
By Chance or Appo rnt ment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

YOUNG'S

tfn

FUll BODY TONING
ond FIRMING
l u o l un l .ou•l.. '( h1l

10 5 1 mo

Addons and remodeling,
- Roo fmg and gu1t er w ork

- Concrete work
- Piumbm g and elec tr ical

DENNY CONGO ,

w ork

[free Estima tes)

V. C·. YOUNG Ill
992·621 S or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Roger Hysell
Garage

WILL HAUL

JUST CALL!
992-3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEl - SAND
TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also TransMission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6· 17-tf c

GEARY
BODY SHOP
55 D PAGE STREIT
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

992-3S37

9 18 87

ROOFING

•Was hers •Dtshwa shers
•Ranges •Refngerators
•Drye rs •Freezers

WE SEll USED APPliANCES
~

511c

CHESTER, OHIO

NEW- REPAIR

•HOME BUI LDIN G
•ROOM AOOITIONS
•K ITCHEN S · BATH S

•ROO FING •G ENERAL
REMODELIN G &amp;

Phone Day

'

-1

11h mt le Hyseii Run oHFi t 124W toward Rutland Many 1t ems
~2h 13th and 14th 6.1~ 99 2

t

Yard Sale

p·omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.·

'

or Evenings

985-4141

GINIUL CONIRACIORS

9-28·1 mo pd

Movmg Sale 2J25 lm coln Ave
Ocl 10 and 12th 9-6 Table &amp;
ch errs carpets, drapes, bad
bedsp reads, la mps, clothes, Bar·
bre pool 1oy,:s et c

,•'
'

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton ,

.t~

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late m odel cle&amp;n
used cars
J1m Mmk Chev Olds Inc
Brll Gene Johnson
6 14-446 ·367 2

------------------TOP CASH pe1d tor '83 model

...•

•

...

••

1:

Want ed to bu y long wood Call
~~nyttm e- C &amp; R Ft rew ood Call

614-367- 0669

We buy st endmg t tmber Call
614 379 2768

' ,.,,.
(1

j

Buyt ng da1ly gold s1lver coms,
nngs, rewelry sterlmg w are old
corns larg e currencY Top pnces Ed Burkett Barber Shop
2nd Ave Mtddleport Oh 614·
992-347 6
Want ed t o buy stand.ng 11mber
Call AI Tromm at 614 74 22328

,,

_,'T

-

••

-~ ,..~

QUI LTS

H1gh p n ces piUd for .pr~ 1950
qu tlts A ppl1 que, pteced any
cond11 1on Ca l! 61 4 992 210 1
or 614· 992- 565 7
W t~nted to buy, Fr ench Horn
Cell 61 4 742 266 5

• I;

' "

Employment
Services

..
.'

'

He lp Want ed

0

CONTRACTING

All Makes

.,

..

,11

107 LOCUST ST.

REPAI RS
REFERENC ES

-;&amp;r',

'

7

·'

Rt t24, Pomeroy Ohoo

Howard l. Writesel

KEN'S APPUANCE
' SERVICE
.985-3561

.

'

~

WANTED TO BUY Used wood
&amp; coal healttr.S Sw a1n s Furnt·
ture, 3rd &amp; Oh ve St Gallipolis
Call 614 446 315 9

MARCUM

98S· 3S61

'1

and newer used cars Smrth ' "
8Utck Pon1tac 19 11 Eastern •..
Ave, Galhpol ts Call 614 446 ~ 1
2282
I
'1

'HOUSE FOR RENT
POMEROY -

Found YolH\g mar e blpck end
wh1te dog Wean ng collar Ca ll
614·843-5 253

9

PH. 992 -23DO Or Stop By
115 W Second, Pomeroy

CARPENTER
SERVICE

10-9· 87-1 mo.

LOST 2 black &amp; whtte Walker
coon hounds on Sr 233 Call
614 379 25 06

0

ll•il•r \ llr ,.:tr~tlu•~~(lu h '
h ~ fm1 li1• thh1 l( f.nml fu r
) ••u' - Bnn r;: ,\ fr u noI
SPE CIAl RATES FOR STUDENTS

415 '861c

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
Riverine Antiques

lost and Found

Rr ck Pearson AuCt1oneer h·
cen sed tn Ohro and West Vrrgt
nta Estate a ntrq ~Je farm hqm ,
dat1on sales 304-77 3- 5785

PH. 949 -2860
or 1149-2801

••),.u

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Call

Norwegtan El khound pupp1 es
304 095 392 6

8

BISSELL

10- 8-1 mo.

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

New locat1on:

g;ve aw ay

0

'VINYL SIDING
'AlUMINUM SIDING
' BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

" Free Estemat es"

&amp; HEATING

Pupptes t o

614 992 651 3

ool

SIDING CO.
PLUMBING

Males and f em al es 3 mont h old ·•
kttten s to g t\1 9 away Call !
614 985 3884 mommgs

Aluminum Cans
34¢ lb
9 Il-l mo

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

·-

Free horso manure to grveaway , -"
mixed w1t h s1rew You load &amp;
haul Call 61 4-446 2107 or _.. ,.
245 5600
.J !(;.

lb

New Homes Built

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

Ktttens Cute loveabl e &amp; htter
tramed 6 w ks old Ca ll 614
367 71 20

6

all

Gtveaway

••
••
••
••·=
••••••

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

992-6167
(2) II-INCH 8 ITEM

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

E. MainL~;CIIl.l..l
POMEROY,O .
992 ·2259

NEW LISTING - STORY S
RUN ROAO - A 3 bedroom
tanch home wtl h a l 2'x65' 3
bedroom mobile home that
1ents 101 $2 10 peJ month.
Garage wotkshop mostly ltn
tshed and has approx tma
lely 2" acres $35,000 00

BISSEll
BUILDERS

PH. 949-2801

ACCENT

Purchasmg

53¢

"At Reasonoble Prices"

Services

located at Corner of
Rt . 143 and Rt. 7,
Pomeroy

Current
lb
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheets

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Business

'

No huntmg or tresspass1ng on
Raym on d Smn h Low er 6 Mtle ...

New Holland, Bush Hog

$SOD per I 00 lb .

""''a

•"'•
!
•
:_'j

Gutters
D o wn sp outs
G utter Cleamng
Pain t mg
FR EE ESliMATES

949-2263- ·
or 949-2168
4 2 87 tfn

··~
• , "'

A\lon Sell A\lon lp r Chns.tm as
M11ke 40 percent Cel 16 14 4463358
• J
EXCE l lENT WAGES tot spare , , •
assem bly w ork, electron
tCS crafts Others Info (50 4)
64 1 OQ91 E..t 29 87 Opf,m 7 , 1...
days CALL NOWI

11mc

• u

WANTED EnergetiC. people or- '~
umted team member/ dental as
s1stan1 to !o m ou r prac tice part
ttme You \1 want to have all th e ' ?
necessary quaht•es of a top
notch dental ass1stance (6111 perumce helpful but not necess.ar vl Wtllmg to w ork hard?s .,nd
us you r rftsume and sal ary
h1story to Bo111 Cia 1OS Galhpo- ' :
lis Oetly Trrbune 8 25 3rd Ave
Gelhpohs Ohto 456 31

·,,

.'

Excellent mcome taktng short
phone messages at ho rn e Cell
for mfo E•t S·3l3 504 6 497922

e t 6 ooo

your area

ss e .o ao

16021838-8885

ekl

1203

y

'

HIR IN G " I!

Governmant JObs

.'

Call

.

'

�•

•

.·
~age-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

44

.LAFF-A-DAY

The Down Under Restaurant is~
Waitress-Walter, Hosteas and
Bartender Apply m person at

The Down Undttr Restaurant
300 2nd Ave . G811ipolia .

Sitter in my home in town. Call
614-446-2153.

Furnished Efficiency $146. UtHi·
tiea paid, share bath 807
Seeond Ava ., Galljpolis Ph.
446· 441 6 •fter 7PM

Government Jobs . $16,040·
$69.230 yr. Now h1ring

Call
805-687-6000 Ext. R-9805 for
current federal list.

Upstalfl unfurnished apartment.
Utilities paid. Cerpeted, no child·
ren or pets. Call61 .4~ 448 - 1637

E11cellent wages' for spare time
assembly work; electronics,
crafts , others. Info 1504) 641 0091 EXT 3026, open 7 days.

2 BR . apts 6 closets, kitchen·
appl. furnished. Washer-Dryer
hook -up, ww carpet. newly
painted. deck. Regency , /Inc
Apta. Call 304-676· 7738 or
676· 6104.

Hiring! Government jobs-your

Call

{6021838-8885. EXT 1449.

Furn11hed Apt .- 1 Br. $200.
Utlliti• paid. 701 4th Ava.
Gallipolis . Call 614- 446-4416
after 8 :00 PM .

RN, LPN, or EMT to perform
insurance e.lllminationa in Mid dleport, Pomeroy, and New

Haven areas. Send resume to
PMI , P.O. Box 2267. Hunting:.
ton , W. Va 25723.
Get paid for readmg book•l
$100. pert1tle Wnte ACE -31 C.
181 S. Lincolnway, N. Aurora, IL

60542.

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom ap•nmenta for
rent.
B•s1c reilt for 1 bdr ..
1183.00, 2 bdr .. t21" 00. Also
requ ired a $200.00 security
Cteposit. CONTACT· Jackson
Estates Dept . • Ph 446 -3997
Equal Hou1ing Opportunity.

now accepting apphcatlons for
the fotlowmg positionl .

area. $16,000 .• $68.000

'

. "What do you mean its
:wrong? That's how they spell
. t on TV I,,
1

qualified applicant. will have a 2
or 4 year degree '" Med1c.11
Technology and a current ASCP
Registry. Ho!lpital offers e•cellent salar;' and benefits for mare
information call, Personnel Direcotr 304-372-2731 or apply at
Hosp1tal bussmess off1ce

AVON - All areas Call Marilyn
Weaver 304- 882·2645
AVON . all areas. call Sh1rlsv
Spears, 304 -675 -1429.
Radiologic Technologist
Immediate opemng for reg1s ·
tared rad•ologic technologist.
E11ening sh1ft. 2 .30-11 :00 pm.
M onclaya thru Fnday Send
resume to Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal, Dlrl!lctor of Personn111L Valley
D rive. Point Pleasant, W Va
25650. 304 - 675 -4340 ut
307. AA -EOE .

32 Mobile Homes

1970 Ritzcraft ,2x70, 3 bedroom trailer. $5600 call 614·

268-1613.

2 br new wall· tO•wall carpet, air
cond. Parked in .John1on's Mobtle Home Park Will sell on land
contract. Call 614. 446-4110 or

446-1409.

Ha11e openmg in my home for
eldGJiy. Reasonable rates Call

TLC . 614-992-7044 or 614·

992-6817

'

Immaculate condition 1981 Vic·
torian 14'x70'. 2 bedroom,
garden, tub. central air, fireplace, den, $13,900 304·6751317.
12x55 Mobile home, good con·
dit1on. good price 304-6765546.

Situations
Wanted

Hav e room in pri11ate home for
elder person Good car111 . Aeaso·
n abla Call614- 256 -6509

Business
Buildings

Commercial build1ng1 for Ieese.
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores,
offices. A· One Real Estate.
Carol Yaeger, Broker. Call 304-

675-6104
749 Th1rd Ave . Pre1M1tty The
Gift Shop. 1600sq ft. Commercial or warehouse Parking on
side Adjacentto Th•rd &amp; Pine St
Call 614-446 - 2362 for
appointment.

18 Wanted to Do
35 Lots
Carpenter Work, $6 00 a hr. or
by the JOb. Panelling . painting,
drywall. remodeling Call 614·

446-6377

l!o

Acreage

Near Eureka Dam 14 acres-10
acres whh tobacco base. Land
contract. Call 614-446- 2404.

House cleaning or office clean·
ing by dey, Can give reference
lmmaculatfl cleaner Cell 614·

Acreage. land contraC1 or trailer
lot for rent on Rt. 160. Call

Can do light hauling and roofing
Reaso nable rates Medon
Snider. 614· 949· 2629

2 Bulld.ng lots· 1 Y2 acres each
whh county water. Jerrva Run
Rd. Apple Grove. W. Ve . · can
304-576·2383 .

446-8105

514-388-9364.

FIREWOOD! locust . oak,
cherry, $35. per prck-up lo•d
delivered. Billf'Si ack 614· 992-

Two Iota, 2 acres or more, phone
304· 675-4208

2269

4 acre1 on Sand Hill Road . City
Water. 304-675-3030 or 675 3431.

Halle opening m my home for
elderly lady, ha11e experience.
reasonable rates , 304 - 773 ·
5246

Rent als

Financial
41
21

Business
Opportunity

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnished small houae
Adults only . References re·
quued Off atrfH!t park1ng. Ph.

614-446-0338

J NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO recommends that you
do business w1th people you
know , and NOT to send money
through the matl until you have
investigated the offenng

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Will help finance or land contract 10 yr. old houae. 3 Br .•
Patriot V1llaQe Call 614 - 446·

1340. 446-3870
4 BA , flfepJace. full basement 3
mi . so. of Gallipolis. $34.900.
Call Days -614-446 -1616, after
5.00· 446 -1244
L1ke new. maintenance free, 2
br. ranch, ~ully carpeted 15mm.
to Gallipolis or Mercerville
$27. 000 Call 614-256 -62'00
House at 60 Chillicothe Ad Very
Cheap Call 6,4. 446 2404
1984 Tnumph II 141170 All
electric· Cu.t1om made. Ellcellent shape. $9000. Phone 614·
696-4429
All brick . 3 br , 1 1h bath,
fireplace, laundry room Owner
financing . Call 614· 4'l6· 0722.
,_.andt M ;n Spec1al- 5 room and
bath, auic, ba sement 1 10 State
St Prtce negotiable. €all 614·

992 ·3725
Mi ddleport . Lovely rntenor .
close to stores and school. Price
reduced 8 1 4 -992- 5709 aher
6 00 p.m
Government homes from S 1 IU
repair) Foreclosures. Repos, Tax
Oelmquent Properties Now 181·
ling 'your area . Call 1-31 5 · 736 ·
7375 Ext. 3P. QH -H for current
list . 24 hts.
. ' First time home buyers, you can
ow n a home for what you now
pay 1n rent . seller will help with
fimmcmg. 10 m1nutes from
IOWn , 304 676-4008.
Mason County on Rt . 35 South·
s1de. e11cellem 1, 650 sq h farm
house. large b•rn pond . 60 acres
with timber, private country
liV Ing. 182 .000. 304 - 675 ·

5420
For St~le. Land Con1ract . 3 br
house, 2-st ory w1th basement
N1ce 1J2 acre lot 2-car garage.
ntceviAW In New Haven. Terms.
$300. down; $300 month. Call
304 882 233 9 af1er 5 p.m .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Holly Perk , 4 k?O, central air,
porch • .shed , underpennlno
5~600. or best offer. 304 ·675·
5417 after 4 p,m

for. Rent

for Sale

34
12

42 Mobile Homes

4 SR . house for rent 3 m1 so of
Galhpolis. $300 a month plus
dep. Ref. r~~~quired . Call 614·
446·1615 Af1er 5·00 PM ., call

446-1244.

4 BR house on 1 acre Excel
location. Ref. Call A-1 Aeal
Esta1e Broker. Call 304· 676 5104or675· 7738 .
Unfurnished hou1e. 3 br. Rod ney Village II S275 Call 614 446 4418 after 7 :00PM
Nice 3 br. with garage. 8275 e
mo.· Qptlon to buy . Dep req
Cell aftM 4 :00 PM 814-388 -

8624.

Sale-Rent . Ranch style. Large
kitchen, utility rm., single garage. Like new .. Carpet thru -ollt.
Cell 61 4 -446· 1 358.
2 br , carpon &amp; stor11ge area.
82;25 a mo. Dep. 8t ref. reqUired
Call 614 -446-3888 or 446·
4491
Two Bedroom farm houl8,
newlv restorl!ld . Adults only. No
pets. Fairfield · Centenry Rd,
Grl!l&amp;n twp. Cell614-448· 9442.
2 Br. home for rent Kyger Creek
Sch. Dist, Sec dep. required .
S260amo Cai1614-446 -0648.
For rent · very nice 2 br. house in
M tddleport. Full basement. dishwasher, garbage disposal, air
cond . Excellent location. No
pets 8250amo Cai1614· 446·
9206 after 6 :30PM .
3 BR hs., Located at 661 Fourth
Ave. Stove &amp; refrig furnished
$ 186 mo . $76 dep . Call 614446-3870 or 61 4- 448· 1 340 .
3 bedroom, partially furnished .
In Pomeroy , close in. A11ailable
Oct. 17 Must be employed .
Deposit reqUired . Send applica·
tion to The Datly Sentinel , P 0 .
Box 729 Y. Pomeroy, Ohio.
ShpwJ1 by appointment 3 bed·
room. 2 bath home. 607 4th St.,
New Haven. W Va. $260 a
month plus $, 00 deposit Call

614-949-2470 .

2 br. trailer &amp; 2 br . house next
door to college. Call 614·446·
1323 or 246-9170.
2 br.• 2 very good mobile homes
for rent Dep and ref required .
Call 614 -446 -0527 after 2:00

1 2~t60 unfumlahed .with w11sher
8t dryer hookup. 'h ml past
HMC. Ref. &amp; Dep . required. Call
614- 446· 4369 or 304-675·
9760
2 bedrooms. all electric. $200.
deposit. S176 per month plus
utilities. Reference required No
kids. 7 miles from Mlddlepon.
614·742· 2014,
2 bedroom mobile home in
Syracuse S150 per month.
$60, deposit plus utilities Call
614-992-6687 or 614 -992-

6732.

Double Wide, priwete lot, nice
area. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths.
dining room, famity room, air
cond. Gallipoll1 Ferry, 8326 00.

304-675-3087

3 bedrooms, rent plus utilities,
Gallipolis Ferrv. for information

cell 304-675·4088 .

Two bedroom mobile homes
furnished, $186. month plus
$75 deposit. 304 -676·6512 .
Two bed room mobile home
Middleport, Ohio . References
and deposit .required. 304-882·
3267 or 394-773-6024.
3 bedroom mobile home Mason,
W Va . References and d111posit
required 304 - 882-3267 or

304-773-5024.

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt · 4 rooms and
bath . Centrally toca~ed Ref. and
See. dep. raqUiri!IO Call 614446 -0444 .
2 br apartment Adults only
Inquire, Sheppard's. First &amp;
Olive St. Gallipolis, Ohio.
Efficiency apt,: 2 rms S. private
bath. $150 a mo.- Utilities paid.
828 2nd. A11e Call 614-446-

2390
Nice 2 br apt : Stove, retrigera·
tor, water-furnished 41h miles
from Gallipolis. 8210 a mo . No
pet1 Call614-446·8038.
Furnished lpt 2 br. 1136 2nd.
A11e . Gallipolis. S195 Water
paid. Call 614-446-4418 after
7 ·00 PM.

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614446· 9680. Rent as low u $120
month
Furmshed room . $100. Utihties
paid. Share beth. S1ngle male
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 aher7pm.

46 Space for Rent

Mobile Home lot. 60 ft . or less.
920 4th , Gallipolis 175. Water
peid. Call614-446-4416 after7

PM.
Trailer pads with tie downs
Large gardenS. yard on Rt. 160.
8100 a mo. Call614-388· 9354.
Ground floor level - Approx. 560
1q. ft Commercial space. Lo·
cated at 417 2nd. Ave. Call
614-446-3432 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers Call 614·992 -

7479.

Space for small tratlers. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air and -cable Muon,
W.Va. Call304-773-6651
Tra1ler spaces for rent fulty
equipped in Mason, W. Va.
304-773-6319 after 7 :00pm.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

SWAIN

Olive St .. Gallipolis
NEW · 6 pc wood group· $399.
living room suit••· t 199-$199
Bunk beds with bedding- t199.
Full s1ze menrass &amp; foundatiOn
starting · S99
Recliners
starting- $99.
•
USED· Bed!l, dressers, bedroom
su1tes. $199 - $299 . Desks,
wringer washer. a complete hne
of used furniture
NEW· Western boots- $30.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
1oft toe). Call614 - 446-3169
County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliance! and TV sets.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat.. 614-446- 1699, 627 3rd
Ave Gallipolis. OH
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers. refngerators,
ranges. Skaggs Appliances.
Upper Ri\ler Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446 -7398
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

apt jn Pomeroy area. Pay own
11tillt1es. depoa1t required. Call

614-992· 5113. 614-992·6723
or 614•992· 2609 . Call after
6:00. plesse.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

614- 286~ 5930 .

Quality firewood. all hardwood.
for sale S26 a pick-up lo~. Call

614-367-0669.

Firewood-Hard and mixed
Hauled and stacked. $30 a load.
Call Ed at 614-446 -3970.

FIGURE SHAPING TABLES
Open your own figure aalon Wltn
the original Stauffer Concept
Figure , Shaprng tables. Buy
factory direct Call 31 2· 234- )
L1ke new, Kmg wood &amp; coal
stove with blower Uud 1
winter. Call 614-258· 11536 after 4·00 PM
Firewood for sale. Dallverv.
available Cut &amp; stacked. Can
614- 446-0966. Also ·will haul
ewav scrap metal
HALF PAICEI Fleshing aHow
signs 82991 Lighted, non-arrow
S2891 Unlighted 12491 Free
letter! See locally . Call today!
Factory 1 {8001 423-0163,
anytime.
Mink Jacke1 . Sllvflr. Cost
$3'"{00 Asking 81500 New
condition . Call 614· 266 -1825.
ManuallY operated hospital bed
&amp; night •tend Good cond.
8250 . Call 614-266-6206.
White wedding dress. Excel.
cond. S1ze 9. Paid 8400 new.
Willsellfor$100 Call614-388·
Wood &amp; coal burning aiove.
$150 . Call614 -256 -6694.
Unlimited free Kodak Film, plus
free 35mm camMa wtth war·
ranty Toll free 1-800.433· 6312
124 hours).
Woodburner &amp; bottle gas cook
stove. Call 614 -379- 2436.
Catalylic con11erters, only
t89.96 Moat models. ln.atalletion also available. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpson Ave , Athena, Ohio.
Mi•ed herd wood slabs. S12 per
b1,1ndle. Conteining approx . 1 '12
tQn. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co
Pomeroy, Oh10 614-992·6461
Fnewood for s81e Cherry. Oak.
Sasoafras. H1ckory. $40. Pick·
up lo11d. Split and delivered. Call
614-992·6335
For sale. 3 fleshing 11rrow signs.
walk 1n cooler, 2 door gless
cooler, counteJS, glas• show
cases. 2 cash regiaters . George's
Carry Out 3 miles soutt'l of
Middleport, Ohio.
lennox 1 10,000 BTU gas forced
e1r furnacv. Good condition.
$126 . 614 -992 · 6861 after
6 00 p m.
Ashlev wood burner wnh
blower Good cond1t1on Call

~.!:======::::::::;:::::::::::::•:•:•:•~:""':::·:.~
55 Building Supplies
Building Material•
Block, brick, sewer pipes. win·
dows, lintels. etc Claude Winters, Rio Grande, 0. Call 614246-6121.

&amp; Grain

Firewood for sale. delivered
S30.00 load. 304·895-3446.
Monroe copier Model AL-612.
under 15.000 cop1aa. 304·675-

4087

Wood burnmg fireplace insert,
electnc blower. exc cond,
8500 .00 . Phone 304 -676·
2927
Big cha1s111 loungo, orange 826.
304·675·1969
276 gal fuel oil drum w1th 1tand

$30 304-882-3582.

For sale Montgomery Ward
wood 8t coal burning stove.
Good condition . S100. or bett
offer 304-676 -2597.
Tempco 76,000 BTU LP floor
furnace. thermostat &amp; vent, p1p111
&amp; cap, Exc Cond 8100. 304-

675-6173.
55 Building Supplies
Ready mik concrete and all
con crete supplies Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304· 773-5234

56

ployer. $2600. Cell 614-286·
6522.
1983 4 dr. Celebrity. Black with
red interior Auto., ps. pb,
am-fm, •ir,lugg~~ge ra~::k. Sharp.
t3696. Call 61"·286-8622.

2 baby fem•le Ferreta. 8 'wke.
old. 825 each . Call 614· 446·

1354

PR·Reg. Plott Hound pupa.
~eady to go. Will mllte it in the
brush or on the bench. $100
each Cal\614-'388-8478 .
'
German Short hair Pointera-Bird
dogs Call 304·676-21 69 .
Reg111ered Cocker Span1el pup·
pies Black. bt'own, wh1te part•
Himalayan kitten•: No check.
C11ll 614-992· 2607.

57

Musical
Instruments

New AcoustiC guitar 6 case
Excellent condition &amp; tound.
Flute, Bundy like new Call
614-446-4208 or 446 -2886.
UpriQht plano for sale 160. You
haul away. Clll614·992·8789.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Wmasap. Rome. Melrose, Sup•
Gold. red &amp; vellow Delicious
Apples Honey, sorghum, apple
butter, pumpkins
•ssorted
food ltem1. Dunrovin Fruit Farm
681 S. of Alb•ny Weekdays
g. 6, Weekends 9-6. Call 614-

a

698·6298.
Quality Frult1 and Vegetables
retail and wholesale 8 &amp; S
Produce across tram P1ua Hut,
Gallipolis, Ohio.

1976 Dodge Charger SE . Les1
1han 70,000 miiM C1ll 614-

GoDING TO TAKE PLACE , AWD
HOW ?OON, l HURI'.IED
RIC.HT OVoR TO THIS
I!IANK-

Form St1pp l1es
&amp;

Livestock

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 West. Jacllson, Ohio.
614 -288·6451 '
Ma1sey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; u1ed
flquipment. Largest selection in
S.E. Ohio.

~

1982 Berllnme Camero. Red.
Exeat. cond. pa. 'Pb. tilt wheel,
reclining seat, V· 8, auto. am-fm
stereo. Low miiBI. VlfY sharp
Call 614-446·2886 att8r 6 ·00

PM .

1978 Olds. Cutlaes pa, pb, au1o
Good cond. Call 614-379-

2798.

·1980 Olds Omega 4 OR, mea
body, run• good. 98.000 miles.
Call &amp;14-388-8607
Stainlen steel exhaust svstems
Now custom made for your
truck, motor home Of cles•iccer.
With Uf•1ime warranty MuHier
Man, 9 St1mpson A111 .• Athens.

Ohio. 1-800· 843·3787 .

1981 Fo,d Escort Station
Wagon. Real good shapa.
12195. Call 614-949·2179 .
1978 Chevy Si111arado 31. ton
4x4. Call 81 4·986-4339 after
5 :00p.m.
1978 Camaro Rally Sport, auto.
AC, tilt, AM-FM stereo. air
shocks, 360 four barrel!. 304676 · 1 139.
1986 Cougar, 3 B. V-6, take
over p.~ymants, Cln see 2212
Madiaon ~ve. after 6:00PM .
'78 Camara Z28, PS. AC, PB,
2.600. Call 304-876-4072 after
3 :30pm.
1984 Delta 88, loaded, 4 door,
V-8. garage kept, 87,395.00.

1978- 1070 Case tractor with
ac, no t1ll , 4 row corn planter.
)!5960 Call 614·286·8622.

$3,900. 304-675-4480.

p14·388·9688
Homehto Super XL, 16 Inch bar,
$299 95. Siders Equipment
Co .. Hendetson, W. Va . 304676-7421
lnternationlll1 060 grinder mixer
magnet . Hav feeder, 3 screens,
good cond . 304·273· 42115.

62 Wanted to Buy '

304·675·8085.
1984 Ford

Tempo

Clean.

1982 Buick Regal. 34,000
miles. t4.500. 30~~76-4480 .

Livestock

64

Hay

&amp;

'78 Monte Carlo $500 304·

676-5761 .
72

Trucks for Sale

1976 lfa ton Ford pickup Fair
cond 8860 . Call 614· 379-

2884.

1977 Ford truck with bed
Replaced motor Aun• Nery
good. no rust. Call 814- 992·

Mixed

hay,

1984 Chevy truck S-10. V -6,
auto trans., ac. p1, pb, am-fm,
good condition. 13,250. 304676-3364 or 876 -4437.
1978 Chevy lA ton, heavy duty,
good cond , 11,96000. 1973
Chrysler Newport, 4 door,
busted fender. good motor, new
exhaust, 1260.00. Cell 304·

896·3001 or 304-676-4138 .
73

Vans

&amp;

4

W.O.

1----------1988 Toyota 4x4. Daluu extra
cab Ac . cruise. tdt, am-fm -caas
Excel. cond , Call 614· 448-

S1 25

H1y for

15.000 plus 2 {40001 bushel
g1aln bin• for rent. Morgan's
Woodlawn Farm, 304-67&amp; .

Strut1, $119.96 pair, ln11alled~
Moat models. Muffler Man, l
Stimpson Ave Athans, Ohio.

79 Motors Homes
l!o Campers

1307.

1983 Jeep SClrambl8f , 8 cyl .. 4
sp , .t6,000 miles . 14500. Call

814· 986·4324.

I:;;;;:=;:=;=:::::=.:===
74

Motorcycles

1
1986 RX20pR Honda trail bike,
1800.00, good cond, 304· 675·

2495 .

o

FRANK AND ERNEST
•
EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR

I~ wHy

r-/f
.~!

010 :t LeAvE
MY L-AST JoB (
WSl.J.. , l:. PI DN'T THINfc:

~:, l SHout..D HANG
~ouND AFTeR :r.'o

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

rn

rn Hollywood Squares

•

SWEEPER end •ew•ng machine
r8pair, parts, and supplln. PiCk
up and delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one tt•lf mile wp
Georges Creek Rd. Call t14-

m

rn

ALF to 101n a monastery.
C!l NFL Monday Night Match
Up Los Angeles Ra•ders at

Denver Broncos

Cil 0 (I) Funny, You Don't
Look 200 Trace history of
u.s. Constitut•on 0
· (!) America by Design Trace
htstory ol transportauon from

ALLEY OOP
THAT'S ONEO RI!B BO!IiT WE WON'T
HAFTA WORRY ABOUT ANYMORE/

Memories
ctJ Newlywed Game
0 (I) Judge
®I Wheel of Fortune 0
@ Crossfire (0 .30)
1!21 1m Jeopardy! 0
® Barney Miller
Ell(!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 CII Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Father Murphy
0
1m ALF A scandalous

secret from h1s past causes

S~EN fl~eD.

I nPPED IT

OVER! NOW
~ET'S FIND

OURSE~VES

SOME DR);,
GROUt-Jv.

nvers to ra11roads to
htghwa)'S. ~

®I Ill 1!21 Frank's Place
Frank visits a men's club
w1th a past he soon learns

446·0294.

abOut.
l!ll Wonderworks Sensitive

Vinyl Siding, over hang 1nd
gutters. Call 61•·446·6834
Free Estimatt.

from her

Elactrolux Seln end Service- eJI
mechinn reduced: OJ- t849
now on sale 1489. New Discovery upright 1429 now on ••••
t349. 8·9 Sh1mpoo• t399
now on sele ~99. Eaay plfl/·
ment plan available Call 814-

388-9918.

RON'S Television Service
Hou•e calls on RCA. Ouaur.
GE . Specialing in Zenith. Cell

304-576-2398 or 614·446·

g~rl

MEEK
00 'rCV EV£R G£T ·,
1H£ FEE.WJG ...

2464

1HAT J,{))'f&lt;E. LI\AIJG IU
A~

ASPIRIN COMMERCIAl

ou 1V ...

project
@ NFL Monday Night

Magazine

Ill@ Kale &amp; Allie All1e
finds she doesn't like beiC'!J a
team player in romance t;1
9:00 CD 700 Club
0
1m MOVIE: •Right· to
Die' NBC Monpay Night at
the Moviea C
C!l Tria1hlon 13ermuda
@l

Rotary or cable tol)l drilling.
Moat wells completed samadq.
Pump sales and service. 304896-3802

rn

Starks Tree and Lawn Servic::e,
lawn cere, land1caping, &amp;tump
removal, 304· 576·2B42 01

576 -2903.

International

WINT.ERIZATION

82

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CA~TER'S

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
r--------r------~--~--~
l THINK I 1LL WAIT.
NO, TM WAbnN~R::RMY
ARE 't1JLl WAITl~
FOR ~E SCKX)L

SLE! WINTHROP'?

A LITTLE: FARTl·HioF.
D::ll'tN THE STREeT.

CHAUFFEUR 1V DRIVE UP

IN MY STRETCH LIMO.

PLUMBING

AND HEATING

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614·446- 3888 or 614-

698-6121 .

&amp;

Aas1dent1al OJ commercial wiring. New 1i8rvlce or rapa1rs .
Ucensed eleetnc1an E sttmate
frfle . Ridenour Electrical, 304

f/0 HUM .MY AT'S
FUNNY !!
LITTLE

TATER
TH' SAME

15 WEARIN'
THING

genetics.

tomorrow's

news

stor~es .

(1.00)
Ell QJ Benny Hill
10:30CD TBA
[l) This Old House
Ol Cl) Hogan 1s Heroes
t0:35 CIJ MOVIE: Splendor in the
Grass {NAI (2:04)
11:00 CD Remington Steele
0 ill ®I Ill 1!21 I1Jl News
(J) Sign 011
l!ll Health Century Review

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimmi[rg
pools, cisterns, wells Ph. 614·

246 -9286.

significant developments in

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
ciaters, wells. pools ftlled. Formerly James Boys Waters.Cell
304· 675 -6370 .

molecular biology and

genet1cs.
Q]) Moneyline Current
reports on world economics

Paul Rupe , Jr Water Service
Pools, cisterns, wells. Call 614·

. 446 ·3171

Watterson 's Water Hauling,
reasonable rates, 1mmedieta
2.000 gallon delivery, cisterns.
pools, well , etc . call 304 - 576-

2919

Upholstery

Mowrey ' s Uphol1ter1ng serving
tri county area 22 yaer1 . The beat
in furn1ture upholstering . Call
304 · 675 - 4164 for free
ettlmates

significant developments in
molecUlar biology and

ahead to

General Hauling

~ &amp; M Custom Couches and ~
f.'aupholstary , St. Rt. 7. C•own
City, Ot'! 614-256·1470, he.
614 -446 -3438 Open daily 9 to
4 :30, sat. 9 .30 co 1.30. Old 6
new Upholtered.
•

~!j\'~~ffiea~nfu~1 Weview

. 1!]1 Even~ng News A wrap up
of loday·s news and a look

Dillard Water Service. Pools.
Cisterns, Wells. Deliwery Anytime. Call 614-446-7404 -No
Sunday call1

87

o

(I) Aec Monday Night
Footblll
(!) l!ll Oil Shell and BritiSh
Petroleum see growth
agamst background of two
wars.
®I Ill@ Newhart Michael
steals a program 1daa from a
student in his produCtiOn
class. 0
1!]1 Larry Kmg Livel In deplh

.l!ll IBl News

675 -1786.
85

Cil

ChampiOnship

9:30 @l Ill li2l 211t Annual
Country Music Awarda
Kenny Rogers hosts (LI
10:00 CD S1raight Talk
C!1 Speedworld CART
Laguna Seca 300 from

APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE.
Wood 11nd coal sto11es, fumacaa,
and inserts · 8runco. AshleY.
Consolidated Dutchwest. Buy.
sell. trade. 10 yrs experi&amp;nce.
At 143, Carpenter, Ohio. 614-

Electrical
Refrigeration

(T)

in'terv1ews With top
newsmakers and celebrities.

446-4477

84

aunt.

" swapp1ng during a class

Fetty Tree Ttimming, stump
remowal. Call304-675-1331

Security Lightl. Storm Windows. InsulatiOn. Aooflng. General Repairs. 304·876-6367.

grandmother ,

the day·s world news and in
depm teawra reports. (1 :00)
@ MOVIE: ANZACS: The
War Down Under, Pt. 1 (2:00)
Ell(!) MOVIE: The Three
Faces of Eve [NRI (2:11)
8:05 CIJ MOVIE: Sex and the
Single G1~ (NR) (1 :54)
8:30 0 ill @ Wllaria's Family
Wtllie suggests w1fe

EEK

I OFFENDED
'(OU WOULD EVEN

SU66EST IT !

I REFUSE TO ENTER
A SPUDS MAC KENZIE

LOOK-ALIKE COI·HEST !

CLAY R. POllAN

letters of
0 foRearrange
ur scrambled words

the
be ·
low to form four $imple words

I

DEGNIG

.~.,.:.v....,o_A-'-T
:.
. E;:. T.,.-1, 'I·'~·
.. 1

~

Raisins, inevitably, wer.e_
ground into the floor of my kit·
I I 1
chen . The cleaning lady left this
. - - - - - - - - - ' - - - , note: "If you're trying to make
RU5 L 0 y
1wine, the grapes are--."
::....:,l....;..,lr;6,..._,
Complete the chuckle quoled

f,,-TI;;S-:;1,..;;..,CI

O

I.

.
.
.
.
.
•
by f111ing ir the m1ss1ng wo rds
L-.-J-~-..1.-..1...-L......J you develop from step No. 3 below

'
lETTERS TO

.

"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Loafet - Juice - Qulrlr - Pastor - CROOK

'MY young

eon wrote a paper on becoming a policeman.
When the paper waa returned, the teacher had written, "GOOd
Idea. Start with your friend, he wanlll to be a CROOK."

BRIDGE

NORTH
li-IZ·87
+KQ97
.AQJ73

James Jacoby

• 86

. Bois Royal Distilleries of tbe Neth·
erlands has reinstituted a popular
journalistic competition of the 1970s
- tbe Bois Bridge Tips Competition.
Ten experts around the world ~re in·
vited to· submit tips, and the winner
will be selected by the members of the
International Bridge Press Associa·
tioo. Today's deal was submitted by
the Scottish writer Hugh Kelsey. Does
it surprise you that the opening lead
against six spades is the five of clubs?
Kelsey's theme is a simple one. If
you're on lead against a slam and have
long trumps with a potential trump
trick, choose a lead that suggests to
declarer that you are short in trumps.
In this particular deal, it would be
wrong for West to cash the diamond
ace on opening lead, since a shrewd
declarer might deduce from that lead
that West also had a possible trump
trick. Similarly, the lead of the club
nine might also persuade declarer to
play West for long trumps. But from
declarer's point of view, the five of
clubs seems like a normal lead from
length. Then, when a spade is played to
dummy's king, with West playing the

+K4
EAST

WEST

••

tJ6 4 3
.982
t A 10 &gt;2

•10 &gt;4'
+J73
+QJ8732

+9.

SOUTH
+A1082

.K6
tKQH
+A106

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weal

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nardi

East

2+

Pass

3•
4+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

&gt;+

Pass

Opening lead:

+5

six and East the five, chances are good
'that declarer will nert play the queen
from dummy, and that will s~ll finis
to making tbe slam.
r

learns of death wtth help

~ Primanaws Wrap ups ~~

10·1~

b~

WORD
GAM I

crm m

C!1 NFL Monday Night

• Home
Improvements

Unconditional lifetime guaran·
tea. Local reference• furnished.
Free estimates. Call collect
1-614·237-04B8. day or night.
RogersBasement
W•terprooflng.

6:00 CD Crazy Like a Fox
C2J Ill (I)
1!21
ll]J News
C!l SportsLook (T)
C!l Dr. Who
l!ll Square One TV 0
® Facts of Life
Ell QJ One Day at a Time
.6:05 CII Alice
6:30 0
1m NBC Nightly Newa
C!l Scuba Scuba diving on
• 1oca110n around 1he globe. (T)
(I) l!) (I) ABC News 0
C!l NlghJiy Bualne11 Report
®I Ill IHl CBS News
l!ll Colorsounda
l!ll ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world is
anchored hve from New
York. (0:30)
® WKRP in Cincinnati
Ell(!) Too Close for Comfort
6:35 CII Leave It To Beaver
7:00 CD Remington Steele
0
PM Magazine
C!l Sponscenter (L)
ctJ Entertainment Tonight
0 (I) People's Court
C!l l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
@l News
OJ) Moneyline Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill 1!21 1m Wheel of Fortune

7:30 0

Services
B1

EVENING

Ell C!l M'A'S'H
7:05 CI1 Andy Gritfi1h

1·800-843-3767.

Gospel Group? Nica motdr
home. Sleep• 8· run• gre•t ..
generator- air-awning. Come
seel 16400 Cell 614-:t:68·

•

MON.,'OCT. 12

~Cheers

--

Grain

bedding 60c. 304-175-5579.

1286.

19n El Camino Run• good,
new tires. Call 814·742· 3133
after 6:00.

8738.

Mixed hi'V for sale · round baln,
Call814-246·151 \7,

Auto Repair

1986 Mercury Ststion wagen.
Clean 83:900. 304-676 -44BO.

S421 .

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn Call for la~est quotes. Ri11er
City Farm Supply. 614- 446-

77

•

S©l\Jl~- ~ t.tfs~

THAT DAllY
'UULII
- - - - - - - lditod

rn

WANT TO BUV windshield
fr•m• and parta to fit 1977 CJ 6
Jeep. 304-676-8009.

Cell 814,388·8178.

1-row Oliver corn picker. 1200
bu. wire corn crib-good cond.
Call...614'· 446·8427 after 6.

Bidwell Castl Feed Store. Oct
Special On Sale now· 6ft • 6ft.
&amp;. 6Ya ft . steel pott. Galcho barb
wire Call for the latest prices.

'\

Ohio . 1-800-843·3767.

1986'h Ford Escort hatchback.
Am·fm, 4 spd. Very good cond .

1979 Thunderbird (wrecked)
new tirM, 361 Windsor V8 eng.
38,000 actual mile~ . Call 614448-2886 Of ·48-4208.

'IOU'RI!. 60NNA HAI/I!.
TO FO\..i..OW THE:M ...

---------·lc-'
Du-' exhauat kits. t99.95 ir•tallad . Most Ford1, cruwy
trucks, Vans, 4x4'1, Muffl,..
Man, 9 Stimpsoon Ave .• Athens.

379·2652.

1978 Chevy Caprice, Classic. ·
Wall equipped. low mil ... excel.
cond. 12100. 1983 Chewy Conversion van, loaded, low mile1,
excel. eond. t9600. Call 614388-9736

WHE-N THEY COMe OUT

WHEN I '5AW WH!'R!'
THE TRANSACTION WAS

304-876-4230.
...
Chevotet engines: 360'a. 23:,:
V -8.· · Olds., Pontiac. or Buidt
40().. Fordeoglne Cell614-245-

1978 MarC\lf'Y Zepher. 8 cyl.,
auto .• 84,000actualmlles. Runa
&amp; looks grut . t950, wtll taka
truck In trade. Cell 814 -44t1912 or 388-9873.

1982 Chewy Malibu Clanlc 4
dr., air, PB, PS. AM -FM radio.
Truck load apples, Ida Red.
High mileage. 1996. Call 614·
Golden Deliciou•. all fru1ts and' 992-6471
vegetables. Jacks '-'arket, Rt
36. Henderson. W Va.
'81 Dattun 610 Wagon . 4 sp.
Good mechanical conditton. Call
Freeur Beef. 304·676·"182
after f :OO p.m .. 814-992-6041
Carl Kinnaird

7 wk. old ptg•. 130 each. Call
614·256· 1682.

The autumn leaves were beautiful. ..
then Edgar sneezed.

1984 Dodge Colt Nice economy car No rust. Stereo ca11

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennet.
CFA Himalay•n. Peraien and
Siamese kltt.ns. AKC Chow
puppies. New kinens; Perslene.
Call 614-448- 38&amp;4 after 7PM .

8 yr. old· 68" Bey Mare 1600.
Call 614·388 ·8476

Apt . In Middlepon. 2 br furnished apt also two room
efficiency apt . 304-882-2666

2566.

0231 .

Reg. Angu1 buill &amp; heifers. 9
mos. old Call 614·266-6210.

Two bed room apartment. 304 676 -2548

1971 Tovota 1973 Chervy Ca·
pice Claaaic. 3 year old Dober·
man. mala. 876 Call 614·379 -

Groom and Supply Shop- Pel
Grooming All breeds .. All
styln. Julie Webb Ph. 114 - 446~

63

ground floor, washer end dryer
hook up, no children, immediate
occupancy. No petl, phono
304-675 -4480 ltxt 53 or 60."1.

1988 Calavier As. Auto., ac, ps,
pb. am-fm rad1o, tih, rear
detroit Call 614-446-2323 af·
ter 4.00 PM .

Pets for Sale

2985.

3 rooms and bath, gas heat.

71 Auto's For Sale

Television
Viewing
u

Budget Transmissions: UseCI and
rebuilt. all tvpes. Guaram:ae 30
days. Call 814· 379-2220 - or

5087.

1ranspurlatJOn

2783.

ElectroiUiliS hav1ng a Fall Sale
Super discount. Celt 304 -768·
3213 for further informatiOn

5024.

1962.

Hay

lafge round bates of hay . Call
814-268-6011

Concrete bloctl;a all size• yard or
delivery. Mason sand. Gallipoli1
Block Co ., 123'12 Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Cell 814-446-

APARTMENTS , mobile homes,
houses. Pt. Pll!la!lant end Galllpo·
lia 614·446· 822, ,

576 2083.

64

-----

•

61 4-446·0966.

614·985-4276 . • 175.

Sl!laaoned oak firewood . Call
304-676-2767 after 4 :40

EASY

w•

•

\

~~~

Used and rebuilt trenamlnion•.
lnternalty Inspected and guaranteed . ln•tallation 'available.
b'u'f' junk trensmlttlons. Calf

1.800-843-3767.

2 bedroom apartment in Syra·
cuu 5150 par month plus
utilities. Deposit. Call 614-992 5687 or 614· 992 -6732 .

2 br furnished trailer, Gallipolis
Ferry. St . Rt 2 between Goo~
dyear S. Stauffer . One unfur·
nished tta1ler. 304 -576· 2132 or

'

Boats and
Motors for Sale

~

9809 .

SNAFU by Bruce Beattie

Mt. Vernon AVe Ground floor
apt . 3 room1&amp;. bath, stoveS. ret.
furnished. private entrance &amp;
parking, large porch. ex c co nd &amp;
neighborhood. Quiet single or
()Ouple. 304·676· 45BO or 676·

OI&lt;AY,fMGAWNO~aOFFl trNJ I()U'V£1
IT, YIIW ~ '()lJ ~AA roWtlll

--!-~ CAPTAIN

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock·

9547.

Office Space for rent . Excel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries c;.all 614-446-4222

BORN LOSER

Pontoon boat. 24 ft. witt. 22'
inch Pontoons Excellent eondi·
tion. $3600. 814-992·7810

54 Misc. Merchandise

304-882-3287 or 304· 773 -

2,' 3, or 4 bedroom houses and

75

.,

New 16 lb Hot Point Wuher
ar'!d elec! dryer with vent kit and
pig tail for $660.00. 304·876·
5750 '

son, Oh

Motorcycles

1984 Honda VT 500 Ascot!
3000 miles likanew. t1000. of
best offer, Sal at Smittl ,..laon
Motors or call Brian at 614· 992 2174.

Frigidaire Stack Wash8f·Drver.
May tag portable wa•her . 40
mch GE Range . Autom,tic
wash era. Automatic dryera (g81
and electric). Frost tree refrigerator Gas fangas. Firestore
Store. Middleport.

7 room houee in Middleport. '
2 bedroom furnised apt. ref and
Opt1on to buy. Call 614 -992depo1it. New Haven, W Va .
2363 or 614-992 -7621 .

2 bedroom house for rent.
Refwence required . Reason&amp;bly
pnced . Call 614-992-2974.

74

•

16. 16.6.
8 miles out At. 218.
Call
614-256·6~61.
----------.Plastic cistern state approved,
plastic septic tanks, plastic
culverts, metal culverts RON

furnished . Waaher·dryer hookup Water, garbage paid. Near
Silver Bridge Call 614 ·446·

The Daily Sentinei- Page- ·11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1986 Honda CR 1215. Good'
condition. Call 814 -379· 2112.

Carpet, $6.60 &amp; up Living room
suites, 8326· &amp; up Mollohan
Furniture, !,.lpper Aiver Rd. 448·

2 Br ..... p... Stova. refllg.

Park1ng. Call 614-446·0338 .

Sofllll and chairs priced from
$395 to $995. Tables 860 and
up to S12~ Hide-a -beds $390
to $696 RecUners $225 io
8375. Lamp1 828 to 8125
Dinettes $109 and up to 8495
446-2325.
Wood table w-6 chairs 8285 to
t795 . Desk 8100 up to 8376
Large two-bedroom unfurnished
apartment with stove, refrigera- Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
beds complme 'w -mattresses
tor, washer and dryer Olleflook·
lng City Perk. 8225 per month. ' t296anduptoS395 Babybeds
$110 . Mattrenes or bo.1t springs
Callevening1. 814-i448- 4425 or
full or twin $68. firm 878 , and
446-2325.
S88 Queen sets &amp;226, King
2 Br. garage apartment, 2 br . &amp;350 . 4 drawer chest 869. Gun
furnished upstairs apt. &amp; 3 br . cabinets 6 gun . Gu or electnc
range S376 . Baby mattreaaes
··unlurnished, apt Call 614-446835 &amp; $45. Bed frames $20.
0284.
830 &amp; Kmo frame S60 Good
Tara Townhouse apartments-' selection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets. headboards S30
Furnished' or unfurnished 2 br.,
1 1h bett)JI Private entrance. end up to 866
Enclosed patio Call 614 · 367·
90 Days same as cash with
7860.
approved ~credtt
3 M1les out
Bulaville Ad Open 9am to 5pm
Gracious living. 1 end 2 bed·
room apartments at VIllage Mon. thru Sat Ph. 614 · 446·
'
Manor end R1v8rs1de Apart- 0322.
ment&amp; in Middlepott From
PARSON ' S FURNITURE
$216 . mcluding utilities Call
614· 992· 7787 EOH .
New wood 6 pc. living wood
2 bedroom, upstairs newly euitee. $399 .S6. chest of drawremodeled Sto11e and refugera- afs, 4 drawer· 848, 5 drawer·
tor furn11hed . S200. per month $59.'95, mattress &amp; bok eprings.
plus utitities. 8100. deposit full s1zo; 312 coil. S 149 96 set
rset
required Call 614· 992 · 34B9 twtn mattri!ISses, $95
THE WORKING
evenings.
MAN ' S FRIEND
Nice one bedJoom apartment.
Vallev FurnitUFG
Newly carpeted, upstairs . 402%
28th St , Point Pleasant Call New and uaed furntture and
appl1cance1 Call 614· 446 814-992-6858 .
7672. Hours 9-6
2 bedroom apt Ntce setting.
convement to shopping Ap ·
pllance• furniahed. ca rpeted.
Call 61 4·992-6025 EHO
00

Newly redecor11ted apartments
for rent . One-bedroom, unfur. mahed. •econd floor. From
8175. to $226. per month. Call
evenings: 614-446- 4425 or

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br LallY Wright

2 solid Cherry twin bede, t75
each. Footbell drapes &amp; twin
bedspread. Rainbow ltripe curtains • twin bedtpra.t, Other
various curtain a, dr~pes . &amp; beds·
preads 48 " base cabinet with
butch• block top. 16"x 30 "
wall cabinet. Call 614·388·
8476

Callahan's Used Tire Shop . OvM
1 .000 tires, 1lzes 12. 13. 14, 16.

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
44

51 Household GoodS'

7444.

Monday: October 12. 1987

•

One professional adult only.

PM .
U1180 Mobile home. 'h m1le
from city limits No pets. Adults
preferred Call, 614-446 -1168.

•

Furnished ept. next to library.

LAB TECH
Jackson General Hosp. Riply, W . t - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - t _
·7=:02;::5=.==:==7=o=======
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'

Monda , October 12, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

and financial news w1th Lou
DobbS . (0:30)
® Honeymooners
Ell CD Love Connection
1t:30 0 Cll I1Jl Tonight Show
C!l SportsCenter (L)
®I Magnum, P.l.
1!]1 Sports Tonight Act1on
packed sports highlights wi1h
N1ck Charles and J1m Huber.
(0:30)
Ill @ 'Hunter' CBS Late
Night Ar. abandoned building
is....set afire by a man dressed
tn black lea1ner
, @ Magnum, P.l. Mixed
Doubles
· Ell CD Late Show
12:00 (]) Burns and Allen
@ NFL Theatre The Golden
Era of Pro Football
.III .B (I) News
[l) Sign Off
tl)l NewsNigh1 Live news

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Madonna's
1 Speed away , Penn pal?
5 Whaler
_141 "Thesailor
Hunter"
9 Descended
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{poPt.)
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10 Pqsition
melodies
12 Entranc·e
2 Texas
13 Card game
shrin~&gt;
14 Ms. Carter
3 Salem, Mass.
16 Modern
4 Summer
Caesar .
(Fr.)
17 Clear
5 More
16
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pallid
cosb
6 Hastened 19
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18 Assuagl.'
7 One ~
20
20 Deep mud
lime
21 Conster8 Powerrut 23
nation
craving
22 Sicilian
11 Shandy's 24
city
creator
25
23 Man14 Position
handled
25 Fumed
26 Colleen's
land
.27 Part of
West
Pakistan
28 Makes lace
29 Regard
highly
32 Rainbow
shape
33 Neronian
greeting
34 - Lanka
35 C'1ty 111
Pakistan
37 ··south
Pacific"
role

Food fish

27 Eng. river
Formative 30 Expunge
years
31 Rishol''s
Signiried
hat
Mum
33 Venezuelan
fragmem
copper
Biblical
center
mountain 36 Unbroken
Onginate 37 Guided

38 Orift
39 Gaetk

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it:

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for ·the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
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CRYPTOQUOTES
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'

�,·

Monday." October 12, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Twins AL
champions
Page 4

'

"

Daily Number
972
Pick 4

Cl~ar tonight. Low in mid
30s. Sunny, highs in 60s
Wednesda)'. Chance of rain
zero percent.

1643

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•·

enttne

1 Section. 10 Pages

P.o meroy-Middleport •.Ohio, Tuesday, October ~3. 1.987

, Vol.37, No.109
Copyrighted 1987

26 Cents

A Multimfldia In(;. Newspaper

Vicious dog registration deadline is Thursday

MARCHING ALONG- Southern Hlgh School's Marching Band
was a favorite witl1 spectators at Saturday's !all festival-

bicentennial celebration· in Racine. Followi~g a parade, the band
returned to the street for a concert.

'

.

...---··

COSTUMED- Sue Hager and Patty Parker, left. to right, were
among the many area residents dressed in old-fashi~ned clothing
for Saturday's fall festlvlll -bicentennlal celebration m Racine.

........·

•

KEEPING THE BEAT - Th,e musical ability of eight-year-old
Tom Powell must come naturally. Tom, the son of John and Debbie
Powell of SyraCU!jC, drummed his way into the hearts of the crowd
at Saturday's falllestival-blcentennlill celebration in Racine. His
mother says his drumming skills are sell-taught.
QUEEN AND COURT HOPEFULS- This parade float, which
transported Racine's Harvest Moon Queen candidates, carried out
the fall theme during Saturday's fall festival-bicentennial
celebration festivities in Racine. Sealed left to right at the front of
the float are .Junie Beegle, a freshman at Southern High, holding

nursing _home in Middleport The
90-bed facility will provide 'employment for some 60 people and
will feed. about $3 million a year
into the local economy.
.council went on record as
opposing a rate hike proposed by
General Telephone Co. of Ohio.
According to a communication
frOm the Office oft he Consumers
Counsel, the raise would be
betwe~ n 31 and 44 percent on
telephone service. Middlepor t
Council voted to send a letter of
objection to the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio which will
make il ruling on the rate hike .
requ es t.

lumberjack

,.

4

ATTENTION!!!

Southeastern Business Colleae

----

'·

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

J

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"VIE HA~E HEARING AIDS"

·1 )
2)
3)
4)

Real
Real
Real
Ileal

Estate
Estate
Estate
Estate

Donlt Ml~t/t-Cs/1 Today 446·4367

..

....,

•

I

·.

.. ',

by U,S. Army helicopters In last
'week' s lirefight .
Two of the photos,. including
one altered to obliterate the
background, showed the burned
hUll of a twin-engine speedboat,
"There was something in the
background taken out," Head
said :- · 'It wasn't part of the boat.
It was considered operationally
se'nsltive."
·
The other two photographs ·
showed only a 12.7-mm machine
gun identilied as "Soviet made"
mounted at the bow of the second
boat.

•

.

..
~

_,.

~

~·

......

''

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-·

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•.

;

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The Court of Appeals has
overturned a Meigs County Common Pleas Court decision awarding Mary Jane Talbott $1,99.2,340
from the Ohio Power Co. as the
result of the death of her
husband, Terry D. Talbctt · on
Sept. 13, 1981.
Two judges of the court, Judge
J . Stephenson and Judge Homer
Abele concurred with the overturning of·the award while Judge
P . J. Grey dissented.
The award was made to Mrs.
Talbott as the result of the death
of her husband on Route 7 in
M~lgs County. A driver had
damaged a Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. pole along
the route causing the company's

electric wires to sag to about five
feet off the ground .
An employee of the Oh-Io Power
Co. wass notified of the accident
but did nothing about the low
wires after he had ascertained
that the Ohio Power Co. did not
own power lines in that area.
Approximately 10 hours later
the late Talbott stopped at the
scene to take so me photographs
of the wrecked vehicle and was
electrocuted.
In the original action, Ohio
Power Co., Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric and American
Electric Power Co., were named
as defendants . However, Judge
Charles Knight dismissed Co- •

lumbus and Southern Ohio Elect ric Co. and the American Electric Power Co. as de fendants and
that action was upheld by the
Court of Appeals.
The gist of the decision overturning the award to Mrs . Talbott
is that the Ohio Power Co. did not
own the power lines Involved ln
the ac~ident and hence employees of Ohio Power Co. did not
'h ave a legal duty to report
damage to the equipment of
other electric companies.
In his entry of dissent, however, Judge Grey maintains that
there is an obligation to report
dangerous situations for the
safety of the public.

Dog warden will enforce new law

dangerous dog ordinances, based
By NANCY YOACHAM
upon the state la.w. And Syracuse
Sentinel News Staff
CROSS CUT SAWING- Tina Sheer, the lady in the Hank Peters
had
a strict pit bull ordlnapce
Meigs County Dog Warden
Lumberjack Show demonstrated cross cut sawing and logrolling
before
the state law was even
Wayne Roseberry wants dog
during I he Boh Evans Farm Festival last weekend.
.
enacted.
owners In the area to know that
The state law and the villages' .
he intends to enforce to the letter
ordinances
require that all viOhio's new law dealing with
chopping'
and
tree
climbing
cious or dangerous dogs be
You learn to change In front of
dangerous and vicious dogs.
and women ju st ca n't chop
confined to the owner's premises
them and they change in front
Roseberry Is adamant ·that
fast enough or climb, " Scheer
of you," Sc heer said . " We
"anyone caught not abiding by . in .a locked enclosure with a
sa ill.
covered top. When off the prehave a job to do- to promote
the law will be cited."
lumberjacking. It' s a cpmmon
mises, the dogs mu st be conSince the state's new law
"Most women can 't handle
goal and we work togeth er."
strained
by a s ix-foot chain link
singles out all pit bulldogs as
·
leash,
or
muzzled.
the road. I don't know of
" vicious," one of Roseberry 's
another
woman
that
does
In
addition,
owners of v icious
·Scheer sa id that she prefers
main concerns is in checking that
what
I
do
for
a
living,"
Scheer
carry
liability insudogs
must
shows to competitions. Sbe
Meigs County's pit bull owners
said.
"I
havenofutureplans
of
rance
In
the
amount
of $50.00J.
does the show s fo r the m~y
are meeting the · new state
doing
a
nything
e
lse.
I
The
village
ordinances
al so
and to share the spor t with tlie
requirements.
·
anYthing,
require
that
owners
of
vicious
wouldn't
trade
it
for
public.
Pit bull is a generic term for
and I've had plenty of
"Most women don't like
the breeds of American pit bull dogs register their animals with
opportunities."
·
shows becau se there is n't a
terrier, American staffordshire village authorities.
Roseberry
reports
that
he Is
big demand . There is a lot of
terrier' . the bull terrier' or any
continuing
to
have
more
and
dog which has any of these In Its
more
pit
bulls
turned
over
to
him
genetic makeup.
because owners are becoming
According to the new law, a
wary
of the breed and Its alleged
"vicious" ·dog is one which has
unpredlcta
blllty. But a !though
k Uled a person or another dog, or
some
owners
are asking him to
schools were closed' fo r the day
I)esplte the fact tha t two .has caused serious Injury to a
come
and
take
their dogs, other
and students returned to their youths have been turned over - 'person. Pit bulls automatically
owners are tu r ning the unwanted
homes. Fire and emergency permanently to the Ohio Youth fall into the "vicious" dog dogs out as strays.
categOi'y
as
deflned,by
the
law.
officials have advised that build- Commission and a third was
He also reports two recent
The law defines a " dangerous"
ings should be closed for 12 llours' sentenced to a reformatory this
incidents in -Pomeroy In which
dog
as
one
which
threatens
to
when such calls arc received.
fall on charges of Inciting panic,
small children were bitten, one
On Monday the Bradbury Ele- the bomb tljrebt calls continue to attack without provocation.
by a pit bull which was tied In a
Already,
Syracuse,
Middleport
mentary School was closed when plague schools oft he Meigs Local
yard
and broke loose and atand Racine Village's · have
a bomb threat was received District.
Jac
ked
a child pla yi ng In an .~lley
pasEed their own vicious and
tllere.

Two schools of the Meigs Lccal
School District were closed this
morning after a bomb threat was
received.
A telephone me,;sage was
received at the Middleport Elementary School wm·ning that
bombs had been planted at both
that school and the M•eigs Junior
High School in Mlddl•~port. Both

r
1

'

,.

way, a nd a nother In which a
German shepherd attacked a
neighbor child that came into the
yard.
In both cases. Roseberry says
t he children werP fortunate that
adults were around k) stop the
attacks.
When a dog bil e occ urs, Roseberry Is required by law to take the
dog from the owner and quaran tine it In th e dog shelter for .
several days to ru le out th e
possibility of the a nima) havi ng
rabies .
He also reports many calls
throughout the county of pit bulls
attacking other a nim als,
Ro seberry says he is ' ·we1!informed as to where the pit bulls
are' ' In th e cou nty and he will be
checking to sec that owners of pit
bulls, as well as owners ot othervicious or dangerous dogs, ar e
abiding by the new st rict enlaws.
Although he.acknowledges that
many pit bull owners in the
county are tak ing good car(' of
their dogs and abiding by the
stricter state · regu lations, he
advises "ali owners of pit bulls
and other ,·icious dogs" to
contact loca l insurance agents •
Immediately to determine the
best way to purchase the required liabilit y ('overage . " It's a
must," ftoseberry says .

..

'
-

It was believed to have been used

Meigs closes school today after bomb threat

Principles and Practices
Law
Finance
Appraisal

Registr/ation Deadline is October 19, 1987

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244
•

GALLIPOLIS

OFFERS .
REAL ESTATE CLASSES

JOHN A._WADE, M.D. Inc.

'

Once a student, she is now
the teacher of the school.
After she . gradL\ated from
high school. Scheer said she
went on the road with her
family doing shows. She sa id
she was raised 01n the road
with her brothers a nd other
male lumberjacks . But being
a femal e lumberjaek isn't that
~
terrible.
"You get use to the guys .

SONGBIRD - Debbie Powell of Syracuse, singi'ng acappella.
shares her rendition of "America The Rt•autilnl" during
Saturday's !all feslival-bicenl ennlal celebration in Racine.

helicopters sank during Thursday 's firelight with the Iranians.
He said authorities were "very
optimistic" a bout the recovery
and believed the vessel was
heavily armed. U.S. officials
earlier reported fincjlng parts of
a suspected American-made
Stinger anti-aircraft missile
abcard another speedboat involved in the incident.
The U.S. Central Command,
which con'trols operations in the
gull, released photographs of two
speedboats captured after the
firelight In the north-cent raJ gulf.
The photographs appeared to
have been taken aboard a barge
the United States has been using
as a floating base in the central
gull, but command spokesman
L!. Col. John Head would only
say they were taken "in the
gulf."
The 100-by-400-foot barge has
served since last month as a
command base for patrol' vessels
and small mine-sweeping boats.

Appeals Court overturns decision

By l\1ARGARET ;CALDWELL
OVP StaffiWrlter
_The 'Army mJy l)e a job,
football may be ~ career, but
lumberjad!ng is a sport.
At least thad what Tina
Scheer believes. Scheer was
the only female lumberjac k at
the Hank Peters ,Lumberjack
Show at the Bob Evans Farm
Fes tival this past1weekend.
Scheer, 27, h.a s been a
lumberjack for 18(ears, startIng out in logrolling and
changing to cross· cut sawing,
She has been coppetlng for
the last · 16 years and doing
lumberjack show s In the fam 1
Ily business.
Scheer's hometown of Hayward, Wise., is th e homeofthe
Lumberjack World Championship. The promoter of the
competition wan ted more local pr.'Ople to compete so he
hired a woman lumberj ack to
tea ch the children j n the ~rea .
This is how Scheer got her
start.

LONG TIMJ' RESIDENTS HONORED-"The oldest residents
born and still living in Sutton Township were honored Saturday in
Racine as pari of the township's bicentennial celebration of lhe
signing of th e Northwest Ordinance. Seated left to right, llstenl~g
to speaker Vic Brown tell a brief histo~y of the township, are Susie
Fisher, Leah Nease, Vernon Nease, Grella Carnahan and Elwyn
(Dutch) Yost. t t age 90, Yost was honored as the oldest man.
Marcia Karr, a 96, the oldest woman, wa~ unable to attend. The
hict·ntennial eel ration wa.• held in conjunction with Racine's
annual fall festival ; sponsored by the Racine Merchants
Association.

Iranian missile hits Baghdad

It's SRort,
says lady

T.J. l\1oore, and Ailsa Wilford, a Southern sophomore, holding
Alan Moore. In back left to right are Tracy Beegle, a Southern
junior, and l)onette Talbott, a senior. Ailsa Wilford w~ crowned
queen in a ii'riel ceremony held during the parade.

529 JACKSON PIKE

Treasurer Jon Buck, and Councilmen Gilmore, Jack Satter·field, Dewev Horton James
Cla tworthy and Willia~ Walters.
Don Vaughan and his scout troop
were • present to observe the
village council session.

tlse for bids for the construction
the observance for Thursday, building on Oct . 29.
The report of Mayor Hoffman
of a miniature golf course at
Oct. 29, from 7 to 9, subject to
change. Councilman Bob Gil· totaling $5,381.45 in fines and fees
Hartinger Park in Middleport.
According to plans, the course
more announced that Feeney- for September was approved by
will carry out a river town theme.
Bennett Post 128, American council.
Attending the meeting were
A letter from Mini-Golf, Inc., was
Legion, will stage a public
Mayor
Hoffman , Clerkread · indicating that the firm
masked Halloween ball at Its new
would put In such a miniature
golf course for $13,900 if the
village agrees to proceed at this
time. If the town waits until later,
th e same course will -cost an
M~NAMA, Bahrain (UP!) The Post, quoting unidentified
additional $4,000. Payment on the
Iran fired a surface-to-surface Western sources, said the reproject would be made through
missile Into Baghdad today, quest originated with Rear Adm.
three installments.
hitting a school as students Harold J . Bernsen, commander
Since there will not be a public
gathered for classes on the · of the U.S. Middle East Force.
Halloween party staged by the
It quoted the sources as saying
playground, witnesses said. InMiddleport Chamber of Comitial reports said the attack the Reagan administrapon is
merce this year, council rein- · inflicted heavy casualties.
considering a broader military
Council also agreed to adver- stated trick or treat night and set
Ambulances were evacuating role for the U.S:"forces. allowing
dead and wounded more than one them to confront Iranian gunhour alter the suspected Soviet- boats when they are detected
made Scud missile crashed into stalking civilian oil tankers .
the Iraq! capital at 7:55 a.m. · The Post said the move would
' (12:55 a.m EDT), the Bahrain- effectively put U.S . forces In ihe
based Gulf News Agency quoted gulf on a virtual war footing with
witnesses saying.
Iran.
Classes at the school were
The first U.S. -escorted convoy
scheduled to start 5 minutes after of re-llagged Kuwaiti tankers to
the missile hit and children were enter the gulf since Thursday's
waiting on the playground at the · clash with Iranian speedbOats
time, the report said. It gave no ·was reported Monday sailing
specific casualty figures , but north toward Kuwait lor loading.
said the toll was expected to be The convoy began the 550-mile
high.
journey on Sunday and had
Several Iranian missiles have reported no incidents by early
hit the Iraqi capital of 4 million today.
Iraqi warplanes, continuing a
people this year, sparking fears
blitz on Iranian gulf shipping and.
of a full -scale "war of the cities'·
between Iran and Iraq .
Industrial and economic centers,
The attack occurred as the attacked a convoy of oil tankers
latest American-escorted convoy and freighters under Iranian
of re-llagged Kuwaiti tankers protection Monday as it moved
steamed north through the Per- south along Iran's coast.
sian Gulf toward Kuwait today
The 13,006-ton Panamanlanand the U; S. mliitary attempted reglsfered Mari~thi M tanker
to recover an Iranian speedboat was attacked about 30 ·miles off
sunk last week by U.S. helicopter the coast with an Exocet missile,
gunships.
kUling a Filipino sailor, shipping
The Washington Post reported
sources said. No other vessels
today that the U.S. military were reported hit.
SURE FOOTi&lt;;D ROLLING - Logrolling was
Lumberjack Show take to the pond for logrollln,g.
commander in the Persian Gull
A U.S. Navy official, speaking
one of many lufuberjacklng sports demonstrated :I'he show also boasts a lady lumberjack, who
is seeking approval from Wa- on the condition he remain
at the Bob Evans Farm Festival this past competes In cross cut sawing and logrolling .. shlngton to attack any Iranian
anonymo us, said American forweekend. Here. :two of the men in the Hank Peters
on
merchant
vesces were working to recover a
gunbcat
firing
'
sels th&lt;!l then call for assistance,
42-foot Swedish -built Bogh regardless of their national flag.
ammer patrol boat that Army

Owners of vlclou~ dogs, which
automatically includes all pit
bulls, must regist~r their dogs
with the Middleport Police Department by Thursday, Oct. 15,
to comply with a/ new village
ordinance.
This reminder was Issued by
Mayor Fred Hofi1J11an Monday
night when Middlf port Village
Council met In re~ular session.
Dog owners must pp.y a one-time
$5 lee when they register their
dogs, In accordanCE! with provi: sions of the new ordinance. Alter
: Thursday, owners; will be in
violation and can be fined.
Mayor Hoffmat· also commented on the gr undbreaking
· held last week ·o r the new

•

,, .- .·r-,.~

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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="39674">
              <text>October 12, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>abels</name>
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    <tag tagId="2112">
      <name>allison</name>
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    <tag tagId="2920">
      <name>atha</name>
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    <tag tagId="791">
      <name>boston</name>
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    <tag tagId="2253">
      <name>deeter</name>
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    <tag tagId="6972">
      <name>dittmar</name>
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    <tag tagId="6973">
      <name>hansher</name>
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    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
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    <tag tagId="1567">
      <name>rutherford</name>
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